<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9125" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9125?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-06-17T11:14:33+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19554">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/24c8ef1c618ca5095fe916d91d1d7648.pdf</src>
      <authentication>aa9151a72bf1bb0a35f3b302108a5f1e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29342">
                  <text>'

...

~

If

Sunday, March 3, 1991 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

I

Expect mil~ production to
WASHINGTON (AP) - High
fees! prices are expe&lt;$11 to limit
growth of milk production in !he
United States this year while ~
number of dairy cows is likely to
drop about I percent, the Agriculture
Department says.
The average cow will produce
about 2 percent more milk, an
increase similar to last year's, when
bad weather limited the rise. The
department's Economic Research
Service says the projected drop in !he
inventory of milk cows is only slightly .higher than in 1995.
The anemic growth in milk production is attributed to the lowest
feed-to.milk price ratio since the rnidl970s.
'
· Tight markets are likely to mean
higher milk prices, especially in' the

EARNS SERVICE AWARD· Stan's Lock and Kity of Gallipolis was

"

:: -uy honored with • apecllll plaque commemorating five yeera

or ~tlnuoua e«VIce to AAA lllllllbert. The awerd was presented

: to Stanley T.ylor , right, by AAA'a dlntelor of member aervicaa, Ted
: Gilbert left .

.

optometr·sts
1
: • d0 nate e·ye .exams
~ Area

;:
·"
_

•
: COLUMBUS : Ohio optometrists
~ are donating eye exams to more than
;;: 1,000 low-income Ohioans during
;: "Save your vision Week." March 3·

a national, non-profit charity founded by doctors of optometry to assist
uninsured, low-income families who .
do not qualify for government and
: 9.
private health care assistance pro- More than 400 member doctors of grams and who have at , least one
: .the Ohio Optometric Association are employed family member.
; donating their time and offices to pro- ·
VISION
USA
volunteer
::; vide eye care services through the optometrists in the area are Dr. A.
! VISION USA program.
Jackson Bailes, Dr. ,William B.
; . The program is currently in its . Thomas, Dr. James L. Schmoll, Dr.
.,. sevenI year of helping working fam- Robert ·s. Rudge, Dr. Robert B. Ter·
:; ilies who cannot afford eye care. It is ry and Dr. Gary L. Clarke.

be up this yea~~

fU'St half of the year, USDA says.
ing this month but wholesal~ prices
On Jan. I, the total number of cat- are dropping because of a Seasonal
tle and calves on farms and ranches sales decline. USDA predicted a sig·
was I percent higher than a year ear- nificant weakening of prices if a tar·
lier.
iff disputewitli RussiaandOiinacuts
The nation's inventory of beef-cat- irlto poultry exports.
tle is more than 3 percent under car·
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Farmlier projections, indicating lower beef
production next year, !he department ers like the idea of a geneticallY engi·
- nee~ soybean that is unaffected by
says. ·.
Pork producers are finding most of a popular herbicide. But some of
!he red ink·encountered last month is them aren't buying because of a probeing wiped out by hlgher prices in hibition on saving seed from the crop.
Monsanto Co. will sell its
February. But this relief is expected
to be short-term, the department said, Roundup Ready soybean seeds only
as production costs will continue ris· to farmers who agree !hey won:t save
ing into spring.
·
for future planting the seeds they harFirst-quarter pork production is . vest.-Saving seeds would ~uce the
likely to match last year's record company's collection of a $5-a-bag
because of higher slaughter weights. " technology fee, " whlch is desigl)ed
Production of broilers is- increas- to heiiJ Monsanto recoup !he $100

I

vest.

~

price exceeds the spring price, Glickman said.
The Agriculture. Department said ·
crop revenue coverage "should he
particularly .&amp;\tractive to com grow·
ers who have suffered a major crop
loss and then, due to rising prices,
were required to pay back advance
deficiency payments."
Unlike traditional crop insurance,
the new variety would replace lost
bushels at the higher price exi~ti!lg at
harvest time.
. Crop revenue coverage will be
offered this spring to com and soy·
bean ·growe~ ~ghoul Iowa and
Nebraska.
'
Income proteCtion will be available for com·growers in Champaign,
Ford, lroquois1 Livingston and
McLean counties, III.; Benton, Faun·
tain and Warren!counties, Ind.; and
Adair, Audubon, Cass, Dallas,
Guthrie and Shelby counties, Iowa;

•

~I

,,

i"
·~

:r~

.

·"
i ..

.
'

'

dropped 10 percent over-the past five
''We could do the kind of !hines
years, costing 'growers $100 million we could never possibly do on :a
a year.
state-by-!ltate voluntary effort," ~
The reasons include health con· said. "That has failed miserably.".- '
~efll&lt;. imnnrts. chanvinv r.ntinv
Usry said his group has poiiC.d
habits, lack of innovative new prod· peanut groups in nine produciirg
ucts, changing demographics and, ·states and only North Carolina arid
~ause of budge,t cuts, smaller pur- Virginia have not officially endorsed
chases by the government for feder· the plan.
al food programs.
·
Don Koehler, executive director of
"We must pursue self-help," said the Georgia Peanut Commission,
~
.
I
Jerry.t:Jsfy._ the Georgia _producer;;' ,spelled out the problem-this way;
execut1ve d1rector. He swd $15 mll·
"Basically, when economic times
lion IC) $20 million would be needed are gaod, people don 't eat peanuts
for a nationwide grower-financed - because peanuts are just · peanuis.
TV
advertising campaign. It would We've got to get a beautifpl
~
WASHINGTON (AP) - Proper· infectious disease associated with use sludge may affect the safety of food
ITHACA, N.Y. (AP) - Dairy
: ly treated municipal wastewater and · of the reclaimed wastes on food products 'lind the sustainability of farmers soon may he able to cut in need congressional a~proval and the spokesperson to put on a fur coat alJd
e~dorsement of a maJDnty of grow- convince folks that peanuts are a del·
agricultural land, and may carry half the cost of milking their cows.
~sludge can be used safely to·irrigate
crops.
~ and fertilize food crops, the NationWastewater is often used to irri· potential economic risks." .
icacy like caviar."
The key is controlling vacuum ers.
Don't look for sludge to replace levels on milking machines.
'C al Research Council has concluded.' gate public landscapes, for air condi&lt;
: "Current technology to remove tioning, industrial processing and other fertilizers. 'The council said that
"Typically, the milking vacuum
'
.· pollutants from wastewater, coupled . construction. And farmers in · the all the sludge produ&lt;;ed by municipal pump is oversized to accommodate
•
:: with existing regulations and guide- ~ Midwest have long used treated sewage systems in this country would any intenupted air flow, such as when
&gt;
:: lines govel'l)ing the use of reclaimed slu.dge, ·mostly to fertilize hay, corn cover only I .6 percent of the nation's milking units fall off a cow's udder," •
.- wastewater and sludge in crop pro. and other feed grams.
309 million acres qf cropland. About explained ·David LudiJtgton, a pra;.
:: duction, are adequate to. protect
The co~ndl s_aid broader _use. of one-quarter of thoie actes are used to fessor of agricultunil and biologicaL.
O: bunwi health and the environment," . wastes for 1mgabon and fert1hzat1on grow food for humans, and only 2 engineering at Cornell University.
:: said the council, l!n arm of !he gov· is hampered by a lack of public c?n- percent of that land grows food
Substantial savings for dairy farm,
:· cminent-clllltered National Academy fidence in goyernment regulation meant to be eaten fresh.
'
ers are possible, researchers say. .
\
: of Sciences.
·
, : and concern about odor and effects
• "The use of wastewater ~nd on property values.
.
'
sludge in the production of crops for
Too, t~e report ~id, "~armers and
alr..~atinued from.,.. 1 .
human consumption presents a man- the food mdustry m particular have
ageable risk," the council said. The . expressed concern that the chem1cal Saturday, March 9 at the Ohio Uni- "Whlch Annual Flowers Are Best For
study found no reported outbreaks of __ :'nd pathogenic contaminants in versity Inn in Athens, Ohlo from 9:30 You?" on April 16th. All sessions will
.,
a.m. to 5 p.m.. Confe{ence costs are; start promptly at 7 p.m. and be held
$15 for the general public; ,$10 for at the Meigs County Senior Citizen
Ms~
Rural Action and RAN members, and Center located on Mulberry Heights.
''
POMEROY - Pleasant Valley uled 10 take place, according to PVH $5 for low income residents and stu· Pomeroy, next to Vetetans Me'"ori·
al
Hospital.
'
·
·
·
.
spokeswoman
Amy
Leach.
The
name
dents.
Lunch
will
be
provided.
Hospital qf Point Pleasant, W.Va. has
In a closing note, yur office wish·
expanded its service on this side of of the business will remain the same.
es
our
former Agent, Cindy .Oliveri,
Homeowners, ate your fruit trees,
Continuity of Care founder Greg
the Ohio River with its recent acquimuch
success
as she takes on a role
sition of Continuity of Care Inc. of Kaylor will stay on board as rehabil· raspberry bushes ~nd grape vines
itation specialist and site manager, . pruned yet? You better get started. as our Family &amp;; Consumer Sciences
Pomeroy.
she
said.
·
The extension office does ha.ve fact District Specialist. The people of
· Continuity of Care offets durable ·
:This
will
help
secure
the
future
of
sheets available to demonstrate how Southern Ohlo are fortunate to he
medical equipment and supplies for
medical seryic,- in that area, · Leach to prune and how to properly care for abte to continue to -utilize her talents
long-Jerrn, home-based care.
•
them. Please call or stop by your locay and !mowledge of the needs of.chil~ No personnel changes are sched· said.
dtcii, · families and senior citizens.
office,
Congratulations,
Cindy, Meigs OourtNeed to improve your lawn? Mark
ty
miss you!
..
'
• €0LUMBUS · Bob Evans Farms . the quart~~r · were $.18 compared to your calendar to attend the first of a
HarOld
H.
Kneea
Is
the
Agti·
: Inc. Friday announced results for the : $.33 last year. Combined net sales for series of free Home Yiu-d &amp; Garden cultural . &amp; Natural R,esou.rces
'
the quarter increased five percent to · Seminars sponso~ by the Ohio
: first quarter, which ended Jan. 26.
Ageat;
Oblo
State
Uaivenlty
~
In the restaurant segment, an . $194,7 million compared to $185.6 S!Bie UniverSity ExtensiOn - Meigs
Coaaty
County. Learn about ''The Basics of Extension •
.
.,.increasingly comjletitive environ; million a year ago .
HomeLawn
Care"
on
March
12th
For
the
nine-month
period,
com·
·
:'ment, combined with severe winter
: \Veathcr, impacted sales and earn· .bined net sales were $608.3 million starting at 7 p.m. at the Meigs Cqunor a five percent gain compared to ty Senior Citizen Center. ·Aretl of
ll ings.
·
'
$577.9
million last year. Net profit information to be covered during the
~.
Despite positive sales volumes,
was
$35.0
million or $.83 per share first session will include "Seeding a
~ the food products segment had
: decreased earnings as compared to this year compared to $41.3 million · Lawn", "Fertilizing.Js it Neecssary?",
"The Best Methods of Controlling
~ its strong performance a year ago or $.98 per share last year.
During the third quarter, ~EF Weeds" and "Common Lawn Pests&amp;;
·;.because of record-low hog costs
opened 10 new restauran\5 ' which Diseases".
- !!~ring that pehod.
Further topics of the HOmeowner
.'V.s ~ result, net income for 1he brought the total in operation to 383
Yard
&amp;; Garden Series will cover: ·
units
open
at
the
end
of
the
,quarter
·
decrel!sed 46 percent to $7.6
A Perennial Border &amp; How
"Creating
this
year
compared
to
334
last
year.
comparedto$13.9million a
To
Care
For
TheiiJ~ on April 9th and
and earnings per share for

