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...... 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.
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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;

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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.

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On The
Cutting Edge of
Outpatient
s-urgery

Meigs County Community calendar

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'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
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• :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

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District meeting sche(Juled March 2

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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.

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M~ddleport

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Janumy 20, 1141 • '*"-Y 18, , .

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

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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

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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.
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'For IH the dotlllllonl from lhe Welt Vlrglnlll.
Ellob lc Co. of A-., the 'Ohurohe, llld ~I

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

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Wife ..... ..,.... Lva• It IIJ,

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

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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-

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O'BLENE·'SS·

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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.

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A hospltGl Wit CIUI all . ;.
1M prorul of.
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·Memorial Hospital

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

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·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

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'• clurlng hit ltlnlll W dl 1,1 .811d I IPIDIII'
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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

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JACK M. BRALEY, SR.

A Gannett Co. Nuw ; rp i r

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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

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partly cloudy, high .,....
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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

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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

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Multiflora signup
deadline Thursday

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.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

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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}
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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.

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TUIIday, Februtlry 27, 19M

rpommentary
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OHIO Weather

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111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
&amp;14-992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
.Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geoer~~l

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

Maneger

/'~oldwater, Reagan

·Buchanan·'s models
By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Atloclllld Preu Wrtler.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Let Republican history be your guide: today 's
extremist often becomes tomorrow's mainstream.
.
.
' Today's target, Pat Buchanan, reminds audiences that "Barry Goldwater
was called all those terrible names. Ronald Reagan was. Pat Buchanan is."
They are company he'd like to keep, a historical trend he'd like to join.
B~chanan's protectionist rhetoric is a breilk with the GOP mainstream. But
sri was Reagan's anti-abortion stand in 1980.
·Republicans who remember how the party has changed, including some
Bob Dole suppor!ers, are urging the Senate leader to cool his ·attacks on
Buchanan. Ht's already cooled it somewhat, now calling Buchanan's positillns extreme rather than calling Buchanan hi111self an extremist. .
David Keene, chairman of the American Conservative Union and a Dole
supporter, said the senator is "waving a P9litical red flag" at conservatives
who still remember the days when they were "dismissed as an irrelevant,
da:ngerous bunch of nuts by an establishment that didn't want them in the
door."
·
·.
Goldwater, 87, the GOP conservative patriarch, jokingly pronounced
himself and Dole "the new.liberals of the Republican party" on Sunday and
called Buchanan "a good Democrat." When Dole made a pilgrimage to
Gol,dwater's hilltop home near Phoenix in advance ofThesday's Arizona primary, Goldwater gave Dole his blessing and predicted a victory for him.
.When Goldwater captured the Republican presidential nomin3tion in
1964 and declared at the convention that "e~tiemism in the defense of libeny is no vice," he gave the party's conservative wing a sense of its power.
l'Jley had defeated the party establishment: Nelson Rockeleller, William
Sttanton, Henry Cabot Lodge.
.
:;As GOP moderates feared, Goldwater ·suffered a crushing defeat in
~vember at the hands of Democratic President Lyndon Johnson. The Arizoila senator carried hundreds of Republicans down to defeat with him.
~:Even as the old establishment was reclaiming control of the battered
d)P, new, more conservative fig!JreS were emerging, Reagan among them.
:•In a bitter Republican primary light in 1976, President Ford beat back
R,.tiagan's challenge by portraying him as ·an extremist.
· :The Ford campaign ran a radio commercial which stated, "Governor
R4gan couldn't s~ a nuclear war. But President Reagan could."
: :f'our years later, Reagan·captured the Republican Party and defeated the
inCumbent Democratic president in the general election.
::·Reagan dragged the party rightwafd," said Lyn Nofziger, who was Reagan campaign press secretary and then became.White House politi~al directot; A Dole supporter, Nofziger acknowledges 'how far Buchanan has come
sini:e his unsuccessful challenge io President Bush in the 1992 GOP pri-

mioies.

·

'•"The last time be was a token with about 3 million votes," said Nofziger.
"This time he's a serious f\ICtOr out there. If Bob Dole or Lamar Alexander
thihk they're going to get anywhere by calling him "limes and demonizing
hiJtl, they're out of their minds. They nc;ed to debate the issues."
llut Nofziger isn't certain of lhl: strength of Buchanan's claim to be direct
heir of the trend set by·Goldwater and Reagan.
.
:'Pat isn't dragging die party rightward, he's dragging it. backward," he
said.
lw'illiam Kristol, former chief of staff to Vice President Dan Quayle, and
now editor of the conServative journal the Standard, says Buchanan could
en1 up. not as the GOP's Reagan, but as its McGovern, a comparison to how
Seft. George Mc(!ovem moved the Democrats to the left when he captured
the! 1972 presidential nomination.
"'nother item to consider: today's attacker can just as· easily become
tol{lonow's fringe .
:OJ coMider myself to be a mainstream conservative and I think there's a
difference betweel! mainstream and being extreme," Dole says.
:The difference may not.be as clear as the Kansas senator would like. And
whJit better place to consider that than Arizona, the next big Republican primary battleground and the home of that one-time e~tremist, Barry Goldwa•
.

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~(TOR'S

NOTE: Donald M. Rothberg hla covered 11111lonal and

lnternetlonal alfalra lor Tha Alaocllled Prall In .Waahlngton alnee

184L'

ioday in history

A little-noticed clause of the
covered with
Christian Coalition's "Contract
black-andWiih the American Family" is quietbhie · marks
ly wending its way through Conbut who are
gress and' our state legislatures.
neVertheless
lt's. part of the ve!'Y wholesomeliving
in •
sounding Parental .Rights Act. And
homes where
the language of most of the bills and
they are not
loved and ·not
amendments begins .with the statemen! that "the right of parents to By Slra Eckel
. able to ' corndirect the upbringing and education
municate with
of their children shall not be their parents •• the kids who will be
infringed."
.kicked out oftheir homes if they tell ·
This sounds quite reasonable, their parents they have a drug habit
indeed . downrighi essential. Who or are sexually active? (And it's
wapts public officials breathing these kids, after all, who are most
down their necks, telling them how likely to seek solace in drugs and
to raise their children?
sex.)
'
OK, but what about the majority
. But the parental rights proposals
have less to do with keeping med- of parents, the ones who will act in
dlibg bureaucrats out of people's their child's best imerest if trouble
homes than it does with restricting arises, and who believe they have a
the privacy rights of children, tspe- right to know if it does? Even these
cially teen-agers, in the interest' of people's kids need the option of constriking a family-friendly pose.
fidentiality in such matters. Because
Consider the laws regarding even the children of good parents
medical auention. In mosfinstances, will do itupid things to avoid catch·
young people do not have the right
·
to medical. attention without a par- .
ent's permission. However, there are .
important exceptions •• in cases
such as testing for sexually ~~:ansmit­
ted diseases, treatment for drug
abuse, birth control and abortion.
The exception for abortion has
been successfully contested in many
states, and now the social conservatives are going after the other exceptions.
On their face, they ~ound like
reasonable propositions. What parent wouldn 't want to know if their
teeil-ager was on the pill or in drug
rehab? But there are two basic problems with these proposals.
one thing, they are based on
sumption that all parents are
parents. The deaths of Susan
Smtth 's sons, 6-year-old Elisa
Izquierdo of New York and countless other victims of child abuse
affirm that this is simply not the
case. Of coW'Se, child abuse is and
will continue to be illegal-- not even
th.e Christian Coalition will say it's
OK to beat your children senseless.
But what about the less extreme
cases? The kids who may not be

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The
·welc011101 ,leuen
.19
electioll. However, jn the .in~t ol fllll*l, no' ~ectaon ~ w1U be
·ICCCI'Ifll• 12 aoo11 on·MOnday, March II. . · . · · .
lndiv_.lllould addrela is~.- llld not personalllill. '
·
~ Cllldidirestwill not UIOd.
1 Leaert
. [.-., tbould be lOO wards or lla, prefenbly IYJiicJ./41 teucn 11t llib-

be

...,;.y

puters ''think'' in the hlllllllll

1n the
sense of win·
nins, bUt move lhroup its pro~-·
men' codes for cOmplex problem~ving sc:enarios. It could have been
playinJ bingo for all Deep BII!C

t:ared.

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e.:,~'f:·-===
e~!t.':c~'t;Z:~:!:
be,....,... d Lil*f,..M ,t!.b:.=::~:~No-=.:=
e in.. . . ~- • _,v.
· ,. _toDl~.
kick Kaap..ov's buu? I,doubt it.

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Gllp/llcoNel

p,._,

: Some severe thunderstorm activ)ty was P!Jssible fOI' Ohio tonisht
-when a cold front comes up on the
:.:tay's unseasonably warm tempera~ures, the National Weather Service
:said.
· Readings today .were expected to
approach 'record levels. Overnight,
lhe lows were within 5 degrees of
Mond4y's highs.
: But the weather will tum sharply
colder on Wednesday as cold air
llehind the frontal system settles into·
the state. By late in the day, temperit)II'CS m~y plunge into the 20s, fore ~asters said.
· Snow showers will be a possibilIty throughout th'e state.

Internet access provider

way' ~

old pillars of the Republican establisl!ment. The
first is Newt Gingrich, who got whacked last year
for 'trying to do too much too quickly, but now
looks like a joi!Y old elf in comparison to Mr. Pat.· .
The very night that Granite Siate voters were
delivering a slim primary victory to Buchanan.,
Gingrich and his closest allies were huddling' ·
together in a retreat designed to map out a political strategy for 1996.
They have · de~ided to blaze their own trait,:.
since neither Alexander, Buchanan nor Dole·
seems likely to support jtheir ideas. They want to
lead a free-market, limited-government, multicul- .
tural liberation movement ··. and pitch it with ..
Clintoncsque skill. If the presidential nominee·
goes along with the agenda, fine.
,
Beneficiary No. 2 may be lack I&lt;.emp. Old ;
Reagan and Bush administration hands have :
begun begging the old quarterback to get in the .. .
game, and the hotoriously indecisive Kemp could
enter into the fray in early March. Even failing.
that, however, he could honor an old promise to· .
ju'mp on the Forbes bandwagon and use' his con-•
siderable popularity to got Kempian ideas' back in '
play.
Buchanan's boom could prove a boon for the '
GOP. Nobody ever got stronger in politics by run- · •
ning away from a brawl over principle, and
Buchanan has fOrced his foes to &lt;ljrty their hands ·
with social issues and the cares o( working peo- · ·
pie. He wants a clarifying debate, and he'll get it.
So let ,the fun begin. His primary opponents
warn that they're going to wage a pitched battle to · '
define the party's heart and souk,Now they only · ·
have to acquire 'the weapo~s necessary to win'
such a fight --hearts' and souls.

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(Conllnued,.._ Page 1)
In other business, the boanl:
• Noted that Jim Diddle of Racine
has applied for a liquor license trans·
fer in Chester and said anyone
requesting a public hearing on the
matter would need to contact the
board P!'ii:lr to Monday ~moon's
regular meeting;
• Met with litter and recycling

-Local News_in Brief:Deputies capture fugitive from jail

Pomeroy accident report corrected

-

Daily

Stocks

.hbli ibed ""'? ~. Mooday .....ah
ftiday. Ill Coun sc. Pomcloy, Ollio. by IIIIo
Ohio VllleYPublltNI!a Coa&gt;onli/Oatna Co.•
p,....,.y, Ohio IS169, I'll. m:2156. Second
........... poidlll'omeroy,Ohlo.

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Ohlool$769.
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'

Stock raport1 ara tha 10:3_~
i.tn.~ prowldld by AdvloltJI
or ·a~..

commerce; 'Which have jointly
pushed and prodded for.the complellon of studies to identify industrial
sites in our county, and later the fea~ibility
environmental studies of
, these proposed s~.
Please d(\ not forget the work that
has been done by these members on
their personal time to push for the
completion of U.S. 33 to 1-77. I realize th~t people are riot happy with the
downsizing of the project from a four
lane to a super-two lane; but at least
we will have a road to take a traffic
count from.
If you .have questions concerning
the highway construction process
and are ipterested in promoting
Meigs County, I encourage you to
contact Steve Story at 992-6624 for
a calendar of scheduled U.S. 33
meetings so that you can plan to
'attend.
In preparing for growth/change,
we must organize ourselves with 'lne
goal in mind - create job opportunity. Locate a site, purchase the site
with private and or public funding ,
develop the site with the proper
infrastructure, ZONE it for industri·
at use and, if we.are able to receive
the funding through H.B. 440, build
a speculaiive building on the site,
then market Meigs County (climate,
labor force, bulk transportation
route/Ohio River, Rural Enterprise
Zone and quality of life) to expanding and relocating industries.
We all need to work together or
the above picture will remain a mere
puzzle with the pieces still waiting to
be put together. To help put the puzzle together, join and take part in the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce and Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation.
Bringing you back to the need and
importance of tourism is the quality
of life factor. Tourists, like hard
industry, are drawn to a friendly and
attractive area. So, let's plan for
tomorrow instead of failing, by participating in the following seminars.
Visualizing the Possibilities in
Appalachia will be held March 9
from 9-5 p.m., call Rural Action Network at 1-614-593·7490 for further
details. Development in the Floodplain and Wetlands and Their Importance will he held Thursday from 85:30 p.m., call Buckeye Hills RC &amp;
D at 1-614-373-7926.
Do not just say to yourself that
these are just seminars and 't~at you
do not have the time! Expose yourself to the possibilities, discover
where your talents will help, and take
an active role for tomorrow.

ana

.

Avenue, Cynthia Large, VMH;
8:30 p.m. Monday, Mulberry
Avenue. Cynthia Large. VMH.
RACINE
8:37 p.m. Monday, Riverfront
Road , Jack Ables, VMH ;
9:29 p.m. Monday, Tackerville
Road, Kenneth Lee Clark, Pleasant
Valley Hospital
.
REEDSVILLE
5:31p.m. Sunday, SR 124, Colin
Chevalier, VMH.
RUTLAND
10:08 a.m. Saturday, Strongs Run,
Beatrrice Rienhart , O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital;
9:52a.m. ¥onday, SR 124, motor
vehicle accident, Donald Neal, Sara
Neal and Christine· Neal , HMC,
Salem Township VFD assisted;
3:36p.m. Monday, Salem Street,
Doris Purchase, VMH; .
9:05 p.m. Monday, White's Hill
Road, Grover Oliver, PVH.
SYRACUSE
8:35 a.m. Monday, Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
Rena
McDaniels, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
· 8:38 p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
Cliffs Apartments, Jane Ratcliff,
VMH.
7:01 p.m. Monday, Main Street,
Marvin Walker, St. Joseph's Hospital.

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Ruth Ann Sturgeon

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Ruth Ann Sturgeon, 50, Nitro, W.Va. , formerly of Point Pleasant, W. Va.~
died Monday, Feb. 26, 1996 in Thomas Memorial Hospital, Soucti
Charleston, W.Va., following a lengthy illness.
·
•
Born March 27, 1945 in Mount Vernon, daughter of the late Marvin E..
Sr. and Wilma Smith Bennett, she was. a 1963 graduate of Point Pleasant High
School, and a former employee of Pleasant Valley Hospital and Americag:
in Putnam, W.Va.
·
,
She was also preceded in death by a brother, Marvin Bennett Jr.
Survivors include her husband, Harold L. Sturgeon; a daughter, Mrs. L.cig'h :
A. Harmon of Fort Knox , Ky.; two sons, Matthew R. Sturg~on of Charleston,''
W.Va., and MarkS. Sturgeon of Nitro; two grandsons; three sisters, Sondr-.
· Lavigne of Sandyville, W.Va., Elizabeth Hall of Mount Gay, W.Va., and P~-,
cia Wehrung of Pomeroy ; and three brothers, Samuel Bennett, Richard Ben, .
nett and Joseph R. Bennett, all of Gallipolis.
'
~ervices will be I p.m. Thursday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Poin~ .
Pleasant, with the Rev. Bobby Woods officiating. Burial will be in ttie Kir~' ·
land Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.n(
Wednesday.
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Meigs announcements ·
Speaker coming
Evangelist Gerald Harding . of
Columbus will speak at the Believers
Fellowship .Ministry at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Pastor ~argaret Robin·
son invites the public to attend.

... .

Masonic: meeting set
· •·
The Middleport Masonic Lodge· .
will meet March 5, 7:30 'p.m. at the
temple.
.. ,

Trustees to meet
The Bedford Township Trustees
will meet March II at the town hall, ·
7p.m.
·

You've worked hard all of your
life to build a comfortable nest
egg - now learn how to help
protect it while you enjoy
your retirement.
If you're retired and concerned about the safety of your
nest egg- come and join us for an informative seminar.
Find out ways to help beat the three biggest threats to
your next egg, as well as ways to:
• increase your income potential and
cut back on your taxes
• make your nest egg last longer

••
••

• reduce your investment risk

.

A Seminar Entitled:

"Do You Have the Right
Mix for your Nest Egg?"
KRIS JAENICKE
SENIOR ·REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT

'

Tbis free seminar will be held
MARCH 5, 1996 at 5:00 P~ "

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SENIOR CmZENS CENTER of MEIG~ COUNTY
MULBERRY HEIGHTs- POMEROY, OH

Middleport Council

bers. .

