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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
w,nston slips
past Meigs in
TVC contest

Pick 3:
298
Pick 4:
1219
Buckeye 5:
15-18-19-25-32

Sports, Page 4

•

a1
Vol46, ND.197
2 Sectlon1, 16 Pegee

.....--Stocking up-...,

In preparation for the next snowstorm, Meigs County Highway
Garage truck drivers were busy this week stocking up on more
road salt, used to men snow and Ice on county roads. Recent winter storms had depleted the department's stockpile. Highway
garage trucks, above, walt to dump their payload which will be
mixed with cinders.

-never have r~K~t without CHUMS.
. CHUMS Inc., one of 11 projects
DA,YlON - You CliD 1111ver created by the American Associahave enough friends. Just .,.t Jf!lrb tioa of Retired Pcnons to foster
and At
independent living, pairs voluri. The two men have a lot in com- . teers with people over the age of 60
mon. They like walks, visiting who have a history of mental illmuseums and even once worked in ness.
the same industry. But.they migl\t .
AI May, a 69-year-old retired
Air. Fon:c pilot, met Herb lhree
Bow Muela7
•
years ago after mponding to an
If you're woal)eriag how much invitation to join CHUMS that
ou'll
get from Social .S-un'ty appeared in his church bulletin.
Y
- way
"He's the best chumJ've ever
when you retire, here's an easy
hlld,"
says Herb, 69. Herb, who has
' to fi nd ouL 1ust call I- 800-n2- been diaposed with schiiophre"'"'- 1213 and ~k for your own Pe~- nia, asked that his last name not be
sonal. Earnings and Benefit Esu- . used because of the social stigma
mate Statement. Your statement attached to fllllntal illness.
wdl .show h~w much you can.
Herb who -ver mam'ed lives
eX"""'
to
recet whe
...:...
' enjoys
·~
'
,...... .
ve . ~ you ·~... alone. He
crafts and riding
Or what you11 ~1ve 1fyou work his bicycle..beyond normal retirement age..
He also likes spending tir~K~
with May. The two go to panics, hit
More Thaa Reem-t
thc
library and take long walks.
· A lot of people think that Social
They
also share stories about stints
Security is jiist a retirement plan.
both
put in worlrinc in paper mills.
Well it's a lot more than thaL
"All I'm doing is enjoying
There's disability insiii'BIJCe ... to knowing Herb," Msy sai\1.
protect you against loss of iiiCOIIIe
AARP began the program after
if you become disabl~. And
members
responding to a 1993 SID'·
there's siD'vivorsj11sutam;e to provey
said
remaining at home and
tect your family if you die. It all .
living
as
independendy
as possib"
adds up to a whole package of prowas
the
most
important
thins to
tection.

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....
.

.

,..

. them.
··
••it just blub my
she sclilzoplftnia.
. "hopte are in a cOmmunity said. "You really don't know the
Volunteers ali SCiiened, interwhere they have their fiiends, .netcl IIIII!! you ~into it."
viewell and trlined. They then
· of!en their fatnily. They feel very
CHUMS was foundod in 1987 .select .a "ch!n!a" based in part on
rooted there aad lit home," said by the Nitionlllnstitute of Mental mutual intereats and lOcation.
Kalhy. Keller, spokeswOinan for ·Hellth as a pilot project. It became
Ms. &lt;lriuics said, the ~lients
Ohio'sAAJU&gt;o~ .. ·
.
an independent qency in 1991. respond well to the voi!Ul~·
Janet Lowry, MSOCiate professor Locally, it is funded by county ·
"When you gi-ve them IOIIIOODC
of ~ioloSY at Austin College in niental health boards.
.
in their life, it's like a-lllinCie.'' lbe •
'd
.
Sherman, Texas, ·said people feel
AARP helps prcivide &lt;liUMS . 511,
better about them~elves in their with volunteers and Jllidance. ·AiJd
"People were aettins thcif first
normBt surroondings. And it is it uses CHUMS as a model when lilny card, going to their tim pll'cheaper to keep people in their contacted. by cOmmunities in~- • ties, going to chl!ll:h anll being takhomes than , to institutionalize ested in stilting similar ~. en i!' ·':"'r ~JII1l 1 famijy,. We'~
them
" • · c· f
. ,
t :R.isa Grimes, CHUMSI .chief aJW.yi~ bY what this-doN .
· The AARP bas simitarpjk.t
executive officer, said the organi· . for folks.'' ,
jccts for elclerly independonce in zation that opet!ed in 198_7 with
Ne~ Y?rk City; Rutland, Vt.; jilst 1&lt;4 volunteers now bu more
COIUm_b11!o S.C.; Raytowa, Mo.; than 200. It HrVes 382 people with Caned Ia Stllllli
RAPIDOTY,S.D.(AP)-Tbe ~
B~kinp, . S.D.; Sacr8riKintQ, · a history of
health plob. ~bf.; Marien.,. Couilty, · Ariz.; !ems, such !II mUJC depression or . Mount RualunoR Nllioail MamoPierce County, Wash., and ·Cal•
·'· ·
· ' · ·.,.
· rill, Mled iti the Bid ilius, «1¥~eu Parisli,_La. · ·
• .
ers 1,686- of'I!IIIOIIed mounPIIYII.ii ~bnore, 66, bOc:ame Th&amp;MIIIIdllJ B• "f
tains ~liq Mouat Rulbalcft.
a CHUMS volunteer after she
·:A penon relirins'today at aae
The memarial !11!11 cmbli'lbed
. retirecf
.·
65 * .'baYing eatiKid avmp · in 1929. Carved on lbe ,._. of
·"I love people," said Ms. wases durin&amp; his/her worlringlife . Mount RUihmcn a lbe ·f ellltlu •
CriclaQore. "Ij~t think I could do should recei~e a monthly balefitof of Geoqe Wullinlton. Thqmu
a litde !:&gt;it for someone else. It is about $1!30. It .would take a little Jefferson. Alnhlm ·Liai:cln and
rewanlirig. ''
over seven years to recei-ve the Theodore RooleveiL Bleb
She said that when she fim .saw · amount shelhc paid in tues for ·~some 60Ioe&amp; in.beipt; from
the ciruMs clients at a jlarty, 'she · Soi:ial SeCurity retireiDent andiUI'- the cbin to the top of,dae head, and
could not believe hliw mucl~ they _ vivors benefits, talciniintereat into is visible up to alioUt 18 miles
needed.
. ' ICCCIUIL
away, _ : ..

Pro-

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mea- ·

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Into
wn:• ~ · ~..WCI'A
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Conv.eniene~;

Safety! Be: Doubly Sure

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Your s•cwf$ec.firity Ch:fciC. ·· "'
· · ~· · · .n Reach.You!' .&lt; , , ''· ~- ON~~/Attf¥
With Df.rect Deposit, You 'U Never Have ·To · Q The ~Y8amc For AU OJW• V;,p.ia......,,._
Worry About Your-C~ck
Cettins Lost••• .,w-..-.
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DIRECT·· .DEPQSIT
...IN'.YOUit
BEST INTEREST!
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.,. 6lO .VIAND -STREET.
ROINT_PL~ANT,
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December by Don Tillis, Ohio ·hindered work on the project during selection process and criteria ;n about
Department of Transportation project last spring and this winter, the state a week or so. Until the new selection
supervisor, two lanes of the project mandated completion date is now the process is activated, regional trans- •
should be complete with a three to second week of August, according to portation officials are lc:.ft to wait for
four full weeks of work by Kokosing Tillis.
word on new construction in lhe area,
Construction, Co. of Fredricktown .
The completion of the rest of this according to Nancy Yoacham, direcConstruction officials have previ- highway -· 18.5 miles between Rock tor of public infonnation for ODOT
ously stated that two lanes of the pro- Springs and Ravenswood -- will · District I 0, Marietla.
ject will be opened once completed, depend largely on federal funding
"We are very hopeful that the
while the remainder of the paving and state funding that will be deter- remainder of the Rock Springs to
work is finished on the four-lane pro- mined by a new project criteria to be Ravenswood project, as well as the
ject.
announced soon by the Ohio Depart- U.S . 33 Darwin to Athens project will
Rredicted completion date by the ment of Transportation.
rate high' on the new project lists,
slate for the project was origlnally
The state is scheduled to make an based on the new criteria set for conJune. 1996. Due to bad weather that announcement on . the new project struction of projects," said Yoacham.

i ·First in state

·columbus plans new
downtown office tower

By JAMES HANNAH
Aaeocllted p,... Writer·

Two M·e igs County' nurses complete
unique six-course program at OU
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

res, and this program offers nurses a
Sentinel news 1tlff
real benefit in that they can advance
T. C. Ervin, R.N. and Linda Van- their training at no cost.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Plans have have sat vacant as a parking lot for
Inwagen, R.N. of ~e Meigs County
Torres served as mentor for Ervin
been finalized for construction of a years."
Health Department are two of 22 and Vanlnwagen who each earned 30
21-story office building on lhe south·
Key to the deal is that the planned nurses who have completed a six- credits toward a bachelor of science
east corner of State and High streets tower is "sized right," Schimmer
course certificate program for public degree. Both plan to complete their
in downtown Columbus.
said. At 180,000 square feet, it will
health nurses -- the first in the slate - degree requirements. Vanlnwagen,
Arshot Investment Corp. plans to give downtown much-needed prime - through the School of Nursing at · who is the child health s.ervices
break ground by summer. with com- office space without flooding the . Ohio University.
director, will finish in March, and T.
pletion scheduled for l@te in 1997.
market. It also will allow Fifth Third
The courses, entitleq "Nuniog in C., the assistant"'lursing director, in
The deal was sealed after Colum- . Bank and other businesses to ex11and. Public Health Agencies widi'.:Jiki::iJ!t- spring, 1·99.7-. --~ - ·'
"blis ~ity CoJtiicii on Mtfri'daycllipped:". " 'Cotincihpproveil a ~fswaW'thtil on•Early Intervention..; wen! offered
The O~io Department ·of Health
in nearly $5'65,000 worth of prime , gives the tower develoj!ers the Lthrough a joint project of the Ohio provided $75,500 for the program to
land for the project.
shaped, 0.6-acre site free . 'The land, Department of Health and the School include students' tuition and some
"We worked a lot on this," said owned by Capitol S&lt;iutht which of Nursing.
course matenals, while the·School of
James Schimmer, Downtown devel· developed Columbus City Center,
OU Assistant Professor Sharo11 Nursing provided the instruction.
opment coordinator for Columbus.
had constdered the property as a pos- Denham who taught the courses, said
The free college credit was a real
"We're excited. I believe that sible ·retail-office exten~ion : But that the Ohio Department of Health incentive for nurses to participate,
only one other downtown office tow- Capitol South, a development agency wanted to detennine if their training said Torres. who noted that 30 ourser is being built east of the Missis- of the city, decided the Arshot plan would "malce them better health es from 15 southeastern Ohio counsippi River. And this was a super-dif- makes besl use of the land and has nurses and give them better skills for ties were selected to participate . Only
ficult site- a piece of land that may turned expansion sights to another working with the clients regarding 22 completed the program. Not only
vacant property downtown.
. early intervention."
did the students have to mak.e a comNorma Torres, R.N., nursing mttment but the agenctes mvolved
director at the Meigs Health Depart- had to allow the nurses to attend
ment was on a committee of four classes three Fridays a quarter. The
which wro1e the innovative program. remainder of their class time took
The others were Dr. Kathy Rose- place on Saturdays.
KENTON, Ohio (AP) - The born in Kenton and grew up on the Grippa, director of the Ohio UniverAs explained by the instructor. one
body of the first American soldier family dairy fann two miles southeast . sity School of Nursing. Nan goal of the program was to teach the
killed as part of the Bosnian peace of Ridgeway, a village of about 400 Schwartz, R. N., consultant with the nurses to commumcale more effecmission could be returned to the Unit- people.
Ohio Department of Health, and lively with others who are involved
An investigalion continues into Judy King, R. N. nursing director of with the children they are serving -ed States as early as Saturday. a
the cause of the explosion that killed · the Muskingum Health Department. famtly members and other profesfuneral director said.
John Price said Tuesday that Don- him.
Torres said that in addition to sionals. She said that anolher emphaA press release issued today by the offering pubic health nurses a way of sis of the training was on increasing
. aid A. Dugan's family intended to
make funeral arrangements with him NATO-led International Force in learning more about their field so that the nurses' awareness of what their
Tuzla, said Dugan was " .. .in a they could do a belter job, another .colleagues are doing. particularly so
today,
Price said the funeral will be marked .mine ..f.eld near a !FOR consideration was retention of the since early intervention is an interopen to lhe public. Burial will be at chec k pmnt. ...
. nursing staff in public health agen- disciplinary or a collaboralive role Dugan's widow. Miriam, and their cies .
Grove Cemetery in Ken10n. Dugan's
- working with other agencies in the
daughters, Dixie and Beverly, will
body is curreptiy in Gennany.
Public health pays less. said Tor- county.
The 38-year-old Anny sergeant attend the service in the gymnasium
was killed Saturday in nor1hern at Annstrong Barracks in Buedingen,
Bosnia. Dugan, a career soldier, was 40 miles northeast of Frankfurt.

·Sgt. Dugan's body could be
returned to Ohio by Saturday

Buchanan upsets Gramm
Claims to be GOP's true conservative
Hampshire's Feb. 20 primary. "I
BATON ROUGE. La. (AP) think
we ' re going to win this nomi·
Winning the first delegates of the
nation."
1996 presidential contest, Pat
Gramm predicted that he and oth·
Buchanan claimed his upset ·victory
in Louisiana's caucuses proved he er GOP candidates can't win the
was the true conservative in the nomination unless they finish at least
third in Iowa's important caucuses.
GOP field.
" I don 't think anybody is going to
For Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, Tueswin
the Republican nomination
day's deftat was an ominous setback
unless
they win first, second or third
in a slate he had counted on winning
in
Iowa,"
Gramm said on CBS's
os nearly all the other GOP cafld.idates refused 10 participate in defell. "This Morning."
ence to Iowa's caucuses next Mon·
Buchanan won the Louisiana cauday.
cuses
by getting ' 13 delegates to
Making the rounds of network 1alk
Gramm's
eight. " We are at the beginshows this morning, Buchanan said
his triumph over Gramm in Louisiana ning of a coalition," Buchanan tol~
was "a victory for the new Conser· supporters at a spirited rally Tuesday
vat ism of the heart" among voters night after the final vote count.
with traditional values .
Although he appeals mosdy IO the ·
Exit polls s~owed Louisianans
.conservative and religious right, who turned out for the GOP caucus·
Buchanan pointed to a New Orleans es were overwhelmingly conserva~ewspaP:Cr h~~dline _tliat toined . ~im tivc. Half of voters described themas wmrung the m1ddle class as . selves !IS part of the religious right
p~f th~t he h~ an array of support. political movement, and Buchanan .
. .~e re putt1ng .together a broad . beat Gramm 2 to 1 among Christian .
coah~•.on ... that I thmk wtll do ve7 conservatives, according to the poll
~t:ll, ~uchan~.n sa1~ on NBC,' conducted by Voter News Service, a
. Oday show. I don t know who s
au· f'lbe A.ssoc'·ted
· Pr ss
.
. I
b Ithi k ,
coo~r veo
m
e ,
•goang to w1~ owa, ut
n we ve ABC, CBS, CNN lind NBC.
-got a ~~ghling chance .to do well
·More than half said the most
there ..., he added, sayms he also
expects a strung showing in New .
Coatinued on paae 16

..

..

A Gannett co.~

ODOT plans to resume work
on connector project in March
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
State transportation officials hope
to resume construction work on the
2.25-mile U.S. Route 33/Interstate 77
connector between Rock Springs and
Five Points by the first of March,
officials said this morning.
Paving work on the project was
ceased in early November due to cold
weather and wet conditions. Excavation work continued until earlyDecember on the Five Points side of
the $12.3 million project.
According to statements made in

PAGE TWELVE· RETIREMENT EDIUON

35c0om.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 7, 1996

COMPLETES STUDY - T.C. Ervin, seated lelt, and Linda Vanlnwagen, both registered nurses with the Meigs County Health
Department, completed a special program for nurses In public
heanh offered at Ohio University with funding from the Ohio
Department of Health. Their mentor was Norma Torres, R.i\1.,
standing, local nursing director who was one of four professionals writing the Innovative program.
This month the nurses who comTeen pregnancy and how to devel.
plctcd
the program will return to
op a community prevention program
was also a part of the training pro- campus for an evaluation of how bengram. Neither Ervin not Vanlnwagen eficial they are finding the new matehad much fonnai training in that field rial in their role as public health nursalthough they deal daily with such es.
That evaluation will help deterproblems since Meigs Counly has
mine
whelher the program is offered
such a high incidence of teen pregagain.
nancy.

Chartered jet crashes, 189 believed dead

PUERTO PLATA, Dominican Tuesday. but the Boeing 757 was subRepublic (AP) - A charter jetliner stituled at the last minute . The plane
carrying Gennan to!lrlsts·home from took off in heavy rain, then abruptly
the Caribbean craShed into shark- turned around and headed back for
infested w4ters off the Dominican land just minutes later. The pilol did
Republic. There were no signs today not radio the control tower about any
that any of the 189 people aboard, problems, .according to the Dominiincluding four children, had sur- can civil air agency.
.
vived.
The plane, bound for Frankfurt
Aircraft and boats searching the and Berlin, was owned by a Turkish
waters otT the Dominican Republic's company, Birgen Air, and leased to a
north coast spotted bodies, empty life Dominican airline, Alas de Transrafts and debris scattered over two . porte Intemacional.
U.S. Coast Guard Lt. . Lincoln
square miles. At least 40 bodies
were recovered, but divers were wsry Benedict in San Juan said pilots had
of enlering the water because of the ~ spotted sharks in the area of the crash
site.
sharks.
"The area is shark-infested."
There was no immediate inforBenedict
said. "It obviously would
mation on the cause of the crash late

hamper recovery of either survivors
Flight 30 I took off in heavy rain
or bodies from the water."
from Puerto Plata International Air·
At least 40 bodies have been port about II p.m. (10 p.m. EST)
recovered, he said . There were no · Tuesday.
reports of survivors.
The aircraft had been in the air
Seas were relatively calm as the only five minutes when a radar opersearch continued this morning off the ator noti ced that it had turned around
coast of the Dominican Republic, and was headed back to land, said
which shares the .island of Hispanic- Luis Flores Mota, a spokesman with
Ia with Haiti.
·the Dominican Republic's &gt;ivil air
agency.
Skies were clear in Puerto Plata,
There was no radio conlact with
a coastal resort 100 miles northwest :the plane to indicate there was a pro~
of the capital Santo Domingo, but 'lcm, Mota said.
thick clouds and , rain squalls
Navy aircrafl and Coast Guard .
obscured the crash area offshore.
cutters and helicopters from Florida,
U.S. Coast Guard Lt. Mike Calla- the Bahamas, the Dominican Repubhan in San Juan said the rain was lic and Puerto Rico headed to the.
slowing the rescue a bit but was not :crash site. 13 miles north of Pueno
a serious problem .
Plata.

Ohio Senate OKs aid to rural h1dustrial parks
COLUMBUS (AP) - A bill to
provide $10 million in state aid during the next two years to help create
rural induslrial parks has cleared the
Senate despite questions about its
potential effectiveness.
Sen. James Carnes, R-St.
Clairsville, won approval on a 23-10
vote Thesday of a !Jill to help pon
authorities or similar nonprofit
groups - with 1oca11ovemment
backing - buy llnd and develop
. pads to attract ill!lustry.
. Carnes said the Ohio Department

:of Development would set up a systern to handle applications for loans
or loan guarantees.
Local governments or lenders
would have to come up with matching money that probably wou1d represent about 60 percent of park
'development costs.
"It's going to be very competitive,
Jlnd I think that's going to he a very
!important part of the legislation,"
·Carnes said.
The bill mu~t go. back to the
House · for cons1deratton of Senate

changes.
In other action Tuesday, the
House:
- Voted 53-45 for a bill to give
· ski resort operators an extra measure
of lawsuit protection from patrons
who slam into snow-grooming equipmentor other objects on the slopes,
- Voted 96-0 for a bill to grant
$30 million in tax credits to corporatiolls or individuals who voluntarily
·clean up polluted land for develop. ment.

~ Approved on a 99-0 vote a bill
that would require a legislative committee to periodically review thou- '
sands of state agency rules and reg- .
ulations that otherwise would remain
in effect.
All three bills now go to the Senate.
The Senate vote on the ni~al
induslrial park bill was a mixed
political bag that saw combinations·
of Republicans and Democrats favor ·
or oppoSe the legislation .

�•

~ ~:commentary

I

p·~

~ednesday,
Februery 7, 1996
.

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Oenllt'll M1nager ·

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Caucuses are a hoax ·
By MICH~EL GARTNER
.
. AMES, Iowa-The Iowa caucuses are next Monday. There will be much
hoopla between now and then. ·Polls. Ads. Speeches. Spins. Ads. Photos.
Charges. Interviews. Ads. Analysis. Commentary. Anchormen. Columnists.
Ads. Blah. Blah. Blah.
And the thing to remember about all that is this:
The caucuses are a hoax.
They're our little hoax upon the nation.
They really aren't what we swear they really are.
They really don't mean what we say they really mean.
. The modern-day Iowa cauduses were invented by a handful of Iowa political operatives in the early 1970s, were quietly tested by George McGovern
and Ed Muskie in 1972, were discovered a couple of years later by an
'obscure Georgia go~rnor named Jimmy Caner, and were given prominence
in 1976 by a New York Times reponer named Johnny Apple.
·
At the time, they were what we say they still are: an opponunity for a
politician to try out ideas, to travel from church basement, to farm kitchen.
to main street cafe, to weekly newspaper offices to talk to real people about
,-i:al ideas and real concerns. There was real debate, real interest, real thought
'lind real listening on all sides.
:- It was - .then - democracy in action.
: : Shilled by Tbe Des Moines Register - I know, for I was its editor in
,bose days - and promoted by Des Moines Chamber of Commerce types
who liked the free spending and camaraderie of the national press, the cauQJses by 1980 were a political happening.
:- Caner anli Apple had made them important, and the Register and the
~amber had'!trade them convenient. Politicians and reporters flocked to
fbwa. You weren't anyone unless you had had a couple of candidates stop by
fl,r breakfast, unless you had pictures of them with your Child or your hog,
Qr- unless you knew the reponers as Johnny and Jack and Jules and AI.
· : There were ads and debates and diny tricks, but there still was true give
and take between candidate and citizen, true listening to each other and true
lt'lought about the issues. Iowans viewed the caucuses -as a responsibility, and
they took that responsibility gravely. And that's what we want you to think
t••s like still today- grass-roots democracy, retail politics, aw-shucks camJiiigning and thoughtful discussion.
• But it isn't.
' Today, it's just big-time politicJUng in a small-time state. It's slick and
mean 1V ads - the word is that !jteve Forbes alone is spending $4 million
on TV here - and consultants, handlers, mailings and photo opponuriities.
It's candidates talking about each other and at the national press and ignoring Iowans except as background people and props for the bigger stage.
· There is no talk of issues of imponance to Iowans - our main concerns
these days are property taXes and ~orporate hog Jots - and no listening to
the common-seltse views of Iowans. There is pandering to the rabid one. jssue people of the right because those are the people who will show up
Jl&gt;'onday evening.
•
: And that's our other little secret. Not many people go to the caucuses.
There are about 2 million people of voting age in Iowa, and 584, I 18 of lhem
~re registered Republicans. I doubt if I 25,000 - 6 percent of the voting-age
.
population - will show up at the 2,200 preci~cts across the state.
. For the truth is, the caucuses are mconvement and bonng. The Republican meetings are shoner and more democratic than the Democratic caucus~s. but they still req~~ire you to go out on a cold evening and stand around
before you are counted. It's not like the convenience of the New Hampshire
primary. when you can go and quickly vote on your own schedule. It's
inconvenient, and it's not ·much fun.
· What's more, the people who do tum out are not representative of the
state - Jet alone of the nation. The Iowa Republican Pany is controlled by
ihe Christian right, great disciplinarians if not great thinkers. They' II turn out
in big numbers and talk about abortion and homosexuality and all those
.
meaningless issues they care about.
• Th_ey'll argue a bit, vote (but not in secret) and then go home. There will
be a big story on Tuesday, but by then Ph1l Gramm and Pat Buchanan and
Bob Dole and Steve Forbes and those five other .guys and their handlers and
chroniclers will be gone.
We'll write stories about winners and losers.
But the story we won't write is this:
Tbe real winner is the Iowa c;conomy.
Gartner editor of tha Amaa (Iowa) Dally Tribune, 11 former editor of
The Loul1~11le Courler.Jo!Jrnal and The Des Molnea Register and tormer president of NBC New1. Write to him care of GanneH ~ewa Service,
1000 Wilson Blvd.,. Arlington, VI. 22229-0001.

Letters to the editor
Wants longer archery season

SUPAI, Ariz. - In a small community nestled in the depths of the
Grand Canyon, several hundred·
American Indians know what it is to
be between a rock and a hard place.
Their quandary is this: Cuts in
Indian aid programs will require
them to be more self-sufficient, but
their primary mcans of suppon -tourism •• cannot be greatly expande.d without risking environmental
damage to the Grand Canyon and
, their community.
The Havasupai, literally meaning
the "people of the blue-green
waters," are the only tribe allowed
to live inside the canyon. Although
the canyon is their ancestral home, it
took a lawsuit some years ago for
the Havasupai to be allo'f'd to
return there from tile plateau above.
The small tribe. of more than 400
actually lives in Havasu Canyon, a
side canyon that was carved by the
Havasu River. Tbe river's beautifully clear turquoise-blue water cascades over three spectacular waterfalls below the village' before emptying into the Colorado River.
Its remote location can only be
reached by helicopter or a stcej)1
eight-mile trail that begins 3,000
feet above the canyon floor on the
Hualapai Hilltop. Although the allday trip is grueling, 25,000 tourists
make the hike each year, as does the
U.S. Postal Service, via "pony

Accu Weather• forecast

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IND.

Fire destroys Rutland home

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e Columbus

A Rutland-area home was destroyed it) a fire Tuesday evening.
Firefighters of the Rutland Volunteer Fire Depanment responded to
the Higley Road residence of Mary Smith at 8:57 p.m.
The owner and several small children were at the residence, consist·
ing of two mobile homes located side-by-side, when the {ire began,
but no injuries were reponed, according t.o Fire Chief Dave Davis.
The fire was apparently caused by a kerosene heater, Davis said. The
'dence was uninsured.
e Rutland VFD responded with 22 men and four truck while the
meroy VFD assisted with a pumper truck and manpower. The Rutd squad of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service also
responded to the scene.

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Man sentenced on charge
In an-entry filed Monday, a Pomeroy man was sentenced in the Meigs
County Coon of Common Pleas to five years probation on a charge
of cultivation of marijuana.
.
~
Richard Cooper, also known. as David Jennings II, was origina y sen·
tenced to 18 months confinement which \lias suspended pendin com·
pletion of a six-month stay at the Southeastern Probation Tre ment
Alternatives (SEPTA) Center at Nelsonville. He was also fined $500
for coun costs.
• According to the indictment, the offense took place on May 26, 1995.

Parent/teacher meetings set
Southern Local Schools will be holding parent/teacher conferences
the eveni,ngs of Feb. 12 and Feb. 15 from 5-8 p.m.
"This is an excellent opponunity to talk with your child's teachers
about his or her progress over the first half of the year," said Superintendent James Lawrence. "Call your child's school to arrange a con-

. William T. Grueser, 78, Middlepon, died Tuesday, Feb. 6, 1996, at Vet; erans Memorial Hospital Skilled Care Unit in Pomeroy.
1
Born Aug. 23, I917, in Minersville, son of the late Theodore and Stella
! Houdashelt.Grueser. He was a retired manager of the former Pomeroy Motor
; Company, member of the Middlepon Church of Christ, the Farm Bureau,
' Lions Club and was active in the Pomeroy Ch~ber of Commerce.' .
; He is survived by his wife of 57 years, Flora Dell Russell Grueser of Mid: dlepon; a daughter and son-in-law, Debra and Michael Gerlach of Middle; pon; a son and daughter-in-Jaw, Don and Trish Grueser of Steamboat Springs,
; Colo.; two granddaughters; three step-grandchildren; a sister, Helen Maag
' of Minersville; a brother and sister-in-law, Elmer and Marge Grueser of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a brother, Edmond Grueser.
Services will be held Friday, I p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middle; port with AI Hanson officiating. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery in
: Middlepon.
. ·
; Friends may call Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home. Memo: rial contributions may be made to the Middleport Church of Christ Build' ing Fund, 5th and Main streets, Middlepon OH 45760.

