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.. .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
.
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1
1 s.................. . ·
·ECKRICH
$ 19
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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 ·

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~ BEEF CUBED

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

$219
$ 169

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

SOUTHFIELD PORK .

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(

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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LB

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$ 139

Kicker:

i

2 LITER

PORK BUTT STEAKS OR

Super .Lotto:
8-1G-11-17-38-45

Sports, Page 5

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PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Pick 3:
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Pick 4:
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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

'

GENUINE IDAHO

Potatoes
. •••••• ~:..........

$

1''

MORTON
HOUSE BEEF
STEW
200Z.

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SHEDDS SPREAD

Country Crock.::••••••••
SMUCKERS
KRAFT
AMERICAN
•••••$.·. 179_ GRAPE JELLY
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S1ng es ••••••••••••••••

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cHICKEN 'HOOPLE SOUP
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COHONELLE
B·ATH TISSUE

FO E 5
CO.FFEE

4,R0U: PACK

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ORA IDA REG OR CtUNKLE CUT

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MEADO~ GOLD ·FAT FREE

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Pomeroy Merchants plan to become
1 , announces 1
· •
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·
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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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BEEF

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EUGENEbTRI:dLm

·
"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.

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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.

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Thursday, January 11, 1996

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OHIO Wc;1thcr
Friday, Jan. Jl

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Thursday,,..nuary 11,;1 •

The ·Daily Sentinel
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By Sen Watt.nberv
, bers, with a tax 'cut -· alre¥Y bas • drowned... pe wp!lld . ~ indistin- black and Hilplnic: .activist groups,
and the National Organjzation for
As the budget imbroglio contin~s ' "Republican" stamped all over it.
g!lishable from1he Republicans."
G8Dilett Co. Newspaper .·
.
and the.I!Oiitical season gets bot, keep
What happens if a deal does not
And what would Jackson do about Women to work witll fackson-led
organi:mlions;'the Rl\inbow Coalition
· your eye on Jesse Jackson. •
· pr~ct the government~ spe!!lli118 it?
.,
What has been going on .seems to
. He says: ''I would not stand idly and People United to Save HumaniROBERT L. WINGETT
ty.
'
..
be a political triangle. It is not. The
by... I would protect. the people .... "
Publisher
WiU'Ciinton save the Roosevelt
· three prominent. players are Bill ClinBut wouldn't that sp~ Demosocial safety net? What will Jackson
ton, Bob Dole apg ,N.ewt Gingrich, interests of.lhe left?
cnitic Piirty?
,
·
and they·are ~tO represent, resppeIt\ o recent interview, ackSon . 'iie says: "I would put conscience actually do if he doesn't? What will
'
his allies do?
tively, the center-left, the cenier- told me that an acceptal:!le budget and survival over convenience."
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
The concept of the "Roosevelt
Now, that is not exactly an ultiright and the right. There i$ some deal must save the "Roosevelt social
General Manager
Cootroller
mild commonality of policy rhetoric . safety net, " thereby saving the down- matum declaring that if the ROQSCvelt social safety net" is amorphous. Still,
betwo;en them: a 1W'D from ever-larg- tr()j!den. He say~ that Clinton is social safety net is not maintained it is a pluase with an 11ndentood genLETTERS OF OPINION are weicome. They should be less than ,300
er goveJ'iUI!ent. But when's the left? ·under ~~su~ frOm " G.eph_atdt, then Jesse Jackson will run as a third . era! meaning. Professor Allen Schick
·' words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
It has not gone away. 1be Ameri- labor, CIVIl ~-1ghts orga~1.zat10ns, party candidate for prtsident. But it of the lJniycrsity ofMarylandan4 the
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letten
. Brookings Instimtion is ,one of the
can
p,olitica14Jagram likely has (oilr NOW,.~ Rainb~w (Coahu~)'and is pretty close.
,
1
should be in good taste. addressing issues, not po;rsonalilies.
: sides, not three. The left is tile party PU:Stl. Thc effon of, this coalition of
Jackson has been out of the head- , nation's 1~111 scbo~~.l,hC llud.1--'-.;..___...;.__. - '""!'.;.'- · .,..._ _.....,;_ _ _...;.;....--~,, again's! slowing ciown.'go~mc~t, . ~ le~. s~ys J~kson, is~!~ to lines recendy: but'be has been busy. get. Asked whether !lie Roosevelt net
· and for the mOiiltii ·1s playmg Its see to 11 that Cbi\IOJl does not cave He is promoting "Target 1/421396," coold be
. within:~ framework
.
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hand through the offices of Clinton, in." Jacks'1'1 says he does nol'think anefforttorepnDemocraticconttol of a .
he
hoping, that he will protect its inter- Clinton will cave in.
. of Coqgress. It involves voter regis- but without
ests. ·."·
· " '.
~ ·, · .But wl\&amp;1 if; in Jickson's jddg- tration drives in kl!y congressional
"
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But the framewoHc Of th¢ bUdget ' men!; tie diles? ! I.
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disiricts, "dir¢ct action" in those dis• .
•.:. ~y'\VALTER R. MEARS
. ,
deal "&lt;I":' on the '-ble •.l seven years
,:Jackstln says: "If Clinton caves in, trjcts, 8nd "coalition \Juilding.'.' Jack- .
AP Special Correspondent
to balance, using non-partisan n'um- the dam will break... he will be son is recruiting allies from labor,
·' · WASHINGTON- Somehow, the big snow job that buried back-to-work
. day for the federal government seemed fitting. It was real, in contrast to the r - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - , . . . - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - : - - : - --:----:-:-'""-----,
• • political drifts piled around the budget s!ruggle tllat led to tWo partial shut-downs and isn't settled yet.
Tbe argument is supposed to be over balancing the. budget. It is instead
costing federal money, a lot of it, ·more·than'$1.25 billion, according to the
Office of Management and Budget.
.
that would be for 27 days' worth.of fMeral pay for work that did not get
done, for lost fees on services and faeilities that bad to be shut, and for such .
OkAY
items as the SIOOmillion a week of airline ticket tax~s that lapsed with ihe
PUT A.•. . ·.
. IIIIMie·
h new year.
·
~~
tnent,
, loQki.al9'~x
SPIN QN,. S? . · ·if$
· In middle America, far from the beltway, th~ impression is that a clos«&lt;
mUSf:les.
civil rllhts, tiiov&amp;.
. ' government costs less. It costs more.
.
meilt· is also re-cq'inizing: \After
And those are only direct governll}ent costs: private contractors and small
Louis F811'akhari's publiC emergence,
. businesses have been the losers, too.
lai:kson is ~n u more mlinstneain
The latest, three-week shutdown that affected 760,000 federal workers
than he once was.
" -' .. 1 1 _
&lt;'Was settled, for now, when President Clinton offered a revised 5even-year
Jackson has dreamed of leltdini a
balanced budget plan, and House Republican~ approved·the. settlemel)~ for
national coalition of the political
now, although they don'tlike his numbers and won't buy them permanent.left. He is now S4 ~ears old. lf he
ly.
'
.
waits for four mare ·yean, it may ·be
. Clinton signed the measure Satufday night, financing the government until
too late. J~e can defii)C a b~t de!tl
fan. 26, although Republicans kept a hold on progtams they don't favor;
;as l)e' sees' fit, and "cay~m" is one
· among them environmental spending, education aid and iiemized stipends
legitimate way. This would be his
for states instead of the less restricted block grants they advocate.
· third run for the pres!dency, a field
That temporary setthiment came just as the snQw .began falling, prelude
where experience COWits. Once again.
to the blizzard that heaped a foot and a ~alf of snow on a capital that can
Clinton is falling in the polls. Third
. ~ crippled by an inch or two. So on Sunday night, the government decidparty ~ntiment is in the air. JacksOn's
ed to sllut do\1/n aU but emergency services Monday. ·
eyes are on the prtze.
·. ,
Budget negotiations at the White House did resume, after a day's delay
BenW~a,berl.a~f~
because of the storm, and RepublicanS offered to.ease their curbs on Medat tile Americaa llllerp~ J.d•
.icaid and 'MQdicare spending, politically sensitive items had been using to
tute, II the author ol a aew ~
radvantage.
.
.
"Values Matter Most;" IUid Is the
i . "It is not the financial numbers that are blocking our progress, it is polit- :·~.--::;:- ._-::;..=:.~-;. 7 . : · - . . •
host of the weekly (III~Ue tele\'lliol,t
~ical ideology;" Clinton had said earlier. The numbers are edging closer; the L----------------~--:._-~-"'-----------,-"'-___J propam, "Tblak Tank." '
(ideology is still :a collision point.
, ·
; A snow, job, f?y c;ljc!i9nary definition, is a long;involved effort' at per,
;"Suasion or deception witlJ a, vM,t lintQUnt of infonnation or fictiti6b5 eitplo,ts:
~ ' That would be the budget ralkS the private bargaining and argument, -the
;public accusations and counter charges.
·
• Both politic@~ sides have been at work, Republicans striving to lise their
!hold on Congress to-write their spending priorities and policies into law now, By Joseph Perkins . , ,
· ing.
a "disinvestment."
business. All of these employees are
jt~e Democratic White House prefemflg a settlement that puts such issues
Constitutional scholars often dis·
-This occurred last Nov. 15 when
But this is just the usual Washing- acting illegally."
:~n hold, finances the government for the election year, and puts .such issues agree about the "original intent" of Treasury· Secretary kobert Rubin ton doublespeak. The fact is that the ·
If we take Reich for his word, then
&lt;On the ~ampaign age~dl\ as Clinton seeks•a second tenn..
certain ambiguous sections and clatis-' raided twci federal pension buSt funds. government is requifed to replace the the Clinton administration is acting
: That had served him .well politically, but the latest published polling shows es that the Founders included in ·the
pe,n$ion funds it converted to cash .and illegally by diverting federal pension
;rus approval rating down and $en. 'Bob Pole's competitive standing as a pres- 2-century-old document. ,
Joseph PerkinS disinvested, while also making up any funds to ~Y the government'~ bills.
tidential challenger up, with jleople now blaming congressional Republicans - For instance; there are some
lost interest. To the minds of most And if we take the Founding Fathers
(including yours inlly) who argue·that First, he took $21.5 billion from the ·Americans., when. yQU have to pay for ll!eir word, tflen the adlflini~QJI
•and the White House about equaily for the budget strife.
: Both sides say they !lop't won:y nboutthe polls. Both sides do. 5c! s~· the "presentme~t" clause.. which · fedenil ,emplqyees To/if~ S11vings . back money with interest, '!'at means is abrogating Congress' P,OW~r· ov~
:blame could be an incentive to reach a ·settlement.
·
apjleats in Article !,,Section 7, gives Plan.~. he toOk ah6th«:r $39.8.bil- you' bop\&gt;wcd it. I! ' · . ,
the purse by ·borrowing froril, th6Se
: First', mere's the snow job t9 be plowed away.
the president line-item veto authori- lion from the Civil Service' Retire- .
is !IIIOthei-~ofthe'n-ea· pension fund~ to avqid the debe 'tim·
• Clinton now says there is "an oyei'Whelmitlg consensus on ... a balanced. ty.
ment and Dlsa~ility Fund. · .
sury Department's' pensi"o!t .raid thAt it.
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!budget in seven years," with the caveat that vital federal prognuris must be-· . And there were some (not includ~
The Treaipry Department went to sho!1111 give'JI&amp;USC til .~ ftl!i!ln's ~It is lamentable that t1!e bat~ ,
maintained·.' It took him four budget proposals, one. with no balance in sight,· tng yours ~y) ~ho suggestec! last !)lese extreme lengths to allay fears in ly 3 million federi'l'employees. 'Sec· bUdget dispute has cqme to ibC PaiN
'one with a' 10-year timetallle, one witll disputed estimates, to get to that point winter, during dCbatc on the Con- the financial markets that the federal retary .R~bin thought nothing of tak· wbete the gov~nt is 'pirtiap~ sl!qt
:;.,., Recall the House Republican yow tbadn their new regime, Congress gressionl!) Cove111ge Act, that the government would default on its inll $~~-8 ,billiolJ QUI of the civil ser- dOwn and tile United S~ risb
. i~oiild no longer' be exettipt from the t11ws it 11asses and the regulations it "speech and debate", clause, which ~ebt, And 1lllhile no o~ jn his or her .vice trust fund even thciush theWhite defaulting on its debts for the f~t
~anctions. That warIn' their ) 994 Cen!i'Jil:t With America, and )hey ·voted to , appean in Article I, Section 6, grant- right mind -- Republican or·l;&gt;enKil:· House knows that it is-underfunded time in histciry. But it would be cve'il
~ 0 it, but while federaf workers werll off the payroll temporarily; they kept ed Congress immunity from the laws rat-- advocates that the United States by more than $500 bi)Hon.
. · more lamentable if we have come t'6
drawing their salaries. .
,
.
of .111e land. .
.,
renege oil its financial obligations,
. The' hyjiocrisy of this iS' that the a point in history when; one of ~
; Or presidential-candjdates, Dole and Clinton among them, who got their
But there ts one clause that 1s as concerns were expressed in Con- Clinto~ administratiQII is cracking · three branches of sovenu.nent ljrazeJ!.
&gt;\;hares in more' than S22 Jnillion in fedenu campaign subsidies despite the straightforward as lillY appearing in gress, by lawmakers on both sides of down on private employers who ~d ly violates lit, Constitu~on. ,
'
sh~ldown. . ·
. · . · · '·
··
·
. . ·
· the Constitution. Article I, Se~tion 8 the aisle, !,hat the Clinton administ('a- their own pension fu~dt., ''I want to
Ame~~!l
re~~~
1\lC
~~it'$
bl~­
1
;; · Clillum sal&lt;! iii a t84Jotalk tha( '¥budget struggle 'is.\fiftic!lltand demand- clearly s.tates that only "Congress lion set a.constitutional precedent.
send a very clear· ind-uKambiguoas est survtvmg demoCracy beCaUse IIIII·
''in'g, ·but "rcmeml!ef,'depu)cracy is 'raucous and often full of debate mat is . shall have the pow~r ... to bo':o'!'
Put 1~ 'White House insists that message to empioy'ers,'1 said Labor ther the president; .1101' !hi) ClingNU,
· · • pOt always pretty."
.
,
·
'
ttioney on the credit of the Untied Ru,bin 's maneuverings around the Secretary Robert ~ich (barely two nor the judiciii'Y is aBoVe the q«;!nsti' ' ·Seldotflit'~ lis ugly as this.
, States.''
.
federal debt limit does not violate the weeks after Rubin's ,pension gr'ab). iution. When one ~f ibC ~. ~h,
·
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Thi$ rarely evoked ci~IJ!Ie has sud- Coilstiwtion. ,1l!e administration is :·Hands off. This is not your ,money. es of ~o.~~me~t 1s ·alll:c to u~ !fiC ·
•·
El&gt;ri'OR'S
. · R.·Meus, VIce pnakleidlllld cOJIIIDIIllt denly been thrust to the center of the not "borrowing" the money, they say. This money belongs ttl employees." consllt!lbonAI tftrolauye of.il!)e of
for The
·
has repo~ on WublbatOa Ud national pol· o11going federal b8dget battle. :(bat1s Rather/ the mon~y taken.from thjl fed•
Reich acknowledged that sbme the othen, then the ~lance of power
itii:s
'
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because the Cliiltoil administration'i.s eraJ Thrjtl Savi!IP. Plan was merely ·employers "liave every intention of that the Founden int~nded Is underusurping Congress~ constitutional a . "conversion to cash:1' The funds paying the money back; but thjly are mined.
• f ..
authority by borrowing money to taken from the Civil Service Retire- using this for their own purpOses to ' · Jtilepb Petldtlt,l!la en' pW for
financec:ontinuedgovCI'IIIIIentspend, · mentan&lt;!Disabjliiy,FI!IId wassiiJlply pay bills, to pay olhercosts ofdoing The San Dle&amp;o Ullion-'lribane,

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-Today's weather forecast
·,

Southeastern Ohio
Winter storm watch tonight
' ·through Friday morning ...
·• Today...Sriow developing. An inch
' or less of snow accumulation. High in
"the lower 30s. Calm wind.
Tonight. ..Snow. Accumulations of
·. 3 to S incbes possible. Low in the
... lower 20s. South wind 5 to 10 mph.
Friday...Snow showers. Total snow
:- aC:ciiJil.uhltitln of 5 tQ 7 inches possibler'Highs tn the upper 20s. Chance
•·of snow 60 percent.

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tlke'

' WAS}iiNCl'rON:-;
a lot of
black men, 1 st8rted hypelventilating
the .fii'St time 1 k~ a preview' of tJie
mOvie; "Waiting to Exhale.''
. It didn'f matter,m!JC:h ihat I kne~
nothini ab&lt;?Yt llle:subs'tailce of its st~·
ryline: Just the fact that Teny McMII·
Ian's best-selling book had made it to
the silver screen was enough ·to send
shiyen up my spine. From the
momelll her fictional account of four
black women who fill in and out of
love with a mostly s&amp;cy· array of
black men aJ1peared in bocikstores.
'' mr tcsil!sierone kvels :oogan tO cfu!tb.
·•,I ~ever got ,around 10. ~~
-·! Mc~)l~ fiacllt[f' lllliough t booebt
. _my Wtfe a COiiY•·IQ prpve to myself
that-l~Jia no ijlauviniS~ l dldli't need
lib. The bad
Jt ~ frOQi my
~ Wll en01111;1 to conviiloe me
thai til bciot~wu something ldidftli

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i~thl!~~~~~§~a~p~p~r:·• i!!~·
~-male JI'ClYP
" ·to,
"'"'-.. McP4illan's
'
\l!i'W(P-. ~

'*'

'i'hle~ wU'•

JljD. ~.._we

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Pomeroy accidents investigated
Pomeroy police investigated two
accidents on Thesday and Wednesday
with no citations issued in the separate incidents, according to police
chief Gerald Ro.ught.
Tuesday morning at 8:53 a.m,
Ellen S. Marshall. 43, Vinton was
turning into the Woodland Centers
parking lot on Mulberry Avenue
when her 1996 Saturn slid on the icy
roadway into a 1989 Chevy owned

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by Lawrence R. Powell. 30, Pomeroy.
Damage to Powell's car was light.
Wednesday at 2:39p.m., Jamie E·.
Kennedy, 20. Pomeroy was pulling
from the entrance to Bob Roberts
Field at treatment plant road when he
struck a northbound vehicle dri vcn by
Eric L. Stover, 26, Racine. Damage
to Stover's 1980 Che vy was light,
while damage to Kennedy's 1985
Chevy was moderate.

da
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vest oc k report
I

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Thursday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to weak,
instances 50 cents lower; demand
moderate on a moderate supply.

U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 39.5041.00, instances 41.50; plants 40.5042.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 3~ .5039 .50.
'Sows: under 500 lbs. steady to 50 .
cents lower; over 500 'lbs. steadv.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ....................... 41\
AkZo ......................................56\
Ashland 011 ..........................35"1.
AT&amp;T ................................. ;.....65

Bank One ..............................3571.
Bob Evans .... :....................... 16'1.
Borg-Warner .........................31,,
Champlon'lnd ....................... 22%
Channing Shop..................... 2"1.
City Holdlng . ......................... 23[.
Federal Mogul .......................20:1

Gannett .................................!""
Goodyear T6R ......................43'1.

