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P~~g~~ 12 • The Dally SeuUnel

Thursday, January 18, 1996·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. ~~~~~~----~----------------~--~-----

:Classes pffer,ed
.
.

Cluses in ballroom dan&lt;:ing, rib' bon embrQidery, and CPR for .pro' fessional rescuers arc being offered
by the Rio Grande Community Col· le.ae through the Office of Adult and
• Continuing Education.
· Gerald Powell of Pomeroy, a professional dance instructor, will be
teaching the course in ballroom daneing.
.
. Tbe six-week course will be held ·
on Sunday evenings beginning Feb.
II from 3 to 5 p.m. in the James A.
.Rhodes Student Center. Cost for the
' cou!"$C is $60. Registration deadline
is Tuesday, Feb. 6.

~t

University of _Rio Grande

be held Feb. 1 ~nd f'eb. 8 from·6:30
to9p.m.inAnniversaryHaii,R.oom
102. Cost for the class is $30. Preregistration and payment are necessary. l'lcregis~on deadline is Monday, Jan. 29, 1996.
•
Those enrolled will custonuze a
lamp shade for lamp with the everlasting beauty of ribbon Dowers. All
materials except scissors will be furnislied by the instructor.
Also to be offered is a course in
accommodate even for those who CPR for Professional Rescuer.
have never danced, according to
I Powell.
The two evening class will be held
The course in ribbon embroidery Tuesday, Jan. 30 and Wednesday, Jan
lamp shade, two evening classes, will . 31 from 5:30- 10:00 p.m. at Lyne
Powell began his teaching can:er
with a worldwide dance company,
conducting regional classes, workshops and dance cruises. He will be
teaching new steps and routines that
will suit the sounds of yesteryear and
popular music. Powell is known to
have the ability to tum each session
into an exciting event, as well as a
learning experience, making it atuaclive among all ag~s. The course will

a

· Center, Room 114: Cost for. the. cl~
ts$40.Preregtstrallon~tsFriday, Jan. 26, 1996.
·.
.
This course will prepare people 10
the professaonal fields as well as for
n~ing students. This is a one year
certified program.. Books can be purchased in _the Rio Grande·Bookstore.
.To regaster for any of the classes,
c.ontact the Office of ~dull and Co~­
Unumg Educauon. Umverstty of Rio
Grande, Rio Grande, OH 45674 or
call614-245-732S or toll free in Ohio
at 1-800-282-7201 ext. 7325. l'lcregistration l\fld payment are necessary.

:.Dairy Barn to open Community Exhibit Saturday
The

work of two Athens artists stated in previous publications that
will ~n display at the Dairy Bam the Appalachia area ha5 "meant a
Saturday, Jan. 20 through March 3. great deal to me and must have
The Third Annual Dairy Bam Com- affected my an in many complex
·IJIUnity Gallery features the art work ways."
Murray Stem (1927-1985) was
.ofthelateAnneCiarkCulbertandthe
)ate Munay P. Stern.
born in Brooklyn and came to Athens
· , Anne Clark Culbert (1921-1994) in 1972. His mediums include paint. \¥&amp;5 born in New York City and ing, pen and pencil drawings, and
llloved to Athens in 1953. Culbert's . charcoal- drawings. In his artist's
Porcelain art work is well-kllown statement, Stem discussed how peoiflroughout the area, but she also pie easily tum on and off violence,
~orked in watercolor, oil painU,g, .but his paintings. "cannot be turned
:prints, charcoal, and pencil. (:ul}lert~!' off or the cover closed."
~

.

..

.

:Talk shoW
:pioneer Phill

Robert M. Laughery, son of
Laughery of Reedsville and
Denise Laughery of Tuppers Plains,
has joined the United States· Army
under the Delayed Enlistment Program at the U.S. Army Recruiting
. Station, Athens, Ohio.
Laughery, a senior at Eastern
High ~chool, Reedsville, will report
10 Fon Jackson, S.C., for military
basic training July 10. 1996.
Michael R. Phoenill
Michael R. Phoenix, son of Mary
and John Phoenix of Cheshire, has
arrived a1 Fort Sill, Okla.. to begin
basic military training and one station
unit training as a field artillery cannoneer.
~obert V.

calls i.t quits.

will

'

I

Eastern girls
post another ·
cage victory

9498 .

BuckeyeS:

•

.e

V.., auto, elr cond, PS, PB,
PW, POL, Pwr ..t, tilt,
cruiM, AMJFM cua, New
Seblt Tnlde-ln

.\

.

·Val. q, NO. 185
. 1 8eotion, 10 ......

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 19, 1996

Rainfall
floods
roads

I

I

while wreckers salv.age tanker
·-

1994 PLYMOUTH
LASER

1994 EAGLE
TALON ES :~
4 cyl, 5 1pd, elr

By TOM HUNTER
"'SenUnel New1 Steff
Meigs County emergency crews
·and law enforcement hoped to have
·!he remnants of a Thursday night
tanker-truck aecident removed from
· an area along. State Route 248 in
: Chestfr by early this afternoon, offi: dais said Friday morning. ·
The accidenl occurred around I0
- p.m. l11ursday Y~hen a tanker carrying 9,200 gallons of propane over. ·turned between Baum Lumber Co.
and the Ridenour Gas Service bulk
_. IJiant. .
· The truck is owned jly Petroleum
Transport/Vidmar Transportation,
·based in Mclean, 01., according to
information provided by the Meigs
'County Sheriff's Department.
· According to accident reports,
·Gregory A. Wampler, 40, Fla1 Rock,
Ill., was eastbound on 248 when he
·allempted to make a right tum onto
· Firs! Street As Wampler was luming,
the rear wbeels on the tanker came off
"the roadway and went down an
embankment, causing the tanker trail·er to roll over onto its side.
Damage to the tanker was moder-

2 Dr, 4 ely, 5 1pd, elr
cond,PS, PB, AM/FM
Clll, rear defog, ·Low
mll11, More.

c¥tC~,

AM/FM Clll, tilt, crdlu,
PS, PB, Pwr window,
Pwr door locka. MORE .

1992 FORD
TEMPO 4 Dr. GL

.1993 FORD
TAURUS STA. WGN
AM/FM cau, tilt, erul1e,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, MORE.

ate', while the hitch on the 1989 Kenworth tractor was damaged when the
trailer broke free as it rolled to the
right side.
According to Emergency Management Director Robert Byer, no
immediate danger was posed to the
public as a result of the accident.
"The was no leakage of propane
from the tanker, and no danger was
posed to residents," he said.
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department .will ask residents in the
area to leave their residences ~¥hile
the truck is moved this afternoon,
only as a precaulionary measure.
U!!its of the Meigs Emergency Medical Servites will also assist in the
precautionary evacuation b}• removing an invalid resident, Byer said.
As a precau1ionary measure, students attending nearby Chester Elementary School were advised to sljly
home. he added.
"Where we stand right ~ow, we .
will probably start removal operations around noon," Byer said this
morning.
Arrangements were made this
morning to bring in two large wreck-

·- -

1996 NISSAN SENTRA.XE
4 door, AM/FM cassette, air,
rear defroster, power steering.

1995 NISSAN K/C 4x4

Club Cab 4x4, air, V6, cassette,
sport truck, sport wheels.

V6, air, cassette, tilt, cruise,
bed liner, power mirrors.
1
Off MSRP

Special Price:

·

$18,999

3,000

'-"!..;;;,;Prlc;; To Sill
1

1994 MERCURY
VILLAGERGS

1995 FORD&gt;
,,
WINDSTAR LX

v-e, ·auto, dual air cond;

'

V-6, auto, air cond, PS,

AM/FM CD, PS, PB, PW,
POL, Pwr lilt., ; till,
•
crulae, Lollded.
·-

PB, PW, PDL, Pwr 111t,
tilt, crulae, AM/FM CIU,
Loedltd

$18,949

51'5 ,949

'

1995 FORD F
4X2

1~~:~~~N

·1 cyl_, 1 ' apd, air, ' cond,

4 door XG, air, CBS$., II~.
cruise, factory warr.

AIIJFII - · tin, crullle,
PI, Long hd;T:CIPP.IIf!r .

:l

--~ ~·

1993 CHRYSLER
CONCORDE
3.51Her, V-6, alr,
auto., factory Wlllf!lnly.

ONLY:

'13,995

1993GMC
SONOMA

ONLY:

1991 DODGE
, CARAVAN
7 pue;, alr,lllllo.,
AMIFM caea., V-6.

.ONLY:. '8,995,

sa

~13,449

1992 FORD
RANGER 4X2.

1990FORD
V-150
V-8, auto., air,
XLT Lariat Pkg.

XLT, v.a, fluto. air coricl,
PB, PW, POL, tilt, cru•l••·
AM/FII CUI, Long btd.

a.e v.a, euto, air l!ond,

.PI, PW, PDL, tilt; cru11..
AUMCiiu,Keyllu
,.

$12,

XLT, Suparc1b; 4 cyt, II
air cond, PS, PI, ....,.,,
caaa, ahon bed. •

.; (..La,....

.•• ...

-•1-

._

•

•• '

•

--

· - · ~~

•

__

----~

-:..r .-'·
,.-....

.,_"'t

--...

,..

~

EXAMINING TANKER - In addition to copIng with nlturllamergencies overnight, emergency and law ~nforcament offlcllls also had
to contend with 0111 man-made emergency.
Above,
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby 1nd·.a deputy examine a tanker treller con·

,._lg•

telning 9,200 pounds of propane that rollltd
over Thuradey night In Chester. The village will
likely be temporarily evacuated as workers
attempt to right the trailer this afternoon: (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

ers from Emerick Brothers Garage, !railer.
Parkersburg, W.Va.
"The trailer has a full 40-lon load
'"The)' have been involved in sim- right now," he said. "If we would
ilar tanker removals in the past," said pump the tanker, we would only be
Byer.
able to get half of the load due to the
Byer said officials did not consid- tanker being on its side. It would be
er pumping the propane into ano~~er much safer to remove the tanker irom
tanker as an
in moving lhe the scene completely full, instead of

half full ."
Units who were on the scene since
last nighl included the Chester Volunteer Fire Departrneni, Meigs County Sheriffs' Department, and officials
with lhe Meigs Emergency Medical
Servi~es and Meigs Emergency Management Authority.

~$olld_ carryover

cheers

. Racine niayor, council

John R. Lentes
ha:ve been. I have issued opinions and
advised county and township officials
as they have asked me to."
"However," Lentes continued, "I
have found lhat il is not necessary to
sacrifice law enforcement effons in
(Continued on Page 3)

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New• Staff
The village of Racine just finished
its best year ever, ac~ording , to Mayor Jeff Thornton.
Financially, the village had a carryover of $277,862.68 from its 1995
budget of $658,466, Thornton reponed Thursday.
Total appropriations for l9961otal
$488,194.80 in the following funds:
general, $74,386; refuse, $38,842;
parks/museum, $312.95 ; streel,
$56,815; state highway, $5,397.31 ;
fire , $32,300; fire lruck debl,
$1 0,670.29; ' waler, $99,709 ; cemetery, $4,585; water deposits. S1,000;
Community Developmenl Block
Grant, $82,577.25; Appalachian
Regional Commission Grant,
$80,000; cemetery endowment,
$6,800.
Council recenlly discussed village
accomplishments for 1995, which

included:
• 5,000 feel on new sidewalk;
• housing rehabilitation;
• new water well and water lines;
• conslruclion of lhe Cross
Mill/Racine Museum.
The new water system is almost
completed, with 35 meters and 2,000
feel of line remaining to be inslalled,
Thornton explained.
Future plans may include putting
new sidewalk along Elm Street to
Southern High School and finishing
the downtown area sidewalks, it was
noted.
Council also discussed how
Racine seems to be growing with various new businesses going in and old
businesses being renovate~! .
Thornton and council commended village crews and residents including Bill Maynard, Rose's Construction. Tom Wolfe and J.D. Drilling for
(Continued on 'page 3)
'
.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New1 Staff
High water, caused by more than
one inch of rain that fell overnight
coupled wilh melting snow, added up
10 flooded roads in part of the counly and resulted in the closing of the
Meigs Local Schools loday.
Meigs County Emergency Services Director Roben Byer reported
more than a dozen road closings,
moslly in the western end of the
county.
Roads closed included: Dexter
Road at Malloon's Run and Jacks
Road; Stale Route 124 from state
routes 7 to 325, including the village
of Rolland; Swick Road between
Lasher and Hatfield roads; Tilus
Road between Lasher and leading
·Creek roads; Noble Summil Road at
McElhinney Hill Road; Bra!lbury
Road off Noble StJmmit Road;
SR 143 from SR 7 to Ball Run i SR
7 at Dye Road; Loop Road near New
Lima Road; SR 681 a1 SR 692; Laurel Cliff Road near SR 7; U.S. 33 at
Burlingham; Old Dexter Road; Hemlock Grove Road at Cherry Ridge
Road; Happy Hollow Road; SR 692
at SR 143; and SR 681 from U.S. 33
to SR 692.
Byer said 1.2 inches of rain fell on
the county overnight, overflowing
streams already swollen with water
from melting snow. One inch of the
tolal fell after midnight, he added .
The Eastern and Southern Local
schools are· in session today.
High wind caused problems of its
own in 1he fonn of scattered electri·
cal outages.
"We had a few scattered outages
yesterday and this morning," reported Ohio Power/Columbus Southern
Power Manager Ron McDade.
Approximately 450 Columbus
Southern Power customers were
withoul electricity for 1- 112 hours
Thursday after a tree fell on a power
line around 2: 15 p.m., breaking a uti I·
ity pole, McDade said.
Residents from Antiquity to Apple
Grove to the Bashan Road/Dorca5
area were without .power until 3:45
p.m., he explained. The outage did
affect not the village of Racine.
Two more poles were broken
around 6 p.m. in the Eagle
Ridge/Sugar Run area of Chester
Township. Ten customers were
affected in that area.
Byer reported peak gusts reached
33 miles-per-hour.
·

Southern committee eyes past
levy success for bond campaign :

Meigs United Fund
·exceeds half~ay
mark of 1996 _g oal
The 1996 fuftd-raising campaign ty, it was reponed.
for the United Fund for Meigs CounAnother agency that 'received
ty is past the half-way mark to its funding for.work wi!ll youih was the
1996 goal of $18,000.
RSVP Program for work with the
According to a report from the Yesteryear program.
agency, the amount received or
1ltc Retired Senior Volunteer Propledged exceeds SJ O,SOO.
gram conducts 1he Yestervear pro· An emphasis of funding from the gram annll8fly. Fifth graders from aJl
local agency is geared to youth orga- schools in the county are invited to
ruzations, it was reported, with dol- participate in this project, which is
.•Ill'S Joing to the Community Assault designed to teach participants slcills
.Prevention Services, the Yesteryear in cr!lfis of Yesteryear.
projeCt and Boy Scouts troops.
Program Director Alice Wolfe
Community Assault Prevention reported to the United . Fund Board
Services (CAPS) was one of the that dollars were used to purchase
.agencies that received funding from new leather tools, and provide aprons
the United Fund in 199S.
for the volunteers to wear during the
Monica Dodrill is the .executive programs.
di~tot of the CAPS program and
Two Boy Scout troops also
reponed that funding was used to received funding in 1995.
'help the asency provide trainin11 to
Troop 249, under .the direction of
students · .at Portland, Letart, Scoutmaster Don Frymyer, used·
·Riverview and Salem Cen1~r ele- - money 10 help subsidize the cost of
mcntarics, to ,conduct an activity in sumrncr camp to enable all members
Middleport and make a presentation 1o attend.
at the Gingerbread House.
1fOw 299, under the direction of
Dollars were' liNd to purchase Scoutlhaster ,Greg McCall, utilized
hllldouts, for duplic~on. training of · their funding to help with an educavolunteers (which Is required by the tional ·field lrip-for tlic membeR. •
national CAP prop11111) and transOne hundred percent of the monportatiqn·&lt;:osts. Fundins by the Unlt- ey raised by the United Fund for
td filnCI for Meiss County enlbled Meigs Cpunty is given to groups in
lhe CAPS ·progm'n to extend the Mei'gs Co!anty that haye requested
•vliltbiQiy of progrumnin1 offered support and are eligible (SOI3C stato young people throuJihout.the coun- tus) for &amp;i.xlins. a United Fund offi-

~ ··

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

..

M6igs County Prosecuting Attor- Cleveland-Marshall College of Law
ney John Lentes has announced that · in Cleveland.
·
he will seek re-election to that office.
Prior to coming to Meigs County,
He filed his petitions with the Meigs Lentes served as the law director of
County Board of Elections Wednes- Westlake, a Cleveland suburb, and
day.
acted as special counsel and a memLentes, a Democrat, was elected in ber of the legal staff in North Olmst1992. A nati\le of Detroit, Mich., he ed.
has been a resident of.Meigs County
He and his wife, Cathy, have three
for more than nine years. Prior to his children, and live near Rutland.
· election to office, he was a partner in
Lentes said that si11ce taking
the law finn of Palter, Linle, Sheets office, he has eKpanded the focus of
&amp; Len1es.
the, office to include the 'civil responHe is a graduate of Brockton High sibilities of the prosecuting anorney.
School in Boston, Mass., and ·
"During the past three years, I
received his undergraduate degree in have kept my pledge 10 township
history and classics from Miami trustees, clerks and other local offiUniversity in Oxford, Ohio.
cials," Lentes said.
I,.entes did postgraduate studies at
"During my last campaign, they
Miami University, as well as 0Kford lold. me they had been ignored, and
University and the University of were left virtually without represenLondon, both in England. He tation,'" he added. "I promised to be
received his law degree from the attentive to their needs, and I think I

•
"'""'- -:

·~ .

. Lentes seeks $econd
·term~as-·prosecutor · -

..

1996 DODGE DAKOTA

35centl
A Gannett Co. Ne•apepw

Propane truck
.wrecks
on
248
Ches.t er residents asked to leave

Y-1, auto, air cond,

1995 DODGE NEON

Lowe lletwe•n · 5·1 5
tonight. Partly cloudy.
Saturday, p•rtly cloudy,
hlghaln 201.

8-22-26-29-31

1995 FORD
T·BIRD lt

dren under 12 are free. Thursday
evenings from S p.m. to 8 p.m. are
free and sponsored by The Athens
Messenger and Larry Conrath Realty.
The Dairy Barn's Board of
Trustees Annual Meeting and the
Community Gallery's opening !Ceep_.
!ion will be Friday from 6:30 to 9
.p.m.
• Sponsors are American Electric
Power, Days Inn, OhioAns Coundl,
and Snider Fuller and Associates.

Travis Mup-aae
Army Pvt. Travis Mugrage, son of
Charlie and Peach Mugrage of
Racine, recently graduated from Fort
Knox, Ken. after completing seven
weeks of advanced individual training on maintaining and operating
armored vehicles.
.
After spending two weeks at
h.:!me, Mugrage is now stationed al
Fort Benning, Ga. The 199S Southem High School graduate joined the
Army in Augusl, 1995.
Timothy 'E. Wella
Army Pvt. Timothy E. .Wells has
completed basic training at Fort
Leonard E. Wood, Waynesville, Mo.
Wells is the son' of Joan A and
Dana R. King of Pomeroy.

Pick 3:
416
Pick 4:

•
•

Sports, Page 5

--Military. news--Robert M. Laughery

~Donahue
..y SCOTT WILLIAMS
AP T...vl1lon Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - · Phil
I!lonahue, who pioneered the audience- and issue-driven talk show,
dnly to see his )"atings yield to lowo/ow imitators and trashy topics, is
calling it quits.
·
·
"Donahue," a Peabody and
20-time national Emmy Award winner seen in more than 45 countries,
continue through the end of this
.season, his syndicator, '4ultimedia
Entertainment Inc., announced
Wednesday. .
·
· ·
"Phil Donahue essentially
slarted this company and began an
entire industry in daytime syndication," said Multimedia l'lcsident Bob
Turner. "He was the first• to intimately involve his studio an(! horne
audiences."
A nine-time Emmy winner
as tal,lc TV's outstanding host, Donahue, who turned 60 last month, will .
continue to work on TV specials and ·new projects in . broadcasting and :
c11ble, Turner said.
A spokesman for the show
said Donahue was taping a program
late Wednesday.afternoon and would
not be available for interviews.
"Donahue," which marked
its 25th anniversary ill, 1992, began
on Nov. 6, 1967, in Dayton, Ohio,
where the then-brown-haired TV personality intended to have a standard,
couch-and-desk fonnat.
,
However, a studio audience
sl!owed up for the canceled variely
show he was replacing. "Somebody
said, 'Why don't we sit 'em down
and let 'em watch the interview?"
Donahue recalled in a 1987 inteiview.
· ·
His guest, atheist Madalyn
Murray O' Hair, was questioned by
tile audience during commercials
apd Donahue lhought some of their .
questions were better than his.
"Sometime during that first week, I
jumped off my chair lllld ran into the
.
'
audience," he said.
·.
' The program moved to
pational syn~ication and the top of ·
tlie ratings - until a newcomer .
named Oprah Winfrey debuted in the
1986-87 season and knocked him out
pf rwst place.
.'

