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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Ohio State
nips Indiana
by 6 Rqlnts

ljff.l

Pick 3:
8-1·7
Plck4:
7·9-9-6
Buckeye 5:
22-24·3h33·37

Sparta on ' • 5

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Mo•tly cloudy tonlqht,
IOW8 In the 308. Saturday,
~r:oudy, high• In the

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:VIII. 47, NO. 110

, 01..,, 011Jo V.U., Publllhlng Canp IPJ

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\I t's offi.cial·: · .~· ,

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.Cepartme"' ot 1Rln~o\iof\

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Pto)ec,ed ~uno1ng S\'Ortla\1

highway•· jobs
i. n··~ area' spared

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Studies, design work to proceed
~~~ U.S. -3~ relocation, conne,:ctor
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will continue- with a later re-eval.'Sentfl:lel News St.ff
uation to detel'mirie if funher devel·
· ·. Alihough local and regional high- opment wili occur. ·'
' _way projects were apparendy spared
The document notes that Tier n
. i'roin the monetary chopping block, projects will be evaluated at least
, oon't'. expect construction anytime annually to determine if they merit
' )loon.
advancement to the next stage of
, .. , ~o rDepanment of Transpona- development.
The proposed Nelsonville and
- bon Di~tor Jerry Wray re~ the
, .forst draft of a document Thunday Lancaster bypasses ·.scored ~igh on
. !hat prioritizc:s highway projects the second tier.
· based on projections thai revenue will
. Earlier this month, the projects
, remain fiat on both ·state and •federal were reported on .the "chopping
levels.
·
·
, block" according to · ~ anicle pub;
· · The draft dOcument places pro- . lished in the Columbus Dispatch.
, posed construction projects into three
Two projects to widen U.S. 35 to
categories: ner I - consbuction in four lanes in Fayette and Greene .
· fiscal years 1998-2001; Tier ll ..l. counties were also reportedly on the
: continuation thnlugh the current list to be cut~ but were instead com;
. $tage of development; and ner lll-· mitted for consbuction. The projects
ho funher.development.
wUI.result in a new fOIIr-lane highway
: · The proposed Athens to Darwin from Xenia to the Fayette County
: bighway relocation project and U.S. line.
~311-77
·
Road were both

. ·By JIM FREEMAN

97 5·10 2·WHEEL IMII•
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2 5ectlona, 12 Pages, :15 cenl8

POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 31, 1997

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AO.nnett Co. Newspaper

Balanced
budgetary
plan .nears .
.final vote

WASHINGTON (AP}- A Senate committee's endorsement moved
the balanced ·budget amendment to
j •
the Senate floor, but without the
changes Del)locrats said were need·
&gt;,'f.
ed (o protect Social Security.
· Debate on · the ·constitutional
•. ·, • 1
~mendment requiring a balanced
budget is to stan in the full Senate
'/ ·' ' ·
next week. Democratic opponent• arc
. determined to defeat it unless Social
•
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Security is removed from budget calii1J1
culations. .
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On Thursday, tbe Senate Judicia·ry Committee voted 13-5 in fuvor of
·' ·
the Republican-crafted plan. Several
Democrats who joined the .RcpubliHIGHWAY PAIORmES _j Ohio Departnient
mandllled planning document prioritizing $5
cans in sending the amendment to the
of Tren8fiOI'blllon Dlntctor Jerry Wray 8IOOd by
billion In proposed Ohio roed project' in
full Senate made clear they had not
• .gr•phlc twtu~lng the caparlrnent'.t.cltnlly·
Columbu8 Thut.day. (AP)
·
. made up their minds on the final vote.
....;;:;:::.;.!:::.;:;.:.:=::::.::::!!..:.:::.:::t;:::.::::::.::.::.::=::::I...-...::::::::.::::::..:.:::::.::::.:~~:::J'-------- · ··constitutional amendments must
project
been moved back to fis- been. The numbers may · have reflects the amount of revenue the be approved by two-thirds majorities ·
cal year 2000, instead of 1999..
changed butthe commitment to the agency is expected to have in the in both chambers .and ratified by
Projects.arc given points based on work remains the same.
future .
·
three-fo~~nhs of state legislatures.·
.factors like traffic accident rates, traf"And when it comes time to revise
"11\ey revised . it because they Two years ago, an amendment passed
fJC volume, average daily buck traf- the list again, plan availability will have the reflect the true picture," said the House but fell one vote shon iri
fie and economic development poten- always play a key role in the process. District I 0 spokeswoman Nancy the Senate.
tial. The points determine ,.,hat tier a If our design plans are ready and -Pedigo. "They have $100 million less
Supponers argue that a constituproject is placed in.
waiting, our projects will move ahead than they thought they would."
tional amendment is the only way to
"In other words," sai4 ODOT of a project without plans. Whatever
"ODOT has a project list that adds ensure fiscal discipline in governDistrici'IO Planning and Prognlm· constniction money is available to us, up to more t~an $5 billion . SQme of ment. "The time has come," said
·
.Tom 'Hed~k, 1J!Iiii ,IIJ'!~Y.i !lc: s~nt," h~ added. :. . these
Senate Judiciary Committee Chair.__..."'' ., h~e. 1 .;,..0P.Q;l~.llffi.~:~.the....l•u,,._,._.
l:llj~~~~~'!:·h!i"·~~"::-•;~!'I~Otrin Hatch; R•Utah, '' to ~nee ""
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b!lllic charter \.Q rein in
·-~
allus(oct ninver ot the.purse, as has
been done n similar siluations in our
·· . : .
history since Magna Cana."
But Democratic opponents said
the amendment is unnecessary now
that both the White House and Congress are committed to real plans to
balance the budget by 2002, and it
could seriously handcuff Congress
wben it encounters future economic
crises. President Clinton has opposed
the amendment.
"Frankly, the vote today was a
victory of bumper-sticker politics
over good economic sense," said Sen.
'I
Patrick Leahy of Veo:mont, the rank.
ing Democrat on the committee.
At a news conference, Democrats
introduced a statement signed by
I,060 economists, including II
Nobel laureates in econ9mics, warn·
ing that the balanced budget amend·
mcnt was "unsound and unneces-

has

sary."
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NEW' LOOK,.... A8mode!lng ·of lhll Plaple8
: · Bank In .Middleport 18 compleiH
an open
:; hou~ I• lillng pllnMd .tor the •prlng. The

C.Pture

eldtlrlor ollhll building ch8ngid to
·~ of thl 11rly 19008 dHign of the orlgiMI

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·But Senate Democrats also
acknowledged
that the amendment
NEW TELLER COUNTER -A nawly-de•lgned 't eller counter,
"
would
ge(
70
or
80 votes, well above
completely computerized, h88 been installlld at Peoples Bank in
the 67 needed, if the Social Security
Middleport. Nan D1vla 1 front, Wltlted on customer Carolyn
trust fund were excluded from future
DeMoekey. ·
·
budget c,alculations.
The Republican majority on the
committee defeated three Democrat·
ic amendments that would have protected Social Security. The RepubliThe newly designed teller counter, to look over their possessions.
can argued that the trust fund was in
totally computeri1.ed,. is positioned
A foyer has been added and there ·no danger of being robbed to balance
diagoqally in the !obby. It is more are two conference omces in the lob· the budget and that putting it off-budsecure in that entrance can be gained by area.
get would make it much harder to
only through the back' after going
Matched carpeting "•s been used bring the budget in balance.
through a locked door into the bank in other rooms in the bank including
The trust fund , now running a sur.safe area.
the large meeting room at the rear of plus, is included in general budget
Adjacent to that area is a small but · the building which still features an considerations and both Clinton ·and
·
comfortable room where customers · outside entrance.
Congress include it in their propos- :
with safety deposit boxes can retreat
als to balance the budget by 20Q2.

unveils
remodeling
results
\~lddleport's.
Peoglest~:lank
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ISJ CHARLENE HOEFLicH
Sentlilll News Staff

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· Peoples Bank in Middleport has
· : taken on a new look.
1be first floor exterior of the
l!uilding has been redesigned to capture ~ flavor of the original early
1.9005 structure.
·
: lncorporatid into the design ljave
b_een side pillars with ¢itcular tops
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the new two-lane drive -through.
which now features a tube and drawer system for convenient access by
customers.
The lobhy of tl)e bank has been
completely remodeled with ceramic
and carpeting on the floor, and coordinating wall coverings. The featured
· gray tones show some color accent of
·. natural, mauve and blue:

jury·deliberations focus on·minute details .
·

. SAI'iTAMONICA, Calif. (AP)·· Asmetliodicalasthescientistswhosc;
· ~ is appBrel)dy at issue, OJ.
Simpson ttial jurors immeJSed themselves in tbe minutiae of DNA testiog,' and focused on whether blood
eyidence could have ~n contaniinated or pla!)ted.
. ,. Appearing 'relaxed and cheerfUl,
Jlipelists',:leliberaiin1 in the wrong-,
illl-deadtclllllwenriniOcourtThursday to tehear the testimony from a
s~te crilile ItJb scientist .and watch
vjdei&gt;tapes of investigaton at work.
Lawyen ea., til see whit lhe jury
. was up to raced to the cCIIIrllll!ule on
. a few lftOIIICIIIS' nocioe. RepilitieJS
~ ouflide and 10questered in a
hOtel the street also filed intO
W counroont, studyinJ the jurors'
f.- fOf ~-·
1 • LeJal expcru iofe4 1hal the jury
' ' ~ 10 bC llkinJ pain' 10 lie'
dtlll'olll~ • it '*'ides whet!IU to
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around each of the ~dows and
doors on the first floor. j:lie toP markings, in light color con~ting to the,
brick facade, were cop1ed from thi:
· second story window design for integregation into the original structure
style',
The accent WM carried out on.both
the front and side of the building,
Nonh Second and Race,.&amp;s Well 'as on

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hold ·Simpson liable for the killings · cal from the back pte of'the condo. help with the media after the trial. It
·of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson Thcdropcon~inedSimpson'sDNA was signed by Brenda Moran and
and her friend Ronald Goldman. type.
included Gina Rosborough's name.
Deliberations ~nter their fourth day
The defense claims that Simpson's The women were members of the
today.
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blood was planted on evidence, criminal trial jury that acquitted
"I think they wantto be!osure of includinl the back sate.
Simpson in October 1995.
the verilict when they face the pubThe jury requests began shortly .
Relatives ·of Ms. Simpson and
lie that they want ro cross ·every t and after The Associated Press ~on firmed Goldman are suing Simpson: If found ·
dol,every i,'' ~aid Laurie t.Cvenson, lho jiB'Ors had chosen as their fore- liable for the June 12, 1994, knife
. assoe..te dean of tbe Loyol~ Univer- · man ·the most meti~uloUJ no~er , . slayings, he COuld be ordered to pay
sity,law~hool.
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unona them, a pohce officers son millions.
·
Ell1ier. l'(hile behind closed doors, whO s.ld during jurj selection that he
Aift(lng the ev.idence the jury
jurorl asked for photo boal'ds ii!U!- admired Simpson but believed he asked to see ,again were two vldeolratiliJ some key pi~s of disputed . was probably 1uilty.
lapCs showiog criminalist Dennis
ev~. illcludlnr blood on the rear
~ man, ~n his late 50s or earl,y Fung and his assistant Andrea Mazgate 111Ch•alkway at Ms. S.h!lpson 's 60s .wtth a white handlebar mustache zola handlins crit~al evidence oolido, . . die area in back of Simp- and beard, is a retired Jlllllhic anisL Simpson's blood sample and • bag
. son's boule W11t!fe ~tecti c Mark
While jurors concentrated on the containins the bloody glove' Fw.m.ri
Fultnnu Aid he found a bloody complex case, shenff's deputies ' said he found.
alove.
Another Video WIS Shot in Simp1 investigated I letter .II least twO
Thef lfllollked 10 seC bJQWUfll of . il!fCX' JOI. bef&lt;!fC CIOSiliJ UJUntCnts , son's bedroom, where police said
DNA ·!lilt fillips tlled by .tile state . eiided. ·
they found bloody socks at the foot
critt!IIJ~b• to w!yze q~eCi~c blood
1be Jettet·UIJOd juron tO COPIA!tt Of the bed, The llpe, ho~ever, does
dropi,IIIIOIIJ dtlm IUJ!Jle drop lift- . ~F~;~t Bud Stewlrl for profeui!"'.al not shnw ;IRY soc~.
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·Commentary

AecuWeat~ f&lt;&gt;*UI for daytime conditions and

poor?
The Daily Sentinel Third World solution ·for Amerlca,.s
aao
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'Esttlbasnd in~

111 Court St., Pon...-oy, Ohio
114-112-2158 • Fu: it2-2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controll•r

Genenll Manager

I

By Jeok And 111 an
that are exported all over the
"Eleven ye.n
it -lite bit·
Md .._ Mol IF
Clribbeatt."
tina y- bead qaiut a bric:lt wall,"
WASHINGTON .. Rep. Tony
Hall and Rep. Amo Houahton, R- Hmislllicl. "No one knew lbout it,
Hall, 0-0hio, has spent the bulk of N.Y., plan to introduce a bill next and the few thlt did thoqht tiw it
his 18-year congressional career as
was not wOibble."
the Capitol's most eloquent champiNow Harris is preparing to play
on of the hungry. These days, he's
Jack Anderson host to ftiSt lldy Hillary Rodham
preaching a new approaeh to allevi·and
Clinton, Treasury· Secr1:tary Robert
ating poverty at home and abroad:
Rubin and !he presidents of ·
capitalism. '
Jan Moller
Bangladesh, Mali and Uganda ..
The concept is called mierocredwho are all scheduled to speak at the
it.ll has been working small miiacles
summit. Organil;Crs· are hoping that
in lmpo~erished Third World nations month that w&lt;iuld give more money President ClintQn, who met and
for decades, and it's an idea !hat for sul:h programs abroad. At a time became intrigued with microcredit
could find rare bipartisan supjlort in . when foreign aid is under a micro- guru Muhammad Yunus of
the corridors of Congress. Basically, scope in Congress, this is the lcind of Bangladesh while serving as goverit involves giving small, low-interest program that members of both parties nor of Arkansas, will also attend.
start-up loans to poor.but-upiring could rally aro~nd. It soothes the
Hall, a one-time n'lember of the
entreprenellfS. Experience has shown Democratic impulse to help the poor, Peace Corps and real ' estate bro!&lt;er,
that a little money can make.a world using Republican. notions of self- has devoted much of his lime on the
of difference. Hall offers an example reliance and free,market capitalism. hill to battling world hunger.
he witnessed on a trip abroad:
Next week, microcredit propo- Houghton bri'ljls an eye for efficien·
"In the Dominican Republic, there nents ftom around the world will cy honed. as llte·CEO of a Fortune
was a shoe repairman, he was very gather in Washington for a "sum- 500 company. The concept also has
goOd," Hall told our associate George mit," an eveni that Sam Daley-~ar- the backing p~ Rep. )3enjamin A. ·
Clifford Ill. "We loaned him $60 and ris never thought he'd see. Harris Gilman, , R-N.Y., who. heads the
he bought shoe-making tools. The started a group called Results, which House International Relations Com·
man now has about 22 people work- has spent more than a decade advanc- mittee.
ing for him. He makes baby shoes ing this idea.
As leaders ofbolh parties ~all for
;:.::..:.:::..:.::::.::...::..:.:...=::=..=::.:...:=:..::........:.:.;_________________
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Excerpts from other
newspapers around OhiQ
By The Associated Preu

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Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and natiOnal mterest fromOhto
newspapers:
.
The (Toledo) Blade, Jan. :U
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·
' The campaign of. violence against abortion clinics was cranked up a notch
last week. In suburban Adanta, at least seven people were hun when the sec·
' ond of two bombs exploded, a terrorist action apparently ~signed· to cause
the maximum number of deaths and injuries.
.
It's possible ·'-- but at this stage it is unlikely - thill t~e timina of the . ·
'second explosion wds a mistake; that the device was supposed to explode
earlier.
.
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· Mme likely .it was a callous and murderous .attempt to C~Blm as m~~ hves
'as possible - not of those working at the chmc, or viSitmg the chntc, but
of firefighters and law.enforcement office~.
·
.
How despicable of the bombers to take 111m at those whose goalts to help
and protect others. And how hypocritical it wo~ld be.if this atrocity was Cat·
ried out in the name of opposition to legal abortton.l)ut·that has always been
, •the Achilles heel of the radical anti-abortionists.
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YOU'RE !lUsTED!
'!

The Columbus Dispatch, J an,'23
·
The U.S. defense establishment is at war with itself over strategtc pnor•! ities for ihe 21st century.
·
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:: The military has begun a.Quadreimial Defense Review, man~ated by Con' Jgress, to re-examine whether the United State.s needs to remam prepared to
: •fight in two large regional wars at the same ume. · · . .
..
•: For the first time, there is significant disagreement wtthtn the mthtary
:: abOut maintaining this potential.
·
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;; · Some analysts have suggested that under a revised strategy the n~tton's
: ·armed forces, wiih a ·1.4-million active-duty roster, would have to he mmmed
percent to 10 percent. .
·
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· ~! Still, at $264 billion, the defense budget already accounts for 40 percent
:·of global military spending.
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•: There is no doubt that troop reductions would have a ripple effect through:~ out the nation, and wouJa cause economic trauma in some areas. But deter:~ mining the right size of the mili!A~ must be based·~olely on what's need!~ed f!l protect .!he nation's strategtc mterest, and no!hm~ else.

NOME

CONTAINS•

.DRUG·

·UMCIIP
•TEST TUifS
, FEPER~L

TESTING

. KIT

A5ENT,

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i" proposal.
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:~ He wants lhe state to set .aside $ rmlllion to study the Ohao Lottery ~~ to find out ·who plays it and the costs.
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r""
o cares.
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:: If we're against gambling, and the govem.or ~akes no ~ones about hts
;· dislike of the vice, let's say ~o and be done. wtth 11. We don I need to spend
•J a million bucks to say that, JUSt a referendum vote on the lotte'1:. .
;-, . If the study is not to try to eliminate ·the lottery, what good ts II gomg to
:::Uo anyone? And why would it cost a million dollars to stand down at the
•::Convenience store and watch who buys tic.kets?
·~
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~
Times RepOrter of Dover-New Plilladelpbla, Ju, 24
.
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We in tbe print media do not norynally rally to defend our counterparts
:; in television. We think what they call news coverage ts too often shallow
•!and sensationalistic "entertainment."
·
;~ But a recent Raleigh, N.C., jury verdict against ABC News is disturbing
~~and will have a chilling effect on undercover reporting at all level~- ABC
i-was investigating a report that Food Lton supermarkets were sell.'ng rat·
, :gnawed cheese, expired meat and old fish and bani, washmg those ttems m
; :bleach to kill the smell.
.
.
.
'· Normally, that type of public service w~uld be ~n~s for a Pulitzer Prize
"nomination. Instead, ABC go! slapped wllh $5.5 mtlhon m pumttve d~m­
agcs, not because of what .!he in~.estigato':S found, but becau~ of _''fraud~
trespassing and bieach of loyalty m scndmg.out the reporters tn dtsgutsc.
The jury's m.essage was clear' Better to subject the ctttzens to rat-gn_awed
cheese, expired meat and b.leach•washed fish than to have. a reporter dtg out
a story and tell them about it.
·

l:;n.,

Letters tQ

~he

e_ditor

Praises Jeff Thornton
other laws that used to protect the
Dear Editor
I would like to say "thank you" to innocent, now protect the guilty. I've
Jeff Thornton for having· prayer been noticing in the summertime that
. before his meetings, and ackno~l­ the way people take' their clothes off,
edging God. t wish w_e had more hke that it's not decent for good young
boys or girls to be out in public. I
him.
. ·
• 'If we had more prayers prayed, collld go on, but I won't so I'll just
·. and more people serving the Lord, · pray that the Lord will help Meigs
our Meigs County would be a better County to see their need and they will
get back to servin,B the Christ who
. place to live. I've lived here all may ·
died for them. .
·
life and I've seen a lot of chuges take
In Love
place.
Doris Richmond
· I've seen bad cha~ges, such as our
Middleport
' : moral laws have been let down and

!Today _in history·
l &amp;yJM~Prm ·
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TcJc!ay is Fri~y. Jan. 31. the 31st day of 1997. There are 334 days left .in

1 the

yellt. ·
·
, TOday's HiJhlighl in ·His!QI'Y: .. .
,
. .
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On Jan. 31, I951,the Uniled States,,en~ !he Space Age w111:t tts first
fSUCCCIIIM Jaunc:h'W a ~lite. into orbit, Explorer I.
' On this date-'
.
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I In 1606. Fawka, convicted for his pan in the "Gunpowder Plot"
l11ainlt the Bn,Si~ l'lrlilnient and Kina 1amet ~· was e!tecuted. . . ·
. Jn 1797 WIIIJXINr Praliz Sc~ was born an Vienna, Ausma.
; 1n ~~: Oen. Robert B. Lee was umed general-in-chief of all the Contfedenle ......
. .
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be . .
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f
: II 1917, CllrmMy'liln'ed IIOtlce thlt II was JIDntng a po tcy o unre·
llricted submtrine wll'fa. · .
.
· .
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In 19&gt;44 tlurinJWarldWII'n. U.S. fllfC*beianinvldlna KwtjalelnAiqll
IIIII ather j.u of dill~ Mriltdl.-..
. ,
• II. 1945, Pri'llll BddM Slovik,tile "- Ollly U.S.IIIllfll:'r lillcl tb1 Civ•

Ouy

~~fl!ICU~•~for~· He-~ bY an Amen usflrinllqllld

Braley
~.-vice&amp; f« tuci,JJe ~. 82; of Pomeroy, who die&lt;l- Thursday, Oct. 17, 19% in Pl..- Valtey Hospital,,will be beld SWiday at 2 p.m.
the Beech &lt;how Cenietery,
The Rev•.Paul 0.
will offi-

a halt to plrlisln and ideoJoaial
clashes, microcledit may ofhr ~
mon pouad. Mole iiiiJIO'IMdy, ·its
!nick record~ thlt it worb.
It's been ounxpcrlellce dl8t111011
Jli'OifiiiiS designed by government to
help the poor~ up helpinJ IJIOidY
the bureaucrats who administer the
aid. But microCredit has its roou 1101
in govtmament, but in the Slreetl and
alleys of the Third World. The cl:tallenge now is to see if a similar program c;an be a useful tool for !'l'viving ·inner-city neighborlloods an the
United States:
Summ.it organizen point to the
story of a Chicago mother who
worked her way off welflire usins
sweat and shoe-leather. To supple..
ment her welfare benefits, she bepn
~lling .shoes door-to-door lind w~ .
eventually ref~~ to -~· Women I
Self•Employment Project, ID org&amp;i\i·
zation thet helps poor'peoplc create
their own jobs.
.
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With a l011n of $600 she expand·
ed her business and evcnlually
opened a retail shoe store.
·
"I find it amazing,"· Hall said,
"thai we have to go to Third World
nations to fiad oltt how to feally lielp.
our own poor people 11m::" Yet I~ iJ
quick to caution that even though
mict'ocredit shows promise, it isn't
.for everybody.
· "There has · to be some screening," he said. "Not everyone has·the
entrepreneur's ability to make things
happen. Not evei-yQIIC's hungry to do

But many of the bomiwers who
do pass the screening have defted the
notion, popular among ban!&lt;ers. !hat
poor people are a bad credit risk. By
some couius, the repayment rate for
microcredit loans exceeds 95 pen;enl.
"This is not a handout. It's not a
·boondoggle: It ge!S paid back," Har·
ris told us. "With other programs, the
more people you reach, the closer
' you are to the limits of your budaet."
But because microcredit loans are
· repaid with ·interest, Harris adds, .
"the more people you reach, the clos- ·
er you arc to being self-sufficient as
an institution."
Jack Andenon and J1111 Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

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ChWlcothe Gazette, Jan. l4
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··~ The usually frugal Gov. George Voinovich is way out of line on a recent

~~c;i_lle
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Grandmothers may be our most
iaken-for-granted human resource.
They don't get much attention when
the subject of family valu,es comes
up. Yet with so many mothers of
schoolchildren working in every
country of the world, grandmothers
may be'doing more than anyone else
to hold families together as surrogate
moms:
As such, they h~ve become a
necessity in our .society. Unlike most
necessities of life, however, they arc
also beloved.
Can you think of a more touching
tribute than this one delivered by an
8-year-old girl at her schOQ)'.s Grandmothers Day observance•
, "A grandmother is a lady who has
no children of her own so she likes
other people.'s children. A grandfather
is a man grandmother. He goes for
walks with the boys and talks about
fishing and tractors and things like
that.
'"Grandmothers don't have .to do

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·Approaching system will
.offer ar~a dry weekend
Scattered showers and snow nur- p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:40

.
the Democm\ic caucuse~ even pinker
than before. Meanwhile, several relalivcly liberal Republican senaton
similarly read the tea leaves aod
decided not ro run for recelcction.
Almost to a man (and woman), they
.were replac~- on Elci:ti9n Day by
Republicans well to their right. The
Senate in panicular, therefore, is distinctively
more conservative than it
•
I
was JUSt two ye.,s ago.
The net result is that the IOSth
Congress is;•ideologically speaking,
divided even~ more sharply than the
I04th, and fllr more so than any ot~
er Congres~ ill recent times,

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By Willlllim A. Rusher

for presidential and' congressional
candidates of the.same party. According to one exit poll, only 7 percent
split their tickets. Whatever the actu-

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William A. Rusher

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HOUSTON (AP) Crews
. searched early today for people who
may be trapped under tons ohteel ·
and rubble from the collapse of a 20·foot-highsh\lppingmailwaii;Atleast
. f,bree,P,e?pl~ w~re ~lied.
. . .
Tile wall whtch · was .bemg
.- removed to ~ake way for theater
, comple.x, collapsed Thursday mom- ing as a couple of dozen elderly
:. ~'mall walkers" were exercising. Six
walkerS were injured, as was a firefighter- noQe of them seriously.
'
Au!horities found three bodies,
• and ,.td as many as six more m~y be
· under the rubble at Northline Mall,
· about five miles north of downtown
kouston,
.
· ' Several people whose names
• appear on an optional sign-in sheet
' for walkers relllained mislling. and
. some relatives said they had not
· ,heai!J from family members who usuwalk at the mall before stores
.ally
.
open.
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· ·Early today, the Harris County
· Medicai.E~aminer's Office identified ,
the three bodies: Leola Edwards, 59,
Ema Cunis, 62, and Thelma Loraine
Jolly; ~:1, l!.ll·of Houston.
. The' cause of the collapse was not
immediately known.
·"What we're trying to do ri•st of
all is very cat(\fully remove any,
debris 10 get to any bodies," said.Jim.'
mie Schindewolf, Houston's public
works di.recior. "Then we will try to
analyze' thc situation."
~'!l'i&gt;lition crews were removing
thi: J'ast· sections of ~ closed department S!&lt;ire when a wall common to

Daily Sentinel

the old ·store and the mall caved in.
Cranes were brought in to lift fallen concrete roof suj,ji'orts and C:hunks