K-mart .....................................7\
Landa End ...............................14
Limited Inc ............. .., ••••...••••.•1.6\
Peoples Bencorp...................23
Ohio Vallay Bank..................35'1.
One Valley ...............................31
Rockwell· ................................52
Robbins 6 Myera.......~ .........2a~.
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 137'~
Shoney'a lnc...........................9'Star Bank·................................51
Wendy lnt'l. ........................... 20~
Worthington Ind ................... 19'1.
.
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.
.

-·-·-

BALTO •
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
ROBIN WlLUAMS IN

JUMANJI,.
44&amp;4923

HOLZER CLINIC

The

(USPS 21:"M01
Published'every afternoon, Monday tllrouJh
Friday, Ill Coon St, Pomeroy, Qhio, by rhe
·Ohio Valley Publlwna ~IG•'!" co.,
Pooletoy, Ohio 45769, ""· m:zl~. .......
cl•• pos.... paid 11 l'&lt;&gt;meloy, Ohio.
Membtr1 The A~ll&amp;Cld Preu, altd the Ohio
··Newspaper "'-ssociarion. ~
. '

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POMEROY

Near l'oln.erof·Maon Bridge

TR~VIA
lA recent Harm Poll names Fronk ,.
. Slutra as America's mosl popular
musical star. The SJatler Bros. are
No. 2. folloliiUI by ReO. McEnllrt .

' 992·258$
VINTON
Qallla County Dl8ptay Yard

155 lllllln St. ·

388 8803

· POIS'I'MASTBR; Send addraa C«ft:ctions lo
11le Daily Send'!'!, II I Coun Sc., Pomeroy,
Ohkt45169. .)

., 'Carrier .. - -

'tVoct ............~ ..".:............................... sz.oo
, 1One MOIIjll,......,. ..-,..........:.................... $8.70.
One Year···: .. ···"~'""···· ········"''' "''' '''''''' SI04.00
1 ()nc:

StNCiU: COPY HICE

t:la;ty ....., ............................................. 35 Ccnu

s

SEE

'
S~ti'TION
IIATIS

\

' renU1 in adV_.a direct 10 The Diily'Sebdnel
on adnc.lia or-12 monlh bill a. Credle will be
1Jiven carrier each week.

SILl

"

No IUbtcriplio~ by mail pormintd In ~ .... home.carria'semce II anilllble.
'\

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'MA1b1llliCIIIPnONS
' !ftl!ldtM... c-ty

Holzer Clinic, Gallipolis; Ohio ••.....•.••.. (614) 446-5411
Holzer Clinic, Middleport, Ohio .••••••••• (614) 992~2188
Meigs
.Health Services.
~f _.
:
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Holzer Clinic, Pomeroy, Ohio •. ~ ..•.•••• (614) 992-6601

I

' 13 \l'Oeb ...................................._...........$27.3Cl

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... 82
26 ........
.,--······" '''"'""''''"' ''l ......................~~.
52 .. .l:~....:.....:........................... SIOS.56
--MolpC..,.•
13 -

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2:1e N. S.OOncl Ave.

992·5827

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Holzer Clinic ••• Here for your health, here for your lifetime!

....... ..................... ~ ................... $29.25

2 6 -....................................~.......... ~61
52 Weeb ...... ,.......,, ............,. ...............-SIOil.72

WILL EXTEND OFFICE HOURS AT
ALL LOCATIONS UNTIL 6 P.M.
ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY,
JANUARY 11 &amp; 12, 1996.

CALL CLINIC REGISTRATION TO RESCHEDULE
VISITS DELAYED BY THE "BLIZZARD OF '96!"

' Sublcriben .... delirin110 pay die Cllli!' moy

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fourth Wednesday of the month in
January, February and March and the
second and fourth Tuesday of the
month the remainder of the year. The
second meeting will be held at one of
the schools. ·
Present were Buckley, Rhonenius,
. Abbott, Walton, Hood, Humphreys
and Larry Rupe.
·

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"''~h\'.~tbM's ~ ha(1pened to . ~ ' fOIIt , ~~~,!tl~t.•,\d '~
ked for 'the s women ia McMillaitl~ iul)VIe. It wu-. tGF ~- MU ~~
, .,·
~ tfR'o n't that they were beaer than the men
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t.

.from· ourbetter
nustakes
indIngotheonend.
to ,· , It's
' , -~ ··', , ,• .;· I1,
k~
people.
: 0~, to
. exhale.
,

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Hospital news

UIICIII"•

:the

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Huge S·nowfalls...

cle_

IUOIItJ!!!"

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logs 12 calls
lgs
e

¥

lhin'M

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Way'fe Wickham

women ·

&gt;

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Me'l[g·s·, ann·0 U ncement S

and then retreated to restaurants or w!Ute. 9featij outnumbered, we gnt·
I thmk. that s what. drevy . 'll!C
someorie'~,home to dissect its mean- ted our teeth ilnd dug in. ?"r, ~Is. ~·s of WD!llCn to ~~,.10 ~
·"
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·.
When !lie film Came 011 l diilrq ~ant "Waiting. 1~ Exh.~··" . F~ bl. . .
1
~e,
tQ exhal~,l wll!!~ !o puke.
.·
• women, 11 1s . the1r Mlli,to,_n ~
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But tiS McMillan s,story t~nfold~ ,Man:h. For white women, til!' ~ st
ing.
.
on screen m~. ~g~. fizzled as I ~~~- ry they can relate to, one thii c .
·· Then last week, a golfing buddy of CQvered that , W&amp;lnng to Ex~e · 1~ easily be told in white face. It's
.
mine called to say that his wife ivas onl~ .a movte,, not •1 ~liter "'ot bing _synibolism has' ~I!IC to do y;i
one of 41 women who had descend- I!J8UISI black~· I. h8d sone to.-lhe !he ~anh
tPoYI~·, Pqlly
ed upon a Washington· cinema to theater ready. to CO!Intcr die cm~on- allow~ to he told {rom . a bl
watch the tfiovie together- to c~r al re~ of women \0 tbe, lilr,n, Wllmll''s perptive, t1!an as a ve
the film's conflis~ woinen and J'!steadj· more often tha~• .not,
for ~ri_d!ng the failinp of,bl
•j - its ~!)n\emptilile .me~. :n~~ lor ' l~uesed~~~ t~~upeil ·and .~~n. ; . \/ ' \ (
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.• me •.~asthe_laststraw..~was,~mefor ~~~ ·'W.Wiior~o:Jw••a~
TerrY,· McMillan's movi~ il·· • _;,
a blade-male respbJ¥.
. toi~~'tna a
aa..il'• plm , ~· for all the
·~
. I deCided to tal\e a poup of guys ?. .
bUt •
iff --~~~ . black
It is 411 iln)iltii
' ..
'tb thl! same W~in~~ mor!e ho~ ~~~!\'l:rernen. MQiiol lynch pin lhai·s mlde dteiit ' '
-;- a SOit of blai:ll-m !! Rapid Re&amp;Q' . .ba ........_ ,
..
lind •aware of themselves lnd theit ~lsi
lion Potce-' to Cowl r this snrolnl .I. W!._..lftlel!llll.~
'·•
...._c,f
' "-•m• ~
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tide. :As ittifi~oA l c\ooldl';.;,et llf.IIIIVfl!llo wo~ u .,one 't-or ..... s not~ ..... tn ~ritl~uJiei'. .
·w~nttore84"'- inctitsmovieii,Pbloff • twoodierm~ · toJomme. The rest of aijOilicr ., our ,ltvea, J~st- as min)' the meuap ,my . !d Ri*:!lo ~ wu"sometbjna 1-dj4n't _,to eoe. the IUY5 I Jted iilrered 'up a lot of - !llltek WO!JICII have, at.bmes, plliaecL~Im!llab&amp; ~11om 11)8 ~
.•
· So; I wu relieved Jut, month · vMial s~· bUt shied away ftom and IChemed to let 1 man. · ·
many ,black
w~ lutv1
1
6
wben
she wu '10i111 die idea of IOlJII to the ~( 'in an
1be '1"111 ~ tl)at most of us learn
n re ~to.~ , hit: , , ,1

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Ellen Wells

~ros~ the nation as gr()Ups of wom~.n. · .o f !IS sat ' should~ to, sl}pul~1 'sur- ·.in their liv~. IKh,ra~. t\tai·th# S;tt
massed at theaterS to see lhe movte, "flll_i\ded by w~n . -. blac~ ~d ry ~as ~ld trom, their vw.y, . , 1

on

Alic.e Mays

:Heavy snow expected
~·lo 1aU in southwest Ohio

It~$ :oK·· ,or bi$ek: men .~ t;p_:exh81•

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Extended foreC:ast
Friday night... A chance of snow or
freezing drizzle. Lows in the 20s.
Saturday.. .Mostly cloudy south. A
chance of snow or freezing dri'zzle
north. Highs from the lower 30s
northeast to around 40 south.
Sunday... Chance of snow north.
Dry elsewhere.!I.:ows in the mid 20s
to lower 30s. Highs from the lower
30s northeast to lhe lower 40s south.
Monday .. ,Dry. Lows 15 to 20
north and 25 to 30 south. Highs 30 to
35 north and lower 40s south:

Vada Swiney, 83, of Walton. W.Va died Friday, Jan. 5, 1996 at Roane
General Hospital, Spencer. W.Va.
Born at Walton in 1913, she was the daughter of the late Ben and Goldis Shaffer. She was a homemaker.
She is survi~ed by two half sisters: Mary Ann Kiser of Racine, and Nola
Bradshaw of Middleport; one half-brother, Roy Shaffer ofTwentynine Palms,
CA; and several nieces and· nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Edgar Swiney; one brother,
Bud Shaffer; 9ne half brother, Robert Shaffer; and her stepmother, Eva Kirby Shaffer.
Memorial services will be held at a later date. No calling hours will he
observed. Arrangements are being handled by Sinnell-Taylor Funeral Home,
Spencer, W.Va.

Alice Mays, 72, of Reedsville died Thursday, Jan. II, 1996 at St. Joseph's
Hospital. Parkersburg, W.Va.
Born in New England, she was the daughter of the late Archie and Ruby
Milhoan Camp. She was a homemaker.
She is survived by three daughters: Ina Vanmeter of Tuppers Plains, Karen
(Harold)WhiteofProctorville,andAvice(Harry)SpencerofLongBottom;
one son. Thomas (Carolyn) Mays of Newark; four sisters: Ruth Schultz of .
, ''By The A8soclllted Press
Temperatures early today dipped Reedsville, Ellen Mayes of Elizabeth, Evelyn Bush of Parkersburg, and ·
• · Much of southern Ohio could into the single digits . in northern Clarice Meredjth of Caneyville, Ky; one brother, Jack Camp of Lowell ; 12
•grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren.
:have another heavy coat of snow by Ohio and the teens elsewhere.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Alvin Mays, in 1990; one
'-i'riday morning, the National WeathLows tonight will be in the mid, er Service said.
teens over northern Ohio to around 25 son, Jim Mays; one grandson; one sister, Mary Sovel; and one brother, Aoyd
Camp.
h
The NWS issued a heavy .snow in the south.
Services will be held Saturday, II a.m., at the White Funeral Home,
' warning for 15 southwest Ohio counOn Friday, snow flurries will end
Coolville,
with the Rev. Robert Markley officiatini!. Burial will follow at
.ties for ,t'?'!ay ·and .. tonight, saying in western Ohio in the morning and .
Meigs
County
Memory Gardens.
accumulabons of 6-8 mches w~re continue in. the east until afternoon.
Calling
houn
for family and friends will be Friday, from 2 to 4 p.m. and
'·fx&gt;ssible ~ ' : " · · . '
·
Highs will be 25-35.
7
to
9
p.m.
" A snow advisbry was in effect for
The record-high temperature for
'-central and west-cehtral Ohio, where this date at the Columbus weather sta"aepths bf 3-5 inches were predicted, tion was 66 degrees in 1890 while the
The remain'der of the state was not record low was II below zero in
.
.
supposed 10 get more than an inch or 1886. Sunset tonight will be at 5:26
Ellen Elizabeth Wells, 87, Long Bottom, d1ed Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1996,
so of nel!i-linaw..fow:astcrs.sflld. ,. D.JIIP.§ll!l SUIJ!i~Eriday at •1;,53 amr·. at.lie~- ~s~c. ;~ ,.. ·. "- :. ·. '
· e. :: 1: "· ••
• •
"\:;t r""'; 'r'"'--;, '1 ·~ ~ f'
. •\ ' .
•
She was born Aug. ! 2, 1908, IR Smithville, W.Va., daughter of the late
Anderson and Alice Campbell Connolly.
She is survived by a son, Chester Wells of Long Bottom; t~o sons and
·
daughters-m-law, Stanley and Juamta Wells and Frank and Shi_rley Wells •
Township Trustees will be held Mon- all of Long Bottom; two daughters, Marjorie Miller of Mid~eport and Mary
• oran1elfntstea to meet
The Orange Township Board of day 7 p.m. at the township building. Josephine Wells of Long Bottom; two daughters and sons·m-law, Effie and
,.Trustees ·will hold its &amp;PJI{opriations Supper rescheduled
Charl!ls Hauber and Roberta and Gary Murphy, all of Reedsville; several
:;meeting M011day, .7;30 •p.m. at the
The First Baptist Church, Racine, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
.
·.ttome of the clerk, Patty Calaway.
has rescheduled.its family night soup
Also surviving are two sisters, Lettie McCain of Long Bottom and Martha
,'[rustea to meet
supper for Jan. 20 at 6 p.m. at the Marks of Belpre, and a brother, Joseph Connolly of Reedsville.
, , · A special meeting of the Lebanon church.
..
She was preceded in death by her husband, Roscoe Wells; two sons,
~M
,.
Bernard and Denver Wells; three brothers, William, Homer and Everett Connolly_;asister.ErmalineJohnston;andseveralgrand.~~ildren. . .
• · ·
:
·
.
Services will be held Saturday, 2 p.m. at the While Funeral Home .m
· Units of the Meigs County Emcr- na Beegle, treated at the scene, .Rut- -&lt;;?Oiville with the ~v. Steve Reed officiating. ~urial will follow in Sand
,g,ency Medical Service logged 12 land squad·assisted.
Hill Cemetery, Long B_ottom.
F~ls Wednesday including six trans- RUTI.AND
Friends may call Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 P·'!'· at the funeral home.
fer calls. Units responding included:
2:06 p.nl., Loop Road, Milon
}\tiDDLF.;PQRT
Labik, Holzer Medical Center.
, . 12:07 ,a.m., Hudson Street, Gre- SYRACUSE
11:51 a.m., Second Street, Robert
'jjory ~ajlp. Veterans Memorial HosContinued from page 1
doesn't do it that day," lollery spokes"ital;
.
.
tuHarden, treated at the scene.
damage to roads, bridges and parking woman Sandy Lesko· Mounts said.
. 8:21am., Stonewood Apartments,
PPERS PLAINS
When a snowstonn hit the Clevetom Metcalf, VMH."
8:13a.m., state Route 248, Ellen garages from the corrosive, which
POMEROY.
Wells, dead upon arrival, Reedsville also damages the underSides of motor land area on Jan. 3, statewide ticket
sales dipped to $2.5 million from the
vehicles.
II .
squad assisted.
'·I '
The snow also has meant con- $3 million lottery otftcials had expected.
·
.
sumers are staying home.
The University of Cincinnati and
The Ohio Lottery has noticed that
, Veterans Memorial
snowstorms cut into ticket sales, Wright State University were closed
Wednesd,y admissions- Melvin although sales also vary according to Monday because of the snowstonn.
Thornton. Racine.
the size of the jackpot.
So were stores in some areas.
· Wednesday discharges - Lena
"You do see a softening of sales,
Icenhower, Ravens wood, W.Va.
significant softening, beca~:~se the
Holzer Medical Center
person who might be out and about
Discharges Jan. 10- Gary Way'
land, Phyllis Lively, Sarah Blazer,
St~:fanie Ley, Karen Campbell, David
Michael, Eugene Steele .
Birth - Mr: and Mrs. Michael
'
.
.
Clarkson, daughter,'Wellston. ·
:·{!~Y: ~n~el
(Published with permission)
'

'There

Continued from page 1
before the regular meeting, Roger
Abbott and Scott Walton were elect·
ed president and vice-president,
respectively.
In addition, reelected members
John Hood, Roger Abbott and Randy
Humphreys were sworn in.
The board also set regular meet,ings at 7 p.m. on the second and

Vada Swiney

I,

,•

In by Treasurer Cindy Rhonamua are, from left,
John Hood, Roger Abbott and Randy ·
Humphreys.

Old Central school ...

I

.
,~sn.ow. JOb

,s
·World
.: .p
..

not promise anyone a job for their
support. I have, also, heard I will be
a part time county engineer, letting the
staff continue to run the operation. I
will be Meigs County's full time Engineer," continued Triplett.
The candidate is the son of Edna
Triplett of Lasley Street, Pomeroy,
and the late Harold E. (Gene)Triplett
His wife, Karen, is employed by Lit·
tie , Sheets and Warner; his daughter,
Shelly, is the mother of his only
grandson, Nathan Starcher, and his
son, Russell, is a junior at Ohio Uni·
versity studying civil engineering.
Triplett is a member of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rptary Club and the
Professional Land Surveyors of Ohio.
He is, also, chainnan of the Meigs
.
County Republican Party and a
TAKING OATH - Reelected Meigs Local
founder and member of the Party's · School Boerdmembersweresworn lit WednesCentury Club.
· day nights organizational JMetlng. Being sworn

MICH .

