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~xercising

at lunch time helps many keep fit, ..eat less -

the masses at night or early morning.
"I can't get too hot and sweaty
because I have to go back to work,
but it fits into my schedule to come
now," says Connie Crawford of Fort
Myen;, Fla., who takes a 4S-minute
lunch break to walk the treadmill
twice. a wee~. "And during the day
my kids are tn school."

addition to what it does for your it in."
body, it's a stress reliever, she said.
Exercising at lunch has its obstaIt's unknown how many people . cles. Workouts arc ·shortened by
use lunch time for working out. The necessities such as commuting time
most popular times remain morning and showen;, for example.
or after work, says Cathy McNeil,
"Face it: Taking off the ·nylons,
spokeswoman for the Boston-based heels and suit is a chore " PokornyInternational Health, Racquet and McHugh says.
'
Sportsclub Association.
So what are the options? Commit

Woman with pet reindeer

town Fort Myen;, Fla., JOb m sneak·
en; for ari ~ur on weekdays. She
walks 13 mmutes to a park, eats a
light sack lunch and walks back. The
two-mile trip gives her energy for the
rest of .the day, she says. r~ also supplements her workout rouune of aerobics classes four times a week. .
Carl Skinner of Fort Myers fits m his

Vol. 48, 1'10. 193
2 Sectlone, 12 Pegee

Prices~

Seven-mile stretch between Portland, Long Bottom hardest hit

Thru February 10th

By JIM FREEMAN

• 30% Off Ladies Sweaters
and Selected Tops
• 30% Off Selected Mens
'.Flannel Shirts
• 30o/o OH Key Brown Duck
Outwear
• 30%·0ff Chlldrens Rubber
Boots
• 30o/o OH 1Gro11p
Sweats

PROBLEM ROAD - Jammed betwMn the Ohio River and an
overlooking bluff, •taW Route 124 betwMn Portland and Long
Bottom Ia preuntlng a problem for state.offlclall. Ohio Qepart·
'ment of Transportation officials estimate damage from the lilt
flood at almost $80,000. A motorist drlvas along an eroded .,C·
, tlon lust below Long Bottom.

The Pl~~ee For Work and Western
her Anchorage, Alaska, home, Nov. 28, 1995.
Star Is a major attraction, npeclally this time
of year. (AP PhotoiJack Smith}

traveling in rural Alaska and once Lanka.
Most prominent in her collection
made a trip down the Yukon River in
is
Alaskan
jade, mined by her hustheir amphibious car.
"We went down the Yukon River band in northwest Alaska.
from Eagle to Circle City in I 966, "
she said. "We went 365 miles in three
days."
The amphibimls car is used only
for parades these days, but Stewart's .
traveling days are far from over.
At an age when she might be
expected to slow down, Oro Stewart
still rambles the world in pun;uit of
her passion - rocks.
A member of the Chugach Gem
and Mineral society, Stewart has
spent years collecting minerals. Her
home and photo shop are overflowing with specimens she's collectedrubies from Yugoslavia, emeralds
from South America, tounnaline
from Australia, golden agate from Sri

290 North Second

River ~raffic tied up
by submerged barges

Middleport

HOGSETI, W. Va. (AP) - 1\vo
barges filled with steel sunk Wednesday in the Ohio River at the Robert
G..Byfd.I.Jlcks ~ Da!p., -; . .. . '
·· bock master 'Rat Warley said ·the
accident at about 9:30 a.m. tied up
traffic on each side of the locks. He
said the Anny Corps of Engineers nnd
the Coast Guard hoped to resume traffic sometime Thun;day. Nine barges
were waiting to go through the dam
Wednesday night, Worley said.
"The barges that sunk were northbound and took on water. One went
through the dam and sank below the

Chicken loverS

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Good At Partidpating
KFC' Restaurants
CLIP

MONEY

SAVING

COUPONS

CLE\VELAND (AP) - Backers
of a statewide riverboat gambling referendum have obtained the support of
a fraternal organization by expanding
the proposal to allow slot machines
and pull-tab bingo at fraternal and
veterans clubs.
Facing Gov. George Voinovich's
ongoing opposition to casino gambling in the state, the pro-casino
Buckeye Extravaganza group has
attracted as an ally the fraternal Order
of Eagles, which has 250,000 mem.bers and auxiliary members in Ohio.
The group has endorsed the Buckeye Extravaganza petition drive and
will help circulate petitions to get 1he
measure on the Nov. 5 ballot.
The proposal , which seeks
approval for eight riverboat .casinos in
Ohio, was submitted Wednesday
afternoon to the Ohio Attorney Gen eral's office, which must review the
wording.
Rick L.ertzman, president of Buckeye Extravagan7.a, based in Pepper
Pike, said Wednesday the Eagles
would be paid nothing for t~e
endorsement or to circulate petitions.

what they have to work with. "The
During the most recent Ohio Rivpatching they are doing doesn't work, er flood, emergency services Director
they need to raise the level of the Robert Byer said one federal official
opted to don hip boots and walk
road.
What is needed is some more through one section of high. water
money, Hudson explained. Money near Dewius Run Road -- doubtful
that ODOT says .isn't there. Mean- the road was still there.
Other problem areas include stale
while, during flood season he keeps
Route
338 at Antiquity and East Main
a map flattened out on the counter lo
Street
in Pomeroy.
show people how to bypass flooded
1
The section of East Main Street,
spots.
The big enemy is the river, Hud- near Nye Avenue, is being underson observed, citing recent guardrail mined by the river's natural rising and
work between the river and road : falling. As the river falls from flood
"They put up the guardrail and two or stage, the waterlogged earth is slowthree months later it's lower than the ly sliding into the river's channel.
road," he said.
While local and state governments
"It's really pretty country up here... scurry for road repair dollars, the rivyou'd think 124 would be in a lot bel- er seems willing to wait, knowing
.ter shape than it is," he commented. · time is on its side.
1
'

Bloodmobile collects 96 units of blood
Ninety-six units of blood were col- di King, David Duplantier, Barbara
lected by the American Red Cross Crow, William Ra!lford, Harold NorBloodmobile at Wednesday's visit to ton, Paul Marr, William Snouffer,
the Meigs County Senior Citi~ns Don Smith, Deborah Grueser, BarCenter.
bara Risgs, Linda Foreman, John
Multiple gallon donors were Ray· Musser, Melody Ramsburg, Betty
morid Jewell and Darla Thomas, four Lowe, Jennifer Mora, Ronald Hangallons each,and William Snouffer ning, Paul Rice, Vtrgil Windon, Joyce
8nd Barbara Riggs, three gallons Hall, Gerald Rought, Bryan Shank,
each.
·
Jerry Reiunire, Nancy Reitmire,
DonO!$ by community were:
Roger Abbott, Amber Blackwell,
P.Qmero,)' ~ -}Icon, Brinker, ·Mindy - .Gloria .Kloes, J_9sej!~ ,H_alJ, Sr,P.\IJ!i,:
Brinker, P'eiiii¥' l'tfn~ii; ' ~iacey · cia Barton, Deborihlfaptonstall, BraShank, Vicki Cundiff, Geoffrey A. cy Kom and Jack Braley, Jr.
Wilson, Thomas B. Hart, Dennis
Mason, W.Va.-- Ralph Thompson
Gilmore, Laurie Wayland, Gladys and Brian Johnson .
Cumings, Gretchen Andersbb, RayRacine -- Harry Holter, Marie
mond Jewell, Helen Blackston, Cyn- Bush, Charles Bush, Roy Parker,

dam. The other sank in the ' upper
approach to the dam," he said.
Worley said he di&lt;l pot know who
!'wned ~bai'
. · ·,ge5, ho--: !DUi!~
weighed·or where the'y were:
· .·
He said. t1ie barges and tlleir cargo
would be salvaged once the river lev·
- ~~_goes down.
He also said efforts had to be made
Wednesday to keep two other barges,
loaded with limestone and coke, from
sinking. Worley said it appeared
those barges had been stabilized
:Wednesday night.
The locks and dam is located
COLUMBUS (AP) -A bill to limit
Rep. Sally Perz, R-Toledo, the
about I5 miles south of Gallipolis.
chief
sponsor, said she will ask the
the Ohio Turnpike Commission's
authority and subject it to legislative House to reject Senate changes. That
oversight has cleared the Senate with would set the stage for a conference
ease. But even some supporten; said committee to work out differences.
"It's a very different bill than what
it didn't go far enough.
Se·nate approval on a 28-5 vote we sent over to the Senate and I think
"This is a great opportunity for Wednesday sent the legislation back we need to work out the details," Perz
them," Lertzman said.
,said in an interview. Her original bill
to .the House where it started.
James Valentine, suue secretary of
the Ohio State Aerie of the Fraternal
Order of Eagles, based in Beaver·
creek, told Lertzman in a lener Mon·
•
day the group was happy to help.
,.
Valentine predicted"his memhen;
would back the referendum because
of irritation with stale gambling raids
The lnlemal Revenue Service is inmting some tax relief to
111 clubs. He mentioned in particular
m..tDesses in Meigs and WasJUnclon Counties which were
two Eagle clubs facing fines of up to
declared disaster areas due to recent floods. 1
$30,000.
Employen in these areas have uniU Feb.lS to issue Forms w.
Not everyone is happy with the
·1 to their employees. Banknnd C011J0111tlons have the same exten·
referendum.
slon for issuing Forms 1099 for lnleRSI and dividend payments.
" I don't think any of the veterans
'Ilaxpayen have uniU Feb. IS to file the following fonns which were
organizations would be supportive,"
origlnally due Jan. 31: Quarterly ExCise Tax Reblm, Annual Fedsaid Don Lanthom, legislative agent
era! Unemployment Tax Return, Heavy Vebkle Use Tax, Tax on
and service director of the 165,000
Wagering.
American Legion members in Ohio.
IRS e~~nnot extend the deadline for employment tax returns or
Marion L. Fessler, executive sectax deposits, but It wiD abate pcnallles for Fonns 941, 941M, 943,
retary and treasurer of the Ohio
and 945 rtled by Feb. IS. II will likewise' abate penalties on tax
Council of Fraternal, Veterans and
deposits due between Jan. 19 and 31 if the deposits are made by
Service Organizations, a Piqua-based
Feb. lS.IilleRSI charges apply to payments made after the orig·
umbrella group representing 600
lnal-due dale of the reblm and caanot be waived.
groups, said he detected little support
In addldon to the relief •bow, the IRS will suspend many
for legalizing gambling in, fraternal
enfor«tnellt aedvides, such u levies, seizures and summonses ••
and veterans halls.
for taxpayen within Meigs and Wuhlngton Counties.

Pauline Parker,Vicki Sayre, Jeffrey
Frank, Clarence Frank, Louise Frank,
Frederick Simmons, Janet Theiss,
David Wolfe, Linda Holter, Clarence
Randolph and April Nichols.
Portland -- Michael Duhl, Diana
Duhl and Carolyn McPherson,
, Shade -· William Cook.
Middleport .. William Slater,
Vanessa Compston, Vema Compston, Vanessa Compston, Linda
Haley, Tone Givens. Donna Hawlev.
Donna Davidson, Gloria Peavley,
Judith Hunter, and Monty Hunter.
Rutland .. Debra Ingels and Mary
Davidson.
Syracuse -- Pauletta Hendricks,
Darla Thomas, Kathy Cumings and

Carolyn Charles.
Langsville -- Ellis Myers.
Tuppers Plains .. 'Karolyn Welsh.
Long Bottom .. Ruth Karr, Oris
Smith, Debra Ingels, Henry Bahr and
Trenea Harris.
Minersville -- Mary Voss.
Reedsville -- Barbara Roush, Teresa Talbott, Jennifer Saylor and Kelly
Milam.
·
.
Chester .. Melissa Dcmsey.
RSVP workers at the site were
Betty Spencer: iune Ashley, Peggy
Harris, Ted Hatfield, Don Young, Lee
Young, Catherine Crist and Donna
Grate. Alice Globokar also assisted.
The canteen was served by Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Bela Sigma
Phi Sorority.

Senate OKs bill to limit OTC's authc;&gt;rity

lRS grants some tax

would have rescinded much of the toll
mcrease.
" I've had a lot of requests from
our members to take it to conference," Perz said.

Senate Highways and Transporta-

tion Chainnan Scott Oelslager listed
the toll increase on the 241-mile road
as chief among several objectionable
commission action5 in recent years.
"I think the 82 percent increase

Continued on page 3

Story eyes prosecutor's
post on Republican ticket

"I believe that it is very important
that we obtain economic growth in
Meigs County."
"I. find in my years of practi ci ng
law, both as prosecutor and defense
counsel, most the people that gel into
trouble don't have a stake in the system.
"By providtng economic growth
and jobs I believe you give people the
opportunity to have a stake in the system and become productive citizens
instead of crimi nals.
"On the other hand, I was a very
aggressive prosecutor during my previous term and would co ntinue to be
that same way. This is proven by the
number of persons that were prosecuted who were dealing not just in
marijuana but narcotics and other illegal drugs. This record is unmatched
before or since.
· "I. am also a fiscal conservative
and believe that you must live within the budget given to you by the
county. In a county as financially distressed as this county, if the money is
, .
efforts I am co-chairman of the Route not there then you work with less
Scattered rains will be possible 33 Corridor Committee consisting of even if it means you work harder."
He has one
Nicholas.
from the rest ofTexas eastward to the representatives from five counties in
southern East Coast, with heavy Gulf · Ohio and West Virginia which I
Coast rainfall likely.
believe has made great strides in the
At Walla Walla, Wash., the low of last five years to lobby for the comto below zero Wednesday tied the pletion of Route 33.
record for t)le date last set i~ 1950.
"I believe that the completion .of
The nation's hot spot Wednesday Route 33 Corrrdor •s. perhaps the smwas' CQ~:oa. Fla., at 84 degrees. 1be gle most 1mportantrssue m promotcoldest place was Thwer, Minn., at 5S ing economic growth in Meigs Coonbelow zero.
ty."
.
Subzero tempera!ures may prevail
Story is on the board of directon;·
today across the norti)em Plains, for the Meigs County Chamber of
with readings into the teens in New' Commerce and is secretary of the
England and much of the Midwest, Meigs County Community.Improve..
the 20s in the Northeast and lower ·ment Corporation.
Plains, the 30s in the mid-Atlantic
He has previously served qn the
region, the 40s and SOs in the South- Veterans Memorial Hospital Board of
east and the 60s in the West and Gulf Trustees, the Meigs County TubercuCoast regions. Readings could top 70 losis Board and is a member of the
in southern Florida
· · . National Rifle Association and the
Pomeroy Gun Club.

, b USinesses
•
re le f &amp;0

Pomeroy attorney Steven L. Story announced Wednesday his candidacyasaRepubli can fortheofficeof
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney.
Unopposed in March I9 primary,
Story will face incumbent Democrat
Prosecutor John R. Lentcs in the
November 5 gencr~l election .
Born in Pomeroy, Story is a lifelong resident of Meigs County and a
graduate of Meigs High School. He
received a degree in economics from
the Ohio State University and graduated from the Ohio NortHern University Law School, and has practiced
continuously in Pomeroy since being
licensed in May, 1979.
He ha~ previously served as Meigs
County Prosecuting Auorney from
I989 to I993 and also served five
' years as solicitor for the village of
Middleport.
"I live and practice law here
because this is my home and I love it

Southern Ohio ·braces for latest winter blast ::;r~~~qd~~d;~~o~~;svo~~n~:~

BELOW

9.99%
.........

By The Associated Press
A winter storm was expected to
dump 4·6 inches of snow on much of
southern Ohio tonight and Saturday.
A winter storm warning was in effect
for six southeast counties and a winternorm watch was issued for the rest
Qfthe area.
Bittedy cold temper&amp;lures will
penist into the weekend for the e.ntire
state. the National Weather Service
said. Lows tonight again will he in the
single digits, except in the teens in the
south. Highs Friday will be 15-20.
Frigid Arctic air will grip the stale
over the weekend as high pressure
builds in from Canada. Highs o~ Saturday and Sunday will only be from
S-IS with morning lows of S below
to S above.
. ~ record-high temperature for
~ ~~date at the ColW11bus.wealhF sta-

OUR LOAN
SPECIAL CONTINUES
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Ma.._PDIC

CROW'S

Sentinel news ataff
Despite its beauty and use as a nat·
ural transportation artery, the Ohio
River sometimes wreaks havoc on
man-made highways in' its timeless
quest to·straighten out its curves.
Consider state Route 124 between
Portland and Long Bottom, a CORVO·
luted, seven-mile streteh of two-lane
highway, plagued by bumps, dips,
potholes and warped pavement.
That particular piece of highway
took a heating in the most recent Ohio
River flood on Jan. 22, according to
Dan Pennock, highway management
administrator of the Ohio Department
ofTranspoiution's District 10 out of
Marietta.
Pennock said preliminary cost

estimates to put the road back to the
way it was before the flood total
$59,768.
In the long term, ODOT is look.
ing to address road slips in the area
caused by erosion from the river, Pennock said.
Meanwhile, some area residents
arc unhappy with the condition of the
road. The nearby Long Bottom Post
Office seems to be the clearinghouse
for road complaints, noted Posunaster Jim Hudson.
"People complain all the time
about the road," said Hudson; who
said most complaints focus on the
area between Rock Run to just below
the post office.
He contends thai state road worken; are doing the best they can with

Casino backers get support
from Ohio fraternal groups

•

:Feeling: Snowed Under?

35centa
A Gannett Co. N-opaper

ODOT hopes· to address section
of SR 124 damaged by erosion

February Clearance

'

Winter 1tonn warning
tonight Low neer 1o.
Friday, snow. High In
teens.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 1, 1996

DAN'S

"1be air raid would sound and I'd
close the photo shop and r.un into the
bushes across the street."
After a year in Kodiak the Stewans moved to Anchorage and opened
the downtown photo shop that Oro
runs to this day.
Life in what was then small-town
Anchorage was an adventure.
"Everything was new and exciting,"
Stewart said.
After running the shop during the
day she'd stop at Ship Creek and
catch a salmon for dinner. She
learned to hunt moose and caribou
and began holding a yearly, midwinter wild game barbecue at the camera shop.
"When it came time to cook the
walrus and seal all my friends would
vanish," said Stewart.
She and her. ,husband enjoyed

LYRES

tion was 66 degrees in 1989 while the tana to the Dakotas and from there to
record low was 3 below zero in 1978. upper Michigan.
Patchy rain will be possible in
Sunset tonight will be at S:50 p.m.
and sunrise Saturday at 7:39 a.m.
southern California, and higher eleAcross the nation
vation snow will be possible into the
Bitter cold blasted the northern southern Rockies. '
Plains again today, punishing MinSnow showen; may fall across the
nesotans with a ~ing, of 42 degrees Ohio River Valley and the central
below zero at Ely before daybreak Appalachians, witb a chance of snow
and possibly freezing rain from the
and chilling Texas with subme~
·n
temperatures.
southwestern Plains to the Tennessee
· River Valley.
Another blast of cold should
down lhrough the weekend acros e
· Light to moderate snow may
northern and central Plains, the id- spread across the Northeast.
west and New Engltind.
Icina could occur from northThe . deep fruze should prevail western Texas to Arkan~. Oklaover.the northern states. with a phance homa and the plains of northeastern
of hsht snow from tbe northern New Mexico. .
Rocilies to the e~ Great Lakes
Soitthem Texas could feel the
region.
··
'
· sting of· I ()..dep cold lbe!Mf of
Temperatures may have a hard treezinc rain, 11leet and snow forecast
time reaching zero today from Mon- into the wee~elll!.
.·'

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an·Alaskan original

REINDEER OWNER • Oro Stewart, left, with
her pet Reindeer, Star snd Albert Whitehead
take a atroll In the park across the street from

- ~ /0&lt;-

•

By MAUREEN CLARK
A11oclllt8d Press Wr1ter
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) The ftrSt clue that Oro Stewart is an
uncommon woman is her pet rein- .
deer.
"I told my husband I wanted an
Alaskan pet," says Stewart with a
smile. "Of course, he thousht I
meant a husky."
Stewart, 78, has kepi a pet reindeer in the yard of her downtown
Anchorage home for the past 35
yem. Star, her fourth reindeer sonamed, munches contentedly on
alfalfa and lettuce in the fenced-in
yard of Stewart's trim, ranch-style
house.
It's a whimsical element in an otft..
erwise ordinary neighborhood. But
Stewart is no ordinary woman.
She was a newly minted English
teacher at Washington State University in Pullman SS years ago when
she met het husband, Ivan, an engineering student. He brought her to
Alaska. ,
Ivan Stewart, who died nine years
ago, had traveled north to work as a
gold miner. It was supposed to be a
tempOrary job to earn money for
sehool, but he quickly decided to stay.
He wrote to Oro, asking her to marry him and move to Alaska.
"I decided I'd betler if I wanted
Ivan," said Stewart. She left on the
last steamer bound for 'Alaska, four
months after the Japanese bombed
Pearl Harbor. The war in the Pacific
was in full swing.
They had a two-day honeymoon,
hiking Kodiak's Pillar mountain. It
ended abruptly when they took shelter from the rain in a shack on the
beach. They' awoke to find themselves surrounded by American soldiers with bayonets drawn. "!'he soldien; had been hot on the trail of
. Japanese spies.
· "I said 'Don't shoot, don't shoot.
We're Ameiicans!'," said Stewart.
"So they apologized all over the
place and fed us a nice steak."
During their fin;t year of maniage,
Oro operated a photo shop in Kodiak while Ivan worked for the Anny ·&lt;;:orps of Engineen; on military con- .
struction projects in the Aleutian
Islands.
. ·, "I was the janitor and the portrait
taker, the salesman and the hook·
keeper." She still recalls the sudden
sCramble when the military would
re.spond to the threat of enemy aircraft.

Pick 3:
550
Pick 4:
7823
Super Lotto:
14-16-21-30-40-46
Kicker:
160582

Sports, Page 4

tend to his son m the ~o:·~~
tak~.s ~~ookyn and n~~ ~s ::ich
. It s tnc to ge~ . ' 1 ..
out, c~ge ant m e ~~ to.:iJ ~56o
0
says Skinner, w 0 exerCISes
rmnutes.
.
.
.
Pen;onal tramer M~chael ~enme~
satd he. commends t ose w 0 wor
out dunng lunch .

··-

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
girls defeat
Wahama

By BETSY CL:A'YTQN
' workoutenjhusiasls claim they rerum • Even a short workout is good, says
"It's not a trend to work "OUt dur· to it despite the hassle, or lhink of a workout before a I p.m. ci8SI ~ Edi·
Fort Myef8 Newa-PrHa
to the jobf~c refreshed
Valerie Pokomy-McHugh, a Fort ing lunch time, it'sa fact oflife," she workout that can be done at worlc.
son C:Ommurutr Colle~e. ~ sm~
. · It's lunch time. Instead of~ hour
Plus they avoid working out with Myen;, Fla., fitness consultant. In says. "It's a time when people can·get
Anne Palmer leave~ ~H:r down- only 11 ~ for him- beca se and he
of eating, chatting and returning to
your~sk feeling l~c •.you c~uld
• db a stint on the treadmill, ride a b1cy- ,
cle or streteh your muscles.
Working out at the noon hour
works into many schedules.
Whether they play basketball at a
gym, exercise at a health club or )og
the streets near work, lunch-ume

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Wednesday, January 31, 11JM

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 16 • The.Dally Sentinel

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-:Commentary

P~ge2

Thur.tdly,Febfuary1,1181
OHIO Weather

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The·l)ally Sentinel Survey indicates w hate our government
. . -.

.

'£sttJ/i8s&amp;tl tn.1948

I

·. 11J TONY IHOW
Cl Is,. 8vftd [] 1&amp;

us.

