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Page 10 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

MQnday, January 15, 19Q6
•

'

·Names in the news Married couple have different needs ~
•
NEW YORK (AP) - Jon Bon
:\ Jovi c;an I'Q!:k- and he can pose.
·: The nder IUid his hair will be fea·
: · tured in a new series of ads for fta).
:; ian desiper Gianni Versace, to be
:: Nlea&amp;ed in February.
. ·Set in Argentina, the photos will
:; feature Bon Iovi both in perfor:· mance IUid styled like a cowboy, with
·: a .shorter, wener haircut.
·. Paul Beck, Versace's director of
:· international advertising, said the
·:idea to make BOll Jovi the designer's
: latest celebrity model came about
' when he and others were invited to a
:: concert ~d began taking the rock
·: star's photo.
'; "We think he's great. We think the
·;music is great," Beck said in the Jan.
• 19 edition of Entertainment Weekly.
: Other Versace celebrity models
; have included Sylvester Stallone,
•Elton John and Madonna.

.

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Bruce
;Springsteen's latest· album features
; songs about life on the. streets. But
.you won't find a song abOut this; 100
:homeless people who camped out for
;tickets to his concert.
The homeless were shuUled to
:nine locations around Austin Friday
;night to buy the $30 tickets for com;panies that r;esold them for as much
-as $400. The homeless people were
:offered as much as $50 each to stay
:in line pvemight and buy the tickets
•in the morning.
: "[ think i&amp;'s wrong because I
:don't think the homeless people
-

.

~ ~12

understand how bad they're being
sex therapist who will talk to you and
used," auomey Steve Boney, who Ann Lenders
Rod together. It will be the best
waited for tickets Friday, told the
Dear Ann Landers; I am in my late
investment time and money-wise
Austin-American Statesman.
30s and reasonably · attractive, and
that the two 'of you will ever make.
Jay Hill, who works for Ticket ·have been married for 17 years to a
City, said his company paid about man I adore. We are'blessed with two
• 'Dear Ann Landers; I'd like to address
five homeless people to stand in line wonderful children, a loving family
this letter to my husband;
for tickets. " It's free enterprise. and friends, and h,ave a comfortable
You broke o.ur hearts, Jim. You
•
· came into my life and swept me off
That's what America is based on," he lifestyle.
The only source of trouble in our wants sex, he gets it, and I make sure my feet. My kids loved you and came
said.
Springsteen, whose Austin concert marriage is sex. "Rod" and I have _he ha$ a terrific time. He says he to depend on you more than they did
is Jan. 25, is currendy touring in sup- vastly different needs sexually, and wishes he could excite me the way r their own d4&lt;1- My brother became
port of his album, "The Ghost of Tom although he is educated, compas· do him, but I'm dead sexually with your best · friend. Our families
·
:
sionate and open-minded, he believes him.
Joad."
rejoiced in our good fortune of find·
th~t being married entitles him to sex
I love Rod and always will, but he ing each other. Your customers
whenever he wants it, regardless of has reduced our sex life to drudgery. thought the world of you. Your moth·
BELLEVUE, Wash. (AP) Johnnie Cochran Jr. says self· · how I feel. As you can imagine, sex, Any suggestions?-· RESIGNED IN er depended on you tb guide her in
reliance, not government assistance, like anything pleasurable, is reduced RIVER CITY, IND.
tier old age. Your ftrSt grandchild was
to
a
chore
when
it
becomes
a
"duty."
DEAR
RIVER
CITY;
When
Rod
.
is the answer for blacks.
born recently. How you anticipated
For years, I have tried to work this says he wishes he could excite you that event! But you will never play
Cochran, who gained fame as
lead auomey of the legal team that out with Rod, but if we make love the way you excite him, it means he ball with him or go fishing. How sad.
won O.J. Simpson's acquittal on fewer than three times a week, I get is open to suggestions, so don't hes· All because you couldn't give up cig·
murder charges, said one way to pow- "'The Treatment" He withdraws, and itate to tell him exactly . what you arettes. That habit destroyed your
there is an icy politeness when we are want. Today's liberated woman is not body and ended your life at age S I.
er is through the ballot box.
"When you vote, you get a chance alone·and barbed sarcasm in the pres· content to make sure her man has a You left an ache in my heart that will
to serve on juries and I, for one, can ence of others. The Treatment ends terrific time while she gets nothing never go away.
out of it. Sex should be just as plea·
tell you we need you serving on when Rod gets sex.
r write this letter. Ann, with the
We
tried
counseling,
but
it
helped
surable for you as it is for him.
hope that it will touch some folks
juries," Cochran told 1,500 people in
Ask your physician to suggest a who read your column and maybe,
a speech Saturday sponsored by the only temporarily. Now, when Rod
Puget Sound Education Chapter .of
Blacks in Government.
Cochran noted that blacks in the
United States stiil face discrimination
and lbwer standards of living than
whites.
Sen Bernardino County Sun
percent of those viewe~. or 63,500 screaming in pain while the Romans
"Even though the days of slavery
Jesus Christ may soon end up on people, will want to learn moie about drive nails into his wrists and hang
are long gone ... there's still a very your doorstep.
Christ within two weeks after the him on the cross, and Jesus rising
different reality for African-AmeriOn vide.o.
viewing.
from the dead.
cans in this country today," he said·.
He may come courtesy of people
Nationwide, the Jesus Video Pro"If the disciples would have had
such as Peter Drazin, a modem day ject is in more than 200 cities.video cameras, this is what they
.
disciple who goes door to door on
The "Jesus" docu-drama is a would have recorded," says Bob
Monday evenings in Redlands, Calif., powerful evangelical tool, especially Bradberry of the Jesus Film Project,
giving away copies of the docu-dra- in this video age, says Geoffrey Hilr· which distributes the film intemama, "Jesus. n
ris, executive director of the Jesus tiomi.lly. Worldwide, more than 732
Drazin volunteers for the Inland Video Project in that part of Southern million people have seen the movie
Empire Jesus Video Project, a niin- California. The gro!Jp is coordinating since its 1979 release, he says.
"Eighty percent of homes in the
istry of the national Cap1pus Crusade _ the giveaway among 25local church·
United
States have a VC,, so its time
for
Christ,
to
spread
the
gospel
via
es.
Final figures for the four-day Martin
is
right."
says Lloyd Olson about the
"If you don't know who Jesus is,
Luther King Jr. weekend are due out video throuahout the area.
video.
Olson
is director of the nationThe plan; Offer a free "Jesus" what he is a~ut, you would get an
· Tuesday.
video to people in 299,173 homes- · education," says Harris about the al Jesus Video Project at Campus
I. " 12 Monkeys," $9.8 million.
Crusade for Christ. "We are seeing a
~very
household in 12 communities. tilm.
2. " Don't Be a Menace to South
resurgence of people wanting ·to
Project
organizers
say
they
want
to
The
"Jesus"
video
chronicles
Central While Drinking Your Juice in
know
about God."
give
every
person
living
in
the
area
a
Christ's birth, teachings, crucifixion
the Hood," $7.8 million
Reaching
every home in an area
chance
to
see
the
movie
and
then,
if
and resurrection. Filmed in the Holy
3. " Eye for an Eye," $7.3 million.
may
seem
like
a_ lofty goal, but the
he
or
she
wishes,
become
Christians.
Land and starring British actor Brian
4. "Grumpier Old Men," $6.8 mil·
project
seems
to
be working in Red·
"We've
seen
a
lot
of
people
come
Deacon as Jesus, the story recreates
lion.
to the Lord," says Drazin, 38. "About famous New Testament scenes; Jesus lands at Drazin's Calvary . Baptist
5. "Toy Story," $6.1 million.
40
percent of the homes we come to healing a blind man;" Jesus calming Church. After receiving 1.000 free
6. "Waiting to Exhale," $5.7 mil·
take
the video."
stormy seas and saving a boatload of videos, about I SO people expressed
lion.
Of
a
population
of
852,000
peo· his disciples; Jesus turning a handful interest in lel!l'lling more about Christ,
7. "Jumanji," $5.6 million.
ple,
300,000
are
expected
to
watch
of fish and bread loaves into enough said Dick Sanner, associate pastor.
8. "Heat," $5-.5 million.
the
"Jesus"
movie.
And
Jesus
Video
However, " it's not a church mem·
to feed a starving multitude; Jesus
9. "Bio-Dome," $5.3 million.
Project'
organizers
estimate
that
21
disrupting the temple market; Jesus bership drive," Sanner says.
10. "TWo If By Sea," $4.6 million.

Ann
Landers

.

,just maybe, persuade the
1
happy ones who smoke to snuff 0111
those poisonous sticks and swear ofl',
forever. ·• JIM'S WIFE IN NEW
JERSEY
'
DEAR WIFE: Thank you for ·•
moving plea. I hope it helps. I agr&lt;t
with Dr. David Kessler of the F~
and Drug Administration that nic~
tine is addictive and should be classified as a drug.
:
Gem ofr*Day:Aquote from Dt.
Martin Luther King; "I have a dreiiJ!I
that my four litUe children will one
day live in a nation where they wiD
·not be judged by the color of theit
skin but by the content of their ch~~t
I

..rr

•

Pick 3:
§l~

Pick 4:
3287
Buckeye 5:
8-11-26-29-30

Sriorts, Pages 4-5

Low In mld-301 tonight.
Rain. Wednellday, rein, hlgha
In 60s.

•

.

•

.Planning a wedding? What's right?
·What's wrong? "The Ann Lander)
Guide for Brides" will relieve your
anxiety. Send a self-addressed,loni,
business-size envelope and a cbeck
money order for $3.75 (this i[\Clud~
postage and handling) to: Brides, Cl~
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11.562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562.
·

Vol. 46, NO. 182
1 Section, 10 P8gll

or .

By TOM HUNTER
.Sentll)lll Newt Steff
Preliminary sketches of the pro-·
posed $8.75 milliqn construction and
renovation project for the Eastern
Local School District were reviewed
by members of the Eastern Local
Board of Education Monday.
The preliminary sketches from the
two firms working on the project,
Marr, Knapp &amp; Crawfif of New
·Philadelphia and Vargo, Cassady,
·Ingham &amp; Gibbs of Mariena: detailed
.the basic sight and construction con. cept for the proposed 72,000 square
foot K-8 school, in telation to the pre·
sent high school location.
Based on the sketch work, the new ·
L-shapld K-8 school building will be
built in the area where the girls soft-·
ball field currently is, adjacent to the
high school.
. "From discussions we've l)ad with
the
• architects
h b ·td' and-engineers,1this -site
oor t e ut mg •s-a great ocallon,
- · ·
h eed •
1
·e 1•m•nattng t e n·
.•ork "a Barge
ard
amount
of'd
excavabng
wor
• o ·d
Pre
G
B
·1;
V1ce
-Sl hent reg
ked a1 cy
b o1sat ·
"E veryth mg as wor
out a s ute·
1~ terrific S? far conce~ing both the
s.tte and buddmg plans.

ing.''

The Je'sus Video Project was
launched in the United States in 1993
by Campus Crusade. The project is an
offshoot of Crusade's Jesus Film
Project, which made a $6 million,
two-hour movie about Christ's life in
1979 to use as pan of an overseas ·
evangelical program.
The 120-minute movie was edited
into an 83-miriute video to fit the
viewing habits of Americans.

--.,

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20 that the new K-8 building would
be built on the existing 84-acre site
adjacent to EHS after extensively
examining the possibility of purchasing land near the existing high
school for construction of th~ proposed central school.
The preliminary design of the
building reveals a campus-like concept between the existing high school
and the new structure, but with total
separati90 between the students in
both facilities.
Superintendent Ron Minard said
the new K-8 school will be separat·
ed into two wings: one for grad"' K·
4 students, with the other for grade 58 students.
"The K-4 students will be placed
in the sout~west wing of the building
which faces State Route 7, while the
middle school students will be completely separate from the younger stu.dents in the
·r wing which will stretch
across what is now the outfield of the
baseball field," Minard said.
The main entrance of the building
will open· u"" into a large cafeteria
area, featuring a stage to allow the
area to be used as an auditorium. The
f&amp;Cl_'lilY,will.al_S? hav~. a 350_ seat gym,
...'ll ·• "

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Camput Crusade, which is behind
the Jesus Video Project, is headquartered in Florida. Churches buy t1Je
videos for $7.50 each plus shipping
and handling and then give the videos
away free as part of their ministriei
Spanish language versions cost S2Q.
Videos also are available in sign Jan·
guage and closed caption for the hearing impaired.
~
As volunteers walk through neigh·
borhoods handing out the videos,
they will pray for the homes and people inside. "The prayer is preparing
the soil and $iving them the video is
planting the seed," Harris says. "Our
job is not to save people - it's to
share the message. God does the sav-

35e.n•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 16, 1996

Boa·rd views
-new school
drawings

Religion: Jesus is coming on video

Monkeys' tops
)box office list again

LOS ANGELES (AP) - "12
: Monkeys," a time-travel thriller star: ring Bruce Willis, remained the most
: popular movie for a third straight
· weekend, earning an estimated $9.8
: million at North American theaters,
: industry sources said.
• It was followed by two debuts;
: "Don't Be a Menace to South Cen: tral While Drinking Your Juice in the
:Hood," a spoof starring brothers
• Marlon and Shawn Wayans with
: $7.8 million, and "Eye for An Eye,"
: starring Sally Field as a revenge·
: seeking mother, with $7.3 milli!ln.
The figures are based on esttmat·
: ed-ticket sales Frillay through Sunday.

College
basketball
roundups

•
healthf,

·acter"

Ohio Lottery

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EASTERN SITE PROPOSAL- This preliminllry sketch of the propoeed $8.75 mllfion Ellalem Loc:al Schools building project was pr•
tented at Monday's regular board meeting. The
new K·B elementary/middle school will be con·

strutted on the site' currently oc;cupled by the
Eaatem girls softball field. The softball field will
reloc;eted on the existing baseball field, and
reloc;atlon of the baseball field on a site behind
the existing field.

computer lab, according to Minard. existing high school.
If the bond issue is approved, $7 .2
New parking areas •or
buses and
A 4 .J-mt
• ·11 bond issue to approve million in assistance from . the State
1'
more than 80 cars w1'tl be but' It ,·n 23
bo d
·year n s to finance the con- Building Assistance fund will be
front of the new but'ldt'ng and the strucbon
· of a new building to house released for the project, leaving $1.5
existing h;gh
· K-8 students, and major million for construction to be paid by
• school, w1'th the ex 1'st- I he d'tstnct's
t'ng ht'gh school parking t'ot to rem•'n
·
~
renovatiOns and additions to the the bonds.
for student and activities parking. An
· · hi h h 1bu'ld'
Board members discussed support
access and service road will also ~:':g byg
:stri~t's'"~o~::!t ~ work on 11\e bond issue with mem·
·
, enc.'ompass the area, running between ' Mli!C_h •~.conStl}l
, ClJOn tO beiill On bers of the buildjn~ .committee. Sev·
· (C.iiffiifuea on Pa~e 3)

:e

-· lfdr;t1t-;~c~ k~;p;p";rlcr;;g- · · · "
status as is; plans further study

....

..

Please join us in thanking the many
carriers and motor route drivers who
made their way through over a foot of
snow and down slippery roads i~
below-freezing weather conditions this
week to deliver your Daily Sentinel.
We also express sincere appreciation
to· our valued customers for their
patience and understanding in cases
where delivery was delayed ..

.

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.'

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Steff
·: A drive to raise funds to restore
the olo Chester Courthouse, erected
o.n-a knoll overlooking the village in
'823, got underway today.
· · Following a meeting of 'the
Chester Courthouse Restoration
~ominittee Monday, an account was
~~ up at the Farmers Bank &amp;: Savings
Co. to receive monies which Meigs
countians contribute toward preserving a sopent of the county's history for fUture generations.
. ~ter h8s the distinction of having the oldest courthouse building
ttill standing in Ohio. The commit·
lee's concern is that it be preserved .
: Contributions will be . used pri·
{ltllrily as ·~matching" funds for any
· .lfUIIS aw&amp;roed to the county for ·its
restoration.
Meanwhile, plans are movina for·
ward for use of the $46,000
Appalachia - Public Facility Grant
m:endy awarded for the project.

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promenade has come to a halt until
the weather approves.
Fines for parking .violators will
also likely increase. but business
owners may be able to revoke park·
ing tickets for their customers - a
privilege some feel will almost certainly hi' abused.
Rosc·oe.and Sandee Mills, owners
of the Pomeroy McDonald's, and
Bobbie Karr, owner of Hartwell
House, ·auended the meeting as representatives of the Pomeroy Mer·
chants Association.
Mrs. Mills said the merchants
want to have a representative anend
council's first meeting of the month
and report back to the association so
it can offer comments or suggestions
at council's second meeting of the
month.
·
·
Karr offered to examine other
communities similar to Pomeroy to
see how they handle parking.
Council offered no quick solution
to the problem, but approved a
motion by Musser to continue park·
ing as it is, and sell only quanerly
parking permits for $18.75.
This wi II allow time for further
discussion on the topic, Musser said.
To begin the meeting, Mayor
Frank Vaughan reinstituted an old tra·

dition by asking Rev. Robert E.
Robinson of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church to ask the blessing
for the village and its elected officials.
Vaughan said different pastors in
the-community will be asked to pray
before village council meetings.
.Afterwards, Vaughan led those
present in the Pledge of Allegiance.
Wat~r line work
Motorists in the village may soon
get some relief from water line work
on West Main Street.
·
Village Administrator John Ander·
son said the contractor has resumed
work on the wattr line improvement
project.
Anderson said the contractor proposes filling in the trench that has
plagued motorists to the specified
depth with concrete, .then t_opping off
the fix with a mixture of grout - a
mixture of sand and cement which. as
opposed to concrete, contains no
gravel.
Anderson said the drawback is
that the street will have a gray strip
where the grout is poured.
Council urged Anderson to proceed with tffe repairs. Anderson said
repair work could be done in I0 to II
·working days, weather permilling.

PROMENADE DONATION - The Big Bend Sternwheel Association gave 11 $5,000 check to Pomeroy Village Council Monday
night for Improvements to the village riverfront area. Sternwheel
Ssaoc:lation President Jim Davis, left, presents the check to
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan.
Anderson also updated council on
the road slip on East Main Street near
Nye Avenue. ·
Following the slip, the Ohio
Department of Transportation and
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources conducted a study of the
site and determined the slip was
caused by tbe rise and fall of the Ohio
River, not by ground water or barge
wake as some suspected.
The area rests on a shelf of

bedrock slopmg out into the river.
said Anderson. When the river rises,
the soil becomes saturated and slides
toward the river when naod waters
recede, he explained.
ODNR did some work above
Main Street by driving pilings to slow
the slip, Anderson said, but the main
problem would_likely cause $2.5 mil·
lion to fix .
Pan of the project would involve
(Continued on Paxe 3)

Rising water and ice noes damaged boats and marinas and nooded
riverfront property in the Cleveland
suburb in 1994.
Others were less concerned.
. Rocky River Mayor Don Umerley ·
sa1d Monday that officials in the
west-side Cleveland suburb were
watching this week's lhaw but were
hopeful damage would be slight.
"I see a very low potential for
trouble here," Umerley said. •

Donations sought for old courthouse project

•'

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Steff
· Pamng - and how to manage it
in the future- dominated discussion
at Monday night's regular meeting of ·
the Pomeroy Village Co unci I.
Council -approved a band-aid mea-sun: to qllow more time to discuss the
matter.
"What hurts is people parking on
the street in front of businesses, tak·
ing up space for customers." said
Council President John Musser.
"We have to do something
between now and when the promenade is done," he added.
While village officials are reluc-·
tant to install parking meters along
the anticipated promenade, many
merchants want all the parking
meters removed and have even pre·
sented council with·a petition to that
effect. ·
After expenses, parking meters
bring about $5,000 in revenue to the
village. However, 'Some council
memberS said the meters benefit
businesses by regula1ing the availability of parking in the business area.
Musser has suggested a mixture of
timed meter parking for customers
and permits for parking along the
promenade, adding that work on the

By The Associated Press
This week's snow melt has roofers
and insurance companies busy helpmg people deal with leaking roofs
and cracking ceiling and walls.
"It's businesses as well as homeowners who are ,gelling hit with it,"
said Gary Davidson, a roofer with
Ohio Valley Roof &amp; Chimney Ser~ice, who did repairs Monday at Fuddrucker 's Restaurant in Mason and
two Cincinnati-area homes .
Diana Bussell, a secretary at
Nationw&lt;de Insurance in the Cincinnati suburb of Montgomery, received
a number of calls Monday from
homeowners lamenting leaky roofs.
" I hardly ever get calls about
roofs," Bussell said. "With all this
melting, 11's a problem for a lot of
people."
With rain m the forecast for
Wednesaay and Thursday, more
problems can he expected if gutters
are clogged. • 'd Randy Bauer, manager of Mueller Roofing in Cincin.nati.
" If snow can't get off a roof, it
" Ill :o-ork its way into me .roof iiity
way it can ," Bauer said. "It will work
its way throu gh nail holes and under
shingle ~. ·•
But because air- not water- is
escaping from the snow cover and the
weather is warming gradually, the
snow melt and runoff don 't pose a
nooding problem in Ohio, the
National Weather Service said Monday.
" Everybody 's panicking about ·
this. We were joking about building
the ark ," said · Dave Ondrejik, a
hydrologist at the weather service 's
Ohio River Forecast Center in Wilm·
ington.
"But really, there's nothing to do.
There's no need to worry about
lhis ."
However. officials in northeast
Ohio were worried about flooding
with temperatures forecast above
freezing today through Friday.
" If everything comes together .. .
it's going to be one of the worst cases of flooding we 've ever seen," sa1d
Mayor Dan DiLoberto of Eastlake.
where the Chagrin River empties into
Lake Eric.

