<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9119" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9119?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T08:13:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19548">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7842ae1bc0e8edf96ee70c5e5b61435d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>74458e8552526550e694fece09236015</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29324">
                  <text>)

...

-

Pomeroy" MiddlePort • Gallipolis, OH • Point.Plee•nt,

II••'

Wv

SUnday, February 25, 1

Ohio Lottery

New crops. may·be answer.to1
problems in many rural area~

t

Earnhardt
Goodwrench
champion.

Pick 3:

173

Plck4:
8175

Super Lotto:
1-6-33-35-36-42
Kicker:
199425

Sparta, Page 5 .

,
Voi.48,NO. . .

Pomero~·Middleport,

1 llectlol•, 10 . . . .
"

35cenl8
A Glinnett Co. N-paper

Ohio, Monday, February 26, 1996 ·

'

·FEMA urges flood insurance purchase
.~
toujMBUS (AP)- Residents in 13 coimties along the Ohio Rl'ver who
·' suffered losses in January's flooding have received more than $1 million in
dis(ISter aid. ·
• But as the result of a change that took effc;ct last year, these people must
:.now buy flood insurance or face ,the likelihood of receiving limit~ help in
the fUtllfC.
'
; . ''We don't want to·leave the impression that disaster aid will always ber
· there as a substitute for flood insurance," ~d) Phil Zaferopulos, coordinat·
ing officer for the Federal Emergency Mlill8gement Agency.
!
Flooding is the major cause of propeity loss from natural disasters in this
· .country y~ after year, .said Gary Pierson, deputy coordinator for the agency.
"People need to think about what they'll do the next time floodwaters
: ·approach;'' he said.
, · The flooding ranged from a 10-year flood; tp a 50-year flood, said Nan.

·,

'

cy Dragani, spokeswoman for the! Ohio Emergency Management Agency.
Floods are described by how often they are expected .to occur.
"Those people who live in flood plains and are assisted with federal emergency housing funds must carry flood insurance in the future ," Draga~i said.
. "If they don't and they are flooded again, their assistance will be limited."
Government agencies want people to take precautionary measures, such·
as elevating buildings and buying insurance, if they plan t!l build in flood
plains. she said.
Insurance has been available since 1968 in communities that participate
· in the National Flood Insurance Program.
Any licensed insurance agent can sell flood insurance through the program, which is administered by the federal government and designed to be
self-supporting through policy owner premiums.
.
The annual cost of a flood insurance policy in Ohio was $343 in 1995 for .

Cuban shootdown
of civilian aircraft
may yield .sanction$

Safety:·
counts
New contmls

make mimi root
boltfng simpler

Ki)lart ~losing 15 stores,
--e.fi~in'ating f,3oo jobs ·
'

'

Troy, Mjj:h. (AP)- Kmart Corp. . hundreds of aging and unprofitable
said Friday it will close 15 stotes in stores and eliminated thousands of
eight states by tbe end of May and . jobs ail effort to cut costs.
· The-company has faced stiff com:eliminate 1,300 jobs as part of an
ongoing effort to increase profits by petition for years from :Wal-Mart
shuttering poorly performing stores. · Stores Inc .. the Target chain of DayIn Ohio, Kmart will close its store ton Hudson Corp. and other mass
at Toll 0~ Mall in Oxford.
merchandisers and regional discounKmart has posted disapll!linting ters.
earnings for II consecutive quarters.
· Kmart's sales and profits hav~
In recent years, the company has shed lagged
.
'

:Progress reported in GM talks
DAYTON (AP) -A union official reponed progress Friday in talks
. aimed at heading off a strikl: Monday
· by 3,000 workers. at two General
· Motors •Corp. . brake-component
plants.
· GM and United Auto Workers
·. Local696 began negotiating Monday
after ihe .union issued a five-day strike
nOtice.
,
"It's moving," said Local 696
~ident Joe Hasenjager. "Hopefully, .we can get there before.the deadline." ·
~njager reported · progress on
all of. the issues, but declined to be

specific. He acknowledged that the
talks have had their ups and downs.
Jim Hagedon, spokesman for
GM's Delphi Automotive Systems
division, would say lillie about the
negotiations.
"We're continuing to work on it,"
said Hagedon.
(.,ocal 696 is operating under the
union's national agreement .. which
expires in September. But the union
can terminate the contract and strike
under certain circumstances.
Workers at the two plants went on
strike .two years ago, idling five GM
assembly plants

Report record first
quarter earnings

-

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - Champion Industries, Inc., Huntington,
W.Va., has ~cently announced
record-breaking first quarter earnings
of $636,000 up from $553,000 one
year ago, an increase of 15 percent.
Champion has consistently increased
quarterly earnings over the previous
year in all 13 quarters since going
public in January 1993.
,
TJ!e board of. directors of Champion !llso has declilred the, company's
regular ')Uarterly dividend of 5 cents
per share. 'The divide!ld, voted at its ·
Febl'lary 19 monthly meeting, will be
paid on March 29, 1996, to share,
holders of record on March 8, 1996.

.

, I

formanee

.,~~,l;f'l!' ·l~ans availa~l,e .through ·FSA

: ', . .

.: .r .~·EADO·WS.
com ·is ~1.95/bu:· For spybe~s. the
ft!' ' OAL(JPOLIS• (ltiiin ~ces 8fC · loan rate is $5.0Sibu. All soybeans are

~r ; P:\~h J~Ctte"r ;tl)i~ s~n eliaJb~for, la:ln1 Whil«ronlycoml'fl)(,~·~, li&amp;Y~ ~- fot qulle 5omt; . ,duceC! on: ~ ~qrolled i!lto t~ 1.9 9,
1is eligi·
wiU
pt better? A lot,of . ACfCI!P Red~l:iio11
jliin!t so.· u you are. o~ of b!e.
.
..
, ~~• 1~ on IIOI'ed bean$ or CQOI
If you have, gram harveSted aitd
·~~~~~'J.O,·dte ~ ~ now ,thj~ the loan pr~l cPt!JI\.'be: I!
M lllowant YO\I ,10 t'etail! ow~- ~nefit to YOI!o con,tact Farin'Serv~
'lhif~· lhe pa Md watCii the~- 'Ag~m;y ' at 446;8686 for thl .detalls.
·~ ~ Cjlll. liie paid otf in ~II')'- Thii4Cadijnefqr klaft applicationlii(

'
·
hue
.. ·l l*'JII.'
•

PrOanm

!Jiey

. ifti~~MIIIy~~4uriili' tlle M•y ':it\ 1"!196. .:, .· ' :
· ...-~liteaftoftblloan.With

at 446·2332 for our .
MINUTES .OIL

29
'

'

OR LESS

!)

*19 5

.

spurs TP-C to restructure rate hike

SE;SEDAN

..

By TOM HUNTEfl
Slfttlnel News Stllff

GOP hop~fuls scramble
for Ari;zona.pri_mary vote

BRADLEY
Jtii'I'Y W. Bl'lldley wet pi'omot8CI to unit tUpetVIIOf In

Tobac.co mee,tlng,wlll
~..,. .,., ..........
1
""' he ." . 1 ~'"!!,.Y
,

ClAI,I.IPOLIS - ~ ~ 1011*;c• power JirOO~ -ling wiD be,
. held Tuesday, Reb. 21.slaltina 117:30

pnl.iii'~:I:'~Tl'acelllementuY

••I

"" ............ ' •' ••

'

.

.10,999

'95 FORD UNGER

Orily 4,00o miles, A/C, C88!18tte, 5
'