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

. Continued from pap 1

AccuWecher• forecast

,,

:Jackson"'s eye·s.on the
.~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,ott

(

~-

'

�.
'

Thursday,January11, 1996

- s ·p orts

The Daily Sentmel
· ·
Page4
Thursday, January 11, 1996

•

:;uMass wins; Georgetown and ·North Caro·lina ·beaten
By The Aaaocillte&lt;i'l'rosa
- " Top-ranked Massachusetts needed
· · an extra day to get to Philadelphia. It
took the Minutemen an extra five
:nminutes to beat St. Joseph's and
remain unbeaten.
Playing Wednesday night after a
one-day postponement because
Massachusetts couldn't get from
Amherst to Philadelphia because of
•· ' the blizzard, the Minutemen beat the
. Hawks 94-89 in overtime behind the
"· 34 points, nine rebounds and five
' '· blocks of junior centC~" Marcus Cam-···by.
- '' "I just wish he had missed the
··· plane or the bus, or however the heck
he got here," St. Joe's coach Phil
-' Martelli said.
He could have said much the
•· same thing about the backcourt of
, ·' Edgar Padilla and Carmela Travieso,
·) who combined for 36 points, II
assists and only three turnovers while
·~laying 45 minutes each.
~"' "If they aren't the best backcourt
f in the country, they are right near the
;,ztop," Minutemen coach John Calipari
: said. " They do everything I ask them
.• to."
;.
Massachusetts (13-0, 2-0 Atlantic
\ 10) led by five points with 21 seconds
: left in regulation. Mark Bass of the
~ Hawks (4-5, 0-1) made three free
! throws after being fouled in the act of
: shooting with 15 seconds left. After
; Padilla made one of two from the
~ line, Terrell Myers tied it by making
three free throws with less than a sec, ond to play after being fouled by
Travieso.
The Minutemen never trailed in
overtime and there were 22 lead
changes and 17 ties in the game.
j
"We knew that it was going to be
1
, a tough game," Calipari said. "I kept

had 18, but none in the final 14:40,
. on looking up and saying they' re time."
going to stop, but they didn) . They
ReggieTownsendledSt.Joseph's for North Carolina ( 11-3, 2-1 ), which
shot better against us than anybody with 19 points.
.·
uailed just 78-77 on Ademola Okulaja's
three-pointer with eight seconds
has all year and they were patient and
Pittsburgh 75·
left.
smart. Fortunately, Marcus kind of
· No. S GeorgeiOwa 56
No. 11 Iowa 81, Ohio St. 53
took over the game."
Allen Iverson was held to 12 points
Jess Settles scored 20 points"and
In other games involving ranked on 4-of-15 shooting, including 1-ofteams Wednesday night, it was Pitts- · I I from three-point range, as the vis· .Russ Millard 14 as the Hawkeyes
burgh 75, No. 5 Georgetown 56; No. iting Hoy;jS (13-2, 3-1 Big East) had (13-2, 2-1 Big Ten) forced 30
8 Wake Forest 57, Duke 54; Georgia their 10-game winning sueak turnovers, 19 on steals. Damon
Tech 80, No. I0 flo!"h Carolina 77; snapped. Chad Varga had 16 points Stringer, one of five freshmen whg
No. II Iowa 81, Ohio State 53; No. for the Panthers (7-3, 2' I), who won played~ lot for the visiting Buckeyes
13 Utah 69, Air Force 45; No. 14 their fourth in a row. They had six (7-5, 0-3), had 14 points.
Syracuse 77, Providence 75; No. 15 three-pointers in a 31-6 run that
' No. 13 Utah 69
Virginia Tech 88, Duquesne 69 ; No. gave them a 57-331Cad with II :50 to
Air Force4S
16 Clemson 89, Virginia 79; No. 18 play.
Brandon Jessie broke out of a
Arizona 108, Arizona State 76; No.
No.8 Wake Forest 57
shooting t lump with a season-high 21
22 Purdue 67, Northwestern 51; and
Duke S4
points on'B·for-11 shooting, includNo. 25 New Mexico 78, Hawaii 72.
Tim Duncan scored 12 of the ing 3-for-3 from three-point range as
St. Joe's took a chance by playing Demon Deacons' final 16 points and the Utes (10-3, 2-1 Western Athletic
Camby man-to-man, a move that was finished with 24 points, 14 rebounds Conference) cruised. Jarmica Reese
tried by Dayton last weekend and and four blocks as Wake Forest (9-I , and Charlie Nelson each had nine
resulted in his career-high 38 points. 2-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) beat points for the Falcons (4-9, 0-4), who
"I know we took a bi~ chance," Duke for the seventh straight time lost their seventh straight in Salt Lake
Martelli said. "But I thought that's and the fourth consecutive year at City:
the only way to guard him, mainly Cameron Indoor Stadium. Duncan's
because he is such a great passer. He layup with 47 seconds to play gave
No. 14 Syracuse 77
rose to the occasion."
Wake Forest the lead for good as the
Providence 75
Camby said he was surprised at Blue Devils (9-5, 0-3) blew its third
John Wallace had 22 points and
the Hawks' defensive scheme.
straight double-digit lead in an ACC the Orangemen (12-2, 3-1 Big East)
. "I was shocked," he said. " But the game and fell to 3-19 in its last 42 held on by.making all16 of their free
guards got me the ball in pretty good league contests. Jeff Capel had 18 throws in the final 6:47. Syracuse's
position all night, and I was able to points for Duke.
last field goal came with 8:20 remainscore pretty easily."
Georgia Tech 80
ing in the game. Derrick Brown had
The Hawks, who lost their fourth
No. 10 Nortii Carolina 77
14 points for the Friars (8-5, 1-4),
straight, shot 53.3 percent against
Drew Barry grabbed the rebound who lost for the 15th time in their last
Massachusetts, which had held its of his missed free throw with siHec- 16 visits to the Carrier Dome.
opponents to under 40 percent and onds left and then made two foul
No. lS 'Virginia Th&lt;:b 88
only 58 points per game. It was the shots with 2.5 seconds remaining to
Duquesne 69
most points allowed this season by give the Yellow Jackets (9-7, 3-0
Ace Custis had 18 points, I7
UMass. which has won 13 of its last ACC) their third suaight victory. rebounds and six assists as the Hok14 games against St. Jos!f\t's .
Georgia Tech used a 50-25 run over ies (8- 1) won their first-ever Atlantic
"We won because we played great ·a 15-minute period to offset the vis- 10 game and extended their winning
on offense," Calipari said. "Give iting Tar Heels' 20-9 start. Barry and streak to five games. Mike James had
them credit. They never quit. They Matt Harpring each had 18 points for 19 points for the Dukes (5-6, 0.2),
were fighting and scratching all the Georgia Tech, while Serge Zwikker who closed within three points w1th

.JI

i

I

7:30 left when the visiting Hokies
went a 13-2 run.
No. 16 Clemson 89
Virginia 79
Freshman Terrell Mcintyre scored
all 18 of his points in the second half
as the Tigers (11-0, 2-0 ACC) ended
a seven-game los.ing streak against
Virginia. Harold Deane.had 39 points
for the Cavaliers (6-5, 1-2), scoring
the most points at Clemson in 17
years. He hit eight three-pointers, the
last of which gave the Cavaliers their
last lead, 66-65 with 7:08 to go.
No. 18 Arizona 108
Arizona St.'7ti
Reserve Joe Mclean scored 22 of
his 30 points in a I0-minute span of
the first half as the Wildcats (11 -3. 12 Pac- 10) snapped a two-game losing
streak. Jeremy Veal scored 28 points
for the visiting Sun Devils (5-6, 0-3),

who had beaten their in-state rival
three straight times.
No. 22 Purdue 67
Northwestern S1
Brad Miller scored 1-5 points and
the visiting Boilermakers ( 12-2. 2-0
Big Ten) started the second half with
a 20-5 run in their eighth straight victory. Geno Carlisle had 13 points for
the Wildcats (5-6, 0-2), who have lost
12 straight conference games.
No. 25 New Mexico 78
Hawaii 71
Freshman Kenny Thomas posted
career-highs of 26 points and six
blocks and matched his season-high
of II rebounds for the Lobos ( 13-1 ,
3-1 WAC). Anthony Harris had 23
points for the visiting Rainbows (4·,8, 1-3), who were within one point
\I:Jree times in the final minutes, the·
last time at 67-66 with 2:37 left.

with his 253 yards and four receiving
touchdowns against Pittsburgh last
fall.
·
Glenn won the Biletnikoff Award,
symbolic of the top collegiate receiv- ·
er in the.nation.
"My college degree is very important to me and I have every intention
of earning my B.A. in history,"
Glenn said. ''Right now, though, I am
looking forward to taking on this next
, great challenge in my life."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Terry Glenn thought about whether to
stay in school or tum pro. Then he
thought about it so.me more.
The Ohio Stille flanker on Wednesday finally announced his decision:
He will skip his senior year to make
himself available for the NFL draft in
I April. ·
'
"I've been thinking about this all
1 season," Glenn said. "I'm mature
"'1:nough at 21" to make the decision.
. "This was not an easy decision for
me to make since I have loved everyminute of my time at Ohio State,"
G!enn said. "But it has been a life~
long dream of mine to play professional football, and I feel that now is
the time to pursue that dream."
· Glenn is almost certain to be a
hj~h first-round pick in the April draft
and become an instant millionaire.
'"The money's important, sure, but
it.'s more than that," he told The
Columbiu Dispatch.
·
. "l;m going to do something. thai
I'V.: wtulted_todo since I was a young
boy. '
• ·"t .felt like I have to do this for
myself and my family," Glenn said. ·
''And there are a lot of other people
who have done a lot of things for me
that I'd like to help financially. There
are some people out there I want to
take,care of," he told the newspaper.
Olenn said he has not spokep
difectly to any representatives from a
pro-team.
As a 5-foot-11, 180-pound.junior, I
Glenn set Ohio State records with I7
touchdown receptions and I ,411
yards receiving. He, also set school
rri.,-ks by catching a touchdown pass
in nine games, piling up at least 100
re~eiving yards in seven games and

l

TVC basket.,all
standings
Ima

Boys.()hlo Dinlion
DivlsloD OvenU

'

li l.lY L

MEIGS ................... ..4.
Wellston ................. ..4
Belpre ....................... 2
Nelsonville-York ......O
ViJIIOn County ..... :....O

I
I
1
2
2

5
8
4
2
I

Hoekln1 Dlvlsloa
Feileral Hocking ....... 4 I 7
Miller........................ 3 I 5
BASTER,N...............:2 3 3
Alexander ................ ,1 3 2
Trimble ...... ,.............. I 3 · 3
SOUllfER.N .......... :. 1 . 3 2
'

3
I
4·
4
5

By GREG SMITH
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)- Three
Big Ten games for Iowa, three
blowouts.
The last two have been victories,
including Wednesday's 81-53 thrashing of a freshmen-laden Ohio State
team that wilted under the Hawkeyes'
full-court pressure, turning the ball
, over 30 times.
·
"It was very tough. They had
pressure on us for the whole 40rninutes ," said freshman Damon Stringer,

5

6
6

who led the Buckeyes with 14 points.
"We can't blame it on youth. We
can't use it as a scapegoat. We 've got
to come out and play hard."
Ohio State did, at least early, when
it grabbed an 11 ·5 lead on Stringer's
three-pointer. But Iowa went on a 236 run for a 28-171ead, capped by Jess
Settles ' three-pointer, and the
Hawke yes opened a 41 -27 cushion at
halftime and never looked back
despite 29 .turnovers themselves.
"I thought in the early going we

used to.''

Elsewhere Wednesday night in the
MAC, Ball State made a 35-point

were almost trying too hard, rather
" I don't have a lot to say. We just
than just letting the play come to got soundly defeated."
you," Iowa coach Tom Davis said.
Settles, held to six points in Iowa's
"They forced us to tum the ball over 92-63 vi!;tory last Saturday against
some. They're so quick."
Minnesota, led all scorers with 20
Quick or not, Ohio State coach points while Russ Millard had 14 and
Randy Ayers was upset at his team's Kenyon Murray had 10.
performance.
Settles, averaging 13 points ·a
"You've got to respond and come game, missed only four of II shots
out and play with pride. I thought that and drained four three-pointers.
was something we lacked. We 'll
"I told tl]e guys that! forgot what
address it at practice tomorrow, " it was like," said Settles, who also
Ayers said.
grabbed a team-high nine rebounds.

man34
University 57, Gilmour 47
W. Liberty Salem SS, Mechanicsburg

UC Santa Bilrbarn 84. UC Irvine '66
Utall69, Air Force 4~

Basketball

'

NBA standings
Atllntic Division

Iraa

~

Ori:Ulclo ..................26

7

.788

New York ..............21
Washinglon ............ l7

II
16

.6.."i6
. SI~

4.5
9

Miami .................... 16 16

.500

9. ~

Boston .................... l4

.424

12

NcwJency ............ 13 19 .406

12.5

19

Philodelphia ............. 6 2l

.194

Central Division
Chi"''O................. 29 J .IXJ6
lndialm ................... l9 1:\ .S94

10

CLEVELAND ....... I8

14

.l63

II

Detroit ................ ... 16
C'Mrlone ................ l6
Atllllllll .................. IS
Milw11ukee ............. 12
Tomnto ................ ....9

15 . .516
11· . CS~
17 .469
20 .3"75
24 .213

13.5
14
17
20.5

Iraa

HoUSion ................. 24
Som Antoqio ......... 22
Utah
.... ....... 22
0en¥er. ............... 15

10
9
II
19

Dallas ......

21

.. .... 9

Minnesota .. ......... ....8 24
VallCouver ...... ......... 6 28

.706
.710
.667
.441
.281
.2.410
.1?6

Non-conference play

Akron 64, Ball St. 62
Bowling Grttn H . Cer11. Mi chigan.47
Toledo 98, Minm1 (Oh10) 69

.4~~
.4~~

8
8..5

L.A. Ctippen ......... l4

.41 2

9.S

20

Cte"veland St. 80, Lo)'Oia. Ill. 7)
IlL-Chicago 70. Wright St. 62 '

2.5
6

North Coast Athlotlc Conf.
Case We&amp;tern .58, Ohio Wesleyan SS
Kenyon 61 , Earlham 4S
WinenberR, 67, Denison 61
Wooster 7i. Oberlin 40

Wednesday's sc:ores
Boston II 3. SDCnlmeniD I 04
Newlmey 9'!, New Yod&lt; 19 '
Wuhinaton 98, Philadelphia 93
Chicaao Ill. Seattte 87
Son Anlonio 92, CLEVELAND 86
Denvu 91, VllRCOOwrr 8~
Portland 90, MiiiiTii 89

Ohio Atliletic Conference
Capitall06. Marietta ~5

Non-conference play
Defi1111ce 78. Mnm:hesrer 69
XaYier (Ohio) 71 , CincinnAii 66

Ohio U.S. boys' scores
Olillicothe 67, Reynoldsbura ~
Cin. Aiken66, Ci11. Taft 6.1
Cin. Deer Park ~8. Cin. Anaeytown ~
Cin. Madeira 66, Cin. Indian Hill 50
Cin. Mariemont 84, Cin. ReDdina S9
Cin. Princc10n SO, Milfonl48
.Cin. Taylor 42, Cin. Wyomin&amp; 39
Col. 8eeduoft 91 , Col. East 79
Col. Brookhaven 6.5, Col. Whetslotte

Friday's games
New Vorkat Boston. 7:30p.m.

Philadelphia ar New Jersey, 7:)0 p.m.
Sacrumenlo at Washinaton. 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee m Orlando. 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND 11 Denver. 9 p.m.
San Antonio a1 Utah , 9 p.m.
Dallas at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Miami 11 Seante,- 10 p.m.
Golden-5tale ll! Vancouver. 10 p.m.
Houston Ill L.A . Lakers. 10:30 p.m

Per Ton &amp; Up

Dave Watson, Meade Paper

NCAA Division I
men's scores

..

.......... 55.99
....... .. 57.99
........ 59.tt
....... 54.tt
. . .. 56.tt
"~ ............... 56.99

614·985·4465 Home
Or

East
Holy Cross 8S. Lafa~erte 82
,J.eh;p 84, Anoy 70

61

Ccl. Eallmoor 76, Col. Wat73
Col. Mi(flin
Col. Linden·McKinley

n.

Sl

64

Col. Nonhland ~1. Col . Centeooial!'il
Col. South 85, Col. Bri&amp;&amp;s 76
Coplr=)' S I , Green 49
Dover 57, W. Holmes 41
Fairfteld 12. Cedarwille 61
Felicity 71, Cin. Hills Christian Acad.
'

Medina Highland 71 , Tllllmodge S~
Norton 72, Wadswonh 66
Thomas Worthington 48, Dublin Coff·

42

8-Wnrrc:n Hnrdins 7-1 .
9-Miamisbura 9-0 . .
10-W. Chester Lakota (I) 9-0 .

Col. Linden· McKinley 72, Col. Mifflin

)4

Cn l. Nonhhmd 71. Col . Cemennial 19
Col. South 79, Col. Bri&amp;gs 44
C(l l. Wellina10n 41 , Col. Acndemy 30
Co l. West 61, Col. Eastmoor 41
Day. Meadowdale 61 , O(ly . Co lo~)
White 43
•
D~ty . Pauerson 61. D~ty . Dunbar 32
Dublin Coffman .57, Thomas Worthington 39
Dublin Scioto 38, Wesrerville S . ~!II
E_lyria 36, Lorain Adm. Kin&amp; J2
F1relands 53. Brookside 46
Gruiield Hts. Trinity 9S, Padull44
Oratwf Val. 76. Fairport 42 ~
H:uvc:y 54, Ge..eva 53
Jefferson 64. Ashtabula Edgewood 34
K~nsron 72. Twinsburz 30
Kirtland 57, Lzdgemrmr47
Lakewood 70. Nonnaody 12
Louis¥i lleSI , CantonS. 40
Mansfield Sr. 46, M0t.1nt Vernon 44
Marlington 4l Carrollton 34
Mothews 59. lordsrown :i6
Mnyswillc 54, New Lexington !§I
Mentor 45. Panna 38
MidYiew 39, Southview 37
Miller City 12, Fort Jennings 5 1
Morgan 40, Croobville 38
N. Olmsted 60. Bay 50
N. Ridgeville 43, SI!Jidusky 40
Oberlin 51. Keyllone 9
Olmsted Falls SO, Fairview 28
Philo 49. John Glenn 45
Revere 66, Medina 46
ReynoldsburJ S9, Olillicotbe 36
RiYer View 60. W. Musltinaum 58
Shaw 57, Shaker Hts. 48
Solon 43. Wickliffe 12
Spring. South 42, Wayne 31
Strongs.,.ille 71 . N. Ro~u hon 28
Tol. Bowsher 69, Tol. Waite 42
Tol. Libbe~ 61. Tol. Woodward 4~
Tol. Scon44. Tol. Start41
Tol. Whitmer 59, Sylv1111i11 Northvic:w

Sr. John's 89. West VirJinia 74

Syracuse n. Providence 75
Vir&amp;inia Tech 88., Duquane 69

IUDS

Inm

Tri ·Volley 37. Sheridran 36
Tri -Villase 44, Ony. Northridge 41
Tro~ 46_ Spring. Nonh 43

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W. Car:olina 94, Unc:oln Memorial47
Wake Forest 57, Duke S4
William &amp;. ,.._ary 79, Richmond 78
, WonOrd a1 Coamtl Carolina, ppd.,

snow

•

Midwest

Ball St 8~. Akron 61
Bowlinz Oreen 81. Cent. Michialln 70
Brn&lt;l~y 68, er.;&amp;hlon 54
E. Michigan 88. W. Michipn 6S
Indiana &amp;I , Wise011sin .5~
tow&lt;~.if. OHIO ST. 53
Kentli9, OHIO 68
M:wque~ce Sl.lowa 51. 56
Nebruta 79 Colorado 1•
Purdue 67:
51

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875 ceo 0 0" F (1 t75 co 0 32" F).(743443)
wilhout trado-in.
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. 54.99 without tt""e·in. 4t.tt with trode-lft.

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' Andersen Toll Windows
• Stanley Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, l61n. On CcnJer
• Armstrong solarian Floor Tile
• Marellate Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2xl0 Floor !oint, 161n. On CenJer
• 52 Gallon Water Healer
• Shaw Carpets
• Delta Faucets
• Master T-loclc: Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warran1y
• 25 Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On'The Home

Southw&lt;lt ,

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.

