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                  <text>•

Thursday, February 8,1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pega 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Meigs ladles
defeat River

Pick 3:

7-9-8
Plck4:

Valley 61·42

2-6-1-2
Buckeye 5:

Sports, Page 4

11-12-25-31-34

Partly cloUdy ~lht.
lows In the 30s.l8lunler. _
pertly cloudy. Hlghe In tha
soa.

••
Vol. 46, NO. 188
2 Seetlone, 12 l'llgll

Wllll'llle Celar Doctw,

Thursday:

John Crosby

9om ·15pm
10om· 2pm
10om · l!pm
12pm • epm
Spm • epm

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Ftw Wow foo~nt 8y ~r llooo
Lowe'• ..1 NASCAR Wln•ton Cup R.lc;e C.r
The Color Ooctoor, John Craltby fruman

FreelftCin

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JUflloO Tho Clown

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

'

Friday:
Moow... Of fho Choln 5ow WO&lt;Uic:ar.lnt
Lowo'o #11 HASCAR Wlnnon Cup Rico Cor
Tho Color - · John Crooby Froomon
Et~or

Juttlo• fho Clown

Sam · !Sprn
10am . epm

Thursday:

12pm • &amp;pm
1pm ·7pm
Spm • &amp;pm

9urf... l'rop...~n For f'lll~nt
Coromlc T1lo lnoca"""""
&amp;calnlnt &amp; Roflnlohlnt
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5poneo f'lll~"f A SUncllnt

Saturday: ·
Ftw Fou001: Rlpolr ey D.lnoo
Moowo Of fho Chain 5ow WO&lt;Uic:ar:vlnt
fho Cok&gt;r ~r. John Crooloy Froomon
JUftltofho Clown

9am • 2pm

9om ·15pm
lOom • 6pm
11am • 4pm

1pm • &amp;pm

En.,.lur Sunny

Sunday:
10om ·llpm
12pm -llpm

MooW... Of Tho Chain !&lt;lw Woodcor.tnt
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fho Mld.Ohk&gt; Val'"' Cha,W
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Friday:

Saturday:

100 Ftw Homo 5oturlty Vldoocapoo
Will Do Glwn 0"' ey Woloor Lock
fho Mld.Ohk&gt; V.lloy Cha,w
Of Tho Amertoon Rod Cro..

Committee officially kicked off its
campaign for a 'new elementary
school with a reception for community leaders at Southern High School
Thursday evening.
· . The meeting drew approximately
30 committee members and selected
community leaders from throughout
the district, who listened to a presentalion from Dr. James Van Keuren ,
assistant state superintendent of
· schools.
Van Keuren delivered an upbeat .
message for tbe building supporters,
countered by a somber warning that
this may be the last chance for a long
time for state building assistance.
The committee is pursuing a 6.1·
mill bond levy for construction of a
new, state-of·l~·art, K-8 elementary
school and renovations to the high

:;tolnlnt &amp;Roflnlohlnt
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Friday, Fel7ruary 16:

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Saturday, Fei:lruary 17:

Sam
lOam

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lpm
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Coromlc n1o lnotallo6po"f0 1'111~ &amp; s ..nciKnt
How fo Uoo A f'lllnt 5pt'IIY&lt;II'
Orpnlu Your 6tonlfo 5pooo
How fo Uoo A f'lllnt 5~

4pm

1pm ·I:SOpm
tpm • 4pm

FIN~f'lltn&gt;l

Sunday, February 18:
va.nna·Fire O.partmtnt

1pm • 4pm

12pm
2pm

..,..

~HP

I'" K 4' K 6'

. -$antlnel News Staff
· Customers of the Tuppers PlainsChester Water Districf will notice a
difference in rate charges on their latest bill, di!CJO a system-wide increase
apf2{'QV¢ by t~ d(ijficf bOanHhat
became effeclive Feb. I .
The increase, approved by the
board in October 1995, is a structured
user increase on each block of gallon
usage, according to TP·C Water Oen·
eral Manager Donald Poole.
"We sell water to our customers
per 1.000 gallons of usage," he
explained. "Each usage block had a
different rale increase, ranging from
19 percent for customers using 0 to
2,000 gallons per month to about a
half percent to customers using

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waHpa,.r .,1730

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Aeaoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton and Republican lawmakers
are i*hing closer to resolving thCir
bitter standoff over raising the gov·
emmenfs borrowing limit, but House
GOP members are still upbraiding
Treasury Secretary Roben Rubin:
At a hearing Thursday, Rep. Jim
Saxton, R-NJ .. accused him of helping' to perpeluate a "default hoax"
and "political disinfonnation cam-

sure .

Van Keuren said the building
assistance program has made great
differences in many school districts..
So far, the state has funded 115 projects to the tune of $500 million.
He cited a personal example
when. as a district superintendent, his
district passed an issue similar to
Southern-Local's.
"I saw a totally different altitude
in the kids and community," he said.
"I cannot believe the opportunity
you have here ... especially the tech·
nology piece," he said. "Our $3.1 mil·
lion will be invested well."
(Continued on Page 3)

paign."

DISCUSSES BUILDING PROGRAM - Dr.
Jemas Yen Keuren, aaelatant state euperln·
tendent of 1chools, addressed Southam Local
81,1lldlng Committee members and community
leedera rt~uredey night at Southern Local High
School. Yen Keuren, shown standing next to 1

'

. By TOM HUNTER

500,000 gallons per month."
The increase, the first basic rate
adjustment for the district in 14
years. was deemed necessary to help
offset cokts of the district's threeph~ $~,2 mi\lipn expansion p~oject. --.. · . .
· The project includes construction
of a new $950,000 transmission lines,
· · a·$605,000 main storage tank, and a
$1.65 million expansion to double the
treatment capacity of the district's
lreatment plant near Long Bottom,
according to Poole.
"The construction and also oper·
ating costs as growth occurs are the
reasons for the increase," Poole said.
"Right now, we've seat a July date
for the advenising bids on the new
construction." he added. "We tenta-

tively figured on July about a year or
so ago, but once we recciv~d Issue II
monies we·officially set a date. If we
would not have been able to gel the
Issue II money, the increase would
have. p(ob~bly.. been higher."
Soll)e TP.C water c~ts have
expressed concerns over the increase,
which resulted in as much as a 52
percent for peak useri of 3,000 jo
4,000 gallons. According to Poole,
the complaints are understandable
due to the long period of time
between increases.
"There have been some complaints from our customers, and
understandably so." he said. "The
water board really wrestled over
implementing this increase for several months pnor to their decision.

diagram of.the propoeed school, seld thle may
be the dlatrlct'a last chance to take advantage
of the $3.1 million In state money for building
assistance. The focuala shifting toward eselst·
ing inner city schoola, he explllned.

Rate adjustment set by TP-C
TABLE INFORMATION:
0-2,000 gallons- 19 percent increase.
3,000 gallons (peak)- 52 percent increase.
4,000 gallons- 40 percent.
5,000 gallons- 33 percent.
6,000 gallons - 28 percent.
7,000 gallons - 25 percent.
8,000 gallons- 22 percent.
9.000 gallons- 20 percent.
. IO.OQO gallons- 19'pe.-.ent.
500.006 gallons - less than I/2 percent.
Source: TP·C Water District
"I think the customers arc asking
that we don't wait another 14 years
before we implement another
increase. We should have smaller
increases in shorter variables of
lime." Poole added .
"In 1980, the rate were adjusted in
only dollars and not gallons," he conlinucd. "This time we made the rate
increase in both dollars and gallons.
As a percentage, the average was

probably 5. 10. We had the lowest rural water rate in the state before the
rate increase. Now, we're probably
not the lowest, but we're not yet even
in the mid-range statewide as far as
rate expense is concerned," said
Poole.
All of the complaints received by
the district on the increase will be
reported to the board, Poole said.

·Feds add three counties to fl9od assistance

·-··

$9.0

3"" ThiGk X 15" Wft:le

Faced R·11 lneulatlon
•For lntorlor wollo oliO "''· ft.
~ndlo •l..lu.loo fll&lt;l"f .. "'"" •
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from community leaders in the,.district to drum up support for the mea-

TP-C .Water District raises "rates
to offset expansion job expense

Sunday:
6poneo f'lll~"f &amp; ~lll"f
Hlnl- FIDM lno..lldlon
Orp... Your &amp;to"'SO 5P""

Congress,- White
House nearing
accord to hike
borrowing ceiling

The commillce is soliciting help

Spm

lOam· 2pm

VIenna FIN Doportmont

...

Raising
the limit

:State official touts need
:for Southern bond issue
.:ay JIM FREEMAN
schooL Total cost of the project is
$7,370,600, with the state pickirg up
.Sentinel N-• Staff
The Soulhern Local Building $3,190,800 of the tab.

.... ~c..........

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AGanMftCo.lt•••PIPIJ ,

-Last ch-ance?

.

"""'11-41

·-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Febr"ary 9, 1996

Gallia eligible
for public aid
only, EMA says

·&gt;

71/..11 Ciroular Saw

COLUMBUS (AP) - The federal government has added three Ohio
counties to the list of those eligible
for public assistance because of damage from last month's flooding.

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that Adams. Brown and Galli a counties were eligible for public assistance. That program provides feder·
al money to help replace and repair
public buildings. roads and bridges
damaged by flood waters.
Residents in Adams, Brown and
Scioto counties can now apply for
individual assistance - ldw-intcrcst
loans and grants lo replace and repair

Telecom
industries
launch hunt
for business

32" White Or &amp;ronze
Sfenla ColleGtlon

The government also on Thursday
made individual assistance available
to residents in Scioto County, which
already was eligible for public aid.
And the government denied public assistance to Hamilton and Clcr·
mont counties, but individual assis·
lance ·is available to residents there.
The federal and Ohio emergency
management agencies said Thursday

USATOD~Y
. WASHINGTON - President
Clinton's signing Thursday of the bill
that overhauls U.S. telecommunications law ignited a veritable free-forall in the industry.
"Our laws will catch up with our
future," Clinton said, signing with an
device using digital ink on an elcclronic tablet.
It razes .the barriers between
phone, cable and long-distance companies, and restricts contept on computer networks.
·It didn't take long for the changes
to:Stir up action.
:Within an hour, long-distance carrier AT&amp;T said it will offer local serviee in some areas by early fall for the
fint time since its 1984 breakup.
. :CEO Robert Allen predicted
AT&amp;T would win ope:third of the
$90 billion local market in the next
five to 10 years.
Meanwhile, local telephone com. pany GTE Corp. said it's getting into .
the long-dislancc business with
WorldCom Inc.
Regional companies Bell Atlantic
and Nynex already arc considering
teaming up to grab long-distance cil$·
tomers in the Northeast and MidAtlantic.

homes and businesses.
The federal agency rejected
requests for public assistance from
Hamilton and Clcnnont counties.
but officials there still may apply to
the state Controlling Board for assistance, said Dale Shipley, coordinating
officer for the Ohio EMA. Individual
federal assistance already is available
to residents there.

li~ting

Gallia County is eligible for the
public assistance only, while Scioto
County previously had been eligible
for public assistance, the agencies
said. The addition of the four' counties brings to I 3 the number eligible
for some type of federal assistance.
The olher counties receiving Oood
relief arc Belmont. Columbiana, Jefferson, Lawrence, Meigs. Monroe
and Washington.

Dole's descent in polls
encourages GOP rivals

A STEP FORWARD - VIce Pralldant AI Gore end President
Cll.nton attended 1 Thuraclly cenmony It the Library of Congrosa
vm- the president elgnlld the Telecommunications Reform Act.
Clinton 11ld the leglalltlon will "bring the future to 911r doorstep."
(AP)
f
But AT&amp;T's Allen said Thursday
he would oppose any alliance .
between the two if it is designed to
let them offer long-distance services
sooner than ihe bill pennits·.
Opponents- of the new law also
took to the courts:
• Abonion-rights activists tried but
failed to block part of the law thai
they say mllket it a federal crime to
talk about abortion oo the Internet.

....

.• The American Civil Libenies
Union and 19 other groups challenged the prohibition against using
a computer to send "indecent" mate·
rial to a minor. They say .it allows
prosecution of individuals for any
computer mejsage about sex.
The Justi~ DepWnent said it will
wait arleast a week before prosecuting anyone.

Rep. John L. Mica, R-Fia.,
charged Rubin with an "unprecedented raid" on trust funds set aside
for civil' service retirees. He used the
words "' stole," .. rob" and "bas·

tardized" to describe Rubin's decision to stave off a federal default by
withholding cash intended for the
funds and replacing securities in
them with non-interest-bearing IOUs.
Mica. chainnan of the House civil service subcommittee, testified
before the House Banking Commit-·
tee. He preceded Rubin, who defended his actions and praised Republican
leaders in Congress for their Feb. I
pledge to pass mutually acceptable
legislation raising the federal debt
cei ling above $4.9 .trill_iq_n.
.
Criticism from the banbng COfll·
mittee chairman, Rep. Jim Leach, Rlowa, was far more measured than
from Mica and Saxton. And the
chainnan of the committee's oversight panel , Rep. Spencer Bachus, RAia., told Rubin he disagreed with
other Republicans who advocated ·
impeaching the secretary:
But Democrats seized on Mica
and Saxton's comments as evidence
of what Rcp .• Charlcs Schumer, D·
N.Y.. labeled as GOP extremism.
Mica -- who stirred controversy in
November when he referred to Clinton during House debate as "the little bugger" ·- stood by his com-·
. ments.

Saxton, vice chainnan of Con·
gress' Joint Economic Committee,
criticized the administration for warning last fall of a default's dire consequences even though it had been
studying ·various bookkeeping
maneuvers for months to avoid a

default .
He said an internal Treasury
·Department memo shows that by
June 27 the administration had identified ci vil service trust funds as a
source of financing in the event of a
debt limit impasse.
Rubin acknowledged that his
depanmcnt had identified a wide
range of possibilities for continuing
operations in the absence of c&amp;ngrcssional action. But he added that
as the weeks passed most proved to
be either illegal or imprudent.
I) was on ly on the eve of default
on No~. IS that administration officials detennined with cenainty they
could legally draw enough money
from civil service funds to keep
operating, he said .
Rubin has since warned that he
would run oul of maneuvering room
before March I . That led Republican
leaders lasi week to pledge to pass
debt legislation acceptable to both
them and Clinton by Feb. 29.

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) - cd voters - and they were the clear
Republican candidates are scram- target as GOP contenders crissbling for a huge bloc of undecided crossed the state.
"Get out your Christmas card
voters in the Iowa caucuses with just
lists"
to help lobby for his candida·
a few days to go. With Bob Dole losing ground, his rivals are working . cy, Gramm told audiences at several
Slops in eastern Iowa on Thursday.
hard to close the gap.
Texas Sen. Phil Gramm, trying to He maintained a stiff upper lip and
regain his footing after setbacks, tried to ignore a defeat earlier in the
was even offering plastic peel-off week by conservative commentator
bumper stickers - for Republicans Pat Buchanan in a Louisiana caucus
prone to changing their mind. He most GOP candidates had boycotted
- but which Gramm had predicted
off~red to send campaign workers out
the day after the caucuses to remove he 'd win.
them - if necessary.
·
Dole, still the front-runner - but
Buchanan played 'the Louisiana
Congress also passed legislation
JUSt barely - was back· from a day victory for all it was wonh, declaring
last
week - signed by Clinton on .
of campaigning in New Hampshire to himself "the temporary front-runner"
- that has the effect of ::
tThursday
engage in heavy-duty campaigning in campaign appearances Thursday.
extending the deadline into mid- '
here to shore up his fragile lead. He
Gramm strategists contended the March. The legislation allows the
pronounced his Iowa operation "in race was far from over, and that the
good shape," even though new polls extent of undecided voters so close to government to borrow $30 billion
outside the debt ceiling, ensuring it
suggested his lead was shrinking.
the election made Monday's conte&lt;l can mail Social Security checks at the
And publishing he,ir Steve Forbes, a true grab bag.
start of March.
whose surprising surge in the polls
Gramm dismissed Buchanan 'i
Republicans are pressing Clinton
had caught mosl political profes- victory as a Ouke and pressed hard to
sionals and rival camps off guard,. win the support of lol"a conserva- to ~pt substanti!ll spending cuts, as
well as a cut in capital gains taxes and .
was back in the suite to bolster l!is tives.
a
per-child tax credit, as attachments·
self-financed advertising campaign
to
the debt ceiling increase.
But he encountered some skepti·
with several days of intensive retail
Rubin said that since GOP lead- '
campaigning.
· cism.
ers'
Feb. I pledge there has been ''no :
David Solbell!l. an Independence,
. Recent polls showed some support
ebbing for Forbes, who has made a Iowa, ceramic shop owner, ~d after meaningful work" on strikina an • ·•
17 percent Oat income tBJL the cen- meeting Gramm at a town hall meet- tlgfCCment. But he said the OOP
terpiece of his campaign. These polls ins thll ·he was still hiving a hard promise I!CVettheless wu "a vwy
constructive step."
•l&lt;o showed a large bloc of undecid- time making up his mind.

,.;;

�•

\

Commentary

...•'

•

P8SJ12

Friday, FebrUary 9, 1911

.

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. February 8, 1986
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Publl1her

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH

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er, the~ is Pfenty of blame to go

unable to collect.

i · Normally, iuakes I0 daYs to one around. The original tape was found
WASJIDIOTON ,. Thanks .to a m&lt;inth betweett the ~ 11 tape i$ sent to be cn:Ced, which rende!ed it unus·
bureaucrali~ blunder' by the Educa- from-a guara11tee •geney to the time
, able. So USA Group sent out a sec-

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111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

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, Fin.ding the
world's
flattest tax
..

tion Department and the privllle guarantee agencies it works with, more
than 24,000·defaulted borrowers got
an eight-month ~pricye from their
·•
loan payments last year. .
The episode is indicaiive of the
growing tension be,tWeelt the federal
government and the multibillion-dol·
lar student-loan indu~icy. Student
loan guarantee agencies have been
living on borrowed time since the
advent of direct lending .. a Clinton
administration initiative that lets stu·
dents borrow directly from the gov·
ernment at·lower interest mtes.
Our story begins last May, when
USA Group .. a student-loait guar·
~tee agency .. sent an electronic tape
with infonnation abo.ut 24,000
defaulted student loans to the Depart·
ment of Education. USA Group was
turning the loans over under a process
called . "subrogation," which gives
the government responsibility for
loans on which a private agency was

.BY Jack Anderson
and
Michael Blnsteln
its infonnation is transferred intp the
government's computers. But somehow it took nearly eight months
before this particular tape's data was
finally transferred on Jan. 12. In the
meantime, all 24,000 defaulted bOr·
rowers got an unexpected vacation
from their creditors.
Now each side is blaming the mher for the-snafu. USA Group says i)'s
the department's fault for npt processing the tape on lime. Education
Department officials contend that
~S~ ~roup is responsible fo~ ser·
~tcang tts subrogated loans Until the
govemmerii verjties that the tape has
~n received.
AcconjinJ to the records, howev-

ond tape in IisJy, .but that one was
never found. Finally, a third tape was
sent to the Ed~ation Department in
November, an!J. that is the one that
was eventually processed last month.
The proble111 eventuatly caught
the attention o( the district office of
Sen. Phil Gramm, R·Texas, when a
constituent complained ·about her
loan not being ~rviced. A Gmmm
staffer asked USA ·Group for an
explanation.
"II took the. Departmeni over seven months to recognize the problem
they created," a USA Group official
wrote back, "seven mbnths during
which th- was no collec'\ion on this
'defaulted Joan al!d· where the guar·
·antor was preven~ from assisting a
borrower who wanted to resolve her
problems."
The letter continues with a•not-soveiled shot at direct lending .. even
· ihough the missing loans had nothing
10 ~ 0 with the pro'gram. "Can an
•

(Ectltor'a nOte • David Brlacoe Is standing In for Special Cor·
re1po11dent Walter R. Mears, who Ia away.
By DAVID BRISCOE
.
•A AaiOCiated Preas Writer
t,
WASHINGTON (AP) - When it comes to taxes, the world isn't flat,
,. .. but it's getting flatter. ·
•
Proponents of a single income tax rate for all Americans will have to
. .. . search the globe before they find a truly flat system - one where. you can
: , , file your return on a postcard.
;.,..
In fact, they may not find one.
, .
-. , ' Tax analysts disagree on whether any country has a truly flat tax on all
income. In the murky world of taxation, there are so-called flat taxes, and
,. , then there are flatter •.axes. Nearly every system allows some deductions or
. : exemptions, and most have &lt;;lifferent ways and rates for taxing various types
•• · of income.
,.
The ultimate goal of the flat tax movement is to equalize the tax bite so
as to increase savings rates, provide more business clfpital, stimulate employ·
ment, boost productivity and, ultimately, mise ·living·standards.
; · Opponents say it's just a ploy to make the rich richer.
~- :
Whatever the impact, analysts on both sides agree that taxes are getting
• · flatter around the world, as countries look for ways to make their economies
. , more compeuuve.
Even the U.S. system is much flatter than it used to be: There were as
many as 18 tax levels in effect prior to 1986 and rates as high as 91 percent
a few decades ago.
If the United States achieves further tax simplification and starts taxing
, . all income at the same rate, analysts believe other countries would follow
' suit.
;,
"If America would actually adopt such a system, most of the rest of the
· · world - at least the industrialized world - would have no choice," said
., . BryanT. Johnson, co-author of the conservative Heritage Foundation's annual Index of Economic Freedom.
'
•.
He said Washington's diplomatic community h.. been lining up for brief·
. ings on \(1e vanous flat tax proposals.
.
Heritage's i,ndex rates 142 countries on a variety of factors, including tax.. : ation. Those that score the best- I or 1.5 on a scale o( S- tend to have
the flattest taxes, Johnson said.
By William A. Ru1her
.,
The United States, with its multi-rate system ranging from 17 percent to
Once in every three or four blue
39.6 percent, scores a 4 on taxation.
moons a story comes along that
,
Republican presidential candidates Steve Forbes, Pat Buchanan and Sen. makes you want to stand up, throw
' · ' Phil Gramm all want to flatten that out to a rate of 16 percent or 17- percent your hat into the air and cheer. A book
for all earned income, with few or no deductions or exemptions.
being published this month tells one
Steve Entin of the Institute for Research on EconomiC$ and Taxation says such stacy. and I predict that it is
no country has a flat tax such as the one envi~ioned by the politicians. He going to be a national bombshell.
Here, in essence and in chrono. said Hong Kong comes the closest with "a fairly flat rate."
Price Waterhouse, the global aocounting firm that charts taxes in 116 coun· logical order, is the story. Morris
. tries, lists four graduated rates for Hong Kong, ranging from 2 percent to Childs was born near Kiev in 1902,
: : · 20 percent. There is, however, a flat rate of IS percent for anyone earning emigrated to Chicago with his parents, and joined the Communist Par:: over roughly $115,000.
: So, for big earners, Hong Kong's system is about as flat~ and as low ty in 1919. He caught the eye of
Communist leader Earl Browder, and
:: - as anywhere.
·
:
"Gee, is It a coincidence that Hong Kong has the fastest-growing econ· in I 929 was sent to the Lenin 'School
io Moscow, where he struck up
:: omy in the world~" Johnson says .
. Looking further, Paraguay has no tax on personal income .and charges a friendships with two of his instruc·
·: flat rate of 30 percent on corporate income, according to Price Waterhouse's tors: Yuri Andropov, later the longtime head of the KGB, and Mikhail
· "Individual Taxes: a Worldwide Summary.".
Estonia has two flat rates. It taxes employee income at 26 percent and Suslov, who was to become the chief
ideologist of the Politburo.
interest income at 10 percent.
These connections Served Childs
A top contender for the flattest income tax is in Bolivia. Price Waterhouse
well
when he returned to Chicago:
· . · says it collects 13 percent on all personal_income, with a unifonn personal
Moscow
soon ordered the CPUSA to
: exemption.
. But Bolivia scores only a less·than-perfect2 on Heritage's scale, because make him its Chicago head and a
· it has a 2S percent corporate tax rate and imposes a variety of other levies. member of the party's governing cen·
· New Zealand, another candidate for ultimate flatness, .has a two-tiered tral committee. By 1945 he was edi·
rate that hits earnings below $20,000 at 24 percent and anything above at
· ' · 33 percent.
·
[i ; Even Sweden, which Heritage gives a perfectly bad "5" as one of the
l·! : highest taxing countries, has been moving towards lower, flatJCt: rates.
The search for flat taxes has to end with four countries that score a per·
~~ · feet I on the Heritage scale: Bahrain, the Bahamas, United Arab Emirates
By George R. Plagenz
r.:
and
.
·
r~
' Kuwait.
.
•
~~may be the closest we have ever
c· . They have no income tax at all. And that's about as flat as you can get. come
to contacting another civiliza·
I
tion
in
space (unless you believe the
NOTE- David Briscoe has been reporting on domes·
' 'de EDITOR'S
flying
saucer
stories). Will we ever
•nd international affairs rrom Washlnaton since 1986.
~:
come so close again?
t. t
It was on Aug. 17, 1977.
Astronomers monitoring the Ohio ..
.•
State University "Big Ear" radio telescope in Delaware, Ohio, watched
"'f
with astonishment as the .computer
'• Dear Editor
While I was working 1 never got hooked up to the radio receiver
•'
· '
'
flfShed a 70-second teletype trans; ;: • Coneeniing the rate hike on our a 50 percent increase which you are mission that had all the characteristics
.; water bills from the Tuppers Plains· charging me.
Would you or any other on the of a radio $ignal with intelligent,
· ,~ Chester Water District, 1received my
~ water bill for the month of January board want to pay SO percent increas· exuarerresuial origins.
"~ and ii is up around 50 percenf
·
One of the stupefied scientists
of what es ·on anything you buy?
·
'-'.' 1have pn paying. .ram not against
1 feel you .have gone 100 far ask· ~.xami~!?.g the tra~smission .wrote
.,
... , 1 th'1nl&lt; •thi
· 11
· ing' this out of the people in the comWow. tn the margan of the pnntout.
" t prosress. .,.;t ·
''fl
s pnce •
"The signals definitelv came from
· ~ exceasive because the average house- inunity.
·
'
SciaD:r U.rril outer space," said the observatory's
. ; ~ hold .IJICs around 3,00Q gallons; so
.
~
assistant director. Whether they were
· .: you are'hitting us 0 both ends, price
• being sent by alien civiliza!ions is a
~; 3 .wiseanddiopping.themiiiilllllm.
questionthath..n'tbeen .answered
-1
for the signal was never ' picked up
"!
'
again.
·
· ·
.
~, . Piv~ ~~-1Jo: Votm'in Lithuania o~erwhe)ininJlY en~ inilepen:
Since .1977 bl1ger lmd)IIQI'Opow·.
t ~ ·ftolll 'the·:Soviel Union in a non-binding plebiscite. odfense Secre• . . erful telescopes have joined in !he·
' ta,y bick~)'•.~iointChiefs thainnanColin L, PoweU met with mil; outer space search project 1\nown as
: • 1 illli ~ ·ill Sa~i 'Arabia to ev-'UIIIC a ~lbk! grouitd ~ult
SB'TI (for ' 1SeUth for Exiraleneitri·
aiiWt ~i forces: •
•·
..
··,
~
·.
al lntelliaence:'). Whill olheuipal•
~-j . One year~: '.Fonner Sen. J. Willi11111 Fulbriiht d,ied in W"""'atllil,il . have heel\ lrlcked, titeR has been
:1..-89.
, ;,
1'
,
· , '.,
nothiiiJ to match the ."Wow!"~ .
: .li'Dday'il Binllclays: Actreu KaiiJryn Oraylol\ is 73, ~~visioll journalisl covery. Aitd nobody hal ever called
~ Mud4 i 6i. S . ~ Kin&amp; is S4..Actor ,Joe Paci iJ ,, 3, Author. ' back.
·• . , ·
• ,.AJjce W.O. iS~.~ Mia PII'I'Ow is 51.
,,
•
M~Whlle, the ~- for Birth·
•
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IT'S All

YOUR

Fl4ULT.