''

~~~100

::rx~~~=

Connie; IMide !n a.lllpo~
'

Dole; the Senate majority leader,
reorganizing his staff and trying to
push to sway votes in Arizona while overcome two straight lose~ in New ·
Bpb (&gt;Pie waS $CCltillj! to solidify Hampshire and Delaware, disclosed
support in~ Sta,!e whe~ ·he hoped to
that he'dtalked to Bush
after the
ltave a clearer shot. ,
New Hampshire vote. ·•
Po!e, · also'.' was. playing th~
Asked if he expected an endorsee~ment Jlme, .malting a ,pifment, Dole sai(l, "Well, it would be
grili1qe' ~ ~liJI&lt;Iay to the ' Mzona nice.ldoo't lcnol\l. lt's above my. pay
hilltpP hollle of, GOP consetvative · gflldc.".
·
~h Barly Goldwater and'counQf the call to Bush, Dole said, "I
ing
~sidcnt Bush.
talked to him after New Hampshire, .
Boih COI!IIlrvative commentator told him 'nOt to worry. I'd lost New
Pat BIIC~· ,winner of last week's Hampshire before."
New Hampsbire primary, and milDo.l~ ~d he told Bush: "As soon
lionaire Steve Forbes,· winner of the as we Jet out of these states · where
J~l~~s!ednel.witeprima- , FQI'bes,IW ··pent sa,.,heavjly, I !llink
1)'011.
d .,..:,~.f.Oli~na o~Ari'\ ,we're-'l·fi.!'t, Uust~~fgavC4Um

IJ\d Steve Forbes were making a final

porlltlon'a Kyger CrMk Plant
011 .Ftb. 1. Bradley j91nld .
OVEC In 1981' a 1 1 laborer. In
· 11182, hit trantftmcl io the
~ne clape: btliJII u a
'3

. '95 BUICK lEGALS ,

Loaded, pawer~ wihdows, casse~es,
·tilt &amp; cruise. ,,. ·
·

*13,900

.

'

soon

sPeed.
"

'

REDUaDTO

f_,

. '95 BUICK CEIITUIYS ·
'

,

I

,V-6 engineS, loaded; ·
Bumper to Bumper Warranty · ·

*ll .900 ...,.,c.
I

'

'

'

•

'

'

I

i
.,;

. ~~i~4thb~.~-~·O.:~ ~ ::r.:.ww·=~~re,th~~

· lb!W' ' ~ lloldinJ prlmllrie$ 'on 1;&gt;' ionai ~th Dakota and sOuth Car- '
~y'. With 39 delegates liP for·"'· olin a,': ·
, .
.
~ 7 ihe most iO far in this Yeir's : ·l • ''J{ wo~!d be, 11ice". If Busli
)JI'Itlll!j icfiec!lile. .
e~ btm, Dole said. .
!Dole had campaip stops today in '.
i~ North Dllrota IIIII South Dakota, A~tl; M,11CP11 and Columbus. &lt;ieOrfolf?~ ~· • "first,i!'"~th" pa's ~.which ihebole camCIIIIbilt an ~th, Clrolma on Satw:- • .. pai111 v.ieW. " · one of his better
rJ,Ij.
• .
·• ,
.....,_..i•·ln the South,,is March S.
• RIIQila . . also being held Tuescl&amp;y .

,1, ~ '

' \I

.J' '~t-/

.

,,f
~'

t~It'. , ' .

I

r-"""""

'

:!'

•

, .,.

'

~·

•

j,

~'

'&gt;. ~

!4

'
•

:
'

'

'

·.

'

.

"Even though the funds needed to
upgrade the system's treatment facility are needed, it was felt that there
could be a deferment on part of the
adjustment until Construction is un~er
way," said Poole ..
TP-C officials expect constructi!ln
to get underway in approximately 18 '
months on a $1.65 million expansion
to double the treatment capacity of
the district's treatment plant near
Long Bottom.
"The board was given several

options concerning the rate increase.
One of the options included just an
increase in the minimum to $15.60
for 3,000 gallons. It was felt that this
was too much at one tithe, and that it
would put an undue burden on our
minimum users," Poole said.
Poole added that the original revision in the minimum base gallon
amount of 3,000 gallons was made
because many of the rural water systems in the area have a.bandoned the
(Continued on Page 3).

WASHINGTON (APJ - As the
Clinton administration weighed its
response to the downing of two
civilian planes by Cuba, U.S. officials
said today they .doubted the pilots
survived the attack.
' A government official, who spoke
on condition of anonymity, told The
Associated Press it is highly unlikely anyone survived since witnesses
saw the planes disintegrate.
Earlier, NBC News suggested thai
Cuba might have captured one of the
do)"~~L.J!i.i{l~~ " ~eport.i! {rom _
Havana, NBCfquoted a C n foreign ministry statement claim ng evidence the planes entered Cuban air-

spa~: ~n~~~~t ~~~~.w~~~~~~~

sources who said the pil!lt in questi!ln
may have been a Cuban spy who had
infiltrated the same organization that
FRIEND'S GRIEF - Brothers
operated the downed planes. The spy to the Rescue pilot Humberto
probably was recalled to Cuba Sanchez broke down as he
because of the crisis. NBC said.
hea. d the name of friend and
The State Department had no · pilot Armando Alejandre Jr. at a
immediate response to the reports.
. news conference Sunday in MiaU.S. intelligence officials said the mi, Fla. Alejandre and three oth·
air traffiC control tower in Havana er pilots were gunned down by
had warned the pilots they were in Cuban military jets off the Cuban
danger. The officials said the downed coast S.turclay. (AP)
planes, and a third that returned
safely to Florida. may have entered he could consider. Secretary of State
Cuban airspace .
Warren Christopher declined to
Russia expressed regret over the reveal the options, but said the Unitloss of life but suggested flights near ed States will . "make clear to the
Cuban airspace may be provocative. Cubans that this violation of interna"A question arises about the goal tional law will not go unanswered."
.'«Jf such flights within the Cuban airThe United States believes the
space an~ in the vicinity of it," Russ- planes, operated by a Florida-based
ian foreign ministrv spokesman Gri~­ group that flies off the Cuban coast
ory Karasin said. "Whether we want in search of possible refugees. were
it or nol, this becomes a. provoking in international air space when they
factor."
were shot down Saturday. Four peoPresident Clinton is considering ple aboard the two small planes arc
how the United States should respond missing.
to the incident amid talk of tougher
The incident pushed Cubantrade embargoes ·on Capitol Hill and American relations to the fore just
by Republican presidential candi- two weeks before the presidential pridates .
,
mary in delegate-rich Florida. It al so
Clinton 's national security advis· brought a period of relative calm
ers gave him a lengthy memo Sunday between Washington and Havan a to
evening that lists a range of options an abrupt end.

Indecision reigns among
Ohio's Republicans: poll

ATLANTA (AP)- Pat Buchanan

the open~tlona .,_rtn•tt lit
the OhlQ Vlllley Ellclrlc Cor-

ator In 1H5.1n 1111.1, Ill wet
promcJIMI to equ~IJ opt,.
ator. •BI'IIdtey and hit wife,

-~~

-·

'

, .. ~ER!{JlhCOallta~nty,. ~~:hoolbuildbig.

.))t,.p....""''" ~• ..........,.; ...--......... ~ .·

in as much as a 52 percent for users
of 3,01)0 to 4,000 gallons of water
each month.
1'he board voted in fa"or of a
motion to make this a two-stage
increaSe:, restoring the 1,000 gallons
to the minimum and raising the min. imum amount an additional dolhir.
This will make the minimum bill of
3,000 gallons for $13.50, effective·
with thC March billing, TP-C Water
General Manager Donald Poole said
in the l.etter.

A large rate increase that prompt·
ed 11umerous complaints from Thppen Plains-Chester Water District
· cultomets has been restructured into
a tWO"SIIge increase, water board
officials announced in a public letter
sent to customers late last week.
The increase, approved by ttie district's board in October 1995, resttuctured the minimum bser rate from
3,000 to 2,000 gallons, and teSulted

~~ -~ ~l$~~ ~~: ' ·( · ·:· •;~tue Mold outf~ ~or~~:',
_,..,.. ~

¥.1-i·J:~ t-. '&gt;~;t'
AEP's manater"!'f machinery: '
· maintenance i~ mining operations.
'This machine is now the state
'
of the art in Wety enhancements,
NEW EQUIPMENT- Harry Cathell, field Hrvlce repreuritatlva with the J.H. Fletcher Co.,
· operator effi¢iency and ergonomic ··
clemonttratad one of the new root bolting 11111chlnes, controlled by hancW!eld devices; received
improvemetits, machine perfor- .
by $oUtflern Ohio Coal Co. this month.
·
IIUIIICe, retr
' ility and maintainability."
'·
·
. engi~rs and employeess at Meigs
Fe;~tures of the ll-ton CLTD0- operated by an employee seated in
AEP v· PreSident of Mining
a small cab in the rear of the
Mines No. 2 and 31 met with J.H.
17 machin.es include:
Operatio~ Hugh H. Lucas . has
Fletcher Mining Equipment offi• Three hand-held remote con- machine. The rem!lte controls
challengCII• ~ ·m)lchinery mainteimprove visibility, safety and opercials
than two years ago to
trol devices, one on either side and
nance de~ent ' to .continually
ator comfort.
specifY design changes prior to
one at the rear of the vehicle,
improve&gt;)safety consideratiPns,
• Eliminating the cab also
ordering the new equipment The
allowing an operal!lr to move and
improved access to componen~ •.
opeuiaoi.9f1onomics 111d efticien·
tw(lmachines were received in
position the . machine without
making inspections and mainte'cy ~all mining equipment, and 'to
late 1\)94; the next two in January
touching it
nance easier and faster.
woi:li' with vendors on improve- 1995.
The rear control is attached
• Caterpillar tracks instead of
illents before equipment is rebuilt,
"'Ibis is the culmination of two
with a small, low. voltage electrical
rubber
tires make, the machine
replaced or purchased, Cooper
cable that allows him to control it
years' work between my office, the
'
from about 20 feet away. Older .. more effective on rough and mudmine,'tbe operators and the manuCooper, mining !lperations
(Continued on Page 3)
facturer,"
Cooper
sllid.
models
had hydraulic controls
'

•.

CHANGE

\\J ·

l l.l ,c a

J~

. r~x~!fJl!IJCI. j~,:

tim

', '95

' iliO.~r.ee·Jorro-,·•bUnod in ~~PrOducers' tot~~. 'Wiip~ : ; :nW&lt; ~ ,Slieab~ wjll ,be Dr.' '
~;41 '5,I~... billY
Ill' , ~
il' , . ,. ~~·~ 27, • ~ ·Phil:flllntft,
. , toblceo 1experi~J~Cnt
' "'·'"'- p. dio ~ P!ioe !)( ~ ~ ...~ ; . Flioor af 7:30 ~~hi ... tj011, !TOm ' the 't1nlvenif1 !'( ,Ten·~ w . to olr.et ~ 11~tet·
.JAM Iii.
, Ja .._ ~~ . nc.-..sO!ne or ihe topics 'tO ,bii dis·
'I!
·
,, ' . ·r
l11h'-,_
" ·1M Gallla,,. ll~wiUbeRi~lreaiStaocelnd

•

111

roore

Local Angus breeder recognized .
BIDWELL- Champion Hill, Bid- ·• .the genetic merit animals have for
well, owns three bulls listed in the specific traits, says, John Crouch,
'1996 Spring Sire Evaluation Report director of performance prograll)s for
'published by the American Angus the American Angus Association.
i'ossociation, headquartered in St. When using EPD's. with, high accuJoseph~ Mo. ·
.
rB£y values, cattle producers can
·. Issqed in both the spring and fall, · depend on EPD's for predicting perthe ~w report features the larest per- formalice.
•
information available dn
Tr~ts for whi~h EPD's are avail• 236 sires.
able include, birth weight, weaning
,' ' The information is in the form of weight, milk, yearling weight, mature
:~xpecled progeny differences. It is : daughter ~ize and sc!"ltal ~irc.umfer:eompil¢ from Angus Herd improve- ence. Ava!lable. C!lf'Cass tnuts mdudp!ell~,~ 'ubm!tted by breeders ing marb!)ng, nb eye area.and ~xter,
' .. , 0 u,e.Alperi~ Angus Association.
nal fat thtckness are also,hsted m lhe
.:J · l!PD~~· are·excellent indicators of report.

. End of panel lonawall operations Ill American Electric Power
· System's Southern ,Ohio Coal Co.
have become easier and safer with
the delivery pf twp new automated roof bolting m~hines.
'The machines' will be used to
bolt and support Jhe mine roof prior to rem!lving the armored face
c~~·;}';';~and~ lroof supports at the
· end
panels.

'

$61 ,000 in coverage, Dragani said.
Emergency grants for repairing homes and businesses or replacing personal property average about $3,000 and are provided through the Individual and Family Grant program, which the state administers .
FEMA administers a program called Disaster Housing that provides rental
payment for up to three months if a house is uninhabitable. It also provides
money if the house needs only minor repairs ..
"That money can be the difference between recovering from a flood and
having the flood become a personal and permanent disaster a family never
recovers from," said Dale Shipley, coordinating officer for the Ohio emergency agency.
The 13 Ohio counties that received federal emergency assistance for thi s .
winter 's floods· are: Adams, Belmont, Brown, Clermont, Columbiana; Gal- ·
lia, Hamilton, Jefferson, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe. Scioto and Washington.

f

that it is still early in 'the campaign
By The Associated Press
One poll of Ohio Republicans season and the candidates have not
found a majority undecided on who been campaigning heavily in the
their party 's presidential nominee state yet.
An Ohio Poll c!lnducted by the
should be, while another poll indi·
cated that Bob Dole's lead in the state Institute for Policy Research at the
University of Cincinnati indicated .
has narrowed.
A poll by the University of that Dole 's lead has narrowed during
Akron's Survey Research Center the past week.
The tracking poll, rele!ISed Sunfound that64 percent of the registered
Republicans it surveyed were unde- day, found that 42 percent of the ·
cided on a choice for the party's nom- respondents favored Dole, 19 percent
inati!ln.
fav.ored Buchanan, · 14 percent
Pollsters questiQned 598 OhiP favored Alexander and S percent
adults by telephone betweeh Feb 13 favored Forbes. The rest chose some-· ·
.
and 21 . The PQ)I has a margin of error :one else or were undecided.
.
pf 4 percentage points. It was con- I A tracltin.g P,OII released by the •.
ducted for the Akron Beacon 1oumal 1 same orgamzatton five days earlier· •
1and Cleveland television stations \ had Dole with 50 percent, Buch-. ·
1WOIO and WUAB.
1 with 15 perCent, Alexander with 9 ,
: Among~ polled Who said they : percent and Forbes ,with 7 ~rcent:: .
Iwere registered Republicans, 17 per- ~oughly 17 ~rcen~ were undecidecj~: . : ,
•cent expressed a preference for Dole, tn both traclting poll~.
,
: •, ,- ;:
' 8 percent were for Pat Buchanan, 4
. 11_le ~Us were sponsored by The:?; l ·, \
percent were for, Lamar Alexander· C•nc•nnau Enquirer,
TV
•, ~
and 4 percent were for Steve Forbes. the univ~riity. Pollsters '·
·
The Ohio primaiy will be on 76$1illelY:Republican
Mari:h 19. One explination for tlie between Feb. 20 and
large number of undecided voters· i• · for error is 3.5
'

!0

,

�•

.rlommentary
.

.

.

..
.

-· ~

J

::

•

•3
.,

.

.

.. . .

.. · -

By JIICk Anclei .0,
. free-\J'Ide advocate who found com·
and llchlel Blnatlln
fort in !he corridon of power; an elite
WASHINGTON -- Could Pat suburbanite who drove a Mei-cedes'
111 c-t St., Pomeroy,j)hlo
Buchanan, who spent bis fonnative Benz untii be realized that the pitCh·
814-992-2151• Fu: 9ft:2157
yeus in politics flinging filth on
. Richard Nixon's behalf, be suffering
- ~ from bis own version of the "18v Ql
' '
minute
gap"?
•
It was 18 missing npnutes from
A Gannett Co. Newspaper .
!he infamous Watergate ~apes that
convinced many Americans of
'
ROBERT
L. WINGETT
Nixon's complicity in the _scandal thai .fork bearing peasan!S he preaches to
Publleher
ended his presidency. Similarly, don't drive pricey Gennan sedans.
•
Buchanan is skirting segments of his The man who now draws cheers for
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
own career when he complains to condemning "bloodless corporate
General Mll18gll'
Control!«
audiences about the "sleazy taCtics" butchers" plied his trade in a White
' and ..attack ads" employed by his Ho1110 whose illegal c:ouning of !he
R~publican opponents.
corporate 11entry prompted sweeping
Though Buchanan often wraps .changes in the campaign finance sys~~~~
·-l'llly-·--~~~~~-A/1himself in Nixon's legacy when it Jtem.
...
lltlbl«tiD-..n-,
. . , _ . , _- • ,,~, ....... ""'· No _,..., ,.,_ . . ,_ pvb/ltllld. L - Mtould ,_ In fOOd ......
suits
his political ends, he has con- • But Buchanan's most astonishing
Jd1 ••
IJ.
.
veniently edited qut parts of his past break from the past may be ~Us born·
1---~--------------------..llJ that conflict with bis new image as · ag~n attitude toward negative camthe pugilist populist who p'anicked · paigns.
'
GOP officials by winning the New · . . " Over the . past year _we have
Hampshire primary. . ·
:fought a good, clean campmgn, and I
He likes to tell audiences that he's am proud of that campaign,"
an ·"authentic conservative who's . .Buchanan said last week. "But in the
been right from the belinning." In the last 24 hours, Bob Dole has reverted
•.·
beginning, however, Buchanan was l1 once again to the nasty attack ads he
The Daily Sentinel welcomes let- dates will not be used.
~rs regarding the March 19 primaLetters should be 300 words or
~ election. However, in the interest less, preferably typed. All letters are
~fairness, no election letters will be subject to editing and and must be
PRQSiDQNT [)aiR-- Ttte i~
. j~ecepted after 12 noon on Monday, signed with name, address and teleMaKeS M'{ HeaRT R~-­
&lt;llfarch -II.
phone number. Telephone numbers
~ ei.Sf!
PaceMaKeR
: : Individuals should address issues will not be published. No unsigned
)nd not personalities.
letters will be published. Letters
Tee CIPSe To TKa
:: l.Cuers purely ·endorsing candi- sh~uld be in good taste.
·
M;c~wave.!

By· JackAnd·ar,•aon
and
Michael Slnsteln

.

r

I

. .,,...,..,ltDt,.,
. .--.I......

I

.

•

;~Deadline for publication of
1~1ectiori
leHers March 11 ·
.

GoT

-

..

...J - ·- ·

,...

~·· · · ··

withdrew only last week. His campaign is making telephone calls
smearing me; bis sunogates .-e open.ly attacking iny c!lanocter."
Those ire ironic words for a man
who· spent the summer of 1972
preplringlhe "assault book," a sleazy
encyclopedia of neglllive information
for Nixon to use aaainst bis otl!K'nent
thaiJ aii, Sen. George McGovern, DS.D. No blow 'was too low for the
assault book. At ooe point. Bucbaawl
· referred to a McGovern campaian
contributor as a "screaming fairy,"
,and accused McGovern himself -of
·having a "lynch mob attitude towards
the nation's peace officen, a kneejerk tendency to exonerate hell-raisers and condemn the pOlice."
Wbile he condemned Mf;(l&lt;,lvem,
Buchanan urged l!lixon to Sl8nd finnly bebind one of this ceptury's most
controversial figures •• J. Edgar
Hoover, the tyrant whO ran the 'PBI
for neaiy half a century until his
death in 1972. At the time, the publie already was aware of Hoover '~
legendary abuses of power; bis habit
of using PBI resources to puriue private vendettas against lawmakers,

.

.:: ·

Prayers answered

•••

:•: When we received the call inform: ~g us of the accident that took Von-

j4a George out into eternity, ) thought
J ur hearts would break with grief.
Because of all the prayers that
went up on our belialf, God helped in
:a wonderful way. I don't know even
. ·riow llow-we managed to get through
, tllose tragic first days.
·'

'

I • 0

•

~

•

•

~

-'I.

Mondly"flbnwy ~-

...... ..~. _.... ..... ..... -. ...... . .

M'i

~~Letters
to the editor .••

.

'

-

·~~,.

.v

"'

.

•

•

Justin is now out of the hospital
and doing very well. We realize it ·
wasn't just chance that Justin didn't
die. 'We realize it was the hand of God
that kept bim protected. With all the
prayers going up for him, God heard
and answered those.
Valerie Rkbmond If
Rutland.

•

"Let me

say

this," BUchanan

wr6te in a "sugested spcecJi illleft."

"Georse McGovenl wiU ,ne~ be
ludf the man, or half the ~·
that John Bd11ar koover was - the
11101e Hooven lhiJ natioo' procluces,
and the fewer McGovertls we get as
candidlia, the beiter Off the United
Slates Will be."
Could those ~ the words I of
today's Pat "Let's-Ciean-Up-Politics" Buchanan71s t\Jere any wonder
why !hey were no1 ·included In his
recent television commercials touting
'his White House expe.;ience7
UNDJ!R THE ..DOtdB.,·· .The

HouseAppl:opljatiqli~ttee has .

long been kitown as the dilpenaer of
"pork" projects for v~ speCial
interest . ~ But tilt followin1
matter belongs in a ~ all its
own. ·
'·' '
An unreleased leiter · recently
penned by Rep. Joe Kllollenberg, RMich., a second-termer who won a
coveted seat on Apprbprialionf lut
year, proves that the' life df a lawmaker•isn'l all ·glamorous, ·
· "I am writing to you on behalf of
Mr. R. Miles Handy U, President,
Oink-Oink Inc.," begins thC letter,
which was written• to the cdntreS·
sional relations office of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
·"According to Mt. H~y, the
United States Department of 'Agri·
culture .was allowing Oink-Oink to
pure~ .,roc~- to~:U a;pet
treat ... After .sevel'al monthj of
doing so,lhe USDA1legan'f9 tdye' the
raw penises green.' As a result of this.
Oink·OUtk Inc. is unable to uae them
becauae of this dilltoiOralion."
Fonus!alely, the pet 0\VIWI'loa is
everybody.else's gain. It .- -.s the
pig genitalia were being dy,NI green
to ensure lhal they w~'l . 'l'ixed
with other J1111t5 of the pi1 meant for
human cons1!,111Plion. Still, the whole
episode only confmns wbat Otto von
Bismarck famously noted: That tl'ien=
are two things you never want to see
being made -- legislation and SIIISIIIC!·

- -=--·.

Sponsors sought for event

·~ .

'

: :: Dear Editor
nationally, not patient services, _sll
J~~ek Andenila .lad MlcluieJ
:: : The 1996 Tri.county WalkAmer- children everywhere receive the benBlmtcla moe , . . . tor Ullltetl
:tea for the March of Dimes is look- efit of it.
Feature Sy.dleafc, ac, .
: idg for sponsors.
This year's walk is scheduled for
: :: Althlll!gh the walk is held.in Point · April28 at 3 p.m. at Harmon Park in
· Pleasant, it is far froin being a Point Pleasant We expect over 2,000
: "Mason County" even_t. Last year's . peopletotakepart. ltisexpensiveto
L '
u
w:allc -drewoverl,500participants. stageanevent 'ofthissize,therefore
'
c·ess·~-~,~,
Over 55 businesses and organizations many organizations choose to support
hi the area sponsored teams. Among the 'walk by becoming a sponsor. .
! t
By Nit Hentolf
: !hose from Meigs CouniY. ·were Contributions can be either cash or inHMO for Months, Diagnosed by practice in many manaaed care oper- medical records ahall be fully proAs of January, there were at least Clinic in Days."
: Krog~'s of Pomeroy, VauJJ!an's Car- .. 1\ind contributions of fOOd or merations.)
,~
~ted u proyided by lew .•. no health
. dinal Supermarket, the Syracuse chaRdise. There is a level of spon- SO million Americans enrolled in
One of the maddening fru$1rations cue ~iness ihall soil a patient's
Pieeemeal bills have been introHealth Maintenance Organizations, duced in some state legislatures to f~ doctors in many manaaed care medical records to any third party
: Brownies. Fruth Pharmacy, Over- · sorship to fit every budget.
: brook Nursing Care Center, Veterans
By becoming a sponsor of the Tri- not counting other fonns of managed
plans is the requirement that,they get without the express written autho. pennission for an expensive prooe- rizatioo of the patient" ·
, Memorial Hospital, as well as Sub- County Walk, area businesses and care. As their numbers keep growing,
NstHentoff
· way and WMPO FM and AM, who organizations not only make a dona- so do chilling stories of badly failed
duro by having to phone a cqmpany
Rose Ann DeMoroistheexeclllive
: also served ·as gold sponsors of the tion to the health and well-being of patient ·care.
nurse or another intermediaJY ·who director of f.he c;atifllmia Nunes
Dr. Edmund . Pellegrino, a regulate HMOs. The most compre- does nOt see the patient The CNA ini- .Association -- and the primary force
:event. We hope to have even greater children everywhere, they receive a,
:participation from Meigs County this significant .amount of publicity and renowned bioethicist at Georgetown hensive approach, however, is a set of tiative mandates that no such request behind !he 4rive to make: the Patient
year.
public goodwill in return for their University Medical Center, is critical refonns being proposed in California by a patient's physician can l!edenied Protection.:A&amp;t :into law. Her eeergy,
of HMOs ihat "define the physician by the California Nurses Association unless a ljualified health prof~ssion- intellillence -"' paasion are another
Now in its seventh year, the Tri- generosity.
as
an instrument of productivity. in alliance wjih health consumer al has physically examined the sian tbat ,.orgatJize!l Jabo(, ,may be
;County Walk has been recognized by
In order for the sponsors to be
Medical
ethics," he has written, "puts groups and labor unions.
·ibe March of Dimes as the largest per- identified on the various promotionpatient.
n:11aining some of its powa-,tllld influA vigorous sup(Xlrter of the meaIn California and other places, once.
,
: ~apita walk in the entire nation. Last al materials, it is impo~t that those the genuine needs of the patient at the
"We're not interested in compro:year, thll walk raise over $57,()()() for interested get in touch with a WalkA· . center. That primacy should not be sure is ·Ralph Nader who .. contrary hospitals have .been cutting costs by
,the campaign against birth defects. merica committee member without sacrificed to economics lest the"vul- to seventl premature career obituaries reducing the number of registered mising ;· care;" ' DeMotil' says.
nerability of sick persons be ignored -- is likely to he more relevant than nurses and other personnel. Accord- "Through this initillive. we·~ aoin1
·This is something to he proud of, and delay.
-~ith consequences for the moral ever in this and other aress of resur- ingly, the CNA initiative mandstes to haveaditferemkind' ofjleili~. 'M:
.a testimony to the things which can
For more infonnation on the swn. gent consumer activism.
. be accomplished when all tlvee coun- sorship levels available, call Dianna health of the whole society."
that "all health care facilities shall ,belielie we can build li mass'liise."
·,'The patient can only be returned to
ties work together.
Ellison at 1-304-675-1607 or GeorThe CNA's confrontation with pn)vide safe and adequat4 staffing of ' :Not only will~ benefit,' She1told
: · We are often asked what percent- gianna Tillis at 1-304-675-4340, ext. the center, Dr. Pellegrino told me, managed care is in the form of anini- physicians, registered nurses and oth- ·me,' "but doctors1 in these m&amp;naJe~~
"when the public begins to appreci- tiative 'which requires 700,000 signa- er licensed and certified c.egivers." care organizations·will no longer:be
age of the money raised comes back 253.
ate
,what's being dOne to it -- and tures to get on the ballot in Novemio our own county. 'The money raised
Since CNA's members ~ in afraid to speak out lest they be bllll:kJulia Houdashelt,
when
the
medical
profession
stops
by WalkAmerica is used to fund
Melp County Development
ber •• thereby bypassing the Califor- .hospitals, they do not intend to itYon balled:"
.
•
!JIIking
about
its
own
self-interest,
:research and education programs
nia
legislature
and
its
thick
barnacles
the
good
faith
of
lldministralli!'S
to
~nf
1811!nst
!he
~
.~ ~ the
Director
focusing instead on the damage being of health-industry lobtiyists.
.implement this clause. The initiative Cal1forruaNunes~~ Intends
.done to patients."
Tided the Pllli~nt Protccti_on Ac~ it isays that "all health care fatjlities to actually pul ~ and Physicians
In a number of cities, the public is ,forbids man~ed care operations from Ishall be requi~ •• as 1 conditloil of atthe very center of~Jh care.
beginning to be informed by news- ordenng the1r doctors. nurses and oth· a license .. to file annl!lllly with the
Nat · Hentotf is · a· nationally
'
paper series on the cost-cutting with· er health care professionals to with- , Department of Health Servi-*" a renowned au~ority . on the Pint
holding of essential care in some hold from patients information l:'lle: dew led stAtement of complianCe.
~lldJM,tit lllid
Of. the Bin of
HMOs. In Califomi!l, moreover, Con- vant to the1r health care. '
. . There's a good deal more in this RiaJtts.
,
.1.
sumers for Quality Care has been . Nor can ~octors be pressured to initiative which could become a modNat Het1d .. " I!.UC.Ied
issuing "Casualty of the Day" rncre~ the•r own pay -- an~ the el for consumer groups and -~ writer for Neftp.per EaterpdR
MITCH WEISS
·
repo1151 A characteristic headline: ~Os profits ··_b&gt;: not refemng a ,unionsiK'Oundthecountry.For,e~- : A~~o~~:lldo&amp;
Aasocllded Preu Wrltei"Cancer Patient Undiagnosed by patient to ·a spe&lt;;1al1st. (A common pie, "The confidentiality of pa&amp;ftts'
: TOLEDO -A marijuana activist is taking on the state to try to get back
pounds of the drug seized in a traffic stQp last year.
, To Todd McCormick, ~ n:tum of the marijuana is a matter a principle
and anoihet' chapter in the continuing battle to legalize the drug.
; · "This is the great struggle of the '90's," McCormick said in an interview
.
. .
last week from Amsterdam, Netherlands, where he was visiting. "Every 90
•
1
~onds, someon~ is arrested in the UnitedJ&gt;ta~s qn mariju1111a charges. It's
By Joeeph Spur
OK, so perhaps I exaggerate. Ronald Reagan's invasion of Qtena. · with a genealogy that disappears into
ilisgustinl."
.
·
You want proof that global warm- There are not really swanns of pop- da; he is now an "America Pint~ iso- unl'IICOided hi~tory. ~y :have. only
: : The battle over the legalization of marijuana has taken center staae in
ina is throwing things out of kilter ulists buzzing in Our ~ and splat· llllionist. Buchanan is a native·Yfash- two elemental beliefS( but they Ire
northWest Ohio in !he las! year. Sandusky County Sheritf David Gangwer, . just look at some recent natural
tins against our windabields. There in~tonian and 'also a millionai~1
paitic in their devolillil10 them.
Lucas County Prosecuto[Anthony Piu,a and other taw enforcement officials nomena.
·
·' ·
'Then then! 's ~ older lltti!Opod . . Oae bas to,do widi ~'ihil\1 they .-e
lue upset that, marij~~~na is app.-ently making 'a comeback.
We've been inundated by blizJopph
called Bob who 1s slowly metaor· 1n favor of: fairness. WiloPWists do
· : Pizza said it appears that marijuana is moq: available and accepted than zards, .frozen stiff by Alberta Clippers,
·phosing into a Faux PopuliSL •c;&gt;vet 110! Cllre If others ~ ~ lban they,
befoq:.Howe'Ver, hesliiiOpposesleplizationofthedrugbecausehethinks · ·:andnowwe'vegotlhesegrea/cJouds just seem to bC swatmS of them,' 'his long career, he has been arock- oriftheyhavebia.indbeaerjobs.
Ill use leads to lhe use of other drugs. . ·. . .
of populists swarming around ·us like ~ause every time you turn on the ribbed capitalist, but now he lelia us They demand only dial lilly be !real: lnOII!I cele, a subUrban Toledo quadriplegic has been chqed with mar- locusts. They shoWed up first in tube, !here they are.
1"thesoare the best of times for•y ed fairly. If worbn like -~p a uaffickina after police fOUIId marijuana p.lap~- powing in his baek Louis~a, ~ they appeared 1 in · There's a buJ called Lamar! He's ,wiiOWOilcon Wall Street, but !he facts ' bosses lake pay cuts. If~ pt
, ,Yjlrd. The man. Pllll\~1 Asbury, ~ he smokes marijual\l to ease his pain.
Iowa, then they 1nto.ted New Hamp- fl!adily identifiable by the red and ,leave no doubt that they are the;1¥0nt laid Off, boues a!\l laid of(,.~ _
. · !~ 'The National Qralnization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws has Start• sbire and DOlfi' it
like !he dlmn black plaid shin he wean on his ·of times for many who live on Main
The ICCOIId ~lief h. Mj do with
, .. )!Ia defefiiC fupd for Asbury, 39, of Oreaon, who·fao;es up to 18 months in things .-e everywhere, . ) , .
strolls through tile countryside. He is Stteet" Bob is also a millionaft,.
athinalhey
-iafilst~tl•. ReiJ
;iit if convicted, , . .
· . ,
· .
. Actually, lhey, lie not" nat pop- a ~onnCI' Secrelary of Education, a , So, why are they.Faux ~~ts? populilllcannotabide fanllitsof""'
