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..... 10 • The Dally Sentinel

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Tuesday, January 2, 1916

Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio

.~ ~ diet rather than thinkinz jwt about adding sugar at ackung salt.~ . ~r 1han allowing some add~ pounds with age, and they should shed

.

;APr- Writer~

' WASHING10N (AP)-:-- For a better 1996, try to get a hillf-hour of exer: cise each day, eat a wi!le varie~ of foods in moderation and don1't be afraid
. to tab a drop of wme at mealllme. •
.
: .~'s ~ ~ fl'om the IJOvemmen~. whtch '?'Ia~ released the. fa~
:eclilion of N~tnllon andY~ Health: Dtetary Gutdehnes for Amencans..
"These gwdelines cut through the confuston of messag~~· ~d the chums
:and counte~!atms that we hear every day about o~ foods, satd He~th and
Human Scrvtces Secretary Donna Shalala, who tssued 1he report 10 con) unction with the Agriculture 0e1,'81111lent. .
. ,
.~baste message.o~ '!'oderabo~ .and vanety carnes over from the 1990
gwdehnes, used-by diellUans. numllomsts and other food and health professionals, and by the goven\ment to set standards for school lunches.
: Bul this time around, more stress is placed on exercise. The guidelines
:say ~veryone should gel 30 minutes or more of moderate activity on most
,days of the week, preferably all. Bri~k walki~g. calisthenics, house work,
.gardemng, moderate sports 1111d dancmg ~I Wtll do.
.
· The guideli~es sa~ to choose a diet wtth vienty of gram products, veg·.etables and frutts, whtle low m fat, saturated fat and cholesterol. They 'urged
a diet with "~oderate" salt, sodiumJIJld sugar.
.

your food," says Nancy Schwartz., director·of the National Center for Nutri·
tion and Dietetics at the American Dietetic Association.
~e report.preserves the recommendation that no man: than 30.percent
&lt;!f daily calones .come from fat: and I 0 percent froJJ? s~ted fat. .
,
For the first ttme, the gmdeh~es say people can_ bve. wnhout eallng antmal ~ucts. But those vegetarians should take vttamm B-12, found only
·~ ammal foods. They also should find,good sources of vttanun D and calctum.
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· The gmdeb~es also suggest ratsmg a glass: If you drink alcoholic beverages, do so in mod~ra~.on , with meals and when consumptton does not
put you or others at. nsk.
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It dropped wording that alcohol c011sumptton "' gen~r)ll.'s not recommended, and also took out a statement from the 1990 gmdelines that alcohoi consumption has no health benefits, since some health benefits of modcrate drinking have been documented.
!~ fact, the guidelines mention that eating shoul~ be a P!easllre.
.
Consumers should look to the bounty of Amencan agnc~l~, ~n m
grocery .stores and markets across~~ country•. for help planmng numllous,
economtcal and good-tastmg meals, says Agrtculture Secn:13IY
Dan Ghck·
1
man.
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. excess.pouads gradually.
,
And tjlose looking to lose a few pounds after the holidays should avoid
· .crash diets. Instead, take off one-half pound to a pound per week, combiping exercise aod healthy food choices. Don't allow yourself extra pounds
just hl:cause you're getting up in years. .
·
The report did not impre~. everyone, however.
The advi&amp;ory committee's recommendations were characterized as tab
mild to be useful, taking far too kind a took at salt, sugar, cholesterol and
fat, accordinll to the Center for Science in tl)e Public Interest, a private food
_ watchdog group.
"I think everyone thinks th;it they are consuming a variety of {pods ih
' t ; teration .already," said Michael Jacobson, the center's executive direqt r.
t
.
,
,
. The guidelines in bulletin fonn are available to the public starting today.
To order a single ~opy, send ybur ~arne, address and '5o·cents to c 011 sum~
Information·~nter, Deplrtment 378-C, Puebio, CO 81009. ·
:
Also available from the home page of the USDA Center for Nutrition Po!icy and Promotion at http:/fwww.usda.fusdalfcslcnpp or HHS Home Page
at http:l/www.os.dhhs.gov.

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Calvin and Hobbes have sledded
'down the hill and into the sunset
. ·after nine years on the comics page.
., The terrible tyke and his wideeyed tiger companion on Sunday
made ihcir last appearance carrying
:a toboggan onto a field ofnewly fallen snow.
" It's a magical world, Hobbes,
· ol' buddy. Let's go exploring," .the
,perpetual 6-yc&amp;I'· Oid said as they
sailed downhill and out of sight.
· Their creator, Bill Watterson, said
:in November that he had done all he
,could within the daily comic format.
"I think Bill is ready to move on '
'and explore some new possibilities
in his life," said fan Lucy Caswell,
curator of the cartoon research
·library at Ohio State University. "I
thought the strip (Sunday) was beautifully written, saying that, you
know, he's going io start a new
world."
Watterson, who never gives inter:

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v1ews about his work, has not satd
what he will do now. In the letter announcing the end of the strip, lie
said he would continue to work with
his distributor, Universal Press Syndicate,·but neither he nor syndicate
officials said what fonn that might
take.
Caswell said the strip was so popular because readers could identify
with Calvin and remember their
own childhoods.
"He was able to enter into the
mind of a child, I think, and the sjJecial relationship many children hav~
·with a toy or some other object," she ·
said. "I think that's one of the real
appeals of that strip. Many of us had .
that same 'ah, ha' recognition lots of
times when we read it."
"Calvin and Hobbes" hit .the
comic pages in 1986 and was distributed internationally to nearly
2,400 newspapers. More than 23
million copies of hooks based on the
clirtoon are in print.

'

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club meeting 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public Library wjth Mrs.
Dwight Wallace. hostess. Mrs. James
Diehl will review Ladder of Years by
Anne 'Jyler.

POMEROY - Meigs County
•Library Board of Trustees meeting
Wednesday, I0 a.m. at the Pomeroy
TUESDAY
REEDSVILlE - Eastern Ath- library with art:hitects for the Racine
letic Boosters meeting, 7:30p.m., at Branch Library.
Eastern High School.
-_ THURSDAY
. RACINE - Southern Local
WEDNESDAY ·
Building
Committee meeting ThursMIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy
Masonic Lodge 164 ReguliU' Meet- day, 7 p.m. in the high caf~teria.
ing, 7:30p.m., at Middlepon.

•

Vol 46, NO. 173
,2 Sections, 12 Pages

ary.
Ill and shu!) ·in members were

The Rivm: '\(alley Herbalists held
their annual Christmas pany Dec. 5
, at the Blennerhassctt·Hotel in Pari, ersburg, W.Va.
The 13 members and guest,
Masci Gibson, had a full-course
meal as well as the annual ornament .
and gift exchange.
.
11te steering committee will meet .
.Jan. 8 at 7 p;m. at the Ravenswood,
_W.Va., !jenillf Citizens Center. Reg. ular meeting will resume in Febru-

remembered with poinsettias and
herb hooks were donated to . tbe
. Rav~nswood library in :memory ·of
two members' fathell *.ho died in
1995.

Fireworks light up Bostqu Harbor and FmevU Hall, In the foreground, early on Monday. Tbe dlaplay r11)mlnated lloltoe's 20th Flm
Night celebration, wbicb drew an eothnated 1.5 million people to per·
formances, concerts.and art exhibits throuchout the city. (AP J'ho.
to)

NEWYOitK (AP)- Five major
U.S. cigarette makers have united to ·
argue that the Food and Drug .
Administration exceeded its author·
ity with a proposal to restrict minors'
access to tobacco products, The
· Wall Street Journal reported today. ·
The FDA'~ proposed rule, issued .
last summer,declares that cigarettes
are a drug'i4.elivery device, and
therefore subject to FDA jurisdic·
tion.
The pro)iosal would require
$150
tobacco companies to
million·annUal advertising Campaign
to warn children of the health dan·
gers of smoking. It also waul~ ban
cigarette sales from vending
machines
restriclions on

Cutf!:

ancUmpose

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RETURNS FROM VISIT
P~uline Kennedy, a resident at
The Maples, Pomeroy, recently
returned from visiting her diwghter,
Barbara Loftis, and granddaughters
Katie and Kelly of St. Peters, Mo.

In a jointly submitted response,
the cig~tte makers said they will
argue the FDA's proposal would viD' ·
late U.S.law and even the U.S. con·
stitution. The i!ldustry claims the
. FDA does not 'have federal statuto- ·
ry authority to regulate cigarettes, the
Journal said.
.I

In their 2,000-word response, the
· companies said they will also argu~
that nicotine docs not fit the legal
· definitioti of a drug and that its
e~ts do not fit the legal definition
of addiction.

A man lea..Sinto a driving $nowstorm as he walks through down·

town Colum~Thesclay. Twotofourlnehellspftd!ctedforthatarea

.

rlf
·&amp;I ·r
d ma~•or IIUln•e
·:~ snows· to rm hl•ts o· hl·o

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• The Nation al Weather Se rvice
·;reported blizzard conditions at J ay. break in northern Ohio. Lillie change
,:was predicted through the day. The
.:weather service said another 3 to 5
:inches of snow was CJII!~d across
;:much of northern ·ohio'through the
·fternoon .
•.
"' C(!Jvcland Hopkins International
:-Airpon was. .closed for about two
ours while crWs worked to clear
!6.8 inches of snow from runways.
':fwo runways were reopened at 6:30

nonhern Ohio closed for the day or
delayed ope ning by an hour or 1wo
Across the state, trafric was
snarled and minor accidems were
reported shortly after the ~torm
began early Tuesday and continued
through the night.
By Thesday afternoon, the Piqua
post of the State Highway Patrol
already had reported up to 4 inc.hcs
of drifting snow and at least 10 au'tomobile accidents in Miami County.
"You go ou tside the city li mits
and
bung-o'"
said
Ted
Peacoc k,assistant Miami Coun ty
road supenntendent
Snow dnftcd back onto many rural roarls Tuesday as soon as plows
had passed by scattering salt.
"Then, even though it's treated,
you 're still driving on ice," Peacock
said.
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to AEP. American .Eiectr,l c

its

It's the same cOmpany you've come to know, with a nevi name. And a reneWed Commitment to serving
.oUr cu.tomers
more efflciently'and more ~actively. AEP; Sam&amp; company. New name. Even brighter future.
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Creek Conservancy District, $7,146.
Meigs County. Emergency Services director Roben Byer pointed
out that he has not received official
confirmation from the state concerning the .funding, but added that
he has been contacted by Carey.
"(Carey) stayed on top of it. We
get information from him faster than
from Columbus," Byer said.
"We are expecting the check in
mid February," Byer added.
The county has received emergency funding from the Ohio Public
Works Commission and from the
Natural Resources Conservation Service's Emergency Watershed Protecti on Program administered
'

through the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District.
\
"These incidents go to show what
we are capable of if we stick together," Byer commented.
,
In recent years, the county has
received almost $250,000 in emer·.
gency relief foll owing two blizzards
and the' May flood, Byer said.
The funds released by the controlling board will be used to suP:
plement the cost of the damages
caused by· the storms. Many areas
experienced extreme damages to'
public roads, facilities and communications systems.
•
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Gallia County wi ll receive
$169,631.
.
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lance program and the state Department of Education was determined
by financial need and valuation fig-

ures in each district, according to
State Board of Education official ·
Jack Hunter

•

tWO

by the
"

So~thern 'Local was awarded
$3', 190,800 by the state which will
aid in construction of anew K-8 , 650
studenf"educational facility and renovations and .additions at the existing high school building. ·
Eastern Local was awarded
$7,136,000 by the !l,!at~ which will
aidinconstruction of a new K-8, 650
student educational facility and renovation s and additi ons at lhe cxisling high sc hool building.
Easu,rn and Southern Local
Schools officials attended the m eet~
ing, along with State Represe ntati ve
John Carey (R-Wellston).

The issues would approve 23year bonds to fin ance the construction Of new buildings 10 house the K8 st udents, and maj or renovati ons
and addition s to lhe existing 'high
school buildin·gs in each district.
The amount of state funding
released by the State Building Assis-

Sen. Long t'o seek·j.Ud'ne
::1
• p IC"away
• 1, · County
pos f In
COLUMBUS (AP)- Term limits will not force officeholilen
out until 2000, but the restriction already has inHuenced some
Statehouse career decisions. A term limits advocate said Tuesday:
That's great.
At least 23 members of the I 21st General Assembly have
""'~ti~_,jllan \0. d~ so, ~,xp~t to S"i'k el~ction to other. ofl'14:ea,-~ .
were niitl~g such moves in advance of a Jan. 19 candidate tiling
del!dline.)i
.
' ·
Topping the list or retirees as the Legislature prepared to begin
the second half of its two-year session Wednesday: Senate Presl·
dent Stanley Aronoff, R·Clncinnati, and Senate Minority Leader
Robert.Boggs, D-Rock Creek.
Both said last week they would not run for re-election thl&gt;year.
, Aronoff will leave elective office, while Boggs expects to run for
the Ashtabl!la County Commissioners,
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D·Cirdeville, said Tuesday he would
run for .the post of Pickaway County Probate/Ju veniie Court
Judge. Long was in the middle of his third term in the Se nate and
was not up for re-eleetion this year.
House Assistant Minority Leader Jane Campbell, D·Cieveland,
w~o will give up her House seat to run for Cuyahoga (;:ounty CommiSSioner, traced the legislative musical chairs to term limits vot·
ers adopted in 1992.

Flooding.highlights news in May
APRIL
April 2- Jail construction alternatives were explored by Sheriff .
James Soulsby, a comractor, and the
Meigs County Commissioners.
April 3 - Funding for lhe
Appalachian Arts Initiative pilot project was presented in a meeting of
the Riverbend Ans Council with
Ohio Arts Council representatives.
April 4- Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Cemer puts $800,000
addi!l&amp;n under '!Oilslruction.
April 9 - Commissioners hear
from Howard Frank, treasurer, that
investments are producing revenue
and the county's financial health is
go od. '
April 10 - ·The Pomeroy Merchants Association staged its lOth
annual successful fashion revue.
April II - Middleport Village .
Council bought six )ms to be encompassed into a parking lot for boaters
near the Middleport levy.
April 12 - Rutland Council
applies for a paving grant and brush
fires J}laqu(lthe county.
April l3 _Judge ordered Jack
Crisp to jail to begin serving his time
for the five misdemeanors of which
he was convicted.' County road 25
was closed as work continued on the
2 .25 mile portion of higllway
. between Rock Springs and Five

operation were aired.
April 21 - Ground breaking on
the $153 million hydro-electric project of 1hc American Mun icipal Etectric Puwcr.
April 24- Courtney Roush was
crowned Racine Festival flower
queen .
April 28 - Seventy-one Southem Local School District students
were recogni zed for academic
ac hievement at a banquet where a

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rcpresenlative of lhc Ohio Depart- Vaughan as their um:untcsted candi·::·
ment of Education was the speaker. date for mayor in the November gen&lt;"
MAY
cral eleclion .
·,
May 1- Judgc Fred W Crow Il l
May 5 - ODOT officials rcpon '
rejects a ple a agreement and sen · constructJOn un th~ connector project
tcnces confessed poacher Michael R. is "on schedule."
Barker of Charleston, W.Va., 10 I~
May 6 - Selling the mood for :
months in prison on a charge of . the 19% Congressional elections, ;
felony fleeing.
former Democratic Congressman.:
May 2 - In the counl y's onl y Ted Strickland infom1s Meigs Couti- :
contested mayoral primary, Pomeroy ty Democ rats of his plan to run for:
Republicans se lected Frank A.
Continut'll on page ,3 ,
·,

Major east-west roads were the
hardest hit by the snow drifts. A
.!: The Ohio Turnpike was open but number of vehicles traveling 9n icy
'"'travel remained hazardou s early
Interstate 70 near the Indiana border
:;'tOday.
ended up in the median strip.
::· Elsewhere, snoMall ranged from
'i-II inches in Van Wert in northwest- , . In Dayton, more than a dozen
.;m Ohio to 8 inches in Warren in the "'· htgh school basketball games were
:.nonheast. In Cleveland. traffic was
postponed Tuesday mght. In central
·~lowed by 2-foot snow drifts blown Ohto, shppery .ro_~ds were blamed
t.or numerous lender-benders,. cars
'y 50 mph winds.
.,..
shppmg mto d1tches and a Jack: · In Columbus .•~bout 300 passen- knifed ~emitrailer in Madison Coun'IJ:ers were stranded at the Greyhound
ty west of Columbus.
: bus . station downtown. Customer
Police around Cincinnati. in
""'ervt.ce representative Elyse Henson
southwestern Ohto reported shck,
:Said Snow emergencies and impassice- or snpw-covered roads and
':Able, ice-coven:d roads, especially in advised motorists to stay home
outhem Ohio, kept many buses Tuesday nigh.t except for emergenrom running.
cies. 1be snow, however, did not
"" "We have passengers all over the hamper air traffic there.
Poi~~ril ·14 ~ Rutland Fire bepan-;,lace," she ~aid. "We can't move
The . Cincinnati/Northern Kenment got a new pumper truck. •
nythinj! ouLofhcre."
. ..
tucky lntema!i~Airpo~remained
A .1 17
A"
'II"
1:: 1be American Red Cross hrought open Tuesday ntght, but fltghts were involving
pn
pup mt case
Sharori Durham, the Meigs
.n snacks and drinks fQrt!,.~sen running ur to an hour ·Iate,
C
H
S ·
d h
...ers and many wereru lQwed to spokesman Ted Bu.'}lelman said.
ounty umane octety, an t e
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prosecutor's office was re~olved .
a~:i:~~en!f:Jo~n buses in the ot
StatetroQ~rs~ported kseriesrf
.
Aprill9-Testdrillingfor a new
:::l Sheriff's ' dep~r tmen t s , from cars skidding off Interstates 71 nn
water well for Pomeroy took place at
;l&gt;auiding County j n the north to
90.-but-there were-no injuries.
the Sy..,acusesite~The-site was later 1
~onlgrimery County in scuthwest
. Tuesday's storm followed a bliz- abando.~.
.
, .
hio d...&gt;clared snow emergencies,
zard last month that dumped more
April 20- Mtddleport Village s
le~tricting the usc of highways to
than 6 inches of snow· in parts of cost of sabsidizing the taxi service
'l!mergency travel. .
Ohio and left. thousands of people and ;ways.tQ reduce the cost and keep
~ M!lnY bus!IIOsses in central. and
without power.
the public transponation service in
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st'orm ;.aII area sc h00 Is open

The Associated Press
;: Blindin~; wind: whipped s now
: made dii&lt;•ing dangerous, and closed
:sc~ls and'at least one major airport
~lp Ohio today.
::, The Meigs County area escaped
: most of the stotm. No schools were
__ reporte&lt;! closed in the county, and the
. ! Oallia-Meigs Post, State Highway
,:patrol reported no accidents as of this
~morning. 'The weather bureau is for ·:casting an'inch or less accumulation
-:.in the area.

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'•gs .Count y area
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escapes b run t

~·: By

L..~~""""!-;"'-------.,.--:F:O:o':"r=:=!

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by Bob Hoeflich

COillic ~~:tor MusiiJI() Troisi &lt;!ied 12 , Miramax Films saiil Monday the
-: ,licJin ~filming the Jut see"' of movie
qpcn on 2SO' screens Fri"'''W ~,"bat~ may be 011 · day. That s~sos;the 180 sereen.s
11w wqe o( het•nlq a,1tlr in the that the 1993 SpantSii-language htt
·• Uli.ftil4 s-,
"Like Water for Chocolate" - the
~ ~ _ . , "D Pollino"' in .Ital- ~· biggest-~ing forelgti-lariguage
. 1M; .._ 1 ·1 r I t fet tbe- widest film in U.S. history"- played in its •
• • 1 eww llfr a ,_.p Janpage ' wicleat relca;se.
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"This funding reaffirms the state's
COfl\fllilment to making education a
number one priority," Carey said. "It
is important to provide our children
with facilities that will enable them
to learn to the best of their abilities."
The state funding is only the first
steptoward seei ng the building pro·
jects come to fruition Voters in both
districts must pass bond issues to pay
fo r the local share of co nstruction
costs. in order for dirt to begin moving on new construction.
Southern Local will place a 6.10
·bQ~4~;is.$u~_. b;.fur.e..,li.Q~.. jp. ..
Ma~rcn tlriinance thEw locaJlshare of
$4.2 million for the district building
project .
Eastern Local will place a a 4.5
mill bond iss ue before voters in
March to fipancc their local share of
$1.5 million for the dimict building
project.