I

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That money, according to •Pat
Holter, committee chairman, will be
used to replace the roof, which has
l11rge holes allowing birds and other
animals to enter the buitding.
But before the roof can be
removed and replaced, the exterior
walls will have to be reinforced, she
said. Any remaining monies will go
toward exterior restoration, including
pointing up the ~ricks of the two- story structure.
However,_ none of the work can
begin until late spring when the state ·
releases funds.
Tentative plans call for a "shake"
roof, but as Holter pointed out, what·
ever is done must conform with historical specifiOAtions and be approved
by the Ohio Historical Society
through Mar:y.Ann Reeves, southeast
.
Ohio coordinator.

The second tloor is pretty much the
same as it was 170 years ago with its
single room and large exposed
beams.
To inspire local interest, Holter
has proposed that tours of the old
courthouse be scheduled for organizations and groups of individuals
who might be interested in contributing to the restoration process.
This, she said, would give residents
a chance to see what needs to be done
not only to restore the building but to
make it usable.
The comminee foresees the build·
ing being used in a variety of ways
- a place for meetings, theater pre·
sentations and educational purposes,
as well as for displaying historical
artifacts, particularly those pertaining
to the legal sYsumt. As a part of thti
restorati_on, a temperature control
system will be in•talled so as not to
'The ftrSi floor of the building, cau&amp;e heat or cold damage to anywhich many years ago was ·remod· -. thing-displayod.-- 'The local restoration committee,
elod, will be restored to the way it
. was in the early, l820s, Holter said.

composed of representati ves of
Daughters of the American Revolution and the Sons of the American
Revolution , has a joint use agreement
with the University of Rio Grande.
Holter expects the university to play
a vital role in programming and
exhibits once the two-story structure
has been restored.
Both the old courthouse and the
academy next dOOi' are owned by the
county, but through the years, the
Chester Township trustees and
Chester firemen bave taken care of
most of the maintenance.
At yesterday's organizational
meeting, Mary Powell and Dale Col·
bum were named co-chairmen. Jeff
Thornton will continue as a grants
writer, and Paul Gerard was named to
repre5ent county government on the
committee. Representatives of the
· Chester Township trustees and the
Chester Fire Department will be
named at the Feb. 6 meeting to be
held a1 . the Meigs County Public
Library.

TO BE RESTORED- Pll!nl- moving forward for the r ltQ.. ,
tton of Meigs County's flrat courthouse, builtin Clltater In '1121 , ,
on land dona..cl by Levi Stadman. Cui•blb.lllana to •IF'PIIIIIMt
the Appalact,~ Puelllc Facility grant ol $46,000- biilng,IICG ....... . , •

.

eel at the Fanners Alink I Savlnga Co., Pomeroy.

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'- _Commentary

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, ._T:uea::d:ay:':J:a:nua::~::16:;:1:~:::::::::=~--------------------~P~o~m~e~ro~y~·~,M~I~d=dl~epo~rt~,~O~h=lo~--------~----~----~The:::Da:l~ly~Se::n:tlne::I~·:P:~~3

·Tue•day, January 16, 1996

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OHIO Weather

Board views

VVtanesday,Jan.17

(Continued from P•e 1)
eral board members addressed the
need to register voters who suppon
the issue, but currently are not registered to vote.
1
Minard said that individuals who
are not registered to vote can register to vote at the school during regular hours, or can get more information
by calling the high school at 9853329.
The board held its organizational
meeting before the regular meeting,
electing officers for 1996 swearing in
three board members.
Officers are Jim Smith, board
president; Greg Bailey, vice president; and John Rice, OSBA liaison.
New board members Rick Sanders
and John Rice were sworn in by
Smith, along with re-elected board
member Mike Manin.
The board approved the purchase
of three new buses for the district
from Dills Ford (chassis) and Edwin
Davis &amp; Sons (bodies) at the cost of
$42,275.42 each. The chassis' with
Ford diesel Cummins engines are
priced at $29,376 each, whi'le the
Thomas bodies for the buses are
priced at $14,899.42 each, according
to Transportation Director Arch Rose.
In other matters, the boar!l:
o learned from Minard that AT&amp;T
will submit a proposal for a new 13phone system for the high school, a
conversion to a touch-tone system
because of demands on computer and
fax equipment at the school.
o accepted the Ohio State Controlling Board approval for reservation of state funding for the proposed
building project.
.
o approved the following as vol-

The Daily Sentinel. Clinton, GOP need ·to resume taiks
111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992-2156 • Fu: 992•2157 .

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
'

ROBERT L WINGEn
Publ'-her

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Qen-1 Menager

MARGARET LEHEW ·
Controller

!'---------~---------------...1

·ohio lawmaker has made
career of budget cutting
.BY JIM ABRAMS

#

~:

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I

.AHOCieted Prna Writer
•·. WASHINGlON- Rep. John Kasich's.first federal budget came in 1989
after a citizen he met at a gas station in Ohio told him to do something about
tl)e federal deficit. He got in his jeep, drove home and wrote a budget plan.
lt got 30 votes.
·
· :· How different today, when his fellow Republicans see balancing the budg~t as a near-religious experience and Kasich, now the chairman of the
ijouse Budget Committee, is their high priest
.
· The 73 GOP freshmen, the mo~t ideologically dedicated to eliminating
g~vemment defictts, have made htm an honorary member of their group.
fiscal conservattves from both panics credit him for his impaniality in tar:geting both GOP and Democratic programs for the budgetary axe.
·. ·:He's the best thing the Republicans have going," said his onetime part·
ner tn budget-cuttmg, former Rep ..Ttm Penny, D-Minn. "He's serious, he's
passionate, and he relates to real people."
In the past month he has been at the center ofthe tortuous attempl by the
White House and Republican leaders to work out a plan to balance the budget by 2002. Alongside Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domeniei, R-N.M., it's been Kasich who's been trying to come up with the numbers
that may entice the White House into a deal while staying true to Republican principles on overhauling government and cutting taxes.
. • "He's the guy who knows the numbers," said his spokesman, Bruce
Cuthbertson. "John's the guy who will say you can do this or that it just
won't work."
- • Variously described as irre"pressible, hyperactive and obsessive, the 43year-old workaholic was one of the first to see budget cutiing as ari act of
passion.
. The son of Democratic parents- his father was a mailman - who grew
up in the blue-collar community of McKees Rocks, Pa., near Pittsburgh,
Kasich has long had a knack for taking the political course of most resistance.
Elected to the Ohio state senate at age 26, he responded to criticism from
his fellow Republicans that he was acting irresponsibly in opposing tax
increases by writing a budget that cut $400 million in state spending.
After his first attempt at budget-writing in Washington in 1989, he tried
again in 1990 and this time got 135o votes. Then in 1993 he joined with
Penny to challeng~ the Ointon administration with a plan for $90 billion in
budget cuts.over five years. It failed by a narrow 219-213 margin.
~e has ~lso, in the. name of fiscal integrity, at times defied his own party,
voung agamst spending on the B-2 bomber and opposing tax breaks and
subsidies for Republican friends in corporate America.
.
·: "He gives the Republicans verity for their case that their demand for a
balanced budget is a matter of principle rather than of pure constituent interest," said Joseph White, a budgetary policy expen with the Brookings Insti·
tution.
• ; As Budget Committee chairman, he has gained a national reputation for
his dedication to the cause and his physical intensity. The Washington Post,
commenting on his frenetic energy, noted that .at a news conference last
spring Kasich blinked his eyes at a rate of 36 times a minute. The more
phlegmatic House Majority Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, blinked two times
in the same period.
· "We were a good pair," said Penny, recalling his worlting days wiih
Kasich. "I tend not to get flustered. John tends to get a bit excitable."
. A div?rced bachel.or who s~nds most of his waking hours talking politics, Kastch has a flatr for making the arcane art of bildgetmaking comprehensible, at least a little, to average Americans.
When he opened budget hearings last May, he unveiled a N"ational Debt
Clock on the wall that added another $9,000 to the then-$4.7 trillion federal
debt every second the proceedings continued.
. He also knows the limits of political power. Kicked off the stage at a
Grateful Dead concert in 1991, Kasich acknowledged that "telling the
Grateful Dead you're a congressman is not going to get you O!IStage."
. EDITOR'S NOTE: Jim Abrama covera Congre•e for The A..0Cialld
Pren.

'

Today in history
By The Alaocleted Preaa
·, Today is Tuesday, Jan. 16, the 16th day of 1996. There are 350 days left
in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
Five years ago, on Jan. 16, 199 I. the White House announced the stan of
Operation Desert Storm to drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait. President Bush
siiid in a nationally broadcast 1\ddress "the battle has been joined" as fight·
et bombers pounded Iraqi targets. (Because of the time difference, it was
early Jan. 17 in the Persian Gulf when the attack began.)
· . On this date:
·
·
· In !S47, Ivan tbe Terrible was crowned czar of Russia.
In (883; the U.S. Civil Service Commission was established.
""'
: • In 1919, Nebraska, Wyoming and Missauri became the 36th, 37th and
!&amp;l.h states to ratify Prohibition, which went into effect a year later.
•: ·In 1920, Prohibition began as the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitu·
· tion took effect. (It was later repealed by the 21st Amendment.)
Iri 1?42, actress Carole Lombard, her mother and about 20 other people
were killed wben thetr plane crashed near Las Vegas while returning from a
war-bond promotion tour.
·
, In ·t944, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower took command of the Allied InvasiOn Force in London~
·
·
: II! 1957, three B-S:Zs took off from Castle Air Force Base in California on ·
tQe fust. ·DOD-stop, routid-the,world flight by jet planes, which lasted 4S
'tNn and 19 minu~.
.
·
.
. · ·
• ~n 1964: the muslcar"Hello, Dolly!.': startina Carol ChanninJ, opened
~.·Broadway, , beginning a rub of 2,844 performances.
·
.! 1967, Ala~ S. Boyd ~as sworn in as the ftrSt secretary of transpoi'tauon.
.
.
; ·In 1979,' Shah Molwnmeci Reza Piblevi departed fnn for Egypt; be
. ~yet. returned'.·
.. . '·
, ·
·
.
~ In 1981, in Northern ,l'rclaad, Ptoiestant aunmen shot and wounded Irish
,- ~llist leader B~tte Dev!in McAiiskey and her husband. .
·
'nm
yem
a_&amp;o:
Preaident
Rep,
respondtna
10
Soviet
Ieade,
Mikhail
S.
1
Qorf*:bev.'s proposal to elimintne all nuclear weapons by the yeu 2000,
Slid, "We're 'Jlltefu! for lbc offer,'' and said it was beina studied "With
iieii~·J' :r
.. ?.
•
.
.,. • 0t1e ye. IF: In UniC!fl, s_.c., a proaecutor annduncecl he would teek die
~ flllll'l for Susan Smidt, the woman nttled ilf 4rowninl bel' two
~Mini, 3-~;oo! Midlael and 14-!nondl-old Mex.
"
'
.
.
·· ~
'
~fi~,
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;r..

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By Morton Kond~ ,
congressional passage of a new debt ceiling.
the GOP has dropped from.an original position of
After all the pain they've already put the counRepublicans realize that allowing the govern- $63.5 billion in cuts to $60 billion, while Clinton
try through, it's crazy and irresponsible for Presi- ment to default on debt paymelnts is the political · has cut nothing at all.
dent Clinton and congressional Republicans not equivalent of a hydrogen bomb -- its effects are
Issues of high principle exist on Medicaid and ·
to work as hard as they can to reach a balanced lethal for everybody -- but they could miscalcu- welfare -- notably, whether the poor should be
budget agreement
late and trigger a crisis.
guaranteed benefits in hard times -- but these can
. In breaking off their budget talks recently, both
Finally, Republicans are in the process of try- be compromised by maintaining entitlements for
stdes were careful not to enrage the public by ing to embarrass Cli'nton by putting together a the ·very vulnerable.
seeming unwilling to talk further, but a day later coalition with conservative Democrats capable of
Clinton is proposing to cut discretionary
both had gone into attack mode and were talking passing a new balanced budget bill and overriding spending ·by $295 billion, the Republicans by
·about gaps being unbridgeable and about the vot· a Clinton veto. Even if the OOP can auract 60 · $349 billion. And the GOP is proposing net tax
eis having to decide the budget issue in Novem- House Democrats, it seems most unlikely that relief worth $177 billion, while Clinton proposes
ber.
they can win over 12 in the Senate.
$87 billion.
·
The Republicans have begun a PR offensive
But the closer the GOP comes to succeeding
A combination of Republican concessions on
desig~ed to. portr_ay f!esident Clinton as a "big with this ploy, the more Clinton seems out of the tax cuts, joint action to reduce subsidies and tax
spendmg, btg taxmg liberal" allied with the most national mainstream. Failure to pull it off, howev- breaks for corporations and Democratic concesliberal elements of his own pany.
er, would also be an embarrassment to Senate sions on Medicare could mean significant
The campaign is evidently designed to combat Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan.
progress toward a deal.
Clinton's effon to create an image as a "new
Rather than going to the mattresses, Mafia
A budget agreement would stand as a major
Democrat" seeking centrist "comnion ground" style, the two sides ought to repair to tlieir draw- accomplishment for both sides, with the GOP
and to accuse Republicans ·or beitig right-wing ing boards and find ways to reach an agreement. delivering on its palanced budget pledges and
On Medicare, the Republicans have moved Clinton demonstrating that lie can ttrnptr Repub, ··extremists."
. House Republicans plan to parade before from an original proposal of $228 billion in cost lican excesses.
. mtcrophones to replay the themes that Clinton reductions to $168 billion. Clinton has moved
Both panies could go into the 1996 campaign
passed "the largest tax increase In history," spon· less, from $97 billion to $102 billion. But it's not as winners. What would they fight. a!&gt;out? The
sored a 1994 health care reform plan representing so huge a gap that it can't be closed, and Clinton entire future of American government: 'Tilat kind
the "biggest government intrusion into the private is the one who should make the bigger step.
of campaign sure beats one built around casting .
economy in history," and now is siding with
On Medicaid, the Republicans have moved blame for government shutdowns and debt crises.
House Democrats in refusing to bring entitlement from $133 billio~ in savings to $1\5 billion. Clin(Morton Kondracke Is executive edHor of
spending under control.
ton is stuck at $52 billion. On welfare spending, Roll Call, the newapapar of Cepltolllll.j'
The administration so far is merely arguing
that President Clinton went farther in seeking a
budget agreement with the Republicans than they
did with him, but it won't be long before White
House aides begin chatging again that the Republican leadership can't act because of pressure
from "extremist" House GOP freshmen.
In fact, both sides have come 11 long way
toward' agreement. The gaps remaining are
bridgeable. The pain ahead without agreement
may be worse than that already endured during
two protracted govemm~:nt . shutdowns.
· And both the public and the financial markets
.cle¥1Y want a compromise.
Start with the pain ahead. If no budget agreem~nt is reached by Jan. 26, the government may
shut down yet again. The polls are confusing
about who gets blamed more for gridlock, but
chances are that both sides will suffer if they can't
~orne to agreement after so much to-ing and fromg.
TQe government can be run by continuing resolution, but if they ca,rt't reach a budget agree- ·
ment with Clinton, Republicans are likely to fully
fund only those programs they care about and
slash or eliminate Clinton favorites, including
national service and the Commerce Depanment.
Then, sometime in February, Treasury Secretary Bob Rubin is likely to reach the end of his
a~ility to borrow more money in the absence of

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IMansfield 146° I•

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e Columbus so•

Cincinnati 51 o

W. VA.

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As temperatures warm,
chance of rain increases
By The Associated Press
The clouds shifted from easterly to
southerly overnight an4 temperatures warmed gradually. At many stations, readings at daybreak were
warmer than there were at midnight,
the National Weather Service said. ·
The warming trend will continue
through the week with temperatures
climbing into the. high 40s on
Wednesday and 50s on Tliursday.
But the southerly winds will
increase the chance of showers, the
first of which could arrive tonight,
forecasters said . .
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Colurnbus weather
station was 60 degi-ees in 1949 while
the record low was 13 below zero in
1977. Sunset tonight will be at 5:31
p.m. and ~unrise Wednesday at 7:51

a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Rain and drizzle likely
northern two-thirds with a chance of
rain or drizzle south. Lows middle
30s to middle 40s.
Wednesday... Areas of. rain and
drizzle .. .Tapering mostly to drizzle.
Highs middle 40s northwest to near
60 southeast.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Warm with rain likely.
Lows in the 40s. Highs in the 50s.
Friday... A chance of rain ...Changing to snow from west to east late.
Lows in the 30s. Highs in the 40s to
the mid 50s southeast.
Saturday...Colder with a chance of
snow .showers. Lows I0 to 20 and
highs in the 'lower and mid 20sc

: Pomeroy Council keeps
(Continued from Page 1)
elected by the Pomeroy Volunteer
: drilled into bedro!:k and tying into the Fire Depanment. Appointed were:
Chief Danny Zirkle, First Assistant
· bank to stop the settling, he said.
· With the state studies already Wayne Davis, Second Assistant Chris
completed, the village may be able to · Shank, First Capt. Bryan Zirkle, Secgain some financial assistance for the ond Capt. Kevin VanMeter, First Lt.
repair work. Anderson said the work Stacy Shank, Second Lt. Bracy Korn
needs..\0 , be t:loJle before the slide and T,hird Lt. Michael VanMeter.
Snow removal discussed
• interferes with utilities in the area.
Duri.ng
open discussion, Council, Council told Anderson to examine
man
Larry
Wehrung said he was dis. the possibility of getting funding for
.
appointed
with
snow removal during
· the . project, preferably 100 percenf
the
last
storm,
bearing in mind that
funding as the village cannot afford
the viUage had trouble with its trucks .
·
. such a m$jor ~rojei::t.
Wehrung said people could not
.
Sewer Improvement
find
places to park in front of busiCouncil also authorized contractnesses
and saidthe village needs
. ing with Triplett Engineering Serestablish
a snow removal program.
• vices of Pomeroy for an engineering
Councilman George Wright said
study on the West End Sewer
tiie
snow should be dumped into the
. Improvement Project.
river.
like in Huntington, W.Va., and
The project, which is at least two
Cincinnati.
· years down the road, according to
While some residents were com· Anderson, will provide sewer services to the growing west side of plaining about snow, Monkey Run
, town and include the Monkey Run area re.sident Don Mayer said he
wanted some.
and Coal.Street areas.
Mayer gave council a petition askMr. Mills complemented Ander- ·
ing
them to decline plowing one por. son and the water department for
tion
of Cave Street, allowing children
their work.
In other business, Jim Davis, pres- an area to sled ride. The petition,
. ident ,o f the Big Bend Stcmwheel from area residents, says they will go
• Association, presented council with a around the hill .
Council said they have no prob·$5,000 check from the association for
lem
with this, but want to see if the
· work on the promenade project.
village
could face any liability.
On behalf of the sternwheelers,
Present were Vaughan, Clerk
. Davis thanked council for its support
of the annual Big Bend Stem wheel Kathy Hysell, Musser, Geri Walton,
.._Festival, which will be held this year Wehrung, Bill Young and Wright.
Not attending was Councilman Scott
, on Oct. 3, 4 arid 5.
Dillon.
Council also approved officers as
'

·

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-9601
Publlahed every uftemoon, Monday throuah
Fridlly, Ill Court St.. Pomeroy. Ollio, by the
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Pomeroy. Ohio 4l769, 1'11. 992-21l6. Second
clan po~cage p:Ud a1 Pomeroy, Oh6o.
Menlber: The Associated Pm11, arM the Ohio
Newspaper Au~xindon.

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at 6:30p.m. as the date and time for
the senior class graduauon ceremonies to be held at the high school.
• approved the,fiscal year 1997 tax
budget and obtaining advance draws
of local tax funds by the treasurer
from the county auditor.
• approved the application for
renewal of liability insurance coverage through Nationwide Insurance
Co. and Harcum Insurance Agency
Inc. Coverage to be exte.nded included Tuppers Plains ElementiU)' Boost-

ers, Riverview and Chester PTOs
and the Eastern Athletic and BaM
Boosters.
The next regular meeting of the
board is set for Monday, Feb. 5 'at
6:30 p.m. at Chester Elementary
School.
.. ·
During the· meeting, public dl(cussion of th~ proposed puilding
proJect wtll be held, according to
Smith. The board urges all pare~IS
interested in the building project tb
attend the meeting.

