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Tuesday, January~. 1996
.

Pomeroy • MlddlepcS~Ohlo

..... 10 •-l'he Dally Sentinel

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attest_to the everyday occur~nce· of -rape in prisons
.

Wildcats ·
knock off
Bulldogs

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by three gang members in the shower wltile the leader raped me. Yes, ·
there arc gangs in prisons.Two years
later, I was raped in my cell by a
guard.
.,.,tAl~
I am 48 and straight. If Iliad told
the
authorities about those rapes, I
~"'"
would have been - dead within 24
•i ltar Ann ,Landers: I read with hours.
,Interest your columns on prison.rape.
Being raped in prison is degrading
am 1111 inmate in a prison, although and · humiliating. It tags you as
my safety, I will not say belonging to the inmate who raped
you. One must never openly talk
.t Rape in prison can be an everyday about being raped for fear of bCing
l&gt;!;currence. You don't have to be severely beaten or killed.
'~dllfig, good-looking or a homo-sexI was interested to see how many
'jlalto be raped. I have been in this prison officials responded to your
place for four years and have been invitation to write about this subject.
nped twice.lbe first time was few Not that many were willing to admit ·
~ays after I arrived. I was held down that rape goes on in their prisons. A

Ann
Landers

-sr-...

a

Jot of inmates here read your column,
Ann. We will be waiting to see if you
print my lc;tter and how you answer
it. -- NO CITY, JUST USA
DEAR USA: I received several
hundred letters from inmates, and
most of them sounded a .Jot like
yours. Dozens of guards from all over
the country also wrote. (A few from
Canada.) Most guards denied that
inmates were being raped in their
prisons, and only a few admitted that
guards did any raping. Several prison
administrators wrote to say that rape
was a rare occurrence&gt; and, if reported, chalges would be filed.
.
This may sound strange, but the
letters from the inmates had the ring
of truth that some of the other letters
Jacked. Keep reading for more:

Dear Ann Landers: I am a social
psychologist tcaclting at the University of South Dakota: 'Iblllk you for
raising the taboo topic of {'rison rape.
I recently conducted a survey of
sexual assault in the Nebraska prison
system. Of 1,800 male and female
inmates surveyed, 516 returned my
anonymous questionnaire. Twelve
percent said they had been forced to
have anal or oral sex wltilc in prison.
Another 8 percent reported that they
had undergone pressured or forced
sexual.touclting and harassment. The
incident rate was 22 percent for male
inmates and 7 percent for female
inmates. Nearly 90 peroent of the victims were traumatized by the incident. One- third reported having suicidal thoughts, and 16 percent had

physical in}uries.
Only ,29 percent reponed lhe inti- .
dent to prisoQ· authqrities. -- CINDY
STRUCKMAN- JOHNSON, PH.D.,
UNIVERSITY OF Sotrrn DAKO.:'
TA
,
DEAR CINDY: Thanks for those
figures . Read on:
Dear Ann Landers: On a typical
floor in a prison. housing unit, you
will find 100 inmates and one or two
officers. It is next to impossible for
one officer to monitor 50 inmates. As
a result, inmates commit all sorts of
crimes whenever they get the·chance.
That is why homosexual rapes occur.
The solution js to fire several admin·
istrators and hire more correctional
officers. It won't stop all the rapes,
but it will surely decrease the num-

ber. •• CORRECTIONAL oFFJ,CEtt;
CALIFORNIA MEN'S COLONY
STATE PRISON, SAN LUIS OBIS-

PO, CALIF. ·

By

TV will increase its commitment to
improve school readiness. ·
Ready to Learn, created in 1992,
: The c;::orporation for Public Broadhas until now consisted of PBS
Ca&amp;ti~g is spending $8.4 million- its
largest payout ever for kids-oriented shows such as "Sesame Street" and
"Barney and Friends," combined
~rogramming - to bring four new
with
between~ program · segments .
,shows tq PBS' "Ready to Learn Ser·
RTL magazines and lesson plans are
'\lice" beginning in 1997.
-. With two new series aimed at distributed to parents and schools.
But the four new shows, featuring
young viewers and two corresponding series targeting parents. public animated tales for kids and how-to

ALAN BASH
USA TODAY

year-olds: ·
child."
- Its corresponding weekly parTwo series come from a JJllrlnership between "Ses;une Street" -mak- ent show, "Show and Tell Me," offerer Children's Television Workshop ing ways to reinforce "Dragon's"
.
and Columbia TriStar Television Dis- messages.
The other two ~ows come from
tribution:
- "qragon Tales," a music- Boston's WGBH and Sirius Thinkbased weekday series inspired by ing. "Between the•Lions," featuring
artist Ron Rodecker's work, which talking animals, will focus on literawill stress behavioral lessons such as cy for 4- to 7-year-olds. "Kids and
courage and teamwork for 2- to 5- How to 'Grow Them" is the related

advice for ~own-ups, mark the first
original senes to join the RTL lineup. They're also RTL's first attempt
·
to capture adult viewers.
"This is an investment in Ameri~a·s future," says CPB 's Carolynn
Reid· Wallace, who calls the project
one of public TV's "most ambitious"
educational efforts. "It's the flfSt time
such programs have been worked out
to connect the adult caregiver and the

-·Alfred
nevvs
-Wintertime
blahs,
Those received into the Alfred
United Methodist Church on profession of faith Dec. 24 were Janice
Weber, Gary Johnson and Bobby
Kea1on. Brenda Johnson was accepted into membership by a transfer from
another church. the ·' congregation
welcom~d the new members.
Numerous holiday gue~ts were in
the community.
Karen, Steve, Katie, Brian and
Brannon Follrod, Athens; Kathy, Sta·

cy, and Alan Watson visited Osie Mal
&amp;nd Clair Follrod.
April and Jeff Noble of Fairborn
visited Marguerite and Delbert
Stearns.
Charlotte and Warren Van Meter
. hosted a family party on Christmas
Eve. Present were Joyce .and Jerry
Burke, Sherrie and Greg; Tricia and
Greg Carpenter; Lisa, Kevin and
Austin Lute.
.
Thelma and Pam Henderson spent

.

Dru11s are everywhere. They're
easy to gel, easy to use and ~ven easier to gtl hooked on. If you have
questions about drugs, you need AM
Landers' booklet, 'The Lowdown on
Dope. " Send a self-addressed, long,
business-site envelope and a check or
money order for $3.75 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Lowdowtl,
cloAnn Landers, P.O. Box II 562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In Caf/4·
da, send $4.55.)

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chairman, at Thursday's meeting of
J~e Hemlock Grange 2049 held at the
hall.
: Plans were made for a luncheon in
i'ebruary with sloppy joes to be prepared by Helen Quivey and Nancy
Wells. Ziba Midkiff gave the legis Iative report. The January birtl\days of
Silvi~ Midkiff and Edna Clark were
Qbserved. Reported ill were Leota
~~iiJI. Bernice Hawk, and Margaret
J1aning.
-' The meeting opened in patriotic
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jjarty.'~ '
' •Lnd
' •· 'IJIIjse aucndmg u"' party a prefi'ti!ll gifts to the honoree were PegIY. Cuto, Jeanie Buckley, Becky and
1)1011 Roush~ Rita, Kelli and Missy .
.re'Vcr, J~ne Cre!Jleans, Charlotte
$ewell, Bruce Teaford, Chris Wray,
.-mj__Paniet. and Brittney Riff!.e,
~~. Mike ·tind "Austin Reitmi're;
~y,'·Corey, ~nd Braxton Brinager,
, ·eoftlui, lllf11c, ~elissa,. Tori and ·
li
. ici i e. Goble, Scan R1ffie, and
Mel
~men. '
~ ··
Je t\&gt; auenil but sending gifts
+ere Russell ..ial)d Bemite Roush,
b~Jril 1~d AI Harmon, Virgil and
J1elelllfeaford, and Sue Murphy.

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Life returned to normal for
most Meigs Countians today, but
1ocal schools remained closed for the
thi~ consecutive day this week.
County schools closed last Friday
and have not reopened since. In
addition, schools may not open at all
tliis week, according to Meigs Local
Superintendent Bill Buckley.
Narrow township roads in the dis·
trict are passable, liut remain "slick
and snow-covered, Buckley said.
The storm may cause schools to
use all their snow days, meaning days
missed later in the winter will have
to be made up, he said.
"We had high hopes we would be
able to come back ll&gt;day," said Southern Local Superintendent James
Lawrence.
hopes were dashed
by an additional one-to-three inches
of snow that fell Tuesday morning.
"Many roads.are passable, just not
quiet safe," Lawrence said. "We hope

Those

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Ohio Power is changing

Rlfi!L!
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to A•e .American

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Power.
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reopened Tuesday, freeing many trav.
elers who had waited days for runways to be cleared of plowed snowdrifts as high as 20 feet.
Those openings meant backlogs of
flights and long waits for travelers.
But perhaps none was as long as
United Flight 801, bound for Tokyo
out of New York's Kennedy Airport.
It pulled out of the terminal Tuesday,
and spent the next 7 112 hours either
taxiing on the runway or stuck in a
snowbank- the whole time with its
264 passengers on board .
"We' re close to rioting," said
Tanya Clark, a passenger who called
The Associated Press from a phone
on · the plane at the height of the
ordeal. She said the captain had
threatened to have unruly passengers
arrested.
Many commuter train lines
resumed full service this morning.
Amtrak said il would resume normal
weekday schedules today along its
busy Northeast Corridor between

Richmond, Va., and Boston.
· Officials in New York and
Philadeiphia urged commuters to
leave their cars at home and use public transponation. "We saw the gQOd.
the bad and the awful," Ridge said
Tuesday after touring Philadelphia
with Mayor Edward G. Rendell.
Schools from northern Georgia to
New Hampshire were closed Monday
and Tuesday. Pupils in Philadelphia
had another snow day today, bOt New.
York City's 900,000 school kids were
due back this morning after the first
snow days since 1978.
" I don' t think my son remembers .
what school looks like," said Meredith Moss of Dayton, Ohio,
In Washington, federal workers
who were first told to report to work
today were then told to stay home for
a third day-after from I to 3 inches of
new snow fell Tuesday.
. .
In Virginia's Shenandoah National Park, where as much as 47 inches
of snow fell, six people, including

three children, were stranded at a
campsite and ·a seventh person was
stuck at a lean-to.
Helicopters dropped food and
water to them on Tuesday and may be
Used to attempt to resc ue them today
if ground crews can not get there first.
Digging out meant grocers could
finally restock shelves. Milk and
bread were especially scarce in some
spots, but many merchants hoped
supply trucks would make it through
by today.
· "This is ridiculous," said Joan
Snyder, a mother of two who lugged
groceries home on a child's plastic
sled in Philadelphia. "We ' ll bf" having scrambled eggs for dinner again."
For some , like Yayoi Numazawa,
who shopped at Philadelphia's Reading Terminal Market. she has had just
about enough of the snow and Ihe
cabin fever.
"I was bored," she said. " I wouldn:t go out and I was eating like a
pig."

Pulp mill company has not asked
for special i~centives, Goddard says

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A ny is getting a huge tax giveaway
$1.2 billion pulp mill in Mason from the state.
CQUnty :.will' nQt -receive· anywhere '
Dana Davis; a·Jawyer and director
near the $155 million in tax breaks a of development services for the West
state official says it's eligible for, C. Virginia Development Office. said
Kenneth Goddard, vice president of the $738 million figure has created
unnecessary confusion .
Parsons &amp; Whittemore, said.
He added when all the numbers
A taX department letter from the
West Virginia Development Office, were put into the super tax credit forwritten in 1989, stated the project was mula, what came out was the $738
to have school tomorrow.'"
eligible
for a ri\IIXimum of $738 mil- million figure. What the company is
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reportlion
in
tax
credits. Several hundred )!ligible for really doesn't tell the stoed few weather-related problems.
documents
about the project were ry, he added.
"We were more prepared for this
released
under
court order after a lawDavis said tax savings to the
storm," said Soulsby. "Also, it seems
suit
was
filed
by
The
Charleston
company should total $155 million
that motorists complied with requests
over 13 years. This would be based
Gazette.
.
to stay off the roads."
.
Goddard
said
Tuesday
'that
the
on estimates of profitability and tax
Soulsby said the snow emergency
liability.
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company
has
not
asked
for
or
has been lifted from the co~nty.
received
any
special
incentives,
and
Goddard
said
even that figure is
"Everything seems to be getting
it
is
"ridiculous"
to
think
the
compahigh,
although
it
is the maximum
back to normal on our end," said
Emergency Services Director Robert
Byer.
·
"We've got a few calls from people needing special items," he said.
"We've been coordinating our moves
NORMAN, Okla. (AP)- Rela- Stanley Draper security guard who
with the sheriffs office."
lives of a woman who was kidnapped was found fatally shot in September
Dyer said a new weather comput- and killed for her pickup truck by an 1994.
er installed at the Emergency l)er- Ohio man during a cross-country
Gilbert and Eric Elliott, 18, both
vices Office has helped to keep crime spree are satisfied with his · of Newcomerstown, Ohio, were
county officials from being taken by death sentence.
arrested while they slept in a culvert
Mother Nature's surprises.
"I like it. I certainly do," Kenneth outside Santa Fe, N.M .• a few days
"It has given us some insight on . Ruddell, the victim's unc)e, said of later. Authorities said Ms. Ruddell's
what to expect," he said.
the sentence given Lewis Gilbert on pickup truck was found nearby.
Tuesday. "I think thljt's what he had
Lucas imposed the death penalty
coming."·
·
after denying a motion for a new tri·
Cleveland County District Judge al and ruling that Gilbert was com·
Tom Lucas sentenced Gilbert, 24, in petent to be sentenced. A district
the death of Roxy Ruddell, a Lake court jury recommended execution

potential savings, based on 100 per~e~t of.the company's sales being
ms1de the state of West Virginia. The
company plans very few sales about 5 percent- within the state, he
added.
Parsons &amp; Wltittemore, based in
Rye, N.Y., began negotiating with the
state in 1988 to build the pulp and
paper mill in Apple Grove.
Gov. Gaston Caperton said earlier that he favors the tax credits.
"If we're going to create jobs in
this state, we have to have tax credits," Caperton said. "We have to be
able to lend money and we have to be
able to build roads and sewers."
Environmentalists and labor organizations have opposed the mill,
claiming the company isn't using the

latest safe technology and that it
w.on't commit to hiring West Virginia
labor.
Goddard said he felt a need to
clarify the nature of the discussions
with the developmenl office because
some media are reporting as if the
taxpayers will be payi~g this money
out of current revenue.

He said it actually relieves tax burljens and will provide jobs. If the
plant doesn't go ahead, there won't be
taxes anyway. The forgiveness of tax- _
es will only be if the business takes
off, he said.
Davis also said the incentive money doesn't come out of the state budget, bu1 comes only 'from new taxes
as a result of a specific project.
"What you have without the
investment is no JObs," he added.

Gilbert sentenced to death in Oklahoma slaying
when it convicted Gilbert ~n Nov. 6.
The judge also ordered life sentences , to be served consecutively, on
aggravated kidnapping and robbery
with a firearm convictions related to
the death of Ms. Ruddell.
The sentencing came after Mark
Barrett, an attorney representing
Gilbert, and assistant proS~&gt;cutor Rick
Sitzman argued the convict's competency to be sentenced.
Barrett, who took the witness
stand to testify as to why he thought
his client was incompetent, said, "I

dido ' t seem to be able to get through
to him. "
"I believe he is not competent for
sentencing because he is not colll'petent to adequately B'!ist me in his
defense," Barrett said in response to .
a question from co-counsel Mike .
Wilson.
.
• . Barrett said Gilbert could not help·
h1m prepare the motion for a new trial.
"The thing that caused' me the
rnosl concern was the new trial
motion. " Barrett said .

State GOP·. T.aft
pal"d dues to avol"d 1990 fl"ght
Ii

schoolchildren. The money isto!le
used for enrollment of the children in
private schools.
Gov. George Voinovich's adminCOLUMBUS (AP)- Republican
istration, which has supported the State Treasurer J. Kenneth Blackwell
program. said it would vigorously should run forre-~Jection in 1998
defend the plan.
mstead of JUmpmg mto a gubernatotial pril"aJ')' with Secretary of State
.
Tom Needles, an executive.assisT ,_' Bob Taft. the state party chief said.
tant to Voinovich, said the lawsuit is ·
Ohio Republican Party Chairman
an effort by "entrenched special Robett Bennett also backed up Taft's
interests" to block the program.
account Tuesday of a 1990 meeung
"It's
a
painful
fact
that
the
Cleveafter ~h1ch Taft abandoned a pnma~rQUp.
land
system
has
nOt
delivered
the
ry agamst Gov. George Vomov1ch ..
Several other groups and individkinds
of
results
that
will
prepare
our
TB;fttold reporte':l Tuesday that h1s
uals joine(j the lawsuit as plaintiffs,
including the Ohio Parent-Teacher children for the next century, ""Nee- decision had been h1s own, not a deal
Association and Columbus school dies said. "The scholarship program With Republican leaders for support
is not a panacea. It's one component of a gubernatonal race he •s ex~ct­
board membtr Loretta Heard.
The colllplaint contends that the of an overall, comprehensive ed to make Jn 1998. Blackwell IS a
pilot program, scheduled to begin in refonn .~~
September, violates state and federal
A federal judge last year ordered
constitutional guarantees of separa- the state to take control of the CleveGREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - A
tion of church and state.
.
land school district. U.S. District
The group also claims the vouch- Judge Roben Krupansky stripped school bus collided with a tractorer program would cause irreparable the city school board of its authority trailer today, killing the bus driver
hann to the nearly bankrupt Cleve- and gave the state school superinten- and sending 37 children to hospitals,
land .schools by diverting public dent control of the district's finances authorities said. One youngster was
listed in critical condition.
and management.
mon"y to private schools.
"We want to basically stop the ·
"We find that this is essentially a • ThO"bus "either failed to yield or
failed to stop for a stop sign," police
program," said Ron Maret, president · cruel hoax," Hor.witz said. ·
"The state has been charged to Capt. Glenn Matzke said.
of the Ohio Federation of Teachers.
Rescue personnel had to free some
"The Cleveland school district didn't help the Cleveland schools," he said.
want it, and they didn't ask for jt,"
"Instead, they are diverting monies children trapped in the scho9l bus,
The
which the Legisla- · for private education at religious which was full when the accident
rure approved last year, will proviile institutions under the guise of helP., hippened around 8:30 a.m. on the
vouchers, or lil:holarships, worth as ing Cleveland st~dent1 attend private city's west side. •
Hospitals 'said they treated 37
much as $2,250 each for 1,500 schools."

p..ogram,

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potential challenger for the nomination.
Bennett said there was no deal
made at the meeting he helped
arrange between Taft and former
Republican National Chaimian Lee
Atwater.
"Everybody always talked about
it, but there wasn't any agreement,"
Bennett said.
He said the only agreement was
that the party would provide Taft with
money he needed in a campaign
against incumbent Democratic Secretary of State Sherrod Brown, now
a congressman.

· Bennett said he would prefer to drive to increase voter registration to
see Blackwell and other Republican a record-breaking 7 million Ohioans
incumbenis eligible for second terms this presidential election year.
in 1998 to run for re-election.
He wants to persuade more than
"There's a lot of people _that , 500,000 people to register. An cstiremember that Taft gave up the Idea mated 1.8 million Ohioans are · old
of being governor in 1990 ... that will enough to vote but are not registered. ·..
feel that Taft has more than prud h1s
"The all -time high for voter reg- ·
dues and ":ill be supponivc of him, " istration in Ohio was our 1992 presBennett said.
idential election which was six and a
Asked to respond. Blackwell said: half million, " Taft said.
·
"I just think it's much too early to be
"If we can attain 7 million regisin this discusston."
tered voters that w'•ll then represent ·
The subject came up at a news . · approximately 85 percent of the vot- ·..
conference in which Taft outlined a ing age population," he said.

Bus:crash injures 37 .9chool children in Wisconsin; driver killed

,

It's the same company you've come to know• wi1h
commitment to serving ,\ :our customers more efficiently and more .eff~. AEP. ·Same oompany. New name. Even brighter Mure.

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By NED KILKELLY
Associated Press Writer
With much of the snow pushed to
the side and the white beauty turned
into a towering mess, Easterners are
emerging from their hibernation and
struggling to get back to life as it was
before the blizzard of '96.
" I've been cooped up too long
with my husband and I needed to see
somebody else's face." said Billie
Maven, who finally was able to get
out of the house and drive to a video
store in Stafford, Va.
But for a region that had been paralyzed from a storm that caused at
least 96 deaths and dumped I 1/2 to
3 feet of snow, the respite may be
brief.
Already, light snow fell overnight
in New York, Massachusetts and
Maryland. And forecasters say fTlOre
snow could arrive in a stotm this
weeken.d, but it was too soon to predict how much .
Most airports along the East Colllo;

Teachers, union challenge
school program voucher

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TheM two Middleport youths, Jamie BIIHng1ley, 1ef;1, and Jeremy Rosa, were among several w!'lo enjoyed tlldlng down the hill
In the American Legion Park In Middleport Tuesday afternoon.
The-youngsters "'Hhoul sleds or saucers found places of card·
board work~ almost as well on the steep alope. (Photo by Char·
lena Hoeflich)
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CLEVELAND (AP) - A group
of teachers unions, 'public school
administratoi~ and civil libertarians is
\rying to stop the city school district's
experimental school-voucher pror-am.
The American Federation of
Teachers filed a lawsuit today in
'Columbus asking a Franklin County
Common Pleas judge to block the'
plan, . said Jamie Hor&gt;fitz, ~
~pokesman for the Washington-based

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Meigs Coun_ty
,sch-ools--rem,ain
closed today

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CHESTER-- Sblldc River Lodge
PMEORY- Eagle Aerie 217l,dis453 F&amp;AM regu~ meeting Thurs- trict meeting, 5:30p.ltl'"Saturdtly-with
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• dinner toi follow.