B,y TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
F~nding totaling $10.3 million
has been released to two Me i g~
County school di stricts to help the
costs of constructing two proposed
• K-8 schools and renovating two
county high schools .
The Eastern and Southern Local
School Districts were awarded fund·
ing by the stale Controlling Board
during their regular
· Tuesday
in Columbus. The
.carne

~~~~!:~~an~i=n~ch~o~r~J~~s~o~f~a:cc:u:.m:u:.l:a=tl:o:n~g~ex~~:·:'~ed~.~~~.,J.\~fr~om~;a~f~

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Ohio Power is changing .

derstonns, high winds, flooding and
tornadoes. There are ~ti II many areas
.that have not fully recovered from
these disasters," Carey said.
"I want to make sure that every
co mmunity is returned to pre-disaster conditions as soon as possible,"
he added.
·
The funding breakdown is as fol.lows: Lebanqn Township, $8,748;
Olive Township. $8,837; Pomeroy
Village, $7,247; Salem Township,
$15,358; Salisbury Township,
$5, 180; Scipio Jownship, $2,59 1;
Rutland Township, $13,326; Emergency ~anagement Assoc iation ,
$1 ,623; Coupty Highway Depanment, $44,098, and the Leading

State .funding released for school building projects

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Meigs County receives
$114,115 in flo'o d relief

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advertising tobacco products in areas
deemed accessible to minors.

Beat of the Bend ...

film.

snow.~.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Several Meigs County communities and agencies will divide
$114,115 in state assistance for natural disaster relief following a flood ·
in May, 1995, State Representative
John Carey (R-Wellston ) announced
this morning.
The money was released by the
state Controlling Board Emergency
PufPose Fund with the funding
request coming 11\rough the Ohio
Depanment of Public Safety, according to Carey.
"This spring, many area in southeastern Ohio were faced with severe
weather conditions including thun-

lr-t.nlnt
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auill of ·
arrived on schedule just the "down-sizing'' taking place
· Well,
as we suspected. Some of us wen: across the nation. How come it took
in a condition to recognize you and so many peo.pl,~ to do these jobs and
some of us weren't. Your arrival now all of a sudden businesses are
always brings a reason to celebrate. laying off workers by the thousands?
Perhaps, it's because you give us a Time was when there was some
chance to wipe the slate clean and degree of job security. However.
take another shot at doing better. . with buyouts, down-sizing and mod· .
~~nlo~ a..Joroe, lighted \'?'ern tedmolo~rY,job~l}' seemato
~all in Nl~ 'Yilif Clcy{w1 also get '~ have gone d~wn·IJi~ ·ffi~. 1'em•. ·
our salsa there) to mark your arrival you brought along a solution-if so
and there was entertainment if you pull it out of your magic hat as soon
want to use the tenn lig~tly. Time as possible.
Locally; I hope you brought along ,
was when we had Guy Lombardo on
hand to give your predecessors a some wands for the company that is
royal welcome through the magic of working on Pomet"oy's Main St,
television. However, the world is a with the new water line. The conl ittle shan on Guy Lombardos right struction must have been disaster for
now and that's unfortunate for you-'- merchants of hoth Pomeroy and
and at least some of us.
'
Middleport and in between during
You really look good at this point the holiday season. J realize that this
in time-so very young, so innocent, is probably progress and progress
so enthusiastic. However, I have a · has itS inconveniences. However, I,
• feeling that you, too, have a bag of even in the name of progress,.think
tricks and kicks that you'll be hand- the Main St., situation has been a triing us in the next 360 days or so. fle too much-if you've sat in a long
But you're going to have to go some .• .line of traffic trying to get back and
to beat la5t year's ,bequests. I mean, · forth over the past weeks I'm sure
we're just about shockproof after you know what I'm saying. And I
ha~ing undergone so mucll in the
do hope our vehicles can hold
put, can you really top ttM: O~la- together in spite of the deep ~ts
• · homa bombing, the 0. J. Stmpson . · which have developed at the stte.
trial, ,Pri~\lllSS P,i. and .her. "tell all" So, •Babe, if yDu'"c ~ot the wands
· ~· auitode, Bosnia and clostng down · don't waste aootller mtnute m getttng
· government opcrations:-'ltot only them into. the proper hands.
, once but twice. If you &lt;:an top this
Oh, by the way, I understan~ you,
stuff then we're really in for some , brought along the magic .to make our
, jolts. ·
,
·
winter in Meigs County just like sun•
• , On tile sunny side of your arrival ny Florida this year. Work .your
.J hope yOu .brought alont! I10I11C solu- magic 1\nd watch us keep stniling.
'tion,,IQ J!ri11!1ems that plaque us. ·
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35AGannett Co. N-opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 3, 1996

...

RIVERVALLEYHERBALISTS

...

!-').S ANGELEs' (AP) ,-' :lwi,n

e

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Walking .in the

Cloudy with a chance of fight
snow tonight, lows in the teens.
Thursday, cloudy. High near 30.

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Pick 4:
1986
Buckeye 5:
4-6-18-19-27

Sports on Pag~ 6

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~~·· ~Names· ih·..the· news-" -

336

.Maj()f U.S. tobacco
: c9mpar~ies: set to
challenge FDA proposal

-Community calendar· The Community Calendar is
pubUSbed 1111 a free service to non·
profit JII'OIIIII wlsbing to announce
illeetbll and special events. The
ealeallar Ia' not cleslped to promote . . - or rund nlaen of any
type. Items are priDted' as space
permlttl and camtOt he paranteed
to 11111 a speclllc number ol days.

Pick 3:

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:c~~i~~~~tH~bb~·~~··· -~~~;;;:~~·;;;....... oo~~~~~,~;;;;~~~~oo·t:
:leave comics page

Ohio Lottery

Meigs drops
cag~. tilt to
River- ·Valley

:eovernmen' e·ating guide1ines ·extoll variety, moderation and a·xercise
''By·ROBERT GREENE '...._\

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Movie nightmare rev~sited.~___.__.__...,;,._--;;;

111 Court StJeet
Pomeroy, Ohio " .

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Gannett Co. Newspaper

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CHARLENE HOt:FLICH

"'

MARGARET LEHEW
ContrOller

General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be signed with name,
address and ~lephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should Be in good ~te, addressing issues. not personalities .

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. Governor~· commissioner·
spar over Medicaid changes
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By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COI,UMBUS- Money and power. That's what Gov. George Voino~ich
, wants Congress to give him to deal with Medicaid, the health care program
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Not so fast, Cuyahoga County Commissioner Mary Boyle responds.
Voinovich enthusiastically supports Republican congressional plaits to
send billions·of federal Medicaid dollars to states in the form ~f block grants
with the flexibility to tailor 'programs t&lt;,&gt; their needs.
.
He makes the case for change in the system because of spiraling growth
.. in Medicaid spending not only in dollars but as a percentage of the state
budget used to match the federal cash:
.:.... From. 1985 to 1995, Ohio's total Medicaid spending grew 245 per- ·
.· cent. ·
-In 198~.. Medicaid consumed 19 perc·ent of.the state budget. Now it
accounts for 30 percent.
,
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--By 2002, Medicaid's share of the budl!el would rise to 40 percent under
;; President Clinton's propqsal'for the program.
,,
About 1.6 million Ohioans are covered under Medicaid thro1,1gh 36,000
1; health Fe providers: doctors, pharmacies, hospitals, nursing homes.
,.
Voincivich wants ·111,0re flexibility to negotiale with providers over ben~; etits provided.
·
· "We may find that we don't want to give a Cadillac policy. That's what
1 :,
Medicaid provides," Voinovich said last week.
1
"So basically ~~~[hal we would·do is we could slim down the basic beni' ef1t package, maybe we could go to a catastrophic, make more money avail·
:: able so we could cover more people. That's what il's about."
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Boyle, ·aDemocrat, disagreed.
"He's going to rob one p)lblic assistance program for another," she said.
,. "I'm surprised that's whit he w.ould propose as a way to try to get more
:: heAlth coverage."
11
Boyle acknowledged that block grants might work for some programs,
t! but not Medicaid.
·
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"The majority of Medicaid. dollars in Ohio goes to people in nursing
~~ .homes, older Americans,io long ~erm care. Until the state of Ohio is will''1 .'ing tp. look at appropriate. wa)'s to provide coverage for people in that set
H...of ci1cumstances, there aren't any new dollars to be found," she said.
~ :•.. :~for fle~ibility, B9yje,~d Vpinovich already had it. She said the state
~ &lt;.\"~preparing to accept:bids from .providers to cover ~d to Dependent Chil1: dren recipients through managed .care systems.
{:
"This is an ·issue that Governor Voinovich already has the power and
~· authority to deal with," Boyle said.
•1 Voinovich said he needs flexibility to·negotiate with providers over the
:: -range of benefits provided.
:;
Current federal law s~ts minimum standards. States may ask for exemp:, tions, but the process is lengthy.
"If you wantlll do it differently, you come down on your bended knee,
t· kiss. ~omebody's ring, and get them to bless you so you can do something
,' · that makes all the sense in the world. We don't want that anymore,"
r:, Voinovich·said. "We want the flexibility."

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DISPI!VMY
scm PAPERS
ONCU?.

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· WASHINGTON
01 iver lions on American soil. The illegal the wall of their blisement compqund
Sto'Re's controversial new film,
caper was called "Operation Mud- post 'to inspire ~em on against the
"Ni~ont"" is drama-pac ked with hen"; I was the mudhen.
foe: for a while, they thought Ni~ton
engrossmg scenes, devastating
N4xon also dispatched aide John want;ed me rubbed out, so they
insights- and grotesque distonions.
secretly sought some e~olic CIA poi'
For a Watergate rcponer who helped
sons ;to get rid of me.
..
bring dowA Richard Nixon and
l fO Uid go on. . .
woun4 up high on his enemies list,
Yet I am. after all, a reponer. So
the movie was a nightmare revisited.
•
I B,IP obliged to take exception to
There were really · two Ni~ons1
Stone's characterization of Nixon. I
Stone dissected only one of them.
had detected quite a different Nixon
His autopsy bared the dark, forhid'
Dean to ask the late FBI Director J. -behind the black jowls, shifty eyes
ding, monstrous Nixon at his wurst Edgar Hoover to dig up some mud and unfonunate ski-slope nose- a
- with only fleeting glimpses of the to splatter on me. The FBI confis- shy; introvened man; a sensitive,
other, human Nixon.
cated all my phone records and deeply private person. who soirie1 must be the last person Nixon
compiled a diny dossier. V(atergate times woke up in the White House
would have expected to rise to his Judge John Sirica later ordered the . wondering whether he was really
defense. During the Watergate era, I FBI to purge their files of my private · president.
.
·
found !Dysclf engaged in a mona! phone calls and to lay off.
He could be a! dark and g'toomy
battle with this ~ogged, dauntless
TI)e Pentagon; t~~eanwhile,.,fon- as SlOne ponrayed him. l:lis aw~president. Each damaging story I dueled II separate investigations of ward; marionette hand gestures l\ftd
published created a frenzy inside the me, and the' Internal Revenue Ser-. robot-like responses made him a livWhite House, cnusing him to strike.. vice.spent four fruitless years trying • ing caricature of himself. )'et he was
back in.ways that sometimes exceed- to find something wrong with my tax no ~lo"'n; rather, he was a sljrewd
ed the limits' of 1he law.
returns. Someone ipside the IRS politiciao, brilliant ·strategist and
. At his instigation, the CIA tailed · even forged 'a document to create a sharp-as-n!liiS negotiator.
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!DC for months, assigning as many as false case again,st me.
He 'drove himself~'l5ire bruis18 cars at a ttme to track my move- ,.
The notorious White House ing battle after another, slashing his
ments; this in deHberate disregar~ of ')lumbers," G. Gordqn Liddy and way \&lt;1 the top, suffering inwardly
a law that prohlbtts CIA tnvesttga· E. Howard Hunt: posted, my Rl\ffill on from the political shell fire and accu-

By Jack Anderson

ROBERT 1..\ WINGETT
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Publlsber

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.along the way.- Beneat~ the scars,
intimate Nixon was a lonely, s~!iP}!::
·cious man Who fought so hard
pu&amp;lic approval ~nd was rebuffed
often . .,
Sti)l, his ~chieve~nts
the inner .superiority that
can nurture - the
enlargement of ~rains, tenacity
guile. On the hard testing ground
politics, he somehow managed
w3Q11 th~ chill his visage cast,_ to
· umph over his physiognomy.
triumph of ambition over inhibjtimis
produced two Nixons - one per·
sonal, the. other political - who
were sO incompatible that the former :.;
referred to the laqer in the third persOn. It was as if Nixon, the politician,
were· some 9thcr gtiy.
Sources close '10 Nixon insist lie
wanted to serve with honor- to be
a good president, lWpefq!Ty even a
great president. I know he assignc;d
Johii Elirlichman 1to&gt; k&amp;Pr' a ·set
noteboooks ilemizlng his camptlisn
• promises. I suspect NixOil intended
to fulfill those pr~Jmises. , ·
·.
,But he 1\l!l\S .~onfo~nd!:d ' by an :':
epic flli&amp;judgrpent Ill•\ ~f!U.sed him to :.
commit flfSt the' blunders and then ~
the offenses th'at pJ'OduCed·the .great· :
est political scandal
in American
his- :l:lt
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tory -Watergate. ,
, , . · ..
Unfonunately, Stone's pof1!'11yal ~;
of the years leading ·up,to that peri·:,:
od contained some grating inaecura- ..,
cies. Stone implied; for example, that :::
Nixon conspired wi.th gangster Joha· ::'
ny Roselli' in'' the ~A plot to l(ill :,;~
Cuba's Fidel Castro and that WaiF· w
gate figures E. Howard Hunt and :
Frank Sturgis were implicated in the :
plots to assasstnate both Castro altd . John F. Kenliedy. .
"·
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I happen to be the reporter who ,:,.
exposed the CIA's plot to recruit the ::;
Mafia to knock o(f Castro. I also :;,;
instigated and guided the Senate ::
investigation that dOC::umented the ::;
scandal. A. that record shows -and "'
my reponing confirmed - Stone's ·~
version of the events is simply '.'
wrong.
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It's a shame, however, that the ~
facts must' interfere with what is an ,;;
&lt;itherwis~ excellent ,..... if in~omplete ':
- portrayal of Richarl! Nixon. · ' •.
Write Jack Anderson and •·
Michael Blostein, United Features,::;
200 Park Ave., 10166
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. Today. ts Wednesday, Jan. 3, the thml day of 1996. There .are 363 days
:• 'eft in the year. .
~Today's Highlight in History :
~On Jan. 3•. 1777, Gen. George Washington's army routed the British in
' the Battle of Princeton, N.J.
pn this d~te:
·
·
; · In 1521, Mtll1in Luther was excommunicated from the Roman Catholic
r, Church.
·· ·
·
~
In I 833, Britain seij\Cd cqntrol of the Falkland ·Islands in the South
; Atla111ic. (Almost 150 years later. Argentina seized the islands from the
' .British. but Britain ioilk them back after a 74-day war.)
In 1868, the Meiji Restoration re-established the authority of Japan 's
emperor and heralded the fall of the military rulers known as "shoguns."
, In 1892, J.R.R. Tolkein, author of the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, was
born in Bloemfontein, South Africa. ·
In.)938, the Match of Di!liCs·campaign to light polio was organized.
·.·l.n 1947, the 'lpeninjvessjon;of:jhe U..S.:House ·o ( Representatives Was
ttlcvisect for. the first time. "

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. , I ha~e sometimes.been as~ed why
1- .~on'i attempt., to.··etucidate 1 the
tliinking processes of Scrlcius Wor·
riers, so tlla! Normal Peoele ~ bct·
ter understand them. .
'.
There can be no. better time to do
tlus.than die beginning of a new year;
so ~ere toes:
· ·,
·
Serious ,Wol)'ien;, oi SWs tis they
are known in the worryjpg business,
are people who were born with the
need to stew ovcr ·somcthing at all
tii'(I~S ; Thei~ ~ilections ~ often
nurtured by·menttirs who are them.s!lvcs expefi in the art of worrying.
,Fpr example, •I w~ .taught by,my
p-..al·.~~r;1!world-elass
worriet. ..,ho, if s~' wm witl\ .Us
right now, would be retlding :about
the sinkhole th81 swallowed house
,in San Ftanciato and:brOcXiini~latwhether" ~ groUtl!l WOjlld•(Jpft Up
beneath ber Qwn home, 3,000 miles
tQ the Cllt. She w9uld be potidering
the phellpment!l hlirricine season we
just experienced and worrying

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level for the second half of the season, which runs until 'Memori'at Day,
t.hen take the summer off.
' In reality, they speitd ,jniich of
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Today's weather forecast
Southeastern Ohio
Today...Snow showcf11. An inch
or lcs~ of snow accumulation. Turning colder. Terqperatures falling into
~ 20s. Northwest wind 10 to 20
niph. Chance of snow 70 percent.
tonight...Cloudy with a chaftce of
light snow. Low 15 to 20. Northwest
wind S to 10 mph. Chance of snow
·40 percent.

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medical checkups, they discover
moles of suspicious color.and .lapse
into big funks.
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If you spot someone you suspect
.of bejng an SW. ask what they're '
' thinking about. If they are pondering
. any .of these items, y&lt;iu are in the .'
~ompany of a Very Serious WofJ'ier:
...._ Will some unsuspecting soul'
doing yardwork or something. be
crowned by one of the hundreds if
not thousands of pieces and parts that
fall off of airplanes every ytlll'~
, ~ .,_ When will ·the automotive
industry realize they've simply got to
do something to make it safe to spit
frpm your iruck? :Just -l~st month, a
·. guy,In 'WeSt Virginia leaned out his
driver-side door to e~pectorate, hit
his )tel!CI ona cliff•and died. .
·
·· - Are inventors and sCientists .
beinplaridered? A recent nef'sJette~
pubhshed by ·the Bibtechtiology
Industry Adociation·complains that
in.;Michael' Crichton's latest•novel,
'"The Lost World," nearly every on~
in a la'b coat is depicted as "either an
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~Today's B·irthdays:.Comeditfn Victortlorgc is 17: FbmfJr'trS. Amb3i- ... ·
. ~ador Vernon Wallen; i~ 79:~cto~ J~~se ~ite i,~ 77. Spqrtsca&lt;lcr Han~ S
,
ti =13. Record producer George Martm ts 10. Actor Robcn')..osgia is 66. ACt .~
Dallricy Coleman is 64. Journalist-author Betty Rpltin is 60. ffockc~ Hall•. ·
ofFamer Bo~y Hull is 57 ..~usiei_an Stephen Stills Js 51 . ,Actress Vir!oriti! •
f&gt;rincJpalJs 46. Actor Mel Olbson IS 40.·
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Virgil Armstrong Oickerson; 97, Ravenswood, W.Va., died Dec. 31. 1995,
at his home.
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. B&lt;irn Jan. 19. 1898, near Ripley, W.Va., son of the late Og and Mary
Ameha Mtller, he was a teacher and rural mail carrier from 1925 to 1962.
He was a member of the Rural Letter Carriers Association a fanner mem·
ber'of tftc Cottageville International Order of Odd Fellows: the First Unit·
ed Methodist Church in Rave~swood and was an avid Rotarian.
. He is survived by his wife, Marie Stone Dickerson of Ravenswood; two
. daughters, Ire.ta Sauer of New Smyrna Beach, Fla., and Delores Woehrmann
of Cleveland Heights; a daughter-in-law, Iris Dickerson of Alexandria, Va.;
· seven grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
..
. He was preceded in death by a son, Kenneth H. Dickerson; a brother, Warren Dickerson; two sisters, Rose Henderson and Ruby Carney.
·. Services will be held Th.ursday, II a.m. at Slfllight; Tucker &amp; Roush
Funeral Home m Ravenswood with Dr. Dan Hogan officiating. Burial will
follow in Ravenswood Cemetery,
Friends may cah today from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the American Lung Association"or the Cerebral Palsy Foundation.

Forre~t

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N_ei.gler

Forrest Neigler, 74, Racine, died early this morning at Holzer Medical

~ftt~ in Gallipolis. Arrangements will be announced later by the Cremeens

Funeral Home, Racine.

Ohio AG gets $1 million
more for riot ·costs·

riot.
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11ie state Controlling' BOard 'vot•
ed to transfer $500,000 this year and
again next year from the state's
emergency purposes fund to cover
the cost of four assistant attorneys
general, eight paralegals and a legal
The Daily Sentinel secretary Who work exclusive!~ on .
the aftennath of the 11-da) ri'ot at the
(Usrs 11,.,.)
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility
at Lucasville.
. hbl;shed ev&lt;f)' af1m1oon, Moodly lh""'IJh
-Y· ttl Coooit Sl" Pomeroy. OIUQ, by !he ""
Douglas Lumpkin, director of
· 'Ohio v.tley Pub!illhlna ()lmponyJOonTteti Co"
administration in the attorney gen1'9maoy, Olllo •sm...... 992-2156. Second
elMs po11110 poid • -.,y, Ohio.
eral's office., said the money was not
included i11 . the agency's budget
l'tfto. tmd !he ONo
,Hew&amp;piJICI Al!ocilliol\, ,
·
request last year because no one
knew how much the litigation would
POITMASTII:..Send lddlesa tviitctioiii.O
cost.
.
1k Doily Selloiod, Itt Coun Sl., Pomeroy.
· :Ohio m69.
·
Combined with money tilretldy
available in !\It aic!lcy'a budaet,lthe
IUIISCRtP'IiON IIA'IZS ·
state now expects to spend IIIOfe than
Con!orw- · $2.00
Ooe Weeklly
...........................
:......................
$1 .2 f!lillion over two years on riot·
Ooe M - ''"'"'_,,, ................ - ............ " $8.70
related civillaivsuits, he said.
qoe Y... ........- ..................................... $t04.00

COLUMBI!S (AP) - Attorney
General Betty 'Montgomery got the
go-ahead Tuesday to set aside $1
. million to defen4 the state in lawsuits
resulting fi'Qm the 1993 state prison

--The ". . . . .

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Doily - ·-"""""" " "'""'-""""'""'-"" " ' J5 c...

Su,•crt'ben noc ..-;na 10 .,., lbe cartter ,_, ·

101oi1lo od•...e dilm 10 The Doif; lleilloel
a. • dfte. aia « 121'ft011dt t.is. CNdil will be

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~ hoftle ~ ~ervloe is_aw~Wtle.

MAIL SUIICI:IPI itM'i8

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flw..b ,,,,,,V"''" ""'-""""'"""""""$27'30

:Ill - . .....~.. -...................... ..................SS:tli2 .
Sl -... .................. :...................." ... StOU6

Sll!odlo ........." .. , ..._,,, .....,......,..... St09,72

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Continued from pqe I
U.S. House of Representatives.
May 10 - County officials
.
approve :t revised lease for the Vet·
tions were possible across northern
By The Assodated Preis
erans Memorial Hospital opening the
Ohio
today before the snow tapered
Ohio will become locked in a
door for an anticipated merger
off, the weather service said.
deep freeze following today's snowbetween VMH, Holzer Clinic and
Low temperatures 'tonighL will Holzer Medical Center. The.revis¢ .
storm, forecasters said. Temperatures
range from zero to IOdegrees in the lease contains a broader definition of
tonight are expected to plunge into
north to 10-15 in the south, fore- the building's function.
the single digits.
casters said. Highs Thursday will be
The National Weather Service
A Racine woman wins $100,000 ,
25-30 under mostly cloudy skies.
said the stonn Thesday night ·and
in the Ohio Lottery's Kicker.
The record-high temperature for
early today dumped I I irtches of
May 14 - Residents between
this
date at ~ Columbus weather Pomeroy and Langsville were ham·
·snow on Van 'Wert County and up to
station was 64 degrees in . 1897
8 inches on parts of northeast Ohio.
mered by the worst flash flooding in
while the record low was -20 in more than 50 years in'the "Mother's
Measurements were 4-8 inches else1879. Suqset today will be at 5:18 Day Flood." Around 200 people are
wh~re. except for southeast Ohio,
p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:53
which got just a dusting of snow.
evacuated from their homes in parts
a.m.
Additional significant accumulaof the county.
May 16- Emergency Services
director Roben Dyer estimates flood
damage at more than $1 million.
May 17 - VMH signs affiliation
jThe following ·cases were decid- · Kennedy, Langs~ille, taillight, $43 pact with Consolidated Health Sysedlrecently in~ Pomeroy Mayor's and costs; Attina Gibson, Gallipolis, tems, Holzer Clinic.
court of Mayor John Blacttnar. speed, $49 and costs; Deanna
Following the Mother's Day
Kauspmp. Pomeroy, speed, $49 Flood, Governor George V.
Posting bond were:
Rita Barnett, Rutland, sp.ed, $64; and costs; William Elliott, Pomeroy: Voinovich declares a state of emerBarb Mohler, Middleport, speed, failure to control, $63 and costs; gency in Meigs County.
$65; Carrie Bartles, Pomeroy, spee4, · leaving an accident scene, $263 and
May 18 - The Small Business
$64; William Cremeans, Pomeroy, costs; Laura Cleland, Pomeroy, three Administration estimates total flood
speed, $66; Patrick Leivy, Elizabeth, counts of furnishing alcohol 10 a damage at $3,035,493.
Ky., speed, $66; William Facemyer, minor, $500 plus ~osts each, thirty
May 19 - .Ohio Army National
Pomeroy, speed, $64 ; Ruby days in jail suspended, one year pro- Guard engineers move in to help
Charlene
Goodman, with flood cleanup.
Coughenour. Langsville, speed, $65; bation;
Amy Cleland, Rutland, speed, $74; Pomeroy, three counts, permitting
May 21 - Meigs High School
Will Darnbrough, Gallipolis, speed, underage consumption in residence, graduates 144 while Southern High
$65; Craig Chapman, Rutland, $75 plus costs each, thiny days in School graduates 58.
jail suspended, one year probation;
·
speed, $65.
May 27 ~ Meigs officials give
Danny Buffington, Pomeroy: DUI. Tuppers Plains site top priority for
Fined were:
John Clark, Malta, operating $375 and ·costs, three months OL potential industrial development.
under suspension,, $63 and costs; suspension, three days in jail; Keith
May 28 - Eastern High School
Tamera Lyons, Racine, speed, $47 Lynch, Middleport: DUI, $375 and graduates 49.
and costs; Jon Mattea, Shade, stop costs, three months OL susPQnsion, JUNE
June '7 - Charges of cruelty tp
sign violation, $43 and costs; Eric three days in jail; Michael Mulford,
Hankla, Rutland, expired tags, $63 Pomeroy: DUI, $375 a~d co~ts, animals are dropped against Sharon
and costs; Derick Jackson, Middle- three months OL suspenston, three Durham, Harrisonville, whom offiport, no operators license, $63 and days in jail; operating under sus- cials accused of operating a "puppy
mill ."
costs; Alan Gallantin, Racine; under' pension. $63 and costs; disorderly
age consumption, $88 and costs; conduct, $63 and costs; William
June 10- Meigs Countians celCrystal (l,unyon, 1it\derage con· Durst, Pomeroy, operating under an ebrate Heritage Day by burying time
capsule commemorating , !75th
.sumption, $88 and costs; Aaron ALS suspension, $95 and costs.
anniversary of county. .
.
June 12- Middleport Village
- - - - - - . , _· council approves a building code
ordinance requiring landlords to pay
$12 a year per rental unit.
'.1''
Work begins on Racine's Community Housing Improvement Pro1
•
ject.
Meigs County law enforcement officials are questioning ·a juveJune 13- Karin Johnson named
nile in the theft of three cars in Meigs Coupty over~ New Year's
county's new tourism director.
holiday weekend.
June 16- Middlepon awarded
A car belonging to Milford Frederick of Racine, reported ~len
$60,000 grant for swimmtng pool
New Year's Eve, was found in Minersville, according to Sheriff James
repair.
M. Soulsby. On New Year's Day, a car belonging to Norris-NQrthup
June 17 - Approximately 35•'
Dodge was reponed stolen from Bob Stanley of Racine, Soulsby
Meigs Countians panicipate in the
added. That car was found in a field below the Ohio River Campannual Ohio River Sweep collecting
ground.
.
approximately six Ions of trash.
Souisby said.deputies.attempted 'to question ajuvenile1kll5peci,Who
June 20 - Syracuse Village.
fled from officers on foot. The same youth was later apprehended in
Council ' votes to have all village
Gallipolis by the Gallipolis Police Depanment while driving a car ·
water customers install a check valve
reported stolen from Billy Cremeans of Pomeroy, Soulsby said.
to comply with Ohio Environmental
The juvenile has denied involvement in the thefts, according to
Protection Service mandates.
Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes .
June 22- State Treasurer J. KenThe ·cars were recovered undamaged, Soulsby said.
neth Blackwell visits MeigsCounty .
farms to defend low-interest loans -to
farmers .
Connector project still "on schedule" according to ODOT officials.
Pomeroy police investigated a one-car accident late Tuesday mornJune 24 - New "American
ing on the McDonald's parking lot, according to village Police Chief
Queen" stemwheeler passes Meigs
Gerald Rought.
County.'Huitdreds of Pomeroy viewThe accident occurred at II :49 a.m. when. Cheri Thomas, 29,
ers snubbed as boat passes 'without
Cheshire, was backing from a parking space when she struck a vehi·
playing its calliope .
cle driven by Sarah Varner, 30, Albany,
June 26 - James Lawrence
Damage to Thomas' 1987 Toyota and Varner's 1993 Dodge was
named superintendent of Southern
light. No citations were issued.
Local Schools.
June 27- Racine is visited by a
team of nine mule-drawn wagons.
The VisionQuest team remains for
four days before leaving.
JULY
Units of the Meigs County Emer· Wood. Holzer Medical Center;
July I -John Beaver Jr. of Point
5:02 p.m.. Wright Street, Bill
gency Medical Service recorded
Pleasant, W.Va., jumps off the
eight calls for assistance Tuesday Hudson, HMC.
Pomeroy-Maion Bridge prompting a
including two transfer calls. Units RUTI.,AND
search
by rescue workers in both
I
:50
a.m.,
Depot
Street,
Everett
1'\'Sponding included:
slates.
Beaver turns up later
Gilmore, HMC;
MIDDLEl'ORT
unharmed,
his appar~nt prank land10:19 p.m., Powell Stteet, Mary
II :27 a.m., Page ville, Alice Stan·
ing
him
in
Jail
facing seven charges.
Durst, V~tcrans Memorial Hospital. ley, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
.July 4- Middlepon, Racine and
6:01 p.m., Main Street, Penny
POMBROY
7:52a.m .. Spring Avenue, Audrey Hysell, OBMH.
Rutland hold Independence Day eel·
ebrations while contending with

,......_....._ L·0C8· I

brte
• fS

,.

Juvenile questioned·in car thehs

Virgil Armstrong Dic"erson

....

.

·

son of William Pettit
and Nancy •Davidson Pettit of Poll'leroy. He was employed as a mill Worker.
He is survived by his parents: three children: Rachell, Carolyn, and Daniel
Davidson, all of Pomeroy; one brother, Jeff Smith of Columbus; and a grandmother, Lorena pavidson of Pomeroy.
·
lie was preceded in death by his grandfather, Daniel Davidson.
Services will be held Friday, 10 a.m., at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. James Keesee officiating. Burial will follow in Rocksprings
Ccme.IJ;.!I. Pomeroy.
Call~ hours for family and friends will be Thursday, from 7 to 9 p.m.,
at the funeral home.

theorist ot an evil genius."
'
~ If we go to the dollat coin, "
how wili frequente~Af strip )oin'fs
and ·go-go btji'SS)urnfloney m ttje .•
·dafl.cers' gart~? ,.
· ·· • •
- Will ,anything ever be done
about•the +5,000 c~ildren w!lo .are
irijured e,ac;b year in jumps or falls •·
from grocery carts?
'
- Will robots take over the
world? A scientist in Britain says· i1
could happen within the ' n~xt 50 :·
years.
,
,
;.
· - What. really happened i9 .~'
1913? Hear the words of·· Blai:~-:"
Muslim leader Louis Farrakhan. 7,
''Faur things were set up in 1913...\ N
The Federal Reserve Bank, the IRS 1
the FBI and the Anti-Defamation •
league of B'nai . B,'rith'... ·Is that ~ ·":
coincidence?" . .
'
~;:_. .
. Some SWs np ~oubi think 1~
man js·on ,to .sllnlething. ·
&gt;~&gt;.:;,
. JoHplt Spear is a syadh:a
writer for Newspaper Eaterp•rlli&gt;=
Association.
.. •

.

·

Born Aug. 27, 1958 in Mason, W.Va, he

ins~nsiiive . myope, a thoughtl~ss­

.

Friday ...Chance of snow. Lows 5
to I5. Highs in the 20s.
Saturday through Sunday... Mostly cloudy north with a chance of
.snow south. Lows 5 to 15 with highs
15to20.

!'omeroy. . ,

~

l

Extended forecast

Timothy .Eugene Davidson, 37, of Pomerpy died Monday Jan. 1 in

..

.

Thursdny... Mostly cloudy. High
ncar 30.

:Timothy Eugene.Davidson

And the more they own, the higher confers esteem. It's the stan o~
·
::::
their status. If ownership cost the guy something l!ig.
Not that)'\ffiatetialism ' is, by any.!
some prison time, well, call it a loss
;;
leader. 1s long as he has something means, a modem obsession.
History is a redundant teache
to show, off when he gets out, we can
love him again.
about over-arching lust and greed;.;
Hoi\', then, do we make the argu· whethet for lcingdoms or f&lt;,&gt;r kud&lt;!s .:~
ment tha.t character counl!i? How are
Juvenal, the ancient Roman
we supposed to impress upon our .satirist; often despaired .over · bis
. ::
children that industry, honesty, com- countrymen's conspicUous i:on·
passio~ ,. humor and faith are the · sumption and the insatj~bility .Jhlll:
commodities to stri~e ·for, as that breeds' selfishness Which breeds dis- ·
can't be taxed, stolen, burned down, crimination which bk!eds destitution::::
or repq~sessed? .
.
.
'which breeds self;liestruction. -, :
How do we convince them of this
Get to the bottom q'r crime aiid :,
abstract good when we're worship· · depravity in America and· you will ""
ping th~ Jonesesand racing through find the same soulful corrosion. : :
our lives trying to keep up with them,
What I .want for Christmas next :;::
aching to surpass them?
year - what I ll(i~h II)Y childn~n ~
· Between our worshipful fasCina- would wish for? ..,
:: :
tion of mega-owners, our endless
To locate a point of satisfaction. :
inventions of new things to want and
To_feel, Jn our bones,' that there (s :;::
nUd.'our talent for embellishing old still such a thing as.~nough.
• ..
things; and our increasing willing- . To get th!lt thing and ' clutch it :;
ness to sacrifice leisure time and con- . tight, for the precious gift it,is. ' :.:
venience in pursuit of ownership, it's
Write Deborah ,Mathie, ~- :
no wonder some desperate kids bune Media Services. 435 N. :':
attacK'in'want of a pair of sneakers. Michi1an Avenue, Suite 1500, ,
Having 'them - owning them Chicago, IlL 6q6IJ,.,.
,
.. ;, :-:
.
...... ..
""'

the Serious Worrier

their so-called leisure'time worrying
about what they're going to worry
about when the ·holidays and v~ca­
lions are over and 11\e season sta,rts
1
again.
.
.
.
I can gUarantee you, that (hiring
the,entire week bet~¥.cen quistmas
and New Year's, SWs were chewing
over crucial qu..tiol)s. With'l!U the
government shutdowns are public
jobc becoming less secure? With'the
coming of additional ·all·news cable
chan~ls, will the i:om~tion cheapet)'"the product even · mOle? Are
. ., .
Americans Worlting ~hard tJw we
are apprOal:)t,ing the point of nationat exhaustion? ,Will a Chinese sate!·
lite now 'circling the. earth in a
degrading orbit .crash 'intO, f- popu,,
wbctherwewill .'gc!~ltl!cwaytothe
lated ,area~ Is innocence dyit\g? Is
Z stomi ibis summer.'·
,
An!crica nmning out.of liberals?
'Ibc. !bing is. SWs havo 10 worry. · ~rious WQriicn are faiHy easy to
·~- Peace of mind is an at~ conc:.oPt to . spot. They tend to swe off intOspace ·
. .. t!lem,O,Ofliciallr. ~ f':ll't ¥f l)f the · with wrinkled brows. Many have a
' • 1fofeytng . ~ ~&amp;JIU . 011 ~r ~furrow betwocn their'ey~ws.
. . Qay ·and goes until Chl'iltnlas. At They constantly ~~k their pockets '
• 1. that:p9int,:SWs are suppotio&lt;l !Make . tii)d purse1 to ~ if, they forgot !hCir
~~~~~~4!!0il.f,_,..,.......,;~~~r-'..,7'-r'-~i~"'' ' .. a wee~ llff, "'f9•tlllll _ ~ ~ anltlety wallets, SC~·dlys before routine ·