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expanded federal program do a bet·
ter job? It does not appear that an
expanded federal' presence will help
the borrowers and the taXpayers." .
It oertainly won't help USA Group
.. whose chief executive earns more
than $650,000 per year, or more than
three times that of the president of
United States. Although it's listed as
a non-profit organization, at least f6
executives at USA Group and ils
affiliates earn salaries of mqn: thiia
$100,000 per year .. money tb4t
comes straight from the pockets qf ·
student·IDl\!1 borrowers. .
The Clinton administration, J!lCIII!·
while, is eager to take credit for the
success of direct lending. Last month,
the PeparlliJent o~ Education reponed the lowest student loan !lefault rate
·since the department started keeping
records in 1988 .. 11.6 percent;
down from a high of 22.4 percent
three years earliet. But those numbet;\
are from 1993, before direct lending
went intq,effect.
. ,.
Republicans in Cong~ss tried
their best to eviscerate the program·
laSt year and ~tum the student loan
progmm to the banks and guarantee
agencies. But their efforts were halted when Clinton vetoed the budget
reconciliation bill. The Republican
plan would have ~uced direct lend·
ing to 10 percent of total loan volume, down from nearly 40 percent
last year.
Administration officials seemingly aren't too fazed by the misSing
tape, even if it left 24,000 borrowers
in the lurch for most of last year, One
official noted that in other cases, mix·
ups between'the Department of Education and the guarantee age~cies
have led to some borroweR being
billed for ihe same loan by both agen·
cies at once.
,
Leo Kornfeld, special assistant tp
Education Secretary Richard Riley,
calls the case of the missing tape
"unusual" and says the department
usually takes no more than a month
to process tapes. "I'm sure we co,uld
have been IIIOI'il responsive," Kornfeld told our associate Jan MoHer.
"That's not the issue. The more fun'
damental issue is what they're dri·
ving at. ... Direct loans puts them out
of business."
Jatk Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers Cor Uniled
Feature Syndicate, lac:.

&gt;

'

William A. Rusher

.

Searching for life in

.

i·.Le ers t 0 th e ed•t
I 0r
..·. . UpSA
. t over water bt"ll ··ncrease

.

Reedlvih .

!

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out~r

of Lenin on his chest. Four years Iat·
er, when domestic attacks on.the FBI
were causing dangerous leaks.Oper·
ation Solo.was finally closed down'.
Childs quietly disappeared from his
Chicago haunts, leaving pany boss
Gus Hall (who had always hailed him
as "my secretary of state") to WOII.'
der where he was, when he had been
"turned," and what ghastly Commu':
nist secrets he had revealed.
In 1987 ~sident Reagan quietly
conferred on Morris Childs the Pres·
idential Medal of Freedom .. the.
nation's highest civilian awaril:
Childs lived on until 1991, to see and
relish the fall of the Berlin Wall.
So score one .. a big one .. for the
United States. And let's hear three
cheers for the FBI, which has taken
a lot of knocks in recent years. In
"Operation Solo: The FBI's Man in
the Krcmlin,"'author John Barron has
put a splendid feather in its cap. ·.
William A. Rusher is • Dlstin·
llUished FeUow of the Cianmont
lf!stitute Cor the Study of Slates111811Ship and Political PltQollophy.

space

evolve and must have environment.U
like planets goes on in neighboring dimensions made believing easier.
solar systems to our own. A January
We cannot of coul'lie recover "the conditions that are relatively constant
headline read: "Two new 'planets' are heaven that lay behind the b)ue cur· But it is probable, he said, that atleas't
f~und." Both showed signs of being tain of the sky" bu! to be able to feel some of the I 00 million earth-like
that those are not just "cold, shelter· planets in our galaxy fulfill these conGeorge
less dcsens of astronomical s~e" ditions.
Morrison said he doubts we will
. _
outthcrebutsomehody'shome'ISat
ever meet t~ people· in outer space.
able to S4pport life. But it 1s the least slightly com(ortins.
search for alien civilizations already
Scientists arc almost certain the~ They are too far away. But he feels
in place and already flourishihg that is intcll!ge~t life in outersP\'Ce. ~c; the more advanced civilizations are.
most captures our imaginations. · ·.conclusaon as anescapable, saK!l'halip trying right now to gel in touch wit4...
It. somehow would make the uni· Morrison, the eminent physicist
at us by radio signal, as was the sender
.,.
verse seem friendlier to know there Massachusctts.Institutc of aechnolo· of the "Wow!" signal.
are other peonle out' there. Contem· gy. "The~ are· 2~ milliol! sun,Jike
Somehow just knowing,that some-' •
·
•·
·
a1
I·
l'k 1 body out there wants to make contact .. ·
plating the vastness of outer space st~ mour I ~~Y· t seems un l ~ y
gives some people an enlarged· con· that only' one an that number - our .With us makes the linh·erse seem less'
·
cept of God. But not. me. I feel as Pas· s,un .. has a planet.w,ith i111ellige. nt life ampel'lional.
Geofle Plaleaz II 1 s)'lldb~.
cal did when he said, "The eternal on it." .
..
•.
silences and infinite spaces terrify , Of course, Morrison pointc;d out, writer for Newspaper enterprite•
·
•
me."
,.
' '
a .planet must have a history of.lllil· Alsotladon.
r
f
h H ~
Father George 1)'rrell is a kindred tons o years so 1 at 1 e orms may
spirit too. If astronomy has in some
· ·
wayJi enlarged it bas also impover·

R. Plagenz .

sisa~ad. ournoti~nsllftheheav~ns: he

~.

lio'da'y .l·n.hl•story

' IColumbus ISO".1
•

'I

,

!l

tor of the Daily Worker, but he was the FBI dubbed "Operation Solo."
Just for one thing, Childs smug~usted froll) that job two years later
gled
dver $28 million in U.S. curwhen Browder lost control of the parrency
from Moscow t6:•its waiting
ty. Disillusioned and seriously ill with
stooges in the United States .. after
the FBI had noted the serial number
on every bill.
But there was more.! On almost
hean trouble, Childs was sidelined every trip he had long private talks
for .several years, though ·he did
. not with Andropov and Suslbv, as well as
res•gn.
with Boris .Ponomarev, head of the
It was in those years that he was International Department (formerly
.recruited by the FBI, to remain in the the Comintem). They provided him
party as one of its "assets." Just how with a comfortable apartment in
valuable an asset became apparent in Moscow, questioned hiin on Ameri·
19S7 when its new general secretary, can politics and polici~s. and confidEugene Dennis, mindful of Childs' ed to him their hopes and fears .on
friends in Moscow, appoinied him as such hot topics as China and the Unit·
his deputy, in ·charge of all dealings ed States. Reports based on these
with foreign Communist parties, tal~s were promptly shown by the
including the Russian and Chinese.ln FBI to high-level U.S. officials;· but
1958 Childs' old friends invited him they were not allowcxl.to keep them.
to Moscow.
and not even presidents were told
That was the fil'lit of 52 trips that their source unlil1975tandthereafter.
Morris Childs made to the Soviet
In 1917, on the occasion of
Union and other Communist coun- Childs' 7Sth birthday, Leonid Brezhtrie~ (including China and Cuba) in
nev ·held a secret dinner in his honor
the next 23 years, on behalf of what in the Kremlin, and ~ned the Order

.

.,"
·
· ,,

"The heaven that lay behind the
.
. ·
·
bluecurtainofthesky, when night by • By The A11ocllllwd Preaa .
.
! ·~.
night Go4 ~ung oilt his ·~ilver IIIIIIPs '
Today !li ~st&lt;11)'
· ••
. .
; .
to shine upon the Earth; was a far
.Jhday ts Fgday, Feb~ 9. the 40th day ofJ.996· The~ are 326days left iO ;.
deeper synll!ol of the eternal home the Y~·
.
,
··
·
·
!han the cOld, shelterless ~ of · T&lt;Kiay's Hia~light..in Hist~:
.
.
:~•
aSuonomiW space," said 1Yrrell. .
. ln. 1~3, ihe World Wai' ll battle of O.....canitl in the southwest Pacif. •
'· Many 'ofiQ find it hard in·a uni· ic·elldecl.with·au.S-;victory'bverJapanesefOrcea. '
·
· . ~ ...
verse u boundlesi IIi olin to coni:eive · On this &lt;Wie:
·
· ·
•
J'
: :,
of a Ood who can be inteiesu,d in the.
' In I?13, llie ninth praident of the United Stai'es, Will
Heilry u.,.;: ,
fallen SPIO:OW. The old biblical . son, wu ~ in ~ City Cou~. Va. '
,
!
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• ''\
(
..
' :.

lam

W. VA.

Ice

\1

,..

Sur Pt.= ·=

.

.'

:·.·Weekend ·surprise: ·warm
:::Saturday, coider Sunday
· . - By The A1aoclated Preu
.
The weekend will get off to a
· · pleasant start across Ohio on Satur. ·'day with partly cloudrskies and temperatures mostly in the SOs, forecast·
· · ers said.
But it is likely to ium wintry after
· · · that.
·
Sleet or snow with falling tem·
·
· ' peratures are in the Sunday forecast.
· By Monday, the warmest tempem·
tures may be in the teens, the National Weather Service said .
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
&lt;tat ion was 64 degrees in 1894 while
the record low was 17 below zero in
1899. Sunset tonight will be at6 p.m.
and sunrise Saturday at 7:31 a.m.

Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Panly cloudy. Lows
from around 30 to the mid 30s.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy north
and central. Partly cloudy south. A lit·
tie warmer with highs from the upper
40s north ib the mid 50s.south.
Saturday night ... A chance of rain
showets. Lows in the 30s.
· Extended Corec:ut:
Sunday... A chance of rain or snow
showers. Highs 3S to 45 early, with
temperatures falling to between 25
and 35 by evening.
Monday...Colder. Hurries north·
east. Dry elsewhere. Lows in the
teens. Highs from the mid teens to
mid 20s.
Tu~sday...Dry. Lows in the teens.
Highs in the 20s.

Meigs land transfers posted
The following land transfers wcrq bum, Marjorie Brewer to OMEGA
· . recorded recently in the office df JV5, Olive;
Meigs County Recorder Emmogen~
Deed, Joseph M. and M!Vgaret
. · Hamilton:
Fasano to OMEGA JV5 and Connie
Deed, AI and Marjorie Tromm to M. Manley, Olive;
Patricia Gibbs, Middleport,;
Deed, Rena D. Harper to OMEGA
Deed, Point Mason Auto Glass to JV5, Olive;
Mforda
. rk' D. and Ca~A
. . Huds'on, Bed·
Deed, Charles R. and Peggy L.
.
·Stephcliis' to OMEGA N5;·Olive;
Deed. John F., Marilyn K., Marcus
Deed, Betty Harlis to OMEGA
J. and Ellen B. Fultz to George F. and N5, Olive parcels;
Mary H. Stewart, Pomeroy parcels:
Deed, Gary and Kimberly Hrinda
Certificate, Zenis Blankenship, - to Bruner Land Co. Inc .. Columbia;
Deed; Marvin L. and Marjorie J.
deceased, to Robert Blankenship,
Patricia Stewart, Stewart Blankenship Keebaugh to Forrest Roger Barnett,
. and John Blankenship, Bedford/Sal· Orange, ·.91 ac~;
.. isbury parcels;
·
Deed, Kathryn E. and · Bob
Deed, Grover C. Jr. and ll.lsie . Gilm- to Roger L. Manley Sr.
·' Marie White to ·Tuppers Plains· Trust, Middleport;
Deed, ..Kary Lomtine Luimer to
Chester Wl\ter District, Chester par·
Larimer Family Trust, Columbia, 17
. eel;
Deed, Ira and Hope M. Eblin to acres;
Walter W. arid Sheryl Lynn Roush, . Deed, Marilyn Jean Archer,
Syracuse, .514 acre;
Charles Minor Bland, Janet and
Deed, State of Ohio to Family Louise Bland to Randall G. and Dar·
Homes Inc., Salisbury, 1.321 acres;
Ia J. Hawley, Middleport;
Deed, Samuel Larry and Paula
Deed, . Mary K. Holter to John
Jean Pickens to Gregory and Vicki Keith and Margaret Suzanne Bentz,
Smith, Salisbury, 3.337 acres;
Chester;
Deed, Jason D. Sheets to Ezra J.
Deed, F~mily Homes Inc. to
Mason County Economic Corpora· and Lisa J. Sheets, Orange parcel; .
twn, Salisbury parcels;
' :::•; Deed, Mark A. and Regina
Easement, Lacy and Nadine S. Yoacham to Nancy J. Yoacham, SuiBarton to OMEGA NS, Rutland, ton, one acre;
4.701 acres;
Deed, Barbara Lou Hopkins to
Deed, Warren and Christine Rath· Lyle and Sharon Baker, Racine lots.

C~u

crushes Athens· man

·ATHENS (AP) -An Athens man died after the,1ack supporting the car
he was workin~ ~nder slipped, droppilig the rehicle on him.
Athens County Coroner Robert Butts pronounood'!Michael L. Montie, 40,
dead at the scene. The accident occurred around I p.m. Thursday, the sher•
iff:s office said.
·
Butts said Montie died of seve.re internal injuries.
111e aocident remained under investigation.

'

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSPSJIJ.Mt)

..........

Stocks
'

The Racine Village Board of Public Affairs will meet Monday at
10:30 a.m. at the annex.
DAV sets session
Chapter 53, DAY, will meet Monday at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds
gmnge hall, 7 p.m. A dinner will be
served.

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Center recorded 6
calls for.assistance Thursday including two transfer calls. Units respond·
ing included:
POMEROY
2:45 a.m., volunteer fire depart·
ment and squad, carbon monoxide
alann, Tammy Sheets owner, no
InJUrieS.
MIDDLEPOJlT
7 p.m ., South Third Avenue,
Audrey Davenport, Holzer Medical
Center.
'
SYRACUSE
12:30 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation, Helen Kibble, Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
RUTLAND
8:55a.m., Stale Route 143, Aide·
na Welsh, O'Bieaiess Memorial Hos~ital.
·

COLUMBIA FIRE STATION
February 12, 1996 ·Skin Testing· 6:00.7:00 p.m.
February 14, 1996 ·Skin Test Reading. 6:00.7:00 p.m.

14 SESSIONS
00

. $14

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Umtled InC....~..............~···'"'

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Ohio V•IIIY BlniC~.;.......~ ......... .M
OM VaiiiJ............~..................31

t&lt;mil In odvonce diJe&lt;t 10 The Doily Sellll11l
.. atlvee. "' 0112- billa. a.dlo wtn be
pven Cll1ier ea. ftek. \.

Rockwll ......- •• ~...............12:\
Aobtlln• ~ .................:...211'6
R~ ~~ ,~., ..........~~141

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WerKIV 1nt•1..... ........ l............ .11 "

tJ-. ............................................$29.25

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ltoclt report• af. the 1o:~
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FOR THAT SPECW SOMEONE

K-tnM ••••••••u•-u••••••:..,,....,,,..7~

Sublcriben not cte.irina: 10 pay die cari«'.ft111

Verlie 0. Workman

Verlie 0 . Workman, 92.'Mason, W.Va .• died Friday, Feb. 9, 1996 in the
Special speaker
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Eld~r lohn William Anderson,
Born Nov. 21, 1903 in Hamlin. W.Va., daughter of the late Dillard and
pastor of The Plains branch, will he Marietta Lucas Moore. she was a homemaker, a member of the Mason Unitspeaker at the Reorganized Church of ed Methodist Church and Eastern Saar Mason Chapter 157.
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Raymond E. Workman;
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. service. Sunday
a son, Raymond Jackson Workman; a brother. Kennis Moore; and a grand;
school will be held.at 9:30 p.m. A son, John R. Workman.
·
potluck dinner will follow lhe ser·
Surviving include a son, William M. "Bill" (Carol) Workman of Mason;
vice. On Feb. 18. High Priest John
Sheppard, Southeast Ohio District four daughters, Eva Mae (Charles) Persinger of Huntington, Conn. , Loretta
McClanahan of Eleanor, W.Va., Elsie Mae (Ellis) Bullock of Dayton, and
president, will speak, and on Feb. 25.
Elder Vince Beany, pastor of the Betty June (Sam ) McKee of Carraville. Tenn .; and five grandchildren and
eight great-grandchildren.
Limerick branch, will be the speak·
Service will be I :30 p.m. Sunday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason;
er.
with the Rev. George Hoschar officiating . Burial will be m the Union Ceme:
tery. Friends may call at the funeml home from 7-9 p.m. Saturday.
Co11ntry music niKht
,
•
Country music night will he held
at the Lottridge Community Center,
Saturday, 7 p.m. · to midnight. All
bands welcome. Refreshments.

TANNING
S'BSSIONS
.

Shop "'u"•'-"'_",3),
"1···~·-·.·········

~ TIA ••;............. ;••••. -

SINGLE COPY PIIICII

au~t.n

Board to meet

.....

..............
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~ ..............,.....................).

Dolly ......................:........................... ]~ c..u

,,2 -.. . . ..... . . . . . . .. ,. . . . . . . .

Distribution of relief to flood victims from funding provided by the
Lions Club will take place Saturday
and Sunday, noon to S p.m. each day,
or until supplies aie exhausted. The
distribution will take place at 216 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, the fanner River·
front barbells location.

was the bushy-haired stranger who
Sheppard claimed killed his wife. But
Eberling did not do it, said noughten.
Doughten said Eberling passed a
lie detector test he arranged last year
while Eberling was in the Cuyahoga
County jail.
Sheppard 's attorney Terry Gilbert
said their own expert had determined that J;iberling was a patholog·
ical liar and was not a reliable subject for a lie detector tesJ.
Eberling passed a lie detector test
in 1959 but a reanalysis performed
for the Bay Village Police Department in 1989 found the 1959 lest to
be inconclusive, Gilbert said.

February 26, 1996 • Skin Testing . 4:30 • 6:00 p.m.
February 28, 1996 ·Skin Test Reading. 4:30-5:30 p.m.

Ct.=·

..

26 - ....:............................................$56.61

FloOd distribution set

Thursday.
Richard Eberling, 66, is serving a
life sentence in the Orient Correctiona! Institution for the 1984 murder
of Ethel Durkin in Lakewood.
Last year. Sam Reese Sheppard,
son of Dr. Sam Sheppard, filed suit
in Cuyahoga County, claiming that
his late father should be declared
innocent of his wife's murder and that
Eberling is the one who committed
the crime.
,
Sheppard was convicted in 1954
for the July 4, 1954, slaying. He was
acquitted in a retrial in 1966 and died
April 6, 1970.
Attorney David L. Doughten said
it has been suggested that Eberli4

POMEROY FIRE STATION

....
Chlinplon Ind•••~..- .........- ••.11\'

a,c.m.o.
.. - - - ,12.00
Ont: -...
...............................................
Ont:Mondl.................. ............,............... $1.10
One v-...............................................$104.00

l l - ................................................. $27.!0
26 - ........................... ,.................... w.u
52-.
................
:.........................
;...$105.36
, _
_
.....,.C....,
c

Announcements

Your

80b Ev.,. ......""......................11
~Warner..?.:.~-·-········• .M

SUISCRIPriON IIATIS

MAIL StJIICaiP110NI

CLEVELAND (AP) - A lie
detector test an inmate passed last
year clears him of killing Marilyn
Sheppard in 1954, an attorney said

Bank One ...............................31\

Cltv*"k

.

Deputies of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department are continuing
an investigation into the theft of a
satellite dish from a Racine area residence, according to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
· According to police reports, Bobby Joe Wolfe, Apple Grove-Dorcas
Road, reported that his satellite dish
was taken from it's post mounting
during the recent snow stonn.

Service• Director Robert Byer, and ln1truc:tora
Kenneth Imboden and Bracy Kom. In the October cl111, 32 people received Instruction. In the
last three years, more than 300 people have
received the cia•-· Byer said.

Li~ tf~etector clears suspect of killing

Aahlencl 011 ~.;iu......................a7'a
AT•T ...........................:...............?\

POSTMASTBR: Send addreu oon'«tions 10
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Coon St .. Pomeroy,
Ohlo4S769.

.

Satellite dish theft
under investigation

CPR/FIRST AID DONATION- The Pomeroy
Eagle• Ladle• Auxiliary donlted $1,000 to the
Melg• County Eme)'gency Servlcea Thursday
a• a grsnt for teaching CPR and flrat aid last
October. From left are, Jean Grue..r and Loret·
ta·Tiemeyer, repreHntlng the Aerie, Emergency

Am Ele Powe1 .....:....................41\
. '·. .
,...,..., ......................................
wv.

Man..r: Tho Auocilled P,n, and the Ohio
, · NewspaperAdocillion.

whon-anlli.mcoloimiiiML
.
-

By 1999; the state will call for one
computer for every five students .
The district s'tands to lose
$179,000 in money targeted toward
computers because the existing buildings are n01 able to handle the ener·
gy needs, he explained. For example,
a classroom at Symcuse Elementary
has two outlets 'to supply 30 students .
"If I were you I'd take advantage
of the $3.1 million fr6m the state so
I could take advantage of the
$ 179,000 /'or technolqgy," he said.
"This is the opportunity of a life-•
time," he said.
However, Van Keuren said this is
the district's last opportunity for state
funding .
.
'The progmm is almost done," he
said. For the future,' the state is con·
sidcring going to standardized build·
ing plans which would reduce the
amount of local input in building
design.
"This is a one-time opportunity.
Neir.t tjme out it will be targeted
toward urban districts.
,
"If you don't do it this time, there
probably won't he a next time. If there
is a next time, it probably won't be
until 2050.
"This is it. This is the opportunity," he said.
But failure ofthe issue would not
necessarily lead to consolidation, he
said.
"We're not into consolidation right
now," he .said. "111ere has not been
any push to do that."
"The district is working its way
out of the loan fund now," he said.
"You're making great strides."
The district is also doing a great
job with state proficiency tests, he
said. In the last two years, only one
student has failed to eventually pass
the proficiency tests to receive a
diploma.
. About SO percent of the students
at the high ·school are taking college
preparatory classes.
Pomeroy attorney Jennifer Sheets,
a member of the State Board ofEdu·
cation, said the committee needs to
focus on how the building would
serve the community.
"You havs a great reputation for
doing things as a community," she
said. The building could be used for
classes for senior citizens and other
community members.
"Even if they don't have children,
they can use the school."
Another thing th-e committee
needs to address is the technology
aspect, she said.
"Our kids are not going to be able
to compete," she said.
lnii\iducing speak,rs were Super·
intendent James Lawrence and com·
mince chainnan Dave Spencer. Bill
Cornell presented the videotape
"Moving Into the 21st Century."
Spencer updated guests on the
building committee's brief. but busy
history - starting out with selection
of a building site and addressing
community concerns such as separa·
lion of older and young kids, then
working towards actual promotion of
the building levy.
·
"We started out -Yilh one principle," he said, "to try to find all the
questions and give the right answers,
even if it hurts us."
The goal is to expose children to
the new technology not possible in
the existing buildings, to improve science education with a · hands-on
approach and address the safety con·
cems 11resent with the old buildings,
he explained.
.

