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P8QeD8·.~

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••

Pomeroy·• Middleport • Galllpoll,, OH • Point Pluunt, WV

1

-

II

~ecord farm~ export
WAS~GTON (AP) - U.S.
agricultural exports 1re 911 a recordsettins pai:e for 1996.
·
FlllJIC~ will sell $58 billion of
their products overseas during the 12
months ending Sept. 30, the A¢culture Department predicts. That is $3.9
billion higher than the export reoonl
of $54.1 billion set during the same
. period in 1994-9S .. The latest forecast
is $3.S billion above the figUre pro-

. ACCEPTS AWARD- Marco Jeffers, chairman of the Meigs Soli '
and Watw eon...,atlon Dlltrlct, right, accepted the Ohio Fed- ·
antlon'a superior Mrvlce award from Gary Mall. president, at
the 53rd amual ~Meting of the Federation held last week In
Columbus.

,Meigs County S&amp;WCD
receives .superior award
POMEROY- The Meigs Soil and program planning. This year 34 of
Water Conservation Dislrictrcceived Ohio's districts rated superior, 49 rat• superior service awanl rating at the ed excellent, and four earned a good
53rd annual meeting of the Ohio Fed, rating.
eration of Soil and Water ConservaThose attending the meeting from
lion ' Districts held last week in Meigs County were supervisors, MarCplumbus.
co Jeff~rs. Joe llolin, John Rice and
The award is part of the Distinc- Tom Theiss; employees, Opal Dyer,
· tive Service Goodyear Conservation Blair Windon, and Diana Kimes; aild
Awards program, and "was accepted • ladies auxiliary members, Jackie Jef.
by Marco Jeffers who is presently fers and Janet Bolin along with Natserving as chairman of the Meigs Soil ural Resources Conservation Servic.e
and Water Conservation District. Pre- District Conservationist Mike Duhl.
sentation was made by Federation
Janet Bolin was elected treasurer
President Gary Mast
of the Federation Auxiliary.
The Distinctive Service Program,
1be OFSWCD was organized in
s.,Onsored by Goodyear The and 1943 to strengthen the natural
Rubber Company, encourages district resource conservation programs of
supervisors to ~valuate theii natund . Ohio's 8~ county-based SWCDs. The
resource conservation program on an annual meeting gives supervisors and
annual basis. District programS are theii staffs an opportunity to gain new /
rated in a number of areas of service insight into local program developto county landowners and res1dents, ment as well as learn about natural
including delivery of technical assis- resource management offerings at the
IBRCe. conservation education and county, state and federal level.
information programs .and overall

Tobacco quot~ to be
.announced by Feb. 1

I

I

By UsA MEADOWS .
GALUPOUS ·The U. S. Department of Agriculture aimounced on
Jan. 23 that U.S. cigarette manufacturers plan to purchase 424 million
pounds{From sales weight) of 1996crop burley tobacco.
Major domestic cigarette manufacturers arc required by the statute
to report annually to USDA their
intended purchases of burley tobac·· co from U.S. aliction mUkets and
producers.
Data on intended purchases, average annual llurley expons for.the pre-' ~
ceding three years and the quantity of
tobacco needed to attain the reserve
stock level are used to detennine the
annual burley tobacco marketing

quota. However, \ly law; the 1996
· marketing year quota may not be less
than 90 ·percent of the 1995 quota.
The 1996 quota will be announced by
Feb. 1.
·
Annual burley exports for 1993,
1994, and 199 averaged 15.4 million
pounds, dowo 4.7 million pounds
from the 1992-1994 average. In 1995,
nianufacturers' purchases totaled 38.
million pounds.
Gallia County burley tobacco producers should watch for the
announcement of the 1996 quota and
-details of the 1996 price support
requirements.
Lisa Meadows Is fhe county
executive dlre&lt;:tor of the Gallia
Farm Service Agency.

~Rutland

jected last August
Americans are expected to import
$29 billion of agricultural products in
1996, $500 million below last year.
Lower world coffee prices are the
nlain reason for the decline, USDA
says.
The value of U.S. farm eltpons
last January through October was
$45.2 billion, up 24 percent from the
same period in 1994. With high

year seen·

world prices prevailing for 'most
commodities, tha largest ~.ains were
in grairis and feeds, cotton, oilseeds
. and vegetable oils and bi:ef and
poultry.
· Com shipments during the I0
months totaled 50.3 million tons nearly double the year-earlier figure.
Com exports were wort!) $5.9 billion, ·
up $3 billion from the 1994 period. ·

Jap1111 was . the bigest mute~
buying 13.4 tilillion tons of Q.S. COlli;,
South KOR&amp; took 7.8 million 11)111'
and Taiwan, ~.2 million.
. ,
Ten-month wheat shipments~"
26.8 million tons, a ~light i~;
But the value of those exports shot up;
by $1.1 billion, w$4.4 billion. Eaypt.
bought 4.3 million tons; China. 2.~
million; and Japan, 2.4 million ton-·;,

include
laboratory
director and
chief .
Dr. Gallo's
professional
activities
pathologist at the Indian Medical
Center in Phoenix, Ariz.,, where he
served also served on the executive
committee as vic;e chairman and as
secretary, and was a member of the

caption
during a recent conteat.
.
.

· • ·l

regularly. Trees do get old and die.
Woyar said many contrac:tors care
about natural resources and are
in'llol'lled in Ohio's Cenifled Tree
Fann program and timber stand
·
improvement.
"Most companies in Ohio are here
to stay," he said. "They just don't go
in and render a resource unusable •
. that doesn't benefit anyone."
Swope suggested more communi·
cation among loggers, landowners,
thC SWCD.and f~try service would
create an all-ar01111d better climate.
~ "laatead of enforcing the law, we
want to work with these guys and do
tllings right
' .
.
But all conservation prll)llces
~by lofiUs 1re volUntaey.
~uno _mendlted policy in Ollio
oudiillriJ ·whlt iolphl:an ~can't
,do; .lid' Kevin Swope; Columbiana

'l

'

County Spit and Water Cons.ervalion
District Programs Coordinator. ·
Under House Bill 88, Agricultural
Pollution Abatement, the local
SWCD has the power to enforce
evervthin11 in the "BMPs"for Ewsion
Control on Logging Jobs" handbook.
The SWCD can take action when
water is affected if there is a written
complaint from a landowner or.averbal complaint from a township
trustee. ....
"Loggen need to be aware that we
are trying 10 have some control over
water quality," Swope said. ' Streams
neecl to'be proteCted."
Swope lliid that it is unacceptable
to.dump brush ·rro,n a landing into a
stream. This slows the current of
warer, causes an obstruction and
fon:es the ·alream to change course, ·
whicll. caii$CI. the stream' bank to

erode.
.
If a logging crew needs to cross a
stream, it should be done without
damaging the stream channel by
using a culvert or laying logs across
the stream to act as a bridge until !he
work is done.
.
Skid roads should not exceed a 20 ·
percent slope. For steep a,eas, Swope
sugges~ wC)Itdng with an a&lt;ljaceni
landow~r for alternative access to
the trees.
When !he job is completed, ~
area sbould he reseeded, mulched and
regraded to as natural
u pos-.
sible.
•
'
·
''It ,just doeSn't make economic
sense to go in and lear up the
lando" Woyar s,id. ·
CyJ!IIala L. Jmtl.. it cllltrk:t
fo~ fot lilt "Gallla, SoB -.1
,,ater Coacemttloll Dlltrlet.

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·to~ 1 loillbem
wholculc fJirm
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~GIJIIIC.1:'1}1o0hiofruitcl '"·.
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Factory Spona«ed- Endl Jan. 31 at

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oi!Jaoblc R•r

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BUICK
SINCE 1954

.PONTIAC
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35 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 29, 1996

A Gannett Co. Nenpoper

Budget foes issue call for bipartisanship
By JIM ABRAMS
Asaoclatecl Prna Writer
WASHINGTON- The best way to resolve the impending crisis over the
federal debt is to come together Qn a seven-year balanced budget, Senate
Republican and Democratic leaders say.
"We really need a truce here, we need bipartisanship," Senate Democ·
ratic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota said Sunday. ,
Daschle and Senate Majority Whip Trent Lon, R-Miss., appearing togeth·
er on NBC's "Meet the Press," differed on how to approach the debt ceiling issue but agreed that striving for a balanc~ budget agreement should be
part of the formula.
"I think we're close enough. We ought to continue to work to makt= that
· actually come together and get an agreement," Lott said.
Following the breakdown in budget talks between the White Hquse and

congressional Republicans, House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., suggest- that lowers federal spending levels while keeping the government runnmg
ed that the two sides make a "down payment" on the budget deficit by putting through March 15, are unlikely to raise the debt ceiling without imposing
conditions.
together a smaller package of savings and tax cuts they can agree on.
"The president is not the dictator of the country," Sen. Phil Gramm, RGingrich proposed attaching that pack,age to a bill extending government
borrowing authority and avoiding the first ever federal default on its debt Texas, said on CBS' "Face the Nation." "I'm not going to vote 10 simply
,expand the debt limit by another trillion dollars unless we are going to do
obligations.
The admi.nistration says the Treasury faces default if the $4.9trillion debt something about the problem."
ceiling isn't lifted by March I, possibly causing a rise in interest rates, stopLoll concurred that there .will be "something" attached to the debt limit
page of Social Security payments and deterioration of the nation's interna· measure to make it palatable to Republicans, but said the goal should be a
tional financial standing.
·
full balanced budget agreement, not just a down payment. "I think that's too
small.
I thinK we need to do more. We can do more."
Daschle, repeating the administration position, sail! it was wrong "to make
our whole system subject to the kind of high-stakes politics that some RepubClinton's balanced budget proposal and the plan put forth by the Republicans in the leadership want to see us do."
licans are not far apart on the numbers and both sides say they are ready to
But Republicans, who got President Clinton's sigi\BtUre Friday on a bill resume talking.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. At a mournful, IO.year remembrance Sunday, the rumbling flyover of Air Force jets at the precise
moment of Challenger's last liftoff
· gave way to 73 seconds of pained
silence.
The silence, marking the
doomed flisht's duration, was
punctuated only by traffic and the
screams of sea gulls.
~-i!!O J!llqpj~ " -~lt:~ •.
nauts, shuttle rnanaaers. Kennedy
Spece Center workers and many
tourists - wen: united by theif .
memories o_f that awful day when ·
the seven crewmembers died.
"'fl!,ank goodness I had sunglasses on," said a weepy Beny
Ranck, visiting from Honey Brook,
Pa.
Indeed, many of the children
accompanying their parents to tile
Kennedy Space Center for the
('
Astronauts Memorial Foundation
ceremony had not yet been bora
IN MEMORY - U~. Air Force Airman First Cia. . George
when Challenger shattered 8.9
Woodward plac:ad • ~ In front of the portrait of ..tronaut
miles above the Atlantic Ocean 73
Ellison Onlzuldl durlnt •n annlvlrury remembnlnce •t Onlzuseconds after liftoff at 11;38 a.m.
ldl Air Force a.... Mqunblln Vlaw, C.IH. Ontzuka - • one of
on Jan. 28, 1986.
the aatronauta who Wfl killed In the ChaUenger aXJ)Ioslon on
Six-year-old Catherine Meyer
Jan. 28, 1986. (AP) .I
of Findlay, Ohio, for instance, had
to be cajoled. to go to the ceremo- drawings, an apple and a.plastic . dium at the conclusion of the
·
ny. She was afraid; she saw a video teddy bear.
national anthem in tribute to his
The
mother
of
Challenger
astroof the Challenger accident in her
father and the rest of the crew. He
kindergarten class on Friday and natit Judith Resnik, Sarah Belfer of flew the so-called missing man forthought it had just happened, that Mayfield Heights, Ohio, planned to
mation.
At the Kennedy Space Center,
a schoolteacher had just been spend a quiet day at the symphony. A performance of" America the
near a monument dedicated to
killed.
astronauts killed in the line of
Her mother explained it hap- Beautiful" was being dedicated to
pened a long time ago.
her daughter.
space duty, the father of Challenger
Across the United States on
And the family of Challenger
crew member Gres Jarvis got
Sunday, people remembered- as commander Francis "E&gt;ick"
through his four-minute speech
Scobee was in Tempe, Ariz., for the
though it were yesterday.
without breaking down as he'd
At McAuliffe's grave in her Super Bowl. Son Rich Scobee, an
feared. But afterward, Bruce Jarvis
hometown of Concord, N.H., Air Force captain, led a formation
shook his head when asked how he
mourners left flowers, poems, of fighter jets over Sun Devil Stawas doing.

Ex-parks director Powell ·makes
bid for commission nomination.
Former county parks director
Mary Powell announced today she is
seeking the Republican nomination
for the county commission seat commencing Jan. 4, 1997, currently occupied by Democrat Janet Howard.
In order for Meigs County to
move forward, Powell said, village,
township and county officials need to
develop respect and responsibility for
themselves and each other, and
become more receptive to the needs
of the county's citizens.
Officials need to continue developm~nt of the tourism industry, work
toward
completion
of the
Ravenswood Connector and U.S. 33
to Athens; develop infrastructure and
low-intere~t business !Qans to make
the county more attractive to new
business and industry, and benefit the
retention and expansion of present
businesses and industries, she said.
"We have to open our doors if we
.expect growth and job creation. We
cannot afford to be passed by. Being
your county commissioner will be a
' challenge which I am willing to
accept and working for the county
will be my only job," she said.
A graduate of Pomeroy High
· School and Southernton's Beauty
Academy, Powell received a teaching

Aaaoclated P,.u Wrlt8r
WASHINGTON Labeled
"Richie Rich" by rival Phil Gramm,
GOP presidential hopeful Ste'lle
Forbes insisted Sunday he understands the economic worries of aver. age Americans despite his wealth.
Asked on CBS' "Face the
Nation" if he had ever held a mortgage, Forbes said, "Every bouse
I've bought 1185 been through a mort•
gage." Ending the mortgage interest
deduction would not increase middle:class families' taX' burdens, the mil:lionaire magazine publisher ~d.
. But Gramm criticized ·forbes'
:proposal to end the deduction as put
. ·o f a flat tax. And the Thxas senator
called it inconceivable Forbes could
·beat President Clinton if Forbes
.became the OOP nominee.
. "It would be Richie Rich against
;Tom Sawyer," Gramm said on
·NBC's Meet the Press .....There's
:no way you could posaibly win. that
11

:race."

Forbes has come under increasing

attack from OOP rivals, including
front-runner Bob Dole, the Senate
majority leader, as he has climbed in
the polls.
Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar
Alexander on Sunday said Forbes is
"not prepared to be president."
Alexander also began airing an Iowa
TV commercial arguing the White
House would rejoice if Clinton's
opponent was Dole, Forbes or .
Oramm.
And as Dole had on Saturday,
Alexander also questioned why
Forbes has refu~ to release his
income tax rerurns.
"I think.what most people would
discover is his tax, which says it will
cut our taxes, cuts his and raises
ours," Alexander said.
But Forbes called the issue a·
diversion. Despite his wealth, l'ortles
insisted be understands the economic. coocems of average Americans
because he runs the family publishina empire.
,"For 25 years, I'~e been in the private sector, dealing with real cus-

Mary Powell
degree at the University of Cincinnati
and taught II years at Meigs High
School, where she was responsible
for developing the cosmetology curriculum and budget in order for the
school to become licensed by the
State Board of Cosmetology and
certified by the State Board of Education.
She was also an advisor for Voca·

tional Industrial Clubs of America.
Powell was a fonner business
owner and on the founding commit·
tee of 1he Pomeroy Merchants Association, seving as its secretary for two
years. She was on the board of directors on the Pomeroy Chamber ·Of
Commerce, chainnan of lhe sesquicentennial and co-founder of the Big ·
Bend Stem wheel Festival.
She is a member of the Racine
Order of the Eastern Star; Meigs
County Historical Society; committee
for the Buffington Island Re-enactment; I 75th Meigs County Anniversary and Portland Preservation Committee; River Bend Art Council1beaterCommittce; active in Ohio Parks
and Recreation Association; and
completed National Executive Development School training for recrea,tion
and park directors in Albuquerque,
N.M.
She is a member of the Grace
Episcopal Church choir and president
of the Episcopal Church Women's
Guild. She is co-chainnan of the heritage committee of the Return
Jonalhan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American Revolution and co-chairman of the committee to restore Ohio's oldest standing
(Continued on Page 3)

Stobart announces
run for commission
Joseph
Stobart,
Racine, of the Southern "Development Corannounced Friday his intention to poration to obtain the Ravenswood
seek the Republican nomination to Bridge.
run for the county commission seat
Stobart is a notary public and has
expiring Jan. 4, 1997, currently occu- had an income tax service for many
pied by Democrat Janet Howard.
years. He is a mem~r of the ReorA former Racine High School ganized Church of Jesus Christ of
salutatorian, he served in the U.S. Latter Day Saints, and a former
Marine Corps in Korea and is a life mayor of Racine who served four
member of the Racine American years on the Southern Local Board of
Legion.
, Education. He owned and operated a
He is retired from the U.S. Postal restaurant in Racine.
He and his wife, Earlene, had one
Service, and leased and helped raise
millions for oil and gas drilling iii daughter, Joy, and two stepsons, DarMeigs County. He was also secretary rell and Steve Norris.

As Forbes gains in polls, GOP
opponents turn up ,the criticism
By SALLY BUZBEE

'

Association will lie ~n1 thO . ililmedlately tq!IOWina. For more
"'aall~ ~(y Preview" an "Open infQnniiiOn. &amp;.itet the O.Wa ~
Steer lnd Heater ShOw" 011
ty Bx'lllrioa'Oilce'a1614-446-7007.
'18, ,J996,at~Oallia~1~or
S.nald l'f •• 11 -tbe M....
-~24. '
.. -··
Plliqlvundl on Roe 35 to @lapc:io Ce1 111J ~It lti i1 A.-, Ollie
· lis, Ohio. The Heiflr SOOw ~ beJin 8Cale ~ fi dai
The Oal!ia COUIIIY ~·a II 11:00, Lm. with !he 3!al;r ~
•' ,
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•Aulo. ~1. W/f;I.D.

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·niiWIIIII
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;:Sprl'!il
iu~~ ~~·. _day~-·~·~eo.tinlied~o.~ ..· _:· .
Ohio

Vol 48, NO. 110
1 Section, 10 P-a-

By MARCIA DUNN

BOWL-.

1

•

AP Aeroapace Wrlt8r

.

.

Partly cloudy tonight, .
Iowa In the tuna. Tu..day,
cloudy. Hlgha near 40.

Pick 4:
5-3-4-3

America recalls
10th anniversary
of a ft:agedy

NO MONBY DOWN!

Continued from D-1

7-5-1

Sports, Page 4

As· if. it ·were yesterday

'pftJt::ES GOOIJ'ONLY lJNTIL ~ANuABY 3JSTt

AOI!Sh •re:
Tim Tomlin,
Managtr of Rutland
·
nlture, and Doug Bock of Warner H111tlng and
Cqollng.

1-3-12·20.29-30
Kicker:
1..()-6 4 4 9
Pick 3:

,. ; r

·· ·
r--~R:O~E;L:G~A=L~L~O~,~M:D:!.--~~~=~~~~i~s~==~~;;~~~:_;~~

sa

Super Lotto:

'

CONTEST WINNER • Mel Mock, right, owner Of The Hearint ~
Center, Galllpollt, congnatulatls Charles Perry, PL Pleat ant. Per- '
ry was named winner of • reiiiOW coullollecl color 1V with clna~ ~
1

· GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic surgical cOmmittee.
announces the addition of pathologist
Dr. Gallo, his wife Jackie and son
Roe! A. Gallo, Jr., M.D. as a member Christopher reside in the Gallipolis
of the Clinic Pathology Deparunent. area.
Dr. Gallo has joined the staff of both
/
Clinic and Holzer Medical Center
'•
Laboratories.
A native of Fort Sill, Okla., Dr.
Gallo earned his medical degree
from the University of North Dakota School of Medicine. His residency in pathology was also completed
at the University of North Dakota. In
addition to his medical degree, Dr.
Gallo has a B.S. in pharmacy from
Oklahoma State University and was
a ph11111111Cy resident at the Gallup
Indian Mcdiclil Center where he WIIS
American Society of Hospital Pharmacists accredited.
A Fellow of the College of Amer:
ican Pathologists, Dr. Gallo is Board
Certified by the American Board of
Pathology in Anatomic and Clinical
.·. \
Pathology.

Cowboys win
fifth crown In
Super Bowl

·I

WASHINGTON (AP) - . Shirp this year, resulting Jn lower net returns to farmers were highest since expccttd to . push the br!'ak·-ot!~i
increases in some egg prices in the · returns for egg producers ov~r the )986. But higher feed costs ~ price to nearly 68\)Cnts a p011mt ~ll
eastern United S!a!Cs that followed year.
. Ega eltports should remai!l about
the early Janwuy blizzard are likely
the
same a5 1995, the repOrt said.
to be reversed quickly, the AgriculWholesale
liroiler prices arc
ture Department says.
In the New York area. prices of expected to be stronger during ~
large eggs ·increased 1'6 cents • doze.n flfSI half of the year, the report sai~
over a two-week period, although the But rising feed costs will push the
depanment's survey or 12 melrdpol- break,even price towafd 54 cents a ."
itan mas of the East found the aver· pound io the second half. The annuage was about 1.5 cents. Restocking al growth rate of expons is expected
of supplies is expected to wipe out to slow to around 10 percent, compared with 30 percent in 1995.
much of the increase.
Wholesale turkey prices are likeFor piodUccrs, USDA's Economic Research Service said lower eu ly to drop this month, although in
p'roduction should keep returns pOs- mid-January -they ·were above last
itive during the first quarter, although year's levels. Prices of dark meat are
greater ~upplies . could ·Iced to ·sub- slightly weaker.
The Economi~:· Research Service
stantial periods of losses at midyear.
The break-even price is expected expects continued increases in turkey
to approach 74 cents a dozen later production because last year's net

New pathologist .
joins ~olzer Clinic

Ohio Lottery

r&lt;

Blizzard pushes up some eastern egg prices

tion winner. .. --.
.

Ohio forestry safety.. ~·

..