Telias T«b 90, Tcut Qvtldu 86

Model Home Loca&amp;ed at

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FARM -&amp; FLEET
Prlceti good 'llulclltr. hm'

Sliver
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r n tllraugh s.tun~ar. Hl'lu.y 13, 1tH

PI&amp;Za

441-1221

•\

..•

. Ari...,. 101, AriOOIII 51. 76
Briahun v..,., 97. Freooo S.. 84

Colindo St. 61, WI'OIIIina 63

·
Lo•J lklc:la S1. 79, ~al St.-Ful&amp;ertbl!
66
•
.
.
New Mexico 78. Hawaii 72
Pooif~ 71, New Mnk:o So. 66 '
Son looc St. 66. UNLV 154

l•

4:1 Ill

41 11 1) 142
40104104
28 115 150

&amp;

Northeul Dh•illon
Pittsburgh .......... 21 II 3 57
Monrre:rl... .... ..... 19 18 :5 43
Buffalo ............... l820 3 J9
BllSIOn ......... .... l616 6 111
Hanford ............. l4 B ~ 3]
O:t61W::I .. .•• .•. ...•. •.. 831
I 17

104

.
202 128
127 132
124 136
135140
106 I.H
95 160

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central DMiien

Ium

!&amp;: 1. I £11. lil lid.

D..-croit ...............29 9
Toronto ....... .......22 14
Olicngo .............21 14
Winnipcg ...... ..... l920

3

61 I.S.

K9

7 ~I 138 122
9 Sl 146 125
J 41 ISJ 156
St.Louis ....... :... l818 S 41 108 109
Dallas ........ ..... II 20 9

Jl 104 IJ2

l·S. Chnrlescon SE { IOJ 10-0
. .I J I
2.J:u:ksonCemer(4)8-J .
. .. 127
J-Zanesville Rosccrons 8-2 ...... .. 78
4-Bascom Hopewell· Loudon 9-0 ....62
5-Kalida 8-2 . . . . . . . .. .... .... ~ 0
6-Cuyahoga HIS. 6-2 .
. ...44
7,Ft. Loramie 7-1 . . . .
. ... J4
.. J2
8·Southington Oralker 7. ]
9-0uoViUe 9-l .
. . .. 3 I
10-0a nvi lle 8-2 . . . .
. ... .22
Uma Cent . Cnth. 9·1 .
. 22

P11drK Division
Colorado
... 23 I 3 7 53 168
Lns Angeles.. . 16 17 I0 42 149
Vtm..:ouver ....... l41611 39152
Anahl!im ....... l.5 2J _, 35124
Calgary ........... l42 2 7 J5122
EJmooton ...... 14 21 6 14 11 2
San Jose
.... 8 30 4 20 124

Others rtniwin&amp; 11 or RlOf'e points:
12-CDI. Tree of life I~ - 1."\-C Dnv oy
Crestview 12.

Vancouver 2, Montreal 2 {tiel
N. 'Y . Rangers 7, San Jose 4
Toronto 5, Los Angeles 4
Delroil4, Dallas 0

121
142

146
142
IW
169

192

Wednesday's scores

~~'=C ~ 82 handheld phone or
installed AudioVox . .,
your choice $19.96.

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Oklnboml S1. 7l, Oral Robert• S6
San DieJO St. 7l, Texu-EI PalO 71
(01)

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57 141! !OQ
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Delaware St. 79, Fkni&lt;b AltM 68
E. Kcntutky 76. Mv.-elqd St. 64
Georgi II..Tech 80, Nonll Carolina 77
LSU 71. VnodcrM168
·
Md .·E. Shore 84, Bethune-Cookman

· =-~

M,1il In Rt

.J4

Atl1ntk Dh·lsion

IWo
!&amp;: 1.
N.Y. Rnngers .... 27 II

'•

Clrmlon 89, Virginm 79

MIX"(!oo St. at N. Carolinq A&amp;T. ppd ..
snow
N.C. Cbarlotl(' 78. Louinille 66
Old Dominion 61 . N.C.- Wilming1on
48
South Carolina62. TenllCSSee ~~
VMl at Georgia SoutherB. ppd .. snow
Va. Commonweallh &amp;6, George Mason

Ium

EASTERN CONFERENCE

N.Y. Islnnders.... l.022 8

Division IV

.39

NUL standings ,

• Uniden Bag Phone ... 96~

~8

Arbruu 63. Miasi11ippi 62
Citadel6fl, Winlh!"OP 62

60Monthlow
M..lntanance Bllttery
Up to 530 ceo 0 o• F (815 ca 1t
32' F). (491320) 44.99 without
trad..;n.

46
.4J
.4J

..

1\labama 72, Auburn 6.5

---- .

1.\0
tl OI
t 79
.. 73

2-0imsted Falls (I ) I 0-0 .
. 84
.~ · Lima Bnlh (2) 8-0 . . . . . . . .
. .. 77
4-Bellaire 10-0 ..
. .69
S-Col. DeSa.les ( I) 11 -1
.. 60
6-lkloit We!t Branch 11 ·1
. .56
7-Paland Seminary 7-1 . . .
. .. .49

Alabama A&amp;M 80, Alobo.ma S1. 1:9

$soo H·""t 1.,0 , b.ltt

&amp;

Others rrctiyin&amp; 11 or mon points:
II (tic}-Carc:y, Coldwater 22. 13-Biuffton
18. 14· Uppcr Sandusl:.~ (I ) 11. 15-Ciarreltsville Garfield 16. 16-WHEELERS·
BURG 1~ . 17 (tie)·BELPRE, Marion
Riva Valley 14. 19 (tie)-Brookfic:ld.Olu·
grin Falls 12.

. .41

Division II

I -GarfieldHts . Trinit~{10)7 - l

South

Up To

a game - or leadership of senior
Rick Yudt.
Yudt sprained his left thumb in
practice this week and played just one
minute against Iowa as the Buckeyes
lost their fourth straight game after
opening the season with seven win s
in their first eight contests.
Ayers. doubted Yudt would have
made a difference, not whel\ the
Buckeyes had 17 turnovers in the first
half and 13 more'in the last 20 min(See BUCKEYES on Page ti)

Florid."l ..
27 12
Ph1bwklph1a .....21 I I
"Washingron .... 1917
Tumpa8.:~)· ........ 17/7
NewJcrsey ........ l819

1-Rocky Ri'Jer Luth. W . (I ) 9-b
.. 81
2-Henth {4) 10-0 ..... .
.7'J
].Baltimore libeny Union 10-0
.68
4-Lenvillsburg LaBr~ (I) 10·0 .
. ~J
:'i·Amanda-Clearcreek. «J ) I 0-0
.41
Brookvi lle(I)IW .
.. 41
7-Alunn SI.V-Sz. Mary (I) ~-4
)7
8-N. Lim3 S. Range 7- 1
. . .. )6
9-Pc mbervilte E.-utwood 9-0
~~
10-Ci n. Wyoming 7-1
. ... 23

Others recei..-ing 12 or more polnb:
11 -Fremonl Ross 25. 12-Newark B . 13L..akewood 21. 14-Cie . C~ltinwood 13.

(01)
Navy 60, Bucknell ~7

PinsbtJtgh 7.5. Geor&amp;elown 56
Seroo Hall 66, Miami 63

.

~!:Ctili·v·e·r ·~-a~~~ ~~~t. ~-2. : :

Col. Independence 58, W11lnut Ridge

Loyola, Md. at Siena. ppd., snow
Mllllhnllan 81. Rutacrl '6
Mauoc:huseus 94, St. Joseph 's 89

304·489·1128 Business

Inm

&amp;

1-Beovercred. (II ) 8·0
2-Pick.eringt&lt;ln (2) 9· 1 .
.~-Col Brookhaven 10·0
4-B;llbertDn 10-0 .
S- Boardman 10-1 .

Liberty 79, Md.·Balrimon: Coumy 63

.. .. sa.tt
... sa.tt

'

Division I
Iwn

29

Mid-American Conference

Minnrso~aat L.A. Clippen. 10:30 p.m.
Phoenix at Golden S.late, I0:30p.m.

c.,.1

81-5~

Hockey

OthHS rtetivingll or mo~ points:
11-Cop ley 24. 12-GALLIPOLIS 2~ . I)Struthers 21r 14-L..isbon Bc:nver Local l!i .
15 (tie)-Ash'-WIIe Te11ys Valley , Avon
Lake I J.

How a ~ tate panel of sponswriters and
bro!AdcD.IIIers rntes Ohio high school girls'
bBSketbn.ll teams in the ftrst of s i :~~ weekly
regular-season 1995-96 polls for The AsIOdated Press , by Ohio High School Athletic Associntiftn divisions, with w&lt;ln·lost
record throogh games of Jun. 7 (first-place
votes in p:wentheses):

Chagrin Falls 67, Orange 26
Chardon !57. W. Geauga51
Cin. Turpin 60. Cin. An&lt;)erson 55
Cin. Westem Hills ~8. Cin. Tafl 28
Cle. CathoDe 62, St Augustine 38
Cle. Soothcoul S7, Rootstown 41
Col. Bcechcrof1 60, Col. East J6
Col. Brookhaven 112, Col. Whetstone

Midwestern Collegiate

Detroil at Owlone, 7:30p.m
Milwaukee at Indiana. 7:30p.m.

99 ·'2"
.
•.,.ni m B•L
luS .................
Fro• $1'4
. ,' •·2
.. . ,
Ill'S
'ff
•20% Off Brown Duck W~rk' Jac~lts,

as they hit 32 percent of their shots
from the floor, then made 61 percent
irt the second half, outscoring the
· Zips 62-27.
·
Bonzi Wells had 21 of his 32
points in the final half for Ball State.
The Cardinals ' LaSalle Thompson
scored all of his 21 points in the second half.
(See MAC on Page 6).

. .. .29
.21
.. .. 2:'i

(40T)

Atlantic 10 Conference

I II

7.5

Amher~t ~7 . We51lake 50
Avon Sl, Cle!ll"view ]2
Avon Lake 54, Rocky Ri ver ] 8
Batavia !55. Cin. Lockland 41
Berkshire 3!§, Pymatuni111 Val. 53
Bristol 60, Perry SO
Cardinal 30, Newbury 2.5 {OT)
Centerville 62, Ke11ering Fairmont 52

St. Joseph'J 13, Dayton 64

\.~

8-Belle:y 9-2
.. . .
9-Cin. St. Ursula9-2 . . . .
10-Cort land Llke view 8-1

Ohio U,S. girls' poll

•

Ohio women's
college scores

Paclnc Dlwlsion

DRIVE-BY BASKETBALL- Iowa's Andre Woolridge (ri11ht) dri·
ves by Ohio State's Damon Stringer' in the second half of Wednesday
night's Big Ten game in Iowa City, Iowa, where the Hawkeyes won 81·
53. (AP)

40

Defulnce 85 , Bluffton· 8."\
Wilmin&amp;ton ~9. Lnkc Erie 56

14

Tonight's games

ft....

Russ Millard added 14 points and
Kenyon Murray 10 for Iowa (13-2
overall, 2-1 Big Ten), which matched
its second-best start in 10 seasons
urider Davis. Iowa was 13-2 in both
1989 and '9 1.1n I987, the Hawkeyes
won their first I8 games.
"Our own ball club just keeps
playing pretty steady," Davis said.
Jermaine Tate scored ·10 points to
join Stringer in double figures for
Ohio State (7·5, 0-3), which didn 't
have the scoring punch- 13 points

Division Ill

Akron Spring. 42. Canal Fulton NW

Ohio Athletic Conference

.5
1.5
9

.697
.6JJ
.514.
.471

Ohio U.S. girl~' scores

Baldwin-Wollace 61, Moom Union ~8
Capital78. Mwrie11a 7S
John CarrollS I , Heidelberg 66
Musk.ingum H-4, Hrram Cal. 61
Otlerbcin 79. Ohio Northern 72

li.l

Scutlle ············ ....... 21 10
Sacr.unentD ............ l9 II
L.A. Lakc:n ............ l8 · 17
Patland ............... l6 18
GoldenStnte .......... l5 18
Phoenix ................. U 17

:
Wa.,.erly 60, McDermott NonhweEI 54
Wellington S2. Hamilton Twp. J7

Wiuenberg n. Denison 47
Wooster 88. Oberlin 47

1 2. ~

MidwtSt DMsJon
~ L rD.

Walnut Ridge 87. Col. Independence

7:'

Case Reserve 72, Ottio Wesleyan 70
Kenyon 86, Earlham SS

19

Atlantll a1 Toronto, 7 p.m.

•Snow .Boots .................... startlnl At s19"
•Lined Coveralls .......... Fro• *39"·•46"
•Lined Bilas...................Fro• ~33"·•3899

turnaround in ihe second half to
defeat Akron 83-61 , Kent edged
Ohio 69-68, Eastern Michigan took
sole possession of the conference
lead by downing Western Michigan
88-65 and Bowling Green posted an
81-70 victory over Cenual Michigan.
Ball State (2-1) had contrasting
halves against Akron. The Cardinals
trailed 34-21 after the first 20 minutes

Val. Forae 61. Wnrrensville Hts. J7
Vienna Man~w s ~9. LordSiown .36
W. Bnmch 60, Minerva .18
W. Carrollton 67. Greenville 61
Wadswonh 1S, Clo... erleaf 49
Waterloo 51. Fidd 38
Wellinglon 51, Elyria W. 44
Western Larham 64. Beaver Easte-rn 46
Yellow Springs SJ, Day. Bt!lmont 47
Znnelville Rosecrans 81.lancasrer 49

North Coast Athletic Conf.

li.l

. L ll:l.

so

Ohio men's
college scores

EASTERN CONFERENCE

1Win P•clr

• \t /'

Sendek called it "the toughest loss
si nce I've been here." Toledo coach
Larry Gipson said, " A lot of it (cr~d­
it for the victory) has to do with
defense. All the shots were heavily
contested. We didn't giv'e them a lot
of second and third shots like they're

...

Large or Small Tracts
Starting At

to see it on film," he said' about Bak- when with two seconds to go, Baker
er's basket. "That was the most stole the· ball as Wally Szczerbiak
spectacular play of the game, so it's threw it in bounds. Baker then hit his
natural to draw a lot of attention to only tPiree-poinrtry· of the night.
that play. However,.there were many
Craig Thames was the only playother plays throughout the game that er for the Rockets (2-1) to score in
put us in that situation."
double figures. He had 10 points.
Miami (1-2 in the conference),
Szczerbiak led Miami with 17.
which had recovered from a 21-14 Kevin Beard tied a sch~ord with
halftime deficit, was ahead 42-40 seven blocked shots. c

Scoreboard

WANTED:
STANDING PINE
$400

trey help~ Toledo top Miami; Kent tops OU 69-68

WESTERN CONFERENCE

The deadline was 12:01 a.m. very careful about what he does. He
today for undergraduates to petition -educates himself very well before
the NFL for inclusion in the draft.
making any decision."
Glenn's coach at Brookhaven
High Scl)ool in Columbus said he
Cleveland agent Neil Comrich,
wasn't surprised at the wide receiv- who represents several other former
er's decision or that it took him so Ohio State players now in the NFL,
long to decide.
said Glenn is a certain first-round
"People really don't know Terry, pick.
maybe because Terry doesn't let people know him," Greg Miller said.
"He's a very intelligent person. He's

·byKey ,
I
3
5

B~ker's

Turnovers help Iowa down freshman-laden Ohio State

IGlenn to leave OSU and enter NFL draft
~, By RUSTY MILLER

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

...

2 ·_ In the MAC,

By TIM PUET
Associated Pre•• Writer
The record book will show Toledo ddeated Miami of Ohio 43-42 as
Kevin Baker stole the ball and made
a three-point basket at the buzzer. But
Miami coach Herb Sendek said that's
not necessarily where the game was
war.
"It happened quickly and I'd like

..-In Top 25 c,ollege basketball,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

"Requires exlsltng line on 1988 rate plan.

591•CELL

Model Home Viewins Hours I :()().5:00 p_..p{
The. · Sat. or by appointment.

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~ogan,OH

Athens,OH
'

'

,,
','.

�,
• ·PIIgel• The Dlllty Sentinel

Thursday, January 11,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1$196

:11!
~:~~----------------------------~------------------------------~·------~------~~~----------~~--~--~----------------~~----~-------

~ill Jimmy -Johnson succeed
Shula.as Dol.phins'
.
~

~

~:...

;'"!By STEVEN WINE .
DAVIE, Fla. (AP) - Jll!lmy John: -son once again is about to follow .a
' coaching legend.
First it was Tom Landry in Dallas,
and now it'~ Don _S_hula.
, .. Johnson s deciSion to coach the
: Miami Dol"hins came after j ust one
: :meeung w1th team owner Wayne
: +luizcnga. · A~ announcement w~.
. planned for this afternoon, Johnson s
; mother told The Associated Press late
•. Wednesday.
; ' "Jimmy is very happ¥," said
:: Allene Johnson, spealcing by tele·- phone ~.om her home an Port.Anhur,
, - Texas. He JUSt loves co~chmg ~d
• be's very happy to be gettmg baolc 10
It."
.
.
.
Johnson, 52, was expected to s1~n
a four- or five-year deal that will
average less than $3 mdhon per sea-

son in salary and~ in~I:'Cement;s.
enough to make him the highest-paJd
coacll.in the NFL, 1M Miami Herald
reported.
A Dolphins representative and a
source close to. ':'uizenga would not
confirm the hiring, and sa1d they
knew of no news conference scheduled f?r today.
Huazenga and Johnson talked f~r
fo~r hours Wednesday at the team s
traJmng complex.. Two forces hastened the negouauons: the JOb IS the
one' Johnsonwants, and Johnson is
the coach Huizenga wants.
. Johnson has _long ~?veted the post
Shula held unul ~tlnng _las~ week.
Shula, 66, was w1dely cnbcized by
fans fo~ the team's disappomtmg 9-7
record 1~ what he sa1d was the toughest of has 33 NFLse.asons.
Johnson replaced another coach-

ing great, Landry, when he became
coach of the Cowboys m 1989, and
was undaunted by the challenge of
succeeding Shula, who holds the
league record for victories with 347.
Coaching the Dolphins will ~llow
Johnsen to wort near h1s home m the
Florida. Keys. And by inheriting a
teaJn that many - including Johnson
-: picked to reach the Su~r Bowl
this season, he becomes an 1mmediate threat to capture another NFL
ti~e.
.
"This makes the Dolphins a very
dangerous team," Cowboys running
back Emmitt Smith said. "It's also
going.to make them a very lean team.
Jimmy's going to go in there and trim
outall the fat - the guys just sitting
around collecting checks. If 1 were
some of those gu~s, I'd be a "little
worried."
·

Johnson, after ~oaching Dallas to
a l - IS record m his flrstseason, won
the Super Bowl with the Cowhq.ys in
1993 and 1994, then left coaching to
become a TV analyst.
•
. • ~"~'he only wa~ I'd ever ~o back
mto coacbmg was •f I looked anto the
future ~nd saw~ Su~ Bowl_." J~nson. s&amp;d fo!!owmg, h1s meeu~g With
Hu1zengl!- There s no quesuon the
opponunJ'! 1s here. Wb~n you have
~n o~ner lake Wayne HUizenga, wh?
IS gomg to go out and do whatever n
takes to be the v~ry best, that gives
yo~. the opportumt~ as a coach.
Not only can 11 be .a very producuvc ~!atJonship,ltbink 1t ~an be
very exclllng and a lot of fun. ,
. Johnson coached the M1arru Hurncanes f!'om 1984 to 1988 and kept
a hom~ 10 South Flonda even after
becommg coach of the Cowboys.