'•

Published evcry 'lftomoon, Moaclly dvoup
Friday, Ill C..n St .. ...........,, Ohio, by the
Ohio Val~y Publillli,. eon-~- Co..
Po.....,., Ohio 4j769, Ph. 092-21 ~. Second
CWI -paid II Ponoroy, Ohio.

..

(Continued from Page ; )

die

Score one for the United. Statest

a:

•

.

. .

~

Satunlay, Feb. 10
AocllWealher" forecast for

'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Last chance?

OHIO Weatlwr

..

•

! .. .

..

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

April2, 1996 -;. Skin Testing ·. 4:30.6:30 p.m.
April4, 1996 ·Skin Test Reading- 4:30.5:30 p.m.

SYRACUSE. FIRE STATION
April 23, 1996 • Skin Testing • 4:30 · 6:30 p.m.
April25, 1996 · Skin Test Reading. 4:30. 5:30p.m.

RACINE FIRE STATION

ONLY
. CW• Hne Juat l•ae.lll4 llew lullta)

April30, 1996 ·Skin Testing· 4:30 ·6:30p.m.
May 2, 1996- Skin Test Reading· 4:30 ·5:30p.m.

ACUT ABOVE

Fireman, EMS, Churches, Fair WOrkers,
College Students, Businesses, Food Handlers,
Children Entering Kindergarten

OH8r lood U•tU .... 29tll

\

SCIPIO FIRE STATION

BEAUTY AND TANNING SALON
JD Sl. . . } 949·2117

UCII~

·~~·~~

•

PUBUC WELCOME

and Save or Call For More Information

�Friday, F~ry 9, 1996
.'

The Daily: SeD.tiiJ.el
.

Redmen down Ohio ' Dominican 94-88 in double overtime

Pllge4
Friday, February 9, 1996

•

The final regular season home
game for the Univtrslty of Rio
Grande Redmen had all the earmarb
of being one of the best college basketball gantc;s ever.
The 94-88 double overtime ·
thrill~ featured II ties and II lead
changes as the .Redmen ovc:roame a
feisty Ohio Dominican squad at
Lyne Center·on Thursday night. The
win extends Rio Grande's current
win streak to four games and gives
·the Redmen sole possession of second place in the Mid-Ohio Conference beading into a full slate of conference games on Saturday.
Rio Grande (20-7, MOC 11-4)
and Ohio Dominican ( 18-9, MOC
10-5) traded punches in the first half
until the Redmen put together a M&gt;
run to lead by .seveq, 22-tG-1 S, with
10:48 ·left in the half. The Pan~rs
never got closer than four points for ·
the rest of the period and Rio Grande
took a 39-tG-30 lead to the intermission.
In the second half, Ohio Domini- .
can reeled off an 18-tG-9 run in the
first 6:44 to draw even at 48-to-48.
The two clubs traded baSkets down
the stretch wiih neither gaining more
than a live point advantage in the
final 13 minutes. The game was tied
at 70-apiece h~ing into overtime
number one.

;

.:. Meigs girls defeat River Valley 6,1-42
,. By DAVE HARRIS

... SenUnel Correeponclenl
Meigs outsclnd Rivet Valley 31·
17 in the middle two periods to powt the Marauders to a 61-46 victory
over the Raiders in girls baskeiball
action.
Meigs played their seeond contest
' 1 without the services of senior Kris-· ~n Dassylva, who will have surgery
• next week fur a fractured nose.
·
Meigs tpok a 14-12 leail at the
: ~nd of the first 'period behind a bal1
• anced scoring auack. Anne Brown
-! led six players in double figures in
·' Ole period ~ith four points. Amber
.J Staton led River Valley with eight
~~ points in the period.
' ( In the second period, Ashley·
I Roach and Brown scoied six points
~ach in the period as Meigs
" outscored the Raiders 17-9 in the
period to take a ~1-21 halftime lead.
The Marauders increased the lead
to 45-29 heading il'tO the final peri-

er

od on the strength of a 14-8 scoring
advantage. Brown continued to have
the hot hand for Meigs with seven
points in the third.
VIJiessa Short· and Jennifer Martin combined the 15 points in the
fourth ptriod as David Moore's
Raiders uied to climb back into the
contest, but Meigs wa.S able to miuch
River Valley point for point to post
the 19 point victory.
"We really played well as a team,"
Marauder coach Ron Logan said.
"We passed the bali well and played
excellent defense. The girls really
played with confidence after playing
well against Belpre on Wednesday.
This was an excellent win for us."
Senior Anne Brown had an excellent game for the maroon and gold
hitting eight of 16 from the floor and ·
four of five from the line for 20. The
Marauders had a balanced scoring
attack placing 10 of the II players
that played in double figures. Brown
wasjoined.in double figures by Ash-

ley Roach, who had II.
Meigs shot well from the floor
hitting 22 of 43 from the floor for
51% in.cluding one of two from three
point range. Meigs Wl'S •16 of 33
from the line for 48%.
Meigs pulled down .37 rebounds
with Cynthia Couerili grabbing
eight, and Brown seven. Meigs committed 12 turnovers, had three steals
and two assists, with Cheryl Jewell
and Brandi Meadows each getting
one.
Staton led River Valley with 14
points. Short added II, with nine
coming hi the final period. No other
statistics wtre ·available for the
Raiilers.
Rese"e. notes: In the reserve
game Meigs ran its record to 13-4
with a 29-25 win. Tracey Coffey led
Meigs with 10 points. Tricia Davis
and Tonya Miller added six points
each. Amanda Davis led the Raiders
with 10, Ashly Roberts adaed eight.
The fllture: Meigs will host East-

In the NBA,

em today at '4 p.m. and travel to Bel-

pre Saturday. · •
Tickets for Monday's sectional
tournament game with River Valley
are available at Meigs High school.
Tickets are $3 each and the tip off for
the game at the Univ~rsity of Rio
Grande is 7:00p.m.
Quarter l!dlli

River Valley ............... 12-9-8-17=42
Meigs ..................... l4-17-14· 16=61
River Valley (7•11) ;_ Eri'n Con·
ley 3-0-0=6, Amber Staton 3-22=14, Gretchen Cloak 0-0-1=1, Jessica Roberts 0-0-1=1, Jennifer Martin 0-0-6=6, Vanessa Short2-2-l=ll,
~arab Ward 2-0-1=5, Megan Mufford 1-0-0=Z. Totals: 114-12=41
Meigs (5·13)- Rebekah Smith
1-0-0=2, Cheryl Jewell 2·0·0=4,
Taryn.Doidge 3-0-0=6, Anne Brown
8-0-4=20, Ashley Roach 3.()..5=22,
Cynthia Cotterill 2-0-l=S, Brandi
Meadows 0-0-4=4, Carissa Ash 2-10=7. Totals: l1·1·16::(i1

,

Mavs slip by Jazz-136-133 in double OT
By The A11oclllhld Prell
Jason Kidd and Charles Barkley
are in AU-Star form just in time for

J

the AU-Star game.
Kidd and Barkley, both of whom
will start for the Westem Conference

TVC basketball standings

!:.
•·

Boys-Ohio Division
Division Overall

·~ lDIII

.W L .W L

.'Belpq: ..................... IO I 13 4
Wellston ................. 10 I 14 3
·~e~:!~!,;·ii ...
~._. ... ........... 8 S I0 7
:~
York ...... 3 7 6 10
'!it~~;.,,nn County .......... O 10
I 15

. .1

Boys-Hocking Division
Hocking ..... IO 3 14 3
........... 7 5 9 7
...........6 5 8 7
............5 6 6 10
.............. ..... .4 9 6 II
ifrin&gt;hl• .. .................. l 10 3 13

Wellston .. .........., .. :...6 8
MEIGS .....................3 9
Nelsonville-York ...... 3 II

9 10
5 12
4 14

Girls·Hockinc Division
Federal Hoc~ing .. ... 11 3 12 7
EASTERN .... ..........,.9 3 12 4
Alexander .......:....... II 4 13 6
SOUTHERN ............6 7 . 8 8
Trimble .... ................. 5 ,9 5 13
Miller ........ ,...........-....0 14 0 19
Thursday's results
MEIGS 61, River Valley 46
Belpre 59, SOUTHERN 38
Alexander 57. T[imble 56
*Federal Hocking 53, Wellston
31

. Saturday's games
SOUTHERN at Nelsonville-

Saturday's games
MEIGS at Belpre-noon
Vinton County at EASTERNnoon
Marietta at Zanesville
Point Pleasant at Athens
. SOUTHERN at River Valley
Trimble at Newark Catholic- I
p.m . .

• - Win clinches Federal
Hocking a share of TVC title
Today's games
EASTERN at Meigs-4 p.m.

Girls-Ohio Division
Division Overall

~;.
........ ........... ~ ~ ~ ~
~
County ..........? 6 10 9

Howunl ~~~ ...lorida A&amp;M .'i:'i
McNt..~le St 69. SW Tt!:.lllls St. 49
Memphis 6K, N.C. Churlo!te ~~
Ornlltobens K9. TeQnessee Tccll 74
SE Utui5ianil91 . Ge£K"~ia St. K6
SW Lcmi5iaJ~II !1~ . Sourll Alabnmu 4M
Tcnn . · M:~rtin 79. SE Mi!i5nuri 59
l'eiUlli-San Antonio 64. Nicholl~ St flO
Tulane 68. Louis\lille 6~
Vir~:i n i o 84. N. Cnrolin:~ St 8:! (2 0T)
W. Carnlina M4. Wofford 72

Bas~ball

.NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

:r.u.

Allantlc Dldsion

~
Orloodo ................:W
New York .............. )()
Wu.io~oo ............ 22
· · · Mi.-ni ....................22
• . NewJcnfy ............ IK
• Boston.................... l7
Philllde!rhia .... .........9

I. f&lt;L

lill

14 ,7111
lfl .6~2
24 .4'1!1

~

II
12
I!U

26 . 4~
29 . ~M~
10 ..l62
:\6 .200

~~t:a~::::::::::::::::::1i I~

16 . ~
2~ . ~

:: :

II

.!IM

1!1.!1
16

.!Ill
.47tl
MilwoukL'&lt; ............. 1R 27 .400
Toro111o .... ············· " .l4 .277

IK

CLEVELAND ....... 26 20

At ..... ..................26 21
IJctruit .................... B 22
Charlotte ............... 22 24

.m

1M

21
29

74

Nunh Texas 12. Stephen F.Au11tin f,~ ·
Sam Hou~10n S1. K~. Tt.!IIIIS· Arlington
W . Kcruuclcy 92. t.um:rr n

MWwaaiM•Wan
~

I.

fd,

Iii

u ::~

-~

San Antoaio ........... 31 14 .61t9
Utah ............ ......... 32 16 .667

~!:.::::::::::::::::·~

Colomdu St tiL Brigllam Young 76
fn.'Joo St 99. San Dk,_o St. K9 rOT)
Gl\ftUIFn 'J4. Pt:pp.:nli~ II)
Hllwltir HI. Air flli'CJ: h2
Mofttana St.'76, N. Arizr"~~Ur61 .
New Mc11ico Sc. 60. UC Snma Brwtlarn

li

O.llas ..................... l6 30 .341!
1~.~ ·
MinACSOtli .............. l) )~~ 18
Vancouver ............. 10 l l..__,,.:.fl/
22

hdflciM•I...
Shnl&lt; ...................:W 12 .7J9
L.A. Lok&lt;n ............ 2K 19 .!196
Sacnm.ento ... ........ 24 20 .J45
Ponlond ............... 24 24 - ~
Pttoenl11 .................. 22 24 .47tl
Gol!kn.Stnte .......... 21 26 .4-17
L.A Oippen ......... l6 .l l .:\:\3

~9
~gon ~!'i . Wa.~ tJin!!lOn ~2
Pndtic 90. Ne ...nda ~

Portland 97, Loyola Marymount 71
S:m Jose S1. 6M. Utah S!. 6.'i
Sroorord 9CJ. Sootllrrn CalM
UCLr\ 7.l California M
Wa!ihingllm St. 61 . OregOn Sr. 42
Weber Sr. 97, Munturm KO

6.!1
Y
II
12

13 . ~

19

Ohio men's
college scores

'lllllf'lday'• .........

etwtone 115. Sik.TUmet1lO 105
AtlanmCJR. Wat.illltlll92
·Oeflv« I"15, L.A. Clippen 9~
Doll.ti 116. Utoh !11 (2 011
'Photttixi07. NewJ,....,y 102

Mld-OIIlo Conference
RIO GRANDE 94. Ohro Dominic nn

Hllt2 0Tl
ShawneeS!. 102. Mount Vernon
NWU'\!M 100
UtNma 69. Malone b4
W;al&amp;h IC~ . Cedanilk 77

No pmes tonight
orSatunay
Sunday's 111me .

Mldwesltrn Colleclalt Conf.

~II..Stnr Oame Dl Sa• ApiOIIio. 6 p.m.

Wi 1. -Milwau~

97. Cle\leland 51. K4

Non-conleronce play

Tiffin 97. Wiitlcr1on::e 73
)

Ohio .women's
college scores
·. Non-co.rereDC~ play

t..r.. l'ltr.·lndpll. 7R, Cenoral St. 64

. 46

Al&lt;loo-$2, AitrooEimo47
Aboo St.)/·St.M 55. Akr&lt;&gt;a Hoban

.
Alio.... "'· 'llimble ~
-Cie
......t ll. Bloom Car- .
~ron :10
oJ
Aodion7
54, P"'l'tbufJ. 52

w.,..

'

Allll!ootl $I, l.nioatoo 30

'

Barkley became the 22nd player
to score 20,000 career points when
he swished·. a 16-foot jumper with
I :321eft in the sec.ond quarter. He's
33 rebounds short of 10,000. .
"I was talking to (assistant) coach
(Paul) Silas before the game, and he
said, 'Your IO,OOOth rebound is really going to be a great honor,"'
Barkley said. "After I realized I was
going to be successful in basketball,
I fell those were the two goals that I
wanted to a~complish:: ·

Mnrion l.oc;!143, Fun Ret:cwer)'
Olcn0ak4~

l!.akc
.. M"ulllC'C ValPcll)"..6J. Tal.Uniunklwn
EmanlH!I Bllfll.
Mtt5 ~illo~

1Wido.,, ............ 4)
~&lt;-' J..oki..6!:o;.. :II

Kelltoo

-

Rid~e

109, Spnni. Nort•·

... '!6

·._ LIIIroe6l.rtewtonl'll~ ~ ••

••

.

42

'J

Ynu. L.iher1)' 46. ~ad~'L'f
Yuu . Ur~ ulinc 4J, Wnrrcn Kcnfk!dy

Gene Tunney won the heavyweight title from Jack Dcritpscy in
1926, lighting in the rain in Philadelphia.

Ml!ig5 61 , ~shin: Rrver Val. 42
Minmtl Rid~e 71. SfMinJ. L..ocnl :\ll
M in ~ lcr 71J, St Henry 54
·
Muntpelicr HO. E\let~n!t!n :n
Mount Vernon 46. Spana Hiahland
40

N. Cuntun 49, New Philadelphia 47
New Knnntlle 64, Dclpho11 St.
John·, 46
New Rclgel69. Se~11 E. l ."'
Ncw\:omenlown .~2. Ridgf..owood 37
NDI'lkHii.u ~s. Muyliekl .n {&lt;YI')
Nonhmor 46. O.rnJinaton 41
Olenransy 51. M:u''.tnille 4'1
Onmae Ov. .U.. Ardew' lO
0re&amp;Ofl Clay ~~. Tol: Whitmer~
Ortaon Strilch 38, Tol. Chrislian ~So
Ottawo-&lt;llando&lt;f ''·St. Mom lO
hrtwoy Sl, New 8R!II)en 49
Poukllnj 73.., Uft~M Scioto V•l. ~
Regina J4, Sl. AIIJuttine l5
Richmond Edi•on 42, Beaver Local

40

29

)8

'

Feb. 9 lncl111• 9 p.m. 't112 Lm.

W.Va's Top Show Band

Gold Dust

S. Jlaaa!e.6~ 1 Vienna Malhevn -'0
Saodj V•l. 6.,, Str01bur(41
StM!:nlwoOd Fairview 87. Tinon61
Soulhi..ton Cbalkcr "67, l..ordttown

Vafentine Party

TRACTOR
SALES • SERVICE

:.. Live o.J ·

spinning the Hjtsl

201 CofiCI4Ir .. .
Pon• ott.
FALio. ~ Wif li!R HOURI .
dl~Y""rldly

ay RoNALD Bt.:.uJ

Nf!A gsmes...

Ridgedale 59, Pleawtr S:t
Ridae~ 69. 11dian Lake 56.
River VIII. 73, Bu~kc)'! Val. 47
Rlvenide 49, Fairbanb 38
S. Otariaton SE K2, Madi100 Plain~

Open Tn

_injury forces·
Wibfield's retirement

(Results as of Jan. 31)
NEW YORK (APJ - After 23
League - Early Wednesday seasons. Dave Winfield said goodbye
MiKed
to major league baseball Thursday. •
Team ltalldlngs - Tony's CarThe 44-year-old outfielder, the
ryoul(42-14), F.O.E. 2171 (38-18), career leader among active players in
Meigs Golf Course (34-22), Thunder hits and RBis, announced his retireAlley Cats (34-22). Captain D's (32- ment this moming. saying a shoulder
' 24), D.V. Construction (16-40), iojury would keep him coming back
Chainsaws &amp; Roses ( 16-40) and in time for opening day.
R&amp;B Beads (8-48).
"It's a hard thing lo say. It's an
Teua high series - D. V. Con- easy thing tp say," Winfield said durstruction (1926) .
ing a news conference organized by
T - hl&amp;h game- D.V. Weber the players union.
•
Construction (697)
The 12-time All-Star, who played
Men
for the Cleveland Indians last year,
Individual bl&amp;h series- Chuck has spent 23 seasons in the major
Burton (532) and Roger Carpenter leagues with San Diego Padres, the
(527)
New York Yankees, California
: lndiYidual hilh game - Burton Angels, Tor6nto Blue J~ys , Min. (204) and Carpenter (200)
nesota Twins- and the Indians.
·
Women
Winfield, a five-time Gold Glove.
Individual high series - Pat winner, didn't give any hint of his
: Carson (516) and June Hawkins plans when he talked with a reporter
• (505)
.
. last weekend. All he would say WI!$
. ~vidual b,llh ..-e- Wend1 ' that he was in· great shape.
. .
Maxson (194) and Marlene W1lson
He finished with a .283 career
~ 189)
average pnd il!~~ top 20 of many
·
career cate11ori~f 3,110 hits (14th),
1,833 RBis &lt;I·Ith), 465 homers
(Continued from Page 4)
(19th), II ,003 at-bats (sixth) and
2,973 gall'"" ~'e.venth).
.
S.U.. 1~,. Net1l0l
He hit just .l't t in a lilnited role
AtPhoenix,Barldey'sgaudystats · with the Indians' with two 'homers
were augmented by , two defensive
ill!d'four Rsls ~· 11'5 at-bats. He
play&amp; he ni~ down the s~tch.
went on the disalii.Cd list twice with
With 4: I 7 left and the Suns proan injured left stwulder, and Cleveteeling a 92-91 lead, Barkley stole
land didn't inciu~ him on its polithe bail from Chris Childs and called
season roster.
.
"The severity ~_l!f the tear has
timeout while flying out of bounds.
Danny t-fan!ling n)ade it 94,91 with necessitated exten~c rehabilitation, ·
a lonj jumper. ·
and that will•prevCIIl me from being
The 6'-foot-6 Bukle~ then read~ to play by ~ing day," W.nblocted a shol ~ 7-6 Shawn Bradley field. said. "After ~rk.ing. IIJI!g and
and made two key baskets, includinj hard, I won't be able ~o make it back
a layup with 1:16-to play that put . for 1996. ... It's tiri$;forme to leave
. Phoenix ahead 101-9S.
.
the game I love so much."
The Suns got their eighth win in
Winfield joined1,the Padres in
II games and sent the Nets to their 1973 after becomint an AII-Amensevcntli loss in the last nine, losing ca at the University·;of Minnesota,
die last three of a live-game road uip. never spending a day,'in the m~nors .
Ho.-.ets 115, Killp 105
He was the fourth pitlc overalltn the
At ChariOue, Olen Rice was II - baseball draft and also was selected
of-16 from the field and scored 33 ,- by the Atlanta Hawks in the fifth
points as the Hornets defeated Sacra- round of the NBA drf!. by lhe·Utah
mento.iil Charloue,for the slxth con- , Stars in the sixth round of the ABA
secutiVC'Iimc.
.
.
draft and 'by the Minn9,sota Vikings
Mitch Richmond had 29 potnt! in
17th rotind of the NFL draft.
fO!' the Ki!I11S·
·
While be became a star with the

,

24

The winner of the 1904 marathon
in the Olympics was Tom Hicks. He
competed for the United States, but
wa' born in Groat Brit~i~ .

..,a:OO

. 8tltUrdiY 1:1104:00

Feb. 16 Wld 17
Birthday Party

•••••

qGeedllai"'-Y

.

•

Wcirlun (W.Vtt.) Mndonn:~ 17 .
Tornnltl 71
Wcllintlnn 43, Tn:c r1ll.il"c 42
Wellsville !'i9, Cadir: ~~
We~tfniiM. Huntinglon 46
Wun5fcr6:\, Alli:lttc:l! J~
Wnll!IIL&lt;rTriwuy66, Clear Fnrk 44
Wuri!J Hnm:sl :'i I. lklawun: Chr. ~I}
Wnnhin~on Chr. fll , Nurlhritl~c 49
Ynu Bnunlmm1 ftH. Au~ lintown- Filch

Tol. Wootlnklre !'iO. Ot!!!:j,n J4
Triwoy M _Clear fork 44
Urbnna 61 . Tt.'\:umscll J7
Van Wen !'il . Wapalcntk.'t:a41
Vioc.:nt W:lll"Cn ~~ . MuriL'Ita &lt;12
W. Hnlmc~ :W. Ucking Vhl. 26
Walnm Rid~ 60, Cut. Brius ~
Warren H;~rdin~t o&amp;~ . Yuu. MCJOnty J4

or.

'·

••• ~- 4'1

~r Mason Bowling
~ League results

Waync~·ncld · Gnshcu .~ 1J . Bt~njumin

44

S~oulder

......

~J . ut

Hollllld Spri.. !12, ,.lllbur)- Lob lO

le-·SciO 6l. To

lndividu~ records
103-Bcn Molden (8-14)
119-Shawn Michaels ( 11 ·9)
125-Aian Lee (12-14)
130-Adnm Thomas. (19-S)
135-Joy Fisher ( 18-7)
140-Vova Stcfanouych (0-14)
145-Mau Ault (12-4)
152-Phil Edminslon (6-13) ·
160-Mike Parker (1-0)
17J iJason Roush (2-S') ·
189-Adnm Sheets (21 -1)
189-Mike Frymcyer ( 1-2) .
215-Vincc Broderick (0-7)
215-Franco Romuno (1-5)
215-Craig Knight (10-3)
275-Josh Rohetts (4-3)

Lug;an-44

.I

I.
I,
I
I
I,
I

f

I'

The.Chain Gang ~ " Ir

me

........._,_______________.
Rock and·Roll

.,

has been nursing a badly sprained 014- J/2..()(():3, Porter 00.111-00=3.
ankle since January 29 when he was Totals: ll/47·1Wo161'11""
injured against Ohio Valley College.
Total FG: 31·72 (43.1 '1&gt;) •
Trainer Brian Norton lists Burris as
RebouDdl: 41 (Dennis &amp;: Wol•
day-to-day.
ford 6 each)
Following Saturday's acti on, Rio
Blocked shoU: 3 ~ell : l,
Grande plays non-league foe Ohio Kits miller I) ·
Assists: 10 (BellS)
,
Valley College in Parkersburg, West
Sleals: 6 (Jones &amp; Potkottet ~
Virginia on Monday night. Ttp-off at
each)
·
OVC is set for 7:30p.m.
Tumoven: 13
In other MOC action Thursday
Fouls: 32
night, Walsh edged Cedarville 83-77
Fouled out: Almond, Bell .t
and Urbana slipped by Malone 6964. Tiffin thumped Wilberforce in a Kitsmiller
non-league jlffair 97-73.
'
Conference action on Saturday
has Urbana (14-11 , MOC 7-7) at
league-leading Walsh (23-3, MOC
RIO GRANDE- Caudi1171l7~
13-2). Cedarville (14-12, MOC S-9) 2/5-4/5=24, Morgan 212-214·
visits Malone (13-14, MOC 5-10). ·11114=21, Snyder 6/12..QI4-5/8=17,
Findlay (15-g, MOC 9-4) plays at Seitz 5/S-010- 214= 12, Schreck 112- Tiffin (13-14, MOC 4-11). And 0/0-32/3=6, J. Burris 2/3-010-1/I:;S, .
Shawnee State (18-9, MOC 7-8) Kems 214-0/1-111=5, Lavala 114-Mh
hosts Ohio Dominican ( 18-9, MOC 214=4. Totals: 27149-4114-:W...,..
10-5).
Total FG: 31 -63 (49.2%)
_
ll.alf l2tali
Rebounds: 47 (Lavala &amp; Snyder
Olrio Dominican ...... 30-40- 10-8=88 14 each)
Rio Grande ............ 39- 31-I0-14=94
Blocked shots: I (by Kerns)
_
Assists: 7 (Morgan 4)
OIDO DOMINICAN- PolkotSteals: 4 (MO!'Ran 2)
ter 4n-4/8-212=22, Bell 6/14-1/2Tumoven: 15
6/9=21 , Chrisman 2/5-2/4-1/2= II ,
Fouls: 24
Kits miller 3n-0/0-5/6= II, Wolford
Fouled out: J. Burris
111 -1/6-2/2=7. Almond 3/5-0/00/0=6, Jones 214-0/2-0/0=4, Dennis

..