., • Meanwhile, a W"dliams County judJC has ruled ~ ll1t Stale Hqhway uliJtl. They ~ a rillllaRt strain called former governor of Tennessee, llid a Bec1111se they aiinply don'' t fit !he left or ri&amp;ht .~ ihinJt
~.~
httOI 'will lim! M~Oi'DIM;k's marijuana .,.. at ~ f!lf IJOW. • ' ·
Faux, Populiats. l'IJaet · into de~ili· , millicil)airp.
·
· . ·,JCJieriC definition of the ~.y.'eb- the wtb, lhe wiy·llid' lila
·, I ·
~: ~cComiick I!IY&amp;Iiis Iawyers.wiJ! file t iiJOtiqil iOon to force the stste 10
taler, btiJ fU1llet me poift\ out ' There:i a tallinipper ~led ..... Iter's Ninth New CoJ!eljlte ~
So, how do we~~~
!ifut!~it.
· ,
.
·
, · ·
• ·'
"'-tllllyhavt~tepi'oducinglllte · lhe most visible Faux Populiat of· narysaysapopuliatia"abelirier' in peoplewhoclaiintobe~
:~ He .&amp;y.,heliala pracripoqn rot the drq &amp;om ~ ~ ~!Qr.,IOit is ictuy .for a wllile aow. »&gt;; io 'recall tbemaii. You-tllight!A,inkhe'u.~ the riahls. wisdom or virtues O(!be the real thiq? We lak , ,- .,,...._
Jejal tor him, undlir i!almial4oliap~.w; to
and ltiiOJij ~ in
BUlb. for ODIIIple. I know, ~n a cbaaieleon and a c:icada. common people."
,
quetlions. .
. •
j$e 'li:dted S~. ~k IIJI!Xl!lllu.ijuana to._ tbe p.in of Clll· : it'n painful, lep uled .memory, bur diD way he bali chlnpd &lt;lOIOrund the . Now look up "de~~~~~ope." : So, Pat,~ do yoaifiel ~ ~.•
'
.
. .
· •
· •
(try ~w. He - a prototype Faux• .1ny heCkoneC on: It WUII'Hoo lonl Apin, Webster's Ninth New,CoJie- ~ wqe?'' · ....:r;;-,.
. :• ~ ~ lwufQ!Ifisc:aflld
when he wu.stuppld bJ ,Ibe pllllOIJuly }'opuliat - aricllman who, forpolit- qothithewaustaunchdefenderof Bille: "A I~ who makea ._..of
·
'· ,~
· ·I' ' •
1"..:.. B~ 'lb!lut 50 mi1•• west oi'J'ol,do. ·
'
tical ...
IIJl-4lUa, atte...__. to alftct a : '--'----, but~- be bullea "~""""- ' .-·•- ,_.,....._ and fabe clllms
..
·
• •
N¢0Mt~~c~c.-,25. ~San~. W... titlllia wayiDRI!Dde~10111it :~ tpUc:b by ii:;in, tocoun- ' ' :;;;;." in·;;.,~ He-~ .:;r;;.o:-~·;~;;;..., JIOII'I'," ' =-t'~' ll· ·· 1
,·
niOii
IJee to •YGD' WI
IIIII shoveling pork rinCii :believed in 1Jee llade; lie is now a
Now dec:ide foryounelf.
!wrll;1111
' lflilll
oa. eli-.· ' ,
,.
,
down hia gullet.
, ·
_f fien:e' oppooent of it He ~~
Real JIOJIUIII!J 1R 1 noble linin A111 I d II
·
. ' '

'·'

JVIarijuana activist

die'+

:fights for his drugs
·By

,0

Invasion ·of the populist mitli.onair-~
pbe:

·Spear

1

seems

lah I E. Grate

_,. _ · -

entmaillen.utd 94her "sub~vel."

Treat•Ing., 'HMO'·s.W'l•th ;d. ue·
. P. t_,o.

.
l'

\M. .
'

~~

•

,

•

,

,·

i

Beulab E. Olile, 'n~ludlllel. dieCJMopday, Feb. 26, 1996 at Oveabtook
Nuriina Center, Middleport.
·
.
PQI'n April 2, 1922 in Gallia County, daughter of the Hanel and l'e.-1 Bar, . n=u bonney•. she fiUa homemaker and a member of the Rutland Church of
. the tll.azarene. ·
.
, . S~ is sunivM,by her husband of 48 yeus, Herman Orate; a son and
dau&amp;JiJ!:r·in-law1~ohn W. and Oloria J. Grate of New Haven, W.Va.; adaugh0
~- ter an.d son·in-l, w, Vicki and T.J. Ferrell of Middleport; a son, James Gforge
• of cOlUmbus; 5even Jrandchildren; a sister. Vivian Coy of Rutland; a sister
. and binlher-in.law, Beatrice and Giles Smith of Rudand; two sisters-in-law,
-~ Maxine'Dcnn~ of Vinton, and Judy Denney of Rudand; and several nieces
" and nepliews. ·
.
She \\!~ alfo«! preceded in death by two brothers, ~n and Leroy Den·
ney.
,
ServiceS Will be I p.m. Wednesday in !he Rutland Church oflhe Nazarene,
with the Re~. Samuel Basye officillling. Entombment will follow at Miles
Cemetery, Mutland. Friends may call at the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle- ·
port, from 2'-4 and 7-9 p.m.Thesday, and one hour prior to services Wednesday at !he d\urch.

: Sadie Lewis
sldie,EiliottCross Lewis, 92, Gallipolis, died Sunday, Feb. 25, 1996 at
Pinecre~ ~ Center, Gallipolis.
B~ ~b. I, 1.904 in Galveston, Texas, daughter of the late Benjamin
Elliott and Zelia Emley Cross, she graduated from Rio Grande College and
attended Qhio University.
Shc,tauabt school in Middleport for several years before moving to Gallipoli!i-tO w~~rk in the offic,e of Lewis Plumbing and Roofing. She was a member of.4Je Middleport First Presbyterian Church, and the Queen Esther Chap·
tor 4 Pnler .of the Eastern ~tar in Clearwater, Fla. She was a foster grandmother at Gallipolis Developmental Center for more than IS yeus.
Surviving,are several friends.
She was also preceded in death by two) lrothers and two sisters.
Graveside services will be II a.m. ~y in the Riverview Cemetery,
Middlepon. with the Rev. Krisaaa Robinson officilllin11. There will be no visitation. Arrangements are by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middlepon.
In lieu of flowers, donatiOIJI may be made to the Pinecrest Care Center
Activjty Department in care of Gail Hamilton, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis
Obio ,4S73l .

~

,

'

•

.
,

The Dally S1ntlnel • Pege 3

Pomeroy • MiddlePOrt. Ohio

2

. * . "-.. '

• ..:...

Daily Sentinel "Old Bucha_
nan vs. new Buchan·a:n: ;· -~: ·

~: The

.

...'

..

r,

lloridly, February 21, 1996

:. B"ssie Scarbe
, _ Bessie Sc:arbe, 91 , HartlOrd, W.Va., died Sunday. Feb. 25, 1996 at Pleas.. ant Valley Hospital .
. BOI1l ·Sept. 25, ·1904 iff Hanford, she was a daughter of the late William
and Anna Conningham Hall. She was a homemaker and a member of the
' True Gospel Churth, Hal'tford.
.
She'was also preceded in death by her husband, Lewis J. Sc:arbe; a broth.. er, Pearl H. Hall; two ·sisters, Esta Hall and Mary Frances Carroll; and a
• nephew; James A. Carton.
•
·surtivors include • brother and sister-in-law, John Will and Etta Louise
- Hall of Landrum, S.C!'.; and several nieces and nephews.
•
ServicC!s will be il l a.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
• Mason, W:Va., with'Rev. Donald Roach officiating. Burial will follow in the
" Zerkle Cemetery. llriends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Tues·
· day.
'

Elsie 'Alice' Welch

,Land transfers posted

Elsie • Alice" Wc!lch, 89, Albanv, died Saturdsy Feb. 24 1996 at her res·
~
'
'
idence.
A housewife, she was born June 10, 1906, in Sd pio Township, Meip
County,_ ~ghter of the late Howard IIIII Clptolia Hicb Hanin1.
Survivmg .-e two daughters ~ sons-in-law, Evelyn and Ceeil Brickles
of Mount SterJ_ing, and Annestine and Charles Buder of Marion; four IOns
and daughters-rn-Iaw, Everett and Shirley Welcb of Cin;Jeville, Herman and
Margaret ,Welch of Cornmertial Point, Gary and Ollldys Welch of Albany,
and Ronnre and Judy Welch of Canal Wincbester; and 19 Jrlllldcbildren and
28 great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in death by four brothers, Earl, Everett, Harl and
Alva Glen Haniag; and two grandcbildren and one great·Jrlllldcbild.
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, with Pastor Joe N. Sayre officiating. Burial will follow in Wells
Cemetety. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

The followinaland transfers were deces.Sed, to Sandra I\- Morri1,
~
..
l'IICOided recently in the office of Letart;
Meip County Recorder Emmoaene
J)eed. Carol Sprouse. Ric:har#.
Hamilton:
Judy and Goldie Sarpn~ CJ'oldl,
Deed, Facemyet Forest ProdUCts · Goldie, Robert Reed. Golda aAd
to Terry Friesner, Olive;
Robert Roush to Ouy SIIIJCII~ Bell·
Deed, Robert E. and lma June ford. 43-113 acres;
Freed to Roger L. Manley Sr. Trust,
Riaht of way, Golda and Roblirt
Middleport parcel; ·
Roush, Judy SarBent to Guy lllld
Deed, Ralph D. and Cynthia Richard Sargent, Bedford;
•
Certificate, Kennie C. See,
McMillin to Dublin EnerJY Inc ..
Salem, IS I.S acres;
deceased, to Patricia E. Doss, Miit.
Deed, George V. and Claudia dleport parcels;
•
Shepherd McLain to Denny R. and
Deed, Terry C. Proffitt to Pam~a
Julie M. Runyon, Scipio;
S. Proffitt, Lebanon. 9.05 acres .
Right of way, Kevin M. and
Chetyl ·L. Grahani to Tuppers PlainsChester Water District, Salisbury,
32.255 acres;
(Continued from Page 1)
Right of way, Carl Dou11las and
Tammy S. Bobb to TPCWD, Salis- 3,000 gallons as a base amount In .
their rate structures.
bury, 2.01S acres;
Poole also noted that several queS.
Deed, fason D. Sheets to Ezra J.
tions
have been raised about tiie
and Lisa J. Sheets, Orange, I0.929
entire
system since the rate change,
acres;
wbich
"we felt should be answered;"
Deed, Dennis and Susan Roush to
"In the upcoming year efforts will ·
David Shamblin; Lebanon:
Easement, Roben S. and Ruth be made to keep our customers betSharon Burdette to OMEGA JV5, ter informed on the progress of tlie
system," said Poole.
Salisbury, .70S acres;
Deed, Harold Rodney and Dolores
Hysell to Troy A. and Kathy J.
Willis, Pomeroy ;
'
Deed, Roberta M. and J .B .
O'Brien to Robert C. and Kathy A.
Hysell, Pomeroy lot; ·
Deed, Eber Pickens to Delara
Spencer, Racine;
Judgement entrY. Martin Wesley
and Carla Ray nell Davis to Roger and
Frances Davis;
·
Affidavit, Lewis E. Ours,
deceased, to Ruth V. Ours, Letart parcel;
Deed, Harold Rodney and Dolores
Hysell to Robert C. and Kathy A.
Hysell, Pomeroy parcels;
Certificate, Everett L. Calfee to
Setsuke S. Calfee, Sutton lot;
Affidavit, Gilbert C. Hart,
deceased, to Audrey E. Hart, Racine
parcels;
Affidavit, William E. Morris,

Local News in Brief:
Two-vehicle crash causes injury
A Middleport man was treated for minor injuries following a twovehicle accident at the j unction of state routes 7 and 143 in Salisbury
Township Saturday atound 2:30p.m.
A 1992 Olevn;&gt;let pickup truck driven hy Lewis D. Michael, 37, Crown
City, was southbound on SR 7 and slowed to tum onto SR 143 when
it was struck from behind by a 1993 Honda Civic driven by Aaron J.
Hockman, 16, of Middleport, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs
Department repon.
A passenger in Hockman's car, Dennis L. Hockman, 41, Middleport,
was transported by the Pomeroy squlld of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where he was treated _and released.
Both vehicles sustained heavy damage. Hockman was cited on a
chiii'Je of failure to maintain assured clear distance.

Deputies report deer-car accidents
No injuries were reported following three deer/vebicle accidents investigated during the weekend by deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department.
Elizabeth Farrar, 62, Chester, was southbound on SR 7 in Chester
Township Friday evening when she swck and killed a deer that jumped
in front.of her 1983 Buick, causing moderate damage.
· Brandi J. Stewart, 19, Syracuse, was southbound on U.S. 33 in Bedford Township Sunday evening when she struck IWQ deer .in the roadway with her 1990 Oldsmobi)e, which sustained moderate damage.
William F. Tiemeyer, 49, Pomeroy, was northbound on SR 7 in Chester
Township Saturday evening when he struck one of two deer thai entered
the path of his 1988 Chevrole1 pickup truck, which sustained moderate damage.

Outcry spurs

Safety counts
(Continued frcim Plge 1)

dy surfaces.
• Electrohydraulic joystick and
toggle controls for the drill station
lind front boom are easier to use.
This also eliminates a large amount
of hosing and hydraulic valves at
I· Otho·P. Younf/ 74, ofW(IOSter, died Fridsy,cfeb. 23, 1996 at Medina Com- the front of the machine that were
prone to damage.
munity Hospital/ Creston.
• An articulated chassi.s provides
Born in 192 ~ in Meigs County, he was the son of the late Edward Young
precise
leveling on uneven surand Katie Fell ..he retired from Rubbennaid in 1983, with 31 years of serf~. malcing for accurately drilled
vice.
~
.
.
1
. .. ~·
He was a mrnbitr of&gt;the-Faidt·United Mlfjodist Church, and served in holes and quicker boiling.
• The machine has a more effithe .U.S. Afm~iiHhe EUropean, African, and ~ideast theater$ in World War
cient dust collection system.
u.
i
The new machines' improveHe is survived by four daughters aiid 'Sons-in-law, Nelson and Gathie Lee -· Repp of ~: O.y and LoueUa May ,Grullder of Creston, DatJ and Inez ments add to the overall efficiency
of coal mining operations at South··
1 Bailey•ofC'ilhiiHonis, N.C., and Richard and Venus Wise of Burbanlc; one son,
:· Even:tt of Sfuew::stepchildren, Hoben Hicks of Barbenon, Charles Hicks em Ohio Coal. (
"We' ll have two machines
~ Jr., Dennis Hicks aJid Becky Votackek, all of Doylestown, and Donna Vorack·ek of Toledo; seven jp'andchildren, two great-gi3ndcbildren and·t2 step-granddoing the work of four old
children,lllld five sisters, Bettie McGuire of Pomeroy, Bernice Bailey of Long
machines," said Jim Tompkins,
' Bottom, Ud Edith Maneul, Elva Hudson and Jean Roush, all of Racine.
vice president and general manag• He was preceded In death by Jlis wife of 43 yeus, Ruby C. Randol)lb, in
er of Southern Ohio Coal. "This
· 198S,IIIdllis second wife, Grilce Hicks, in 1990. He is also preceded in death
will allow three shifts to do the
' byone·l!tjllher, How~.lnd an infant sister,' Ada.
·
same wi&gt;rk it used to talce six shifts
Ser9iCAs will be 3 P~- Tuesday in the Murray Funeral Home, Creston, I~ do on Iongwall bolting opera: with the•Rev. Fred Clayton officiating. Burial will follow in Sherwood Memolions.
. rial Gardbns, Creston. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7"With our I,()()().footwide long- ·
· 9 p.m. 'roday. {
·
wall faces able to mine up to
21 ,000 clean tons a day, this
machine will get us to that level at
--~--~Announcemenm~------- least
a day earlier than before," he
'
.
added.
Tnutees
to
meet
Sauthera.l)cNri ~
Columbia Township trustees will
:
The; So11them Local Bo.ard of
. ~uclltion, will _n{eet in regular ses· meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the fin: sta, sion ,~~Jnight at 7, at Rae me m the . tion.
S'ouihem Local High School cafete-

f.'. Young

, Ot~.9

1

I.

.

FIXED RATE
FINANCING OR
UPTOi2000
CASH BACK
ON SElEO '96 MODELS

riP·

. --~'
-sC:rv1
~,"ce 'w. ill be held at 'the
Lenten

Pomeroy CJiiUch of the Nazarene ·
, ' Thur$4ay · ~ ~~ the Rev. Lamar
O'Bryi!J!I speapng. , , .

Youtll

leaiiJiDMckli'Ydulll
' ' ·'
League

Thii '· Midllt~p()rt

. will rpe_et ~y, 7 p.m. at the
Middle~
., ~lice
'Deparln}ent.
'!I
• , "'
. ~•

,,

I

.
..
-.-,

ONE
LESS

CHOOSE FROM TtjE.fOLLOWING: 1 ·
• VILLAGER fOOO • WINDSTAR 1000

THING

• BRONCO '2000

FOR YOU
• TO

•MYSTIQUE

$800

• CONTOUR $800

• SABLE

$800

•T-BIRD

$800

•COUGAR

$800

•TAURUS

$800

•TRACER

$600

•ESCORT

$800

•PROBE .

JuGGLE
You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your world end your insurance needs are
reel. But you don't need to add this.worry
to your list.
Telk to your independent agent. Insist on longterm experienc:l, community presence, and ·
IOfMOM who Is with you both before and
eft11 thlnga hepp~n. Juet do thla thlnt.

$800

• RANGER

$600

. • ECONOUNE RV $600

I

• AEROSTAR $600

• CLUB WAGON $600
• GRAND MARQUIS $600

This Is•tRDNiaw•hr
A Limited
Time Offer ... Hurry!!
l.onm-.waw:t&amp;$ aa; :z
'

end~ the ............. to Ul.

'

are

Oaly

:tiona

.,a...,,,

rr~'"'!

:o e•

Club.~~~ 11*1~

~

.&gt;~·

,

·~- ;try~

·~

..

.

" '. '
.t , '

®

........

the

The Ohio Cuu.lty QroUp

fll,lr I r•a

c:on.a.• .

.

WHERE EXTRA EFFORT 1$ OUR POLICY

..

"''

'

�•

lloncl8y, Febru.y 21,1-

.ln Top 25 college basketball,

W-.o .... .1 7
DliDOia .. .........6 ' I
OHIO ST....... 3 12
- -.2 13

B .1 s ket IJ :1 i I

A--

NBA slaDdinp

Mloml .................... l6
New *-J ............ 24
Wllllli................. 24
· -..... ,,............. 19
Philade~ ........... IO

I I - 9l.lowa 16
Wlocoilaio 73, Mldli&amp;DD Sllle 52
Mic!Opo6!, Ml.-62

7

.473

29
30
30
3l
43

14

.444
.444
.351
.119

SundaJ'IICOR

Pwduo14, 1-12

.,
l~l

·-1.....,
---1..-

14.l
11
ll.l
lO.l

. -................... 34 20 .630
C4iVELAND ....... 31 22 .liS
~ ................... 30 24 .ll6
Deaoit.................... 21 2l .519
Cllorloae .... ............ 21 26 -~
Mllw-............. 20 33 .371
r ........................ l4 39 .266

HouROII ................ J6
l)e"))f'..........,........ 22

DaiiU ..................... IB
M l - ......,.......16
v""""'"" ............. 11 41

· --

.l

~c

1
1•

'20

l
Mlomi .......... IO 6
Ball St......... IO 6
01110 .......... 10 6

ILl
14.S
16
I&amp;.S
17.S
2l

BOSU ............9

.Sabu'daJ'I'ICGfiS

--···.-·Cil

Toa!Pt'a..-

America~~

The IIJP ,ll team1 ill 11lc AIIOCI....
Prell' collep bllkMMII poll, wit. firtl·
place votes In pareatheaes, records
......h Fdl. 2l, 101111 poillb ...... 011 ll
poiftls for a fim·place "o'Oie llwuJh one
poiM for o lldo·place - · ond .,......,
nuWna:
1
•

9. Teua Tccii .............. :M-1

10. Uooh ............... ,.......22-l

M9
II . Arizou ..................21·~ . 944
12. l'auiSt ...............·.... l!l-4 ' 1181
11. WollcFonoat ........... lll-5 169
14. ,....... ................ 2M 719
1~ . Syrac•~~e ................. ~7
682
16. Vir&amp;!alaTccll .........l0-4 644
l~

17. UCLA .................... I9·7
18. 0ooqiaTecltiS.I04lO

19.- c -......... 19-8

11
311

21 . Loiii1YIIIe ... ,........... l9-8
22: w11..cnoe. a., ..... 24-2

149
289

m

20. iowa ....................... l!l-7

2.1.1owoSt.................... l!l-7 245
24. Georp WllllliiiiOOIII-l 2.12

65, ........ l8
Rider 118, Falrl.... Dieklnoori 72
Sl. FI'IIIICia, Pa. 62. St. Fruo:Jt. N.Y.
60(0T)
S)"ACU,. 71, Pin•...... 60
Wesl Virainia92, StJohn's 77
~

2
I

~

3
7
4
6
II

62

9

I
. ll
14

11 JJ
4 .714 19

..... &amp; ........ 10
1owo'.-. ............a .. 6 .s11

-

~

4
19 . 1
lndiaoa ..........S 6 .511 ll II
MicbipnSt ...8 1 .m 14 IJ
MicbiJon ....... 7 7 .SOD 17 I0
, ~ .....1 7 .lOO IS II

' .

19 ,
1.5
ll

Iii
11

18 ·

2.1
2l

ll ·

E.
17, r - Tecll8l
Florida /ulanlic 88, c... ,Florida 71
Florida St. 84. Nor1b C..UDDIO
Jacbon St. 80, Abl&gt;oma St, 68 ·
Jameo Mlllllaon 81, 0eorae- 80
K"""'k' 114, Flori... 63
LSU 9), Album 67
~d .- Baldmore Coua1y 80, Coa11al
C...Hno 7S
Md.-E. SlloR 92, Morpo So. 90
Men:cr71, Jacbonvllle St. 69
Min. V~I&lt;J St. 78; Gnmbli .. St. 72
MJIIilllpj&gt;i 75, South CaroliDD 6l

Millillippi St. 73, A-.o 6S
Murra7 St. 80, Middle T-. 67
N.C.-Gree11boi'a 70, Charleston

Soulhom 59

.N.C.· Wilmiaatoa tn, Eu1 Cuollna

4l
NE LouiliMI 87. Teus-Arli"J''" 67

New

Or~lfll

66, SW Louisiana 62

(0'1')
North Tc~tu 78, NW Louisiana ~3
R&gt;dfont n, N.C.-Aalleville 74
S. C~roli111 St. 18, N. CnNu AA.T
l9
Sam Hou1101 St. 70. McNcae Sf, 66

m

Somfont 93, Cleoqjo $1. 71

Ge«gia71 , Arklnsu 59

-Oeuraia Tech 92. N. Carolina St 8J
(0'1)
.
Mtmphis.s?, Louisville 54
Troy Sl. 93, Younastown Sl. 88

,.........

Okloboma 80. Ncbnska 76 (0'1)
......... 14, lndi... 7~
Sl. Louis 69, Marquetle 58

Mill. 39, Soulb Florida Sl
Stoj!lleo F.AIIIIIa 76, Ni&lt;:hollo Si. ~~
82, ..,,, ·-·lllloaol73

.m

TeM.-MIItlfl67, AuMin. Pay 61
T-M.V-M79
Tennl!llel! St 6!1, M~ St. ISO
r .... ~ 10. Cltoolel .w
VMIBl,
St. 75

.577

•'t-

The Da,ily S~ntinel
(UII'S 2u.M)

"""*'"..

WIDihn&gt;p 71, Uheny 77

\

I

'

·

C\e.'V.VSJ S&amp;, You. Rayenj4
C011land t.Attview 76. Badger 41
Edon 82, To/. CMatian 71
Failh Chr. 67. HowbndChr. 61
Fayeue 61 , Ouawa Hill~ tiO
Fin:landa 90, Collins Westcm IWerve
Hillsdale 62. Ashland Mif.Jeton 30

Kirtland 71 . Pa.ineJville arvey ~1
Lake...iew 7.6. Dodger 41
luthcr1111 W. 76. Wellinaton 70
Marufield Mndiaon 72. Ontario 61
MWisfield Temple 70, Central Bapr. 6.5
Milford Ow. S7, Oe. Herilap 48
N. Central 49, Maumee Vol. Counlry
O.y42
Oberlin 83, MQ.Isflt:ld St. Peter's 6S
Pettisville 67, Creson Stritch .S.S
Shaker H11. 64. W.-rensville Hts. ~7
Smithville n, Tuslaw 61
.
Snykeo- 55. Donbouy .....,ido .~2
Tiffin 'Calvett 80, Erie (Mich.} Muoo
S2
Tiffin Columbian 67, Clyde 47
Tol. Bowllltt 57, Tol. Waite .54
Tol. Errwl~tt:l Bapt . .S.S. Hilkop 54
W. Salem Northwnlt:m ~.Kidron S4
, Waterloo 64, Woockidge 40
. ,

'

Saturday's ·

. Tournamrnts

regulor-MUOo action

ll

I ~{

.' .
'

MiiM Edi10n 65, H~ 51'
Onllrio67, Col. Cll!wford S.S
Rill&amp;edale 4S, Jollllitown 44 C&lt;m

-.
' '
,I .

:·

I 1I
' ' J '

l

' ,..'

Nln-c•lkftlin ,..,.
.
Coli. ofW.VL 9l, Coloral St. IL&lt;
Dd'ince'71, ~.yviHe69

))

. Touroamools
A-ollonotM-c.llqel
Cluol!oplaNhlp
Thomas More 90, Bluffton 61
Mld.Ohla eon•rtnet••lflnt~a

Urban181, Ohiq Dollliniean 74

Sylvania Southview n, Tol. Scon 30
T.iMnColumbian 68, Sandu1ky 42
Tol. Catholic~). ~~Jl
Tot St. Urwla 60,. ol.
n: Dm:ne

." .

.

'

42

Upper ArllnJion 61. Mllion Hardifll

' I I " i

Woodl'llOrt 43,

Valley For!C 70, Mlfle HU. l2
Willouallby S. 46, e..dat. N. 40

l : I

.'

'

'

ZanesviUe69, New Ptlil.delphia 60

.l

-.,

tw::nr·A.....,.. fl:eu, .... -

Ohio· . •

i if Alai...
.
~-no
IIIII, ....._ 111 c-81., -..,,

Nle

01110 457619.

....

~

'

,I

DI-ll

Avon Lake 74, Bay Villa• Jl
B~.te)'NI 58, W'illwd 43
Canlicl&lt;l67, Yoo. O..y40
J
CIJ&lt;Ie 54, Norwalk4)
Copley Ill . S. EuclidRqina I~
Co,clan~ .~kcview 77, Athla.JIIa
H~r:\0
,.
co.....,13. Rorton34

'·: l,oj' ,;
~ .J

.·''

.,

'

f ' .- 'I
'' l 1

·
Col. Eost ~2. Col. St. Clwlea 47
Col. Eastmoor 63, Col. Lindn·
McKinley 42
Col. Wa1tmon 66, Watkln1 Memorial

- '•

4 DAYS ONl~
.

.,

I

lp

Balctwin-Wal- 60. Mariett1 59

. Stondo,'o·

. ........

Mid·~ Cool....,..
Tro)' 93. Youftlllown Sl. BB

Ohio women's
..

.

'

..

• $2.29 AT&amp;T
Handheld Phone.

.

'

-

.'

• 29¢ Motorola ,
'
Bag phone.

·a

'

'

'

I'

'

.

'

'

.'

.. .

. ;.,

'

'.~

.

I '·

!

• 96 Minutes
ofI
.
FREE Airtime.

I • ·•

.Qn bsseba 's spring training $CetJe,
By Jhe A110'11~ r:f. ••

'.

I' 1 1 '

'

..

':.. ,. '

~ • "I

·• One y_
ear service .·
agreement req~ired.

'

. .'

.
..;
.. .. .
'·

'

'

• I

t

~

..

I!

I

t .I I

' ,. -:'

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

; . ... 4••

- flllltlilatr.t
• AliEII
214 W.Sec•••~tr.t

""

"II was poor from start to finish
in every cateaory." said Wildcats
coach Ric_ky Byrdsong. "We're really not good enouah to play bad. If we
play bad, it can be ugly. And it was."
Damon Stringet added IS points
and eight assists for the Buckeyes,
who moved one game ahead of
Northwestern (7-17, 2-13) in the batde to stay out of last place 'n the conference.
Two of Ohio Slate's three conference victories have come against
the WildcaiS, who were fOiled in
their bid for their first two-game Bia
Ten winning streak in 12 seasons.
Geno Carlisle, who had 39 poiniS
in Wednesday's victooy a1 Wisconsin,
scored 19 this time - but only two
on O.for-8 shooting in the first half,
when Ohio State "took conlrol.
Carlisle finished 4-for-16 and committed live of Northwestern's 17

turnovers. Ohio State had IS
turnovers, six below its average.
"They double-learned him more
than he had ever been doubled
before," Byrdsong said. Looking a1
Carlisle's statistics "lruly is unfair
because he is being defended more
than any other kid in the league. He
doesn't get enough help from his
teammates," his coach added.
Stonerook, who had just one
point in the Buckeyes' victooy over
the Wildcats lasl month, scored 16 in
the litst half as Ohio Stale took a 3928 halllilnc lead. Most of his points
were the .esull of an aggressive fuJI ..
court trap as Ohio Slate scored 17
first-half points on 13 Northwestern
turnovers.
"I didn't have 10 work too hanlon
offense," Stonerook said. "I was gelling easy baskeiS off the press. We
were forcing turnovers and once'you
gel a few, you start smelling blood."

Brav .· s.· to take break for White House visit

• Ask abouf ·,
our $9.95
..
Companion Plap. · ·
,,

;

~

.' .
. '

··Qlfe/'Expires Thu.sday.

c-..........

""'. EVANS10N, 01. (AP)-II's Ilk"We all knew we were playing
en mos1 o( 1he season, but Ohio State better," otpo State's Jcnnain Tate
' CO;ich Randytters thinks the Buck- said. "'1'11C' losing was Iough, but
~r~s finally · ,' be settling ~oWn.
even .in defea~ we were building up
' "We 1101 ly made steals (II our confidc:lfce."
' allogelher, i11fluc:iing 10 in the first
In ad!ijtion, 'il was the lirsl Big
"1\'iiO but cpnverted them ' into Ten triumph on the r'oad for the
. p()lhts," Aye&amp; said Saturday after Buckeyes (10-14, 3-12 conference)
;PJtio Stale 4efeated -Northwe*".::n since a 60-57.win at Penn State on
, s ; ,' 69 to .end a six-game losi11g Feb. 19, 1994. None of Ohio Slate's
sll'elk and an 1~-pmc stretch of Big current players were with the learn at
,.!~n. Confercn~,ro.d ~cfeats.
that lime.
1
·
'1t's no secte1 that we haven't had
Shaun Stonerook scored 20 points
lOt of easy baslce~ sinee league and Tate 19 against the WildcaiS.
· play slai'led, but some maiUrity is
"II has been frustrating the last
couple of 'Wcelcs, but playing close
. st!l{ling to show up now."
.... :;]be victory ended a ftustrating against good teams conlribuled to us
~.s.rnch in which Ohio Swe, which
coming out really hungry tonight."
pl~Y,s eighl ~hn¢n and usually
said Rick Yudt, Ohio Slate's only
starts four, kept CO!Jii 1 close with- senior starter.
''Oul.':winning. ln tbei four previous
Meanwhile, Northwestern lost
. "glilies, the Buckeye
loll by six any focus·• it might have gained
, win•s to Wisconsin, igl)t to I'Uiduc, ·Wednesday, when il ended its own
j i'iJII: to Olin,!ris lift . three 10 Min·
1wo-year . conference rood losing
n~,ota.
streak bv clefcalin!!.Wisconsin.

".,

'

'

•

w1......,, 63. Alleeheo&gt;' ss

No. U Arbau 84
each had 14 poiniS for the Huskies
Orep St. 60
(14-,9, 7-7). whohavelostlivc of six.
A11\icson, Ariz., Ben Dovis had
Sunda1'• act1oa
all II of his points IDd six of 11
No. 4 c-ctbt 7G
lebounds in the second half as the
No. 6 V..On 59
Wilik:lts (21-5, 10.4 Pac-10) pulled
Ray Allen scoml 26 points as the
away. Sonny Benjamin IDd lyan visiling Huskies (25-2, 15-1)
Wallcer each bad 11 points for the clinchedthelopseedintheBigEast
Beavers (3-21, 1-14), who lost their tournlltlcnl. The loss was the linl of
school-record 13th iDa row.
a three-gune auspension for Wild·
VJrpUa 67
caiS gu"!! Kerry Kinles IDd it endNo. 13 Wake forelt 49
ed a IO.game winning strealc. Travis
At CharlOttesville, Va., Courtney' Knight bad eigl)t points, IS rebounds
AleUIIder had 19 points for the Cav- and live bloclcs for Conneclkut.
aliers (12·13, 6-8 ACC), .who closed ~hich won the league replar·SCIIIOD
lhe game will) a 19·5 run. Tim Dun· 111le the last two years. Jason Lawcan had IS points on 6-of-20 shoot- son had 14 poiniS for the Wilck:ats •
ing for the Demon De8cons (18-3, (23·4, 13-3).
IQ..4)
No. 7 ClnclnaetJ 65
' No. 15 sy1w IZ 77
twue 63
PIUsburp 60
Darnell Burton bit a three-pointAt syracuse, N.y ., J.B. Reafsny· er from deep in the comer with two
d(:r had a carter-high 18 poiniS and seconds ~left to give the visiting
gtabbed ttreboundsastheOrange- Bearcats (21 ·3, 10.2 Conference
men (20. 7, 10.6 Big East) hit the 20. USA) the victury. Cincinnati coach
win mark for the 14th consecutive Bob Huggins was ejecled midway
season. Jason Maile had 13 points through the lint half with two lechfor the Panthers (9•15, 4-12), who nicals. Burton' finished with 12
have losuevcn straight and 12 of 13. points. LeVeldro Simmons led the
F1oriclaSt.84
Green Wave (17-7, 8-4) with 14
No. 19 North CIJn)lina 80
poiniS.
At Chapel Hill, N.C., Ja!'ICS
No. -14 Mempllis 57
Collins scored 2l poiniS as the·
No. 21 ~l'ille 54
_ Seminoles ( 13-11; 3-9 ACC) broke
Lorenzen Wright IDd Cedric Hena nine-game losing streak to North derson each scored 16 poiniS and
Carolina. Jeff Mcinnis had 18 points Wrigl)t had II rebounds as the Tigers
and 10 assisiS for the Tar Heels (19-- (20.5, 10-2 Conference USA) won
8, 9-5}, who have losl three of their their 32nd straighl home game. Tick
lasl four conference home games.
Rogers bad 21 poiniS for the CardiDI!IM'k 91, No.lO Iowa 86
naJs (19-8, 10.3), whose chance to
At Champaign, Ill., Richard tic ended when DeJuan Wheal
~a cmer-higl) 2S poiniS missed three three-poinlers in the
to lead the Illini (17-9, 6-8 Big Ten), . fina130 seconds
but the stunning news came after the
Te~ple 57
game when coach Lou Henson
No.16Va.Tecb41
a~nounced he would retire after this
Derrick Battie had 13 points and
season, his 21st at Illinois. Jess Set· a career-higl) 17 rebounds in his final
tics had 17 poiniS for the Hawkcyes 'home game as the Owls (16-11, 11(19-7, 8-6).
4 Atlantic 10) won their fourth
, No. 22 Wls.-Green Bay 73
slraight. Dunon Watlington and
Butler 66 (OT)
Travis Jaclcson each had nine points
At Grcn Bay, Wis., Ben Berlows- for the Hokies (20.4, 11-3), who shot
ki scoml six of his 23 points in the 31 percent.
closing seconds of overtime to lead
Duke 85, No. 17 UCLA 66
1he Phoenix (24-2, 16-0 Midwestern
Chris Collins scored 27 points for
Collegiale Conference) to their 22nd the second straighl game as the Blue
straight win. John Neuhouser had 19 Devils (17-10) won their fourth in a
points for the Bulldogs(l9-7, 12-4). row. Kris Johnson had 21 points for
No.l3 Iowa St. 78
the visiling Bruins (19-7), who were
Mislouri 74 \
never closer than live poinls in the
At Columbia. Mo., Dedric second half.
Willougl)by scored 23 points as the
Cyclones (19-7, 8-4) wOli at MisNo. 18 Geo..... Tech 92
souriforthelirsttimesincei9851Dd
N.C. State 8J (OT)
swept the Ugen for the first time
Stephon Marbury scored 2S
since 1978. Julian Winfield bad a points and Eddie Elisma had 23 as
career-high 25 points for Missouri the Yellow Jac~eiSOS-10, 11-3) won
(16-11, 6-6).
..
their I,OOOth game and look over
No.lS Stanlonl71
firs! place in lhe Allanlic Coast
Wu~ 56
Conference. The Wolfpack (14-13,
AI Stanford, Calif., Andy Poppink · 3-11) lied it al 74 with 22 seconds
had 21 points and 13 rebounds for left in regulation on a three-pointer
the Cardinal (17-7, IO.S Pac-10). by Danny Strong, who finish¢ with
Todd MacCulloch and Mark Sanford a career-high 31 points.

:Ohio/ S-ate.hands Northwestern 82-69 loss

'

u

.

'

31

Nor111 IMR A..lodc Cent,

. col~ge sco{'eS

...•

"

ClermoDt NonheaSiern 64, Cin. Ba·

Finella, 14, CcdtrYIIIe ?8

--

.

••

.

Cin. McNicholas 63, Hamilton Roll
c:on62

7

o, I

•, • ''

'

MW-OIM Cwlti a;c:i'

I

''

'
Dlvllkinll
Bil Walmll ~7, Circleville S:\
Cambrid&amp;e 61, O:t)'TI'IOIM 48

Grool La1oea I - •
Alh..,..-14. Ma&lt;yhonl6f

h

,.1

!

Trotwood Madison 61, l...ebanon 46

N. IUiltOi• 81. WriPI Sl. 71

OWi A.lhlldc c.nl.

a

.

'

4~

Mld-contlnerd Conference.
111.-0icqo 73, CleYi!land $1. 69

Wlll1h 83, Malohe 81

Col. Wes&amp;41 , Mount Vernon 35
Dl:lawn 16, Dublin Scioto 30
Elidl64, Wapakoneta 11
Euclid sa. ShU&lt;r Hta. l6 ·
Findlay 70, Um11 Sr. 41
Fmnonr Ross~ I, MMimet: JO
Gahanna 73. W011binJion Kilboone
l6 .
._,......t39, El,na Jl
MDDallclil Madiaon 62. Aahlaod 54
N. Olmatcd 411, Cle. Eall Tid&gt; 46
N. Ridlf!!ville $6, Wrttlake 40
t
Nr:w.t .0, CiaUoway Wesl'-1 10
Painesville Riverside .S4, Madison 42.
Pic:kerinJion 89, Col. Walnut Rid,Rt:
28
Rocky River Mapifiell 79. Cle. Lin·
coin-Wet~ 20
·

l~

. •"' •

A1hland Crestview 71, Old Foc167
Buckeye Cenn144, Crestline 39
Cono1ton Vlll. 60. Jeweu-Sc::io 5~
CovinJion 49, R. Loramio .4~
Edgenon 60, Hicksville: 3J
Hiland ~J • ._,land•11
Holaarel2. Tol Chri"ionlO • 1
Hll)eweii-LoudOII 64, Dllrtbury ......
•ide 4!/1
Kafida 71 . Conrinentll 26'
,
Kidron Ow. 62. Woodridae 44
Libm~ - Ben1on 76, Hardin Nonberft

(OT)

Slrot~JSviUt: 16, Cle. S0111h

'

'

Helrh 77. Col. Rel4y 4.5 .
·
Jackson-Millon 71, Columtii._ 44
· K..,.u Lalwta 5l. Carey 4~
·,
KeMOII RidJIC 19, Spri... c
lie 70
Ubert)' Union 71, Bloom149
Li&lt;kins Vol.l7, W. Jdl'enonll
MllrJarelro 59, Oak Harbor .t9
M.. on River VII. 48, FredericJ(lown

Di•Wonl
Cin. Sr. Xavier6~. Cin. Tift $8
Cin. Sycamore 66, Cin. HugheJ 44
Loaan .5!1, Miami Trace 44
· .
Middletown 59, Kitteri'na Fairm(lnl

Allllndc 11 Cot6reftu :
DD"on 67, LoSalli 60
Xavier, Ohio 116, DtJquesne lOS
(Of)

... Solie 76, l(oYier 71