.

_ .._,

Flooding highlights...

Pomeroy Mayor's Court

..,.

..... •

~nders~anding

•ldliumbusl ~ I

.
_·'"' _... ,__
i; ~

'

0 'bOrah Math'IS .

.

.By The Aaociate!l Press

I

WASHINGTON- No time like • is so much to have these days •.And
right after Christmas to assail mate- so much' psychic heajth is lied to ·
rialism. This is wheil it's fresh.
physical inventory.
The mountain of receip(s. •
Of course, capitalist countries
The melting away of cash accu·
mulations like a snowman in the sun.
e
The sinking feeling that the like ours have always used material
nation:S budget will be balanced long ·gol,lds as a barometer of success and
before your own.
,. its companion, esteem.
All that urgent shopping and hid- ·· The 4,000 square foot house on
ing and Wrapping, and delivering, Elysian Fields Drive, replete. with
givcli way to had backs and red eyes. every modem and. futuristic amcniThe ungummed but otherwise ty, remains the prime indicator of
perfect bQws and wads of colorful one's having arrived.
paper bulging in the trash bag, once . But, there's so much more to it
valued at $2.99 a package but, in the · nowadays than home ownership.
wink of an eye;. rendered worthlesS. The American Dream is growing
It's the lust for visible matter that longer by the ·year, · crammed· to
creates these annual disturbances. overflowing with thiqgs longed for.
The season sanctions, thrives and Things for which we've decided it's
turns · on our need for things. Or wonh killing ourselves - or, in
desire for things. Or the self·persua· some tragic minds, someone else.
sion that we need what we simply
That .we may have connived,
desire.
tricked and possibly cheated to attain
Actually, the orgy would not be so these things apparently matters less
bad if it_were confined to one season. than 'the fact that we attained them in
But, our worship of ownership is pruhetic conclusion of the means
a year-round plague and, every year, versus ends dilemma.
'
it becomes more consumptive. There
Our heroes are owners, period. ·

r~,. today ln history
tf l'l..ot:

'

MICH.

~ mutating psychological scar tiss1C

That si·n king feeling_... :__
·;i.t.:.._ _ _ _ _._.
.

Deep freeze to
-follow
storms
'

AccuWeather• forecast

/

The Dally sentinel• .,... 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•'

OHIO Wc&lt;llllcr
Tbunday, Jlln. 4 .

Wednesday, Janieary' 3, 1996.

The Daily Sentinel

·~

WectnHday, January 3, 1~

.•

..

·Hospital
news
.

....

~ -·, . ~·

VETERANS ~ORIAL
'1\aday. idnulli0111 "- J - M.'
Williams, 'l-anpvillc.
· Tuesday discharps - none .

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
. Jllildllqts Jaa. l - -Robe~
Fink Blizabelh Waite~. lofla
Bic~nlaub, Billy Clymer, Bcalti~
KCIInody; Tammy Pope, Joyce
Stephen$. •
(PUbl.... wldl ~)

.

'

scattered rain showers.
July 6 -Community leaders and
offiCials examine options to preserve
Buffington Island battle site.
Eastern Local vocational a!llicul··
turc program dropped. Low enrollment and high cosl cited as reasons.
July 7 -American Electric Power announces, "functional ' realign.
mcnt". study that later means pink
slips for hundreds of area employees.
July 10 - Racine Mayor Jeff
Thornton proclaims Michelle Snider
day in the village in honor of the 16year-old who won silver lnedal at
the Special Olympics World Summer
Games in New Haven . Conn.
Southern Local Board of Ed~~~:a·
tion sell Racine Elementary School
to the villase of Racine for $1 .
July 13 - Meigs residents set
records in electricity and pool usage
as heat wave moves in.
July 14 - Meigs County Commissioners request that Jack Crisp,
founder of the Leading Creek Con·
servancy District, serve house arrest
instead of jail on,· fiye counts of
receiving improper compensation.
July 22 - M'eigs residents
remember ,Battle of Buffington
Island, Ohig's only Civil War battle,
in annual observance at P&lt;irtland.
July 24 - Gannett Co., the
nation's largest newspaper publisher, announces it has agreed to~
acq"
Multimedia Inc., a company
.
holdings include The Dai.lyScntinel,,
for more than. $1.7 bllhon. .
\
agreement took effect Dec. 4 ·
Pomeroy Village Council OKs
bids for Grand Promenade project.
July 27- Meigs County officials
and department heads say their
employees are willing to pay more to
keep their existing medical insurance.

a

•

Stocks
Am Ele Power .. ~···-·"""-·~-41 1/4
Akzo ..............................................511
Ashland Oil ----~ .. ~.. --~-..36 114

ATAT -----~..- .. -~...61511
Banlr.Oae~·--·-·
31711

Bob Eva~~~ .....--~........
I'
Bof'l•Warner••.- .................32 118
Champion Incl........................llJ/4

thannina Sbop-··-··-····-.113116
City Holdllfl--..- ..- ...··-~-•.23 114
Federal Mogul .................- •..20 til

Gannett ...•...•~···-..--........:.......-62
Goodyear T&amp;R ·········---44 3141
K·lllllrt ..........--··-·..····-··--7 tn
.Laands End .........._...............- ••14
Lindted lnc•.. _ ....,,_,,,,..._,,t7 Ill
Peoples Bancorp.............--13
Ohio VIIIIey Bank ..........-..35 112

One Vlllley .........,_........~....313111
Rockwell ..... ~............... ,_.....54 711
Robbins &amp; Myen........·---·---21
Royal Dutch/SbeU,.........._,t41111
Sboney's Inc ..... - ...........- •.•10111
Star Bank ..........- ...........- .....59 311
Wellllys ...................................ll 711
Worthincton ..................- ....:W 516

•••

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m,
quotes provided lly Advesl o
Gllllipolis.

Pomeroy accident investigated

Meigs EM~ logs 8 calls

Couples Issued ~arriage licenses
The following couples were gler Jr., 52, and Eileen Smiar, 47,
issued marriage licenses recently in both of Follansbee, W.Va.;
the Meigs County Probate Coun of
Wilbur L. VanCooney Jr., 53, and
Judge Robert Buck:
Victoria Lynn Quillen, 43, both of
Gary Wayne Gilmore, 37, and Racine; Lester James Proffih, 31,
Emily Jane Baumgardner, ~8. ~ and Ca,rolyn Kay Hill, 37, bOth of
of Middleport; Samuel Will! am Zet- . Point Pleasant, W.Va .

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS, (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selecied
buying points Wednesday by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: weak to SO
cents lower; demand light on ~mod·
crate to light supply as snow has limited some movement.
U.S. 1-3. 230-260 lbs. 41.0042.00•. few 42.50; plants 41.504~.00.

a

U.S, 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 37.004i.OO.
uildeJ 500 lbs. SO cents to
'

LOSE.·: 10 LIS.

IN 3 DAYS

--

1.00 lower; over 500 lbs. near steady.
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 27.0031.00; 500-600 lbs. 31.50-3550, a
few over 650 pounds 36.00.

Meigs County
Orpnizational meeting set
· The Southern Local Board of
Education will hold its yearly organizational meeting tonight at 6 in the
high school cafeteria.
Shade River Lodge meeting ·
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM
will hold a special meeting Saturday,
7 p.m. at the lodge hall in Chester.
Work in the Master Mason Degree.
Rerteshments.

SPECIAL SALE
RED, WHITE or lUCK

GUPES

74

4

LI.

CELLO CARROTS

64 C

2LI.PII.

SWEET POTATOES
WHmerYILLOW

4 LIS. $1.00
METAL
GARBAGE CAliS
(10 UISI

.2011L
.

ssoo

.,.

JOIAL . , .

