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•

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
Eagle girls ·
advance in
tournament

Pick 3:
096
Pick 4:
4387

Supper Lotto:
20-23-2~32-40-41

Kicker:
354043

Sports, Page 4

Cloudy tonight, snow
shoWirs, low In 208.
Friday, snow showers.
Highs In 208.

•
Vol. 46, NO. :102

35 centa·
A Gannett Co. New•J)IIper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 15, 1996

2 Sectlone, 12 .....

-Let's go, ladies!-

Oak Hill police chief stabbed
David Ward suffers collapsed lung; Jackson County officials are puzzled·
OAK HILL (AP) - Jackson
County authorities are puzzled by the
stabbing of this village's police chief,
who says he woke up to find a knife
slli~k in his chest.
Chief David Ward suffered a collapsed lung and was listed in stable
cpndition today at Oak Hill Community Hospital. The town is in southem Ohio, 80 miles southeast of
Columbus

Ward told sheriff's deputies that he
and his son, who is about 12, were
lying on separate couches in the living room watching television Tuesday
night when they fell asleep. Ward's
wife, Octavia, came home later,
turned off the television and went to
bed, Sheriff Gregg Kiefer said.
"He said he was sleeping when he
heard a noise or something caused a
reaction," Kiefer said. "He staned to

' roll, felt a sharp burning pain in his
chest, stood up and saw a knife protruding from his chest."
Kiefer said Ward pulled the knife
out and woke hi s wife, who called
911.
The sheriff had no motive or suspeel§. Nothing was taken from the
house and no one else was injured.
The hospital said Ward could not
accept phone calls.

"It '.s not uncommon for people
, to
be angry at police officers," Kiefer
said.
He said there had been some
inconsistencies in the·Ward s' stories ,
which they had worked to reconcile.
It is not ~ecessari ly significant that Ward did not see his altacker.
"We 're examining the oddities, "
he said. " We can't discount the
description by the victim."

Sarah Fisher appointed coordinator for
Pomeroy's downtown revit~lization project ,
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel news steff

!

IIMIIIGHT • ._TAX IDITION

&lt;.

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What's -gross Income:?

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l'iotbs from hobbies, IIDCk div-

sive a written' repol1 ' to your
idendS tmd uneniployment com·
employer eachmontb you get tiP!
pensation. What do all these have
of S20 or more. ·
in conlmoll? All ue oonsidaed
l'aJ fuel OD odd,Jolll.·too
part of your pDSI income ·- the
Dld·you 'make $400 or more
same u your waaes or any other workina'foryounelfordoinJjobs
iiiCOiile you earn that's not specifon lbe side. Chances an:. you
ically excluded by ·law. All 8J1liS
should pay self-.ploymentrax.
income is added toselher tO find · 'Oiis is a Social Security and
out if you owe tax and how much.
Medic:ire tax ·for pcqite who
Here an: some other examples to wort for lbemselves. You •n need
10 file Form 1040 as well as ·
considei' when filins your 1995
incofne tax return.
Schedule SE.
lbey, must-fi~ a tax return: This.
Awuda, pr'- 111111 adler
Cilll ltd4elil'lf'hroooa
lljl!IIICS JC)everyone', not just U.S.
wlnnlnp
•
·
If a fiJI!IIIci~ institution, credCJiizens Or residenra.
Awards, contest prizes or
it union or government iiency
. For more iufwpweltw1
drawings,JamblinJ or other cash
cancel&amp; or f.!Jrgives Your debt of
For details, call I·S00.829winnings an: tuable ,income.
S600 or IIIOie, yOii will pt Form
3676 ·to get 1ny or all ofthHOI' Cars, boats, and other noncash
1099-C sliowinslhe amount This
lowinc
free Pllblic:aliona: (Eii&amp;llah
prizes an: included as income It form is also sent to lbe IRS. The
l~guaae):S19.
U.S. TazGuidtfrir
lheir fair market value.
canceled amount is inl;omc to you
AI141U:
525,
TIUllbk
arrd N011Tues..rtlpl
· tmd must be repOned on your tax
toxabk
ltKQ~M;
531,
Repomn,
Tips an: wases and must be return. · ·
l¥11N:ome: 533, &amp;f/-~
reponed 111 incolllc on your tax
Eta)eDe'alw 'e ll•.• • . .
Tax; 1244, Emplo.yu's Doily
return. This includes the value of
Anyone who.emtSorreceives
ftecotrl of 7ips tllld Report Ill
noncash tips; lib passes, tickets, income from sources in the Unit·
Employer:
alld (Sptmuh. tangoods or servicca. YoU al10 must ed S!lle&amp; needs !!' dctennine if
B""'e)579$P, Conto,.._.itJ

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diffmnce on whether a person
gets a refund or owes more laX"

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Starting in 1995, the Internal
Revenue Service ~uires a Social
Security number (SSN) for each
dependent, except fOJ' tt . child
born in lbe last two months of
1995. No SSN, or an incorrect
SSN, will delay any refund a per·
s6n has coming. To get an SSN,
call the local Social Security
. Administration office and ask for
Form ss.s, "Application for a
Social security Number Card."
For working people who qual·
ify (or the eaned income rax creelit (BITC}, the Credit amount will
increue in 1995. The amount a
, person can earn and still be·eligible for lhf&lt; ~~ inc~, 190·
, 1't!C BITC is·now available to'
military•tJeliOilllehtatlonecl out- '
side lhe United states on extend:...- ed active·duty. To claim to cred. Jt, they must, of course, meet all
the EITC ~uimnents.
Al$0, mamed nonresident
aliau. may be ellslble for the •
Erl'Cillbey elect to be b 1111d as
icaidenl . . . rur lhe ClllljJe year.
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llllai cannot_~ tbe'Cidt
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people sbopld be awn of their
rights u -taxpeyen. Hole's wbat
the law lays: ~llllllt 111 fllr
treatment by lb' ~~·
People Me -~~VICY IIIII
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riJht tol(!llCIIID IRS ClWNM''a

Dtclaraciotl de I,.,#o R,J,r-· ~ve
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The IRS hu laX !011111, pabij. ·
Wut
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cations- lid .ochel- lniORiiatiOn
829-3676 for
availule·Qn-1~ 1b IICCeiS lbe
Your ~~-lin 11.1 a
,lnrer:n-J Reventic Information .

~ (IRIS) oil FedWOI'Id bY
modem, dial 703·32l-8020. .0r

lotondualubehlallidvillN(f.orld.p); file lrllllrer
Potuwl (ftp.fedworld.p}; or
World
Wide
. Web.
(http:llwww.IISII'e&amp;J.pv}. 'Rlcbnical aasi-.ce ilmlillble ar7Q3..
487-4a.
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net

D•·--er·- · ~._111
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· · 'SomelieilPieloclllldwitbiu
deduecnederal disl•ar -

may. get some lielp from ail
unusual soun:e - the IRS. They
IDlY be able to claim 1 dj• 'r
loA on 10 tllllellded tax retum for
list year llfd Jet 1 ~ now of
tucs ,&amp;a!dy''plid. Call I.SOO.

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well as federal unemployment laX
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DIYOrcH PIGpll
and any federal in~ laX wilhs~ dedUCtion amounts Scicnal $,ecun!J laX IS ~ 1 .200. .
muat report alimOny
held from ~ wortrer's· wages.
hav~ula~uetifor 199' to~3,900
For more mfonnatioll on rax
However, waces paid to someone
!« ~ $6.SSQ f--: ~eel ~1- chtutges; call 1·~3676 ,aoo·
Report alimnay you recei~ or
who is under age 18 ll any time
mg JOintly or quabfytns wtd~ free Publication 553, H•gltpay on Form l040. If you pllid
durins the year ue exempt from
ow(er), SS,7SOfor head of house-· lights of 1995 Tax Challges. ,
alimony, you may be able _to
Social Security and Medican:
hold and $3,27.5 for married fil~ IRSd~~ ~· pu~- ~it, wlletha-ornot you itlmraxes, unless lbe worker's princiing separately.
ca . ns an ~"" m.onnauon • ~ze doductiona. You riJull use
pal job is to provide household
. And fOr 1995, the Jlllllimwn
available on-bae. Th 11CC;e5S the . Form I 04(); yo~~ tinnot use Form
1040A or 1040EZ. l'ublicldon
services.
amount of wages and self~~s;nue~Ser504,
Divorced ar Scpln11 ~ ZodiHo~ld .employets should employment income sub'eci to
d'al ?on03 321 S020 by
check thetr withholding or esti·
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m, I
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viduals, explail)l tt._ ~ rules.
maled laX paymeniS to make sure
they will cover the amounts th8t
may be due bcciuse ofemploy~
WO~RIED·ABpUT
FINANCIAL FUTURE? ,, - ·
ment taxes. And· don't forget to
give workm Wilh Sl,OOOor more
in wages a Form W-2, •1Wage and
.UNHAPPY
WITH THE ANSWERS YOU'VE .BEEN GETTlNG?
.
'
.
Tax Statement."
The 19.9.5 standard mileage nite
·COME TO THE SECURITY OF YOUR COMMUNITY!
for using one's car for business is
_up a pellll}' to 30 cents a mile. The
special rate for rural mail carriers
is up to 45 cents a mile.
We'll ''Work With YOu'' to help you make the most of your
Tbe self-employed health
inSUfiiJICC deduction that expired ' · future wit~ a retirement plan that Is strong and secure to meet
~t
end of 1993 has ' been
. YOUR goals for thl!,:future. We'fl also help you keep your plan
relJ:Oaetively .reinstated. TbQse'
whO would have !leeR entitled to
.
In actl~n. We hav•·retirement acco_y,nts for all ages and _
the ljeduction in I?94 can file
I lncom,••
'811, your future 'ls our future•.
· Form 1040X, "Aineiiaed · U.S.
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COME IN l'ODAY AND' SEE WHAT .WE'RE DOING TO BECOM~
amount of 'this· deduction has
increiSed for 199S.
. Also for 1995, people with
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bC ible to use Fonn 1040EZ, the
aiw.Aielt tax-tono: ··
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A 26-year-old Pomeroy man has
been indicted on five charges stemming from the January robbery of the
Salvation Army house in Pomeroy. .
. Brad Robinson was indicted on''
two charges each of robbery and kidnapping and one charge of aggravated burglary. The indictments were
filed late Wednesday morning following a session of the Meigs County Grand Jury Tuesday.
He is accused of breaking into the
old Salvation Army house at liS Buttemut Avenue during the evening of
Jan. 15' and detaining two elderly
women tl\ere while he and a juvenile
accomplice ransacked the building,
stealing an undetermined amount of
cash.
. .
.
Although not tRJured, Dora Wtn ing, 90, and her daughter, Helen
Townsend, were bound and gagged
with duct lllpe during the robbery.
Townsend was there taking care of
Wining who had just been released
frqm the hospttal.
If found guilty of all five charges,

Robinson mlly face more than· 60
years ·in prison, according to Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lcntes.
Meanwhile, a 14-year-old Midaleport youth is· currently spend_ing
time in an Ohio Dcpanme,nt of Youth
Services facility after pleading guilty
to one count each of robbery, kidnapping and burglary stemming from
the incident.
Joshua Paul Cremeans pleaded
guilty to the charges on Jan . 17 and
was sentenced by Judge Raben Buck
to the youth facility until he reaches
the age of 21.
Until last month, Mrs. Wining had
operated the Meigs County Salvation
Army from the home.
Robinson is being represemed by
Vinton County attorney and former
prosecuting attorney John G. Gosling.
He is currently free to attend
funeral sef.vices for his mother in
Columbus, according to Lcntes. He is
scheduled to repon back to the Meigs
County Jail Monday morning.
· ·
·

Sen. Gramm· withdraws
from presiden·tial race

:VPVR

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Pomeroy man indicted
·on charges stemming
tro!JJ January robbery., __. :

flllclipp.
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lhloup lhe Pmblan ~
Off~e:e if they · UJ;biO·ifO

Tax changes fer:.·1995· .

Be awa~ of tax law changes
.that could affect the bottom line
·o f your 1995 income tax rYtum
Each year, there an: usually a
few- changes to the rax law that
people need to know to file corl'e(:t returns. Some could make a

Eastern as1l1tlnt coach Peul Brannon glvn some encour·
agement to the plsysrs during a break In the action In Wedt tel
day nlghl's Division IV I8Ctionlll first-round game against Trimble. For the story ol ,the Eagles' 51-40 victory and other photos ol the contnt, Page 4. (Sentinel photo by Tom Hunter)

I

I

WASHINGTON (AP) - Texas
Sen . Phil Gramm dropped out of the
Republican presidential race Wedneday, declining to endorse front-runner
Bob Dole ~ taking a slap at. ~ cbiCf
rival in New Hampshire, Pat
Buchanan.
"Our pany cannot follow 1M path
·of protectionism, " Gramm told a
Capitol Hill news conference
announcing his withdra"'al in the
aftermath of a weak showing in
Iowa's GOP caucuses on Monday.
" The ~e always has been a reces-

sive gene in the American character
that has found protectionism appealing," Gramm said. a poke at
Buchanan, who has made his opposition to free trade agreements a
keynote of his campaign.
Gramm, once .considered Dole's
chief rival for the nomination, said he
had.sotten the message from his poor
showing in Iowa and, bef~ that, in
Louisiana.
" When the vorers.speak, !listen,"
he said.
Continued on pap 3

9th Ohio .DlstrlctAppeals Court
overturns lower court rull.ng on
license suspension for drug use
AKRQN (AP) - The 9th Ohio license that resulted, however, and
District Court of Ap'peals has ruled .it Akron Municipal Judge Elinore
is legal to suspend the driv~r·s lieens- Marsh Stormer ruled last March that
es of people cQnvicted of minor drug suspension of the driver's license was
offenses.
disproponionate to the crime.
. · The coun's decision Wednesday . "The coun recognizes that the
ovenumc;d a lower coun ruling ihu • state hi\S a legitimille interest in pro·
it was unconstitutional to sw;pend the rooting highway safety and discour. driver's license of someone eonvict- agjqg drug abuse," she said. "Howed of a minor drug offense.
ever, by choosing to treat possession
The case dealt with Douglcts Wait, of small amounts of marijuana as a
who was a passengC{ in a car 'stopped minor misdemeanor .. . the legislafor speeding in Akron last year. An lure r'nade a policy statement. "
officer smelled marijuana tmd did 1
The appeals court, in a decision
search, and Wlit was chqed with lbe written byJUdae Daniel Quillin, dis-·
ft1inor misdemeanor of possession.
agleed, ruling that the punishment
He appealed the automatic six- was appropriate.
month suspension of his driver 's

'.

''

~

.;

Beautification as a finishing touch
to Pomeroy's downtown revitalization
project was discussed and a coordinator was named at Wednesday's
meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants
Association held in the Bank One
conference room.
Sarah Fisher was namCd to the
position and will work in cooperation
with the Pomeroy Downtown Design
Review Committee. Emphasis will be
on developing landscaping and beautification ideas for the downtown historic area with all proposals to be presented by the coordinator to the
Review Committee.
Mike Stroth, revitalization consul~ who proposed the po~tion of
btautifieaiibll edbllllll~(or, said that
Fisher will be provided with copies of
the finished drawings for the riverfront parking area projects for her use
in coming up with beautification
plans. As pan of her role as coordinator, she will be seeking funding
from local organizations for the work,
he reponed.
Discussed at length as one facet of
downtown beautification was

primarily into the $14,000 salary of m:nament sale. It was also noted that :
Farmers Bank has contributed $50 to·
the parking meter maid.
A suggesti on that perha)1s that the advenisi ng.
Dianne Lawson reported that new
position could be eliminated met
ornaments
featurin g the counhouse
with objection from Mayor Frank,
. Vaughan who explained that someone will be on sale in May, replenishing
; would have to be on the streets to be the fund which has provided money
: sure that there was not abuse in the for village Christmas decorations.
Since Heritage Weekend downI areas designated for shon -term park. ing.
town activities are being discontinued
Mills said that some proposal this year, it was decided to have the
needs to be made by the merchants to duck derby at another time, perhaps
Council before April and with that it during the Stemwheel Festival. More
was voted to set up a public meeting involvement in that festival was prowhere input could come in from mer- posed by Chapman who is active in
chants and others interested in the queen's contest and parade. She
whether parking meters remain or are suggested that perhaps the group
removed .
could serve as sponsor for the cosNamed
to
that
committee
were
tume contest providing prizes in both
SARAH FISHER
Ann Chapman, Bobbie Karr, and the adult and c~ildren categories.
:
removal of1Jatking meiers. Sandee Brenda Roush. The committee will
The 12th annual fashion show was
Mills, liaison between the Merchants announce a meeting time.
announced for March 29 at Pomeroy
• Pres ident Susan Clark reponed Elementary School. A planning sesAssociation and Pomeroy Village
Council, reponed on suggestions she that Pomeroy/Middlepon is to be fea- sion was set for 9 a.m. Wednesday at .
had received including parking ti ck- tured in Ohio magazine next month, McDonald's at which time a chainnan
et invalidation with a sales receipt including the cover picture, and told and committees will be named.
from a local merchanl and limited of the Pomeroy Merchants advcnisMembers were reminded that dues :
time parking. Another suggestion ing program . A half-page has been are payable now.
was for assessing all merchant§ a fee purchased which includes a listing of
A decorated cake inscribed "New
to make up for the loss of village membe(s of the association with the Beginning" was served by Mrs. Fishincome from that source which goes $1366.38to come from the Christmas er.

Senate sidesteps issue on adoption by gays
COLUMBUS(AP) -Asuburban ents are as well adjusted as those of
Cleveland lawmaker nearly sc uttled heterosexual couples .
Logue added that there are many
one of Gov. George Voinovich's pet
gay
parents tn Ohio now.
bills with a last-minute amendment
"To tell their children there is
that would have prevented homosexuals from adopting children or something wrong with gay people
whose parent is, I think . a disgrace,"
becoming foster parents.
she
said.
"I do not believe homosexuals are
The
Senate ultimately sidestepped
the proper role models or capable of
the
issue
by voting 20-11 to table
providing the proper environment
Suhadolnik's
amendment. It then
for children," state Sen . Gary
Suhadolnik, R-Strongsville, said went on to approve, 31-0, the bill
designed to speed Ohio's adoption
Wednesday.
"What 's going to happen to these process .
Suhadolnik said he was unlikely to
children when they see Dad hug Dad
introduce
a separate bill aimed at banor Mom hug Mom?"
Nothing. said Patricia Logue, an ning homosexual adoptions.
Only two states - Florida and
attorney with the Midwest office of
the Lambda Legal Defense and Edu- New Hampshire - specifically ban
cation Fund. a legal advocacy orga- gay and lesbian adoptions. Ohio is
governed by a 1990 state Supreme
nization for homosexuals.
Coun
ruling that said the state's laws
She said every study has shown
that"children of gay and lesbian par- do not prohibit homosexuals from

becoming adoptive parents.
Sen. Judy Sheerer. D-Shaker
Heights, said Suhadolnik's amendment detracted from the bill , which
was the result of nearly five years of
work by the Voinovich appointed
Ohio Adoption Task Force. The bill
now heads back to the House for consideration of Senate chan ges.
Sen. Janet Howard, R-Cin cinnati,
said the bill would help the I ,700
Ohio children waiting for adoptions.
"II is not uncommon for these
children to wait more than four years
for a permanent placement, " Howard
said.
By streamlining the application
process and standardi zin g procedures
stalt widc,thc bill will cut the wai t to
between nine months and two years,
she said .
·
Voinovich spokesman Mike Dawson suggested the governor would

have opposed the addition of
Suhadolnik's amendment to the bill. ·
," He generally opposes adoptions
by gay couples . but believes these .
decisions arc best made by local professional s who can assess the specific situation and who can determine.what is in the best interest of the indi- vidual child." Dawson said.

'
The measure would
have had a
direct effect on Mary Jo Hudson, a
Columbus attorney. She and her lesbian partner are considering adopting
a child .
"This kind of thing is real. It
affects real, ordinary people." she .
said.
·
Gender aside, Hudson sa1d, she
and her partner would be id eal adopti ve parents, with a stabl e relati onship, a house and good jobs.

House votes to .keep current highway speeds ·
- Agreed on a 94-1 vote with
COLUMBUS (AP) - Speed limits on interstate highways across Senate changes in a bill to provide,
Ohio would remain at current levels $10 million in state aid over the next
under a bill the House approved and two years to help create rural industrial parks. The bill that Rep. John
sent to the Senate.
Carey.
R-Wellston, sponsored now
House Transportation Chairman
•
goes
to·
Gov. George Voinovich.
Sam 'Bateman, R-Milford, won pasVoted
79-18 for a bill Rep.
sage on a 75-22 vote Wednesday.
But representatives defeated an Michael Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
emergency clause needed to let the sponsored to permit public coll eges
bill take effect before March 3, the and universities to panicipate in
deadline for passage under a federal regional ~ouncils of government. The
law that permits states to set their own bill now goes to the Senate.
6ateman 's highway bill would
highway speeds.
'
retain
existing speed limits but allow
In other action, the House:

a study of cenain hi ghways where
speeds might increase from 55 mph
to 65 mph.
Representatives rejected an
amendment that Rep. Joan Lawrence,
R-Gal cna, offered to boost the limit
to 70 mph on interstates.
Lawrence said an increase was
logical, reasonable and not unsafe.
" Mayhe I'm the only one wh o
wants to dri ve 70 miles an hour. If so,
I apologize for taki ng your time. But
it does see m to me that this is our
chance to do it," she sa1d.
Bateman said hi s committee had

detec ted no support in the state for an .
increase.
" In a survey we saw, 75 percent of
the people of Ohio prefer to drive like
they' re driving right now," Bateman . ·
said.
.
,
Rep. Damel Troy, D-Will owick, •
said statisti cs showed 80 percent of .
drivers already were traveling at 72
miles an hour.
" It sounds to me·like they're voting with their feel on the gas pedal," , ·
Troy said. "That seems to be the '
speed that most folks are able to feel ;
Continued on page 3
•

Prison inmate says he's peacemaker, not a leadei:
ciNCJNN~ (AP.)- The inmate
accused of orgll!'izing the 1993 riot in
which 10 people were killed at Ohio's
m~ililuml.security prison says he ,
was a·peacemaker, nol a leader.
CariQS. Stmders, 33, testified for
the fi~ umc; Wednesday in Hamilton
County Com11'1()n Pleas Coun, where
he is being tried on.IS charges. Some
of them ~~ cleilth-penalty specifiCI\tiOIIs.
.
He is .charged with aagravated

murder in the deaths of Corrections
Officer Roben Vallandingham and
inrriate Bruce Harris. He al so is
charged with the attempted murder of
another inmate, kidnapping a guard
and felonious assault against two
guards.
Prosecutors alleged that Sanders,
.a leader of Muslim inmates at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Fai:ility
at Lucasvill~. plannec,l the riot in rclaliation Tor the warden 's plans to test

•

inmates for tuberculosis. But Sanders
testified that he advised Muslims to
submit to too test, even though they
believed it violated their religion .
"When the brothers asked me
what was my position , I quoted from
the Koran and said it ~as a situation
where we were being compelled, but
it was the lesser of two evils and it
was a decision they would have to,
make," Sanders said. "I encoutaged
them to take it."

'

Defense lawyers contend that •
Sanders is being made a scapegoat, ;
that he actuallr ,helped p'otect !
inmates and negotiate an end to the :
11-day standoff.
.,
Sanders testified · that another '
inmate, Leroy Elmore, encouraged '
the uprising in which nine inmates '
'
and Vallandingham were killed.
"His position wu that oow is lite :
time for Muslim~ to ~ a stance on ;
religious issues tbat we were being !
deprived of," Sanders said.
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�7

~\:Commentary

Thursday, February 15, 1996
•

I

Thul'lday, February 15, 1tM.

Friday, Feb. 16
A.ccuWeathe,e forecast for daytime conditions and

0
' The Daily Sentinel ' ~~,!.!:.~~ ~~ .~~~~~~.u.,.-.g~ ...-- ~·....
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

•

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publleher
CHARLE~E HOEFLICH
Glnenll M111ager

mcnts and cures for anemia and
.osteoporosis). Whose jobs did they
steal? How many American jobs did
they create that Buchananism would
have destroyed?
'
_
_
To Lamar Alexander: Excellent
Republican villain by driving moder- work. You could be the last guy standates away from the party, or a hero by ing. You need an issue. School vouchbringing some angry voters into the . el'$ is a iood one.
party.
To Steve l'oriles: Your fast rise led
It's now your tum in the barrel. to inflated cxpectatiQns irian organiYour protectionism ends up making zation-dcpendenl caucus state. But
your voters pay higher prices. In _you've-become a national ·player in
every mall in America there would be just a few months. You brought
a "Buchanan w" on athletic shoes, important ideas onto the anvil.
sweaters, furniture and a thousand
There is nothing wrong with going
other items. Your immigration policy negative, but it seems personally
. would not only crackdown on illc- ·negative. How about "My opponents
gals, but also on legals, which would · are good, decent, honest, patriotic
have kept these people out of Amer- public servants. Tile tragedy is that
ica: Michael Chang, Albert Einstein, -the taJt system has forced even such
Colin Powell, Mario Cuomo, Bob honorable men to serve the loopholeHo~. Jonas Salk, &gt;'.ndre Agassi, depen~t special interests"? Agree
computer entrepreneur Andre Grove with Dole that a flat tax will have to
and Drs. Charles C.Y. · Pak and Fu- be shaped by many playen; it''s true.

ed by the reiJgtous nght, .how come
three of the top four candidates were
moderat~s? Exposure can lle bought,
clecttons cannot. Nega_tive ads. are
doub!e-edged swords. The top two
candtdates were the only ,'two who
have run for preside_nt l)efore. Three
of the top four eand1dates have never held federal clect1ve office. The
press · c?v~rage was over picayune
economtc tssues beca_use the candir
dates mo~tly agree With each other.
Values Will emerge.
!o Bob Dole: Be yourself. Don't
believe that no one hked you when
you were portrayed ~ a sardonic
'!learue. Amenca doe~n t need a plasttc puftball for prestdent. Anyway,
' · people can't change. Make this case:
:'be Repubhcan sweep m 1994 was
Important and healthy. As president
you can smooth off its rough edges
and make it ~ork, not-as a Republican Revolut1on but a Republican
Evolution.

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

..