fSiudge, wastewater safe for food c~ops, council says

Bugs in the

Dr. Joey D. Wilcoxon of the
Gallipolis Chiropractic Clinic
· is proud to announce the
addition of
,.

THEUPIST ..
ANNA MARIA LOPEZ

.

To his -office.
Lopez is·licensed under the
State Medical Bd. of Ohio. Her
hours are by appointment.

PVH expands service

·Call 441 ~0200 Today.

-.

:Combined-net
sales for BEF up 5 %
.•

Chiropractic.Clinict

will

722 S.C.-I Ave. ·

· Ga!lpals, Oh ~.

'

1995'

·It's thne Af•ln to .,...,

v-e,

Tlllnldn1.Ahut Your PI 0111,
And- And · Wia~ Not 1M
BaldrU-T•..nn
TIN On•
y..,~,. ·
·Year 'hudot

11,900

,,.. 5
.

'

: , 1995 PONTIAC

· tUISPOR1

-7 ........ loaded.
'
'

.

.'

'

'

. a~n~t needed· .
tQver 100 atJI• to choose from
. IE~ Hours:
.. ~..&amp; Frl~ tll8:00)
Prtcll

· 1

'

.,,...~~~~

.

~

. -From·

.- ,~

••}·~ :.
:,

.....eo
'

"
,

•'

liYIUE ·.

P. wlnctow•, caiMtle, Power lUI, wlndowa, Clll- ftubY Red with !MihU.

loaded.

a.

I

LESii.E

1995

·1995 '

IEGIU
7 In atock_.. l.oM!ed.

• ••

'1 900

·

900

1995
.SKYLARK

199.5

BONNEVILLE .

•10,900

*1'6,900

1995 GIANI PRIX

1995 GIANI All

Auto., AIC, CIII..U., pow~ , ·Oraen, elumlnum
door locka, anti-lOCk brekla. •· poWer IIIIa. · ' . ·

SEDAN

20,000 miiM, whM, lollded.
'

.4'1001

AqUI, 1111, crUI.., ~~

Pick 3:
402
Plck4:
4489
Supr Lotto:
12-17-21-22 44 47
Kicker:
674410

Sports, Page 4

Moatty cloudy ton!pt,
Iowa In the &lt;101. Tuaday,
windy, warner, chance of
~howera, hlgha In &amp;Oa.

.

/

VOl. 411, NO; 214

, Section, 10 hgee

35 .....18

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 4, 1996

-.

A Gannett Co. Nenpeper

&gt;.

cotton growers in Autauga;
NORWALK, Conn. (AP)- D~l
Lawrence, Limestone and Madison testing, a relatively new arrival to~
counties, Ala.; and Brooks, Colquitt, courtroom, is expanding to the batif;.
__. .
'
Dooly and Worth counties, Ga.; and 'I YJ"U.
.
I ·:
10 spring wheat growers in Kittson,
' Cattle breeders wtll he able to vetMarshall, Polk and ~l)seau counties, · ifY a cow's lineage using.a new Dll!A
Minn.; and Grand Forks, Pembina testing device called the Stoci\Mai~
and Walsh counties, N.D.
for Cattle kit. ·
):

Slight increase..~ontiDuedrrom.~-i

Ohio Lottery

Kentucky
winds up
With 26·1
record

..'·

. million oost of developing !he ~
That doesn't sit well with a lot .d
fanners, iltcludinl Keith Brock, ~
farms 1,900 acres in (lcndri*
County, Ind., with his brother. ~
considers the restriction an infrin~
mcnt on !tis fanning freedom.
·
Monsanto e~pcciS to sell out I~
.small, first-year supply by plantijiF
.lime this s~ng.
.
~,
The engmee~ seed IS not affec;~
"ed by Roundup, one of !he most
•widely use_d wced~llers .. Roun&lt;fyp
normally kills anythmg green ~nl&gt;is
cheap and environm·entaiJy s~.
Until now, the only way farmQ'&amp;
could safely use Roundup on soy~
fields was to spray or da!ib it ·_pP
weeds before planting or after hll"
,,

USDA testing two new crop insurance plans·

'
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department is ready to
begin testing two new types of crop
insurance that for the first time would
protect farmers agiunst losses . not
related to bad weather. ·
The two pilot programs will be
available this spring to farmers in
selected counties. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman announced Tuesday, .
One pro grain, called "income
protection," will protect against losses in yield and low harvest prices. A
farmer would be paid when gross
income falls below the level of
income selected.
Coverage will he available in the
test counties to "growers of com,
wheat and cotton.
·
The second program,· "crop revenue coverage_," · would pay losses
from the established yield·coverage at
a ltigher price if the harvest-time

'•

,Back on top, Dole predicts·
critical week for campaign
~Y TOM RAUM
A11oclaled Prall WrHer
'_· AlLANTA - Sen. Bob Dole,
~ happily the front-runner again after a
. pig win in South Carolina, hints that
tllis week's contests could seal the
GOP nomination. But Pat Buchanan
..$aid' today he can heat Dole in key
: Southern contests if he can "crack
, Georgia open" in Tuesday's primary.
'. With eight primaries Tuesd11y, the
·:aop nomination battle focused today
: o~ Georgia, where Buchanan main.lained "we are stronger" than in
' SOuth Carolina, which saw him fin·
ish second to Dole.
· ' Dole remained above the fray in
. Georgia Sunday night. skipping a
'.forum Sunday night tllat saw four
• ppponents in an occasionally testy
· hour-long exchange. The WSB-TV
forum was almost overshadowed by
tlle scene of police hnuling away
another GOP ~ntender - Alan
Keyes- when he tried to get in.
. "This is a disgrace to American
democracy," Keyes told NBC's
. "Today" show. He called it "an effort
to manipulate the outcome" of the