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ference."

Feb. 16 will be used as a make-up day as a result of the calamity days
missed to this point, Lawrence said. All students need to attend.
There will be no school on Feb. 19, Presidents Day.

Boil order issued
Leading Creek Conservancy District customers between Smith Run
Road and Zion Road are under a boil order until funher notice. The
order is due to a leak in a main water line.

Falling ladder strikes vehicle
A Rutland woman was slightly injured Tuesday when her car struck
a falling ladder on Stale Route 7 near Pomeroy, the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the State flighway ~atrol reponed.
JennieS. Williamson, 52, 36679 Dye Road, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by private vehicle, where she was treated and
released.
Troopers said Williams_on was nonhbound at 9:06 p.m., following
a truck driven by Aaron P. Russell, 26, Rushyille, when a ladder fell
from the top of the truck and Williamson's nonhbound car struck the
ladder.
Damage to Williamson's car was slight and there was no damage
to Russell's pickup, owned by Mechanical Services Inc., Columbus.
Russell was cited for inseq1~oad .

:stella Lee Jarrell

.

Last year, ice·s;aing champion Ml~elle program's
music:
Consider the results of the nationals. TwencyKwan was a nervou nd giggling 14-year-old, · "Salome."
Kwan
four-year-old silver-medalist Tonia Kwaitkowski
with a slight figure
a bobbing ponytail.
entered the rink wearing
-- the country's most ignored world-class skater .Her girlishness worked to her disadvantage. a bikini-like combination
- was flanked by Kwan, the youngest national ·
women's champion since 1964, and bronzeSkating judges told Kwan's coach and parents 9f.veils, sequins and that
that she looked too young, sQ, Kwan followed the 1~arnous fake skin. Last
medalist Tara Lipinski, the 13-year-old, 69-pound
example of the most successful figure skaters: year's little girl was oow
media sensation. (And back in the wings, a tearfUl
She staned experimenting with makeup.
an exotic temptress.
Nicole Bobek. 18, nursed the sore ankle that pre,") learned from the Olympic champions,"
At any rate, it worked.
vented her from skating.)
Kwan said about her new look. "I looked in the If a child-like appearance
"These girls grow up so fast," says Ryan,
mirror and examined how they did their makeup. held Kwan back in the
"and we're pushing them to .become that ideal
I'learned from the best."
past, the "maturing of
woman at an even earlier age."
We hear so much talk these days about the
In no other spon is image and personality so . Michelle Kwan," as commentators dubbed it,
decline of American young people, and_ about
critical ·• and are the actual athletics so ignored - helped her secure a victory.
The sad pan is, Kwan should have won with- their sexual precociousness. Politicians decry ~een
- as women's figure skating. Top figure skaters
out
draping silky ropes around her waist and glu- pregnancy. And state and federal governments
are not just athletes or even role models, they are
ing
sequins
to her eyelids. Her program was flaw- . pass Jaws to discourage teens from exercising
also expected to be beauty queens. ice princesses.
less,
and
it
showed a grace and artistry that had more adult passions. ··
.
,
"In an extreme way, I think figure skating repthe
young
skater's
routines
in
the
past.
But
although
we
tell
teen-agers,
especially
eiuded
resents the ideal woman -- fit, athletic, little-girlAnd oddly enough, Kwan also seemed to gar. teen-age girls, that they should refrain from
ish and sexual," says Joan Ryan, author of "Little
ner
approval for her innocence. ABC Sports com- exploring their more sexual nature, the examples
Girls in Pretty Boxes: The Making and Breaking
mentators
Peggy Fleming, Dick Button and Brian we set-- in nearly every facet of society -- say the
of Elite Gymnasts and Figure Skaters."
· Boitano seemed to agree that she was the kind of exact opposite.
And since the 1994 Olympic showdown
We can only hope the young women who ·are
between Nancy Kerrigan and Tanya Hardin·g, the girl "you'd want for a daughter."
very
uncomplicated,
and
I
think
she's
a
expected
to fit these conflicted ideals somehow
"She's
pressure to meet this image has only increased. In
the world of televised -spons, figure skating now wonderful role model for our young skaters com- manage to preserve their own childhoods. Watching Michelle Kwan's on-ice seduction, it was hard
commands ratings second only to football . New ing up," said Fleming.
This
contradiction
is
an
intrinsic
element
of
to know who exactly was beneath all that makeup
ice competitions with flashy names like "Ice
elite figure skating. "In women's figure skating, and glitter.
Wats" and "Skates of Gold" continue to pop up
But when the routine was over and she broke
on network TV schedules. And the audience-- 75 it's better to look old than to be old," writes
Christine
Brennan,
author
of
"Inside
Edge,"
a
into
a childish grin, one ABC commentator spoke
percent of which is comprised of women -- can't
behind-the-scenes look at figure skating. That's ·for a nation full of viewers when he exclaimed,
get enough.
becapse promoters want skaters to exude the sen- "There's the IS-year-old!"
The "Jesson" Michelle Kwan learned from her suality of a grown woman, but increasingly the
Sire Eckel 11 1 ayndiCIIId wrlllf for ~
predecessors became clear at last month's Nation- spon demands the lightness and limberness of paper Enterprlee A110Clatlon.
al Figure Skating Champi!lnships in San Jose, children, as triple jumps and combinations
Send comm1111t1 to lhl lulhor In 0111 of
Calif. A heavily made-up Kwan appeared on the become standard requirements at the elite level.
thll newapaper or eend her e-mail II llflluice in a costume that was as provocative as her
maol.com.

Shutdowns interrupted civil rights enforcement
gates ·discrimination complaints
were sent home- causing EEOC's
already large case backlog to swell.
This should come as no surprise to
Dole, R-Kan., and Watts, R-Okla.
They knew long. ago that the
EEOC's workload was unwieldy.
'Unfortunately, our nation's top
Nelson Diaz, HUD's general
Four days later in Springfield.
civil-rights Jaw enforcer, the Equal counsel, told a civil rights commis- Tenn ., two black teen-agers wemo
Employment Opponunity Commis- sion investigator that the shutdown convicted of shOoting to death ..:
sion. is burdened with an unaccept- hindered his office's effons to insure white man who flew a Confederatd
ably high 90,000-case backlog," that people with AIDS were not flag in the rear·of his pickup truck
they wrote in their July Wall Street denied housing beca11se of their his terrified wife looked on .
·
Journal article. "We must give the medical condition.
Also last month, • ~te couple4
EEOC the tools it needs to do its job
"During this winter's severe was arrested and charged with
properly."
weather this may have amounted to a ond-degree lynching after theyl
What they said and what they did death sentence for some people with allegedly tortured a 9-year-old blackl
are worlds ar.an.
AIDS," Diaz said.
boy. The child, who had gone to
The governmen~ shutdown also
Maybe. Maybe not. What's cer- couple's horne to play with their son, •
hun operations at the Department of tain is that civil rights enforcement said he was tied to a tree and beaten
Labor's Office of Federal Contract came to a vinual standstill at a time · on his feet with ~ crowbar by the
Compliance; the civil righ!S offices when acts of racial intolerance and boy's fatlier ~fter being accused of
in the departments of Health and . discrimination appeared to be" on the stealing something from the man's :
Human Services and Education, and rise.
.
:
truck.
the Department of Housing and
111 the past year, at least five black
. Afterward, he\ays, ihc mother ;.
Urban Development's Office of Fair churches have been burned down. choked hi!ll with a· beh until he :
Housing and Equal Opponunity. . While the (JfSI fQW' produced no evi- puled ouL
.
'
Less ce~n is the effect it had on the dence of . racial motivatiotl, mllly .
Bob Dole ~d J.C.- Watts didn'~!
Civil Rights Division of the Justice blacks think the arions were hllte CIUIC any of this to happen. But in
Department, where 7S pen:cnt of the crinles. The fifth, a h0115C of worship backina the shutdown, they denied •
employees were sent home but some in Kno~ville, Tenn., that wu federal aae!!CieS the resowi:c( the)' :
civil riJ)IU litiption and investip- destroyed in Jllluary by Mo\0\GV knew were needed 10 fully investi- :
tion work wu done.
cocktails, - laced wiih racial slun. pie such acts of racial hind.
~~

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Tonight. .. Rain likely. Low in the
upper 30s with slowly rising temperatures after midnight. Southwest wi(ld
5 to 15 mph. Chance ofrain 60 per·
cent.
. 1'1!l!rsday... RaJn likely. High ~
the mid 40s.

Local briefs---

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Ice wars:·
athletes or beauty queens?·
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J1ck Anderton 1nd Mlchlfl ·
Bln1teln ara wrlllre tor Unltld
Feature Syndlcllle, Inc..

SllJTDOWY

.roday _in h'$tory
.,....

.,_

lWilliam·r. Grueser

Our associate Dale Van Alta
.recently visited and spoke to tribal
leaders -- few of whom would speak
on the record -- about the impending
cuts in Indian programs. Though the
Havasupai are not easily excitable,
they're clearly concerned about the
tribe's future. "A Jot of meetings.
Meetings, meetings, meetings," one
of the leaders said, laconically, shaking his head.
The Havasupai are not rich, but
neither are they destitute. For
instance, their high-school age children are sent to a California boarding school. But their houses·are prefab quality, some of.. them resembling shacks. There are no cars or
motorcycles; transponation is by
horse or on foot. Groceries brought
in by mule or helicopter are taken

1 have spoken with many deer hunters. They agree with me 99 percent.

·-'Till

accommodate any more visitors
without risking environmental damage. "We would love to get more
tourists, but now we know it would
put our home at some envi1;011mental
risk," one tribal leader said.
Recently, the tribe has tried to
diversify into the fastest-growing
American Indian enterprise -- casinos. But due to their remote location
and proximity to a treasured national park, the Havasupai are the only
one of Arizona's 2 I tribes that could
not have a casino.
So they worked out a deal with
the town of Williams, Ariz., which is
75 miles away. The city agreed to
cede 10 acres of city"land to a feder- ·
al tribal trust, in return for a percent- •
age of the casino proceeds. It was
imaginative, and would have been
lucrative, but Gov. Fife Symington
nixed the deal.
That puts the tribe right back
where it started, facing a diminishing federal subsidy with nowhere to
tum -· between a rock and a hard
P~ -

Southeastern Ohio
Today...Cioudy. A chance of rain
this .afternoon. Precipitation may
begin as snow or sleet. High in the
lower 40s. Southwest wind 5 to 15
mph. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.

conditions and

MICH.

express."

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Last 'uly,
We need to have bow season stan early in Seplember and run through Jan.
Sen.
Bob Dole and Rep. J. C. Watts
31. Tbe state is wanting a bigger deer kill. This would help. Sol)le women
co-authored
an anicle.in which they
and senior citizens just can't stand the cold weather. You are allowed onlr
said
the
nation
must "conscientioustwo deer per season in Meigs County. What would make the difference 1f 11
ly
enforce
our
anti-discrimination
is early or late in the season.
,
I also think that deer should be checked in my his or her game warden, laws." Then, just a few months later
·so that giln kill is not tagged in as bow kill. Or maybe have game checking the two men backed a congressional
stluions check•the wounds on the deer to see if they were shot with gun or Republican scheme that forced a
!lOw. This has been the policy in the state of Delaware for yeats. Also in shutdown of the federal government
- and gutted civil rights enforceOther states.
.
.
· · Some people wrote that they thought Sunday hunting was a sin. This is ment effons.
Proof of the devastating results of
~ a job but a spon. I feel that Sunday hunting should bi opened for all
' giune. No one objects to fishing on Sunday. Coyote, woodchuck and-fox their doublespeak can be found in a
hunting ate already o~ned on_ Sunday. This w.~uld give our sc~ool childre.n soon-to-be-released repon by the
aiKi others time to enJOY hunung. When I am tn the woods enJoylRg Gods U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, a
nature around me. I feel very close to the Lord. It is _a relaxing time for me nonpanisan ·government organization that monitors the anti-bias work
to meditate. This could keep our kids out of trouble.
of
federal agencies.
M1rHnWotfl
The two shutdowns, which lasled
Rutland
a total of 27 days, "severely inter·
rupted civil rights enforcement" in
at least five of six federal agencies
with major responsibility for overA11aD,IIIIed Pre.. ,
.· ·
.
..
.
seein&amp; the implementation of antit • 1bday ia Wednesday, Feb. 7.!he 38th day of 1996. There are 328 days left
discrimination laws, the commission
Ill""',.__ .
concludes in its n:pon, a copy of
, 'JOday'a Hi&amp;liliaht in History; .
.
_
which I've obtained.
·
I • In 1964, the B~es beJII.I their firit American tour u they amved at
At the Equal Employment OpporN,w Yodl'• J~ F. Kennedy In~emltional Airport. whe!e they were greet- . tunity
Commission, for instance, all
11, n'nda of·.:reami•s fus.
.
but 154 of the '1&gt;500 employees in
01 dJia·U.:
.
the office that receives and investi. 111·fl12.11111lor CharleS Dickens wu b!Jm in Portsmoulh,.England.
Ditar EdRor,

home in a wheelbarrow. Alcohol is the devastating flood of February
forbidden by the Tribal Council 1993.
The village has been flooded
(though a case of Budweiser goes
for $50 under tl)e table in
before, but never as
some homes).
severely as three years
· Most Havasupai are
aso. Flood waters collected behind a private
employed by the various
dam that broke, sending
Indian programs that operate, among other things, an
a IS-foot-high wall of
elementary school and a
water crashing down
clinic. Driving the mule2,265 feet to the village
and-horse train also pays
below. No one died, but
well and employs tribal
the damage it did to
members. In 1995, the
Havasu Falls seems
tribe got $213,563 as a
irreparable.
"Those falls have
direct "tribal priority allo- - - - - - - cation" payment, 'l'(hich is the only been our lifeblood," says Wayne
unspecified federal subsidy they Sinyella, the tribal chairman. The
receive. The latest conference repon tribe has sued the owneci of the darn
on the Interior Department appropri- for improper maintenance. The dam
ation would cut that to $179,700. ispanofacattleranchowr.edbythe
Other tribal programs might be cut family of Interior Secretary Bruce
by as much as 25 percent through Babbitt, who does not participate in
the congressional appropriations the family cattle business. Sinyella
process.
estimates that the tribe lost $2 milBesides the federal government, lion through propeny damage, lost
the tribe's only other incoriie comes income and expenses.
from the tourists who visit their
Three years after the flood,
scenic preserve each year. The num- tourism has rebounded to pre-flood
ber had been on the upswing_until levels. But the tribe says it can't

The Deily sentinel • Pege 3

Today's weather forecast

Thunday, FeiJ. 8

The Daily Sentinel Grand Canyon Indians have been hit hard
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

WedneldiY, F..,_, 7, 1111

.,.

'Lsta!Jfisfrd in 1948

/

Stelia Lee Jarrell, 84, Long Bottom, died Monday, Feb. 5, 1996, in St.
Albans, W.Va.
- She was born Dec. 14, 1911, in Olley, W.Va., daughter of the late Sydney Calven and Allana Masey Luther. She attended the Dorcas United
Methodist Church.
Surviving are four ~ons, Denver Jarrell of Chapmanville, W.Va., Otto Jarn:ll of Cinj:innati, Archie Jarrell of Long Bottom and Dallas Jarrell of Racine;
(our daughters, Annabell Elkins of Chapmanville, Genrude Tackett of Pecks
Mill, W.Va., Deloris Browning of Blair, W.Va., Linda Jarrell of Chapmanville,
Doris Elaine Ball of St. Albans, W.Va., Brenda Beddoes of Westerville and
Ruth Rose of Long Bottom; 4S grandchildren; 56 great-grandchildren.
Services will ~ Thursday, 2 p.m. at the Handley Funeral Home in
"Danville, W.Va., with the Rev. Donald Mason officiating. Friends may call
today from 6-9 p.m. with family calling hours at 5 p.m.

1

·oorothy M. Will
Dorothy Mildred Will, 85, of Pomeroy died Sunday, Feb. 4, J996at Overbrook Center, Middlepon.
Born Dec. 24, 1910 in Gallipolis, she was the daughter of the late Elmer
.and Nora Withers Burnette. She retired in I972 as a loan clerk from Farm_ers Bank in Pomeroy. She was a graduate of Marshall University; a 50-year
member of Order of the Eastern Star Chapter# 186 of Pomeroy; and attended the Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
She is survived by a sister, Jewell Eyles of Hilliard; two nieces, two great
nieces, and two great nephews.
· She was preceded in death by a sister, Geraldine Burnette.
. Services will be held ~aturday, I I a,m., at Fisher Funeral Home, Middlepon, with the Rev. Bob Robinson officiating. Burial will follow in Gallipolis.
Friends may call the funeral home Saturday, from 10 a.m. uqtil time of
the service. Eastern Star services will be held Saturday morning at I I a.m.

The Dally Sentinel
!USPS 31:1-!IMt
Published every lfll:rnoo&amp;. Monday th,..gh
FridAy. Ill Coun Sl, ~. Oltio, by lbe
Oloio Volley PublishlDJ Co._yJO.- Co.,

Pomeroy, Oltio 457119, Ph. 992-2136. Second
lC':Iw poltqe paid-at Pomeroy, Ohio.
"Me.hn The Associated Preu, and lhe Ohio
......._.. Asrocilllioo.

Mlirtha D. Haggy, 82, Columbus, formerly of Pomeroy, died Tuesday,
·Feb. 6, 1996, at the Columbus Alzheimer Care Center.
.
.
· A homemaker. she was born March 24, 1913, in Gallia County, daugh·,
ter of the late Claude and Mel Bailey Jones. She was a member of the Ziori,
. ·:
Church of Christ, Pomeroy.
She is survived by a granddaughter and husband, Debra Haggy and Saul
Himelstein of Columbus; a grandson and wife , Dwane and Chris Haggy of
Westerville; four greal-grandchildren, Greg, Matthew, Derek and BethanY,
Haggy; and a brother, Durward Jones of Hawthorne, Calif.
;
She was preceded in death by her husband, Alvin "Dutch" Haggy; a son.Norman "Drew" Haggy and daughter-in-law, Zelma Haggy; sisters, Mildred
Ward, Maria Frederick, Kathleen Jones and Ruth Walters; brothers;
Richard and Nonhcott Jones.
.
Services will be held Friday, I p.m. at Ewing funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Roland Wildman officiating. Burial will follow in Peech Grove:
Cemetery, Pomeroy.
.
Friends may call Thursday, 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.

EMS logs 16 calls -Hospital news -:0Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Center recorded 16
calls for assistance Tuesday including
six transfer calls. Units responding
included:
MIDDLEPORT
7:59 a.m., volunteer fire depanment and .squad, auto fire on Shon
\F~unh Avenue, Judy Wise owner, no
lhjurtes.
.
.
.
POJ,..ROY
9~4~;E;~:·n Maples Apartments,
Ethel Ne~,, treated at the scene.

·,

RACINE
3:21 a.m., Richard Road , Woody
Richard, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
6:42p.m., VFD and squad to Long
Run Road, possible structure fire at
Michael Dailey residence, Michael
and Sally Dailey treated at the scene.
Bashan VFD assisted.

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions - none.
Tuesday discharges - William
Frecker, Racine; Lettie Young,
Pomeroy; Mildred Lamben, Middlepan; Sadie Carr. Pomeroy.
Holzer Medical Center
Disc:harges Feb. 6 - Heather
Roush, Clara Call, Gloria McQuaid,
McKenzie Conley, Patricia Mossman, Geneva Sech, Mrs. Gerald
Roach and son .
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Wade .
Leslie, daughter, Rio Grande; Mr. ami
Mrs. Daniel Craycraft, daughter,
Cheshire.
·
(Published with pennission) '

RUT-LAND
7:36 a.m. , South Second Street.
"Geneal Dunkin , HMC;
II :22 a.m.. Ball Run Road,
Hanwell Curd, HMC;
I :22 p.m., Cleland Road, Steven
Lush, HMC;
6: I I p.m., Page ville Road, Annie
Quivey, HMC;
8:57 p.m., VFD and squad to
Higley Road, structure fire at Mary
Smith residence, no injuries, Pomeroy
VFD assisted.
TUPPERS PLAINS
7:08 p.m., Silver Ridge Road .
Oscar Pe~nington, dead on arrival.

Meigs announcements

Trevor Sharp
Graveside services for the stillborn infant son of Brian Shawn and Stacie Dowler Sharp of McGuire Air Force Base in New Jersey, were held Saturday, I p.m. at the Koenig-Massers Cemetery in Meigs County with the
·Rev. George Homer officiating.
·
Trevor Keith Sharp was born at the Burlington County Memorial Hospital in Mt. Holly, N. J. on Jan. 30, I996.
·· Besides his jlarents, he is survived by a brother. Ian Caleb Sharp at home;
his paternal grandparents, William B. and Sharon Kay Sharp of Reedsville;
his maternal grandparents, Walter and Mary Jan Dowler of Cpolville; his
paternal great-grandmother, Ruth Frances Koen-ig of Reedsville, and his
maternal great-grandparents, Joseph and Marjorie Suck of Belpre.
Arrangements wen: handled by Leavitt Funeral Home in Belpre.

Martha D. Haggy

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Wednesday by the
U.S. Depanment of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents
higher; demand moMrate on a mod-.

Volunteer meeting set
,
Letart Falls Elementary parent
volunteer group to meet at 2 p.m at
the school, Feb. I 5. All parent volunteers need to attend, it was
announced.
Solid waste meeting slated
The board of directors of the GaiJia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Joint
Solid Waste Management District
will hold its regular bimonthly meeting on Feb. 15, 6 p.m. at the district
office in Wellston .
Club to meet
The Middleport Literary Club will
met at 2 p.m. Feb. I 4 at the home of
Mrs. Eldred Parsons. Mrs. Dewey '
Honon will review "Let Me Call You
Sweethean" by Mary Higgins Clark.
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter will review
"The Glass Lake" by Maeve Binchy.
Llbnry hours extended
The Coolville Library has extended its open bours. The library will
-now be open Monday and Wednesday
from noon to 6 p.m.; Tuesday and
Thursday from 3 to 6 p.m. and Sat·
urday from 9 a.m. to noon .
There will be a preschool children's reading hour on the second
Wednesday of each month at 3: 135
p.m. The library is located at 81 112
Main Street in Coolville.
Craft show set
A craft show will be held at the
Thppers Plains Elementary School,
March 9, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tables are
for rent and anyone interested may
contact Marcia at 667,6513 . The
event is being sponsored by the Thppers Plains PTO ..
Levy group to meet
The Eastern Levy Committee will
hold their regular meeling Thursday,
7 p.m., at the high school. All parents
and residents of the district are invited to attend .

"I'm tellin' you, man.
I was there. I saw the whole thing.
I~ was enormous."

POSTMASTER: Seed address corrections 1q
The Daily Seouoel, Ill Coon St., - . . y .

Olllo 457119.

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SIJBSCIUPTION RATES

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11J
$100
Doe Monlh................................................$8.10

boo Yeor .......;.......................................St04.00

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SINGLB
PRICB
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S *m1ben ftOC detirin&amp;IO pay lbe Cll'ftel: may
nmit I• adv.:e dRc:t eo 1be Dlily Set*.t
boo tlne,aill or t2 molllb boll• Crodll wtn 1oe

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MAILSUIICallTIOIIS

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Sport~

·T he Daily Sentinel
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Wednesday, February 7,1996

· WITHIN REACH- The Melge Mareudere' Brad Whitlatch (1 0) gets

In front of an unidentified Walleton defender to take a point-blank·

,.nge

ahot during Tuelduy 'light's Ohio Division conlaltat Well·
eton High SchoOl, where the Golden Rockets won 72-65. (Sentinel
photo by Dave Herrle)

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Wellston jumped out to a IS-point
third-period lead, 1111d held off a
Meigs comeback attempt to defeat
the Marauders 12-65 in Tri-Valley
Conference basketball action Tuesday evening at Wellston.
,
The difference in the game was at
the foul line as the Golden Rockets
went to the line 33 times hitting 25
of them for 76%. Meias. on the other hand, went to the charity stripe
only 13 times, hitting six for 46%.
The Golden Rockets (14-3 overall &amp; 10-2 in the Ohio Division)
went into the contest as the state's
14th ranked team.in Division m.
Wellston jumped out to a 6-0 lead
on back-to-back threes by Steve
Fink and Brad Patton. Meigs (!(). 7
&amp; 8-5) battled back to tie the score
at six on a bucket by Travis Abbott
at the 5:19 mark of the period.
Wellston, sparked by Jamie Lambert's six straight points went on an
8-0 run to take a 14-61ead with 1:14
left in the period. Ryan Martin's layup with 33 seconds left cut it to 14- .
8 Wellston after the fmt period. Nick
Haning drained a three-pointer to
start the second period to move
Meigs to within 14-11.
Abbott was able to pull Meigs to
within 2().18 when he hit a three
from the comer with 4:23 left in the
period, but The Golden Rockets
· went on a 7-0 run to take a 27-19
lead or/ Lambert's free throw with
1:17left.

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Cass Cleland scored with IS sec·
onds left in the half to pull the
Marauders to within 27-21 as the twO
teams went into the locker room at
halftime.
Wellston stormed out to a 36-21
tead at the 5:45 mar1c of the period
when Ryan Bethel hit a three-pointer. But Haning started the Marauders on the comeback trail when he hit
a three-pointer to cut itto 36-24 with
I 5:33 left. Paul Pullins scored with;
!four seconds left in the period to pull
' Meigs to within 44-34 heading into
the final eight minutes.
Brad Whitlatch and Pullins both
hit threes wrapped around a Brad
. Patton bucket for Wellston as the
Marauders cut the lead to 46-40 with
7:20 left in the period.
Meigs was able to cut the Rocket lead to five on two different occasions in the fourth period, the last
was on a three-pointer with 43 seconds left by Martin. But that was as
close.as the Marauders were to get
the the Golden Rockets.
'Tm proud of the way we played
as a team," Marauder coach Jeff
Skinner said of the Marauders.
"Wellston made its free throws down
the stretch to keep us away. We are
·getting better as a team, we have our
sights on finishing strong and winning thi: Sectional Crown."
Lambert led four Wellston players in double figures with 18. Patrick
Riepenhoff added IS, Steve Fink 12
and Brodie Merrell added II. Wellston hit 21 of 43 from the floor
including five of 12 from three-point

-

range for49%. Wellston pulled down
32reboundsledbyLambert's 12and
Patton's eight. Wellston turned the
ball over I 7 times. Lambert had four
of the Rockets' eight steals, and
Riepenhoff had three of their nine
assists.
Pullins, who led all scorers with
23 points, was joined in double figures by Haning's II .
Meigs hit 26 of 59 from the floor,
including seven of 22 from threepoint range for 44%. Meigs pulled
down 24 rebounds led by Haning and
Cleland with six each. The Marauders turned the ball over 13 times •.
Martin had three of the Marauders
nine assists and Haning three of their
nine steals.
Reserve notes:Meigs pulled
away in the end to post a 61-47 victory over Wellston in the reserve
game. Daniel Hannan led Meigs (152 &amp; I 1-2) with 21 points, Matt
WiUiams added 18. Scot Sturgill led
Wellston with 18.
The futUre: •Meigs is now ·off
until next Tuesday's home game
against Point Pleasant. Wellston will
host Nelsonville-York Friday.
Ouarter lllllll
Meigs ..................... 8-13-13-31=65
Wellston ................ l4-13-17-27=71

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Ttimble notches 62-53 win over Meigs
By DAVE HARRIS
Trimble spotted Meigs a 7-21ead
in the first three minutes, and
stormed back to defeat the Marauders 62"53 in girls' TVC basketball
action Monday. evening at Glouster.
.The win was the third straight for
the Tomcats (6.:'12 overall &amp; 6-8 in.
the Hocking Division).
. After Meigs (4- 12 overall &amp; 3-9
in the Ohio Division) jumped out to
the early 7-2 lead the Tomcats went
in1o a full court press that gave the
Lady Marauders problems.
: Trimble forced nine of the
Marauders 20 turnovers in the first
p;riod, and Tony a Trace scored six
points and BP.th Koons added five as.
tltC Lady Cats took a 18-13 lead after
~ne period.
Meigs was able to cut the lead to
27-23 at the half. Kristen Dassylva
'ted Meigs in the half with seven.'
PQints. Cheryl Jewell added six.
Trace poured in II fof"lhe Tomcats

Your

in the first half.
Trimble with red hot shooting
outscored Meigs 22-13 in the third
period to increase the lead to 49,36
at the end of the period. Koons (six),
Sherry Davis (five) and Missy Lent.
(four) scored 15 of the 22 points
between them to give Trimble the .
13-point lead heading into the final
period. Ashley Roach led Meigs in ,
the period with six.
I
Meigs rallied in the final period ·
but Joy Pettit scored six of her I 0
points to help hold the Marauders off I
_ ~nd Trimble had posted the 62-53 '
win.
Koons led all scorers with 18
points. Trace added II and Pettit
added 10. The Cats hit 20 of 58 from
the floor including two of 10 from
three point range for 35%, and added
12 of 24 from the line for SO%.
Trimble pulled in 28 rebounds led
by Koons and Pettit with eight each.
Ashley Roach led Meigs with 13
points, while Jewell added 12. Meigs
hit 17 of 52 from the floor including
one of 10 from long range for 33%.