Jl

Two held after patrol
recovers stolen vehicle .
Troopers of the Galli a-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrol recovered a vehiCle reponed stolen from a
Pomeroy residence earlier this morn ing.
According to Pomeroy Police
Chief Gerald Rought, a 1980 Ford F150 belonging to Chester M. Francis
was stolen from his driveway on
Condor Street around 1:30 a.m.
His daughter heard the door slam
and saw someone driving off in the
vehicle prior to calling the police
department, Rought said.
OSP Trooper Tom Smith saw the
vehicle later on U.S. 33 heading
toward Athens County and attempted to stop it after backup arrived, said
Sgt. Kevin Teaford of the Gallia-

Meigs Post.
Following a short chase, the truck
was slopped about a mile out of
Athens, Teaford said.
The juvenile driver of the car was
ticketed on charges of fleeing and
eluding, re~kless operation, no operator's license and failure to wear a
seat belt.
The driver and passenger Kathryn
Pullins, 18 , Pomeroy, arc being
charged with grand theft auto,
according to Rought. They are
appearing today in coun.
· Roughl said the two apparently
stole the vehicle with plans of running off to get married. They had
their bags packed, he' added.

Meigs announcements
Chances noted
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, will no longer have dinners served at the annex at the second
meeting of each month. Instead,
members will have food and refreshments at the old Legion trail.
Dance announced
A round and square dance will be
held Jan. 20 at the Tuppers Plains
VFW · hall. The Smoky Mountain
Drifters will provide the music with
May B. Wilson as the caller. There
will be games and prizes. Music will
begin at 8 p.m.
Legion 1o meet
The Racine American Legion,
Post 602, will meet Thursday at 6:30

p.m.
Soup supper set
Burlingham Modern Woodmen
will meet Saturday at 6:30p.m. at the
hall for a soup supper. Those auending are to take dessert, salad, or reltst
plates. Neighbors and friends arc
invited.
Trustees to meet
Olive Township trustees appropriations meeting, Thursday, 6:30
p.m. at the township hall.
District meeting
, Leading Creek Conservancy District will meet Thursday, 5 p.m ., at
lhe office.

Faculty at Central State
propose budget cut plan

Wll..BERFO~CE (AP)- Central
State University's faculty will recommend to trustees a budget-cutting
plan that includes layoffs of administrators but not teaching staff.
Faculty members voted 81 -0
Monday in favor of recommending
News:
·
Barrows and gilts: mostly steady ; the proposal.
demand moderate on a moderate
Central State's board of trustees,
supply.
which declared a financial crisis earU.S. 1·-3, 230-260 lbs. 39.50- lier this month, will meet Friday to
41.00, a few 41.50; plants 40.50- adopt a budget-cutting plan.
The university is trying to erase an
operating-fund deficit of$3.7 million
by June and deal with a longer-term
money crunch that could push its
total debt to more than $6 million .
Am Ele Power ....................... 41 '·
Akzo ......................................5&amp;\
Alhland 011 ...........................35'AT&amp;T .....................................66'1.
Bank ar. .............................. 36'4
rJob Evans ............................ 16'·
Borg-Warner ...........................30
A Pomeroy man was cited ·for
Champion Ind . ......................
assured clear distance by the GalliaChannlngiShop ..................... 3'1.
=ldlflg ............................25
Meigs Post of the State Highway
I M'ogul ...............~....... 20~
Patrol following a two-vehicle acci Gannett ....".............................~
dent Monday on State Route 7.
Goodynr T&amp;R ......................43'1.
Troopers said Everette D.
K-mert .......................................&amp;
Gilmore,
37, 329 Mechanic St., was
Landa End ...............................14
southbound in Salisbury Township at
Limited Inc.............. :...............18
Peoplel Blncorp......... .:. ........ 23
II :24 a.m. when he was unable to
Ohio Valley Bank..................35'1.
stop in time and struck the rear of a
One Valley .............................31\
truck driven by James'A. Howard, 49,
RockWell ..............................53'1.
54
Spruce St., Gallipolis.
Robblna &amp; Myera...:............. .28'!.
Howard,
operating a truck owned
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 135'1.
by
Tope
Furniture
.co., 151 Second
Shoney'• Inc ........................... 9~
sgr Bank ..............................57~.
Ave., Gallipolis;-had slowed almost
WendY lnt'l.............................. 20
to a stop for a wide load vehicle when
Worthlngton Ind . ..................19'1.
the crash occurred, according to the
report.
Stock report• are the1 ~~~:11
Damage to the !ruck and to the
a.m. quolll provided by A
trac(or-trailer
Gilmore drove, owned
of GaiHpolll.,
31541
Hill

2,_

unteer drivers to operate 'the band
equipment vehicles: David We~ks,
Roben Fortney, Larry Heines, Gary
Wolf and Susan Climer.
• employed Mary Dempsey as a
substitute secretary for the remainder
of the school year, to be used on an
as-needed basis only.
• approved entering into an agreement with Tuppers Plains Wastewater
District to allow casements for installation of sanitary sewer lines.
• approved Sunday, May 26, 1996

tn

•

Today'·s livestock
report
.
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndtanaOhto dtrect hog pnces at selected
buymg pomts:;Tuesday .bY the U.S.
Depanment of Agrttulture Market

left, and Rick Sanders were eiiCted In tti11
November election to the board. Re-elected
board member Mike Martin was also aworn
prior to Monday's meeting.
•·

NEW EASTERN BOARD MEMBERS- Two
new EasteriJ. Board of Education members
were sworn rn at Monday's regular meeting, by
Board President Jim Smith, right. John Rice,

Driver ticketed
after accident

The faculty plan would require
faculty members to give up a portion
of their pay on a sliding scale to be
devised later this week, but reaching
15 percent for some professors.
Administrators would have to take
a larger percentage pay cut of as
much as 25 percent The plan also
includes an early retirement offer to
trim faculty positions.
The plan did not detail which
administration positions should be
eliminated.
The faculty recommendations
contrast a plan that faculty members
say is being considered by Central
State President Herman Smilh Jr.

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded nine
calls for assistance Monday, including two transfer calls. Units responding included: ·
MIDDLEPORT
12:29 p.m., South Fourth Avei1Ue,
Betty Ohlinger, Holzer Medical Center;
I:39 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Marie Dudding. Veterans
Memorial Hospital, · .
POMEROY
7:52 p.m., Maples Apanments,
Jean Haii, .HMC;
10 p.m., Memorial Drive, Chester
Hutton, HMC.
RACINE
10:31 a.m., State Route 124, Fern
· Norris, VMH;
II :28 a.m., Rocksprings Road,
Renee Hoschar, VMH;
4:26
SR 124, Donald

Daniel E. Shane
Daniel E. Shane, 55, Rutland, died Saturday. Jan. 13, 1996 at Veteran~'
Memorial Hospital.
, Born on July 30, 1940 at Antiquity, he was the son of the late Daniel N,
Shane .and Wanda Stewan Shane. He was a r~tired employee of American
Electric Power, where he worked as a cenified welder, and he was a meni"
ber of the Believers Fellowship. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army.
·'
He is survived oy his wife, Patricia Parker Shane of Rutland; three daughters. Teresa McKensey of Savannah, Ga .. Kristine Shane of Rutland, and
Kathleen Laudermilt of Mason, W.Va.; three sons, Michael Shane and Daniel
Kelly Shane, both of Supply, N.C., and Timothy Shane, Middleport; a sister. Anne Browning of Middlepon; a brother, Stephen SMne of Burleson,
Texas; 20 grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
'
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Franklin Shane:
Services will be 10 a.m. Thursday IN the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
The Rev. Margaret Robinson will officiate and burial will be in the Letati
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call al the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
·
. Wednesday.

Harry A. Walsh

." .

Hany A. Walsh, 81 , Mascln, W.Va., died Sunday, Jan. 14, 1996 in Plcas.ant ValleY Hospital.
Born Dec. 4, 1914 in Mason, son of the late Edward A. II and Mary E.
Young Walsh,' he was a unit supervisor in the operation depanment at tbe
Kyger Creek Plant, a member of I he Catholic faith, the American Legion
Smith-Capehan Post .140 of New Haven. W.Va., VFW Stewart-Johnson Pe»t
9926 of Mason, and.served as lieutcnanl in the U.S. Army during World War
II.
,
He was also preceded in death by two brothers. Edward A. Walsh 11 and
Clarence Walsh; and two sisters, Mary Margaret Weber and Edna Winters:
Survivors include a daughter, Harriet A. Dorado of Lakeland, Fla.; arid
two grandsons.
•;
Graveside servioes will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. with Father Melvin Avern1an officiating. Friends may call at tlit
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, from 9-10:30 a.m . Wednesday ..

Alleged riot ringleader
could face death penalty ..'
CINCINNATI (AP)- An inmate
charged with planning the 1993
prison riot lhat killed 10 people
could face the death penally.
The trtal of Carlos. Sanders, 33,
who also is accused of killing a guard
and an inmate during the riot, began
today in Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court. Jury selection was
delayed • whil; lawyers and Judge
Fred Canolano met privately to discuss lhe case .
Prosecutors have accused Sanders
of planning lhe I 1-day riot at the
maximum-security Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility. Guard Robert
Vallandingham and nine inmates died
during the siege. '
Sanders, formerly of Cuyahoga
County, is charged with aggravated
murder, kidnapping and assault. He
could be sentenced to death if convicted of killing Vallandingham and
inmate Bruce Harris. Lawyers expect
trial to last at least a month.
Last week, Sanders' lawyers asked
the Ohio Supreme Coun to postpone
the trial , move it from Cincinnati to

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Hany
Clark, Racine,: Delmar Whaley, Middlepon.
.
Monday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical .Center
Dlscharces JIID. IS - Mrs. Cecil
Duncan and daughter, Geraldine
Lightfoot, Mrs. Jeffrey Roach and
daughter, Nancy Downard, Wallen
Riley, Yolanda Masters.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Tolliver, daughter,lackson; Mr. .1111d
Mrs. Justin Williams,

Columbus. and remove special Pro~~
ccutor Mark Piepmeier from the
case.
.1,
Steve Manin, a spokesman for
Piepmeier, said Monday he was n(!•
aware . of any ruling on Sanders'
requests.
· ·
The defense contends prosecutoll!
arranged to have Sanders tried in
Cincinnati to increase the chance ~e.
wi II be convicted and sentenced to
death .
Hamilton County juries are know11&gt;
for sending more men to death row.
than juries in any other Ohio couoty.
the defense argued.
,
Piepmeier, a Hamilton County
asststant prosecutor, has declined to
comment.

State prosecutors have obtained at
least 44 convictions in courts around '
southern Ohio on felony charges
resulting from the riot.
.
.'

''

�•
•

.sports

The Daily_-Sentinel

-

PIERCE DRIVES· Kansas forward Paul Pierce (34) drlvea paat
St Peters guard Mike Frensley (00) during first action of Monday night's game In Lawrence, Ken. Kansas, ranked fosurltl 1'!.
the nation, eXtended its home winning streak to 22 with an as:
71 victory. (AP)

Giants sign Cuban
pitcher to 3-year deal
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The
San Francisco Giants won the competition for Cuban pitcher Osvaldo
Fernandez, who was sought by several major league teams after he
· ·defected in September.
The 6-foot-1 , 190-pound star of
the Cuban national team signed a
three-year contract with an option for
$3.9 million, $3 million guaranteed,
including a signing.bonus of just over
SI million, the San Francisco Chronicle reported today.
"We ar~ thrilled about this,''
Giants executive vice president Larry Baer told the newspaper. "We

were shocked that we could get him.
With all the teams after him, it was a
little like the Barry Bonds deal."
• Ten major league teams were after
Fernandez, who has been playing for
the Licey Tigers of the Dominican
League in the winter league.
Fernandez has an arsenal of at
least seven solid pitches, including a
90 mph fastball, according to scouts.
" We think he's going to be really
well-received," Baer said. "People
who have gotten to know him
through the interpreter say he's·a really good guy."

"It was the coach's decision. I
have to live with it," he said.
"We can definitely learn from this
game, not looking at the refs to call
some calls we think are there,"
Vaughn said. "We . have to. play
through them. If there's something
we learned tonight, I think that was
it...
..
Mostly without Vaughn, the Jayhawks (13-1) played some of th~ir
worst basketball of the season. They
missed six of their first seven shots
and II of their first 19 free throws,
but a late run put them ahead 45-26
at halftime.
St. Peter's coach Rodger Blind
said it was,encouraging to see Vaughn
out of the game.
"I.n terms of the pressure he puts
on the ball, yes, but we. have to take
advantage of that, and we didn't,"
·Blind said. "I was very disappointed
because we were defending them
well in the· first seven minutes. But
then we lost our defensive intensity
and toolc some quick shots."
.
Raef LaFrentz, who had 40 points
in two games last week and was the
Big Eight player of the ·week, scored
16 points for Kansas. Luis Arrosa had
17 points for St. Peter's (9-4), which
lost its fourth straight game.
No. 6 Wake Forest 71,
Richmond 6o

Tony Rntland scored all 13 of his
points in the final 9 112 minutes as
Wake Forest bounced back after
blowing an IS-point lead.
The Demon Deacons (Il-l) led
40-2-2 with_18:43 left, but visiting
Richmond (4-9) responded with a 242 run for a 46-42 edge.
Tim Duncan scored 16 points for
Wake Forest, which won its eighth in
a row. Adam Mobley and Eric Poole
scored 16 each for the Spiders, who
lost their sixth straight game.
No. 8 Georgetown 74,
·
Notre Dame 69
Allen Iverson scored 26 points and
Georgetown won on the road despite
shooting just 39 percent and getting
outrebounded 43-34.
Iverson 's 3-pointer with 12:10 left
put the Hoyas ( 15-4, 5-'l) ahead for
good at 49-47 . Notre Dam'e'remained
winless in the Big East (5-8, 0-6) with
their fourth straight loss.
Ryan Hoover scored 26 points for
the Irish. The game was the first
between the teams since the 1989
NCAA tournament.
No. 11 Virginia Teeh 79, George
Washington 71
Ace Custis scored 18 points,
including a tip-in with 47 seconds
left, and Travis Jackson tied his
career high with 17 points as Virginia
Tech ( 10·1, 3·0) scored its seventh

straight victory and took sole pos- .
session of first place in the Atlantic10 Conference.
'
George Washington (8-4, 2-1);
overcame a 15-jJOint deficit and led ·
with seven minutes to play, but:
missed its four field goal attempts in ;
the final minute.
'
Kwame Evans paced George
· Washington with 21 points, while 7foot-! Alexander 'Koul had 20.
The game was moved to Roanoke
because 27 inches of snow accumuIated on the roof of Cassell Coliseum,
making the roof unsafe.
No. 15 Utah 67, San Diego St. 59
With coach Rick Majerus back on
the bench, Brandon Jessie tied his
career l!igh· with 28 points, and the •
Utes (12;3, 4- 1 WAC) overcame an
11 -point halftime deficit to defeat
host San Diego State.
•
Majerus missed Saturday's game •
at Hawaii with an inner-ear infection.
Ho·prove from Salt Lake City to San •
. Diego for Monday 's game.
Utah scored 14 straight points to
take its first lead, 38-35, on a 3-point· er by Ben Caton with 14:34 to play.
The Utes led the remainder of the
game.
Paul Jarrett an~ Kareem Anderson
scored 16 and 15 points, respectively, for the Aztecs (8-5, 4-2).

PmSBURGH (AP) - Players
gave TV interviews in hallways, and
a baker hauled in a 500-pound victory cake. Staff members scurried to
make Super Bowl reservations.
Everyone took turns hefting the AFC
championship trophy.
The Pittsburgh Steelers were get-·
ling ready to play the Dallas Cowboys again in the Super Bowl, so
nearly everyone wore a smile. But
down the hall in coach Bill Cowher's
office, the only diversion from the
normal weekly schedule was a Mon'
day news conference.

tant coach at East Tennessee State,
Wake Forest and Mississippi and
coached professional football in
Europe.
Pruett was hired last.week, replacing Jim Donnan, who became head
coach at Georgia. Pruett retained four .
Donnan assistants: defensive ends
coach Mark Gale, defensive line and
· special teams coach Tim Billings,
quarterbacks coach Tony Petersen
and receivers coach Brian Dowler.
The rest of Donnan's assistants
went to Georgia. Pruett still has three
spots to fill.

DALLAS (AP) - Green Bay
.Ssistant coach Gil Haskell, despite
showing improvement, remains under
intensive care with a skull fracture
after being slammed to the ground in
a sideline accident at the NFC championship game.
Dr. John Gray, the Packers' associate team physician, said late Monday that Haskell's condition, reported as serious, had shown "very
encouraging progress" during treatment at Baylor Medical Center.
"His neurological function and
mental status both have improved,
along with his level of responsive:
ness," Gray_said in a news release
issued by the. Packers on Gray's
return to Green Bay.

Georgia moves up ~
in AP women's poll
By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
AP Sports Writer
Kicked . around early, the Lady
Bulldogs of Georgia are snarling
again.
After losing two of its first four
games, Georgia is playing the way a
team should when it returns all five
starters from a Final Four club.
Coach Andy Landers' team has won
11 straight games, the latest a 75-67
victory, at No. 3 Connecticut on
Monday.
The Lady Bulldogs have been
climbing in The Associated Press poll'
as ·the victories mounted, and they
moved from seventh to fourth in
Mondliy's voting, which was done
before the Connecticut game.
It's the highest Georgia has been
since· holding the No. 2 spot in the
·first · regular-season poll. Georgia
rumbled all the way to 12th after losing to Virginia 94-65 on Dec. 2.
"When we lost to Virginia, thot
was a reality check," senior guard
Saudia Roundtree said. "We knew
there wasn't anybody going to lay
down for us. We realized we had to
go out and· work bard every game
because, hey, everybody wants to
belii Georgia." ·
Unbeatens Louisiana Tech and
Vanderbilt remained 1-2 in the poll,
with Connecticut holding firm at
third.

Louisiana Tech ( 13-0) received all
38 first-place votes from a national
media panel, the fifth consecutive
week the Lady Techsters have been a
unanimous No. I. They've been on
top every week except the preseason
poll.
Vanderbilt (14-0) finished with
906 points in the voting - 44 fewer
than Louisiana Tech. Connecticut
had 874 points. ·
Stanford climbed one spot to fifth
after winning twice, including an 8867 victory over Southern California
that featured a school-record 44
points by Kate Starbird, the most by
a Division I player this season.
, Tennessee slipped two places to
sixth after losing to Georgia, which
gave the Lady Vols a rare two-game
losing streak. They were followed by
Virginia, Texas Tech, Iowa and Penn
State. Penn State dropped five places
after losing at Northwestern, now
ranked 17th.
Tennessee's loss at Georgia ~arne
after a homecourtloss to Connecticut.
The skid ended when the Lady Vols
rebounded to beat Old Dominion and
Kentucky.
North Carolina State climbed two
places to head the Second Ten, which ·
also had Oregon State, Duke, Wisconsin, Colorado; Old Dominion,
Northwestern, Alabama, Oklahoma
State and Arkansas. Colorado and
Old Dominion were tied for 15th.