:··Letters to the editor

extremely well, and you'll keep doing
well. You're a very smart guy. You're
not going to win. You can be a
·

Ben Wattenberg

Brewery building a nuisance
Dear Editor,
·, . . I'm concerned about the brewery
· , building at Condor Street.
" · Three years ago, a heavy snowfall
·• fell, ·collapsing the roof. Our children
, in the neighborhood and many others
· :come around to go in it, especially
' during warm weather I see this happen.
..
., . . Children are vulnerable to these
sites left to harm them in our society,
' three years are going on toward four..
Even a historical property should be
,~:!aken out of a child's harming and

away or construction of its repair not
to mention traffic traveling by here.
What about those in question? The
question is how will some commu~i­
ty official have some of the say for
our neighborhood and take the building under some codes instilled by the
town laws.
Children are here and to stay here.
Why make us move away? Why not
the building? Please listen, please.
· Patty Morjan
Pomeroy

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;Dear Editor,
1;; ,
To the taxpayers of Southern
f:tocal School District: .
't' :
The new school plans realq~ look good on paper. But, is it
: •.tlftOther Portland School levy where
;~$11 the certified employees got high
;:taises: Why not take the money we
1 ;~~ve and upgrade and build onto the
~ ~schools we have?'We have comput;•ers in junior high and high school.
:~~y do we need them in our grade
: :~chools?

•· •
We need to get back to the
;:Lasics of. school where the teachers
;:ilre teaching our kids, not computers
i~nd hi-tech equipment.
!: ,
Let's consider the tax payer.
;lAt least one-half are seniors and are
: • ~n a fiKed income. Medicare is under
'!fire to be cut, Social Security is going

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r•~

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Can't afford more taxes

down the tubes, so where will th,e
money come from to pay .taxes. The
other half of our residents, some work
and pay taxes, the rest are on the giveme programs and they don't pay t&amp;Jtes.
Now our school board ..
There are five of them. They get $80
a meeting each. There is to be 14
meetings this year. Eighty dollars
times five equals $400. Four-hundred
dollars times 14 equals $5,600. Turn
' I)
that back in. Why do we need a local
'
and county board? Southern wages L------------,------------------~---------J
are entirely too high. I don't make
$30,000 to $75,000 a year. I can't
afford more taxes.
Guess how I'm going to
vote.
E. Shockley
Racine
Back when Ronald Reagan was the Postal Service had a monopoly on accept .if the Postal Service had . since the court-ordered breakup of ·
governor of California, he made an first-class mail. Moreover, the Postal markedly improved its reliability. AT&amp;T in 1984, long-distance phone ·
observation about the nation's postal ·Service so zealously enforces this But the evidence suggests that the rates have fallen by 66 percent That's :
system. "Some 25 ·years ago," he monopoly that in recent years it has Postal Service loses or throws out mainly because AT&amp;T no longer ;
several hundred million pieces of · enjoys a monopoly over long-distance '
said, "you could make a long-dismail each ·year.
service and must offer rates and ser- •
tance
call
on
a
privately
owned
teleto call in for someone to work. There
Joseph
Perkins
Consider
some
of
the
recent
postal
vice that is competitive with MCI, ~
was probably a hundred people there. phone system from San Francisco to
Just across the street was a New York for $28. For that same sent out &amp;;,ned postal inspectors to horror stories. A Rhode Island mail- Sprint and mol'll than 500 other, :
'
flop house, or a mission, for bums. amount of money, you could send audit the mail rooms of private busi- man was arrested after 94,000 letters smaller carriers.
nesses. Since 1991, at lel!St 21 com· were found in his backyard. A Boul- . Prior to its bleakup into a long-dis- ,:
Early of a morning they would come 1,376 letters.
"Today;" he continued, "you · panies have been hit l'(j)h more than der, Colo., carrier was arrested after ' lance carrier and seven smaller, ~
over there to try to get a job so they
could
make the same telephone call $500,000 in postal fi!I€S. Their crime three tons of undeliverable mail was 1 regional telephone companies, AT&amp;T ;
could get some money so they could
buy some booze to get drunk on. for $2 and a half, and for that amount was sending out letters by private discovered in his house. A.Chicago :controlled roughly 80 percent oftele- •
They would hang around there until you can only send 41 letters. So the overnight couriers (like FC~feral letter carrier was brought up on , phone servite in this country. That's ;
almost noon, then they would go over government is investigating the Bell Express) that postal inspectors charges after it was discovered that he . roughly equivalent to the market ;
to the mission for their dinner. I usu- System!"
deemed insufficientlv "un1ent" -- hid 40,000 pieces of mail in hjs truck. . domination tliat the U.S. Postal SerIf a private company had been . vice presently enjoys, with its :
Reagan's remarks come to mind that could have been sent by firstally stayed until about 2 and then left.
guilty of such lapses in service, it : 100;000 workers and annuaiRvenues
I hated to think I had to min· amid news reports that the U.S. class mail:
•
gle witn that kind of people because Postal Service plans to spen\1 $90 milBut the reason so many business- would have gone out of bUsiness a 1of $55 billion .
long
time
ago.
But
the
Postal
Service
'
"Ma
Bell"
was
a
venerable
insti·
lion
this
year
on
an
elaborate
adverthe most of them were drunk right at
es and, _increasingly, individuals are
is
able
to
get
away
with
its
less-than·
\
tution
in
this
country.
Nonetheless,
·
the time they were over there. But I tising campaign designed to show that looking for alternatives to the Postal
was in a position where I couldn't the 219-year-old quasi-governmental Service is because first-class mail has ·reliable first-class inai} delivery (at ·consumers profited from the breakup ·
; ever-increasing prices) because it's of her monopoly over the nation's
institution is not only dependable, but gotten slower and costlier.
help myself.
[the
only game in town.
telephone service. Tile U.S. Postal
There was a recreation park also a bargain.
Indeed, the Postal Service itself
. Postal Service spokeswoman acknowledges that a first-class letter ! That's why Congiess needs to end Service is a similarly venerable instiright next to us, and they had a roller
coaster there, but it was in the winter, Robin Minard says that these self- took 22 percent longer to deliver in tbe Postal Service's monopoly over' I tutiC?D. Andlike Ma Bell before, the ·
and it was closed down then. It was promoting "image" ads are necessary 1990 than in 1969. Meanwhile, from 11irst-class mail. If there were several ·time has come to end the Poslal Serright at the end of the bridge, and because ".we face competition in I 970 to 1991, first-class postal rates ; competitors vying for first-class mail vice's monopoly over the nation's
bums \j'Ould camp under the bridge. everything." She further claims, "We rose 385 percent, while the cost of liv- customers •• rather than· a single mail delivery.
bureaucratic behemoth - rates would
Joseph Perkins , js a eol1118DIIt ·
OpieCobb don 't have a monopoly on the mail i~g increased only 244 percent.
be
lower,
delivery
time
quicker
ana
.
for
llle S1111 Dfeto Union-1iibane,
Middleport like most people think." ·
Postal customers might find the
Well count yours truly among higher cost and slower delivery time service far more reliable.
and a writer for NEA.
"most people." Last time I checked, of first-class mail somewhat easierto
Picking up where Reagan left off,

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Postal Service fails to ·deliver_ _...-._

Drugs, _alcohol a problem

· :~bear

Editor,
l read the article about
.:• ~omeless people in Sunday's paper. I
~:•on't think there i~ one out of 10 but
:•tvhat would spend the money that
:lhcy received for beverage alcohol or
•
·•!!rugs.
~In the late 1940s. there was
· :·~ man lived by us that was visited by
;!.orne people to see if he had any f&lt;X?d.
;:.,ney reported back that he dtdn't have
,~ny food and not even any cigarettes,
~- if ctgarettcs·were more tmportant
: •~

· '· • !lhan fopd.

. fI . •,.
,.

·

. .a trat'I er at
We moved mto
• · Council Bluffs, Iowa.. I didn't get any
,
work that winter and the unemploy.mcnt people said I had to draw on the
' : ' Jast job I had worked on in \Vest Vir• ginia and the time limit had run out.
, 1', l . applied for commodities and got
1 •them.
f&lt;- 1 :..
Over in Omaha there was
t ; what they called a spot office.That is
1 ; ' GR employment office where you go
; . • and hang around waiting for someone

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[ ·~Today in histol)'

~ JIY The Aesoclated Preae
1 Today is Thursday, Feb. 15, the 46th day of 1996. There are 320 days
, • (eft in the year.
·
' ' Today's Highlight in History:.
: · On Feb. 15, 1965, Canada's new flag, with its maple-leaf design, was
: unfurled in ceremonies in Ottawa.
: . On this date:
·
.
• In 1564, tbe Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei was boni in the city of
- fltsa.
In !'764, the city of St. Louis, Mo., was established.
~ ~ In 1820, Susan B. Anthony, one of America's leading pioneers of women's
) .HtzhiS, was born in Adams. Mass.
~/;\. In 1879, President Rutherford .B. Hayes signed a bill allowin'g female
' '• t wuQmeys to argue cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.
, .._.. In 1898, the U.S. battleship Maine blew up in Havana Harbor, killing 260
members and escalating tensions with Spain.
In 193~. President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt escaped an attempt on his
in Mia!lli. when shots fired by an assailant missed; however, Chicago
u fl~yor J~nt&lt;IR J. Cermak was killed.
·
the British colony Singapore surrendered to the J~se dur-

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IM.WOI10

War n.

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during W:orld War U, Allied f~ heavily bombed the monastery

MoljtC Gassino in Ilaly. ·
84 men were !Piled When a huge oil-drillina !ig, the Ocean
olf the coas.t of Newfoundllllld durina a fi~ lllOI'I!I.
Sov~t Ull/on annou~ that the last ·of 'its troops had left
~ nine· yean of military intervention.
L. Hooks Inn~ plan, to iedR as exec11tive'd ftc.
of
AnOti~on fot: die Advantenient of COlored ~le. ..
'JP y~
Thi: Philippines Nlllional A.llembly procj~ ~·
president for another s~ yean, follawlq111 ol~tion nwbd by
ro f fraUd. :(
•
· a concliticlaM,wi-w.i from ~t. ~
BUlb • a cruef hoax. The ~~~~crmnent of'South
Conjml aiiiiOIIIIRid an _q~Wmem on terms
lllll)l6n4
, illllllled llnlgle ~~&amp;ainst
. !IPU1heid-

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Will governors' plan divide Democrats?
Congressional Republicans tliink
the nation 's governors have given
them a rich political gift that will help
establish a GOP record of accomplishment while dividing the Demo- ·
cratic Party.
The gift. of course, is the compromise plan on welfare and Medicaid unanimously approved recently
by the National Governors' Association. Already. its plan shows signs of
reigniting disputes between bemocratic liberals and moderates.
For instance,' without endorsing its
SP,CCifics, President Clinton said the
NGA plan is "a huge step in the right
d!rection," while Marian Wright
Edelman, head of the Children's
Defense Fund and friend of first lady
Hillary Rodham Clinton, denounced
the ideas as being "as bad, if not
worse, than the bills President Clinton-has vetoed or said he would

Veto ...

•. Democratic leaders on Capitol
Hill also criticized elemenis of the
governon' package", obviously hoping
to push the White House toward a
veto in case the ''package makes it
throuth Conpal.
·
· ~assed Unanimously by the bipar·
ti~ 'NOA; othe Welfare plin would
eliminate the fedenil cntidcment for

,,

Aides say that the two camps also
Aid to Families with Dependent Children while providing . $16 ' billion are at odds over whether Clinton
more than Congress voted for child should agree to new Medicare spendcare and incentives, to get welfare · ing reductions if that's what it takes
to get a balance4 budget agreement.
the White House, Morris'
Mprton Kondrscke . teamInside
is said to include Communicarecipients into jobs.
'tions Director Don Baer, Press SecThe Medicaid plan would retain an retary ~ike ~c.Curry, Bud'ct Di~entitlement for pregnant women, chil- tor Ahce Rivlm, Domestic PoliCy
dren under 12, and the "frail" elder- Official Bruce Reed, and Counselor
ly, but would give states "complete to the President Bill Curry, while Ick·
flexibility" in defining the "amount, cs' team includes Counselor George
duration and scope" of services.
Stephanopoulos, Economic Adviser
Top Wllite House aides acknowl· Gene Sperling, and Special Projects
edge that welfare and Medicaid could Aide Rahm Emanuel.
reopen the running split between
Outside the 'White House, Morris
Clinton'·s "praglilatic" adviser,~, led
relics
on pollster Mark Penn - whose
by campaign consultant Dick Morris,
surveys
s)low that most Americans
and "principled"liberal aides, led by
are
"optimistic
about lheir personal
deputy chief of staff Harold Ickes.
In the past, the aroups have fortunes but worried aboui the counclashed over whether President Clin· try," one Morris ally Slid. ~ and is,
ton should present a seven·YC!U' hal· bolstered in some policy disputes by
anced bUdget, which the pragmatists Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin.
On the other side is LabOr Secreultimately won: whether to endonc a
tary
Bob Reich, who urges that ClinSenate-~sed welfare ..refonn plan,
which the liberals won: and whether ton defend the middle Class, · cut
til base the preaident's,l996 Campaip "corporate welfare" to fund a jobon "optimi.sm" and "Values" or the. trainina voucher plan, and find ways
economic iniiCCurity of the middle to induce _corporations to help wortclass, which Clinton settled by doina en rather thad casting them off to
increase Profits.
·.
both.

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School levin facing Eastern and Southern local school district voters _can only be used for construction of the stated building projects,
Metgs Co~n~ Prosecutor John R. Lcntes said this morning.
Lcntes satd hts office has received several call l'rom district residents
~king if the levy money could be used for other purposes.
Under the provts1ons of state law, 8lld the manner in which the levies
are being sought, these funds can only be used for capital improvement purposes and cannot be used for other purposes, including purchase of equipment, salaries, or other items unrelated to capital
Improvements." Lentes stated.

IMansfield !26• I•
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McKelvey named trustee
The Lebanon Township Board of Trustees Monday appointed a new
JUe~ber to replace long-time trustee Eugene Long who recently
restgned.
Bruce McKelvey, who resides on Barringer Ridge Road, was appointed at Monday's special meeting. He joins Elson Dailey and Corby
Cleek .on the board of trustees. Cleek was elected in November during a write-in campaign.
Dorothy Roseberry is the township clerk.

are

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Levies for buildings only

MICH.

M . . . C&gt;ri-&lt;00&gt;
·lion. You agree with them on many
issues. Wbo wants condoms in the.·
schools?
You Clisap with them on aborlion. Most Americans as- with you
not them: rome reasonable state
restrictions, within a framework of
legality, while working toward reducing the number of abortions. Bring it
up proudly! Let the other candidates
split the pro-life V«!tes. Give voters a
sense of where you fit politically:
Stress your chairmansllip of Empow- ,
cr America and their big•name players like Bill Bennett, JIICk Kemp and
1eanc Kirkpatrick. Explain that your ·.
"flat w" is pro-(ioor and also has a
built-in "propssive" rate. (Why
liberals anacking the only nan pro-life ,
candidate who wants to eliminate tax- :
cs for the poor'i)
~
To Alan Keyes: You are the best :::
bntor.Anunknowncandidategt!tting ;
7 perce11t with.no money in a ca'ucus •
·state is amazing. Keep on gbingl' ,:
You're taking some pro-life ·votes ·'
from Buchanan who is an isolation- ~
ist, protectionist and nativist, which :
you are not.
;:
To Phil Gramm: Keep running! If ~
you're out of money, live off the land
the way Buchanan does. Challenge ,
him. You're no isolationist. You're no ,
nativist. You're no protectionist. He :
is. Most conscrvati~cs aren't.
,
Th Ross Perot: Cut the bull-about :
organizing a third party for someone .
else to use. If you run, you' II hurt the ,.
Republican candidate facing Clinton, :
but not by as much as it would seem.
Iftbe politicians don't pass a budget,
you've got great issue.
Jesse Jackson: Smart. You've
frozen the linebacker. If Clinton ,
makes any plausible deal with the ;
Republicans on the budget, welfare :
and/or Medicaid, then you and some
other liberal activists will form a third
party, hurting Clinton.
Bill Clinton: No budget deal
means Perot goes in and Jesse stays •
out. That's just what you want. It's ~
good politics, but bad for America, '·
which makes it bad politics.
Bea Wattebllera, a senior fellow !
at the America• Enterprise lnstl· :
tute, Is lhe author ol. a new book,
"Values Matter Must," and Is the
bosl of the weekly public: television
.pmcram, "'lblnlt 1lmk," and. syll•
dlcated writer for Newspaper ~
Enterprise Aa«lallon. ·

Outside the administration, the
· 1992- campaign team of consultant
~ James Carville and pollster Stan
"Greenberg is allied with the Ickes
squad and is accused by the Morris.
· group of hyping internal differences
out of pique at losing the Clinion
franch!se this year.
Now, congressional ~publicans
' think that the governors' welfare and
Medi.caid proposals will split the.
.administration funher. They think
the White House pragmatists will
want Clinton to fulfill his promise to
reform welfare, while the liberals will
, want to protect -Clinton's · support
:among bl~ks and other traditionally
Democ:rauc constituencies.
House GOP aides also think that
the plans' unanimous support .from
Democratic jovernors will bring over
. more House Democrats than the 17
I who supported the last OOP welflll'e•
jplan.
..
1 If Coq8ren passes welf..-e and
1Medi~aid le_gislati?", 00~ members. ,
·and aides.dunk, Otnton w11l be under '
severe and connictina ~ ovei
whether to sip the meuures. .
:'
' (Mortait Koadntcb 11-dw;
editor olllal Cal, die roew i 1 er •
ol. Clpleal Hll, ... a wtller lor,
NJA.)

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Patrol probes accident

1'11-tod-

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

,_._..;......Local briefs--

OHIO Weatt1er

· ------------~--~--~~---.------------~----~--~~------~
'£stlli1Wfwl in.l948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ice ·' Sullll¥

Pt.

Cloudy Cloudy

(J~t

.Today's weather forecast
.
.

Southeastern Ohio
Today... Variable cloudiness. A.
chance of light snow until mid-morning. High iii the mid to upper 30s.
Northwest wind 5·,to IOmph. Chance
of snow SO percent.
• Tonight...Cloudy, Snow showers
likely &lt;leveloping around midnight.
Low in the mid 20s. North wind 5 to
10 mph. Chance of snow 60 percent.
Friday... Snow showers .likely.

'Hi*h &lt;il:t ·the upper 20s. Chance of
snow:'fu percent.
'
·f Extended forecast .
Saturday...Achance of snow. Lows
t.ero to 10 above and highs in the
teens.
·
·sunday... Fair but cold. Lows zero
to 10 above. ~ighs IS io 25.
Montlay ...A chance of snow. Not
as cold. Lows 10 to 20 and highs 20
to 30.
·

Another Arctic front
wi.ll hit Ohio tonight
By The Ae~oclaled Preas
· There was a 'chance of snow for
Ohio tonight and Friday as an Arctic
front pushed through the area. The
National Weather Service said the
front will usher in colder air, keeping
temperatures below normal for the
weekend.
The snow will accumulate 1-3
inches in some areas, forecasters
said.
Lows tonight will range from the
low teens to mid-20s.
Highs ·on Friday will be in the 20s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather sta·
tion was 70 degrees in I 954 while the
record low was 4 below zero in 1978.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:07 p.m.
and sunrise Friday at 7:24a.m . .
It was snowing across paru of the
Midwest and East early today, cloudy
in the South and windy across the
Dakotas.
The temperature hit 64. degrees at
McAllen, Texas, before daybreak and
plunged to a.low of 8 degrees below
zero at Sault Saint Marie, Mich.
Predawn snow fell in Boston, Buffalo, N.Y., Pittsburgh and Minneapolis.
In the Pacific Northwest, floodsoaked communities north ofjdaho's
Salmon River faced. new danger as
warm weather upstream in Canada
' threatened to loosen ice jams, smashtng into the blockage in Idaho.
'

No injucies were reported following a one-car accident on Happy Hollow Road near Rutland Wednesday around I I :SO a.m.
Marsha K. Fox, 25, Rutland, was southbound and went off the right
stde of the roadway, striking a ditch, according to a report from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Damage to her 1994 Pontiac Grand Am was listed as modcrate. She was cited on a charge of failure to control.

Deputies investigate burglary
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department are investigating
the burglary of the Pizza Dan restaurant in Rutland which occurred
either Tuesday evening qr Wednesday morning.
A subject or subjects entered the restaurant through the front door and
earned out several cases of hamburger patties. other food items and
a television set, said Sheriff James Soulsby. The items were recovered
nearby, he added.
.
An undisclosed amount of money was also stolen. he said. Soulsby
encouraged anyone having infonnation about the incident to call the
Meigs County Sheriffs Department.

Lawmen seek woman in stabbing

Mildred R. Jenkinson
Mildred R. ~cnkinson , 88, Hilliard, died Tuesday, Feb. 13, 1996, at
Hilliard.
·
A retired employee for the state of Ohio, she was born at Harrisonville,
daughter of the. late Edna and David Cuckler.
Surviving is a son and daughter-in-law, Joseph R. and Betty Jenkinson;
three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren; a sister-in-law, Betty CockIer, and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Wm. Reed Jenkinson.
Services will be held Friday, I I :30 a.m. at Schoedinger Hilltop Chapel
in Columbus with Pastor Mike Bateson officiating.
Friends may call today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.

Dennis L. Palmer
Dennis Lee Palmer, 91, of Hometown, W.Va., died Tuesday, Feb. !3,
1996, in Americare-Putnam, Hurricane, W.Va.
·
:
A former resident of Racine, he was a self-employed laborer and a twOyear resident of Hometown.
·
He is survived by four daughters, Learlene Basham of Butler, Penn .. Jean
Cardew of Phoenix, Ariz., Jewell Payne of Winfield, W.Va., and Janice Sue
Wilkinson of Charleston, W.Va.; a son, Denny Palmer of Augusta, Ga.; {3
grandchildren; 21 great-grandchildren; one great-great-grandchild; and two
sisters, Nina Allen of Hinton, W.Va., and Beulah Spencer of Princeton, W.v'a.
Services will be Friday, 2 p.m. at Casdorph and Curry Funeral Home in
St. Albans, W.Va. with the Rev. Mike Rad.er officiating. Burial will follow
in Cunningham Memorial Park in St. Albans.
Friends may call from 7-9 p.m. today at the furieral home.

Jean Simms
Jean Simms, 70. of Merritt Island. A a., formerly of Long Bottom, died
Wednesday, Feb, 14, 1996, at Cape Canaveral Hospital in Cocoa Beach, Aa.
She was born Jan. I, 1926, at Elarado, Ark. , daughter of the late Lester
and Margaret Van Dixon.
She is survived by a brother, Lester Van Dixon of Barefoot Bay, Fla.: a
daughter, Jean Louise Hayman of Merritt Island; two grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
·
She was preceded in death by her husband, William H. Simms .
Graveside services will be held Monday, I p.m. at Bellbrook Cemetery
in Bellbrook.