of debris from the 150-foot-long
sec~ion ofwall, wN!e r~scuer~ used
)Xlllce dogs,an~ fibef ~pttc devtces to
search for survtvors.
"That's always a :possibility,"
fire ~hief J;ddieJorral said .•:· A lot
of mtraculous thtn~s happen. .
Robert Delaney, 67, was walking
when he heard someone .~Y a r(,lCk
had fallen through,the cetbng. Then
everything started collapstng around
him.
. .
"I was about 2 feet from the last
beam that fell in," .Delaney said.

Stocks
.

'-blltlied,'·

(USPS 21:1-,..,

~lit')' llftemaon, Monday 1hrou1h
fttoloy, Ill Coon St .. .........,., Ohio, by ."-

.,.-Co.

Olliq \Wily ............ ~ .....
~. (l!lio 4l169. Ph. 99Z·ZI.l6. Sot:ond .

. .,.. pG!I.,...pald" """"""· Oltlo. . .

. ' pARKERSBlJRG, W.Va. (AP)An arson clwJ~ against a missing
barge worker will s~a~td while ca:cws
. search the. Little Kana,wha River for
his bOd¥) a.prosee11tor. laid.
Kenny Parsons, ·20,
of
Ravenswood, w~ last seen Jan. 22
stringing ~lectrical cable on a barge
operated by Adas. Towing of Parkershurg. ·«.
.,
Parsobs ·was to be tried tliis week
in Jackson County, W.Va., on accu.
sations that he set fi.re to a hunting
cabin last _year near Cottageville.

"I reel for the Parsons family:"
. sai.d 'Jackson County Prosecutor
David·Moore. "But the charges can't
be dismissed until it's detertl)ined
Parsons is deceased.''
The search was suspended Sunday
when the river became clogged with
. ice, but was to resume today, said
D.R. Smith, director of. the Wood
County Office of Emergency Services.
Sonar will be used for the first
time in the search this weekend,
Smith said.

Bank One ............•.............,...45\
Bob E~• .........,...................13'4
Borg-Warner •.•••••••••••••••••..••••••4p
Champion ...........,............... ;.16~
Ch1rmlng ShoJM-..................4"1.
c::
· Holcln~~ ..••.••.' ~.......~..........3o~.,

P08"J'MA~1 Send.add:reu cotrection11o
'lJie llolly'!Hdoel, Ill Coun SL, fotneroy,
Olio4l169.

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· IINGLI COPY I'IUC&amp;

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It's official: highway jobs

Bombing suspect Ciittorney
disputes validity of video .

Today's livestock repo.rt
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Friday as provided by
, the U.S. Depanment of Agriculture
Market News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents
lower; demand moderate to light on
a moderate movement.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
points S 1.50-53.00, few at51.00 and
53.50; plants 52.50-54.00.
U.S. 2·3, 230-26Q lbs. 45.505 1.00; 210-230 lbs: 40.50-45.50.
Sows: near steady.
--u.s. 1:3 300-450 lbs. 41 .00-44.00,
few 40.00; 450-500 lbs. 44.00-47.00;
500-650 lbs. 48.00-51.00, few at
51.50.
Boars: 38.00-39.00.
For cthe week: barrow and gills
firm to SO cents higher; sows 1.00
higher.
·

Announcements
OAi'SE to meet
Southern Local O.O,PSE 453 will
meet Monday, 6:30 p.m. at the bus
garage. There will be an election of
officers.
·

Meigs EMS runs

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Masonic
lodge
F
;~
The Mi&lt;ldleport Masonic.,Lodge
Gannett oo0oooouooooo~ io1uono•• .. ••••••••77 363, F &amp; AM, will meet Tuesday;
Good~r .•.......•.....•.•..........•.54\
. 7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
K•m81t •••••••-••••••••~;,·~····~·••oooooo11 ~
masons invited. · Refreshu-. E.nct.•••.••.••••••••••••.•,•.••••zn . Master
ments.
LlmHec:t ....................................17
Ohio Vsl~y Bll'niJ ....................36
Ortt Yilley.............................. 37}a Writers group
.
Peoplel ................................. 26\
The Book Shelfe.s Writing Gi'oup
·Prem Flnl-. ............. r................14'will meet Wednesday, Feb. 12, 7 p.m.
Rocktrlllll ...............~~••••.•.•.••••• 65\
at
the Pomeroy Public Library. ·
RD-SMI1 ..............................174\
sttorwv•• .....;......_... .,................ 7\
Observance set
Star Blnk .............................. 36''
Wenctv•a ................~ ••• ~ ............22
MembeB of Drew Webster Post
Wortlllngton.......................... 19'1i
39.
American Legion, ·arc asked to ·
• • •
--~
assemble outside die Pomeroy First
. Stock .rwport• 110 thl 10:30
a.m. IIUOtM provided by Advast Baptist Church Sunday at 10:15 a.m.
. of Galli~;"'"
. and enter the church in ~ group f~r
the Four Chaplains Sunday observance.

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BVIqVNDJ AND
3RP &amp;PEARL St

. 949 ROSE (7673)

FEATURIN~

Fresh Cut Arrangements
Silks··Balloons
. .,..
.Specialty Gifts ·
..
Amlsh-Craftac:l Pie Safe
. ··
Tropical Wood Gifts~ Colta Rica
Leanln' Tree Cai'CII
• Blaumont Pottery ·· .

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MI.DDLEPORT, Olf

These locally owned and operated Dealer Stores will feature
Appliances, Electronics. and Lawn and Garden Equipment.
:The Dealer Stores are supported by the Sears Retail Network,
Including systems, distribution. training, as well as local and
national advertising and marketing campaigns. The Dealer
Stofe will sell and dlsploy the Kenmore and Craftsman
products, as well as GE, Whirlpool. Kitc~enAid, Tappan,
Ho9ver. Sony Magnavox, and more. .
.

FLOUU I GIFTS.
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Sears America's #l Retailer of Appliances. Electronics, and
Lawn and Garden Equipment is currently seeking candidates
to own and operate a Sears Authorized Retail dealer Store In

"'

SiJIICRtmON RATES

.,c..~or
OIIt - .
.. , .........................,., .. _ ............noo
Ollt .............................................. ,.11.10
Olie v.................,.....................:.........S104.00

·exception for those who beld "'vallt
existing rights" to mine coal, but di4n't clearly explain what that meant:
That led to years of disput4,
including a court case that set one
unofficial policy for most states 811$1
another for Ohio.
.
OSM's proposal recommends
new policy · allowing strip mini!\@
only by coal-rights owners who ei~
oblliined or made a good-faith effon
to get all necessary mining perrni6;
before the 1977 law took effect. ,
· OSM's acting director, Kathrine
Henry, said the regulators decided
that was tile most restrictive standaril
"that would be suppqped by the
courts."
'
That part of Henry's announce.
ment was cheered by environmental
groups, but :the other half of her
announcement - coveri~g underground mining- was condemned by
those same groups.

.....
ere1 Mogui ..... ................23Y4

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Neor_.-llitoclodon.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Clinton Administration todaY. is
embarking on a bureaucratic mission
that eluded the Bush, Reagan and
Carter administrations: it's ,trying to
estalllish the rules for 111ining coal in
national fon;sts and under the ground ·
near homes, public buildings· and
cemeteries.
· The Office of Surface Mining is
publishing a proposed rule which, if
it takes effect, will specify what the
owners · of coal ·beneath federally
protected latlds must do before being
allowed to mine. ·
Ncariy 20 years ago, Congress
banned strip-mining in the National
Park System, National Wild and
Scenic Rivers System and o!her protected ·lands, including "buffer
. zones" near homes, churches and
cerileleries.
The Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act of 1977 allowO\I an

(Continued from Page 1)
resideats to realize that local projects
books since the 1950s. It would take are "right where they- were" before
decades to builthlt of them, even if the list was revised.
we had the money," Wray said. "It
She said the U.S. 3311-77 Condoesn't make se nse for us to expend nector Road, the Athens to Darwin
resources on j&gt;rojects that have little ~ ighway relocation, and Nelsonville
chance of being built in the foresee- and Lancaster bypasses are all imporable future."
tant projects because they would
. "We can't spend money we don't represent completion of a highway
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have. We understand lhe value of the cOrridor.
many transportation projects com. .The construction of major. new
m.unities want, but at the end of the bridges, such a• the proposed replace-·
day, we tiave a responsibility to bal- ment for the I "mcroy-Mason Ohio
presence at the time, and that's
ance our checkbook," he added.
River Bridge, are not included ·on the
important because of conflicting tesWray also predicted that after the project selection list.
timony among witnesses who said
They have their own list, and
they saw McVeigh at the shop, CBS year 2001, ODOT will be forced to
concentrate almost all of its con- funding , separate from the major new
said.
said.
,.
In · the McDonald's video, sbllction program on the maintenance draft, Pedigo
and
preservation
of~he existing transMcVeigh appears to·w04f clothes difportation system.
·
ferent.than !hose descril:ied by witU.S.
33
Committee
co-chairman
.nesses at Elliott's, CBS noted..
Steve Story said he ·w;IS pleased that
McVeigh's lawyer Steve Jones
criticized the repon, telling CBS !hat the projects did not wind up on the
news of the tape only indicates pros- chopping block, but said additional
ecutors are trying to."rearrange deck money needs to be earmarked for
. chairs on the Titanic . They acknowl- highway construction . .
The U.S. 3311-77 Connector Proedge their witnesses are confused."
ject was moved up on !he Tier II list,
a change that pleases Story.
"The importance of the project is
renected by contributions of $1.3
million in federal funding and $81?
· Estimated receipts: 34,000.
· mtllton from Gov. George .Y.
Summary of Thursday's Pro- Voinovich's discretion;uy fund," Stoducers Livestock AsSociation auc- ry said. .
tion at Bucyrus:
Story said additional highway
· Hogs: 1.00 higher.
construction funding could come
Butcher hogs: 43.75-54.00.
from an additional fuel tax or by
.
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. programs
Cattle: 1.00 to·l.50 lower.
removmg
non-consbllctton
.. from the existing fuel iax.
"Any funding increase sbould be .
earmarked for new constructio.n, not
Units of the Meigs County Emer- shared with other agencies," he said.
gency Medical Service recorded five "Eventually this problem will he
calls for assistaoce Thursday, Units dealt with and there will be adequate
·responding included:
funding."
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Story was also ·pleased that enviI a.m., Main Street, Pomeroy, · ronmental and design work will conAnnette McCoy, Veterans Memorial tinue on the proJeCts.
Hospital;
"The committee wants the pr,ojects
10:04 a.m., Arbaugh Addition, ready to go once the funding comes
Tuppers Plains, Donald Sprague, through," he ~aid .
. ,
· Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital;
Pedigo said .it is lmponant for area
8:55 p.m., Rowe Road, Racine,
Ruth Aim Fox, CCMH.
ALL TJCUI'S· •sr, II PIO:ID ur
ti111S Pfl, 8ATVJIMrl
.
MIDDLEPORT .
Da: t 'I UOII UCIEVU IZI 1 9 . SLiCitS
OF PillA • PIPBI
II : 10 p.m., Hill Street,. Harold
UD A IIIDIIlCIII' ROVUI 16 , 15 . .c::h.
Will, Holzer Medical Center.
PJCI UP 'IGUI:
.t.'l' GALLIPOI.f.ll
DOIIIIM)'I PillA LOCA'!'ID
to
POMEROY
. . . . . . V.u.t.CY CI•IM 01' AT
llftlYALUI
CI
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6:23 p.m., voluntiler fire depart~110 liD I 'DAM'I'a raa• &amp;
ment to West Main Strcej, auto fire,
·~ ....,JCIU ..0 fta ' lltAST'
Todd Evans owner. ·

.......... ,,;,. Aoiodoted p.,,., ond lho Ohio '

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.Am Ell Power ....................... 41 \
Akzo .....................................10\
ArftTech .................................69\
AlhlllnCi 011 ••••••••••:..•..••.. ~ .••••• 43\
ATaT ...........:.........................31\

For additional Information,
Interested parties should call

.

1·111·259·2616

Interviews will be held in the near future
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MoreOVer, don't lose sight of.the
fact that this sharp division simply ,
renects the sharp division between
the voting biocs that.S4?nt these people to Congress to represen.t them.
If Mr. Clinton could clone himself,
he would no doubt try to sit oo both
sides of the fence, as he did at the
Army-Navy same. But, ,since he is
just one person, he has been tryinJ for
al)ouj a y..,- nqw to d9 the splits. No
wonder he longs for bipanisanship!
WWia!n A. Rusller II • DIRlnplllbed FeUow of the au-t
lllltltllte for, the Sc.dy e1 Sta....
-hlp and PolltiCall'lall.oplaJ,

Washington is currently in the
midst of an orgy of avowed biparti·
sanship. What's more, it apparently
thinks that's what the public wants.
As President Clinton pu~ it .in his
inaugural address, "The American
people returned to office a president · al figure, it was relatively small-- yet
of one party .and a Congress of enough to give Mr. Clinton his maranother. Surely they did not do this to . gin over Sen. Dole, and to keep the
advance the politics of petty bicker- GOP in control of C::ongress.
ing and extreme . partisanship they
There is no reason, then, 'tO
plainly deplore."
.
assume that the great majority of
· But if you think all this talk is American voters are in a particular-.
actually going to result in an era of ly Iavey-dovey mood right now. On
good feeling, I've got a b.ridgc to the the contrary: The evidence seems
21st ceniu,Y that I'd like to sell you. clel!f that the American electorate is
_ In the first place, it i_s.J!y no means splitting right down the middle, and
clear what the vote.s are aiming for .that the gap between the two halves
when they elect a divided govern- is ·widening.
ment. There can't be many people
The trend was first evident in the
••
naive enough to puttwoscorpions.in 1994 congressional ·elections. Con· .
a bottle and then expect them to set servative Republicans, especially in
up housekeeping.
tl\e Soutll, ousted many Democtats
. On the contrary, if my mail is' any who qualified, in Democratic terms,
indication, many people vote sys- as "moderates." The Democrats who
'·· '
tematicallyforapresidentofonepar- bel&lt;fon to their seats WC!'C by and
,
· ty and a Congress of the other in the larae liberals from northern urban
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frank hope that "they'll 'spe'nd so · constituen&lt;:~s .well to the left of the
much time fighting each other that . nattonal mBlnstrearn. That ts why the
the)" 11 leave us alone." I have·never · Democratic minorities in the House
'
regarded that as a particularly .ele· and, Senate today are, broldly speak·
vated political strategy, but there's no ing, far more liberal than the country
doubt that, up tp a point, it works. as 1 whole, and indeed far more libThe result is tailed "gridlock." ·
eral than the current version of Mr.
Wh81's mme, Mr. Clinton to the ClintOII.
l
coatrary notwithstandinJ, it was 1101 · · Between 1994 and 1996,' a large
~
13· .·,..,.__...;.;,o
&amp;..:-.
I . I conserv~ve
.
42 I a.,..,,.-._....
• - '-"!.!'~••
"theAmeric:an!JCOIIIe"whochQieto
. n,um....
~ f rcauvey
a
elett a Democntic pretident ,lnd 1 consresston~ De'!loctats etther
Iii , . ~,.,..n~t,
wflo
lfcldfHI
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Republican Cdnpess. The arear chin~ parties or reti.ec:J.from ConIn thlil counroom'f'
,
majority of voters wt their bajlotJ , ~"· T,he 1)1'1\J!t wu simply 10·1eave .. L,.::....:......i:::..::::.:::=::.:.:~;,;..;;.;.;;;..;;;;;.;.;;,;,;;;.;,;,;.~-~-.....;·;:;.·.....,u

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.Crews hunt for survivors
·trapped in wall collapse

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a.m.
ri~s can be expected across much of
Weather foreeast:
· Ohio tonigh~ in the wake of a cold
Tonight.
.. Mostly cloudy. Lows in
· front, the ·National' Wel!lher Service
the
".PJM!r
30s
to around 40. West
said. Lows' will be around 30.
NEW YORK (APl-A ~ideotape
But an approaching high pressure winds 10 to 20 mph.
· Saturday... Mostly cloudy. in the · from a McDonald's restaurant secusystem should provide Ohio With relatively dry weather for the weekend, morning ...Then becoming partly rity camera shows Ttmolhy McVeigh
buying a hamburger minutes before
·.forecasters said. A few sll.ow.flurries cloudy. Highs in the mid 40s.
Saturday nighi ... Partly cloudy: he •lleaedly rented ~truck used in
are possible in the northeast on Saturday. •. ...
.
. ~t.:ows in the low.er_30s.. ,
the Oklahoma. City' bombing, CBS
· Extended&lt;_(orecut. .
. . News reported.
.
Othe~tse, ,the sun may . peak
Sunday...P1111y cloudy. H1ghs tn · · The vide!)tape shows McVeigh for
.through tile elpuds wtempenitures
sho\lid ·lle mostly in the 40s· on Sat- the mid SOs.
•
about two minutes at a McDonald's
urday. MuCh the sam~ thing· on Sun•·· Monday... Partly c_loud~. Lows in · in Jupction City, Kan., CBS said
the upper 30s and htghs m th.e mtd Thursday, citing unidentified sources.
. day.
The reco~~high temperature for 50s.
v
· Later, Me Veigh ·is believed to have
Tuesday... Rain likely~ Lows near rented a Ryder truck from nearby
l(tis date at the Columbus wel\lher
statio~~&gt;was 62 degrees in 19 I 7 while
40 and highs near·60.
·Elliott's Body Shop.
the record· low was S below zero in
The tape provides ·prosecutors
with physical evidence of McVeigh's

eorge •

How desirable is bipartisanship?_

1955. Sunset tonight will be at .5:50

By The Associated PreM

• /

some gt1'Jldmo~r~ feel put:upon by
But it isri't because they can babytheir married qkildren, especially sit for us that we cherish grandmo!hwhen it comes IQ,baby-sitting. SOD'!e · ers. In the words of the little girl, in
say this is th!: &lt;ke aspt!:t of being a our story, "theyd011't have to do anygrandll)other ~Y dot~'t like.
.
thing but l1e there. Everyone should
Here are sdme comments from : have one because grandmas are the
rl'tJgenz grandmothen littending .. .church only-grown-upswhohavegottime."
symposium on.llaby-sitting.
Grandmothe.s deserve our &amp;Jipfchave lots of quarters ready. Or if they
"li isn:t a nillite'r !)!'not beina able ciation and our prayers. Here is ·•
take us for walks and slow down past to afford a baby sitter in thb c~ of jood prayer to say for grandmothers
things like pretty leaves and cater- my daughter'' family," said one (and grandfathers) every night when
pillars.
grandniother. · ~ijer husband is doing w~ go to bed:
"They should never hurry up. . 'l"!'ll .ahd they,4&amp;ve a maid, bul the
"We commit to thy can:, 0 Lord,
Usually they are fat but not too fat to . maid gets her evenings off and guess those who.an: old and full of yea.s
tie kids' shoes. They wear glasses and· who ·gets ell~ Oil to do the ·free · . and ·W~ can no.longer be.- tile burfunny underwear. They can take their. baby~sl·uingi" ~
,
. '' den and he.i!.Of !hi: day. Gr11nt them ·
teeth and gums off. Tl\ey .don't have .. · Other grandmothers don t like the to have so tnisted and learned oflbee
to be smart, only answ~r questions idea of beinJ "on call" at 611 times. ,.ip yea_rs th_at are gone, thatin the loss
like why dogs hate cats and how God "No matter w!!tn the you~g parents of their daily wort and the world IIleY
isn't married. ·
phone, they feel insulted tfyou tum have long known, they shall not have
"When they read to u5 they do~'.' them down," she grumbl~.
, lost~·. Vouchsafe to·them light at
mind if it's the same. story agam.
One grandmother has solved·thts evenanc ttme and the assurance thai
Everybody should have one, espe- problem by issuing baby-sitting scrip · by serene example the.Y alsa ~!"e
cially if you don't have a TV, because m the·form of play money. When the who only stand and watt. Amen.
grandmas are the 9nly grown-ups month's allotiJICnt runs .out, the par·
Georp Pl8Jenz II asyadlated
who have got time.!' ·
cnts have to fi~d someone else to do writer for Newspeper Enterprise
Beloved though they may be, .their baby-sil\ing.
AAoc:latlon.
anything but, be there. They are old
and they shouldn't play hard or run.
It is enough if they drive us to the
store where the prelend horse is and
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G
R n1

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Missing ~arge worker
still fa:ces ar~9n ,charge

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Why .God made grandOOothers
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Pomaoy.

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· B~tist Church: ....
. ··
· &amp;urvivlpa - • Claught.er, Gloria Gaynell S~venson of Columbus; a daugbtcr-in-law,lfenda J ..Braley ot Pomeroy; ~nd six grandchildren and II greatgraodchildi-en.
_.
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She was ...o precede.:! in dc8l!l by her fi.st htisbalid, Mel Thomas; her
second husband, H~ii)Cf Braley; ,aile! a son, Jack Braley Sr.

·'

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· By George R. Pl.a genz

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Sti~
.
Born April?, l!h~ in'Pon.e1oy, she was !,he daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. James Canteiberry. She Wff'.a homemaker and a nx:Jnb!:r.of the P.OillCroy

' that, II

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OSM proposes .new
regulation
for
mining
.

OHIO Weather
Satun:lay, Feb. 1

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�Sports

--.riiU:Ift,
~-n-• J,-..~~31,1117

The Dally

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In this Mek's VICtOty Circle,

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T1fl! VICTORY CIRCLI!
By Scott wor.

Quarter t2t111

Miller
II - 2-8-9=30
Southern
6-22- II -6;45
MiUer: Beth Lanning 1.:0.2/4=4,
Kristen Plant I -0-0=2, Sarah Dishon
1-0-0=2, Angie Lucas 3-0-0=6,.Corrie Coole 4-0-415= 12, Britnei Mer·
ckle 2-0-0=4. Totals: 12-0-fr'9a30
Southern: Renee Turley 8-2··
3/6=25, Cynthia Caldwell 1--0--011=2,
Kim Sayre 1-0-114=3, Brianne Proffitt 4-0-0=8, Jenny Friend 1-0-0=2,
Conny Horst 1-0-0=2, Erica ¥oott
0-1-0=3. Totals: 16-3-4/ll=45

FROM THE CORNER - Southern's Kim 8ayrl (left) lluncties 1
allat from tile right can.- of Jlle court . . Mil~'• Santh Dillion (12)
offers bellllld rninlnce during Thuray nlght'a Hockh~g·DIIrillon
game In Rllqlne. Tile TorJIIICIOIS won 45-30 to collect tllelr 1~ win
~· the ...1011.

-------sports bliets----oRcHARD PARK. N.Y. (AP)Jim KeJiy will e.nd an 11-year NFL
career that includes four straight
Super Bowl appearances today.
The 36-year-old quarterback and

owner Ralph Wilson have reportedlY been working on a $1 million
compensation deal. Kelly will
announce his retirement during a
news conference

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. - to Jeff Skinner, anolhe( perfor·
mance .like th8l at the Ale~ '
While sCavenging through lhe game;
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local ~ bins for recyc:~ to
- to Ron Logan, another defense
supplement my feeble salaril:s at 1M . as tough as his J-3-1 7,0110;
:
Daily Stnliul, I carne across some
-· to Howie Caldw'ell, his 200ih ·
c:onfideniill memoirs of several area ~arsity COBI=hing victory; •
coaches. Applliently, these area men., to·Howie Caldwell. 110 fiiO!e '
tors had bee'!· rorrespondiiiJ w'th trips to Ches•peake;
San'- Claus to gnnt these wishes for
- to Scott Wolfe, a teserve.lellll; ·
lhe new year.
- to·Tony Deem, hoine of!icials '
Santa in tum granted lhese wish- who call games as well as tMSe bn
es for lhe upcoming year:
· the road;
,
- to Howie Caldwell, a 6-10 post
- to.'Thny Deem, Nelsonville 11
player;
home next year;_
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- T to Jeff Slditner, a team as expe•• to Eastern alld . SOII!bern.
rienc:ed as his 1995-96 team;
' Al~xander moving up to the 'IVC
- to Scou Wolfe, a natural point Ohio Di.vision;
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guard;
.·.
•• to Meigs, IIJiother Michael
-- to Tony Deem, a post player Bartnnn and Mike Chancey;
taller than Coach Caldwell's new
. -- to Jenni Roush, a trip to the
addition;
DistriCt Tournament;
·
•• to lenni Roush, another 30••. to Scott Wolfe, the rqping of
point scorer like Renee Turley;
. the harvest qf a rebuilding year;
. -- to Ron Lqgan, a family with - . •• ·to Toriy Deem. a .l:bampi·
twin girls, both All-State dt&gt;uble-&lt;lig- onship;
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it scorers;
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-- to Jeff Skinner, some better
-- to Howie Caldwell, a big- IIICk in so many close games;
screen 'IV;
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" , •• to Howie Caldwell, a point
- to Scott Wolfe, ~ore warm guard averaging 20 a game to combodies to comple,ment his 8-man plement his new 6-10 posfpla~r;
line--up; .
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.-- to Tony Dllem, anotller year o(
-- to Scott Wolfe, _a lei!RI doctor;
eligibility for Eric Dillard to go with.
. -- to Tony Deem, another Otto, . his new-7' post player;
Bissell, or Durst; .
-· to Howie CaldWell, someope to
•• to Jenni Roush, a champl- step up alfd take charge;
onsllip, she deserve~;
(See VICTORY CIRCLE PaRe 5)

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Scoreboard
Loyola, Ill. 47, Wis.-Grm Bay 4~
N'. 11Hnois76. III.·Ctricaao 74
OhioSI:. 73, 1ndiana67
SW Missouri St. 11, C~i-'"on 71
Tenn.-Manin 71 , E. lllinots 68

Basketball
.NBA standings

Southwell

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

»:

L f&lt;L . lill

Mloml ....................32

12

New York ............. J 2
WuhinJIOn............ 22
Orlando ....,. .............20
NewJeney ............ l2
Philadelpbin .... ..... 10
Bosron ... .................9

21
20
Mt
33
32

.721

13

"'!

.711

.~1 2

si

9 '·:
10
19
21':
21 ':

,:;oo
.286
.233
.220

Central Division
~

Chicago.................. J9
DecroiL .................. 32
Atlanta ............ .... ,.29

II
U

Owlorre .............1!'i
CLEVELAND ....... 24

19
19

Milwaukec ......... :...ll , 22
lndi11na ................... 20 11
Toronro .................. l5 28

_.__;,

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.88ft

. 7~

.690

6'-:
9

-~

14

18 ,. "

ll~1 ,-t_·.

li.ti

Hoo11o11 · ...... .. ...~ ..32 12

.727

Urah ...................... J I

13

.705

I

Minncso1a .............. 20 24

.45.,

12

64

Ore1an 87. UCLA 8~ tOT)
Snn Frnnclscu 61. Si. Mlll'y's, Cal. 60

28 .:u.~
1( ,
31 . .J lf . 18 :
;\0 • .268
19'·:
W .170 2:'i '·,

Padflt: Dlll'itlon
L.A. l.nk5S ...........:n 12 7:1:\
Se.1ule .................... 31 13 .70~
Por11and ...........,. ..... 2!'1 20 - ~~6

Santa Chn 6R. San Diego~
Sputhem C:r.l71 . Oregun St. 6R
Uouh S.. 8~ . Cui Puly-SLO
WashinJIOn 72, Arizona Sc. 61
Wyoming 7~ . Air fMe 64 ·

Ohio men's
college·scores

K
14

2~

.405

14~

Golden Srnlc ......... :17 26
Phoenill ................. 1~ -'0

.~'9~

I~

J:\:\

IR

Midwestern Colleaiole
Butl¢r 84, Clt:VC!Iand St. 47
Detroit 6~. Wri&amp;f1t 51. 63

Thurtd ay's scores

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:'iS, Sprina. Nonhcasttrn
•9
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T....,. 01&lt;. 42.llolaw.,. Or. ll
Tinona ,1, A)'lti,.Ville )!i

Ottawa H-ill a 66, Tol . E"'manuel

8.,.. I~

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Pandora-Oilboa

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40

?~·

Nardi• Nonhe111

Paulding SI, lima Perry 30
Pemberville EutwOOIJ ~6. Oibsoa-

boo'840.

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Fenym"'' 60. Rossfool )9

Plymouth 51. M..-oeviUc SO
{W, Va.) Plca.ant 60. C'helhin:
River Val. 49,
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Portsmouth Nolrt Dome SO, FrankJin
Fumacl" Grten 41
Racifte Soo1hem 45. Mil~ 30
Rayland Buckeye Local 49, QcaVct"'
Local JK
Richmond &amp;li:Mtn 6'1,_E. UvetpODI ~
Richmond His. 72. Otlmour 4M
Rocky Ri\ICI' Luthei-an W. !\4, Bea&amp;:h"wood :H .·
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S. Ccmrlll 49, Mapleton 42
S. Ran&amp;c61,1adson-Millon42
S. Weblter 57. Lu~:asvilk: Val. 50
Sandy Val. 62, J.:wctt·S.:m :'i2 -~
St"bting·5$, United :W.
ShadysitJe 6~. Batm."Svillc 4]
~ Point

PaUOO 52. Hilbdlk 42
Dnn11ille 42. E. knoll :\9 (0T)
Day. Crurull S~. Leb~mnn 43
Day. Dunbur M . SprinJ. Sooth 67
Uay. Jcrtimrun 4H. Middlt!rown Ch,.
lklinna: :'i I, Van Wer1 42
. I.A'(Jmff Rivt.uide 4:'. Mc~:hunicNbUrJI

Tq&gt;p Cily :16. Dooy. S1- 2l
Toi. - • 2 . N........ 20

--IllY- '
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v., Wert Unt.:Ofnview -'1. Columbus
Grow46
tl
Vmnillel-49, Gnabam .17
Vi Ilion Co. ~~ . Heltonville- York 45
·- W. Holrtao4:'i: l.oudnnville 20
W. Jerrmon 61, JIKI:IIh'M Akk.'t 37
W. Laru)'dte RidJe~ :'i:'i, Mohan

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W. Muskin&amp;um 40, Lnncastcr 2.~
WDmnsvillc HIJ. 66. Ck:. Olcnvilk:

WashinJion C.H. ~1~ London 4K ·
Waterford SO. Shci!Gntbah '47
W&lt;~)'IMl: Tmt.-e 34, AniWCf'Jl 29
·

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60,

WII,Yn,t:t~Oeki-Gu5hen