Joseph Stobart

Key federal disaster
programs summarized

tamers, meeting real payrolls," said
Forbes.
In a Federal Election Commission
filing last year, Forbes listed his
biggest personal holdings as his Bedminster, N.J., farm, rental properties
and investment properties, each listed as wOrth.mo~ than $1 million .
A rival magazine, Fonune, has
estimated the farm is wOrth $26.5
million, and Forbes overall worth
$439 million.
Dole next week plans to air new
ads casting Forbes as inexperienced
and pushing risky and untested ideas,
perhaps by focusing on Forbes' views
on welfare and immigration.
Forbes, asked on CBS about gun
control, said he favored repealing the
1994 law banning some types of
assault weapons, but favored requiring potential gun buyers to undergo
a quick check of theii records . .
Asked why he.once called Christian Coalition founder Pat.ltobenson
a "toothy flalce," Forbes said; "He
was running ·for president in 1988
when I made that statement, and he

From AP, Staff Reports
Ohioans affected by flooding in six eastern counties will be able to get
money from the federal government to help pay for damage to their homes
and businesses.
·
President Clinton on Saturday declared the counties l!long the Ohio River, including Meigs, as major disaster areas and ordered federal assistance
to supplement state and local cleanup effons.
The following is a summary of key federal disaster aid programs ma~
available for the six counties designated for federal assistance by Clinton's
major disaster declaration:
• Rental payments for temporary bousing for those whose homes are unlivable. Available for up to 18 months depending on need.
• Grants for minimal repairs to make damaged homes habitable.
• Grants, to a maximum of $12,900, to help meet serious disaster-related needs not covered by other programs.
• Unemployment payments up to 26 weeks for workers who temporariSteve Forbes
ly lost jobs because of the disaster, and who do not qualify for state benefits.
had made some views on economics·
• Low-interest loans, at 4 or 8 percent, to conver uninsured private and
that! disagreed with."
business property losses.
1
Forbes also said Sunday he would
· • Loans up to $1 .5 million for small businesses that suffered disaster-reiJIInot oppose Taiwan taking a seat in the ed cash flow problems and need working capital to recover.
..
United Nations if he became presi• Loans up to $500,000 for farmers to cover production and property lossdent, but would not push for it. Chi- es, excluding primary residence.
na, which regards Taiwan as • breakIndividuals, families and business owners in the coUnties designated for
away province, is adamantly opposed federal assistance can apply immediately by calling 1-800-462-9029. Eligito the idea.
ble counties include Belmont, Columbiana. JeO'erson, Meigs. Monroe and
Washington.
I)

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�Commentary

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- Monday, Janu1ry 29, 1996

.... 2

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·2158 o Fax: 992·2157

. llonc18y, J•nu.ry ~. 1oee

--Area Deaths-...... Du Pont heir nabbed
~~~~~~~~ari~~!a~!y. Jan.27. 1996intheSelby trying to repair boiler

OHIO V'Jcathcr
Thelday, Jen. 30

-

'

AccuWealhc,. forecast

General Hospital, Marietta.
·
Born in Coolville, a daughter of the Iau Wtlliam and Emma Snyder
Chutes, she was a homernllker.
Surviving are two sons, Thlll1mlll Deeter of Wadsworth, and Jack'Deeter
ofThlsa, Okla.; eight grandchildren and several great-grandchildren; a brother, Tom Chutes of Las Vegas, Nev.; and a sister, Hazel McCloud of Pomeroy.
. She was also preceded in death by her husband, Stanley Deeter; and one
infant son.
.
Services will he 10 a.m. Wednesday in the White Funetal Home, Coolville,
with the Rev. Helen Kline officiating. Burial will follow in the Stewart Cemetery, Hockingport. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.rn.lfuesd
ay.
' B u d d y ' M o ·we r y
Luther

•

By Jack Anderaon
surrendered the high ground against AFDC's entitlement status but still 'While some Clinton advisers would
and Mlct..l BlniiHI
the Republican welfare plan, which had the administration's support .• love to lay down a martccr over weiWASHINGTON - President Clin- would end the federal guarantee of would send 1.2 million children into fare -- as the administration did with
ton punctuated his State of the Union cash assistance to poor mothers witli poverty. This is an open-and-shut case Medicare last year ·- others would
address with 32 references to chi!as domestic programs go, but Panet- prefer to sign a bill and declare vicdren, but omitted even a single refer- ,
Jack Anderson· ta glumly noted that the political real- tory. H Clinton chooses the Ia~. it
ence to Aid to Families with Depenities were winning the day. One Jaw- will he yet anotl)er blow to the liberdent Children, the child-welfare promaker who attended the meeting ai lawmakers gathered in Panetta's
gram that sparked a candid discussioo
described Panetta's reasoning:
office that day.
days earlier in the office of White
Michael Blnsteln
"Whatif(Sena~MajorityLeader . "Theproblemis•.~I~don't
House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta.
Bob) Dole cuts a deal with (Minori- have the votes," said one attendee.
The 90-minute private meeting children in favor of block grants to ty Leader Tom) Daschle to do the " We threatened the adtinnistration
was attended by senior ad111inistration thC states.
Senate bill with small improvements, (on welfare) last fall wl!en we had the
officials and members of the Black,
Panetta acknowledged that unless but doesn't include the entitlement debt bill . ... That's why ~y:re ~~n
Hispanic and N.ian-American cau- AFJ?,C retains its "entitlement sta- · status, and they get 75 or 80 votes?" talking to us now. We needed to get
cuses in the House. N. details of the tus, anu-poverty programs for chi!- tiPs lawmaker said. "Then it comes . their attention."
meeting reveal, Clinton's challenge to ,dren will be _forced to.c_ompete against to the House and passes overwhelm- . . ,That's a wry commen~!fY on: a
Congress to pass a welfare bill that .other spendmg pnonbes on. the_ state ingly. How can the president veto it, .president who tried to get the COUll·
does ''the right thing by our children" level, and that those compeung Inter- because it will be a veto-proof mar- try's attention in his ·State' of the ·
seemed secondary to doing the right ests may have ~ore (IOWerful and gin?"
·
Union speech by tallting about
thing politically.
more vocal consutuenc1es. ~ enuWith the electi~n only nine montha · "doing the "right lblog 'by"'ur chile
Nobody in Panetta's office dis- tle~ent status ensures that children away, Clinton clearly does not want dren."
agreed with the notion that AFDC, the are msulated from the normal ups and to lead another showdown with the
INSIDE THE CLOAkROOM -government's chief welfare program, downs of the economy that can GOP over welfare. "You have to help Reeent public opinion pollsshow that
should be protected as a federal enti- squeeze state budgets. .
.
us," Panetta pleaded with the House · many sou:tlit:inllina ltcpublic:anS do
tlement.
. Panetta also kn~ws the' results of Democrats, urging them to dissuade not want 93-year-old Strom Thur·
But the consensus turned to con- :a study by the Wh1te House budget Daschle or other Democratic leaders mood. wbu has b!oen in the Sen6te
troversy when some lawmakers want- [office last fall indicating that a Sen- frpm cutting a quick deal with Dole.• since J954rto run for re-election this
ed to know why the White House had ate welfare ~11-- which didn't protect
But the issue is far from decided. year. That opinion is shared, almost
r.:e::f~C!-1":::_7.:-,_...::------...unanimously,. by li'is Senate ~
JAe "
SerVices Committee collea$Ues . -~ M1!4.
who, fortunately, for Thurmond, cail.: l't!WS -~
o
,,
not vote in South Carolina.
.
1\eaU'{
ThedirtylittlcsecretintheReplibIican cloakroom these days is mat
or. t:!au
Republicans simply don't, belie\oe
1° ., 1'"
their revered friend is up to'the job ,. although "for a 93-year-old min,
~ he's amazing," as one Rcpublic.an
senator put it. But these R~publicans
do have a lot to say about whether
Thurmond will return to the Senate as
chairman of the Armed Servic~s
Committee. If a secret vote were tak. • J. I
en today, according to sources, Thur... ·r,.
.rnond would lose that contest hand's·down.
·, ' ·
·"!think you may see some kind of
• · • Ike
movement nel!.t year to get control of
that committee somehow. and remove
ThurmQnd (Jom the day-to-day opc;rations," said one exasperated member
of the committee. "I don't know how
you do it.'' This source echoes tbe
widely held view that ihe committee
is in danger of becoming "irrelcviht"
as a result of we* leadership.
Jack Anderson and Michael Bips~in are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
'

I Toledo I 24" I

By

and

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publleher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Changes due in special
: license plates program

~ By JOHN CHALFANT
· Associated Pre11 Writer
COLUMBUS- Most Ohioans display basic state license plates on theit
. vehicles. Others pay more for plates with special designs or initials through
a program that may receive a legislative tuneup.
Rep. Sally Perz, R-Toledo, heads a lhree'member subcommittee that is
' expected to recommend changes to increase consistency in creation, man' ufacture and sales of special plates.
'
Three percent to 5 percent of the 10 million vehicles registered in the
' state have special plates.
,
' " ft's a good program. I think it's an emerging market. It's a discretionary
. expenditure so it:s nothing that we're mandating," Perz said.
"You don't have to go out and get a special plate. However, if you choose
to there are many good causes that could benefit from the extra money gemcrated," Perz said in an inte..View.
The subcommittee's recommendations will help determine the fate of seven bills pending before the full House Transportation and Public Safety Com•mittee that deal with special plates.
. Types of special plates include personalized, reserved initials, amateur
radio, physician, volunteer firefighter, non-profit organizational, military,
· Lake Erie, Pro Football Hall of Fame, scenic rivers and collegiate.
. The military category alone includes 26 variations: veterans of World War
I (seven estimated renewals in 1995) and Vietnam (3,463 estimated renewals
' 1995).
License plates that IOU! a driver's college of choice come in 58 varieties.
, • "We're going to recommend that the Legislature approve all special
. plates," Perz said.
Legislators currently approve those plates that create special funds to col"lect money from extra plate fees, such as college scholarships. The Ohio
Bureau of Motor Vehicles can approve on its own other special plates.
"So the Fraternal Order of Police, for instance, just got approval through
·the bureau because they're not putting a surcharge on to go to some special
•cause of their choice," Perz said.
Other likely subcommittee recommendations:
- Requests for new plate designs would need a minimum number of
·orders for purchase such as ·500 or 1,000.
- Final approval of plate design should rest with the bureau.
- All special plates must show county identification.
- Maintain a current requirement for front and rear plates ..
- No free plates or free renewals. Fee exemptions already in place may
continue for renewals, but new orders would carry fees.
"We're really working from a comprehensive approach. We believe that
we should not as a Legislature be approving free plates and free renewals.
Where do you stop?" Perz said.
The subcommittee expects to recommend the state set a minimum num.ber of sales per year in order to maintain each special plate.
"It's hard to rationalize keeping plates on a program where you have six
~sales per year, or none per year. It just takes up.computer space, shelf space,
. paper handling," Perz said.

:Today in history

1

I Dolfi

Have
aN'fr'HiNQ

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--................ ..

...

A zero for Jesus·in a·public school
By Nat ttentoff
A consortium of civil liberties and
religious organizations -- from the
ACLU and the American ·Jewish
Congress to the Baptist Joint Committee and the American Muslim
Council -- has issued a parental guide
to religion and the law in the public
schools.
One section states: "Teachers may
not require students to modify,
include, or excise religious view.s in
their assignments, if germane. These
assignments should be judged by
ordinary academic standards of substance, relevance, appearance and

grammar.

tl •

• By The Aaaoclated Prell
' Today is Monday, Jan. 29, the 29th day of 1996. There are 337 days left ·
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 29, 1820, Britain's King George III died insane at Windsor Cas.tie, ending a reign that had seen both the American and French revolutions. i
On this date: ·
In 1843, the 25th president of the United States, William McKinley, was :
born in Niles, Ohio.
In 1845, Edgar Allan Poe's poem, "The Raven," was first published in ·
. the New York avening Mirror.
· In 1850, Henry Clay introduced in the Senate a compromise bill on slav; cry which included the admission of California into the Union as a free state. !
: In 1861. Kansas became the 34th state of the Union.
,
: In 1900, the American League, consisting of eight baseball teams, was
• organized in Philadelphia.
'
:. In 1936, the first members of baseball's Hall of Fame, including Ty Cobb
:and Babe Ruth, were named in Cooperstown, N.Y.
In 1956, editor-essayist H.L. Mencken died in Baltimore.
In 1958, actors Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward were married.

In March 1991, Dana Ran:~sey, a
teacher in the Dickson County Tennessee School District, gave a
research assignment to her ninthgrade English class. The students
could choose any topic they wanted,
provided they could sHow four secondary sources for their research.
Among the topics the teacher
approved were papers on witchcraft,
black ~ and the occult and spiritualism ~upernatural meetings with
dead people).
Briuney Settle, then 15, decided to
write a paper on "The Life of Jesus
Christ," for which there were deciyedly more than four secondary
sources. The teacher rejected the topic, telling Brittney it was "not an

approprl~te ·thing to

d6 in a public

school." Moreover, it was all the
more inappropriate, the teacher
added, because Brittney was a Christian, al~ady knew a lot about the subject in which she was intensely
involved, and so it would be hard for
her to research and write the paper in
a properly scholarly way. Brittney
wrote and submitted the paper anyway, and was given a grade of zero.
When a lawsuit was filed charging
discrimination against religious
.speech under the First Amendment,
·the teacher said, during a deposition,
that " we don't sleal with personal religious beliefs in a public school."
Dana Ramsey was supported by
her principal, the school board, the
federal district court, and the Sil!.th
Circuit .Court of Appeals. This
unequivocal rejection of the student's
claim that she was being punished for
her religious viewpoint was in odd
contrast with a Dickson County
School District written policy that in
compos111ons, "Student-initiated
ellpressions in assignments which
reflect their beliefs or non-beliefs
about a religious theme" are to be
pennitted.
School boards often tend to be
shamelessly contradictory in defending their violations of student speech
rights. For instance, this school hoard
said that Brittney's zero grade did not

conflict with its stated policy on pro- mistaken."
_)
tected religious expression in school
On the other hand, Michael
assignments. After all, said the board, McConnell, law professoc at die
Brittney Settle's paper was not "a University of Chicago, points out:
composition."
"When a research paper is otherwise
Adding to this educational obfus- appropriate, as this one was, the fact
cation was the teacher's response that it involves religion is not a legiiwhen she was asked about having imate basis for exclusion."
Last November, the U.S. Supreme
given her imprimatlll' to topics of
reincarnation, spiritualism and the Court refused to review Settle
occ:ult. Those were not, she said, reli- · Dickson County School Board. No
gious topics.
· reasons were given. ~ court ~y
Tho Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals . : have copsidered the ·~ · moot ~inee
•declared: " Learning is more vital in · Brittney has graduated. This di5crimthe classroom than free speech," as if . inatory . Sixth Circuit approach to
. the two had· nothing to do with each . religious speech in a public school is
. other. Does that mean all speech, . now the rule only in that circuit (Kenincluding what has· previously been lucky, Michigan, Ohio aild Tenheld by courts to be protected student nessee) but may be cited by courts
speech -- like refusing to give the ·elsewhere.
.
Pledge ,of Allegiance -- is now proBut this _particular constitutional
hibited? Or the right, affirmed by the classroom ISsue has not yet been
Supreme Court, to have a student-ini- decided on its merits by the ~upreme
tiated religious club before or after Court.
.
classes?
Not surprisingly, the ACLU w115
. Speaking for the Sixth Circuit, not moved to protect Brittney's
1Chief Judge Gilbert Merritt dealt speech rights. TI,e ACLU is al59
with the teacher's convoluted-- and .sometimes confused al!out student,s.'
constitutionally specious -- reasons !religious speech rights in public
for rejecting Brittney's ~h paper sc~D?Is . The stat~ m_ust not compel
on,tlte life of Jesus. Those reasons, he rebg10us spe~ m 1ts schools, bl!(
,said, "fall within the broad leeway of students do not shed .their religious
:teachers' rig!lls to determine the viewpoints at the schoolhouse gate..
nati!R of the curriculum and the
Nat Henloff is a nadonaUy
grades to be.awarded students .. even . noownetl authority .on the ""-'
118~eachers ' 3/8 reasons that may be Amendment and the.rest of the Bill
ofRigha.
,.

a

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Why the White House . Seven.· were.:. fl~ed

Berry•s World

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By TONY SNOW
Creator• Syndicate
WASHINGTON -- Democrats
shifted nervously in their seats last
WedneSdllY, when seven former
employees of the White Ho115e travel office appeared before the House
Committee on Government Reform
and Oversight.
!he men who have served the
White House for a combined total of
134 years described their firings on
May 19, 1!)93. They were summoned
by a top. Bille 8ft!l told to clean oui
their desks. J'Wo hours later, aa they
were herded away in a cargo van with
no seats, Clinton aides were calling
them incompetents and crooks.
N. it turns out, the Ttavel Office
· Seven were fued because ~ presiden! wanted to hlf!d the~t's
duties over to some pals and huihlllate the ou11oing employees in the

process.

.

The White House reerved special
punishment for the former office
director, Billy Ray o.Ie. ~ 10n1 the
FBI and IRS after him, banaed his '
wife, kida and iistet, and· put hiql

through a 3G-month ordeal that ended when a jury took barely two hours
to declare him not guilty of malfeasance.
that trial, which cost Dale
$500,000, seemed only to whet the
Clintonistas' thirst for blood. Robert
Bennett, part of tl)e president's legal
dream team, has libeled Dale twice in
the last month. He told ABC News
that Dale had agreed to plead guilty
Ito embeulement charges --perhaps
!mistaking Dale for former Assistant
Attorney Generill Webb Hubbell -.and blamed Dale for failirig to per,fonn duties properly reserved for the
Customs BI!Rau:
·
Democrats stepped up the as5ault
durinslast week's hearin11. Rep. Paul.
IKanjorski of Pennsylvanii, ·woo not
:too long ago inserted $30 million into
.the fodtnl budget for a project nm by
his biotber and some~ cronies.
.Jed the chqe. When his ditiquel feU
tlat. KaiUonki switched gem. He
·calmly explaiiled tJ!at the Cllntons
'brutalirJed me Travel Oflic:e Sevai not
:0111 of malice. but stupidity. '1boec
.YOIIIIJ, idealistic ArltaoAIII didn't

I,

knl!~

proper procedures.
.
, Rep. Christopher Shays, a .Connecticut Republican 11est known for
his oon,genital bipartisanship, explodedit' ibis display of bullying. ".1 had
lhis misguided view that Democrats
would be ashamed of. what hap~Mel;' he recalls. "I thouJht ti1eY
woula say, 'With profound humility,
we're sorry for how you were treated 81!'1 we'te outraged' at. boY!' you
Wid treated and we apologize.' But
they· didn~t. "
· .;Yet there was method to the
~· savagery. Travelgate ieriotlllf threatens .the Clintons' most
c~hed IXJS~ssions: . thelr moral,
vand:y and the1r co-presidency.
The episode captures them in the
lll:l,of beatlna lip some amall fries ~
a fomi of lrrogance that anyone clll
understand. But more i~tfY. it
oft'.ra
a glimpse at the peculiai: way
in which the Clintona assembled The
Mc,.t Ethical White HoUJe' in Histo,ry,
Shortly after unpaekiJ1g their bags,
tho;~sident ~d his missus ~gf'lltO
repiiCC long11~ career ctVll ler-

•lcotumbusl30o

•

_,..

.:N e w c o l d f r o n t t o l e a v e

;~se•·sonal

temperatures
By The AUoclated Prell
, Weather forecast:
" Pas.,of a C\)ld front tonight will
Tonight ...Partly cloudy early most
~~ave Oljio '1\')lh,plll'tly cloudy skies areas ...Thrnmg cloudy after ·mld'"and temperatures generally in the mght. Lows mostly 15 to 2~.
. teens, foreoasters. said. Portions of
Tuesday...Scattered flumes northqorthern Ohio could have up to an eut...Otherwise . mostly cloudy.
.jnch of new snow on the ground.
H1ghs from the m1d 20s north to 35
:, Scattered flurries 1!fC possible in to 40 southeast.
ihe northeast on TUeSday, with the
' ,rest of state having mostly cloudy
Extended forecast:
;J kies. Hig~ will be1t~ .the mid-20s in
Wednesday and Thursday ...A
. the north but ,are likely to be above chance of snow north. A chance of
freezing in th south.
snow, rain or freezing rain .south.
, The record-high temperature for Lows in the teens north and in the 20s
this date at the Columbus weather south. Highs mid 20s north and in the
station was 65 degrees in 197S while 30s south.
Friday...A chance of snow. Lows
1 the record low was 13.below zero in
. )963. Sunset tonight wjll .be at 5:46 10 to 20. Highs in the :zps north to
, p.m. and sunrise Thesday at 7:42 a.m. mid 30s south.

me

:

M!~~~!g~~e~!!nJs!!r~SRafo~!!!~ci-

reconled -recently in the office of
~ Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamiltcin:
•
Deed; Donald .P. andEdnaR. Wil· 'Sbn to Karen Ann Leigh Jarrell, Mid' i:lleport;
Deed, John H. Mitchell to Kenneth A. Gamble;
Deed. John H. and Neda B.
Mitchell to Kenneth A. Gamble,
Orange traCts;
Deed, Donald R. and Ernestine K.
. Shul~ to Dale L. and Mary A. Prid·ay, Sutton ~~;
·· Deed, JIIIIC$ M. I&gt;Jint to Sammy
L. and Sherry Darst, Columbia;
, · Easement, Allen H. and·Regina F.
lllrowntoOmeaaNS.Chester: 7.394
JK:res; ·
Affidavit, Dorothy E. Hensley,
. aeceased, to Raymond Hensley, Scipio, 1.5625 acres;
Certificate, Arthur Hensley,

p' • I.S62S acres;
. .
Deed, Raymond and Patricia
H nsley to Jesse G. and Annie R.
Barnhart. Scipio, 1.5625 acres;
Deed, Margaret E. Ohlinger to
S~ Kalhry~ lannarelli and Susan
Mane Bear, Middleport;
Deed, Martha H. Chambers to
James W. Hobstetter, Sutton parcels;
Right of way, Greta Suttle Brown
to Monogahela Puwer Co., Olive, I •
acre;
Easement, Greta Suttle to Mon
Power;
• ·Right of way, Charles G., Carolyn
K. Uld Alma P. McMillin to Dublin
Energy Corp., Salem parcel;
Deed, E. Darlene Tillis to Larry
Holsinger, Letart parcels;
Deed, George Charles and V'trginia Foster to Thppers Plain-Chester
Water District, Letart parcel.

· · All·slinraffic deaths in Ohio over
•the weekend occurred in single-vehicle accidents, the State Highway
~trol said today.
.. ·
· The patr&lt;il counted fatabbes from
,6_p.m. Friday through Sunday. &gt;
.. Thec~Wl:
SuNDAY
TRPY :.!.. Thomas Wndling, 26,
of West Milton, hi a one-car tM:Cident
on a Miami County raod.
. MASSILLON ....: .Jeffrey Klever,
'18, of Massillon; driver in a one-car
accident on a city street.
SATURDAY
· RAVENNA Preston D.
t!hurch, 43, of Ravenna, driver in a
one-vehicle · tM:Cident on a Portage
County road. ·
,
.: PICKERINGTON - Dee A. :
ease, S4, of Pickerington, driver in a .
tine-car accident on Ohio 204 in Fair- ·
field County.
FIUDAY NIGHT
HAMILTON Patrick H.

one-car accident on a Butler County
road.
BARBERTON - Pamela D. Harrison, 39, of Barberton, pedestrian
killed by a car on a
street.

~fl.· A~Jfc~~n O~!~. 3~!fl!!~~lf!~

president's personal conespon•
dence unit, moved files from Vi~
Foster's office after hi,s dellh and jus(
happened to ~ICOver key billin~
fi.ICOids helongmg to the first lady ! ~ore · than a year. .rter q,npe
~uested the docume!'IS· ·
·
The !lhoaie opelJI,!OU, _with no.
te · 1mo J..o- 0 f""''te H;,..:;,~
ex nstve
w -.~ ' " '"
::::1
culture, probably didn't unclenlaDd!
tbat 00 adminiltratiun since Nixoa'-J
has installed the·kind of priv~ li~
that Mn. Clinton used
. to reaeh the
White House the night of Foster's

·• ·• ~ .,

'~·

Dante to be held
A round and square dance, along
with clogging, w.ill be held Saturday,

EMS

Hospital news

I TiiWNSiliii

Pon~emy.
Ph.
clus ........ poid Ml'onienoy, Ohio.

New- Auoclodoo.

.

· .

.···
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POS'IMASTBR: Send oddrtoa -lono to

t ~::11
e.m. quotaa provided by A

of Oelllpolle.

'
,I

"Our family is devastated and
sadd~ne4 by Dave's brutal, unexpected loss, " Mrs. Schultz told
reporters Sunday. "He was not only
a world-class athlete, coach and mentor, but a devoted and loving father to
our children and husband to me for
the past 14 years."
She said she had no.idea why du
Pont would attack her husband.

Lawsuits filed with clerk
(Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines R. Manuel, Racine, are seeking an
the grievances of one party against amount in excess of $35,000 from the
another. It does not establish guUt Southern Local Board of Education.
or irinocence.)
Mrs. Manuel claims she was
The following suits for judgment injured on Jan. 27, 1994, by falling on
were filed recently in the office of steps while working a5 a volunteer
Meigs County Clerk of Courts Larry for a school administration function
at Racine Elementary School.
Spencer: '
The board was negligent by keepCheryl L. and Spencer R. Carpenter, Racine, are seeking $750,000 ing the steps unsafe, the complaint
plus costs from Helen 1-. Bodimer states. As a result, she suffered perand Darla J. Hawley of Middleport, manent disabilities, according to the
complaint.
and the State Farm Insurance Co.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
On Jan. 27, 1994, Mrs. Carpenter
Pomeroy,
is seeking $2,580.41 plus
was a passenger in a vehicle driven
by Hawley that was involved in an costs and interest from William R.
accident with a car driven by Bod- Hall of Kent to repay the balance of
imer, according to the complaint. As a defaulted loan.
Karl Kebler U and J(aren Kebler
a result, she sustained severe and permanent injuries causing pennanent of Pomeroy are seeking $6,041 plus
physical impairment and incurring costs and interest from John and
Pamela L. Hogan of Tuppers Plains
medical e•penses.
Osie Evelyn Manuel and Charles on a defaulted loan.

Ex-parks director

Pomeroy police
find stolen car

(Continued from Page 1)

A vehicle which was reported
stolen from a New Haven, W.Va., residence Saturday, was recovered early Saturday afternoon by the
Pomeroy Police Department, according to Police Chief Gerald Rought.
A 1988 Chevy, owned by Mark
Roush of New Haven, was recovered
after police found the car parked on
East Main Street across from Cleland
Realty. Roush had reported that the
car was m1ssmg from h1s dnveway
around noon Saturday.
The truck was fingerprinted and
photographed , then released to
Roush. The incident is still under
investigation.

courthouse in Chester.
She is past director of the Meigs
County Parks Recreation and
Tourism, and was on the founding
committee of Ohio's Appalachian
Country and Ohio's Outback coalitions, designed 10 promote area
tourism. She has been involved in
other tourism activities including bus
and self-guided tours .
She has been active in promoting
, youth soccer and in securing grants
for various promotions.
Powell resides in Pomeroy with
her spouse of 42 years, Gerald. They
.
·
ha~e two children and three grand·chtldren .

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According to a ~ affidavit,
Mrs. Schultz said d'ii Pont fired one
bullet into her husband 's body after
he had ~ready fallen to the ground.
At one point, she said, he aimed the
.38-caliber revolver at her.

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---

own Car and opened (ire as Schultz
\Vas standing outside his home on the
estate grounds, where he lived with ·
his wife, ~ancy, and their two children.
.

ORANGE

SVBSCalfTION RA'IU

J • •• •• : ••••• •• ••• ••

Police said on Friday that duPont

~ pulled up in his silver Lincoln

notice of tile Aa18S of Taxation lor tile T1&gt;&lt; V• of 1995. Rates expreuod in dollars and amts of each one thousand dollars

BEDFORD
Molal L.S.D.
1 L.S.D.
CHESTER

The Doily S.Mioel, Ill C...rt SL. Pomei'O)I, '
OhkJ.!Ii769.
.

·o.n,. ......::.........................

Schultz, who was trainins on du
Pont's estate for this year's Games in
Atlanta.
Du Pont, 57, was arraigned on
murder and weapons charges, then
jailed without bond pending a hearing Thursday.
He arrived at the police station
Sunday kneeling in a black van, his
hands cuffed behind him. Wearing
running tights, sneakers and a jacket
advertising his world-class wrestling
center, Foxcatcher, the gray-haired du
Pont looked dazed as an officer bustied him out.

COLUMBIA

Stock raporte are

,~·

"This was a situation that required
waiting and patience, rather than
blazing guns," said police Lt. John
Francis.
From the beginning, the 75 officers who surrounded the 800-acre
estate chose negotiations instead of
attack against du Pont, whom they .
described as an eccentric, Olympiclevel marksman believed to be heavily armed.
Officers cut off duPont's hc!&amp;t Friday night but decided 10 keep other
utilities connected and even allowed
du Pont to sl.eep in hopes the situa;
tion could end peacefully.
Although negotiators encouraged
du Pont to try to fix his boiler, Newtown Township Police Chief Michael
Mallon repeatedly denied that police
tried to lure him out.
"He was not tricked into going out
of the house," Mallon said. "It was
an extremely trying and difficult situation.''
The capture ended a standoff that

began Friday afternoon after duPont
allegedly shot and killed 1984
Olympic gold medalist wre5tler Dave

of IIW, I, Howard E. Frank. Treaurer of Meigs County, Ohio, in compliance with roviood Code No. 323.08 of State of Ohio,

1liX

I~

-·-·-

eon-,_
C.,
Ohio 45769.
M ·2156. Secoo4

' '"-ilfed l'ltu , ..,. tbe~
· M..,loer: The

d~~~-~••

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

WendY lnl'l. ........................... 20'1.
Worthlngtunlncl. ·-··· ............20'•

Ohio Volley Pubtirhi..

'•

17

units record
calls
POMEROY
Units of the Me igs County Emer11:42 a.m. Saturday, Rocksptings
gency Medical Scrv!ce recorded 17
Rehabilitation
Center, Ray Garlinger,
calls for assistance Saturday and
HMC;
Sunday, including one transfer call.
5:58 p.m. Saturday, RRC, Diana
Units respooding inCluded:
Copeland, VMH;
MIDDLEPORT
10: II p.m. Saturday, motor vehi2:54a.m. Saturday, Village Manor
Apartments, Henry Thome, Veterans cle accident, Flood Road, James
Hudson U, refused treatment.
Memorial Hospital; _
2:02 p.m. Sunday, State Route 7, RACINE'
2:47p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
Marvin Yeauger, Holzer Medical
department
and squad to SR 124.
Center
motor vehicle accident, Jack Harless
refused.
REIIDSVll.LE
Veterans Memorial
5:32 p.m. Saturday, SR 681 East,
Saturday admissions - Donald John Chevalier, refused treatment.
Ervin, Racine; Walter Wears,
RUTLAND .
Pomeroy; Shirley Wolfe, Rutland.
2:35a.m. Saturday, Charles Wise,
Saturday discharges - none .
HMC;
.
Sunday admissions - Telitha
8:42 p.m. Saturday, Starr Hall
Casto, Long Bottom.
,
Road, Marjorie Schuler, HMC;
Sunday discharges - none:
9: II p.m. Satitrday, Rutherford
Holzer Medical Center
Road. Anthony Giles, HMC;
Dlscbarges Jtm.l6- Carl Whit10:31. p.m. Saturday, Meigs Mine
ing, Georgia Edwards, Melissa Har- 2, David Darst, PVH;
rison, Kathleen Dalton , Patricia
1.2:51 p.m. Sunday, Noble Summit
Suver, Roxie Leach.
Road, Robert Moodispaugh, HMC;
Blrtbs - Mr. and Mrs. Terry Bar2:17 p.m. Sunday, Cole Street,
ber, son, Reedsville; Mr. aod Mrs. ·Deborah Yonker, HMC.
John Cremeans, daughter, Pumeroy.
SYRACUSE
Dlscharces Jan. '1.'7- Jack Hud2:51 p.m. Saturday, Hemlock
son, Sabra White, Mrs. Terry Barber Grove, Mildred Smith, St. Joseph's
and son, Mrs. Rod Clonch and son, Hospital ;
John Sprow, Mrs. John Cremeans and
9:55p.m. Saturday, moto~ vehicle
daughter.
accident on Minersville Hill Road,
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Dave Woody Richards, Dianne Jones and
Bradshaw, daughter, Hamden.
VMH.
Disclaar&amp;es Jan. 28- Mrs. Dave OJ. Richards,
TUPPERS PLAINS
Bradshaw and daughter, .Gladys
8:25 a.m. Sunday, New Hope
Moon, Eric Saunders.
Road,
Telitha Casto, VMH.
(Published with pennlasloa)

In

. . . . . . . . . . . ... uo

e,e,y _ . _ Monday lhrouah
Ill C..., S. .• Pomaoy, Olllo. by tbe

8 to II p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
VFW building. Music will be provided by Out of the Blue and caller
will be Jim Brown .
Gospel sing set
A Bend area gospel sing will be
held at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Hobson Christian Fellowship[ Church,
State Route 7 below Middleport. Pealured will be Genesis, The Chosen
Ones, Narrow ·way, Evelyn Roush
and other.

NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. (AP)
- In the end, it wasn't the sharpshooters or the SWAT teams that
forced John E. du Pont out of his
mansion, but a bum boiler.
· al comFor 48 hours, the chenuc
pany heir barricaded himself in his
bedroom after the slaying of an
Olympic wrestler and refused to surrender. Authorities cut off his heat,
kept him talking and waited.
As temperatures plunged and the
mansion grew colder, du Pont finally went out to fix whal he thought
was a broken boiler. That's when
·•·:r team mem be rs tackled hi m
Sw."'
just as he emerged unarmed Sunday
afternoon.

Rates of Taxation for 19915

138
lnc...........................&amp;'J.
Stir Be.nk ..............................61\

l'lobHstoed

'

BlootlmobUe Comins
The American Red Cross bloodmobile will be at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center Wednesday, I
to 6 p.m. Since the Red Cross is llXperiencing a shortage of blood ar this
time, local officials urge residents to
donate.

'L.I.D.

(IJSPS UJ·MI)

lticlly.

a

Meigs announcements

'

The-D,aily Sentinel

or

tile

Luther Allen "Buddy" Mowery, 58, Crawford, W.'Va., died Friday, Jan.
26, 1996 in the Davis Memorial Hospital, Elkins, W.Va.
Bom July 17, 1937 in Gilmer County, W.Va., he was son of the late !~sac
Andrew Mowery and Hally Ford Mowery Curry. He was a general worker
in the construction industry, and attended the Crawford Methodist Church.
He is survived by one sister, Lona Virainia James of Middleport·, three
-.,
brothers, 'Jimmie Mowery of Crawford, Junior D. Mowery of Belleville,
W.Va., and Billy Curry of Parkersburg, W.Va.; an aunt; two nieces, two
nephews and two grandnephews; and several cousins.
·
He was also preceded in ileath by his stepfather, Harold Curry; one brother, two aunts, and one uncle.
·
Services weere held at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Alkire Funeral Chapel, Ireland, W.Va., with the Rev. 'Mitzi Oldaker officiating. Burial was in the Fair
Haven Cemetery near Ireland.
ln lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations he made to the American Cancer Society.

W.VA.

..

il!gheadlines, ~lynHuber,headof

I

330

¥. .

vants with political appointees -~
' 'our people," in Mrs. Clinton·~
"'ords. They fired mo4 the ladies
who answered the president's maii.
lbeY hancjed pi~. s.li~ to the phone
aperators. They wiped out the travel
office. They jettisoned the chief usll•
er and reportedly iiiquirediboutsup;
planting Secret Service agents witll
!Arkansas trOOpers.
,
:
• If you look at the scandals that
. now beset the Clintons, you will
· tha. t "our peop1e •' ..
...eep mak+
nou~e

death.

The Dally Sentinel• P-ae 3

· ------~~------~~----------~----~----~----~~~~--~~--~----~~

The.Daily Sentinel AFDC has become a political football
'Ut:ab/Wid in 1!H8

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Reol •1ll• IIXII which J.w ~01 blon paid II the clc»o of tach collection ct&lt;ry I penalty of ton PIJ'atnt TIKII may be Plld II tlta offiCI
of ... County T . - clr by mail. P'- bring your laat II• roooipt and If you p0y·by rreil. be lUte ·ID lacat!t YfM property by IIXiiiQ
dillrict and anciQ11111f11P1d •11~1-d an'IIIQPI. Alweyo aqmlne your •• rec:eipt to • that It CCMrS oil you; praparty. Office hours
n 8:30A.M. to 4:30P.M. Monday ttvou~ Friday - Ctoaad an Slturdlv.
Fei!u,. t o -.. IIX 111-11 dOll nat ovoid any panatty, ln-t, at cNr;a,ln&lt;umd tor tucll dalay. Ohio. Ravilld Coda 323.i3.
CtOiing dlla.M•clt 4. 11196.
I E.
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sports
In Super Bowl XXX,
•

•

.
Pege4
Monday, January 29, 1996

.

By QARY CLARK

and Eric Dillard combined to score
The visiting Eastern Eaales con- II points in tbe extra period and
vened eipt of 10 free throws in, Tony Deem'~ Meip CountY squad
overtime Saturday niaht. as Eric Hill shol put w~ by a 71-64 score

~•

.

beat Steelers 27-17.to win .t hird title in four-years

•

•

:a, lARRY WILNER

1l!MPE, Ariz. (AP) -. Let ~
Dallu Cowboys procl111m thetr
JI'CIIIIess. Let them ri~e in limousines. Let them strut and boast.
They've earned it.
: With their third NFL championship in four years, the Cowboys
placed themselves in elite company.
No team has gotten that many Super
~owl titles in such a short span.
~se Cowboys, basically 'the same
rrux of stars and blue-collar workers
Who won twice under Jimmy John~o. went just as ·far with the oftmaligned Barry Switzer.
,
·
: Now, ·with a 27-17 victory SunClay over the determined but inconpistent Pittsburgh Steelers, tbe Cow~~have five Super Bowl wins,
equaling · San Francisco's record..
lU!d the franchise finally has a super'
~ision over the Steelers, who were

•

4-0 in the big game and 2-0 vs. Dal- up touchdown runs of one and four
las.
yards by Emmitt Smith. That earned
"This is the sweetest," receiver MVPhonorsforBTOWJi,whoisoverMichael Irvin sitid. "Do you know shadowed by Deion S....n on tbe
how sweet it is to get ~0 men com- other comer of a Dallas defense that
milled to maldng sure we win it, and was vulnerable for much oftbe secthen to win it? We kept hearing how ond half Sunday.
Dallas is dead. We ain't dead, are
"We can go baek to Dallas hapwe?"
py and with a ring on our finaer," ·
Not even close, although it was said Brown, who had a difficult seatight enough to make guard Nate son after the death of his infant son.
Newton and the rest of the Cowboys "It stays on your mind. You've got
sweat.
to learn ta move on. The Ol1aniza"It was scary until the end," lion and the players rallied IIOUIId
Newton said. "Then they were just me and helped me through that
harmless, like everybody else.
time."
"We go to work in limos, buses
Brown returned the kindness with
or taxicabs. But man, we can play the a superb post-season. And when
game."
· Smith (49 yards on 18 carries) Could· The Cowboys didn't play their n't get untracked offensively and
best game Sunday. But they made Sanders rarely drew any action, it
the biggest plays, particularly two was Brown who kept the Cowboys
interceptions by Larry Brown that set in control.

'

·~

it

Dallas built a 13-0 lead as Chris onshlp run that now stands at 1~. yard retum to the Piitsburgh six set;
Boniol ticked two field goals and they' ve eliminated any suspense by 'up the 'clinl!hing scQre b)' Smith,·
Sanders' 47-yard catch set up Jay applyingacrushingblow. The Cow- ;whose fifth Super Bowl rushing:
Novacek's thrrec-yard touchdown boys, who struggled through contro- 'touchdoWI! set~ career record.
'
reception.
versy all season, did it in their Super
But SJDJth was nQI the story..Few :
Then Pittsburgh, in its fJrst Super Bowl victories over Buffalo in 1993 · ·of Dallas' big.names were. Aikman
Bowl since 1980, got untracked. and '94.
did well (15-for-23 for 209 yards),:
Quarterback Neil O'Donnell, who
This time, the Steelers ignored 'but was not spectacular. Same for
strugaled. most of the day in the recent history and delved into tljeir Irvin and Jay Novacek alld Sanders
·biggest game of his career, led a !54- glory days. They got a 46-yard field and Charles Haley, tbe defensive end
. yard drive capped by Yancey Thig- goal by Norm Johnson, who then .who became the first player with five .
. pen's six-yard touchdown catch 13 sent an onside tick past ~e befud- Super Bowl rings, three with Dallas ,
· seconds before halftime.
died Cowboys front line and Deon and two with San Francisco.
"We defihltely felt tbe momen- Figures recovered.
The ultimate hero was Brown,
tum had· ·changed when we came
O'Donnell. suddenly productive, who echoed his teammates by dedi- :
back and scored a touchdown," took them 52 yards, Bam Morris eating the victory to Swill;er.
'
Thigpen said.
scored from the one and it was 20"I'm proud of this team and I'm :
But midway throuah tbe third . 11.
especially happy for coach Switzer,",:
quarter, .Brown lll4de his fJrst inter"Everybody was really frred up," Brown said. "We owe this to the :
ceptionandSmith'sfirsllotlchdown Morris said. "We got the ball back man."
made it20-7.
· ... we threw the interception and it
Switzer has had a'trying two sea-:
When NFC teams. have gotten was downhill from there." '
sons as Johnson's replacement. · · ·
that far ahead in the current champiBrown's second pick and 33-

Basketball

'' .

A-DIYlit 12
" ra.
. I.Odlodo ..................30
.714
1

each made two free throws in the .
final IS seconds after tbe Ducks (9- :
9, 2-S) had closed within 66-65. ·
Jamal Lawre.nce had a career-high 34
points for Oregon, which lost its fifth
; straight overall and IOtb straight to
Arizona.
.No. 17 Purdue 70
Ohio St. 53
At West. Lafayette, Ind., Roy ,
'Hairston scored 20 points for the ·
, Boilermakers (IS-4, S-2 Big Ten),
who had lost two in a row. Rick Yudt
bad IS points for tbe Buckeyes (8-8,
1-6), who lost their fifth straight to
Purdue.
No. 18 Syracuse 88
No. Z1 Boston College 13
, . At Syracuse, N.Y., Todd Burgan
'had a career-high 23 points for tbe
Orangemen (14-5, S-4 Big East),
wbo ended a three-sam~ losing
streak. Freshman Scoonie Penn had
22 points for the Eagles (12-4, 5-3) . .
Loulsvllle 78
No. 19 UCLA 76
At Los Anaeles, Brian Kiser's
three-pointer with four seconds to
play gave the Cardinals (14-6) the .
win after they had blown an eightpointJead with 44 seconds to play.
Charles'O'.Bannon had 23 points for
the·Bruina (1-3-S). ' . ,,
No. 23 Eutem MJehipn 96
Kent 81
At Ypsilanti, Mich., Earl Boykins
scored 26 points and Theron Wilson
had 19 points and 14 rebounds as the
Bagles (15-1, 8-0 Mid-American
Conference) won their eighth
straight. Ed Norvell led tbe Golden
Flashes (9-7, 3-S) with 24 points.
North Carolina St. 64
No. 24 Cle1111011 61
At Clemson, S.C., Todd Fuller I
· had 20 points, including the last six :
of the game for the Wolfpack (12-8,
2-5 ACC).

Mllwlllkee ............. IS

p...,.,
1cJolj!e!' played 18 aeasons for tbe

Ucm n :lll Qilin, Cioei- BcnaaJs
...S SaD Dieto C!Jarien, and 41 one
... ~ !11f! moe'ul!-timo ~
,dpli l!'*..He n'"" ,ranks .fifth

··~M Monlt:.)~1 ~ Sk)ve

' .I "ltl a~ .IJ. .,~n. . • ;
,
··- Ahci • • - to lhtc:llntpl, Qbio,
, : ...... ~.Joe Oibbl, 0,0 DilirdCxf,
· 11&amp;11 ~ and Lou c-,tmju'.. Olblil eoriJOd tine Wllhlnpm·
1 , Ct~M; 1 .1111 to Super Bowl
~. was~NPLi
ye~rm 1982,1983and
.
"'!'"• wl)ll die 19~

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0.0.. • M i - l p.m.
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Newkn0y01Sattlo, IOp.m
Goldea Slate at L.A. Lakcu, 10:30
p.m.
ToroDto 11 Slcnrnento, 10:30 p.m.

AP Thp 2S coUege
men's poD

rI. N•tlll

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z.1Centu&lt;:ty(3)............ 17' 1

) . ~ ...................... 16-1
4. COMOCiiCIII(I) ........ I9-1
S. Ciacilllllli ................ l4-l
6. Villanova ............ ..... l6-3
7. Ullh ......................... l6-3
8. Nonlo Ovolina ......... 15-4
9. Gecqelowo ............. l7· 3
10 . ..... St ................... l'-1
II . M................ ....... I4-3
12. Walto l'on:tl .....:..... ll-3
13. VlfJ)ttlaTecll ......... ll-2

1,417

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1,402

4
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l,l27

1.1511 ·
1,1172
I ,0:16
1,020
940
901

Ill
864
561
540

IS. Te••Todo ............ l6-1
16. 1owo ......: ............... l5-4
11 . ......................... 15-4
18. Syr~CUtC................. I4-S
19. UCI.A .................... IJ-~
' 20. Midli.........." ....... lo!-6
ZI . ...... Col.... ...... ll-4
22. Allltum ................ .. . IH
2l E. Mlchipn ........... l$-1
2A. Cieatooo .................IH

•

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19
17
IS
16
20
21

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106 . -

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men's scores
Satunbov' o

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St.--

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MUST BE PREPAID!

,

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Tmplc54.SI. Jooet&gt;lt'o!:f
VII~
.
a 90, Miami 62

··········~······~··········~
PtW ,_. . . . ."
.I

.'

•

I
I

Wordal

.

N. Carolina

~

Coli. oCCtta-76, ~ 7.

~~::=&amp;'J'J
l!atr~aa .U,N.C.·WUniiiiiOD
.

c...

Fla. bM&amp;IIIi-' 83,
florida 71
florida 7U.SU 70
6t, T -..awt• 1op S9
• ' u
96 Atlleric:10 Ual
'
;
Oeofle
matOe • ,
·
•·
15
Oatqiar.&lt;Jtl9, - S t. 5ll

I
I

20

'

64,
A ~T~b(aOT)ooCoo-l

44

Umlt

....71

Sl. Jolm"lll, Owo
15. .......
Sl. "'-it.
SI.
12 NY 10
S.. Peoor't61.Sicaa5l
SyrecilleU....._Colleae7l

...

,.

-.o!U. 51.Md.·E.-55

l=.!li.~•~~
~ 63
' Otrdlo $7

. ~t;'7:;•61

M-r.,LII,'f-.·-•68

lf,;;;'"1~·1:i::':"'St. 70

•·

. ·.

M,.a ............., ... ,

· .a~~s"'r.~

I

····························~

~

,.

9

N.C..-74,-a.II!tod 56
N.C...CJrW••boro 90, Ctwl..lol

·.· ""'..... ~····"~....-~.
54 ~-- ,._.
·

. ·.J
t

.

:·-Ciotllaa.s.w•-"

I

1

Keayon 62. Mlel)leoy 55
Ohio Wcalc)'ID 119, ca. R.aene Y1

Obio H.S. girls' Scores

c.... Lll• I.-reel. c.tttWMe

Bowlin&amp; Oren - 72; Sy1vaDia

Nonhvicw 50
·
B..._, 56, Cadiz Sl
Bryan 66. Pauk1111 58

Bucbye C.nt 71. Seae&lt;o E. S I
Buclt&lt;Y&lt; Tnil71, Ri4Jcwooc1Jl
iqton 59
a •. fiD~WD ~I. Muon49

Teus Tech 19, Tuu 71

F•rW_.
Hawoil 88, San Jlicao Sl. 79

Big 'len standinp

Minneso~a

..... 2

5 .286

OHIOST....... I

6 . 10

Nmhwaam:r,. l

6 . 143

2 .71.

.m
.m

. ~71

I .93&amp;

IS
II
15
IS

4 .719
4 ·.719

I.

6 700

12
II

.632
.579
.700
526

7
S
I~
6
10 9
8 8
6 10

3 .:'i71

.5 .175

.~79

-~

Saturd•y'o ltOnll
Jllinoil74. Nordt1ttallm62
12, lodiaaa 68
Michis- Stale
Mi...,... 54
Punluc10, OHIO STAll! Sl

Peons-

61,

y-.
1

Iowa u lndlatta

.-

I-=
lit I.
MichiJan... S 0
BOSU ............ S
Ball St
S
.W Mt' clt.......... ,
'
........ ,
Miloni ............•
TOH&gt;Ie&lt;IOdo ........... :

3

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

'

12

4 .750

9

7 S6]

~

Coot Mich. .. Z 6 .1511

~ ............0

6 .625
7 .563
9 .4)8

8 .000

::

•

=

lall St.
Mlami 70
0111012.Ceto.
'W. Mit:lllpoii, T

65
77

Jl.-...
.
ObiO ·mea's

college scores Sllllnla7'1 actlaa

~ P

Mille u

'*'

s.. 7,

1

2'I4

...
~Julienne 6l, Kentoo
Day . Christilfl 63. Day. Colonel
While 3&amp;
.
Da•. Dunbor7l. Elida 51
'
•J llny. Meodowdalc60, Day. Belmont
0.,. Wayne 36, Ce-'"lle J I
Db.ie 56, Midcbdown hbdi10n o40
Dowr 44, Ne- P11iladelphio )S
Eutllb N. S4, A1llblllown-Fitcb 44
""""' Cldt. 73, Bedlord Cllanel 46
F~ 70, Xenia 38
f·•·•-.. •• 8 VII~ 8 41
- - -· ay
a,
F.,...mlle 65, Cio. Ht It Ott. !8
.,_. .... M(OT)Iaw..Obniorf-46
_,
FiralaDdt47. Welli..,.oo3Z
lftatliD..MoDro 71, Bethel32
Garfield 1111. 53, Parma J6
Olrfteld Hu. Trinity 75, Cle. Catholic
2A

51

HeMhjO, QruWille~l

56 tlcbrool.abwooclli.J-banAider
IDdependectce 46, H11 ha way Brown
21
J-C....55, FonLonmieSI
Jameatowa Orecneview •47, D•~ ·
~l2
-wood
letJenoo Ara 56, PoiiiCiville R&gt;•cr·

ticlo•l

·Scio60,Newcomemown55
Jolotitnwn•2.E. Kno• 30
~J3 , 0nrtp 31

Kea&lt; R......,k 46. Field .,
Ketteriii&amp;A... 42,00,. Carroll31

64 MiitaftdtiSt. ....'a74. LcniaColh.

KlapS.. Oa.o-PIIIlJI

Haolltta 16, Mlryo'rillo 72
-oaiAcal 66, Aolooltt 35
•• Mlrtiaa feny 6), - l i e Colli.
--CIIr.lll. Z..'rilleCIIr. 63

Labwoocl46. - o r l 9
~ 74, Pacllmoudt 48
LocJtemDIII 7), Flltpttn 59
Libeny IJoion SJ, fiohcr Cllll. o40
VII. 51, Orutclview 44
Lima 111167, DeiplloiSt. Johtt•l
LinaTempleOir. 41 , Toi.Emanuc:l

Licki'if

1Jafti1:-•9.Pd,.(W.Va)-39
Lopo Elat 45, Bl "" Carrol14l
l.oudoovll~ 74, :::cr.oo 29

::..n:ci!:.~. ~o~:.m
.

t=:...Lift...:..=~

Coofl"""'

~-,:lorCI!l'""· :r'J:JI

~~W~! 65

49

.

New lt-'rillo 54. . . . . . J6
NeweoMeP~CNn 74; CoiKIIIOCI Val.

61 INcbonlllalrawoocJ-79, N. ':tl .

"FOR PETS ONLY"
WILL BE PUBLISHED TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 13TH IN
Also a special section for In Memory Valentine 'ets.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
ONLY
$600
PER PICTURE
PRE·PAID

MIUficlld St. ......

Maatllloo Jactooa

~. S.neca E.

u. ~·••••Ill•

:··~..::::.::.w.uMP'MI,..alabtiDCDOtltSO. CoDoiOo 46

Owner's Name

r---------------,

1

.VALENTINE PETS

1

j

:

:Pet'aName

..

I Owner's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
~~~
I ,.
I
I ·.
I~
I -.
for
plcturea I
I Amount Encloaed:

.. _______________ _
·~--~

.J

Deadline Friday, February 9th al 3 p.m.
Mall or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel. .

_ ..... Cidt.,..a..aNI).

110CourtSt.

Q.50
Milloraty69,Kall4a61

NorwattSc.l'llll61."-c-.I••

"PET'S NAME"

Hurryl Deadline
friday, february 9th at 3 , ....

Ndaa69,Midpn44

64

,•..

· Please enclose self·
addressed stamped
envelope to return
your photo. ,,

~68,Spriaa.Nonh,.....,.6.1

ou ... rieo47,01lwoocl 32
Hanti.... Badia 46. Hamikon 34
Hawlral55, 0tytltopHII. SI

MlddleiOWD feawlck 71, Valley

1

Coldoo-71. Von wen :111

Colottol C..wford 53. Oaurio 52
Columbiw Crealview S., Leetonia

Copley .3. a.... 27
O.twood 59. Roo&amp;llown l6
..,__...__
Damoille68. - - . 39

Mrip59. ' 46
Mottmr Or. !7, Ucltloa eo.Ow. 5)
Miaat1 B. 64, Nawtoa 62

OIIJI!

Col. T"" of Ute 50, Milmi Vii . 39
Col. Wanenon 58, llubllo Coflmon

c-154, Poiaavillo Horvey 51

:::l:l:5i='i~~~

~u;sc::-:=.

Loyclt.m.••·.

31

·---74,"-71

WedlleldaJ'IIantel
W. ~ • Abuo
8t11 St. ifiCOII

• • I naC

•9

Libedy.&amp;c.loa56.0Yfort44

!)6, Kealll

46

ea:t':.17

. UmaCadt 67 V W 63
'" en .
uma
.. Pony· 54.• Oluovlllc
l7
Uma T~ Ow. 82. Tot. s..-1
1111'1- 71
U-view 107,1'Mkway 52
...... J9, PdM(W.VL),_l6
M1i1ioaot P1aiat 55, Wa,...vlllo 47

Salurllay'o ...,....
-~- 70. Akroa 51

E.

~~-~·~~«.Cadll7

lian:Jl....,ee.r75,Toi. W~1060

~~

OUR SPECIAl PAGE($)

Cia. ~47. U.. 43

Col DeSalos69 Whoelcn
Col: ReadyiiO, Newllll

McKi.::~70.Harritoa51
..__ (Mi&lt;b. ) Ow. 12, Tot. Ori•·

I~ I~ : ~i:

5 .ll5

Keal..............,)

10
9
7

Chopin F~b !7, Wickliffe !S

., Cia. Wyomios 55, S. Cltorlatoo SE
Cln:le'rille 110, Pairlicld Ualoo S7

KiohaO:at. S7,G-56
lakewood St Edwa rds 60. Canlon

I'JI. W.
J. fa.
I.OO 1 ~ 1 ·938

Tueoday 's games
Buffalo a1 N.Y. Islanders, 7:30p.m.
Toronto at Detroit. 7:)() p.m.
Edmon1oo 11 Calgary, 9:30p.m.
New Jcney at Vancou ver, 10::\0 p.m.
Hanford at San Jose, 10 : ~0 p.m. .