Junior William "Sy" Seyfried, 67, Lynchburg, Va., died Frifiay, Feb. I~
1996 in Lynchburg General Hospital .
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Born Feb. 5, 1929 in Middleport, the son of William George 8J!C) Mildre4
Eichinger Seyfried, he was-retired from the Lynchburg Wholesale Floral Corp:
A 1946 graduate of Pomeroy High School, he received the Danforth Foun•
dation Award. He served as a p)loto interpreter in the U.S. Air Force in 1948;
52. He graduated summa cum laude from Ohio University in 1957. with 4
bachelor's degree in agriculture, majoring in floriculture.
He · taugh!
floral design at Ohio University, where he received an honorary member•
ship in the Horticultural Club, and served on desigR panels in Ohio and Vir~
ginia, where he worked in the retail florist business.
.
He was a member of American Legion Post 16, Marshall Lodge 39 AF
&amp;AM, where he served as Worshipful Master in 1978, and as chaplain iii
1984. He was a member of Royal Arch Chapter 10, the Order of the Gold:,
· en Key, where he served as Excellent Preceptor and Prior. In 1989, he selectc
ed a 33rd Degree Mason.
Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, Maxine Smith Seyfriedi
two daughters, Janet (Lee) Hawkins, and Sandra S. Thornsbury; four grand-:
.
children; and a brother, Robert E. Seyfried.
Services were held Monday, Feb. 19, 1996 in the Memorial Christian
Church, with the 'Rev. Virgil Knipp and the Rev. L. Carlton Lyon officiating. Entombment was in the Fort Hill Memorial Park, with Masonic rites.
, •
Arrangements were by the Whitten Funeral Home; Lynchburg.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Memorial Christian Churcb,
615 Perrymont Ave., Lynchburg, Va. 24502; or the Ageless Wonders, c/o Erm~
Style~, Rt. 4, Rustburg; Va. 24588.
.
'·

Featured Guest Speaker

Discharges Feb. 26 -Mrs. Terry Timmons and daughter, Sheila
Ross, Vi~ent Dabo, Helen Lewis.
Mrs. Christopher Freeman and
daughter, Chris Neece, Teawana
McCaulla. ·
Blrt" - Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Russell, son, Jackson.
(i'bbl~ed .with permission)

(ConUnued from Page 1)
In other matters, coundl:
• hoard from .Warren Calawav,
owner o( the·comer ~off of General Hartinger .boule~ aDd Pearl
S~t. questioning' ~ sidewalk C4YCin along Hlninger Boulevard.
• approved a ~ond reading on
division of a cross-alley Qff ot: Fifth .
Street l)ear the Mi4dlcport Church of
Christ betWeen the adjoining property's owners.
.
•.
Council set their ne~t regular
meeting f()f. Monday, March II at
7:30p.m.•. in village council cham-

..•

J. W. 'Sy' Seyfri~d

Dances to be held
Round and square dances, with
clogging included, will be held this
weekend with music by Out of the.
Blue. Friday night, a dance will be
held at the Rutland Civic Centet. On ·
Saturday night, a dance will be held
at the Tuppers Plains VFW building.
(Julia Houdashell is Meigs Both dances will be held from 8 to II
County •s· economic development p.m. Jim Brown will be the caller at
the Tuppers Plains dance. Callers are
director.)
welcome at th~ Ruiland dance:

EMS units log 23 calls

Dean Whittington, 31, Pomeroy, wanted on a bench warrant for escaping
the Middleport Jail in late 1995, was captured bY Meigs County Sheriffs
deputies and canine units Monday night after a chase through a wooded area
Units of the Meigs County.Emerthe village of Pomeroy.
gency Medical Service recorded 23
Whittington was reported to be at the Beth Gloeckner residence on Mulcalls for assistance between Saturday
berry Avenue, and fled into the Breezy Heights area near the Pomeroy water
and Monday including four transfer
tower as deputies arrived at the residence to detain him, according to Shercalls. Units responding included:
iff James Soulsby.
MIDDLEPORT
Deputy Steve Heater and Calypso of the sheriffs canine unit tracked Whit·
9:44 a.m. , Saturday, Overbrook
tington through the wooded area, capturing him as he hid behind a tree on · Nursing Center, Arthur Scholderer,
the ridge which overlooks the Meigs County License Bureau, Soulsby statVeterans Memorial Hospital;
ed . .
10:47 a.m. Sunday, South Second
Gloeckner was questioned and released by authorities. Whittington was
Avenue,
Ann L. Davis, Holzer Medjailed on the outstanding bench waqant in the Meigs County Jail. Other
ical
Center;
charges could be pending in the case, Soulsby said.
3: II p.m. Sunday, OBNC, Stella
Smith, Pleasant Valley-Hospital;
6:48p.m. Sunday, Clifton, W.Va.,
A 17-year old Pomeroy youth was cited in a Friday two-car accident on
Lora
Anderson, treated at the scene;
West Main Street, and not a 60-year old Pomeroy women as reported in the
4:38
p.m. Monday, Art Lewis
Feb. 2S edition of the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Street,
James
Casto, VMH;
According to police reports, Nathan Snow, 17, Pomeroy was cited for fail 5:09p.m.
Monday,
Village Manor
ure to yjeld, after the 1988 Cadillac Seville, owned by the Freedom Road
Apartments,
Joshua
Pherigo,
HMC.
Foundation of Alhany, he was driving was struck by a 1990 Ford Fiesta, driPOMEROY
·
ven by Orsie Norris, 60, Pomeroy.
2:30 p.m.,Saturday, volunteer fire
Snow stopped in traffic after leaving Pomeroy Exxon in an attempt to tum
department
and squad, motor vehicle
into the eastbound lane. As Snow was stopped, he was struck in the front
accident
on
State Route 143, Dennis
end by NQITis. Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Rought said this mornilJg.
Hoffman,
VMH,
Michael Lewis and
Snow and two passengers, 17 year-old Kim Crites, and 18 year-old Gary
Dianne
Proctor,
refused
treatment.
Cantebury were not injured in the ~cident. Norris was transported by the
I
:46
a.m.
Monday,
Mulberry
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
·
.
treated and released.
Damage to the front of Snow's vehicle was light, while modemte damage
was reported on the drivers side of the Norris vehicle. ·
Vetenns Memorial
Monday admissions - Marie
I
Roy, Racine.
The
Sen~el .1 '...--~O!!!!!!!~O!!!!!!!""""i'
Monday discharges - none.
· Holzer ~edical Center
(IJSJ'SJD-Mt)

Hospital news

And the prize money is something wrestling. They'll
might even go after Gary Kasparov. \
else to consider. Half a million never feud, with
Does his insurance cover an event ' I
•
like that?
,
bucks were at stake. Kasparov can other computers:
I
buy himse,lf a nice little condo with . They' II
never
Personally,
I
won't
start
worrying
:
that kind of dough. What can ~p high fiv~ each
until IBM makes a !ftachine that call ~ :
Blue buy? A:' lifetime's supply of other, or slap each
duplicate
true human · thouglat. · ;
screen save~? · ·
other on the
processes.
For
example; \hei:C~s. 91)1; :. 1
Wbert it comes. to competition, behin". Computability
to
think
. about anything
computers have a long way to go ers will never trot
exce~t
what
it
is
ybu're
supposed to·
before they become anywhere ·Dear onto a field, slam
be
thmkmg
about.
Many's
the lime, ·
human. Belore a match, computel)l dunk a basketball,
facing a deadline, I fi~d myself star- : !'
.
never growl across the table, ""our or hit one into the
head is coming off, buddy!" After a stands. (On the bright side, comput· 1ng at my momtor, trymg to come up.match, they don't whine if ihey've ers will never get into a tussle with with something to say aboul Bosnia, " I
·lost, gloat if they've won, or pour the NCAA or enter a rehab pro- and thinking instead about going to :
champagne on teammatt!s' heads in gram.)
. a movie. Could a computer do this? :-. l
If computers starr generatill(l . lbcn there's our al)ility to hold a ~
the locket room. Computen don't
· their own code, however, all ·this grudge and get the blues, not to
have locker rooms.
Computers don 'I have a. fire in could change. 1bey could make mention our enormous capacity for :· ;
the belly. They don_'t cl!ew to~co, cyborss with the ability .to play 10 self-delusion ~nd procrastination. If · I
or knOck dirt fi;om their clea)s. tliey games of chess simultaneously in scientists ever come up wil~ the arti- ·; :
never throw tantrums, argue with a their heads, while effonldsly pitch- licial' intelligenCe logarithms .that •. I.
referee, kiiee an opponent in the ing a no-hiuer. and throwil!g perfect allow compusers to do somethins as · I
groin, take,steroids, or blow a !Qss to passes to receivers with ·hang times simple as loaf, we 'humans equid
calculated to the oanos~on'd. ·
the stands.
. .
indeed ~ doomed ·•• if computers .·
. Even then I wouldn't ·worry too can get off their fat duffs. Ions , ,
. lbcy don't issue ·statements to
reporter; or,get trophiCs. They don't much, until. the cybOrgs decide that enough to doom us.
• 1
., I
have niassive thil!hs. ·They .don't their efforts are wasted on mortals
(To
'I'ICIIw
a
compllln..
nl'
l
tlt'
-rvr
.;
1
like
us.
If
that
happens
..
we'll
be
huddle. ~y don't endorse running
Ian.._.._
IIIW&amp;I&amp;tkt,
cell
1-tCJO.
''
;
shoes. They'll never need knee knee deep in Arnold Schwarzenegget'$ coming at liS from theJ uture IINJUCK or Wlfll Duclt'a Bl'l8ltl,
surgery.
;,
·
401 BI'OIId .St., NaVIdl City, CA ,
Computen ·may master cheas or trying to stop other· killer robots
8t.ott111 Ia uyndlast· •·. ·
Cbinese checkers, but never strip. from taking out adolescent computer ld
for Neilllplflll' ...... • .
.
ricer, freeze, ~- or. professional whizzes with floppy haircuts. Tbey -prfll Alaocllltloft.
/

.

. Question: How many times have
you heard the sayi"g, "If you fail to
.~ plan , you plan to fail"? ·
Answer: More than likely, just as
many times as it has proven to be a
profound·statement in your life.
I have been told that Meigs County is where Hocking County was severlll years ago as far as tourism is concerned. This is not bad considering
that Hocking County has developed
into an area that attracted 36,663
tourists to its welcome center during ·
1994, then during 1995, 50,311
tourists passed through, which is an
increase of 37 percent and of course
the net income of local assqciated
tourist businesses has increased
accordingly.
Besides, this they have drawn in
new investments in restaurants, gas
stations, antique and craft malls,
hotels, department stores, etc.
Tourism dollars totaling $21.2
million were generated last year.
The Call 1-~00-HOCKING number
has tallied 1,500 calls per month and
increased by 30 percent from 1994 to
1995.Now what you need to keep in
mind is that people g11 to Hocking
County to see Old Man's Cave (a
cave - not a river) and they also
offer .II campgrounds, 65 shops, 45 ·
cabins, 22 bed and- breakfasts and a
total of nine motels.
Thursday may he even colder
We have 57 miles of Ohio River
than Wednesday, with the m~rcury shoreline (water skiing, fishing, boatstruggling to get into the·upper teens ing, boat races, stemwheelers, etc.),
in the north 81)d the low 20s in the Forked Run State Park, two bed and
. s~.
•
breakfasts, the Meigs" Motel, greenThe record-high temperature for houses and tomato farms , The Ohio
this date at the Columbus weather River Bear Co., a museum, historic
~tation was 65 degrees in 1896 while churches and the oldest courthouse in
the record low was .II below zero in the state of Ohio.
1963. Sunset tonight will be at 6:20.
The list goes on, but we will nev· p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:07 er see this money that can be brought
a.m.
in· if we do not plan for development
Weather fOI'eCalll:
of them into user-friendly attractions
Tonight...Showers and thunder- for tourists.
storms likely... Mainly before midI have .also been told that we,
night over the west. A few ·stortns being Meigs County, are also where
may he severe. Turning colder with Hocking Counry was neany 20 years
lows from around 30 northwest to ago as far as industriaVeconomic
near 40 southeast.
development is concerned. This, too,
is not an obstacle that we cannot
o•erc!JIIIe if we do/plan something
now! You are responsible for what
tomorrow is.
ll)anager Kenneth Wiggins who reimThat is why I have encouraged our
bursed the general fund $11,000 for dormant Community Improvement
an earlier cash advance to the liner Corporation to revive itself and
conirot and recycling office;
become ready to take advantage of
• Paid weekly bills of monies and opportunities that will be
$210,806.29, consisting of 157 available through House Bill 440,
entrjes.
sponsored by our state representative,
Present were Hoffman, Howard, John Carey, for the location of specHartenbach and Clerk,Gioria Kloes. ulative buildings in the distressed
\.
cpuntjes.
.
In retrospect, we would not be in
a position to revive the CIC if it were
not for the forethought of (&gt;Ur county commissioners and chamber o(

\lit--late winter thaw vani.shes
:Sy The Allc»eleted

Computers don't have locker rooms. .

:The

. ..

ana requires.
Parents m'ust ask themselves:
Would I rather have my child get
tested for a se~ually transmitted dis- .
ease without my knowledge. or
would I prefer the disease to fester?
Would I rather have my dauehter t:et
birth control without my knowledge,
or would I rather she get pregnant?
Would I r~ther my son have ¥cess
to resources that would help him
kick a drug habit, or would I prefer
him io continue to take drugs in
secrecy?
.Obviously, these are choices
between very disturbing evils. And
in the best-case scenarios, kids will
' trust their parents enough to talk to
thel!l if they get into trouble. But this
trust must be built by the parents
themselves. 1bc government can 't
do it for them. .
.
S1111h Eekel II 1 1J11dlelllld
. writer for NIWipiiPif En~~rp!lrill
Alloclatlon. Sind ~"*"• to
tha author In C... of till• _.,..
par or lind hlr 1-111111 at llfllu. maol.com.
· ·

By JUUA HOUDASHELT

\from region on Wednesday

By TONY SNOW
surrendering their pay to sl1pport it. Every day, .
Creators Syndicate
Congress passes new laws -- new curbs on their
MANCHESTER, N.H. ·- Bob Dole tumbled freedom -· robbing them of their dignity and
into The Valley of Flat Braipwaves the day before sense .of destiny.
·
the New Hampshire primary.
Buchanan has'come swaggering mito the scene
The one-time GOP presidential front-runner like a playground bully, promising to whack the
was touring an electronics plant in Rochester, large, impersonal forces that hurt the little guy. He
N.H .. when he blurted out a Confession. "We did- doesn't promise a program, he yows vengeance n't plan it this way: We didn't think that jobs and -swift, sweet and sure.
trade and what makes America work would
A Buchanan rally is a high-tech tent meeting.
become a big issue in the last few days of this He calls audiences " friends ," refers to the
campaign.:•
·
nation's capital as "Washinnon" and trembles
Dole, like most Republican Party elders, want- · with rage when an out-of-work mechanic asks for
ed to run an issue-free campaign · iii 1996. The 1;0mebody to explain how and why the job6 went
idea was tll put pesky topics --abortion, Medicare, away. The Buchanan Beatitudes not only cast
· Social Security, immigration, quotas, school blessings on .the meek, they also promise to introchoice and welfare refonri -· "off the table" in duce bigwigs to the virtue of humility.
order to avoid undue controversy on the way to' a
This performance leaves Dole and Alexander
showdown ·with Bill Clinton.
agog. Dole·has wasted his entire campaign mumBut then came Buchanan, who tossed the bling about the balanced budget and blowing
unspeakable matters back on the table, saying, chances to get reformists on his side. He snubbed
"Deal with it."
U.S. Term Limits, which offered its help. Ditto fo~
GOP establishmentarians like Dole and Lamar the National Right to Work Committee. In trying
Alexander reacted predictably: They assumed the to stamp out Steve Forbes' flat-In plan, he even
fetal position, called Buchanan names --and lost. rejected the handiwork of his own In-reform
Now the talk in GOP circles turns to the ques- commission.
tion of how to stop Buchanan. lbc·short answer is ·
Ale~ander hasn't done much better. He
to winnow the field down to two candidates and reprised Gary Hart's empty mantra about "new
let Buchanan have his 25 percent to 30 peicent. ideas" while dressing up like· Monty Python's
But the better reply is. to learn from the guy.
lumberjack •• as if a shin change constituted an
Pat Buchanan has vaulted to the top of the intellectual breakthrough. To make things worse,
GOP field becaljse he understands that something so,rie people now suspect that his slogan,
truly profound is going on in American public "Alexander Beats Clin!on," refers to his ability to
life. People have had it with suffcicating govern- wheedle more money out of his old pals than
ment and messianic politicos. They know the wei- Hillary Rodham Clintorl could from hers.
fare state no longer works, and they're tired of
Buchanan's breakthrough ironically helps two

.oaadUni tor. puli·ncatiOn · ot..).~~se:rh~::t. :::~:.
sc•
. ~lectle"
~ette.rs ~~rch 1.~ .. · .· · ;:-Deew;11~d:~~~:;~.~!.
Daily,~
~~"8 ~~arch
Jlf!:IIW'Y . · a~~.
tnunan
·

ing heat from Mom ,and Dad.
In my holnetown several years
ago, a IS-year-old boy was brutally
murdered by a killer ·who still
remains at large. When police questioned his friends, who were supposed to have met him that night, the
kids were reluctant to give the police
the infortnation they so vitall)' needed. Were they accomplices in the
murder? No. Were they afraid of
retaliation by the killer? No. The
kids were afraid to assist the police
investigation because they didn't
want their parents to know they
were drinking beer that night. 'They
could not see how this petty offense.
was insignificant in such a life-anddeath situation.
And then there is the case of
Rebecca Bell, the Indiana teen-ager
who died froin complications crealed from a botched illegal abortion.
She dic!n't want her parents to know
that .she was pregnant, so she risked
her life rather than ask for parental
consent for an abortion, which Indi.,

Dole: 'We didn't plan it thi_s

~aoclatld Praaa ·. ·
.
today is Tuesd•y, feb. 27, the 58th day of 1996. There are 308 days left
in the year.
On Feb. 27, 1933, Germany's parliament building, the Reichstag, caught
Recently, human Gary Kasparov
firi The Nazis, blaming the Communists, used the fire as a pretut for sus- whomped computer Deep Blue in
pending civilliber!ies.
the mail vs. machine chess match of
()n this dat~:
·
the century. 'stiH, some say it's only
In 180 I, ·the District of Columbia was placed under the jurisdiction of a matter of • time before humans
congress.
·
make a computer able to checkmate
In .1807, pQCt Heliry Wadsworth Longfell~w was bol'll in Portland, every grand master ,within a 40-mile
.
.
,.
radius. Hoard , your pawns, .folks.
· Maine. ·
, .. ·· . ·
·In 1861, in Warsaw, Russian trOops fired on a crowCJ protesting Russian Head for the shelter.
rule over Poland; five l)larehers were killed.
Not being a chess player, I'm not .
• In 1890, boxen Danny Need~ and .Patsy Kerrigan fought I00 roun~s sure how alannCd 'I should be. After
in San Francisco before the match WI!S declared a draw, after more than s1~ all, howeyer "smart" DCep lllue is.
and a half hQun,
. it was still programmed, by humans.
In 1922. 'the U.S: Supreme Court unanimously upheld the 19th Amend- The chess match 61ill pitched human
ment to the Constitution that guaranteed the rigbt of women to vote.
against human (or team of humans):
In .1939, the Supreme Court outlawed sit-down strilces.
The only ditfcence. was that one
.
In 1960. the U.S. Olympic hockey team defoalell the Soviets, three goals side had state-of-the-art proecssors
··_. to two at tile Winter Games in Squaw Valley, Cllif•.(1be U.S. team .wen.! on to help it. In other times, this would
· ' ... _ ld --..t..t )
·
·
· have been called cheating; in the
to WJ.n u» go """"', •.
,
'""·,
'dered resean:h•
·
•
• •
. ·
.,.,._ II S CORSI
'

By

MICH.

.

'

l

VVedDMday; Feb.~
AccuWe~ fOJeeast for lblytirile conditions and higli

should kids have?
The Daily Sentiitel How m~c·h - privacy.
.
.
'Estti!JUsnd in 1948

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Re·Eiect

J ET
HOWARD
Y01r CO..nty
Co11111issloner
Pd. for by the C81Kidale

Come and bring a friend! Seating is limited, so please call
us today to reserve your place:
KEBLER BUSINESS SERVICES AT (614) ~Z-7270
Attendees will also receive a FREE copy of Kemper's popular
"Nest
Protection Kit." which includes brochures that have ..been
reviewed and approved by 1bc National Cou11Cil on The Agina,lnc. '·
(NCOA). Prospectuses for several invesiment
·
. companies will be available.

Eu

,

.;

.,

KARL KIBLER II, REOISTIRED REPRUINfA11VE '
IIIMttiN oiiiNd lhr I Ugh
'
H. D. VMt lmill!lnllllllh hi 0 lno.
Gil!. 1.11 Ccllineo llvd., T1llnl Floor, . . . . TIC .,._
12141111-1•1
u h

we

' .

1., jl '

,'

.··-...'.·

�•

The Daily Sentinel

:,Sports
.,

Febi'UIIry 27, 1888

.

.