Single-day
strike hits
efdereare ··-facilities
: CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) About 1,000 workers at 12 nursing
~omes in West Virginia were on a
one-day strike today to protest
staffing levels and low wages.
: Members of the Service Employees International Union District 1199
carried picket signs at the state Capi·
tol.
·
Among the nursing homes
.jnvolved was Mariner Health Care in
Huntington, where one staff memhc~
must care for at least 15 to 20
patients a day, some workers said.
"A lot of times, I get attached to a
patient. ~utI can only spend IS to 20
minutes with them before I have to
move on," said Diane Harmon, a cer-tified nursing assistant at Mariner.
"By the end of the day, I feel I didn't do my job by taking care of them
properly."
The average nursing home aide in
West Virginia earns about $5.61 an
hour. The union wants that increased
.to at least $7.29 an hour.
The union also wants to raise min·
imum staffing to one aide for every
eight residents during !he day, one for
e'very I0 in the evening and one for
e&gt;11:ry 15 at night.
"I think lawmakers have kind of
isilo~ the problem," said Jennifer
Tlli;kett, a Mariner employeee. 'This
is 8 problem we're all going to have
tQ face. We're all going to get old,
f(ld we're going to be in a nursing
IKune if we're not dead already. One
day, we're all going to be on the
receiving end."
·: The federal and federal Medicaid
program pays for 77 percent of all
nursing home patients in West Virgjnia, and demands by the union
workers would increase those costs
$18 million at a time when Medicaid
is facing cuts.

election and said he was considering
legal action. Buchanan, one of the
four invited to the debate, said today
Keyes "certainly should have" been
included.
Dole was invited. He campaigned
in Maryland late Sunday and headed
k Georgia today.
"There are still about four candi·
• dates around. I think if we do very
well on Tuesday, there won't he but
one around. And that might he me,"
Dole told a veterans rally in Towson,
Md.,.late Sunday.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich
told 'The Associated Press Sunday
night that he will cast an absentee bal- ·
lot Monday in G.eorgia but will not
make public whoni he is supporting
for a few weeks.
"In my view, it's now down to
three people and they deserve a coupie of weeks to try to dislodge Sen·
ator Dole," Gingrich said. "I am not
going to endorse anyone in the meantime."
Dole suggested that other Republi~an candidates might want to con·
sidcr folding their campaigns if he

sweeps primanes this week. Eight
states, ·including Georgia, vote on
Tuesday, followed by New York's
primary on Thursday, where 93 del·
egates will he selected.
Polls show Dole ahead in all nine
states.

Buchanan, appearing on NBC's
"Today" show, said he 's still in con(enlion, but "clearly, we have to do
better here in Georgia. It's a Js;ey state.
If we can crack Georgia open I
believe we can beat Bob Dole in the
Super Tuesday of Southern states."
The Senate majority leader retook
the lead on Saturday with a commanding win in South Carolina.
Dole's suggestion that he's got the
GOP race close to nailed duwn found
few subscribers Sunday night among
his three principal opponents commentator Buchanan, publisher
Steve Forbes and former Tennessee
Gov. Lamar Alexander. 'The WSB·
TV debate was carried nationally on
Cable Network News and C-SPAN.
All three sco~ Dole for his
absence.
"There is one candidate who can
stand up to President Clinton. It's not
Sen. Dole, who can't even stand up
here, " Buchanan said.
And Alexander said of Dole,
"He's supposed to be here tonight. ...
And he's supposed to be compared
with us."

AG approves wording
on gambling question
COLUMBUS (AP) - Attorney General Betty Montgomery has
approved wording for a petition to put a casino gambling issue on the
Nov. 5 ballot.
The wording for a second gambling issue is expected to he approved
this week.
Both still need enough signatures to he placed on the ballot.
The first issue, by Buckeye Extravaganza, would set up a total of
eight casino sites in Fairport Harbor, Sandusky. Lorain, Cleveland and
in or near Cincinnati . It also would allow fraternal and veterans groups
to install electronic gambling machines in their private clubs.
The proposed amendment to the Ohio Constitution requires signatures from 335 ,000 registered vmers before rt can be placed on the ballot
Buckeye EKtravaganza President Ricky Lertzman said casinos
would create 15,000 jobs and bring in $400 million a year in taxes.
But Gov. George Voinovich opposes casinos as anti·family and has
fostered a group called Citizens for a Stronger Ohio to campaign against
the gambling issues.
Montgomery's office said wording of a similar petition drafted by
Lorain businessman Alan Spitzer probably will be approved this wcelc.
The proposed casino sites vary in the two petitions, and Spitzer's
proposal does not include gambling machines in private clubs.
Just before the debate began, and Alexander slammed Buchanan-'s
longsh01 candidate Keyes was taken call for high tariffs on Japanese, Chiaway from the debate site by Atlanta nese and certain other foreign-made
police . Keyes was not invited but goods, arguing they would amount to
tried to enter the studio anyway. tax increases for American con"You have no right," Keyes protest- sumers.
ed, as supporters chanted "Let him
For his part, Dole hinted at campaign
appearances on Sunday in
speak!"
During the Atlanta debate, Forbes Maryland

Speaker at retreat- Cremeans' primary opponent

bridles
at belief
he's a 'joke'
.
.
.

John C.llender, right, senior v!ce president of the Ohio Hospital Allocletlon, Columbua,eddrasled general healthcera
problema currently confronting ell hoapltala when he spoke
lit the aonuel retraet of the board of trustees and medical staff
of Veterena Memorlel Hospital. The retrut wes held Friday at
the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis. VMH Admlnlatrator Scott Lucas Ia
shown welcoming C.llencler to the off-hospital alta retriult,
which Ia required by tha Joint Commlllsion on Accreditation
of HeeHhcara Orgenlzatlona.

Angered by dismissive comments
that he is a ·~oke," Sixth District con·
gressional primary candida1e Bob
Kelley begs to differ with the belief
he isn't serious about his CBJ11paign.
Kelley, a Scioto County .Jocational educator, responded to comments
from Barry Bennett and David Payne,
spokesmen for U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipoli s, quoted in a
Gannett News Service story last
week.
Bennett and Payne commented on
Kelley 's challenge to Cremeans' support of millionaire publisher Malcolm
"Steve" Forbes, who is seeking the
Republican nomination for presi·
dent. Kelley is opposing Cremeans
for the GOP nomination in the March
19 primary.
"Most people think he 's a JOke ,"
Bennett said, adding that Kelley
"doe.~n 't know what he is talking
about." Payne, a Cremeans staff
member, has been loaned by the firstterm congressman 10 the Forbes campaign.
.
"Bennett calls me a 'joke' ... but
has never interviewed me or even
talked to me about my talents, skills
and knowledge that make me a cred·

·-

'

-~

Bob Kelley
ible, competent, problem-solving
candidate for service in the U.S. Congress," Kelley said in a statement
issued over the weekend.
His criticism of the CremeansForbes alliance is rooted in hi s belief
that Cremeans and the party are
ignoring working people. Cremeans,

he added, "is playing up to corporate
America instead of the people who
elected him."
"The Republican Party needs to be
a party of inclusion, not e~clusion , for
those of us who believe in less government, less taxes and more personal
respon sibility," Kelley said.
Kelley, who described himself as
;"a working cia« guy," finished fourth
in a four-way race for the congressional nomination in 1994 that wa~
won by Cremeans.
A fanner employee of the Piketon
nuclear enrichment plant and a
Portsmoulh steel mill. Kelley said
he 's pu1 his job, retirement plan and
savings at risk by running.
"I ask you, is this not a serious
contender? llhink so," he said.
"I have put my money where my
mouth has always been," Kelley
added. "I want to serve my country
again, as I did in combat in Korea.
Mr. Bennett, Mr. Payne; being shot at
was deadly serious, not a joke."
Cremeans and Kelley are seeking
the nod to oppose fonner Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland of Lucasville
this fail. The Si~th District covers 14
southern Ohio counties.