Meigs cashed in on 18 of 26 from the
line for 67%. The Marauders pulled ·
down 32 rebounds, with Dassylva
and Taryn Doidge each getting six. '
Reserve notes: In ,the reserve
game, Meigs held Trimble scoreles,s
in the middle two periods to post a
27-8 win. Melissa Wcrt'y led Meigs
with II points, while Bobbi Lent led
the Cats with three .
The ruture: Meigs will host state
ranked Belpre today and then host
River Valley Thursday.

n...rtrr ta1a11

Meigs .................... 13-1 ().!3-17=53
Trimble................... l8-9-22=13=62
Meip - Rebekah Smith 1-00=2, Chery Jewell6-0-0=12, Kristen
Dassylva 3-0-3=9, Anne Brown 2-().
. 1=5, Ashley Roach 3-1-4=13, Cynthia Cotterill 1-0-6=8, Taryn Doidge
0-0-4=4. Totals: 16·1-18o=S3
Trimble- Joy Pettit 4-0-2=10,
Tony a Trace 4-1-0= II, Sherry Davis
2-1-2=9, Misty Lent 3-0-2=8, Hollie
Canter 1-0-2=4, Beth Koons 8-02=18, Devon Cooper 0-0-2=2.
Totals: 22·:Z·1Z=62

.

: mark.
: Eastern was led by junior guard
• Eric Dillard, who had a varsity
: career high 17 points and seven
~ assists.
'
Not taking a shot in the ftrst half,
; all of Dillard's points came in the

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EASTERN CONFERENCE

Milllni .................... 21
NewJeney ............ l8
Boston .................... l7
Plliladelphia .............8

i r..
San Anronio ........... 30

14
Viall.-.................... 31 ll
HOI.IIIon ................. 30 18
Denver ...................19 27
Dallai ..................... IS J0
Minneso~. .............. l3 Jl
Vtmcouver ............. IO · 36

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OUR SPECIAL PAGE($)

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111 Cowrt Strtet.
, ,. . .,, OH 45769

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East

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Ut$1Heh.

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Al3ama 83, Southern Miu. 69

Clemaoo 77. Wofford 28
MQI'YIIftd 84, North Carolina 78
Miami 68, Wesl Vi1Jinill 6~
Miniuippi St 18, Arkansas 6..l
VirJinia Tech 69. Duquer.ne 6~

Midwest

Southwest
a.-.1 Roberts 78. Sacramento Sr. 66

Far West
CRI Poly-SLO 66. CS NonhridJe 59
UC lnine 85, S. Uroh 75

Ohio men's

college seores

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Waloh

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Akron Covecury 97, C11111on Herilqe
0... 60
Akron Ellee 68. Alton E. 62
Akron Fireuone 69, Akron Cent.•
Hower 61
Akron Garfteld ~2 . Akron N. ~9

Akron StV..St.M 92. Hudson We.tem
RCJrrVe47
Adttabull Artlor 72. Jeffcnon An:a 10
Auslincown-Fitch 66, Sletlbeaville 52
Barberton 78, Cle. East 61
Bay77 , Cle. kennedy J6 ,
Bcavtrcreek 6t Day. Belmont !19
Bodfool Mid&gt;. 71.0reaon Clay67
Belpn: 711, NeiOH!ville-'t'orlc l9
Benjamin Lopn S8, Triad 43
Black River 56. Hillsdak 52
BowliniJ Greea 88, Millbury Lake 7:l
Brook11cle 5:1, Avon SO
Buckeye Ccntnl S7, Riftl'dale ~
Cal1'jlbellli0, You. Boordman ~ (00
Cnal Winche1ter 71, Bloom-Curroll
lO
Cardington 90, Buckeye Val. 50
Chardon ND!CL 61, Garfield Hu.
Trinit160
Chr"pC..t 86, Buffalo, W.Va. ~7
Cin. l...&amp;SaUe 71, Hamillon Badin '14
Cin. McNicholu 78. Cin. Rocer Bll·
coot\6
Cin. Tlf180, Day. Cokmcl White 70
CWdcville 72, Teaya Val. S4
Ck. Hctahto 118. Gorf~eld H~. 46
CoL lk«hcroii8J, Col. Easr62
Col. Briu• 71. Col. Sooth S7
Col. Brookha~n 60. Col. Whetuone
S9
Col. Independence 69, Walaul Ridge

Walall6~,-.,60

Non-&lt;Gnferen&lt;e play
Cedarvitk 126. Wilberlbn;c 62

"PET'S NAME"
Owner's Name

Dayton 60. Bechune-Coolun3n ~9
Mount Vernon Naz.artDe 70. Kenyon

64

Ohio women's
college seores

for

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Ohio Atltletic: Conference
Capiral 74, Heidelbera 45
lohn c.roll81, Hinm66
Mount Ulk&gt;tl 62. ot.to Norfhem .S~
M•ski11JUW17~. Baktwin--Wall~ 73
Qri&lt;tllctn 74, Mllliellil62

Col. Mifflin 62, Col. Undtn-McKinlty

ll
Col. Northland S6, Col. Cen~nnial 47
Col. Wancnon ~I.Col . Hartley.50
Col. Wellir~~ron 6~. Uncoln Bapt. 45
Col. West :J3, Col. f..aslmOOI' S:\
Columbit ~3.lndependnce ~
Columbiana.Ciah&gt;iew 59. l..aloaia :\9
Colurnbua Orove 70, Pandora.-Oilboa
68; JOT
Conne111t 71 , Gene\'a 56
Croobville 47, rn. vaney Jl

4l

CrossroAds Olr. 90, l.urherarl E. 89
CuyllhoJa Hts. &lt;69, Aurora o4.S
Cuyahop Val. Chr. 60, Akron Hobo.n
Duville 68, Johnstown 59
Day . Chaminacle-Julicnne 68, Xenia

$5

Duy. Nonhridae 51, Middletown 0..

41

De&lt;Jmff R.ivmidr 61, Ridflemont 41
Dover !'iJ, Colhoclon 44
E. Kno.: 6-4. Curerbura 48
E. Liverpool88. Boeke)&lt; Lo&lt;al 40
E. Pa~li ne 4~. Sou1hern Local 40
f..llltcm Pike 51, Punamoorh E. 53
Eli,Ja 44. Lima Corh. 4l
Elyria Open Door 71. Elyrh1 First
B'l". ll
Elyria W. ~. Kc)'lloac 33
Fairbanks 60. Mcc::lwiCJbur&amp; 57
Fairbonn 91. Spriftl. Gr..IXlll 69
Fairfield UniOD ~3. Lopn Elm 47
Fatracu 58. Marlinaton ~jon
Fairview Pirie 71, 1\(jdpart 60

Federal Ho&lt;l.iftJ 60. Trimble 47
Firelands 68, Oberlin 56
Foo: Frye 102, Bealbvil~ 7S
Fori Lo&lt;amie 68, Bolkiirl 47
Franklin Furnace Green 75,
Ponsmoulh Clay 6j
Franklin Mocwoe 65. Bradford &lt;65
I'Tonlier 611, Warerford J9
Galtow•y We.tlllnd.75. Wesaville N.
$1

Gilmour 65, OraAae 51
GrahAm 80, MihOft-Union 66
Gmndview 7t Col. Ready 64
G""'ville 70. Filher Cal h. 68
Oreerwitle 86, Troy 74
~
GroYepor1 61. Newark 46
Hamihon Twp. 51. Amanda·
Ocartrtek 45
H:wrison 6~. Norwood ~
Heri•ac•Ch&lt;. 82. M......,haa.. 64
HilliOid 77, Gahaolla 64
&lt;Holland Spring. 87. Anthony Wayne

·Mall or bring. the entry form:
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110 Court St.
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45789

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. Weather has played havoc with

the basketball schedules this season
and make-ups are all that remain of

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Linsly. W.Va. 82. SteubenYille Carh.

64
Usbo1188. Columbiana 70

Losan 68. Cheshire Rim- Val. 55

Make-up dates dominate
local cagers' schedules

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The D~ily Sentinel_ ·.·
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Porn~roy, · Ohlo

Hou~ton 71 Jackson Center 62
Howland Clv. 70, W;uren Chr. 47
Hubbard 60. Newlon Fn.lls ~7
. Indian Creek 85, Beaver Local 61
·Jad.son JU, Vinton Co. 61
JncUon-Miltoo69, Minernl Rid&amp;e 62
.JeweU·Scio 61, Lakeland ~2
Kalida 75. Van Buren 68 (OTI
Kcnerins FuirmonJ 66 . Huber Hu.
Waync63
l..akeYiew 61. Brookfield 36
Lancasrer 70, MariOn Franklin ~
Lobanon69. spr;e~
Libert)' Union 79.
Union~
Uckina Co. Chr. 76. Heritage ~r. 6J
Lima Tempk: Chr. 9~. W;~ynesfield·

Louilvilk: Aquius 83. W. Branch 62

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The Dally Sentinel• P.ge 5

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JOOst area team schedules.
· : Southern's boys go to Eastern this
Fnday night for the ~e of Meigs
COunty, then go to Nelsonville-York
oi Saturday. Eastern is idle Saturday,
bl)t makes up AleXIIIlder on Tuesday,
F~bruary 13, and plays Federal
H,ocking Friday, Feb. 16. On Satutday tho 17th, Eastern goes to
Beallsville.
: Southern's make•up with Trimble
ism-lay, February 13.
The Southern girls have a make-

up schedule similar to Eastern's.
Southern hosts Eastern tonight,
Wednesday, February ?, then goes to
Belpre February 8, plays River Valley February 10, and guts io Miller
on February 12.
Eastern's girls visit Southern on .
Wednesday, then tentatively goes to
Mcip Friday afternoon for a 4 p.m.
game (pen9ing the signing of officials). Eutem hosts Vinton County
on Sarurday at I p.m., plays Trimble
iii the tournamont at 6;30 at Alexander on Wednesday,February 14; then
hosts Federal Hocltina on Satunday,
February 17 at noon.
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at the half and it appeared no one
could stop him. He had a great overall effort."
Eastern. got in foul trouble trying
to stop him in the first half, but made
adjustments in the second half and
held him to just four points.
Overall, Thompson was 14-17
from the field. For the sixth straight
game, Josh Casto scored he first two
points for Eastern. This lime, however, it was his only two.
Casto's first scored cut into a 9-0,
Thompson dominated, Miller lead.
Thompson continued his surge with
some complimentary goals by
Massie in pursuit of a 19-11 Miller
lead.
Durst sparked a second quarter
Eastern comeback, but the Eagles

defensive effort sprung several leaks
· in a 20-20 second period battle. EHS
ended up not gaining an inch and
· trailed 39-31 at the half. Eastern
. scored 34 points in the second half
·offensive expi~~Sion .
. Dillard, who 'has been an important play maker for the Eagles, made
· the big play of his own in the second
' half.
Dillard hit for 17 of Eastern's 34
·igniting what started out as a stag:nant EHS offensive unit. Flanked by
Bowen, Hill and Otto, with Otto
.dominating the boards, Eastern cut
Miller's lead to 48-44.
Miller stuck to its old stand-by 13-1 defense, while Eastern was making strides with its stop-gap measures
to contain Thompson. The Eastern

Zane Tr.cc 77. Hunlinscon :n

l..utherWl W. 80. Brooklyn 43
"adiron ll Ashr-~·la Eil&amp;-ood 46
m
· • Newcomm~own61
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Malvern
8S,
-· Manafield Sl. Peter'• I 00, Tree of Life
88
· 61 Po' (W V , Pie
Manena
. , tnt . a.,
asant 61
Muon
69.
Trenron
Edaewood
Milthewa 96. Lowellville 71 61
· s h · •1
Maumee 64• S•YIYllllll out VIew...
~byfield j6, Keruroa ~2
Ml!)'l~illc SJ. Philo4 t
MeDonald 46, Berlin Center Western
34
Reacrve
66
Medina Fint Bapt · MI. VemoQ 61
Meip Eastern 65. Hankx:k MiiN:r 61
Miami Val. 67, Tirwo Ciry Bethe16.l
-rr
Miamisburg 62• Valley View 46
•Middletown 79, Franklin 58
~idd.~~0 " 0 WFenwic1k 66;• Carlisle 60
.... in "'u · averY ·
Mopdore 71 Srru11boro 64
Mopdore field 57, Windham 55
· ••· h 'I E
37
MorelJCI., mlC · -' · Yapeen Moraan
89,112
Newc ·U!.xinc_on
75'1
H'l
N
A•--·
1
· - · · •9 F. ln. · \ 8
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Napoleon ·" •57oalona.
NN~'~ A64lbanHy :_~~kj'n&amp; His. 41
&amp;eaf3 8
Nt..:l '
orwayne · . Yer
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Old Fon CM. G1baonburg 93
Oranae On. 67. Meadville (Pa.) Cal·

Zanenille Rosec:rans 48, Col. Sl.
Owlcs 45

Obi0 H.S • g1r
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Cin. Woodward 41, Cin. Aiken 2.l
Cin. Wyomina 59, Cin. TayJor 20
Cle. Collinwood 81, Cle. Glenville .50
. Cie. EDsrTech 70, Cle. South ~8
Cle. Hayes 27. Cle. Science 18
Cle. Kina~~. Cit:. Hea.lrh Carun )() .
Col. Bee&lt;:heroft 68, Col. Elal37
Col, Brookhaven 78, Col. Whemone
29
Col. Independence 67, Col . Walnul

...~me 76, Caoroo Timken 67
Otlawa Hills 71, Maumee VII. jJ
OliloYille 51, Fort Jennin~ 1 JO (01')
Paine~Ville Har\'ey 68, Ashtabula St.
John 61
Painesville Ri\lel'lide 76, Ashtabula 6J
.5~
64
'• PPIIIIIIIIburhd~ R· :,~ ~Oorrnmnd y ·
errys

SCOres

•- 4...
, Rittmon 42
A.kroa Manc.o~lttr
Allen E. 60. Arlinaroa 43
Ashland S9, Plymoutb 39
Beachwood 32, Ha1haway Brown l!'i
Bellbrook~. Day. Stebbiru43
BeiRne 48. Willard ~~
Brookville65, Franklin Mooroe 41
Rurtoo Bubhire 56, BriltQ)43
Canton Cllh. 17, Alliance 26
, OtippewaSI.OrTville44
Cin. Colerain 35, Milford 26
Cin. Finneytown ~. Oel!r Park 40"
'Cin. HuJhca 70. Cin. Withrow 43
Cin. MPdeiru SO, Indian Hilll8
Cln. McAuley 67. Cin. Mercy 59
Cia . Mounr Norre Dame 69, Mount
Heallhy 25
· c·m. Non hwe~~-''l·. c·rn. Tuzprn
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Cin. Oak Hilb 86, Cin. Prince:ron 62
Cin. Seron .SI, Cin. Ursuline 48
Cin. Sycamore ~I. Middletown 40
Cin . Walnul Hills S9, Harriaon 51

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• Pickerinaton 68. WorthinJion 6.l
Pikeron 14, Glenwood 79
Piqua 76, W· Carroll len 60
Poland 64, Girard 39
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Portsmouth Noire Dame 64. lronlon
St. Joseph 57
Pur-fn-Bay 71, Ohio Deaf 59
Racine Soulhem !58. Alexander 54
RllYCDila Sourheur61 , Cresrwood .S'J
Reedaville Eastern 65, Hemlock Miller

Rida;e 43
Col. Unden-McKin~ 59. Col. Mifflin
46
Col. Nonhland 79, Col. Cemennial 19
Col. Soolh 44, Col. Brigs 43 (2 011
Col. Wellinaron 64, Matan~~ha~r . .57
69 Co Eut
31

61

Copley 68. Revere 40
Covinaton 68, Millon Union 28
C•ylhop Val. Chr. 44, Hudson Wesl·
ern RrJel'\le 33
Oan\'i.lle 71, Sparta Highland J6
Del•w.e 42. WOJthinaton Ov. 39
Dublin Coffm•n 57, Thomlls WorthiAJIDn H
Ealon60, Tri-Villqe52
Edaerton 67, F•yene 62
Fairfield fiO, Cirt Winton Woodt 26
Fairport Harbor 64. Middle(.eld C•di-

l~

72 (OT)

Mld·Ohlo Conference

Deadline Friday, February--9th It 3 p.m.
I

.

South

$600

~~~
I
·f'Amount Encloetd:

•

11 .5
Ill

O.y10n 60. Bedlune.Coobnu !'9
Indiana 81. Minnaoca66

I~

·········~···~··········~····

8.5

Conneclic:ut99, Providence 71
Foirf'aeld 1~. Sr. Pder's63
Manhattan 65, Notre Dame 44
MIIJSaclMirdta 7:\, Fordham 47
Penn 90, Lcbi&amp;h
Rhode 1•..... 14. S.lle 6.~ ',

ONLY

1
VALENTINE PETS
I Pet'e Name
I · ·
.1Owner's NIIM

· ·

•

7

Milwaukee It Toronlo, 7 p.m.
San AniOftio ar Boston. 7:30p.m.
WaahinJIOI at New 'Vort.. 1:30 p.m.
hadianallf ~l~lphio, 7:30p.m.
Atlanta Ill Mianv. 1:10 p.m
Orludo at .Delloit. 8 p.m.
Ponland • Minoaoca. 8 p.m.

WILL BE PUBLISHED TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 13"' IN

·

I

19 .l87
19 ..SSB
24 .489
24 .467
25 .4S7
lO .348

NCAA Division I
men's seores

"J'OR PETS ONLY"

r·················~··········~

v........ a....

.m

.217

Utah a1 [)aUas. 8:JO p.m.
L.A. Clippers 11 Dellva. 9 p.m.
New Jersey" Phoenb., 9 p.m.

r !!~'!l!...f:!'!'!!'!l!!!'.!!.tl!:.'!:, ·

I
I
I
I
I

12
ll.l
17
21

~~~-w "~ .739

L.A. Lobn ..... ....... 27
S~aamea~o ............ 24
Portland ................. 23
Phoenix ........... .... 21
Golden sr01e .......... 21
L.A. Clippm ......... l6

Hurryllle•llllne

•

2

Tharoday'saunes

AU Valentine Hearts will be publlslied in the Februtry 14th

·ftaaal
~to~ Socks

lil

.682
.674
.625
.&lt;61:'
.JJJ

Socl1lnlenlo at Olarlollc, 7:.30 p.m.
Wuhinaron M Atlanra. 7:30p.m.

your photo.

20
W_..l

I.S ..S
18
19.l
2J ..
28

Vancouver at UtDh, 9 p.m.

Anyone wlio would appreciate a dlouptfulword from youf

Willi
. . . $6.00
. to:
· The W, Sentllel

I~

Houstou LA. pilll&gt;en. 10::10 p.m.
New Jeney at L.A. laken, 10:30 p.m.
Chica,o 11 Golden State. 10: ~ p.m.

Please enclose selfaddressed stamped
envelope to return

umn

10

01

Seatrte ..........

'·

c.n!ml Sr.
78
o.n..... Sl, Blulltoo 61
Kenyo• ~. Bethu:y..W.Va. 46
90, Non. Dame (Oilio) 44

Akron Buchtel 92, Akroo Kenll'Klft 62

Div-r.s.

Mift...
lt I.

•

I

I
I
I
I
I

ll
16..S
24.5

Tolli&amp;ht'scomes

•Frleacll

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

.400
.370
.182

WESTERN CONFERENCE

PER PICTURE
PRE·PAID

'"' ... , . . . . . . . .

l7
29

b':ftu

•BIIbfsiUen

MUST BE PREPAID!

.U7

CLEVELAND 91, BooiOn 73
San Antonio 109, Oarlone 102
Orlllado II ~ Sacramenlo ICl2
Phoenix I06, OJ· o 96
Milwaukee 114,
Ill
L.A. Lakers99, Denwer78
Seanle 99, Houlton 94

I

issue at a cost of only $6.801

26

4
10.5
I)

J6

82. Aohlond

lil

CtnlniDtvllion
Chicqo .................. 41 ~ .191
lndiana ................... JI ll .674
CL£VELAND ....... l6 20 . ~l
Atl11nt1 ................... 25 20 ..SS6
De!roit.. .................. l2 22 .$00
Olarlotle ................ 21 24 .467
Milwaukee ............. 17 27 .386
Toronto .................. 13 :n . 2&amp;~

.· THE DAILY SENTINEL

Jr9(

I]

r.s.
.72J

New York .............. 29 16, .664
Wubinaton ............ 22 22 ,j(l)

Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

211
Pkg.

I.

Tuesday's scons

,I

Non-eoolereace play

AdlnlkiMYIAon

r...
lt
Orlanclo .................. 34

•

Southern ................. ! 0-1 I -I S-9=45
:Trimble ................. .6-15-15-15=51
I Southem - Becky Moore 3215=6, Bea Lisle 0-0- I 12= I, I onna
Manuei7-0-215=16,ReneeTudey 14-618=20. Totals 11-4·11122=45
Triinble- Tonya Trace 3-214=8,
Sherry Davis 2-112=5, Misty Lent 30-0/1=6, Toby Lawrence 1-0-0/1=2,
Hollie Canter 1-0-212=4, Beth Koons .
11-415=26. Totals ll-9115=51

Remember that special someofte this
Valentine's Day with a meiSSaae in
The Dally Sentinel
•Sweethearts
•MomsADadl
oGnadpareatl
•'IBcllen

RIO GRANDE 80. Molone 64
liffia 7S, Ohio Dominican 4S
Urbina 71. Calonille 67

NBA standings

Ouartcr mtall

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE

Mid-Ohio coor........

Findlay 67. Mount Vernon Nazarene
l7

PIC,.DRI YODI PEt

the 51-45 win.
Tanya Trace hit a field goal and
two free throws for 46-40 THS lead,
then Holly Canter and Koons had
two free throws apiece to put the
game away.
Southern had a 39-36 rebounding
edge (Manuel 13 SHS; Koons 13
Trimble). Southern hitl5-56 for26.8
percent, 4-12 threes and 11-22 atthe
· line. SHS had eight assists (Turley
3), II steals (Turley 7, Moore 3); 18
turnovers and IS fouls.
Trimble hit 21-55, 0-4 on threes
and was 9-15 at the line. THS had 15
assists, 14 steals, t5.tumovers and 16
fouls.
Trimble won the reserve. game
38-25 led by Bobbi Lent's 13 points
and Sara Guinther's 12. Jenny Roush
and Ashli Davis had five points
apiece, while Jenny Friend had severi rebounds for Southern.
. ~quthern will host Eastern
tomght.
:

second half. Sophomore Stevie Durst
had a great pick-me-up performance
with 12 points, nine of whii:h came
in the second.canto to spark an Eastern comeback.
Eric Hill added I0 and Micah
OOtto added II points and 13
rebounds.
Miller was led by Chris Thompson's game-high 32 points. Jeremy
Massie had 14. Eastern coach Tony
Deem praised his club for a great
comeback on the road and for the
team's scoring balance. Eastern also
got great fan support as Eastern fans
are starting to hop on the victory
band wagon. Deem said of Thompson's great effort.
''The Thompson boy (Chris) was
phenomenal the first half. He had 28

Basketball

•

,.li_____________.,;..__________.,,.

.

a:

.
'
'
··

SeCtiOnal 'Set
for Monday

,
I

)

1.:.

Seadnel Correapondeat
~ Outscoring Miller 34-22 in the
: se&lt;;ond half, the Eastern Eagles con: tinued their mid-season blitzkrieg by
: picking up their sixth straight win, a
: 65-61 Tri-Valley Conference victory
: over the Miller Falcons Tuesday
• night
. in boys' varsity basketball
• actton.
: Eastern is now 9-7 overall and
: tied for second with Alexander in the
: TVC's Hocking Division with a 7-S

Division ,II girls'

Gallia Academy received the top
seed in the girls' Division ll sectional
tournaments that get under way on
. Monday, Feb. 12 at 7 p.m.with the
Meigs Marauders meeting River
Valley at the University of Rio
Grande.
· The Blue Angels, wbo received
the first-round bye, will play the
Meigs-River Valley winner on
Wednesday, Feb. 14 at6:30 p.m.
The winner of the game between
.Gallia Academy and the River Val.ley/Meigs winner will advance to
.
idistrict play at Chillicothe.
I The bottom llracket will feature
i second seeded Minford and Jackson
on Feb. 14 at 8:15. The winner wilt
advance the district play at Chilli. cothe.
Tickets for Mondays Meigs-RivMEIGS - Brad Whitlatch 2-1- er Valley contest are available at the
0=7, Ryan Martin 2-1-1=8, Cass Cle- office at Meigs High School. The
'land 3-().0=6, Paul Pullins 8-2-1=23, ticket price is $3 on all advance tick·Nick Haning -2-2-1=11, Brent Han- ets sells sold at Meigs. A percentage
son 1-0-0=2, Travis Abott 1-1-3=8. will go to Meigs Athletic DepartTotals: 19-7-6::415
ment.

Trimble
girls rec~rd 51~45 victory over Southern
.
The Tomcats (5-12 overall &amp; 5-8
Southern took a I0-6 first-period
in the Ohio Division) were ·led by · lead, but saw that dwindle to a 21Beth Koons' 26 points. Southern (8- , 21 tie at the half. Both clubs played ..
7 &amp; 8-6) was led by Renee Turley's even in the third round, then Trimble came on st&lt;Qng at the finish for
20 points and Janna Manuel's 16.

--

.

t

: By SC01T WOLFE

• WELLSTON- Ryan Bethel 11-3=8, Brodie Merrell 1-1-6=11,
Steve Fink 3-!-3=12, Jamie Lambert
5-0-8= 18, Brad Patton 1-2-0:8,
PatrickRiepenhoff5-().5=1S. Thtals:
16-5-:Z!=?l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~Dillard, Durst &amp; Micah Otto help Eastern beat Miller 65-61

Page4 :

Wellston boys" hand .Meigs 72-65 loss

• Trimble hit six of eight foul shots
ii the waning minutes in pursuit of
S!-45 Tri-Valley Conferenc~ victOry over the Southern Tornado girls
at White Gymnasium, in Glouster.