All of the art work is for sale
except Culbert's porcelain pieces.
The Culbert Family will donate the
proceeds from the sale of Anne's ~o­
dimensional art work to the Daary
Bam to help establish a scholarship
fund.
Gallery hours are Tuesday through
Sunday, II a.m.-5 p.m. wiih extended hours on Thursdays until 8 p.m.
General admission is $3; senior citizens and full-time students are $2.50;
and Dairy Barn members and chi!-

Ohio Lottery

18
IS
12

'

6
J

GOAL·

5111,000

· By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New• Staff
The Southern Local Building
Committee examined an earlier, successful levy campaign at a commiltee meeting:Wednesday at Southern
Local High School.
Committee Chainnan Dave
Spencer introduced Steve Beha."
director of Carleton School/Meigs
Industries, who directed a successful
county-wide 1.8-mill propeny taK
levy campaign for thai agency in
November 1992 .
Beha faced a daunting 1ask in that
particular campaign. Si• similar
levies had gone down defeated in the
past. The measure lost by one vote on
election day, but wound up winning
by seven votes after the absentee Mllots were counted.
"We won by· a 700 percent margin," Beha gibed. "We only needed to
win by one vote."

cer said.
In l99S, 12 groups, including the
American Cancer Society of Meigs
County, Cooperative Parish, Meigs
lniluslries, Arts Council and the
Museum ~ved funding for special
projecfs and events, it was noted.
It was' pointed out thai the United
Fund for Meigs County is not affiliated .wilh any na~~~:al ~ani~ti?n
and that all mono1 raised ts adnums' tercd by a local.board of voltinteers.
Contributions tQ the United fund are
encouraged.throush a one-lime donaASHLAND (AP) - A highway
lion, pledse or payroll deduction. . patrol trooper was shot to death earFor additional information about ly today along Interstate 71 in nonhthe Unii&amp;IFuinHOFMeigs-county or cenlral Ohio.
tQ obtain a donation or pledge form,
A suspect was apprehended, State
residents may contact President liighway P.atrol spcikesman Sgt. John
St~san Oliver at .992-2161.
Born said.
'
Donations may !JC mailed to UnitThe names of the trooper, who .
ed Fund for Meigs County, Bo~ 424, was with the Ashland post, and the
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
suspect were not immediately

The Southern Local Building
Commitlee is now seeking passage of
a 6.1-mill lax bond iss ue for constnlction of a new, stale-of-the-art, K8 elementary school and for renovations to the. high school. Total cost of
the project is $7,370,8oo, with the
state picking up $3,190,800 of the
lab.
First, Beha infonned the doze n
people attending that "there is nothing you can do to ensure passage."
Gaining support is one job, he
explained. Getting supporters to vote
is quite anotner.
"Every person you talk to is
important," he said. "Get'them to register. then gel them to vote. There are
a lol of people out there that arC"likely supponive , but they don'l vote."
Beha showed some of the promotional material used by Carleton
School/Meigs lnduslries in its levy
campaagn and suggested a blend Qf

informational outlets.
"lnfonnation is real important,
don't just count on one source of
information," he advised.
In 1992, Beha's group used radio,
newspaper letters to lhe editor, yard
11!\d utility pole signs, posters, direct
mailing and posters located near
polling places.
"There will be a lot of misinformation ou1 lhere," Beha explained.
Be ready to deal with it, he added.
lleha also actively sought endorsements in the 1992 campaign, receiving the endorsements of both politi_cal parties, many politicians and The..
Daily Sentinel and WMPO.Radio. ..
"It's not fun to ask people for more
money," he said. "This is the one""
opponunily people have to say 'no' to .
taxes."
''They're probably not opposed to ..
the program, they just don't wan1 to·
(Conllaued on Pap 3)

State trooper shot 1o death on interstate

~

rcle~sed .

An Ashland trooper, who did not
give hi s. name, told the Ashland
Times-Gazette that the-trooper was
shot in the chest af(er.stopping a dri ver for suspected drunken drivi'ng.
The shooting occurred about 3
a.m. about three miles north of Ashland.
.
The trooper told the newspaper

that the suspect, was captUred in ..
Medina County, &amp;bout 30 mil.ei to lhe · ·
northeast, ~fter qashing.the car on 1111 ,
· exit ramp to State-Routc.-18. . Born said more information would ;
be releaSed at a late I!Kll'l!inl newa •
Conference in Ashland.
.,, •
Ashland is about 70 mila ~~
east of Columbus.
. · ;"
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�I

..Commentary
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The Daily Sentinel

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'IsttlDfislid in 1948 ' .
111 Court Sl, P~y, Ohio
81..a&amp;2·21116 • Fu: 992·2157

.:1

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl•her
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW

·

General M•neger

·Controller

'--1Dlllo-••*-"-1flhouldl»-ll!an:tiiii-AN-.

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fMJ/111-- ,...... -

bor. No _ , . . , lioiWI .....
79 I,,. ...... IIOt PltiOIWI ' I
~

'Tax lip reading

... "' flOOd
·
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: • Friday, January 19, 1996

PllgiA2
Frldly, ~ tt, 1...

•

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•
W. VA.

ndt ·MAKt;; A-

Memorial to the.victims of Communism

..

I

I
!I

I'I

....

Anger: A sin

that~s

lcs

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

ll!i-ted,.,.
. Dry, cold conditions set
.] following heavy rainfall
GriP/IIC$Nfl

!

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S/lowom T-IIOnns Rain Flumes

•

By WALTER
A. MEARS
. . .
. "
France
be a
AP
Special CorrNpondent
reliablewquld
ally no
in longer
the . light
WASHINGTON - Republicans aren't quite telling voters to read their against. the Soviet empire.
"I"'~
lips for a guanintee against new taxes, but cl?se to it.
.
.
Mjtterrand quickly sent
.
,.,;,
A
. In their campaign for lhe prestdency, that 1s part of a tax debate m which secret word to the United . If~&amp;
1 vtQQIIIUI:I
· rival candidates all promise that reforms will mean cuts.
States lhat Reagan should
N~ Qt.£,
The flat tax may come later; the flat campaign pledge a~ainst increases not judge him by what he
· : ·.·
.
(){&lt;! Til~
: comes fmt.
said in public, b!Jt rathc!' by
••What that wins in one election it can cost in the next. As George Bush his actions •• which would
'
\~~~F
· learned when he reneged in the White House on the no tax vow that helped prove that he was staunc~ly
~Y'
him get there.
pro. American. Mitterrand
~ (, Beaten on the issue when he challenged Bush for the nomination eight asked Reagan 10 revie\V his
· years ago -leading the field now- Sen. Bob Dole is not yielding on it this previous communiques to
time.
/ .
Washington, in which ,he
"In a Bob Dole.admi.nistration, there will not be a tax increaac," the Sen- reassured the Carter admin. ate Republican leader said. "There:ll be tax cuu·... " .
·
isltation that his public anti. · His no-new-tax rivals are on his case constantly for taX increase votes American posturing should
- 'during his 35 years i.n Congress. He CQu'nters that he's voted against 60 of not be taken at face value.
· them since I 982, shepherded the Ronald Reagan taX eut as chairman of the
In a confidential assess, Senale Finance &lt;;omnlittee and led the opposition to President Clinton's ments prepared for the Rea1993 tax increase.
· gan White House, the CIA
The legislative instinct is to leave leeway to adapt, should cin:wnstances agreed with Mitterrand's prichange. For campaign purposes, better to say "No," and make the pledge vate assurances. One "Top
flatter than the three versions of one-rate taX plans offered by other candi- Secret" report, for example,
ilates.
notes that Mitterrand delib: Dole is keeping room to maneuver with his embrace of the single-rale tax erately "played down .favor:
(ecommended Wednesday by the GOP panel that he and House Speaker able attitudes loward such
Newt Gingrich set up to propose tax reform.
issues as NATO and Euro; Jack Kemp's commission did not recommei1Sl a specific rille or detailed pean integration in order to
_;__~---~~~_::~~~~~~~~~~~~~L---------..,---J
plan, only that there be a total overhaul to a simpler, flatter, fairer taX ~yscem, with lower income Americans protected by personal exemptions
instead of the graduated rates now in effect.
.
·
: "We're talking about an entirely new tax system ... " Dole said. ''It's
going to be one of the major priorities of !hi~ yem;:s elections, whether
you're running for Congress or runrung for pres1dent
raised from private contributions), no public funds will be involved in the
By Willi- A. RU8hef
.
' ·
President Clinton has been arguing for months thai Republicans are so
A columnist necessarily spends a lot of time complaining about this and creation of the VOC Memorial Museum. The only governmental contribudedicated to tax breaks fo.,the rich that they deml!ftd un-:ceptablc curbs in that, so it is a positive relief to tum, for a change, to ,a subject that deserves tion was a grant of land.
·
beaJth caie and other programs he is determined to protect. He favOJ1i a mid- nothing but praise:
11ic plan is to redesign an&lt;!lqely reconstruct the Old Tariii Building, at
dle class tax cut - familiar fare, since he campaigne1:1 on a ilimililr note in
Washington, D.C., is a beautiful city of noble bliild}r!Js, lw!dsomc · Seventh . and Eighth Streets between E and F, N.W., Qcar. the Mall (and
-i992 before deciding as president that deficit reduction shoul4, come· ftt~
avenues -and broad vistas, and 'as the n&amp;tion's , '
directly across from the National Air and S))IIGC
: Sensitive to Democratic headway on that argument, Dole uSed his role as capital, it• has jncreasiniJy become a Sllrl of
'Museiun, whil:h draw.; 8.5 million. visitors annuala sponsor of the Kemp report to counter that the Republicans ~ -~ustoas theme park for the history and significance of
ly).
'
determined to protect the middle class. He slapped at "the latest Cltnton tax the United States. Here are the soaring memoriAmong the felllures of the VOC Museum will t(e:
..!Crease " which was in 1993, then said he wants an overttaul that will ben- als to our very greatest presidents: Washington,
A Roll Call of Victims, displaying the l!alilcs- lllid
:elit tax-tired middle Americans and won't shift burdens away from the Jefferson and Lincoln. Just across the Poi.:om.ac.
f~~~:es of victims of Communism (lUld whe~ possi:wealthy. That's his rap on the 17 percent flat tax championed by Steve River, in Arlington, lie most of the
ble their persooal testimonials) on video si:recns
:Forbes, the self-financed candidate who has used the issue and intensive guished dead from our wars, including
and through electronic databases.
·
·advertising to boost himself to second place in pre-primary state polls.
Unknown Soldier from each. All over town
A Hall oflnfamy, containing real and reproduced
· : Forbes would erase the politically sacrosanct deduction for home mort- there are memorials of various types to illl sorts
artifacts of Communism's inhumanity to man:: a
:gage interest; Dole and other Republican candidates wouldn't.
of individuals, events and causes -- one of the
section of the Berlin Wall, a recreation of a Gulag
: Sen. Phil Gramm is in with a 16 percent flat tax plan, Pat Buchanan at 15 most recent, and most moving, being the Viet!larracks, a "room" at the Hanoi Hilton, an assem•percent, Sen·. Dick Lugar with a 17 percent national sales tax. Lamar Alexan- nam Veterans Memorial.
bly-line from one of China:s forced:lahor camps,
~er outdoes the others· on no-new-taxes, saying he wouldn't raise them even
As the United Siates has become the central
ere.
.
.
.tn a,war.
·
.
player on the world stage, the memorials have
A Hall of Heroes, containing stlllueS and mcm""
• Clinton's spokesman said the administration is working on its own plans taken on noi merely a natiOIUIJ but an 'interaa- ,
.
rabilia ,pf such leading anti-CI)mmutiists as Pmi:for a simpler .tax system including the possibility of flatter rates. But Mike , tiona! flavor. Thus., for example, the United ·States Holocaust ~emoriat &lt;lent Ronald R~an, Pope John Paul II, Andrei Sakharov, Alcxander
:McCurry said simple ideas can tum out to he simple•minded.
Museum is dedicated to remembering Nazi Ocrmapy's campaign of ~no­ Solzhenitsyn, Vaclav Havel and Lech Walesa.
·
·
: And the Clinlon camp is content to let Republicans argue about it all. cide against the Jewish people, even thougli that occurred' in,Europe. ·
A research library, an auditorium and much else.
;
·"We're asking the presidenuo join Ibis debate," said Kemp, who as a House
So.it is.altogelher appropriate that the ftrst steps have bee~ taken tQ creThe sponsors estimate that the whole project can be funded by just $1 Op
:member was an architeCt of the massive Reagan tax cut of 1981. He said ate, · in Washington, a Victims of Communism . Memorial Museum, to million in private tax-deductible contributions (one dollar for each of the
:Clinton should appoint a blue ribbon commission to come up·with an entire- remember the more than I00 million victims of Communism around the I00 million people wantonly murdered by Communist dictators since ~
~~taX~
•
.
.
world.
Bolshevik Revolution in 1911). Their ·goal is to raise this sum in time 10
·. Not likely. _Instead, Clinton could well use the center stage of his State .o f
The Victims of Communism Memorial Foundl!tion is strictly bi~san, open the Museum in less than live years: in December 2000.
,
~ Union address next week to suggest changes ,o f his,own.
its creation having heen supported by leading members of both parties_in
It is hard lo imagine a worthier project than this one. Here would be set
•• The adlllinistnition already has appraised a 17 percent flat tax propOSed Congress and signed into law by President Clinton in December 1993, II is forth, in original documents and gripping films, the long, bloody history cif
in the GOP House in 't99S; the 'Ifeasury said it would be a substantial taX also internationally endo~. having on its International Council such well- this murderous creed: the deliberately induced famine in Ukraine in the early
c;ut (Of tsxpayers with incomes over $200,000, an increase for everyone else, known figures as Andrei Satrnarov's widow, Yelena"Bonner, fonner Soviet 1930s, the Cambodian genocide directed by Pol Pot in the 1970., the deathand would cost $138.3 billion a year in revenues.
·
dissident Vladimir K. Bukov~ky. and the presidents of half a dozed Easteni dealing "labor camps" in China todar and so on.
: That kind of targeting is the fe!ISOn Dole .~fers to leave the details for · European countries. 11te chairman of the foundation is fonnef. Ambassador
Remember this project in your prayers. ,
Lev
Dobriilnsky;
its
presidenl
is
Dr.
Lee
Edwards.
·
·
.
Wllll•m A. RuiMr I• • Qlltlngulthed Fellow of tile a.-ttiMtllater.
As with the Holocaust Memorial Museum (for which $160 million wu , tuta for the Study of Sl8tumanlhlp and PolltiCII PhllOIOplly.
: EDITOR'S ~ - watter R. - . , vice preetclent IIIICI column'-t for The ..
.M"OII8IId ......... 1\M rlfiC)rlecl on Waalllnglon 8Jid natloMI potlllc:e for more
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James M. Darst, 85, Albany, died Tllursday, Jan. 18, 1996 in the Hickory Creek Nursin$ Center, The Plai ns.
Born March 12, 1910 in Meigs County, son of the late Alonzo and Sarah
Elizabeth Simms Darst. he was a former coal miner, farmer and officer at
the :t:&amp;leski Youth Camp.
He is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law. James Eddie and Annie
Mae Darst, and Sammy _Louis and Sherry Dam, all of Albany; three daughters and sons-.lp-law, Sarah Mae and Arch1e G11lman of Hamden, Ruby Eloise
and D1ck Ebhn of Pomeroy, and Shirley Louise and Larry Will of McArthur;
14 gmndchil~en , four stepgrandchildren, 16 great-grandchildreh. 10 stePgreat-grandchtldren, ·three great-great-grandcht ldren one step-great-greatgrandchild; and a sister, Lillian "Hat" Stewart of Toledo.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Ruth Francis Ellis Darst; a
son, Larry M. Darst; three infant sons; two sis1ers, Alm a Rathburn 811d Pearl
Marcum; and three brothers. floyd , Douglas and Walter "Watt" Darst
Services will be I p.m. Sunday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport,
with the Rev. Marvin Markin officiating. Burial will be in the Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Saturday.

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James M. Darst

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"'QURAVb 11"
c
oiln:...
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SQtiNO QJRrAIN
TWO.

,I

Recount yields no change in race

MiCH.

eqilnd (the &amp;ocillists') coiiSiituency to the left." President George BUlb lisl)ed out It lhe aew presEvlm. as a candidate, Mi&amp;mand was appmnt- ident for appointing Commuqists to hia cabinet, to
WASHINOlON - The death 1-' week of ly qm,e cOI)CCI'IIed that a Socialist victory would whicll Mitterrand retorted thll America ,should
Frince's IOILI~time prelidelit, Francoil ' ,Miner- coft~Promi~- bis couniry's securiU' against -the miJid its own busineSs. In retroSpect, liicb public
rand, is aure to prodllce fascinal!ns dlaci08Ul'CI 'SoYid. bloc. .In 1978,' for elW!Iplc, he sent llie . spats were nothing more than rituali:r.ed·politic:al
' about the JDIIL. wlto ~ hi$ COWIII')''I .P91i· SocialiSt party's lnternlljonal secretary, Robert thealel', put out for public COIISumplion but' with
tics {or· two dec!llks.
.,
Pontillon, to the U;S. Embusy in Paris to allay Tittle or no effect on I'Clll relations.
•
: . The French already knew IUm as a changeling, any American misgivinp ·about that year's elec.
Oil issues that ~ ., such as Reagan's
. a man who easily abandoned political idealll to lions.
•
controversial deployll!ent of nuclear Penbing .n
quench his thirst for poYfer. But even they Will be
The cables about that lllilsion, still classified and cruile missiles to Germany, and ·the Amerisurprised Ill bow fei'Vently their Socialist I~- · "Top ~t," report thai Ponti lion "informed can-led.effort to pltsb Iraq out of Kuwait - Mitwho appoi11ted four Communists to his.first pres- EmbasSy Paris that Mitterrand is concerned .about terrand backed the United States despite domestic
idential Cabinet -- secretly reass~ the Carter the U.~. security commitment to France and political 'pressure to do otherwise.
and Reagan administrations that he-was an -anti- WI!IIIS assurances thai the .lJ.S. would maintain. its
In fact, the real leftist in the l'tfitterrand family
Communist conservative who would. support the defense umbrella if a Socialist-Communist turned out to be his wife, Daniello - a fact the
United States and NA10.
alliance comes to power." .
CIA caught on to early. This became clearly eviAnother c;able reported that Pontillon "said dent in recent years as she befriended Cuba's
Our associati Dale Van Ana has had access to
several secret Iiles on Mitterrand at the State \hal the Socialists still believe France ought to Fidel Castro.
Departnient and the Central Intelligence Agency, seek West European integration and remain. in
It was Danielle Mitterrand, for examjlle, who
most of which are still classified.-They w~v~ an NA10. He 11'1ded that t)le party leadershi,p is pre- persuaded her husband to invite Castro to Paris in
, interesting tale of a man whOse con~bons !JCCUpjed with European . security, which 'we , early 1995.
·
,
helped smilolh American-French ~ons at a. understand can be found .only through a p'riviMitterrancl used. the occasion 'to call tfie ~ ·
critical sta;c of the Cold War.
. . leged relationship with ~U.S.'"
. ·
tinued U.S. embargo of CUba "stupi,d" -- a_fiaing,
After years of finishing behind the CCJ11Cr-nglit -. As long as the "priyilelcd relationship" tinal ·elWIIple of the contradicti0111 and lnconsisGallllists in ,presidential elections, Mitterrand led · between France and the United States remained tencies that were the hallmarks of his political
a Socialist-Cornmu11ist coalition to victory in . iniact behind the scenes, the two sides felt free to career. ·
·
1981. The victory sent chills up the spines of-Rca- swipe at one another in public. Within month of · Jecll Anc!enof1 llld M~ llnllllft ·gan admiaistration officials, who worried that Mittel'flllld's tint victory, for eltBIIlple, then-Vice · ~ • for united ,.....,. ~ InC. · ·

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all. too.-. ~ead. ly ·

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Local News.in Brief:

OHIO Weather
Saturday, Jan. 20

Mi.t terrand was a master of .political theater
By .iMk Ant'HII
lftd liD~ 111 lktlllln

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Feds report December
jobless rate held steady
By MARTIN CRUTSINGEA

overall economy, as measured by the
gross domestic produc~ was growing
at an annual rate of 3.2 percent ir. the
July-September quarter after nearly
stalling out in the spring. Still, analysts believe that the fourth quarter
growth rate will slow once again.
Some economists had begun to
express growing worries about a
possible recession developing this
year. They pointto the age of the current expansion and the fact that.
despite the relatively low unemployment rate, consumer spending. which
accounts for two-thirds of the total
economy. has been teetering Of late
under the impact of high debt burdens
and anemic wage grow1h.
Earlier this week. it was reported
that the Index of Leading Economic
Indicators, designed to forecast aclivity six to nine months in the future ,
dropped by 0.5 percent in November,
its second straighl monthly decline .
.Some economists believe that the
Federal Reserve. which in December
cut interest rates for a second time.
should do so again when it next meets
at the end of this month. given the
weakness of a variety of reports.
But other analysts argued that the
December employment report, which
was slightly stronger than had been
expected, would keep the central
bank on hold.
"This is consistent with the notion
that 1he economy is now on a sedate.
growth path:but is not slipping into
anything more ominous," said Robert
L&gt;ede.rick, chief economic consultant
for the Northern Trust Co. in Chica-

AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON - The nation 's
unemployment rate held steady at 5.6
percent in December as the l)lanufacturing indusrry enjoyed its bigges!
monthly increase in nearly six years.
::By The Aaaochlted Preas
The record-high temperature for helped by the return of striking air::: The rain mov,ed out of Ohio ear- this date at the Columbus weather craft workers.
":ty today ahead of a cold front that station was 67 degrees in 1907 while ·
The Labor Department said the
::: bro1,1ght gusty winds, a sharp drop in the record low was 22 below zero in overall jobless rate ended the year
e :temll!lratures and wind chills as low 1994. Sunset tonight will be at5:35 about where it began as the nation's
; -as 20 below zero.
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7;49 businesses added 1.7 million workers
· Some rural roads and low-lying a.m.
to their 'payrolls in 1995, down
Weather forecast:
; areas were under water because of
sharply from the 3.53 million jobs
Tonight.. Variable cloudiness and that were added in 1994.
: streams overflowing their banks. but
: :he wa~rs were expected to recede cold. Lows 5 to 15.
Economists said the slowdown in
Saturday... Variablc cloudiness. job growth was to be expected given
· 1oday.
· Temperatures dropped from early Highs mqstly in 1he 20s.
the fact that the economy grew much
Extended forecast:
: morni~g readings in lhe 50s to the
less robustly in 1995 than it had in
Sunday... A chance of snow. Lows 1994.
: mid-Jeens and 20s at daybreak.
Lows tonight will be in the single 5 to 15 and highs in the 20s.
The Clinton administralion
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows 5 to expressed· satisfaction that the
: digits over much of the state, 1he
: National Weather Service said. Highs 10 and highs in the 20s.
December unemployment repon, 1he
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy. Lows in fim major statistical release in a
• on Saturday will be in the 20s.
•
the teens and highs 35 to 40.
month, showed the jobless rate holding steady with payroll growth of
151 ,000.
· "These numbers show strong and
(Continued from Page 1)
broad-based
job growth," said Joseph
members discussed the appointmenl
pay more taxes."
Sliglitz,
chairman
of the president's
of precinct represenlatives to drum
"You need to get supporters reg- support for the new school within Council of Economic Advisers. "This
istered and out to vote."
.is the fim piece of hard economic
their respective precincts.
Supporters must also have a posTreasurer Kim Phillips reported news we have had in a while and it
itive attitude.
the group currently has $1,225 in its is good news."
" "You have got to be absolutely war chest. She also added that more
Reaction in financial markets was
flO.Silive. You have got to believe in money is expected from prior com· mixed . Stocks were up modestly at
mid-morning while bond prices
it ... be enthusiastic.
mitments.
:• "Focus on what it will do for kids.
The next meeting will be Wednes· dropped as investors wondered
' Promore the good things that are day, Jan. 24 at 5:30p.m. in the high whether the better-than-expected jobs
•.goitig td·hapPen.''
repon would put further interest rate
school cafeteria.
cuts by the Federal Reserve on hold. g~
'· In other · business, committee
'
.
Dederick, who had been one of
The jobless rate dipped as low as
5.4 percent in February, the best those expecting a Fed rate cut at the
showing for the current recovery, and Jan . 30-31 meeting, said he now
.
.
t
prevention equcation programs in climbed as high ·as 5.8 percent in bdieved the central bank would stay
(Continued from Page I)
on the sidelines given the strength
~rder to assist my elected civil clients. elementary schools, and is in the sec- April. It spent the year in· a nanow
shown by the December jobless
My office has taken a strong stand on ond year of conducting Meigs Coun- band that many analysts believe is
"crime, regardless of who the defen- ty's mock uial program for high close to full employment as the cur- report.
For December. the strength in the
rent recovery comple1es live years of
~\lant is or what position the defendant scljool seniors.
labOr
market came in manufacturing.
growth.
'holds in the community.
·where
employment rose by 52,000.
.i.entes has also established Meigs
In a separate report, the Com"Part of that criminal prosecution
the
biggest
increase since a jump of
work must involve close cooperation County's first Crime Victims Assis- merce Deparunenl said today that the I 04,000 in February 1990.
· with the sheriff in investigations, and tance program, which is administered
·Judges to· ensure fair and finn sen- by a member of his staff and funded
through state grant monies.
tences," Lentes said.
The prosecutor said that other
· Lentes said that not only has he
8;30 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Units of the Meigs County Emerconcerned himself with the prosecu- co~nties have had programs like this
Center,
Pam Carter, VMH .
. pon of criminals charged with vari- in place for many years, but that gency Medical Services recorded I0
POMEROY
.'sous offenses.
but also, with imple- when he took office Meigs County calls .for assistance. including two
,
.
10:24
p.m
.. State Route 248 •.
mentmg cnme preventiOn programs. did not have access to those services. transfer 'calls Thursday. Units
propane tank overturned, Chester
Lentes said that il is "reassuring to responding included:
' Lentes' · office prepared Meigs
Volunteer
Fire Department al so
know
that
these
victims.
who
have
MIDDLEPORT
·County's first DARE grant applicaresponded
(see
related story).
;03
a.m..
General
Hartinge
r
II
tion, which was approved and implc· been virtually ignored in the past,
RUTLAND
;inented in the sheriffs department. receive 1he emotional and financial Parkway, Velma narrick;
I 0:19 p.m.. M~igs Mine 31,
2: II p.m.. South Second Avenue,
Lentes' office has al.so begun crime support that they need."
Robert
Rankin, Holzer Medical Cen·
Dorothy Roush, Veterans Memorial
ter.
Hospital ;
SYRACUSE
4:42
a.m.,
Kingsbury Road, Nev
I
White,
Pleasanl
Vl\lley Hospital ;
Feeney-Bennett
Post
128,
Ameri· No free clolhlng
a.m.,
Laurel
Slreet, Brenda
II
:33
can
Legion,
will
no
longer
have
dinFree clothing days at the Salvation
Braley. treated at the scene.
ners
served
at
the
annex
on
the
secArmy are being discontinued and resVeterans Memorial
TUPPERS PLAINS
idents are asked not to leave clothing ond meeting of each month. MemThursday admissions - Harry
2:54
p.m .• Arbaugh Road. E1hel
contributions at the fonner Salvation bers will have food and refreshments Thomas, Cheshire; Helen Kibble,
Arbaugh. treated at the scene.
Army headquarters on liS Butternul served at the meeting place in the old Pomeroy .
Legion
hall
jus1
before
meeting
time
.
Ave., Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - Melvin
carryo~er
RACOtomeet
Thornton, Racine.
RACO will met Tuesday. 6:30
Holzer Medical Center
(Continued from Pag~ 1)
p.m. at the Racine Star Mill Pari&lt;..
Discharxes Jan. 18 - Merlin cleaning streets during the most
New members are welcome.
Tracy, Robin Conklin, Virginia recent snow storm . Council also disD,aily
Mahone.
cussed getting more equipment 1o·
(USPS 21:1-961)
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Mar~. help keep snow graded better from
Jenkins, daughter. Oak Hill; Mr. anG people's driveways.
Published every aflentoon, Monday throuah
Mrs. William Powers. son. Gallipo· · Fridoy, Ill c .... St. Pomeroy, Ol!lo, by !he
Thernton thanked council for its
Am Ele Power .......................42\
Ouo
Vallc:y
f"ubli&amp;hlna
CompanyKJMnen
Co.,
lis; Mr. and Mrs, Shawn Taylor. work last y«;ar. and'Joe and Kay Prof1
Akzo
......................
,
...............
54~
' l'ol1&gt;cloy, Ol!io 45769. Ph. 992-2156. Second
daughter. Oak HilL
A1hl811d 011 ...........................35'h
fitt for their work on renovating the
" ' " - poid • Pomeroy, Ol!io.
AT&amp;T .....................................66'4
(Published with pennission)
old bank building. which will soon
' Men~.r: The Auociated Pren, aiiM tM Ohio
B8nll One ..............................35'.0
house a flower shop.
1\kw-~IIOCIMion.
Bob Evana ............................16\
.'
......_
Council also discussed using. the
Board
meeting
set
Borg-Warner ...........................30
POS'I"M.tU'BR: Send lddren correctiolll lo
1
old
grade sc hool and turning it into a
.Champion
Ind
.......................
22\
The
Leading
Creek
Conservancy
The Daily Sentinel. Ill Court St.. Pomeroy,
Chllnnlng 811opa................... 2"1.
Ohlo45769.
building for the mayor.
.municipal
District board meeting will be held at
CIIY Holdlng .......................... 24~
clerk
and
police
officer and renting
S p.m. Wednesday.
SUBSCRIPTION RATIIS
Federal Mogul ....................... 19\
space
for
storage
and other organi11 earn.... .....
G•nMtt .................................&amp;O~
•One Week ................................................ $2.00
zations.
With
a
kitchen
il would be
Qoodyellr T&amp;R ...................... 43 ...
One Mon!h ... ............................................. $8.70
good for' groups having parties,
K-111..-t .........·•• .:.-..::::::: ...............&amp;~.
OIIOYeat ............................................... $104.00
Thornton said.
Lindt •nd............................. 13'4·
,
SINGLB COPY PRt&lt;2
Umltld Inc............................15\
"The whole community can get
FUNERAL.HOME
Ooil) .................................................... 3lC.ou
l'e.Pplls hncorp...................23
use
out of it," he added.
Our family business will
Ohio V•lley Benk ....................37
Sublertbefl not desirin1 10 pay the ~r moy
Council
hired Glenn Rizer as
serve your fam~y the way
008 V811ey .............................31 ~
·.~mil In advance direct to The o.ily Send•l
street
commissioner
and appointed
.ooadllee, six or 12 month huts. Credit will be'
Roctcw.~l ............~.......... ,..... .55\
we
would like to be served.
the
clerk
to
work
full-time
in the
·Ji-c*iia ...b-. .
Aoblll08 •
.27...
·
We
can
pre-plan
or
prewater office.
A-1 Dutc
1..............136'1.'
'No '""'cri""QII by mol/
In ....
ai:'!:-·
'
arrange any type funeral
~"""'~' • Inc............................9:4
........ bome ...... iotvlceloavoi~ \
Star Bank ..............................58'4
,
'
'
'
you desire ata cost that
· ' -· - MAIL IIUBSC;RIPTIONS
' ·
Wendy lnt'l.........................:....20
suits you best.
Wortf)lngton Ind.....................20
)3 .- ................................................ $21.30

\Southern committee eyes

·A recount of votes cast in the November general election for Bedford Township clerk resulted in no change in the official count, accord-·
ing to a report from the Meigs County Board of Elections.
The recount was requested by Barbara Grueser, who received i45
votes. Winner of the clerk's post was Linda Williams Schoeippner with
153 votes. Angie Brickles, a write-in candidate, received nine votes. ·

Pomeroy fees due by Jan. 31

·

The following annual fees are payable to tile village of :
Pomeroy by Jan. 31: amusement licenses. trash hauling permits and. :
alarm fees.
·
.
.

Dog license deadline extended
The deadline to purchase Meigs County dog licenses has bee n
extended to Jan. 31 , Meigs County Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell
announced today.
.
Campbell said the Meigs County Commissioners have approved the
extension. The original deadline to purchase dog lice11se was Saturday.
Cosl is $4 for a single license and $20 for a kennel license. After
Jan. 31. the normal penally of an additional $4 for a single license and
· an additional $20 penalty for a kennel license will be charged.
Dog licenses may be purchased at the Auditor's Office during the
hours of 8:30a.m. to 4 p.m., or from the Meigs County Dog Warden,
William Dye.
·

:
:
:
:
:
·
:
'
'

Reform Party pushes on
despite petition questions
COLUMBUS (AP)- Organizers
of a drive to get the Reform Party certified in Ohio were not fazed by an
investigation into alleged irregularities on some of their petitions. •
Secretary of State Bob Tafl on
Thursday ordered election_officials in
Montgomery. Franklin and Lake
counties to look into questions raised
by former supporters of Texas billionaire Ross Perot, who is backing
the creation of the new polilicaf party.
"We did everything possible to
comply with the law," said Sandra
Reckseit, the Reform Party's Ohio
coordinator.
She said Reform Party workers
will continue d?uble-checking peti-

tions that were thrown out by Taft;s
office, saying they have found several
hundred signatures that were improperly disqualified.
Ms. Reckseit said she did not
think Taft's investigation would hun
1he party's effort to win recognition
in Ohio. But she said the party probably will nol have candidates in the
primary because the filing deadline is
today.!
,
Oh10 was the second state targeted by 1he party. Taft las1 month ruled
that the Refonn Party was about
2.400 valid signatures short of trye
33.463 needed to be recogmzed as. a
political party in Ohio and win a spot
on the March 19 primary ballot.

. -/ ...... ....~ •.J.,
.. !.. ... / /,..... l. ....,t.,,.,.

nw1~sm
.. _ ,..,,..
.....__

. •.••

,.,...
.........
[

IPG:~ 1U

7:00,9:20 OAit.l
IIATI_n bl SAT • SIJII
1 : 00 ,1:1:0

;t.entes seeks second term

!'

Squads respond to 10 calls

GEM CLOTHING &amp; CONSIGNMENT
99 Mill St.

ON THE "T"

992-6684

Middleport, Oh.

Hrs.: Mon.·Sat. 9-7 p.m. Closed Sunday.

·Meigs announcements

Hospital news

Solid

The

Sentinel

Stocks

CREMEENS

"

·-"'...

"""'ned

~

26-................................................. $53,82
52 - ................................. ............ $105.56

. . . . o..-M... ~

~= ::::::::::::::: ::;;;;::: :: : :: :::::~

52 - - . .•~.......... _,,;......................l" .... $109.72

\II

=. . . . . .
-·-·-

Stocl! JWpOrtl are the 10:30
•.m. QIICQI provided by Adv..t
of Galllpqlla.
·

949-3210

Forethought Funeral Planning
Racine, Ohio

A Few Of Our Home Standard Features
*Andersen Tilt Windows

• Stanley Doors
' 2x6 Exterior Watts, 16 ln. On Center
• Armslrong sotarian Floor lile
' Mareltale Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2•1 0 Floor Joint, 16 ln. On Cenler
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpets
• Delta .Faucets
• Master T-tock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphah Shingles
• I0 Year Structural Warranty On The Home
Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.
· Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Horne Viewing Hours I;OO.S:OO p.m.
1\te. - Sat. or by appoinllllCIIl

�The Daily Sentinel
Page4
Friday, January 19, 1996

Mars~all
I

l

I

I

I

The Mountaineers (6-8) have lost
five of their last six games, with the
.only win in that stretch a 90-78 upset
of No. 12 Syracuse 90-78 in a Big
East game earlier this week.
"We can't get down," said West
Virginia guard Cyrus Jones. "At one
point in this season we lost four in a
row. We just have to try to snap this
and put some good things together."
Still, "These losses are staning to
hurt," he said. "The season's starte
ing to end, game by game."
Jones was a bright spot for West
Virginia, leading the Mountaineers
with 24 points. But for every plus,
there were two minuses.
For instance, 6-foot-11 center
Sandro Var~jao got his fourth foul
early in the second half and fouled
out with 10:25 left. And dt!spite
.Varejao's three-inch advantage, 6-8
Marshall center John Brown clearly
had the better game, jumping higher, moving faster and hustling more
en route to 14 points and 12
rebounds.

"It was tOUilh without Sandro, the outcome.
because it was hard to adjust inside,"
"This was a big game -for both
said forward Damian Owens. teams," West said. "But this is a real
"Going into the game, we thought big for them."
we liad the advantage on the inside,
WVU also can take solace in hisbut they played hard."
tory. The hist time the Mountaineers
West Virginia junio~ point guatd lost to M~hall, in 1990-91, they finSeldon Jefferson (15 points, five ished 17-14 and advanced to the secassists) also was outplayed by his ond round of the National Invitation
opposite number, Marshall freshman Tournarneht. And when West VirJason Williams (14 points, six ginia heat the Herd 89-821ast season,
assists), although their statistics were it finished just 13-13 and didn't make
similar.
_post-season play.
Williams broke down the WVU
John Brannen added 20 points for
defense with a slashing drive through Marshall, including four three-pointthe middle for a layup to start the ers. Marshall outsbot WVU 11-6
game and continued to wreak havoc from beyond thC arc.
the rest of the way.
Owens added 11 points and I0
"This is the fust game Jason 's rebounds for West Virginia, while
been able to play all-out every Greg Simpson and Gordon Malone
minute," said Marshall coach Billy scored II apiece. Malone also had II
Donovan. "He's not strong enough rebounds.
as a freshman to go that hard 40 minIt was the final non-conference
utes."
game ibis season for both teams.
West V'lfginia reserve guard JarMarshall is at East Tennessee
rod West intimated that emotion State on Saturday, while West Virmay have had something to do with ginia is at Providence.
•

Mason Bowling
League results
(Results as of Jan. 3)
League - Early Wednesday
Mixed
Team standings - Tony's Carcyout (20-4), Thunder Alley Cats (18~). Captain D's (16-8), F.O.E. 2171
(14-10), D.V. Weber Construction
(10.14), Meigs Golf Course (8-16),
R&amp;;B Beads (6-18) and Chainsaws &amp; .
l,toses (4-20).
• 'Jeam high series - Thunder
Atley Cats (1980)
' Team high game- Captain D's
(695)
Men
lndl\'idual high series - Larry
:Morgan (587) and Roger Capenter
{561)
· Individual high game- Morgan
:&lt;212 &amp; 198) .
Women
· Individual high series -'- Mar. garet Eynon (.554) and June Hawkins
(521)
: Individual high game - Pat
. Carson (235) and Eyno·~ (21 0)

Oilers' 18-0 run that put them behind
until a half-closing 11-0 run erased
the deficit and gave them a two-point
halftime lead.
In the second half, neither team
got more than three points away
from the other until the Redmen led
53-48 on Tobey Schreck's layup at
the 12: II mark.
Rio Grande's first double-digit
lead came with 7:14 left when
Shawn Snyder canned a three-pointer.
Rio's Eric Caudill led all scorers
with 26 points, while Snyder chipped
in with 17, Schreck added 14 and
James Lavala had 10.
Todd Sands and Tim Hamen ·led
the Oilers (11 -5 &amp; 5-2), who were
knocked off the conference summit,

with 18- and 17-point efforts, respec- ·
tively.
The fublre: The Redmen will
play at Tiffin Saturday at 3 p.m.

Bal(miali

-·-·-

Hunter &amp; H.i psher to lead OU
and Akron ·into Saturday bout
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Now they have moved on to different towns, different jobs, different
challenges. But a part of Ohio coach
Larry Hunter and Akron's Dan Hipsher remains true to a comparatively tiny school in Springfield.
. Hunter, in his seventh year with
the Bobcats, will take a 7-9 record
into Saturday's 7 p.m. matchup with
Akron, 3-10 in its first year with Hip-

•

sher at the helm.
They played against each other in·
college- Hunter at Wittenberg and
Hipsher at Bowling Green - and
talked during clinics, camps and conventions. Huntoir was 396-76 in 13
seasons• at his alma mater. When
Hunter left for Athens, Hipsher then an assistant to Don Donoher at
Dayton - took his place.
The line remained unbroken. Hipsher's Tigers went 97-18 and won

•
•

Sacramento at Phoenilt ~ p.m.

Basketball

•

:., NBA standings
~

EASTERN CONFERENCE

•

.,

'

~

I. l&lt;l.

• Orlando ..................ll! 9 .7S7
~ New York ..............23 13 .639
,, WuhlnJton ............ ll 19 A86
. , Miami... .......... ....... t7 t9 .472
,• NewJeney ............ 15 21 .417
~ Bollon .................... l5 22 .405
; Philadelphia ............ 7 28 .200

,.
•
•I

:•
.•
·•
:
.,

Central DMIIon
3 .917
lldilftl ................... 22 14 611
CLEVELAND .......20 16 .m
Dem&gt;l! ...................19 16 .l4J
AIW!ca ................... l9 l7 .l23
O.lolte ........... ..... l7 19 412
Milwaukce ............. l5 22 .405

Gil
4.~

10
10.1
12.~

1 .~

20

26~

PURSUE LOOSE BALL- Mal'lhall'a Chrll Gr11y (12) and Welt Vlrglnla'l Greg Slmpaon (3) pui'8Ue the looM bell from varioulaltltudea
during the flrat haH of Thuraday nlght'l game In Charleston, w.Va.,
where the Thun~ing Herd won 91·87. (AP)
·

Mkhrett Division
~ I. l&lt;l.

:' loa
;

S~nAntonio ........... 25

,. HouiiOn ........ ........27

10 .714
12 .692

, U1ah ......... .. ....... .. ... 22
~ Oenver ................... l6
.• Dallu ................... II
' MlnaeJOia .............. IO
.·', Vancouver ............... 7

13
22
24
26
30

.629
.421
.3 14

.278
.189

:
heine Divillon
' Seonle ................. 26 10 .722
.-. Slmmenlo ............ll 13 .618
• LA. Lakcn ............ 20 17 .540
{' Portllftd ................. ll 19 .486
. • Ooldm Sta1e ......... .l6 22 .421
~ Phoenix .................. l4 20 .412
, LA. Oippen ....:.... tl 22 .405

IJ

D.l

14

16
18 ..5
24

Coppin Sl. 71, Belhune-Cooknul.n .55
Dnvidsun ~6 . N.C . Oiarlocte 47
Duke 71, N. CarolinaS!. 70
Florida 1\&amp;.M 74, Howard 65
McNeese St. 72, Te11ns-Arlington 6S
Mr:mpbis 94, Arkansas 72
Merter 67, Cent. Flori® 6S
N.C. Ccn~ra176. N. CllrOiina A&amp;:T 70
N.C.-Greensboro 65, N.C.-Aiheville

lill
3
10.5
t4
1~ ..5
19

64

4
6.5
8.5

II

II

l6

New Orleans ]0, LouisiamrTech 4.5
Nicholls St 67. North Tc:llas 62
Rlldford 66. Md.-Ba\timore County 48
SE Louisiana 76; Samford 70
SW Lou11iana 82, Lanw-69
SWTeiUISSt. 61. NELouiaiWUl~6
South Alabama 55, Arkansas St. H
Stetson 73. Georgia S!. 61
Te11as-San Anlonio 62, NW Louisiana
VirJinia Tech 63, Daylon 62

tl .l

Mldwesl
Butler 67, Loyola, Ill. S9
Iowa 82, Illinois 79
N. Illinois 76. CleYe\and St. 62
S. lllinoia nl Droke. ppd., wea~her
Wis.-Groen Bay 67; Wis.-Milwaukee

.~ g:~~~;
~=:~o 98
Milwaukee 100, Golden Slale 96
.,
•

Bolton 108, Hou110n 106
a.BVELAND98, Vancouwer90

o

S - o IOl, Ponland 100

•'.

Southwest

·~
~

AllaataiiPhllocleiDIIio. 7:30p.m.
New Ieney al ~ashin&amp;lon a1 Balti-

;

Dlrroit arlnd1~ _7.:30 p.m.

" •morc, 7:30p.m.

Qli1otte II MuuN, 8 p.m.
S. Allklnio 11: Minnaom, 8 p.m.

,..