As income crawls ahead, spending records decline
Persons/ earnings
post sins/lest rise .
Since /SSt SUmmer

By JOHN 0. McCLAIN
Alaoclated Prall Writer
WASHINGTON _ J&gt;ersonal
incomes inched up 0.1 percent in Jan·
uary, the smallest advance in six
months. Consumer spending fell 0.5
percent, the steepest decline in more
than three years.
The Commerce Department said
today the increase in incomes was the
smallest · since they remained

unchanged last August. The spending
decline. the third in five months, was
the largest since consumption fell 0.6
percent in August 1992.
Incomes totaled $6.25 trillion in
January, up from $6.24 trillion a
month earlier, the report said. Spending totaled $5.01trillion, down from
$5.03 trillion the previous month.
Economist Cheryl Katz of Merrill
Lynch &amp; Co. in New York said the
weaker-than-expected January spend·
ing suggests sluggish consumer
spending during the Januaty,,March
quarter. She said there were signs of

a modest rebound in February.
and subsequent blizzard in the East.
Analysts said in advance of the
In December, incomes rose 0.6
report that severe weather in January percent, pushing them for the year up
affectedbothincomesandspending. 6.1 percent compared with 4.9 perThe number of hours worked shrank 'cent in 1994. The annual increase was
because of the cold and snow, which · ·well above the 2.5 percent rate of
kept many consumers from depart- inflation, as measured by .the govment stores and malls.
emment's Consumer Price lndu.
The report acknowledged the
Spending in December jumped
weather impact but did not attempt to 0 .9 percent, pushing it up 4.8 percent
quantify the impact.
for the year, slower than the 5.5 perThe report combined the Decem· cent gain in 1994.
ber and January figvres, which were
Many analysts expect consumer
delayed by the governmen! shutdown spending to remain sluggish this
caused by the federal budget impasse year because of weak income growth

and large debt accumulation.
An early February survey of 36 :
professional economic forecasters by :
theNationaiAssociationofBusiness ·
Economists, for instance, produced a :
consensus saymg spending will :
increase by 2 percent, down from 2.4 :
percent in 1995:
Consumer spending represents
abouttwo-thirdl; of the nation's ceonomic activity.
Disposable in~ome rose 0.3 per·
cent in January after jumping 0.7, percent a month earlier.
_

fi.ghtening screws on Cuba may derail development efforts
By ROB WELLS
A9 Bullneu Writer
. WASHINGTON - A new bill aimed·llltoppling Fidel Castro by tight·
·etiing U.S. sanctions against Cuba could end up causing pain to U.S. busi·
ness, too, officials say.
".A provision allowing U.S. citizens to sue foreign corporations that use
co~_fiscatecl property in Cuba could cn:ate "economic chaos" with Ameri·
can trading partners like Mexico and Canada, several Cuba experts said .
:.'And it could help foreign companies gain market share in the Caribbean 's
llriest country.
.
: ·." It certainly doesn't do anything poSitive for U.S. business," said William
LCoorande, professor of government at American University. "It does run
thi risk of disrupting normal trade and business relationships with our closeft:allies."
fohn Kavulich, president of !he U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council,
cflls the bill tantamount to "laying out a welcome mat for U.S. competitors."

•

- '
.

Last week, congressional leaders and President Clinton agreed on the mea·
sures in !he bill, aimed at drying up foreign investment in Cuba. It is expect·
ed to pass easily in both the House and Senate.
The bill came to the forefront after the Cuban military shot down two aircraft flown by exiles on Feb. 24.
It would allow American citizens to sue foreign investors who make use
of Cuban property confiscated during the 35· years of-Castro's rule. An estimated $6 billion worth was seized from more than 5,000 U.S. businesses and
citizens after Castro's 1959 takeover - one of the largest takings of U.S.
property in history.
•
. ·
Clinton can waive the lawsuit provision, but only for six months at a time
and only if he declares it in !he national' interest. Officials expect Clinton to
block the lawsuits, but a decision olhcrwise could clog federal courts with
an avalanche of claims.
Such lawsuits would cause "economic chaos with our trading partners"
and greatly complicate trade agreements like the North American Free Trade

Agreement, said Willard Workman, vice president for international affairs
at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Canadian Foreign Minister Lloyd Ax worthy said last week the bill violates NAFfA and suggested Canada and Mexico might file a complaint in
international court.
As examples of the disputes that could arise, analysts cite Cemex, a Mexican cement company operating a ceme11t plant that once belonged to the U.S.
company Lone Star Industries. Another example is the Mexican telecommunications firm Groupo Demos, which has a deal to own half of Cuba's
state telephone company, but denies it uses assets of ITT Corp., which bas
an $80 million claim against Cuba.
The Cuba bill also denies U.S. entry to anyone who traffics in confiscat.
ed property. And it puts into law all previous executive orders concemina
America's 34-year-old embargo on Cuba, meaning il could be lifted only by
Senate vote, a bigf!er hurdle than a pres1denllal order.

�Pege2

'.Commentary

'.•• Monda.y,
Merch •• 11M

Monday, March 4;·1996
- ' '

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Wcdtl1cr

l~ongressional _ GOP look• ·

. Thmdly, M..-dl 5 .

The Daily Sentinel Not ·even the GOP ·deserves.Buchanan

~ccu We~

By Joseph Spur
When I hear someone .mention
Republicans these days, two thoughts
pop immediately to mind.
The first is a truism as old as
mankind: If you sow lemon seeds
· you eventually get'lemons.
The second is a frightful scenario:
Patrick Buchanan wins the Republi- .
can nomination and does to them
what George McGovern did to the
· Democrats --enfeebles them for two
decades.
The man who planted the seeds
that produced the le1_11on that is Pat
Buchanan was . Richard Nixon. In
1968, after barely winning the presidency over Huben Humphrey-,
Nixon decided to woo die 10 million
voters who went for Alabama Gov.
George Wallace. Whereas before,
Nixon had sought to attract blacks·
and moderates to GOP ranks, he now
considered them less imponant than

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

£
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Ma1111ger

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

-::Today in history

the economically disaffected, the
"Washington elite," the anti-integrationists, the God-and-guns gang.
The devolutiop of modem politi-

Joseph Spear
cal discourSe had begun. The steady
regression took us through the
.Ronald Reagan era, which vilified the
ideological impure, !o the Newt Gingrich era, which slanders the opposition witJt a glossary of vile words and
phrases. Along the way, the GOP
bandwagon picked up a host 'Of disagreeable if not disturbing passengers, from rabid radio talkmeisters to
religious fundamentalists to camouflaged crazies and conspiracy theorists. And now they've got Pat
Buchanan.
I am tempted to say the Republi. can Party deserves him, but I have too
much affection for a viable two-par- .

· · The Aaaociated Preas
Today is Monday; M¥Ch 4,. the 64th day of 1996. There are 302 days
left in the. year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 4, 1789, the Constitution of the United States went into effect
· •as the first Federal Congress met in New York. (The lawmakers then
· , adjourned for the lack of a quorum.)
On this date:
.
In 1681, England's King Charles II granted a charter to William Penn
for an area of land that later became Pennsylvania.
In 1791, Vermont became the 14th state.
In 1793, George Washington was sworn in for a second term as presi, dent of the United Sta~s .
·
In 1829, an unruly crowd mobbed the White House duriqg the inaugur, al reception for President Jackson.
In 'J 861, Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated president.

ty system to wish this man on anybody. Yes, he is striking a cbord with
blue- and white-collar workers who
feel they are ~ing sljafted by Wall
Street and ignored !ft. ~ashington .
But what the·disafl'ected fail to appre~ciate is how much worse the cure
would be than the malady in this case.
To dislodge Buchanan. some say,
would be to encourage Ross l&gt;erot..
Ah,· friends, Ross Perot would be
stinker. Pat Buchanan would be an
unmitigated disaster.
Buchanan is a hater, a goa&lt;!er, an
opponunist. He exalts hooliganism.
He praises such despots as the late
Francisco Franco of Spain and
Augusto Pinochet of Chile. As a
speechwriter for Richard Nixon, he
was the black angel who perched on
the president's shoulder and succored
the dominant dark sid4 of the Nixon
·psyche. As ttie COI!1munications
director in the Reagan ~ite House,

!

Tl'tra;f TIIAT .
SIIWLP 00!

'

he was the administration's resident
provocateur.
Buchanan is, in the words of fellow Nixon speechwriter William
Gavin, "George Wallace with ll
.Georgetown degree." Buchanan was,
.in the words of Reagan spokesman
Larry Speakes, a "blindly reac, tionary" troublemaker.
1
Let's permit Pat Buchanan to
: speak for himsel~
· -- "Hider was indlled' racist and
1
anti-Semitic," he wrote in 1977. But
•Hider was also a person of "great
Icourage, a soldier's soldier ·in the
IGreat War, a Political organizer of the
: first rank, a leader steeped in the Jtjsltory of Europe, who possessed ora:torical powers that could awe even
Ithose who despised him." .
1 • .,.
Holocaust' survivors are
jengaged in :•groupfanwies.of mar' tyidom and heroics," he said in
1990.
-- Democracy "may erove the
Golden Calf of this-genei:ation," he
wrote in 1992. He also decri~ "the
·democr,tist ~temptation, , the worship
of democracy as a :fonn'. of gover\nance.'' ·
· ; ~- · Wom~n are -'}simply not
llndowed by· nature" -with wha! it
. ,takes to succeed in the worlq!lace, he
~nee wrote. "The monunil bird builds
the nest. So it was, so it shall ever

be."
-- Martin Luther King Jr., he once
said, was an "immoral, evil demagogue."
.
Suffice il to say that no tena~le
.candidate on the political . horizon
could inspire the united'opposition of
;a hundred factions-- blacks, Hispanics, Jews. environmentalists, prg.
choicers, feminis~. the disablql,
internationalists, bankers, traders,
finanCiers: liberals, fibertanans, Main
Street conservatives, modera_te
Republicans, common sense folk aqd
maybe even vegetarians -- like
Patrick Buchanan could.
,
As craven as. '1t's .been, the GOP
doesn't deserve' thit lemon.
Joseph Spear is a syndkated
writer for Newspaper Enterp~
~ladoL
·