·-

...Rio to host CedarvUie in Great Lakes Regional· quarterfinals
. : The University of Rio Gran'cie
beJini iiS quest for a second con. · secutive trip to the NAIA National
•.. 'lbumUQCnt against a familiar foe.
. • The Rcdmen and Cedarville Col: · lege wiU loclc horns for the thUd time
this $eason Thursday night in the
quartafinai!QIInd of the Great Lakes
Regional. Rio Grande enters iourna.· ment play as the fourth seed in the
pre&amp;t Lakes Region. Cedlll'V!IIe is
. -die fifth seed.
. · . The Redmen (21-11) and Yellow
Jackets ( IS-13) split the season
..series this year with each club win' . liina big on tlieir home Ooor. The
. •Redmen bourn:ed Cedarville 95-79 at
•Lyne Center on January II. Shawn

Snydet led the Redmen that night
with 23 points and nine rebounds.
The Yellow Jackets returned the
favor two weeks ago. beating Rio
Grande 103-86 in Cedarville. Jeff
Bradley was the hot man for the
home side with 26 points.
These two squads met in the
Semifinals of the Great Lakes
Regional last year. The Rednien
won that contest II S-Ill.
In the regional final, Rio Grande
knocked out Transylvania 89-79.
That win earned the Redmen a
spot in the NAIA National Tournament in·Tulsa, Oklahoma.
It was the fourth trip to the
NAIA's grand buffet of hoops for the

Redmen under coach John
Lawhorn's guidance and the fifth for
Rio Grande overall. ~vious trips to
the national tourney came in -1954
(with Bevo Francis and crew), 1985,
1987 and 1991.
Rio Grande's defense of the Great
Lakes Regional crown will begin at
8 p.m. on Thursday at Lyne Center.
General admission tickeiS are $5
each and student tickets are $2 each.
No passes are available for NAIA
playoff games. For more information; call245-7213.
The game will be broadcast live
on WKOV (~1 7 FM) beginning at
7:40p.m. ·
As for the rest of the Greai Lakes

Rio Grande women to ta

I

ln a rematch of the 1995 Great
... Lakes Regional semifinal, the Uni: yersity of Rio Grande's women's
, "1-sJcethall team will host West Vir.: Jinia State College Thursday
: . evening at Lyne Center.
· · The Redwomen completed the
, ·1995,96regularseasonwitha 19-13
,.record. They closed the season win. ,aing three of their final five games.
In last year's meeting, the Redwomen scorohed West Virginia State
:.. ~9- 70 at Ly'le Center. Rio Grande

h

then advanced to the Great Lakes
Regional final, but was stopped in a
bid for a second consecutive trip to
the NAIA National Tournament by
Central State.
West Virginia State _enterS the second season on the heels of a 2-22
1995-96 regular season. The Lady
Jackets finished 11-17 last year.
Thursday's game is slated to tip·
off at 6 p.m. Adult tickets are $5
apiece while student tickets are $2
e;~ch . No passes are available for

Region, four teams will take pan in
a play-in roond on Tuesday night.
Brescia College (Ky.) (13·16) and
Sue Bennett CoJiege (Ky.) (7-23)
square off in one game while Central
State University (8-.19) and the University of Michigan-Dearborn ( 1220) meet in the other play-in contest.
The winner of the Brescia/Sue
Bennett game will face top-seeded
West VirJinia State College (16-10)
on Th11rsday. The &lt;:;entral
State/Michigan-Dearborn winner
will take on the University of Find·
lay (20-8). Findlay is seeded second
in the region.
Number three seed Transylvania
University (20-9) hosts sixth seeded

Spalding University (Ky.) 0·23) o~ .
Thursday night to round out the
quarterfinal pairings.

Great Lakes
Regional
Tournament
· 'l)lesday'• quallften ,
(7) U. of Michigan-Dearborn (1220) v. (10) Central State University
(8-19)·
(8) Bre10cia College (13-16) v. (9)
Sue aeMett College (7·23)

OHSAA Dlvlllon II Districts
• O.U. Conv~lon Center, Athena

,_

.£ ::.: I

(1&amp;.10) v. Brescia/Sue Bennett winner
(2) Univeisity of Findlay (:m-8) v.
Michigan:Dearborn/Centr'al State
winner
(3) ·Transylvania University (209) v. (6) Spalding University (7-23)
(4) Unlvenlty of Rio Graade
(:Zl·ll) v. (5) Cedarville College (1513)

1:11

games. For more
245-7213.
'
The Redwomen/West Virginia
Sta~ game will be broadcast live on
WMPO (92.1 FM) beginning at.5:40
p.m.
A Redwomen win against the
Lady Jackets sets up another rematch
for Rio Grande. The Redwomen
would make a second trip to Lexington. Jl;entucky to face nuinber two
seed Transylvania University on Sat·
urday, March 2. Rio Grande fell to

Transylvania earlier this season.
'The remainder of the Great Lakes
Region quarterfinal round has
Columbia Union College (Md.) facing Spalding University (Ky.) on
Tuesday night. The winner of that
game will visit top seed Central State
University on Saturday .rternoon.
The Great Lakes Regional final
will be played on Tuesday, March 5
on the home coun of tlie highest
remaining seed.

'

•
~4-'s quarterfinals
(5) Columbia Union College

(Md.) at (4) Spalding University
(Ky.)
'lllunday 's quarterfinals
(6) West Virginia State College at

Saturday'l HmiiiDab
· Home coun df highest remaining
seeds

..

:Texas women make . first
. rop ·2S appearance of year

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By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
AP Sports Writer
1Cxas was running out of time to
maintain its string of yearly appearances in The Associated Press
;women's basketball poll. Thanks to a
~Jig victpry in front of a big crowd,
dull string is still intact. .
: With just two polls remaining,
:rexas made its first Top 25 appear~ce of lhe season on Monday. The
Longhorns grabbed the No. 25 spot
W now have been ranked at least
""'~e in each of the 20 years The AP
,..,_11 has existed.
.
110
~ ; ·Tennessee is the only other school
~th dult distinction.
• CLouisiana Tech led the poll for the
fl!c:ond straight week and the 12th
litne overall this season. Texas was
llie only newcomer, and the Long·
bQrns literally came from nowhere to
IRak into the poll.
:. Last wee~. Texas did nQt receive
• aingle vote. But an attention-grab~ng 76-60 upset of Texas Tech.
iccOmplished before a lively crowd
~f 14,115 in Austin, Texas, swung
.onough votes from national media
j.ne1 1.0 get the Longhorns (17-7)
iulbd
'·· ,".Our crowd support has just been
~ omena!,.. Texas :coach Jody
·
i said. "'The l!ond between the
''
lllld this team has been incredi·
' ~ TheY've really supporte(l our
'They supported us last year
n ~weren't winning." .
~ in her :?,Oth seasOn at Texas, .
~still winces at the thought of
~~ ~•. when the Lonljhdms finiilllid.l2•t6·forher first losing sea.pi: Injw:ies were a flctor and so was
ltc.team.'~·.yoil!h: CQn~adt ~~~~ up
wia&amp; 12 different slarting hncups,
: "••We bad no chell)islry last vear.
t:..didli't Mve IDY offensive punch.
We Jwhept ayilla iD filld soniething

was 4-5 in early January, although all
fi¥e losses were to nationally ranked
teams - florida •. Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Stanford and Old Dominion.
"It took us a while to play past last
year," Conradt said. "The schedule
didn't help us because we were try·
ing to get it together against some of
the best teams in the country.
"Then we e,ame to our conference
schedule and it was like a new begind·
ning. Once we got there, we starte
turning lhings around.1"
· 12- 1 1n
· the s outhwestern
11exas Is
Conaerence
•
d
an has won 13 of 15
games since a 98-61 loss at Old
· · And m
· stark contrast to
Dommlon.
last season, Conradt has used only
four different starting lineups.
··
Junior guard Danielle Viglione,
the leading scorer with a 13.4 average, has started every game. Junior
forward Arnie Smith has started all 23 .
games she has played and senior forward Erica Routt has started all but

...

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1117

Tut.
....,.
lt11

Saturday's aemiiiDab
Columbia Union/Spalding winner
at (I) Central Swe University
R1o Grancle/W. Va. State winner
at (2) Transylvania University

-

."""'
...

Rqlonalllaal
'lbesday, March 5
· Home court of highest remaining

game," Donovan said. "The game points, 18ofwhichwerescoredinthe
was over at the half for the most part. . first half.
Veney hit six 3-pointers, including
We're a lot better now than we were
a month ago."
five in the first half. Carlton King
The score was 65-24 at the half added 17 points with nine rebounds
when Marshall was 22 of34 from the for Marshall, Jason Williams had 13
flOor to the Eagles'? of 16. The Herd points and John Brannen scored 12.
hit 10 3-pointers to justtwo for G!'QfGeorgia Southern was led by Fer·
gia Southern in the first 20 minutes, nando Daniel with 16 points. Brian
and Marshall held a 16-9 edge in Wallace added 12.
Marshall (16-10, 8-6) plays Friday
rebounding and had runs of 15-0 and
13-0.
in the Southern Conference tournaIn the second half, Marshall ment againstTenneSS'ee-Otattanooga.
outscored Geor~ia Southern 31-26.
Georgia S011thern is ineligible for a
Keith Veney led Marshall with 21 playoff posii'ion.

tw~'gl'ames. . . thi
..
m enJoymg s team a 1ot,
sm'd Conradt, the career leaderamong
women's coaches with 671 victories.
"'They're very hard working. 'Il!ey're
good people. They have.learned the
true meaning of being a team. All the
good feelings you g~t from coaching,
I've gotten from this group."
Louisiana Tech (23-1) was an
CEDARVIU.E (AP) - Walsh's
overwhelming choice for No. I, Shelton Normllft an4 Monique.Maher
receiving·30 of 40 first-place votes. of Mount Vernon Nazarene have
Georgia remained second and was beell' selected u the players of the ·
followed by Connecticut, Stanford , week in ~ Mid:Ohio Conference.
• and Tennessee in a top five that was . Norman; 11 junior.from Columbus,
unchanged from last week.
scored 26 poiDII in an 83-81 victory
Georgia (23-3') got eight first· overMaloneiniDMOCtourmiment
place votes, Connecti&lt;;ut (26-3) and semifinal played Saturday. He hit 9Stanford (22-~} each had one. . .
of-13 sho&amp;s frolil'l~ ;f!eld, including
No. 6Jowa, No. 7 Old Dooumon 4-of-6 from 3\-pollltnii,o. lltd was 4~ No. 8 Virginia each moved up of-.5 in ~ ·lbroWs. · ·
·
one spot. 'Thxas Th:h. which had a 17· .
'Mabei1 11 ~ from Wadsworth,
game winning streak broken by the aver.,Ocl'18.pllnis adcl-10 rebpu'nds
~~.". l!besald.,','Lastyear_we W,Ss to Texas •.. fell three places to : u~~I:.IdyCoupuplit.twO'games.
11!14 to ~in. on .fease -.1 they JUSI mnth. · . · ,
·
bigest ,pme C11J1C ID an 85-52
clfj't ~if. We were a pretty ·youna i Vanderbll1. Penn .State .alld J.)uke ..wia-over Malolle 111 the MOCJNAIA
~.,'e lt c 11.An4 ~ just c:Jidll'l • held their polilions from l~t wtelc at bi•,Wca JI ~when ,00 ICOJ'ed
¥d ·'...s wbll it tciC*."
· , ' tO through 12. ~climbedoaa )' Jl'llnll,
13 rebou~ and
:.Nidi~ oaa 111\ioi'; ~ season plaee to 13th
. .
' .:IIIIi!, ~, ~~. seven blocked
1
..iilf.:.•t ,...·out_'aalii:ll
lCUl '
·· ~ ~ '· 1'
~bPi~: ·
,.;. · ·
':···

a

!

Norman, Maher
MOC honorees
·

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11et

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•

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their·86-76 victory over UMass, but
they gritted it out at the end ll)ld figured it was a pretty good job consid·
ering the circumstances.
"It was tough," said Shawnta
Rogers, whose two free throws with
1.5 seconds left clinched it. "You
know everybody is going to be com·
ing after you. We're in the Top 25
now."
Xavier ( 11-13, 7-7) is caught in a
vicious cycle of inexperience. The
Musketeers start three freshmen, and
it usually shows at the end Of games.
Xavier has played three Top 25
teams at home in the last month UMass, Virginia Tech and George
Washington - and lost all three
games by a total of 13 poin&amp;s. ,
"It was like so many games,"
coach Skip Prosser sailj. "We needed a big stop, a big· rebound, and
down the stretch we couldn't stop

them. I'm tired of looking at it, and
you're tired of looking at it."
In the only other games involving
ranked teams on Monday, No. 3
Kansas beat Missouri 87-65 and No.
IS Syracuse defeated 'St. John's 92· .
19.

George Washington had a few
scary moments in the second half,
until its experience came through at
the end.
There were seven ties and 10 lead
changes, with neither team leading by
more than seven points. Xavier
opened the second half with a fourpoint spun for a 42-35 lead, but
George Washington went on a 12-1
run over five minutes to get back into
the game.
JJ. Brade broke the final tie.with
'the first of four consecutive free
·throws with 6: 16 left, and George
Washington held a slim lead the rest

Kentucky regains top spot in AP Poll
LE
OTON, Ky. - With the
regular season winding down and the
NCAA tournament approaching,
Kentucky coach Rick .Pitino isn't get·
ting caught up in his Wildcats returning to No. I.
'
"There's not too much difference
between one and two," he said Mon·
day. "The important thing in the reg·
ular season is that you try for il high
seed, and whether you're one or two
doesn't hav~ much significance."
Kentucky (24-1 ), the preseason
choice at No. I, had been second to
Massachusetts for the Minutemen's
entire nine-week run at No. I in the
AP poll.
· The Wildcats were th.e ov!'r·
.

J~

whelming choice of the national
media panel to replace UMass, which
lost its first game of the season on
Saturday. All but two of the 66 first·
place votes went to Keniucky. which
had 1,648 points.
UMass (26-1), the only team t_o
beat Kentucky, got the other two first·
place votes and 1,563 poiniS.
·
Pitino doesn't believe his players
will have trouble staying focused
despite carrying the No. I tag. Kentuclcy plays at Auburn on Tuesday
night.
"Y~ try to become a be!,ler ~
every n•ght outand execute, he said.
"You're really not looki,'ng at anything. Outside or that, we just try to
talc!~ care of the preserit tense, and not
loo.k back or 10\lk al'tead.
"H you do ihat, I think you can
take care of business the right way."
· Kentucky has won 23 consecutive

a

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_,11.., I

'Ml I . . . . .,)

--~~....

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Frl.

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1111

1-----

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games, the longest in Pitino's seven
years at the school, and the longest
since "Rupp's Runts" won 23
straight to start the season 30 years
ago en route to reaching the NCAA
title g&amp;l!le.
Kentucky held the top spot for the
two polls of the regular season until
losing 10 Massachusetts in the Great
Eight. Kansas moved in for three
weeks until losing to Temple in the
Jimmy V Classic.
Massachusetts then claimed the
top spot and held it until this· week,
the longe.st run at No. I since Duke
· was !here for the enlin: 1991-92 sea-

,...

a

...

·
'The Minuteme!l'S first loss was to
Oeo 11~ Washington ( 18-5) and it got
the Colonials into the rankings for the
first time since midway through the
1993-94 season.

son.

I t

c•11

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I -(111-ll

____
Fri.

By Tbe Associated Press
Monday's. Results

Field 75, Ravenna 63
Graham 56, Spring. Northwestern
55
River View 73, India~ Vall. 71,

Girls

RecuJar Season

r

It Csd/VIeaGiiua'IIW'

·

By The A11oclated Pr111.

career.
A.C. Green kept his streilk alive
Fjlzsimmons said he allowed
Smith, whose re.cord is 906, to play
- by the skin of his teeth.
A day after Green. had two teeth short stints as many as 10 times while
knocked out by New York's J.R. Smith nursed a-hamstring injury one
Reid, Green extended his league-high season .
conSecutive-game ~ak to 785 by
"I've seen A.C. play in games
playing 68 seconds Monday night in with a cast on when we really need·
the Phoenix Suns' 110-87 loss to the ed him to play," Fitzsimmons said. "I
Utah Jazz.
thought it was the right thing to do to
"He shouldn't lose the streak play him, even for a minule."
because someone took a cheap shot
Reid was suspended for two
at him," Phoenix coach Cotton games by the NBA and fined
Fitzsimmons said.
$10,000.
Green, listed as questionable,
"I'm sorry that it happened, but
entered the game with 6:59to play in sometime~ these things happen durthe first period, took one shot, a 3- ing the heat of a game," Reid said in
point attempt, and missed. He left the a statement.
In other NBA games, the Los
game, went !o the locker room with
5:51 to play in the first period and Angeles Lakers beat New York 114returned to his hotel.
. 96, Indianapolis beat Boston 122-119
Fitzsimmons coached the NBA in overtime and Detroit beat Sacrarecord-holder for consecutive games menlo 93-78.
Against Phoenix, Karl Malone
played, Randy Smith, for part of his

F•lil•t
A good day: when the wheela
of your aliopping can! an go In

the same direction.

'

Heard about the pancakee wllh
popcorn In lhem? Th!fy tum
over by themaelvee.

** *

In order to gpt a loan, you mu11t I
first prove you dori't need 11.

***

:a

At no time Ia freedom of
apeech more precious than
when you hit your ihumb with
hammer.

include older models of equipment
and the newer 1996 models.
Roush was recently rewarded for
his devotion to the game of golf as
well as for his knowledge of the busi·
ness end of golfing. 'The new presi·
dent of the West Virgina Golf Association, Harold Payne, appointed
Roush to the Board of Direct~· for
the WVOA. This will entail malting
association decisions, tournament
· , th
official rulings, and he1pmg •n e
direction and sponsorship of the
WVGA events.
Payne cited Roush's dedication to
golf, his donated time to the golf
course rating system with his team
members. his sponsorship of River.'fyingsitefor
11'deGolfCiubasaquali
'the.Annual West Virginia Amateur,
bis knowledge of the rules, and. his
J·u
. st "plain love of the game" as high
points .in choosing Roush forthi s
. position.