..:_._

.

the game that Jones had been sus- with 20 points, missed a three-pointBy The Aasoclllhld Preas
New look, no luck for Southem pended for the remainder of the uip, er and Gaudio rebounded as time
which ends with a game at Califor- expired.
Califomia.
No. 15 Memphis 68'
Playing for the first time since nia on S~\urday, and that his status
·
would
II&amp;
evaluated
when
the
team
N.C. Charlotte 55
interim coach Henry Bibby took over
Mingo Johnson scored 20 points
for fired Charlie Parker, the Trojans returns home.
Bibby said he didn't know if • and Memphis used 11 17-0 run in the
lost to No. 25 Stanford 99-69 ThursJones was upset about the c081:hing middle of the game to win in Charday night.
change.
lotte.
The loss was Southem Cal's most
Andy
Poppink
scored
20
points
The Tigers (17-4, 8-2 Conference
lopsided in its series with Stanford,
and
Dion
Cross
had
19
for
Stanford
USA)
bo11nced back from the1r worst
which dates back to 1917.
(14-5
,
7-3).
loss
of
{he season, 74-56 al
"My only comment is I guess I'm
Cardinal coach Mike Mont- Louisville last weekend. UNCC (11 glad this game is over, " said Bibby,
10, 4-4) limited Lorenzen Wright,
who was an assistant to Parker. gomery said he didn 't think the
"With alithe distractions we've had coaching change had lll)Y bearing on Memphis' leading scorer, to seven
the last few days, it took us out of our the game, but said he was sorry to points.
No. 17 UCLA 73
see Parker fired.
framework for the gafl'!e."
California 65
"I feel badly about Charlie ParkSouthern Cal ( 11 -11 , 4-6 Pac-10)
UCLA
outscored
Cal 9-0 in the
lost for the lOth time in 15 games. er," he said. "He is a .very good
final
3:57
and
won
for
the 19th time
Last month at home, the Trojans beat friend of mine and a very good
in its last 20 Pac-1 0 games.
coach."
Stanford by four points.
J.R. Henderson scored 21 points
(ljo. 10 Penn State 61
"This game was just as emotionand
Kris Johnson I 5 for the Bruins
Winois
58
al for me to step ir as it was for the
(
16-5,
9-1). Charles O'Bannon had
Matt
Gaudio
scored
18
of
his
21
. players on the court who were upset
12
points
and blocked two shots in
points
in
the
second
half,
including
about the coaching change," Bibby
said. "Tonight was a very,good les- two key foul shots with I 0 seconds the last minute .
Shareef Abdur-Rahim had 24
son for our young _guys who had to left for Penn State.
points and 16 rebounds for Cal ( 12. The win at home helped the Nitstep up to the plate under adversity."
7,·6-4). The crowd at the Oakland
In other games, No. 10 Penn State iany Lions (17-2. 8-2) tie Purdue for
Coliseum was Cal's first sellqut
beat Illinois 61 -SS, No. 15 Memphis first place in the Big Ten.
since March S, 1994, Jason Kidd's
~ Jwned North Carolina Charlotte - · Gaudio's free throws provided the
final
points
of
the
game.
Kiwane
final home gam~ for the Bears.
68-SS, No. I 7 .UCLA defeated CaliTulane 68,
fornia 73-65 and Tulane upended Garris, who led Illinois (14-8, 3·7}
No. 20 Louisville 68-65.
Southern Cal played without cen• , ter Avondre Jones. 'Bibby said after

Knight (fourth).
,
Last Wednesday. the Marauders
placed second in a four-team match
with .Gallio Academy, River Valley
and Point Pleasant.
Meigs (20-7) will participate in
the TVC tournament Saturday at
Federal Hocking High School. ·
Wrestling will get underway at 10:30
a.m .

Wn1rlil!&amp;lll fl~ . llc1!:1 42

Sprinp . SllawnL-c ~7 , Sprin~ Norrh·
.lfl
S1ow ~. Ravcnrw 42
StruthcB 1'1~ . Pnlund JH
Sylvania Sotnhvicw 4J, M,aulllL't ~~~
Symm•.., Vt~l. M. GknwtJtw.l !'i7
.Tcoy11 Val. S!'i, CIUlo11 Winchester J9
T«tlJde Cllrinion !'i I. CarMon Ht..'f'itaJlc

CU.~ li.Tn

and his ball club, they're lighters and
never quit. My hat's off to him and
his lcjds. They're 18-9 for a reason .
He a\lded, "Our guys did a great
job maintaining composure in the
cl utch. We expect a lot out of our
seniors and 'they gave us a lot
tonight. We're proud of this team and _
what they've accomplished. We've
seen these young men mature quite
a bit this year and we've still got a lot
of basketball games to play before
we're through here."
.The Redmen take their show on
the road for the final five regular season games. The tour begins at Mt.
Vemon Nazarene College on Saturday evening. Rio Grande hooks up
with the Cougars at 7:30 p. m.
Fans can follow the action on
96.7 FM WKOV beginning with the
Redmen Preview Show at 7:10p.m.
Earlier 'this season, the Redmen
knocked off Mt. Vernon 88-to-75 at
Lyne Ce(lter, Mt. Vernon is 9-17
overall and 2-13 in MOC play heading into tomorrow's action. The
Cougars defeated Kenyon 70-to-64
in a non-conference game on Tuesday night, but Iosito Shawnee State
102-tG-1 00 last evening.
On the injury front, Coach
Lawhorn said junior center Eric
Burris is doubtful for Saturday's
match-up with Mt. Vemon. Burris

•

•

-.' .
I

Mt:Oermou
Nnrlhwcsl
70,
PortllllOlltll W. 5H
.
Mclloaald 45, Lowellvilk 30
Mec · nic1tKlrg !'i6. W. Uberty Salem

:tr:'.n.~~~Colr:..J6
·

~H .

46

Col. Mirmn 62. Col. Cemenninl ~ ·
Col. Nor1hland ~It, Col Bttchc10ft .'i~
Col. S"hool fo r Girh !'il. Marion
Cmll. :n
Columbia 61. lkaehwood 3&lt;1
Columbian:~ 72, Snuthlm Loc11l 6~
Con\loy Cresl\'iew ~9 . Columbu11
GroveJI
.
Corlltmd Lakeview ~7 . Wa rren
O.ampion &lt;19
Co$hncinn 72, [)()vtr 71 (()'f)
Cuy:dw.1ga F11lls ~- Burtlt.'non 5:t
Cuy!lho~a H~. 61. Richmond lil5. 46
Cll.)laho,_a Val. 0... 72. Laurel411
Danbury &lt;19. Ounwa Hills :iS
Oanvillt: 62, E. Knol 14
Ocf~tm~;c S
. l limo Shaw net 42
lA.'Gtutr Rivmidl!' 49. Fairb;ank, JR
Oclnwan: I'll , Watkins Memorial :u
Oclpbos Jefferson 67, Uncolnview M
E. Paklstine ~~ . UtUIL~ Loclll41
Ea.~twood. 76. Oibsonburs 42
Edison Loc11142, lkaw:r Locul40
Elgin 60, N. Union 29
Elmwuod 63, Nonllwood 47
Eu~lid 61'1, L)'fldhunl BNsh 46
Fllirtield Union !'il, HaniiiOft Twp. )5.
~al Hockins ~~ . Wellslon ~ I
Findlay 54, S)lvnnia Northview 4~
Fisher Cntll. 68. Millenpot07
Franklin Furnace Green 6~ .
• Porumouth Clay 4~
-'
Fremont Ross46, NQilOielml.~ ·
Gallipoli• 73, Jackson J4 ·
Gamwa)' ~7. Berlin Hiland~
Gl'llndview 51 . Wuhinatoa C.H. ~
Gmnvillc ~!'i. New Atbany ll
Gmen 7&amp;, Norton :U
o~neYteW ~2. Wa)'DeiYille n
Howkrn 67, Hllfliaw:ro:rown 26

w-.-..62

·

.Meigs wrestlers get last
in 1o~team tournament
-.

.

Redshirt freshman Eric Seitz
scor¢ a career high 12 points .coming off the bench. Seitz was S-for-S
from the floor and had two thunderous dunks off lobs frolJI Morgan. His
second jam gave the Redmen an 85tG-80 lead in the second overtime
session. Seitz hauled in fi ve
rebounds.
Kurt Polkotter led ODC with 22
points. He hit 4-of-8 three-point
attempts. Mike Bell scored 21 points
and handed out five assists. He also
hal two blocked shots. Chris
Kitsmiller and Josh Chrisman rounded out Panther players in double digits with II apiece.
Rio Grande's defense held Ohio
Dominican to just 43 percent shooting from the field. The Panthers shot
40 percent (I 0-for-25) from threepoint range to stay in the game .
Both clubs shot well from the foul
line. Rio Grande hit 70 percent (28of-40) of their charity shots while
ODC was 76 percent (16-of-21) at
the line. The Redmen won the battle
on the glass, 47-41.
Redmen coach John Lawhorn
said, "I think everybody 'got their
money's worth tonight. Both these
clubs worked so hard 1\11d played so
well, it was just a great game. We
had them by nine at halftim.e, but
give a lot of credit to Ed DiGenova

:usc loses in· Bibby's debut; Penn State &amp; Memphis w1n

:w

Mauillun ~. Kent RuoM:velt 4H '
Mo.uillon Jacksnn 411. Cnntnn

Whet~ltlnt! ~ 2

Ja&lt;luon ~ 811, Fairlowo-:11
Jackson Milloa 72, 8erlln Ceater

-•on.

By DAVE HARRIS
Meigs wrestled last Sa!urday in
the John Deno Classic at Athens
Mavericks 136
High School.
Jau 133 (:Z OT)
The Marauder mat men placed .
At Dallas, Jim Jackson had 38
lOth in the tough 10-team tournapoints and George McCloud had' 32 ment. Other schools in the tournato go along -with Kidd's numberS.
ment included Federal Hocking,
Kidd's three-pointer early in the Dublin Scioto, Fairfield Union, Jacksecond overtime put Dallas ahead fo~ son, Johnstown Monroe, Hillsboro.
good, 124-122, and the Mavs led Chillicothe, Marietta, River Valley
134-127 with 20.7 seconds left. Jeff and the host Athens team. Hillsboro
Hornacek and John Stockton made won the tournament with a team
three-pointers to get the deficit to score of 244.
three, but Karl Malone missed a
The Marauders' Adam Sheets, a
tl)ree-pointer at the buzzer.
189-pound senior, was voied by the
Utah, which could have moved . coaches as the Outstanding Wrestler
percentage points ahead of San AntG- on the strength of his performance.
nio in the Midwest Division, lost for Sheets pinned ail of his opponents
only the second time in nine games. for the day, including undefeated
It wa5 the first overtime of the year Joke Spruell of Hillsboro.
.
for the Jazz, ,who were playing their
Orher Marauders that placed in
fifth game in seven days. ' .
the tournament included B'en MoldThe Mavericks, playing in their en (fourth), Shawn Michaels (sixth),
league-high eighth overtime and sec- Alan Lee (sixth). Adam Thomas
ond double-overtime, ended a three- (third). Jay Fisher (fourth). Vova
game losing streak .
Stefano.uych (sixih), Phil Edminston
(fil\h), Jason Roush (sixth).and Craig
.(See NBA on Page 5)

Maple H11. ~4 ~ Bctlford 4l

K.t Cui Eas! 2J
Col. Eou;rmoor 7!1. M11r1on l:ranklin

(ll:tr) .
Ho•llll!d M , Oinrrd 62

on

After. nothing was settled in the
first overtime, which en~ tied at
80-tG-80, the \1-edmen out-distanced
ODC in the second extra frame .
Senior point guard Jack Morgan iced
the game for Rio Grande in the second overtime hitting four clutch foul
shots in the final :21. Eric Caudill
scored six points in the seco.nd overtime to help seal the victory.
Caudill _finished with a game
hig~ 24 points on 9-of-:l2 shooting
from the field. He'was 4-for-S from
the foul line. l'!le relentless Caudill
played all SO minutes.
Morgan sc~ a career hi~h 21
points hitting 4i&lt;if-6 shots from the
floor and going'-11 -for-14 at the foul
line. Morgan uP,ped his career assists
total to 666 af\er dishing out four
agllinst the p.;,thers. He also had
three reboundS' and two steals. Morgan also tum· d in an iron man perfonnance, pl'l)'ing all 50 minutes.
Fellow senior Shawn Snyder
scored 17 points and haqled in an
amazing 14 rebounds in 47 minutes
of action. AI!, of Snyder's rebounds
came on the 'defensive bo8rds. He
:had several_k~y boards in each overtime period.!lr' .
·
James L&amp;vala matched Snyder's
board numbCrs with 14.'Lavala also
scored four points and managed one
steal. He saw 43 minutes on the floor.

: In Top 25 college hoops,

TOP WREST..ER- Achlm Sheets, 8 .189-pound aanlor for the
Melga Ma111uclen, wae votlld by the cOIIchn •• -the outatandlng
WTHtler In the John Deno Claaalc held IMI - k at Athens High
School. SMettl pinned all hla opponenta for the evening Including
Jake Spruell of Hlllaboro, who - t Into the tournament undefut·
eel. Shteta Ia 21·1
the

Mnrion Hanlin,_ M. Man.~w:ld Sr. 47

Col. lndtpcndctll:e 711. Col WL~ 71
(0TI
Col. Linden-Mckinley ~K . Col.

R-1•1•"{ 9$. X.vler (OIIIo) 91

Ohio H.S.prls' sco~

~urora 54. Brooklyn J6 •
Ayenville 60, Ed&amp;C!fon J7
Bdlrr~mtaiae 48. Orttnon 21
Belpre ~9. Racrne Southern J K
Beme Union !iO, Licking Hn. JO
Blufflon 70. Allen E. ~0
Botkins !'il. Annu 40
Bowling Gn=en 4~ . Rouroru :n
Brisenl76. Coo lund Mnpk:wond 17
Bryan 47, Swan!on 42
Buc key~ Locnl ill E li\leqtsJOI 4J
Cantiekl 4K. Niles 26
Canton Cath 62. Salem J!'i
Canton McKink:y SO. Akron RuL1lt~.:l

Rc~vc ~ ~
Col. Brookhuv~

~~

F•rWest

a

Lake: Ridl!c 42. Elyria Oren 0001'" 29
LA.'i!Wniu ~J . &amp;:brina: 46
l.ciJlsic ~I . Arlingmn ~~~
UbL'fty Center fH. P.o~!rkk Henry 46
Umot D:~ttl 6!'i, Elida !'iO
Ushu11 ~K. Columhiuna Cre~t\lii.'W 2K
l..ot:,nn61. Athens 4tl
l.outJunvilk= 64. Black Ri\ICf 2M
l.cui ~ \lille Aquimt' M . Fuirlcu ~I
lutheran E. 56. Crouroad• Otr. 12
Lutheran W. 34. ln&amp;kpendenc:c 17
MnnlfiehJ Mlldisnn ~"/ , Norwalk ~9
Mnn~fidi:l Sr. P~tcr ' s 51. M1ndicltJ
Chr. 26
Mansf.chl TL-mJilc _,I . Heritoze: Ctu.
44
•

Ashllmtl Crest.,.icw 60, Mount Gilead

Cclinu 611, Kenton .17
Cenrerbul}!. ~ . Juhll!iltlWn 44
Cin. Scum 46. Cin. Mercy 42
Cin. Wyomin1 49. Cin. MarK:mun1 .l J
Circle\lillc 41, l.o~an Elm 4 .~
Ck. Hnyes JH. Clc. Aviatinn 2K
Cit:. Heights ~2 . WurreM\'ilk: JJ
Cit!. Kinz 48. Clc. Adnms 20
Cl". Marshall 60. Hu1.hon Weslern

Southwest

WESTERN CONFERENCE

:r.u.

.1~

Ark .·UIIit! Rl'o~,:k 69. New Orleans 66
Arka11~ al0 S1. ~6 . Tclr.as· Pan An~ri c an

19. ~
r

42

Midwest
Crerl!hlon Ml. S. Illinois M
lllinuis St. 97. N. Iowa tiO
lmlinna S1. ~~ . Drake! K.1
L• Salt.! al D:~ywn . Pfl(l .• death
N. lllinm~ 98, 111. -Chlcn~ 90
Wis.. Milwuula."'! 97, Clc.,.eland St. tw

CmlraiDhl-...

'

I

Tonight's games
SOUTHERN at EASTERN
Belpre at Vinton County
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Nelsonville-York at Wellston
Miller at Trimble

Trimble at Vinton County

.

J

in Sunday 's Ail-Star game at San
Antonio, had performances Thursday
night that rated 'among their best of
the season.
Kidd had 25 assists, 20 points,
four steals and four rebounds in Dallas' 136-133 double-overtime victory over the Uta~ Jazz, and Barkley
had 30 points, 18 rebounds, four
steals, three assists and two blocked
shots as Phoenix heat New Jersey
107-102.
On the last night of play before
the break, only five games were
played. Charlotte beat Sacramento
115-105, Denver beat the Los Angeles Clippers 115-95 and.(\tianta beat
Washington 98-92.
"
Now, the auention turns 10 the
league's.showcase event.
'I would love to pass to Karl and
Sir Charles and Shawn Kemp and.
Drexler and Olajuwon, all of them.
I would even love to pass to John
Stockton. That's what's so fun about
playing this game, it's that I get to
play with the best pl&amp;yers in the
world," Ki,dd said after becoming
only the second player this season to
have at least 20 points and 20
rebounds in a game.
"This is going to be the most fun
All-Star game for me. With everything that happened this year, I did" 't expect to be the leading vote-getter or even start. So this will mean a
lot to me," Barkley said after scor.ing his 20,000th career point and
nearing his IO,OOOth rebound.

The Dally Sentinel• ..... '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I,
I I-,

Padres, hi s l~yearcontract with the
Yankees - a dealthattumed out to
be worth just over $17 million made him a celebrity.
,
Yankees owner George Steinbrenner counted on him to replace
Reggie Jackson, but soured on Winfield after he went 1-for-22 against
Los Angeles Dodgers in the 1981
World Series.
In September 1985, Steinbrenner
&lt;;ailed Winfield "Mr. May," playi~g
off Jatkson 's nickname of !'Mr.
October." Steinbrenner and the
David M. Winfield Foundation were
involved in three lawsuits against
each other.
And the outfielder and the owner
became involved in a weird affair
·involving Howard Spira, a freelance
radio reporter who worked for Winfield's agent at the time. Spira, an
admitted gambler, accepted a cash
payment from Steinbrenner for information on Winfield's foundation
that led the owner to be suspended
from baseball in 1990. Spira later'
served a prison sentence' for threat-·
ening Steinbrenner.
In May 1990, Steinbrenner final ly got rid of Winfield, sending him
to the Angels for Mike Will. In 1992,
Winfield returned to the World
Series, gelling the game-winning hit
as Toronto beat Atlanta in six games.
Winfield liit .290 that season at age
40 with 26 homers and I 08 RBis. He
was selected the AL comeback player of the year by The Sporting
News.
.
Steinbrenner today said he and
Winfield have had their differences,
" but we have resolved them.''
"I certainly consider him a friend,
and be assured the Yankees will have
the welcome mat out for him on Old
Timers Day in the years ahead."
"Dave Winfield was one of the
standout players of his era, and a certain first-ballot Hall of Farner."
Steinbrenner · said in a suitement
issued ·by the Yankees ..
Winfield's strangest moment
carne in 1983. Hiswarmup throw at
Exhibition Stadium in Toronto killed
a seagull and he was taken to polil:e
headquarters and c.hll!iCfil with cruelty to animals. The charge was
dropped the followins·dl!)o.

No. :ZO Louisville 65
Jerald Honeycuu hit two f011i
shots and made two passes that set
up dunks in the last three minutes as
Tulane won on the road. Couisville

had a chance to tie, but DeJuan 6, S-3 Conference USA). Brian Kis.lr
Wheat missed a pair of three-point had 16 for the Cardinals (16-7, 7-2
attempts in the last 10 seconds.
Conference USA). Tulane won for
Honeycutt and Chris Cameron just the second time in 16 garn,ei .
each scored 18 points for Tulane (13- against Louisville at Freedom Hall.

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�--

Friday, February 9, 1996

Friday, February 9, 19915

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

to help me sleep and tranquilizers to
get me through Jhe day. Suicide was
always at the back of my mind.
Instead of talcing the sleeping pills, I
saved them up. My goal was to accumulate 200. I figured thar WOI!Id surely do it.
.
Then, I read your column tn the
H~for~ Courant the da_y you ran th~
arucle Before You Kill Yourself
from Reader's Digest. I took a long
look at those pills and flushed them
down the drain.
·
Thank you, Ann, for saving my
life. With my luck, I would have ended up a vegetable had I taken those
ptlls. I sbll have a long way to go, but
believe me, I~ going to give it my
best. I am plannmg to get some coun-

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I am the mo!h~r or nine children -- seven boys and
IWO girls. I am SS and look preny
J!Xld•all things considered.
In September 1994, one of my
~ons hanged himself. I b~ame
-deeply depressed and couldn 't get
~ver the idea that somehow I had
:-t$iled him. My doctor gave me pills

sebng, shape up and be equal to whatever comes my way.
Thank you for my life. That was·
some gift. -- "Kate" in Connecticut
De~ Kate: I am thrill~ that you
are sttll among us, but you should
thank ll\e Hartford Courant and Reader's Dtgest I was merely the one ,who
put you together.
.
And now,-I hope the counsehng
you get will help you maintain a balanced and rational outlook. Death is
awfully permanent.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
smokes, and I hate it. After cancer
surgery, "Ioe" promised to quit. For
six weeks while recovering be didn't sm&lt;!ke, but as soon ash~ .got out
of my stght, he started again and lied

about it. He swore he wasn 't smoking until I caught him.
Ioe has promtsed to qUit many
times. but he's never made an honest
effort. .1 ~ sick of this filthy habit
and hts hes. It has caused many
fights. H~ has high blood pressure
and bleedmg ulcers but insists he is
healthy and that smoking _doesn't hun
h1m. He says that smoking is not a
problem for him and that I'm the one
with the problem. He intends to continue to smoke and I ean "like it or
. lump it. "
Joe smells like his stinking ciga~ttes all the time. This odor is repuls1ve to me and a real tum-off. I can
hardly stand for him to touch me. He
has chosen to give up closeness and

:..~community calendar- ,-----To
• The Commuuity ·Calendar Is
: published a.i a free service to non·
=profil groups wishing to announ~e
::meedng and spec:ial events. The
~dar is no.t designed to promote
.·sales or fund ralsen of any type.
• Items are printed as spa~ permits
: and cannot be guaranteed to run a
:qe«:ifl~ num~r of days.

:-·JIRJDAY

intimacy rather than give up smoking. about his addiction, a good physician
I don't want to hurt my children and will help him. He cannot win this bat·
grandkids, so we continue to live de alone. I wish him luck.
together, and illy to make the best of
Dear Ann: If you think it's hard to
it.
get a job with a law deg=. ~ with
J keep reading that smoking kills a B.A. in history. Es~1ally tf you
over 420,000 people every year, but can't type. Advise college students to
there are no statistics on how many major in something useful. O_r better
marriages it ruins. I'll bet the number yet, go to a vocational school- Smart
is staggering . Any suggestions? •• Too Late
Trying to Cope in Salem, Ore.
Dear Smart: You may be right.
Dear Salem: I am sure you realize Thanks for the advice.
that Joe is hooked. The addiction to
nicotine, they say, is more diffic.ult to
Send questions lo Ann Landen,
kick than heroin. '
Creaton·Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
Joe is not going to get off the weed tury Blvd,, Suite 700, Los Angeles,
without professional help. If he ·
should suddenly become sane on this Calif. 90045
subject and d~cide to do something

sent musical-------. Man, 81,.

Apos tol1c
C. .rdi oi'J- Clutot Apootolk
VIIIZindt and Ward Rd.
Putor: James Miller

P.O. Box 467,

Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Services- JO,oo

lapllst
~:~~~~~;.~·era)
570
Grant.St.,
Sunday school - : Lm.
Worship· It o.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service ~ 7 p.m.
Fno WUI Baptist Cbun:b
Ash Stree~ Middleport

Pastor. Les Hayman

uses on1on
to beat
mugger

MONDAY
PORTLAND -- Portland PTO,
Monday, 7:30p.m. at schoql. Speak·
er, Southern Building Committee
representatives.
POMEROY -- Big Bend Fann
Antique Club, Monday, 7:30p.m at
Meigs High School Library.