•
•

�I

•

·l

Se~tin~l

The Daily
·

·
Pege4
Wednesday; Januarv.3. 1996

.Nebraska.·beats Florida 62-24 in Fiesta'Bowl to stay unbeaten
one of college footb!!il's greatest
1eams with one .of the most overwhelmihg efforts ever.
Billed as ·a matchup between the
nation's two best teams, the No. I
Comhuskers in lead made· Florida
look like all t Pacifies and Mjssouris and Iowa 18tes they usually
rout. Gators co h Steve Spurrier
could only close ·Hyes and rub his
brow as Nebr a wrecked his Fun
'n' Gun offense and romped 62-24
Tuesday night in the Fiesta Bowl.
Lawrence Phillips, suspended for
six games after assaulting a former
girlfriend, ran for I 6S yards, and
three touchdowns in his firSt start
since the.incident. Quanerback Tommie Frazier ran for I99 yards and
two scores, including a 7S-yard,
tackle-breaking surge thill may have
convinced NFL scouts that there's a
place for him yet. ·
· "We wanted to come and show
I everybody we were the best team,"
center Aaron Graham said. "If the
program was bad, i{ the program had
flaws in it, then we should have
crumbled.
"We didn't crumble. We stood
strong. The program has a strong
foundation and we wanted to show
that to everybody," he said.
At 12-0, Nebraska became the
first team to repeat as champions
since Alabama in 1978-79 undeE
Bear Bryant, and the first team to
win consecutive titles with perfect
records since Oklahoma in 1955-56.
The only beating Nebraska took
all year came from critics who
branded the Huskers outlaws after
Phillips and three others were.arrest·
ed during a three-month period.
Osborne, whose character and ethics
. .
.
Fielta Bowl In Tempe, Ariz., where the top·nmked had never been questioned, found
Comhusken ct~ptund their second 5tnll&amp;ht nation· himself under attack for lillowing
al crown With a 62-24 win. (AP)
PhiJiips back on the team ana per-

least, no o'ne could touch them.
In a season when coach Tom
·Osborne spent as much time defend-

ing his troubled players as they
spent defending the national championship, Nebraska
itself as

milling two playeR charged in shootings to continue playing.
'
" I'm glad the season is over,"
Osborne said to reporters: "I hope all
you guys concentrate on basketball
now. I need a vacation."
So does Spurrier after Florida
(12- I) surrendered its most points
since a 6~- I 4 loss to Auburn in 1970.
Danny Wuerffel, who led the
natioo's second-best passing game,
was intercepted three times and
sacked a career-high seven times,
once for a safety.
"Nebraska's just way better than
us," Spurrier said. "They Oiltcol!Ched
us and outplayed us. We got smashed
up front ... Tommie Frazier made us
look like we weren 't trying at times.
"The{clobbered us up and down
the field. They're just too gQOd for
us," he said. "We did not come to the
ballpark to play the best. we could,
I'm embartassed bout 'that. As coaclles, we did a, lousy job somehow.''
Nebraska dominated the meeting ·
between the nation's last remaining·
undefeated, untied teams, scoring 29
straight points in the second quaner
for a 35-10 halfti~ lead.
By then, this season ' s~uper Bowl
of college football looked like anoth·
er real Super Bowl - in other
words, a mismatch. Maybe there's a
reason - in less than four weekS, the
NFL will also hold it championship
game at Sun Devil Stadium.
This .matchup was laheled as a
classic air vs. ground confrontation.
Nebraska led 'the country in 'rushing
(400 yif!ls per game) and storing (S2
per game), and it Vilas easy to see
why as it rushed for 524 yards;
Yet Osborne, whose only loss in
three seasons was an 18-16 defeat by
Florida State in the national cham. pion_ship .game. t--:o years• ago,. '
showed he had some tricks to matcb

Spurrier's &amp;immicks.
After Florida took a 3-0 lead on
the game'~ first possession - only
the second time Nebraska had trailed
all year - the Cornhuskers came
back when Frazier rolled right on an .
apparent run, then thr~w back ru;ross
the field to a wide.open Phillips, who .
was escorted into the end zone for a
16-yard touchdown.
Later in the quarter, after Frazier
threw an interception, qsb_orne
returne&lt;! to what his team does best
-calling .14 straight running plays,
one of which Phillips turned into a
juicing, 42·yard score.
The game was 'well in hand when
Frazier made the play of the night,
breaking six tackles by four players
for a 75-yard touchdown run for a
49-18 lead at the end of the third
quaner. Graham, the center, admitted
hi; wa~ already wa)~ing back II? huddl.e up for another •play when he saw
Frazier shake loose.
'_'frazier is a g.-,:at football play,
er. V{e think the option still.has a
place in footba,IL He show~ that
tonight," Osborne s~id.
The senior, whose slippery style
might find him a place in the NFL
similiar to the one 'lleld b~ ' Pit·
tburgh's Kordell Stewiln, also had a
35-yard touchdpwn run.
" I had a great career at Nebraska.
There's no bette_r way to end it," Frazier said.
Wuerffel, who threw 3S touchdown passes and set l an NCAA
record for passlpg efficiency in the
, regular season, was pressured into
his worst performance of the year.
"The biggest thing I can say is at
Ihalftime, we didn't want to be anoth-·
er front-runner team that goes out
there and play~ and ,1giv,es up,_"
Wuerffel saiil. "We kept playing."

'

Co.lomdo Minea 63, CS NonhridJe 59
Frana Sl. 76, New Mexico 7~
Hawaii 63. Wyomin&amp;53
Montana 74, Black Hilla St 61
Rhode bland 81, St. Mil}' I, Cal. 74
San Dicso 67. N. Arizona 60
SIU1 Oiejo SC. 87, ColonOO St 67
San Francisco IS, CS Stani1laus 70
San JoK St. 88, Cal St.-Fullenon 71
Texu-EI Puo 5:.\, Air Force 48
UC Irvine: 72, P.llcific 54

t •••

c"\. EAsTERN CONFERENCE
Aillntic: Dlriaton

:r. lt!.
Orlando .........- ......... 21

L f&lt;l.

Nt:wYork .............. l9

llll

.793

6

.655

10

4

,... Miami :................... u n .~l6
1 J Wutdi'IJion ........... IS
14 .~17
I ' Bostbft,.,,. .., ........., .. J2
J6 .419 ~
j · Ncwlcney ............ ll 17 .393

7.~

8
JQ.5

U1oh 83. BriJbam )'ouna n

11 .5

Washinstori 76, ~olorado 68

I,1,,, .fl'ii~P!&gt;!•---,
. . . ..,......6_ 22 ' ,214 · 1,6.5
M

Clntni.DiYldon

.,r .~ 89-i
:, : ~~:::::::::::::::~ 1·2 :s1t
,. Indiana .................. 16 12 .m
~ I

,

~t

9

16 .467
16 .448

12
12.5

18 .357
· 21 . .300

IS
17

,~ : Allanla ................... l3

Ohio men's .
college scores ·

I

14 .517

Chatlocle ................ l4

.i'- Milwaukee ............. IO
',' Toronto .................... 9
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9
10.5

! ~ 'Oetroii .................... IS

.-· .

»:

Buffalo 60, YOWlgslown Sr. S6

Non-conference play

llll

8 .742
8 .704

::San AntDnio .... :...... l9

f ~ J'*'*v~,, .............. rs VI

Tounwnenll

2
· -~
9.!'0

~~ ~11\h ............. .-.......... 21 9 .700
:"M&gt;taytr ....:... ... :, ...... 13 17 .433
; · DallaL ..................... 8 20 .286
1
1 7MiniW:SOfa ...............:7 ~I .2SO

13.~
14. ~

17.5

· .Pictfk DMiioa
; Scanle ..- .............. ., .. 21 8 .724
; 5...,..,_0 ............ 17 9 .654
; • L.(t. L:akeU ............,I.~ I~ ..SOO

2.5
6.S

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.48l
17· .43.

...... !.

I

: L.A. Cllppen_. ........ ll

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'Ohio women's
. _college sl!ores

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Not1h Coast Alhleil&lt; Conf.
Kenyon SS, Que We1tetn 65

7

: , PMiand ................. 13
' Golden St01e ..........l2. 17 .414
' J

IUP Holiday IM Holldoy a Finl......t
Wes1 O.Cs1er 78, Cut. St. Ohio S I

'

.167

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8.5

Ohio Alhlell&lt; Coaferenc:e-

9
IO.S

!9 .:167

Capital 81. HcidclllctJ S6
John Cnrroll69, Hiram 41

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Ohio H,S. boys' scores .

lndinna 102. Denver 1\7 ·

~8

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Philadelphia~ L::A. labn 189

Tonight's pmtB
-.._·

Ponlalld at Boston. 7:30p.m.
~·
TorOntoafOrlando. 7:30p.m.'
"~ • HoUston Dl Chicago, 8p.m. · '
..
ilecroi1 al Milwaukee, 8:30 (l.m.
· •·
Utah'nl San Antoni o. 8:30p.m.
Indiana wL.A. Clippen. IOJO p.m. 1
Philadelphiu at Goldtn Sl.o.lc. 10:;10

Ce1edo-Keraova, W.Va. 72,1ronton6i
Owdon S I, 8.-rron Bcrklhire 48
Chdhirc River Val. 67. Meip 48
Cin. Aiken 83, Cin. Glen Elle 50
Cin: Christian 71 , Ciri. Landmark 62
Cin. Elder 64, On. Prince!on 61
Cin. Woodward 78. Cin. Walk 73
Clnymont 76, Berlin Hilnnd S8
Clc. Heia.hts 71" Cle. VA-SJ 66
l)alioo 86, ~opio« 57
Delta 61, Swdilfon 40
~er S2, Indian Val. ~
-Fuyette ~~. E\'tfp:en ~I

Thursday's games

New Jersey at ,J:'Iew York. 7:30p.m.

I?albs at W~~gton;7JOp.m:
StaHle at ~Ulml 1 _7 :30 p,m.
Chicago Ill Otorlotte-, ~ : :\0 p.m.
Toronto 111 Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
•
MinncsOia at Phoc:nilt, ~ p1m.
[)(raver"' Str.crnmento, 10:30 p.m.

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Froatiu 80, BceHsviUe 60

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Indian Crook 71, Raylond &amp;ckeyd2

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f NCAA Division I

f ·nie~'s scores
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BuffalO 60. YoungatownSt. 56
•
F4irf.ek19.5. Wagner 86
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.., Harvard 111/9, Nav)l 48
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;{ "' Mo.•K!''"~ ·c ily 66, Cent ConrM!Cd·
4
.;.t St. 59· .
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·kiM Han 82, ~dttlce 71
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Villanova 761 ~otrc Dame 56 .

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~ 1 Coli. of Cbarlnron 12, Coasaal ~li -

, ' u52 , .

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• o.ndJon 93, Lafa)'tlll&amp;! 68

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~ FloridA AAM 71, 8tyu 6&amp;
1

Florida AllAMic 70. Columtlia 51

• , _ sc.12. ao~~~a ... l7
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~61
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Ev-,._11,1'Jo._ . . 7 5.

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17
IS
9

Texas AftM ......... .9-3.0 661
If&gt;. VirJiDia ................!M-0 603
17. Mlchiaan .............. 9-4-0474 1n

19
It

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Otkn ~ vate.: -Ea&amp;t Carolina

Ill, Wlllllinatoo j6, LSU 33, Nonh Car-

olin~l6,

Clemson 12, Arkruuu 8.

lt!. L l bldlE GA

1!10 liS
134 92
141 100
106 , 9'
109130
96 101
10.1 141

Nor1Mast DIYIIIon ·

Pittsliurah .......... 24 10 3 · si 183 1J7 ,
Monlmll ........... .19 16 '2 '40 110 1, 1
Buffalo~--- ·· ···-····· 16 19 3 3S I U ll 'i
Boaton................ u 1$, ' 1 3S 12~ . 131
Hartford ............. II 21 5 • 27 91 121

Hockey

NHLstandtngs

14

OU4WI ................. 8 28 I

17 18 147

Best -Wishes To All-Our
Meigs County
Winter Sports PrOgrams~

Uibon Beaver 57. F..di10n ~2
Maplewood 50, Badger 39
MQUmee 61 , iol. .Waile 41
M,;Mechen (W.Va.) O'on:.hue 79,
Sh:ldyai&lt;l&lt;; 6!!
Meadville (Pa.) Calvary' 7J,
Youn11townO.r. 64
Medina FBCS 97, MoJadote Chr. 64
New Bouon GlenWood 8R, Well4rn
Latham6J

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soil aUai,s ·alma mater after a long, ·
controv~rsial career at Long Beach
State' 'and UNLV that included the •
1990 national championship with the
Ru.ianin: Rebels.
The Bulldogs (7-4) .have done
surprisingly well considering that
several-players, including nationally
prominent recruit Teren~ Roberson,
have been declared ineligible.
"I thought Fresno State played
awful well. That's obviously the best
·game we have seen them. play,'' New
Mexico coach Dave .Bl.iss said. " I
have to give them a lot of credit"
The Lobos (I 0· 1) · ,w-ere · last
ran~ed in the final poll o;&gt;f the 1_992.

By The' i\aoclaled Preu
Jerry T~illl) is still winning
big games at llis new address.
· In 11is first Wes(em Athletic Con·
ference-· gatne at Fresno State,
Tarkanian'led the Bulldogs to ll 76·
75 victory over No. 25 New M~xi·
co on Tuesday night It was the
Lobos' firs~ loSs of the season in their
first game as a ranked team since
1993.
.
"It's a tough loss for New Mexico, coming in here IQ-0;" Tllf\canian
said. "B~t I've learned one thing ~
during"the season, you can't fee)SQ[ry for anyone but yourself."
Tarka!aian, 64, is in his farst sea·

15 Uta~ 83, Brigham Young 77.
career-high with 22 points and KerNo. 4 Kansas 100, Comell46
ry Kittles had 17 points, seven
Playing their first game since los- rebounds and seven assists as tile
ing to Temple and falling from No. W1ldcats (II-I , 3-0 Big East) w(Ua
I, the Jay hawks (8-1) cruised at their founh straight Villanova clOS!ld
home behind the 16 points of Jacque the first half with a 12-2 run for a 38-Vaughn. Kansas c1osed the_first half 24 lead. Pat Garrity had 16 points f{)r
with a 17-5 run and outstored Cor- . the Fighting bish (5-5, 0-3). who h8d
nell 50-9 in the second half. Raef won three in a row and have not wllQ
Lafrentz had 13 points and I 0 four straight since reaching the fin~
rebounds to lead the Jayhawks' of the 1992 NIT.
~
inside dominance. Eddie Samuel led
No. U Wake Forest 81
the Big Red (2-5) with 14 points.
Furman49
No. 8 Villanova 76
Tim Duncan had a career' high 27 .
Notre Dame 57
points and grabbed 12 rebounds to
AI vin Williams matched his lead the Demon Deacons (7-1), wlio
were playing for the first time in 12
days. Wake Forest had a 26-2 run
over an eight-minute spah of these&lt;;.:
ond half. Matt Schrecengost had !f.
'points to lead the Paladins (2-8), who
lost their I 2th straight road game ••
. No. IS Utah 83, BYU 77 . : :::
from Providence of the AHL,
hawks committed no penalties.
Keith Van Hom had 29 points !Q:. It was I -0 Bosion when Chicago stopped the last four shots .
Iead
the Ute~ (9-2, I-0 Western Atll', :
Todd Elik made it 5-2 with 5:22
evened it with 4:23 left in the first.
letic Conference), who won their ·
After the. puck bounced through the · left.
In the only other NHL game 27th consecutive home game by
crease twice, it came out to Tony
~oring seven straight points after ·
Amonte, and he slapped it off Tuesday night, Calgary bombed BYU closed within two with 4:44 to :
Tampa Bay I0-0.
Billington and in.
play. Bryon Ruffner had 26 points :
Chicago made it 2·1 with 3:261eft
Flames 10, Lightning 0
for the Cougars (6-4, 0- I), who are
in the sccand when Don Sweeqey
At Calgary, ·Theoren Fleury had
winless in four road games this seawhiffed on a cle&amp;ling pass in front of three goals and an assist as the
son ,
the Bruins' net and Eric Daze Flames rolled past T~pa Bay.
slapped it past Billington.
'
Fleury assisted on Pbil Housley's
Proben made it 3'-1 at2:5 I of the 12th goal and stored himself in the
third when he tipped a shot from the first period, then added goals in each
poi~t past a sc~ned Billington. of the second l!lld third periods · to
Chelios made it 4-1 just 54 seconds complete the rout.
later with a slap shot from the blue
Fleury's 18th goal of the season
line.
'
capped a"five-go;ll third period for
Then Nicholls went in on goal the Flames, who led 2-0 after one
alone' 6:05 into the third to make it period and 5-0 after two. The Aames
5-1 and chase Billington, who had· stored their I0 goals on just 28 shots,
n't lost in five starts (4-0-1). Scott making it an easy night for goalBailey, recalled earlier in the day tender Trevor Kidd .

93 season, and they were back in the ·~aut it was-a good play by Young."
Top 25 on Monday. They most probKendric Brooks led Fresno State
ably will be oui next week.
with a career-high 32 points.
Dominick Young made two free
"It was a great win. Our kids have
throws with three seconds left to give worked hard ~nd when you work
· the Bulldogs the win. New Mexico hard, good things should happen to
had taken a 75-74 lead with SS sec- you ," Tar¥anian said.
onds left on four straight points by
Charles Smith and Clayton
David Gibson. But Gibson then Shields each had 18 points for New
missed the front end of a 1-and-1 Mexico, while Gibson finished with
with 27 seconds left and Young, who / 16. ·
was fouled 1!5 he was passing, was a
In other games involving ranked
hero 24 seconds later.
teams Tuesday night, it was No. 4
"Thelastplayofthegamecango Kansas 100, ComeU46; No. 8 Viieither way. I didn't see the play, so I lano'va 76, Notre Dame 57; No. 12
can't say if it was a foul or wasn 't," Wake Forest 81, Furman 49; an!( No.
New Mexico cOIICh Dave Bliss said.
(}

Blackbawks beaf:Bruins; Flames blank Lightning
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Borrowed identity gets Weaver on Texas football roster
:"!'

PICKENS

HARDWARE

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MASON, W. VA.
773·5583

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TELEPHONE

NEW YOR!{'(J!P)...,. New York
Rangers goalie :Mike Richter, the
NHVs victory leader at 19-8-3, is
expected to ~ sideli~ for fqur ·
weeki betau~, of ·a-strai · d groin,
'lie was injured Satiarda night at
Edmonton.

.

Niles ~.

Gcurensville Garfield 46
Paden Ci1y, W.Va. 70, Hannibal River

~'!~'!!·..~~

Rely ·on QS For
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NOTICE: L1cenM •uM·IJJe at~Nd "!' ...... than JllnUirY 20, ·1111, ta mild ~- penally• . . . ,IIIII " I ~~
dtD. petlllty will te $4.00 lot ......11tlntll20.00 for KennelllceMI.
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P.O. Box 551-' I . . . · . .· "
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N~NCY·-·~R
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Pomeroy,""· • .,.. ' (. ;.t ,

r.tilforii,,N.H., won the women's .JS·
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. DOHA. Qatar (AP) - Tll!'i~·
ed Tlloma$ Muster of. !,.~atrla :and
second-seeded Boris Becker.o fdermllliy advanced to the ·seto\ld rD1l1"" .,
of 'the Qatar ~fl, · . '. • '. • ·
" Muster beat S!!aln'{ Ja ler• ,.'
S,anche~ 6-2, 7-6 (8-6) &amp;ll!l.~~er
d!!feilted Sweden's Stefan Edberg·~ ·
2, ::J-5. . '
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BIRd 'ail
: LAKE PLACID. N.Y! (AP)
~n Weslo\oer. of Gotchliater, ·
_ won-the ZO,kilometerJaCe..in _u,. ;...c...
U.S. Charripionshi111 willi a time of
I hour. 6 minutes, 1.~ second* aiMt.
tlirCie mi_. tarie~-- .
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Is Yo•r Ho•s•
Ready for
Winter?
We carry:
,lns•latlon
for Pipes,
Window Kits,
Heat Tapes
and Weather · ~:: ~·~I
.
Stripping.

By CHIP BROWN
•
b~~ stiU outtag~ about .this · . under1he n~me.Jotl Ron McKelvey didn't know· what their son was up talk to the players and the coaches
AUSTIN (APJ ~ An bnpostoron h , Dodds satd. R1ght now and attracted attention from Texas to. "I don't know where he is."
and try to make the situation right
:JJe more queshons thai' A&amp;M, Brigham Young anc) San
. Ms. Money said her brother led a He isn't running from anyone."
the Roster. The Immaculate Decep- t
.
.
Diego State over two years before double life purely outof his passion
Meanwhile, Joel McKelvey,
tion.·
ankr, , .
Wl)atever you calf it, 30-year-old .
w1ll . purs~e . every . tra1l , tra~sferring to Texas. UT officials to play football, denying earlier whose identity was assumed by
~on Weaver's ~bilityto change his mciUdin poss•b!e cnl)'lma~uon, to say his transcripts from the junior repons that Weaver·~ motive was Weaver, says he has no idea why he
, 1denuty and _g~!' add1t1on~l _colle!le help t!le.appropn~te authonues get to college, although delayed by . a writing a book.
~
was chosen. McKelvey said he had
·•
. football ehg1b1hly at the Unav'?rsll)l the bottom of thiS. We owe that to bangup about h1s Soc1al Secunty
Ms. Money said that Weaver real- met Weaver several years ago while
'
. · of Texas has authont1es and school our faculty, _students, coaches, alh- number, appeared to-be proper.
izes the severity of his actions and Weaver was working at Alvin Square
' officials considering legal action.
Jetes, alumni_and fans."
.
After The Californian. a newspaplans to contact UT players and Liquors i~ Salinas, which is run by
_ Ln; officials ~aid Tuesday they'll . Dodds srud he behe_ves Texas IS per in Salinas,_broke the news of his coaches to apologize. Weaver likely Weaver 's parents.
hkely_h1re a pnvate mvesllgator to . safe from NCAA sanctions because dou_ble 1denuty, Weaver. at first
will go on television to tell his sto"I JUSt want to know how he got
'·
look mto the matter and may _sue , he co?tends .that no one tn the denu~dthestocrlpld-thendttchedthe
ry, "maybe something like '60Min- away with it." McKelvey said. "If
Weaver for the cost of his scholar· schooLs athleuc depanment knew of Longhorns wh1le they were 1n New
utes. "' she said.
anyone would have checked, they
. s~ip. .
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We~ver's true identity.
.
Orleans preparing for S~n!lay ~ighfs
"When he is ready to talk, he would have known he was nq_!: me. I
·
Federal authonttes say they also· . _ We were purposely dece1ved, . Sugar Bowl game agrunst V1rgm1a
will," Ms. Money said. ·"Everyone never played football. I never went
want to quesuon Weaver.
, but we are confident we f~llowed Tech.
• will understatld why he did what he to college. My name isn 't even
"If he has defrauded the univer- _. every_proper l'ICAA and •dnwers1ty
"Weaver reportedly has been staydid. Right now his top priority is to Ron ."
sity, heS'could be facing potential mail procc:~ure." DOdds satd. '
,
ing with his sister, Bonita Money,
, an&lt;! w~ fraud •lll!d 'Social SecUrity
Otflcials Said they have yetto get just outside of Los Angeles.
..
A lnan who answered the phone
violations." .said Ron Sicven, who a straight answer from Weaver, who
.
heads tlie U.S. auorney's office in · exhausted his eligibility at Sacra- at Ms. Money's residence Tuesday
DEADLINE FOR -,...
are Four Dollars ..
Austin. ·~WhenoN~ dcitermine all the menlo State University before.':'s!Jag said Weaver went to visit his pa'rents
($4.00) f~r each dog, male or female. Kennel Fees a~e Twenty Dollars ($20.00). To obtain
facts, we will make a decision ."
~he Social ,Security nwn~,of a 23- in. Salinas, Calif. His mother, Sung
'
llcenae by mall, complete and return application to: Nancy Parker Campbell, Melga County
U'f. athl~tic dfrec_tor DeLoss year-old Salinas, Calif., tialja nl!!lled Weaver, however, said she hadn't
Auditor, P.O. Box 551, Pomeroy, OH 45769. Encloee a eelf-addresaed, stamped envelope with
• DOdds said be notifiea the NCAA on Joel Mckelvey to clilllige his identi- seen him.
a cheek for the price of the lk:enee.
Tuesday tha\ :y.'eaxl*,,a:backup cor· .. ty and keep playi~g footbaU.
. "!,am worrying to death a~~:&lt;&gt;ut
nerback whO,saw l~rruted action f!lr
He enrolled as a
at Los ,_, .him, srud Mn. Weaver, who cla1ms
···~··········~······················· .
· the Longhdrns this season, ~U.
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that
and her husband, Richard,
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OWNEROFDOO
:~c~e\1 off: ~ .te-"' ~,lad ~~~
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stored IS of his 25 points in the founh quarter, leadins Houston over Minnesota.
.
•
Hakeem 'Oiajuwon added 28 as the visiting R~
CIS won their fourth in a row.
,
•
Tom Gugliotta had 25 points and 17 rebounds for
the Wolves, who have gone I · 7 since coach Bill Blai"r
was replaced by ~p Saunders.
..
Jau; 10Z, Ma rides 92 _: Karl Malone had :2.9
points and 13 rebo nds in hot-shooting Utah's victC!IY
over Dallas.
.
John Stockton had 18 points and IS assists, inclui!;
ing six of each in the founh quaner, to break open the
game.
Host Dallas, which lost its second straight and eighcll
in the last nine. was led Jason Kidd and Jim Jacksoit.who had 23 points apiece. George McCloud added ~ ?
Pacers 102, Nuggets 87 - Veterans Ricky Pierpe
and Eddie Johnson fueled a 16-2 run early in the fimll
period to send Indiana past Denver.
"Pierce and Johnson, both 36, combined to store 2i
straight Indiana points as the visiting Pacers withstoo3
a Denver rally that cut the Indiana lead frotn 20 poiriiS
to seven.
:·
Pierce, Reggie Miller and Mark Jacks\)n finis~d.
with IS points apiece. Rookie Antonio McDyess led
Denver with 21 points ·and 10 rebounds.
·
&gt;

