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                  <text>PllgeDI•,J • ,...__,

11 ,,

Sunday, February 11, 1"f5.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Ohio Lottery

. ...
•·

National farm group leader says

Eastern girls
post another
cage victory

Ethanol future looks bright: !
..

COMPLETE DESIGN COURSE- Jo Ann Francia and her dllugh-

tw, Suzie, from left, h111111 bHn certHied aa rn.atw floraf dealgnera
following a recent design courae. Jo Ann'• huablnd Bill Francia,
of Francia Florlat In Pomeroy, aeld the women are the flrat moth·
er/daughter pair certHied aa· rn.ater floral dealgnera In the atate.
'The filet that JoAnn and Suzie are doing thla program Ia another
example of thtlr dedication to thtlr craft and tht al'tl In which we
work, • Mr. Francia added. 'They do not want their dtllgna to be
mundane. They fael that tht paople of thla trtt ahould have acceaa
to the lateat In the floral dtllgn arena. • They will be continuing their
· education with other courses Including wedding dealgn. ·

JOhio ·Valley Bank stock
·now
listed on NASDAQ
.

GALLIPOLIS • The common trading day. Those pri~es are ~ail­
stock of Ohio Valley Bane Corp., a able in over 200,000 electronic terone bank holding company began minals in brokers'.offices throughout
trading on Friday, Feb. 9, t9%, in the the United States and the world. TradNASDAQ National Market, accord- ing data is also disiributed widely
. ~ng to Chairman and Chief Execu!ive through wire services for selective
dissemination by newspapers, radio
Officer James L. Dailey.
~ · Ohio Valley Bane Corp., whose . and television stations.
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. had assets
lt'llding symbol is OVBC, operates
of
$317
million and $27.5 million in
Ohio VBlley Bank with offices in Galshareholders'
equity at year end
" lia, Jackson, and Pike Counties in
1995.
Current
market
makers of the
southern Ohio and the OVB Loan
Bane
Corp.'s
stock
are:
The Ohio
Origination ·center in Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va. The Bane Corp. recently Company, Advest, Inc. of Gallipolis;
fonned a consumer finance company Montgomery Securities of Buffalo,
that will open offices in Gallipolis N.Y., and Diversified of Columbus.
In addition to increased market
and South Point in March. The comvisibility,
NASDAQ offers Ohio Valpany has 12 directors and over 180
ley
Bane
Corp.
the advantage of mulemployees.
Entry into the NASDAQ national tiple market ·makers that compete to
market provides brokers !lnd others offer the best bid and ask prices, as '
wilh immediate access to the best bid opposed to a single specialist on the
and '&amp;Sk prices and other information ftoor of stock exchange.
about OVB's shares throughout the

·strawberry fields will
always need .: chemicals
WATSONVILLE, Calif. (AP) Strawberries are especially depen. Half a century ago, Mike Miller's dent upon the chemical because the
grandfather planted a strawberry fJeld fruit is prone to disease and expensive
in the heart of the nation's berry cap- · to plant. The plants grow in long
•ital.
: s)rips no more than I0 inches high,
That was when farmers battled imd II)Ust he picked by hand several
.bu1s an!~ fungi without chemicals.
times ' ~eek during the-long bar. 1 But Miller, 42, was raised in the
vesting season.
.~i'a of methyl bromide, a powerful
Sixty years ago, farmers discov·fum.igant pumped into the soil to kill ered they could sterilize the soil with
bugs and weeds. The third-generation a mixture of methyl bromide and
grower says banning that chemical chloropicrin, a wartime tear gas. The
·would devastate the strawberry indus- chemical doesn 'I taint the fruit.
,.try. '
Strawberry yields rose, making the
• "We'd be back to where we were fruit affordable to more Anlericans
befon 'fumi1ation. The price, would and guaranteeing growers a comfort_go
up, and the (number of) con- able profit.
.~ would go way 4own," he swd.
But there are problems. Methyl
"AJid ; the · people who'd be most bromide may help deplete the ozone
impliGred by this are the farmers."
layer that protects humans from can,Unfortilnjuely, say critics, what cer-causing sun rays.
kills bugS ~lip· harm humans, too.
The United farm Workers says .
In 1984, the state's Birth Defects repeated expos~re can lead to numbPrevention Act requife9 that pesticide · ness, muscle spasms and convulsions,
makers submit health risk studies by and can cause birth defects. March 1991 or face a production ban.
Scientists say they need more
Thedeadli~'formethyl bromide was time to .come up with an alternative.
extended to March 30, 1996.
But an all-in-one chemical substitute
Legislation to push the deadline · is unlikely, said Doug Gubler, a plant
back again, to Dec. 31, 1997, is pend- 'pathologist with the University of
ing in the state Senate. The U.S. Enyi- California-Davis.
ronmental Protection Agency plans to
Jim Cochran, who grows strawban production starting in 2001.
berries and vegetables on 45 acres in
Still, Miller says he hasn't given Watsonville and Davenport, says it's .
much thought to life without it. not easy making the switch from
"Either I'll be able to continue od chemicals to organic methOds, as he
·won't.lfl can't make money, I won't did 13 years ago;
do it," he said.
He rOtates sirawberries, a cover
The EPA estimates the United crop of barley and beans, and vegStates uses about 56 million J?OUnds etables, a process that replenishes the
of methyl bromide a year fu,nugating soil and fights bugs and disease natsoil, termite-infested buildings and urally.
post-harvest imports and exports.
As a result, his costs are about
California uses 18 million p(lupds, do'!_ble Miller's, his yield is abou~ a
mostly to fumigate soil for strawber- . third lower and consumers pay twtce
ries, carrots, grapes and flowers.
as m'!ch as they would for Miller's
chemtcally treated strawberries.

w.,

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP)
ETBE also works well in fuel
Ethanol as an additive in cleaner- blends because it has low volatility,
burning gasoline will be the primary he said. That means the fuel can be
fuel of the future - and South Dako- shipped through traditional pipelines
ta com farmers can reap the benefits, to areas of the country where ethanol
the head of a national farm group said is not readily available.
Friday.
.
Com-based alcohol as a gasoline
"We're on the fighting edge of the additive got a boost last January when
fuel of the future -and the future has an Environmental Protection Agency
arrived," American Com Growers directive went inio effect,
The EPA required reformulate
Association President Gary Goldberg told delegates to the group's gasoline in nine metropolitan areas
national convention in Sioux Falls. with the warst smog pollution: New
"We've got the facts on our side."
York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San
The group thinks the ethanol- Diego, Baltimore, Milwaukee, Housbased fuel known as ETBE is the best ton, Philadelphia and Hartford, Conn.
bet for expanding the market, GoldNationally, ethanol production
berg said. The gasoline bums clean- soared from 88 million gallons in
er and emits 20 percent less pollution _1 980 to 1.5 billion gallons last year,
because ofhighe{ levels of oxygen.
mostly because of the EPA require-

ment, said Goldberg, of Kearney,
Neb.
If consumers continue to fill their
tanks with reformulated gasoline,
. ethanol production could soar to
about 3 billion gallons by 2010, he
said.
Com growers should put aside dispules with those who favor other
kinds of fuel additives, Goldlierg said.
Outside the Com Belt, ethanol faces
tougH competition from the petroleurn-based methanol · derivative
,MTBE.
"When you're talking about
reformulates, you're talking about
every oxygenate ... they all have a
place," said Goldberg. Currently, 12
percent of the reformulate gasoline
programs consists of ethanol while

QUANAH, Texas (AP) .:- Wheat
farmer Butch Tabor traded his plowand-planting routine for grass management back in the '80s when the
government offered a payout program
for land prone to erosion.
He was far from alone.
The federal Conservation Reserve
Program enrolled 50,712 acres in
Hardeman County, where Tabor still
farms around Quanah, and about 36
million acres across the nation.
Texans signed 19,762 reserve contracts obligating them to plant grass
or trees instead of crops on erosion
plagued fields. Those :10-year contracts, some of which expire this year,
paid an average $39.50 in "rent" per

~old futures

acre . .
But the current budget standoff in
Washington gives no indication what
will become of the program which
was lauded for its benefits to air and
water quality, wildlife and the financial solvency of some farmers.
"The CRP's been a crutch to help
them through hard times,'' Tabor
said during a recent drive by his land.
"So were they better off with us
broke, or with us able to buy some
things?"

.

Ken Cook, president of the nonprofit Environmental Working Group
in Washington, supports the pro.
gram. He says it has anchoring the
dirt and provided brushy habitat for

drop..c.oatinued rrom o-•

a drought and frosts that led to a disastrous harvest. In Colombia, the
Colombian Coffee Federation is
keeping a tight h&lt;1ld on sgpplies unti:
the price is right, Ganes said.
•.
"It's not like there isn't coffee out
there,'" she said. "There is. The market just isn't attractive enough yet to
drop supplies."
Wheal futures price's rose 3 1/4
cents to $5.13 1/4 a bushel Friday on
tl\e Chicago Board of Trade on trader enthusiasm over a government crop
report.
In its supply and demand report,
the U.S. Department of Agflculture

reduced its forecast of May 31 U.S.
wheat reserves to 346 million bushels,
down from an estimate of 386 million
in January. The estimate for wheat
exports also increased.
"I don:t think anybody is tooterribly shocked by the numbers. But
still, there it is in print and it boosted
the market," said Jack Scoville, grain

:~lystforTheLinnGroupinChica\
Robert Lelcberg, an analyst for - ~~-=
Goldenberg, Hehmeyer &amp; Co. in
Chicago, said wheat was also supported by reports that Russia is interested in importing grain.

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comPWnl.•with--the dOYtlopad C!ll IIIia mUit~pnltA!et diP
;• .... 'hll C&gt;rpaizlliOII, denwtd· risl* Of~ .... forlhlit~ ·
laf ... s.,.D bo8or CODYrilitll for SO , od.
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.Huge Sale On Select

--Business briefs-RENO; Nev. (AP)- Dow ChemBOSTON (AP) - TRW Inc. bas
agreed to spin off iis division that ical Co. is asking a Nevada judge to
keeps c~dit records to two private throw outa $14 milli9njury award to
companies for more than $1 billionc a woman. who claimed leaky breast
Bain Capital Inc. and Thomas H.
made her seriously ill.
Lee Co., both of Boston, will buy the
Orange County, Calif.-based Information Systems and Services business of TRW. The sale, structured as
a recapitalization, is expected to be
completed in the second half of thi&amp;
year, the companies said Friday.
The TRW business keeps credit
information and sells informaiion to
businesses to help them target their
marketing.

Returns from seminar
GALLIPOLIS - 'fricia Fender- ·
bosch, R.D.H., B.S. recently returned
from Dallas, Texas, where she auended a Professional Healthcare Seminar
sponsored by Oxyfresh, USA. The
seminar was attended by dentists,
. hygienists, assistants and office man. agers throughout the country.
A featured. speaker, Belinda
Bryant, hygienist, consultant with the
Pride Institute and faculty member of
the L,D. Panky Institute gave a presentation · on implementing an
Oxyfresh Fresh Breath Center into
their practice.
Those seeking mo~e information
on the subject should ea'tl 1-800-9999SSI ext. 508-001. .

SA
· ' 'L'.E·

PEOPLE WHO APPRECIATEi..
The Value Of A Dollar,
Appreciate True L.ow Prices~i
I

~~95

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Grand Am

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The U.S. Public Health Service's Agency for ToKic Substances and Disease Registry surveyed plant records and health statistics from Pike and six
nearby counties. The report concluded that emissions from the plant did not
constitute a health threat.
But Roselle sent a letter to the Public Health Service citing a 1976 plant
report that technicium.leaked into a drainage ditch at the plant. She claimed
the report said the concentrations were 20 times more than the federal limit and siK million times more than the state limit.
The lener said the federal report ignored "voluminous" evidence of releases of hazardous chemicals.
She cited a 1976 study that reported chromium, copper, m'anganese, zinc,
and radioactive materials in excess of state standards were found in the Little Beaver Creek water and in the Big Beaver Creek sediments. Radioactive
materials also were found in fish.
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Roselle also said that in 1977, according to plant documents, tr:.Ces of
radioactive chemicals called transuranics were probably heing released into
Liule Beaver Creek.
Michael Greenwell, a Public Health Service spokesman, said the report
is considered a draft. He said the agency plans to respond to each of Roselle's
claims in the final report.
,
"When we do these health assessments, we review all environmental and
health data that we have access to. We look for levels of contamination that
will harm people's health and we look for ways for people to come into contact with the contamination," Greenwell said.
Maria Galanti, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency's site coordinator at the plant, said she is unaware of any environmental problems that
should make people nervous about living near the plant.

SR 7 slip
tackled
by ODOT

:hear call for unity
from officeholders
By JIM FREEMAN
·Sentlnal Newt Slllfl
Billing herself as an ambassador
for southeastern Ohio, former Marietta mayor and current Ohio Lt. Gov.
Nancy Hollister addressed Meigs
.County Republicans at the annual
"Lincoln Day Diimer Saturday at
~eigs High Sehool.
· After an introduction by master of
'ceremonies Beniard Fultz, Hollister
-briefly addressed two areas of con'cem to practically all Meigs coun..pans: highways and econQmic devel-

~~tr,r .,3

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.
li · iects, Hollister commended
local project advocates and added,
:·we're coing to have to make some
·\~lings move, •
. "Decisions on 33 and the connector project by the local comminee
will have a major impact on what the
. ..........

" IQIV' .,;OIIneetor

state does," she said. .
On economic development, she
noted that the message from Meigs
County is "don't !~ave us out .. . don't
forget," she said. For 1996, Hollister
said she will focus on three topics:
work force development, training·
and employment.
Ohio's first woman lieutenant gov- .
emor -labeled herself as an ambassador for southeastern Ohio.
"I carry the banner of southeastern
Ohio to all parts of the state," she
said.
"I -..:lll con\i11ue .to be an ambas·nctor;• ·sJi~ said, remarking that' ihe
plans to spend more .time in southeastern Ohio.
_ , Hollister said she is looking forward to a year of transition, with the
state to assume more responsibilities
previously handled by the federal
government.

REGIONAL AM..ASSADOR- Ohio Lt. Gov.
Nancy Holllater of Marlena, Ohlo'a flrat woman
IJ9~~~·Mtlgs Republicans at the
annual Llht:Oin Day.Dinner Saturday. Holliltlll'
The state is willing to receive
block grants and administer them
responsibly, she explained. adding
one caveat:

"We have to be very careful not to
become what we have accused Wash-

termed htraeH as· an ambllaaedor for aouth·
eaattm Ohio. Holllater, It podium, Ia '""
speaking to the eatlmated 250 ,t1o attended
the meeting.

ington of being all these years."
In addition, Hollister conveyed a
greeting from Sen. Robert Dole, RKan., who is seeking the GOP presidential nomination.
"Dole needs your support," she

said.
After serving on the Marietla City
Council, Hollister was elected mayor, where she served from 1984 to
1991. In 1991, Gov. George
(Continued on Page 3)

·Murder suspect now in Mason County's custody
POINT PLEAS~T. W.Va. -A arrived at the Mason County Jail
Hanford woman who was indicted on around 12:30 a.m. from Uma Couna murder charge returned to Mason 1 ty, Ariz.
. .
County early today, according to 1 Leonard was indicted in January
Mason County Sheriff Ernie Watter- for the September murder of Jack
Roush, S2, Hartford. Watterson said
sbn.
Ri~. Lynne Sayre Leonard, 32,

Leonard should appear before Circuit
Judge O.C. "Hobby" Spaulding on
Tuesday to answer her indictment.
Leonard was transported back to
West Virginia by Extraditions International, with costs being covered by

the West Virginia Department of
Corrections, Watterson said. Leonard
was picked up by Arizona authorities
on Jan. 24.
Arizona authorities are continuing
the search for Timothy W. Gibbs, 36,

.GOP hopefuls brace
for decision in Iowa
Forbes, making the rounds of network talk shows this morning, sought
: DES MOINES, Iowa - Iowa to dampen expectations after his draRepublicans meet tonight in caucus- malic rise this past month from the
... ~~provide a keen test for politi- ranks of the unknown.
ul newcomer Steve Forbes and oth"I hope to finish in the top four,''
"r candidates jockeying furiously to Forbes said, eKplaining his 4-3-2-1
challenge front-runner Bob Dole .in strategy - fourth in Iowa, third in
w 1996 GOP presidential cam- New Hampshire's primary next ·
j\aien.
week, second in Delaware then first i
Pat Buchanan, Lamar AleKander in the Feb. 27 primary in Arizona,
and Phil GraJilBI were eKpected to where he enjoys front-runner status in I
&amp;ante Forbes for second place after the polls.
~se-caucus polling showed Dole, the
The full field of nine contenders is
.Senate majority leader from Kansas, matched for the first time in the cauli:ading in support from his farm-state cuses, and late polls appeared to give
neighbors.
Dole some breathing room at the top.
. . At a campaign breakfast this His hope was a "strong first" to
morning, Gramm told his precinct solidify his standing.
Chairmen that he expected a close
Dole portrayed himself as the
vote and he urged them to get as .veteran statesman, in contrast to his
ntany of his supporters as possible to rivals. "America is the leader of the
.attend the caucuses.
Free World and when America starts
: "We believe at this point we are this· process, the world listens," he
llmost in a tie, and it's going to told a rally in Waterloo.
ilepend on who 1eis their people
Fodles, publisher of Forbes magOut." said Gramm. who noted he won uine, emerged in the closing weeks ,
his first congressional race by only as a major challenger to Dole with a ·
1n votes.
self-financed advertising blitz. There
~ A relative handful oflowa Repub- were suggestions he was slipping as
licans - perhaps 130,000 or so - the caucus campaign wound down,
~ld enormous inftuence in the first but Forbes sounded a defiant theme
big event of the GOP nominating on Sunday, casting himself as an out. process.
·.
sider under assault.
··: Most of the candidates planned
"The whole political establish- 1
lbt-rninine campai1riing before par· meat is after me." he declared in sub!Y ac:tivists headed to fire slltions, urban Des Moines. "They know I
ohutdt basements and schools for 8 mean whatl say."
Documents obtained by The Asso· . P-m. EST caucuses in each of Iowa's
2, 142 precincts.
·
ciated Press showed that Forbes : The eampaign "organizations set up who has ~manded that Dole apolobllllb and c.r pools to doliv· gize far
a cotiUrion pr~~~:tice
~ the ac:tivists who will decide known as
tum vot-..c.,-.wJtom,to. .,.,~.-as:.~J~ilkl:-=,~-•:rs:l~a~c.E~~s:"'~~~ a similarIIC:OIId or· third - in the crowded technique to develop his own cam• ~blican field. ·
paign themes.

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Hartford, who is also M&lt;anted in connection with the Roush murder.
When Leonard was picked up,
Gibbs was with her, but gave authorities false identification and remains
at large, Watterson said.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
A major slip Saturday afternoon
caused a section of State Route 7 to
give way and tumble down an
embankment near Tuppers Plains.
The slip possibly led to the closure
of this section of the busy north-south
highway while state officials make
repairs to the area.
One_-lane traffic is currently being
mamtamed wtth traffic signals, and
the area of the slip on the northbound
lane of 7 between Cline's Fruit Farm
and the Card BoK has been barricaded by state crews, accOrding to Nancy Yoachl)lll, public information officer wAh ODOT District Ill.
The section of the northbound lane
began to sink a few inches toward an
embankment late Saturday morning,
accordmg to several area residents.
Officials with Ohio Department of
Transportation District I 0 office in
Marietta, were notified of the slide
around noon on Saturday by the State
Highway Patrol, and the section of
road was closed to traffic, Yoacham
said.
The slip became more severe by
early Saturday evening, as the drop of
the northbound lane continued for
about I0 to 12 feet, taking with it the
berm, jlUardrail and much of the
under surface of the northbound lane,
Yoacham said.
A problem at the area which the
(Continued on Page 3)

Poll finds opposition
by Ohioans to public
funding of stadiums

By MIKE GLOVER
Aatoel~Hd p,... Writer

Au!Qmalic
Air.Condbillg'
• Cruise Control

A Gannett Co. Newa.,..,..

~Meigs . ·Republicans

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35.,.nta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 12, 1996

PIKETON (AP) -Agovemment report says the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant dio;l not have emissions that were health threatening. But an attor- ney representing area residents claims plant records prove otherwise.
• Some neighbors fear emissions from the plant, _70 miles south of Colum.'bus in Pike County, may be causing cancer and other ailments.
"There are lots and lots of documents that show the statements they're
·.'making jllst aren't right," said Louise Roselle. ofCincinnati. "Maybe they
.'looked at the documents and explained them away. But if they did, they didn't do it in that report."
Roselle represents residents within six miles of the plant in a $300 million lawsuit againsi the former Goodyear Atomic, now Divested Atomic, and
•'Martin Marietta Enefl}' Systems. The companies operated the plant for the
U.S. Department of EnefBY.
· A trial dale is set for June 3 in U.S. District Court in Columbus.

l

LARGE DISP·Iii\Avr_
I:

;Gorpis Indiana~lis kitchen range
plant: The appliance maker, in the
• mjd$t of a downsi;Ung, is closing the

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Super Lotto: ·

CIHr tonight, low
around 15. Tueedey,
tunny. High lll'ound 30.

Piketon residents dispute safety claims

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8-22-26-31-39-43

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deer and·quail. Yet its annual price tag
Several sources said f~riners'
of $1.7 billion, he said, makes ii an would eagerly sign up their, land.for
easy target as politicians try balanc- another round of the reserve pro~
ing the federal budget. ,
if Congress cuts the rent amounts by
"It's as up in the air as the rest of no more than 25 percent.
Doug Sh.arer, state CO[!serva:dmi
agriculture policy in this Congress,"
Cook said. "And that's not a tribute." operations coordinator for the Naturt
House and Senate Republicans' al Resources Conservation Seryice it)
proposed $12.3 J;lillion in spending Thmple, TeKas, said many of the orig·
cuts for farm programs would allow ina! participants 10 years ago were
farmers to withdraw from the reserve trying to retire.
'
program before their contracts expire.
"They couldn't raise livestoelt
President Clinton has objected to the and make any more money than wi\h
early back-out idea.
CRP, and the same is tnie with farm~
House Majority Leader Dick ing " Sharer said.
:&lt;
Armey, R-Texas, over the years has · · Boosters say that ifthe progr~ is
crusaded against commodity pro- cut severely and grass-covered land
grams he views as unnecessary and gets plowed for crops, there will be
expensive intrusions into the market- mor~ dust storms, and _surplus P.fDplace. He is no supporter of the con- . ductton from . the addtttonal acres
servation reserve.
could cause pnces to drop at market
"In general, we have always had
As f~r Tabor, he said he likely ~i!l
problems with government programs fence hts land and put cattle on •! tf
that idle that many acres .. : (because . Congress makes the conserva~on
of) the cost factor and it's totally program unpalatable.
,
against the free market/' said Jim
"I think it will survive in SoJne
Wilkinson, a spokesman for Armey. form, but I don't know in what
"It messes up the prices and, we form," he added. "The whole farm·
think, hurts the farming industry.'~
ing economy is sort of uncertain .~·

- Super Lotto:

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1343

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Farmers concerned over uncertainty of progr~m

Go·vernment tells••• coatillued rrom o-•

house a plan to scf'!IP ihe ~eclkles-old
link between farJll price~ ·and gov·
emment subsiaies. Farmers would
fii:tory~
have a series of fixed and declining
·•
~mewbere Iii! between: The payments under t1te legislation ...
• . nalion's retailers, whOse January sales Exisling home prices rose in all parts ·
reports were a very 'mix~ bag, But of the country expect the Northeast.
· while blizzards· trnd biuer cold kept Falling monaage rates helped
· ·ihqppen out o(Eastern stotts, retail- increase the demand for new homes
, •en lin California were ~ing signs ... PepsiCo Inc.'s fourth-quarteuam•1 that business, which never fully ingi fei!6St~Cn:ent in lhefounh quar• : IICOYend .from the recession; was tor beca~ ofuequ~ ~n1
·filially picking up some molnentum. chan~e, ~tinvestors fOimd·~ty ~f:
• ~
promtse tn the eompany and j)id tis
1
':The Senate .voted ancllent t" •the . stock up more ~- $3 a sbiR on

MTBE makes up the rest, he said . .\
"Our goal is to grow the pie sp
everyone's slice is larger,'' said ()\,1~
berg.
.
l
Terry Wigglesworth. a spokeS:.
woman for Ashland Petroleum Co~
told convention goers her company
has committed a significant am011t1t
of money to produqing and markdipg
reformulate&lt;! gasolines.
J. ~
Ashland buys ethanol bec~;ur
officials believe ETBE will be a fu
of the future, Wiggleswonh said~
When two of every fiveAmeri&lt;:~
breathe 'air that makes them sic~ -~
doesn't make sense to continue tp
bum conventi~!lq) gasoline, she Wq,.
The conventt'bn attrac.ted about
160 delegates from slate$._ ' !
•

670

Sports, Page 5

;

'0

Plck3:

CINCINNATI (AP)- A poll released Sunday indicates that Ohioans are
overwhelmingly opposed to the use of state money for construction of sports
stadiums.
The statewide telephone poll of 803 adults found that 68 percent of those
questioned opposed the spending of state money to help build stadiums to
keep professional spons teams in Ohio. Thirty-one percent were in favor and
the rest were undecided.
Respondents were almost evenly di~ided on the idea of creating a state
sports lottery to provtde money for stadtums. Ftfty percent were in favor, 47
percent were opposed and the rest were undecided.
.
The poll, conducted by the lnstitut~ for Policy Research at the University of Cincinnati, was sponsored by The Cincinnati Enquirer, WLWT-1V and
the university.It was conducted fron Jan. II to 24. Its margin for error is 3.5percentage potnts.
Cleveland and Cincinnati are trying to build new stadiums for their sports
teams .. Cleveland made a deal last week with the National Football League
that woll gtve the ctty another team by 1999.Jn the meantime, Browns owner Art Modell will move his team to 'Baltimore and give it a new name and
uniforms .
· Residents of Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, approved a "sin.
tax" on alcoholic beverages and cigarettes last year for construction of a stadium. Gov. George Voinovich has pledged state money to cover 15 percent
·
of the stadium's cost.
Hamilton County voters will decide March 19 whether to increase their
.sales tax by one-half percent to build a baseball-only stadium for the Reds
and a football-only stadium for the Bengals. Voinovich also has pledged state
help for those projects.
Majorities of all demographic groups polled opposed use of state funds
for stadiums, the pollsters found. Such opposition also carne from a majortty of restdents of the Cleveland and Cincinnati metropolitan areas who
answered the poll's_questions.
__
Respondents also were asked whether they
of casinos in Ohio. There have been proposals for casinos on the
or Lake
AIDING
VICTIMS P-ay-Middleport Lions
Club sptnt tht weekend offilrlng help to victim. of tht recent
flooding In Mtlga County. Mont than II) baslwta with cleaning supplies, food and tollttrlts Wll't pnpired by Llont Club mtml*w
and dlltrlbt.ttecl from the formlr Riverfront Barballa building on
Main Stntt. Llont President INCI Ttlfold said the ralltf ltemt
werepurchtledwlth a $10;i)OO doMtlon trorn-t;lona llltematloriIL "Wt lpant moat of tht mOney hen with tht loctl IIMIChante.
It WIS very well MCiived and a huge IUCCIII," said TeafOrd.