.

ao. Tulpia 48, Norwood 26

KcttlonRiclacl)), ~aLopo•1

()m-.11

3 .625
l 62l
:625
'
4 -~
: -~

30

Kioha67, 0....S6

MAC standinp
c-r.

47 , WilysideChr. 4:\
Tiffin Columbillll 53, BellevtJC 49
Tol. Catholic 56, Cle. VA-SJ 49
Tree of Life 62, Mimmi Val. 39:
Triad 76, Ridaerrom 47
Troy 47 , GRenville 43
TulC&amp;fawas Val. 4~ . Caator. S. 40

Caldwell62, Collonon Val . 51
Cttmbridp 56, Zanet,; tic .,
~--- ~~
Loui vll'-!9
~·on ..... 1• • 44,
s lllltl •
Canton GlenOak 64, Alliance r1
Caruon McKinley 67. ,.. ...mon Perry

Oo. Oil Hilll 57, Cio. Setoo 56
Cia. Re.dinJ 56, Cin. Cou.h) 0.,.

-Ciearcnelt

71
Kalida 71. Lei · c 76 (""'

T~leOir .

Bedford61, Oilmnut46
Ballai1o59, Monintl'eny'l
Bellaiie St. lobo'• 54, Lal:eland 45
Belle-ae 6&gt;1, Ke01on 29
Bd(loe 49. Pon f'tye 45
Beot.-'a ~~51. Flirblaltl50

-·l .

::0.::0slJ;.';;:::.tt!.- 59
Jacboa , &lt;lahire liwr Val.

_,
WIICClDiiollllliooil
- - .. &amp;ticltiJIOII OHIO STAll!
Michi... Siatclll'llnb

Tonlcht 's games

Sl. Louis 11 Onawa, 7:30p.m.
Pituburch Bl Aorida, 7:30p.m.
Wuanipeg at Dalla., 8:30 p.m.

PIC7UIE YOUR Pft
AMO 7BE•••
Pft VALENti
!

•9. Cin. Ropr Bacon 43
Oa. Macbcr of Merty 49, Cin. Ropr

n BriY.:

W-y
Mic=
PunS-11 icltipnS.aoe
Nordl1f-.all MiiUIMOta
WiiCClDiinat OHIO STAll!
rt. . .........

r w - 11

WashinJion 3, Philadelphia 2 &lt;
On
Mom:real 5, Boston 4

Teays Val. 49, Amanda-Ciearc:reek

Cia. Mm:y

o.,:Ookwood

.375

Sunday's sc.....,

Sberlllu ,8, ~'rille 38
Sidocy 57, Vaadalia Butler411
Solon 70, O.udon 16
Spnng. North 49, Spring. South 45
Spri11boro 39, Bellbrook ll
Stronpville 84, Cloverleaf 37
Tultmad1e 64, Mcdi.. Hianlud 42

g::~,7~~•S'M'!::.~'

w. Oteller ~

Coaltocloo49, Tri-Valloy.,
Door~r- V~. Ow. 71, El)'tla Open
llaJIDII •• Hilll&lt;laloiiO
....,
Day. c.ron69,
62
Day. Chrioti,. 72.Dillie 67
Day. Dwt1oor 107, Fairfield II
Day. PlnenonSO, Tol. Scott 46
Delaw. . 92, Wctflhi.,.,. Ow. 10
Del(llloa St. Johtt't 70. CottliMMalll
llnver 66, Salem 50
E. Clinton II, Bllncbelter 64
EKoox86.,_.64
Elida85,St. lfeory69
Fedaol Hockias17. flleblos 64
Andla)l81, Tot Woodwlfd66
liohcr Cod&gt;. 70, New Albony 60
Fo11oria St. Wendelin n . Oreaon
Slrilclt 65
Fnonklin7l,l!atoo...
Fraoltlio Hll. 67, Col. Academy 46
Froll4ier 60, Cdctwell 5j
G~Upolio 62. Racine Soulhcra 41
GaUowm) Wettland 90. Col. Wese 70
Grandview 55, Lobwood 44
G&lt;anvillc 57, Ncwdtridadl
o...,.,;tte 93, Lima Sliawnec 81
Grow: City 58, Col.
•9
H .1
B·•
C
M I
ama ton W~~~D ,
nton- Ul e
62
Hetaltl7
46

ll J. I'JI.

S. Webcler61, PortJmoulb W. 0
Saodi11ky S2, Midv~w 27
Shelby 66, Bucvnas 35

Cia. Flooeytown 44.1ndilll HJII 33
Cin. Harriooa 64, Fnnldin CouDiy •9

Cle. Soudl65, L«aitt Souillvlcw 52
Clear Fodt 89, Lucu 41
Col. Wellin.IIOO 56, Uacola9aFI. 26

O&gt;tnll

S

53

Ci~. HiNt
, 59, Cia.lndiao Hill 53
Cia. McNic:l!olat 68, Alli:Ha 50
Cia. MI. Neoldty 86, Cia. Oleo l!tle

Cio. Tafll7, On. WI- Woodll6
• Cia. TayiOf 61, Cia. Mlriemoal ~j
(OJ')
Cia. Wilhrow 80, OIL Walenl Hills
63
C1e. Beaedielinc 12. Olmolod Fallt 66
Cle. Help~ 71 , Lorain Adm. Klos
62 (l 1111
C1e. Rhoclca SS, Baf VIIJooo Bay 5I

'

Saturday's scores
Moorreal 4, WinnipeJI
N.Y. IWtaen !, Boston 3
Pituburzh 7, Philadelphi a o4
Deeroit 3, O,icqo S (ric)
51. Louit 2. Tampa Buy I
CoiO&lt;ttdo 4, S1111 Jose 3 (aT)
Loa An&amp;dcs 5, Attaheim 4
New Jersey -4, Hanford 4 (lie)
Toronto 2. Onawa 2 (ric)
Aorida 6, Buffalo J
Vucouver 6. N.Y. blandt.n 3

.

Canliall 32

Cancon Timle• 70. MUiiiiOII WD

""- 88. Nelt&lt;ubl)

Hockey

•9

48

Wo)'DU'ri llc 52. Codalville XT'

S..loy67, Utica•z
811 Wllaut62, Watltin~ C.H. 55
Btocb•iDe 69, llntaowoclt Sl
.a~&lt;te 56, Keylloae o40
brookville 73, Twin Val~y S. 36
Burtoa Bertahire 46, MidcUefield

01-61
65, Col, SL Ctaflol49

Cia. 0ot HiUo 60,

34

thaiI 63 .

Bia Walaul63, 1..- Alder 53

53

Shlw45
WoynaftclcJ.Gooltco 56. ladiao Lob

,.... N, nyallon:U
'
Beoa,.,
Balin Hllat0!78, JohA (W.Va) r.t.-

Bellevue 80, Part

Midwest

3
3
3

21

Bellef0olai10110,~56

CiociiiDIIi Ill, Soolhcm Call)
Iowa 70, Midtiplt 61

Memori1130
Wam:nJYil1e Hu . ·ss. E. Cleveland

Avm Lob6'1, A-29

f._

58

W. Mualdngum jS, Philo 44
Wadsworth 74, Nor1oa 33
Walth Je1uit 67, Akron Oilfield 18
Warreo Harding 6 0, Campbell

8taJit,jJie 54, F,...ier 46
Beawercreek !17, KctteriDJ Fairmoot

Bonoes'rilloS., BellainoStJot.'a:M .
Beallsville,9, Slledyal4c51
Bdlbroolt 69, 0.,. Jdla.oo Sl

--

side41

-l2

S.turday'o actloa

Buley

W. Holmes 63, Black R ~er 20
W. Ubeny Solan 55, DeGraff Ro..,.

Alhlabula Ed,ewood -42, A•htabula

Akron St. ~·SI. M69,AitroaNordt 48
A.......... 51.W-'ord50
Arlia11on 60. Allee E. 55
Aahland Cra1Yicw 54. Moplet0112l
Athoas 52. NeltOD'rillo-Ynr1148
Aycn'rille 63,
59

out:e 83, Moryland n

I .857
2 .714

Alhlaod 48, .......,.. 25
........,.1166, Geoeva64

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Soum Alaboma 10, Jacbon,jilc 76
Tulane M, DePaul7•

Mit:llipn St ...S
Punbo ...........5
low• ..............4
Micltipn ........
Wi~a»~itt ..... 4
Jndiaaa ..........4
Illinois .......... 1

Alouador51 , Meip39

Alliance Marli..,on 5&amp;. Wll&lt;rloo •l

Noa tsalu
piiJ
Btumoo 77, Wllmi- 64

Coucaicut 76. Vil)in&amp;a 46
Dtllwn 77. VermoM 59
Dleacl M, - - 4 7
I0D191, Colpe '7-4
Loyolo, Md. 51, Mlllltallatt50
Provldoaoe " · Pilllbuqh 70
lielon Hall II, Rutpn?8
Towt011 St. 81 , Hanford 73

c.ar.
ra.

Alaoo Coveouy 73, Rlnmaa 29
Abuo Elmo 49, St. Au1U11iae 41
Abuo Hollan 73, AlaoD E 25
Akroo St V.S..M 63, Kcomon: •2

Tiffin 72, Malo~ 53

.
Sl..rord 71, Wulllos... So. 67
UC lnine 7&amp;, Utah St. 72
UC Sarna Bart&gt;oniO, San Jotc St. n
U.... l2. New Me.ico 64
Wuhioaton 71, California 69
Weber St 119, E Wa&amp;hin&amp;loo 88
Wyotttina 96- Flesno St . &amp;I

J.

nmkalza

Mld-Oiola c.or-

' Ceduville 90, Moun: Veruon
N-68
Wlloh 76, Ohio Domhticu !7
Fi ...ay 10, RIO GRAND6 59

Sanea Clara-78. Loyola Mwymount

rll
...MS........... 6

Saturday'• actloa
Aluoa Ceat.·Hower 53, Caacon

Alhlaad 61, Orud Volley St 56

11a1s week 'a alate

Bu&lt;kncll 79. Lafayeno 71
Butralo M, C... CootfOCIICul 51. 61
Colpoell , ~ 72
Canoll76, CoMnbia 6.1
~--~ ~ Nrlj48
•
~J7,
Holy Croll 100, biab II
1.oq lllatO! ijaiv. B1. R-. Monil
73
·
•
-72.
47
Md.·&amp;.llimote Couaty 73, Coa~al
Coroliaa 67
·
M...-h.NJ. 71, w.,_68(01')
-St.Mary'o,Md.61.-55

Wlloellnbuq71,011&lt;Hi1164
w,.rord 6ol.lluc,... 50
Yellow Spri1111 66, W. lelfetton 50

Not1ll COMI A....UC Coelllllltl
Eorlbom 6'1. Dettltott 53

Iowa 70. MichiJM 61

1

'

can.r

. Suaday' siCOI'e

l!atl
Brown 73, Yale 56

AU Valentine HeartS will be publlshecUn the February 14th
Issue at a cmt of only $6.001

Vtllallal H...s
·1'11 ·c.aal St...tt.
~••.,oy; OH 45769

14
12

Otlter nul~llta YOIII: Iowa St. 98.
Marquene 67, Wuii.,ton 65, Louisville
52, Stlllfnn148. , . , . _ 44, California
43, New Mu.ico 41, Ni11i1Jippi St 34,
Wi1.-0iua Ba)' 21. miDOil 21 : WiiiOtlri
21 , CieotJj a 20, &lt;*op Wllllli""9' ••· '
Tula 12. Soum Cal&lt;&gt;lioo 10. Temple 10.
Tulane 9, Alabama 7, Nelnlka 7, Pritte&lt;•
ton '6, Teau 3, Dub 2, Saala Clua 2.
Coli. oCOiarletlool, wt.,..;ai .

'

... $6.0011:
..
Tile Daly

~2A

520
•78
276
193
117
160
132

25.a..qiaTecb .........ll-8

.
Anyone wlio would appreciate a thouJbtful ·IIfOrd from you1

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

6

944

••. Ari- .................. 15·3

••

7
10
II

.

au.

ot.io Northau 66.1tiram S4
Mouat Union 67, Musttnaum 64
Otlcrtx:in 10. JohA
64

CaoisiUJI2. Fllilf~ld 72

·-

Vaadllit Bllfler?O, Mitu.Unioo 32
v~cay
n, w.... a.r.5l
Walth laoit86. Akron E. 55
Wureonille Hea. Sl, E. Cleveland
Sllaw45
Watlli- C.H. 55, UcklOJ Val. 41
Weir, W.Va 79, ~ 14
WellinJtoa 6.5, Columbia -41
W..crtillo N. 70, MMtlicld Sr. 62
W&lt;ilfall98. Berae Ualoo 46

c-lti'*i
dl)ll St. 67

Vinc:ent WIIJTC'n S8. Chc1hirc .ltiver
Va1. 49
W. Cmollton 44, Piqlla 40

Northrid1e 39, Lucas 33
Oberlin 5), A. von 49
Olcnti.!IJ)' 50, W. Jefferaon 45
On'rille 56, Nonllwest 39
Ottoville 77, Delpboa Jeffcoon 63
Panna Holy Name 615, Parma Plldua
S2
..
Pvma Valley F"'le 110, Cle. Heil)t~ .
57
Perry 54, Kinlaad .,
Picltain4JOD 67 , Upper Mia&amp;lon 49
Pymllu01oJ VII. IIO, o...n.J Val.
Rlcine .Soutbem 57, Wahama, W.Va.
ll
Raveooa Soulheasl79, Streetsboro 22
RI:Jina 42, Beachwood 25
hv~n SO, Hudson 49
Richmond Ediaon 51 , CiK'rollton 38
Ridpdale S9, Marion River Val. S4
River View 62, Tri-Vallcy 48
Ru11io:1l, Hou1ton 40

Upt&gt;or Scio&lt;o Val. 10, Hanlin Nmh·

c'•

Vcrmili011. 49, Lonin Adm. K.iDJ J6
Versai lles S4. u.t.rla 'Z'J
Victory Ov. 66, Warreo Chr. 40

Newbwy 44, Brillol 39

n6J ·

OllilA- c..r-

lk&gt;llon U. 86, Holllnl71

VOle, IDCI Jld'e"iout

I

Baldwin·WII'- 10, Copllll 64
Hddelbera 57. - 4 6

l!atl

~·~-··'!~!'
·'" -~­
•lhvllt
....... htW
pol... .. 25
.,._.. foe a fint;f.~ YDte daruuJh one

.......,

~ea.r..

MWwattm C '
Clnelud SL 10,

61

Twhuburc .n . 'W. Oeau&amp;• 49

Morpa 52. Moyavillc 46
Mount Vernon 39, Hilliard 29
N. Ol111tldl S5, Olmol&lt;d Filla 50
N. Ridaovlllo •7. Elyrio •s
New Albatty !7, Berae Union 55
New l...exiDBion 58, John Olean -45

Twin V....,... 99, Brookville Sj
Ulli,...;ty 62.Uonloo ND-CL 59
Upper ArlinJto. S4, Dublin Coff111111

v.......... 51. 17. Trny St. 6'1

Sunday's aclloo

'Be top 25 CI!IIM iD nt Auociaeed
....... - ·· ....... buboball poll. widt

for a 2.Stlt-

61

F•WIIl
AriZOIII 70, Olqoa 65
Ari101111 St. 93, ~ Sl. 75
Boile S1. 69, MoDWUa S1. (i I
Colondo 51. 94, Air fo&lt;ce71
ldaho66, N. Ariiou64
LoDJ Beach sa. 83, Pac:ific n
Lcxnnille 78, UO.A 76
Mott14tttt 94,1dabo St 7!
Nevada 89, Cal St.fullerton 70
New Meuco St. 68, UNLV 66
Poppadino 88, St M11y'1, Cal. 7S
.......... 67, Gonzop 66
S. Utah 72. CS Nuihridp 65 (aT)
San Fnacioco 52, San lliolo 41

CLEVEUNI&gt;IIOiailoae. 7:30p.m

poilt

Mld-A81nc.c.artre er
. W. Michlpa 71, Tolodo 110
Bowtill&amp; a- 86. ....... 66
Kent 88, II. Midlipa
Ollto !H, C... Midlipa 64

Wi-~~.Wooow75

· ToaiPI'•M-•NewYort. ~,JOp.m
v_,.,..,. PhiiMelpbia, 7:30p.m

Covl-

n-~w...... 6J&lt;an
nPI' Oty M,
52

Tol. St. Jolul'l68, Clc. St.IJR11il,l• 53
Tol. SeMt 69, Wapakoeeta 64
TPe of Ufe 70. Don,;11o 6ol
Triway 7-4, Orrville 12
1loy BJ.Ilay. Stebbiao 54

S.btrday'o 11ttltto

Slqlhea P.Auttla 94, M e - St. 73
TIW!.I SOulhcm 77, Prairie View 69
Teau·SID Aalonio 6!1, SW Texll St.

Saaday'IICOR
au.,... 9!, """""'12

Tiffia ColumbiiD 89, Frernoat Rou

Tol.
'c 75, Su6uky
Tot. Ubky 72, Day. Bel- 55
Tot. R.... ll7. C.)'lhop Filla 62
Tot. St. Frucit77, Uma Sr. 56

Obio women's
college scores

Sam Hauoton St 78, Nicholl• St 71
Soulhern Melli. 87, Teau Qriadan

.2

Ultlt 108. Goldeo S111o 91
Sanlo 96- L.A. Cllppn 117

Local.,

nPI'&amp;z,;llelhel71. "'-m 6'1

"&lt;1111

HOUlton 10,5, Detroit 8j
P'"'laod 112. DaJJu IOl

......, 11 OrJ
l'llocai• 11 M'

7l

An.·Uttlo ROck 65, Lon. 63
- 6 6. 0n1Robcm65
. - S t. 77, SWI.GulJjona71
Briabam Y - 90, T_.EI Puo 82
-91,BaylcrM(OT)
NE Louiaianl74, NorUrTe•• 65
NW l.ouiliaaa 61, Tc•••·Arlinaton

t•

.390

Jl

61

--

6.5
6.5
9.5

Mlami 102, CU!VI!LAND Ill
ladiiOI 102. Odlndo 79

•Tudlen

:

II

16
LA. Lakm ............:U 18
Ponlaad ................. ZI Zl
Oaldm S.... .......... l8 :u

'•

•Moms&amp;Dads
-Grudpanau

~
I

·'

RIO ORAND£ 76. M...... 75
Ollio Domilican 93, Tiffin 74
lhkna 95. Cedor'rille 9l

61,

.

New Ynrll 104, MI-a 95
LA. Lakm 100, New latey 98
Wuli0Jioo102,V..C..-77
~ 110. Phi~ 105

•Sweetbtllrts

I
I
I

.~

Sb=· 1111a79, W. Muld~&amp;umS3
Sp.la Hip!ud 59, Norlbna 56
St. a.trs'rille u- LocaJ63
St. ~o~ory·,
•2
56, Soooltcn
'lbomu WonhiDJIOD SO, Grovepon

•s.1•.-

92

0111"""""

Iii

.................29 IS .659
Utoh ............, ..., ......~7 14 .659
Deover ........... ........ 17 2l .405
llallu..................... t3 2'1 .325
M - ..............11 29 .:175
v_..ver ............ .IO 32 .238

t

•

26.5

~...... . . . ~ I~ .Ws

I

I
I

S.

.375 · 12.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE

!'.

I
I

II

TDnliiiO .................. Il lO .216

MiiHJIIIo C11hract
Wallh 83, Sha._ Sl. 64
Filldla)' 98. MCMmC VentOft Nwlrene

Ball 51. 82. Millli. Ollio 10
BowHos o-a 70. Abuo st
Butler 70, Deavil6l
CreiJbtoo 81, SW Miuouri St. 7S
(OT)
Doytoa 61 , x..ior, Ohio 55
E. IWDOil 83, W. lllinoit61
E. Mjct,;
96- Kealll
Evnvilf."'IO, Dlioob
DI ..Qicqo87, Wit.~MilwtuU. 76
Dlilloit 74, Nonllwa1010 62
Dlinoit St. 74, Widli,. St. 57
laclloaaSt. 78,N. lowo67
lowo St. 67,
61
J..orolo,lll. 81, ClewlaadS.. 71
Midli... St.
1\11-a 54 ,
Mi....,; 86, Kaouu St. IO .
Ollio U. 7l, Cent Michl ... 65
l'llnb70, Ohio SL 53
St. LDuit 72. N.C. Olar._ 5I
....... 79, Dna.. 73
Vllpon)oo 65, No,-Kaouu Oty 57
W. Midlipoll. Toloclo77
Wea Virpnlo 6'1, N..,. Dome 59
Youosuowo St. 90. Troy Sl. 80

10.5
14
t6
16.5

CI.E\'EUND .......n " .n7
Deavil. ...................ll 19 .525
Olorlooe ................ 20 ll .488

Ridor76.Nrtei.

Super Bowl aaainst Miami, in 1988 being elected. He played tackle and
aaainst Denver and in 1992 against guard from 1950-19!59 for tbe
Buffalo, and they did it with three Detroit Lions, but often waa used on
different.quarterbacks.
-defense in short yi!Jdaae situations.
He retired after the 1~2 season
He played in 165 consecutive
and became an owner in. stock car games and was a 'member of three
raciila. Gibbs alsO is a telovision NFL champiouhip teams. ·
football broadcaster for NBC. ·
Miko Haynes and Dwisht
Dienlorf, now a broadcaster for Stephenson were tbe only finalists in
ABC, joined the Sl LOuis CMrdirials , ~ tbe balloting who did not aain
after starring at Michiaan ~played entrance into the Hall followina the
tackle arid center for 13 seuotl$.
meeting of the 36-JIIet!lljer 'boald of
1 , IWI(t'o played 14 seasons for Dalselectors.
!u as a cOI'IICiback ·anct. safety. He
Eliminated earlier in tiM: volin&amp;
was picked for the Pro Bowlin Cach were eight other nominees: Ken
• of -his firit 10 MaSOIIS and finiJI\ed Anderlon, Carl Ellcf, 'Ibm Msck, ·
bia,caeer 1!rith S2 intelceptiono.
Jack Youngblood and f~ Steelcra
Cleekniur' wu tbo lone senior .....: L.C. Oroonwoocl. ~ohn Sllll,JlO~~· a cateaory.'dul, requires .worth.LynnSwaonandMibW. 1
.nndtd Illtohavecomplded60per- lief,
·
~~ of theit ~ 2S )'CII'I befcn . ·

-

:12.5

0110110................. .38 3 .917
..........................21 •• .666
Allaola ...................:U 17 .SIS

••

Joiner joins ·Gibbs, Di,rdorf, Rerif'ro .
'P,d ·. creekmur in Pro Football HOF

W.1:on&gt;llaa 5I. Cibldol7•
W. Kcolucty59, l.GulJj•Tecb51
Wlllcbrop 77, U...., 76 (OT)

13
14.5

29

N-

Heide~7a.M-.60

Coplta171, Boldwio-Wal!a&lt;e70
Hinrn 6S. Ohio NOithen 6.1
Jdln CanvlllOl. Onedooia &amp;7
Mounl Unioa Sl, Muatinpm 47

Villinio Tecb 81 • ....-,57

9
II

CaontiDI.-

'•
'

Poioosvlllo Ri,...;do 56, Pot...vlllo
IIIMy 49
~ (W.Va) Soolb 6&gt;1, Mlri·
enoll
Ply ....lb 73, Mohawk 6'1
Reednille Elltern 71 , Wahama,
W.Va64(0T)
R l - (lod,) 60,
46
Rlct..ood Dole Soo-.110. McClain SS (OT)
Ridp:dale 44. Colooel C..wford l6
Ripley 71 , Fe6dly 60
RUitia 50, VOI'IIilla 48 (aT)
S. W-67, Wawdy49

OIUoAdllldeCa:Aeewe

Oooqil62

~-k

Salllnlay'aiiCOftl

Remember that special someone this
'Valentine's Day witb a mellsage in
The Dally Senllnel

for coach Lewis Hall's White Falcons.
~ ,
(See tAGLFs oa l'wae 6i

Millc:nport SO. Cot Wbcblooe 49
Mloenl RiiiJe 13, Moplewood I
MiiiCn'a 46, Oaymon1 l l
Minford 61, l..ucuviUe Val 44
Miuipioawa Val. 39. Tri -County N.

~yM, t.-71

~0.y 12. Tol. Bowllla65

r-TOI$.,,M........,St 7l
VMI M. A~ocN• St. 64

3.5

.500
.• 52
.405
.366
.110

. ................ .17 23
LA. Clippon ......... 16 25

WRITE AMESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE

16 and Eric Hill had 12 for Eastern.
Wahama also placed three scorers
in double fiaures, with James See
notching 16 tallies, Jeremy Tucker

O i l - 51, Hollaad SpriDJ. !7

T,__ so. n. E. ~C&lt;otuc:v 69

Iii

.~

15
21

23
25
26
Phl....................... 7 l4

•

.

', TBMPB. Ari~. (AP) - Charlie.
Joiner. who played more seasons as
a receiver than any other player in
~ ' hiatory. is one · of fiv~ new
elllries into the Pro Football Hall of

New Yodt ..............26
Wulllopa .... ........ll
Mlaml .................... l9
Newltney ............ l7
.................... 15

GnoiJ-.--.C b
Qnood Volloy St 79, Alllllod 6'1

s..... M, FbidoAIIoiMic76

EASTERN CONFERENCE

SacriiiiODIO ............:u

.