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fjth Join ~lllh, councilor, presiding. •KIII.hryn ,Vaum
the l!lld1t. report, , ,
. 1 'l'!wicpled~ •to tbD Ch!ispan 111!8 •,9f,ficc~, we!~ d~~talled, and new
• • ~n and 111;riptule read from comm!t'* .lpP!IJRied. ·
., · ,
P..aJma''MemberHanJihe~tat·span-' . Estlter Slitilli read "New yetj:•.
;i~ ~ncr and .iDplltld the' Lord's Others ~dill• were L,ura ~ICc,
tray«.' . ' · , .. ·. . Mary J3arrilliet; .Lora. Dlmewood,
~ Bl~ Hayes, · Ella Osboiilt, · Virsinla tee, Oolc!l• b~~rlct,.
.ltld ~t~,m.beQko!i~ ~- E~e~e~t Q,rant,_Cbarlolle
Opel
(II ill. 8ob 1far*D',VU reported hos• Hollon, Bdlel Orr. ucl ~ ~'!" .
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: ·~ter Council323, Daughters of pitalized. P115t Counc:ilot'i Club will
~ met )ast week at the hall meet. at_ the .hall Tuciday,. 7 P·f!l·

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Pt1ester._0 _of-A hold mee~ing:

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form and officers' reports were give~.
A "New Year" theme was used for
the literary prQgram presented , by
Muriel Bradford. Sh'to read "Wet
Weather Talk." The group sang "Winter Wonderland" and other readings
included "Tiie Flu" by Linda
Schoeppner, "How About You" by
Nancy Wells, "Resolution~" by Rosalie Story, and songs of "One Little
Candle" and "How Great Thou Art."
Janitor for February will lie Hilber
Quivey. An open meeting will be held
when the weather improves, it was
reported.

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,rsfbh1hday·celebrated
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·• Nicholas Tanner ~file, son. of
~heJ!f;and Shannon Riffle, observed
liis fii'll birthday Dec. 30 with a par&amp;- 111 Jiis 'home in Racine. A Sesame
Street theme was carried out for the

A Gannett Co.

.Easterners get back to·business

""'"~,, ~

day, 7:30p.m. at the lodge hall. Worlc
in E.A. and F.C. degrej . Refresli'ments.
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RACINE -- Southern Local Build.)' .!
ing Committee meeting 5:30 p.m. at
TUPPERS PLAINS -- VFW Post
the high school. All district residents 9053, meeting Thursday. 6:,30 p.m.
urged to attend. ,
refreshments followed b) 7:3011.m.
meeting.

THURSDAY

35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 10, 1996

Blizzard's death toll climbs to ~6; most airports reopen

·contests of '96 listed at
Hemlock Grange meeting
Contests for 1996 were explained

a1

Fun in the sn.o w.•. -

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parents show. ·
, •,
Each producing pai~.will get $4.2
million to make 40 episod~s :Qf the
kids series and 13 episodes of the parents series. . · · ·- -~ .: ·
Also planned are lesson;ti~cies via. •
on-line, radio and print mlilpriai. ·
CPB; relying in JJllrl on a\DepJirl·
menl of Education grant, will unveil
the project this week at the 'wintCii
gathering of'l'\16riters in Pasadena,
Calif.
'

Christmas day with Linda and Dave Nellie Parker entertained 'Parke,r famWilliams at Belpre. Other guests ilies on Dec. 3 I. Wilma Parker had
were Aaron Williams and hjs friend, the.blessing before the basket dinner.
· Others attending were Howard PallMatt of Alexandria, Va.
Sarah Caldwell was the holiday er, Irene Parker, Suzy Carpenter, Milguest of Do'ris and Ben Ewing and dred Caldwell and Tom Hysell,.all of
family. Other guests were Janice and · Meigs County; Willis ~arker; Pl\fkSteve Weber, Alfred, Peggy and ersburg, W. Va . ._ Janice and Bob
Charles Caldwell, Carrie and Crissy, Parker, Marietta; Cori, Bo!J!!y, and
Columbus.
Abby Parker, Crown Point, Ind.,
Martha, Joe and1 Will Poole and Helen and Edson Parker, Albany.
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WEDNESDAY

Low tonlg~t In upper
teens.
Partly
cloudy.
Thursday, partly cloudy. High
In 30s.
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A Henrico COUnty, Va., cat had the right Idea Monday u he ut
In the warmtl\ and yawned behind a thennal pane window with a
· wra•th draped In lee and snow. Up to 18 Inches of snow faD In
. the Richmond are.over the weekend, closing the airport, bue tar·
mlrial and most bualnesaea. (AP Photo)

~y Helen Quivey, women's activity ·

e

notes-.:.---~,-

Chester townhall.

Pick 3:
833
Pick 4:
9366
Buckeye 5:
1-12-22-29-31

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Vol. 46, NO. 178
2 s.ctlona, 12 Pagn

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-------Community caler.tdar---~-. -... ~The Community Calendar is iary Parent-Teachers, 7 p.m. Tuesday
published as a free service to non· at the school. Representative of the
profit 1roups wishing to announce Southern Locai_Building Committee
meeting and special events. The cal· to speak.
endar Is not deslped II! promote
POMEROY -- Meigs County
sales or fund raisers of any type.
ltems are pl'lnl!d as space pennits · Board of Elections, 9 am. Tuesday,
and cannot be paranteed to run a board office in Pomeroy.
specific number of days."
CHESTER -- Chester Township
6:30 p.m Tuesday, at the
Trustees,
TUESDAY
PORTLAND .-- Portland Elemtn-

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Sports, Page 4

DEAR SAN LUIS OBISPO: you
!Jiaicc a lot of sense. Thanks for writing.

PBS makes big new i'nyestment in children's TV programming

Ohio Lo~tery

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children from the bus, which was
headed to MacArthur elementary
school.
the bus was turning left when it
collided with the truck, Matzke said.
He said the street from which the bus
was turning had stop signs but the
cross street did n01.
Snow fell overnight and police
said slippery pavement also might
have been a factor in the crash. ·
Randy Griswold, who had just put
his 6-year-old daughter, Sara, on the
bus, rushed back to the scene when he
heard the crash. ·

He said the left side of the driver's buses in Wisconsin .
Twenty-three children were taken •
cab was demolished, and the driver
"wound up curled up like a ball in the to St. Vincent Hospital, said ·
stairwell. ,.. It's a scene you can't' spokesman Jerry Vokracka. He said
describe." Police confirmed the dri- some were still being evaluated, but
ver was 'killed.
. at least one was ljsted in critical con- ' ··
Most of the children on the bus . dition and a second was iQ serious'.'
"were just in shock from the whole condition. - incident," Griswold said. His daughTwelve children were in stable
ter was not seriously hun.
condition at St. Mary 's Hospital with : ·'
A representative of Lamers Bus fractures and liii:Crations, said spokes- : ·
Lines 'refused to lalk to a reporter oth- woman Justine Lodl. "Two ~ •
er ·than to confirm that a company wcie treBled at Bellin Hospital and•
vehicle was involved .in the crash. released, said spolceslllan Tom Schi:lf- :
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Lamers opcrat~ school and other felman.

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Wednesdly, ·January 10,1991

Page2·

Wednesday, January 10; 1996

OHIO Weat11er
Thunilay; Jan. 11

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r ·The Daily·Sentinel ·S·ecret plan cans fo.r :·bank nationalization
: By Jack AndeRon
111 COUrt Street
. and Michael.Blnsteln
Pomeroy, Ohio
WASHINGTON - For most of America's
' banks, 1995 was a "dream" year -- 6nc of. soaring
profits and billion-dollar merger.i brought on by
Gannett Co. Newspaper
low interest rates and low in nation,
But buried deep inside the fi les of the Federal
, Deposit Insurance Corp. is a bluepri nt for every
ROBERT L. WINGETI
banker's nightmare· -- the federal government's
Publls,bei'
contingency plans in case one of America's HI
largest banks goes belly-up.
Thei~ solution? In case of a major bank failure,
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
the 10 largest American banks would be natinnalControUer
General Manager
ized before they'd be allowed to fail. In other
. word s, the federal government would take ..over
the banking system-- with all its liabilities .. and
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
stick it on the backs of the taxpayers. ·
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, - The reasoning is simple: If a major bank fail s.
address and telephooe number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
' 'it could erode confidence in the entire system.
should be in good taSte, addressing issues, not personalities.
· This could create the kind of fin ancial panic not
seen since the Great Depression, when endemic
bank n,ons forced President Franklin D. Roosevelt
to declare a bahk holiday.
This doomsday scenario was devi sed by top
economic officials at the Federal' Reserve, ihe
Treasury Department and the FDIC during the
early I 980s, at a time when bank deregulation had

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.Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

By The AIIOCiated Press
1
: Excerpts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
The Lima News, Jan. 6
=:: "He who sets the agenda wins" is one of the most imponant maxims in
Politics.
·
• The GOP's takeover of Congress has brought that maxim to life. The conservativ.e agenda has shaped the national political landscape and_pushed libe(lll (orces into relteat. Americans are no longer debating the degree to
~ich : bureaucrats should run t!Je nation's health care system or how many
aew welfare programs the federal go~ernment should create. Instead, nauon~ leaders argue the terms of a balanced budget, the size of a tax cut and the
wJ)mber of programs that states should control.
.
;. Today, ihe lOth Amendment - "The power.i not delegated to the United
$1ates by the Constitution. nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to
6 States respectively, or io the people" - is the rallying cry for a bloc of
~ns ervative Republican freshmen in the House. ·

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file Mlddletowu Journal, Jan. 2
Remember that chain reaction·ihat was set off last year when Barry Levey
announced thnt he was retiring from the Ohio Senate?
When all the dust had cleared, Scott Nein of Middletown had left the
Ohio House to take Levey's spot in ihe Senate, and Gary Cates had left his
Union Township trustee post to take Nein's place in the House.
Recent announcements from key legislators in Columbus have opened
the door to several major changes, including the possibility that Nein, just
entering.his first full year in the Senate, could ~come the influential chair~
'
"
man of the Senate educalton
comrtuttee.
Should Nein win the leadership post, Butler County lawmakers would
·conrrol both education commillees in the Legislature. State Rep. Mike Fox,
R~lndian Sprin~. is already chairman of ihe House education panel.
'

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brought
on anew
wave
of new
lending and
risks.
'The
plan was inspired by a 1982'
visit from Mexican government officials, who showed
up at the Treasury Depanment one day to announce
that their country was broke
and could no longer meet the
interest payments dn its
American obligations. The
oil boom in Mexico had gone
bust, and officials there were
considering an outright repudiation of their country's foreign debts.
The Mexican crisis never
materialized, but the incident
got Reagan administration
officials thinking: What if a
large foreign government -with major U.S. loans on its
books -- goes bankrupt?
What if a banking crisis in a
major foreign economy, such
as Germany or Japan, spreads
to the United States? In
response, a select team of
bankers and economists sat .
down to write what is essentially a how-to manual for
nationalizing . the banking
system.
'

remain a closely guarded secret. They were never
db1ributed to other asencies, nor to the banks
themselves. No congressional leader has ever
seen these plans, thllugh some know of their existcncc. But that doesn't mel!n they weren' t taken
seriously within the FDIC. Officials there even
wrote up a sample press release, to be given out in
case of a takeover.
.
Whnt the plan really revealed, however, was
n&lt;Mso much a strategy for nationalization as a
sober reminder ihat .the only way. to deal · with
such a disaster is to prevent it from happening.
Financial panic is like nuclear war; once it starts,
it's very difficult to contain.
More than a decade after these plans were prepared, the risk of financial meltdown seems more
remote than ever. Last year saw more than 1,000
hank mergers worth a record $150 bil.lion, including such giants as Chase Manhallan, Chemical
Bank and First. Chicago. Forecasts in&lt;!icate that
the trcn~ will continue, or perhaps even accelerate
thi s year. Whether these mergers will help everyday hank' customers is ~nothe( question entirely.
One expert predicted the cu~nt merger-mania
will result in one-half of aii _Jocal bank ~!ranches
being closed by the year 2000: .
.
Things have been so tosy · ~hat the FDIC :has

AccuWealher• forecast

essentially elimi{lated !lank premiums for 92 percent of all domestic banks. 1be Bank Insurance
Fund is operating at record levels. with $25.1 bil-.
lion in reserves as of Sept. 30, 1995. This come~.:;
just four years after the fund finished $7 billion inA
the red, and na)Cs~yers like Ross Per01 were bu.S)"&gt;
predicting a giant wave of banking fail ures.
:
· But a growing chorus of critics believe th~
good economic times are causing the government:
to ease up on its role ,as guardian of the banking~
system once again ~ Clinton administration offi-:
cials ~~redivided over the issue of bani&lt; premiums.:
Some believe that now is the perfect time to save~
for a rainy day, and have argued for keeping pre..::
miums at current levels. Others believe bank "': ·
should be rewarded for a job we ll done.
·~
The optimists have apparently won the fight M
Buried deep in the budget plan submiued by Clinton last month is the fact that the White House
won;t fight the GOP on deposit insurance. Repub- licans, in a move that's very popular with the
banking lobby, have included a Cl)p on the gro--:th
ofihe Bank Insurance Fund as pan of-their plan to
balance the budget.
.
, Jack Anderson ·and Mlch8el Blnataln
· are wrltar1 for Unlteit Feature Syndicate,
Inc.
,'

DUE ·'ft1 DOWNS IZIN5,

W&amp; CANNOT COM' TO

.TKE PMO'NE ...

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raids

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inflation.
There also were social consequences. In 1989. novelist Tom Wolfe said:
that the post-war economic boom gave people "a sense of immunity to ordinary dangers. " "We are in a period," Wolfe said in a speech, "of every man ;
and everx_ woman as an aristocrat. In every walk of life, people feel more:
and more free to indulge themselves in the whims, the instincts, the freedoms that only ·aristocrats dared to assume."
'
The result, says Samuelson, 'was a shattering of old taboos, sexual openness •.family bi'C!!J&lt;.down, relaxation of the moral stigma against debt, chat- ;
lenges )o traditi6rial authority figures and an attempt to guara111ee equality of
outcomes instead of equality of opportunity.
·
·
Corporate America also thought it could do no wrong, developed a "cult
.of management" and ended up creating excessive bureaucracies and lavish · executive perks that helped reduce productivity and corporate profits, leading to a debt explosion rivaling that of the government.
What Samuelion calls "the myth of unbounded power and prosperiry"
began to unravel in the late 1970s Amid hyper-inflation, slow growth an4 :
sagging national morale -- what President Jimmy Carter called "malaise." ·
Many economists contend ihat median family incomes have fallen since •
1980; but Samuelson says they have merely slowed from more than 35 per- :
cent growth duripg the 1960s and 1970s to 6.9 percent in the 1980s and 5.9 ·
percent in the 1990s.
He does not djspute that income inequality has increased, with the rich- ·
est•20 percent of the population gaining 35 percent more money from 1970 :
to 1990 while the poorest fifth gained only 3 percent.
The inability of the economy and the government to fulfill eve~one's
ambition to have more of everything has led to.fierce fights between groups
and a general decline in confidence in government and other. institutions.
What to do7 Samuelson says that people simply have to accept the fiCt
that not every one can have everything he or she·wants and must develop an
ethic of personal responsibility. He thinks that the federal budget ~~lUSt he
balanced as government's way of asserting respOnsibility.
·
There are signs in Washington that a re~ponsibility ethic is !aldng bol •
but he thinks it's also entirely possible that "inertia" will carry the society
· toward more "c1,1lture wars" and other forms of disunity.
It would be helpful if President Clinton and leaders of ihe ~p\lblican
Congress could cooperate in fostering a " responsibility era," but Samljelson
thinks that salvation probably has to conie out of the bedrock values -ohhe
American people -- if, that is, they haven't been co!lllpted in the. "entitle· ment era."
(Morton Kondracke 11 executive edHor of Roll Call, tba new8paper of CapHol Hill.)
··

f~de. ral

pet;Jsion ~f~nds

\
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By JoHph Perklna
shall have the power ... to borrow right mind .: Republican or Democ-, also making up any lost interest. To .
Constitutional scholars often dis- money on the ctedit of the United rat -- advocates that the United the minds of most Americlllls, ·when •
agree abQut the ' "original intent" of States."
States renege on its financial obliga- you have to pay back' money wiih ~
certain ambiguous sections and
This rarely evoked cla\lse lias tions, concerns were expressed in interest, that means you borrowed it. ::__
clauses that the Founders included suddenly been thrust to the center of Congress, by lawmakers on both
There is another aspect of the '
in the 2-century-old document.
the ongoins federal budget· battle. sides of the aisle. that the Clinton ·Treasury Department's pension raid
For instance, there are. some That's because ihe Clinton adminis- administration set a constitutional that. should give pause to the
(including yours ll'llly) who argue tration is usurping Congress· consti- precedent
'
nation 's nearly .3 million ' federal
that - the "presentment" clause, tutional authority by borrowing
But the White 'House insists that employees. S~retary Rubin ihought
which appears in Article I, .Section money to finance continued govern• Rubin 's maneuverings· around the nothing of taking $39.8. billion out
•. 1 '
7, gives ihe president line-item .veto ment spending. 1 •
federal debt limit does nO! violate of the civil service trust fund even ,
·r
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authoiity.
·
This occurred last Nov. 15 when the Cons\il!ltion. 'the administration though the White House know$ that '; •
•
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And ihe~ were some (not includ- Treasury. Secretary . Robert Rubin is not "borrowins" the money, they it is underfunded by more ihan .SSOO •'
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in~ ypur~ ~ly) \Vho suggested ,l.St raide&lt;:! two, federal pepsion trusl say. ,~ther, the ·Q\oney taken from billion.
""
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·'T,j
~h
~~
ki·
wmter, dunl)g debate op t~ Con- funds, First, he. took $2 U billion the federal Th~ift Savings Plan was
The hypocrisy of ttiis is thal..'the ~~
a~.,.
r\:1..
.' ~,.' gressional Cover~ge Ac!, t!lat !he . from the federal employees 'Ii&amp;Jrift me~ely a '"cimversjon to cash... The Clinton administration is crac~jng ~~
•
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•
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, :· • ••
•__: . ~~~. c::.·
• "speech and debate" ~1ausc;, which Sav,ings-Pian. Thj:n, he.took anotlier ~ funds-taken lion\ the-Civil Service .down on private,employers, who raid~_....
B De A_...-.1
l ·,:; ,: ·,
' ., ' appears in Arti~le I, S~tion 6, gran1- · $39.8 billion from the Civil Service Retiremeht and Disability Fund was their own pensjon funds. "I want to
send a . very clear and unambiguous , ~'Jbilay is Wednesday, Jan., 10, the tenth day of·J996. ~re Ill!' 3~ days 1 1_ed Congress 4mtl)umty from . t~e Retirement and Disabllity Fund.
. simply a "disinvestment'' ,
l eiAI'I 'the year. . . :· . , . .
,
, ,
, ..
. laws of ihe land.
· 'Ille Treasury Department wentto
But this· is just the usual Wash- message to employers," said Labor !-Today' a Hisbli,lht m History:
· ·
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.
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B~t there is one clau~JdJa! is as these extreme len~ to l.!Jay fe!lfS ington doultlespeak. The fact is ihat Secretary Robert Reich (barely two .::
011 hn. 10, t17~1homas Jillne.publl~ Jija:Jallliential pimphlet, -:-. sttaishtfo!W~ ~11\'Y appeari~g in I in the.tinanf ial mirkets that the fed- the aovcrnment is- required to . wee!Cs after Rubin's peiisfon gNb). •·
,,~ se-.e. ·· ~n his ~II for American ih"Je'l i '"III'C from Enl_l~;
the ConsltiUilon. Atpcle ':.Section, 8 eral government would default on its replace the pension funds it convert- · " Hands off. This is not your money. ...
·
Wrote
..
B......,tblftJ
thlt
i~
right
or
rc:llll;..l"'*
fiiMth
for
sepatatJon.
clearly
states that only Congress debt. And while no one in his Of her ed 111 cash and disinvcsted, while This money belongs to employees.'' ::
P. 110

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' Wilbur Warner, 80, ofTuppers Plains died Tuesday Jan. 9, 1996 at Cam.den Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
;·
Born Dec. 9, 1915, he was the son of the late Alben and H.azel Taylar
Warner. He was formerly employed at Ohio University, and was a mem~r
of the Beihel United Methodist Church, Coolville.
He is survived by his wife of 55 Y,ears, Dorothy Gillilan Warner; a daugpter and son-in-law, Marlene (Don) Price of Reynol&lt;l$burg ; a granddaugllter, Melissa (Willie) Ward of Reynoldsburg ; a-grandson, Steve Price qf
Reynoldsburg; one great-granddaughter, Jamie Ward of Reynoldsburg; a sister and brother-in-law, Eloise (Russell) Archer of Guysville; a brother anil
sister-in-law, Clarence (Edna) Warner of Athens; and several niecei,
nephews, and cousins.
Services will be held Friday, II a.m., at the White Funeral Home,
·
Coolville, with ihe Rev. Wes ley Thatcher officiating. Burial will follow iii
the Athens County Memory Gardens, Athens.
:
Calling hours for friends and family will be held Thursday, from 2 to !I
p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
In lieu of nowers, memorial contri butions may be made to the Bethel
United Methodist Church ; in care of Diane Wolf, 50802 Joppa Road,
Reedsyille. 45772.
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Wi-lbur-Warner
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Extended roreca:n ·
Soullleastern Ohio
,
Today...Mostly cloudy wiih achance .A chance of snow s&lt;iuiheast. Dry
of flurries ... Becoming partly cloudy e lsewhere. Lows 20 tci-~5 and highs
by mid-morning. High in the upper 30 to 35. ·
Saturday... Dry. Lows in . the mid
20s. Northwest wind 5 to 15 mph lmd
20s
to lower 30s. Highs from the·lowgusty this mbrning.
Tonight. .. Partly ~loudy ... Then er 30s nonheast to the lower 40s
becoming mostly cloudy. Low in ihe soulh.
Sunday...Dry. LOws in the inid 20s
upper teens. Calm wind.
Thur.iday... Mostly 'cloudy with a to lower 30'!: Hig_hs·from the mid 30s
.,
chance of snow. High in ihe lower northeast to near 45 south.
30s. Chance of snow. 40 percent.
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Wilbur Warner, 80, of Tuppers Plains died Tuesday Jan. 9, 1996 at
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
. . Born Dec. 9, 1~15 , he was the son of the late Alben and Hazel Tay,lor Warner. He was formerly employed at Ohio University, and was a
member of the .Bethel United Meihodist Church, Coolville.
He is survived by his wife of SS years, Dorothy Gillilan Warner; a
daughter and son-in-law, Marlene (Don) Price of Reynoldsburg; a sister
and brother-in-law, Eloise (Russell) Archer of Guysville; a brother 11nd
sister-in-law, Clarence (Edna) Warner of Athens; two grandchildren, one
great-grandchild, and several nieces, nephews, and cousins.
Services will be held Friday, II a.m., at the White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Wesley Thatcher officiating. Burial will follow
in the Athens County Memory Gardens, Athens.
·
Calling hours for friends and family will be held Thutsday, from 2 to
4 p.m. an~ 7-9 p.m.
'
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to ihe Beihel
United Methodist €!hurch; in c~ of Piane-Wolf, 5080'2 Joppa Road,
Reedsville,.45,772. '',

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Today's lhte$tock report

CLERK/TREASURER
-~Middleport ClerkfTI'tNJ. ..,
surer Dennis Hockman, left, Ia sworn In by Mayor Qellvey Horton·
at Monday'alllfttlng of MlddlapQrt VIllage Council. Hockman will,
fill the remainder of Tert Hockman's unexpired term, before begin- :
nlng hl1 elected t1rm to tha offlca.