•1
icaos spend $200 billion just filling \minority-owned bt,laioesses and 5
Molt f~ pCoplliW auume out the r011115 •
·
1paceot to firms with female owner·

IND.

.

mab

No worry for homeowners

Ronald Ray Jeffers, 46, Middleport, died Wednesday, Jan. 31 , 1996, at
his home.
Born Oct. 12, 1949, in Mason, W.Va., son of Eula Stab! Jeffers of Middleport'and the late Charles Jeffers, be was a truck driver for Jeffers Excavating, a ll!embc;r of the Middleport Pentecostal Church, a former Pomeroy
Police Officer, former member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles in Pomeroy
and the Fraternal Order of Police.
He is survived by two daughters, Ranae Jeffers of Columbus and Amanda Jeffers of Racine; a ·son, Curtis Jeffers of Pomeroy; a stepson, Kevin Tanner of ~ville; a grandson; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Richard and
Nancy Jeffers of Clinton, S.C., and David and Brenda Jeffers of Pomeroy;
two nieces and two nepbews.
""'-"
'
.
He was preceded in death by an infant son, Charles Bradley Jeffers.
times. Stann total 7 to 10 incbes.
Soutbeutem Oltlo
Services will be beld Saturday, I p,m: at Fisber Funeral Home in Mid.. Winter storm wamlng tonight ud Highs in tJic upper teens. Chance of dleport with the Rev. Jobn Neville officilling. Burial will follow in Rock
snow 90 ~ent.
. Friday. .
Springs Cemetery.
' . Extended forecast
Today... Cloudy wit!l a 50 percent
Friends may call Friday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Saturday... Cbanc~ of snow mainchance of ligbt snow. Highs in the
ly eut and ,south. Morning lows 5 to
lower 20s. Ligbt northeast wind.
Tonight...Snow may be heavy at 15. Higbs 15 to 25.
Sunday.1.Cold. Chance of snow.
.: times. Accumulations 3 to 6 inches.
Emma M. Scarberry, 78, of New Haven W. Va., died Wednesday, Jan.
Lows
zero:1o 10 above. Highs S to 15 .
Low near 10. Nonh wind 5 to 10
,
.
Mondlly...Col&lt;!. Chance of snow. 31, 1996, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·mph. Chance of snow 90 percent.
Born
April
2,
1917,
in
Parkersburg,
W.
Va.,
sbe
was
a
daughter of tbe
Lows
5
below
to
5
above.
Highs
5
to
Friday...Snow may be bealiy at
late
Aaron
M.
Grady
and
Mary
(Duskey)
Grady.
She
was
also
preceded in
iS.
.
.,
death by ber husband, Johnson Samuel Scarberry, three sons, Francis Edward,
Roben A. and Aaron R. Scarberry, Sr., a brother, Dwight Grady, and sister,
Juanita Grady.
Sbe was a homemaker.
Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law, Ruth Ann and Ron W.
McBride of Ashland, Ky., Betty Jane and John Holden of Mattawan, Ml;
.
'
four sons and daughters-in-law, Lawrence R. and Barbara H. Scarberry of
Henderson, Wilford R. and Edna M. Scarberry of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
Samuel R. and Deborah L. Scarberry of Montrose, W Va., Roy Thomas and
Earlene M. Scarberry of New Haven, W. Va; two grandsons : six sisters,
Racbel E. Knight of Parkersburg, W. ·Va., Ruth N. Smith of Racine, Wan' WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Beca.ofthesbarpslowdownin da D. Powell of Racine, Luda G. Amott of Punta Gorda, Fla., Betty M. Reed
pumber of American workers filing ecoJiomi~ activity, the Federal of Lafayette, Ind., Mary l. Fontane of Spencer, W. Va; live brothers, Harold
fmt-time claims for 'unemployment Reserve on Wednesday cut interest D. Grady of Spencer, W. Va., Walter E. Grady of Alabama, Aaron Dewayne
. benefits dropp¢ by 25,000 last week rates for ' a second time in seven Grady of Lafayette, Ind., Clark W. Grady of Lafayette, Ind., Blaine E. Grady
after a huge ipcrease the week before weeks, pushing tbe federal funds rate of Oregon; 23 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren.
Services will be Saturday, 1:30 p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral Home with
that had been blamed on winter bliz· down to"S.2S percent. Many analysts
zards.
believe the , sluggish economy will the Rev. Marlin Campbell. Sr. officiating. Burial will be in the Graham Ceme' The Labor _Department said that prompt at least two more credit eas- tery.
.
....
.
Friends may call at the'funeral home Friday, 2to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
;388,000 Americans filed new claims ing moves by the Fed before the end
for jobless benefits last week, down of May.
from 413,000 the previous week
The Lalior Department showed
when claims had jumped by 97,000. that seven sillieS and territories had an
The decline was right in line with increase •in initial unemployment
Phyllis L. VanlnWagen, 68: of Point Pleasant, W. Va., formerl y of
analysts expecll\tions. They had been claims for the week ending Jan: 20 Pomeroy, died Wednesday, Jan. 31 , 1996, in Cabell Huntington Hospital,
"expecting an improvement, blaming while 46 saw dee lines. The state job- Huntington, W. Va.
much of tbe earlier surge week to til- : less claiJIIS are reported a week later
Born June· 26, 1927, in Pomeroy, she was .a daugbter of.the late Pearl
ings delayed because . winter snow- · !han the national totals and, unlilce the and Oma Smith. Sbe was a~o preceded in death by her bus band. Edg'ar Van·
- ·storms had forced many claims national figures , the state totals are lnWagen, brother, Homer Smith, and son, Steven VanlnWagen.
offices to close.
·
not adjusted for normal seasonal
Surviving are a daughter, Nancy Bragg of Point Pleasant; son, Dusty
Even with the improvement last variations.
Smith of Belmont, Texas: sister, Jerry Spencer of Syracuse; two brothers,
week, the four-week moving average
States with the higbest increases in Frederick Smith of Middleport, Harold Smith of Pomeroy: two grandchiltor claims rose to 377,750, the high- new jobl~ss claims were Pennsylva- dren and two great-grandchildren.
est level since tbe first week in Jan- nia, up 8,292: Virginia, up 8,072;
The funeral will be Saturday, Feb. 3, I p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
!JllrY· Economists prefer to follow tbe North Carolina, up 6.819; New Jer· Home with the Rev. Bill Adkins officiating. Burial will be in the Beech Grove
moving average because it helps to sey, up 5,366, and Maryland, up Cemetery.
smootb OUI week·IO·Week fluctua- 2,303.
Friends may call Friday, 7 to 9 p.m., at tbe funeral home.
lions.
,
States with the biggest declines in
Economists are braced for a slight benefit apjllications were Michigan,
rise in the unemployment rate in Jan-. down 14.~49; Tennessee, down
itary to 5.7 percent, compared to 5.6 13,268; Illinois, down 10,367; Alabapercent in December. Many analysts rna, down 9,869, and Missouri, down
believe that the economy is growing 9,474. ~improvement in Michigan
ATHENS
Steve Walsh port to our local community at this
at less than half the rate needed to was credited to fewer layoffs in the announced Wednesday that Bank time," he added .
keep the jobless rate from ~sing.
jlUto industry.
One. Athens, has set up a $500,000
Bank One flood assistance loans
flood assistance loan fund for flood are available to both individuals and
victims in Meigs, Mason and Gallia businesses at the bank's current prime
counties. Walsh is president of Bank mterest rate. Loans are subject to
cred1t approval.
Units of the Meigs County ments, Stephanie Young, Holzer One in Athens.
"Some
residences
and
businesses
Businesses interested in lhe pro£mergency Medical Service record- Medical Center;
sustained
heavy
damage
during
the
gram
can call John Cornett at (614)
.
ed 15 calls for assistance including
4:58 a.m., Overbrook, Nursing
recent
flooding,"
said
Pomeroy
446,0902.
Area residents can call
three transfer calls. Units responding Centel, Grace Hawley, VMH;
Branch
Manager
Steven
Dunfee.
their
local
Bank
One banking center
included:
5:37 p.m., Vail Street, Jane
"Bank One would like to provide sup- m Pomeroy at 992-2133, Rutland at
MIDDLEPORT
Swatzel, VMH:
·
742-2888 or Gallipolis at 446-0902.
6 p.m., South Third Avenue,
IO:SS p.nl!, Union Avenue, April
Individuals can also apply directly
' Beaulah Strauss, Veterans Memorial Large, VMH;
over
the phone after bank hours by
lfospital;
II :23 p.m,, Wetzgsl Street, Alben VETERANS MEMORIAL
calling
1-800-800-LOAN.
•, 7:44, p.m., Sbort Fourth Avenue, . Smith, VMH?
Wednesday admissions •• Martha
The
special program will be
.
·~ ·
•Ronald Jeffets,
dead upon ani val.
Bums, Middleport.
offered
trough
March 15.
RUTLAND · .
Wednesday discharges ·· Walter
I p.m., Hysell Slfe!lt, Henry Car- Wears, Pomeroy, and Telitha Casto,
POMEROY
penter,
VMH;
'· 2:25 a.m., Village
.. Manor
. Apart· 1:28 p.m., OBNC, Clara Grueser, Long Bottom.
Sberiff James M. Soulsby report·
VMH.
ed a correction in an accident release
Holzer Medical Center
Discbarses Jan. 31 :- Electia published Wednesday.
The D,aily Sentip~l ·. SYRACUSE
He advised that it was .David ·
Brown, Norma Fowler, Matthew
!USPS2tl-9fll
5:54 p.m., volunteer lire depart- Hosken, Kerri Wells.
Lambert that struck the deer on New
Publ i~ hed t:v«y lfternoan. Monday throuah , • ment and squad, motor-vehicle acciLima Road, not David Spangler:
(Publlsbed .wltb permlssloa)
Fridoy, Ill C011rt St. Pomeroy. Obio. b)' 1he
dent
on
Minernville
Hill
Road,
Mary
Ohio Volky Publi~hinJ Comp_nnyiGanneu Co.,
Kirby, VMH; .
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21~6. Secoad
clnu pct:'lllge paid nt Pomeroy. Ohio.
6:43 p.m. , Village Green Apartments, Iamie Brannon, treated at the
"-htr: The Anocioted Pl't .,. lllllllhc Otlio
scene;
Newap:aper Auociotion.
1
II :05 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabil- •
'·
POSTMASTER: Send ~~~ correcliOM to
itation
Center, Sadie Carr, VMH.
The Dally Senlinel. Ill Court St., Pomeroy,

:Today's weather forecast

Emma M. Scarberry

,

·388,000·Americans
:file first-time~{·claims
:tor unemployment

!

I

s...;,

I

~., ;~~~~\.,~~~:;:.e::r::~~;·;::::~r:~St:.:os-!
·• ·1.t·.~·o
1b some
in fact; it can be irJued that a
economy migbt ·Ha
ex~t,
weakening
; 'l:veD fur a time pot • base under existing housing, since economic ww- .
; iless !Je accompanied by lower interest rates, thus spurring demand. ' :
~-AAudioC?Dtinbousued .weabninbu
. • g of~~OI!'f wodtJid, of~· burt most assets, :
• """1 g
mg, t even ....,, a senous owotum tits likely that hous- .
: ;na priceS would regain their losses and !ben rise some more. ·
·
: · ror homeowners, therefen, !be message is this: Don't be discouraged /
: by repOrts Qf deteriorllion in the housing market The chances are higb that
• lt bu liule or no immediate applicllion to your specific situllion.

s,..

Phyllis L. VanlnWagen

·th·e· ·G. ·re·a
·. ··t. ·Pr'· e-t.·en de
}r
.

-~------------

ean

1
·By Joeeph ~
,
promptly vetoed iL That's because cient means. But the president would :can people.
.
As President Clinton delivered ·Clinton is not really committed to ,deny them government-funded
1be president shamelessly aughis State of the Union soliloquy this "ending welfare 1!5 we know it" (and ,voucben that would give them the gests that bis political Ollponents ire
.week, an old song came to mind •• as be promised it during bis 1992 sameschoolcboicesthatrichparents pickingonbispoarwifetogetatbim.
:"The Great Pretender." Because, presidential campaign).
·like the Ointons now .enjoy.
But if Hillau'y Ointon had been saris:since be fmt campaigned for tho
Indeed, Clfnton proposed his own I The president used lbe occasion of fied to play the traditional role of fi,it
•·
'
·
·
IWhite House, Clinton bu demon~ welfare refonn plan in 1994. Had it 'his State of the Union address 10 'lady, or if sbe bad Jedefined the role
•
:strated a knack for saying all !be right been enacted by the Democrat-con· ·introduce his new "drug czar," Gen. ·of fil1tlady by pu~~uing a noapoliti.·
:things, but never following up his trolledCongress,itwouldbaveadded Barry McCaffrey, outgoing chief. of ·ell career in lbe private sector (like .
.
.
.
..
w()!'ds with deeds.
·an additional $9.3 billion in welfare the U.S. Military's Southern Com- Elizabeth DOle, president of the
6 /
, Let's go to the videotape.
ispending over five years (as if $1.2 mand. "To succeed, !be president not- .American Red Cross), then she woul4
I In bis State of the Union message, trillion wasn't enough). Mcnover, ed, "be (!be general) .-Is a larger .Dol have been subjected to so much
·
!the president lamented that '.'More Clinton's plan would have applied forcethanbebuevercommancled." scrutiny.
;.bear Editor,
;to offer extra protection to me and 'and more Americans are wmldng onty to welfare parents born before · ~ut the White. House Office.of · ButHi\laryCiintonbupoliticizcd
1
; Wednesday evening, Jan. 24,1be Iseveral of the players. Things that withoutaraise."Headded, "We need , 1971, whomakeup.onlyone-tbinJof NatJonaiJ&gt;rugPolicyControl, whicb theroleoffmtladylilcenoolberpre:.
. · Jteedsville-Eastem girls vmity bas· : :reslly couldn't be explained. rather : a IIIX credit for working families with the welfare caseload.
Gen. McCalli'ey now OOIIIIIIIIIIds, hiS decessor since Eleanor Roosevelt
btball team was involved in a very · ·than sheer coincidence. 1be initial ; 1children."
We saw the same inConsistencies ·gotten smaller rather than bigger And since she consciously decided tO
. ~llic doubl&amp;-fatality accident OR · .impact left the bus with DO steerjng ' i But since Clinton bas been in the .in Clinton's pronouncements this under Clinton's watcb. Jndeed, one of .be a politicll ' figure, alongside bei'
Route SO near Guysville. Although ,and little or no brakes because the .Oval Office, the government has week about educati'on. "I cballenge ,the president's first orjlers of busi- .husband the president, she hiS n6
· !be iccident was very bad; no one on · ·engine was pushed into the fire wall rsised taxes on working families and every state to.give all pMellts the rigbt 1ness, upon assutiting office in 1993,. grounds to complain abQut invlistigathe bui suffered life-threstening 'and the pedal wouldn't pusb in com- everyone else. Indeed, Treasury to cboose whicb ·public school their twas to slasb the drug policy staff from tiona into ber pre-White House
. !tljuries. oitly a lew pol8ible concus- · pletely. The shifting of the bus body : · Department figures for 1995 sbowed children attend," be said.
jt46 to 2S. Hillary Clinton bu men ·wbeelin~ and dealings on behalf of
· ' Uons, 1Ju!nps and bruises, whiplash, · :to !be front worsened this condition, : : that individuals wrote $20 billion ; But wben the president and first ,staff II! ber beck and clll than Gen. · Madison GuarantY (the tailed savings
~· dJC, t~pecte4 B£bes and pains. :but wben lbe bus body shifted for- m~re in ~ks to satisfy their oblig- lady decided whicb school their McCaffrey. .
,
,
:and loan tbal cost IIIXpaym SSO miiOolyan~~etofOodC.PIIldbaveleftus :wud the fenderwell pusbed towud· 11UonswtthlbelnternalRevenueSer- beloved daugbter Chelsea would
And$pealcingofthe~tlady,the lion or so) and bet present White
t.l Rtc:b fait'~. and we praise Hin'l ·the rear of the tires and acted like a ·vice than the year before. That 30- attend, they did notlimitlbeir choic- president bailed ber as ( a ~onderful IHouse abuse of power in lbe Travel,fcir His watcbina over·us.
· ;brab. Additionally, the cal's altema- , ·percent increase in individut!IIIX pay- es to public schools in tbe District of wife and magnificent JIIOtller and a gate scandal.
·; Tltia ~ihap broliiJtt out the ~1 . !tor lodged ~een .!be two dual, . ments last year w~ directly a~but- . Columbia. They placed their daugb- .great fmtlady."
·'
On taxes, welfare, education;
1Ji Qlankind, as several passmg · wbeels on the ngbt stde of the bus, able to the 1993 Cltoton 111X hike.
ter in privately run Sidwell Friends
Well, most AmericiJ!!S would not drugs and bis controvmial wife, !
motorists ~ all the familieS in the again acting lik~ another bralre.
·
The pre~nt told the.American because, as ' lbey said, "we believe quarrel witb the wife and mom President Clinton bas said the lhinl•
trea united togelber to .comfort our
~OnCC~mtngtrafficandanoth- people that, For~D?longourw!!lfare thisdecisionisbestforourdaugbter." :claims, because only t1Je president that his bandlers tell bim that the
playe11 and . offer. asststance. We · er semt were able to get 5IOtl!'ed as sys~ bas unde'?;"ned the values of
Well; tiJere are a number of poor 1and Chelsea can speak to that. But · . American, people want to bear. But
Wol,dd ~ially ~':lee to ~ Mr. : our ~us careened ~ugh thetr lane · f~ly and work. He also userted, .and moderalc-income parents wbom •among the 4S fmt ladies in !be his-' the ~gly skeptical public is 011
tnl' l&gt;fn. Bren~ Smith fOJ" ~ng ~ · .and mto ~ guudrai~. •
. Congre~s and I are IIC8f ~nt the ~sident professes toll!' so conof the United States, Hillary to Clinton's doubletalk. They know
.. play~ to tbetr hOJ!Ie, , ustng lbetr, . My briefcase bad JUSt lipped over: 1ouweepmg welfare reform.
.cerned about wbo would like nothing . :Clinton hardly ranb among tiJe . be'sjusta great
.
.
. . ,pbODC. ~for all'¥ ldndtieu they ion the seat and in an eft'on to pick it ; But Congress sentas~ng wei- .llloretban toenrolltlieirdaugbtel1or !Pats. Indeed, the latest opinion ,
Penbis luoa+ pw
;. ~. i~· 'IliOir ;,~; '!!.~ed: ~ ,a ; ,.up. ,I scocited!1:the~l~.~::_in badmybeesest, t!arethereform .b1deiil ~ ~ 'YIJiteandHouaebe .sons in Sidwell Friel\~ or someoth- . ;polls sbow that sbe i~ ·viewed unfa. ror'l'lle ScaDieao UJiiali.TdiiU-:
&lt; ·u. t J!tllli enJerP!ICY.~,J. ·Cfwc Victiil)i; !away ,
ws e w'"""
n :•or
prest nt s Signature
• er private. academy if they bad suffi- 'vbrably by a majority of !be Ameri··
• ~~~a'ia~~fortllf'~j lalkinJ
my assistant Coach Paul
'
• ·
··
·
;

~ Lett.ers

to the ed ··to•-

·:•rrrec.
w k surv.
· /
•·
vor grs,e.u

!tory

1

'•liledicswhouses'~dteii!Juries.We

l··w. .hen

Flood assistance loan
program available in area

:Mei.gs EMS .logs ,15 calls

• I
HOSplta
news

J_,..

brouJI!

••tu· ·

...nee

.

.

guerrilla orpoization.
:ri;l~agroup, 'wore feared and batedbt;
Wbat ~ned?
(:tuzens across dJe country.
:
We can t ever really know, : But, I uked, is it posaible that
because ~JJS?D's~tary trial wu .someone could be a decent pmcin''
so arossly unfair- 11 was closed to . and still somehow be involved witJi.::
!be public, the judge's identity wu it?
·
.
'concealed, and Berenson's lawyer ' "I could see getting sucbd into'
. w~ not allowed to cross-examine it," abe co11ceded. "The poverty there
w!~ or present evidence in his is desperate aJ!d ._..wrenching.· .
jcltent s lll!fense. !'rosecutors ·~ And there IS an UJijiJjt Caste~..
Berenson &lt;wu a · l~ of !be rebel . And~ IS a small pen:e~a.., of1· ·
.group, ihal sbe.stockptled Weapbni people who have an awful lot. BUI il's •: '
and gatbered Information for an bani to justify lbe.temlrist actions." ~ .
attack. Berenson's lawyen say •that
lt.adolb rejects the idea that ~n- ·
tbouah she was friendlr ~tb. 'JiltpB£ son got swept up by anydung.
Amaru mcmben, ~. llelieved they ~.aaw.bis friend screamiltain Span- ,
bad renOIJllCeCI tbeir violellt past ~ isli au press conference be found t.er ,
·bad no lmowledp .o f any lerroriSI "totally ll'tt of characleL" He later •
.Plans.
learned that iJbe' bad been 1o IOiitlrY .•
I called Carolyo, asaumin1 abe confi.-..t for 30 clayulld bad been :;
would tie diJirelsed by Berenson's 'inllrucledbymilltary~toyelho ~
1~. She wu not..
ilballbe could be beard wlthilut a ,
m1111 have been inaedibly !microphone.
.
~
oaive,''saidClrolfD.oliPiaininathat_ ! s.ialcUIIuS, . . . . ...., •
1\tpll: Amant, atona with the :tor Ntlwq ap •llolap; IN" 111 dill :
Shiniq Nib,lnotber l'llnlvian per· . .....
, .~·

Ollio.~7 69.
1

One Moolh .... ............................................ SS.70
One Year .................. .......................:..... $104.00

~·

•

A 4-year-old boy injured in a bus/car collision last week was
upgraded recently from critical to fair condition at Children's Hospi·
tal in Columbus, according to a hospital spokeswoman.
Justin George was a passenger in a car driven by his mother, Vonda George, 2S, wben it plowed into the front of an Eastem Local
Schools bus on U.S. Route 50 in Athens County on Jan. 24. His mother and a passenger, Misty Mash, 19, both of Athens. were killed in
the coltision.
•
Passengers on the bus received only minor injuries.

Counties eligible for assistance
President Clinton Wednesday afternoon declared eigbt Ohio
counties eligible for infraStructure assistance. Counties included under
the disaster declaration are; Belmont, Columbiana, Jefferson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe, Scioto and Washington.
With the declaration. affected local governments in these
counties are eligible to apply for federal funds to pay 75 percent of
the approved cost for debris removal, emergency services related to
the flood, and repairing or replacing damaged public facilities such
as roads, bridges and utilities.
The declaration was at the request of Governor George V.
Voinovich.

Man cited in wreck

:
·
:
'

i' ·

A 32-year-old Albany, man was cited following a one-vehicle wreck on School Lot Roarl in Columbia Township Wednesday
around 2:20p.m.
Gary L. Crihfield was southbound when he lost control of
his 1994 Ford truck which went off the left side oftbe roadway, slrik·
ing a fence and a tree, according to a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
He was cited on charges of failure to control, expired oper·
ator's license and expired registration.
.
No injuries were reported. Damage to the truck was listed
as heavy.

Woman injured in accident
A woman was treated for minor injuries after a one-car accident· on Minersville Hill Road Wednesday around 5:20p.m.
Mary E, Kirby, 27, Texas Road, Pomeroy, was northbound
in ber 1987 lsuzu and went off the right side of the road in a curve,
striking a guardrail and a post, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs
Department report.
She was transported by the Syracuse squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital
wbere sbe was treated for minor injuries and released.
Damage to the vebicle was listed as. moderate.