House
votes
Continued from page 1
they safely drive at and that's probably where the speed limit should be.':
Lawrence's amendment lost on a
37-60 vote.
That prompted a recommendation
from Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Cuyahoga
Falls, to defeat the emergency clause
in an attempt to force Voinovich to
negotiate. 1
Bateman said he expected the
Senate to reinsert the emergency
clause. Then the bill would have to go
back to the House for another vote on
whether the emergency clause should

Wind gusts up to 38 mph and wind
chill readings of minus 21 degrees
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department is searching fr · an Albany
were reported during the night in
woman for questioning about a stabbing case, Meigs County Sheriff
Williston, N.D. Gusts of up to 45 mph
James M, Soulsby reponed this morning.
were measured at Buffalo, S.D.
John W. Grimm, 31, Albany, was brought into the Holzer Medical
One to 3 inches of snow was posCenter Emergency Room in Gallipolis around 8:15 p.m. Wednesday
sible today from North Dakota and
by his wife, Pamela Grimm, 28.
the northern Plains to as far east as the
The two said Mr. Grimm was stabbed in a bar in Gallipolis, but invescentral Appalachians and New Brig·
tigating Galli(X?Iis officers discounted the story, Soulsby said. Meanland.
while, Mrs. Grimm left the hospital while her husband was admitted,
Locally windy conditions could
he said.
spread south across the · Plains and
Deputies are seeking to question her about th~ incident, Souls by said.
along the eastern slopes of the central
remam.
Rockies·.
There was a chance of mixed rain
Michael Dawson. the governor's
and snow from northeast Arkansas to
press
secretary, did not view the vote
Workers cutting old bolts for an addition to the recorder's office in
the sou!Jlem Appalachians and the
as
anti-Voinovich.
the Meigs County Courthouse inadvertently caused a fire scare in the
northern mjd-Atlanlic region. Thun"I really don't think that anybody
historic structure around 9 this morning.
der~s '(;ere possible from l!QUthwould
play politics with the safety of
The smell of hot wood and metal permeated the building. prompting
east Louisiana to northern Aorida and
people's
Jives," Dawson.said.
in the call. Pomeroy firefighters responded to the scene. There was no
- southern. Georgia.
Ohio !'aces a March 3 deadline to
fire.
Except for possible showers dcveiact,
although there are different opinoping over portions of California, the
ions
about what would happen if the :
West should ~dry with highs near or
bill
did
not pass.
above normal.
Eastern Local Schools will be in session Friday. using the schedTemperatures should top 70 today
uled day off as a make-up day, according to district superintendent
in the deserts Southwest, southern
Ron Minard.
Texas and Florida. Readings should
Students in the.district will still observe the President's Day holiday
TONIGHT
be increasingly cooler farther north
Monday, as classes are not scheduled.
WALTER MATTHAU,
with temperatures in the 20s along a
JACK LEMMON IN
corridor from Montana to Maine, and
GRUMPIER
in the single digits from northeastern
OLD MEN ...,
Montana to northern Wisconsin.
EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
.
The nation's hot spot Wednesday
" When you run fifth in Iowa, an
Gramm said he had no plan now
STEVE MARTIN,
was Waco, Texas, at 87 degrees, while to endorse another candidate. Front- important state, you would have to be
DIANE KEATON IN
the coldest spot was Presque Isle. runner Dole called him earlier today brain dead not to take a look at where
FATHER OF THE
Maine, at minus 24.
from New Hampshire but said he had you are and what you're doing."
BRIDE ·II.,
not asked for Gramm's endorsement. Gramm told reporters before abruptONE
SHOW 7:30
"I enjoyed'every day of this cam- ly cancelling afternoon campaign
paign, " Gramm said. "Some days I events Tuesday and leaving New
Hampshire.
enjoyed it better than others." ·
Gramm, 53, became the third canWhen he walked into the room,
arrived at the police department and supporters gaye him a noisy wel- didate to quit the race. California Gov.
began interfering· with officers, Hol- come. Gramm looked around and Pete Wilson had a short-lived camcomb said.
asked, " Where were all you guys in paign, and Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen
Hawthorne was warned several Louisiana and Iowa?"
Specter quit late last year. Wilson and
times and refused to leave, Holcomb
He had bragged he would win the Specter now support Dole.
srud. Whe~ Smith attem~ted to arr~st Louisiana caucuses two weeks ago
Gramm, who had spent at least
htm for dtsrupung offictal business, where Buchanan was his only rival. $19 million in the race, said he was
Hawthorne grabbed him, he added.
He finished a poor second. Then not quitting for lack of money. "I'm
Smith · then used his Mace on came Iowa, and he finished so weak in the black," he said.
Hawthorne and wrestled him out into
If he had stayed in the race,
the parking lot before the substance that he was doomed.
observers said. he would have jeopardized his chances of re-election to
took effect. allowing him to be subdued. Hawthorne was then taken to
his·Senate seat in Texas.
the Meili,$ County Jail.
"It is my goal now to become a
Meet rescheduled
The dijmk driving suspect, Jeremy Tonight's meeting of the board of grcttt senator," he said.
Cline, 21; of Reedsville, presented no directors of the Gallia, Jackson,
He ended with a laughline: "I'm
problerrts and was released to go Meigs and Vinton Solid Waste Dis- tired of coming home late at night and
home, Holcomb said.
trict has been rescheduled for Feb. 29 having my own dog bark at me
Hawthorne will likely be arraigned at 6 p.m. at the district office in Well- because he doesn 't know who I am."
today in the Meigs County Court, ston.
In advance of Gramm's announceHolcomb said.
ment, TeKas GOP Chairman Tom
A Few Of Our Home Standard Features
Pauken noted, "If he's not going to be
•
Andersen
1111 Windows
able to turn it around, then the smart
• Stanley Doors
thing to do is simply to pull out and
. Units ofthe Meigs County Emer- RACINE
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16ln. On Center
concentrate on the Senate."
gency Medical Service Rcorded eight
10:46 p.m .. state Route 124, Cathy
• Annstrong solarian Floor 111c
calls for ·asststance Wednesday Milbach, treated at the scene.
0 Marellate &lt;;abinets
mcludmg two transfer calls. Units
• 8 Fool Ceiling
res(X?ndingiincluded:
VETERANS MEMORIAL
RUTLAND
• 2xl0 Floor Joint, 16 ln. On Center
12:23 p.m., Mill Street, Francis W,EDN~DAY
•
Sl Gallon Water Heater
MIDDLEPORT
Kerns, Holzer Medical Center;
Admissions: Elsie Welch, Albany;
0 Shaw Carpets
7:16 p.m., POwell Street, Carol 12:36 p.m.. College Street, Jason Carol Wines, Middleport.
• Delta Faucets
Wines, Veterans' Memorial Hospttal. Hershberger, VMH.
Discharges: None.
• Master T-lock Vinyl Siding With Ufetime Wammty
• 2S Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
POMEROY
SYRACUSE
• I0 Year Structural Warranty On The Home
2:02 p.m:, volunteer fire departI :38 a.m.. Rocksprings Rehabili·
Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.
ment and squad, West Main Street, tation Center, Mildred Smith, VMH.
smoke odor lit G'q:: building.

Workers cause fire scare

Eastern in session Friday

Sen. Gramm...__c_o_n_tin~u_ed_f_ro_m~p-=•g:...•-•_

.Long Bottom man charged
in assault on OSP trooper
A 29-year-old Long Bottom man
. is facing a felony assault charge fol . lowing a scuffle with an Ohio High. way Patrol trooper early this morning
. in Pomeroy.
Arrested and charged with assault.
obstructing official business and
resisting arrest was Darrell D.
, Hawthorne: according to patrol
.•Sergeant Dale, Holcomb of the GalliaMeigs Post.
Troopet Tom Smith was testing a
drunk driving suspect at the Pomeroy
Police DeP.~ment when Hawthorne.
a passenger from
car,
'
.. the suspect's
.

.

~

The Daily Sentinel
(USrs Zt3-llf0)

Published C:VUJ afterDoon, Mondoy lhrouah
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Ohio Valley Publishina CompanyJOanneu co.,
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·Announcement

Mei·g s EMS logs 8 calls

Hospital news

FAMILY HOMES INC.

Couples issued marriage lic~nses
'fl:le foll~w~ng couples were.issued

mamage hcenses recently m· the
Meigs County Probate Court of Judge
· Robert Buck:.
Charles Scott Casto, 26, Mason,
W.Va., and Karen Ann Hysell. 34,
• Pomeroy: Eli Ebersbach III, 39, and
Barbara Ann Windsor, 32, both of

Middleport:
Henry Paul Price, 45, and Marisa
Ann Gray, 27, both of Racine; John
Franklin Aeiker Jr., 29, and Marilyn
Virgi'nia Robinson, 33, both of
Albany; Timothy Michael Whitlatch,
31, and SbeifaAnn KiQg, 29, 'both of
Coolville:

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy•Maaon Bridge

992-2588
VINTON
Gallla County Dleplay Yard
155 Mlln St.

I

,.

Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614·992-2478
Model Home Viewing Hours I :~S :00 p.m.
Tuc. - Sat. or by appointment

...
.....
•

�'

'S Ports
"

.

The Daily Sentin....r]

.. .I

·

-

; lhunMiay,Fibfuary15,1198

-In the MAC,

By
PUET
AIIOCteted Prell Writer,
Anyone who doubls the tmporlance o( makiQ8 free lhrowa need
only look at the play-by·play sheet
from Western Michigan 's game
against Miami of Ohio.
II shows that the Bron&lt;:01 went.
II :20 without a basket during one
stage of the second half. But it also
shows Western made 19 free throws
during that span and won the MidAmerican Conference game 76-65
Wednesday night.
.
Western made 30 free throws tn

:eastern girls erase early deficit to beat Trimble 51-40.
' By TOM HUNTER
Sentl;,.l Staff Writer
Eas1em overcame an early deficit,
then turned up tl\e wick for a strong
second half in posting a 51-40 triumph over the Trimble Tomcats
Wednesday night in the first round
Division IV Sectional game at
Alexander High School.
The Eagles (15-5) advance to the
sectional championship game on
Monday, Peb. 19, where they meet
Crooksville (6-15) -the Ceramics
were 74-16 winn~rs over Portsmouth
East - in their quest to defend the
sectional crown at 6:30 p.m. at
Alexander High School. Tickets are
on sale at Eastern High School at a
"Cost of $3.
Eastern had a very . balanced
attack led by Jessica Karr 's 13
points, Rebecca Evans' 12, Jessica
Brannon's 12 and Patsy Aeiker's 10.
Tracy White and Beth Bay were
credited with strong effiirts off the
bench. Trim&amp;te's Sherry Davis had a
career high 16 points with four
three-pointers.
After scoring eight in the first
half, Beth Koons tallied ten, Joy Petiii eight, Tony a Trace four and Toby
Lawrence two. Trimble lobk leads of
6-0 (Pettit, Koons and Trace goals)
and 11 -4 before Eastern finally
·awakened.
Two Jess.ic~ Branno.n field g011ls
and an Evans field goal cut the Tomcatlead to ll -10 as Eastern went for
the last shot with 41 seconds left in
the first frame.
The firs! quarter action by East.em was summarized by the· Eastern
coaching staff as a·po(&gt;r Eagle'effort

~ In

on the boards and a lack ot running
the offense efficiently. Eas1em made
four of its eight turnovers in the first
quarter.
Eagle mentor Scott Wolfe said,
"We stood around on both offense
and defense before we decided to
play. When we stand we're bad and
when we move we can be great. It's
a mindset we'vegol to get straight
going into a game, not after its
already started."
In the second round, the entire
Eastern team got in on the scori ng,
really mixing it up well. Eastern
went up 17-14 on a Nelson field goal
and 19-14 on an Evans jumper.
Although Eastern played a much
better second quarter "hustle wise",
the Eagles again never got the offensive movement it wanted and played
perimeter basketbaJI. The result of
poor shot selection was a 5-12 frame
from the floor.
When Eastern went up 18- 13 and
had the ball, the Eagles shot an
untimely lorig range jumper. Trimble
retaliated with a Davis three-pointer
for a 18-16 tally. Koons hit a free
throw for a 18-17 score and Evans '
canned a short jumper for a 20-17
tally.
·
Pettit canned the last Trimble
bucket and Eastern again went for
the last shot. With 48 seconds left
Eastern ran the clock down to 12 seconds, but missed and Trace tossed a
65-foot desperation shot at 11\e
buzzer and missed to keep the score
20-19 at halftime. Eastern was outrebounded 20-14 in the first half, ·
while shooting 10-20 from the field,
5-12 in the second period. Eastern

was 0-4 at the iine. Trimble was 814 from the field in the first half.
Eastern picked up the pace in the
second half and was more patiently
against Trimble's 2-3 arid 2-1-2
zones.
At will Eastern began to pick the
open spots and took a 27-20 advan·
tage. Patsy Aeiker hit two straight
goals for .the latter score, but ~&gt;astern
in tum gave up a three-pointer to
Davis and a field goal to Koons and
saw its lead redyced toi 27-25.
"We couldn't shake Trimble. They
were pumped up and red-llot around
the perimeter. Every time we'd'make
a big run, we'd make a mistake and
they would take advantage of it,"
said Wolfe.
Later Eastern led 34-29. Jess

Brannon sparked several fast breaks
with key steals, whileJessica Karr
broughtlier offensive into high gear.
"Three things were keys in our final
victory · drive. We played more
aggressive team defense and overall
great second half. Rebecca Evans did
a great job on Koons in tbe second
half, holding her to just two points,
Jessica Brannon made several big
steals and we started to become more
patient in the offense," said Wolfe.
Another Davis trey cut the score
to 36-33 at the end of the third round.
Eastern roared to a 46-40 lead with
three minutes left, compliments of
Evans, Nelson, Aeiker and Brannon.
A Davis three-point goal again
kept Trimble in the game, but with
3:00 left, Eastern went into its three

guard delay game. Trimble eventvally was forced to foul. Jessica Karr
hit a pair to give EHS a 48-40 lead
with I :25 left, then Kart' 'hit 3 of 4
foul shots at the finish for the 5 l-40
finale.
Eastern hit 22-41 for 53 percent
(8-16 third quarter, 4-5 fourth quarter), was 0-1 on threes and hit 7-16
at the line. Eastern grabbed 26
rebounds (Aeiker 6, Nelson 6, Brannon 6, Evans 5) to Triinble's 29.
Eastern outrebounded Trimble 12-9
in the second half. Easteid,had nine
steals (Brannon four); eight
turnovers, II assists (Karr 7, E~ans
3) and 7 fouls·.
. Trimble was 12-33. on twos'for 37
percent and was 4-11 on threes, with
a 4-7 night at the line. Koons had 13

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

-Western.Michigan~ Ohio, Ball State, BGSU and Kent win
nil

Thursday, Februa,Y 15,_1998'

•

· In Division IV sectional action,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1rebounds and Hollie Canter had

five. Trimble had three steals, ll
turnovers and 16 fouls.
The tuture: Eastern hosts Federal . H~king for the TVC-Hoding
Division championship on Saturday
at Eastern High S~hool at noon.
Quarter l!dlla
Trimble ..................... ll-8-14-7=40
Eas~ern .................. I0-10-16-15=51
Eastern - Rebecca Evans 6-00=12, Jessica Karr 4-0-5/6=13,
Nicole Nelson 2-0-014=~; Patsy
Aeiker 5-0-0=.10, Jessjca Brannon 50-214=12. Totals n.o-7/16=51
Trimble - Joy Peuit 4-0=8,
Tony a Trace 2·0-0=4, Sherry Davis
.1•4-213=16, Toby ·Lawrence 1-00=2, Beth Koon 4-0-214=10. TOtals

40 auempb, with.the Broncos' Ben didn't realize it was that kind of disHandlogiCn apd Juon Bl~~:k both parity," he said. " We were still
oullcorin'g die . entire Miami team somewhat productive, though ,
from the line. Each made 12 foul because we were getting to the
shots in 15 tries, -while Miami was line.u
10-for-1&lt;1.
·
Handlogten finished with 24
Miami made 24 field goals to points and Black had 19, while
Westem's 22; but that was more than Devin Davis had 20 ·for Miami.
off5et by the difference in free throw
A layup by Bowling Green's
shooting. .
Antonio Daniels with four seconds to
Broncos coach Bob Donewald play gave the Falcons a 72-70 vicsaid he didn't realize the contrast in tory over Eastern Michigan, but tbe
numbers was so striking.
Eagles still lead the MAC standi ngs
"I know we got to the free throw by two games.
'line a sisnificant number of times. I
Ball State beat Central Michigan

In ·Top 25 college basketball,

82-75, Ohio downed Toledo 72-60 particularly dramatic because it was .31 points and LaSalle Thompson 24
and Kent blasted Akron 86-63 in oth- his first game following the death of to lead the Cardinals. Charle~ MacOn
er conference games Wednesday his brother, Chris, who played for the had 19 for the Chippewas.
Geno Pord's 29 points led Ohio
night.
University of Dayton and died last
over
Toledo. Bobby Krahulik with
That leaves Eastern at ll-2 and Thursday at his home near the Day·
16
points
was the Rockets ' high scorBall State ai 9-4 atop the league. The ton campus.
middle of the standings remains
Daniels finished with 20 points, er. The Bobcats took an early 15-2
tightly bunched, with · Ohio and while Bowling Green sophomore lead and never were threatened after
·
Westein tied for third at 8-5 and Mia- Dayon Ninkovic scored a career- that.
The story was similar in Kent's
mi, Toledo and Bowling Green all at high 34. Derrick Dial with 17 led
7-6. Then comes Kent at 6-7, with five players in double figures for victory over Akron, with tire Golden Aashes scoring the first 13 points.
Central Michigan and Akron far Eastern.
back a~2-ll and 0-13 respectively. ·
Ball State led for all but 17 sec- Nate Reinking had 27 for Kent, with
Daniels' basket made the end of onds of its game against Central David Tillis getting 19 for the Zips,
the Bowling Green-Eastern game Michigan, with Bonzi Wells scoring who continue to struggle with ~ line. up of mostly freshmen.

i

.

Bowling Gree~'s Daniels returns; Villanova &amp; UNC also wi·n
By The Auoclmed p,_.
Antonio Daniels was supposed to
have played with his older .brother
watching. The way the game turned
,out, he just might have done that.
Dlg!i~ls, playina fdr the f"JtSt titne
'since the ~ of his. brother;Chris,
;m~ the- pme..winninalayup w""
follf secqnds to pia)I Wedne.sday.
,night a5 Bowling Green belt No. 23
·£astern,Michigan 12·-10. · ·
,
. : "We really played with a sixth
man tonight;" Bowling Green's
Anthony Stacey said. "Chris was
watching over us. Antonio felt the

12-4-417=40

same ·w~y."
Chris Daniels~

the 22-year-old
starting center for the University of
Dayton, dled last Thursday after col·
lapsing al,liis off..campus home. A
'·"'lcause of de~~th has not been deter··''miRed.
Antonio Daniels skipped the Falcons' game with Ohio University on
Sanlrday to remain with his family in
Columbus. Ohio, as they prepared
for the funeral on Monday.
His decision to play against Eastem Michigan ·on Wednesday night
was part of an emotional, agonizing
day for au ·involved.

the NBA,

.Johnsons help ~akers
·a~d Sonics tally wins

"At 2:30 (p.m.), Antoriio, (assistant) coach (Stan) Heath and I sat in
the office and l'told him he didn't
have· to do this," Bowling Green ,
co~~:ll fim I.am.nap said. "He told
us he hadl)'t slept and hadn't eaten,
but felt. be l!ad to play. CIJris was
pllllriing'on ~oming to this giWle.
. ''In,!he ~5 years I've been coach-tng, this &amp;u probably been the most
difficult day."
Larranaga also had a team that
was close 'to Daniels and his brother to deal with.
"To ·gy and understand and control yout emotions and channel them,
in the right 'direction -that's what
I asked the team to do," he said.
Danitls, who finished with 20
points, asked not to talk to the media
after the game, according to Bowling Green spons information director Steve Barr.
"It's been a tough time for (Bowling Green) and Antonio and you.really have to marvel at how well they
were able to play tonight under the
.circumstances," Eastern Michigan
coach Ben Braun said.
The Falcons (12-9, 7-6 MidAmerican Conference) went ahead

70-67 on a free throw by Daniels their 20th straight victory. Katu
with 13 seconds to play. Earl Davis had 15 points for the visiting
Boykins hit a three-pointer with Bulldogs (14-8, 5-7), who took their
nine seconds to go to tie the score worst loss of the season.
No. 3 Connedkut 87
and Daniels then made his winning
West Virginia 69
shot on a pass from Jay Larranaga,
Doron Sheffer had six threethe coach's son.
Sophomore bayor\ Ninkovic was pointers and scored 23 points as the
12-of-14 from the field and had a Huskies (23- 1, 13-0 Big East) won
career-high 34 poinis for Bowling their 22nd in a row. Ray Allen and
Green, which won its 13th straight Kirk King each added 13 points for
home game.
Connecticut, which won its 22nd
Derrick Dial's 17 points led the straight conference game. Damien
Eagles (18-3, 11-2), who still have a Owens had 16 points and nine assists
two-game lead" in the conference for the visiting Mountaineers (9-13,
4-10).
race.
In other games involving ranked
No. 4 Villanova 79
teams Wednesday, it was: No.2 Ken·
Seton HaD 67
~~~y 86, Georgia 73; No. 3 ConKerry Kittles scored 25 points and
necticut 87, West Virginia 69; No.4 Eric Eberz added 15 in their final
Villanova 79, Seton Hall 67; No. 5 game 'at the duPont Pavilion as the
Kansas 85, Colorado 70; Indiana 72, Wildcats (22-3, 12-2 Big East) won
No. 9 Penn State 54; No. 12 Texas their ninth straight since losing at
Tech 78, Baylor 72; No. 17 North Seton Hall on Jan. 17. Adnan GrifCarolina 53, Clemson 48; and No. 22 fin had 22 points and II rebounds for
the Pirates (10-12, 6-8), who lost
Iowa State 70, Oklahoma 58.
their fifth in a row.
· No. 2 Kentucky 86
No. 5 Kansas 85
Georgia 73
Colorado 70
Mark Pope had 16 points and II
Raef LaFrentz dominated inside
rebounds to lead the Wildcats (2 1-1,
11 -0 Southeastern Conference) to

By The Auoclated Preas
for a I02-10 I lead after Golden State
13rvin Johnson had the best game trailed JOI-93. Joe Smith and B.J.
. Of his undistinguished NBA career. Armstrong each hit two free throws
Earvin Johnson had the besi game of in the final minute to seal the win,
, BATILE FOR REBOUND- Eutem'l Nicole N11ton (14) bBttln•
his second NBA career.
and Dee Brown's layup at the buzzer
PASS OR SHOOT?- That'a the dlclelon Eaatern'e Jessica Karr Trimble:• Beth Koona (._.)for the rebound while the Eaqlft' Rebec-.
Earvin, known to most everyone was all that kept the visiting Celtics .(13) fllcae aa she looks to her right for en open teemntlll8 while stand- ca Evena (fer ~~ welts to whet IMippena during Wcdn•dey
as Magic, had 15 points, 13 assists from going scoreless in the final
lng In the 188m ofTrlmble's deftnll during Wednesday nlght'll Dlvl· nlght'a toumiJMill conteat In Albany, whirl the Ee01e1'11-polnt win·
and 10 rebounds Wednesday night fn 5:05.
slon IV sectional tournament game egalnat the Tomceta at Alexan· wee achieved deaplte barely being outrebounclld. (Sentinel photo.
Latrell Sprewell 's 20 points · · der High School. The·Eagles won 51-40 to advance to the final round by Tom Hunter)
Jhe Los Angeles Lakers' 87.-86 vic·
·'
•·
'
.
'
next - k . (SenUnel photo by Tom,Hunter)
. tory over the Atlanta Hawks. He topped the Warriors, while Smitlt had
, p1ayed .39 mi~utes, ·including !he I 9 points and 13 rebounds. Greg
was the only other Pacers player in
entire fourth quarter, and his pass to Minor scored 16 points for Boston. · Pacers. ·
::Vlade Divac led to two free throws
. Grizzlies 93, Kings 86
Gilliam, who had 17 founh-quar- double figures with II. Shawn
Bradley scored 19 points for the
~hat completed the scoring with· 19 ·- · Greg Anthony scored· 21 points
ter points Tuesday night in the Nets'
Nets.
&lt;seconds left.
and Bryant Reeves had 14 PQints and victory ai Indianapolis, scored 15 ir\
Hornets 120, Knicks 100
-. ~ "He found a way to win, and
II rebounds as Vancouver snapped the final period and finished ,with 25
Charlotte
matched its.largest win. ~hat's the big thing everybody knows a six-game losing streak by handing on Wednesday.
.
ning margin of the season, defeating
: ubout Earvin Johns6n," Lakers visiting Sacramento its fifth straight
Gilliam's two foul shots with 41
:· coach Del Harris said.
defeat.
seconds left gave the Nets an 86-84 · New York with a dominating running game.
: Ervin Johnson, meanwhile, is
Winners of just 10 of 47 games lead. Reggie Miller's three-pointer to
Glen Rice had 29 pciints and Ken~veraging just 15.8 minutes and 4.2· before the All-Star break, the expanput the Pacers ahead by one, but P.J.
nY
Anderson 14 assists f6r the host
}'oints a third-year center for the sian Grizzlies used three 10-0 runs Brown made a jumper with 16 secHornets,
who built a 35-point tea&lt;i on
· :, fieattle·SuperSonics..
to beat the Kings, who have fallen to onds left to make-it 88-87 and Indithe way to winning for just the sec• On Wednesday mght, however, 24-22 after a 19-9 start.
ana couldn 'I score on its final posond time in six games.
·
: he·scored a career-high 28 points and
Sacramento lost despite 30 points session.
·
: bad 12 rebo~nds and 'five bl&lt;&gt;&lt;;ked from guard Mitch Richmond and 20
The victory was·a costly one for
~hots as the Sonics routed Minneso- by Walt Williams.
the Nets as guard Kendall Gill broke
. la 130-93.
Nets 88, Pacen 87
a bone in his hand in the first quar: With his more .heralded teamNew Jersey got another big fourth ter. He 'will be sidelined indefinite·
·tytates, inciJJdingAll-Stars Gary Pay- quancr from Armon Gilliam to'beat ly.
10n and·Shawn Kemp, on the bench Indiana in the second game of a
Miller had 34 points and seven
: (n the fourth quarter, Ervin was spec· home-and-home series against the three-pointers, but Antonio Davis
: tocular,' scoring 18 points.
' His teammates tried to get him to
double his previous career scoring .
•
ltigh . .
' "We wanted to get him 30
points," Hersey Hawkins said. '·'But
they didn't want to give up 30." ·
l Johnson also mlllje the first threepointer of his career after being
eggCd on to shoot by fellow center
Sam Perkins.
: "I never shot a 3 before in my
Kart A. Kebler,
~areer," said Johnson, who actually
"Enrolled to Practice Befo~e
had made 011e previous attempt.
the
Internal Revenue Service."
: l'Sam 'told me to shoot it. So that 3
was for Sam."
·
EARLY IRA
: Christian Laettner scored 19
,WITHDRAWALS
Poinis for Minnesota, which has lost ·
.19 consecutive games to Seattle.
I wanted to stan w~~~:;;~:~,:~l
money from my IRA, e•en
' The Lakcrs are now 5-1 since
I am j~st 55 years old. Is tben:
CellularONE has tripled our home rate coverage area You can call virMagic Johnson came b~tk following
way around the tO pereent penalty?
·II 4 112-year absence after he tested
tually anywhere from Cincinnati to P.ittsburgh or from Cleveland to ;
. : positive for HIV. After Divac's free
Ch~¥~eston, without roaming charges.
'throws put Los Angeles ahead, Craig
\ '
If.:;~::.~:~; unless you arc
'
·Bitto, who made a three-pointer to
ld
you must·pay the pen•tty
·put the Hawks in front with 25 secwithdraw money from yQur IRA
_onds remaining, missed a desperalbelfore rea~:hing. age 59 l/2. There is,
.
.
.
(jon shot •the buzzer, ,
lho·we·ve':r. one further exception to'
I Steve Smith led 1\tlanta with 20
lpenallty. You can escape the penalty
·Jioints. and Grant Long had 16
withdrawals take th.e f9rm of
96~
:pointS and acareer-high 21 rebounds .
Mctin~e annuliy, Payment must. be
;tiefOR fouling out with 42 seconds
on your life expectancy,
remammg.
.
expectancies of you and
• ~ El'den Cu,~pbell was the Lakers'
beneficiary, made in
lbdillg scorer !With 20 points.
~~~~~;~~~·~~, equal amounts, and
· Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
I
I,
at least annually. If you
•
•Oetroil 102, Philadelp))ia 83; New
change the method of payment,
•
::Jmei
88, Indiana 87; Chorlotte
I,
pen~lty may be impoaed
~ ~~!),. f'lc!V Y~ 1,00; V811¢ouver 93.
SICfBIIICnto 86l and Golden State
l~ BOIIQ!l 103.
.
.
. Warrion 1~ Cl!itlal103
'
·., GOiden .State wiped out ·an eight·
p'oinl j!efitil in the fmal fi.ve ntillptca
'
t
1 ~800·44·CELL·1
'bY ~ng (3 consecuuv~ pomtt, .
I
'i4cJuding Cliffor(J Rozier's follow ·
' '
•
11ML5t111St.
.
II
atSt.
11tlii.St.
ZIUMSt.
;IIIIo&amp; with 2:021eft that aave the W•.
J
riors the lead fur Jood.
·
.• llolier Jf8bbed two offensive
211N.IIcend
. . Jebcll•nda tllld ICind after the second.
~

from national and international competition ·for two years after a urine
test last August turned up positive for
steroids.
Foschi's family has filed a lawsuit
in New York State Supreme Court
trying to force the UCLA testing lab
to iurn over the unused urine sample
for testing by an independent lab.