'

Sunday Service· 7:30p.m.
Sunday School -10 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.
Rutloud Flnt Bapun Cb""'b
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
wo.. hip -10:45 a.m.
P9'J1'roy Flnl Baptist
Pastor: Paul Stinson
East Main St.
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
tlnl Southern B!l&gt;tl.ol
41872 Pomeroy Ptke

~

MIDDLEPORT
Return
)onathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
· of the American Revolution, Friday.
: 1 p.m. at Heath United Methodist
r church, Middleport. Speaker, Mrs.
~gar Yierian.

-&lt;·
L "

t.SATUJU)AY
BURLINGHAM -- Burlingham
~Modem Woodmen of Camp 7230,
~ ·poiluck at the hall, 6:30 p.m. Satur: d,11y. Meat, rolls and beverage fur• nished: Members to take potluck
; dish. For members, family and guests
: ol members.
l

::." POMEROY-- Big Bend Chapter,
: :Good Sam Club, Saturday, 6 p.m. at
: Shoneys in Point Pleasant, W. Va.

..

PORTLAND -- The Lebanon
Township Board of Trustees will
meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the township
building to discuss appointment of a
trustee.
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Board of Elections, Tuesday, 9 a.m.
at the office.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
home of Mrs. Eldred P&amp;r$ons. Mrs.
Dewey Horton to review, "Let Me
Call You Sweetheart" and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, "The Glass Lake."

•..

All club meetings and other news
: , · In an effort to provide our readerarticles
in the society section must
: phip with current news, the Gallipobe
submitted
within 30 days of
• jis Daily Tribune and The Daily SenAll
birthdays must be
occurrence.
: tinel will not accept weddings after
submitted
within
42 days of the
: ~ days from the date of the event.
occurrence.
~·

• ,

POMPANO BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- Izzie Rotterrnan always takes a
sweet onion when he goes out to eat
because they're easier on his 81-yearold stomach than those served at most
restaurants.
His culinary quirk paid off.
Wednesday night when he . used the
half-pound Vidalia to stop a mugger.
Rotterman and his business part·
ner Gloria Lepcio. 55, were on their
way into Gianni's Italian Restaurant
when a man jumped out of a car and.
grabbed Lepcio 's purse.
Ratterman pulled out the onion
from a plastic bag and began pummeling the mugger's head. More
shocked than injured, the attacker
jumped back into the ·getaway car
without any loot. Rotterrnan said.
"It was more stupid than brave,"
he said Thursday.
, Unharmed and still hungry, the
two went into the restaurant, where
the manager called police and gave
the couple some wine for their trouble.
·
Then came the salad. Pulling out
the onion, Rottcrman sliced it thin
and laid it· across the lettuce.
"Not too strong like those restaurant onions, but sweet," he saic!:

TUESDAY

=
;..;.· --News'policy------

:

The Middleport Church of Christ teen choir,
"Maximum Impact• will present a mu81cal, "Sell
and Light" Sunday and Wednesday st 7 p.m.
81Ch evening at the church, Fifth and Main, Middleport. In the group are from the left front, Bev·
erly Stewart, Tara Gruenr, Alison Hays, Joey
Taylor, Derak Johnson, Chris Pickens, Abby
Harris, Ca11le Vaughan and Stefani Plckenll;
second row, Ashlee Vaughan, Alison Gerlach,

Jessica Wheeler; third row, B.J. SmHh, Carrie
Hartson, Angle Taylor, Sarah Craig and Lisa
Snodgrass, and back, Daniel Young and Malt
Sellers. In the choir but not pictured are Aaron
Hockman, Jeremy Hartson, Thaddeus Bum·
gardner, Mike Wilfong, Josh Lynch, Stephania ·
Wood, Adam Thomas, Jessica Johnson, Dar·
rick St. Clair, and Brandl Stevens

I

.•.
••
•••

]nternet? 21st century? These folks just want a dial tone~

. ....... . '
•
: jl.y t.·.scorr ttECKAFID
' lP Business Writer

Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m,
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.
F'lnt Baplist Cbun:h
P~or: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmet Sl .. Middleport
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Raclae Flnl Bapllsl
Pastor: Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor: AaroA Young
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:40a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.m.
SJJytr R1111 Bapllsl
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School -IOa.m. .
Wo~hip- lla .':"·· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servoces· 7,30 p.m.
ML Ualoa Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

nications.
· Kennedy Meadows is one of a few
; Excuse the residents of Kennedy ·-u.s. communities, mostly in isolated
t-Aeadows, Calif., if they laugh abou\ and poor areas, that have not had a
: ho.\v a new law will open new forms chance to tap into the in'formation
of' communication through tele- age, from on-line banking to ·com: jlj.ones, televisions and computers.
puterized chat sessions.
:. : At 6,000 feet up in the southern
"Everybody's cruising the Inter: S~rra Nevada pinyon pines, they just net these days. It's just amazing how
want a dial tone without the 35- much information is flying around,"
lli'inute hike to the nearest truck stop says Kennedy Meadows resident
Kent Whitham.
·
: piy phones.
: . : 'While much of America is poring
"It would be nice if there was a
· o~llr the new-found benefits of the . phone. It cenainly makes life a little
: [!:llecom,overbaullaw President Clin- safer .in terms· or if there's an acci-.
: 1011 signed Thursday, there are still dent," Whitham said from his job at
· iome folks around the country that China Lake Naval Weapons Center,
~on 't even have access to the bare 50 miles from his two-bedroom
, .ii&amp;ics when it comes to tclecommu- mountain home.
:-c

7

...

manages to pay $15 a month for cable
TV but has no phone.
"I' ve never had one," she told the
Lexington Herald-Leader. "I can't
afford it."
·
Many advocates of phones in
suth areas say installation costs are
the main reason residents don't havt
access. And a lack of competition is
why phone companies i:an charge
higher rates once service is set up.
Officials with the California Public Utility Commission have said it
would cost an average of $20,000 a
line to install phones in Kennedy
Meadows, .compared with the usual
$4,000 to $6,000 in urban areas.
After a two-year battle before the
commission, the residents prevailed
'

The town has requests in for 130
phone lines and Ducor Telephone Co.
has said it is ready to provide service .
But the residents may have to wait
an~ther year.
About a quarter of California
doesn't have phone serviee, said
Richard Fish of the state's Public
Utility Commission. While much of
that land has more coyotes than
humans- people are there, too, and
they want phones,
Many poor eastern Kentucky
counties face similar problems. Nearly one-third of all households there
don't have phones, researchers say.
Janet Bishop, a mother of six
learning job skills while working at
a variety store in Booneville, Ky.,

'

. r . .·

~t&lt;orn

birth
:ilnnounced
'...

Old Belhol Free WJI Bapll!l Cluun:h
2860 I St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 o.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30
HW.Idt Baptlll c••n:•
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
PastOr: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr .
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serviees . 7 p.m.

'

'

Alii TIIAT'IIIO IULLI

30 Year
Fixed Rate

TEEN.DANCE
D. J. Jerry J.
Magic 101.5 F.M.
Saturday - 8:00 p.m.
Singles: $2.00 Couples $3.00
Mechanic Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
"Formerly; Loca:-Motion"

7 .:17:."" Interest Rat£•
7 .! l7'~o A.P.R.

PiR.tll Mtehlm, Pool T•~let,
Video
Piztl, Pop

0•••• ·

A

None

M

,..__IIIIJ

,.;,._100

15 Year
Fixed Rate

PASTOR MIKE &amp; JO ANN PANGIO

BiWIPL&amp;:

7

'

I

~~ ~'

.,

-

•

•

'

t'~."-

•

7 r..,:..

Forut Rua Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
·. SundaySchooi-JOa.m.
Wonhip - ll a.m.

Roitloud c..n:b of God
Pastor: Gregory L Se1n
Sunday School- tO a.m.
Worship· II 1.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sefl/ices - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

'•

S..:rod Hoort Cotluollc Cbn:b
161 Mulberry Ave, Poineroy, 992-5898
Paslor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-S:l5p.m.; Mass- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 Lm.,
Sun. Mass ·9:30a.m.
Dailey Mus- 8:30a.m.

,.

Cenlral Cluslu
AJbury (Syncuso)

lfn Iriformation, call
TGmmll Beaver At (304} 671J-112J . .
lloa•fllal&amp;fll!,_.....,......,......,...,, ._.._ID_'h
...
\ .
;

:For .

.

808EAST

tuaL

.

~·

~

•

.

'

SNOUFFER
FIRE SAJ=ETY

a

SALES A SEFMCI

.•..,eon

•Pt. Pl••nt

•New Haven .

1112·1075
172 North a-nd AYI.
Mlcktleport, Ohio

Torth Churtb
Co. Rd . 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
R.aci•e Fint Chun:h orlhe Naurea~
Pastor: Scou Rose
Sunday School • HO a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Middleport c•un:b of tbt NuartDO
Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
wo.. hip. 10,30 a.m., 6,30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
RndswHie Fe:Dowsblp
Cbun:b oCtbe Nazareoe

Interim Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a .m,
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Syncuse Chun:h ofthe Neurone
Pas1or: Bill Stires
Sundav School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip. 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

•

Pomoroy Cblll't:h orlbt Nuortoo
Pas1or: Rev. Thomas McCiuna
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Worship -10:30 a.m. ond 6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m:

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
S1ruf

a3.,.,,,

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

""
••

HoddaRPOrt Cbun:h
Grand Street
Sunday School- to a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Cluster

93 Mill Street
Middleport, OhiO 45760
(614) 992-6657 - (99B-oolls)
CHURCH SUPPUES &amp; BIBLES

.,

Bethel Chun:b
Township Rd., 468C
Sund&gt;y School · 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday SC:rvices- 10 a.m.

Tuppen Pl•lns St. P1ul
Pastor: Sh111ron Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Tuesday ~rvices · 7:30 p.m.

0\\~rr

I

Cootvlllt Ualtod Metbodlst Parlsb
Pas1or: Helen Kline
Cool•Uie Cbun:h
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Tuesday Se"'ices. 7 p.m.

R~ednille

•

,.•••

Raclae
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Pastor: Rev . Charles Mash
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

326 E. Main Si, Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPianlicr
Holy Euchari51 and ·
Sunday School !0:30a.m.
Coffee hour following

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for everything

Ellsl Lelarl
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· tO.a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

LongBottom
Paslor : Re\1 . Charles Mash
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- I 0:30a.m.
Wednesda~ Services · 7:30p.m.

Trlalty Church
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Halt·

Morulae Sur
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School ·9:45a.m .
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Se"'ia:s • 7:30p.m.
,. SuUoD
Pastor: Kennelh Baker
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m. (lsi &amp; 3rd Sun)

Jopp•
Poosoor: Bob Randnlph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

~~

i

¢armel
·
Pastor: Kcnn&lt;th Baker
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Congregational

c .... ~JChn:h

Sunilay School . tO a.m .
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Airrtd
Pastor : Sharon Hausman
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.

Chostor Chun:• of God
S. R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Chester
Pastor: Rev. William D. Hihds
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 6 p.m.:
Wednesday, 1 p.m. Family Training Hour

..........,. Cli•n:• or Clirlat
2t2 W. Main St.

Btlbllnf
Putor: Kenneth Baker

Meigs Cooprratin Parish
N~he1s1

204 Condor St •
Pomeroy,OH

992·2975
RAWLINGS. COATS

FISHER
. FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
214 South 2nd

Middleport

Coolvittt Rood
Putor: Rl:v. l'llittip R Sunday School • 9:30 ...,.,
Worship · 10:30 I.DI.
Wednesday Servia: - 7 p.m.

Clioll&lt;r Cis........... N...,....
Putor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncaday Services • 7 p.m.

..

.
'

'
'

Fotnlnr Blllk Cis.....

R•tlud Cli..... ol' ... N...,...
Pulor: Samuel Ba.syo
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednclday Sefllices - 7 p.m.

Letart, W.Va. Rt. l
Postor: Rankin Roodt
Sunday School • 10:30 LID .
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Pootland Flnl Cio..... or tho NUUHe
Pastor: Morlt Malson
Worship - 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 6 p.m.
Wednesda~ Services . 7 p.m.

Faltb Fello....lp C - for Clutol
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dicken~
;
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.
Coi•ll'J Bible Ch..-cli
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship 10:30 a,m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:30p.m.

New Kana Cbun:b or lht No.-at
Pastor: Glendon Strodd
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo~hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

SllvonvHio Word or Fallis
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9,30 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.

Other Churches
Cbrlsllao Follow,.lp Cooler
Salem St., RUIIand
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School· tO a.m.
wo.. hip. 1us o.m., 7 p.m.
. Wednesday Servia: • 7 p.m.

Rejolctac Ure Cis .....
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Fore:m1n
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

HobiOB c:-tlaa F•llowablp Clian:b
Rev. Clyde Hendenon
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service. 7:30 p.m.

Chun:h or Jesus Chrll~
Apostolk Faltlu
114 mile pasl fort Meip on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: Will1am Van Meier
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Foltb Full Gospel Chun:h
long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday - rellowsh1p service 7 p.m.

Clifton Tahonooclo Chun:b
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
· Worship - 7 p.m.
Thursday Service . 7 p.m.

Tho BeUoven' Followsltlp Mlalstry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
PISior: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday Sc~ool - to a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Harrlson•IU• Coaumaally Cbun:b
· Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday -9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Endllme House or Pnyer
(at Burlingham church off RouiC 33)

Mt. Olivt United Methodist
O(f 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.• 7 p;.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Church of God or Prophecy
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
PaSior: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School'· 10 1.m.
Worship- I l a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Ep1 sco pal

SnowvUJo
.
Sunday School · 10 a.m .
Worship - 9 a.m.

United Methodist

SyncuH Ftnt Ch•rch or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worsllip- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-7:30p.m .
Wednesday Services - 1:30 p.m.

Church o f Ch11 st

·s.tem Ceater
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worsllip -. IO:t5 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutberan Church
Walnut and Henry Sts .• Ravenswood, W.Va .
l_ntrim pastors: George C. Weinck
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday·School· 9:45a.m .
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

-Racine

Rutland
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Selvices • 7 p.m.

Lutheran

Mt. Moriloll Cluon:b or God
, !

Rock Sl'rinp
Pastor: Ke1th R•dc:r
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

St. Joh• Lalbonn Chun:b
Pine Grove
Pastor:·Dawn Spalding
Worship- 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School - to,oo a.m.

Foil• Baptist Cbun:h
Railroad St .. Mason
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhop- I I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedqesday Sefl/ices · 7 p.m.

Evening· 7 p.m.

,,

Chns t1an Union

Pomm.y
Pastor: Robert E. Robiouon
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m. ·

• Th• Cban:h ofJosus
Clurisl or loller-Diy Salbts
St. Rt. 100,446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-tl a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11 :OS-12 :00 noon
Sacnment Service 9· 10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Church

RHdsvlll• Cliun:b orChrbt
Pastor:·Philip SIUrm
Sunday School ' 9,30 a.m.
'Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Pearl Cliapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - tO a.m.

Reorpnlud Ch•n:h ofJosus Christ
of Lotter Dl) Salnll
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pulor: Janic;e Danner
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· t0:30 o.m.
Wednesday Services · 7,30 p.m.

Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school - JOJO a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

\\'l·•.., t Vlif!iiiJ.i II(JlJ"-.IHl!,

Served ·Aft~r Dedication)

··-·u·. SERVU~~E· SCHEDULE:
10A.M:~

H~mlock Grove

'

m•fll..-iltlol. ,_flltheM7.11110m a p...,-.Jdlie
IN?
•DotJ'iltll*ed ... ._MittC•Ieall-~

·. ·iJED.ICA,TI()N SPEAKER '.

mr· ~Y

longsvlllo Cbrisllton Chun:h
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service HO p.m.

MIDenvHie
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
W0r&gt;hip- tO a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Graham Unllod Methodist
Worship· 9:30a.m. (1 st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

R•llond Fr« Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - tO a.m.

·

•

;f pR... C. RUSSEL ARCHER ,

Ratland Conmuoll)' Chun:b
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School · 9:30a .m.
Sunday Evenin&amp;- 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Church of God

Pastor: AndrCw Miles
Sunda' School'- 9:30 o.m.
Worshop- 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

·. , 923 S. 'lmRD ST., MIDDLEPORT
I

Bndfonl Chun:h of Cbrlsl
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Keith Cooper
Youth Minister: Michael Teagarden
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

.. A}' H.

Aa.-wlliupurdlueplloeflletiO.OOO_... ...... •• nndu : ;

2:1 Yt·.n Fixt ·d

Rutlaad Chun:h of Cbrisl
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

lourol CUff FI"H Metluudlst Cliun:b
PastQr: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· tO:JO a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:00p.m.

Uhorty Clirlsll.. Chun:b
.Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Thursday ;&gt;ervice- 6:30p.m.

HHth (Middleport)
Putor: Vernagaye Sullivan
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Waloyoo Blblo HoUnoss Cbtu'Cb
75 Pearl St. , Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.
Hysell Ruo Hou .... Cb•n:b
Pastor: Robert Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m,
Wor&gt;hip -1(}.45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.

Hickory Wlls Chun:h of Chris I
Pastor: Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m . ,
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes - 7 p,m.

Forest Rua

Pastor: Charles Neville
SUnday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Thursday Services· 6:30p.m.

Plae Grou Bible Holiness Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastoo: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
W~dnesday Service . 1 :30 p.m.

Bndburj Chun:h of Cbrtll
Pastor: Rick Snyder
Sunday School -9:30a.m. ·
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

(i .S7!l · Int t'n·q Hate

teo_...,...., mblarMII.113,,...-.IIil)'wtaa auwp • -· -as

Dedication Of New Church
'10 A.M. ·Sunday, Feb•.11

Tappen Plaia Chun:b orCiurlll
Pastor: Stanley Mincks
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 9:.tS a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Flatwooda
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

ROIO or Sbllron Holtneu Cbun:h
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Allllqutl)' Bapll.ot.
Sundoy School -9:30a .m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Thursday Se"'ices · 7:30p.m.

•"

.

Zl011 Cban:h or Cbrlal
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Woo&gt;hip • 10:30 o.m., 7,00 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m .

Eolerprhe
Pastor: Keith Rade r
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m.

Col•ary Pllpim Ciuopel
Harrirwnville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship- IOa.m.• 7 p.m.

MI. Morilob Jloptlst
Foutdo &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig. Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hlp • t0:45 a.m.

£lWG'I.I: IIGale Willi a purdlue price oletiO.OOO- ft11111N a
nn.......,.
(~ ._of the M7.100 w a p..., wwki lie
3eOaiCIIIIIIIyJNOJ
utafll*l:l8.07.
_ , . . . - J U R I - ~·· - l l l l l l l ._._,.. -~lllleall_...._

ERIN KORN

FAITH CHAPEL

'

•

PQII'tl'8

grandparents are George
,M;~Ouolyn Kom of Carroll and John
Goolsby of Houston,
the maternal great-grand'ijlj?th~r 'is Jean Coates of Syracuse
paternal great-grandmother is
Tho~!IS ,of Pomeroy.

Beorwollow Rid&amp;&lt; Churtb ol' Chrbl
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday'School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
\!¥;dnesday Services · 6'30 p.m.

Hoi mess

St. Paul Lutbtnn Cbun:b
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St. , Pomeroy
Pastor : Dawn Spalding
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.

Vktory Baptist iadep&lt;ndaat
525 N. 2nd Su. Middleport

'

~·

K•ao Cbun:• or Ciorist
Worship· 9:30a. m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wall~~«
1st and 3rd Sunday 1

Pasaor: Ch•rlca Neville
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship - II 1.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30 p.m.

DlaYIU. Ho~Mu Cliurdo
31057 State Route 325, J.an&amp;svltc
Putor: Rev. Rick Maloyed
· Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Sundoy wOBhip • 10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Children's church· 10:3S a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

lhrifturd Cluun:h or Cllrlsllll
Cluriollaa U•loa
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. Dlvid McManis
Sunday School - l t a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed~ay Servicea· 7:30p.m.

Catholic

~~;~~E~;;~ofMiddlepon, and the

'

YOU'LL IAVEIIONEY
If T1l£ CLASIROB

We Ma~ It Possible With ''Unconventional" Secondary Market Ff.nancinli!

Mlddltport Clian:k or Cis rill
5th and Main
Pastor: Al Haruon
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servloes - 7 p.m.

Worship· 9:30a.m. Sunday ·

Let Peoples Bank Put You In A
New HolDe For ·only 5°/o Down

'"Bracy and Shannon Kt'lrn of
~emeroy announce the birth of a
&lt;laughter, Erin Brooke, Jan. 12, at
li1&gt;Izer Medical Center. The unfant
:we·tghed six pounds, 13 ounces and
:Wii&amp;.21 inches long.
·
grandparents are Bah
·
Caruthers of Pomeroy, anti

33226 Children's Home Rd .
Sunday School • I I Lm.
Worship · IOo.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;ea · 7 p.m.

Bible Study-7:00p.m. Wednclday

"Then I ate the evidence."

and should be getting some service
by late this year or early neKt year.
Ducor Telephone, which specialize~ in outlying areas, will have the
~ lines installed. Basic rates will be
capped at $28, 150 percent or the
aniount paid by customers in nearby
GTE-served·areas.
And rate payers throughout the
state will kick in a little more than
$100,000 a year in subsidies to provide Whitham his right to a dial tone,
the Internet, and whatever else the
booming telecommunications industry dreams up.
"Contrary to what some people
say, we didn't move up here because
we wanted to be hermits," Whitman
said.

P _ , WOSIIklt c•lll't:borCMt~C

Bet.lthom Bapdst
Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine

~--

!

· The Dally Sentinel• Page '1

thinks ~wice about suicide after reading Ann's column

Ann
Landers

:

•

.

~oman

•:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Nationwide Ins; Co.
of Columbus, Qh.
804 W. Main
992·2318 Pomeroy

We Fill Doctors'

Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

YGu 'U be floating c&gt;n a
cioud with the buys ·
you 'U find in the

clmsifo!&lt;U .

p.m.

Middleport Community Cliun:b
575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Wedne~y Service · 7:30p.m. 1

Presbyterian

Faith Tabernacle Churcb
Bailey Run Road
•
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
E~ening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.

Syrocuso Flnl United Presbytoriloa
Pastor: Rev . Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Uarrlsoavllte p,...byt•ri•n Cbon:ll
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 9:4S a.m.

Syncuso Mission
1411 Bridgcm~n St., Syracuse
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
E\lening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Mlddltport Prabytorilon
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WOJship • 10 a.m.

Haul Commlllllty c•un:b
OffRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
SundOy School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m ., 7,30 p.m.

Seventh -Day Ad ven ti st
Seveat•·Day Adveatlsl
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Worship- 3 p.m.

Dyes•lllo Commualty Cbun:b
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · I 0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Mo.,. Cbllpol Church
Sund111y Khool · 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

United Brethren

Foltb Gospel Cburch
Long Bottom
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.. 7,30 p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

ML Konno• Uallod Brt..rtl
In Chrlat Chon:h
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- t0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

MI. 011•• Commanlty Cburcb
Paslor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30 a:m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

Edea Uoitod Brtthrt•l• Ckrist
2 1/2 miles nonh of Reedsville
on.State Roule 124
Pastor: Rev. Raben Markley
Sunday School • to a.m.
Worship· 7,30 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30p.m.

United Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pasror : Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Full Gospel Ugbthouso
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter .
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tutsday &amp; Thursday- 7,30 p.m.
Sotalb Btlbel New Tostomonl
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Roben Barber
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
' Wor5hip- JO.a.m., 7 p.m.
. Wednesday Service- 1 p.m.
Corloton intordenomlaodonoi c•un:b
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Je'ff Smitll
.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip Se"'ice·lstand 3rd Sunday, 7 p.m.
No Wednesday Evening Service
FrHclom Gospel Mlssloo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Putor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

......~~
Wlillo's Cbapel WeskyiD

••

............ OSS'I

~-•

7 '..

POMEROY, OtiO • IU IIlii
BILL QUICKEL

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY~

Mlddlepon Pentr.:oslal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6
Wednesday Services~ 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship· 10 a.m.
Wednesday service-6:30p.m.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homeme Saws

-

Crow's Family
Restaurant
"FHhlriltl K~lfiMdt.j Fried Cllicu11

228 W. Mlln St, Pomeroy

992·5432

EWJNG FUNERAL HOME
"Dignil.y lUid Service Always"

Established 1913
992-~121

106 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

214 E. Main
992-5130
Pqmeroy

Veterans
Memorial Holpl1tall'' ·

..

115 E. Memorial Dr.
992·2104

P~

�.'
,

ft•

Friday, February 9,' 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pall 8 ~ Tbe Deily Sentinel
'

'

.

.

.

Study: Low-fat ·diet won't-help avoid risk ·o1 bre;ast ca·ncer
8y MALCOLM RmER

AP·Sclenoll W,..
NEW YORK (AP) - Scientists
· .eported evidence today that startmg
f a low-fat diet at midlife or later probt : ably won't reduce a woman's risk of
: b.east cancer.
,
•
One researcher, however, said that
doesn't mean such diets are worthless
and that they probably help protect
ag~nst heart disease and colorecta1
cancer.
"There m other, very good reasons to stick to a diet which is re1alively low in red meat, and low in
. high-fat dairy products, and high in
; .. fruits and vegetables," Dr. David
Hunter said.
·! · Hunter is executive director of the
; : Harvard Center for Cancer Preven..,

lion at the Harvard School of Publi~
Health. He and odia' scientists .eport·
ed the breast cancer work in today's.
issue of the New England Journal of
1 •
) Medicine.
They pooled and analyzed the '
results of seven previous studies·
involving a total of 337,819 women,
mostly middle-aged or older. They
found that the amount of fat in the
participants' diets had no effect on
their risk of developing breast can9tr
later.
The researchers in the seven st!ld·
ies didn 't find out how long. the
women had been on'lheirdiets, so the
results don't rule out the possibility
that women who have stuck to low fat
diets from much earlier in life run a
lower breast cancer
risk.
.