Erie.
Fifty-eight percent supported ftoating casinos if !ileal voters approve, 41
percent were opposed and I percent were unsure. The figures were unchanged
from those included in a 1993 poll.
.
Respondents were more evenly divided on the question of legalized casi- ·
nos in m~ cities. Fifty-three percent ~ved, 46 percent wee opp010il .
and-1-percent-wete.utidocided
'
However, 42 percen~ favored casino gambling in rneclliun-sized Ohio
cities, 56 percent were opposed and the rest were undecided.
'

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Monday, February 12, 11111

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OHIO

The Dally Se~nel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

We&lt;~tllcr

Local News in Brief:

1\al!llday, Feb. 1l

,.

D
•
s
f
,-Rohatyn
opponents
are
ready
for
battle
1
1
The a1 y en 1ne
L

WA~HINGTON -· White House
Chief of Staff Leon Panetta spent pan
of last week quietly sounding out
Senate Republican leaders on
whether the administration should nix
the planned nomination of Felix
Rohatyn for vice chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board.
Panetta was privately warned that
Republicans on the Senate Banking
Committee, which would have to.
approve the nomination, were girding
for a holy war to stop the liberal
Rohatyn, a New York investment
banker and longtime Democratic
activist, from assuming the Fed's No.
2 job. At this point, Rohatyn would
not win a single Republican vote on
the banking panel, according to one
GOP source who canvassed senators
last week.
Although Rohatyn remains the
front-runnerto fill one.oftwo openings on the seven-member board,
sources say that Panetta seemed very
concerned about the intensity of the
opposition. He appeared grateful for
the candid assessment and remarked
that he needed to know the reality

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992-2158 • F•x: 192-2157

-

'

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

MARGARET LEHEW

GeMrll Mlll8glll'

Controller

Sunshine law pending
against Cincinnati
A..TERRY
oclllledKINNEY
Preas Writer
8y

,

:·

before the administration proceeded.
Reservations about Rohatyn have
delayed the renomination of Chairman Alan ~nspan, who enjoys
·

By Jack A d
.
n fiTSOn

and
MIChael 8/nste/n

wide bipartisan backing, because~
White House thought Rohatyn's
prospects might be improved if he
were paired with the Republican
Greenspan in the announcement.
Rohatyn 1h;ls been turned into a
human trial balloon as the White
House agonizes over whetller it has
the votes and the verve to tackle
another bloody confirmation battle - this time in an election year.
Sen. C:onnie Mack, R- Fla., a
member of the ban kin~ panel and a
strong proponent of price sl.libility,
will serve as the opposition's field
marshal if the nomination is made.
Mack, who also serves as chairman
of the Joi,nt Economic Committee,

recently has been rootmg through
Rohalyn's past like was a nominee
for the Supreme eoun. ·In fact, the
Fed is thought of as the supreme
court of finance.
.
"H~'s (Mack} adamantly opposed
to putting on someone who is deeply
ingrained in the body politic, and in
a very liberal philosophy, and he's
going to lead the opposition." said
one Republican member of the Bank·
ing Committee. This same source
said that Banking Committee Chairman Alfonse D' Amato would defer
to Mack and play a low-key role in
any confirmation process.
"These two open seats are ~itally
important to the future direcuon of
·the Fed," said a second Republican.
"It's worth having a fight about if
that's the way they are going to go."
'nlC battle lines of that fight are
already emergmg. Even as Panetta
was taking the Senate's political
puis~. staffen on the Jomt Econom·
ic Committee were preparing a senes
of confidential memos for Mack.
"(Rohatyn's) public views indica!e only a casual acquamtance With

he

·-----------------------~---.

CINCINNATI (AP)- Ohio's Sunshine Law is supposed to give citizens '
the opportunity to see and hear public·decisions being made, to force government to operate in the light of clay.
.
.
.
But battles are still being fought over pubhc husmess bemg conducted
in private sessions.
.
Former Councilman Tom Luken often refused to attend execllllve sessions of Cincinnati City Council. He called them "secret meetings," and at
one point threatened.to file a lawsuit against. the city similar t'1 one a M~a- ·
mi UniversitY journalism professor filed ag10nst the Oxfond City Counc~l, ~·
'
Luken contends that while be was a member.the past two :years, the C1ty : ·
Council held·improper meetings at least once a monlh.
·The Cincinnati Post asked the Ohio Supreme Court last summer to order I
~he city to release minutes of council's closed briefings regarding a plan to i
finance construction of two riverfront slailiurns.
· ·
:
Luken said he would have filed suit,' too, if be weren't tied up opposi.ng J
the half-oent sales tax proposed to finance those stlld~ums.
,
"If I had the time, I'd file it tomorrow," Luken smd recently.
.
Karl Kadon, an assistant city solicitor, said 'Iilesday that the newspaper's
lawsuit had not been resolved. The Supreme Court has said it will hear argu· :
ments in the case, but no date had been set.
In November 1994, Miami University professor Joe Fenley sued in the
Supreme Court, alleging that O~ford's council was violating,its city charter which says all counc1l meeungs shall be open to the pubhc.
'The court agreed that the charter was specific. Since then, the charter h!15 .
been revised.
·
When Luken threatened to sue last year, the city solicitor issued an opinion saying that the wordin~ of the Cinoin~ati. charter- "The proceedings
of the council shall be pubhc ... " - made 11 different from the Ox fond char·
ter.
·
That opinion also cited differences with the Cleveland charter, whic~. says
"All meetings of the Council or ~omm1ttees thereof shall be pubhc, and ·
Portsmouth's charter, which is similar to Cleveland's.
.
In the case of Cincinnati -although Luken disputes the interpretation .
_ the difference comes down to use of "proceedings" ratber than "meet·
A new novel, "Primary Colors" by
ings " the opinion said .
·
·
Anonymous,
is alleged to have capThe opinion concluded that "proceedings" distinguishes discussion of
tured
the
spirit
of President Clinton
issues from execution of legislative authority.
"The Charter therefore provides for l'Ublic access to the proceedings or and his White House better than most
nonfiction to date. The novel is
final actions of council taken by vote and does not prohibit the U§!" of exec.uncanny in its accuracy, supposedly,
utive sessions otherwise in accord with state law," the opinion said.
It also said it was not in the public interest for some legislative deliber- despite the fact that Clinton is called
Jack Stanton in the book, and George
ations to be conducted .in public.
·
Stephanopolous is not only Henry
''There should be little argument that the public interest is not served by
Burton, he's black, and sleeps with
the discussion of the weaknesses·in .a pending coun action, discussing the
the
first lady.
·city position in labor negotiations or the interview process for the hiring of
So
how do4Ve know it's on target?
a city manager in public," the opinion said.
Well, the pundits of the east have all
weighed in to tell us so.
"What makes the book so deadon?" asks Mauhew Cooper in The
New Republic. He notes that "Mand¥
By The Auocleted Preas
.
Grunwald, a player in 1992 but no
Today is Monday, Feb. 12, the 43rd day of 1996. There are 32.3 days left longer an adviser to the president, is
in the year.
represented by Daisy Green, a nicoTod11y's Highlight in History:
.
.
tine-puffing New York media conOn Feb. 12, 1809, Abrabam Lincoln, the 16th president of the Umted sultant. In the book, Grunwald's
States, was born in present-clay.f.arue County, Kentucky.
·
Green sleeps with Stephanapolous'
Burton. That's fiction, although I
On this date~
In 1554, Lady Jane Grey, who'd been queen of England for nine days, 'couldn't help but read those pages
was beheaded after being charged with treason.
.
with special interest since Grunwald
In 1733, English colonists led by James Oglethorpe founded Savannah, and I have -- full disclosure •• been
·dating." I couldn't even remember
who the hell Mandy Grunwald was,
Gain 1870, women ·in the Utah Territory gained the right to. vote. .
In 1892 President Lincoln's birthday was declared a natiOnal hohday.
so I'm grateful to M,atthew Cooper
. In 1895,' the Battle ofWeihaiwei took place during the Sino-Japanese War. for elevating her to relative fame once
In 1907. more than 300 people died when the steamer Larchmont col- more, even if it was just to brag that
lided with a schooner off Block Island in New England.
· he's going out wilh her.
In 1908, the fint round-the-world automobile race began in New York.
It ended in Paris the following Aughst.
In 1909, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, America's oldest civil rights organization, was founded.

0

FLAT

tAR111

FLAT

~VING

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•

•
'

'

0

FLAT
•
* '•
0

0

•

for

To~ay

in history

lan Shoales
"Primary Colors": '"Youn truly has
been mentioned by some," he writes
coyly, "but I'm too vain for a pseudonym." I can believe that.
Newsweek's Mark Miller (Mark
who?) also denies writing the novel;
although he does admit "I'm a logical suspect -- I spent most of a year
inside the Clinton camp for
Newsweek .... " Again, vou can see
t!Jere's no false modesty in this crowd
of logical suspects.
So who did write it?
I've gleaned' the media for you,
and !)ere's what I've learned.
lim Weiner in the New York
Times informs us that "Walter
Shapiro of lime ~,r~agazinc says he is
not Anonymous (of coune, he a4ds,
people thought" he was)." Sure they
did, Walter, sure they did.
Sidney Blumenthal and Michael
Kelly oflbe New Yorker didn 'I write
it, neither did James Carville or
George Stephanopolous himself.

(Stephanopolous thought Anonymous
might be Peter Knobler, the ghost
writer of "All's Fair,:'' Mary Matalin
and James Carville's booklike object;
he has denied it.) ' Joe Klein of
Newsweek didn't write it, Time's
Michael Kramer didn't do it. Neither
did speechwriter David Kusnet, former White House aide David Dreyer,
Paul Begala (former Clinton con.sultant), former press secretary Dee Dec
Myers, or novelist (and Clinton pal)
Tommy Caplan.
'
·
Who does that leave? Who the hell
cares? I don't even ~ognize half the
names on this dizzying list.
For that matter, the novel itself
seems so "inside" 1· can't imagine
anybody but the people on the dizzying list, or people like them, having
even the slightest interest in the darn
thing.
' ·
Matthew Cooper (again, sorry)
informs us, for example, thai in ll)e
novel " ... there are renditions of midlevel staffen that only an insider
would know, like Patty Solis, a scheduler for the first lady. Whoever wrote
this knows she's- Mexican-American." A novel with realistic portrayals ' of mid-level White House staff
memben, only their names have

.
.
• di ..
,·
the ~~sues suJTOUn ng mo~tary P:O ·
1cy, one memo.declares. Nothlllf!
indicates he beheves .the F~
America best by keep!ng pnces .s f
ble, not by engagmg m th~ kind &lt;!
fine-tuning that ~arked the 70s. If~
. held sway, Am~nca~s would have .IIJ
live with more ~flauon, and all of I(s
attendant conseque?~e~ •• a drop 1~
real vatu~ of ~he1r tncomes an~
wealth, higher tnterest rates and a
weaker and less stable dollar.... I'll!
simply: R·O-H-A-T-Y-N spells
stagflation."
:
Where Rohatyn calls home coul~
also spell trouble if the administration
fudges , on the Fed:s ~ residency
requirement. He can,'t claim Neljl
York as his residence -- though he'~
lived there. for ·a half...centtlly .. ~
becaule Greenspan ~~ready clai.lns
.!hat seat and every' Fed- govemdr ·
must be selected from a different Fed
district. Tile administratiortis·tloating
the idea of claiming that Rohatyn is
from Wyoming becjtuse l)l~t's wheJ1
he's building a house. "'The JEC hlis ·
prepared a two-page legal memO lQ
preempt this J:I!SC. .
~· r .
But Rohatyn's recond ·Is the m10n
ammunition. The Mack mCIROS detail,
his support of European-style indus"!
trial policy; increases in the gas tax,;
government checks on · wages and~
prices to curb inflation; possible.lim',
its on foreign lrlide; and tinkering
with interest rates to accommodate:
~hanges in fiscil policy. He may,
"hinder the Fed's Independence anll'
lead to internaJ bickering among iis 1
memhen," the memo wams.
· In 1993 Rohii!Yn stated that tlW
United Sta~s "wOf!:'t gci re.JjOb ~·
ation from the private sector unless it
is stimulated by a largt· public work~;
program." That quintessentially liberal view ranltles Republicans, but it,
should also rub President Clinton the ·
wrong way:-- He said twice during:
his State of the Union addreSs that the
"era of big government is over." ·,;
To avoid another La11i Guinier
debacle -- whose assistant U.S. anorney general nomination was withdrawn after Clinton conceded he:.
hadn't read her controvenial writings~
-- the president may want to review::
Rohatyn 's record.
''
Jack Anderson and 1\Jichael
Bllasteln an writers for United '
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
•J

PA.

he'i'l

IM!!n•fleld l2e· I•

. ... ..
'

• IColumbus 13~ I
37°

;\'II Au~~,~ ~IIIJIIDolltl

•(.

•

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.f

By The Aiaocleted Preu

. An approaching high pressure
srstem will push some of the clouds
out of Ohio tonight but the mercury
viill plunge into the single digits in
pfU'IS of the state, forecasten said.
Clouds will build again on Tues~ay and a . few snow showen will
develop in the northwest, the Nation-

l ,... .

.
I

.

J

1""'£1-ll w-.o
A 'Sf:X· C~~t-lGE
.

/f'R\-- ./

'.

.., I

'

.,.

been changed? Oh boy. I'll be up at
dawn to get a lint edition of that'of!e&gt;
Reviewing the novel for The Ne~ .
:York Times Book Review, Michael' ·
Lewis even tells . u~ ; th11t t~#.
"oenophile R.W. Apple Jr. of ThC
New York limes makes a · cameq:
appearance as the oenophil~ A.l'.'
.Cauley of The New York nmes."'Ilpcf.
name vaguely rings a hell, but ev~!l
if I did want to curl up with a bitiris;
snapshot of a wine-guzzlingjoumaJist, I think I'd wait for the papeibacf
All in aii,-I','d' have to agre~ wii1l.'
The limes'lim Weiner who calls tlie'
Hap atound the novel "self~abso~.:.
. self-absolving blather." .Hey, I kno\f~
how to review self-absorbed blather.Too bad I can't review "Primii!'Y'
Colon." That would be unethical."
After all, I could have written th~ '
book' myself. 'Don't laugil1 I could hav~. if I fe.ltlike it. I may 'be a lot ~t
things,but--·fulldiscldsure--l'mnot •
too vain for a pseudonym. ·
·
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoales newsletter, call 11800-9~- •
DUCK or write E&gt;uck's Bmtli; 4011~
Broad ~t.. Nevada City, CA 95959.)'
lan Sboales li · il aylldlcated
writer for Newspaper Entel'prlie"
Association.
• I

The RepUblican ·Revolution
independent of politicians :and the series of "refonns" of lhe criminal
Anolh«:r "refonn" in. the · aptlyo . I d' the d th
the angry "w1'shes o.fthe miiJ'ority" to ..,_ •J'ustice system. If they are ever imple- titled book, "Guilty," is · the ~:
mc u mg
ea sentence on
,_
abandonlilent of dte
. 'Miianda rule
Fourth Amendment -- may 'have tison "legal teChnicalities." .
·mented; more prisons would have to
u"'
stalled in Congress, but the demoA less predictable and more omi-. be huilt, and not a few. innocent peo- right to remain silent and to have a:
nizing of the Bill of Rights is accel·
·
pie would be stuffed into the'fl. ·
~awyer .Present before any P,Olic.e :
crating elseWhere in the land. ~ risRothwax would, for example, m~rr~~~~o~tarls).
- · · :)
i11g Pat Buchan1111 tells the Heritage
.
essentially dismantle the exclusionns......,,
would be "\lolun: t
Fotlnd'ation that "a judicial dictator-, . nous augury of hard times ahel!l for ary rule. It says that evidc.nce tary," lawyerless confeSsion$. Rolli- S
· "active
· oppos111on
"
· ·a obtained by search and seizure in v1·o- wax
bOth the acute· ••
sh.1p" ·IS tn
tothe James Madison's handiwork IS
1 underestimates
b'l'
fus
·
•
.lau·on
of
the
Fourth
Amendment's
vu
nera
I
1ty
and
con
wishes of the majority.' II is a pity new bouk- "Guilty: The Collapse qf
d th
6t · ion
, of, some·
"' ••
·
·
d'd
mandate
of
a
warrant
cannot
-with·
suspects
an
e
su
le
'
q
uestioning
the
Co
the framers of
nstltullon 1 Criminal Justice" -· by one of the
sk'll f
d
••
.
'de
'ew
exceptt'
ons
-be
used·
at
trial.
I
s
o
some
etectivcs.
·Nor
wiD,
1
h
not have Mr. ·Buc anan at the1r s1 . most efficient J'udges in New York, ''
'deotaped
• ·
......
In Nashua, N.H., Steve Forbe s Harold Rothwax. He is a trial coon
""'_ exclus1'onary "rule was not VI ·r the con.e5slons ·assure fair-~
·
1
the enthralled
'th
he
·
coxtcnded
to
state
and
local
law
ness
camera
omits
what
pre:·
·tn•Orms
•
.
voten at
judge on the Supreme Court, wliich
eded the taped
fi ·
would use Antomn Scal1a as a mod- in New York is not an appcllllle court. en(oreement agents until 1961. Ol!r- c ·
con ess10n..
1
·
' once There are two levels above it.
1'ng the year be'ore
el for his judicial- appomhnents
'' in New York C1'ty, H Roth ·wax's ' publisher, Random.· 11
sending him on an eight• ; 1•
he and the flat lilll are e Iected. And
A fonner officer of the New York the poll·ce -- bern'1 ans-werable to no · 1ouse, ISfrom
George l'lltaki -~ who wu elected Civil Liberties Union .and criminal one •• had not obtained a single c ty tour,
sea to shining sea. ThiS' 1
not usually
governor of New York in large part defense attorney· for the Legal Aid search warrant before '~arching and ·is
boo'o the OO.,C ·with
· bua nonfiction
Ran
•
· I Society, Rothwax is a lecturer at.the seizing. But in 1961, the policeduti- H .. -•n does
courts,
don!'
because of his devou.·on to cap1ta
• · need I
trod
fully went before judaes to obtain·
ouse·uso . n I
a weather-·,.
punishment •• has m
uccd the Colwnbia Universitr Law Sl:hbol,' hundreds of warrants becaUse they mill to know which way the wind is ,
Poli~
and Public Protection Act pf and has been on the ben&lt;:h for 2S 'had to. But Rothwax trusts the ""'lice blowina. ,
. ·'.
'
, &gt;.;.
1996 in the legisl-turc.
,
' years.
"
'
~"'
J dgc_Rothw
r,
Pataki, who doesn't need a wealh- · - He runs so fui~~ 1 court •• no andjudges1o-be-reastinable-without ~ ·: 11
· ax_.:ls up ~ or ~ . •
·erman to know which way. the wind . showboating ...._ ..... ·Jawyen, no thert being • inandatory ellclusio~ polntment by Gov.. ·George ' Pataki~d
.
COiiUIIalldi the I
''"'" ,....,
,
rule.
,
.
~· nobody will' b_et that ~othl wax I
is bl&lt;!wmg,.is ·
· Ill
eg· unnecessary time in sidebars - that . ~· -''"wax· would aiso ·,e.visc:erate .Will nl;'l be resllap.mt;i.~,u,,i:ie
. for a
islatilrs to gratly IOOien the judic:ial he could have ~y.shoitened tbc
""'
tong time 1
,- 0
rulei th8r titN.t the~ ~hen ,~y OJ. S~JISQP trial if he had beoD jp the 'Fifth Amendment righ' qainR ,
· come;
· ·•
~e~tchandaetze.lnaflniililtrefr8in, place of .IAnce Ito, Rolhwax is a ~if-incrlmin,Uonincriminalcaaes.
Nat H atolr
~ :S
11 ~ - ·
he says the police mUll no lOnger be ' 10111!1 aente~ (some lawyen call He would give juries .!he power to
e
'1
~~'
_
., · . · him ·:the prince of dlrkneas").
infer that sila1cuquates Juilt. ThOse reao,- aatbodty • Clie ftrit ~ ' 't··
_ ~f!rlmary!!!IC!ofl'llalrisblll
Roihwax'•hnotllauppalled~~ old enoua!l to remember Joe A nl !ntaalltlle_._OIIIIei8·L ·is New York's 1ilpst ~. iiiC il libenarians and. a .Jood lllally McCarthy niay wonder al the sllle of Ol'lUP'Md a i)'ll'tlt«¥NhiiiB'•.,.,~
'CoUrt 0( Appeala, whicl) has been defenlo ll1Gmeya. He ldyOCIIel a Judae Rothwu's memory. ·
for NEA.
.

wa·lter C. 'Pete' Wears

EMS units answer 9 calls

a

Hospital news

Pomeroy woman
files civil action

They are Elmer Newell, preSident, and Blair Windon, vice-president.
The third trustee is Gary Dill. JaJ)et Life, township clerk-elect, will take
office April I.
.
Regular trustees' meetings in 1996 will be held the second Tuesday of each month. 7 p.m., at the Chester Town Hall. aocording to Karen
Smith, Chester Township cler\(.

Trustees schedule Tuesday meeting
Chester Township trustees will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the
Cheshier Town Hall .

Middleport police probe accidents
Middleport Police investigated two separate weekend acciden~, with
one citation issued in a Sunday wreck, accordmg to Pohce Chief S1d
Little.
The first accident occurred Friday at 6:10p.m. on the Super America parking lot on General Hartinger Parkway.
David C. Jacks, 46, Middleport, was waiting for another vehicle to
move when his 1995 Chevy Cavalier was struck by a 1971 Datsun,
driven by John D. Sturgeon, 34, Pomeroy, police reported.
According to reports, Sturgeon was backing from a parking space and
failed to see Jacks' ·:ehicle when the accident occurred. Damage to
Jacks' vehicle was light. No citations were issued.
The second accident occurred Sunday at 12: 13 p.m. in the intersection of Pearl Street and General Hartinger Parkway.
.
According to reports, Timothy Ray Roush, 40, Mason, W.Va., was
traveling west on General Hartinger Parkway in his I ~87 Ford Ranger
when he failed to stop for a red light at the Pearl Street interseciion.
Roush then struck a 1987 Cbevy S-10, driven by Arthur C. Coutant,
66, Middleport, that was traveling south on Pearl Street and crossing
the intenection.
Damage to both vehicles was moderate. Roush was cited for a stop
light violation.

Survey finds grads
take remedial courses
By RICHARD WHITMIRE
Gannett Newa Service
WASHINGTON-About 13percent of all college undergraduates
reponed taking at least one remedial
course, according to a profile of college students in 1993.
Those taking remedial courses
are more likely to he poor, minority·
and come from a family where the
parents speak a language other than
English, according to the repon being
released Monday by the American
Council on Education.
.
The profile of those needing remedial courses, designed to correct academic deficiencies, comes at a time
when many states are considering
eliminating or cutting back on remedial counes.
"A lot of states have tight budgets
and they"re looking at everything,"
said Linda Knopp, author of the
report. " Opponents of remedial education say especially when money is
tight they're opposed to funding students for teaching things they should
already know."
Some of the cutback proposals
include limiting remedial courses to
two-year colleges or limiting remedial classes to the first year of college.
Foreign students make ~p about
one-third of those taking remedial

courses; foreign students make up
one-tenth of the total undergraduate
population in the United States.
Nearly one-fifth ( 19 Jll'rcent) of all
African-American, Hispanic and
Asian-American undergraduates took
remedial courses. About II percent of
white students took remedial courses .
Other report highlights:
• Remedial math was the course
. taken most often.
, • The majority of those taking
remedial classes were freshmen, but
nearly one in five was a junior or
senior.
• The long-range educational goals
of those taking remedial courses
mirrors the goals of the larger student
population, with about half planning
to pursue advanced degrees.
• The number of students taking
remedial courses appean to be holding steady, according to the data used
in the report from the Education
Department.
. Concludes the report: "As ihe
debate about the role of remedial education at colleges and universities
continues, it will he necessary to balance the concerns about the inadequate preparation of some college
students against the benefits students
derive from remedial programs."'