+·

Meigs among 16 teams in ·m atfest

-------------Sports briefs------------Swimmlua
ORtANDO, Aa. (AP) -. U.S.
Swimming's governing ·board punished a teen-ager fi&gt;r steroid use,
opening debate about how international anti-doping rules should be
intef(llited.
The federation banned Jessica
Foschi, 15, of Old Brookville, N.Y.•

with 20 points and tlie Jayhawks (20- · 63 shots and almost blew all of a 162, 8-1 Big Eight) opened the second point second-~alf lead . Brian Skinhalf with a 13-0 run to take control ner had 22 points for the visiting
in their 27th consecutive home vic- Bears (7-14, 2-7), who have lost sevtory. Chauncey Billups scored 21 en of eight.
·
points for the Buffaloes (8-13, 2-7),
No.17 North Carolina s3
who lost to Kansas for the 13th
Clemson 48
:
straight tim~ .
Jeff Mcinnis had a career-high 25
Indiana 72
points, all but one on three-pointers,
as the Tar Heels (17-7, 8-4 Atlantic
No.9 Penn St. S4
Brian Evans scored 32 points to Coast Con{erence) ended a threelead the Hoosiers ( 15-9, 8-4 Big game losing streak with the road vicTen). who overcame a flu bug that tory despite their lowest offensive .
wiped out half the team e(lrly this output of the season. Terrell Mclnweek. Indiana led 54-50 with seven tyre missed a three-point attempt
minutes to-play and closed the game . with six secords left and Clemson
with an 18-4run.GiennSekundahad tra1hng 51-48 The Tigers (14-7,
18 points for the visiting Nittany 7) lost for the seventh time in 10;
Lions (18-3, 9-3), the nation 's lead- games.
•
ing three-point shooting team which
No. 2Z Iowa SL 70
1 ' • ' ·,
fini~hed 5-of-22 from there .
O~ahoma 58
Texas Tech
Kenny Pratt scored 20 points and
No. 1l Texas Tech 78
the Cyclones (18-5, 7-2 Big Eighi)
.
Baylor 72
held Oklaho111a scoreless after it got
.The Red Ra1ders (21 -1, 10-0 within two points with I :32 remainSouthwest Conference) won their ing. Ryan Minor had 16 points for
14th straight game despite one of · the Sooners (13-10, 4-5), who have
lhetr worst shoot1ng ntghts of the lost two straight home games an~
season. Darvtn Ham scored 22 po1nts four this season after going 15-0 at
for Texas Tech, wh1ch m1ssed 40 o( home last year.
·

Skiing
SIERRA NEVADA. Spain (AP)
- Norway's Atle Skaardal won the
men's super-a in the World Alpine
Championships, beating Sweden 's
Patrick Jaerbyn by 0.20 seconds in a
race dominated by Scandinavians.
Skaardal completed the 7,956·
foot course in l minute, 21.80 sec-

onds. Norway's Kjetil Aamodt, the
defending slalom and giant slalom
.champion, was third. Finland's Janne
Leskinen was fourth, followed by
Austria's Patrick Wirth and Norway 's Lasse Kjus.
The championships resume Friday with the women's combined
downhill.

The first annual Southeast Classic Wrestling Tournament will begin
Saturday at 10 a.m. at Warren Local
High School.
The tournament will be a 16-team
affair in two divisions. In the Blue
Division, the teams taking part will
be Athens, Jackson, Logan, Caldwell, Federal Hocking, Meigs, Belpre and the host Warriors. Teams in

the White Division are Marietta Riv•
er Valley, Gallia Academy, Sh~nan:
doah, Trimble, Waterford, Nelsonville and Chesapeake.
Admission for the dual-fonnat
tournament will be $4. Medals will
be given for the first three places in
each division. Weigh-ins are from 8
a.m. until9 a.m.

.

'''I
I

CbiCJI0,.................4J
Indiana ................ Jt
CLEVELAND ....... 27
Atllllla ................... 26
0..nMI.................... 24
Owlol1e ................ 2)

I
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I

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'

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••
•

Service agreement required.

'

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.......

'' 192-5827:

.
.I

'

•.. ...,,, ...... ,.......

"S.

.
·.

••

_,
IR

.896
.6JJ

12.S

~14

ZO

IS.S

Z2 . ~2
22 .S2Z

Mihr.. ~ ............. l8

28

.J91

Toronto .................. l4

34 ·-.291,

t1

IS
20
24

29

MAC standings

15

.674

U1oh .................. .....11 I6 .671
Houston ................. 32 18 · .640
[)enya ........ .. ........ 20

lR
Doll:u .......... ........... l6 .11
Minnrsoca ............ 14 H
VIUICOUver ............. II .l7

.417
.140
.298

.229

Pldlkot.-.
S.anlc .....................l6 12 .7l0
LA t..llktn ............ 29 19 .604

s............ ............ 24

22

.m

fbll S1 ..... ,.... _9
W Mich........8
Milmi ............ 7

4 .692
S .615
3 61~
6 .!iJI

Toledo ........ ... 7

6

OHIO ............8

Ponlllld .......'.......... 24 2~ .490
tloldeo Stile .......... 2.1 26 .469
PhoeniL .... - .......... 22 25 .468
L.A. Clipjlm ........ 16 J) .127

I,_,
1 2. ~

-

2~

Col. Brookhaven :'iJ . Reynold5burg
.

)()

,

DiviMon Ill
Cio. Maricmonl 49. Cin. FinneY10wn

Day. Dimbar 66. Day Meadowdale

"

22
LancMrer 66. Col. ludcrendrm:c 65
(lOT)

Vandalia·Buller 711. Midt.llt': IOWil 60

.14

Garawuy ~9. Indian V&lt;JI. W

Snnlinia Eastrrn Brown
Park 1~

4~ .

Cin. Octr

Well sville 60. Sleu~n\'ill!.! Calh ..~M

Divbion II

Brllairt ~0. Steubenville!! 4Y

Benjamin l.of.an 68. Eoiton 42
Big Walnu1 !i.~. Losan Elm JO

Cin. Purcell-Marian :'il . Mount Ornb

Wcslc:rn Bmwn 41
Cin. Roger Bacon 67 . Clermo nt
Nonhea., lern .H

47. Cnnfield 4!i

Val. 59, Col. Whcl s lm~ 20

Division IV
Berlin Hiland 70, Malvern ~ 6
Cmnksvillt= 74, Ponsmout h E. 16
M1ll~r~ pon 4:'\ , Co l. A ~ ndemy 40
N. At.lams 42, l..n:sbu,rg Fnirficld 41
Reediville E:tstern ~I , Tri mble 40

Rates of Taxation for 1995

I

u

men's scores

r

~

i

•
••
&amp;

~
~

·- ...
.I
·e

•
t:

•

IIOFORD

NaY)' 60. COIJitc: S7
Providence 77, Miami S4
Ridor l6. Sl. Fnnci1. N.Y. SO
St Francis. Pa. 68, Rebert Morri&amp; H
Vill~nova 79, Sccon Hllll67
Wqner99, Loq bland Uni'-1 . C)4.

South

Alllb&gt;ma7S. Auburn 12
DuU79.Vir gmia69

·"
East C.oliiU. 811, WiiHQRI 1: Mary 73
Florida St. 79. N. C~~rotina S1. 66
JaimES Mldiaon ~9. N.C.-Wi!minJIIJA
~8

(OT)

Kennacky 86. Oeoraia 1~
·
MARSHALL 9~. Appll~~;hian St. 64

t

&gt;

.c

!lj
~

•

. -·••·=
"'·

·-

,;I

ll

d

~5

i

~

CHESTER

LEBANON

LITART
OLIVE

ORANGE

Mora.. Sl, 77. N. CMoli11 AU 74
N.C.·Aihrnlle 76. Wolford 67

.,

-~~Sl , Ctoo.-48

O.d Dominion 9), Oeorae Muon 92'
(OT)

.
South Carollnm 57, Occqia S01ttherra

-

-n.uu.,

J .8S7

.t - ......... 8 4 .662 IS 9
I) ' II
·11 6
14 9
I.S 9
· ll 10
IS I
9 JI

.62.•

,JG

.7,.,
.609
.W
.~

.652
.4.10

wn. l II .01.1 . 6 IJ .216

E...nule 13. tndiona sc.n
lltiooit St. 74, Dnb Sl
K-.15. CotorMo 10
~e6J.Ooi~on'T

Tut-17.SU.c&gt;!11!SI
1)1111114, S. Hbajl75 (OT)
Wio.-&lt;lilldiiO 56: LoyalL lit. l9
WriiiJ! Sl. 65, C:....lood Sl. S4

Soudl-

'" "-19, M~ 1J
y.... a.n..12

.-.,.116.

·-10.

- s.. 19, ()lit

OnJ
RicO
71,

"'

Mo.·~
Clly"
$ouillora-:
10

1'cul69, Tello AAM SO
.'hd! 71, llo7*J2

t

Smn~rs

Teay ~

Tri -Vnlky JR. Philo J6
Warn!n Lol:al !i.'i. She rid"n 49
Wnvt'rly 67 , Miam1Tr;n 47

MW-

·c.r,
'\ lia
l!
i.
ra.
B:
"
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....,. ..........9 2 :m 19 4 .m

•

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)7

VMl 90. W. Carotioo 73

.

•

Regular-season action

Ashtabula Hatbor 44, Conncnut
Avcn Lnte $9, Wesclake 42
Berea 4J, Midpilrk 31
lkrksh1re 66. Chardon 3~

Marietta .'il COT)
Cin. Glen Esre .'il, Cin. Withrow 47
Cin. Sycamore 46. Amtlia ~4
Cin. Walnut H1lls JJ. Cin. Woodw:U"d

Padua 48, Cle. Hcighls 43
Pickerin~ton 84.l&gt;ublin Scioto 18
Rocky R1ver 64, Fairview 62 (lOT)
Solon 66. Copley ~6
Sout~inston 61. Bri!itol 59
Strong! ville 68. Bron!wk k ~5

Akron Spring. 7,, Akron Ellet 4:ci

NCAA Division I

...~

Bo.tolt-at~aiiCMO.I0: 30p . m.

Nuad:

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

Di•ition I
Olillicothe_ ~.

N.J. 63

Dal101 11 LA t..llktn, IO:JO p.m.

•
•

61 Kiski Prep . .~I

Tournaments

Col. DeSales 71, Cnl. Ccnh:nnial 2;\
Fairland 56, Pormnomh 51
GalliJlOiiS Sb, Cheshire Ri\lcr Val. .1R
Lakewood 47 , Cot: Eas1moor 44
ML'Cinin 5~. Wa.~ hmgtr&gt;r, C.H. 46
Minford 74. Jackson :\4
New l.tlo;ingron 52. 1\lhet!s 42
Rkhmond &amp;li~oo 52, Li s~m Beaver
Loc:~.l .16
R01.:k Hill4-'. S. Point42
Spring. Shawnee 57. Day. Notthmlgc

In pursuance of law, I. Howard E. Frank, Treasurer of Meigs Counly, Ohio, in complianctl with revi"'d Code No. 323.08 of State of Ohio
do i'olreby give notictl of the Rate~ of Taxation 10' the Tox v.. of 1995. Ratos exproued in dollars and cants of ei!Ch one thousand dollar;

Bucknell 3), Ldli&amp;h 63
CoonecticUI87, We~~ Viqini• 69
t.ar.yttw 61. Ya)e ~8
Marisl79, Flirleiall Diddruon 69
M011111 StMary's, trfd. 73. Monmouth.

M1twaukcc 1M Orlando, 7:JO p.m.
Denver at O,.lou~. 8 p.m.
Oli...,.o 111 Minnnota. I p.m.
Goldtn SWe AI San Antonio, R:JO p.at.
~nb1111 Scanlt, 10 p.lll.
Atlanta at Vancouver. 10 p.m.

I

R~ne

bI

Friday's tpllllll

s

Western

Bowti., Green at Toledo
Ceo!. Michip 01 Milnli
E. Michil"" 01 Ball S1.
W. Micllipn II KCIII

East

Philooklphia .. New von. 7:)0 p.m
Indian" vi. Wuhinaton 1M Baltimore.
! :JOp.m

. Midti... 51...7 ~ ,6!6
, ..,.. .............. 7·
. sa~
Wl....,.in .....6 S .~5
· Micllipo ..... :.~ · 6 ,4,,~
. l«' n 11 .'....5 6 .&lt;4U
. ltll!loli .......,...f 7 .364
OHIO ST....... Z 9 .112

Strukn 7:'i, Howland 72 (2 OT)
Tallm3dge 70, W:Oworth 40

Atroo .. OHIO

O.Jiu AI Ulah. 9p.m.
Phoenix a1 Portland, 10 p.m.

J .7l0 18

Lutber.m W. 57, 51. Joseph )4
Madison 7~. A1tlfmbula 44
Medina RI, Cloverk:af 33
N. Olmsted 56, Amhem 36
N. RhlaeviUe 65, Midview 27
Oberlin 40, Elyria W. ~2 ·
Ouovilk61 . LimaCillh. 58

Saturday's JIIIICII

Cllic•o 11 Det:roi.l. 7:30p.m.
Wooht-11 Mil-be. 8:.10 p.m.
San &gt;\IIIOftio ac HouAOn. 8:)0 p.m.

' ..... Sl .........?

.S83

Hutbon 71, GrecpjJ
lroa10n 7~ . Rod: Hills fiO
N011:on 66, Higbland 6J
Oak Hill71. McDmnott Northwes t~~
Rewte7l. Copley 7Z

W. Mtchi&amp;an 76, MiP 6.1

16 .
Ill
21'.S

Denver Ill Mklmi. 7:JO p.m.

•

10

14

Wednesday's scora

CLEVELAND v1. 'Toro1to at Hamil·
ton. Onlaio, 7 p.m.
·

I

10 II .476
15 6 .714

Ball St. 82. Ce~~t . MichiJIII 7~
Bowlin&amp; Grftn 72. E. Michi&amp;:~n 70
Km1 86. Akron 6.1
OHIO 72, ToledoliO

Toni&amp;bt's Jlmes

j B~g Ten standings

. ~18

I~
8 .619
1J II .542

JIGSU ............ 7 6 . ~J8 12 9 .m
Kcnl.. ............ 6 7 .461 12 9 .m
Cenr. Mith . ... l II .1M S 16 .2.18
Akron ............ 0 13 .000 J 18 .10

.!i

20. ~

Overall

ra, .ll! Ll&lt;l.
.146 18 1 .m

2

Iii

7
11
IU
IH
1~ ..,

.ll! L

c..r.

E. Micll ....... It

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B: L ld.

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24

Firntonr 68 . Akroo Garfield 65
Glenville 9!1, Cle. Benedicline 70
Gram 76, Symmes Val. S9

l.cli- II Nichipn

Wed!lflday'l-

!

• FREE nights and weekends till Apri1 .3oth.

.4011
.367
.21)

Delroi1 102. Philodclphia 81
New Jeney 18. lndi... 87
Cbarl'"'elzo. New York 100
Seonle 1~. t.tinftnol• 93
Va.-:ou\U 93. Sactamcato 86
Cioklen Slate 106. Boston 10.1
LA. Ull&lt;ci187. Allonla 86

• Motorola 26.00 Bag Phone only

'

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E. Liverpool93, Steubenville 61

Sunday'apme

4
12

.449

.479

San Antonio ............'t

•. NEC 500 only $9.95

'

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21
29
)I
17

Midwm DivilkM

.

•

11

Iii

.714
.6.18
.461

2~

lia

•

14

WESTERN CONFERENCE

l

I•

'

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Akron Buchtcl60, Akron Ellet 49
Akron St v.s •.M 76, Akron Spring. 41

WI-oi!MP&lt;noS-III'unlue

t..

I

'

I

A-DIY-

Ortando .... :............ .JS
New Yoot&lt; .............. JO
W..t,;oa~oo. , .........22
Miurii ....................22
New 1enoJ ............20
.................... 11
Pl!;looklploio ........... IO

Ohio U.S. boys' scores

•.

MichipoS!• I I N -

EASTERN CONFERENCE

as

·

,

Thom.:u Wonhin,ti1on 44. W~ltland 42
To I. Roger 42, T!&gt;l. Libbey ~7
Tul . Scort ~1. Tol. Woodward .15
Tol . Waite 4S, Tol. Stan ).2
Valley Forge .~H. Cle. VA-SJ 49
Vermilion 74, Sandusky 411
Wnrerford 61 , Shenandooh :'iO

Brecksville 76. N. Royal!on 26 ·
Brook.sick 44, Wellin&amp;ton 38
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Ourdon ND-CL 70. Stlakc!r His. S2
Dublin Cofflmn 69, GroYeporl60
Elyria 61, Soulhview J6
Firelands 4~. AYon ~9
Fon Frye 71 , Monroe Cenlral '58
Frontier 71 . BeallsviUe 49
Harvey 6~. Genna~ 1
Hawken .57, Wi.:kliffc ~
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wood J2
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Kin&amp;s Mills KinJ161 , Spingboro 4~
l..akewood 62. W. Gt:u~aa 48
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Santa Clam 79. ~t . Mary ' s, CulM

Saturday's p -

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of fll Coun!Y T,_.ror 01 bv moll . P;.. bring your last lox ,_lpt ·and if yoo poy by mail, be,..,. to loatto yoor tlfoiltriY by tilxln(j
din•ict end encloot •llml*l•lfolddl d onvelOPf. Atw.ys ......,,,. your IlK receipt to • thlt It t&lt;Mrllll your pr()porly,'Offici hours

n 8:30A.M. Ill 4:30P.M. Mdndtty 1hrCII9&gt; Fridly- ClOIId on So1unloy.
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SanltMI

-B rowns·oust Belichick as head coach
-

I!IY DAVID GINSBURG

BALTIMORE (AP) -The NFL
·forced Art Modell to leave the
BIOWlls' name IIIII colon in Cleveland. By his own choice, he left
· c~h Bill Belichick thele, too.
· So who will join Modell in Baltimore?
- . Modell, owner of the transplanted Baltimore franchise, frred
Belichick on Wednesday, saying a
coaching change was nece~sary to
bring the team to what he called the
· next level. The Cleveland Browns
were S-11 in 199S, their fourth los•ing season in five year&amp; under
Belichick.
· Before he finds a new nickname
for his team, Modell ~ to get
new c~h.lfhe's looking for somo(lno: with Blllli,-.ore lies, then Ted
Man:hibroda equid be his man.
Man:hibroda, 64, won three AFC
East titles as coach of the Baltimore
Colts from .l91S to 1979. He
returned to coach the Colts in Indianapolis in 1991 and led the learn to
l)le AFC title game last season before
being dismisSed after a conlracl dis,pute. .
. · The Indianapolis Star reported
today that Marchibroda met with
~odell on Wednesday in Baltimore

a

and is expected to be hired.
"The decision is not definite yet,
but 1cedaihly want the job," Man:hibroda told the newspaper during an
a break in an interview with Modell.
"I learned of Mr. Modell's interest
(Wednesday) morning. I would like
to return to Baltimore, but as of right.
now, it's still Art's decision."
If Marchibroda is not hired,
another candidate with local ties is
Oakland assistant coach Joe Bugel,
who was a longtime assistant coach
with Washington before leaving to
become head coach in Arizona.
Bugel said last week that he would
be interested in interviewing for the
job if it became available.
San Francisco defensive coordinator Pete Carroll, who coached the
New YorkJets in 1994, also is a possibility.
Modell spent Wednesday in Bal·
timore in a series of meetings and did
not return phone calls from The
Associated Press.
Belichick, meanwhile, spent the
day cleaning QUI his office in Berea.
Ohio.
"This team has an excellent
future and I wish them well," he
said.
Th~re is a strong possibility that

Belichick will soon be employed by
another team- perhaps as defensive
coordinator for the Miami Dolphins
under new coach Ji!Mly Johnson. An
NA.. source said he might be offered
a job by New England Patriots coach
Bill Pan:ells.
"I will review my options with
regard to my future in the NA..,"
Belichick said.
The Browns lost seven of their
final eight games last season after
word leaked out that Modell planned
to take the franchise to Baltimore.
Belichick was 37-45 in five seasons
with the Browns.
"The move to Baltimore offers us
a new beginning, a fresh start," Modell said in a statement. " ... I believe
to get to the next level, a change at
head coach is necessary."
Belichick led the Browns to an
11-5 record and a playoff berth in
1994, and last season was supposed
to be even better. Modell signed free
agent receiver Andre Rison and
spent nearly $24 million in boQuses
over the $37.1 million salary cap in
an effort to get the Browns into the
Super Bowl for the first time.
After a 3-1 start, the Browns were
4-4 before news of Modell's planned
move to Baltimore began to leak to

the media. Belichick's attempts to
keep the players focused on the season were futi(e and the team's slide
began with a 37-10 thrashing at the
hands of the visiting Houston Oilers
on Nov. S.
The next day, Modell formally
announced his Intention to move.
~Browns' only win after that was
a 26-10 rout of Cincinnati in the
home finale Dec. 17.
"Last year we had a lot of distractions and didn' t have the type of
season we expected to have," quarterback Vinny Testaverde said.
Belichick had a no-nonsense
approach to the job and rarely joked
with his playe..S. But he earned their
respect, in part because of his dedication to his work.
"Bill is a great coach. The way he
prepared us for games is incredible,"
left tackle and team captain Tony
Jones said. "I can't put the blame on
him for our losses last year. Bill
doesn't play on Sundays."
Testaverde said: "Unfortunately,
losing your job in the National Football League is part of the business.
However, getting another job quickly is also part of the business. I wish
him the very best wherever he goes."

Thursday, F

Thurldly, Febru.lry 15, 1996

Ohio

0811, PS, P8,
Mit, tilt,

PW, POLo Pwr

crulu,

to call it, "J;Iipolar disorder."
Contrary to what people may
think, this 'is no case of "Johnny's
down in the dumps again." It's a disease that puts its victims through hell
and makes'death look inviting. I have
been to at least 20 psyebologists, psy~~·
chiatrists, pnests and counselors, but
By ANN LANDERS
after ~ or four weeks of feeling
Dear Ann Landers: I am a college- fairly nollJIIII, the depression returns
educated man who works in the with a vengeance.
building trades. I would like your
I have ~been to several support
honest opinion on suicide. I'm con- groups to oo avail. I appear to be persidering it.
fectly normal, but I agonize daily
In spite of my incredibly tortured , about my ~¥ish to die.
.life, I have a good wife and two lovo- ·
I know this is a lot to lay on you,
ly children. I have suffered through Ann, but with your many years of
.years of manic-depression or, as the advice- giving, do you have any for
'mqdern medical community prefers me?-- Bill' in 01-egon

Ann

Landers

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

-

1995 FORD
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SEVERAL IN STOCK

By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science WrMer

an article from our local paper. Once
to dozens of psychologists and psy- again, as you will see·, a young man
chiatrists. Didn't any of them suggest is going to be rewarded for doing the
that you take medication? There are wrong thing. This boy climbed a
a number of excellent anti-depres- fence at the zoo after it was closed
sants on the market that help people and was badly injured. His parents
like you.
felt the zoo should pay. Why?
I urge you to try the professionals
Here's the article:
again and take this column with you.
"A decade after wolves tore off
Also, look into the National Depres- his right arm at the Toronto Zoo, 17sive and Manic-Depressive Associa- ye!lf-Oid Scott Connor was awarded
tion, 730 N. Franklin, Chicago, Ill. a settlement of up to SII million.
60610, 1-800-826-3632; and D/ART
'"It won't replace his arm. but it
(Depression Awareness. RecoRnition will take away some of the worries
and Treatment Program), Room L, we had for his future,' his mother
Rockville, Md. 20857. Good luck said.
Bill. Let me know you followed
" Scott Connor will begin receivthrough. I'm worried about you.
ing monthly payments in two years
Dear Ann Landers: I am sending under terms of the out-of-court set-

to other cancers, re.searcher Dr.
Chaim .Roifrnan said. ·
· An e$'l(I\Jated 3,500 new cases of
the leukeni'ia. called ALL, occurred in
the UnitelcJ~States last year, 2,000 of
!hem in ~hildren, ai:cording to the
4ukem~,' ~ilciety of America.TJ:aoi~nal chemotherapy 1cures
most ~ts but about 20 penr:nt of
all cases relapse and have a poorer
prognosis~· The new study focused on

what to do in those cases.
The work is reported in today 's
issue of the journal Nature by Rolfman, of the Hospiljll for Sick Children in Toronto and the University of
Toronto, with colleagues there and in
Israel.
'
"It's very impressive," said Dr.
David E. Fisher, an assistant professor of pediatric oncology at the Dana

include . fatigue, malaise, loss of addressed, stamped envelope to P.O.
appetite, irregular menstruation, and Box 2017, Mumy Hill Station, New
abdominal pain.
York, NY 10156. Be sure to mention
The diagnosis is established by the title(s).
PETER
demonsttating !he protein and fat
DEAR DR. GOTT: My grandson ·
abnormalities that I mentioned. Treat- had a chance for a better job, but for
GOTT,M.D.
ment is directed to the underlying some reason he failed the urine test
condition, that causes the nephrotic because it was too weak. He drinks a
syndron\e.
tremendous amount of water. What
However, dietary protein supple- can be done to alleviate this problem?
ments are also necessary to stem the
DEAR READER: The more water
By PETER H. GOTT, II.D.
protein depletion taking · place a person consumes, the more fluid is
DEAR DR. GOTI: A relative ha~ through the kidneys. In addition, salt eliminated in the urine. The more
been diagnosed with nephrotic syn- should be restricted, because it will dilute the urine, the less concentratdrome. Do you have information aggravate edema. Patients with this ed are the various components·· such
'about protein loss, diet and medica- condition should be monitored by as metabolic products of drugs -- in
tion'!
· kidney specialists.
it.
Therefore, during routine testing
DEAR READER: The nephrotic
Cortisone and other steroids often
syndrome is not a ~ingle disease; help reduce protein losses. If the kid- · for drugs, such as marijuana and
rather it has many causes, ranging neys are severely ·damaged, . renal cocaine, many labs check to see how
dilute the urine samples are. If a specfrom diabetes and lupus to severe transplants must be considered.
allergic reactions. The syndrome is
The putcome of · the nephrotic imen is too dilute, the drug test is ·
marked by excess excretion of pro- syndrome varies, depending on the considered inconclusive-- or may not
be passed, as was your grandson 's
tein in the urine with resulting ·low cause and ~ success of treatment.
levels of protein in the· blood,
Because I mentioned lupus and predicament.
The easiest way to solve the probincreased amounts of fats in the diabetes as two possible causes of
blood, and edema (swelling of tis- peP-~Q!i.~ syndi'OI)IC, I am SC!!,ding. lem is to urge your grandson to avdid
sues).
you ftetlcopies of·my Health Reports unnee~ssary fluid consumption. If he
The primary sign of nephrotic.syn- "Lup~~&lt; The Great Imitato(' and drinks only when he is thirsty, the
drome is edema, which can be quite "Diabe'tes Mellitus." Other .readers urine will become more concentratsevere in the legs, but can also affect who wijpld like copies should send ed and the lab will prove that he is
the face and lungs. Symptoms ·· ·S2 for each report plus a long, self- drug-free -- if, indeed, he is.