The Eagles followed up a onepoint win at Nelsonville York on Pri-

SB Looi-19, c::coo-y 77
Sou- U. 95, Alcon 51.117

PocllkDI-

•Frleadl

on Saturday with Micah Otto leadinl the way with a pme-high 26
points, while Michael BII'IICtt added

Rldlolood71.1---11
s. Caroliaa St. ~-A&amp;M . 7

Saoto ....................30 ' II .732

•Bibflltten

pme,

Olclllomial• 86. Wllllata &amp; Mary

12

NBA staDdinp

J(ansas, UC &amp; Kentucky among victors

I

day with its overtime win at Wahama

I
getting 15 and Chad Ord scorina 1.4

Sc oreboard

In Top 25 college bssketbsil,
No. 18 Syracuse 88, No. 21 Boston points for the Gamecocks (11-S, 5: Roy Williams reached an impres- College 73; Louisville 78, No. 19 3), who had won five of six.
No. 6 VIllanova 90
five milestone and was his usual UCLA 76; No. 23 Eastern Michigan
Mlaml6Z
· 4own-to-eartb self about it.
96, Kent 81; North Carolina State 64,
: · The coach of No. 3 Kansas jqined No. 18 Clemson 61; and No. 2S . At Villanova. Pa., Kerry Kittles
had 25 points as the Wildcats (16-3,
(he late Everett Case of North Car- Georgia Tech 79, Florida State 58.
7-2
Big Bast) improved their all-time
Sunday's games
9lina State as the only men to reach
record
against Miami to 9-1: Steven
No. 4 Couneeticut 76
!he 200-victory mark in their eighth
Edwards had 21 points for tbe Hur. Vlqlnla 46
season when the Jayhawks beat
Ray Allen had 24 points to lead ricanes (10-7, 4-S).
~ebraska 88-73 Sunday.
No. 7 Utah 82, New Mexleo 64
• "I wanted to get Win 16 more . tbe Huskies (19-1) to their schoolAt Albuquerque, Keith Van Hom
!lwt I wanted to get Win 200," record 18th straight victory and their scored
2S points to lead the Utes (16ft'illiams said. "We are going to look sixth this season by a margin of 30
3,
8-1)
to their seventh straight vic~r an ice cream place on the way i or more points. Connecticut had a
tory.
Charles
Smith had 14 points for
hack and see if I can find that hot I 17-0 run on the way to a 39-18 halfluclge sundae with some extra nuts.'' ! time lead over the Cavaliers (7-9), the Lobos (16-3, 6-3), who bad an
: Kansas (16-1, 4-0 Big Eight) ; who were held to their lowest point 11-game home winning • streak
r
'fiOn its ninth straight by pulling . total of the season and lost their snapped.
No.
8
North
Carolina
65
away from a 36-35 halftime lead. ~ fourth straight and sixth in the last
No.
1Z
Wake
Forest
5!1
"reshman Paul Pierce scored 17 of J eight games. Courtney Alexander
At Chapel l;lill, N.C., the Thr
liis 25 points in tbe second half and , had 10 points for the visiting CavaHeels (15-4, 6, I Atlantic Coast Condlere wasn't much the Huskers (15- ; liers.
ference)
rallied from an 18-point
j, 3-2) could do about it as the Jay- ·
No. 5 Clnclnuali 85
deficit
with
17:23 to play. JeffMclndawlcs started tbe second half with a ·
Southern Callfol'llia 53
nis,
who
had
20 points, gave North
~-8 run.
Danny Fortson scored 19 points
Carolina
the
lead
for good at SB-51
• "The first five minutes of the sec- and Art Lonj! had IS points and 12
qn
a
steal
and
layup
with 1:09 to
end half, they were outrageous," ·rebounds for tbe Bearcats (14-1).
play.
Tim
Duncan
had
22 points for
l!lebraska forward Terrance Badgett Brandon Martin had 21 points for the
4Aid. ''They play good basketball. visiting Trojans (10-9), who missed the Demon Deacons (13-3, S-2).
St. John's 83
We knew that. But we couldn't con- · 14 of their first IS shots.
No.
9
Georptown 7Z .
liolit."
No. 15 texas Tec:h 79
At
New
York,
Felipe Lopez had
: The win was the second straight i
'&amp;us 78
25
points
and
Zendon
Hamilton 20
iJI Lincoln for Kansas, which had 20 !
Jason Sasser ~ad 20 points and 12
as
the
Red
Storm
(8-8,
2-6
Big l!ast)
· offensive rebounds and forced 22 · rebounds and Cory Carr scored 18
snapped
a
three-game
losing
streak.
wmovers.
points, the last a free throw that' gave
: . "I felt we had some opportunities -the Red Raiders (16-1 , 6-0 South- Allen Iverson had 39 points for the
1nd didn't capitalize," Nebraska west Conference) a four-point lead Hoyas (17-3, 7-2) and improved his
ooach Danny Nee said. "A good with 6.5 seconds to play.·The win average in six career giiJ!ICs at Maditeam closes the door. Kansas did was the 26th straight at home for son Sq~are Garden to 31.3.
No. 10 Penn St. 82
tftat."
Texas·Tech. Reggie Freeman had 27
Indiana 68
• Pierce had a career-high five points for the Longhorns {11-5, 4-2).
At University Park, Pa., the Nitthree-pointers and he made two free
No. 161owa 70
tany Lions (15-1, 6-1) stayed atop
throws and a basket after Nebraska
No. lO Michigan 61
!lad clqsed within 70-64.
f.ndre Woolridge matched his . the Big Ten standings behind 23
· "I was open and I followed . career-high with 28 points and Jess points from Pete Lisicky; Penn State,
which leads the nation in three-point
through," Pierce said. "Even though Settles had 12 points and nine assists
shooting,
went 11-of-18 from
ii was on the road and the crowd.was as the Hawkeyes (15-4, 4-3 Big Ten)
beyond the arc. Brian Evans had 21
lpud, I just felt that! could block the remained unbeaien at home. Maurice
crowd out and was able to hit them." Taylor had 17 points, 1.4 rebounds points for the Hoosiers (11-8, 4-3).
No. 11 Memphis 81
: Erick Strickland led the Huskers and five blocks for the Wolverines
S. MIAisslppl 68
(14-6,
4-3),
who
had
won
seven
of
with 19 points, although he didn't
At
Hattiesburg,
Miss., Cedric
store for the first 10 minutes of the the last nine games against Iowa.
Henderson bettered his season averSaturday's games
second half.
·
No. 1 Massachusetts 72
aaed by more than 15 points with 26
: 1n other games involving ranked
to lead the Tigers (14-3, S-1 ConferSt. Bonaventure 47
teams on Sunday, it was: No.4 Conence
USA), who had an 8-0 run over
At
Amherst,
Mass.,
the
Minutenecticut 76, Virginia 46; No. S
the
final
I :38. Damien Smith had 21
men
(18-0,
6-0
Atlantic
10)
remained
Cincinnati 85, Southern California
53; No. IS Texas Tech 79, Texas 78; Division.l's only unbeat~n team and paints for the Golden Eagles (8-8, 2aDd No. 161owa 70, No. 20 Michi- welcomed back center Marcus Cam- 4).
No. 13 Virpma Tech 81
by, who collapsed mysteriously 13
prt61.
Fordham 57
days
earlier
and
missed
four
games.
· In games involving Top Ten
At
Blacksburg;
Va., the Hokies
The
6-foot-11
junior
had
19
points,
teamS on Saturday, it was: No. I
(
13-2,
6-1
Atlantic
10) rebounded
seven
rebounds
and
a
school-record
Massachusetts 72, St. Bonaventure
from
the
17-point
loss
to George
47; No. 2 Kentucky 89, South Car- nine blocks in 26 minutes. The Bonolina S'1; No. 6 Villanova 90, Miami nics (5-11, 1-6) lost thl:ir fifth Washi~gton behiJ!d Shawn Good,
straight ovemll and 16th in a row,to who played with a separa~ shoul6~; No. 10 Utah 82, New Mexico 64;
der and still had nine points, six
NO. 8 North Carolina 65, No. 12 . Massachusetts.
rebounds and six assists. Darren
No.
2
Kentucky
89
Wab -Forest 59; St. John's S3, No.
Deschryver
had 11 points for the
South Carolina 57
9 'oeofgetown 72; and No. 10 Penn
Rams
(2-14,
0- 7).
At Lexington, Ky., Walter
Sl!tlC 82, Indiana 6&lt;1.
No.
14
Arizona 70 '
· .In o(hcr games involving ranked McCarty had 20 points for the WildOrea-65 '
cats (17-1 , 7-0 Southeastern Confer· teamS on Saturday, it was: No. II
, At Eugene, Ore., the Wddcats
Memphis 81, Southern Mississippi ence), who used a 30-2 run to take a
68; No. 13 Virginia Tech 81, Ford- 76-471ead in their 16th consecutive (lS-3, S-2) won their fifth straight
titm 57; No. 14Arizona 70, Oregon win and the 300!h of coach Rick Pili- Pac-IP game behind tbe 19 points of
6$;No. 19 Putdl!C 70, Ohio State 53; no's career. Melvin Waison had 16 Ben Davis. Reggie Geary and Davis

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

in an exciting high school buketball

•

....

•

•
'
By The Aaoclated Preu

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~astern boys post 71-64 overtime win over Wahama

The Daily Sentinel
. .

~Cowboys

Monday, January 29, 1996

'

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

..

:1

L;~---·~------------~----------y•'_.'_.".k...~..~--S._._IO_..__._._.~--~-----·_._._._._._..__..__._.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~! !
..

I ·,

.
'

�•

.

·: -P~-a-~•--•The
___DM
__~~s_._u_~--------~----------------------~P~o~me~ro~y~·~M~I~dd~l~e~po~rt~,~O~h~~~--------------~----_;M~on~de:Y~·~J8::"t.::~~29:,~1:9e&amp;=

.-.

:::••• Meigs
·:~

•••

.

:• By

.RACINE . R.L HOLLON
TRUCIIII
GUN CLUB
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
GUll SHOOTS
C~N

..

.qe~

PULUNS ~RES- Meigs guard Paul Pullna (far right) geta palt
TO THE HOOP - 1be Melga Maraudera' Brad Whm.tch pula up
Millar's Joey Duffy (12) and Shawn N•l (23) to accn on a layup dur· a thot In front of Mlller'a Jarrod Browning (15) during Stlturclay
Jng saturday night's TVC make-up game at Malga High School, whent · nlghra game at Rock Sprlnga, whara the Maraudera won 59-46. (Senthe Marauders won 59-46. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harrla)
tinel photo by One Harrla)
·

led by Massey's three, and six steals.
"We came out flat, but we really
picked.it up in the middle of .the second period outscoring them 47-31 in
the last three quarters," Marauder
coach Jeff Skinner said after the
game. "Our defense really picked it
up in the second half, Thompson
only scored five in the half after scoring 16 in the first half."
Reserve notes: In the reserve

game Meigs jumped out to a 19-6
lead at the end of the first period and
· coasted to a 66-34 victory. Meigs
had a balanced scoring attack with
all II players getting into the scoring column. Matt Williams led
Meigs with 14. Adam Keller led
Miller with 10.
The future: Meigs (8-7 overall &amp;
6-4 in·the Ohio Division) will host

Vinton County on Thesday. Miller
(6-8 overall.&amp; 4-6 in the Hocking
Division) will travel to Albany to
face Alexander on Tuesday.

O!!Wrm!lla
.Miller....................... 15-1 0..9-12=46
Meigs ............ ,........ l2-ll-22-14=59
MILLER -leremy Massey 2·
0..0=4, Joey Duffy 0..0-2=2, Jarrod
Browning 3-0..0=6, Jeremiah Keller
3-0..2=8, Chris Thompson 9-0..3=21,

to the free-throw line, to cut the Blue 34 seconds remaining in the half. as
Rucker was fouled by Adam Roush
Devil lead to 9-8.
Southern tied the game at 13-13 on a drive to the hoop. The field goal
with 3:38 remaining in the first half, was good, as was Rucker's ,free throw
as Jamie Evans canned one of two and Gallipolis went into the locker
shots at the charity stripe. Gallipolis room with a 21-20 lead. The lowkept the game tight, with inside scoring first half saw both teams
hoops by Jay Lambert and Rucker, •account for a combined 18tumovelll
but Southern maintained a one to two and20 team fouls en route to sub-par
point edge through the remainder of shooting figures as well.
the quarter.
Gallipolis broke open the second
Gallipolis took back the lead with half with a 6-0 scoring run in the first
·
'

•two minutes of the tllird quarter: After
;a time out by Caldwell to auempt to
jregroup llis Southern troops, Gal.lipolis continued its s~oring run by
extending the lead to 31-20 with5:02
remaining on a lay-in by Issac Saun· ders.
· ''That was the game's turning
point," said Blue Devil head coach
-Jim Osborne. ·
. Caldwell quickly used another
. time out after the Saunders bucket, in
an auempt to keep the game from
- entirely slipping away from Southern.
• The TOflladoes looked to be stepping
· from the shadows that had held them
· to zero points in the early stages of the
. quartet.s Jesse Maynard· hit a three. pointer to cut the lead to 31-23 with
• 4:08 remainin11.
. Gallipolis closed the period out
~ with a 14-3 run to lead 45-26 at the
~ end of three quarters. Heath McKin" niss and Dave Rucker were the hot
Jhands for the Blue Devils during the
l final four minutes, both hilling two
Jfield goals during the stretch, as the
Blue Devils took their commanding
lead into the final period. .
I Southern outscored Gallipolis 1715 in the final quarter, but could not
cut into lhe lead created during the
final four minutes of the third period.
Billy Sheppard paced the Tornadoes
with six'points in the final period, but
converted fastbreal- opportunities by
Greg Lloyd and 'Dave Rucker sealed
the victory for Gallipolis.
Gallipolis hit 2S of SS field goal
auempts (one of four from the threepoint circle) and was nine of 12 at the
lihe.
·
The Blue Devils had 21 pelllonals,
46
rebounds, a ~areer high by Isaac
STAYING CLOSE - Gallla Academy'a Heath McKinnlaa (right)
Saunders
-and 16 turnovers. the Blue
ataya cloae to Southern'• Ryan Norrla while Norrla playa Jreep-aw.y
De
vi
Is
had
five steals lind 17 assists,
during Saturday nlght'a game at Soutt,em High School, where the
nine
by
Rucker.
GAHS had eight
Blue Devlla claimed a 52-41 win.

leads No. 19 Purdue to 70~50
'

''

screens, cut to the ball and you'll get
other people open and you'll get
open," Hairston said. "Teams have
heen playing me.one-on-one in the
post and the .team has been doing a
good job of getting me lhe ball in the
post."
The victory ended Purdue's
longest Big Ten losing streak in lhree
years. Still, Keady isn't happy with
what he saw Saturday.
"It looks like we're bored out.
there," Keady said. "We need to get
· back to when we were on that 10-

.'[~~(lgles best White Falcons.~~o-nt-in-ued_fr_om_Pa.;;.ge_s:....)- - - - - - - ~ ~dropped in a pair froni ·the .
Eastern battled blick with its points, and Corey Johnson netted II
~ stripe for Wahama with six strong inside game of Baroelt and for the WHS cagers while Steve
iloCOads remaining in regulation to Otto to pull· to witllin a bucket after Durst dropped in 13, Robert Harris
toni! the game into a .four~.minute three quarters before Otto led the ·12 and Ricky Hollon II for !!astern.
'xtra frame but the Eagles quickly Eagles inro the lead l~te in regula- 1
Wabama will return to action on
~mped out to a S-point advantage tion.
Wednesday when the White Falcons
i1ft1r a trey by Dillard and a 2~point
See kept the.Bend Area Falcons host Ravenswood. !!astern will play
, We( by Hill. The lUdden Eastern in contention with 8 f~ulll1er . 1iimblc Tuesday night.
· W ill the overtime period. forced nlarkell befon: knotting the, score ng,mr &amp;mill
.JfflS 10 foul in trying to get back withapai~ofc~tytosleswithsix Wabaina. ..........,.l7-10-t6-16-S=64 ·
, -to contention by th!l· Eagles · ·seconds to play. · .
' Eastem ............. l3-10..18-18-1~=71
:
liD•~ the Gall by connectina on
••
!
' · • WAifAMA- See S-1-3/4=16;
1
~ of 10 ~ during the wan1be ~limii!IIY ~on~t was aiiiO · JUcker 3-;J-0-101 S; o.-d ~0..318= II;
lallili11ulel of the ~ to pull out, an exc~tint affair with Bri!Jinon · Jtiggs 2-0-314=7; Howald 3-0-112=7;
~lOVeD-point wia. '. ·~
·
HB;er'l ti- point bubt With tWo Shields 3-0..0/0m6; King l-0f0/0=2.
Whjle PlkODI tOok a 17~ 13 Mconda 1 raalininl' sivlng coac!l. 'IOtall: :Z1-4-1tt'IW4
leld' lftet' one quaceer behind the · Frink c.pehllit's Walll_ma junior
EAS~RN ....; M. Otto 9·0~nJ of Jeftlllly Tucbr before the
vllflity ~ .a come·liom-behind 811 0::26; Barnell 7-0-1/2:a 16; Hill 4, t~wo-..ctividlda20iJojDUecond · · 51·SO win over the visitilll Ela1es 0-4/4=12: Dillud 0..2-214=8; Casto
- 1 0 l!·ve \1/ehMnA a 27·23 hllf· jay* uait. ·
·.
3-0-010=6; D. Otto 1·0.112;3- ·
--..,., r-:= • ,
~ 1«1 111 IICQ'al With 18 'lbtiiii~:Z.17.:z3-'71- . ·, -

m.e

i.

\

Shawn Neal 0..0..2=2, Kevin Plant 10..0=2, Ryan Beal 0..0-1=1. Thtals:
18-0-10=46
MEIGS - Ryan Martin 2-20=10, Cass Cleland 6-0-2=10, Mark
Mills 1-0-0=2, Paul Pullins 7-04:18, Tim Lewis 1-0-0=2, ·Nick
Haning 1-0..0=2, Brent Hanson 1-21=9. Travis Abbott 1-0..0=2. Totalll:
l0-4-7=59

.

"·

vic~ory

over

Ohi~

·'

· game winnin.g streak, play_ing with a · fi_nal four points' of the first half to
lpt of enthustasm and havmg fun. ... gave Purdue a 36-25 lead, the BmlI'm concerned that we play with the ermakers ran off the first ~ve points
caliber of whom we are playing and in the second half to take a 41-2S
not up to our c8J11111ility of playing." lead on a basket by Brad Miller.
Herb Dove had 10 points for PurOhio State cut its deficit to 47-39
due (15-4, S-2 Big Ten). Rick Yudl
led the Buckeyes (8-8, 1-6) with J 5.
After Luther Clay scored the

IOnertc[ mfJb

'

614.698-4011 (cOhct)
, 3222 Swart lld:

Albaaf, OhiO' 45710
• AMUilies are ilsued by Insurance
Companies and have
penaltlea for early witlidnawala.

.. '

FIDUCIARY FUNIJII. FOR
THE RSCAL YEAR ENDED
.'I·
DECEIIBER 31, 1111.5
DATE: 12131115
SALEM TOWNMP
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
· RECEiPTS
REVENUE RECEIPTS

aen..tFund .

~ ................2111.01

·

1Gallipolis ................. 9-12-24-17::62
'Southem ....................4-16-6-15=41
SOUTHERN -Adam Rousli'O..
1-111-4, Ryan Norris 0-2-012-6, Greg
McKinney 1-0-010-2, Jamie Evans 0..
0..314=3, Jesse Maynard 1-1-3/4=8,
Spike Rizer 1-0-012=2, Jay M~KeiVc:y
1-0..318=5, John Harmon 1-~2
Tyson Buckley 0-0..3/9=3; Billy
Sheppard 3-0..010=6. Totals: 8151·
4111-13129=41
Thtal FG: 12-62 (19.3%)
. Foulll: 18
Rebounds: 40 (Maynard 8, Harmon 7)
Steals: 8 (Maynard, Evans 3)
Thmovers: 10
GALLIPOLIS- Heath McKinniss 3-0..010=6, Issac Saunde'rs 5-P.
0/0=10, Dave Rucker S-1-314=16
Greg Lloyd S-0~212= 12, Aaro~
Beaver 1-0·010::2, Jay Lambert 2-0..
112=S. Chris . Smith 1·0..0/0=;l.
Thtals: 24151-1/4-8113=6%
Total FG: 25-S5
Foulll: 21
Re~cls: 46 (Saundelll 13) .
Steals: 5 (Rucker, Lloyd, Smith,
M~Kin.niss Lambert &amp; W. Saundct;S.1 each)
Assists: 17 (Rucker 9)
·
Thmoven: 16
'I

State

.I

on Jason ~ingleto~·s only bu,ket.
Chad Austm then hat-a tlvee-pomter
to make it 50..39, and PUrdue heldll
double-digit lead the rest of the game
as it beat Ohio State for .tl!e fifth
straight time.

-GRIIIPI
•FM!IIy
R-*le Prieta

Cl119e2-7747
Aft11'4pm

During WHkdlyl ..

• All Olhlt' Revenue.31120..7U
Total Revenue R~ ·
...........................50973.25
EXPENDITURE
DISBORSEMENTS
, , DISBURSEMENTS:
IOenenll

Oovernment.......25037.55
.' ' Public

s.tety....................1175.78
. c.pltal Outley; ...... .3842.51
,. . TOTAL EXPENDITURE
.

BATTER IES

SHOCKS

P235n5RX15

TI Flf:.~;

. '

Apache All Season ·

ssg95

'

HAY fOR

i

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

SALE.

Umtatone, hnd, Gravel, Colli &amp; Water

CAll

WE HAVE A- I TOP SOI L FOR SALE

614-949·~512

'
-~ ~

v.

· - ····· ··- •

.

COISIIumOI

:':"'..,,I

a.. ·ldlq:·~·
•NewHomea

•Addltlona
•New Gar~g&amp;a
•Remod1llng
•Siding
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
1192-5535

. .. - . .

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C.
PIIV~TE CARE
· HOME

\lhe
eotnet
Picture Frame, Mats
· &amp;Framing Accessories.
&lt;405 NCIIIh Second Ave., Middleport

614-992-3200
,,;_,_.

me on WHkiiiiCII

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

I-WAY

MINI STORAGE _
882·2996 .
c:ca.-1DIIIIIal I Prki.

Tot.! RIDilpls 0.. (Undlr)•
Dllbur•r...,..-..20117.33

OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
Other F1nanelng
loUr-=-............. - ......121.00

,1nr.w1-.,..

TOTALOTHEJI
RNANCING SOURCES

~'!:~AK:-;,;doa:1.00
Sou,_ 9ft' lllnclerl
Dlllburwo.,.lltslllfl Olhef.

u-·-··-·-·..........2183J.33
Fund Clllh ....- .

Jlnuary 1, 1M•••• 11147.34
Fund Calh Bill-. Dee.

31, 1115••• ':'•··-··-··40185.17
SPECIAL REVENUE

REVENUE RECEIPTS .

Taxee.....................l8!tiQ.41
~nm1nta1
: ..............61481 ••
lntlr'Mt ....................1110.00

Public Notice

Plck·Up dlacarded
wahera, dryers, hal
'water tllnkl, atovati,
fui118CIII, and many
matal materials

I
DISBURSEMENTS

Call 992-4025

=

. Public,Wclrkl ...~.. 12008.01

between 8 am-8 pm
Mon. thru Sat.

IIMIII1·-.. ~........... 111811.37

=~iiiTJ~~!t-40

DISBURSEIIIENT$............
•• .: .........................138730.88
Tot.! R1e1lpl1 0.. (Undlr)
~ .. (140118.12)

=~~~Q
Olhlr Fliuoiclng
SourOM...-·-··--·350.00

TOTAL OTHI!R FINANCING
SOURCES (USI!S) ..:.350.00
Toll! of Rec. end Olhlt'

All Olhlr
Revtniii ...................;S19.71
TOTAL REVENUE
RECEIPTS..:0...... 122631.74
EXPEN~E
.

•NewGII'IgH

•E*lrical a Plumbing

•Rooting

Painting
Al.o Concme Work
(FREE ESUM4TES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1192-1215

Public Notice

·-

Pomeroy, Ohio
Public Notice

Jllnu..,-1, 1M•••II081.tll
Fund C..h Ballnce, Dec.

31. 1885.................85332.84
TOTAL (MEMORANDUM
ONtY't

SouiW8 Over (Under)'
l!llb...-nta 8rid Other

Fund C.h .....,ce,

TOTAL REVENUE

All Otlllt'·Revenue..4140.46

·Names in the news

,Letterman.'s top 10 good things
~~ab.out Supe.r .Bowl .on the . radio

RECEIPTS ......... 173ti04.88
EXPENDITURE
· DISBURSEMENTS

Ge-.1
Governntent..........25037.15
Public s.r.ty ........ 117&amp;.711
PubHc WOII!a.-12006.01

Heatth ...................:'111&amp;1.37

C.ltsl Outley.......37401.88
TOTAL EXPENDITURE

DISBURSEMENTS...............
.............................1fil788.71
TOIIII RNelpts OVer (Under)
DlebUJMmlllts...-.68111.21

Sourcee................... 1271.00
TOTAL OTHER RNANCING
SOURCES (USES).1271.00
TOIIII Of Rec. And Oflllr

aou....av. (undlr)
-DI••.-.......m
•nd OIMr If"!