29.00; 500-650 lbs. 29.00-32.00.
Boars: 25.00-27.00.
A car reported stolen from Pomeroy Monday •Was rei:overed
Estimated
receipts: 45,000.
this morning in Minersville.
Prices
from
The PnlchtcerThe 1985 Chevrolet Calnaro, belonging to John Dailey,
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Association:
sLivestock
Leiion Tel""ce, Pomeroy, was stolen 'from theArnericail Legion parkCattle: steady to 1.00 ~g~r. .
ing lot. according to Ponleroy Police QliCf Gerald Rou.ht.
Slaughter steers: chotce 60.00:.
The vehicle was found undamaged in a snowbiilk on Dutch66.75;
select 58.00-62.50.
I
town Hill Roild and was impounded pending processing by the Ohio
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.00- ·
The following cases were resolved Middleport, disorderly, $100 su~­
Bureau of Criminal Investigation.
, ·
66.25;
select 58.00-62.50.
recently in the Meigs County Coun of pended, costs , HRS assessmen i'.
Rought said the department has a possible suspect in the theft.
Cows: steady to 1.00 higher; all Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
David R. Spangler, Syracuse, drivi~Q
cows 42.00 and down.
•
Fined were: Chad Diddle, Racine, under the influence, $750 plus costS,
Bulls: steady ; all bulls 47.00 and driving while intoxicated, $300 plus one year operator's license suspe~~;
down.
costs, 90-day opeflltor's license sus- sion, 30 days jail suspended to 10
Do know a good samaritan who came IIi the ~lie of someone durSheep and lambs: choice wools pension, 10 days jail, one year pro- days, one year probation, 90-day
ing Ill is week's snowstorm? If you d~. c~ll reporter Tom Hunter at 1be
70.0Q-73.75; aged sheep 28.50 and bation; Roger Brauer, Racine. seat vehicle immobilization; driving unctf:£
Daily Sentinel at 992-2155.
•.
down.
belt, $25 plus costs;·Mark A. Colburn, suspension, $100 concurrent wf!h
Boil order lifted
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Long Bouom, speed, $30 plus costs; DUI, 30 days jail suspended to tO
Pamela S. Proffitt. Portland, speed. days concurrent. one year probation:;
$30 plus costs; Jean W. Quantrell, one year OL suspension;
..
Vermontville, Miss., improper turn,
Robert R. 'Darst, Cheshire, DUI,
The Leading C~k Conservaney District has canceiCI! the boil advi$20 plus costs; Nathan H. Huuon. $500 plus costs, I 0 days jail sq~­
sory for customer.i on Leading Creek R&amp;-id east of McEih~ey Hill
held
Jan.
28
at
the
lzaalc
Walton
l:'arm
Meetiag
canceled
Norwalk,
speed, $30 plus costs;
pended to three days, 90-day OL sus:
Road.
A ·meeting of the Tuppers Plains near Chester, For more infoflllation or
Laurie J. Chandler, Beaver, speed, pension, one year probation , $250 of
VFW Post 9053 scheduled for Thurs- to register call Meigs County Game : $30 plus costs ; David A. Sman. fine and jail suspended upon comProtector Keith Wood at 985-4400. i Pomeroy, failure to control, $20 plus pletion of residential treatment prO.:
day has been canceled.
Special
meeling scheduled
· costs; James V. Stewan, Charleston, gram; Kimalia J. Moore, Vinton, pos:.
Meeling canceled
The
Leading
Creek Conservancy W.Va., speed. $30 plus costs; Kim- session, $25 plus costs; open conThe Meigs County Trustees and
··
Clerks Association annual· meeting. · District will meet in special session berly Roush, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 tainer, $25 plus costs;
scheduled for Friday evening at the tonight (Wednesday) at 6 p.m. at i\5 plus costs; George Arnold, Rutland ,
Jeffrey W. Ohlinger, Pomerqr.
scat belt, $15 plus costs; Valerie assured clear distance, $25 plus costS;
Meigs County Senior!Multij10rpose office.
Computer
seminars
oll'ered
Hawkins, Middlepon, failure to yield, Charles R. Aeiker Sr.. Pomeroy, DliJ,
B~tilding, has I?een canceled and will
the teens jn the sOUthwest.
By The Associated Press
The Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Joint $20 plus costs; William T. Zuspan, $1 ,000 plus costs, six months jail, fiv~
Snow will spread over the etftire be rescheduled at a later date.
11le · snow ended over most of
Vocatioual School District is offering Chester, speed. $30 plus costs;
years probation, two year OL sus,-,
Ohio during the rtight. but the cold air sta~ on Thursday. Hiahs will he 25- M~tiaa chanae noted
two
one-day
computer
seminars
to
be
Alan
R.
Durst,
Pomeroy,
speed,
pension, 180-day vehicle immobiThe
monthly
meeting
of
the
Gal35.
moving over the wanner Lake Erie
·•·
held
in
the
Adult
Services
Computer
$30
plus
costs;
Betty
L.
Blankenship,
lization; assured clear distance, $30
lia-Jackson-Meigs
Board
of
Alcohol
The record,higl\ temperature for
waters dumped another 4-8 inches of
"'
this date at ihe Columbus weather sta- Drug Addiction and Mental Health Lab on the Buckeye Hills 9ltreer Pomeroy, improper backing. $20 plus plus costs.
snow on extreme northeiijt Ohio.
~ ' '
Center
campus
in
Rio
Grande.
The
costs;
Homer
Mills
Jr.,
Syracuse.
And the National Weather Service tion was 59 degrees in 1975 while ihe Services will be held Jan. 22, at 7
said Geauga aN Ashtabula counties record low was II below zero· in p.m. at the Board's office, 414 Sec- seminars will be held from 9 a.m. to se~t belt, S15 plus costs; Robert H.
'
could expect about 2 more inches I 982. Sunset tonight will be at 5:2S ond Ave., Gallipolis, Ronald A. 3 p.m. and ihe cost if $75 a person. Taylor, Bidwell, ·seat hell, $25 plus
executive
director, Addi,tional infOrmation , call 614- costs; Jeffery T. Welch. Rutland, failp.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:53 Adkins,
before it stopped later today.
ure to control, $20 plus costs; Pearl ·
245-m4.
announced
today.
a.m.
For most of the rest of ihe state,
W. Blake, Middleport, scat belt, $25
Meetingc:anceled
aog~oa
classes
set
the only lingering snow was .in .the Aci"'OS the Dl!tion
plus
costs; Carolyn S. Fox, LancastA
beginners
clpgging
workshops
The Meigs Unit of the American
Easterner.i shut in by the blizzard
form of flurries.
er,
seat
bel~ $15 plus costs;
Clearing skies were forecast as were siill trying 'to shake off cabin · will be held by the Big Bend Clog- Cancer Society scheduled for ThursTroy J. Preece, Middlebourne,
fever today, even as Washington ,was geri from Jan. 19to March 8, weath- day night has been canceled.
high pressure built into the ·state.
W.Va.,
speed, $30 plus costs; Karen .
er
permilling,
at
Pomeroy
.
Village
•
Building
meetina
postponed
contending
with
stonn
remnants
that
But another low pressure system
·
L.
Conkle,
Vienna. W.Va .. speed ,
•
Hall.
$3
donation.
For
more
inforThe
·Southern
Local
Building
slipping to the south of Ohio was . dumped another I to 3 inches. A light
mation
call
Vivian
May
at
992-7853.
$30
plus
costs;
Victor J. Coates,
Commillee
meeting
for
tonight
has
expected to bring an increase in snow fell in Boston !¥:fore daybreak.
Long
Bollom,
speed,
$30 plus costs ;
.
'l'ntpper
course
slated
been postponed until Jan. ,17, 5:30
cloudiness in the western half of the
Light snow also ·fell overnight in
K.
Upton,
Racine,
failure to
Pamela
·
A
free
Ohio
Divi~ion
of-Wildlife
p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
state tonight. Some snow could New York and Marylan.d. Accumulat;::ourse
will
be
yield,
$25
plus
costs;
Angela
D.
Trapper
Education
develop over sQUthwest Ohio liy day- tion was mostly light, but at least S
. .
Powell , · Middleport, assured ·clear ·
break: forecasters said.
inches were repol1tl! in parts of t!ie
·distance ahead, $30 plus costs; JereOvernight lows will range from · middle Appalachii!R~ and around ihe
my K. Honaker, left of center, $30 .
around 5 degrees in the northeast to Baltimore IIRII.
plus costs; George F. Hoschar, West
'I]Ie wefur storm system that
Department,
Charles
McCloud,
Units
of
the
Meigs
County
EmerColumbia, W.Va., disorderly, $30
frosted the :Jr{Ortbeast overnight could
phis costs;
produce
snow
show~rs, with..accu- gency Medical Service recorded IS VMH.
The
Sentinel mulations of about Linch possible in calls for assistance Tuesday including POMEROY
John G. Bailey, Pomeroy, failure to
8:54
a.m.,
Union
Avenue,
DorOihy
four
transfer
calls.
Units
responding
(USPS JIJ.MO)
yield,
costs only; Douglas Mowery,
Massachuseus and slightly more in
Roberts,
Holzer
Medical
Center.
included:
northern New England.
Publi111ed every afternoon, Mondly tbrou&amp;h
RACINE
MIDDLEPOitT
· Snow showers also will be possiFri4ay. Ill eo.rt Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Qhto Valley PubltW., COII1)anyJOannen Co.. 1 ble around the .Oteat Lakes, and an
3:52a.m., Union Avenue, Jordan . 4:41 p.m., Tackerville Road,
l'omm&gt;). Ollio 45769. I'll. m •21S6.- Scc:ond' I
inch of snowfall wih be possible in Cleland, Veterans Memorial Hospital; Audra Nice, treated at the 5cene.
class pcMtage paid It Pomeroy, Ohio.
8:47 a.m., Overbrook Nursing RUTLAND
western Miiineso~a.
Member: The AAiocialtd Prest, aftd the Ohio
8:S4 a.m., ShOn Fourth Avenue,
· Warrne( air spre'ading into the Center, Katie Rawson. Pleuant ValNewsplptl' Auodadon.
Joe Wolfe, lnlated at the scene.
,,
Plains states should provide a respite ley Hos~illil ; . •
SYRACUSE ·.
POSTMASTI!R: Seo4 llddm1 c:orreelions to
7:13p.m.,
Duunond
S~t.
Aoyd
from the subzero temperature~ that
The Daily se..tinel, Ill Coorl St, Pomeroy,
.12:23 p.m., state Route 124, Leol:
McClellan.
treated
at
the
scene;
gripped sOme 'Of the porthe!'n staltS a
Qhio m 69.
Ia
Gilmore,
HMC.
8:23 p.-m., Short Fourth Avenue,
few days qo.. . · ,
TUPPERS
PLAINS
:,u~,!!~~.
A band of light rain may fatt · Joe Wolfe, VMH;
12:13 a.m., state Route 7, Francis
9:44 p.m., Brownell Avenue,
o.e
$1.00
across the ·lower Missouri River ValMartin, HMC.
o.e - ............................................... 18.70 ley southward into Kansas llld Okla' Samuel WilliimS, VMH; OneYe. ........................ ,....,...,............. $104.00
Ito .
~.·~
'
~
·
9
:54
J'.
!R...
Middh!pof!
P&lt;?!ice
... ~ ~-~·
•
·,._~ -~.!,... ..... ,
#
COLUMBUS (AP) - lndial)aOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Wednesday by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: sd cents to
mostly 1.00 lower; demand light to
moderate on a moderate to heavy
supply.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 39.5041.00, a few 41.50; plants 40.5042.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 35.5039.50.
Sows: under 500 lbs .. SO cents
lower;_over 500 lbs. ·1.50 !9 21110 lower.
U.S. 1-3. 300-500 lbs. 27.00-

Know a good samaritan?

, ,

·'

W.VA.

Stolen car recovered

!

r....

•

,..._._Local. briefs---.

L.----.---~~=======~==~=~~~~=::::::::::::::::..J

~.ubi~

'

llelen Marie Th9mas Vickers, 77, Point Pleasant, W.Va .• died Wednesday, Jan. 10, 199(i in Plea;;ant Valley Hospital, following.a lengthy illness.
Born June 29, 1918 .in Point Pleasant, daughter of the late Roy L. Thomas
·and·Iva De11ney' Th~as, she was a member of American Legion Auxiliary
Post 23 of Point Pleasant for SO years, and the Loyal Order of the Moose at
Point Pleasant.
'
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Home~ Vickers, in 1984;
and two 'brothers and two sisters .
$urviving are five sisters, Rosemary Thacker of Point Pleawu. Virginia
Smiih of Cedar Grove, W.Va" Nora Bell Taylor of Wellsville, Robena Johnson of West Colll!ribia, W.Va., arid Phyllis Meadows of Buckhannon, W.Va.;
two brothers, Ralph Thomas of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., and Riclwd Thomas
.
of Scottown;' alid several
nieces and nephews. ·
.
Services will be I :30 p.m. Saturday in ihe Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, wiih Pastor Dale Vollmar officiating. Burial will be in the Lone Oak
.Cemetery. Friends may call at ihe funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.

300

.
·
:
:
:
·
·
:
·
·
:
:

BEEP

Wilbur Warner

Helen M.. .Vickers

,.

IND.

Today's weather forecaS,t

Does U.S., have to~ rilany.good things? ~

"'0'""

IMansfield l25' I•

Alice,Mays, 72, of Reedsville died Thursday, Jan. 11, 1996 at St.
Joseph's Hospital; Parkersburg. W.Va. ,
Arrangements will be announced later by ihe White Funeral Home.
Coolville.

'

theyMore
werethan
prepared,
the plans
a decade
after
The Columbus Dispatch, Jan. 3
·· American sports fans used to think of thetnselves as among the most fairminded and restrained il\ the world.
·
.•
" Unfortunately, sp6ns enihusiasts have been getting out of control more
trequently. 'This rowdiness rtPfllSenis a deplora~le trend that officjals should
~e swift and decisive action to quash.
·. 1be supponers of Ohio State University teams know how serious ihe By MOrton Kondracke
problem of out-of-control fans can be. The last few times OSU played WisOne of Washington's most intelligent commentators, Bob_Samuelson, has
~onsin in Madison, players ran the gantlet of abusive fans pelting them with written a new book that goes a long way toward 'explaining the "funk" -·
tomatoes and worse. In 1993, Wisconsin S!!Curity personnel had to warn the President Clinton's term -- that besets much of America_ .
Buckeyes about what they could expect. While it's true that only· marshmalThe problem, he writes, is that after World War II, Americans got the idea
r6ws were usually tossed near ihe players' runway, sometimes coins were that they were entitled to a nearly problem-free existence. Since no such
pressed into ihem, and that could be troublesome.
thing was ever possible, the public h4s become disappointed and is looking
· OSU fans have not exactly been paragons of vinue. In 1993, officials had for someone to blame.
io use crowd control e11en before the game with Indiana at Ohio Stadium.
The media and interest groups that profit from discontent accelerate tne
And approximately 10 people "who were a lillie on the high side" were process, leading to a situation in which polls indicate 60 percent of the pubtossed out of the student section . After the game, about 400 students rushed lic now more or less permanently believes that the country is "on the wrong
·
toward the goal posts.
track.''
Fans should know tl!at if they allack goal posts at OSU's stadium, ihey
Samuelson, economics columnist for Newsweek and 11le Washington
ni!ght be rret with pepper gas.
Post, argues in "The Good Life and Its Discontents" (Timea Books) that the
"age of entitlement" has to be followed by an "age of responsibility" or
Thlegraph·Forum ol BucyqJs, Jan. 4 ·
there· could be chaos between groups jealous of one another's perceived
" 1be government's plan to funher regulate cigarettes has a lot of people advantages.
fifed up. 1be tobacco compan~es obviously want to k~ep selling ih~ir prodAccording to Samuelson, the American dream of individual opportunity
u~ t to as many people 'as poss1ble. Just as clearly, ant1-smoking forces back
suffered a shallering blow in the Great Depression, when businesses failed
altything they feel will reduce tobacco-c_aused diseases and deaths. But what
and in.dividuals were reduced to seemingly permanent poveny through no
does that mean for the rest of us, smokers and non-smokers alike?
fault of their own.
,
The Food and Drug Administration pfllposal is aimed at snuffing out
World War II. which revived the U.S. economy and produced a hardtobllliCO's appeal to young people. Specifically, the Joe Camel cartoon charfought
victory, "demonstrated in simple and stark f~hion ihat the country
ac)Or and advenising near schools would be restric~ed . Vending-machine
wfls
working
again -- bOih in a literal sense and in the larger sense that its
(#farelle compa01es would he requ1red to pay $150 m•lhon a year to educate
institutions and ideas seemed to be succeeding."
·1$tns on the hazards of smoking.·
The post-war era, particularly ihe 1950s and 1960s, was such a boom
a-'W~ are not blinded by cigaretie smllke and have seen the effects of smokperiod
that Americans g01 the idea that permaneni prosperity was guaranteed
:0.: in our friends and family. And like many other areas. it is the responsiand
that
noihing could stop one generation from being richer and happier
ty of the family to •educate young people about the."dangers of ~moking.
··
t we don't think the American public hns a burning desire to have the gov- than the previous ane.
In
fact,
various
aspects
of
ordinary
life
in
America
have
continued
'to
;tment issue any more regulations.
improve. Samuelson cites amenities such as TV sets, airline travel, air conditioning, long-distance telephone service, high school education, antibiotics, health insurance and the ~irth control pill as improvements that are
now_universally available and have transformed American life.
The problem, he writes, is that peopie began to think 'that there were no
J'imits to an ever-rising graph of public and personal happiness. One exam,.
OK~
ple was John F. Kennedy's Inaugural Address, with its promise to "help any
e~tss~
friend , resist any foe" to secure liberty and the statement that "man holds in
Du1" DF' '1l\ l'S
. his hands the power to abolish all forms of human poverty."
The notion that America could do anything it wanted led President Lyn'
f'oS'T'C&gt;....'"f"
' '
don Johnson to try to fight both a war on poverty and a war in Vietnam ai
Pl!nl- &lt;5-'S\ OM
the same time -- without raising taxes to pay lor e1tber -- spawning a ruinous
~!

....

Alice Mays

I

r-----------------------------------~--------------------------------------------·.,

AT&amp;T

The Da!ly Sentinel• Page 3

fomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Boil order lifted

Meigs County Court"

Meigs announcements

Northeast Ohio g~ts ·
more snow overn·ight

..

-

'

.Meigs EMS log~ 15· calls

Daily

-t.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Sll«lLE COPY PaiCll
Daily ................... ,.............._................. l ,Ce...

I~

Ny

SubMlriben ltOC detiriii&amp;IO PlY ihc tinier
remit in advance direct eo The Dlily'seatioel

.,. ......., ,;.orl2111011lhbolla. Crodl!wiUie , '
given eorriert~th - ..
.
No aubatriplioa by nWI permitted in Altai
where home e.-riel' seMce Ia ~aillble.

MAIL st!IICRIPTJOIIIS

·-Mo&lt;pc-J

I 3 Wocka .................. .................... .. ......... S27.30 I

26 - . ......... ..............\.............. .,......... $53.1l

n-................................................ SIOS~
--.-MdpC..,.

13 - ........................ .......... ......... :...... $29.~

26 - ..........................................:....... $56.61
S2 ............................................$109.72

•

'",.

Hospltal'news
.,

•1J .. . • •

. ~ V~ .~

; ~·

~

J\leiday . ~ia;\c)u• - F19yCI
McClellan, M~dlepot:t. 1 ·
Tuesday .discharges - Robert'
Baker, Syracule; Junior Hunt, Long
Bottom.
,
Holler· M~

Ceate....

· DlldaaJiiet b fl. 9 - Mrs.
GC()fle ~ al!ll.daui!!,terLMamie
Erit, Tammy Jones, JIIDCS Duffy,
.LaWiliiM:e SpudisJ.. .
,

·.. (hblkllil will penlllllioa~

· Consider Your Family.

·. c~m~et: Pre~~ed Funeral Planning

Cremeens·
'

.~~~.F.uneral.Hollie
I Raeine,· OH
949-3210

.

�e

•

-

VVednesday, January 10, l996

-·sports

By MATT HARVEY

VVednesday,January10,1996
1

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) • Bob Pruett, the defensive coordin~tor
: for No.2 Aorida, returned to his West
;: Virginia roots Tuesday when be was
. hired as football coach at Marshall, a
: school moving up to Division I-A in
• 1997.
• He signed a five-year contract and
: replaces Jim Donnan, who was fi4:21
: in six seasons before being hired by
: Georgia last month.
·
The Thundering Herd has one of
: the top programs in 1-AA, with a
; national championship in 1992 and

.Connecticut,
t&lt;entucky &amp; Michigan win ·
.

·lay DONNA TOMMELLEO
.

~

STORR,S, Conn. (AP)- 1be
·•jl.ype ,surrounding No. 6 Connecti. ~c~t's aame with No. 7 Villanova and
~erry Kittles nearly got to Ray Allen.
In theirlast meeting, Kittles killed
the Huskies with 27 points to lead the
Wildcats to the Big East Conference
tournament title last March. He also
had 37 points against Connecticut last
year in a regular-season game.
1oo "The only guy who was more nervous than I was before the game was
, (Wy," Connecticut coach Jim Cal'· •'hOun siud.
:,J ' · After watching Allen miss his first
!).four shots. Tuesday night, Calhoun
'-~lid seen enough.
c• , "He was so hyped up. I h!ld to call
~'him to the sidelines and tell him 'You
can't win in the first 38 seconds,'"
t. Calhoun said.
i Allen went on to a pretty spectac,:.ular final 39 minutes and 22 seconds
;,mas he scored 29 points and gnii)bed II
' -·pbounds in the .Huskie8' 81-73 vic, -••tQry in the battle pf Big East unbeatdens.
i "He just told me to take my time
! rtbccause there's far ·more to go in the
! ..same ... Don't rush my shots. Just go .
, r&gt;&lt;&gt;utthere and be patient," Allen said
. ~ Qf, his brief talk with Calhoun.
: Jti • .He didn't miss a shoi for tbe rest
' of the half, including four three~ointers, al)d had 22 points·at half-

l'

1111)1:.