Letters to the editor
Where is Frank?
Dear Editor,
could not give us a date. It has now
·On Nov. 7, 1995, seniors from the been almost four months since we
'Meigs Senior Center invited Mr. Ted first wrote to Mr. Cremeans. Mr. Cre,StrickiiJ!Id and Congressman Frank means has nover been to the Meigs .
Cremeans to come to the Meigs Cen- Senior Center -- not before he was
,,_ _
'ter and talk on the subject ·of health elected, as far as I know-- not since
,,
care, especially Medicare and Med- --and I
wondering if he ever will.
"~
·~···
icaid. Fony-two seniors signed the He was elected to represent all of the [
~,.;
:!,~tters. We sent both gentlemeh a list citirel)s in the sixth district. He rep'o f 41 questions penaining to health;. resents us, and he makes decisions [
care.
: whi_ch vitally affect the health care of j
Mr. Strickland responded imme- semors.
,
dialely and clime to the center on Dec.
Some Republicans have told me I
14, 1995. He came in the door with that Mr. Cremeans is too busy in '
our list of questions and proceeded to Washington to come here. -Some
answer thell). He spoke for one hour- Democrats have told me that Mr. Cre- By Nat Hentoff
,
'and fifty minutes, taking questions means is afraid of the very people he;
There is a nation-- Amnesty Interfrom the crowd. I thought it was a is supposed to represent. The Cincin- national reports -~ that practices torlively and informative.discussion. , nati Inquirer sometime ago reponed[ ture which "is widespread and someA second Jetter of invitation was ;._tl_tai Mr. Cremeans is simply a miss- times fatal. An unknown number of
sent to Mr. Cremeans on Nov. 29. ing person. If you happen to see Mr. \ .its citil!:f'ns have suffered aiilputa~~ns
And a third letter was sent on Dec. 16.! ·.Cremeans please remind him that the of hands and feet smce the authonlles
Finally, e~ly 'n J~nuary of 1996, ~r. seniors a1 the Meigs Center are still · · mtro~uced a ~nal code. ~ased ?.n
Cremeans d•stnct represen_tallve waiting for him to walk in the door their t~terpretallon of lslamtc law.
Dav1d Robert called me. He srud that with our questions in hand.
. Th1s helhsh place of state te;rorMr. Cremeans would come to the I
·
Bob Smlddlt, 1sm aga10st 1ts own ~ople ~~ Sudan,
MeiBs Senior center and talk about :
Pomeroy . the large~! country_ 10 Afnca. The
Medicare and Medicaid -- but he
force behiOd the military government
·
is the National Islamic Front, which
conducts a continuous war against the
·Christian and animist blacks in the
:south of Sudan. In raids, black chilDear Editor,
in tOday's ·world. These are things that 'dren, men and women are captured
After living away from the area for Southern's elementary students do not and enslaved in huge numbers.
nearly nine years, my husband and I have. now.
Moreover, as Amnesty JnternaWouldn't it be wonderful for our tiona! adds, ''goveml)lent forces have
were finally able to move back when
he was lucky enough to find a job in j children to have the advantages of a extrajudicially executed thousands
·his field. We were happy to be home. "city" education in our small town? of women in attacks on villages in the
I find it distwbing that some of our south and the Nuba mountains·."
We've learned that there are many !
advantages, and some disadvantages, ' voters are unwilling to consider.our
Yet the great majority of Ar..erito living in a "small town." One ques- students' education. If they are so cans know nothing of these atrocities
tion we had was, "What educational quick to dismiss this issue as just in the Sudan. Years ago, we did evenoppqrtunities would our two pre- another tax increase, then I have to tually find out about "the disapschool children, and all children, wonder just how many other educa- peared" in Argentina -- people sushave as. students in the Southern tional advances our children will be peeled of disagreeing with !lie milidenied.
Lec~ISchool District?"
tary government. The mothers of
. We were pJeased to learn of our
Voters, please don 'tiel this oppor- many of them, dressed in black,
school di$trict's opportunity to build tunity slip away. Don'tlet this become demonstrated for years, anct the world
a ne)W elementary school. Our chil- a disadvantage to living in a sma~ grieved with them.
dren could have warm, clean class- town.
Teresa Powell,
rooms. Our students could have the
Radne
modern teac!Jing aids and computers
that are necessary to educate our.kids ·

am

til'/.&lt;·

1-------------------'-------------------_.J

When a state .t errorizes its own -people··

.,

In Sudan, hundreds have disap- 1of Trans Africa and other prominent
peared. While no American publica- black Americans ignited newspaper
.lion has reponed in depth from that · and television· coverage · of their
land of terror, the London E!;onomist protests. And that coverage, that publicity, a,wakened Congress and the
White House to place sustained eco1nomic pressure on South Africa.
. There is no such momentum yet
has found that there is "a ubiquitous
secret police, no free press an~ no with regard to Sudan. There are, however, some stirrings. Randall Robinindependent judiciary...
In what sounds like a theft from son, who has been focusing on state
George Orwell's .. 1984 ,.. the gov- terrorism in Nigeria, tells me he has
emment of Sudan has established a. also started creating a network of
Truth Authentication Depaitment, pressure on behalf of tbe people of
Sudan.
. ·
.. hi h h 1 · 1he tb · · k
w c e ps
au onlles . eep • , And Donald Payne, chairman of
watCh on any challenge to politic'al, ithe Congressional Black Caucus, has
social or religious onhodoxy."
!shown how ,to bring pressilre on the
For journalists, this should bC :rulers of Sudan during an interview
'quite a story: the slav~ry; thC: COlJlses :with Tim Sandler of the Boston
{almost 2 'million have been killed ;Phoenix. Sandier, in his own ~pon­
1
since the National Islamic Front ·ing from SP61an. has·done the kind of
seiud power in 1989); and the cui- illuminating journalism that lhe New
tural cleansing (forcing many of the York Times and other mainstream
newspapers should have done long
black slaves to convert to Islam).
But with few exceptions, the ago.
American press, including television;
Donald Payne points out that
haS'Shown no serious interest in the Sudanese access to badly needed
tragedies of Sudan. And without loans from the African Qeveloprnent
intensive press attention, the horrors Board, among other financial instituwill continue.
.
'
tions, should be blocked. Payne also
No_t many Amencans were mte.r- . suppons additional ec&lt;!nomic saneested 10 the b1tte~ abuses of bl~ks m ,tions against Sudan, along with li
South Afr1ca until Randall Rob_mson :multilateral embargo of arms ship-

IJon 't let opportunity slip away

Dear Editor,
. My name is David Spencer, chair- .
puin of the Southern Local Building
Col!llllittee. As you may or may nOt
~now, the committee has been working very hard .over the last three
montha,trying to help generate suppqn.for passage of the Southern ~al
K-8 ~l~m~ntary School bond tssue
,lh,is Jdiii'Ch 19.
·
·
. .i .&lt;vantto express to.all .of you that
we ·de) have a ch8nce.of passing this
levy. falso know that a few people are
sayipg lhatthis levy will never pass.
But ~ity will say, if you and ,J work .
toaelher by &amp;!~ding jus! one ~ote eac~
day in suppon of passmg this levy, II

can happen!
Woody Hayes (former Ohio State
Football Coach) always said, that in
life you don't pay back, you must
always pay ahead. That is what you .
and I must do, we must pay ahead for
the next generations, for we are truly responsible for our children's suecess.
I personally would like to ¥k for
your belp, suppon and vote. Please
remember, "our children are the living messages we send into the
future."
Dawid Spenc:er.
Racine

r
f
b
r
t•
f
Des..cl lr)e or pu 'ca •on 0
,

'.~
.
r·,.-

,

·'~t·lop l_,tters March 1t:. ·
·,

,

1

•

.,~ p.~ly ~ntinel ;welc"!'ie~ let. teisregl!li:lingt,hCM~h 1,~ _pruna·
·.ry election, However, 111 the m~erest
ot fltirne5s, no election letters w11l be
accepted a(ter 12 noon· on Monday,
March 11.
'1 •
•
'
. )Jidividu.IJ sllouJd addJ:es• issllel
aFid not per101181iticS, : . ·. .
~ purely •endilnmg ~I)!