Senate OKs...
Continued from page 1
was what inflamed the public,
inflamed the business community
that has to do business on the tum·
pike," said Oelslager, R-Canton.
Commissioners eventually agreed
to implement the toll boost over three
years instead of immediately, and
give a discount to truckers who usc
the northern Ohio highway.
Legislators in 1993 gave the Ohio
Turnpike Commission broad new
powers to borrow money and build
toll roads anywhere in the state.
Oelslager said the bill· would limil the commission's authority to the
existing turnpike. It also would create a six-member House/Senate Tumpike Oversight Committee.
Sen. Alan Zaleski, D-Vermilion,
voted for the bill but said il should
have been stronger.
"The IUJ11pike commission has a
tendency to run roughshod over the
Legislature. I think we'd be better
served by establishing an overnight
comm1ttee with some teeth in it,"
Zaleski said.
Sen. Cooper Snyder, R-Hillsboro,
opposed lhe bill . He said that with
limited money available for highway
construction, the state might need the
turnpike to build toll roads.
Supporters said such projects still
could proceed with specifi&lt;: legi~la­
tive approval.

COLONY THEAT E
FRIDAY THRU THURS
WALT DISNEY'S

.TOY STORY
PG-13

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

44&amp;0923

\

~t·w::::::s

26 Weells .........c: •.c.•,......... ~...:...........IUI2
$2 - . ............................................ 1111:1.!6
--MdpC.., .

... :........................:................:129.:1$

...........,.......,....................... "...."4.61

$2 _ ...............................................1109.72

'

.

COMPARBANYWHBRB

.

·llw.la ................................................ $77.:!11
·~ -

fi'OII S'll'sl.. lettll Prlas ·
We prlct • ~ ;w.lrr ._. •

mail permitted In ....,

wtw:re home CPJrier service is •vlilable.
.
'
'
\•

26 -

'

..... prkel

Subocriben'"" ""'"'"~ .10 pay doe cam.,. may
remit: in .Jvancc dir$ 10 Tbe, Dlil~ Send~~e1
~on 11 dwec. ~b. or 12 mondt bula. Credit will be
·pven ..mer each :""'k.
'

'·

14K GOLD
CHAINS &amp; BRACELETS
SAVE 50°/o TO 70o/o*
w. au ....... ......,

SINGLE COP\' PRICII

'f'lo subscription by

Beautiful Rape &amp; Herringbone

waiJht. AI file;-, Is
....., .... pdced, . . . .
New,.. .,., pill prlct.

The Scipio To'1fnship trustees will
meet at 6:30 p.m Monday at the
Pageville township building.

ll1Uy ................................................... 3SC....

E"Sbe

. ,.

Trustees to meet

SUISCRIPTION RATBS
lyCarrltrot--

'Onc Weell ..................................................$2.00

Wilen:.

"I

Wreck victim condition upgraded

Correction

·prl• ·n· c·· pies·. Ian· d you ··n .prl·s·0..n

' ' :il-e exttemely gratefti) -~ · ':mosa.likelywouldhavegone
,Brannon. Had I not scootedthrough
over,
·· ifin of lticir effort's. . •, · ' ' the windshield. I am extremely thank·.
;'
Wputd lib b! thank lnotber .ful to Ood for being with us.
_
H~n,.fqrbis~ in: I would also ~Ice to thank Co~b.: By S.. Eckel
•
:While in the United States, bercOin·
and for ibe 1\'IDY. other: Brannon f?£.belptDg me calm the~ . Twenty-six-year-old Lori Deren- munity work tended towlld practical,
. who
blanketlllllll . and orgamZIIIg a plan to IIC1 1hc: kids .. ~recently began ber life sentence . bands-on tasks . sucb ai serving in
~ US:C tbetr ~· The . aw~ ~the scene. I ":ould li~ to · in a cold and oven;rowded Peruvian · ·soup kitchens and organizing .blood
.. ---aitaallon,~~~ .,.OJime· ~~team for baiKIItna tbe
prison.Andbat:kin the United States, !drives. Daniel Radosb, a friend of
,et~~·.name, 1lui neM·~: ano.n Vt:f'/ well. They !MY have alot: · new~ .readers are wondering ·bell since childbood, deacribes a
;NNre e~y ,~ful. ~: ! of character.
.
. . bow this brigbt, caring and rellliv&amp;- :modesty of temperament thai reminds
·
.. • , The
extend the~ ~ympatbies ·ly privileged young American could me of my college chum. "Sbe was
.
. .
to the
of the~~~...=~~~ 1 ::ve strayC\1 so f~ ~ her expect· . . never one to stalld on a soapbo11," be
....., ,., ,..._,1 Pl,lh; ,
. .
said. "I never beud ~r say 1claas
~t·C~•r- .,
Whliblfirst.ltesrdLoriBerenson's sttuggle' or 'oppression.' When she
. off~ ~ : •"11&gt;'• I inuniidia\tely lllouaht of my . ~ about ber experiences in South
who called to ' ~Carolyn.
America. it was about people wbo
.
· . Citolyn Cleary and I were room- w~ starvina or familia that bad
we Would ~to ~in college, and you must for, been separated."
·
lbeir efforts.;' pvoa'friend'a bias wben I say sbe ill : The two WOIJ!en baveotlierthings
.
McaJo-. a remarlcably kind and iotelliaent .in commoo. l'be)' were both excellent
wllin was ll1lilported, 1 : WotiJID., Wl!ile others bold protests studenls.Thcy both enjoy Medlowmt
by a ~ ~W I and rail tpinat -~ 1ta1e1 as :and playin1 ,Wtar. And they both
IO!lk Cale of us vay they ail in·cafea, Carolyn bas llwaya went to Peru wben they were in their
.. '
· ': expnssed ber soci.al co•ience · ~y20stobelpthepoor. , ·
"
•thntuab
- I t hoaieNiubel· ButCirolynisDOIVJ'IisiaabertwO
mu 't!A bGallttlllr'tl'ou" YIJUDI.IIOIII ~ Pemhrob, Mau., anci
.
, . iild QlriltDJil Pf't· ~J~~alifeiCIIItocefor
.
~ "ber alllliitioo With the 'I'Iil* Ailiini
dri""-+--'* .~
Ba'eMOII--Iillltare this trait. , ,~VOlution~ MoVement, a .Yiolenl

Harvey E. Brown

Ronald Ray ·Jeffers

1m

0

-----Area Deaths-- r----Local. briefs-....,
Harvey E. Brown, 72, of Gallipolis, died Wednesday. Jan. 31, 1996, at
the Holzer Metlical Center.
· Born Marcb 15, 1923 in Mason County, W.Va., be was the son of the
late Harvey L. and Lillie Cox Brown. be retired after nearly 30 years service from Columbia Gu of Ohio. He served in the U.S. Army, stationed in
Italy, during World War D. He was a member of VFW Postll4464 and the
American Legion He was also an avid fisberman.
He is survived by his wife of S2 years, Eulah H. Miller Br~~wn ; a daughter and son-in-law, Peggy and Charles E. Huber U of Gallipolis; two grand·
daughters, and one grandson.
He was preceded in death by his son, Gary Lee Brown, and an infant
brother, Charles Edwud Brown.
Services will be beld Saturday, I p.m., in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will follow in German Rillge Cem~tery in Walnut Township.
Friends may ~all the chapel Friday, from 7 to 9 p.m.

·-

WASHINO'l'ON - 'Tbqe.-o.of 'l thltbeneficiaries.-ll!pllcillaidjust· - But the IRS isn't the only body sbip. Thisisjustafractiooofwliila
~ wella-state esllblisb~at have to lllln'ive. Yet u Washington subjects ·churning 0111 edicts. Many ecooomisls soul must endure t? build a sign! .
JUst released a poll indicating that more people to its ministrations, the ,uae the ~eral Register to gauge the
Many other busmes~ face ~~­
Americans bate their government -· imputation of incompetence also 1nuisance potential of red tape. The :~ Kafkaesque fruslrallons, ~ tt
and aren.' t all dull crazy about eacb .spreads. AI fi11t, Congress didn't ' numberof~devoeedtonewruJes. ,will only get wonc: The Clinton
other. The Washington Post, Harvud trust poor folks to visit doctors. Now, exC*ded 68,00o 1111 year. a sligbt administration this year plans to
Univenity and the Kaiser Family the compassion cops micromanage deciease from the all-time bigb estab- .employ a record 132,000 bureaucrats
.A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Foundation bave concluded that~ biring and production decisions in lisbed in 1993.
·
tocarryoutthe 132,000..pageCodeof
cause
for
this
malaise
lies
not
with
most
of
our
major
illdustries.
LawThcie
stric:tures
can
it
diffi·
,Fedetal
Regulllions.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Uncle Sam, but with 0U11elves.
maken insist on rendering assistance cult to do even simple lbinp. In !be : Americ:aos lona have recognized
Publlaher
The survey saynothing shocking. ·everywhere •• not becauae we think Febnuuy issue of Reason magazine, ·that bigb IIIXes and inane rules slow
Aliule men than tine qualten of the we need it, but becauae they do.
'fima Starr, owner of a New York down !be economy. Men recently, we
CHARLENE HOIFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
public
ttusted
Wubington
in
1964,
A
few
indices
illuslrale
the
depth·
.sign
company, d~s the burdles have coocludied that ~ agresaively
Cltnlrllll8nager
Controller
but only 2S pacent does today. The :of Washington's IB£k of faith ·in the :sheencountmdin tryiogtoerectlS· lbelpful government is immoral as
slide in confidence began with lbe average American.
foot-tallleoen atop a factory roof. 1well.
· Great Society and abated only during
Uncle Sam maintains an army of
The basic contraCt took twO:and- . Wben federal authoritiel seize
' lbe Reagan presidency.
.more than .136,000 souls to write, a-balf pages, while affirma!iv&amp;-action responsibility for anyth,ing, they
'
We ..so suspect our neighbors. . :interpret and enforce the federaliiiX rules fiiled another 101 paaes. The tralilform that IICtivity into a polltical
Tile proportion of' Americans wbo ;code. Citizens sbelled out more than· Justice Department wanted. ber cai'· event. Out go lbe old rules and trldi·
consider their compatriots trustwor· . !$13.7 billion last year to billet this pentry, staff to lit 1be following liiJ!II, and in come the normal leg·
,.
· ·' thyhu~ledto35pacentfromS4 :force·· a ·650 percent jump from descJiplion: 42.74 pen:ent minority, islllivelubricaots--moooy,cbicancry
pacent to 1964.
. , :19SS, even a{ter adjusting for iofla- l.S8 ~n.t female. The iron-worlc- ,and bare-knQ!:Ided !=OOfCion.
.
These results baffle some ·Wasb- lion.
profile was sligbdy different: : America's •founde11 recognized
ington wonks.' They argue that gov•
The estimated number of words in IS8.53 paceot minority 111111 7.63 per· !two defe~ against litis kind of
By JOHN CONNIFF
emment spending 1\U risen to .meet ·the Internal Revenue Cude bas ·cent female. Painters: 62.!57, pacent !mayhem - private p1operty and reli·
AP Bllllnn1 AMiyll
lbe .-Is of tbe populace, so wbat's ju_mped during that span from 1 mil- minority an!f 3.52 peJCCnt female. ·gious faith, but -both b&amp;ve become
NEW YORK -The recent downturn in ilales of existing bomes is more the problem?
• . • ,lion in 1955 to nearly 6 million. The ~ feds insisted that tit least 12 per· endangmd species. Fedaha~u.ertsignifi"1'Dt as an economic indicator than it is of any immediate deterioraThc:
answer Is: The belp ts killing Tax FOunclation estimates thatAmer- cent of !be construction.dollars go to ·ed tl!emselves as intermediaries
tion in the foltUIIel of llomeowner$.
·
. between businesses and individulls '
Sales have indeed falleil, 111111 for three straight months, correctly lead- . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
.• thus sundering the old distinction
ing to the interpretation thai die economy may be weakening. But it doesbetween economic and politicll pown't necessarily mean the economy of individual bomeownen is also dele·
er, and. turning private pn&gt;perty into
j
riorlling.
.
&amp;.Jpoil that lawmabiiiJU!Y nab in the
Any,evidence of the latter ii scaot.The preliminary metlian ilale price of ·
name offairness.
·
of existing single-faiiJily bouses in Decembef was S113,800, or $4,700 more
The Almighty also hiS taken it on
tban in the same month a year earli~, not a bad return for a secure invest- .
the cbin. Public schools maY \QCb
ment·
.Zoroastrianism and Gaia worship, but
True, lbe December metlian dropped $SOO from November, but winter- r
·:not the liJdeo.Ouistian csoon. Nowatime declines are normal and usually offset by springtime and summer ·
ldays, when we see some aoul curled
increases. Sales of toys surge in December; housing's ,surae comes in sum-··
up 011 a grate, we say, "Sotneb9dy
mer.
ought to do something about that,"
The Jeality is that housing prices generally manage to keep pace with the :
rather than, :'Wbat can 'I do?" We
: • of inflllion, lllid usually !IOIIIething more. In 1994, Jbe existing-borne ..
have reduced caring to an entry in tjle
: ilales price was $109,800; in 1993, it wu $1(16,800, and in 1992,$103,700. .
federal budget
•
Tbe Nllional Associllion of Realto11list from which these figures were
·
These trends make it easy to inter: talceil gbes back to 1978 detailing an unbroken siring of increases, the siiU!Il- ,.
pret the poll. Americans don't trust
: est of wbic11 was $1,400 in 1982 and tbe largest. $7,000, in 1979.
· ·
the government because 'jt doesn't
·
Not many investments can beal that record, and perhaps none at all wben .
I :trust !bern. They look ukance at eacb.
: you consider the unique allribules of an investment in a family bome. The
Jotberbecause lawmakers have turned'
: primary attribute, of course, is that it is sbelter - a roof over the bead. I
neighbors into political gladiators.
.
But it also a IIIX sbclter, one ·of very rare ones remaining, allowing the :
Incivility doesn't call for govem• owner to deduct interest payments on the mortgage loan. It is also in a sense .
:ment action; it stems from it. So the
a private hnk. providing the owner with loans to meet other expenses. ,
poll's spon1011 are rigbt about one
And while members of.the sccuriti!'5 industry might scoff at an appar- [
thing: If we lat "compassion" coiJ: :ent $3,000, or 3 percelll gain on a $100,000 property, it can't be forgotten
tinue to sow discord and doubt, we
· •:that 111e owner mipu actually bave invested oaly $20,000 to obtain that
will deserve t1te blame.
; ;$3,000. . . .
'
; • And so !be distinction bu to be made between the co.ndition of the bouswrtte ~
en.tat.
··:Jna mamt as a dirOctional indicator for the CCOllii!'Y in general, and ils mean~ 5777 Welt Ccatu17 Bllll.,
: ~ng and beariq for individual homeowners.
$ulte 700, Los Aaplet, Callr.
; : Overall, aays NAR ~~Conomist Joho 'IUccillo, existing borne prices should
'
'~- .
,

111 Court St., 9CIIMI'O)', Ohio
814 112 21ISI • Fa: 112-2157

Frltbly, Feb. l
AccuWcalber• 'Com:ut for daytime condiiians and high temperatures

.!