.

· Allen ::aid he turned io Magic
oh~W'l and Larry Bird for inspira,

tion. He w~tched an NBA highlight
filmbeforetheteam'sshootaroundto
get in.the mood.
" I was definitely thinking basketball before the game," he said.
And he was thinking rivalries.
Bird and Johnson. Allen and Kittles.
" I was watching Magic Johnson
and Larry Bird. I thought about the
rivalry between them," Allen said. "It
was just something that made me
think about Kell')' and how far our
rivalry and friendship can go in, the
future."
.
In the only other games involving
ranked teams Tuesday night, it was:
No. 2 Kentucky 74, No. 12 Miss issippi State 56, and No. 23 Michigan
83, No. 21 Illinois 68.
Twelve games were postponed
Tuesday night because of the blizzard
that struck the East~ including topranked Massachusetts at St. Joseph's
and No. 6 Georgetown at Pittsburgh.
Both of those games were rescheduled for tonight.
Kirk King added a career-high 20
points for UConn (13-1 , 5-0), which
used tenacious defense to key a brilliant transition game and shut down
Kittles for most of the game. ,
King had 12 points in the second'
half and finished 9-for-9 from the
field, the best performance by a
Connecticut player in ll Big East
game. "This is by fill' the biggest game
of my career, of my whole entire

•.

life," King said. ''I never felt this way
after a game."
Connecticut, which led by as
much as 61-43, nearly let Villanova
(12-2, 4-1) back in it. 1be Wildcats
were within six points six times in the
final five min~tes, the last at 79-73
after a lay11p by Zeffy Penn With 17
· seconds remaining . .·
But the Huskies kept their p~ise
down the stretch by milking the
clock, maintaining their pressure
defense and making free throws to .
extend their winning streak to 12
games.
Kittles, who was held to six points
in the first half, came to life late in the
game and finished with ·19 points,
including the last of his three three:
pointers that cut it to 75-68 with I :07
remaining.
· But with Allen' and two of his
teammates sharing the responsibility
of guarding Kittles throughout the
game, most of Villanova's heroics
were left to center Jason Lawson,
who finished with 22 points on I0for-11 ·shooting.
"lbey just hll\1 a good team effort
defensively,'' Kittles said. "They
pusbed us real hard on the perimeter.
1didn't get the open looks that I usually get, and the ones that I did, I didn't knock them down."
·
The game was postponed one day
because of the winter storm that
buried·much of the East coast.
UConn made it worth the wait for ·

the sellout Gampel Pavilion crowd of
8,241 that included Gov. Johit- G.
Rowland
197\1 Villanova graduate - and dozens of student ticl!:etholders who camped out in blizzard
conditions for the best seats in the
house.
No. 2 Kentucky'74 .
~
No. 12 Mlssisiii.Ppi St. 56
Derek Anderson hid nine points in
a game-turning 15-0 run as the Wildcats (12-1. 3-0 Southeastern Conferenc,e) won their II th straight. . 1be
Bulldogs (10-2, 2-1) had pulled within 41-38 early in the second half
when Anderson had two three-pointers and a three-point play in the
deciding three-minute run. Antoine
Wal.ker led visiting Kent\ccky with 16
points, while Anderson l)ad 12. Darryl Wilson had 19 points and Erick
Dampier added 14 f6r tbe Bulldogs,
who had won six straight.
· No. 23 Michigan 83
No. 21 Winols 68
Maurice Taylor scored 15 of his
17 points in the second ·half and the
Wolverines (12-4, 2-1) rallied to beat
the Fighting Illini ( 11-4), who are off
to their first 0-3 Big Ten start since
1975. It was Michigan's ninth straight
win over Illinois and 12th in the lyt
14 meetings. Robert Traylor, the
315-pound freshman, hit three
straight baskets to give Michigan a
73-56 lead with 5:25 remaining. He
finished with 18 points. Kevin Turner had 16 points for visiting Illinois.
which was·outrebounrjed 45-33.

-a

Scoreboard
Basketball

Far West

Gtlllld C111yon 78, CS Nordvidgc 67
S. Utah 68, Colo.• Colo. Sprinp 40
Sl. IIIII)'' I, C.l. 88, Cal Poly·Sl.O 68

'..

• NBA standings

Ohio men's
college scores

EASfERN CONFERENCE

ldm

AdanllcDIYIJion
L

.w

.ra. a

Orlondo .................. 26 7 .7118
New York ... ,.......... 21 10 .6T1
Miamf ............... ., .. J6 · 1:5 .516
w-.hiJJBion ............. l6

BOJ!OO .. J................. Il
New Ieney ............ 12·

9
9.5

Mld-Obio Conference

Mount· Vernon Nlll.&lt;Rile 92, Urbana

I

lndiaaa ................ /.. 19 ll
CLEVELAND ....... I8 13
Dm&gt;it .. ,................. l6 ll
Owloru: ................ l6 17
Atlaota ................... IS 17
Milwauka: ............. l2 . 20

!

9.5
10
12 .
.485
13 •
.469 . IJS .
.l'U· \ 16.5

Ohio
Athletic Conference
John Catroll61 , HcidclbctJ 44

~:1..... . . . . . ....~

It·9

.~

San Antonio .......,... 21
.700
Utob 22... ............... II .M7
1.5
Oenver........... .. :...... l4 19 .424
Dollu .................. c.. 9 23 .281
Minnesora ...............8 24 .250

VIIKOUVCI'• ........ :.....6 27

.182

7 !.:A. J.al&lt;en ............ IR
1 .GcldcnSCate .......... ll

17
18
i , Poitl...r .. :.............,15 18
I Phoeoli~ .................. ll 17
• L,A. Cloi'J""' ........ .I4 20
'·

~

I
'

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'

I
I

•

2.5
6.5
8.5
8.l
9
10

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlanlk Dlvldon

Illll

Wuhinaron al Philadelphia, 7:30 1
'·· ! •p.m.
~-v-:i-~ ~
., , •
SeMtle .. Chicilo.' p.o\.
1
;
~•
CLEV~D · ··~· A~OrJiO. 8:30

12J
'105
IOl
Wuhiaaton ........ l9 17 4 42 Ill 104
11unpo8ay ........ l717 7 41 119 142
Newlenc) ........ 18 19 4 &lt;40 100 104
N.Y. lolanclen .... IOZZ 8 28' 115 150

llen•eui v_...,.,

, 1 ••

.!

I.

·'

Ortawa ....,............. 831 I

»: L I
Detroit.. ......... ... 28 9 )

1'11.111

10 p.m.

Oticaao ....... .. ..... ZI 14
Toronio ....... .......21 14
St. Louis ............ 18 18
Winoipeg ........... l8 2D
OniiDS ....... ~ ........ II 19

DeuoilatCharlotle, 7:30p.m.
, ' 1
Milwa11kce At Indiana. 7::\"0.p.m.
• :'
M'lnne•ota a1 L.A. Clippen. 10:30
~ f p.m.
~
PhoeniJ.IK Go~ Slate, 10: ~0 p.m.

tJ

,

CaiJII')' ....... ....... IJ

a

are

34 112 169

•

20 120 18l

Colorado J, Boston 0
New Jcney 4, StLouis 2
C)li~o J. N.Y. hr.Mml (tie)
Anaberm 2. Philadelphia 2 (lie}
Htutford s, Edmonton I

.. Roloat Mor·

, 'Iii S9
)
Fonlhum 76. Flliofi&lt;lol62
Oeoqc Wubin&amp;ton 87. St. BonAven1urer78

i

.

,
~-

·'

'

'

'

