<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9098" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9098?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T13:54:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19527">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6ed9b35cc132cda1e50459ec0b02fa9b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>45d8d38b9ccd255693286e37b0858d36</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29261">
                  <text>•
~·

Monday, F-.u.y 5, 1 -

.Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.) ;:Meeting to·honor
:·Valentine q~:~een
. PI- for honorinl Mqie Blab,
clllpte(s Vllentine queen, and A. R.
Xnlpt, envoy, on his binhday were
made when Xi 01111111111 Mu chapcer,
'Beta Sicma Phi Sorority, met rccent·ly 11 the Bt'lldbury Cbun:h of Christ
. · Blake will be honoml at Tuesday's
night meeting II which time the
jroup will also enjoy "crazy binso"
. 'lfith each member to take two
.Wi'apped items to be given as prizes.
'A card shower was planned for
Kniaht who will observe his binbday
of Feb. 12. A cooftie 1ray and balloons
:will be taken . to him and members
'were asked to send cards.
· Kay Loaan conducted the meeting
·with the publication of two Beta Sig·
.ma Phi cookbooks being discussed,
and ,arrangements being made to
-serve the canteen at the Red Cross

•.

Bloodmobile. The deadline for apply·
ina for a scholarship was noted. and
a mectina with the Meigs County Fair .
BOird regarding sale of the premium
list was discussed.
A report was given on Jim Adams,
hu$band of a former member, who ·
recently underwent a liver transplant
at University Hospital. The need of
the·church for supplies was noted and
it was voted to make a $25 contribu·
tion. Other contributi.ons made by the
chapter were $25 to the breast cancer
fund, and $2S to the Disaster Relief
Fund.
.
Proirams at January meeting
included Debbie Miller showing pic·
. tures and describing life in London,
Pvt. William S. Hall, a 1995 grad-.
and Charlotte Hanning on Beta Sig- .
uate
of Meigs High School recently
ma Phi attributes.
graduated from basic training and
advanced to individual training at Ft.
Leonard Wood, Mo.
He was a member of the Alpha
35th Engineering Battalion, First
Brigade; Third Platoon. His training
·
c
CHESTER •• Chester PTO mem· onsisted of demolitions, combat
bers ate invited to1 attend an open vehicle operations, and land mine
I
forum of the Eastern Local School warfare.
He
is
the
son
of
Joseph
C.
Hail,
Sr
BOird at the Chester Elementary
and
Leta
Goodwin,
both
of
Pomeroy
School Monday, 6:30 p.m. A short
His nexi assignment will be in Ger·
PTO meeting will follow.
many.
TUI!;SDAY .
POMEROY •• Pomeroy Elementary PTO will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
at the $Chool gym. All interested parents are urgtd .to attend.

JjshCd as a free service to non·profit
,groups wishing to announce meeting
:and special eventS. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales 1lr fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed
.S space pennits and·cannot.be guaranteed to run a specific number of
4ays.
·

r.tONDAY
, LETAI.U FAllS ·· The Letan
Falls Elementary School PTO will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. Parents and
teachers are asked to attend.
CARPENTER·· Columbia Town'ship Trustees will meet Monday, 7
p.m at. the fire station.

•

Canada. .

'

·Hoffa, fighting to regain control of
CAROL STEWART
the corruption-plagued Teamsters
union, disappeared July 30, 1975 .
from the parking lot of the reslltllrant. i
where he reportedly had gone to meet I
·
a mob boss.
At the time, Machus said, his
father feared the publicity would
Laura and Greg Stewart of
give the restaurant a bad reputation. Langsville, announce the birth of a
Over the years, however, it may have daughter, Carol Ann. Jan. 12 at Holz·
turned out to be just the opposite, er Medical Center.
assuring the restaurant lasting name
The infant was 21 inche~ long and
recognilion and a footno~ in history. weighed seven pounds, 10 ounces.
·
Carol Ann has two sisters. Amorette
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) and Cindi, and a brother, Jon.
Dreyfus fund founder and philan·
Maternal grandparents are Ken
tluopisl Jack Dreyfus Jr. has proposed and Carol McCullough, Pomeroy,
a land swap that could turn the and paternal grandparents are Mack
largest private estate at Lake Tahoe and Bea Stewart, Middleport. Mater·
into a publie park. .
nat great-grandmothers are Mildred
Dreyfus, who owns the estate, Fultz, Pomeroy, and Clara Criswell,
signed an agreement with the Amer• Middleport; and paternal greai-grandican Land Conservancy to' put the parents are Evelyn Murray .and
plan in motion.
Lawrence Stewart, both of Middle·
The deal hinges on. the federal port.
Bureau of Land Man~ge111ent's williogness 1o trade to the conservancy
1
d.
public land in the rapidly growing Las
ICers 9 9C 9
Vegas area that could in tum be .sold
New officers were elected at the
to developers.
.
· 1
·
f th
Sale proceeds ·would be used to · recent organizahona meetmg o e
· Leading Creek Conservancy District.
pay Dreyfus. Ownership of hIS
·
secluded 140-acre estate would go 10
They are J.1Fenton Tay1or, preslthe U.S. Forest Service.
dent; Charles Barrett, Jr., v1ce pres•·
The estate con!llins 8 three-story,, · dent; and· Ro~rt Snowden, board
medieval-style French chateau _ • m~mber. Meeungs were set for the
known a5 the "Thunderbird Lodge" th1rd Thursday of each month at 5
p.m.

Vol. 46, NO. 188
2 Sectlona, 22 ,....

.,.,

URG seeking members for choral group
Residents from Oallia, Jacksqp, 7 to 9 p.m. at the univmity's Fine ·
Mason, Meigs and Vinton Counties and Perfonning Arts Center. . •
are invited to participate in the UniIn the past, n~crous I'CSide_n~
versity of Rio Grande's Master- from the five counbes have partic1·
'll!'orks Cborale.
~
· pated in .the Mas~orks. Chorale.
' Dr. Merv Murdock, associate The Chorale combmes voJCes from .
professor of music at Rio Grande, • the Rio Grande student body, s~
says anyone interested in joining the and faculty as well u commuruty
Masterworks Chorale this year is members.
.
·
.
invited to come to the first rehearsal
-Murdock says that the spring proscheduled for Monday Feb. 5, from gram will feature chQI'IIseS from

Gilbert and Sullivan u ~11 u a
B~way medley. The 1pnn1 COD•
cert 1s scheduled for May.
: M~ock encounps thole who
Will JOin the chorale 10 pun:bue
the1r own set of music at the
~ on ~onday. .
. .
. ~~~nts 1n~ m partici~·
IDJ. m this year 1 Chorale at diB Uruversity may call 2&lt;4~740.5,for mon
information.

Stewart birth
announced .

Qff'

.

'

·II fUW -OMIIII COlt' I I ? ~ lnsunnce gaps IIlii
could IIIII til .. .IIIII ....... lola..
. '

' .... lllotltAiiiD
···-~~~~·Lilt
•llulintu.
flllllc:illl
.,._ • DIIIDIII].I•
Perlonll Umbrella
Lilbilly,
.......... CIMIIJIII. . .
· . C1!I ... ·WI'~. hllp yau gel thlliett pouible
lllilli*'t . . . ._paulDI ·coat.
I

..en

. 111t )4acbu Red fox IICfVecl its
lui ·dl"'*' fO the pulllic Slllllrday
Md call '!I iia final privlle .
brunch 011 Sunday. ~
.
Robelt J. Machus l,lid Sat.: .
Urday .... he - Ullllblc 10 RIIC"!' hil '

........
·'

'·

.,

.

,

I

"

..... "-·~ ... 111ngMIIglcG...yahi1eel

,., ,;· . OOWNING GHILDS MUUEN

.o.wr

Wll

OR

$600 CASH BACK
SELEO '96 MODELS
CHOOSE FROM
.
. THE FOLLOWING:'
•TRACER
• MYSTIQUE
•SABLE
· • COUGAR
• GRAND MARQUIS• VILLAGER

•AEROSTAR
•WINDSTAR
• RANGER
• CLUB
WAGON
'

I

.-....t
opened ln
Mill hll•' fllher, lflll'il 0. '

Eastern Local School officials
have approved a resolution of intent
.entering into a working agreement
. with the Meigs County Library Board
for a branch library in the district's
proposed $8.75 million school build·
jng project.
,
Th~ resolution for the letter of
. intent, previously announced by the
'library board, was made official during Monday's regular meeting of the
Eastern Local School Board at
· Chester Elementary School.
· What does the resolution mean for
" residents of the district? Location of
4,000 square-foot branch library in
the new K-8 central school, to be
· built adjacent to Eastern High School.
The facility would afford stuCients and adultS full access to
research information via computer on
tile World Wide Web and the Internet,·
·as well as elimination of the need to
· travel out of the county to local universities in order to access research
· materials.
JOINT WORKING AGREEMENT -:i- The Eastern Local School .
'The library would be located on
Dlatrlct approved .a lett8r af lmanl lo.ft!tet' Into en 1g1-..! for
lhe fronl comer of the new building,
services and space wllh the Melga Jounty Library Board. Seen
with a public entrance located on tbe
above are Krlstl Eblin, dlrectot'af.ttlnslon IMYICH for the Meigs
· library to eliminate lr&amp;ffic from enter·
County Public Library, and Eaa,tMI Local School Board President
ing the main entrance to the school,
Jim Smith,~
I,•cl : .;. , " \ ~' ! I \;;i
ac&lt;:O_r~ing to · Chester Principal
Ricl\ird Roberts, - - The library woul.d be staffed by a
The renovaled high school will galion between secondary and eleschool hbranan dunng school hours. also have an expanded library at mentary students, Roberts added.
and a hbranan employed by the._ .which sludents can access materials
Another benefit of the library the
tibrary hoard during public hours in from ·the branch library via comput· district and county residenls will be
the days and,evenings, Roberts said. er, thus presei'ving comple1e segre(Continued on Page 3)

Pomeroy's elected olf~tials viewed
plans for the proposed riverfront
amphitheater at Monday night's meet·
ing of village council.
Mike Stroth of SBA Consultants
Inc., Jackson. consultant for the village's Downtown Revitalization project, presented plans for the 163-footlong struclure, which will be built as
part of the revitalization program.
The amphitheater will include
seating, a walking/stage area. removable railing and tie-downs large
~nough for large river boats, according to the plans. It will eMtend more
than 17 feel out into the river.
Also included will be stage and
walkway lighting and electrical
hookups for boa1s, Stroth said.
. "(The amphitheater) will be·a real
. Stllf in this area," Slroth speculated.
"It will get a lot of use."
The amphitheater will join the
promenade, currently under construction, as improvements to the
. Pomeroy parking lot. Work on the
promenade has been halted due to
cold weather with .construction slat·
ed to resume as soon as the weather

· By KATHERINE RIZZO

BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHJP,
Mk;h. CAP),_. The JeltaUi'anl where
; . lormec r~ten president Jimmy
· Hoffa wu WI
baa cloHd ita .

n.

Commission, backers debate funding source
By JIM FREEMAN
for the commission seat currently
Sentinel News Staff
occupied by Howard.
' Tourism - or more precisely,
who should pick up the tab for its
Other members of the tourism del·
promotion - was the subject of a egation included Middleport busi ·
meeting betw~n the Meigs County nessman Tom Dooley; the Rev. Dawn
Tourism Committee and county com- Spaldtng of St. Paul -Luth eran
missioners Monday afternoon.
Church, Pomeroy; Pomeroy busi·
For the final six months of 1995, ness woman Annie Chapman; Syra·
commissioners provided $8,300 for cuse resident Dorothy Sayre; the
tourism, with the money coming pri· Rev. Roland Wildman of the.Trinity
marily from the sale of confiscated Church, Pomeroy ; and Sue Maison ,
guns.
chairman of the finance committee of
This year, the board allocated the Meigs County Chamber of Com$5,000 for tourism for the entire year, merce .
plus an additional $2,500 for other
Also .present was Prosecutin g
tourism-related activities.
Attorney John R. Lentes, represent·
.() However, the tourism committee ing the commissioners.
\(had requested $17,000 for the year. In
"If people think tourism helps
:addition, the group would like to businesses and the economy, there
make the joh oftourism·director into ought to be some way of funding it
. a full-time position.
other than by the county commisGroup members said county com, sion," Hoffman said.
missioners should bankroll the pro·
"You need to try to be self-fundmotion of tourism, while Commis- ed," Howard agreed.
sion President Fred Hoffman conMaison countered: "Meigs Countended it should be subsidized by ty businesses don't have the resources
those businesses who stand the most of those in other counties."
Williams pointed out some
· to gain from it.
Hoffman agreed thai tour_jmjL ~ :omplishments of the tourism
important to the county, hJ\ llfl!ll'ed rice on behalf of Tourism Director
· · notth ssJone
~pons bT
that f!lndmg'IS
I Illy
lrin Johnson, who was not present
of the coun1y co
iling •. ~· '.
•the meeling. Those accomplish·
· "wtiat yo ' ourism sh~ld ~ffm~n nnts included work to promote the
asked, "is t
payers in the cou P~.? fg Bend Sternwheel Festival and
for by the -~~~ded f".OSI of the nty · otter local events.
Hoffm
~-~mm · . ques.
Promoting tourism is good busi~ .~ ~
-,_,;.~~·~rs ..Jl'Ss, said Chapman.
·
Janet How'iiid and"'Robert Harten"Tourism is a cheap and easy way
bach. both of whom are seeking re- to build up the tax base," she said:
election this year.
"People are putting their hme, monTwo of the tourism committee ey and effort into tourism for nothing
members present. Judy Williams and in return."
Patty Pickens, are seeking the nomi "We want to work together," said
nation on the Republican ticket to run Williams. "We should not be on

..,. . .

.

opposite sides of the field "
Hartenbac h and Howard sai d th ey
would be willing to reconsider
increasing the •amoun t of financial
ass istance for tou rism and said they
would res pond next Monday.
The group is reques ting an additional $11 ,000, plus what has al ready
been commitl ed by the county commi SS ioners .

Supportmg touri sm in principle is
not enough, according to Dooley. "If
you're going to support it, it has to be
financial."
Afterwards. com missioners met
with Economic Development birector Julia Houdashelt who updated the
board on work to score local access
to the Internet.
The newly appointed Internet
Gateway Committee met with one
potential access prov ider, who posed
the following questions to local computer users:
. • Do you have at least a 144
, modem and 386-40 computer?
· • Do you have thi s in office, at
· home, or 'both 0
• Which Internet p ro v~der are you
· presently using?
• What is your phone exchange?
• What is your age?
• Would you be willing to pay at
:least SIO.for five hours of time per
·month?
i • Do you use lhe Internet for busi·
lness, hobbies, education or busiJness?

·

·

Houdashelt said local residents
.can contact her at 992-5005 wilh this
information .
In other business, commissioners:
• Accepted a bid to lease a 1996
Chevrolet Blazer for Emergency
(Continued on Page 3)

breaks.
. Stroth indicated the project could
be completed · by the end of July,
meaning it could be in use by the
annual Big Bend Stemwheel Festival
slated for Oct. 3-5.
The amphitheater and promenade
will be terrific asset to lhe sternwheel
festival, said Big Bend Sternwheel
Association President Jim Davis of
Minersville.
In addition, Slroth said he expects
about 25 downtown businesses to
participate in the business renovation
portion of the program _ aboul 50
percent of the buildings in the targel
area.
Stroth commended the pride and
enthusiasm of local merchants.
Total grant funds for 1he downtown project amount to $530,950
with $362,200 coming from other
sources. The total of all funds is
$893,150 - including matching
funds from local business oWners.
In open discussion, Council President John Musser said the village has
S1,400 ·put aside i'or three signs
marking the downtown district.
Councilwoman Geri Walton asked
why parking meters were not

removed from the parking lot prior to
the Jan. 22 flood.
Mayor Frank Vaughan responded
that the river may have came up ioo
fast to allow removal of the meters.
Councilman Scott Dillon remarked
that village workers should have taken the initiative to remove the park·
ing m'eters.
Ironically, council may now have
to pay to repair the meters cleaned
while many in the village would like
to them abolished.
Other tol'ics discussed during
·open d1scuss1on were dramageprob" terns, the handrail on Lincoln Hdl and
junked. cars and homes.
Clerk Kathy Hysell reported the
following balances for the month of
January: gcn~ral, $77,799: safety,
$1.817.64: street, $ 13.083.06; state
highway,
$12,542.18;
·fire,
$18,837.87: cemetery, $14,060.92;
water,
(-$1,205.27);
sewer,
$43,459.88;
guaranty
meter,
$18,308.87; utility, $12,869.98; tire
truck, no balance; perpetual care,
$7,245.64; cemetery endowment,
$38.118.57;
police · pension,
$1,035.75; building fund, $1,150.50;
· (Continued on Page 3)

AMPHITHEATER PLANS - Mike Stroth of
SBA Consultanta Inc. of Jackson, standing,
presented plans lor the proposed riverfront
amphitheater at Monday nlghrs meeting or the

Pomeroy VIllage Council, as council members
and other village officials examined the plans.
Stroth said the amphitheater may be complet·
•ed by July 31, In time for Meigs County's Big
· Bend Stern wheel Festival Oct. 3·5.

Cremeans SI}Dt targets Piketon job loss fears

.

~~ by

Who pays for tourism?

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff

Sentinel Newa Staff

ORDERED UNI1S . _IEUIYIISTOCICAIGIIIICIA1 149 '
NO. EXTRA. CHARGE
.OI-tUEIIIY FOil, UICOll, . . . . .~ "
.
. YM SPICIFU.ll 10 11111 Clllltl.

1

.:Eastern
.
gives nod
to library
operation

By JIM FREEMAN .

FIXED RATE
FINANCING

·.ESCORT

35 cenb
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Consultant predicts July opening
for Pomeroy amphitheater project

APR

•PROBE
• CONTOUR
• T'!BIRD
•TAURUS

~re wu no telephone listing for
Piia1111 in l:.ol Angeles, and a publiciJI wiih Milli Vanilli's record cornJ!Iiny, Arista, did not return a phone
cill Sunday.

......

Cloudy, lows In 20s.
Wednesday cloudy, highs
In upper 30s, possible
rain.

Pom,roy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 6, 1996

.i

t

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rob
Pilatus, half of the defunct pop duo
Milli Vanilli, was held for investigation of making terrorist threats after
allegedly trying to bre8k into a car
and a house, police said.
.
: A witness saw the 31-year-old
Pilllus trying to break into a car in
Hollywood on Sunday and.alertod the
~ner, who approached Pilatus, said
Officer Eduardo Funes.
Pilatus .ran to a nearby house and
attempted to force his way in, Funes
said. He made several "obscene and
bbisterou.s" threats, Funes said, and
threatened to kill residents of the
house. A stru~tlde ensued, during
\vhich one of the residents hit Pilatus
in the head with a bat. Pilatus was
· treated at a hospital and released.
. · He was being held on SISQ,OOO
lilit..
.
• · Pilatus and bandmate Fabrice """\
P.,orvan were stripped of their "best \
hew anisl" Orammy Award in 1990
· followina revolations that they hadn't
·
.. sung' note on the best-selling "Girl,
'\',oU Know It'S True" album.

doori. .