~~~r=-.:,.~67

w. ~no9l, E. T - S t. 91

! "

Adende 11 CwultniiC't

s......

.576
.ll9
.630 l,

Other Ohio men's
college scores

SaturdaJ'• ·
repljl,__
action ·

s...b Alohama 9f, W. "-'ck' 78

.826

•..•

K_,

llavidloa 83, MARSHALL 71

BIJ: Ten men's standings
Cool.

Camf*U 69, SE Llluiliana 6S
~a$t . I7,Howw54

10

Mictupn I. Montana! ·

~

-

Ak:om St. 97, Soudtern 94
Bctl..ac-Coolunlln 7l, Florida A&amp;M

Clcmaoo 61, Marylind 61
Coli. ol Otorleaoon 7l, eo-.y 54

1&lt;. Stonfonl ......... ~ ....... l1-7 Ill
24
'
Dllltr . - .. . - · Miooillippi Sr.
95, Bot~on Collqe 86, New Mexico 32,
Coli. of Chorleatoa 28, E. Mi..ipn :lA.
Frc110 Sl. 24. O.ke 21, Marquette 21,
Tuas 16, TulaDe 16, Bradley II ,
ArbnaaaiL Tulta 7, Oooqia•6. DD.w~ . Ark.-Unle RocH, lllinnio 4, Daael 3,
Tell'lple J. California 2. Coppin St. I.

=. ... J

Uni". SJ, Old Doninioo 74

...._eo,D...,..Ih51

.....
1-..llllll

1.174

Duke 8:'§, UCLA 66

R-

..

1,641!
1,561
I ,496
1,469
1.321
I,272
l,26l
1.18l

Ala.-'Birritinaham 61 N.C. Charlotte
Oncinnati 65, Tulane 63
DelnwfR St 91, Bowie S1. 92 (01')

DDJIOO 67, La Solie 60
Dela•.e 71 , Towaon St. '10
Georae WuhinJIOn 86, Mas·
IIChulettl 76
Geoqe&lt;own67, -Collep64
Holy Crou 93, Ducluodl73
' lona61, l.oyoio, Mel. S1
l.ol&amp;-111111\1 Uliv. 87,
Marlia
7~
'• I
' 'no
,·
M-lh.NJ. 71.W-oo
MeuM St. Mary's, Md. 74, M.tt~64
Na•J7l, Lehloh l9
Northealrcm 15. Maine 59

Top 25 college
men's poll

6)

l6

c-. eo.-ticut St. 75, Bulfaln 62
C!&gt;l... Sl, Lofayonc 72
Columllia 61, Brown SS
C«ndl71. Yale 6l

helm. Calif,, 10:30 , ....

Cle. Heiatus90, E. Cleftlnnd Shaw .52
Cle. Sl. fa.wius61 , Lllkt:wood SO

Soeth

Boltoli Univ. 80. New lllqlsbire 69

. !ita Anlonio II LA. Clippcn at ADI-

lY:.I.:I

....

63

ArlinJIOO 69. BeltJ'o'illc 61
ClllltOD Tlmkt:n Jl, Caraal Fulton NW

'

'

lN•blotiiV

Akron Kea. ·

,

Blllbon0114CI, Cu7- FlllalB
. Cle. Heiahta s~. Cle. Kcallt:dy•7
Col. Brookhaven 8), l.anculer 34
Col Wanenon 57, Grove City 49

Cincinnati 82, III ...Qlicaao 71

Saturday's
replar-season a&lt;tioo

-··
~4.

''

Ulica75. MI. Ciilead .SJ
Vmaillea 49, Bellbrook 36
WauKOn 74, Moncpelier JO
Wellin,con S~. Elyria~ . 49

TournaJ~~t•ts

Akron Cen·Howet

..

'

u......- s-Juoky 12, s.- E. 1~

Willo-Hill 0w. 37, CovinJIOII Calvary

more 32

'

'

'

S . Ranae64.~1 Mcmoriai '44

rqular-- action

l9

':!own,

.. - ,.

Sbnwood Fainiew 58. Uma Ca1h.

Victory Otr, l3, XenioO.. l7

Non-conftNIKt pby

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

47

SotuniiiJ'a

Mhi-Conlinftll Conference
Younas1owaS1. 76, Troy $1. 67

·

· Ohio H.S. girts' scores

I~ Ton

Ru1am 71 . Miami .s:.s
-., sr..'Joseph's 69, Fordham .sa
Tempke .5'7, Virginia Tech 41
Vennon1 96, Hofslra83

'

dlelown Chr. 43
Tree orUfe6S, Newark Calli. .57
1Wia VAlley S. 63. Cec*ville 63
Yellow Spri"'l 81, Mioml Val. 6)

Penn St. 72, Ohio Sr_69 •

'

Boot
Connecticut 70, Villaaova 59
O..xel 74, Honfonl S6
flirftekl 66. Siena 57
MmnhlttM 78, Canisius 61
Niqara.SI. StPeter's S.S

ITIUF . . . . .

Lcoabora Fllirlleld 74, Monchester54
M.-ion Cadi. 41. Col. WMtcnon 41
S, OtorleSion SolothcaiiCtll S7. Mid-

Sunday's

Mid-Amtrkan Conltrtnet
Kent91 , E. Michigan 68

60

Fronli« 75. Bellai.. St. John' a 66
l.alhom W-75. New Boat01169

regullll'·oe-o aclloo

Sunday'• acllon

S.tanlay'aaclloo

MiomiiiNew Ieney, 7,30 p.m,
Oolden Stare M CLEVELAND, 7:30
p,rta. I
'
Poatllndotlndi- 7'l0l.m.
~ .. Mllw..U., op.m.
· Minneeobl MOlic:qo, 8:l0 p.m.
Phil'!*lphio. Dalllo, 8,30 p.ll).
TOf'OftfO II HOUIIOa, 8:30 p.m.
Wllhibaron M Denwa. 9 p.m.

Oh6e A*tttk eonr.-clul•llloftlhiD
Capital 61. Mount Union 50
-

MOCIIau 76, Boise St 61

Scanford 71, Washingloo ~
UC lrvi..e 74: Nf:vado. 68
Ulah 74, Air Force SO
U1ah S1. 66, Cal St .•Fullenon S3
w- St. 86, Idaho 7~

Other NCAA
Division I men's scores

Tuad•y'ap.-

Winenbera69. \Voo1tei66

Snnln Cl111n 77, Gonup.71
St. M•)"', C~ . 91, Porllond 8)

Ccat. Mictipn • Akron •
E.MidlipaltTMiami II Knt
W. Micbipn at Bowlin&amp; Green

lndi.,. • -.7:30p.m
PhOenix II Utlb. 9P·ln.
New Yort II LA. Lahrs. IO:JOp.m..
Detroit 11 Sacnmealo, 10:30 p.m.

Calirornia 71, Wlllhinaton Sl. 67 .
Co Iondo St .so, Wyomina 66
Fresno St. 9~. BriJh,am YOIIftC 83
Long Beoch St. lOS, Son Jooe St. 86 . ·
Loyola Mlf}'IDO•nt71, S.. frwlcisco

Son Dieco 80, .. 61
San Oieao $1. n;te~tas·EI Paso 69

Knit II Ball St
Miami 11 Bowlac Green
Ohio 11 E. Midaipa
Toledo II Cent. Midlipn

DaiiUHI!, T..-91
....le 106. 1;-A. Clqlpcn 101

Nonh eo. A.. lell, ea..r.
Choii-

PacifiC 19, UC San11 8..,..72
S. Uooh 8l, Cal Poly·SI,.O 84, JOT
SIICI'JUI'Ie11lo St. 83, CS Northridse 66

Akron It W. Middpn

....
,.,,'&amp;:!I0
' BaiiSt. ll

.......

MourN St. Josepll62, lndi111111 Te&lt;h 44

r•

,..
An:hbold 40,
.,
lrooldleld ll, G....t Vat 12
Cle. VIIISJ l1.Girard )l ·:·
Colllw-l9, Allen E. 4) ,
Eaatwood 78, l;lmwood 26
EJJ,in 54, JODIIhlll .\ldel: 3~
OraMvieo.w. 61, Amanda·C arcreek

wick 42
lldl1llf Ri-ide 7l, Mcclloolcabura

48

I •' •

' .."

Bridaepon lO, ShadJiide 42
Canihti'O!l7l. New A""'Y ll
D.y . .Jd'fenon 53, Midcll«own Fen·

NAIA G,..t LOI&lt;.. Rtpnol

'n11Ja12, Wichita St. 66

Oreaon 81, AriZOftll St 70

w_,

=:.:..';::;.:.,.01

Mhi-Ohlo c'onrtrttKt 11111Winlk
Finella)&lt; 80. Uibonal9
Shlwnoc SIMc 102. Wallh 82

New Mexico St. 81, UNLV 72
Okloho""' St. 66, Colonldo 66

Thlaweek'••te

S..A-9l•.V -... 14
, Ad... 9l. Mi-76

A-.of-Collqel
c•·nr· r IIIIJp
Bluffton 69, Thomas Men 56

' ~.

', .