..
:
•

lolloa .. Oal.., 8:30p.m.
Orloodo 11 Ulab. ,9 p.m

n
-;

-York11Sanle.tO~.m
L.A. Lakersat L.A. C ippers, 10:30

•'

-·11-IOp.m.(

...

.. p.m.

I

~

. Slllur-Qy'apmes

•

:,

' ~:

f

.

Oqt.joa...,.IIOWione,7:lOp.m.
~ICAIIanta, _7:30p. m.

:• · -o01Denvt&lt;.9p.!ll.
0' How York 11 Vancoum, 10 p.nL
..; ~ Utah •• L.A. Clipper~
• ~ I01:IO P-'"~- . .
' 4

CLEYiii.ANO II

'.' "·p.a. .

L.A. l.Ucn, IO:lO

.'

!!· 1 s_.-.,., ...-~

, -...ItT~_.. .

''; ·f 1o.t.iloa
Qkloeoll .

·.
.. .-.
2:lDP.a

• w 11 r .• ..._l:lOp.m.

:.

s.Aiooolo•l'lli...._..,;a, 7p.ill.
lllllooll ...... .,... • -

111

'

,

Far West ,

Air Forte 92, Hawaii 83
Arizona 93, Sou1hem Cal 81
Bril!ltam Young84. Wyomina75
Cal St.-Fullerton 64. UNL V til
Califomla 70, Onoailn S1. 52
F101110 S. 79. Son 1Jkao S.. 67
~ 60, Son Dieao 53
tdoho St 73, N. Arizooa S9
Looa lleo:h S.. BO,.UIIh S!. 73 ·
Su! l'nl!&lt;iiCO 63, 57
Slonfold 94. OnoJOO 74
UC Irvine 74, J-1ew Melico St. 66
UCLA 87. Arizona St. 73
Ulli! 86; C'&lt;ltorodo S1. 82, 20T
Wetcr S!. 75, Boi1e Sl. 67

II ~nahelm,

•

Delpho• Jefferson 91, Uppr:r Scioto
Vol . .59

Lake Superior St. 19, Ashland 81

1\Ud-Oiilo ,Conlerenee

Fiadlay 89,1JrbarlaS4
Walsh 82. Mount Vernon N&amp;zarene

3~

Non-eoolerence .ploy
Blumon 80, Ottetbein 67
Cenlrol St. 68, Mtunt St. 4oseph ~7
Dayton 61, Fordtwn 56

S2

Ohio U.S. girls' scores
Adenn 6~. Uni01o 4.5
Akron Ceni.-Hower 71. Akron
Gm.dd48
Akron Coventry 51, E. Contoo 47
Akron N. 64. Elle! 58
Aleauder6.5, Hemlock Miller SO
Arnandm-Cbrcreck S6, Circleville 47
Amelia37, Cia. Woodward 26
Arcadia ol4, Arlia&amp;too 39
Ashland Crestview 53, Norwalk S1.
Paul32
Athens 81, Jacklon 60
A.-er O!r. 29. Akron Ov. 26 •
Barnesville 88, Buckeye Trail II
(()'f)

28

The fifth annual Tri-State Toughman bOxing contest will be held.
today and Saturday at the Huntington Civic Arena in Huntington,
W.Va.
On both days, the gates will open
at 6:30 p.m. Boxing is scheduled to
start at 8 p.m.
From Gallia County, Danny
(Sheep Dog) Matney (6-foot-1 , 220
pounds) will be among the heavy. weight division (176-400 pounds)
contenders.
Charles (KO Kid) Bays (6-0,
160), Davyd Reynolds (5-9, 160)
and Joseph White (5-8, 160) will represent Gallia County in the light
heavyweight division (160.17~
, pounds)
.,.
From Mason County, the heavy-.

:weight division is represented by
iDwight Adkins of Point Pleasant (6, I, 220), Mason residents John Bush
:(6-3, 185), Glen Hudson (6-2, 250)
and Michael Stanhope (5-10, 236)
. and Apple Grove's James (Italian
Stallion) Wallace (6-0, 230).
In the light heavyweight division,
Mason County is represented by
Point Pleasant's Robert (Country
Boy) Cook (6-0, 175), Mason's
Chris Divers (5-6, 165) and Apple
Grove's Amos (White Lightning)
Sigman (6-0, 160).
Point Pleasant residents Karen
Meaige (5-4, 127) and Kellie
Thomas (5-7, 255) will be in the
women's division . ..
For ticket information; call 1-800.
296-3897 or (304) 696-4400.

Find the best biJI In tile

Sentinel Classifieds

To place •• ad, cal
992·2156

Ohio men's
' "ool!ege scores
Alllalk 10 Confere-

VIqlnia Tccll63, Da)'loo 62

Mldwemm CoiJealale conr.
N. llliooll7fi,"CievdudSO. 6Z

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Sl

FALL l WINTER HOURS
Open Tueaday-Frlday 9:1J0.5:00
Satwdlly 9:0G-3_:00
CIONCI Monday

--y
nlfiM
ftll

Nonhwe.terq !'12

Sprina. Shawnce70. Ulbanl61
S.. Henry 21. Fon Recovay 26
Sl. Marys SS. Celina S2 (OT) ·

.

Keomono 41, Atooo E. l5

U1111 Bllh 82, Voo Wen 17
LincoiMiicW 71. Adll2
U1bDn 41. UniiOII Local44
Lopn l4. v;nccno w.r.. n
Lopn Elm 50. Homlkoo Twp. 39
Lonlo Cam 4$. Cieonliew lO
Loudoo•ille 62, Tri""Y '3
Lucuville VIII. 110, Poillmoudl W. 62
M-Id Madi...,lt. Aoblaad 19
Mipktan 57, Colllps Wetcen Re--

BATT ERI ES

-

SHOC KS

Mlriool'leOiui'71 , MoouiiGIIeod"
Mouiloa J..$4, MMiilloo .....

ry49

o46. Hotlud Sprioa. lt
M.ctllio $7, MUm1 Tnoe l8
McComb .... Laotic )9
Mcllooold 60, Mllbewt «1
Millbuly ,Lol:ol), Bowliq

a.-"

Mineral Rldae 67, Berlin Cenler

· w-.ReMM l)
M~nfard

4)

·

61, Mc.Dennon Nonhwell

"·New a...... ls
-c..un. FmNier«&lt;
Mi-

New MiMi 43, llllavla32

·

New PIIUidelphia !II , Un1oatown

.

..

foul s.
Reserve notes: Eastern (9-0
1VC, I0-2 overall) trou nced Trimble
in the resetve game 62-11 led by
Valerie Karr 's 16, Juli Hayman's II ,
Kim Mayle ni ne and Stephanie
Evans' seven.
Trimble's Amber Six and Sherry
Russell each had fo ur.
The fulure: Eastern goes to
Al exander on Monday, then goes to
Nelsonville-York Wednesday for a
make-up game.

Ouarter tlllab
.
Trimble.............. ..... 11 -9-3-12=3.5
Eastern ........1•• ••••••• 17-9- 15-13=.54
Trimble - Joy Pei'l'l t 2-0.115=3,
Sheryl Davis 1-0/0=2, Tonya Tract
2-0-1 /4=5, Toby Lawrence 1-0.0=2,
Sherry Davis 1-1-115=5, Beth Koon&amp;
7-0-214=16. ToCals: 14-1-4114~5 .
Eastern - Rebecca Evans 4-0'012=8, Jessica Karr 7-0-112=15,
Nicole Nelson 1-0-114=3, Patsy
Aeiker 10-0- 111 =21, Tracy White I'
0.0/0=2, Je~s i ca Brannon 1-0-314=,.
Totals: 24-0-6113=54

Southern was led by Renee Turley's 13 points.
Southern hit 11-39 for 28 percent
and was 2-8 for 25 percent on
threes, while hitting 5- 12 at the line.
Federal"hit 19-36 for 55 percent and
was 0.2 on threes with 12-22 at the
line.
The Lancers won the battle of the
boards 35~ 21led· by Linscott's nine,

Buck's eight and Russell's six.
Moore had 10 for SHS. SHS had II
steals (Thrley five), seven assists
(Caldwell two), 23 turnovers, 20
fouls and no blocks. Federal had 15
steals (Linscott four, Hart three),
eight assists, 23 turnovers and 19
fouls.
Reserve notes: Federal won the
JV game 32-20 led by A. Linscott's
18 points and Trudo's seven.

.

For Southern, Jenny Roush had 1/3=3, Cynthia Caldwell 1-0.1=2,
Bea Lisle 1-0-0=2, Jonna Manuel2II . Flowers had se ven rebounds.
The future: Federal Hocking (6- l-010=7, Renee Turley 5-0.3/5=13. ·
6 overall, 6-3 TVC) will play at Kim Sayre 1-0-011=3. Brianne Prof:
Waterford Saturday, while Southern fitt 1-0-113=3. Totals: 11-2-S/12=33
Federal - Lori Bentley 2..0:.
(6-5, 5-4) will go to Trimble on
114=5, K. Hart 1-0- 314=5, Lisa
Monday.
Mahorney 3-0-214=8, Debbie Buck
Quarter ll!Wi
7-0-011=14,
Jenny Mahomey 1-0Southern ....... .. ............. 3-8- t 3-9=33
Federal Hocking ... ....9-16- 8-17=50 0/0=2, Gretchen Linscott 5-rt
Soulhem- Becky Moore t-O- 6/9= 16. Totals: 19-0-12122=50

I

to hold the Viking offense to only
four first period points in taking the
seven point lead after one period.
But Liz Zinn sparked the Vikings
in the second period with seven
points as the Vikings took a 22-17
lead at the half. Meigs was able to
close the gap to within 29-26 at the
end of the third period, but the

Vikings were able to hold on down
the stretch.
Zinn led all scorers with 17 points
for the Lady Vikings (9-6 overall &amp;
6-3 in the Ohio Division).
Meigs (3-8 &amp; 3-5) had a balanced
attack led by Anne Brown's 10
points.
Meigs hit 13 of 49 from the floor

for a cool 26% and hit only nine of
21 from the line for 43%. Meigs
pulled in 33 rebcunds with Brown
grabbing 12. Meigs turned the ball
over 13 times.
Reserve notes: In the reserve
game Meigs jumped out to a 19-7
lead at the half and rolled to a 39- 12
.w\n. Meigs held the Vikings score-

••

Dassaylva 2-0-2=6, Anne Brown 4,
0-2=10, Ashley Roach 2-0-2=6,
Taryn Doidge 3-0-0=6. Totals: 13-09=35
Quarter~
Vinton County Brandi
Meigs ...... ..... ........... .ll -6-9-9=35
Minton 1-0-0=2, Heather Vance 1-0·
Vinton County........ 4- 18-7-1~39 1=3 , Amy Jewett 2-1 -2=9, Liz Zinn
Meigs - Rebekah Smith 0-0· 4-2-3= 17, Marla Hale 0-1-0=3,
2=2, Cheryl Jewell 2-0-1=5, Kristen Genia Fee t-0-3=5. Totals: 9-4-9=39

less in the first and second periods.
Tracey Coffey led Meigs with II
points, Mary Yocum led Vinton with
eight.

In Top 25 college basketball,
By The Aaaocletecl Prell
Ninth-ranked Memphis had
~omething in reserve for Arkansas.
Rodney Newsom and Chad Allen
beth came off the bench and became
stars Thursday night, leading the
Tigers past ArkansljS 94-72 for their
28th straight win at home.
Newsom made seven of 12 threepointers and scored 23 points, and
also had eight rebounds. Allen had
20 points and nine rebounds, includ·ing eight on the offensive end.
"We were ready and played with
chemistry," Memphis coach Larry
Finch said. "I can't say enough about
the way Chad Allen and Rodney
Newsom played. Cominll into the

game, our bench was.n't scoring a.lot,
but that all ch81\ged. "
Lorenzen Wright had 20 points as
Memphis ( 12-2) stopped the Razorbacks' four-game winning streak in
the series.
"Chad Allen was the big difference in the game. Lorenzen is going
to get his, but if anyone gave them a
chance to win, it ·was (Allen),"
Arkansas coach Nolan Richardson
said.
The game was tied at 55 when
Memphis reeled off a 19-1 run, led
by Newsom and Allen. Newsom hit
three consecutive three-pointers,
then Allen worked inside for six

In winter basebtilll meetings,

straight points.
In other games involving ranked
teams, No. II Virginia Tech defeated Dayton 63-62, No. 13-UCLA beat
Arizona State 87-73, No. 15 Utah
downed Colorado State 86-82 in
double overtime, No. 16 Iowa topped
Illinois 82-79 and No. 18 Arizona
defeated Southern Cal.ifornia 93-81.
No. 11 Virginia Tech 63
Dayton 62
Ace Custis scored 17 points,
including a free throw with I:25 left
that produced the final point of the
game. Dayton had a last chance, but
Coby Turner missed a double-pump .
jump shot from just inside the f,oul

line with four seconds left.
Damon Watlington scored 13
points and passe!! the I,000-point
career mark for host Virginia Tech
(Il-l , 4-0 Atlantic 10). Ryan Perryman had 17 for Dayton.
No. 13 UCLA 87
Arizona Stale 73
UCLA won its IOth straight game
despite playing most of the second
half without star Charles O'Bannon.
Coach Jim Harrick benched O'Bannon after he was called for a technical foul for taunting Arizona State
center Okeme Oziwo.
Jelani McCoy scored 21 points
and Toby Bailey and J.R. Henderson
each had 15 for the Bruins (12-3, 5-

.

Owners vote 28-0 for interleague play
:esy JOHN NADEL

: LOS ANGELES (AP)- To Bud
:Selig, the concept of the Mets playing the Yankees, the Dodgers meet::ing the Angels, or the Cubs facing
•;the White Sox is a no-brainer.
~: Selig has been dreaming about
: interleague play since before many
; current big-league stars were born,
so Thursday was an especially sig: nificant day for him.
, "All of a sudden, you're going to
.l have people coming into ballparks
who fans have never seen (in per:son)," Selig, baseball's acting commissioner, said after club owners
•.unanimously approved the start of
-interleague play in 1997 .
, "You're creating new excitement,
'you're creating new opportunities,
you're creating new potential."
Selig was almost giddy on the
final day of baseball's winter meel;
ings, and it had nothing to do with
the fact that Thursday was his wed-

ding anniversary.
going to be busloads of fans going up
"My wildest dreams never con- to Yankee Stadium or Fenway Park
ceived of us having a 28-0 vote for when we play up there."
it," he said. "I have believed in interThe Major League Baseball Playleague play even before I got into ers Association must aP,rove the
baseball. I used to ask myself what idea, but owners said they weren't
are 1he negatives. I think the posi-. worried about union rejection. In
tives so far outweigh the negatives. fact , union head Donald Fehr
"I wish we could have done it in expressed immediate support .
1996, but it was too late. It was long
"The concept of interleague play
overdue. This will be a tremendous in major league baseball is certainly
success. There isn't a doubt in my intriguing, worthy of serious conmind."
sideration," Febr said. "As we look
Each team will play 15 or 16 for new ways io grow the game and
inter league games in 1997, the first make it better for our fans , interthat count in the baseball record league games deserve a hard look."
books other than the All-Star game
Selig said owners aren't conand World Series.
cerned the two eventual World Series
" I've believed in this for years," teams might play each other during
said Philadelphia Phillies owner Bill the regular season.
"There's nothing in the Constitu·
Giles, one of the plan's creators. "It
tion of the United States that forbids
just took time to get it through.
"I'm looking forward to seeing that," Selig said. "I remember sitting
the Red Sox and Yankees and so at lhe Super Bowl last year and
forth play in Philadelphia. There's watching San Francisco play San

Diego, and . somebody said they
played last November. There was no
less interest."
In the first year of interleague
play, each team in the AL East will
play a three-game series against
each team in the NL East, and each
AL Central team will play a three game series against each NL Central
team. AL West teams will play four
games against NL West teams, but
they might be split into a two-game
series in each city.
Selig predicted the designated
hitter, used by the AL since 1973,
wouldn't become a sticking point.
NL president Len Coleman and AL
president Gene Budig said that in
1997, the DH probably will be used
in AL ballparks only.
The union wants the DH expanded to both leagues because it creates
high-salaried jobs. But owners have
proposed the elimination of it in the

Oh, they won't say it publicly,
By ALAN ROBINSON
having
been forewarned by coach
PITISBURGH (AP) - The
Bill
Cowher
to avoid any imprudent
Pittsburgh Steelers are underdogs by
comments
that
might wind up on the
13 112 points, already the fourthlargest margin in Super Bowl histo- Cowboys' bulletin board. But sever·
ry. If the spread keeps building, the ·al Steelers clearly are perturbed by
Dallas Cowboys will be the biggest the lack of respect given the team
favorites since the Baltimore Colts in with the 4-0 Super Bowl record.
"We don't consider ourselves
January 1969.
underdogs,"
receiver Yancey ThigMaybe that's just the incentive
pen
said.
"We're
not going to go out
these supposedly can't-win Steelers
there
thinking
we
have nothing to
need, After all, the .New York Jets
lose.
We
do
have
something
to lose.
didn't jusl beat the point spread in
· that memtirable Super Bowl, they We have a game to lose. We have a
championship to lose. And this team
beat the Colts.
Just like the Steelers thiQk they hates to lose."
Quarterback Neil O'Donnell
can beat the Cowbcys.

'I

OPac-IO), whohavewon 14inarow
over Arizona State.
Ron Riley had 28 points and Jeremy Veal had 26 for the Sun Devils.·
No. 15 Utah 86
Colorado State 82 (2 OT) . .
Utah overcame an 80-77 deficit m
the closing minutes of double overtime at Salt Lake City behind Keith ~
Van Horn.
Van Horn made two free throws
and a JUmp shot. then passed to Ben
Mdmeth, who dunked for a threepomt play. Van Horn had 22 pomts
and II rebounds for the Utes (13 -3,
5-1 Western Athletic Conference).
No. 16 Iowa 82, Illinois 79
Chris Kingsbury, benched at the
beginning of the game, scored 18
points and led Iowa in the last two
minutes.
Coach Tom Dav1s, disappointed
in the Hawkcycs' loss to Wisconsin
last Saturday, pulled Kingsbury and
two others from the starting lineup.
Kings~ury made a ·three-pointer
with I :42 left for a 78-77 lead and
added two foul shots with 21 seconds
to go. Jess Settles scored 19 for host
Iowa (14-3, 3-2 Big Ten).

I've still gol a senior class down find Denison at Allegheny, Earlham
there that came in with me - Scott at. Wooster and Ohio Wesleyan at
Schwartz, Anthony Robinson, Aaron Kenyon.
In addition to Ohio at Akron,
Smith and Mark- Balusik. I'm still
·
MAC
games include Toledo at
interested in what's going on with
Bowling
Green, Miami of Ohio at
them.••
.
Central
Michigan
and Kent at WestHunter said, " I spent 16 years of
my life- 16 beautiful years- with em Michigan.
Ohio S.tate hosts Minnesota in the
Wittenberg. That's an inportant part
Big
Ten, while Xavier is at St.
of my life. Anybody who was a part
Bonaventure
in the Atlantic I0,
of that _time, or a pan ofWittenbers.
Wright
State
visits
Wisconsin-Milmeans a lot to me."
waukee
and
Detroit
is at Cleveland
So while the two joust at Rhodes
Arena, they might also save at least State in the Midwestern Collegiate
a little concern for Wittenberg as it Conference and Youngstown State
travels to Eastern Dlinois in the Mid·
hosts Oberlin. · ··
Continent.
Other NCAC games Saturday

••

respect is go out there and win next
Sunday."
But if the public 's general apathy
toward the Steelers' chances is upsetting the mood or mentality of their
locker room, it isn't apparent. Each
new prediction causes only another
shrug, and each new controversial .
statement from the Cowboys' Valley
Ranch complex barely draws a reaction.

O'Donnell's reaction Thursday
was typical of his teammates' : So
what?
"A lot of people have written us
off all season, they wrote us off when
we were 3-4," O'Donnell said.

Ashland is at Northern Michigan
in the Great Lakes Conference, while
Hiram visits Mount Union, Ohio
Northern is at Baldwin-Wallace,
Heidelberg at Muskingum, Capital at
Otterbein and Johrt Carroll at Marietta in the Ohio Conference. Bluffton
entertains Thomas More·in the.Association of Mideast Colleges. And Rio
Grande is at Tiffin, Malone at Walsh,
Mount Vernon Naz~ne at
Cedarville, Shawnee State at Findlay
and Ohio Dominican at Urbana in
the Mid-Ohio Conference.
'
Central State is at Kentucky State
and Lalce Erie travels to St. John
Fisher.

•'

Illinois (11 -6, 0-5) is off to it~
worst start in coach Lou Henson's 21
seasons.
No. 18 Arizona 93
Soulhern California 81
Ben Davis, making his first sta(l
at center for Arizona, had 21 poinis
and II rebounds.
Davis moved from forward t.o
center after Joseph Blair was rule~
academically ineligible Monday.
Corey Williams. in the starting lineup because of Blair's absence, haC!
18 points and II rebounds for the
host Wildcats ( 12-3, 2-2 Pac-10) .

TEEN SCENE
Game Room
Located in former
Locomotive bldg. on
Mechanic Street,
Pomeroy
Mon-Fri 3 p.m .-Midnight
Sat &amp; Sun
11 a.m. - Midnight

tl£J 1996 CHEVY

CORSICA

auto., tilt, cruise, cass.,

agreed, saying, "I hate to lose. I really do."
·
Running back Erric Pegram and
linebacker Chad Brown also questioned the point spread, wondering if
it truly reflected the strengths of the
two teams.
"Thirteen points? Already?"
Pegram said / We're not even close
to playing the game yet."
"The Washington Redskins beat .
them twice, so they're not unbeatable," Brown said. " It's a little frustrating, and I don't feel as though we
get very much respect. But we're not
going to earn respect by saying we
don't get it. The only chance to earn

..

AL.