~~~

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~9 114· 1·:'i4
~1 I..._ 1-~2
47 . 14) 1~7

46 l(ll "' IMJ
o42. 1"'1 · 1.11
40 1.10 lo4:\

WESTERN CONFERENCE

44
B~njamin

...

. PiUsbuflh .......... 2711 ~ _.
Hu1Talo ............... 26 19 S
HartfC1nL ........... 20 22 7
Mu.tR.'tll.. ........... l,91.~ K
BnstoCI.. .... ,.........IH 2.1 6
Ouawn .............. .1~ 2.110

um..a67. Sprilrf:. Nm1hwcw.."m ~~
Van B..-.m 67.,""psic 44

W. Liberty Salem 44,

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Flurido .............. 26 14 10 62 141&gt; ' Ill
N_.Y. Raftim .... .l.UO 1 :'i1 17H, "14:'i .,.
N!.'W hncy ........ 24 17 6 ~ 172 116 \
Washtnf!kln ........ 202S S 4~ 1:11 IJ)\ f
Tampn Bay ........ IS 24 ~ 42 IJ7, l:'i~
N.Y. Islandcn ... .l6
~ . 41 ll? I 'Ill

Tri·Villl&amp;e l6, Tri-County N.}J
T!i11166. lndiaool ~ 4~ .
Triway 44. Bla:k Raver 31
' T.-carawaa Val. 39, Fairtt. 36
Un ion Cll~ Miuissinawa Val. 69.
Bnodfool41)
,
UniMo Local :'il, Indian C'n:ck l6 ,

Jail ).J

~-Ill·-

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c.nooot D,l•-

~1~ ~ ~ ~ ~ .

...............
St.l.AJUis ............ 2."12.l &lt;I ,.. 1~9 161 "•
1Jt.'troil................ 2217 '.1 ~3 144 Ill
MlucniJL ..'............22 ~4 .. 4K 1;\'J 1~7
~icaan .............. IH16 K

Tnmntu .............. l9 32 0

44 1~ JJ~ .
3K 149 1110

Mou~ Vernon N~ K2.

Derroit nrNew Jt.'f'sey, I p.m.
Phoi!ni11 nt Tnronto . .l p.11.
Miami;tt CLEVELAND. 7:JUp.m.
Utllh a1 O..llat, H:lO p.m.
Phiblelphiu at- Milw!JUkn!, CJ p.m.
Sal;nmtento at llenver. 9 p.m.
Golden Stlde ot L.A. CliJ'II'ICr•. 10: ~ .

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Tit'fin 6.'i

Non-coilferenee play
Coli . of W . Vlr(!inht H4. RIU
GRANDE in
·
Goshen 76, Bluffiun 74
Madonm1 90, Cedarvilk H~ (()T)
Tr.msylvnnia 70, Ccntml Sl. M
Urb.·mu4U. Wilberforce 6.~ ·

Buckeyt- Val. ~- CardinJ•

· . Ohio women's
coll~e scores
Midwestern Collepate

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Dc~roiiW.

ClcvC!hlfH.I S1. K2

Great Lakes Inter&lt;olleglate
N. Michip.an HI •..Ashluud 62

h'''otilt St.

Mh:h.-l)eatborn ~. WUbtrfoo."&lt;" ~J

Notre DaMe. Ohio ~ . Mount Vemo11

]~

lOTI

The Daily Sentinel
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• ~weethearts • Moms &amp; -Dads • Grand~rents ~ teachers
·
• Babysitters • 'Friends

Elm~

Atlanta ac D::nvtr. 9 p.m.
WashillltOn nii..A, La~. 9:JO p.m.

NCAA Division f
. · men's scores
East

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WRITE A MESSAGE TO Y01JR ~PE~IAL VALENTINE
Remember that special someone this
Valentine's Day with a message In

·

Kalid.1 ~~. LimU Catb. J I
Kcnston hO. Olanji.c .W
Kidron C.:ntrul ('hr. 5.1, Akron

.

Anyone who would appredate a thougbttUI word fl'C1IJI you! AD Vllleatlne . .
Hearts will be pubUshed In the Fetituary 14th Issue at a c:ost ot oniy $6:00!

,....,,
......
.
.tlie heart .... aJo.g .

MUST BE PREPAID!

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MuiiM!hu"u• 68'. OeocJe Wuhina·
~- ton6.1
Tc...,k 68. S.. Joseph's ~9

whll $6.00 to:

Vmnom 79, Mahae 76

.

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words!
'J

Tile Daly Seallsel .
Yaleatlse.Hearts' ··
I 11 Coaat Street
Pa•eroy, OH 45769

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been

has
going on for 30 years," said
Bugel, who referred to Davis as "the
coach."

Even Oavis,. who coached the
Raiders in 1963-65, seemed taken
· aback by the show of eniotion from
Bugel.
- "I didn't say there's a love
affair," Davis responded, "I hired
Joe because he proved over the past
two years total loyalty. It's no love
affair, I'm just telling you what the
facts are."
The other candidates who inter•
viewed for the joh were Raiders special teams coach Rusty Tillman and
Philadelphia Bagles offensive ;.oordinator Jon Gruden. Bugel said he
hopes Tillman stays witli the Raiders.
Davis said he initially · was
inclined to hire someo~ IIIBide the

organization, and interviewed Gruden will&gt; that in mind. But he said
many players expressed their support
·for Bugel.
''There was overwhelming sup- ,
port from our players, aod I was
shocked by it, relative to too hiring
of Joe Bugel," Davis said. "There
were visits to my office .by pl~yers I
hadn't seen in a year.' '
Bugel said he wu grateful for the
support, and promised he would
treat his players accordingly.
." I'm not ashanied to tell our current players I love them and I respect
them,'' Bugel said.
Tailback Napoleon Kaufman.
who watched from the back of the
news co'nference, said Raiders·players wen: happy with the decision.
"I 'm excited ~bout it," Kaufman

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3. 6-2 ACC), which rose to No. 2
nationally beft&gt;re losing to Wake Forest.and North Carolina last week.
Mau Harpring scored 22 points to
lead the Yellow Jaclcets (8-1 0.'2 6).
No. 10 Arizona 87
WIISbillgton State 78
At Pullman, Wll&amp;h.. Michael
Dickerson scored 28 points and the
·Wildcats (13-4, 6-2 Pac-10) bealthe
Cougars for the 23rd straight time.
Washington State (10.-9, 2-6)
closed to 83-76 when Isaac Fontaine
hit a pair of free throws with 45 sec. onds remaining. Arizona's Miles
Simon hit four .of six free throws in
the final seconds to put the game out
of reach.
.
Fontaine scored 32 points and
Carlos Daniel added 17 and a gamehigh 10 rebouods for WSU.
No. 9 Loalsville 81
No. 8 Cincinnati 70
At Louisville, eric Johnson .
scorec! 10 points during a 20-5 run
that sparked the Cardinals ( 18-2, 5I) in the rugged Conference USA
7

matchup.
.,
Louisville made 34 of 45 free
throws as Cincinnati commiued a
season-high · 34 fouls. Cincinnati ,
(14_.4, 3- 1) also turned the ball over 22 times, leading to I~ points fur
Louisville.
DcJuan Wheat scored 18 poinL' to
lead the Cardinals.
Ruben PattersOn led Cincinnati
with 18 points and II rebounds, and
Danny Fortson had 16 points.
No. 21 Tulsa 69
So"them Methodist 49
At Tulsa, Shea Seals scored 14
points and reached the 2,000-poinl
mark in career scoring for ohc Golden Hurricane ( 16-5, 6- I WAC).
Seals made two jumpers during a
16-4 run early in the second half I hat !l
helped Tulsa open a 20-point lead.
Troy Matthews scored I 5 points i.
to lead SMU (1;2.-6, 4-4) .
Seals is sccond"on Tulsa's career
-scoring list behind Steve Harris, who
finished with 2,272 points.

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said. "He's a motivator. Tite players
in general are sitting llaclc now and ·
excited about it."
.White was fired on Christmas
Eve after compiling a 15-17 record
and failing to make the playoffs in
two seasons with the Raiders.
· The Raiders started 1-4 last season and never got above .500, finishing 7-9. In 199S, Oakland started
8-2, hut lost its final six games.
Davis left the task of firing White
·to senior assistant Bruce Allen, and
said Thursday he still has not spoken
with ijis former coach.
"I think there will come a time ·
when I talk to hil)l. I will talk to him ·
at the proper time." Davis said.
"Time is a great healer, and there
were some wounds to heal." ·
The Raiders~ who proclaim them-

selves "The Team of the Decades, "
-are only 62-50 in the 1990s and have
made the playoffs just once in the
past five years. Attendance was disappointing this season .
The Raiders sold out only lhree
games this year after the Oakland
·Cpliseum was expanded lo 62;500
seats, part of the $200 million deal
returning the Raiders to _Oakland

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VIctory C/rc;le.•. ...tc::;:on:!ti:nucd~·~::.::ro::::m~P~ag:::_e~4&gt;____,-----~------- '

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-- to Eastern's girls, the graduation
of Belpre:s Kathy Coyner and Southem's Renee Turley;
-- to Tony Deem, the wish that
Coach Caldwell's wishes don't come

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true;

·- to Howie Caldwell, the wish
that Coach Deem's wishes don't

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five slfort ~ two hours or less.Jiractices
teams )¥!11by.have
kickoff
had time
a !Qtal
Su'nday
of only
at
J\loha Stadium.
- . "We're obviously lilflited with
what we cian•do;'' Capers uiil. "lbc
main ttlin1 we by to clo is just set
!lverybody on lhe same p~~~e,termi·
nofoly-wise:.Tile defense is differcnt, of coune, beca11se lhe rules for
lhe Pro Bowl restriet what you can
do, tlcm't allow blitzing for
inscuc:e."
'
· Both lie and Coughlin were
. enjoyintl U,Cir first time as Pro Bowl
coachel. ·
"It's pelt til be here tGjHeic:nting
the JIIUifS, and fo be here rubbing
elbowl with Ill thole peal playen,"
CDuJhlin said.
, ,
' onwinl the duty of coaching thC
Pwo Bowhqulda iaa tributillto how
fir Capen and CouJhlin toQk their
IAIIII in IJUdl Ilion lpans. The
~ for the 1111·1111' pii!O. both
tho held COIIChoa and their stiffs,
!l"'ll•""a,'l.., fJuD the team1 that loll
Ia the coafon~IICI cllatnpionship
if' DI
So lllllh C ; a' hnthen, wlto

~.

Duquesne 80, Daylun 12
1
Hartford 71. New Han~p~~hine 61

of heart palpitations!'
Following the win, Ayers'·emotions were tempered by concern for
his player's condition.
"It's stil.l griin1 to be a tough
. ~k until we get Jel'maine's situation.resolved," Ayerl'said.
·
Indiana coach Bobby Knight
praised the Buckeyes' effort.
"Ohio Stale had a challenge to
play without lhe kid 'Who has played
well for them and we'had a challenge
to rise to the occasion," Knight said.
"We didn't, aod thai was the story of
the game."
. _,c
Neil Reed scored '19 points, AJ.
Guyton hid I 4- J.{ in lhe first half
-llld Olarlie Millet I I for Indiana
(17-S, 4-4).
'
Oliio State ~ ~-0 run midway through lhe ~half to open
a 5+47 lead.
~ ·
Indiana, 0-4 in Bill 'ten games
when tniling 8l halftime, ~losed
· within three points twice in the final
minute, but each ti.,ie Stringer fol-

'

45, said following a68-S4 winolowed liy hitting .free throWs.
"It was gut-check time," Stringer Southem Mississippi.
said: "We know the effort we have
No.4Utah74
tq·give .for 40 minutes."
· .
'Iisai-EI r.o 51
Elsewhere in the AP Top 25, 11
Keith Van Hom, plagued with
wu No. 4 Utah 74, 'texas-PI Paso foul trouble and held widiout a point
51; No. 7 Clemson 70. Gcoliia Tech in the first h8Jf, keyed • second-half
57: No. 9 LoUisville 81, No. 8 run to lead the Utes (1.5-2, 7-0
Cincinnati 70; No. I0 Arizona 87. Western Athletic Conference) at Ill
Wuhington State 78; No. 21 Tulsa Paso.
.
69, Soulhern Methodist49; and No.
Van Horn scored (I of ~is 13
24 Marquette 7 I, South Aorida 36. points in a decisive IS-2 run that
gave the Utes a 24-point advantase
Flllcb' to raip a• Memphis
Memphis basketball coach Larry . with less than five minutes remain'
,
Finch, under lire for low attendance ing.
Michael Doleac led the Utes 'with
despite averaging 20 victories a sea·
son, will resign at the end of the sea- IS points, and Diew Hansen added
sOn.
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14.
The announcement, made ThursU1EP fell to 8-9, 2-6.
No.7 C1 rn• 70 .
day night by Finch aod the university, came after several days of reports
G--A Tecla 57
.
thai the univenity was negotiating to
At Clemson, S.C., Terrell Mcln-·
buy O.t the final tltice years on tymscored 14ofhis 17pointsinthe
secood half Is the Tigers sgapped
Finch's roniract.
- "Right now this is an emoti\)llal · their two-game ACC losing streak.
- time for me. aod any statement I , GreJ Bucllner scored 17 points
make will be fortbcoming," Finch, . aod Merl Code I 4 for Clems~n! 17-

comc·truc;

borrow Coach Caldwell's hig saccn ·
'IV;

:-to Scou Wolfe, the state's leadi~g scorer Scmaka Randall, 34.5
-- to Coach Wolfe, nu more' wi shpoints per game;
•• to lhc Eastern reserves, a few Cl'i~ jusi lots and lots of hard work;
-- to all area teams, Ali the luck
more wins because they really husin the World!
tle·
Until next time I'll sec you in the
. •.. IU Eas!crn's girls. some conlivictory circle!
dencc to rnatch the talent;
.-- (() Jcnni Roush1 permission to _

•• to Coach Skinner, that neilhcr
Conuh Deem's nor Coach Caldwell's
wishes come lruc;
-- to Scott Wolfe, a new wife;

Since the
NFI; 111·11111 have a verY, brief time
tcigetho{' hefcire' they play the Pro ·
Bowi,!Dom Clpen and·Tom Coujh.
iin ~ Ill be ideally suited .to
coaciJ tile two teams.
·
-After ell, Capers needed just two
ye.-st~? pj_m the e~pansion·. Carolina
PanihOil mto a Super Bowl con·.,
~ndCr, aPe! Coughlin did the same
with tile iacksonville Jaguars; .
'The qpposin1 coaches have had a
. COftllidei'ably shorter period to meld
a winnii)J team this week.
· Bcilh 'Capers' NFC all-stars aod
Coughlin's AFC squad worked out
for the first time Tuesday, so . the

JNI. tOVE LNS
'

IQideqoing tests. after complainin1

7

HO~L\ILU (AP) -

c

t .