Ill•- IV
A-ll, Triad 46

Toumamenll

MontiUSI. 78, Idaho Sr. 52
N. Arizona71, E. Washinaton S7
New Mcxieo 88, Hawaii 79

Miami 76, Ball St 57
OHIO 76, Cnl. MichiJID 7J
W. Midlipn68, Tokdo60

Phoc.Mx 113. New York lOS

1. Ke_k, (66) .......... 24-1
1 M - u (2) ... ,26-1
l. 11wa .....................23-1
4. eo.-lcul ..............ll-2
~- Puidue ........... ........... :!l-4
6. VlllaM,. ................. l.;-4
7. CINCINNA11 .......... 21·3
8.0eu}down ........... 11-~

ll

Satuniii)''J"""""

., . Sund11J'S acGres
Wultlftllpn Ill, MI..._... 103
cw- Ill ' Orlando 91

IMa

.688 13 II .S42
.625 18 6 .750
.625 14 10 .583
.625 15 ll .ll6
.563 14 10 .l83
.SOD 14 10 .583
.SOD ll 12 .ll6
.Ill 5 19 .208 .
.ooo 3 21 .Ill

-

No. 3 Kansas 77, Kansas Swe 66;
No.8 &lt;HoraetQwn 67, Bos1011 Col·
lep 6-4: No~9 Teus Tec:h 73, Teua
58; ~. lfo. 10 UIM 74, Air Force

t¥

;

l •

'.

ml
SC:VGII
So when
~•fer·
)Wee~ came ~wn to ileedmg the. SO.
, .
1tta: ~kel .•o wm lltln~•ana_for the
Also, No. 1_1 :"rlwna 84, Oregon
_l~pt hme sua 1990, cboice was State 60; Vi1J1ma ,67, No. 13 Wake
,!~Y·
, . ·
F~nest 49; No. l.S Syracuse 77,
: .. ~Soph~ore Chad ,Austm ended Pittsburgh 60;.Aonda Slale 84, ~o.
1\is. shdOI!~ slump with a lhJce- 19 North Carolina 80; Olinoia 91 ,
,pomter w11b 13 seco~ to play that _No. 20 Iowa 86; No. 22 Wisconsin'W&amp;ve !'Urduu74-72 VICtory over the G~11 Bay 73, Butler 66; No. 23
'!fO?,s~ers on Sunday.'
.
lowal!talc 78,Missouri 74; and No.
·, •;: It was a play we set up to get 25 Stanford 71, Washington 56.
;~•m ope?,. It worlced:and he knocked
S.turdaJ'J act.
it
Purdue cqach Gene Keady
No. 1 Keatuck, 94
.~~d. .
.
,
. ~ 63
.
... Ind1ana still had a cha~ce to worl'
At OamcSVIIIe, Aa., Antome
'bul Herb Dove, one of s1x Purdue Walker had 20 points and II
'$eliiors looking for lheic first win at reb9unds and the visiting Wildcats
'~sembly Hall, c~e up ~ith some (24-1 , 14-0 Southeaste!" Confer'oryod
defense
. ag1111st
Bnan Evans cnce) won their 23rd Slralgi)t IDd ~e!!..~ the B 1
ali held
'omu
m enn1 ers
on.
lOOk the No. I spot in the poll.
,., " We tried to space three people Dametri Hill bad 24 points and 10
,1111/l get a crack at a 3, and ~o. from rebounds flirthc Gaton (10.14, 5-9).
.~re t~, lry _IUid rebound II !f. w~'.
No.~ Geo; W~ 86
ln~ssed, - lndii!IIJI coach Bob Km1ht
· No. Z M
cbuaetts 76
SJ!Id. ·
· '' •
At Amherst. Mass., Vaugl)nJones
. ' ;;; ,:Dove gave blow-by-blow Of the scored 21 poin,ts as the Colonial~
·-~'lal pos.session~
·
.. .
(18-S, 11-2 Atlanlic 10) handed
.,~ . ''It was one of the most scanCiit Massao:husetts iiS fust loss of the sea·ihings in my life.,l never thouaht it son and heal the Minulemen for the
'Would come; dbWn to that," Do;ve fourth straight time. Carmelo
'$/lid. "I just got over him. He picked Traviese1 had 23 poiniS for Massa:the ball up, a~ tha!'s when I nor: chuseiiS ·(26-l, 14-.1), which had
· mlllly get up on_ people. That's what been No. I for the past 'nine weelcs.
:J•II1d.
·
No.3 Kaote 77
· · "He ~ked me and got III'OUnd
" - S t . 66
me .... I shd my feel and ~aught up
AI Manhattan, Kan., Jacque
wi~ him. H~ jumjlcd up ini? me. I Vaughn scored 20 points to lead the
!lo~~ght thai s what made his shot Jayhawks (23·2, 11-1) to the final
1Mrt. If he bad· s~ llllck a~1 Big Eight championship and their
sq~ared up, he probably wPII.ld have' fifth in six years. Paco .May and
.llil.it because I was.n't going to foul Elloiot Hak:her each had 20 points
~il!l."
.'
'
! fortheWII~s(IS•9,6-6).
, , ,.The Bo1~ennak~ (23-4, ,13;2)
No.8~ J7
moved Within one VIctory or a Penn 1
Bo.toa CGieae 64
.~•.a~e loss C?f cli~ching, ~ts tllird
At -Landover, Md., Allen Iverson
: ~~a•ghl oulnght B1g Tell utle.The had i6poin1Sasthe .Hoyas(23-S, 12las.t team to do that was Ohio State 4 Big East) improved to 15-0 at
:(l'Om 1960-62.
home. Antonio Granger had 19
.·: ," I'm so proud of the six seniors, points for the Eagles ( 16-8, 9-7),
!;!D about to bust at the seams," who had lwo field goals over the
•~~ady said.. "Ther have done a final 8:15.
tremendous JOb th1s year , ~eepmg
No.9 Texu Tech 75
the1r composure 111 games h"c lh1s
'IeliiiS 58
'ahd playing good defei)Se .wl!en our
At Austin, Texas, Tony Battie had
'.?.!fense went ~ry." . ·
.
22 poinls as lhe Red Raiders (24-1,
. Austm finiShed w1th 18 pomls, · 13-0) clinched the lasl Southwesl
. )li~Jle Todd Lmdeman h~d a career- Conference tille with their 17th
hj&amp;h 21 points for the Hoosiers (I 5- s1raight win. Reggie Freeman had IS
"j l. 8-6).
'
·
points fonhe Longhorns ( 17· 7, 10.
" In other ranked games Sunday, it 3), who were 2-of-26 from 'ilireew'as: No.4 COnneclicut 70, Nil. 6 poinlrange.
"Villano!(~ ~9; No. 7 Cincinnali 65,
No. 10 Utah 74
' Tulane 53; No. 14 M~mphis 57, No.
Air Force 50
..~! Louisville S4t Temple 57, No. 16
At Air Force Academy, Colo.,
,yirgini~ ,11'11-~-.J~ ••~q·~. I_. Keith Y,an Horn scored 23 points IDd
• tJeLAI!l!1'ii'iiU~o. - ~ Georg•a'Tech' the Utes (22-5, 14-3) won at least a
·~ North Carolina
e 83, .
share of iiS second straiaht Western
~ ~In games involvjna ranked teuns Athle11c Conference Iitle. Charlie
Oii' Saturday, il w~ No. I Kentucky ' Nelson and Matt Horin had eight
.9.4,Aonda63;No 240eorgeWash- poinlseachforthe'Falc.ons.(5·70.1·
inalon 86, No. 2 asstchusetts 76; IS).

I

I

-Ill

•

·*l~altt
'·· Plil;due
'*'
~-

,.

'

llDipn 66, CA&gt;al Gro.. 43
a..-. 61 ' Croobvllle l4
DD7. ~lliDO BI. Brookville J6
Keacon Rklr 47, AI'CIIMin~41
Miami E. S • Swina. Northeas«em S~
. Mi•fonl 77. Wtflaton .59
N. Adoma ll, W. \'nlolt S7
VenaiUn .51, MikOD-Union :IJ3
WelkYille 71 , Sleubeo\'ille Colli. lO
Whoelonbur&amp;76, Olk Hill S3
z- Trace 62, PIUI01149

DeriADCt 84, S1. M.y'\, Ilid. 64
Kentucky St. 102. Wilberforce :W

Arizona84, Oreaon Sc. 60

DowUna Q,.... 91, Akioo 73
Kelt 91. E. Midti&amp;MlJ

-116.

'

7

Keoc ...............8 ·I
Tokdo ...........B 8
C.... Miol&gt;....l 14
.uro. ............o 16

1-ICM,P,.-90
'Cl.£VI!LANjll03, New *-774
- 9 6, LA.Ia.n M
DelMr99,Uooh90
Sallie 101, sw..... 91
Oolileo
LA. Cli!IIMn 80
'

'

men's standings

I'W.lltd&gt;.
Miol&gt; ...... ll

2u

.....

F•rWIIf

c-r.
Ovtntl
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ W1

18

Seiatle•....................42 12 .771
LA.Ia.n ............ l3 20 .623
Plloeftl1 .................. 21 26 .~
OoldenSIIIe .......... %6 28 .481
Sw
1~ ............ 24 27 .471
PoatloM .................ll 30 .4ll
LA. ~ ......... 11 31 .3U

l9

•

'u tnu

Ceotnol......
St..99, Soaldini 71

Tc:JLUSoulhera9 ~, Prairi.r: View 79
Teus Tech 7S, TelU 58
Teui- Pan Americ.n ' ', Louiaiana
Tcdl45
1
Texu.Sin AniODio 75, SW Texas St.

..... St.. •MiIICi- • Wbcoaai•
lowa.rOHIOSTATE

'a C

G"M Ltka lnltrcolltailte
Aahi.OO 19, Men:yhum 60

Onl Rot&gt;ona IS, SE Mi-' 69
Tex.u Owl allan 87, $0ijtbem M~h.

79

e'

w..., Local6l, Woverty 51

•

~ cW non.~or~r f91'

I .,

'RockHill-12,1 - 6 6
S. Poill.59, Cheallire River Val. 41

Butler 9l, Cleveland St. 82
N. Dtinoit 8 I, Wripc Sc. 61

HOUIIOil 79, Bayki' 69
Lamar 1l, St. 6.1

MiMeaOCa II P\mlye

.

Midwlllbm Ca'

Sua••at
Atk.-Unle Rock I OJ, JocbooYille 71

.....

28
34

.212

~k;po

WiiCOMillll Iowa
Nonhwe:Mem .. Pan Stale •

ll

17 .679
lO .60
31 .41l
3S .340
37 ' .!02

It

nu- • . -

WESURN CONnRENCE
Mlftoii~
.~ ~ lil

.........Jf
Uloh ....................... J6

s..!

Micllipo

FoitftddUiioo91, WIIildiOil2

'

~ Tile~""' rr-

I ,•

Hill..,. 82. v._ en. l9
La~ S4, Cia. PWceiJ.MiriM 49

Mid·4.aas..,_c ' - .
8owU0&amp;0.... 71, Akroo73(0'1)
Miomi, Ohio 62, Ball St. 55
OHIO 73, c-.• Mid".., .58
T~66, W. Midlipn63

Bar

'lbll week'••te

:10.5
29

~~~~Cioi-..................
49 6 .191

Deaoit6l. Loyolo. m. 411
E. Ulioaia 71, W. Qtinoia 53
Ew...,wU~ 96, S. Jlli80il 6' ..
IIL-Oieuo 73, O...ilod St. 69
Iowa St. fl. Mi.....t 74 .
j(_,. 71. !(...,St. 66
N. Dlinoia II , Wriabl St. 71
N. lowoll, Droke 66
NE Illinois.97, Cbicqo Sc. 69
Nonllllmc 7l. Seton Hall60
SW MIIJOOI'i So. 67,.Crei..... 66
Val,...Uso 69, Mo.·Kusu City .57
Wia.-Oreen
73. a.a66(01')
X&amp;Yiet, Ohio I 6, ~ IQS

OHIO STAT£12. Nonh ~•tem 69

lil

"
.1104

Vi~Jioia Tcd\79. Doyloo 39

lindley 6!, D&amp;.oio Sr. 66

Sablrday'•"""""

EAsTEitN CONnUNCE

~
................ ~1~
New YOtt .............. 32 21

-

.SOD 15 II .577
.429 17 9 .&amp;W
.lOll 10 14 .417
.Ill 1 11 .m

.... 4

3·

i

~

.

Purdue, UConn ·and ·cincinnati win

,.."'

'•'
f

The l)elly S1at1nel • Plgll ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,,

11111 .......
IEW.·LblllfDI

'.

•s••·W
,i

'

.

' .

81 Slutll ,ll_tbt

,f

,J'" ..

i ' ..' 1

r I :, I ,

,I

'-t

1 j ,,

•

' :t

~

,,

f )\

.

l' '
· ,LOIAI. ,., ..,,.~~ . ':t.
.

.u

'•·1 .·C.1

, ,]'~ I I''

,•

' b I ,j ·.o

•

POMERDY

.

.

'

t: ·· l .,.

'

'•

.

~

· " WhiletheAtla6taBI1jVesmaynot
be casting manyl\iotes fur President
CliDton in No~mbe.~ !bey were
looking forwanllo visil'inJ the White
House today. : \
'
• ; 'II's always· e~i ng to meet the
~dent," rei~ '. ~ . I McMichael
~~ "I've ~v~ . ' . !!~. the :w"ite ·
. It w~l; 116 · • mtereshlll to
e a tour,
w ....., on behind
1
enes." ' ' ..-.:rbe Braves will fly to Washingtoa after a )V;t ~~ D:Jolnina in ·
""»'t Palm ~ ,_Fl~ for a receP."
lion with C~nt .'The president dlil·
n't'aet a clilnte! io meet with them
1-:Y- afterU.ir Wcirljl Series vic: ·
t~becay:t;.:e ~ian .crisis
.ancMbc go· ,
~ hllli!!Jown.
,•;:. message in the club~ouse
rCtiilnded players of:the trip: "'1119se
go!ni to the White 6011141 ilon't forgct·towearuult." . .
·.-Glinton shbUld probably do a littl~opolitickina when he meets with
the. Braves.
.:'I'll pnibably be the only auy on
tlilf!~ who vOtod. for,him," 'pik:h··
ct.~ Wohleb UicL
•
· .:McMict.ell!lid he dida'l veil&amp; for
qlinton i!i'l992 ana prot.bly won'l -

~

r..

\Jt

see

"J

.• .

t

--the

SA~ORS

•

'•

••'

THE
- Dtlla I!Mihardt of Kannepolll, N.C.
-11111 v1cto1 r lane .. 111 Nor1h C. alii• Moeor Spa ad
W1Y In Rockingham aftw wlll.'lllhe Gooclwi•ICh SeMce 400. (APJ

'•

Earnhardt wins Gooodwre.n ch 400
By MIKE HARRIS
under caulion for the.69th viclooy of
ROCKINGlL\M, N.C. (APJ his Winston Cup careet.
Dale Earnhardt just loves to get off
The caution, caused when Bobb.y
to a quick start and give his com- Hillin Jr. hit the wall, came out with
petiton something to worry about.
jus11wo of 393 laps remaining.
In hot pursuit of a record eiahth
Earnhardt and Jarrett swapped
Winston Cup championship, Earn- leads late in the race, bul it was Earnhardt has done just that,. finishing : hard1 who made the biggest move.
second to Dale Jarrell in the season- . ~ He drove his Chevrolel Monic Caropening DaytoDB SOO and reversing lo under Jarrett's Ford Thunderbird
that finish Sunday in the Good- IS laps from lhe end for his third
wrench Service 400 at North Car- Rockingham victory.
olina Motor Speedway.
"You've got lo really pace your"We've go1 a grea1 team al self at this race track because of the ·
Richard Childress Racing, and it's tire wear, bull was really going for
going 10 take a lol of bealthem," ilthereattheend,"saidthe44-yearEamhardt said. "We want to make old Earnhardt. "Jarrell was gelling
every race count and DOl miss a beal stronger every pit stop."
this year.
But Earnhardt got some unex.. A lot of people talk abolil thlll peeled help.
fact lhat we changed crew chiefs,"
"I thought I had a shot there, bu1
he added, refening to David Smith, 1got raced bard by a lapped car (Ocr·
who replaced Andy Petree when the rilce Cope) and burned my iires up,"
la11er decided 10 go to another learn Jarrett saiil.
after the 1995 season. "But David
Earnhardl averaged 113.939 mph
Smilh has been working for Richard ' on the way lo collecting $83,840.
Childress as long as I've been there,
Ricky Craven, the 1995 Rookie
just working under the crew chief.
of the Year, finished a career-bes1
"It was a long hard winter of third, followed by Ricky Ruqd,
work to gel ready for this season, bul Steve Grissom, Sterling Marlin and
everything just kept going, and to Kenny Wallace. They were the only
come out and win right away is Other drivers on the lead lap. 1
great. We 're just looking toward the
The race, shonened this year
big picture. You've got to run con- from SOO miles to 400, was slowed
sislenl all season to win lhe champi- by 66 laps of caution and several
on ship.
crashes, the worsl of which senl 29"The top two all year long would year-old Loy Allen Jr. to Carolina
definitely be good enough for the Medical Cenler in Charlolle with a
championship," the grinning Earn- concussion and a fractured right
hardt added, only half joking.
shoulder blade.
But, if Earnhardt is off 10 a great
The driver from Raleigh was
start, so is Jarrett, who is tied with knocked unconscious in the crash on
The lntimidalor for the series point lap 172. He resained consciousness
lead after the lint two of 31 races.
after safety workers reached his bat"We've gol to be considered a lered car.
thnlal when we show up for ihe rao;es
Allen, who was lransponed 10 the
now," said Jarrell, who has never lin- hospital by helicopter, was injured
ishad helter than founh in the points. when his Thunderbird slid hard into
"Now we have good race cars, good the concrele wall near the end of the
engines, good pil crew. We've got all main slraightaway. In the ensuing
the ingredien1s."
I!Ciic..t, Bobby Labonte was lapped
A week afler ·ex lending Earn- from behind when he braked 1o
banll's record loO.for-18 in the Day- avoid Allen, and hit the wall in tum
lona 500, Jarrell was unable to hold one.
him off on Rockingham's 1.017-miie
The race was hailed for more lhan
oval.
9 minules while Allen was extricatEamhardl, running second to Jar- ed from his car.
reu, passed him late in the race and
s1ayed in fron1 the rest of the way.
Earnhardl took the checkered flag

Mason Bowling
·League results
(Raulls as of Feb. 15)
Leape- Thursday Nile Mixed
league
Team st.ndi_n p - Towboatcrs,
Lethal Enforcers, Midnite Strikers,
Manley's Recycling, Mack's Cards
and Team 3.
Tum high series - Midnite
Strikers (1871)
Team high game - Midnite
Strikers (648)
Men
llldlvidual high series- Denzil
1 Lilly (S42) and Kenny Clark (520)
Individual high pme - Lilly
(192) and Chuck Bunon ( 189)

w-

•••
•
•••
I

r------------.
NOnCE • NOTICE
·~-::"•oncE ..,,,,
.'!~~ .
-~·

••

MANLEY'S
RECYCLING
·CENTER

•'
'

'

503 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio
(Special Price on
Aluminum C.na
from March 1 thru 29)
Bring In minimum of 50 lbe.
of aluminum 1*18 to

~

•
'

I•

rttiltar for Bunn

-·

eon..m.nr
to be givwl
away. Dlawlng will be held

IIIdlvidlllll hl&amp;h series - Roxann
vote for him this year, either. Thi velcrans through free agency and ous shouldc:r injury in 1993 when he Russell (476) and Dottie Pierce (46S)
on March 29th.
pitcherstillhasn'tdecidadwhohe'll ' trades.
tried to help his cousin during a
lndlridual hi&amp;h pme - Russell
9!J2-3894
support.
Ana*: Five days after the rest of brawl. He needed surgery and missed , (173 and 169)
"I don'tknow.l'm still studying his teammales reported to spring the 1994 season.
it," ~cMichael said. "II would be !raining, designated hiller Chili 1 .
. interesling to see one of those lion· . Davis suolled into training Clll!lP IDd i
The Rutland Fire Department is going door to doo.rl
politicians in 1here, someone like jumped into the cage for batting i
laskin1g for donations for the Fire Department to heltDI
(Sieve) Forbes, and See what they ' ~ practice.
.
I
1
1
can do. '
·
Davis had his troubles apinst :
'the purchase of newer equipment, and
AS for .Ciinton's perfonnance in ' riaht-hander Pete Janicki,I;Jut said il ; ·
lu~:iate members in training.
offiCe, McMichael summed it up this wouldn't take lbng 10 get his stroke :
way: "He hasn't done a bad job, but .• down in Mesa, Ariz.
i
For a $10.00 donation you will receive a
he hasn't done a great job. ll's nbt
He said he wu "Iakins care of I
Gulnu1teed Safety &amp;:
lille he Cf11 do emything, 1 guess. personal busiiiesa" this week,_but is ·
1f)x13 family· portrait of up to 12 people in it. .
Interest Yields .
1'hcie are c:heCics and balances."
now ready to play ball.
pictures will be taken on saturday, March 2,
~tU 11.1': R~p~blican pre~den·
Manoier Man:el Lachemann,
Available
tiil hopefUl Lam.. Alexlllder visit- · who expressed concern over Davis'
• No l..oads or"12:00 noon to 7:00 pm at the Rutland ... '""'"
ed the 'N.,s tninlna camp SWNiay, · · tardiiiCSS on Saturday, said the issue
• Accumulllte or MOIIIhly
ISb1tion, with no appointments.
usiol.ihe,1¢1m ·IJid its scenic l'lpl- was now moot.
Income
ao P11fk u a backdrop ror a c:am,. · "Iff had a choice, he would have
• Hip Sllfetyl
All Rutland Fire Departrilent Members -will be abl1!l
,-ian appennce ill the leadup 10 the ·been here the first ~y. but there's no '
• Wide Choice of Annuilics ef
Arizona primary on 1\Je~y.
reason to make a hil deal of it,"
to show proof they are members of the de]:~me1itJ
All Kinds
When. he WIIJ introducejl to Oak· 'Lachemann said, noting players
CaD tor lnfonnodon:
The Rutland Fire Department will m:eive the
11Dd~Art14owe,thelepub- anm't. required to _appear in cunp

. 1'
l

I

:, :•• :, t'

Hip

llclll caildidale momentarily turned .
·mto 1 spans writer.
"Who lcadl oil for the A'a now?" ·
ukcldAJexanc:icr miDdtul that Rick·
ey HendersOn ~ deplrted.
• "I'll let you know as sOoll u I
&amp;, " .W Howe hopina to NIJuild 1
..;... that lost He.lllenon and othel'
r

.un~l Man:h I. "He~·.~ now IDd
we .e all ready ~o p
· . 'f':nh•: _Bncn Taylor, the No. _I
· piCk •• the 1991 bueball draft, ••
h!Jpina .111 ~ealin the zip in Ilia left

-·
_His ~ wiih the New York .
Yaalceel~zed by aleri-

SCOTI INSURANCE

614 " ' 4011 (coiled)
Jms-tllclv
AI-.,, Olllo 45'710
• Amullies ..., iiiUCd by loiunlxe

... a-ve

sA

1

for .ty widldlawala.

.....

$10.00 donation
· t~...vi
- or any- other donations .that
:
lwoulld receive.
If you are interested in getting pictures taken ·cau1 1
742•3162. or992-7507.
;

_ _......_

•·

••
•

.

'
. ". I

.!
''
•

~ .;
•
•••••

..'

. 'I; •
" '

I

,. , I•

:: :I
II •' I

�.·
.

Plllllr•• •,.... o.a~y Sentinel

PoiMroy • Mldaleport, Ohio

~.

.
FebrUeiY 21, 1111

......

.....,....

I '\

The Dally Sentinel • Pege 7

•
h

•

••

to Buy

90

\

Wanlod To lkly: Sllndlnt Tlrrf&gt;or,

lttYf-. eu • ms.

U.1PLC Yf.1tN T
Sf P :1C ES

MDDDIIUI!AfiDI

PAUERSIUIG

POMEROY, OHIO
Truh RtmOYII - Commercial or Rnldentlal

Septic Tanka Cleened &amp; Portabla Tollllta RIIIIIKI.
Dlllly, -illy &amp; monthly rlllital ratee.
1

JIIGre. . . . . . .,

•
•

•
••
•

'.

Rel. HOLLON
....·• TRUCKING
:i DUMP tRUCK
:;

Sports Funll
'
Scores
Point
Spreads and much
more.
1-900-776.0100

'SEfWICE
Li~stof,Je • Grevel
Dirti• Sand
985-4422

&amp; Water

PAIIIUiuiG NISSAN
1827
Man!at:b A"-

·:

:

I'

.,.:

::

Ext. 7830 $2.99 per ·
min. Must be 1.a yrs
Touch-to~ Phone

,.

Req.

_....

Che.rer! Ohio

:: _....,.........
"
· '

Sarv-U (619) 645- 8434

_.:••:::•:..

..:: ---:---~--..,
~(Lime Stone,, I

(AT11111101t SIIIGUS)B

::; leKS
-ULiltG

..

Ill Men IIIII Dates!

&gt;::Low R-)

::

.l
::

,~
~,;.::r.,:.:

11m.

L'h.esto":e,

¥9tsloadiCI
1,..... "-seeves.

Gr1 ve1, Sal)d,
:! Top,oll, FllliDirt

~:

J

s.rv-u

..: ~===. te====lllll::::;:

~:

. .:l.

CLUB

l

GUm·\SHOOT'

:: SU . ~· 1 PAt
.

: ll¥111
cdmRSIIIOII
1. Just bring In your refill bottle or simply call us.
· . .
·2: our dhannaclst Will contact your doctor for a new prescription If nece5Sart.
5. our p/Jannaclst will then fiN your prescription at Kroger's everyday low priCe!

·ON·' OIIE
'

Phone: 992-3736

Overhead&amp;
underground
utilities &amp; rlgfitlng
Bucket, Digger
Truck Services
Service Pole
$2:50 pcfl' ft.

1·614-371-9108
..
Usi11g th1 Cl11ui{iM1
l• as USIf 11s •••

In case things don't go as planned.

At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness
87 Mill St.,

we care About our customers...
And we Put It IIi Wlftlngl

.,.,.,.,.-

••••

Because we care about your health, we (JI'Ovlde the Kroger
"Pharmacy Facts· patient counseling lnfonnatlon sheet.
It provides Important Inform~.

Middleport

••••
••
••••

Call992~

~~

,,,,
.,..••••
~.

•;·

I'
I•

I '

tor Details.
:wilt-

I

HouH Repair &amp;
KHoho~ &amp;llatll

Remodeling
Room AddHiono
Skiing, Roollng, Patloo

, Reo110nabl•
lnourero • Experienced
Call Woyne Nell

. ' 102-4405
For FrH EaliiMI..
.__ _ _ _ _....;;.;;;;;.,_J

"'""Ag•in
•.
lonely

l

.

I ,·:

•

"

,

.

\.

''

""""*""·

~~~axe~uked_.___~ ------~~------~--------------~. eoc.-, §CI(l~ ctli'ourlh s.~

.... r:IJ J~ :,,_

"

- ·-

- ... ...