Buckeye 5:
5-10-15-20-29

.a

'''I •

.

6630

...

in the news

:- OCALA, Fla. (AP)- F. Lee Bai·
ley is defending another famous
client: himself.
' . Bailey, a member of the high-pow'ered team of lawyers that defended
0.1 Simpson during the former footballstar'smurdci'trial,wasfoundin
contempt of court Saturday and
ordered to tum over S21 million in
stock ~ claims is payment from a
former client.
Dalley will try to comply with u.s:District Judge ~urice Paul's order to
bring the stocks lo court by Feb. 29,
his lawyer said Sunday.
If he doesn't meet the deadline, he
will go to jail for six months, Paul
said.
AI issue is ownership of 602,000
shares of stock that Bailey claims
were given to him by the government
to offset his fees and expenses in representing reputed drug baron Claude '
Duboc. '
Duboc is awaiting sentencing after
pleading guilty to heine pan of a conspiracy to import tons of hashish and
marijuana into the United States an!l

Pick 3:
790
Pick 4:

•

POMEROY •• Fraternal Order of
Eagles Auxiliary meeting Tuesday,
. . PAGEVn.LE ·· Scipio Township 7:30p.m. Potluck, 7 p.m.
Trustees, 6:30 Monday at the WEDNESDAY
Pageville township hall.
RACINE -- Southern Local Build.
ing Committee meeting Wednesday,
.. SYRACUSE ·· Sutton Township 5 p.m. at the high school. All district
wstees will meet Monday. 7:30p.m. residents welcome.
·syracuse municipal building.
/.
'

~Name·s

·College
basketball
roundup
•

Pvt. William Han ··
completes basic

MIODLEPORT •• Middleport .
Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
at temple.

Ohio Lottery

Sports, Page 5

·Community calendar
· . 'fhe Community Calendar is pub-

.

• I

.

.

. MU$SER INSURANCE

., 1118 I J'ld 81.

.

.

· f'onllroy

:· .

If !n&amp;su C&amp; $&amp;•

'

·'

•.

· Aaaocllttld Prt111- Writer
WASHINGTON - Rep. Frank
Cremeans, who won his congressional seat by the slimmest of margins, began running a fe-clection
commercial Monday thai was downright a1omic.
·
· The subject was atomic energy,
and Cremeans' approach to the subjecl made his Democratic opponent
. go ballistic.
"People in southern Ohio need
their jobs protected and we need 1\CW
jOb opponunities. We don'~ need
more broken promises or slick
speec~ by Bill Qinton, and we su~
don't need 10 import any Russian ura- ·
nium," CiaMans, R-Ohio, says in
the commercial.
.'
. A uranium pessing plant is the
largest employer in Cremeans' dis- •
trict. 1'he' plant's future baa been the I
subject of much debate . in recent

years, as nuclear power plan1s worldwide have bought more of their fuelgrade uranium from European factories .
Cremeans' 'Campaign commercial
did double duty, tapping into those
local fears while blasting Clinton for
agreeing to buy Russia's weaponsgrade uranium for eventual use in
power plants.
The intent is to keep bomb-grade
uranium out of the hands of terrorists
- a possibility raised by the unsta·
ble conditions in the former Soviet
U~ion - while helping to stabilize
the economy of the former adversaty.
Nolan Hancock, legislative director of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic
Workers, which representS waters at
the Portsmouth gaseous Diffusion
Plant in Piketon, Ohio, said the union
is worried that Russian uranium will
ultimately mean less of a need for
American-Processed uranium.

•

•,

'

The union.'s positi~lf the said Monday. "It's all rhetoric."
U.S. has to·bring in Russian uranium,
Stnckland, a Democrat, sa1d that
then ·:Let's feed it into the market in if he were still in Congress, he would
such a way that the market doesn't be encouraging more U.S. a.;quisition
get disrupted" by the influx, Hancock of the RusSian bomb matenal; .seeksaid.
ing guarantees that final processmg of
Cremeans' commercial does not the material would be done at the
mention'the pace of moving that ura- Piketon plant; and working for g~ar­
nium to market or the prices to be antees lhat the Russ1an uramum
charged for the Russian uranium. Bui would enter the U.S. market. slowly
he expanded on his thoughts in a en~~gh !o protect Amencan Jobs.
newspaper column in which he com- . I think Congress~~n Crem~ans
plained aboul "Allowing .Russian IS taking a cheap shot, swd Stnck·workers to sell their product al prices land, v.:ho .' ' trymg ~~~ to. regam ~
below the cost of production, under- 6th I?•slf!CI "at. . I thm.k he ~s
cutting our prices and putting Amer- speaking •n:espons1bly, I thmk he 1$
ican jobs a1 risk."
grossly miSinformed.
All of thai makes the man Crc· "I don't know i'fhe bas the capa- .
means defealed 5 t' percent-49 per- bility to understand an issue of this
cent, former Rep. Ted Strickland, just . complexity."
see red.
: Cremeans' chief of staff, Barry
"He may be doing what's smart Benhett, said in response to those
politically, bul it's a pathetic way to .fighting words: "He wasn't so dumb
represent ihe district," Strickland ;when he beat Ted Strickland."

TUBERCULO$IS TESnNG - P!hlga County Tu~lei'Ct~lotlll
NurH Connie Ksrschnlk conducted a skin testing clinic tor ·,
amployws of Veteran• M•mortal Hospital Monday aflamoon.
Tnt.d hare Is amptoyaa Julia Will. Night skin tasting clinics are .
held around IIIII county for the conveniance of resklllnls Md tt. . '
next one win bll allhe Columbia Township Fire Daptn biiWII..,...'
day, Feb. 12 from 6-7 p.m. All individuals who are In food ...,
vies are required to oblaln YMf'ly skin 1ssta, Karachnlk said.

....

�•!\

~.-~T;u:••=da~y,~F~e~~~~~u~~~~8~,1~~~--------------------~'~----------!P~om~e~ro~y~·~M~I~dd~~~po~rt~,~O~h~~~--------------------~The~~D~a~ll~y~Se~nt~~~e~I:•!P!~~3~

··Commentary

Tue•~~~tr,

'

FebrUI'y e, 19111

r...

-

The Daily Sentinel 0..,.. ,.._.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
61+992·2151• Fu: 992·2157

.!lr

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl1her
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

file...,.,. ••- l'7ley-,.-

L-.10
!111ft 3110- All. . •UIIIHt ro ltll/llnf IfNI muar HllfiNid and lttt:lll* •a'd . . •nd 11 ••, .__ numlw. No unolgned -

will ,. puiJIIollod. , _ _ -

... In ~ ,..,.,

odd ...... luuM, " " ' - -

.:.F ormer speaker likely
·to challenge grand jury
a

COLUMBUS (AP) - A jurisdictional issue that surfaced in Franklin
.&lt;· Counl}' grand jury investigation of lobbyist payments to legislators likely
· . will reappear as fonner House Speaker Vertt Riffe defends himself against
· .. charges.
. • , Riffe was indicted last week on two counts of filing false statements. a
first-degree misdCmcanor.
.
.. . He was accused of failing to disclose multiple payments that totaled
. $4,500 in 1991 and 1993 from billionaire retailer Les We~ner's company,
:.- The Limited.
Although such speaking fecs, .or honoraria, were legal at the time, recip., ients were required to repon any in excess of $SOil.
. . Investigators alleged that payments of multiple $500 checks at single
.,.. events were intended to avoid disclosure requirements.
·, The grand jury determined that multiple payments were legal if they did
· .. not come from a single soun:e.
,
H. Ritchey Hollenbaugh, Riffe's lawyer, anticipated challenging the
grand jury's authoril}' in the case.
"I think you can count on that," Hollenbaugh sai in an interview.
At issue was whether a prosecutor coul ·
ndently investigate
alleged ethics violations of legislators or could act only upon referral of a
case from the Joint Legislative Ethics Committee.
· · "I believe there should have been a confidential investigation and hearing liy JLEC. a finding by JLEC, and then if they made a finding of improp. er conduct for them to specifically refer it to the county prosecutor," Hollenbaugh said.
• "That was never done. This looked more like a game of bot pot~~;~o." he
· ~aid .
.
Franklin County Prosecutor Michael Miller anticipated the argument.
"Well, obviously I think we do have jurisdiction. l.f I didn'tthink we tiild
·jurisdiction, we wouldn't have done what we've done for the plit few
· months," Miller told reporters last week.
'
· · "Have I ever been wrong before? Sure," he said.
· Riffe may have at least one precedent to cite on his behalf.
. A previous special prosecutOr in the case, James Meeks, contended Miller
co.uld .not investigate the matter until the ethics committee determined
impropriety and referred ·the case to the prosecutor's office.
·
··
: : ,Both the committee ljnd Miller rejected that finding, and the prosecutor
: !copened the case.
.
.
• , Riffe also has one precedent that went agamst him.
: : . He argued the jurisdictional question jn December in an attempt to block
'; Jrand jury subpoenas in the case. Franklin County Com!flon Pleas Judge
' l'atrick McGrath ~jected the challenge, and the mvesllgallon cbntmued.
~ : A .first:.degree misdemeanor carries a maximum penalty of 180 days in
:Jail and a $1,000 fine. .
•.

=

:.Lette·rS to t.he ed •. tor
••

:"./J0 more fSX increaSeS

•
· ; Dear Editor,
·
: : Studying recent reports regarding a 17 percent increase in taxes in the
: Southern School District, I would suggest the board members take another
'long look at their proposal. It won't fly. Few pllOple consider S3 cents a day
:just "a can of pop." Oyer a year's time it still adds up to hard cash, which is
"In rather limited supply today, in.case they haven't taken the lime to notice.
Knowledge without wisdom is a comb in the hand of a bald-headed man.
· With the economy as unce'rtain as at the present, thanks 10 30-plus years of
:tax and spend, it will be foolish to burden the nell two generations of cur:rent and future high school kids with a repressive and unproductive tax. ·
: Now to the wisdom pan, which would have indicate that the 1911 school
'house be renovated and four or six additional rooms be added at a cost of
:less ihat S1,000,000. Forget all the frills' and goodies. Computer literate?
: p-etter get back to teaching our students how to read, write, and especially
: do basic arit\lmetic.
·
:: Fifty·percent of toda~'s nint_h graders c~'J P.as.s the Ohio stale basic exam
·In the three R's,' plus citizenship lbe first lime 11 IS g1ven! The old one room
,: fchoolhouse had that ~I· coming and gQing. Wake up call! Little kids do
:ftol need compurers, onl~ dedicated teiiChers throug~ whom they can learn
·ihe, basics. Leave the all1mponant advanced trammg for the last four years,
:and by those people and ·institutions who are qualified to provide it.
: No more tax increases!
.
\
· R.E. Weevar
I'
Racine

By O.WAYNE WICKHAM .
..
StMce
WASHINGTON - Given the
choice, I'd rather be in a foxhole
with Magic Johnspn than Robert
Doman.
Jobnson is the HIV-positivc, basketball superstar who came out of
retirement Tuesday to play for the
Los Angeles Laker.;, a team he led to
five National Basketball Associati9n
titles during the 1980s.
Doman is a California cqnsressman and Republican presidential
c~ate best known for rabid dislike of homosexuals.
It .was Doman who inserted a
provision in the Defense Department funding bill now awaiting Bill
Clinton's signature that forces the
military to summarily discharge all
service members who are HIV posilive. That's right. be wants them
booted out with only limited medical benefits - and none of the disability pay .that others who are given
health-related discharges now
receive.
Why? Because most HIV-positi ve service men and women are
"drug users, people who visited
whorehouses or·homosexuals," Dornan told a reporter. How he knows
this he didn't say. What little he has
said on the subject ellplains why his
presidential campaign remains stuck
in first gear.
Although it shouldn't matter.
isn't .it possible that some people
were infected through blood transfusions or what they thought was
monogamous sexual contact with
their marital partner? Does Doman
blame them, too, for their life-threatening condition?
Lucky for . Magic Johnson ·.ihat
Dornan is not the NBA commissioner. If he were, Johnson would have
been banished from the league the
moment in 1991 he announced he
had contracted the virus that causes
AIDS. As it was, he voluntarily
retired from the game only to return
the following year to star in the
NBA All-Star Game. And Johnson
the "Dream
1992 Olympic
il!;·tNJsketblill for the

United Slates.
.
After his splendid play in the
Olympics, Johnson wanted to return
to the NBA but changed his mind
when some players worried aloud
that be might transmit the HIV virus
·by bumping il\lo them on the basketball court.
That was then. Today, most playcrs know better, even if Doman
doesn't. They welcomed Johnson
back into professional basketball
even as Dornan's amendment is
about to become law. Ironically,
Clinton- who condemns Doman's
rule- has said he'll reluctantly sign
the legislation because it provides a
tong-awaited pay raise · and other perks for members of the nation's
anned forces. Under the bill, the
military will have six months to discharge all service men and women
who are H1V positive. At last count,
that number stood at 1.049.
Clinton says he hopes to get legislation passed before then that

...

IND.

... '·...

I

I

-' .

..
I

f

I

...

• IColurnbusl38• I

"
40•

:··

W. VA.

...

,,

.