· Eormer Cincinnati
; b~s,ketb'an coach dies
He led Cincinnati to its first two
Final Fours, in 1959 arid 1960. With
eventual Hall-of-Fame players Oscar
Robertson and ·Jack 1\vyman, the
Bearcats placed third in the NCAA
tournament in those two years.
The funeral will be at Westwood
United Melhodist Church in Cincin·
'nati, with a sen/ice to follow at Spring
Oro~ Cemetery. - ·
•
· · Smith is Survived by his wife of 59
y~.Helcin:

I

TIGHT DEFENSE· Washington's Brent Price looks to pass as
he.Is guarded cldaely by Chicago's Ron Harpin In first half play
of Monday's NBA game in Andover. Price aco('ed a career-high
30 points, but the Bulls won, 118-109. (AP)

:wright State snaps
six-game losing spell

Yes, the Steelers are going to the
Super Bowl again, 16 years after the
dynasty of the '70s completed its
work in January \980. But, no.
Cowher said, the Steelers don't plan
on doing anything differently the next
two weeks - except to become the
AFC's first Super Bowl champion in
12 years.
·
"This is not bowl game, or a situation where we're going out (to
Tempe) to enjoy ourselves," Cowher
said Monday. "We're going om for
business, this is a business trip. There
will be lot of time to enjoy this after

this·is over. I'll enjoy the heck out of
it on the 29th."
Cowher wasn't predicting victory
- he'lllet the Cowboys do that - ·
but he wasn't predicting a loss. either.:
The only time he glared during his
20-minute media session was when
he was asked if these Super Bow.lseasoned Cowboys might iptimidate
his Steelers.
·
Cowher didn 't need mention the
words "Greg Lloyd" when he
answered: "This team won't be
intimidated by anybody."
Especially, it appears, by their

"He is currently alert but still disoriented, as might be expected."
Haskell's head struck the artificial
turf at Texas Stadium when Dallas
Cowboys safety Darren Woodson
knocked flanker Robert Brooks out of
bounds and'into the Packers' 52-yearold assistant late in the second quarter of Sunday's game. The Cowboys
won 38-27.
The Packers said Haskell may
remain in Baylor's Neurological
Intensive Care Unit under continuous
observation the rest of the week, but
doctors anticipate n good recovery.
Packers trainer Pepper Burruss
reported that Dr. Michael Foreman,
the trauma surgeon directing
Haskell's care at ·Baylor, confirmed

there was no evidence of neck injury
and that Haskell was breathing on his

a

'

and Spaniards Conchita Martinez
and Arantxa Sanchez Vicario.
Martinez opened with a 6-4, 6-1
victory over Britain's Clare Wood on
Tuesday, and Sanchez Vicario won
her first-round match Monday.
Seles' return to the tour, begun five
months ago. has been hampered by
problems with her knee and ankle, a
virus and, on Sunday, a right groin
pull suffered in the final of a warmup
tournament.
"I'm going to uy and say it's not
huning, like what I did on Sunday,"
when she beat Lindsay Davenport in
a close match.
She acknowledged, "it's still sore,
when I had to move a few shots."
In men 's matches, No. I Pete
Sampras let Richard Fromberg have
I0 break points, but didn't allow the
Australian to cash in on a single one
as he won 7-5, 6-3, 6-Q.
Edberg, a past No. I in his
farewell year, found his touch in his
serve-and-volley game in the .final
set, beating &lt;2ech player Jiri NoVak
7-6 (8-6), 7-5,3-6,5-7,6-1.
Sampras said he is over the flu that
spoiled his warmup plans for the
Open, and "I thought I hit the ball
pretty well, but didn't serve great"
Volley misses by Fromberg gave
·Sarnpras the first set, '"d the reigning WimbledJn and U.S. Open cham·
pion turned up the pressure when he
faced two break pointS at 3-3 in the
second. Coming to the net behind
powerful ground strokes, rather th""
his serve, he saved that game and
then broke Fromberg in the next. He
broke Fromberg twice in the fmal Set.
"Hopefully my tennis can get betteras the week goes on," said Sampras, who managed only four aces to
. Fromberg's 11.
Edberg, No. I in 1990-91. served
~of his four ees in the final ~t.
'.'1 had t~ dig really deep today. I
wu
..,. luck)!
. to cornt out of lhili," said

Zanesville, Archbold, Orrville
and Liberty Benton are No.1

.,

..

..,
COACH GIL HASKELL

CZhe /!.i?ht
\Couch

the Swede, who has played in the
most consecutive Open-era Grand
Slam tournaments -..- 51.
By
Edberg, who turns 30 on Friday,
Dave
has said this is his final year on the
tour. Asked whether he is ready for
Grate
the museum, pe replied: "Not quite."
of
He has won six Grand Slam titles,
including the Australian Open in
Rutland
1985 and 1987, and says: "I think I
Furniture
can win another slam, starting here."
Last year, Edberg fell out of the
Flattery is the art of
top I 0 after a decade in that elite
describing others as they
group. He now is ranked No. 31, to
see themselves.Novak's No. 36.
***
Men's No.3 Thomas Muster, who
has been dominant on clay but not on
Why is it that a baby never
hardcourts like the surface here,
sneezes unless his mouth is
opened with a 6-3, 6-3, 6-2 victory
full of cereal?
over France's Thierry Cluardiola.
***
The only men's seed to fall so far,
The trouble with installment
No. I6 Paul Haarhuis of the Netherbuying is that by the time
!8)1ds, lost 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 to Filip
you own the thing you're
Dewulf of Belgium.
sick of H.
No. 7 Thomas Enqvist of Sweden
***
beat Marc Goellner of Germany 6-3,
6-2, 6-4. No. I0 Goran lvanisevic of . Cost of living: your income
plus 20 percent.
Croatia beat Germany's Ben'KI Kar***
bacher 6-4, 7-6 (11-9), 6-3. No. II
Nostalgia: when you find the
Richard Krajicek of the Netherlands,
present
tense and the past
who nearly pulled out of the tourna-.
perfect.
ment with an arm injury, eased past
Australian Jason Stoltenberg 6-1, 63, 6-2. No. 12 Arnaud Boetsch beat
fellow Frenchman Guy Forget 4-6, 76 (7-5), 6-3, 6-3. . No. 14 Andrei
Medvedev o.f Ufcraine beat Spaniard
Carlos Moya6-4, 7-5,2-6.-7-6 (9-7),
and No. IS Todd Martin ousted
Daniel Vacek of the Czech Republic
6-4. 6-7 (7-5), 6-3, 6-4.

I

in a crucial fourth-quarter stretch, and
Mario Elie had 20 points and a key
slam dunk for the Rockets.
"It was a close game against a
tough team, " Olajuwon said. "Everytime we play them, it's decided late.
This is a team we'll be playing in the
playoffs."
Utah, which lost for the founh
t\!ne in five games, was led by Karl
Malone with 23 points and David
Benoit with 17.
Bucks 98, Knicks 92
New York had a chance to tie it
with 17 seconds left, but Patrick
Ewing missed two of three free
throws after he was fouled attempting a 3-pointer.
The Bucks pulled away after that
and sent the Knicks to their second
straight surprising home loss. They
dropped one to Sacramento on Saturday - their first loss to the Kings
since 1981. ·
"This was the biggest win of our
season," said Vin Baker, who had 30
points and \3 rebounds.
Lakers 96, Heat 88
Pat Riley returned to another of his
fanner haunts and saw his team fall
three games below .500 - its worst
mark of the season.
Miami has scored fewer than 100
points in 17 of 18 games and is 1-5
since Alonzo Mourning returned
from an injured left foot.

from scratch," Mourning said. " We::
need to do the little things that got us:•
going early this season. We 're just; :
fighting through something, and I•:
don't know what it is. We 're having:•
a lot of difficulty out there , and it's a:'
strain."

~

straight vict ory.

:·

Eddie Jones scored 20 poi~ts and;;
Vlade Di vac 19 in the Lakers ' third: •

SuperSonics 104, Warriors 9S
•'
Gary Payton had 23 points and;
Hersey Hawkins 22 as Seattle won at~·
Golden State, the Sanies' lOth victo-;
ry in 12 games.
.
:•
Shawn Kemp had 17 points, 14 •·
rebounds, three blocks and four :
assists and Vincent Askew added a;·
season-high 17 points.
Timberwolves 103, Kings 94
At Minneapolis, Darrick Martin
scored a career-high 20 points and
Isaiah Rider had 29 as Minnesota
snapped its five-game losi ng streak.
Hawks 96, Pistons 88
At Atlanta, Steve Smith scored 31 . points and Mookie Blaylock added :
21 as the Hawks went over .500 for:
the first time in nearly six weeks.
Nets I 08, Raptors 83
At East Rutherford , N.l .t Kenny":
Anderson had 23 points and 13,•
assists, Armon Gilliam added 20
points, Chris Childs 17 and Yinka -•
Dare a career-high 12 - the first •
game in double figures· for the Nets' :
1994 first-round pick.

and perhaps less athletic lineup, won
last year over Marshall in Charleston
89-82. This year. in its first Big East
season, West Virginia has added twO
key players under the basket: 6-foot11 forward Gordon Malone and 6-11
center Sandre Varejao.
WVU (5-7) was to host No. 12
Syrcause tonight in Morgantown.
Despite an 0-5 conference record.
the Mountaineers "have held their
own preuy well in the Big East," said
Marshall forward Chris Gray.
Marshall 's output against VMI
was 20 points below its average, but
the Herd held the Keydets to just 34
percent shooting after allowing its
previous opponents to average 46
percent and nearly 90 points a game.

On Saturday, Marshall's defense
looked particularly lax in an 89-87
los ~ at Appalachian State in which
Appy State shot 54 percent.
"Going into the game, we felt
VMI was playing very well," Donovan said. " I was awfully concerned
about this game.
"This game was by far the worst
performance offensively we've had
this year. Our guys played tentatively tonight. We just didn't shoot well
tonight." Donovan said. "But when
you guard, you can have nights like
this and still win. This is one step in
the positive direction. We still have a
long way to go."
VMI coach Ban Bellairs said
Marshall 's loss to Appalachian State

awakened the Herd.
"I'm really upset mostly with App
State," said VMJ coach Bart Bellairs. •' ·
"Marshall was like a bear tonight.. '.
(Donovan) must have chewed his · •'
guys ·good."
Keith Veney scored 21 points to ·
lead Marshall (7-5, 1-1).
. .
John Brown added 15 points and
12 rebounds for Marshall, while Sid- ·: •
ney Coles also had 14 rebounds for ; •
the Herd, which held a 52-44 edge in. ,
:·! .
that category.
Lawrence Gullette scored 16 for ·
VMI (6-4, 0-1 ), with II coming in the .
first half. Spencer added 13 points, ;
Conley had 12 points and 10
rebounds and Lester Johnson scored ,

10:

Browns fans, mayor in Atlanta to pitch case

Burruss said earlier that possible
injury to the brain, not the skul1 fracture, was the main concern. ..
"You are dealing with the brain
here, and it is very hard to predict
what will or will not happen," he
said.
Packers coach Mike Holmgren
planned to travel from Green Bay
back to Dallas to be with his Haskell
and his wife.
"It puts things in perspective,"
Holmgren said in Green Bay on Monday. "We were playing for the Super
Bowl. All those things pale in comparison to Gil's situation."

In women's matches, No. 5
Kimlko Date of Japan trounced
Anaelica Gavaldon of.Mexico 6-2, 60, No. 71vaMajoliofCroatiadefeated lllena Makarova of Russia 6-4, 62, No. 8 Aiike Htil5er of Germany
beat Sandra Kleinova of the Czec.h
Republic 6-1, 6-4. ·

on the first two stops of a four-game
West coact lrip.
The Mavericks.got29 points from
Jimmy Jackson, 27 from George
McCloud, 22 from Popeye Jones and
20 from Jason Kidd.
Kidd also had 14 assists and seven rebounds to win the head-to-head
showdown with Hardaway, who had
21 points and just five assists.
Bulls 116, BuUets 109
Michael Jordan scored 46 points
- one game after he had a seasonhigh 48.
"All things considered, we did a
decent job on him," Washington
coach Jim Lynam said. "It sounds
crazy, but he had to take 31 shot~."
Scottie Pippen scored 27 points
and Dennis Rodman had 15 rebounds
for the visiting Bulls, who improved
to 31-3 with their eighth straight win
and their 21st in 22 games. .
The onlY. other teams in NBA history to start 31-3 were the 1971 -72
Los Angeles Lakers and the 1966-67
Philadelphia 76ers. The '71-72 Lakers set a league record with 69 victories, and the Bulls are in excellent
position to top that.
"It's possible," Jordan allowed.
"The history aspect will take care of
itself. That's not for us to worry
about.''
Roc:kets I 07, Jazz 99
At Houston, Hakeem Olajuwon

Herd whips VMI; faces . WVU Thursday·._: .

Wheelersburg, Wellston,
Marietta, Portsmouth
·East ranked in AP polls

own.

Pierce, Seles open Austra~ian­
Open action with easy wins
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)
-Mary Pierce, the defending champion, and Monica Seles, who has never lost a match here, each opened
their quests for another Australian
Open title today with lopsided victories.
Both those matches combined
took less tirtie than former men's
champion Boris Becker's 6-4, 3-6, 46, 6-3, 6-Jvictory over Greg Rusedski as two of the game's biggest
servers spent much of a chilly night
exchanging service breaks.
Becker, the No. 4 seed, had six
breaks and Rusedski, a Canadian
native who now plays for Britain, had
four in the 2·hour, 49-minute match,
which lasted almost until midnight.
Sometimes serving at speeds of more
than 130 mph, Rusedski had 12 aces
to Becker's 10.
Becker now has a 29-13 record in
five-se,t matches, and h~s ·played
more of them than any actiVe player
except Stefan Edberg, who has
played one more.
Pierce, who didn't drop a set on
her way to the 1995 title, her only
Grand Slam triumph, beat Petra
Schwan of Austria 6-3, 6-1.
Seles, who won three consecutive
Austrlliian Opens and then took two
years off after being stabbed by a
spectator in Germany, blasted past
American .qll!llifi« Janet Lee 6-3, 60 in .47 minutes. A sore pulled groin
muscle didn 1t appear tQ slow her
down as she' ran her unbeaten streak
here to 22 matches.
Pien:e, whotumed21 on Monday,
also hid · too !IIUCh power for
Schwarz, ranked No. 108 and now a
five·time first-round loser bere.
Schwarz came up with enO!J&amp;h shots
to force Pien:e into a numbet of
deuces. '
·
"Petta ran a·lot of balls tlowi\- I
was· really sug!rised," said Pierce,
who is seedM fourth. behind .Seles

words. Among Cowher's admonitions to his players were to avoid a
war of words, which could escalate
out or'proportion and become a preSuper Bowl distraction.
"You should say the right things,"
Cowher said. "You don't have to say
1
what • you really feel. We'll let our
deeds speak for themselves."
Even if the Cowboys, from team
owner Jen'y Jones oil down, were
saying the wrong things. They're
already according the Steelers about
as much respl:ct as any NFC champion accords the AFC champion.

The Orlando Magic's longest road
trip of the season is feeling even
longer now.
·_
They dropped the first game of a
five-game trip Saturday at San Antonio, then ran into the resurgent Dallas Mavericks on Monday night.
Dallas overcame a 14-of-18 shooting
night by Shaquille O' Neal for a 119104 victory that gave the Magic just
their second two-game losing streak
of the season.
Upcoming-for Orlando are games
at Phoenix on Wednesday, at Utah on
Friday and a rematch of last year's
NBA Finals on Sunday in Houston.
" "We can't take anything away
from this game. We just need to go
out and play hard in the next game
against Phoenix," Anfemee Hardaway said.
"We didn't play well at all. It happens. It's been a long season, but
we'll be OK," O' Neal said.
In other games·Monday, Chicago
downed Washington 116-109,.Houston beat Utah 107-99, Milwaukee
defeated New York 98-92, the Los
Angeles Lakers beat Miami 96-88,
Seatile topped Golden State 104-95,
Minnesota downed Sacramento I 0394, Atlanta gol past Detroit 96-88 and
New Jersey beat Toronto I 08-83.
Orlando hadn 't losnwo in a row
since Dec. 2 and 3, when the Magic,
which was without O'Neal at the

gap to five points, but couldn't get
closer.
Conner had 14 points and
Brooks had 13. Derek . Molis led
Loyola with 25 poin1s. Javan Good·
man had 16 points and 12·
rebounds, and Theodis Owens
scored 13 points.
Elsewhere Monday, Hank Raber
scored 24 points, including five 3pointers, to lead host Youngstown
State to an 89-59 victory over
Chicago State in the Mid-Continent
Conference.
Chicago State (1-13 overall, 1-5
MCC) took the first lead of the game
at 2·0 and tied the score three times
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP)in the first four minutes of the game,
Marshall's
defense woke up in a 78but Youngstown State (7-6, 2·3) led
71
Southern
Conference victory over
. the rest of the way.
VMI, and coach Billy Donovan
hopes it will stay up for Thursday's
game against cross-state rival West
Virginia.
.
"I think West Virginia is a coml pletely different team than we faced
last year," Donovan said after the win
Monday over the Keydets. "They are
a lot better, they have a strong front
line. We have our hands full in the
frontcourt and in the backcourt .
" If we're not fundamentally
(sound) on the backboard, West VirBy The Aaaoclated Press
16iil10ting by a state media panel.
ginia could outre bound us by 20,"
Zanesville and Archbold stayed\ - Chardon was third, Bexley fourth Donovan said.
No.I, and Orrville and Findlay Lib- and Lancaster Fairfield Union fifth.
The Mountaineers, with a smaller
erty-Benton moved into the top spot
In Division IV, Springfield
in the second weekly Associated Catholic Central last week held a 50Press Ohio boys high school poll for point bulge over Liberty-Benton 1995-96.
which won the state finals last year
Area lejlmS ranked this week over Springfield CC . But while
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mayor
were Wheelerslbar11, ei11hth in Springfie_ld ~C was splitting two Michael R. White and buses carrying
Division 3; Wellston, lOth in Dlvi- decisions against much bigger oppo- more than 150 Cleveland Browns
slon 3; Marietta, 15th In Division 1; nents, , Liberty-Benton won its two fans have left for Atlanta to make yet
l~ton, 20th in Division 2 and · games by an average of 30 points to another attempt to persuade NFL:
Portsmouth East 15th In_ Division 4. slide into the top SP,Ot.
owners to keep the football team in
Those were the highlights m the
Van Wert Lincolnview moved into Cleveland.
. poll released today, although it should second, with Springfield CC third,
White and Gov. George
be noted that Chane! was - what Southington Chalker fourth and Voinovich, a fonner Cleveland mayelse?- No.5 in Division Ill.
Zanesville Rosecrans fifth.
or, are scheduled to make the city's
Arc:hhold's advantage over sec- case to the owners Wednesday, and
Orrville, last year's Division Ill ond-place Lisbon Anderson fell the Save Our Browns organization
state champion, took over the top spot from S1 to 43 points. Versailles was planned to make their pitch today to
in Division II by sliding past last third, North Lima South lt,lmge block Browns' owner Art Modell's
week's No.I team, Cleveland Villa fourth and Bedford Chanel moved . plans to move the team to Baltimore
AngelaoSt. Joseph. VASJ (9-3) came up four spots to No,s, just like the for next season. ·
into the week with a 34-point lead on women's fragrance.
Opponents of the move also
0.,-ville and won its only game. 51Zanesville garnered 36 of a possi- planned a vigil tonight outside the
50 over Lakewood St. Edward. ble 40 first -place votes for a 93-point hotel where many of the owners will
Meanwhile, Orr,ville ( 11 -0) won edge on Trotwood-Madison. Toledo be staying.
twice by an average 25-point margin . St. Francis was third and Cleveland
Orrville now leads the division by Heights again fourth, with Galloway
66 points - meaning there was a Westland climbing three rungs to
I00-point turnaround since the first fifth.
By The Associated Press
Vitaly Potapenko saved his best
for last.
The Wright State cenier scored 24
of his 29 points in the second half as
the Raiders snapped a six-game losing streak with an 87-73 victory Monday night over Loyola of Illinois in
Dayton, Ohio.
'
Wright State (7-8 'overall, 1-4 in
the Midwestern Collegiate Conference) scored eight straight points to
go ahead 57-49 with 10:58 remain ing.
Keion Brooks had four of those
points, and Mike Conner and
Potapenko each had two.
.
Loyola (3·10, 0-4) twice cut the

Steelers stay the course for Super Bowl

Marshall names two
assistant grid coaches Green. Bay's Haskell shows improvement
HUNTINGTON, W. VA. - .Bob
Pruett has hired Dartmouth linebackers coach Kevin Kelly as his defensive ·coordinator.
Kelly previously coached at
Tulane, Northeastern, Bowdoin,
·Syracuse and Southern Connecticut
State.
Pruett also hired Northeast Mississippi Community Cqllege head
coach Gunter Brewer as an offensive
assistant. Pruett did not indicate
Brewer's exact post.
~rewer previously was an assis-

Chicago Bulls outlast Bullets 116-109 in NBA shootout .·:·
" We need to go back and start•:
time, lost at Sacramento and Portland had 28 points, including nine in a row
By The AIIOClated Prell

St. Peters

Fourth•ranked Kansas rolls past
By The A11oclated Prell
From now on, Jacque Vaughn
will let his coach .do the talking.
.Vaughn was benched for most of
the first half by Kansas coach Roy
Williams after picking up a technical
foul for talking back to an official
Monday night in the fourth-ranked
Jayhawks' 85-71 win over St. Peter's.
Vaughn, one of the nation's best
point guards, shot an air ball 3 1/2
minutes into the game and then said
something to the officials, right in
front of Williams and the Kansas
bench.
..
The junior point guard was hit
with the first technical foul of his college career and spent the rest of the
half of the bench.
"I just decided I'd Jet Jacque sit
there," Williams &amp;aid. "I said I don't
care what the score is, Jacque is sitting the rest of the half."
In other games involving ranked
teams, No. 6 Wake Forest defeated
Richmond 71-60, No.8 Georgetown
beat Notre Dame 74-69, No. II Virginia Tech downed George Washington 79-71 and No. 15 Utah stopped
San Diego State 67-59.
Vaughn, Kansas' most popular
player, was nicked in the eye by a St.
Peter's player a few minutes before
the technical foul and the subsequent
benching.