Farber Cancer Institute, part of Harvard Medical School.
The work involves an enzyme
called Jak-2. Normally, this enzyme
becomes active only when a cell gets
an external chemical signal to divide.
The enzyme helps carry that message
to the cell's nucleus, which is its control room.
In ALL cells from relapsed
patients, the researchers discovered,
Jak-2 is found in abnonnally high
levels arid it is active constantly,

dement. Should he live to age 80, he
will be paid a total of SII millio11 to
compensate him for medical costs as
well as wages he could have otherwise earned.
" Scott was 6 .when he sneaked
into the zoo with his brother and a
·friend. The trio scaled the zoo's
perimeter fence and tried to catch the
attention of what Scott thought were
' big dogs' on the other side of a seeond fence."
Tell me, Ann, if a young person
the same age had lost a limb to cancer, what would he get? The young
man in the article should get at most
job training, an artificial limb and a
lecture, not a posh life for the rest of

•

his days. Many people have pain an4
suffering through no fault of their
own and get nothing. •• Phoenix I
· Dear Phoenix: I don' t know
enough about this case to make a
judgmenL Perhaps the court felt the
zoo didn't do enough to keep .people
from climbing into the cages. Where
were the&gt;lad's parents? A 6-year-old
is awfully youpg to be roaming
around ,a zoo wiih no adult in atten"
dance.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, l,.os Angeles,
Calif. 90045
'

1993 BUICK
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rather than just intermittently.
sion of the Iak-2 blocker by a pump.
Scientists then found that a sub- To make a useful drug for people; scistance called AG-490 binds to Jak-2 entists would have to devise a version . .
and blocks its activity. In mice that that can be taken orally or through :
had received transplants of human shots once or twice a day, Rolfman •
ALL cells, this chemical blocker said.
•
was able to eliminate the leukemia
The study has implications
cells without harming normal blood beyond ALL, because other cancers
cells.
also depend on internal messengers
"I don'l think we know at this like Jak-2, Roifman said. So devising
moment whether they' re cured for- blockers specific for those other mesever," Roifman said.
,
sengers might be useful for treatment.
The mice got a continuous infu- . he said.

FUilNn'UB CO.'S

DR.GOTT

ON

.

Cancer society ki~ks off Daffodil Days

1995 MERCURY
VILLAGER
'

7 Pllllnger, V-e,

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tlH, CNIM, PS, PI, P.W,
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Jerry Rought, Pomeroy Chief of
Police, has been named chairman of
this year's Daffodil Days, an annual
fund raising event for the Meigs
County Unit of the American Cancer
Society.
Rought will coordinate all activities. Proceeds will be used for lhe
Society's research, education and

1995 FORD F150
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By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science Writer

LOADED

NEW YORK (AP) - Scientists
say they ' ve found the oldest known
traces of sharks - scales from an
ancestor that may not have evolved
jaws yet.
The scales are 450 million years
old, about 25 million years older than
the previous record for shark remains,
scientists reported in today 's issue of
the journal Nature.
· The scales were unearthed in a
sandstone formation about 30 miles
from Colorado Springs, Colo. They
are hollow, teardrop shapes that are
·found in clusters of up to 10, said
. researcher Ivan Sansom. Each scale
is no more than one twenty-fifth of an
inch long, he said.
The scales have internal canals
that are characteristic .o f sharks, Sansom said. Scientists use those canals,

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Bl~llner,

Days means giving hope to cancer
patients and giving.yourself a touch
of spring."
The freshly-cut flowers will arrive
the week of Man:h II. For more
infomiation contact the Meigs County ACS otfice at 1'-800-446-7479, or
Jack Slavin of Syracuse, 992-3710 or
Rought at 992-7430.

rather than fearsome-looking jaws, to
classify fish as sharks.
It's not clear whether the ancestral
shark had true jaws. If it did, the
scales would also be the oldest
known trac;es of any jawed fish .
At 450 million years ago, "there's
a reasonably strong possibility they
didn 'l have jaws," said Sansom, a
researcher at the University of Birmingham in England.
Shark teeth are not known in the
fossil record until 50 million years
later, said Paul Smith, a study coauthor with Sansom. Teeth are highly likely to be preserved, so the fact
that none are found earlier suggests
sharks may not have had jaws at that
time, Smith said.
Instead, they may have had a more
primitive biting mechanism.
Rather thallhavingjaws that close
vertically, thC mouth might have

closed in from the sides like those of
the modem-day lamprey or hagfish,
Smith said. Toothlike ·structures
· might have been made of the same
material found in fingernails, which
would be unlikely to be preserved in
fossils, he said.
Researchers also unearthed a surprising variety of fossils from other
.fish, Sansom said. The results show
that fish had evolved into a wider
diversity by that lime than scientists
had traditionally thought.
'
John Maisey, a fossil fish expert at
the American Museum of Natural
History in New York. said he was
skeptical about the idea that the
ancient shark lac)o:ed jaws. It may
simply not have had teeth, he said.
He said identifying ancient fish
from scales is controversial, but that
the new report makes a good argument that the scales are from sharks.

Druggists: Prices rose at. double inflation rate in '95
By STEVE SAKSON
AP Bu1lnn1 Writer

ltC.

'11,949

. .:t
..
patient
&gt;q;vlce programs.
The oilfodil Days Committee is
currently taking pre-sale orders. A
bouquet of 10 is $5, pots of six to
eight blooms, S I0 each, and choco- •
. late lollipops are $1 each.
"As 1~ first flower of spring, the
daffodil symbolizes life and. hope,"
said Rought. "Supporting Daffodil

•

Scientists find e~rliest trace of sharks,
maybe from even before jaws

414

NEW YORK (1\P) - Prices that
diug companies.charge for their most
popular medicines rose at more than
twice the rate of inflation in 1995,
according to a study by retail drug_.gists . .
· . The results, released Wednesday
by the National Assqciation of Chain
Drug StO!'CS, showe4 the average
·w.hole5ale cosl of the 500 lop selling
drugs rose 4.6 percent during the
year, while the government's producer price index was up only 2.2

'9,949

w,.k

"'ile'"'"'

..

Dear Bill: You say you have been

The facts on nephrotic syndrome

'.