-'
~~~

Goop/JicsNol

.

1977. Sunset tonight will be at 5:56
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:34
a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight . .. Becoming
cloudy...Snow toward daybreak west.
Lows in the&gt;'20s.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of snow.•. Changing to rain.
Highs middle 30s to lower 40s.
Exteaded forecast:
1bilrsday...A c~ance of rain. Lows
35 to 40. Highs h~the upper 40s to
middle 50s".
Frida:y...'Dry. Lows in the upper
20s and 30s.·Highs 40 to 50.
•
Satunlay••.Dry. Lows in the 20s.
Highs in the 40s.

;:Meigs announcements

Bruce Gilman
Bruce Gilman, 61 , New Haven, W.Va., died Sunday. Feb. 4, 1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Sept. 15, 1934 in Delbarton, W.Va., son of the late Dorsey and Delphia Dillon Gilman, be retired from the Kaiser Aluminum Corp. in 1986, was
a member of the Bachtel United Methodist Church, New Haven, and was a
U.S. Army veteran. ,
Surviving are his wife, Gladys Hensley Gilman; two daughters and sonsin-law, Debra and Danny Russell of Lakeland, Fla., and Dona and Nick Barton of Jackson; a son, Danny Gilman of New Haven; three sisters and brothers-in-law, Ozie Martin of Delbarton, Trula and William Dillon of Radnor,
W.Va., and Barbara and Arnold Hensley of Lenore, W.Va.; three brothers and
sisters-in-law, Cleophus and Peggy Gilman, and Rasco and Dottie Sue
Gilman, all of Columbus, and Alben and Betty Gilman of Amanda.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, W.Va., with the Rev. Ed Johnson officiating. Burial will be in the
Union Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tonight.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Marie Roush 'scholarship Fund, in care of Peoples Bank, New Haven.

' I

,.

.

mxn

:

i

•

",

'

pupils of a Pope, and the pees of a punk. In addition, I have the patellae of a prose srylist. the dandruff of a dandy, !Uld t)le ccretmll cortex of a copy
writer. Then lbere are the kidneys of a' kibitzer, 'the
ribs of a raconteur, the navel of a novelist, and the
musculature ·of a monologist, especially around
the trapezius. I have all these, allegedly.
When these revelations were shared with me,
did I ever have the presence of mind. to arch: an
eyebrow.' then tum the conversation to an historical overview of the relationship between
(obscure, transparent, or even invisible) body
pans and cafeer choices?
No. I ran screaming from the room every time.
I reacted in fear.
·
Do I have the genes of a genius? Nobody 's
ever told me' that, but I'd probably either swoon or
scream ifl heard it. Ms. Thompson (oh dear one!)
is not the swooning type.
·
Still my fondest hope is that one day we will
meet, gaze deep into each others' eyes, past the
corneas to the retina, down the optic nerve, and
discover that indeed we both havelthe central ncr·
vous systems of clowns. This will'l,ead to a relationship that will only end in pain. That is my
dearest hope.
Unle11 we have Cltltletl, In which
ca1e all bell are off.
,
(To rec.lve • complimentary lan Shaat,e
newalatter, c;all 1·800-988-DUCK or w~lle
Duck'l Bl'lllth, 408 Broad St., NeVIIda City, ~A
95959.) lan Shoalla 11 a 1yncllcated writer far
NEA.

.

.I

.

'

'

.

What we saw when tile Sepate Majority Leader spoke the b\I;Jer night was
Dole being Dole. He was the same w,arrior who has been scowling at us fi&gt;r
3S years. He was more intense, perhaps, but that was because he was directing his words at the right-winger.; who will be doing most of. the vqting. in
the Republican primaries. Beneath that crust, there beats tbe l}eart of .a
decent man with decent values -- a stay-at-home, actUlilly, when he isn't
campaigning. If you feel the need to typecast, call him a compassionite
Republican -- which means he bas the soul of a humanitarian !Jut must lie
careful not to show it.
I
Is Doie getting too old? The lighting for his speech may have made hiin
look like an ancient, but logic swiftly dispels that notion. A failing m4n
could not possibly keep up Bob Dole's grueling schedule. ~efore most of_,
tum~ over the morning
·
'
after his speech, Dole was
on his way to Iowa.
· Ironically, Dole can
turn to his Democratic
opponent for inspiration.
In 1992, Bill Clinton was
just beginning to 'look like
a serious candidate, when
a woman named Gennifer
0
••
Flowers publicly claimed
•
she bad been Clinton's
lover. The media went
wild. They clamored, they
clawed, they· stripped Clinton's hide {rom nose to
toes. As we are all jiWarc;,
he survived. Some might
wonder what he is made
of,.but whatever it is, it'~
stem stuff.
.
Can Dole do it? We'll
·have an answer by April
Fools' D~y.
Jouph S~r 11 •
1yndlcated wrher far
New1peper EnterpriM

!: fn 1952; Britain'• KlnJ George VI died; he wu succeeded to the throne · In 1?72, Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine was thought to have the
:. by hidiu.... £uzihllth n. ·
, " ·. "
·
. Democratic nomination wrapped up. But in February, the bone-weary can'
~: 1959,.t1iie U'!h~ S-1 ~sfully test-filed fcir llle fust time a TIIIII didate stood in the swirling snows of New HampShire and crie4 as he_angrily denounced a newsp&amp;per publisher for disparaginJ his wife. The media
.I in~dHni81. 11alli~ miUllo
c;.pe Canivetld.
• 1ft 191,8, Muriel QU!pphrey took the oath of office u a U.S. senl!« from began uking questions about his emotional stability. His campaign crashed.
In 1979, Sen. 'l:ed Ken,nedy of Massachusetts was all set to tie nomi.naced
: MinneiOia. fllliq the se1t of~ ·!4te husband, farmer Vice Prelident Hubert
by acclllllllion wlicn he sat down for a couple of interviews with CBS news;·. Humphrey.
· ...__
· · ·
.· · ..... ,..__,len
. , eli te
.
man
RoJCC MUdd. 11ie reporter aslted Kennedy why be wanted to be presi~n YCI!l! qo: ~"" COIIUIUSIIOII •nvetUpllnJ ""' """" aer•~ r
dent.
Kennedy slipped, slid, aiided, waffleil, wigled. The media began to
• ;_ opened itt heirilltt into the CSIIII6 of the lpiCC shuttle explolion·lhlll killed
portray
Kennedy as Insincere, and his campaian fizzled.
.
. Ill seven ~ memben.
·
·
·
.
Does
a
simil•
fate
await
Bob
Dole?
We'll
have
the
answer
around
April
Five ye.. .,o; Jardlli's Kina Huuein liltecllhlrply wwlld·lrilq in the
I;
by
which
time
lbe
big
primaries
Will
be
history.
BUI
the
m&lt;n
interesting
Gulf W.., dllciribinflbe conftict u 'an effort by 111111i J zsto destroy lnlq and
queition, it ~n'ls to inc, is why we're aslting 'the question in the first place.
_carve up the~ world.
~
'
AaiCIC!adan.
•. il .
,I

;i

f

I •

1 ·

...

...

i:

Media blasts front-runner, as usual

~·

,'

.,

'

•
Sessums was making his own play for the lady' s
always looking for arti- fair band (as if she'd deign to date a mere jourOfhompsoa, is doing. · .nalist!J,.but .Ms.,Thompher
Branagh. Sooner son deftly responded to
oc later, you see; the golden moment will come his clumsy flattery by
when she's worked through her pain and is ready giving him a brief leeto look for Mr. Right again.
lure on the historical difWhen that moment hap)lens, I am available. ference between TrageI'm willing to fill her days and nights until she dians, Clowns and Buffinds husband material. I volunteer. While she's foons. (God, I love her!)
looking for the man of her dreams, I will be her
But the more I
stopgap measure.
thought
about the
Vanity Fair, of course, is the closest thing we corneas-of-a-clown line,
have to a celebrity barometer. Since the February the more I thought the
issue featured Emma Thompson on the cover (as guy might be on to
•
Joan of Arc, no less), I sensed a golden opportu- something. I don't want
nity tQ discover if she's ready for another doomed to give myself too much
lan Shaalee
relationship. Sg I bought the magazine. I owed it · false hope, but Ms.
to myself and, yes, 1 owed it to her.
Thompson and I could - - - - - - - •
.
After rea!ling the cover story, I must say I was- possibly have a psychic connection.
n't entirely discouraged. On the downside, everyFor example, a physician once looked in my
body in show business thinks she's just great ear and gasped, "Why, you have the tympanum of
(including here~). which must do wonders for her a tragic actor!" I didn't put much stock in it, but a
self-Csteem. Plus a new movie and book have just month or so later, my girlfriend at the time stared
come out, both of which have received raves. This intensely at my midsection and suddenly shouted,
could mean that she's so adored now, there's no "Ian, you have the appendix of a poet!"
hope at ·all for a guy lil&gt;e me. (I don't even have
We broke up soon after, and I didn't see a docher number!)
tor for three years.
But halfway through the article, interviewer
In the decades since, however, though I've
Kevin Sessums told her, "I think the secret to never been told I have the corneas of clown, I
your portrayals has always been in your eyes. have been told I have a clown's coccyx. l'm .not
You've got the corneas of a clown,"
sure what that means, but many soun:es bave ,let
The, corneas of a clown? Ii sounded like Mr. me know I possess the philtrum of a fool, the

•

•
IToledo I 36" I

: ; By The A11oclllted Preu
l ; Snow or a mixture of snow and
i I rain is forecast for Ohi.Q tonight, but
: ; the National Weather ~ervicc said a
: i·wllfJIIing tre11d will continue.
: : The mercury tonighi will fall only
• : into the 20s, forecas~rs said, and on
W~nesday will crack the freezi~g
,. mark most places. Southern Ohio
1 ; could sec readings in the 40s.
1 :
By Thursday, temperatures could
: \ reach the SOs and the p~ipitation
: : will end.
• : The record-high temperature for
: ' this date at tholt:otumbus weather
: :station was 60 degrees in 1925 ~bile
: ; the record low was II below zero in

tm.

,., . .

help him build In · even ~~er
body - aod .strengtl\eft hisl resJ ~tance to the vu-us that threatens his
life.
. Bef&lt;n Domlll! ~orced his'Warped
1dea on 11, the nubtary treated HIVpositive trOOpS like any other member of the armed forces with a chronic disease. It restricted ~m from
ove~ and combaJ ass1gnments
and discharged them only when the!
became too Jlt to perform their
duties.
·
That makes sense. What Doman
has managed to do, doesn't.
Doman, who sat out the Vietnam
""(ar in t!Je Air Fon:e Re~rve, consJ~rS h1mself a champED~ .of the
nulitary. But as one of mJihons of
men and women on active dury at
the height of that costly conflict, I
disagree.
,
In the heat of battl~, I'd . rather·
have .someone at my stde w1th the
guts of Magic Johnson, than the
shameless gall of Ro~n Doman.
·

.l1 mixture of accumulation

By Joaeph Spear
So Bob Dole gave the Republican response to Bill Clinton's State of the
Union speech and they say he fell on his face.
So be was brooding, dour, negative, stale. So he looked like a cadaver and
'
sounded like a sourpuss. So now he is seen as a. struggling old pol making ,
one last lunge for the brass ring.
So here we go again..
.
The
pattern
is
utterly
~redictable.
A candidate rises ·to the top and
i,8y The AIIOCI8ted P..u
becomes
an
inviting
tarset.
For
a
while,
only
his opponents shoot at him, but .
: · Thday is Tuesday, Feb. 6, the 37th day of 1996. Theile are 329 days left
bad-hair
day
triggers
a
missile
barrage
from
the press. The candidate
a
in the year.
up
his
hands.
It's
nbt
his
fault,
he
says,
it's
the
damn "liberal media."
throws
. Today's Highlight in History:
.
He's half right. It's not all his fault. A lot of it is the media, and the "libIn 1895, baseball legend Babe Ruth \!(as born in Baltimore.
eral"
business is· irrelevant.
•
·On this date:
. .
,
The
conservative
Center
for
Media
and
Public
Affairs
specializes
in
In 1756, America's third vice presid~nt, Aaron Burr, was born in Newark,
counting
and
weighing
the
things
said
on
network
news
show~ about politi; ' N.J.
.
.
the co-director. of the organization, Roben Lichter,
:• • In 1'?78. the Unite!~ States won official•recognitian from France as lbe cal figures. In
wrote
in
the
Washington
Post that be had found a thread running through his
: · two uiions signed a pair of treaties•hi Paris.
•
research.
"It
is
not
liberal
bias," he said, but a broad trend toward '"com:
In 1788, Massachusetts became lbe sixth slate to ratify the U.S. Constipensatory' reponing. We, susgest a general rule: The stronger a candidate,
; tutiOn. ·
:., In 1899, a peace treal}' between lbe J]nited States and Spain was ratified the sreater the media scrutiny...
Take a look at Jecent history.
by lbe U.S. Senate.
.
·
The 1960 election was Richard Nixon's to lose. He ~as a sitting vice
In 1933, the 20th Amendment to the Constitution - the "lame duck"
'
president,
running against a rjch, Catholic senator. But then the 11ervous, taut
:, arnelldtrient Which moved the stlM1 of presidential, vice-presidential and conthe ~. cocksure John Kennedy and got stomped. The
Nixon
debated
~~ ..-iOllll Ierma &amp;om Mlri:h to January - wu declared .in effect.
media
piled
on,
and Nixon disappeared into a politicill swamp for eight
:. In 1943, a' Los Anples fw:y acquitted'IC!or Errol Flynn of three counts of
I, ttalliiOI'Y

MICH.

ionship that can only end in pain

•

and

(Conlin lied tram Page 1)
added to each building
computthe possible location of adult basic ers will be available in each classeducation classes at the new facility, room through the SchooiNet proaccording to Nancy Larkins of the gram. Remedial facilities will be
Eastern levy committee. ''This is .added in the new building and new
something that we are definitely expanded science labs will be added
looking into; having GED and adult in the high school. With these new
education classes in the new facility." facilities, we plan more class offerPublic discussion was held on the ing,s and an improved education for
upcoming bond issue, with several our students," said Superintendent
.
questions raised concerning the Ron Minard.
future of the district in the event the
Impro,vements to the senior high
March bond issue is not approved by science labs are particularly needed,
the district voters.
as students don't have the equipment
"If the bond issue fails, the district to do the necessary lab work for the
is looking at over a half-million &lt;!PI- classes at the present time.
Iars in the repairs and renovations that
"The lab tables currently in the
will have td be made over the next high school were moved there from
five years to the aging buildings. One Chester High School in 1957, and
hundred percent of that money will were the original ones purchased for
come from the district's pockets. Chester in 1929. We definitely need
- None of our buildings are currently to upgrade those tab facilities," said
· handicapped accessible, and that will · Roberts.
more than likely present the district
Segregation of secondary and etcproblems very soon," said board mentary students has been a big issue
of concern with parents in the district,
member John Rice.
Parents also questioned whether due to the adjacency of the proposed
new facilities will necessarily new building to the high school.
improve the quality of education in · According to school officials,
the district.
every measure to ensure total segre"Separate computer labs will be galion has been considered, and is

! !Warming trend to· bring

':Today in history

.'

rescinds Doman's ~ndlcss amendment. In the meanume, bunc:lre!ls.of
Gls - some of them almost cel'laln·
ly veterans of the Persian Gulf War
--:- will face the pos~ibility of being
kicked out of the m1htary because of
a medical condition they contracted
while on active duty (enlistees who
test positive for the H1V ~~s · or
AIDS are not allowed to JOin the
military).
Ironically, the life expectancy of
persons infected with the AIDS
virus bas increased dramatically: It's
not unusual for someone who tests
positive for HIV to live 10 years or
more before AIDS sets in. Doctors
routinely advise people with HIV to
remain active as one means of
staving off the onset of AIDS. Since
retiring, Johnson has worked out
regularly with weights and played
endless hours of pick-up basketball
games.
Now the more demanding sched·
ule of professiofllll basketball will

Eastern Board approves library agreement with county ,

OHIO Weather
Wedne!lday, Feb. 7
AccuWcathcr" forecast for daytime conditions and

Better to-be in &amp;·foxhole with Magic than oo·rnan

'Estll6fisfJd in 1348

'-

. ~

•
'

I

, ' DAR to meet
• • Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter Garden Club to meet
: ~:DAR will bold its regular meeting
Chester \}arden Club will meet
Velma M. Herrick, 87, of Middleport, died Monday, Feb. 5, 1996 at her
: :·Friday, Feb'1.9, at I p.m. at the Heath Wednesday, 7:30p.m. 111 the home of
.
residence,
following an extended illness.
""' United Methodist Chun:h, Middle- 1\vila Buckley. There will be a flower
Born Jan. 12, 1909 in Racine, she was the daughter of the late Charles
pon. This is a change from the Sat- arranging demonstration.
Thomas and Emma Shafer Rhodes. She was a homemaker and a member of
urday meetina because of Mrs. Edgar
.
Grace Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
Yierian;. scheduled speaker for the Lodge to meet
She is survived by her husband, Wesley Herrick of Middlepon; a son and
meeting.
Shade River Lodge 453, F &amp; AM
,. .
will meet at7:30 p.m Thursday at the daughter-in-law, Keith and Dolly Woods of Middleport; and five grandchildren, 10 great-grandchildren, and two great-great-grandchildren.
•... Rudlllld Couacll meetJnJ
hall. Refreshments.
'She was aJso..prec:eded'ill'death by a hillf-'Si~ter: - ... ····' -: - - · ,.·~­
, ·. Rutland Village Council wi11 meet
-r
Graveside services will be held Thursday at the Letart Falls Cemetery
~~ in special session tonight at 7 in lbe Club sets. session
.
': : Rutland Civic Centerto meet in execThe B1g Bend Chapter of Good ' Chapel, with the Rev. David duPiantier officiating. Friends may cilll one hour
"1, utive session to discuss personnel Sam Club will meet Saturday, 6 p.mi prior to the services at the cemetery. Arrangements are by the Fisher FunerIn Point Pleasant,
matters.
·· at Shoneys
..
" W.Va. ' al Home, Middleport.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to the Velma M. Herrick Fund, c/o Grace Episcopal Church, P.O. Box 326, Pomeroy,
.,
Ohio 45769.
Units oftlie Meigs County Emer- treated and transported at 2:13 p.m.
'.''· gency Medical Service recorded nine by Syracuse Squad 33 to Pleasant
calls for assistance Monday, includ- Valley Hospital
Graveside services for the stillborn infant son of Brian Shawn and Sta". ing two transfer calls. Units respondMIDDLEPORT
cie
Dowler Sharp of McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey, will be held at
ing included:
5:30 p.m., Gen. Hartinger ParkPOMEROY
way, VelmaHarrick, dead on arrival. I p.m. Saturday at the Koenig-Massers Cemetery in Meigs County. The Rev.
George Homer will officiate.
''· 3:33 a.m., North Secmt,d Avenue
Trevor Keith Sharp was born at the Burlington County Memorial Hospi: ~ Todd Quillen Jr.. Holzer Medical
. COLUMBIA TWP.
tal,
Mount Holly, N.J., on Jan . 30, 1996.
'
Center; •
8:34 p.m., auto fire, State Route
Besides
his parents, he is survived by a brother, Ian Caleb Sharp, at home;
" ' 9:58 a.m., Lincoln Heights, 143, vehicle owned by Steven D. Parhis paternal grandparents, William B. and Sharon Kay Sharp of Reedsville;
···:Dorothy Douglas, Veterans Memor- sons.
'
his maternal grandparents, Walter and Mary Jan Dowler of Coolville; his
,'''ial Hospital;
RUTLAND
·•- I :55 p.m., Village Green Apart10: II p.m., White's Hill Road. paternal great-grandmother, Ruth Frances Koenig of Reedsville; and his
maternal great-grandparents, Joseph and Marjoiie Suck of Belpre.
•-rnents, fJrst responder, Shaunda Test, Grover Oliver, PVH.
Arrangements are by the Leavitt Funeral Home, Belpre.
~ ·.
..

Velma M. Herrick

.~: EMS.units

answer nine calls

Trevor Keith Sharp

,. Consultant predlcts.__(c_·on
__
tln_u_ed_fr_o_m~P-·~1):........-,--

recreation, $3,862.89; pennissive tax,
• Agreed to thank agencies and
. law enforcement, others assisting during the Jan. 22
; 12,968.66; COPS FAST - grant. : flood;
$3,550.54.; downtown revitalization, 1 · • Approved the minutes of the Jan.
" ~88,000; total, $360,476.49.
I I 5 meeting and the maypr's report of
In other business, council:
$4,581.
The Rev. Roland Wildman of .
• Authorized Harry Clark to stan
a taxi service in the village provi~ Trinity Church· opened the meeting
he hils the proper documentation; 1 w1th prayer.
• Met wilh Melinda Strong about'
Present were · Vaughan, Hysell,
' 'Parking problems in front of Pomeroy · council members Musser, Walton,
··Elementary School;
· Dillon, William Young, Larry
""· • Approved spending $125 to Wehrung and George Wright. Also
~ tponsor a police training session for present was Sandee.Mills, co-owner
':tocal police departments;
of the Pomeroy McDonald's restau,•
rant, on behalf of the ·Romeroy Merchants Association.

1 '$2,969.8 f;

.

Dorothy M. W'ill
Dorothy Mildred Will, 85 , Pomeroy, died Sunday, Feb. 4, 1996 at Overbrook Nursing Center. Middlepon.
Arrangements will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
.

being taken into account in the building plans.
"Most of our thought toward the
planning of the project has gone'
toward compl~te segregation. With
the new building layout of separate
wings for grades K-4 and 5-8, we feel
very comfortable and confident that
we will have complete segregation.
The two groups of students will
come in different entrances to the
.building, and never see one another
during the day," said board president
Jim Smith.
Residents of the district have also
questioned whether this will be the
last opportunity for use of a large percentage of state monies toward a
building project in the district.
. According to Roberts, this very
well could be the final chance for the
·district to acquire state funding for
such a project.
"1996 is the final year for the current state building assistance program. Unless the state legislature
extends the prog.ram, this will be the
final year for projects. With government currently in a trend of downsizing, this very likely will be our last
crack at an opportunity like this,"
Roberts said.
·
In other matters, the boaltl:
• approved revising the 1995-96
school calendar to allow for Feb. 16
to be used as a make-up day for students.
• received a. report from Nancy
Larkins on the levy committee. The
committee has placed 30 architectural renderings of the new building in
local businesses, and has sent 1,923
mailers to registered voters in the district.
• Joy Swain and Debbie YouQg of
Computer Resoun:es Unlimited, who
addressed the board with an informational presentation at the January
meeting, said they would donate

:advenising time on their autolllltlfd
telephone hotlinc to the levy committee. The !)onation was graci~y
accepted by members of the teh
committee.
l
• added the following substitute
teachers for the remainder of the ti96 school year, on an as-needed batis
only: Angela Rigsby and Dse K. Blll'ris.• employed Debra Denise Morab'
.
a substitute cook for the remainder f
the 95-96 school year.
I
• approved an extension of un.,,d
leave of absence to Deborah We~
for March 18-21 , 1996.
• approved Mrs. Barbara Tripp
tutor for student Alan Watson, ert: live Feb. 5, 1996.
'
• approved the proper disposal ~f
193 old library books from Rivcrvi~
Elementary School.
:
• approved Treasurer Eloi)e
Boston to seek quotes for inSIJraltfe
to cover the buildings and businifS
personal property, from April Q'!,
1996 to April 18. 1997, as per sp¢ifications and most recent replacement cost figures.
• approved payment of bills for
1$1 ,470.00 toAAA and $10,457.30 to
:'Harcourt, Brace &amp; Co.
·
' • approved necessary transfers,
, advances, and appropriations.
set tlie next regular meeting for
Wednesday, March 13 at6:30 p.m: at
I Riverview Elementary, with 30 min! utes of public participation for the
I upcoming bond issue.
: ·
I·
The hoard set a special meeting to
discuss personnel for Wednesday,
Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. , at Tuppers
Plains Elementary.
The meeting will also feature a
question-and-answer forum of public
participation on the upcoming bond
issue for the district. All interested
parents and residents are urged 110
attend.

t

I

•

Who pays for tourism?
(Continued tram P1ge 1)
Wervices from Gene Johnson
Chevrolet-GMC in Gallipolis for
$405.80 a month for three years, with
a grant paying 50 percent of the costs .
Commissioners and Emergency
Services Director Robert E. Byer
expressed disappointment that no
Meigs County dealers submitted bids
although they bad all received packets.
• Denied an animal claim by

Short-term
T·bills decline

Leonard Amos, Coolville, who had 'a
steer injured by dogs on Jan. 12. The
cll!im was rejected because it was n.\)1
reported until Jan. 25 and not within
72 hours according to guidelines. .
• Paid weekly bills of
$229,329 .78, consisting of 13,0
entries.
• Reappointed Dan Arnold to the
:Gallia-Meigs Airport Authority
'Board.
,
The board's next meeting will be
Monday,' Feb. 12 at I p.m. in the
commissioners' office in the Meigs
County Courthouse.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Interest
rates on sbort-lenn Treasuty securities fell in Monday's auction to the
· lowest Jevel in more than a year.
The Treasury Deparunent sold
$16.2 billion in three-month bills at
an average discount rate of 4.88 percent, down from S.OI percent last
week. An additional $16.4 billion was
sold in six-month bills at an average
discount rate of 4.79 percent, down