•t,

By, Tile AII ac· d Pt II
A win o- Indiana is spccill for
Ohio •S'-te ,anytime. This one,
thoush. hid extn naeaninl for the
Buckeyes.
Ohio State, playinJ with ill sc:cond leadinf scotet sidelined witll
heM probleins and 1111id specuiMion
about cOIICh Randy Ayers' future,
· stopped a· four-game losing streak
Thursday night with a 73-67 victory over lhe No. I7 Hoosiers at
ColumbUs.
. ·
Dmnon StrinJer scored I8 points,
including foui- free throws in the
fmll 2 I seconds, .u Ohio State coming off a 3 I -point Joss to North·
'w ertem- ended a four-game losinJ
:skid apnst the H~ (17-5 over:Ill, 4-4 .Bia Ten).
N••hnn Col~n ~ IS
~ points, . Shaun ~ 14, Otis
' Winslon II and JIIIOil Sinsleton .10
for Ohio Stale, which wu missing
· starting center Jermaine Ta.te. ·
. Thte, the team's second-leading
scorer at 14. I points a game, is

ay _.·PliERs

1irfin

b.mtliiiiWD Gr~·cncvicw ~h. Way-

uc~vilk-.fll

.

'

Hunlin,ton -46, Z4nci Trtk:c 40
Jacbon Ccnt.:r SS, Annu .\ 2

Rlil GR~NDE 116. Ollin Volky 91

Ohio H.S. girls' SC'ores

'

Hud.'i41n ~. Sulon ol ~

Nlltftl'ltne ~I

,Oic:Dflo nl Scan~. ~: :.lO.r. m.
CLE\I~ND at Muuru, 6 r.m.
Vancouvtr n1 BOIIon, 7 p.m.
Phoenix at Detroit, 7 p.m.

l

Calvert ~7 ·
Fr..nklin4K. Odonl Tal;~w&lt;~m.!a 26
Fn.·munt Sl. Jo.~h .~5 . Mohawk 46
G:111ipnlill46. Jock:oon J I
Garuway 6'1. Tu.q·ur.twru~ Cltlh. JK
OciWp:lilwn 47. Bclhc.l·Tmi: 36
. Hamikoo !'i3. Unm Sr. 44
..
Humiltun Badin -t7, Cin. Ro~t:r Ba·
cnn J6
Hamler Ppcrkk Hcnry-76, Ot~gu 47
f-k;lthJ3. G,anvil}l! 40
'
Hill"horu 117. Felicity ~2
HulFOtlu,49. Hicksville 31
Hupcw.:ll· l.uudtm79, Bcu"villt: lS
Htlwl:md SM. GarfllJid 50

No\..conrerenee ~ay

a-lone 111 New York. I r .m. .
Houaron 81 OriAAdo. I p.m·.
·"
New, lerac:y otlndiana. 2:30 p.nt. '
Portland • Mi...,IOfa, .1:30 p.m.'

w~.~ndelln 74.

.f

Ohio State upsets No•.17 Indiana; Louisville beats UC

Pro .Bowl
slated.for
Sund'a-y

,, '

Fairbank~

Ealcm llill tried to force !be ball
inside and JDIIde many cosdy
tumonn, oftellpviq up lhc OUIIidr
shot it .-Ito ojJen the inside pme
blckup.
Meanwhile, the game got brutal.
Federal used its bulk to lwnmer
away 11 Eastern .and the Eagles
tweaked b!K;k, but on a smaller
scale. The game got so physical it
hid to he stopped several times.
Wolfe said, "The officills didn't
make bad calls, !hey just didn't
make any calls and the g~~~ne physically got out of.bllld!"
•
Despite lhe rouihness, with 3:43
left in the third quarter only four
fouls had been called; Federal 3 and

E Ml:m I. E rt mwubeldiCCftlea with J3rebounds (Karr 12. Brannon
to this pointllld ~ned that WIY
II).
:
Eastern had 14 steals, 2&lt;}~
throucbout the fnme ..
tumOven, ten assillS (Brannon 3);
Wolfe added, "We got pushed
arouad and our Jir1s became liu&amp;- llld 17 fouls. Federal hit20-SO, 2-S .
three's, and was I 2-19 11 the line. ;:
tnltid. We only had si~ playen and
took a good souod heating, literally. O...rfv fllflla
Federal
16-1 2- 15-15:58
Still, I'm very, very proud of my
11 -12-0-20=43
girls. There are no better si~ young Eastern
Eutem:
-·
Davis
2-0-0=4,'
varsity players anywhere. After getting down 23 at one point, we came Stephanie Evans 1-1-414=9, Karr20-4/4=8. Brannon 7-0-313= 17, Hoi- ·
~k to cut it to I 5 at the finish. We
didn't die."
•
lo~ 0-0-112= I, Angie Wolfe 2-0- ·
Federal led 43-23 after the third CY3=4. Totals: .J4-1-J2116;43
Fedenl Hocking: Russell 8-2frame and went on to claim the 58!13 win. Brannon had six in 11\e last 0=22, Hart 3-0-2/6=8, Waderker 0- '
frame. while Karr and Evans each 0-112=1, Buck 2..().112=5; Mahomey .. 1..()..0:2, Elasky 1..()..0:2, Heidi Rns- &gt;
had five.
Eastern hit 15-58 overall, hit 1-4
moissen 0-0-415=4, Linscott 5- ·
three's, and was 12- 16 al the line
4/4=14. Totals: 20-2-12-19=58-

·

defeated Washingulh 38-9. "I wantOAKLAND, Cllif. (AP) - Joe ed to be pan of the' silver and
.Bugel remembers wllking off .the black.''
.
_fteld with his defeared Washington
Bugel was an assistant coach
Redsldns followina the 19!J4 Super with Washington in ,1981-89, during
B.owl aod wonderin1 whll it felt like which time the kcdskins won two
·mbe' put of lhe winning Raiders SuperBowls. In 19!l0-93. hewas20~ •
, , _
..c. ·,
44 at Phoenix in his only previous
' N~w he's iespon"sible for tJyinito head coaching jOb. 1
get lhe Oakland Raiden back to the
- "This, to me, is the ultimate·
NFLclwnpionshipgameforlhefirst thing in my profeSljionallife," said
time since then.
Bugel, who was considered for the
Bugel, who spent the paSt two - Rai~' top Job i~. 1995, but lost out
seiiSons . as the Raiders' assistant to Molce Wh1te. It mea~s a great
head coach for offense; was elevat- deal to me to be a Raider."
ed to the head coaching joh ThursMinutes after finally gelling tbe
da~.
·
.. ·
· position, Bugel .carried out perhaps
"I suffered for 13 years waiting the most. e~sentoal task ,that accomfor this head coaching job," he said, ~ames·the Joh -la~fshmg praose on
tllinking back to the Super Bowl in team owner AI DavtSI
"I love AI Davis. This love affair
•which the Los Angeles Raiders

»: L I ftl. lif liA
Phi~a ....... 29 14 7 6~ 1~9 'Ill

Iall

froet This hid beea the E I'IID
bread llld buller of the finl hllf.

In Top 25 col'-t1e basketball, ···

By ROB GLOSTER

' ' !·
EASTERN CONFERENCE

~-..,

Ta:um~h

..

.t·~'

NHL standings

r"'

abo miised 10111e easy sbola -ty.
Had it not ~ for thole laplel. we
coald have boen up by IS M the hllf.
ltl'=d, - go lD the Ioder 100111
down 2&amp;-23, but still very 1DUCh ill
lhe 111M-"
The key to Pedenl's second period was an eight point inside ~
frol:n senior Gretchen Ljnscoa. Brannon added six for the Eagles, Davis
had two, and Stephanie Evans lwn·
rnered out four points to lead the
Eastern attack. Eastern bad
outscored Federal 12-6 in the traJne
early, but lhe fllUDC ended even 1212 (28-23). '
''
Federal's defense plugged up the
middle in lhe second half. c:ollapsinll
bn Karr, taking away the baseline
and Eastern's pick aod roll's out

Ra,ders promote Bugel to-. fJead coach's post

Hockey

.Jeffcmm S2. Spcncer11ille 42
E. Canton 60. Akron MllnChc~ter 4.1
E. Paklitine 4~. Sflwhc:m Local 24
El11tlnkc N. 7~. Maplc ' Ht~ . .17
F.Nda 77, Otluwa-Ginndorf ~:'
Euclid 70. Willoughby S. :w
Fairfrekl Union 4~. Ordeville 34
t-:airvil:w 6M. F.dJt.'t1on ~9
F_ayetfc 60. Pt:ui1Yillc SK
Findlay libl.trty B~nlun !16, Vanlue 21

Mid-Ohio Confereri&lt;e

· Saturday's gam••

Sunday's games

Otqon Clay ?fJ. Fosloria 52
OregOn Slritt.'h 48. Danbury )I

'

Delrhu~

Fim.llay M. Ohiu Dominh.:an 42
Malone 90, ShiiWiltl.'e St. H
'

Tonight's ganies

p.m.

~9

Omnge Otr. 44, Ha~haway Brown 36

Col. Ealt 37, ( QI. Mitnin .lJ
Cui. lndej~~.omki'ICI! _,8, Col. Briu~ 29
Col. linden-McKinley 72 . Col. ·

Dl.'l:rw~

• 1\sh\and ~H . N. Mkhi~n 51

Ponlnrw.l a1 Bf!Ston. 7 ~ . m .
Orlaado 111 P'tuladi:tJ!fua. 7:30p.m.
Milwau~ Ill Owlo11c. 7:30p.m
Huuston ui lntli:ma. Hp.m.
_Min~Sotn at Snn Anhmiu. tUO p.m.
W&lt;~5hington al Seaul~. I() p.m
A1lan1 11 a1 Vancouver. 10 p.m.
Chi~:tgo ~~ ~Gulden ~ale. JO:JO p.m.

~

.a3

Oo1k Hill72. Wheelmbur1 S6
.
Oakwood 40, Middletown Madi~on

'

You. Ubcny ~2.11oodF )1
· You. Ursuhne 49, Austialown-Fikh
40

Snylcr J7. HilltOp 22
Summil S111ion Lic;kin&amp; H11. :'i6 •
Millenpmt ]9 I
. SWIMon 7:\, Everpeen 42
Sylvania Soulh¥iew !li2. Sylvania
NonhvieW 50 COO
Teaya Val, 61 , Amanda·Ciearc~k '

Old Fort74, Tol. ChriSiian 4."i
01{,1 Wash. Buckeye Trail :'i3, CahJ·w,ell 39
.
-

CO¥inglon 49. Twin VaUc:y S. 40
O.rlhop F~ls ~'· Rnvennn4~

Great Lakes lntercollt«Jal&lt;

,

Denver 11.1. Hou51on 109
Utnh 102. A1lar.m 96
L.A. Clippen 100, Vanc:ouYCJ 94
Chicn!o Ill . Saciamento 9J

·, •

211

s,.;... n .

ron 49(01'1

New Jersey 113. Phoenix 101
·Minlk:sotu 92, OIUI~ K2

·

Col . M:trion-Frantlin 76. Cnl. Enu01001'64
•
... Col. Ohio Oc~rf 29. Michi&amp;Uo 1Xaf26
. Col. WC!St 67. Col. SOulh ~4
Caldwal« 68. Marton Local 41
Cnlumbin ~7. Cuyaho!a HIS. 48 ·
Cmllllld Lakeview 68, NeWlon Full~

47

S......... )6, Lolelan&lt;ll2

Northwood 37. Geno.1 26
NOI"'itnlk Sc. Paul 54, Collins Western
Reserve- 2R
Ook Glen, W.Va: ~lr Wellavillc ~8

Ntl!lhlllhd70 -

1•

I ': .

.Sacramento ............ l9 26 .422
L.A.Ciippcrs ........ .l7

Nevada 79, UC Santa Barburtl6~
New Mexico St. 84, Lona Bcu~:h St.

.

~w Ric:,el 96, N. Balti~ .U .
Northridge 48, Wonhin4tan Chr. 4S
N. R;dguille Lake R1d1e 4:t . Andrews 24

Ck. Marshall 79. Clc. Eoso 71 ·
Coal Grove 45, 1ronton 44
·
Col. Acad..wy ,8. Tree of Urc ~7
Col. Drookha~n 76. Col. Whet!to~.

2~

·

euterq 34

Wellston 60, Iron1on St. lusept1 I~
Wcstetn La&amp;hlm 46, Cleowwd o4J
Whilchou•( Wayn( 4~ . Holland

w...,.._

· '
New Rkhmood 43~ Cicrmool Nonh-

Cin. TuqMn 47, Amelia 37
Cin. Unuline 6&amp;. Cin. McNicholll.!i ~2
Cin. Westen~ Hills ~~ . Cin. ~ken 24
Cin. WyQmina 66. Cia Muricmont 47
CSe. lnclependence J2, Brooklyn 25

Fat West

Arizona 87. Washin&amp;ton St: 1K
Boi.c St. 67, UC Irvine 46
Colorado St. 78, UNLV 6H
Fresno St 87. Sari DiegO Sl. 7 I
Hawaii K7, San Jose S1. 74
ldlno 7l, C:JJ St.-FuiJenon 6_,
. Mon~an~r Sl. 83. SOK:~nto Sl. 66

17';

Mldw~Ill•~

Dalhas .............. ,.... ,. l4
Dcnver ................ :.. l4
San Antonio ........... ll
Vancuuver ...... ....... 8

811aviaJ2
Cin. Taft 53. Doy. Meadowdale 48

Tulsa 69. Southern Melh. 49
Utah 74, Tu~t~·EI Pil50 ~I

14'~

.558

.48~
.476
.349

canum46

46

Sprioi. l..ocal 61, Lowelh•illc 31
SJ!rin,. Shawnee 5.1. Grttnon ~I
Sprinaboro :'i8. Hnrnihon RMs 46
So. M"))80.
6)
Stewart F~cral Hockina :'iS.
Reecbville Eastern 43
Stow 52. W;ma Hard.ina 31

· New Breinra 70. ·New Knoaville64
New PariJ Narional Trail 6,2. Ar-

Cin. Oak-Hills67,0n. Wilhrow41
Cin. Reading ~9. Ci11, IDitinn Hill 38
.Cin. Sev~n Hitb 41. Cin. Country
Day-)1
Cin. S1. Bernard 64, Cin. Lockland 50
Cin . Summit Country Day 36,

. {Of)

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

Lotin61 •
Cin. Hills Cbr. S4. Cin. ~ N. CoUeae
Hill.l9
Cin. L.aradmark 28, New MimB 25
. Cin. Madeii"D 46, Cia. Da:r Part 21
· Cin. McAuley 58, Cin . Mt . Not1c
O;ome56

Ark .-Linle Rock 61 . Teus-Pan
Ameiicmr 46
l.omor 76. Arbnsa~ So.67
.
NE l..oJ,Ibiana 14. Texas-San Amollio
81
'
PacifK
NOfth Texas S2 .
Rice 82. T~•o.s Olrislian RO
SW Tuas St R7. NW l.ouiJillM 77
Sam Hou11on S1 . R7. Stephen
F.Auslin n
Te~•-ArliQIIOO 69. M~:Ncae St. 67

Atlantk DivWon

-11'

uta of the pme, llld belen awtlk·
Pedeall Hockill hid buik
leads of 6-0, 12-2. lid 16--3. TheD
E"l •tot kiued by . . h-kabell
priacc . . . . . . ICCIIi.. tile fillll
eiJhl points ofthe frlme, 16--11. Rutsell hid eipt for F+ll it the
frame, while Brat111011 ... four, ICarr
liRe, and Wolfe and O.Vis two each
for Eutem in a bal. . lUlCk. ·
Putern came blc~ .lllrong, making the MCe'Mry adjustments, to
lead 21·20 IIIII in lhe PfOCCSS forced
two FcdenJ Hocking lime outs.
Coach Scott Wolf~ of Eastern
said, "Except for lhe
two min·
utea aad the Jut two minutes of lhe
first hllf, we played a very great ftrst
half. We got off to a slow start and
Jave up six points in the po&amp;t in the
last couple minutes o_f .lhe half. We

.eaiaa

a 21·20 E I ft Je8d to
leal • the half 2&amp;-23 ·ett 101118 10 a
51-43 viceory oo. theE t a Lady
Haps 'l1lllndtoy • Senllt. P k n
~.pelt m. hllf, but- beld
~l'lns the thin! quana-, (I 5-0),
wilb whM proved to be the diffaence
inthepme.
Pedeall Hockin1 is' now 10-9
ovenll and Eastern diOps to .5-12.
Came ~II hid a great game
:with eipt field gOIIIs plus two three
poi-. en I'9Uie to a 22-point effort,
~ 'Oreb:hen u - closed out her
home career with 14 points and 14
relw•ftds, ·. Eutem - led by another great
effort from sophomore Jessica Brannon with I 7 points and 11 n:bounds.
~ lapsed lhe fint two mill·
OIW-

Scribe finds loc~l
coaches' ·wish· lists

Lucas six, Rhawny Dutiel four IJid
two each from Kristen Plant and
• Sarah Dishon. ·
Southe'rn hit I9-(iO from the floor
overall apd 3-13 from three-point
range and 4- II 8l the line with 34
rebounds (Turley 12,Sayre 5, Horst
5). SHS had 24 steals (Thrley II), I 2
assists, I I turnovers, 12 fouls and
three blocks. Miller hit 12-45, 0-5,
hail40 rebounds (Plant 10, Coolc7,
Lanning 7), seven steals, five assists,
'1.7 turnovers and 13 fouls.
Southern won the reserve game
38-3 I led by Stacy Lyons with I 5
and Kim Ihle with .s. FeliCia Page
had I6 for Miller.
· Southern is now 12-7 overall en
route ·to its best season in many
years.
Southern hos!s Ravenswooil
Wednesday, while Miller hosts
Millersport, the opponent of its only
victory this season.

Renee Turley had over half
- .... lhe
'
Southern points and nearly ourscored
lhe entire Miller Falcqn team as lhe
Soulhem Tornadoes rolled to a 4.5-30
Tri-Valley Conference win Thursday
in RaCine.
Turley, second in the state in scoring according to the Ohio Girls Basketball Magazine, is being sopght by
' the University of Rio Grande as a
possible recruit and again had powerful slats to bolster a great basketball image.
· Turley led the way with 25 points,
but also had 12 rebounds, II steals,:
seven assi.sts and three blocked shots
to .lead every category of the Southem stat sheet.
:
Miller (1 -17) slowed the ball
down to the tune ofan 11-6 first period lead for the Falcons, holding Turley to just two points. Then the talented ball handler exploded for 13
second quarter points that pushed
Southern to a 22-2 second period
scoring offset and a 28-13 halftime
lead.
Southern went on jo lead 39-21
and ended up on top 39-30 at the
end.
Other Southern scorers were Bri-·
anne Proffitt with eight, Kim Sayre
three, Cynthia Caldwell two, Conny
Horst two, Erica Amott two and Stacy Lyons three.
Miller was led by Corrie (;ook
with 12, Beth Lanning four, Angie

The Dilly Sanllrfel• Pege 5

PomlrDJ •lllddllport, Ohio

Tbc fledwll Hockina I ~

Southern girls
down Miller 45-30 .

...

Federal Hocking girls tally 5843 victory over Eastern

,

•

~

j~o~.u~C~H~?~-~~~~~~~~~It~ma~y~•~-~m~~~~~~~t~the~~Den~ve~r
tile plgakln e little toO.IIIbt ~o
In
Parry II yawning 11 he begin•
all-pro• In prtlpllratlon for Sunday'•

:
~
~

~
~

'·
:

l

'•.

.

'•
•

'I

'•

CIIUignl

haW

·
. won the NFC West tiilc, !¥1~ Coug~- high the last two years, but some of
lin'sJaJIWS. a wild-card'iellm in the ffic players we have ~ere available
playoffs. came within just ooe win o'f ' to every· other team in the league. I
, don't think anybody would have
playing in the Super Bowl.
''We're very· proud of what we benefited if these two teams weren't
accomplished," Capers ~d. "We , competitive."
firmly believe we can get to the · Both coaches have made some
Super Bowl with hard work and ded- adjustments durin1 Pro Bowl week,
·when !!layers don't pllrlicularly want
· ication."
'
.
'
Some ctities arouiK! thf ·league, long . practices cutting -into their
including fired St. Louis ~coach beaCh and golf tinie.
Capers, an extremely structured
Rich ·Brooks, claimed tluii: lhe two
1'995 ox pension franchises got an coach who plans every minute of
unfair IMI~IIJI~tit in the drift aod in every pr~tice, ttied to .til.ke a more;
4
1he fact !hi( !hey slll10d lt-olil scratch "bana--l~" approach for the wee~.
which is supposed to 'be a·reward for
willl.tbe,alll)' cap.
·
'
the
players.
Capen, however, uid that at
"I ·had to ~e~~lize that it's more
leaat 30 pia,.. on lhe Panthcn 1'01·
rwlaxed
this week than it would be
aer dris 1te11011 could hlyc been
for
a
1ame
bact in Chartot&amp;c,'~ ho
· litll*i by any other teaR( in the. '
said,
smiling.
"We want to aet lhorn
leape. "Ouys .,mo were w•ved by
od.- 1eap11, JIIYI who ...:11111 on ready. but we don't wlllt to take up
......
.!.....&gt;....,........
...... . ' ,
any more of !heir lime than 1115 R1W1DU
tlliJ MIU
Ill')'.
"
· 1SIItl Coqlliln: "We cllil draft
J

Brll• Nrw 1!!7 t'ny

.Aslra Cmrrstaa Yat

-

l•
Br••• New t!li c•u y

iI
!