Mason, WV

Lost- beige &amp; brown female dog
wit h purple collar in Snowville
area, 814·992·2081 .

Los t: Female Bassen Ho und In
Vanzant Area, Reward! 614 -3880013.
I

Lost male Ch;nese pug, 'Bandil'1.
4 years old, Rocksprings Rd . ~
Peach Fork vicinity, reward , 614-

992-2762.

--·

P.O. Box 587

Claaaes

JetArttile
rv&amp;VIdeo
hlsp«t/ooiiNIIiWII
,_ tJHJ 615-1651

LD~ItS,

anN mo.

Los1 : numerous loleys on a silver
key ring, Pomeroy vicin ity, will
identify, call,614-992-7177.
Lost : Red Doberman In Popular
Ridge Area, Rt 554, Reward! 614·
367-7515.

Lost: young temale beige hound,
Vance Rd.tSnowville vicinity, $100 ·
reward, 614-992-2081.

Yard Sale

10

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnl1y
All Yard Sales MlJst Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
rhe day before the ad is to rlJn .
Sunda,y edition - 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition • 10:00 a.m. Sat-

Pomeroy,

INC•

~Jew

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

614-992·7643

Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy
I
In
Advance . Deadline : 1:OOpm the
day before the ad is 10 run, Sunday edition- 1:OOPfTI Friday, Monday edition 10~m . $aturday.

so

Public tre
and.Auctlon

Boggs Auction Serw1ce. 614·446·
7750.

Sunday Calls)

~~'!JM Rick Pearaon Auclion Company.

, full t1me auctioneer. complete
auction
service.
licensed
•66,0hio &amp; West Virginia. 304 ~
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

Help Stilled Out VIctims
,

Cllll992-3967 •
for Dttalla

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Bac:khoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512

,. ,,., w.,

Wanted to Buy

90

· Socks $1 .75 per pair
Pluo 50 cento Pootllgl
Send 12.25 llonoy Order to

614-742·2193

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
·R- Addtuon•
•Newo.aan
o£11ct11call Plumbing
•Interior &amp; !Elcterlor
Painting
AIIO Concnta Worll .

(FREE ESTIIIATIS)
V.C. YOUNG II
' . . . .15
"-roy, Ohio

Something frog. the
honey's t
Live girls 1-lo-1 ·
conversations
1·900-288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+
$3.99/min.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

21583 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 411nt
14W013Phone
11411-2011 FAX

emAoenue. Galipoho.
•

Top Pr;cn Paid: Old U.S. Coino,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, AU Otd
Collectible•. Paperw•lghts, Etc.

Remo\:lellng
Stop &amp; Compare .
FREE ESnMATES

985 4473

DUtributed by

. .

The water 1rlllllrnllnt
partldpate In a

anlllywitt.

cordially 1 -, VCIJ to

water

CASE MANAGER
Individual wlm BA in human serv·
ices field needed to provide as sessment, planning, linking, moni·
loring, advocacy, and crisis as·
sistance services to mentally ill
population in Uason County. EJIperience providing case manage·
ment aemces preferred . Uuat
posseas valid drivers license
and relia~ vansponalion. Excel·
lent benefits. Send retume ro:

PRESTERA CENTER
Human Resourcest
Mason County Cue Uanager
P.O. Box 11069
Huntington, WV 25105

EOEIM
Home Typists, PC usera needed.
$45,000 income potential. Call 1Immediate Opening For A FullTime Medical Social Worker In
The Homi Health Department.
Responaibilities Include: Accessing Patients To lmpt'ove Or Main·
tain Their Social, Emotional And
Physical Healrh . Makes Home
Visits·. Participates In The DeveiOf The Patients Plan Of
·
Co~nseli ng .
Q~,,,;r;~ahons Include; Masters t
Ohio License Required, Prev;ous Health Care Experience Preferred.
Immediate Full Time Opening For
AN In Home Health Department
ResponsibiiJlles Include: Provide
Skilled Nursing Care In Patient's
Homes. Requi rements Include:
Ohio License, One Yeaf EJperience In Acut e Care Or Home
Health Experience.

Setld Resume To:
Personnel Department
Oak Hill CommuOJty
Medical Center
350 Charlotte /we.
O~k Hill. Ohio 45656
EOE

Person Wanted To Sit With El·
derly Hand~apped Man, Muot Be
Good Housekeeper, References
Needed. 614·446-&lt;1788.
Plumbers &amp; Pipetitlers L.U. 1577
Wil! Be Distributing Apprentice
J\pplicallons Beginning February
19, 1996 Through March 1. 1996.
Applications Can Be Picked Up
At 1236 Gallia Street, Portsmouth
Oh10 From 7:30A.M. Until 4 :00
P.M. 1$35 .00 Applicalion Fee.

EEO.

Postal &amp; Gov' t Jo bs' S2t IHr ...
Benefits, No Exp. Will Train. For
Appl And lnlo 1-800-536-3040.

POSTAL JOBS
Start $12.08 fHr., For E•am And
Applicalion lnlo. Call 219- 7698301 Ext OH581 9 A.M. -9 P.M.
Sun -Fri.
Sales Rep For Snap On Tools,

EOE. 606-928-6128.

wage, call614·9flS.4351.
Styli st Wanted , Carol Kings

Finest Styling Full Or Part-Time,
No Clintele Necessary. Paid Sal-

ary, 614-446-8922.

•

180 Wantlld To Do
my homt, reaaon- '
61l-992-31125.

Babysitting in
-

Used furniture- antiques, one
piece or comptete tillites. Oaby

Babysitting In My Home CenllArea, E~~:perlenc:eCI · With
CPA Training, fl14-441~7. ·

Wanted to Buy Uaad Mobllt
H...- Coil: e14-448-0175
·Wanted To Buy: GOOd Ulecl Motorized TlNdmill. 814-445-3137.

Wanfed Tc Buy: Junk Auto&amp; With
Or Without Motors. Cah l!arr~

614-388-9303.

lli·STID Willi SYSIUIS, IIC.

Babysitter needed lor seventeen
month old, preferably in lhe RoCksprings area. Call 814-992-2292
after6pm
·

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gampolio. 814·446-2842.

Martin, 614-llt2-7441 .

•

Send to :
Eloise Boston, Treasurer
Eastern Local School Oisrrict
38900 SA 7
Reedsville. Ohio 45772.

Single mittdle -aged woman :
desires female companion 10 II~•
,in for room and board and small

773-5033.

·Trtalllltnl
E'f•lp••nt

::!i:~:~:;,~o51b:e c1~ n~d:~~~h

4, 1996.

Late Model Cars Or
TruCks. 19go Models Or Newer,
Smi1h Buiet~ Pontiac, 1900 East-

Clean

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying &amp;al·
vage Y'ihic:IH. S.lling parta. 304-

ROBED IISSEU
COIISJRUCnON

Allistant-to-the -Treasurer's position, .preferred bachelor's degree or associate degree in ac ·
counting . Excellent computer
skills and experience in payrol l

Acre Level Lot
08'11eloped Within
i
No Resric·

Antiqu @
,S, collectables, aacatel,
Riverine Antiques, Ruu Moore,
614-992-2526.

Box 120, Gnobbo, Ar11. 72431

•New Homes ·
•Garages
•Complete .

\

Secretary /Receptionist For Point
Pleasant. Uid Ma rch, Pa rt -Time
To Slart. Very Delall Oriented A
Must . Win Prepa re Reports, Do
Tracking &amp; Report Results To
Home Oltice. Mail Resume To
AOW 328 112 Seventh Street
Suit&amp;. 16, Parkersburg, wV
26101 , Ann: Us. Saunders.

1

H&amp;H

4 People To Set Appts. For Local
Oist Pay &amp; Bonus. Call For Inter-

1100·513-43&lt;13 Ext. B-93118.

N•w At lqles llutronies

1/31/tfn

s.-' 'Drill

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

992-7843.

on Tape or CD

,.rrfal

APPOINTMENT SECAET4AY
TELEMARKETEA

Zenith Quasar floor model TV,
good shape. ·needs switch, 614·

· · FAX 773-5861

J.D. Drilling Company

....1111'

l

Home, 614..u&amp;-7004.

60 Lost and Found

CALL

'

a...,s.rn

!!2124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Bri&lt;:ldes

·~PieiCitltiOn~oflzo.DOfWqil/i'wid

Ph. 773-9173
108 Pomero Street

BISSELL

llartthaw MJI

'

Taka

We will worlc wtlhln yaur bUdgUt

'

I

'

lAbia Avon Representalives
lneeded. Earn money tor Christmas bib at home/at work. 1-800!992-6356 or 304-882-2645, Ind.
Rep.

Puppies To Giveaway, 5 Boys
And 3 Girls, Cute, Flulfy, Ador ·
able, Mother Is Chow,· Ready To

I

serv..u 619-645 ........
am

SAWMILL
Portable

' -·; · '

Golden Retriever, black lab, Rottwe iler mixed puppies to good
homes, 8wks D1d. 304-882-376l

I

'

I

Touch lone phone requftd.

Chlldriln &amp; AduH

for keeping a chll~ In your h,ome. If you are
intereste.d ~ ~nlng your home, 19
a child, please c8111-800-331•9989.

Germa-n Shephard &amp; Lab mix
puppies, 2black, 4brown . 304 675-4506.

i'·

$2.99/mln. 18+

Kick Boxing
Ttalnlng ·
At Big Berid
Health &amp; Fitness

Fo~teq Parent$ Needed In Kentucky and
YDCA wll pay up to $40;00 per day

Experlenced'Groomera • Financing AVtlllable.l : : - : - - - - - - Blonde mixed tHt.ed female.
B. Jolene Ru-'Own.(614) 992-6244 amos., good w/chUdion. 304-875..8595 akor 5po\.
._..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...lijill.l!IUJ ChH:...... 304-882-2442.

BALES OF .ladle lhaeli Dealer
'.
'. HAY .IOit.""
'
.
Your favorite artist
SALE.
'

C1ll
l·tOo-656·2600
llte•slo• 3012 '

. . !Ill

pr•(~tkltn conti., gr label and o.ur twendiY """' nM/st will dO the rest.
··~ ~- ~ wftJf ottHir eoupom •Exdudtll 'illcohol and~ produt:t$,
· ~ • 1trt1t cne c:D~JPQt~ w CL!ItUoJ!ff •ttc,t Vllld on ~ ~ i:JtiWif floQJiv

ROUND

DELUXE

.

Black Australorp roostero. 30489!&gt;3703.

'

'

SPORT'S CAR

· 'YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7:.00 PER DAY.

271 North 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH. 45760
AKC Reg. Puppies, Klttenl, Blrdl &amp; More

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
992·2825
...... -·614·949·2512
_... __ :, ..___.;..o.___...;,_________,l

. 614-992-4060

For Havina
ANew or Transferred PresiriDtion Filled At Kroger. I
we fnllce It ..,y to trans1er your IJIWCI1ptl6n. Just btfng us rour · _

'

I

find auto parte.·

'

...

'

R~Nng

....*H,...., f...Uy fet Aofe

112 Ak;la Malo. 1 112 Yoaro Old,
. Very Porductive, Good With Kids,
LOYosToPiay, 614-387-9398.
Beagle Mixed Pupa, 4 Females, 2
Males To A Hoppy Homo, Bl' ·
367-0283.
i

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

i

i'
i'

Opening Feb. lsi

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Service&amp; • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
.. • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamental
Steps -Stairs, Ralllnga, Patio Fum~ure, Areplace
~ems, Planter hangers, Trelli&amp;as &amp; lots at other-stuff! I

992-5042 or 742-1120

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

1 Female Puppw, Cute, Playlu !,
GreatWilh People 814·258-1527.

441-0508.

home atmosphere.
RIIUOnable Ratae

Chrll,.....

"Supplia for all your pel need._"

Dog, Nl ce Friendly Husky, 614·

, State llcenlecl•

Flnclera of hard to _

(,., we are txcAided br rotA" Insurance carrier/

1380 taatem - . . .. Gollipolia

614~41·1975.

Lata otTLC. Family

Polly or

AVON . ! All Areas I Shirley
Spewo, 304-67S-t&lt;:zg.
·

AduU Video's 814· 44812501,

VIew.

12 Rutland
Room &amp; board tor
eenlora &amp; dllabled.

Mon. • Sat.

·

!Postal Positions. Permanent ful!:time far clerkJsortera. Full Bene·
]fits . For eum, application and
ulary into call : 'ro8-264-1839 Ext.
31170, Bam 1D 8pm

Prlnwas Video New Shipment 01

Freezer Beef Sale. USDA Choice.
Custom cut, wrapped &amp; frozen .
$1.35/lb. Crawford's Grocery. 304·
675-5404.

~!~,!!~~

w,lishers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
tumaces, b~ttenes
and any metal
materials.

Personals

CHARITY SALE

1A3111 rno.

FREE
Pick-up discarded

A-c UTILITY
CONSTROOION CO.

·oos

help burn -out victims. Socks
$1. 75/pr, ptUI 50. pOitago. Send
$2.25 money order to J. FonSal tion, P.O. Box 120, Grubbs, AR
7UI1 .

Give Yourself l'he
BINGO . .
Sports Edge Sports
Raelae A~aericaa
Entertainment Linell
· legloa Post 602 ..
1-900-776-0100
EVERY SUID~Y
Ext. 6057 '
Doors open at 4:30p.m.
$2.99 per min. '
LJcky S.ll $20'o.oo and
Must be 18yrs. ·· ''
Raises $50.00 each
Touch Tone Phone
wk. .Pay according to
tll!l numbar of players.
Required
Kaep ad tor FREE card
Sarv·U {619) 645-8434'

.

Sln:tay,12pm-6pm

;.ATm: P&lt;;nt Pleasanr!qcf

A NNOUNCEMENTS

(Special Price on Aluminum Cans
from March 1 thru 29)
Brfng In minimum of 50 lbs. of alul!llnum cana to
reglater for Bunn Cofleemaker to ba glvan away.
Dnlwlng wiH ba held on March 29th.
1
992-3894
. 2fWTFli

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

IL-Le

MaxiJy- 5atlntay, 9 a.m.- 9 pm
~

(301)418-1541

· Middleport, Ohio

Call 992-4025

\HUll

'

Bal. .Pbt.-

30 Amouncements

~

~:

·,

(619) 645·1434

304-7)3.5083 241nlday. ,
ducts, No Selling. Pald Direct, Ful·
ly Guaranteed. No Exp. Neces·
aary. 7 Doyo 407-875·2022
Ext0521!H06.

•••~:,, MANLEY'S ,:A•t11
•"'t IECJfi.ING CENTER ' 11111

'

;12 Gauge

\

(

61.-;.992-3470

~

Pharmacy Manager
Jennifer Trent
Graduate of
WestVIrglnla Unlverslty

INC.

.· , . ·
•
r•••o•aa:ini:O:e:iliio;a;ui;i:l~•••••·•••;;;-,
503 Mill Street

pa.c:ented weight-lou produc t.

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

992-3954 or 985-3418 . · . ~ ~Pu=._=.....
=·~WV=!U~10~1~,-~~T:o:u::~:=~~:~;~.-~

I

..

t-WAHTED-S

, 0 people who neelf' to lose
weight &amp; make moner, ID try new

NiBIWI Headqliarten
Lowest Prices

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

......
·'..
•

Help Wanttcl

S200 ·$500 Wldy. Aooemblo Pro-

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
Umntone, Sind, Gravel, Coal

110

uNISSAN
Clift• ..,. .. ,.,.

Buy: Unt. TI~H Toyt,
Picnic Table. Play

nltel,

nar~

Brothers Construction &amp; Home
lmprove~nls , 814-381; IM7

Contact:

sr- Or Bm.

�.

..

~~-

....

~

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

,.,

......

... ....

~

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

- -~

...

The Dally s..._tlnel• Page 9

Ponwroy • Middleport, Ohio •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Cro•lrWorcl Puzzle

IIUDCI&amp;

. PHJI.I.IP
ALDER
:

Houa~ cleaning. ()hioiWV

m'N' CARLYID by lArry Wrtjjl.t
UIIJ
Will

eur-

· ~ rourt4 ....... Excellent ,.,.,e~
·• u. c.1 :104-773-11&lt;10 an«
: allclor~

-

•pm.

·

· In IIQ,me Care lor Eldorlr. Wo
• opeclallze In Alzholmefo Care·
gMr1g, 31M-1!2·2Sio4.

.

"""'
~· EEK- &amp; MEEK

·; ~qolng ond Learning Babylinin;,
:• dOne in my home, referenc11

....lolilt, l14a2-«lt2.

., 4 3
9Q I 5
o5 4

.

•K 1

BY JUSr a::MREtW
A ~~!AiAA 'SltDr'

e5 s
EAST
AK I 8 5
•• 2
• Q 10 8 s
•Q 10 9

10 ,
10 I 4 3

••

CF"U£ LUi&lt;lE ~ ..

8 2

SOUTH
eA J 7 2

9A J 7
oAK 1 2

.

ACRDel

Gowtl an-

P'o.l{i;

4DIIIIY-.._

j 1 1lllle- -IIIII 41
· IComlc41Y-

'

=:

......

)

4411Mp

,u::

~:z::a.,ec~unc~

11Mv14
11 UlliiiO.
PNIIa for
clyMmlo
,,___
. 17 OUiclo'a high

10 1!-.ge
113 len. NIHIII
14ThtKina-II loulh Afric8n

18 -Entice
20DINN
22 ...,.. lunoh

Dutch
II.._"""*
llllrgee
• Vlrillnle11 Ael8n llolkllly

• 23 IIMd

~--~~

12 Rll ar I!IIA
. a~ p11

14.11o'a •
'1101d·eoldler

2t l!h lt:uoo.,.. ·
33 Ragullh IICt

DOWN
I Group of nine
I TDOII to court
10 -.nltiM
119diool • .
11 CO*' with

1 Drlwr8' • ·
.......
32Sovlltl
Clilllltole
4 _ _ ...,.the

•

loMncll
-.........
pro
tllltlll

'11 Wllllr

bull8lo -

conawtw
21 Along a
cantnlllne
24 Brlal act
25 Not OUIW_,

•A 4

.z - ~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
South
West North Eat
2 NT
Pa.u
3 NT
All pau

215bolll
ae
.....
....lila
30Ea

lead: ••
Babyoltdnt In mr home; floxlble

hours. Re~aonable rates, have
references. Close- to aChoolt.
:JIM-875-27&amp;1.

for R!lllt

NeW t4x80, 2 or 3bedroom. Only

FINANCIAL

2 paymenta to move ln. No
payments attar .tyeara. 304· 755-

210

55118.

Buslneu

. Opponunny

5~11

in warranty. 304-755-7181.

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CC. Price Bulterl NeW ,4x70, 2 or
recommends that you do busi- 3b&lt;. Crt( $895 down. S19Simonth.
. ness with peaJNa you know, and

Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Home&amp;, Nitro wv. 304-

· maiLuntil you have Investigated
!he ofloring. ·

756-5885. .

Commercial building for rent in
Center of dawn tJwn area UidcleP!lr&lt;, 2500 sq. fl .. call 11•·992·
2&gt;15Q.

~

cino Bar On Ria Grande
1
·campus Call 814·245-5682,
2655880Wners Relocating.

Schult Home Ordered Before
March 20, 1096. Single Or Multi
Section. French City HoiTMis, Inc.

:r Tony
GuaranJHd
Lowest
45e3~t~.~~~~~~~~~
Boot•lama.
By Redwing,
Chippewa;
A · Prices At Shoe Cale, GallpoliO. '

Galllpoli~

OH 6t4-4.e·93o&lt;O.

Eureka
I 3 County
Ultes Oul
OnFour
Teens
Run Road.
Water.
10
Acre Lots Beginning At $10,000.
Two 5 Acre lots One With Old
lfome $29,000. Large Barn On t9
Acres $20,000.. Also, 17 Acres
$14,000, 14 Acres $12;000 &amp; 15
Acres $15,000. OWner Financing
With 10% Down, 10% Off Cash
Purchases:

Five actte,
Rac1ne,S 1~.ooo .

One Acre Flat Property In Galli·
poW&amp;, Pet-feet For Mobile Home Or

fo11111181111ilul or national

Sc8nic Valle~. Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac lots. publiC' water.

odgln, or any Intention 11&gt;

nioke "'Y"""" preference.
1_,.,
or dlocr1mlnation.·

Clyde Bowen Jr.. 304-576-ZI36.

1bll new1paper will not

kncMIIVY accept

~

ESTATES.
lrom S2•• &lt;o $315. Walk
&amp; movies. Call 614- 446:-_::·,-~-,
EquoJ Houslne Opportunity.

C'eramlc Shop Equipment Kiln
Pouring Tabla Slip Machine 350
Molds Complete Alter 9:00P.M.
-:6t_4_-4411_-&lt;_s_56_._. - - - - -

Clean One Bedroom Furnished
Apartment In Middleport References And Deposit Required.

Concrete &amp; Plastic Sep~c Tanka,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jac:klon, OH

$275 Month~. 6t4·992-7075.

·

- I l l lor,... 11118,18 ·ll:l
wl*"' loin -lion olthe law.
OUr ..."""' are hetlby
lnlormod 1hot aR dwellings
actvertlleelln this ne'Mlpaper
a r e - 6n an equal
_,tunlty beals.

Wanted Approximate Acre Level
Lot Prefer- Already 08veloped
Within 5-7 Miles, G'allipolis, No
Res•ictions. 64-448-0034.

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

'The liqht mist
turned to rain ..

Oeposil Required, 513-922-0294.

Efliclency. References. Deposit
No pets. 30&lt;4-675-5162.

Furnished 1 Bedroom Apartment,
Second Avenue, Gallipol is, Upstairs, No Pets, Referenc.es, 614-

446-Q523.
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Across From Park, AC, No Pets,
References, Deposit, $350/Mo.,

614-446,8235, 614·«8-ll577.