from 4.90 percent.
The three-ri\onth bill rate was the
lowest since they sold for 4.79 percent on Sept. 26, 1994. The sixmonth bill rate was the lowest since
they averaged 4.75 percent on Aug.
I. 1994.

Do you

have an IRA1

a Keogh1 or a SEP1

__..___ Hospital news---Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Mildred
Lambert, Middleport.
Monday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Feb. 5 - Tomi Craft,
M~. Harold Coughenour and son,
Mrs. Thomas Masters and son, Mrs.

Man Hasseman and son, Albert
Smith, Robert Burdette, Lillie Hively, Tyler Van Meter.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Adkins, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Roach, son, Gallipolis.
(Published with permission)
'

618 EAST MAIN.ST., POMEROY
OPEN MON.-FRI. 9-6; SAT. 9-5

992-6674 ·

MuterearciiVIIII/Dilcover

accepted at mo1t area locetlon1.

The. D,dily Sentinel
(USPS 113-MO)

PubH1hod &lt;vf&lt;Y afternoon. Monday thiOIIiJI
Friday, Ill Coon St., Poinero7, Ohio, b71he
Ohio Valky Pllblishing Con.,anyJOannctt Co.,
POmeroy, Ohio 4l769, Pit 992-lll&lt;l. Secooc1
clus pos1age paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Metabtr! The Anociated Press, allllhe Ohio
Newspap::r Assotil&amp;ion.

'

POSTMASI'BR• Send oddlu1 ...,..... ..,
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Coun 51.. Pomeroy,
Ollio 45769.
SIJBSCRIPriON IIATIS

..,. c.nw .. Cll' ~ a-te

5 ~::::: : : :::: ::: ::: : : : : ::::~:::::j:;~S
SINGLE COPY P8li=JI
tllil, ................................................... .3~ (knCI
Sub&amp;criben DOl: deairinJlO pi)' the Cflriror my
•
Ia advance dinx:t to De Dlily Senti11l
on a~ .u or 1:i moodl bill•. Cmlit win be

Jl..,._...,...-.

- "-.

.

'

'

No aubtatpdoo b)' moll permiiiOd In . .

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

........

Am Ela Power ......,........:.......43'1.
Akzo ......................................55\
Aahland 011 ...........................37'.!.

Here's The Scoop.·.

ATAT .....................................651M

Blink One ................................37
Bob Evena ............................15\

Borg-Warner ••.;......••••.....•.....30'\

Cillrnplan Ind .........................17
Charming Shop ........................3
City Haldlng ...... ;...................24._
Fec)e,.l Mogul .......................18).
O.rtttt .................................13\

~ T&amp;A ......................47\
K-mart .. aao ooo oooooouooooo -ooooo . . oouooooo7
Landa End .••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••14'.4

9.99%
OUR LOAN SPECIAL CONTINUES

Umlled Inc.•••• ~....................16\

Peooplea·Bai'ICOrp...................23

Ohio Valley Bank..........- ......31-.
OM Yllley .............................31~
RockWII ..••...........•..............58~
.Ra.bblnl l M.v-re .............;...... 28
Raytl Dutch/Shell.-...........141._
ShOMJ'a lrte...........................If
Stir Blink ..............................63~
Wendy lnt'l......:.....................20'1.
Wortt.lngton Ind•..•••...•.••..••.•2"'

-·-·-

Stock ..port• are thl1_ ~~~:~
a.m. quat• provided by A
at o.lllpolll.

' .

H...... FDIC

,,

• Mason 773-5514 • NeW Haven 882·2135 • Point Plwant 6'75-112\
•
• Or Call Mlssl On The Peoples Bank Loan Hodlne 675-ASAP '

s..-..,, · Nooo.,. '""""'""'Joeo 1o &lt;mill *' r ltt!#ttllod•• •IIIIIMwM/«flo....,..
.V.R.,._,II.._,..
• .wuwlotil,_oi'SS,M
.,.,.,. ..... ....,......,, ....... ; ill*lfii.JI.II.
r-.u&gt;.R.w_,
_ _..., no ...,,.,.._,..,....__.,.._,_...._

B

'

�-'Sports

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily .S entinel
·

Villanova freshmen star in 79-66 win

Page 4
Tuesday, February s, 11.96

PHn.ADELPHIA (AP) - Villanova freshmen John Celestand and
Howard Brown both had huge games
against Georgetown. Afterwlrd, bowever, they were referred to by 'the ·
coaches as that "freshman kid" and
a " pain in the n ~ k . "
John Thompson, whose eighthranked Hoyas were defeated 79-66 by
the sixth-ranked Wildcats on Monday
night, was referring to Celestand
when he praised "the freshman kid"
and "No. 13" after the game.
"(He) did a hell of a job tonight,"
Thompson said. "I'm not so sure we
were ready for that."
Celestand scored a season-higli 19
points injust 21 minutes, going 7-of10 from the field as Villanova (19-3,
10-2 Big East)·won its sixth consecutive game.
" We just wanted to play mistakefree ball, take open baskets and play
poised. I think we did that," Celestand said. "It took a little while to
get going. Georgetown is relentless,

·:Eastern, Southern prepare for Friday clash
· ' By SCO.IT WOLFE
Friday night, barring some form
of weather emergency, the Eastern
' --Eagles will host the Sout)lem Toma·'does in the second of the seasonal
, Series between the two boys' varsity
basketball teams. In the first meeting.Eutem defeated Southern, 67-62,
' for the first time since a 92-87 win in
the ftnt meeting of 1!189-90. That
· •year, Eastern won the SVAC cham. : pionship, but later lost to Southern,
62-71.
. 1be year prior Eastern won the first
game (1988-89) by a 97-87 margin as
•. the schools' again split in the seasonal
..series.' Both the 1988-89 and '89-90
· leamswerecoachedbyCharlieRiley.
··Since·that time, Southern has totally
.dominated the series under Howie
·Caldwell coached teams.
· • Eastern went on to win the SVAC

in 1989-90 under Riley, breaking a
string of Southern excellence. In
(act, ,Southern had either won the
league (SVAC) or the Sectional or
bothevery year since 1977. The only
exceptions were in 1985 when Hannan Trace claimed the league and in
1992-93 when EHS and SHS were
not pan of a league.
During the 1984-85 season,
Southern fell to Eastern 71 -66 inthe
first game of the series, but Southern ,
redeemed itself 70-58 at Eastern in
the finale. Eastern won tlie rubber
game of the series that year 49-44 in
the Sectional Tournament at Me igs.
The Dennis Eichinger:coached
Eagles rolled on to a 12-10 season
and Sectional Championship, losing
a close battle with Franklin Furnace
Green in the District.
Digging very deep into the record

·books, Eastern last won· an EasternSouthern bout when Dan Spencer
hurled a half court shot through the
hoop (then just a two-point shot) to
can the Tornadoes in January ·l97778. Dan's daughter, Danielle, is an
·up-and-coming star as a seventh·
grader at Eastern, while 8th grade son
Kirt plays on the eighth grade squad.
Since 1974, Carl Wolfe, Jr., now
mentor at River Valley, coached the
Tornadoes throughthe 1985 season,
when Caldwell took over. Howie
Caldwell owns a 164-69 overall
coaching record, two SVAC Coach of
the Year awards, two district coach of
the year awards, and seven sectional
championships. Additionally, Southem has one district crown under
Caldwell's tutelege and five district
runner-up honors.
Caldwell has spent21 years in the

Southern organization, and is in his
lllh as varsity mentor.
After losing four seniors from last
year's squad the 1995-96 Southern
Tornadoes looked for a sharp, quick
learning curve. SHS apparently hit
that curve, but fooled everyone when
the bottom fell out after the last beating by Eastern. Southern had won
four of five, butlhen lost three of the
last four.
Last year, Southern was 13-9
overall and 12-3 in the Tri-Valley
Conference. Gone from that club is
All-District,
All -Stater
Ryan
Williams, All-TVC players Mason
Fisher and Jeremy Hill, and Kevin
lhle. Southern scored 66.1 points per
game last year as a team. The graduates lost accounted for 4.5.1 points in
that average. No one has consistently come forward to plug the offensive
gap, and no one has shut off the flood

-EHS senior gir(s shine in 75-43 victoty over Miller
By SCOIT WOLFE
Eastern to a 26-5 first quaner lead. assists, and 21 fouls
· · TheEasternEaglesgirls'rolledto Eastern tallied 19 points in the .secEastern won the reserve game 64: a 75-43 Tri-Valley Conference win ond quarter by the same methods en 23 led by Valerie Karr with 16, Juli
:o.ver Hoc~ng Division foe Miller routetoa45-16halftime. Eastern Hayman 13, and Kim Mayle with 12.
· Monday mght at Eastern. It was a subbed freely throughout the game, · Jennierfer Brown had eight and Brit: very special game as seniors Nicole outscoring Miller 16-11 in the third nei Merckle added seven for Miller.
: Nelson, Rebecca Evans, Jessica Kan-. round, then hanging on in the fourth
Eastern's make-up schedule
: and Beth Bay who were honored on for a big finale, 75-43.
Eastern visits Southern on Wednes· senior. night for fine careers as Lady
At one point in the fourth quaner, day, then tentatively goes to Meigs
· Eagles.
Eastern had a family affair. Sisters Friday afternoon for a 4 p.m. game
· Karr led the Eagles with 18 points, -Jessica and Valerie Karr, and Rebec- (pending the signing of officials).
, while Eva11s added 15 points and . caandStephanieEvansjoinedEvans' Eastern hosts Vinton County on Sat: eleven rebo.inds. Together that duo first cousin Juli Hayman in racking urday at I p.m., plays Trimble in the
:had 13 steals. Patsy Aeiker added 13 up 10 points for the Eagles.
tournament at 6:30 at Alexander on
Eastern hit 31-75 for 41 percent (all Wednesday,February 14; then hosts
: pionts and seven rebounds, Jessica
· Brannon had 13 points and nine two's), was 13-31 attheline,andliad Federal Hocking on Saturday, Feb: rebounds, and Nicole Nelson had 48 rebounds(Brannon 9, Evans II, ruary 17 at noon.
Score by
: eight points and five assists.
Aeiker 7). Eastern collected 25 steals quarten
: ' Miller was led by Mindy Halasz (Karr 7,' Evans 6, Brannon 5); Aad II Eastern 26 19 16 14=75
· imd Kristen with 10 points each and turnovers, 18 assists (Nelson 5, Karr . Miller 5 11 II 16=43
: Darcy Cook with nine.
5, Brannon 5); and had 12 fouls.
MWer (43)-Steph Merckle 0-1.
: After running through its offense
Miller hit 15-47 two's and 3-6
: successfully, Eastern ignited a potent
• fast break that saw Karr, Evans,Aeik- three's, while hitting 4-9 at the line
: er and Nelson cash in on the revolv- and grabbing 28 rebounds (D. Cook
, : ing door of scoring opportunities. The 8, C. Cook 6). Miller had six steals
: Eastern fast break and press sparked (D. Cook 3); 32 turnovers, five

112=4, Mindy Halasz .5-0-0= I0, Corrie Cook 3-0-I/2=7, .Darcy Cook 40-113=9, Kristen Plant 2-2-010=10,
Christy ·Halasz 0-0-112= I, Krissy
Neal l-0-2, Britnei Merclde 0-0-0,
Kasey Snyder 0-0-0, Jenn Browning
0-0-0, Anna Braglin 0-0-0. Thtals
15·3-4&amp;o43.
Eastem (75)-Beth Bay 0-0-0,
Rebecca Evans 7-0-114= 15, Jessica
Karr 6-0-618= 18, Nicole Nelson 4-00=8, Patsy Aeiker 6-0-113= 13, Crystal Holsinger 1-0-0=2, Martie Holter
0-0-0, Tracy White 0-0- 116=1,
Michelle Caldwell 0-0-0, Jessica
Brannon 5-0-3/4=13, Amanda Milhoan 0-0-1/4=1, Juli Hayman 1-00=2, Valerie Karr 1-0-0=2, Kim
Mayle Q-0..00...-(), Stephanie Evans()..
0-0. Totals Jl.f).1313l/-75.

.

Division IV race
tightens
in
AP
poll
~---Sports briefs----

.. .

:FooTBALL
": HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP)- Ron

:;Erhardt. the offensive coordinator for
; J'ittsburgh the last four years, joined

; p N~w York Jets along with former
•~teeters tight end coach Pat Hodgson.
• :': Erhardt, who will be 65 later Ibis
: monlli, and Hodgson were released
;·t)y the AFC champions last week.
• Brhardt was the offensive coordina~tor when the New York Giants won
: the Super Bowl after the 1986 and
: 1990 seasons.
"
Meanwhile; Bobby April became
: the third Steelers assistant to leave
! since the Super Bowl when he was
: hired by New Orleans as special
• teams coach.
• TAMPA. Fla. (AP) - Mike Shu-

.

.

Ia, an assistant with the Chicago
Bears for the past three seasons,
became the NFL's youngest offensive
coordinator when he was hired by the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Shula, .30.
the youngest son of' former Miami
coach Don Shula, jpins the staff of
new Bucs coach Tony Dungy.
TORONTO (AP) Don
·- Matthews, who directed the Baltimore Stallions to the CPL title,
returned to tile Toronto Argonauts as
coach and general manager.
Matthews, 56, who signed a threeye11r contract, coached the Argos in
1990 before leaving to join Orlando
of the WLAF. He had a year remaining on his contract with· the Montreal-bound Stallions.

~victory
.
By SCOTT WOLF,

.

Circle

·

daughter of Patti Hayman and Greg
Hayman.
.
.. , Much of the time when the 1995Johnny Evans is one of the South.: 96 Eastern Eagles take · the floor, east Districts top basketball officials
three-fifths nf the team can he attrib- and has been voted on by coaches
~ uted to Ron and Joyce Hill. Micah statewide to do District and RegionOtto and Daniel Otto are brothers and a1 games in the OHSAA tournaments.
the sons of Joyce, while Eric is the Teresa (Edwards) Evans was a stluson of R9n. making the trio step for one of the first Lady Eagles teams
brothers. Erfc and Micah are enjoy- circa 1975-77: She was quite a playing outstanding senior years for er herself for Coach Sue Thompson's
Coach Tony Deem's Eagles and have (Arnold) clubs as was little sis Patti
~ played varsity for three :years. (Eawards) Hayman. Hayman was on
Besides be10g teammates the clans- one of Eastern's club's to visit the dis.!Jien are also good. fri~nds. Wherev- . trict in the late 1970's and early
;eryou see one, you re hkely to see the 1980's. Eastern's seniors were han; others not far behird.
ored during halftime of the reserve
• , 1be three also ha·;e spent several game Monday. Going down the
'years of summer employment at stretch of their senior sea!;ons are
Adams•·Farms. For recreation, what Nicole Nelson, Jessica Karr, Rebecdo they do? Shoot hoops and play ca Evans, and Beth Bay. All have
ball. What else?
played for Coach Scott Wolfe for the
,
~ one Par:'icular night recently, past five years and were pan of an 11&lt; the tno, compnsmg three-fifths oflhe · 3 team in the eighth grade. Also, on
.:•'6n--cou&amp;:~,, players.had three-f~urth~ of that team, and still together are
.. the teams o~nstve output. L1kew1se, juniors Patsy Aeiker, Amanda Mil' wben there Is a schedule change of a hoan, Crystal Holsinger, and Martie
snow day, Coach Deem can get all Holter.
three with one call. Of course, there
Eastern's girls' varsity is 11ow 12,re downfalls. When Mtcah (often the 4 on the season going into Wednes. driver) is late, so are.the_other two. day's game at Southern. They are tied
. They dl!n~ ~llow a sbp bke that too for first in the Tri-Valley Conference.
jlfte~-. Besides.~ boys 10 the fam- Eastern's boys are also on a roll, windy, Sl~~tephaine.~, CII'CB f992~ ning their last five games in boosting
!&gt;3, was Ill AII-D1stnct basketball their record to 8-7 overall. Tony
player at Eastern and sister Toby_Hill Deem, former Southern star, is the
fU a star player and ~pec1ally ,coach. Both Wolfe and Deem played_
rebounder on the v~tty squad fQr Carl Wolfe at Southern. Likewise,
sev~ral yeu:s back. Tal~ng about so have Jay Rees, Jonathon Rees,
{IJIUI)' aff11rs, at one .potnt 10 the · Kent Wolfe, Richard Wolfe, and
. lj)uith q~ of the_Miller ~e ?n Scott Prederic~ who all lire coaching :
MOIIC!Jy,_Butem QUite ~ aft'm. Sis- varsity teams. Southern grad and ·
ters Jes11ca and Val~ne ~· .and Howie Caldwell coached Chris Stout, ·
~-and S~le _Evani-!,Q!~, alOng .with ScOtt Wickline are other
"v~ fint cous~~ Jub ~~ 10 Southern siblings in the profession.
:~Ill up ten pomts for the Eaflet- . Sevet:al others, ineluding ·Brian .
~- ~ are
Weaver, Todd Cummins, and A1111
, while1hlir lillm • ~-~~~~ : Criap
out of lhe Southent
!il~
~ - ·the ~ of systan, aloiiJ with Jeff Caldwell a
·~ ·
are •
. hi ..... Soudiem II'IDiplant ,hi~ sellior year.
·' ....- ·Md SU~ii· ~. w le ""'
Until •lltdme ni - you in the
B\111!1' . . . . - ...... of ~~ny VICtory Circle.
BV. 11!11 ~ Bv11111, Jul1 !~ ~.
.

: Sentinel Correapondent

F

I;

-wrs. ·.

Jea.ic&amp;

t

bfve come

-

By The Alloclated Prell
With two weeks left in the 45th
Associated Press boys state high
school poll, you could throw a blanket over the top three teams in Division IV.
' Findlay Liberty-Bertton is first,
Van Wert Lincolnview second and
Springfield Catholic Central is third
in the balloting by a state media parrel. Just 40 points separated Springfield Catholic Central from. the top
spot,
The. races aren 't nearty~ exciting
in the other three divisions.
Archbold leads Bedford Chane!
by 102 points in Division III,
Zanesville is on top of Cleveland
Heights by 97 points in Division I
and Orrville leads Bexley in Division
II by 36 points.
Liberty-Benton, the reigning state
champion, received 18 of a possible
38 first-votes and .had.329 points. Just
12 points behind was Lincolnview,
but the Lancers began the week just
five points back of the Eagles'.
Springfield Catholic Central, which
lost~
- n he state finals to Liberty-Benton I t year, receiveil eight first. plac votes and 289 points.
DeGraff Riverside was fourth,
trading places with ~h-place
Southington Chalker.
North Lima South Range, second
last week, fell four slots in Division
lil after a 59-57 loss to McDonald.
That-opened the door for Ari:llbold to
expand on what was a 94-point lead.
Chane), Lisbon Anderson, Wheelersburg and Seaman North Adams each
moved up a rung with South Range
dropping to sixth.
Zanesville heat Cleveland Heights
69-68 in overtime in the Division I
title game, and hasn't ,given up the
top spot since.

gate of the opponents offenses.
Seniors John Harmon and Spike
Rizer have put together great games
forlhe Tornadoes this season, but
have lacked consistency. Juniors
Jamie Evans, Jesse Maynard, alld
Ryan Norris have had several big
games, but too have lacked consistent
offensive outputs.
Senior JayMcKelvey has had an
up and down year, but joineq the
above five to hit double figu.es in a
big win over Vinton County.
Ironically, Caldwell was a star at
Eastern, thea built a new home at
Sou them. Eastern's third year mentor,
Tony Deem, was a star at Southern
and is now in the midst of solidifying the Eastern program. Coming off
two 6-15 years, Deem has rebuilt the
Eagles into a league contender and a
second seed in the Southeast District
sectional tournament, this year settling in at 8-7. The last pre-Deem era
Dennis
record stood at 3- 17.
Eichinger, now assiStant principal at
Meigs. coached the Eagles from
1978 to 1988, wiiiQing a sectional
crown and two runner-ups in the
SVAC (Second to SoutheOJ). Riley
had two seasons at the helm, while
Larry Bunger had the 90-91 team,
and John Nichols had a brief stint of
five games in Eastern's musical chairs
of coaches. Next came Greg Ullman,
who had one winning season ( 11 -10)
in two years at Eastern. A f t e r
dropping to 3-7 early in the year and
losing two, two-point games to both

PICftJRE YOUR Pft
NG ,.BE•••

Pft

Galloway Westland was third,
Cleveland Collinwood fourth and
·Toledo St. Francis, which lost68-62
to Libbey, dropped three spots to
fifth.
For the second straight poll,
~n~sville ~.eiv~ , )~ .. fl1"t-place
votes.
In Division II, the top two teams
stayed the same. Orrville received
341 ·points while unbeaten Bexley
had 305.
.
Lima Bath was third, trailed by
Bellbrook and Cleveland Villa
Angela-St. Joseph. yet another
defending state champion, which lost
last week ·tO Mansfield Senior in
overtime.

'•

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

-

-Sports briefsBAsEBALL .
PITTSBURGH (AP)' - Pitts. burgh Pirates buyer Kevin
McClatchy. shrugging off rumors of
·friction in his investment group, filed
his final paperwork on schedule with
major league baseball.
McClatchy, a California businessman whose $90 million takeover of
the deeply-in-debt team was
approved last week by baseball's
ownership committee, now awaits a
·vote of the 28 club owners.
CLEVELAND (AP) ~Ore! Hershiser, who is under contract to the
Cleveland Indians through 1997,
auditioned for a job as an analyst with
Fox.
The lndians confirmed Hershiser
.interviewed with the network, which
will begin telecasts of major league
baseball June I.
Hershiser, 37, was 16-6 with a
3.87 ERA last season and 4-1 with a
I.S3 ERA in the postseason. The
Indians later exercised his $1.5 million option for 1996, then signed him
· for $2.7 million for 1997.

Meigs arid Belpre, Eastern has come
. on strong to win five in a row and is
now 8-7. Additionally, one of the
losses came to then IOth,ranked Wellston 67-62. So, the Eagles have been
on a rampage since defeating South-'
em. Senior Eric Hill is averaging.
nearly 20 points per game and has ,
proven to he unstoppable despite
drawing double and triple teams.
Senior Micah Otto has returned to his'
old form and over the last five games
has averaged over 15 points per
game, after struggling earlier in lh&lt;:"
year below ten ppg. Senior Brian
Bowen has been a steady force and
has overcome a severe ankle sprain
to get more varsity minutes with each
game. Michael Barnett, another'
senior, has shown much improvement
over his early season slats, while Eric'
Dillard has settled down true to
form .
•
Juniors Josh Casto and Daniel'
Otto have provided the necessary·
spark ofT the bench and as spo•
starters. That duo livens up the action'
when they are on the floor and ha.ve
made considerable offensive contributions.
Every time Eastern has beaten,
Southern, Southern has always come
back to win the second game. Coach
Caldwell hopes this holds true, while
Coach Deem hopes to stan a new tra-·
dition. Coach Chris Stout's reserves,
now 8-7, will take on Scott Wickline's young whirlwinds in the opener at 6:30.

"FOR PETS ONLY"
WILL BE PUBLISHED TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 1311 IN

. ''

LOSES BALL· ~·a Allert Jvaraon, Cllttlr, raacta lfler
looall)9 control of ballaa VlllaiiOVII'a Klrry Klttlaa, left, and lefty
Penn ~ during flrlt half actiOn Monday In Phllacltlphla. VII·
· · lanova won, 7e.e&amp;. (AP) ·
· ,
.

.::.Nancy Lieberman-eline
.among ttall inductees
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) · Nancy Lieberman-Cline doesn't
· mind at all being told that she plays
basketball like a man. She even
prefers il
After all, it helped put her in the
Bas((etball Hall of Fame.
·Other inductees announced Mon.• _day were scoring rival s George
: Gervin and David Thompson, UCLA
and Los Angeles Lakers star Gail
Goodrich, high-scoring Ge01Je Yardley and the· late Kresimir Cosic of
Croatia.
But the often controversial Jerry
Tarkanian, who owns the hest winning percentage among college
coaches, was passed over.
At S-foot-8 and 120 pounds,
Liebennan-Cline didn't intimidate
with sheer size. But she helped
' restyle women's basketball into a
~ugh~r. hard-charging, more aggres• save game.
•
"Maybe people will associate me
with change and changing attitudes in
• how the game should be played:
:· without it being wrong to say, 'She
:· plays like a guy,"' Lieberman-Cline
' said.
•
S,he broke barriers throughout her
;.. career. At l7,she•playedonthe 1976
;: U.S. team that won the Olympic sil,: ver medal, making her the sport's
;; youngest medalist in history.
:;
DUring two seasons with lhe
:· Springfield Fame of the United States ·
.; Basketball Leagoo in 1986-67, she
·:: was the first woman to pia~ in a
: men's professional league. .
·• . She also led Old Dominion to two
:; straight national college champi:: onships.
.~
The scoring rivalry between
: Gervin and Thmu.-son reached its
• height on April9, 1978, when each
'
·· was challenging for the NBA scoring
:; · title with one game left. Thompson
; scored 73 points for Denver to take
: . the lead. But a few hours later,

, . CEDARVILLE, Ohio (AP) -; Shawnee State forward Vernita
: · Provitt and Cedarville guard Jason
': 'Quinn have been selected as the Mid. · ·Ohio Conference players of the week.
; · Provitt, a 6-foot freshman from
~ Warren, averaged 28 points and 13
;; rebounds per game while leading the
.~ Bears, who are ranked No.4 in NAIA

ONLY

$690
PER PICTURE
PRE·PIID.

.

.J

~lease enclose selfaddress~ stllmped

.

"PET'S "AME"

•
.I

.'

®l

=

BATT ERIES

IIIGII*Ictl

r- !!~'!1!...'.!'!!:'!!!1.!!.".!!. ~'!:.~,
1 .

VALENTINE PETS

P235/75AX15

Apache All Seaspn
$§995

'

Ohio Domlnlcan ...- ............................. 10
Findlay ..................................................9
Urbana ......................................;.............&amp;
Shawnee St...........................................&amp;

MIIOM ..................................................5

~---·----~-----'
Deadline Friday, F'bruary 9th at 3
Mall or bring the entry form:

.

~-

i

The Daily Sentinel
110' Court St

.Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.•

•

I
.J

p.m.

. ·. "
.

t...-......,(.. .........-.......................o~:

·-

7

11

9

' 12

-

.HOWARD E. FUNK
MEIGS COUNTY :TREASURiR .

''

•'

Lappas said.
Neither team shot well from t.6e
free-throw line, with Villanov1 goi.g
15-of-31 and the Hoyas 18-of-31. • ·
. Othella Harrington had 10 points
and Jerome Williams grabbed II
boards for Georgetown, which had
just seven assists.
" If we had made some of our
layups, we would have had a lot more
than seven," Thompson said. "We
missed a whole lot of easy shots."
The game was tied at 35 at halftime and Villanova started the second
half with a 19-5 run that included 3po inters by Kittles, Williams a~d
Celestand. Celestand's 3-pointer with
13:22 remaining gave the Wildcatu
52-40 lead.
. They stretched it to 54-40 on Kitties' desperation IS-footer before Aw
made a layup 10 snap a 13-0 run . But
Georgetown couldn' t get any cloier
than eight points the rest of the way.
Eberz, who bruised his hip in Saturday 's win over Pittsburgh, didil ' t

Rookie
Smith
shines
for
Warriors
.