Mavericks down Magic ·11,9-1 04 :

.
i Page4
Tuesday,January16,1996

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The Dally

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, January 16, 1996

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Rio's Eric Caudill named
.MOC ,.Player of the Week'
Redmen will host Findl;~y Thursday

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. CEDARVILLE - Rio Grande's
Eric Caudill and Shawnee State's
Vernita Proviu have been selected as
the players of the week in the MidOhio Conference.
9ludill, a senior rrom Beaver, had
19 points, eight rei..ounds and four
assists in a victory over Cedarville
and followed that with 28 points, four
rebounds and three assists in a win
over Urbana.
Provitt. a freshman· from Warren,
averaged 22 points and II rebounds
in four games. Her week included 30
poin.ts and 10 rebounds in a victory
over Rio Grande. She also had 27 ·
points and 14 rebounds in a win
against Malone.
Rio Grande coach John Lawhorn

said, "Eric has taken a real leadership
role Ion our ball club. Here of late,
he's really stepped yp his game. I
think it started before the Christmas
break with the OU game. He was
really pumped up about that one and
'showed a lots of people that he can
play with anybody."Rio Grande is 136 overall and 6-3 inside the MPC.
The Redmen face the University of
Findlay in a grudge match of sorts
Thursday night at Lyne Center.
Rio Grande lost Ito the Oilers earlier
thisseason , 78-76.
It will be Holzer Clinic Night with
members of the clinic staff in charge
of halftime activities. Game time is ·
7:30p.m.

We Give Mature
Drivers, Ho111e
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

14.4 average. She's also among the
top 10 in steals, averaging 2.6 per
game.
Center Megan Winters is among
ihe top five shooters in conference e
play, hitting 52.7 percent from the
ROGAN f.:U,
field. Winters is the second leading
RNER~
scorer on Rio's squad ( 13.8) and is ..
the team's third top rebounder (4.7). .
Insurance Services
Freshman Carrie Carson is second
214 EAST MAIN
·in the MOC and tops on the'Rio team
PQMEROV
from the foul line, hitting 83.7 per992~7
cen.t at the charity stripe. Carson also
A.uto-O..,nera IJUUIYJIIee
lel!ds the Redwotnen with 77 assists.
Life Home Csr Bualnell
Game time is 7 p.m., and will be carried live over WMPO-FM.
L..;..:.J.:.~:!':::!::=~--.;J

es were subsidized by corporate contributors to Save Our Browns civ,ic
effon.
" It's like a playoff game and we're
bringing the noise," Pinkney said.
One of the NFL owners, Dan
Rooney of the Super Bowl-bound
Pittsburgh Steelers, said Browns fans
have overdone it with a barrage of
phone calls and faxes to club owners.
"They 're hurting their cause," he
said Sunday. "They've made their
point. We already know .what the
Browns mean to their fans. Football
is very .important to them.
"But we couldn't even conduct
our business the last couple of weeks

and we had work to do because of the · .
·playoffs. It was definitely a problem . :
for us."

The owners are scheduled to vote
on the move this week, but might ' ·
postpone it until after trial of a city • ' .
lawsutt that demands the Browns ~
play in Cleveland through 1998, the '
end of their Stadium lease. The trial
is scheduled to begin Feb. 12 in
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas·:
Court.
•:
•
Modell announced Nov. 6 that he :
would move the team to Baltimore in ~ :.
1996 because the club had lo;&gt;st $22 • •
million over the past two years .

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember thai special someone this
Valentine's Day with a meaage in
The Dally Sentinel
•Sweethearts
•Moms &amp;: Dads
-Grandparents
•Teachen
•Babysitten
•Frleads

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
!ewer and less costly losses than
other age groups. So it's only fair
to charge · you less for your
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us and save even more
with our special muHi-policy
discounts.

Rio women to battle
Mt. Vernon five tonight
RIO GRANDE -The University of
Rio Grande Redwomen will be gunning for their third str11ight win
tonight against visiting Mt. Vernon
Nazarene College in Lyne Center.
Rio Grande enters tonighfs game
with a 5·2 Mid.Ohio Conference
record and 12-8 season mark. Mt.
Verno~ is 1-6 in the league and 7-9
on the year.
The Redwomen'held off a scrapPY Tiftin fi-ic last Thursday, 76-74.
Saiurday. the Redwomen thl!mped
Malone 82-53.
Stacy Riley is the seventh leading
scorer in ~ MOC thus far with a

White led a delegation of politicians and business leaders to Atlanta
by plane Monday about an hour after
the buses of fans left.
"We 're ready," White said just
before boarding the plane.
Upon arriving at Atlanta Hartsf~eld
International Airport Monday night,
White was greeted by about 20
Browns fans. He told them: "We are
going to make our presence known to
the owners and we're going to come
back, God willing, with our team."
Arnold Pinkney, co-chairman of
the Save Our Browns campaign, said
it was exciting to set out with other
fan s on the 14-hour bus trip. The bus-

Anyone wlio would appreCiate a thoughtful word from you!
All Valentine Hearts will be publishedln th: February 141h
issue at a cost of only $6.00!
MUST BE PREPAID!

,...............•.......

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Ptilt your •ssagt
in IH Mwl
andmailaloag
.
with $6.~ to:
The Dally SentiMI
·Yclelltlite Hearts
111 Court StrHI.

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20

Worclal

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Po•oy, OH 45769
M_. Be Rlcllntl
a, Feb. 9
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Pqe

6 • The Dally.Sentinel

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

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\~:Anonymous
mother
would
very
much
like
to
ke.
e
p
it
that
,•
.

''

Ann
Landers

Dear Ann Landers: You have
addressed this subject before, but I
am hoping you will print my l'etter.
It's important to me.
Several months ago, with my
knowledge but not my approval , my
· parents began a search for a child I
had given up for adoption.
A short time ago, "Ellen" was locat• ed and reunited with my brother and
his family at their home. My mother
and father were preseat. I was not. I

'

am still trying to son out what Ibis
may mean and to what extenlit will
disrupt my life. I am extre'mely angry
and upset lhat the search took place
against my wishes, and I feellhat my
right to privacy was violated.
Unfortunately, there was no way
this search could have been prevented since Ellen and my _parents want·
ed to find each other.
I don't wish to be included in any
family gatherings from now on. Nor
do I want any information about me
given to the "new" family member.
My parents actually had lhe nerve to
tell me in great detail (on the phone)
what Ellen has been doing lhese past
several years and what her pll)lls are
for the future . Ann, I did not ask to
be updated and have no interest in the

subject. I resent them for pushing the lion records wilhout the consent of
infonnation on me,.
bolh the adopted child and tl)e .birth
I have written this letter over lhree parent have done a grave .disservice
times and hope-the message is clear. to those parties who want privacy.
My family needs to understand how
The great Justice Louis D. BranI feel about this. Maybe lheY'Il get it deis suggested we pay more attention
if they read it in your column.-- NO to "the freedom to be left alone." I
NAME BUTANY CITY
second lhe motion.
.DEAR N.N. BUT A.C.: Your
Dear Ann Landers: You've printanger comes lhrough loud and clear. ed several columns about a North
I can understand why you are so Carolina surgeon who left a patient
upset. Your parents had no right to on the operating table with her brain
implement a search for your child exposr&lt;( while he went for a SQack.
without your permission.
Don't think that sort of thing happens
Perhaps, in time, you will change only in North Carolina. I'm enclosing
your mind about seeing Ellen, but a clipping about Memorial Sloanunless you do , your family should Kettering Cancer Center in New
respect your wishes. Meanwhile, the York, one of the finest. A neurosurstates lhat have opted to open adop- geon there mistaken! y operated. on

published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special ,events. The
calendar is not designed to promote,
• sales or lund raisers of any type.
' Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to
a
spedtlc aumber of days.
TUESDAY'
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Wesleyan Bible Holiness church, 75
Pearl Street, Middleport, revival
through Jan. 21. Rev. John White,
Penn Creek,. Pa. Evangelist. Services, 7:30 each evening, special
singing. Pastor, the Rev. John
Neville, invites public.
·.WEDNESDAY
·•
OOMEROY -- Alzheimers and
:: Related Disorders Support Group
;- will nieet Wednesday, I to 3 p.m. at
!: the Senior Citizens Center. The top': ic will be "Validation Therapy." The
:: public is invited to attend.
•:
::
::
:•
•:

·:.' .•

RACINE-- Southern Local Building Committee meeting Wednesday,
5:30p.m. in the high school cafeteria. All district residents invited to
attend.

POMEROY --Disabled American
· ' Veterans, Chapter 53, McDonald's at
7 p.m. Wednesday.

the heallhy J:lllrl of a cancer patient's brcilhers and sisters, will bll!td togethbrain after pulling pictures Of the er to protect unSIII~ting patients
wrong person's skull.
•
from the irresponsil1le and the. jnoomSuch erron are tragic, of courSe, petent.
but .wilh lhousands of · operations
Gem of the Day: MOst of us would ·
being performed every day, things be willing to pay as we go if we could
like this are oound to happen. - DAN just linish paying ' fot .wliere we've
H "»•,
JAMES, OFFICE OPI&gt;THE DIS- been.
"" . \ .
TRICT
GOVERNOR,
EAST
Is alcohol ruininB"YOJ!f life or lhe
NORTH CAROLINA DISTRICT
life· of a loved orie? 'IJ\.Icoholism:
DEAR DAN JAMES: I agree that How to Recognize It, How to Deal
medical mistakes are inevitable, but With Jt, How to Conquer It" can tum
now that we have entered the com- lhings around. Send a self-addres&amp;ed,
pu~r age, the profession's watchdogs
tong; business-size envelope and a
are better able to keep track of sur- check or money order for $3.75,(1his
geons who goof up and then move to .includes postage and handling) to :
another state ~o set up shop.
Alcohol, c/o Ann La,nsfers, PO. Box
Let us hope lhat the ethical doc- 11'562, Chi~ago, Ul..606!1 ·Q562. (In
tor;s, instead.of protecting lheir errant Canada, send $4.55.)

COOKIE CRUNCH - Fifteen community
members participated In the flrat-ever Big Bend
G lrl S,Couta Cookie Crunch last .Thursday at
Meigs Junior High School In .Middleport. Here,
Tom Payne. of WMPO radio, Ed Durst from
Fanners Bank and Tom Hunter of The Dally
Sentinel, from left, munch down during the
cookie eating contest designed to promote the
sale of Girl Scout Cookies. Also competlpg
were Tom Dooley, Middleport Community Asso-

elation; Treasurer Howard Frank; Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell; Middleport and Pomeroy
pollee chiefs Sid Little and Gerald Rought;
Commissioner Janet Howard; Pomeroy Mayor
Frank Vaughan; Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentea; Juvenile/Probate Judge Robert Buck;
MJHS Principal David Gaul; Bill Frazier, youth
mlnlater of the Middleport Church of Christ;
and Skip Jphnson, Middleport Volunteer Fire
DeparbnenL
'

OIESTER STORAGE
Avan.b'le

YOUR MESSAGE
. CAN BE ~EEN HERE
FOR ATOTAL OF ·

NOTICE OF sALE

11r virtue of en order

;

•

~ Pot-bellied

•

pigs lose charm

: By MARYANN STRUMAN
· The Detroit News
'
Vietnamese pot-bellied pigs, one
: of lhe trendiest pets of the last
decade, are going.to the dogs. Literally.
'
The lucky pigs are landing at ani! mal·shelters, Those less fortunate are
~ ending up in. dog food.
1'hC pot-bellied pig's high falcon: tcnl ~JU~kes it un~~Ceeptable for food
:such as ham or bacon.
; "Siau.ghtcrhouses wer-e taking
'lhem in for lard, since they are too
'high in fat and cholesterol. It's too
~ mUfil! lxilher to separate the meat
from the fat. They're just grinding
lhem up·.whole" for ·~t food, said
· Dan ·Riff!~ of PIGS, A 'Sanc1uary in
west ,'Vqin~. a national c~aiingboule for' free pig adoptions. '
Riffle lakes in thousan!ls of pig'
from (ICWSs ihe country.
'

i

MY CHRISTMAS IN KOREA -1952
My Christmas in Korea
I can remember still.
The First Battalion of the 381h regiment
Were on Arsenal, Errie and TBone Hill.

• Business
• Fiduciariet ·
• Fanns
. • Parbaaliaips
• Corporations • Non-profit

"Atleastshe'sclose.Westilltalk
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pro.bleal .. that~ pot-f?elltps. men .... l'igs defilii~ely have a, differ. whic:ll Olioe, sold! for ...
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· ,

61''8 EA'

Anil)lal experts say many pig
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f11!Viion AI;Qold of "jJreen

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Ji.500, ect~ ~I; .PIS•·;,
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Hurryl De•dlllle .

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VALENTINE PETS .

:Pet's N a m • - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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111

Amounc:enw~ts

, Forked Run ·
Spol18man Club '
·Shootin-g Match
.
Sunday Starts
12 noon

•

•'

Deadline frl.d ._y, February

I.

ly;.

9th at 3 p.m.

' ' or bring the entry form:
Mall
,

't

I

f

The l)aily Senti·nel_
~ .110 Court St.

Pomerov, Ohio

45.189

E

wl.-

""'"""r-

c:rew

••

. "

,u...

between8am-8pm

•

Mon. thru Sat.

848-2512

H&amp;l
SAWMILL
Portable
.
Band••• Mill

ROUND
BALES OF.
HAY FOR
SALE.·

32124 Heppy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 4117110
Denny I Peggy 8rlckl•

~:~1!"~~(S14) 84WOI3 PhOne
C814) ,1148-2D18FAX

614-742·2193

l.....:ifll:iiiiii'==;;;;;;;.,.•~-1:.81:,:4~.,;5:114-:;:2t~OO~:,II,:NI~GH~T~

,~..,,. ,.,.

111131111

King Hardware

REG. HOURS
Mon.-Wed. 10-4:30 ·
Fri.-Sat. 10-4:30 '
Cloaed
Thurs. 11o Sun.
102 Elllt Main
Pomeroy

Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 North Second Aw., Mld,dleport !192-~

992-7696
12/:1:111 mo

(Lime Stone-Low Rilla)

Meat Every Sunday

WICIS
HAULING

Public Notice
Menulectured Home,
Manulacturer'o
Serle!
Number LL6014 2BFD RA,
with Certificate of 11tle No.
530248498, which Ia
currently loceted on the
above cleecrllled ,..l ..tate.
Bald moLlie home 11
oubloct to treller taxee to
1995 which ere due end
peylible to the Melga
County ·Treeourer within 30
dllyo of dlte of 111e. Furthw
Information regerdlng 11ld
taxn cen be obllolned from
lhe Melgo County Treeourer.
Property
Addr•e:
Loelted on the Eeet oicle of
Dorcu Rood CCR·28),
Recine, Ohio, wlih roedo
Immediately to the North,
$QU.I!!, E;eet end, ,Weat ••
loRowt: Wnt• Apple GroveDorcu Road (CR·28): South
- State Route 338; North Townehlp Roed 103; and
Eaat- Stat. Roull338.
Real Eetete end Mobile
Home
Apprellld · et:
$13,700.00. The reel eetale ·
end mobQe home will . be
eold together end cennot be
eold lor Ieee than two-lhlrde
of the .PP,.IIId value.
Term• ot Sale: Caoh on
dell~ of deed.
JlnMo M. Soulaby
Sheriff of Melge County,
Ohio

(Specialize In
Driveway Spreading)
Umestone,

mo.

BAIYWBLL
. BODSI

\lhe ~tame
· C!.otnet .

1

.only 12 gauge
Fresh Butchered

IIODERII SAIIIfAftOI
POMEROY, OHIO .
Trash Removal - Commercial or Realclentlal
Septic Tanka Cleaned &amp; Ponable Tolleta Rented.
Dally, wee~ly &amp; monthly rental rate•.

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

'

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Limestone, Sand,,Graval, Coalllo Water

WE HAVE A-I TOP SOIL FOR SAlE

614-992·3470

992-3954 or 985-3418 ......

RACINE
GUN ClUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. 1-PM-

Authorized
Distributor
Welding Supplillll •lnduatriai·G - • Steel
Salas &amp; Flbrlcation • Repair.Welcllng
Alumlnum/Stalnlell
• , Machine Shop

UP·JG-DITE
· SPORrS

FIIWICE

noc1s

.. _ ..............1
Or!Ygen Ac:Mylena co. .

IIID ao•EIII
1·900·371·1100

,hw,;r-I
PU ·

Hallum all siztll Medical Grade 0.
Propane Trimix Ultra t.fix

PI.nN171

108 Pomeroy

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

Ext. 3140
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.
Touch tone phone

St. Maaon, WV

required.

Serv-U (814) 845 1434
1

......

. .•..,. Werlr

I. D. CONSTRUCTION

Laurel Limousine Service

Siding, Porch..,

"Ride In s Chariot of Luxury~·

Deck•,
Home lmprovamenta,
Remodl!llng,
Add-On's, Roofing
S.tleilct/on
GuartntHd
Bill Doerfer
(614) 992-2979

Public NotiCe

, "Pigs In SPJICC: Deep Dish Nine, The
Across the parking lot, all of Ker- Next Gcnefation o~Pigs in Space."
mie's friends are hanging out in the
~ HOLLYWOOD - Hi, •Ho! lt's . .. ,Like lhtold syridi.cated series shot Muppet workshop. The famous felt
~ Kemit the Frog, explaining what in).onC!on .(1976-8~), the Muppets facesofGonzothe Great, Dr. Bun~en
'' 'brought him back to 1V sfespi~ a wtll goof around w1th some of the Honeydew, Dr. Teeth, the Swedosh
: hugely slicussful intcmationat'film ~ sws in Hollywood: Michelle Chef, Camilla the chicken, and
R.;;arcer.
· · · Pfeiffer, ' Billy Crystal, Sandra .Bul- assorted bananas, cows, horses and '
"What brought me back here was 1\)Ck, Wboopi Golilberg, John Good-· mons~trs are stored on racks of
ta ,'box," "'"'
.". s Kermit, who s.tars it!J mail, 'd.arlh BllOks, Paula Abdul and wooden. pegs.
~-;
"'!''
.
Off 10 th
fb
tA"BC's new "Muppets Live!" ,scr!~ , Tony ~ennett.
· ·
·
are
• e corner are rows 0
~~sprint. (No airdate has been set ) ' ' ·All have agree~ to enter the "felt blue, tan, green, purple and orange
::"1-CIIIIIIy,lilto'as in a box. In t~' back and fd1m realm" inside Raleigh Stg.. blank , Pu~Ft fac.~s . and torsos , the
;&lt;ofa big truqk.''
... , , . 1
dios, the fonnq~ "Gunsmoke" studio vers~ule extras 10 Muppet proC But !Criollsly, fCIIks . .. ,
• · which. dates b.Ck 10 the silent film doot1ons stored above rows of dozens
~ ; "The Mtqlpets II'C very exciteq ·• '·~: Here Jim Hcpson Productions of ~reballs and no~.
,
~t rell!mina to prime-iime televi- has created the KMUP-1V 1stage,
. We. call lhem What. Nots. ~y
'.aion," says Kermit about ABC'~ ~C!JnU:OI room. offices and .dresiing usmg dt_fferent noses, eyes and hatr,
- ~viva!
of lhe old.- "Mu.....,.•Sbow" ' ......_. __ all elev~_ •..,.· ·by 4-foOI'stilts s_orl of hke Mr. Potato Head, we. can
'1 "
r..,..
,.....,..
....,..
h
th
f d ffi
~ich premiered 20 ?'cars .11J?· , ' .10 Muppeteers can stud be_lOw eftcl c ange em 1n,t,o a 11 ~rts 0 1 er~- "Thepaccilftelev•s•on·•ssol'nul;ll · manipulate lheir ~ c:blrloten ~n~ ~ters, explams Muppets
""'' you know. We do films, but it above~ !heir heads.
, Writer. Kirk That~. .
.
:efourm_D/'ths~~:~~-~d,
,Four-foot . hjgh floors .are telft·
ThiS Mu~ mag1c factory IS
t's tun too, &amp;i!t 1t's nice JUSt to tie porarily install~ so human .auest where Henson s human, ~reatures
'lly wilh the,pys.''
'
'
IIIBn
inter-act wilh ·the magical ·sculpt Miss Piggy's head from foam·
~ i More .siUi~is with lhe guys and ' Mu~ •menqeri~. That's -lhe only ·rubliCr, style her.wigs, and design and ·
s is what mey promi~"" from &lt; way I htlllld. could teach lhe old sew bet costumes, like the Snow
'~Muppets Live!". studios in • l'ola!Y-dial PlY: J!lipnes mi!Un~ 11- _White peasant &lt;tn;ss she needs for a
. UP-'IV. You .know1 the ~on · .•fiiet olftbe studio floor.
.
sketch with Marlin Short. (Henson
1
ich &lt;~ills· .' ' Say ·qf Pi&amp;s
"k's ~ linle tricky, but peqple have ~ucqons also h~ve a ' New York
f/ildi,· '""ltils Prom-The :Vot~:· ~ 10 pt UMd to it. They do ' fine," studioforSesatneS(feetcharacters.) ·
's iop-flllil blmylnl, cft. ~· Bob Bell: jhe furry brOwn
A few feet awiy others build the
. c..
--·led ...,-1
E I 0 ..
I .
.............. ;
'· '.
_.
ho
k
~ . "'"" . ht
ToilaY's ·
.,. • • •. - · ' . • '
&amp; Y 'IICCunty
w . wac Y props ~ ~·S ~ags.
MissPigywillbe~ tOO.
CIIO&lt;IAI4TV critica!hroup 'theMup- task: t,flke,ap~~rof IS-mch woOden
, ,ill-~w. ::.'ST'J1101RkJI'&gt;
iD Jllla'.• .TV bllaie.
·
,
· cru_tc:bes for a l1111e duck.

c.n

.