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· Thursday, February 1, 1996

~~~inge~~
,..,.,.....,~~"'::..':...

.9l.cquisitions ~1•

., . . ..._
W•hj Ill&gt;. Oh.-41710
114-111H210

'·

1818el:aiiii1Mt. A•'
0 IJ It, Qh. .at
.........a,a

�-

•

·sports

.

Page 4

:

...•

eight-game winning streak, lost
While Michigan Stare and Michi- Wednesday night for just the second
gan further muddied a tight Big Ten . lime in 17 IIJJIC$ this season, 82-73
basketball r,ace, Eastern Michigan at Ohio University.
made • mess of its first appearance
"I thought we took some pretty
as a nationally nmked team in the quick shots and never got into a
school's history.
_
rhythm," Basics coach Ben. Braun
Eastern Michigan cracked the AP · said. "A big part of that was we did
Top 25 for the first time this week at not establish our inside game. We got
No. 23. But the ·Eagles, riding an caught up ' in a jump-shooting

••
;.
l,
I
'

•

Basketball

NBA standings

1-.. . . . .

lMa

. lndi&amp;nl ..........5
Iowa ........ 1..... 4

Michl.,. .......4 4
Wilcooola .....4 4
llliDOil ...~..:.... 3 s

:u.s

l .929

1:"'.-.o
. .. . Jf
U!oll .................... :.. :l9

I~ ~

Gl

Houlton ................. 29 ·16 .644

I
II

- -

14 .674

Denwcr ................. .18 ~ ..tl9
Dlllu .. ................... l4 27 .341
MlnntiCMI .............. 11 30 .268
v - ............. 10 34 .m

-0. -..

STAVING CLOSE ~ Eaetern'a Jull Hllv-n (C8111er) llfllyl c._
lo W1h1rnt1'e Lorl8umgM'MI' {10) •• Bumge~ rnt1ket her 1110¥!1

l'odlkiMrillon

Sallle ...... .............. 32 . II

during Wlldneeltey nlghl'e 111111111 • Eeetam High School, wh8nt lhe
Eegl• won 6149. (Sent!MI pholoa by Tom Hunter)

·

&lt;i'

••
:
,

•

11

~

••
~

I'
J,.
t

Wi~CG~Wa

...
'

Ita

c.nr.

ll L lll. liY. L fll.

..

·

•

I
l

2 .1181
9 .471
4 .765
8 .600

Southwest
Ark.-Uttle Rock 72, South Alabama
60

l 14 .176
Wednaday's_.,.
Keoc 9S, Ball S1. IS
Milllli 80, BowU~ Green IS4
OHIO 82, E. Michipn 73
To)d) M, Ca\1. MlchiJU SIJ
W. MichipoSI ......... 46
Saturday's pmes

Abva ............0

-

.. a . - . 7:30p.\IL
a1 Ooaoir, 7:30p.m.
Davtt. Mitw.ultee.l:30 p.m.

-

9 .000

Nonh Teu. 62, Soulhl:m Meth. 53
Oklohomo 67. Ta• 6S (01)
Rice 79. Bay tor 64
SW Mluoo!ri Sl 66. Tulro 61
T-ChrioriaDIO, TtUIAAM76
T""" Tech 78, Oral RobenJ 74

(See TOP 25 OD Paae 6) ·

:
I
,
,

Minnt1011 11 Su Antonio, 8:30p.m.
L.A. Oippcn 11 Ullh. 9 p.m.
New Jeney at VMCOIIWI, 10 p.m.

BIIdwi&amp;-WaJI~e 8l,

Hiram Col. 67
John c.nvn 61 , Moun• Union 58
Mu1kinpm 52, Marietta~
Ohio Northern 78. CapiiAI63
Otterbein 71 , Heidelberg 69

66

...

tu.. ViewS?. Crool&lt;mlle l3

SheridaoSI,Pbilo40

ToaJabt'a pa.

Florida • . _ 7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
Moab'ellll pw• 'II • 7:10p.m.
VIDOOUWitll St.l..ollil, 8:30p.m.
Willlipea 11 Colcndo. g p.m.
New Ieney. c.Jaory, ~30 p.m.
LooAnplesMSUJ.., !0:30p.m.

S•lllln"llle 64, £. Uverpoot 52
Tol. c.bollc: 114, Tol. Scorl 87

w...._.oa...._

Tol. N""" Doolollll, Tol. Ubl&gt;cy 43
Tol. Scon S'l. Tol. Woodwlnl23
Tot SLIJnola 511, Tol. Bow,._ 41
Tol. Wllite 39, Tol. ROFJ 3!
3J
,..,.,...... 70,

o.-.
'it:
47
Y/. Bruch 66,
VetmlUoe Sl

I

Frld8y's pmes

:19

Wlcllil!o44, W. Oeoop36

Bruuwick Sl , N. Ro)'lllon 40
Buelaoye Loc:al74, T""""o !56
Buckeye Trail47, Fort Frye otS
c-1 l'llhoo Nonb-1 ~7. Coolon S.

Vucouver •

w...... so.~twdifl

-•t

CeM«vi lie Sl, Xcnla30

Transac tio ns

_._

Hockey

01aarin Folio 69, Owdoo Sl

Qeahire Rha VII. 41, J.:bon 36
Cle. Adamo l6, Cle. H... lh c....n 21
Clc. Callinwood 79, ae. Rhodes 41
Cle. Eu1 Tech67. Cle. Keaaedy 47
Cle. OJenyjlle 63, Cle. Eur 41
Cle. Hay69. Cle. Lincoln·West4)
Cle. HeiJhll43. M~&amp;nificar42
Cle. Kin&amp; 26. Cle. Science 12
Cle. Soulh SO, Cle. Manball47
Cle. St Joseph 41, W.-mu:ville Ht1.
46(201)
·.
Col. Hanky 74, Cot. OoSolea 61
Cmrwoocl S7. R a - - ! !
Day. Ch1miaade-Julienne 59, Day.
Mudowdale lll ·
lloy. P111Cnonii.Belmonl:l9

llueW

A-IM-

EASTERN CONFERENCE

14 '
14 II
Wutoina&lt;oo ......2321 5
Ncwlency ........Z222 s
T - Bay ........21 20 7

67
S9
SJ
49
49

SEATILE MARINERS: Sipod Ken
Oritrey Jr., oucfltlder, 1o a row-yar CODtn1et exftlioa throu&amp;h 1000.

--

I7S 137
169 129
m m
1:19 123
14l 1!8

fireludl42. Elyria W. l.S

1crm1 wilh Joe A)'raull. catcher; Joe ·
Borowll.i, pitcher; Too)' Graffaniao, in- '
f.elda'; IDd WODderful Mo.~~, OU1fieldm',

00-)011-.

Pi!Ubu'lh ......... .31

Huber Hl:s. Wayne 61 , Spriaj. North

16 J 6S 2.18 168
M.,....l ............lS,I9 6 S6 1110 IS4 ·
Boo1on ................21 20 6 41 169 17l
llont'onl .c .......... .I92S 6 44 100 1110
Buffalo ...............20 l6 3 4l 146 160
Onawa ................. 9l3 2 20 112 19S

Jeffenon Am. S9, Atblabuia Harbor

WFSI'ERN CONRRENCE

Garfield Hu. Trink)' 11, Panna Holy
Nlne37

w.....,.

Otmlllrilk !&amp;,
36
Gne¥1 64,
S!
Haaniba1Riwr67, Uul)', W.VL 33

eo.-

Ceoltlllll•-

:rll L I lll. Ill
Detmit ................35 9 .. 74 181

Keu1oo 62. Solon S4
Lakewood $4, A"on Lake 43
Lorain Adm. Kioa48. Midview 3!1

liA
106

Chi'Oio..............261S II 6l 176 141
TOI'ODCO .......... ....ll19 9 53 151 147
S&lt;.l.ouit.. .......... 21 20 3 30 Ill ll4

Lou.isYille Sl, Minerva 41
Madiaoo S7, Allllallola Edpoocl44
Mqootia. W.Va. 41. Momoc CcriUII

--

WiaBipea ........... 21 24 4
Dllllu ................. l4 24 II

MaoJfield St Peter'&amp; 31, Oal.-io n
Ma)'lville 62, John Glenn SO
Medina 69, Bc:n:o 39
Mlomi VIII. 37, C:O.Iq1oo 25
Midpotl: 37, Clovaleof lS

46 112 179

NEW YORK MIITS: Apoed 10 1mn1 • •
wid! lreM Mayae, ti1Cber, oo a oae·,._
contract. Named Dous Davi1 muqer
.... .Ilion Lopu """"' or PiiUfoeld or ... " '
New Yorlt·Peoa Leope, atMI Gory Wool •. ·
c:oac:h of KinJ1port W 1he Appalach.lan .

~TrSBURGH PIRATES: Si&amp;aed :.•

Oaftny Darwin, pitcher, IO a tbtltOI' lcqMC :
contnicl.
'
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Received ~ ,
Rod Cornea. Infielder. rmm 1he California '
Aoaeh 10 complete 11 uade tor John •
HabJ'U
, •

SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS•

T1m O.Jaad. Otllfidder.

Si-.• ,

39 133 167

Colonodo ............ 261S 9 61
VIII&lt;OU- ......... 1720 12 &lt;16
Calpcy ............. II2J 9 ~
Loo AnJeles ....... l7 2J II ~
tidmonron .......... l316 6 42
Aaoheim ........... J327 S 41
Soni01C ............. II3S 4 · 26

M........ 49.s.-.t..o31
MorJID 60. W. Mlllkii'IIIUD 49
N.Oimlted6l........ 43
New Wlna10n47, Tri-VIIIey 37

•

Nollaool'-'&gt;o
ATLANTA BRAV£S : Asrced ta .

N.Y. 1 . - ..... t f :rl 8 34 1:13 183

Flirmolll S3. FoilllomlS

-

UKI,

X..
ll L I lll. Ill li.t.
N.Y. Raoam ..... 30 II 10 70 1811 139
Philodelphio .......24

.

DETROIT TIGERS: Named Tyler '
8arDel clreclor or public rellliolal.
;
NEW YORI( YANKEES : Siaoed
Derek Jeccr. lbomtop, to a ooe.ye¥ coa-

NHL standings .

Florida """""""'31

o.a-. 8:30 p.m.

tt.tfoni•Auhrim. 10:30p.111.

W-41.-37
Z..Yllle Rooecnoo It, o.t. W-·

30

Cent. St. Ohio 87. Indiana Tcth 68
Wilmina.ton. Ohio 14, Ohio We..eyan

..

Sl Cloinrille 74. a-.ille 46

Brooklide 61, ae.view 52

· Non-conference play ·

Eut

Reednille £anerD 69, Wallama,

Bavcrmot 70. Stiri•l· Soulb 36
Bm:bville 71 s...,...tlle 62

4S

*"

TIIIIPIIIY 4, ftnst
1
Sc.l..c&gt;ob ' · r.._ o
N.Y. - . I ,Dollool (lie)
Qicap4, s.s . ~... o
_ 6 . .............. 4
Aaobdm 2, Cotcndo I

-7t.Omo01)'3l
Racioe so.-. 66, - Y o o t

W.VLJ9

- 4 4 . Rocky Ri,..26

Oblo Athletic Conter.-

NCAA Division I
men's scores

&lt;16

Avoo so. Keyaooe 34

44

Wed ••r'•"""""
-6.-1
llollial, Oltawal
-!.WMJ l

_ . . , IAipolc :19
.......tlletuwnldo7l,-ta43

!56

Ohio men's
college scores

Tolodo oiBIII Sc.
Bowliaa Green 11 Ken1
. W. Michipn at Cent. Micbiaaa
OHIO II Miami

Friclay'• games.

PoniiDd 11 Wllflia&amp;toa. 7:30p.m.
...... ~7:30p.m.
-Minr"•"\7:30p.m.
l'boeniAMCLEVELAND,8pm.

.

FarW01t
Scanrord 93, California 79

Akron II E. Midli&amp;~~~

"Uftialt
Whirlpool
Bath

' BuketbaU

191
178
147
171
llS
141
IS3

139
167
IS7

................ '-IBOSTON Cfl.TICS: Adiv-.1 Grq
Mi,.., ....... liomdlelojured llot
Aatboay GoWwitt:, auard. to •
fer lite ral of the ICUOD.

223

PHOENIX SUNS: Wahcd Stefano
ltuscoai, forward.

167

'
•

ClfARLOTIE HORNIITS: Sl&amp;oed

179
190

COIItracl

&lt;..,

679!!

1 f h I I ". \ ,

81:ain1818
MeelSinta

ONLY:,

AliiD-Stoct

l"ll&amp;uUnl
Ioiii
..........
. --.."·-.........___
__........

~~.,.........,

,

l'lautiiUa

Please encl.,.;.aelf·

.Allln-stqck
~tchen

addressed stamped
envelope' to retu{n

•.
,,,,
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Sentinel-·

110 Court St
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Pomeroy, 'OI'IIo'45761
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lnalollnl

18!:
&amp;tii.IIIAI5999 ............

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All itchen &amp;

-·-..

Bathroom Vanities
1: Mu'ble fops

Will or celll"'l mount.
Eliminatet moisture
and odorl from
bathroom• up to
45tq. ft. ,.,..,.,..

VDlt

..... -.-.

Loft-Otri(llll-

Our Ben

_

2999

STflliiNr,

...... _,_.__..,_...

~Bowl
Flushes with eompleta

A lhoroogh bowl
cteono!ng While uoing
only 1.5 go Ilona ot
water. White. Atlente

Bath All On Sal
AlliD-IWck

BaUlroom
l'aD/Llgh'

-NI.t&amp;howu

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llkliea
0011Dter ar -.rloJI

PEl PICtURE
PIE·PIID
,.,...

....

Mecllolne
Cablneu

All Ia ·

$60;0

Allin lftoat
!ab

I

1 Piece

DRI!IIInl IIIII
~

--- --',

Regular Prlca

l.~,._-~~
.. _..-

'

btl!

. .., •..s~Polic»uidaoneof~'"·

Wi1.-Milw1Ube 13, W. UliGOis 75
X1vin, Ohio 84, St. Joteph'J71

BGSU ............! 4 .SS6 tO 7 .SSS
S.U S1.. .........! 4 .5!56 9 3 .S29
01110 ,........... S 4 .SS6 10 10 .!00
Kco1.. .............4 ! .444 10 7 .sss
Call. Mich.... z 7 .122 ! 12 .294

Pllillldclpbla .. Miami, 7:30 p.m.

.

BUller 78. LoyoiL Ul. 66
CIIICinnati 78, N.C Olariot1e 64
Kanw 114. Otlohoma St. 66
KUJM St. n . Netnsta 68
S. lllinoi1 78. lndiaai Sr. 65
Ovenll

E. Mich.........&amp; I .889 IS
W. Mlch........ 6 3 .667 . 3
Miaml... ......... 5 4 .556 13
Toledo ...........! 4 .SS6 12

OrloodoMNewYook, 7:30p.m.

Vllldcrbilt 76. A11bum 62
Vii'Jinia Tech 74, N.C.-Greensboro 48
Wab:'Fomt66. N. Cuoli11.1 51.62
WilliJm &amp; Mary 68, James Madi&amp;on

MldWCilt

THE D~ILY SENTINEL
.

IIJlllilllll woulil haw~..,.
notl!lw~.tbJ~OUI.".-t~ ollly ~rned ·~ith the playon'
1p1 Cl!lon. .but 1111, p"ottlla:tot' IIIII ·,~ ~ David Tht,viS, •
18Velli- ~ woll-~,
wttli the ~. ~ ~
M1iNtd-.firmuj4;hcluldlllve pledthe-CIIIIL . •
, ··
"1,' W9lf.ui4' · · ·· ·

·

Waite l'orat 66, North Camliu
Stale ~; No. 13 Vqioia Tech 7,4.
North Carolina-Oreenaboro 41; No.
IS Texu Tech 78, Oral Roberts 14;
and Vllllllerbilt 76, No. 22 Aublp
62.
•
'
MI ...... S1*61
No. 10 Peaa State 58
Both ofthis season's IOsaa by

•
w.._
•
' --5!.Mootlaa..,.4'

Abon H - 6S, Abon Buc:brel49
Atron sp.;aa. 36. Com&gt;tltonlll

Teaneuee 67. Miuiu.ippi 51
VL Ccmmonweal1h 94, ·0ecqe Muoa

8'""1ey 77, .,...110

MAC Standings

Tonlpl's games

Also " special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

•

Refion·

....,

St

Nonhweuem a lndialta

ct,EVEI.AND81, Milw..... 71
Utlh98,Portlud94
,
Saa ADI:oaio 115, LA.. Clippcn 106

WILL BE 'fUBLJSHED .TUESDAY,
FEB.RUARY 1311 11

death to unworn seat belt

ror

II

~--l'llnl
Sunday's game

WecloeadiiY'•- .

"FOJI'pJ:rS ONI.Y"

Troop~rs trace McPherson's

•.!1..-~!rOr~·~DG ~:ro::'~;.:·=:
&lt;~a::~~c~ ~~~J:Jkle;:~~~
would not coiament on......._ the vented the death beeline* would hlnclifll lhr: situation. We're not

State out o(~ion of the
league leld with 61-S8 decision 11
East Lansing.
• Elsewhele in the op 2S, it w~q
·No. 3 KaNu 84, Oklalloo,a State
66; No. 4 Connec:ticut 77, •Ru~p~
59; No. 5 Cincinnati 78, North Carolina Charlotte 64; No. 8 North Car•
olina 73, Duke 72; No. 9 Gecqetown 91 , Wnt VIrginia 67; No. 12

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Soulh CaroUna 82. Woffonl ~'

OUR .SPECIAL PAGE(S)

todayoforthePigskinClas- SportJ
· playedatBYUonA!Ig.24.
.,
·
••· ·
·
llitllouncemcnt was'rnade'by
" Footbill .
COLUMBUS, Ind. (AP) ...:. A en people in the villi was w~ril a
National Association of ColleSALT LAKE ClTY (AP) seat belt could have saved the life of seat belt when the vehicle c!Uhed.
Qjlcctors ;of "A,thletics, . the Brigham ·Young will play Texas a member of the lnllill!tii-Punllie· "This bas ~n a lraJOdy for all
........ sponsbt.
·: :
. .,
A&amp;:M in the Aug. 24 Pigskin Clas- Indianapolis women's llasketbaiJ' ·· of us at, IUPID," athletic director
scheduling the game for Aug. sic at Cougar Stadiu.,., the National team.
r '
.'
I
.
Hugh Wolf said w~~Y· 'lit's
·,noon, the ....kin ' a.lssk Associlllion of C,ollege Directors·of
One of two vluia carrying metll·· like losing a ~ of your own '.
tbll Kickoff Classic for the Athletics•arinclunce!l. ,
ben of. the IUPUl ~ c1115¥ 0!1 family. We don'i know the long-term
ofbaitll the first conteat of the
· ."
qljlaplcs ·'
icy ln~nla!e 65 late ll'uCidJIY night. effects on our playeq or.our coach·
~~ .~·~-~ IIUion. It will'l,e .te!e'
"il..ANTA (AP)- Oljmpic Sta- . killing' the siarting point auard and ing s!aff at this point, but We will If
li
Sports.
• , , ·dium. th..SS;~IICat centerpiece of, injuring live other playen and their "!"atching the'in very closely. ,Oitr
The Kiclkolf Clwic the liext day · the ·1996 Surrimcr Games. needs to · coac.h..
'·
hearta .go oUt to .the family."
.
~ve
more preati~ have J*fS of its steel ,skeleton rein- · Shannbn.McPherson, who would ·
The team hid atopped for dinner
hO'!fiCver, sending fw!~~n , fwced. 111 ~neering .lirm said.
have ll1rned 21 today, wu lhtown in &lt;;:olumbua, llboitl «l miles south
· Southern c.l !ll Oil!lll · • • Antranij Ouzoonian of Wei- from the lead van aftec it struc1t 'a of' lndianepolis•. State Police said
'
Rut!-ford, N)., i!.l dllnser' Associates, ·a New York- median ~ overturned on the way coach Kimra Si:hlieclier was drivins
couldlie•~~ofthilfl* blledt!IJI-anlf!flllthltrevinW back'from•_gll)leatlndiana-South- · nonh, about five miles north of
,~=~~~~~.
construCtionoftheS230millions&amp;a· cut in New AJbany. Shew. pro- Columbus, when the university··
.i
hid a 7-~t reCm1 di1101, ..adthet!Jesteel~nfd !!iat~ dead_atColutnbt,ll
o~ van slid out or control and
lira lime ill IT to be "line-tuned and enhuced. •
al Htllpttal:, ·
.. .
', rolled over.
,,

· .·'• .'

so

Eur c.rou.. 66, Richmond 58
FumMD 80. Oeorpa Southern 38
I..Duilville 57. Soulh F\orida 54
Miainippl St. 76, Gcor&amp;Ja 73
l'lonh Carolina 7l, O..lao 72
Old DominiOO 51. N.C.·Wilmiapon

15% ofT ··
regular
price all
kitchen
cabinets in
stock

and Texas

brief~-

.. .,.-.. ,...,,...r.\.

· L-----------~~--~~~~--~~-~~.~-~-~~~~.~.~-~------------~------------------~------------------------~------------~

me

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.

11 lllinoil

Paa SWe II Iowa
MicblpD • OHIO STATE

Booron m . v-91
"'-it 120, Ad-114

Oaicaao ar Sacnmeato. 10:30 p.m.

t

WecJIMIIdlr'• -

Soutb ·

Aloboma 68, Florida 6S

Saturdly'• .......

1

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"""CL,~E~~~~ri~

-:.._.-~,..

.

-Codo.63,o.t. - , ! 6
Ollorlio 66.

Na• liiaKe ...J·
Cent. St, Ohio 92, lndiiJIA Tech. 7)

Dnidlon 86. VMI 79
Delaw.. St. 7S. Morpn S1. 66

14 7 .667
12 8 .600

MiDMIOia n. NCIIIbwa~e:r~~68

II.S
tlS
14
16

Sadie II DaJiu. 8:l0 p.lll.

~

.600

OHIO STATE 63, Wlocontio SS

7

•

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8 .600
5 .7SO

r."

14
19.S

23 \6
L.A. Uken ............ zs 11 .m
I'Mialld .................21 23 .477
- . .................. 19 2J • .4S2
OoldeoS.... .......... I&amp; ZS .419
L.A. Clippon .........l6 27 .372

.37~

...

Pigskin Clafl)slc ·

.

W.Miehlpo8S. A.... 61

St. Peti:t' s 86, St. Fr&amp;Deis, Pa. S4

.800

1'1dooiO. Midli !9
Mlc:hijoo s.... 6 Peon s..., sa

17

.744
,,90

.SOC!
.SOO

..... BJ.HOfsttaSS ·

.1182

14 6 . .700
Mloneocioo .....J ! .l7S II 9 .S!O
OHIO ST.,.....2 6 .1!0 9 8 ·.S:I9
-~- · , 7 .llS 6 u .m

WESTI!IlN CONFEitENCE
&gt;

3 .625 12
4 .500 U

tiJieigs .!Jirls·top Wahama

;,tter :·lbsing to Alexander ·
·:.:E
; r
..

.

Mld·American ContereMiomi ss,aowu.1 a.- 76
OHKJ6!1. E. tdichipo S]

NaYy 69, Lehilh 63
NOU'e Dwne ~.St. John' all

Coni'.
Onnll
lit: L lll. ll L fll.

2 .730 IS 1
Puntue ...........6 2 .730 16 4
Mi&lt;hlp11 S1...6 2 .730 12 8

:19 14 .674 IO.!
Al-...........,.....:14 19 . .SSII 15.! ,
CLEVEI.AND ....... 23 20 .SlS 16.S
Dlmllt ....................11 20 .SI2
IU
Cllortolte ................11 21 . ~
18
Mllw.- ............. 1! 26 .366 · 2.1.5
r .....o .................J2 ll .279 27.! -

!

,. ,... ..........-........,....,. _....,...__,_.. __ ,. _ ,.___. __

~.,.,..,.

The·O.IIy Sentinel• Plge I

Unranked Michigan Stale was in
a three-way tie with No. 10 Penn
State and No. 17 Purdue for the Big .
Ten lead after Wednesday night's
games.
Purdue embarrassed No. 20
Michigan 8().59 in Ann Arbor, the
Wolverines' worst loss at home since
an 87-62 defeat against Indiana in
1915. Michigan State knocked Penn

Maitt 71, ltot.en Morri1 '7o

, _ 51 ..........6

CalniDI,_

Cbl-..................39

Colpre9l.LIIi,.oe76
c..-Jc:.. 11, a....,. ''
GeooJelowo 91, WCOI Vlrsinia 67

Bi&amp; Ten standings

Pili...................&amp; 34 .190

Pft

...-.,..-, .,....,.._T'"'" . .

Ohio women's
coUege scores

8"'""'1190. Holi Crou 83 (01)

Cbi.,..O ii L.A. l...obn. 1~ 30 p.m.
TCJf'Oiio II Golden Stlac. IO:lO p.m.

A...,.; DIYX..
![ L fll. Gl
· ~ .................. ll 11 .721
-Yoot ..............:rl IS .643
l.S
WMi-............ 21 1! .~
9.!
1o!iam1 ., .................19 ZS .412 12.S
Ncwl&lt;noy ............ 17 26 .39S
14
- ....................16 27 .372 . IS

0111 ,.IE...

~,.,

•

Scoreboard

I!!A8TERN CONFERENCE

PIC,.URE YOUR Pft

T""

•

game."
Geno Ford Jed Ohio with 28
points, seven of those came during
an 11-0 run that gave the Bobcats the
lead for good in the second half.
Curtis Simmons had 21 points
and II rebounds for Ohio, which is
just I(). 10 for the season.. Derrick
Dial scored 23 points and Brian Tolbert had 22.for Eastern Michigan.

,·
•

Griffey &amp; ~s OK $34M
contract extension

_..

-.

•

By The •aeoclalvli ,.....

:

Eastern's defense was tough in the
stretch as EHS fabricate&lt;l a 13-0run
(22-0 overall in the frame) for a 3414 tally. Tammy Westmorelanll
canned a jumper for the Lady Fal- .
cons with nine seconds, but Martie
Holter drilled one at the buzzer for
a 38-16 EHS lead.
Eastern rolled to a 49-23 advantage in the third frame, but in the
final three minutes of that canto
Wahama outscored Eastern 12-3 to
make the score 53-3.5. Many of Eastem's young players did a good job in
the final round, outscoring WHS 164. Valerie Karr had six.in the frame,
Juli Haym'&amp;n three and two each
from Amanda Milhoan and Tracy
White and one by Kim Mayle.
' All 17 Eastern girls got in the
game.
Eastern hit3D-67twos, no threes,
was 9-20 at the line and had 44
rebounds (Evans eight, Aeiker seven, Brannon &amp; Bl\y six each). Eastem had seven steals (J. Karr three),
IS turnovers, seven assists (Hayman
two) and 10 fouls.
Wahama was 14-44 twos, 3-8 .
threes and 2-2 at the line with 27
rebounds (Bumgarner 8, WeaverS).
TAKES AIM -With e crowd bllhlnd her, Eubtm'l Mlch8118 C.ldWahama had five steals, 12 well (34) taket.elm • the bllebt during W8dn.Sdey night'• contHI
turnovers, three assists (Bumgarner •Pin• vlahlng Wehllrnt1, which 1081 69-39.
.
3) and 14 fouls.
Eastern hosts Federal Hocking
tonight and goes to Meigs for a I
p.m. gll!lle Saturday.
, Oyertcr lll&amp;ala
Eastern .................. I5-23-IS-16--69
Wahama.................... l4-2-19-4=39
Wahama - Tamra Westmore- .
land 1-().0=2. Lori Bumgarner7-3212=25. Stacy Gillispie 1-0.0=2,
season, beating the New York YanMelissa Weaver 1-0=2, Stacy
By LINDA ASHTON
Weaver 4-0-0=8. Totals: 14·3·
SEATI'LE (AP) - The Seattle kees before losing to the Cleveland
•
212=39
Mariners made center fielder Ken Indians.
Faced with a player payroll of
Eestera- Beth.Bay 1-0-0/1:2, Griffey Jr. baseball's highest-paid
Rebecca Evans 5-0.4n=l4, Jessica
player. Now they're prepared to $35 million this year, the Mariners
traded first baseman Tino Martinez.
KarrS-0.112='1l,NicoleNelson2-().
build their team around him.
third baseman Mike Blowers and
"The
name
of
Ken
Griffey
Jr.
has
0=4, Patsy Aeikcr 6-().0=12, Martie
'• finale. , . ·
Holter 2-0-0=4, Tracy White 2-().· become synonymous with the reliever Jeff Nelson.
"I hated to see ~s break up a good
Mariners." said Chuck Armstrong,
: , Eastern finale c8me to life by the 2/Z..-6. Jessica Brannon 2-0-012=4,
learn and a good bunch of guys,'~
president of the ball club.
:5:06 !11Ukin the.secooli period on a Amanda Milhoan 1-0-0=2. Julie
"Ken will be the man around' Griffey said earlier this month. "I
•9-0 run, SJI8rlted by glll!ls by Bran- Hayman 1-0.112=3, Valerie Karr 3: non, EvanJ, Karr and Aeiker. 0.0=6, Kim Mayle 0-0-112=1.
which this team will move for- care a lot about who I play with. It
:~a ~led time to regroup.
--_Totals: 30-0·9120=69
ward," Mariners chairman John Ellis hasn 'I helped to see Tino and Blow
go, or Nellie.
.
said Wednesday.
"The guys they'l'l; bringing in
The four-year, $34 million· contract extension has an average annu- may be gond .playets. but :we just
. al vatue of $8.5 million, topping the don't kilow how it will all fit together. It's like we're stiuting over. The
$7.2~ inillion annual average of the
six-year deal Barry Bonds, signed Mariners arc always starting over,
• f . .'
~ ''
'that gets old."
HARRIS
Meigs was paced by Anne Bl'jiWn with San. Francisco in December andOn
Wednesday, he put a litde dif·
1992.
•
eon-po.~411
.' . who poured in a game high 16 points
Armstrong called GriffeJlthe best ferent spin on it.
'
.
: t Meip~~17-3in - aitdpulledinsixoftheMarauders32
"You're
always
going
to be upset
,
player
in
baseball
and
recalled
fondotJie fourth period to break open a rebounds. Cheryl Jewell added nine
ly. the 1987 draft when he was the when guys like. those type of players
:Ctose c:On._tlllll defeat W,ahamli 53- points and eight rebounds.
leave," Qriffey said. "With tile play:34 in girlf basketball action Monday
Meigs hit 19 of 59 from the floor learn's No. I pick ..
ers
we got in return, we're going to
"Ken
is
our
own
player,"
Arm:evening at Mason. W.Va.
.
for 32% and IS of 22 from the line
strong
said.
"He
goes
a
long
way
to
be all right."
, , The · White Falcons beaded Into for 68%. Meigs turned the ball over
enhance
the
attractiveness
of
our
.Oritrey. 26, appeared in 72 games
la.:tion last weekend as the ninth rat- 13 times and had nine steals.
franchise."
last
season, batting .258. with 17
team in Clll\~ A-in West Virginia
Bumgarner a fine looking sophoGriffey
insisted
salary
was
not
the
home
runs and 42 RBis. He missed
•with a 9-1 record. But the Mas,on more led Wahama with 15 points.
top
consideration