Fresno State. . ~ops . New Mexic_o 76-75; Kansas downs Cornell

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New MiAmi .~w. Cin. ~en Hills S6

65

streak.
also had 20 for the 76ers.
Brandon had 27 pojnts and 10 assists for the CavN £ Exel scored) 7 points for the Lakers, -who
their fifth one-point defeat of the season.
. abso
~ers, who have won four straight and eight of nine .
!be
ers took an 89-88 lead on Van Exel's steal
Chris Mills scored 20 and Bobby Philis 19.
of Ruffin and breakaway dunk. But Vernon Maxwell
Rookie Rasheed Wallace led Washington with.a seadrove lhe lane and made a nl,nriing jumper with 46 secson-high 20 points and Juwan Howard and Roben Pack
onds remaining, and StaCkhouse grabbed the rebound
each added 19.
of Van Eicel's missed three-point shot.
Netl 81, Bucks 72 - Shawn Bradley had.his best
On the 76ers' next trip downcoun, theb~ll flew out
game since being traded to New Jersey, getting 17
of Maxwell's hands and into Van Exel's with 10 secpoints, 14 rebounds and seven blocks in a win over Milwaukee.
.
onds•left. But he inisfifed on a running j11mper, and
The win snapped a four-game home l~ing streak for
Philadelphia ran out the final seconds.
New Jersey, which had dropped eight of its previous
Eiew,}anngdmtheissedKnl'ch!_~ ~el'lrdtogPaomnelansidncleO· Ispra
_92i.~~~egbbehisr
ln 'other games, it was New Jersey 81, Milw'a\l~e
nine games.
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72; Seanle I I I, Atlanta 88; Houston lOS, Minnesota
missed his second sioce straining his shoulder as the
•' tOO;'Utah 102, Dallas 92; and Indiana 102, Denver 87.
~on Gilliam finished with IS points and I&lt;l
rebounds
for the Nets. Glenn Robinson, Vin Baker,
BulletS were beaten by Cleveland 108-100. ·
·
TYd Bluers 101, Kllidcs 91 -New York' has
Shawn
Respen
and Johnny Newman each had 10 for
dropped three straight, all since Ewing went down, and
'"We ilon't have any sympathy for them. We've been
the
Bucks.
forced to play through injuries for the five years.lhat
four of its last five.
!ionl~ 111, Hawks 88 - Seattle ran its winning
I've.been here," Cavaliers guard Terrell Brandon said.
Ailroil McKie scored 24 points 1111d Cliff.Robinson
streak to six by beating Atlanta at the Omni.
The ,76ers snapped an Il-galll!! losing streak ar the
and ROd Strickland had 22 apiece as Portland ended a
-Frank Brickowski had a season-high 21 points and
Forum ihat stretched 6ack to the 1984-Sheaaon, when
seven-game road losing 'streak.
Shawn Kemp had 19 points and 12 rebounds.
, Julius Erving and Moses Malone were leading the way
New York's Derek Harper finished with 22 points.
Atlanta's Andrew Lang, hitting 14 of 19 shots,
and Charles Barkley was a rookie.
Char'es Oakley had 17 points and 14 rebounds.
stored
a career-high 29 points. Grant Long added I~ .
Vernon Maxwell had 22 points for Pbiladelphi,a. and
C&amp;vllien 108, Bullets 100 - Danny ferry scored
points
and
I I rebounds.
reserve Trevor ·Ruffin made nine of his fii'St12 shots
half ,of his 20 points In the pivoml third quaner as
Rockets
lOS, Timberwolves 100 - Sam Cassell
and fi~ished wfth 20 points. Rookie Jerry SW:kho~se . Cle~~land ended the Bullets' six-game home winning

.~

•Meigs·Mcirauders·
•Eastern ·Eagles
•Southern .Tornadoes
. .

Midd!&lt; ToM. 6~: Wit.-~ 64
N. Cin&gt;lioa5t. 1o2 V,:.C.iolhall
~1, sc- Pm&lt;l~&lt; Po.
N.C.-GrooM...., 1
j

Akron Hoban S4, Ra~nnm Southeasl
.
.
Amelia .59, Western Brown 5d
Ba.cavia SO, Cin. Summit 48
Bcllaite 81; Toronto 46
Cambridge 68, Moundawille (W.Va.)

Mauba\166

p.m.

'

13

931
886
867
724

Atlonlk:-

N.Y. Rangcn .....2S II 6 '56
Florida ...............2S 10 2 52
P!tillldclphia .......22 II 6 · !10
Wlllhington ....... .ly 1,_ J 41
Ta"l'uBoy ........ l616 6· )'B
Nc&lt;dcncy ........ IS 19 4 34
N.Y. Islanders ..... 9 22 6 24

'

Clevellli\(J 10:8, W'-'hinstoo 100

1\

10. ViiJin&amp;a Tech .... .10-2.0 1,015

II . N... Damc ..........9-3-0
12. Soutltcm Cai ........ JI-2-1
13. l'eM St.................9-3-0
14. r .... ....,............. li)-2-1

Iaa .

No. 8 Arluanw 70. Doyton SJ

Seattle Ill , Muta 88 '
HouSIOn llr.l, Ml~ 100
Utah 102. Dnllni 9'2

J!

The Top 25 IC:I.tnl in The Associated
Prell final cone,C football poll, wilh tint·
place voles in pl{'eruhe~n. records; 1otal
point• blued on 1S points for • nr-.-plbcc
vole throllsh one point ror a l.St.b·place
voce, and pn:viout
nr.nkina:
; ,
.

I
2
•
8
7
4
10
3
II

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Non-collference play

'fueldli!Y'• SCMCS

_.,

AP Top 25 coUege poll

I.S!O
1,474
1 .~28
1,311
1)09
1.161
1,147
1,124
1,029

12
22
21
16

lj .

- ~ , PortlnndiOI , NCwYork92
~
New Jersey 81, MjlwiiUkee 72
A'

Football

&amp;l!Ya

'

Mid.Conllnenl Conference
Oefinoce 81. Ollio Waleyan 5'1

J. f&lt;l.

1..........:2.1

45

IS. Otqoa ..................'l-3-0 416
19. syrac..................9-3-0 Jll2
20. MWni CFio.) .........8-3-0 352
21. Alabama ...............S-3-0 313
22. Auburn ............ .....8-4-0 · 276
l.l Tex• Tech ...........9-3.0 197
24. TOLEOO ............ II-0-1 170
ZS. Iowa ...................... S-4-0133 1n

Lall

Ira
~
I. Ncbruki!62) ........ 12-Q.O
2. Florida.................. I2·1-0
3. r......... ............ .! 1-1-0
4. AoridaSt.............. ll)-2-0
S.Colonldo .............. ll)-2-0
6. OHIOST.. ............II·2-0
7. Kwa&amp;St............... ll).i-0
8. N011hwestem,. ...... I0.2-0
9. 1Unus ................. JI).2.0

North COIUII Alblellc Cool.

, • Midwtsl DiYIIIon

;' ' :r~aon .....

Wadsworth 86, TQIImadJ,e 43

Warren taBrne ,2, Warren Howland

By The Aaoclated l'ral
The New York Knicb· aien't wmmng withaut
Patrick Ewiog. Without Chris Webber, the Washington
BulletS saw their tJu:K-glllle winning streak end.
And then ihere were the hapless Phil~lphia
76ers, whO beit the Lakers 90-89 at the Forum despite
the absence of Derric.k Coleman, out with a sprained
ankl.
·
" It was a good win for us in what's been a year of
nothing, but being snakebit," said 76ers coach John
Lucas, whose 1eam won for just the sixth time this season.

' · ,
' · B~ie Nicholls stored'ill.a 3:14 Spmi · H~kert was made . with an eye
• 1,40$TON (AP) - Ed Belfour ,.early in the third peri!/d extend tl\e towards a busy -schedule that has
and ,Je(f Hackett are both having
Blackhawks' unbeaten streak to nine tliem playillg seven games in 13
\ great Seasons fOr the Chicago B!_ackgames (8-0-1). The Bruins' unbeat- days. It probably also didn't hun that
en streak ended at six games.
hawb.
.
-Bel four was 6-I lifetime against the
"The goalies weren 't 'a factor," Bruins, !While Hackett is 0.3.
So when it came time for coach
Craig Hartsburg to pi~k one to start Chelios said. "We threw a lot of
Dave Reid slapped one past
in goal Tuesday night against the _pucks in the net."
Belfour in high on the glove side
· So it doesn't matter who plays 4:06 into the game to make it 1-0.
~treaking Boston Bruins, it was an
goal ,-right?
easy choice. Either one was OK
But before the Bruins could score
"I don 't know about that," Che- again, the Blackhawks had banged
"We've got total confidence in
both goaltenders," Hartsburg said . lios said, interrupting an interview five shots past Craig Billington.
after a 5-2 .victory over the Bruins with Belfour. "Eddie made some
"Both teams had been playing
with Belfour in the.' net. "We don't pretty good. saves badtth~. "
pretty well," Bruins forward Adam
Belfour .credited the ·win to ·his Oates said. "But we carne out a litworry that if we don't play one, he's
defense, which held the Bruins to 21
koing io 'get cold." ·
·'
tle sluggish in the first two periods
While Belfour is generally con· shots - three in the si!tond period and in the third, then got a few goals
sidered the Jllackhawlcs' No. I goal· -and nopower-play opportunities . . and it was over."
"That's been the ko;y to our suctender, second-stringer Hackett has .
Chicago's hot power play, which
won eight consecutive games to tie cess lately, " he said .• ,It all goe~
has scored eight goals in two games,
hand-in-hand."
Tony Esposito's club record.
had only two chiiJices Tuesday night
Bob Probert, Chris Chelios and
'Hartsburg said the de'cision to sit
and failed
. to score. But•
. . the Black.!
~.
' .
·--

'-Kenyofl89, Case Wes~em79

-. WESTERN CONFERENCE

: •

W. Union48, Manchester l4

Cal Poly..SW 74, Simon Fruet 69

u: NBA standings
t,"

Raverma 65, SlftletJboro 48

The Dally Ser:ttlnel • Page 5

Cavalier$ beat Bullets 108-1 00; 76ers and Pacers· also wi·n

' '

'

FarWell

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedn•d8y, January 3, 1996

Jy ~y GOJ;.EN • ·,

Scoreboard
Basketball

,.

..

•

MeiSJ• County

. •.

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,!'! !-: 1 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomerop-Middleport, Ohio

ednesday, ..... u•••..

Wednesday, Ja~uary 3, 1996

.

:,

G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Sc.«Writer
· ~ . River Valley's v'"ity boys' bas",UtbaJI team scored the game's first
i ix points, stayed abeac1 and weath•.~ a Meigs uprising in the third
1111tter to notch a 67-48 win Thesday
··~ gbt ll.River Valley High School.
; ~- The Raiders, who opened their
· : Siason nearly a month ago with a 60~2 Joss to this club, took an It-point
Jeld into the second r er primM·
1Jy on the shooting of
hman power forward Joey James. Getting I 0 of
Ius 14 points (he finished with a 5•fOr-I0 showing from the field) in the
:&amp;t quarter, he made that early exhi·
' l:tltion possible by maltint all of his
·w field-goal attempts and hitting
~o out of four free-throw attempts.
" The Raiders maintained that II ·
:P!Iint lead at halftime on the wings
.« their 14-for-29 showing that cra.dled the consistency (7-13 i n the first
'4\larter &amp;: 7-16 in the second) nec'tftary to survive the Marfuders '
....proved field-goal shooting in the
~second quarter (7-14, compared to
~ir 3-for- 7 showing in the first
frame). The Raiders needed their 6,{!jr-11 effort in the paint in the sec'Qpd quarter, because Meigs hit sev~· out of eight sh~ts in the paint in
;tf;lat period.
.- , : "We were hustling more, and we
~re more aggressive," said River
Yalley center Bruce WMd, who tal,.

•
lied 14 points partly on 4-for-6 fieldMeigs guard/forward Cass Clegoal shooting and had six rebounds. . land, who Jed his club with 10
"We were hitting the offensive points coming from 4-for-6 fieldgoal shooting,·never sank ·more than
boards."
By scori ng eight unanswered one basket per quarter and was held
points in the first 5:16 of the third to only twofield-goal attempts in the
quarter, River Valley extended its same quarter (he made a layup and
lead to a 43-24 lead. But Meigs missed another in the fu-st quarter). ·
nailed four three-point shots - these
Reserve note.: Meigs won 41-29
came from seniors Cass Cleland, in part behjnd the 10-point effort of
Paul Pullins, Brent Hanson and Mark Brad Davenport.
Mills ·.- in thC last 2:31 to cut the
The Raiders were led by Morgan
hosts' lead to nine at the quarter's ·Sullivan's 10.
end.
- "We didn 't guard them," said ·
The future: River Valley will
Raider mentor Carl Wolfe of the · head south to face Fairland Ftiday.
Marauders' success beyond the arc.
- •- •However, theRaiderskepthitting ·
' MEIGS (4-3)
the boards at both ends and putting
.(6-18-12·12=48)
forth the defe nsive efforts necessary
Cleland 2-2-012=10, Pullins 2-1- ·
to keep.Meigs from cutting the lead 2!2=9, Haning 3-0-112=7, Hanson 2any slirruner than nine points.
0-214=6, Whitlatch 1-J-1/2=6, Yost
Though both teams missed about · 2-0-112=5, Mills 0-1-0/1 =3, Pierce I·
75% of their fourth-qu~ field-goal ().U/4=2. Totals: 1Y35--5115-7f.Zl:::o48
attempts (River Valley missed II out
Total FG: I s:so (36%)
of 14; Meigs missed 16 out of 19),
Rebountls: 24 (Haning 6)
River Yalley made up for that by hit·
Assists: 5
ting I6 out of 23 foul shots in the
Steals: 6
final quarter. The Marauders missed
Thrnoven: 8
seven out of I0 shots at the stripe in
Fouls: 25 - ·
the same stretch.
Fouled out: Cleland &amp;: Haning
The shooters: Senior guard Greg
!
James, who got barely more than half
RIVER VALLEY (l·S)
of his game-high 24 points from 6, (17·111:-10.22=67)
for- II field,goal shooting, made
G. James 5-1.-11113=24, J. JI!JIIes
nine out of II free throws in the last 5-0-4/5= 14, Ward 4-0-5/6= 13,
quarter to keep the Raiders in front.' Adams 3-0-214=8, Cochrane 1-00/0=2, Graham 2-0-112=~. Justice().
().112=1. Totals: 20/50-V6-24132=67
Total FG: 21-56 (37.5%)

Larkin
&amp; Reds·Ink
.
.
·.....,three-year
contract
.

Rebounds: 45 (A~ &amp;: 1.
James 9 each; Graham, 0 . 11111es, &amp;:
Toler 7 each)

----------~--------------~------- --------•

TUrnovers: ~

Foula: 23

.•,

. ~TO~E HOURS

WE RE
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT··QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JAN. 6~ J996.
'

WE ACCEPT 'WIC COUPONS

DOUBLE COUPO.NS EVERYDAY· SEE STORE FOR -DETAIU

(

NO-LOOK PASS- Meigs ~U~nllfonrard Cass
Cleland (15) launches a no-look pau in front of'Rlv·
er Valley's Greg James in the second quarte&amp;(of
TUesday night's Jllllle at ·River Valley High Schqol,

where the Marauden fell 67--48. tl~lancl paced
Meigs ·with 10 points. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

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~.HuNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Youngstown State. He also is the
Yoimgstown State coach Jim Tressel school's athletic director.
~ys he's not interestedm becommg
Marshall is moving up to Divi~hrshall 's new head football coach,
sion,I-A in 1997. Gilley has said the
while five members of the Herd staff university· probably would take two
~JI!II1cdiY will head to Ge~rgia.
weells to hire a coach .
,; -(fn:ssel , whose Pengums won
Defensive secondary coach Brad
Nti:AA Division 1-AA champi- Lambert already has. followed Dono..hip$ in 1991, 1993and 1994, said nan to Georgia.
'J)!esday he .infomied Marshall of his
Michelle Adkins, wife of Mar*ision Sunday night. He gave no shall tight ends coach Greg Adkins,
sjt:ci~c reason.
said Do~nan will take five m_ore
:. •:"Both myself and the folks in Hefd ~ss1 stants ~o Georg1a: Adkms.
, H~ntington decided I need· to be offensive coordmator Chns Scelfo,
fli-e '' Tressel told The Tr~bune runmng backs coach Leon Perry and
,bnicle of Warren, Ohio. " And '"'pan-time assistant Greg Briner, who
y need to fi.nd ihe best possible was offensive coordinator during the
.
diclate. We both decided to go in I 992 championship season:
CifiiCr c!nctions."
That would leave defens1ve coorl~:Tnssel to!~ MMshall athletic
dinator Micl(ey Matthews, quaner~tjlf .~ ~ool1-l1e was n~t inter· backs coach Tony Petersen, receivers
. : ja .'thejob, college Prestdent J. coach Brian Dowler, defenSIY.e ends
. . .~ Gilley said Tuesday. But coachMari(Galeanddefensivelin~
· :clt!CyuKI'liesselwasneveroffered coac~ Tim Billings. Matthews has
and ," id he never Ia! ked to been menti~ned as a possible head
.
·, ' qent, John Geletka of coach cand1datei!
.
' · ' latown, Ohio,
·
Donnan was recruiti. Tuesday
. ;~ job .opene4 Dec. 25 when and unava1lable
·
nt. Goor·
~ comln&amp; off a 6-6 season, gia spokesman CJ
!ton sai~.he ·
fifidiim I&gt;oli.ian. Donnan was 64- had no information : · whether DQn'· fl~ •i~t' ~ 11 M!ll'ShaiJ, wjth a nan had himt'llhy ri'lp~ ·assislllnts
J~chlnlp!OIIShip in 1992 and run- but said Donnan told.hiJ!I' Monday
nialieS 1. n . 199 I, 1993 and he hoped to ~vc hiutalf P!ll
th, ·
, ·· · ·
,
, er "in a day or two." ~ , f ~
•I' 42 is 87-41 -2 at
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$ 129

USDA·CHOICE BONELESS BEEF .

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'PEPPER ··
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298 SECOND ST.
-POMEROY, OH.