Hra•• Nrw 1997
Pltllit ''••• Prll sr•n

FIJI Slzr tllmSIII Yll

·lit Ccdon
•~ Rllliog lldl.
• "-Window~ • 4 c..,. Cltlil
• " - ~ . • Rill Salllllid
•NotFM Clllllll • Lllllllll

ll

l .

l
l

Ij

Tom Peden

.

Country

•

., ._., -·!llllrd81: 9111 · 8 pr ·llattdiJ:I· 8 1M1 .
•

.

)

,.

•

.

...._.....

• a..

.

,

'P

"

..

�'
..
'

'

Page I • The Deily Stldlnel

Pomeroy··~ ~lo

Landers
AaFka
s-,.,._
...
-s....--. c.199!. Lol

-n-

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: May I add an
"amen" · to the letter from the
woman whose volcanic husband
turned out to suffer from chemical
depression? I went through the same
thing with my daughter, whose violent behavior began when she was 2
years old. By the time "Lottie" was
5, we had tun out of excuses. No one
wanted to be around the child. I was
reduced to tears every day trying to

deal with her.

tie is 9 now and improving all the
When Louie begat1 to physic.lly time.
hurt other children, we soulht counTo all panmts wbo feel their child
seling. The oounselon wen: wOIIder- is hopeleas or that they ae terrible
ful with behavior nwdificalion, but parents, pleue hang in there. The
the crux of the problem became best thin1 you can do is -k profesllpp8!1:nt when one counselOI' made sional help. It changed our daughthe connection between her behavior ler's life and oun, too ..- Utah
and chemical 'depressioo.
Dear Utah: Thank you on hchalf
At the age of 7, Lottie was put on of the countless number of desperate
anti-depressants, and within 48 parents who are agonizing with the
hotirs, she was like a different child. same problem and don't know what
I cried with joy the first time she to do. You have been a tremendous
voluntarily came to me for a hug. help.
While I am sorry for the years we
Dear Anil Landers: My dear huslost, I cannot adequately express•my band bas ail annoying habit that i"ealgratitude to that counselor for the ly drives me up the wall.
,
We are both retired and enjoy
years to come. We were lucky to
learn how to treill our child's condi- reading. Whenever I read, he invarition while she was still young. Lot- ably reads out loud to me what HE is

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

A reminder of the constant pro.tection of God

depre~ion.:

birthday ~

By BONNIE SHIVELEY
was 'down. We missed the tum and
DavollonAil WI I •
wandered up, down and around
Last month I sat in the back seat Kentucky's icy road for one and a
of the car with my face buried in ~ half hours before E.R. rescued us.
pillow-- praying hard--sometimes Thank you, Lord.
whimpering.
God was merciful and sent His
Twenty-one hundred pounds of guardian angel to protect us from
uailer and motorcycles stayed danger. Safe in iheir home, we sang
behind the car as we crept down a around the piano and enjoyed sweet
steep Icy hill near L.ily, Kentucky . fellowship with our friends until
around a sharp curve and across a 4:30a.m.
bridge. We begged the car to climb
After a few hours sleep in Lily,
the next hill and thanked the Lord we pressed . on even though the
for every inch our wheel moved for- mQming news reponed 1-75 closed
ward and stayed on the road.
at Jericho Mountain in Tennessee.
Why would anyone be out on a For a shon time the road opened and
night like this? After e~ening prayer we slipped over the mountain safely.
meeting, we left with two other cou- Thank you, Lord. Then it closed
pies-two cars· pulling two trailers again.
with three motorcycles for a vacaThe snow and ice of. the nonh
lion in Florida. Ron and Wakefield turned to pouring rain in Georgia.
drove, Roberta, Claudette, Wayne The next .day the sun popped
: : UGHTENING THE LABEL- If •tlng "lfght" lood ~ mskss you feel better, you m.v w.1t to lllks and I went along to pray. Oh, mercy! . through nonhem Florida's clouds
:a cloaerloOit .t the ll!llale on IIHI producm you•,. buying. A 11195 Tufts Unlveralty study dllmonltnlted
We were to spend the night with , and we maJVeled at the 75 degree
th.t msny reduced-1st produell actually had higher cslorls contsnt.
Phyllis
and E.R.in Lily. No problem temperature. What a difference a day
' .
'
we'd be there by midnight! But makes-good-bye snow, ice and rain.
··mother nature had dumped a little · Hello, sunshine.
ice and snow.
·
· · Thank you, Lord.·
.
We got off J.. 75 at 1:30 a.m. -, not
· In Leesburg, Fla., Daisy treated
b,ad. The sign for Riverbend Road us to a delicious picnic. The men

cele·brated

~y

reading. He does it evwy tilM I lit ina with 10111ething be wants to her sit down llld write thank-yoU
doWIIIIId opea a boot ar maprjne . shire with you, Ilk him to pleue notes.
Why does he think that his rading circle it with • pencilllld hand it 10 '
I'd lbo lite to AY to anyone who
material is men inllftlliq than you to read'1Per. Meanwhile, coual
mioe? When I aet upy wi1h him. your bl = inp. In mmy marriaaes. miJht be ICIIdiag JMMtte a gift in
he clams up for llbort ti~M, but it is the wile who would lite men the funire-- if you dOn't ,eta thanJt..
you note, don't IICnd her any m~
then it &amp;Iaiii 1111 oyer lpin. I've lltention.
Dear Ana Luden: Our 25-year- gifts and pleMe !pve me out of iL ~
gone into the bedroom and the
kitchen to read, but he follows me. old dauJhler, "J~." married in - Nonh Bencl, Wash.
I've even tried to get even by doing July. We gave her a big ehutcb wedDear North Berid: People who
the same thins to him, but he just ding .with all the trimmings. I' regret
to Ay .the newlyweds apparently ·complain to the bride's mothei; about
tunes me out
My ·husband is basically a·quiet ·failed to send tllank-you DOtes for . not having received a thank-you
perspn, and I realize thit may be his the gifts they recejved.
note are not very classy. Malee no
way of getting lllOj'C attention from
..several people have phoned me apologies and no excuses.
me, but it does get on·my ilervu. Do to ask if I was ·aware that Jeanette
you have any .ugestions? - Up to didn't send a thank·YQU note to "my
Send questions to Au Lanlden,
Here in Indianapolis
grsndmolher" or "Aunt Sarah." I. Creaton Syudkste, 57TJ W. Ceo:- .
Dear Indianapolis: The next time taught my "daughter better, but tury BIYd., Suite 710, Loil AnaeJea,:
your husband interrupts your read- Jeanette is arr,, adult, and I can't make esur. 91io45
·

a

Lark Quartet ·to entertain seniors
'

The Lark Quartet, which has
perfornied across the Unites States.
and· Europe and js currently locat- ·
ed at' Ohio University, will present
a lunchtime concert at the Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center Thursday Ill II a.m.
The presentation, sponsored by
the Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc. and the R,iverbend Arts
Council, is open to the public.
Those attending are invited to stay
for the luncheon.
Balancing tradition repenoire,
new commissions and previously
unkQown works, the Naumburg
Award-winning Lark Quartet
breaks boundaries between the old
and the new, the familiar and the .
unusual.
From
recordings and performances of
Borodin and Schumann quartets to
commissions by Aaron Jay Kemis
and Penka Kouneva; from res.ur- ·
rectirig the works of Amy Beach to
recording Kenneth Frazelle's
soundtrack for Bill T. Jones's
Still/Here, tlui ·Lark Quartet has
established its reputation with audiences and critics as an ensemble of
the highest artistic integrity,
QUARTET TO PERFORM -The Lark Quartet will pre11nt a concert Thu111d8y 11 a.m• .t the ·s,n1or
The Quartet has set out to devel- , Citizens Center, Memorial Drlvll, Pomeroy. In the groilp are from the left, Diane Ps-_1, violin;'Jell.
op new audiences for chamber nlfer Orcherc!, violin, Anna Kruger, viols, and Astrid Sch-n, cello.
music through school appearances
and college residencies, and in the
well as to many European cpuntries Festival. '~:hey won the Gold Medal
fall of 1995 they began conducting
Highlights of recent seasons including Germany, Austria, in the 1991 Shostalcovich Internathe first-ever residency at Ol!io include concerts on Lincoln Ceo- France, Italy, Switzerland and tional String Competition and top
University.
.
In this ter's Great Performers. Series, the Great Britain.
prizes in .the 1991 London Internaresidency, the musicians of the National Gallery and Kennedy
tional String Quanet Competition,
• Quanet plan ·concerts and events, · Center in Washington DC, and St. . · The Lark Quartet has •appe*rei!· the 1991 · Melbourne 'International
both on campus and in the town, Paul's Ordway Theater, as well as · at the Lockenhaus Festival in A"s- Chamber Music Competition in
designed to increase the enthusiasm performances in .Boston, Philadel, tria, the Beethoven Festival at the ·' Australia, the 1990 Paolo Borclanl·
and knowledge of.individuals ,who phia, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Pushkin Museum in Moscow, the Competition in Regjlio EJllilia,
are not familiar . with classical Houston, Baltimore, Chicago and Musicades Festival in Lyon, the · Italy, the 1990 Karl Klingler Com-'
JllUsic. This residency is supported Atlanta. Tours abroad have taken Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival. petition in Munich and the 1986
in part by a major grant from- ihe L..arks to China, Australia, Rus- in Nonhem Germany, and at Mexi- Banff Competilion in Canada.
Chamber Music America.·
sia, Mexico and New Zealand as co's San Miguel de Allende Music

Second
Ethan Noctingluitit celebrated his
second binhd~y recendy with a party
at McDonalcl's in Pomeroy ..
Attending ·were his parents, Jeff
and Valeria Nottingham, maternal
grandparents· Paul and Janet Simpsbn, matem~l ·great-grandmother
Jane Sim]!Soh, and •paternal grand- .
parents, Carll!nd·Mary Nottingham.
Also·. attendinif were Vic~i, Linzie,
Nic and JoeY. .Nottingham, Jordan
Bass, Carla and Josh Nottingham
Jason ·Nottingham, Michelle and

Fat-free ·challenge? Scrutinize
fabels to make int~lligent choices
are

ETHAN No1'1JNGH~M
lyler Miller, Holly Milhoan, Joanic
Simpsoll , Rob Buckland;. Ashley
Kaiser, Allen and 'Janet Downie, ·
Ryan Beegle, Sheiry Smith ·and
Darcy Hile.
.

..

'

PICTURE YOUR PET

AMONG

~~•••

PET
.V ALENTINES!
.,
'·\

', ft '• ~·&lt;.

.. .;,

•

•

~

••

..

Gaming is the latest attraction·for Spielberg

OUR SPECI~L PAGE($)

'

'
By BRUCE HARING
they're not cutting comers on costs. · chandise. . ·
·
entertainment centerS have not ereUSA TODAY
· Although declining to reveal exactly
Not everything . inside Game- ated !OUCh of a stir since being intra'
Get set to be dazzled by film how much is being spent, Snoddy · Works will be as cutting-edge a5 duced two years ago.
director Steven Spielberg's next big said, "This is a Spielberg produc- Vertical Reality. Many attractions, in
Also scrumming for the same
production.
·
tion, so it' ll be enough. It's what it fact, \viii be versions of current .PC dollar are.Club Disney family.enterNo, not his sequel to "JuraSsic takes to get it right."
and console games; But every expe- tainment centers and lwerks' CinePark," scheduled for release this
Spielberg, . caught between final rience will be geared toward human tropolis miniparks. And Sega itself
May. Before then comes Vertical edits on the "Jurassic Park" sequel interaction.
has some family entcrtail)ment cenAlso a Jptelal ~lon f~r In Memory Valentine Pels.
Rcality, a 30-foot-high, four-player "The Lost World" and the begin"The .concept is. it's a central · tcrs and plans to open more.
interactive ride that's the signature ning of production on a new film, place for people to go to meet other
The estimated billion-dollar ·
piece of Game Works, a combination said his interest in games goes way people and have fun together," said cntenainment center industry has
high-tech arcade, restaurant/coffee- back.
.
Montgomery.. "This is all about been abuzz about GameWorks'
house/bar and Internet lounge set to
"As a kid, I was a big fan of the social interaction. It's not about prospects, said Bailey Beekan of the
open in March in Seattle.
game Connect the Dots," he said. playing you against the game. It's International Association of Family
A joint venture of' Spielberg's "Then, in the 1970s, while we were · playing you against your friend !Jr Entenainment, "It's exciting to see
Dream Works SKG, Universal Stu- filming "Jaws," Richard Dreyfuss against eight people."
.
someone (Spielberg) who might
.dios and Sega, this newest leap in and I would sneak off the set and
. As additional locations open, vis- bring in a whole different take.".
razzle-dazzle entertainment centers · spend hours at the local _arcade play- itors will be able to compete against
Other industry pbservers are less •
seeks to elevate l!=tljnO game-play- ing Pong, which was actually noth- · player~ in other ciiies. "We really effusive.· Marcus Webb, managing
ing "from an an:ade level to an elec- . ing more than a new version of Con· think we'll become a force in the editor of amusement industry, magaI.
tronic sporting arena that is also a nect the Dots. As the technology and interactive gaming market and have zinc Replay, declined to prc4ict how
. positive social ~nviro~ment," Spiel- tile ·pmcs. ~arne more advanced, son of a vinual competitive_ worl~," th_e company wm ·do fc;u: fear_of ruf,
berg said. .
'
so dtd IllY mterest."
Montgomery said: "We thtnk tour- flmg some feathers tn the ·trade.
• Or, as GaineWo~ks CEO Mic~ael , Vertical Reality is ,an example of naments are going to be a big hit "For sonle, Sega•is a competitor.''
Montgomery put it, "The idea is sort ' how far game technology has with.us. People IQve competing with
GamcWorks' competition, how" ·
of a town hall for the MTV genera- 1 advanced. The towering ride with its somebody vinually."
ever, goes beyond location-based
tion." ·
four chairlifts is apt to be the first
Borrowing a phrase from Shake- entertainment .centers, Montgomery
Pl.... .,.clou. Hif~ .
"PET'$ NAME~
Industry watchers are cautious.
thin&amp; seen I by visitors to Game· Speare, the player's the thing .at said, noting that all game deve'opadcl1111111~ ·stllmpecl
"Ciearly the Spielberg liar\~~· will Works. High resolution video j:iro- GameWorks. Rather' than give a\l.:ay ers, not just Scga, contribute to
Owner'aName
·enveJppe to r.tum
attract people in 'the door'·tflc, fJnt jectors create the illusion that a s~y- stuffed animals, GameWorks will GameWorks.
Y9ilr p't_\Oto. ·
·time," said John Porter, a video scraper is inside the building.
reward winners with . visibility.
,
I
game analyst with Arcadia InvestThe ~nvironment is a cashless Selected wirinets .will get the star
And what wil) ~riog.thc crowds?
ments of Ponhlnd, Ore. "Tile ques- society. AS' they enter, GameWorks treatment 6y being ba\lled in spot• ·"You've got a dat~ or you'!'C just
1
tion is:. Will the entertainment' be' player&lt; will ' obtai~l, special llebit lights and ~aving tJ¥!i~ faces plas- with a bunch of friends and you're
•!;OOI enough and provide a robust cards that are,electronically charged tered on 1i 6-foot $Crccns through- · going out to gu do something. What
options do you h~ve?" Montgomery
enough experience tq atlqwt them with a cash value. Then they'll move out the facility arid at other sites..
' '·
· .
,
6ack a second and third time?"
!hrough The Arena, a'raucous entry-, Visitors who want 'll temporary asked. .
,.----~-~---liili--,;..-----....----~---,
j '
.Spielberg and his panners have way into the, GameWorks world respite from _the noise can kick back
kept a tight lid on s~cifics, but filled wiih video and t11Usic. .
in The Loft, which features such
Then, answering his own quesI ~·
they'rc Clearly confident. Beyond
A mezzanine bar allows specta- classic arcade games . as Ms. Pac- tion, he said: "Sporting c,vents, bars,
. Seattle, other Game Works are tors to scqpe out The Arena's biggest Man, Asteroids and :centipede as bowling alleys. Hopefully, at this
Pet's lil.ame
· "scheduled to open later this year in attractions. In Seattle, that ·means well as pool tab!es, pinball, a juke- point in time, tl)crc's nobody doing
.Las Vegas (the largest at 50,000 Vertical Reality as well as an eight- box, a coffee vendor, a restaurant exactly what we're doing. They'll
Owner'• Name_~~---------square feet), . Dallas, Phoenix· and player 3-D sound simulator game and a bar serving beer ~nd wine. The pop up, though."
I ••
. Ontario. Calif. All wilt feature (not yet named) and an ejght-player Loft is also a place to log on to the
AddMaa_
,. · -.------------------1I
·attractions designed by Spielberg Indianapolis soo race,simulator.
Internet. Among the s~ci~l in-house
.
and a 30-member team led by Jon
to ride Vertical Reality, players software features: EaCh visitor can
In an effort toprovi&lt;le our·reader- . City. ,1,
.
I. ,.••
S~oddy, a fanner Di~ney "imagi- are s~pp!d into seats that.climli the . get a permanent Game)Vorks e-rflail ship with current news, the Sunday ·
neer" whose credits include ,Disrtey- · side 'of•the vjrtual bUilding. :As·the · addltss and his or her own \Veb nmes-S~ntinel will. not ..,ceJ)t wee!,
Enelolecl:'
. for
·'land's The lndiana 'Jont's·'ll.d¥¢ntitre .~ts ~4111· 10 rise; players shoot it pace.
'
.
· dings after 60 days from the date of .,
,ride.
'
oili with dyl!lqs developea by mad · Des11ite the multitude of attnc- the event.
·
at $Such.
· ·
· · ... . · 1 · ,
Weddings submitted after the 60:) ·'With a ,the!Nj .,.k, you can scientist Mr. B!J. l'lay$'1 go \ligher lions, GameWorlts is not without
~ild one · t~ina every few yoan,'' when they hil c:yborss; when competition· in an industry that bas day deadline will appear durinJ the
· ~~dllne Friday, February 7th at 3·p.m.
• snillf!ly said. "It's very frullrating cyborgs hit them, a player's chair lutd Its ups and dOWns. Dave and wee~ in The Daily Sentinel and the
.
Mali or bring the entry form:
' for dCiianers." ColtvcneiJ. Otlme- dropt.
9Uiler's, a Texls:buod reataurant Gallip&lt;&gt;lis Dlily Tribune.
fiorb can turn II'OUnd ilc:w I'*' in
AI $4 10 $5 per ride, Vertical and enlertainmeni center wid! nine
. All club meetings llld other news .
- of weeks, Reali"'
·
._...
.,.. ''llltoundi"•"·
..,. ........
., if OIIC o(thc JIIOIIexpelllive outlets nationwide, hll been a hit. articlCI
in the society ~lion must •·
Snoddy said.
·
. · OialeWoiJII paiN;
Will Bill the Discovery Zollo.. wllidl ~ be submitted within 60 days of
lheclmmof~tellilll*flilh llcb be 7' cenli 10 $1.!0. "De\dlpl i I youth-orielled .......... llld . Occuneace. All birt¥ays must be
pnU:!eamnpur~=::; ,..,11c 1 ttn-thor'.-~MJ~t· exercise mix, lui ,_, .flfecl. for 'submittOd within 60 dlys of the,
· . 110,Court St.
,.,
.
.. .1 ~!.,-.-1 ilif ... _.,Ill 35 - .10.. . -'$20 Cbapllr II ~ protectloll. ......__ _ ,
,
.l
•'
. I t ·: ~ · ~
AI 1'1111111. . . Wit • IIi 4 lW ..,JII!ll", ._'Jq,aiii' Ill 'allocll~~ ......,,.,.._,., ,
f.,
,

"EOR PETS ONLY''
WILL BE P.UBLISHED THURSDAY, .
FEBRUARY 13TH IN

'

THE DAILY SENTINEL

.PER ·PICTURE
PjE~PAID

·H¥rryl De11tlline
Ft#Ry,.Fe6rfl•rylth 111 3p.m. :·

· ·. VAtENTINE PETS .

News' pol"ICY·'

Amq~nt

I ;;
I;

::&gt;Jctu,.. i r

~--·------------------------~

the......,.

8

"l

'Qt~ · Daily Senti.Qel
Pq,n,roy, Ohio 41'189

•.

'

''

KATY ROBINSON
offat, as well,
•.
The ldllho StatMmsn .
What's the difference between
: When Melis5a Broxson is on one the two boxes?
...
of her dieting kicks, everythina she . Look at tHe directions for prepabuys at the grocery ~tore has to have ration. The regular ve..Sion instructs
the right label: · "fat-free," you to use whole or 2'percent milk.
·~reduced" or "light."
·
The fat-free pudding ~Us you to use
: "It totally malces you feel better ·skim milk, warning ~ou that using
about what you.'re buying," says regular milk will add ti~ck the caloBroxson, a . 31-year-old Boise, ries. ·
Nutritionists say iii~ best strategy
· I'daho, resident, "I'm not getting any
thinner, but at least I can say I ate 10 for sorting tl)rough the flood of diet
fat-free things today."
· products is to do what Boise shopper
: Americans' que~t for foods .that Polly Thomas does ~rery time she
S'alisfy the.sweet tooth but don't add shops: Study the label~.
.'to the wai~tline has spurred moun"Looking at the ftwlt of the box
tains of new products targe!ing isn't enough," Thorn~ says. "Items
· dieters. Krafi-General Foods, has that are fat-free are often loaded
begun marketing "Fat Free" variety with sugar. And ofte~. there's not
of Jell-0 Instant Chocolate Pudding, much difference· be!-,:een the stanand M-and-M Mars his introduced a dard product and 1¥ low-fat ver"Lite" version of that chocolate- sion."
•·
· · .
lovers' favorite, the Milky Way . Another thing to twatch is the
):andy bar. A string of other foods serving size.
l' · .
from potato chips and iCe cre~m to
"We've gotten through the mescookies . and cereal - is following sage abol!t lowering fat, but the 'new
suit.
problem is that a 1&lt;!• consumer see
; . But consumer's joy over these .'low-fat' think it's a ·l!llense to eat as
new products may he tempered much as they want,"£:j'iays Gail Zyla,
when t~tey· taJce· a closer look at the a nutritionist and edi r for. the Thfts
· food labels. ·
University Diet and . 'lion Letter.
· :- Take the Jell-0 Instant Pudding.
. Lower fat does n~ automatically
It turns out that the standard pudding equate to lower calories.
is actilally fat-free, too. As for the
A 1995 Thfts trlllversity study
Milky Way Lite and sorite other demonstrated that many reduced-fat
Q:duced-fat candy bars, a major part products .actually had1tigher calorie
of the benefit to your arteries comes content. A s~d!lrd ll~joz homesty Ie.
fr_om tht;, reduced-:IIU:·ofthe~~ .. ro~lejl t~l(~l· gt~t~ for example,~"
which costs considerably tpore than bas 25 c!llones per quarter cup. By
the standard candy . b~ whe~ you comparison, ·a P.epperidge Farm 98
figure the price per ounce.
. percent fat"frae gravy coniained 30
Despite government rules about calories per quarter cup.
whFn food-makers can call someMeridan, Idaho,"resident .Kohlyn
thing "light!' ot "fat free," .some Bu~n admits being suckered in by
manufacturers ~ still using those t1ie package. ·
terms in ways that can be confusing
•:1 look at the label to see the fat
or eyen misleading, says Bonnie content, but I .don't read anything
Liebman, director of nutrition at the else, I'm bad,- huh?' ~unn says. "I
Center for Science in the Public don't have time to reid through the
lilterest.
'
·
label with my soft in the can, and it
.
' "Labels cannot be ' manipul~ted can all get confusing)'"
as easily as they could befote the
It's especially coitt'Using when it
1994 FDA regulations went into comes to type· of fat, says Betty
~ffect," Liebman says . ."But there
Miller, a registered dietitian at the
are still some loopholes."
Boise Heart Clinic. ,
: The Food and DruJ Administra- .
"Labels break do·wn saturated
lion requires today's labels to dis- and unsaturated fat, j ut what they
play the nutritional profile of every don't tell ·you is tlllt trans fat,"
packaged food. In the case of the fat- Miller says. "The trans fat is a dou- .
free Jell-0 pudding, the label con- ble whammy, because it lowers your
firms the claim on the front panel good. cholesterol w'e increasing
that the pudding has zero grams of your bad cholesterol.
·
fat. But the label on the 1tgular Jell-'
Trans fat- or oils that have been
0 Instant Pudding shows zero grams partially hardened , ~- appear in

AWord To The Wize:
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award-winning service
Department is highly
trained and ready to get
your automobile ready for
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..