~ Jt'tdnttaclay, February 7, 1998

69

56, Brook.lyn 42
Findlay 79, MIW'ionCHardin&amp; ~83 T

Fort Recovery 46. ratview 4. iO )
Fremont St Joseph 67, Fostoria 40
, Gohanna M, Hilfi"" ~2
Grand Val. so. Lcdgcmonr :t8
'" "''"''Iron Bad,·n 61, Cin. Purcell Mari46
f.leath 40, Utica 34
Hilltop 46, Bryan .14
Hopewell· Loudon 86. Vanlue 3~
Hudwn 41 , Green 24
Kenton Rid&amp;e 116. Urbana 34
Kidron 86, Canton Heril~ 12

'--- 17
LAke Ridge -40. Luh ... wl .•
Laurei51.Andrewa29
Leipsic 53. Potrick Henry 50
Le~~oinglon 56, Ow Fort .SI
LoudonYille S.S, Mnnlifield MadiJOn 40
Lucasville Val . .Sl. Ur\i01o49
·fi
66. s ll
Magm rau
lOW
Marion Carh. 52, Col. Academy J4
Marion EJgin 73, KentOn 40
M"ysvi'lle 6'.
London 42
~
McDermotl Nonllwcsr 49. Oak Hill 21
Miami E. 52, D1y. Chrisrian4S
Mount Gi~od 52. Crestline 38
New Bremen 60, Spencen-ille 23
N~wlll'k 48, GroYepor141
lllfld 16
Newbury .52, Kin
Nordonia 64, Buumonl 40
Ouawa-Gia.ndorf7J, P:!.ulding 36
Paim Val. 8S, Zane Trace 49
Peny 47, PymaiUning Val . 40
Pickering1on 82. Worlhington Kil·
bourne 37
Poim (W.Va.) Pkasant 57. Jackson 49
Preble Sbawnee Sl, Day. Ookwood 42
Reynoldsburg S4, Chillicothe 39
Ridgedale 51, Cnrey 46
s Ci:nrml M. Cclli11.1 Wes1em Reser....e

·

-"'

..:•

Eastern .................. 11 -20-13·21--vS , •
Miller..................... l9-20-9-13=61 ; :
EASTERN- Brian Bowen 2-0- ;
0=4, Eric Dillard 3-2-5n=l7, Jasti ·
'Casto 1-0=2, Daniel Otto 2-1-212--9: :
Eric Hill 4-212= 10, Micah Otto 5~;
112=11, Steve Durst 2-2-212=12,;
Totals: 19·5·1ZI15=6S
"; .
MILLER- Jeremy Massie 4-2~ •
0/1=14, Joey Duffy 0- 1-113=4, Jere~ :
miah Keller 2-012=4, Chris Thump-:
son 13-1 -3/3=32, Shawn Neal 2.;;
011=4, Nick Altier 0-112=1 , Kevitt ·
Plant0-212=2. Totals ll-4-7n4=6:t :

World Hannr74. Faith l'hr. 18
You. Rayen 64, You. Wilwn SO
You. Viclory On. 66, Yoo . Christian

J6

Hockey
NHLstandings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic DMiion

Iulll

lt L I ell. til liA

NY. Ranaen .... J I 1210
Floridii .............. J 21~ 6
Philadc:lphia. ....... 26 14 II
Wnshington ........ H 21 5
NewJersey .:...... lJ 22 6
Tampa8ay ........ 2221 7
NY. t~onden ... H 29 B

12
70
6J
.S!'
52

19J 148
184 146
179 134
14~ I:M
IJJ 126

.SI lSI I~
16 llO 196

Nertheut Di"ision
PitlsburAh .......... 32 11 :\ 67
Monlrc411. ........... 26 21 6 58
Bo"ston ............... 2221 7 ~I
H""fonL .......... lO ll 6 46
Burfa1o ............... 20 28 3 4J
Ottawa ................. 9 41 2 20

244 176
168 162

180 18J
144 163
1~ 169
117 205

WF.'lTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division

Iulll

W L I ell. til 1iA

Delroit ................ 37 9 4
Chicaso .............. 2915 II
Toronlo .............. 22 21 9
Sr.Louis .......... 2122 9
Winnipec ·.......... 21 26 4
Dallas ................. I~ 2611

78 188 108
69 189 14.S
SJ 1.56 1.57

Sl 140 148
46 178 189
41 14~ 179

&amp;no:a E. 66. SandLlSky Perkim .54
40
Shaker Hts. 42, Lyndhursl Brush
4
6
ShdDy Nl. Ghnlion ~ , r-Spnng. 01'1 western 4. '"'"'""non 40
Tiffin Columbi.ll.ll 61, Bucyrus.44
Upper Arlington S I, Grove ~it49
Upper Sandusky 69, Norwalk .

.~·-

RooiStown 67, Peninsula Woodrida:e '

Ouartcr mta11

Jg

~:ld:'.: n'. w!i..u.:Z9

59

Reserve notes: The Eastern: :
reserves won 43-28 led by Rickie; :
Hollon 's 12 and Stevie Durst's 11 ;:
Miller was led by Brian Dorsey's llo ;

nlll ~~l'lliew Park

Col•mbia 42, Medina Buc:keye 3)
conn·ne,.al61. Wa.,...Tnce 40

Reynoldabuf178, Chillicothe 60
Richmond Ediaon 68, Toronro 52
Richmond His. 65, Beac:hwood 63
Ridgewood 65. Strasbura54
River Vtew 63, John Glenn 48
Rock. Hill 68, McDennoll Northweu

Russia 89, Fairlawn 44
Shenandoah 69, Caldwell 55
Si~ttey 78, Vandalia Butler 7~ (01') ~~ ' ·Spring. Nor1hc:utem 85, Day. Chri ..
tian68
SpriiiJ. Sbawaee 64. Ced.ville ~7
ThortW Worthington 60. Dublin Coff·
'mun 55
Tol. Emanuel 8apt. 62 On:&amp;on Srritch
S$
Tol. St. Fmncis 88. Day. Dutlbar-86
Tol. Whitmer fiJ, SyiYania Nortbvlew
41
Trotwood-Madiaon 80. Northmont 5~
Tusccnwas Cnrh. 68, Berlin Hiland 58
Twinabura.5~ . Nordonia .SJ
United Local .S~. Sebrina Me: Kinley 46
Upper Arlinglon 67. Grove Ciry 66
Valley Forae 34, Bruruwick 60
Vicrory Clu. 47. \'oungslown Chr. 41
Vienn:J Mmlhewa 96, Lowellville 71
W. Geauga S6. Ea.i:llllke N. ~.5
W. Liber1y S;~lem 66.11dian Lake 6~
W. Muskinaum 64, Shcrid.o.n 62
Wamn Champion 73, l.aBrae .SI
Waterloo 7.5, GllrrettsYillc: 61
~ eirton (W.Vm.) .MadonnA 74, CAdiz
61
Wellinaton 74, Cleanriew 62
Wellston 72, Meip 65
Wesler'Jille S. 7.S, Dublin Sciolo .S~
Wickliffe 73. Yiillouahby S. 48
Worthingloo 0.... 88, Lucas 41
You. Ouu~y 68, You. Ea.\164
You. Ubeny 72, Badaer ~2
Yoo . Ru)'t'n 'JS, You. Wilson 31
You. Viclory Ov. 47, You . Christian
42

rally was led by an 8-9 shooting
effort from the line in the foulth
quarter.
Dillard hit a three-pointer to tie
the game 56-56. After a Miller miss,
Dillard hit another three for a 59-56
EHS lead. The Eagles never looked
back. EHS rallied to outscore Miller
20-13 and led 65-59 before Miller
canned a goal at the buzzer.
Eastern hit 5' 10 threes, 19-37
twos, was 12- 15 line and had 33
rebounds (M. Otto 13, Hill 7). EHS
had 14 steals (Hill6); 14 turnovers;
17 assists (Dillard 7, Bowen 5); and
15 fouls. Miller hit 4-10 threes, 2138 twos, 7- 14 at the line with 25
rebounds (Keller 8, Massey 7).
Miller had 5 steals, 16 turnovers, 17
assists (Massey 5) and 21 fouls.

V~ncenrWuren61,Athens49

w. O.esrer L..akrna 74, Hamilton 62

w, Jefferson 67, Col. School For Girl•
30

Wadsworth ~4. Tnllmadge 26
Om
40
Wannsville Hu. 43· •
nge
W;~yncsYilk 62, Middletown Madison
27
·
Westervilk N. SS, Gallowny Wesrland
lO(OT)
Westerville s. ~0. 0\lblin SciOio 46
Woodroore ~J. Mohawk 31
·
1.4.· U

·----------------W•oo..;'..;'•.•6..;2.;.,N•ew"'_l'h•lode....;.,...;''•"•·- - - '

....
•

"Power too 1s. And e1ectroni cs.
And doorknobs. And drill bits. Toilets.
Even an indoor lumber yard.
I ll'ean it was overwhelming."

Hearing Loss
Is NotA Sign
Of Old Age.
Chicago, Ill. - A free offer
of special interest to
those who hear but do
not understand words
has been announced by
Beltone. A non-operating
model of one of the
smallest canal hearing
aids in America today will
be given absolutely free
to anyone requesting it.
It's yours for the asking,
so send for it now. It is
not a real hearing aid,
but it will show you how
tiny hearing help can be.
These models are free,
so call or write for yours
now. Benefits of hearing
aids vary by type and
degree of hearing loss,
noise envir.o nment,
accuracy of tlearing
evaluation and proper fit.
Phone 1-800-372-5454
or send your name, date
of birth, address and
phone number today to
Department 28709,
Beltone Electronics,
4201 West · Victoria
Street, Chicago, Illinois

e064s-en2.

...
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�~~~~~~&amp;~·~TIM--_DI_I~Iy-S.
__
m_I~------------------------~------Po_me_.~~~y~·-M_Idl_d_le~po--~~O-h_~_-____________~----~W~ed~ne~•~~~Y~·~F~~~·~~~~-1-~-

•u &lt;Wednaaday,
February 7, 1198
·

S.
o
uthern
weathers
Alexander's
challenges
to
win
58-54
.

-Congress proposes bills to resolve NFL relocation debate ·

,' IY SCOTT WOLFE

Jarvis' game-high 28 points, while
shooting.
A winner finds a way to win.
Shooting 7-12 from the line.over- Thomas Haskell added 13 .. AlexanSouthern did just that Tuesday all probably did not raise many eye- der jumped out to a 6-0 lea,d, ~~ a
·. night. The Tornadoes posted their brows in the To111.ado cheering sec- Jay McKelvey trey cut the leal! in
,.'second straight Tri-Valley Confer- tion, but the 4-5 m.gbt in the waning half 6-3 . Southern came back by
~ victory, a 58-54 thriller over ·• seconds was worthy of mention. putting its run and gun game in
' .,divisional foe Alexander (8-6) on the Jamie Evans and Spike Rizer each motion, tying the score at the 3:17
:·Spartans' home court.
canned two clutch free throws and mark at 8-8. Southern then picked up
• : Early in the season, Southern (6· John Hannon added another safety to the already fast pace and went on a
· ..10 overall) found many ways to lose. pull out a Southern win.
7-0run to Jerull5-8 at theendoftbe
· .One of the most prominent was
Rizer was perfect at the line (3-3) frame. A staunch Southern defensive
puarid shooting from the foul line. in posting a 17-point, six-rebound ettort was a contributing factor,
. Another was incqnsistency, espe- ' perfonnance, while Ryan Norris daz- holding Alex scoreless in the last
..,cially when the game was on the line. zled the crowd with three . tluee- . minutes of the frame.
. , During the last two games, it pointersenroutetoa 15-pointgame. ·
Caldwell said, "The ~econd quar"
. ;seems that Southern has finally Evans tallied II and a good defenter has been· our demise all season
•.flipped the monkey off its back, hav- sive effort and eight rebounds, while
long. Tonight we played very, very
ing won pressure cooker games with Harmon collected five key points
well in the second quarter. We just
.1=0nsistency down the stretch and by and a team-high nine rebounds.
kicked it (ball) out and ran with it
Alexander was led by Chad effectively...
. _harvesting some clutch free throw

In the NBA,

At one point, Southern went up
27-17 nearing three minutes to go in
the half. Alexander theit went on a 6Lrun to cut the score to 28-23 at the
half.
Southern came out hot in the third
round, although Alex tried to maintain a slower tempo than that set in
the farst half. SHS went up 39-30
with 3: IS left in the frame.
Alexander then called a time out
and went on a 10-2 run, thus cutting
Southern's lead to 41-40 after three
rounds. From then on it was a dog
fight.
At the 5:30 mark Alex took a 4443 lead on a Jarvis goal, then a bat·
tie of nip-and-tuck developed. South·
em led 45-44 at the 4: I 5 mark, but
30 seconds later, Alex lied 46-45.
, Alex led 51-50 with 2:15 show-

WASHINGTON (AP) _ Hesi"ed the
J tant and tongue-n
,
big man in
·
brown Jersey and orange shoes
. ·. the Led
• bl . the ,
al
1oo.. uncomaorta
e tn
aorm
.: House Judiciary Commitree chambe
r.
But he was a man on a mission.
bo
• H 1 eel b"
· th e. P ac ~I tg orange neon
~ he Wldtnt osl
e bebledside 8 dogfaced
a little in.his
· at an on Ystum
·, . testimony about how important his ·
,
•· hh"ometown
1·• H aootball
k hi team has been in
• IS 1ac.
e
. trod ept scomposurecven
wh
' en m uced as a (ounder of "the
dog pond...
, d
. . Th at s " awg pound," not pond,
as Jd
mostll anyone dfrom
h Cleveland
. · cou te you, an t e star witness
at Tuesday's
"B · D congressional
.. al len hearing
•: was
tg awg,.. ~o
own as
John Thompson, bastcally a non·

ing on the Alley's ticker. Rizer game stan 4); 8 turnovers and II fouls.
Alexander won the reserve gaine
Southern a S3-S I lead, then Evans
ripped a pair of free throws for aSS- 39-30 led by E. Sanden with 15.
Jason Allen had eight for Southern.
51 tally.
Southern goes to Eastern Friday
With 9.S seconds left Jarvis
and
to Nelsonville-York Saturday
canned one of a two-shot shooting
Quert«
mtala
foul that followed a Haskell goal to
Southern
.....
.........~.l5-13-13-17=58
cut Southem:s lead to SS.54.
Alexander
.................
8-1 5-17-14=54
Rizercannedtwofora57-51 talSOUTHERN - Ryan Norris 3ly, then Hannon concluded .the victory march with 2.9 seconds to seal 3-0=15, Jamie Evans 3-1·212=11 ;
Jesse Maynard 0-2-f/2=7, Spike
the game.
Southern hit 15-44 for 34 percent, Rizer 7-0-3/3=17, Jay McKelvey 0was 7-18 on threes and 7-12 at the 1-012=3, John Harmon 2-0-113=5.
line with 38 rebounds (Hannon 9, Totals 15-7-7112=58
ALEXANDER - Lance R.ol·
Evans 8). Southern had 7 steals (Riz- ·
er 2, McKelvey 2): IS turnovers and stan 0-1-2/2=5, Kenny Waggoner 112 fouls. Alexander hit 16-40 twos, . 0-0=2, Chad Jarvis 9-2-4/6=28, B.J.
was 4-18 on threes and was 7-14 at Sams 0-1-0=3, Thomas Haskeii6-0the line with 30 rebounds (HaskeU 9, 1/3=13, Mau Ross 0-1-011=3. 'lOials
Jarvis 9). Ale~t had eight steals (Rol- 16-4-7114=54

.

.

Suns beat Bulls 106.-96; Cavs hand Celtics
By The Associated Press
• It was on Super Sunday that
'Charles Barkley decided to make
:things difficult the next time he saw
the Chicago Bulls.
The next time was 1\tesday night,
:and Barkley overwhelmed the team
that has dominated the NBA this sea·
son. Barkley scored 35 points and
'grabbed 16 rebounds as the Phoenix
·sunshandedtheBullsjusttheirfifth
·Joss of the season- but their second
' in three nights; 106-96.
' "It looks like he has been look;ing forward to this game since we
beat them in Chicago (93-82 on Jan.
'28)," Bulls guard Steve Kerr saii:l of ·
.Barkley. "He has been saying that
·we're not that good and that he
·couldn't wait until this game. He can
. say whatever he wants; he is Charles
·Barkley. and he backs it up."
He did just that in sending the
''Bullstojusttheirfifthlossagainst41
·victories and second straight; they .
fell at Denver on Sunday night.
• "The Bulls are the best team in
' the NBA, but they can be beat if you
:play well," Barkley said. :·They're
•

By KATHERINE RIZzO

not going to cakewalk tlarough the
NBA like everybody thinks. ... I
mean, they might win 70 games, but
it's going to be tough.''
Particularly if opponents give the
same kind of effort the Suns displayed.
Elliot Pe1JY, who came on for
injured poinf guard Kevin Johnson
(hamstring), broke a 96-96 tie with
two free throws and a jumper.
Barkley hoisted Perry over his shoulder and carried him to the bench as
Chicago called timeout.
Then Barkl,ey stole the in-bounds
pass for a breakaway dunk and the
celebrating began.
"I think they don't like really
physical games," Barkley silld. "I
think the only physical players
they've got are Michael (Jordan) and
Dennis (Rodman), and I felt like if I
was really physical with Dennis. he
would get frustrated. and I thought
he did."
Jordan should have been frustrat·
ed. too. He missed several open shots
in the final period and wasjust9-for·
22 from the field, 10-for-17 from the
.

free throw line for 28 points.
"I try not to remember those, but
it doesn't malter if you rememberit is what you did last. Tonight, I just
didn't feel comfortable at the line,"
said Jordan.
. It was the first time Chicago lost
two in a row since Feb. 24-26, 1995.
Elsewhere, it was the Los Ange·
les Lakers 99, Denver 78; Orlando
112, Sacramento 102; Seanle 99,
Houston 94; Cleveland 91, Boston
73; San Antonio 109, Charlotte 102;
and Milwaukee 114, Dallas 111. .
Lakers 99, Nuggets 78
Did Magic Johnson ever really
leave? It didn't look that way at Denver.
Johnson scored 16 points, dished
outl2 assis!S and narrowly missed a
triple-double with nine rebounds. He
played 33 minutes and looked fresh
in the fourth quarter, when he had
eight points, five assists and two
rebounds.
"We have a great guy playing
with us now," Los Angeles guard
Nick Van Exel said, "and everybody
is responding to it. Our confidence is

In Top 25 college hoops,

higher with Magic on the team. We
,have a lot of confidence down the
stretch."
'
Cedric Ceballos scored 27 points
for Los Angeles.
1
Denver's Dikembe Mutombo had
20 points, 17 rebounds and eight
blocks. Bryant Stith added 17 points
for the Nuggets.
,
Magic 112, Kiop 102
The Majlic moved closer tg the
i NBA record for home wins . ~! th7
Istartofaseason.Anfemee H~
scored 24 points and Shaquille
O'Neal had 22 as they improved to
25-0 at Orlando Arena and extended
their NBA-high heme winning streak
to 32 regular-season games, dating
back to last spring.
The record for home victories at
the start of a season is 27, set by
Washington in 1946-47. Boston
holds the overall league mark for
consecutive wins at home with a
streak of 38 that began in December
1985 and ended the following
November.
Mitch Richmond scored 23 of his
25 points in the secoml half for
Sacramento.

_

91~73

I

By JOHN NADEL

LOS ~~ELES (A~) - Ron
~ Weaver dtdn t want hts f~tball
career to end, so ~e c:xrended tt far
beyon&lt;l NCAA hmt!s by playmg
. under somebody else s name. .
.. Now, 5
w~ks after bemg
,.exposed, · he ~ hop1ng for another
,.,shot, but as htmself, not somebody
else.
. .
.
. . ..
, Weav~r satd 1 ~ an mtervtew thos
, .week he s been . worktng out con.stantly and staymg 10 Texas-shape
~.because ' tf anythmg ever happens
·.where I d~ get a tryout, I want to be
• prepared.
He's hopeful he'll get a sh~l wi_th
the Are~a Leagu~, wht~h begms Its
~e~? m_ the spn~g. ,
..
I m JUSt hop1.~g, he told The
Assoctated Press. Before, I thought
,

point total was a season low by 12
points, lost for the IOth time in 13
games.
Spurs 109, Hornets 10l
The visitors· put this one away
early, hitting their first seven shots
and I0 of 11 in a 20-0 run. Vinny Del
Negro scored 13 of his 17 points in
the first quarter.
David Robinson had 23 points
and 15 rebounds and Sean Elliott ·
added 23 points for San Antonio.
Larry Johnson scored 21 to lead
Charlotte, which fell to 5-16 against
.teams with winning records this sea·
son.
Bucks 114, Mavericks 111
_ Vin Baker had 36 points, including a key fadeaway basket, and a
lead-saving block in the closing se~:onds.
Glenn ·Robinson and Shennan
Douglas each added 17 points for
Milwaukee,whichhadlostfourofits
previous five home games.
The Mavericks overcame a 22point first-half deficit and tied it at
109 on George McCloud's jumper
with a minute left. McCloud tied his
career high with 36 points.

!12

to win the league. But an 0.3 league
start
sent the Terrapins' stock tum! CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) :The most experienced team in the bling.
Tuesday night. they climbed back
iAIIantic Coas! Conference is finally ,
into the ACC race by beating No. 12
• starting to play like it.
; With '.four returning starters, North Carolina 84-78.
"We went through such tough
~M!IiYI811d.was 'tl).e·preseasiln favoiite

times early, you don't feel se~ure."
said Maryland coach Gary Williams,
whose club has won six of seven to
move I 1/2 games behind ACC co·
leaders. North Carolina and Wake
Forest. "You just keep trying to get
better.

"This· is too early to say that
you've arrived or you are good
because a lot of people wrote us off
during that (losing) stretch. We've
just been trying to claw back and get
[!;ft~table."

., Ehewhere in the Top 25, top-

ranked Massachusett.&lt;'beat Fordham
73-47, No. 4 Connecticut downed
Providence 99.77. and No. II Vir·
ginia Tech defeated Duquesne 69-63.
Maryland (12· 7, 5-4 ACC) won
Tuesday •s game with defense, using
a triangle-and-two at times to hold

dawners
YOn
·

Monday, a trial is scheduled to
begin on Cleveland's claim that the
ream has·
a lease obligating it plak in
Cl
landS
eve
tadiumthrou~"t99.
M
li"
~while, the owner of the
Seahawks has said be wants 10 move
h' ,
IS aootball team from Seanle to Los
Angeles;
the owner of the Houston
0'1
1en wants to move his franchise to
and fans are still
Tennessee;
sed
- getting
u
to th~ St. Louis Rains and Arizona Cardinals.

'Then there's the Oaklllld-Los
Angeles-Oakland Raiders_ an-•L.
uua
er story altoge•L-.
All of that has
u'".
inspired lawmakers to nrnnt\U' new
laws to set the football world
strai""t
.
•"
Am_ong the bi~ jJending before
cotnmittees of the Howe, Se•••• or
,,_
both are prosiosals to:
-Leave the ream name and colon behind when a tTanchise leaves
a city.
-Give c·,·u·es that have l011t the'•
franchi
. ·ses '""
"~. 1 •v
-fusal n'shts •or
"
expansion teams.
F
- . orce the league to grant an
e~panston ream to such a city, provtded certain financial ••sts
we~
•v
met.
-Force reams that leave arad1·•
urns before leases are up to compensare communities for the coslto

r·-r--

q

1
taxpayen of the unused building or
east Y9U won't be groping in the
improvements.
dart. and we will take that to heart~'
NFL commissioner· Paul Tagli·
Hyde's commitree warmly weiabuc has bee n a .
corned
Thompson and e'·
.•.· 1 offi.......uent r····-:·
~on
ICClCO
Cap
'a) from
itol Hill, pressing for a new legal Cl s
Seahawks, Oilers and
status .that would put some muscle Buccaneen country. But the lawbehind the 1··-- wben it uu.mses makers weren't as nice to the NFL.
"""6rr
team migrali011.
·
Rep. Michael Flanagan, R-Dl.,
The chainnan of the House Judi- sniped that the league doesn't have
ciary Col!llllitiee, Rep. Henry Hyde, "omniporent power, just colossal
R 111 be ' the
power."
• ·• gan
day with 1 careful·
ly unbiased pronouncement: . "lam
Rep. Martin Hoke, R-Ohio, comnot certain that legislatiOn is neces- plained of "legalized extortion" by
· 'tied"tn Ibis case, bull do reams demanding posh new stadiums
sary or JUSII
· t nd li
• 11
the
m c to sten careau y to
tes- from cash-strapped cities, and
timony."
ridiculed Tagliabue's contention thAt
AI the end of the day, he indicat- football competes with bueball, ~
eel the ~
...L••• was not done.
ketball and other forms 9f entertain"The uncertainties in the law dis- ment for consumer dollars .and
serve the sport and the commuru·u·es investor support.
involved," Hyde told Tagliabue.
Hoke and Tagliabue also
ued
"No matrer which way it goes, at over the nmifications of Hoke~bill,

Arena Football was a joke. Now, I
hope it's a reality. I just want to
play."
.While ·Weaver admits he did
something wron~, he says·he h.as fe':"
regrets about usmg the false tdentt·
t~ to play three extra years- two at
P1erce College, a junior college in
Los Angeles, and one season, at the
Unive~ity of Texas.
.
. He JUS! WIShes be was _sull playmg for the ~nghoms, whtch would
almost certamly be the case had he
not been discovered.
As it is, by his count he played in
70 college games.
"I ,just ~njoyed playing the
game, he saJd. "It was for the lov-"
of football. I don't have to get paid
to play. I looked forward to practice
every day.

"If you asked me what I want to College in 1992, Weaver-McKelvey soon. 1 have to try and move on."
do tomorrow; it would just be to suit matriculared south to Pierce College~
When the story of Weaver's douup."
He played well enough to be ble-identity farst surfaced, there were
Weaver, 30, has a youthful look awarded a scholarship to Texas, reports be was writing a book, that
that helped him pass for a friend, where he was a reserve defensive the whole situation was gang-relatSC!Ven yean younger, whose identi- back and spl!cial teams player this ed, and that he had placed bets for
ty he took to restart a college foot- past season.
Olher players.
ball career that was complered at
When Weaver's true identity was
All untrue, he says now.
Sacramento State in 1989. ·
discovered a day before Texas faced
"Preposterous." he said. "I'm
"I can't even arow a beard," be Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl on . from a town of about 60,000. They
said. "I can't even grow hair on the Dec. 31, be said be initially denied don't even have gangs there.
side of my face. When you play foot- it to members of the Texas coaching
"I wasn't in any gangs, I'm not
ball, you never grow old. It's an . staff but realized shortly thereafter writing any books. There was no betexcuse to stay young. You can still that it was "time to bail out."
ting. Something went wrong. They
be a kid."
And so he abruptly left New made me look like the bad guy. 1
So in the fall of 1993 Ron Orleans.
understand why."
Weaver, previously a wide ~eiver,
"I felt upset it was all over," he
Texas officials, who believe the
became Joel Ron McKelvey, defen· said. "That empty feeling which I school will avoid problems with the
sive back. After realizing he could had when I left college before, it NCAA over the matter, met with
still play while serving as an unpaid came back again, thinking 1 could Weaver last week.
assistant coach working with defen- never play again. I knew it had to
Texas compliance director Leroy
sive backs at Monterey Peninsula come to an end. I didn't think so
Sutherland, involved in the meeting

:·rop·25 hoops... J?&lt;c: on.;.; .;·un: uec~2I;rro=mE-Pag~
:
-e6f:&gt;:::=:::::~:::::::::::::===============
..

hit 14 of 16 shots for 31 points in
North Carolina's overtime win at
:.College Park, Md.. earlier in the sea~ son. Jamison ended up only 4-for·ll
·from the field for 13 points this time.
Then there was Johnny Rhodes,
who tied his own school record with
nine steals ..His biggest play, when he
stripped the ball from Shammond
Williams with Maryland clingjng to
an 80-78 lead in the final seconds,
, ,wasn't even counted as a steal. The
. ball hit off Williams' foot and rolled
out of bounds.
· "Johnny Rhodes, he has the
quickest bands in the land. Sham,.mond might itot have known that,"
• ~d Duane Simpkins, who scored 18
__ points and led Maryland's second•
half run.

jMaryland
beats
North
Carolina;
UMass
&amp;
UConn
also
win
•

! By DAVID DROSCHAK

elecred representative of, the aeveland Browns fans."
.L: "I
k was kind of nervous," but "I
uun that anything's worth trying to
save the ream," he said.
Art Modell, owner of the team
Thom
,... .....
pson 00 "'"""""• wants to move
the · franchise to Baltimore. NFL
may vote on the move Fri-

,...._
..._lly s-~1.1u·ne1 • p9IIIJI 1,
I IIW . , .