4

...,

••

-::

By Jack Anderson
and Mlcheel Blnateln
WASHINGTON -- When his
hometown Dallas Cowboys recently
visited the White Hquse to celebrate
their Super Bowl victory, House
Majority Leader Dick Armey lived up
to his brash Texan reputation.
"I'm cenain the Cowboys will be
at the Wl)ite House next year," Armey
said in a ; statement. "But · I 'doubt
they'll find President Clinton there."
In a recent fund-raising letter,
however, Armenounded more like a
coward than a cowboy. And he was
much less confident about his party's
chances of keeping control of Con~s than 'he was about putting a
Republican in the White House.
Armey's three-page pitch reads
more like a desperate plea Jienned by
~levl\ngelist Oral R.obt:rts than ti!e
irnhedgs oafbo
· au'tmacho!o.thmae
.•

?po~~IJ?cshasof

• •

,

.

.

, ,

• '

_

carnpasp

•••

l

•

,

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Blnsteln

,sition on a level playing field,"
Armey wrote. ")'hat means my campaign needs the money to fight
whomever they send against us."
Who is this 800-pound gorilla that
Democrats are hoping will unseat the
second most · powerful nuin in the
· House? He's Dr. Jerry Frankel, a S3. year-old urologist, who says he's
;raised a grand total of $200. In
.1December, 4noey had m\)Te than
$has700,000hin
c,ash, and _heth
won 1s past t..;.,., e echons wt

cam~~n

'tt!"n:'~~~W'.:~O:~~i!:ki~dl~!~ ,~:~~~~~~:~=~~efJ..vr~~F~~~

'tbat Qod was going .to "call' him
·, dates wiU not ,be ~.;
..
I' ! bome" ·.IJII.~ss he raiSC\1(1 ·millions of
,, . Lettm s~ukl be ?&lt;JO wOrds or; d?l~ma~?"ple~fmonths.
leu~ preferab)~ tyjled. Ailletlera are . L•kew1se, Am\ey. told ~upporte~
subJect to edmng lind 11\d must he that he was headed for pohucal pursigned witb nanie, ad4roif and tele- gatnry unless they injected fast cash
phjlne number. Telephone numbers into his coffers. "I need to raise
. will not ~ published. 't#o ~ri'si~ · $67,89S in~ weeks so I can ~ear
Jetten wt~l be publl.slied. ~ra .. !If' my
to respond to nabOS::
· ~ld be IR JOOd lute.
·' i~ DeiiiOCAIS. outra~eous attacks,
r
,
..

Armey wrote last month. "The stakes
are incredibly high .... I need your
. 'help immediately.
.
; · "You and I must meet our OPJl9·

, "I'm flattered to hear he's in troulble," Frankel told our associate .Ed
iHenry. ':Jdidn'tevenknowheknew
Ithat 1 exist."
·
:. An Armey spokesman told us the
letter was an example of "democra.cy in actioil" because it showed that
his boss is collecting small contributions. He Said "the other side is higiJJy m0tivatecl': and Armey '"can't

leave-anything to chance."
In reality, Al)ney is using a tactic
perfected by the Democrats during
their 40-year reign in · the House of
Representatives: Incumbents raise
gobs of money early in the election
season as a way of scaring away
potential contributors to their oppo·nents. ·The OOP used to ridicule this
tactic when Democrats were in·control. Now they 've raised it to new
heights.
· Frankel told us he's spent about
;S400 so far for button and bumper
~ stickers . As a practicing doctor, he's
:running on a plan to radically restruc·
!ture the health care system. He even
1crafted a motto to help.crNte·inlarest:
i"Togethei we can move mountains!
ilogether we can have health and prosipeiity for all Americans."
But what about that help. ~
'national Democrats that Armey fs so
!Scared of? .frankel admit's lhai lie did
·~ttend one meeting wilh tbe Democratic Con~sional Campaign Com~
mittee. He was advi~ to shave ~i~
motto down to two or three words; so
how it's: "PeOple FU,t." .· '
In addition to his hoge campaign'
war ~hc;~t. Armey's separate leader-:
ship PAC is. bulging with $421,800•
from special interests. Armey has;
helped the GOP rake in record sums
--• includitiii an unpt'ecedentOd $16 ·
million at one dinner in January.

.

...

.. -

.

tors."
What can also be done, says
iPayne, is putting pressure on cou)ltries that trade with Sudan.
I have seen videos of smuggled
•out of Sudan -- videos, of escaped
slaves and of witnesses to other
atrocities. If this and similar ,foota~e
were shown on "60 Minutes," "Dateline," "PrimeTime Live," "The Ne'l"sHour," and t!te network news P\1"
grams, the White House and Congress would finally awaken. WithC»Jt
sending a single American sold*·
they could releak 'millions of blacks
in Sudan from the Cf!IShi~g weight&lt;Of
a viciously cruel government.
'
Meanwhile, Louis Farrakhan, during his recent "World Friendship
.Tour," went to Sudan and lavistily
praised that government of slaveri;
Nat Hentolf is a oatioaally
renowoed authority OD the ~
Amendment and the rest of the BJ¥

or Jtl&amp;bts.

1
•

.

''

' '
' f

This is-the same Armey who stood ..
·and cheered when Clinton mentione9'
campaign f)nance reform during hi~
State of the Union address.
DOLE'S DOUBLE STANDARD
-- Republican presidential candida~
Bob Dole, R-Kan., is the last perso.
who should be complaining that MJ
colm S. ·:ste•e" Forbes is "trying1
buy the election.'.'
'
. .
Dole's bitter remark came afi«
Forbes outspent hirQ by a 4-1 margiA
in the Arizona primary, whicli Forbel
won handily.
·.
::
. The Senate majority leader woo''
·get much sympathy from Glru:m·
Q'Dell, who was outspent 8-lin
futile battle (Qf Dole ~~ lie,nate seat i
. 1992. Oole puisuriell~ O'Dell by 31
points afte1 spending $2 milli!!4
against her paltry $295,000. ,
,~
O'Dell. who waged a "Gloria vs~
Goliath" campaign tbat included 'le(
shooting a TV commercial with •
home video camera, told us in ·Itt
intervjew:"'I thil!k tiH!J:t:'s.such wiinl
depul irony in that now (Dole)
whining about the fact Alai sOm,el
bOdy's gpt more money than 'him;•;
Almost four ye~s .after the race .
'O'Dell's caplpiligil,,. (il(ld remain,
· ~ly $12.5,000 in the red.while s~
!is unemployed.
. . ·~ ;'
Jaek Alsdenon Ia a
Writer for United Feature li ·

·i·

:q

·

""-

IND. ·

'''''

..·•

'' '''

•lcotumbuslse· I

·" .

... ,,,,

', I

.,

,,

'

..
.,
·:

·

,

~ ~

.