U----..
··-·----·11111111.21
Fund Clah Bellnce,

' if this is the phone calls.
'IEMPE, Ariz. (AP)- NBC may the audience for it. and

..
JanUMy 1, 1895.11711211.30
·have televised the Super Bowl, but allllience for the new alb!mti . fine.
Fund Clah Bellnce, Dec.
· 'CBS' David Leuerrnan made ,the - That's where.! should be ript now,"
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Johnnie 31,1985
...............12110111.51
· ,best of it during his network's radio he said.
. Cochran Jr. said he's been able to use COMBINED STATEMENT Of
.·, broadcast of the game.
His latest release is ''The OboSt of his newfound celebrity status to ben,
RECEIPTS,
DISBURSEMENTS. ~D
In fact, he carne up with the "Top · Tom JQad," a collection of stark, efit youth.
CHANGES IN BALANCES'len Good Thinp About Listening to somber tales of the American jlream
"I am able to sPeak to children and NON-EXPENDABLE
TRUST
the Super Bowl on the Radio" for the gone bust.
kids about what they ought to do with
FUNDS- FOR THE RSCAL
CBS radio halftime show.
· The album has failed to cnck the their lives," Cochran said at a UniYEAR ENDED
DECEMBER 31, 1895
10. When the game gets boring, Top tO after eight weeks in stores, but versi:fjf Toledo scholarship dinner
DATE: 12131115
t¥ announcer can make stuff up.
Springsteen, 46, considers llis new Friday.
·
SALEM TOWNSHIP
9. No spitting, no scratching, no music some of the most satisfying of
"It P ts Die in the position to talk N~PENDABLETRUIT
butt slapping.
his career.
about the so-called divide in Ameri- OPERATING RECEI'TS
8. The instant replays, where the
"I always felt that whole 'the ca and how, despite that divide - . Glfll ..........................500.00
. )lnnouncer describes the play again, Boss'thing is fundunentally siDy," he wllich was not created by the Simp- TOTAL OPERATING
...............500.110
)'eally, really slowly.
said of hiS nickname when he ruled son case - there is still much more RECEIPTS
OPERATING
. . 7. If you like, you can imagine the .the top of tJie charts. ''I knew my that unites us,thao divides us." 1
INCOME ......... - ...... 500.00 .
· cheerleaders are naked.
audience would go back to its regu·
"I've said, 'Let's not run and.liide. INCOME BEFORE
. 6. If you like, you can imagine the tar level. I didn't see that it might hap- Let's acknowledge the divide and OPERATING TRANSFERS
officials~ ·naked.
pen. I knew that it would taagpen." let's try and work together to make AND ADYANCES ...... 500.00
NET INCOME ............ SOO.OO
5. It's fun to phone in requests,
things better.' ... I tllink we have to do ·Fund
Calh Bellnce,
then hear the team do your play.
..LOS ANOELES (AP) -Is Mag- that to be the country we want to be." December31,1M .. SOO.OO
4. During sex, you don't have to ic lo,luison n;tuming to' basketball
Cochran led the legal team that Thle Ia 1n unauclltsd ·
jiSk your wife to mo'(e her head.
because he may have two more defended OJ. Simpson in the slayings tlnanclll etstw..m.
3. Can simultaneously listen to the . mouths to feed?
'of his. ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simp- I c.tlfy the fOllowing r.;ort
to be CCII rect end true to the
• game and read "Late Show Book of
Johnson and llis wife Cookie plan son, and her friend, Ronald Goldman. butofmylcMwlldge:
Top Ten Lists," $16.95 at boo~tores to adopt twi~s. the Los Angeles Simpson was acquitted of murder
S.lem Townlhlp ·
Bonnie Scott, Cllrk
everywhere.
Times reported Sunday. 'I1Ie c.ouple charaes.
26231 Legion Roecl
2. Hearing a groin pull is less already has three cllildren, including
Langsville,
Ohio 45741
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Leah
painful than seeing one.
an adopted baby girl.
Phone 814 eet 3081
I. You never know .when the
Johnson, 36, has put their home up Rabin wrapped up a two-day trip to (1)211te
announcer's giving you the finget- (or sale, reportedly beCause they'll Southern California by visiting a
like this.
nCC!I more space. They're asking memorial to the vi,ctlms of Nazi terPublic Notice
$6.32 million for the two-acre, fouJ- ror.
~· 1 feel a great pride in the fact that
.. .. LOS ANG~ (AP) - Bruce bedrQOm Beverly Park home.
.
today
we are convinced that some,Springsteen is playing 5,000-seat theNBC-TV reported Sunday that
thing
like
this could never happen
aters with notliing but an acoustic gui-' Johnson, who retired in 1991 after
again
because
Israel dales to protect
.tar - 1 far cry froin ·the 80s· when announcing he has the virus that caus"The Boss" and the E Street Band es AIDS, ~ sianed a· contraCt to Jewish llores wherever il can," the
packed stadiums around the world.
re.turn to the Los Angeles Lalters and widow of slain Israeli Prime Minis~r Yitihak Rabin said Sunday after
'· But he's notcomplaininR.
cOuld pl.ly as early as Thesday.
:: "W))at you have to do isstart with
· A Lalcers spokesinan denied the touring the Si,mon Wiesenthal Cen;a piece of music and then sean:h out report. J'1im500 's agent did not return ter:S Museum.

(!Uie

c:•·

..

.

OI·STITE WATER SYSTEMS, IIC.
TDS, Mlnerol H..-dneoo,lron, PH.
Pt.M ull R•I.So{let 912-1472 or 1-eoo-eGe 3313
to HI up your frM Wllter •niiV*ll.
,_

Authorized

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,.,,....

SAWMILL
la•d•aw Mill
32124 Heppy HoUow Rd.
l!lldd~ Ohio 457110
~J&amp;nny a PIIIVY Brlclde1

614-742-2193
11!131111 MO.

Distributor

Wtlclng 8uppllte .,.lnduatrlal Gaaea • Steel
s.tlee I Fabrication • Repair Welclng
AlumlnumfStalnlea
Machine Shop
·

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

Oxygen Acetylene co.
Helium all at.. Medical Grade 0.
Propane Trlmbt Ullra Mix

Pl.tts•u

ru

108 P.POI.,.mMitlt'"'OY

St. Mason, 'flY

BUILDERS, INC~
Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
. Room Additions • Roofing · •
~OM,.ERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
.ntttw

A-c UTILITY
CONSTRUOION CO.
Overhead&amp;
undergroun~

utilities &amp; llg~tlng
. Bucket, Digger
Truck Services

Service Pole
$2.50 per ft.
1-614-378-9801

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

·J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,

Trackhoe,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hra.
We dig basements, put.ln septic
systems, lay lines, undergroun~ bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512
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Opening Feb. lst

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Middleport. OH. W&amp;O
AKC Reg. Pupplea, !&lt;lttena, Blrda I More
Experienced Groomers .. Financing Avallltble

B. Jolene Rupe/Owner
J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

(614) 992-6244
IMII-2512

o

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

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

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

hee~

L D. COitSTRUOION
Siding, Porchea,
Dec:ka,
Homa Improvement~,

·

lapses in bxhaustion at the edge of a
canyon. ~n b~zzards swoop in and
fly awa_yw•th llis beer.
. But •I wasn't all animals. Celebribes and athletes had their day as well.
1bugb-guy actor Jack Palarice
rounded up cattle wath a Ford truck,
and ~ouston Rockets center Hakeem
OlaJuwon wllipped out his Visa c~
to buy lunch for all his Olyrnpac
oppon.ents.
.
.
Heasman Trophy ~mner. Eddie
Georse got a rupbn~sh .YJsJt from
t)Jree t~ NFL. defensave players, led
by Regg~e White, wh~ recommended
. that the young runnmg bsc:k from
. Ohio State. try Tylenolfor pain.
. ApdDe•on~·~nce~y
have con~ vae~rs trymg to keep
traC~.of_llis on-fi~ld pl~y. Not .only
was ~Time cha.sangreceavers
and ~g ~ses, _but he was sell1111 Wheities wath ClliCIIJo Bulls stir
MichM!1001iii~playina!"c1 ~­
tunner m ~ ~~ lid that nuxedlive
~~:lion With animation.

.

The water treatment company cordially invijes you to
participate In a free, no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
.

OTHER RNANCING
SOURCES (USES)
Other Financing

/II. . '

: NEW' YORK (AP) - The Dol- ' i:Uring a .niuseum dinosaur skeleton
i'Jins,: Broqc,os and Bears didn 't ~oing on a nipttime ~wl. Bul when
IQlalce it lj) th1s year's Super Bowl but at comes across a secunty guatl! eatif dinillav, :a' aoklfish and bu~ ing ftench fries, the frightening 'creallid strutting their stuff before a· ture makeS like a puppy perfooning
televi!iiln alidienee.
'
•for a~
• '
·
' Madiso'n·Avenue turned Sunday's
A aoJdfish ·plays~ until cllil~lecast into a comrnen:ial Wild Kins- dren drop soft drink in its bowl in a
;'by featoring !l menagerie of cemmen:ial for Pepsi-Cola Co.
~ties -:- act~al, ~~tinct ~d lni. In A? ad fOJ: Bud Ice beer, .l'fo.lJ!en
tiated-m the most e~pensave ads CJiD8cmahouseasas~poimds
f.Ver run on television.
loudly, ~ the door. TheY ~~~ 1 ·~ud
·; NBC charged a record $1.2 mil· Ice outside ~a~ offonng, ,QIIIy
~ on av~rage for each bllf-l!linllle !0 f'i¢. the m~ 11 ~ small but
li! commen;iaJ time during the June, . illert!ve penaw~. ·• ,·
Iii&gt; 20 ~ _. 11aat~, Atibut , · .!lti~ f~i··•sme,t~.t, for
ijs milllciltviOwm'were·expected ·to Buclwe¥er, " ~ t1w &amp;lllf!!:lively
t!!aved'tuRed•in. . · , _
. • ·· 'cro.k{he!leilt'snuneare.undltorred
fi .OII!ihe ~ld; ttae~p Cowboys by a SJJO~llQII tlw ~Rem !heir
~ailed'o-ihePilllburgliSieelers, toques.
·
.
'~17.Qn"'-.tubiJ;tlllimalsiOUIIhtiP
1\vo lelnis of Clydesdale. horses
ltisty their hunger and thirst with play football in 8IIOiher Bud
~ldess and often· etllertainina mereill. Alld ·ia an Iii ~Bud LiJitl,
ill*adon: .,
- •. - •. ' , astiandedJDIII.Witliasilcpec!l:.l hiab
~ McDould's €otp, ...... lid feil.. iL Qlr't' pt any wane wileD·be col'
•·
·

~-N~
~~fTr=~=~nt
~v:...vwv .....,••• ,
Dutributed by'

•Interior I Exterior

.

1......................... 76582.06
lnllrgovwnmentsl
, Aecelptl .•••.•••••••..•88554.46
lnter..t •••••••••••••••••••• 3328.01

u-....................(13748.12)

•Room Addltlona

1111111111

bo·stly Super BowJ ads a hit with football fans

S I! )( 1'- \ I \ H 1.; I I '.'

SCOTT·INSURANCE
.
-

~~.:.':~=:
TYPES AND SllloiLAR

ln18rgo-tal
Recetpq ••. - ........ 28082117

:blocked shots, five by Lloyd.
i
Gallipolis improved to 4-10 over•all (2-6 in the SEOAL), while South. em dropped to 4-9 overall (3-S in the
TVC). Southern plays host to Federal Hocking Tue'l;!ay nighL
Reserve n«*!S: In the reserve
contest, Gallipolis defeated Southern
58-48. Jermaine Jackson led Oallipolis with 14, while Southern was
led by Billy Sheppard's 14.
Gallipolis also won the freshman
game, but the score was unavailable.

\ 1:&lt;1 111111

• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Montbly
Income
• High Safety!
• Wide Choice of Annuities of
~II Kinds·
Call for Information:

COMBINED STATEMENT Of
RECEIPTS,
DI88UR8EIIIENT8, AND

I

POMEROY, 0t10
Trah Remcmtl· Cammarclal or Reeldentlll
Septic Tllllta Clelnld I Portable Tollela Ranted.
Dally, wehly &amp; monthly rantal .......

Public

rr, ·•

n.-.................. 17121.57

l\ER\ '()l TS
· Guaranteed Safety &amp;
High Interest Yields
Avallalbe

, ~·
Notice
~~::==~~~~~==:]

;

()~lnga for 2.
-...._}Chrlatlan
atmotphere for
tldtrly Clrt In •
non-amoklng home•

·AnnlverMrle•

.985-447.3

I'

: !:t

•

•

l

.- :Roy Hairston has Purdue coach two-game l.osing streak by the two'Oeiie Keady second-guessing him- time defending Big Ten champions.
•self about not redshirting the senior
"Roy has accepted his role on
:last season.
what we want to do on offense,"
f Hairston, the 1994 National Keady said. "For his first year, he
! Junior .College Player of the Year want~ to be a three-pointer shooter
iauuggled last season in his debut and a finesse player. It's too bad. We
:with lhe Boilermakers.
probably should have redshirted
isn't struggling now, 'having him .... He's maki,ng layupnow. If
1sc;
in double figures in five of he had done that last year, he·could
:Purdue's last six games. He had 20 easily have averaged in double fig:points, connecting on nine of II ' ures."
·
_
[•hots Saturday as No. 19 Purdue
"Coach · has told me to set

ofleunlona

oCoioplete
R•modellng
stop li compare
FREE ESTIMATES

';
'

~. ifii!ST LAFAYETI'E, Ind. (APJ · defeated Ohio State 70-SO to end a

eed a rltol..,...,pll,r for
your SpuU.I OetlllioiJ?
•Wtddlngtnleclptionl
oCouponl
(Er.giiJimlnt Plct....)

'.NiwHomea

I

'

·-

·coNmilcnoN

Academy boys notch 62-41 ·victory -over Southe·rn

,

f..,.

Chester, Ohio

101111 BISSELL

HUNTER

'

'

·. '1211utt .
a..ke Only

FOR A~TOTAL OF
$7.00
DAY.

'

~. Hqirston

BE SEEN HERE

ROUID
IllES OF

'

I

Umestone • Gravel 'I
''
Dlrt•Sand
!
985-4422
'

·su1.1 PI

YOUR MESSAGE

the lead to 5-4 on a Jay McKelvey
bucket with 5:31 to play in the open:;
The Gallia Acadetr!Y Blue Devils ing period. Gallipolis FXtended the
;: broke open a one-point halftime lead lead to 9-4. on a Dave Rucker buck:•. in a big way, outscoring Soulhem 41- et with 2:37 left; the final score by
.; 21 in the final 16 minutes to come either team in the opening quarter.
:: away with a 62-41 victory over
Southern opened up the second
:I Howie Caldwell's Tornadoes before a quarter with a threat to the Gallipolis
, ;: big crowd at Hayman Gymnasium lead, as the Tornadoes' shots began to
fall. Adam Roush converted on a
:: Saturday niJht.
·• The Blue Devils jumped out to a three-point play, after a foul by Chris
_ quick S-0 lead, before Soulhem cut Smith on a made bucket sent Roush

•I'

The D1111Y s.ntinai • P •• 1

.. .

·: Sentinel Staff Writer

",

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh~

boys crack halftime deficit to beat Miller 59-46

lead to 38-30. After a bucket by.Jere::: By DAVE HARRIS
my Massey cut the Meigs lead to 38:·: SmtlnetCanupo."ICIItltt
Meip overcune a slow start and 32, Hanson hit another three-point·
ClllllcomlloJjller 36-21 in lhe second· er with I :31 left in the period to
half ro dcfelr lhe falcons S9-46 in , make it a 41-32 contest.
Two buckets by Pullins wrapped
Tri-Valley Conference basketball
action Saturday evening at Larry R. around a basket by Kevin Plant gave
Meigs a 4S-34 advantage heading
Morrison Gymnasium.
Miller led for almost all of lhe into the final period. All told, the
first half. Jumping out to a 7-2 lead Marauders outscored the Falcons in
on a bucket by Jarrod Browning with the tllird period.
· S:39 left in the period. Meigs came
Meigs increased the lead to 49-36
back on a bucket by Paul Pullins and with 7:18 left in the game on a Cletwo by Cass Cleland, the later came land layup off a Pullins assist with
on a steal and assist by Pullins with 7:18 left. But Miller went on a 7-0
3:08 remaining giving Meigs a 8-7 run and cut the Meigs lead to 49-43
on a basket by Massey with 4:26
lead
,.
Chris Thompson gave Miller a remaining.
But the Marauders took control of
•: short lived 9-8 lead on a bucket in
the
game after that and when Mar: ; die paint with 2:38 left. But Pullins
: ~ and Abboullit back-t()-back buckets tin hit another three-pointer with
; ; givins Meigs a 12-9 lead with I :37 with 3:251eft it gave Meigs a 56-44
lead. Miller was unable to cut the
·: remaining:
:; . But Miller ran off lhe last six Meigs lead to single digits the rest of
:: points of the period 10 take a 15-_12 the game.
. Pullins led a trio of Marauders in
: • lead on a bucket by Thompson w1th
double figures with 18. Cleland
•: six seconds left.
::
.Those last six points of lhe first added 14 ·and Martin added 10.
:• period were the fust of 14 in a row Meigs hit 24 of 53 from the floor
•: for Miller as lhe Falcons took a 23- including ·four of seven from three:; 12lead with 4:381eft in lhe half on point range for 4S%, and seven of 14
'• tWO Shawn Neal free throws.
from the line for 50%.
,.
But Meigs went on a run of their
Meigs pulled down 26 rebounds
• own scoring nine of the next II with Cleland grabbing !OandAbbott .
points to cut the Falcon lead to 25- six. Meigs had 17 turnovers, 10
, 23 at the half when Ryan Martin assists led by Pullins with three and
drained a three-pointer with 45 sec- 12 .steals led by Pullins with seven.
Miller was led by Thompson's 21
onds left
Meigs took the lead for good with points, with 16 of those coming in
4:40 ieft in the third period on a the first half. He was the only Falcon
.
three-pointer from Brent Hanson in double figures.
Miller hit 18 of66 from the floor
deep in the left comer giving them a ·
for a cool 27%, and hit II of 23 from
30..28 lead.
Pullins went coast-to-coast after a the line for 48%. Miller had 28
defensive .rebound for a layup with rebounds led by Thompson's 12. The •
2:0S left increasing the Marauder Falcons had 10 turnovers, II assists.

~~Gallia
.. TOM

L:P. IIondey, J8nu.~ 2t, 1996

21513 BASHAN RD.
Raclnl, Ohio 45771
IMW013 Phone

841-2018 FAX

Remoclellng,
Add-On'a, Roofing
S.ff•flretton

Guanm!Hd
• Bill Daerfer
(614) 992-2979

J&amp;LINSULAnON .
537 BRYAN PU.CI!
WIDLEPORT 882-2772
Olllae lkMn: llon.-FrL
8:00 ~.m-4:30 p.m.

VInyl&amp; Alulll. Sieling,
VIi¥ Rttpl ' 81118!11;

NEFF REMODEUNG
SERVIa
HouMReplllrl

....... Ddlllng
Kllolwn lllllh

Rena-ill•

" - A Ultlolll

••,::::----

....

.........,, 1Vrtd
. Cal . . . ,...
~
l'or , _ I , ,'

i&amp;t• _':

· - - ..
_..
1H . . .. .J)

'

For Lon?
C•llllowUU

····~

lnlulallcM,IIDwn
Storm , '
0oor1, Btorrn

•••a.
_._. .
................
'

l•fOOeJJJ•JJIO . ~::::::==VI=-:·
•••• t402
.,.

$2.",....
lluillbe 11 yrl.

:roUGh lOne ]illoiMi
Ii~

tired.

Sin U11U111-..IOI

�.·
Po~~y

~:;M:on~~~y~,J:•:":u•:~~29~,~1=~~------------------------------~P~ome--~~y:•:M:Id:d:le:po:~::O:h:lo::::-=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=™:=D:a:ll:y:Se:n:t:lne:I:•:P:~::9~

•Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BIUDOK
PHILLIP

ALDER
At,r , c\u~;(. r lEr~T '~

BEATI'JE BLVD.tl by Bruce Beattie

- ·In Rlclne, llrglbulldNicl lloml
~lances

furniahld, laundry
facllilift, C\oM ID IChool tn
Ap~ICiti ona available at:

·t47.DOa 814-8411-2804.

ThrM bedroom home in country, . ' Gr- Apto
Whltoo Hill Ad., Au...., ono bof&gt;. 3711.EOH.

•~

oc call 81

,,~,~t'r(1iH4.

tor sale

1178 14170 Schultz Monnchoowr
With 12x21 Foctory Add·On
Room 8144415 1084.
.

"Another blind dale disaster! I found out she's
an anlmal ·activlst when I drdarad veal!"

W81)ted

tltl2-7354.

Experienced, Scrap Burners ~ Im-

mediate Openings. Call :JOA-232·
, 1333 Mon -Fri, 8:00 To 5:00.

J.&amp;··D"s ·'iutoci'arto. 'B"u~ing Ill-

FULL Of! PART· TIME Car &amp;
:rruck Mechanic. Muat Be Hon•
eat, Reliable. Have Own Tools,
8!H..S.45t4 (M-F. 6-5).

FURNITURE STRIPPING &amp; RE·
VIOl vehicles. Selling polrll. 304· FINISHING : Must Be Reliable,
773-5033.
Hard Working, Self - Moll~ated,
. •Top Prices !'aid: Olcl U.S. Coins, And Be Knowledgable Ot Wood .
Or Part Time Available. lnex· Silver, Gold." Diornonda, All Old Full
porienced Nited Not Apply. FurnC&lt;lllo~tibloi, Paperwolghll, Etc.
M1T.S. Coin~"Shop, .1St Second Ish References And Work History
At Time 01 Application. 1403
Gel¥'""'~ et&lt;~-448-2842.
Eastern Ave.. Gallipolis, OH
u..a •furniture: antique&amp;, one 45631 , 81 H-46-45t4 (M.f, 6-5).
plec~ or complete estates, Ooby
HOME
~n. 814-992-7441.
...
TYPISTS
~tMI\To-Buy: Junk Autos With PC .u...rs Needed. $45,000 InOr Wt\bout ~otors. C..ll larry come Potential.
Call t-800-513-4343
Ltvoly. if1 4-3118-9303.
.
Ext B- t0189.
.wanted To Buy: ~iltle Tlkeo Toys, Home Typlsta, PC uaera neodld.
61 4·245-5887.
$45,000 Income potortdal. Call 1·
Wanteil to buy: amall house dog, 800·513-4343 Elll. B-9388.
304·875-2917. .
Llw office aeeka fLill·time expwi~
Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile encaa ~~eretary, wlttt good grammar, typing, word processing
Home, 814-446-0175. •
. &amp;kills. Send resume 1q Box G-2•,
"%Pt Plea11nt Register, 200 Meln
Si'let, Pt Ploollnt, WV =!fi550.

e··

'

EMPLOYr~Etn

SERVICES

Maalcal Peraonnol To Do Mobile
Insurance Exams And Blood
Draws Port-nmo In Golia. Moiga,
And Maaon County. Call t ·8DO·
456-1884 In Dunbar, WVA Monr~Through Frlcloy 8:00 To 3:00.
MYSTERY SHOPPERS
Part-Time Flexible Hours.
Evaluate "'"tfood ~in
In Gallipolis &amp; . ·
Surrourding Anlu
819-S46-0032.

l200 -SSOD W&lt;ly. Ao...,blo Pr'o;
' u"•' .!«&gt; ·SOling. Paid Dlroc' Ful·
a '
ly Gu. ranteod. No Exp. Nocos·
1ary: 1 Day• 407·875·2022
ExL0526HCU
S200·$50D weekly. Aaaemblo
roduCII. No selling. Paid direct.
11
00&lt;1 ""'
1
U y)guar.nt · ,_, e~;perence
neca•~ry.,1 daya. 407-875·2022
o.r0505110o4.'
:,
·
~V.Otf I· .\11 11\reas I, Shirley
• -· ·- · "75-1429

~

·

....-~ ~

At:»~ a~. 'Avon

Repi esentalivea

ElSE

WO HAl.€ BEftJ

NEEDED IMMEIDATELY
locol Factory Oudet Hoa 8 Previous l'baillono Available.
• No . , _1onca Nooeuory
'lncentlvePrograms
• Poid Vacotiona
'S300 Per Weoi&lt; .
To Those Who Qualify. lnterYlews By Appointment .Only. Call
Monda.,, Tuesdav Or Wednes doy on.Y,
•
814-«t -1975

180 Wanted 1b Do

•J 9 8 3

lA~

SOUTH

21 0

Business
. Opportunity

3 NT

Pass

14180, 2 "' 3b.clroom. Only
rNIIot 2 polymonll to mew• ln. No
poymonta oft.,. 4yoora. 304·75555111.