. ·
which would punish the 1e1po ib
fails to '"ve a replacement tCIIIl II) a
o·
city that
has lost a &amp;anc:hise llld
proves it can su~ a new one.
The commission r stuck with the
arguments he's been making all
a!
that all
ongspans compete with
each other for fan loyalty and thole
lucrative loge rentals, that little
reams would suffer under Hoke's
bill, and that with the proper legal
backing the league could stop'
.. ~~
tcam moves .
·
He said court interpretation• of
·
1
antitrust aw, and the SSO million
price tag of losing a lawsuit by
Raiders owner AI Davis, have IIUide
•--·LaJJ
•uuw
owners reluctant to fight
reams that want to migrate.
"Ri ght now we are powerless in
this area because of the antitnJst
uncertainties," he testified.

Weaver looks for another shot at football after fakery exposed

setback

SuperSonics 99, Rockets 94
Another tough home temit is Seattie, which is 20-2 at Key Arena after ,
its seventh consecutive victory over
the Rockets. Shawn Kemp and Gary
Payton both scored 22 points. Dedef
.Schrempf scored 17 points and Sam
Perkins added 14.
The last Seatde loss to Houston
came on March 10, 1994. The Son·
icsnowhavebearentheRocketsfive
straight times in Seattle.
Clyde Drexler topped the Rockets with 24 points. Hakeem Olajuwon and Sam Cassell each scored 21
points for H9uston, · which got 13
rebounds from Drexler.
'
Cavaliers 91, £eltics 73
At Cleveland, Bobby Phills
scored 21 points and the C::avs'
league-leading defense let only two
Boston players reach double figures:
Todd Day with 14 and David Wesley with II.
Terrell Brandon and Dan Majerle each scored 16 for Cleveland:.
Micliael Cage had 13 rebounds and
Chris Mills grabbed 12.
The victory was Cleveland's
fourth straight. The Celtics, whose

. Pomertw
-, • Mlddlapo-rt, Ohio ·

North Carolina guards Jeff Mcinnis
and Danre Calabria to a combined rs
points.
When the ball did go inside, the
Terrapins put the clamps on fresllman sensation Antawn Jamison, who
(See TOP :ZS on Page 7)

·'I was in position where we were
North Carolina (16-6, 7-3) has
one-on-one," said Rhodes, who is 17 fallen behind by 17, 18, 19 and 17
steals shy of bRaking the all-time points in each of its past four ACC
ACC mark. ""Ihe cross-over move is games. The 1ir Heels were lucky
one of the more familiar moves in enough to pull two of those games
the league. When I saw (Williams) out in dramatic comebacks.
lined up, I just wanred to get a hand
"Once we're down in double digin there. before he got the ball all the its, just don't come back, and that
way across bis body...
solves it," N011h Carolina coach
On a tcam ofvetcrans, a freshman Dean Smith said when asked if he
was also a hero. Tentll Stokes made had an answer for his team's tenthree free throws in the·final 20.4 dency to fall behind, then try to ralseconds to belp seal the win. It was ly down the stretch. "We don't get
the farst time in 21 seasons that down on purpose, believe it or not.
Maryland has beaten North Carolina It might look like it."
in consecutive seasons.
· A 22-5 run late by the 1ir Heels
. "We can:tlet th~ame make Our tied the score at 78, but M17.land
season," said Simpkins. "It's always made six of eight free throws in the
gOod to beat a team as good as Car- final seconds to win. The Tcmpins
olina."
led by 17 with 6:04 left.

."Usually you don't lose your
potse at home, but I lhink that just
shows wbere the mental part has
gone," Smith said of his club.
Despire North Carolina's comeback, Gary Williams said he had a
good feeling about his team down
the stretch.
"The thing you look for in .your
team is just that feel in the huddle,
and I don't lhink I ever felt that we
thought we were aoing to lose the
·
errame•" he said . "That was unportant. If we didn't have a little bit
more confadence now than we had a
couple weeks ago, we would have
lost this game for sure."

'

No. 1 Maaaeh~~~etb 73
Fonlham47
At New York, UMass ·led by only
point at halftime before overwhelm·
ing Fordham in the second half. The
Minutemen (22-0, 10.0 Atlantie 10),
the nation's only undefeared ream,
were coming off an overtime win
over Xavier of Ohio and they strug·
gled in the first half against Ford·
ham. ,But Marcus Camby scored 26
points for UMass, including 19 in the
second half when a 20-2 run turned
a three-point game into a 56-35 lead
with 7:59 remaining. Fordham (2-17,
0.1 0) has lost 10 straight.

with Weaver, would only say, "This
remains a criminal investigation, so
w~ are not at liberty to discuss the
individual issues. But from our point
of view, I can say that most of the
university and NCAA issues surrounding his enrollment, recruitment and participation have now
been resolved to our satisfaction." ·
Weaver realizes he still could be
in trouble legally, possibly facing
mail· and wire-fraud charges.
"I believe in Texas' eyes, the case
is ~all with and put to pasture," he
saJd. "But I'm not out of the woods ·
yet. I don't have any idea what the ·
U.S. Attorney's offoce in Texas has
planned. "I know I did something wr6ng.
When I went iqto this, I knew the
ramifications and I was prepared to
suffer the consequences. thai were
dealt to me. If worse came to worse,
I guess it would probably be my
obligation to do what they asked me,
whatever the punishment was.
"I understand that I caused some
havoc and it was unethical, but it was
all for the love of the game. If I'm
going to be punished for something"
I love, so be it:''

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Wedn..day, February 7, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~------. .---Community
THURSDAY
will be served at 6:30p.m.
POMEROY •• Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror·
CHESTER •• Shade ·River Lodge
ity, 6 p.m. Thunday at Episcopal 453, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Parish House. Soup supper at 6 p.m. the hall. 'Refre•hments.
followed by talk on PoJI~eroy's revi·
ALFRED •• Orange ToW11$hip talization by John Mu~r.
Board of Trusrees meeting WednesROCK SPRINGS - Rock Springs
·day, 7:30 p.m. at lhe home of Clerk
Grange will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m.
Pauy Calaway.
at lhe home of Harold and Helen
CHESTER •• Chester . Garden Blackston.
Club, 7:30p.m. Wednesday, home of
Twila Buckley. Flower IIITIIIIging · TUPPERS PLAINS ·• VFW Post
demonstration.
90S3. Tuppers Plains, will meet
Thursday 7:30 p.m. ~Refreshments

·WEDNESDAY .
RACINE •• Southern Local Build,illg Comminee meetin1 Wedaesday,
. S p.m. at lhe high school. All district
·residents welcome.

Wednaaday, February 7, 1996

calendar

MIDDLEPORT
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of lhe American Revolution, Friday,
I p.m. at Heath United Methodist
Chun:h, MiddlepOrt Spealcer, Mrs.
Edgar Yierian.

SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM •• Burlingham
Modem Woodmen of Camp 7230, ·
potluck at the hall, 6:30p.m. Saturday. Meat, rolls and bev~rage furnished. Members to take . potluck

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Children could go broke inheriting a fortune jrom father

dish. For members, family and guests'
of members.

Ann
Landers

POMEROY -· Big ~end Olapter,
Good Sam Club, Saturday, 6 p.J;II. at
Shoneys in Point Pleasant, W. Va.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Your answer to
"Jusl Wondering in McLean, Va.,"
.moved me to write you for the first
time. You said, "If the winner of a
s~eepstakes should die, the remainil'!g payments must be made to the
estate."
·
Not in Texas, dear heart. According to iJn editorial in the Dallas Morning News, Edgar " Bubba" Groce.

who won $19.4 million; learned after would bet that over 90 percent of lhe
he had collected his first check, that people in Texas are not aware of it.
if he should die; his children could
I've read your column forever,
not afford to inherit his Willnings. Tire Ann, and since you have clout, I'll
reason• They would have to pay $4.7 bet you could shake up our legislators
million up front in 'state and federal to u:medy this unfair situation. -estate taxes before they could _get D.R., Dallas, Texas
their hands on the money. ·
Dear D.R.: Although the Texas
Nora Linares, state lottery execu- . state lottery office is not obligated to
•live ilirector, said Groce could have · inform lottery ticket purchasers of lhe
avoided lhe problem by seUing up a tax repercussions in advance, they do
family trust before claiming his prize. recommend winners seek expert
But are ihe .good folks of Texas financial advice before the prize is
infonned of this? Of course not. Our claimed.
legislators must have used actuarial
If any of you Texans think your
tables to estimate bow many winners lottery set-up is unfair, speak your
would die of illness, old age, suicide piece to the local lottery folks. If
and accidents ·when they set up the enough people yell, they 'lllisten.
lottery. I believe this is unfair, and I
Dear Ann Landers: 1 have been

. married 40 years to an alcoholic .
. What started out to be a cocktail
before dinner wound up, in my wife's
'case, as aU-day sipping. Twelve years
' ago, her doctor told her if she continued to drink, she would die. His
advice fell on deaf ears.
Eight years ago, I rushed my wife
to lhe hospital with acute alcohol poisoning. 1 nearly lost her. This experience kept her dry for a while. Then,
I caught her guzzling beer. When 1
managed to steer her away from beer,
she discovered that some food flavorings &lt;;Ontain up to 3S percent alcohoi.
Living with an alcoholic is a
nightmare. She denies she has a pro!}.
lem, and no amount of talking makes

a, dent. I su.spec! her addiction is dose to you. When you get mUeJ:able
genetic since her father had lhe same enough, miry be _you'll be willing to
problem.
go the extra distance.
I love my wife, and she says she
If your wife is irito vanilla, she
loves me, but the boule comes first. needs Alcoholics Anonymous, and
I've heard about Al-Anon, but the you need Al-Anon. Make the phone
nearest meetings are not very close to calls today. It could save her life and
me. I believe drinking is far Jlll)re improve the quality of yours.
deadly than smoking, yet alcoholic
Gem of the Day: Seeing an orlhobeverages are promoted and adver- dontist these days gives new meantised as part of " the good life." Those · ing to the phrase "putting your mon·
beer commercials on TV that show ey where your mouth is.•·
all those beer drinkers hav ing such a
jolly time are very convincing. Can
Send questions to Ann Landen,
you s~gge~t ~o~ething? •· Sick at Creators Syndi~te, 5777 W. Cen·
Heart m ~•s.sls.sr~pl .
tury Blvd, Suite 700, Los Angeles;
Dear · MISSISSippi: Apparently
you've heard of Al,-Ahon, bul you say Calif. 90045
the nearest meetmgs are not very

Meigs Local Schools·honor' rolls posted fbr second nine weeks g_rading period
Plans to participate in a mi~on- 1
ary project to Kenya were milde '
when lhe Mt. Moriah Church of God.
Ladies Ministries mel Tuesday
evening at lhe horne of Shirley Simp- .
son in Racine.
Mary Stobarl opened lhe meeti~g
with scripture followed by group
prayer. During lhe business meeting, :
it was decided to continue monthly I
support of the Meigs County Senior!
Citizens. The annual valentine banquet will not be held this year, it was.
decided due to work on lhe fellow- .
ship hall, but will be resumed in
1997. Floor plans for the new par·

TABLE &amp; 4otAIRS
Chen'y a Bllclc Finish
NOT$998.95

ONLY$39995

.What is penalty fo~ late
Medicare enrollment?

~tern~

By EO PETEf'SON

a premium penalty or waiting for a
Soc'-~ See•lty - . . . . Alhllll
general enrollment period. You can
(Note Exception to Metllcare enroll in Part B during an eight·
Premium Penalty lor Some Late month special enrollment period if
.Enrollees.)
you have group health plan coverage
. I've received a number of calls from that current employment at the
. from people who have read about the time you first became eligible for
ann.ual open enrollment period for· Medicare. This1 special enrollment
. Medicare Pan Band wonder if lhey period begins with the month
· will be subject to lhe premium penal- employment ends or the month· your
, ty· ·if lhey enroll after their first . group health plan coverage ends,
, chance to do so at age 6S. The answer whichever comes first.
is genenllly yes, but !here is an excepPart B coverage, also called "medical insurance," helps pay for doctors' ·
·lion. .
. · Tbe three-month general open care, outpatient hospital visits, and;
.enrollment period from January Ito other medical services. People are[
:March 31 is for people 65 or over .offered the option of signing lip fori
who don't have Pan B Medicare cov- Pan B at lhe same time they are auto- 1
. erage, which supplements Medicare matically enrolled in Medicare's Part
:Pan A Hospital Insurance with doc- A {hospital insurance) program. The
·lOr bills coverage. This period is to · basic monthly premium is $42.50
' give you a second chance if you did- monthly.
n'i enroll when you were first eligi·
People who want to sign up for
ble or you dropped your 'coverage. Pan B Medicare cove111ge should call :
Most delayed enrollees pay a 10 per· the Athens Social Security office :
cent surcharge for each yeat• they (592-4448) or call Social Security's :
could have enrolled but did not.
. _toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213,
However, there is a special enroll· between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. any busiment period if you or your spouse is ness day. The lines are busiest early
working. You may be able to delay in the week and early in the month,
enrollment in Pan 13 without paying so it's best to call at other times.

a Prlcet l*d'l1lrOUGII Ftll..10, 1tM.

IWBlN:SMYI THU~AY I FRI~AY ISAT~~DAY I
-111G.Tht-Oo.

....... ,..Good In~.,.....,..
W.f'IMfW ... rtgMtollllft .............................

Marketing workshop
set for career center
William J. Taylor, an Agricultural
Economist with lhe Cooperative Ser· .
vices Division of the USDA Rural
Development Administration, and an :
Adjunct Professor at the Ohio State :
University will be lhe featured speak- :
er at tbe upcoming "Marketing - The
Key to Income Opportunities" Sem·
inar.
Taylor a freque~t speaker on
agribusiness management issues. He
also operates a small woodworking
business from his home. Bill's Toys
sells folk toys and fine wood keepsakes and provides him with an
opportunity to ''practice what he
preaches."
Taylor will share his secrets for
"Excellence in Promotion" during lhe
keynote address at the "Marketing •
The Key to Income Opportunity"
Seminar. The seminM will be held on
Saturday, Feb. 24, o.: the Washington·,
C6unty Career Center in Marietta. It
will begin with registration at 8 a.m. :
and conclude at 4:30p.m. ·
·
· Following the keynote address,
participants will spend the remainder
of lhe day in workshops focusing on :
marketing lhe products, skills and .
services of rural small business ventures. Taylor w_ill also be presenting
a workshop on cooperative market·
ihg. During this workshop, he will
1'

'.

share various options entailing flexible responses of organizing cooperatives to meet specific needs.
Other workshops to be offered
include guerrilla marketing, canoeing, bramble production, dried Hower
production, organic food production,
,bike rentals, producing and market-,
ing specialty foods, West Virginiai
Tamarak &amp; crafts marketing, financ- '
ing your business, advertising your
products, developing a landscaping
business, visual merchandising,
woodcraft for profit, risk management, pricing your. product, marketing to tourists, marketing dried flowers, ostrich farming, and portable
sawmills.
Registrations for the seminar are
due on br before Feb. 17, to: Buck-!
eye Hills RC&amp;D, Route 2, Box ID,
Mariena, OH 45750. More informa-'
lion about the seminar can be ~
obtained from Bob First, Buckeye 1
Hills~C&amp;D{614-373-7936), or John!
Carr, Little Kanawha RC&amp;D (304679-3639) or any of lhe following
seminar sponsors: the Marietta Col- :
lege Small Business Development . ..
Center, and your local office of The:
Ohio State University Extension ori
West Virginia University Extension
Service.
·

Dole

Bananas_._.Lbs.
C'IJ

sa• FIIR DIET alln\ SAIJif;

Diet COlee or
· COla ClassiC
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'

Kwlk fC!1sp
Sliced BaCon... Hb. Pl(g.
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IOHt1lE 1100 (ALl VA.flmO}

Gunnoe's

sausa~e~

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· ~Society scrapbqok.

ART CLASSES
AQUATIC PROGRAM
Art class using acrylics are being .
The Ohio University College of.
()sleopllhic Medii; inc is offering an; offered by lhe Riverbend Arts Counanhritis aquatic; prosram at Royal: cil. .
~~etort- Pomeroy.
: . Carol Tannebill will be the instruc· .
The propm is open to anyone in; 111J and classes will be held on Sat- ·
.die commuajty with 111hriti~ and: urdaya from I Ill 3 p.m. lqinning ·
iiiCIIICie• aeatle exer~ise~ in the l Feb. ·11. The ~ for lhe course is .
twimlnina pool. No IWIIDDIIDg expo- : S:ZS; plus a supply clwJe. To regisrloiJQe il JleCIIwy.
. ter n:aidenll ntay ca11'99l-S336.
· Sellionl Ire held 011 MODilay., ,
· 'Wec~Dadayt llld Pridaya from 10 to; :
JJl!lil PGr a JIIOIIihly fee of S21 pw- . TVBIIlCVLOSIS CLINIC
ric ;ran ruy lllleJid ciMMI ~ _ : A he akin testina. clinic will~ .
1111 r. c'llt!n any time !bey ~· · • l conducted. by Connre Karachn•~·
' Por eddl'k-1 ~ FWII· : R.N., MCIJII Couaty tuben:ul0111 ,
.... lli01 C11J lhe OU CoUep
nune,"dleColumbiaTowNbipFire ·
0 1 •,
lllcU. Ardritis Pro- . 'Dq:wlur:, MODilay, from 6 to 7
. .-a&amp;614-S93-2511.
.
.
p.m.

au

•

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,

•

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·.

Honor rolls for schools in the Shea, Ian Stewan, Tanisha Thomas,
Meigs Local School District for the Eric VanMeter, Tyler Wayland, Melia
second nine-weeks grading period ·Whan, Justin Bell, Matt Boyd, Chan·
have been released.
ning Burge, Brandon Chandler,
Making a grade of B or above in Samantha Cole,, Jamie Ellis, Aaron
all their subjects to be listed on the Fife, Anna Hartenbach, Brittney
honor roll were the following stu- Jacks, Kathy Johnson, Kylen King,
dents:
Alisha Maddo~. Amber McKown,
Joshua Slater, Bobby Stone.
Bradbury Elementary
Third Grade : Brandon Bell, Erin
Klnderganen: Jamie Ash, Amy Cullums, Nick Dailey, Lisa Gheen,
.Barr, Nathan Cook, Ben Coppick, Matt Holley, Ashley Johnson , Chuck
Michael Evans, Laura Fields, .Edgel Landers, Michelle Neece, Luke
Gobel, Heather Graham, Hared Grig- Roush, Ashlee Smith, Kasi Smith,
gs, Kay lee Kennedy, Kirk Legar, Josh Cassi Windsor, Natasha Wise, Megan
.Lewis, Katie Patterson, Joseph Tibbetts, Brandon Carpenter, Eric
Rosier, Michelle Scarbrough, Valerie Cullums, Chuckie Davis, Megan
Schoeppner, Joseph Schiemann, Mayes, Carrie Michael, Jordan RawChelsea Seifert. .
son, Katie Reed, Anna Sayre, Daniel
Fifth Grade : Zach Gilkey, Casey Thornton, Brooke Venoy, Donnie
Dunfee, Emily Story, Beth Wilfong, \\?Jan, Chet Wigal.
,
all A's; ' Sara Casto, Brandy Shea,
Fourth Grade : Page Bradbury,
Amber Lee, Abram Sayre, Carla Kenny Carsey, Candace Casey, Tyler
Smith, Carrie Darst, Lucy Howerton, French, Ashley Halley, Jonathan
Alison Smith, Stephanie Schwab.
Larldns. Angela Smith, Ryan Stobart,
Sixth Grade: Carrie Smith, Tara David Boyd, Katie Childs, Jeremy
Wyatt, Heather Fry, all A's; Heather Dingey, Jennifer Dunn, Ryan Frazier,
Fetty, Josh Glaze, Mo~ica Moon, Heidi Gilmore, Kim Johnson, Beth
~ebecca Smith.
Landers, Kanndies Lee, A$hley'
Ms. Brown's class: Marcus Ward, Payne, Erica Poole, Stefan Stamper.
Ross Stewart, Zach Butcher.
· t."r. Foster: Jennifer Fqreman .; Pomeroy Elementary
Kenda Wheeler.
·
Kindergarten: Samantha AckerMr. ,Gheen: Kathy Jones, Charlie man. Michael Ball; Makayla Curtis,
Aeiker, Ryan Krautter, Jodi Reeves. Travis Eblin, Kelsey Fife, Robert
Foreman, Rebecca Hanstine, Chelsea
Harrisonville Elementary
Hicks, Stephanie . Hysell, Bradley
First Grade: Daniel Bookman. Jones, Natasha Knapp, Jessica Lilley,
Alicia Butcher, April Butcher, Brit· Lindsay McKinney, Jesse Mowery,
tany Chapell, Charlene Chilcote, Gregory Musser, Cassandra PatterCory Dill, AJ. Haning, Douglas son. Grant Phillips, Morgan Powell,
Herdman , Heather Kerns, Sarah Amorette Salser, Jessica Sheets, MolLantz, Cayla Mell, Jemiifer Partlow, ly Smith, Caitlyn Thomas, Trenton
Michael Payne, Jonathan P~as t , Wilson.
Chellsie Riggs. Daniel Steinmetz, . First Grall!~: Dali:ota Arms, ~h
Celeste Taylor, Curtis Welch, Jos hu~ Arms, ·Miclillel Blaettnar; Ashley
Williams, Constance Wyant.
Browning, Meghan Chilland, Randy
Second Grade: ~iranda Beha, Collins, Cecilia Core, Evan Dunn,
Travis Burbridge, Rachael Gardner, Heather Elam, KayIa Grover, CourtBrittany King, Laura Marcum, Nic- . n_ey Haggy, Mian Herman, Daylong
••ule Mull, William Taylor, Kayleigh . Jenkim, Scot!y Musser, Dru Reed,
Ward.
Casey Richardson , Christopher RunThird Grade: Jodi Donohue, Peg- yon, Britnee Sauters, Dakota Smith,
gy Duff.
Jerod Wyatt, Christeena Young,
Fourth Gracie: Maegan Dodson. Tiffany Zqmes , Renee Colburn,
James Hemsley, Sarah Lee, Bobbi Michael Cotterill, Mark Cozart, AshSue Napper, Holley Williams.
ley Cremeans, Ashley DeMoss, AshFifth Grade: Benjman Bookman, ley Ebers bach, Heather Fink, Jessica
Wesley Call, Derrick Fackler. Fisher-, Justin Harper, Larissa Hood,
Rachael Morris, Jessica Preast. '
Sarah Jeffers, Alex Johnson, RebecSixth Grade: Joeline Allen, Ashley ca Klein, Jennifer Kuhn , Ashley RusBurbridge, Ben Haley, Amber Han- sell, Matthew Salyers, Brandon Shull,
ing, Jennifer Reeves , Stacia Sims.
Wesley Wright.
MH: Gene Buckley, JoAuana Pet·
Middleport Elementary
ty. Jessica Gray, Katie Kibble, Chuck
First Grade&gt; Angela Casci, AJ. Nyc, Ruth Snyder, Crystal South.
Chandler. Cody Davidson, Timmy Christy Capehart, David Day, Robbie
Dexter, Billy Fink, Steven Hud~ o n , Johnson, Kyle Kinnan, Jesse Klein,
Beth Hysell, Erinne Kennedy, CayIa Kenny Lunsford, Jill Ree~es. KayLee. )oel Lynch, Chalsie Mnnlcy. . lcne Slater, Anessa Wolfe.
Christy Miller, Danielle Ph ill ips,
Second Grade : Chelsea Dent,
David Poole, Whitney Smith, Dustin 'Nakita Fitzpatrick, Amanda Jeffers,
Vanlnwagen, Michelle Weaver. Cas- Nathan Jeffers, Jacob Kennedy,
si Whan , Dylan Dailey, Sarah Engle, Joshua Kennec;ly, Alison Woods,
Joey Kimes, Matthew Lande rs, Tom· Daniel Young, Miranda Young, Wes
my Lavender, Kayla Priddy. Katie Ault, Bryce Davis. Weston Fife.
Rodehaver, Amanda Schart iger, Jor- Cody Hysell , lilian Jenkins, Lacey
daim Thomas, Kasey Winter. Virginia Kennedy, Jordan Shank, Abby StewWilliamson .
art. Whitney Thoene. Jake Venoy.
Second Grade: Sarah Da vis . Josh Venoy, Jeremy Vincent.
Michael Durst, Ashley Engle. Amber
Third Grade : Jerry Bentley,
Fisher, Erica Haning, Laura Hollen, Jonathan Boothe, Brittany Cremeans,
Matt Imboden, Willy Landers, Tara Jason DeMoss. Trevor DePoy,
Lee, Kayla McC arthy, Meghan Rosanna Dillard, Brandon Grover,
'leslie, ioBeth Rodehaver, Cory Deidra.Strong, Erin Bauserman, Donald Boling, Sarah Bush, Alisha Cremeans, James Cremeans, Justin
DeMoss, A.J. Dickens, Justine
Dowler. Eddie Fife, Rochelle Gloeck, ner, Jesse Haggy, Alnanda Hoyt,

.Check W-2s
for correct
information

· Be sure your Social Security numli'er and name are correctly shown on
the W·2 form (statement of earnings)
your employer was required to give
you before the end of January.
: Compare the number and name
shown on the W-2 with the informalion on your Social Security card.
Jteport any discrep~n~ies to your
employer and the Ch1lhcothe Soc1al
'Security office right away. The name
and number on your w.2 must match
·your Social Security record so that
:r.our earnings will be credit~d to the
wrrect Social Security record. You
may also call Social Security:s toll
free number -1-800-772-1213·-lfyou
4etect a problem o~ your W2. . .
· Retirement, surv1vors and dtsabJIity benefits are based on an individual's earnings record. Uncredited
earnings could adversely affect your
future eligibility for benefits, as well
yqur benefit amount.

as

Maggie Molden, Amber Pierce,
Regan Shuler, Zachary Shuler, Clare
.Sisson, Kelli Tanerson, Tiffany nmmons,' Jenni Young, Iilli Young.
LD: Joey Richard.
Fourth Grade:· Jessica Blaeunar,
Thurien Caner, Jaynee Davis, Nicole..
Harper, Michele Imboden, Brandi
·ThOmas, Paul Wiii,Jordan Williams,
Tawny Bauserman, Kara Buffington,
Michael Davis, Andrea Fetty, Jessica
Forman, Aira Little, Angela Wilson .
Fifth - Grade : Maria Drenner,
Michelle . Drenner, Kyle Hannan,
Heather Hysell, Katie Jeffers, Ben
See, Kayte Davis, Amanda Fetty,
Brandon Ramsburg, Jeremy Roush,
Jennifer Zielinski.
Sixth Grooe: Carrie Abbott, Danny Buffington, Delana Eichinger,
Caleb Ellis, Jason Miller, Erin Moore,
Nichole Runyon, Jessica Roush,
Mary Schultz.
Rutland Elementary
' First Grade: Steven Anderson,
Andrea Banrum, Alisha Compson,
Rene Edmonds, Natashia Qinther,
Ladonna Hawk, Gary Hess, 'Keilab
Jacks, Corey Jarvis, Bethany King,
Dustin Knapp, Adam Lam~rt.
Amanda Miller, Timmy Spires,
Joshua Taylor, Brittany Varian, Morgan Wolfe.
Second Grade: Josh Bolin,
Holly Davis, . Valerie Diddle, Sarah
Eskew, Carita Gardner, Tyson
George, Bryon Haggy, Adam
Humphreys, 8riuany Hysell, Sarah
Dawn Jenlcins, Taryn Lentes, Margaret Rupe, Bradley Smith
Third Grade: Kelby Brown,
Justin Coleman, Shane Collins, Kris
Ginther, Adam Snowden, Renee Bai·
ley, Ashley. Baylor, Madi5on .- .
Miranda Sipkins, Sarah Wilkei,"Bleili
Williams.
Fourth Grade: Tyler Sames,
· Nicole McDaniel, Christina Miller,
Amanda Priddy, Pamela Rupe,
Miranda Stewan
'
Fifth Grade:
Ashley
Banrum, Brook Bolin, Melissa Cre~
means, Hollie Ferrell, Crystal Jacks,
Jessica Justice, Mallory King, Allison
Williamson
Sixth Grade: Brad Baylor,
,Amber Ellis, Gabriel Jenkins, Darrick
Knapp, Johnny Lentes, Melissa Rich· mond, Chris Rupe, Travis Siders,
Amber Snowden ·
Intermediate LD: Brent Butcher,
James Haning, John Kessell, Travis
Siders, Carrie Walker
Primary DH: Angela Graham,
Kimberly Miller
Intermediate DH: Darin Hom