Gannett News ServiCe

WASHINGTON- When Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., took to the
House floor to argue for $200 million
to help save the Everglades, he was
reclaiming hls role as party "visionary"- part of an ~merging strategy
to regain the political and congresj sional high gtound.
• Sometimes House speakers wrap
: up debate on a major debate_ on the
r budget, say. It is rare 10 see the~ in
t '!'e trenches on more roullne Jegtsla,, llon. But these are not routine times
~for Republicl\ns, struggling to regain
their footing · to assure continued
control of Congress and their "revolution."
_ There was Gingrich, the budget_cutting, bureaucracy-slicing reforrtlet,
_ arguing against his Appropriations
chairman, Bob Livingston, R-La.
- Arguing that, at least this once, more
Free dinner slated
Potluck diDner set
... money is needed to keep the EverA free bean and cornbread dinner
Burlingham Modem Woodmen - glades cleanup on track. On a vote
will be held Sunday from II a.m. to will have a potluck dinner Saturday - that split both parties, Gingrich won,
I p.m. at Southern High Schbol in . night at 6:30 at the hall. Meigs . 299 to 124.
Racine. Sponsored by the Southern County -Prosecuting Attorney John : Republicans systematically- but
Local Building Committee. All com- Lentes will be the speaker for the • with limited success - have made
munity residents welcome.
family life program. He will talk on ' forays against environmental law,
estate planning and wills.
~ creating a public backlash many lawBuilding commiUee
:makers regret, at least politically.
The Southern Local Building Arthritis program ,
j That Gingrich now would try to ternCommittee will meet Thursday, 7
The Arthritis Aquatic Program of lper that seemed to some a precursor
p.m. at Syracuse Elementary School. the Ohio University College of 1of a truly strange political year.
. All district residents urged to attend. Osteopathic Medicine got underway
Fot; Republicans, particularly conFriday at Roy~l Oak Resort in servatives, 1994 was a startling gift.
Girl Scout activities
Pomeroy. It is a series of gentle ~re­ And 1996 has become the seminal
Pomeroy Cadette Troop 1180 is ational exercises in the heated pool, election that could shape the nation
planning a day of activities for held on Mondays, Wedn~sdays and for a generation.
Brownie and Junior Girl Scouts in the Fridays, 10 to II a.m .. and residents
IfRepublicans hold Congress and
area on March 16 from 10-2 p.m. may enroll at anytime. Those panic- win the White House, they see their
Cost of the event is $4.50 per girl and ij1'ants who are not members of Roy- revolution advancing. It slows if
they should register through their al Oak pay $21 a month and for that they hold Congress but President
troop. A minimum of 30 and a ·max- fee, they and immediate family mem- Clinton wins. If Democrats recapture
imum of 80 girls will be accepted for bers may attend the program and use Congress, Republicans see. a resurthe event. A wide range of activities cenain Royal Oak facilities on their ·gence of big government.
are planned: games, dancing, crafts, own time. Participants who come
Republicans have seen prospects
food and more. For more informa- once a week oq the Senior Citiuns' ·for their revolution slip. Since early
tion, call992-6679. The event is open bus may continue to pay $.5 a month. January, Gingrich, in nearly constantto girls from surrounding counties
sessions with other leaders and ad vis·
also as pan of the celebration of Girl
ers, crafted a strategy that includes:
Scout Week.
Garden dub to meet
• Making clear their difference ~
The Chester Garden Club will. with Democrats. "We have failed to
Rutland Youth League
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the tell the American people what's going
Rutland Youth League will have home of Mrs. Howard Knight. The on and what is motivating us," Rep.
baseball sign ups Thesday, 7-9 p.m., topic will be "Secrets of Gardening" Henry Hyde, R-111:, said.
and Saturday, 4-6 p.m., at the Rutland For roll call members are to display
Those differences blurred last fall,
fire station. Bring birth certificate. an unusual garden tool.
when GOP mantras like "leaner govFor more information call742-22o9.
ernment" and "tax cuts" became garbled in the need to keep government
open and to raise the "debt limit" or forego horrowing. Twice the govemment shut down, twice the GOP
caught the flak.
No~, they simply will try to tell
'deWi!maJean McGraw, 71, Racine, died Sunday, March 3, 1996 ai her res1 nee.
·
Bom Jan. 30, 1925 at Letan Falls, daughter of Rose Howard McDade of
Middleport, and the late Ray McDade, she was a homemaker and a member of the F~t Baptist Church of Racine.
She 1s ~urvtved by her husband, Dale _L. McGraw, whom she married Feb.
II, 19461!' Racme; a daughter and son-m-law, Garcia and Harold Adams of
Long Bo~tom; three grandchildren and one great-grandson; two sisters and
brothers-m-law, Thelma and Herman Reese of C:heshi~e , ind Norma and
Roben Wilson of Columbu~; two brothers and SISters-m-law, Ron~ld_ and
Loretta ~cDade ofGalhpolts, and Don and Linda McDade of Cheshire, and
several n1eces and nephews.
,,,
She ~as al_so preceded in death by a sister, Oma Amott.
. .
. Serv1ces will be I p.m. Wednesday m the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racme,
w•'!t the Rev. Larry Haley and the Rev. Aaron Young officiating. Burial will
~ m the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the fun,t:ral home from
' 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.

Meigs announcements

J

'
VlaAssCJ. c 'nrtD'Ptta~t .

1

'·Brief warming trend set ·
;·f or middle of the week
. :By The A88oclated Preas
:
A brief warming trend is forecast
· 'for Ohio; starting Tuesday, forecasters said.
•
. ']Jlat follows low temperatures this
·· morning ranging from the single
_ digits in the northeast to low teens in
. ·the south.
; : Temperatures tonight will · hold
: steady or even lise a few degrees, the
National Weather Service said. R'ain
·. :also is likely; starting out a5 snow in
' lhe northeast.
,. ·: The rains will continue on Thes; )lay as temperatures climb into the
; ~and 50s and possibly even the 60s .
: m southe~t Ohio.
· ' A return to more seasonable
&gt;"eather is likely by Thursday.
The record-high temperature for
1this date at the Columbus weather
. ~tation was 78 degrees in 1976 while
the record low was I below l!:f'ro in .
1943. Sunset tonight will be at 6:27
o.m. and sunrise Thesday at 6:58a.m.

...,

lments there.
· Funhermore, according to ttie
Boston Phoenix, "Payne is fdr senll:ing human rights monitors-intd Sudan.
to hold the government accountable
for its actions. Any decisions abOUt
freeing up international loans could
!hinge upon reports from these moni-

c:ate,loc.

.

·'

By NORII BREWER

Wilma Jean McGraw

· Weather forecast:
Tonight ...Snow 1
iikely
north ...Changing to raih around midnight Rain may be mixed with a~­
od of freezing rain. Cloudy south
with periods of rain ...Mainly after
midnight. Lows near 30 north to near
40 south, with temperatures rising
)oward morning.
TUesday... Windy and warmer with
showers likely. Highs from 4S to SO
far nonheast to the lower 60s southell$!.
Exteodtd forecast:
Wednesday... Rain likely... Possibly mixing witli snow north. Lows in
the mid 30s north to near 40 south.
Highs 40 to 4.5 north and 4.5 to 50
south.
Thursday... A chance of snow.
Lows 25 to 35. Highs from the mid
30s north to the mid 40s south.
Friday... Cold with .a chance of
flurries ... Except snow showers likely northeast. Lows 20 to 25, Highs 2.5.
to 30.
.

.Weekend wrecks kill ni

Armey uses a l;)emocratic ploy to raise funds

Together, it can happen

~o better explain ~ •contract' :

f!mcut for daytime conditions 111d hlah temperatures

'

'Esttmflstid in 1.948

The D8lly Sentinel.,.... 3

"

1

By The Associated Preas
bus Grove, in a one-c
t on
Weekend traffic accidents in Ohio a village street.
_c;taimed .nine lives, four of them
XENIA - Melvin . Dawkins,
jiedestrjans...the litate High,way rarrpl 82, of Xenia, a pedestrian struck on
,'l,lid .tOday. '
a Greene County road.
' · The patrol counted fatalities from
WADSWOKI'H- Milton J. Gaup.m. Fr:iday through Sunday.
gler, 64, of WadswOflh, driver in a
' :· The deild:
·- erne-car accident on a city street.
'·
. SUNDAY
WAPAKONETA -· Mark A.
. ' KETfi'llhNG - barbara E. Quellhorst, 23, of Wapakocicta, driver
, Rowia~d, 41 , of Kettering, a pedes- in a one-vehicle accident on a road in
trian struck by a car on Stroop Road Auglaiu County. .
·in Ketterjr;lg.
'.
FRIDAY NIGHT
,
SATURDAY
NEWARK- Edward L. Baugh~ · CANTON -Judith Radanovich, man, 73, of Newark, a pedestrian
:·49., of Navarre, apas&amp;enger in a two- struck on a city street.
:c,ai crash mi a Jackson Township road
McCONNELSVILLE - Jimi
.'in Stark County.
Sue Ashton, 16, of Malta, driver in a ·
. .. COLUMBUS GROVE-Joseph one-car accident:on Ohio 60 ia Mor~ntz, 20, the driver, and passenger, gan County.
Angeh1
J)ietrich. 20, both of Colum.,,
-

:6

·:Historians to fix mistakes

:on Rear/ Harbor .memorial
.

: _HON~~ULtJ (APl - His!ory is , ihe attack.
.
!Jemg rewnlteJ! ·at the Pearl Harbor
"I'm pretty sure I'm abve," the
Tiletnorial, aJjd with good reason now 74-yeat-old veteran told The
iJ's ful~o"(mis~es. , • ,
Honolulu Adveniser. "Yep. Still
: . The f~r~l govemmeiJl has hired here."
,
;(o,ur histot:i,aps to correct at l~t 50
BaJcer believes he was listed
mistakes at the USS Arizona among tbe casllalties because some"Re~.mbra~ Exhibit."
one Y&lt;'ho was killed in the attack had
Thiny &lt;1f the 34 panels that list grabbed a piece of his. uniforni condeaths irt .~Decj. ~· 1941, Japanese ,tainjngpan!J(hisenlistedserial nUIJlattack CP,ntt'.!!' !,Ri~s~lled names.,. ber. ·
,
. ,
.
wrong nn'ks and Incorrect duty sta·
Even Baker s family was told he
,tions.
was dead and he had troubl~ getting
'• ' But one man "u a .bigger boric to a paycbeck after the attack. Another
1Jlck. Pre: GebiJc·Baker was listed as soldiet finally confirmed his identity
'killed in action: He actually survived .and the misunderstanding was .
·
'· • cleared up, but his name still made it
'
·
1 on the memorial plaque.