in
his
decision
to
73
games
after fracturing his left
:COUnties were treated rudely by
There was no reserve contest.
remain
with
Seattle.
wrist
on
May
26 when he crashed
;their cross river.rivals.l.,ast weekeoll . . Last Saturday in a make-up con''I've always told the Mariners into the outfield wall.
!Southern defeate4 the Ll!dY Falcons, test Alexlll\der outscored Meigs 13·
it's
not a matte( of the money," GrifIn !)is seven-year major league
:t-feigs picked t,~P their victory ·on . 7 in the fourth period to pull away
fey
said
in
a
telephone
news
confercareer,
Griffey has a .30~ lifetim~
. ;tofonday evening loci 18st night~~- · . from a 38-32 advantage after three
ence
from
Orlando.
Fla.
"I've
batting
average with a Mariners:Cm picked up a win liVer Wahama.
and post a 51-39 win.
always
wanted
to
be
on
a
winning
record
I
89
horne runs and 585 RBis
:: ! The tofarauders brOke out of a . Meigs held a 2().17 lead at the
team,
to
have
something
to
shoot
for
in
917
games.
He was selected to the
lMid-scason slump to post the 'win · half, but Alexander outscored the
in
September
and
early
October."
starting lineup in each of the.last six
~yclr the Falcons. M,eigs ( 4-11) will · host team 21-12 in the third peri911
Griffey
gets
a
signing
bonus
of
All-Star Games. Last year, he won
:hQst Be'lpre on Thllflll&amp;y.
to take a .38-32 lead heading into the
$2.S million. In 1997, he will be paid his sixth straight Gold Glove award.
:: : Meigs jumped ~~ no top after linal penod.
.
Before signing the new contract,.
~period 14-8. Anne Brown paced .
.Jom Grubb led all scorers w1th I7 $7.25 million; in 1998, $7.75 million;
in
1999,
$8.25
million,
and
iri
Griffey
had ~:omplained about Seat·
1t11 ~in the period with five pomts. No other Alexander statJSIIcs 2000, $8.25 million.
cold,
damp )Vinters and noted he
tie's
jt&lt;liots. Lori Bumgarner led Wahama were available.
He
is
also
eligible
for
a
number
of
was building a tamily home on a golf
with six.
·
·· · .
Kristen Dassaylva led Meigs with
·
o
ther
bonuses,
including
$100,000
if
course
near Orlando.
\: Wahama behind Bumgarner's fi,ve I I points, Anne Brown added eight,
he
is
named
World
.Series
MVP.
"I
like
Seatde, the fans and all.
41eond period points outicored · Cheryl Jewell seven, Rebekah Sm1th
But
being
here
(in Florida) where we
The
cxtensioh
starts
with
the
Meigs 14-1210 pull to with in 26-22 siK, Tl")'n Doidge five and Asbley
1997
scasori,
meaning.
Griffey
will
can
go
outd~
to hang all the lin\e,
.i the tialf.
, Roach two to pace Meigs.
be
under
contract
with
the
Mariners
every
day,
is
great,''
he said earlier
: Meigs held a 36-3llead heading",
Meigs hit 13 of 49 from the fl?Or
this
month.
·
through
the
2000
season.
itio
final period but it was all .• for 27% and_15 of 19 from the hne
"We've gone a long way in the
With a contract through 2000,
~igs 'in the ·fourth period as they
for SO%. Me1gs h~ 25 rebounds led
last
couple
of
years.
We're
going
to
Griffey
also will likely play in the
s*JICdawaytopostthe 19pointvic- . · b)l Dassylva w1th seven, .Sm1th
field
a
good
team
in
'96.
We're
going
new
baseball
stadium being designed
$-y.
added si)!. Meigs had 22 rebounds.
to
be
competitive,"
Griffey
said.
for
the
Mariners
and scheduled for
In the n:serve game Alexander
reachel:l
the
AmerThe
Mariners
completion
in
1999.
made it a clean sweep with a 27,7-2
"I'm coming back, and that's the
win. Tonya Miller led Meigs with ican League Championshijl Series
for
the
first
time
in
their
history
la5t
~a~mtomeet
most imponant thins." Qriffey said.
·nine, Melissa Werry added eight.
.
.
Kristy King led the Spartans with
eight.

.._

.: Ohio shQcks No. 23 Eastern M1ch1gan 82-73; UC also wins.
.
:
;
,
;

• J1y SCOTT WOLFE
Eastern placed 12 girls in the
, -IC&lt;lring column en route to posting
:: J ~-39 non-leque girls basketball
:: ~lctory over the.Waha!na White F~•• 'ons Wednesday evening at Eastern
High School.
Eastern (11-4 overall &amp; 8-3 in the
Hocking Division) will host Federal HQCking today at6p.m. in the batde for .first place in the division.
Wahama is now 9-4 overall and is
currcndy ranked ninth in Class A in
. West Virginia.
·
Eastern was led in scoring by
Rebecca Evans' 14 points, Patsy
· Aeiker's 12 and Jessica Karr's II.
White Falcon ace point guard
Lori Bumgarner poured in 25 points
in a great individual effort.
The Basics .wted out slow and
impatient, forcing ~vcral early shots
inahorrible7-23firstquarterslreak.
Easlem conb'OIIed the tip, but missed
~ 'lraight shots. On the next posseslioo, Jess Brannon ·c~ed the ·
games first score at the 7:10 mark, ·
nearly one minute into the game.
Still leading 2-0 Eastern missed four
straight four footers on the next possession and Stacy Gillespie tied the
score 2-2 off a Lori Bumgarner
assist.
.
Eastern then called time out to
· retool its priorities. Karr fed Aeiker
·; off the break for a 4-2 tally, then Sta: cy Weaver canned a baseline jumper
· to tie 4-4..
·
.:
Bumga'rner canned a couple
: uncon~sted 1rey's as Wahinia took
: 111 11-10 lead with 1:08 left in the
:. fintquarter.Eastcmcamedownand
: promptly missed four more under the
: basket shois. Evans grabbed a
: rebound and faked an up and under
; (finally), hitting the bucket and then
• the free throw fora 13-11 EHS lead.
: Aelkerharnmered in a Karrmiss. 15:II, but Bumgarner drained a three
:pointer at · the buzzer for a 15-14

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

: In Top 25 college hoops,

Thuray, February 1,1996

·.Eastern girls han,d
·wahama 69-39 loss

•

'

Thursday, February f, 1996

. The Qaily Sentin.el

j

... ••"!
Our lea

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I: Shower

faucet

- - g n. l/2"
lron plpo union. Cle1&lt;
~eryllc handles.
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All In-stock

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�•

.P . 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • _Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 1, 1996

Thursday, February 1,1996

By RUSTY MIUER
"Our inability to take c~ of the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- On bllsketball killed us," Dennen said.
a lliJht when every ttip dow~~~:owt " We can't manufacture points. We
was a roller-coaster ride and every just kept taking opportunities away
shot seemed to get blown off counc, from ourselves. We play so impulOhio Slate coach Randy Ayen was· sively. I had hoped to see better qualn't~hoosy.
.
ity plsy at this point from our kids."
"h ·was obviously not a petty
Wisconsin shot 39.5 percent for
win.': he said of the Buckeyes' ugly the game, had 23 tumoven.and fin63-SS decision over Wisconsin ished the game with four fouls on
Wednesday night, "but we needed five different players.
one alibis point in the ~n."
In his post-game comments to his
Rick "iildt ~ 16 of his 20 team, Bennett said, "I tried to paint
points in the seeond half and Ohio a picture of what good basketball is.
Stste kept error-prone Wisconsin at The hardest times to teach are the
bay by hitting 14 cons«utivc free best times to teach. You have their
throws in the last I :3.5.
·attention at this point."
The teams combined for 41
Yudt hit S-of-8 shots from the
tumoven. With eight minutes left, field in the second half and all four
they had totaled 69 points. Twelve . of his free throws as the Buckeyes
foul calls in the last two minutes finished 27-of-3.5 at the line.
resulted in 22 points . that made it
"My performance tonight was
look as if the tesms did something on gratifying because it's my job to lead
offense.
by exiunple," said the only senior in
But Wisconsin coach Dick Ben- an otherwise all-freshmen Ohio State
nett didn't fall for it
starling lineup. "It's like.fcediog the

·

tire. We all did some things that
chlttged thinp around."
Ohio Stste (9-8 overall, 2-6 in the
Big Ten) won fer only the second
lime in its last nine games and
snapped a tlne-gii!QC losing skid.
Sam Okey bad 16 points for Wisconsin (12-8, 4-4) - now 8-30 in
Big Ten road games this decade.
The ftrst half might have been as
ugly as any in St John Arena's 40

years.

•

..

4:43 mark after failing to aet off a
shot in the allotted 3S secOnds oi)
back-to- back possessiO!Js. At o..,
point, the Buckeyes had only one
shot from the field in 11 trips dowp
the noor.
.
"I'm leaming our team is not
going to grow up quicker than I want
them to," Ayen said. " But I tbjnll:
they're starling to understand what it
takes to be successful in the Bit

Ten...

Bv The Aaoclltecl Preu

"I'm really pleased with the way
After stnlggling through the first our team is playing right now,"
half of the season, the Phoenix Suns .coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said after
appear to he on the rise again.
watching his team win for the fifth
Charles Barkley and Kevin John- time in seven games. "We're startson, who both returned from injuries ing to get healthy and we're going to
last week, scored 18 points apiece try our very best to make a ruri at it."
Wednesday night as the Suns routed
The Suns should get another
the Atlanta Hawks 120-84.
boost when Danny Manning returns
Friday night at Cleveland. Manning

:Top 25..c;ontinuedfromPages&gt;

In the NHL,

BIue.s bIan k. L.eafs,•
Lightning top Pens
By KEN RAPPOPORT

,,'
'
I

I

I

AP Hockelf Wrlblr
Mario Lemieux, Mark Messier,
Steve Yzennan. And now Date Hawerchuk.
Hawerchuk became the fourth
player this season, and the 23rd in
NHL history, tQ. reach the .500-goal
plateau as the St. Louis Blues beat
Toronto 4-0 at Maple Leaf Gardens
on Wednesday night.
" It's a pretty good scenario to get
it the way I did toniJht," said Haw·
erchuk, who was born in Toronto and
grew up in the area. "It was a big
goal in the game and to shut out the
Leafs right in Toronto ... it's a pretty good story.
·
"My parents are in Florida ·but
my grandmother's here. She was sitting down at that end, so it was kind
of nice to get it down the~"
Hawerchuk scored 489 of his
goals with the Winnipeg Jets and
Buffalo Sabres before coming to St.
Louis as a free agent in the offseason. His goal Wednesday night
helped the Blues close the gap
between them and third-place Toronto in the Central Division to three
points.
Hawerchuk scored the historic
goal on a 2-on-l.breakaway at 10:26
of the third period. Rob Pearson,
playing his first game with St. Louis
· after being acquired Monday from
Washington, set up the 15:year veteran, whose slap shot from between
the circles sailed under the cross bar
for his II th goal of the se&amp;sOn.
That pve the the Blues a 2-0
lead.
"It was such a big goal for the
team," said St. Louis coach Mike
Keenan of the 32-ycar-old Hawer. ~huk, wbo has 1,351 points for the
II th spot Q.D the all-time list. "I was
really happy for him, happy he
could share it with his grandmother.
It was a great night for him."
· Dave Roberts, Geoff Courtnall
and AI t.faclnnis also scored for the
Blues and Grant Fuhr registered his
15th career shutout with 2.5 saves.
He's started all 49 St. Louis games
this season.
Elsewhere, it' was Buffalo 6,
Florida I; Boston 3, Ottawa I; Montreal S, Washington 3; Tampa Bay 4,
, Pittsb~h I; New York Rangers I, ·
Dallas I; Chicago 4, Edmonton 0;
Hartford 6, Los Angeles 4; and Anaheim 2, Colorado I.
Sabns 6, Panthen 1
At Buffalo, Pat LaFontaine had a
goal and three assists to eclipse 900
career points, and Brad May added
two goals in the Sabres' victory over
Florida.
Randy Burridge, May and Garry
Galley scored for Buffalo in the
openi~g 20 minutes en route to a 30 !Cad. Jason Dawe put the game
. ·away with a goal in ·tho third period.
' ~ 11 'ed by goal b Ma
d
•0 ow
s Y. .Y an
~ontain~.

- • • 3, Senioton 1

Boston goaltender Bill Ranford
wu the difference in a wide-open
pme u ·the visiting Bruins downed
Ottawa.
AcWn Oaaes. Josef Stumpe! .nd
Shawn McEachern scored to end a
two.;ame Blllins llllina streak, but
it was Rlnford who stole the show
with 29 saves in his ' . .t pedeirm-..ce li~~~:e_comina toBoston from

Caudlen~ 5, Capitals 3
In Montreal, Martin Rucinsky
and Vincent Damphousse continued
their torrid scoring pace in leading
the Canadiens over the Capitals.
Damphousse had two goals and
an assist, while Rucinsky had a goal
and two assists to lead Montreal to
its fourth consecutive· win.
Rucinsky has eight goals and nine
assists in his last eight games.
Damphousse, his linemate, has four
goals and II assists in his last eight.
Llptnlng4, Pengulus I .
John Cullen came back to haunt
Pittsburgh with two pis, including
· the game-winner, in Tampa Bay's
victory over the visiting Penguins.
Cullen was signed as a free agent
by the LiJhtning after Pittsburgh
d«ided not to re-sigil him in the offseason, Chris Gratton added a goal
and an assist and Alexander Selivanov had a pair of assists as Tampa
Bay remained u!!defeatcd in its last
six games at the ThunderDome (5-0-

·
.
.

.

I).

Rangers 1, Stars 1
In Dallas, Luc Robitaille's power-play goal with 2:14 remaining in
regulation lifted New York into a tie
with the Stars, keeping the Rangers
unbeaten in 1996.
The Rangers, S-0-4 in January,
got another strong performance ftom
Glenn Healy, who gave up only a
~«ond-period goal by Kevin Hatchet while facing 23 shots. The last
time the Rangers went through a
month unbeaten in a sesson was
1939-40, when they won the Stanley
Cup.
Allan Bester made 22 saves for
the Stars, 3-1-1 in their !sst five
home games a{ter going 1-6-2 in
their previous nine.
Blackbawb 4, OUen 0
Ed Belfour stopped 35 shots for
his first shutout of the Season and
29th of his career as Chicago start- .
ed a six-game road trip with a victory over the Oilers.
The Blackhawks, who have lost
just one of their last nine road
games, scored three times in a span
of 74 S«onds late in the second peri,pd. Jim Cummins, Bemic Nicholls,
Eric Daze and Brent Sutter were the
goal scorers as Chicago extended its
record in its last 21 gam~ to JS-33.
Wbalers 6, KiDp 4
_ Jeff O'Neill scored the go-ahead
goal in ti!C S«&lt;Dd period and Brendan Shanahan added two power-play
goals and an I!SSist in his 600th NHL
game as visiting Hartford defeated
Los Angeles.
Geoff Sa.....son scored two
third-period goals and Nelson Emerson had three ·assists ·for Hartford.
Sean Burke stopped 30·shO!S in his
20th consecutive start for the
Whalen, two short of Greg Millen's
club-record 2Z straight atans.
Wayne Grctity had three assists
for the Kings.

MIPtv Dackll
Awelaw:he 1

'

Ia Anaheim, Gu)' Hebert outdueled P*trick Roy with 39 saves and
Paulbiyahadato,al·udaillllist
as tho MiJhty DuckS·beat ~lorado.
David Karpa slllpped a scorelcu
lie 11:17:44 of the ieCond period with
his first career shorthanded goal,
hlllpina the Dtx:ks win for the third
time in five a- and second time .

The Ohio Athletic Conference
hands.
The Blue Streaks (10-3 in conference play) extended their lead to
two games over Capital and Ohio
Northern (both 8-S) by defeating
Mount Union 61-S8 Wednesday
night while Capital lost 78-63 at
Ohio Northern. Five games remain
in the conference season.
John Cartoll lrliled the Pu!ple
Raiden 49-40 with 8:13 remaining,
but scored 21 of the final 30 points
to gain the victory.
J.R. Richanlson scored 21 poin~
for John Carroll.while Neal Richards
led Mount Union with 14.
Ohio Northern scored the !sst 13
points o'fthe first half and the f1rst 14
of the seeon'd'half against Capital.
Ben Russell's 19 points pliced the
Polar Be.s and Thny Joseph was the

Crusaders' top scorer with 14.
,
Elsewhere in the OAC. Baldwin-:
Wallace downed Hiram 83-67 ..
Muskingum edged Marietta 52·50:
and Otterbein squeezed past Heidelberg 71-69.
Xavier (9-8) beat St. Joseph's 84- ·
71 in the Atlantic I0 Conference
with the Musketeers' Lenny BroW.:
scoring 18 points. Xavier held the;
Ha~ks without a field goal for a;
penod of 10:20 in the second half. :
Ohio handed Eastern Michigan its ·
first Mid-American Confere~c
.defeat or the season, winning 82-73, '
but the Eagles remain two games in '
. front of the rest of the league .in the ·
standings.
' Central State blasted Indiana T«h
· 87-68 and Wilmington outscored ·
·Ohio Wesleyan 74-66 in non-con- •
• ference games.

'

..;,

..

~

,.,,.._

..

Homes 'To Fit Your tifestyle

Ann .
La d
n ers

t.oo.._

Dear Ann Landers: Although I
am an avid fan, I have never felt
compelled to write you until now.
I hope it's not too late to reply to
the letter from "Fraidy Cat" about
the S·foot iguana she found in her
sister-in-law's bathtub.
I agree with you about the
unjustness of allowing these animats to be sold as novelty toys t(l
uneducated people. "Fraidy Cat"
unfairly assumed that she was in

danger. Furthermore, the sister-inlaw _should be ashamed for sentencmg an ~nlmal ~at ne.eds
~annth adnd laves attenllon to ISO.
allOn an a c?ld bathtub. ,
I would never have c.ons1dered
an Iguana f&lt;l!"•. a pet un_ul my son
brough! home, a youngtguana that
was ~mg ~sed by Its owner. I
~c;;!~lty on '1! B?d soon became so
ed 10 tbjs 1g~ana that I would
never part w!ih..him...
Not only ts' lg~y playful and
~f~ct~onhatei . ';: ·is bn~:tp6::;
ame • as 8 .
hu e
•
1oves macaront . . c eese, ~m~s
when you ca~~ h!m, sleeps wtlh !'is .

::.J

0:'cJ~ ~~a~~~~~~a:~C:!ng

P 1P~
'th hi
. H alps
us aug ng ';;1 s. anucs. e so
has become,.an a~ld camper and

now has the run ~f ~ moto,r home
as well as our pnnc1pal res1dence.
We would never part with our
pel B?d have p~epared. for the.ti~e
he Will re~h lus.full s1ze, which 1s
6feet. While he 1s free to roam the
house, we .have purchased a
playpen for his,safety when we are
not home.
Iguanas are not slimy creatures,
as some people beheve, but are
actually dry-skinned and extreme·
ly clean..They J!I'C great ~ompan·1ons when treated right, and I urge
all iguana owners to become educatcd about. their pets. 1 am proud
to own and love our Jggy, and if
people are afraid to ~orne into my
home because lggy IS here, I ~e
them to, stay home .•• Proud and
Educated Iguana Owner, Kelso,

· Wash.
Dear Kelso: That's quite a teslimonial, but I'd still rather have a
cat.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm a 32·
year-old male. 1grew up in a small
midwestern town and had a rough
lime of it (both my parents were
alcoholics). 1 left home at age 16;
knocked around for a year and then
joined the Navy.
Back then, 1 thought tattoos
were cool and went for them in a
big way. I mean huge. I have Dowers, .hearts, initials of women I
can't even remember and a snake
that goes all the way up my arm.
I have settled down and am
going with a terrific woman. I'm
ashamed of the tattoos. She didn't
criticize me but brought up the sub-

.Scholarship ,-----Rutland unior fire
program
announced

~ yet to play this se150n because of

race is now solidly in John Carroll's

~

By ANN LANDERS

Ohio State iook the lead for good
Ohio Stste bad five f~eld goals
and four 3.5-second violations, yet at 27-23 on Yudt's short jumper in
the lane at the IS:S6111111it. Ahead 33~
orily trailed 21-18.
The Buckeyes hit three of their 31 with 12: II left, Ohio Stste held
fust four shots from the field while Minnesota scoreless for the next 4:27
taking a 9-0 le8d, then procccdcd to - yet only added five points to its
miss all but one of the next 14, ·
margin.
W'15eonsin shot 38 percent from
· Neshaun Coleman's three-point·
the field and bad 10 turnovers, while er with 2:43 left stretched Ohio
Ohio State mustered 27.8 percent State's lead to 47-41. After Jermaine
and also threw the ball away I 0 Tate blocked a shot by Okey under:
times.
neath, Stringer hit a short shot off the
It got so bad that Ohio State left break for a 49-41 lead with '2: 18
the court to a chorus of boos at the, remaining to put the game away.

John Carroll puts lock
on first place in OAC

.

·

"tits,

-

five of six free throws in the final
a knee injury.
I :17 as Utah withstood a wild rally
• Cavallen 81, Btacb 71
by the 'Iiail Blazers. Portland's ClifAt Oeveland, Terrell Brandon ford Robinson was fouled on a
had 23 points, nine assists, ~ight three-point attempt with .5.2 seconds
rebounds and a career-high five left, but he missed the first two of his
blocks as the Cavaliers handed Mil- three free throws and Stockton
waukee its fourth straight loss. Bran- clinched the victory by making two
don's perflll'lllliJI(:e came oae day free throws with 4. 7 seconds remainafter he made his ftrst All.Star team. ing. Utah led 86-63 early in the
The.Bucks matched their season low fourth quarter before Clifford Robinfor points and shot just 3.5 percent son and James Robinson, who got in
frofu the field against Cleveland, a scuffle aftcrThesday's practice, led
which ~ won its last eight meetings the ~omeback. Clifford Robinson
w1th Milwaukee. Glenn Robinson · scored 33 points for Portland, while
scored 21 paints for the Bucks.
Karl Malone had 28 for Utah.
Cellla 131, Grlzllles 98
Spun 115, Clippen 106
At Boston, Todd Day scored 24
·. At San Antonio, Avery Johnson
points as the Celtics rolled to their scored a season-high 26 points and
most lopsided victory of the season. Vinny Del Negro added 23 for the
Vancouver was coached by assistant Spurs. Pooh Richardson led the Clip- ·
Rex Hughes, who filled in for Brian pers with 24 points, i~~~:luding four
Winters. Winten missed the game three-pointers. David Robinson had.
due to the desth of his mother-in-law.
IS points and 10 rebounds for San'
Bryant Reeves, Byron ~ott and Antori"io. Clippers coach Bill Fitch
Eric Murdock CKh scored 16 points was ejected in the third quarter after·
for the Grizzlies, who lost their third getting two technical fouls for argu-·
straight. Eric Williams scored 17 ing a ~I and slightly bumping an;
points for Boston.
official. The victory was San Anto.
Jazz 98, tnll Blazen 94
nio's second straight after losing four.
At Portland, John Stockton made of five.

.

, _ 5_"""
C......Syndicaoo"

Suns, Cavs, Jazz &amp; Spurs among victors

Ohio Unlvenlltlf'• Burl Fakhlr (33) and
Eastern Michigan'• Derrick Dial bailie above the rim for the
rebounddurlngWednesdllynlght'sMACgamelnAthens,wherethe
.Bolic:lltl won 82-73. (AP)

The Daily Sentinel• Page 7

Pet iguana sho9ld .not be sentenced to isolation, cold bathtub

In the NBA,

RE80U~ BATTLE -

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio State hands Wisconsin 63·55 loss

'

.

..

•

Six!)'-two scholarships t~, attend
one of Ohio's proprietary schools
or colleges ~ available, Senator
• Jan Michael Long (D-Circleville)
: announced today.
He said that the scholarships for
full-tuition with the students only
being required to pay for books and
a small registration-fee, are pro•
vided by the Ohio Council of Pri:
vate Colleges and Schools through
the cooperation of Ohio's business
and trade schools.
· · Students from the high school
- class of 1996 may &lt;;.ontact Serl.
Long at 614-466-8156 and /or