ODOT tackles SR 7 slip
(Continued from Page 1)
slip occurred had been anticipated by
state highway officials, who had
been monitoring the area for the past
several months while preparing for
repain later this spring.
According to Yoacham, the original intent was to sell the plan through
the state's emergency contract sale
procedure, which eliminates the need
for legal advertising for bids from all
interested contractors.
Due to the nature of the slip, repair
plans are currently being revised by
District 10 officials and ODOT soil
experts who will' e•amine the site
today to re-evaluate the situation and
determine if the southbound lane can
continue to carry traffic .
• "The slide is stable at the moment,
:but future stability is the question ·and
the safety of the traveling public is
our priority right now. Our intent had
been to sell the project as soon as

possible and keep the south bound
lane open to traffic."
"However, now that the slide has
started, we may not be able to keep
one lane open. That's what we have
to decide after taking a closer look at
the area," said Larry Coler, ODOT
District 10 production administrator.
Coler did not state when the construction bid on the project will be
sold, but said that he expects the bid
to be sold soon so repairs can begin
immediately when weather permits.

Your

Daily

Volley_....,.

.

.,._...The

Sold---··

Oitio 45769.

•

Actions to end
marriages filed

SuucatrnON IA'111S
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Ooe - .................:............................ .$2.00
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,

The following actions to end mar. riage were filed recently in the office :
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar- ·
ry Spencer: .
;
Dissolution asked - Sandra L.
Williams and Mickey C. Williams, ,
both of Pomemy, Feb. 8.
Divorces asked - Carol Lee 1
Dorn from Robert Horace Dom, .
both of fomeroy, Feb. 9; George W.' '
Bricltles from Carolyn Sue Brickles, .
both of Middleport, Feb. 7; Michael '
L. Bing, Middleport, from Diana L.
Bing, Racine, Feb. 7; Shirley A. Hub- ·

III'ICLBCOPY PKICB

11'111)'............................................... 35 c..

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both of
Pomeroy,-~.
6. Hubbard,;'
bard
from
Wayne Allen.
.

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Merlin Harold "Pat" Tr8cy, 77, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Feb. 10, 1996 in
at Holzer Medical Center.
Born Dec. 5, 1918 at Laurel Cliff, son of the late Emmell and Eva Lowery Tracy, he was retired from the Imperial Eleciric Co. of Middleport. He
was a member of the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church and a U.S. Army
Air Corps veteran of World War II.
. Surviving are his wife of 50 years, Mabel West Tracy; a son and daughter-in~ law, Jay aiid ~elv• Tracy of Pomeroy; a daughter 'and son-in-law, Sue
and Chester·Stonc of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; six grandchildren; three greatgrandehildren; two sisters, Freda Russell of Orlando, Fla., and Bea Davis.of
Mid~lepon; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be 3 p.m. Tuesday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with Pastor Peter Trembley officiating. Burial will be in the Rock Springs
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. today.
In lieu of !Iowen, donations may be made to the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church Building Fund, in care of Pastor Peter Trembley.

Walter C. "Pete" Wears, 86, Pomeroy, died Saturday; Feb. 10, 1996 at
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center near Pomeroy.
Born April 19, 1909 in Pliny, W.Va., son of the late Ira and Nannie Legue
Wears, he was retired as a custodian from Ohio University. He attended the
Rock Springs Methodist Church and was a U.S. Army veteran of World War
II:
.
He is survived by his wife of60 years, Virginia Abbott Wean of Pomeroy;
a son, W. Paul Wears of Lakeland, Fla.; litRe daughten and sons-in-law, Ann
'ay The AUocleted PrH•
ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Marilyn and Fred Werry of Pomeroy, Janet and Benton Eblin of Pomeroy, and Reta
Seven Ohioans died in weekend M. Zavacky, 46, of Beallsville, when and John Ord of Cheshire; 14 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren; and
traffic accidents, including two in one her car collided with a truck on Ohio several nieces and nephews.
wceck, the State Highway Patrol said 9 in Belmont County. ·
He was also preceded in death by his parents, three brothers, two sisters.
tl!day.
WAPAKONETA Rick L. and a son-in-law and a daughter-in-law.
The patrol counted fatalities from White. 31, of Wapakoneta, driver, in
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday 111 the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
a two-car crash on a city street.
· with the Rev. Keith Rader officiating. Burial will be in the Rock Springs
The dead:
SATURDAY
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.
SUNDAY
MANSFIELD - Clarence L.
In lieu of Oowen, donations can be made to the Rock Springs Methodist
· FREMONT- Robert Wright, 56, Skidmore, 71,.of Mount Gilead, dri- Church Building Fund, in care of Brenda Blackston.
of Tiffin, and Aliee Kaiser, 65, of Fre- ver in a one-car accident on U.S. 42
mont, ·when his car and her pickeup in Richland County.
truck collided head•on on·Ohio 53 in
FRIDAY NIGHT
Sandusky County.
GEORGETOWN - David . E.
·. MASSILLON - Michael A. Skidmore, 45, of Ripley, the driver in
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaSows : under 500 lbs. steady, over
Cpwford, 37, of Massillon, when his a one-car accident on a Brown Coun- Ohio direct hog prices at selected 500 lbs. steady to 1.50 higher.
carranoff of ohio 21 in Stark Coun- ty road.
buying points Monday by the U.S.
u.s. 1-3. 300.:500 lbs. 28.00ty.
Department of Agriculture Market 32.00; .500-650 lbs. 32.00-35.50.
News:
Boon: 26.00-28.00.
Barrows and gilts: steady to weak,
Estimated receipts: 42,000.
instances 50 cents lower; demand
Prices from The Producers
moderate on a moderate supply.
Livestock Association:
· ' (Continued from Pig&amp; 1)
a vOle," he said.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 45 .00Cattle: uneven, 1.00 lower to 2.00
'!{oinovich appointed her director of .. - "Let's get behind whichever can- 47.00, few 47.50; plants 46.00-48.00. higher.
the Governor's Office of Appalachia, didate comes out allead in the priU.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 40.50Slaughter steen: choice 58.q0~taere she managed ecooomic devel- maries to get a Republican in the 45.00.
65.50; select53.00-61.00.
qpmenl, fundi11g and policy issues for White House," he said.
29 soulheastem rural counties,
Afterwards, Carey addressed work
i\ltluding Meigs County.
on highway projects in Meigs Coun~ ~ As lieutenant governor, she chain
ty.
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Sheridan Pierce residence. no
tJ\e state and local government com"We're ·going to keep working at it
gency
Medical Service recorded nine injuries.
rpission co-chain the Governor's until we get the job done," he
calls
for
assistance Saturday and
RUTLAND
Htlman 'Resource Investment Coun- pledged. ,
·
Sunday,
including
three transfer calls.
I 0:49 a.m. Saturday. Hampton
Following the· guest speakers,
ell, and s~es as the governor's
Hollow Road, Janice Hampton, Holzdirector of cabinet. She oversees the local candidates stated ~ir positions Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
er Medical Center.
Cll\io Bureau of Employment Ser- and signed unity pledge presented
12:55 a.m. Sunday, Rivenide
SYRACUSE
v'it:es, the Ohio bepartment of Agri- by Steve Story, a candidate for prosApartments,
Dorothy
Robbin,
VeterI
0:39
a.m.
Saturday, Pomeroy
&lt;;\tlture, as well as the Governor's ecuting.attorney,
.
.
ans
Memorial
Hospital;
Pike,
Helen
Smith~·
Pleasant Valley
Office of Appalachia. the Ohio Coal
Story asked that Republicans s1gn
6:22
p.m.
Sunday,
Cole
Street,
Hospital:
Qevelopment Office, Bl!d the Office the pledg~ to.SUAPOrt whichever .can3:11 p.in. Sunday, Cherry Street,
ofHousing and «;:ommunity Partner- d1dates wm 1n the March 19 pnma- Della Milliron, refused treatment.
RACINE
David
Lawson, VMH.
*ip.
'
ry.
.
. /
I: 13 a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
·She called for the party faithful to
Local candidates s)leali!Jll! were:
support U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans of Story; Gary Dill and R~bert Harten- department and squad to Sycamore
Grove
Road,
electric
lines
down
at
Gallipolis and State Rep. John Carey bach, for county commiSSIOn; Ernest
of Wellston.
Spencer, Judy Williams, Patty PickHolzer Medical Center
' "Folks feel strongly about Meigs ens, Joe Stobart, Mary Powell and
Discharges
Feh, 9 - Kimberly
COilnty but don't let the party be John Blaettnar, for county comm1s·
Thompson, Mn. Eber Pickens and
divided. Stick together to get Repub- sion; Gerald Rought and Mike
·son,
Katelynn Ebert, Bruz Gibson,
lieans elected," she said.
Canan, for shenff; Ed Durst and
(Editor's
note:
A
lawsuit
oudines
Ethel
Boswell, Tommy McGuire,
. She was accompanied by her bus- H~ward Frank, for treasurer;·Eugene
the
p\'UICes
ol
one
party
aplnst
Karen
Hall,
Royce McGhee.
blind of 25 years, Jeff.
·
Tripl~~t and Robel:' Eason, for counanother.
It
does not establish guilt
BirthMr.
and Mrs. Bill Moore,
Next, Fultz introdui:ed Cre~s. .ty ~ngmeer; Debb1e Watson and, for
or
innocence.)
daughter,
Middleport.
,
who said he will continue.to usist on Recorder Emmogene Hamtlton who
A
personal
injury
suit
was
filed
Discharges
Feb.
10
Mrs. Pau I
a balanced budget and criticized unde~ent. open he~ s~rgery Fnday
Thunday
in
the
Meigs
County
ComLawson and daughter, Kaitlyn BowlDemocrat President Bill Clinton as at Un1ven1ty Hosp1tal m Columbus,
mon
Pleas
Court
by
Andrea
D.
Diling,
Lisa Redmond.
"obstructionist."
and employees _Judy. King and Kay
lard,
Pomeroy,
against
Rebekka
D.
Birth
- Mr. and Mn. David Pat.. "Ciint011 willliBY any'thing 'to get Hjll. Mn. Hamtlton IS ex.pected to be
Mcintyre
and
Clarence
D.
Mcintyre,
tenon,
son,
Gallipolis.
discharged from the bospttal Tuesday.
both
of
Racine.
Discharges
Feb. 11 - Ruby
Approximately 250 attended the
·
In
her
complaint,
Dillard
states
she Lucas, Mn. David Pattenon and son,
annual event.
was in an accident on Nov. 17, 1993, Mn. Bill Moore and daughter, Sara
:1he
Sentinel '
when a car driven by Rebekka Mc!n-' Cain.
I~JIMMJ
tyre struck her vehicle from behind.
Birth - Mr. and Mn. Richard
As
a
result,
she
received
injuries
Reymond,
daughter, Point Pleasant,
P.btilhed ....., ........ Monday lbroqh
to her head, neck, shoulden, back, W.Va.
l'ridly, It 1 COurt 51., ~. Ollio, by die
Q&lt;io
~y.(l- Co..
face and other areas in addition to
(Published with permission)
.........,, Olrio 457159, Pt.. 99'2-2156. Secoad
incunring medical costs and pain, suf- - plid·~.OIIio.
fering, anxiety and distreb, the comAuoc:iMed - . . ondllle Ohio
plaint states.
!lew.,..,..
....- .
•,
She is seeking S2S,OOO plus costs.
A jury trial is requested.
1'lle
DUly Sendnd, ! II c..rt St. ~.
JlosTM.urBil

_ -....
-----,
.
I -.....
--.....

~

'Pat' Tracy

Meigs "Republicans hear

;

',

Merlin~ H.

Today's livestock report

'I

O('ft~A.'t'IQN.

al Weather Service said. Temperatures will warm into the mid-20s to
low 30s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 69 degrees in 1984 while
the record low was 8 below zero in
1917. Sunset tonight will be at6:03
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:28a.m.

Steven D. Maley, 46, 32 Kristi Drive.' Bidwell, died Monday, Feb. 12, 1996
at his residence.
'
Born Sept. 22, 1949 in Parkenburg, W.Va., son of the late George Casto
Maley and Orvella Brake Maley of Little Hocking, he was the office manager for the Kanawha River Towing Co., Henderson, W.Va.
·
He was a graduate of the Columbus Business Univenity, a member of
the ·Fellowship Baptist Church, and a member of the Pilot Club of Huntington, W.Va.
·
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Brenda L. Brown, whom
he married June 12, 1972 at Vinton; a daughter, Brandi Maley, and a son,
Eric Maley, both at home.
·
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis, with the Rev. Joseph Godwin officiating. Burial will be in the Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral chapel from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

Weekend wrecks kill ·7

I

'

.

itself felt in
Phio
during this week
.

Nat HentO"

'-..

' ;.

rll'~ .·... :Jn&amp;king

'&lt;·"· :

F'O~ 'I(£~«S, 'no\£ ~$~·c.tU.It46
S\'fU..T\OPil SU~£1' M~ .

. ......
W. VA.

Piling 'on the· Bill of,· Rig.h ts _ _ _&gt;.·

Berry's World

Tile Chester Township trustees have named their officen for 1996.

Steven D. Maley

I,

Don't get me wrong. I'm glad
Manhew Cooper has a love life
(whoever he is). He goes on to deny
that he is the anonymous author of

Chester trustees elect officers

1

Political novel ·in·'search ~an a~thor·- . ~1
! •

conditions and

•
•

TAI·BOOKS ARE.NOW OPEN
FOR
.
FIRST HALF 1995 COLLECTION OF THE
,REAL ESTATE TAXES AND ALSO
FOR DELINQUENT TAlES.
FINAL CLOSING DATE WILL BE
MARCH 4, 1996.
'l

·-- - -

IOWIARD
E... FUJII(
II
MEIGS COUNTY r. I EASUIE. I

--- ·

..

~--------11!'1--------- ----·~----lltili;l!

�Sent~}

The Daily

Monday, Februery 12, 1998

~:~ N-Y
~~

.
Caldwell cited the second frame as
Southern's jinx this 199S-96
The third quarter blues, however,
stopped Southern in its tracks.
N-Y blitzed to a 20-11 fralne, setting Southern back to a S7·~ tally.
Twenty-three Nelsonville poil\ts
came from the !icc throw line. The
Buckeyes shot 37 limes from the
charity sttipe and caqJed there in the
suburbs of the paint for most of the

Mitcbell's IS, Jeremy Schultz's 14,
Jason Waite's II and Jason Wick-: ~
Visiting Southern made a valiant man's 10.
X"'·effort to pick up its fourth straight
Both teams shot out of the gate
I win, however, the Nelsonville· York with a torrid offensive explosion that
Buckeyes barely repelled the effort put 39 first quarter points on the
. in an exciting 85-83 Tri-Valley Con- board. Nelsonville-York took the
: ; ference boys' varsity basketball game slight edge 20-19, led by its fasl
1
in Buchtel.
'
break and sttong inside game.
!iouthem is now 7-11 overall and ;
Southern's break and occasional
1
outside
power shooting kept the
• .6-7 in the league, while NelsonvilleYork moves to 7 -II , 4-8, Southern Tornadoes right on the cutting edge
· was led by junior guard Ryan Nor- of victory. In the &amp;eeond frame,
·2 r ris, who tossed in a game-high 26 Southern pulled away to a 42-37
. poin~ (51 points for the two-day halftime advantage. Southern ran a
" .' weellend). Norris had eight crucial wide-open offense in the second can.r . three-pointers in the game. Team- to and exploded to the lead. The Tor•, mate Jesse Maynard had 16, John nadoes hit 9-11 three pOinters in the
-(I · Haimon had 13 and Jamie Evans had
first half. Norris was the ringleader
. . 12.
with other long balls by Maynard
The Buckeyes were led by Jere- and Evans.
my 1brapp with 19 points, Eric
Southern head coach Howie

-on.

-{'i .

r·

I

.I

1

fourthq~r.

In the finale alone, the Buckeyes
canned 17-25 safeties. It was this
Buckeye shooting that kept Southern
at bay. Nelson_ville-Yolk bad an 8374 lead with 45 secoRds remaining.
Norris hit two straight three-pointers
to make it 83-80.
N-Y's Ryan Wildmal\ made the
first of a two point foul sbot, but
missed the second making it 84-80.

Maynard drilled a ~-pointer for putting the ball in the basket. That's
an 84-83 ~then SHS called time 54 percent.
out immediately, but had already
"The offense was good, but our
used all of them. The result was a !defense had something to be
techoical oul, but the clock bad desired," Caldwell said. "When you
stopped and SHS had a chimce. 1
bold the other team to 85 points, .
N-Y missed both technical free you're not going to win many ball
throws. Schultz was fouled on the games."
inbounds play with four tenths of a
Southern hit 17-33 twos, 14-2S
second remaining. Schultz made the threes and was 7-12 at the line.
first shot, but missed the second, SS- Southern .had 23 rebounds, led by
83.
Rizer's nine; seven steals (Harmon
Schultz missed the second, 3); 14 turnovers arid 27 fouls. ·
putting the exclamation point on the
Nelsonville hit 30-54 overall, hitBuckeye's strategy concel'llinj the ting 28-44 twos, 2-10 threes and 23OHSAA rule thai states only a lip in 37 at the line. N-Y bad 30 rebounds
could occur under four tenths of a (Mitchell 7, Thrapp 6, Waite 6); 22
second.
assists, I block, four steals, II
Caldwell said, "I thought we turnovers, 20 fouls.
played very, very well offensively.
Reaerve notes: Nelsonville-York
Anytime you hit 31-S8, you're
:won the reserve garrie 59-SO. Heath

·~~: E~stern

I

• .•.

1:iBelpre

• &lt;\

..~,

Scoreboard
.f

Mil)' 66

Basketball

n·
.{

· NBAslate
411-Saar pme
Easl 129. w... 118

No games tnnlght
Tuesclay'sgamos
Den'Vft' at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
TorolllollMiami, 7:30p.m.

Charlone II O.EVEUIID, 7:JO p.m.
New Jersey ut lodiana, 7:30p.m.
Dallu 81: Houaton, 8 p.m.
Washinaton ar Oicqo, 8:30 p.m. .
Philadelphia ac Mi~wDUkee, 8:30p.m.
Utah m$an Ant0111o. 8:30p.m.
Seaule at PhoeqilC., 9 p.m
Oolden S1a1e 111 Por1land, I0 p.m.
Bostoftal L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
MiiUliCIOCa at SKr1UI1ento, IO::tOp.m.

'.

college poll

I

..;

first-place votea in parenthe&amp;el, res:ordJ
1hrough Feb. II , total poinls based on 2S
poinu for ·a lint-place vote throu1h o1e
point for a 251h-place vo1e, and previous
rnnking:

~8

......
&amp;:1!1111

~

I. Mrutsachuseus (59) .. 23.0
2. Kem~~&lt;kr&lt;IJ ...........ll).l
J. Co-1(1) ........ 22· 1
4. Vilhmova ................. l0-3
5. Kanw ............., ....... 19-2
6. CINCINNATJ .......... I8·2
7. U&lt;ah ......................... 19-3
8. Woke F...,t............ l6-3
9. PennSI. ................... .. IB-2
10. VirginiaTech ......... IS.2
II . Purdue .................... l9-4
12. Telllll Tech ............ 20-1
ll Arizona .................. IS-4
14. GeofJefOWn ........... J9-5
IS . Memphit ................ l7-4
16. Syracuse ................. l&amp;-6
17. North Carolina ...... .l6-7
18. UCUI .................... I~
19. lowm ....................... l1·6
20. Slanford ................. IH
21.8otlooCollep ...... IS·5
22.1owaSt. .'................. 17-5
23. E. Mi&lt;hiii" ........... IB-2
24. Loilisville ............... J7-7
25. Mississippi S! ....... .16-5

1,619
1.563
I,49S
1,383
1 . 3~!1

1,246

1.147
1,065
1,025
900
.871
847
n8
742
643
477
411

4tl1
J41

J09
103
203
152

L fd.

.818
.6J6
.636
.54!5

19
14

.!26

Punlue ...........9
JndiiUIII .......... 7
Michigan St .. 7
Iowa .............. 6
Wiscomin ..... 6
Michigan .... :.. !!
Minnesota ..... 4
lllinois ......... .. 3
OHIOST.......2
Nonhw,.IOR\.1

2
4
4
S

.S4j
5 .SOO
j

II

2
4
9
13 10
17 6
14 9
"

6 .400 12
7 .300 14
9 .182 9
10 .091 6

.609

8 .652

10 .S&lt;l
8 .636

II .450

14 JOO

14

M-AIItlelkConf-

flndloy 62, 1111in 60
Malone 97, Cedorville 93 (0'1)
RIO GRANDE 87. Mount Veraon
N-69
Shawnee St. 81, Ohio Dominican 81
Woltlll26. UrMaa 98

Ohio women's
college scores

s.s.....,

lllinoi1 a1 OHIO STA're
Michigan State 111 Northweltem
Wisconsin a1 Minnesou
~n State Ill Purdue

Mid-A•erkln CWtftlltl
tlowlina O=n 81, OHIO 69
Mlomi 68. Allroo 61

MW•IIIem ~te c.tertntt
. Clev&lt;llllld Sl. 94, N. lllinoil9l

- c- Atldodc Caof.
cuca-..71. w..-S6
Earlham SB, 9berlin Jl

Wineoba)86. Deniaon~l

Ollio A-Caof-

Baldwin-Wa11""'72, Heidel.... 67
Capilll60, M00111 Union 53
Hiram 12. Ollerbein 7S
Mi.riett• 66, Ohio Northem !IJ
MusklnJU11174, Jolin Cam&gt;ll62

"--oiM-C...,

Blullloo 12. WilllliiiJ!OO 71
.
Deli...,. ros.Tbomu M... 97 &lt;O'J1

M~AalllkColff11 i· '
flndlay72. 11flin j6
RIO ORAHDE 73, Moun1 Vernon

Evansville 80, Drake 69
Iowa St: 74, Nebrlllka ~9

~-119

Urbano 94. Ollio Domlnlcu 64
Wahh 12. Malone 53
N• ...
Cenlral Sl. 14, Keolucly Sl. 48
Mo•u•51. J.-p1157, - 4 0

*'....,.

SUDday'uctlon

Atlultk IIC.•·aaw:;
Duqueone 63. Dayroa 58

-

.lrLfd.~Lli:l.
ldl ....... ll
I .917 18 2 .900
•·
Sl. .......... 8 4 .667 12 8 .600
loliomi ............ 7 ~ .~8J IS ~ .7l0
' Toledo ...........7 ~ .58J 14 9 .609
" OHIO ............ 7 l .SBJ 12 II .122
·~~- lolidl ....... 7 ~ .~83
9 II .4l0
BGSU ............ 6 6 .500 II 9 .S.!O
Keno. ..............! 7 .4.17 II 9 .SlO
·., Ceno. Mich...2 10 .167 l I~ .2.50
·' Aldoo ............0 12 .000 3 17 .ISO

"

'E

.,

f&gt;,, .

. S•tunlay'IICOI'II
! ·, Jloll St. 111, W. Michipn 67
· E Ml&lt;hi10"91,Caw. Ml&lt;hi1M79
Miuni 99, Akron SO
OHIOIJ,tlowllD&amp;G,....67
Toledo 86. Kent 70

.,.'" t IllWedaeoclay's
51. • Ceot Mldll..

pme11

E. Mlfllil'" II tlowlins 0.... .

Monroe Centnll61, River 48
Montpelier 69, Hilltop 66
N. ....,..,, s.dinia Ealtcn161
Nelwaville-Yort 85, Raciae Soulhera
New Albolly 59, Marion Calh. S3
New Boston 78, Pom.nouth Notre
[lame64
New Riqcl !52, FostoriD Sl. WeMelin
44

Newark Cath. Sl, Utica 1S
Newcomer:atown 61. Wlledord 39
NO&lt;Wolk 6.1, Shelby 47
Onlorio 67, S... Hlpiand IS
Oreaon Clay '77, AniiJooy Wayne 67
o.tawaltilb 19, Lima Tcmole 57
PMrict Heory 48, Holuoe 33
Perkint74, Rrelulll 67
Plculnt 71. Marion Riva. Vall S6
PoiM .......... W.VL 54, Golllpolit 4S
_......, 64.1Je- ~I
~~ Voll. 7S, Genevo 65
RidiiiiOIId Dale~ 56, Adeoa48
Rock HlD 92. Ook Hllll4 (OT)

60

S. ~ 66,- Middlelown St&gt;rina.
Sllldy Voll. 88, Conottoo Vall. 7J

Sbabrlh 54, Cle. St. l1lllliuo ~l
Si~

74, Celi.. 62
SoollliiiJ!on 82.-.....,. 47
lit~ M, Van Won ~8
St. lllliyo 62, o .....illo ~~

,..__ SS. N. Royalloo Sl
T-58.U-Sl

Sunday's aclioD

Trotwood-Madiaon 79, D111y. Dunbar
64

'

Ohio U.S. girls' scores
Saturdoy'uctlon
41

Akron Cen-HoWtt ~2. Akml 8tJChlel
Amhent 54, Fairview Part 47

-~9.01dfon47

-la~ood4S,Genevol2

Athens 60, Po1 n1 Plealant, W.Va. Sl
AYon l..ah 67, Ba_y ~~
Beall1ville 36, PnM Growe (W.Vo.)
Valley 34
Beava Comuy (Pa.) Otr. 38. Victory
Chr. )7
BeaYm:reek 60, Fairborn l2
Belloi1&lt; 72, BridJepon 48
Bellaire St. John 146, WelbviUe 42
J1e1Pno 61, Meip 42
Bexley 64, JOI\IIIhon Alder I9
BOinfmaa 67, Kent R001Cvell45
Bucb-ye Ca.fml36, Wyn(ord 24
Buckeye Local 44, Beaver Local :\9
Cadiz SJ, Indian Creek JJ
Calvtw)' Chr. S7. Middlecown Olf. 41
Caa1011 McKinley 4!1. 'WIIIftn Hard·
in&amp;J I
Canton 'nmten 49, Alliance 39
Cardinal 37. Kirnand 36
'· ~ '
Carey 11, Hardin Nonhem 55
Oui.Jrin.Fans 61 , Ornnae ~ S
Chardon ND-CL 64, Cleveland Clllh.
21

Oleaapeab56, Fairland41
.
Cbe1hirc River Vall. 59 Racine
Sou!hem57
Cin. Mt. Notre Dame :'1 I, Cin. Bacon
42
Cin. Norlhwet1 Sl, Cin. Winton
Wooob )2

Cin. Readiq 5!1, N. Bend Taylor~ I
Cin. Seron 54, HamihOII Bldin 42
C.n SyC4JI'Kife 49, Fatrfleld l6
Cle. VA/SJ 66, Cle Sl. Jo aeph
A&lt;ademy 27
Cleveland Hta. 61, Men1or ~s
Cleveland His. Beaumo1t ~. Shaker
His. HlrhaWI)' Bruwn 19
Cloverleof 49. N. ROfaii&gt;XI J2

Col. Brookhaven 96, Col. lndepea·

dencc:~6

Col. Har11cy 18, Bi&amp; Walnut 49
Coldwa~« 63, Brookville 49
~56. Hudwn 52
Cmllu.e 52. Ontario 46
Oeatwood 5 I, Roorirown 46
C.yahop Fall• 72, Wolsh leauir48
Cu)'Dhop Hll. 61 . Lakewood St. Au·
JUSriiC40
Cuyahoaa Valley Chr. 44, Open Door
J()

)6
47

Danbucy Lateaide 51, Tol . Ouisti1111
Danville 67, John'slown Nonhrid1e
'
5
O.y.
ic:::=~:.!
Day. O..::~J
Du

Day. •
E. Can1011
Elyria 78,
Elyria W. 49.