Fifth Grade: Rachel Argabright,
Lindsay Bolin, Ashley Colwell,
Austin Cross, Kristallohnson, Kelly
Johnston, Sara Schuler.
Sixth Grade: Erin Bush, Jessica
Cundiff, Rebecca Jacks, Chelsea
Montgomery, Josh Napper, !Crystal
Pennington, Kristy Puckett, Misty
Puckett, J.P. Varian.
Salisbury Elementary
First Grade: Shauna Clark, Kayla
Diddle, Faith Dye, Charlie Eblin,
Andy Games, Bobbi Lee, Chelsea
Manley, Andy McAngus, Nathan
McClure, Brandon Pearson, Bradley
Ramsburg, Hollie Richard, Jennifer
Smith, Bradley Soulsby, Kristin Trad·
er,
Brook Watson, Caitlin
Williamson.
Second Grade: Derek Brickles,
Ashton Bush, Travis Butcher,
Matthew
Meadows,
Brooke
O'Bryant, Sabrina Oldaker, Becky
Rader, Bailey Seifert, Chris VanRecth, LulaWebb, Nicholas White.
Third Grade: Grant Arnold, April
Coppick, Megan Garnes, Niki Lewis,
Ross Well.
Fourth Grade: Nathan Brickles,
Nikki Butcher, Ben Collins, Tia Pratt,
Stacy Pullins.
Fifth Grade: Marc Barr, Ashley
Fields, Jon Halar, Meghan Haynes.
Sixth Grade: Mindy O'Dell, John
Witherell.
Meigs Junior High School:
Seventh Grade: Whitney Ashley,
Chasidi Biggs, Joseph Blazer, Derrick Bolin, Zachary Bolin, Michael
Brumfield, Reatha Bush, Jessica
Chapman, Sarah Clifford, Misty
D¥St, Andrew Davis, Michael John
Day, Nicholas Dettwiller, Jennifei"

Fife, Michael Hammon, Ashley Hannah, Alison Hays, Melissa Houser,
Sarah Houser, Abby Hubbard, Brian
Klein, Carrie Lightfoot, Samantha
Marshall, Bethany McMillin, Cecil
Midkiff, Shannon Price, Amber
Rbush, Brandley Searles, Jeffrey
Shank, Brooke Smith, Albert Steams,
Ian Story, Patricia Walker, Stephanie
Wigal, Connie Willet
Eighth Grade: Grant Abbolt,
Meghan Avis, Orion Barrett, Steve
Beha, Lisa Bias, Amber Blackston,
Melanie Blevins, Bethany B'oyles,
William Bratton; Stacey Brewer,
Ashley Burton, Melissa Cremeans,
Robert Day, Patrick Erwin, Jessica
Fitzpatrick, Michelle Fort, Marjorie
Halar, Claude Hale II, Mindy Halley,
Brooke Hart, Michelle Hart, Amy
Hysell, E~ck Johnson , Tawny Jones,
Jessica Laudermilt, Tangy Laudermilt, Crystal Leach , Joseph McCall,
·Amanda Miller, Jennifer Neaie, Seth
Rawson , Ashle' Rupe, Jennifer
Shain, Jennifer Shrimplin, Kyle
Smiddle, Jeremiah Smith, Shannon
Smith, Joshua Sorden, Julie Spaun,
I,,James
Stanley, Wesley Thoene, Adrianne Tilley, Ryan Well, Marissa
·Whaley, Michael Williamson, Shawri
Workman
·
'
Meigs Higb School
Ninth Grade : Lacy Banks, Tricia
Davis, Ryan Dill, Melissa Holman,
Virginia Howerton, Jessica Johnson,
Rebecca Johnson, Matthew Justice,
Kelli Lightfoot, Estill Marshall Tamra O'Dell, Franco Romuno, Rebekah
Smith, Georgiana Spears, Jeremy
Thomas, Bridget Vaughan.
Tenth Grade: Michelle Bissell,
Carly Chasteen, Jeriea Clark, Ginger
Darst, Brad Davenport, Robin Donohue, Elizabeth Farley, Chad Folmer,

"People smiling and
asking, if you needed help.
And it~ coming to Wood County.
You'll see.
It's bigger than all of us!!"

Salem Center Ele-ntary
First Grade: Courtney Barrett,
Cain McKinney, Casey Molihan,
Brandy Nottingham, Nikki Parsons,
Raymond Reynolds, Brittney Rife,
·Kay Ia Rowley,Jamie Wallace, Terry
Light, Anthony Davis.
Second Grade: Nathan Argabright,
Julia Johnson, Alexandra Mitchell,
Kelly Napper, Joey Sears, Zackary
Weber.
Third Grade : Jeffrey Baughman,
Eric Bumem, Zackary Bush, Jason
Crisp, Julia Cross, Robert Cross,
Aaron lhle, Amanda Johnson,
Samantha
Pierce,
Kimberly
Reynolds, Carrie Rife, CuUis Varian,
Randy Hart, Kayla Icenhower.
Founh Grade: Joanna Bowersock,
Jessica Curfman, Candice Mollhan,
Brittany Powers, Joshua Ray, Jessica
Smith.

~----------.;.-

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... --------·-·~;;;;;;;•••• - ..........-.;;;;;.-i..

{
..

,Danielle Grueser, Cortncy Haley,
•Myca Haynes, Jeremy Johnson,
Michael Krautter, Michael Leifheit, '
Kellie Maurer, Shellie Maurer, Candace Miller, Sheila Neace, Amy See,
Wendy Shrimplin, Amy Smith, Mike
Smith, Zinnia Spears, Adam Thomas,
Aaron Vaughan, Jessica Wheeler,
Matthew Williams, Melissa Williams,
Sandra Young.
Eleventh Grade: Heather Barney,
Adam Barren, Riki Barringer, Amy
Boggs, Jason Brockert, Amy Clonch,
Anita Collins, Taryn Doidge, Justin
Fields, Jennifer Garey, Brandon
George, Tara Grueser. Cindy
Hawkins, Aaron Hockman, Liberty
King, Erin Krawsczyn , Christopher
Lambert, Timmy Lewis, Je ssica
McElroy, Teresa McGrath, Bnlndi ·
Meadows, Jeanie Newell, Billy
Nicholson, Stacie Reed, Eric Siders,
Jodie Sisson, Jennifer Small,_;ood.
April Snider, 13everly Stewart, Chandler Watson.
Twelvth Grade: Amber Bennett,
John Card, Megan Clark, Phyllis
Clark, Jeanette Cline, Bryan Colwell,
Susan Cotterill, Bonita Cremeans,
David Cunningham, Kristen Dassylva, Jeremy Fetty, Terri Fife, Thomas
Gannaway, Alison Gerlach, Travis
Gilmore, Israel Grimm, Angela Hale,
Amy Harrison , Michael Hawley;
Suzanna Henderson, Michael Jarvis,
Amanda Jeffers, Angelica Kelly,
Courtney Knapp, Heather Knight,
Dorothy Leifheit, Rodrigo Lopez,
Tony a Phalin, Michelle Pooler, Faiih
Rose, Sara Roush, Lori Russell, Tra.
cy Shaffer, Teresa Simpson, Natasha
Slater, Kimberly Smith, Amy Smith,
Marion Snider, Kelly Spencer, Cynthia Stewart, Jessica Stobart, Tabitha
Swearingen , Tracie We stjohn ,
Stephanie Wood, Donald Yost.

., ,

I;

�· Peat 10 • The Dally Sentinel

~meroy
•

RC COLA
PRODUOS
2 LITER

STORE HOURS

....., 11n s•• ~~~y
IAM-IOPM
291 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

'

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c

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Accepts Credit Cards

TIE liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD TIIU FEB. I 0, 1996.

7UPOR
DR. PEPPER
PRODUCTs ·

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STOlE FOR DETAILS

2LRER

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RCCOLA

BONELESS

$189

Chicken Breasts •••••••• BUY ONE
ARMOUR STAR
GET ONE .
'
FREE
Hot Dogs
Ll.

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TYSON/HOLLY !=ARMS

PRODUCTS
12 PK 12 OZ. CAN

ARMOUR STAR.

SUPERIOR MOUNTAIN

Bologna ••••••••••••:~. .:!!~

59 (

llonll11a

.

$1

Shced Pepperoni.:::•••• 99

$ 39 BUSH KIDNEY
BEANS
Chuck Roast •••••••••~••••

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

1

·ISOL

Bacon •••••••••••••••:.~·.~~••
··FlAVORITE FISH
$429
·
Sf•ICkS•••••••••••••••••••••••

..

5 Ll box.

·- -

SUPERIOR POLISH

·sausage ••••••••••

lSOL

480Z.

Celery...........:::•••••••••• 59 c

2
$1
Margarine •••••••~..... ·
$1''
~ J'o Milk~•••••••::•••••••••
·c
.
.
'69(
·Juice •••••••••••••••••••••••••
TV ner ••••••••••••••••• 79
'Parkay

MORTON

.

46oL

·

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·$ 89 ·

.

ARMOUR
CHILl ·
W/BEANS.
1iOZ.

8.5-10oz.

(

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.$
$129 FESTIVAL
. _PINTO . '
19
B
.Ice Cream ••••••~r.:......... 1 GROUND
. eaas ••••••••••••••••••••••••
...
4

' "

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lb.·

COKE
24 P'k.

•

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PINTO:
BEANS

COHONELLE

VELVEnA ·&amp;
BATH TI.SSUE SHELLS DINNER
120L

· 4 ROLL PACIC
Umlt1

·s

Plllll

.

59

s

·· IN

90
I•

8

~Local
Job's
.

1110Lb.

Idaho
Potatoes

iDaughters
:serve
1n
•
;state seats
•

•

$259

Gallon - United Valley Bell

ll

1% Milk

•••• •

~#ionalThreeOrdermembers
of the lntemaof Job's Daughters,
otJethel62, MiddleP\)rt. are serving in
~ftices in the srate organization.
: Ms. Kathy King Johnson, Mid·
!2:Jtcport. a past guardian of the local
~thel, is serving as grand director of
~!~sic for the Grand Guardian Coun:i:il of Ohio; her daughter, Jessica
'ohnson, as Grand Betl)el third mesosenger; and Kimberly Mattox. daugh·
~er of David and Ann Mattox, West
:l:olumbia. W. Va. as Grand Bethel
:Jepresentative to Kansas.
'- They will be honored at a recepjlon to be held Saturday at the MidSIIepon Masonic Temple, 3 p.m. The
,-e&lt;:eption will also honor members
'irom other Bethels in District S
~hich include McConnelsville, New
:t.fatamoras. Marietta and Belpre.
f.iembers and friends of Job's Daugb·
Jers are invited to attend.
: . Kathy Johnson has been associat·
with Bethel 62 for many years
aving served as honored queen~
·
969, and Grand Bethel bono
~ueen, 1969,70. She IQrcr was Bethel
~uardian ~d as well as guardian secletary, a positiOII • still retains. In
IJ98S, she was presented the degree
~If royal purple. ~shest award of
fob's Daughten in.recognition of her
:rontinuous dedicated service to the
~rder.

As grand director of music for the
tate, she has charge of all musical
lections perfonned by the alternates
:Juring the upcqming . "Miss Ohio
'ob's Daughten Plgeant" in·Canton.
jhe is also the chainnan of the pe~·
ioniling arts cornpelilion at the Grand
~ssion of the Orand Guardian Counil ofOhio which will be held at Kent
tate U"iversity in June 1996. She
Jill also be perfonning at the piano
During the meetings of the Grand
~uardian Council at Grand Session.
• Jessica Johnson has been a mem·
f Bethel62 since 1992 and,has
the otr~ of third messenger,
·
, junior prilli:CSS (throe tcnna,
r princess, a position she 'cur'
tndy holds, and honored queen.......
.....he served a5 the Grand B ethel
on to Now Mellito.
joined Bethel 62 in 1991
bas held the offi&lt;:Ca of sec:

t

e

'BEEF

Asst. Varieties

KIMBERLY . MATTOX

•

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CHIQUITA
BANANAS

99

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VALLEY BELL
0

STOKELY

.

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LUCKY LEAF .
APPLE SAUCE.·

9(

LB.

.

WESSON
OIL

'

lb.

$399

KITCHEN PRIDE

'

79

c

s 99

Chicken Thighs

. (

Foodland Sugar

.

Skin_.

~lyF81'1M

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•

5 LB. BAG

neles.s .Skinless ·
Breast ·Fillets

12 OJ, pkg

!

The Deily Sentinel • P~ge 11

• Middleport, Ohio

~P:C~· chaplai~. m~hal,

E

,Junior pnncess, scruor pnncess

terms) and hOnored queen, flOW
ag her fourth tcnn. She. also.

~as a Grand Bethel choir mem· .

lillr in 19?4-9S.•
II'

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F--------·

Regular Or Old Fashioned

12P10kee.J
11-115.25 ...... -

-·cut ...

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FLORIDA GOLD
Orange Juice

.. eo- 8lylo Corn.-

2 •a
Day
USDA Inspected • Grain Fed
..10..14 Lb. Avg. Whole
aonal... SIRLOIN TIP

81411b.

Whole Stick

Mountain Brand

BOLOGNA

aaclb.
Feb. 8 &amp; 9 ONLY!

�•

••
•

!Wednlldly, F'ebruary 7, 1196

Wednesday, February 7,1$MI6

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

' • 12 • The DIIHy Sentinel
'.

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The O.lly Sentinel• Page 13
'

Parents
relax. now that baby is closet to home
.
.

It; JORDIE HENRY

Kapiolani - he was wheeled to her
·
in an incubator called an isolette.
'• UMBERI'VJLLE, Ohio (AP) Since she could not sit up, all she
Cltuck and Mary Jo Kaseman are could see was one blue eye and a tiny
stirling to relax now that their pre- hand.
mtturc infant is IS minutes away in
"I got to hold his hand- that was
Children's Medical Center of North- the ftrst time I thought I would not
wist Ohio, rather than IS ·hours see him again alive," she said.
away in Hawaii.
The Kasemans couldn't join ·Eric
:Having a baby in intensive care is in Honolulu until Dec. I , after Mrs.
an&lt;ernotional roller-coaster ride at any Kaseman was discharged from the
titRe, but wben the baby is S,OOO hospi~. Then they got some blld
mDes away, it is like the difference news. Eric had a serious lung cornbeJween riding the Raptor at Cedar plication - pulmonary interstitial
Point and talcing a spin on a lciddie emphysema.
coester.
"They told us he either.SillS over
:"We know he is not on death row it or he doesn't," Mrs. Kaseman said.
anymore," said , Mrs. Kaseman.
He passed that hurdle about five
"Now it is a matter of time."
days later. Since Eric was doing bet~ Kasemans weren't expecting ter, KasernanHewhomeonDec.6to
an)' problems -when they set off on relieve his parents; who were taking
~ir dream Hawaii vacation in early care of their other children: Charlie,
Nevernber. They had lieen planning .9; Jennifer. 4; and Andrew, 2.
thC trip without th~ir three children
Mrs. Kaseman stayed in Honolufo( to,yo years, and Mrs. Kaseman was lu at a Ronald McDoiWd HOUse. Eric
jull 5 112 months pregnant.
gradually improved, • with several
~ut two weeks into the vacation, small setbaCks along the way.
sW ·contracted an infection of the
But her other children also needIUIJIIiotic fluid, which started prema- ed . their mother. So on Christmas
1\1~ labor. Since the baby was in the Day, Mrs. KaseJ1!1an left &amp;ic in
doilble.breech position, feet going in Hawaii to Hy' ho!IIF•
opjlosite directions, MR. Kaseman
It was an ernotiolial tug-of-war:
had to have a Caesarean section.
'One baby in a hospital S,OOO miles
Due March 4, Eric Joseph was away from home and three young
botn Nov. 28 on the island of Hilo at children who had gone without their
27 :weeks. He weighed 2 pounds, 4 mother for nearly six weeks.
··

'f.tle (Toledo) Bl8de

It took .five hours for doctors to
ou~and~IU~~-stabilize the infant for his Hight to

Kapiolani Medical Center for Women
and Children in Honolulu. Alth9ugh
Kaseman was able to watch over the .
chjld while doctors worked on him,
his .wife wasonherback, recovering
' from the operation.
The first time she was able to see
Eric was just before he was Hown to

27 with the goal of getting Eric horne
as .soon as possible.
But the pllh to that goal was
paved with pitfalls. First, Eric's lungs
h;ld to be matun: enough for him to
survive off a ventilator,
Each time doctors tried to take
him off the device, he went into Respiratory Distress Syndrome.
"He was having arough time over
there," Kaseman said.
Finally on New Year's Eve, Eric
was taken off the ventilator and put
on an oxygen tteatrnenl that provided enough pressure to keep his lungs
inflated. Doctors said they would
consider Hying the baby back to the
mainland.
.
The Kasemans tried to get a Hight
for Jan. 4, but their insurance company n:fuscd to pay for it
"They said it was cheapec in the
long run to leave him there. It was not
cheaper for us," said Kaseman.
He called his company, Cincinnati-based Cincom Systems, about
the problem. They told him the company would cover the expense.
Next carne the incredible logistics
of trying to get the baby on a direct
Hight with all the medical equipment,
a neonatologist, a neonatal nurse, and
a respiratory therapist.
Delta was the only airline that
could provide a direct flight to
Adanta, and the rest of die trip to

Toledo Express Airport had to be provided by an air ambulance service
frvm Pittsburgh.
Everything was set to go Jan. 6
when the blizzard hit.
"It was real close, but everyone
said, 'Let's go with it,"' Kaseman
said.
Once they Were in the air, the
monitors measuring Eric's oxygen
level~ and other vital functions malfunctioned. The baby remained stable.
A medical team from Children's
Medical Center in Toledo met Eric at
the airport and took him to the
neonatal intensive-care nursery.
The labor that brought Eric into
the worlcj started because of an infec·
tion.ButmedicalexpensatKapiolani
told the Kasemans they see a lot of
premature births·in Hawaii that could
be linked to long-dist.anco air travel.
A study printed by the Jownal of.
Perinatology in 1994 recommends
that women at high risk for premature
birth be restricted from traveling
around the time that a live birth is
' possible.
.
So the Kasemans want to get the
word oul Having a premature baby
so fllr away causes tremendous stress:
both economic and emotional. ·
"ltisaroller-coaster,"Mrs.Kaseman said. "It is never smooth sailing."

J&amp;LINSULAliON
Ul'IIIIYAN PLACE
IIIDOL£PORT 1112-2772
Ollloe Houre: Mon •.frl.
8:00 &amp;111.4:30 p.m.
VInyl• Alum. Siding,

P~CE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EUCHUETOURNAMENT
Tonight &amp; Every Wednesday
Starts 8 P.M.

._,,~,n..m,mo.o.

In Gall!' poll'S

e

·

40

t - · ~~

=t:iilif.l!i

-r·_
p. ~ p
~ .~ tt

v ...•

~..~~~'t

other
Models
At Similar
Savings
Big
-~· 1 Selection

by Bob Hoeflich
Self-cleaning
Electric Range

_.....,_

If you are a victim of .sugar diaAnd down Middleport way, Mrs.
• 8111 Clll Illig CMfl Will'!
betes, perhaps, you'd be interested in Glada Davis will be observing her
joining the Meigs County .Diabetes 98th birthday on Feb. 12--the same
• C..-nic II'IIOOitt*'P .....
Support Group.
date as Abraham Lincoln's. Mrs.
•Or-.I!J'"Iol"n:r
CIMrPtwoi!J'",.._.
Membership is free of cbarge and . Davis loves to recei ~e cards and they
the group does hold regular educa- will reach her at 209 South Fourth ·
tional sessions which could be help- Ave., Middleport, Ohio 45760.
·F..o~ful. Not only are you invited to take
part but members of your family or
Two more of our favorite entersupportive friends are also invited to tainers' left us in the past week. They .
participate.
.
are Audrey Meadows who played .
The next meeting of the group will opposite Jackie Gleason in the well.
• With Approlllld
be beld at 7 p.m. next 1\n:sday, Feb. known "Honeymooner" skits and
13, in the cafeteria of Veterans dancer, Gene Kelly.
Memorial HospitaL "Understanding - · So many of the television stations ' ·..
Diabetes" will be the topic of the · used clips featuring Kelly's "Singin'
meeting wit~ Mrs. Jackie Starcher, in the Rain" dance number from "An
D.T.R., Pomeroy, conducting theses- American in Paris" ·-certainly one of
sion.-She will have a video and some . his best in a long. successful career.
recipes which you might find helpfuL It was good to see parts of the film
which undoubtedly is one of 'those
that
wil] live forever.
Did you know there was a song
written about the·1937 Hood?
Beverly · Rupe of Middleport
I didn't either. However, Mrs.
Sarali Caldwell was going through uncovered some old textboqks and
some old items at her Alfred home others at a yard. sale recently and is
when she carne across the music and in the process of sorting them out.
some five verses of lyrics. The words . Some of the books date back to
were by Warren Caplinger and the 1823, 1827 and 1828 and there are a
music by Andy Patterson. Keeping it number from the early 1900s. The
timely the so 0g was, of course, writ- books cover a wide variety of subject
ten in '37 and was copyrighted the rnauer but Beverly finds that she really has no use for them. So·-if you're
same year.
into old books contact Beverly at
Paul Nease ofRt. 7 near Pomeroy 992-3310. Beverly isn't trying to sell
wants to commend the State High- them. She's perfectly willing to give
way Department in Meigs County for them away but she couldn't make her- .
a good job in clearing the highways ,.self dispose of them until she checked
during the recent heavy snows. Paul to see if you're interested.
did a bit of traveling into other coun-------- .
1
ties during the period and comments
What wtth the recent bad weath- :
that he could always tell when he was: er--the blizzard and the Hood--vehili:.aving Meigs County, not by the cles really look bad don't they?,
'.
signs along the highways ·but by 'the . Seems like it might be a good time to
fact that the highways jn Meigs were be in the car wash business. You
so clear of snow--unlike those he was . won't get rich but you should make a '
movjng onto in other counties.
lot of people happy. Do keep smiling.·

·----_....,
3

"

paaaanger handlcapp•d
acc•aetble
bua.
Spaoltlcatlona
and
lnatructlona to bidden ....,
be o!J!alned ., the ofllce of
th• Treaau,.,, 320 E. llaln

Lucky Bill $200.00 llld
R..... $50.00 HCh
wk. Pay ICCOidlng to
the number of playera.
Kelp lid for FREE card

Streat, Pomeroy, Ohio 487111
1mn mo.
or by calling (114) 1112-4180.
By- Of lllelga LoCIII
Clrd of Thank&amp;
. _ , ol EcJuc.tlon -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;:;;;::;-.
Cindy J. RhotMmu., . "

,.,.._

(2) 7, ••• ~1. 28; (TC

•

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~ _...

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Dishwasher

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_IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

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AND THAT'I NO IIlLI

Ouiot-

• N 2-)'NI' WW'Fir'Cy

.

'

• '.: People who reach age 58, S9 or 60
::,~ October I, 1996 will receive a
lsl!ltement showing what they can
:expect from their lifelong investment
:iB the Soc~ Security program. The
,s~ternent shows the amount of ben:e~ts workers can receive when they
·toe(ire, if they become disabled before
thi:y reach retirement age, the amount
'o(benefits their families can receive
if~y die, and the earnings on which
~ benefits are based.
• : More than eight million people
h~e received a Personal Eanlings
and Benefit Estimate Statement since

\•,

J25g-

0

ServHI81M45 8434

'.

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H&amp;H

SAWMILL

SPRII$SOFT
, .......... Syat...

Doll's Water R......
NllwH-,WV
304.2-2896

\

February 199S when Social Security
began the first mailings to persons
age 60 or older. By the end of the century, Social Security is required by
law to begin sending an annual statement to everyone age 25 or older.
The statement lists earnings on a
year-by-year basis. People who
receive the statement should check
their earnings to see if they are cor-·
rectly reported. It's important that
your record is complete and accurate
because your future Social Security
benefits will be based on this record.

attitude coupled with his knowledge
and eKpertise in the field of diabetes,
truly gives a greater prospect for a
healthier, happier lifestyle for persons
with diabetes," said Simms.
"The uniqueness of the the program is attributed to the speaker himself, who is also known as "Mr. Diabetes". He has been a diabetic for
over 20 years and utili us the insulin
pump in the management of his dia-

Porttlble
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickle&amp;

Sunday Calls)

TFN

'

614-992-3200

'

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I'

~ PETER H. GOTT, M.D. .
: DEAR DR. GOTT: My wife has
g&lt;jne from 128 to 98 pound' in two
yecars, primarily from diarrhea. She's
!Mlen to her doc!Or, a.s well as to a gastroenterologist She's had invasive
. arid non-invasive testing and has
tah:n antibiotics and medicines-- all
t~o avail. She's SS, works full time,
bit a lot of enei'S)', but tires quickly.
S..'s afraid to eat, since.:everything
~s straight through. Can you
SlfJ&amp;est anything or recommend
sQ~~~Cone who misht help?
.
• DEAR. READER: Without knowwhat tats and examinations your·
Wife lias had, I dare not haurd a
· ~ about what lila her. .
: However, lam, atruql by one fea-

ibi
r

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•

A-( UTILITY
CONSTRUaJON CO.

New

C:Zhe

ame

Overhead&amp;
underground
utilities &amp; lighting
Bucket, Digger
Truck Services
Service Pole
$2.50 per ft.

eo~nt.~

Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 North second Ave., Middleport

1-614.378-9108

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE
. HOME
Opening• for 2.
Chrletlan
ltmoaphere for
elderly c1re In a
nan-amoklng home.

New At Jneleslleetronies

latl18 lbaeli Dealer
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Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

1

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992-2825

MODEll Sllfrlftll

MINI STORAGE
882·2996

.betes,"
In his .presentation, Holsclaw
draws on his personal experiences as
well as years of individual successes
with the numerous patients he has ·
counseled.
'
Holsclaw has been recommended
by several healthcare professionals
and has received a number of bonors including the West Virginia Medical Society's President Award.
·

ture of ber two-year illness: The tal, where super-specialists will
chronic diarrhea is having a trcmen- examine her, review her testing and
dous impact on her ·health-- primar- plan whatever further analyses may
ily, I suppose, because she's not be necessary.
receiving adequate nutrition. Either
To give you more information, 1
she is afraid to eat or whatever she am sending you a free copy of my
consumes passes through her too · Health Repon "Constipation and
quickly.
·
Diarrhea." Other readers who would
Therefore, her gastroenterologist like a copy should send $2 plus a
must pay close atteption to the vari- long, self-addressed, stamped en~e­
ous causes of. chronic diarrhea. In lope to P.q. Box 2017, Murray Hill
your wife's case, I'd be suspicious of station, New York, NY 10156. Be
some form of colitis (inflanunation of sure to mention the tide.
the large intestine) or ileitis (i'nHarnDEAR DR. GOTI: I'm a healthy
mation of pan of the small intestine). 42-year-old female. At 35 I started ,
Also, an overactive thyroid can cause mi~s ing periods and began having
chronic diarrhea.
extended cycles. Since I was otherAside frvrn the usual tests-- stool wise in good health, 1 wasn't conanalysis, blood eaamination, X-rays, cerned. Two years ago I became
end~copy, and so forth -- coliti&amp; and involved with·a very passionate man
ileitis both require a biop5y for diag- and my cycle ha.s been normal since.
nosls. (I have seen ileitis ·diagnOsed Is there any correlation? Does sex
by CT scanning, but this is unusual.) · ~e 11, person younger? ·
·
I believe that your wife needs reaDEAR READER: Regular sex
sonably prompt medical attention·, activity tends to stabilize a woman's
before her system suffen serious hormonal pattmt and r:egutlte mendaJnaae, such u heUt diae11c or IIIC· struation. You are not, unfortunately,
'mia, from 11111nuaition. 'lberefore, I palnJ younpr. Howc\W, your body :
recommeod thai you tab lwr to a . Ia IUpOIIdin&amp; normally to increued .
tliqiiOAic;.clinic in a teiCbinl holpi- JeJtitAI ,UOUIMion.
~
:'

Something from the
honey's
Live girls 1-to-1
conversations
1·900·288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+

$3.99/min.
Procall Co.