their high -school• counselor for
more details concerning these
' scholarships. ·
·
Senator Long indicates this is a
real opJl(imlnity for 1996 graduates
. to participate in post secondary
· education at little or no cost. The
primary objective of these scholarships is to provide individuals for
a job in one of Ohio's businesses or
im!ustries.

.-·11

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Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777
W. Century Blvd., Suite 700,
Los Angeles, Calif. 90045

BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Greg and Michelle Wilson Link
of Tiffin, announce the birth of a
son, Bradley Scott on Jan. 24.
The infant weighed seven
pounds, 14 ounces and was 18
inches long.
Grandparents are Gail and Dennis Eichinger of Reedsville and
Bernard and Dorothy Link of Tiffin. Opal Eichinger of Chester is .a
great-grandmother.

bachelor ·of arts; Teresa
Chenoweth, bachelor of arts;
Racine: JQhn Hoback, bachelor.of
business administration; and James
Lemley, bachelor of science in education.
BIG BEND SAMS
Bob aild Susie Turner hosted the
January meeting of Big Bend Sams
at Dale's Smorgasbord in Gallipolis.
Members discussed crafts for
the ditty bags for the spring jamboree in May and also the possibility of joining the "adopt a high·
way" program . A seloction of an
area will be decided at the ne*t
meeting.
'
For information on Big Bend
Sams residents may call Don and·
Lee Young, 304-0882-2373 or the
Turners, 614-245-5559.

EARN DEGREES
Four Meigs County students
were among the 534 students from
the Athens campus who were candidates for degree's at the end of fall
quaner.
They were: Brandy Ritchie,

---News policy--_...;.,
'

residents of
area will
now ha)l'e the services of more numbers In fire
protection efforts, with the recent organization
of the Rutland Junior Voluntller Fire Department. "unlor firemen lnc;Jucle: first row 1e

George Mil~, WIIU' Ward, Jr., Jesse Ward, and
Jacob Davl.s . Second row 2 left, James Spangler, S~annon Smith, John Morris, and preeldent Dave Stllttl.

In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the event.
· All club meetings and other news

anicles in the society section must be
submitted within 30 days of occ urrence. All birthdays must be submitted within 42 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editin g.

Groundhogs cointribute more to world of medicine than meteorology
&amp;If MARY ESCH
Aaoclated Pre•• Writer
ITHACA, N.Y. (AP) - While
Punxsutawney ~il h~gs the glory,
300 groundi)ogs'llere are"re~ealing
far more about liver disease than he'll
ever tell aboui the weather.

Groundhogs, also known as
happen to be the ideal
lab anim;js for the study of hepatitis
and liver .fancer, Cornell !Jniv'&lt;I'Si!Y
breeds tliem for use in trials of antiviral drug~. and improved va~cines.
To pubhc1ze the work, umve1;5ity

officials planned ·a Groundhog Day
forecasting face-off Friday morning
between a meteorologist and a chub~y r~_«m~ name«J Shll!\&gt;w, wJ:!QSC real
Job ts to produce bpby woodchucks.
"We're not supposed to make pets
of them," said technician Joby

woodchu~ ks,

Crispell, cuddling docile Shadow
during a tour of Cornell's off-campus
woodchuck housing this week. " We
all 'have our favorites, though. "
Observers alSo will be watching
Punxsutawney Phil in western Pennsylvania on Friday. Legend says if the

groundhog sees his shadow, winter and marmots, are suscepti blc to
will last another six weeks and if he hepatitis and liver cancer.
doesn't, spring is right around the
The ·woodchuck hepatitis virus is
comer.
very similar to human hepatiti s B and
Researchers at the Philadelphia has a vinually identical effect on the
Zoo first discovered that wood- liver, said ve terinarian Bud C. Tenchucks, relatives of ground squirrels nant, who heads the Cornell project.

Alzheimer's aluminum ·scare is over these days
ASK ANNE. NAN

Blf ANNEa. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I've
~n using aluminum foil and the aluminum pans to bake and cook in my
toaster ovep and reg\llir range oven.
Now I hear that it 'is dangerous .as aluminum is considered unhealthy and
can lead to Alzheimer 's disease. Is
there any substance to that "rumor"?
-- A. BERNATH, Des Plaines, Ill.
· DEAR A.: About 20 years ago,
aluminum came to the forefront as a
possible cause of AD (Alzheimer's
disease) when researchers found what
they believed to be significant
amounts of aluminum in the brains of
AD patients. Recommendations were

made to avbid aluminum in the diet
and avoid alumin~rn products for
cooking and storing food.
In the intervening years and after .
extensive, !Contwlled research, aluminum has &gt;been ruled out as having
any causal effect in the development ·
of AD: In normal, healthy individuals there arecexcellent barriers against '
aluminum entering the body. Physi- ·
ologically,' · aluminum is. poorly
absorbed and usually excreted quickly.
.
The fact fs that humans are. constantly·expo$cd to aluminum, which
is the third most abundant element on
eanh and is ubiquitous in food, water
and air. Batqng powder, toothpaste,
anti-perspinuns, cooking utensils,
aluminum be~l}lge cans and antacids
which contain aluminum salts are
also potential sources of aluminum
expo~ure.

'

At a symposium held by the International Life Sciences Institute that
brought togC!~er many prominent
r.esearchers on AD, the consensus
was that the U!e Of these products did
NOT increase oae's chances of developing AD. Re~ arch is now concen-

trating on rislc factors such as genetic predisposition, environmental toxins and viral causes.
If you are still concerned about
your uses of aluminum in cooking or
if you want to learn more about AD,
you can contact the Alzheimer's
Association, 919 North Michigan
Ave., Suite 1000, Chicago, IL60611
( 1•800-272-3900) or.theAizheimer's
Disease Education and Referral Center, P.O. Box 82SO, Silver Spring,
MD 20907-82.50 ( 1-800-438-4380).
STUMPED: C.L. Evans of
Lanaea, Ark., is looking for a recipe
for chocolate cookies that her husband has asked h4:r to make. She
writes: "His mother made them with
corn Oakes or Post Toasties. I asked
his mother and all she could rcmem.ber was that the recipe was on the
cereal box. He said he dido 't have to
wait for ~m to bake, but only that
it was like melted Hershey bars
poured over the Oakes. I spoke with
Kellogg's and Post cereals and neither company remembered anything
about them. CAN ANYONE

HELP?"

We looked in our copy of Ceil

Dyer's "Best Recipes from the Backs
ofBoxes, Bottles, Cans ljlld Jars" and
couldn't find anything that fits C.L. 's
description. We hope thai one of our
readers has the recipe tucked away
somewhere.
A FUNNY UTILE - STORY:
Irene. Hazen of Ponca City, Okla.,
recently sent us a letter full of hints
and ideas and closed with this story.
"When my son was very young he
saw a mail car driving down the street
and asked, 'What kind of a car is
that? ' When I told him it was a mail
car he quickly asked, 'What side is
the steering wheel on in ·a fema]e
car?~~~

Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" a1
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to tbe volume of mail, personal replies cannot
be provided.
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co-authors of
"Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetslone) and
"Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize
Problem-Solvers Share Their
Secrets" (Bantam). To order, call 1800-888-1220.

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ing with their legs and not their
backs. This is a must. Otherwise, ,
they can very easily rupture a disc .
in the IC)wer back, which requires
s~ery and can end their lifting tor
good.
I had to learn the hard way. -World War II Vet in Boise
Dear Vet in Boise: I don 't go in
foi much heavy lifting, but you can
be sure I will remember your
advice , should the occasion arise.
.P.S. I' II bet millions of my readers
will, too. Thanks on behalf of all of
us.

-Society scrapbook-

Some women on fa'st track feel derailed by menopause
AFew Of Our Home Slandard Features

ject that they CAN be removed if
I ever felt that I wanted to get rid
of them.
Well, I do, Ann, but I don 't
know where to go or what is
involved. Can you help me? -Buzzie in Brooklyn
Dear Buzzie : According to Dr.
Robert Gotkin in Long Island. the
best method for removing a tattoo
1s laser surgery. The procedure 1s
time-consuming and costly but
worth it. See a dermatologist or a
~tic surgeon who is experienced
in this area.
Dear Ann Landers: Please
inform your readers that whenever they lift anything heavy from the
Door, they should be sure their
knees are hent and their legs are
close together. They should be lift-

&amp;If SHARON L. PETERS
Allen, gynecologist and attending
Special fot USA TODAY
physician at New York Hospital-Cor. Middle-aged career women might nell Medical Center.
nave been expecting hot Dashes. ·
S~san Mang\-um, healthy, robust
Faulty memory, lack of concen- and high-energf, was pe!plexed when
tration, sev~re energy dips, sleep- she was heset w.ith an assortment of
lessness and headaches weren 't on symptoms four years ago.
lheir agendas. And the surprising
She would sometimes be
arrival of such symptoms - identi- wrenched from 'sleep, edgy and anxfied only in recent years as common ious, for no cl~ar reason. She lost
signs of the approach of menopause interest in sex. She couldn't remem- has been wreaking havoc with ber things, significant things somemany high-powered women .
times ..-Her concentration seemed
As baby.boomers r~ach this stage jagged.
,.
in unpreced~nted numhers - AmerThe symptoms ·intensified over the
iCilll Demogmphics projects about 19 . next several mowhs, carrying trounullion women will be in the prime ·bling implicatioQ, not only for 'he.r'
m~nopause age span of 4S to 54.jn, ~sonallife - t\ch with. a still-new
2000 - many are unprepared for and marriage and thet JICitement of con.
stnictipg an imptessive home atop
mystified by the experience. · · '
Doctors are seeing many women Cincinnati's trendy·MountAdams complaining about memory loss, ' but also fot her professional life.
energy lapses, forgetfulness or lac:Jl,of , A corporate trainer whose clients
focus. Worried that this is how they'll ' are a Who 's Who of high-profile
spend the rest of their lives, some- Midwest companfes, she depended
particularly those in high-visibility on razor-sharp focus and split-second
business
- are rethinking· reasoning. Both s&amp;:med in jeopardy.
for fear.of spiralin¥ into .'
" A.t so111e point I began to fear
·
· ,. " ·•·
f '
I kilew; thllt.in
aniirv" is
lime "would
be able

to think on my feet," said Mangrum,
now 50. Medical consultations
offered no answers.
"I wondered if I would have to
quit doing what I do for a living," she
said.
Hers were common symptoms
brought on by the gradual decline in
estrogen and progesterone prior to
reaching menopause. But like many
women she had trouble finding that
explanation.
. "They blame the business, blame
the marriage, change the place they
live," said Lila Nachtigall, director of
the Woman's Wellness Division at
"New · ·York University Medical
SchOol.
·
·
"They blame everything but '
menopause. Or they come in thinking
they have some dread disease, a brain
tumor. Once we make the diagnosis,
even if they are not treated (with hormonos}, they can get on with life.
.Theyunderstandthisisn'tsomething
awful, it is natural, and they are bet·
terequipped to deal with their symptoms.''
Understanding· and comins to
terms with menopause is especially

because there is anecdotal evidence
they may be prone to a somewhat ·
more difficult menopause, some
experts say.
"Women who are really under the
gun already, with lives filled with
appointments of a personal and pro·
fessional nature, can be more likely
to be more sensiiive to menopausal
symptoms, " Allen said.
But that is not to say boomer
career women should automatically
anticipate the worst. There are two
equally important counter-balancing
facts:
- EliCh woman's menopause
experielli:C is different, and not everyone has a terrible lime with the symptoms. "The vast majority of women
don't have all the symptoms, a few
have practically none, and most have
a modest experience with some of the
symptoms," Allen said. Indeed, 90
percent of women function well.
- S«ond, the symptoms don't
last forever. Most or all diminish or
· disappear over time, many can be
. reduced with certain lifestyle changes
. such as exetcise or diet modification,
and most or all decrease or·disappear
importanrfor-boomer~fast-tncken-immediatelv
·
·~

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lowed for seven months. By chat
By DANIEL Q. MANEY
time, 13 percent of the patients get'
· AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - An ling ritonavir had died or gone on to
experimental medicine in a powerful develop new AIDS-related illnesses:
new class of AIDS drugs can prolong compared with 27 percent in the' com·
life and reduce complications in peo- parison group.
ple in advanced stages of lhe disease,
The deach rate was 4.8 percent in
researchers said today.
che ritonavir patients and 8.4 percent
The drug, called ritonavir, cut the in the comparison grqup.
death rate in half when given over a
·showing an actual benefit on disseven-month period.
ease progression 1111d survival "is a
'This medicine· is another in a fust among druss in this class," said
group of compounds called_protease Dr. Andre Pemot of Abbott.
inhibitors. On Monday, researchers
The company has applied to lhe
presented promising data about a U.S. Food and Drug Adminittralion
competing brand called indinavir.
for approval to sell ritonavir. Until
The findings on ritonavir are espe- then, it is makin'g the drus available
cially noteworthy, because chey are to 2,000 AIDS patients worldwide in
the · first to show that protease a lottery.
·
irthjbitors actually make people live
The most common side effects of
longer.
'
Abbott Laboratories, which makes che drug were dillllhea, nausea, vomritonavir, released the findings today iting, fatigue and a tingling sensslion
at the annual Conference on Retro- around the mouth.
Earlier, researchers showed that
viruses and Opportunistic Infections.
In their study, overseen by doctors Merck &amp; Co.'s indinavir cOuld elimat the Universily of Ottawa, either inate all measurable traces of the
ritonavir OF dummy pills were ran- viruses in 90 percent of patients for
domly given to I ,090 AIDS patients at least six months when combined
ai 67 hospitals in the I,Jnited States, with two other AIDS medicines,
Canada, Europe and Australia. All of AXfand3TC.
The ftrst protease inhibitor to
the patients had ominously low levels of helper T cells, che main target reach the market was saquinqavir, a
of the AIDS virus in the bloodstream. Hoffman-LaRoche drug approved by
ThC patients continued to receive che FDA last month. Experts believe
whatever AIDS drugs they had that indinavir and ritonavir are coil·
already been taking and were rot- sidersbly more powerful.

I !

de~ted.

14 billion light years away.
. The discovery of the stillunniiiJ!.ed system pushes back the earliest known lime of galaxy birth to
Within a billion years of the Big Bang
thousht to•have formed the universe
IS billion years ago.

An extrt:mely faint galaxy near the
constellation Virgo, the system may
offer clues to the formation of the
Milky Way, which contains our solar
system.
Astronomers at the California
Institute of Technology said the

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

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a~~~~i· ~~peii!CC~·~dea~.lov~~·~

"H~

after . the producers guaranteed
Urquhart would make a grand exit.
One w,ay or another.
· Richardson 's .,legant portrayal
gained widespread recognition for the
classically trained actor and won
Briiain 'stop aeling honor, But he and
his wife, the former actress Maroussia Frank, had to live wich the snake.
"He was always a very difficult
one to shed and get back to normality. After each of the three (series) I
left within 24 hours for the south of
France, where we have a house.
"For about a week, each morning
I would wake up with F.U. Then
gradually I looked in my shaving mirror and his face had vanished. It was
just silly old me again. That was
rather nice."
Rather nice seems to sum up
Richardson himself, visilins Southern
California to promote "The Final
Cut." He shows a courdy politeness
to a reporter, searching out a hotel
tobby's'quietest corner to chat
The acting bug,' it turns out, didn't fmd him ll the cheater. It bit while
the ywng Richardson watched Sat-

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yure ego, Soren wes pert of what eome 11w
11 a novelty act Thle year, ae lhe leads MTV
New• Into coverage of Its seco~ praslllentlel
Cllllpelgn, 8ha Ia pert of the inedl mainstream.
(AP Photo)

Correspondent Tabitha Soren .is·
back on MTV's campaign trail

·

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By FRAZIER MOORE
block. " 'sayt So~n. in her office· in watch much 1V.
AP Tallvlalon Writer
the Times Square headquarters of
And what ofSoren's given name?
. NEW YORK (AP) - Four years corporate pa.rent Viacom.
Despite lhe fact that the daughter
ago, Tabitha Soren was part of what
'"WJtarl'm looking for in terms of of Darrin and Samantha was "born "
some saw as a novelty act.
the election IJtis lime is ~t we don't on "Bewitched" little more chan a
This year, as she leads MTV have toexplail! why we're there," she year before the MlV correspondent. News into coverage of its second says. "That'll allow me to redirect a to-be, "my mom," says Soren, "told
. . presidential race, she is part of the lot of my energy into reporting."
me she got the name out of the
: · media mainstream.
As Soren continues, she is by Bible."
:
Welcomed by Soren aboard turns prideful and self-effacing.
At MlV, Soren has similarly
. MlV's funky "Choose or Lose" bus "Hopefully, .the coverage will be played against expectations.
•: last week, Sen. Bob Dole clearly even better thati last time," she says
While her fingernails may somesensed this wasn't exactly NBC's · "and I'll know a little bitabout what times tum up painted purple, she
"Meetthe Press" he had gotten him· I'm talking about this time."
stops short of the hipper-chan-thou
.self into.
Viewers will set another look at look sported by many of her netThe 72-year-old Majority leader the campaign, MTV News-slyle, on · wor!c's fellow on-air personaliti~. At
came across as a moralizing fuss- the next edition of the network's the same time, she stands in sharp
· budget i~ the company of Soren. As "The Week in Rock" news wrapup. contt:asi to the glamour grotesques at
the New Hampshire scenery sped by, While it usually deals with a variely . ocher network news shops.
Dole looked less like someone who ofitems thls week's half.hour will be
"I think l act differently than a lot
lhought he was being interviewed' completely given over to "1996 of reporters," Soren says. "When I
· .chan kidnapped. By his own free will, Choose or I,.ose" coverage, inciJldins interview someone, it's more casual
'the presidential hopeful chose to an interview wich Republican presi- and there's not a lot of posturing. l
take that ride.
·
denlial candidate Sieve Forbes.
ask ' different questions, they are
Dole and all politicians remember
''The Week. in Rock" ~mi~ ·cauafJt off guard, and they seem more
the lesson of President Bush. who " Fri4ay at 7:30p.m. EST, with subse- human because they have to chink of .
noted· that be was no looser a "tee· quent repeats. Soren co-hosts with an answer on the spot."
· ny-bopper" and hence had no -busi- Kurt Loder.
·
When interviewed in the Oval
ness on MlV. He chansed his mind
Tabitha Soren came to MTV Office last summer, President Ointon
only days before the election he News five years ago from a television seemed thrown off his rhylhm by
. would lose to MTV veteran Bill Oin- station in Vermont, where she Soren's easy-goins questions about
· 'ton. ·.
anchored the II o'.clock news and aborlitin rights and his anti-smoking
l.ltis year, candidates and the 16- served as Statehouse correspondent campaign;
to-:30-year-old audience alike ·con- lllld her own film crew. .
While Soren vows to stay in
aider MTV Jill!'' of the ~5. . · .. She had groWJI up a military brat "hard news," maybe the lime will
','Politicians, because they notic:e ' who moved hquendy, developed ·an come when that won't include quesus Jettinll noticed, are now tiutkina i~ in fOieip lfflin early on lions posed to-pRSidents about the
an effort to appeil to this voter and, perhaps surprisinaty, didn't Gnteful Dead.
;
·
·:
·

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MTV CAMPAIGN COVERAGE • Republican
presldlintl41 ~~San. Bpb Poll, R·~•·
tllka with 'nlblthii'.Sorl!l aboard MTV'I fll!!kY
"Choo11 or· LOH" 'IIUa blfore hie taped lfil,wr·
vllw with her In Hanover, N.H., Jan. 20. FOur

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Houn Repolr &amp;

-NewO•rllll"
•Eiectrlc1l &amp; Plumbing
•Roonng
·

Pick-Up dllclrdecl
Wllherl, dryers, hot

-,,,., •.
,•••,, .,.,.

in a hurry... TRY

•Room AddHlon1

Are Yo• Ready
For Love?

malal inaterlals
Call 992-4025 ·
betwean 8 am-8 pm
Mon. thru Sat.

,

.

The Dally Sentinel• P....- 9

NEFF REMODEliNG
SERVICE

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

FREE

·water tanka, .ltoves,
fumace~, and Nny

EveJY0118 Welcome.

The last of Urquhart:: Clever PBS
:political saga comes _to end
· By LYNN ELBER
er their retirement nest.
. AP Televlalon WriW
All this while neatly mixing a
, . PASADEI!fA, Calif. (AP)- Cut, diplomat's dignity and a mobster's
the-director called, bringins an end to morals.
the last scene in lhe last chapter. of
Richardson sums up the character
Francis Urquhart, British politician as "an absolute monster, a murderous
·and public menace exlraOrdinaire.
man."
. · .. "I.Iooked up arid leiJI1I were pourAs Urquhart totters at the top, on
. _ing down my dresser's face," · scaffolding constructed of more than
· ·recounts actor Ian Richardson. "I· one corpse, he draws us in with
·said, 'What's the matter Wich you?' " heguilins confidences aimed direct. "It's so sad. F.U. is gone," wailed ty at the aUdience, his co-conspirator.
.the assistant.
"How do you feel about me now?
·Good riddance, says Richardsqn. Like- a fon:e of nature, perhaps," he.
;.who broupt Urquhart to ~arrni!lg , muses at one point. "I've been here
. : life iii the R~S "Masterpiece The- so l.ons now that, love me or hate me..
'' t-t);'~" drama "HoUse of~" and its 'it's hard for you ,to imagine anyone
.,,. ·~uel "To Play.the_Killg.".