(Ill
614• 949•2512

Free Hotdogs
Factory choke guns

'M.upp~ts Li~e!'. will bring_the old
~g.
a
fl·
·
~
l
,
.
,
.
.
.
b_
a
~k,
,
·to,
.
,
t~e.
sma
_
ll
.scre_
e
n
.
I
, .
r

.

!l92-4025

Call

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

HYDUULIC REPAIR
~====~~=
S3 2 00/HR

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
-Sonrlce
.....with,.~o~e Night Out on the Town Oporotld
ownec~ •
by

(614) 992·4279 JC:J~7~!!'

0

· ~-:'

33058 SR 33 * Pomeroy, Oh. 45769 '
ta/1411 mo.

Ire .Yo1 Ready
For Love?

One Step Cemplete Aute 8e4y Repair

Call Nowllll

,..,_tuM.

BY JOHN KIESEWETTER

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

614-992~200

PUBUC NOTICE .
Due to ll10llmet1 woether,
the Melge Mltropolllen
Houelng
Boord of
~::: R~a:-l.•lga County . DlrectoreAuthority
1111 Nochoduled
Ret.rence ,Deed: Volume the P,nnuel Meeting of lhe
291, P1111 408, end Volume Boll'd lor Jenuery 17, 1118
250, . Pege 7,a7, Melge . In the Houelng Aulhorlty
County Deed "-ordl.
Conltrenc:e Room ot 39350
8ubl10t to ec:cruld 19115 Union Avenue Pomeroy,
Ohio It 7:30 p.m.
The 111ova deecrlbld relol
Alllnllrllted peraono ere
nlltl h• been IIIIQned lnvHICito '1t1enc1:
Audllor'l Pan:al Number'08JllnTruoNII
00713.
Exec:utlve Dlreetor, MMHA .
AIOnt wt"' I 1873 Uberty_ (1) 11: 1TC

•The Cr.oiiL-wtl ~ ·r

your photo.

..

~.

TD6,)11nuel Hiordneoe, Iron, PH.
Pleuo celt Roi.S..jlal.ll2"""72 or 1-,100-806-3313
to Ill up your INe - r anolyole.
1-

non-amoklng home.

TREE TRIMMING

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

1·900·255·2700
1:&amp;1. 9402
Muat be 18 yra.
Touch tone phone

AND REMOVAL

614-992-6223

Chuck Stotts

$2.H par min.

l

~

addressed stamped

lc~

=:a..o=c!;. .
•1 -

Please enclos.- -self·

1

.