~~~~~~!
~l:~c~~!~~ for SaturThe _game was played at the Spec-

By Tha Aaeoclated Prna

. ,,

"

,,

the Hoyas' miscues carne in the second half, ~ompared to only five
turnovers by Villanova after halftim~.
Iverson's two steals enabled him
to break his own schoofsingle-season
record of 89 steals. He has 90 thefts
this season.
The Wildcats, who shot 53 percent
in the game (27-for-51) and were
ahead by as many ·as 17 points in the
second half, also got 17 points from
d~fense."
Kerry Kittles and IS from Alvin
Brown started in place of injured Williams. Chuck Kornegay had II
small forward Eric Eberz, their No. rebounds and Jason U.wson had fi ve
2 scorer at 14.2 points per game.
blocks, all in the first half.
"These freshmen - both of them
Midway through the second hal f,
- just did an outstanding job tonight. Lawson got into a scuffle with
It makes me feel good about our team Boubacar Aw. No punches were
now, obviously, and for our team thrown , and both players were
charged with a technical foul. Lawdown the road," Lappas said.
The game was only one Monday son, who was ejected for fighting in
night that involved a ranked team.
a game against Bradley early this seaThe Hoyas (19-4, 9-3) shot ~ ust 34 son, would have been lost for the year
percent from the field - 30 percent • if he was tossed.
in the second half. They had 12 steals,
"Jason's hands were clearly down ,
but committed 17 turnovers. Ten of but I was definitely ~till nervous, "

The Clippers trailed 111 -94 with
8:3S to play, but tied the game at 124
on a short baseline hook by Brian
Williams. When Sprewell missed a
driving baseline jumper, Smith converted it into the winning bucket.
Sprewell scored 26 points to help
extend the Clippers' losing streak to
six games. Still searching for the win
that would equal last season's total o~
17, the Clippers lost for the lOth time
in II games, despite 22 points each
from Williams and Loy Vaught and
21 by Terry Dehere.
After Smith's basket, Pooh
Richardson could have given the
Clippers the lead, but his 3-point
attempt missed and Tim Hardaway
finished the scoring with two free
throws.
Jazz 9:Z, Grizzlies 83
· KariMalonescoredmostofhis31
points from inside as visiting Utah
sent struggling Vancouve~ (I 0-36) to
its fifth_!lr~J loss,. By.ron Scott had
19 points to ead Vancouver. The Jazz
(31 -15) took over first place in the
Midwest Division .
TraD Blazers 90,
Raptors 87
James Robinson sank a 3-pointer
from the top of the key with one-tenth
of a second remaining to boost Portland at Toronto. The Trail Blazers,
who trailed 71-62 with II minutes
left in the game, were led by Rod

Strickland with 28 points and ClifT
ltobinson with 25. Tracy Murray and
Damon Stoudarnire scored 16 points
apiece for the Raptors.
Knkks 97, Pistons 91
Parrick Ewing had 25 points and
13 rebounds, and his fadeaway
jum~r with I :02 remaining helped
host New York hold off Deuoit. The
Knicks wasted most of a 16-point
second-half lead, letting the Pis to. ns
get within a point in the final78 seconds before Ewing 's basket. Derek
Harper hit four foul shots to seal the
win.
Heat 103, Kings 92
The outside shooting of Rex
Chapman and Bimbo Coles complemented Alonzo Mourning's inside
play as Miami defeated visiting
Sacramento. Mourning had 25 points
and II rebounds, Chapman scored 24
points and Coles added 21. The ·
Kings have lost five of their last seven games.
Timherwolves 104,
Mavericks 92
Tom Gugliotta had 22 points, II
rebounds and seven assists to lead
Minnesota over Dallas. Christian
Laettner added 23 points, Isaiah Rider ~ad 21 and Sam Mitchell 20 for the
host Wolves, who got seven
rebounds, seven assists and seven
blo~ks from 19-year-old rookie
,Kevin Gamel!.

trum before a crowd of 18 ,433 , the
third-largest coliege basketball crowd
in Pennsy lvania history.

The Golden State Warriors knew
what they were doing when . th~
selected Joe Smith of Maryland as the
No. I pick in last June's NBA draft.
We
Mature "
" If I had to cast my vote for rookie of the year tomorrow, I'd give it .0'
Joe - based on the fact that he has
great legs ~nd shoots great from the
outside," Los Angeles Clippers coach
Bill Fitch said.
And that was after the Clippers
fell to Smith and the Golden State
Warriors 128-124 Monday night.
"Joe came up with the big play
Our statistics show that mature
down the stretch," Warriors coach
drivers and home owners
Rick Adelman said. He played great.
You have to make a play like that
lewer and less cosUy losses thari
down the stretch to win , and he did."
other age groups. So n·s· only fail
The visiting Warriors blew a 17to charge you less for your
point fourth-quarter lead before
insurance. Insure your home and
Smith broke a 124-124 tie when he
car with us and save even more
tipped in Latrell Sprewell's missed ·
with our ' special muRi-polic~
shot with 20 seconds left.
discounts.
"The last play was super 011 his
pan," Fitch said.
Smith finished with 23 points, hit'
ling IO 'o f 17 from the field , recorded lhe Warriors' only blocked shot
· and had no turnovers in 38 minutes
of play. Of his 16 rebounds, 14 were
' on his own end of the court -the
· Clippers as a team had II offensive
rebounds .
"I tried to go to the boards on hoth
ends," Smith said. "I tried to geta lot
of motion, so it was tough for them
to find me."
In other NBA games, Utah defeated Vancouver 92-83 ; Minnesota
stopped Dallas 104-92; Miami
downed Sacramento 103-92; the New
" I don' t know if the eat' s out of
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland
York Knicks defeated Detrq,it 97-91 ;
Browns quarterback Vinny Tes- the bag yet, but it looks like we 're
and Portland edged Toronto 90-87.
taverde says he has been told he will going to Baltimore and it looks like
play ·the 1996 NPL season for the we ' II be called the Mustangs. The
Baltimore Mustangs," Testaverde
Baltimore Mustangs .
said.
" I'll have to get used to the
A Cleveland television station,
name,
but we'll see how it goes."
Insurance Services
WKYG, reponed Monday night that
Cleveland is attempting to block
214
EAST MAIN
Testaverde
made
the
comment
in
a
TOLEDO (AP) - Miami of
the move, and a trial is set for Monwhile
he
was
at
a
golf
brief
interview
POMEROY
Ohio's Landon Hackim and Kent's
.day on the city's claim that the
in
Tampa,
Fla.,
on
Monday.
outing
992~7
Carrie Templin have been selected as
Art Modell Browns have a lease obligating the
Browns
owner
the players of the week in the MidAuro-Ownen lruurance
announced Nov. 6 that he signed a team to play in Cleveland Stadium
American Conference.
Ule Home Car Business
deal Oct. 27 to move the Browns to through 1998.
n. ·,v. p,..u..
Hackim, a senior from Cuyahoga
Baltimore for the 1996 season.
Falls, had 24 points in a victory over
Bowling Green, hitting 9-of-17 shots.
from the field including 5-of-9 from
3-point range. His second 3-pointer
gave him the all-time MAC leadership with 246 for his career. Hac kim
added 19 points in a victory over
Ohio.
Templin, a sophomore from Hillpoint, Wis., averaged 23 poil!ts and
12.5 rebounds as the Golden Flashes
WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
took over first place with a pair of
wins last week. She had 24 points and ,.
Remember that special someone this
II rebounds in a 75-59 victory over ''
Valentine's Day with a me$58ge in
Ball State and 22 points and 14
rebounds in a 91 -66 win over BowlThe Daily Sentinel
ing Green .

Drivers, Honte
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

have

It_wi.Jl be _Baltimore Mustangs
according to Testaverde

~lrf6~

Hackim, Templin
take honors

•Sweethearts
•Moms &amp; Dads

•Gnadpannts

GARMiscHPARTENKIRCHEN, Germany (AP)
- 'Italy's Werner Perathoner won his
first World Cup title of the season,
beating France's Luc Alphand by
0.21 seconds in a super-giant slalom.
The race was originally scheduled
for Sunday, but was moved back
when dense fog shrouded the course.
One of the two scheduled dowithills
was called 'off and will be raced
instead in Japan in early March.