(602) 954-7420

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCtiON
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

DllfBII·
Kick Boxing

Training
At Big Bend

Health &amp; Fitness

POMEROY, OHIO
Tra1h Removal- Commercial or Rllldentlal
Stptlc Tanks Cl1anec1 • Portabl1 Tolleta Rented .
• Dally, -icly a monthly rental rltea.
I

SERVICE
HouN Repair I
ReiiiOdellng
Kllchen 1111111
R81110de11ng

(Lime StoneLow Ralel)

992-3954 or 985-3418 . ,,

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"Supplie• for oU your pel needo"

RACINE
Opening Fel:i. lst
GUN CLUB
no..
271 North 2nd Ave.
GUN SHOOTS .
Middleport, OH. 45760
SUN. I PM
AKC Reg. Puppies, Kittens, Birds a More

,_,.,.., •••" ,_...Pet

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Experienced Groomere • Financing Av11llattle.l
(614) 992-62•14

B. Jolene Ru.,wo-

12 G11g1
Fartory Choke Only
.

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

Racine, Oh. 45n1
J1mes E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozt~r, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
W• dig basements, put in nptic
systems, lay lines, underground boras.
For Free estimate call

949-2512

JI'UCWA••• JIA1'ES

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DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985-4422

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,_

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Chester, Ohio

Ire You Ready
For love?
Call Howllll

'

..

.

.

'

1·900.255·2700

Durribured by

TII•SIIlE WIIEI SYSTEMS, INC.
The water treatment company cordially inllites you to
participate In a free, no obligation , comprehensive water
analysiS. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral HardneH, Iron, PH.
PIHII caltll.. i...Soft 111112-t471! or 1-111J0.801.3313
to HI up your lrH w.,.r •nalyala.

CHESTER STORAGE
OneUnhNow
AVIIIable
101128,$65 per mo.
992-3t81
J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

'

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

114t-2512

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
CHEAPER BATES

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/11.
21583 8ASHAN RD.
Ml111, Ohio 45771
Ml-3013 Phoria

MNOISFAX

Ext. 9402
$2.99 par min.
Muetbe18yra.
Touch lone phone
•

' Nqulred.

••
•

Serv-U 619 845 8434

.I...•Cnt•

111-

•

•
•
•

•••

Beef and Hog
Bus (304) 882·2756
Res. (304) 882-3328
. West Columbia WV.

-••

'

YOIIIG'S
CARPENTEt SERVIa

i~
,:

Painting
Alto Concrat• Work

.:
~

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
112-41211
Pom..-oy, Ohio

I

•
••

:•

•NawGarlfiiM
•EiectriCJ!I• Plumbing
•Roofing
•lnt.tor • Exterior

·-

.•••
••

•ROom Addition•

~

L

.

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

....

.14-Mt-2$12

c

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

ForFrw~

CALl

.' '

(602 954-7420

Limestone,

Room •ddltlone
Skiing, Rooting, P.UO.
RHIOnabte
anau,.... . Experienced
c.ll Wayne Netr
892-4405

ROUND
BALES OF
·HAY lOR
SALE.

$3.119 par min.
Must Be 18 Yre.
PROCALLCO.

Umeatone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Call992·3967
NEFF REMODELING

1·900·484-21 00
Ext. 2074

HAULING

Cl111ea

.,11 ....

MISUIIDEISTOODI
UYEII
CONYERSAnOI .
ONE· 011 ·OlE

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Children &amp; AduH

for Detalll

0 •

614-992-7643

614-742·2193

lfti.I.WIY

If you find an error in your record
that involves recent earnings at your
current job, contact your employer as
soon as possible. If your statement
shows any other incorrect earnings or
if some earnings are not shown, notify Social Security. You should also
notify Social Security if the statement
shows an incorrect name or Social
Security number.
.
When you call, be sure to have
your records of the correct earnings
available. Acceptable records include
W-2 forms, pay stubs, and tax returns.

' ~·

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

BIIIHIMIW Mil

1 '""'

Weight loss needs prompt attention

..

I

s...1vf,.fa

.

FREE ESTIIIATEI·
(814) 182-5535
814 192·2753

.New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Wlndov.l.

between 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon.- Sat.

· Plut50 CMW Plllllgl
Send $2.25111aney,OtW to
Box120, Clnbbe, Art. 72431

I

,,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

can 992-4025

Soclla $1.75 par pair

,(

11(1

j

•N-HCKIHIS
•Additions
•New Garage•
•Remodallng
•Siding
·Roofing
•PalnUng

'

washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials.

Help Burned Out Vlcllma

. St. Malon, WV

108Pomeroy

FREE
Pick-up discardfKI

'

THE..DAILY SEN·TINEL
•

$2.99/mln. 18+
Taucll tone phone llqlftd.

:Attitude can _lower blood sugar

' '
· "Attitude Can Lower Your Blood
· Sugar" . will be eresented by Ed
' Holsclaw, diabetes consultant for
' Bl)chringer Mannheirn's Diabetes
' Cllre Division, according to Bonnie
"Simms, R.N., diabetes educator at
' Holzer Medical Center.
The program will be held Sunday
from 2 to 4 p.m. in the French 500
ROom at HMC.
, "Mr. Holsclaw's positive mental

Rely On US For
Complete Coverage Of Your
, F v~rite 5p~rt and Telm
~

Call
1·90W56-2600
lxl111l01 3012

•

PETER
GOTr, M.D.

20"-Cash
&amp; Carry

"''"Ag•l•
•.
lo1ely

Cutlom Building' 11om

Oxygen Acelylene co.
Hallum allllzel M1dlcal Grllde 0.

Mlddlaport

lrlN-

Benefit statements issued to
*'o~kers
under
age
60
in
'96'
.

h

.

'·

metal malerlals

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

tit ........

•Meigs Marauders
•Eastern Eagles ,
•Southern Tornadoes

'

I want to express my
heartfelt
thank.s/appreciation to
my husband, son and
daughter for being with
me on Dec. 16th. Also,
to Pomeroy EMS,
CCMH and C.A.M.C
staffs.
My sincere thanks to
my church family, local
churches, schools,
relatives, friends and
neighbors for your love,
calls, cards, Howers and
food- but most of all for
your prayers during my
illness/hospitalization.
A big thanks to Coke,
Jack and Charlotte for
decorating
Baurn
Addition with yellow
balloons.
May each of you be
blessed, as you have
blessed me and my
family.
Glenna Riebel

tanka, stoves,

SMitH'S
CONSIRUCTIOI

AuthOrized
Distributor
Wilding SUppllel•lndullrtal Gilll• Staal
Salal a Fllbltcltlon • Repair Walding
Alumlnum/Stllnleu
Machine Shop

CDiftlllllillll._ I Pllcaa

.Best Wishes To All Our
Meigs County ·
Winter.Sports Programs

I

Call 992-3967
for Detalla.

NOTICE 10 IIDDERS
: SHied propoMII wtl be
received by lha Board of
eductltlon of tha llelga
Local School Dlatrlot of '
~CIIMI'O)', Ohio, at the '
,.,........,•• 0t11ce untll1:00 •
p.m. on ThurediiV, MilCh 14,
1HI, and at that time '
llpaned by tha Treaau.., of
Mid Board tor t1ve (S) new
ieventy-one (71) .,.......,
.laaal achool bueaea and
one (1) new elxty . (80)

Dryer

•

between 8 8111-8 pm
Mon. lhru Sat.

o..s .... at 4:30,...

Electric or Gas

Beat of the Bend...

_,,., ,.,.,_

llld1t A=erfca•

Rt~frlgerator

.

Call 992-4025

11110

22-Cublc-Foot

\0 *

~

lneulllllon, Storm
Doore, Stonn
Wlndowl, 0..-.gee.

Public Notice

&gt;.

-•~
~~
A~~V'.:~~~ 41 0 ~ Q""'-

87 Mill St.,

Public Notice

'Lt'~' ·

S, #.,•
0~ ~

fumacaa, 1nc1 many

Letlol Post602
miYSUIDIY

Load"'-·-r•M
·~~the~~~gsl~ ·-----~~-------------------------~~~~~-~~~~~~-~
, _.E
·
F
·t
e
s _,..
c.
-:·. ~ ..·
~
mpI re urn I ur . r.......,.,•..,......
u~••~clty
~&gt;
~
~
. . --- - -·

to do was leave Eric there," Mrs.
Kaseman said.
The only thing that kept her going
was.the knowledge that Eric wa.s stable, getting the best of care, and that
her husband would be arriving in
. Hawaii to bewith him two days later.
" Knowing Chuck was there, I was
able to sleep," she said.

VInyl Replllcement,
,.-Wlnclcln, Blown

THURS., KARAOKE

AWAY FROM HOME • Chuck and Mary Jo Kaseman hold their ·
aon Eric at Children's Medical Center of Northwest Ohio In Tole- -, •
dojan.1'5.ErlcwaabornpramaturelnHawallwhllehlsperenta :;
ware on vacation, and had to stay on the Island when they
, returned to Ohio, until he Wll old enough to travel. (AP Photo)

Plck..tJp dlacarded .

wuhera, d.,.,., hoi

llllllfft

SAT., "WHITE RAVEN"

IU

At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness

Frwfelt-

FRI., D.J. BRADY $Ul0 cover

.·.

t

•

J
0

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'