Rd.~Fw._t.,,
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•••

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•

Gaetti returns to
By TOM WITHERS
AP. Sportl Wrltar
Gary Gaetti moved across a state
and jumped to a new league to fulfill
a boyhood wish.
Orowing up in Centralia, Ill.,
Gaetti rooted for the St. Louis Cardinals. He would travel to Busch Stadium and dream of playing for his

.:Roush wins tourney in Florida :. ~~155 meters was a new person•
·: · Riverside Golf Club owner and'
:green's superintendent, .Gary Rous h,
· d'lVISIOn
· · of
:recently ·won the senior
'!he Golf Course Superintendent's
:Association of America Tournament
1Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla.
. !The tournament was played February
'5 and fj, on the Magnolia and
'Aunter's Creek Golf Courses that are
l[part of the :Walt Disney 11°If comp1elt
5ust north C?f Orlando.
1 The scoring system formulated for
~ GCSAA Senior Division was a
fied Stabelford Competition
ar 10 the PGA Jntern,tional
ed annually at Castle Pines, Col·
. Roush's total for the two days
'nf ~lay
· ·was ss
· ts 'R h
· pom · ous was
)llso in atlehdance as well u the·~nul.I PO..
· · t 11
1 t th
~equ•pmen •1 0~ '' 'e
piango&lt;;ounty Convelllion Cenier 1n
·
Orland~
, The !'&lt;J~ show has more ll)aa ~·Of!Q
displays 1n • showplace ~~ !'f
1SO,OOO ~ k
Exhibili.ons

The Knicks played without Reid
and the injured Patrick Ewing ~nd
Charles Oakley. Also out of action
was Magic Johnson, who ha.• skipPed
three of the Lalcers' last four garrles
because of a strained righl calf.
" I am really upset right now and
I'm most upset since we 're so shorthanded," Reid said. " I've let my
teammate's down."
Pacers 122, Celllcs 119, OT
At Boston, Reggie Miller scoi'ed
39 points, including the game-winning 3-pointer with six seconds ICYt
in overtime.
·
'•
The Celtics oyercame an eigbipoint deficit with two minutes lef~in
regulation to lie it on Rick Fo• 's fR:e
throws with 4.1 seconds to play.
Boston led 119-117 in overtime~
Miller ran through two screens to set
open for the game-winning 3 - poiR~er.
:

Spring training roundup

St~

beloved Cardinals . Now, nearly 18
years after becoming a major leaguer,
he will.
"It's real exciting. I'm just really
thankful for the opportunity to come
over here and be part of this," said
Gaetti, who signed a one-year, $2
million deal with St. Louis last win. ter after 15 seasons in the American

Sophomore Jessica White placed
second in
.. the 55-meter hurdles
(:09.09). White was the fourth place
finisher in the 300 meters with a time

MAC honors
hot shooters

of :45.4. That was a new pers~al
best for White.
Leslie Bales took fourih place in
the 800 meters. Her time was 2:30.4.
Lisa Uhrig set a new personal
record (:08.13) in the 55 meters.
The Rio Grande men's distance
medley relay squad almost assuredly earned a slot at the nationals over
the weekend. Their time was
10:27.2. The top 18 fastest times
qualify to run in Lincoln.
Freshman shot putter Chris Starner set a new Rio Grande record with
a heave of 50 feet, S inches. It was
also Stamer's personal high.
Teammates Jason .Casey (fourth,
38 feet. 2 inches), David Thompson

Louis Cardinals

League, the last three in Kansas City.
"This is one of the highlights of
my. life, just being a pan of the St.
Louis Cardinals scene and being
close to home."
Gaetti was chosen in the fourth
round of the 1978 free -agent draft by
the Cardinals, but turned down a
$500 signing bonus. In 1981 he

(fifth, 37 feet, 5 inches) and Jason
Fields (eighth, 33 feel) all finished
among the top 10 in the shot put.
Senior Courtney Hutchinson set a
new personal record (:06.7) while
finishing third in the 55-meter dash.
Brian Lutz also set a new personal record in the 3,000 meters with
a time of9:41 :i. Lutz finished sixth
in the evenc.
In the .300 meters. Mike Hartley
placed with a time of :38.1. Brad
Davis finished second in the 800
meters (2:04.3) while Jeremy Cline
finished fifth (2:06.4).
.
Scott Wenger took home the
I ,500 meter title (4: 14.2), while
Mark Bennett placed fourth (4:24.5).

Furniture Ca.
Will Be Closed
February 28, 1198
Far fta Funeral 01
Mrs. Barman Grata
...........................................,
ELECT

-.',,

began his career with the Minnes~
Twins, and on Sept. 20 he homered
in his first major-league at bat. :•
"I got a 2- 1 knuckleball off Charlie Hough, just yanked it down ~e
left-field line and took off runninS:. ''
Gaetti said. "When they signalled
home run it was pretty awesome."
He has since connected for 291
more homers, including a career-high
35 last season for the Royals.
·
Gactti's next contact with St.
Louis came in 1987, when he helped
lead the Twins to a seven-gawe
World .Series victory over the Cardinals.
"It was pretty ironic," the ' twO·
time All -Star said of his return lo
Busch Stadium. ' 11 used to love to t;o ·
over there and watch the games and
just he at the stadium. I always
dreamed about playing there whe~ I
was younger."
•
Instead. Gaetti, 37, spent nine fwll
seasons in Minnesota, then moved on
to California in 19? I. The Ange1i;
released · him in 1993.
•,.

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TOLEDO (AP) - Kent's Nate
Reinking and Toledo'sAngela D.;;k~· piililtiiii
have been selected as the players of
the week in the Mid-Ainerican Conference.
Reinking, a senior from Galion,
scoredacareer-high3
of-18
shooting {ro thepointson14field in the
Golden Flashes' 91· 7
t of MAC
leader Eastern Michi an. In two
Kent victories 1u1 week. he shot 65
perc~nt (19-of-29) from the field, 63
percent from 3-point range !7-of-tt)
and hit all nine of his free throws.
Drake, a junior from Grosse
Poincc. Mich., made ·~·of-22 sho&amp;s
from the fietd and t3-of-t7 tree
tlu:Pws. She had 23 points on 11-of-

.

DEBBIE WIJS
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER
Quali:l:nd,
Ca:pabfe, Denerula
. . ble
'II
r
K'

.N~
·
· NER -lns~nce Services 1

214 EASliiAIN
20 YEARS OFRCE, BOOKKEEPING
POMEROY
PUlER EXPERIENCE
992-6187
&amp; COM
,
~~ =~:m~r= ~~~
UFELONG RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY
't'.t~::=~:;:.n;e
palata while hilliaa 7-of-10
ill
Pl:ld !orbr C.ldlcllllot, Dlbllle Wltllcln, 42455 Woodl Ad., Coalvllle.Oh. 45723 L--..!!.n.~~~:C::..:.-.:S• )
a&amp;&gt;63win~~h6~~~~••1......~..........................~.............

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scored 28 points for Utah, which led
26-15 after one quaner following an
11 -4 run in the final 5:23. The Jazz
led 52-32 with 3:41 left in the first
half. and took their largest )ead, II 085, with 32 seconds to go.
John Stockton had 16 points and
II assists for Utah, including the
I I .OOOth ass is~ of his career.
Charles Barldey scored 17 points
and Danny Manning 16 for the Suns,
whose four-game winning streak was
stopped.
Lakers 114, Knidcs 96
Cedric Ceballos scored 27 points
as Los Angeles beat New York for the
first time since March 10, 1992. The
Knicks had won seven straight over
the Lalcers.
Anthony Mason led visiting New
York with 23 points. The· Knicks
trailed by 20 points early in the founh
quarter and got no closer than I2.

White, Casey among those
turning in top-five efforts

Grate
of
R. . .

IL

and he made his major-league debut
in 1989. His most productive season
was 1993, when he drove in a careerh'igh 75 runs in 139 games.
In 1994, he was sidelined by an
arthritic condition that caused
inflammation in his joints. The Reds,
uncertain about his future, releaSed
him in a cost&lt;utting move.
He signed with Milwaukee as a
free agent, and hit .273 with .12
homers and 51 RB Is in 97 games for
the Brewers in 1995.
He has a .249 career average with
59 homers and 304 RB!s in '649
games .
Berryhill, 32, under)Vent reconstructive surgery on his right elbtlw
last week was expected to miss ·lhe .
entire 1996 season. He was signedby
the Reds as ·a free agent .in November 1994, was plagued by injuries last
year and hit .183 in 34 games. %

On Rio Grande's Indoor track scene,

5

· .·

Damon Berryhill, who was injured
most of last season and reinjured his
arm the first day of spring training.
The Reds also have left-handed
hitting Eddie Taubensee, who could
platoon with Oliver.
Oliver was accompanied at a news
conference by Larkin, Rijo, Eric
Davis, Chris Sabo, Hal Morris- the
other remaining players from the
Reds' 1990 World Champion team. A
loudspeaker blared the song ''We Are
Family."
·
"We got 1990 back, Pnd they better get it done," said Reds owner
Marge Schott.
·
Rijo is trying to come back from
elbow surgery, and Davis and Sabo
are trvin~ to revive their careers after
becoming bench players with other
teams because of i'njuries.
The Reds selected Oliver in the
second round in the 1983 June draft,

Green's playing streak .barely continues:

Cle. Arts 39, Cle. Health Careers OT arfi ld H Tri' · 56 Pad 38
..
G 1e , IS. ntty ,
ua
Cle. Science 29, Cle. Jane Addams ·· · Young. Chaney 81 . Salem 67
. 27
Young. Mooney 67, W. Branch 51
TOURNAMENT
·Division Ill
·
' Division IV
Black River 56, W. Salem North·
• Crooksville 53, Wlliteoak 31 .
western 48
. .
· Latham Western 32, Franklin FurBloom-Carroll 72, L1cking Hts. 52
nace Green 31
Brookfield 53, Champ~on 42
·
Boys
· Campbell
Memonal
51,
.
,
Woodridge 39
It was a record-setting weekend
Monday s R~ults
Cin. Finneytown 72, Georgetown for the University of Rio Grande
Manella Cnr. 1v, Emmanuel Chr. 6 8
·
men's and women's track and field
: 69
Elgin 50, N. Union 36
teams. which competed at Ohio
TODivlsURNlo A MENT
Fairview Park 57, Columbia SS
Wesleyan University's indoor meet
n1
Hawken 62, Brooldyn SS
in Delaware, Ohio.
A~on Garfield 67, Wooster 45
Maplewood 54, GarrettsY111e 52
On the women's side, Tricia
Monroe Centra162, Buckeye Trail Holmes set a personal and school'
•I Alhance 56, Akron Ellet 5I
S1
•
record in the 20-pound weight throw.
•.. Brush 44, Mayfield .42
Cin.
Elder
78,
Cin.
Princeton
66
.
Oberlin
71
Chippewa
so
Holmes' toss of 40 feet, 2.5 inches
I
R ley 77 'Indian Hill 75
was also good enough to earn a spot
•I Cin. Moeller 55. Milford 43
Cin. Oak Hills 50, Fairfield 42
u'~ted
~I
SO
New
Middlein
the upcoming NAIA Indoor
1
Cin. Withrow 7), Cin. Aiken 54
· ns 0· g 48
'
Nat1'onals, a weekend meet slated 10
. H 60 U
Arl'
town p n .
Franlei m
IS. • .pper
mgton Division IV
begin Friday in Lincoln, Neb.
54 . .
G
.
Centerburg 67, Worthington Chr.
Holmes placed fourth in the shot
H1lhard 50, roveport 43
S9
put with a throw of 37 feel, I inch.
Midpark 73, Parma Hts. Holy
Danville 64, Fairbanks 48 •
Teammates Kelli Morgan (seventh,
Name 64
Fairport Harbor 43, Windham 31 36 feet), Kim Reames (ninth, 31 fee~
N. Royalton 82., Normandy 67
Fisher Cath. 61, World Harvest49 I inch), Rachael Jenkins (lOth, 30
N~on1a 68, Solon 52
Jackson-Milton 56, Calvary Chr. feet, 8 inches) and Jodie Peyton
Stow 82, Akron N. 20
49
(11th, 30 feet, I inch) all set persontecumseh 6,1. Tro,Y 59
Leetonia 49, Southern Local47, at records at Ohio Wesleyan.
_ . Xenial5, Greenvtlle SO
OT
Rachel Taylor grabbed the gold in
~II
Millersport 76, Ohio Deaf 55
the 300 meters and the 55 meters.
Coventry 77, Canton ~ath, 74,
Mineral Ridge 53, Lord~tow~ 24 Taylor's time in the 300 was 42.9
1
: 30T
.
·
Newbury (i2, Ashtabula St. John · seconds, setting both a personal
, Day. Carro1180, Day. Stebbms 66 47
record and a new Rio Grande high
;
•·
water mark. Her 7.7-1-second finish
31

n·

.'

O..Unlr.~

·Ohio high school
basketball s~ores

: 1·or a·sEP1 ·

618 EAST.f.tAIN §T.; POMEROY
OPEN . MQN~-FRI. N; $A't N
~~4 ,-

~-

--ltWI

1-IIWI

By
Dave

1

...

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-(17-1)

WI;

The Light

.

.
111~

I
............ ,0
..
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...."'"'
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of the way."
::- •
Kwame Evans' niade the pivotal
play with 32 seconds left, driving to
the hoop for a layup. T.J. Johnson
fouled him, and Evans completed the
three-point play for a 76-72 lead.
Xavier never had a chance to · tie
again.
"It's just one of those things
where you want to give yourself a
chance and hope tho~ guys wi II be
in position to help you win," Jarvis
said.
The Colonials hit five of six free
throws in the final IS seconds to
clinch their lith victory in 12 games.

***

. . . . . , ....,

--

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'

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.... ,11.. ,

.•1117
,.
1117
1:11

Do)'OU have an IRA1

.

........w,.

seed

1\a

wins. The Eagles' previous low was
three victories in the 1926-27 season,
the school's first year of basketball.
Georgia Southern played just seven
games that season.
The Eagles also broke the school
record for losses in aseason. Losers
of seven straight, the Eagles were
defeated 22 times in 1979-80 and
1980-81.
The biggest problem MorK!ay was
turnovers, with the Eagles giving the
ball away 23 times in just the first
· half.
"That was the main key of the

.XIN

...

Boys District Tourney Pairings

.

:~ :;!~~~~~!

,

OHSAA Division Ill Districts
• O.U. Convocation Center, Athens

1\iesday, Man:b 5
Horne court of highest remaining
seed

.xavier throws scare into GW before losing 81-77

·iiii!Bmmala al Georgia Southern's Jona Seay (52) and Frank Jack·
.1011 (42) dlfend. The Herd concluded regular season play wllh an
.NIY
SIS-50 victory over lha Eagles in Cam
Henderson Canter. (AP)
.
.

1N)

PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) - Joe
Oliver has returned to the Cincinnati
Reds.
The free-agent catcher signed a
one-year contract Monday for
$500,000, including incentives.
"I feel like I'm at horne," said ·
Oliver, 30, who spent parts of six seasons in Cincinnati before being
released in 1994.
"I'm glad to ~ back in Cincin·
nati, where I feel like I belong," he
said. "I'm confident that I can give
stability and a leadership quality, and
help out the pitching staff."
Barry Larlcin, the NL's MVP last
season, said that's Oliver's best asset.
·
"He can tell pitchers wbilt they
need to hear, even if it's not what they
wan.t to hear," Larkin said.
you're not afraid to throw what he
. Jose Rijo said he liked working calls," Rijo said.
with Oliver.
To make room on their 40-man
"When he puts a sign down, roster, the . Reds released catcher

OHSAA Division Ill DistrictS
• o.u. Convocation Center, Athens

.

LOOKS FOil TEAMMATE • Marshall's John Brown (40) looka for

===

Boys Di strict Tourney Pairing s

MU set for tourney play after easy victory

CINCINNATI (AP) - Most
coaches bring their teams down from
a big win by telling them to forget the
past and look ahead. Not Mike Jarvis.
After No. 24 George Washington
knocked off previously unbeaten
Massachusetts on Saturday, Jarvis
told his team to read the newspapers
accounts and revel in them. The
·ColOnials then went out and added to
their scrapbook Monday night with
an 81-77 victory over Xavier of ·
Ohio.
"I took a little different
approach," Jarvis said. "I made sure
they had every single newspaper
from New York to Cincinnati to read
so they could really start feeling good
about themselves. Right now it's
important that they know they're a
good basketball team."
The Colonials ( 19-5, 12-2 Atlantic .
10) weren't nearly as impressive as in

1...,

......... !1M)

Herd finishes 16-10 on year
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)Georgia Southern's coach Gregg
Polinsky knows a whipping when he
sees one.
And Marshall's 96-50 wi~ over
his squad Monday qualifies. In fact,
Polinksy indicated Marshall coach
Billy Donovan could have made it a
whole lot worse.
"Mercifully, Billy called off the
dogs," Polinsky said. "We really
tried hard but some of our guys aren't
as talented. We probably lllSt some
enthusiasm."
Georgia Southern (3-23, 2-12)
·matched a school record for fewest

a

Ml

(3) Unlvenity of R1o Grande

Great Lakes
Regional
Tournament

Q

Ml

on West Virginia State Thursday

NAIA

-liNt

.......

Rqlonal 1111111
Thunday '• quaJterflnals
(I) West Virgnia State College

_a
___
..
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t

-·
·
~
...... - . ,,
""'

llf

The Deily Sentinel • Page 5

Joe Oliver returns to .Reds

Pqe4

Tuesday,Febnuary27,1196

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

•

.

.

�..

•

.

Ohio

.,.,]1;:/;ila·ves book on Ben Bradlee's life .rave revieWs
Ann

LAnders

. By ANN LANDI!RS

_ Dear Readers: If you want a f.s,~inating, riveting read, I have just the
Jlook fQr you. It was written by a man
who served for four years in the
-South Pacific, worked as a cone. spondent for Newsweek in Paris, then
!Jecame top editor of The Washington
. ro.t and made it one of the most
' influential newspapers in the world,
•tie gives you the inside skinny on his

this his destiny? We don' t know what against women to the public's attento tell him. Can you give us some tion. You recently printed a letter
guidance1 •• Midwest Parents in from "~hensive in Jfouston,"
Thrmoil
who was concerned that a male
Dear Parents: A 20-year-old'male · acquaintance was harassing her. She
who has 'romantic fantasies about oth- said a restraining 'order would cost
er males is unquestionably homo- SSOO. I am concerned that this inforsexual. Counseling will not "sttaight- ml!lon ·might discourne other vic. en him around." Nor is there any tims from getting protection.
medication that will perform that
A ~estraining order obtained
magic.
through a private attorney is only one
I do recommend counseling, how- approach to the problem. A second
ever. Your son needs to talk to a pro- avenue is to obtain a protective order
fessional alxluf his feelings. He needs througll the districl attorney's office.
to know that he is not a treat, that he This is FREE to the victim. And a
is not alone and that he can have a protective order may be even better
satisfying, productive life.
than a restraining order, since the perDear Ann Landers: Thank you for petrator can be !llfCSted on criminal.
bringing stalking and . violence charges if he violates it:

friendship with 1ohn F. Kennedy, his
investigative drive that led to discovery of the Watergate scandal, his
three marriages 'and how he managed
to buy Robert Todd Lincoln's home
for $2.S million. I was sorry the book
had only 499 pages. i wanted more.
And you will, too. The tide, "A Good
Life," by Ben Bradlee. The publisher, Simon and Schuster. The price,
$27.SO ($37 in Canada).
Dear Ann Landers: Our son, 20, is
confused about his gender identity.
He told us that sin.ce higll school he
has had romantic fantasies about
guys, not. girls. He wants to see a
counselor and become straight.
Is there any psychological, psychiatric or medical help for him, oris

Ounng my yei!D in off'JCe, lluave
sponsored dozens of bills dealing
with sexuil and domestic violence
and anti-stalking legislation. I
encourage victij11S to use the
resources available to them and call
their local women's shelters for more
information.·· Debra Danburg, state
representative, Houston, Texas
Dear Debra Danburg: I appreciate
hearing hom you. The information
you have provided can be extremely
important to women who need it.
'Thanks for a valuable contribution to
my readers,
I Dear Ann ·Landers: What's your
. opiniOn of a man using a !liscount
coupon (or dinner on a first date1The
women m this office _think It's tacky.

:Social Security compared to insurance
I
l

TUESDAY
RACINE·· RACO, Thesday, 6:30
p.m. at Star Mill Park. Southern
building committee members to
speak.

publlsbed u a free aervlce to - ·
pruftt 1roupa wishing to aniiOUIICe
mftting and speelal events. The
calendar Is not designed to pl'OIIIOCe
'Utes or fund ralsi!n of any type.
Items 8ft printed u space permit.
ud wmot be IJWII'aDteed to run 1
speclflc: number of days.