THE TAl BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR THE
FIRST HALf 1995 COLLECTION OF THE
REAL ESTATE IllES AND AUO
FOR DELINQUENT IllES.
FINAL CLOS,NG D~T~. WJL~ IE
MARCH 4, 1996.

plct~.trea

lat .. aach.

Overall
3
7
8

21
18
18
15
13
17
13

'

I
I
.•
for

2
4
4
4
1
8
8

Rio Grande ..........................................10

I
·1

I Amount EncJOJtd:

·

~~· .............................................~,....

they ' re everywhere."
Brown, whom Villanova COICh
Steve Lappas called a "pain," held
Allen Iverson to five points in the
second half. The superb Georgetown
sophomore fmished with 22 points.
"If you get (Brown) fired up
enough you could probably get him
to eat that television set over in the
comer," Lappas said. "He is big,
strong and a real pain in the neck on

-Sports brlefs-

-Cage standings-

I

I . .
1Ownar'e Nama

IAddreI
lc-

•1

1

IPat'a Nama

SHOCKS

'
~

Division II, to a.3-0 week.
Quinn, a 6-foot-1 senior . from
Toledo, averaged 23.3 points per
game in leading Cedarville to a 3-0
week. For the week, he shot 66.7 percent from the field and 81.8 percent
at the line. He had 16 rebounds, 10
assists and seven steals.

Mid Ohio Conference

• J

Hurryl Deallll11e

llres

Gervin scored 63 for San Antonio, to
win the title by percentage points.
"It's truly an honor to be going in
with David," Gervin said Monday.
"We had quite a few battles." .
Each of them battle.d in his own
life, too. Nicknamed "Iceman,"
Gervin turned pro after slugging an
opponent and losing his college
''lilolarship. Later, while with the
Spurs, he entered a drug rehabilitation program.
Despite his personal problems,
Gervin, who also played with Chicago, scored more than 2,000 points in
six consecutive seasons. He averaged
26 points during 14 seasons in the
ABAandNBA .
Thompson, who led North Carolina State over UCLA and Bill Walton en . route to the 1974 NCAA
championship, also fell prey to
c~aine as a pro. Atlhe lleight of his
drug problems, he did a brief stint at
a prison camp for beating his wife.
However, 'Thompson averaged 22
points during a career that brought
him to both Denver and Seattle. He
once hit 13 field goals in a quarter, an
NBA record. He is the only one to be
named most valuable player in both
ABA and NBA All-Star games. ·'
Both Thompson ·and Gervin now
work for programs that help disadvantaged childrerr.
· "It all has been behind me,"
Thompson said of his past_struggles.
" No~y's perfect, and everybody
has skeletons in their closet. But
when you're a pro athlete, you' re in
a position when you can have influence on people's lives."
Goodrich, another NBI\ marquee
name, led UCLA to its first titles
under coach John Wooden in 1964
and 1965, before starring with the
Lakers. At 6-1, he averaged almost 19
points in his 14 seasons, which
included play with Phoenix and New
Orleans.

:.Provitt, Quinn MOC players of the week

THE DAILY SENTINEL

envelope to return
your pHoto.

--

.

Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

The Dally Sentinel• P9 5

•Teachen
•Babysltters
•Friends
Anyone wlio would appreciate 8 thoughtful word from yo'u!
AU Valentine Hearts will be publishedin the February 14th
illue at a cost of only $6.00! ·

MUST BE PREPAID!

r·················~··········~
..... , . . . . . . .
.
I
a
........
o•
~· ...
I

·.1

:
I
I

:
•
:

.......

wltli $6.00. to:
Tht IWiy SentiHI
Vllullle Hew Is

UmH
20

I

I

Wordal

111 c.rt Street.

J: •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Pi•eroy, OH 45769
·
M•JeRullvldB1 reb.t

I

�~ Page'&amp; • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueeday,

flome:roY • Middleport, Ohio

FtbMiry 8, 1998

f~Jowa
State
joins.
fop
25
ranks
for
first
tinle
-~hl~\.y~ar
jlo..
.
). •'
..
,o: •By JIM O'CONNELL

~:: AP Basketball Writer
, -. When the Big Eight preseason
: poll came out, Iowa State was at the
: , bottom. You couldn't blame the vot• •ers because the Cyclones lost 95 per: •·cent of their scoring and rebounding
from last season's team that won a
school-re~ord 23 games and reached
the secon~ round of the NCAA tournament.
On Monday, Iowa State (16-4)
joined the ranks of the ranked for the
first time this season at No. 21.
"We wouldn't have dreamed we'd
, be 16-4 right now,"coach TimFloyd ·
• said Monday. "We're very encour- .
:•i:;;.;·nW.~~;e~ :dtd have a·huge turnover tn
;•
but fortunately we got

1

~"

.

same decent players in here. They've
grown together, they like each other
and they're playang extremely hard
right now."
.
M~ssachusetts, ~hic h ne.eded
overtime to.beat Xavter of Ohio on
Sunday, eastly held the No. I Spot m
the rankings for the seventh straJght
week.
.
. ..
The only unbeaten Dtvtst~n I
team, the Mmutemen (21-0) recet ~ed
58 first-place votes ~ 1.641 potnts
from the national medta panel, well
ahead of the seven first-place votes
and 1,586 potnts garnered by Kentucky( l8-t).
.
.
Kansas was .third, followed by
Connecticut, whtch got the onl_y oth- ·
er first-place vote; Cmcmnatt, Vtl- .

lanova and Utah as the top seven
teams remained the same from last ·
week.
Georgetown moved up one spot to
No. 8 and was followed in the Top
Ten by Wake Forest, which jumped
three places, and Penn State, which
was I Oth last week. ·
Virginia Tech jumped two spots to
lead the Second Ten and was followed by North Carolina, Texas
Tech, Purdue, Memphis, Arizona,
UCLA, Syracuse, Iowa' and
Louisville.
.
The last five teams were Iowa
State, Boston College, Michigan,
Eastern Michigan and Stanford.
Iowa State's top two scorers this
season are New Orleans transfer

Dedric Willoughby and junior college
transfer Kenny Prau. Kelvin Cato, a
6-foot-11 transfer from South Alabama, has given Iowa Stale a shot
blocker and rebounder since becoming eligible in mid-December. Junior
college transfer Shawn Bankhead is
the defensive stopper.
"We didn 't know what we had.
Kenny Prall, I hadn't even seen him
play. Shawn Bankhead, I didn'l have
a chance to watch him either;" Floyd
said. "Cato and Willoughby were
backups in the Sun Belt and they 're
two of our main cogs. I think I was
just being realistic."
Iowa State is 5- I in the Big Eight
after going 6-8 last year. But next 9n
the schedule is Kansas on the road

.~

!..

Wednesday, and still to'CQme iJ Mia. ill the prm uoa•poil/ l'hiy '*"e in
souri, Oklahoma u d Oklahoma on 'a li~·&amp;lllle winning streak that
State.
• ial:ludci4 a. wlli It UCLA and Satur"I don'! know if we·~ 9111 o(lbe : ·day's 74-~..!llrjlshiDc of Jl{empl!is.
woods yet," Floyd sai~. "W~'ve . , •:'Ihopo they are riiJ:It,': ti!lm said
won five games. Who's lo say we MOIII!ay 9fthe'voters. :!~has
won 't end up where evecybody beealhrough some 'tooJh
but
picked us.
• ,
they -~ · playing ~ly well.
"We're by nil mean dornil)anl They'~ showing greal{ effon. As
team. In fact, our margin of victory long as' they keep that up, I will he
1 •
is bigger in the Big Eight than ill non- '! happy with them."
.
conference play. We've just bad some
Stanford (13-5), the third newthings happen right for us. We feel lcomer'in this week's poll, was 18th
very f~pnate at this point."
·
in tile' preseason voting, 1t1n fell out
So does Louisville coac~ Denqy four WC!I'ks -later. The Cardinal made
Cnun whose Cardinals (16-6) have ~one-week return over lhe ' next
overcome the losses of three starti!Jg ,eight w~ks and come in ~ving ~on
frontcourt players to tln'd 'their.way 1five of st!\', !l!e list two unpre$Stve
baek intotheTop25afterbeiog 12th vict!lries over California and Seton

·;Fill

J&amp;LINSULA110N

137 IRYAH PLAcE
IIDDLEPORT MN172
OIIICIIIIoln: Mon.-Fri.

ames,

Plck.Up dlacardad

1:110 e.nt.-3:30 p.nt.

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7 PER DAY.

--

Mon. "'"' Sit.

11110

Dll's Wiler

30+II2-2tMIS

•

1 , •

, . , . _ . . . .. .

Help Bllllld Out Vlctlme
Socke $1.75 per P.lr

to

thelllllllller ol pll)lfL
Kelp Ill for FREE cerci

.,

111111-

. t

$12.95

4

l· . - - - - Expires 2-12-96
~ ~-----------

•

.

: .

•••••••••••••.;;;;;¥'.,;•••••••••••••••••:

COUPON

-----------, ~----------•

Jl;! ··

r

b'""'u is 1101 d ; p top~

r...es ~;4'tmd n1sen of uy type.
. 'Items ere prlatt(d u spece p~nalll
!lllld earinot'be'parahteed to rim 1
&gt;epeciflc ~r 01 days.
•
'

-----------,
SAVE

AI IIDftfl! ~c· 1'Vf&amp;,-)\
aa.IIUIUl1V \J MIG

1 1
1 1

'JneeliDc aDd 1peclal e\&lt;eng, The

..

•Snack B1aketa
•Sw•elhlllrta.k...
•Fresh Flowera
•Singing Tetegrsma
•Artificial Flowers
Even 1 Belly Dancer to deliver your Sweety
1 Valentine Greeting.
•

.

. -----

COUPON

Expires 2-12-96

tO

'ipub~Wtieila. araw semce to - ·
prollt II'OIJps wlllilila to - - - .

I
1

VALEN~~~:u_N:CHASE I

.

1

·00
I

271 NortiiSecondAvenue
MlddleDOn, Ohio 45780
(&amp;14) 992-4548 I .
.
'

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

Gun
Cabinets
Pine &amp;Oak

30
·

&lt;%0 .

OFF

Instotk

Vinyl
Floor Covering

ss
'

Sq. Yd.

ANDERSON'S
CARPET
SALE

Mattress
Sale
Serta &amp; Spring ~ir

•NewHomH

•Addition•
•New G1r1gea
' •Remodlllng
· •Siding
•Roofing
·PelnUng
FREE ESTIMATES

(&amp;14) 182.a531
1114 992-2713

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES ·

614-992-7643

-

(No Sunday Calls)

Serv..U S1t845 8434

Community .·
oalendar · Beat of the Bend ...
· The Coamiualty Ctdeaclar II •

~IIINnglllllii.IIFI

~ew H9mes • VInyl Siding New

$2.99/mln. 18+
Touclltane phane ntqllftd.

PMIDcenta ......
lind 11.211 ..._, Onlor lo
lox 1JO, GnMe, AIIL 72431

St. Meaon, WY

SIIITII'S
CONSIIUCTIOI

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

1·90H56-2600
IJ:1HIIoa3U2

CUinYSIU

Lucky-Bill $200.00 end
P:zlnt .• .00-"

.

108 Pomeroy

loaelyA,.In
can

New~.wv

........ 4:30 ...

Jtort ;

llx Mig Weldlra

flliftllll

,........ .,lefWit
..... ,,,.,,

RIIYS.DIY

.·tlarlt,s J .

...

Oxygen Acllylene co.
Hiillum lllabrlll Mtdlcll Gr1lde 0.

SPIIIISOFT

'"

1•1••
•·wlcaa
Lejoa ~1602

·

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

St.,

Middleport
~,
Clll 992-3967
for Details.

betw11n &amp;em-8 pm

~~~-

'

87~111

Call 992-4025 '

Doort, 8tonn
Wlnclolll, Ga......
FNihllntlln

Dlltrlbutor
Welding Suppl... •lndultrtll CiaMI • Stlel
Se1ea a Fabrlcetlon • Repair Welding
Alumfnum/Stllnlell
·
Mlchlne Shop

At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fltnelt

Wllhera, dryera, hot
"WWIter tanka, ltovea,
turnacea, end 1111ny
llllillllllllr.lall

VInyl. Alum. Sldlnf,
VInyl Rapll'!:tmtnt,
Wlndowt, Blown
lneuletlon, BIDnn

Authorized

WE. .TLOSS
PIHUll

FREE
Pick-up discarded

A-&lt;:UTILRY

washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
· arid any metal
mate,rials.

by Bob Hoeflich
l.'(;~;'d';h;';i;;;;;:;-;;;"F;a~~~
I watched the thennometer creep
was great. Last week

.
..

([;he

Corner ,

Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.

Call ~-4025,

405 NOIIh Second Ave., Mld&lt;l~·ort 9!12·~

between 8 a.m.-8 p.m.

'

Mon.- Sat.

CONSTRUCTION CO~
Overhead&amp;
underground .
utiiHies &amp; lighting'
Buckel, Digger
Truck Services
Service P.ole
$2.50 per ft.

1-614-371-9101'

.
New At lq'-s lleetroafes

up to zero Monday morning and was
encouraged. We're probably gonna
have a heat wav.e any minute after
"enjoyitlg" the biuer cold over the
weekend. Anyone for sunbathing?
That's okay, it's hard on the skin anyway.

Joe sent another tape entitled, "Joe's
Favorites"--and coincidentally Jll&amp;nY ·
MIDDLEPORT
•sUIDERSTOODII
of them are my favorites too.
U.P.C.
The tape is fantastic and on these
LIVID
cold days I'm enjoying it tremenPRIVATE CARE
COIYEISAnOI
i'fUESDAY
,
dously. Now let me tell you about
HOME
• POMEROY -- Pomeroy Chapta'
some of Jre's favorites. By the way,
OlE • Oil • OlE
!186, Order of the Eastern Star, Tues- •
---·---the tape is neatly indexed giving all ·
Openings tor 2.
1·90.484-2100
day, 7:30p.m. White elephant auction
Over the years I apparently have Of the selections included. The tape ·
Christian
~to benefitt•rt Fund.
· convinced some,of you that! am both in some instances has the same song -.
atmosphere tor
Ext. 2074
POMEROY •• Pomeroy Elemen- a "music" and a "smiling" person.' several times only done by 4ifferent - ·
elderly cere In 1
$3.119 per min.
tary PTO will meet 1\Jesday, 7 p.m.,
Evecy now and then a friend sends artists and, of course, with different · . non-smoking hofne. '
Muat Be 18 Yre.
'at the school gym. All interested par- along a tape of music .they think I instrumentation and tempos.
..
614-992-3200 I 106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
992·2825
PROCALLCO.
"'nts are urged to at~nd.
might like. Or some sheet music frQm · So, I'd say judging by the tape that ..'
t11111fn
. (802) 8&amp;4-7420
.
way .back when--that's my kind of Joe especially likes, "Whispering ·r·1
·· ;.. · ~-i~iiii ~:::;;;~;;;;;;:;;;::;;;;;;:;;;:;::=.
; MII)DLEP.ORT -- . Middleport music. Or 8.' memento encouraging Hope", · "Lara's Theme", "Sunrise '
r
•· - • • .7:~
~"'p.m. Tuesday, smt'1mg.
'
Serenade" and ''Beautiful Ohio" since
.Masonic,L.ooge,
·I . . . . . . . .
1 1 1 ,1 1
. (Ume Stoneat temple.
I'm particularly pleased that these songs do show up more than .· MINI S.,ORAGE
1
LowRIItM)
'
'
friends think of me in this light--or on once. Interesting that "Beautiful POMEROY, OHIO
•• POMEROY •• Fraternal Order of second thought even think of me at Oh'to" ts
· on the tape four ttmes.
·
I'd .
· 882- 2996
.,_Tr11h Removal- Commerc111.or Realdentlll
l:agles Auxiliary meeting Tuesday; all.
say Joe really must like that one. I . can..- 11 . _ • 1'11111
-pttc Tanka Cltaned a PorUtble Toilets Rtnttd.
7:3Q p.m. Potluck, 7 p.m.
I really received a windfall recent- ,don't blame him. It's ' one of my .. ·
. , _ _ ,..
Dilly, WHicly a monthly rental ratta.
ly thrOugh Kenny Wiggins, director favorites too. Heck";1~ike that song
·
.
WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
WEDNESDAY · ·
of the Meigs Co\tnty Liner ControL even if I were from Michigan.
Something from the
Limestone,
: RACINE •• Southern Local BuildIn the collec~on of liner Kenny
My latest "smiley" memento came
Umestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
honey's
11,8 Committee meeting Wednesday, miraculously spotted a pile ofmaga- from Bob Wingett, publisher of the
Gravel, Sand,
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Live girls 1-to-1
~ p.m. at the high Sj:hooi. All district ·- zincs called "SheeJ Music" that a res- ·Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Bob ·
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
residents welcome.
ident was getting rid of. Now I nev- apparently spotted the memento on
conversations
992-3954 or 985-3418 ,
er bad heard Qf the publicaiion before one of his business uips south recent614-992-3470
1-900-288-9155
ALFRED -- Orange Township but Kenny salvaged -the magazines ly· and· picked it up for me. It is a
and sent them along to me and tliey necktie just filled with traditional yel~oard of Trustees meetitiJ Wednesext. 3912. 18+
"Supplie• for aU your ~~ need."
day, 7:30 p.ln. aqhe home of Clerk ·are tremendous. Each edition features low "smiley" faces--you know, the
$3.99/min.
the sheet music to several songs-- kind like the waitress draws on the
Patty Ca1away.
.
some current, which you know for back of your restaurant check.
Opening Feb. lst
Proeau eo.
the most part f C&amp;lllive without, and
Since 1 basically am a solid color
•
THURSDA1"
(602) 954-7420
POMEROY, -- Preceptor ~eta othors from&gt;you know what. Yep, necktie person, I haven't had the
A111
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SO(or- way back when. Interesting that some courage to splash out with all of those
271 North 2nd Ave.
ity, ~ p.m. Thursday at Episcopal of the magazil!es have the songs f!'Om "smiley" creatures hanging around
Mldcllepor1,
OH. 45760
ROBERT
BISSELL
Parish House. Soup supper at ~ p.m. the thinies and forti~s--music that I my neck. My "smile" mementos are
AKC Reg. Puppies, KHtens, Birds &amp; Monl followed -by 'talk on Pomeroy's revi - have wanted to use in some musicals packed among my "souvenin;" for the
CONSTRUCTION
but previously have been unable to most part. However, the necktie doestalization by John Musser.
Experienced
Groomers • Financing Avalllble
•New Homes
.locate. Well, I have the music now n't belong in the box. It needs to be
12 Gauge
ROCK SPRINGS •• Rock Springs and. theY.'!Viii be included in the line- seen. And it will be--the vecy next
B. Jolene Rupe/Owner
(614) 992-6244
•Garages
Grange will meet Tliursday, 7:30p.m. up of number$ in .the nut Big Bend "nervey" day I have and !thank Bob
Factory
•Complete
at the home of Harold. l!lld Helen Musical.
··- -· ..
..
for thinking of me. Let's face it. It's
Remodeling
Black.lton.
Joe . GIQCCkner of Pomeroy is always nice to be remembered isn't
Stop &amp; Compare
another
friend who apparently feels it?
SATURDAY .
FREE ESTIMATES
So let the music play on--and let
BURLINGHAM -- Burlingham that 1 should have music in my life
P.O. Box 587
Racine, Oh. 45771
and
~oe
()bv.iously
likes
the
same
kind
me
take
a
glance
at
my
new
necktie
Modern Woodmen of Camp 7230,
985-4473
James E. Diddle
potluck at the hall, 6:30 p,m. Sawr- . of songs that I do. Earlier Joe. sent and remind you to keep smiling.
7
DUMP TRUCK
Trackhde, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
day.· Meat, rolls and beverage fur- along a tajle of the Sammy Kaye ·
SERVICE
nished. Meinbers to take potluck
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs •
.
.
!Ill
dish. For meJ11bers, family and guests
Umestone • Gravel
We dig basements, put In septic
Kick Boxing
of members.
Dirt• Sand
1ystems, lay lines, underground bores.
.
Training
985-4422
For Fie&amp; estimate call949-2512
· At Big Bend
Chester, Ohio
8'MONA•••JIAUI

llatl18 lllaeli Dealer
Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

a

MODERISU-1-DI

WICKS

HAULING

I

Parftred Ptw• faml1 M

UCINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN SHOOTS:
SUN. 1 PM
Gol!e Oaly
- ~

J.D. ~rilling Company · R. L. HOLLON:
TRUCKING

......--Scout week---.

HeaJth checks
offered by PVH

Pleasant Yalley Hosp!tal Clrdiac.
Rehabilitation, located in the Wellness and Rehab Center; will be spon.soiing free cholesterol screenings
and blood pressure checks Jor the
public on Thursday, Feb. 15, 9 a.m.
tO noon.
~
The reason for the appraisals is to·
focus auention on the ·improvement
of healt1t 11111Jphy5ical perf001111111:e of
individuals at risk for heart diseiSC,
.ettplained Jeannie Shato, R.N.
.
ThoSe wishing to schedule ·
appOintments for the free cholesterol ·
screeninp and blood pressure checks
should call (301) 67S-IPY.D.
National Cardiac Rehabilitation
Week wili run from Sunc!ay, Feb. 11
to Satufl!ay, Feb, I7. The ~ "Put
Your Heart Into It," was selected to'
express the role of prevention in the ·
treatment of heart di~ and cardiac
. rehabilitation.·
.:: ,. .
Blood cllOie.terOI and blood pasure wiU. be inculftd to see if' the
ievels
·too hiJh. For· smokers,
some advice on how to quit will be
aviilable. High c.holeat,crol, hiJtl
blood~ and s~g are con-

Health &amp; Fitness
Children &amp; Aduh
Clas•

c.u992-3967
torDitltls ·
a't/1-

NEFF REMODEliNG
SERVIa
HouM AePotlr I
RlntDd.tlnt

Distributed by

TII·STATI WATII SYSTEMS, INC.

The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate In a lree, no obligation, compnthenslve water
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:

,,..., ml LitoSoflettlll2-4472 or 1-aocHOe 33.13
tD Ml U your I7H lllttr lna:y.il.
,_,

RIIIIDd..lnt

. . _ Ac?c?lllonl
lkllng, Roofing, PIIIDI

One Unit Now
Available
1Ox28 , 18&amp; per mo:
992-3961

992-4405
For FrM Elllmlllll
~

'''

ROUND

•I

,

oblll'ftd~by=SOI~~m=te~~:=~:
aoadl,_..

I

L..,....,...iii.----------~---~
•
j ',

BALES OF
HAY EOR
SALE.
Clll
614-949·2512

-

Are Yo• Really
For L•v•?
Callllowllll

1·900..255·2700
Ext. 9402 .
$2.99 per min.
M..11111B yrs.
Touch-~

·required.
s.rv-u s1e 645 8434

....,..

. OfESTER STORAGE

RHIIOMIIII

lnlti..... Ex...rlencM
c.ll W1tyM Neff

. sidered
be three .IIIIJOI' risk f!lctors
Wlh this
Scout
Weill! being
for hearttodisease.
ICioula
week,
buey
LlckofelU!IdsOandrupiJYiilsof ' el-..... Here, u...ley111o1111, hli ...... ·~;=~=~:=~1
-IIRaa also conuibule to the clewiopo · new,·....... ellllndow llleJIIey In front of the D
_ . ofheaft disease.ICidod Rudi · snoe-,lnoyonCowtSiillttPiillway.

t

. Water
~.;..,!.: 1..J'f- Treatment
~~~ _
v;v Equipment