...
jj: Country group Diamond
L.• Rio: From fore to 'IV' ·
• By A.J. FLICK

:; . Tucson Citizen
TUCSON - You could almost
feel sorry for Marty Roe. The charismalic lead singer for the ' pOpular·
group Diamond Rio was spending a
sunny, clear Albuquerque morning
• recently talking on the phone instead
• of golfing.
" Yeah, don't you feel sorry for
me?" he kids.
In January, the group performed in
Tempe, Ariz., with Lon:ie Morgan as
part of Super Bowl festivities.
The award-winning group's offi·
Cialt996 tour began in l'ebruary, but
the guys have been playing clubs to
gel back into the rhythm after a long
winter break.
"We'.re kinda gettin' out and
workin' to get the chops back. Tryin'
out a lot of new stuff and see what
works and what doesn't," Roe says.
With a new single, "Walking
Away," already making gains toward '
the top 10, a new tour gearing up with
. a new sponsor (Hane~) and a new
'NA:SCAR racer, there's plenty for
Diamond Rio to look forward to in
1996. But what the band's most
excited about is , its fourth album,
" IV," due out Feb. 27.
"We want people to know that's
not 'I,' 'V,' but !four' the number,'' he
quips.
Careful consideration went into
the album's name.
"We hammered· out a bunch of
things. We had a lot of possibilities.
"We didn't want to call it 'Walking Away' for marketing purposes.
We've. been· iold over and over to
name the album after'what you think
.
·-

. Other studies suggest lhlt if a low·
fat diet can influedte that risk, it
would have to be adopted ~n child·
hood or adolescence to affect the
decades-long processes lhat lead to
the disease.
1 lit taea that towenng tat mtake
during middle age could help protect
against breast cancer had appeared to
be promising, but· it shows "less
promise all the time," said Robert
Smith, an epidemiologist and senior
director for detection and treatment at .
the American Cancer Society.
The report comes as the federal
government is conducting major
study of whether a diet that includes
low 'fat·can reduce breast cancer risk.
It aims to enroll 48,000 women and.
follow them for an average of nine

a

years.
More than I6,000 women aacs SO
to 79 have already siped up for the
federal study, in which a computer
randomly assigns some participants
to follow a diet that gets 20 percent
of calories from fat and includes lots
of fruits, vegetables, cereals and
grains.
Dr. Jacques Rossouw,lead project
officer of the federal study, said' the
' that went
results of the seven studtes
into Hunter's analysis had been
known when the federal project
began. Given the individual study
results, the outcome of the analysis
was no surprise, he said.
.The typical American woman gets
30 percent to 35 percent of calories
from fat, Hunter said.

'.

~Prom

will be the first single. But we didn't
like the connotation. 'Diamond Rio
Walking Away,' like we'.e walking
away. 'Bye! We're outta here!"'
Someone came up with "IV,''
which the record label, Arista, liked
because of the visual effect •.he says.
" We discovered after the fact that
Foreigner named their fourth album
'IV' and Toto named their fourth
album 'JV' and for boih groups, iJ
was their best album ever. We '&lt;tlike
that to happen for us. That'd be just
fipe."
"IV" marks some firsts. It's the
first time the group co-produced
(with Tim DuBois and Mike Clute,
who has engineered on the group's ·
previous albums). It's also the first
country ~lbum to be recorded dlgitally, without ever having a note
touch tape. Roe says he hopes. fans
will appreciate the improved sound.
Content wise, "IV" features mostly up-tempo songs.
"It's not quite as melodramatic as
the other three albums," Roe says.
"And Jimmy Olander wrote the
best instrumental," he crows about
the lead guitarist's song, "Big."
(Mandolinist Gene Johnson, drummer Brian Prout, keyboardist Dan
Truman and bass guitar player Dana
Williams round out the group.)
"It's all just a really neat technocountry thing. Jimmy had a good
quote about it. He said most times,
when you finish an album, you hand
it over to someone and you're done
with it. You've had all you can take
of it. But with this album, you want
to sit down with everyone and listen
to it with them."

style·show____,

PETER
GO'IT, M.D.

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: In the past,
you've wrinen about cluster
headaches. I happened to remember
my late mother's remedy for this. At
the first indication of a headache. she
would get a piece of real cotton and
set it on fire in an ash tray. The cotton would smolder and give off