Furnished Efliciency All Utilities
Paid, Share Bath, S1451Mo., 919
Avenue. Gallipolis, 614·

Electric Wheelchalra/Scootert,

New JUI8d, Scooler /WhHichair
l ilts, Stair:way Elevlillora, Lift
Chairs, Bowman's Homecare,
8 4 448 7283
_t:-·-:--·--·-'·- : - - - - - Embroidery aupplln, quilt tmcka,
pillowcase squares, dollies, crib
quilts: bibs. Ruth's Fabric Shop.
~-8 75-8 454 ·
'
Firewood Pick-Up Load. You Haul,

=

$30; 4 Dining Room Chair&amp;, $25

Piece, BU--446~774.
Full-leng1h pram dre11, · off
ahDulder, thl~ high aPIIt, ·emerald,
size 18, matching sho·es. $150.

Round Bales For Sale $20 A

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
614-446-0390.

Ro· Bole, I14-311H11!56.

AKC
trlevera ,
Chocolate,

Bloodline,
&amp; B lack, 4

furnished,
2526.
· utilities, $300,

'89 Tl\undorbircl SC, two door. 3.S
Retriever Puppies AKC,
Sholl &amp; Wormed. 9F.

to go. 114-37Q.296t Al.. r

and loeks, ·Great Car: $8500
neg., S14-91iJ2-7478 or 614 t..849 ~

ll
ume.

:,•

_

'

'

._,

I· , , .

RIJII. ShoUand

S~eepdogo.

ono

male and two ttmaln, sable and

wllto,l225, 8t4-7~-3085.

570

Musical
Instruments

UBS Caidillac Good Condition,

614-388-8956.

_,

New gaa tan~•. one ton truck

~ ~ llootmtii.IIC.

D &amp; R Aum, RIP!or. WV: 304-372·
3833or HI00·273-9328.

790

.

:;;.. ~T 00 '100 Tlill« Of n\l!l t6l
F1&gt;-T =oeoTITlJTE E.V~ I~
TNJQN() ~ ~. 61f'SOI.l7

..,, ,.

-

Q\ ,IJEll., l'D H£V~ NOTICE ..
~~· (.OOK.IN0 GIVE-~ II£
11\~T~I

iT fVOte WU~. &amp;IT TIEY~Y

~FEat£»,'( H00CE. ~ ~OC

EffU.T OF I~IIW.. Dt.St'RE!6 1

..

ClmptfS ·&amp;

n..-•

1990 Ford F·150 aulo. XLT ,Lar·

... -,

Mol0r- Ho~

caiiB 144fl1..a301 .
iat, tnterline e, crutle, air, 14,000
miles, $8800,
81•.Q85-4418.
.

·LOSER

~ :ii'HE

2879.

1988 Fo,rd Ranger XLT V·l, 5
lfigh Miles, Well MalnSpeed,
1957 Ford Cu1tom, 4 door, V· 8
automatic, dual exhaust, 70,000 18....,, $2.100. 814 3118 ~.
aciU81 miles. looks and runs good, 1989 Dodgel).250 3/4 Ton Pick·
$2000, 814·247-4292.
Up, Good Condition, ~.•oo. 414·
1975 Chevy Impala Good Co~di- 448 ·8588. ·
.
&lt;ionl Runo Goodll4,000 Ac&lt;ual 1990 Dodge Dako&lt;a pick-up. long
Mi lt~ $500, 81&lt;-446-111011.
bod.~ speOd. 4 c1r.• 55,000......

.11191 GMC SonorrMo SLE Extendad Cab, h4, Au&lt;o. Air, Till,

Converter, Sl..ps e, Too Maft"t
Items To llsti' Loolil+ng Far 4x4

·· ~BIG

2

3

1

~

-,-R_Hr.:-A
I ~~ rN_Cr-tl
I I . ..~::.•',

JET

My elderly aunt says that
changing your habils is like
climbing a flight of stairs, rt's
easier when you're - - - - •.

0

MA S 1
•

_

Q

.

_

Co.;,pleto ;ho chuckle quoted
by filling in the mis.sing words

IIIIII

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

AERATION MOTORS
•
Repaired. Now &amp; Rebul&lt; In SIOC:Iq
C\1)1 Ron EYIIla, t-IQO.S37-9528.

Biceps- Jerky- Lunge - Shadow ··WAKE UP
As a kid I was always daydreaming . Granny told me
that to make your dreams come true you musl WAKE

Treasure You
tht
SovlnJI You'll Find In the

Match~ar can help ~ou underatand on you.
·w!i.t 10 iio IOmaka lie~~. VIRGO (Aut. 23-llepl. 22) /111 llltiOCiale
• Mall $2.'15 to " Ill 1111161'. c:lo thle news·
paper, P.O .. Bo• 1758, Murr~y Ifill
Slation. , _ Yoott. NY 101 !56.
'
ARIES (llllltah 21·Apfll1.) You might
.becoma ln1loNed Willi 1ft lnc;IYidual who
opera!• in a mannar that make1 you
uoiCOIIIIOrtEiol today. Do not let this per·

tanct. . . sure to offer

-aflonl.

'*-'who......,

!:- 114;-441--31U
~ HDuutmld
~pllii~GrMIDIIIIO'I.:.'

... al
nl!ll ~ ..
W11iNy ll!lfi'C011IIIIy. bill today yqu ~ ~
~ ... .'IW' lltUIII ,.,....
1!1!11
Tryiltg to patch up a
, llen~oma!'ce? Tha Allro·Graph .

"'-'-Ani

n••-

•

..

'I

.\

-· .

.

onv what you

who cooperaled wilh. you prevloualy
might be reluctant 10 do. 10 today
because he or she wiH feel that past
fiiOrts were not iiCicnOwleCig8d plllperly .
L.RA (Siopl. 23-()ct 23) A negative alii·
tude will no1 only make your laeka more
dlfllcuH today, but alao your co-~ers'
pe!formance may sufflt1 as well.
BCORPIO (Oct. 2Wiov. 22) Someone
wllh whom you'ra closely affiliated might
· make unlair dernen$ on your resources
today . Know your limits and stay wllhin
!hem.

BAOITTARIUS (Nov. ~ 21) TIV to
avoid maldng a major deciaton today H
you hiM!n1 had enough lima to evaluate
a1 ot lhe pros and cona. Hally judg111euts
wll only ln..tle probl8ma.
iMI~.
CANCIR (olune 21 · July II) Guard · CAPRICORN (Dac. 22....._ 11) Prapara
llglllnlt the InClination to IUpl)l.s lhlr9s · to fend for youraell today. You will not
. _ ll1e capacity tc gat ...... to do your
thai bathar you today. Tty to brtng
out.lr*l the apen lr1llled 10 that they CliO : bidding. Wl1jl court rajadiau?
~ tt: Ill hod ltiDived. .
.· AQUARIUS (J1n. IO.,ab. 11) In an
LIO J.IUIV a
D) Hyou poke your lllltiili~A tu ittp!OW your lot in lite today,
no. . lroto a attuatlon Whe,. H !loean't · ycju inlgltl be tempted to take a foollllt
baking • · a friend
lctlplto ~· Do not ~ your gnp on raalty. . '1&gt;1
hatMI -Illy mwot"'~ liar pruii!Mt•

bC'PI.{IIIIIr II .June 20) Yolir ambition
will ba aroUNd ..,uy today, but you
mitt1l locue on ... W1'0!'U objedlve. TIV
not to '!lata lima on oornething or lillie •

111-_,dli... 'Witlllha . . . of na'IJIW.
nothing Ia actuallj1 walled. Painful,
leMon~ from •the ~ can ba utii!Zedi
dl9t tiM, II) 1ha year 11-d. ;;
'
I j tiS (Na. ....... 20) You n lie.

VIllA f.URNIIURE

·. '

II II

PYGSY

6 ~~~lN~~~ lETTERS

If an old friend needs financial aula·

,

.

.•

11VICfS

1011 peltDnlze you.
•:'tAIIIIUB (April 20-llay 20) Open your
111--....__..,._....;.. hMII aa 'well aa~r purse atrlnQa today

_..

'•

NATE

Ap~~nminla ·
f!)r Rent l

..............-

of tho
lour ocrambled -d•
lOw 10 form lour -ds.

L......L.-.1.-....L-.L.-1-J you develop from step No. 3 below.

·• ~ ·11iie
1)11-..ri. ~· '11, 1 '

-·.-

- - - - - - Hlto4 ~f CLAY L POUAII -~----

_

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.......~,

LJCLV)

AJII.

I
I..,_rlsr·-TI...;.;;,.I.;.;.;I....;,I_-1

ASTRO·ORAPH

'----...

Z H. '

. 0 ...,,,.,... ..,....

C

·~

.,_

XHOOIOPX

WCNO,

....
'=~='· sa:~4llA-ltt.~Ps· ....

Re~~ta&lt;. -

Full Stz. Truclc. 814-2S&amp;-11!11 . ·
~.f

I J X 0

C

•

I

Con\'eraion, Gil Cook Stove 1&amp;

Rospam. $t0.500, .814·441·
0013.

A· J H

llA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Death is nature's way of saying 'Your table is :
ready." - Robin Wlltlama.
'
•

Dlldee Engine, 35,000 Miles. B•·

,_,_

-25-

LVTLI!

LCA

HJ

(RIHNXUTI'WV

.

""'!i :JIM-875-5195,

CruiM, 15,000 Miles, Runllike

DJT

VCOQ

DJT

1•

I MONDAY

Ftot

'UOIIJPO

1978 Winnebago Molor Ho"ll.
Conta jntd., Root, Air, ~-0

Gao Or Elect

.

• . . CNIIIIdffam cp
· •.., .....,._ I*IJIIt, • am pr...w
IEMit'I...,-~IWCiptW . . . . tor . . . .. ToellyWCIW: R..,....P

· c.wwtt, ctpNr at&gt;*&amp;

"West led the heart four, which we
will assume is his fourth · highest.
· Subtracting four from 11, you know
there are seven cards higher than the
four in the other three hanils. And you
have seen aU seven: three in the dum·
m,y, three in your hand and East's nine.
So, West must have the.heart king."
With that, North mailed his bridge
· manuscript to the publisher.

. CloiSI(Ied Stctian.

~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
br Lula Canipoa

1990 Ford Ranger XLT w/alr.
5spd.. long bod w/to-r. exc. .Sale Or Trede:--1174 Bus C. .

&amp; Electric In
Buy Out

-

57=~1

Fwn~

celfenl Condition, 814-258-1202.

u~J....

king?"

d•talll~g.-;~e bf(lt, by
r:&gt;Ointment alter 4:00pm or all
Sawrc~er.. ca11 lt4·992·30.t1

New, ExCellent Condition, In All
Three Aoorry Aparlmenl, Ne~et To
l ibrary: $350 Per Month, Oeposil
Required, No Pats: Contact Judy
AI Bossard library At 814·4•87323.

"What was I supposed to do?" asked
South.
"Play less impulsively. After establishing the clubs, you need a dummy
enlry. And there i.s only one candidate,
lbe beart queen. You must win the first
• trick wilb the heart ace."
"But how do llmow West has the

31 Oplno prince
41 Cer1aln
48 ,...,.,h
""-""'111
47CUitom
41 Grab
41 Give""
51-bit
52 AI nil linolr

sa Genalli:

down."

c.ar

lllre. V·8, elite model turbo. PS.
PB. AC. 5 speed. power •••"

S14-a48-I·E~::.r~~~E:f~
Millar Mobile Home ·

ment in Middleport, 6t1·446• 814-992·5304 or d14.S92·

tg82 CheVy plclcup, 112111n. 4lfl!l,
good cond .. $1,150. 304-1752457.
.

Voyager, automatic, air, 8Qi,OOO
miles, $8000, all excellent condi.tion, 8t4-1102-31520 ahor 5pm.

985-!805.

One bedroom furnished apart-

Against lbree no· tnamp, West led
the heart four. East did the best be
could, putting up the nine, and Soulb
· won with the jack. Declarer continued
with three rounds of clubs. After win·
ning the 1811 of these wilb the queen,
East returned his remaining h,eart.
However South maneuvered now, he
couldn't come to more than his seven
top lricb.
"I feel' as if a dagger has piereed my
heart," said North melodramatically.
"''be clubs were 3-3, yet :you stili went