TDS, MIM&lt;81 HtniMII, lrvn, PH.

Kitchen I 8a1ll

'a

Spencer, RJ'I.,. ~·.

·'

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

IMN512

UCIIE IYDUULIC REPIII
&amp; UCIII. SHOP, ·IIC.

~~~-

.

Beef and Hog .
Bus (304) 882-2756
RB&amp;. (304) 882-3328
West Columbi; NV.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVKE

.,._ Addlllona

:==~
ADDing
'.
·•tiMor • l!ldll1or .
' PIInlll'l!l
AlaD CD. . . . WOitl

(PMJ~TIII

· V.C. YOUNG • ,

......i

........ Ohio

..

•

�The Deily Sentinel • Page 9

PHILLIP

ALDER
AN'JO JtJC I '.11 '• ' ,

KIT 'N' CARLYLU by Larry

33 High -.I
34 Give- - whirl
35Rup

ACROSS
· 1 TV:&amp; llllldna

'-111(2wile.l . . . . .h

5 Conllrucllon

w...-.t

37
31
40
41

bMm

9 Stllua 12 Facility

In Kanauga.

Furnlohlcl,

$1-81-7«18.

-·ldVirtiolng
which-"
to-.uo. •any po..........
All-

Utiii~H

Two and throe bedroom mobile
homeo, oranlno u $240-1311,
. :~";~;_and ~h lncludad,

In

lhll ne I~per •ltj)fect lo
tho Fldlrll Fair Houolng Nt.
ol19e8
llegll

I

~s.

turned down olaowhere. Upton
Equipment Uaed· Cari. 304-458· .

In the nlfenl8•a parldng apace ...• ·

SOUTH

"

.

Sou..

1877 Dodge Pick-Up True&lt; 4

.510

Hou181101d
Goods

.560

for Salt

Groom SltoP -Pot Groomlna.
'lolln ,.,._ turln8'jllt~~aoh. Julio Webb.

· Am mana Side Br Side " 8
1 Coll81
. 1.
tor, Color T.V., Wuher, urror, l-:-::--;:---:--~:-:::--:-'7':'7.
814-256-12311.
12 Pupploa, Half Beagle, Hall
~•
FURNITURE
BalltiJ,
4 Woel&lt;o Old. Wean&lt;id,
V '""
5 Milo, 7 Fomo1o $25 oe., One Tri
814-4411-3158
Color. 814-251 II38S

1084 382 Model Potarblk 350 Big
Cam Cumrnlna · En81no , New
Steering Tliea &amp; Whoolo, Bel%
Brakto, Fair Drlve ·Tiroo, Various
Other- Portal
,
. ii14-37H728.
'

Wliiiao Hll Rd., Rnllnd, one bafl,

Jn.drounc! P,OOI. 814-992-5087.

:

320 Mobile Homes
. for Sale

44,000 original "'""· o_ne ow,.,,

---

12160 8 12x85, Underpinning;

Forch, Slliva, Rofrlaorator $3.000;
$3,500 No CaUo Afisr 7 P.M. 814·

1094 Chevy
Sp~rtside,

E•)•nd~d Oab 1;•
4.3 ' V-e, auto. aw.

cruise, lilt, arrvrm canetta equalizer, towtnD ·package, bedliner.

441-o873.

MA'(9E VOLI WILL
6ET TO BE KIN6 ..

.•

'

· NO. I DON'T WANT
TO DONATE TO
'(OLIR T~RONE ..

Someone to taka over paymani'
on 19.84 ford F-150. low milo ,
••cellent condilion, 614·94 ·

3123.

•

730 vans &amp; 4·WDs
'84 Ford F150 4WO lariat, ai
cruiaa, tilt, tlereo, automatic Wi

overdrl ... 302 V-8, pushbun6•
4WD. loti otex•aa. 31,000 mild,
llli&lt;i!'U $17,500, 814M3-~Clold~ Reorlover Pupploa AKC,
$200, Sholl &amp; Wormed 814·378·

2881 Allor 5pon

IU84 Chevy s-10 lllozer. V8 auoq,
ac, iooko &amp; runs good, $3,50CJ.
00! 8823852.

I

1015 Toyota 4x4, ·4 cyJ. 5

BANK

ape~

chrome vr,heelt, cai;aettte. looklf
. runo OQO&lt;UZ~. 41 ~4l-4292. ) ·

I800 Dodge" R.ilo \lan~-25
72.000 Miles, SS,OilO. Con B
Soon At: Gallipolis Doilr Tribune'

14•80. 2 or 3bodroom. Onlr ·

matw 2 peymenll to move ln. No

"UPPLIES
,, LIVr STOCK

15Cu.Ft. 4

=enta afttr 4reora. 304· 755-. :
Now Bonk ·Repo&gt;o. Onir 4 loft.
in MnanJW. 304-755-7101.

td~ l .1

1992 Chevy Astro, all whoek

,~
·-.t:t

packao•i
'

Pass

uios'Chevr,!f·1 o -4~4; stl.nsllr~ •;if

Tranamiaalon, A:lr, Tilt, Crula-~

_:I'IIE BORN ~~o~v.,

118,200, 614-387.0111.

' 81 4 448 8817.

~-.

,..N.l.. RIC:.~T, 1-JI~~. WE. ~
'KNOW 11. 11\oosm:&gt; MllU~~ I=&gt; '
).. Bl U..lot-1, M fb.i
I~ (\

·

Hor~e'a

relative
8 Sanctum
8 Campuaann
10 Incite
11 Fragrance
19 F..ahw- ' '
llah .
21 Naval abbr. ·
23-and~

24 FHm director
- Bunuel
25 This (Sp.)
26 Medicine
bottle

27 Vow
28 Gallop, e .g. ·
29 Hosiery

shade

30 Ooze
32 Conceal

35 Error
36 Definition
38 Plump
39 Carry

~

'

I~ II IF I CAA
~~T OF ,._'( UFE

WI-\1\T &amp;:XI)

Sf'rnD W.E

~

C£UITIN(, N--10 1-!E:.V(R

.I

I

::::

I
I

I

ROD\ TI\EE:NP?

I BR0 T

1:

IL=~-;:::~·
I I ~-~~-::;~·:
I
.
~

Is :,'

Over the years I learned that
...,the best advice you'll get is
from someone who has already
made the same - .••••.

I
I~-T~-=-;:1-;-6'-TI.:..:.....;:I-:;-7;1--i O
r

S CA R E E

Complete tho chuckle

~uotod.

•
_
•
•
•
•
.
by f•lllng in lhe missing words
L..-L-.1--L-.L..-L.....J you develop from step No. 3 below.

!

Rtlria8fat0re, Stow••· Waahetl
Wrapped Gra11 Hay $20 1
And Dr.yera. All ReconcFIUoned
814·388-S524. No Sunday
And Gaurant.edl $100 And Up, Calli.
WI Deliver. 811
8441.

e•

Second Cutting Orchard Gra11,
Novoo: Wo~ $2.25 Por Bale, 614-

Roach'o cu..., Bu!ChtMg. Now
Open lor boo! or hog. Call. lor 418 1053.
::.-882-2758 Bua. or 882· .

;w-

Smal caudo, IIIII. 814-882·7352.

Uvety. eu 38B 8S03.

Wanted .To Buy: Unle Tlkel Toyt,
814-245-68117.

· Prot.allonoi Treo Service,

ll!t.tJSI'OfllAllmJ

SOMco -so fL Reoc:h, s..mp
movel , Free Eatimateal In·

aurance. 24 Hr. Emer8oncr ServIce -Call And Savel No Treo Too
Big-Or Too Small! Bidwell, Ohio.
Sun Val~ Nurserr _ School.

Unfurnlahlcl !WI&gt; bedroom houoo,.
nice and clean, depoalt required,
no inaide 814-992-30110. ·

2-K, Young School Age During

Verw nice homt in Pomeroy tOr
rant,

814-388 8813, 814-387-7010._

Chlldcore .f &amp;am-5:30pm Aooo
Summer..3 Dar• per Wtok Mlnl-

""m 614-4411-3857.

I H.I.VEN'T W.D A
T~T So".D

I
1

A

OR.EAM

0

1 0,000·

at4-245-58n

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO

I
•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

\(:

Sovlnfl You'll Find In lilt

Cklssl(led Section.

Transmlaaiont

·

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
. IN THESE SQuARES

V GET ANSWER

51NtE .... !&gt;INC E .....

Accessories
•

S'r~~~w~~~.'I

Autos for

3933
or ' HI00!273-9329.
• ... ·
'
!·,

!WI&gt;

sTORAGE TANKS 3.011 GaUon

power seata

-·Ohio,

Car; $6500

1-1100-537-8528.-.-

Auto Parts &amp;

I

•

Effort· Logic· Basin· Tyrant· GOT there FIRST
Overheard in line at bank: "No matter where you go,
you find that inflation GOT there Fl RST"

New ·gaa 11n1C11 one' ton •ttUctr:

Sola With 3 Tableo. Dlnalie. 4
Chon, Ct..t of o-n. llrovl&gt;ll.
All New ~.814 ue ~SIOI&lt;ot-Uallc Stor8. Good Ccndi·
lion. Cal Allor 8pm 81 4 311 1525.
Uprillh~ Ron Evana Enltfprloao,

plete Tree Care, Bucket

760

BIG NATE

Budget Transmlssi9fls, U1ed IR~
buoll. All TI'Jies. Acceasible To

814-982-7148.
Used
place or
Manln. 61
Wanlod To Buy: Junk Aulll With
or Without Uoloro. Call Larrr

1993 201 Pro XL, 20' Struto4
bau boat. 200 XPHP, 814-667•
7347 or 814-1148-2879.

Over

Saga ~.. 1en gameo, Menand IIVH COIIIIOIIora, 1228,

SER'.IC' f~,

1 Reminder

7

At the bridge table, it is better to
laboriously .
41 Aalan counq
lind an Impregnable line of play rather
42 Scandinavian
than to rely on an opponent to give
43 Tropical
you a gift. In loday's deal, taken from
tree
i match, only one of the two declarers lm-r--t44 Stunt
found the ideal approach.
45 Custom
46Biclneu
Despite the good spades, East's
· 47 - - avatl ..
hand cried out for a pt'l!-emptive bid. g ; - - - t 1=--t--t-t--t
46 City In Utah .
South went with his long suit, m~der­
51 Cnude
atandably feeling his spacles were too ...__........._
metal
weak for a takeoul double.
After winning West's he_art queen
with his ace, the first South drew
trumps and took a successfol diamond
CELEBRITY CIPHER
finesse, West covering declarer's
by Luis Campos
queen. Declarer rutred dummy's heart ·
Celtbt\lv ~~ cryplogt~m~ are cruted from QUOtations by famous people. past and prasant
Each hitnef In the cjpler stands lor another. roday's due: L equals y
10, and then played on diamonds.
However, when they didn't split 3-3,
'X
KCBCW
'tiNWCU
DC
declarer ruffed dummy's last diamond
WNUXZNS
before leading the spade three. South
HTCK
LAVKP/
IAW
,.. hapitlf to duclt-the Irick to East,
IC NW
XM
making Wherever the ace wu located.
HAVSU
Weal was on his toes, though. Seeing
G N J C
GC
ZAKOCWBNMXBC
what wu coming, he put up the spade
queen. South couldn't avoid losing
HTCK
A S U . ' - W ·ADCWM . IWAOM.
three spade tricks and his contract.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "Everybody says they'll marry unill dea1h I've Joed to ·
The successful declarer didn't ruff
the judge twice myself • - (Boxing champoon) Muhammad Ail
the heart 10 after the winning dia•
mond finilsse. Instead, he tried for the
TIIAT DAILY
3-3 diamond splii immediately. When
PUUIII
that failed, South called for the heart
- - - - - - 141to4 ~y CLAY I . P O l L A N - - - - - 10. After East covered with the jack,
Aearronge Ieffert of
·South calmly discarded a spade. leavlour ocramblod words
Ing East endplayed.
k»w to form four words
If Eaat/layed a spade, dummy's .
ldng woul
Whereas if he led a
SKIARE
heart, South would discard another
1
2
spade from hand and rulln the dum·
1
I I I
my. Either way, South would lose only
one heart aDd one spade.
Both Wests were left to rue two
MYPUJ
·ml88ed opportunities. They could have
3
led either a spade or the heart four
I 1 I
and defealed the contract

Buy

H.1Pl OYt.1E'tJT

Dlllon'a
nickname

••
Pais

Rick Pear.on Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auclion
aervice.
licensed
IBB.Ohio &amp; Well Virginia. 304773-5~85 Or 30-4-773-5447.

~ Wilntecl to

4 Gods
5 Abounds
6 Hillside (Scot)

DOWN

32=-hal

score.

' ... ~~~~

~D W.u~t:QP.~-'1

to

2 Precipitation
3 :¥!a-Saxon

ncblaman

58 Steal

0

drive. extended &amp; LT

304-675-3121.

I

Rl-alght
27 Florida

S@~Q{}1A-tt£~s·

825 Third Avenue, G.allipolil
Ohio.
'
.
i

...

·

lellne ·ltv"
58 Ctoerlohad
animal
57 Brilllh

By Phillip Alder

1888 s-10 5 Spoed,' Air, Sunroof,
V-8, 614-448-4737 Allar 5 P.M. 1

8753.
.
"'
1905 Ford Ra'!qar XL'Sport AiJtomadc, Wllh Aor, 11 t.ooo; 61~-

2 Rooms I Bath,
Utllltteo Furnlahod,
Roleronco, De4-448-1518.

sr;;

s.1
a rota
55 Number of

$3800, 814-992-3111-4:

1004 Chevy Slivtrado, 1001 green,
tinted window~ am·fm casaette,
,., pb, air, loW milelge. Muat ..,
. 10 appoeclatol 1!3,500. 614·44~.

countrrj

Ncvalto
53 KentuCky blue

Good play,
not misdefense

49,000 mlloa: 111,000, call 81•·
940-2827.
.
..
(
Thrte bedroam hamt In

nickname
50 leap
52 Aclor-

Opelling lead: • Q
SNUFFY'S
NEit;HSOR WENT
OUT OF TOWN

1885 _Doctga oni ton.~ump truck.

48 Llncotn'a

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
West North Eut

Pau

. - BARNEY

6 Genenltor

23 Roman brora

31=~ton

•• 4 3
9A •
tQ 10 5

•A K Q J 10 ·2

WD, Rebuilt, 3HI, r.tew Tires,
Looi&lt;l &amp; Runo Graotl.$3,200, 814- 1 , ~14-9q2-ai?JI·

tpta., lOIII olactrlc, IP·
· furnlahod, laundtr room
cloH 111 achool In ll&gt;Wn.
avalloblo at: Village
. or call'614·99t-.

COIICh. I had no kiN I'd paJked

124 Mlululppl

....

720 1hK:ka for Slle .

.2 Roomo, Fumllhod Ellk;lorocy, AI
-Utilltlto Pold. Downatalro, 818
Second Avonuo, GalllpoNa, $1851
' Mo. 814-448-31145.

... \.- .

.

Bank Fl'!llncing_ Guaranl8ed. With
Mlnl""m Down·or Trade-In, Call
RUIIt 814-4411-28U7 .
•

--78118.

·~.

WS-1- WT

Ault&gt; Loan~ oO.ier wil ourango· ft.
nanclng even if you h•va b-.n
-

9KJ18785
t84

68 7 8 3

1004 Ford Eoco(l front W~tal
.Drive , 5 S~ood, ~t,IIFM Radio,
$11 ,500,814--17. •

1088.

EAST
•A J 10

dlnaction
17, In the pall
18 FOfiiMI
20 LHa polite
II Ucen- end
cndlt cards
(lbllr.)

910 3
tA J 3 2

, 21.110 Mijoa Aai\JOg ·•e7oo 614258-e34C! or ~14·J58-&amp;0e7. .. · .

1 bedroom apartment In Mlddleport, 1vallable Dacomber t, 111
. ulllllloa paid, $250 par montlo,
8100 depool~ lam 1o 5pm 814·

.. '*•· .•

6K 8 7

Door, Auto, Air, Tilt, Cauaua,

440

llro-oordlocr'.mll•tlon
bued an,...., colo&lt;, rwllglon,
oex larrillllllliUI or nolionll
D&amp;tgln. or any 1nt1n11an to
-any ouch PNI8&amp;11ICI,
1111~1110'1 Olclllcltn'*'IIJO..~
. '

.
1993 Dodge ShadoW ES. • Cyl...

PlUM

lnqul..
Sine-non
42 c-1n turno

13 lrlah
14TVpaolbNn
1s Short aklrt
16 Sunrlaa

Smlll 1 Bedroom T~aller l.oc:al.cl

Plgglah

Sr HViCE c-;
door, 3.8
turbc, PS,

810

I

I

!TUESDAY

I

Home

~~ 814-049-

·r
I

I