Vegas makes Cowboys two-TD favorites

as

Mldoorli SZ, Bay 4t

Millord69, Urna Sr. j9

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Vinton County outscored Meigs
18-6 in the second period to erase a
11-4 deficit and go on to defeat the
Lady Marauders 39-35 in girls' TriValley Conference basketbalt!Ction
Thursday evening at McArthur.
Meigs came out of the blocks fast

that caliber in the Mid-American
Conference: somebody who has a
good work ethic, who knows basketball. is .a good coach and a good
person. Other than whe?, he plays us,
I want him to succeed.
They have never been particularly close off the floor. But they share
so much - including Wittenberg's
rich history
the winningest program in NCAA Division lll.
Both are ~onsu~ by their currena jobs and teams and players. But
both admilthey keep an eye out for
WittenberJ .scores.
.
AskCII if he still followed the
Tigers, HipUier said, "All the time.

NOW IN STOCK

Blpo 55, Bucbye VII!- 2S

Mllioa Local o46. l'lrllway «&lt;

'

played a bit sluggishly, then the
Lancers roared to a 25-11 halftime
lead.
Southern made a third period rally to pull back to within nine at.3324, but Federal had a big fourth quarter to pull away for the win, 50-33.
Federal Hocking was led by
Gretchen Linscott's 16 points and
Debbie Buck's 14.

Ohio college forecast..._...;.&lt;C:...:.on_lin_ued_fro_m_Pa~ge_4l;...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

TI RES

SNOW ·

..,.18

36

saved us, but I guess a win's a win ."
Eastern hit 24-53 (all twos) and
was 6-13 at the line for 46.1 percent.
Eastern outrebcunded Trimble 41 2.5, led by Aeiker's 17, Karr's ei ght
and Brannon's six. Eastern had eight
steals (Aeiker 4), 18 turnovers, six
assists (Karr 6) and II foul s.
Trimble hit 1-9 threes and was 1463 overall, hitting just 4-14 at the
line. Trimble had 25 rebounds
(Koons 7, Pettit 6), had II steals
(Sherry Davis 4), II turnovers, eight
assists (Sherry Davis 3) and had 13

In Super Bowl XXX vs. Steelers,

Pomeroy, OH.

Kemon R.idp: 108, Greenan 33
KiDJI 57, WilmiftiiOD l6
l.Wvlew 64. Hubblnl 47
l.eelonia 61 , Columbiana 45
lcxinJian 48, Mwf.eld Sr. 3S

B~ld &lt;16, Yoo. Lillefty 53
Bryon 45, l'alric:l Henry 43
BudMet"64, Ailloo Fiml- 41
Cada47. Wcii1Villel7
·CIIIIIWi-76 FlirlicldU-

Cot. Wbe111oae 42, Col. C..OIIIII

Symmes Vml. 47, Porurriouth Clmy J4
Teays Val. 73, 8Joom..Carroll.14
Tiffin Columbiana S I, B~~eyrus 32
. Tel. Bowsher ]9, Tol. Libbey :n
T()i. Christian 52, CardinW Srritch 44
To!. Notte ~ 62, Tol. Slillt 45
Tmr: of Ure 59, Cardinaron 40
Tuscarawas Val. 48, Tuslaw 38
Union Local .57, Bridgeport 28
V11111ue" Sl, ~-Rawson 4S
Vinton Co. 39. Meia:l 3S
W. HQimet 41 , 0earfiork 30
W. Jeffenon 79. Mlldison Plains .17
W. Ubeny Salem 47, Fmirbanks ]8

o.,...

Bia Wlllnuo76, JO!IIIhan Alder 40

'*

Hardin Nonhmt 68, VIII Buren 52
llealh 98. Lakewood 41
Hilltop 64, Penisville 36
Holaatc 48. Arwwap28
H..,.weii-Loudc&gt;D 63. Caley 39
Howland 48, Clllfldd 44
Independence 45, Columbia 41

Wayoe11

Jewen-Scio 60, Ridaewood 46
Kalilll68, Lirr. Cam. 53
Kuuu Lakota 6),
4l

&amp;lonchea... ~l . -~r... 40 !011

Cln. Coonll)' Illy ll, N. Collep Hil
.
Cln. MouM Noao Dome $t,Cin. l'llr·
cell Morion 17
Clo. 0otc Hill• 61,CiL Alt.o :lO
Cln. Taylor 47. Madeira 23
Cle. I-:!'- W. 60, - ) ' l l l l
"Col. Brigl 44, ,Mirioo Fnnklln 41
:14 C9l. B""*""ven
. . 81, Col. NOI!IIIu!d
Col. l!uanoor $8. W..... IUdpol3
Col. tn• t ' . 44, Col. 5oodl :til
Cot. Llodeo-McKialey "54, Col:8
oft40
•
Col. Mlfllia.7, Col. S.45

Gallipolis6?, Mtlietta S9
Garaway 66, Llkelaad 26
Granville 35, Licking H11. 16
Oreeneview .Sl, E. Clinton 40
Htunillon Badin .50, Cln. Mc:NiehoiU

&lt;on

IIC1a 57. Stloleph Academy 32

'

SteubetiYille sa. Martiu Feny ss
Stryker 57. Edoo 49
Sylvlllia NorthYiew 82. Oregon Clay
4S
·
Sylvania Southview 62, Anthony

Jac:\uon Cenlel' 60, Ruuia:W
Jackson Millon M. Sprina. Local 60

52

5l

Fildlay 108, Fostoria 14
Fisher Cath. 52. Berne Union ~9
For! Frye 76. Coldwell S9
FredcrickiOwn 51, Mansfield Otr. 44
Fn:mont Rou 66, Tol Whirmr:r 58
Ftell'IOIIt St. Joseph 59, N. Baltimore

New Rei~l6~. Mohawk 31
Newcomenlown .57, Strasbuq41
Nordonim41. Willughby S. 39 \
Nor1hrid,ge 25. E. Kno:JL 28
Oak Glen, W.V3. SO, Beaver Local ]8
Olmsted Falls 60, Wcsdake 44
Ouawa-GIIUidorf 81, Kenlon 37
Ottoville 76. Pandom-Gilboo 57
Painl Vat 76, WestfD.II67
Pauklina 60. Columbus Grove ~I
Peebles .54, Wesrem Lalham 48
Penysbura 49. Rosaford 20
Piketon 48, Zane Trace 42
Plymouth 56, New London 4J
Porlsmoutb 47, lrooton 46
Portsmouth E. SS, Portsmouth NOIJC
Oame44
Ravenna 51, Kcn1 Rooaevclt40
Reedsville £litera 54, Trimble l~
Richmond Dole SE 73. Huntin&amp;lon 71
Richmond Edison 59, Indian Creek
.53
Rklgtdalt 73, Nonhmor 35
Rocky River Macnificat 77,
Stronssville 55
S. Cencral64. Monroeville 46
S. O.t~rlcston SE 91, Cr:darviUe 33
S. Range 62. Lowellville ll
Snlem 5.5, Girord &lt;18
SI!Jidy Vlll. S5, Akron M3ncbesler 41
Sherw{)( J Fairview 98, Aymville 49
Soulhern Local 52, Cofumbiana
ClCSfview 46
Sparta Highland 62, N. Union 32
Spencerville 57, I\ lien E. 49
Spring. Cmtbolic 59, Tipp City 32
Spring. Nonheaalr:n 56, Sprina .

lodiu Val. )9, Faille» l2
lodiana Deaf l7, Ohio Deaf 18

Bachwood 26, Richmond Hu. ~7
Beaumont 38, SC. AuJIIIIine 54
Bellaire St John 49, Sh.tyside 31
Bcllefonl.llne 61, Tecumocll&lt;2
Bellevue 67, Willard 44
Belpre 66, Wellston 61
Benjamin Lopn 33, Mechanicabura

2S

1

Delta H. Montpelier 32
Dover 54, St. Oainvillc: 40
E. Palealine 42, Sebrin&amp; 32
Eutem Pike 82, Glenwood 29
Easllake N. 67, Brush 41
Eas1wood 78. Nonhwood ~9
Elida 67, Uma Shawnee S8
·Elmwood ~l. Genoa 49
Euclid 46, Maple Hts. )2
Fairlawn 64, Bolki111 47
, Fairview 98, Ayenville49
Fa)'&lt;lle Sl. N. Cenlrll 2S
Fedenll Hockin&amp; SO. Racine Soothern

.

"Betllll Hilud 76, Tu1canwu Cath.

Nevllll 72. uc ..... - . 64

••• New Jeney-,1::.0 p.m. .

)4f

W. Kenlucky 68, Tens-Pan Ame-rican
lO
' .

Cenrral St 7.9. Mu,;b.·Dearbom 76
Mount Vernon NllWCne 94, LaRoche

Greol Lakes lnlercolleeiote

14

Tolll&amp;bl'• pmes

(OT)

Ohio women's
college scores

~8

Thursday's scoreo

4

81

South
II

Defiuce 70, Wapakoneu~o S7
DcQraff Riverside 47, Ridacmoot AS

to put the stubborn Tomcats away,
54-35. Karr had six assistS on the
night and Aeiker had four big steals.
Eastern coach Scott Wolfe said,
"Trimble played a good defense
tonight and we were very sluggish
after a big win on Wednesday.
"I wanted to look good for the
hometown crowd, but it was somewhat ugly," Wolfe said. ''The final
score was- not an indication of the
closeness of the game. We didn 't
attack the weak spots in the defense.
Executing some fast breaks really

Memphis beats Arkansas 94-72; UCLA &amp; Arizona also win

Annual boxing .tournament
draws 14 local contenders

W.:48

Danville 82. Lucus 26

Non·coolercnee ploy

AlaOOmaSt 82. Troy St . 80
Campbell69, Fla. lntemarional66
Centenary 94, Jacksonville Sl. 85
Omrleslon Southem86, Winthrop69
CoiL of Charleston 61 , Aorida Allarllie

·: . WESTERN CONFERENCE
4

1\Ud-Ohlo Conference
RIO GRANDE 84. Findluy 74
Urbana 84, Tiffin 71

Easl

Boscon Univ. 73, Hofslm 61
Drekel 87, Nort~a.uem M
Fnirfitld 7S, 'Manhauan6S
Hartford 79, Delaware: 77
• lona K7, Loyola, Md. 62 .
Mnrshall Ql , West Virginia 87
Towson St. 69, Vennont67

Olia~~o ............. :.... 33

, .. TcrOIKO ............ .... :10 28

l...ak.e .SUperior St. 76, Alhland 66

NCAA Division I
men's scores

A.lllnde Divillon

• loa

C01hoCtoo 56, Cambrid1e 49
Cuynhoaa Falls 70, Stow 63
Cuyahop Hts. 51. Aurora 36
Danbury 55, Onawa Hills 4]

Greot Lakes lntnc:ollegiote

CLEVELAND Ill Por1hmd, 9 p.m

:Easte.r n girls record 54-35 division win .over Trimble

Vinton County comes from behind to beat Meigs 39-35

Scoreboard

I,,••·

l

four North Coast Conference titles in
his four years. He went on to spend
two seasons at Stetson before taking
the Akron job last year. .
"I knew him a lot of years,"
Hunter said of Hipsher. "I ~ew him
from my Wittenberg years, wben we
went up there and played at Bowling
Green while he was there. I knew
him when he was at Dayton.
"It's good "to have ·someone of
(See FORECAST on Page 5)

; --~--~~--------------------------~~~~~~------------~~~==~~~

By SCOTT WOLFE
The Federal Hocking Lancers
remained in second place of the TriValley Conference race behind Eastem after posting a 50-33 triumph
over the Southern Tornadoes Thursday in girls' varsity Hocking Division play.
"federal Hocking took a 9-3 lead
in the first period as both teams

Steals: 1 (Hamen 3)
Thrnovers: 8
Fouls: 22
Fouled out: Daniels

Findlay............•................32-42=74
RIO GRANDE - Caudill 6/8Rio Grande..... ;............. ....34-50=84 . 4112-213=26, Snyder 3/6-3/8-214=17,
Schreck 6/6-0/0-212= 14, Laval a 4/5FINDLAY .:._ Sands 6/10-213- 0/0-213= 10, Morgan 3/6-0/1-1/6=:7,
012=18, Hamen 315-3/4-2/4=17, J. Burris 317-0/0.012=6, E. Burris
Bishop 0/3-3/6-0/0=9, Siefker 213- 213-0/0--0/0=4,. Totals: 27/411/4-212=9, Daniels 212-1/3-0/0=7, 9/20=84
Ireland 2/4-tn~0/0=7, Kaple OilTotal FG: 34-62 (54.8% l
til -0/0=3, Compton 1/5-0/0-0/0=2,
Rebounds: 48 (Snyder 12)
Conley 1/3-0/1-0/0=2. Totals:
Blocked shotS: none
17137-12130-4111=7.4
Assists: 12 (Morgan 7)
Rebounds:32(Sands8)
Steals: 3
Blocked shots: none
Thrnovers: 17
Assists: 13 (Daniels 4)
Fouls: 14

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Federal Hocking girls tally 50-33 victory over Southern

Rio
Grande
men
hand
Findlay
84·741,
o
ss
.
Rio Grande's Redmen shook off
being behind twice in Thursday
~ight's Mid-Ohio' Conference home
game against Findlay to notch an 847.4 win.
The Redn;ten ( 14-6 overall &amp; 7-3
in the MOC) saw the 11-6 lead they
had in .the game's first five minutes
disappear under the weight of the

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Outscoring Trimble 15-3 in the Sherry Davis each added five.
third quarter, host Eastern rolled to
Eastern rolled to a 17-II first
a 54-35 Tri-Valley Conference vic- period lead, then played even the
tory over · the Trimble Tomcats second round for a 26-20 halftime
Thursday in girls'.varsity high school advantage.
basketball action.
Eastern shot just 3'1 6 in the secJunior Patsy Aeiker led the Eagles ond quarter from the floor and was
(9·3 overall &amp; 7-2 in ,the TVC's . 3-6 from the foul line.
Hocking Division) with 21 points
Led by three Aeiker steals and an
and 17 rebounds. Poinr guard Jessi- aggressive fast break, Eastern blitzed
ca Karr had' 15 points.
Trimble 15-3 to lead 41 -23. Trimble
Beth Koons led the Tomcats (3-9 fought bacl&lt;; to within 13 points in the
&amp; 3-5) with 16 points and seven final round, but Eastern regained
rebcunds, while Tanya Trace and some momentum jn the final round

men beat West Virginia 91-87

By MATT HARVEY
· CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)Marshall has conquered West Virginia. Coach Billy Donovan doesn't
want to stop there.
, The Thundering Herd defeated
West Vuginia 91-87 on Thursday at
the Charleston Civic Center, with
Keith Veney hitting six three-pointers and scoring 29 points. Marshall
(8-5) snapped a four-game losing
streak in the series and cut WVU's
all-time edge to 17-7.
Last season, Donovan's first as
Marshall coach, the · Thundering
Herd lost 89-82 to West Virginia.
· "It was a big win, no question."
Donovan said. " It's a big intrastate
tivalry. I was really concerned. Outside of the Kentucky game, this was
ihe most talented team we ' ve
played."
However, "This is not the national championship. This is something
to build on," he said.
•
West Virginia has been busy,
meanwhile, tearing itself llown.

. Friday, January 19, 1996-

Was $15,220.

LS decor, air, cassette.
Was $13,247

NOW$1

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13

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1992 OLDS DELTA 88 ................................................... $7965
2-1992 OLDS CUTLASS ...............................................$7495
1993 CAVAUER Z24 ...................................................S10,&amp;10·
1992 ASTRO CONVERSION VAN .............................. $13,490
1991 CHEVY CORSICA................................................. $3185
1995 TOYOTA PICKUP..................................-;................ $1110
1993 FORD F150 XLT ................................................$15,995
Ext. cab, flarnide, V8, auto., 26,000 mlln.
1992 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE 2 clr., air, aharp............. $5915
1989 CHEVY CORSICA, V6, auto., air, ahllrp .............. l3915

All UHCI Cera a Trucks Mull GO.
Taxea and title fee not Included.
All paymenliiUbject to ..... epprtJYal

DOll TATE MOTORS,
IrS WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

�Pu tor: Rev, Roland Wildman
Sunday school ond wonhip 10:~

Church of Chnst
.

""'-"1 Chord&gt; ofCinill
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

1

Wonbip- l0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Sel'ices · 7 p.m.
Putor: James Miller
Sllllday School - 10:30 a.m.

Pomeroy Wesulde Church ot Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School'- II a.m.
Worship · lOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Evenins - 7:30p.m.
Wednl:lda Se '
7 30

Assembly of God

Middleport Church of Chrlll
5th ond Main
Pastor: AI Hartsoo
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won hip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m .

Uberty Asambly ot God

P.O. Box4SI, Duddfn&amp; Lane

M111on,W.Va.
· Pastor: Neil Tennant
SW!diy Servi&lt;es- 10:00 Lm. 111d 1 p.m.
Thunda Pn
. '. ' 1

.

Baptist

Keno Choirch ot Christ
W011hip - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
ht ood 3rd Sunday

H..,. BapljoiCiwrch (Soulllem)
570 Gnut SL, Middleport
Sunday achool - 9:4' a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m. ond 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Free Will Baptist C~urch
Ash Su.et, Middlepon
Pastor: La Hayman
Sundiy Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday Schtlol - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Sel'ice-7:30 p.m .

..

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Tuppers Ploln Church of Christ
Pastor: Stanley Mincks
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
W011hip - 9,45 a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Bradbury Church of Christ
Pallor: Rkk Snyder
Sundoy School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:3p a.m.

First BapUst Church
Pastor: Mark Monow
6ch ond Palmer SL, Middlepon
SundaySchool - 9o!S a.m.
Wonhip -IO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.'
Wednesday Sel'ice- 7:00 p.m.

•

.

~·

.••

::·
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·:

ZIIMI Church ot Christ
Pomeroy, HarriJ&lt;nville Rd. (RL143)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sur&gt;day School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

RuUud Jllna Baptist Chord&gt;
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.
Puna...., Flnt Baplllt
Putcir: Poul Slinson
EutMain St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Flm Soulhem Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00,p.m.

::·•

...
• .••
::

Bearwallow Rldile Church or Chrlot
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship - IOJO a.m., 6'30 p.m.
Wednesday S&lt;Mceo- 6:30p.m.

\

·'

::

·:••

·...
••

Rutland Church or Christ
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday Sehool - 9:30am.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
Comer of SL Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Keith Cooper
Youth Minister: Michael Teaaorden
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

RKine Flnt Baptist ·
Pastor: Rev. Lany Haley
Youth PaslOr: Aa roo Young
,Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip ·- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Worship • 8:00a.m .• 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Liule
Sunday School- IOa.m.
Worship· lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 :30p.m.

Hickory Hills Chun:h of Christ
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School • 9a.m.
Wonhip - IOa.m., ?p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

MI. Unloo ·Baptist
Pastor: Joe N. Sayn:
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening -6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 6:30p.m,

Llb..-ty Chrlotlan Church
Dexter
Pastor. Woody CaU .
Sunday Evenmg - 6:30 p.m.
Thunday Service - 6:30 p.m.
Langsvlne Christian Church

Bethlehem Baptist
Racine. OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
W011hip - 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study - 7:00p.m. Wednesday

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30pm.
Wednesday Sel'i&lt;e 7:30p.m.
H.., lock Grove Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school - 10:10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30 .a.m.. 7 p.m.

Old Jlelllet F'rft Will Bapdst Chon:h
28601 SL Rt. 7, Middlepnn
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7:30p.m.
Thunday Sel'ices - 7:30 ·

·.·.:.
.
•• .
·••.•
'

.•
••
•
•

•

•

•

Rc&lt;dsvllle Church of Chrlot
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
WonhipSen'ice: 10:10a.m.
Bible Study, Wedneaday, 6:30p.m.

Hillside O.pllst Church
St. Rt. 143 juSL off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wo.,mp- lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford C~urch of Christ In
Chrllllan Union
Hartford,-W.Va .
Postor: Rev. David McManis
SIDiday School - II a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 Lm., 7:30pm.
Wednesday Service•- 7:30p.m.

.VIctory Baptist lndependant
S2S N. 2nd SL Middlepon
PaslOr: Jam~ E. Keesee

Wonhip- 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
Faith llapllal Chun:h
Railroad SL, Mason
Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
tJ1
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Ariua Hurt
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
W011bip - 11 a.m.

Church of God
ML Moriah Church ot Ged
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James S•terfield
SW&gt;day School ' 9:4.5 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Rutlond Chun:b ot God
Pallor: Gn:gory L. Sean
Sundiy School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen;rices - 7 p.m.

Mt Morioh Bopllst
Pounh &amp; Main SL, Middleport
Putor: Rev. Gilbert Cnig, Jr.
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Wor~hip· - 10:45 Lm.

SyraCUH First Church of God
Apple ind Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David RuueU
Sunday School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 7:36 c
g.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:3 p.m.

AllllquiiJ Baplllt
SWI&lt;Iay Sehool- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm ..
Thunday Servicea - 7:30p.m.

t

''•I
•

(

'

.''

'

Kulla .. Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday.Sehool- 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
'
Wednesday Services - ? .p.m.

Church ot God or Prophecy
O.J. Whitt Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor. P.J. O!apman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
W011hip - II a.m.
_ Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

'

Cat holic

Chnter Church of God
S. R. 248 &amp; Riebel Rood, Diester
, Pastor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday S~l - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 6 P..m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Family Training Hour

Sacnd Heut Calltollc Chun:h
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Postor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
SaL Con. 4:4'-' :Up.m.; Man- 5:30p.m.
g..,_ Con. -l:4S-9:U a.m.,
Sllll'. Man - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Ma11 - 8:30 Lm.

Congregational

c,_ E.,..._l O•n:lo
326 E. Main SL , Pomeroy

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Mill Worl
Cabinet MalrnJ
Syr1cuse

212 E. Main Street
9!!2·3785 Pomeroy

Holiness

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

UCIIE IIOWEI CUIIC
IIU.QUICIB
. :ft2~77

....., ...... ,....d.
IIIOIIIIIURI llptll
.