,
'

Gmraway 86, Newc~town 27 ·

42

Garf'teld Hts. Trinity

10~.

Elyria Cath.

O....S Valley 34, Newbury 26
Greenf.eld 64, S.-diDia E.ucem 31
GroYCpO!t 60. frooklin H~. 58
HamiiiOII 44, Uma :'6
Hamihon Rou 63, Trenton Edae·

wood60
Hawken,.., Ollmout .51
Hiland 62. Labland 36
Huber Htt. Wayne $6, Tce\lmiCh 27
Indian Vall. 44, Cambrid&amp;e 43

Jackson Center .59, Way•elfield·
Gothen47
Jewett-Sdo .51 , Malvem 47
Kemton 67, Twimbura 42
Kinas 74, Cin. North Colleac Hill21
Labwood '2. Puma 32
Umcuter64, Col. WJI'Ienon 51
Lllllwo Wasem 41, N. Adorns 29
l.el!.iftlton 47, Akron St.V-StM 44
Uberty Union S:t, Mll~port 40
Uckin&amp; Vall. 48, Utica 40
Uma llalh 16. So.llelwy 34
London _,7, W. Jetrenon43
Lonin Kina $6, Southview 44
Louisville SO. Marlinpoa ~9
L.uca 48, Centerbur&amp; 41
Mansllcld St. ,.,.,., 45. T..e of Lile
32
Maranatha Chr. ~7 . Xeaia Chr. 51
(OT)

·'

MlamiMW. IIIclli. .
OtGO • Tolado

, .

-..r.

•

·,

hers.
After halftime, the Raiders needed Staton's 17 points and six from
Ward to hold off the Tornadoes'
clutch rally. Why? The Tornadoes'
Brianne Proffitt, who led her club
with 18 points, scored I0 of her 12
second-half points in the last period.
Reserve aoles: The pn:cedi~g
reserve game saw the Raiders get
scoring from II of their 12 players
to win 35-26. Amy McCoy led the
Raiders with eight points, and teammate Tonya Sutphin added seven.
Southern's Kim Sayre led all
scorers with II points. Teammate
Darlena Flowers had I0.

The fut.;te: River Valley will
host Meigs in the Division sectional opener on ,the University of
Rio Grande campus today at 7 p.m.
Quarter l!dlll
Southern................ 15, 10-12-20=57
River Valley.... ...... I8-13-14-14=S9

Southem (9-8) - Proffitt 9-00/0= 18, Manuel 2-2-218=12, Turley
4-l-1/3= 12, Moore 3-0-212=8, Lisle
2-0-3/3=7. Totab: Z0-3-8/19=57

Fouls: 18
Fouled out: Turley

RiverVaDey (8-11)- Staton 92-112=25 , Ward 4-1-6/8=17, Denney

Belpn: ..................... l9- ll-14-17=61
Meigs - Rebekah Smith 1-00=2, Cheryl Jewell 3-0-0=6, Taryn
Doidge 4-0-0=8. Anne Brown 4-01=9, Ashley Roach 2-0-0=4, Cynthia
Collerill 0-1 -0=3, Brandi Meadows
1-0-1 =3, Carissa Ash 1-0-0=2,
Tracey Coffey 2-0-1 =5. Totals: Ill1-3=47
Belpre - Kathy Coyner S-O6=16, Chistina Eator 1-0-0=2, Crystal Goin 3-0-0=6, Erin Humphrey 31-0=9, Angie Haynes 6-0-0=12,
Krisly Rhodes 5-0-2=12, Anllie
Rouse 2-0-0=4. Totab: :ZS.l-8=61

3-0-112=7, Conley 1-0-112=3, Short
1-0-1/2=3, Cloak 1-0-010=2, Mulford 1-0-0/0=2. Totals: Z0-310120=59
Fouls: 23

Stop In and Join Us For A

The Eastern Lady Eagles (14-5)
will face the Trimble Tomcats, 6-14,
Wednesd~y in the Division IV sectional
semi-final at Alexander High
In the NBA·AII.star Game,
School at 6:30 p.m.
In the second game, Crooksville
(4-15) faces Portsmouth East (7-7_
at 8:30 p.m. The two winners will
meet in the sectional championship
Monday at 6:30 p.m.
The Southern Tornadoes (9-8)
By WENDY E. LANE
game and gave the East an 88-71 will square off against Miller (0-19)
SAN ANI'ONIO (AP)- There lead . He sat out the last 16 minutes Thursday at 6:30 at Alexander.
were 46 turnovers, a bunch of air- of the game, content to watch the
In the lower bracket, Eastern-Pike
balls and the game was a blowout by younger players close out the victo- (8-5) faces Green (6-8) at8 :30 p.m.
State Route 7
221 West Secoad St.
the end of the third quarter.
ry.
The two win·ners square ofT Monday
The NBA's All-Star show didn't ,.
Down by 22 at the end of three at 8:30p.m. following the upper diviTuppers Plains
POIIItl'oy
gel many rave reviews from its par- quarters, the West opened the fourth . sion title J.ame.
985·3385
992·2136
ticipants or a very lively response quarter with a 23-9 run, with David
Eastern was fmt-seeded in the
from its spectators.
Robinson scoring eight points, and tournament. Southern was second
"II didn 't seem that there,was as pulled to 111 -103 on Mitch Rich- seed.
t ....... . ,.
much enthusiasm as we've seen iri mood's fastbreak layup with 4: 10 to
Southern will go to Hemlock to
past games," Chicago's ~cottie Pip- play. But Hardaway hit two straight face Miller tonight to end the reguMember FDIC
pen said.
three-pointers, only the third and lar season. Eastern will play its
"I don't think it was very good fourth for the Eastern Conference, to finale at home against Federal Hock·
for the fans," said Utah's Karl Mal- stretch the lead again.
ing Saturday at noon.
• one.
O'Neal cappedoffa20-point sec- . ,-----------..;..------~-~~~----------------------------,
A number of those fans left the ond half with a thunderous dunk in
Alamodome unhappy Sunday, dis- the face of Robinson, who led the
appointed that the Most Valuable West with 18 points and II
In pUrsuance of low. I, Howard E. Fronk, Treasurer ot Moip County, Ohio, in complionce with revi10d Code No. 323.08 of State of Ohio,
• Player trophy didn't go to Shaquille rebounds.
do
givo notice ollhe Ra1111 of Ta&gt;atian for tho T..C Y• of 1995. RaiOS
in dollars and Cl!nts of eoch one thousand dollars
; O'Neal,, who attended high school
But the West, which beat the East
; here. Quiet and uninvolved during by 27 last year, shot poorly. Charles ,
f
'most of the game, they booed when Barkley, wh9 said he had a touch of
;
I
l•commilllioner David Stem present- bronchitis aad wasn't feeling well,
u
~
•'e&lt;l Michael. Jordan with the crystal had J'ust eight points and 'Hakeem ·
t•
"'
•trophy. ' •
..
Olajuwon four, and neither played
l Jordan did score 20points in just more than 16 minutes. Last year 's
l :22 minutes on.8-for-11 shooting, but MVP, Richmond, missed seven of 10
::he wasn't the Eastern Conference's shots.
: •leadin* scorer in Sunday's 129-118
Both teams, however, were guilty .
• :victory. ~Tile high-scorer was of sloppy play. Too many no-look ·
: :Shaquille O'Neal, with 25 points and passes went into the seats instead of
: 'J0 reboun&lt;\s in his best perfonnance into a teammate's hands, and too
; :in four All-Star games.
'
many would-be alley-oops wen: sim·
LEBA1110N
· · "I felt kind of strange standing ply oops. The Wesi turned the ball
: out there with the MVP trophy and over 26 times, the East 20.
: :the crowd making their own selecLETART
; :tions with the way they responded,"
OUVE
·Jordan said.
• · Jordan, ever the relentless com; ,.litor, doesn't even like to lose a
ORANGE
: .popularity contest. Or an All-Star
RUTLAND
• :Gamt.
: , Playing in his first All-Star Game
; ~ince 1993, Jordan was clearly glad
· Guaranteed Safety &amp;
:to be back.
·
High Interest Yields
• :· ••t just wanted to come out and
: bave a good time," he said. "I hadAvailable
: ~·t experienced this in a couple of
• No Loads or Pees
' :years. I relived a lot of memories."
• Accumulate or Monthly
~: In the third quarter, Jordan put on
Income
;.~he kind of show expected of him,
• High Safety I
I belping the East tum a 61 -58 half• W'tde Choice of AMuities of
: iime lea~ into a double;digit
All Klndl
.
.
.
• l!lowout.
· CaD for Information:
l· Then: he was driving through the
SCOTI' INSURANCE
)ane, picking up a perfect. bouni:e ·,
pus from Apfernee Hu!laway and
614 6!111 4011 (l'OIIect)
~oaring in for a dunk. A short time
R•r••• ••• which,_ not t.n !)lid 111M ct• of 11ch cotllction aorry a 110111111'( of 111ft (llfcent. T~&gt;• may be poid 11 the office
3:WSwutRd.
of
tho Counl'( T r - &lt;r ·bv .. u. P'- bring your '-'"'" reooipt; end If you PlY by mail,
to loca• your property by taKing
later, he was curling around the ri8~t .
diltrlct and tr~e~•1111!1111d ..tf-ilddl
~ IIMIIOPI'. AiMVIIXIIIIIIII your II&gt; IICiipt 10 . . that I! CCMfllil VDAX ()10111111'(. Office hours
l, , ide for a one-hlnded jam, tongue 0 AIIIUJ, Ottlo 45710
Annultiet an: laued by IDIIUIIICC
. . 8:30A.M. to .tr30P.M. Mondly throuth Frldly - Clc.ld an S.turclly.
• Jlan&amp;lnl 0111.
'lnd have
. Flikn to..-.. t1&gt;1
da!ll not IIVOid 1!11' .,.,...!'(, ln-t, or c:hlrgllncuiTid for .,dl dolly. Ohio Rwilld Code 323.13.
_C kllllitdnMwdl.t. 18111.
.
1: That baA~t. with 4:14 remainbtg
.
I
for ell'ly withchw-.
ttnthe tblrdquartcr, 'VIS hislastofdta

Valentine Day Celebration
Join Us For Coffee &amp; Donuts
Wednesday, February 14th 9 am- 11 am
Cake from 11 am- 3 pm

••-'*

.

"
'
I'
' '•

Ouartcr milia
Vinton County........ 5-18-15-13=51
Eastem ................... l3-14-22-18=67
Eutem - Rebecca Evans 3-0.
5/8=11, Jessica Karr 13-0-5n=31 ,
Nicole Nelson 2-0-013=4, Patsy
Aeiker 2-0-012=4, Tracy White 0-0212=2. Jessica Brannon 7-0-113=13.
Totals: 27-0-131.Z5=67
Vinton Couilty- Heather Vance
1-0-0/0=2, Heather Hayes S-08110=18, Liz Zinn 0-4-3/4=15, Jenny Zinn 3-0-213=8, Marla Hale 1-1 0/0=S, Kirsten Jakmas 0-0-3/4=3.
Totals: 10-S-16121=51

~~

Division IV
girls' sectional
pairings posted

Farmers
Bank

be.,,.

110 Court Sinet • l'oi!Mif'O)', Ohio

..

Marauders turned the ball over 19
t1mes and had none assists led by
Jewell wrth four the Marauders had
fi~e steals led by Erin Krawsczyn
wtth two.
.,
Belpre won the reserve game 3935. Rachel Fumkor led,Belpre with
10 points. Tricia Davis led Meigs
( 14-5) with 15.
Belpre, rated eighth in the state's
latest poll, finished the regular season with a 19- 1 record and a 13-0
mark in the Ohio Division .
Ouarterl!!lab
Meigs ........ ................ l4-6-15-7=47

·t

QUALITYWINDOW SYSTEMS

.~

un:s by Haynes and Rhodes with 12
points apiece. No 01her statistics on
Belpre wen: available.
Senior Anne Brown led the
Marauders with nine points, despite
limited playing time in the second
half. Doidge added eight, Jewell had
six and Coffey had five to pace
Meigs.
Meigs hit 19 of 56 from the floor
including one for one from long
range forr34%, but managed to hit
only three of 10 from the line for
30%. Meigs pulled down 31
rebounds led by Brown with six. The

I

and

'

man, Valerie Karr and J(im Mayle
each had 14 points for the young
Eagles. Mary Yocum had eight for
Vinton Counry.
The fulure: Eastern plays Trimble in a Division IV semi-final sectional tournament game Wednesday
at 6:30 at Alexander High School.

•

Taryn Doidge led Meigs in the
third period with six points as the
Marauders pulled to within 44-35
heading into the final eight minutes.
Doidge scored six of the Marauders
14 points.
But Belpre dimmed any chance of
the Marauders upset dreams in the
fourth period by outscoring the
Marauders 17-7. Coyner scored 10
points in the period and Rhodes
added five for Belpre. Tracey Coffey
scored five in the period for Meigs.
Coyner led all scorer.&lt; with 16
points, she was joined in double fig-

••pr-

* Bring in your window sizes * Options are availa~le at additional charge
*To qualify for special you must sign up this weekend for afree estimate

'

,

Rates of Taxation for 1995

Srrubuts 311. T~~~&lt;anWaa Calli. !2
S'ronJIVIlie SS, 8au 47
TaUmadae S8, Oren1bur1 Cira:n 47
Tiffin Calwen 76. Vanlue 30
Tiffin Columbiu. 61, Aabllnd 45
Tol. Ulll&gt;ey.,, Tol. Woodwlllll J6
Tol. N011&lt; Dome 61, Ald!llold 63

M

'

'

Belpre jumped out on lop after
the first eight minutes 19-14. Angie
Hayes led the way for Belpre in the
first period with six points, Erin
Humphrey added five and Crystal
Goin and Kathy Coyner added four
points each. Anne Brown led Meigs
in the period with five points, Ashley Roach added four for the maroon
and gold.
1'he Lady Eagles outscored Meigs
11-6 in the second period behind
Kristy Rhodes who scored five
points to open up a 30-20 halftime
lead.

~

. 90

'

assists. Brannon capped a IS-point,
eight rebound charge, while Evans
canned II points and had eight
rebounds. Hayes had 18 for VC,
while Liz Zion had 15.
Eastern hit 27-57 for 47.3 percent
from the floor (all twos); 13-25 at the
line, and grabbed 32 rebounds
(Evans 8, Brannon 8, Aeiker 7, Karr
6). Eastern had 18 steals (Karr 6,
Brannon 8); just 7 turnovers, II
assists (Nelson· 5, Karr 3, Brannon
3); and 16 fouls.
Vinton County hit 5-14 threes, 1042 twos, and was 16-21 at the line
with 26 rebounds (Hayes 8, Jakmas
6, L. Zinn 4); three steals, 22
turnovers, one assist, and 20 fouls.
Reserve notes: Behind a 20-4
outburst, the Eastern reserves blew
away the little Vikes 60-18. The win
lifted Eastern of Coach Paul Brannon.
to a 16-3 overall mark and 14-0,
undefeated league marl&lt;. Juli Hay- •

YourBankfM4i···

SPRI.G FIX-UP SEASO. IS HERE

1-800-~91 -5600

"We ran the offense to perfection,
and on one possession everyone on
the coun had touched the ball,"
Wolfe said. "The girls gained confidence, and played up to their potential with unselfish aggression."
Hayes absence in part, helped
spark a 12-0 Eastern run. Ten points
from Karr pushed Eastern to a 49-38
lead after three rounds.
Liz Zinn had tliree, threes the
remainder of the period, forcing
Eastern to run a partial box-and-one
on the VC sharpshooter. The VIkings
lost guard Amy Jewett, another player to an ankle injury, wbo despite
being scoreless went out of action in
the final round. Eastern's starters Karr, Evans, Nelson, Aeiker and •
Brannon - each chipped in to finish off an 18-13 offset in the finale.
Eastern was led by Karr 's effortless 31-point, six steal effort. Kart:
also had six rebounds and three

East.posts 129~118
victory over West

$195.00 INSTALLED·

Dellwaof3,New-......75
~63, ba!O
.
-84.T-SS
51. JoMpll'at9,.-lolood64
........ Sr. M,lolalooj6
·lV'*tYlrplll17. S.OO Hall"

Belpre opened up a 10-point halftime lead and went on to post a 61·
47 victory over a stubborn Meigs
team in girls basketball action Satunlay afternoon at Belpre.
TheMarauderswereplayingtheir
fifth game in sixth days so Ron
logan went, to his bench early and
often to try and keep the Marauder
fresh for their tournament game
today. The Marauders (5-15 overall
&amp; 3-10 in. the Ohio Division) will
play River Valley at the University of
Rio Grande at 7 p.m.

'

Swtdllf!actloa
·

•I_

River Valley guards Amber Staton
and Sarah Ward combined for 42
points to pace the .Raiders to a 59-57
victory over ~ isiting Southern Saturday.
This was a night that saw seniors
Erin Conley and Staton receive
recognition for their four-year service lo their club. Staton later scored
her I ,OOOth career point, which warranted additional n:cognition for her.
The Raiders got ahead early in
part bcause Ward, who matched
Southern's Renee Turley in firstquarter offense with seven points, got
a little more offensive backup from
her teammates than Turley did from

Martina Ferry 52, Riw:r 49
Marysville 48. Whitehall :n
Mulilkltl45, UniontOwn 1..ake 43
Mauillon Jackson 68;· W. Salem
N-41
M - Vall. 46, Umo Temple 42
Maysville 55, New l..eUncton S~
Medina 61, llre&lt;bvllle 52
Miami Tnce 38, W.inJIOII CH 37
Midpld •l1, Bnnu:wk:k41
Millbury Lalah'IO. Oak Hod&gt;or )7
Milton-UniOR59, 'EaloD SS
Minfo&lt;d ~l. Wbodonboq 5 I
Miut« 60. frantlin-Moara.! 46
Mopdote 4J, '11 Olldri4&amp;o 41
• t , '. ht'!'l"'l /P. CtQobYiHa olio: , · I ~
~ N. Olmilcd 66. Rocky Ri'wa 47
N. Rld&amp;eville 49, v..,;lioo 42
New K1101. ville 64, &amp;I kina JO
New Pbiladelllbia 5~. Claymont 31
Newark 54, Thomu WortbihJIOII J6
Calh. 74, Trimble J2
Oberlin 51. Avon40
Ole111an11 53, Hetwon Laltewood 26
Of mated Fall• S I, Wa1lake 40
Orrville 56, Tualaw 42
Ouawa Hilb 5S, Northwood !12
Podua 62. Olanel22
Paine~ville Rivenide 67, Conneaut 42
Parma Hts. Holy Name S'J, Lute
&lt;loh. 41
'
Perry ) I, llerlclllilo 2.l
Philo JO, Joh• Glenn 27
PorUIJIOIIIh qay 59, Raceland, Ky.
l6
Ravenna SE 44, Ganin1YiUe 4)
Revm 62. Nonon 21
River View40. w. Multinsum )5
Roctr Ri~er Mapificat 70, Wester·
ville N. 47
S. C~arlesroa Southeauer" 74,
Sprina. sttDWnre 71
S. Webller 50. Fnillklin Furaace
Gftlrll42
5henandooh 42, Ridpood J6
Sherwood Fairview 12. Bryan 42
Sidney 60, Ft. l..onuftie 49
SmithYiUe 49. Kidron .-s
Soton 49, Witldiffe 12
Sprina. C•holk; 31, Gteeneview 48
Steubenville 72. Sreubenvil&amp;e Carh.

ss

field goals and Zinn canned a three
to make the score 32-30 Eastern.
On a missed Viking shot, Hayes
went down with another seven: ankle
injury and was out for the game. This
time she injured the.opposite ankle
of the one she had fractured for 3 112
weeks just after the Chrisbnas holiday.
During the time out following the
injury, Eastern went on a 12-2 run,
sparked by great team offense. Karr
and Brannon were the main beneficiaries with ten and seven points
respectively, while Evans. Nicole
Nelson, and Patsy Aeiker also contributed.
.•
Eastern head ·coach Scou Wolfe
said, "We ran an offense we hadn't
run for a long time to attack what )lie
thought was a weakness in l!e Vinton defense. After Heather (Hayes)
went down, we looked like a led
weight was lifted off our chests.

Southern girls' second-half rally falls short in 59-57 loss to RVHS
-·-·IT

is having a "WINDOW BLOWOUT" 'SPECIAL
* Solid vinyl insulated replacement window
* Double Hung * Maintenance free *Tilt in
* Lifetime Transfera~le Warranty.
"
Any size up to I PI united inches

NewMeolco .l l, T-EIPaaoSl
0..1 R-a 74, CS Nonllricr,. 59
Pacillc 74, U1ob S1 rl
I'OIIIIIIId 89, Pq&gt;perdioe 76
5aa Diep Ss. II , Ais Fon:e 72
Silo Jooe S.. 96, Nevodo 91
S.. C1n M, San l'llociiCII41
Sr. Mory'1, Col. 6~ San Dieao 58
_..., 67. tJa.A 66
UC !rfioo IS, Cal s. ..flll- 7S
UC Slill~ 8""""'65, UNLV 57
Utah 78, Colorado So. 73
Wll!liftl101150.=· 40
Weiier S.. 94, -

0'1)

Venaillca 14, Covinaron 40
.
Victory Cbr. .59, Erie(Pa} Bethel .56
Vinton Co. 60, Trimble .56
Walsh JaW! 88, Clc. East Tech .5.5
WuhinJIOt 01 57, Grceneview 47
Wea~fall48 , Pikeron 46
Whileoak 78, MIIICbes.. ~7
Youna. Mooney 44, Akron Hoban 42
Youna. Rayen 44, Villion Quest 36
Zane1viltc 13. Col. South 64
lAnesville Rosectlll'll72, Mansfield St.
Peter's .57 ·
·

!

Pomeroy, Ohio

Monrana 17, N. Ariza.~

W-51. 70,

Modi100 Plolu 73, E Cllmoo 70 (01)
Mal.... 76, Soulhem l..ocall9
Mlrion Local44, HOutton U
· Manias FesTy.6S,IndionCreelc ,s4
Mar)'tYIIIe ~; london 49
Muoo 7~. Gooben 47
M-g dJwbroot 69, ShenaDdolb 52
Mi~ 83, N. Rldf'ville 61
Miller 70, T..e of Life 63 &lt;OT!
.
Miller City 74, Cory- Rawson~ I
Minerva 70, IUJCarawat Vall. 64 (2

Pioneer 71
Triway 75, Can10n Timken 71
Twin Valley S. 19, fm)le SMwnee 62

EUdid 68, Bedfonl40
f~rbWJ 52, Ridaetnonl 41
field ~2. Streellboro 29
Fillle&lt; Calh. lO, Col. Ready 42
frcmonl Ross 61, Findlay 4.5

Quality Window Systems

Bri"""'

·MAC
.... stand'ings

"

. Te11'4'lo Ov. 79, Mo. Vemon A-.ny
. 52
Tiffin Columbian 63, Galion 45
ToI. S1. Francis 66, NordoniD 44
Tol. So. John' a 82, AM A - (Midi.)

.,. T• CAatt• we
Ollio 51. 94.1\fi- 68

J'~rW...
· Robe St. 70. E. WuhiAJ.ton 65 Car)
Youn1 II. Wyomina71
Ca1Poly-SLD91,S. Ulllt71
eaur...ia u. Sou1hem Cal69
Colorado 84, Mo.·Kioou Cil)' Sl
Hawail97,- s. 76
ldiho S.. 66, Idaho 62
LoftS Beach ·St. 73. New Mexico St.

'~

fl. Frye 90. w..... Local 17
HMoiiloollodln71,Doy. ...oenoa51
Hilloboro ~7. o.-r..w 41
Holllllld Sprini. 62. Delta SO
Huber Hu. Woyne SJ. Cemenllle 49
Hudoon ~9 . Bnah 40
lndWI Lab 63. Trild 52
IrontOn 51. Joteph ~. "-'an, W.VL

B3

American72
Baylor 78, Southern Meth. 74
Houtton 63, Rice 39
Jacksonville 80, l.anw '70
Miuiuippi St. 76. Oll.llhoml71
New Orlealll69, Albnou So. 66
Nonb Twas64, Sam Huuaton St. 62
Oldlhoma Sr. 8:\, K11n111 S1. 60
Stephen F. Auslin 18, Texu·Arlina101174
Te~~:M Tech 66. Te&amp;a~ A.t:M 63

Purdue at OHIO STATE

FanrteYillll! 54, MidcUerown 011. 35
FI..Sioy 67, Roos6J
Fruklla Hta . .56. Gmocpon 54
- S o . Jooeph 64, MwfH!Id av.