�.·:Pal• U

Wednesday, February 7,1He

• The Dally Sentln81

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally S111tlnel• Page15

~~~~~~------------------~~========~==================~
AI.I.EY OOP
NEA Cro1.word Puz~e
::

Pomeroy • Mlddlaport,
Ohio.
.

.

41 TV an ;a ii
....... llolel

PHILLIP

.EJ~,t

113 Sun hal
ti7 lteo IUCII!f blue

BEATTIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie
. tatS

II C:.•a 111111
10 Foe• "' bone .

Dorton&amp; lroo, v.&amp;, S SpHd,

Air, TU~ CruiM, AIIIFII C -.
43,000 lli!U, 17,700, 080, 814·
2511·,15311, 814-~1111 ..

11183 0oago Shadow ES, 4 Cyl., 4
Door. Auto. Air, Tilt, C1111tte,
27,000 lilies Asking 18700 51+
.2511-«!40 ore 14-258-8457.

EEK&amp;MEEK
WEST
•J t 3 2

.nanclng even If you have bftn
turned d,own elaewhere. Upton
"Equipment Used Cars. 30+458-

Will do houoec:leanlng, 6 1~gg2.
.

. 10111.

FINANCIAL

·Banlc Financing Guoranllod. Wllh
Minimum Down or Trada-1n: Call
'Ruth 814-4441-28117

210

6A Q 5 t

•K 10 I 2

THIS .JUICY 60551P
IS FOR--SHHH If

mall until you have lnveatfg•ted
the olterirll.

SE RVI C ES

"REAWAY If

AII19Biestateed'J811181ng In
!his ne.-..paper laiUb]eCIIO
me Fedlr!l Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which IJI8ko8 k Illegal
10 ad'J811iaa "any prelerance,
llmillllon or d8orlmlnallon
baa8cl on race, calor, rallglon,
sex lanillal statu! or natkx\al
origin, or any Intention 10
make any such prvfenonce,
limitation or clscrtmlnallon.'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

'

This MWSpOper wll not
knowllngly aocepl

advertioements foriNIOSlala
which lain violation of tile law.

~.

Our readers ara hereby
Informed met all dwelllnga
advertised In this newspaper
ara avalable on an equal
CJili)Orlllnlly ba818.

'
FAR M SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVES TOC K
'

Tax, Repo'£,
Toll Free (1) 800-898-9778 Ext.
H-281 4 For Current Ualflgs.

Chain&amp;aw, Farm Boss 029 , 18
Inch Bar, Brand Nawl $300, 814-

3111H1624.

.

Nice home in Racine, large build-

Usina~ the -Classifieds
. Is as E.asu:1 a·s"
0

f.-rll Equipment

THE BORN LOSER
It&gt; Ulit: 1\ CJ.R CH!l'FOC !

$10,000. ~7S.&lt;I849-3jlm. "

~

00 '(00 HI\VE: »1'1

CI:ffE£-rtJ..V~

'

1895 Chevy S-10 414, Sllndard
Transmission, Air, Tilt, Cruise, '
S18,200,81+367-0tt1 .
:

!NT

Pua
Pus

Pua

z•

COfF'€£ 'r

320 Mobile Homes
lOr Sale
12x50 &amp; 12x65, Underpirining, '

Sheetmetal Shop Foreman. ,t.pplicant Must Have -Sheetmetal
Layout And Fabrication Experience, Job Coordination Skill, ,
Work Well With Olflors, Etc.
Excellent Pay
Good Benefits
401K
Plus Extras
1
Join Our Gr"owing Team Today
AndBa4Leader.
'
Send Resume To:

Poroh, Stove, Refrillerator S3,DOO,
$3,500 No Calls After 7 P.M. 814388-8886.
·

1993 201 Pro XL, 20' Strutoa
boll boat 200 XPHP, 814·667·
73470f 814-IMll-28711.

---------!
1987 t•x70 Danville 2 Bedrl)9ms, I

760

2 Baths, CA. 614·4-46-8374, ~fief I
5 P.M.
I

abcwlgilll
10 NarroW wood

SOhool dlnoe
21 Clpllll of

·- 27-~.=~
•1111111
.

·.....
::ra_..··xon:

21 llulalln
:10

.,.......

Pua
Pua
Pua

.

31T32 DlpiJJRIICJ . .

II Fl,.,ct• :
piiiO lbbr. -

·.

40---~ - ­

u

DeriOUIK'I , •

. . eel,

~Srl-+-+--t 411 .....

language

Sometimes you will receive whal
lookl like a favorable lead into your
long suit. However, especially when in
a no-trump contntet, you might have
to resort lo some aubterfuge to elltntet full benelll.
' Today's deal wa1 declared by Liz
Brinlg of London. Her opening bid of
one no-trump ahowed IS to 17 poinll.
With lhal ncellent 1ht-card 1uit, I
lblnt the llllnd Ia too ltroni- However,
u I would have opened one diamond
and gone down In whatever game I
reached, perhapa 1· ahouldn't be
sounding a critical note.
After North uiled a transfer bid to
show bla lreartl and lhen bid his
apade1, Brinlg leapt to three notrump.
Undentandlbly, West was unwilling
to lead from hla club suit. Instead, he
aeteeted the diamond jack. This suggeSted thai the dlamonde weren't goIng to break 3-2. And il they were 4-1, a
Jecilimlte chance lor the contntet Willi
to lind Eaal with the heart ldng pro~at n101t one other beart.
Jig that Eut WIIII!Oit unlikely to be 10 abort In both red aulta,
Brlnlg pul up an effective amokeecreen. Wben East followed with the
diamond five at Irick one, declarer
played her seven. Thinking he had
'atruck pld, West continued with the
·diamond three, allowing deelarer to
·run for home with her·nlne trlcka:
three apadel, one heart nnd live diamonds.
True, South could have looked silly
if diamonds were 3-2 all along and
Well had switched to chabl at trick
two. But ducldng the lint trick will
won In the real world where Weal Ia
only looldnc at two baDda, not all four.

47=
soC::
.......
-~

Klill111'1111r
12 llsrll

'LFLSUKJL

K

ALDONAX,

K N ;

KV

XCE

XCE
DSL

NDYL

JACEOIP'N

KV

TEPY.

J

DSL

XCE

I C P' N

J K U Y,

K N.'

-

P L L I

XC E
ALP IX

v c s I.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I never dared Iii radical when young/ For l•r H-.td mako me conserve- when old.'- Robert Froet.
:

I MF L Y

PI
I.

I

1~

I_0 SI. DI_0 T~~_

5

1::,,

One dummy to another: "I

liave to put off certain jobs sev-

eral times before it completely

~::-;~~9. 1.: .,11~-Tf~sTI-11 ·~ -~~;;~ ~;;~h:~~~
I'
•&amp;"MILE
I IMvl I I I
"'IS

lh,:-..:1

L-..L-.L-...L-1-...L--l vou develop from liop No. 3 below.

-

11;11'

PRINT . NUMBERED
LETTfRS
I

Auto Pans&amp;

I

I

I

SCIAM LETS ANSWIIS

Acceuortes
Budge! Tranomilsions. Ulad IRebuill, 411 Typos, Accoulblo To ·
Over ,·0,000 Transmission, ;
614-245-58n
,

988 1~X60 Excellent Condition, :
3/4 Acre In Bidwell Area, !
Firm, 614-388-8973 •
Mt888go.

a·

23

Eul

Motorcvctts

Contractor Has A Position For A

180 Wanted To Do

MfN.

I
I

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

ma1ion, 1-407-750-3122 Ext.
OHI12C( 7 A.M. ·8P.M.)71lays.

Pua

Nortla
2t

10!k 4 WD Honda 300 4 Wheel·
.., With Srow B -.....200. 614· :
148-7371, Af1tr 5 P.M.
,

l91l4 Rodmond 14110, :~bedroom,
1bath, St 4,000firm, oxc. cond. After epm 304-1175-t 783.

\

Kaiser- Jumpy- Orbit- Cl&amp;ase- MISTAKE
Over the years I leamed that the best advice you'H
get is from someone who has already made the same
· MISTAKE

.

Sovl"'' You'U Find In tht
ClrmJ(Itfl Stc11on.

I

IWEDNESDAY

Postal &amp; Gov't Jobs $21 /Hr +
Benefits, No Ellp. Will Train, For limited Olfarl 1QQ6 doublewlde,
Appl And Info 1-000-536-3040.
. 3br, 2bath, $1790 down, 12751'
month. Fret delivery &amp; setup.
Utility Contrac10r now Hiring Aeri-· Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro ·
at Line Crews &amp; Undet oroung , WV. 304-755-5886.
Crewa tor Telephone and Cable :-:--~
. ;,;;.;.;,:,;~---­
TV. Send Rreaume to P.O. Box NIW 14.:80, 2 or 3bedroom. Only
658 Goshen, Oh 45122 or Leave · make 2 paymenta to move in. No
a Menage wiht Answering Serv- ' payments after o4yeare. 3o•··765ice@l5t3)782-0501
_5_w_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

·..

·610

Lift/
S.AIP f,OM NOW
01'1 S'tfe'L./.. t4A\ff
A /..OT ~~Itt~,
STANI&gt;AilPS IN

·-. .~~--

1994 Dodge Caravan V6, auto,
air, am-fm, 76,000 highwoy miles,

740

Three bedroom home in country,
Wt"itos Hil Rd., Rutland, ,one bat!1,
1n-ground poo, 814-992-5067.

sary,Etc
For
,t.pplica11on
AndNeceslnfor, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..1era
. No
'Experience

Welt

94 Ford F-150 414 XLT, loadad :
18,200 miles, eJ:cellent condition: :
aaklng S17,200 814-367-0288 or '
81•·11'48-2&lt;81 aft..- epn.
·

ing w111 house small business .
also a ono car garage, fenced
yard, out of flood area, asking
$47,000 614-949-2804.

WILDLIFE /CONSERVATION
JOBS
New Hiring Game Wardens, Security Malntonance, Park Rang·

.l TtUNK .l'Vf llfAL/..Y IMP~O\ffl&gt;
\
Tttf QUAL-ITY OF
f,AHtl/'1~'$

I

pi- ol coml!felo
llaltin.ll+iV2·7441 .
'
.

S c.l. abllr. I
a tr.vllllon lnlle.

.-.

21 ,.,.,. o f -

clly
I Jl1pao I

...,..uon

Cash in on ttle lead

8liT IF' THE CEILING FALLS, I'Ll..
n!E FIRST TO KNOW ..

'(OU REALLV DON'T LOOK
VER'i COMFORTABLE. SIR ••

Jackson, OH 45840

•A 2
tAKQt7t

11 , HII~al~l

Opening lead: • J

PEANUTS

SHEETM~:~~SITION

•K I

....

11 Air,-«« n

I Colla dill Sol

. By Plallllp Alder

.

...

.. .

7 Wonl of

2 lablau3DIIIIncllverM
4 llldlclnt1l

lleaUa
INT

z•

BARNEY

recommends that vou do bUll ~
neaa whh peapl• you know, and
NOT to send money through the

E MPLOY~1EN T

POSITION AVAILABLE

,.

~

Wble: North:South
Dealer: South

Help Wanted

leading Southern Ohio HVAC

, .....

61 7 II

YORE EARS AUMH

61:4-U6-

'atiame

QOWN

7

SOUTH

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Spaniel Blonde, 3

•

•tO.
•Kt75t
es

Opportunity

110

=ro: .

EAST

t J 10 I 3

720' lhlcks for Sale

Business

•J.

.,

·Auto l.oonl. Dooler will oroango 11-

2788.

11a..tof
burden
12AI ... piaM
113 L8nda •!lind

NORTH
0:41·116
•A Q I 5
•Q J 10 ••
•• 2

1004 Ford Escort Front Whttl
Drive, 5 Spood, AIIIFM Radio,
"lt1,500,814-441H1817.
,

Help Wanted

•,

41Ra•••_. •
41 R II iiUIItil

;,rmoutWI r.•F t&lt; 1'•

10

•

-IDI'i&amp;;lll .......

... 'I .II,

ALDER

"1 don't know If 111 ever find happiness.
My dream in life ·is to be in a pelting zoo.'

..
:·

.

zt

FEBRUARY71

SERV ICES

I .~NI~-~-~·~~~~~:=
Price Buster! New 1•h70; 2 or
3br. Only $aa5 down. $185fmonth.
Freo delivery &amp; letup. Onf~ II
~:SO:, Homes, NitrO WV. 304·

Furnished

Rooms

350 . Lots &amp; Acreage .· ,

Circle Motel, Gallipolla, OH 814B h
C
I &amp;
63 Acroa County Woter &amp; Eloc- 446-2501 or 614-387-0612. EHera t ers onstruct on Home tric On Property, Great Hunting&amp; · clency Rooms, Cable, Air, Phone,
Improvements, 614-388·6997 Recreationl814·258-14t2, 814· Microwave &amp; Rl!frigera.,r.
Con01ct: Steve Or Bill.
251!-11844.
h
·· bah " d. ::;,;_.;.;._;;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ .1 Rooms for rent· week or month.
. h"ld cora In
C 1
my ome
on
Acooaga For $Ole: 7 Milot From
1 20
G
Ordnance Elemep~&amp;ry. My a.ge,
Holzer, 795 Clark Chapal Road,
IBrung at 1 tmo. aflla Hotel.
full or port-time. 15yrs experloroce.
"814-448-9580.
304-675-e5311.
Alrtot, Ohio.
Sleeping rooms with ceoklng.
en river. All
Faim For SAle, 78 Acree, 814- ·Also trailer
Elilctrlcal, Plumbing, Concrete 256-!1484.
I
Foundatlono, Garages, Room Ad- .
aerator,
dhloris: Ramodellng, David, 614· Five acres,
Aaclna,lti,OOO can finance
2M-tlll49; /Rog« 614-lliiii:Q118.
hllf -n.I1-:ID25.

s ·

.Y8ri:.n[;lp8c~aTaiierilron:-,KOOV.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises,

L.:l\S~~Ll~lili.l;!:lL~~ loOk lor romance and you'll

- - 011io. , -800-537-9528.
Ttvee y•r okt lift chair, Nke new~

1250. 814-0112·71153.

ASTRD-ORAPH

Troodmlll- 1.25 HP motorized
(Cadonco). ••coil on• condition.
omotgoncy stop'-· 1250, 614-

0112--.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

~.Feb.8, 1~

.,,,

llfiPfOWd cW&gt;elopn• ~• could be In 11018
lor you In lha year ahead.-· In

order 10 taka advantage of theaa new
apportUnllial. you mull cancel unpoodueltve activiiiMAQUARIUtl (.1111• . . , . ,., Son-11
may abuaa your generollty toclly and
you will be pertly raaponalllll. Do not
ma1c1
ID people who cion'

.

commn-111

- . to rcibo~aclesyc;.;:d

~ LEO CJuly D-Aug. 121 lnalalld ol doing ·
Aatro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly -fls eJ&lt;I)eCied o1 you today, you.,.
r..-la which 11gnt1 ara romanllealy per- took for surrogatea to handle your
feel tor you. Mall $2 .75 to Matchmaker, reiiPOfl8ibilitiee. Unfortunately, you ma~
c/o lhle newspaper, P.O. Bo• 1758, make poor choices.
Murray Hill Slallon, New York, NY 10156. VIRGO jAug. 23-Sept. 22) Poor ManPISCES (Fo. zti-Marcll 20) II might &amp;g60118i11 ol ,_today could crMie
proye wiaa today not 1o rlak loelng a good pooblema fUrther dOwn the fino. This CliO
thing by gambling tOr _,.ng better. be avold8d K you try lobe morw lifUdenl
Your bell pom.ablllltlllllide In your_pre- and cautlous lhao UIUII. .
sent lltuallon.
UIIRA (Sepl. ~ 23) Try not 10 be
ARIES (March 21·Aprll II) Try 10 be too opinionated today when IOCilllzlng
realflllc In regard to how you hope to with friends. Injecting strong viewa Into
acl1leYe your objecll- today. Lucll will llgllthearted converaatlona could make
not- as a eublltlulo lor hard work ot1ter1 feel~and dldlcallon.
SCORPIO (Oct 14--No¥. U) Try 10 Iii
TAURUS (April )0.. ., 20) Try to be opllmflllc regarding tha outcome ol
tacllul when dealing with co-workera evanta today, but. allo make IUN your
today. If they thlnlt lhll you thtnk your .a•pectallona ara beeed on raallallc .
Ideas are ••,perior to thelra, they may . ~·
·haldiMielcconatrucllvuoJIIIIII!a'll.
UGITTARIUS (Now. U·DH. 11111
GEIIIINI
11-.1- 201 Think twtce you.... ,....lilllhecl. budget a yourMII,
belen lilooi••'ll llo • I 'V Involved In 1 makl I ganuN allaft ID lllclllo I IDdly.
blind _..,.u..,~ today. ~ you 1111p out Do not wllle caall
lhingl lhlil _ ,
ol, f..,._
you . , . IDle your ..,.olullly " " tllll.
bwiiUI. .
CAPIIICORN (De•. II·Jan. 11) In
c•uca (.lunai1..JuiV 121 8eloN 1111111· ,.mID I'IIUf-.lodlly c1o not PGII·
lng a INijor· dldllon today, _ , ID the · pOne attei1CIIng 10 mattera lhlt ,...,..
Input o1 fn.nct. who .,. genu1ne1v con- tour Immediate attantlon. II you lall
cemecl abciui)'IIUI ........ They may·IMilind, ........ up . . notlil .....
flnd it. The

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I . hgt11 • The o.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Wednesday, February 7, 1991

•

E$uctf8nan upsets Gramm ~·
Coadnaed from J1111e 1
bigger than 8," Gramm said, retool- . her brother would pick up disaffectimportant factor in their vote was that ing a favorite stump-speech line.
ed Grimm supporters from Iowa's
the candidate they supported. "best
"Right now I'm in second place. active religious right.
represents conservative values." ·I hoped to be in first. but I'm 8 del"Phil Gnmm shares a base with
Nearly six in 10 of those voters sup- egates ahead of Bob Dole," Gramm Pat among Christian Coalition conported Buchanan. Gramm held a said.
servatives. Now that Gramm is darnnarrow edge among the one in seven
Both Gramm and Buchanan were aged, those people are going to be
who said the most important factor headed to Iowa today for a solid week looking for another candidate.
was picking a c.andidate who could of campaigni111 before that s141e's They'll very naturally fall to us," Ms.
beat President Clinton.
caucuses next Monday. There, they Buchanan said in an interview.
Gramm, who waited to the bitter face the full slate of GOP cindidates, · The action of some Louisiana votend to face deflated supporters Tues- inCluding front-runners Dole and ers who identified themselves as
day night, conced¢ the delegate tal- publisher Forbes, former Tennessee Christian conservatives cast doubt on
ly was a setback. to his campaign, Gov. Lamar Ale.ander and lndiapa that theory. Retired homemaker
which counted on sweeping southern Sen. Dick Lugar.
Helen Fortier of Abbeville said she
states.
Buchanan campaign manager Bay gave her vote to anti-abortion candi"Even thOugh I failed the third Buchanan called the Louisiana out- date Alan Keyes rather than support
grade and had to de;~ it twice, I can do · come a 'Asolid win" which left Buchanan because, she said, "I don 'I
the arithmetic and know that 13 \s Gramm damaged. She also predicted like the isolationism. He's just too

I

Meigs land transfers
The following land ttansfers were
Deed. Anna L. Wannke to Robert
posted reCently in the office of Meigs L. and Diana Imboden, Rutland
County Recorder Emmogene Hamil- parcels;
ton: .
Deed, Kenneth H. and Patricia P.
Deed; Roger D. Humphrey to Light to Robert L. and Diana lmboden, Rutland parcels;
•Clysta Kimes, Chester;
Easement, Bruce E. and Donna L.
Sheriff's deed, John R. and Violet
OQurm, Fnincis E. and Sally S. Blake F. Hunnell to Dennis Richards,
. to Monongahela Power Company, Letart, 215ths acre;
Olive;
Easement, Jeffrey and Sandra
Deed, Frederick W. ill and Cathy Folmer to OMEGA NS, Salisbury,
Crow to Gary Rbual Fitzwater, Mid· .092 acre;
· dleport lot;
Easement, Harold H. and Helen E.
Deed, Homer D., Denzel, H.D. Blackston, Roy~ Opal Grueser to
and Mabel M. Goeglein to James S. OMEGAN5, Salisbury, 1.212 acres;
and Ann C. McQuaid, Rutland;
Easement, Roy and Ojlal Grueset
Deed, Richard W. and Ruby to OMEGA JV5, Salisbury, 2.673
Vaughan to Ruby Rentals Inc., Mid- acres;
dleport!Pomeroy parcels;
Deed, Kenneth E. and Darlene
Easement, Helen R. and Herbert Hayes to Darren E. and Carmen Jean
L. Grate to Larry J. and Rita D. Ball, Hayes, Bedford parcel;
Rutland;
Easement, James L. and Madalyn
. Deed, Larry J. and Rita D. Ball to C. Emerson to OMEGA NS,
Herbert L. and Helen R. Grate, Rut· · Chester, 7.394 acres;
land; ·
Deed, Rhonda L. Conde to James
Deed, Harvey F. and June M. Van- P. Conde, Salisbury;
Vranken to Clarence Junior and
Deed, Millie Grueser, Millie
Sharon Y. Matto•, Pomeroy;
Christian to Millie Christian, MidDeed, David E. and Rebecca A. dleport;
Ellis to Eblin Family Trust Agree·
Deed, Larry H. and Jean Whobrey
menl, Rutland village;
to David K. and Marinda K. Gardner,
Deed, Marjorie A Durst to Robert Rutland village;
A. Durst, Suuon parcels;
·
Deed, George C. and Jessie Cain
Deed, Christina M. Wilson to ·White to Gay M. Perrin, Bedford parConnie M. Manley Trust, Middleport eel;
parcel:
Deed, Eugene and Karen Tripleu
Deed, Dennis R. and Juanita E. to Denver L. Warner, Columbia;
Bryant to iuanita E. Bryant, Scipio
Deed, Garry E. and Rebecca L.
parcel;
·
Hunter, Robert F. and Gloria A.
Deed, Jane Ann and William Mcintosh to Alan B. Swindell,
Snouffer to Karen Sue Moore, Mid- Deford parcel;
dleport parcel;
·• - Deed, Garry E. and Rebecca L.
Deed, John C. and Esther M. Hunter, Alan B. Swindell to Robert
·Scragg to Joe and Polly Bowland, and Gloria A. Mclntosli, Bedford
Rutland par~el;
parcels;
. Deed, Wayne 0 . and Claudia C.
Deed, Robert F. and Gloria A.
Roush to Douglas Dean and Tonja Mcintosh, Alan B. Swindell to GarLee Hunter, Sutton;
ry E. and Rebecca L. Hunter, BedDeed, George aitd Margaret Buck- ford, 64.701 acres;
ley to Lee and Deborah Owens,
Deed, Garry E. and Rebecca L.
Olive;
Hunter, Alan B. Swindell, Robert F.
Deed, Middleport Housing Cor- and Gloria A. Mcintosh to Philip H.
poration to Charles A. and Julie L. ~windell, Bedford, 38.966 acres;
Leach, Middleport lot;
.
. Sheriffs deed, John R. and Violet
Deed, Mary E. and Louis T. Smith F. Hunnell to John E. Blake, Pomeroy
to Dorothy M. Roach, Middleport;
parcel;
.
Deed, Cecil and Dorothy RoseDeed, Charles W. II, Claudia D.
·berry to Argyle Deeter, Lebanon, five : and Mary Kohrman Hayes. Michael
acres;
H. Kohrman to Barbara A. Dill and
· Deed, James Warmke to Robert L. Rebecca A. Foley, Pomeroy lots;
and Diana·Imboden, Rutland parcels;
Deed, George W. Jr. and Dollie M.
Deed, Jerome Warmke and Can- Martin to Wesley Lambert Marvin,
dace Slaughter to Robert L. and· Salem, 1.149 acres;
Diana Imboden, Rutland parcels;
Right of way, Pauline Wolfe to
Deed, Jonatbon Warke to Robert Columbus Southern Power, Letart;
L. and Diana Imboden, Rutland
Deed, Joe C. Ritchie to Tuppers
parcels;
Plains Regional Sewer District,
. Deed, Joseph Wannke to Robert Orange, 56.345 acres;
:L. and Diana Imboden, Rutland
Deed, Gary L. and Patricia L.
parcels;
Wolf to Ronald Ray and Linda l(ay
: Deed, Julie Warmke ~d Michael Epling, Olive lot;
:Barrell to Robert L. and Dtana ImboDeed, Floyd Kyle and Linda Rupe
den, Rutland parcels;
· to William Richard Barnett and Ruth
Deed, Matthew R., Christy and Ann Loveday, Rutland parcel;
.Kristi Warmke It' Robert L. and
Deed, William L. Klein to Russell
.Diana Imboden. RJtland parcels; ·
W. Cundiff, Pomeroy parcels;
Deed, John R. and Violet F. Hun·
Deed, Roman Jr. and Maria
'Warmke to Robert L. and Diana nell to Danny R. and Kim I. West·
.Imboden, Itutland pan:els; ·
moreland, Rutland parcel;
Deed, Jeffrey Wannke IQ Robert
Cel'\ificate, Virgil H. Roush,
L. and Diana Imboden, Rutland deceased, to Mary Jo Barringer: lar~ ~Is;
ry and Donald Roush, Chester.

INDIANOLA, Iowa (AP)- Multimillionaire publisher Steve Forbes
faced questions over social issues
amid fresh evidence of a shakeup in
the race for next week's Iowa c~.il­
cuses.
As he rolled through town hallstyle meetings across Iowa Tuesday,
Forbes was questioned repeatedly
about ills views on abortion, sex education and gay rights. Meanwhile, an
anti-abortion ·group accused Forbes
.of trying to mask his position with
millions of dollars of television
8dvertisi.ng .
He was also facing pressure from
rivals complaining about his campaign spending. He rejected that cril:
icism, arguing voters "are not for
sale" and said his message, not his
money, has moved his poll standings.

. much of too much, too radical."
: The exit survey alsc;~ sugges
·Buchanan might find the going
·tougher in the more crowded conies~
·to come: 20 percent of those whO
·turned out to support Gramm::
' Buchanan and Keyes said they wouta
;have preferred Dole or Forbes.
.:
I A six-member musical jam~
at the Buchanan rally Tuesday nig~
crooned the campaign's best hope f~
what lies ahead: "Buchanan's here to
stay, so let's all ride the Buchanan
·
~
E•press. II
·•
j GOP strategist Eddie Mabe had a
:more sobering take on Tuesday's bal7
·. toting and any moment11111 it migl)1
carry. "After Iowa, Louisiana is jus,t
· a footnote," he said.

Sports, Page 4

,\. ~~c~ were grant- Middleport; Ronlld Oive11 Da~is;
·:ed ...,nqelic:eilla IIICIIIIIIy In the 33, .ad I~ Lyan Durlwn, 33, ·
.. Meifl Cqupty Prilblle Court of bolb C)~ Middleport; .
.
: JIIIIJO Rt1ben luck:
·
a.ril~ Lewt1 Loti, 30, and

:;,,Jf*.:':::.-~:· :;.,R~:. ~==·~ :0.bot~t~~:::

Furn11ce Filter
Kerosene
He11ters
Ventless
Natural gas

"We got a 911 call of a major
lire," police Sgt. Rick Young said.
"Police (officers) were first on scene
and found the smoke so bad that they
couldn't go in."
After firefighters arrived, they
used bteathing gear to enter the
apartment.
"A firefighter brought outa child . .
The child was dead. The other bodies were found inside the apartment,"
Young said.
Avanesian was arrested in
November and booked for investigation of child abuse, police said, but
they could not immediately say
whether he was ever charged.

Colorful valentine door knob decorations have been made by
children at the Meigs County Public Library for realdenta of
Extended Care, Veterans Memorial Hospital, Overbrook Center,
and the Rock Springs Rehabilitation Center. The children 118lst·ed by some mothers made the decoration• under the direction

i

r

Cisneros said today.
The rate rose from 64.2 percent in
the last quarter of 1994, marking the
sharpest increase in at least 30 years
and the addition of about 1.4 million
home owners. Cisneros said.
The 65.1 percent level translates
into more than 65 million homeowners nationwide, according to the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development.
Prices in many markets posted
double-digit gains, including South
Bend, Ind., where the median price
jumped 18.3 percent from a year earlier. They rose 16.6 percent in Sal!
Lake City and t5 .3 percent in Corpus
Christi, Texas.

Group feels speed limits
should remain the same
COLUMBUS - An Ohio House
committee is recommending the
speed limits on interstate highways
remain the same, for the most part.
The Transportation and Public
Safety Committee voted 13-0 on .
Wednesday in favor of a bill that
would keep the interstate speed lim·
its in Ohio at 55 mph and 65 mph.
Congress decided recently to allow
federally imposed speed limits to
expire on March 3. Some states, especially in the West, wanted to raise the
speed limits or do away with them
altogether.
Sc;~me Ohio lawmakers have indi-

Home Improvement Warehouse

(0Mifl6 FE.UARY I TO WOOD (OUNn
.1300 GUND (EllUl AVENUE

cated a desire to raise the limits by 5
to 10 mph, but the legislation voted
out of the co~ittee would make few
changes.
'
The bill would eliminate short
stretches of 55 mph limits on interstates near major cities which some
lawmakers have described as speed
traps. The Ohio Department ofTransponation would be given 120 days to
make the changes.
Rep. Samuel T. Batuman, R-Milford, the committee cha~rman, said he
expects the department also to elim- .
inate 55 mph zones on the outerbelts
of major cities.

Officials list permit criteria
for flood-damaged structures
Meigs County residents who suf- flooding and repairs are to be made,
fered structure damages during recent the owners should contact Edward J.
flooding are urged to be aware of Werry, local floodplain manager, at
locally enforced flood damage reduc- the Meigs County Ta• Map Office at
tion codes. These codes contajn stan- 992-2994 for a permit and in(ormadards for new and substantially dam· tion on any standards which may
aged or substantially improved struc- apply.
· According tQ Werry, the ·Meigs
tures which are located in identified
County
fu Map- Office will be han.special flood hazard areas or in_I00dling
only
the unincorporated areas of
ycar flood plains.
All communities participating in Meigs County. Residents of incorpothe National Flood Insurance Pro- rated villages in the county must con- .
gram ·have adopted the locally tact the · officials in the village in
c;nforced reduction codes, which which they reside.
To determine if a structure is ·
reflect minimum federal criteria for ·
located
in a special flood hazard area,
. flood damage prevention and require
residents
should review a copy of the
that development permits be obtained
prior to Oily activities in the special · community Flood Insurance Rate
flood hazard area.
·
Map 390387;0175. For additic;~nal
. If a residence or commercial sbUC- information, they may contact Werry
ture has been impacted by the recent at-992-2994.

HNters ,
PIC IllS

HARDWARE
,~
I I

.f

of Norma Hawthorne. Included In the group were Brandon Bachner and his mother, Timmy Bachner, Aaron Oliphant, Holly Whita,
Devan Soulaby, Undeey Buzzard, Ashley LHe, Ltan Hoffman, and
Justin Duckworth, with Norma Hawthorne, children's services
librarian. ·

Racine Village Council endorsed
construction of a new elementary
school for the Southern Local·School
District during its regular meeting at
Star Mill Park.
The endorsement followed a presentation by David Spencer, chairman
of the Southern Local Building Committee. Spencer also showed council
members a promotional videotape
entitled "Moving Into the 21st Century."
The committee is now seeking
passage of a 6.1 mill tax bond issue
for construction of a new, state-ofthe-an. K-8 elementary school to be
located in the village.
Total cost of the project . which
includes renovations to the e•isting
high school, is $7,370,800 with the
state picking up $3,190,800 of the tab.
"We can't expect development
without adequate schools," council
members saod in support of the measure.
In addition, the village obtained a
Boone Weaver skiff for the Racine
Museum/Cross Mill which is cur-

rently under construction.
The skiff was made in the village
around 1917 and was donated by Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Wright of Cottageville.
The Wrights, who arc active in the
Big Bend Stcrnwhecl Association,
were accompanied to the meeting by
association president Jim Davi s of
MinerSville.
Under the agreement between the
Wrights and the village, the skiff will
be returned to them if for some reason it cannot be kept in the museum.
Also, the skiff must be .kept inside.
Fire Chief John Holman reported
that fire schools arc comi ng up
including an arson detection class.
Council approved fu nding for the
classes.
In additi om, Holman said the Ohio
Department of Natural Re sources
will hold a class in the village on
fighting brush fires.
Firefighter
David
Neigler
approached council concerning planning for a new fire station to be co n·
structed on property adjacent to the
Continued on page 3

Falling mortgage
High· court hears challenge to__I)UIIaw
rate~ ·h elp ·improve
home values in 1995
WASHINGTON (AP) - Falling
mortgage rates drove up demand for
houses last year and helped improve
e•isting home values throughout
much of the nation.
Prices shot up 8.4 percent in the
Midwest, 5.1 percent in the South and
3.1 percent in the West during the
final three months of 1995, compared
with a year earlier, the National
Association of Realtors said Wednesday.
Only the Northeast registered a
drop, a 0.7 percent decline.
Home ownership also increased in
the fourth quarter of last year. boosting the nation's home ownership rate
to 6S.I percent - its highest level
since 1981. ·House Secretary Henry

·-~---

IM-17a-SMI

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

council
endorses new
grade school

he supports abortion through thl
second trimester of pregnancy," sa14
Samona Joy Smit,legislative director
of the anti-abortion group. "While I
am pleased Mr. Forbes recognizes the
strength of our message, these two
colliding positions are not an honest
·
one for any candidate."
She said Forbes had spent "millions of dollars in advertising to repo·
.sition himself on the abortion issue."
"His claim to be pro-life rings
very hollow when he sits atop an '
organization opposed to everything
we support," she said.
1
Asked about the anti-abortion
group's statements, Forbes said:
"I've made my position clear from
the very beginning. I've not changed
it and I'm not going to change it."

&amp; Bonte gas

.......

35 cents

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 8, 1996

..-------Remembering others·- -------. Racine

I

COLUMBUS - President Clinton will make his first Ohio fund-raising appearance of the 1996 campaign
at a March rally designed to whip up
support ·among local Democratic
activists, the Ohio Democratic Party
said.
Clinton will attend the state par-v
ty's "Celebration 1996" fund-raiser
in Columbus on March 23. The
event, which will cost $96 per person,
will be held at the Ohio State Fairgrounds.
"We're hoping to raise some
money," state party Chairman David
Leland said Tuesday. "But more
importantly, we want to re-energize
and reactivate our grass-roots organization.n
Leland said Clinton likely will
appear at events elsewhere in Ohio,
but he did not have details.
He added that the visit probably
will be the first of many campaign
stops in Ohio for the president. Clinton faces only 'token opposition on
the l:&gt;emocratic ballot from perennial candidate Lyndon LaRouche Jr.,
but the state is key to the president's
hopes for re-election.
"I think he's going to be here a
lot," Leland said. "They place Ohio
very high on their priority list."

Rain, lows in 30s.
Friday cloudy, highs in
upper40s .

Val. 46, NO. 187

2Seetlona, 12 Pagea

'

J

I

dows of the first-fl~ unit and sent
smoke·throug!toul!he building, awakening neighbors.
.
"I just heard a noise and woke up.
I heard a woman yelli~" said neighbor Vahe Dishajdzyan, bo lives on
the first floor.
"There was smoke fmt and then
first thing we heard was the alarm,"
said Mary Kissablak, a second-story
resident. "We couldn't see anything.
We went downstairs and we couldn't
see our hands in front of our faces."
The fire was confined to the one
unit, except for some smoke and
water damage elsewhere, frre Baualion Chief Don Biggs said.

·

•

I

Carpenter.

''

ly Republican caucus-goers and had
a margin of error of 5 percentage
·
points.
With Forbes' bolstered standing
came fresh scrutiny.
At a Des Moines news conference
Tuesday, the Iowa Right to Life
Commillee, accused Forbes of "acting just like another Washington
·politician when If comes to abortion."
•.
The organization · distributed
copies of a 1993 fund-raising appeal
to support GOP candidates "who are
fiscally conservative and socially
tolerant."
The appeal lists Forbes as one of
five "co-chairs" and lists "freedom
of choice for women" among its
"guiding prin&lt;;iples."
"Mr. Forbes says he is pro-life, yet

2-1~23-3~~7

Kicker:
569372

Clinton plans
March rally in
Columbus.

·,

~·

said. "We feel this is an ars~n murder," he said.
·
Police were searching for George
Avanesian, 40, who fled to his sister's
nearby horne and then left, Perkins
said. The sister called police after he
left her house and told them he had
suffered burns.
"This is a horrendous crime and
we want to find him," Perkins said.
The one-bedroom apartment was
rented toAvanesian, who also goes by
the first name Jorjik. and his wife,
Turim, said Peter Kissablak, the building manager.
The 5:4S a.m. blaze at the four-story tan stucco buil~ng singed the win-

GLENDALE, Calif. (AP) - An
arson fire killed 5even members of an
immigrant family inside their apartment early today, and police were
seeking the missing father wbo apparently fled with burned hands and forehead.
•The victims, four children and
three adults, weren't immediately
identified, police Sgt. Jon Perkins
said. But neighbors said they were
members of an Iranian family who
moved to this country two to three
mc;~nths ago.
Signs of an "accelerant"- flammable substance - were found in the
living room and kitchen, Perkins

Editor's note! A lawsuit oudiMI $5,819 judgment, plus interest, from
;the p q - of one (IPty aplut Patricia A. Imboden of Pomeroy for
~•.It does aot ....,.... pillt medical .services.
The Rural Economic and ·Comorl&amp;ic 1 ce
. ...
· Ina civil cue fjled Tuesday in the munity Development Service was
:Meiss CQIInty Ccbt of Common awarded $39,887.99 plus interest
Pleaa. Peoples Bank of Point Pleas- from Ruth Ann Lance, formerly
ant. W.Va. is seetin1 $1,809.32 and known as Ruth Ann Longenette,
· :$6;948, pillS interest and costs on Tuppen Plains, in a foreclosure suit.
eac~. from Robert L. Sawyen, The ICiilement canies provisions for
foreclosure of the property at 30 Ash
. Pomeroy. lllleailll loin &lt;lefault. .
• Alw Tuesday, ,..id-Obio Carcliol- Slnlet; '~'uppers J'lains.
• ·!'IY ltlc. ofColtqnbus wu panled a

.:CofJPte• /'sued marriage ,licenses

· "We've used our resources to go
o:!irectly to the voters, so it's had more
impact," Forbes said. "We're going
directly to the voters, and they're
responding to our message."
Bob Dole launched the race as the
presumptive favorite in Iowa, and a
· poll released by the University of
Iowa Social Service Institute showed
how much Forbes' message has jumbled things.
The poll showed Dole with the
backing of 24 percent of those surveyed, and Forbes with 15 percent.
Texas Sen. Phil Gramm had 9 percent, as did fanner Tennessee Gov.
Lamar Ale•ander.'
But the poll showed that 42 percent of people surveyed listed themselves as undecided. The survey was
conducted Feb. 1-5 among 400 like-

Pick 3:
381
Pick 4:
9136
Super Lotto:

Fa'm ily of 7 perish in fire believed caused by arson

Common Pleas Court news

:!i.-:: .~=~~R!Jie

Southern girls
cop another
cage victory ,

Forbes pressed on social. issues

APPLAUDS VICTORY - GOP
Pet
BuchiNIII liiii*Udl hill upMt victoly Sen.
In
the Loulalanll Republican CIIICU8 during a victory celebration In
Baton Rouge Tunday. {AP)

.:~~~an·.

Ohio Lottery

f

.

Defense lawyer Martin Delahunty
Ill of·Youngstown said that adrninis·
trative license suspensions that Ohio
and other states have enacted were
political measures to stop the public
at large from drinking and driving.
''It's a great goaL Nobody should
drink and drive ," Delahunty said in
an interview outside the courtroom.
"But when the state deddc s it
wants to punish you first, it wants
your license before you get a chance
to get in a courtroom. then they· re
stuck with that choice of penalti·es,
that pound of flesh they 've picked to
guarantee that they're going to get,"
Delahunty said.
"Our argument is they can't go a
second time. That's double jeopardy." he said.
Motorists who Jose their licenses
under an administrative suspension
may eventually get them back for a

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio
Supreme Court has taken under
advisement eight cases that challenge the constitutionality of the
slate's drunken driving Jaw..
In an unusual move, justices
devoted their entire three-hour oral
argument period Wednesday 10
drunken-driving cases.
Two sections of the law were in
dispute.
One lets police immediately suspend the licenses of motorists stopped
for drunken driving who fail blood·
alcohol tests or refuse to take them.
The other allows authoritoes to
seize the vehicles of repeat offenders.
Defense lawyers told justices that
on-the-spot administrative license
suspensions were unconstitutional
because they imposed two penalties
for one violation -double jeopardy.
Prosecutors disagreed.

$250 reinstatement fee.

But they also face additional
penalties later' - includong a longer
license suspension- if convicted of
drunken driving. That means another
$250 reinstatement fee for a total of
$500.
Michelle Cerni, an assistant prosecuting attorney from Youngs town ,
said there was no double jeopardy
involved because the administrative
suspensi'on and subsequent court
action were pan of a single proceeding.
" If you consider this as the initiatoon of this action, the underlying
OMVI charge, you really have one
proceeding then." Cerni told the
court.
"You're dealing with this officer
... and onc e he turns in his report.
everything is handled under one case

number, you ' ve got one prosecutor ...

this officer is not act ing as a prose-

cut or, " she said.·

Defense lawyer John Lavelle of
Athens saw it differently.
"The officer is not only the investigator but the judge , JUry and executioner in thi s matter." Lavelle said.
"We think the accused should on ly
have to run the gauntlet once, so to
speak." Lavelle sa id.
State Solicitor Jeffre y Sutton
argued that the license suspc nsoon
was not punishment but remedial. a
term used 10 describe sa nctions
intended to protect the public .
"There 's a remedial goal of getting drunken drivers off the road."
Sutton said.
Five of the eight appeals were
from Auglaize County. The other cases were from Mah oning. Athens and
Warren counties.

House OKs civil justice reform bill
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's
business leaders didn 't get everything
they wanted in a House-passed ci vii
justice reform bill . But they carne
close.
·
The bill, which passed Wednesday
54-44, caps non-economic and punitive damages that can be awarded
Ohooans who win product liability,
personal injury or other civil suits. It
also would prevent someone from try ing to recover damages for injuries or
illnesses that tum up more than 15
years after using a product or undergoing a medical procedure.
The bill now heads to the Senate,
where it faces an uncertain future .
The measure has the backing of
business owners, doctors and insurance companies, who say a growing
number of lawsuits and outrageous
jury awards have raised their costs of
doing business and limited innova-

tion .
Opponents, mostly trial lawyers
and consumer advocates, contend
that huge jury awards are rare, and
question claims that the legislation
will lead to lower insurance prcmi ·

and settlement costs tacked onto the
prices of goods and servo ces.
Several, usually pro-business
Republican lawmakers broke ranks
with their party to oppose the bilL
Rep. Jeff Jacobson. R-Vandalia.
urns.
saod he could have supported a bill
"Passage of this bill mthe House aimed at riddong th e court system of
is victory for all Ohioans. who will frivolous lawsuits.
benefit from the approval of these
But the ver.;ion the House passed
important measures," said Roger was topped too far in favor of.special
Geiger, president of the Ohio Alliance interest groups, such as the insurance
for Civil Justice.
industry and chemical companies, he
The coalition repre se nts business- warned.
es, trade groups, farmers. medi cal
Particularly objectionable to
associations. non-profit groups and . Jacobson : caps on jury awards and a
local governments.
provision that limits companies to one
"Everyone feels the impact of the punitive judgment against them even
costs of frivolous lawsuits," Geiger in large class-action lawsuits.
said.
In most cases, caps for non-ecoHe claims that lawsuit abuse costs nomic damages would be limited to
every Ohioan about $1,200 a year in $250,000 - or four times lost wages,
insurance premiums, lawyer's fees medical bills and other compensato-

Forbes drilled on social issues
INDIANOLA, Iowa (AP)- Multimillionaire pu.blisher Steve Forbes is
facing repeated questions over social
issues amid fresh evidence of a
shakeup in the race for next week's
Iowa caucuses.
In a ' slop this morning in Des
Moines, the Republican presidential
candidate was.asked again to defend
his position on abortion.
Forbes responded by saying that as
president he would tiontinate
Supreme Court justices like Antonin
Scalia, one of the more con~ervative
'members who has voted to overturn
a woman's constitutional right to
abortion. . \.
•
"We want abonion to vanish and
disappear in America." Forbes said,

e•plaining the law could change only
with a shift in attitude and culture. ·
"That's the kind of judge I want
on the court," he said.
Forbes also took a position against
affirmative action programs, saying
Americans "should be judged as
individuals and not as members of a
group."
As he rolled through town hallstyle meetings across Iowa Tuesday,
Forbes was questioned repeatedly
about his views on abortion, sex education and gay rights. An anti-aborlion group accused Forbes of trying
to mask his position with millions of
dollars of television advertising.
He was also facing pressure from
rivals complaining abOut his cam-

..4

paign spending. He rejected that criticism, arguing voters "arc not fo.r
sale" and said his message, not, h1s
money, has moved his poll standings.
"We've used our resources 10 go
directly to the voters. so It's had more
impact," Forbes said. "Wfre going
directly to the voters, and they're
responding to our message."
Bob Dole launched the race as the
presumptive favorite in Iowa, and ll
poll released by the University of ,
Iowa Social Service Institute showed
how much Forbes' message has jumbled things .
The poll showed Dole with the
backing of 24 percent of those surveyed, and Forbes with I~ percent.

I .
~

•·

ry damages. The amount could be up
to $1 million in severe cases. Punitive
damages would be limited to
$250,000 or three times the larger of
economic or non-economi c issue s six times if a judges rules it an
ex treme case.

" I cannot vote lor a bi II that I
believe gives rewards to people who
cause harm and does not give remedies to thc or injured victims, " Jac obso n said .
The bill's sponsor, Rep. Pat Tiberi
of Col umbus , defended the caps as
necessary to bringing predictability to
corporate accounting and said the bill
walks the balance between ind ividual
rights and economic competiti veness.
"Under current law, we have created a legal system that Jives and
breathes on the false premise that
every accident can be pinned to a cal·
lous
who must be punished
" Tiberi said.

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