949•2104

Central Cluster
Albuey (Sync,.)
Ps11or: Charlot NoviUe
~School · 9:4' a.m.
onbip- 11 a.m.
Wedneaday SeMccs - BO p.m.

Duvllle Holiness Church
31057 State Route 3~. Lansovlle
Pastor: Rev. Rick Maleyed
.
Sunday school - 9:30 Lm.
Sunday wonhip - I 0:35 a.m. .l 1 p.m.
Childrm's church - 10:35 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service • 7 p.m.

En~..

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - I 0 o.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Calvary Pllllflm Cllapet
Haniaonville Rosd
Pastor: Rev. Vittor R001h
Sunday School 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - II o.m., 7:30pm.
Wednesday Sel'ice · 7:30 p.m.

Pine Grove Bible Hollneaa Chun:h
112 ririle off RL 325
Postor: Rev. O'DeU Manley
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30pm.
Wednesday Sel'ice - 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holl- Chun:~
7 5 Pea r1 St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday ochool - 9:30 Lm.
Wqnhip - 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday Service - 1:30 p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Churcll
Pallor: Roben Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WOI1hip - 10,45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7:30p.m.
Laurel Clllf Free Methndl.t Church
Pastor: J'eter Tn:mbloy
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. ond 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:00p.m.
Rutland Ctllllmunlty Chun:h
Pastor: Rev. Ray McCany
Sunday School - 9:30 am.
Sunday EveniJt&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se~ces • 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
R"''f1anllll0d Church ot Jaus Christ
ot Latter Day Salnll
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Puwr: Janice Danner
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - I 0:30a.m.
Wednesday Sel'iccs - 7:30p.m.
The Church ot Jesua
C"rbt ot Lall&lt;r·Day Saints
St. Rl. 160, ~7 or~7486
Sunday Schooll0:20-ll Lm.
Relief Society/Prieothood II :0'· 12:00 nooo
SacnunemService 9-10:1' a.m.
Homemaltina mc:etin&amp;, ht Thun .- 7 p.m.

Luth era n
St. John Lutlseran Chon:~
Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn Spaldin&amp;
Wonhip ·9:00a.m.

'Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Our Saviour Lulhertu1 Church
Walnut ond Henry Sto., Ravenowood, W.Va.
lntrim poston: Georae C. Weinclt
S!Diday School- 10:00 Lm.
Wo11hip - 11 a.m .
St. Paul Lutlseran Church
Comer Sycamore&amp;: Second St.• Pcmeroy
Pastor. Dawn Spalding
Sunday School - g:4S a.m.
Wonhip • 11 ·a.m .

United Methodist
Gnham United Methodllt
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. (Ill&amp; :z.id Swt),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday S&lt;Mee · 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
p.,lor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip - !0:30a.m., 1 p.m.
Thunday Services - 1 p.m.
Melp Cooperative Parloh
Northeast Clulter
Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester

Plstor: Sbaim Hausman

F1atwoods

Pallor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wollhip · 11 a.m.

' Long Bottom

Putor: Rev. Cl!arlea Muh
Sunday School - 9JO a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Sel'i&lt;e~ -7 :30p.m.

RAWLINGS-COATS

H ..th (Midtloport)
Pallor: Vemaaaye Sullivan
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm..

214E. MMI .
992·5130 Pomt~W

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm. ond 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'icea - 7 p .m.

Chester Church otthe NazarPostor: Rev. H'f'bert Grate
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednea&lt;foy Sel'icea - 7 p.m.

New Haven Chun:h ottbe N_,_
Pastor: Glendon Stroud
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednl:lday Servi&lt;es - 7 p.m.

Mlri,...llle
PasLOr: O!.arles Neville
Sunday School - 9 am.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.

Other Churches
Qrlllllll Fellowlltlp Center

Salem St., Rutland

Pearl C~apel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Woohip- 10 o.m.

PallOr: Robert E. Muucr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 :15 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesdoy Sel'ice - 7 p .m.

Pomeroy
•
Postor: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday Sehool - 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study Tueoday - 10 a.m.

Hoblon Chrbtlu Fello-lp Churdl
Rev. Clyde Hendenon.
Sunday service, IO:OOa.m., 7 :10p.m.
Ywth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m .
Wcdneoday seMce, 7:30p.m.

Rod&lt;Sprl11p
Postor. Kctth Rader
SIDiday Sehool - 9: IS a.m.
Woohi{&gt; - 10 a.m.
.
Ywth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Faith FuU Gospel Chun:h
LongBouom
Pastor: Sieve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. ond 1 p .m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

Rudand
Sunday School - 9:30am ..
Worship- 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Services • 1 p.m.

The Believers' Fellowmlp Ministry
New Lime Rd ., Rlllland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7 :30p.m.
Sunday, BO p.m.

Sal... Ceater

Pastor: Ron Fierce
SIDiday Sehool - 9: IS a.m.
Worship- IO:IS Lm.
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wor1hip - 9 a.m .

Harrisonville Community C~un:h
Postor: Theron Durham
Sundo.y - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

llethAoy

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
SWiday School - 10 a.m.
Won hip · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services • tO a.m.

Pastor: Raben Vance
SWJday worship · 10 a.m .

Mornlac sfar
Putor: Kcmeth .Balter .
SWiday Schnol - 9:45 a.m.
Wonliip -10:30 Lm.
Thunday Setvices - 7:30p.m.
Sutton
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (lsi &amp; 3rd Sun)

EutLetarl

Wcdnaday service · 6:30p.m.

The Salvadon Army
liS BuuemuJ Ave., Pomeroy .
Saturday · 10 a.m.
Thul1day - 7 p.m.
Sunday - 7 p.m.
Middleport Community Church
S75 Pearl SL. Middlcpon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
SWiday SchooiiOa.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Service - 7 :30p.m.
Faith Tabernlcle Church
Boilcy Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
SID!day School - 10:00 a.m.
Evming 1 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
s ...day School - 10 a.m.

Wonhip · 9 a.m.

Wednesday - 7 p.m .

Thundaf Service - I p .m .

Radne
Pastor: Brian Hukness
Stmday Schnol - IOa.m .
Worship - II a.m.

Coolville United Melhodlst Parish
Poator: Helen Kline
Coolvlle Chur'(ll
Main &amp; Fifth St.
SWiday sehool- ·10 a.m.
Wonhi~ - 9 a.m .
Tuesday SeMc:es · 7 p.m.
llet1lel Church
Townohip Rd., 46SC
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Woohip- tO o.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Syr-oeMlalon
1411 Bridgeman SL, Syracuse
Sunday Schooi - IOa.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p .m.
· Hazel C..nmonlly Church
Off RL 124
PastOr: Edsi:l Hart
Sunday Schopl - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Dyosvlle C..nmonky Church
Sunday School -9 :30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
MO!'IO Chapel Chun:ll
Sundayo&lt;hool - 10 o.m .
Wo11hip - II a.m. ,
Wednesday Service · 7 p .m.

HocldiiJiport Church
GnndStreet
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Services • 8 p.m.

Fallis Gospel Church
l..DngBouom
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonbip- 10:45 a.m., 7:30pm.
Wti&lt;'nesday 7:30p.m.

Ton:h C~urch
Co. Rd. 63
School - 9:30 Lnl.
War1hip- 10:30 a.m.

Mt. Olive Commulllty Church
Pootor: Law....ce Buah
· Sunday School.· 9:30 Lm.
·
Evming - 7 p.m.
Wedncday Service - 7 p.m.
Middleport Clwrch ot the Nuueae
Pastor: G"cory A. Cunclilf
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Unlled Foltll Ch•ch
lb. 7 on l'omeroy By-Pall
Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday SchoOl - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip -10:30Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday SeMco - 1 p.m.

R-Ile Follo_.p
Church of lhe Nuarene

3304S Hilond Road, l'omelo)'
-.RayHtmler

~~~~~Cona~n~"J!.:.. .
c.tar Rtl.
-.OH45m
,._.,..._
Middleport

......

f.me.. ·

'Rocksprings U.M.C.
Women have Recipe,
Books for Sale for $7.00.
Call
. 992-3334, 992-7580

Carleton talerdenomlnatlonal Church
Kingsbury Rood
Pootor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
WonbipService !0:30a.m.
W011bip Sel'ice-hl ond lrd Stmdaf, 1 p.m.
N'o Wednesday livenin&amp; Semt:e

or992~5869

Public Notice

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31 '
Pu tor: Rev. Roser WiUford
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 7 p.m.

IFALP8ZW4RH201210

Thti Firmer• Benk and

,S aving•

Whlte'a Chapel Wesleyae
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W011hip - 10:30 a.m. Wednelday Sel'ice - 7 p.m.

Faith FelloWihlp Cruaede tor Ckrlot
Putor. Rev. Fnnldin Di&lt;k"'' ·
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeray Pike, Co. Rd.
Paotor. Rev. Bla&lt;kw-t.
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service ·7:30p.m.

...

Pomeroy ~lower Shop
.
'

Public Notice

1

Church or Jesus Christ,
Apoototk Faith
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New lima Rd.
Pattor: William Van Meter
Stmday-7:00 p .m.
Wednesday-? :00 p.m.
Fnday -7:00 p.m.
Clift,. Tabernacle Chun:h
Oilton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m,
' Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
PenttcQIIal A....,bly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Mlddleporl Pentecootal
Third Ave.

Postor: Rev. Oark Baker
Sunday School- IO.a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services - 7,()() p.m.

MIDDLEPORT

Wllrrentlal given.

HOME

, For .further Information,

contact Dellrae It 992-2138.

CHEAPER RAIES

Openings for 2.
Christian
itmoaphere for
elderly care In a
non-amoklng home.

(1) 17, 18, 19 3TC

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR.
Recine, Ohio 4Sn1

149-3013 Phone
149-2018 FAX

ROUND
BALES OF

'

.

SALE.
CALL

&amp; Framing Accessories .

IIODIRIIAift'AftOI

HAULING

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal · Commercial or Retldentlal
Sepdc Tanks Cleaned &amp; Ponabla Tolleta Remed.
Dally, wee~ly &amp; monthly rental rateli.

(Specl@llze In
Driveway Spreading)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992.-3470

•

-

12 Gauge
Fadory O.oke Only
MINI STORAGE

882·2996

'

'

.

SPRIN&amp;SOFT

Authorized IU Distributor
Welding Supplies • tnduatrlal Gases • Steel
Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
Alumlnum/Stalnlesa
Machine Shop

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

... n11171

St. Malon, WV

Forked Run

United Brethre n

Sportsman Club

eiiH of occupation• In each club, Kaylor Ia a
medical aupptles dealer white Kebler Ia a tax
·consultant In olhar business, officers preIIKited reports of currant activities and. ~~
datn an'd times for upcoming a&amp;Nice projects
Including the Rotary pencake breakf11t to be
held In March, the Junior High School Achlev•
ment BanqUet In May end the Adult Balle Edu·
cation Banquet scheduled for June.

Shooting Match
Sunday Starts
12 noon
Free Hotdogs
Factory choke gu(ls '
only 12 gauge
Fresh Butchered
Meat Every Sunday

115 E. Meinorlll Dr. Pomeroy

9112--2104

'

Serv-U {&amp;14) 645-11434

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

30 Announcements

-.

,.. ........,..
QINIIft~ .Wor•

I. D. CONSTRUCTION
Siding, Porches,
Decks,
Home Improvements,
Remodeling,
Add.()n'tt, Roofing
SaflsfKffon
GuarantHd ·

Bill Doerfer
(614) 992·2979

Are You Ready
For Love?

Call Now!!!l
1·900·255·2700
Ext. 9402
$2.99 per min.
Muel be 18 yro.
Touch tone phone
required.

Serv·U 619-645 8434

In Memory

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle

Neod n PhotD~Mpl•er for
yoar Specisl Oec,.,ioHF
•WIItdlngi/RICaptlona

-coupon•
•Annlvari8rlee

"--IIIa Prtcet

........

Cll1112·7747
Aflw4pm

During~
'

204 Condor St
Pomeroy; OH
992·2171·

,.,

....

Hou.. Rtpalr •
Remodeling

Kltchtnl Beth
Remodllii!IJ
Sidlng, llaoii.'11J, huoa

•F1111lly

Pomeroy

NEFF REMODELING
.SERVICE
Room Addltl-

-G~

,

J&amp;LINSULATION
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

992·2n2

Office Houre: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum ..~kllng,

VInyl Reptacemem,
Windows, Blown

Insulation, Storm
Doora, Stonn

Ge111ges.
Free Eollmetee

Windows,

1/111tfn

111-

Tractt:hoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hra.
. We ctlg basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949·2512
ll&amp;MONAB' IIIAT&amp;S
-

992·2955 .

$2.99 per min.
Muat bt18 yra.
Touch tone phone
required.

.New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL aod RESIDENTIAl.
FREE ESTIMATES

304 882·2996

Mulbeny H11. Rd., Pcmeroy
Postor: Roy Lawimky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m. ·
Wrohip - 3 p.m.

SJOCKS

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

New Haven, WV

s..eniii·Doy Ad•entlat

FIIIAIICE

ht. 3140

1f1c

Daa's Wat1r Reflllilg

Seventh -D&lt;Jy Adventi st

'1'Jawir"'1
ru

108 Pomeroy

UP·JO.DITE
SPORrS
AIDMOIEUI
1·900·371· i 100

Oxygen Acetylene CO.
Helium all alzea Medical Grade o.
P~ne Trimlx Ultra Mix

CIH1 Wtller S,lt...S

We Fill Doc:tora'
Preec:ripiiOna

614-742·2193

992·3954 or 985-3418 '· " "

!EniJIItllmant Plcturaa)

Mtmortal Ho.pltll

Denny &amp; Peggy Brlcklea

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

-Reunion•

v.terane

Rd.

Middleport, Ohio 45780

Limestone, Sand, Gravel, 'coat &amp; Water

tlflllln MO. pd.

SWISHER It LOHSE
PHARMACY

32124 Hippy Hollow

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
_SUN
•.I PM,
'

Middleport Presl&gt;yteriu
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

992-5432

,.,,.•,.

SAWMILL

12123/1 mo

lfti.I·WAY

RlfiL TIMI
SRVIRS

H&amp;H

REG. HOURS
Mon.-Wed. 10-4:30
Fri.-Sat 10-4:30
Closed
Thurs. lfr Sun.
102 East Main
Pom.eroy
992·7696

WICKS

Corr4llflllll Sllll • Prlcel

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

·-·-1111.

(Umt Stone-Low Ratn)

Harrlsonvlle Presl&gt;yterltui Cllurch
Worship - 9 Lm.
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.

"FNIUflnQ Kentucky Frilld CIIJ4::ken"l

betWaan 8 am.;e pm'
Mon. thru sat .

BOUSE

NewAI

405 North Second Ave., Middleport 992 -SOl!O

614·949·2512

are

Crow'a F•mlly R•..ur•nt

· Call 992-4025

IIRftiiLL

·&lt;7,he
Cotne'l
Picture Frame, Mats

HAY fOR

11

CC?.mmun ity·_ calendar·

Pick-Up dlacar*.d
washers, dryert,.hot
water tanka, stovee,
furnaces, and IIIMY
metal materials

11/131111 1 'mo.

kin, or lhe RCCSOn who will be resp-on-· into lhe ministry. II was he who gave
si_ble
for y_olu- \lUria!, knows lhat it is. the blessing at our anniverSary party
Ann
· Almost all moftuaries are willing SS years later. -- G.L., Menasha, Wis.
Landers ·to provide a siniple wooden box. Dear Menasha: What a sweet letShould a mortuary be unwilling to ter. You and Earl are lovely role mod=·~
handle lhe sei'Vite un~ss you buy an els for us all. May you have many
c - ~. expensive caskel from them, call more happy years togelher.
another mortuary.
Dear Ann Landers: Please advise .
'
- \
By ANN. LANDERS
!'eople have become more enlight- .your readers not to bring lheir guns
Dear Ann. Landers: YiiZhak Rabin, ened about burials and are opting for .when they come to Canada. Many
the late prime minister o(Israel, was , simplicity rather than ostenlation. U.S. citizens don't know that carrycarried to 1$ grave In a Hag-draped · They are beginning to realize that ing a gun in Canada is not legal
plain,wooden box. For years, I have ..,how we treat our loved ones when . unless you have a firearms permit,
which is hard to come by.
considered leaving instructions that they are alive is what matters.
Every day, Canadian Cusloms
lhe sam~ happen to me.
Dear Ann Landers: In response to
I fear iny heirs might buy a fancy your request for stories wilh a special confiscates guns from visitors. and
_casket costing thousands of dollars. twist abou(how you met your mate, subjects them to a minimum fine of
$500 for not declaring the weapons.
·- Pl~e help me get things·arranged in I submitlhe following:
If you are coming to Canada and
advance. Surely funeral homes don't
We met at 9:00 at a ballroom
sell plain boxes. Must I pre-anange dance, walking toward each olher, carrying a gun, please advise Canawith a carpenter? Would . a funeral almost colliding. Both of us jumped dian Customs upon entering. They
ho111e. ~till offer its hearse and gravein lhe same direction and again a sec- will keep the firearm for you 10 pick
si~_ 'servicos if I didn'tlluy one of Qndtimeandalhird.Atthlltpoint,he up on your return stateside. -- Sault
thetr caskets? 'Yould a cemetery grabbed my ann and ~d. "Well, as Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada
accept me in a plain box? Would I be long as you're getting in my way, we:
Dear Friend: It's obvious lhat
~viol~~· · any slate, local or federal
might as w~ll dance.'' ·
Canada doesn 't want any gun-totin'
;. ~regulations? . ·
, ._ '
I. yJ~ed-Jiim gOod. I never got out U.S. citizens up there. I say, "Hooray
•
How about finding ,out for us, of his way again. We celebrated our for thern!
Ann? Can an American man be car- SSJti wedding anniversary this year.
Gem ofthe Day : Any person who
ried to his grave in the same manner ·After our wedding, Earl and I moved can take a pill at a public water foun·
as Israel's Yitzhak Rabin? --Arapa- IS times, but I didn 't mind. He is lain deserves to get well.
hoe, N.C.
.·
'
ouch a wonderful mate.
Dear Arapahoe: AI! Orthodox
Backtracking a· bit, when attendSend questions to Ann Landers,
Jews
bunecjjn a simple wooden ipg high school, ~e seniors looked Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenbox - no nails, no metal. If this is down on the lowly sophomores. One tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
your wish, make sure your .next of of !hose "lowly !Wphomores" went Calif. 90045

Kibler, from left, - . Inducted lnlo the Mklctleport.Pon.oy Rotary ClUb Monday ilv.lng
by club Prnldenl Lloyd Blackwood. The twt&gt;
-... praHnted lllhogl'llplted copiea or the
Oblec:i of Rotary •nc1 the Four-Way Teat alOng
with their club ~ and gold Rotary lapel
pin. Mitnberatllt:lln Rotary II partly baled on
having a r'epraJ,ent.tlve of many dlffel'enl vari-

Fill

Ba11ll1aw Mill

215e3 BASHAN RD.

614-992·3200

'

: NEW ROTARIANS • Grwgory KaYlor llld Karl

949-2512

RACINE HYDUULIC REPAIR ·
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

PRIVATE CARE

Presbyterian

Eden United - - ist 0r11t
2 112 miles nonh of Reedsville
on Suue Route -124
Pottor: Rev. Roben Markley
SundaY School - 10 a.in. '
Wonhip - 7:30p.m.
.
Wednesday Servicea - 7:30 p.f11.

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

U.P.C.

Syrac:uae Flnt United Presl&gt;ytertaa
Pastor: Re". Kriaan1 Robinson
Sunday School .- I 0 a.m.
W~nhip- II am .

ML Hems.. U•lled a..-..
lo Chrbt Oorcll
Texas Community off at 82
Pootor. Roben SondCI1
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.·
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednc:sd•y Services -7:30p.m.

TRI·SllTE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

The_ waler trealmcnt _company cordially inv~es you to
parttctpate In a tree, no obligation, comprehensive wa ter
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TQS, Mineral Hardne.., Iron, PH.
PltOII call Rai.Sojlatlll2oo4472 or 1-800-101 3313
to tat up our free water IMlytll.
1t&gt;lllllln

(614) 11112·5535
614 11112·2753

Car.l frug:~J. tead.~r~/ use
woode.
n. o~o-x as a cask.et
.
'

.

Dutributed by

FREE ESTIMAl'ES

.....,......,..,_.,.....,.,.!

Sdvenvllle Ww.d ot Faith
• Pastor. David Dailey ,
Sunday St:hool9:30 a.m.
Evening - 1 p.m.
ReJokia1 Lite Churclt
500 !II. 2nd Ave., Middlepnn
Paator: Lawn:nce Fonman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;es - 7 p.m.

Company,

Polw•oy, Ohio, re1erve1
the right 1o bid at thla aale,

Fairview Bible Church
l.ellrl, W.Va. RL 1 '
Poator: Ra,OOn Rood&gt;
Sunday School - 10:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

•NewHomn
•Additions
•New Garag..
•Remodeling
•Siding '
•Roofing
•Painting

and tO. withdrew the ebove
colleterel prior to 1111.
that on Saturday, January Further, Thi Fermara. Benk
20, 111811, at 10:00 a .m., 1 and Savlnge Comp•ny
public ure will be held It reeerve• the right to reject
211 Waet Second Street, eny or en bide eubmltled.
~y. Ohio, to aall for
Further, the ebova
cuh
the
following ccillataral will lM told In the
eolilt8rll:
conllltlon It ll_m._ with no
1114 FORD THUNDERBIRD exprau
or Implied

Fr- Goopel MI.....

Water
~.Ail':
Treat....nt
~1Z~ ~ · Equip111ent
.

Cuatom Building I Rlrnadtllng

PUBUC NOTICE .
NOTICE li hereby given

'

"1.../r')
6

~ONSTRUCTION

Available ·
10x28·, $65 per mo.
992-3961

Postor: Roben
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 am., 1 p.m.
Wedneaday·SeMce - 7 p.m~"

The D..ly Senti.,.. • Ptlge 7

SMITH'S

· OneUnHNow

Fldl Geopei!J&amp;hthouoe

A~"t:l::~

10110

Silver Rid

Eodtlftle House of Prayer
(at Burlinaham &lt;hun:h off Route 33)

Cannel
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th SIDI)

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-6141

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

McCIWII

w:

P,stor: O!arles NeviUe
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Thunday SeM= - 6:30p.m.

Joppo
Pastor: Bob Rudolph
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

C~prchotllle!lez•­

Purtlaod Flnt Qurcb or the NUJtnae
Postor: John
Dooala• '
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.
Wof1hip -6:30p.m.
Wedne~day Sel'ices - 7 p.m.

ForestRun ..

.

.........,J
Pollor: ReV. Thomas

R u - C~III'CII otllle Nezarene
Putor: Samuel Buye
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6JO P.riiWednesday Sel'icea - 7 p.m.

Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School-.10 a.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

264 South 2nd

992 ·3918

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Tuesday Setvices - 7:30 p.m.

Coffee hour rollowina

Trinity Cbun:h
Seeond &amp; lynn, Pomeroy

.RACINE PLANING MILL

Pastor: Sharon Hauaman

Holy Eu&lt;hariol and
Sunday S&lt;h0oll0:30 a.m.

CHESTER STORAGE

Sunday School - 10 .:....
Evcnina 7:30p.m.
Tlleaday .l Thuraclly - 7:30 ,....

&amp;111111 Billie! New Tella•elttSyrac- Church olthe NIIZIII'tlle
Pastor: BiD Stin:s
SWlday School - 9:30a.m.
W011bip - 10:30Lm.,6p.m.
Wednl:lday Servicea - 7 p .m.

Tupptrs Plains St. Paul

Rector: Rev. D. A. duPI•ticr

Rooe otSharon Holiness Ch~rcb
Leadin&amp; Cteek Rd., Rutland
Pastor; Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
Sunday sd!ool· 9:30a.m.
S!Diday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Pastor: John w. Douatu
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'icos • 7 p.m.

ReodavUle
Pastor: Rev. CharlcJ Mub
WOI1hip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

Episcopal

212 W. Main SL
Pu lOr: Andrew Miles

~oy • Middleport,_Ohio

Friday, January 19, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Re•OMI»&gt;e

ln.urare';,·~~!':~~

. c.n=~

YOUNG'S
CARPENrER SERVICE

•Room Addition•
•Na'w G1regea
•EIIctriCill &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
·
•lntertor &amp; Ex1erlor
· Painting
AIIO Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTIUUION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete

�. '

-

January :19, 1991

_P_omeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

OOP

NEA Cro11word Puzzlf,

BRIDGE
PHILLIP
'

ALDER
KIT 'N' CARLYLFAD by l,.aiT)' Wa1pt
1015 12x55 1Wo -..om mobile
homo, 11,500,814-11112-31114.

.

1 oq. . . - 4 o,llr)dor. ·5

1. .

!~!*d.

thrtt bedroom mobile
11ar11ng 11 $240-S300,

aewer, Wllter. and trash

'

Alt.

II'IOUM?

1H1
Shact,lw.- ~ s~ .
.AC, '(lj~ liiAIFM Cu~. AMr
·Spoll'r 11,000 111111, IU.,.
080 II4-2SN118.
'
· 1H1 Aod&lt;ot Chouia ,... cor, all
-In '11, Wi-. - Dl._
rr1tinD.
wold. lual
111...call,
- ·on·boetd
u,u.
Nul podala,
Ire lfllelll, roling chulla; 15800
neg. call Scott Wolfe, 0114-84··
. 2878, 114-t.a-2045 or 11~·JII2·
11113.

WEST
810 I 5 2
•Q J 10 5
tK

1 bedroam apanmen1 In Mlddle_61_4-_99~2_-389
__
1 .-~-~--=-:: I part, available December 1, all
Bank Repoa. Eaay Ananclng. Coli utllltltl paid, 1250 per montl1,
Ruu Murdrd 1.-.251-5070.
$100 dapoalt, lam to 6pm 814-

SOUTH
81 8 4

t

~~S::':f..~ee~·

8

•Kz

t

Aultl L.oeno. c.- will """"" ,financinG· even If you haY,_ ~n

turned down elaewh.,• . u~

1089.

'•

720 TruckS for Sill

:;BARNEY
.

A&gt;in1 Ploaaant Nur~no &amp; Rehable

itation Canter, Routa 1, Box 326,

Point Pleoeant, WV 25550. 304875-3005. (A Glenmork Auoclalllll Facility). EOE.

!)pencer. Laureland Apart-

ments, NeW Havert. 304·882-

3151 .

180 · Wanted To Do

LATEL'(, l-IE SA'f'S, IT'S SEEN
MOSTLI( SIDE I-IILL. ..

1 H4

GMC 1500 Serltl Shfl'l

fPJy~H'~TfY 7

Bad, 2 Tone Poin~ ~tic, AO
I 5,000 lilies, 614-317-n23.

!

1995 Ford f250 4x4 XlT,

IUIQI

-

304-875-2030
Chuck.
· ·' !iprn, ... to!
,•

'130 vans &amp; 4-WDs · •

FARI.I SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVE STOC K

RENTAL S

·HO~se Fbr

$500
Pro-

OWn
I

Beautiful

Wanted : Construction work, all
phaaas.· ~ddiliona, aiding, plastering, stucco, aynthetics, finish
drywall, roof repairs, Installing
windoW&amp;. 304-675-81102

Now Taking Applications. Retail

OHIO OPERATING ·
ENGINEERS
LOCAL 18 APPRENTICESHIP
IN CONSTRUCTION
And Women, Ages 18 And ,

To Operate And Re-

Moving Machine• And
Application Dates: Februa,ry 5, 6, 7, And February 15, I 6,
&amp; 11, 1996 Time: 9:00A.M. To

3:00 P.M. Applicatlon Fee: $10.00
Cash Co~tact: Ohio Operating
Engineers Tr8ining Center (f514)

385-2587 E.O.E.
• Representative~
money for Christ·
hpr1)Giat WOfk. 1-800·

210

Business
OpportunHy

Investment Property In Galllpolls,

OWner May Be Able To Help With

Some Financing, Call 614-797·
4345 Aher 6 PlA.

Snacks To Taverns IC-Stores,
$125 Startup Needed. Our Pro·
ducts Sell, No Gimmicke.
1 ·800.589-891~

Overbrook Center has pan time
pol itlons for STNA's. Anyone in·
terGsted .Pieaae come in and fill
out an applicarion ·or contact Jan
Elias, ADON for more information

61 ..c.a..SI·3089, if no aniWef leave

•12.000. 814-992-e1:n

'

Tlia newspaper wtlf not
knowllngly accapl

.

edU&amp;rtlaomtntl for raat - t •
which Is in violation ol the tow.
Our fl!lldera ara hereby

Informed that all dwellings
ac!Vartllod In thl.s newspaper
oro awlta9le on an equal
opportUnity baala.

. 24 Wonctertand

DOWN

vteltor

- ·-

1 Poallc~
2 Sand
3 Living 011 other

21 - Chulchlll
30cet.._,
31 Feel poorly
32 AUihor-

endawelf

5 _ ... lflel

tfrpaol-

310 Homes tor Sale
3 Bedroom Dou- ~tome o~
·
$18,500 Ahtr 6pm 814-

22Spum
I
aa I.UIIrlutn :•

24- Seat

........,

ol Aala

25-u..te
27 Atcohcil
ICIIutlone
21 Spa loan
21Bautbel
player
31

IWO

~leeping rooms with

bedroom house,

Also trailer space on

hook·ups. Call al1er
304-713-5851,MaaonWV.
MERCHAND ISE

420 Mobile HQITI8S
for Rent

51 o

Household

Goods

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ra~es, Refrtgrators, 90 Oay Guarantee!

French City llaytag, 614-448-

7795.

Natural Gas Furnace, Very Nice, For Your Carpet &amp; Vinyl Needs
614-446-2003, 614-448-1409.
Mollohan Carpets Rt 117 N. 814·
Heat , 446-7444 .
Gar - GOOD USED APPLIANCES

1 child. 1275/mo. lncludea tralh
.plckup. S200 dopoalt Now 1095
2bodroom, rio pall, 1 chllcf, $350/
mo. S300 depoolt 304-875·8277
at.Spm

4411-:1140.

i

I

Shoe cat..
Ht.Effeclency L.P. Or Natural Gaa

734 7 Of 614-9..c8-287f.

,~ 1

75 Bafts Clean Gr11s Hay With

lntor1hetm &amp; Miller lloblt Home
Furnaces. Gas, Pil &amp; Electric In

Squ11e boles h50·$1. 75. Saturdel only plclwp. 304~75-31180.

Bank Financing Available, Call
Benn1t1s Mobile Home HTG I

TRANSPORTATION

Stock, 'Largo Diltrlbuttr lilly Out
of Now lloblll Home Furnactl.
CLG At 814-4411-8418 or 1-800872-5887.

710 Aut!ll for Sale

JET

'89 Camara. four new tirn. bC1f.

Kitchenette Table With 4 Chairs,

litre, V·8. elite model turbo, PS,

Acceaorlle

~.=.~~~~!~~~~~
ot

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,

51 RomMI 1ilt• !

CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by Lula campo.