.jsv DICK BRINSTER
"It's a tough race, which I think
• : DAYTONA ·BEACH, Aa. (AP) is good, because you have to know
- With hungry Dale Earnhardt at how you stack up," Jarrett said.
the point and five former Daytona "You'll know what you're going to
.:,00 champions in iow, the first of have to work on Friday and Saturt,wo qu,alifying races today has the day, if thCre is anything."
· ippearance of a dry run for the Super
Considering Earnhardt's presence
and that of former Daytona winners
· 8owl of stock car racing.
•:: From this battle emerges the next Jarrett, Bill Elliott, Geoff Bodine,
champion.
Darrell Waltrip and record-seeking
. "We'll know exactly how we defender Sterling Marlin, virtually
·stanchfterThursday's race, becl!~ everybody should lie turning or tun·odler than not]Javing (1991 c·am- ing something in pursuit of better
pion) Ernie (lrvan) and Jeff G6nton combination for Sunday.
.: •.we pn:Uy much have the can YOI!
Earnhardt is beginning the quest
llnow you're going to have to beat to for an unprecedented eighth Winston
_win the Daytolla SOO," 1993 Day- Cup championship. But a victory
· -tona ~ willner Dale Jamu said .Sunday would leave him in an unfa~y.
.
miliir positio.n- leading.after the
• • ' Jirrett, · already a 'victory this. openirig salvo of the 31·race sched,
in,the ~Pilil'll Busch Clash; . ule.
•
111111 oulalde DaytOna 500 pole-sit·
"Our plan this year is to l~ave
· , ""~~ in.,the lint of two 1~· , . ,. Da~tona with the .lead and noP09k·
fO act politiona 3-30 for ,Ina back." he laid. "We're ~Y·
~~~··· S3.6 'm1Uion ..race. Ollly· Our plan iHonsiatency."
'
~·wt~oca-t~fleil hil Cle~
Despite a record 26 c~r victoJilt MOIIII! Clirlo • 189.510 mph, il'ld riel at the 2.S-mile Daytoaa Interlrven, ·wf!Oie 189.366 clocki.na in a lllllional Speedway, Earnhardt• baa
Jlord Thunderbird pve him the pole )'et to celebrate the ouiA:Ome of a
for tho IIOC(JI!d oftoday'uaces, will 500-miler. But he WQII'~ be ovcr1101 be .trected by the 01111:0me of the come with delpiir should he fail for
qUallfyina ~the 19th time fO ]Win

•

NEW YORK (AP)- A drug that
wiped out human leukemia cells in
mice may lead to an effective treatment for the most conunon cancer in
children, scientists repor1Cd today.
The drug blocks a chemical signal
that the acute lymphobla5tic leukemia
cells need to survive. The general
idea behind the drug inay also apply

:Flyers, Bruins and
.;Qilers among victors

.Five former winners
'to run in Daytona 500

The Dally SenUnel• Page 7.

Drug wipes out leukemia cells in mice, gives clue for treating people

Jn theNHL,

By The AIIOCiaWd Prell
scored a goal in each period.
· The Philadelphia Ayers and
Rick Zombo, Rick Tocchet and
f'lorida Panthers couldn't have been Ted Donato had goals as the Bruins
'more evenly· matched this season. snapped a three-game losing streak
Just imagine what might happen in and won for only the third time in I 0
games (3-6-1 ).
the NHL playoffs.
· JohnLeCiairandAnatoliSemenRanford earned his 12th career
~v scored in the first 10 minutes of shutout, and coach Steve Kasper
the second period as Philadelphia lauded his defense, which kept the
beat Aorida 4-2 Wednesday night. tough shots off Ran ford for most of
That concluded their season series 2- the game.
2-1. Each team scored I0 goals. Bach
"It was our game plan and it didwon games 2-1 and 4-2. There was n't have to be pretty," he said.
a ·I-I tie.
OUers 3, Mighty Ducks 2 .
. "It's a very important win, espeAt Edmonton. the Oilers scored
cially against a divisional team that's three goals in less than four minutes
above you in the standings," Ayers in the second period. Glenn Andercoach Terry Murray said. "Hopeful- son got his 900th point as an Oiler
ly, this will build momentum for our and his 496th goal in the NHL.,Zdeno Ciger had the game-winner, while
team, which we need."
The Panthers ·lead the Ayers by Todd Marchant had his ninth.
siK points in the Atlantic Division,
In their four wins over Anaheim,
where both teams trail the New York the Oilers have surrendered just four
Rangers.
.
goals.
"It's real important to beat a team
. Klap 2, Sabra 2
that we might wind tlp facing again
At Buffalo, Rob Ray and Pat
in the playoffs," I.:eCiair siid. ''
LaFonlaine rallied the Sabtes from a
Semenov, a rarely used forward, 2-0 hole.
made it 3-1, and when the Panthers
LaFontaine'sgoalat 11 :16ofthe
crept within a goal, Eric Lindros _ third period gave the Sabres the tie
~anged in his ·team-high _37th.
and extended their unbeaten streak to
Semenov has been an afterthought four games. Buffalo 8,_oaltender
this season and didn't dress in the Dominik Hasek stopped 37 shots,
pR:vious three games.
including 15 in the third period.
"It makes me happy, it makes
Los Angeles was without Wayne
£oach happy, and maybe it makes Gretzky, sidelined with a bruised hip
you guys (media) happy," Semenov sustained Tuesday night against
iaid. "I do my best. I want to play Detroit. Gretzky has been the subject
hockey. It makes me happy because of trade rumors that had him leaving
I know I can play."
the Kings for a Stanley Cup con. . . Ed Jovanoski and Paul Laus tender.
srored for Aorida.
Yanic Perreault and Eric Lacroix
· "We're two teams that match up scored 38 seconds apart for the
well against each other," Florida Kings, who have won just two of
~oaltender John Vanbiesbrouck said. their last 17 games (2-11-4).
"The series is tied, and that's about
Maple Leafs 4, Sharks 3
it. What more can you say?:'
At Toronto, Mats Sundin's back"There's flO! much to read into bander with 7:33 remaining won it.
·it," added Aorida's Scott Mellanby,
Jeff Odgers' second goal of the
a former Ayer. "We play each oth- game just 21 seconds later set up a
er close. This would make a great tight finish.
playoff series."
Mike Gartner, with his 26th and
· Also Wednesday, it was Boston 3, 27th goals, and Doug Gilmour also
Hartford 0; Edmonton 3, Anaheim 2; scored for the Leafs, who have won
~Angeles 2, Buffalo 2; and Toron- two straight after a 2-8-3 slide.
to 4, San Jose 3. 1
Jamie Baker also scored for the
Bnd111 3, Whalen 0
Sharks and Chris Tancill had three
At Hartford, Bill Ranford made assists, giving him 14 points in his
20 saves and the Boston Bruins last eight games.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Anti-depressants may be the a·nswer to m·an's bipolar disorder

Wll .- \ri,.S N 1~: \\:
IN l l SI~It 1\rl,
rl,lJllN I• IIi I~?·?
1995 FORD
T·BIRD LX

ary 15, 1996

~rceht.

'The ligures were the latest evi-

dence lhat the pharmaceutical indus-

trY hiS &amp;JifCIIS'ively raised prices in

the two years since national health

:tUe rcfon;n effons failed.

'

~
'

••'

,

If

I

Restonic Crown
Royal

•99
...
..........
_2 . . ....

Twin Ea. Pc. Rag. $149
$t79

1et

Klnt3Pc.let

..

said Ron Ziegler, the association's '
president and chief executive. "For
many, prescription drug&amp; represent
their largest out-of-pocket cost after
housing and food."
The drug price survey is done
quarterly for the chain druggists
group by the University or Minneso- .
ta .
Drug industry critics say manu- :
facturers are exploiting tflc demise of
President Clinton's . health-care
reforms and the pro-6usiness attitude
of Republicans in Congress to raise
prices faster than iri past years.
Indeed, drug industrY profits are
among the healthiest in American
industry and drug stocks are among
the fastest rising on Wall Street:

$119
$279
$379

Restonic Perfed
Rest Summit

'119
...

s159
...

Twin Ea. Pc. Reg. $1"
Now·

fuM Ia. ~
Queen2Pe.S.t
Kint13 Pc. let

$239
$$99
$H9

$149
$349
S.79

S.Year Umitecl Wafl'anly

Restonic
Bed of Roses

'209
...

NOW

..........
-2Pc.let

S.79
$1149

$259
$619

ICint 3 ,._...

$1-

•'"

I S.Year Full WaiTanty

Twin Ea. Pc. Reg. $249
NOW

Pulla. Pc
Qu.tn 2 Pc. Set
KI"'!31'&lt;.Sot

$309

$749
$990

$199
$469
$619

15-Year Umh.cl Warranty

FREE

Delivery of
New Bedding

Twin Ia. Pc. Rag. $379

.

The association's drug inflation
rate was higher than the 4.1 percent
registered in I1)94 and the 4.0 percent
rate of 1993, when health reform and
drug prices were dominant political
themes.
Drug manufaCturers disputed the
study's accuracy, saying it fails to
reflect discoupts given to health
insurers and other vendors of prescription medicine.
Still, the ~urvey illustrated the
widening gap in prices for the elderly ~nd uninsured, who pay the high·
est prices for drugs, and members of
mimaged care lilld insurance programs who enjoy _discounted prices.
·" The nillion:~ 37 million 'elderly
,entolled in M~. Which does not
provide preScription drug coverage,
are victims of these rising prices,"

$590

NOW

Res tonic
Exquisite

FREE
Bed Frame
.WJth purchaM of

kJneMt

RIITLDD

FREE
Removal of
Old Bedding

�•,

,

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Thursday, February 15, 1996

P1111 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 15, 1 • '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

The Dally Sentinel • Page

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.18th annual Gettysburg address
~ssay contest to ~e held .. ·
·~

Something from the

The Gettysburg Address Means To

honey's

The 18th Annual Gettysburg
Address Essay Contest which is open
to all ~venth' and eighth grade St!ldents m Delaware, Maryland, New
J~rsey, ~ew York, Ohio, Pennsylvama, Vtrgtma and West V~rginia, will
be spo~ by the Gettysburg Thlvel Council.
In ~ past 1_7 years, the Travel
Council has rece1ved many favorable
lctte~s. from school teachers and
adrrumstrators ':"hobavc en~ouraged
student partic!pat1o~ to_ ~ncrease
aw~ness of Lmcoln ~ wnb~~ mas~~·ece and the Amencan C1~~~ War
ulfough the contest theme of What.

Iarea anractlons. The winning student'

, Me."
•
• will also be invited to plll'licipate in .
Last year, the winning entry was . the 133rd Annual Getty!burg Address :
· submitted by Miss Cassie Sabrina Anniversary ~J'VIIIKle activities '
Brode, a student at Martinsburg next November. There Will also be 12.!: .
: North Middle School in Martinsburg, cash awards ranging ftom $23 to $50"
West Virginia. Cassie's essay was and all winners from each school will ·
·, read as part of the commemoration receive a special edition Gettysburg
1 activities of the 132ndAnniversary of I poster.
·
' 'Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, held
All entries must be posbliarked by
last November. ,
March 3. Entry forms and contest ~
This· year's winning student and tules may be obtained by writing:
their 'family will receive a Gettysburg Essay Contest, Dept. G--S2,·Gettys- ,
vacation package which includes 2 burg Travel Council, 35 Carlisle St.,
nights lodging, 5~meals, tours and ,Gettysburg, Penn. 17325.
free admission to many Gettysburg

.

BLACK HISTORY TELEVISION • Alia.,_,.
Swindell, Hen here In the Harlem section of
New York, Ia one of nine African-Americana , _
lured In the Discovery Chennel film "Harlem

Diary: Nine Voicea of Rftillance," which debuts
Feb. 25. The film aubjecta share their Jo~lan~
bleak experiences of life In Harlem. (AP Photo)

~

and section chiefs in related fields at 'known for his research in the liRa of ·
medical centers across the United congestive he~ failure.
, , . · ,.
States. Each person was asked who . Lewis. has been at U mvemty &lt;
the,y felt were the leading clinicians Medical Center since 1969and is not· .:
in heart disease and' strokes. To pre- ed for his study of cardiovascular dis-~~
vent bias, doctors could not nominate eases including mittal valve prol~. ;
University Medical Center is a
anyone !II their own institution. 'i'he
magazine published the names of the nationally known teaching, research
357 physicians cited most often.
and Jiatient care facility specializing;.
Leier, director ·of the Division of in cardiac care. organ transplantation,· ·
Cardiology at University Medical 'retiabilitalion, women's services, neuCenter since 1986, is internationally rosciences and cancer.

TV offers .rich celebration
of Bla·cl{ History Month
---Community calendar-.-. -

I

.j

By LYNN Ea.BER
• · AP Television Writer ·
~
LOS ANGI;LES (AP) - Nine
hopeful young voices, sharing tales
of Harlem life bot11. joyful and
blea~. Nine .u nguarded young
faces, eyes fixed on a future of
boundless possibility.
"Harlem Diary: Nine Voices of
Resilience" is an intimate, stereotype·sllattering look at youngsters ·
refusing to accept limits or failure
despite the to.tghest obstacles.
The Discovery Channel film is
pan of a rich exploration of black
American experience offered this
month on television, which usually has a knee-jerk tendency to reiegate blacks to flimsy·sitcoms.
· The occasion is Black History
Month, and cable channels in particuiar are doing themselves proud
:
in marking it. While the pain and
:
glory of the past,co~live, there's
1
a focus on the here-and-now . as
· welL
i
Let's start with the vivid
:
"Harlem Diary," which debuts at
9 p.m. EST Sunday, Feb. 25. The
documentary from sociolqgist Ter' ry 'Williams a~d filmmaker .._
Jonathan Stack allows each youngster to tell his or her own story.
Williams, author of "The

!

i
!•
'

Uptown Kids: Slhlggle and Hope
and reaching for something posiin the Projects," formed a writers' · tive, whal everybody wants: a
home, a job, to raise a family in a
circle to guide young New Yorkers
positive way."
toward self-expression and insight.
"I feel lucky that I realized the
Other programs to watch for
during Black History Month (all
right way ,before ending up sometimes EST):
where I couldn't return from," says
-"In the Life," PBS (broadcast
16-year-old Rasheem Swindell, an
dates and times vary; check local
aspiring boxer who has watched
violence and crime defeat so many
listings). The newsmagazine
of his friends.
attuned to gay and lesbian issues
.' "People ask me why I'm• so
reports on the growing gay presserious," says Barr Elliot, 17, a
ence in Atlania's annual march
budding hip-hopper . musician.
honoring pr. Martin Luther King
"Life is serious. Got people out Jr. and examines other topics from
here hating each other because of
a black-gay viewpoint.
their ,skin. ·,, I really try to love
:-"This Century," anthology
myself and always love another
senes offers "The Last Lynching,"
like myself.",
an examination of the 1930 hllngWilliams said in a telephone
ings of two black teen-agers in
interview from New York that the
Marion, Ind. The Thursd)ly, Feb.
"Writers' Crew" he formed in
15, program is "Nightfighters," a
1989 ended up serving as a counlook at black aviators; the civil
seling group and employmentcen·
rights' anthem "We Shall Overter as well.
CC!me" is the topic Thursday, Feb.
And as the source of the docu22.
.
mentary Williams hopes will be an
~"Digging for Slaves," 8 p.m.
eye-opener a~ut Harlem.
Friday, Feb. 16, History Channel.
"Don't see 'the community as a
A look at how archaeologists are
monolithic entity,just as drug dealfinding evidence of slavery's bru' ers or crime or single parents," he
tality and discovering black consays. "See this as a diverse com·
tributions to American society.
munity, as a community that's
-"America's Dream," 10:15
constantly growing and changing
p.m. Saturday, Feb. 17, HBO.

'·==:::::p
~==r===~==-r=:::::::P:=::
'u~llc~==-r=~~=
ubllc
Notlc:e
Public Notlc:e
Notlc:e
Public Notlc:e

•

Drs. Carl V. Leier and Richard R
·Lewis, cardiologists at The Ohio
State University Medical Center,
Columbus, are among the country's
best heart doctors, according to an
anicle in the March edition of Good
Housekeeping magazine.
Leier and Lewis were .the only
Columbus-area physicians listed by
the magazine.
To obtain the list, Good Housekeeping polled 260department chairs

-

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•

: ',

.PUIUC NOTICE
1 T~•
foHowlng
• appllcatlona 8nd/or verified
l compJ.Inte were received
l and the following draft,
, proii!)Hd, or 11n11L acUona
' , were l..uad, by the Ohio
• Environmental Protac,lon
1
~ (OEPA) Leal Wetk.
~ r~Cf.~ONS" Include the .
••dOJ\II,ri,' mocii(ICIItlon, or.
I i'evcitlltlon of Order• (other
I ltlan emergency ordera);
1
l tht luuanca, denial,
, ;noctlflculllon or revoca1111n
l of IIOIIn-. pannlta, luata,,
lvart¥cta, or 0 artlflcetea; ,
• and the epproval or·
dlupproval of plana l!ld
•P•!Iflcatlona. "Drlltt
Acllont" Ire written
• llllltmtnla of 'the Director
Envlronmenta'l
l ot
; ~n·a (Diractor'a)
• Intel)! with reepacl to tht
; laau'"ca, dtnlal, ttc. of •
r paril!lt, Ucente, order, etc.
'
.
.

'
i

...
.,

intereeltd ptreone mey wrtitan commanll, requeoto
aubmlt Written commante or for public mattlnge, and
'reqUIII I publiC mealln~ adjudication hearing
regarding draft ectlona. raquaata muat . bt ttnl to:
comment• or public Heerlng Clark, Ohio
m..tlr\g requ..ta muat bt Envlronmantel P.r o!tctlon
aubmlttad within 30 daya of Agency, P.O. Box 1041,
notice of the draft action. Columbn, Ohio 43218-1048
"Propoatd Acllona• are (Taltphona: 114-444-2128).
written t!atemanta of tht. "l'lnal AcUona: are actlona
diNCIOr'a Intent with of tht director w~lch ere
rtapecl to the laauanco, I~=~ upo~leauancaore
denial, modification, I'
affective date.
revocetlon, or renewal of 1
to Ohio Revletd
pennlt, llcenu, or varlence.
Section 3745.04, 1
Written com menta end
action may be
rtqueata· lor a · public
ad
to
the
matting . regarding · a
board of
propoaed aotlcm may be
a paraon
aubmltted within 30 daye of
waa 1 party to a
nolle• of the propoatd prootadlng before tht ·
ecllon. · An ed)udlcatlon diNCtor by filing an appeal
hearing may be held on a within 30 deya of notice ol
propoud action H • heerlng lhe.ftnal action. Pureuant to
requeat or ob)acllon Ia Ohio Revlaad Codt Section
received by the OEPA 37411.07, • final action
within 30 deya of laauance Ia • u I n 11 ,
d • n y I n 11 ,
of the propooad action.

modifying, revoking, ,pr
renewing • parmH, ·llcanae,
or variiRCI WhiCh Ia not
pracadad by a propoaed
action, may be appealed to
tht EBR by filing an appeel
within 30 deya of llauanct
of the final ecllon. ESR
·~•• mutt be Iliad with:
Environmental loerd ol
Review, 231 Eaat · T-n
Strut,
Room
300,
Columbue, Ohio 43215. A
copy of the eppael muat be
.. rvad on lha director
within 3 deya Iller tHing the
appall with the EBR.
Final approve! of plena
IUICI•~catlona

L 11 d I n 11
c r• • k
ConetNancy Dlolrlct
Rutlend, OH, teeua Dale

IIZ/O't/111

Thlt flnel action not
by propoatd
and Ia eppaaleblato
New Wallfltld 111915.
15; 1TC

I

The Community Calendar Is
published as a rree service to nonproftt groups wishing 10 announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not dtslgned to promote
Sales Of fund raisers Of IIDY type,
Items are printed as spac:e pennits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific n11mber of days.
THURSDAY
STIVERSVILLE -- Revival
Thursday . through Saturday, 7:30
each evening with evangelists
Charles and Wanda Hall, at the
Stiversville Word of Faith. David
Dail~y. pastor, invites the public.

REEDSVIJ.L,Jh qJiyt to,WJ!ship
Trustees. Thursday. 6 p.m, to go over
flood disaster information and paperwork at township hall.

p,.m. at. die R~k .Sprin~s U11ited·'
Meth&amp;tist ehlitch: ·l'lus6'1iliciS'' nlght
to be observed.

SUNDAY
POMEROY-- Pomeroy Group of
POMEROY -- Naomi Baptist
A.A. will hold an open discussion ChilrCh, Pomeroy, guest speaker Sunmeeting Thursday, 7 p.m. in the base- day, 10:45 a.m . service, Rev. Arius
men,t of the Sacred Heart Catholic · Hurt of Gallipolis. P\lblic invited.
Churcti.
MONDAY
•
PORTI..AND -- Southern Local .
RACINE -- Racine Post 602',
An:lerican Legion, Thursday, 6:30 Building Committee meeting Mon·
p.m. with dinner to follow.
day, 7 p.m. at Portland Elementary
School. All district residents invited
POMEROY ,_ Mic!dleport Child to attend .
Conservation League, Thursday, 6:30

.

'&amp;OOR
,,

. G.OSI-Ourl

We .,.

we·,_,,

"' llle . , . ol

a 11ew . , . , . ,..,..,.
wallf lo 111ovelf• .w e've.,_,.,
, ••• oil
011 .... llooif .......

eve,,

listed are )ust a few examples. This i$ a 100% storewide sale on
every product in stock. Hundreds of items in the Jewelry
Department are up to 50% off. If you miss this sale, we both lose I
2 Pc. Sectional with Queen Sleeper, Reg. $1199.99 ........... NOW' $699.99
2 Pc. Early American Sofa &amp; Chair, Reg. $699.99 .............. Now $488.88
Full Size Sleeper Sofa,'Reg. $549.99......................... :: ......... Now $399.99
Two Way Recliners, Reg. $199.99 ........................................... Now $99.99
4 Pc. Pine Bedroom Suite, Reg. $849.99 .............................. Now $599.99
King Size Bookcase Waterbed, complete, Reg. $499.99 ... Now $245.99
Daybed, Link Spring MaHress, Reg. $349.99 .; ........... ;......... Now $239~ 99
Wood Bunkbed, Reg. $299.99 .............................................. Now$188.00
Twin Size Headboords, Reg. $59.99 ....................................... Now $38.88
,
'
Four Drawer Chest; Reg. $99.99 .............................................. Now $49.99
Lamps, Buy One At Regular Price ................. :................... Get 2nd for $9.99
3 Pc. Oak Finished Coffee &amp; E11d Table Set, Reg . $179.99 ... Now $89.99
3 Pc. Entertoininent Center, Reg. $499.99 ............................ Now $299.99
4' x 6' Area Fringed Rugs, Reg. $99.99 .................................. Now $49.99
5 Pc. Wood Tres~e Table, Reg. $299.99 .::........................... Now $169.99
5 Pc. Cherry Dinette, Hutch &amp; Buffet, Reg. $1749.99........ Now $1099.99
Amana Heavy Duty Washer &amp; Dryer, Reg. $999.99 .......... Now $799.99
Tappan Self-Cleaning Electric Range, Reg. $529~99 ........... Now $~99.99
Tappan 15 Cu. Ft, Frost Free Refrigerator, Reg. $599.99 .... Now $469:99
Zenith 20" Remote Control TV, Reg; $335.99 .................. :... Now $2.49.99
Zenith 25" Remote Control Console, Reg. $599.99 .: ...................:Now $469.99
.,,
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wa er

oporatlng
hiCrllled
ilnil i
Pomeror
10

Public
Notlc:e
.

Publ)9 Notlc:e

Public Notll:!lt

Live girls 1-to-1

All ite~s are 'cofh &amp; corry priced. Limited to in-lfod merchandise.
toe'Nori!IIIDoilcl ,._

•a(114) llli2-at35

llfll011lo4111D

$3.99/min.
Procall Co.

$7.00 PER DAY.

(602) 954,7420

Public Notice
aamt aa aold to ·· S. D.
Horton end recoftlad In
FOREClOSURE OF
Volume A, ,.....5'.3, oltht
MORTGAGE
•
'
common
Court
· ~=~ R~~~~d• oJ, Melgt
Molga County, Ohio , " F ''h'
f
Caaa No. 15 CV 10.,
uri er except1on rom
• the ebova roal eatllte the
. Netlonal City Mortgage loll-Ing: The following r~el
Company, plelntlll, vo. ettate baing In Fraction 31,
Reybon R. Wallece, Jr., Sallabury Townahlp, Molgo
. Executor of tht Etllllt of County, Ohio, and bounded
' Reybon R. Wallace, lkll and deacrlbed eo tollowa:
, Raybon A. Wellact, Sr., It Beginning ebout 11· 112 rodo
ai.T=:te,n:.~!\t Laona E. , a111 of the IIOI!thwut
, Wallace end the unknown corno~ of Frectlo~ Nb. 31;
thtnca noJth 184 fettto tht
' apouat, helrt, dtvlaaea, center of Road 'Ho. T 75;
, btneflclarlea, legate.. , thtnct aouth 53, 30, eat!
admlnlatratore, executora; 157 feat 10 1 point In the
their aucc~aaora end
. •••lgna of Leone E. center of oeld rot"; thenct
aouth 44'. 15' eaat121.11etl
Wellaca, who.. laat known to I point In the Cantor ol
addreotll Wllrt unknown, aeld roid·; thane• w..t
upon whom ltrvlet of 211.4 feet to th•···ptece ol
. autnmona cannot be madt, .._
11
bllctuot the realdenea tnd -ginn1ng, cont~" ng ·45
, 111 othtr ~dtlretata ol aeld ec;,;cepllng .from the
daftndanlt are unknown abova-dtocrlbtd tract of
· end cannot with ,..eonabla land tht mineral• which
diligence be eeoerlalned, ware prevloualy .Oid.
are horeby notified that on
Dted rttarenca: Volume
December 7, 1115, the 251
M1
• page 755 •
• ga
plelntlllfllld a complelnt In
the Common PI••• Court, County Recorda. 1 •
. Melga County, Ohio, In Ceoe
II It tho lnttnt!On of lht
. No. 85 CV 107 agel nat grantors to convey all tholr
Revbon R. Wallace, Jr., .right, title end lntarellt 10 tht
•
ebova deacrlbad ~52 ecrea.
Executor of the Ellett of A field aurvey of nld
Raybon R. WaiJ.ca, Sr. end propa•ly lndlcotea tho
Laona R. Walllca, exaculld
, and delivered 10 Wtttlm property deecrlbed totolo
Slvlnga Aaaoelellon, a only 5.1338ecr•. ·Seld llold
·. promluory
· nota, which aurvay dlllcrlptlon Ia u
followa:
· proml ..ory nota waa
Commencing 11 tho
• ..algntd to North Cantrel southweot corner of
Mortgage Corporl!lon, nka Frecllon 31 thence Eeal 66
National City Mortgage 112 rode (1,0117.25 lett)
Compeny on Mey 25, 1171; along the aouth Uno of 11ld
·, • lhtl defendanta, the aatete fraction; thence ~h 184.0
: • : of Raybon. A. WeUeca, eke feel to 1 rellroed oplko
• : I Raybon R: Wellace, Sr., and found In tht cenjerllno ol
• : . Ltono Wallace have Towilohlp Road ; M·and the
; : : dofeuHod In the peyment of pleco of be111nnlng of 1hle
.~ : , ••ld note end owe to tr101 lh
N o• 04' ,., .. w
1
; .....
encothe.'. s 31' 24'
, , ,' pleinlllf $15,552.i3 with ·
501.23
, : . lnttreet 111-n from May 1, 04" E 287.H toatffthenco s
· , · 18115, 11 8.75% par annum; ... 40, oa• E 247.'1'1' teat to 1
thai ae aecurlty lor the corner 01 1 ~ catholic
l&gt;" P~Y,menl of ••lob.~JII.!.t~ Climiimyfiflle:i s e§L 51•
: " •·.dtfillndanta, Rayli;on R. 31 • E 14l.28 It · with the
, , , Wallace, tka Reybon R. llnl of aald emetary;
: . Wallece, Sr. end Ltona E. llltnca S o• 04' 49" W 366.15
' ' Walleca, executed end lett alon'g.lhe Uno of aold
: l · delivered lo . Weatam cemetery· thane• S II' 51'
, Savlnga • A111oclellon • 31" w 335.54 f•• leaving
' . · mortglge detd, which atld cemetery line to iho
mb~lgagt . deed wu centerline of the ,Townohlp
: , toalgnad to Noith Central Rood: lhonce N ~ 21' 06"
1 • • llorlgagt Cllrporlllon, nka w 128.13 fHt; thence N 55'
: National City Mortgage 31' 34"W 157.10 float to the
, • . Compeny on Mey 25, 111711, piece ol beginning
for lht rttldenca II Rl. 2 conlllc;'lng 5.133!1 acr..,
Twp. Roed 75, Pomeroy, Intending to conve(\111• 5.07
Ohio, akl 337110 Hiland acre tract conveyaCI In the
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio, Melga County Deed
. convayln~ the following Recorda Vol. 259, page 755
. , • dncrlbail
premluo, and Vol. 251 paga101 .
. . olluoted In the T-nohlp of
Thai the dotand•nta, tho
; Stllobury, County of Melga, ••lite · of Rey~n R.
, . . end Stele of Ohl~ tnd Wallace, aka Rey;lion R.
, . bounded and deecrnred •• Wallece, Sr., and Leona
: lollowa, to-wit:
Wallace heve fallad ;to pey
• . . Being II 1/2 roda eetl 01 aeld note oc~ordlng to tho
· · tho aouthwaot corner ol Ierma an'd conditione
; FFIC!Ion 31; thence north 5I thereof thet delendento
:; , 1/2 ~oda; lhtnct 111111, 54 · Rilvbo~ R. Walleca, Jr.:
, , . rode, thence aouth 42 t/2 Executor of the Eatele of
. · rode; tht!ICII Wttll 8 rodo; Ravbon R. Walllfl, eke
:-,thence north 14 rods; Raybon R. Wallace; Sr.,
. • lhanco -.•120 rode: and 18 Rev bon R. Wallace, Jr.,
· , . llnkt; lhtnca aouth 12 rocla Neoml Bleck end the Melga
:. · 1nd 16 llnka; lhanct 1111 9 county T~aaurer, moy
' , ""'"; thence aouth 21 rodt claim to have. aome lntereot
: •• and I IInke to the oouth line In aald reel property:
, of tlld fraction; thonca thtrelora, plelntlfl dtmonda
., weal to the Rl•co ol ludgmtnl
1 g 1 tnot
: • • beginning, containing 17 diofandanta, the eatete ol
: · , ICrll, mort or.....
Raybon R. Wallace, lcka
, , EXCEPTING from tho Raybon R. Wtllece, lilr., for
, ebovo 17 ecrea, mora or $15,552.83 with lnteroat
• : leu, I he following thereon 118.75% per annum
1 daocrlbad
real ·· aalatt from May 1 19115· that .. id
·; l llll~tted In Sallabury mortgego bo fo'roclooed;
•i Townillllp, C~nty of Malga, that the omounl of Ilene on
~ , end State of Ohio, baing In the property be moreholled:
; . Fraction 31, Town 2. Ra~t . thet tht reel property be
1:13, of tho. Ohio ComJ11ny • oold and tho amount due
· Purchaaa, beginning 11 1 • plelntlfl be peld from the
: .poet with 3 nolchea, befog procaede of the ••••·
; lht corner of the Guy F. together with casta herein:
, IMerdn and Drulllla 1'. Merlin that dofendanta, Reybon R. .
• 'l nd· Oren Jonta fermo on Wallece Jr. Executor l!f the
: the waatllne of the Rlcbard Eallte ~I R~ybon R. Wallace
, Wlllllmaon farm; lhonce okl Raybon R. Wellace, ,Sr.,
; ,aaat 110 1~2 ·f tet; !hone~ Reybon R. Wellace, ,. Jr.,
, 11!1!\11 2-3/4 woal 701 IHI, Naomi L. Black, and the
• thenco w•l. 1150 feat to lha Melga County Treeoure'r be
: , una of tho , Catholic required tout up their Ilene
• :Ctmelory; thenct nolth 231 or lntereot In aeld " roel
• filet; thence wtat 342 IHI; property or be iorlvtr
: thanct aouth 208 feat:
.
• ' thence north 11-314' weal barred from aeatrtlng ·l,h t J
• ' 241 fHI to a tocutl ateke· aama end lor attornaya flit .
: thence north ~· 112' waai and colll.
.. ' :
•.211 1.1111 ·to 11 1teka In tht The daftndanl• flral !
• -Oren Jonae and Martin nne· ; b•ralnebove nemed •ra
: thenco north 401 112 fHI ~ ' further notlned that they ero
• olhe place ol beginning . require to enawar •CIId
: ·contelnlng 11;18/100 acre~ complaint on or before April
• ,.xcaptlng ·coel end other 18, 111M which lncludao 21
~ mlnarolt aclld by ~amea daya from
the latl
: )tlrtln end Iii. J. Martin; hla publlcetlon or Judgement
• wife, to S.D. Horton by d - may bo rendered ••
: dated .ranuery 30, 1112, end demendad therein. ..
·
• ortcordedd In Volume 54, ,
BRICKER &amp; ECKLER ,
• p .... 113· of lht Recorda ol
Konnelh C. JOhnaon,
-..
'
· ·
Attomey
!•·»tiJgt
County, Ohio, With .•H
100 South Third SIIHI
Col mllua ·ohlo•43:115
, rlghll nacuury or
+ convenient •ICI the ml011!1g (2) 15 12u29• ·'
1!end working .of !11• umt (3' 7 1•4 2•1• 8• TC
.,Jihoull~to tht. • ·• • •
. PUBLIC NOTICE ,

PI••

..

I )

ii

'

'

(619) 645-8434

TRI·STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN CLEANING
· ltsldr•rlal &amp;

,,,., •.

:rJII1

,,..,ill
llr*

•

-Niftlolltll ,,....
Call 992·3967
for Details.

Call992-3967 .
tor Delalle

H&amp;H

$2.99/mln. 18+

Touch tons phone requllld.
Serv•U 619-645 8434

All Ohio
E.·~e. y

Pay At·tu

li CS illdiiCI.'

· Du.. or.r1ts&gt;
Cornp!rl c•r Ouctcs
ii3H) 99;0 7040

985-4473

F'n1111·1Dy

Romodollnt
•NawHomee
•AddHIOnl
•New Garagc11
•Remodeling
•Sieling
•Roofing
•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES ·
1112"5535 ,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

I

.New Homes • VInyl Siding New
'

Garages • Replacement Windows

Bam/sawMHI
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614-742·2193
TFN

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

2112112mn

Ar1v C.11
Ar1y Drrv&lt; Jl
DUI &amp; SR 22

'

FREE

A-c unun

Pick-up discarded
washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials.
Call 992-4025
between 8 a.m.-a p.m.

CONSTRUOION CO.

\lhe

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

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

Mon.· Sat.

1·614-378-9808

'

ROUND
BALES OF
HAY fOR
SALE.
'

• 614·949·2512

BINGO

. Till

Racine A111arlcan
legion Post 602
EVERY SUNDAY

CURl'S CAB CO.

IJoars open at 4:30 p&amp;
Lucky Ball $200.00 and
Raises $50.00 each
wk. Pay according to
the number of players.
Keep ad for FREE card

Ownora:
Harry &amp; Donna Clerk
Starting Sun. thru Feb.
29 Sr. Citizens Special
Fee for day runs.
$1.00 par person to
Pomeroy &amp; Middleport
Days: 541·1124 (local)
Nights: 992·2741 .

...., mo.

113111 mo.

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING CO.
SHINGLES • SID ING • WINDOW S
BUlL T UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RE SIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
PHON E
614 -2 45-0437

28 Yc&lt;11 s Expenence
'-800·J71-~ 4 77

J&amp;L INSULATION
537 .BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2m
OffiCII Hours: Mon.•Frl.
8 :00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
VInyl Replacement,
Wlndowa, BloWn
lnaulatlon, SIOnn
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Eatlmates
111Min

CHARITYSAU
Help Burned Out VIctims
Socks $1.75 per pelr
Ptu1 50 Centa Poatage
Sond $2.25 Money Order to
Bax 120, Grubbi,.Ark. 72431

·21111 mo.

SPORT'S CAR
DELUXE
Finders of hard to
find auto parts.
614-992-4060

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

992-2825

In Memory

Of

DOniE SMITH
Feb.15,1993

(Special)
ALLEN BELL CONTRACTING

3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage, full
front porch, 1288 sq. ft, .Price $59,500.
Stick built on your lot. To view home

Public Notice

Public Notice

GENERALSOUCrrA~ON

propo1ala:
(1) contain detailed,
accurate and complete
programmatic and budget
lnfonnetlon.
(2) Follow the prescribed
format Identified In the RFP
packet.
There will bt 1 blddera
conference on February 20,
1996/1:30 p.m . RFP
packagoa will be given out
atthlotlmo. (All proapectlve
••rvlce

provider•

who

would like to aubmH on RFP
mual be preoent 11 the.
blddera conference). All
RFP peckegeo will be due
Merch.. 22, 1118/12:00
(Noon).
Located at:
SeNict Delivery Aria 124
lronton-Lewrence County
CAD, 305 North Fifth Streit;
Ironton, OH 45638, (f14)

532-3534
(2)

God IIIIW yo11 getting
weary
So He did what He
thought best
He came and stood
beside you
And whispered "Come
and rest."
'
You bid no one a J•t
farewell,
Or even uld goodbye.
YOII
gone before
we knew It
And only God knows
why.
M•y you always walk
111 eunahine,
God'a.love around you
grow,
For the happlneas you
g1111e us
No one will ever know.
II broke our hearts to
loae yo11
Bill you didn't go
alone
For part of us went
with you
The aay God call
celled you home.
Sadly mlutld by
Daughters,
Carta and Kaal;
· Sister, Connie;
Nleeaa, Teresa &amp;
Rhonda

were

(304) 882·2379 WV WV003452

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal ·Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanks Cleahecl &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
· Dally, wes~ly &amp; monthly rental rates.

.

$3.99 per min .
Must Be 18 Yrs.
PROCALLCO.
(602) 954-7420
(Lime Stone- .
Low Rates)

WICKS

Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Limestone,

WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Gravel, Sand,

992-3954 or 985-3418 1"""
need.~·

"Supplk• for aU your pel

Opening Feb. 1st

...,,reel hu fUIIIJ he Role
AKC Reg. Puppies, Kittens, Birds &amp; More
Experienced Groomers • Financing AV11IIable, I.
(614) 992~44

B. Jolene RupeiOviner

J.D. Drilling Ccintpany
Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
P.O. Box 587

Jackhammer, Available

We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate

call949-2512

RUSONABI IIIADS

.,

~.uf.

I/JIIfn

Water

,.JJ:- Treatn~ent

WV

~'U.._~ .

Equipn1ent

Diatributed by

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

onalysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, llllnerll Hordneoo, Iron, PH.
Pte111 call RnioSoflet 992-4472 or 1-800-61)6.3313
to aot up your lrH water enelylle.

Roadt's Cust.,.
ltrtHflg
Beef and Hog
Bus (304) 882·2756
Res. (304) 882·3328

West Col11nibla WV.

SPIINGSOfr
C"-W.terSys....

Dell's Water Refltthlg
New Haven, wv
304 882 ·21116
949-2512

be

lor an
ytat ol optratlcn.
application pro call·.
require• thet tubmltttd

Sentinel

NYDUULIC IEPIIR

$32.00/11.

Top Soil,

Fill

Dirt

614·992-3470

RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. I PM .
12 Gauge
Factory Choke Only

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING .''
'

DUMP TRUCK · ·
SERVICE

24 Hrs.

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC..

Claeaifiede
992-2156

1·900.484-2100
Ext. 2074

HAULING

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

12, 13014, 15, 11; 5TC

MISUIDERSTOODII
LIVE II
CONVERSADON
ONE· ON ·ONE

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

.271 North 2nd Ave. ·
Middleport, OH. 45760

In Memory

STATEMENT,
The Prlvete, lndultry
Council (PIC) and Service
Delivery Are1 Number 24
(SDA 124), Which lncludeo
(Athena, Gollle, Hocking,
Lawrance, Molgo, Perry and
VInton) countlea, ore
aollcltlng propoeola lor
urvlcea to be provided to
youth (Tille U·B and Title II·
C), edultli (Title II·A) and
dlalocetod -rkero (Tille Ill
EDWAA) under the Job
Training Perlnarahlp Act.
Thtat ..rvlcoe will be lor
Program Veer 1898 (July 1,
111915 to June 30, 11117) on a
county biola. Each RFP
mull Identify • county. II a
protpectlva
urvlce
provldtr wlohaa to bid on
r.10re then one '(1) county, a
atpar•t• RFP muot be
aubmltlod for •ch county
Identifying tho county.
Program• operated during
Progrem Year 198&amp;, which
meat
contracted ·

New At Ingles lleetronies

1/31ntn

LIC EN SED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTir,1ATES

PROFESSIO NAL
SERV ICE

Call

~om Building I

.

•

CALL

HoUHRepalr&amp;
Rtmocltllng
Kitchen • lith
Rllllodellng
Room Adclltlono
Siding, Rooting, PtiiOt
Ra1110nable
lnaurore - Experienced
Call Weyna Neff
1112-4405
For Frte Eatlmatea

At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fltnesd
ChUdren &amp; Adult
Classes

Middleport

SMITH'S .''
CONSTRUCTIOJI

NEFF REMODELING
·SERVICE

21111 r.o.

•New Homes
•GaragBs .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop 6 Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
'

&amp; Fitness
87 Mill St.,

Health

Porta61e

A'"""'

7

Training

Call
1·900.656·2600
Exta1slo• 3012

"""' , _ ; Wn

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

At Big Bend

SAWMILL

Stwfr &amp;
" - ' - StrYb

.Itt
TV &amp; VWro
nla6le
,.,.,A
" ' - (3041 615·1651
~======~
··;

Kick Boxing

lonelr Again

r-----------~------f-O_I__l_ll~Y-O~UINIIDS!

• nd the l'lght.to mine lht ,
~

·serv-u

FOR A TOTAL OF

)~][~~~~~·

.j

1-900-288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE

l

1-IDIHaell11

1·900-656·2600 bt.
3136, 2.99 per • +
II yn., .. 1st• tt
singles located it Ohio
prolle thllllseins.

conversations

I

University Medical .C.enter physicians :
named among nation's b~st .
·.~

Ill More IW Dates!
Sltttpiycal

!EIGHT LOSS
PROGRAM

28513 BASHAN RD•
Racine, Ohio 4577t
(114) MW013 PIIOM
(114) 1141-201B FAX
114 5114-2008NIGHT

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985-4422

·-

Chester, Ohio

Are Yo• Ready
For Love?

·

Cal.l NowiiU
1·900·255·2700
Ext. 9402
$2.99 per min.
Mull 1M 18 yro.
Touch tone phone
·required.
Serv-U 619-645-8434
111..... .

Sfti.I·WIY
MINI STORAGE

882-2996
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER UR,riCf'

�•

Thursday, February 15, 11196

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel~

Ohio

..

.NEA Crosaword Puzzle.

• 1

•• •
•

PHILLIP
B~niE

.

ALDER

'
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by IAtn·Wri&amp;Jit

BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

~

_,,..,,.,eoo,

t'NI Go&lt;&gt;INc!i To 14""'" To SHUT
l)o!PN OUil- 140U$S#'dl.O .UNTil.

wf:

&amp;-'1--'NGO:D ~lll)&lt;iET.

1looQie Pup, SIIC&gt;II, Wormed, 814·

ol-48-2311 .

.2
•K 52

EEK&amp;MEEK
tJ
•2

9 8 7

9A 4 3
tK 4 2

'

•A 8 7 3

1

114·1l49-Zit3.

· BARNEY
•

EMPLOYMENT
SE RVICES
Lost: 2 Dogo, 5 Mlleo
Male: Bleck labrador

i
Collar, Female: Bloc' &amp;
Collar, Laot Soon Friday
Child's Pets, 61•·992·8595

$1,000 Weekly Processing Mall

day Thru Thursday Aller 4

Free Into. Send Sell-Addressed

110

"

$200 ·$500 Wkly. Asoemblo Produell, NO SoiHf'G. Pad 01- Ful·
ty Guaranteed. No Exp. Necesoary. 7 Days 407·875-2022
Ext0531HOO.
life Guard Applications Are Be·.

Help wanted

lng Acceptad For London Pool
Submit Applications, Including
Training And EMperlence InformaJohneon's Trailer Park, Blvd., Suite 148-345, Cedar Park · tion, To Janice lwiiUng, Clerk ·
While Female Sllittu, Name: . ~TX:.;.:..1118::...13:__ _ _ _ __
Treasurer, Village 01 'Syracuse,
~~~AB~·~-~d~I6~11-~~~~~·~J
Municipal Building, Syracuse.