~~~====~~==-=.::
-

ABTRO·ORAPJI
----·· - -

.mii•JN COUld

your

wisest
AqU8riua, IfNI yotJ!MIIto a billhday gilt. courae ol action today will be to avOid
Send tor your ~ predic:tiona for irtvlliiMments In ciater'a finllncial allaira. "
111e ytiar Wee~ liy ma~~ng S2 .oo SASE you get mawn in, 11 could put demando

to~,c/olhii~.P.0. uponyourperaonatreaourcn.

:ns•s•

Box 1758, Mutqy Hil $tation, New Yortt. VIRGO (Aug.
2211n _a partnerNY 10158. Malle ... to lllle your Zodi- ahlp arranQ8menl iocsay, you might be
· toe IIQn.
'
held accountable lor the actions· and
· BERNICE . PIICII CFW; ao MLcfl 201 People wtoo behavior of your coholl. Malee 111re your
~ aupporl your jJC)Iition might 1'81111 t1lfoJ in hamiOI1Y with you. .
BEDE OSOL your
ideal tOday._Expreeaing aggn~Mion LiBRA (Sept. Z1-0cL 23) A l'll8pOI1Iibill
wifi not'- your ~you've postponed could gel Iaugher !he
- - - - - - ARIES C111n1i1o 11.·Aprll11l The buck wl longer you put M Do not Compound a
atop Willi you IDIIIY- NyoO goof up - - ~live situation With liCk of anentlon
thing. Y!JU1' 111i1n t11t ~ ol olheia bv llglin IOCIIY. confeulng, even though It might ba 8COAPIO (Oat. U·Nov. Ill Today
1
·elnberruling.
:· guatd agelnst lncllnallona to taka rilkl
'!'AII!IUI(Aprii.....,:IOihwtflbeblal· w1111 t~~~nga ,lhal do not belong to you. K
not to tal!e ~ linlildal rilk today N~ you ruin 1011111hlng a lrilnd Vlluw. toe or
.......
...
only 111ft a ~ amount of irlf9fllll· ....... ....., cltmand rea~~u~~on.
WG~Mdiy, f -· 7 ' 1 '"'"'
I .....
wh
don't k
~ .._,
T
tlon. n """ f1818,
II you
now ..
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. IJ.Oeo.. 211 Ilia
In the vw ahead you lilly play
could hurl you. •
Will be one of a- daya when Mwll be
lulrdlealn lite n\anagemenl o1 olhet peo- GUIINI (May lt.,une 101 Plan your bell not to buck the odell knowingly,
· ple'l rnatMWI aflln. Your IIIDria might mo- ca,.. IOdly 110 lhll you don't aapec'-IIY -""' your career Ia con·
llotnti.,dlcUhrough- farm of pallle- . miaci!CYiate ancl deprive yourMI of an camed.
·
1pa11on or 0011111 lula."l.
• '
·
: . gbjad•:~t You have tht liblllly to echla...
cAPNCONI (Die.
111 UIUIIIr
AQUAMUS (JIIn, »M. 111- -.,.naga ~ CANCER (.111M Z1.,uly Ill You might you .,_ - - tactful when dHiing
, lt\!IMY rt.atarl yot.iraaiiiOCiay lftl!l8d Of• toe toe gullible tor your &lt;W!" good todly. w1111 o111m buiiOday you m1g1t1 111cw on
; jiUitinD 111em tn lhf hanc!l ol' ·Taite. to warily Information thtl their 11u111
of their vtrtuea.
you .....,.. to Ill it00f1111 01. •· .... or liar c:arn..to·you frOm quellklnallle aou~. ,.
·

a«:

-•9-

zNa

irllllad

'

.

'

..

FEBRUARY61

�•
I

PeDe 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuelday, fftbruary 6, 1996

Forcing children to eat ~an lead to stomach .distress and more
Ann
Landers

By ANN .LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I'm 21 years
old and have an older sister who is
(livorced and has two young children,
ages 6 and 4. I read your column daily and know you don' t approve of
folks butting irito other people's busi·
neSs, but I need your opinion on a tac·
tic my sister uses to make her kids
~at.

At mealtime, "Dora" makes them
sit at the table until they clean their
plates. They have been known to sit
there for"three hours. If they must go
somewhere and the kids haven't fin·
isbed eating, Dora wraps up their
food and keeps giving it to them at
every meal until it is finished . The
children no longer have any contact
with their father, so he has no input.
They recently visited my parents'
home. At the first dinner, Dora gave
her son food that he had said he did·
n't like the day before. She told him
if he dido 't eat it, he would see it
again tomorrow. I can still see my
nephew's face as he gagged on those
creamed carrots. I have refrained

.

'

getting up late. That hasn't worked
from saying anything to my sister Iy needed guidance.
··
because I know she would resent it;
Dear Ann Landers: This problem either.
Doug has already lost his com·
so I mentioned it to my mother. Mom of mine might seem inconsequential
said, "That's how Dora was raised, so compared to others you receive, but muting partner, and I'm afraid he's
going to lose his job if he ,continues
that's all she knows. " Well , I was it could mean my husband'sjob.
raised that way, too, but I would nev"Doug" has a habit oftuming off to punch in late. Any suggestions? I'll
er do that to my children.
his alarm clock in the morning and try anything.·· At Wit's End in IJ!di·
I hope you will print my letter and going back to sleep for "just a few ana
Dear Indiana: There are several
give me your views. Those kids need more minutes." Of course. this makes
help ... An Aunt in Greenfield, Mass. him tate for work. and I'm afraid his things you might try. First, get Doug
Dear Aunt: Forcing children to eat boss' patience might wear out.
to bed a half-hour earlier, if possible.
or punishing them if they don't is
I've tried everything I can think of Another suggestion came from one of
never a good idea. It makes mealtime to make Doug get up. I've set my my readers •• put a glass of orange
an unpleasant experience and can own alarm clock 'nd gotten up with juice in his hand the minute he
lead to stomach distress~
him, I've .duct-taped · the "on/off" wakca up. This will get his blood sug·
1 hope your sister will talk to her switch on his clock so he must use the ·ar up, and' he'll have more energy.
pediatrician about this. I'm sure he snooze button instead, and even tried
The last reson is to get up with
1or she) can ~ive this mom some bad· letting him suffer the consequences of him and read aloud a few paragraphs .

from the financial pages about down·
sizing, job losses, plant closings; etc.
Apparently, he doesn 't take .serious- ·
ly what his tardiness might mean in \
temis of joining the ever-growing list
of the unemployed.
Gem of the Day: There are two
categories of peopl~ who never will
amount to much. Those who cannot
do what they are told, and those who
can do nothing else .

Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, L~ Angeles,
~CalK.

90045

Lean fasJ food doesn't cut the mustard
By NANCI HEI.LMICH
USA TODAY
McDonald's is pulling the plug on
its much:touted McLean Deluxe.
. The healthier burger, with i 2 fat
grams and 340 calories, premiei'ed
with much hoopla five years ago. It
used carrageenan, a seaweed deri vative, to replace fat and bind the beef
together. It was "just noi as popular
as some of the other items we have,"
says McDonald's Rebecca Caruso.
Also gone: chef salad and side salad.
But if you're thinking this is the

end of the lite-food foray by fast-food
A slice of TripleDecker pizza
Some think consumers are show·
restaurants, you may need to wait with ham has 17 grams of fat, 402 ing a preference for fatty fare. "They
before passing judgment. The evi- calories; a slice of pan pizza ·with say they want lower-fat items, but
dence still isn.'t clear.
ham has 9 grams of fat, 222 calories. when it comes time to order they
Qn one hand, Taco Bell says its
"People know it's an indulgence choose the: higher-fat items," says
Border Lights menu items are doing food," says Pizza Hut's Rob Jeff Prince, National Rest;~urant
just fine. They "tap into a solid con· Doughty. "It's a Friday night meal • Associati~n. '!They talk the ta\k but
sumer demand," says the company's · when people say to themselves, 'I don't walk the walk."
Amy Sherwood. ·
want the world and its rules and my
Michael Steni, a columnist for
On the other hand, Pizza Hut says diet t~ take a flying leap."'
Gourmet magazine, isn't surprised . .
its brand new TnpleDecker Pizza,
Pizza Hut is looking at lower-fat "You go to McDonald's for a big,
which has a crust made with cheese products, but " twice we've come out greasy, fattening h·amburger with
between two thin layers of dough, is with lower-fat pizzas, and they've greasy fries on the side. If you want
hotter than a pie pan right out of the failed miserably in the marketplace," to eat dietetically, you go to soqte
oven.
he says.
rabl!it food restaurant."

Multiflora rose control program underway
The Meigs, Soil and Water Conservation District will be accepting
applications for the Multiflora Rose
Control Program until Feb. 29.
· Applicants must have a minimum
of one equivalent acre of multiflora
rose. Cost-sharing will be $100 per
equivalent acre approved with a max·
imum of two acres per person
approved.
Applicants must be cooperators

with the Meigs Soil and Waier Con· . of the practice is reponed and a bill viously participated in the program,
servation District, or signup as coop· proving the purchase of cliemicals .or must attend a training session spon·
erators when they are applying for the mechanical treatment of the roses is sored by the Meigs Soil and Water
cost-share program, officials repon. provided. ·
Conservation District and the Coop·
A Soil and Water Conservation
Participants must wait until they erative Extension Service, on proper
District representative will visit the are notified by the Meigs Soil and treatment methods, before they can
farm following signup, to confirm Water Conservation District that they be approved.
that the farmer ha,.o_ne or two equiv- are approved before they begin treatSignup for the program will be
alent acres of mul~ora rose, it was ment if they expect payment through held at the Meigs Soil and Water
reponed. The representative will the program, the SWCD adjfed. ·
Conservation District Office through
return to the farm when completion
All applicants, who have not pre· Feb. 29.

WELCOMED - Susan Clark was Inducted Into the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club by Lloyd Blackwood, president,.at Monday
night's meeting at Heath Unltad Methodist Church, Middleport.
Clark Ia owner of Clark's Jewelry Store In Pomeroy. Pete Thomp· son of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency addressed
Rotarians on hla agency's role In waste management and hazardous waste cleanup.
.

.

Friends make drive to Boston to give blood for teenage cancer patient
..

. By JAN

CIENSKI

. Aaaoclattd Preas Writer
BOSTON (AP)- Steven Cucci's
· (riends and neighbors in New York
weren't about to let hospital rules
keep them from donating blood for
the 17-year-old cancer patient.
: So, they got themselves a bus,
traveled five hours and gave blood
_Monday at the Boston hospital where
Cucci will undergo surgery.
"NQ distance is too far to go for

Steven," said Debbie ·Gibbs, one of ·Whitesboro, a suburb ofUtic·a. N.Y., man bus company, said he only cov- shonage is," said Farrier, a nurse
the organizers of the blood drive . people came forward. They were ered his costs.
from Utica. "tt:s an honor to give it
"We wanted to make sure there was stymied by the' hospital rules but
" This is a small town, and every- · to Steve."
enough blood supply to not delay the undaunted.
one knows everyone else .. It's like our
Richard Carson, Mass General's
operation."
To minimize the risk of contami· . own child," said Dianne Szlach· director of donor recruitment, said the
Cucci was diagnosed with nation, Massachusetts General Hos· towski, a school nurse from Whites- hospital has enough bl!l&lt;Jd to accom·
Ewing's sarcoma, a form of bone pital doesn 't allow people to make boro who has known Cucci since be modate Cucci, but that the additioncancer, in October. He is scheduled to long-distance donations, said Georgia was 2. "If my children needed it. I'd al donations were welcome. Any left·
undergo a bone and joint transplant Pierce, a hospital spokeswoman. In like someone to donate for them."
over blood will be added to the hasFriday.
order to give blood, the volunteers
Jennifer Farrier didn't know Cue- pi tal's blood bank.
1
When word about Cucci's plight had to go to Boston.
ci but didn't care.
Cucci, who has been undergoing
,"! do know how bad the blood chemotherapy, called ~e volunteers
spread at his school and church in
Manv Meislin , own~r of the one-

'

Wildlife program .presented
at Wildwood Garden Club
A program entitled "Wildlife·· i
Saving Our'Environment" was Jlre· ·
sented by Heidi Elberfeld wheb1he
Wildwood Garden Club met recent·
I}' at the home of Doris Grueser.
. She listed the four classifications
&lt;if at-risk species of wildlife. In Ohio
an endangered species is one that is
threatened with destruction from the
Slate as a result from one or more
&lt;:auses such as habitat loss, pollution,
P.redation, competition or disease.
Then there is the threatened species,
cine whose survival in Ohio is not in
itnmediate jeopardy, but the threat
exists. The third. classification of
risk is the special interest wildlife in
which a species might become threat·
ened in Ohio under continued or
increased stress. Being evaluated in
that group are the purple martins, the
spotted tunle, Eastern sand darter and
the Olympia marbling butterfly.
Devotions were by Evelyn Hollon
who read from Isaiah 40 and had
prayer. For roll call members named
an unusual bird feeder guest. They
included a the white tailed deer eat·
iflg from a feeder and the. cooper's
hawk attacking song birds at the feed·
er.
: Focus day to be held at the Rolling
Hills Baptist Church was announced
with Janet Bolin to be the arranger.
Thank you notes were read from
Helen Nease and Hilda Yeauger for
· fruit baskets and the Forest Run
Methodist Church for a memorial

Correction
The name of the new beauty shop
located at the comer of Barton Road
near Reedsville
is: the Comer Cut Up. Owner/opera«ir is Ella Jones.

off Staljj Route 681

~·

' '

"perfect people" during a shan interview Monday .
"I never really thought people
would care about one person in a
community like this," he said. "It
keeps my mind off everything else."
The 27 traveling blood donors
talked about the teen who is crazy
about football and basketball as they
milled around at Mass General,
munching on muffins the hospital had
donated to keep up their energy.

tribute to Leah Nease.
"
For the arrangement of the month,
Mrs . Grueser used arborvitae, red
berries and a silk blue bird. Evehn
Holter had an arrangement of spruce,
pine cones accented with a silk red
bird and white doves in a basket.
The group sang "Happy Binhday"
to Mrs. Grueser and presented her
with a cake, ice cr.eam and flowers in
celebration of her binhda~ _

By

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland

FurnHure
Steering committee: an
average family parking the

car.

•••

If you must be pushed and
are easily upset, you're
probably a wheelbarrow.

•••

Next time somebody tells
you nothing Is im'possible,
tell him to put his skis over
his shoulder and go lhrough
a rewlving door.

4

t

•• ,j

. '~.,.
.

'

'.

....

If at first you do succeed, try
to hide your astonlsl'lmenl.

•••

In order to compose music,
all you need to do is

remember a tune lhat
nobody else has thought of.

•

.

• .. •'"..

Ohio POwer is changing

News
policy
. ·In 111 elfort to provide our reader...., wlt.t} current news, the Gallipo, &amp;bally'llibuneandTheDaily Sendnel will not •accept wecldinas after
60 days froin the date cA the event.
: All club mectinp and other news j'
liticlea in the society MCtion must
be aubmiued within 30 days of
oc:curnace. All birtbdaya must be '
.Ybmiited wilhin 42 days of the

.

'

.itsnameto•EP. American.
It's the same company you've come to know, with a new name. And a renewed commitment to.serving
our rustomers more efficienUy and more effectively.
. AEP. same company. New name. Even brighter future.
'

ll!flf!'_AMIRICAN

iiiiiii.ICffiiC
POWIR
Rt.

'

'

.

••

-

.•

I
'

I
~

.
~

·~~,.

..

"

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="384">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9756">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29263">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29262">
              <text>February 6, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6109">
      <name>gilman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="724">
      <name>herrick</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="94">
      <name>rhodes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="131">
      <name>sharp</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="716">
      <name>will</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