Klnp 72, Ublooo 65 (OT)
Lake Ric!Je 49, Hawbn 43
Lakewood St. Edward 78, Cle.
Cad&gt;olic S9
Lt~lftJIOO 7l, Clear Fork 55
Lii&gt;My Cenler 68. Sll')'klo41
Lii&gt;My·lleoloo76, Blulftoa 32
Uckina Vall. 74, W. .Jeffcnon 67
Lima Bath 96. MM'ion HIRHnJ 48
Lima Cadi. S6, Tol. Cadlolic 5S
Unco1nview 69, Me.. Knoxwille SO
Lockllod 60, CiociftDIIi Hills Cbr, 55
Lonlo0eormw6I, M1f11101111S6
Lorain Southlliew 63, Warrentville
Hit. 61 (2 0'1)
Loudonville 57, ""'land 55
Lucuwille Vall. H , McDermott NW

A-llc.AMIIIICbluelu 13, Xavier 56

S..lhwell
Rock 76, Tun-Pan

TbundaJ

Col Academy47 , 1bley4~
Col. lllrtlcy 62. OlcoiJo&amp;y SO
Col. lteody 69, c.oo.bool63
Col wo~.. Rl..,. 84, W1iitehal174
Coldw-62. LimaSba..- Sll
!loy. Meadowdlle 6l, t.onc.. SB
!loy. Norttwidl" 78. Day. 0\rijrion 7~
Dolpllot Je-..79, fl . Jeonlop 48
Dover 61 , Carrollton 34 •
·
llaalwood 17. Old Fort 76
El~n61 , Mo. Gileod Sll
Elida 156, E. Cleveland Shaw 52
ElMwood 54. Oflcao 51
Elyria Clllh. 10$, a..c1on ND-CL 113
Wclid 67, Mentor 62
Foiaok161.J-Aidor42

:Ill

S•tunloy's ..don

Ark .~ Litrle

Tuaday

; rJ(cat • Akroa

Bhllfton 68, WllmiiiJ!oo SO

Loyola. Ill. 113, WriJhr Sl. 67
Missouri 71, K~~r~w 73
Tulaa 75, Wichita St. 47
Val...,aiso 102, Troy So. 92
Virain.io Tech 78, Xavter, Ohio 7~
Wia.•Oil!Cn Boy 57, N. lllinoi1 Sl
Youngstown Sl. 87, CtUcaao 51. 71

, . , Iowa at MichiJIIII

· .'ti\

_,_~

Au•tin Peay 84, SE Milaouri 71
Brad~y 73, N. lowo 71
Buffalo 85, NE llliooi•77
Buller 76, Cleveland St. 68
CreiJhton 78, Indiana 51. 12
Detroit 90, lll ...chiclliO 7 l
,
E. Illinois 87, Cut. Con~tic111 St.

.609

This week •..tate

f..

_

Ollerbein 68. Hr... 62

MW-

.l61
.7J9

Sunday's score

. tf

llaldwj..wan~~~~e71, HoldelbefJ59
Clpllllll9, Moum Union 75
!"""Canol! 66, Mulilinpm M
Olaio Nortbllnt 71 , Marietta 60

McNeese S1. 89, Tex•Sao Anlonio
83 '
Md.-E. Sh&lt;e 70. Delaw. . So. 67
Middle Tenn. 19, TeiiDCUK St. 74
Mill. Valley Sr. 96, Pnirie VIe-.!! 76
~iuiulppi 78, Vanderbilt 5S .
Morann Sr. 81 , Florida A&amp;.M 74
· Murray St. 81, Morehead St. 66
Old Dominion '76. Jame~ Madi10n 72
Rrulfo&lt;d 92. Wimhrop 12
S. Carolina Sl. 74, N. Carolin1 AAT
l3 .
SE t.ouitiona 94. Metoer 88
SW Louisiana 9S, W. Keolud&lt;y 113
SW Tens St. 67, Nicholl• St. 61
Soulh Caroliaal06, LSU 68
Soulll Florida 63, Mist. 57
Sou1hem 96, Alllbama So. 66
Tn.-a.a.ttaDOO&amp;a 86, F•nun S6
VMI !2, E. Te.....,. Sr. 79
Va. Com~m~~wealth 80, Eas1 Carolina
71
Virginia 6:Z, c~ 51
W. C.-olina74, Citailel7~
Woffonl roo. EmiiWIIICI (10

Iowa 76, JndillllA SO

c.nr.

OllloAitllode~sw

S2

Pun!ue 69. Mlcbi~ 64 ·
'Penn State 54, M1chipn State !10
Minne101o66, Nonhwe~tem 47
•" , WIICONin62, OHIO ST~TI! 56

·m

-C..AitllodeCeaf.
Al .......y 94, Obio Weolyn 87 (OT)
Ealliom 91. Ollerlill76
Wl-70, Deol100 63
Wooarer19, ea. Reoerwo 63

l.ouisYille 81 , Ala.-BinninJbam 66
MARSHALL 71, Geor1ia S..lhem

.900

44

,GniiiAMI ...r r ' l l *
Atbllllld 14, Hllladole 64

Coli. ofOiorleltoo 68, s-ss
Davidwe 84, Appa!K:hian Sl. 66
E. Kentucky
tenA.-Manin 74
Flo. International 76, Florida Atlamic

Satr,trday.'s ICOrtll

•,

M'd-&lt;"11 I Colltw.tMt
Vounpto•n 81. 87, ctdcqo St. 7~

41

Ovenll

~

SalanlaJ'I M:tloD

M......_m c r I' b c.tennre
Burler 76, Clevolliod Sr. 68
Loyola, Ill. IS, Wrip S.. 67

Gmmblina St. 77, Tex.a S0111them6l
Howanl 72, Bellwno-Coolcman S!
J;cbon St 75, Alcorn Sl. 59
JocbonYille St. 78, Samford M
Louisi1111a Ted'l47, Soucll Alabama

118

~ L fd.
PenD St ..........9 2 .811!

men's
college scores

(0'1)

Big Ten standings
Itm

Obi~

FloridA Sr. 100, Mll)'land 71
George Muon 98, Ricbmolld 91
Georain 68, Alabama SS
Georgia Tech 92, Nonh Carolina 8l

Other rtcelvlna vote•: Wis.-Orcen
Boy 10~ . Geor-ia Tech 62, Oeorp Wuh·
inJIOn 49, M•chi&amp;an 38, Arkan111 35,
Auburn 26, Marquette 21, New Mtkico
18, Tuas 14, Coli. of Chorle11on 11,
Washinjloa 12. California 8, Miuouri 5,
Miohigllll St. 3, Providence ~. Tulane 3,
aemwn 2.1ridillll8 .'2.. 'Bradley 1.

c.r.

r-

n:

I
2
4
6
3
S
7
9
10
II
14
13
16
8
IS
18
12
17
19
IS
22
21
24
20

1,28J

ForWtll
Arizooa 79, Ciocl- 76
Go-· 81, Loyola l\larymooull68 .
51. 69
N. Cari&gt;tina Sr. 89,

,t

end. Eastern continued to dominate
in the second quarter, maintaining
leads of 19-7 and 23-9 before Hayes ·
and Jenny Zion hit hack to back field
goals and Hays hit S-6 at the line for
a 23-18 EHS lead.
Seniors Jessica Karr and Rebecca Evans carried much of that
weight, while Jessica Brannon and
Tracy White capped off a 27-23 tally at .the half. Liz Zinn bad canned a
big three pointer right before the half
to cut into Eastern's lead. That trey
was VC's only one of the half.
Karr had 14 at the half for Eastem, while Hayes had 14 of Vinton
County's 23 points.
Eastern appeared to run out of
steam in the second quarter after a
tough week of basketball. The
Eagles, however, again began to fal ter in the third round. Brannon and
Karr had two .Eastern goals, while
Evans canned a free throw.
For Vinton County, Hayes hit two

girls hand Meigs '61-47 ·loss in regular-season finale

'! l!8y
DAVE HARRIS
· · Sentinel COI'I'elpondent

Cfinton~Muaic 65. S. 'Charleaton SE

S3

Tew 102. TellU Oubdan 81

AUburn 73. Florida 70
Bm.ton CoiJeae 62, Miami S8
Compbell70, .Cent Florida 69
Ceni&lt;OQI}' 79, Geooai• St. 76 tOT!
Charleaton Sn.thcrn 68, Md.-Balli·
more Cqunty 46
C~al C.-nlilll68, N.C.-OnaJiboro

The 1op 2., teams in The Aswciated
Pre.u' men's oolle&amp;e baiU!ball poll, witb

IriiD

.......

-

AP Top 25 men's

-~

S. Dllaoio 74, tiUoolt 51.71
St Jolm'1 74, N- Dome 66

Dre.le193, Ho&amp;lnl63
. fairfteld 72, Niqara 64
Fairleigh Dickinton 95, Lona bland
Univ. n
Fordham 68, Dayton 58
.George Wuhinaton ~. La Salle I~
H"'lord 82, NOIIheaotCI'II 79 (OT)
Holy Croll 17, Navy 67
Lafayette n. Army 72
Monmouth. N.J.. 15. Robert Morr11 54
Mount St. Mary's, Md. 8.5, St. Fran·
cis, NY S6
Penn 17. H.-vft 63
Pean St. 54, Micbipn St. .SO
Priocctnn .52, Dartmouth 41
Providence 80, Piltlburah 71
Rider 80, Moritt 67
S1. Bonavellt\ft 60, Buclmdl55
St.Peter'188, Sie• 74
Syracuse 8$, ~own 64
Vennolll 75, Boal011 Univ'. 7:Z
Villanova 76. Rutp:n 64
·
Wosner 81, St. Fnnds, Pa. 80

Sund•y'siiCOI'e

·•

Matq.... " · Dol'ul65

CaniliUS 72, LoyolA. Mel. 67
Colaate 79, Lebi&amp;h 67
Columbia 74, Yale 58
Comell67, Brown 53

.. 4'

.

stay·s on h.eels of division-leading Federal Hocking

Eastern g~r~~ered II assists in a
great team effort and repelled a third
quarter Vinton County comeback to
poJt an important 67-Sl Hocking
• . Division, Tri-Valley Conference vic' tory over the Vikings Saturday in
girls varsity basketball action at
Eastern High School.
The win allowed Eastern to keep
' pace witllleague leaders going into
this week's chatnpionship show' down with Federal Hocking beginning Saturday at noon at Eastern.
Eastern ( 14- S overall &amp; I 0-4 in'
. · the Hocking Division) is tied with
Alexander for second in the division.
Federal Hocking is on top atll-3 in
the division and 12-7 overall.
Early in the game, Eastern put It&amp;
: . clamps on Vinton County's three. . point. oriented offense. The result
· • was 7-2 Eastern run and later a 132 tally.
Three Heather Hayes free throws
made the score 13-5 at the quarters

Malloney led wiih 20, while Jerrod
Mills had 14 for Southern and Jason
Allen had 11.
Oputcr Sllllll
: ~uthern ................ l9-23- 12-30=83
.Nelsonville-Yort. ... 20-17-20-28=85
SOUTIIERN- Adam Roush 10=2, Ryan Noois 1 - 8-011=~6, Jamie
Evans 3-2-010= 12, Jesse Maynard24-tVI= 16, Spike Rizer 4-().(Y():S, Jay
McKelvey 1-()..()(0=2, John Harmon
3-0-7/10=13; 'fYson Buckley 2..()..
CV0=4. Totals 17.14-7/u-83
NELSONVILLE·YORK
Eric Mitchell 4-I-4/6=1S. Jaso)l
Wickman 2..()..6110=10, Jeremy
Schultz 3-1-S/8=14, Ryan Wildman
I-0-314=S, Josh Swope 3-011=6,
Jason Waite 4-3/4=11, Shaun-Six 2.1/2=5, Jeremy Thrapp 9-0-1/2=19.
Totala: 28-2-23137=85
.

The Dally Sentinel• P~ge 5

Pomeroy • Mlddltport, Ohio

By beating VInton County girls 67-51,

}

outlasts Southern's second-half
challenge
&amp;.wins
85•83
-

By SCOTT WOLFE
· r J ·Sentinel Correapondent

Monday, February 1-2, 1996

•

:I

•'

"

�B~r The

Bend

Jwon~, February 12, 1996

Sen~el -

The Daily

.

.

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Th,t Dally Sentinel• P~ge 7

. J l P!l ' Ad

' Monday, Febi'UIIry 12, 111111
••

'

Shred irnp.ortant items before tossing them out

:Leach birth
;announced
; ' Roser and Mary Leach of
Cheshire announce the birth of a .
•daughter, Whidey Don, Jan. 12, at the
: Holzer Medical Center.
- The infant was 18 inches long and
~ weighed five pounds, Jieven ounces.
; Maternal grandparents are Pearl
: and Linda Edwards, Long Bottom,
; and paternal grandparents are Donald
t and Dorothy Leach of Cheshire.
-~aternal great-grandparents aR Pearl
"tiid Blanche Edwards, Cheshire; and
;~llle Whitley and Cora Folmer,'
•Pemeroy. Paternal great-grandpar;iats are Joseph and Margaret Leach
'i4d John and Dorothy Veith, both of
iCfteshire.

By ANN LANDERs

WHITLEY DON LEACH

'

~0

the A:ens News. Holter is the

Ann
La d
n ers

cover topics that help people live
safer, saner lives. I'm writing to
acquaint your readers with a fraudulent practice that could deplem your ·
savingsorcheckingaa:puntsandyou
wouldn't know it for months.
J'mtalkingaboutthetheftofcredit card and checlcing account numbers
from trash dumpsters in apartments
and office buildings Everyone has
seen scavengers goi~g through trash
for valuable items, recyclable cans
and anything worth money. Until
reeently, this was OK with me. But
your readers should know about the
darker side of this seemingly harmless "treasure hunt."
We had $8SO removed from our
checlcing account not long !lgo. The
ftrst we knew about it was 'when a
series Of bounced checks Knt us scur,
rying to ' tbc bank to ask, "How
come?" We are never overdrawn. Our
checkbook alwlfs balances. Months
later, we got our money back, but

recipient of several scholarships and
honors, including the Scripps Howard
Foundation Scholarship and the Folio
and Writer's Digest award for magazine design.
' For more than 26 years, Southe_ast
Ohto . has been the only magazme
covermg the cultural even~ of ~~th- .,
eastern Oh10 and ~urrounding reguliiS
1n West Vtr~tnta and. Ke~tucky.
Southeast Oh10 magazme IS pro. duced three limes a year by stud~nts
at Jl.W. Scnpps School ?f J?umahs!"
and serves as the offi~1al mtemsh1p
for magazme Journal.tsm Sl!ldents.
Subscnpllons are available through
E.W. Scripps Hall and by calling
(614)593-2584. .

•

tMe1gs County Spelling
;Bee to be held Tuesday
The annual Meigs County Mr. and Mrs. Rick Stobart, f9urth
:Spelling bee·will be held Thesday at grade; and Ashley Payne, daughter of
";1 p.m. in the vocal music room at Kimberly Parne, fourth grade, run:Southem High School. .
ner-up.
The county participates in the
Pomeroy: Kayle Davis, daughter
~ontest sponsored by the Huntington of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Davis, fifth
!Herald-Dispatch and the Meigs grade, winner; and Jaynee Davis,
~nty winner and the runner-up will , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
~ompete in Huntington, W.Va. for the Davis, fourth grade, runner-up.
Rutland: lenni J.i'riddy, daughter of
championship and the opportunity to·
~ 0 to Washington, D.C. for the · Tammi Kennedy, fifth grade, winner;
)lational contest.
Bra~ Baylor, son of Beverly Adlcins,
• The winners and runners-up from ._ S)Xth grade, runner-.up.
,
Sa)J:m Center: Lmdsay Bohn, son
their respective schools in Meigs
tounty as announced by the Meigs of Mr. a~d Mrs. B-:ent Bohn, fifth
~UfC'rintendent of schools are as fol- grade, -:vmner; Austm Cross. son of
lows:
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Cross, fifth
;· Chester: Britlllny Hauber, daugh- grade •. runner-up.
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hauber, a
Sahsbury : Clay Russell, son of Mr.
(oorth grader, winner; Carrie Crow, a~ Mr~. David Rus_se_ll, sixth grade,
~ughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Crow, wmner; Matthew W1~hams~. son of
J'jfth g~r, runner-.up.
. . · ~r. and Mrs . . Davtd Williamson,
: Riverv1ew: Bnttany Tolhver, stxth ~ade, run~er-up ..
iwhose guardians are Mr. and Mrs.
Metgs Jumor H1gh: Wesley
J'QIIlk Wells, fifth grade, winner; Thoene, so~ of Mr. and Mrs .. Dale
fJ.;athq Smith, daughter of Mr. and Thoene, e1ghth grade, wtnner;
rars· Michael Smith, fifth grade, run- Christopher Dodson, son of Mr. and
ner-up.
Mrs. Russell Dodson, seventh grade,
! Thppers Plains: Le Ann Marcinko, runner-up.
llaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Letart: Sasha Collins, daughter of
J&gt;tarcinko, fifth grader, winner; and Mr. and Mrs. John Wayne Stobart,
)'heresa Baker, daughter of Mr. and fourth grade, winner; Joey Phillips,
Jl!rs. Rick Baker, sixth grade, runner- son of Mr. and Mrs. Terry Phillips,
fourth grade.
r~·Eastern Junior High : Josh Clark,
Portland: Amanda Huddleston,
i011 of Penny Smith and Roger Clark, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gan:y Hud~eventh grade, winner; and Amanda dleston, sixth grade, winner; Lori
Coates, daughter of Jane Estep and Sayre, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Coates, eight grade, runner-up. Aaron Sayre, sixth grade, runner-up.
c Bradbury: Emily Story, daughter
Syracuse: Mindy Chancey, daugh~f Mr. and Mrs. Pat Story, fifth ter of Mr. and Mrs. Rick Chancey,
Jrade, winner, and Erica Bryan, fifth grade, winner; Tyler Little, son
faughter of Sheila Bryan, sixth grade, of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Little, sixth
RJnner-up.
grade, runner-up.
: · Harrisanville: Derrick Fackler, son
Southern Junior High: Shauna
llf Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Fackler, fifthl Manuel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
' ~·winner; Amber Haning, daugh- Charles Manuel, seventh grade ~ winter of Sarah Birchfield and Russell · ner; B~ndon Hill, son of Mr. and
Saning, sixth grade, runner-up.
,.Mrs. Steve Hill, seventh grade.
:· Middleport: Ryan Stobart, son of

;:=:;.,.
~lvt

·

•

only after we took funds from our
retirement account to cover the
bounced checks and the fraudulent
charges against our account.
We closed that account, butseven
mon.ths later, someone continued to
.ue forged checks with our name and
old account number.
These thieves found our account
number on · ATM slips, canceled
checks and financial records that
were thrown liway in an unlocked,
communal dllmpster. ~. Ann, tell
your readers to shred these m:ords or
. keeptheminastoragefacility. They
.also should make sure · communal
dUmpsters are secured against these
criminals.
We aren't rich. Losing nearly

By ED PETERSON .
Social Security Manager

But if you are married and your
wife works, did you know that you
·A thena
'
may be able to get benefits on her
If you are a working man, you record under certain circumstances?
probably know that you can get Social Security can pay benefits to a
Social Security benefits based on man on his wife's record ·when she
your work when you retire or if you retires, becomes disabled, or dies, as
become disabled. You may also know long as .she has paid enough Social
that your survivors could get benefits Security to qualify, and he is not enti·
on our Social Sec'Ufity record if you 1\ed to a ~gher benefit on his own
d'1~
'
Social Security record.

African dance troupe
coming .to Ath.ens
•

The~ationalDanceC~~any~f
Guinea, Les Ballets Afncatns,
IS

including Athens in its schedule of
their 1996 North AmeriC!ln tour.
Their newly completed show, Herilllge, will play at the TempletonBlackburn Alumni Memorial Auditarium on Saturday, February 24 at 8
p.m. For more than forty years this
company has been Guinea's proud
cultural ambassador to the world;
they have given thousand's of performances, many at the most prestigious
fe·stivals and venues around the
world.
Les Ballets Africains is a forty·
member performance troupe whose
shows are a collage of traditional
African dance, music, costumes and
storytelling. The group is world
renown for its exciting mixture of
comedy, drama, acr,obatics and top
notch technical theatrics. They are
also dedicated and tireless perform-

lnthepasttheyhaveoftento~red

ers..
nonstop for up to two years at a lime.
, Heritage has been two~~ in~
'malting for Les Ballets Africams. ltts
the story of Bala Fassake Kouyate, a
hero of African legend. His adventures serve to explain the history of
the drum and the Balaphone, an early fonn of xylophone. These instruments are an integral part of African
communities as tools for communication and healing. as well as music.
Heritage also teaches revered African
morals such as respect for elders,
compassion, caring for the young and
appreciating beauty.
Tickets f6r Les Ballets Africains
are available at the auditorium box
office, open from noon to 5:30p.m.,
Monday - Friday. The cost is $11 for
Green Zone or $9 for While Zone or
for students and seniors. To order
. using Visa or ·MasterCard call (614)
593-1780 duri~Jg box office hours.

,._

'

•

7

T::;.•J.IfYic" will

You must be at least 62 years old, not
remarried, and your marriage to her
must ~ve lasted at least 10 years.
You call even get benefits 1&gt;1! her
record if she just q~alifies for Social
Security benefits but has .not yet
retired, as long as1you have been
divo~~:ed for at leas! two years.
If your ex-wife ,is deceased, you
can get benefits if ( 1) ):OU are not !)urrently married, you are 60 years old
!(or SO and disablelJ) and your marriage lasted at least 10 years, or (2)
,you are any ase. unmarried, and have
·a child in your care who is under 16
or disabled.
If you think you or someone you
!'know may qualify for benefits, or if
,you just want more infonnation, call,
1
Social Security's toll free number,l ·800-772-1213, weekdays from 7 a.m.
until 1 p.m. The lines are busiest early in the week and month, so if your
business can wait, it's best to call at
other times. Social Security infonnation is also available on the Internet
at http:llwww.ssa.qov.

l

1111/12:00

QH 41138, (1141

· 1s, 11; m: .
Pllbllc Notice

N~.T.9 SI""RS
STAlE OF OHIO

DEPARTIIIENT OF

TRANSPORTATION
Columbul, Olllo
Olfloe of Con- ,
• Lag81 CaPY
_ .!l'!!:,.
n_e,_
er -.
• ...,.121

: ONITPIIK:E,.....,,..,...,
,l . · Mailing. o.ta 2nlll8 . ·

Director of Tre~lon

(2) 12, 19

2TC

.ii·;~;;;;(·ii;li~i;~~~~~'

Public NotiCe

Recpte, over Dlebmte .........

o i'ii'I'~ ..........F·i·~·; ~·l:

STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE OF THE AUDITOR
FINANCIAL REPORT OF
THE IOARO OF UBRARY
TRUSTEES'
Ubrary Illig• County Public
Ubnry
•
For Flocal Year Endi':'IJ

~TO

You've got a lot on your mind. You' re building
your world and your inaurance needs are
real. But you don't need.to add tills worry
to your list.
Talk .t o your Independent agent. lnl!lilt on longterm experience, community presence, and
someone who Ia with you both before and
after thlnga happen. Juat do thll one lhlnf,
and ....,. the Jutlllnt ilct to us.

Choir to meet

• NEC SOO o"ly $9.9~ .

•

• MotQrola 2600 Bag Phone only 96$
• FREE nights and weekends till April 3oth.

'

1111111 :.
·

,

Nplll ·· · ·-1111

.
The OhiO CMUIIty ~
.,.. •'!G' Cs r;,rnlll

WHERE EXTIIA EFFO·IIT IS QUII POLICY

Rtret•• lllll'lca•
Post 602
EVERY SUNDAY

LtgiOI

Oecambar 31, 1115
County·ot llolge

.............................. 748,064

lf.tl/1

................................~
Eal'lllngl on ~~
. ...................~··'~,;; ...,....,~

Pllly C11h .................... SO
Ch1n111 Coah................ 14

Other lnYIIlmenle...........

lllac:aHaMOua Recalpta ..
........... ..............:......27,800

•............................840,721

Total Fund llillanca..........

Contrlbutlona, Gille lo
Donlllona ...................... 320

1t;i;"·i·~:·:;~--.. ~~~~ci1:d

Tobll "-!pta ..... I04,117
Dlaburumenta:

SlleriH .. -1111 ..........
.............................. 222.~
Suppllaa............. ;... 11,1115
Purchlleed I Contracted
~erv~c...................... 12,5:51

Llbr8ry · Materlata ' lo

.

lnlormlllon
............... 71 • •
.

Financial Report
1 certify the preceding
report to be conecl Connie
L. ealloy, Clork-Trnauror ol
the loerd ol Library
Truatna, P.O. Addre11 211
W. ·Main(t14)
St.,t12-lilt3
Pomeroy, OH
41718.
(2112; lTC

CEl_LULA RONE
1
.
....... ... I,.,... ,.....,..
'

~aoo-44·C.fSL,L·1.
e11r111St.
11t. . St.

•••

·'

'

'iiiiiiSt. .

, . -I

I

.

"

1-614·378-9808

New At Ingles .lleetronfes

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

1'110.