Ohio 45779.

perlence With A System 38 JAs

400 Prolorrcid. Full Time Pl&gt;~bon, Neod 5 Ladies To Sell Avon,
M -F, 12:00 -9:00 P.M. For lmmo· 448·3358.
dlato Conaidoratlon, S.end Ro·
':':":"'::"~~~::-::"."i:-:::::o':"' I sume To: CLA Box 373, c/0 Galli· ·
polls Dally Tribune. 825 Third .
Advance .
.
A.....,, Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
. Loca l 'Company
the day before the ad Is
Time Secretaries 'cC.~icf~,;,ibtvl
Amerlcare Home Inc., A Division
edition · 2:00 p.m.

··

Gallipolis
I VICinity

edition • t 0:00 a.m

Pomeroy,
Middleport

I VIcinity
1 Yard Sales L1us1 Be Paid In
Advance. Dea'~li ne: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad is to run, Sun·
day edition· 1:OOpm Friday, Mon·
day edition 10:0Da.m. Saturday.

· 9Q

I

wanted to

Seeking Quality Mlndsd Individu als For The Following PositiOn.
The Jackson Agenc)' Ia. JCAHO

Accredited, Well Established

And Fast Growing, Serving Jackson, Vinton , Pike, Gallla, la wrence, And Scioto Counlies.

R.N. Full-Time, Case Manager,
Minimum 1 Year Acute Care EM perlence Or Home Health EJCperl·
ence As A Registered Nurse.
Level II Medical Records Clark,
Part-Time." Minimum 6 Months
Experience In A Health Related

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. Coins.
.Silver. Gold, Diamonds, All Old
Collectibles, Paperweights, Etc .
U .T.S. Coin S:hop , 151 . Sec:;ond
Avenue, Gallipolis. 614-446-2842.

We Provide A Competitive Wage

Maron, 614-992-7441 .
Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos I
Or Without Motors. Call Larry

lively. 614-3811-9303.
.warned To Buy: l ittle likes Toys,

814-245-5887.
Wanted To Buy: Standing Timber,·

Any Arrioun~ 614·388-9906.

Submit Resume By February 23,
1096 To:

Chrrsry Shay R.N. DPS
Americare HomeCare

;731,E. M.On Stree1
,Jaollaan, OhM&gt; 45640

I

Postal &amp; Gov' t Jobs .$ 21 IHr +
Benefits, No Exp. Will Train, F.or
And lnlc 1-800-536·0040.
:~-::-:-:-:.:=.::.:.:=..:.:.:.-:-::-1
Screen Printer EICperienced Or
WUI Train The Right ~on, 814·

sex familial status or national
orlgln, or any intention to
make any such preference,

limitation or discrimination.•
This newspape·r will not
knowllnglyaccept
advertisements for real estate
which Is In violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby

We Are looking For Food Service Workers At: University Of Rio
Grande, Sodexho Food Services.
Experienced In K itchen Prep 1
,Salada, &amp; Catering , 614-245·

11188 Ford E150 Converoion Van.
Automatic, Crulaa, 4 DekJg CIP-

FoidO&lt;J~
Excellent Exterior &amp; Interior

talns. O.oon Size Bench

2bdrm . apts., total electric, appliances furniahad. laundry room
facilities, close to school in town.
: Applications available at Village

lnlormed lhat all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available·on an equal

opportunity basis.

....__,.._____•

441-1492.

REAL ESTATE

$5500 614-448-2&amp;47.

. Green Apts. ,49 or call 61•:992·
3711. EOH.
.•

530

&amp; !llOviea. Call

814~446 · 2588.

Equal Hou~ng Or&gt;porwnity,

·

Country Side Apartments, Nice 2
Bedrooms, AC, WiD, Water, SCM·
Deposit Required, 51 :HI22~294 .

614-388-0429.

Get ready for Spring, call B 14·
992·2335 Spring cleaning serv·

ic:o.
Professional E 1Cperience -Tax
Preparation No Job Too Small!

Call Sondra For Affordable Prices
614-448-0670.

Mlscellal)i!ous

Bedllner, New Tires. New 1rina-

Male Cbcker Spaniel Puppy,
Good Bloodline. EJic&amp;IJent Mark·
ings. Bladt.'IWhite &amp; Tan In Color,

m1BIIon, $5,500, Call Betwoon 8
A.M. -9 P.M. lion -Sat, 611·258-

Merchandise

310 Homes lor Sale

for Sale

small housepets, read)' Fed. 25.

$75, 814l-092--!042.

1972 Buddy 14.x60 Good Condi ·

PM.

1986 Gn!!ndville 14x70 2 Bed ·
rooms, Fireplace, Total Gas,
derpinning, 16X12 Deck , CA,

Un-

Furnished Efficiency All Utili~ea
Paid, Share Bath, $1451Mo., 9t9

Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 614~

446·3945.
Gracious living. 1 and 2

bechom

1988 14x60 Tra iler, Land And
Srorage Building, CA, Gas Heat. 2
Bedrooms, 10M20 covered Porch,
Excellent Condilion, $1~,500 Firm,
614·388-8973 Leave Mes.!IB.ge.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

902·5064. Equal Housing·Oppor-

1.eo&lt;l-537·9528.

port. From $232·$355 . Call 814·

410 Houses for Rent

1991 Nissen 4.:4 XE Bedtiner, EM·
Miles, Sliding Rear Wind·

tra low

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

-...uon

31 - - lor All
Seaona
32 COnvertlrnonay
33 LabOr Dill·
34 1YJie of beltn
35 Authoo'
• Ernlle36Pokerataltfl

I Jewish

.~
compo_.

10 Ell to 1011

1tNight

37 SUpple

T~IS

o"ne

bedroom cottagit in Pt.
Pfoasan~ 6)1-992·5858.

One bedroom lurnished ap&amp;rt.
men t in Middleport, 614·448·

3091, 614·992·5304 or 614·992·
2118.

740

ay) .
24
'
21
I king .
21 Sl8n0'1

28&amp;e.- ' 1
Sam'
29 aultelliall'a
-A.n:..,.ld
30 FUia with
revere~ tee

32Arrlve
35 Study ol
antmata
36 Random
. 36 llldrkl Mrs.·
3t Cooking
.

uteMII

41 Bakery
purchaaea
42 on.nd
43 Concert
ltalle

44 C..., on·
45 InjuN
•
ol&amp;~.:f"yer
47 Plllllllnl
48 01har
51 Inlet
'·

849 NH Round Baler 489 NH

1990 LT·80 ~uzuKI 4 whooltr,
new tires, runs ooo&lt;f, $1300, 014247·2851 bftar 5.

tion, Andy Adsms Dairy, 6t4-37f.
.
Digital Read·Out, 2 Months Old, 2744.
$90, 611-148·3613.
D4 Ca181&gt;illar Dozer With Wenc:h
D i ane~ Area 5 Day, 4 Horel $5,50p , OBO: Fordson Tractor,
Nights, Use Anytime, Psk! $310, $2,500, 090, 614·258-1252, 614·
256- 161&amp;.~
5111.100, 614-470-2786.

Three Room Apartmen1, N&amp;Kt To

Gravel Hill Cheshire Prime Lois
S200 Per Grave Including Corner
Stones And Perpetual Care, 614-

Massey"' F9rguson 250 D iesel
Tractor With loader With 700
Hrs. 614'367~7002.

1993 201 Pro XL , 20' Strutoo ·
boas boat, 200 XPHP. 614·867'
7347"' 6t4-949·21179.
' '

630

760

367.0214.

7323.

HI·EIIocioncy l.P. Or Natural Gaa
92% Furnaces 100,000 BTU 1·
ATHEilSLIVESTOCK SALES
800·291-0098, 614 ·448 ·ti308, Speciaf Sale: Saturday, February

At Bossard library At B14-446·

Furnished

450

Rooms
Circle Motel, Galllpolla, OH 614·
446-2501 or 614 ~367·0612 . Efleciency ~ms, Cable, Air, Phone.
MicrowaVe &amp; Aofrlgerator.

Rooms lor rent - wetik or month.

Duel Sysmms And Air Condition-

IHI. Free E11imates.
lniertherm &amp; Miller Mobile Home
Furnaces. Gas, Oil &amp; Elac:lric In
Stock. lar~e Distributer Bu't Out
of· New Mobile Home Furnaces.
Bank Hnanctng Available. Call
Banneus Mobile Home HTG &amp;

· Livestock

17th, 1 P.M . Selli ng: 50 Head Ot
Cows. Some Wit h Calves , 15
Yearling Steers 1 6 Hailers, &amp; 1
Umousin Eklll, All From 1 Farm To
Be Sold! All Consignments Wei ·
come, Trucking Available, e 14·
592·23~ 814-698-3531.

Hay Bought And Sold, Horse And

CLO Ac 814·446·9416 or 1 ·800· ~~Da~w;y~O.~al~l~~·OH
~uBy~Tha~Som~~
i l~o~ad=•·
872-5967.
513-888·2822.
• JET

Polled Herelord Heiler 8 Months

Statting at St201mo. Gallia Hotel.
AERATION MOTORS
Old, 614·258-1365.
614·148-9560.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Sleeping roams wiih cooking . Call Ron Evans, 1·800·537·9528.
Also traHer space on river. All
hook-ups . Call after 2 ;00 p.m.,

304· 773-565t Mason wv.

Tht TrNsurt You Sttk Is the
Sovlnrs You'll Find fri lilt
Clossified Sectron.

lTHURSDAY

Budget Tranomiltlions, Uoad IRe·
built, All Types, -'c~elllblt To
Trantminl,o(' ,

614-245-5677

Campers&amp;
Motor HOmts

' 20 Ft.. 1977 Wit·
1177 Prowler

domet 24 FL, 1973 Holicfoy flam.

Ill'!' 23 FL, 1973 F-.g t 7 FL
114·448·t511.
'.
SERV ICES

810

tloln9

Improvements
B~SEMENT

WATERPAOOFNO
Uncondhlonar l!lttime ouarantoo.
Local reference, IUrnlohad. Call
(814) 448·0~70 Or (8141 2370411 Rogoro Watlfp&lt;ooflng. Eo·
tabllahocl1975.
~
Appliance f'¥18 A"!! S...lce: All
Namo Brando ev.r 25 'iMfl Experience All Work Guarantaed.
French City Maylag, 81'4·448 ·
7185,

\

ASTRO-ORAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1

C&amp;C Gonerat Home Main·
tenence ~ Pl.indng, vlriyl tiding,

corpentry,•doorl, 'WI.-o, bolho,

~ homt' ,.,..,,. and Ji)Cir8. for
f,.. ntirna• COif Chel, 814-i92-

83ZI.

Roofing and ounoro· commercial

and rHidon~, lliirior """''"· 35
yoora oxperlonco,· B&amp;B ROOF·

::a.

814·992·2311• .•, 't.SCl0-8811-

I

.,

'

840

!.'

N

SFX

a

·S N M J,

•p

JNX

TFAXI' " . ,

VIIJNWK

AAUNDJSDIIH.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "The love we have In our youth is ouperflcial
compared to lha love that an old man has for his old wile. - Will Durant.
·

'::!:~;~' S@\\.~lA-~£~s·
-:...:..:=:.::...-=:.-=: l~tto~ ~r. ClAY I'CK&amp;AN
O lour
Reorro"'• tetters of
tcramblod word•
low

WOII
tAM I

tha
bt·

to form four words.

A N K N I .p

I 1I I I
1

K fi E R I

~

=·==·==·=:_,

,
My son was upset because
a tiend took a different class

I I I' I I

vou

bv filling in the missing words
develop from step No. 3 below.

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

~ccessorles

790

A V J ',

(ANTCNRDII)

•

Auto Parts &amp;

10,000

' P

p A

VIIX

8 .PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

sriow bleds, $350: 61 4· 742·3802. '

Over

Nl

r

1996 Honda 400 Foreman lour~
wheeler, green, alx weeks old ~
showroom condition. 15500 ftrm,

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Mon111, Deposit

SDWPDYD

than he
had chosen
. I told
him
that
friends
can grow
sepa.....,,..;,P--;:O_T.:..rA:....;::U_I:.,~ rately without growing ----·.
~
s
Q Complete the chud:le quOted

~

65 MHH'f Ferou,on Dleaeiiii!O
Ford Diesel, 6t4-~522.

ReQuired, No Pets: Contact Judy

•p

_
_
•
•
.
L......L-.J---1-..J......,j
_

er, Dryer, StoVe Retrigerator, Non

... . --

"-~Qr:::···----by-' Ead'l
ln . . Ciptlltlllndltorerdher. T~ldW: U . . . H

I I 1
~~·
,..

1991 250X Honda. 4 Wfletler,
$I ,950, 614·148-6885, 614-446·
7036.

by Lula Cllmpoa

·~....,,;.A~S-=-Lr.U,_,U~~
...."'~',
1

1GIG Yamaha 350 Four WhHier
4M4 Big Bear Goo&lt;t Condition,

o Farm Equipment .

Denise Austin Manual Trtadmill

CELEBRITY CIPHER

3

Massey Ferguson 2165 Tractor
With loader, low Hours, 1996 SO
Horse Power long &gt;4x4 23 Hours.

~

PI\LI

235ub-

nMde

Philip Guedella, a British biographer and historian, said, "I had always
imagined that Cliche was a suburb of
Paris. until I discovered it to be a
street in Oxford."

Motorcycles

Eleclric Wheelchairs J$coorers,
New fUsed, Scooter fWtwelchair
liftl!l , Stairway 'Elevators, lilt
Chairs. Bowman's Homecare,
614-448· 7283.

Library; $350

1:':&gt; Tf-\E '905,

11 lndlvlduall
It Ending lor
IUC1Ion
21 Acnea
Thurmltn . .

27 -and 1-'y

·

16,200 miles, extallen1 condition,
askino $16,900 814·367-0286 or

S2.600 060, 614·3117·0299 Aftor
5:00.

61

safe. :

614·9411-2481 allar 6pm

Haybine, Both E•Cellent ConcU·

Main S~eel. Pl&gt;meroy, $175/mo.,
614-992·7511 .

RENTALS

ter 5 P.M.

$40, 614·992-4407.

Riverside Apartments in Middle-

Unhur1shed aperll'nent, 118 112 E.

Wanted - 15 or more acres in
Meigs Counl't .with or without
house, must have some paslure,

1 lion, S225,lfCall 814-«8..0070, At-

Priceo At Shoo Cafe, GallipoKs.

Concrete &amp; Plastic SeptiC T~nks ,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

apartmentS ·at Village Manor and

2 Batho. CA. 6t4·446-8:!74, Alter Slrokors, $300 Oepoail. $350/Mo.
5P.M.
Applications At 1743 Centenary
Rood, Galipolis, 814-446·2205.

614·992-ti534.

Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,
Tony Lama. Guaranteed Lowest

Brand new royal blue prom dress,

hlu$1 Be Moved, $10,500, at•·
36Hl429.
Small One Bedroom; Excellent
Condition. Counlty Salting, Waoll·
1987 141C70 Danville 2 Bedrooms,

MusiCal
l.nstruments

.. ..

..

Seen At: Gallipolis Daily Tribu~
825 Third Avenue, Gallipoli.
Ohio.
.

ow, Very Well Taken Care ol.
Like New, 614-446-3100.
rescue Jeep, $120; excellent Fender S~uire Stratocas1er &amp;
co::.ndi:::
'
:
::tion::.
:
:::•
·
..:6.:.14:.:8=4:::3-.:54::53::·
:
_
_
_
Sidekick
Ampllllor,
Good
Condi94 Ford F-150 4.:4 XLT, loaded,
:

tur1des.

lion, $6,800, 614-643-2916 AMer 4

i

1990 Dodga Caravan Now Front
·r iroo, Brakoo &amp; Bolli, Look'
Golden R8triever Puppies AKC, Greatl V·6 3.0 Liter, $4,800, 611$200, Shots &amp; Wormed 614·379· 245·0717.
2911 1 Alter Spm.
1990 Dodge Ram Van B·250,
Puppies- mOther .Chihuahua, la- 72 ,000 Miles, $6,000 , Can Bt

::::~.:.;::.::~--"--1 570
Barbie battery powered Jeep,
$65: large boys bauery powered

320 Mobile Homes

1443.

HOUoabfl) ~

;:92ii"'C;;n;;;;JA.;;i;;;d'Gi~l ther Reo. Pome;anian, will be
I
Antique Radio Price For Quick
Sole, 614-448-94711.

Nice home in Racine, large building will house small buiiness,
also a one car garage , fenced
Brothers Construction &amp; Home .yard , out of flood area . asking
'
Improvements, 614 ·388·8997 $47,000 614-919·2004.
Con~ct: StBVe Or Bt•.
Three. ~droom home in country,
Electrical , Plumbing, Concrete Whites HUI Rd.. Rudsnd, ons both.
Foundalions, Garages, Room Ad- in-g.,und pool, 614·992·5067.
ditions, Remodeling, David, 614·

General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard Work Windows Washed
Gutters Cleaned Light Hauling,
Commerical. Residential. StENe:

540

11189 ChoYy S.10 4 W0. 5 S!&gt;Hd,

AKC Rogislered , Show Quality

t 124 E. Main Stree~ on Rt. .124.
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10 :00 Date Of B~th : 8131195,
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to ken, 614-37~:2728.
6:00p.m. 614-992·2526.
,

er Garaboe Included, $350/Mo.

180 Wanted To Do

Experienced Caregiver (NonSmoker) Good Care Uon -Fri's
Daytime, Also lighl House Work,
Reasonable Rates, 614 -4463504
'

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques ,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET' PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 \YOIIWOOd Drive
l111m $226 to $291 . Walk to shop

5660; 0• Stop By Oflice, 9 A.M. -3
P.M. Monday Thru Friday, EOE.

256·6949, .Roger 61 4-886·9t 78.

+

All real estate adVertising In
11\ls newspaper Is 8Ubjecl to
· 11\e Federal Fail HouolnO Act
of 1968 which makesllllfsgal
to advortlse •any preference,

EEO.

F.ield.

And A Variety or Benefits. Please

know, Ibis means that when having
eight cards in a suit missing only the
'queen, .you take a finesse. Wbenyou
have nine cards, you cash the ace and
king, expecting the queen to drop.
However, this is one of the most
misleading of all the rules. Finessing
for the queen when having nine cards
is only "wrong" by a small amount.
And often the full deal dictates taking
the finesse one way or the other - as
in today's deal.
Against three no-trump, West led
the spade seven: two, king, ace. South
ha!l seven lop tricks: one spade, two
hearts, two diamonds and two clubs.
.. At least two more tricks were avail·
able from the clubs, but' if East got the
lead, he would push a spade through
South's remaining jack-nine, killing
the contract.
·
So, to keep Elll!t off the lead, declar·
er played a club to dummy's king and
finessed the jack through East. Here,
the finesse Wllll and South claimed 1o
tricks . But even if the club finesse had
lost, the contract would have been

booed on race,fOior, rollgfon,
Plumbers &amp; Pipelitters L.U. i:sn
Will .Sa Distribulinq Apprentice
Appl1cqtions Beginmng February
19, 19_
98 Throogh March 1, 1996.
App lications Can Be Picked Up
At 1236 Gallia Street, Portsmouth,
Ohi? F.rom 7:30 A.M. Until 4:00
P.M. $35.00 Appl ication Fee.

27 Cry of

ever, nine never." As I'm sure you

Imitation or dlscrtmlnatlon

R.N . Full -Time, Clinical Supervisor, Minimum· 2 Years Home
Health EMperience, Management
And Strong ·Acute Care Back ground A Plus.

Clean Late Model Cars
Trucks. t98~ Models Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern ~enue, Gallipolis. •

Used furniture - ant iques, one
piece or complat&amp; eslates, Osby

lead Into Full-Time,
perienced
rory Control,
For Appointment.

Of Regency Health Services 'Is

::.11

What is a cliche? Bridge, of course,
is fuR of cliches, or maxims, like "cov·
er an honor with an honor." .
Most of these sayings are ~asy to remember, but dangerous when applied ·
automatically at the table . Bridge is t...+-4still alive because there are so many
exceptions to the "rules." For example, all beginners are taught "eight

1

A Computer Operator. Prior Ex-

"--IIY -

By Phillip Alder

Stamped Envelope: Express
_....:;.__.::..,-:::-",---::-"-,-J Dept.t3t, 100 East White atone ·

=========== I

20P~Iortwo

Study the deal,
not the dictum

THEN LITTLE
RED RIDEY HOOD
SAYS--

Friday, Saturday, Sunday, All

Local Flnancial 'lnsiwbon 5etking

18 lneflcteiiYI

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: Soutb
Seulh
Weal Nortb Eul
1 NT
Pass 3 NT
All pass
Opening lead: • 7

Two achool deaks with chairs,

"ard
Sale
•~

•K 6 53 .
•Q J 8 7
tQ 10
•Q 54

910 9 6

• greatwatrllldoo~ 8tl-88s.3384.

-70

EAST

WEST
•Qt0874

SOUTH
•A J 9

pi81 to good homea,, will make

,,,..

.22 Singer

tA 6 53
•K J 10 9 6

One pup left, Golden Retriever/

,j

02·15·116

NORTH

-Collie, 811-942313.

tv. OoonlWork. 814.--r.
, Throe malo ,..t lour remale pup-

I Wiltz.~

5 FteiiOIIY fGr

t5F--

1

:Mixed Slbttlan Huoky puppleo,
111-882-«173.

•

11 Critic Rex 17 lorn

tOll ~ Clluaja .... ~...
, _ in 'VI, Wlhoood, bHI ofr~1111ng, wtid, throe whotll, tl,..,
Nool pedalo, .fuel cell, on.bOard
fire oyatam. ronlng chlllio. $5800
neg. Call S&lt;:on Wolfo, 811·8'9·
2878, 811·91f.2015 or 811·892·
6193.
.1993 Daytona tree, V·l . 5 Sptod,
·Air, 1111. Cruioa, AMIFM Caooatto,
~.000 Mlleo, $7,700. 090, 814· .
258·1530, 81..:!~189.

c.1vv It~-"'~ -"•

••
••

121nallna
13 Wild a/IMp
,. - Tin Tin

t&amp;a1 P1ymau111 Actaim Au11t, /IMr ·
FM Sttlto.Jik, CruiM, PS, PB,
81ot-3eH25t .

'

ACROSS

-f '

,
· Feb. 16, 1!1116
In tht ye~r ahead you might become
lrwolved In a /W!W endeavor that uaes
'bolh PIQduaiiJ~ ~pta. Thia could
1!100"• 110111 fun and profilllble. ·
MlUAIIIUI (ML 20-Feb. ''l You can
lltiiCe bigglf ...... IOdly wyou 1ocu1 on
. . . , _ 61ttliila!• rether then hill~·
·edy. 11411JCHt!nCI lhe objet;1Ma Clf llltlther.
Do your 'OWI'IIIilrtg. Get a JUmp 911 - by
Ullderll.nding the lnflullneM 11111 IIIMni

.

'

,Finding solutiqns could be easy ~ you put
yqu In the year ahead. Send for your your mind to rt.
Aatro-Grlljlh predictions today by mailing LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) Suggestions
$2 and SASE to Aatro·Groph, c/o this offered today by your mate or partner
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill regarding a joint interest could be mutualStation, New York, NY 10158. Make sure ly advantageous. Keep your mind open.
to- your :zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sipt. 22) A frustrating
PIICU (M. »lllo;h 20) Things will condition that has plagued you lately
- " out better lor you today Wyou don't could suddenly shift lor the boner today .
broadcaat your business Intentions to Make sure to hop on board.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If you pal
others. Keep a lOw profile.
ARII!I (Mirciii1-Aprll ttl Start looking around with people today who act and
ahelld today. You can begin effectively to think young, 11 could hava a mal'\/elous
blend your ~ elforla ~ aomethlug effect on your .outlook. let your hair down
you hopiiO'achieYe in the near future.
and try to have run.
TAURUS (Aprll '20-llq IIIII Your WORII ; SCORPIO (Oct. .24-Nov. 22) You will not
and actiona could have a poweclullmpact · have to l8llle for lite staltls quo tQIIay. II
on your, c:ompanionl to&lt;~Wt. 10 uae cau- ,you lind a way to Improve something ,
lion In regard to what you uy or do In don1 be afraid to lu rpltnnent your Ideas.
' front ol Olhefs.
sAarr:fARI!JS (Nov. 2:1-Dec. 21) Rely
01!1111 ~ 2t.June ~)Your mind will equally on your mental and phylical ebll~
fundlon allullf*ld IOdly. and IIOmbanl llee Wyou get involved in a cornpalitiva,
you with contttrucllve thouOhta . Try to tiOCial aport today. Ullng your head will
lmplemeJit the ld.. l relallng to your give you 1111 edge.
~ itlnlla ftrat.
CAPRICORN (qec. II.Ja11. 11) Con·
CANCI!II (June ;n"oolllr II) Today you cl1lons in genen~l wll favor you·todly, but
.wtll have a apec:ill aptttilde lor ferreting your luckiest area will be VOlA' material
out' the root cau111 or veMing problema. altalrs.

I

.'

Banish • Chord • While - Frigid · SEARCHING
My favorite science professor gravely told my class.
"What people decide to see may depend on what they
are SEARCHING for."