.

"I have a stron~ emotional feeli~g
toward South Flonda," Johnson s&amp;d.
" People here have been fantastic to
me. Some of the greatest times I ever
had in my life were when I was at the
University of Miami and the success
we bad there. nus is a place where I
wanted to be for a long time. That
was one of the reasons I left the Dal·
I~ Cowboys :- because I have that
kind of affccuon for the people and
area of South Florida."
His mother said Johnson made a
joking phone call to her borne in Port
Anhur, disguising his voicc'and pretending to be a radio reporter from
Miami.
.
"He was asking tne a lot of questions about Johnson and other
things," his mother said. " But 1
knewbewasjustkiddingmebecause
I recognized his voice." .
· Johnson's hiringmeansasbakeup

,,.

coach1
'

in the Dolphins staff.
Per~onnel director Tom Heckles
may be reP!aced with Bob Ackles of
the Philadelphia Eagles, the Htrald
reported. Ackles is reponedlybaving
tJ:ouble ~ith Eagles coach Ray
Rhodbs.
General manager Eddie Jones and
assistant OM Bryan Wiedmeier will
_likely ~ retained.
Johnson will travel to Mobile,
Ala., on Monday, where the Senior
Bowl will be played the following
1\'tekend. ·
. ·
. Next season, the Cowboys play
the Dolphins, a meeting that is certain
to be the most-hyped game of the
year.
"It won't be a big deal to me,"
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said carlicr in the week, "because Jimmy
Johnson bas no effect whatsoever on
the direction our team is going."

•'

BULlETIN BOARD DEADLINE :
2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

...... ..

But the off-season dcpanures of
running back Barry Foster and tigh~
end, Eric Green forced offensive
coordinator Ron Erhardt not only to
. tinker With his play boolc; but also to
rip out huge sections of it.
What emerged was an offense
unlike any seen in Pittsburgh since
the final years of Terry Bradshaw's
· career, and an undeniable evolution
from run to pass. Neil 0' Donnell
broke most of BradshaiV's single-season passing records, end, for the first
time in Cowh,er's four-year reign , the
Steelers did not rush·for 2,000 yards.
· But when the Steelers talked
Wednesday of what they must do
Sunday to beat the Indianapolis Colts,
a recognizable thread emerged.
"We wa~t to try to establish the
run. That's .our ballclub," running
back Barn Morris said. "We've got to

get the running game going. Whatever the weakness is in their defense,
we haven't found it yet, but we will
run the football.':
The de-emphasizing of the Steelers' game didn't result so much ft'om
inefficiencies - Erric Pegram and
Bam Morris combined to rush for
nearly 1.400 yards - but rather the
rapid progression of wide receivers
Yancey Thigpen and Ernie Mills.
Thigpen broke John Stallworth's
tearn single·SC(BSOn receptions record,
and Mills made eight touchdown
catches.
Yet when the Buffalo Bills seemed
more preoccupied with neu.tralizing
the pass in last week's divisional
playoff, the Steelers rushed for 147
yards, 106 by the 240-pound Morris.
"Everybody said all week how we
couldn't run the ball," Morris said.

"So we went to the coaches, and said,
'Hey, if you want to give to each of
us 25 times, I'm with it.' "
What lchanges from week to week
is who gets it,
Until Ibis season, the Stcelers' running game was more bash than dash,
but Pegram, signed away from
Atlanta, provides a tum-the-corner
element that previously was missing.
So when defenses stack the middle to
shut down the Steelers' inside running, Pegram usually gets most of the
carries.
As a result, Pegram bad two 100yard games and twice had as many as
26 carries. Morris had a season-high
211 carries Saturday and his third I00yard game.
"Barn is a big-time player, and, in
big-time situations, big-tim~ players
have to step up," tackle Leon Searcy

'

~P names Lobo Female Athlete of the Year
~y CliUCK SCHOFFNER
lots a~d had 379 points~ Speed ~kater
Lobo's popularity brought points, 9.8 rebounds and 3.5 blocks
;:'f~P Sports Writer
Bonme BlaJr, the 1994 wmner, was unprecedented attention to the as the Huskies went3S-O to become
~ ~ Re~cca Lobo, who hel~d take fourth ~1th 34 first-place votes and women's game, and she's still at it. just the second Division I team to go
~women~ basketball to new he1~hts of 282 pomts..

.
She now plays for the natiOnal
. populanly With her playmg skall and
Connecticut became a med1a sen- women 's team, which will form the
charm, today was named The Ass?- sation during it~ championshi" run, core of the 1996 Olympic team. She
; caated Press Female Athlete of d\e · wh1ch ended With a 70-64 VICtory and her teammates have been touring
. Year for 1995.
.
. over Tennessee an the NCAA finals, the country playing top college
, Lobo beat out tenms stars Mom- and Lobo never faltered under the tearn·s, giving U.S. audiences a look
: ca Seles and .S~effi Graft~ wm the glare.
.
at a skill level in women's basketball
; award after lcadmg Connecucut to an
She gave the same steady effort iii never seen before on this side of the
; unbeaten season and .the NCAA every game, handled _the demands.of globe.
; champiOnship- a magJ~al_rid; that reporters and adonng . fans With
"I marvel at how things have fall. captured the fancy of·the nauon s col- aplomb and accepted her accolades en into place for me," Lobo said.
lege basketball fans. .
modestly.
.
.
"My junior and senior year, espeShe rece1~ed 9.4 farst-pl_acc vote.s_ : And there were. many•. mclud10g , dally my sepior year the way our sea. an~· 77~ poants 10 balloung ~y a first-team all-Amenca, nau.onal play- .son· went, and then for .this team to
: n_auonwade pan~l of sports wntcrs er of the year a~ NCAA "fOman of ,come·· about _ it's timing. And 1
~nd broadcasters. ltesscnually was a · the year. She ~mshed be~ career at thank God eve'1' day for it: It's just
• tw~person contest as Se)es had 600 Connecticut wath 2,133 points, 1 ,2~8 been a perfect s1tuation·for me."
. pomts and 86 votes for_first.
rebounds and a 3.63 gradc-pomt
' Perfect described Connecticut's
. Grafwas the top chOice on 43 bat- average. .
1994-95 season. Lobo averaged 17.1

i

unbeaten in NCAA play.
Lobo's value to her team was never more evident than in the national
finals against Tennessee at Minneapolis.
·
She sat out much of the first half
after getting in foul trouble, and Connecticut trailed 38-32 at halftime. But
Lobo returned for the second half and
hit four baskets during a·foor-minute
stretch to start the Huskies' gamewinning charge. She linished with 17
points - II in the second half. .
"This is justa picture perfect-way
for someone 'to end their career," .
Lobo said after the game.' "We're
undefeated, we're national champions and I did it with the people I
love."

~ Ri.
.. pken named AP Male.Athlete of the V~ar
~

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' By The Auoclated Press
ers were selfish, Ripken was. hailed
, Breaking a record once COI!Sidered by some as the sport's savi()f.
' unapproachable lifted Cal Ripken Jr. ,
"It's a flattering thing to -say, but
' to yet another honor.
' i I hOpe I'm smart enough to realize
; , The Baltimore Orioles shortstop! that that's not a true statement," Rip: was an overwhelming choice as The . ken said.
· ·
· Associated Press Male Athlete oftbe
Ripken never boasted or bragged
(Vear foa: 1995.
,
i : Ripken, who broke Lou Gehrig's
: mark of 2, 130 consecutive games on
• Sept. 6, received 193 of 331 first(Continued from Page 5)
; place ballots in votin3 by a nation- utes.
: wide panel of sports writers and
·"We can't go on the road and tum
1broadcasters. He easily outdistanced it over 17 times in the first half and I·
expect to win," he said. "I thought;
1 AdantaBravcspill:herqregMaddux,
1 who receivc;d 47 first~place votes.
out passes were too long, and they've ,
: Houston Rockel&amp; .center Hakcem 1 got the athletes that can react."
:
: Olajuwon was third will!. 19 firstDavis tried to empathize with
• plap: votes, followed by race car dn- Ayers, who at times had five fresh: ver Jeff Gordon with seven and men on the floor.
:.{Jreen Bay quanerback Brett Favre
"I thought our pressure was real·~iih six. Cigar, the tborollghbred who ly good," Davis said. "One of the
. :won ali!O of his raees .in 1995, also hardest things to (each young kids is
1got a first-place vote.
-..
how to haridle pressure. There's so
: Ripken finished 20th in vOting for much to leanil"
·
; the American League Most Valuable
Stringer said he and his teammates
:Player award last season after batting were encouraged when they took it to
•.262 with 17 home runs and 88 RBis. Iowa early:
:aut he earned the AP award for
"Itliink we handled their pressure
:breaking a record thautoodformore early, but we underestimated them
' than a half·centuay, and the way he when they got ahead," he said. "You
:carried himself while doing it.
·can't hang with .any team with 17
j ·rn a season in which baseball . turnovers in the first half. It w~ just
;attendance dropped 19 percent an!l careless ball-handling.:• .
:fans coll)plain~ tbattoo many pl~y- , Davis thinks the Ha.,.keyes, who
•
,.
were embarrassed 8S-6lat Purdue in
Reds' 1996 'tickets
their Big Ten opener lasi week, are
~Q be sold Selurday
hitt!~· their Stride. .
. . .
,·
• CINCINNATI (AP) -Individual
· ,The beauty of th1s b~l club IS we:
/aame tickets for Cincinnati Reds don t have. to cpunt on JUst one guy.
:fiome games for the J996season will ~e _have d1ffere~t peopl~ leading~~
tgo on sale Saturday.
.
,
m d1~erent areas many gavcn game,
• 1'k:tell fot all llames, mcluding he S&amp;ld.
• .Apr111 openint da~ game with r"'i"-.--~
.-CO.-·'_,._
:""JI'!"'a'!"'...-,...
. a""~.;.
lbe
~ I!ltpos. belm at 10 a.m. .
;111· Ji¥,~~6oal Stadium and at the
. 'WILt STAll' ·'
• Gift ShoP. at the dontown
'. u.u vllil1Vuiinll ·.
""Jtea-Y lfo~Ct. ..
{.
,,..1- - · Sala llao will be conducted by
~- aAS$ij1
telephone (5f3&gt; 42.1-7337 or &lt;soo&gt;
'OIIJAMMIHlrH .
•8l9-53S31nd at all T~ketmasler outAT CAIIliOII SCIIOOI.
1leta; where a service fee is c~ed.
..r;rva.~,...e
; 1lckd prices raale from $1 I.SO
111 il'~
~or field level blue seats to $6.!10 for
AlkOO p.a
·~ level red SCitS. The top six .
For ¥or.e lrforrnariml
IOWI of red acat.l'ire sold for S3.SO ·
• Coli 99J-683SI
. . . 011
day. .

Buckeyes•••

......

P.me

.'·

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about the accomplishments that put
him in the spotlight. Instead, while
the stildiUJ1! lights d~ed. he often

stayed more than an hour after game
in his uniform to sign autographs.

MAC•!~ontinued from Page 5)
George Phillips and Scott GoodEastern' Michigan's victory over
·en scored IS apiece and Ali Kart had Wes1em Michigan left the Eagles (3·
14 for Akron (0-3).
0) with the only unbeaten record in
Ohio (1-2) almost pulled off a· conference play.
similar co111eback at Kent ( 1·2). The · Eastern carne up with a strong secBobcats, behind 40-26 at .halftime, ond half after trailing 40-36 at halfoutscored the Golden Flashes 42-29 time.' The Eagles used a 24-6 run to
the rest of the way, but felljusi short. take a 64-48 lead with 10:09 to play·
Nate Reinking hit the winning
Brian Tolbert scored 22 points for
three-pointer for Kent and finished . Eastern, with the Broncos (2· 1) led
with 20 points, as did teammate D.J. by Ben Handlogten's 17.
Bosse. Curtis .Simmons had 15 for
Jay Larranaga scored 24 points for
Ohio.
Bowling Green (2-1), which Jed Cen"l'm not surprised at all that they tral Michigan from stan to finish. The
(Ohio} came back the way they did," Chippewas (1 ;2) got within 42-41 ·
said Kent coach Dave Grube, adding with 17:38 left, but the Falcons ran
that his team got too conservative in off seven straight poin\5 to make the
the second half. "Down the stretch, margin 49-4 I. Aaron Brown had 20 ·
instead of playing to win, we played points and Thomas Kilgore 19 for
not to lose," he said.
. , Central Michigan.

BATTER IES

SHOCKS

TIRES

SNOW TIRES

"BREATHE EASY"
Jan.17 at 2 p.m.
.French 500 Room
Holzer Medical Center
Speaker: Sharon
McNabb, AN
Holzer Hea~h Hotline
Topic: Positive ideas and
self care tips including
coping with panic attacks.
For more info call
"Holzer Hea~h Hotline

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COURT STREET GRILL
SAT., JAN.

lndlau Firm Dlleo"'n:

fJI'

S-pecial" cream
for arthritis

•Uudl oow, -.lllllrilil ...._ ~~a.. ' - ~ - ·dloiil a "'ocbr-ftlCJa"
oold rw lllllrilil - · Now a 1n1o Arilritio er-11111rw....... boo- .W.dapod. lllldlllloul tbli
bllinr. . .

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(SPECIAL)-A small coillpany .pain . and brinsiriJ comfort to
in central Indiana has develop~\(~ · cramped knotte!l"joints: ·' ,./
a special cream that relieves •PAIN · BUST•RII was reartht;i~s pain. i_n mi_nutes, ev~n searched arid formulated to be
chrome ·artbnt1s p&amp;n-d~p a.n absorbed directly into the joints
the joints. Th~ prOduct w~tch IS ll!ld muscles-where the Pain
called PAIN BU~•RD, IS OJ!C originates. Long-time llrthritis ·
of the fastest-acting the~utic sufferers will be glad to know
formulas. ever dc~~loped 1n the that this formula will help put
fight agaanstanllntis.
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an end to agonizing days and
Immediately upon apphca- sleepless nights. It is highly
lion it goEs to work by penetrat- recommended by users . who
ing deep to . t!'e areas most have resumed dall~ activities
affected-the JOmts themselves, ·. and are enjoying life again.
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thas ptoduct. Even a single
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•remarkably well in relieving .
/

SALE

$3''

13·

KARAOKE

Featuring Jeff North

112-31111

WAYNE'S PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH,. PRESENTS
. .. "WHitE RAVEN"
FFII ., JAN. 12 &amp;SAT., JAN. 13
9:30PM-1:30AM
$3.00 per person cover
· $5.00 per couple

•

SAN ANTONIO (AP) - A lo~- . ers and tied a team record with four
scoring game was expected when two in the first qul!fler as tbe Spurs took •
of the NBA's best defensive units met the lead for good. .
.
in the· Alamodome, and that's what
"The. Spurs shot well and made
fans gol.
big shots," Cavaliers coach Mike
Behind 26 points by Sean Elliott Fratello said. "Their defense was
and 24 points and 20 rebounds by good at times, but a lot of time we got
David Robinson, ihe San Antollio our normal shOts and good looks at
Spurs won 92-86 over the Cleveland the b115ket,but we didn't hit them. "
Cavaliers on Wednesday night. .
Cleveland was Jed by Michael
"This wasn't our prettiest win, but Cage with 20 points and a seasonthe NBAdoesn't count pictures, they high 20 rebounds. Terrell Brandon
count wins and losse$, so we'lltake added 19 points, while Dan Majerle
it," San Antonio guard Doc Rivers scored 18.
said.
'
''We couldn't bit our shots," said
"Cleveland makes the game ugly Brandon, who also added a seasonand they play within themselves bet- high I0 rebounds. "We executed and
ter than any other team in t)ie league. did the things we wanted, but couldThey play tough defense, which . n't put it in the basl&lt;et."
•
allows them to have a chance to win
Leading 67-56 going into the
the game late. That is a sign of good final quaner, San Antonio saw Majer·
coaching." .
le score the Cavaliers' first II points
The Spurs boast the lowest field- of the fourth quarter to close Clevegoal percentage allowed in the NBA, _ land to 71-67 with 7:29 to play.
as therr opponents are shooting,just
San Antonio fought off the' charge
43.1 percent this season . Cleveland as Robinson had eight points down
managed to connect on only 40.2 per- the stretch. Chuck Person's threeCent of its attempts Wednesday night. pointer gave the Spurs an 86-76lead
The Cavaliers have allowed the with 1:'44 left.
·
fewest po~nts in the NBA, with _an
Danny Ferry's three-pointer
average ol92.5. After the game w1th brought Cleveland to 88-85 with 12
San Antoqio, the Cavaliers have held seconds remaining, but Vinny Del
oppone~ under I00 points an NBA- Negro and Avery Johnson answered
hag~ 25 limes. .
.
with a pair of free throws apiece as
I talked to them about playmg to San Antonio held on.
the I00s because Cleveland makes
, "We need two or three guys to
you P!,ay slow and they do a ~oodj?b step up and help David and Sean
of 11, Spurs coach Bob Hall sa1d. every night in order to be effective, "
" We got into the game early, got the said Person, who had 23 points on
game ?,JOYing and.got some energy I0-for-17 shooting. "When we help
gomg.
those two, we ar.e a very tough
Elliott, who made six three-point- ·team."

•

1·800-462·5255

"If Bam comes in and he's having
a greal game, I would keep running
him, too," Pegram said. "One of·the
worst. things than can tear a. te1UD
apan 1s selfishness. There is a certain
unselfishness on this tCJ!m, and I
think e.verybody wants to see,everybody else do w_~ll."

•

I

-

OneUniiNow
Avall8ble
10x28, $85 per mo.

60 Lost IIICI Found
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
S.led bide lor tile .....,
of purqheee of e lour (4i
door lour whMI drive (4WD
ell purpoee vehicle will be ·
received by the Melge
County Commleelonere 11
their olllee, c/o of the Melp
County ·courthouee, Third
Floor, Second Str ..l,
'"-oy, Ohio 45761 until
1:00 p.m., Jenuery 29, 1816
end opened 111 -1:00 p.m. on
tlllll ~ end 111 Hid Dlftee.
" LOST
Bide will be opened end
Golden Mix
ruct aloud lor the following.
BpeciiiCitlone lor nld
Cocker name
vehicle cen be obtelned
"GOLDIE"
from the Melge County
Emergency Servlc.., POB
Ftmrooctaa
748, I\IUlberry Helghte,
OldSR 33
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
. REWARD
phOne (814) 11112-6617.
All blddlra mutt UH their
992-4025
own bid form. . Bide ehett be
Htled end meriled • "Bid
lor EMA 4WD Vehicle".
) Public Notice
The Melge County
Comml11kinera r8Hrve the to welve eny lnlol'lllllllly In
right to refeet .ny end/or all any propoeel
bide or eny pert theNolend. (1) 11, 18 2;1'C

Support Group

Spufs .record ·92-86
win over Cavaliers

118ULII $5.95

lOW.
II STOCK
.
.
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said. "Last week, he stepped up
against Buffalo, he was running hard
and wasn't letting guys arm tackle
him."
Both Morris and Pegram agree the·
Stcelers' tailback rotation wouldn't
work lf there was any element of jealousy. .

..