,JI

Jiy JOHN NOLAN
pick and choose who they sign."
. · ·.CINCINNATI (AP) - Barry
LMkin said he was concerned by ·
.tirkin, the National Le~gue's MVP the losses since last season of slugijst seaSon, has signed a three-year ger Ron Gant to the St. 'Louis Car- ·
c;pptract extension with an option for . dinals and pitcher David Wells to
that could keep him with the Baltimore. But he credited Bowden
:Cincinnati Reds his entire career. ' with having a knack for making ·· Larkin and the Reds agreed Tues- deals to strengthen the ballclub. ~ay to the $16.5 million, three-year
Two seasons ago, Bowden picked
~ltensi~n through 1999, with the
up free-agent third baseman Tony
.d ub option for :woo that _could Fernandez. Last season, Bowden
.l!f~e the deal worth $21.2 m1lhon.
added catcher Benito Santiago.
Bowden noted that the Reds had
·- 'Larkin; 30, the Reds' reguiM 1
~~rtstop since 1987, said he has not finished first during the strike-short- .cl«idect whether be will play beyond ened 1994 season without Gant,
2000.
Wells or Santiago that year.
Larkin is a Cincinnati native.
' .. But Reds general manager Jim
JlQwden said: "I think Barry can After playing at the University of
p,lay into his 40s."
. .
Michigan, he was the Reds' tin;t pick
. · ·Larkin made $5.4 mdhon last in the 1985 draft.
lt&amp;SOII. He isscheduled to make $5.3
Bowden said the · negotiating
rilitl,io,n in 1996 under tenn~. of a process w.itl! J.,;u:19n began.~n. July.
S1S.6 niillion, five-year contract he Larldn had said he wanted tp sign an
ailiied i.--January 1992.
extension· before the 1996 season
r,J+i(kin Will be paid $5.3 minion started. an'!_ ~~~l'!.n91 nego~~'r d~r­
~n 1,997,' 1998 and ).999. There IS a
ing the season :
$600,000 buyout ~vision for the
Bowden also announced tile sign~ 2000, but an option fur that year · 'ing of former Reds slugger Eric
liioUJd automatically kick in if he has Davis to a minor leagu~ contract,
!if ',least 525 plate appeMances in along with former Pius~urgh Pirates
11197, 199~ or 1999,
catcher Don Slaugh!. They will be
· ·-:." I didn't want to have to test the invited to spring training as non-rosf~·agent market," LMkin . told a ter players.
.
~ws conference at Riverfront StaDavis played center field for the
db1m. "I'm happy here. I've been Reds for all or parts of eight seasons,
~ted well here. The Reds have
including their 1990 world champibokn ood to me."
onship season. He was traded to Los
•·kegbattcd .319 with IS homers, Angeles in November 1991 and latM-RBI alld 51 stolen bases last sea- er played for Detroit.
·
lfi_Q. H~ :.von his second consecutive
The Reds also signed six other
&lt;Told Glove Award (I I errors in 544 players to minor league contracts:
c~ances) and sixth Silver Slugger left-banders Bryan Hickerson and
. Award as the 'NL's top oh'ensive Rich Rodriguez, right-hander Jeff
s~Qnslop.
Shaw; catcher.; Joe Krnak and Brook
;:'"We're real excited to have Bar- Fordyce:.~ and infielder Roberto
ry,) ack here." ~owden said. "In Mejia.
~ae economic.bmes, clubs have to

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 1-.

CUBE 24 PACK

Monclay tin Sunday
IAIJ,.JO PM

'

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Assists: 8 (Gr8n.m 3)
Steals: 6 (G. James &amp;: J. James 2
each)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

....

-:·-fouls hurt_Meigs cause in 67-48 -defeat to ·e;ver.Valley

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~Teacher
t9els difference
she made in .Student's me
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: By ANN LANDERS •
Dear Ann Landers: !just received
:: a gift every teacher holds most precious and 1'1!1 still glowing from it
:
In lhe past you've suggested that
•. notes froni parents expressing their
: appreciation to the'teaebet would be
: wonderful. Letters from former stu~ dents expr~ssing ·how YOU, as a
· teacher, shajled his or her life is the
moSt cherished gift an educator can
-&lt; recefve.
~
My gift was from a student 1-had
~ 12 years ago. Reading her worils 6f
:: gratitude made me misty-eyed. It

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-affirmed why I cho~ this profession. improved tele~rvice: ";'fter tha' colPlease ask your readers to write . umn appe~. The NationaiPerfor-

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be permitted to leave ihe country, he • to get help from her family, Tom· Is it possible to turn the fedenil _govcalled the State Department in Wasli- arranged fqr the local emergency ·emmel)t around so that ";m~racans

-~~e; :~~~~o~n~:'!na:uf.'!!t~ :tceof~~c:.~be~~~:. :~o~b:d~~~i~~~~ ~=en.!J ~~i~{~::department to reconnect her 1 ~:'er~":. ~~~ift~:~~~~~~~~~;,
th~m know they had-sOQIClhing ao do

wath your success: Put them on
Cloud I'!line. -Lompoc, €alif.
. Dear Lompac: What a beautiful
tdea. You asked them and I thank
you.
• Dear Ann Lande.rs: Lasryear you
printed a column in which you mentioned your attempt to get through to
the Immigration and_. N~~cturalization
Service in 'Chicago. You Said:it took
.45 minutes before you _reaehed a
"live, warm bo!ly." .
Please know· you ' contributed to

and now gov~ment ag~ncaes ~
taking steps to amprqv~. I would blce
.to share two experiences th~ sho)-V
how hard governfl)ent ~gencaes life
working to upgrade therr servacc. ,
_ 0~ July I ._ 1~95, Saturday
evemng on a holiday,weekend, .a_16year·o~ memberoflhe,{,!.S. Nabon..
al Tenn~~ Te~ was on her way to a
compettbon m France. HCI' pu~.
with beq~assport iiiSide, was stolen
a! JFK AiJP?rt 1n New York . ..a,fter
'Blrpo~ offictal.~ tofp her father that
there :Was no·way his daughter would

plans and spent the next several ,
'hours working with the airline to per-·
mit the girl to depart while ihe passport issue was being resolved. She
was on a flight that night.
. Topt Pajiq)s, daims re~ntativc
m Chicago'~.Soctal Sec'\fltY Offi~e,
offe~ ~o ptck up_a Soctal Secpnty
· appJ 1callon from,an elderly woman
at Her home. When. he got there, he
found her swathed in layers of ·
clothes in a frigid apartment, h11ddled
next1o ~ SPJCe heater. She had no
water, no gas, no heat After. failing

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Pomeray • Mldd..port, Ohio

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samrs

Nmil~lw for

These stj)nes jlre part 'Of "Com- peni11g. People are actually )"ntt~g
mon Sense Government," my 199S !heir government lhltnk-you letters
report to President CliRton. It shows ,- thousands of lhem. -Vice Pr~stJaat government agenc!es are made · ~nt AI Gore • • ·, ·
:'
1
up of
people. and people go 9Ut of . · Dear Mr. Yice Pn:sldent: 1 ~
theit;~ay to help others.It's one of pleased to sh~ yqUJ:&lt;impressi~ 1~the thmgs that makes us human. ter with my fe8!1ers. ~oucan be most
No¥.y e~pected Davt\1 Gooding to of them will be as impressed ~- I
~et_ astde his week~nd plans, or.rom was.
· .., ;:
:•·
PaJkos to take an mterestm·a poor, _ -.-'
. 1,._. ':·
·:·
elderly woman on a cold night. s,nd queslio~ tp AIIIJJ.anderis,
Tho~ just di~. .
.
Creators
· 5777 w. c~
ts It poss1ble for, a I!_Overnme.~t 1\) tury Blvd.,
Angeles;
;encourllj!e sucq exceptiOnal $ervtce ? Calif. 941045
· ·
· . ·
·

;llfll' Spffllll lkt111lo11?.

,:_,

BISSELl BUILDERS, INC.

CONSTRUCTION

• Wedding.s/Recepcion•
• cOOples,
'

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
· _Garages • Replacement Window~
,
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Cu•t•• B•lldi•a a R•••••ll•a
•NewHomes '

~Pict ....)

·Additions

• Reunions

• New Garages

• Anniversaries

• Remodeling

• Groups

• Siding
• Rooting
• Painting

~

• Fam!IY
Reaso!"'blc pric""
Call 991-7747
after 4 pm during wcd&lt;day&lt;
(Anytime on wcck~nds)

.

FREE E5n11ATES

...

I· '"'""""""'"''•
Remodeling,
~

( No Sunday Calls)

BiU Doerfer
(614) 992-2979
...

~

Water

..

FOODLAND

L . -

NSOREDI
~

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UNIVERSITY.,OF Rl~ _ G.RAN~DE REt;&gt;., EN ··

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vs -. ;

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.- First ··
_
icelebrated
.

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)I

m;

Q

-:·- -

USDA _CHOICE BEEF

·CHUCK
ROAST
IUY ONE, GEl ONE .

"(··
'

II

-FREE

!I

va1u willl coupon.

.;..

-

.

--~/

SHORT .LOINS
'

·Asst~ , ·

$ '99

L!J ~ "...

...

- ~ORK

CHOPS

f

s

LB. ·

FOODLAND SPEC IAL COUPO N

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I..1 lb.
bag

.

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CHEERIOS OR KIX

v

Sa!!l~g•

Company

, r••• 11M the _right to reJMt
•nr or-111 bldl aubmhtlcl.

F~.
the above
collaWal will be IOid In the
condition It Ia 'In, with no
expreaa or lmpllltd war·

For further Information,
contact Deal • at 111124131.
(t)3, 4, 13tc

U2.00/HR. ..

-j

COREA

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MASON, WV.

RES. n3-5766

AUCTION CENTER- na-&amp;447
PAUL "ERNIE" WATI'ERSON, COMMITTEEMAN

FOR DAISY LEPoRT
' TERMS: Call or Check wilD '
Not~ for accidents or 1oM of ~ty.

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ERE:E:tEP.SI®.:24-PA€K·· .
.. ... .· y . UY 'T·HitE'E

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CURES ARE NOW THE RULE
WITH TESTICULAR CANCER
Question: My 24-year-old son
recently found a lump in his testicle.
He had tests that showed the lump
was cancer and then he had the testicle removed. His doctor is optimistic that he will he cured, but I'm
still worried. Can you give me any
additional information about testicular cancer? Answer: About 6,800
cases o'-cancer of the testicle are
diagnosed in this country each year.
Most often the man is between 20
and 35 years old -just like your
son. Since this cancer is more common when the !estide fails to
descend into the scrotum, it is recommended that any hoy whose testicles have not descended into the
•
RUTLAND - 'the Rolland
scrotuin by age two have surgery to
: : Township Trustees organizational
correct the problem. This will reduce
: · meeting Thursday, 6:30p.m ., at the , his lifetime ris" of developing tes• : Rutland' Fire Station.
ticular cancer.
•
Testicular cancer is usually found·
•
RACINE - American Legion
by the individual. It may appear on
• Post 602, Racine, 6:30 p.m Thursthe tes'ticle as a hard growth that is
:• day. Dinner to fallow.
as small as a grain of rice; or it may
•
·first come to the person's attenti011 as
tenderness and swelling withoutan
'
'"Obvious lump. Commonly, the lesticular tenderness is first treated ;as
: A Year In POetry
: Japuary is t_he beginning of a new an infection called epididymitis, but
• year.
it d&lt;ieSn't clear up with medication
: February is a time for love and as epididymitis does. Further diag·
. ' Valentines my dear.
. · nostic tests then establish the cause
. March is the.time to fly kites so h1gb, . as cancer.
:.. · and
.
· Actually, all testic~lar cancer is
: April is tile month of fools, both girl not the same. 'There are two major
: . and guy.
types of cancer cells - germ cell
:. May is the· month for flowers 10 and non-germ cell cancers. This
·,... emile out of tbe ground, and
distinction can only be established
:-: June is the time for swimming, but after surgery when the tissue is
: ' please-don 't y.ou drown.
,
· stUdied under a microscope, but it is
; _July is the time tO celebrate the Dec· important because it 'is one of die
• · laration.
.
factors that rnlilt·lli!'considered when
~ : August is too OOt to have any •ocle- determining the proper treatment for
;. : brntion!
·
the cancer.
:,. September is when fall does begin,
Oerm cell cancers account for95
~ : and
·
percent of all testicular cancers. .
Oct~r ia.' wjien Halloween comes . · TheSe CJII¥:CI:li can he subdividecl into.
' ; aptn.
.
. ·
two addition!ll.cell types. AI,I of this
f, · No~ember js the month we have is impPrtant in rtanning the best
~: T!wtksgiving,
. treat.ment. Anolber major treaunent
··; becember is the end of another great considentiOfl·is whemer or not the
worth living!
pancer bu lpl,e8d beyond the testi; ; By KAicl Ho-..tter
cle, a proceu Which is wled "mer.
; ~~
_·
.
tas\s" in doctor,veniiCular.

: Poet's corner

CODE: 04
NIIME : ~------.-'---

STAE:tE~J:-===STA;jL:;:~::z;p.:;;:j
CITY::O::

I'

PHONE

. .

, stOre name where 24-pecks were' pu&lt;dllled

.

Buy One, Get One

.· FREE·· ·
8 LOCATI9NS
, To
'

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SERVE$
~

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You •...

-~

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.........

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:-;year

..

Usi"&amp; tilt Ctusi{i«b

lu• USN a•

614-742·2131

~

(614) 992-4279 ~::.::::·

MIDDLEPORT U.P.t
PRIVATE CARE

• 614-992-6223
·•-"' •· Free Estimates ·
Insurance Work Welcome

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

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-····

.- i
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-- ·
~-

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

-

Family
Medicine

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~--~-7
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.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

J.D. Drilling Co1npany

. __.

1DI211MIIIn

P.O. Box 587

Another Minute .
CaH Nowtll
1-100-255 5454
Ext. 4375

ReaiONible •.
lneu..,. Experlencad
CaR Wayne Nafltlll:a- 1

RACINE
GUN CLUB
Gun Shoots
Sun 1 pm
12 gauge

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
. Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs. ·
, We dig basements, put In ~lc
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512

Judge who saw
• •
•
•
VISIQn res1gmng

Room Adclltiii\IS
Skiing, Roofing, Petloe

~13195

Jamea E. Diddle

NOWIII
Thete Is someone for
everyone. Whatever .
your pralerence
Nationwide or R!ght

HouaeRepalra
Rtmodlllng
Kitchen a Bath
Remodlllng

For F'" Elllmatn

~-

•IMONAII,JI &amp;U'.U

112/96 1 mo. pd.

4405

.

Racine, Oh. 45771

All testicular cancers are treated
by surgical removal ofthe cancerous
testicle. Depending on the specific
cell type, Odditional treatment with
more surgery, radiation;chemotherapy or a combination of these is used
to give the best chance of a cure.
Your son and his doctor were
optimistic about a cure, and they
should be. Most types of testicular
cancer have about a 90 percenl
chance of being cured. This even
includes cases where the cancer has
metastasized to many other areas of
the body. Some types have cure rates
of 97 pen:ent.
Another concern is about the
patie,nt's sexuality. In some types of
testicular cancer, the treatment
leaves the individual fully able to
have erections and to father children .
These are important issues for any
man, but particularly for a young
man who wishes to have a family .
Unfortunately this is not the case for
-all treatments for testicular cancer.
However, it is often possible and
advisable to have sperm frozen
before surgery so -that it is possible
to father children in the future even
if the cancer treatment leaves hiin
infertile, impotent, or both.
· ·So you and your son shOuld be
optimistic. Today a cuie of his cancer is V'lry likely as are his chances'
for having a long, happy 1;1nd productive life.
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
,.ritt to Jollii C. Wolr, D.O., Ohio
U•iftnlly College of'Osti'Opalllk
Medklae, Grosveaor HaD, Athens,
()hlo 45701.

\

Openings for 2
Christian
atmosphere for
elderty care in a
non-smoking home.

SERVICE

Chuck Stotts .

'

1

NEFF liEMODEUNG

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

HOME

614-992·3200

O•e·Sttp Ct111plete A1tt ••~f Rep1ir

· Factory Choke OniJ

-

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:aclliHI American
Legion 1602
Starllrig
Sunday, Dec. 3rd
Doors Open
4:30P.M.
Bring_, for FJW Card
Phone 1148-2044
1148-2885

FREE
.

Plclt.Up dll«*decl
washers, dry81'8, hoi
water tanks, stone,

furnaces, and any
metal msterlll.
Call 992-4025
~enlam-8pm

MonthruS.L

.·
REG. HOURS

llon.·Wecl. 1~io

Frl.-sat. 1~ .
.
Cloled ' · '~- 1"
Thurs. a Sun.
102 East Main
Pomeroy
992·7886
12121tt

MODERN~·····

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCOON

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal • COifllllercial or 1'86idential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

•NewHomea
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

110\'/ Of FElliNG (;O&lt;Cff,\L 11&lt;\ULI'IG

\'IE HAVE A 1 f()l' •,rl I f'OH SALE

FREE ESnMATES
985-4473

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Portabk

Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brictcles

614-742-2193
111

Round
Bales of
Hay for
Sale.- .

24 Hr.
Wrecker Service

C.-/Heavy Trtdc
Repcir
(614) t92..U
23 Coll8ge Dllvl

Call
614-949-2512

Mldclleporl, Oh. 45760

Lot~Eli:NE~;s

Door. Don't Waste

TQIICIII-iOnii"*':Mual;:-~,:-

, 'ciNCrnNATI (AP) - A judge
who says •be saw the f~ee of Jesus
Chiist on a courthouse pillar is .
leaving the bench to become an .
evangeli~ and motivillional speaker.

,..,

.

IREEIIIMIH
AID IEMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
andRemovect
·.
Misc. Jobe.

'Ill Slack
H2·2269

........

II PI l 1

. . . . . i'Ji

.,....,.

lob Davie .

Munici~

JUdge Leslie Isaiah
Oaii)OS, 10, Wd he' will resign Feb.
1. •

lbuaN Otiw; :II

I

·-·

1

1W'!4Nmo.

aumber el days.

.

11/24/IIN-

.SAYRE TRUCKING

(614) 149-30t3 Phonit
614) 14._20t8 FAX
8t!l) 514-2008 NIGHT

33058 SR 33 * Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

frlende.

The ~unity Calendar Is
:: publlsbed as a free service to non•
; profit )II'OUpll wiiiiiD&amp;·tci IUinOance
· . meetiq end. ipedal eveals. The
calendar IJ aot designed to promote sales or .lund rqen of aay
, type. Items ere printed as space

.,

Roger Walker

RIISm•l• Riles
JeeN.Siyre

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45n1

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
~a~.·~~~~- Night Out on the Town 0wn1c1 •
leMce w11tt
.
Oll1relld rty

~.
Paul&amp; nna Rouell;
llloll~era, clslwlltnd

~

,.

Cliashlre,Oh. .

814-367..()302

Trallr&amp;Han~Sitn.

"Ride In 11 Chllriot of Luxury"

RICK PEARSON AUCnON CO. 166
LUNCH

rnmunity
; calendar

''

68 N. Locuat St.

Septic Sys•s,

Laurel Limousine Service

AUCTION CONDUCTED By .

deughtwoln-Iaw,
Robert J. " Carrie
R-'t; .l l•ldchlklrwl:
Rebec.cl • lllltltlN
Aoueh, 1011 •

WEDNESDAY
. MIDDl-EPORT - Pomeroy
MasoniC Lodge 164 Regular Meet·
irig, 7:30 p.m., at Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT - Middlw&lt;&gt;rt
· Literary Club meeting 2 p.m. at the
• POnieroy Public Library with Mrs. ,
· Dwight Wallace, hostess. Mrs.
' James Diehl will review Ladder of
: · Years by Anne Tyler.
.
POMEROY - Meigs County
• Library Board ofTrustees m~ting
: Wednesday, 10 a.m. at the Pomeroy
: library with architeciS for lhe Racine
: · Branch Library.
: - THURSDAY
, Rl".CINE - · Southern Local
: Building COO.mittee meeting Thurs: day, 7 p.l)l. in the high cafeteria.

IAULIIG &amp;
EICAYATION
u.s.. &amp; Gravel,

$20.00/HR
IJDUUUC IIPIII

$300aup
LHaonaon
Plano,
GuHar &amp; Drums

garagekeptlll

l'lnllllglven.

•.
:;
:
::

TOSSED SALAD
•

FurU., The F1tmen Bank

•~d

948-2512
'

· Cheaper Bates
WELDING &amp; FABRICATION

ftoor lamps, COllection of glass ·shoes, several pes.
McCoy, lg. Walt pottery casserole wllld, green &amp; wh~e
stoneware pitcher, hall, several . dolla, · jewalry,
ChriStmas decorations &amp; rnore. ; . ·
AUTOMOBILE WILL BE SOLD AT 12:00 NOON .
1969 Olds Cutlass: 2 door, auto., v. vinyl top, green,

IUITAIS

1112WIIII mo. .

•

3 Pc. B.R.-suite, chest, dressers, china cabinet, table
&amp; 4 ~hairs, oak wash stand, wardrobe, Ginny Lynn
bed, portable TV, 3 tier stand, o1c1 radio, old lampe,

STAI IUITAI

614·949·3027

. RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC."

-

• to rua 1 sp111Clftc

(ID

.fres~ , E~p~~ss ....

,.,.,.,...till

c.n. Aoueh;-.

~

.

. SLICED FREE

Velvet .
S'P.Free
-·ICI CREAM

1 . CHEVYS.tO
KICCSti'Stlllfl!Otlle
Thl Flnnetl Ba~k and
lllvlnp Company, Pomeroy. Ofllo,
right
to bid It thll Mil, lncl to
withdraw the above
collateral prior to aala.

' P,el'llllll iUid .-aii!IQf be cu-lled

..

~17 ......____2...._$_3·~

''

79

'

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~10 lb. •vg.

r

ChQcolat.e.
'. ·.Drink··

'

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Springdale

.----~:-:""---.......- : - - ,
Ooz.

$

...

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·PlaetiC Gillon

Wlloldeef

•'

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'

foRCIW:Jaaoltlllrll:

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

•,

1

,

lleooncl 8trMt, Po~,
Ohio, to Mil fOt Cllh the

TDs, Ml...Wat Hard,_., Iron, PH.
PIIMe call R..U.Sojl at 192-4472 or 1~13
to eel u · ur free water ana 11. tllllllln

Lotated II the At.Mrtlon Center on Rt. 33, In u.oi!,
WNiher concltlona we have movwd
the .,.,_. PI'OI*tY of ..... ~ from
Henclerlon, W.V. to the Auction Center In Malon,
W.V. MIS. Leport II In I nun1lng home and no
longer lblt to live II her home. We will be -Hillhg
the folklwlng:

992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

(Stock up on your
holiday baking
supplies)

' analySis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING: ·

w.v. due lv

.,

• _;\ . Fresh .
i,--~., ·
Sealtest ·
j ' ' . IORANGE JUICE
.

·-·-

·.'•
'.
•

. UmK 2 With coupon. Good thru 1/6196

I

.... wll w hllcl812tiw..t

YOU
U..
looldni ~ for ua
:· . unllllhe blllennd.