45631 .
bea~ty salon. "'alation w/

bed.· Retall &amp; wor:k•n11l
ire well etoc:ked. Great
location In Pt Pleasant.
o~~-~~,~~:it~~o-~wner reiD·

1f

New Antique &amp; Cmft Mall ready to
open.
Needed are vendors ol anUAu'·'· quality crafls, &amp; collects-

~~~~·•':.·899~·~~2~"!~1'38~~~~~ ToNo $900
Expolrlence
WeeklyNoceo'Hryl
/Potontlal ssoo
Pro74

ceasing Mortgage Refunds, Own

Hours. Coil (909) 715-2300 . .Ext.
782. (24 Hours).

,._P",

Thla -polr will nol

1tnowllr9Y accept

Postal Job1 /St5.90 /Hr. No Exi)frience Neceleary. Far APpli cation lnlo Call 816-784·9018 Ext.
4175.
Proreasional ElCperience Book-.
kHper -Tax Preperarion No Job
Too Small I Call Sandra .For "Afiofdable Pricle 614-oWG-0670.

-lorraal-le
which lain -lton ot lhe law.
Q!lr raoctora are hereby
lnlonned lhet 1111 dWellings
"atlverloodln this n~r
are IY8A8bkl on an equal
opponunlty basis.

11.•111!"•••••••
f1EAL LO:;TAlE

RECEPTIONIST /INSIDE SALES:
II You Enjoy Wor~lng With Tho
Public Arul Hevo Clerical Exporlortco . Thlt!Job Ia For Yout PC
Experience Dolirocl. PIIIH Sul&gt;mlt Vour Reluml' And Waoe Re·
T~ Chrlollan'a ConEuwn Avenue,
45631, _8 t4 ·448·

BALL, AND WHEN IS IT M'( TORN, AND WHO CARES "?!

Small One Bedroom. ExCellent
·Condition, Country Setting. Wuher, Dryer, Stove RafrigeraiDr, Non
. Smokers. $300 Depoai~ S35Mto.
Applications At 1743 Cenrenar~

Rood, Gollipolis. et 4-446-2205.
Stonewood Apartmantl now accepting appl ications for apartmont~ all electric. lor oldorly and
dlaabllity. FMHA auboidized, ba·
sic rant $280 per mo•th, EOH,
8 t 4-992-3055.

Three Room Aparlment; Next To
library: $350 Per MQnth, Dopo1it
Required. No Pets: Contact Judy
At Bossard library At 614·U873Zl.

ONt TtiiNG FO~ 5U,f -/IT' f NOT AIOuT
POLITIGS 0~
POL.ITIC.IAN5.

Twin Rivers Tower, now accepting
applications for 1br. HUD sublidized apt. for elderly and handi·
copped. EOH 304-675-6879.

450

Furnished

Rooms

Circle Motel, Galllpo!lo. DH 814446-2501 .or 614·367-0812. Effo.
clancy Rooms. Cable, Air, Phone,

MI........ &amp; Relrlllfrotor.

lumber : Ook Poplar, Pine To
Place Ordor CaU Att.r 8:00 304·
576-29M, Prlceo: .151/Bd.Ft To
.!iOtllld.FL

.. .

"'~'"'"'"t~ s
NEA .tnc
'

I :7~~=::-::-----::--.Matchlng Whlta KeniiiOfo Walh-

• ..., t vtl t:iv

RoO!TII lor rent ·week or monrh. er &amp; Dryer, e Vears Old, •110
Starting at $120/mo. ~allla Hotel. Bottt; White WoadnghouiO Drpr
614-446-9560.
4 Yoara Old. 1125: Doak 1110;
~uel 011 Stove Wlttt BIOWII $50:
Sleeping rooms with cooking. While Whirlpool Dryer $75, 114·
AIIO lfailer IPICI on river. All 371-2720 AfTER 1 P.M.
hook·upo. Call attor 2:00 p.m., E:~:;;.;:;..;.;;_;;~_;;~~:--"
30•·173-5851, MaeonWV.
Refrigerator&amp;, Stov81, W11het1
And Dryoro, All Rocondltlon•d
And Gaurantoedl 1100 An&lt;l Up,
MERCHANDISE
WI OeiHir. 114 Ma fH 41 .

510

BORN LOSER

i

r

Thl~ I~

\ •

1\ &amp;JFFET, ~lie::.

:rot! 1"\oall'&lt; ~INUTD

Nlutlcat teclder
L.MIIIt1rletlve

regulation•
6 Employ•

Buoy•••Eliminate

8 City vehicle

9 Cerne to
lllmll

70pen~t•

Nortb
Pass

10 Sewer'• toot
11 Sevwe ,
experience
17=ofblln
18
llbbr.
22 Ch
23 Pu12 end2

t..,._

·-

211 EllllblllhH

East
Pass
Pau

30 Rowers' toote
32 Above (pOll.)
34 Summer

houte
35 Plrhlctly
36Mockl
37 Epic poem
36 -AbdutJtlbbar
39 Geteaway
from
41 Yank
43 Guido's high

note

46 Octagonal
trlffic olgn

lblrl-t-+-

47Miobehavln'
50 Sgt.. e.g.
51 -cha¥
(ChlneM
Clbbage)

ro:-t-r-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Ceteority Cjptwr ayplogrtln . . CINied hom quollltiOna by lamoua ~.pal and pt8Mnl
ED letter In the Cipher ltanda for another. Todey's due: A equ~~lll U

' T FJ E

H K N

HKN

B K K C U

TVRJ

BKBBKWGVLYPM . '
ZKFEEH

J M S

WJSSJG •..

U B J J D

WJSSJG ,
HKNG

TV E ,

B V C J

MEP
LVEM

(AMEMLJG)

DJUCH.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The good composer is slowly discovered. The bad
composer is slowly tound out."- Ernest Newman .

'::~:;~' s~tt&lt;lllA-~i.~s·
- - - - - - Ullo4 lay CLAY I.
letters of
0 Roorrango
four acromblod worda

I II I I I I
low 10 torm tour words

WOlD

lAM I

the
be-

UPLYER

1-ND 1\ll '1EHO$"'
U~')I'6¥J !1 ~

Remodeling : Cabinell, Counler
Tops, Sinko, Doors And Other
Mile. &amp; Furniture, 814-3111-11654.

Household
Goods

~

Till~ I~ 10C ~T ~Kf. [\€ £llfl(

VO! Wr..ITE.R!

Appliances:
Recondition•d Roach's Cu1tom Butcherlrig. NWoahers, Dryera, Rangea. Rtlrl- Open for beef or hog. Call for
gratofl, 80 Day Guarantee! appt. 304-882-27511 Bua. or 812French Citt Maytag, 814·448· 3328 Roo.
T/95.

Country Furni1ure. 304-875.a&amp;20.
At 2 N. emilos, Pt Pleaoon~ WV.
Tuos-Set IHI, sun n -5.

STORAGE TANKS 3,!100 Gallon
Uprigh~ Ron Evens tonterpriMO,
.-.on, Ohio, t-101).537-85211.

SUper Single watorbod Now MlltFor Your Carpet l Vln~l Needa tren, Semi-Wavelea• $160 Or
Mollohan Carpets Rt •7 N. 814- Boat Otter, 8t4·378·2174 Alter
6:00.
446-74~ .

G. E. Waaher

pool
$75:
Free,
Harveal
Electric
Was$

2 Bedroom Trailer, Rio Grande,
Front Porch. Small Yard. Water 1
Tralh Paid, 1250/Mo .• Deposit,
!;61~4;!3118!!!!;;!!!1!!11!1!!!6._
1

------1

2 Bedrooms, t Bath, Gas Heat,
$285/Mo. Include• Water, Garbage. No Poll, Dopool~ 814-44t-

oooo.

2bedroom, tolal electric, no peta,
1 child. $2751mo. Include• uaah
pickup. 1200 dopoai.l Now 1885
2111droom, no poll, 1 cttlld, 13501
mo. $300 dopo11i. 30A·675-G277
aitof 5pm.
. Nice Clean 3 Bedroom Mobile
Home, Mercerville Arta, 6142511-41574.

.TWo and three

bedrOom mobile
homos, otartlng ot t2olllc$300,
· - · water IIIII tralih .Included,
et...a-21e1.
•

TI-IEN .

W~ IT?
IT SURE
I.II~StlfT .

Duty 175:
S75: Whirl•
DryaFroll

Range 30 Inch Advacoto Green
Was 1150 Cut To S125: Moytao
wa·sher S205:' Matching Dryer
$205 t Year Warrenty; Portable
Washet $95; Skaggs Appliances,
75 Vine Street, Galllpolla, 6t 4448·7398,1-800 489 3~88.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waaheri, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skagga ApPliances, 78
Vlno Street, Call 614-446-7~98.
1-800-499-3499.

12X65 Witn 16118 Expando, 2
Bedrooms. 2 Baths. Newly Carpeted, AC, Excell8nl Condition.
Private lol.ln Cheshire, After 5
P.M 614-387-7e71 .

~11'

t11Nf.!

YOU I&lt;.NO\ol,
JU~T

l"V£

lii80UT H,._O
IT WITH

'(OU!

SCIA~S

Servin(! You 'II Find In lite
Clo11l(led Section.

Video Store, Reatocklng, Over
800 Video'• For Sail, Oldies
Cla111c1 Somo Re111111,
$2,000, 614-3ti7-G6t2.

i

;

•

Winter heavy clothing. Sam
Sori1ervllle's· Armr Surplus bJ
Sandyvile Post ottlco. Noon-epm,
Fri-SUn. 304-273-51156.

550

"I think the world is round," the philosophy major
told the class , "so we can't see too far DOWN the
ROAD"

JANUARY29I
Siller Act (t992) ***A Reno IMgl
anun 10 ~ude mob sssassi\s.

Experient:o (CC)

-ltle.

530

AntlqUH

Experient:o (CCI
t014 Comoro, outomollc, v.e ,
troclo tar 414 or $1500, 814-742·

3042.

..
ASTRO-GRAPH

understand what to do to make the rela ~
tionship worl&lt;. Mail $2 .75 to Matchmaker.
c/o this newspaper, P.O . Box 1758 .
Murray Hil Station. New York. NV 10156.
PIBC.S (Feb. :ZO.M1n:h 20) It you teel
you' re not gelling adequate support
today, ~ may be the result of your poor
• example. Clean up your act and others
will follow suit.
,
~. ...__ _ _ _ _ _ ARIES (lllrch 21 · Aprlt 11) Something
beneficial will stir behind the scenes
today . It may cast a mere hopetul lnflu·
ence over y~r financial affairs.
TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20) You will
econ enter a cycle which could offer VQU
new hope and promise. However. don1
become impatient nsome ot the old
Tuelday, Jan. 30. 1996
The llmhations YDO! placjld on youraelf in epots hive to be removed first.
'
the past will be alleviated in the year GIMIHI (lily 21-June 20) You will enter'
aheM~. You will oow start to exprass your 1 pcaiti.. opportunity trend in regard to
polential through a new. pcaltiY8eltltude. , your.....,_Golla pertaining 10 this area
AQUARIUS (Jen . zo.Fab. 111 Today, . cen be reaNzed lit thla time.
repreu rhe inclinatiOn to take financial " CANCER (June 21 · Juty 22) Malntatn
rlaklln unflmllai ereae. Do not bel on your individuall.l y today regarding your
thlnga you cannot control pereonally. proaent ptana. Your concepts will be bel·
Trying 10 pak:h up a broken ,_a? The 111r ttwn tile methods of !hoM wl1o bom·
Aatro·Grapll Mak:hm~ker can-help ~ bird you with lllggftllOIIs.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

I

i

Mohair· Decay· World· Endure · DOWN the ROAD

Building
Supplies

4 Steol Arch Sytl1 Bulldlngo,
40130 Wu S8. 100 Now SUIO:
40156 was . , ,250 15.1100:
LAYNE'S FURNITIJRE
SOx78 waa $13;880 "eoo;
Complete home 'furnishing•. 50xt50
Wu I2S,OOO Now
Hours: Mon ·Sat, 9·5. BU-.&amp;.. 8· $15,900. e . -••• Are
0322, 3 miles out Bulaville Pike t .aoG-320-2340.
FrooDot...y.
Block, brick, oowor plpoo, wind·
PICKENS FURNITURE
owa, llntola, otc. Claude Winr.ra,
-1\Jted
Rio Grondo, DH Coli 114·245·
. 304475-1450
512t .
Ammana Side By Sldo Rolrig-· 560 ._.. for Salt
tor, Zortlth Floor Model Color T.V.,
Coble Andy, Woahor, Dryer, Cor Groom Shop .fl'ot Groo"*'t. "-·
Batterlea, 814-251-1238.
turing H;dro Bath. Julio Wobb.
Cal114-446-0231
.
'
'I1'AA FURNITU~
8t4-4ol6-3t511
AKC beeutllul white AmoriCin
Quality Houl101101d Furnialre And Ellklmo, mole, Qld, allllhota,
Applancn. Groot Dooll Oit
raadyl0go.304-e75-le93.
Calh Ard Co"fl ~NT·2-0WN
And~ AIIO AvoiAKC Box•r pupa, lalla docked,
Fr.. DoiYery Wlll*t 25 Mile&amp;
dew Clawl iiiiM:I::IId. f'Mdy 1•28•
,. Cal304475-3446.

'•
\,

ANSVWIIS

IMONDAY

!~~::......:~~

sort

\

West

We had no WOTd to SaJI.
I think that's sad . And I have two
questions: What was the title of the
poem? How does it apply to today's
deal?
You are the declarer in three notrump. West, who has overcalled in
spades, leads.the spade queen to your
king, East playing the eight . How
would you continue?
·
North's three spades asked South if
he had a spade stopper . If South
couldn't continue with three no trump, North was going to lake a shot
at·five clubs.
You have six top tricks: one spade
(given trick one), two diamonds and
three clubs. You will have nine tricks
if you can win either six club tricks OT
.five diamond tricks. To keep both possibilities alive, you should start with a
club to dummy's queen and a club to
your ace . Is the suit running? If so,
play a diamond to dummy's king .
Here, though, East has the suit
stopped. So you change ships, playing
a diamond to dummy's jack. When the
finesse wins and the suit splits 3-2,
that ship stays afloat and you arrive
safely in the harbor wit~ nine tricks.
Wilde's poem, which, if written 80
years later, might have been about a
crash between a passenger feny and
a tanker in the English &lt;;hannel, was
titled "Hermits." You know the answer to the second question now.

HATE PLAVIN6 ·CROQIIET IN TilE RAIN, AND WIIAT COLOR IS

Apart111111ts
for Rent.

•

movement

s.. memmel

25 Swinging

word,

420 MobUe Homes
for Rent
Allraaleatate edvortlalng In
lhla
Is l&lt;bject 10
the Federal Folr Housing Act
ol1988 which makH Hilogal
toadvertiH •any pretorarce,
limitation or dloc~mlnotion
baled.on race. cclor. religion,
oe•. la~latetua or notlonol
origin, oc any Intention 10
moka any llJCh preto,...,
llrnlllllon ... dacrlmlnallon.•

2
3
4
5

...-+-+-i .

stonn
We had crossed eac~ other's wa11:
But we made no sign, we said no

Three bedroom home, beautiful
counuy Htling, fuel bill Included.
$400/mo., 814·085-3341 or 614992
.~-~-8_8_.- - - - - - ' - Unfurnished lWO bedroom house,
nice and c~an, deposit required,
no inoi!lt petl, 6t4-992.3()90.

Wetzgal Street. Pomeroy, WID.
$350/Mo. Deposit, 513-822-0294.

1

21 Bri.U.
29 Muelc1l

_"1'1'11...,.."'"'

Oscar Wilde wrote this poem:
Like two doomed s~ips that pcl8S in

quired.

992-e356 oi 30•·882· 2845 • Ind . No exiierlence nocessaryl S5DO
Rop.
II! spoo weoldytpotendal procou01g 111Gr!11t11t rolunds. Own houra.
l t'QEtn:· AVON SEUS ITSELF
N"oed .CASH 'Fer. Wlrit,r IIIIIs? CaU909·715·2376 ext 1377 (24
Earn $8 ~1 5 !Hr. At Wprk -Ho~
reurs).

DOWN

Mel.

By Phlllip Alder

1 Bedroom HouH Fuoniahed 735
Rear Third, Gallipolis, $1 50/Mo.
$150 Dopooi~ 614-4«1-3670.

Very nice home in Pomeroy lor
,.,~ 814-992-5858.

57 Door apenere

Which ship
this time?

410 Houses for Rent

3 bedi'oom house on lincoln
Helghtl, call614·992-3829.

Jobne
24NotOirlllln
27 Neighbor of

1-:

Opening lead: • Q

wv.304-755-5885.

INOTICEI
2 Bedroom Houae. 2 Bedroom
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Trailer tn Goli'""la, 61 4-&lt;46-8849
recommends that you do buel- For lntJrmadan.
nea• with people you know, and
NOT to sand money through the 2 Bedrooms On Mill Creek Road
mall until you have Investigated $100 Dopo~t Roquirocl, $2001Mo ..
ttte altering.
6 14-44 t -oll68.

Name,

51 Chaaue

Prl,.,..

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer. South

month. Fre• delivery &amp; salup.
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro

Serious
Adclreas &amp; .:;~iii'.;;tli;~;&amp;,"j;;
To P.O. Box 833, u

2Rogers
3 - -Sl.

•A7642

21 .. 31

2 Bedrooma, Totel Electric, Small
Yard, leaH, Sec. Dep.. No Pita,
814-448·1358 3 Refarenc:e1 Re-

11 Roman 1,051
19 Profit 1nd 20 AdviM
21 Biking tin
(2 wdl.)

(cocldlllll
49 01tenlllt ou-'Y
.....51 H l i 52 Wide 11101 IIU
53 Pine frUit
54 Amorous took '
55
1 ~~fiDgP,~

•K Q 2

South
tNT

Galli a
Tanning Salon,
Partner, Great
Buainen Great

441 Clroled
48 Mal -

31 Belt holdere
33TM1

1K 6 5

Toyota ·~~. Fair Condition
$2000 080 ~14. . .1887

thrllllly}40 Tllmllnll pole
42 RD8CI worker
44 EviCtion
45 - ROIMrta

•A 2

24' Hour Care For 1 Elderly Or -Bonk Ropoa. Only-4 lolL Still
Handicapped Person In licensed In worranty. 304-7SS.718t .
Priva11 Home, 614-44HXlOO.
Only 2 loft. Now 1888 2·3bed·
Care For The Elderly In Their roomo. 1885 - .. lt811/mo. Free
Homo Cooking &amp; Cloonlng lndud· delivery/setup. Call Rues Mur·
ed, Full Or Part~T ime, Wnkday1 dock 1-100-251-5070.
Only, 614-448-2427.
Price Busterl New 1h70, 2 or
Electrician Any Kind Of Electric 3br. on1y 1995 down, S10!il!ronth.
Free delivery &amp; ootup. Only at
Work Done, 614-448--1 t37.
Oaowood Homos, Nitro WV. 304755-5885.
GooriJto Portable Sawmill, don"t
haul yuur togs to the mil just call
350 L,ots &amp; Acreage
30447S.t057.
MATH TUTOR- will tutor high 83 Acres County Woter &amp; ElecIChDOI &amp; college IIUdentl In ba- tric On Property, Groat Humlng &amp;
alc rNith, olgobra I trlgono,...try, Recreiuionl 614-256-1412, 6142511-e1144.
conlaet Jolvlat 614-liii2·1CQO.
Profealional Tree Service, Com- Acreage For Slle: 7 Mites From
plete Trot Cart, Buc&lt;et True&lt; Holzer, 705 Clartt Chapel Road.
Serlicl ·SO Ft Roech, Stump Ro- Porter, Ohio.
moval, Free Eltlmatell lnBruner land
aurance, 24 Hr. Emergency &amp;nCompany Inc.
ice -Call"An&lt;l Savel No Troo Too
614-715-8173
Big Or Too Small I Bidwell, Ohio.
lora Of Silas To Choose From 3
814-388 - · 8t-7·70t0.
Milea
Out On Teena Run Road.
Sun Vallew Nuraer1_ School. 1g Acrea Wilh large Barn
Chlldcoro 11-F Gam-5:30pm Agoo 120,000
ONLY $2,000 Down +
2-K, Young School Age Durlno $237.88 A Momh. Al119, 14 Acres
Summer. 3 Days per Weak Mlnl- $12.000 ONLY $1.000 Down+
""m 814-448-31157.
$145.37 A Month. Thoro's Four
Cof.atruction work, all phaaea. 10 Acre Tracts To' Choose From
Stalling At$t0,000.
Additions, aiding, plutorlng, - ·
co, syntttotlcs, finish drywall. rool
repolra, Installing lvlndowo. 304-' Owner Finoncing At 10% lnteresL
Examples Baaed On 10 Year
675-e002.
Contract With 4 Year Balloon
Will do blbysining In my home. Payment. 10% OFF Cash PurHave references. 24hrs/day, c:l1aleal
c1o11 to acttools. 304475-2784.
Five acre&amp;,
aerator, near
or take Raclne,S18,000 can finance with
day, $10 NJt - . . 61 4-IIG·21l25.
814-992Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac Iota, public water,
Will provide child care In mW" Clyde- Jr., 304-578-2336.
.home, M·F. ·Excellent referenc81,
304·675-71!65.
RENTAL S

FINANCIAL

•to 5

14

1 aa•

0

18 4
•Jt0976

Limited Ollerl t898 doublewlde.
3br, "2bath, $1790 down, $2751

. neltded ..,Earn. money' for Christ~ blea. No Fl~aa please I Serious
11)1a bill at holnetat worl( 1·600. inquiries o_
nly. 304-1175-7824.

;

AIHTHi~

EAST

•A 53
•Q 9 8

e..,

brOW(! puppy

Clean Late Model Cars 'or
Trucks, t987 Modell Or Newer,
~lth Buick Pontiac, t800 Eutti!n i\Yor1~o, GlllpoNs. .

(o...Ji'_5f:!

11on1c Repoa.
Financing. Call
Au11Mu- t-100-251·5070.

li!J··• L.oat lli'ld Found
ilort~ Fi lth Avenue, Mlddloport,
"looka ikit o...m.n Shepllord, 8t•-

0

WEST
1A Q J tO 9 2

1817 Banville 2 Bldrooma, 2
Botho. CA, 814 418 8374, Nttr 5
P.ll.

- · 7 llonlhl Old; Roo!Shotl; With
ABel
Sholl,
Good
Kldo,
Can~··
Ba Wotch
~ 81 &lt;~-2451152.

1 Fou nd;&amp;~ar~

.

OH9-116

•KQt0765

1882 Ford F·100, 8 cyi. ·
PS, Pll. lnvfm Iter... IliON bod,
runa ond good, $1410, $14247-4282.

Norrla Mobile Homo, 814·

448-0527.

PuPf'iH Wonting To Find Good

'found, Proocrlpdon Loni Glell·
oH/IOft Pool Behln6"City Building
' ' 814-388--9112. .

UIO intornodonol Dump Truck
Wit\ 8 FL $mw Plaw &amp; Soh Baa
Auto, PS, Y·8, Ro1dy To Work I
• • 5,000 Flnn.ll"'l!!7..(1112.

. I 1-'~1'•

320 Mobile Homes

NORTH
17 3
•8 4
•K J 3

720 'lhlcka fc!r Slle

~,;1'I'A ,.V.~.

In-GrOund pool, 814-11112·111167.

Goldell Rolrlovel! Borclor Oolllo
"pup., c81161··-2313. .

1 Food (11.)
5 Not bright
I Y- (Sp.)
12 FICI
13 JICOb'l twin
14 Neighbor of Fr.
15 Torriarlek Nit

11 Crlllclud
2bdrm. lptl., total electric,

alao a one car garage, fenced
yard, aut or nood area, aaklng

1~72

37-out(ua

erw

lng will hoult small bualne11,

ltallon
tyr
.male, red· fawn,
houoebroke, good wlklda, very
lovin9· scmewhat timid, to oood
_ , . ,_304475-e223.

ACROSS

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Continue to treat
others exactly as you would have them
treat .you. Pleasant developments will be
possible if you are palienl, sincere and
generous.
•
VIRGO jAug. 23-Sept. 22) Take care not
to play favorites today. II you neglect an
old and trustelj ally for a new acquain·
lance, you might lose a lriend .
UBRA (hpt. 23.Qct. 23) In your desire
to tullill your personal ambitions today ,
make n a pcinl to help your companions
as well. It you help now, you'll receive
later.
·
SCORPIO (Oci. 24·Nov. 22) Guard
agelnet tile incllnldon to alter things lllat
are presently running smoothly. The
~hangea you Implement might be coun-

ltrprociJctlve.
IAGmARIUS .(Nov. 23·Dec. 21) You
might be offered something ot value
today by a new friend. Try io be as gra~ a recipiel ~ ~ he or ihe is a giver.
CAPRICORN (Dill. 22--Jan. 11) You Cln
find good for lhtt CINtive
you
wll conceive IOCity. You wiiiNied oilier's
support to !WIIize . . . goals. Sllrt IMJild-

ideaS

ing yoo~network nnw.

'

.

•

•

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page 10

· Monday, January 29, 1996

Vendors have right to specify terms of payment·
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Your recent
I)Oiumn concerning a sales clerk who
refused a roll of pennies in payment
·for a bottle of Soda caught my atten.tion. You said that even though pen.nies are a nuisance, they arc considered legal tender.
. I had read an article in the Massachusetts Collectors and Treasurers
Association newsletter concerning a
problem faced by tax collectors and
-o.thers: irate customers paying with
s mall coins.
The article cites Title 31 of the
U.S. Code, which s!Jites that minor
·Coins (pennies and nickels) are legal
,tender at their nominal value for any
- - .

\lfere in $50 hags direct from the U.S.
Mint. The rest were in boxes and a
pillow case. Loose were 12,648 pennies.
The taxpayer ignored a request by
the city attorney not to bring in the
pennies and unloaded them anyway.
City employees had to reload the penamount not to exceed 25 cenli tn any nies and take them by truck to the
bank to be counted. The tax collecone payment.
The article also mentioned a 1990 tor issued a receipt but said she didincident in which a restaurant owner n't think it was very funny. The taxin Portsmouth, N.H., brought payer said he dido "t want to look at
382,648 pennies to the tax collector's a penny ever again.
The editor of Jhe newsletter sugoffice in a van. The taxpayer was
miffed over what he described as a gested checking with your city or
rude letter demanding payment of state Department of Revenue before
delinquent taxes. Most of the pennies invoking the provisions of Title 31.

Ann
Landers

Southern Building Committee
gets anonymous $1,000 gift
The Southern Local Building Committee met Wednesday evening at the
high school with Treasurer Kim
Phillips reporting the group has
,received $2,315 to.promote the bond
issue for a new elementary school,
-i11cluding a $1 ,000 donation from an
·anonymous supporter.
·
So far, $500 has been spent on a promotional videotape with an additional $324 appropriated for three rounds
:of promo inserts for The Daily Sen- ·
'line! and ExpressLine customers in
the district.
Plans were made to recruit workers
jn each precinct to drum up support
for the measure. A special meeting for
prospective precinct representatives
.will be held at a later date.
The temporary committee is pursu- •
·ing a 6.1-mill, 23-year bond issue to
bankroll the district's $4,180,000
share of a $7,370,000 project which
iAcludes a new, district-wide ele'mentary school and renovations to
the existing high school.
The next meeting will be held
Wednesday, 5 p.m. in the high school
c.!lfeteria. The group encourages all
district residents to attend the meetjAgs.

-~arns

degree

Andrew Baer of Pomeroy earned a
Bachelor of Arts degree with a major
in criminal justice from Ohio
Dominican College in Columbus. He
is the son of Barbara Bailey and
Charles Baer and is a 1991 graduate
of Southern High School.

To host conference

Plans for the South Central District
Conference to he hosted by the Mid-

dlepqrt Child Conservation League
were made at a recent meeting of the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church.
The conference will be April 13.
Honorary members will he invited to
attend since it will mark the local
league's 50th year·in the Ohio Child
Conservation League.
Kitty Darst presided at the meeting
which opened with the pledge to the
flag and the mother's prayer. A dessert
pizza was served . Patty Arnold was
hostess. Nancy Morris won the hostess prize, and Peggy Harris, the traveling prize.
February meeting will he husband's
night with a potluck dinner being
served. Denver Rice will entertain on
his guitar.

District meeting
A district meeting to be held Saturday at the hall was announced when
Chester Council 323, Daugh~rs of
America, met recently.
Goldie Frederick, councilor, conducted the meeting which opened in
ritualistic form. The illness of several members including Jean Hall, Bob
Harden, Deloris Wolfe, and Virginia
Lee, were reported. Elizabeth Hayes
returned after an illness.
Officers were installed. Refreshments were served, and door prizes
were awarded to Mary Jo Barringer,
Goldie Frederick and Erma Cleland
Others attending were Kathryn
-Baum, Thelma White, Opal
Eichinger, Doris Grueser, Esther
Smith, Opal Hollon, Charlotte Grant,
Mary Holter, Jean Frederick, Marcia
Keller, Elizabeth Hayes, Laura Nice,
Everett Grant and Ethel Orr.

By Ed Paterson
Social Security Manager In
Athena
How much do you know about
your disability protection under
Social Security. Not much? And yet
statistics say that one out of four
young workers will become disabled
sometime during their lifetime. Following are the five most frequently
asked questions about disability benefits:
How does Social Security define
disability?
Disability under Social Security is
based on your inability to work. You
will be considered disabled if you are
unabl~ to do any kind of work for
which you are suited and your disability is expected to last for at least
a year or to result in death.
Who may receive disability benefits?
People who work under Social
Security long enough and recently

.
Magazines suspend publication
· NEW YORK (AP) - Omni and
Lonpvity magazines will suspend
p~~blicalion becaUJe of rising paper
and postal costs, The New York

limes reported today.

• The two maauines were left
" only lllll'lillllly_ptofitable" and will
allo lay off 40 lltaff JIICII'Ibers because.
of the mini costs, said Bob. Guccione, cblimwl and cJikf eJtecutive
qf pubHIIber General Media Intema-

tiOnll. .

Guccione told lhe Times u.t both

m' a•ri- wiD still be available in
dieir electronic wnlons throuab onHie -.vice~ .-1 that publiCIIlion
wuultllle resumed wbell peper costs

. .,.,..

.

., · ; ' - '·ila blmoolbly mapzine of
r· .
~Jied~-~:as start.. ill 17' ,_111 c11 ~ ......on aver-

;. •!'=',

.-

~

aged 703,019 in the first silt months
of 1~9S, according to the Audit
Bureau of Circulation. The magazine's circulation was down 2 percent
from the ftrst half of 1994 but its
newsstand sales rose I0 percent.
Longevity, a health magazine
started in 1989, bad an average circulation of3S8,418 in the first half of
last year, up two 2 percent. Newsstand sales were down 7 percent.
. Guccione told lhe Times that General Media had seen paper cost
increases of 60 percent and postalrate i~~CR~~CS.of34 ~ent in the last
year, lidding that "1995 wu the first
year in 30 yeus that l'althouiC ever
lost money."
·
Pelilhouae is General Media's flagshiP oublicallon.
r I
--...-·-