Something from the
honey's
live girls i -to-1
conversations

MIDDLEPORT 992-2772
otflca Houra: Mon.·Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl 1o Alum. Siding,
VInyl Replacamant,
Windows, Blown
tnaulatlon, Storm
Doon St
• onn
Wlndowe, Garagae.
Froe Elllmataa

1-900-288-9155

992-2825

1

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992·3954 or 985·3418 , 't"

ext. 3912. 18+
$3.99/min.
ProcaiiCo.
(6.02) 954-7420

~======·=1N=II!tn~

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

ROUND ·
BALES OF.
HAY fOR
SALE.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
RemOdallng
Stop &amp; Compara
FREE ESTIMATES

CALL

985·4473

614·.949·2512

,

, NEFf REMODELING

Dllftlll

SERVICE

Kick Boxing
Training
At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness

HOUIIRtpllrl
Remodeling
KHchen a. Bath
Remodeling
Room AddHione
Siding, Rooting, P•Uoa
Reuonlibla
lneurere - Experlencad
Call Woyne Naif

......... ...,,•.,... ..,.
Opening Feb. ht

271 North 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH. 45760
AKC Reg. Puppies, Kittens, Birds &amp; More
3 Experienced Groomers - Financing Available.

B. Jolene Rupe/Owner

..._

For Fr11 Eatlmetea

(614, 992-6244

J.D. Drilling Co111pany
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771

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

.0-'r

JlEASONAIII RATU

''" ""

Water
~.~!. 1;/J-.- Treatment
~f'lZ~
Equipment

ron-

Diatributed by

SPIINISOFT

lfti..I-WAY

Dtl's Water Refllhcy

MINI STORAQE

c........, .....

..

882·2996

New Haven, WV
304 812-~!!!

Compnllle . . . . Pilatl
.

til..., ..,..

..

TRI,STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC,
The water ·treatment company cordially invites you to
participate in a free , no obligation , comprehensive water

analysis. WE

WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TOS, Mlner•l Hardn..a, Iron, PH.
Pl1111 call RoinSo{llt 112-4472 or I-800-6De-3313
to HI up your lrH w•ter enalple.
,_

--.co.-Otto .. _

·.

.

.. _ _

ln..,...._ Oln . . . . . n.tam

.....

Md Cftlnolto moctvate 01Mr1.

·'

One Ul)hNow
Available
1Oli28 , $65 per mo.

J . E. DIDDLE, OWNER

11411-2512

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
MICHIIE SHOP, INC.
(Special)

ALLEN BELL·CONTRACnNG
3 Bedroom, 2 bath. 2 car garage, full
front porch, 1288 sq; ft, Price $59,500.
Stick built on your lot. To view home ·
Call (304) 882-231'9 WY WV003452

.,

.

MISUNDERSTOODil.
liVEII
CONVERSATION
ONE • ON • ONE :

I

~ ·900·414-21 0~

Ext. 2074

-·

$3.99 per min.
Must Be 18 Yra.
PROCALLCO.

'.

(602) 954-7420

(Ume Stonelow Rates,

WICKS
HAULING ::
Limestone, ,
Gravel, Sand, ~ ·
Top Soil, Fill 0111',
614-992-3470

RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. I PM ·
i ,.·

'

~· ·

12 Gauge

Factory Choke Only:,'

R. L. HOLLON.

TRUCKING ::
DUMP TRUCK ·:
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel'
. ,.
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

·-·

Art You Ready
For love?
Callllowf!!J

1·900·255·2700
Ext. 9402
$2,99 per min.
llluat be 18 if•.

' 1

Touch tone phone ' .
1
·required.
'
Serv-U 619-645-8434 · .,
111MII G

CHESTER STORAGE

H2-3961

a

.

•·'

"Supplie• for all your pet need. "

Children &amp; Aduh
CIBIIies
. Call 992-3967
tor Detalr.

· ' . ·.8irils•.
'\

1118196

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal • Conemerclal or Residential
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets flented .
, Dally, weeidy &amp; monthly rental rates.

• 537 BRYAN PLACE

1192-4405

.

MODERN SANITATION

w•

the program 'tciplc ~t a rel:ent p~~ti~tof the Riverview 9arden Club
held11tthelihome qf Grace Weber.
' ·
-·~&gt; ,
·
' Fl'R''rolt'cal} members named bird~. w,~ch visit thilir bird feeden, ahd gave way~
iri wlllolrdiffant birds call be atttac~ to feeders. •
·
A lener was read by Janet Connolly froll) Betty ~oggs who has been in Colum, .
bus due to her husband's health problems. A card was signed for Mr. Bogss.
· Devotions were by Gladys Thomas and ii!Cluded "Snowbirds" and "God's Promises." l,l{antcs ~eed conduc.ted th~ moe~ing and menitiers were ~mi~ to take fruit ·
trays to the February meellng whtch w11l be at the home of Mwne WhiteheJ¥1. Prayer . .
1;1,- Marlene Putman concluded the 'meeting.
·
Games were.condutced by Miry Alice bise, and prizes were awarded. Pauline
Myers won the door prize, a bird house.

405 North Second A•e ., Middleport 992·5020

113111fn

~~'inc:~=~' ~J&amp;:;:,l:::;.•.::N:::::SU:;'
..1';TI::::O.::N.: :
t.MII

................................42 ~ 9

Picture Frame, Mats
· &amp; Framing Accessories .

Milt mo.

Caah hi enka (Nil) ....:....

FlnnandFHa ....

Overhead&amp;
underground
utilities &amp; lighting '
I
Bucket, Digger , .
Truck Services
Service Pole
$2.50 p&amp;r ft. :,

Co'Lne'l

29 Sr. CIIIDiJS Special
Fee for dlly rune.
$1.00 par paraon to
Pomeroy 1o Mlddtepon
Days: 541-1124 (lOcal,
Nlghta: 992-2741

IIIIGO

A·C unun -~
CONSTRUOION CO.'

&lt;lhe

OWnere:

Gardeners study birds.·

• Service ~ment required.
''

I

·

2J12JI2/Ifn

New

. H1rry A Donna Clark
Starting Sun. thru Feb.

SouiCIII(Uenl:
"'-. a1 4 30
. Optratllig Tranatera-ln .... , ~ opel
: Poll.
.............................. 200.000 Lucky Ball $200.00 and
Openttlng Tranatera-Out.
Ralll!l $50.00 each
.............................200,000
wk. Pay according to
TOIII Other Fln1nclng
SoUI'CII/(UHa):
the nu.mber of p~era.
End 1111nce Jenuary 1...
Keep ad tor FREE card

his librarian ~ife recalling his enjoyment of the bookS by Laura Ingalls Wilder which
had •irisJ!ired the 'television series, "Little House .on ..the Prairie." This slirred up his
dete&lt;(llio,~tion to lean\ as much as possible about Laum and to share his knowledge
wtlll ottim. . · . .
. .·
,. ......
·
· · He ·glifhe~'l'ilemoirs! newspaper articJCs, her poeiry and personal interviews into
this ¥oi\I.Pe ,which is a,potpouiri of remembraqces. Y{e learn that the Ingalls were a
pi~ri~g. (atnilx_. that Ulul'a ll!arried Al&lt;i!IZO Wildio when she w..S 17, l)a(l a bab~ .·
boy .~died lwo. w~ks after btrth and a daughter, Rose, who also became afamous
journalist.
.
' Part ~wo narrates the hardships of praiiie life in South Dakota and includes some
of the recipes used at the time.
11ie Mansfield Era, part three, told of the hard life on Rocky Ridge Farm which
the Wilders purchased in 1894. The author mentions a log cabin without wi'ndows;
light came through the chinks in the walls but, unfortunately, so did the cold and rain .
Laura, born in a log cabin, self-educated thro\lgh many moving expenences, did
not reach her full writing potential until her first book was published .when she was
65; the reviewer noted.
. Her fame increased as she grew older. Much of her activity in'l'olved the Athen•
ian Literary Club, A sample program was cited.
.
,
She die~ in t 9S7 ~( the age of 90 and her .books are still popular with 60 million
copies sold.
Fourteen members of the club answered roll call with a comment on the "good
1
old day1." · . ,

CelkllarON E has tripled our honie rate coverage area. You can call virtually 'anywhere from Cincinnati to Pittsburgh or from Cleveland to
Charleston, without fQarlling charges.

JuGGLE

Pluo 50 c.nto ....._.

Sond 12.25 Money Onlor to
Box 120, Grubllo, Aile. 72431

Cl!lltal Outlay ....... H,23t
other Obtaeta .......... e,365
Total DltbuiHmenta .......

The Middleport Literary Club met at the home of Karen DuPlantier.
Mrs. Eileen Buck reviewed "I Remember Laura':.fompiled by Stephen W. Hines.
The book, published in 1994, is an.anthology of selections concerning Laura Ingalls
'Wilder, one of A.merica's favorite storytellers, as she was remembered by her farrily, fl:ien~s anti neighbors.
· ·
The contents are divided inlo four parts: Kindred Souls, a Reason for Reminis-ce!#; Laura's Life in DeSmet, S.D.; Laura's life in Mansfield, Mo.; and finally, Reflec, I . . ... ~.. . " ·"

'-"

'

JarryWfay

(No Sunday Calls)

Call 992-4025

CLARK'S CAB CO.

...,,

614-992-7643

beJween sa.m.-8 p.m.
Mol).- Sat.

TAll

(614) 892-5535
(614) 992-2753

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
.FREE ESTIMATES

Pick-up discarded
washers. dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials.

Sockl $1.75 par pali'

St. Mason, WV

Room.Additions • Roofing

FREE

Help Burned Out Vk:llms

•NewHomee
l )
•Addltlona
•New Garage• .~
.: ~
•Remodeling
•Siding
,
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

.New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

614-742-2193

'""'"

COIISTRUCTIOIJ)
CUllom Bulklog • Aomodtllog

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
· Danny &amp; Peggy Bricktes

,_ ...

~hoJ:

;

I

SMITH'S -•

.

,!'elders
nx a••

Tile s"'Mrtais ·

Bllffflsaw M1

$2.99/mln,. 18+
Tauc:h lane phanl "''lillll.
619-645-8434

se.v.u

. nHI71
108 Pomeroy

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Portable

1·900.656-2600
Extt•sl• 3012

1

FOR YOU

tor Details.tWI/1 ....

Cal

;Middleport .Literary club
reviews Hines-novel .·

THING

Call 992-3967

lonely Again

CARPENTER SERVICE
Staled prO(IOalla- will be
·
•Room
Addttlona
10oepted ,fran\ an pra•HewGaregaa
qu•lltted blddera 11 the
Olllca cit Con.,_., Room · •Eiectrtcal A Plumbing
•Roofing
118 ol lila Ohio Department
of
T ranapo: taiiOn,
•Interior A ExUrtor
Columblll, Ohio, until ! 0:110
Painting •
a.m., W-Illy, Febl'ulry
AIIO Concrwte Worll
2i, 19116 lor lrnprovementa
(FREE ESTIMATES)
In:
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Athena, Gallla, Hocking,"
11112-6215
Melge, Monroe, Morgan;
Pomeroy,Ohlo .
Noble, VInton and
Waahlngton couniiM, Ohio
lor Improving acllona ATif.
33-7.644 and varloue, U.S.
Route 33 and varloUI; In
R 's Cusltat
VIIIOUI vllleg.. , by
htclletlllfi
lnltllllng prlamatlc
Beeland Hog
retroranectora.
Bus (304) 882-2756
'"The date eel lor
completion of thle work
Res. (304) 882-3328
ehllll be n Ill forth In tile
W86t Columbia WV.
bidding propoaal." Plana
end Specification• ore on
ltle In the Dlpartment of
Public NQtlce
Tranlf)OIUtlon.

.. End

County
North Filth Sti'HI,

.-Nidi-,.,.

,,,., •.

· YOUNG'S

Public Notice :

Gov....,.ntal Funda

at:

LESS

.

A..,

Th~ Pr.lvat~ lno!uatry.
Council, (PfCI and Se""ca
Delivery· Arae Humllar 24
(SDA 1241, Wfllch lncludel
(Athane, Gallla, Hocking,
.~11"'• Malge, ~ and
~nlonl , coyntlaa, Ira
eollcltlng prop'?aala lor
aarvki.. to ba 'jirowlllad to
youth (Title 11-8 and ntla
C), adulla (Title 11-AI
dlatocetad wortcera (TIUa
,. EDWAAI under tha .Job
Tralqlng. Partnarahlp Act,
be tor
P
·Y-1"' (Juty .1,
11M to Jurw'30, 1117) on a
county baala. Each RFP
muot ldenUty a county. II a
proapactlva aa'rvlca
provider· wlehaa to bid on
mo,. lllan ona (ll county,..a
aeparata RFP muat be
oubmiH•d tor each 'i:oilnty
Identifying the county.
Program• operated during
Program Year 19lljl, which
meal .
contract,loj
pertorn\anca atenderda,
may ba extended lor In
-Hionat yur of oparlllon.
The· application proceaa
requ1111 that oubmlttad
propoaala:
(11 ·contain datallad,
ac~ur•t• and complete
programmatic end budget
lntonnetlon.
(21 Follow the preecrlbad
lo111111l Identified lflthe RFP
piC"-1.
There will be a blddara
conl.,.nce on February 20,
1111/1:30 p.m. RFP
packa~ea will be given out
at IIIII time. (All proapectlw
earvlce proYidare who
would llka to aubriiH an RFP
muat be praaent at the
conference). All
will be due

ONE

.