''

... _... _______________
""""_____
, ·
Good lhru 1/elll6
,
..L --·
UmK one !rae of equal "' -

.

t-, 8110:00 a.m.,'a DUbie

'

Velvet
Super Dip

lGE
CHEESE

·Pink Salmon

NOTICE Ia hereby given
IIIII qn Saturday, JI~IIIIIY 6,

Sadly mined by wtt.,

Foodland

Whitney'~: . .

BONELESS
.
'.

·Comlno

&gt;

' oz. Ll~e or Small Curd

-Church youth
··present play
·''The.Night'of His Birth" was pfe·
sented on Christmas Eve by the
:youth of the Bradbury Church 'of ·
.. Christ.
The cast included Stacey Brewer
as Mai&lt;y; Clark VanMatre as Joseph;
. • Derek Johnson as the innkeeper;
Alex Mitchell, Sarah Snyder, Jesse
Nibert and A. J. Snyder as lhe 1111gels;
Tyler Nibert, Jeremy Snyder, Ben
Mitchell, Derek Johnson uthe shepherds.
•
.
Jodi Glass was the narrator; Cindy .
.Snyder, the director; Greta Riffle, the
assistant direciOr; Kathy 1ohnson, the
organist, and Jeremy . Snyder and
Clark VanMatre, in charge of scenery.
Jessica Johnson sahg "What.Child is
. Thins" prior to the program. Rick
Snyder had the closing prayer,
On Saturday the youth met 'at the
church ,for a full day of activities
which included play practice, baking
· and decorating cookies and fixing
fruit baskets. The cookies, donlted by
' Carol Brewer and fruit baskets alongwith fudge, donated by Debbie Fin- .,
law, and candy, were delivered to rei-.
atives and members of the church lat,,er in the evenin!l as the you~ went
C,:hrj.s!!Jlas carohng. ., ·
.
· ; Hot chOfol!lte awajted the carolflrs on !hear retufll to the church,
along with pizza, pop 11nd chips.
"r Participating in the weekend
I!Clivitiea were S~y BRwer, Ben
• 111'1 Alex Mitchelf, J~y. Sarah and
A: J. Snyder, J - aiad Tyler NibeA,
.Clark VanMair•, Jessica and Derek
lohniiDfl, Katherine ~tchell, Jodi
~ Gietl Riflle, JijCk arid_Cindy
S~ydW. ~ ~- ~~!'larrjson,
Ball and.· NIOI!II King, ~ Kathy
Johll10n.
• · •·

it.._.

Even though
liMn lhat long ..,_
~you p
eel away
·- You•,.. IIJ our hllllta,
:: . mind l!nd thoughla
:: :' 811Ch and every day.
•&gt;
.... ·hanl to llop .nd
. :~
llllnk ihM yoil a...
blck
~:: What w. wpcilc!n•t give
•• • t:o .._. • your allly
•.. , laugh.
· • You hay.. bean a
. hueband. dad, grand\ pa, brolhli, uncle
: • lild fltencl.

. IN CAS.H ,--_ GRO.( lE.R :I ES oA A~90 SECOND SHOP-P -1\NG .SPREE

~ birthday

, Kirk Pullins; son of Tom andSta: cie Pullins, recently celebrated his
1first binhday.
·
! Attending besides his p~nts was
fhi~ sister,- Audrionna, grandparents,
' Th~odore and Becky Pullins, grand: mother, Nancy Hall, and great-grand: mother, Sally-Bland.
, Others attending were Tammi,
Judy and Ciara Young, Roxann, Carola and Cody Russell, Sue Zurcher,
:Kevin, Christy and Christopher Tay•lor, Terri and Justin Browning, Bill
Iand Jean Osborne, Chuck, Qonna and
:Zachary Pullins and Susan and Emi~yAsh.
•'.'
,. ' Others presenting gifts were ·
~grandparents; 'Dave and Susan Half .
:and great-grandmother, Lera Halt
Usa Hysell, Dakota Young, Gary,_
Vicki, Josh, Jason, Jeremy, Jenny ·
·cline, Mike, Angie and Kiara Taylor, •
;Denise, Michelle and Mike Zaughery, Doug B,owning, Tom and Scott
Russell ~nd Brian,Ash, Chuck, Carolyn and Cody Stewart ·
A Mic~y and Minnie theme was
·carried out for the party,

·-

SATURDAY,.: J~~&gt;1~"(H .. _:. · ...
See Some Great CoUege,Ba.ketbin·plus ·a chance to

KIRK PULLINS

'

'

Who woulcllilve
been 63 on Jan. 3,
1918.

...

.

'

URBANA ·.

'.

••

.