enough can receive Social Security
disability benefits at any age. Certain
members of your family may also
qualify for benefits on your record.
They include: Your unmarried son or
daughter, under 18, or under 19 if in
high school full time. Your unmarried
son or daughter, 18 or older, if he or
she has a disability that started before
22. Your spouse who is 62 or older,
or any age if he or she is caring for a
child of yours who is under 16 (or disabled before age 22) and receiving
checks. Your disabled widow or widower 50 or older. The disability must
have started before your death or
within seven years after your death.
(If your widow or widower caring for
your children receives Social Security checks, she or he is eligible if she
or he becomes disabled before those
payments end or within seven years
after they end.) Your surviving disabled ex-wife or ex-husband who is
50 or older if your marriage lasted 10

'years or longer.
How long do you have to work to
qualify for disability?
To qualify for Social Security disability benefits,. you must have
worked long enough and recently
enough under Social Security. The
number of work credits needed for
disability benefits depends on your
age when you become disabled. (In
1996, earnings of $640 constitutes a
credit of work; you can earn up to
four work credits a year.) The rules
are as follows:
Before age 24--You may qualify if
you have six credits earned in the
three-year period ending when your
disability starts.
Age 24-31--You may qualify if
you have credit for having worked
half the time between 21 and the time
you become disabled.
Age 31 or older--In general, you
will need 40 work credits. Unless you
are blind, at least 20 of the credit•

must have been eame4 in the I0 years
immediately before you became disabled.
Will a preexisting condition keep
a person from receiving Social Security disability benefits?
If an individual meets the defini'tion of disability under Social Security and has earned the required number of work credits, he/she needs to
only serve a 5-month waiting period
·before benefits begin.
· Why is there a five-month waiting
period?
The program assumes that working families have access to other
resources to provide support during
periods of slion-term disabilities,
including 'w} rkers compensation,
insurance, slivings, and investments.
It is designed to provide a continuing
i income to you and your family when
you are unable to do so. Benefits continue as long as you remain disabled.

Baking the Perfect Sou/fk

By The Associated Preas
The American Dairy Association
has the following tips for a perfect
souffle:
-Read the recipe carefully before'
you begin. Organize the ingredients
and the equipment you 'II need.
-Butter and dusi your souffle
dish very carefully with sugar. The
sugar provides traction for the baking
souffle to climb up the slippery sides
of the dish.
-If the unbaked souffle comes to
within 112-inch ofthe top of the dish,
add a collar. Use a triple thickness of
aluminum foil to fasten a 4-inch wide
band .that will go around the dish and
overlap 2 inches. Butter the band and
dust with sugar. Wrap the collar
around the dish, sugared side in, with
the edge of the collar extending at
least 2 mches beyond the top of the
·
dish; fasten With a paper clip. After
den c;1ub, . Monday, I p.m. Har- ' baking, remove the collar.
nsonvlll~ Fne House. Betty Lowery
-The best souffle goes into the
and Clotme Blackwood will be ho~t- oven immediately. However, you can
esses.
refrigerate an unbaked souffle, covWEDNESDAY
ered, in the dish, for up to two hours.
POMEROY -- Natcotic Anony-Preheat the oven before baking
mous, 7 p.m. Wednesday at Sacred the souffle.
Heart Catholic Church basement,
-Once the souffle is in the oven,
161 Mulberry • Pomeroy. Anyone do not peek. Nothing de-puffs a bakwith problem welcome.
ing souffle like a blast of cold air.
RACINE -- Southern Local Build-When is the souffle done? At
ing Committee Wednesday, 5 p.m. in the end of the cooking time, gently
the high school cafeteria. All district move the oven rack. If the souffle jigresidents urged to attend.
gles in the center, return it to the oven
THURSDAY ·
.
. . for a few minutes more baking. If you
POMEROY -- PERI. Semor Co_to- must let the souffle stand in the oven,
zens Center, Thursday, I p.m. woth . do so with the heat off for no more
lunch at noon.
than 10 minutes.
-You can camouflage cmcks in
the souffle with a dusting of confectioners' sugar.
Night," Doug Supemaw
7. "When Boy Meets Girl," Terri
Clark
8. "Like There Ain 't No Yesterday," BlackHawk
.
9. "Ring On Her Finger, Time On
Her Hands," Reba McEntire
10. "Bigger Than The Beatles,"
Joe Diffie
(So.urce: Cashbox magazine)

.

Food recipes

Country western top 10
Best-selling country western
singles of the week:
I. "It Matters To Me," Faith Hill
· 2. "Rebecca Lynn," Bryan White
· · 3. "(If You're Not In It For Love)
1'111 Outta Here!" Shania Twain
: 4. "C&amp;n't Be Really Gone," Tim
McGraw
S. "Cowboy Love," John Michael
Mon(30mery
· 6. "Not Enough Hours In The

.

penniel were not consil(ered legal means tbC Internal Revenue Service
tender, and merchants had the right to doesn't have 10 accept payment in
refuse them. The Coinage Acts of pennies and your local gas station '
1873 and 1879 made pennies and attendant doesn't have to accept bills
nickels legal tender for debts up to 25 over$20.
I would hope, however, that local
cents. Dimes, quarters and half-dol would keep their cusbusinesses
lars were legal tender up to S I0.
tomers
in
mind
when they determine
However, in the early 1980s, these
laws were combined into one provi- what type of payment they will
sion that says U.S. coins and curren- accept. Allowing a customer to pay
cy are legal tender for ALL debts, for a soda in pennies is certainly
regardless of the amount. This means worth the goodwill it will genemte.
the Federal Reserve System must
Send questions to Anu Landen,
honor them. It, does not, however,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
mean anyone else has to.
Individual vendors have the right tury Blvd., Suite,700, Los Anaeles,
to specify terms of payment. This ,Calif. 90045

Social Security disability benefits

.
't
calendar
m
m
1
n
1
y
CO

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed
as·space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of
days.
MONDAY
POMEROY-- Meigs County Veterans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
Monday at Veterans Service Office,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
PORTI..AND -- The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the township building.
· RUTI.AND -- The Rutland Gar-

Small coins aren't the only pro~
lem. What about those businesses that
say, " We will not accept bills over
$20"? I understand they don't want
to create a security risk, but isn't this
against the law? If they refuse payment because you only have a $50
,bill, does that mean the service is
free?
Please, Ann, ask one of your
attorney friends what's legal and
what isn't. --A Reader in Randolph,
Mass.
Dear Randolph: My staff contact.ed Donald R. Nichols, director of
:public affairs at the U.S. Mint. Here
are the facts : ,
In the late I 700s and early 1800s,

Bush birth announced
James and Ruth Ann Fry Bush of
Virginia Beach, Va. announce the
birth of a son, Justin Lee, on Ian. 2S.
The infant weighed seven pounds,
12 ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Bush have
a daughter, Cheryl, five.
Grandparents are Mr: and Mrs.
James Fry, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Suzanne Bush, Racine. Mrs. Eloise
Stiles of Middleport is a great-grandmother. Mr. and Mrs. Fry are in Virginia Beach with their daughter and
her family.
-

Author of Sermonette
The Rev. Henry Hoppe, assistant
pastor at the Hillside Baptist Church,
Pomeroy, submitted the sermonette
whic:h appeared in The Daily Sentinel
Friday. His name was unintentionally omitted.

SWEARING IN CEREMONY- Jane Frymyer,
sec:ond from left, deputy director of the Meigs
County Board of Elections, wee sworn In aa
aec:retery of the Ohio Assocllltlon of Elections
Official• at a· alltawlda conferanc:a held earlier thla month In Columbua. The other officers
are from the left, Patrlc(a Smith, dlrec:tor of

Huron County, .treaaurer; Steven Little, deputY
director of Licking County, sacond vice president'; Robert Moskettl, director of BUller County, firat vice president, and Pamela Sweftord,
deputy director of Hamilton County, prealdant.
Secratery of Stete Bob Taft conducted the
swearing In ceremony.

Your child's health: Handling teen-age stress
By LAURA L. MEE
positive stress : sticking with a progress in school and enhance selfEgleston Children's Hoapltel
demanding class will enable a teen to esteem.
For AP Special Fnturea
ATI..ANTA - Many adolescents
can lead very stressful lives.
While stress can serve as a positive, motivating factor in a teen's life,
it can also be totally, overwhelming,
unle,ss parents help their adolescent
children learn to use appropriate coping techniques.
Many possible sources cause stress
in a teen's life. The inherent anxieties
of adolescence, issues such as selfdoubt, peer pressure and blossoming
sexuality, are among the most common.
Plus, teens' lives are often busy
and demanding, filled with pressutes
to perform in the classtoom, on the
playing field and in their social
spheres. Adolescents are also vulnerable to the worries about major life
events that plague their parents as
weJI.
Because adolescents' reactions to
stress vary sq widely, parents must
look for differences in behavior for
what's typical for their adolescent,
rather than differences from other
teens' behavior. Changes in eating
and sleeping habits, overall mood or
that fits your minivan.
peer interactions could all be signs of
The Ohio Casualty Group of Insurance Companies, one of the top SO
too much stress.
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. The first step toward reiieving
teen-age stress is to identify its
minivan drivers 15% off their premium rate. Now, minivan drivers
sources and determine whether eacli
like you can get top-notch insurance coverage at family car prices.
stressor plays a positive or negative
role in the teen's life. An example of
To find out more about this money-saving deal in minivan insurance,
just call us today! We think you'll find our offer very fitting!

-

Your Independent Agents
Serving Melga County Sine. 1868

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSUUNCE
111 Second St.

ltprntfui,.:

Pomeroy

192-3381
Group

Ohio Lottery

Herd thump$
Furman 95-71
in league tilt

Pick 3:
3-G-7
Pick 4:
5-7-3..()
Buckeye 5:
2-6-12-16-35

Sports, Page 5

VoL 41, NO. 191
1 lecilon, 10 Pllgee

Cloudy with acattered
flurrlll tonight, Iowa In the
Ieana. Wedneaday, partly
aunny. Hlghaln the 201.

35centl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 30, 1996

A Gannett Co.

New•.-...

COmmissioners ponder dog pound cost
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Construction of a new Meigs County dog pound was the topic of the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners during its regular meeting Monday afternoon.
Commissioners endorsed creating a special building fund that would be
used to construct a new dog pound to replace the aging facility now located near the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
.
Commissioners said preliminary cost estimates of a facility similar to the
Jackson County, W.Va., animal shelter were between $100,000 and
$125,000.
However, Dorothea Fisher of the Meigs County Humane Society and
: Health Department Director Jon Jacobs said the cost could be reduced by
using different construction materials and eliminating unneeded space.
"(The Humane Society has) been pressuring for a shelter since 1972 ...
: and we have been ignored," said Fisher.

Reminding Commissioners Janet Howard and Robert Hartenbach that this
is an election year, she added: "This would be a tremendous feather in your
caps."
The goal is to replace the existing dog pound with a new, modem facility. The current pound consists of a series of open dog runs with a small storage area in the rear. The facil ityis frequently targeted by vandals and people
·
stealing dogs.
The proposed building would likely include enclosed dog runs and a cat
arid puppy room.
Another question focused on where any new dog pound would he located. The site of the current pound has been a point of contention for some
time between the Fair Board and the county.
Harten bach suggested an area near to the existing pound, but away from
the fairgrounds and behind the county highway garage where it could he kept
behind a locked gate and guarded.
.
Jacobs discussed a site near the junction of Howell
Hill
Road
and State
,_

Route 7 near Pomeroy,
Commission President Fred Hoffman proposed creation of a building fund
where donations could he kept and used toward construction of a new building. The Huma11e Society wants the board to solicit donations toward construction of the 'building.
The Humane Society is currently facing two lawsuits stemming from- a
raid on an alleged 'lpuppy mill" last year and cannot afford a large amou!'t
of assistance, Fisher explained.
Fisher noted that Jackson County spends about $50,000 a year, including
the dog warden's salary, for animal control. Meigs County spends about
$32,500, including the dog warden's salary.
In other business, commissioners opened a bid from Gene Johnson Chevrolet-Oldsmobile in Gallipolis for a fourrwheel -drive vehicle for the Meigs
County Emergency Services. The $25,210 bid for lease of a 1996 Chevrolet Blazer was the only bid received.
(Contiuued on Page 3)

. - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ , Grudging
Controllers approve
approval?
·new lottery equipment
COLUMBUS (AP) - A legisla- lottery said in a written request.
Controllers approved two com- 1
tive panel has approved without
debate a $1 .9 million Ohio Lottery panion lottery requests:
• A $346,805 contract with Con.lease for a new instant ticket system
Ironies
Systems of Ohio, Columbus,
~ to replace equipment that has become
for
instant
ticket terminal dispatch
outdated.
The state Controlling Board and repair services.
• A $194,615 contract with
.agreed Monday to waive competitive ·
bidding rules for a lottery contract Hooven-Dayton Corp., Dayton, for
with GTECH Corp., West Green- on-line terminal roll ticket stock, bet
. wich, R.I.
·
slips-cards, and terminal ribbon carIn other action, tbe panel OK'd tridges.
The lottery already has another
three marijuana-spotting helicopters
for Attorney General Betty Mont- contract with GTECH through June
gomery, and $36 million for prisons 1997 for computer on-line games and
· in Youngstown, Caldwell and Lan- . instant ticket support services, tercaster.
minal hardware, and maintenance of
The Controlling Board is IJillde up all on.tine equipment.
of six l;gjslatiii'Jl. /llld.L~5.identwbo
G'rECH is p&amp;d' I .68 percent of
represents Gov. George Voinovich.
on-line sales. Controllers were told
Sales of scratch-off instant tickets that would amount to $17.8 million
account for more than 50 percent of this budget year.
the lottery's ann~al $1.1 billion rev- - · Montgomery won board approval
enues.
to waive competitive bi~ing rules
"Despite continued record instant for a $158,310 contract with Aviation
ticket sales, the instant ticket termi- Specialists, Galloway, to refit three
nals utilized by the lottery's ... agents surplus helicopters the state picked up
to activate, validate and 111ark instant at no charge from the U.S. Army.
tickets have become obsolete." the

December retail sales
confirm slow season
WASHINGTON (AP) - In its
last economic report prior to a major
Federal Reserve policy meeting, the
. government said retail sales edged up
a scant 0.3 percent in December in a
lackluster holiday shopping season.
The Commerce Department said
today sales totaled a seasonally
adjusted S198.6 billion, up from
$198 billion a month earlier. That was
a smaller increase than November's
revised 0. 7 percent gain. Sales in
November originally were estimated
to have advanced 0.8 percent.
Many analysts had expected a 0.6
percent increase in December. Sales
!tad fallen 0.2 percent in October and
0. I percent in September.
The December activity boosted
retail sales for the year to $2.3 trilti~n. 4.9 percent above those of 1994
. and the smallest gain since a 0.6 percent advance in 1991 as the last
recession was ending.
· The report was released as Federal Reserve policy makers prepared to
open a two-day meeting to consider

whether to cut short-term interest ·
rates for a third time in seven months
to stimulate the economy.
The Federal Open Market Committ~ lowered the central bank's federa! funds rate from 6 percent to 5.75
percent in July and then to 5.5 percent
in December. The rate is what banks
charge each other for overnight loans.
Because of the partial government
shutdown in late E&gt;ecember and early January, many economic reports
have been postponed, giving policy
makers an abbreviated view of official data. The December retail sales
report originally was scheduled for
Jan. 12.
Anecdotal data and reports from
private organizations and government
agencies not affected by the shutdown have painted a bleak picture of
the economy lately.
A Fed survey of ~gional economic activity in early January, for
instance, found that "'holiday retail
sales were generally reported to he
below expectations, with extensive

Ohio Poll reveals
52% approval
rating for Clinton

CRASH INJURES ONE - An lnvaatlgatlon

conUnuad todaY Into a colllalon betwaeri 1 treetor·traller and car on State Route 7 near Tuppara Plaine Monday. The Gallla·Melga Poat of
the Stele Highway Patrol reported lhallhe rig,
driven by David W. Hupp, 37, 31805 Baahan
Road, Racine, waa eoulhbound at 8:05 &amp;;Ill.
when a northbound car went left of center.

Experts predict new
cut in interest rates

Retail

salii
i&gt;tat retai sales in bilions ol dollaos.

Seasonany ~usted.
$200

:
.

195

AP

discounting."
The finding mirrored reports at
year's end that retailers were deeply
disappointed with the holiday shopping season despite a sharp increase
in sales in November, when gift-buying usually hegins.
Retail sales represent about onehalf of consumer spending, and the
holiday shopping season can account
for as much as one-half of a retailer's
yearly profits.

Hupp turned left to avoid collision but the rig
struck lhe car, causing the truck to atrlke a
guardrail. The driver of the car, identified 11
Mindy Sampson, was transporlecl by the Meigs
EMS to St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg,
W.Va. Damage to the carand the rig, owned by
R &amp; J Trucking, Youngstown, wea11111ere. (Sentlnel photo by Jim Freeman)

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Reserve is ready to cut interest rates for a third time in less than
. a year amid widespread signs of economic weakness, many economists
believe.
And these analysts think a follrlh
rate cut before the end of March is
entirely likely. But after that, the central bank could well sit on the sidelines for the rest of the year.
"I think the Fed wants to get any
easing done sooner rather than later
this year so they don't become
embroiled in presidential politics,"
said David Jones, chief economist at
Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co. in New
York.
The Fed's key interest-rate panel,
the Federal Open Market Committee,
planned to review current economic
conditions during two days of closed
door discussions starting today. If the
Fed does cut rates, it would announce
that action on Wednesday.
The FOMC, composed of Fed
board members in Washington and
presidents of five of the Fed's 12

regional banks, cut interest rates
twice last year, in July and December.
Those reductions pushed the central bank's target for the federal
funds rate - the interest that banks
charge each other on short-term loans
- down to 5.5 percent.
The funds rate had been.doubled
to 6 percent in seven rate hikes from
February 1994 to February !995 as
the central bank sought to restrain
economoc growth in order to keep
inflation under control.
Not all economists are certain that
the Fed will cut rates this week. Some
argue that it may wait until its March
26 session. especially since much of
the government data it depends upon
to ·steer the economy has been
delayed, first by the budget shutdown
and then by a severe snowstonn that
hit Washington.
But Lyle Gramley, chief economic consultant at the Mortgage Bankers
Association in Washington, said he
believed Fed policy-makers will
decide they have enough infonnation
on the slowing economy to act.

CINCINNATI (AP) - About half
of the Ohioans who responded to a
survey approved of President Clinton's overall performance. Support
for the first lady was slightly lower.
The Ohio Poll released today was
sponsored by The Cincinnali Enquirer, television station WLWT and the
University of Cincinnati.
The university's Institute for Policy Research conducted telephone
interviews of a random sample of 803
adults from Jan. 11-24. The margin of
error was 3.S percentage points.
Fifty-two perceni of tl)e respondents said they approved of the overall job Clinton is doing. Forty-three
percent disapproved, and 5 percent
said they were undecided.
Similar Ohio Polls put Clinton's
overall approval rating at 49 percent
in October, 46 percent in March and
51 percent in May 1994.
In the most recent survey, 50 percent of the respondents approved of
Clinton's handling of foreign affairs,
while 38 percent disapproved and 12
percent were undecided.
.,..
But 48 percent disapproved of
Cllinton's handling of U.S. involvement in Bosnia. Fony-two percent
approved, and 10 percent were undecided.
Fifty-two percent approved of
Clinton's handling of the economy,
while 42 percent disapproved and 6
percent were undecided.
Tim Burke, chairman of the ·
Hamilton County Democratic Party,
was pleased with Clinton 's showing.
"Here's a guy who was the governor from Arkansas, and his strong
suit now is how he's handling foreign
affairs. That's pretty incredible,"
Burke said.
But Republican political consultan!: Ed Gocas noted that while Clinton 's approval rating is up, his negatives continue to be higher than 40
percent
"He's in trouble in terms of being
in safe territory," Gocas said.
When asked about Hillary Rodham Clinton, 49 percent of those surveyed said they approved cif her job
performance, but 45 percent disapproved and 6 percent said they were
undecided.

Lawmakers claim Reform Party
forged signatures on petiti~ns
. COLUMBUS (AP)- Two Dayton-area lawmakers said their signatures were forged on petitions su~
tnitted by Ross Perot's Reform Party in its failed attempt to gain a spot
on the March 19 primary election ballot
• The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office is trying to determine how
·the names of Sen. Rhine McLin, DDaylon, and Rep. Don Mottley, RWest Carrollton, got on the petition,
The Coll!mbus Dispatch reported
today.
The probe is part of an investigat!on ordered by Secretary of State
Bob Taft.
,
"Obviously it's a forgery," Mott~y said. "It's not my signature, it's
not my Jlame the way I sign it ... and
J)ley put my law office address
instead of my home address.."-~

·.

Mottley said he has spoken before ther were 'Mickey Mouse' and
a group of Perot supporters but nev- names like that on .petitions. I was
er was approached to sign a Reform very surprised we didn 't find Ross
Party petition.
Perot's name on a petition as we went
McLin also said she didn't know through Ohio."
how her name got on the petitionThe legislators' names were on
twice. She said her name appears petition forms circulated by Rosalyn
with two different addresses, both Williams of Dayton, one of the parincorrect.
ty's five official organizers in Ohio.
"What it sounds like to ine, and said Abner Orick, Montgomery
I'm just speculating, is that people County elections director.
have gotten lists and just went
Williams is hospitalized and could
thiough them and staJted putting not be reached 10 comment, the Dispeople:s nam~ on there," McLin patch reported.
said.
Orick said investigators also will
Sandra Reckseit, \he palty's Ohio cbeck petition forms on which one
coordinator, said circulators had to circulator supposedly gathered huntrust that people signed their real dreds of signatures in the same day.
"I don't ~ow..what theY_'re .~oing
names on the petitions.
" People can sign whatever they , to come up with, Orick satd, but I
want even if they are asked (their ; assure you they'll get looked at."
name)," she said. "In another state,

FLOOD DONATION- The Malge County
. Llonl Club racelvad a $10,000 donation for
local flood relief eflorta fronl the Llona Club
lntamatlonal Foundation. Dlatrlct 13-K Governor Tad Keller pt'llltllad the money to local
. club Pllllldant Bruce TNiord and other Llona

n.

money
Club mernbarllllonday allili 110011.
will be uiH for food voucherl, clothing. madleal aupplln, c...n,.:;twt IIIII Md DIPII~IOIIOII
...
II
hyglana productl.
left .... the Aav.
William lllldclleawarth, Keihlr, Kenny Ul\,
TMford lnd C~ Wray.

·-

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