A..r.;m,. Bolloo,7:l0p.m.
'l'....,ootN.Y.Ialoan.1:30p.m.
Sao ..... Now ;,;,.y, 7:~.111.
St. t.ia "!r"i' . · \.WL 7~ . p.m.
~~~~~
7:30p.m.

Oniw•• .. ......

T1 .111 '·,i'JC 11011 s

.4.-....

Rely On Us For
Co111plete Coverage Of Your
favorJte Sport oft~ led,m ·
.

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_:

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.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
..

,.

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&lt;

~

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·
On Tuesday, ho!~ver, Earnhardt
, N.C. (AP)- Forget said he concedes nothing to the next
~all that
about 'The Intimidator .generation of drivers and that he still
~
ng 'The Retiree. Dale Earn- has a •trong desire to compete and
t's not going anywhere. .
win a record eighth Winston Cupdri·
"As far as . being fired up and ving title.
'wanting to win, the fire's growing
"I haven't gotten complacent to
~bigger every year. It hasn'tgotten any where I just want to be there or I'm
!smaller," Earnhardt sai4l'uesday in just there for the money or because
4jrnnouncing he has agreea"to a con- we've won seven championships,"
~iract extension that will keep him dri- he said. "I want to win it again."
~ing on the Winston Cup circuit
Earnhardt said he conti11ues to
. ~ugh 2000.
·
view ownership Qf a Winston Cup .
Several factors· had combined to team as full-time prospect when he
uel talk that Earnhardt might be eventually retires from driving. For
· inking about making a transition the near fut11re. !hough, he plans to
from a Winston Cup driver to a enterOIIIy a "very select" number of
owner in the series.
. Winston Cup races as a car owner.
or slarten. there was the matter 11lc maiD reason for th•t~ he said, is
f his cootract with Welcome-~· competition. ·
"As far as. owning my own Jearn,''
chard Childres.s Racing. It was aet
~ e~piR 11 die end of th,e 1996 sea- lie said, "l'nrnot sure that I want to
~·
.
race agaiiiJt J.TIY own team."
t;j Then the~ was the museum, gift . Childress got more than a com. • p and racing complex Earnhardt '. mitment from Earnlu!fdt on Tuesday
af building in Mooresville. Part of the for another four years. GM Goodi!ity is being cOnstructed to hou11e WJ'CI!Ch Service, which since 1987
, ·race team. .
·.
has been the,primacy sponsor of the
And there also w45 the changing-" Chevrolet&amp; fieldqll by Childress,
If-the-guard ~cenar_i.o, Earnhardt, ;' announced it ~lso has agreed to
'WhO turns 4!1 ·In Apnl, hid to lhlre extend tts.barck1ng ~gh the 2000
liuch of the spotlight 1111 yw with. · season. ·
' · • ·.
Jlrong perfonnances from several .
"To have this combination for
Jiiins driven, iiiCiudina 24-year-OIIr · another four years is very exciting,"
....nston Cup champiQRieffGordon. Childress said.
·

r·

. -

1 1'11und8y'•pmes

:on Winston Cup ,
lcircuit through 200

sons plus five games in 198.8, com'
piling a 61-57 regular-season record.
The only active coaches who have
been with their teams longer are New
Orleans' Jim Mora and Buffal&lt;!'s
Marv Levy.
Among Detroit coaches, only

.

.

George Wihon coached the L10111 ·•
longer (1957-64). Fontes already t.
coached Detroit for more games 111M1 .
to more wins !han any previ0111 .
coach. He has guided the Lions to
two division titles, four playoff berths
and the NF&lt;;: title game in 1991.

1

Friri~

The~

feated Wellston last
evening. Eagles at noon this Saturday.
The Nlarauders defeated the Golden Marauders had several players IH,,
Rockets 82-74.
with the Hu when the game was sup- ·
Despile the loss, Wellston is cur- · posed to have been played last Thull- ,
rently ranked eighth in the sUite in day, so the game was moved to this;
Division 111. Meig• is 5-3 overall and weekend.
t
own a 4-1 mark in the Tri-Valley
Monday's gaine at Trimble was f
Conference's Ohio Division, good also postponed because of the weadl- '
enough for a first-place tie with er. No make-up date has beell ,
Wellston. The next Marauder contest announced. These Marauders own
is next Tuesday at Southern.
3-6 record overall and a 3-4 record i11 1
1
In girls' action, the Marauders will the Ohio Division.
travel to Belpre to play the Golden

a;

.-~~------------------------------------------------,
eWtt Tum Orum, and Roto,.,
e Th~ Guar'lfntHti-Lowtt,t Prlt;tt"
• Llftttlm~ Warntntltt,

• Thtt 8~,t Nam~ 6rand,
at tM Pe!!-t pric:e5

Of\

e Frttt~ TtttJtlng

• Part" E11pretJtJ
we don't h•ve it , we'll

if

~et

P•tUrle~.

it for you fa,.t

109

Caatrol 10W30,
10W40,5W30
or20W50
Motor Oil

Pennzoil 10VV30,
10W40 or 5W30
Motor Oil

Fri.AII
on Filter

2for

[JJ '

Fram Oil
Filters
Limit

2 -for

994

fPJ

AC Delco
Ro5i5tor
Spark PIU\35

AC Delco
Oil FiiUI'5

#7918

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Limit. 16

AC Delco

Gu'm out
Fuel Injector
Cleaner

1

Spark

limit 12

229

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Autolite
Reaistor
PIU{l5

Filters/Chemicals
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99~

109

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-, ~M~,

5tart.er!i, atternat.ora,

cor~trol mo&amp;otul~. ~"~

Limit 12

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ma5t parte

Umit 2

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Limit 16

Winter

1
Gary Pla5tice
Snowl&gt;room

Scraper
#3012B

5.97e•le price
- 1.50 mfr'e rol&gt;•~

'.,

4!?.,

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1

Gar:y Plastic•
Winter Wizard

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,.

.(

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22

:I

97 ~:~~~omo~n

Kenco Contour
Wrap Bug
Shiold5

Saddlo~lanket

Seat Covore

Limit 4

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'
• I

I

Actron

Perfaction
Universal
Choke Kite

Pitt Penn
Do· leer

Sunpro
Mini Tach

#4001

#804510

#CP7!l06

Cobl&gt;e Terry
stol,;~

Wheel

Covere

a

88

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Radiatol'5

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72month

Champion Sui&gt;

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Bat~rlee

Du.~l Termin~~l

kterte.

Prl&lt;:• toad with - ··

209 Upper River Road

446-3807
Radiator

l'f'lli

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Ho~eor

Fan 6/llt•

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'.

.

'' 'l

afterr~b•te

Sierra Antifreeze

#61tl

~

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',

1 ·;~

:

.

Florido II·CoIondo, 9 P·l!'·
Honfatd II CaiJIIY, ••lOp.m.

BOB PRUETT

~Eiy·JOE.MACENKA

Tonipt'opmes

V-Y&lt;1DI lito-', 7:30p.m.
Sao Jo.. o~ . N . Y . llonJ"1. ,7:30p.m.
Los ~nat~" TD~~&gt;!IO&gt;· 7:30p.m.
Detrort"al.f.tDKu.• 8~ P·l!'·

,aun:arq '! Wut~pea,.l:lO p.m.

most of the defense back from the
squad that lost 22-20 to Montana in
the 1995 title game. A key graduation
loss is Chris Parker, the Southern
Conference's career leading rusher.
Pruett was hired by Florida coach
Steve Spurrier as defensive coordinator in 1994 after serving as defensive coordinator at Tulane in 1992
and 1993 and defensive backs coaeh
at Mississippi in 1990 and 1991 and ·
at Wake Forest from 1983 to 1989.
He helped the Gators 'to a 12-1
record and a Fiesta Bowl berth on
Jan. 2, where it Iosito Nebraska for
the national title.

Meigs County cagers announce make-up dates

~ Earhha~dt to rema.in

,.

Tuesday's scores

Bolcon Collett 72. Moue Dame 57
C.MctieUI (J, Villanova 73
Di~ki-7J

89

ll 1% 125

22 7 ll 119 137

s..Jooe ...............8 29

Etiit
Foiolcip

59 llO

1 49 133 118
S 41 108 109
J 39 149 Ill
9 31 104 128

Edmonton ...\...... 1423 6

.

'

CaU 992-6839

•Meigs Marauders
•Eastern Eagles
•Southern.TornadoeS

fll. lif ii&amp;

hdlleDI.-,

t, ).1men s scores
1

I") 9!1 160

C&lt;!londo.: ......... ZJ ll 6 52 164 117
LosAnae~ ....... l616 1.0 42 14~ 137
v........ ......... I416IO· Js llD 144 ·
Anaheim ...........is ~J l Jl 124 1.42

L~ (NCAA
DlviSiop I
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9

playoffs-or-else ultimatum after the · son. This year, there was no change
Lions fell to 3-6. The team tben won in Fontes' status.
seven straight and made the playoffs;
"His contract never came up. It
it wa$ generally believed that was WJ!S a non-issue," Ford said. "We disenough to save Fontes' job:
cussed the coaching staff, players, the
But the calls for his firing were whole nine yards."
Fortes, 56, has coached seven.searenewed following an embarrassing
58-37 first-round playoff loss to
Philadelphia. It was the third straighl
time the Lions bad been knocked out
Make-up dates have been set for
oft~ playoffs in the first round.
. games that 'have been postpone'd
because of the recent snowstorm .
. Last year, Ford squelched specuCoach Jeff Skinner and the Meigs
lation that Fontes' job was in jeopMarauders will travel to Wahama on
ardy by giving him a two-year con- Saturday, Jan. 20, Jo make up Jhe
tract extension through the 1997 seagame that was postponed from last
Salurday.
Meigs will then host the Miller
Falcons on Saturday, Jan. 27. That
game was postponed Tuesday.
The Marauders are coming off an
impressive win over previously unde'

t

WESTERN CONFERENCE
c.ninl-

1

•

...,

128
130
39 123 ll2
Booton................ l6 16 6 31 Ill 1&lt;40
Honfonl ............. l4 22 5 JJ 104 130

l, ; _ All~a at TOI'CiniO. 7 p.m.

!.

For More Informatiora .

forward, to Mlchipn ar the IHL '

57 2112
-~~~42 1:15

'nalan!laY'• ....... '

l '

At6:00p.&amp;

Piud•n&amp;h ..........2711 l
MCIIlU&lt;OI ............ 19I8 I
Bufralo ............... l8 19 l

·j .I ' p....Miami" Ponland, 10 p.m.

l ·1

.W L I Ell. lif ii&amp;

N.Y. Rangcn ..... 2611 7 59. 161
Florida ............... 27 12 2 5&lt;i 144
·l'biltdc:IJlllia ....... ZJ II 8 54 148

·Tonl&amp;ht's ......

'1

(AP)

DAU.Ali stARS: Sent lac Bo)"'·

MBGS CO. /CARATE QUI
WIU START
WIIITEI QUAITE#f.
IEGIIIIIIIIG CUSSES
ON JANUARY lll'H
AT CARLETON SOIOOL
IN SYIACII$E

Best Wishes To AII ·Our
Meigs County
WU.ter Sports Programs

Wilmln&amp;lon 82, Hanover 66

sm-.;:.. -.7;30l:Om.
;,'..' ',·1 '' ·NewYod'.IINcwJalcy,
71. p.m.
~•

.

GE1TING BY- Kentucky forwant Roa Merter (right) dri•es
put Mississippi State forward
Dontae Jones In abe lint half of
Tuesday nlabt's SEC 1ame in
· Stark.We, Miss;; wbere tbe visiting
WUdcats won 74-56 to re11111in
undefeated in conf,rence play.

.

Non-conference play

Atluca 104, S&amp;iwneoto 88
San AniOnio 88, H9'11ton 82
Sealtle.91, MilwMika:92
...... 91, Dallal 84
L.A. CIII'J""' 105, Phoool• 100
!;.A. J.al&lt;eni06.Mi-104
Goldm Stue ·I()I). Vancouver IOl

1

·,

MuWnJom 14, Hinam .53
Ollio NOI1hcrn 69: Otlcrbcin 64

Shaw~ee Sl. 94, RJOORANDE 60
Urbana 76. Tiffin 6S

Orlando 92, New Jenc~ 84

•

Aaivated .Stcve Rucc.h.ia, ~.from injwed

ncr-~a«ue comractt.

-..60

9.3
14
1.5
11.!5

Tuesday'ucor"'

"'• , {
1

· Several members of the Dallas
Cowboys noted Tuesday their former
coach would definitely have a quick:
impact if hired by the Dolphins.
~·Whatever his name is. Haagen
Daz (Huizenga) ... . I hope he is not a
&lt;;ontrol freak, because if he is, Jim~ller.
my won 'I have that job long," said
"I think D;m Marino is a great tackle Nate Newton.
player, and I think that's a plus,"
If Johnson does get the job, runJohnson told the Sun-Sentint:l of ning back Emmitt Smith has a warnFort Lauderdale fortoday's editions. ing;
-&gt;
He indicated he wouldn't plan to
"Total shakedown. Total shaketrade Marino, a sure bet for the Hall down. I mean he'• goirig to trim the
:Or Fame.
fat and make some muscle out of
: "When you have a player of Dan their squad."
·
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said:
;tdarino's t;aliber, you sometimes fall
into a trap of letting him try to win "I think it would be great for him to
the game·for you all the time," John- get back in the NFL."
•on said. "You have tq have a win- · The eventual coach must •till
ning football team. My experience is determine how long Marino will be
ihat you have to have. the special with the team.
.learns and defense to be a good team.
Marino has one year remaining on
l "That's how I felt about Troy Aik- his contract. His agent, Marvin
inan and Emmitt Smith in Dallas. Demoff, and the Dolphins hit a snag
lbey're great players. But if they're in negoliations this season over an
out, you have to be good enough to extension. Demoff wanted more
win anyways."
. money and greater guarantees than
. . Johns01uays the Dolphins' prob- offered by the Dolphins, who real:; !em with dissension "without ques- soned that they couldn'-t give Mari: tion, has to be dealt with."
no the money and still put a good
:··
"I wouldn't anticipate that being team around him. ·
~ a problem,'' Johnson said Tuesday
Johnson said he didn'tthink mon~~ from his home in tbe Keys.
ey would be an issue between him
..• The former coach of the Dallas and lhe Dolphins. He has coveted the
Cowboys and Miami Hurricanes said job for many yean, turning down a
,• be and Dolphins owner H. Wayne S5 ,million per year offer from
.; Huizenga had been in conUtct, would Philadelphia in 1994.
:= meet soon and would like to work
"That's really not a major factor
~ something out this week. Huizenga in this," Johnson said. "I know
reportedly had the flu Tuesday.
about what people
talking about."
~ . Johnson will be in Dallas this
However, he did tell The Dallas
i weekend as an analyst for Fox tele- Morning News he plans to talk again
'·vision at the NFC Championship with lhe Tampa Bay Buccaneers.,..Game between Green Bay and thci after meeting with Dolphin~ repl'e·
=:, cowboys, his fanner team. Dallas · sentatives. Florida coach Steve
would be an ironic backdrop to • Spurrier turned down an offer from
,.. announce the new job, i:tfisidering the Bucs on Tuesday.
~ the clash with Cowboys owner Jerry
John110n said he has told Tampa ·
• JD~~Cs that forced Johnson to leave Bay thai if they need to make an
~ ~fter winning back-to-back NFL immedjatc move. they should go
~utles. .
,
ahead. ' .

Mid-Ohio CoDference

Charlone 92. Toronto 91
New YocJt 98, Bolton 93

•

67

AN=
ill~~'DirKs:
........
Hockey

Mount Union 88, Baldwm-WaiiiiCC!

Ohio Domimcan 62, Mount Vernon

.ll4
.455
.455
.433
.412

:

1

Iii

Pacific Division
. Seanle .................... 23 9 .719
; . Smcramento ............ l9 ·10 .655

I

,

MJdwaa,Oivlalon

.'

PHILADELPHIA PHIU.IES: Ag=d

die Ep1teia director of baseball qpcratioas, PrisCilla Oppenheimer diredor of
mlDDr-leq:ue operati0111, aDd Rene M0111
mi1tant director of ICOIIIi•a and pl1yft
:tevelopment. Ap-eed to tenn1 with Rob
Murphy and.Scort Lewis. pitebers. oa mi-

Ohio women's
college scores

j T=~~~:~~~o
1

Placed Rudolph Chikireu, JUard, on the
Injured lilt

train ins.

SANbiEOO PADRES: Named Ed·

..194
.581
.ll6

-.lion

with Fontes and their meeting Tuesday was simply J1f2Cedural.
F?r the seclJ!id straight year,
DetrOit got off10 a disappointing stan
and made a stiong run down the
stretch to save Flintes' job. But Ford
hinted Tuesday that the Lions will
need something better than a strong
regular-season finish next season if
Fontes is to remain.
"We've got to be a force in the
playoffS; and we. haven't been," Ford
said.
Many fans and media members
already were calling for Fontes' dismissal when Ford issued a make-the-

MIAMI (AP) - Jimmy Johnson
wllnts NFL record-setting quarterbai:k Dan Marino to stay right where
he is if·Johnson decides to coach the
Miami Dolphins. But Johnson warns
that teams can get too dependent on
a superstar like the Dolphins' signal

Dale, pilchen. Agreed 10 tenn1 with Mite

PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZF.RS :

you should never be satisfied ."
Pruett will have an annual base
salary of $70,000 a year plus incentives that C(\Uid equal another
$30,000. He also will receive income
from a package that includes a radio
and television show, although Moon
did not say how much that would be.
Moon said Pruett's total income
wouldn't match that of Donnan, who
reportedly received more than
$200,000 a year. But he said the
package would be comparable with
what many 1-A coaches make .
·
Pruett inherits a veteran team. with
quarterback: Chad Pennington and

~ohnson wants Marino to stay
1jf he is to take . Dolphins.,~_re,ns

Oalleao. infielder, on a one--year conlrDCI.

Notlonol Bo-looU

~

Pruett, 52, is a fonner Marshall
tight end and assistant coach. He said
be always dre~~d about returning to

1

land Athlecic1 for Allen Battle, outfielder,
and Brei Wqna, Jay Wituic~ and Cnrl

to tmns with Dave Leiper, pilcber, on a
miDOr-k:Quc coDtracr.

Ohio Dominican 98, Cedanille 80

Central Dl•ldon ' CIUcqo............ ... :..28 l .903

!

PONTIAC. Mich. (AP)- Wayne
Fontes has a lot in common with the
team he coaches. lbey both just keep
;;ooming back.
·
" 'The difference is, Fontes s.ur\lives
the playoff disasters. ·
Detroit Lions owner William Clay
' Ford ebded more than a week of
speculation on .the fate of Fontes
;wJie.!( repqrters caught up with him
".Tuesday outside the Silverdome.
' "] didn't fire him and he didn't
quit, so I guess he'll be back," Ford
· said.
:. Fontes was not available for com} ment. Ford said he had mt;t earlier

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Acqui"'d
Todd Stottlemyre, pitcher, "from the Oak·

·Basketball

program."

the Thundeqng Herd.
''I'm a sentimental guy," he said.
Pruett said be isn't worrying yet
about the move to 1-A.
"The first thitlg we 've gotto do is
win games next year and then we'll
let the next year take care of itself,"
he said .
Marshall president J. Wade Gilley
said he wanted someone from a
major national program who had
" solid ~xperience " a good record in
academics ..(lrf'{ \ti.e unqualified
endorsemefit~J:Dead coach."
Said / Pruett: ~·I think until you
hav~ I00 percent graduation rate,

·.Lions .m ust get farther in playoffs if Fontes is to stay

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: De&amp;i&amp;· •
BlUed Otris Hook, pitcher, for alliP.~J~~ent

NollonoiLoo...

Temptc: 13, Xavier 56

19 .406 12.5
19 .387 ll
Philodelphi~ .............6 24
.zoo 18.5

witb Mike Pqli~n~lo and Rene Gonzales,
third basemen, on minor-~ue oontracb.
TORONTO BWE IAYS:·Sent Jimmy Roaen. pitcher, outriJht to Syracuse
of the lntmmtional Leap.

runner-up finishes in 1.987, 1991 ,
1993 a"d 1995. Marshall, a Southern Conference
member, will play in the Mid-American Conference in 19jn. ,
"Bob' has the skills that were
needed for this job, " athletic director
Le~ Moon said. "He coacbed at the
highest level, at the highest competition , to prepare him for this job. He
malehed up witb what we want i~ this

.: TfJough Ford hasn't fired the coach,

: ., ...

CINCINNATI REDS: Acquired Mike
. Kelly, outfielder, from the Alla1ta Braves
for Cbacl Fox, pitcber, and a player to be
.letenninod.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Si&amp;ned Eri4:
Chriuopherson, catcher, to a minCir leaauc contract and iavitc!d him to apri113

Atlantic 16 Conference

4

.soo

16

The Dally Sentinel• P • I
----..........---

The DailySe_nt~~~ ' Pruett named Marshall head football coach

In Top·25 college basketball,
~-

•

Pomeroy·• Middleport, Ohio

.'

�\

ttage 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

VVedneaday,January10,199s ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oblo

.

'

.,_Biakabutuka's planned entry into NFL draft
.

: By HARRY ATKINS
ANN ARBOR. Mich. (AP) -

•.

naro. On defense, tackle Trent
Zenkewicz and end Jason Horn also ·
graduate.
Michigan also will go into spring
drills with some uncertainty at quarterback. If Scott preisbach's thumb is
healed, he will go into spring ball as
the No, I signal-caller. Otherwise,
backup Brian Griese will be under
center.
1
As it turns out, Biakab~lluka may
.
be the easiest to replace. Because he
was injured at times, freshman
Clarence Williams and sophomores
Chris Howard and Chris Floyd all got
plenty of game time.
Wilkinson, Robert Smith; Roger
"Any one of the-players behind.
Harper a,nd Alonzo Spellman.
me is a potential All-~erican,"
All are still playing in the NFL.

also had a year remaining, declared
for the dmft last week.
Coa~h Lloyd Cm also will have
to replace receivers Amani Toomer,
Mercury Hayes and TOdd Richands,
all of whom are gmduating, leaving
the- Wolverines with no proven veterans.
.
The offensive line graduates tight
~ nd Jay Reimersma and Joe Mari-

- The .decision by tailback Tshimanga
· Biakabutuka to e.nter !he NFL draft
leaves Michigan with a lot of questions heading into the 1996 season.
Biakabutuka, who announced
Tuesday he was declaring for April 's
draft, was the second Michigan player to pass up his remaining year of
.eligibility. Tackle Jon Runyan, who

.

·OSU's Glenn expected to announce
: stay-or-be-drafted decision today
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio .(AP) - The
lure of big bucks in pro football is
making it more difficult for colleges
· to persuade underclassmen to stay in
· school, Ohio State president Gordon ·
Gee said.
· • Gee commented tuesJay as wide
' receiver Terry Glenn considered
whether to skip his senior season to
make himself available for the NFL
draft. The league 's deadline for
underclassmen to declare their intentions was today.
"In Terry's instance, I think he
. 'really wants to stay.... When you stan
' getting these sort of dangling temp. tations out there, then it becomes typ' · .ical for someone to sort those out,"
;Gee said. "Ultimately, we have the
responsibility to counsel him and ·
making very certain he gets the very
best counsel he can."
Glenn could not be reached for
-comment Tuesday. There is no tete.:phone listing in his name. He told an
. :Ohio State spokesman· he would
:announce his decision today. Ohio
·State coach John Cooper' was at the·
. American Football Coaches Associ- ation convention in New Orleans.
- Ohio State sports infomation
director Steve Snapp said he had spoken with Glenn.
"He came in today and we chatted briefly," Snapp said Tuesday.
: "He said he'd call me In the morn. ing to set it up."
: . Asked if it seemed as if Glenn had
: made up his mind, Snapp said, "I got
'.the impression he's still really torn,
:that he just from one minute to the
. -:next isn't really sure what he's
·. ~ -doing."
As a 5-foot-11, I 80-pound junior,
; Glenn set Ohio State records with his
:-11 touchdown receptions and I .411
-;yards receiving. He also set school
. marks by catching a touchdown pass
;in nine gaines and gaining at least
. ;tOO receiving yards in seven games.
-. Glenn won the Biletnikoff Award,
: symbolic of the top collegilite receiv: er in the nation.
.
: . Cooper said during Ohio State's
: :Citrus Bowl preparations that no
~:Underclassmen should ever jump Ill :the pros.
. : Ohio State has lost to the piuS sev: ·eral players who had at least or:e year
· of eligibility remaining. A year ago,
: linebackers Lorenzo Styles ahd Craig
::Powell and offensive lineman Korey
::Stringer all left early. Others who
:have done the same include Dan

Biakabutuka said. "I believe I will
• miss Michigan, much more than the ·
team will miss me."
Biakabutuka said his main reason
for leaving school early, against his
· parents' wishes, was money.
"My dad was somewhat disappointed when ·1 told him of my decision," Biakabutuka said. "But he said
I'm a man and he'll be behind me
100 percent."
Carr was in New Orleans for the
American Football Coaches Association convention when Biakabutub
made up his mind. But the coach
released a statement through sports
information director Bruce Madej.
"I wish him well," Carr said. "My·

~

:;:

concern is that he'll finish his degree,
·and I hope he'll do so."
Biakabutulai, who has run ~gh
four languages over three contments,
said he would.
"I don't think I spent three years
at college not to get my degree," he
said. "I'll get it, because I promised
my mother."
Biakabutuka, 21, comes from a
family qf II children. All buttwo older sisters moved almost .15 years ago
from Zaire to Longueuil, Quebec, a
suburb of Montreal, He has noi seen
the two sisters since.
His father, ~Ph.D., teaches at an
Indian reservaUon about a mne-hour
drive'from Montreal. He gets home

only on holidays. Biakabutuka said
· bC' needs the NFL money to help his
mother with the children at home,: and to bring the two sisters to this -:
continent li:onrZaire.
• ,·
Biakabutuka became just thi: sec-••
ond player in Michigan history to. · ·
rush for more than 300 yards in a , &gt;
game when he closed out the regular : . season with a career-high 313 yard~ : -·
and ~ touchdown in !he Wolverines' : -.
31-23 upset of then-No. 2 Ohio · :State.
·•
The Wolverines closed out the . · .
season with a 22-20 loss to Texas :;.
A&amp;M in the Alarno Bowl. In that · :
game, Biakabutuka had 24 carries for . ·
94 yards.

WIN A90 SECOND

•

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PINTO BEANS
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results

(Results as of ~- 27)
League - Early Wednesday '

~: Mixed

i (684)

•:·

Men

~

~ 189)

'

-·-·-Dec.

~:

.

~.;,

' ~ape-

(Results as of

21)

Thursday Nite Mixed

::.uague

::! • Teem standings '-- Towboaters
~(I),

Midnjte. ,s ,triFke,rs (6), Mack's
~&lt;;arels {S), M'"Jey'll Re~ycling (2),
'I Lethal Enforcers (4) and Team 3.
"i. •, ·,1'-m hlp ~erieS - Towboaters
~ &lt;IWl

;,

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LB.

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,

Individual high series - Russ
'::Carson (545) and Roger Capenter
:;:(540)
~
Individual high game - Carson
~ (203); Carpenter &amp; Larry Morgan
~ .(both 195)
,.
Women
:_.: Individual high series - Mar~. garet Eynon (533) and Pat Carson
::(512)
.
'' Individual high game - Eynon
~:{ 190); Pat Carson &amp;· Eynon (both

Ann
Landers

DearAnn Landers: ~an you stand
another response to "Depressed Old
Prof in New .Orleans"? He said
today's colleges are run like businesses and put the bottom line before
education. He was absolutely right.
Are college students being taught
to_think, or are they memorizing facts
the mght before an exam, regurgitating !heir new "knowledge" for !he test

(
79

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By LEE SHEPHERD
Blnghllmton Newe and Free Pre1a
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. - "Give
me some skin, man. ''
Say that to cell biologist Robert G.
Van Buskirk and .he's likely to give
you more than a handshake.
He's likely to show you a sample
!If the synthetic human sldn he de veloped- a product that's on its way
to obliterating the need for laboratory animals in pharmaceutical cosmetic testing.
He's also developed a sophisticated pr~edure and accompanying
device that can assess chemical damage to cells without using animals,
' and a new solution that may keep
: organs fresher longer for transplant.
' ' For his "outstanding contributions to the advancement of altemalive methods (to using animals) in
biomedical research, testing or higher education," !he Humane Society of
the United States late last year awarded Van Buskirk the Russell and
Burch Award.
While not an ·extreme animal
rights advocate, Van Buskirk is nevenheless an avid animal lover.
An associate professor of biology
at Binghamton (N.Y.) University, he
isn 't against using animals formedical research if there are no alternalives, but he'd rather there were other choices.
He and his wife, Jean, have O'Mied
as many as seven.dogs at once. They
. now care for a diabetic pooch who
needs regular glucose testing and
'insulin s~ots. He'd once considered
' becomiltg a veterinarian, but already
had discovered the joy of teaching
biology.
.
.
But Van Buskirk never qu1te gave
up the quest to protect animals·
through sci~nce.
'
.
Serendipity- molded a substantial
part of Van Buskirk's scientific
career. Within the first year of his
atTi~al at ~U in the mid-'80s, he ·
. received h1_s first. grant from the
Johns Hopkms Umversity Center for

By TOM HUNTER

Good thru 1/13/81

q-(677) .

What wotTies me mpst is the
One thing is ~rtain. A college
pressure on the faculty to dumb education is essential unless you're a
down !heir courses to keep the cus- genius like Bill Gates of Miirosoft,
tomers happy. -- ANGRY OLD who quit Harvard after a short time
PROF IN BOSTON
because he "couldn't learn anything
DEAR BOSTON : I heard from oth- there. "
er Old Profs in Boston, as well as
Dear Ann Landers: I've been datYoung Profs in Lansing, Mich., ing "Matt" for three months and have
Madison, Wis., and New Haven, never bc;en treated so well. He doesConn. (no jokes from Yalies) and at n't hide anything and even lets me
Northwestern, Fordham, Southern answer his phone. We've decided to
Methodist (Dallas), Connecticut Col- take things slow for now.
lege, Wharton in Philadelphia and
Here's the problem: Matt has a
Notre Dame.
friend, "Sally," who is going through
Some agreed with your assess- some hard times and can't afford her
ment. Others said their schools were own place. Matt has agreed to let he1
raising the standards because there is stay. in his apartment, imd they will
so much competition to get in any- split the rent.
place these days.
I've told Matt if Sally moves in,

and forgetting it two days later?
Untenured professors are too busy
publishing articles in more than
70,000 journals that nobody reads
and, for !he most pan, contribute very
littlr to the understanding of the current scene. If they entertain their students and make exams easy by asking multiple-guess, flipthecoin questions, they will be armed with the
appropriate percentage of high student evaluations, which are essential
for tenure.
Meanwhile, bloated administrations spend much of their time and
money preparing publicity to dress
the windows for unwitting freshman
applicants and their parents, which
adds up to the greatAmerican rip-off.

'·

I

'

.,

'

e.,man•a ·Foodlancl Quality 1nd Savlnga... Now With a Loclllona... ~ Your Convenltneel
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Alternatives to Animal Testing.
Under the grant, he atTanged to
conduct research that summer at a
Massachusetts biotechnology firm,
Millipore Corp. To his delight, company officials offered to huild an
instrument specifically designed for
the test system he was developing .
Within a few months, they had
comeupwithtl¥lCytoFiuor2300nuorescent plate reader, which could
measure what happened to cells during a toxic insult. The device became
the company's top seller, used in
more than 500~aboratories worldwide. ,
,.
During his • ond and third summer at 'Millipore, Van Buskirk sueceeded in building from single cells
a synthetic human skin, a living facsimile to be used as an animal alternative for product safety testing.
A second company, MatTek Corporation of Ashland, Mass., spansored the product and has since sold
the engineered skin to more than half
of the major cosmetic and pharmace utical companies in the United
States.
The engineere4 skin and CytoFluor are designed to work together,
making the products more marketable
than each would be alone, Van
Buskirk said.