.\

~ Steelers expected to run in ' AF~ title game against Colts
: .By ALAN ROBINSON
; , PmSBURGH (AP) - In Pitts·
· ·burgh, tbe running game is never
; -·passe.
The Steelers may change offenses, philosophies, personnel and, occasionally, their run-to-win mentality.
But whenever a big game approaches, such as Sunday's AFC cbampi' onship garne, it is almost certain what
they will do.
·
Run, and a lot.
"We will always run the football,"
coach Bill Cowher said. "There's a
; mentality, a degree of toughness that
~- .goes with it."
~- · Until the Steelers altered their
·. .,..offensive approach to become a pass;.. j'irst team this season, the idea of
;~)':hanging their run-first philosophy
•.,.·~ould have aroused as mucll suspi:-~l:ion as altering
the formula for Iron
....
.
..,:City Beer.

OIESTER STORAGE

-

Now Is the time for g-r-r-r-eot
buys In the dosslfleds · ·

Area students to perform at OU
honor band, choir festival
Six M~igs Countians will be of Choral Activities Peter Jarjisian,
among the top high scli:ool musical the festival is expected to be an annufrom across the state to perform a free al event designed to provide talented
public concert at 3 p.m on June in high school students with a high-proTempleton-Blackburn
Alumni file performance.oppoJ1unity and to
Memorial Auditorium on the Athens introduce those students to the Ohio
campus as Ohio University hosts its University campus.
first Honor Band and Choir Festival.
During November, Climer and
The six, all from Eastern High Jarjisian held live auditions of hunSchool, are Jennifer Mora, clarinet; dreds of studeats in seven cities in
JUdy .West, bass clarinet; Melissa · Ohio·and·selected Sl singers and 54
Dempsey, French hom; Eric Hollon, in~mcntalists for the festival. Parand Ann Wolfe, trumpet; and Christi"" . ticipants will arrive on campu~ on
Grossnickle, trumpet;.
Friday for a look at campus and
Coordinated by Director of Con- extensive rehe11r5als before the Suncelt ~ands John Climer and Director day perfotmance.

. Climer and Jarjisian said the festival offers "two highly select ensembles" and is unusual compared toother festivals in Ohio because the live
auditions rather than taped entries,
were required of the students.
The concert .program includes
Haydn's "Achieved is the Glorious
Work:" and "Kyrie" from "African
Mass" by the Honor Choir; "First
Suite in E flat for Military Band" by
Gustav Holst and John Philip Sousa's
"Sabre and Spurs"by the Honor
Band; and a 'Combined choir and band
performance of "AmeriC'a the Beautiful."

Add juice·,.
rinds ·.to this·
ta~, t.y ca ke

Community
calendar

ASK ANNE • NAN

'
By ANNE B. ADAMS •nd
NANCY NASH.CUMMINGS
We ·do so love Reader Feedback.
Hope you do, too, as what follows is raisins and pulp and peel of orange
a column devoted to let~ you have and lemon. Add.to bauer. Pour into
; written us. ·
·
9-by-12 greased pan and bake for 45
. CAKE WITH LEMON AND minutes. Pour glaze (above) over
' : ORANGE JUICE PLUS RINDS OF · cake while the cake is still hot.
•BOTH: Charlene Minor of Puhasie . A NOTE TO OUR READERS:
: Pa., was looip.ng f~r this rceipe and 'Though we dearly love our fQOd
1Winifred Blodgett of H,milto.n, processprs, Anne and Nan still
!Mont., obliged. Note: Bec~IISe this is . depend on their old-fashioned meat
; an old recipe, it calls for putting rinds grinders for certain kinds of food
' and raisins through a meat giinder preparation. While a food processor
jrather ditin sJim!dilig them In a food is enormously convenient and fast, it
(processor.
.
5hred5 and cuts rather th11J!·, as a
I OIJANGJJ: CA.KE PUDDING
griader does, forces foods through a
·, Preheat oven to 325.
flanged funnel under pressure. .
· Prepare Glaze:
This pressure.. releases the flavor
Squeeze juice from:
and juices that the slicing ¥lion of a
112 lemon
.
food processo.r just doesn 'I do. Meat
. I ora~ge (reserv~ rinds for. use in grinders, and replacement pans, are
;cake batter)
still available froiD Lehman's, P.O.
Add&lt;
Box 41 , Kidion; OH 44636 (216'})3 cup-sugar
8S7-S7S7}. Catalog: $2.
Simmer while cake is baking. '
SOW BUGS: Rosa Mullett of
Mix Cake:
Pantego, N.C., was being plagued by
112 cup shqrtcning
sow bugs in her flower garden and
112 cup sugar
wanted to know how to get rid of
I egg .
them. We wrote her a rather compli1 teaspoon baking soda
cated answer to which Barbara
McLean of Whittier, Calif.. replied,
2 cups flour
I cup milk
.
"You .really goofed. I am a member
I cup raisins
~- ·
of tbe California Rare Fruit Growers
Pulp and peel of 112 l.;mon and I and volunteer at the Arboretur;n at
orange . ~; , .
.
.California State, Fullerton. For sow
Crearri shortening and sugar. Add ~ugs we use good, old-fashioned
~gg. Beat well. Sift together baking Epsom salts ·(magnesium sulfate)
•nda and fl_our.,Ad~! to baner alter- that can be purchased at any drug·.
nately W'it,li milk, 'mixing well "in store very cheaply. Just as an exambetween. ·
,
pic, I sprinkled it&amp;f\&gt;Und my tomatoes
Through a meat grinder (Ol in a last summer and·the 'sow bugs disap, food processor) grind
or shred I cup peared. It is also good for the soil."
• ..

.

Tlie Community Calendar Is
published as a flft service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
wendar is not desiped to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed u space permits
and cannot be paranteed to run a
speeiftc.number qf days.
THURSDAY
.
CHESTER •• Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM regular meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the lodge hall. Wort
m ,E.A. and F.C. degrees. Refreshments.
POMEROY· Eagle Aerie 2171,
district meeting, 5:30 p.m Saturday
with dinner to follow.

Dive team
pulls cow out
of icy pond
SHICKSHINNY, Pa. (AP) - It
was a cow slip.
The 900-pound bovine wandered
to the center of her owner's icy pond.
Problem is, she didn't moo-ve fast
enough and fell in.
'
A neighbor, Paul Zagata, spotted
her head and shoulders bobbing in the
water-. about I00 feet from shore
1\resday. The cow's back legs were
stuck in mud.
Zagata, his brother Andy and farm
· owner Art Hildeberandt anached a
harness to the Brown Swiss cow, but
she stopped .moving whenever they
tried to pull her from the 5-root hole.
Plan B: Send for the Luurne
County Dive 11:am.

Star; Gt~n·ge ·'to - ~·old ybuth baking contests
,.

· One ap~
«ld wJIIJ
:were delivered duriai'g 25 stops for
when Sillr QiJrige,'(78:ll!'! !'#n~ -- Chri~as~ car~ling' r.eccntly. Nine
at the liall. ;The tneeting lfU ~on· IJICmbefS went carohn~ and were
ducted by Mastcr}'attY Dycnvilh'14 joi~ at the hall: followmg the car·
members aad tlarcc:]uni91"5 ~ng . 9ling for a $0Up supper by five other·
·'· Jlliic MaComber, chairman ofcbf .; members.
.
. .
neiJfinded members to ....,It was•reported that the JUmor and
..h from l'tOst bite. ' · ' yquth balcing confests will be held at
· Dyerrcpor!edthat22,fruittw•uu', tbe.Feb. 3meeting.

luis'Weted

t:':::'

.. .~.P"""" .

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""

l'.i.

• •

W•ter
~.;,/. 1.J/- Treatment
~!(.(~
Equipment

U..SteH&amp;Gnvtl
Septic Syst•s,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.
ReasOIMIWt Rates ·

Joe N. Sayre
. SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C.
PRIVAtE CARE
. HOME

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TRI·STIJE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

The water treatment company cordially

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water tanks, lltovea,
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Call 992-4025
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&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

Openings for 2.
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im~ttes

participate in a free, no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:

·FREE·

iflllllll mo. ...

H&amp;H

SAWMILL·
Port•llll•
Bandsaw Mill

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohlq 4Sn1

HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
814 594-2008 NIGHT

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vlnyi Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
'
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

32124 Happy Hollow 116.
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Danny &amp; Peggy Brlcklll

614-742·2193 '
11113195 I mo.

BUNILL

BOUSE

REG.HOURS ,
Mon.-Wed. 10-4:30
Fri.-Sat. 10-4:30 ·
Closed ·
Thurs. &amp; Sun.
102 East Main
Pomeroy
992·7696

2/12/HIIfn

(Ume StOM-Low Rete•)

Also KARAOKE Every

lor

'
6WV

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

The second·degrce team members
were reminded to.leam their parts for
practices to be held each Friday in
January·and F,ebruary, 6:30 p.m. at
the grange·llall. Nex.t meeting will be ·
a fun night and an oyster supper on
Jan. 20a6:30_p.m..at the grange hall.
A donatipa will be taken to pay for
theoys~.
·

•

II

\

WICKs·

MODERN SANI,ITION

HAULING

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal • Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
· Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

(Specialize In
Driveway Spreading)
Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top 9t)ll, Fill Dirt

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Umestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

614-992-3470

992·3954 or 985-3418 ,,,.,

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. fPM
12 Gaugt
Factory Choke Onlr

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

· Authorized A8l Distributor
Welding Supplies •Industrial Gases • Steel
Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
·Aluminum/Stainless
Machine Shop

1111' ............ .. ...,

PB. 7ft.8173

FIX

Siding, Porr:!Jes,
Decks,
Home lmprovemente,
aemodellng,
Add.Qn'e, Rooting
s.lfft.ctfon

Guaranteed
Bill Doerfer
(614) 992·2979

ROUND
BALES OF
HAY FOR
SALE.
CALL
614·949·2512

.

'

NCE
CIS

lit. 3140'
c
per min.
,
Must be 18 yrs. '·
Touch.tone phone
required.
Serv-U (614) 645'11434 ·,
$2.99

I

St. Mason, wv

7'flc o. sYMt

·...tLSU.. ,
tr
It
'

,...•. , 'Mwlr

l D. CONSTRUCTION

l

·,

AND MORElli
1·900·371·1100'

Oxygen Acetylene CO.
Helium all sizes Medical Gl'tlde 0.
P~jlllne Trimlx Ultra Mix ~hwi;rs
1118 Pomeroy

UP·TO·DITE
RTS

Laurel Limousine Service
"Ride in a Chariot of Luxury"

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
- • Reliable Night Out on the Town awned'
. Senrn wfth
·
operated by

~

(614) 992~279~~~~:::·

33058 SR 33 * Porftroy, Oh. 45769

11/1411mo.

24Hr.

Wrecker Service~

..

Car /Heavy Truck
Repair -2
(614)992~

"
23 Cottage Drive "
Mlddlerort, Oh. 45760
111&amp;'111-.'

.'

One Stop

Compl~te

Aute Bedy Repair

P'ECISION AUTOMOTIVE

TREE TRIMMIN
AND REMOVAL~

Ch'u ck Stotts
614-992·6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

Light Hauling, ~
Shrubs Shaped ,,
and Removed,.\

State Rt 33
Darwin, Ohio

::=:

;:.!

HW1/Mitfn

J.D. Drilling Company ·
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available _2 4 Hrs.
. We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512

Jli.UONAILI JIATU
Need a l'halagro1J.or far
yotll"

SJle&lt;inl Ortn.ion~

•Weddlnge/Rec:epll-coupone
(Engegement Plcluret)
•Reunion•
•AnniVWMrlel
-Groupe
•Ftmlly
,
RIIIODIIIIfe Prteei

Call912·7747
Alttlr4pm
During Weekdrrya

An

mt on wnkenclt

.,._

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE .
Houee Repetr &amp; ·
Remodeling
Khchen &amp; IIIIth
Remodeling
RoomAddHione
Sieling, Rooftng, Patlol
Reuonal!le
tneu.... ·~ed
.. Cell Weyne Nell
992-4405
For FI'H Eetlmetee

.

Misc. Jobs
~\

Bill Slack

1

992·2269 '
YOUNG'S

,

CARPENTER SERVICE~

•Room Additions
·New Garage•
':
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing ~
·Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
,
Painting
,
'.
Also Concrete Work ., '
(FREE ESTIMATES) ;:
V.C. YOUNG Ill ..·
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio ":
112/ttnt

ROBERT BISSELL~
·coNSTRUCTION'l.
•New Homes
•Garages.
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare ~
FREE ESTIMATES.;

985-4473 . ) .

. 7/12114'
' •.

'11

�Jen~ry

11; 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• P~ge

NEA Crossword Puzzle

8BIDOE

PHILLIP
;,•.;j ,

';

,

~ ~~ ~JT ~
1

KIT 'N' CARLYLEQD by Larry Wript

BEATfiE BLVD.IID bY, Bnlft.Beattie

.

F-

Aile ·

AI Nil- -lloloiQ In
. ~· ' l'lf•IIUljtotlo
U.
Fllr Houalng Jod

Roglareitd male Bassett
~nd ) cill 304'81'2-2208 ottor

led 1breed, half Baaattt, to

ollll88willdi-H~

"-',... 304·615·1.407 aflor

lo-"anyprel-.
llml1atlon or clocrln*laljon
buell on roos, oo!or•...,,

'"1·

ALDER

'

NORTH
1K 10 6

' " 6~1' "fttEi'
1-\ IIMIQ I rl Iii fl.

6 4
tAQJ8 _6 5

· Fix&amp;~!

17

IIDI'-

_..,_,...........
any,_

1HOS£
ARMS ...

- o r dlocrlmlnallon."
T111sno--MII&lt;101

wt
lndentltk:alion. Seen on Fredrick

-lion

~!lor mod lhliiii!Mellilgl

Er.1PI OYMr.t JT
1

S EF~V C E S

IUnllea.
19711 1(X70 SChuiiZ Mannchoetef
WIIh 12X28 Faciory Add · On
Room 814·ol46-8034. •
1988 Grandville 14x70 2 Badrooms. Fireplace. Total Gao Un-

· 115:1112

• Deck.

$11 ,500, 614-367-CM21l.

1986 lhrM bedrOom mobile home,
call614-949-2880. ·
1990 1(x65 Clayto~ mobile homo
·on 3/4 acres, out SR 143, 614·
1182~.

Bank ReP91. Eeiy Financing. Coli'
Ruaa Murdock 1-1100' 251 ·5070.
Faclory Rebate ·St,500 Rebate
On Any 'SchUlt Single Secti~n
Home In Stock. All Homes Are
New ge Models And Include VI·
n~l Siding And Shingle Roof.
French City Homes - GaiiiP91il,
OH 6-14-446·9340.
Limited Offer! 1996 doublewide,
3br, 2baih. S1199 down, $2151
month: Free delivery &amp; setup.

Onl~

Apply In ,
Thru Friday,
Cleaners. 658

• ,

540· lltscellaneoua
lltl'chlfld,.. I

-----'-·-

Busineu ~omputer, IBM c:omP.I·
rtdlcorat~:d, n1C1 t1~an tibillty,
. CTX monitor. Panaaonlc
2bedtoom ground " -· wid hook·

N8w.ly

up. Reloroncn Depolll 'No .,.s.
30H15-5162.

. '

PX-2123-fl'lntor, keyboard , cash
drawer, Micro-biz retail 116ra con· 1-i;()~der;, Bi•: kh•&gt;es,
~lef, 2\IIL o~. 3Q+67H238.
I

Nice 1 Bedroom In Kanituga, Complele Mary Kay di splay
Carpeted. Appliances Included, cases wllots of extra products.
No Peta, Deposit &amp; Reterenc,a, ~7S..7H7.
S25011oto. 61H86·7t02.
:---~::""'~:-::-::-:concr••• &amp;' Ptla1ic Septic Tanks,

Nice two bedroom apariment in 300 Thru 2,000 . ~aiJons ·Ra.n
F'Dmeroy, 8,4·992-5858.
Evans Enterprlaes, JacksOn, OH
.One bedroom efficiency apart·

1 115211
-:'~~~·53
::-::'::::--:·:-.-::-:-

-::-:-:-

menl in Middleport, 61(·992- Eltotilc W~talchalro 7/Scooters,
5304, 614·992·2178 or 6t4-446· Now tUood, Scooter IWI!aolchalr
3081 .
Liftl!, Stairway Elevators, lift
Taking Applications For Small 1. Chalrl, Bowman·• Homecare,
6 14
Bedroom, Excelltnl Condition, :~_.._411-_12e:j.:-:"~:-:::-:--::--':--;
SIOve, Rolrlgorator, Willhor, Dr~- Firewood $40 A Pick Up l.oed
er, 1350/Mo. 130~ Deposit, 17(3 Delivered 130 A Load Picked Up
Cenienary Road, 814-446-2205.
614·379-2158.

Three Room Apatment, NeJ:t To
Lillrar~: S350 POl Monllt. Deposil
ReQuired, No Pel6; Cohtacr Judy
At 8oaaard library At 81•· 448·

1323.

:Fi rewo--o~d. 3-0-4--6-15::-·6~3:-:2-1-o-r-::-30:-4·
675-85&amp;4.
::::..::-7:..;;..-::-..,...-:::---::-~:-:­

..,

ri41W ,

M &amp;OIN6TO BE

;r.~:~~~c~•~Li~aw~~Etc.~~~~
•.

~iniBWS, ~lers,

• iWE HAVE 'A COMPLETE LINE
, , Of FliRTS SERVICE!

a

'.

WO AIIO Hawt A Variely 01 Used
.Eqijipriteni Including 8 Rou•d

·Bal.-a. .:

.

Massey Ferguson 35 Diesel Live

WoOdman 01 Tho World Llfo- lnauranCe Society has curr8nt
opeftlngs for career repreHnta·
uvea in tho Mason, Gallla and
Meigs CounJy area. Full benefits,
plus comprehensive iducation
program. full·time ·or part-time. All
replies will be strictly CJonlidenUal.
Send. your personal replies to:
Clay Roney, 241 J Jackson Ave ..
PI, Ploasa~I . WV 25550 or call
~15-8019. EOE

Milley Ferguson 35 Tractor

170 Mllcelllfl80US

7&amp;1,2

With Llvo PTO $3,650; 185.Mal·
soy Ferguson $4,9,5: 20 F.ergu·
son, 11.995: International 43(
Diesel With Power Steering, L~
PTO, S.,395; 814-2ll8-6522.
Deluxe Haybl"e1U .5DO
Adams Dairy, 111' ~'379-

uied V-30 DI!Ch Wi!Ch tranchtr.

· For.a Brono;o ·••4.·.1114°245- :
·1g88 To~ote 4x• Driv~L ~- Cylin· '
def, Good Condition; a-14 ~ 388 ·

8341.

118a

'

.

- - ,. '

1 JUST •

a!IS:V AFTER .SCWDIJL.I S16HEPOP .
FOK A FElli WE!I&lt;S, FORJAMBONI
LESSONS!
MARCIE .. •

1gag Forll Btonco ·Full Size XLT. .
65,000 Milea • WD, Eic•llent

Shape. '10,500, 614-311_1·7156.