else in my place. Isn't it?"
: f• l'The Fina,t . Cut" (wntten by
Previous behavior,.such as tossing
., . AildrCw Davies and airing 9· fl p.m. ·an· irksome young journalist off a
·:: 18sT Sunday and Monday) is ~me rooftop; was somewhat off-putting.
~lie~'. Urqu~·· oWn ve... ion of a There is ahyPnotic allure when evil
;t{ixoitian "Fihif Days." The past is · is witty, impeccably well-mannered
cluthing up, and fast,
and even has ·• twinkle in its eye.
. { He's. fending off challenges that
On reflection, Richardson says,
Could'QUit him before lie has broken Urquhart had ltjs good points. ..
.Mlii'Jint'lblilcb•'s record of II 1/2
"It seems strange to say this but
Oftiice .. He it sc;heming to he was a p t Brilisher, a patriot, a
in biatory by bro- PI believer in Bri~n," the actor

.. -.....

----

::::Astronomers say they've found most distant galaxy
. By JANE E. ALLEN
'/llP Science Writer
. LOS ANGELES (AP)- In a dis·
· covery that sheds light on the
·"timetable or bow galuies were
formed, astronomers say they've
· · found the most distant galaxy ever

. .. "'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALL YOU CAN EAT $3.00

t

""'

. ..

;!1111111111111111 111111 1111 1111111111 111111111111111111111111!:

New AIDS drug shovvn
to prolong life, r~duce.
complications

'JWenly slUdents from Rudand
and Salem Center Elementary and
Meias High Schools attended the
recent National Energy Educ&amp;tion
Development (NEED) leaqership
ttainin&amp; workshop held at Ohio
Universily.
.A'M'ENDS WORKSHOP - T ' - flftlt end
From the~ they are front, Alllaon Wllllamton,
The workshop dealt wich enerebdh
llll'llde Rulllnd ltUdeta or Danna Jlnldna ...,.nl Priddy, Mallory King, and Mell111 Cre- ·
. gy 1111d envirorunent and che local
Plrtlclpmct In the NCen1 IMderlhlp tnlnlng IIMIIIna, fltth g...,_; and ·back, Amber Ellla,
: :-:sponsor was American Electric
worklhOp
of the Ohio Nltlollll
EducaAaron B B-.ock, Mell111 Richmond, and
. · Power.
tion De~ held It . Ohio
Klr8
MUIMr, elxth g111der1.
: : : Thachers Donna Jenkins, Sandy
· : ·Walker, Rim Curfinan, and Rick
: : :Edwards participiled in che pro: · ;gnm which was IIUide possible, in
: : ,part, throuSb a Brant from the Ohio
· : ·Environmental Education Fund
: · :and the Ohio Oil and Gas ASsoci·
: · :ation.
.
; : : · Emphasis of the workshop was
· : -on the energy cycle wtch students
: · :pedalins their way lhrough a vari·
• : 'ely of demonstrations to produce
-electricity to light bulbs, ruri fariii;
and actually experience a BTIJ
.(British Thermal Unit) fust hand.
Students toOk the roles of reologists, miners, and economic advisors as they trllded their energy,
. industry and technology in a glob. al trading saine. The culminatins
event ·of the workshop was an Coer·
LEARNS ABOUT ENERGY- T'-ltudltnta
(Walker), Jllllll ThOinle, J: P. Varian, Kryatal
gy carnival where students used
of Tim Cul'fiMn and Sandy Walker from Salem
Pennington, end Jeaelce Cundtn, end beck, Kfi.
cheir energy, math, and language
Cenar llltended the l;)hlo National Ellll'gy
ty Johneton, Megan Hlllfner, Bobby Stacy and
skills to win prizes.
·
Educlltlon Devalopment program held I'IICentAehley CQiwell (Curfman).
All of the activities used
. ly It Ohio Unlvlfllty, Lett to right, tilly ere
. lhroughout che day were geared to
'
. . motivate students to learn cooper. . · atively using their creative thinking
and leadership skills. The. workshop was designed to educate and
motivate both students and teachers on how to plan and conduct
energy and environmental activi. .. lies for their school, putting stu· .
' dents in charge of teaching fellow
classmates.
.
Ohio NEED was awarded as
one of che 1995 "Ohio's BEST
Practice's" in education. Ohio's
BEST is a statewide !J}Iiance dedicated to improving educational
• opportunities. Much of this recog,
nition is due to the propams educational philosophy of "lcjds teach. ins kids." Approximately 2,400
students and 600 teachers will
PARTICIPATES IN WORKSHOP - Rick
emong the MelgeltUdenta IMrned about -rattend a NEED workshop d,uring
·
Edwlrda'
etudentl,
Jeaalcll
Priddy,
J.
R.
RHe,
gy and the environment It the NEED program
the 199S-96 school year. Ohio is
,
held at Ohio Unlvll'lllty.
•
'
. Jonlttuln Wyatt, and David Bonomtey were
. one of 28 states participatins in the
· , ~Project and has grown to be
are available free of charge to
Funding for workshops, eduOffice of Energy Efficiency to
: the largest program nationwide
teachers and students in l!flll)es K
calioo!ll materials and other events
operate the program statewide and
: with a membership of 1,000
lhrough 12. For mnre information,
is provided bY 2S private compa·- w&amp;S .awarded a grant .from .The
· : ' schools.
·
Ohio. NEED can be reached in
nies located throughout tbC state.
.
Since 1984, Ohio NEED has
~jncinnati Gas &amp; Electric CompaColumbus at (614) 785-1717.
ny to open its Cincinnati ·office.
Ohio NEED materials and training
: • received a· grant from the Ohio

'

Thunlday, Febru•ry 1, 1996

,

lr 'SL HCJil Ce

Ar1yLH
Any Or .\/er

DUI &amp; SF1 22
· [ li:-,COU fli S ·"

cu .. q•ult:r Ouulr'S
'() ).)1 ljil?

7040

fJ , lll1PIO~i

111160
I•IB•I•~rlca•

, ......... 602
EVERY SUIDIY
Daan Dpfl at 4:30 , ....
Lucky Ball $200.00 and
Ralsaa $50.00 uch
wk. Pay according to
the numblr of plsyara.
Keep ad for FREE card

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE

HOME
Opening• for 2.
Chrlattan
ltmoaphlre for
elderly care In s
non-amoklng home.

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
. Top Soil, Fill Dir.l

614-992-3470

992·2825
ANNOUNCEMENTS

1/31/lfn

IlDDEII SINiflftON
POMEROY, OHIO

.

Trash Removal - Cornmerclal or Residential
Septic Tanka Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dally, wee~ly &amp; monthly rental rates.

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Llmeatona, Sand, Grjlvel, Coal &amp; Water

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

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

005

Personals

Reduce safe and last with GoSese Tablets and E-Vap diuretic.
AvaUabkt Fruttl Phl!lrmac~. Mid·
·
dieporl.

30 Annl!uncements
Fortunes will be made ·new MlU
atop smoking, al bol8nical, doctor
recommended, 100% guaranteed,

, -800-870-5987.

40

Giveaway

2 Tropical Fish (1) 10 Inch Paco
(1) 1 t lnc: h Channel Cat. Yeu·11
Need Adoas&lt; 55 Gallon Tank, Call
30• ·675· 5227 Aller 5 P.M. n11 9

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - PM.
'
· 3 Terrier miX puppies. Blacktwtlite,
"Supplic• for all your pel 11eedo"
·Q
long ha~red . Black wlllqppy ea rs.,

\·r:'
&amp;;;,~
,''/1!.1

pot belly. Bla·ck Wlcurly ears~ All

Opening Feb. lst '111~1:1!1.~...

• "'""271,_,
I'MIII Pel ..,.
North 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH. 45760
AKC Reg. Puppies, Kittens, Birds &amp; More
3 Experienced Groomers - Financing Available
B. Jolene Rupe/Ownar

(614) 992-6244

appro~~: . 4mos old , to good home

only. 304-675-4650.

5 Free Puppie s, Ready For
Homes By 219.-96, 61~·379-2645.
Australian Shephard, male. m!O!d ium ~51bs. goOd w/children, ti mid,
to best home. 304-675-4650.

Beagle. male, 6mo s old, house
pet, good W/Children, well trai ned.

30H75.S50.
Peek -A-Poo dog, prele rably to e lde rly person, g ently, e 14· 9 49 -

2957 at1er ~pm.

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

. Racine, Oh. 45n1

James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
· We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512

STOR•G£
CHEsftD
IU\
R
One Unit Now

... _
A:'
Y
."'
.,.
1Ox28 , SIS per mo.

~:.·~:.::·pe~~7'l~~;~·~"d
Walerbed &amp; olhor l urn llure 1o

Qlw! awar. 01 ..992·7352.

60

Lost and F®nd

Found : Beau tifu l Siame se On

Orchard Hi ll Road La" w eek,
8l4· 25e-1793.
'
Found : small Collie, a....... .

2886 A""' aRM
LOll· ""' of Cllt kovs on flng , Midlieport vicinity, 61 4-742-2056. -

LOST: Fema.le &amp; male tri-colo1-ed
Basseu Hounds . Also female

blat:kltan Bassets mill . Mason
area. 304 · 773·5202 or 304·675·
5581 .

.

Loot laaiaa bllllald, black

•

•·.e·
keep

Pizza HuL A&gt;moroy, viclnl~,
.....rrmlne, ro1u rn impar1an1 po.
1'111, 814-992·5474.

614-992-3200

.........,
MINI STORAGE
882-2996

·ca

~r1

'I

._,Pdcea

Gltllpolla

a. Vlclnlly

.ALL Yard Sales Mull Bo Pilei

'In:

'Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p ..0.'·
lho dar beloroi 111• od Ia "' r~n.
SUnday eillllon • 2:00 p.m. Frldlr.l
_ , eii1111on • 10:00 o.m. Sat·

Uldarl.

�.. .
•

....
'Thursday, Februery 1, 1996

Pomeroy • Mldd~ Ohio

- .

·~

..

-....-.-.

Thul'ldlty, ~ry 1, 1196

Pomeroy • Middleport, OHio

,.

.

BEATI'IE BLVD.~ by Bruee Battle

PomiJOY,

..

.

' A&lt;reage FOf Sale; 7 Mile&amp; From
Holzer, 795 Clark Chapel Road
~ ... Olio.
•

M.V.rd S.loa llull a. Paid In
dVanoo. DM&lt;Iino: 1 :DOpm the
lilt - . l1o od ·;a ., run, Sund!W e&lt;liion- 1:00""' Fridly, llon-

Farm For Sale, 78 Acres, 814·

2511-&amp;18-4,

--1~m. SIIutdoy.

liOYing Solo: Finll Ooy, Furniture,
WO••.,..ro• Lown l Gordon
EqUipment, So1Uiday 213. 10 A.M.
!ot.P.II. 48891 Eost Lotart Road.

'f1LIW1.ato.

.

io .PubliC -

.

SmQM&lt;o,

.

•rvic:e. llcenHd
I Wn1 Virginia, 304·

6, 4-et:Z,3055.

wv..

Adultlamal&lt;i bo• dOg. 304-675:1117~.

....

Antlquoo, colloctabloo. utatn.
· Rlv•n~ ~ntlqueo ; Run l(oore, 110

'11 -·'

tf11n

Laie Model Cara -·or
TrUCk~, t817 ..,odtlo Or ,..,..,,
Smlth'Bulcll Pon~ac. 18oo Eat!·
om llworlio, Golllpolla.

Dopoil~

1GIO International Dump Truck
With I Ft Snow &amp; Sail Bo•
Au1o, PS, V-6, Read1 To Work!
$5,000 Firm 814-387-otl12. ·

MAI'E'S. Mli

'l'Al~~tVoiiS, .

(•o!

FINANCIAl

Help

EEK&amp; 'MEEK

EAST
68 54

•Q 10 7

neg ~75-«153.

•·.

occeptlng
IIPplloa~onl lor 1br. HUD auboldlz":~t. ro·r otdtrly and handlco
EOH 304-67~79.

•A
•A
tS
•A

f9g2 Ford Ranger XLT, 4c:yl., 5
lpd., 111, aluminum rim,, $5500

'

.

.'

19g3 full·aiZe Chevy ·snveri:do, ·
loaded, 38,000mi., uklng
t10,500. 304-8l5-3738..
.

111114 Chevy Silwftldo, 111.01 groon,
dnted windows. am.fm caaaette,

low ml'-. loiUII -

.PP,tciia,ili

Fumlihld

t1a.soo:·814--

NoE•parlance Neceaaaryl

210.

B,AJlNEY ·,

..,

2•
)'

Pass

·f

_Op~rtunlly

Room• for rent · •week or morlth.
Starting ot $120/mo. Gallia Holel.

ssoo

To $900 Weeki~ /Potential 1Pro.

36
86

Sleeping roomi with cooking.
Atao trailer apace on .river. All

Beautr salon located on Union
Avenue for rent, S1!50fmo •• Con-.
tact Donie Turner Realty office,

.

1988
. 4x4,
Sl~do,
loa&lt;!od !Wiopciqns, low Milas, must
sea ·to .apprec:i.ate. 11'2,800. 304·
882-3502.
. \&lt; ~ ' ' '
1988 F'or,d Lorain - cOnversion
Van, Alitematic, PW. Po, Ral~
Roo!, 614-3117-7566.
'

Commercial building for rent in
cente( of down town area, 2500

aq. h.. call614-9112·2•58.

MERCHt.NOISE
Hause In Syracuse, 8 rooms &amp;

ilalh, call614·992-31!80.
Unturnianed two bedroom t'lou~e,
nice and ciMn, deposit required,

no llllldo pam. 614-9112-3090.

All rvalestate IIIIVertlllng In
IIIIo newtip81)8l IS lllb)eCt 10 .
lhe Federal Fair Hauling · Act
1968 - h
ft Illegal
10 aiMtnlae •any plllfe....,.,,
tlmttalon or dlscnminlllon
baed on race, color, religion,
aex familial siii1Uo or national
origin, or any Intention 10
maka any such prale....,.,,
limi1811on or dlacrlmlnallon.•

or

-wl
l
1
--for

lrlorrrted th81all dwel~a .

ad\rortlaed In lhl8 _ , . ,
ara avallabte on an equal
opportuni(V biBIS.

REAL ESTATE

31 o ttpmes for S&amp;le
2 bedroom 1 bath home on 2 lot&amp;
in Syracuse, 24x30 1. 5 story
shop bui lding, $22,500, call Butch

.

rue .. sal o.e. Sun 11·5.

not

Home, Pprter
Utilities Ui'l·

Ro-

Gt~AL.06'Y

e&gt; .E. Wuhor Heavy Du(V $75;
W.stlngl'louae Drl•' $75; Whirlpool Wuher $85; Kinn)oro Dr1or
$75; Whirlpool Rtfrigorator Frost
Free. Whitt $125; Refrigerator
Harvest Gold Froat ·free $126;
Electric: Range 30' Inc:h White
Wao $125 Cut To US; Electric
Ran~• 30 lnc:h Advacoto Green
Wao $150 Cut To 1125; Majtag
Washer $205; lla1ching Dr1er
1205 1 Year War_rllnty; Portable
Washer $85; Sk"ODI Appflancoa,
78 Vlno S1root, Gf!llpolifl 814·
446·7398, 1-800 4111134911.
GOOD

USED

Sf'~ICP

---

Round e8is Of Hay, ~~ &amp;
Stored ~Bern. 614-245-5117.

TRMJSPORTATiOt&lt;

APPLIANCES

THE

Wa8hera, dryera, refrigerators.

rarigas. Skaggs Applianc:ea, 76
Vine Street, Call 614·446·7398,
1-eoo-.illl!-34911.

.~ KK1.I \oJ~T~I'€.7!',
tj ..J loJI.I€N I~~ M. 'il£"
Y.,'( 'OieWfAlla. ·~
1Nc.L.EJI£NT...

LAYNE'S FURNfTlJ'IE
home furniahinga.
Houra: lion ·Sat, 9·5. 614-4480322, 3 miles out Bul•ville Pike
Compl~ta

Free~.

614·9112-38114.

'

21 Punch

by Lula C.mpoa
~Cioho&lt;oCaown..-lnom.-,. bv """""-· """.,._
£oclo

·

'IQJ~ ~~w....y

"

lOO~T~IJ..lU\1~

TOC lob.Tl-IER CKN-!Na!

In today's deal, South hogged the
contract and his play was as ball as
his bidding.
Two clubs was strong, artificial and
forcing. Two diamonds was the nee-live response. After that, North tried
to show that his diamonds were
strong, but South wouldn't be deflected from his own suit.
South thought that he had one
chance: An opponent was holding the
singleton diamond ace. So, he won the
first trick, drew trumpa and played a
diamond. However, it wun't difficult
for East to hold up his ace for one
round. South had a later club loser,
finishing one down.
South had two chances, not one.
After winning trick one and drawing
trumpa, South should cash the areking of hejlrts. Then comes a diamond. If the ace. appears, fine. But
when East ducks, declarer ruffs dummy's last heart, cashes hie second
· club winner and exits with a diamond.
Here, East has only diamonds Jell
In most deals, when both hands
bave a long suit, it is better to play in '
the weak hand's suil

., . . - -... . . - r....,....,.._. ~-u

'SEUUXNEEA

AIIOA

ZE.ET

I E II

IISOFO.'

'SEUUXNEEA :

L

PKUBKFLU

RETOXLFA. ' -

JLFUET

LZ

II

E T

JO

LZ

...·..
.

·- ,, EFZET; .

NOUUOZ.

.

-

RFLTAE.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Music should strike lire from a man." - Boethoven.
'Composing Ia like malcing love 1o the future.• - Lukas F08S.

-.·

C A NU L Y

1• 1· I I I
REI M P

I I rI

I

I

.,.'T~K
:,,
I ...;u,..s_,H,......;,v,..........~/:
I

When you aren't su're of
• _
your facts you should keep
r--~-...;_-----. your chin up, it helps to keep
GR0 F T 0
lyour-·---shut!

NowiiJMd
304-675-1450

I

Ammone Side By ~ - - ·
IDf, Ztnlfl Floor_llodel Color T.V..
Cablo Raedj, W.aher, Dryer, Car
Balllrloo, 81'!-266-1Z!B.

~-,j:r;;...;;.l.:..rl_:r,.:..r.,s....-1
l

VI'RA FURNITURE

•
"RK

I'IWHA.I\'
THAT
Ki!&gt;'S IN

. FM1Dol~Wti125-

EIGtt_!.H

Antlell*

CiAA~!

!THURSDAY

Bank Rapoa. Eaa1 Financing. Coli
Allullutdoo:lo1-600·251·5070.

govern·you, in the year ahead. Send f01'
your Asfro·Graph predictions today by
malllng'$2 and SASE to Aetro-Graph, c/o
thle MWepaper, P.O. BoK 1758, Murray

ASTRO·ORAPH

Hll Sfation, New Vorl!, NY 10t58. Make

sure to stale~ zodiac algn.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

PISCE&amp; (Fell. 20 March 20) H you per·
ticipale In • fun ~tltion wtlh friendl
today. nwill be wiloto keep betting out ol
the picture. lock lloml juSt fOr the llwtl ol

. .______ .

:rc~ 21~·11)1\ matlerthat

llflecllloved ones ~ w6fti out Alii' faclonly !O*Y- Howe...,., lhll will bti u

&gt;. lda.v
.

I M1i.1 ',LJI' PI I[ S

_ _ ___

.'.I \,f ',lOCK

to tha

ef!ort8 Of ~. not 10 your _,

efforta.
·. TA~ .... . . . . , 20) Yoi.x pciiiUiartly Ia pmntly 81 a~ 1101!( but yilu ritight

.Frldly, F..,. 2, 1~

.. .

In\ the y11r ahead· you, may be.comt

1,884 Ford Eacort Front Whoel
urive, 5 Speed, Alollfll Ra~lo.

11 ).500. .,. ••• 6617.

su ca-..•.., aocid condition,
l'!llllflrm.l1441f.ZII&amp;

.

~Ylt I hard lime ~Vtngilt. You lillY
hl!ve.,.,aedlhlirlliiliOillalyourfilll.

lnllat,..d In ....... ..-IUC~IIti!ll CIIMINI (May 21·Ju_n a It) Mat.erlai
Inter"''· :rtl,tiH a~lvlttee may IIIMillai!M you _ , e&gt;&lt;p~i!llug might
...walllad, but e IJi1lqua Ml-'l . . link , lllddanly, dl\llllp 1i1r you todly. DO not
dlaaloaa what occuia to 1 p1r1011 ·WhO
lGUAIIRI~ l.lllk ...Ptll• U) T!l4 ,-.,._,.~gaDa~
1
.,

"-• i

'*· .\.· -

'

.......

'tfte..,

Completa tito chuckle quotod
.-1-J.-L......J-J.....J
bv filling In t1to m;Ding _.ds
yo., develop from ll8p No. 3 below.

rr r rrI
I I I I I I

sctAM.UTS ANSWBS
Sav1nr1 Yau'fl Fllld In the ·
CfouJ(Ied Sectklll.

11194 Redmond 14x70, 3bedroom,
1ball&gt;, $14,000firm, oxc. cond. AI,., 6pm :Jl4.1l75-1783.

0

pt~s~-;sLEmls ..
I ~~~!.~~ tmus

BIG NATE

614-~111
.
QudtyHcu-FumlureMd
Appll- Great Iloilo qn .
Cooh And Cl!lliii:NT-2-0WN
Arid I.IYIIIIiY- MilatlO.

Sawmill. dOn't
to the mill tuat oall

2DComiiiJ

CELEBRITY CIPHER

PtcKENS FURNITURE

530

T--

• Alelgn

Pau
Pass
Pass
Q

stone."

Country Furniture. 304·675-6820.
Rt 2 N, emilea. Pt Pleasant, WV.

lcrtod1gly aCC8Ill

teal ll18te
which Ia In Ylolallon of tho law.
OUr teederl ... hlraby

Household
Goods

7795.

mom

This

EVERVONE l-IAS A.
BOX OF CRAVONS
AND TIIEIR OWN

Appliances :.
Reconditioned
Washers, Drytra, Rangoa, Re~l·
grators, 80 Day , Guarantee/
French Clt1 lloytag, 614-448-

U.lf'L OYME tJT
SlllVICES

51 o

ITV-

Pus

John Dewey, the American teacher,
philosopher and reformer, obviously
didn't approve of IQ tests. He said,
"This intelligence-testing business re·
minds me of the way they used to
weigh hogs in Texas. They would get a
long plank, put it over a crossbar, and
somehow lie the hog on one end of the
plank. They'd search all around till
they found a .stone that would bal111ce
the weight of the hog and they'd put
that on the other end of the plank.
Then they'd guess the weight of the

Space .fo_
r Rent

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~ooo-upo . Cali after 2.00 p.m.,
304-773-5651,11110!11 wv. .

-~

-

7 FaMckn

An embarrassment
of greed

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2t

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Opening lead: •

26

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1984 Chevy S-10, 4~yl, 4apd,
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Stonewood Apartments now·ac·
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•

ALDER

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Small Ono Bedroom. 'E•collont
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lull tlmo auctioneer. complete
~ ·111.~0

Now Taking ltaaea For 1 Or 2
Bedraom Apartmenta, 814-a88·

One bedroom fufnlihed apartmont In Middleport , 814-448·
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...

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350 Lot8 &amp; AcrMgt

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&amp; VIcinity

.. ·.·:.

NEA CrostiW'ord Puzzle

§.......
••

"

The Dally Sentinel• Pege11

E AU.EYOOP

$.

.

..... "

.- '

'

Dahlia - Latin - Blunt - Tmble- TELL it ALL
1was taught to tell the truth, but through the years 1
also found it wise not to always TELL it ALL.
h

FEBRUARY 11

.. '

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A conlldenllal
maner should be discussed only with persons diraclly involved loda~. Try to keep
this in mind W a curious associate glvea
you the third degree.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today. take
care not to let your materiel rnotlvea and
desiret override your Innate generosity. If
you trear others fairly, you'" have nothing
to lear.
UIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The probability
Of 8Chloirlng your ambitiOUS objectives
loday looks slrong, provided you're not
unduly~ by a weak cohort. ·
SCORPIO (Oct, 24-No¥. 22) If M Is your
.turn to run the railroad loday, assign
taskS to people you INS!.
00011
you do, let go and let them do !hinge their

Howe·-.

way.
IACimAMIS (NOw. D DK 21) ColleCtive

.,.._.!1011 will tiave a good Chance f01'

lucceM· today, but averyona muat do
8II8CIIy
aqlldlcl Of hin 01' her.

"'* •

CAF'RICDRN (Ole. a..llrL ttl Friends
who

uauaty give you aupport lhould do

.............. ~ :lw..-IQdiJ II ,au CAIIDIR (oliMi!i I t - - II» Cohcltloi• 10 again todly. IIOoru"'ir, 1 " ' * 1 prOcluoe to
o1 yaur lbliHiaa. ll'flllll1ng i!) ,_. c6nar•CIIillllairalook tiutto ... ....,. yaur·IIIY· thll per·
Howevar,-dOn'Uhlnk you mnl lll!llli
-.:H~avorltllle
lor
you
today.
' . . . . 4,._
.
·aon.inay havea hidden ~··

.......

- - - - - - ·--&gt;· --·I'

·-.... - -

�•

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Thuntday,February1,1986

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Chocolate rsouffle
,: with pudding for
:Valentine's Day
. ·ay The Auoclated PNn

until blended.
Gradually beat in mille and 2
tablespoons of the creme &lt;1e cacao.
1\'ansfer yolle miltture to~ medium-size heavy saucepan. Cook
over low heat, stirring constantly,
until mixture thickens. Do not
boil. Cool mixture until just warm
to the touch. Meanwhile, preheat
oven to 31S degrees F.
Stir melted chocolate into
cooled custard.
In a clean separate bowl with
clean beaters, beat egg whites and
cream of tanar until foamy. Gmdually beat in the 2 tablespoons sugar; beat until stiff but not dry.
Place custard mixture in large
mixer bowl. Stir in remaining 2
tablespoons creme de cacao. Gmdually fold in egg whites, onefounh at a time. Pour into·buttered
and sugared 6-cup souffle dish.
Bake 30 to 3S minutes or until
puffed and just firm to the touch.
Dust with confectioners' sugar.
Meanwhile, for the sauce, combine raspberries and P.fCserves in a
small, heavy saucA. Bring to
boiling, stirring consta1tly; boil I
minute. Strain to eliminate seeds.
Stir in liqueur, if using, and cherries. Let stand at room temperature
until souffle is baked. Spoon over
each serving. Makes 4 servings.

.

On Valentine's Day, smooth the
'path to romance with a whitechocolate souffle. Serve the souf'fle with a sauce made ·with frozen
· raspbenies, chopped sweet cherries
'and raspberry preserves.
To serve, gently break the top
crust of the souftle into portions
with two forks held back to back.
Spoon out portions. Include some
crust with each serving. The recipe
is from the American Dairy Association.
For a variation on traditional
·souffle, serve warm chocolate
souffle pudding with mille chocolate sauce. The recipe is from chef
John Storm, lecturing instructor at
The Culinary Institute of America
·in Hyde Parle, N.Y.
. White-Chocolate Soume with
Raspberry-Cberry Sauce
For the souffle:
4 egg yolks
3 tablespoons sugar
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons mille.
114 cup creme de cacao
5 ounces white chocolate, melt'ed
5 egg whites, at room tempem.ture
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
2 tablespoons sugar
Confectioners' sugar
Fdr the sauce:
I 0-ounce package frozen mspberries in syrup, thawed and

Recipe from: American Dairy
Association and Dairy Council
Inc.

drained

6 tablespoons raspberry pre:serves
I tablespoon mspberry liqueur
·(optional)