POMEROY·· Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion, commander to
meet with Ladies Auxiliary, 2 p.m
Tuesday at the Legion hall, Pomef?Y·

'
Send quadonl to Ann Lande~

knife was used to cut off parks for
since the Pilgrims landed in feed until it was all uSed up. Later on,
this country, it has been a life long the corn was cut by hand and put into
~ggle for surviv,I. They came sllocks until time to husk it by hand
here, and under adverse conditions, and haul it into the crib for feed.
lllcre put to the test, and by patience Many of these things are still done by
liJICI perseverance, mastered most of some, but most have taken advantage
the things they encountered.
of the. modern way. ·
~ Down through the years, and up
I lllll only using the men of the
until the last few years, \\'hen mod· country, who grew up under extreme
QD1 machinery of all kinds has made conditions to make a living anjl proa big difference in life style, most of vide for a family. The people of the
the hard manual labor has disap- cities had problems, but not of the
~- The men of today work, and same manner. They had the problem
work hard, putting in long. hours to of finding work and earning enough
achieve the end result, but unlike to take Care of their needs. The men
their ~ounterparts, their life style has- of the country had the,same·situation,
c:!Janged,
· as jobs were hard to find, and every·
· . It used to he up at the crack of day necessities had to he purchased
dawn, hitch up the team of horses, just the same. Some of the young
i)ld off to the fields to do whatever men who did riot have a farm in the
job had to be done. Sometimes it family, would have hire out to work
miJht be plowhlg the fields for plant· tluvugh the summer to earn a little
'
·il•l• riding the disc harrow, dragging extra money.
, Stales.
I
going to close for now, after
'the spike-toothed cultivator, the drill
Most of the time, it was from day·
f!)l' sowing of different seeds, 10tne- light to dark. The hours were long touching on some of the men of yestimeS by !)and, such as the hlnd-oper· ,and the work hard; but they made it, teryears, ·along with the solving of
Mod corn planter, or sown by hand and were rewarded for their labor.
mmy of their everyday problelt)$. We
Tdik:li wu:Cilled broldcasting. ·
Saine sought work in building, may come back with a future article
~ . Maybe i~ 11\ight he ridins the timber cutting, sawmill . work, or of more of the old times and people.
.,ow.i!ll macbil.e, cutting fields of anything they could find. The condi· It does a penolt good to go beck in
._.,. fOr winld' feedina. ridinJ the lion exists tnday in much larger time and see how this country was ·
. 'horac-clnwn r.tte, separating the · numben. In a lot of cases, all mem· fqunded, and how it grew to 11&lt;: the
'roVta with the pi!Cll fOrk and making bers of the family have too work to . great:country it is today. Problems
,...U db to.be loaded on the hay make ends·meet. ·
existed in both times, but the ones
w.p and halaled 10 tbe bam, and It was then as todif. if the will is . who have' the desire to live and forge
J!id in tho hay IDO'\' for Winter f~. there, great thinas can be done. It ~can reach their objective. See
.J;r J111Y1te ltiCW jn tho'lieldi in llqe may not be the way you would want you all later as liine wit[ continue to
.liacks'ulllil ~ 011 WI-- old hay . it, but you can make the belt of the pas!.
-~ Ev~r

am

Beat of the Bend ..

...

1

••

.

'

!

'

.

- ~22

contest ia the lixth plde. 1)o_conleSt will end on Mlfi:b 18.
.· Tbepie is •u.n.ony - People .
IJIIl. PI~• 'I"; Neilbbora with
•. NIIUfe. ", .. ·"
.
.
11ie Meip swm illvillll a11 •
...

"
\

• t

.

"

r

.

I

Public NOtice

lultmlt,.,....._ot

'

=Ia

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

"I'

...,.......,.or ,,.u1t10n

·di111Pft""'"

.,

..
'I

Sports Funll

Scores Point
Spreads and much
more.
1·900-na-o1oo
Ext. 7830 $2.99 per
min. Must be 18 yrs
Touch-Tone Phone
Req.

LowR....)

WICIS

HAULING
.

LimestOne,
Gravel, $and,
'
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

.

·-

·•

~ ··

FREE
discarded

Pick~up

•

washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
arid any metal
materials.
Call 992-4025
between s a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon. -Set.

MISUIDERSfOODI

UYEII

Nillan Beadquarten .
Lowest Prites

UmMtone, Send, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

PAIIIISiuaG N1S$AN INC.
18Z7 M11111ac1a ""·

IIlii. Pba.. l304l 485-15fl

.......!To~u~r~"':!::~~~

ZIIOt
.. , ·I·~======~'!"~~

992-3954 or 985·3418

a-cunm
CONSTRlKTION CO.

Overhe8cl &amp;
underground
_, .... uUIItlea &amp; Hghtlng
Bucket, Digger

,,.
.,

Truck Services

Se,y!ce Po_le
$2.50.per ft.
1-614-371-9101

,,

A·•r•n

Manufactured Housing

Condlllclnen, Heat Pumpe,
Fu.._. AH
In 11ock

','

.

992-3894

· At~lg Bend
Health 1c Fitness
87 Mill St.,

Middleport

2J2Imll

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge Sports
Entertainment linen
1-ooo-ns-o1oo

"Supplie• for aU your pel needa"

Touch Tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

B. Jolane Rupe/Owner

..~\· ··--

New Five Star

No waiting direct
!Mnu.
1-t00-~100

axt. 7823
suepormln.
lluat ba 1S yn.

R11oonabte
bt-·E•parllnc:ecl'
C.H Wayne Ntfl · .

102-4405

...

ForfrH Eatlmatea

.,.

••••,•.

--

.
'i
'

Mo,Atllt Hofi18,Jieatlng a. Cooling

s•hlnau. 0111o a .-...Wfllnll

SPORT'S CAR

Frae1~72-M7

. . . . up
·

ttl 1411

.

BALES OF

I'

HAY ·Eoi

I'

'

SALE.

''

CALL

614·949·2512

:J§

""'~ ·
j

'

•'

.

.

.

'

'

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

P.O. Box 587

992·2825

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
.We dig basementa, put In septic
systems, lay linea, underground bores.
For Free estimate cBII 949-2512
JULUONABI I JLU'a
11Wn

--

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

DIWXI

~ew

Kick Boxing

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

TI!J"Ing
. At Bl_g Bend

(No Sunday Calls)

Health !f. Fitness

614·992·7643
CllllmWI

Children &amp;_AduH
Cl111"

Help Burned Out VIctims

cau 992-3967

Ptuo 50 Cents Polt.ge
Send $2.25 Monoy Onlt&lt; to
110l1120, Grubbs, Ark. 72431

tor Details .

.... .

..

J.D. ·l)rilling Company

.• 11!111

I

'

ladle lbaeK Dealer

····- ·-· ·- --

0nc1 auto perta.
614-992-4060

•

lleetronles
. .

New At

FJI1Cieq of hard to

Foster Parents Needed in Kent~ and
Ohiolll YDCA will pay ,Lip to $40.00 per day
for keeping a cl1il~ In your hol'!'le· If you are
interested In ope.nlng your home to ·
a child, please caN 1-800-331·9989.

We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX n:t-5861
108

ROUND

lo•eiJ Agai•

Touclt tone phone requlled.
sirve-U &amp;1H45 8134

M'i~~Hto

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

Polly or Chr1a

.i,

Room' Addltlono .
Skiing, Rootllljj, PltiOI

11

H$1 .

,,,
......
SAWMILL

32124 "'PPY Hollow R~.
Middleport, Ohio 45780 ·
Danny &amp; Peggy Bricldes
61~742-2193

Kniltes, Toola, Furniture, Tractor
Equipmen~ 8 14-379·21 ~ Wanted To Buy : Standing Timber,
An; Amount, 61&lt;4·388-9906.
,

EMPL OYM ENT
SERVI CES

Sockl $1.75 par pelr
11

11 o Help wan1ed
S-WANTED·S
. 10 people

wno

need 1o loae

we;ght &amp; make monet', to try new
patented weigh t·loss product

(614) 992-41244

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
SerVices • Steel'Seles &amp; Fabrication • Repair Weldng
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamental
Steps -Stairs, Ralllngs, Pallo Fumilure, Fireplace
items, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol other stuff\!

992·5042 or 742-1120

SoHH18 145 8434

To Buy : Sea !fling lrGn

Skillets, Cloth, Pockel Walthe,o,

304· 773-5083 241'rslday.

Guarantee~ .

No Exp. Neces-

1 Days 407 · 875 -2022 •
Ext0526H06.
- ..

home atmoaphor11.
R1110nable RaiH ·

~ng

: Wanted

•.. •

sary.

Room • board lor
aenlora • dl..bled.
State licensed.
Lota of TLC. FamHy

Updated Every 15 Min.

Kllellln A Balli

House, 6,4·245-5887

ly

........1
12 Rutlond

Ill

R-llng

Wanted To Buy : Little likes To}s.
Sand Box , Picnic ·Table, Play

$200 -$500 Wkly. Asoembte !lit·
ducts, No Se!lirig. Paid Oirecl, Ful-

Middleport~

LVagasPick

Hou11 Repair 6

11111mo.

271 North 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH. 45760
AKC Reg. Puppies, Km-, Birds lo Mora
Experienced Groomers • Flnaqclng Avallab'-

Must be 18yrs. ·

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

for Details.

To Buy : Junk Autos Wilh
Without Molors. Call Larty
lively. 614-388-9303.
.

,_,,reclhw·r•~v,..•••

Ext. 6057

$2.99 per min. ·

s,.rts Uttd I

Call 992~3967

Opening Feb. ht .

$2.99/mln. 111+

IENNEnS

l

. , , .,.,.,.

·••rvalll

. Ext. 2074
PAOCALLCO.
1102 154-7420

&amp;03 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio
(Special Price on Aluminum cans
from March 1 thru 21)·
Bring In minimum of 50 IN. of aluminum c:ana to
r.glaler for Bunn Coffoemakor to bo glwn IW&amp;y.
Drftlng wtn bo hold on March 29th.

Ex1HIIo•3082 '

·olale!l 1floothto ·date. lfiirofllll~ .......
.,......_. tl · Ollie llo)rlolll'
111
, dlreoto ·
·c.. hotlon' ,S?41.04; • w1111111 a •...., 11111t1
final eatlon tnoy Ita ·-.,::: ... lio . . . .&gt;
•liP.••IIid
to
the ~:n;r::: of;., . ,
anvlron~M!'tal ltoonl of'
Ttlpp••· ...... ~......'1
N¥Jaw (QII) II¥ o ~ W*rlllattlat
. , ,. - ~..,'
'Ito ••• a party_.to a
.proooa•ln\ before .tha . · Rn•rvlllo, 01t ..._ 0.0
1112111....
.
"~
dlfoator ttv ling
wllhln • - - .,
.. . Tllla final Hlllill ·
tho final aotloil. Punuanl to PfoDadod ·tty 1proHol4·
Code 111111!1 ,Millon Olldllap=*
1741.01, a final a~loll.U.:"
IIIUIIII,
dllllfllli, Itt ulan PraJnL
MMI2.1ng, rav••· or II) 17; 1'1C
1•NJUU11 a peiil!'it IIIRII, . . .

1·900-414-2100

•"'':" MANLEY'S , ,::-•
,.,.,,. _RJCYCLING CENTER '11111

Call
-9oH56•2600

for

B..ni · o :

COIYIISAnOI
OlE ·01 ·OlE
$3.111 per min.
Muat Be11 Yr11 •

· · - . 111&amp;1• · · · -

'llrl/1-

Using tltt Cmlli/iMJ
Ius

,\ .

..u.n::

.

rental rlttl ..

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

... -

.,

tlla Ufl lty fling' 011 OPf Ill;
wllllln • !lara Of loeuan
..f ,'the nnal
1
•
oppnh .,._ ba lllod

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

1

mon~ly

'

....

•final AotiOM: ... aclcrw fllwlla, lSI ' l11t l
ioo,'
of tiM dlrtOilli wllloh an 'ltrhC. · ' Roon1
q&gt;luMIIuo, 01111 4111,1. '
"" ~•..,.""" 'rt . , . ~··.

'*"' ..... •

(619) 645-843!.-

12 Ga•t•
Fadoly Choke Oily

IlL;•rppropoucf
ptalod

=-:

..............
s.r..u

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUN~ 1PM·

'

,Millin, IIIIIY

ln~tlrllfiiiiOntal

IAIIENIION SIIIGUS)II
lloMeniWDatlll
SIIJplyaJI
1·900-656-2600 Ext.
3836, 2.99,. .... +
11 yn., .......
sllglesilatlllllm!!
.

614·992~3470

.

J

jlroHdod

Sei'(·U (619)645- 8434

Dilly, WMi&lt;ly •

-NtltillllfiiPr.(Lime~

Public~
'
lor pultllo IIIHtlngo, oncl or variance whlol! lo not

adlulllootlon hlorlng
.requoott mootbe Mftl to:
Hoorll'!l Clerk, Ohio
:1nvlron1110ntaL. ProtectiOn
Al!nor. P.O. ' loti ~04,,,
· CGI.s1t1bW, Oh!o ~~ . . .
~ho!lo: 11........,:11.,.

·Septic Tanka C-l11ntd • POftlbll Tolllta Rented.

,

•

.Pu!ll!c H!Jtlce

,_

Chester, Ohio

'•

'

requoot • ~ -tlrll
.J'Igardl::.\ dran actlono.
common • or public
nMOIIng
mult tt.
oubnllllad
• ctayo ot
'nollce of lht !lratt action.
"Propool4 Aotlono• are
wr1ttan - " t a :of lho
tnlont With
'NilpiiGt to tho IHU.IIGO,
Mod ltloatlon '
l'ftOIItloll of~,: ·d11111',
-.uon,·or jwr,laal or a
then •orvt"*V o .
tho l.. uanoe, donlt , =IDtllU,_.V. . . Dl
·
en oom1110nt1 and
·ilrlnnan,pwallo;._.., · ro~ualila fer li pultllo
Vlf'IMIIM. ot +W t10...1; Mooting razardlng I
'a nd the ibroval •~ protiOOid aot on~may Ill
lit jltanl 11!11 ..b. . . . alhln dayUf
a poe floatlona. . • Draft -IIOIIee of tho prop-d
children or'ibia . . in ~ip Coun· Aotlono• aro written H':'!n· An adiUclloa,:rn
•
ty to panici~. This intludel ......... or .., .,...,.., lllillilt . . , ... ......
pe
4P
II I • IIJIIoil.lf I , t I bJI
of
lnvlrt::••nlal•
lioth pubtlc and priVIIe tebooli and
,'NIIIUNI . If . o..-10,11 II
.. ,rooalvod by ...,_ OIPA
'thole wbo'do IMJtreceive Y(C!Id of, =·Ill~
..... ,.;;•tar
10 ...
lhli ceialllllllelllred to b:illai tho . llollollllf, '............. .., • ·w1111111 • _ . el lion 101
=UDJAII, ........ - . .of lho propoHII. aotiOn.
o~. 992-664?. . , •
tat]. ,..... I ill _ , ' . .llkn IIOUAJI.IIIIf't,UJIII
. 1

.-Mejgs SW.CD conte,~ts to begin Friday

Nlllt*: 102·2741

Dirt• Sand

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER

=

--

'

,.lnieatone • Gravel·

HOWARD E. FUll .

'"'*

Pomeroy • lllclcllePort
Dlya: 541·1124 (locll)

I

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

•'

~.... . .

PlaJC N011CI!
The
f.o!Jowlng
·oppllaiiiDM Md/Or WltW
·complaint.
rooolWtl
and tho following. draft,
,propoood, or final aotlono
loouod, br. tho Ohio
;lnvlroniiiOntal ProtaotiOn
(OEJ~ LMt Wool!.
.
ONI" ln.oiiHII .t ill
ado~.l'l• MOdiiiDIIIOn, ~

·81t111ug SUn. lhru Feb.
28 Sr. au- 8pllc...
Fee for dly .,...,
$1.00 per poi'IOfl to

R. L HOLLON

• i

POMEROY, OHIO
Tntah Removal· Commen:lal or Roaldentlal

Owntn:

'

(114$102-5531
/114i 102-2753

Syndicate, !777 W. CeJt
Ivy Blvd., Suite 700,IMA..,-.,
Calli. 90045
C~ten

TAX lOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR THE
FIRST HALF 1995 COLLECTION GF tHE
REAL ESTATE TAXES -AND ALSO
FOR DELIN NT TAlES.
.FINAL CLOSING DATE :WILL IE
MARCH 4, 1996.

Public NoUoe

CUll'S CAl CO.
. Harry • Donlll Clan

FREE.ESnMATES

Harrison remembers men of . older times
8y OLEN HARRISON

TAll

.

•Addition•
•Haw ·a.ragoa
•Remodeling
•Siding
•Roofing
•Painting

I

Emergency HEAP applications·stm being accepted
The Gallia-Meigs Community
To he eligible for the program,
Action Agency is continuing to both the i.ncome guidelines and the ·
.ccept Emergency HEAP applica- emergency requirements must be
lions for the 1995-96 heating season met. Household income is defined as
th{ough March 15.
·gross income of all -household mem•
· ''~ snow and cold temperatures bers, ·except earned income of
have continued in the area through- dependent minors under 18 years of
oot most of February. The. cost of ·-age. _
.
home heating fuel continue&amp; to escaAllow~ble annual mcome for a
late creating a hardship on the work- one-person household is · $11,205;
ing poor as well as households on two people, S15,045; three people,
1xed incomes.
. $18,885; four people, $22,72S; five
; The Emergency HEAP program peopl~. $26,565. Add $3,840 for
can provide financial assistance to each addtbonal members. The prolow income households that are gram allows a one-time payment of
threatened with disconnection of up to $17S per heating season to
their heating source, have already . restore or maintain 'home heating
had service disconnected, or have services.
less than a ten day supply of bulk ·
Households with heat supplied
tUel.