: Marlee Jill }Jorfman celebrated
:her second bit;ihday J/10. 121t\1 the
~home of her ' j)hre~ts, I;lavid and
; ·:Kathie Hoffmti~ Jif Middleport. A
'Btii'IIC)' and Baby Bop tl]el'!e was car- .
$ied out. •
'.i
: •ifliose ,llt~nding were her sister,
Li~~J~; grandparents, Fred and Pauhne
· Hoffman and Nick and Ruth Wright;
Jmr, '1\mi. Trevor and Jordan Buck;
'Mike and Vicki Hoffman; Beverly
:anti..N.athllll Rothgeb; Kim and David
~~~~~: Brenton Ba~ette; and Nik-

(AIIEIIIIOII siiGLEsJI
. . . . . . Dates!

Sillplyal
1·9410-656·2600 bt.
3136, 2.99,.. +
II rrs, .. 111'!1 to
silaleslocatlll II OW.
pniiiiiHIIHives.
Strv·U
(619) 645-8434

,,,, •.

IIIII mo.

'•,

'Ome

'

DAY

Excluding Yard Sales

.

s1 :oo·A,·D. ay Fo·r··

MARLEI!; HOFFMAN

',
..:::::
GOOD HOnEST PEOPLE
,,.

VInyl &amp; Alum.'Skiing, ·
VInyl Replai:ement,
Wlndowl, Blown
lnalilltlon, Storm
Dooni, Storm
Windows, Oaragea.
F-Eatflll8ttl
111Min

1

: group of figures counts as a word; Count name 1
1 address or phone number, if used. You'll get better 1
1 results if you describe fully, give price. The:
: Sentinel reserves the right to classify, edit or reject 1
1 any ad. Yard Sales Excluded. "
'I
: Name__~_.:.____________ 1.I
1
1

• Service agreement required~
,.

.....

1

I

Address~-------------

I
1

Phone

'

'

Cleaelflc.tlon:

.

... •.

•I

"5.11 ..tSt.

•••

n ·=
st. ,
.

'

I

MU141St.

I
I
I

. fl•ltif,OI
'

I
I
I
I

PubliC NOtice .

2.

I.

'

7.

.

9.

I

.OII.Chanaas tl.ubl .JOba .•T~ne-ups .

NEFF REMODEliNG
- SERVICE
HouM ll•p•lr I

llemocleNng
Kitchen I 81th
llamodall!lg
Room Acldltlona
Sieling, lloofi111J, Patloa

lleuonab..
lnaur.N • Expwtanc..t

CURl'S CAl CO.
ow-.:

Hllrry a Donna Clark

Starting Sun. lhru Feb.
2t Sr. Cltlzene Specill
for day runs. ·
$1.00 per person to
Pomeroy a Mkldleport
Days: 541-1124 (local)
Nights: 992·2741

Fee

--

8.
10.

Something from the
honey's
Live girls Ho·1

New

'the

ame

Overhead &amp;
underground
utilities &amp; lighting
Bucket, Digger
Truck Services
Service Pole

eotttet

Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 Nollh Second Ave., Middleport

$2.50 per ft.

1·614-378·9808

New At Ingles lleetronies

ladle lllaeli Dealer
Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992-2825
1/31111n

MODERN

ext. 3912. 18+
· $3.99/min.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTIOII
•New Homes
•Garages
•
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473
7/22/M

. . . !1111
Kick Boxing
Training
At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness
Children &amp; Adun

MINI STORAGE

882-2996

Comparable sa. • l'llcll

VI~ 1110 .. ..

bt. 2074
$3.99 per min.
Must Be 18 Yea.
PROCALLCO.

(6021 954-7420
(UmeStoneLow Illites)

Umeatone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

. Limestone,

'

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470
"SupJ&gt;IU!• for aU your pel need. "

RACINE
Opening Feb. lst
GUN CLUB
Pa~~perecl Ptar" fMIIV hln..
271 North 2nd Ave.
GUN SHOOTS
Middleport,
OH.
45760
.
SUN. 1 PM
AKC Reg. Puppies, Kittens, Birds &amp; More
.
Experienced Groomer• • Financing Available. .

(614) 992-6244 ·

B. Jolene Rupe/Owner

J.D•.Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

12 Gauge .

Fadory Choke Only

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
DUMP TRUCK
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
SERVICE
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
Limestone • Gravel
We dig basements, put In septic
',
Dirt • Sand
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call

949-2512

JIUIOH.UIIJIATU

,_,

·-.,

Water
~.;.,!': ~..Jr Treatment
~/[.(~ ~ Equipment

:ttiM-

lfti.I.WiY

1·900·484·21 00

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Claaaes
for Dltallll

MISUIDERSTOODII
. L1¥EI!
CON¥ERSAnON
ONE· ON· OlE

WICKS
HAULING

1-900-288·9155

For FrM EaUmat..

l?::::;s:;:;,ll;;l;;t;;so:;n~"'-:;·

A•C UTILITY
CONSTRUCTION CO.

conversations

Call992·3967

t12-4405

:l/1lllltllln

POIIIBJUfV, OHIO
Trllh Removal • Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented:
Dilly, WH~Iy &amp; monthly rental rates. ·

Cell W•~ tMif

New"-,WV
304-882o29118

Dil1ribu1ed by

TRI•STATI WATER SYSTEMS, IIC.

The water treatmCflt company cordially invites you to
participate in a free, •no obligation, comprehensive water

analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TO$, Mineral Hanlneaa, Iron, PH .
PlMn call RHi..Soft 11182-4472 or 1--..3313
to HI up your frH wtttar inalyala.
'llllllfn

985-4422

13.

•

t5

14.
''

For Addllloolll ...... ...._ Atllleh
Al1p11*'*-0fP. . ..

.

CHESTER STORAGE

.

'

Mail or bring this coupon with payment to:

The Dally Sentinel
.

,

P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
MUST 81! MID IN ADVANcE .

'I

1
I

Ire You Ready
For Love?

Call Nowlll!
1·908-255·2700
Ext. 9402
'.
$2,99 per min.
Mu1t 1te 18 yra;

Touch tone phone

requlr..t.
Sarv·U 61~5 8434
1M....

H2-3911

West Columbia WV.

CHEAfERBATES

~.00/HR.

215838AStWI liD.
Rllclnt, Ohio 41771

8ti3013"FAX

I

Beef and Hog

Mt-2512

•"•n •••••.a,•o•

.. .'Phone-.... ,..,.._....

...

Bus (304) 882·2756
Res. (3041 882-3328

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp;MACHINE SHOP, INC.

• ~ m.e-a:~:lot. Rlnrtrom ~~~.. ·

.....

..... c.....

OneUnHNow
Available
1 Ox28 , $65 per mo.

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNI!R

\ • .

YOUNG'S

CARPMER SERVICE

•RIICIIII AdtlltiO(Ia

•NewCJanlsH

•Eiec1rtcai &amp; Plllillblrig
•llooftng
•Interior &amp; Eldlrlor
Pllrtllng &lt; : ,
I
AJeo Con~• Win

(FRE~ bTIMATIS)

v.c. :YoUtfG ..
Pometo_, ONe

••a•ts
·'

'

-

•

·-

Chester, Ohio

12.

t1 .

·--~--------------~---------

..

· CALL
614·949·2512

CleRw.ter ,S yll._
Dill's w.t.r Rtfl Jag

8.

5.

I

eBrakas •Shocks •Struts •Tires

'

ROUND
BAlES OF
HAY FOR
SAlE.

I

4.

3.

I .

!

'

.'f:.

I
1

1
I ..
I
1
1

.

·:·

'

j

1·800·44-CELL-1

.
.

'

.

J'JNUT .JQ171J'JDNT'AV.AUA.J.I
2'and 4 WheeJ Allgnments.(Computer)

~ ~ .DociJJti iMd.•
· 8ol w. .._.n '$1~. Pomeroy, OH 418711 - ·

8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

OF.FER
EXPIRES
---------------------------Print one word in each space below. Each initial or:

I

. ' ~ , ~nglne Dlagnoale

Olllce Houra: Mon.-Fri.

Photo Copies Not ~epted

• FREE nights and weeklnds till April 30th.·

TAXI

mo.

. 537 BRYAN PLACE
MIODLEPORT 992·277!l

(Over 15 Words • 2q¢ Per Word)
Minimum run3 Cons~cutive days to
receive special rate. t{p REFUNDS!
Offer good with c~pon only.

I

111111

· J&amp;liNSUtAnON

15 Wotds ·

r

participating in this year's version of
the parade on Saturday, Feb. 17, at
1he Pomeroy VillageHall auditorium.
, Auditions or individual performers will begin at 3:30p.m. and auditions for performance groups will
begin at 6 p.m. Audition will condude by 7:30p.m.
Wolfe said that he is looking for
dancers, banner carriers, nag carriers, .
comedians, float drivers, and perfofmers with special variety talents.
All parade participants will be , . E. Stilt St.
used on a voluntary basis, and no scr:
. vices will be paid since the activities
.is' viewed 8s a community
,. service
.
program.

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

TFN

Lucky Ball $200.00 and
Ralaft $50;00 each
wk. Pay according to
. the number of players.
Keep ad for FREE card

St. Mason, WV

•Palnllng
FilE!' EStiMATES
(8141 tl2-5535
814 tl2-2753

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-742~2193

·~

'

Wolfe Productions Entertainment·
is' looking for par!ide perfo1111ers for
this year's prosentation of a parade to
be staged in Middleport in August.
The Midnight holiday electric
light .parade is scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 10 under the ' direction of
Bruce Wolfe.
. '
In preparation for the parade,
Wolfe will be conducting "open·call" &amp;Jlditions for individuals and
performance groups interested in

BIIIHlsiiW MJil
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

at 4:30 p.a

•New Hornet!
•Additions
•NewGaragea
·Remodeling
•Siding

,New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Wln~ows
Room Additions • Roofing·

Call 992-4025

han.,..

eu-lllllldlng I R•• ad I •

BISSELl BUILDERS, INC.

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

EVElY SUIDAY

SMITII'I
COintUCTIO• .

·~oofll!l)

Pll J% •••

Tftcho. s....Mtta

·

materials.

liNGO
RachiiA1181'fcaa
LttiO• Poll 60~

"WtldeR

... ttl lift

and any metal

A

••

Limited

• Motorola 2600 Bag Phone only 96$

Oxygen Acalylenll CO.
Helium all sizes 1ladlcal Gr8di 0.
P~ne Trlmlx Ultra Mix

washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries

AD SA:JJE,

·e.

participants sought

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

108 Pomeroy

:01111110.

Portable

.£LASSIFIED

VIctoria's Prom and Bridal, The Top Drawer and The Clothes
Vault will present a Prom and After Prom Show 3 p.m., Sunday,
Fab. 11. Stutlanta frpm Point Pleasant High, Waharna High, Hannan High, Gallla Acadamy, River Valley, Melga and Ravenswood
will 118 mocleitng on stage at the State Theatre•.PPHS students
Stac( Lea, lett and Brlanne Hartley modeUwo of the prom dreaato· be featured In the ahow. .
·

• NEC 500 ~nly $9.95

Welding Suppllla •lnctuatrlal 0 . . • Steal
Sales a Fabrication • Repair Welding
. AlunilnumiStalnleaa
Machine ShoP.

FREE
Pick-up discarded

Rate

"

Call 992-3967
for Details.

Call
1·908-656-2600
Extension 3012

.

Authorized 1M DIStributor

-NGfiwiP...-

SAWMILL

$2.99/mln. 1B+
lauch tone phone Nqtlited•
s.rv..u819-&amp;45-8434

Speefal

CellularONE has tripled our home rate coverage area You can call vir·
tually anywhere from Cincinnab to Pittsburgh or from Cleveland to
·'
Charleston, without1.roaming charges.

At ~lg Bend
Health &amp; Fitness
87 Mill St.,
Middleport

lonely Again

Pilla.50 e.m. """•
Send SUS Manor Ordor to
Box120, Grubbo, Art&lt;. 72431

either. Thank you for writing.
DEAR DR. GOTT: Please discuss
neuropathy. My doctor says there is
no help. He's placed me on Xanax for
my nerves and Tylenol. with codeine
for pain.
DEAR READER: Neuropathy
(poorly functioning nerves) has many
causes, ranging from diabetes and
various nerve disorders to vitamin
deficiency and alcohol abuse. The
condition causes numbness and tingling of · the affected nerve, most
commonly in the feet.
Doctors don't really ha"e a consistent cure for neuropathy. Antidepressant.drugs and anti .convulsant
medication may reduce some
patients' symptoms, but physicians
oft~ fall back to treating the ~fflic­
tion with painpills.

WEI&amp;III LOSS
PROGRAM

H&amp;H

Help Burned Out VIctims
Socks $1.75 per pair

Parad~

'·

'•

VISITING MINISTERS
Visiting ministers have been
scheduled for this month at the Reor;
ganized Church of Jesus t;:hrist :or
Lauer Day Saints. ·
·.
The church is located on Lovell
Road, Portland. Sunday morning
worship begins at 10:30 a.m. following Sunday school which begins at
9:30a.m.
-----------·--Elder John William "Bill" AnderOMI'ITED
son, pastor of The Plains branch, an~
The name of Manhew Evans, a High Priest John Sheppard, Southeast
junior at Southern Qjgh School, was Ohio District president, will be at the
inadvertently omit'e4from the South- Sunday service which will be fol em Local School District's honor roll. lowed by a potluck dinner.
Whitney Thomas, Beatrice Mor- .
At the Feb. I 8 service, Elder
. gan and Stephanie Kopec we.e unin- Vi nee Beatty, pastor of the limerick
· tentionally omitted ft;.om the Meigs branch will be visiting minister.
Junior High School hOnor roll.

fumes that she wo.uld breathe. After sels in the skull. As a general rule,
about two good sniffs, the headache these headaches should be diagnosed
was gone, This remedy will not work and treated by medical doctors.
Most cluster headaches respond to
with imitation colton, such as the
treatment
with analgesics, vasoconkind found in medicine bottles these
strictors
(drugs
to shrink swollen
days. I've never analyzed why this
worked, but ·1 al,:;o suffer from arteries), steroids, or inhalation of
headaches and this works for me as supplemental oxygen.
I cannot, for the life of me, imagwell. Perhaps it will help some of
. ine · how sniffing burning cotton
your readers.
DEAR
READER:
Cluster would affect cluster headaches. But,
headaches are recurring .attacks of as you know if you're a.regular reaasevere headaches that occur, as the er of.this column; I will often mentitle implies, in paroxysms. Patients tion unusual -~ if not bizarre -- home
sometimes experience many months remedies for various ailments, proof relief between episodes. The cause viding the remedies are not themis unknown, but some experts believe selves hazardous.
that such headaches are related to.
Such is the case with your sugmigrai~e or are due to biochemical
gestion: I can't see how it would
abnormalities within the blood ves- .work, but I can find no risk from it

Second birthday
.celebrated ,

.'

BIRTQ ANNOUNCEMENT
Amy Brllthers , of Middleport,
announces the'birth of her son, Ryan
Matthew Brothel'S, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Jan. 23. The infant weighed
eight pounds, six"dunces and was 20
inches long. Maternal grandparents
are Mark and Candy nms of Rutland
.and Mike Brothers of Pomeroy.

.

The Dilly Sentinel• P8ge 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ociety .scrapbook:-

'Home remedy m~QY help for clust~r headaqhes
-Dll. OOTT

.

·Friday, February 9, 1

·"

in the new stu~y could be due to' all
. inability to accurately meas~re
· women's fat intab. The estimates
were done with questionnaires i11
which women estimated how oflen
they ate various foods during the preceding year..
.
Hunter dtsagree4. All the sbjdies
in the report included Steps to i:heck
up on the 'accurKy of. what the
women reported, tncludmg. aski~g
some women to keep prectse ctiet
records for up to a month, or aski.ng
some of them ntrandom what they'd
eaten in. the' prior 24 h~,urs.
· :
The results were adjusted·to cprrect for errors in queslionnair,e
responses, he said, and even after that
was done the resean:hers saw no eyidence of breast cancer protection ..

The neJ analysis found no evidence of ~lion in women getting
smaller perCentages of calories from
fat. The results actually suggested an
increase in risk for diets of less than
IS percent, but Hunter dismissed that
as probably a chance finding.
Smith said the study, which
looked at women in the United States
and northern Europe, can't rule out
the possibility that a very low-fat diet,
with less than 20 percent of calories
from fat.,can reduce breast cancer
risk when adopted at middle age.
Such a diet is ~~ry uncommon in the
Western world,.he said.
Dr. Peter ~nwald, director of
the division ot'!!jlncer prevention and
ontro.l at th~ r:fllljonal Cancer lnstit e, said the I~ of proteption found

..

. ..

.,

-

.

•'

�Frldlly, February t, 1998

it

!!;.g. 10 • The Dilly 81nllnt1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• .,_.. 11

Pomeroy • 141ddleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

aamoa

NEA CrOIIIWOrd Puzal

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS

, ............
t-Grllllll

13C'14 II

AtJNUU~IU

1.1lNTS

BEA'ITIE BLV~).GD by Bruce Beattie

KIT 'N' tAltLYLM by Larry Wrlgbt

17 Give --- ---

3.

AI reel Illite o.:tv.-.g In
111111 newspaper Ia ILC)jeCt to
tile Fadalll Fair HOuoing N:t

n

ot 11108 _ , makes ilfeOOI
t o - "any Pf8forenct,
llmltalon or dloe~mlnation
based on race, COlor, llllglon,
sex lamlllllstatua or notional
orlgln, or any IntentiOn to

,...._any OUCh preloronoo,
llmftaaon or docrimlnation."

Two acid lhree bedroom mobile
homes, uarling at 12~0 - $300 ,
sewer, water and tnllh included.
814-1182·2187.

- ' f h accapf

4 'SIYen WMk

Ok:I ·Kintna, ·eorn

!'H&gt;n Chrl1tnw Eve,

liner.Tralned,
'.:Peady For New Hame, Inside
.fi"ll, 814-258-1793.
·

-

Cats- lour hlrnalol and ona mala,
it&gt;'good homH, 81+882·7505.
light brown corduroy recliner
ehalr, e14-085-3685.

Mixed breed hunting dog, male,
11 mond\1 okt, 8H N5 4428.

""A~bbill

10 giveaway, buck and
doo and seven young onaa. 81 ~.
$
::-_400
_;_;2;...·--,-----'---1
Rooatera, 81-4· 2·58·8003 After e
P.M
· ·
To (IOC1d nome. female C,_ dog,
· redctilh tan, about 8Jno1 ~. "'Y'
f 1 dl
d
h d
30
:7~nr9liJ . goo ware '. og. - 4· ,

60

LO.t ll'ld

fOU,nd

Found: molt and lomola huntlna
dogs wllll brown. and orange cof.
Iars, black,-.. whlta. 814-7~2-

22B8.

•

Found: Siberian Hullkw type, red
collar, POmeroy Epl-' Church
vlcmlty, 81.,..2-341111.
Loar: blad&lt;. and 11n aponad
fo• hound, Wille Pin atta, 81~ 912·11273.
'
Milling: Sunday 214198 Small,
Black Bob.tall Scnlpperke Last
Seen: Burkhart Lane, N1me :
Spooky, Ra.tdl11~5.

Yard Sale

70

Gall~ lis

I VIcinity
A~once.
tho day .balore tnt ad Ia -~ .-~·--:o
SUndly lldldon • 2:00 p.m.
Monday !"'idon · 10:00 a.m.ulday.

POineroy,
I VIcinity
't.li Yard Saloa lolual Bo Paid In
-Aovanco. DHdllna: 1:OOpm the
' JIIf before the ad Ia 10 run, Sun·
~or Odlllon• I :OOpm Frida!, lolon·

doW edlllon !o:ooa.m. Salulday.

PUblic Sale
and Auction
'

loll Alto Auction. Every Friday
7pm. EVIf)' Saturday epm. R1 2-33
." Cfouroade". Groceuea. new

..,.,chniJ... Ed Frazier 936.

Rick Pe.,rton Auclion tampany,

full time auclioneer. complele
auction ; service. Licensed
116Ci,Ohlo &amp; Wear Vlfllinlo, 30~773-5785 Or 304-773-54&gt;47.

Wlntld to_Buy

Antiquea, collectables. estates.
Rlvorlrie Anliqull, Run Moore,
. - . 814-ell2·252e.

Clean L••• Model Cars Or
Trucka, 1ge7 lolodoll Or Nowor,
Smilll Buick Pl&gt;ndac, 1800 East·

..., .......... Gdipolll.

J &amp; D'a Aulo Parta. Buying Ill·
VIOl ,.r,ic:laa. Soiling panl. 304·
773-5033.
Top Prlcoi Paid: otd U.S. Colf11,
Silver, Gold, Diamonda, All Old
Collactib14ilt, Paplrweighta, EtC.
lol .lS. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Galii&gt;Ois, 814-4&lt;18-~2.
Used ~ furniturt· an1iquas, one
POec• or complete B:Btatea, 01by
~anin;nc-aeN~ 1.
WanMKt To Bur: Junk Autos Whh
Or Without lolotoro. Call Larry
Llwl)'. it4-311 8;!03
--lOCI To Buy: Unto Tilloa Toya.
814-2-7.
~ To

Buy: Standing Timber.

.-.. Anlourit. 1143111 ~, I

·

OY~. H::

I 1,1 •'I

NT

IIVICE S

110 i Hllp W..-ned
c

I

j

t

,

"

\

11,000 W._..lf Procesaing MaU

Screen Print&amp;r Experienced Or

Free lnlo. Send Self· Addresa8~
Stamped Envelope: E)lpreaa
Dopt.131, 100 Etal Whlteatono
IIIYd., Sulta 148-:145, Cedar Park
Tl(

7e&amp;1S.

$200 ·$500 Wkly. Anomble Pro·
ducts, ND SeUif"1l. Paid Direct, Ful·
ly Guaranteed. No Exp. Necea·
aary. 7 Days 407-875· 2022

En062BHD8.
'

·

·1
$200:i500 weekly. Aalembte
producll. No aelling. Paid direct.
fully· guaranteed. No 8Jparience
noooaao'ry. 7 daya. ~07-875-2022
ext 0505H04.

"ATTN: Point Pfeaaont'{qcl
Pl&gt;atal Pl&gt;lllllona. Parmanenr full·
dm, lor Clerklaortera.. Full Banefila. For exam, application and
lllory Info caM: 7'08-200· 1839 Ext
3670. lorn to lpm

310 Homes for sale

Helpwanted

Will Train The Right Person, 614441 ·14D2.
"

440

320

Smoke frao aNI drug !roe -

1·

ronmtnt Equol Oppor~Em-

. ptoy•MIFIDN
Nsed 5 Ladi11 To Soil Avon, il1~·

Sand resume to: 238 W. Main
Str • Pom
Ohio 45769
ee,
eroy,
·

5 P.M.

7:'-::'-'=·-------

Sun Valley Nursery Scnool.
Chlldcaro M·F Born-5:30pm Agoa
2-K, Young School Age During
Summer. 3 Daya par Wook Mini·
mum 814-448-31157.
Babyaiuing in my home, ll.,lblo
houn. Reasonable rates, have
references. Close to· schoal1.
:ji)H75-2784.
,

WEST
•A K 8 7 4

HMO~IAL?

t&amp; 4 3

,.

,., BARNEY

1977 Dodge Pick-Up Truck 4
WD, Rebuilt. 31&amp;, New Tires,
Lookl &amp; Runs Graoti $3,200, no388-111101 ' 814-8112-6976.

A BODACIOUS

•'

11Poor.wl\

lleull'

West

Nonll

=17

I •
4•

Pass
Pass

2•
Pass

21 GIOiag'
dlvlaiOn

EM&amp;
Pass
Pass

t:

•

21Darne~-

30 I cllk•llv ;
34 beMcl
Swim
, ,- ·

Opening lead: • K

I GOT YOU

A trusting attitude

35Julol=·

By Phillip Alder

311 Wllrdto~ ....

Oscar Wilde claimed , "Morality is
simply the attitude we adopt toward
people we personally dislike." And
Wilde wasn't slow to signal his altitude
toward people be disliked.
At the bridge table, the defenders
may make attitude signals. Usually,
they signal attitude in two situations:
when partner leads an honor in a suit
and when they make their first dis·
card- &lt;There are other possibilities,
but these are the most common.) An
unnecessarily high card expresses in·
teres! in that suit, whereas the lowest
card is discouraging. Sometimes,
though, the person receiving the sig·
nal --- the signalee? --- must trust his
partner.
After a straightforward auction to
four hearts, West led the spade king,
promising either the ace-king or the
king-queen. As dummy had only a doubleton spade, East decided it was un·
likely to matter if West fell for the Bath
Coup (declarer ducking from A·J· x and
getting two tricks in the suit when
West continues spades). So, as East
knew he could overruff the dummy, he
signaled ~couragement ,with the nine .
Trusting his partner to play high
only if he had' the spade queen or ll he
had a doubleton spade and a trump
higher than dummy's jack, West con·
tinued with the spade ace and spade
seven . Now declarer's proverbial
goose was cooked. East overruffed the
dummy with his heart queen and
cashed the diamond ace to deleat the

-PEANUTS

1987 GMC Sierra Classic, dually,

low miles, ' excellent condition, 4
door, .utended cab, set up to pull
any trailer, one ton roll deck, ,
$11,200, 81~·1192_.093 alter 8pm

..

IF lfQO IAIANT TO .
IJE ION~, HERt5

t9B8 S·10 5 Speed, /IJr, SUnroof.
V-6, 614-«1!,~73HI1or 5 P.M.
PICKENS FURNITURE

~:~~d;c~';,;r"w'!:e,~~~

~~

or Garobgo Included, $350/Mo.

Dopoalt Roqund, 513-1122-4200.
Furnilhad 2 Badtoom Apartment
Acron From Park, AC, No Pall,
Relerencoa, Depoait, S3501Mo.,
614-4MI·II235, 81\4-446-0577.
Furnlahod 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Downstairs, Ulilltloa Furnisntd,
Clean, No Peta,' Reference, De·
politRaQulrod,-814_...._1519.
Furni1had Efficiency All Utilittea
Paid, Share Bath, S1~51Mo., 910
Second Avenue, Gallipolis. 814·
448-31145.

VI'RA FURNITURE
81 4-44&amp;-31B8
Furrftl,. And

&amp;'jjjilJiiHouloH"

DoliiOn

530
Buy oEr
i
,
112• ·
ort Rl. 124,
Pomeroy. .
: .T.W. 10:00
Lm. ID 8:00p.m., Sunday 1:00,10
0:00_p.m. 814·QQ2·2528.

Gracioua liviOg. 1 and 2 btdroom 540 Mllcelllneous
aportmonll 11 Villagti Manor and
Merchandise
Rivaraide Apartments in Middle-s5 Call 814 2 Ploco Sectional Couch, Baioa
po rt· From •ZI•
• ~' Oppor- C-"or, Good Condldon, 175, 814·
892·5084 Equal
Houaing
·~'
--;.;;:-;:__ _ _ _ _ _ _• 258-43115, Allor 8 P.M.
IUnl
_
1
N. 3rd. Middleport 2btdroom. fur- 22 Mag. ·20 Ga. Over ~Under
nished. Deposit &amp; referencn $18Q: Coil King Coin $385; Rug30,;..&lt;;.;812:=:.-;;;25;:6.:.8·- - - - - - l or Slngll Six S'16t; Rell!lnglon
870 Wlngmaatar 18 Gago (Old)
1249; Maverick t2 Ga. Pump
New 1bedroom apartment,
elecJric, Sto¥8 &amp; refrigerator
$139; Kirby SVMeper Wllh Atniahed. 1270/mo: ... depoait 304· tachmenta $85; Tools, Gu.,na,
675-3100 or 30~-875-5509.
To
,, ,,., Dove' • wop Shop, 812"•
Nica three btldroam apartment, S.R lN.Chtlhwe.Sl4--387·7108.
olea one bedr'oom apartment 1n Boo 11 By Rtdwlng, Chippewa,
Pomeroy, 814-QQ2-585B.
Tony Lamo. Guaranteed Lowell
•
Pri001 At Shoo Colt, Gallpoill.
Nice two bedroom apanment in
Racine, no pets, $275Jmc . plus combuationeer stove, excellent
deposit 814-8112·7843.
condhion, 814·742·3'115. ,
"
L
F
N ow Tbing eaaea or 1 Or 2 Concfete &amp; Plaalic Septic Tanka,
Bedroom Apartmenta, 814·3B8· 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
1100.
Evans EnterpdMI, Jack10n, OH
One bedroom t.urniahed apart· t -800-537·9528.
menr In Middleport, 814·448· DllfTI!Ind Rlrig, Tlflony cur113 CL
30g1, 814-QQ2·53D~ or 81~·992· Uko Newt Appoolaal Value 11,000

s

: AKC Cocker Spaniol PuP., Sliota.
Wormed, Dow Clawa Ramovad,
Tails DixMd, 81~:256-68117.
AKC· Ragillarod Bloch &amp; ·White
Pekingese Pupa, Will Be RHdy
For Thai Valentina'o 'S weiiiHrt,
$175Each, 614·258-eOIIII.

WELL, TJ.IEN, FIND
ONE THAT ISN'T

'lOU COULD DO ..

1go~ Chovy E•tendtd Cab ~•4
Sportslde, 4.3 V·l, auto, air,
cruise, til~ anvlm cuaatte equal·
lztr, 1owlng pachago, bodllner,
49,000 miles, $18,000, call e14-

SO

~16H ..

r.

~2027 .

Someone to 1i.ke over payment•
o,n 1984 Ford F· 150, low miles,
••cellent condition, 814-Q49-

·'

AKC Rogiatorod, Show Quality '31ZI.
Malo Cocker Spaniel Puppf, 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDi
Good Bloodline, E x - f lolork•
·inga, Black 1Wh118 &amp; Ten '11) Colot, 1980 CJ7 Joop, 41pd. VB. 1\llrd
Dote 01 Birth: 11131/VS; .HcioafbtO. top. 304-576-2505.
loan, 1250, 81.4-37fi.2Y21. •
Hl88 Ford BrOnco. II, clean body,
Full blOoded Shih1Zu puppill, alx 41C4, ''~"' QoOd, new lires . 304·
weeki old, two male·.chocola• 811241125 1 - masaage or 8W
and - · ono femal• block and 448-01!00 ult lor Pam.
While, $150 OICh. Will bo r'H~
for Valentine's Dar. QU·082· 18118 llano« ~•4 Super Cab. V-6
8458.
aUtori1atlc, air, flijerglan topper,
Gat 1 ,·ump on
· neaL Suppiomtnt 17!100, 81 4-992· 7069- 5pm
mbntnly nea~~ma
~~ H •n. 191Q Dodge Caravan 4 Cylinder,
r~·· ~
PY JACK ABLICKS. Rtpala Good Condition; 15,000, 814-448adult fleas on dog.a &amp; cats and 11.24.
condition"
coat
naturally.
~~T\1,\~~ STATES_ 304·6 75· 1990 Dodge Ram Van B· 250,
72,000 lollloa, $8,000. Can be
. _._,
,
Soan At Gallipo~a Dally Tribuna,
,
Golden Relri•er Puppies AKC, 825 Third ~venue; Gallipolis
Sholl &amp; Wormed 814-378- Ohio.
21Nti1 After 5pm.
18&amp;4 Dodge Caravan ve, IUIO,
Pamparod- Fornly F18t
n , am-rm. 76.000 higt1way miles.
ncwopenMondaylhtough
110,000. 304-675-~9 alter 3pm.
Tlulllay,Qam.7pm, Fri.:far and
94 Ford f · 150 411:4 Xll, loaded,
Salulday, Qorn-8pm, SundaW bw
18,200 miles, excellent condition.
appointmlriL Grllornlng, pot IUP.
pliel. AKC puppiH. klnena, bifdl,
utling •17,200 614-367-0288 Or
81~ ·~2481 ah• Bpm.
taed and much more. located
no)CIPoor., Tho Added Touch.
740 MotorcycleS
Col 8.1~-1182-11244 .,, gniOrnlng

\1ARE:-

APPA,~I'IT/, Y

.,.,.. IT wASN'T

A MI6Pil1NTI

r/ECES
1/. .. '

•

•

.. •'

38Shlnlo . . . .

31 . . . bubb!r
40Vadl~ ,

If East 's highest trump had been
lower thaD the nine, he wouldn1 bave
encouraged at trick one.

e200.

s-

appoint:ment

GE 17.ecu .IL refr1::tor, frail·
..... $100. 304-87&amp;•

849 NH Round Boler 489 NH
Haybine, Bolh E•cellenl Condlion, Andy Adams Dairy, 814-370·
27~.

Auto

·'

,.
'V

HMXU

I

YIGVUSG.'

M~RCHANDISE

..;_;...----1

3 Bedrooms For Rant, No Pols.
Dopoalt &amp;. Rolerencoa, 8 U·2455562,-5 P.M. 814-2tl5-5eOD.

_,;__ _

510

3 Badruoma, 2'Ful Balha In Port·
ar Aroa S27SIIolo. You Pay Do·
peoil &amp; Udlitloa, Rettronco Re·
quirad, 81oHIJ&amp;.glB2

----------1
Country Furniture. ~~~~~U
R1 2 N, 8mllol,
F
T-·Sat&amp;-11, Sun 1

Hou~old
GOodS

S25D, 81 4-~ 1 -41118.
Rainbow awaopor wloll auach menta, •••· cond., ~25. ~- 7735157 anylime.

;:::~::::::::::::::JL::::::::~::::;:::;I=R;.;tl~ri;:tor~at;.;o~ra-.~S-to-ve-o-.~w~.-.h~.---,,

And Oryar1, All Reconditioned
And Gouran11odll100 And Up,
Wll Dolivor. 814-etlg-64-lr.

640

Good Wroppecl Groll Hay $20 1

or:::r:mb~·~.:::
low ro lorm four worda.

II

T

I

uR E L

I 1 I I
'

I.

71 o Autos for Sale
'811 Thu-d SC, two door, 3.8

litre, V-8. tllto model turbo , PS,
Simlloc Wllh Iron Baby Formula, · PB, AC, 5 apood, power aeata
$2.00 A Con, 814-245-5513.
and locka, "Groot Cor; 18500
STORAGE TANKS S,OOO Gallon nag., 814·QQ2·7478 or 014·049·
2870.
Upright, Ron E•ona Enterprlaoa,
. - , Ohio, 1-600-537·G528.
t881 Gran Prix, needs work,

Business

$300. 304-SJ'5.8418.

•

3

1 I I I .

I

I

I

e

Treasure You
the
Sovinfl You'll fllld In the
Ck11sf(led SectJon.

7785.

ii•P•r,

.-.-

C&amp;C General Hlitn~ lolajn·
tentnc•· PalnllnQ, vinyl' aiding
carpentry, doOra, wt,_, boths:
homo rapolr 1f111 more. For
freo ·n - t e Ci II Chat, 014-QQ2·

.[

-

~ERNICE
BEDEOSO~

/

out beaer than ortginal idou.

Ron's TV Service, tPecializlng in
Zenllh also HrYicing moat other
brand1. House c::aus, 1·800-7970015,
304-578·23118.

~

Avenue,

-

d

' . . yail ~ .... ~-wlh.,.,.

ploplund III!I'IIIMI 4111"· . • •
~lUI (Jell. IHeli. ,., T....
ttWt wiiUffeCt your flnanc!lal Pturtty
eppear quite proinl1ln11, today, Thll
munt galnl might come to you l,r om

WOQdllf KIICIIen Tillie &amp; 4

Chalra, Go1Hf Condition, ~10,
114-3711-2721.
.. '

Wllld ~ , . . Edldln ... 111
nfe. utol. oncyCfepedW,--plua
2

. . . . . ....,

...........11-tnl

.,.,

1 ·-

15811. lf'llrmlnt plan

1'1-Aprll II) In regan! to

your ca-r today, lryiiiQ developments
could awaken your resourcetulne11 .
When the dull seltloe, you should come
out on top.
·
TAURUS (April
20) SomethiiiQ
you've hoped tor appears lo be getting

Saturday, Feb. 10, 11196

. Signitlcant oocllil chenge8 11111Y be poeelble 111 "''-year ahead.- More lnfllltnce
aver·~""" (lt!IUP 1a
d d. In ac111-

...

~

20-MeY

'

For Sm~ll
f14-441·

17118, -

I

I' I'

I•

I'

Is

...