~~~~w--••r~on..-tram_O,

_ __pulam-

Eactl...,-ln Ifill dpher.a.ndl fur anolher. Todly .. da: J equ.M U

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION""/\ leader is a dealer in h9pe." -Napoleon 1.
•uneasy lies lhe head thai wears a crown.' - Shakespeare.

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r::~::.'. S~tl4llA~4~~s·
::::_
_,. ltr GAY I. POUAN __;;__ _

rat... ....,.

:

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fA iht
lour ..... mblod _,. below 10 form four wwda.

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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

., ..

The Treosu~ You
tilt
SCIVIIIJS You'll FIIHI In tile
CIGssJ(Ied Section.

r1c ·c
llok:T

•

Occult -Impel- Whole • Hennit • MUCH MORE
My friend returned from the store and asked, "Why
do the foods that contain less of everything, cost so

I FRIDAY

JANUARY 191

co'n truftt

AERATION MOTORS
ltnt condition, call B14-Qg2-2358
mota. tiC. ~
Repaired, Now &amp; Aotxrltt In \tod&lt;. ahor 5pm weekda11 or an,tlma D &amp; R Aull, Rililol, WV. 304-3~ •
1
Coli Ron Ewno. 1-800-537-9!&gt;211.
::•.::::.rbrd sc, two door, u \!1133or .eot).!'1343211. .

.lj

I
·l

p8rsone who are trying to bring this about Inspire you to Succeed.
.
·
Trying .to patch up .a broken romance? : LEO !July 23-Aug. 22) If you have lo
ABT.Rb-ORAPB .
The Aatro·Grapll Matchmaker ca~ help . operate independently loday , by all
yoo undttnitanil'what to do to make lhe means do so, but team up Wllh comp&amp;relatlonahlp work. Mall $2 .75 to .ler)t allies whenever pOsslble .
Matchmaker, c/o this n-spapar, P.O . VIRGO (Aug. 23 Sept 22) A big shift In
8oJI17S8, Murray Hlfl Stadon, Nft York, condlttonl might occur today. ~ could
BERNICE
NY 10156.
opportunllles lor you.
BEDEOSOL I'ISCES (Feb. 20 IIMch 20) Your efforts Try to lpoltheH opportunities before
could be more suoceelfuiiOday Wyou do You• oompel~iou dOle.
what need!' doing without talking about H ,UIRI' (lapt. 23.0Ct. 23) Today and
flrll. Keap,alow profile.
1omonow you COUld be luckier than UIUIII
Aflllllllalcfi21·Aprll11) LUCk lillY be In lllulitiona thai~ Pft9eUive ldeaa,
r. store tor you todlty. weo, ·thle .,... of me1hodi or procNcta. Tilinii or f!lllulunt.
good fortune may produC. ·tong term, SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) In lhis
lavor.b!e en.cta.
oycla, thingl wiiii!MI • Wily of endi'rg up
TAURUS (ApriiiG ..., 20) Dedicate u 10 your ldvlntage. Houoem. lhll doesn't
many .ho\n as pOealble 10 objeC11Yea 01 main you should rea.. Important matlenl
1
""'!IIY.;· Jan, 20• ~
Ihe greateat Importance to you at !his 10 dfa!a·
:·
In tile. ~,..,_. you WIN have pier. !!me. Your lUCk wHIIawr crllfcaf conceme. IAGIITARIUS CNIW· 21-Dac 21) Before
oppoflu1J~. ID operalt' In an lndepa
. n- GIMINI (May 21-June, IG) Peopfe who ma~II)Q any lmportanl declelona loday,
~ . . . . 111an you have had In the . llltai you will, be eager 10 help you today. ,....-..your altemtit!vw. You rn1g111
pul. !ml*lmanla ttial hampai'9CI your · but you mut11 lay all of your Cllldl out on 111M ~ acMnlltges at your c111poeat
....... IIIII! !1M&gt; 1111 • , you beciorne a lha tltble. W
-you _are lr8r* and fortlto~t. .lhan youNiltira.
.
a01oo- ,...on.
·
'
!hay wll be 10:0·
CAPIIICORN jU.C. 22-Jan. 11) Con·
AQUIWI•.,... •
1" SorriMiiltg . CANCER j.lune 11-July 21) 'latarial 0f1111reta yoyr effo&lt;la. on development•
. ~ · haplto ~ . . ' - a iplllldld ; motlv~ Iii a JIOlf8dullacto&lt; that you -..can o111r you·101m or .,._,..
~ of·becoo•iilllla .-.., ltlt1illlma. i 'can oliannallo your advantage today. gain lodliy. Yow plllbatlllln for tteqtili• Do' riot ~.tall'lln.yDinllf Of In . . ol1ar I Focullng· on tll111ga J.OU want could tlor!'look · ·good.

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scaAM-UTS ANSWIIS

. u'\YO ""~lo

buill, All Typeo, Accatllblt To 1
N• \
Clutch Kill,
Pia.._ ,
StlrUng 5·10'1 $811.85, 814-378· ·
21135

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II. l

r;""

r

o- 10,000 Tronemiltion,
New gas tankl, one

Nevlllll

6 UNSCRAMBLE
ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

::B~udgai=";'Tran=om~as~on~~
..;,;.s.'-:-:Uit!l:-"'
. -:-,~rfl:"'i-:

""'"' ·...._.,floor

ct..

. 3&amp; Not wldl ,'
31 lrfaguW ,
420¥42 Chlkl'alllf
44 Entlca
45 Flnlshtld
46 City In

8

1993111rada 18Ft. Opan sow; :
92'11. Furnaces 100,aoo BTU 1· Altalfo, 814-446-4344.
Extra Canvaa &amp; Cowttr'11 4.3 v.o1
eoa-2&amp;7 ·8308, 614·448-8308, Second c uulng Orchard Greaa: lhlf 18,000, 814 448 8.1.
I
Duct Syatema And Air Condition· N..er Wei, $2.25 Ptr Bale, 814·
ers. fiM Eltlnwtea.
'
,760 Auto Part.-&amp;
.
44&amp;-4053.

&amp;.Loaf, Floret Couch, Chair, S50 PB, ,.C, 5 I~Od, POWII lOIII
and locks, ··oreal Car,. sesoo 810
Hollw
I
.Firm For All, 814-441-7127.
Vine Sltett, Call 814-448-7398,
~'\: 814-9~- 7478 or 814-949~ -~ ,
Lumber: Oak Poplar, Pine To
HIOO 499 3499.
'
Place Order Call Ahor 8:00 304LAYNE'S FURNITUfE
578-2988, Prieta: .15cllld.Ft To '95 Buick Regal Custom, V·BauBASEMENT
Complete home furnishings. .SOiilld.FL
tomatic, all . power, amoky
Wt'IEid IICCWNl
"'
Houra: lion -Sat, 0·5. 614-4411arneflyll, 10,500 mifoa, molr.t offor Unconditional llllitimt guarant...
0322, 3 mileo out Bulavlllo Pike
~price, 61..-.3382.
• . Local referoncoo furrillhtd. qag 1
8 8
Frae DoliYI!Y.
1978 Chrralor 1400; 1085 To'""" &amp;~~ ~ ;! ~~~~C::n~~~~:1
PtCKENSFURNnuRE
$1100; All Ru~a Goodl &amp;14-441 - talillhtd 1117~. ·
·
~"li
Now/Uiod
0870.
-:-l .
. 30;4-875-1450
1983 Lincoln Town car, good :\;;pji~;;;;;;;-:t;;d"sZ;i;,~ ·•
VI'RA FURNITURE·
cone!., aoklng 13,000. 304-77361-l-446-3158
6170.
'
Ouaoty Houllhofd Furrilunl And
Appllancae. Groat Ceell On
CIOh And Cony IREN1'2-0WN
And...._Aioo-o.
FIM Delivtry Within 25 MillO.
Washers, dryers, refrigeratota,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 7f5

-;;;;;;;;;:--;-;.;~;i;i;;--;;;;;;~
2bedt'oom. total electric, no pel&amp;,

Hay·' Grain

;

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Rooma for renl · or month. Groat Chrlatmao Glfta. Boota B1
.-'
Starting ai $120/mo. Gallla Hotel. Redwlng, Chippewa, Tony Lama. 1500 II. - of.good hfl, 120 por
bale, 614-742-3069 or 814-742· 19Q3 201 Pro XL, 20' S!rUtOI'
:.8~1f;_pf,;_~gseo7.;.;;;;;~;u;-~;;;;;l Guaranteed Lowoat Prlcoa At 3064.
0111 boat 200 XPtiP. 814-867-\

nice and clean, deposit required,
no Inside pets, 614-992-3090.

2bedrciom trailer, furriahed, naturol gu. 304-713-S248.

!

When I first moved to the United
States, I couldn't get a credit card.
"Why won't they issue me a credit
card?" I asked my bank manager.
"Because you don't have a credit
record."
"And how do I get a credit record?"
"By using a credit card."
It was a classic Catch-22.
Players sometimes feel they are in a
Catch·22 situation at the bridge table.
The thinking goes like this: "I can do
this or that, but-whichever I select will
be wrong when the other line would
have worked."
Of course, this negative philosophy
is counterproductive. Be positive by
going with the pereentages - which
South failed to do in today's deal.
Playing in three no-trump, South
won the first trick with dummy's heart
ace and led a diamond to his queen.
Alter.winninrwilb·the·king, West continued with the heart I 0. South cashed
the diamond ace, inwardly groaning
when West discarded the spade two.
Suddenly the "sure" nine tricks were
down to eight.
·
,.
Since South needs only three diamond tricks, the percentage play is to
start with. the ace. If only low cards
appear, play a club to the dummy followed by a diamond to the queen. If
the suit is 3·2, everything is fine . If
West has .four diamonds, you get three
tricks without difficulty. If East has
four diamonds, he must duclt the second round. Then you switch to spades,
establishing nine triclla via one spade,
two hearts, two diamonds and four
clubs.

~::-*

Klngatey- '
35 Folklore
'
e re ··
:rr Bullfllhl

produCe,_-

REAL ESTATE

11 Man or belt
1&amp; AnnlaUcta
20 Oanlale

~~ ·

4 Sllclc ttcaooiGMIIeth..,.,

Lavln
:13Aalar--

10. Moran .

~

j

640

2 Bedroomo wall To W.ll Carpal,

root estate adVartf~lng In
this n e - r Is "'b!Gct to
1110 Federal Fair Housing ACt
of 1988 which makeS It Illegal
to a&lt;lvertise •any preference,
' · IIIMatiOn or discriminatiOn
·boOed on race, color, raiiQIOn,
sex famll~l status or national
origin, or any 1n101111on to
make any such pralaranco,
tl!nltatiOn or dlst:rlmlnltiOn.•

_.lPN'-'

.,.,,

I
750 Boats &amp; Motors •
oonc~ton.

.-blo.

In Pomero~. HUQ accepted, will
lease with option to buy, deposit
and references. no ptts, 81&lt;4·6ga..
7244.

Unfurnished

iI

,.~ ... eor I ~ YaJ RI&lt;:Sf.1'

Cuatom, Iota of ••tras, excelienl

....._.

614-448 3831

All

·-

New two bedroom, -IWO bath in
Harrisonville. Uving room, dining/
family room, nice kitchen w/bar,
utility room and garage, water anlt
heat furnished. Ten miles to Gavin Po..wet Plant, 17 miles to
Athens, no smoking or pets. Oeposir and references required,
$3751 mo. plus utilities, 61-4-742·

10xl8 Storage Building; No .Ptta,
Deposit Required, After 5 P.M .

aller6pm.

·'·

Seriaus-Calls Only, Please. Lois
Of SIOraQO, 614-448-4559.

12x85 1SI72 2 Bedrooms, Clean,
Minutes From Holzer Hospital,

Experienced roofers needed, call
6 I 4-992•2364 or I ·800' 889-3943

.y

Laundry &amp; Family Room, No Pets
$500 Por Month, Plus, Deposit,

LOW IN'IESTIAENT
'Netzgal Street, Pomero1. WiD,
ROUTE SALES /SERVICE, $350/Mo. 0opo~l51a.922-0294.

or !104-882-2645, Ind. at 814-ji9H472.