·H-~a

'

------Community calend·ar -..,...---. The Community Calendar Is

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

. c_.....,.,IIII,Uta·,

protection for their working years.
About 9S percent of the people age
by Bob Hoeflich
65 and over at the beginning of 1996
were receiving benefits or would be
able to receive benefits when they or
their spouses retire. About 98 ~rcent
•
of the children under 18 and their
While many volunteers are walk- : As it turned out, Tony had t4
mothers or fathers (with · children ing their neighbQrhoods in a house- 1undergo an amputation just below die
under 16) can count.on monthly cash to-house campaign to raise funds for knee of the right leg on Ian. 31 4t
benefits if a working parent dies. the Meigs Division of the American Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkert
About four out of five men and Heart Association, there seems to he burg, W.Va.
·
•
women aged 21-64 can count on , a problem in Pomeroy.
T011y was able to be up and walltmonthly cash benefits in the event the . Actually, there is a volunteer ing on l!J1 artificial limb in two day$
wage earner suffers a severe and pro- shortage in Pomeroy, accotding to following the surgery, and thell threj:
longed disability.
Mr5. Debbie Hapton'stall, a member day~. later was returned tQ Weat Hill!;
Even these social benefits can be of the local heart board.
for physical therapy. ·
:;
quantified as a benefit to you to the
Areas in which volunteers are
Tony is now bact home and has~
extent you are relieved of the burden needed to help with the fund drive therapist from home health servic~
of supporting your parents. It's some- include Lincoln Hill and High Street; is visiting him on a regular basis. His
thing to think about.
Village Green Apartments; Oak, family is de.lighted to have him bac{
Cave and Locust streets; Mulberry home. After a tough winter in mod
Heights; Wright Street; Condor ways ,than ~ne,. Tony is looking fm;l
Street; Nye Avenue; Kerr Street; ward to spnng.
, . ,
Upper East and Main Street; ~ulHe thanks all of you for yol\r
berry Avenue and Beech Street; and cards, visits, sllppon and prayetl.
Union
'Avenue and Union Terrace.
These things go a longway- as you
RUTLAND -- Rutland Fire
PORTLAND •• The Lebanon
As
you
can
see,
areas
in
which
well know.
·
:
Township
Trustees,
7
p.m.
Thursday,
Department Ladies Auxiliary, Tuesworkers are needed ~ really small'
:
township building.
day, S p.m. fire station.
so if you live in one ofthem, perhaps,
A neighbor - using the tenjl
POMEROY-- Pomeroy Group of it would be convenient for you to vol- broadly ~ will be appearing on t"
THURSDAY
LETART FALLS -- Southern Alcoholics Anonymous, 7 p.m. unteer to do the fund drive on. your Ohio Lottery's Cash Explosion Show
Local Building Cominittee meeting Thursday, in the basement of Sacred street or in your neighborhood. if you in two weeks. She is Margaret All'{
Thursday, 7 p.m. at Letart Falls Ele· Heart Catholic Church, Mulberry ~an help in these areas or in any part son of Wilkesville. Nice to havf
of.them, please call Mrs. Haptonstall someone hom a relatively close Ioc.,
mentary School. All local residents Ave., Pomeroy.
at 992-6078. •
tion invol~ed !n the game and rna~.
encouraged to attend.
Normally, the heart campaign runs she be a btg wmner.
•
through February, but because of the
.
bad winter weather and the need for ·
And, a friend tells me that Mrs.
a few more volunteers, it is being Margaret Blaettnar, long-time
extended until the middle of Marcb. Pomeroy resident, is one of those
by PUCO regulated utilities must be pie~ Monday through Thursday
Volunteers who have been able to Leap Year birthday people. So Mrs.
enrolled in the Percentage of Income from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and I to 3 work are asked to complete their Blaettnar will be chalking up a birthPlan (PIP) to be eligible for emer· p.m. at the CAA central office in routes as soon as possible and tum day on Thursday, Feb. 29. And even
gency benefits.
·
Cheshire, the Gallia County CAA their kits into their captains, or drop with the fact that she only has a birthHollie visits can be arranged to Outreach Office at 863 Porter Rd., them bylo Jane Frymyer, local heart day every four years, I'm still not
assist the elderly, disabled or home· Porter, and the Meigs County Out· group treasurer, at the ~eigs Coun- talking numhen. After all, you're
bound that are unable to get inio one reach Office at 393SO Union Ave., ty Board of Elections Office on Mul- pretiy good with math.
of the Community Action Agency Pomeroy. No applications ·will be berry Avenue in Pomeroy;
intake ~ites.
.
· taken on Friday. Regular HEAP
Is it just me? I'm getting a bit
Al~if anyone wou)d like tQ
Applications are also available applications ' can also be filed make a nation to the drive, but has foundered with the television comfor the Regular HEAP program, through the Senior Citizen Cente~
not bee 't:ontaCted, please feel free to mercial of those two wonlen who
which _is additional heating assisFor further information, the tCfe- mail your donations to Frymyer at ( got the job'' but don't know what tq
tance ·of a non-emergency nature. phone number for the Chesliire 42199 Gilkey Ridge Road, Shade, o;lo about the telephones. It's high time:
The income gui&lt;telines are the same office is 367•7341 Galli a County, Ohio 45776.
someone helped them. Do keep smil-:
for both programs. The deadline for 992-5605 Meigs County, or the Gal·
ing.
·
Regular HEAP applications is lia County CAA Outreach office at
And here's an update on Tony
March 30.
388-8232, and the Meigs County Jones of Tuppers Plains.
Both Emergency HEAP and Reg- · Ou~h Office at 992-~S. .
ular HEAP applications can be comAsststance can also be obtamed
l!y calling the HEAP toll free number: 1-800-282-0880. Hearing
impaired applicants with a telecommunications device, for the. deaf
(TDD) can call toll free : 1-800-6861557.
.
situation and live. Great men came
out of the families of old, such as
doctors, lawyers, preachers, politi·
cians and many more. They made
their name stand out the same as
today.
.
,
Take lhe country doctor for
instance. It was not unusual for him
to be called out anytime of the night
to visit a sick patient. He didn't have
the car to jump into until much later.
It was hitch up the horse and buggy
and make the trip in any kind of
.
.
weather.
,·
Teachers had the same problem, as
.
they did their teaching in the old oneroom school with the big cast iron
stove for heat iii winter. They all
made it and many of thei~ pupils rose
'
to fame with the old fashioned education of reading, writing and arithmetic, even some went as far as
becoming President of the United

pare Social Security. with private
insurance are thinking about retirement income. ·It's true that if you
invested the Social Security tax for ·a
strictly retirement annuity, you would
probably do well. However, J!lany
forget that Social Security benefits
are increased annually . to ~eep up
with the cost of living; and they CO)I·
tinue for life. These features are not
found in most private policies.
As a social insurance program,
Soeial Security is primarily concerned with whether it is meeting the
needs of society as a whole: To this
extent, Social Security gets high
marks. It provides a base of income
that permits workers to build their
retirement income ancf a valuable
package of disability and survivors

.........,..,••

. ... .. . '·.

.;

diiCitiN&amp;

.

and two children is equivalent io a
· 'Athena ·Office
$295,000 life insurance policy. The
A friend who knows I work for average monthly payment would be
~ial SCcurity asked me how Social
$1,350. The importance of these
. Security compares with other insur- benefits is underscored by the fact
. ance programs. Specifically, he was that younger Americans face rough, '~nJ if he could get a better ly a one in five chance of dying
deal 'if he were able to use the mon- before reaching age 6S.
The disability protection for work. ey he puts into Social Security to purers
unable to work is equivalent to a
. -ehlse private coverage.
$203,000
disability policy for . an
• I pointed out . that comparing
Social Security to private insurance is average income earner with a spouse
·'not a fair comparison. This is because and two children. The average
·110 private insurance company can monthly payment to such a family
: 1natch the Social Security coverage would be about $1,100. Benefits
:for the price. The protection includes continue until the youngest unmar' Rtireiilent, survivors, and disability ried child reaches 18. A 20-year-old
worker stands a one in three chance
~nsur111ce coverage.
The value of Social Security sur- of becoming disabled before age 65.
. vivors benefits for an average wage
·However, mo5t people who com·earner who dies and leaves a spouse
•

j

Our boss says that he sees nothi.
wrong ·wilh it and that a woman w&amp;
would complain is 1 snob.
'
Mosffemales I know would like
to feel that we are worth full price.
What do you thin.k? •• Kentucky
De8r Kentucky: For a flfSt da~.
I'd pass on the discount unless tit:
fellow is unemployed or a struggliiiJ
college student. On the outside
chance that he is only curious about
the reaction, I'd give him anothct
chance.
·
.,

I

By Ed Peteraon, lllllfl898'

The Dally Sentinel• P9

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio ·

J. E.

OWNER

9411-2512

UCINE HYDUULIC REP~IR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
CHEAPER RAT.ES

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
.$20.00/HI.

·AnN: Pairtt Pleasam' (qcJ

;

~s ta l Posiuons. Pe,manent lu.._

t~me tor clerk/sorters. Fu~l Ben~­
tu~. For eum , appl tca tton arid

liNGO
Raci••A••ka•

LetiH

Post602

EVERT SUIDIT

hon opel at 4:30 , ...
Lucky Bell $200.00 and
Ralsn $50.00 ncb
wk. Pay according to
the number ol pllyen.
Keep ed lor FREE card

sal~ry

AVON ! All Areas
Spears, 304-675-1t29.

005

.'
t

Sh.rl'Y

Able Avon RepresenlaliY&amp;s
needed. Earn money fo r Christ ·
mas bills at home/at work. 1.·800·
992-6356 or 304-882-2645, lnf.

Rep.

..,

APPOINTMENT SECRETARY
TELEMARKETER
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

113111 mo.

ANNOUN CEMENTS

1nfo call · 708-26t· 1839 EIA.

3670, 8am 10 8pm

,

4 People To Set Appts. For lo cAl
0 1sf. Pay &amp; Bonus Ciill For l nh~j .

.... ew.

61..C -441 -11H5,

�.
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Tueadlly, February 27,1116

The Dally Sentinel• Page~ .;
.;

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:::
..
----------------------------------------------------J:•
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BIUDQIIC

'-CftOU

PHILLIP

ALDER

1 r11

~Ia awing

42Mre.

ftD Jl t

-

7 GliWIIIft
12

liltiiMWilf

441om
41-tlta

C':t;'

13 Uglttly
14.

•lnt

Whirlpool Wuhar White,
Dutro S85; Kenmore Dryer
Kenmore Washer Heavv
$125: Maylag Dryor St25 :
Washer Heavy Duty While $150 ;
Kenmore WasHer H ea~~ty Du ty,
Wh ite, like New, $205, 1 Year Block, brick, sewer plpea, wind·
Wa,ranty: Kenmore 30 Inch ~ lee· owa, lintels. etc. Claude Wlntera,
Inc Range S95: frlgldai"' 30 Inch Rio Grande, OH Call 814·245·
'
electric Range $.125: 30 Inch 5121 .
Columbu• Gas Range, $150 ;
M.atal Roofing And Siding Gal·
Whirlpool Refrigerator Wh ite
vanizod;
Galvalume And Palmed,
Frost Free $125: Ho1J101nl Ra~lg­
61.4-245-5183.
erator Froat r::re• Advacodo
Green Nlct $175; Almond Wilt·
REPO BUILDINGS
lnghouH Froal Free Refriglir&amp;IO(
factory
Hu 2 All Steel QuonMI
13115; Admiral Rohlgorotor Fmat
Free $350: 1 Ytar Warranty On Bulldlng_o For Immediate ~1 . (11
C.o mprenor Like New, Skagga 40xeo. "Never Erected. Will Take
Bolarw:e Owed. CsiiQill;
Appliance•. 78 Vine StrH~ Galli·
. 1100-511·5843
polio. 81l·448-7398, 1-800·4119·
34119.

· No• · takiilg new atudents kir be·
g_uiner •l"d intermediate piano
lessons. Call Nancy Ill 14·VV2·

690!11

0ualifi~
· d, •xperienced ; CNAI
HHA. ~ o lo care lor !he elderly
in their orne, plaaae call 61-'·
992·2048.
Nur~~ry

s un Valley

School .
earn-5:30pm Ago&amp;
2-K. Young School Ago During
Suf!YT1or. 3 Dayl per Weol&lt; 14Jnlmum614--57.
Chilltcar~ 11-F

I '

BabyaJn~ng&gt; in

I

i

re"terenc11. Ciote to schools.
304-675'?~-

wouldn~ look 10 awkweni.•

. Wil l do light hauling ,
1035.
.

61~ ·992 ·

•

Buslntu

IIIOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

.

reeommenite d'lll you do bull·
ne11 wilh "'pte ygu know, and
NOT 16 ttiid mooay lhJough tha

,I

lhe ollorll\g.

'

Mobile Homes
for Sile

mail .untl! you have Investigated
·

New--GroWing Eapresao Cappuccino Bar On Rio Grandt College
CampUS Call 614·245·5682, 614·

Wi-5588

Schull Factory Rebate: Rec:eiva
$1,500 Rebate With Any New
Schult Home Ordered Before
March 20. 1rille. Slngla Or Multi
Section. French City Homes, Inc:
Galipoli' OH 614-448 8340. • .

350 . Lots &amp; Acreage
Building oltes wilh road lrontago,
back of New Haven, rural water,
and Hnanclng aVIIllablt. 304-A2·

281111.

•

Five acrea,

itrator, near

Racint;l18,000 can finance wilh

hoiI-n, 61 4·949-lll25.

One Aero Flat Property In Galli·
poil, Porfocl Fof Molile Homo Or
Doulilt Wide SIO,OOO With $600
Down On Blacklop Road, OWner
Financing, 814-448-8692.

Ai .... -18lldvtllllin0 In
ll1jo now roror llllllbleciiO
!hoi1tl!l
Fednl
lid
,of
_Fair~
_ _ lllgol
I

,I
I

to.,.._
P""""'""'·
11m11111on or dlla1n*latton
"any

-10

Wanted Approximate

level
lot .Prefer. Aheadyo Developed
Within S. 7 Milea, Gallipolil, No

Realricliona, 84 448 11034.

biNd on race, color, rtllglon,
-

4~

Apartments ·
for Rent

2 bedroom apartment, $350 a

Opponunlty
I

~

f :NANC IAL

210

my~

"I wlah my name were Shorter

-IIIIIM or nsilonal
Oflgln. or 01'1/
01'1/ ouch pooloiiiiCO,

~-lion Of IJiortmlnatton.•

RE NTALS

.t10 Hoilan for Rent

month, utilities included, 1200 d&amp;poliL no petS. 614·!1112·5724.

2bdrm." apta .. total electric , ap·
ptiances furnished, laundry room
lacililiea, clolt 10 tchool In town.
Applications available at: Village
GrHn Apt1. 148 or coN 614·11112·
3711.EOH:
3 bedroom 1par1m1nt or ren1 In

Pamaroy, no poll, 814-11112·5856.

35 Walt 2 Beroom Brick TownhouMa, I 281 Jackson Pike, Go I·
llpoU1, ~c:i'oaa From , Cinema,
$285/Mo. + Dapolil, Ronlal lnlor·
mation, 614 ~446 · 0008, Or Write.
P.O. Be• 994, Gallipolis, OH
45631 .

Rtlarences, Oepoait, S3601Mo..
614-ol46-8235, 8iH46.0571.

2bedroom houH, 221a 112 Lincoln llle. ~75-1301.

REAL fS TATE

4 Bedroom Houaa, 1 Balh, 2 Car
Garage; On ·211, $400 Daposit,
114·258·1388 Mon •
3 8edJOOf11 Hou11 I Bath, 2 Ar.r· S400!No.',
Fri,
Ahor 5 P.M.
'
e, 145 SA Z18, 81 4-446-&lt;11138.
Nice clean 2 bedraa&lt;n, In I'Omor·
33 WIIIWicl&lt; Ad.. brick lrunL fll, br rent or 1. . . with option to
room, 2batl:l, large living room, buy,
HUD accepled, $300 par
large family room, fireplace. kitch·
en, ulllily room, double garage. month willi dtpoliL ·no pots, 614·
61111-7244.
304-875-ol803.
3br., LR, DR, Fam, I 112 both, Small houoa. doen. no pets. 1200
deposit, $250 mon1h, 304· 773·
6yrs. old. $107,000. Many ..
- prime neighborhood. 304·875· 9192 or 304-71'3-5183. &gt;
4046.
ThfM bedroom house in Cheater,
Country living 2 Acres, 3 Bed· refeJtnces, depoail, l*aae, no
rooms, 1 Bath, Eat· In .Kitchen, pets, 614-887-6205.
CA. 8tH4B .8832
very nice home In Pomeroy for
Mnt "614-992-5858.

31 o Ho111111 for Sale

n.,

3 Bodmom1, Wetzgal Stroo~ Po·
mero~. WID, S3501Mo. Deposit.
513-822.0294 . .

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12xfl0 2 Bedroom Parrially Fur·
niahad, In Bulaville Area. 814 -

367-0544.

.

Buf Or aell. Riverine Antlqutl,
1124 E. Moi~ Street, on Rl. 124,
~mtroy . Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 1 AKC Golden Relrlover, malo,
a.m. .10 8~ p.m.. SUnday 1:00 to $125. 304-1.73-5804.
8:00
814·1111:Z.25a8.
I AKC Choco1111 Lobi, male and

;;;;;==.;.;.;==:;:.._;.__
540 Mlsc:elleneous
Merchandise

15' wire lh&amp;lh satellite dish, com plele with decoders, asking price
$400 080, 8 I...948·3330.
Baby bed , swing, stroller, car

seaL high Chair. 304-675-4546.
BAHAMA CRUISE I 5 dayl/4
nights, Underbooked l Must Sell!
$279/c;Ouple. L imilecl tickets . 1·
800·41.11·4151 ext 6589 Mon· Sat

lomale
; AKC Cockor
AKC Schipporkl'l,
maloSpaniol;
OOid lo·
male: AKC Shalland shHpdog.
Call614·892·6244 days or 614·
742·28~ after' 7pm..
AKC Labrador pupptU, aholl
and wgrmed, parenta on aite, ref·
erencea on prtvioua litter, $200,
614·992-3879 after 5:30pm.

Furniahad 2 Rooms &amp; Bath,
Downstairs, Utilities Furnished,
Ciean, No Petl, Rerer,nce, De·
po~IRequired,6t4 ·446-t519. '

,

Furnished Ellicltincy All UlililiU
Paid, Shere Bath, $145/Mo., 919
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 814·

4411-3845.•

Graciaus living. 1 and 2 bedroom
a_par1men1s at Village Manor and
Riverside Apanmenta in Middle·
pori. From $232-$355 . Call 614·
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
tunitiea.

Modern 1 Bedroom
814-4411-0380.

Apar~ment ,

N. 3rd, Middleport 2bedroom, lur·
niahed. Deposit &amp; references.
304-882-2566.

~H)I85.

· SOUTH
•QJ10982
•A Q
•&amp; ·2
69 6 5

,.
o'

.

11M Harley DIVIdiOn, 813 CUI· .':
... - ·· $5.200. 304:773-5\55 :.
or 30&lt;- 773.flt07 a....Spoft. •
•'
•

'Q'

,_,_,

Ill •

•

~~

.'

South

.. 'r

I•
3•

OI,.WNEA.Iftr:.

Twolilack and whito f;ctd hail·
era: one hertforCI hiller: one
black Angua bull and one hartlord bull; cow W call; 814-892·
7456.

Never wet, i-ound balta nay far

Receiver With Romolo, Uka Now
S!iO, 614-448-1155.

AKC registered Cocker Spaniel

PEANUTS

..... 304-882·28n . ..

1l11N65 CIIAN6E .. IN TilE OLD DA'{S '{OU NEVER WOOI.D
AA'IE SEEN A PIR:ATE WAITIN6 FOR TilE SCIIOOL 8\.15 ..

Round &amp; oqu11re balM ol 80% a"
lalla hay, 614·31111-91119.

Wanted To Buy: large Round
Bales Of ,Hay &amp; Squa.ro BaiOI,

81H«&lt;·1052.

TRAN SPORTATION

.

- - iiiiiil .

-

~

ttet-LO... ·· ,.,.,_"! •.f4ELLO? • · :t KN0¥1

IT'$ A GAT
I;
T_,.AT KfePI C}.i,LING :_ (\'
ANI:&gt; NOT SAYIN' A
~
.,o,P. :t (,AN . ~I
tfM~ r~e
1 •

·//,.

~v,

t

•

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PV,J.IN6/

Q

THE BORN LOSER ..

-----.,-~---

JET

....
Home 1••,

'1870 Winnttiago Molar
Fully Co'rnllhed~ Roof, Air, 4..0 .r
Doiga Engine, 35,000 Milelo E•·
celonl Cdridilion, 614o258·1202.
~.