I

-' - -' - Trylnato
' ......

"'

,

Closer and Closer. Soclll conteclt modo
today ciould ..._, epeec1 you -.rei your
pl. .
.
'Q IS'II (lily 21.J- 1111) Remain llllrt
lor financial oppofiUnltila..~ might be

thrueti!POfl you 1Udc*1ty, and you'll have
tO act ind think wilh alacrity.

UBRA (Sepl. 23oOct. 23) A materiel situ·
ation which has disturbed you should
-'&lt; out to your liking today. Hidden lac·
tors might QOmll.inlo play.
ICORP,IO (Oct 24-NO¥. 22) Today k will
· be lmp0r1ant tor you to surTOUnd yourMII
with friends who know how to l)ave a
good time. Make sure 10 include yourMII

. in their pfar\1.
IACII1TA..,. (Nov. 2a.o.c. 21) Your
chart lndlcatea more possibilities than
PIIIOIIal geln8. Do not let any
~to bitter your lila alip away.
CAPIIICCllll{ (Dec. 22...Jan. 18) In Older
to gain tl1e IUppOit of othell today, you
muat be candid In regard to your pur-

Ulliallor

21) Joint
·~ entered tor~ or IIOCial ~~~*· Let IYiryone - how your kleaa
, _ . will have e x - t pmbabiliMI ~ benlitlt him a-·
....
...,.,
I,~ ;• • i "\ ~
~ ·j . J
CANCI!A (June 11·Julr

•,

\

·.:

r

Aviary- Dolly- Perch - Repule -PROVE
Most people don't really know how to count calories
and they have the ligures to PROVE it.

• ~roken romance?
Miotch111aker can help you
, gits and efforts
arrange·
whet to do 10 tnllke the t~lllip ,.00.. ', menla that have
possibilmes.
Jolt~~~ $2.751o M ltlonaker, c/o this neWt!- Yoocould have good luck In money-mak·
P .O. Box 1758, Mu,rray .Hill lngsituations.
Blatlori, New Yolll, NY 101M.
VIIGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your warmth
. .· IIIICES (Feb. llO-Mifell 211)11 titere' are and dyhamic personality will impress
Ullloxpecled ·changes in your IOCiel ' Others today. People who meet you lor
planl · loday, don't let II gat to you . the first time will·want to get 1o know you
$t!ontane&lt;&gt;us developmtinta may wor11 batter.

RooJing and guuors- commercial
and, reafdlnrial, minor repairs. 35
years experience, 8&amp;8 ROOFING, 81~;QQ2;~ or 1·10D·B89·

.

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWH

•

wv

Commoiclal building for ront In
o f _ , - oraololkldlf,
2&amp;00 OQ. 1~, call 814·~12-

a

SCitAM-mS ANSWERS

~ppllance Parta And Sorvico: All
Noma Branda Over 25 Yoars E•·
perienca All Work· Guaranteed
French City Maytag , B1•·ua :

I.

I

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

Home

."'1

I~

the chuckle quottd
by foiling in lhe miuing words
1.-J..-.1.-.L.-.J.l---..J.._--' you develop
lrom llep No_ J below.

Improvement a

6323.

...

1·

L ATT0

Unconditional lifetime guaranlee.
local references furnished . Call
(814) 448 -0870 Or (81~) 237·
Q488 Rogora Werorpraoling. Eai
,tablahed 1975.

TRA NSPOR TAl lON

B

2

1--r.I5'SNIIOV
--T-I..:,1.-=-;lr--..:,1'-s-1 O Complell

Parts &amp;

WATERPROOFING

OVBFKHUD.

~y

', BASEMENT

Bolo, 814•3N-852~, No ,Sunday
CoiL

-JUS

WDII
r::~~;~~ S@ll~1vi4
t.~s·
I
lhllte. ClAY I. POUAN _.;__ _ lAM
__

SERVIClS

810

Hay &amp; Gralfl

.' .

.. ,.

3933 or 1.8Q0.273-93211.

Queen Size Waterbtd With lollr·
rorad Llghlad HHdboord t. Pad·
dod Side RaU, Good Shape,

CDVSF

"Once I discovered money
didn't grow on trees," my friend
~======::...., sighe~. "I was way out - -

8 Ft. Flberglau Topper,. Wida
Access, Great Condition! S250,
Nag., 814-446-68111 .
·

Holalein /Angus St•ll &amp; Hellefs,
8 14-311&amp;-8524, No Sundoy CoiL

RVK

v o u .: ~-

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A Pretty Girf Is like a Melody."--- lrviiiQ Ba~in .
"My band is my inalrumen!." - Duke Ellngton.

whoela, llllktora, floor ...., au:.
D &amp; R Aulo, Riploy, WV. 30~· 372·

~ERATION MOTORS
Repoilod, New &amp; Robulb In Stock.
Col Ron Evant. 1-600·537·052~.

HMXUK

H

EVSUAB

~-

' ~·

New gas tanka. atia ton truck

'

JPVGVKR

CMEGMP •

1-I

Acce88orleS

JET

.~

53 Duel cloll!,

IFRIDAY
Sleepiin~ rooma with cooking.
Also lr&amp;lltr 1paCe on river . All
hook-ups . Call after 2:00 p.m.,
304·773-5651, M..onwv. ·

&amp;OVMI

52 Ac1or Wal~ili

199.3 201 Pro XL, 20' Strutos
bus boal 200 XPHP, 814· 887·
7347 or. 814-11;19·2879 .

760

'

•tlallc · ' 1

A
V

1965 Massey Ferguson Tracror,
Vary_ Good Condilion, Runa Ex·
..rlint, 814·742-2457.

ua.

41 :;::,-•• ••

. ..,.:.M;_I;.-::.Gr,::E_;Rr---11. ..
N:::
',

I 989 Yarl\llha 350 Four Wheeler
4114 B1g Bear Good Condil1on .
12,800 080, 814·367-0239 ~frer
5:00.
.

FARr,1 SUP PLIE S
&amp; LI VES TOCK

441'1 p ty ·~

contract.

--------1

:2..:'78..:...
.
Alllcing ·~· 814-4~-2~. 61~·
Small Ooo Bedroom, E•collent .,.J'6QB.
ConctiUon, COuntry Setting, Waah- Electric Whtelchair~ /Scooters,
ar, Dryer, Sloue AetrlQerator, Non New /Uied, Scooter !Wheelchair
Smohera, S3DO .Dopoat' $350/llo. Lilla, Stairway Elavatora, Lilt
Application• At 't743 Centenary Chairs, Bowman's Homacare,
Rood, Gallipolla, 81~22115.
814,.40-7283.

Opponunlty

•

mnl •• ·

12Awty '

Dealer: South

120 lhiCics tor sale

TIVH year old lift cl!llr, lilt ,..;.·
1012 5.0 HO, MUlling, ~apd,
$2110,11-candy apple red, exc . cond. In ~
aide &amp;out 304-874-1584.

'

10 Atoya ~··
11Ungth

42 11 glnnlnt ,

FINANCIAL

.,

In,_.

II Actvrllt

Vulnerable: Eaat-Weet

BONIII

81~·QQ2·

. '

7 lloUo I led
• llltullcel rOpe

33 Aug. houn
34 Sounda

•A

loluar '••ll· 1914 Dodge Spirit, 4
cyt. au10matK;. u.ceUent condilion,
19000 negolial&gt;le, 81-11-2718.

2 bedroom, Jn ·Roclno, 1250 por
month plua utlllliea, 81~·902·

32 Norm

•AK8732
t -K Q

Rutn81~28117

1 bedroom apar"*'l In Mlddl•
part, available December 1, all

Drinclplas

28 bomlno llpol
31..-cUma

SOlJTH
•Q J 10.

•

Bani&lt; Financing Guattnllod. Wtm
Minimum Down or Trade-In, Call

nilhad and untulnl1hld, MCUrlty
depo1it required, no pet1,' 514QQ:!-2218.

tA 8 7 52
••o &amp; s 2

•9 8 4 3

23HIIgllborof
lid.
24 IM11Ctdiii1CCM·~,.,.
25 A4:tOr --- Julia
278yetamof
morel

EAST
.9 5
•Q 4

•&amp;

nanclng IIWIM if you have been
turned down elltwhere. Upton
Equipment U1ed Call. 304· 4SS.
1069.

Aplrtments

1 and 2 b--001"'"'"''I oper- fur·

-3368.

210

WH~iioii;

ES, 4 Cyt., 4

Auto Loana. OHler will arrange fl.

for Rent

2788.

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
2 PIIRT·TIME SECRETARIES

-

OZ-IHI

•3 2
9J 10 9 5
• J 10 9
•K Q J 7

EEK&amp;MEEK

Door, Auto, Air, Tilt, Cauene,
27,000 lolllea Alhing $8700 814·
250-8340 or814·256-a..e7.

1972 Buddy 1~•80 Good Condl·
lion, $8,1100, 814-&amp;43-2018 Aher 4
P.M ..
..,---..,------1QB7 1~,70- DIIflllillo 2 Bedrooms,
2 Ballls, CA, 51 U48 8374, After

plata them wtlhln roquirad"ima reatraints.
·

Will cto houaocloanlng,

111113 oodgo

1871 Schultz 3 Badrooma, With
12x18 Addlon. 814 388 9355.

s

opporturity far advancornonL

trifle firebird 350 Engine, Au ·
·
I With OYer DriYe, Good
Aahlng 12500 81&lt; ·

Mobile Homes.
lor Salt

19B8 •~•80 bcellenl Condition,
Appr. 314 Acre In Bidwell Area,
Able Avon Representatives -----~-'---1119.500 Firm. 614· 3811·8973
nHdad. Earn money for Chr'lsr-, Uolity ConuaciDr now Hiring Atri· L•va .....__
mas blls at home/at work. 1
----''------812.8358 or 304·882· 2845, I
al Line Crews &amp; Undergrouna limited Offer! taos doublewide,
Rap.
Crews lor Telephone and Cable 3br, 2bath, 11799 down', S2751
TV. Send Rreaume to P. O. Box monlh . Free delivery &amp; setup.
AGENT: AVON SELLS ITSELF
658 Goon,n, Olt 451 22 or Leave Only 11 Oakwood Homa1 , Nitro
Need CASH For Winte'r Billa · a Message wlht· Answering Serv· WV.304-755-5815.....
Eorn 18 ·SIS/Hr. At Work·Homa
ice_ti&gt; [513]782·0501
1·801).742_.736
New 14•80, 2 or 3badroom. Onlr
_________:.;__ _ I WANTED: LICENSED PRACTI· make 2 peyman111D move in. No
Babysitter For 1 Smart /Active
CAL NURSE For Two Community, paymentl attar 4year~. 304·755Year Old, In My Home /Non· Group Homes For Peraan With
5586.
·
$mokor Preferred, Man ·Frl, Ap- MRIDD In Bidwell And Galllpollo.
prox. 9:30 ·4:30, Rllorenceo Rt· Hours: 11 A.M. -7 P.M., Mon: 10 New Bank ~~ly 4iefL Slill
qulred, 614..46-44lii,Ewningo.
A.M. ·6 P.M .. Tuas 11 A.M. · 7 mwarranty.
·7 ,7191 .
.
P.M., Wed IThura; 8:30 A.M. • Pro·ca Busterl N- 14,70 2 0
Babysitter needed in m)' home, 2:30 P.M . Frr: Hours Include At·
.....
•
'
referencn requirad, 614 -992· tandanca At Weekly Staft Met- 3bf. Only 8995 tDfn, 1105Imonth.
2508.
Free delivery &amp; setup. Only 11
tinga: Or As Otherwise Schad· Oakwood Homes, Nilro wv. 304·
uled. Vacation, Sick And In· 155-5885
Dairy Farm Wanting Farm Hand aurance Benelltl. lntarelted
With E•po&lt;ience, 814 "24 5- 5175 • Contact Cecilia ~~ 1·800·531 · 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
No Calli ~ft'" S:30 RM .
2302. Deadline For Appl~anll: 21
Earn 1qoo1 wOOkiy atullin9 en- 18.1Mi. Equal Opportunity E"'4&gt;ioY- Farm For Solo, 78 Acrea, 614velopu at home. Be your boas. er.
'
·
258~.
Start now. No e•p.. !reo suppliea.
:::---------lnlo., no obllgetion. Sand S.A.S.E. 180 Wanted TO Do
Five acrea,
aerator, near
to Prestige Unit ll, p o . Box
Raclne,$18,000 can finance with
Brothers Conatruction &amp; Home half down, 814-&amp;49·2025.
~: 6 09, '!I~IOr s_prings, Fl Improve menta, 8U·388·1G97
Co-t Stave Or Bll.
Nice home 1118. ciHracl, ready for
Earn up to 11,000 - l y stulling
you 1a bullet Rl2 north. Srrin. from
envelopal at home. Start now. No Child ca'e In my home ·behll1d town. 304-675-2385.
Ordni.nce Elementary. Any age,
eKPerlence: Free luppllas, lnfor- full or part-time. l5yrs txpettence. Scenic Valley, Apple Grave.
matlon. No obiiQallon. Send sell 3Q.4.675-8538.
beautUul 2ac Iota, public water.
Clyde 8cMen Jr., 304-576-2336 .
addressed stamped envetope to
Express Dept 36, 100 East Electrical, Plumbing, Concrete
Whitestone Blvd., Suite 148·345, Foundadons, Garagaa, Room Ac:l· W~NTEO TO BUY: 100 acres or
Cedar Park, TX 78619.
ditiona, Remodeling, David, 8t~- more. Muat ba remote, i
·
256-f5949, !Roger 814·886-8118.
land ·With ;ood access,
road frontage, woode, pallure
Homa Typists, PC uaors needed. Electrician Any Kind Of Electric views. C&amp;K 814-SIKJ.8S45.
$45,000 1ncome polenial. Call 1· Work Dono. 614-446-1 t37.
Wanted- 15 or more acrea in
1100-513-o4343 Ext 8-93611.
~eiga County with or wlthoul
General Maintenance, Painting,
Immediate Opening• Available Vard Work Windowa Washed
houN. muat have. some pa11Ura.
For Certilied Nurse Aides. Com· Gutters Cleaned light Hauling, 814·182~534 .
potilive Wages, Diflerontal With Commerical. Residential. Sieve:
Experience, Sl_gn On Bonus 81~-388.()~20 .
RENTALS
Available Equa~ opportunity EmGeorges
Portable
Sawmill,
don'~t
ployer. Contact Tnt Aaeiarant Direc1Dr Of Nufling, Plnecteat Care haul your logs 1e the mill jult call
410 Houses for Rent
Center, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gal· 304·675-1957.
llpolls, Ohio 45631 814-~48 MATH TUTOR· wlll tutor high
7112.,
school &amp; college Students In ba·
LPN and RN part·time pasitiona sic math, algebra l lrlgonometry.
ava1lable lor progresaiw&gt; Rantbil- Contact John al 814·QQ2-7008.
unrurnlahed twO bedroom house,
itationl Skilled care ICF facility.
nice and clean, deposit required,,
Privata
lessonS
.
Percuuton.
Development of sub·acute unlta
Beginning Brats. Beginning Pia· no Inside poll, 814-IKI2.3flll0.
require these candidates to be
experienced ni.HIII, willing 10 no. Reasonable ratea. Relerenc· Very nice home In Pomeroy for
work as a team member with an eL CoM Jon at 304·875-6273.
ntnt 814·Q02-5858.
••cellent ataff ol therapitta and Profenionat Tree Service, ComNurses that have I hiiiOr)' or 5 plete Tr~e Care, Buckel Truck Wetzgal' S1roet, Pomatoy, WID.
any regul1tory com- Sorvica ·50 FL Reach, Stump Re- $3SO/Mo. Dopolit, 51H22-G2Q~.
. E•cetltnt benefit moval. Free Eatlmateal In·
ahlhs rvquired. aurance, 24 Hr. Emergency Serv· · 420 Mobile Homes
or aand ra· ice -Call And Savel Na Tree Too
for Rent
Rthablllta· Big Or Too Small I Bldjlfoll, Ohio.
Rd_, p.,.
2bedroom. total electric, no pets,
614·388-8843, 814·367·71l10.
1 child. $275/mo. 1ncludes trash
Smlill Home Rlpalr Drywall, Plllnt, pickup. S;!OO deposit Now 1995
lollnagimant Opportunity
Or Etc ., Cheap PriCe, .auality 2bodroom, no pots, 1 child, 13501
Workl 81~·448-8681, Ash . for mo. 1300 deposit. 304-875·8277
Taka adVanfllge of IIIia last ft11ck
Larry.
aher Spm.
....... opportunity, good . ..,,
Mull bo wiling 1a - k hard, alsuma raapomlblltioa, lllink for
youfllllf and bo c u - aarvic:e
oriontod. Cal Banoflcial 11 8 1~·
QQ2·211 1.

~RTH

Three bedroom home in co"untry,
Whilel Hill Ad., ~dand. one bllt'!,
in-tfOund pool, 1514-5f82·5087.

No phone calla ploaao.

top~.......ulvo trairing,

21 RaiM

~aoe .

Country Living 2 Acroa, 3 Bod·
rooms , 1 Bath, Eat-In Kitchen,
CA, 614 446 8832

Must be proficient in all general
cterlcalfsecrelarial akilla. Mull be
capable at utilizing PC basad
word proceSsing, desktop pub·
liahing, accounting programs, ate.
(i.e . needs to be PC literate) .
Must_be '!Ill• to communicate
and lntiract with Chamber mtm·
btl&lt;~ County ollicials, proapec~ve
buaineas peraana and the public
efloctivaly. Mull be wiNing 10 M!rh
odd hours and/or days wlltnevor
nacellary. Mull bo able to monage multiple project* and .com·

AVON I · All Aroea I Shirley

WAfCI{fi;S.

"'f

10Oft----"

882·2587.

Socreary
Meigs County Chamber of Commarc&amp;'Econom&lt; ~pment

.~t.304-87S'1~20.

1'141"

11 Tunnoll

3bed'rOom houa,, 4,0001q ft
building, At 33, lolaocn, WV. 304·

19

' IIICidleport

90

110

u

ALL Yard

ao

110 . Help Wanted

•"'fo IF

ore 1
on an oquaI
utllltloa peld, $250 por month,
- _ _•ba•llis•.- • l l $100 dopoal' lam to 5pm 814.___opportunlly
_
~
QQ2-7806.

How not to make lrienda on the bomb squad.
4 Free Valentine Klttena,
: 367-72118.

t\OIIfl. -

Two btdroom, 12x80, located on
Smllll Run Rd. oulolda of Ruliaflli,
total tlociJic, $2501 mo. plua utili·
lite, $150 dapolit, 814-742-2088.

'TNI neA ptperMII not

adv•liNmlooto lor' raalesllte
Ylt*::h tlln Ykllltlon of the law.
0ur ,_,..,.. holaby
lntormad 11181 al dwellngs
advertised tn this n8Wipaper

I Ct1All66 fljf -""'

Twa 3 Bedroom Trailora For Ron'
61-3-2757.

whirl

1&amp;84 Cutllll SUpreme f. Top1,
Rally• • 1.200: 108~ lntr. Wagon
505 GL Turbo Di- 11,000, 814-

Mobile Homo For Ron~ 8U...e-

0785.

I IIIII

15 Signify
11o.-...

I

•'
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·"..
. 'i

''

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'

�. ..

•

7.... 12•The Dally Se11linel

Friday, February 9, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NBA All-Star preview- Page s1

HI: 301

Low: 30• ··

.

Weekly Wall Street . Page o1

•

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-..

..•

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DNwiH:L
'lo' . . .
OnSun••Y•

........

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

...

fra Fa..- Rdpalr By Danca
Mae...,.. Of The Chain Saw Woodcal'lllne
The Color Doctor, John Croel&gt;)l Freeman
Jueglea Tho Clown

..... celer ...... ..

Energlur &amp;un..y
Mae...,.. Of The Chain Saw Woodcal'lllne
Free Plcturee With The Pink Panther
The Mid-Ohio Veil~ Chapter
Of The American Rod Croeo
VIenna Fire ~artment

11om· 4pm
lpm • 6pm.

12pm- 5p~

Evere,acly·
9am • 4pm
lOam· 2pm
lpm ·1:30pm
lpm ·4pm

Sunday, February 18:
lpm -'4pm

Depa~ment

Energizer
Bunny!·

Saturday:

'

....

Smith out

12pm

f.ocuses on
. Eastern Avenue
traffic problems

lpm
2pm
3pm

4pm

12pm
2pm

t .. ceL.TA R't'Oin ......_

S~/1-, 7haKU~

freud'

4pm

~;o.romo ~nloh •A&lt;~I• han&lt;lleo 124&amp;31

'- · "'••to lf92266

ROll
SHARP.

ROll

eoss·

---

.......... ""...'"" '"'""

k• •:!l·t'"tf

km (051120'-WJ ~70

buuon (R·3W97) lf56306

· POMEROY • Women who are
'victims of domestic violence now
~ave a new opportunily lo seek sup·
I?Ort in lheir efforts to bring an end to
Qbu~ive relationships, thro~gh a n~w
"ct1ms support program 1n Meags
-s;ounty•.
, The support group, organized by
'C:onnie J. Dodson, viclims advocate
i&lt;ilh the Meigs Counly Prosecu1ing
~uorney's Office, is offered in conjunction with Serenily House, GaiIlpolis . . According to Dodson, the

~

00

STEEL
32" 6-Pa

Golfba
Braided Flcu&amp;
•Midlum ere'" follagl •Pia" In

Door Unit

'

•fact&lt;&gt;ty primu -&lt;ill for ~nloh coot
•lneulated wre •Wood eill•• •nd r11lle

"ml·ehadtd area• •Kttp loll
molet •Awold draetlc: cha"S"
1t1 temperature •nd eun •po~
eure#'m3M

:::,.Duct Tapel&lt;46496

•.

.....lo/vNieo •Kou....., co 1llO
choMtle of ,...rammlnf """"'

PRO

: ~···30

'

.I V TOM HUNTER
tl--8en1inel Staff

oComl""" 18" &lt;lloh ~nlen •DitJtol

MIGrowave Oven·
CO&lt;&gt;Id"f •E&gt;&lt;pro•• &lt;ltfro"'

""eigs support .
Satellite Syetem

.9 Cu. Ft.

36" Door

\

Big (PAC) bucks:
~

First Alert'

j$

97

120..

'

Great Stu~·

lneulatlng Foam
o&amp;tc&gt;pt mfta b.v.flllnt. ...lint .....
1-'otl"f cnooko .,... oponlne•
~,_,.,

.......... -

lf1H11•

13• Cln~u1~1r

99....
-

Fh~oreecent Fl~re

2" )( 4 Stud

eWhlk .C.&amp;Hnt or w•ll mount&gt;alolo •FI&lt;II:Y .....,.. ln4 ""'"'.....,
•u- 22-" bull&gt; • -

•l'looltlon ....-ttl ................. boot ttu&lt;l
~h• oSVaitht •E.,.yto ouionil
•forlnkrloruoa 106001

11

......... ......, """"'&lt;N

300 Grand C•••••al Avenue ·
·.

)..

.&amp;V

group is the .firsl &lt;if its kind in Meigs the group sesCounly and.is providing a beneficial sions has been
means of oulr!:ill:h to viclims of vel)' good thus
physical and mental abuse.
far,
largely
"You don't hnv,e to be victim of because of the
crime to auend lhC. suppon sessions. need for such a
If you're a womail in a violent silua- group in Meigs
lion, you can come and lake part in County.
open discussion with olhers in simi"We · defilar cases. The suJIP.ort group is also nilely fell there
beneficial in I~ way it allows was need for a
women lo know exaclly whal their group in Pomeroy. Serenily House
oplions are in dealing with abusive offers support groups and counselsituations,'~ said DOdson.
ing in Gallipolis, bul the closeness is
Organized in January, response to a big faclor in being able to help

1160liZ.S

:.

~'"

(3Q4) ~95iOOO

,.

By JILL WILLIAMS

Tlme•Sentlnel Staff
• GALLIPOLIS - City officials are slicking 10
a mid-summer completion dale for a stud,y of
Eas1ern Avenue traffic problem~ lhat the city
hopes to use as justificalion to obtain federal
lmprovernenl money.
1be Gallipolis City Commission
approval!o two -emerge~:,: ordinances
allowing lht e~'ly lo· mler mlo contract
Ohio Depi11111!Cnl of Transportation and Burgess
,.t Niele Lid., Columbus, 1o conduct lhe study.
Burge~s' a Niple will j&gt;repare the stl!'dy,
designed to focus on safety issues and-flow P!llen·
tial development will impacl on the primarily .
commercial section of Slate Roule 7 where "a
rale of vehicular liccidenls reil!lhing in
inJunes and propeny damages" occur,' Ci1y Manager Mauhew Coppler said. ·
•
"This won't be lhe standard lraffic-relaled
study," he explained. "Tile last one on Eas1em
t\venue was done in lhe rnid-'80s and was concerned wilh X amounl of cars on lhe road al a cersEt FOR STUDY- A lnllllc proi;IIDm .rudy an Glllllpalla' Eastern Avenue, a aectlan at which
lime.
Is •bow • the lntaractlon with the Ohio Rivw PIHII, will focus mostly on ufely l.. uea,
C::ttY ,~.,.... Mlllthew Coppler saki. The study Is due for completion by July.
Contln.ued on Pll9' A2

•Unl'l"" """"'" &lt;INI 1u1ot ~ ftnu co
· rollot Impact twlthout buokllne or Nfilne
•Knot I• •mooth on ~ .W.. to prwwm

~nr::;1v

On split vote, board determines
GOP candidate may not seek
party nomination for engineer

By KEVIN KELLY

DREMEL:

Woven Field Fence

e&amp;eo wotto of pOWtr •CorouNI •lnttont

ing would qualify for help.
It also recommends a change in federal rules to qualify all-purpose shelters for more aid,
Exising rules now target aid to specialiZed shelters
for single men, single women, families and single-parent
families.
·

Board of eiectjons rules:

39" x 330/363, t~·Gauge

·•'1'•-1¥

grounds, ou1buildings and even caves," said Jill Long
Thomps.on, lhe undersecrelary for rural matters.
Homeless people in rural areas have a few cushions,
1he report says.
Counlry people tend 10 be more neighborly, helping
with a bag of groceries, a place to slay or a free 'aoctor's
visit when someone they know faces hard limes.
Rural communities rarely have the shelter&gt;, soup
kitchens and services to help people find jobs and a
place 10 live, Thompson said.
Among its recommendalions, the report says the government should widen the definition of homeless so that
the rural poor who live in shacks withoul heal or plumb-

lOam
llam

Sponge P,inting &amp; Stenciling
Hardwood Floor lnataliation
Organize Your Stonoge Space

· ~.1 co 10.ton-.......,... topt ~.,., ~riH pottorn-no moaourl"f
o5tunly viJ\yl-coato&lt;l otool won'l ... or w1rp 162114

homelessness, development can push people over the
· edge, too, lhe Agriculture Department noled in a .report
released Friday. Ski resons and vaca1ion homes can ereale new jobs, but they often drive up the cost ofland and
sheller. New indus1ries in small towns can attract more
job seekers lhan jobs.
No one knows how many rural homeless there are,
the report says, allhough slate-level sludies in Arizona,
Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio give a sn•pshot Counting
the homeless in cilies is hard enough. lbere are few
sidewalks, shelters and underpasses. The problem is
spread out over vas1 miles.
"The rural homeless are of1en 'hidden' in camp-

~

Fauc:at lnetallation
Storm Door Installation
Motion Datlctor ln•tallatlon'
Ceramic Tile Installation
Spone• P,lnting &amp; Stenciling
How To UM A P,lnt Spnoyer
Oreanlze Your Stonoga Space
How To UM A P,int Spnoyer

Sunday:

:Cloeet Organizer

Vol. 31 , No. 1

.

~ • WASHINGTON (AP)- Their m8keshif1 shelters are
;'shacks, junked school buses, even caves bul homeless
~people can be found in rural America alllhe same.
~ . Joblessness and mental illness lake lheir toll on lhe
• rural homeless, as do problems walh alcohol and drugs,
:.just as in cilies. Women become stranded after fleeing
;,libuse al home. The rural homeless also include migrant
~workers who run out of money belween fann jobs, or
"People in places where single industries like mining,
:;;logging and fanning-have collapsed.
- Allhough lhe loss of economic mainslays cah cause

lOam· 6pm

lpm • 4pm

The Mlci·Ohlo V.lley Chapter
Of The American Red Croee
Fire Safety f'lltrol
VIenna Fire ~artment

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • February 11, 1996

.· AP Ferm Writer

lOam· 5pm

100 Free Home S.Curity VIdeotape•
Will &amp;e Given Out &amp;y Welaer Lock

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

:ay ROBERT GREENE

Saturday, February 17: ·

Tof/

mt

:RepQrt: While hidden in shacks, junked buses - even caves iCOuntless
homeless people can be found in rural America
.

9am • 2pm
9om • !5pm
lOam· 6pm

Friday, February 16:

&gt;Kitchen Fauc;et ...,,..,..

•

;RUral hOmeless: They're out there!

. Sunday:

VIenna Are

I

•

Sa~urday:

John Crosby

)

.

,_Detgfh.

.... Collll' c...........
~l-fl- WIIII 1he c.ler DDciDI',

'

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':

,,

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•.
·tmts

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•

o.talla on,.
pageA2

PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Rep. Frank Cremean&lt; ranked lhird among lhe
Ohio delegation with $209,474 conttibuted by polilical action committees in
(995, Citizen Aclion said.
,
1 1be group said lhal Cremeans, R-Ohio, received $401,438 in overall
'
po.litical contributions
last year.
Barry Bcnneil, Cre·
means' chief of staff,
as.m d with ihe aCI:uracy of· the figure Citizen
Action released, but
said it is being misinterpreted. '
'
''That figure is for the
flfSI 12 months (of his
lerm)," said Bennett,
"The second 12 monlhs
he raised S21S,7SO. It
: just worked out that
Rep. Cremeans raised
his money in the first 12
monlhs, but PACs are
limiled to what they can
give, so he can't raise
that much money' in the .
next 12 monlha."
Jim Lowe, member'
din:ctor of Citizen Action, said a1 a news conference Friday that
Ctl~~~-~~~"~et-11-StlftC!IIIIll in tlking lobbyist money.
: "Wilh elel:cions coming up Ibis November, people need to ask whal do
IIIeY (coqnu memben) give in order to aet the money?" he said.
,
'
' COJittnuld On .... A2
•
•E

more battered women. Some victims
will probably atlend the sessions
now, where they wouldn 'l have
attended if they were only offered in
Gallipolis," said Jessica Jones , support group leader for Serenily
House.
According lo Jones, the group is
only a discussion group and nol a
counseling group. "The group discussions offer a release for batlered
women. We don'l necessarily discuss abuse silualions a majorily of
the lime. The discussions can range
Continued on page A2

Times-Sentinel SIBff
GALLIPOLIS - On a 2- 1 vote·, lhe Galli a County Board of Elections ruled Friday to remove Glenn
A. Smith as a Republican candidale for county engineer in the March 19 primary.
'
The board did not give a reason for ils decision,
but said a written st,temenl detailing 1he reasons for
invalidaling Smith's candidacy would be released by
Feb. 16.
David T. Evans, the Gallipolis auomey wh9 repre·
sented Smith in a complaim agains1 his candidacy
filed with lhe board, said he and his clienl .would
await release of lhe wrillen stalement before deciding
to appeal .ot not.
The board 11nnounced ils decision several days ahead of lhe original dale
il planned lo do so after il conducted a hearing last Tuesday on lhe complaint, filed by Harlan and James Northup of Gallipolis .
In a let(er 10 Eleclions Board Chainnan Elaine Rouse. the Northups
claimed !here were a number of inadequacies to Smith filing for engineer. At
the lime, lhey claimed 1ha1 Smilh was the Guernsey Counly engineer, reside$
in Guernsey County, and yel filed pelilions wilh a Gallia County address. ·
Smith, 60, who served as Gallia engineer from 1969 to 1975, was the sole
Republican 10 file in 1he primary 10 challenge Democratic incumbent Josepll
L. Leach this fall.
During lhe hearing, the board heard Smith declare that he has cJ..:nged his ,
residency three limes since September.
The board noled at the hearing that Smith is currenlly a resident of Gal,
iia County, and has been since Jan. 12, at which lime he had not yel circulated petitions for his primary candidacy. .
Evans argued at lhe hearing thai his client was staying on as Guernsey
engineer as a gesture to help 1he counly until a replacement could be found,
Smith, who was appoinled 10 fill an unexpired tenn as Guernsey engineer ·
in June 1994, resigned 1he position effective Friday.
"I fail to sec how, afler this board has acknowledged (Smith's) residency,
1ha1 lhey can now say that he's nol a registered voter," Evans said after the
board released the decision.
Smith can appeal the decision to Gallia County Common Pleas Coun, the
Fourth Dislricl Court of Appeals or the Ohio Supreme Court, depending on
lhe reason lhe board cites for removal from lhc ballot
·'
"I will have (the reason) by lhe 16th in wriling, and at lhal poinl,l will
decide wha1 to do," Evans added. "We are going lo e•plon: whal options we
have."
Smith, who was also Gallipolis city manager from 199 I until 1994, was ...
not present at Friday's announcemenl, as he was serving his last day as
Guernsey engineer.

News capsules
For Iowa voters it's decision time

Good Morning
Today's Gl'm. ~· IW

' ' .
18 Sedions • 164 Pates
OSKALOOSA, Iowa (AP)- The Republicans looking to oust Presi- .
"ll 's decision time," was how
dent Clinton from the White House are welcoming him to Iowa for ·a · Sena.te Majority Leader Bob
CaJcodan
weekend of camj,aigning- and urging GOP volers to use the president's Dole ·put ii Friday night as the
trip to focus on their choice to replace him .
campaigning for Monday's Iowa
Qassifieds
03-7
caucuses enlered a crilical final
Comiu
lpprt
weekend.
Editori!!ls
A4
Dole, lrying to frame lhc
Obituaries
AS
dehale in his favor, said he had
soorts
thC'Ieadership abilities and expeBJ.8
rience to go up againsl Clinton in
Al
Wea!hcr
November and said caucus-goers
should ask lhemselves: "Should
I vote for someone who has no
Column s .-chance of heing elected president
of the United Slates?"
JackAI"k09D
The GOP race remained
A4
volatile 10 lhe end, and mosl of
John Cuggll
A4
the~ wen~ criiSCrossing
lobHndkh
AS
Iowa Ibis weekend to malce their
case.
,
.
A Des Moines Resister poll
Doro!hy Sure
C$ ·
published Saturday 'found diat
Dole had the backing of 28 percent of likely caucus·soe~:~o to 16
percent for publishing heir.Sieve Fodlcs, II percent for commentator Pat
Buchanan, 10 percent for Alcxanc)er and 8 percent for Texas Sea. Phil
Gramm, wilh others traiU.,..
·
·
11.1'!1o
But the poll, which c.m.ct 11 marsilf'of enor of 3.9 percenlaie poiniS,
also showed ·19 percent wafN, UIIIIecided wbia ~11om. Sa.turday
(.·~
through Thursday.

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