Tips for spotting ·
· food lies
,

Here are some tips for spotting little "light" lies in diet .
fOod:
- Plan a resean:h shopping
trip. Allow yourself an extra 30
to 45 minutes so you, can read
labels carefully. Bring along a
·calculator and small pad so you
c~ .keep '!otes ,llftd figure out
pncmg. ~

·- .

· ~, ·

··· ,

'

- Makea list ot any fat-free,
lite, sugar-free or other health
products you've been buying.
Compare the nutrition labels on
these diet products with the
standard versions of those prod. ucts.
- If you must prepare the
product, check the preparation
directions to see if they are different.
- .Read. the ingredients to
determine how the manufa~turer
has created the "healthy". version of \he product.
- Check the weight. Is the
"lite" version actually lighter in
weight?
-Check the price per ounce.
If the price per ounce is higher
on the diet food, consider the
alternative of buying less of the
standard pr.oducts or simply cutting down on the portion you
eat.

where to pour the potato water. She · gadget that produces a geritle
said, 'In the disllpan.' .l.hich I did. whooshing noise that blocks out
Collecting the silver ~fore dessen, I . intermittent or continuous an~oy!ng
asked her where to rl\lt the silver. sounds, such .as traffic or hcking
Sbe said, 'In the dishpan.' Later, clocks. We had mentioned this was
when I washed the *'lver in the available from the Mountainville
sudsy potato water, ~1 the ta,mish Health catalog, but have since found
was g9ne! Just 'plain 1/eiled potato additional sources.
water! Needless to say, I've used
Hainmacher Schlemmer, OperaBy ANNE a, ADAMS and
potato .water ever since!~
lions Center, 9180 Le Saint Dri~e,
· !'4ANCY NASH.CUMMINOS
Thelma Riley of Baton · Rouge, Fairfield, OH 45014-5475 cames
. ; Feedback and upclate. •
La., sent us this idea for keeping sil- the Sleep Sound Generator. It is item
' STOCKING
.P.ULL-UP ver tarnish-free. "I am 79 and have ·30705H and costs $49.95, plus shipHELPER: A. Thrner of Alhambra, use~· camphor blocks i~ my ·silver ping and haDdling.
· .
Calif., was IQbking for this aid for (my mother djd too)tolieep the tar. The Brookstone catalog cames .•
. pulling on socks and pantyhose. It's nish away. Please tell iUp,the world. more ornate· ·model called Tranquil
· very useful for people with back . It works. Use no less than two Moments, which cat\ be set for dif~
problems and for those who ~ave blocks at a time and when evaporat- ferent "soothing" sounds of nature
!lad hip operations. Thanks to all of ed, put more in their pjace. I order such as rain, ocean surf, stream, et~.
you for writing.
my camphor blocks tdrough my Their description notes: "An addt; ).C.
Penney
carries
a drugstore." .
,
tiona! sound has proven ~ore ~ffec, .
ShoeJ!om!Sock Aid/Reacher, i,tem
10 CLEAN THOSE10RUNGY live than heartbeatS, whtte notse or
HB 864-6416FA for,$19.99 (call to COOKIE SHEETS: nna from War- womb sounds in safely soothing cryorder .at 1-800-222·6161).
renville, m:, writes: ; ·~prtiy the ing babies. It calms 91 percent of
• ~ealthouse, USA, · Inc... Box cookie sheets with oven cleaner, .infants . if introduced within ·JO
,036, Jericho, NY 11753 (1-516- 'place them in . a heavy plastic bag weeksofbirth."lt'scatalog 1~5.
334-9754) offers a Stocking Pull-Up .and leave them there for..:Z4 hours. and the price is $90. To order, wnte ·
(33860) for $7.99.
. The grunge'Should wipe.right .off." qr caii . B1'09kstone Corpor~ Head. Mountainville House Calls, P.O. Of course, do not use iJ\Is method q~aners; 17 Riverside St., Nashua.
· .Box 331.148, Fon Worth, TX 76163· with Teflon-coated cooki~ sheets.
NH 03062 (l-800-846-3000
. ). '
il48 (1·800-460-7282) has • Fle~­ · CLEAN DIRTY STAINS ON ·, Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
ble Sock Aid (item 55071) for . FIBERGLASS: Kim IQ.mbler of P.O. Box 240, Hanland, VT 05048.
. $14.95. Take your pick!
. Prescott Valley, Ariz., ~ · every- Questions of general interest will
· . · POLISHING SILVER AND thing to aet dirty stains ahd hair dye appear in the column. Due to the
· KEEPING IT TARNISH-F.REE: · off the surface of her fiberglass volume of mail, personal replies
· t&gt;.C. ~etzger of Wabash; Ind., . shower-tub.
After "; htended ·cannot be provided.
· . !Writes: "Yean aJo, my· sister was reseirch, she discoveted tlfat a prodAnne B. Adalns and Nancy
. having a large family dinner. She uc! called Simp)e Green did 'the Nash-Cummings are cO-authors of
wal living in a temporary summer trick, It is available wherever clean- "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone)
• home -- no water or sink inside. ing supplie~ are sold.
and :•near Anne and Nll!l: Two Prize
Needing to pour water' off t]\e potaU~DATE ON THE WHITE- Problem-Solvers . Share
Their
. toes before mashil\1, I asked her NOISE M{\CHINE: This.\l.a dandy Secrets" (Bantam).

an

•

I

I

·

$16.95).
More than a two-hankie movie,
or a .leading man with a chin like Mt.
Rushmore, a chick flick, she says, is
any. film that makes a connection
with a female audience, even if guys
like iltoo.
·so you don't accidentally stumble into "Rocky XXV" when you' re
in the mood for a weeper like
"Sleepless in Seattl~." here. are
some ofBemard's picks: . ·
- TearjerkerG: "The .Bridges of
Madison County," "Casablanca,"
"Gone With the Wind," "Intermezzo," "Now Voyager.''

·'

'

•

By ALAN FISK
The Detroh News
· Is there su~h a thing as a "chick
flick?"
.
Jami Bernard argues that th.ere
are plenty of them - movies that
appeal mostly to women - even
though some film critics argue that
no, films are universal.
Trust me, says Bernard, who is, ·
after all, a film critic for the New.
York. Daily News and who has just
published the · new paperback
"€hick .Flicks: A Movie Lover's
Guide to the Movies Women Love"
(Citadel Press-Carol Publishing;

around

The Idsito Ststesmsn

''

unloaded the cycles, parked the cars.
and the rest of the trip was more
beautiful than .-~
we could ever
have dreamed,
fitie weather,
friends, food,
fun and games.
Thank You,
Lord.
The
tcy
roads
had
reminded us of
the constant proteCtion of God, but:
we also realized He was with tis just:
as much when slOes were blue and
sunny.
'
Our trip was one of worship and
thanksgiving •.Psalm 91 :11-15, "For
he will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your
ways; they will lift you up in their
hands ..,because He loves you."
Father, thank you for your constant love, for ansWering our prayers

. and for your ministering angelS that
protect and keep us from danger.
Amen.

'Chick Flicks' rates the best weep and swoon movies

foods that
deeP-fried or contain
"partially hydro-generated oil" in
their ingredient list.
Another label that 'can lead to
confusion is a 'meat package that
claims to be 80 percent lean. That
sounds pretty healthy, until you flip
that
to mean "20 percent
fat." Meat doesn't fit the FDA's definition o{ "lean" unless it has fewer
than 10 grams of fat. .
Some labels inay couch disclosures in the fOI'm of friendly advice,
Liebman says.
For instance, a cheese package
may tell you to "see back panel
information on sodium and other
nutrients." That advice is actually a
clue that this is. a high-sodium food.
Federal law requires disclosure
ori flawed foods that make goodsounding claims like ·~fat-free."

Pull up stockings .the easy way .

•
.I

'

Frldey• .......,31,1tW

.Mother -tells her child's story of chemical
Ann

.

,•

.

lw ·

- Bad Girls: "La Femme Nikita," uFranccs," "GHda/' "The Last
Seduction," "The Postman Always
Rings Twice."
Female Bonding: " Diabolique,'' "Passion Fish," "The
Man in the Moon," "Strangers in
Good Company,': "Thelina and
Looise."
- Perfect Love: "The American
President," "It Happened One
· Night,·· "Laura, .. "Pretty Woman ,"

','Sense and Sensibility."

WINTE~IZE

�I

'

-.. .,.--= .

.
mort: .......,ant
14.

,

'rf

--Millor

Clowrdolf.... Qrlol
V=%

s-kJ-·IIL&amp;
w
t ) Se:vica 7 ,..,

n ,.g

I

'81WIId

I

MJ 7
I

,__ ....,

I

I Doodo "Qrlol

"-:AI 1'"'-

y - u•.

, BiJJFnzior

•

Ridlltd Oliver
5'10 Groat St., Middleport

_ , Sdlllal·li'.JO ......
Wonhlp • 10:30 Lm, 6:30p.m. ·
Senrica. 6:30p.m.

.w_,

s.-y·odlaol· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m. and 1 p.m.
W - y Servioe - 7 p.m.

..

-

Wllllollliol Q

....._,._w
.....
Suaday.SdloaJ. 9:30 ......

....

Alh -~Middleport

Putor: La Hayman
Sunday Service • 7:30p.m.
Su~ School ' 10 a.m.
Wedn
y Seivice-7:30 p.m.

· Wonhlp • 10:30 Lm., 7:00 p.m.
W-ySe:vica ·?p.m.

, _ Flnlllopllll

..

Putor: Paul Stinson
But MainSL
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm.

41872 Pomeroy Pike

. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Wonhip . 10:45 a.in., 7:00p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

, .. t

Pastor: Mark Monow

- Rev. Llwrence
Flnl BLpCiot
PUior:
T. Haley
Y011th Pulor: Alron Y01111

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesclay Se"ice' - 7:00 p.m.

Pulor: WOOlly Citt
Sundly Evenins ' 6:30p.m.

7r30 p.m.

Wednesday Senrices- 7:30p.m.
,

.

Putor: Joe N. Sayre ·

...JIIIY. . Cial
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.

Evening · 6:30 p.m.

Wonhip · 10:.30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetdoy Senrioe 7:30p.m.

Sunday S.:hool-9:45 a.m.

Wednesday Se"'icea ·6:30p.m.

Old Btlloel Fne·WW llaplil,l Cllarc•

28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday SChool -10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; · 7:30p.m •..

Hlllaldt Bapllll Cllurcb

.

Sunday~ ·lla.m.

Church of God

Wonh1p • 11 a.m., 6 p.m. .

P -: Rev•.Jamea Sanerfteld
Sunday School· 9:4S a.m.

MI. Olh't Uded M . Off 124 bdoind Wilkesville

Bvenins- 7 p.m.

l"utor: Rev. Ralph Spires

Wednesday.Scrvioea ·1 p:m.

Sunday School · 9:31! a.m.
Wonhip • 10;30 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Thursday Seroica -7 p.m.

Wednesclay Services · 1 p.m.

Rallud Cll.,.. .rGocJ

Fortll Rooa llapllll
Pulllr : Ariua Hun
Sunday So:hool· 10 a.m.

Sundoy
School·
a.m.
· -·
Randy to
Barr
Wonhlp · tta.rn., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.~a.

Worship· 11 a.m.
'

.
Fourth A Main·SI., Middleport

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp ·10:4S a.m.

. Ciotti...

'

Cong re g at ion a l
.
Trlalty a.•.,b

Second I&lt; LyM. Pomeroy
Putor: Rev. Roland Wlldnun

Paalor: Rev. Wallei E. Heinz

Sun. Con...:&lt;45-11:15 a.m.•

Som. -·9:30a.m.
· 8:30a.m.

Ep 1scopa l

' Dolley -

. ,'!

GrMt
326 E.

ClltP Ci l of Clmsl
Pa• OJ a.- OICioriot · '
212 W. Main St. . ·
l'attor: ""'ll'roud!oot
Sunday 5c!1001 ' 9:30 a.in:
Wonlltp. 10:30 LIIL, 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servil:a •7 p.m. ' .

Wcdnc~y,Serviccs.

. '

Jloltom

Rector: Rev. D. A. duPlllllier
Holy Eudtarilland
Sunday School10:30 a.m.

Pattor: Rev. Olarlea Mash

Wonhip -10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Tuesdo~ Senri- ' 7:30p.m.

~flee hour followina

.·

Cii111'81 Cloilor

·.~r:.~~:::le

Paalor: Mark A. Dupler
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

Wednetdoy Senrica. 7 p.m.
sy....... c..,...orllttNPlllor: Bill Slira
Sunday Sdlool ·.9:30a.m.
Wollhlp ·10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednetdoy Senrioea -7 p.m.

etih

. Pom1roy Cllvtl
N...,_
, . P.astor: Rev. 'lbom• McOuri1
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m. ·
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Senriceo-7 p.m. ·

su.-y Sdoool ·_9:45a.m.

W

,. 77 ' .,.,

LETART . Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday 't tbe
_ office buildilig.

r SL1;Rt. 124,
' ' "ltocilo
zt

r - : Williulllobock
Sowldoy School· tO a.m.

",.....,,....

.

· • ·)

.. ~ ·•

t·

.

. ' uc
MI1•!Kie:l'
.''' ~
A~

j

t

·'J"

....r

.

may belp. After applyiaJ the cream
at night, cover the aff~ area with
plastic wrap. lliis may serve to
" turbu-clwge" the cortisone.
Second, your husband might find
relief from ultraviolet lisl;lt therapy.
The dennatologi'st can supervise this
treatment, which consists of apply·
ing a spe(:ial ointment that js then
subjected 1!1 UV radiation •

" Mleolaol
s,._
141 I
St.; Syncuoe
Bridpioan

Sunday.School· 10 a.m.
Eveni111. 6 p.m.
Wain ' ~ 5mice ~ 7 p.m.

Hlltl~Cio.;..
Of!Rt: 124 '

. Put~·
Edod llarl .

·Somdoy
I· 9-.30 a.m.
Wonliip • ,!\'30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Soaollytcbooi·IOa.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wedn fiy Se"'ice -7.p.m.

,.

Folll' ~ Cloordo
t:Aiio•lkx"""
Sundoy · I · 9:30a.m. ·
WollltiP ·'·10:4S un., 7:30
. p.m.
, . w....,.y·7:30p.m.

.

AAFION. T. BqWERSOCK

Bowersock
advances in
poetry contest

Aaron T. Bowersock of Rudand
has
been notified ·that be has been
~~·
TUFSDAY .
selected as a semi-finalist in the
POMEROY·· choice home edu- National Library of Poetry contest.
His poem, "Windows of Life",
cators, 10 a.m. Tuesday a1 the
will
be in the lnthology "The Night·
Pomeroy Library conference room.
fall
of Diamonds", scheduled for
For more information· contact
publiCation
in the summer 'o f 1997.
Tammy Jones, 992·6743.
Aaron is a seventh grader at Ohio
Valley Chrisiian School in Gallipo·
lis.
·
WEDNESDAY
RACINE •• Pbmcroy-Racine . He is the son of lana Bowersock
Lodge 164, at ~ Racine Lodge Williams, and grandson of David
and Jane Wiseman, Rudanil.
hall . Refreshments . .,

992·2753

ANNOUNC EME NTS

Pomeroy

.'

•St-Doen&amp;

Wlz••ws

l·

Seeldng Companion-

ali!&gt; Foam Nl&lt;e - F a r Tak1,

. Walks &amp; Frlendahlp. Send Ra' pliel To: CLA 301. Clo Gallipolis

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE E~TIMATES ..

'

Penonals

Gendern~n

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

~_:!~ ~rlbune, 825 T~lrd A-ua.

.. 011451131.
Lonely? Tiko A Chonee On Me,
White F.male •1 . P.O. Box 486,
~.Oii-'457!0.

IEET NEW PEOPlE lHE FUN

•

•

614-992-7643

• WAYlODAY. .
Ext1818
$2.911 por min. M..t be 18 ,...
1 ·800~43-5180

Sorv.U (1111)64~34 .

Giveaway

40

(No Sunday Calls)

2 Adult Female Cats To Givea·

,_, 81""'*23113 Allor 3 P.M.

- liNGO
RAONE,OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
POST602
.mltY SUNDAY

•NewHomBs
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
$top &amp; Compare
FREE
EST7.MATEES

Doorl Open 4:30
Game Starts 8:48
Pey G¥~ltl ec:coilllng to
. nwnHr of ptey....
· Under ntW maneg•ment.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
985:4422

Chester, Ohio

7/22/tln

SNOW
REMOVAL

GIUESEI'S ·
·GAUGE

Sun11t Ho11e
Constructloa
New Conatru~lon &amp;
Rimoc?ellng
Kitchen Cab?neta ·
VInyl S?dlng • .Roofi
Oeckz • Garagea
F11H1 EatltMtea

·•Driveway" , ·
•Parking Lots
•Etc,
Call Anytime

l'lflllr.
Tune-upa;OII Chlnge,

.wax, Buffing

949·3327
591·1897

Long St, Rutland, Oh.
'142·2835, AA for

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

.

614-742:-3411

1NI/I711-

summ.ry Of lndsbtldnn••

1/!Hr I -

.2 Full Blooded Doberman Pinch""· 3Q4.ll75-4508.
4 Window• w/aluminum frames,

49137112. Old• sewing machine
w/cabinet, ·needs repairs. 304·
815-5128.

Bilm Call., 814-258-t385.

Umestone • Grave?
Dirt• Sand
•

985-4473

Public

'

R. L. HOLLON
IRUCKING

ROIERT BISSELL
CONRRUCTION

Body work, car, truck
&amp; truck·palntlng,
minor mechlntcat

S)iWW l'lntU..... fllc*)ll&amp; . .
I'IIMor. leY. KriiiDa 'a 'a I 11

pol.

C•H now to achedule your Tupparwara Part~. Ear n frH . pr.o·
dUCII. Slllrl &amp; Slripes. 1·80Cl ·
484·)7!2 S.C. 2779.
·
F~ve· ye~i old temale Aonweiler.
black and mahogany, 814- 7ot23168.'
.

Foeo pupa, 614-!185-3947 . .
Material frOm 6 room house, rou
tear down &amp; ttrwl away. 30•·675-

2468.
More WOad To Giveawar. Cut In

Ltl\llllol 2 l 3 Ft. Long 814·388·
11412.
.

Bo..-.

Pan
part Golden RetrieYef,
7 months old, nas had si"Jots.

30&lt;1·675-!90! .

Two rabbit• to giveaway, cage in· ·
eluded, 61H49·2510.

60 Lost and Found
.. Found: Blue &amp; While Tam Cat Vi·
cinitr Gallia Academy High
School. 614 · 448 · 1830 Aher s
P.M.
.., .

Oulctcud•ISI1111N----·
........_ ......... 12,013.11
Found: little Wn(re Puppy tDog .
Public Notice
Pub7?c Notice
Publ?c
Awtlwwd-....._ .......3.111.11 '
VIcinity: White Road, State ROute
'
· firm pre1entlng the Bid HID, Call Afler S P.M .. 814-448·
OutaiLNIInt 1:1131/1-....
I . Wobble Slick Ce&gt;ntrole
. . . b..povlded
printed e&gt;n the outalde. AI 23116.
···-··· .. ••• .............:•• 1.101.117
2. Front Ce&gt;unterwalghl Blda must be In eealed
Dining
Force·
Bucket
Thle le en unludlled
Still lo st: 2 Female Beagles,
5001ba.
Cyllnclor 13,11110 LBF
packegee end clearly McClintic
llnanclll IUIIIW.ent.
area; .t · n ·97 Plea se
3. Slow Moving V1hlcle marltecf,
18"
Heevy
Duty
Bucko!
10
I certliJ lhe · prevlou•
cau
304·768-5687.
algn ...
BACKHOEILOADER BID.
report to lie correct end beeupptled .
4. H-/Delroater
C.b: GeugH· Converter
· The Tupper• Plaine· Still Lost: lar\le Male Bo1er,
trioe, to the beet of my
5. Fabric covered ewlvol Cheater Water Olatrlct Brown With Black Face Wh i te
Toimp
knowtadae.
euepanolon seat· 180 re!III'Ye~ the right to waive Chest; Weanng ~een Collaf1Last
Engine We* T""p
degr• pivot action turn any lnlormellll.. e&gt;r Seen In Ut. Hut , Holiday Heights
FuellAaftl
Area, Gene;ou • Reward, 304 ·
around adlulbnenl.
· Hour llelet
lr"''Jularllloo In the Blckllng. 875-6774 And 814-441 -0351
&amp;.
Soot
Bella
.
Tlchomeler
By order of the Tuppen Eveningl.
7. Front end Raar Wipers .Pial n • · Cheater W"'*'
Volmge ......
8. Hand end Foot Thronle Dlltrlct.
(GII8fiH to be IOollled on
70
Yard Sale
9.
Reverelble Stabilizer
the right 1lde of. th•
Herold H. Blac-n
()poo1aiOI'e Slllllon and - t ) Podl with etreet rubber
Prealdent
GallipoliS
_ _Pu_b?_lc-Not?ce
_ _ _..;l Wlr!llng Llghte· Engine 10. Encloded Cob with (I) 27, 31, (2) 2 3 tc
- .•.
&amp; VIcinity
vandallom protection kH
011 ,,.,.,,.
11.
Hydniatatlc
Power
Public
Notice
LE!UL NOTICE
Atr C....., Reetrlctlon
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance . DEADLINE : 2:00p.m.
ADVEIITlSEIIENTFOR
Alternetor
Chlnge
the day before the ad is to run.
PUBUC NOTICE
1108
Hydra u II c
F II I er
13. Rllllr Fenderl '
NOTICE• II hereby glvon Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. FridaY.
TUpper8 P..lne-C._
Reetrfctlon
14. Bilek up Alerm
&amp;a1t1on · 10 00 a.m Sat·
that on Soturday, Februery Monday
urday.
Wetw Phlblotc
JlniD end 011 Level
15. II 0 Volt Block H 1, 1117, et 10:00 a.m., o
38111 ·-..'30 Rood .
.
Perkl.. Broke Engqed
Slate length olllma bid Is public ula will be held et
Pomeroy,
.....ville, 011411772 , . ·
Ughte: HeiOgell• 2 Front eflecthre. ·
·
211 Weet Second Street;
Mlddleporl
111~11 · ·
Heed Llghta end 2 Front
State Warranty and Pomeroy, Ohio, to aall lor
· -.nlte -ted Bldl .for Flood Lights
Delivery
&amp;'VIclnHy
cuh the following
• - Rubber
Beollhoe
4 - r Working Llghta
Four · acluel prices aro colleterol:
.
All Yard Sales Uuat Be Paid In
with the apeclllj)atlone
2 R..t Tell Light• and requeeted:
1110 Plymouth Sundence Advance, Deadline: 1:DOpm the
lt8ted below will be Brake Lights
'1996 Model with and tP3XP480ltLN138774
·
day before the ad is 10 run. Sunr•celved by the Tuppera
2 'Amber Warning and without trade of Dlstrlct'a
The farmer• Benk end dar &amp; Monday edition· 1:OOpm
Plelne; Ch ..te.r W- Turn Slgnel Llghla
. preeent Bllckhoe
.
.
Sovlnge
Compeny, Friday.
Dletrlot until 10::00 o'olook
Strobe aeecon Light on
1997 Model with and P.orneroy, ·Ohio, reaervea
e.m., Febr-r 10, 1887, end Top J&gt;l Cab with Bruah wllhor~l trade of Dlstrlct'o the rlflht to bid et thla. ~e. 80
PubliC Sale
then lLI •ld omc. publicly Shield
• preeent Beckhoe. The
and Aucllon ·
allf to wlthdri!W the above
'PI ned end I'MIIeloucl.
Fuel Tenk: 30 Gallon Hclth01 can H oeen at the colleteral prior to ••te •
Specltlc8tllllli for- (t) Mlnllllum .Cepeclly
llloltrlct'e Meln office. Call further, The FarmaN Bank AuCiio11 s1 Er! 7pm Jan 31 . grG ·
eer1es, •Larry with a b•g load•
Integral Loeder BeckhH
jlydr.Ul.. Reeervolr: 21 tor · an eppolntmenl. The
with tour whHI drive to H
CJilon TOiel SylLiem
Tupper• Plalne·Cheller and Saving a Compeny New dealer witn new &amp; used merrelerve• the right to reJoct . d&gt;andin. Sat zam, Feb 102. Ron
puroheeed by ,.._,.
Electiicel: Minimum 12 Witar District re1t~r~es lho . any
or on bide oubmlttecl.
Prl.. with a t&gt;g load ol QVSoa (I
Plelni-Chuter · W- voft.·NegiilllveGround
,to relect and end ell
FtM'Iher, the ebove can't say lhat word! ML Alto Auc·
Dletrlct. Jhey ere ee . lllnllllum 885 Cold
e&gt;r to lncre..e or collitarol wltl H IOid In the lion Rt. 2·33 ·crosaooado' Ed
fOIIOWI:
11t at 011 111 . ·
or omH •ny 1-.m condition It Ia -In, with no FJOZier il930.
Min. 'trjliotor· weight: ·
lllnlmum
85
IIWard to tho e:•prlll o·r Implied :-L,-m-lt_y'_a-Au-c-tio_n_S_o_rv-lc-o,-L-os-lie
13,2110 lbe.
•
Aharnelllr ·
. Bidder. Eech
Lemley, Auctioneer. Hauseh01d,
Ground Cleerence: t2"
l!re&gt;poeal must be In a wtrnntllagtven.
For further lntormetle&gt;n, Esllte, F.arm Sales. c,u 814-446·
.Minimum
Machine. 10 be equipped
envelope wllh th• cOntact Jerry at 111111·7430.
11241, 8H-311&amp;94&lt;23.
Engine: 4 OJIIIIder DleMJ. with ... IGJI,owlnll!
name end acklreee of the (1) 2t, 30, 31; :rrc
Turbo oharged ptOCluolng
;! II II II II lll!llllllllllt ltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llll!::
·
PUBLIC AUCTIOH
.
215-25211-41 ~torque
ANNOUNCI:. MENTS
Every Soluodar n1g111 e:110pm. 202
M.lnlmum. Flywheel -