John Stainer's "The Crucifixion"
will bd presented PaJm· SIIJiday Ill
liOJ wil_l..,. ~·~. ..' '
Trinity Church. in Pomeroy by a
~~~
. .
·
~KII:IAI'ID ..,.. .l!ordand PTO, ®mmunily ch\)ir, ·
Anyone
in~
iii
singins
in
the
MOilday, 7:30,p.m, 111 school. Speaker, SOuthern Building Committee ' choiJ, iJ· ubd to meet ~y ..
Trinity Church. ·7:30 p.m. lit the liplellnilliVe&amp;.
church. Otlten interested whp may ·
POMiilOY - Bil Bej\d PUlli 110( be lllile· to ~ tbo 'lbunday
Club, MondA)', 7:30 p.m 111 pncticc,D !libel to call !)92..3101 or
Mi!JI.Hip Sc:bo~UJbi'Wy.
~"" ~-illtelaC."""" .

Fewer men than women receive
; these spouse benefits because they are
· more likely to be working and earn·
ing over the annual earnings limits for
Social Security beneficiaries (In
1996, the limit is $8,280 for beneficiaries under &lt;i5, $11,520 for beneficiaries 6S-69, and does not apply to
beneficiaries 70 or older.) However,
the protectiOn is there for those who
need to lllke advantage of it.
If your wife receives Social Security benefits because she is retired or
disabled, you can qualify for pay.ments on her record if you are age 62
or if you are any age and have a child
in your care who is under age 16 or
disabled before age 22.
If your wife is deceased, you can
get benefits on her record at age 60,
at age SO if you are disabled, or at any
age if you care for her child who is
under age 16 or disabled before age
22.
.
Even if you are divqrced, you may
,qualify for benefits on your ex-wife's
I record if she receives Social Security retirement or disability benefits.

.

.
Oxyr.n Acetylene CO.
Helium II alus Medical Grade 0.
P;r;; Trlmlx Ultra Mix

Mlddlaport

MlltOIO.

~ J~~,,i~~~ bes~ her presentation by notina a conversation between Hines and

PORTLAND -- The Lebanon
lished as a free service to non-profit Township Board of Trustees will
g,roups wishing~oounce meeting meet Monday, 7 p.m. Ill the township
!-11d speeial eve . The calendar is building to discuss appointment of a
imt desiJlled to ~ole sales or fund trustee.
~sets of any type. Items are printed
a1 apace permits and cannot be guar- TUESDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
alueed to run a specific number of
Board of Elections, Tuesday, 9 a.m.
dt:ys:
at the office.
~NDAY
.-- RACINE -- ~ine Village Board
of Public Affairs, 7 p.m. Ill the annex,
Mondfy,.

..·..

· . STATWMif:J4T

.J-11 .................,

87 Mill St., ·

prlflle llletntlves.
. Strv·U
(619) 645:1Q4

011

: The Community Calendar is pub-

'
• . ')'OMEROY
--Chapter S3, ·DAY.
Mqnday, 7 p.lilliJ ~ Rcic!t Spring•
PD~nds: JI'IRie building. A din-

GENERAL SOLICITATION

Welding Supplies •lnctuatrlal GIIBI • Steel
SliM 1o Fllbrlc8tlon • Repair Wtklng
Alumlnum/Stalnlaa
Machine Shop

At Big Bend
Health &amp;Fitness

11 yis., - ld•t•
lfltleslocated .. ~

· YOUR
MESSAGE CAN
BE SEEN HERE
·FORA TOTAL
OF $14.00
PER DAY.

1

I got a little secret that I thought you So if you ever would li.ke to share
would like to know,
your thoughts
!think you're really something but! with someone who truly cares,
try hard not to let it show.
then just look around til you find me.
The truth as it may be is I'm really I'll always be somewhere...
quite the shy, ·
JOieScou
Formerly of Pomeroy
but everytime I think of you "ooh" I
get the greatest high_.

.

'

raVIIJCI of tbi1 dev.-mng diJCIIIC'
HediedKveralmoatbsago,lltbomc,
tn my arms.
.
. I would 1101 have nusaed !1110 '::
.:*lth_.Ralph, despite .knowlll&amp; .
!nev1table outeome .~d 11_1&amp; .!'sks ·
mvolved. Please tell NoC~ty ~
her sister may know peal JOY with
' thismaninapiteofthe~hes.
.. . She should enco~e bcr SISter to
JOID an AJDS caregtven su_pport
group. It can help enormously 10 the
difficult times ahead: Above _all, she
should not ~ocus o~ the ~sks. ~t
sounds as 1f the stster IS we :informed and careful. .SQ ~as I,
which IS why I am H1Y neclilive. -Seattle
ky
· Dear Seattle: ~ph was_ 1uc. .to
.have had a woman~~~ you 1R hiS bfe
'for 10 years. I hope the future bodes
well for you. You deserve II. ·
'
Sendquest!Oillto~III!LIIIiden,
Crnto111 S)'tld~Qte, 5777 Vi•.Century BIYd., Suite 700, .Laa A.aa•lllll,
:Calf, 90045

Poet's Corner
~would You Be My
. Valentine'
.

Community
calendar.
.

"

•

$l,oo0 made a sizabl8•dent in our
,budge~ ~e manqed to get ~gh '
.that cnsts, but many others m1ght
hav~ e~ UJ? floating a loan and
lpaymg a b!&amp;h mtere,tt ~- .
You lnlgbt .be wondering what
,happe!'ed to the culpnts. The bank
·traced them, and we finally got our
money back, but the forgers were
never prosecuted. -- Kim in San
Dieao
.
Dear San Diego: My readers learn
from ·each other. Thanks for your
valuable input. (P.S. Why weren't the
forgers prosecuted? I'd like to know.)
Dear Ann Landers: I was interested in the letter from the woman
whose sister is involved with a man
who has AIDS and tuberculosis.
I was divorced after many years in
an unhappy marriage. Subsequently,
I met an extraordinary man 1 "Ralph"
was romantic, sensitive, intelligent,funny, talented, handsome and suecessful. He was also HIY positive.
I shared I0 years ~ith ·!DY soulmate, the last two of which were
spent watching him succumb to the

Authorized Ill Distributor

(AIIOOIOII SIIGUS)U
NoMoniWDIIttl
. Silplral
1-900-656-2600 Ext.
3136,2.99 Per ... +

Social Security: Benefits for husbands, dads

...

.

.

Dear Ann Landers: You of'!en

~acine yo·uth joins
SEO
fnagazine sfaff
;. .
.. James Thomas Holter, son of Mr.
:Roger. and Mrs. Helen Holter, h~
)ojned the staff of Southeast. Oh1o ·
magazine as its associate publisher.
' .He serves as an intermediate
between the advertising and develfop,ing staff for the Spring issue and is
actively working to put the magazme
ibn the World Wide Web.
: A senior at Ohio University and
1graduate of Southern Hi~h School,
Holter is a magazme . Joumahsm
major. He has previously worked for
Southeast Ohio as ejlitor and art
·airector. He has also served as con;,tributing editor for Advans_w C~lmilnications and a contnbutmg wnrer

.

CHEAPER RATES

WELDI,I &amp; MIIICATION
_20.00/HI. - .
21513 BASHAN RD.
Ohlo41nt
8183011"'....aotiFAX

AMERICA'UI DATELINE
1·900·3118-0200 OXl ~7 30.
18yra1- S2.991min.

ProcaR 602·1154·7~20

1

1.1

�-~Piij&amp; 8 • The Dally S.ntlnet

llondly, FHrulry 12, 1196

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• P 1 f I

~~.AL~LE~Y~O~O;P~------------------------~~--------~==::=.=~====.:::::-=:=::==N=E=A==C=ro=.=~==o:r:d:P:u::zz:l:e::::::~

L

MOnday, February 12, 1196

l(f IJil'6r 1 r:.ar.,:=:r
A MICe SCUI/ENI't~ _ _.....:..::

WELL.

l"lliM T ..li\MI -

PHILLIP

ALDER

t

I

,.

12 Wl'tllln
dft!lll••
13 C.. uM n
1t73 112 Ton, lnt•rnalional Pick·
UpTrud&lt;, ~. &amp;1~189 .
1877 Ford 414 $2,100: Chevy
C.8o 38ll 5 SpeH, $1 .500: 1975
Chov. car tllulor. 4 Door, 18 FL
w.dge $3,500, 614-388.gg()G,

'
sewer, water and trash Included,
81 4-992·2117.

•1877 Ford F- 3~0 1 Ton . Dual
Whaela Naw Tira1, -looks And
Runa Good $2,800, 15 Mlnu les
From Cl!II!Poi•. B14-3711-2eOL , ·

:"TWo bedroom,

11182•Ford F-100, 6 ~1. slanda"d,
amllm
, short beet, looks
, $1400, 814·2t7·

and three bedroom mobllt

homes, lllrling at $2•0·$300,

~.)

230

Professional
Services

12x80, localed on

Smllh Run Rd. oullide of RuUand.
IOtal electric, $2501 mo. ptua udll·
:lies. SISO !ieP&lt;&gt;IiL 61H42·2!186.

i440

..·..... ' ..
...

NORTH
6K 2

WEST
•J 10 9 8 5 4

,,,

910 8

•A Q
•9 53 2

t5 4
•Q 8 3

•K 7 54

--

~loi--10

whlcllla In -lion ol lha law.
. OUr-- .,. hateby·
'worm.tllhal .. "'".....
--lnlhlaara a - on an equal

5&lt;:1\ool Bua Clalliflcation. llagin·
ning Alto Of Pay II 16.00 !Hr.

., GiiHipolls
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yal'd Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 11-m.
the day before th8 ad Ia tO run.
Sunday edldon - 2:00p.m. Friday.
Monday ~ldon • 10:00 a.m. Sat·

urday.

Pomeroy,

Boo11 By RtdWI"IIo Chlpp-,
Lamo. Guarant.... Lowaol
PriCH Alsnot Calt. Golllpollo.

Ton~

lcncW11119'IICCOIJI

SUBSTITUTE BUS DRIVERS •
GALLIA AND MEIGS COUNTIES
• Applicanla Mual Have A High
School Diploma. Preference
Given To Applicants Poaaeuing
A Commercial Drivers License
With School Bus Claulllcalion
Prelerr~. Boglnnl1111 Alii Of Pay
Ia $6.00 !Hr.

&lt;Jili)Oitunlly -

&amp;r.nd ,_ """' blue pn&gt;m drHa,
$40,814&lt;182-4407. .

IO $291. Wolk lo shop

6 movlaa. Call 614·448·2568.
Equal Houalng Dppotlllnity.
'

·

BUS DRIVER - GAUIA COUNTY
- Appllcanll Muot Hove A High
'·'" &amp; Ylclnlly
School Diploma. Praleronce
All Yard Sal•a Must Be Paid In Given To Applicants With A
Advan ce. Deadline: 1:OOpm the Commercial Drivers Ucanu With
da~ - before the ad il 10 run, Sun- A School Bua Clualllcation. Beday edition- 1:OOpm Fri_d iJ, Mon· ginning Rite Of Pay II $6.00 IHt.
day·oditlbn 10:00..m. Soluldly.
EDUCATION COORDINATOR GALLIA /MEIGS COUNTIES 80
Public S.le
Preference Given To Apr,ncanta
and Auction With A Coli-eo D-eree n Early
Rick Pearson Auction Company, · Childhood Or Relat.d Field. Befull time .a'uctiOneer, complete giMintl Alto Of Pay IS$10.00 /Hr.
auction
aervlc:e. Licensed
Olll6,Qhlo &amp; Weat VirGinia·, 304 · AppHconto For THIS /I"HESE Pooltlon (ol Muat Have A Valid
'll'!'~850r 304-773-5447. '
Driver's lcenae And A Clean
Driving R.cord. Employment Ap90 Wanted to Buy
pllcatlona May Ba Obtained AI
Anliqu"'• polliH:tilbleo, eo1a111, Gallia -Meigi H"d Start, P. 0 .
River in\ ·Antiques. Ru11 Moore, Box 318. 301111 S1110 Routa 180,
Gelllpollo. Tha DeadliM For Acowner, 61•·1112·25218.
eepting Applications Ia Thur.day,
I Carl Or February 13, flille 4:00P.M. For
Or Newer, Additional Information Call e1 411100 Eall· &lt;14e.ee7•. 8:00 - 4:00 P.M., Monday Thru Friday. Gallia ·MtiGI
Haed Stai~ A Division Of """"'
To Human Reaource Develop·
menlll An M lEE&lt;) El'f"l&gt;loy«;

••'

Top Prl~a ' Paid : ()1\!tj.S, yolno,
ti.1wer·, llold, Dlamondl, All Old
Collectlblei, ·ftlperwe!g hts, Etc.
. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, t'"lpo~, 81~2842.
Used lurniture- antiques, one
pieCe or complete estates, Osby
Ma&lt;tin, 614·9t2·7&lt;141 ,
Want to buy: 1979 Dodae Aa~n
lor body por•. 304-875-8480.
Want~

To Buw;.Junk Autos With
Or Without Motors. Call Larry
L;v.ty. 814-3118-9303.
Want~ To Buy: Ullfe Tikeo Toya,
614-245-5887. '

Wan1~: To

Buy: Sanding Tlmbar.
ArYl Aml&gt;unt. 814-388-lltOII.

EM PLOYMENT

Sf RV ICES

11 o Help Wanted .

Home Typists, PC ul&amp;l's n -.
$45,000 tncome potential. CaR I ·
11011-513-4343-Ext. B-8388.
Local Flnenclal ln~Mion !iaeltlllll
A Computer Operator. Prlo; Ex~
perlance Wllh A Sylltm 36 lAo
400 Profetr~. Full Time l'boltion,
M ·F, 12:00 ·9:00 P.M. For Immediate Conaideratian. Send Aeoume To: CLA Box 373, CIO !lollpolls Daily Tribune. 825 Third
""•nut, Gellipolls, OH 45831 .
Americare Home Inc., A Dtvlalon
Of Regency Health Se rWcea Is
Steklllll QualiiY Mindad ln&lt;lvi!IUals For Tho FollowinG Pollllon.
Tha Jackaon Agencr Ia JCAHO
Accredited, Well Eatabliehed
And ·fall Growing, Sotvlng Jackaon, Vinton, Pike, GaiUa, Lawr...-, And SciOli&gt; Countiae.

R.N. Full-Time, Clinical Supervisor, Minimum 2 Years Home
Health Experience, Management
And Strong Acute Care BackllfOUnd A Plus.
R.N. Full·Time, Case Manager,
Minimum 1 Year Acute Care E•perience Or Home H81llth Experience AI A R&amp;Giotot~ Nil' ...

$-WANTED-$
1o peo.PJa who need to lose
weight t 'make rhoney, to try new
· pate.nted walght·losa proc:luct. Level 'II MediCI! Recorda Clerk,
304-7~~ 24tl'l!fdey.
•
' Part· Time, Minimum 6 Months
Experience In A Health Related
1.oJ\velkly Proces•lng Mail Field.
Free lrtle&gt; Send 5&lt;!lf.Addre11~
Stam~inl ' Envelope: Expre11 We Provide ~ Competitive Wage
Dept. · 311 IOO ' Easl Whiteatone And A Voolaty 01 Benoflll. PI•..
BIYd., . ''1e 148-345, C~or Park Submit Reaumo By February 23.
TX78(
, ,
·1111111 To'

s

$200 1$500 Wkly, Aasomble Pro·
ducts, 'No Salli~. Paid Direct, Ful\•
'-.
ly Guaranteed.! No Exp. !ltCGI·
saty. : 7 Days 40 7·815·2022
ExLO!i¥.11!'100·
S200-) 5QO weokly. Aa ..mble
pro~utts. No llilling. Paid direct.
' Ful~ AUi'ranteed. No experience
7 da.
407 875-2022
'
nece:z;
ya.
4
ext 0
, · .
AVOif · 1 All Af •a• I Shirley
.

Sperw~ ~75-1~.
~

Able ~ Avon Repretentativea
nHdtta.'''Earn i'nohe)' fo r Christmas blh at home/or-~ 1-aoo·~-.816···e•. or 304-1182·2845. lnd:
r-r T ;
&amp;ELLS ITSELF
Ntl~ l:ASH ·For Winter Billa?
ll!lim*',$1Uir.AtWork·Homo
~"ia-8Q0.7A2~738 ..

, ,.GEtiiiVON

BoDraltitt n - d in my t~omo.
N:s.;~kin__t : R.•."'~"lnc~a.
•

•

- '-~ ·
·
Dairy -~rm W.,dng Farm Hand
Wioh Eiipat,.,;c.. 814.-245-5175.

:No::.:C.:IIIM~A;;:IIrr;:.-:5::'*~=-.:P.M". :-:;--I

e11n $1000J - l y 1tul1ing on·

V.lo,.( at hlllno. B. your boll.
Start ,.,.,. 110 M'·· 1tH auppiial.

infO.. ~o......... -

Ctl'lsty Shay R.N. DPS
Amerlcare HomeCare
731 E. Main Streel
JacNon. Ohio 45840

Cambuationetr atove. excellent
conclllon, 814-742-3115.

10%: off all tractor engine averhaul kits, In February. Sider's
Eqtlipmon~. 304-875-7421 .
Ver~ Good Condition, Runt Ex-

Ot;o.

.FR4NK &amp;

F.AJINF.~T

!

.""!'!.till

4yr old Bay Mare W/COIL Will sell
aeporataly, 304-875-4137.

~

1991 Nislln 414 KE Bedlinor, Ef.·
tra Low Miles, Sliding Rear Wln¥aw, Var~ Well Taken Care Of,
Uke New, 614-446-3100.

2 Registered AOgus Bulla, 13
Ctd614-388-g708.

g• Ford F-150 4•• XLT, loade~,

18,200 miles, excellent condition,
liking 111.200 814-367-0288
814·909-2481 attor 6pm.
,

9r

740

Motorcycles

18118 TR~250X .4 wheele r, exit!"
tirea and wheel a, ather mi tf. ·
parta, one owner . $1600 , 814·
912·5486.

WANTED: tiCENSED PRACTICAl NURSE For Two Convnunlty
Group Homaa For Patton· With'
MAIDD In BldMII •nd Golllpolla.
Hours: 11 A.M. -1 P.M., Uon; .10
A.M. ·6 P.M., Tueo 11 A.M. ·7
P.M., Wed IThuro ; 8:30 A.M. 2:30 P.M . Frl ; Houri Include AI·
·llndanco At Watkly Staff Mat·
.tinga; O.r Aa Otherwlaa Schad·
uled. Vlcallon, Sick And in·
aurance Beneflls. II lntereeted
Contact Cecilia At t ·800-5312302. DaedHna For Appllcanta: 'lJ
18/118. Equal ()pportunity Employ-

2.-1'1
"(..,,o.vi:;;.S
C 1996 bf NEA. k'ot.

i O'WYamaha 350 Four'Wheol,
4·x4 Big Bear Go.od Conditiol't,
$2,600 090, &amp;1•·387-0239 Ak&amp;&lt;
5:00.'

THE

1995 Honda 4WD 4 WhaelOr
$3,800 o&amp; Wheeta !Tires For Honda 4 Wheeler, Like New I 6143117&lt;l554.

TRANSPORTAT ION

I'D UK£1\FON&gt;lV.lP NIQINE
Tlo:£T ftll?. Y(M:: NO-T FLI(,HT

"

~

.

~

wax.o YCO CAA£ ro Pf&gt;.Y E)(T~
TO fLY FIR!&gt;T CJ..l.O"J ?" ~--1

Norlll

Eul

I NT

Pass

3 NT

All J1881

a•

Limited Offerl
3b&lt;, 2bol h, $1799
. Free dtliYIIY &amp;
Oakwood Homes,

'fill Thundatblrd

~

~

£)(.~? ~ ...

(:fJ

I ~ ['U.. .J.l&gt;T
UlW CL"-')S 1

sc. two door,

PB, AC, 5 ~ad, power teata
and locka, "Groat Car,' $6500
n-e .• 814-9G2-7478 or 614-948287V.

Electrical, Plumbing, Concrate
Foundations, Garages, Room Additions, Remodeling, David, 81-t·
258·89411, IRogor 81H86-9178.
General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard Wori Windows Washed
Gullet&amp; Cleaned Lt8ht Hauling,
Commorlcal, Resldenolol, St..a:
614-3118-0429.

World Book 1998 Edilion now on
sale. 22vol. oncyclop.dla pluo
windciwa or MK MultitMdla. Reg.
l75g, aalo l59t. (Poyment plan
-lablo). 304-875-3n5.

MERCHANDI SE

550

Building
SUpplieS

Household
Goods

Privare Lesaon1 - Ptrcuaalon.
Beginning Bras1. Beginning ·Pia·
no. ReaaonatMe ratH. ReJerenc •• Clll Jon at 304-675-8273.

LPN and AN pan-time positions
avaiiabte fOr progresti'll RehabilCountry Furniture. 3&lt;M-675-8820.
italionl Skilled care ICF facility.
At 2 N, 6miles, Pt Pltallnt. WV.
RE IHAl S
Development of tub-acute unltl
require these carldidatta ta be
TUft-Solll-8, Soon 11·5.
e•perlenc.ed nur1e1, willing to
work at r lOam mombet 1'1111 an
excellent staff of theraplsla and Small Horne Rep&amp;w Drywall. Pain~
Nurses that have a hlatory of 5 Or Elc . Chaap Ptlco, Quality .
yMra without any reoulaltKY ~ Workl 814·446-8861, Aak For
pliahct issues. E~~:c.itent benefit larry.
~klae. Rotatintllltifll requi.-d.
Call 814·g82-8808 9r aond ro- Sun Valley · Nursery School. Unfutnim.d 3bt. houoe w1garage,
sume to RockspringS A:ehabilila· Chlldcare M.f lllm-5:3011m Agaa 1350/ma. Afao, 2br. furnlthed
tion CeniOo. Rocklprlnga Rd.. l'b- 2·K, Young School A;• DurinG trallar, *209/mo. Camp Conley.
Summ•. 9 O.W• per Week Mini· 304-875-5585.
mottll'. Dttlo. EDf
81H4&amp;-31167. ·
Unlu!niah~ two bodtoom houoe,
Naed 5ladlea To Sail Avon. 8t4.$48~.
Babyo~ti1111 In my homo, flexible nice and ciNn, depollt required,
houra. Rtaaonablt ratea, have no·ltWda pottl. 814&lt;112-30110.
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
,.,.,.n..a. Cloaa to achoola. Very nice home In Pomeroy far
10 Ploplo To FIH Ooonilllll In .An 304-8'11-2714.
r...o; 814-GII2·5151.
Ex~ndintl Gelllpoiia Dio~ibuHon
Canler. 1300 WH~t~Y Per Written Will Do Hou1ecleanlng, H•v•
Wo~gal Stroot. Pomaroy, WIP,
Agrnmant To Start No Slrlk~l
Pay By JoD. Experi· $3liOIMo, Dopolll, 513-t22.0294.
Or layoHa, Quldt Advanc•mont
Evening&amp;:
And Paid vacadona Oflt.-d. No
·~ lllolllle Homes
Ex~rlonca Macooaary. For Ap·
lor Rant
poln.,..,t Call 814-j441 ·1t75 Mon
U-5 Only.

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PREVI9US SOLUTION: "I lOve BriUah cinema like a cloclor km1 hil dyllig

paltent, - Ben Kinglley.

S@~4llA-lt£~s·
I.

tiiAT IMI&amp;Y
"IIUI
- - - - - - Nooo1

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lattOfl of
four oaambled -.!1 be.aw to form 10111 -da.

GADEJG

II I IP
S I RRE

"If you bite off more than you
can chew," granny said, • you
r--M_A_W_Y_R-l-... begm to cut your------ teeth.•

..::.,_1:~1G Compt.1a tho chucklto qualM
1._,5_,,~,-"-r~6,;_;,:..1
•
•
•
•
•
•
. by fillinG in tho milling - ·
you dovolop loom llep No. 3

XL, 20 ' Strutos

baso boat , 200 XPf1P, 614·667·

8

7347 or 814-1149.287V.

j

TAATi NOI!OI&gt;'( U~S
THE 'o«lR.I&gt; "NEAT• fi&gt;H'f·
!'\ORE' 'YOU'RE NEAT••
IT~ LM1E 1• IT~ Sfi.JI'I()!

Budget Tranomi11lons: Used IR4bullt. All Typal; Accouible Tp
~e r
10,000 Tranamin i o~ .
614-24!&gt;-5877
'

t..low.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

•NEAr~ WAAT KIN!&gt;
Of' VALENTINE I~ .

!I1

SCRAM LETS ANSWIRS

7/

Butler - Total - Grime - Vision - ON a LIMB

·once I discovered money didn't grow on trees •

1984 Cutlaaa Supreme T-Tapa,
Atfly. $1,200; 1914 In~. Waaon
50S Gl. lUIIIo Di- .-1 ,000, 814· .New gas tanks, one ton tru~
3138~8:!1~1~~~~~~----~-~­ wheell, ra&lt;iabtl, Hoor ~Mil. etc.
D l A AuiO, Ripley. WV. 304·3721GI4 Mentt Corio, now 350 en· 31133' Of 1·1100-273-t32t.
't
Gino, 11111 and dual exi"auat,
new paint, Iota mora, asking
13300 Me or call Gary F. HyiOII,
814-!13118.
.

friend, sighed, "I was way out ON a LIMB.•

I MONDAY

.

Block, brick, sewer pipet, wtndowa, llnttls, eta. Claude Winters, ·
Rio Grande. OH Call 814·245·
5121 .
.

-------=1

""m

.

I I~ 1 1

8 Fl. Fiberglass Topper, Wide
Acceaa, Great Condition! $250,
Nett .. 8 14-44&amp;--8116,'

'

lo

11 COIIII Of , _

,.I-.-U-Q_A_T_O....,, ~"'=,'

'.75() Boats &amp;'Motors :
for Sele

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

MATH TUTOR · will tulor high
schOol &amp; colieae students In basic malh, algebra &amp; trigonometry.
ConiiiCIJohn 11814-tt2-1Utfl.

• QuiiiCfl
MI'Mietr•IIIIUd

1-

lin. v-e, olita model turbo, PS, '

••rv-

-...,..

~-l
saczsey

• 118ck.....S bl..
I Follow ordera
411 08olagiCII
7New
dh1elon
pertonnen'
41 Floor

Pua

A woman wh011e cat regularly wanders off has attached her collect caUIng-clrd number to his col11r. Now,
anyone who linda C.gney, a Bunnese,
can make a free phone call to leU ita
owner where she must go to retrieve
the peripatetic animal.
It would be good to have 1 calling·
card number when you are playing at
the bridge table. Faced with a dllllcult
problem, you eould call your favorite
expert for advice. I doubt, though, that
m1ny experts would permit uae of
their aoo numbers for this purpose.
Yet perhaps a 900-number aervlee
could be fonned.
Would you have needed to make a
call during this de1l? You are East,
defending against three no-trump.
Your partner leads the spade jack,
and when you top dummy's ldng with
the ace, Sou.th is clearly unhappy,
After you cash the spade queen,
tbou&amp;h. you cannot play a third spade.
What do you lead instead?
Perhaps North sl)ould have rebid
two hearts, a reverse, promising extra
strength. However, live dllmondJ Is a
long way .off land problbly goes down
berel. Having only two spades, Eut
wu right not lo mike 1 ~I dou·
ble OYer one dllmond.
You muat try to get partner on leld
to run bia spades . But which entry
card can he have? There Is only one:
the club queen. And to establish thai
u 1n entry, you must swlleb at Irick
three to the club Icing.
This play, saeriliclng an hooor toestablilh an entry for pertner, Is called
the Deschapellea Coup, after
Guillaume Deschapelles, a famous
whist player of eons gone by.

10

J)

Matchmaker Cln help

~ou

underatend

------,;,.----~ - what 10 do 10 melee tllloilllionihlp work.
ASTRO-ORAPH
Md 12.7510 Meldwn11ter, e1o l h l l ...,._ _ _..;-._ _ . papar, p .o. Box 1758, Murre~ Hill
Stalllln. New York, NY 10158,

(July D-Aug 21) One of your beet
al&amp;lll tocll~ will I!• ~our ability to
lmpr.a every01• yoU encot.w~ter. Even.
people you rMIIIOI' the flrllllme IOda~

wll _,.to kelp In touch.
""CIS (tJ:... ~roh 20) Remain VIRGO (A.... 23-..,t. 21) ln1111d of
Ollllfldellt lodly II you find yourlllf In a lal.l'lcf*lg a rww llldtla- IOCIIy, try to

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

. oorr.,.tlllve IIIUI!kln· ~.... odda
w11 be In your tavor, 1M you wll .IIIW 10
. com~ICI YI)Uf'1811.
. . . . (llinlit 11-Aprtl 11) Ulually, yoU

cifloontl up with

•

brlghlldNI. Today,

oor•-•

however, If ~ou 1111en carelull~ lo a
lriend'a
yoU may'- . , .
bellllllilll acMoe.

pr*'*

llnialt two old
10 your WllliiJo:tto,t.
llalll Wll be wartll 1111111111 G·
LIMA (llpL 23-0ot. 33) II you've btren
hoping 10 . . . frOin Cllllin people, ltOp
walling far them 10 gel In touch with you.
Tllte the lnllllllve IOdJy IIIII "' 1 ltltllh
~-

.

teo" 10 (Oct.~- 21) Some,..._

10-111J .II) Somaonl . rill OOIItpeiiMIIflfl you've hapad 101' may
may Ilk you IOdJy 10 help iOit oul I Crill- your WilY wry 10011 undlr piJManl
Cll deOIIOptnel •. You wll not I9CIIYe I ~ You mighl- 011 maie
niwMllmn11 1 1 1), but eon.-.G niOJ thin you •iiiCilprrllcl.
may come your WilY I!IW. ·
MGrTTANUS ...,., 2HIII 111 Llllllll
CJIIIINI (Iller 11.June 10) It ma~ be · ~ourJIIIIOclly from 1ny retlrJinlllhal
bentllclll ~ do Jomethlng tun lodl~ Inhibit yoUr lndependetiCI. Focua yoUr
lnaiMd of llldtlrG 10 your routine. Pk:k a lflorll on OlljlcllvtJ whiCh gratify your
perl!y 0011'411111011 4liho . . dallrwJ 10 flee \IMIIIO
tram bo11c1om.
Cll IICOIWI (Ilia. tNM. 11) You _.
CIINCIR(.Iuliu11.Julr lt}'fou wll pel · bt _
...... In jOinl'llltllniiOdiyl
lolili biJIIOclrty w11en lrMIMCIIn . , . rou 11ay In thl background. Kaap In
type ol. crw~~.. etldti«Jt . T!Y 10 find a touc:h uulh - *· but don1 try 10 011 out
TAUIIUtt(Apfll

S.A.S.E.

10 Pr tl. . Unl,t ll, P,O, ~x
. ." I DSIO ,.., Wintar - Sptllllll, Fl
' 32718, · 'I

Wetil

19De Honda 400 For,man ioul,"19 Buick Eatale wagon Limited.. whetltt, green , ·•ix week s old,
Good Condtdon, Fine Work. Car, ,ahqwf90m tondi~p. •ssoo lim~ : ...
Good- 814-•-743.
lllOW filM&amp;. $350, 114-742~3802.

Get ready far Spring, call 814-

-::181

.~:c.

21'-

Soalb

0

71 0 Autos for Slle

Georae• Portable S.wmlll, don't
haul your logo to tha mill ju11 call
304-875-1 957.

z GITlin
3 Auti. holn
4 Anil olllere

3711111dee

0

BORN LOSER

;-

1Dt• • WD Honda 300 4 Wheil"' With Snow Blade, $4,200, 614·
'"&amp;.-7371 , After 5 P.M.

er.

Profenianal Tree Service, Com·
plate Tree Care, Bucket Truck
Sorvtce -50 Fl Raecll, Slllmp Removal, Free Eatlmattal In·
aurance, 2-' Hr. EmMgtnty Service -Call And Savel No TrH Too
Big Or Too SmoMI Bidwell, Ohio.
814-388 9843, 814-367·7010. '

REFORTIN6, SIR •.

For Solo: 0&lt;14 Stihl Chain Saw, E•- ·
cel.lent Condition, Never Tlbm- 1880 Dodga Caravan N- Fro,~t
ber~Wilh$275,814 388 ~Tilts, Brakel 6 Balta. Looh
Groat! V·&amp; 3.0 Uter, $4.8oo, &amp;14G.hl grinder mixer, NH 7ft hay- 245-0717.
•
. bine, Owan10ne 7h hlybln., 1211
di1c. All ,good cond. 1880 Dodgo Ram Van B-2sk
72,000 Milas. $8,000, Can Be
Seen At: Gallipolis Daily Trlbunl;t,
"":'=::::-:::::~~~-:-::-::--I '825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis

Utility ConltlciOr now HirinG Atrial Line Crewe &amp; UndergrounoCrewa for Telephone and Cable
TV. Send Areaume 10 P.O. Box
'658 Gaahen, Oh 45122 or L•v•
a Musage wiht Answering S«vloa 0(5131782.0501
.

.

~E TROOPS W~T TO
I&lt;NOW WtoW WE J.IAVE
TO STAND IN TilE RAIN ..

PRIVATE SPIKE

1189 Dodge Caravan 4 Cylindlrr,
Good Condition, $5.000. 614-4-4,$·
1124.
i,

~

Screen Printer EJiperienced Or
Will Train Tha Right Feroon, 614&lt;141-1492.

tce.

1GU Ford Bronco II, clean bo~~.

1985 Mauer Ferguson Tractor.

Cub tractor wlcultivators: runs
good, $1,100. 004-875-8688.

POsTAL JOBS
Start $12.08 /Hr., For Exam ~d
Application lnlo. Call 219-7898301 Ext. OHS81 9 A.M. ·9 P.M.
Sun -Fri.

992-2335 Spring cleaning

1tee ford. E150 Conve&lt;olon ~n,
Autoimalidl Cruise, 4 Datu&gt;e C~p­
talns. OUoeil Size Bench Fol dOIJ~
Excelltmt Exterior &amp; Interior
$5500 61H46-2847.
'

440-lell8.

Polloi &amp; Gov"t Joba U1 /Hr +
Benoflta, No Exp. Will Train, For
Appl And ~lo HI00-538-3040.

Brothers Conttructlon &amp; ·Home
lmprovamarill, 81 ~ -388- 8997
ConiBCt SIOYe Or BiH.

1 Sgl,, • •

ZIF8ble .wrltlr
31 &amp;upporl

Call out for advice

...----J.

-~---

610 Farm Equipment

Dlamof111 FJne, Tllfony Cut 113 Ct

Eleatrlc WhHichalta /Scooten.
!'iew /UIIId, Scooter IWhHichalr
Lilts, Stairway Elevalora, Lilt
Chairs, Bowman'• Homecart,
814-446-1283.

180 Wanted To Do

DOWN

By Phillip Alder

4x4, runt good, new tires. 304oolonl. 614-742·2457.
882·382~ loava mtiiiGO or 61 4·
84G NH Round Bali1r 481 NH 44&amp;-ll800'alll&lt; lor Pam.
Haybine. Both Excellanl Condi· 1988 Ranger 4.~• Supo&lt; Cab, V]&amp;
tion,' Andy Adotino Deiry, 814-370- f ' !~~!!'~a}ic: air, llbelglala tOppw,
2744.
614-ttl!-IOell atrr Spm. ,.

Concrete &amp; Pl11dc S.pdc Tonka,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallona Ron
Evan• Entet'prlns, Jackaon, OH
I.IIOQ-537-8628.
LIM Newt Appralaat vatue $1,000
Alll&lt;l111!1400. 814-448·2•118. 814-

M~lepon

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TH' VITTLES OR
TH' di055tp ?

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MOBILE UNIT DRIVER: MEIGS
Laat~·,M,rte German Sh•pherd, COUNTY
· :Appliconta Muat Have
lanG~ ..... 814-7~2-2532.
II HIGh School Diploma. Applicant• Muat Bo Wlilillll To Obtain A
70
YardSIIe
Commercial Drivers license With

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FEBRUARY12I

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.hoi ~o· The O.lly Sentinel

Monday, Februllry 12, 1...

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio News in Brief:--. Flood relief c·rews reach isolated ·sections
Man pulled from car victim of gunshot
CWVELAND - A man, who police thought had merely crashed
bis car, was actually suffering from a gunshot wound that proved fatal.

Terry Mutin, 2S, of Cleveland, was unconscious when be was pulled
from his car after it etaSbed into two houses about3:45 a.m. Sawrday.
Police said emeraen&lt;:y workeR did not realize Mutin had been shot
in the left si.de under his ann until they had removed him from the car
Mel were taking him to Fairview Hospital. He died there two boU!5Iat-

a:.
Mutin, who was found with a small amount of crack cocaine in his
, . possession, was in his car when he was shot, police said. The lilst bouse
be hit was damaged extensively, especially on its foundation.
Police could not ~y whether the car was moving when Mutin was
$bot.
•
Willie and Del~ Hampton live in the second house hit by the car.
"My husband heard the shot.!' Delores Hampton said. " And it wasn't but a few seconds and it ctasbcd and we both jumped out of the
bed IUid looked out the window."

PolicemtJn 's killer awaits sentencing
LANCASTER - A man who pleaded guilty more than two years
• ago to fatally shooting a Lancaster police officer must be sentenced
within 90 days, U.S. Magistrate Judge Michael Merz ruled.
Men ordered that John Wesley Frazier, 32, be sentencf'd for the Feb.
21, 1993, siJoo!ing of Officer Bren Malkwood. He was shot while chasing a suspect on foot after an armed robbery at a convenience store.
Merz agreed with Frazier's claim that he has been placed in double
jewaniY and cannot face the death penalty. He ruled that the trial court
must sentence .Frazier to either life with parole eligibility after 30 ~em
or life with parole eligibility in 20 yem.
Frazier's case stalled in October 1993 when prosecutors agreed not
to seek the dellh penalty.
Prosec11tors want Frazier sentenced to life with parole eligibility in
30 years on the murder charge and I0 to 25 years for the robbery charge.
The sentences would ~ served consecutively.
The defense has requested parole eligibility in 20 years and wants
the robbery sentence to be served concurrently.

helpin&amp;; their neighboR and welcomAcross the region, there were
ing tbe National Guard and other signs of renewal and survival.
relief workers when they finally
In the upscale Portland suburb of
carne.
Lake Osweao, the water receded IUid
John Fitch, who bought the old residents returned to begin cleanina
Mist Store in September. said he told up their once-luxurious homes, now
people in town this would happen. dank from the dirty Tualatin River.
They didn't believe him.
With 3-112 feet of waterin the liv''There have been people who!ve ing room of one $400,000 horne•. a
lived here all tbeir lives and didn 't grand piano that had been placed on
think it was coming," said Fitch, who cement blocks was flooded to its belstood around smoking with a "group ly. It still played when the water
of townspeople.
dropped.
Now, many had lost the things
The canal that carries the water
most dear to them, including photos, from Oswego Lake into the
clothing and china.
Willamette - now a muddy, chum"It's just devastating, especially to ing river - was linered with broken
the ord people out here," said Bob boat houses and smashed motorBuccholz, who lives a few miles boats.
south of Mist. "It's all they got."
At a community church service in
Up to 200 homes along the the town of Scio, near Salem, worNehalem River, which runs past shipers grieved over-the death of 8Birkenfeld and Mist, were destroyed year,old Amber Bargfrede, a local
or badly damaged by the flood.
girl who drowned Wednesday in a
A few .homes still were flooded culvert.
Sunday, but most were drying out. · In Woodland, Wash., a 4-footl
Under a brilliant sun, bedding and stuffed teddy bear, a bedraggled bow
clothing were spread out on lawns to around its neck, hung from a tree
dry.
limb where the water had left it.
"The water went down like someSlowly, roads and highways
body pulled the plug," said Buccholz. reopened. Interstate S between Port"It went out as fast as it came in."

J cksonvllle

'
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· By MARTHA IRVINE
.AIIOCI8ted P,... Writer
MIST, Ore. - In lush valleys
turned to watery mush, their rjvers
running high, brown and mean, the
rugged people of Oregon's north
coastal mountains feel they are the
Oood's forgotten victims.
Tiny towns with enchanting
names such as Mist and Jewell were
cut off for days by high water and
mud. Those driven froin their homes
tuned to Portland radio stations ·and
beard the attention heaped on the
city's waterfront and aftluent suburbs
50 miles southeast of here.
"-Nobody mentioned us," said
Tami Bellingham, a rancher from
Birkenfeld. "We felt lost."
The rivers and streams across the
Northwest continued their slow
retreat today, leaving behind a dispir·
iting trail of muddy destruction. The
death toll stood at seven from the
floods and mudslides in Oregon,
Washington, · Idaho and Montana.
Three people were missing in Ore·
gon.
As they waited for someone to
remember them, residents of Mist ran
out of food, laundry and patience.
On Sunday, they were cleaning up,

COLUMBUS - Gov. George Voinovich has approved clemency
requests ·involving pardons grants after a criminal served time behind
bars. He also granted commutations in which a sent~nce is reduced,
sometimes to time served, allowing the immediate release of a prisoner. A third category involves releasing prisoners in imminent dan·
ger of death from disease.
In 1995, Voinovich:
• Commuted Ronald Pecora, a former four-tenn Lorain City Council member who was serving three to 15 years for shooting at a car he.
thought contained juveniles who broke a window in his borne;
• Released Michael Kolbs, a convicted burglar, who was dying of
AIDS;
'
• Pardoned Deena Adlerstein Weiss, a Columbus woman convicted
of drug trafficking in 1981. She had worked with drug rehabilitation
programs for I 0 years;
·
• Commuted Robert Moore, 78, convicted in 1991 for shooting a
neighbor in a fight over a daffodil. Moore was dying of cancer.
·
-The Associated Press

!Report cites safety
:violations at Fernald

LOS ANGELES (AP) - ." Mystepous evidence found at the scene has
drawn the FBI into the investigation
of a freight train derailinent earlier
this month that killed two people.
"We called the FBI to look at
something that someone found in this
pile of wreckage," National Transportation Safety Board spokesman
Alan Pollock said Sunday.
Neither Pollock nor FBI
spokesman John Hoos would discuss
what was found or comment on the
possibility of sabotage. Pollock said

60 mph, before 45',of the 49 can
the NTSB often asks for the FBI's check it out."
How a failed signal would have plunged off a st~ mountain gradci.
help on possible sabotage cases.
'
An unidentified source told the caused the Feb. I derailment wasn't and exploded in flllliies. .
The conductor and a braltemari:
Los Angeles Times in Sunday's edi- clear.
The Federal Railroad Administra- were killed and the engineer"wu seritions "there is concern whether a signal was set improperly, or that it may tion has said there was evidence that ously injured.
have been tampered with." The the brakes on the Burlington NorthSabotage caused the deadly derail'
source added that the NTSB "uncov· em Santa Fe freight train had failed me!lt of an Amtdk passenser train i~
ered evidence as the wreckage was as the train started down a steep -Arizona last fall. Someone prieil
being cleared away."
grade.
·
loose a railthat sent Amtrak's 12-qr
Another anonymous source told - The train, which was carrying Sunset Limited passenger train into a
the newspaper: "lbey've seen some· dangerous chemicals, apparently desen gully 6S ,miles southWCII o(
thing odd. They want the FBI to accelerated to between 50 mph and . Phoenix. Asleqling car attendant wai
killed and 78 'people were bun.
:

Mothers and babies.
We pamper you both.
Just ask
Robin Johnston.

CINCINNATI (AP) - There to remain in their jobs at'ter being
;have been more than I,OQO serious found to be impaired by drugs or
Safety problems at the former Fernald alcohol; and radiation alarms that did
·, uranium processing site since a new not work because of power outages
fOnlrllj:tor took over cleanup opera- or dead baueries.
.
lions three years ago, according 10 a
_In 1ts_report Sunday,_ the Enqutrer
newspaper's analysis of internal s31d FERMCO gets patd only when
memos
.
·- 11 mee~s spec1fied cleanup goals, and
ReWrts by the cleanup contractor that it has received $932 ~illion so
.-Fluor Daniel of Irvine, Calif., and far - panty based on falstfied per, its subsidiary, Fernald Environ men- formance re~orts and mflated cost
tal ReStoration Management co. _ and work estimates.
,show that numerous safety rules and
Internal FE~CO .documents
. procedures were overlooked or did· show the c.ompany s semor manage. n't exist, The Cincinnati Enquirer ~ent officials ~new about the fina~­
; reported in a copyright story pub- &lt;:tal and repo':"ng problems, but did
' lished today.
httle .or nothmg to stop them, the
· The newspaper reponed Sunday Enqu1rer sa1d. .
.
_
; that FERMCO has cheated the gov- . Federal aud1tors began mvesbgat; ernment out of millions of dollars by mg the allegations last month a~r
·accepting payment for incomplete the newspaper contacted the Energy
: work and billing the government for Department. So far, they have found
:unauthorized work.
no evidence that supports the allega: FEI\MCO and the U.S. Depart- tions, said Jack Craig, area director
Iment of EneJ:IY, which owns the plant for the Energy Department. .
i 18 miles northwest of Cincinnati,
"Yes, th,~y w~re very .senous
:denied the 1\Ccusations and have, accusatiOns, . Cr31g satd .~n a tel~­
. schedl.\led a news conference today to phone mterv1ew S~nd~Y- _An audtt
; give their response.
team has been looking mto tt for over
; Uranium for the government's three weeks. It has not completed Its
1production of nuclear weapons was ~view yet, but. we have foun~ noth: refined at the I ,050-acre Fernald site mg to substantiate the aile gallons so
;from 1951 until July 1989.
far." .
.
.
Cr31g also. sa1d federal aud1tors
: .Westinghouse Environmental
' Management Co. of Ohio performed and Fluor Dan1el offictals have fobnd
: the first stages of the cleanup. Fluor no evidence of improper accounting
: Daniel, an international construction and billing by FERMCO.
:-and design c"ompany, was awarded
"As of today, they (Fluor Daniel)
! the $2.2 billion contract in December come to the same conclusion: That
; 1~ and FERMCO took over tbe they can 'I find anything 10 substan: site J:.O. t, !'993.
tiate the allegation," Craig said.
: Energy Department records
. Enquirer Editor Larry Beaupre
tobtained by The Enquirer showed s31d Su~y that the newspaper stood
• that mosr of the safety violations and by tts stones.
:.problems that have occurred at Fer~ newspaper. reponed today
nald 1 the have been identified that us exammatton of mternal
lby ~~~v~ment as tbe fault of reports found 78 c~s of radiation
:FBRMCO management, the newspa- contanun_auon, occasiOnal sa~ge
J·
"d '
and m1ssmg and mtsplaced contam· '
1Der¥J.
f
.
c
ld
.
;. - According to the records. those ers o ~ramum at .-erna .
. '
imanagement problems include failure
Cratg acknowledg~ that the stte s
)o adequately train workeR, fa!lure to safe~ record was poor In 1993-94 but
.
·t maintain safelY equtpment has,!mproved.
::ni'l,~oring or failing to follow
The data we have on safety per'E ·
· ~itt rules to prevent form~ce clearly shows there hu ·
: "pt~'l1; .115 Or radiation contamina- been Improvement on the stte over:
'~x OliO
the past two years," Craig said Sun·
·uon.
.
d
·h
; The pape~ said those failures led ay mg t. .
, .
•to
prObte.N such as storing
s.tuan Hinnefeld, PERMCO s VI~&gt;; drums·of ridioi.ctive waste too close president of safety ~ ~alth, satd .
·:
!her· workers who were allOwed ~ost of the contumnillon cases
•·
·.
mvolved workers' clothing.
•toP

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.

Robin Johnston works hard. And
· she wouldn't have it any other
way. That's because she's pan of a
special staff of nurses who devote
their lives to helping bring more
than 500 babies into the world
every year.
You see, our maternity staff at
O' Bieness Hospital has more nurses certified in obstetrical nursing
and neonatal resuscitation than
most hospitals our size. We are
also well equipped with the latest
in neonataltechliQ)ogy. So you
and your baby are in good hands.

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A hospilsl we CIUI
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shared the $27.7 million jackpot. The
prize goes to 1ft estimated f35 miilipn for Wedneldliy.
Twbts ib11 maida tile fine five
numbers; bUt miss ~PowO(,blll, will
$.100,000 ~.IIICI ~ weie 11 of
those. Two wpre.lpld m Clecqi~:Ancl ·
one ea~:h wu 1pld In ·eonnecucut,
Indiana,
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Keiltwlly, .
·Loui1ill"' ~~; NeW

State of the state
to tout majority's
accomplishments

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his presentation and making lastminute changes.
Other likely topics: economic
. development ,p nd his continuing
opposition to casino gambling.
"It is a typical State of the State
speech, looking at recent accomplishments and looking forward into
the future," Dawson said.
''I don't think you'll see many
specifics," predicted Scott Borgemenke, chief executive officer of the
state Senate. "I expect to hear all the
. things we've done under a Republican majority."

-

One of the major reasons why
Voinovich was not expected to

announce any major policy shifts is Bowl ftrst half," Voinovich said of
that the state's budget - which lays the first half of the legislative session.
out tbe two-year funding bl~eprint for "!think we probably had one of the
government programs - was com- most productive legislative sessions
pleted last year.
that we've had in anyone's memory."
In last year 's State of the State,
State Rep. Jane Campbell, D·
Voinovich talked· about welfare Cl6veland, said she hoped Voinovich
refoim, his desire to gain control over would reaffirm the state 's committhe State Board of Education and the ment to providing health care to lowBureau of Workers ' Compensation income children, the disabled and the
and a voucher program that would elderly.
allow parents in the Cleveland school
." I suspect he will talk about
system to send their children to pri· that, " she said. .
vale schools. '
Campbell, the No.2 House DemoHe got much of what he wanted crat, likely will be disappointed,
from the Legislature.
though, if she expected Voinovich to
"I think I'd describe it as a Super comment on the Democrats' renewed

SR 7 closing will ·necessitate
.-new two-lane construction

~­

New~

push for a tax cut.
"Absolutely not," Voinovich said
when asked by reporters about the tax
cut.
· Democrats last week pulled out a
tax cut package they proposed irr the
fall . It indudes a property tax freeze
for elderly hpmeowners, ·a $10,000
tax deduction for college expenses .
and an increase in the stale property
tax subsidy from 12.5 percent to 15
percent.
Voinovich said the state needs to
hold onto its $900 million-plus budget surplus and welfare contingency
fund to meet expected federal cutbacks and a possible economic downtown.

County
locates

.

tourism

and pan-gravel base," Mionard said.
By TOM HUNTER
"lbe
township is going to put some
Sentinel News Staff
more gravel on the road because of
State highway officials have
the . increased traffic, so we don't
closed both lanes of State Route 7
expect any majOr- problems in transnear Tuppers Plains due to'a growing
porting students by that route."
landslilk that began taking the road. Yoacham confinned this morning
way down a 50-foot embankment on
that
OOOT officials have considered
Saturday.
the
predicted
traffic increase on Old
The Ohio Department of TransSeven
Road,
and will work with
.ponation District 10 office in Maritownship officials to upgrade the road
etta decided to close the section of the
as a means for local traffic to detour
busy north-south state highway after
the slip area.
re-evaluatiqg the slide Monday .
Ot:X:)T also consulted with soil
"We are going to temporarily
specialists and officials with the
umzra&lt;le Old Seven Road so local
OOOT central office in Columbus,
that road. 1be official
.~,~~!lfding IO~X 'YQw;ham, pu~lj~
-":t;~""'"f"-·
'
-:·t1·
o--d&lt;1~fiiiiiifafrif
u-s. 50 to U.S. 1~~
information offiCer with OOOTOis~
we
thai
the heavy truck traftrict 10.
,
fic · in the area will maintain that
Tlde eectlon of StM• Routt 7, ,2 mt•
'"The closing was more due to condetour route," Yoacham said.
11011h ol P""*"J, will be • - lor al
struction than safety," Yoacham said. iNti
t w o - while OOOT ollclalo
OOOT hopes to sell an emergency
"The slide is pretty stable right now.
build 1 tomporooy roed 101 trolllc. Unlit
contract
for repairs to the highway
Ihal limo, tho dolour I* US 116wNilo
We just felt that the closing would
within
the
next month, while it could
Athene, to US-33 .uth tO PotnlfOY.
allow our work crews to move. in
he mid-summer before two lanes are.
q_uickly and begin work on moving
completed and open to traffic.
the south bound lane over, so that closure will be U.S. 50 west to
The slip came as a surprise as
one-lane traffic controlled by signals Athens, to U.S. 33 south to Pomeroy,
ODOT was monitoring the area for
ciln pass safely."
Yoacham said.
several inonths and completing plans
1be state will riow fill the area
Eastern Local Schools Superinadjacent to the southbound lane in the tendent Ron Minard confinned Mon- for repair work at the time of the slip.
"It really did come as a big surarea of the slip, and begin construe· day that Eastern's buses will use
prise.
We knew that it was moving.
lion of two new lanes, which could be Orange Township Road 294 (Old
and
the
plans were being drafted for
completed within four months. Offi· Seven Road) as a detour between
the
emergency
' contract. I was wordais hope to have 0 ne lane open for TuppeR Plains and Easiem High
ried
about
the
spring
rains causing ·a
traffic within the month, Yoacham School. The road is a half-mile loop
possible
slide,
but
the
warm weather
said.
around the area where Satunlay's slip
last week helped to trigger the slide,"
The official state detour for the occurred.
said
District I 0 Deputy Director
:'The township road is a section of
closing must folloiv other state and/or
federal highways. The detour for the old State Route 7. and is part-paved John Dowler.

funding
Fund-raising
helps avoid use
of general fund
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
1be Meigs County Board of Commissioners Monday found some additional money for promoting tourism,
but stopped shon of committing dollars from the county's general fund.
"We will leave what we have
appropriated stand at that dollar
amount," said Commission Vice

President Janet Howard.
Instead, Howard explained. the
board conducted some fund-raising.
"What we have done is we have
contacted people and businesses
throughoul the community ... and
we've done rather well. I feel," she
SLIP DAMAGE - Stale Route 7.near Tuppers.Plainsthaa been
added. with out giving a dollar
closed due to this slip which claimed lhe northbound lane of the
amount.
two-lane highway around noon Saturday. Transportation officials
Bob Gilmore. a Middleport Vii·
are now questioning the atebillty of the hl9hway's &amp;0\llhbound
lage Council member and a member
lana.
of the tourism committee. addressed .
the subject as a representative of the
"We figure the project will take begin start up a month lrom now. If Middlepon village government.
"We reali ze the importance of
two or three months of work for com- we have a really dry spring. compte·
tion
of
the
project
should
come
in
just
tourism
to our community," said
pletion. We have the project in emer·
under
four
months,"
he
added.
Gilmore.
gency status. We hope the project can
"It's ever-renewing. If we could
ever get tourism going in this area, its
a constant replenishment of new
people and new wallets that arc coming into the community.
"I think it not only benefits the
tern will be installed that will save the include installation of new chain-link fund.
"'The money raised by the com- business community, but it benefits
village from using 2,000 to 3,000 gal· fencing, repainting of the structure,
and removal of the wood frame munity for the pool will go only the entire area and we want to have
Ions of extra chemicals each year.
The new system will constantly stairs which currently lead to the top toward upkeep of the pool. We are the business here," he added.
Gilmore said council members
·
really pleased with the response the
recirculate. and refilter the water in deck of the pool.
had
dis cussed donating $2.000
A public meeting on the pool pro- community gave to this project. It
the pool, thus saving the village money over the long haul, Johnson said. ject will be held by the Middleport wouldn't have been possible for us to toward promoting tourism in the
A new deck addition will also be Recreation Commission Thursday at begin work without them." said Hor· county; a donation they approved at
the Middleport Village Council meet-· •
constructed and serve two purposes, 7 p.m. in council chambers at the vii· ton.
ing
later Monday (see related story).
tage
hall.
Repair
costs
will
be
paid
with
according to ,Mayor Dewey Horton.
Howard
said other villages and
"The main thing that we need now nearly $50,000 in donation s, .tabor
"The top of the deck will be used
businesses.
including
American Elecfor sunbathers, while the bottom is volunteers to help us with the and supplies given by village resitric
Power.
will
likely
follow sitit.
dents and businesses during the last
area under the deck will be used as a work," said Johnson .
"The reply that we have gotten has
Honon also noted that any mon· 18 months. A target completion date
picnic area and she,lter house," he
been
outstanding ... just by asking,"
ey
not
spent
on
the
pool
project
will
of
Memorial
Day
has
been
set
by
viiexplained.
she
said.
"It's a project I feel has been·
(Continued on Page 3)
Other changes at the pool will go directly into a pool maintenance .
very worthwhile and I do not want to

Middleport Council learns of startup date for pool repair
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport Village Council members received long-awaited news at
their regular meeting Monday announcement of a startup- date for
repairs to the Middleport Municipal
Pool in General Hartinger Park.
: ~epairs on the pool will begin Sat·
uiday, weather pennitting, according
to Arnold Johnson of the Middleporl
Recreation·Commission.
: The repair work will begin after a
ldng del~y by state officials in grant·
:iiJB variM&lt;:es on the proposals for the

Variances were granted on"every"·
thing at the pool , with the exception
of handicapped accessibilily. A new
series of ramps will be constructed to
make the facility handicapped accessible, Johnson said.
The 43-year-old, above-ground
pool has been closed since spring
1994due to repair demands. Prelim·
inary estimates on repairs to the pool
were set around $80,000. Cost for a
construction of a new pool for the ~itlage was estimated at $350,000.
Along with repairs to the electrical system and steel reinforcement
around the pool, a new filtration sys-

Pofe wios Iowa caucuses,
Buchanan
finishes second
..

!b MIKE GLOVER

eked out a victory in Iowa's presidential• caucuses but it was Pat
~uchanan who gloated today after a
~olid and surprising secohd-place
·showing left him crowding Dole for
a,perch atop the GOP field.
· The Iowa results underscored the
impo'rtanl:e of next-up New Hamp. sJtire, a troubling thought for Dole.
· His campaign stumbled there in
1988, while Buchanan's upstart 1992
f!Ut took life after a surprisingly
sttong New Hampshire showing.
' A subdued Dole declared his win
over B-uchanan "the first big step on
Olir roed." But Buchanan said this
-~Ominj that Iowa established him as
' .the one •conservative who can w,in
this nomination."
-Lamar Alexander claimed
moiiiCidUm with a third-place"finish
' ' .
.

,i

I

A Gannett Co.

Familiar themes to pepper address

~IOCIIIted Preat Writer
: DES MOINES, Iowa- Bob Dole

wet)'

·: o£S . MOINES·, Iowa (AP) ;None of the ticb"· .sold .for lhe

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 13, 1996

p~ect.

:··

Snow tonight, Jowl In
the zoe. Mostly cloudy
Weci11Hday, chance of
snow. Highs in the 308. ,

•

'