'

Ford F·i50 4x~ PU ts.88$:·
Ford F-211b 4~'1 Pl)j$5,995;
1989 Chev. S· 10 ... PU 13,gas:
lvi6. CheY. S-)0 414 PU S2;995: ;
1988 Forll Ronger .' 4X4 PU ,
S3,995: 1UB Toypta ••• PUo
S6.2i6: 1987 5-10 Bl~,r 13.885: •
1984 Ni,oan 4~4 PU .$1,495 :!
1985 GMC 'Blazer ... Diesel, B&amp; .
D Auto Salol, Hwy;~ 160 'Nonh,
st a-446-eaes.

e

i
f

'
- - --'!...

TRMJSPOilTAIION

Wan1ed To Buy: little Tikes
61 ... 2(5-5887.,

Kenmore llat· top electric range,
$75: Sears cabinet·stylo humiclili,
er,l35: 814-985-43112.

3 bedrooM .flo~ae" In .:Cheater,

Rub &amp; Se;rub Cloning Service -"
dusting, rpopplng, window&amp; and

710

up&amp; . References on requeat, call
Torr~ at 614-9D2-(232 or 814-

• bedroom, Hud 8~. 'a1011e
&amp; relrigerolDr, 1375/monih, $200
deposll, Naylors Run, 8t(.g9268116 alter 6pm.
' .

1182-4451 .

FINAN CIAL

420

"usineu
Opponuntty

:i

ltiO!IIe HQmes

for 'Rant
. . ··
'
"

.........ing.
Investment Properiy In GaNipollo,

Ow"" May Be Able To Help Wilh
some Financing, Call814· 797·

.4345 Aftaf e P.M.

LOW INVESTMENT·

Shack a

BeaVIf

dmwtrea
1 Rodlnl·rlddln

8 Olubl
8 ... . nd haw

Dbl. .

3 ..

r

.

~

I,. WI-IY,I~COIE'l£,~ ~

lliCXX:IHT

, Why was silk "invented"? One per·
son's answer in a moment. .
Arguably, there is nothing more
beautiful at the bridge table than the
defenders working in harmony to defeat a contract. One may draw a simile
with, perhaps, a ~uning engine.
In tOday's deal; haw. should the defeiise proceed .igainst four hearts?
West's two:)teart overcall was a
Michaels Cue-Bid, showins at least 5-5
in spades and a minor. East's three
clubs would be considered natural by
most pairs. To ask for the minor, the
advancer (as an overcaller's partner
is known) usually bids tivo no-trump.
South's three hearts is also strange;
why not pass to give partner a chance
to double.three clubs?
Enough on the auction - as someone probably once wrote, the play's
the thing. West wanted a diamond ruff
or two. To push partner in the right di·
rection, the opening lead of the spade
-· nine was selected. Getting the mes·
sage, East won with the spade ace and
returned the diamond lwo, a suit·pref·
.erence card ~!lowing an entry in tlubs.
After ruffing, West underled the club
ace to East's queen and a second dia·
mond ruff defeated the contract.
Who produced this silky-smooth de·
fense? Garozto and Belladonna?
· Hamman and Wolft'/ No, ii was Carol
Combes (West) and Whilhelmina
Jarigsma, playing in the South Perth
Ea8let . .COI!IIre88 ,in • Western
Australia. I hope they win the 1996
International Bridge Press Associ•·
tion award fOr the defense of the year.
Silk was invented so that women
could .go naked In clothes, claimed
MuhamfN1.d, l(te founder of Islam,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull C.m.,os

,.

Celebrity Cipher CJYPIO',,~ITil ar• c...led horn quogtion&amp; by flmous PIOI*. past and present
Each lett• in the q,her standi for IOOthef. Todty"s CIW: G equals Y

' C L H B
L

T

PI

·v T M R Z I G

Jaw

D LV V

CLNTUUSLRN

LW

WN

T R

VLJW

.u

-

Z· ~

PMJLU

INJJLRL • .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Money doesn't talk . It swears. " - Bob Dylan.
"Money is always there, but 1he pockets change.· -

Gertrude Stein .

.

....

'·

IAU

I r1

...

HAMSAT

I

r 11

'..
"-"

~AA

WJ~W:i~!
'•

1347 or 81 ...1149-2879. ·

, .•

-

~

.

AUto ~·

Counry Furni!Uro. 3041875-8820.
Rt 2 N, emllto, Pt Pi&lt;Ntsant WV.
T"*Sit t ... SUn I 1-5.

)

.

!

•

$175; 1 Sat Of Smell !lloclt Chevy

'

i

400 ' C. I. Cyllnd~r Hoa
_ll• $100, 1
814--441 -1053.
•
.'

For Your Carpet &amp; Vinyl Needs
Mollohan Corpots Rt •1 ,.. 81(·

e

Bud1101 Transmloaiono. Uaecl (R~
built, All Typoo, Accessible To
Over
tO,OOO Tranaml11ion,
Cluichea, Pruouro Plates', 81(· '

'!48·7#1.

•

3711.-2835.

PRINT NUMBFRED

lETTERS.

UNSCRAMBlE

ANSWER

I'

FORI

2

5

rr

1 1
I' 1' 1·
1111 ·1 11

I' I
I I

Vine Stroot. Call 614-.,B-7398,

1.aob-488-3488.

SCRAM LIT$ ANSWIIS

' LAYNE'S FURNmJRE
Complete ho~e furnishings.
Houro: Mon -Sa~ 9· 5. 61(·(46·
0322. 3 miles out Bulaville Pike

Tlte Treosure
SCIYI"fS You'll Find In lilt
Cle~ssl(led

Noorly .,,., i.e. cond., $150
,Refrloerators, Stoves, Waeh•~•
080. 304-615-8722.
'
A(!d Dryert, All. Reconditioned
And
Gauroi1Iitdll100 ~nd Up,
PICMENS FURNITURE
WIN Dollver. 814 118'84,1.
304-615-1(50

.-fl*d '

Stc1101t.

.I THURSDAY

Flunky· Noisy· Lobby· Numbly - BUY his BOOK
While leaving the theater I overheard one old timer
say. "We used to hiss the villain. now we go out and
BUY his BOOK."

'i
·:I
.....
_,
•

..
'

JANUARY1tl · ~ ·•

2 Baclroomi Wall To Wall Caipoi.

Mitchell Road Area . Goii!Po!ia.
$310/Mo. Water, Sepiic, Trash
Paid, Deposit IReterencea, 814·
8-43-21116 Alief 4 P.M.

1·::----:-::---:-=-----":"::""

Two and Ih&lt;ee bedroom mobile
homea, atarting·a t $2•0·S300,

sfwer. water Bf'd ~lrath . included,

••

814-11112·2181.

SALES .!SERVICE.
TaveJnl IC·Stotej,
Our Pro·

•

Two bodroom ·traller lor renlln

coun1ry, depoall and .referencll

'

"'1fiired• 8_1o4-e4i;:~~
440
a ". . I .
. ' rpattiT!ent

I

'I

'
I

i

~· Rent

...:•

.'

310 I lamia ·for 911~
Got Haa~ Ruau- PIM,8lo4-....e.
.

3 Bedoooroc l Baih.

ral water;

7 Le- - ' -

Nltural Gls F4rnace, Verw ttlce,
61(-44&amp;-2003. e1.:..a-1409. ' -

. ·.

8832. '

,..~

3 Arclil4 CIOM f•lcon
eyes
5 l(awllllan

Bedroom iMobue. Hqine, Mill
Crook aood, StQO .Doposll Roqulr8cl. 120011ot&lt;&gt;. 81..,..1.()1188. ·

INOTtcEI
OHIO VAUEV PUBLISHING CO. .
reCommends that you do busi·
willt people ~ou know. and
to send money .through tha
mail until you have Investigated

•

;

-.)

34 Diving bird
35 Pollick fish
36 I.e., In full
37Born
36 Actreu Dunne

1 Rare gu
2 Cldal

.·- ~
·'
~2 c'*-ra~ai s riiCihlatloy Wheel• '

FMeDolivery.

home. · Wetzgal Str~tet, \ Pomeroy, WID,
1350/Mo. Dopolit 513-1122-0294.

Mit. llbbt.
32 Prel8nd (2

1993 201 Pro XL. 20' S1ru1os

760

MWI~ r....doled, ..Curily depoe- GOOD USED APPLIANCES
it, leaae, references: Cllll 1·8 1f· Walhers, dryers, refrigerators,
445-911~1 alief llpm. ,
.
1 ranges, Skagga ApplianCes, 76

more. Comptete service or ·touch -

flw

bon boat, 290 XPHP, 614·861·

77115.

st-

Georges Porteble Sawmill, don·!
haul your logs 10 lht miH juat call
304-675;1i57:
.

ROUTE

ro·ee

Condloon, Low IAIINQI!; 11188 Del- ·
ta 88, Royal Broughman, Good
Coildlli9/'. 814-3811 ll:l58. '

~~-:r&lt; ' \ "' ;yt

RlfiL

LESSONS?

l

Wanted To Buy: Junk
Or Without Motori. Call
Lively. 61~3.

CLASSIFIEDS

ZAMBONI

ALWA'fS

Ford Aeroatar ElxceUant

..
r-~t POi:!, l t«0 Ha.P I.JITK Jo\Y "

210

. ONEHEEDS

'

1

Will do baby sitting in mv
'81-2823.

ZAMBONI

Ex~ellant Condition. eu-eg•'

2 Bacl ..,... t;arage/ 1 Balh,
curltv Oeposll, 111Monllt't ~t.
814-446' 1?58.
'· .
'

2t

. By Phl.JIIp Alder

· 814-448-0327.
I
.

·41'0 Houat&amp;lcir Rent

.....
47 P..m fiber
1 4 - - - Mel .•. 41 Give an
I 5 Try
occount ol
11 Environment
52 CIUM ol .
11 - - r.un
_affliCtion
(ovennuchl
56 HerediWry
I g Wayne
I octora
Gretzky' s org. 57 Fenclng ployt
20 Expre~s
56 Frozen dessert
22 Ctorpentry tool sg Unpild dlbts
28 Tolk back
60 Bird
to (sl.l
·
21 Troplcol blsklt
DOWN

As smooth as silk

a·t Oakwood Homes, Nitro

RENTAL S

~-~~~-- ·

Brielle

43 Chemlul ...rttx
44 Neigllllor ol

Pass 4 •
All pass
Opening lead: • 9

WI/. 304·755-5885. • '

,31 51 .

42

10 3

2•

....

..

40 Pandemanlum

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West North Eut

....

derpinning,

•J 7 3
•9 7 3 2
•K Q 52

•J

... IIVlllllie1llls
on"
an equal
odvertioaclln
"-

' ,·

..... 3

•AKQ102
t K 10 4

O u r - ... hanlby

11812'

EAST

•J 9 8 ., 5 4
•B 5

IQ 2

~for .... ~
Is In
ol U.law.

~

Rd. RI. UIO. Rowardl 814 -388·

WEST

SOUTH

"' IOwllo 'fii/1 accept

"""""' '» tJ., Orange caNer,

Ol ·IHI6

u

... famlllll olltul or natlonol
origin, 0(
to ·

Los! or 'Stoia&lt;: 5 mo. old Beagle.

5 ,... - -

12Siwn13 Type of -..1

•

BEfi,UTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES· AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wtarwood Drivo
from $228 to $2i'1. Walk tO lltop
&amp; m011i.._ Call 814· ..8·2588 .
Equol Hauling Opflar&amp;lni!Y-

ACROSS
1 O.C. hOliday

tt

~

· in Middle·
December h Ill
, $250 per mon1~.
lam to 5pm at••

••
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:Page 1o•The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

~Hig~ p.rincipl(es not the scime as being square:

Dear Ann LanderS: lim a male, in
my mid-30s, never married and am
' seeing a divorced woman with two
children, one a teen.-ager, one a preteen. We have been ,together for
nearly a year, and Ol!f relationship is
heallhy and strong. I like her childreu,
and they like me. They are wenadjusted and well-m11nnered and
their mother has done a fine job raising theJ11.
There are times when she would
like me to stay overnight at her place,
but I feel uncomfonable because of
her children. Our times alone have
been at my house, where there are no
complica!ions.
I've. told her that I'm not sure what
the children would think of 1\Cf if I
spent the night -- to say nothing of her
neighbors. TJVs is a small town, and
I value. our reputations. Also, I

believe it could become legal fodder
for the ex-husband. who-is mostly out
of t~ picture.
11le children know we arc committed to one another, but I don't
think we should do anything that
might make them think less of us. Am
I "square," as one of my colleagues
has suggested? Maybe I'm not seeing
things clearly. Please set me straight.
-- MlOWEST ANN
DEVOTEE .
DEAR MIDWEST: Square?
Absolutely not. You sound like a man
who has high principles, and I
applaud your' good judgment and
restraint. .
.
· Childn:n judge lheir parents not by
what they say but what they do. Your
companion is fonunate to have a man
of your _caliber. I hope she appreciates
you.
Dear Ann landers: My wife and
I have become increasingly annoyed
and, more recently down-right dis.gusted With the deteriorati9n in dress
code standards in generid and especially in many top-scale restaurant&amp;.
We just returned from San ,Francisco where we had dinner in an ele-

gant (and expe.;sij e) French cafe.
Most of the guests were nicely
dressed. However, i member of the
. party seated at the 'next _
table was
we~ng a. T-shirt, no coat, running
/
shoes and a baaebaJI cap.
Last weekend, we had Sunday
brunch at a weu:Jcnown (als~expen­
sive) restaurant with a panoramic
view of the city. Again, a couple was.
seated ne~tto us, the man wearing a
T-shirt, shorts and tennis shoes. His
hair was almost waist-length and kept
getting in his face and food.
I realize some restaurants are
huning and .don't want to tum away
business. However, if this keeps up,
they won't have any business. Right?

-- DENVER DINER
DEAR D.O.: The wave of the
future seems to. favor the casual
look. There is, however, a definite
line between casual and sloppygross. The maitre d' or hostess in
charge of seating should know better
than to seat people in tank·tops and
cutoffs next to individuals. who have
dressed up for their luncheon or dinner.
Restaurants that have high stan-

· dards will lose their up-scale clients
if they do too much compromisinJr
Dear Ann Landers: I'd like you.to
share one of my pe\ peeves·with 'your
many readers. H'opefully, it will save
some women a great deal of trouble.
Often in the supermarket, I see 'a
purse ·plopped on top of a can, left
unattended while the woman is
pinching the tomatoes and sampling
the grapes. Many times, the purse is
wide open and the billfold is visible,
just waiting for a thief.
Please, women, put your bag over
your shoulder or under your jlflll.
- CORPUS CHRISTI
DEAR CHRISTI: Great advice. I
hope they lisicn before they learn
from experiel\cc.
Lonesome? Talce charge of your
life and tum it aroun4. Write for Ann
Londers'IU!w booklet, "How to Malee
Friends and Stop Being Lonely"
Send a se/f-Dildrrmed, long, busiMsssize envelope and check or money
order for $4.25 (this ineludes posttlge ·
and handling) to: Friends. do Ann
Lontkrs, P. 0. Box JI562, Chicago,
Ill. 606JJ-0562. (In Canada.
$5.15.)
l ...

v........ cand., .,.,.,.

PI, P8, pciwer wlrldow•,
power ct.r IOcka,·IIIOI'e•

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..School students
·Christmas. play

'

Majority
of Ohio
seniors
passed
exams

_Fowler declares candidacy for 94th seat

T·IJRD

were two years ago. There are not
more Jobs in southeastern Ohio.
There is not better educational oppor·. Declaring that the people of southeast Ohio' ileed better representation
ll!nities for southeast Ohio~There
is not a finn commitment o ·high·to provide the same opponunities for
ways
in this area," he adde
area residents as o!her Ohioans, edu' "In order for job opportunities to
cator Jeff Fowler officially kicked off
be created in southeastern Ohio, we
his bid Thursday for the 94th House
need better educational opponunities
Dislrict seat currently. held by Rep.
and new hi,:hways," Fowler continJohn A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston •
ued. "Without higbways, possible
Fowler made ltis announcement
industrial
sites are going to remain
during a reception held by Meigs
barren strips of rural land. We have
County Democratft Pany at the Carto push for funding ~;ommitments for
penter's Union Hall. in Pomeroy.
highway construction to create an
The 30-year old Fowler, a Crown
economic impact on this area." ·'
City area ·resident. will seek the
Fowler said that education, parDemocratic nomination in the March
ticularly
tbe issue of equal funding
l 9 Primary. He has served two tenns
for
all
Ohio
schools, must become a
as Guyan Township clerk, and has
priority issue in the legislature.
been a school teacher at Trimble High
;'It is not fair to southeast Ohio
School, Glous~r. for nine years:
JetTFowler
· · Raised as a beef and tobaeco
schools that need state funding to be
farmer in rural' Q~lia County, Fowler Social Sciences degree.
penalized because of a shonage in
· is a 1983 graduate of Hennan 'fiace
"Southeastern Ohio is not being state monies. Education in the state of
·High School and a 1987 graduate of well represented in the Statehouse at ohioispublic.butitisnotequat, The
the University of Rio Grande with this time," Fowler said.
children in Meigs County and the rest
cum laude honors and a bachelors of
"We are not any better otT than we
(Contla,ued on Page 3)

TALO,N,ES .
'

FIRST IN '96- Tyler Allen Franklin Madden, Infant son of Kenneth and .j(rJatie Madden, Is the winner in Melg• County'a First
Baby of 1996 contest. He was born Wednesday morning at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Jiv'er
••a""'~'~en named .
T II
IVIt
UUI

f
·Meigs' first baby 0 '96

Kenneth and Kristie Madden of
Zuspan Road, Middleport, are the
winners of Meigs County's First
Baby of 1996 contest, co-sponsored
.
.
.
by
local merchliJltS and The Daily
c1·eate jobs in high unemployment
State Rep. John'A. Cllf\ly Jr., RSentinel.
areas .
. Wellston, announced Thursday that
· A report of the binh of Mr. and
Carey says he has worked hard to
: he will seek a second term reprejobs to southern Ohio in his Mrs. Madden's son at 8:08 a.m. on
senting the 94th House Dislrict, com·
previ01us
p&lt;lsitions, both as mayor of Jan. 10 at Pleasant Valley Hospital
pri$611' of Gallja, Jackson and Meigs ·
~- ~~c:_JI:I!'Jrl _( 198~,!!4) and as an aide to. W'\5 the only one filed with the newscounties,
.Jill"..,. e.astem
La~¥reoce
~ ·~
~ !'\•
Clarence Miller in 1981 - paper'by Wednesday's contest dead...ounty.
.
.
.
line.
·
. "It liN ~n an honor to serye Qlis
The
baby
weighed
eight
pounds,
In order to provide·access for all
pan 'o f the state: I have done my best
of his constituents, the 36-year-old IS ounces and was 21 inches long.
to ll\8ke.sure the concerns of this area
·Republican holds open door meet- Named Tyler Allen Franklin Madden,
are heard." Carey said.
ings, public meetings, and legislative he is the couple's first child.
. -~Y has been an advocate for' .·
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
forums.
progress on area transponation proKenneth
Madden Jr., Middleport.
"I am very pleased that I have
jects, including State Route 32. U.S.
and
Emil
Thompson,
Cheshire. Mary
been able to provide opponunities for
33 and 3S, well as the Chesapealte
Madden
of
,Middleport
is a greatBypass and Ravenswood Connector
hundreds of citizens in lhe 94th Disgrandmother.
projects.
trict to have a direct voice in state
As the winner of the First Baby of
government," Carey said.
The first-tenn representative ~as
1996
contest 18 gifts will be award influential in gaining equity funding
Carey has not missed a floor vote
ed
to
Mr.
and Mrs. Madden and their
for Ohio's poorer school dislricts, and
in the House, and serves on the fol·
John A. Ctirey Jr.
sponsored H.B. 86 and H.B. 280,
lowing comminees: Transponation infant son.
Gifts include a bear from the Ohio
which have become law.
and Public Safety, Economic DevelRiver
Bear Company, Middleport; a
H.B. 86 allows municipalities and hJve passed in the House and are cur- . opment and Small Business; Family
counties to establish n:serve accounts rently pending in the Senate.
Services· and Insurance. In addition,
H.B.
35~
provides
for
streamlinfor jails and safety equipment, and
he serVes on the Ohio Board of
H.B. 280 will provide $5 million in ing and greater efficiency in the Ohio Unclaimed Slrip Mines.
capital improvement funds for Depanment' of Development. By
Carey and his wife Lynley, who is
Appalachia. including more than e~tablishing a low-interest revolving a teacher for the Meigs Local School
loan fund to assist distressed rural District, live in Wellston, where-they
$500.000 to the 94th District.
Carey has sponsm;e d two addi· counties, H.B. 440 will allow for the recently celebrated the binh of their
tional pieces of legislation which construction of industrial parks to first son, Justin.