The neJ&lt;t phase of Van Buskirk's
quest wall to find a chemical solution
in which to store the engineered tissues for extended periods of time in
a state of suspended animation.
Van Buskirk tested HypoTher- .
mosol, a blood-substitute developed'
for low-temperature surgery by Cryomedical Sciences of Rockville, Md.,
and found it would preserve the
engineered skin for more than a
·week.
Using tecl\niques perfected for the
CytoFiuor, he 's discovered that
HypoThemosoi is several times better than cUtTently used solutions for
storing aqd shipping human organs. .
The time between organ donation and
transplantation could be extended to
days, even a week.

. ..

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

-

• Page 7

DEAR MASPETH: I don 't think
you're mixed up at all. You ~und I 00
percent on target. Tell Matt he's
pushing the envelope. No female
roommate. Period.
What can you give the per•on who
has everything? Ann Lander• ' bookItt. "Gems," is idea/for a nights/and
or coffee table. "Gems" is a collection
of Ann Landen' most requestea
poem~ and essay•. Send a se/faddressed, long, businesssize envtlope
and a check or money order for $5.25
(this includes postage and handling)
to: Gems, c/o Ann Landers, PO. Box
11562, Chicago, Ill. 606/10567, (In
Canada, send $6.25:)

The Community Calendar is·
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishiog to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type;
Items are printed as space pennits
and cannot be guaranteed to run
specific number of days.
•
WEDNESDAY
RACINE-- Southern Local Build;
ing Committee meeting 5:30p.m . ai
the high school. All di•trici residents
urged to attend.

a

THURSDAY
•
CHESTER -- Shade River l:.odg&lt;!
453 F&amp;AM regular meeting Thurs'
day, 7:30p.m. at the lodge hall. Wo.j
in E.A. and F.C. degrees. Refresh;
ments.
:·
POMEROY - Eagle Aerie 2111;
district meeting, 5:30 p.m Saturday
with dinner toi follow.
·

News policy
Rossi clears a path with a snow blower in
front of a tropical mural on the side of Brandy's
Tanning Selin In Pique. According to Peg
Brendln, owner of the salon, the men whom she

said everyone knows simply as "Rossi" "was
trying to help us clear the beeches." (AP Photo)

;AJ.ook at the best movies on TV
this weekend, Jan. 12, 13,14
.

-'

By JACK GARNER
Gennett.News Service

,
As we tum the pages back to January II, 1956, The Daily Sentinel
recounted the tragic January 5, 1916
sinking of the steamboat "Kanawha"
near Little Hocking which claimed
ten lives. The steamboat, which ran
weekly between Pittsburgh and
Charleston, bashed against a lock
chamber and overturned causing the
, deaths of eight passengers and two
. Racine crewmen, Bert Wolf and
. Lloyq Gee.
Wilbur Beaver of Racine.brought
: the poem written by 1\is late mother
· Mrs. R.M. Beaver into our offices in
:· early I 956 for publication to com. memorate the 40th anniversary of the
:,tragedy. Mrs. Beaver, one of the 25
· : passengers on board the "Kanawha"
: when the boat went down on the
; stonny winter nigbt in 1916 into lhe
: icy Ohio River.
.
:. A passage from Mrs. Beaver's
• poem reads: "Pretty Kanawha, bold
: against wind and wave. On a dark
: night, cold and wet, Steamed forth
: into her waterloo, The results we'll
: ne'er forget."
• . Looking back thirty years ago at
· this week in 1966, construction was
: progressing on the new St. Paul
•Lutheran Church on the comer ·of'
: Second and Sycamore streets in
: pol"eroy.
·
State Department of Transporta-tion District 10 engineer John Dowler ..
willbe~tlwe•l• •lt•/hllltl Co••tle• byi
.announced that $8 million would be
contr~~~:ted for highway construction
..'in Meigs County in 1966, inore than •
.'
_threebeetimes the amoedunt ofhemoney than ·:
fr
,
ltlaJ,
J
..
ni•I'J
12~ 1996
,. had
n contract m t prev10us
:nine years before. The $8 million ill
I. Jt~ekl•
:would be split between bidsfor the •
2,24 1•11 . . POIHfOJ
•
·Route 7 bypass project and !he Route
=33 four lane project.
•
9:00.NOOR
•
: l:feading the marquee at the Meigs .• ·.....11.01 Fret HG0-63'4-5265 fer .il~••6de =poiRIIIIIIt. .•
·Theatre was the technicolor drama
1-r
"Shenandoah", starring James Stow- • · ".till flits
h giYII by a llctlltll Hlllilg Aid Sp1dllst •
an.-Adniission at·lhe Meigs Theatre ...~riYone who hal'\fouble hearing« undel!ltandlng-colwersation.is Invited to •
wu .75" and .40." .
•.have a FREE hea~ng test to see if this problem car1. ~ he!~. Bring thiS •
Jn !he sports spotlight 25 years ago .. CQUPOII wtth you tor your FREE HEARING TEST. a $75.00 value.
• ·
this week, Eastern's three-year, 24
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SVAC winning streatc ~nded •
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with a 82-78 home ioss to North Gal- •
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WALK-3f8 WELCOME
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aunc:

it's over between us. He says I don't
lo~e him if I would break up over
thts. Also, he is hurt that I don't trust
him. I feel that Sally is not his responsibility and that she. should find
another solution to her rent problem.
I think there is a line that should
be drawn here. If she needed an
escort to a pany, I would encourage
him to go with. her. But I can't tolerate !hem sharing an apartment. There
are two important facts I )eft out (I)
I'm not sure these two have always
been "just friends," and (2) I have
been hurt before by an exboyfriend
who did the "just friends" number.
I need your help. -- MIXED UP
IN MASPETH, N.Y.

Clearing the beaches--- Community
calendar

If you like to watch movies in
bunches all wrapped around a single
theme - or performer - this is the
weekend for you. The various 1V
channels have double and triple features galore.
There are Neil Simon films,
William Shakespeare films, a trashy
string of "Friday the 13th" movies,
a Kevin Costner triple-header, two
Lillian Gish silent classics, and, in a
games during the 1970-71 season, as strange bit of perversity, a TNT
they eventually finished the season parade of films about handicaps and
with a 17-4 record and claimed defomities.
shares of the Mid Ohio Valley and
Starling off the weekend of miniSouthern Valley Athletic Conference fests are six, count 'em, six Edward
championships. Eastern's season end- G. Robinson ·flicks, Friday on Turned with a return visit to the Class "A" er Cla5sic Movies.
District Tournament in Chillicothe,
The Robinson extravaganza starts
where they were defeated by with his most famous gangster film,
Crooksville in the District Final, 64- "_Little Caesar" (j930), a cornerstone
56. ,
of the Warner Bros. mob movie colCoach Bill Phillips' Eagles were - lection. lt's on TCM at 7 p.m. Friday.
led that year by the starting five of6Robinson 's famous portrayal of
3 junior center Dennis Eichinger, 5- Rocco will be followed, in succes10 senior guard Howie Caldwell, 5- . sion, by "The L.ittle Giant" (1933) at
II senior guard Tom Karr, 6-1 senior 8:30 p.m., "The Last Gangster"
forward Dave Smith, and 5-1 I junior ( 1937) at 10 p.m., "A Slight Case of
forwaro Jim Amsb~~:ry. Other players Murder" .( 1938) at II :30 p.m.,
included Bob Caldwell, Mike Boring, "Brother Orchid" (1940) at I: 15 a.m.
and Bill Benedum.
early Saturday, and "The Amazing
Eichinger would go on to lead,the Dr. Clitterbouse" ( 1938) at 2:50a.m.
Eagles as head coach throughout the early Saturday.
1980's, and is cutTently assistant
TBS, meanwhile, has packaged
. principal at Meigs High School. two of the most successful film
Howie Caldwell is now in his lith comedies from the work of Neil
season as head coach of !he Southern Simon:
boys varsity program. Karr is a pan- "The Goodbye Girl" (1977),
owner o(Wesam Construction Co., in with Richard Dreyfuss' Oscar-winPomeroy. Bob Caldwell is serving as ning portrayal of a struggling actor
superintendant · of Wamn Local who moves into the apartment- and
Schools in Washington County. · heart - of a divorcee (Marsha

In Dr.

POMEROY

The Dally

Professors are to_blame for. fall in quality of college education

Bend Area Reflections

UmH 1 with coupone.

": . Team standings - Tony's Car: :ryout (14-2), Thunder Alley Cats ( 10: :6), F.O.E. 2171 (8-8), Captain D's (8::,.8), D.V. Weber ,Construction (8-8),
... Meigs Golf Course (6-10), R&amp;B
:: Be\l(ls (6•1 0) and Chainsaws &amp; Ros:.:es (4-12).
.
~
Team high series.- Captain D's
;'(1937)
..
f Teem high game- Captain D's

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Synthetic human skin
:developed for lab tests

~Mason Bowling
~League

may hurt Michigan

Vfednesday,January10,1~96

•

•

-

'

Mason) and her daughter. It's at 10:25
p.m. Saturday.
- "Barefoot in the Park" (1967),
the early Simon success about the
· tribulations of newlyweds in New
York. Robert Redford and Jane Fonda co-star.' It's at 12:45 a.m., early
Sunday.
Another fairly successful writer,
Shakespeare, is represented this
weekend by two films on Thrner
Classic Movies:
-"Julius Caesar" (1953), a fine
interpretation of the tragedy of the
Ides of Man:h, with a fascinating portrayal of Marc Antony by Marlon
Branda. James Mason and Jolin Gielgud are among those who lend him
their ears. It's at I a.m. early Sunday.
-"Romeo and Julie't".(l936), an
early Hollywood version of the great
love story, matching Leslie Howard
and Norma Shearer. It's at 3:30a.m.,
early Sunday.
To go from the sublime to the
ridiculous, hotTor fons can jump all
over a "Friday the 13th" slasher
extravaganza, airing on TN[f, starti ng
on Saturday the 13th. "fuday the
13th" (1980) at 10 p.m., will be followed by pans two, three and six.
Kevin Costner is on display,
meanwhile, in three film~ airing Sun-

day on Cinemax. They are:
- · "A Perfect World" (1993),
which features one of Costner's best
perfomances, as a thief on the run
from a relentless cop (Clint Eastwood).
- " Revenge" ( 1990), with Costner as a man who earns the enmity of
a powerful gangster (Anthony Quinn)
hy falling for his lovely young wife
(Madeleine Stowe). It's at 8 p.m.
- " Wyatt Earp" (1994), with
Costner as the famous lawman, in an
overlong western epic: It's at 10:05
p.m.
Fans of classic silent cinema,
meanwhile, won' t want to miss two ,

of the greatest films made by Lillian
Gish qutside the auspices of 1\er mentor, D. W. Griffith. They are:
-'- "The Wind " (1928), an
impressive drama with Gish as a
strong woman, who combats the
challenges of the Dust Bowl, as well
as a bum of a husband. It's at I a.m. ,
early Monday. ·
- "La Boheme" (1926), King
Vidor's film about star-crossed lovers
· in 19th century Paris. Adapted from
the same novel that inspired the
famous opera. It 's at 2:30a.m., early Monday.

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipphs Daily Tnbune and The Daily Senline! will not accept weddings after
60·days from the date of the event:
All club meetings and other news
articles in the society sec tion must be
submitted within 30 days of occurrence. All birthdays must be submitted within 42 days ofthe occurrence.
All material submitted for publication IS subject to editin2.

See
Pickens
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.
:Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.-.
~~Health
.

Wednesday, January 10, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 10, 1991.

professionals say postpartum depression not~unrlatural

-

•••

••
••
!!JIY BARBARA ANDERSON

through it. They were lucky. What
Barnes experienCed is so cOmmon it's
-· ~eno Guette-Journal
,• Te~a Biunes was overjoyed with almost par for the course after child·
•
: the birth of her farst child 14 years . binh.
Up to 85 percent·of women (and
. ago.
some health professionals think that's
B~t the day after she brought
: Maisie home from the hospital, the a conservative number) experience
postpanum blues, the name given to
: tleprcssion hit.
·.
" I cried all the time," Barnes says. a transitory depression that strikes
I was happy or sad, I jusi cried. I from three days to two weeks after
binh and lasts a few days to two
:· guess the honnones just took over."
.. The abruptness of becoming a weeks before departing as suddenly
as it appeared.
: mother also added to her blues.
: . ''I just felt a big shock," says
"It's probably more prevalent
: Barnes, 25, of ~eno, Nev. "Every- than most obstetricians are led to
: lhing in my life changed - every- believe," says Dr. Terrence McGaw,
ihing down to brushing my teeth was a Reno obstetrician. " We just see the
: ·3ifferent."
tip of the iceberg is my guess."
,
But a week after her sadness hit,
The usual hormonal fluctuation
·. it disappeared.
that happens after delivery is believed
: Barnes had heard about postpar- to be involved in the " baby blues,"
: tum depression, or "baby ~lues , " but but it's less clear what role that plays
: no one in her family had gone in a more severe form of postpanum

':·:·u

disuess, called affective postpanum
depression.
Postpartum depression , which can
· last from two weeks to a year. is common in about 30 pen;ent of binhs.
"It's so common that some say
you could consider it the founh
trimester," says Dr. Elisabeth Chan
Small, a Reno psychiatrist "But a
woman may not want to tell any body." .
•
Postpanum depression isn't a new
phenomenon. It's been recognized li1r
centuries, but it's still not listed as :1
separate condition in the medical
.code book of illnesses.
" The _recognition .of illness related to childbirth goes back to the I Kth
century," says Canadian psychiatrist
Shaila Misri. The problem was
thought to be poisons affecting the
brain.
·
" Mental or psychiatric illness

.

associat¢ with anyone is still full of
stigma," says Misri, author of a
book about postpartum depression.
"But when it's associated with a time
when you're supposed" to be happy.
there is even more stigma, more
dcnial. "
Depression during pregnancy has
hccn less studied than postpartum
depression, hut pregnant women can
become depressed, says Elizabeth A.
l.urt, a family nurse practitioner at the
Northern Nevada Medical Group.
Major depression during prcgnancy affects 4 percent tn 112 percent
of women, according to Mtsri .

Luft, who also is a marriage and
family therapist intern at Family
counseling Service of Northern
Nevada Inc., believes more women
would seck help if they knew postpartum depressions arc sig nificant
problems fur many women.

,

It's hard for women to admit
something is amiss when pregnancy
and childbinh are supposed to be
exhilarating and awe-inspiri ng. But
pregnancy and postpartum are times
of change and stress - physiological, psychological and social.
Outside pressures such as laGk of
family support, an unstable relationship with the father and financial
problems can make pregnancy and
postpanum experiences more diffi.
cult, says Judith Peterson, an obstet·
ric-gynecological nurse practitioner
ut Nonhero Nevada Medical Group.
Sometimes hooking a new mo m

up with socia,l services is the best way
to help her, Peterson says·.
With the "baby blues," just cdu·
eating, the mom about the soon-topass condition can relieve her anxicty, Luft says. Postpanum depression,
hdwcvcr, can require mnrc medical

mented on Dec. I with the first home
visit in Morgan County made by OUCOM Nurse Coordinator Lynn
Smith, R.N.
.
. "The prim~ry goal ofthe program
1~ to mcrease tmmumzauon rates and
umehness 10 the zero to two-year-old
a~e ~roup, throug~ - earl1er ~on'!'cl
With tnfants and, thetr mothers, Khne
said. "We.arc very excited to have the
opponumty to offer th1s Important

service to Southeastern Ohio."
The postpartum home visitation
program is funded through an annual immunization plan grant from the
~hio. Dep~ent of Health, lmmuntzauon DIVlston. .
The progriiJll 1s offered to all
mothe.rs 10 the five ~ounties . The OUCOM s Commumty Servtce Prosrn;ms office is worki~g in collaborauon w1th home v1s1t programs

already in existence in some c~tl~tics. and identifies resburccs through vcrThe program involves a nurse bal and written discussions with the
coordinator, who secures permission mother, and make referrals as neccsfrom the mother to visit the .mother sary.
·
and ba~y. in the home. During the , The infant is ~n placed into the
home viSit, a nurs10g assessment of existing recall ·program of OUthe newborn and mother is complet- COM's Childhood Immunization
ed, and educational materials are pro- Program (CHIP) 'program for future
vided. The nurse coordinator also immunizations.
discusses immunizations and their
"Immunizations are an important
imponance in preventing · diseases,

~llcllile

intervention .
11te most severe type of postpar·
tum depression, called postpartum
psychosis, usually required ho~pital·
ization and drug therapy to co!Tect.
Getting help for the mothet is essen·
tial because she may bec.ome delu-·
sional and be a threat to herself and
the infant.
But postpartum psychosis is rare;
less than I percent of women expe·
rience its devastation.
Postpartum psychoses are not
caused by pregnancy, Small says. but
can be precipitated by it. Women
rnost at risk for postpartum psychoses
are those who have a personal or fam-•
iI y history of emotional problems or
psychi atric illness.
.. .
For the vast majority of women ,
the "baby blues" last about a week,
and the suppon of family and friends'
may be all the mother needs. · ·

. J.D. Drilling Co~,.ny .
SAT., JAil. 13, 1996
10:00 A.IL

P.O. Box 587

HOUSEHOLD
Sectional L.A. suite, 2 recliners, RCA XL 100 color
TV, Magnavox remote VCR, 5 pc. wood dineltli
c~ffee tab~. lg. poster bed, twin bed, cedar ~hest:•
G1bson frosHree refrigerator, 30" (brown) electric :.t 1111 11 11111111111111111111 11 111111111111111111111111111111111 1:
.
--..
range, Hot Point washer, G.E. dryer, few dishes, table -- · .
lamp, new set of pots &amp; pans, crock pot, toester,
-~atware, few hand tools, new still in box Century 230
-AMP AC welder, grinder, Remington electric chain •
saw&amp; more.
-GUNS
Marlin 30-30 lever auction rille, model 1200
Winchester pump gun.
.
Farm equipment &amp; vehicle will start
•
.
Hlllng ll12:00 noon.
FARM EQUIPMENT
Ferguson 30 tractor, needs block; Ferguson 30 tractor ::
BULLETIU BOARD DF~DLINE:
;::
for parts, 14" plows, 4 fl. brusl) hog, Ferguson 6 ft. disc, set 14" hillside plows, .tobacco setter, tobacco ::
- 2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PIJBLICATIOtl! ::
press, Wheel Horse 11 h.p. mower, cultiVator, i::om'
planter.
·
DRAFT
HOUSE
VEHICLE
.
.
- Rt. 2, Pt. Pleasant; WV
1992 Dodge D-50, auto., 4 cyl., 59,686 act. mil8s.
304-675-9915
Does have a lillie hail damage.
AuctloRHr'a Note: Be on nmem
' Tonight: KARAOI&lt;E AMERICAN
&amp;
Rtlcords Conte.st
AUCTION CONDUCTED By
7:00

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

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

·---

.

--

Slptic Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.
Reastnallle Rates
Joe N. Sayre
SAYlE TIUCIUIG
614·742·2131

MASON, WV.
773'-5785 or 773-6447
EXECUTOR: STEVE LEE ADKIM$ SA;
TEAMS: C.h or Check_,.,
Not reaponalble tor ace..... or IOaa Of JII'OII*I
' ¥-.

Family
Medicine

.

•

•

c

•

J ..

•

aowling
benefit
set
for
.0~
.
.

.: The second annual bowlathon to
knefitthe Zimmerman Osteopathic
~ream Foundation will be held Sat·Orday, Feb. 17 by the Ohio UniversiC_oll~ge of Osteopathic Medicine
1atrtcs C) ub. .
;
:
. 1, The bowlalhon, ~hicli ,is ~eel·~
~led to begin at 1 p.m. at the Roller1\ilwl Lanes in Athens, .will include
ltc;ulty, staff and student participant .
IL-Jen as well as i_nterested rncm-

cer is in remissloit, was selected for
the trip.
1
Tina Swarm, an OU-COM student
and president of the Pediatrics Club,
d~scrib¢ th¢ foundation's efforts in
making
·..children's
dreams come true
•
.1.
as '\helll}wanni,hg ; a~,d jnspiring".
"This year ti:te Pcdiatncs Club's goal
is lO increase the arno1111t of money
we raise CltrOugh the Bow'lathon," she
said. "'The more money we raise, the
~"
more children we can send on this
~of the co,mmun1ty.
•""'"'ical trip."
.:, Last year, about 30 bow~ raised ••....,
~to $3,000 through sponsorShips
"The· Zimme)1Tlan
!P .benefit t~ Zimmerman Osreo- Dream Foundation is very imponant
P,!Jthic Dream Ftiundation, .whose !O the osteopathic ~fession be;cause
:10...1 is to annually_send a cl\ild with !' fulfills a need w1thi~ these senously
fti'ie-threatcnina illness alone with •, tll chtldret:t :· ~ tnps ~ay,well ht1
" ... or•her funily to l!!i•llfY WotldJn. the las~t:eaJ ·familr iYacatton t!Jcy wt
, · '
;; . . take toge~." Sw~ said. · :
Jilmda. • 1 • ,
.
' Childicn fac:ia1.' ~0111 illnesses . . l\.nYonp· •~~~~
.
nominated for die' trip bY 01ico- tn the bow at!iOt\ .or tn
.,..ic pbr•~~iiiiiS 1JDujho~ ~hio, bowie£ shoul~.• ~o,tl~t . Swi!ffi
l,flt ljlriaa••foUr rear old ..icliael 614•797-3162, . • . • r .
Oouclu of :Athens, whole brain un-

1

.

'

WHAT·YOU
. U.S.D.A. CHOICE, CRAIN FED BEEF
(11-14-LB. AVO.)_

:w ftole ·
.Sirloin
TIPS

•••

·From milk, bread, eggs &amp; ground beef...'
to all vour drug &amp; general merchandise needs!
Plus all Kroger Pharmacies are OPEN to serve vtJUJ

POund

'"

'

.

NEW~K(AP)-Neitherrain

nor snow n sleet nor hail shall prevent delivery fan electronic mail.
• A raging blizzard kept snowbound
workers out of the office across the
East and yes. even halted delivery of
:the U.S. mail in Washington and New
·York City.
: For many empJnyees, it wasn't a
:totailoss. They just turned on lbeir
comp_uters, dialed in and went to
work from home.
; "Realistically, in this day and age
; if your office has voice mail, e-mail
and you have. a. computer at home
• that's compatible with your office,
· you can get a lot done at home," said

·

furnaces, and rntllly
metal materials .•

Call 992-4025 :
between 8 ~-8 pm
Mon. lhru Sat.

tMe-21112

H&amp;H

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
.
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
.

'•

SAWMILL .

,~,·····
.........

"

,.,~

32124 HIIPPY Hallow Rd.
, Middleport, Ohla 45760
DMny A Peggy Brlcklat

28M3 BASHANIRD.

HYDRAULIC REPAIR

$32.00/IR.

. SMitH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Racine, Ohio 45n1

(814) IMN013 Phone ·
(e14) .....201ai ·FAX
e14 114-2001 NIGHT

614-742-2193
11 1 1~1

BOUSE

New Hom's • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE .ESTIMATES

•New Hointta

•Addltlona
•New Garage•
•RemOdeling
•Skiing
•Roofing

REG. HOURS
Mon.-Wed. 10-4:30~
Frl.·Sat. 1().4:30
Closed
Thu~. &amp; Sun.
102Fast Main
Pomeroy
992·7696

614-992-7643

(814) te2·5535

814 ·tea-2753

mo:

lllllftYILL

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Cultam llul4lng l RllllCidolllltl

(No Sunday Calls)

(Ume Ston.L.Ow RatiiJ

•'

MIDERI SlllfAftll

HAULING

POMEROY, OHIO
•
Tr11h Removal • Commen:I•I or Ataldentlal
$tPIIc T1nka Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dally, weekly " monthly rentll rltta.

~Spreading)

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,

·

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Umeatone, Sand, Gnwel, Coal &amp; Water

Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

- UCINI
GUN CLUB
GUN SHO,OTS

· s·ui. 1,.12 .....
Factory We Only

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418 , , .
'•

Authorized Ill Distributor
Welding Supplies •lnduatrlal o-• Steel ·

UP·TO.DATE

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

Sales " Fabrlclllon • Repalr'Wekllng

FIIIAIICE

AluiiJinumiStalnleal

.&lt;

·~

Machine Shop

. noc1s ·

.

liD MOIEIII ·
1·900·371•1100 ..

Oxygen Acetylene co.
Helium Ill s1zea Medical Grade o.
Propane Trimbt Ultra Mix M* Weldels

.._ nLII72

bt. 3140
$2.99 par min .
Muat be 18 yra.
Touch lane phone

ru ns 1111

St. MalOn, WV

108 Ponieroy

·

SPORTS

required.

Serv-U (614) 645-8434

Fra ...........

•

121'1 -

·

QUI~Wiwll

·I. D. CONSTRUaJON
Skiing, Porchea,
. Deckl,
Home Improvements,
Remochtllng,
. Adci.Qn'a, Roofing ,
S.tl.tactlon
Guarente«&lt;
Bill Dotrfer
(614) 992-2979

IOUI.D
BALES OF
HAY FOR
SALE.

.

/

Roben Smith, prosident of lntel'llclive said ~itchell RIIJIOpon, a pariner in
Services Assoc'iatiod in Silver ~pring, the consumer products unit at Ogilvy
Md. ·
&amp; Mather lntenwtive, a ,divisiop of
Smith said · he decided to work the giant advenising agency. •
from home ·when the baby sitter
Rapopon, who was working from
called to. say she couldn't make· it his home in Wiltun, Conn., said
through the snow. . .
telecommuting, or working at home
"A tot ofwh~ would have in .the via computer-telephone linkup with
dffice I'm .doi'1g.J rom. ho!i'Je," he the:office, is an acceptable .practice
said, eXplaining ~ ltad spent the lillY with the firm. Workers' can chat on'
.
sending out electroiiic mail and mak- line, send ~lectronic
mail and trans.ing.phcine calls. :,_
' mit files from just about any_w)lere.
·At Merck. &amp; ·c4. ~adquaners in
Whitehouse Station, N.J.• the drug .. ,"It makes· the world a, fV more
intimate place," he said. "You can do
Iitaker's 1,800 employees were iold
exactly the same type of thing that
to stay home.
.
you normally do at your desk, thou"The roads are impassable," said sands of .miles away. "
spokesman John Dilorley.
·:storms like this d'?n 't faze us,"

WICKS
· (Specllllze In

Blizzard' can't halt' .electronic
mail
.
By KAREN SCHWARTZ
AP Business Writer

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

FREE ESTIIIATES

:.:· By ANNE B. ADAMS and
Wrong. I opened·them up, put them
:" NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
out in the sunshine -and fresh air,
·
DEAR READERS: Here we go sprinkled !hem wjth baking sOda ..
· with another column devoted to al! nothing helped.
your genereus feedback, with many
"Then I opened up three cak~s of.
thanks from Anne and Nan.
Irish Spring soap', •put ooe in each
ALMOND BUTTER: Cassie stiitcase and closed them up .for a
Dooling of Stevensville, Mont., . couple of days. U~believable! ·They
writes: "Tell Edna Poner from smelled gre~t! And so did, ill the
Galesburg, Ill ., who asked you about clothes we packed."
recipes for.almond butter, that she can
HA:RVE"(
.. WALLBANGER
use it in any recipe that calls for CAKE:' Cathy baurino of Qes
peanut butter."
Plaine~. Ill., wanted a recipe for this
.
DNR BRACELET: Florence ·and we were stumped. Dpris MQ91't yam insiead.
Jm'!&lt;&gt;ff~(Lockport, N.Y.. wrote to let ofStev~nsviU~. M.9.ll.t.:,li}!Jdly S!ii!',~;~ "'i' S~ QOI~; 'Ylvailable in&lt;yarn and
us ai!d our readers know that DNR (and Cathy) the;f!jillowinil. · ·
cnlft sl),ops, .it co~es in small skeins
(Do Not Resuscttate) bracelets. are
HARVEY .. ,.tWALLBANGER· and ha$ three strands which can be
available_for S9.7S from The Hem- CAJC.Ii!
.' , .
'
separated so you can cboose,. the
lock Soctety of New York, P.O. Box _ I package yelloy.o,cak~ mix_" •
tjlickness :that you want. It is avail·
2316, Emp1re State Plaza, Alb~ny,
I package ,rcg11hlr-slze varulla able in many, many.different colors."
NY 1222()..0316. When ordenng·, · instant p~ding "\ .
'
We would not recommend that
please enclose a self-addressed,
4 eggs .
this be used for mending heels and
stamped envelope.
.
I cup oil · .(
toes of socks as it is less lig~tly twistBefore ordenng, check With offi.
114 cup yodka -'
ed than regular darning wool therecials in your city and/or county to
Il4 cup GalltaiiQ
• . . fore, not as strong.
'
make sure that they w1ll honor your
3/4 cup orange ).,Uce
Write to ··Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at·
Mix all Ingredients together. Beat P.Or Box 240, Hanland, Vf 05048.
, wishes: TheK are restrictions in1placc
in some areas across the counlry th•t for four . minut~. ,Pour into wall- Questions of general interest will
requ1re med1cal person.nelto prov1de · greased. floured b~t pan. B~e at appelir in the col\11f1D• Due to the volhfe support.
. . 3~ for 45-!;Q mmu,tes. Cool. Dus~ ume _ofmail, 'persomilrepliu cannot
MUSTY SMELLS: E~l Tnmm wnh powdei'ed sugar. (Now, Anne be provided.
'
of Salem, Ohio,· wntes: I bav~ a and Nan .wonder,,who WAS Harvey
',...
,
great suggestion. My husband and I Wallbanger anyy.oay?)
,
Anne. B. Adams and Nancy
were getting ready to go south to vis·
DARNING Yi\RN: ·Margare.t N·~umminp are ~o-autbon of
it our daughter. Our suitcases had Syroid of Missoula, MonL, write~. to "Afk .Aane &amp; Nim" (Wbetstolle)
been stored in an outside building, let Laura Barnett -of Rollo, Mont., aDd "Dear Anne and Nan: Two
and I'd put crumpled-up newspaper know that if she still hasn 'i located a Prilel.•r'lb!,..-$olven Sbare Their
and charcoal inside them thinking it source ofdl1{1Jing yam she might try ~"(! Jfh'!l). Toonler,call·
would keep out the musty smell. , using embroidery, crewel or tapestry 8QO.I188.-t120;1·

'

Plck·Up discarded:
washers, dryeri, hot
water tanks, stoves,

The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate In a free, no obligation, comprehensive water
analysts, WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
•
TDS, 1111,.,.1 Hardnortt, Iron, PH.
Plaatt ealllloU..SoJI at 112-4472 «1~3313
to Mt up your"" water
IIIIMfn

Openings for 2.
Christian
atmosphere for
.elderly citre In a
non-smoking home.

Readers really ·~know their.stuff

treatment and establishing the likeli- 1
hood of a cu_re.
Superficial cancer that involves a
relatively small- amount of the blad· 1
der is !&lt;&gt;tally cured by surgery in 50 I
'percent of cases. In the remaining SO .
percent, the cancer may recur. In
these individuals, 40 percent may be
cured by additional treatment. Perhaps your husband h!lli this type of
cancer, and that is why his doctor is
optimistic. ·
Cancers ·that have spread totally
through the bladder wall or beyond to
other tissues of the body have a less
favorable prognosis. Those that have
spread through the bladder layers but
-not to local lymph nodes or other tis·
sues in the region are often treated
with surgery to totally 'remove the
bladder. Then. chemotherapy and
radiation therapy are used to improve
the chance of survival. Between 30 to
40 percent of individuals with ~this
type of cancer are still alive in five
years.
Almost all of the unfonunate indi. viduals whose bladder cancer hils
spread to lymph nodes or to distant
organs, such as the liver, lungs or
bone, are dead in two years despite
treatments. This is why it is so
important to diagnose this disease
early, before it has spread. ,
So again, I urge you men reading
thi~ to put a~ide that stoic_male m~n­
tahty. Any s1gn of blood 10 the unne
·should be promptly brought to the
attention of your doctor. It doesn't
matter if there is pai? with urination
~r not. ~· dependmg on ~e findmgs of 1ntt1al tests, your fam1ly doc-·
tor may request_that_you see a,urolog1s1, a spec1ahst tn unnary tract
problems.
"FamUy Medl~ine'' is a weekly
column. To subnut questio~, write
to John C. Wolfe, D, 0 ., Ohto Unl·
venlty.. College of Osteopathic .
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Qblo 45701

v;v ......,.....

,y
TII·STATE WATER SYmMS, IIC.

HOME

614-992-3200

Water
~~/- Treahlleat

Distributed

•Pal~ng

Llcenud&amp;

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