Sunday $dlooi·IDun.
Wonhip • II a.m.

.

l

•

MtHJ I ll'noll:"'._
Suntloy School , a.m.
Wonhip · IDa.m ..

Soo I.._Doy Afiallll•
Mulberry Hit. Rd. Pomeroy
Pulor: RO\' La•inskv
Solurday'5&lt;1\·ioea: .'

Sabbath So:hool • ~ p.m.
Wonhip. 3 p.m. ·

...

-..

U111ted Bretl' rcn

nrec1

EYI!ni"' • 1 p.m.

.

W~y
,, Servioe,• 7 p.m.

u""""-

Rl. 1 ort J&gt;GmeroyCli.,..
a,.,...
l'attor: Rev. Robert E. Smith. Sr.
Suotdiy School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.• 1 p.m.

I

.

Wcdn cnlry Service • 7 p.m.

FoiiGaopol..,....._

'

3:1045 Hiland RoM!. I'Gmeroy
Paitor: Roy Hunter
-10 a.m.
. ~
Evc~:tina
7:30' p.m.
Tuesclay·.t Tbarsday •.7:30,p.m.

'

...

.,.

.

.

Pub??cNot?ce

·~

•·
'.

~
.· -~

••led

•

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

~

•••pa••·•IAE
nit
tn.nem,l..lon: 4·•peecl

•

&lt;

-

•

FUANITURE &amp; HAROWAAE
Hctmelilt Sawt

Full Power lhuHM with
Dlffvenllll Look ·TOI'IJU8

"
r

..

Axl11:
Front:
An
Outboerd Plene .Tery 1JN
Front Wheel 11x1U tJIR

••

.

DriV. wiDrfve lhaft Guard.

•'

·The

'
,.

HN1 ao

Pome~ay

..
..,,

811J111118011tllego.

· Reer: OulbMrd Plene

n.-

Tliy
1Uxl4 10PII
. . .:w.tllleo
"ydraulla •r•tem:

•'
.
•,

::;

ilnlnluiiiGI'II •

Lo.,., Cepeo:t.::. 1

' tDPID ......... kn

.,.morlll

.I

_...led

tront whHI drive mllll

,be lleobnloeU,
end Pllllllllle elllllty to

:~

••
''•\lW'Ma
YGu 'llf,e floating a EWING FUNERAL HOME ~
FISHER
"Diplty hUt Serviu Allwlys" ~
Halpbl •'
.
.:Joud.
with
the
buy•
.
.,
.FVHEIW.,HO"E ,
Eallbliahed
1913
1
••
you
7l.find
in alae · ,•
'
..
.
,~21
.-1141
.
111 E. Mlmon.tl Dr. F'anM!iaV
ciq,~.
101 Mubluy AV.. · Pomltot
--2104
••
11410utblnd lldllaput
~·

on

=Gta...

__....:;..........- ......~13

214 E. Main

Pomeroy

A ny Car
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22
&gt; D1scounts &lt;
Comput er Qu o te s
(6 14) 992-6677

I . . WitJdows

Mi. Oll..,j::oc=-olly Cloom
Patlori:Law:cocO 111111!

POUEfiOY,,OHIO • 112 lUll
'
IIILL QUICKEL

.

-No Job Too Sma77
-Remodeling
•Any and· A77 of Your
oGariagea
Homa Repair Needs
•Decks
eCa75 Today for Your
' . Frae Estimates

MIDDLEPORT
111111·2772
1:00 e.in.-3:30 p,m.

.,_,..c' ·

olo,Cioudt
Sundoy Sdtool • 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
·a

614-992-3470

. .....

INSURANCE

137 BRVAH PLACE

,..,.. . .IIi II • ...,,m.a4

r·- a.rn

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

u-,wv

"U..., Nm Ownershi'"

IIISUUTIOII

Otat'' " • CliMb ....._ ,

elk ......

HAULING

FAX 773-Sl!81

oNew Homes

_,!?'"""_,_...........~ et,S01.37

· Wonhip· o.m.
Somdoy Sdtool· 9:4S LnL

WICIS

Easy Pay Auto

Dapalltolf letnre~ ...........

llantll

\.o!lrAIIIII)

005

· Sunday Evenina? p.m.

Tbunday Service· 7 pm.

(l,,mmllw•

.

ALL OHIO

992:5535

Fllllli Vo7ay 'ht: roedt Clo.
llaiidlllm Rood
Putor: lteY..~men.......,

.

rl

12131..................17,173..24.

'

Prescriptions

RAWLIIGI· COATa

. day 'at the lodge batt. School of
instruction information will be
reviewed. Refreshm~nts.

Ph. 773-9173
108 Pomeroy StrHI

...

. .

We will work within your budget.

RK?nl, Oh.

Wedo l'*y 5or¥iC!Ia • 7 p.m.

We FI.HDoc:torl'

882·2855

......
--···--

MONDAY

. PHARMACY~

··tor everyth~ng ·

,,...........Cl7lle....

.
'
· · MlDDLEPOIIT •·• Evangelist Joe
Gwinn ,will be the guest speaker at
Hobson
Christian · Fellowship
Church Sunday, 7 p.m. All welcome.

SWISHER • LOHSE

' •

CI..ASSIFIED
'ADS
.
.
: .• •upeu llaark~ . '

l'llltiARTY

.'

· New Lilt \'ktooyC......
3113 o-Jaa Cnot ...... Oallipolil, 011
Bill !lalen.
S...y Semc:e, • tO Lla. &amp; 1 p.m.
W t ley ·1 p.oil•• YOIIIIo 1 J1.1L

· Ev~· 7:30p.m.. · ·
Wednaday ~ice·
7:30p.m.
,,

ojl

· 982-2318 Pomeroy
.

' Cloudo

Sundly Sdtaol· IOLm.
Wonhlp·,?p.m.
1bunday Senrice • 7 p.m.

,Yoorvice • 6:30 ,.• .

Mll ." of ort C
y a....
57S PearlS£, folkp ot
•
, , Plllor:Sanl~ ·
'j
Sonday Sdioot 10 o.m.
'

.

POMEROY •• Big Bend Stem·
wheel.Festivat committee, Sunday, 2
p.m ~· the Carpenters Hat!.

Oillon, W.Va.

(llllurlin&amp;him chun:h olf R - 33)

·"

.804W.Maln

i

oy-7:00p.m.
l'riday-7:00 p.m.

.. ,

,

..

..

"No Job ·Too.LIIrge or Too Sntllll"

114-742-28M

i

SUNDAY

W

p

P, J. PAULEY, AGENT
NallonwidJ
Ins.·Oh.
Co.
of Columbus,

: 1/4 mile poa1 ,.,. Mtip oio NoW Lima Rd.
-WIIialoV•=*r':OOJI.IL

CFntoo11 t

At 2 l..oclll7onll
Rui?Md, OPt.

, For instance, occlusive dressings ll_!l~14~98~t·~2202:~J

Sunda~, lk:'-1 .· 9::)0 a.m.

. ltetdnUJe Fellowalllp
Cll- oflltt N -

· Taoppon Plolas sa. root
Putor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9 a.m.

!11ain 2.,"'Pw;w:ro,
Cloudo

7 p.m.

Sunday
9:30 Lin.
Wonhip
·
10:30
a.m.
,,
Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool • 10:30 a,m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30 p.m.
.
Flill Sunday of Month • 7:30p.m. ,.,.;..,

Sunday ocbool and -.hip 10:25

.. Sa!. Coe. 4:&lt;45-5:15p.m.; Muio· S:30 p,no.

Pillor: Gre111ry A. CUndiff .
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip·I0:.30o.m., 6:30p.m.

=
;
_..

' LDil

C.llilOIIC

Mldcll&lt;pool c ..... lflltt NUinM .

Wonhlp • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool· 10:30 a.m.

Evenlna • 7 p.m.
''Y Servicea -.7 p.m.

,_....,.c.., zClowrdo
161 Miliary A..., I'Gmeray, !192·5898

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship ; 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Senricea · 7 p.m.

Putor: Bob-8andolpl&gt;

.

Worship • 11 a.m.
Wednesd~y 5ervi~s • 7 p.m. '

$UI!doy Sc:hool - 10 a.m.

Rooc:

J- .

Pastor: PJ . OJapman

i

Llll.

..,_,C!l apel Clo-

l'lalor: Sharon Hausman
. · Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 10 o.m.
'Thursday Senrica , 1 p.m.

0.1. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Co. Rd.6l
Scllo&gt;ol- 9:30 a.m.

Pulor: Sharon llauam.an
Sunday Sehool • 9:30a.m.·
Wonhip • II Lm., 6:30p.m.

.

Cllurdl of God orPropflet)

Thulldl.y Scrvicel· 7;30 p.m.
Rwlltwad- WID llapllol
Salem Sl.
Putor: Rev. Paul Taylo1 .

T..... Cioordo

Altrtcl

We&lt;lnetdoy Services · 7:30p.m.

AllllqwliJ Jloplllt

Sunday Schooi · IO a.m.
Wonhip • I I a.m.
\Vednaday ~rvlccs·8p.m.

fi~' Chuler

Apple and Second 511.
. Pulor: Rev. David Ruuell
Sunday School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Evcniilg Suvica-7:30 p.m.
'

rioior: Rev. Gilbert Cnia,lr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp ·, 10:45 Lm.

Grand~l

MeiiiC..o,er.am ........

s,_ Flnl Clowrcb of God

ML Morla' llapllll

·

' BotlloiCioudo

Tbwnship Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip · IOa.m.
Wednaday Se,.icel. 10 Lm.
~ Hockhll"o1 Cllordl

llaciae

Fall• Baplill Cllurcb
Railroaoj St., Moson
Sunday S&lt;:hool· 10 a.m.

. WeJz

Wonhip. 9:30a.m. (Ill.&amp; 2nd Sun),
· 7:JU p.m. (3rd I&lt; 4th Sun) ·
· Wednesday Setvioe • 7:30'p.m.

MI. Moria~! Cloudo of God

hrtoJ.

CooM7o ct.rdt
Mpi~ I&lt; fifth SL
'Sonloy Sdlool-10 a.m.
. Wonhit' • 9o.m.
.,._f SenriCel · 1 p.m.

~u-M.­

Worship· IOo.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se.Vices • 7 p.m.

-·

~: Brian llaotnaa

Caohlllo Uwlled M~
P-..: Helen Kline

Rev. George Weirick

Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
.

Un1ted Mcthod 1st

525 N. 2nd So. Middleport

'I

.

Cloudo

'!l

· •• Simdoy S&lt;hooJ • io a.m.
Worlhip. 1t a.m.

SL l'aaii.Aalltt- Cllor&lt;•
Comer Sy_.,. I&lt; Second St., Pomeroy

.Putor: Rev. Dovld McManis

Putor: lamea E. Keesee

w-:."::".%.y·?p."'.

.,,_a.tol.
' l f l l f. .

'

hee..._.,.....,..
-.-v..... .
=worUip·IOLm.

E

.

Wednelday Senricel-7 p.m:

. Servioea: Wedqoeday, 7:30p.m.
. Sunday, 2:30p.m.
Henlooa... €
...., Clo- ,'
, _ , 11ttron Durlianl
'. Sunday • 9:30 LOL IIIII 7 p.m.
\V-y-?p.m.
.

Pootor: Brian 11aotnaa
Sunday &amp;hOoF- 10 a.m.
9 Lm.

OwrSooiovlAalboruCIIudo

.

Wonhlp • 9:30a.m., ?:JU p.m.
WedneldayServiooa· l::!Op.m.

Wonhip. 10:45 a.m. (Ill I&lt; 3n1 Sun)
lull.ellrl

Walnut and HoOf}' Sll., Rave111wood, W.Va.
lntrim putors: Rev. ROOort Hupp
Sunday Seltj&gt;ol· 10:00 a.m.
Wonhop ··II a.m. .

UniOn

VIctory Baplllt lodeptodul

So!ndar Sdoool · 9:30 Lm.

Wonhip • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

a...-.v•
Hlrlford, W.Va.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhop . I lo.m., 6 p.m.
Wednetdoy Se"'ice' ~7 p.m.

Putor: Kenneth IIUer

Rev. George Weirick

llord'enl Cll.,a IICiuiot Ill

St.RL 143 just off Rl. 7 ·
Pastor: Rev. lime~ R. Acree, Sr:

..

s-

Har·
risonvil~ LOdge 411, F&amp;AM., Sli,t· .
SYRACUSE ·• Suttoo Township
urdlly, 7:30 p.m. 8! .tl!e Masomc , BoaRl \)f Tiustees Mgular meeting
Temple: ·RemshmelllS.
Monday, 7:30 p.m. .~ the Syracuse
Municipal
Building.'.
·
'
I
•
' EASTMElOS ··Eastern Athletic
..
Boosters, "wort· session" on the
RAC?NE ·•• Racine Chapter 134,
weight ~oom, I p.m. Saturday.
Order ofthe"Eastem ~tar. 7:30 Mon-

. Putor: Lawn:nce Folarian
s.-,. School ~ 10 a.m.

....
·-lllew-

J!l.,(o Uilte Rd., R and .
Putor: J!ev. Marprel J. J!ob-

HARRISONVILLE

I I aiJfe a.Mio
so0~.2nd
Ave .. Midi I ot

.... Goopo1 Cloudo

Delrltnn'f•• JU'- 'JYJ

1\ConlqSeao
Putor: ICeMO!h llabr
Sunday School· 9:45 o.m.

......._Ciowrdl
Pine Grove·

'Rtursday Serviccs - 7:30 ·
CIHISIIiHl

nec•udooUeou
Cllrtll ori.Aa-.u., Solotl

.

r-:David Dailey
Sunday Sdoool9:30 LID.
Evcnina·?p.a

. Rev.&lt;lydelltDdaSunday IIIOIVico, JO:OIJ Lm, 7:JO p.DI.
Youdt FellowohipSunday, 7:00p.m.
w.tr I ~., MIVioe. 1:30 P:m·

Sunday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:4S a.m. (2nd .t 4ih Sun)

~

SL Job

Rot Jo , . . Clowrdo ofCiuiot
Puwr: Philip Slunn
Slmdoy Sdlool: 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip Sdrvioe: 10:30 a.m.
J1i1&gt;1e S!udy, Wcdncacloy, 6:30p.m.

I

....... Ciiil 1... , .... 1\ Clo-

Pulor: Keaelb Baker

Lu thera n

. Wonhip • 9:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 9:30 a.m. Sunday
Bible Study· 7:00p.m. Wednetdoy

l'ainnOJ Nra, a.. Rd.
PIRor. Rev, 8' aiuod
- y Sdoool· 9-.30 .....

- -

AuthOrized AGA Dlstributol'
~ Welding Suppliaa I lnduslrtal Gases 0 Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fllbricatian , ~Welding
: . • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing •
ental
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Patio FumHure, F'weplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; Iota of,other stullll

.IPIOUTIIY

sane cfc.iun. But the therapy .is not
always effective.
Your husband sboul!l be exam·
ined by a dermatologist because
'there aze other lreapncnt options
available.

The c-,...nlty ~elerid•r II
piiiN!tlw? • a free NrYiH tO_.;.·
EAST MEIGS - Special meeting
,..,at..,...... willliq to ••'""ace of Easlem Lqcal Boanl of Educa·
mtlllns ud spedei evenls. The ti9n, 7:30p.m. Monday nigh!' in the ·' ·
c.t1d11r II liCit dellped to P.,.. school library. To ~ cbnsidered,
~ ..ae. 1M' f1md .nllen ol uy certified and .non-certified employee
type. Ia- an Jlri!l~ as IIJI8Ce _ contracts, contract cf9cumenl from
~ UcP can""' be ~teed the architects regarding i)Cl¥ conto ~a Ill • . IIUiber of days.
siJUCtion, and resolution on profi·
SATUJtD~Y . ' ·
· citncy tcstin~r. ·
"

•

c.moy .... a....

'

.

-

N'tiJM&amp; !fet.6

for

erable, and we 8IC 81 our wits' end .
DEAR READER: ' Psoriasis, a
conunon skin ·conditioo' marked by
itchy, irregular, scaling blemishes, is
often aeated successfuljy with corti-

..

.

:

Rev. Fraaltlil DlctCM
Senrlce: Friday, ,,..,

........ w.. ., 1'111111

.

I'Fl'ER
GO'I"l', M.D.

-.Com.munity.
~.
calendar'

Wionbip 111'.30 Lm, 7:30p.m.
. Wednaday SaYice ·?:lll P.•·

Wonhip • 9-.Jila.m. aod? p.m.
w - y - ?p.m.
Flidey -·rctlowohip oavioe 7 p.m.

Wonhlp. 10:30 a.m.
Th"!sclay Senrioea ·7:30p.m.

s.-f ICbool • 10::141 a.m.

-

i0111)

- . Robert a w- ·
Sunc!'~ School· 10 ~·~·
Wonhip1.11:15Lm.,7p.m.
W - .y Servi!o ·1. p.m.

Wonllip • 9 LID.

W~y SOMoa.·10 a.m.

, ,

,_F. . w 1\ ~lorCiidol

923 S. nlni $1, Midi 1 "

'
"
""'
SundaJ School· 9-.30

eyen pleasurable.
· Ear-nose-and-tl)roat speci~ists
have debunked ear-wning as a use·
less waste of money and point out
that ~ aze beJtet.ways to Clean

Sunday
·li'JOUL
Wonhip· 7:00'p.o~. ·
Wcdneillfy Bible Sf!ldJ ·l:OO.JI.IL

Cloopoi()Jiaa -Cioudo

-

I

. ....:.:tllilt

Oi' ,_...... , n1p c.e.r
. Solem 5I, Rutland

Pootor: ~ llabr
Sunday Sdaool • 10 a.m.'

Hememakins -tins. lot1bu11. • 7 p.m.

-.Oc:nez-

· Racine, Ofl
PUIOr : Daniel Berdine

....._

SaCrament SCrvicc 9-10:15 a.m.

H-~Ciowrdo

lltlltltbt• llapdot

•••

Sundaylid&gt;ool-tOa.m.
Wonhip·9a.m.

Sunday School JO::ZO.Il a.m.
.
Relief Socil:ty/Prieal._ ll:OS·I2:00 noon

,..CIIvd

ML Ualoa llaplill

fteCill I ~
320 E. Main SL,........,.
OJ MIOiicipal Bail!' a r s

s

7

Paolor: Ron Fimle
·Sunday Sdlool· 9:15a.m. ·
Wonltip ·IO:U LIL

St. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486

Tbunday Servioe • 6:30p.m.

,..,...... a-da
Lelalt, W.Va. lo.J

Polly Wadi .
603SocondAoe.' 77J.S011 . . .
Ser¥ic:elilne: Sunday 6:00p.m.

.

a.-Caolor .

Sunday Scbool· 9:30 Lm.
Wonhlp ·10:30 a.m.
Wednelday Se"'lceO -7:30p.m.

UlartJ Clutldoa CloDel!ler

PIS!or: Bill Unle
Sunday School · IOo.m.

~

•F\iiJ:()aopel Clluidl'

Sunday Sdloal. 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday S..Vicel- 7 p.m.

1 ' Chrcl of Jeou Clorlol
of lAaltor 0 . , .
Portland-Racine Rd.
Brandt PlaidoDI • Midlael Dultl

w-

. Slim' ... llaplllt
lb.~ .•

•

R&amp;&lt;wa

Sundi)Sdaooi•9Lm.
. Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
1 Se:vica. 1 p.m.

1u

, _ Midlael PooQio
- , oorvio:o, IOLIII.
11wondriy oervioe, 1 p.m.

Latter-Day Sain t s

lltdoaiy lllZI Clo- "Qrlol
E-lill Joaq111 B.llciatias ·

...
--A:
~

-

s

Sunday Sdlool· 9:30 .....
Wcnhip • 8:00a.m, 10:30 LIB., 7:00 p.m.
w - y Se:vicel • 1:00 p.m.

or·,

t

l'oofor. Jito &lt;;odMr • .
Wonltip oavica: -y.IO UL &amp; 6p.m.