SA.,

•,

. PU8UC NOTICE

•

V.C. YOUNG Ill

WATKINS
.PRODUCTS

~i.uf: ~~ hat. .nt
~~~ WV Eq•fpNeBI

SAT.,IAII. 6, 1996
10aOOI.M. ·

• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work

I

The water treatment . company COfdlally Invites you to
patticlpate In a !rae, no oblgaHon, comprehensive water

Of .
ROBERT H. ROUSH

• Room Additions

• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

-~ -

TRI·STATI WATEI SYIRMS, IIC.

..

YO_.J
CAIPIIIJIIRIIWICI

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Cuara~~teed

Diolriblded by

In Loving ll1mory

Roo~.

Afld-On'o,

Salufaclion

(614) 88H535
i614i 192-2753

&amp;Auct~n ~ .

B. D . CONSTRUCTION
SWing, Pt~rt:hP.•·
Declco, Honw.

614-992-7643

Public Sale

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

Free E1rimale1
QiuJljly Worll

.'

,,

Stone

WICKS
HAULING
(Specillze In drlvewet
.......g)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sanct,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470
'

�•
\

~ldnndly,

Jinuary.:J, 1896

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The

OOP
PHILLIP
ALDER

5 llodiooma. 2 112 Balhs, ~­
Alrt Propane. Fenced Yard, Rt· Newly reda.coratt d, nice cltl\n
edavllle, $350/Mo. Ptua Oepoal~ 2bedn&gt;om l5n&gt;und ftoor, wid hoolc·
304-675-7518.
up. ReferencH. Deposit No pets.
30-1-615-5182.
5 Room House &amp; Bath, ·$250/lolo.
Plua Dapotft.&amp;14~548.

911 Viand St.. Pt Pleasant Nice
~room

J=i:!l/'1~£. ~fi-1 1 ~

'

1

wrflht · ·.:

per, ac, waahartdryer hookup,
kitchen furnished. Ralerencea &amp;

deROiil No pets. 304~58· 1728. I
Will 1111. OWner Will h~p finance
down pty/TIOI'll

anarp. $3,800.

•A t O 3

•to

tQt08 7 84

Nice two bedroom apar tmenl in

• to s 3

Porr,omy, 81 .. 1102-5858.

hbt.tse, wall to .wan car- One bedroom efficiency apart-

1992 Ford F· 1so ~C

man! in Middlepon , 814-992·

1417 .

EAST
•J 9 2
•J 7

AADI~ ~U

01J A FU'JO DRNE

52,500 Miles 11o.ooo : ~1 .4 ·44 1 ·

Small Efficiency Apartment, All
Utilities Furnished, Quiet, Clean,
Prlllllto Pork, $225/Mo, 814·446·

'

tJ 9 5 2
•K 9 4 2

E.VERS/00.

1992 S-10 Blazet 4·'1!0 LoadoG,

SOUTH
•K 5 4
•K Q 6 5 4

304-1175-8338 Aher 7P.M. ·

21102.

1.7 Ford' !ru ck fl aJbed, 302 , 3
apaed 1600.614-992-4,17.
•

Twin Rivet'l Tower, now. accepting
appllcatiopo for 1br. HUD aubticf.
lz",!!/'t. for elderly and handl·
co
. eOH 30..675-8879.

f'\.

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs
'78 F-250 Ranger 4x4,

~

speed

lranamiasion . 33· BF Goodrich
Mud Terrain tires. Oelta1ool box
lot the bod, '78 Ford Super Cab
for porta, $3000 080 "' trade for
amall ~, or truck 'of ti1utl value,
814·742-2050.

Unlurniahed . Graham S'hool
Roaa, 2 Badloome, SIDYe, Rafrig,
Wuher &amp; Dryer Hook-Up, Car-

J&gt;O'n. All Electlic, AIC, 1275/Mo.
$275. Qeposic , 814·448·3888,
6\0·448·4491.
450

e Cylinder,

AIC Bedliner,t Good COndition,

5304 , 614·1192·2176 or 814·4&lt;8·
3091 .

BARNEY .

tires . quad track, oak fiB\ bed ,

s.l ,4oo

~

PAiSDN If YO'RE
.JIST IN TIMI

oeo. &amp;14·

FINANCIAL

.......
era :t,

tA

K

•A Q 7

=

gathering

48
nn Roof
4t
16 R1
ch 1'0001 50
17 8lby Ilona , 51
18 UnpiMNndy
52

(2 wehr.)
-.1111 nook

Over ~
~

Author llarW
Helaht (abbr.)
53 Batfia
54 OIIIOI'der
55 -de -

20 - - -

21 Olflceholclers
22 Ballbalrt
OIMI!gglo

54""-18

23 Froatfrit
28 Nolalell

30 Wooden ahoe
31

u..a act._.

32 Pronoun

DOWN
1 Hlghllnda

2

33PoatlcUrne
olday

34CIIaral*ron

c.:..

tauahw

5 Venda
67 ""
Newright
aoc"'llta
a Rocleablke
V Pull
10 taland olexllo

of

3 ooiloiJova
4 llaldnglllee

Frtenda

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends thai you do bual·
ne11 with people you know, and

NOT to aend money through tho
'mall until you have Investigated
thoo"-lng.

0065

OON~T SUILD
5NOWME~ ..

lnvollment Property In Galllpolla.
May ·Be Able To H~p With
Financing, Call 814-797·
Allor 8 P.M.

=ji;...-~------1 Ohio, Send Resume In Con-

P!;)meroy,
Middleport
&amp;

fidence To;

.

R.T. Manag81'
4406 TuHeo Road

Cotumi&gt;Js, Ohio 43017
··
Or
Fax: 8 , ..889·9233

---for

Tl1ls -par will not
taiOwlow accopt
rerlf-

""k:h Ia In violation of lhe law.
our 111ada,. ""' hereby
lnlotmod tl)llt sl-Ings •.
advortlaod In this - r
a111 avalllbla on an aquof
opponunlty baols.

--

TRAN SPO RTATION

710 Autos lor Sale

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

10Q3 ChevY Silverado 1i2 Ton

4X4 Long Bod, 350, Automatic.
'1111 Tnundtfblrd SC. tMI door, 3.8 44,000 Mile' excelonc Condition,
litre, V-6, elite mode4 turbo, PS, 117,500, 814-379-9381.

PB, AC , 5 speed , power seats

and locks, ·Great Car: 18500 1993 Chevy van, fully loaded,
take over paymentl . '304-875·
~: 614·992·7478 ·or 814·04g·.
1137, .

'

1079 Ford Gtanada, 250 8 cyl., 68 "Plymouth Grand Voyager
loll of new parts. kJoka and runs AulD, Air, V6,.Eloc:et Cond. $4,500;
·
goOd, 1500, 814·843-6348 any- 614'441.0n7

-·

MotorcyCles

11182 BanMVilkt 350 diesel, !'Vee
bod1. good tires, 2 batteries. all HillS Pol aria ' 425 Magnum 4·
there, blown head caokel, 1550, whooler, ony ....... old, 270miloll.
304-e 75-2580.

... .... ""~,,.,~71'-J ' '

1982 Ford Thunditrbird, 2dr, auto,
good tires, battery, exhaus t.
7,000mi. on moiOr. $875. 00..675.111111 .

REAL ESTATE

750 Bolts &amp; Motor.
tor Sale .
19g3 201 Pto XL, 2Q.: Strutos
baas bolt, 200 XPHP, 814·887·
7347 or 614-948·21179-

-.

310 Homes for Sale

The final of last year's Marlboro
Venice Cup was a repeat of the previ·
ous · one, held in l993, between
Germany and the United States This
time, Germany turned the tables, win·
ning 312-248. Ahead by only three
points before the last t6 boards, the
Germans won this final session 70·9.
The winners were Sabine Auken,
Daniela von Arnim, Beale "Pony"
Nebmert and Andrea Rauscheid, with
·Klaus Reps the non-playing captain.
Karen Caesar and Marianne Mogel
were also on the German team, but
they didn't play in the final.
The losers were Kerri Sanborn ,
· Karen McCallum, Sue Picus, Rozanne
Pollack, Kitty Munson and Carol
Simon. The first three were on the vic·
torious 1993 team.
In this deal from the final session, the
Americans reached a poor six no·
trump,' going three down. The Germans
stopped in three no-trump alrer the giv·
en auction. One club was strong, artifi.
eial and forcing. One spade showed ei·
!her boUt majors or both minors. Two
clubs was correctable: West couldn't
pass with the majors.
West led the heart three: 10, jack,
king. South, Aulten, cashed her lop dia·
monds, getting the bad news when
West inaccural!!ly threw a low club.
Aulten exited with a low heart, West go.
lng in with the eight and sWitching to
. the club jack.
.
After winning with the club queen,
declarer played a spade to dtunmy's 10
and East's jack. Auken won the spade
return with dummy's ace, played a
spade to her king. cashed the club ace
and exited with her last club. East
could lake two club tricks, but then she
had to lead from the J-9 of diamonds
into dummv's Q..IO.

20

22 Nolw

23C.....,_. ,
bucket

. ::

24 Nile~/, ~
!Or lllorl .,. ,

I

15 Charged
par1lctn

.

.

28 Craving •
27 lalancl
21 Painful
~' '
211 Wine Cllltll
3111penH . .. .

34 Fllm 'uoU
35 Volda
3'1 &amp;aya

38 Bridge of ..
San lula40 Barbre
SlraiNnd :·
movie
.

By Phillip Alder

Business
Opportunhy

AU reel -te adveltlllng In
this nenpapar Is sutJtect to
tho Federal Fair Houllng Act
ol1988 which makH nHllllat
to advartloe •any preference,
Hmltatlon or dlacnmlnatlon
based on race, color, rallgloo\
sex familial sta)us or natlo;1al
odgln, 01 any lnt&amp;r1tioft lo
..-..any such preleranca,
·limitation or dlsctfmlnatlon."

'

HT-*

41 MlaaHe abbr..
42 Glided
·. •
43 Actor

'

Ad&gt;,ance . DEADLINE : 2.:00
Hlc:J&lt;or·y· Creek Facility · Athens,
belore the ad is to run .
edition -,2 ;00 p.m. Friday.
FaCility • Coolylllo, Ohio.
edition - 10:00 a.m. Sat- Must ·Be Licensed Or Eligible In

'

31 Flucl prtcee

Same match,
different resuH

TO ASK TH'

IL&amp;IIIN'll ·

210

... . .

. .
AMwet to Pla•io• Puldt

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East ·
Sou&amp;lc
West Norlh East
Pass
I.
Pass 2•
Dbl.
3•
Pass
SNT
Pus Pass
lead: •3

19.75 314 ton Jeep 4x4 truck. 1e•.

Fumlshed

1NMnrnan

14 ··
rival
1 15 Cat on - -

'Sholl bod, 305

"M,..,_ IMII.I'. 956f' 85fl'" ~

:=:utnn

ACROSS

8 AI lha IIOuH
~
oiiFr.)
40
12 Zhlv-ao'a Jove 41 Pu:~ . , _
13 - out (alrelch) 44 Private

8 Cy llndll,
Au10, Air, v~

r&gt;A~~-JAfll' • Jo~ ;

••

NI:A Crossword Puzzle

..
KIT 'N' cARi..vLu by urry

Dally Sentinel• P ., ,

Montane!

44 Blltar nut • •
45 Jump . -· '
46 Edible

-weed •
47 Unplayed ,.

.

Ci;LEB.RITY CIPHER

49==-~
...

by Luis Campo•

·'.

Celebftly Cipher ctyplogtam~ .,. aW.IM from quotlttone. by temoua ~- put and JQMnt
. Each llttef r~lhl Cillhlirlllndl for another. Tod.ty'$dutl: Z eqwl.s C

'PXBWFELDF

F

Dl

LMXCLM

EOFC . '

BMGNZWORM

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Y FEE.

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'X K,

LXXG

WKM

AMCM

BX

WOOM. B

NPKFVVH . '

AKMP

AM'

FEMTFPGCM

.'
....

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I~

R U S H· E
s
. . . .

Gramps concluded after
:manyyearsofobservationthat
.
- years ago people would finish
.--:--:-~-:--:-~--,work and want to rest Now
RES P E V
ltheywantto - -- ---··.

I 1 1 I'

,.

~

e'TI.,..,-; 8

1'-T,..-7~.,,-..,Ir-~1

Complero "'• chuckle quoted

•
•
•
•
•
~V filling in the missing words
~-"-.£.._...___..__..___. you develop from atep No. 3 below.

. . PRINT NUMBEIIfD
,;r LETTERS IN SQUARE;

8

TE$TifiiG 1

ANSWER

,

110

IWEDNESDAY

$40 OOINYR . INCOIAE Polencial.
Hom•Typlot~ /PC Ueers, Toll
Free (11 800·898-9778 e... T·
2814 For Llslinga. ,
.
Able Avon · Aepraaentarlves
needed. Earn money for Christ·

Wanted : DriVer w1CDL, class 8,
haz . mst. &amp; rank ·endorsements,

mas billa at hamela1'work. 1-600· 2y.rs exp, 304·875·4393 afte r
992-6355 01 304·882·2645, Ind. 5pm.
Rep.
·~ENT

AYON SALES

Benelits 1 Qiscounts I 'Flexible

Houral t; lnventl&gt;ry Required.
' . 1-ll(iQ'742-4738

' I

.

... ·

-

. ~

. .9

~

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

Someone to live In with elderly
lady, days of to be arranged, light
housework, meal preparation .
5ortd resume and three refer.encea c/o Daily Sentinel , P.O. Boll
7211-16, Pomeroy, OH 45789.

Earn ss ,$t5 !Ht. AI Work ·Home.

"

# ... .. .

Help Wanted .

$35,000 I'I'FI. INCOIAE Pocential.
Reeding Book 0. Toll Free (11 800·
898·9778 Ext R-281• For Oerails.

..
.'

Solace • Hiker • Notch - Writer • CRITICS
My elderly aunt~ always very gentle with me when
I was a kid . She belll!ved that children should have more
models than CRITICS.

TEST·
'"'
(;, !
1r
O!.PLOVMENT
SERVIC ES

4

SCUM-lETS ANSWERS

TWO,

THREE,

ol

r r 1 r .,. I' I' 1

I I· I I I I I I I

UNSCRAMBLE' fOR

ONE,

I'

ol

180 .. wanted Tel Do
Have Ope
Handicapped

For 1, Elperly Or

JANUARY31

ICC I
limiced Offer! 1998 doublowlde,
3br, 2batn, S·1799 down, $2751

WHI Vigna

month. Free delivery I setup.
Only at &lt;ilakwopd Hof11e•. Nitro
wv. 00.. 755-6885..

!CCI

Price 8ust8rl New 14x70, 2 or
3br. Only $1195 doWn, 1195/mOnlt.

Free d&amp;Uverv &amp; aerup. Only ar
Oakwood Homea, Nitro WV. 304755-5885: \
/·, t

rao·n In licensed

PriVIueHoma 61H4HlOOO.

to I
lot ,
you' ll find it . The A
Mat#ker instanHy reveals
ASTRO-ORAP ..
are romantically perfect lor you .
$2 .75 to Matchmaker . c/o this newapa- .
per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hm ,Stldion,
New York, NV 10156. · ·
· ··
AQUARIUS (Jan. ·20-Fib. 111 Try ·10 be
lair today and share the gains lroUI a collecllve effort. However. do not 'rew~rd
someone~ he or she did not oontribule.
., PISCES (Fib. 20-March 20) ~ ri91. get
caught up -in petty politics today ln your
aociilf invo!vfments with friends . Maintain
a friendly demeanor without acting as
· ·..
arryone's campeigi manager.
ARIES (Mar¢-at&gt;Aprll 11) Material
objectives can be achieved today, but II
might not be as bsy as you first thought.
J:J;turaelay, Jan. 4, 1996
Keep
thinking cap Oil Wmoney-Is the
primary Issue.
•
., . .
lnte111slln9·dllollloPnents c.ould pri!Vall in
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) n
be
the year jllwa~: , Just when lhe eltmenta
imperative
to
asiess
situatiOns
I'IIIHiltlealto OOIII!I)ire ·against you, changes
lhltt·\vil pyl 'fO\IJMtCit 0111011 of the ~ap _ ly_!oel@y. ~~tiona rou!d arise:,~ you .
rniQhi'Occ:Jt, ' ~~·
•
• '
claliblrailly gloss over Of ignore exllting
•
· ,
CAPIICOIIIN 10ic-.22.Jan. 1tJin pert· pcobleml,
QEMINI
(May
21-June
2U)
Keep your
nerSNp ~· l&lt;lday. your way ol
doing ll'ringt ~.be ltlOI1I efleoli-.. than guard up today W you'111 In the COI!'f8ny
·of a per10n 'Who t9(&gt;k advantagt !l! your
the '1)81tc0cl\ Of proceCIUtes Stlg~lllod ~
generous (1ature In the past. lle Of ahe
co· ..O~era. DO what'a best tor e·. ,ry·

..

BAD CREDIT, NO CREDIT? ea. 840 Electrical and
tabliah and Reatabllah With
, Rtf~lg.,.atlpn
Guornteo Bank Flnlnclng for 1-.-;:::::i::O::::~=-:~""",....
Uae d Cars. Coli Ruth, 814·448•
.RSESCERTFta&gt; DEALER
31117
LAWRENCE etilER'RISES
Hoot Pumps; Al&lt;-(iqndltlonlng,-11~ .
1\MJ Don't Call 'tto We Bo!ll Lolli
Ftaa eodmatos. t ·800·287-e30e;
814 44811:108. wv 0021145. ",
''
:
t;.i\amiaalon.
1naadl front end,
good mo..
tor. $700io. 01 11 ,300/both. 304-

773-!5823.

•

Reaidontiaf 0.I ~~ ....Ilea. . ''•
or-ri!Pak IIIIMr tJ:
connd oltQ~Ttclan.' Rldet\ou{
Electrical, WV0003Qe, '04·175· •.
1788. .
.. 1

BERNICE
BEDE OSOl..

You'

'IWJ.

*' ·'

to repeat

(JUne 21-.luly 22) 'You should
try to be yo&lt;.tt own person, but don't carry
It to exl[ames today. II a team ellott ia
required, work with the group, no1 agalnat

them.
.
.
LEO' (Jutv 23·Aiig. 22) Indifference or
pool' judgment may causa you not to take
proper aelvahtage of something ollered to
you today. This could be beneficial to
JIIUr ~r.
'
viRQO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 II you need a
favor today , go to a trusted . reliable
friend. Do not requesl anything from an
ac~ualntance who has le1 you down

recently,
LIBRA

1'-P'· 23· 0ct. 231 Your luck

might be fickle today, so don't leave any·
thing to chance. You can still succeed .W .
you

uae reaource1u1ne1s and Ingenuity.

~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ · ~ !I
.

-~

"

I!CORPIO (OCt. 24-H!w. 22J Avoid promoters whO grossly over-exaggerate the
quality of their offerings today. Their
pilml8 wiN moet Nkety be superior to their
~-

SAGITTARIIIS ,(Nov. 23· Dac. 211
Fij'llnclallnlhdl continue to look 1881011·
ablv prom~ing . but prudence "!ill b~
required. E;xlravagant gestures could

111row your~ oil-balance.

•

'·u

.•

�•

......
'•

:~ 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wedm;sday, January 3, 1996

Pomeroy •,Middleport, Ohio

Cholesterol-lowering drugs cause cancer in ·rats

~~·
.

-

·.

• 'By BRENDA C. CQ.LEMA!N
panying the study.
•';\PM~ Writer
·
.' They said lhat when lovastatin
·"'·· CHIC.,_GO (AP) ~ The two was administered at · 12.5 to 62.5
~t popblar types of cholesterol- times the recommended dose, no
:towering drugs in the United States increase in tumors was seen,
C.~~~e cancer in rats and should be
They said people who are alarmed
; liled sparingly in humans, two by the study shquld remember of lhe ·
~rs say.
..
1,000 compounds contained in roast·
. ' The drug types are statins and ed coffee, 26 have been tested for
flbrates. They include lovastatin, cancer-causing potential and 19 are
· ~ete.d as Mevacor, _
and gemfi- considered positive.
'lirozil, marketed as Lop1d. .
"Americans consume, on aver". · In many ,~:ases , the rats and mice age,lhrC!' cups of coffee tier day, and
were given high doses of the drugs
· -~ in some· instani:es, hundreds of
- ·~mes the recommended dose for
· jlumans.
The reP&lt;&gt;rt was disputed by a drug
maker and by other doctOrS who
·:/tuestioned the validity of the rodent
l tudies in an editorial accompanying
. tile article in Wednesday's issue of
, '!;be Journlil of the American MediCjl)
-Association.
· ·• The rese~hers reviewed data
from cancer studies on rodents that
lJhan'naceulical companies are
-j:equired to submit to the Food and
·;i:nug Administration as part of the
d,rug approval process. The also
. looked at other FDAJ'C\."'rds and previous articles.
.
" Such studies are not generally
~ublished in scientific journals but
»fe summarized in the Physician's
pesk Reference, a well-known directory of pharmauuticals used by
health care practitioners, said the
researchers, Dr. Thomas B. Newman
and Stephen B. Hulley of the Uni ~.
~ersity of California at San Francis-

OSU loses
72•69 tilt to

'

it is .unli~e!Y _that there is any
The maker of Lopid, the Parke., ,
in~reased risk of cancer wilh this
Davis division of Warner-Lambert
use," Dalen and Daltoa said.
Co., did not immediately return calls
The manufacturer of M&amp;vacor, for comment.
Me~k &amp; Co., disputed the 'lmporOne outside researcher, Dr. Sid·
tanu of the rodent tests and said · • ney M. Wolfe, said the findings
human· testing has not shown an should encourage doctors ana
in~reased cancer risk.
patients to try diet, exercise and bth·
"Of"~oncern is the potential for
er cholesterol-lo.wering drugs.
Newman and Hulley's article to
Wolfe is head of Public Citizen's
frighten patients who could truly Health Rese~h Group, a consumer
benefit from cholesterol-lowering organization that previously advised.
therapy," Me~k said in a statemein. agains~_any use of gemfibrosil. ·

Ohio Lottery

"-

Lions ·

J

•

I

Sports, Page 4

•

Snow nurrte1, . _ In the ~ •'
. . . . ~.light inow High -;

ln30L

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•

·.

.'

January 4·6

...... ~.1?4

"·'

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;~~eMil

.

Pomeroy-Midd.rt, Ohio, Thuraday,_January 4, 1996 .

11tlll11'110 ..... .

A

o.nnea eo. "*r s ·~
I •
"

Pomeroy council ·kicks off 1996 with new mayor

Thursday 9..!7 '
Friday
9-8 :
saturday 9-&amp; &lt;·

. The researchers said statins and
librates should be reserved for
· patients who are in imminent danger
' of heart ~blems, such 8s those with
. known heart disease. Currently, the
jlrugs are prescribed 10 people at relatively low risk of heart disease.
..: · In the past decade, prescriptions
Of drugs to lower cholesterol and "othfats have increased I0-fold, .with
Riore than 26 million U.S. prescripli._ons filled in 1992, the researchers

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel
111ft
,
Pomeroy Village CoUncil kic.!&gt;ed
off 1996 with !I newmayor.II)C!,coull'
cilWOIIWI at its Wedl!esday rulbt regular meetiag.
The f'tnt order of business was to
swear in new Councilwoman Oeri
Walton and reelected Councilman
Scott Dillon. Rookie Mayor Fnnk
Vaughan administered the oaths.
While addressing council for the
first time in bis official capacity,
Vaughan called for more cooperation
between elected village officials,
department heids and their employees while also stmsing the need f!lf
more performance and fiscal aci:ount·
ability by village employees, includ· 111 d ~- 1 head
'
mgCouncilapprovedthe-ondand
e e,..-w-n
s.
third reading of a,revised water bill
ordinance. F&lt;ir residential water ser-

new.

..

NEW SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS - Dltve ·K~cam1 and Bob
CottliiS from ....... wen awom In aa new members crllhe SOuth• .....!..I ..
...::Y~....... _.._ ......,board'aannuai:IZMional
_,...._
_,...,,._,_,
IJ.WIIilia W8di1Uidly ntgllt Here, Treaaurer Dennie II. aclmlnteten the Cllllh.

co~ittee appointments: finance .. and Scoit Dillon; ~k .. Bill Young, members.commented on fauli). cacCJi..
4n'Y Wehrung, chairman, John chairman, &lt;:leri Walton and George basins and burned out sttcet lights,··
M~r and Geri Walton; grievance . Wright; insurance .. Scott Dillon,
Other topics of di~~ssion we,l'(
• Scott Dillon, ~hairman, Bill Young chairman, Sill Young and John Muss- the water line replacement ~ork oo
and George Wright; ordinanu .. er; OSHA .. John Musser, chairman, Main Street and downtown partd~ .
Bill Young, chairman,l,.alry Wchrung -~eorge Wright and Bill Young.
.The consensus of council was to w111t:
and Scott Dillon; safety - Larry
Vaughan postponed making until the promenade project is com,
Wehrung, chairman, Scott Dillon and appointments .to the zoning and zon- pleted before determining how parK;
George Wright; zoning .. Larry ing appeals boards.
. .
ing will be organized in the down;
Wehrung, chairman, John Musser
· During open di~ussion, council
COatillutd 011
3

·

Local ·eoard· :efi~t~~=~sr::!t!:.~pr:
We·lco·mes new me·mbe·rs .
SOU
. thern

er

.

· · Patients may-- take cholesterolIO'Wering drugs for more lhan 30
years, even !hough the drugs. have
only been tested for much shorter
:periods.
Studies found that lovastatin ·tthen administered at blood concentrltions.two to four times the levels
ieln in ' the maximum doses that
&amp;light be prescribed to patients .G&amp;used a higher-than-normal inci· ~~ence of stomach, liver and lung
ll!J!Iors In mice, the researchert 51\id.,
' At somewhat higher levels, the
:oiher statins lhat were reviewed :pravastatin, marketed as J;'ra,vachol;
simvlistatin, marketed .. Zocor; and.
.fluvaslatiil; niarlceted as Lescot ..,. .
.t•used rodent,cancer, the ~~hers
·said.
•
. ' Gemfibrozil, a fibrate, caused
liver cancer in mice at blood concentration levels comparaille to those
-$!:len in humans -taking the medical!cin, the researchers said.
: ' The resean:hers acknowledge that
drugs that cause cancer in rodents
.qiay not do so in humans, or may
Olily do so ·in certain groups of
-humans. But they said it would be
·Qnwise.to dismiss the rodent studies
entirely.
'' Two researchers not associated .
with their work took a sharply' diff(ring view.
· · "For the two most popular cho. :lejterol-lowering drugs, lovastatin
and gemfibrozil, the doses (given to
¥Jmals) were 312 and 10 times the
human recommended dose, respectively," Drs. James E. Dlllen and
William·s. Dalton of the University
of Arizona College of Medicine in
Tucson wrote in an editorial accom•
·'·

455 .

• Pick 4:
3441 .
Super Lotto:
10-23-24-27-31-34
Kicker:
377863

~

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Said.

Pick 3:

·

' '

·
salaries at sso' per meeting for 13
Education welcomed two new mem- meetings;
·
.hers at the b9ard's annual organiza-- Renewed membership in the
tionalQieeling Wednesday night. , Ohio School Board Association for
·sworn in as new board members $1 ,000;
.
by Tlc~~Suier Dennie Hill were Bob · -- Renewed performance bonds
Collins and Dave Kucsma, bolh who for the treasurer, assistant treasurer,
won ~hoOI board 5eats as write-in superintendent and boar~ members
candidate5 during the Novell)ber, for a total of $400;
1995, gen~ election.
-~ Aulhonzed the ~asurer ~0 pay
Kuc:sma ~~u~ly assuiJICd his all bills, prov1ded funds are a~8llable,
dutieS ~or to the Orjaniiational and to report monthly .to tl\e board

1'be SoutbCm Local Board of

:&lt;

Gt-ueset -ieelected !" pre$ident of auditor when funds are ~vll!lable tery,- $13,74U3; waler, $2,179.37_;
ihe board wilh C.T. 'Chapman being . and payable to the school d1stnct;
sewer, $53,0)8.37; suaranty meter,
nunedv_ i~pJ:CsidenL . .
'· ·. -- ApprovedP?,Iiciespertaining.to $18,658.87; utility, $13,149.98;' fire
In' addition: the· ~· sellts regutar meeting night for the f«;"urth
Monday of eac;h month at 7 p.m. 1.!'
the high school cafeteria. J'rt:viously, ·
the board had niet on the third Monday.
In other business, the bpard:
-- Established board members'
' "

ALL Pictures

.42% to 72% OFF.!

1):1

Are Greatly Reduced.

M•

All Bedrooms
Are On Sale!

'

·

holiday 'dinner

. · ('

·..,._~·

•

•

.
WASHING10N (AP) - With
Republia !wlding fmn, the House
19
today iOjected a move to end the ·
day partial government shutdown. 1
President .OiD!Qn co~Jdemned the
defiance and the continued impasse,
calling it "an unf1811!J11( 4iillster."
"II is long past time to relipen the
government" Clin\!!1! dec,la£C4.
The , budgdi'j~ has idled
280,00o f~ral' w~ and forced
hundieds of thousands more-to.labor
without pay, ·
Although the Senate had voted
10
unanimously the night before

&amp; E\ectron•c~

0. of A holds

•

.. '
•'

5 Easy Ways To .
• MasterCard • Visa • Disoov·er
Helilla-1\llev•ers Card •

.~lilt

befch'l Wedneaday nlght'a!MIIIng of~ -- .

Vllllgl Cciunc!l. llllyor Frank V1ughan aclmln- ...
~sara the Cllllh to tile two cou.ncll!t••ibwl.
-.

. ,I
1' s"s
' ·. ·ue· II
L;li .l·g .h. .,•..g'· h. ·. t.-S·
Mel•gs -news In oc t 0 ber
·

.

1

truck, no balance; ·perpetual care
.
(cemetery), s7.24S.64; cemetery
1
endowment, $38,118.57; poliu penThe following i$ a third in a series rejects bids on .trash hauling service
sian, $1,035.75; building fund, ·of reviews of 1995 news highlights in concerned over the loss of commu$650.50; recreation, $3,812.89; per· Meigs 'County.
nity trash hauling jobs.
missive tax, $3,044.68; law enforceAUGUST
,
Aug. 29-- Pomeroy Village
ment, $2,633.66; downtown revital·
Aug. I .. AEP announces Council approves drilling of new
ization, $88,000; COPS FAST grant, plans to cut 25 percent of its job water well on existing village well
$4,602.58; total, $393,946.25.
. force, a move destined to affect 265. site.
In addition, John Musser was · area workers.
SEPTEMBER
reelected as village council president
Aug. 8 .. The Meigs Local
Sept. I -- The first asphalt is
and Vaughan made the foUowing School District votes to make free placed on the 2.25 mile, four-lane US
breakfast available to all district stu- 3311-77 connector project at Rock
dentsregardlessofincome.
Springs.
.
Aug. 9 .. Symcuse Village
At the request of Prosecutor
WELLSTON (AP) ~An electri~ Council closes a portion of Bridge- John Lentes, the Meigs County Comreopen federal agencies through Jan. cal problem caused a fire lhat man Street due to a slip.
misioners appoint K. Robert Toy of
12, the House voted 206-167 agamst de11troyed the Bluegtass/Cooperidge
Aug. 10 .. Work continues Athens as special prosecutor to lhe
an attempt by ,Democratic Leader Barrel Mill, lhe fire chief said.
on the 1-77/U.S. 33 Connector Project state's case against Danny Zirkle and
Richird Gephardt of Missouri to · Fue~fBob Long estimated the as workers pour concrete for bridges Sarah Snouffer.
fo~e approval of a measure. Nearly · damage to the mill at SSOO,OOO. near Meigs High School.,
.
Sept. 2 .. A Middleport teenager
all House Republicans voted to con- There were no injuries in the fire
Aug. II .. Meigs County is charged with attempted murder,
tinue the shutdown, and nearly all Wedn~y.
Commissioners give nod to Middle- following the shooting of 16 year-old
Democrats voted to end it.
Officials from the mill's parent port to apply for $500,000 Commu- Chad Wise. Thomas James Ross Ill,
Later, appearing 'iri the White company,· Brown Forman Inc. of nity Housing Improvement Program 16; Middleport later pleads ~uilty to
House briefing room, a grim-faced · Louisville, Ky., are on their way to grant.
one charge of attempted murder in
Clinton said, "Each day Ibis shut- Wellston to view the damage. The
Aug. 13 .. Anthony L the shooting.·
down continues, the consequence(" company intends to rebuild or relo- Legan, 20, Hockingport, drowns in
Sept. 1 .. Enrollment figure in
grow worse_... This is not a ~atural ~ate the mill,_Long said.
Forked Run Lake as friends watch Meigs County's schoools are down
disaster. It is an unnatural disaster,
The f'II'C displaced 25 worlcers.
on.
by 200 students from 1994, accordborn of a cynical Republican strateWellston is 28 miles southwest of
Aug. 14 .. 132nd Meigs ing to county superintendent lohn
gy."
.Athens.
County Fair gets underway as tern- RiebeL
peratures climb to a hazy, humid high
Sept. 12 --·Nearly 40 residents of
in the mid 90s. Jefflj.ose and Noelle the Eastern Local School District
Pickens named 1995 Meigs County attend the first public meetings on a
Junior Fair King and Queen.
proposed multi-million dollar new
Middleport residents com- building project for the district.
plain to village council about floodThe Southern Local Board
ing in the village.
· · of Education hears complaints of
Aug. I 5 .c Anita Calaway nearly 30 parents addressing the
cops top steer honors at the Meigs issue of Kindergarten overcrowding
County Fair.
·
in the district. The board later decides
Aug. 18 -- Top steer pur- to hire an additional Kindergl\rten
chased for SI0 a pound by City Ice teacher and.size down classes.
and Fuel. Largest buyers ~ Home
Sept. 16 -- Middleport Riv·National Bank of Racine and Syra- er Festival is postponed by rain for
.cuse and Farmers Bank and Savings the second consecutive year. Meigs
Company.
·
High School student . Crystal
Aug. 19 •• . Fair pulls in Holsmgens named 1995 River Fes$20,285 in gate receipts Satutday, tival Queen.
breaking previous single day record
. Sept. 19. ~ - Nine write-in
set in 1994 by $3,945. Total sate cand1dates file_pet1t1ons for the N?v.
receipts for week total $81,858.
7 general elechon WI~ the Me1gs
.
Aug. 20 - Prominent local County Board of Elechons.
attorney Frank Porter Jr., 70, Racine,
Sept. 30 -- Pomeroy attordies at his home.
ney Fred W. Crow is honoted wilh
Aut. 21 - Meigs County othersurvivingmembersofthe 1935
BoardofEdiiC&amp;tionchangesnameto Buckeye football team honored ~~
Meigs County Educational Service halftime, in· front of 95,537 at Oh10
· ~nter.
,
Stadium as Ohio State rolls over
· _ .Aua.22 .,. Rudandresidetits Notre...Dame, 45-26, in their first
complain to village council ibout · meeting since 1935.
problems with storm drains folJowint
~BER
~lier
flooding.
,
·
.
·
Oct. '4 .. Southern Local
lng much ol tile filii df tlil. Till CDINI llllcWr
AuJ. 28 --County studenll SChools officials announu a pro... llilcliild down fnlm . . . . . . to ... the
return to school followilll a hot posed $7 .~ million building project
bltJidlng .In 1111 OclrA»&gt;r, ...., ....,... llllgl
1
,-mer vllCIIion, •
whil:h includes construction of a
·
~ .Mill lnflntllliJ _
n stldutl llld llllt
,
MiddleportVillqeCounc:il new650-studentK-8buildinganda
lp Dill out !l(lllnet the ....
-~
' ' '
'•
'"
...
''

nndom drug testmg of commercial
driver's license holders employed by
the district.
Present were Superintendent
Jjlmes Lawrence, Hill, Grueser,
C~apmaq, Kucsma, Collins and
board member Marty Morarity.

'use· refuses
'
t 0 end
. sh utdown .Fire destroys mill·'
.g-o:_·· v.· ern me.nt
i:J 0

ALl-living ~oom~

App\ian~es

__

COUNCIL MEMBERS SWORN IN- Reelect·
eel CoUnclln'llln ScGtt Dillon and new Council-wOman·. ,.W.tton trbm rltlhto were awwn tn

t!n::t,~1
~~~::::~~~=~:=~;re~--:iJi¥fW~~~~t: ·~· -1lif-- r.: - m
· -~~a
· . r-·y·c.
•'vefetao; bOard ' ll)!lmller Susie ~ure advanceS from the · c?unty $12,191 .19; fire, $19,920.20; ceme- II

47.."'" to 1! . Off.

Are Priced 1o Go.

~enis

for C!Kih 100 gallons in
excessof2,000gallonsamonth, wjll
be charged. Business and industrial
water rates as well as tap fees are also
being adjusted.
All three readings of the BMIIal
appropriations ordinance calling for
a budget totaling $1,379,422.09 were
approved. aerie Kathy Hysell .said
the appropriation is almost identic:al
to last year's with the exception of.
newl¥ created funds including the'
downtown revitalization ~OPS
FAST grant funds.
.
Hysell presented the
·ng
balances for December ~ .S: gcJI«·
46

..

·
4,900 square foot addition to lhe e115t
end of the existing high school . 'if .
voters approve a Marc~. 1996 ~·
issue for construction. ·The local
share of the project cost will be $4, I
1
million.
_
~:
The Meigs County Board~
Commissioners votes to advertise Q)j
sale the building currently
by the county home ·and the Meii
County Cooperati~e Extension Seif.
vice. Commissionershopethebuil4,
ing could be sold to a health cate
interest to help save Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Oct. 6 .. In the face of criticism by county home residents and
supporters, the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners holds firm og
their decision to sell the county
home to the highest bidder. Thi:
building is scheduled for Nov. 10 sale
on the steps of the Meigs Coun~
Courthouse.
. ..
The restored 87-foot Jean
Mary Is among 15 boats docked at · 1
the Pomeroy levee for the sixth"'.
annual Big Bend Sternwheel festival:-···
It inevitably draws the attention ef••
local residents, after sinking in the ·
Ohio River between Pomeroy a~;
Mason in Sept, 1994. Eastern Hish·
senior Brandi' Reeves is crowned ·
1995 Stemwheel Festival Queen. ·.. : •
Oct. 6 -- Eastern Local
school officials approve plans for lllf · ·
$8.75 million building project for tile· •
district, which includes constructiQI\ : .
of a new central K-8 building and" ·
maj()r renovations to the existing high ..
school building - if voters approve ·a "
Mmh, 1996 bond issue for COl), "
struction. The local share for the pro;
ject will be $1.5 million.
• ·•
·
A new w~r 'Varning syl::
•tern is installed by Meigs Counoi:
'Emergency Services, as a resultpf th(.
1
Mother'sDay Flood which cauSed .it:
:estim,ated $3 million in properG::
damage in Meigs County. The syt..:
tern, along wi!h monitors at I~·
fligh ~hools and n~inj faci!itioil&amp;:
will help ,cl!uniy offiCials !Jedcr In-:
pare JQr seyere weather.
._ •: •
, . Oct. h .. Counry official(:
break ground on a new Leidi!ft:
Creek Conservancy'DistriCt walerli~:
project
. , •!·
--...:- Oct.--1-7--- Bell Adantic Of.
'West Virginia annoui!CCS theii i~:· ..
ton to file a waiver in fedoral court~:
allow the company ,to mab a~:sjon on toll·free c:allin1 ~nu!Mr.
Pomeroy and MUODINew ~
exchaft&amp;el. Officials .in Ohio _,.' .
. CWI ' •h•--3 ~ ::;
4;. ......
• ~-· 'lti

occupi~

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