, G:•==
Shll'llf of . . ..cou).".Y
WOhio
wth;· ·• roioda (1)2, '8, 11,3 to' · • '
lmmedlltely to the North,
Pub.II 'Notl~ Iouth, Eut end W•t ••
. . C
~
~ followt: .WNI· Gold, Rill!ll '
Niffice Qf SALE 1
4 Roed CT-1~; South- Gl!ld
By virtue of tn Order of
~ R!dlll RC!tl!f .IT"130): NOrth- 1111 i11ued out of the
llete Route 811 end •common Pleea Court of
~~~~· RCHid CC-40); MeigS County, Ohio, In the
arid 1!811 • Sllte Route
01 J1on1e Hltlonll B11ik

=

PER.PICTURE
PRE·PIID
'

ii

· 30

fumacea, and "*'Y
metal materlllla

The watet treatment company cordially lnvijes you to
partlc:ipate In a free, no obUgation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE Wlt.L TEST THE FOLLOWING:

=1i!:';' 1~0~

'======~=~~~=~==~~-~~ -

I

ONLY
$600

·~~~F-~~~!!·!!!~!·~-~~~~~.;~~~ ·~' ..
._________,_,~f!llll---ii!!ii•...--..1
~
·"
·.-

~•

(NO$
. unday,Calls)

wuhers, d~ hot
water lanks, ..ovea,

Chrl..la!l

614-992•7643

!

'"~

The battle it was raging
This was no Christmas ball.
Those friends who died upon that
hill
Would no longer stand roll call.

"Pot-bellies root and do all the
things you would expect ... and lhe
That Christmas still remains with
maternal instinct is very strong. They
me
·
get ornery," said Dale Rozeboom, a
I
cannot let it go.
swine expert at Michigan State UniWas it the 23rd of December?
lhe dead from ol'f the hill
Carrying
versity.
.
Incoming Artillery lit up the sky.
And
though
the blood stained
And spme unscrupulous pet supThe reds came charging up lhe hill snow.
pliers are selling pot-belly knockoffs
that really are baby fann pigs. New
owners usually can't tell the differ.
ence until their 30-pound bundle
'·
grows into a hulking 300-pound sow.
Sara Oiesmann of Carleton,
Mich., said her family got rid of its
prized pot-belly, Frances, after it
started to bite. '
"She was sweet," said Giesmann.
"But she had several babies, t~~en just
sljU!ed biting. Plus it was hard to find
someooc to take cai'e of her when we '
went away." .
A neighbor took Frances off their
f1v1t Hltll
h ands,she.sat.
'd
',• ·-.,...---~;.;;.~.._-.................-.;.;.;..-.._ _,.__ _..~

FREE ESTIMATES

r'l

THE DAILY SENTINEl}

There were many who would die.

As grave registration officer
I moved among the dead.
I had to bag and tag them
That more can be said.

Plelntltt, • ••• J•m•• A clell;..rv ot .deMI.
Dunoen,
II 11·• Delendllllll,
~-;!•,_ M. 8oullby
upon • .lu.ent
t~ereln
._.-m of..._ County

•
i

Area Korean Veteran remembers Christmas
'52
.
:
:
•
:

Openings for 2.

~ , Room Additions • Roofing
COM~ERCIAL and RESIDEN_T IAL

~

'-----------~--------------...,.-------..1

that some o( his war contacts were
reestablished. Tom Lyons, 'a prolific
writer, served in his division and at
Christmas time Sent Gene a poem
abaut Christmas 1952 in Korea.

Gar~ges • Replacement Windows

ollw.far•llleMihtlront
PubliC Notice
·-::
,o · :wtll
dcMir·
or • cowthou• In
Pai•-J\ ••Jg• County,
NOTICe QF sALe
- Public Notice
.. Ohio, on the . 1111.1 I!IIY of . lly wlrt... of en 'Ordet of ~~::=:::::=:-7~:'::--::"*-Yo 1tlll, It 10:00 Sele . leeued out the ••- bwrence B. Vence, II
!·· e.m., lhe toil-Ing len~ Common Plu• Court of •'-· Detendenta, upon •
, " lllld 11-nte, located et lhtge County, Ohio, In 1111 Judgment t'*-ln ~.
38510 Gold Ridge 'Roed, 0111 of The Fiarmere· Benk lll!lnt c... No. 95.eV.0011n
. Pon-t. Oh)o 45'7~9- A end Snlnll• CC!mpeny, · utd County, I wiH ollw tor
, . ,complete legel lleKrlplion Plelntlft, ve. Henry L. ulellt lilt front docfr of the .
: · of the real e111111 11 11 llenlley, •• .... Dlleridllnte, Courth.ouee In Pomeroy,
. .. , lalo.
upon 1 Judgment therln llelgl County, Ohio an the
: . The toll-Ing -crllled rendered, being C111 No. 7111 dly of Februlty, lll8 11
· reel ....II ellueted In 1111 es-cv-o20 In uld Court, 1. 10:00 .A.M., the following
- c-tyofMelga,'Townehlp illlltoffJrfonllillllhttront rNI-endrnobllehome
of Bedford, Stile of Ohio, dOor of 'lilt ~hoUMJ In eliueted theron, loelted et
...__..
·
" - " • . l!!!alge &lt;;qqnty, Doroee ROICI, Recine, Olllo
,_..--iitulll ··. ~·· BediOfd Ohio, " the "" day Of 45771. A comrlelt legal
Town•hlp, .Nelga County, f'llln*y, 18111, ll;f 10:00 deaorlptlon o thl reel
11111 of Olllo•llld 'belnt 1n i.m., ttie tollowl"g 'lends cirid mollllll 11ome 11
FI'IOIIon··24, Tow11 3 Noi'lll, lftd li!Mmenle, ,locm.d II II fallotn:
• RIMige13 W..t Cit 1111 Ohio 805 Wilt Main StrHt,
The following ,.., ....II
~any'e Puroii.P, end P-!ly, Ohio o~&amp;r88. A eituell In the county of
bllnt dllorllled • tollo!ft: 'complete legll -crlptlon . Mllge,.ln 1111 • --01 Ohio,
' Betilnnlngllt • point lll·lht of the reel eetate II •• and In tile Townelllp of
• oellllrllne of "ounty RCIICI follows·
Lllert, bounded end
~ 130 (~. Rcied~ 1111c1 'sltillied In 1111 County of dllorlbed •• . follow•:
C point lli~l!t WHt iillo~t Melp, hi lilt 811111 Cl1 Ohio, Blglnnlnglllht 8oulhftll
" 2270 r.et end \North ilbout . end In tl.l• City of Pomeroy comer of 100 Aore Lot No.
~ 1820 1111 from the end In the 'Horton end 214 end running due. Eelt
~ &amp;out!l•••• Corl)er . cit D~tllney. ~ddltlon, more on lilt &amp;o!llh line to 1 atone
~ FriCtion 24, llld point
JH1rtlculerly_ bounded end within eight rode to the
~ being North .1 8' .,oo• Dll" !IIH!'IIIId •follows: Belilg Southeeat · corner of the
W.t 11.00 fHI from 11:11· ~of_!!II portloi\ OJ.~~; Will IIIII Ofllldlot; lhlnn
lloutheMtComwciiThelnil ·1.... 'wh'!Ch .llis .... of the North to the North l!ne of
Berika ·.7 .11'. ecr.. •• ·10 loOt ·No. 'I' ICH R~t of Aid 100 Acre Lot No. 214;
deecrlbed ln. ~g.i, County
hid lot fllqee 11·-fwt lhlllce Weat on Mid North
Deed ileeortlll: Volume 231, on wMI W!f forlner!J. Mlln line to 1 poet 11 Levi Cllne'a
• Page 053: tMnc:e North 31' Street end ellllnda II 1hJt Northe111 corn•r 20 rod•
)! 34' 55" E11f 221.111 fell to width -to 1111 80 loot No. .7 1111 of the Northweat
Iron rod, Jlliealnt an Iron ICH Right of WIIJ'; lllld •leo corner of 11ld lot: thence
rod It 30 fMt.for lit. Nee; 10 fell off oflheliOUtherty South 18 rode; lhtnce W.lt
tlllllee North u· 57' ·17" llde' of Lot 102i '•ncl eleo 20 rode at Cline'•
... Weii195.181Mt to en Iron lhet portion of Lot 104, &amp;outh-1 corner on the
~ rod; thence ioulh 33" 03' which lie' ..., of IIIII 10 Weal line of Aid Weal end
12" Welt 21B,.;,Nt to • )~ N\1. 71CH Right"' ~ey. - ofulcl100 Acre Lot'; ," -w
point In the cent'WIIne of Silllllot 104 , . - , . ,... on South on Nlcl Weal ...d line
aetd County ROed · ·130, . Willi wee formerly Mlln It the ·a outh-t corner of
MUing an Iron · ,rod et lllrMt end elillnde 11•1111'ly eeld lot et the r,l•c• of
IOU:I fell fctr .,.,.,.._, to the 80 foot • · 7 ICH beginning, colllloln nglorthlhlnoe Sciulli S1' 39' '11" RllllltofWey. . ' :'
elghtecr•, more·or Ieee, It
!•t 90.52 tMt along ujd · lier.r.~-o.ede~ Volume being In Town Two, of
rold to • point; thence no, ,._ m; VOlume 248, ' Range Twelve of the Ohio
Iouth 51·" 01' 011" E11t Pe.. Ill; eitd Volume 244, Compeny.: .,Pwch-.
111 . . fell eking •ld roed ,Pege 821, ·Millge. County
EXCEPTING 22 ecr . .
to lhe polift of ~Inning, DeiaRaconll.
~d to Rldcy J. Motrlo end
--.Mining 1.110 ~ more
Snlil ,..t Mlliote-hill belli · Clni!Y . Morrie, by cleed
or ..... exceptlng.lin.legii •••1111!111 Auclhor'• .Pero.el ' recorded In Volume 261,
flgllla of wey.
Nlll'lllllr 16-02141.
·
8211, Melgo County
The bl ''IIIII Ill lhllbove
Pfo~rty. ~ddr•e: 60S
R1 cIll de.
-crlplloil ~". biMcl on Welt lll!ln ..... Pomeroy,
CEPnNG 5 ecmr eold
1111 ret•ence deed: Volume Ollie! 4S'N8.
to Milttle Bell, by . ctnd
231, Pege~ 013.: .
· , "-1 Elllll Appf'llllltl AI: recorded In .Volume 285,
I' Rlt.IIMB ·DMCI· Volu-· ~.7~.00. The - • - - Pege 4J8, Melga County
~ 123; Pege cti,' Melg1 0111not tM Hid lot Ieee llwl Deed R11111da.
: c-ty Deed Rea a.ecll.
two-thlrda the epprel""
EXCEPTING 1.08 eoree
b Slid - • • • Ilea been velue.
.
'•
aold to Mn Venlhllll' end
F. :::!~ ~··· l'ernl
Ter1111 of S.le: C..~ on Betty VenM-. by dud
~
Dt:GOS&amp;a 00
, delivery of deed. " ·
recorded In Volume 285,

Also a special s!ctlon for ln·-Memory Valepti&amp;e Pets. ~

. . ' - 1,..,..,..
Ccqllllbll Sial I Prices

f.:.~::"~~~%';!_ =~~~:O:.~:r~:;
~.r:.:.•n::::::., •-:,in. ·ot •••= ceeh on

~

~News
·policy
.

882-2996

.New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

AppqiHd 11:
$27,800.00. Th9 ,.., . . . .
.

render.., llelnt c . . No. (t)2,8,t.. 18116Jto
•tii-CV-080 In Hid Court, I
'
· .

OUR SPECIAL PAGE($)
·,
·"FOR PETS ONLY"
.WILL BE PUBLISHED TUESDAY, · :
FEBRUARY 1311 I"
~

MINI STORAGE

BI$SELL BUILDERS, INC.

-.!10

RACINE-- Racine Board of Pub: lie Affairs, 10:30 a.m. Friday,
: rescheduled meeting.
•

Gene Coleman of Rutland served caught up in readjusting to civilian
in the U.S. Army in Korea and while life and in the process lost contact
there became close friends wilh man)' with those he fought alongside of in
members of lhe 38th Infantry Regi- thai conflict.
It wasn't until last' fall when Colement, Second Division.
Returning home in 1953 he was man joined a veterans' association

O.V:t1~~wei CT-21111-

~...

-

fti.I-WIY

MIDDLEPORT
PRI:ifiCCARE
HOME

&amp;•

,

ever Big Bend Girl' Scouta Cookie Crunch laat
Thursday at Melga Junior High School In Middleport were, from left, third place, Skip John·
son of the Middleport Vo.l unteer Fire Department and his assistant; Bridget Johnson; first

wv

. ,.., Haven,
304 1112·211111

-::.•

1

"

place, Tom Hunter of The Dally Sentinel and
assistant, Mellaaa Houaer; end second place;
Bill Frazier, 'youth minister of the Middleport
Church of Chriat and. hla assistant, Stacey
Bre-r.
.

...d

of

. . . ieaued out 0, the

.

'
COOKIE MONSTERS- Winners .In the first-

. Public Notice

___,Pu;..;;bl=lc;;.;.;Notl=ce:....- l

'

In an effort to provide our readership l!(ith current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the event.
All club meetings and "'ther news
articles in the society section must be
submitted within 30 days of occur- .
renee. All birthdays must be submit, ted within 42 days oflhe occurrence.
' ·
All material submitted for publi-,
cation is subjeet to editinl!.

Pit's Wllflr R.tw.g

$7.00.P~R

• FRIDAY

,
:
:
•
:
:
•
'

SMIIIfOR
CI,n . .erlylt...

Plck.Up dltcenled

•NawHomea
•Addition•
•NewGeregaa
•Remodeling
•Skiing
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 8112-5535
814 8112·2753

892-3911

PIC,.U:RE YOUR PE'r
,.BE~ ••
PE'I'

POMEROY -- Meigs County
Library Board, special session,
Thursday, I p.m. at the Meigs Coun-·
IY Public Library to discuss personnel matters.

~ lkllldint lllr I dlllltl

1o.26, $85 par mo.

THURSDAY
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local
Levy Committee meeting Thursday,
7:30p.m. at lhe high school. Public
urged to attend.
.
:
:
.

Middleport,, Ohio

SMnH'S
COISIRUCIIOI

One Unit Now

nutritional reco~endatio~s. Federal guidelines suggest at least five
servings of fruits and vegetables a
day.
The findings were "alarming,"
researchers said. Fifty percent of, all
the children in lhe survey ate )es~ lhan
a serving of fruit a day.
Forty percent o( boys and girls
ages 2 to 5 ate less lhan a vegetable
a day, if french fries were excluded.
And 30 percent of all children age 2
to 18 ate less lhan one serving of vegetables.

CHICAGO (AP) - A scientific
study has documented what parents
already know: Kids don't like veggies. unless they're· french fries.
Doctors say most children do not
naturally like the complex taste of
vegetables, and the problem has been
worsened by America's high-fat,
high-salt, fast-food cuisine.
In the study, researthers from the
Na.tional Cancer Institute and the
U.S. Department of Agriculture Wanted to know what fruits and vegetable~
children were eating, compared with

run

Pome_roy •

way ·

'

The Community Calendar is

:·

·a

irl Scout activitie~------...., No surprise children's favorite ··- .
veggie ·is french .fries

Comr:nunity
calendar

-·

Tutsday,January16,1996

Ught Hauling,

Frae Estimates

Shrubs Shaped

Insurance Work Welcome

and Removed,

required.
"

Serv-U 619 645 8434

.. ..

'fJ

.--

, II'

\ "'

'

No~;;~;c~~;;~lven

f

State Rt

Misc. Jobs

33

Bill Slack

Darwin, Ohio

992·2269

UW11M/tfn

J.D. Drilling Company ,

thllt The Paoplll Benklng a

~:rc, c~::ny ~'1 !:"-:

!

eppiiDIIIon with lhe a- 01
Ohio, DlvltiOn of Billa; n
.South
High Street;

· Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,

facllltlee et the following
locetlone: POMEROY
BRANCH, 115 'court BINet,
P~ Melge County,
Ohio; POMEROY AUTO
BANK, 112 Lwnn Strut,
Pomeroy, Melge County,
Ohio: POMEROY ATM, 431
112 w . .t Meln Street,

Jackhammer,
Available 24 Hra.
.

P.O. Box 587

g;~;~~~··o.:!~~~~ ~.a:.s~

~;c'tlu~:~t' B~:~~'J:

.

We dig baaements, put in aeptic
systems, lay linea, underground bores.
For

Free estimate call949·2512
••MONA" I .RAUl

N••d ·a Pholopsp/o•r for
your Spniltl Occruion?
•Widdlngi/Receptlone
&gt;Coup one
(Engaglmtnt Pteturn)
ofleunlona
•AnniVWIIIIII

Selem Strut, Rutlend,
Melge county, Ohio:
GALLIPOUS BRANCH, 352
Third Avenue, Gelllpolla,
Gillie . County, Olllo:
GAt.UPOUS AUTO BANK,
348
Third
Av.n-. -GroUp.
Gelllpolle, Gellla Couiilt · oflllllly

~:::.; 3:~dl~~dLL~~

RueonilllaPrt-

Gelllpolle, Galli• County, .
Cell812·7747
OhiO; IIII'OUih lilt pum..
Afllr 4 pm
otlh•t IIOilltt• ourr.ntty ~
During W.ekdayt .
opii'IMd II the priOIIIIng . ~~~;~on·~w~·~·~liincl~·~
:::::.~,~Y : ; :
atr..t, Athen 1 , Ohio.
written oommenll from
loo.....-ctplltllareg.rcllng
tllle propo•l will lie
ICOiplild lly .... Dlvlllon of
Bente untl( Jenuery 30,
11111.
(1) 15, 11, 11111

2

I•

J!:t -

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
HOUH Repair I
Remodeling
Kitchen&amp; lllth
Remodeling
Room AddltloM
Sldlnl, RQOflng, PIIIIOI
R1110rllllle

tnau,.,. - Expedenc:ed
Cell Weyne Nell

m-44os.·

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addltlone
•NewGeragea
-EIICiriOII &amp; Plumlllng
-Roofll!Q
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Pelnllng
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
892-8215
Pomeroy, Ohlq
l/2111n

ROIEiiiiSSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

-Garages
•CompJete
Remodeling -'
Stop &amp; Compal'8 ,

FREE ESTIM~l'ES

985-4473
•

I

•'

'

•

�January 16, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Se"tlnel • , . . '

NEA Crossword Puzzle

'- BRIDOII

t
•

PHILLIP

ALDER

Limit... Offttt 18111 douhlowido,
3br, 2bath, $1799 down. 12751
mon't~. FrM delivery &amp; Jttup.
Only a t Oak.w ood Homes, Nitro

wv.3)4-755-5885.

Only 2 left. New 1996 2-3bedrooms. $995 down, $1118/mo. Free
deliverwlsetup. .Call Ru sa Mur·

dock 1-800-251-5070.

Price Buster! •N ew 14x70, 2 or
:lbr. Only $995 down, 1195/monlh.
Free delivery &amp; Sft,I!IP- Only Ill

Oakwood Homes,
755-5686.

Nl~o

WV. 304-

Furnished

APat.,_nt

oorft From $232-1355 . Call 61 4992-5064. Equal Housing o~­
turihl.

.

Nice 2 Bedroom Garage Apanmant With Refrig.erator &amp; Stove.

1250/Mo. 1!50
3717.

Five

Nice two bedroom apartment In
Almeroy, 614-992-5856.

· aerator,

near

3l4-578-233tl.

O.posi~

.

EAST

•A

.53 2

•A 8 7 2

••o e 4 s

•K52

Spencer, L•areland _Apar,t·

304-882-

South

BARNEY
Elecirlc Wheelchairs /Scooters,

New /Uatd. 'Scooter /Wheelchair

l ilta, Stairway Eltv&amp;IOra, lilt
Chaira, Bowman's Homecare,
8 I 4-4,18-7283.

GUaranteed Lowes! Prices At

Hi-EIIociency LP Or Natural Gu
Furnace• 10.0,000 BTU 1800-287-8308, 814,448·8308,
Duct Syetema And Air COndl!ion·
.,,, Free Eatimitn.
82%

GOods

THE
JOKE'S ON

61 o Farm Equipment

540

Shot Cafe,

Household

311 Worm
'S7 lioN lmt.bla
311Dren-l

on hfpe

55 VcQeln
55 Dlecrlmlruotion

DOWN
1 Dec. holktay
2 Verdi opera
3 Change
4 Same(comb.

lorml
5 Actor Eetevez

I Boca -,
Florida
7 Without

I Wine bwNI
10 Mild oeth
11 Genue ollrop

pnoludlce
8 III'Nkfaet

12 Comedian-

brMda

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Flrewood:-opli! hardwood. 1351
pickup load, you houl. Doll-y
alaoa'lallable..304-475-5168. ,
Grear Ctirlotmao Gifta: Boota By
Red1oino. Chippewa, Tony Lama.

510

270newho
1111111yzH ora
.31 ActrHe Terl 32 Belndlbl
33 Strong wind
34 Art dec:o
fllullnltor
35 Small cuehton

r.=n•

53
54 With llliniM

t64

EOH 304-675-66'19.

Rooms

cendy

6K Q J

Stove, RolriQerator, Washer, Dry:
or, $350/llo. $300 Dopoair, '1743
Centenary Road, 614-4411-,2205.
T.,;n Rivero TOIVar, now acc.Pano

Fum!Shad

c::y

•K Q 9 8 4

Bedroom, E)ltell•nt Condition

$200
114-992- 450

• Q 10 g
SOUTH

' Taking Appllcatlona For Small 1

COpped,

•• 7 3

tK17 5

•

ized apt. for ·elderly and handi·

.....

WEST
•Q J 10 8

e U-446-

applications for 1br. HUO au bald·

~avon .

(AU.. IT?

Newly ·redecoratld, nice c:lean

2 Riverview lotS 200'X701' River·

2ac Iota, pu bile water,

New

WHAT ct&gt; 11-IE'T'

2bedroom ground ~oor, Wid hook-

bend Subivision N. Rt 7, Wate.r.
Eloctrlcty, &amp; Phone, $30,000. 304-

Vall", Apple Grove,

plumbers. sid·
YIOrf\ers •. O~.ntac!

•AJ32
• e5

'

~

304:,875-5112.

Racina,l16,000 can 'tlnanca with
hoJt doWn, 81-1-949-2025.

wanted: Car·

' EEK&amp;~EEK

RNerakfe Apartments In

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

acres·,

Cugat
7 Spuka
. 13 UtMinaiiiDrne 51 l..eieufw

15 DexWoua
•
•
•
•
111 SptH tr.-nt
II
j1 7 Do ul ,.-----.;:;u;;;;a;----:::-::-.:~ .18 Pa.WUr or
NORTH
D!-18-96
Malta
• A e4
20 Actor Ayluoyd
21 Inborn
•J 10. 7
23 Aduh lnucl

920 Fou;th

A.vonue, 1 aedrooiit $215/Mo.
g20 Fourth Avenue, Galllpolla,
Clhio61~ 411 UIBA!ter7PM.
Gracloua living. 1 and
a!"'rtmonto ar Vlllaga

40 TOUIMn
42 Glnlle lllow
41 v.w
41 O.lrlchlllre bird
41 Nol amoo111

1 llnalcllft -

.1.

up. Rel&amp;renc11. Deposit. No peta.

529·1753Aflllr SP.M.

ACROSS

lntertherm &amp; Miller Mobile Home
Furnaces. Gas. Oil I Elecrrlc In
Stock. Large Distributer Buy Out

1Dlla Toyora ~·' Drive, 4 CylloGood, Condition, 81.1-388- .
NH489 Deluxe Hayblno $~ . 500 dor,
8348. 'of
d
I
Andy Ad_ama Dairy, 814-3712740.
198&amp; Fo.rct Broi)Co f¥11 Stu l(LT,
85,000
Mlltl 1 WD, Excolfonr
630
'Livestock
Shape, $10,!J0l0,"814-31l7-7756. · But&lt;:hering hogs. 304-475-1807'
,ggo Dodg .. Rl tn v,~ B-250,
72,00Q Milot: ·sa.ooo, Can Be
G40 Hay I Grain
At: Galllpotlo -Dally Tribune,
. Third, ~~ 0.nue, ·Gallipolis
1500 lb. bale of good hay, Sl!() por
' I'
• ~ . - \~ ..;
'
bale, 6,.·742-3089 or 814-7423)64,
1991 S-10 4x4 4.3 Bedllnsr A.lr,
Tilt, New Tirel, Very
Second Cutting Orchard Gra11, Crui1e,
Never Wor, $2.25 Rer Bale, 614- ctaan, sa. sao. 614-446-7ISO.
4411-ol053.
1~&amp;4 Ford Ranger 4x4 STX
Package 14,000 Mlloa. Loaded ,
TR MJSPOR TATION
CondiUori,' 1'Owner,

710 Autos for

-&amp;
'

'

Slle
'

I DIDN'T HIDE MY
BUTTER AN'·EGG MONEY

You·
PAW!!;

WHO

IN TH' HAYLOFT II

A.ERATION MOTORS

New &amp; Rebul~ In Sroc1&lt;
Call ~n Evant. 1-800-537-&amp;521.
Repaired,

PEANU'l'S

MotorcyCIM

''

..

1103"201 Pro Xl, 20' Strutoo

ba11 bOat, 200 'XPHP.' I14-1871347 or 114-ld-2871-'~ t
1

tit SAY f MA,l'IAGf IS A

TONIG~T'S

/ ( ' ...

. ' TOP I(•

rwo-wAY tnttr.

wiu do house cleaning, 8\cparl6586.

--·· .. -··-' " . '
-"

.

-

r

'-1

""

EVEK(£T Tilt: FEEU~ lJIAT (.JfN .

'(00 WJJ.X

t-lW&gt; IT.·.-.

,.YQR.

~T~ IS (::()N6 TO
~cur.m
~ M:ro~

Did you see that i.ncredlble pb~.'to I
taken by the Hubble space telescope
the gas and dust clouds that are
trillion miles high? Inside, new:
.., are being formed . And what we aro.bnt-+wllneuing actually occurred 7
...-+-+~f-+-4-­
years ago because that's how long
has taken the light to reach us.
.
The key moment In some b~:g~i[:..LJ..J_j_.J_..;
deals comes immediately; In others,
is well down the 13-trick road. Which is
it in this deal? West leads the spade
queen against your contract of four
CELEBRITY CIPHER
hearts.
by Luis Campos
Over the takeout double, responc.tJnly Cipher~ are ern~«~ from quotalione by t.mous PIQPIII. paA and preeent
Each litttfli)n lhe ciphel: at.nds lor MOther. TocMy's ca.: I ~ L
der's jump to two no-trump showed a ·
maximum pass with at least four
TYD
NYOH
J II' S K
J N F
T Y S
'C N H
hearts. With a balanced 10 or II points
and fewer than four hearts, responder
KHOHMYI
FVC
LFVSCHX
UHHS
would have redoubled.
When playing in a suit contract,
NHYM
XRXS'C
NH
uvc
check your losers. Here, there are
CRTHK,
four: the heart ace, the club ace, the
CNH
MHPHMHH.'
N . H .
WYSKHS .
second-round diamond loser and the
third-round spade loser. The spade
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Anyone who has ever struggled with poverty knowe::
how extremely expensive It is to be poor." - James Baldw1n.
loser can be discarded on the third
club, but only if you do something
about It now.
If, after winning the first trick, you
play a trump, West will win and lead a
second spade. Then, when West gets
.....
I. POllAN_;......_ _ __
in with the club ace, he will cash a
spade trick. The unavoidable diam1111d
Rearrange t.ttllrs of the
l""r ocrambt.d words beloser to come will mean defeal
low to lonm lour -da.
However, you must also watch your
entries. Win the first trick in the dumREHAWL
my aad play a club. Let 's suppose
West ducks this trick but wins. the next
. club and returns the spade 10. You win
In hand with your king and discard
dumlily'8 last spade on your club winV0 BEA
ner. Finally, with your loser count
down to three, ·it is safe to lead a
~QAT

::

0

.. .

LOSER

SERVICF S

Pau
Pau
Pus

'=~=' s~~atllA-~£2/is·

TtiAT A(.GOUNT$
fOit AI..'- Tt4f
t4tAl&gt;-ON
tOLL.ISIONf.

enca,;anCI references, 614·992-"

FINAN C IAL

ZNT

By Phillip Alder

and locka, "Groat Car." $8506
neg .. 814-992-7478 or 614-9492679.

Dbl.
Pass

Eut

Birth in slow motion

PB, AC, 5 speed; power seata

JET

North
p-

POpening lead: • Q

WAS LOOKIN'?

tour new dras. uoelHarley Oavjdaon Sohall
lenr condldon, call 814-992-2358 CUII!Orn, loto of oxrrae, txefflenr
ol New Mobile Home Furnaces. after Spm Weekc:lays or anytime oondllon. $12,000,114-9924133.
Barik Financing Available, Call
1881 Honda 300 • Tiak 12,800:
Bennena Mobile Home. HTG &amp;
Thundtrblrd SC, twO - · 3.8 1885 Suzuki 230 Quad Runner
CLG At 814-448-8418 or 1-800- '89.
litre, V-6, elite model turbo, PS, $1,500;614 U8 6068.
672-5967.
.
'89 Cef111nl,

Welt

"'

rr 11

1-

trump.

....

r~--=-s-:-:K~A:-:-:-H-:-:-y--,1 ~ '"',

b"

I_ r_ I_ -

rr

After our last big holiday I
discovered that the first thing a
kid will. find out about 11 new toy

--.:-F_Ar-T-r-R_Rr-E-.....~1 IS - - - •I - - - - - -'

I I I

r

G

1..-L-.L-.L-.L-.JL....J

8
-~;;;~~~t.l~lft'.f

Pleasant Valley Nursing and Re·
habilltarlon Cefner is tooking for
an 'RN with ACLS or altainable

PRINT NUMBERED
!ETTERS
•

I) Sc",iAMBLE
~· TTIR!

1

'Witt)in six mont~s. Minimu~ three
~ears

I'

recent nu·rsing experience

tlng (IV, TXS). Enective communiol

The Treosurt Y011
Scrvlnp You'll Flrld In the

All real estate aciYonlsing In ·
thiS newspaper Is sublecf'to
tho Federal Fair Housing Ad.
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
tOa!;tvertlse Many preference,

Classified StctiOII.

Mx lamillal&amp;tatus or n8.tifJ?81

origin, or any Intention to
· make any such preference,
Mmltatlon or di&amp;Cflmlnatlon:
I

This ""1'8P8fl8r will not
knowt(ngly accapt
advertisements for real estate
~Is In violation ol tho law.
Our roada10 are~
· l"of!llOd !ll!tt all dwallnga

odvanloed In this

·'

,._r

ara ::-.:~~~al

Pels tor Salt
Groom Shop -"-t 'Groorring. f•turlng Hydro Bath. Julie Webb.
720 Trucb fOr sale.
C&amp;H 814-4411-0231 .
"
11 adoitillle A.KC Go~ Rllrlev- 198$ Chevrolet 2 Ton Flo! Dump
ar pups, 7maln. 41tmafaa, rea!ly 32 Cu. ln. 4 Speed x2,' Good
Hotly, 11 ,100, 080: t91t Fora 31
Jan 111!h. 3l4-773-!il104~
4 Tell·Cllff1&gt;00'; Spociof 3110 Cu.

AKC rriniarure Pincher pupa, W.r A.u!o, Cobra Slide-In, 5 .Sleeper,
12.000 080, 814-3'19-9208.
3l44?5-3003.
A~C Yellow lab P~pa, Wormed, ,
4x4, 350 auto, good
Sholl, 1300. 614-251 8331!, A.hor
n.....

BP._M ·---------------

II'IOW

tirM

1100.

. ...._.

REAL ESTATE

'

446-5591.

.

~==~/':Send lor yow
~ Astro-GI'Iph ~
i'l:\~~u~
111 fo&lt;

31 o Homes .tor Sale
3 I!Odro&lt;im Ooublewlile Homo On
112 Aero, $1&amp;.500 Alter 6pm 814·

Squawk - Entry - Obese - Kidnap • KNOWS
leamed a great deal from self help seminars. It
takes a person longer to tell you what he thinks. than
what he KNOWS.
1've

ITUESDAY

limitation or discrimination

based on race, oo16r, religion,

25550.AMOE

I lnl I I I I I I
SCIAMUTS · ANSWIH

in rehabilitation or acute care ~et·

G.41ion skills. Oemonstralea ability
to
as a
Com·

Complete lhe chuckle~ quoted
bv filling in tho missiOQ -da
you develop from step No 3 b&lt;c-.

' r

.ASTRO-OR.AP ..

Dog .Houses For Sale : Several

Sliae, Wayne Shoemaker, Stltf
Rou10 141, 81.4-4411-051:1.
Rabbits : Netherland oWarfi

Dutch, 'Min Rex Min Lop, 814:

31J8.857'1.

Ao9i1toroid Ma~. COppt~r '. N~•...
Baagfe. 4 Montho Old; UO, 814448-1032.·

r '\f"/',1

Sli~'Pl II

.\. II.;! 1 ,T )(,.

tt

c)

'·•

the Y..r ahead by mallng $2 and SASE CANCER (June 21.Juty 22) This is one
10 Aatro-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. ot those ~ys where h might appear to be
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, ~rtcest before lhf! ~wn. Hyou can keep
NY- 10155. Mike sure to 1tata your zoel- · the lalth, ll1ir9 should work out to your

ac: aiQ!I.
• · . · •
satlsiiiCIIon.
, .' A!:IUAIIIUS (j•n. 20-Feb. 11) II you LEO (July iS-Aug. 22)11 Y"!''ve ~
BERNlCE
don, cotticize Or demand too rnudllrom tor something thai Isn't ot a material
you will outpot1 everyone in nature , your wish will have an exceflenl
BEDEOSOL aothelltOctay,
popularil}l contest. Assume an enthull- chance of b8ing lunlfted quict&lt;er than you
ullc altitude.
think. Good luck.
- - - - - - , . . - - PIICE8 (M. ao-Marclt 20) ~pre- . VIAOO (Auf• 2s.&amp;apt. 22) Working con~ IOdly coUld ~ som.thing dlllons and. associates could provide a
beneficial lor your lamll}t p ;a unit. Put Ia~ ,_lor you tod8y trr~n:tal ,
lhllr ~ llllldl aboiHI your own.
and- arwas.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11) You will UBIIA CSapl. ~ 23) You may expehave ample I'HIOI'I to view 'IIIII optlmleti- rlence a wave ol I!Ood lortuhe at Ihis
calf)' 1n this ttme trame. Now H w11 be up potnl In lime, and as a rasun. you may
to you to think po1llvely and allabllah find fewer olielacltoe In your path than .
Objac:tives yoil ,ihought were far beyond Cllelrable objectives. ·
usual.
y(!Ur ecope 11111 lui yaar could bt within TAUIIU~ (Aprti20-May 20) II YQU center :SCOIIPIO'(Oct. 24·Nov. 22) To!lay
yclur raflllf li nn. year llhead. You hive a your 1111ot11 011 ways to rnakl) money. you wi10 Is fond o1 you might 11y to