Mc:Cuty
Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 o.m:
Sunday Evenin&amp; • 7 p.m.
W~y Senrica -7 p.m.

M.-. llJOu&amp; Sblmblill
Ybutll MlniotediiU Alllhctpr

C:i:ll'( !'r•·,

. 014"-ricaa ...... IWI.
--.J(Miop ~ 011
,_,Rev. Mary NeD I I
$tlay $4si · 10 LLL &amp; 6 p.IL

· (P

Putor: Rev' Roy

Comer of St. Rt. t:Z.hl Bndbur)' Rd.

6th ond Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday S&lt;:hool • 9:15 a.m..
Wonhip - 10:15 a.m.,?:OO p.m.
~ednesday Se"ice- 7:00 p.m.

SdDoJ.,,...
Slo•ia:o ·? p.a

W-J

r

Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thtuaday Senrioe · 7:30p.m.
...._ CEif- Medoedlol a.....
Putor: Peter Tr&lt;mblay
s...day School • 9:30 Ln!.
·Wonhlp. 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m .
W~y Seroioe. 7:00p.m.

Mud Clo- IICtujlt

s:-*1

Wonltip-IOuo.

RotludC-uiiJQ-

Flnl Baplllt Cloorcb

Worship ·

-Cioepol

-

. Wonllp. l~p.o:.

-Y~ · 9a.m.

7
a....
r-:RobatMIIley
s.aJoy 5diDal • 9-.JO Lll.

pd Dri ol'Ciartlt
Pulor: Eu&amp;ene E. Uaderwood
s.my fchool . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

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

'llrlla.nlll.r•"

... '

M'a . . .

IIJatTa.. H

a.ti

Paslor·: li. Lamar O"Bryan1

FtS.•ioll-7,....

')111&lt;'1

w-:r

w.wp. 10::10 a.m.

' Flnl Soalltmt BLpCiot

l

, _, Ouirloa NevUie
Sundav School· 9 a.m.
Wonbip· tO a.m.

Wonhip • 7:30 p.m.
Senrioe -7:30p.m.

• ... 1 ct.rdt "Cklol
- . J... Qipley
s-toy Sdlool· 9:30a.m.

Worship. 10:30 a.m.

·10:J0.....,6:30p.o~.

.,. ueo

.:'

-

r-:s-t..,.·

we"

,_, Ouirloa NevUie
Stlay Sdaool • IOLm.
, W.aip · 9LOL
111onJoy
6-.30 p.m.

Cbildrea'l oavlce • 10 LOI.

. '---'
Wonllip
Service·
9 a.m.
Scoc """"'
Comm- · tO a.m.
s-toy Sdlllal - 10:1.5 a.m.

s.-y School · 9:30 .....
· Wonhip • 10:4S Lm.

'DoodolflloN

I

Wa I'

W~·tla.&amp;

W'*na llllt H M tK C'ludl
7.'1 Pari 5I, Mlddleport.·.
Pootor: Rev. Jalm Nevillc .

T:yp '111 fllia a.rctl c;tiCidlt

Rallaod Flnlllopllll Clo....

F-s...-.

the ,.. - by . . . l"'!~ 1 5 Moreot-.
IIICIIt laltlt prw:lida.., believe
lhll the odlll{ cllittla ~ .._ ... llfC
simply ludicl-._ ..... .., _,.,.,

Deirijiip!t.nicle you - t me lbout ~·sudl-~.
Ibis biilue pnctice, I leamed 1hll
I bave DO finlhlnd lmowledae of
eat: ~~~~ i4 claimed - by its pro- - c:onins. so I will ~ an QPCII
poaelllS - 10 i!JipiOIOe sight 8lld bill· mind about the practice. Whethet or
uce ·aac? mental clarity, make peo- not you endone the new rage is up
. pJe·unwiiid, SOQIIIe lension, vacuum 10 you. But the whole concept
· sounds aliule silly.
·,
die J i - - and clean die ears.
Tho technique is simple. A footDEAR DR. G01T: -My husband.
loog CQJIC of paper is placed in the has psoriasis, for ll'hich he waS prear aac7 the cod is lit with a mau:b. scribed conisone cream. Although
AppnntJY, w!lfmed air then circu- this ,emedy is effective for the ruh
IMa iDio the ear ·eanaJ. Ear conen on ~ scalp,, it .doesn 't1work on his
iDs~ 1hll the process is harmless, · body because it rubs olf. He is mis-

Soiola!o-·P..liiUL

r-:IICdlo .....

,._GtwnMitH •
a •.a
1/2 mile olf RL 325
Pootor: Rev. O'DeU Monley ..
Sunday School • 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30j&gt;.m.
Wednelday Service -7:30JL111.

Zloa Doodo IICiuiot
'-toy, - • D i e Rd. (RLI43)

p

$tJ!Ido)l- ·tOa.m.

tcbool··9-.30a.m.
Sunday wcnbip ·7p.m.
W - y prayer_... , p.m.

...,..-.lorn

.

DBAll bADSR: BIIIOd 011 the delay pi;. .. f ., - - -

........

-Y

• . . . . . . . DoodolfQrlol
.hl&amp;or. JICt 0ai11Jcwe .

11r PIT15Uf. G01'T, II.D.

...

Wonlip·9UL

-of-BE
CloLeadi"' Creek Rd., Rutland
.... Dewey Kina

tttlllll:lnl-1

I

,_,,.~:,
7

l'lalor:Rev. Vk:lorSuaday School 9-.JOLIL
":.t,onh!t · II a.m.,-7:30 p.a.
W
y Senroco ·7:30p.m.

Jtae Doodo fiiCIIItlt
Wanbip·9:301.11L
.
SuadaySdloaJ.JO:.JOL&amp;
,_.JeffRy w.u~ii@l"":' (Seolltmtl

r

~R~··

_ , - . 9-.lll..... .
w~ 8:15, 10::10 ....... 1 p.m.
W-ySaoica•?plll.

;t..-. 7'.30 ....

I

.....
-,-·14L&amp;

Clllnll
31057--32:1...........
"-:Dr. J.D. y s-ky ....... 9-.30 .....
- 1 "'!'lip· JO:JOa.a&amp; 7p.a
w
y'pnyer--?p.a

Wanloip • 10...., 6 p.a

I

is too far ~ut ··

Dl!A7l DR. 001T: l"7eMe CCD- - 011 . the New Ate ... cal5ed
.... COIIlaJ.'~ 7s it 151 IbM it's
axlrld up 111 lie? '

w . -·.:-aT..a·.
'KI

E~rp.rocedun;l

\

I

Po.nlroJ • lllddllpDit, Ohio

·.FtUIJ;......., 31, 1117

~:.:.~~-~--~
,..,
. . iJi.,.. .
III!IIIC&amp;t··-

1

'

lllfla•r

---------------

::
~

---

----

BULLETIN BOAR D DEADLitH:
2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

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

------------ POST 467
•
---- MON~&amp; WED.
:
- . 6:30P.M.
~
--STAR BURST
5120.00
I

Ml11l111•111

DIIIIII·14'·A . .

rl

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.

'

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BINGO

ss.oo ....

-':'OVE
• lOAD
\

,,

'

Second A~enut, Mlddlepoq.
(0)11, houtthold, IIG.
Not reaponsiblt tar accidenta .

Of:tio. Toola,

T&amp;rml of MS. CIIW'l

·

Auel'-.Nm"MIIJ- '
11011 S..VI&lt;e."
i
Uc. a bonded 1¥ a1a1..1C»11o. '
114-11&lt;9-2192. Conol~- i
come.
Rick Piloraen Aucdon Company)

full !imt IUCtlonttr, complttl ·

aucuoM aervtct. lh:enaed
HI,Ohlp a Well VIrginia, ~4&lt;
113-57115 Or 304· n:J.5&lt;147

.

I

'

Wanled to Buy
1.
Abtoluto Top Dollar: AH u.S. Sll-'

80

vet 1\nd Gold Coins, PtootMta.'

Dill!ionda, AntiQue~ Gold]

Rmp,...,,:10 u.s. c ...toer.,

e.. ~,·-~i'
.stp. Coiro
Sloop. 111 s-nit
-..,a 'It n,,1...,..,..1SQ. '

~~..~~.::::
. ,~...,..
~t·
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.....
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.

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, ......., 31, 1117

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

OOP

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ACAOI8

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ALDER

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at liM :
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.
..
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12"oo

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·~ at
...............
.

11WIIall
14-.......

~
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•
Wanted to buY· turnitur•. baby

AKC C- C- for. Stud Sorvioo

11...., call l1•·ii2·3725, Pvmor·
oy Thrill Shop/ 22.0 Ea4t Main

SIMt

15

814 ·-~7

•Q

-'""
17-

J &amp; O't AuiO Pans. Buying sal·
vaga vehicles. Stlhno par1t. 304·

•Jtoae·saz

11

773-5033.
1DI7 S-10 EKit"'** Cab, au ·:

Top dollar· anuques, liJrnilura,

.

'Ieee

V-1,

Auro; .a.,~ 1

M~e1, Ail In EJcOiitnl
CockMo .... l1~1

WOnted To Buy : Baor Bed &amp; 011&gt;
er Bab/ Furniture. 614·2"5-9695.

~75-0748,' 304-5~2-138-

• Q

• 7

io 7 e

Solllb

I

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t·

1992DGdge lloiiOtA piclc,up, lilw. :
miiaago. 1891 ChoYy 5·10 pidl·
u~ 30-&lt;-8115-3!18.

.

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...

ndllioltjl
•
, I

i911 S-1 0 Talloo Air Condition;
ing, 5 Spood, Exoollont c-~ ·:

.Wanled To Buy : Dr fving Horeel
· Standard Breeds Prefe"ed, Dan
Hershberaer, • 789 Patriot Road,
Corner Of 141 &amp; Pab'iot Road, In

•AI7S42

K 6 2
8 5 4 s.

I

Milu, 1t00 S-10 Sppr(es,oao:,i .
Mlln, \N2 5-15 SonciiN 71,0CJ0. I

uamn. ~, ...992-7441 .

Clldfn&lt;o.

s-10

·EaR

KJtoteli

tomatlc, PS •.PB, air, bod covw 1
ond irlir, ii32I;IOi 11;HII2-32112.
I

glass. chine. clockl, gold, silver,
cotni, waiChes. eltatts. old SIDM
jars, old blue &amp; whlto dishe~ old
wood boxas; milk boldes.- Melgt
County . Advertitemenl, Osby

Iii Cltillil for t.e.
• Bony .....
57 Coal "' .,....
Iii Foot pill

111 Ramen 102

•AQ4
• KJ

.

11 1'tPe

• 10 8 7 5 3
oA92
•AKQ94

:=:-;:r•

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~~

...........
21 AeiMinder
21 F. - IIIIey

20.....
3 Fifth ..........
4 - +bn1c

30 " - ' • • 311n~
10
13
• j:)oup ~57 :::~
.•

Cllllle........
•·t ·

5 F-.
8 lHII rMnd
(Jiael.)
7 Dlglup
'
11 Crim• For """.
13 EMIHt born
t Put OUI at e~g~~t. 11 llagiclan'a
1DIIdw~
·

1$ c.rt.ln.city
reelclenl

20,._..

winding

. -lne
22 Mlnldlu
•nlllllll
23 Auto

24 :::.d

Vulnerable: Neither

.'•

Wanted, To Buy: little Tykes

Kitchen Set, Worksf'lop, Play·
nouse, Possible Any OtAer Little
T1ko Toys, Please Cali 61•·2•S-

581l:.

25 Kindol

Dealer: South

South

W&lt;M

t•

2•

5t
, .. .

Pilla
Pilla

couch

Eut
.••
• Dbl.
s.
Pua
Pilla . Pilla
Norlh

27 Agnue32 Worldwide

. . .?
34 Tlllra
35 VIgor

31 Hunflno .
expedition

OpenlncJead: ??

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

43R. . pa
45 Small '

mNSUN·

menta·
47-

410Kbr01td-

ca-•

41 Guardian

et&gt;lrl1

,._

SOY'orkehlre

-·
-

52 Map

1979 FOrd- ~75-5155.

I

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•

5-&amp; R-.,
fll!l1118rly

•

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Cempoe

n • ""t.mou~ ~. ~ n prwen~~
.Eac:ttlielir.hclpher_.b...._. T~CW: P ..... R

VCHQ

ZH

C. l
L

C A'

HOI_OOZXZJA,

ex

NTLV
H

XHJR

RQCATHX.'-

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Olllllldr o.r- ~ • a....s rnwn"

·' z
z

53 Bullfight

z

VCHQ

RGCATHX.

UTH

OCHZAW

JPXJA

BGIIOX.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'How wonderful opera would be it lhara were no
llingn."- Gloacchino ROIIIinl.
·

TlleY 51\Y TOO
fAJ.J.l.Y (..()OK:)

SPOIL THE

•

flrorH ...

....

••••

'·

/'

••
''

i'

Automobile Mechanic, 3 Year
Minimum Experience, Send Re·

sume To: P.O•.Box 38, Hender·
oon. wv 25108.

••

BOTTLED WILL POWER! LOSE
up to 30 pounds, 30 DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE I N~tural,
Doctor Recommended. 814-441·

,.

'.

1982. Free samples.
Compuler Usett Needed.
own hours. S20k to S50ktyr 1·
800-3&lt;111-71118 11508.

Any odd jobs , painting, gutlers
cleaned .. 614-245-5879 or 304- .
675-7112.

··~

\
'

K-.~Lill.

ANSWIIS

' ll\llnnow.- Ruler ~ Shaky· Unless • S~EN YOURS

It's ea$ier tD fOrgive other's mistakes and harder to
forgive them·for having·SEEN
YOURS.
' '
.

•
Full· time Advenisjng Sales Rep
position available 35hrl!week .
Expetience helplul. Ouafk or Me·

Intosh skill a pius. Reliable
transportation a must Send resUme to ; A~vtrtisihQ' Reaume
P.O. Box 1(), Raventwood. WV·

2818-0.
Fui-Timo WOrd Clerk Needed Far
Hama HeaJih Agency. Experienced In \'arioul CompuJar Programs, Efficient Typing SkUll At

lady wil take care of elderlY p8rson. T.LC. Work daya 01 nlghta.

Cali 304·7-73-578CI.

IFRIDAY

'

Professional Tree ~ice, · Stump
Removal, Fi'ea Eatlmateal ln8Uiance, Bidwell, Ot'lio. 61-'·388!111'18. 81-7-7010,
WHI Do Housecleaning ·usa M)"
OWn Ctenneq11 &amp; Klrbr Sweeper,
Met~rville And Crown City Area, ·
Call Nicole, 614· ~56-6979.

Will do 1n-home elderly care, 3-4'
per week, have: eight y•~
Sam• Club, Health Insurance I experience and many reterencaa,
Paid Halidayo. APf!ly In Person At havt had NIA training, $5.00 por
hour, 81.,.949-2329.
7112 Second """""''; GoiiiJ&gt;oh.

so wpm. Banallts:·Paid Yac:a~ona,

~aya

Full-Time, Part·Time Tupperware
Deaiera NBeded, CaN Between 1
And 5 614·446·4530. I
t

FINANCIAL

.,

•

JANUARY 31l

''

�~op25

.

Meigs rockerS hit
mualc acene with
their own ·b lend of

coil41gfl
B-bml '

agcdnl

rock 'n' roll

&gt;\

.

}KiJfl tire
'jorce be
wltll 1J01f,

Rndlnga

. . . . . . . . GIJ ,.,.111 .

•Page AS •

• Feeu.d on hge C1 •

HI: ....,eo
Low:308

•

.. (

..

.... ...,
Cloudy CCIISIIIIOI•

Detalla on
pageA2

•

., I

I

.·t mts•

..

•

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • February 2. 1997

Vol. 31, No. 51

Millions ·in tr~nsportation funds at stake for Ohio
A~a legislators debate formula for highway fund distribution
Is, ~MI!LA BROGAI'I

.·
·
. . ·
. . WAS.HINOTON - Mdleons of
4lolei
• • liars m federal funds to pay for
~way:: and ~er transporta.tion
jlro~';S .en .Ohio ~ at stake m a

' nnunced "Iced Tha"), llec lntersncid; Thursday, including several projects · Ohio, California, Texas and Florida
el Surf~ Efficiency Transportation · in ~ Mlrietta·area that will be tap - are. so-called "donor" states.
Act, well largely foeus on how much candidates for ISTEA funds. They They will line up against states such ·
enooey lhC federal government aends include COIIIII'IICtioa of U.S. SO from as West Virginia and New York that
to llec statts Jor· highways under a Alleci\S .. to
Coolville; · the are called "donee" states because
I:OIIlplicllled formula. The formula. Ravenswood Connector; construe- they receive more dollars than they
!DIIIbbilliondOIIarbellthat~ set .upi~ 1991 when'lhc.firstiSTEA lion of a new four-lane highway contribute.
·
!l"s up later this rnontjl.
legtslalton was pautd, 11 computed between . U.S. 50 and Richmond
Since 1955, Ohio has received an
The debate ·over ISTEA (pro- by asaessina the~ of a atak: and Dale; and cOIIstruction of a new average of 93 cents for each dollar
consll\letion coats.
highway from Athens to Oaewin.
contribUted. But West Virginia has
Thl$ year, the
In addition to the highway fund, reaped more than two dollars from
states received about ISTEA also sets up separate, smaller . the highway fund for each dollar
$19 billion in federal funds for aviation, harbor mainte· collected in transportation taxes.
highw•y funds,. with . nance and inland wa1erways. '
The ratios have been somewhat
"OI)io ' getting $681
· •J;Iut · there!s II pitched battle less during the past six years under
millllin · and West . expected over the funding formula ISTEA. with Ohio getting back 86
Virginia neii!IY $170 to be writte.er intll the secon!IISTEA cents and West Virginia receiving
millil1n.
legislation, and area lawmakeri are .$1.35 ,
Ohio's transport&amp;· weighing in on the debate.
In · a deficit-driven Congress;
lion :r.; department
States that contribute more donor states will be angling for a
announced its top money in transportation taxes than larger slice of the transportation pie.
fundln&amp; . priorities they receive from ISTEA - such as
Coilllnued on pep AZ

~--Men S1mo.

·

.

.

Tracking tranSportation dollars . ·.

.'

A~ look at how rru:h taderal•aiij)Qitalbs iJioli8y stal88 gett.:k
lot -v ~ con1ltlulel. Ooi1Clr stales c:onllbAe.I!IC)I81han theY gal
back, whllll ·
stalits gal bad&lt;~nont than they oontellula.
. .

: ·.
·~··

' . ....._..._
"'AAIska'0
.: 499
iL
I
•
I

o..,l... ••• I .:...:,

·~····+

-

Donor stilt

.End t~ bickering?~
;lntersectio · ~afety:
·
·
Area members agree Congre8s . .
.

plan
toLuJMsusGeorge
&lt;AP&gt; Voinovich
.,.... oov.

$;~·. ~t:S:W:

. budaet that would
increaie spending
in 11ec next fiscal
year by abol\1
percent

.

·'

.

- The OallipoCommlasion will be
to · 'a conditional use
later
month to build a
.,..,.,,;·,. in the city.
Qevelopinent · Co.,

I

!Et~Oa.,'
Jay Hall will
Jr. and
Hall•and
of Cheshi~e,
be

· 11ec !eq~ea.t ~urin&amp; a public
of, the .ciitJe!Niaion It 6
Tuesday, Feb. II in the

[6aUipolis Municipal courtroom.
meeting was scheduled at
the request of llec developer 110d
the Halls, Who were to have
tially met wilh the commissiQO
IJ!id·~~ but JIOillponed .it
until' a late~ date.
·
The penni! ~uested would
allow for
cQ~U~tna\tion of ~
c~icr•. as yet. un11-"'ed,
tll'li~ Or 2145 Eaattin
to' Mike Null, the
Cll)"l.cooc enr.OO;e,melnl officer. ·
silt .o f the ptoposed center
ltltMlr.iees 18.6' acres of ·tand, and
as tniffic-oriented
river commerce

97

..w.

• ·Y·&amp; ENGINE .
..

•

.

Petition a$ks steps be taken
to Insure ~,I
M. uden
. t safe.tu
"1

should
. , focus attention on issues:··

at SR 7, Little Kyger Rd.
By KEVIl KElLY"

T l - Slnlllilllltd

CHESHIRE - River Valley High School parents
l;lelieve stePll should be taken to improve safety at the
intersectiOn of 'State Route 7 and·. Linle Kyger Road,

i~die~
·
i~i~~f·
~
the~~
·
~~a~traffi~
·
~Q~Iii:C~i~~~
-~t~o~ve~r~:~;::~;:::
~
iia4'.ti:liOiilolll•

.

, ....,..., "·:

I

.

- '

Good Mornmg

I

.rieal number
al .
ihl~lion f..ilj4~
RVHS opened
thecjlatn)l
cials woulilstill
any safety improvements.
"We don't need•another accident like the one we had
~: aai4 lL Wiyne McGlone, commander of the
~lrol's Oallia~MI(as POlL
'
'
.
Stlideats Stevtii · Boso, J.B. Boio and Jeremiah
triplett we~e injll(lid when llec car llecy were traveling ·
to lthool in collie!i!d with a pickup trU~ on Jan. IS.
They we~e ttanspo,ted to aren hospitals, where Triplett.·
and I:B. Boso we~!Jater treatiKI and released .
Steven Boso, "" drOve the car, remains in the
inten&amp;lvc care udl~ at .Cabcll-tluntiilgton Hospital,
Himtingfon, W..va!&lt;li
.
A petition hal l:iieen circulated calling for all "necessary steps" to cn&amp;e silldents' slfety to and from
RVHS; SI!Ch as calillpn liahts, speed redlictiori, turning
lllnes or school zoeiffluhinglights. .
. ·
U:LI'IIIII 0\11' Vlllly High SChOol .
Although the Ollio Department of Transportation's.
Nlck:Rocchl
mlldl
•
donellon
to help liuy
District 10 office ieilMirietta had not received the peti.
jleCbta
fol' 1111·th- RVHS ~
tion last week, it il"aware of the concerns 'about the
two-v,hlcll Cfllh ~'the echool lilt
intersection and is pleplrins a p~eliminary study of the month. • ·jlltltlon
drive 11 cllllng for .11tety
site, said Tom Camden, studies engineer in llec dis- I!IIJKOVIolllllta M lleleccldlnt ahl.
'
. ....
.
trict's planning andt~rammins ~~nt
::
FOI!Owi~s·the
accident,
the
loc.
a
l
patri&gt;l pi&gt;st found·
"We'~e trying ·to'·look at it. tiut it's not a cursory
glance," Camden eX'plained. "We want to look and see that lle\fl!R ~~idents ha:ve occurred at SR 7 and Little
if a pattern is there, 'll!d see what what we can do about .I.C.Y&amp;eJ: sleice' 1993. Aside from the·recent crash, ·only
, . ~idF~t ~piece involved i,njury or 11 driver under
it."
.
' .
._,
.
; ,I .
'' .
• •
'the study will
f~arded to John Dowler, the
,
there
to
where
7
eind
SR
554
~et
in
district's deputy
to determine if further study
~~~Je. there have' beep about 20 accidents ove~ the
is necessary, he .·
to make the inter·
· Continued on plgl A2
· ' ·,
section safer
'

P.ri

line fo

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28105">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28104">
              <text>January 31, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4020">
      <name>braley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