I ~3rd cup chopped sweet cher, "ries, well drained
For souffle, beat egg yolks and
·the 3 tablespoons sugar in small
mixer bowl until creamy, about I
minute. Add flour and beat just

Warm Chocolate Souflle Plld-

dina with MUk Claocolate
Sauce
3 tablespoons butter, melted ·
Powdered sugar for dusting
314 cup (I 1/2 sticks) unsalted
butter, at room temperature
2-3rds cup powdered sugar, sifted
6 egg yolks

Ohio Lottery
AP's Top 25
teams chosen
Sports, Page 4

and mote recently in universities and
statehouses across America, these
women have fought extraordinary
battles for social, economic and polit-:
ical ernpowennent," Uinton said. ·
He urged teachers to craft lessons
around the works of black women
"and the strides made to bring their

1994 FORD
PROBE
Cyt, HID, air concl,

4

MUSTANG GT

a.u,tllt,~,PS,

minor, tilt,

PW,
POL,
LoHed

Pwi 'l unroof.

a1

v-e, 5 IPCt air COnti, AMJIFII

AMII'M a.u, PI, Pit, Pwr

011'

3,800 m

t s.etlon,10 Pagn

bread in the mille.
Meanwhile, melt the chocolate
over simmenng water, stirrins until
smooth. Mix melted chocolate into
the butter mixture. Add the soaked
bread, bread crumbs, nuts and
vanilla; blend.
In a large bowl, combine the
egg whites and granulated sugar.
Whip until medium-stiff peaks of
meringue are formed. Fold in the
chocolate base.
Fill the prep~ cups threefourths full. Add warm water to the
baking pan to reach halfway up
sides of cups. Balce, until set,
about 40 minutes. Remove from
the oven and take cups from the
water hath and allow to cool down.
While the souftle is still warm, turn
the cups upside-down and unmold
onto a dessert plate. If the souffle
sticks to the cup, gently free up
around the edges with a paring
knife. Serve warm with the mille
chocolate sauce. Makes 12 servings.

achievements to the fore."
He particularly cited speeches and
writings by women such as abolitionist Sojourner Truth, educator
Mary McLeod Bethune and author
and Nobel laureate Toni Morrison.
· "The voices of African-American
women have called attention to the

twin burdens of racism and sexism
and have invited listeners to.discover the richness of traditions kept alive
in b~ kitchens and workrooms,"
Clinton said.
·
Clinton also recalled the late Barbara Jordan, the ft11t black woman
elected to Congress from a Southern
state.

B~ JEANNINE AVERSA
Aaaoclated Prasa Writer
,.
WASHINGTON - Americans can expect to see a dramatic transformation of television, telerhone and c9mputer services, now that a historic over. haul of lbe natton's telecommumcatJOns laws has sruled through Congress.
But how soon?
"I think you'll see companies reacting 'fairly quickly," Vfce President AI
Gore .said in a telephone interview Thursday.
President Clinton is likely to sign the bill within a week, Gore said.
The massive. overhaul of the 1934 Communications Act would allow head' to-head competition between cable 1V and local and long-distance telephone
-companies, deregulate cable rates.and allow media companies to more eas·
'ily e·xpand their holdings. It also would restrict smutty material on comput' ·er networks and television.

MUSTANG LX

Convtrtlble, 4 cyJ, 1uto,

llr concl; AMJFM CIM,
lilt, crulH, PS, PB, PW,
PDL

RACINE -- Southern Local Building Committee Wednesday, S p.m. in
the high school cafeteria. All district
residents urged to attend.

MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport
Litemry Qub will meet at 2 p.m.
Wednesday, home of Mrs. David
DuPiantier. Mrs. Eileen Buck will
review "I Remember Laura" by
Stephen Hines.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Narcotic Anonymous, 7 p.m. Wednesday at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church basement,
161 MulherfY , Pomeroy. Anyone
with problem welcome.

THURSDAY
POMEROY-- PERl, Senior Citizens Center, Thursday, I p.m. with

One de.ad,
one hurt
.
following
• •
shoot1ng

CUTLASS CIERRA

4 Dr, v.e, 1uto, 11r cond,
AM/FM CIM, Ult, CfUIM,

PS,

PB,
LEATHER.

PW,

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1991 019$

CUTLASS SU8EME
v.e.
.

f

PW, PDL, tilt, c:ruiH,

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AMJIIII CIH, PS, PB,

"

.

. . .ville -' .Aqel, Murphy,

• . . . I , , U'---. -lor:t St.even
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·

Most consumers now recognize that SUCC!Issful weight loss
requires a combination of both nutrition and exercise. Nautilus
believes that the consumer who has become discouraged with
commercial weight toss programs, that have proven not to work,
Is now ready lor a sensible program of moderate calorie
restriction, safe exercise and healthy eating. We believe that
once this customer has had a positive experience with healthy
weight loss they are now much more willing to make the
necessary lifestyle changes for pennanent success.
·
·After extensive research and development, Nautilus Is now
offering the Nautilus Healthy Start program for weight loss and
Nautilus LifeStyle program for weight maintenenace.

The key features of these programs Include:
Effective, Individualized programming, that Is flexible and easy•
to-tollow, established by fltrK!SS professionals.
· Real food that is healthy, delightful to eat
and provides complete appetite satisfaction.

Specific InfOrmation for ~term maintenance.

'
I

· . : .,U

--

a1t "'1101";
•

.
, - Alidrew Fields. , ,
.

Mkbelle

McCo¥.

SALE

FABRIC

1995 fORD:;FlSO

4X2''

8 cyJ, 5 apd, 1lr
concl, AMIFM CIM, Ult,
crul•, PS, PI, Long
Bed,
.

For more lnformllllon call:

.CGmiaaiD

Featuriqg
NTanningN

Big a.I ,Health

Feb11111ry:

Wolfe
'Qulba!ll

...

·

&amp; Fltnes,s
992-3967
'

llldllilaport. Ohio

Muy'i'lud
Kick lied.

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TOPPER

$1

Stock

WAVERLY
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IMPERIAL
Retail $30.99 Yd.

!.-

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Sale$9

MERCURY
V-8

VILLA~R
Milo, llr cilncl, AM.IFII

Clila, tilt,

crult!li,

PW,PDL,
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MUCHMORE. •

PS,

1994 FORD F150

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WALLPAPER
Just Arrived• ••
Jl'lorala, Tenures •.
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w/Katchtna Borden

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Dill

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Retail $24.99 DIR

Efficient exercise that fits Into busy lifestyles
and accQmpllahes the goals of looking-better and feeling beller.

Terry. 'Kayl&lt;n;,

ljllliqr; · 'tnuy Poweii-Snuth,

SAniRDAY
SALEM CENTER-- Star Grange

A LIGHT DUSTING - A winter storm expected to striiGI tile
· county fall: night paasedsouth lncleut, leaving only alight dll8t.. Jng of snow ... not tile 7-to-10 Inches that had been predicted; Jim
. Ritchie of Racine, above, SWHpa- rather than lhovala- lnow
off the front atepa of the Melga County Sheriffs Departmen't llrller todly. Schools In the courrty -re closed today.

MONDAY
LETART FALLS -- The LetaJt
Falls Elementary School PrO will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. Parents and
teachers are asked to attend.
CARPENlER --Columbia Township Trustees will meet Monday, 7
p.m at. the fire station.

WALLPAPER AND
BUNDSHOP
••m
IAl ··-•1
lDAVI.,rMII '*"•
II . .
IION.-FRI. I 1&amp;30 .
lAT. I I130, lUll. 1N

......... . .· 428·1065

A 34-year-old Reedsville man is
dead, the result of an spparent suici~e. following a shooting incident on
Joppa Road early this morning.
Dead is James Willi&amp;!ll Eddy,
52003 Joppa ~oad, according to
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby~

BY THE YARD

~; Sb111e -. Breat S~th,

......

POMEROY-- Pomeroy Group of
AA will have an open discussion
meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. in basement of the Sacred Hean Catholic
Church.

Weight Loss Program

' The following area students
were, among the 3,S38 students
from the Ohio University-Athens
eampus to be named to the Dean's
l;.ist fqr the fall quarter.
· To be 'named to the list, a student must have earned a grade
point average of 3.3 or better on a
$ale of 4.0 (straight A's) for the
quarter and have earned 16 hours,
1·2 of which were taken for a letter
irade:
: Cheshire - Charity Waugh,
·$nior. .
· · • Coolville - Amy Morgan,
senior;. Brandy Ritchie, senior;
Kenneth Hymes, senior; Teresa
. • ~n0weth~ senior; Teresa Jeffers,
l'resbman.
' Long Bottom - Julie Riffle,
jianipr; Keith Spencer, senior;
.'{Ysqn Rose, sophomore:
· , Middleport - Krisbn Torres,
'tmbinail; :RobbY Wyatt, ·senior.
.,. l'omerOy - Arthur Kopl:zinslcy,
seniQr; ·Chuck Leg!D'. fresbman;
Counrlcy Midlclff, junior; Keith
Smith, junior; Kelley G!'tteser,
~; Melinda Smith, iopho'Jiiolj: Michelle Young, junior;
•v·'iell Triplett,' junipr;· Susan
·Wolf; seillor: Racine - 1amey
Holler. .enior: J~e Hannon.
seni~ Julie ·Hill, junior;. 'II'evor ·
~1. seai~; Wendy Johnson, .

••

FRIDAY
Rtm..AND -- Rutland Township
Trustees, Friday, 6 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

transmit lots of data cheaply. Telephone companies say they'll accelerate
movies on demanli and intemctive television.
And broadcasters say once they switch over to digital technology, they
may offer muitiple channels of programs, home shopping and transm,it spon
scores to laptop computers .
Supporters say the measure would boost jobs. expand consumer choices
and potentially lower prices for cable, telephone and other communications
services.
But opponents say that more jobs will be lost than gained through consolidation, that choices will be limited and that cable and telephone rates are
likely to go up considerably because the level of competition envisioned by
supporters will not emerge.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who voted against 1he bill, said he was concerned about deregulating cable, saying, "I don't want to see a repeat of skyrocketing cable rates on passaee of this law."

Reedsville man
dies after taking
shot at girlfriend

1991 FORD TAURUS
STATIONWGN

7878 and Star Junior Grange 878 will
meet in regular session Saturday.
Potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. Meeting
at 8 p.m. Junior and youth baking
contests to be held.

FEBRUARY

OU dean's list
annotJnced

junlcir•

lunch at noon.

Even though companies have been preparing for this new era of telecommunications competition, "You're not going to have people in the field tomorrow constructing new (telephone) lines and throwing a switch," said Rep.
Jack Fields, R-Texas, one of the architects of the bill.
"It's jusi not going to happen that quickly. " he said.
The bill- saluted by Sen. Larry Pressler, R-S .D., as a telecommunications "road map" into the new century - flew through the House on Thursday, 414-16, and then the Senate, 91-5.
Qinton hailed the measure, saying in a statement, "consumers will receive
the benefits of lower prices, better quality 'and greater choices in their tele- .
phone and cable services, and they will continue to benefit from a diversity ·
of voices and viewpoints in radio, television and the, print media."
For instance, cable companies say they ' II speed up delivery of high-speed
modems that connect customers to the Internet, other computer services and

1993' OLDS

1993 FQJD

-----Community calendar----The Community Calendar Ia
published as a free service to aoaprolit lii'OUJIS wlsbiDR to aDIIOUIICe
meeting and special events. The
calendar is aotdcsigaed top~
...es or fund l'aisen ol any type.
Items are printed u space permits
aDd cannot be guraateed to run a
specllie number ol days.

35 C41nla
A Gannett Co. Newapaper

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 2, 1996

Bill to change face of t~lecommunications

VALENTINE'S DAY TREAT· Wh"- ChocoMfe Souffle Ia In ....
pnt deaaert for Valentlne'a Day. Serve with Raapberry-ct.rry
Sauce. (AP Photo)
.
3 slices white bread, crusts
removed
1/4 cup milk
4 squares (4 ounces) semisweet
chocolate, chopped
1/4 cup fresh bread crumbs
1
I cup hazelnuts, toasted and
finely ground
I tablespoon vanilla extract
I0 egg whites
1/2 cup gmnulated sugar
Milk Chocolate Sauce (recipe
below)
Brush twelve 6-ounce custard
cups with the melted butter. Using
a fine sieve or sifter, dust with
powdered sugar and shake out the
excess. Place the cups in a balcing
pan with 2-inch sides. Preheat
oven to 350 degrees F.
In a large bowl, use a hand mixer or electric mixer with paddle
attachment to cream the 3/4 cup
butter and the 2-3rds cup powdered
sugar until light and smooth. Slowly cream in the egg yolks, one at a
time.
In a shallow bowl, soak the

Snow likely tonight
Iowa 1rounc1 10. S.turclly,
cloudy with scattered flur- :
rlea. Hlgha In the tHna•

•

1994 FORD

Vol. 46, NQ. 194

Febrluary named Africar--American History Month
. WASHINGTON (AP)- Presid~nt Qinton today proclaimed February as National African-American
History Month and urged special
recognition for black women who,
rose above "the twin burdens of:
racism and sexism."
"In churches and communities,

Pick 3:
1-4-1
Pick 4:
8-5·5·5
Buckeye 5:
3-4-12·22·37

1993 DODGE

CARAVAN
V-4t auto, llr -.1, AIIIFII

.CMI, PI, P8, ft8r defaow-,

IIOAE.

•'

I

1991 FORD F150

4X2

'Snow days' disrupting
·area school calendars .
Jly JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Stiff
'' Summer vacation may come a lit' tie late Ibis year for Meigs County ·
'students and their teachers.
While the state allows schools five
~alamity days, all students have
'lnissed at least eight days due to snow
'Or high water.
• All county schools were closed
.again today due to an anticipated
snow stonn which failed to materialize and dusted the county with about
::an inch of snow.
• In the Meigs Local School District, students have missed at least I0
(jays of school while students at Sal·
isbury and Pomeroy elementary
,Sc:hools have missed II and 12 days,
:respectively, according to Superin·

tendent Bill Buckley.
The MeijlS Local Board of Education ha ~ scheduled two makeup
days. meaning students and teachers
may have to make up at least three
days at the end of the school year.
Students attending Eastern Local
Schools have missed nine days so far,
with students at Riverview Elemen·
tary missing two additional days due
to flooding, said Superintendent Ron
Minard.
Also, students attending Chester
Elementary missed an additional day
due to an overturned propan~ tanker
trailer in the village.
Minard said he is working on a
schedule for additional makeup days
in the district.
·
(Continued on Ptge 3)

· ·• 'After midnight tddaY, l1,lldy cilled
his girlfriend, Shon Gates, age unreported. of Little Hocking, and told
her that he intended to hann himself,
was one of three that was damaged or sunk
SALVAGING WHAT'S LEFT - A crane Was
Soulsby said.
when tow cables snapped after cle~rlng the
brought
In
to
off-load
materials
from
a
partlalAfter Gates and her father arrived
locka and moved upatream. River traffic was
ty-aubmerged
barge,
far
right,
at
the
Robert
C.
at Eddy's tmiler. he fired a shot
freed up on the Ohio River Thursday. (AP)
Byrd Locka &amp; Dam at Hogsett, W.Va. The barge
through the wall of the trailer that
struck her in the upper left shoulder.
After the two left, Eddy's father
arrived and found him inside lhe trailer, dead of an apparent self-inflicted
gunshot wound to the head, Soulsby
said.
A .25-caliber; semi-automatic pisBy JOHN D. McCLAIN
added.
reponed that 161,000 new jobs were
tol was found at the scene.
Aaaocllted
Preas
Writer
Other
economists
contended
that
created
in December.
Eddy was pronounced dead at the
WASHINGTONThe
nation's
the
repon
would
have
been
weak
The Def:ember job growth was
scene by Dr. Douglas Hunter, Meigs
County coroner. His body was trans- unemployment mte rose 10 5.8 per- even without the effects of the snow· boosted by the return of 4 1.000
workers who had been on strike or
paned by the White Funeml Home of cent in January, highest since laSt slorm.
spring,
as
the
blizzard
early
in
the
"The
real
number
is
not
minus
laid
off. In January. the decline was
Coolville to the Fmnklin County
month
shrank
employment
rolls.
20
I
,000,"
said
economist
Marilyn
due
in
part to the snowstonn and the
coroner's office for an autopsy, a rouThe
Labor
Department
said
today
Schaja-of
Donaldson,
Lufkin
&amp;
Jen·
strike
by
30,000 New York building
tine procedure, Soulsby said.
the
number
of
jobs
declined
by
maintenance
workers.
rette
Securities
Corp.
in
New
York.
Gates was transported to Camden201,000,
the
first
drop
in
10
months
"When
you
take
away
the
impact
of
The
labor
market
has shown signs
Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersand
the
largest
in
nearly
five
years.
weather, job creation probably was or slowing in recent months as the
bull!. W.Va., where she was treated
It
said
much
of
the
decrease
was
economy softened. Many analysts
flat,"
and released, a hospital spokesdue
to
the
blizzard
that
closed
many
believe the economy now is growing
The
advance
in
the
jobless
rate
woman said this morning.
businesses
during
the
depanmenl's
at
a barely perceptible I percent
was
the
first
since
it
rose
from
5.5
Soulsby said lawmen plan to talk
survey
week.
annual
rate, less than half what is
percent
in
October
to
5.6
percent
in
10 her a!x&gt;ut the incident as pan of lhe
"The
decline
in
employment
was
needed
to keep the unemployment
November.
II
was
unchanged
in
deplinment's investigation. Soulsby
due primarily to lhe effects of the December.
rate steady.
emphasized that no foul play is sus· blitzard that closed much of the east,
The National Association of Pur- ·
The latest readin~ matched the 5.8
peeled in the shooting.
ern United States in early January" percenl rate last April, the highest chasing Management reponed Thurs.
Officers were summoned 10 the when the job survey was"taken, said
during 1995. The rate had dipped to day that a January survey of its memscene around 2 a.m.
Joseph E. Stiglitz, chairman of Pres- 5.4 percent last February.
bers suggested an ·overall economic
Responding were Soulsby, Hunter, ident Clinton's Council of·Economweakening for the first time in almost
Analysts
had
expected
an
increase
Meigs County deputies S.teve Heater ic Advisers.
five years.
to 5.7 percent.
and Randy Arnold. assistant Prose- . "We fully expect employment
Acknowledging "moderating eco201,000 decline in jobs was
cutor Chris Tenoglia and the growth to resume, and believe that lheThe
first since a 62,000 drop last May nomic expansion," The Federal
Ree~ville squad of the Meigs Coun- our economy will recover fully from
and the largest since a 215,000 Reserve cut short-term inlerest rates
ly Emergency Medical Service. , the blow dealt by Mother Nature," he
plunge in April 1991. The department earlier this week in an attempt to spur
'
economic growth.
·

Blame it on the blizzard: nation's
unemployment increases ·to 5.8o/o

.

.:State Senate leader, ex-speaker
)~dieted in lobbying investigatio~
'By JOHN CHALFANT
~~l.tld Praaa WrHer
~, COLUMBUS A grand jury
'lnvo,~tisation of undisclosed lobbyist
p,ayment5 to legislators produced
'tildictments for failure to file reports
'tiut no evidence of bribery, Franklin
'County Prosecutor Michael Miller
,SJid.
· Senate President Stanley Aronoff,
'f~rmer House Speaker Vern Riffe,
alld &amp;en. Eugene Watts were indicteil Thursday on charges they failed to
rtporl thousands of dollars in speak.·
iOj fees from lobbyists.
! 1\vo lobbyist companies, a law
fllln and a former lobbyist also were
iDdicte([
·· All the misdemeanor charges
~mmed from an investigation into
lobbyist payments to lawmakers at
various dinners and related events.
· ~ Miller was asked at a news conr~ ibout the absence of any
fHldings that dealt with more serious

.

''

""

offenses of improper compensation
or bribery.
·
· "To my knowledge there has not
been a scintilla - a scintilla - of
evidence showing any fonn of
bribery. I can assure you the grand
jury is not going to indict on puffs of
smoke. They need evidence," Miller
said.
"If anybody has any, they didn't
give it to me and they didn't give it
to the grand jury," he said.
"There has been an argument on
improper compensation regarding
one individual. The grand jury was
aware of those allegations," !;Iiller
said. He declined·to identify the person.
.
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and Riffe,
D· WheelersbUrg, each were charged
with two counts of filing false statements, a first-degree misdemeanor.
They failed to disclose payments
of R.SOO eicb In 1991 and 1993
fTo!n billionaire retailer Les Wexner's

~·

company, The Limited.
Watts; R-Columbus, was charged
with failure to file a statement, a
fbunh-degree misdemeanor.
A nine-member Franklin County
grand jury also indicted Government
Consultants Group, Columbus, on a
charge of failure to file a statement.
Strusslon Consultins Services,
Columbus; Climaco, Climaco, Seminatore, Lefkowitz &amp; Garofoli, and
_({enneth F. Seminatore, Cleveland,
were all charged with falsification, a
fii'St-degree misdemeanor.
First-degree misdemeanors carry
muimum indi'l'idual penalties of
ISO days in jail and $1,000 fines, and
. a $S,OOO corporate fine.
Fourth-degree misdemeanors provide maltitnum penalties of 30 days .
in jail and $2SO fine for individuals,
and a $2,000 fine for corporations.
Riffe said be had always followed
the law carefully and indicated he
intended to f11ht the charge.

Phil predicts
more winter:
surprised?

Vern Rlife
..
"Contrary to published reports, I
could not and would not . plea to
something I did not do, ".Riffe said in
a statement.
Aronoff denied that J:le inteptionally falsified ally financial repon ...
"If the disclosure slatements tn

J

Sllnley Aronoff
question are inaccurate in any way, I
accept full responsibility," Aronoff
said in a statement read at a news
conference. "But I emphatically deny
that! intenti.onally or knowingly falstfled any disclosure statement."

PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP)Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow.
That's the message of the nation's
premiere groundhog, Punxsutawney
Phil, who "saw" his shadow at
Groundhog Day ceremoni~s today.
At 7:28a.m., handler Bill Deeley
yanked Phil from the fake tree stump
that serves as his burrow as fireworks
went off to simulate a sunrise. Qouds
obscured the real sun.
A crowd ofabout 10,000 gathered
at ~lei''s Knob greeted the prediction with boos and hisses.
. Members of the Inner Circle, the
. local group that claims to communicate ·with Phil but R:ally makes the
shadow-no shadow decision in
ldvanQe, say that he is always ClliNCl
"l.olls ,befole man invented the
· bei'Oineta, JIOilndhop were preclb. .
ins the wlllhei:," -Inner Cirt:le Jlleli·
dent Bud t:luatel said
·
~

-

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