great deal oii)OI!tnlfal. Exprlll,t you....,! ll1outd do well lor yourself both today and *tlfv a malto&lt; that·has aiJIIravaled you.
CAPRICOA_N (Dto. 22·J•n. 11) Th• tomorrow. Gel an Nrfy llllrt lnd stick 1o tt will bt btltlr ROI 10 dls&lt;:uu his 111 her .
people who , . , . authority over you In yow ~ plin,
eupport with others.
1
Ql
TIM
{lllr
21..,._10)
The
Important
8AGITTARIUS
INO¥· 23-0ic. 21) Keep
II1II'IMt: wll hold you ln hfijh "'llrd
todly. lloweoer, one ol your ~ rillghl INng 10 ltelp in "*'&lt;&lt; todlly 1t1 the knowt- In rNnd today 111111 the boHom llna will
try. to hiYI! you ..balleve otherwla•. edge lhlll you can auccaulully manage count more than the Illite epurta that take
eaptoom, ~~to a birthday gilt. anytling In which you btc:orna tnvotved. • you In negative dllectioo.t l.

,,

;

�•

,_,.10 • The.Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, January 16, 19116

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Long· study of blank sky unveils rich fields of stars, galaxies
.By pt.UL RECER
·AP lclt,_ Wrlllr
• SAN ANTONIO (AP)- Staring at a "blank" patch of the universe, the
)lubble Space Telescope captured images of hundreds of galaxies so faint
)hey never before have been seen.
- 11le images are of the faintest stars and galaxies ever seen, some 4 billion times dimmer than what can be seen with the naked eye, astronomers
reponed Monday.
: Raben E. Williams, director of the Space Telescope Science Institute in
iJaltimore, said the findings were a treasure trove for astronomers that could
jxlssibly include the most distant, and hence the oldest, galaxies ever cap·\um on film .
' '" In archaeological tenns, it is sintilar to finding a royal city, but we don 't
bave the dates yet," he said. "We don 't know•yet if we are seeing the most
ilistant objeciS or not."
: A report on the just completed deep space survey was delivered to tl)e
pational meeting of the American Astronomical Society.

.

Williams said the finding was released quickly into the public domain so
that the world's astronomers could immediately begin studying the data,
described by some as "the astronontical equivalent of the Dead Sea Scrolls."
To gather the views, the Hubble Space Telescope was aimed at a specific target and allowed to capture light for 10 consecutive days.
The target was a wint in the sky near the handle of the Big Dipper, a part
of the universe continuously in view of the orbiting telescope.
· .Seen from the Earth, the target was very small, "about the size of a large
grain of sand held at arm 's length," Williams said. To ground telescopes, the
area seemed basically a blank pan of the sky. Yet the long exposure revealed
at least 1,500 galaxies in various stages of fonnation .
"The variety of galaxies we see is amazing," Williams said.
The study is rather like taking a core sample of the Earth. Such a sample
would have many layers of din and rock laid down over mill{ons of years.
In the celestial core sample, what is captured are views of stars and galaxies ranging fanher and fanher into the universe and increasingly distant in
time.

Some images 'could he from galaxies fo(llled within a billion years after
the beginning of the universe, but Williams said this will require detailed
analysis to determine.
"It's like looking down a long tube and seeing all the galaxies along that
line of sight," said Mark Dickinson, a member of the Hubble Space Telescope team. "They're all stacked up against one another in this picture, and
the challenge now is to disentangle them."
Some of the galaxies are " things we haven't seen before," said Andrew
S. Fruchter, another Hubble team member. There are elliptical shapes, and
spirals. Some are like beach balls and footballs. Others are long, cigar-shaped
'
•
clusters of stars.
A key question the study may answer is how do galaxies form? These star
groups are found throughout the universe. Astronomers so far do not understand how many billions of stars can come together to fonn a single cluster
like the Milky Way, a spiral galax~ that includes Earth's sun.
" Galaxies are not forming at the present," said Williams. "They seemed
to have fanned a long tinte ago. Exactly how they fanned is a mystery."
About 1,200 astronomen are meeting in San Antonio.through Thursday.
'

·Endeavour
.astronauts
.retrieve
probe

of the Year:
She bro:ke family cycle
of migrant field wqrk

• SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
;.__ Shuttle Endeavour's crew hauled
11board its second satellite in four
days today, plucking a · gleaming
NASA science probe from a 190mile-bigh orbit.
: Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata maneuvered Endeavour's 50-foot
robot arm to capture the $10 million
satellite, two days after it was
!tleased to collect science data free of
the shuttle.
. Wakata also worked the arm dur·ing Saturday's retrieval of a science
. ~atellite launched by the Japanese I 0
months ago. Both retrievals went
without a hitch.
· "Koichi's two-for-two, Houston,"
commander Brian Duffy, who slowJy steered while Wakata made the
·arab. told Mission Control.
. . 'llle boxy probe picked up today
:holds four technology experiment, ,
·im:luding one on spacecraft contamination and another involving lasers.
· During its two days of free flight,
the satellite at times led the shuttle by
more than 100 miles. Data gathered
during that time will be reviewed
after Endeavour returns to Eanh.
· - One milestone remains for the six·man shuttle crew - Wednesday's
$patewalk by astrol)auts Leroy Chiao
and Winston Scott to practice space

'\'

of strUggle and setbacks. ·
· She was born in NysSa, Ore., on
the statei,s western border.' Her parents, Me.tican imrtiigr!lflts withJil\le
education or ·understanding ·of English, toiled in the beet ancj .onjon
fields from sunrise 10 sunset. · !
From June to November, Mn.
Ramirez, her parents and her six
brothers traveled through the Nonhwest looking for work in the fields.
During the rest of the ·year{ they
worked in Eagle Pass, Texas, op the
Mexican border.
·
·
For 19 years, Ramirez's life was
spent in the one-room cabins of
migrant labor camps, whose furnishings consisted of burik beds, a table
and a two-burner·gas stove. Workers
pinned up towels and sheets 'for privacy in community bathing areas.
"I remember one of my uncles
lived in this little shack ihat lookeil
almost like a chjcllen CQOP," she said.
"There was no place (else) to put
'
hi m. "
In Eagle Pass, Mrs. Rantitez and
her brothers attended ' classes for
migrant children. There was 119 high
school prom, no extracurricular activities--: just school and work.
"We were a fam'ily and .we were
together and we were helpiifg .each
other," she saicj. "We knew we had
to· pitch in, which we did. But yo'u
don 'I know any better."

Associated Press Writer
, COMMERCE CITY, Colo. (AP)
- Maria Ramirez's childhood was a
blur: Working in the fields by day,
squeezing i~to labOr camp,'bovels at .
night, she had little time tn_think of
·
anything buf survival.
Years later, with field work behind
her and a mllster's degree 40der her
belt, Ramirez is a living exilrnple to
her second-grade pupils of.,what can
happen when you stan :1tllinking
beyond survival, to success:
"I tell them my •stories of where I
came from, of how I was, how I used
to live in this box.car, ,how liard we
worked and how we had n,Qthing,"
she said.
'
.
.
~·
"Even if you're poor, you should
work
hard and go 10 school and know
SATELLITE CAPTURE· Endeavour attronaut
from NASA televltlon. The crew picked up a
that
you
can do it. Some day you can
Daniel Barry detcribet the view during hit MonNASA science probe today which waa released
be
somebody."
·
day spacewalk during an Interview with a Houltwo dtya ago to collect eclence dtta.
Rantirez,
39,
a
bilingual
teacher
at
ton television alation Tueaday In this Image
·Alsup Elementary School in this
blue-collar Denver suburb, ~ honstation construction techniques and excursion will involve the s:une type incredible." ·
evaluate new tools.
of tasks.
Mission Control, meanwhile, kept ored this month as Teachet of the
It will be the second spacewalk of
A still exuberant Barry deS£ribed an eye on a shuttle. cooling system Year by the-National Associ!\!ion for
)!~ ·
the flight as the National Aeronautics the views of Earth during his space- that failed Monday because of an ice Bilingual Education.
Her
pupils
have
"a
sense
of
buildup.
and Space Administration gets ready walk "as gemstone colors."
empowennent,"
said
Alsup
llfincipal
It wa~n ' t expected to hamper the
"The blue, the ocean, goes from
to lead construction of an internaturquoise to midnight blue," he said second spacewalk, liut the problem Ernestine Garcia. "It's like I 5ee more
tional space station in a few years.
Chiao took his first spacewalk ear-·' in a TV interview tbis morning. could shonen the flight by a day if. it leaders and more assenivc:ness in
ly Monday, spending a little over 6 "The forests are emerald green. The persisiS through the week. Endeavour asking questions.... They're·&amp;pistol
ft;,.
hours in Endeavour's cargo bay with clouds are so white that it buns your is scheduled 10 land in Aorida early of a class...
Mrs.
Ramirez
developed~
own
Saturday.
eyes
to
look
at
them.
It's
really
crewmate Daniel Barry. The second
'
sense of empowennent through years

Southern
turns back
Meigs 68-54

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

•

lime.
..........

At any rate, a belated happy birthday to Richard.
I'm gonna have music--thanks to
friends.
·
Paul Clark of .Middlepon sent
along a tape of calliope music from
the American Queen--you know how
I've complain~d about the Jack of the
calliope playing when it passes
Pome~oy. Joe Gloeckner made a tape
of his Sammy Kaye music--the
remember when songs. Many ofyouVfill remember the Kaye orchestra
froni the big band era. "Swing and
sway with Sammy Kaye" , as I recall
was' the motto of the popular orchestra. And, by the way, wasn't a Middlepon man once pan of the Sammy
Kaye orchestra? Seems like it.

I

~

~

'

Buckeye 5:

.

L - In 40. tonight. Partly
cloudy. Thursday , partly
cloudy, hlgha In 50a.

8·12·19-21-31

Vol. 46, NO. 183
2, Sectlona, 12 hga

35 centa
A Gannett Co. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 17, 1996

Rutland street light project will .
be completed soon mayor says
Crews began work earlier this week according to Eads

::---:-:--::-==--.J

CRIME SCENE- Thll houte at 115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy,
was the • - of 1 terrifying robbery Monday evening. Two
women were forced to the floor, blindfolded, gagged and bound
while two robbers nmHcked the houte. Aulhorhles are quesllonlng subjects on the crime. The houae has long been the headquarters of the Meigs County Salvation Army.

Salvation Army
break-in probe
yields 3 suspects
.. .
-

·- ....

.

.

~·

·

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Work is expected to be completed
on reinstallation of street lamps in the
village of Rutland within the next l~o
weeks if weather pennits, ,Rutland
Mayor JoAnn Eads announced at
Tuesday's meeting of Rutland Village
Council.
Work
crews
from
Ohio
Power/Columbus Southern Power
began work on the light project this
week. after canceling scheduled work
last week because of inclement
weather, Eads said . "The officials
with the power company stated that
the work should take a little over a
week to complete, if the weather is
fit ..
After the light project is complete,
council members have decided 10
evaluate the lighting in tlie village
and deterntine if there is a need for
additional street lamps in the village.
Village maintenance olficia) Dale
Hart reponed that the Ohio EPA made
their annual inspection of the village
water works and e~erything currently meeiS state and federal standards.
Han also spoke with council members concerning the street lamp installation work _!,y Ohio .Power.
A. date of Saturday1April '20 at 8
p.m. has been set for the annual Phil
Din and the Dozers concen at the
Rutland Civic Center, with proceeds
to benefit the civic center improvement fund. Last year's concen generated a profit of nearly $700 for the
village, according to village officials.
The village ended 1995 with a
$655.44 general fund balance. Other
funds and their year-end balances
include: street fund , $1 ,503.34; state
highway fund, $3,697 .87; water fund,

•

COUNCIL MEMBERS SWORN IN • Rose
Mary Snowden Etkew and Dick Fetty were
awom to their new terms O.!l R.utland_VIIIage
•

•

dlepon, has confessed to charges of
$4,073.89; sewer fund, $2,925.38;
robbery, kidnapjling anil llurglary,
sewer debt fund , -$1 ,163.36; utilities
An elderly woman and her daugh- according to Prosecuting Attorney
deposits fund, $7,567.21; and
• ter escaped injury at the hands of John R. Lentes.
replacement fund, $18,694.98.
Brad Robinson, 26, Pomeroy, may
hooded bandits in a robbery at the
Couqcil also decided to speed up
face
similar
charges
plus
an
addiSal vat ion Anny House in Pomeroy
the search for a new village marshall.
tional charge of kidnapping, Lentes
Monday night.
Several council members agreed that
Dora Wining and her daughter, said. In addition, a juvenile female
speeding violations are on the
Helen 1ownsend, were in the Jjving has been questioned.
increase in the village. and better
During the attack, burglars covroom around 8:30 p.m. when two
enforcement requires at least a part
hooded robbers rushed in, grabbed ered the women's heads and taped
time, officer in the village.
their
hands
and
mouths
before
prothem and threw them down on the
In other matters, council :
floor next to each other, reponed ceeding to ransack the place, looking
· approved a appropriations ordiPomeroy Police Chief Gerald for money, Lentes said. During this
Rought.
time, they kept threatening the
Meanwhile, authorities have tak· women, trying to find where money
en statements of two juveniles and an was hidden.
adult believed 10 be involved in the
Eventually. they left the house takCOLUMBUS (AP)- Drivers in completely unacceptable. The burden
robbery.
ing an undetennined amount of mortthe
Cleveland, Cincinnati and Dayton must be on the contractors, not on the
Joshua Paul Cremeans, 14, MidContinued on page 3
areas will have an extra four months public, to deal with these problems."
According to the EPA, the wait
to get newly required emissions tests.
Since Jan. 2, drivers in 14 counties should be no longer than 15 minutes.
have been required to have their cars and the companies that run the statested at designated stations for pol- tions will be fined for the delays.
" In the nonheast Ohio area, it's
lution emissions.
been
pretty widespread, and it's not
But those stations were not prethe
same
station every day," Madigan
COLUMBUS (AJ') - Political cussed and debated." Batchelder told pared for the volume of cars, and drisaid.
vers have had to wait in line for up to
·
correctness on public school and col- the House.
The tests are required in Cuyafive
hours, said Patricia Madigan,
"II
is
therefore
appropriate
that
we
lege campuses took a back seat 10
protect open debate specifically on spokeswoman for the Ohio Environ- hoga, Lake, Lorain, Geagua, Ponage,
freedom of speech in the House.
mental Protection Agency. Many sta- Summit and Medina counties in
those
campuses," he said.
A bill that would prohibit adminBatchelder said some campuses tions were not open on time, and nonheast Ohio; and in Montgomery,
istrators from restricting speech that
otherwise was constitutionally pro- had gone too far in anempts to limit some still have not opened, she said. Clark, Greene, Hamilton, Butler,
"Clearly the vehicle emissions Clermont and Warren counties in the
tected off school propeny cleared the speech that others might find offentesting program is not up and running southwest.
sive or poliucally incorrect.
House 97-0 Tuesday.
The four-month extension applies
properly," EPA Director Donald R.
The bill now goes to the Senate.
Rep. William Batchelder, R-Medto
drivers
with January and February
in
a
statement
TuesSchregardus
said
In
other
action
Tuesday:
ina, the chief sponsor, said free debate
registration
deadlines. Next month,
day.
"These
problems
have
been
Representati
ves
sent
to
Gov.
and expression should reign on camthe
EPA
will
decide whether to apply
compounded
by
bad
weather.
The
George Voinovich a bill to expand
puses.
the
extension
to March deadlines.
result
has
been
long
lines,
which
are
'.'They are to be areas where peo- from 13 to 19 membership of a nat·
ple are allowed to say things which ural resources advisory council creofttimes later prove to be foolish bin ated under the Lake Erie coastal eraare at least things that ought to be disContinued oD .page 3
COLUMBUS (AP) - Environ- a law passed last year. The dump
mentalists want to amend the Ohio would collect radioactive clothing.
Constitution to include a big " Keep animal carcasses, tools and machinOut" sign aimed at nuclear waste ery from nuclear power plants, hosgenerators in five other Midwestern pitals, universities and businesses in
Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Misstates.
souri
and Wisconsin .
Incumbent Meigs County TreaOhio is set to become the first of
But anti-nuclear activisiS on Tuessurer Howard E. Frank filed his petisix regional waste storage sites under
tion of candidacy forthe Republican
nomination for treasurer with the
Meigs County Board of Elections
Tuesday.
In addition, she has assisted in
Incumbent County Commissioner
Frank is seeking reelection for a
securing
grant funds for the Tuppers
Janet Howard announced today she is
seconc;!term. He was appointed to fill
Plains
Sewer
District to help with
seeking reelection for a second term
anu~•piredtenn.inMarch 1991 and
development in that area and serves
as county commissioner.
then elected for a lulltenn.
A Democrat from Middleport, she on the Issue 2 Loi:al Review ComIf nominated in the March I9'Jlripointed out some of her accomplish- mittee.
mary he will run for reelection in the
Some of her work has went toward
meniS from her first tenn and her
November general election.
improving
housing in the county
goals
for
her
second
term.
During Frank's time in office colincluding
a
$500,000
housing grant in
During her first tenn she has conlecting delinquent real. estate and.
Racine
which
came
through
the comcentrated on seeking funding totaling
trailer taXes has been a priority.
missioners'
office.
-Frank· is chairman of the Meigs
more than $1 ntillion for county water
"I have worked toward the.develprojects.
County Budget Comntission, chai~­
nian of the Board of Revisions, and
"I continue 10 be totally commit- opment of an industrial park in the
the' Meigs County Investor of Public ·
ted to providing water service to all · 1\Jppers Plains'area and feel this proFunds.
areas of Meigs County," she said. ject will soon become a reality," she
He is a member of 'the Racine
"Without wa1er, no area can he devel- said. "Meigs County desperately
needs indusltial development and I
oped."
American Legion, Post 602, and sevfeel this is, a big first step."
eral other organizations.
HOWARD E. FRANK

Bill would let students
sue over free speech

Council during Tuesday's regular council meet·
ing. Swearing In the two council members ia
Mayor JoAnn E~ds (right).

nance for the village concerni ng the
1996 village budget.
·approved Mayor Eads and Judy
Denney to attend the state mayor's
conference and seminar in Columbus.
· reorganized and named Judy
Denney 1996 council president. The
following committee chairmen were
named: Civic Center, Rosemary
Eskew; Utility, Judy Denney:
Finance, Danny Davi s and Ri chard
Fetty.
- approved purchase of two toilets

and one water fountain fo r the civic
center.
-set their next meeting for Tuesday, Feb. 13, 7 p.m .• at the civic center.
Present were Mayor JoAnn Eads,
council members Danny Davis, Dick
Fetty, Judy Denney and Rose Mary
Snowden Eskew. Also present were
village employees Dave Davis and
Dale Han. clerk Sandy Smith, and
Jim Birchfield.

Drivers must have the tests done
every two years. Those with cars
made in even years must have them
tested in even years.
The automa,tic extension will not
kick in until Monday becawse officials
need time to reprogram Bureau of
Motor Vehicle computers, Madi gan
said. The EPA is asking drivers w,hose
deadlines are after Monday to wa it
until then to renew theirregistrations.
Meanwhile, those with deadlines
before Monday can get extension certificates at .any inspection station .
The emissions testing is required
by the federal Clean Air Act. Since
1991 . Cuyahoga County drivers had
been testing their taitp1pes for emissions, and in four ot her counties, visual inspections have been required.
But those tests were not as sophisticated as those required now, Madigan said.

Two na!iona l contractors were

chosen to run Ohio's new testing stations. Envirotest Systems of Tucson
Ariz., has the contract for the Cleve:
land and Dayton areas. while MARTA Inc . of Nashville. Tenn., runs the
program in the Cincinnati area.
Those companies have failed to
open the stations on time, have had ·
faulty equipment, computer prob- .·
!ems and an inadequate number of
computer technicians, and they will ·
be fined, Madigan said.
1
The Ohio EPA announced one other change to the program Tuesday.
Cars that fail the test can be
excused if certain repai rs have been
done by a certified techni cian. But
there aren't enough ce rtified technicians avai lable, ye t. so for the next six
month s: drivers can have any
mcchamc make the repairs.

Group wants Ohio to pull out of regional waste pact

A fine salute to entenainer Minnie
Pearl in the television show honoring
the 70th anniversary of the Grand Ole
Opry: I hope that some of you
remember Minnie's appearances here
during the Broiler Festivals. She was
such a gracious lady off stage as well
as an excelle.nt entcnainer. She had
known Henrietta O'Brien, former
-Meigs resident, during earlier years.
' Minnie cenainly deserved the honor
afforded her during the anniversary
show. She's been a super person.

.

Pick 4:
0207

Ohio EPA extends deadline for emissions tests

Pat Wehrung of Riverview Drive
in Pomeroy spotted a robin Monday
morning and thinks the appearance
could be an indication that spring
coul~ be 'coming.
It's coming alright, but don't forget, Pat, we still have to sweat out
that groundhog and you know how
that goes.

· .: ;, Richard Nease of Route 7 near
''
'POiliCI'OY marked his 50th birthday on
Dec. 29.
· : His wife, J~. planned a nice ~ur­
prise for him. She contacted a' nuin'lier of friends by letter and asked
ittemlo secretlY. send'binhday greet·
inp 10 her and then she surprised him
·Sometimes I seem to be allowing
.\111111! 1~ mes$8ges on the designated myself 10 get pretty negative. It's
'day.
..
times like these that I think that
·: ·I wu uked to participate .and ful- instead of revitalization programs,
ly mcut too. However, that's jilst one .amphitheaters and promenades,·
pf leveral "thiq1 to do" I. bAd Pomeroy could usc an extra truck and
:plan~ for .over the holiday season s!'ow plow. On the other hapd, I
bUt ·JuJ! neV!Ir got around 10 do.ina. JWelf I can ••t too practicl\1. :'Man.
YllU~ ~~the toad 10 bell don't d0¢1 not Jive by bread alone".' I: gatyou? ~\~ l , ,1.
·1 ' ,
ta remember tliat--do keep sntillng. '
t o~
•·!
~
.. ~ ''
' .

399

Sports, Page 4

By JIM FREI!MAN
Sentlr1el Newa Staff

Mrs. Mildred Shuster of Pomeroy
· is among residents who are thankful
:shit Veterans Memorial Hospital con, tinues on the local scene.
Mildred recently suffered a heart
:attack and was taken to the Pomeroy
hospital by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad. Time is an imponant element
iJI cases where residents suffer hean
·' attacks so that proper medication can
be given and can be effective. At Vet&lt;rans Memorial, Mildred was stabilized and prepared for funher lransPc&gt;nation to the Holzer Medical Cenll:r where she could be monitored in
!,he intensive care unit. She's since
been returned home and it getting
Blongjust great. She really thanks 'all
qf you for your kindnesses and
prayers during her ordeal.
And speaking of Veterans Memotial, my hat's off to members of the
hospital's Women's Auxiliary, the
-;olun~r organization. 111 spite of the
'lousy weatber which as you know
· ihcluded so]De pretty deep snowfall,
members of the auxiliary have somehow managed 10 be at their'postto do
lhcre thing in helping at the hospital
ip so many ways. By the way, recent!)' two members of the auxiliary were
awarded service pins in recognition
·of their long hours of work. Mrs. Bell)' Sayre received a 7,000 hour pin
·anc1 Mn. Edna Triplett, a 3,000 hour
,j)in--now that's a lot of volunteer

Pick 3:

.

Teache~

By SANDY SHORE

By MIKE DRAGO
At~llted Prett Writer

.

Ohio Lottery

Frank eyes·second term
as Meigs County treasurer

day proposed a constitutional amendment that would bar Ohio from
accepting out-of-state nuclear waste.
" We are trying to stop the waste
-over 2 million cubic feet - from
coming into the state." said state Sen.
Dennis Kucinich , D-Cleveland.
Kucinich led the unsuccessful fight in

the Senate against the nuclear waste
agreement.
Each state in th~ Midwest LowLevel Radioactive Waste Compact
has promised to operate a storage site
for 20 years, or until it reaches its
capacity of 2.25 million cubic feet of
waste.

Howard seeks second term on county commission

Ohio Power is c-.anging
its name to·•F P. Amertcan.fl·
e ctric POwer.
.
,

'

'

'

'

'

It's the same oompany you've ~~ to know, with a new na~. And.a renewed commitment to serving .
our cUstomers more efficiently and more effectively. AEP. Same company. New name. Even brighter fUture.
'

.

..

'
Some of her future goals include:
increasing the industrial tax base in
Meigs County, to obtain funding for
water service to rural areas of Meigs
County, to keep the county on ' a
sound financial basis, to provide for
the needs of housing prisoners sentenced by our couns and to continue
to support Senior Cititens through a
general fund allocation and ' special
projects such as Meals on Wheel s.
"I plan to explore the possibilities
of obtaining funds for a ncwjail," she
said.
Ms. How..-d resides in Middlepon
with her husband, Ray lllckett, and
has three children; Kevin, Tanner and
Travis.
.

-

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