~~~

MIDDUPORI
U.P.C.
PIIYI11 CARE

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO•.tHI6

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

~ ..ut:

u...... ' Gravel

E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, DumR Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hra,
We dig base.....m., put In teptlc
ayatems, lay lines, "riderg_round bores.
For Free estln'li.te' caltSMB-2512
.
I'UO"AIII
James

Located ,at the Auction Center on Rt. 33, In Muon,
W.V. Due to -ther condition• - ·have moved
the estate of Bemht Adkins to tM Auction Cenblr
and will be llelllng the following:

pan of infant health care because
these measures can prevent 10 differcnt diseases with potentiallongterm complications," Klil'e said. "A
major focus of OU-COM ~ role in thiscommuni!Y is to improv~ heal~h care;
for all Southeastern Ohm residents,.
and this new Postp~um Home Vjs·'
itation Program is helptng us .to.
1
•
achieve that goal."

Recine, Oh, 45771

·6&gt; · ·

·HAUL NG &amp;
EXCAVATION ·

LUNCH

Question : My husband has been
:~!f~~i~~ ·with bladder cancer. His
:l
operated on the bladder
removed the cancer. He tells us
my husband is probably cured.
that be true? Answer: Cancer of
J~e urinary bladder is relatively com·
'lOOn. More than S 1,000 people are
:diagnosed with this disease every
~ear, and men are afflicted. with it
1fom two to three times more often
1han are women.
··
' Smokers and those' who work in
)he chemical, textile, rubber and
related industries are at greatest risk.
:0.. reason these workers are at risk
js probably d~e to expos:ure to chem'cals used in these industries. One "'eory proposes that these hazardous
jx-oduct.S get into the body, often from
',kin contact or from inhalation, and
':II'C eliminated from the body by the
:_.idneys. The concentration of the
l:hemicals is increased in the urine,
picreby exposing the bladder cells to
,;arcinogenic substances for prolonged periods.
; The individual usually becomes
11ware that there is some urinary problem because oT blood in the urine.
bflen this bleeding is painless, but for
)orne individuals it may be accom·
l'anied by discomfort. Bleeding,
mcreased urinary frequency, and dis~omfort with urination are symptoms
siiat suggest infection, but men rarely
get urinary tract. tnfecuons wtthout
hkving some underlying problem -like bladder cancer. Therefore, any
man who has blood in his urine
)hould be exll!llined by his doctor!
'l'his is not a problem that should be
treated with home remedi~s for a few
~ays to see if it goes away!
• Bladder cancer comes in several
different types, and the panicular
(ype, the amount of bladder tissue
lhat is involved, and whether or not
It has spread through all layers of the
~der or into other tissue are .all
tmponant il\ determining the best

The Dally Sentinel• P... lt .

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•• • AuctiOn

;ouc·oM to _begin postpartum home·yisitation program in Meigs County
:: . Meigs County is 'one of five coun: ties in Southeastern Ohio targeted by
: the Ohio University College of
.Osteopathic Medicin~ for its new
: pos~partu~ home vi~~tation ~rogram,
. _a part of 1ts communtty serv~ce out; reach effon.
.
. . The new program is under the
. d1rect1on of Carol K.bne, coord10ator
: of community service programs at
: OU-COM. The program was imple-

/

Laurel Limousine Service ·
For.all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddi_
ngs, Anniversaries, Birthdays
_, ~~~~- Night Oirt on the Town - a
-.
Opoooledby
~ (614) 992-4279 Jah~Mr;;: &amp;
33058 SA 33 * Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Wrecker .Service

Car/Heavy Truck.
Repair
(814) 992-6843

23 !=ottage Drive
Middleport •.Oh. 45780

11111111'1 1'110.

1VIIM1-

•

011 Step CtMplete Aute 8e4y Repelr

TREE TRIMMING:
AND REMOVAL

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Light Hauling, ·.
Shrubs Shaped ·:·
and Re!liOVed, ·
Misc•.Jobs

Chuck Stotts

614-992-6223
Free Estimates

Insurance Work Welcome

.ULL ··

614·949·2512

,.~~ -

"Ridt In a Charlot of Luxury"

. ..,
~ ~·

.

I

.--~

State Rt. 33
Dai'Win, Ohio

liD Slack

992·2269

tll21l'ltri'lfn

/Yel,d a I'Aoi..,..,.,W.r for
yoar S,..ciDJ OcctuiD11. ~
•W.adlngi/Rec.ptlona

YOUNG'S

CARPENTE!t SERVICE •.
•Room Addhlona
•New Garages
,
•Eiactrtcal a Plumblllg

-coupons

(Engagtmant Plcturea)

-Reunlana

•Roofing

•Interior a Exterior

•Annlwraarlaa

-Groups
-Femlly

Painting •

Rn~on~ble Prices

· Soci'ety s~rapt;&gt;ook___,..-, --

OUTSTANDING LEADER~
civic, educational,~ fraiCmiJ activ- Jllnerally good health can giv~ blOOd.
SHIP
i4es~ , .
. l' ."'
.
&gt; ···-~tri-sta.tereglondireody.~es
Ethel Han, Burlingham was honBLOODMQBUi.g COMING
hosp1tals, pabents, and·do~ors fh ~ .~2
ored for outstanding leadership of
The Tii-State Rl,gion BIOQd Cen· · Cl!~nty area m parts of West Vil'lll~ta.
young people during J99S as direc- ~er·wm be bringing ihe~ Red , Oh1o and Kentucky. · •
lor of the local Modem Woodmen of Cross Sloodm~o 'to Meip Colin·
ROCK SPRINGS HEALTH 'CLUB
~merica Junior Service Club.
ty Wednesday, Jan. 31.
"'
·
·
: Han I~ the group to menl status,
The unit. will .,. at the Meigs
The Rock Springs !letter. Health .
an honor gtven·by Modem Woodmen County Sentor C'et!ter, Mulberry Club held it5 annual Chrisllllas party
lo -recognize leaders of youth clubs Heights, Pomeroy, ftom 1 to 6 p.m. at
Springs United Methodist IIIIHII Gnlftll!lL,·IIUIIIMd I
for top-level performance.
' that 'clay.
. .
· ·· 1 · ' Church.
.
Red Cross offitlals Rpqit that at ·
The potluck dinner at OOOll wls
: Judging in me merit club·contest
is based on the quality ~nd quantity l~t. 240-unit5 of· I!}ood are ·I!~ ··ned with~ prayer·by Nlncy ~or- ·115~:::~~~:~~~1
!If meetin1l, pro~s. and c~mmu- , ~ weekday to' nieet the ~ qf ' ris. Devotions elitltled ~Lonj,LonJ
!lilY service actlVlttes held dunng the.. s~~rflcal patieilts.. accident victllllt, · t,-ao::, 11te Gui&lt;!in&amp;Aoighf", imd a
' .
J:811Cer~patle!lts, ~~.others ,!lho need .
C,hiistmas Legerid"j vas presented by ~;;~l~
year. _ _ _ ·
Modem Woodme_n of Amenca's ' ttlljsfusiotrs o'fl'ed .blood cells, plas·
Mrs . . Monis. The~ was a gil\
yO!llh clubs are org8111Z1llons for dul- rna 111d other blood components. exchange and membet:S '!l'.ere siven
auismtas·magnets as favqrs.
dreh who are members of M\)dern General individuals"can safely give
Woodmen and are. 16 and under. The every S6 clays. .
Christmas treats and frult
clubs follow a fraternal youll\ proAlfbiOOc!l Y!'O'! IIi aeetled.
were prepaled for the
Jrain which provides .chik!_ren ~ith
~ndividlllls age .17 or oldet; ~ of the community. Next
opportumues to par11c1pate 1n soc1al, we1gh at Ieut 110 pOuhds and uc tn
be held 1n March.

Roc"

1

Ca11992·7747
Af;,r4pm
During ''Hicdaya
'"" on .VMklllda

eta:-8215

Pomeroy, Ohio
1/l/lln,

ROJEIT IISS.LL
COIISIRUCnOII

NEFF REMODELING
SERE

•New Homes

Hou.. ,...,.lr a
R-d•Hno

Kltollln a lith
RIIIKidtllng

Rctam;Addltktnit

Siding,!::":·.._,.
R
II . .
IMu,.....
I • EllaiDd
~,

*-""""'

. Ca(ltea.-44411

,

Aleo Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES) '
' V.C. YOUNG IH
·

,

•Garages
C
I ·
• omp ete
,Remodeling
$top It Compa,. . . ..
FREE ESTIMATES '

9854473

, ' --~~:.1
' l'orf'nt EtllmitW '·' , _.,....,.....,_..

�•'
!!.PIIge10 • The Dally Sentlne.l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednaday, January 10, 1986

;..1 Wedneetlay,

'-

.

t1

--------------------------------------------------·
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BUDOI:
PHILLIP
ALDER
KIT 'N' C~RLYLM&gt; by Larry Wrlgbt

BEATriE BLVD,® by BnKe Beattie

The Dally Sentinel • P~~ge '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

January 10,1996

---------------..
,..,. __
ACROSS

44 Ring

48 I think, 11\erao

1 DIM
4 Millt8ry C8P

48 .-, • deer ...

I Held onto-

41 'Pitna

12 Conceit

53 Sbler-

13 -angry
14 Singer Pln.ra
15 Johnny-

,57

Fiemlng

1&amp; Snooas
17 Author · •
2bdrm. apta., io1111 elaclrlc, oppllances furnilhed , laundrr room
locllltiti, clou Ill ochool In town.
~Policobons available ot: Vllloge
Groen Apta. f-18 or coil 814-11829711. EOH.

aita1e

AIIIOI
- ' I I In
ttn rlelpj ... "81' ilsutlfect to
the Fedotal Fair Hooolng N!.
ol11188 wNch makoo Uogal
"onypret........
-tloo "'dlocllmlnatloo

1o-

.........,..1o

TN'I ne •PIPIPI' 'Mil not ·
toiOWIII ~ 1CC01P1
~lo&lt; ...l whlellls In olllle low.

,,

OUr- are heriDy

tills.._,.

BM&lt;h St., iilildiepor~ 211r. fllr·
nlshtd apt, utillllos pold, dep. I

opportunity DillS.

•w · ·· vn Salt~ ·

Er.1 PLOY t.1EtH

. , . QalllpoJIS

110

310 Homes for Sllle

Help Wanted ·

F.urnlihod 2 Rooms I Both,
; BOwnotalro, Utilltie• Furnished,

Help Wanted . .

. polil Required. 81.-151~.

1

ALL IYard. Saito Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 ·p.m.
the day betore the ·ad is to run .
Silndal edldon - 2:lXl''p.m. Friday.
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m. Sat·
uo&lt;foy._

Pomeroy,!

110
Able

Avon

&amp; VIcinity
- ~·VI!.I~ Solao Muot Be Paid In

..

'.

3·Rooms a

Both, All Udillos Paid, llownslllro

needed. Earn money for Christ·

$250/M~nt_h,

mas blls at homo/at - I t 1-800·
&amp;82·8358 or 304·882·2645, Ind.

;,; Second Ava.

&amp;1..-~5.

Rep.

FurnlohOd Apar-~ &amp;20 Fourth
~vinut , 1 bedroom, t285JMo.
~20 Fourth Avenuo. Gallipolis,
Ohio 814-446-4418 A1Wr 7 P.M. '

AvON · $8 ·$15/Hr. No Door To
Door, Flexible Hours, 1·800·827·
4840 lnd ISla IRop.

'Rick Pearaai\ Auction CDrftpany,

.....

full time auctioneer, complete

auction
service. Ucen1ed
,ee,Oiilo &amp; Wall Virginia, :IM'773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
~-.;·:.;.'--..,....---·~
"'
411
Want,ed_to Buy '
~v

A~'~•TIIflll'fiAiofll Wll'f '"U

fitit#JITftt.• IN '1'1\C.

f""R

\ "

.

.

'

49 8 6 4 2

"8 2
87
•J 8 6 5

•Q J 10 3

I t

~"'f4i'M -~~ 'iol'f~:

DID YOU
MISS ME,

;

tA Q 3

2•

Pass
Pass

Obi..

5.

' ,· period
66 N. Z. pllrfCit

.9

25 SUr

,

29 Heavy booko •
33 Llltenlng
device?
34 Neck part
36 Bare ,
37 Leavo out
39 Deer
41 Mou1h part ·
42 Of the nooe

DOWN
Flnnlah ilm

1
· name
· -' 2 Gotol' 30neot
Hom let'a
chok:ea
(2 wda.)
4 llelltlve

Pass~· ·

4 NT
Pass

· Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • K

PAW?

The odds hold up

1~88 Cadillac, Runo, $1,000;
Matched Rofrlgoralor I Ro~e
1100, Two EIO&amp;tric Ron;o'o t25 , t1 adorabl,, AKC Golder Retriov·
Each, Mobile Home Frame With, er pups, , 7malao, 4fomales, raadj
Whools &amp; Tires, $900, All AI Is, Jan 19tlt 304-773-5904.
814-31!8-1100.
'

By Phillip Alder

Automatic Clot~es Dr~r. Works
Good' Shape, $125; Gaa Cook

FARt,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVrS lOCK

FIRST 1 AAVE TO FINISH M'(

J.lOW DID I 6ET
AT TliE BOTTOM OF
TilE FOOD CAAIH'?

CEREAL, AND TMEN I HIWE
TO Fl)( LUNCHES FOR
SALLV AND ME.•..

..

Home Typlata. PC uun needed.
145,000 Income potential. Call t •
110().513-4343 En ll-i388.
live-in needed to care br elderly
lady, call 61~- 742-3128, leave

narr. and ~mbef.

Antique•. call~tables. estates,
!'liVerina Antiques. Ruse Moore.
~. 814-~2-2526 .

4AKQI0 53

. ...

6$ Colendatr

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
South
West North East
Pass

Toll Free 1·800-467-5588 EXT.
313.

EAST

eK 6 5
tKJ10964
6A K 7 3

semble Pro.d ucta at Home. Call
I

WEST

S.15, • qt., 5sp., PB,
Rall1 wheels, 73,000
814-892· 2679.

Cllllord20 Expended
(money)
22 llaking pit
24 Printer's.

62 - terrier

·, 6 3 S h - 64 Dlery of - •Ho..:wwlle

m. .u,.s

SOUTH

Easy Workl E•cellant Pall As,t

~Off

V!O..EIJC£

Stove $80, Electrlt Cook Stove
ISO: Color T.V. $100, All Worko
Goodl 814·370-2720 AFTER e
•
Garaa·e APi.rtment 1 BedrOom . P.M.
29· 112 Nell Avenue, Gallipolis,
S2751Mo, Utilltiaa Paid, 814-4484418 Aller 7 P.M.

once, D!lll~llne : t :OOpm the
01 IMifor• the ad Is to run, Sun- Avon $8 -$15/Hr. No Uinimum
. . dOl edition- 1;OOpin friday, Mon- Order, No Door -To ·Door, Dls·counta. 1·800·735·0188 lnd ISis
)day edition !O:OOa.m. Saturday.
IRop.

Pubilc Salil
and AuCtion

€lean, No Pall, 'Reference, DeFurnlih~ Aportmon~

Repre•entatives

AVON I ~II Areal I Shirley
. Spoors, 904-875-14211.

Middleport

80

"Counlrj Sld41 lojlortmonts, Nice 2
llodroai1)1j 'N:., W/0; W.J8r, Sow·
, or Garai!Qe lnetud~. $350/Mo.
' [)epoih Riqulrw. 513-,22-0294.

SE.HVICES

&amp; \'lclnlty

'

. - -·-· .

,.,____ _

are a - on an equal

• 8 52
6Q 10 4 2

·r ALSO

'

BEAUTIFUL APARTM~NTS AT
BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
110m $226 1o ~1, Will&lt; to lhOP
I movloo. Coli et4· 448·2581.
Equa! Hou~ Olll&gt;orlln!!f. ·

Informed tllatal--.ga
ldYerllsed In

'You bet I'm liard on mYself. I once won
a limbo contest lor low self-esteem!'

eA 9 7 4

35.WE$T • 2 BR BRICK TOWN·
HOUSES ·' 1261 Jackson Plko~croas From Cinema. $295/Mo.,
Dep. For Rinllll Appllcollons Clll
SU-4 48·0~57 • 814-448·0008 .
814-441-1616 Or Write: P.O. Box
1184, GaHipotl(, OH' 456:11 :

00 ""'"· colo&lt;,

01-10.86

•J 7

EEK&amp;MEEK

2br., utillbes fumlhed, deposit required. ~75-7552.,., o~pm:

l8ilglon,
oox lornlloi11111UI oi riatlonil
origin, or any
....... ony ouch ...........
· llni1alion or dloa1mlnll11on.'
-

· ' etPit

Gerdte Pllywrlght

NORTH

eo .. (poet.)'

58 COMM hollllny
10 -de colo•oe

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.