FEBRUARY15l

�.••
'

:.,.12 • Thl Dilly Slntlnel·

•

Thuntdly,FebnJary15,1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~ Pharmacists attack FDA plan to teach s8fe rri.edicine use
J

: By LAURAH NEI!RGAARD

: 11aaaclalld P• •• Wllw
1

,

RO(:KVD..LE. Md. (AP) - Minions of An)ericans bring home power-

i ful presaiption mediciaes wilh no written instructions other than " take two
. ·. pills once a day."
Now pbannal:isls an: in an uproar because the Food and Drug Adminis• 'lnllion wants them to start !Jivinaptlients leaflets, in easy-to-undentand Jan·
guage, detailing how to tab every prescription drug and what risks it pos·
es.
· How delailed? Heart patients could be told pigging out on spinach and
· other vitamin K-p.:ked foods could interfere wilh lhe blood thinner war. farin. People ~ng the blood pressure drug enalapril could be warned that
swelling can signal a danJerous allergic reaction.
"We will not rest until consumers get good patient information," FDA
Commissioner David Kessler pledged Wednesday.
But ~acists told the FDA that consumers offered such leaflets today
·lhrow lhem in the trash. and. that lhe industry can find innovative solutions
if lhe aovernment stays out of lhe way.
"We want to get more information to patients," said John Gans of lhe
American Pharmaceutical Association.
The FDA says 45 percent of American patients receive no written infor-

..
•'

·southern's
ladies beat
Miller five

'

••'

'

mation about prescription medicines other lhan d0$1ige instructions. Othen be so scared by lists rare side effects they'll stop taking !heir ~cine1.
be~ .
.
.
get insbuctions of varying thoroughness. ·
The proposal "coukl&lt;undennine the physician-patient relationship," agreed,
Questions can abound: Do you take the pills with meals? Willi side effects
can occur and when 'are lhey severe enough to call a doctor? What other drup Dr. Roy Schwanz of the American Medical Association.
•
will interact dang~usly with this one?
ButconsUIIleradvocatcs said lhe drug industry wants to deny patients thif
Ideally, lhe doctor would have discussed all that beforehand. But patients right to full medical information.
~
can forget oral instructions. And Gans said lhe nation spends some $7.5 bil·~Willi's essential is for ~nts to save their own life and lhe life ofloveg
lion a year ~ng drug side effects and injuries from taking medicine wrong. ones from pharmaceutical misadventures and mistakes," said Barbara SeaThe FDA'tproposal is to provide written patient information; in layman's man of the National Woman's Health Networlc. She began lobbying for patient
terms, for every drug with a "serious and significant" risk, and to push pbar- information 27 years aao. after her infant son almost died when a doctor pro.
maci~ts to provide similar "medication guides" for less dangerous drugs to
scribed for her a drug ibat's not S\lpposed to be used while breastfeeding. :
at least 75 percent of patients by the year 2000. If the industry doesn't ~t
Kessler acknowledJed pharmacies have begun giving patients some infor-.
the deadline, the FDA would mandate the leaflets for every drug.
mation. Indeed, as he spoke, salesmen outside hawked new computer soft•
But Kessler told lhe industry Wednesday be's flexible about how lhe ware that prints customized leaflets telling patients how to usc a new pre;
leaflets will actually look and will hold a public hearing to gather Ideas.
scription together with drugs the pharmacist's records show they already bay~
Pharmacies that already provide patient leaflets discovered that patients at home.
.
~
immediately threw them away, Gans told lhe bearing. He cited a study that
A~. FDA study found many of lhe patient leaflets already provided are o(
found 41 percent of patients aren't educated enough to understand instruc- questionable value, witl) rsome not even revealing a drug's dangerous side
tions as simple as "take pills on an empty stomach."
effeclll "The gap between the drug information patients.need and that the~
The elderly, .who frequently take 10 or 20 medicines at a time, will be
bombarded with paper, and doctors fear patients who do read the leaflets will receive ... is fast becoming intolerable," Kessler concluded.
:

· By ALYSSA GABBAY

Aaaocl.ted Presa Wrltat

r

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff

..

woman elected
~~as president of OHHA

.,

....

Love to enhance your
home's beauty &amp; energy
efficiency? Is your thumb
"green"? lr-terested In
what's new on the market?
This show Is for YOUJ .
And best of all ...lt's .free
family fun at
A't:---U~nlverslty Mall.

'

!.~tor of ihe SEPTA CorrecliQIIII F~il·
;~IJY 'in Nebonville~ a SO lied, lllult

:'.'male; conununity ~ con'ecti~'

: fKillty l!'fVinJ Moip and twelve
'oCher Southiulenl Ohio . OOIIJIIiU..

De~ maba:her borne

'

'I

'·

in Nel-

i Sbe t. belen ·i DJe!llber M OHJt\ .oftville, widl bor hulbllnd Bin ud '
tlilll:e lhe bel• pluninJ SEPTA in, dftahter, Pllter, who will 10011 be
lhree.
•
• ·1 1916.
",, .
J

.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff

'

1002 E. State Street,

Phone 592-3574

est of the four classifications of
chemical emergency. The most serious, respectively, are "major event"
and "prepare to evacuate" and the
lowest level is "standby.''
Dalesio said the fire was nowhere
near tanks that house 240,000 pounds
of methyl isocynate, the gas that
leaked in Bhopal, India, in 1984

....

County receives more
state literacy
funding
•

Meigs County has received an additional $17,000 in adult basic literacy education funds, John Riebel , Meigs County superintendent,
reported Thursday.
At last week's meeting of the Meigs County Board of Education,
plans were made to apply for the additional funding, which will allow
~he county to expand the number of hours ~vailable for literacy train·
mg.
l
Riebel reported to the board on special education changes, along
with the new policies and procedures to become effective on April I,
with the board adopting lhe changes.
A discussion continued on office merging with other districts, something to be completed by 1999 in order for the Educational Service Center to serve the required 8,000 students.
Phyllis Witherell was hir~ as a substitute teacher's aide on an asneeded basis.
The county board went on record as supporting both the Eastern
Local and Southern Local bond issue.s . Riebel described both issues
as "bargains and a way to get some of the tax ;:lollars sent to Columbus back into Southeastern Ohio."
Allending were board members Jeff Harris, president; Bob Barton,
vice president; Howard Caldwell, 1.0 McCoy and Jeanette Thomas;
Riebel; and Carol Gilkey. treasurer.

4 new 'central K-8 school and reno-

March 1991.
It was the second drop i~ the last
four months. Production edged up 0.2
percent in December.
In another report, lhe ·commerce
Department said today that consbuc-

lion spending rose 0.9 percent in
December, wiping out an identical
loss a month earlier and helping boost
outlays by 4 percent for the year. But
single-family outlays fell for a second
straight month.

·Area highway projects rank among top 50

FRI.·SATi·SUN. •FEB.16·17·18

,, . De"'- li tlio Executive Direc·
'

·-

t&amp;RihQ ~itCh

WASHINGTON rAP) - Indus· weakness in the manufacturing econltial production plunged 0.6 percent omy.
in January, the biggest drop in nearThe Federal Reserve said today
ly five years, but the decline was due the decline in output by the nation's
ib part to the blizzard that hit the East factories, utilities and mines was the
Coast. Still, it was fresh evidence of steepest since an 0.8 percent fall in

•

~

State College, bas been a critic of
Dalesio said the company is safe- Rhone Poulenc's safety record.
ty-minded.
"We"ve been bearing for years
"Your first job is to assess and to about improvements, and lhen llllothfigure out bow to protect the people er accident happens, and here we go
in your plant and the neighbors," be again," he said.
said.
The "shelter in place" advisory,
Gerry Beller,. a political science telling pe&lt;lple to stay at borne with
professor at nearby West Virginia windows closed, is lhe second lowi .
. ..

'ndustrial p~oduction posts biggest drop in five years

•~ :Area

'

'

paper on time."

the proposed 6.10-mill, 23-year bond
vations to the existing high school.
issue for consbuction of a new cenArea residents will getlf.e oppor"If we don't pass the bond issue, tral K-8 school and renovations to the
tunity to voice lheir opinions and ask we're looking at over a half-million existing high school.
questions about March bond issues in dollars in sewage upgrades, asbestos
"New schools and better educathe Eastern and Southern Local abatement, and roof repairs at our old tional offerings are going to attract
school districts through a series of buildings," Eastern . Local school new families to the area, attract new
"town meetings" with local groups board member John Rice said.
business, and create jobs in our comand associations.
''Those repairs would just keep munities," Lawrence said.
Both school districts were repre- them open, not allow us to make any
"According to the state assistant
sen'ted at Ibis week's Meigs County major improvements. We have two superintendent, this is the last chance
Chamber of Commerce meeting, one buildings over 70 years old, and the for our district to have an opportuniof the many groups on a county other two are 40 years old. We des- ty at obtaining a large chunk of state
speaking circuit that board members, perately need this new building," he funding for a new building project,"
school officials and members of levy added.
he added.
committees have been speaking to
Southern Local Superintendent
Officials from both schools have
over recent weeks.
James Lawrence said the economic addressed concerns surrounding the
In the Eastern district, residents benefits for the distric~ as well as the SchoolNet Program.
will consider a 4.5-mill , 23-year educational advanatges, far outweigh
Under lhe program, the state is
bond issue to benefit construction of the cost to the district's taxpayers on
(Continued on Paga 3)

.
-~
Of Our Lives")
Outstanding villain: Mark Piotei'
(Grant Harrison. "Another World" J
•

the plant 1hut down Interstate 64 and forced
re1ldents to ably lnalde their home1. (AP)

BLOCKED ENTRY- A pollee otllca' blo cl•d
trefflc Thured8y nNr the Rhone Poulenc Ag
Co. '1 lnatltule, W.Va., plant. A chemical fire at

for bond lssues .on the road .

:'Soa·p Opera Digest' readers name daytime's hottest te'levision stars ..

.~""''o
~ •'

told. to stay indoors and seal ventilation areas of their homes, said Danny Jones, the Charleston 'area's 911 ,
director.
Also, Interstate 64 was closed in
both directions for about five miles.
One Charleston radio station said
emergency officials did not immedi·
ately notify the station of Thursday's
·emergency to enable it to telllistell"
ers.
Bill White, Kanawha County's
director of emergency services, said
workers in his office believed that
others had alerted the station, when
in fact no one did.
While said the response to any
emergency never is perfect, despite
lhe efforts.
''There so much that bas to be
dpne to protect the public and get
\hem· out of harm's way," be said.
He said emergency crews initially must activate outdoor warning
sirens, notify businesses and schools
through a paging system, send verbal
warnings on cable television systems
and alert various police agencies in
areas such as where to block roads.
"This is a very, very fast moving
emergency," he said. "We~ll do
everylhing we can to improve the
system as we go. But there's' nobody
that's going to .guarantee a 100 percent perforrnance.l9"''t even get my

Stho011~8dE!rS

•,'

nie Ohio Halfway House Associ! ation (OHHA) bas announced that
· 'Monda H. DeWeese has been elect. :lid'to aerve as president of the asso:eiation for lhe ·1996197 term.
~Founded in 1972, Ibis statewide
) KJanization is dedicated to promot' inJ,. and enhancing Community·
· Bltlld Residential Criminal Justi~
.Qnd Alternative services. OHHA pro; vieles leldenbip to community cor:· ~ pnctitionen through public
; .pcatiOn, trailling coordination and
: ::..ivocacy for communiiy CQO'CCtions
•· •11 the state and Local Ievet. OJiHA
:1)1130 ~mber aae.nciet ~t

INSTITUTE, W.Va. (AP) - A
failed pump seal caused the leak.of
about 14,000 pounds of a petroleurn~ased cbemical which then . caught
fire at a Rhone Poulenc Ag Co. plant,
according to a preliminary investiga·
lion.
· But spokesman Tom Dalesio said
officials don 'I know what caused the
toluene to ignite Thursday.
The fire sent up a vapor cloud that
injured two people, forced thousands
indoors and closed Interstate 64 for
about an hour.
The 6:50 a.m. fire was extinguished iiY about an hour. officials
said.
Toluene flows from a 126,000. pound storage tank through a pump
. into a chemical unit to make the pesticide Sevin, Dalesio said. The tank
was about half full, be said.
The toluene that leaked was
vaporized in the fire, causin$ the
· thick black smoke. Dalesio said.
. When burned, t0luene releases dead. ly carbon monoxide.
William and RO$e Pannell of St.
Albans were admitted to Thomas
. Memorial Hospital in South
Charleston on Thursday complaining
of dizziness, skin and eye irritations
and nausea, a spokesman said.
Up to 30,000 residents in Institute,
Dunbar and South Charleston were
'

.••

(Lucy Coe, "General HQ~pital")
Outstanding · supportigg actress:
Louise Sorel (Vivian Al~,ain, "Days

Overdue
report .
upsets
highway
backers

keeps 30,000 people confined

z

Hottest male star: Peter Reckell
(Bo Brady, "Days Of Our Lives")
Hottest female star: Lynn Herring

" GllnMII Co. lilA $ ¢ I

.Fire at Rhone Poulen.c fsc/1/ty

quilts from 1:30 p.m. • 4 p.m.! duri
ing which time the quilts will be nos
be on display. All those exhibiting
quilts are asked to pick ·them UR
between 4 and 5 p.m. The jurors will
not make any selections until all of:
the local quilt shows have been beldZ
The Meigs County show is being
coordinated by the Extension Offici!
and Meigs County Retired and Senio~
Volunteer Program. 'Local contacts.
are Cindy S. Oliveri, Family an&lt;t
Consumer Sciences Agent, Ohio
State University Extension, phone
992-6696 and Diana Coates, Retired .
and Senior Volunteer Program:
Senior Citizens Center,'phone 992-!
2161.

Athens girls volleybalf
tryouts ~o begin /
~·

Outstanding lead actor: Maurice
Benard (Sonny Corinthos, "General
Hospital")

·--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 16, 1996

Chem.ical scare

-.society scrapbook-

tors, but the nominees for favorite
show, houest female and male stars
and hottest romance, were based on
reader mail.
The winners, announced in a ceremony televised Wednesday night on
NBC, were:
Favorite show: "Days of. Our
Lives."
Outstanding lead actress: Robin
Strasser (Dorian Lord, "Ono Life To
Live")
·

Plck4:
9-2·1·5
Buckeye 5:
1-14-18-21·26

Vol. 41, NO. 203
1 81ctlon, 10 ,.._

PrrfSBURGH (AP) - Forget
!he women who were taken to coun
for praying too loudly. Forget lhe
hunten who hire strippers for their
bunting camps after a bard day stalk. ing Bambi. Forget !he fish-filled lake
where ducks waddle across on the
backs of their finny friends.
Forget them all, and western
'Pennsylvania is siill pretty weird.
This is a region, after all, where
you can travel from Moon to Mars in
less than half an hour, eat sandwich·
es stuffed with french fries and watch
grown men consult a rodent aboutlhe
CONGREGATIONAL
weather.
Hall, who is observing her 94th
MEETING ~.
. birthday.
"I think we have a very . high
The annual congregational meetintrinsic oddness quotien~" said DenASH WEDNESDAY BREAKing
of the Wilke$ville Firsl Presby·
• uy Bonavita, managing editor of the
FAST
•
terian Church will be held Sunday at
Courier-Express in OuBois, about 80
The annual Ash Wednesday break'
9: 15a.m.
miles norlheastofPittsburgb. "We're ·
·fast hosted by Trinity Congregation•
The Rev. Frank Hare, Amesville, al Church will be held next Wedneskind of a perverse people. We're
will' moderate the meeting and will
backward."
be!Jinning at 7:45 a.m.
;
WILD WILD WEST - Cook Jim Wargo puts
serves about 700 of the HndwlchM, which con- also speak at the morning service. dayMembers
Apart from towns named for
of
all
churches
in
the
togather Prl1111nt1'1 Hndwlcb Jan. 24 at PrJ.
tain moatly cola llaw .end french frlu, on I
Her will also be moderator atlhe Ses- area are cordially invited to attend.!
llil .celestial bodies ·or personalities 1111nt1'1 reltlllnnt In Pittsburgh. The reataunint
"slow
day"
(AP
Photo)
.
sion
meeting to be held at 1.0 a.m. on .Reservations can be made by calling
:Apollo also orbits near Pittsburgh,
'
Saturday.
'..
along wilh Moon and Mars- west- ·
either Peggy Harris at 992· 7569 or
Following the congregational Pauline May~r at992-3777 . .
•em Pennsylvania boasts what may be
At Primanti Bros., a restaurant in of "The Tongue-In-Cheek Guide To · meeting the church will haVe a card
; the smallest town in the world with He moved to Pittsburgh from ChicaThe breiilcfast will take place this
shower and refreshments 'honoring year in lhe church's Bethany Builct:
the longest name: Slovenska Narod- go in 1993. "I'm always fearful of an the city's produce district, a sandwich ~iusburgb."
Western rennsylvanians' attitudes their oldest member, Zelda Coon ing with the entrance on Second
na Podpoma Jednota, population 12. accident, so I just wait."
comes with french fries and cole slaw
toward
animals are a separate catePanic is close to Desire, as it
Drivers also drive at or below the tucked inside with the meat.
Street across from the p0$t office. ~
gory
of
weirdness.
Animals are often
should be (both are in Jefferson speed limit and frequently let olhers
"As far as I know, the restaurant
used to be a trucker stop, and the treated with . respect that seems
County), though Plum and Nectarine cut in.
· are miles apart.
"No one ever honks at you in truckers couldn't bold it all so they beyond their due. Days ago, in Punx• On a slnaller scale, Pittsburgh's .• Pittsburgh or flips the finger at you," slapped it together," said cook Don sutawney, a group of top-baued,
tuxedoed men asked a woodchuck
•road system, a crazy-quilt of unex- • .iaid a disbelieving Dawn Keezer, Valentine.
·pee ted twists and turns, and its resi- director of the Pittsburgh J;1ilm Office
The language, too~. is laden with named "Phil" to tell them when
dents' unusual driving habits are aad a recent transplant from Santa colorful peculiarities. Many Pius- spring would arrive.
The Athens Volleyball Program 1977 or were high school students in''
In an area where the fmt day of
burghers drop the infinitive "to be"
· often a source of amusement, if not Cruz, Calif.
(AVP) has scheduled tryou~ for girls the 12th grade or below, during the;
That's not the only thing she's from sentence constructions, saying deer hunting is a school holiday, it's in grades 12 on February 18, 25. and
'bewilderment, for newcomers.
current academic year, who are I&lt;}
· · Possibly the biggest idiosyncrasy. found strange about the city, which that their cars "need washed ... and not surprising that animals are fre- March 3, at Ohio Univenity's Conyears of age or younger on June IS:
is the. "Pittsburgh left," the tradition she nevet:tbeless !•kes ~. 1~1. "The their hairdryers "need fixed.,; Instead quently ibe objects of violence. The vocation Center.
of
the current season are eligible foi
•:Of letting the first car tum left in front food here 1s very b1zarre, Slid Keez- of saying "you," some say "yunz." town of DuBois took heat for exterTty-QUts
for
the
14
and
under
team
the
18 and under team.
,
And they pronounce ."town" as minating a rash of skunks by drown- will be 9-11 a;m. Feb. 18 and 25. Tty'of oncoming traffic after a traffic light er.
There is no fee to tryout. Ten to 1
ing lhem, and little RidJWay made
turns green.
Pittsburghers love to feast on "ton. •• '
outs" for lhe 16 and under and the 18 prls will be chosen for each team
for
shooting
stray
cats.
headlines
· Once very common, lhe "Pitts- pierogies, dumplings stuffed with
A chipmunk is a "grinny," a sparAs for the source of the region ·s· and under teams will be ll,.a.m,- I :30 The' teams will practice once a wee
burgh left" is now only sporadically mashed potatoes and cheese and row is a "sputzie" and to dean is to
p.m. on Feb: 25 and 9-11 a.m. on and travel to regional volleyball tour~
"redd up," as in, "Please redd up the peculiarities, some speculate ifs a March 3.
.: practiced, which makes it even more sauteed in onions.
naments on the weekends.
•'
function of geography. Mountainous
:confusing for newcomers.
Mixing french fries with steak and table."
were
born~
or
after
'
Players
who
For more information about the
"You don't know wbetheno go or other meats is another common prru:"It's intriguing and different in the and heavily rural, western 'Pennsyl- Sept. I, 1981 qualify for'Ute 14 and
Athens
Volleyball Program, pleasa
vania
is
mostly
made
up
of
small
jo wait," said Ellsworth H. Brown, tice. To make steak salad, chefs pile sense that you do have words which
under team. Players who were born . call Ellen Dempsey at the Obio.Uni;
communities
that
sprang
up
in
river
president of The Carnegie, a con- chopped steak on a bed of lettuce and seem to have no basis in what they
on or after Sept. I , 1979 !jl'e eligible
. glomeration of museums in the city. top the whole thing with french fries. describe," said Ken Abel, co-author valleys and often remained relative- for lhe 16 and under· team. Playets versity Volleyball Office at 593-118!t
or Denise La Monte at 593-8243. .~
ly isolated.
who were born on or a~r Sept. I,
i

.. BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)• Robin Strasser of "One Life To
··Live" and Maurice Benard of "Gen·~e.ral Hospital" were among lhe win.:ners in the 12th annual "Soap Opera
iDigest" awards.
Fans and readen of the magazine
..,judged performances given between
: .September 1994 and September
• 1995. Ballots were in lhe Oct. 24
•'
• issue.
·' Nominees were chosen by the edi-

7-9-7

'

Patterns worth repeating ~
quilt show scheduled . . :
The Dairy Barn, Inc. ofAiliens is
in lhe process of planninJ the 1996
Patterns Worth Repeating Quilt
~bow. Selection of qpill!l ftir the display will be done in 22 counties of
Southern and Eastern Ohio wilh
Meigs County to b0$t a sli.Q.W on Feb.
22. noon to I :30 p.m. at the Senior
Citizens Center, ~ultip~ BuildIng, Mulberry He1ghts, Po!l'eroy.
Those individuals whO wish to
enter quilts, should bring diem to lhe
Senior Citizens Center 1\t,,noon on
Feb.t2, for re!Jistration. At d:00 p.m.
there will be a presentaticln by Dr.
Schuyler Cone, associate professor of
:textiles, Ohio University, on Care and
Copservation of Quilts in tbe Home.
Show jurors will worlc , with the

Pick 3:

Sporta, Page 4

•

Looking for
weirdness?
: Try western
Pennsylvania

Ohio Lottery

I
••

state looks at the cost savinp as a
local contribution of dollars. That
. Development work on two major means additional points for a proarea highway projects will continue ject," said Dowler.
Dowler saide that $2.2S million
.with this morning's announcement of
has been earmarked for fiscal year
~ new highway ~ject selection pri.ority list by the o'hio Departmen1 of 1997 on preliminary design work for
the Athens to Darwin section. A two-:transportation.
· The new selection process was year construction plall is anticipated
'termed the Top 50 countdown by for .fiscal year 2000 at a cost of $20
some ODOT officials since project million, and fiscal,year 2001 ata CO$t
development by the state will con· of $25 million.
The U.S. 3311-'17 Ravenswood
tinue only on the top 50 ranked state
Connector
projeCt also rated favorhighway projects, out of more than
200 projects which were considered. ably, at 34th on lhe new priority list.
The proposed relocation of U.S. The ptnject went throlish similar
a;Hrom Athens to Darwin ranks I Sib downsizing to the U.S. 33 Alhens to
On the listing of new projects, d~ Darwin project, with super-two claslargely to the downsizing of the pro- sification reducing project costs from
ject. from a four-lane which could the original cost estimate of $117.6
have cost nearly $90 million, to a million.
super two-lane on a four-lillie right of
Preliminary design fun&lt;Ung totalway, according to ODOT District 10 ing $1.8 million·bas been IICt aside for
Deputy D~tor John Dowler.
fiscal year 1997. Construction ·costa
"By down~izing a project, we for lhe connector have been estimal·
sa~ .money for the stare. In the cue ed at $44 million, wilh $21 .8 million
of Athens to Darwin, the cost savings set aside for fiscal year 2003 ud
is: nearly $SO ·million. Therefore, the $21.8 million for fiscal year 2004.

The narrowed list of 50 projects
also includes the proposed Nelsonville U.S. 33 bypass project, listed at number 32. Funding of $1.70
million for the preliminary design of
the project has been earmarked for
fiscal year 1998. Total costs for this ·
project are estimated at $43 million,
'with $21,4 million set aside for construction in fiscal year 2003 and fiscal year 2004. ·
Odter major area highway construction projects to be COII)pleted
within lhe next several years, including lhe four-lane U.S. SO project in
Athens County, are not included on

lhc new list liecausc funding for these
projects was set aside by lhe state pri-

or to development of the new selection process, according to Nancy
Yoacbam, ODOT District 10 public
information officer.
Funding for replacement of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and rebabi 1itation of olher stale highways in lhe
area will come from otber sources,
with lhe bridge project to be completed with money set aside for
major bridges only. Highway reha·
bilitation projects will be funded by
moneys earmarked for maintenance
only, Yoacbam added.

Authorities
nab prison
escapee
.
I
.
CffiLLICOTHE (AP) - An camp's farm center, the Ohio Departinmate who escaped from a prison , ment of Rehabilitation and Correc·
camp was captured Thursday in lion said.
· Achtermann was seen walking
Cincinnati, the prison said.
Robert Acbtermann, 31, bid been down a street in Cincinnati and was
missing from the Ross Correctional arrested It aboUt II a.m. by city
Camp since about6 p.m. Wednesday. police; prison· spokeswoman Robin
He was last soen wortina It the Knab said.

!

The drop in industrial output was
not as steep as 1he 0.8 percent decline
that many analysts had predicted.
But it was a new sign of a sbuggling factory sector, which haS seen
growth slowing during much of the
year.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
U.S. 33 Highway Committee
members have approved downgrading two Meigs County highway projects IQ super-two projects, but
remain concerned over an environmental study for the remainder of the
U.S. 3311-77 Connector Project that
is almost a year overdue .
Committee co-chairman Steve .
Story, Pomeroy, said new criteria for
rating highway projects takes into
.account both transportation and economic development factors .
Transportation factors, including
traffic count and safety. account for
70 percent of the points allowed
toward highway prioritizing. Economic development counts toward 30
percent of the allowable points.
However, downgrading the connector road and the 3 project from
Athens to Darwin to super-two projects will allow those particular projects to receive bonus points due to
cost savirip. .
"Our stand is that if we reduce-the
cost' of the ptnject. it can be used to
get ll(jditional points," Story said.
A super-two highway is similar to
a fl!ur:lane highway, complete with
acceleration/deceleration lanes and a
four-lane right-of-way, Story said .
The big .difference is that it only bas
two lanes instead of four.
l'nlike existing two-lane high·
ways, super-two highways are limit·
ed access with no private driveway
entrances.
This would reduce the price of the
connector road from $117 million to
$43 million for total savings of $74
million, Story said.
Doing the same to the Athens to
Darwin highway will' save approxi·
mately $43 million.
"This moves them up, I believe,"
said Story. "If it moves us up ... it's a
tremendous plus. Half a loaf ·is bet·
ter than none."
Meanwhile, Story has been critical of Ohio Departmenbt of Transportation District I 0 in Marietta con·
ceming an environmental study for
!he U.S. 3311-17 Connector Project.
On March 3, the environmental
study will be one year delinquent,
said Story. The contract for the study
cost $410,000 and almost $279,000
has been paid, he added.
"Why has it taken 13 years to do.
an environmental study '/" Story
asked.
·
This was done at the district office
in Marietta, Story said. The point is,
he added, it was hired out to a con(Continued on Page 3)

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