Musical
Instruments

lazyboy Rocker Racllner Like
New, VInyl Covorlng $150, 614 · Console Piaho Whirney By Kim 258·1638.
ball Dark Afnerican Walnut E• CIIenl Condition. 614-ol46·9835.
like New Nordictrack Pro $250,
Jason 400X Telaacope With Komball piano. good cond.: $100.
.
Stand $50, 75 Gallon Tall Rtc· 304-675-5411.
tangular Flah Tank With Filter
$125, Little Tlke PlayhouH $50,
16 Ft Flborglau Searo 3-Soater
Rowboat$500614--448· 11199.

chargerl, $1800, 614-1182·3194.

'! ~

ITUPIP

570

590

11193 Dutchman 2111., air, oopa· ·::.
rata bod &amp; bath, loadod, axe.
cond., 304-87~1aa.Spm.
~~ ·

$300 ,ot will -

61 4-843-5392.

w..t

~

DID '1'()g ~~

IJAAT'5 ~ WJ.....

..

~ ~ f'I.A'(

DI~IWE.Y ~

lnlarior Wood

Stains and· Flniah 20% ott ;egular

33~=--c:!m.
30 Foollall

2=01'

1 Sprlngmo.
3 SmeHchltd

37~

4 Part of HOMES
5 FI._IIWekY

31 ·11e- IIIIII'Y

• Dtooped

10 Actor Wallaal\ , '
11 Cauatlc

7 Florldl
track • -

s

::C.!t'
.
•
:
-

Scoltlall-()aettc

. .b1tanoe

eus....-

Pass

.

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R\,. l F S
1

22 er-n .
23 Begin IIIIi'

24--~

;
.

~~·tool :
32 Rtld'rllan
n r ·n
34Finftl

35u.da

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•• •

31
43 U.-tltly
41 Mllcl
47 Actrwa

.' .

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50 Ootth
Electll llf
ct.;rd
52

='*Winge . .

ar.Yr..:
54 Commit a
faux pea

""~
?'

rn:.u~ !li\CK 1!lrn7

Be warned that some deals are diffi·
cult, but I think Donner has the best
writing style of any bridge author,
molding the words into delightful sen·
tences. This alone makes the book a
pleasure to read.
Today's deal is one of Donner's easi·
est. Against four spades, West leads the
diamond ace: three, queen, two. West
continues with the diamond king and
anolher diamond. You ruff, play a lnlmp
to dummy's king. which wins, and a
trump to your queen, West signaling ·
with the heart nine. East takes your
next spade play with the ace &lt;West dis·
carding the heart threel and switches to
the heart 10. Should you finesse the
queen or go up with the ace and play for
the clubs to break 3-3•
Maybe you played the heart queen,
thinking that a finesse is 50-50 whereas
a 3·3 break will occur only about one·
third of the time. True, but bridge logic
is more important than percentages.
'East's diamond queen at trick one
showed the jack: If West held the heart
king, he would have underled his dia·
mond king at trick two. East would have
switched to a heart at trick three, defeating the contract. As West didn' de·
fend like that, he cannot have the heart
killg.
.
So, take the heart finesse, draw
East's last trump and claim.

...

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Cempoe

....

. . . ..

•

--.,...,..

..

Cellbntr~~ lfflllfl Cfllalldffam ......... br ~wnou~.-. .
~IW--1or
T_.ou: X-CI

' II V F

TMIIIIFJFPII

DZFJ

XJLZFP

OFCII

WHPLMS

W HS DH F . '

PVFS

CDJ

NDJSP

L'JF

SFFSP

LHS

M·F It

Y L J J

-

IIFLJP

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TFFUVI'J

PBD¥F.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Before you can win a game, you have

- (Pitlaburgh Steelara coach) Chuck Noll.

t,p not 1oee •.•

·

.
....·.....
• •

T A RG F

~'
I P I I ...

1-rR...;Ar.W;;,.;;.E_Fr--il .

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L 0 u RHy
~,..;~6::....:;:.1~~:..:. :;177 :.,1,--f
.

.

.

.

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O Complete

1110 chuckle Quo1od

11 bv l illing in the missing words
L......L-.L.-1-.J-;,;_L....J you develop lrom !I•P No. 3 bel-.

'i• :;

.

A philosophy professor
posted this 'sign in his office:
"Be Bold In What You Stand
For And Careful What You - ...

...~ .

.....J

..

1
lETTERS

lor u• dirt bike,

I

SCflAM.lETS ANSWERS

FARM SUPPLi fS
&amp; LIVESTOC K

... ..
'

So•l"'s You'll

In rite

Classlfltd Section.

1~h. stock trailer~

'

twpworth
41 Fuu

=,.

'

..

11111 bwM

Pass
Opening lead: • A

Ollict Deik, 614·378-2720 AF· I'':'::::"-::'-::"_...;....;.-,--TER61'M.

S1kkens

CJrert8h-red

Pass
Pus
All pass

'{'Ot;l/o.y

New- not Uled Otrt Devil wtrh II·
tachmanlld\ $25, 614-VV~.

New

31

DOWN

East

Nonh
16
I NT
4•

. ,.

Racing · go cart lrame for aale. 4
horae engine, great condition,

Chetnlcel autttx
30 Sticky atull

20EnMiekNid

Sale Or Troclo: 1g74 Bu1 Camper , , ,.
Convar,lon, Gao Cool! Stove •
G• Or Elect. RelrigOIIIOI, POwer 1e ::
Conwrter, Steip• e, ,TDO Man~ • ' 1•
llema To Ualf looking For ••• • : 1'
Ful b Trudl. 01•·2!16-1581.

ForSile
orTritcle

a

New York, NY 10025-7t24l .

Round bale liligo, 1700/lb baift,
$35. :104-875-4308.
.
.

te!i-3805.
_....,;.;,;__ _ _ _ _.,.......,
HOward cornrnercial freezer'; Tlr~
ramlta back ho"&amp;; commercial·
corner lot wllh buildingi Bl-4·7421902.

.

541 Man:hanl

-~Merrill

During the play of a bridge deal,
clues Dutter around the table like fire·
Dies on a summer's night. The hard
part is spotting them. Yet help is now
at hand. Albert Donner has written an
excellent book, "Dormer on Deduction ~ &lt;Gollancz; $16.05 p.p. from The
Bridge World, 38 West 94lh Street,

Hot Springs Portable Spa (hot
tub), seats two. redwood sidfng ,
no plumbing requ ired . Call 814-

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rabult In 5tDc1!.
Call Ron Evans. 1-8&gt;0·537-9528.

._

By Phillip Alder

640 · Hay &amp;' Grein

AKC roglsterod ChlnoM Sharpel,
2 btack female pups, large dogs
alto, 6ti-Gifi.2121S.
·

55 Condemned
541 One or !Ita
olltar
57 Pol. .lld

Success
from supposition

.

·l!ao~CJ~~~t=::::

Beige Flex1teel Recliner. Good
Condilkln, ISO; Technics Stereo

.....

51 Ktnt'aaon

17-•F.1t Loilg Inlet
21Minltptant

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

from-gtound up, --~tNng ·new, :;

$2,800. 304·675·!5815 Of 304 ·

~~

AKC Reg·. Rottwallor, male, ~·
prox . 1yr old, good b•havior,

•::-r-ln

l..,.cllanl

fl

t188 HOnda 4-Trax 250R, rebuill

1115-3237.
.
.

1t Omelet

23 - nnTin

• li:753
lfKI06
•QJ95
•JB

9J943
tAK76
610742

Tinted t.
eu- :·

·

Wlnd~erMn A1klng

•

Hay For Sale: Round And Square
Balas; Bll-245-5193. ·

Marttn high efficiency natural gar
circulating ~eal~r . Alao, Tappan
On riVet" • one bedroom apartment, '
gaa oook IIOYe. 304-675-3626.
furnished, u~~tles, , $300, 614·949·
2526.
Modern Wood Kitchen Cabinatl
Wiih Solid Wood Drawer~ Very
One bedroom lurniahed apart· Nice. 614·446·V827.
ment in Middleport, 614·448· .
3091, 614·11112·5304 or 614·992· Motorola two-.way radio&amp;, base,
2178.
.. two moblltl. two por1able1

Three Room Apartment, Next To
Library; $350 Per Month, Deposll
Required. No Pets; Conract Judy
At Bouard libraryo At 614·41148·
7323.
.

u

Helmet. ~;

1117

Pipe,

43

6A K Q 3
EAST

WEST

,,

1187 350 Warrior Run• And 11
Looks Very Good $2,200 Neg. "
6i4·258-taot, llt4-25M205.
:·

•. '() .
0

lriandly. 304-675-5089.

9am·10pm.

PAINT SALE. PIUoburgh Ceiling
Paint $10.99/gal.. fill Wall Paint
$11 .99/gal .. Semi-Gion Paint
$12. 991~1 .. lntroduclory Ollar,

ITUESDAY

double ula, di·

Ocular - Gypsy - Ranch • Mosaic · YOUNG

My elderly aunt says that changing your habits is like
climbinQ a fliQhl of stairs, it's easier when you're YOUNG.

..

FEBRUARY 271

Ylder gat,, front amra,ge, bumper
hitch, good cond .. $1 ,600. 304·
773-56te.

price, Oeruato White or Black
Enamel , (Spray Cari) Buy One

..

Gel Ona Free. PAINT PLUS 304·
675..06(

1972 2 Bedroom, Storage, W.sh·
eriOryer, ·Ver'j Good Condition,

L..w - g o 814-448·1440. ·
t978 t4K70

..

puppies, born 1117196, bath p~r ·
Boptl B}t RedWing, ChippeWa, oms on prw .... l:jOO, 614-992·
Tony lama. Guaranteed lowest 3931 8Y8ninp &amp; weekend~.
Priooe AI Shot COle, Gallipolis.
'AKC .Regillered Labrador ReBEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Concrece &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks. trlevera , Champion Bloodli ne, ·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron Chocolate. Yellow &amp; Black , 4
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive · Evans Enterprises, Jadl.son, OH Weeks Old, Ready To Gol $250
Each 814-643-2266.
·
lra&lt;n $244 to $31 5. Walk to shop 1·800·537·9528.
&amp; movl11. Call 614·448·2568.
Equal Hauaing Oppottunlly.
P'L;ouoon And Chair, Good Condi · AKC Regiatorod Ron Weiler Pup·
pies, Champion Bloodline, Ger. 614-44lHI652.
man Background, Sire OFA Carll·
Clean One Beclroom Furnished
Apartment In Middleport Refer- Eleculc Wheelchairs !Scooters , fi@d, Parents E.cellent With
encaa · And Oepoalt Required. New IUstd, Scooter !Wheelchair CMdron, 111 Shots &amp; Wormed,
S275Monll]ly. 814' 11112·1075.
Lilts, Slairway Elevators, Lill $360, 814-245-4433.
Chairs, Bowman's Homecare,
AKC Ragiotored, Show Quality
Country Sldo Aporlmtntl, Nica 2 614-4411-7283.
Bedrooms, AC, WID, W.1er, Sew· -::--~~~~---- Male Cocker Spaniel Puppy,
er Garabge Included, $350/Mo. f i r - Pick-Up Load, You Haul, GOOd Blooelllne, E•collont Mark·
Black !While &amp; Tan In Color,
Deposit Required, 513-922-0294.
$30: 4 Dining Room Chairs, $25
_Place, 614-4411-0m.
Oll!irth: 8131195, Houllbro·
ken. 614-378·2728.
Efficiency. References. Depos1t.
No pet&amp; 304-675-5!62.
Hi·Efleciency U~ Or Na1ural Gas
92% Furnaces 100,000 BTU I · · 10gal tank set up apecials. Fish
Furnished 1 Bedroom Apanmenl. 800·291 -0096, 614·446-6308, Tank &amp; Pet S,hop, 2413 Jackson
. Point Pleasant, 30•·875·
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Up· Duct Systems An'd Air Condi~on2063.
arain~, Utilities Paid, No Pets, Refers. Free Estimates.
erences, 61..,.4o68-a523.
Furnished 2 88droom Apartment
Across From Park, AC, No Pets,