PO YOU

Clean lata Model ,Cars Or
)rrucko, ·1987 Models Or Newer,
,Sm!th Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis. ·

YOV'Vt

Pfi'EVIOVS

J &amp; D's Auto Psrto. Bujing sal·
va~ vohlclao. Selll~ -pons. 304;n:!-5033.

1970 Harley Sporlstor basket ·
case, $1800; new utility trailer,
$250: '81 Chevy pickup, t285 ;
BtH42·21M18.
.

1i91 Honda 300 4X4, well main·
llllned, $3,200 lirm. 814-742·31~.

BORN LOSER
"ew.! IT~_ CI-\IlLY IN IU£. 6111.JTI.l:ll'

..

~

I FNl£1&gt; ID ML0\..1 FO(':. WE WI~D-

et~'t' YOO ~:r'!V£~m 7

0\IK OCTOR.I-JITH '«lli: f\\OTII(R
:iT"-Yit-16 ~ !

When a declarer makes an tmusual
and successful play in a suit, even.
though he had the percentages in bis
favor, we he,ar about it. And some times the play has so much appeal
that it wins a prize . Frenchman
Philippe Cronier won the award for
the best declarer-play or 1995 from the
International Bridge Press Associa·
tion for this perionnance.
Cronier',t; double showed short
spades and a willingness to bid high·
er. North , Maurice Salama, offered a
choice or ~ontracts via four no-trump.
Cronier went with his long suit.
Cronier ruffed lhe opening spade·
king lead, played a heart to dummy's
ace and called for the diamond eighl.
East rose with the ace and returned
the heart queen . After winning with
the king, Cronier exited with his last
heart. East won with the 10 and continued with the heart jack, ruffed by
South. West discarded two spades on
these lriclcs.
Cronier paused to take slock. The
trump position was clear (unless West
had made a strange play of the dia·
mond· seven from the doubleton seven-threel. West was marked with six
spades from his two-spade weak jump
oven:aU. And West was known to have
started with two hearts. This meant
that WeSt had lour clubs.
N; East was four times more likely
to have a low club than the singleton
jack, Cronier immediately played a
club to dummy's 10 - a first-round fi.
nesse against the jack despite holding
all the other .honors! When it held ,
Cronier led a diamond to hill jack,
cashed the diamond king and claimed.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Lula Cam,,a

Celebmy Clflhe' cryptograms ail! created from qUOietions by famous peopte. put and Pf8Hfll
Eact119tlel' in h cipher atands lor another. Todly'a du.~ C frqum P

' TLBHW

OLHDB'R

V L Y

OIHZAD . '
'TLBHW

N 0

RZJX .

N R

OWJZB.

ZJIZWO

RPHAH,

Y F R
' "\.'

R PH

CLGXHRD

GPZBEH

-

'
DRHNB .
EHARAFOH
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If il was so, ~ mighl be; and if it were so, it would be;
bul as it isn't, il aint That's logic."- Tweedledee.
. _,_

........

"·.. ~ '.

'

-,

....-.-·._,

KUFNLY
1

.,

-

I I 'I 1 I

..

~ ,.

I NS 0 Y

r I I I'

750 Boats &amp; Motors
· for sale

xc::

1D83 201 Pro
2d' Strutos
bOll, 100 XPHP. 814-867·
7347 or 814·-2679._

&amp; 3300 oquare
oi!Mnl.-hoy, 81-1118,
GIOund

...

Auto Pll'la &amp;

.'

.0. corn. your lOCks. Call

~75-2443- 4pm.

'

•
'

.'
•-..

.

SCUM LETS ANSWDS

-

'

Plenty· Balmy· Proud· Cotton • COMPANY

T~t

Treasure You
SGvlnrs You'll Find In the
-Cloul(ltd SectiOn.

SER VICE S

Fl rJA NCIAL

· CLASSIFIEDS,

nME
and you ' ll lind it. The
around your finle hnger .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - Matchmaker inslanlly,reveals .-1tlch signs
CANCER (June 21.July 22) II you enlerare romantically perfect lor you . Maa
taln al your place today . don 't
$2 .75 to Matchmaker, c/o thiS newspa·
overindulge your guesl Wiih loQ much
per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray_Hill Slallon,
food or booze. Remember lhatlhey still
New York, NY 10156.
have to drive home safely.
·
AQuARIUS (Jan. 20-F.... ilf In regard
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You would be
to en important maller today, il will be
wise at this lime to take your assign·
· BERNICE
imperatiVe to grasp the. big picture . Pay
men1s as seriously as your boss does, or
BEDEOSOL auenlion to details. ~ul do nol ••elude else he or she may question your value
other information.
to the organization .
PISCES (Fell . 20-llarch 20) Money·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Do nol lreat
making ideas used b.j a successful friend your monthly budget as merely scribbling
may not work as well for YCIII today . on a scrap of·paper. You could regrel
'lllrthda.v~Jr
because you-will lack hie or Iter e•perllle.
your actions taler n
have a financial
Do nOI gamble.
,.
shortfall.
·
ARIES (March 2hAprll 11) The aile· ' l.IBI!A (hpt. 23-0ct. 23) Today lty to
glance you ••peel (rom an associate
avoid getting involVed With a person who
go lo your OppOsition lodey; His or makes big promises, but seldom keepo
1
996
Thunlday, Jan. 1• 1
.1
, 1\er poailion$ Will b8 mpre compatib!e with
them . This Individual is slill looking lor

. SIMWS

I

REAL ESTATE

ond thrH
, Two
homoo,

'
Knl!lht 50 Col. Block ~ "In
at 12-10·1300. -lint' Rlflo; Incl. Sc• . Rlnoo;
nih lnduliod., Cato, Sling, All ~ccuooritl .
,
'Uud 1 Tim.: Col e14·4411·~
5:00 304-6 75-lliee Aller

~room mobile

•

a~.ar~•

e14-8112-788e.
' .

you

"1!91rt

82 LinColn T.near, One cereful

..... liii!Mr ln-. mint condl-

· llor!.

miiHQtl. 11~.~.

Your chart Indicates t~at In I he year 1 ihe cornpelition .
·
.
·
~ y0u ll)igltl s1a11 ft8dlng out a lew T~URUS. (Apt/120-Miy 20) Those who
unproductlw-~- TfiiW wiN be lai'Of at your aide will-not covor lor- yourap1acec1 by new ueoclllllont lhef.oller today. "Do not wander away from your
peetor ~woik. You must relneritber your reaponsl· .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22....... 1tj-TOday,
lot the Slke of your Image, don't exag· ClRIINI (Mey 21-JUnt 20) Someone you

-s.

•

gira1e your ~ ...,.. Wthe II** ls wtld about you does like you. but
,..op~t. ~

you .,. doing the oome • not to 11\at edent. II .will be besl nol 10

thing. Know wl\4!nl to 1oo1c lor romance

'• ·
I

At a recent social gathering I was forced to converse
with a rBal bore. He deprived me of solitude without being good COMPANY.

r

W:-::E:=D:-::NE==s=-oA~Y::--------J~A""""NU--A......
RY-1--..0

r.l

.. ,..

''

botlll lhel you haw

'*"

0&lt; her wrapped

gullible_people. .
sc;:oRPIO jOct. 24·Nov. 22) You must
guard aga!Mt·the tendency to underesli·
male your adveroarlea .ln commercial,
aociBI or palillcal sllualions today.
IIAOITTARIUS
23-Dec. 21) Do not
hang you( hopes lor heppiness on the
ecqulaillon of material goods. Life's lnr8
offerings are priceless Intangibles like

CHew·

f9Ying and !*"91oved..

..
I

'

�.,

...

..

•

.. .Plot 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy•

•

1996.

Ohio

PEPSI ·COLA
. PRODUOS

s

IAM·lOPM
291 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE

~ Buckeyes

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU JAN. 13, 1996.

69

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAIU

953651

Roasis •••••••••••·••••••••••

$ 39

...por. k R.b
.
.
1
1 s.................. . ·
·ECKRICH
$ 19
.
1·
Fran ks•••••,•••••••••••~.... .
COUNTRY STYLE

VoL 46, NO. 178
1 Section, 10 hgM

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, J•nuary 11, 1996

•

Mayor sworn 1n•••

"....

GOLD
MEDAL
FLOUR ·

•

-

""

•'

'·'

......"

~

(

\

Ll

~ BEEF CUBED

·Steak•••••••••••••••~:·•••••••
: U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

$219
$ 169

.Rump Roast ••_••••••~~..... · ·
:ECKRICH SLICED

SOUTHFIELD PORK .

. ·::. .

(

Sausage••••••••••~••••••••• 89

• •

JIF PEANUT
BUnER

Eugepe Trlplen of Pomeroy has
: announced his candidacy .for the
: Republican nomination for Meigs
Coullty Engineer. He filed his petition
• with the Meigs County,Board of Elec. lions Wednesday. The primary elec- lion this YW is March 19.
Tri~leu is a registered ~fessio~al en~ and surveyor ~tth a pn. vate. prac~mPomeropm~e 1~88.

180Z.

$ 139

.

Bologna ·~·········~••••••~~
··KITCHEN PRIDE SLICED
$379
:Bacon ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ·
.

:Triplett .candidate for
· county engineer~.!( p~st

The old Central Sc~ool building in
Midd1eport may be getting some
needed repairs following Wednesday
night's meeting of the Meigs Local
Boilrd of Education.
'Last month, Superintendent Bill
Buckley reported the old building had
reached the point where ·it needs to b&amp;
vacated or repaired,
· Wednesday, Buckley said an architeCt and a representatjve of the state
ftre marshal's olftee toured the building, which is part of the Meigs Junior
High School complex, and JX)inted
out several deficiem.:ies including
loose plaster and no fire doon. In
addition, the boiler in the building's
basement has no shielding to protect
occupants in the event of a boiler
explosion.
Buckley said upgrading lhe doo!"l,
plaster and electrical system would

cost approximilely $20,000 to
$30,000.
Replacing the old boiler with a
modem, outside unit would cost
between $84,000 and $100,000 while
design fees will be around $15,800.
The cost of repairing. the building
will be between $15,000 and $20,000
per classroom, lower than the cost of
adding modular buildings to the
junior high school, it was pointed out
Buckley said the boiler replacement could be funded through the
House Bill 264 program for energy
conserving upgrades.
Currently, some of the classrooms
in the building are not being used.
In addition, the boilrd authorized
Buckley to pursue repairs to the Middleport Elementary School roof. ·
Buckley said the project could also be
funded through HB264 since the new
r'oofing should include insulation.
1he board . approved a proposed

TOWELS
EA.

35f

r•r

tax budget for the upcoming fiscal
year with projected revenues totaling
$9,175,669.
Treasurer Cindy F.h0nemus· projected the district would have a balance of $50,490.24 at the end of the
fiscal year on June 30. For the end of
the next fiscal year she projected a
$104,525 deficit, due in pan to prop.erty tax reductions and reductions in
tne amount of money paid to the district by state.
Joy Swain and Debby Young of
Computer Resources Unlimited ·
approached the board concerning the
establishment qf a district-wide parent-teacher hotlin~.
Parents could call the hotline and,
using a .touch-tone phone, access, different directories to find infonnation
about closings, specials events, homework and sports.
Young said the service will be
funded through advertising and be

•.
free to the district and parents. Teachers who want to participate in the ser.
vice can leave or receive messa8l'S
through use of a special cO,de, she
said.
Eastern. and Southern will ' be
approached 'tater concerning the service, she explained.
In other matters, the board:
-- Hired Work. America Inc./Diana
Snow as a tutor for a health handicapped student on an as-needed basis
not to·exceed five houn per week at
$11.72 per hour;
-- Hired Donna Wolf as a tutor (or
senior students who have not passed
the ninth-grade proficiency te'st and
use grant money available to the district for payment;
-- Met in executive session to discuss the hiring of personnel with no
action taken.
During the organizational meeting
Contioued on page 3

Environmentalists say Senate bill shields polluters

with the township trustees.
..
"As a business man 1-know the
~OLUMBUS (AP) - Environ- right thing," said Sen. Gary Suhadolpain of waiting for a large customer mentalists were quick. to anaclc a Sen- nik, R-Strongsville, the bill's sponsor.
to pay his·bill. As county engineer I ate bill that allows companies to con"As a result of this bill, we will
will see to h that vendors are paid in duct internal reviews of their opera- have a cleaner environment, at no
a reasonable amount of time. The lions and .keep the information .from additional cost to the taxpayer."
County Highway Depamnent is allo- the public.
•
He said companies would be more
c~ a Cl;lt!lin amount o(II)OIICy each
."It is not unlilce robbing a bank., likely to look for and correct enviyeu. That's all ip hou)'d s~ If ,c;onfessiQJyow-~.beinJset~. ~~ . problems if !My·. were
~...~. a,:Q'~f,.P.Oincro~ "!a!t·wfundsare avrull1ile dleif~'~'"'ii'lll')'otl ~tldb~'ji'IM'Iil&lt;lliey;" ~~d ~jeCa that the state could not use
s~I ~ e)riied a.de&amp;~ m Cl':tl ~ paid,",added the candidate.
Jeff Skelding, State prognm coordi- the Internal reviews against them.
eDJirteer:JDI! from Ohto Untvemty •.n
·"There are a number of untrue niiiOr for the Ohio chapter of lhe SierThe Sierra Club contends that cit1971. Prior to begtnnmg his.own bust- statements already circulating about ra Club.
·
izen involvemem and aggressive state
ness, be worked for~ Ohio Depal'l- ··
even though I am only today
Republican backers said the envi- enforcement of environmental laws
m~nt o~ :rransportauon and Crown announcing m~ candidacy. I have ronmental audit bill. passed Wednes- are the only ways to keep polluters in
Ctty ~upng Company. ,
.
never said thatl:will be"tetting rid of day cin a party-line 19-12 vote, will check.
. Triplett saJd all of his F~~nenc.e any county hial}way employees nor encourage more companies to comply
"Responsible companies already
smce collese has been ct~tl engt- do 1 have any soc:h plan': By the.samc with environmental laws. The bill will do audits because it's a good business
· neenng related -- roads, htghways, token I have DOl promised and will go to the House for consideration.
practice," Skelding said . "This bill
streets•. bridges, drainage ~~j~ts,
C tin.aed on pqe 3
"It encourages people to do the only serves to protect the bad actors
water hnes, sewers, and sulxh vtstons
on
. .
' - and that tyjle o( experience is
invaluable in the position of county
engineer.
The candidate said ih111 he and his
By JOHN NOLAN
. Congress.
Cf~mpany have done hundttds of
Alsocl8tecl Preu Wrller
Most of the lab's 220 employees
property surveys and ha'::e prepared
Ohio's heavy snowstonns of deiayed their .retiun until Tuesday
civil engineering plans for numerous
recent weeks have forced store clos- because of the snowstonn, lab direcpublic improvement projects Jn the
ings, obliterated municipal sn.ow tor Tim Oppelt said Wednesday.
county.
removal budgets and even left out in
"For all intents and purposes ...
He said that if nominated in March
the cold SOllie people who usually buy we've been treading water here
and elected . county engineer in
'lottery tickets.
because of the continuing uncertainNovember, be. will annually certify
But missing a day of work. because ties of the budget," said Oppelt,
the safety of the co1111ty's bridges.
of Monday's snowfall in Cincinnati whose lab researches and develops
"Each bridge will· be inspected, if
was not a new experience for employ- pollution control methods.
ne¢ed t weight t~t will be ,posted
ees of the U.S. Environmental ProThe employees were frustrated by
and enfon:etl, and :a · program for
tection Agency's National Risk Man- the November government shutdown
replacement pf inadequate bridges
agement Research Laboratoty. They and the possibiUty of an~ starting
will begin. Waiting until a bridge has
.,.
already had been away from work. for Jan. 27, Oppeltsaid.
to be closed and · then begging for
three weeks because of the budget
The snow blitz is ~l.!j'ing state
emergency money for repiiiCCment is
· ·. •
fight between President Clinton and and city budgets.
not good enough for Meigs County,"

me,

BOUNTY

61 box

mainliliftJigood~orkin~~lationship

A O.nnen Co. Na

Old Central School build.i ng ·.
renovation planned by board
By JIM FREEMAN,
Sentinel News Staff

5 LB .

Ll.

Winter 1torm watch
throuah Friday morning. LDW
tonlglit In 201. Snow. Friday,
anow; high In 201.

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out there who will cover up their pol- . immunity from civil or administrative
lution problems through secret penalties - and criminal prosecution
audits."
in some cases.
Suhadolnik said that the immuniThe audits could not be released to
ty from penalties and the confiden- the public or us¢ as evidence in
tiality sections of the bill would not court, though the state ·attorney gen..
apply if someone can prove the com- eral or a county prosecuior eciuld ask
pany-knowingly committed an illegal .. judge for, pennission· to 1Mtarm
act.
audit to detennine if any laws had
Democrats, however, dubbed•the been broken.
measure "the polluter-protection
Even more uoublcsome to
bill."
Kucinich was a provision making it.a
"This is a free pass for polluten," crime for anyone to divulge informasaid Sen. Dennis Kucinich, 0-Cleve- tion contained in the audit.
land.
"The bill protects polluters from
He objected to provisions in the the community," Kucinich said.
bill that give companies that conduct "People have a right to know what
volun~ audits of their procedures kind of pollution is being poured into
their neighborhoods."

Huge snowfalls prove costly across Buckeye State

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Pomeroy Merchants plan to become
1 , announces 1
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for commission seat. more 1nvo1ve 1n communi y ac lVI ~es

saDid: ·l
p::t. He said that he will

Longtime C~ster Township·
Trustee Gary R.. Dill has announced
his intention to seck tbe Repoblicl!'
nomination for the Meigs County
Commission seat cot'nmencing Jan. 5,
1997, currently beld by Republican
Robert Hartenbach.

,.

· Retired from Ravenswood Alu·
~num after 33 years, Dill is currently
full-time bus driveJ for the Eastern
Local School District, serving as
[!resident of OAPSE Chapter 448 for
the school district.
.
: He has been a Chester Township
Trustee for past 22 years and still
. ~rves in that office. He bas also been
·a member of the County-wide
trustees' and Clerks' Association, ·
lii_ving ~ed as ~Kient f~ a num~f of hts ~2 years.
·

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"If elected, I will serve as a fulltime commissioner," Dill pledged.
''I will make evety effort to be in
office every worlcipg d~y. !feel dulltime commissioner is· needed on a
full-time basis to·serve the people of
Meigs County." '
. Gary and his wife, Flossie, also a
bus driver for Eastern Local, reside in
Chest~r Township.

a pas(member.of the l,Jnit: .
ed Steel Wprkei's Union and is a
iiiembtr of n ·Shade River Lodge
4~3 or aiester, Scottish Rite and the
~n AmSbary Chapter of the lzaalt
Walton League of AmeriC.. H~ has
been a ~-time bill driver for Carleton School' and has been active in
mflny Meigs County projetts for 0.

I :. ·He is

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,,

In a nonnal winter, the Ohio gle-snowfall record 14 inches last
Department of Transportation spreads · weekend.
397,000 tons of rock salt - which
The highway maintenance division
costs $14 million- to melt snow and · will either have to ask the City Counice on highways statewide. This sea- cil for more money or find it in oth.
son, the department already has used er budget accounts; said Man Manion,
80 percent of that amount and is the division's acting assistant superscrambling to replenish stockpiles.
intendent.
"If Mother Nature can give us a
Athens spent $8,000 in ovenime
break, we can get caught up," depart- last weekend for crews to spread sand
ment spokeswoman Michelle May and cinders on roads. The Dayton
said Wednesday.
suburb of Keuering has spent all of
Cincinnati has S 1.1 million a year the $66,000 it budgeted this season
budgeted for materials and overtime for snow removal overtime.
for snow removaL The city spent
Cities that use roc~ salt face hid$808,000 of that last week, mostly den , long-tenn costs of. coping will)
because of a stonn that dumped a sinContinued on pqe 3

ts years.

.~

.'

-

.,I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
so as not to severely in(Cnupt the tral The Bank One ornament sale, courthouse. :"-11 1ssues ot the orna:
Sentinel Newe Staff
.
fie flow.
.
headed by Dianna Lawson, was d1s- ments featunng Po~eroy landmarQ;
Discussion on a prognm geared
Councilman George Wnght regu- cussed and it was decided to use the are st1ll ava1lable w1th the excepUoO;
toward more merchant involv~ment larly alte~ the meebngs as Counc1fs sixth year of sales for ·a~other orna- of the courthouse, the first Of~t:
in activities of Pomeroy Village rep'!sentabve and •! was at ht~,_sug- ment featunng the Metgs County offered.
Council which directly alfect the gestton that the .merchants voted to
:\'\~!l'\l':i!'l"'~~!"r'l''!"'l!!f
business community highlighted ~ave represen~bon at Councd meetWednesday's meeting of the Pomeroy mgs to atr thetr concerns.
Merchants Association.
Officen for 1996 w~ elected.
Sandee Mills of McDonald's of They are Su~ Clar~. prestdent; An~
Pomeroy, a new member, was named Chapman, v1ce pres1dent; and V1c~
to serve as the liaison between the Ferrell, treasurer. Nancy Thoene will
merchants association ,and Pomeroy continue to serve as secretary. MeetVillage Council.
ing time was set for 8:30 a.m. on the
It was decided that merchant rep- second Wednesday of each month.
resentatives will attend the Council
New memben welcomed were
meeting held on the third Monday of Sarah Fisher, Mrs. Mills, and Bobbi
each month.
.
Karr. A membership drive is under- •
Snow removal and the condition of way and dues art payable by Jan. 31 .
West ·Main Street. where new water
The need fot:. getting people to
lines are beina installed -- both of shop locally was again discUssed and
Which are reportedly having a nega- Mrs. Chipman urged members to
' live impact on shoppina in Pomeroy include that sl,ogan in their advertis-- were discussed • lenJih, and sev- ing. She also. stressed the need for
eial solutions were propoiltiCI.
merchants to 5Up[lOI( other-merchants
Immediately followinJ the· meet- through referrals.
' . iQJ, a deleallion met with Mayor
Progress on the downto'Nn reviFnnk Y.u,ltM to jive sugestions on taliution prognm was noted Plans
alleviatina the two problems.
· are moving along for constnletion of
Also di!lcusaed were plans .for the amphitheater, it was reported.
extending the new water line through , Mrs. Chapman announced a 6::!0 p.m.
Pomeroy's downtown and' the need Feb. 12 ~tiQJ of a dnma JI'OI!P at
for plAMiOJ before the W&lt;llk begins } Jiini.ty Church.

I

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/}

•

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