•

SIXMI, RefriQera·

Regatored Angus Cattio: 2 111111s.
Firewood : aplir hardwood. •351
Fivo Yoar Old, 1 Two Year Did,
for Sale
~'
pickup load, you haul. Ceifv111 1
1 Cow With Heiler Calf, \ Yoa~ing
.
•
INOTICEI
afao
304-875-5150.
Heifer, 2 Six Month Old Heifers, 1087 21 Pt Four Wl!na.250 Sun
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 3033.
UI:Commends that you do bUS I8
In ·Out -a-.1 CUddy Co\
~~!!!!~~~:::..:~=~ on
F&lt;oozor
corn fod, 11 par ·lb. : ,;;14;.:·25;;:56-.e::;;:::5::,:1,::;0·------l -~
bin All Accoaaorlas, Call 814··
ness with people you know, and Nice clean 2 or 3 bedroom house .,
lhorol,boll,
col814-885-3105.
NOT to 1111nd money through lht
mail until you have investigated
the offering.

r

•

1913 Chevy S Bliior .LT (lA
35,000
Mlloa, Lea1her lnltrlor• 1
Maatey ferguson Diesel Reatored, $4,350; ON Ford Restored Owner, 814-317-1823.
$1,995;614-2-522.
88 Ford Aaroatar XL paaaonger
630
Llv•tltock
van, V-8, auto,. AIC, loaded,
"':!'"
107,000 mit... nico, $2,000, 0143 Holstein Heiforo Weighing Ap- 247--4292.
·
prox. 500 Pda. Each, $300 A 740 · Motorcy.
Piece, 81ol-446-405'!.
Eieht- old bi!JI pigs for ulo, 1887 Harle, Davidaon Soflail

tor &amp; Dishwasher, WeU Insulated, ·

FINANCIAL

EMPLOYMENT
SERV ICES

CorP.~

,_

1

Ford 3000 Tractor $3,995; 85

cellent Condition, 2 Balha. CIA,

.Ellt.

Experience Helplul, Part-Time &amp;
Full-Time, Honest, Dependable,
Reliable Transportation, ·salary
Positions, Reply In Person To :
Funtime Video, 2239 State Route
14-, , Gallipolis, No Phone Calls
Please.
·

Rent:.Well LOcated: 3

JVfT' GET IT
To LAY OfF
fO(l A Wlf•tE {

.

~Third~~~·~~··· Ga~l,o}l1

l

Bedrooms, Nowl1 Decorated, Ex·

ESCApt FEAt-rrr.. ~"'

.

1090 Dodgo Ra,n\ Von 8-2s0;
72,000 lllloa, U,ooo, Can B1
Seen At: Gatlipolla Del~ ~~

2 Bedroom In Gallipolis, $3151
Mo., l&amp;BSEII &amp; Deposit Required,

614-448-2957. .

/)OIV'T WA,..,T Tb'

1087 S-10 Blazer h4, Call Altoo
5:30P.M. 114-- 8565

410 Houses for Rent

open. ·Needed are vendors of antiqueS', qUality cralts, &amp; collecta·
blea.oNo Fleas plea ~ ei 'Seriqus
inquiries only. ~- 675-7624 .

52 Unit olllgllt
53 rh~
.... ~
54 tharnlcel aulllx
11 - - - and ... Ill Wooden lUll
21 o..r
Ill EMily moldtld
22 'hllreoul...,...., 57 on.pring

By Phillip Alder

Sub-conlractora wanted: Car·
penter.i, palnt111, plumbatl, tid ing &amp; concrete workers. Contacl

Now Antiquo &amp; ,crah Mot I rea~ to

....

HI' 1;
1a &amp;oundl

There's
no catch here

Seekfng Regia~ared long·tarm
care NUrsing Asaiatanta for
·akilletl long term care nuralng
facility; rotating shifts. parttlma.

T~rry

17Bu•W.-

Opening lead: • Q

·'

HelpWanted

•A Q 54
•A K J 8

15 Without low

-5..

....... to,, ...,.. Puzzle

34 Etevllllone
.
•
cfWiuN
•
31 Coualn'alalhar
oiO Wlllp
41 IIIU IIH -.1
42 ...., - Moon!
45 Afttctadlr ai1J
.. oatil fnlllala
e UplioteWtld

Vulnerable; Neither
Dealer: South
8outb
West North Eut
I NT
Paso 3 NT
1\11 pass

Equlpmonl Uaod Cars. 304-458-

110

•9 1 8 4 3•tO&amp;?e

•s

Ar, ~ en.Jie, A&amp;M'M Coaaatta.

"2-7806.

NORTH
8K Q s
•A 8
•J 9 3 z
•Q 10 4 2
EAST
8A J t

•&amp; 8 7 3

1m Daytona lr'oc:, v.e. 5Spaed.

payment &amp; take over payment•.

1 MlachleoO'•
dilld
• Lily
I J4riNI
12 Drlwra' "''Il·

Item•
14 ... unan- -

.

Do•

lnctuded,

1078 14x70 Schula llannc:hta•r 114-•2-2187.
With 12x28 Factor, Add-On
Room au HI 8034.
Two btdroom, furnllhtd, nice to·
:;::::::.:.;~......;;,;,;,;,.;.___~ I cation on tho river, utilltiaa paid,
t988 14x70 3beclrooma, 2bt1ha, 114-•2-- .
all applioncft, c:en-.1 air, laundry
room. ,_ Bx11 front porch, exc. 440
Apartments
cond. lluat Hit. Muat bt moved.
Prlco reduced to 113;800 .. 304for Rent
:93:;7_;-218::.;;.9;,;..----~---J 1 and 2 bedroom epattmonta, fur""5 Sk I'
70 h •·• niahed and unfumlahtd, ucurity
t..
I •no, 14X • 1 rH - - ~apoait required, no poll, 814rooma, one both, htat pump IMII- able but extra, wtll conalder down - ··22 l8.

ACROSS

n ·Dairy-

73,100 ....... AlldnjJ:

'll710, 080.114 . , . . ,,

The Dally Sentinel• P •

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:.. Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel
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Friday, January 191 1996

Po.neroy • Middleport, Ohio

Along the River

s1

ln 51 dc

-

·College basketball results

/WtJIIIItaln

Net,eat:

A ,.,teet
get.way

Futured on pege C1

s·tate of the Union

-Page

HI: 30.
Low: 201

s1

Details on ·
pageA2 .

·PageA6

•

tmes
•

WIN CASHI

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

On January 28, Super Bowl XXX
be played In Tempe, Ariz. The
outcome of the game will be
determined on the field, but YOU
may have something at stake, tool
Just flO out the entry blank, clip it .
out, and bring in or mall to
The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court~.
Pomeroy, by noon Saturday,
January 27th for a chance to win
$501 All you have to do Is predict
the correct final score of Super
Bowl XXX and the $50 Is all yours.

·will

ENTER AS MANY TIMES
ASYOUWANT!
Predict the Winning Team
&amp; Final Score!
The Sentinel will take all correct
entries and select the winner by
ran~o.n drawing. Prize awarded by
The Dally Sentinel
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

ENTER·and WIN!
"YOUR GIFT

From AP, T-5 Stat! Reports

Clip out the entry form below and
drop off at of the participating
businesses.
All Entlres Must Be
Submitted Before
12:00 p.m. Noon on
January 27, 1996.
Employees of tttls
newspaper and the
participating
businesses are not
eligible. Enter as
often as you like. No
purchase necessary.

e .

HEAPQUARTEAS"

We Have Feed For all Your
Livestodc &amp; Pets

Vs.

I predict the winning team &amp; llnal acore /

' -------Team---

-----To-----,-Name-------------------

·Pittsburgh

Address---------.-

Ph. No. - - - - - - - - -

-

Wheel Horse

Jewelry

TRACTORS and
RIDING MOWERS

and

7th &amp; Plum St.
Parkersburg, WV
304-424-5337

Your
Local
STIHL8
Dealer

Furniture~

'

*Jeap*Eagle

Steelers

Ingels

'H&gt;HO

·: GALLIPOLIS. POMEROY - This winter's latest
legacy - flooding - sent emergency management personnel in Gallia and Meigs counties scrambling Saturday in preparation for low-level inundation from the
Ohio River and inland creeks and streams.

Dallas
Cowboys

1.996 SUPER BOWL
SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY

(814) 992-8454

• POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
108 Butternut

Pomeroy

HAWK'S 76

FARM SUPPLY
State Route 7

Tuppers Plains, OH 45783
~7-3182

lllaeK

BAUM
LUMBER ·

106 N. 2nd
Middleport

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301 or 985-3330

992·2635

MILLIE'S
DOWNING
RESTAUUNT &amp;
CHILDS

PRODUCE
c..•illl"

II. . . . , , . .

509 Main St.
Point Pleasant, WV

615-7201
'
Y. mile north of Rt. 7 on
Country Road 15

39239

MULLEN
MUSSER
INSURANCE
1211 East Second
Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
992.i3381

Fanlily Homes

·

.,. ..·. g,ta®.I
11tf ,.

Your Local ·
Purina Chow
Pealer_

STIHC

ne,:~~;{~~:~:~~

SUPPLY CO.
399W. Main 992·2184
Pomeroy, Ohio
The Store With "All Kinds ol Stull"
lor Pall, Stables; Large &amp; Small
Anlmlla, Lawns &amp; Glldena

pc

Po.neroy, Ohio

Carpet

ESTABLISHED IN 1913

5Year
Guaranteed
on Carpet

~

FUNERAL HOME
Main Street, P.O. Box 188
Rutland, OH 45775
. 742-2333
*Special Fun ding Is

TIRES .TIRES TIRES
. ;;;

Wl

Avall.able

JUST DO IT.

... rl-11'·1&lt;!

has

r -he race
is on·.·•.

N.. 2nd AVE•.
MIDDLEPORt

992-5627

Candidates pack race
for county commission

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Stell
.
GALLIPOLIS - Heightened interest in the Galli a County Commissioners' office has prompted a run of filings for the two seats that will appear oD
the ballot this fall.
By Friday 's filing deadline for the March 19 primary, a total of II candi~ •
dates declared their intention to seek their respective parties' nomination. • ·
The Jan. 2 term on the commission, now held by first-term Democratic .
incumbent Kenneth R. Fanner, attracted seven of the candidates.
Fanner has filed for re-election and will face primary oppOsition on
Democratic slate from Homer F. Clary of Gallipolis, a disabled Korean W&amp;l' ·
veteran who works with the county 's Green Thumb program.
••
Five candidates are seeking the Republican nomination - Shirley Angel :
of Crown &lt;:;tty, distribution supervisor for the Gallia County Rural Water ;
Association; David L. Woodall of Gallipolis, the former president of 1h&amp; •
Gallia County Local Board of Education; retired tire company executivt :
Robert L. Murphy of Vinton; James R. Dixon of Gallipolis, a tax specialist :·_
and insurance agent; and David W. McKenzie of Gallipolis, a former Gal;:
lipolis Township trustee who ran for commissioner in the 1994 GOP prima: ,
ry.
For the Jan . 3 tenn, Republican incumbent Harold M. Saunders has filed :
for a second term and has opposition in the primary from Roger L. Burke of ;
Bidwell , former Gatlia Local Board of Education'vice president, and Kevili •
R. Plantz of Gallipolis, a customer representative for State Farm I11surance::
Fr~nklin E. Beach of Bidwell, a fanner and businessman, was the sole :
Demlic rat to file for tl\e Democratic nomination.
'
Continued on page A2

me·

END

Valley

&amp; ·Suppl·y
Co.

~

Mlddlejjort
992-3673

-----

FREE

· Home ···
Shopping
Phone: i14-t82.e811
S55 Ptirk Sl .
Middleport, Oh.
Stant Houra:
Mon.:.FI'I: 7:oo·e.ni. to s:oo
Sit. 7::00 e.m. to 3:00 p.in.

.••,.......
t(rafts
.
.

·

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•·'

"

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Olhlr_I!W...._ r ·
,,
~ Incumbent Democratic slienff James M. Soulsby will run unopposed in
!lie primary, but will one of two c,~tlton on tile·Republican side in the
November ela:lion. POmeroy police' c~ef Gerald Roup! and former inves-

•lnstr•ctiO.
. looks
. .
.

Emergency agency issues
flood safety instructions

'hmu-sentlllll 81llfl
.
'
.'
'
POMEROY- All the dusrcleaml Friday after me 4 p.DL filing' deadline
for candidates in' the Mirch prim&amp;ry, a large slate of c&amp;ndidates appeared for
several Meigs County offices,. particularly ·the !IUS .fqr two county com·
Rlission sealS.
.
The list of candidates released by the. Meigs County Board of Elections
Friday evening showed • local of IS candidates filed in the two races for the
County Commission SCIIS cumntly held by Dcnlocrat Janet L. Howard an4
R~Ublican Robert C. ~nbach. .
..
.
· In the race for Howard's term, which commences Jan. 4, 1997, three
IJ!jmOCI'IIts will fice off against Howard in the Man;b ~lection. James L.
Divis of Minersville,_C.E. "Ed" Evans of Dexter, and l)ianna Duff Phillips
o£ Pomeroy are all ~king the support of the county's Democrats.
. On the RepublicIll' side, six candidate$ are entered , in the race for the
Jl111Y nomination. Racine re$idenls Ernest "Ike" Spepc~tla"d Joseph Stobart,
Pomeroy residents M~ Powell, ~l('y Goeslein Pickennnd John W. ftlaet~
tnar, and Syr~~:ulle resident Judith A. Williams are hopinJ to beve the opportunity to take back the commission seat.
'.
In die tace for. Hartenbach's tofti\, wHich ccimmeiiCCI ~ - s, 1997,1ona. time Chester Township trustee Gary R. Dill will proVIIIe the competition for
thC Republican nomination. Three DetnOCI'IIs JViU ieek seat in-the pfimary:
Jack Slavin of Syracuse, Racine mayor Jeff Thornton, and Clyde R. Morris
. of Long Bottom.'

.

270 Mill

News capsules

By TOM HUNTER .

.:

~

'·

.

area,

· Jnatall~on

OFFERING
PRE-NEED
· COUNSEUNG AND
ARRANGEMENT$

·a• .H.lwfatDhct• ~

BIRCHFIELD

Ohio

461 North Second Avenue
Mlddlepon, Ohio 45760

INGELS CARPET
EWING
Mohawk
FUNEUL HOME

l•vfe~ Alwa~s

915·3301

GENERAL TIRE
SALES

0

Dipftl and

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

·Primary _
ilings:

and exp1115ion of the Mei's .; ·
"ow that the Meip County Historicill
Socic:ty ,
been awarded $79,000
\lJrougb,!he Appalachian Public Facil·
ities IIII!JOVements Fund Program.
Mqpret Parker, Society .J)I'CSident
and direc;,tor of the Museum, said the
state funds are not ex!lected to be
released·until spring.
. MeanW,hile, emphasis will be on
raising more money through a public
fund drive so that all of the needed
repairs can be.made and the addition·aJ space 11dded wh~n the work begins
later !his year. Applications will also
be made .for other grants, some of
"tltll Counlly
which require local matching funds ..
""
.
,
Parker ~;xplained that additional
library space is needed, along with an environmentaVclilnate controlled rare
document and archives storage area and an el~vator or lift to Jll&amp;ke both
floors of thl; museum completely handicapped ~essible.
-· The library is presently housed in a room 14xl6 feet .with additional read·
ing space in adjoining rooms. The probate tecQftls, rare books and documents are housed in a separate area. The planned 1Sx23 feet addition to the
library would alloW ~uate resean:h facilities, as well space for a climate
controlled.sto~e~
and an elevator.
·.
··
The addition would be built ·over a Oat-roofed area ihat leaks and has
caused ceiling damage to the room.betow.
_
·
All of the arint money will go into the museum improvement project
since the faciUiy is .staffed entirely by volunteers who keep it· ~n Tue$llay
through Saturday, from I to 4:30 p.m. ·
Parker wrot¢ two grant applications for
tutids, one for $79,0oo
for the additi"!lq,~ museum libn!ry. which was '
and aI!CCOnd for
"'
• Cpntlnuect on (IIIII

Find out more by calling...

SALES· SERVICE· PARTS

The Jeve\t at the
The Ohio River is
expected to crest this · Flood wate1 update Racine Lacks &amp;
Dam was 42.5 feet
weekend up to I 0 feet
at II :30 a.m. Satur'above flood stage in eastday. The river is
em and southeastern
expected to crest
Ohio, in the wake of this
there at 48 feet at 7
week's thaw and heavy
rains.
·
a.m . Monday, while
a crest of 51.6 feet
'The National Weather
is expected for
Service declared south:
'Pomeroy.
eastern Ohio to be under
Several busi·
a flood warning this
nesses in downtown
weekend.
Pomeroy moved
U.S. Anny Corps of
merchandise and
Engineers officials at the
equipment to higher
Roben C. Byrd Locks &amp;
ground late SaturDam said Saturday that ·
day
morning. '
the Ohio is expected 10
River levels of
crest there at 54 feet at I
49 feet will put
a.m. "Tuesday.
water into several
.
1be river was rising at
f th
al
FLOOD SALE- Before the watera CI'Oieed Main Straet to mC~Hinto Pomeroy bullnnauthree-tenths of a foot per
op e S";Jres Moog Saturday afternoon, Super Sundry w11 putting up flood ute signs. Here Hank Cleland, left, .
ho.ur Saturday morning,
omeroy s
am aullla Oonald Shafter, one o1 the bualnesa owners, hang.algne ollering ahoppers e ~ ·
when the level was 47.5
Street With levels wide dlacounl Word waa received late Slturdly atternoon thll Pomeroy's main 11r1e1 wa ·
upected to reach. cloeed at the Intersection of Sycamore Sl Moat bualnesMa were closed by Saturday evenllljj.
feet, and the rate, was
expected to increase as
52 feet by early
to·Wells Run. Also closed due to high water were Scout
Monday. store owners indicated they were taking no Camp Road in Chester Township, along with various
temperatures
warmed
Saturday and Sunday.
chances.
.
thoroughfares in the Leading Creek, Sandy Cove and
The
highest
river
crest
reponed
at
the
Byf!l
L
&amp;
D
Dexter areas.
·
The Gallia County
Emergency Management ·
was 68.1 feet in 1937.
'
.
Gallia sheriff's deputies noted that high water wa$
Roads closed in Meigs County as .or Saturday after- reported at SR 7 South at Teens Run Road and at ~
Agency wa8 considering declaring the county at Levell
status Saturday morning, but Sheriff James D. Taylor noon included State Route 124 at Mmersvtlle, SR 7 at Kyger Creek plant, SR 233, SR 554 at Kyger, SR 553:
said an emergency might not be declared until later in . Forest Run, SR 338 from Antiquity to Great Bend, SR and SR 141 at the Lawrence Coupty tine, SR 325 and SR
124 from Long Bottom to Reedsville, and Dewetts Run
Continued on page.A2
the weekend.
.

Historical .society receives grant
for ·
museum
.. .

228 WEST MAtN
POMEROY
992-5432

R &amp; G FEED &amp;

108 Mulb,erry Ave. '

DlicOVER WHY.
PEoPLE SAY, .

"I w(JJ(t

(row's
F
Restaurant

R&amp;G

so

~

James C. Blrcbfteld~­
Owner·Operator ·
Fknnl"' For Every Occalon
We Deliver &amp; Wire Flowet"'
1-IJ00.433.6203 or

Vol. 30 , No.

,Gallia, Meigs under flood warning

IN, TOOl

YOU CAN

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • January 21, 1996

~~ .

'

••. ""·-·

·- . _ .
-

'r-: ....,

C:OOIInuld on P11D1 AI

-

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_...... '' ....

~

GAi.LIPOUS - The region Ia under 1 flood warnIng thle . 'I!IHkBnd 11 the Ohio River Ia •xpacted to
creal up to 10 feelabov• flood elege In aouthuatem
Ohio.
The Gallle County Emergtncy Management
Agency Saturday releaaed the following flood aaf•ty
lnatructlone for i'laldlntaln the region:
Dudnq tht ftogd;
• Avoid area• tubltct to lUdden flooding;
• Oo not attempt to croll a flowing atream where
water 11 ebon the kneee;
·
• oo not attt~mpt to drift over 1 flooded road. Drlnre cen be llranded and t~.
· • If ¥OUr nhlcle 11e11, abillclon It Immediately end
IMk higher ground. Many people drown while trying
to reecue a cer.
. Afttr the fi!IOd:
· • Oo not uee freeh food lhet h11 come In eonlect wllh flood Wlllrl;
• Tnt drinking Wlltr tor potability; walla ehould be pumped out 111d Wiler teeted before drinking;
• DO net vlalt.cllletera.-.; your ~ce cen hamper rwcue and other tlmllllfllCY operations. ·
• Oo nOt handle lin electrical· equlpinent In wet al'lll; ..ectrlcel aqulpmtlllt ehould ·be ohecQd and
.dried before retUrning to eervlce; ·
·
• Uee
notl8nllme or torohea, to examine bulldlnga; flammlblee mey be lnalde.
n utility lnea to poliCe, fll'l or Olhei' approrlele euthorlllee.
•~b

"-'':C".·

-.

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Good Morning

•

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Today's C-...,Judbcel
IS Seetions - 164 Pages

Ca!en!lars

C2&amp;3

Classii"Jeds
Comics

D4-7

Insen

Editorials

M

Qbltupries

A:3

Soorts

Bl-8

Weather

A2

Jimf'mmen
Apnl,whn ·
Jilll$t='•

.
•,

.,. .
-•.

M
B8
C4

Cl
.C$

...

••.

Columns
Jack Andcnon

..'
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( s

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Ohio unem·ploymenfrate falls to 5.1 percent in December :
WASijlNGTON (AP) - 'The unemployment r11te in Ohio fell to S.J per"Our analysi~ ~~ the sharp )ise in the Ul)employment ~e in Noveia-, •
cent in December; a decline of 0.7 percentage point from the prev1ous ber was due. pnuymly to short-term/layoffs proved conect,~· Debra &amp;. : ~
mpnth, the government said.
·
. .
'
Bowland, administrator of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, ald.
The nilion 'sjobl~ ~e stayed at !1.6 percent. Ohio's rate in November Friday.
.
·
·
was. S.Bpercent. · .· ·
(
. ·
The state's average unemployment rate for -l99S .wu 4.8 percent .
,.

,,

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