Private school
passage rate
higher, latest
results reveal
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -The latest scores
froni Ohio's high schoo! proficiency
tests show 92 percent of this year's
seniors have passed the exams needed to graduate.

case of Gerber baby food from Big
Bend Foodland, Pomeroy; a stainless
State School Superintendent John
steel sipper cup from Acquisitions Goff said Thursday that results of
Fine Jewelry. Middlepon; a $5 gift tests in reading, writi~g. mathematcertificate from the Fabric Shop; a . ics and citizenship taken in October
free meal for the parents from Crow's demonstrate !!he Class of 1996 has
RestauFant, Pomeroy; a $10 savings perfonned at the same level as last
account from Racine Home Nation- year's seniors.
al Ban~: a $20 gift cenificate from
"Even !hough the percentage i~
Powell~ Super Vatu, Pomeroy; a $20 .. the same I thiilklhere is an intereStgift .cemficate from Fruth Phannacy, ing point in here,'' Goff said at a news
Middleport; a $10 gift cen1ficate conference.
from Middleport Department Store;
"We have about 2,000 more ·
A $15 gift cenificate from The
seniors
this year than last year who
Shoe Place in Middleport; a $50 savhave
passed
all the tests. We believe
ings bond from Fanners Bank; $25
wonh of baby fonnula from Kroger's. that speaks to the staying power of•
Pomeroy. a $10 gift certificate from these youngsters. They're staying in ·
Swisher-LohsG Phannacv. Pomerov : school, not leaving, and we have that
a baby arrangement from the many more now passing," he said.
Seniors who still must pass one or
Pomeroy A ower Shop; a $10 gift cermore
tests may take the exams again
tificate from Buttons and Bows,
in
March
and May. .
Pomeroy; an ice cream cake from
Dairy Queen, Middleport; a $25 gif~
But the latest scores also show that
certificate from Vaughan's Cardinal
ninth
grade students in private
and a three-piece feeder set from K
schools
outperfanned their public
&amp; C Jewelers, Pomeroy.
system counterparts.
Results of tests taken last March
and/or October show 48 percent of
137,556 ninth-grade public school
students had passed all the exams
after one or two tries.
In private schools, 72 percent of.
the 14,725 ninth graders had passed
all four ~~ams after the same number
of attempts.
Goff commended nonpublic
James L. Davis, Minersville, has
schools for the achievement. "It's terrific," he said.
announced his intention to seek the
Democratic nomination for lhe Meigs
There was no ready explanation
. County Commission seat cprrently
for the disparity, but Goff sai&lt;i he
held by Democratic incumbent Janel
believed there was more intense
• To Republicans, the papers sug· Howard, whose tenn commences
parental involvement across the nongested that Mrs. Clinton ordered the Jan. I, 1997.
public system than in public schools .
May 19, 1993, purge of the travel
Davis is retired from the U.S.
"I think parental involvement is. ·
office staff and that she did substan- Army Corps of Engineers with 27
an extremely important piece of this
tial legal work for Madison Guaran- years of service. He served in the
whole picture," he said.
ty Savings and Loan while living in U.S. Navy frpm 1954 until 1958, and
"When you get past that, I'm not
· Arkansas- two charges she denies. also served 18 months with the Pressure
i have an explanation other than
James L. Davis
in his first full-scale news confer- idential Honor Guard in Washington .
the commiunent on the part of the
ence since August. the president D.C. .
Davis civic activities include family and the student, based on the
indignantly denied charges that the
Davis and his wife, Mary Donna. membership with the Daughters of decision made by the family to go to
White House has withheld sensitive have been lifelong residents of the America, Guiding Star Council 124; that school, probably carries some
infonnation from investigators. area and have resided in Meigs Fraternal Order of Elks. Athens; weight. I can only do that-anecdotal"We're in the cooperation business," County for the last I 5 years.
· · American Legion Fecncy-Benneu ly," Goff said.
he said.
He is a member of the United Post, Middleport; VFW Post 9053.
In the Roman Catholic Diocese of.
But he stopped short of commit- Brotherhood of Carpenters Local Tuppers Plains; Forked Run Sports- Columbus, the percentage of ninth
ting the first lady to testifying in per- 650, Pomeroy; a co-founder and man's Club; Shade River Masomc graders who passed all four tests after ·
son before congressional committees chairperson of the Big Bend Stern- Lodge; Scottish Rite Valley, Colum- two lries reached 74.4 percent 'file
investiga.tirig the affairs.
wheel Festival Committee; trustee of bus; White Shrine of Jerusalem, Gal- diocese covers 23 of the stat~ 's ~8
"She wilt' do whatever is nece§- the American Stemwheel Associa, lipolis; Aladdin Temple Shrine, counties and includes II 1high
sary to answer all lhe appropriate lion: and a member of the U.S. Coast Columbus; and Horsetraders Degree, schools.
questions," Clinton said.
Guard Flotilla 3-10, Pomeroy.
' Valerie Wilsqn, diocese public
Kentucky.
He dismissed speculation that his ·
relations director, said most of the
wife has suddenly become a political
class of 1999 took the exams last
liability. "She will continue to be an
March as eighth graders. Si~ty-six
enonnous positive force in this counpe~ent passed all four on the first try.
try," he predicted.
My sense would be the tests
. The news conference was pan of
reflect the sound curriculum that ·
Jeff Harris was re-elected presiThe board set the second Thursday
a fledgling campaign at the White
we've developed over the years. I
dent
of
lhe
Meigs
County
Educaof
each
month at 7 p.m. for the reg- can't mike any comparison to the
House lo salvage Mrs. Clinton's reputation. She iJ embarking on a high- tional Service Center Board during its ular meeting date.
public ~chQbJs," Wilson said.
,
Howard Caldwell was named to
profile book.tour next week, planning organizational meeting Thursday
She agreed with Ooff .aliout the
serve as (he b6ard's legislative liaison
to •answer questions on the travel night.
importa~e of pa~trital invol;t~;ment. ,
Re-elected vice president was to the Ohio School Boards Associaoffice and Whitewater:
. "We have ex~l!~nt c~tion .·
Bob
Banon.
tion.
In his testimony Thursday;
The meeting was held at
John Riebel Sr., superintendent, wtth the parents.J thmk ~s, kOJ[: - 1 , ;
Massey said Vincent Foster ordered
factor.. They cboo~ to put ~ar stu- .
t.·
him to tum over the.campaign papers. McClure's Restaurant in. Pomeroy · discussed the special education dents In lhe sC_hoo(s sometune&amp; at. &gt;· · ~
Foster, later a deputy counsel at the due to a power outage at the board . review report and staff contracts financial hardship," Wil$0l! siud,
. · ''
\llhich will be up for renewal this
White House, comnlitted suicide ih · offices.
~
"'
~~· .~
. r,
July 1993, a tragedy that fed specu- _ Harris and 1.0. McCoy, wh0 are ·year. No.actib.n on either matter was
Students mus( 'paSs ' ~· l!ilith-:"'"·'·',.f~i-ff'
latiOII about tbe taligie of Whitewa- beginning new four-year tenns, were taken. Bills were approved for pay- arade tests' ilnd 'meet ~ ·~ .
given the oath of office by Treasurer ment following-the utas'urer's report ments in order io PI~ ITdm
ter-related developn1ents.
~ Carol Gilkey.
school.
·
•"
...... . 1
~

:Incumbent Carey will seek second term .

as

sp,~CJE SIHI n I L... - Th• Space Shuttle Ende8Vour thund4irs off
Launch Pilei 38-B lll'ly Thursday·mornlng beginning a nine-day
ml••lon. (AP Photo)
·
·

'

•

35AGennett Co. N1w 1j1per

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 12, 1996

District race heats up

a

1994 FORD ·

ing it quits after Septemhl:r.
derful nine-year run and has been 11
Despite improved ratings in a less tremendous asset to Twentieth Tetetawdry format, "Affair" won:t be vision," said Rick Jacobson, th~
returning for the 1996-97 season, . company's president . "The show is
Twentielh Tel~vision, the show's dis· as good as it's ever been right now.··
lributor, announced Wednesday.
However, "'Affair," the nation's
"'ACurrenfAffalr' has had a won- fll'st syndicated tabloid .show .and
long the ra.ti'!gs leader, had in recent
years slipped to No. 3 position behind
the shows it inspired: "Hard Copj"
'
and·current front-runner "Inside EdiWilliatns was. ;el~tcd v.ice piesident. tion.-'' _ .
'
·
Joe Bolin is the 'third trustee. Meetings will be held on the 'first Thursday of ta.;h month at 6: IS p.m. at the "
Rutland Fire Station.

OFFICER.JiiLEq'ION
. Officers . wcte elcc~ w(len.•,the
. ~es Auxiliary qf.Oiive ToW!tship
Fire Depanment met Tuesday riight
·at the hall.
··
. Elected were Connie Smilh, president; Jody Bethel, vice president; .
OSU .HONOR ROLL
Elizabeth Smith, secretary; and
PaUline Brewer. treaSurer.
·
Si~ M1igs Countians were listed
.'Plans were discussed for a dinner on the honor roll for the autumn
to be held at a later date and for a quarter at Ohio State University.
Valentine package as a February
Those honored received a grade
.fund raiser. lt will include dinner for point average of at least 3.5 and were
~wo, a movie; and chdcolatcs.
enrolled for at least 12 credit hours.
. ·.
· ,
- '
On the list from here were Barbara
~LE&lt;Jrilp PJWjSJDENTS
Joan Anderson, Sarah Elizabeth
Charles }liiiTett, k was Fleclell. : Anderson, Jeremy William Buckley,
· ~~- ~~~of the ltutland ToWIIship ' Cleon Reginald Pratt Ill, Andrew
when thl:y met 'for an orga- David Wolf, all of Pomeroy, and
· meeting recently Charles Robyn Ann Stout of Syracuse.

Vol. 48, NO. 1110
1 Sectton, 10 l'llgw

By :roM 11UNTER
Sentinel News Staff

-.Society
.scrapbook...
~

.Low In 20. tonight. hrtiJ
cloudy. Saturday, moatly
cloudy, hlghaln mlcl-30..

•

1995 MERCURY
SABLE

4 dr., 4 cyl.,· auto., llr cand.,
AM/FII caa..aa, Ult, cruiH,

:'A Cl!lrrent Affair' c~lls it quit, won't ·return next fall
By FRAZIER MOORE
lP Television Writer.
: NEW YORK (AP)- Ka-chung!
''A Current Affair" has been cut.
The graitddaddy of syndicated
news magazines, wilh its pyramid
logo and wind-whistling intro, is call-

789
Pick 4:
4909
BuckeyeS
1-2-3-21-30

Sports, Page 4

Eanh. The satellite was soaring over
Australia when Endeavour blasted
off, more than 9,000 IJ)iles al)ead.
The 4-ton reusable satellite holds
two dead newts - they died shortly
after being launched from Japan last
March - and fertilized newt eggs, all
pan of a biological experiment. It
also contains crystal-growlh furnaces
and.infrared telescopes.
Duffy and his crew will release
and relrievc a U.S. science satellite
during the nine-day mission. Two
spacewalks also are scheduled to
practice station-style work; three
men wiiiJ!O outside next week, two
at a time, to build up crucial spacewalking experience.
American astronauts alone will
have to perform 200 to 250 hours of
spacewalks per year from 1999
through 2001 to assemble the international space station. Japan is one of
the station panners, and is aiming for
a manned moon base of its own by
the middle of the next century.
Endeavour is due back at Kenoedy
Space Center on Jan. 20. ·
Shuttle manager Loren Shriver
said it was a "fantastic first launch of
1996." He warned JIIASA may have
to slow down aDd'perhaps even halt
w.otk on upcoming missions if the
federal budget impasse drags into late
January or beyond. Eight shuttle
- flights arc planned this year, one
more than 1995.
At Mission Control, 'flight director Bryan Austin formally kicked off
the mission by painting in one of two
eyes·on a red, ball-shaped Japanese
doll, a good-luck s!Wiol despite its
menacing look. He ;!It paint in the
remaining eye once the satellite is
captured, in keeping with Japanese
tradition.

Pic~ 3:

Miami hire.s
Johnson as
new coach

Endeavour blasts off,
begif/S satellite chase
By MARCI-l' DUNN ·
· AP Aerospace Writer
. ·; CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
. -;- Space shuttle Endeavour and its
' crew rocketed into orbit today and
began chasing a 'Japanese satellite
loaded with dead newt~. crystals and
telescopes that mied to be returned to
Earth.
"It was a great ride uphill," commander Brian Duffy said.
The 2,000-(on spaceship rose from
its seaside pad at 4:41 a.m., lighting
the sky for miles around. Liftoff was
delayed 23 minutes.by an assortment
of communication-system problems.
"Sorry it took us a couple of extra
minutes to get tlie engines stancd.
But once you tumed·the key, you sure
put on a great show," Mission Controltold the six astronauts.
It was 44 degrees at liftoff, warm
. enough under the rules established
·after the 1986 Challenger disaster.
'NASA used heaters to protect crucial
shuttle parts.
The temperature was 36 degrees,
·the coldest ever for a shuttle launch,
when Challenger exploded 10 years
,.go this. month, killing all seven crew
members. Investigators found that ihe
cold had stiffened the 0'rings in the
shut~'sbooster rockets, allowing hot
·gas tQ seep out.
After the accident, NASA adopted an elaborate fonnula involvinglow temperature, wind and humidity
in detennining whether it is safe to
launch. Heaters also were added to
protect the joints and O~ring seals in
the boosters and other components.
On Saturday, the five U.S. and one
Japanese astronauts will use the shuttie robot ann to relrieve the Japanese
satellite nearly 300 miles above

..

Thursday~ January 11, 19tJ8

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

In a highly competitive programing marketplace, the sbow's continued presence in cenain key cities was
in doubt. "It wasn't economic~ly
feasible to prog'nlm under those circumstances,'' Jacobson said.
Launched nationally on · F'lxowned stations in June 1987, the
show was re-introduced in Septem~
as "The New .A Current Affair,"
ilnchOred former "Dateline NJIC"
·
·
· Jon Scott.'
·

Got· A C

'

Room

In Your ome?
• Heat up to 500 11Q- ft.
• Uses 50% less electricity than corwentional
heating systems .
• No flames, no fumes ' ",,...,.
• Ph~ lnt9 110 Outlet · .
• · Purifies the air all ' ·

· year rwnd. · ' · .
1
•.

Furniture C!lbihel '
serves as functional
end·tabl~
·
'

''

Heat Whl'rP You Wan l It For Just A Dolla r A Doy.

1995 FORD
WINDSTAR GL

1995 FORD
FlSb 412
I cyl.; I •P.•d, air ..........,
PS,

PI, " tilt,

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new complications are arising

.

119'94'.. 1FORD ·.
F150 4X2

' XLT, I cyt, 5' ipiled,

cOnct., ~·· .,...,

U10 c:niie,;. .:....IIIMtt•,
''I•
' , JongHd.

Minersville
man·seeks
seat on
commission
As Clinton tries to mute criticism,
0

v.e,
.... ~'~··
PB' Ali/fiji
'

'

,·

...... delogge'r, ~.

By RON FOURNIER
be.fore the firings with Hollywood
Aaeoc~ ~s Wljlter
producer Harry Thomason, a ~onfiWASfllNGTON ~ Caught in a dant and private adviser to Clinton.
swirl of accusationS centered on his Thomason's attorney, Robert Benwife, President Clinton is denouncing nett, said Thursday, " He did not dissuggestions of wrongdoing . in the cuss~ firings or anything related to
White;l,ater and White House travel the tr!ivel office."
office affairs.
·
.
Last &lt;week , the White ·House
"An allegation," he snapped at a r'eleased aJllemo from fonner chief
reporter, "is not the same tl1ing as a of administration David Watkins that
fact." said Mrs. Clinton had pushed for the
Clearly exasj,erated by the politi- dismissal$. White House officials
cally draining topics, Clinton com• have said It wa~ Watkins who made
plained to reponers in a rare full-scale . the decision. . .. ,
news conference Thursday: "An aileTho111asoo h~s enlerged as a cengation comes up, and we answer it. tral figure as congre~sionafRepubli­
And then people say, 'Well, here's cans seek details on whether Thomaailotlier allegation; answer this.' And son or Mrs. Clinton improperly
then, 'Here's another allegation: pressed forthe dismissals, which bolh
answer this.' ...
have denied .
·
· •."That is the way we are living
• An attorney who worked wit~
hef~: in Washington today," Clinton Mrs. Clinton cast dqubt on the first
~before flying to Nashville, T&amp;n., lady's· account of having little to do
for appearances today. Later, he Hies with legal work for an Arkansas savto Europe to visit U.S. troops in ings and loan at the center of the
Bosnia and Hungary.
Whitewater real estaie affair.
But even as he lried to mute the
In his Senate testimony, Richard
criticism, new &lt;!evelopments Thurs- · Massey also said he was ordered by
day ensur~ that life won't get any, a key Clinton aide to surrender his
eisier forthe president and his wife, Whitewater files 'dUring the 1992·
Hillary Rodharh Ointon.
·
presidential · campaign. Massey said
• Documents and interviews. he was unawaie that the files were
obtained hours before the news con- · given to the presidential campaign, a
ference showc:cJ that ClintQD knew practice he said he would have
about the finng, of seven White opposed .vigorously. ..
House . travel office employees in . After weeks of improvement . in
1993 more than a day before they public opinion polls, Clinton's polit. occ:urrcd. The presiden1 has sJ!ld.he ical fOrtunes abruptly changed last
~w , veil)' little about the matter ~week when the Whi~ House released
~fore the firings.
,
, two sets of documents that congrcsThe documents also. reveakld that sional investigators 'had sought for
the president met ,.,.ice the week months.
.
' .
.
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