I 983 Blaclc Chrly 4X4 Dular 8.2
Go I $250
.
~~~~~~~:::R~.· u .5oo.
AKC Rogia&lt;orod Ron Weiler Pup· 710 Autos_for Sale
pin, Champion Bloodline, Ger- '78 Dodte A&amp;pon. runa, 61•·982· t985. Dodge one ton dump ruclc. 1'60
44,000 otiginal miles, one ownlf, ·'
man Baclcgrouncl, 'Sire OFA Cettl· 8220-Spm.
$3500, 814-912·31... - .
fled, Parente Excellent Wl1h
Children, 11t Shota &amp; Wormed. '88 Ca¥8lier, automatic, air,·
ea;ooo mlln, $3100; ·go Old• 1986 GMC t500 8.2 Dolul, Au$350, 814-245-41433.
Cutlan, e cyl. automatic, air, l!&gt;maac. Awl• Excellent. 814-~5...ooo niles, $1000; 'DO P1ymou&lt;h 5193.

N. 3rd, Midd'-POrt. 2badroom, furnishQd. Deposit &amp; references . Howard commercia) freezer; Ter·
304-482·2568.
·
ramite back hae; commercial
corner lot with -building: 614-7420n river- one bedroom apanrnent, 1902.

REAL ESTATE

TRANSPORTATION

....-t-+-+-1

quic:ldy.

R~ To
, ~lch.et....

,:aood clean full size mattress,
$35: 30x48 table and tour chalra,

Hot Springs Portable Spa (hoi
tub), seats two, redwood siding,
no plu!pblng required. Call et•-

to boring.

Weeko Old.

304-675-4506.

Hi-Effeclancy L.P Or Natural Gas·
92% Furnaces 100,000 BTU t800·291 -0098, 614-448· 6308,
Duct Systems And Air COndltianers. Free Estimates.

to snow.

$35. ~75-40011.

!!~~------.-1 $60, 614-1192'31811.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 ~JOom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riversid• Apartments In Middleport. From S232-S355 . Call 81•
992·5064. Equal Housing Opportunities.
'

-~

contracts alive. Tbe declarer in tod&amp;,y's
contract murdured his darling very

· Rountt bale auaga, 1700Jib balel,

b~·llde refrigerator, $150; call

er Garabge Included, $350/Mo. 8t4-IIQ2·5042 or 114-7•2·1120.

The story turned

The rain turned

• &gt;

HI00-537-9528.
Countrv Side Apartments. Nice 2 -:oe""a:.;p..;l.;.ro:.;oz;.;e:.;,:.;che-,-~-,'-15_0_:-,1-do-.

Bedrooms, AC, WID, Water, Sew·

- r-

341••,....

Murder Your Darlings."
Whatever :yoll think of lba~ don't do
the same atlbe bridge table: Keep your

P.O. Box gg4, Gallipolis, OH

Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath ,
Double Wide $10,000 With $500 · Dowr:~slairs, Utilities Furnjs.hed.
Down On Blacktop Road, Owner Clean, ·No •Pets, Reterence, DeFlnancine. 614-446·6592.
posir Requited, 614-446-1519.

to a - "-'erence,
........., or tllcr!mlnallon
baled pn ..... color, reBglon,

-

aerator , near

can finance with

halloown. &amp;14·949-2025. .

""*"'

35 Wesl 2 Bedroom Brick Town-

Schult FActor~ Rebate: Receive

$1,500 Roba&lt;o Wi&lt;h Any Now

Building silea with road trontaQe,.
back of New Haven, rural water,
and financing available. 30.._..882·
2888.

Ali ioel ulata a&lt;t.&gt;enlslng In
this r.n~r Is sOOject to
the F - Fair Housing Act
ol191l8
makes n Illegal

3 bedroom apartment or rent In
Pomen&gt;y, no pel&gt;, 6t4-Q9l!·5858.

...

SI&amp; ......

. T~e British author Sir Arthur
QuilJer·Couch, wrote "If you_require a
practic:al rule of me, I will presenl :you
with this: Whenever you feel an im·
pulse to perpetrate a piece of excep·
lionally fine writing, obey it - wholeheartedly ...: an'd delete it before
sending your manuscript to· preu.

J7t1 . EOH.

_

a..

12 Arciii*I-

By Plllllllp Alder

h9usu, 1261 Jack1on Pl~e , Gallipolis , Across From Cinema,
$295/Mo. + Deposit, Rental• lnforma~ion, 614-446-00oe, Or · ~rile,

LOW INVESTMENT
ROUTE SALES. · !SERVICE, 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Snacks To Taverns /C·Storea,
BRINER LAND
· $125 Stanup Needed, ·our Pro·
8 14·775-9173
ducts SoH, No Girnmicl&lt;s.
1-800·589-81112

:g::~~~r:~~:,;j
New
Growing Espresso

2bdrm. apta., lotal electric,
pllances furriahed , laundry
faciliti·es, ctoae to achool in town.
Applications awilable at: Village
Green Apts. f49 or call 814·992-

Now Bank Repoa. Clnly 4 lelt

NOT to lilnd manor through lha

Don't kill
the contract

WHAT DID YOU
WIN, PAW?

Apai'tm_ents

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

31-

child

aaw, • ·

bro-1

-.n .

Ae.

who ....

I

UP.

FEBRUARY 26 I

�.

...... 10. The Dally Senllnel

• Monday, F*'*Y 21, 1 -

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Marshall nets
win over Ga.
Southern

:. Dairy Barn auction ,Spring planting seminars to be held at\eni~r ·center .~ t
.to be held March 30 wcn.mp.
.'

spina plantings llld dcmonslratcd Hopnh arranging. I"Room for Birds" from the honiculwill be CODducted by Hal Koecn, Valcntinc pillS were provided for the turc mapzinc. She.notcd thai most of
Mcipexlellljon qeat, in March and residents of the Meigs County Inf1r· the 796 wild bini species in Nonh
April II the Seoi&lt;rCitizenl Center, it mary. Olurch lll'l'lllgcments over the America have no wed for a bini·
IIIIIOUIICcd when the Rutland paSt month have been made by Mrs. house. They nest in the QPCn or build
Garden Cub met -ely at the Sci· Lowery and Pauline Atkins, club in~ of 11ees and shrubs, Or like
presidcnL It was noled that orders for · the whippoorwill, lay their eggs on
pio Frie H - ia Harriaooville.
bulbs
from the Ohio Association of the ground, or the kingfishers w~
Oa Mlldl 12. he will Wk lbout
Garden
Clubs are due now.
'next underneath the ground.
bl&amp;ic CIR or home plants, on April9.
It was reported that Bernice Nel·
She slid Ulat86 species rlise their
perennial borders, and on April 16,
son is in Holzer Hospital. The ttav- young inside cavities in trees. About
umuals.
Betty Lowery and Coline Black· cling prize provided by Mrs. Black· 40 specp, she said, can be enticed
wood hosted the meeting and gave wood was won by gues~ Virginia into garden variety birdhouses. Mrs.
devotions For roll call, members Gibson. Mlljorie Rice won the door Blackwood said that the inside
dimensions and the diameter of the
answered by naming a bini they had prizes.
Mrs.
Lowery's
arrangements
was
entrance
hole determine whith birds
seen at.their feeder.
Announced was a focus meeting named "Bird Haven." It featured lit· use it.
Ann Webster gave a step-by-step
held at the RolliftJ Hills Baptist tie birds among evergreen branthes
Church near Athens Monday. Janet and eating from walnut shell feeders. -(ICthod for dividing a houseplant.
Mrs. Blaclcwood gave a review of She said that plants which divide well
Bolin of Rutland was the arrange~
011

· Reservations are bein&amp; accepted
for thC Dairy Bn Odtunl Arts CCII: icr's biennial spring art and leiaure
. auction to be held Sllunlay, March
· ~0 from 7-11 p.m.
One of the feawrcd leisura items
to be auctioned is a weekend get-a·
way to New York City which
·includes a stay at the new Trump
· international Hotel and Tower with
ttansportation provided by the Wash. burn Travel Center. More than I 00
' art and leisure items arc beins donal·
ed to the ~ Bam Auction by Joc:al
and regional !lflists as well as com. munity businesses and organizations
"to be auctioned off.
' · · Admission to the auction is $2.5
· for Dliry Bam members and $30per
person for non,memhers. Members
·may also raserve a table for eight at
· · $200; .the corporate· table reservation
· ·rate is $300. Resetvations will be
·accepted until Monday, March 2S, or
· ;until the maximum 2SO reservations
are filled. Doors for lhc event will
open at 7 p.m. A silent auction will
· 'take place throughout the evening;

I
'

\

the live IIICtion begias at 9 p.m.
Participaots also may ope to
attend a preview party to get a CW·
ly slimpre .. items to be IIICtioacd
and to meet the artists. Admiuioa to
the party and auction is $3!1 for
members and $40 for non-members.
The open bar at the preview ~
will be raplaccd by a cash bar &amp;.f.
ing the silent and live auction. Food
for the event will be prepared by 011!
Hocting College Culinary Arts Oub.
"I would encourage people to
reserve a place at the auctioil as soon
as possible. This is a major community even~ and I expec1 the ieala and
tables to go quickly," lllid auction
Co-Cblir Susan Hostetler. This is the
Dairy Bam's key fund rliser. The
whole town tums out for it.
All proceeds benefit the pro:.
gramming and operations needs of
the Dairy Barn Arts Center.
To reserve a seat, rasi4enls may ·
call the Dair:Y Bam at 614-!192-4981 .
or stop by Monday through Friday 9 :
;1.m. to S p.m. at 8000 Dliry Lane.

Dear Ann Landers: I have been in
the United States for six years. I love
this country, but there arc some
lhinp I cannot undcntand, and I am
troubled by them.
I read in the papers lbout children
who are abandoned, neglected, beat·
en severely IIIII sexually abused. The
judges liaten to the witnesses who are
totally mdible, and then, they rum
llOIIIId and give those children back
. to their abusen.
I'm enclosing a newspaper clipping about 6-year-old Elisa IzquierThe Meigs Soil and Water Con- signup, to confirm that fanners have . do of New York. Her lovin'g father, as
servation District will be accepting one or two equivalent acres or mul- he was dying, planned to obtain sole
applications for the Multiflora Rose · tiflora rose. The represclllative will custOdy and send Elisa to live with
Control Program through Thursday. return to the fann upon completion ralatives in Cuba to keep her away
Applicants must have a minimum of the practice.
from her cnck-smoking, abusive
Participants must wait until they · mother. Elisa had been offered a
of one equivalent acre of multiflora
rose. Cost-sharing will be $100.00 are notified by the Meigs Soil and scholarship dlrougll grade 12 in a priper equivalent acre approved with a Water Conservation District that vate tchool by a well-to-do foreign
maximum of two acres per perSon they are approved before they begin prince who was impressed by the
lreatment if they expect payment child when he visited her school. The
approved.
through
the program.
Applicants must be cooperators
family court judge handling the case
All
applicants,
who have not pre- demonsttated a willingness to deny
with the Meigs Soil and Water Con·
servation District. or signup as coop- viously participated in our program,
erators when they are applying for must attend a training session spon·
the cost-share program, according to sored by lhc Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District and the Coopthe rules for participation.
It .was noted that a Soil and Water erative Extension Service, on propConservation District represeniative er treatment methods, befora they
will visi~ each farm following can be approved.

'

j

I

I

Ann
Landers

·,,., ...""'*
a-..,._.

to

On The
Cutting Edge of
Outpatient
s-urgery

Meigs County Community calendar

l

'teachers and relatives and reiumed
· the child to her drug-addic~ moth'er is responsible for the girl'~ death.
; How do such people getlo be jiidges?
l And when they make such decisions
- . - ~ 11111
• :as this, how do they hang on to !heir
1
._;:..._...;.....,..._.,( jobs? •• Baftled in New York City
Dear New York City: Since -that
'custOdy the biological parent if it
was in the child's best intciest.
story about Elisa was widely publiThcfalherdiedon~daill~ewas cizcd,lcan'tirnaginewhytherawasto have sent Elisa to safety. The .iiJdge · n't a public ourcry about lhc justice
then ovenuled the objections of ·system. As for the judges, some are
teachers and relatives and gave Elisa . elected, others are ,appointed,.dependto her drug-addie)cd mother. Accord· . ing on the ltlcal sc!tup.
ing to police, the mother then reject· . You wonder about judges, While I
ed the scholarship, pulled Elisa out .of 'am confounded by some of the cas-,
school, tortured her in auempted • es. that are permitted to be heafd. For
exorcisms an!f finally killed her by · e'xl!lllple: A 9-year-old boy in Consmashing her head against a concrete · necticut was sued for $1 S,OOO by a
wall.
woman who said he hit her in the face
Neighbors in .the high-rise housing . with a baseball when he and some
projec~ where Elisa and her mother . Other lads were warming.up for-a Lit·
lived, heard Elisa's cries but thought lie League game. The· JWoman
her mother was disciplining the child claimed she suffered permanent
and did not wish to interfere.
injury to her jaw, had headaches and
It ccnainly appears to me that the ·suffered nervous shock. S.he never
judgewhoovenuledtheobjectionsof ·aucmpted to speak to the boy:s par·

MONDAY
TUESDAY
RACINE·· RA,€0, Tuesday, 6:30
POMEROY·· Meigs County Vet-erans Service Commission, 7:30p.m. p.m. at. Star Mill Park. Southern
Monday at the Veterans Service building commiuee members to
Office, Mulberry Avenue.
speak.
CHESTER •• lzaak Walton
POMEROY- Drew Webster Post
Lc;ague regular meeting Monday, 7 39,AmericanLegion,commandcrto
p.m. at the club house. Guests from meet with Ladies Auxiliary, 2 p.m
district office will attend.
Tuesday at the legion hall, Pomeroy.
RUTI..AND •• Rutland Garden ·- . RU11.AND ·- Rutland Fire
Club, Monday, I p.m. at lhc home of Department Ladies Auxiliary, TuesMarcia Dennison, Rutland.
day, S p.m. fira station.

twenty-first centUJY
medicine. O'Bleness Hospital
has some of the latest surgical
equipment available. Laser
surgical tools. Laparoscopic
devices that make precise incisions and operate. with tiny
cameras and viewing monitors.
The newest iii anesthesia teChnology. It's all designed to. give
you the very latest in modem
medical perfonnance right here
at O'Bieness. Today, because of

'

'

'. ,
"·~

·•
·•

..

,.,.

v

,...

"'.. .
'·

'-

M

"

; .. t

District meeting sche(Juled March 2

.
I

t

i

A district meeting to be held at I
p.m. on March 2 was . announce!~
whe~ Chester Council 323, Daughters of America, met recently at the
hall.
Elizabeth Hayes, councilor,
opened the .meeting in ritualistic
fonn.ll WI$ noted that the good of the
order ·committee will have a soup
supper and games at the finl meeting
in March.
Reported ill were .
Mqaret Amberger. Mary Holter, and
Bob Harden, now home from the hos-' ·
pita!.
, Ella Osborne was installed to an

office to which she was earlier elected. Members were reminded of a
meeting in Belpre on March II.
Erma Cleland read "Troubles"
Refreshments wera served by Esther
Smith and Ruth Smith.
Thelma
White won the door prize.
Others attending were Marcia
Keller, Blhel Orr. Sandy White, Char·
lotte Grant, Opal Hollon, Thelma •
·White, Mary Barringer, Ella Osborne;
Kathryn Baum, Everctt Grant, Joann
Baum, Jean Welsh, Bob Ritchie and
Doris Grueser.

."•

f

'

''•'

'

':

• J
'

'

M~ddleport

;-.

•

(I

'

,

..' •...
•1'!..

'

'

Janumy 20, 1141 • '*"-Y 18, , .

\

T11e family of Jack II. a-,, Sr. wl8h to thllnk
the An. Paul SUIUICIII of the Firat Bll)tlll

'I

For your corwenience
we have mocated OUT
CJutPrment Center nut
to Surgery 011 the fint flOor:

Church of Pomeroy n
the Rev. ,...
..........,..Y of the frM WlllllslbDdl.. Churoh of
Lan1 Cliff,. who ll8pt In IDUCh d&amp;!ltng Ide

'

DriV.~.

Hlnlll lftcl dNih, who ~ the
Men'iOitll S1n10e 11t ,_ home !Ill 180 • • •
St. For the
llld _.. 1Jam till
iMIIIberl
till chunlh. For thl rlllghbora
thllt Cltllld 8lld 1111 fiii!IICNind epaal1l frlenill
· J~Dind tc.111 Rarllh.
. '
'For IH the dotlllllonl from lhe Welt Vlrglnlll.
Ellob lc Co. of A-., the 'Ohurohe, llld ~I

..,
(.

·J·
' .•'',

PIIIJ••
or

~

,.

j
., r.

AleO the ll8ly . . . . ·-:HI ~ . .....
ln-tOuch'llfd to IIJJOIIII whO hllpld 'ln

'1

T

..

I(';

,,

TJ-* JOU IO!IIIIIIIt; It h 1 -

Wife ..... ..,.... Lva• It IIJ,

til IOfll 8lld fllmlr, I 'pu1 I I wt811d failtiW' .

•
~~

·I

, ;...

i

... .

-

!

-

,.

' II

'

1

'f '

CA1LE1TSBURG, Ky. (AP) A judge has issued a rastraining
. -9rdcr against strikers at Ashland Inc.
and union officials have asked for a
meeting to present !he company with
a proposal that could end the walk-

·:

.,

.r..

.
.

., .:0.

O'BLENE·'SS·

''

. .--; r
'

'I

•

~ r.

.•

"'.... . .
'

Negotiators for the Oil, Chemical
and Atomic Workers union on Mon·
aay req~ a meeting with a fed·
~raJ mediator. The mcctin• is set flir
Thursday afternoon in Ashland 8nd
Will involve nepaton for tWO loc:als
teprcSentjng about 900 workers at the
company's Catletuburg Jeftnery.

'·"I

vi
oI
~.
~

I

~.

A hospltGl Wit CIUI all . ;.
1M prorul of.
·, •. .-

'

(1111.

.,

·Memorial Hospital

55 Hoopital Drive, Athens, OH 45101· ,
• 614-593-mt
· ·

. .'·

'

'

. l'

,...
• ,J,

'

Commission Vice President Janet
Howard said she has heard many pos·
itive comments concerning local
Internet access.
"Meigs County is taking the first
step in front of many other counties,"
she said. "It fits in with the progress
we've made the last few years."
Walton said the technology board
is also planning regular training sessions for new Internet customers or
for other interested community resi·
dents.
"(think it will be successful," Walton said.
In other business, Pomeroy May-

or Frank Vaughan told commissioners he.is going to Columbus to determine the feasibility .of the state's
building a large veterans' home (or
several smaller homes) in southern
Ohio as a counterpan to the existing
veterans' home in Sandusky.
Vaughan asked commissioners if
they would be willing to help Meigs
County acquire a slate veterans' home
by pledging use of county-owned
property near Veterans Memorial
Hospital. .
All three commissioners said they
would commit to helping locale a veterans' home in that area.

"Anything for the veterans," said :
Commissioner Robert Hartenbacb,
who is himself a 'veteran.
In addition, the board authorized
advertising four old sheriffs cruisers
and one other confiscated vehicle for
sale. The vehicles will be displayed
near the sheriffs office.
·
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said the
department has bought several used
highway patrol cars with money
from the department's Law Enforc~­ •
ment Trust Fund . Money from the
sale of the old cruisers may be used
to purchase an additional car.
· (Continued on P9 a)

Telecom overhaul bill may
hast.en cross-river calling·
Toll-free service
between Meigs,
Mason counties
could be a go
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff

The Telecommunications Act of
1996, passed earlier this month, may
soon affect thousands of Meigs and
Mason County, W.Va .• residents by
hastening implementation of local
calling between the two Ohio River
communities.
On Dec. 21. 1995, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio directed
GTE-Norlh to tile an application for
a waiver with the Federal District
Coun to establish local telephone service from its Pomeroy exchange to
the Mason, W.Va., exchange.
But as a result of the legislation

passei! by Congress and signed into
law 11n Feb. 8 by President Clinton,
GTE North is now not required lo
obtain the waiver to establish interlocal access transport area (LATA)
service. As a result, GTE has asked
that it not be required to submit a
copy of the waiver request.
A PUCO spokeswoman confinned this morning that the telephone companies involved no longer
need to receive the waiver from the
district court.
1be new act is good news for local
calling proponents. Historically, federal judges have been reluctant to
issue the required waivers, according
to PUCO spokesman Dick Kimmins.
The PUCO and the Wes~ Virginia
Public Utilities .Commission have
already' approved one-way flat-rate
calling between the communities in
their respective states, meaning it can
"definitely happen ," the spokes-

Auto sale decline prompts
0.3o/o retail c;Up in January
WASHINGTON (AP) - In one
more sign that the overali economy
weakened further at the beginning of
the year. the government reponed
today that retail sales dipped 0.3 per·
cent in January, the poorest showing
in six months.
The Commerce Depanment said
the weakness was centered at auto
dealerships, where sales fell 1.2 percent, the ftrst decline in this area since
last July.
Analysts blamed m~ch of ·the
weakness on the severe winter blizzards that kepi consumers out of the
stores. They said this was one more
factor supporting their ,view that the
overall economy was barely moving
forward as the year began.
Because of the weakness, many

woman added.
Mason residents make an avenige
of 17.4 calls per access line to the
Pomeroy exchaAge while Pomeroy
residents make an average of 1.0 I
calls per month to the Mason
exchange, according to the PUCO,
with each call involving a long-distance charge.
·
Local calling will be of added value to Mason-area computer uses, also
allowing them local Internet acce's
- if plans succeed to establish local
Internet access in Meigs County.
Currently. computer owners in
both communities must pay long-distance telephone fees to access the
Internet.
GTE serves approximately 6.481
customers in its Pomeroy exchange
while Bell Atlantic serves about 922
in its Mason exchange. GTE will proceed to establish an in-service date
and upon doing so shall tile it with
PUCQ.

Retail

salis
blat retail sales ill bllions of

analysts are predicting that the Feddollars. Seasonally a~ted.
eral Reserve. which has already
trimmed interest rates three times in
an effort to spur growth, will do so
again. Many forecasters are predicting t\VO more rate cuts this spring.
The Fed has cited diminishing
inflationary pressures as a key reason
it has been able to ease i!redit. The
government also reponed today that
wholesale prices rose 0.3 percent in
January.
Analysts discounted much of the
January price increase, saying it was
based on special factors such as 0. I percent in January.
Cynthia Lana, a senior economist
heavy demand for energy during the
at
DRI-McGraw
Hill Inc., said that .
cold winter. They noted that under·
lying wholesale price pressures, . todafs reports did nothing to change
excluding the volaul~ food and ener· her view that more Fed rate cuts arc
gy components, actually dropped by on the way .

.

_.,'

'
"

·southern
Board hires
substitutes

and sewage hookups to the campers,
which have been occupied mainly
during the summer months. The
sewage pipes from lhc campers run
onto lhc property, and present a pt~b­
lic health hazard and code violation,
according to Huxley.
Council directed Huxley to village
building· inspector Angela Huxley,
and said it would help her solve the
dilemma.
The fire raport showed the Middleport Volunteer Fire Dep~ment
answering 826 calls last year, with
124 fire and rescue and 702 emer·

gency crew runs, said David Hoff·
man, fire chief.
The department logged 343 man
hours in fire and emergency rescue
training, with I ,244 man hours spent
on maintaining equipment.
The department responded to 19
structure fires totaling $278.450 in
losses, eight vehiCle firas iotaling
$2,500 in losses,·13 brush/trash fires,
nine false alanns, 17 hazardous conditions, 28 mutual aids. 17 rescues,
and II service runs. The department
logged 17.433 miles, Hoffman added.
(Continued on Page 3)

Both sides in Ashland strike want meeting

,,,

I ,'

1\18 ""'··_._..,. doMIIOftl ~ ..........,.

..., ....

''

'

· 11M1 for ·all the . . , . , thel ..... fill $til
'• clurlng hit ltlnlll W dl 1,1 .811d I IPIDIII'
. ..... to HGipiDI ~ hllpllf ...... ~, • ':.
'

.,'

to sign up local computer users, Walton said. Billing will be dotle one of
two ways, via credit card or month·
ly billing. he explained.
Customers will pay a startup fee
around $20, which will include software and instruction, he said. The
county will receive web page.
Earlier, Commission President
Fred Hoffman said he would like the
committee io offer a certain number
of free hours of access to subscribers
for about SI0 a month, a guideline
that seems to have been followed.
Walton said services would start at
$9.95 a month.

Council reviews fire report

By TOM HUNTER
· Sentinel Newt Stlltl
• Middleport Village c~·lmel in
a brief session Monday, hearing
udson
property concerns from
Street resident and reviewing the
1995 fire repqn from the Middleport
Fire Department. ·
Hudson Street resident Angela
Huxley addressed council on he~ flil·
· iire to access an adjacent lot near old
Hudson Street because two campers
and some old cars are blocking the
right of way.
Hudson questioned the electrical

.,.

JACK M. BRALEY, SR.

A Gannett Co. Nuw ; rp i r

'

'

l

'\

the Internet, but it is prohibitively
expensive due to !bog-distance tele·
phone access fees. The Internet
allows computer users to cpmmunicate with others around the world
with !heir computers via telephone
lines.
About $25,000 in equipment has
been located by the company in the
GTE building in Pomeroy, Walton
said.
"It should be about three to six
weeks before the system is up and
running, eight weeks at the outside,".
he said.
. The provider is preparing a form

By SONYA ROSS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Under attack
from critics ·who say the United
. States isn't getting tough enough with
Cuba, the Clinton administration
today defended its response to the
· downing of two unanned U.S. civil·
ian planes off the Cuban coast.
"We took additional measures
.-.,y.-da1fiChich are e~v~-~-!1. ~I! .
n lease
pressure on C&amp;Stro s government," said Undersecretary of
State Petet Tamoff in an interview
with CBS. "It's exactly what's war~
ranted at this time."
President Clinton annou ..ced a
series of actions Monday desi~ned to
retaliate against Fidel Castro 's. gov·
ernment for the incident sa,urday
ANGER OVER SHOOTDOWN - JoM Alonso yelled llflti.CIIs·
over lhc Florida Straits tljat left four tro chants during a protelt Mondlly outside the office o1 U.S. Rap.
occupants of the planes rhissing and Sam Gibbons In Tempe, Fla. About 50 Cuban exiles turned out
presumed dead. Another plane from to pruteat Cuba's downing of twa U.S. airplanes on Saturday. (AP)
the Cub~" -.•.:r.;.:~an .e~ile group
Brothers to the Rescue escaped and added new restrictions to Cuban Committee, promised to pass "the
Cuban ~iGs and returned safely to diplomats' U.S. lfolvel. He pledged strongest possible" embargo bill
lhc United States.
support for legislation toughening the "and have it on the president's desk
Congressional Republicans said embargo against Cuba and said he before lhc blood dries on Fidel CasClinton's actions are welcomed but would ask Congress to compensate tro's hands."
don't go far enough.
the victims' families out of $100 mil"The policy of engagement with
"Castro won't exactly be shaking lion in frozen Cuban assets. .
Fidel Castro has failed miserably,"
in his boots unless we get tougher
Clinton called the attack · "an Helms said. "It is time to tighten the
sanctions," said Rep. llearla Ros· appalling reminder of the nature of embargo and isolate his brutal
Lehtinen, R-Fia.• a Cuban-American the Cuban regime: repressive, vio- regime."
who represents a heavily Cuban dis· lent, scornful of international law,"
In related developments:
trict in Miami.
and said he was "not ruling out any
• A Cuban air force pilot who
Presidential candidate Sen. Bob further steps in the future should they defected to the United States said
' Dole, R-Kan., declared that Clinton be required."
Monday he rewmed to Cuba three
was "coddling Cas1ro."
Several members of Congress and days ago and ·gave the Castro gov·
"The president has yet to under- Cuban American activists demanded emment information about the Broth·
stand that the only way to deal with more punitive measures, starting with ers group. Juan Pablo Roque, who
Castro's tyranny is with raal firmness final action of a tough bill that would had been a volunteer pilot with the
and pressure," said Dole, the Senate dramatically expand sanctions on Miami-based group, said on Cuban
Havana.
.
111ajority leader.
television he wanted to reveal "the
Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C., chair- real character" of Brothers.
. Clinton halted all charter flights
between the Uni!ed States and Cuba man of the Senate Foreign Relations

•.

•'

In the 408. Weclnndly,
partly cloudy, high .,....
40.

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 27, 1996

_Shooting
response
defended
:by Clinton

Morris Teaford is a h'eart patient at
University J{ospital, Columbus.
Cards may be sent to him at Rhodes
Hall, Room 850 West. University
Hospital, Columbus, 43210.

Rice, secretary-treasurer of 12th
Capitular District Officer'S Association no later than March !!,telephone, '
742-2922 or, by mail, 3409!1 New
Lima .Rd., Rutland.
Horizon including Andy Graham,
Tom Neal, David Booth and David
Graham will be playing following the
dinner.

Showerallftd thunder·

etorms likely tonight, knn

'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Internet is coming!
Scott Walton of Pomeroy, a mem' ber of the recently-appointed Tech·
: nology Development Board, updated
the Meigs County Board of Com·
;.missioners Monday afternoon on the
: group's progress toward establishing
. a local Internet gateway.
One area provider contacted by
· the group is coming, Walton iiaid,
adding that the provi4er is requesting
· anonymity possibly due to concerns
about last-minute competition.
· · Meigs countians have access to

HOSPITALIZED

Reception for Masonic leader set
A reception for Arthur E. Ross,
grand high priest of the Royal Arch
Masons of Ohio, will be held on
March 9 at the Middleport Masonic
Temple.
The dinner, to which the ladies are
invited, will be served at 6~.m.
Tickets are $7 a person and reservations are to be made with Harold

Buckeye 5:
2-5-9-17-19

Internet .access provider pledges service

Jents but just went ahead and sued"'
him. Last I heard, Little League was
about to be broupt into the case as ·
well.
And now, deat readers, this item
set m• back on my heels.
. A 6-year-old Jir.l in Modesto,
·Calif., stallbed a 7-year-old in the
; back with'a steak lcnife in a fight over
' Barbie dolls. 1lte girls cot into .a·
: name-calling, hlir-pulling tiff over
; the dolls, and the 6-year-old said,
. "I'm going to kill you," went ho• and ralumed with a'knife; Theinjurcd
7-yeat-old was hospitalized and
; reported iii serious-condition.
1 . Whcra do 6- an.d 7-year-olds ge_
l
1 tdeas about stabbing people they
· don't like?

these and other great additions
to our technology, the majority
of our surgeries are outpatient
surgeries. That means that your
surgery and post-operative care
may often be taken care of in a
matter of hours thanks to our
highly skilled staff and our
modem technology. At
O'Qieness, we continue to work
hard to bring.you better and
better healthcare service~.

4-9-~

VoL41,NO.:uo
I leallon, 10 .....

1,;-

Welcom~ to

Pick 3:
7-4-9
Pick 4:

Sports, Page 4

-···- . . . '

Multiflora signup
deadline Thursday

.

'

.are those thllt form multiple crowni.
miniMure pllllllota, or those Ill$ '
form otfseu. St. lllid the best lime ::
to divide a houleplant ia late wintor
and dill vines or planiS lhll pow on
a sinale stem arc not risht for dividin&amp;.
·
Mqarct Weber Wbd lbout ~
.noting dill soil in the prden, on lht
lawn or even, in containers larply
'deiCI'mincs the success of lhc plants.
She slid that soil is not a dead, stat-' "
ic thing, but rather a living, bleatbinc··
and evolvill&amp; one, and save tips on ··
mixing the risht soils for vario111 •
plants.
. Mrs. Atkins c011ducted a question ,
game on birds, Eva Robson p~
out pieces of her home grown thyme: "
Refreshments were served.
"'

Reader feels judge responsible for girl's death .:·
By ANN LANDERS

Ohio Lottery

I

., J

', -1 ,

'

'

'

•

I

Charles Leonberg, vice president • said company negolialors,had agreed
ofLocai3-50S, said workers will pte· to attend the meeting.
sent new lartguage concerning work
"Thera's been so much movement
assignments, The company wants from lhc union side and we're will·
workers to do jobs outside their spe- ing to move further," said Terry Howcific classifications, but the union ell, a member ofl.ociii3-50S's ncgofeels that would compromise safety. ti4ting committee. "1bey (the com"Thcra may be a new proposal pany) arc pretty set on what they
coming out," he slid. "We've been want and don't want to vary very
working on that all along. Exactly much from it.1'
·
what the changes will be will depend
A judge issued a restraining order
on the company's atti"!de when we Monday limiting the number of pick·
gel in the meeting."
ets outside the company's strike·
Company spokesman Chuck Rice . bound refinery.

1.13RARY DONATION- nW Pam.roy FI'1DrMI Order ot Eaglel
Auxiliary preeented a gift of $500 to the Meigs County Public
Library •• a geature of support to the library for Its MrVIc:w to
the elderly, particularly the purch- o1 llotge print books for
eenlor ctu.ns. 11118 Ia the 22nd ~ollie gr1nt ptogtWil. bjln
auxiliary rnembara Betty Fa.,..,, left, encl8herlee "Chuck" Evena,
right, pntttnbid the cNclt to lllrirlln Ruth Po suers. (Sel1..181 phoo
to}
·

Personnel matters dominatca .
Monday night's meeting or the Soutl).
em Local Board of Education.
Meeting at the high school in
Racine, the board approved Nancy E.
Scarbrough and Tony Hudson as
substitute teachers.
In addition, Alan Crisp and Jeremy Dill wera hired as volunteQrescrve girls softball coach and~
baU ~oach, raspectively, both unpaid
postuons.
.
The board also accepted the resignation Michael Winebrenner u
seventh grade boys basketball each
for the next seasdn.
_
The board approved new apeciiJ,
education policies and procedures at ·
mandated by the state. The proce.
dures take effect April I. ' ,
In other business, Superin~t ·
James Lawrence, Treasurer Iili!DRie
Hill and school board member M. . •
ry Morarity will llllend a mileti11a 11
Columbus concemirfa die llllll - .
fund.
•.
~soG preacnt were bolrd- . ' 111
S

uste rueacr, C. T. a. 9

Kuc:sma and BoliCollia.

,.

'

, ~'
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="384">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9756">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29326">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29325">
              <text>February 26, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="99">
      <name>denney</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1090">
      <name>grate</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6116">
      <name>scarbe</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1681">
      <name>welch</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="109">
      <name>young</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