~~~-

What's more, we know how to
make yoor birth experience truly
memorable with special emphasis
on your very own birthing options
, and preferences. After all, it's your
baby. You ought to be able to have
it your way.
If you're pregnant or planning
to have a baby, give our maternity
staff a call to explore all the wonderful options that are available to
you. We '11 make sure you get the
special attention you and your
baby d"serve.

4-5-2-4
Buckeye 5:
3-7-10-21-24

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Preas Writer
COLUMBUS - Gov. George
Voinovich ·was expected to tum to
familiar themes today when he gives
his sixth Stale of the State speech.
"The governor uses every major
' PRACTICING - Gov. Gearge
speech
to talk about four areas that he
Volnovlch reh•rud hla atllte of
has
identified
as priorities: managefhe atllte s.,..ch l)f'l the siage of ment, education,
jobs and quality of
the C.pltof Tllllt8r In Columbus. ,
life,"
spokesman
Mike Dawson said
:The govamor was to deliver the
Monday as Voinovich was 1rehearsing
·spuch today. (AP)

\

o~{.

5-8-0
Pick 4:

Sports, Page 4

s!ilht
lndi·"

"

Pick 3:

State defeated
by Marshall ·

land IUid Seault reopened~
jafter beins closed for two daya by a
D)Udslide and bilh water. ~
84 through the Colwnbia River
Gorae was croseil fot the fifth lla)',
but crews boped .to ...pPen it by lallj
today.
•
While· the rest of the reaion w•
recoverinJ, the Yellowstqnc River ill
Montana was threateninato overrua
its banks. Volunteers were pl~einl
sandbags along the river 11 the town'
of Hysham.
.
A flood warning was issued for IIIIi
Yellowstone at "Giendive, where aii
ice jam was blcking up water. Resi•
dents of Sidney were wuned that thtl
river could rise another 2-112 feet by
Tuesday.
In Washington, preliminary s~
veys by the Red Cross es~
there were at least 750 homes with
major damage and 1,700 with
damage in 22 counties. Yakima
ana Nation officials said anothet
1,000 homes were damaged or alfeet~
·ed by flood damage.
1be cost to local, Stale and feder•
ai governments could approlll:h$120
million in Wl!$hington alone, olftcials
said.
.:.

·FBI ·drawn into probe of fatal train derailment

Voinovich grants clemency requests

Ohio Lottery

:I

••• I

' ~-.

that came after' months of lagging in
the polls.
"Pat ran well in the caucuses, but
in the eltd it's going to be a contest
between Bob Dole and me." Aleunder said as he made tbe rounds of tbe
network talk shows.
For wealthy publisher Steve
Forbes, a $4 million investment in
Iowa caucuses yielded only a foutlh
place showing and 'Texas Sen. Phil
Gramm could do no better than fifth.
That disappointing performance .
guaranteed Gramm would face a
campaign week filled with qqestions
about how long his run for the party's presidential
nomination could go
l
on.
Dole and Gramm . avoided the
day-afler talk show diagnosis of their
A WINNER IN IOWA- senate M8jorlty LHdar Bob Dole great·
disiiPPOinting showings, but the first . ad supporten Monday at e presidential caucus In Clift,
~ of business for their rivals today
Dolt rnede e brllf ~ btlfore the C.ICUS ~ISCI lo ¥0411
was to. put the best possible cast on
for • Rapubllcan prnl*'tllll C811dldate. Dole won • clellr-cut victhe restllts·
lory In 1M Iowa CfUCUIM. (AP)

1-.

· Racine teen
is sentenced
in fatal wreck

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Stllff
A Racine youth has pleaded guilty
to two counts of vehi~ular homicide
and one count of driving under the
influence of alcohol in the Novemljer
traffic deaths of two teenagers near
Letart Falls.
Jeffrey Ryan Martin; 17, pleaded
to the charges in Meigs County Juve·
nile Court Monday. Martin testified
in his own behalf, apologizing to tbe
families of victims Alysia M. Jenkins
. and Christopher C. Hendricks for the
events of Nov. 25, 1995, which
resulted in the 8ccident.
Hendricks, 18, Racine, and Jenkins, 17, Sil~r City, N.C., died after
. · their vehicle made contact with Martin's vehicle while he attempted· to
pass them on State Route 338, causing !hem to veer offtheroadwa)'and
(COntinued on Page 3)

see end ."

"We've got the ball rolling, and we
want to back out and let (the tourism
cominiuee) take care of it," she said .
Pomeroy businessman Anni~·
Chapman said commissioners have ·
helped the situation by going to bat .
for the committee.
·
"Your doing that has definitely
helped the situation and ~ sure need
that money of some kind,'" she said.
Commission President Fred Hoffman agreed the commission would
help with fund-raising, but said the . /'· ·
tourism commiuee would likely have
the same success.
'
.
"If you go out and ask some of '
these people, I think you'll get money," said Hoffman.
The action followed a meeting last
week between members of the
iourism committee and the commissioneR.
Members of the commiuee
approached the board Sel:king adjli. tiona! funding for lourism. The group
had requested ·an appropriation for
ibis year of $17,000.
(Conllnuecton Page 3)
I

I

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