I

~~~~~~~-~-:

Groom Shop ·l'otl ~rooming. Fea·
luring Hydro Bath. Julio Webb.
CaU 614-4411-0231 . ·

mt home,

flexible
hours. Reasonable rates, have

• tO
1888 Hondo' 250 2whHI drive.
$1,..00. S0..578-2965.
-:~

02·21-M

...

... Tltn»Uggl

11CentnaNORTH
•K 4
ora 1 s 2

..·=·:

..,._

"'V8llly
41 ICMMIIIIll

Schill~

1t78 12K21

Vomco Add Room Many E•liall
Excellent Condition, Price Re·
Midi e1t ue 1034.

Prom dresses. long red ae-

se-

9N Ford Tractor Brush

qulned, sb:a 7, fllnalion, $100.
quin &amp; black lace, silt 5, $75 .

Fork, Oahorners, Tractor Bell,
614-387·7902.

304· 773-5698.
Queen alza waterbed, full wive
mattresa, ai1 drawera underneath
bed. good COfidition. call 304-7738167.

7
A g7c~o-:
- A:-:II::-is:-:-IJ-ac-:to_r_s-.w-,i7
1h_w_o_r""ld

Redio Controlled Truck, Compille,
Manj Option1, Sharp, Faat, OYer

ISDO Invested, Sell For 1250,
614-2SIH887.

r.1ERCHANDISE
Two bedrOom trailer, in Tuppers
Plaint. ptOpane gas, city water,
1250/mo,. depaait requir..ed: 81&lt;4·

-3113.

510

HoUMhOid

GOods

1511 upright I(IIZer. :..c. CO~d ..
1200. 304-675-311te.
Appliancll :
Reconditioned
Wllhorl, Dryorl, RtngH, Ralri·
tO Day Guarantool
City Maytali. ~14·448 ·

Refrigerators, Slcwta, Waahtrl
And Oryero, All Racondllloned
And Gauranleodl $1'00. And Up,
Wllllolver. 614-HII-6441.

famous air cooled dktael engine&amp;.
12x3 •ynchromesh tran1, dif loCk.
radlaJ t~res, 1 double apool valve,
-4yr or 4,000hr drive lraln warran-ly. Modol 41100 4WD 52 PTO HP.
Each 11le price $18,900. 5.9% ft.
nanclng price 120,900. Keefer's
Service Center, St Rt 87, Pt
Ploasam &amp; Ripley Rd. 304-8953674.

r---:::a '

llahl 95 Grinder Mi101, 1830 01·
wall Ml•or, Feodor Wag0 n Wllh
Scaleo, 614·24S.5183.

oo.

' Ro111ing1Dn 11 12 Gogo, llhaca
37, Ruger 8 "M, POnce Soannor;
Dril P1HI, Dlvit'1 814-:!117·7108.

Gehl ,Round BOlero, Mowor Con·
dllloners, D11c Mowera, Diac
Mower Co~dllionars, Forage
Equlpmenl Salol And Service. E.~~11.mant
RoHYIDe Umbreiii 'Stand Floren· . Allizor farm Supply, 814·245'
5111:!..
1.;_:.:.:,~------lintC.1t24$400.. 814-448·145t.
PO!Iablt electriC
caae, e•c: cond.,
5.

I

NH r hay lilno. OwaiOnnt T hay
blne . -Gehl grinderlmlll:tr. 12'
tllnsport disc. All good condition.
:104'273·421 5.
•

BERNICE .
BEDE OSOL
___

$400il'. All are
• - · brakol, bellO. etc.
~ulo .Solei, 114·882·

.

.

'

' ...... .

Places, treat yourae 10 a birthday gift.
-~-----.;...--:---- Send for your Aatlo-Graph pnldictlotlll for
the year allead by mailing $2 and Sr\SE
to Aatl'o-Graph. c/o ltti6 newspaper, P.O.
.-~~--..;_-- Box 1758, Murray HiM Station, New Yorlr,
·PlY 10156. MaM eure to s1ate.your zodi·
1C llign.
·ARES'(l!lltreii21-Aprlt 1111 Try to protect
·
• llle one you love 1odly ~ he or she lad&lt;o
your bold118A and u.wy. Do everytltlng
In your power to see that his 01 her lnler·
lith-~.._,....

'

,,,

.

. ..
~'topes and eii~IIW" lhat are con·
atructed op

•!!bnv loilnclat!ont can bf

etts.,.eecura.

'

yNI'

'

,.,

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 231 You will have
the ability to tfnd what you seek today ,
especially It your objectives are or a
financial or cOinmercial nalure. Pursue
your ·~

boldly.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22) Even
though you mlghr bf tempted to avoid
dletastetulleaues today, you muSIII'f lo
, _ the music. Today. even the unaolv·

TAU,!WS (Aprll-....y 20) PartnerShip
arrengel]18nta will look encouraging to
you today. Ybu can supply the Idea and
game plan, bUt let your cohort carTY .out IIIII can .,. reeotved.
your atrategy.
.
IACIITTARIUS fNov. :n.Dec. 21) Do not
OE.,. fii8Y 21-.lune 20) With a con· 181 preconcehlad, negative notions hold
certed etlort, you can derive graater·then- you hoataga today. Make an effort to
UIUIII galnl tram your customary tiOUI088 . . exparieuca , _ lltuatlont.
todly. New c:hannala might l'iOI oflar..you CAPRICOR!t (Dell; 22-.lan. 18) It YOII
l l l e - plobabllitiaa.
have doubts regarding daclalon you
CANCER (June 21-.IUIV 22) You eltoukl · mlgllt have to make today, aaek the
laad ,llllhar tiWI tallow todlly. H you hope CIIUIIIII ola tiuMd lriend. He or aha w11

llltelld wyou - " .
hand\ln Qlove wtll\ rHIIIy and laregO con10 ~ vPU' Ult-illllt811, you llhoutd
alloul whet mlilht ~ lilerl.
PieCH (Fell. 211 ...,.. 211) Your pm- re/11 an yaw lblllllal and uwta lnftMd
.,. Will ~ a walcomt eddiiiOt• to ol dapiudlug on Ollala.
. __
~ aocial g11ttartng you attehd today. U!O (July ~ A·• II) Do 1101 ba lll'f/»&gt;
Y011.r entrance. could tranalorm a dull oor-rllilltoday Wyou have to~Ue a taw
- t 'lnlo aciinethlng a~ng and tun. 'hill in ~ Mill' lnningl. Yourlll•tUII•
I
•'

ac:ltla.ed ilr.1M

wiM oome IIlio play during .your last al bat.
YtROO (A119. 23·S.pt. 221 Take mea·
sures 1odly lo lighten the ties that bind
you to two close friends. Something
muiUally baneticial can develop ii lhese
bOndlntmUIIntacl.

&gt;

.

'

.. .'
... ..
.
.·. .
- '1- t

,

'

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*

nO! Ill you doWn.

~ (.Mn. 20-Fell. 11) 811

wu . - ·

.

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.
,' · ,.;

.
•J

your

plii,..IQI lllda.and fo11u1 your • •glw
and 111or1a Cl!i piadncltte • m1111011. You
Glilt --r,.:ll 1: a lot loclay 1 you-'&lt; for
wt111

~

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.

Plge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

••

Tuesday; February 27, 1990

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

•

~Program seeking 4-H alurtrni benefits state foundation
: The Ohio 4-H FOWtdation will
)enefit from a special program in
~ &amp;b Bv1111 F111111 lllld 4-H uc
~ up to locate 4-H alumni.
: • From Feb. 26 through March 31,
;4-H alumni may sign-up at any of the
•137 Ohio Bob Evans Restaurants. In
:COnjunction with the program, l!ob
:EVIIU Farms will make a donation to
:1he Ohio 4-H Foundation for each
-person who signs up.
: 4-H has always been a part of our
~y.• said Dan Evans, chainnaD.

of the board and chief exec:utive offi- pare itt, v.olunleer qr donor. There are
ccr of Bob Evans Farms. "We strOng- currently 4S million 4-H alumni
ly believe in the high standards 4-H nationwide.
sets and the self-confidence it instills , "So many Ohioans have been a
in our youth. Bob Evans Farms is part o( 4-H and we want to followproud to help Ohio 4-H locate the · up with them because they know betpeople who have been impacted ·ter ihan anyone about the value of 4through the years by this Ohio- H," . said Kirby Barrick, assistant
founded organization."
director of 4-H youth development.
One out of every six people in "Unfortunately, until now, we have
Ohio has been or is currently never had an lipponunity to locate
.
involved with 4-H youth develop- our alumni."
ment programs either as a member,
Kick-off for the alumni search is

~adies . Missionary
:

The Victory Baptist Church in

~iddlepon Ladies Missionary Fel~OW$hip meeting was held recently at

Abe church.
• Praidcnt Betty Barker opened the
meeting with Linda Keesee giving
1xayer. Barker announced that an
~nvitation was received from Calvary
:Jiaptist Church regarding its confer-

.

in celebration of Ohio 4-H Week,
Feb. 26 through March 3. ·
4-H is a non-fonnal, educational,
youth development program that is
offered to youth '-ge S to 19, regardless of their race, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, gender or handicap. .
Bob Evans Fanns owns and operates 386 restaurants in 19 states and
produces and disuibutes food products in 29 states and the Disuict of
Columbia.

Pick 3:

111
Pick 4:

5760

Sports, Page 4

readings and the theme evolved
around "Loving One Another" and
"Love Never Faileth." Angela Hall
shared a letter with the group from
missionary Sherry Classien explain;
ing some of the activities in the mission field. Classien expressed appreciation for continued monetary sup-

•

.a I

.

•.
port.
The closing prayer waS' given by
Margaret Nunn and refreshments
were served by Molly Johnson and
Helen Jane Brow'Lt,e&gt;those named
and Patsy Cornell,l'hyllis Hudnall,
~isa Johnson, Margll£et Nunn, Jane
Snouffer, Myrtle Q11illen, Wanda
Ashley and Jennifer Ashley.

VoL 48, NO. 211
3 II adona, 28 ......

nrug

quickly.
The Diasensor "is certainly the
hope for the future," said panelist Dr.
Joann Boughman of the University of
Maryland. "But the future is not here
today."
Dozens \lf diabetics who pleaded
with the FDA panel to let them buy
the machine were bitterly disappointed.
·
"You know nothing about this,"
Gail D'Vortez of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., shouted at the panelists as they
outlined their concerns about the

Diasensor.
· The panelists said they were
moved by the pleas, but insisted diabetics deserved better evidence than
manufacturer Biocontrol Technology
Inc. provided that the machine works.
The company studied 23 peoplt for
a month, but the Diasensor was sensitive enough to test just eight of them
accurately at least half the time.
"I will apologize to every diabetes
patient ... in this room that I cannot
be more enthusiastic," said panel
chainnan Dr. Arthur Karrnen of

Albert Einstein College ofi'fledicine.
MR. AND MRS. DORES ARNOLD 1
"But hopefully what you want to get
is the right answer" from a diabetes
test.
~·
The FDA is not bound by advisoDores and Mildred Arnold of Patricia Hysell and Janet Jeffers oC
ry panel decisions but usually follows 33823 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, will Pomeroy; Robert Arnold of Poin
them, and FDA medical device chief observe their 59th wedding anniver' Pleasant, W.Va.; and Jimmy Joe an~
Dr. Susan Alpert immediately asked .sary Friday.
Henry, both deceased. They have sev..
Biocontrolto meet with her this week
The couple were married on eral gran~children, great-grandchil!
to figure out how to proceed.
March I, 1937 in ~eigs County by dren and great-great-grandchildren ...
There are some 16 million dia- the Rev. Alonzo Stark.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold have
'betics in the United States. Their bodThey are the parents of six chil- Meigs County residents all
ies cannot regulate glucose ill the dren, Mary King of Long Bottom; · lives.
bloodstream

Arnolds to celebrate '59th

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A Gallia County bulk fuel mar- Prosecuting Attorney Brent A. Saunketer pleaded not guilty IO a charge ders said in a written statement
of theft of more than $100,000 in issued after the arraignment.
conne&lt;:tion with an alleged phony
Following an eight-month invesinvoicing scheme durihg an arraign- tigation, it has been alleged that
ment Tuesday in Gallia'County Com- Miller hilled the Ohio Valley Elecuic
mon Pleas Court.
Corp.'s Kyger Creek Power Plant at
Larry E. Miller, who operates a Cheshire for fuel that was never
BP bulk plant on Pine Street in Gal- · · delivered over a 10-year period,
lipolis, was secretly indicted on Feb. resulting in a loss of $260,502.08 to
5 by the Gallia County grand jury, OVEC.

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Larry Miller, left.
w
as attorneys consulted following Miller's arralgnmen•
Tuesday In Gallla County Common Pleas Court on a charge of
theft of more than $100,000 In connection with an alleged phony
Invoicing scheme. (Tribune photo)

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.

By MIKE FEINSILBER
Noting that Forbes spent $4 milAssociated Press Writer
lion on TV ads in Arizona and won
In a GOP presidential contest that some 111,000 votes, Buchanan said,
scrambles every time the voters "Clearly our momentum is not
speak, anti-Washington sen)iment tri- enough to overcome $40 a vote."
umphed again with Steve Forbes' vicGrumbled Dole : "What he does ,
tory in Arizona. Forbes' rivals uied to when he spends all that money, it
make his free-spending ways an issue helps Buchanan and drives me
today, but the publisher insisted his down ."
.
message, not his money, was carrying
Replied Forbes: "You spend the
the day.
money to get the message across and
Bob Dole managed to keep hope the message carries you .... Senator
alive with his dual wins in the Dako- Dole has spent far more money in this
tas, but he still hasn't won outside his campaign than I have."
native Midwest. He said he'll prevail · Forbes is paying for his campaign
in the first test of Southern sentiment, from his own pocket and so can spend
in South Carolina on Saturday.
. all he wants. His rivals take govern'
A week ago, Forbes looked like a ment money and must live under govOash in the pan, his Oat-tax idea under emment spending limits. Dole spent
fire as a gift to millionaires, Now, sur- so freely early that he's running into
prisingly, he.leads all contenders in a problem.
early-state delegates.
With nine more GOP contests in
Commentator Pat Buchanan, the the next seven days, the ·rivals turned
other anti-establishment figure in the immediately to solidly conservative
Republican presidential race, was a South Carolina, which conducts a
big loser in Tuesday's primaries and stand-alone primary Saturday.
blamed Forbes' deep pockets. So di1
The Palmetto State's mix of disDole.
placed textile workers and conserva-

Morton offered two pieces of
advice to the newly reorganized
Meigs County CIC:
First, "Land isn't worth anything
until someone is willing to pay for it.
Next, "A bean field is not an indusJ
tri.al P!lfli..:wAib&lt;?!it &lt;!lti!i\il:i)pn·si~e."
"YOu've got ·tb liave sqmething
special:· A sign ih the middle of a
bean field is not it."
Currently the Hocking Valley CIC
has real estate assets of $4.4 million
and cash assets of $400,000, Morton
said:;To date, the CIC has assisted in
the creation of2,000 to 3,000 jObs in
Hocking County since 1960.
.
The Hocking Valley CIC is a private corporation consisting of a ISmember board of trustees that also
serves as the chamber of commerce

Saunders said the the investigation
'!'as conducted by agents of the Ohio
Attorney General's office; the Bureau
of Criminal identification and lnvesligatiQII, assisted by auditors from
American Electric Power Corp.;
OVEC and its security; and auditors
from BP headquarters in Cleveland.
Judge Joseph L. Cain set Miller's
bond lit $50,000 and a pre-uial hearing has been scheduled for 10:30 a.m.
on Thursday, April 25. Miller, who

WASHINGTON (AP) - House
Speaker Newt Gingrich is expressing
fresh hope that congressional Repub.licans and President Clinton can
make a budget deal, possibly in the
next few weeks.
Gingrich, R"-Ga., said Tuesday
that "the failing Clinton economy ..
has renewed interest in an agreement
to balance the budget in seven years
ana cut taxes.
"America needs a balanced budget agreement to get lower interest
rates," he said. "America needs a bat-

Deter ent
C~ips

·Repord high temperatures
are.reported across state
By Tbe A.aoclated Press

.

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 28, 1 - ON,~Y

.

tive Christians could provide a sympathetic hearing to Buchanan's anti abortion and pro-tariff themes . But
the entire Republican hierarchy in the
state has lined up behind Dole .
Next Tuesday, the pace intensifies
with eight primaries in Colorado,
Connecticut, Georgia. Maine. Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island
and Vermont.
Forbes said in a pre-dawn new s
conference in his native New Jersey
that he's pinning his next hope on the
March 7 primary in New York, which
awards 93 delegates. "I think we have
a very good chance of winning New
York."
Dole, once the man to beat, professed satisfaction despite his loss in
. Arizona and predicted he would prevrul in South Carolina, dominating the
headlines over the W\'Ckend.
"My view is I' II be the Republican nominee," Dole said. "It may
take a bit longer than we planned." ·
Lamar Alexander, who fini shed
fourth in all three' of Tuesday 's contests , hoped his campa1gn of "new

r

ideas " would catch fire in some of
next Tuesday 's primaries in states
with moderate voting traditions. Of
the top four, he is the only candidate
without a victory. He says he must
have one soon to remain alive.
Because the field isn 't winnowing
and no clear leader has emerged.
some Republicans suggest the nomi nation will he settled by the convention, not the primaries.
.
"If no one's running away with it
and you ' ve got people taking turns at
one-two-three in the primaries, ·il
appears to me that there's a real
chance no one would go to the con- .
vcntion with a majority," said Gov.
Mike Leavitt of Utah, who suppons
Dole.
. Tuesday's results "(ere especially
bmer for htgh -Oying insurgent
Buchanan, who was left empty-handed despite drawing enthusiastic Arizona crowds over lhe weekend . He
sounded subdued: "I believe we won
the bailie for Arizona's hearts and
minds. We had the fire, energy, enthuContlnuect on page 3

board of ·UUstees, a seven-member
executive committee and one paid
executive (Morton).
The advantage of a private CIC is
that it provides the privacy many corporations require , he explained. A private CIC is.op~ bqund .by law to disclose its dealings as public corporations are.
·
··
; Julia Houdashelt. county economic development director, gave an
update on Hlluse Bill440, part of the
Jobs Bill Ill package prepared by
Lieutenant Governor Nancy Hollister.
HB440 calls for a revolving loan
· program, a private/public partnership
and other provisions to aid rural counties. Part of the measure, awaiting a
signiuure by Governor George V.
Voinovich, will help rural counties
create indusuial parks and buildings.

posted the bond, was represented at
the arraignment by Columbus attorney Thomas M. Tyack.
While the investigation continues,
il is suspected that at least one other
OVEC employee, now retired,
worked in collusion with Miller 10
allegedly defraud the Kyger Creek
Plant, Saunders said.
Saunders said a second arrest in
the case is expected in the near
future.

C.t.C: SPEAKER- Hugh Morton, director of the Hocking County Community Improvement Corporation, addrened the Meiga
County CIC at Its meeting Tuesday night In Pomeroy. Morton
explained lhe hlatory of the Hocking County CIC which hie, since
1960, acquired $4.4 million In real estate asaets. ·

Record hign temperatures were reported across Ohio on Thesday,
the National Weather Service said.
The ~ords were reported in Dayton, Zanesville. Columbus, Cleveland,· the Akron-Canton area, Mansfield, Cincinnati and Toledo.
.
The. highs at Dayton and Zane5ville reached 70 degrees, surpassina the mlllk of 66 ·set on this date in both cities in 1976. In Columbus. the high of 71 broke the record of 6S set in 1896.
The high was 65 degrees in Cleveland, where the previous record
was 64 iit 1976; 65 at Akron-Canton, where the mark was 62 set in
1976; 6&lt;7 in Maallfield, breaking· the record high of 60 degrees set in
1976; 71 in Cincinnati, breaking a 100-yew-old mark of 70 degrees
and 66 in Tolec\o, one degree higher than the 1976 record.

anced budget agreemen~that includes standing bill or legislation - needRoth 's committee is writing a
tax .reduction for job creation and a ed ·by mid-March - to raise the welfare and Medicaid bill based on a
tax deduction for working mid4le- nation's $4.9 trillion debt limit.
comprom1se offered by the National
clllss families."
His optimism about lhc prospects Governors' Associati&lt;fi\!!ealth and
Gingrich and Senate Majority for a speedy deal ran counter to a Human Services Seotetary Donna
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan . planned 10 more cautious tone in closed-door Shalala was prepared to tell Roth's
meet today to work on budget strat- discussions among 1'-opublican sena- panel today that the administration
egy. Deep differences remain tors. Sen. William R~th, R-Del., opposes parts of the plan but sees 11
between Republicans and Clinton on chrurman of the Senate Fmance Com- as a good starting point, according 10
how to cut taxes and wring savings . m1ttee, told them 11 would be.dtffi9ult a source familiar with her testimony
from entitlement programs such as · to draft an enutlement-spendmg o~r- :.---Who spoke on condition of anonymi·..J
·
Medicare, Medicaid and welfare. ' haul acceptable to Congress an'lr ty.
'
Gingrich said the vehicle for the Clinton in ti~e for it to be paired with
Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M. ,
balanced budget could be a free- the debt hmtt btll.
Continued on page 3

House moves to close loophole in state's ethics law
By JERI WATERS
Associated Preu .Wrlter
COLUMBUS -The House has
moved to close a loophole in the
state's ethics law regarding the disclosure of gifts to legislators.
Representatives approved the
amendment to the Joint Rules of the
Legislawre by a vote of 97-0 on Thesday:
·
The amendment requiring lawmakers to disclose all gifts totaling
more than· $75 a year from a single
lobbyist was proposed afteradrafting'
error in the 2-)'ear-old ethics refonn
law allowed the $7.S disclosure limit
to be applied per gift, not per year.
There was concern that could
allollf lawmakers to receive frequent
gifts valued 11 $74.99 or less without
disdQsing them.
In other action, the House:
·- Passed
a bill 64-34 )ll'otecung
'

employers from lawsuits over things
they say in job references. The Senate passed the bill 20-13.
- Voted 83-11 to retain highway
speed limits at current levels, with
some limited exceptions.
- Passe&lt;' a bill 98-0 prohibiting
the ·improper handling of infectious
ageats.
.
'I1!e sponsor of the employer-reference bill, Rep. Roben Corbin, RCente~il.le, said .employers were
~ompl~ntng ';hat tt was beco~Rtng
. tncreas1ngly difficult to check references because of the fear they would
be sued.
Not only an: employees suing for
defamation, but new employers are
filing la~suits against com~ies for
not ~amtng them of potential p'rob-o
~ms when they. hire a bad employee.
Under the bill, employers would
be protected
. from lawsuits unless it

can be proven they intentionally proAn emerge~cy clause was also
vided information that was false, ·approved to allow the bill take effect
given in bad faith l,lr maliciOus.
~ before March 3, the deadline for pasPeggy Chavez, II lobbyist for the sage under a federal law that permits
Oh io Education Association , said she states to set their own highway
. did not think the bill was necessary speeds. 1be bill goes to Voinovich for
hul was pleased the wording in the hi s signature.
·
original version had been changed
Rep. Otto Beany, D-Columbus
and was more Cquilllble to emp.IG~es. won passage of llis bill to prohibit ~.
"It will at least give employees the person from possessing an infectious
·
opportunity to challenge if there are substance.
evaluations or recommendations giv1be state had no law against posen that are not accurate,IIJII the.hi~h- 'lsessing disease-ca11sing substances
er standard would have made tt v1r- and was forced to charge a Lancaster mari fast year with receiving stolen .
tually impossible," she said.
l:fouse Transportation Chairman property after three vials of bubonic
Sam Bateman, R-Milford, won pas~ plague bacteria allegedly were found
sage of an amended highway bill. at his home.
•
·
Bateman's bill would retain existing · The bill mak~s ·p oueuioi) of an ; .
speed limits but allow a study of cer- inf¢c:tious substance a a'ime JIU!Iilh-• '
lain highways where ~ might ,able up to · JO ¥ears in prison lad' a, · ,; : ·
increase from S.S mph to 6.S mph.
Imaximum fine of$10,000.
-. . ~ •

--

.

.

I
. l

35cenll
Co._.....,..

House Speaker Gingrich says budget deal possible

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By JIM FRf.EMAN
"ACIC allows achamberto put its
news staff
money where its mouth is," Reed
Fifteen uustees for the newly res: said. A CIC can do anything a private
urrected Meigs Coanty Community business can except lend money, he
Improvement' Corporation were expl~iried .
apllf'Ovec! at I! CIC meeting Thesday
People say "Why don't 'they' do
niglt at the Meigs,CoUnl)l Senior Cit- something?", Reed commented.
· ' .....,n..,..
,.,~ ·~·
•
"We .are 'th.ey'," he lidCfed: ·
tzens
.
1\P.P.Qinted were: E11gene FacemyGuest speaker for the meeting was
er, Bruce Fisher, Horace Karr, Nan- Hugh Morton, dtrector of the Hockey Campbell, Joe Bolin, Roscoe . ing County CIC.
·Mills, John :Musser, Jennifer Sheets, --. · Morton explained the Hocking
Steven Story, Chris Tenoglia, Paul County CIC ~ formed. in I960.
Reed, Judy Williams, Roben Wingett, Since then, it4las built and leased·
John T Wolfe and Dewey Horton .
buildings and sites to companies
CIC president Paul Retjl opened ·such as Goodyear, Lockheed and the
the meeting, attended by about 45 state department of health and envtpeople •. by explaining the difference ronmenlal protection agency.
"We created assets we leveraged
between a CIC and a chamber of
commerce.
into other assets," he explained.

Sent!MI

Sugar
$ 69

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Mei9s CIC OKs ·new trustees

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HEAD

en Ine

Forbes 'back in race

FORBES WINS ARIZONA· Steve Forbes celebrates his primary
tlectlon victory In Arizona Tuesday with daughter Sabina, 22,
right, looking on. Aa winner, Forbes will gamer all39 of Arizona; a
deleglltes. (AP)

.\

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 28, 1996

.fDA panel says no to blood-sugar testing device
•
· lty LAURAN NEERGAARD
. ~IOCI8tecl Preu Writer
. • GAITHERSBURG, Md. (AP) ~
biabetics will have to wait to get a
• ilain-free ,way to measure blood sug)r while the maker of a controversial
Jlucose test figures out how to prove
i\ works.
! Diabetes experts told ~ Food and
Administration on Monday that
1he Diasensor, in line to become the
:C.rst non-invasive glucose test, must
lle studied more before it can be sold.
:J'hey urged that research be done

Windy and cold
tonight, lows In the ~­
Thuraday, partly cloudy,
high In mld-30s.

Buckeye 5:
2-3-12-15-37

Fellowship reports on ·mission activity

ence scheduled for Man:h IS and 16.
Devotions were presented by
Verenia Barkman from Juanita Purcells book entitled "Be Patient."
• Barkman also gave scripture references from Galations, Jeremiah,
Gospel of John and I Corinthians.
·Various members shared in scripture

.

No.1
Kentucky
tops Auburn

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