·The

D~y

Sentinel

~2~3-M~~

Stocks

"'

I

Am Ele .Jto.r ......................~ ..43
Abo .........:••••...••....•••...••.....~.11\
Aahllllld 011 ...........................311\
lllember. The Auac:i""" ...,.,, end lhe ()h;o
New1paper Auociation.

A T I T ouoooooooooooooouo on u ooooooooouo63'1t

Bank OM •·······-······················38

Bob ~~· .......................:.... 11'4

St., -,.

f'OS'nt.\S'I1tR: Send addla1 oorn:ctiou• 10
The -Daily
Ill Court
Olllo .S769.

s.......

. a,·CWrltr·--

~Warner ........................... 33
Cf'llmplon 111d.......................... 17
Chlr'r!'l~ Shop ......................4\

svilcatPnoN IIATIS

City ttolclng ..........................23\

Otoe - k .............................................. .. $2.00
OneMollh................................................ $8.70

Ganrtelt
·····-··········-·····
..
Qooc:t,_T.A ........................
IO

One

v................................................. SIIH.OO

.
~f!iGI,II coPY raJa

'

Doll)! ................................................. 3, ea..
~ben 1i9l dalrl"l to pey obe cairier moy
renoitll ....,.... 10 The Doll)! .. ~
•.,;, I - . tll 01'12 .-, booiL COedit wiD bo
..Yen

c.riereach..._ ~ .

~

No oubt&lt;riptio.i ~oy' ,.u1 ....,..... lo we...re home t•d•\......,_ it'aftr n~

' ., 'fa

.'

"Ylleklu
' ~-;,
~g';"'
.. o-n-..
i~

:.•-••·"""'"~"''''~'~"'"' "'$21' 30

. 211-.......................:....................$53.12
01
~ .......i'i"'"oc···;;--M;ij;~;; ..
·"
..........,..._ .......................... .$2!1.~
IJ -

·:"l"

. lii'Noob..............:..........................._s,.,a

32 - ............................. ...............llllt.'12

'.,

~ Moguf .........................11

·······11\

K-m~lt .....................................7\

Larldl End ...............................17

u.... -~ ..........................~11\

Pecplll Bencorp...................23
01110 V811ey 8Mk ....................~3t

. Ortl .,...., .............................32~
Root.~~ ·

Robbins •

...............................11~

u,.ra ........T .......ae~

Ropl Dutchi8MII ,..............131\

81\Qrwr'ellrtc.............;.............e!4
Star .....................................11
w. . 1111'1....................~.......11~

Worthlltgtor1 llld...................21\

-·-·-

Stock ,..,on. are the 10:30
a.m. quotH prowtcled by AdYtel
of Qalllpolle.

Sentencing phase opens
in riot leader's sentence

CINCINNATI (AP) - Lawyers
wrangled over witnesses today as a
sentencing hearing- began for an
inmate convicted of murdering a
guard during the April 1993 riot at
Ohio's maximum security prison.
Carlos Sanders; 33, was convicted last month in the death of Robert
Vallandingham, 46, the only guard
killed during the 11-day uprising.
Nine inmates also were killed.
The sentencing phase of his trial
began today in Hamilton County
Common Pleas Court. The jury that
convicted him will decide whether to
recommend that Judge Fred Cartolaqo impose the death penalty or
sentence him to life in prison.
After brief opening statements, the
jury was sent out of the courtroom
while lawyers for both sides debated
over the admissibility of testimony

from a prison c,onsultant called by
prosecutors.
PrQseculors say Sanders was
responsible for planning and leading
the riot, the deadliest in Ohio history. Sanders, who was serving a HI- to
IS-year sentence for aggravated robbery in Cuyahoga County, wanted to
show corrections officials that he had
become a powerful leader of the
prison's Muslim inmates, they said.
Sanders, who has adopted the
Muslim name Siddique Abdullah
Hasan, has said he was a peacemaker who negotiated the end of the riot,
not a hard-liner who ordered killings.
Sanders is the 45th inmate convicted of riot-related charges. Fifty
prisoners were indicted on about
200 charges. Two prisoners were
acquitted, one case was dismissed
and two other prosecutions are pendmg.

EMS units answer 15·calls

I,

I

Today's· livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana,
Ohio ~irect hog prices at selected
buying points Monday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly steady;
demand moderate on a moderate to
light supply.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.5047.50, a few 4.5.00 and 48.00; plants
47.00-49.00.
U.S. 2-3: 230-260 lbs. 41.0045 .00.
.
Sows : finn to 1.00 higher.
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 30.0033.00; 500-650 lbs. 33.00-35 .50, a
few 36.00.
Boars: 25.00-28 .00.
Estimated receipts : 39,000.
Prices from The Producers

Livestock Association:
Cattle: une•en, 2.00 lower to 1.00
higher.
Slaughter sleers: choice 57.0066.00: select 50.00-63.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 55.0064.00; select 50.00-6 1.00.
Cows: steady to 1.50 lower; all
cows 42.75 and down .
Bulls: steady to higher; all bulls
50.00 and down.
Veal calves: steady to sharply
lower; ch01ce 140.00 and down .
Sheep and lambs: uneven, 1.00
lower 10 5.00 higher; choice wools
70.00-92.25; choice clips 75.0095.00; feeder lambs 91.00 and down·
aged sheep 46.00 and dowq.
'

One-car crash
injures driver

Units of the Meigs County Emer- pita!.
POMEROY
gency Medical Service recorded I 5
II
:51
a.m.
Saturday. Maples
calls for assistance Saturday and
Apartments,
Mary
Lyons, treated at . . A Racine woman was slightly
Sunday, including four transfer calls.
· the scene.
Units responding included:
InJUred early Sunday in a one-car
RACINE
MIDDLEPORT
accident on County Road 34 (Pine
3:18 a.m. Sunday, Elam Street, Grove) near Racine, the Gallia-Meigs
I:49 p.m. Saturday, North Second
Wilma
McGraw, dead upon arrival;
Avenue, Joyce Crabtree, Veterans
Post of the State Highway Patrol
REEDSVILLE
Memorial Hospital;
reponed.
1:.54 a.m. Saturday, SR 124, Mar8:.56 p.m. Saturday, State Route 7,
Kelle~ J. Nease, 36, 44770 Forest ·
jorie
Rood, refused treatment.
Pamela Hysell, refused treatment; '
Run Road, was taken to Veterans
RUTLAND
4:41 a.m. Sunday, Bradbury Road,
Memorial Hospital by private vebi8:05
a.m.
Saturday, McCumber cle, where she was treated aitd
Penny Evans, Holzer Medical Center;
7: 13 p.m. Sunday, Beech Street, Road, Beulah Collier, PVH;
released, a hospital spokesperson
1:14 p.m. Saturday, Main Street, said.
Margaret Nunn, Pleasant Valley HosChris Capehart, VMH.
Troopers said Nease was nonhSYRACUSE
bound, five-tenths of a mile north of
6: 14 p.m. Sunday, Kerr Street,
State Route 124, around I a.m. when
Harry Games, VMH.
her car slid off the right side of the
.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Veterans Memorial
road and overturned into a small
10:13 a.m. Saturday, volunteer fire 1creek.
Saturday admissions- none .
·
Saturday discharges - Beulah department and squad to SR 7, auto : The car _was moderately damaged
fire, Richard Patterson, owner.
White, Middleport.
. and the acc1dent remams under invesSunday admissions - none.
tigation.
Sunday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
DUclsa7'1es Man:b 1 - Martha
DO YOU WANT AN OPPOR'rUNITY TO:
SPRING VAllEY CINEMQ
Houck, Brittany Coomes, Kimberly
~46·4524
*Retire?
Kerr, Cheryal Webb, Florence Musser, Bessie Robinson.
·
~
Lower your Taxes?
Birth - Mr. and Mrs.· Leslie
Put Kids or Grandkids thru College?
McCombs, daughter, Vinton.
. Discharges Man:b ~ - Ashlee
Cornell, Martha Hopkins, Mrs.
THEN SEE ME!!!
Sbawn Qick and t~in daughters,
Karl Kehler
CPA
~~Y~!~~~cCombs and daughter,

Hospital news ·

7

*
*

m,

Bbtb - Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Bunce, son, !'omeroy.
,
Dillcbarges ~an:ls 3 - t-trs.
Steven Bunce and son, Matthew
Clarkson, Vernon McGuire, Ray-

mond Copas.
Bbtb - Mr. and Mrs. Olarles
Williamson, son, Rutland.
(PIIblillled wldl perwdehm)

•

people what having a balanced bUdget or tax cuts or regulatory relief fpr
businesses would me111: lower int~r­
lest rates for a house, car or colle-e
loan; a stimulated economy that clieates jobs; higher wages; more m~­
ey for consumer spending or savinss.
• Gingrich returning to the role he
filled in the first half of 1995, whtn
he spent time 0~ strategy and explaipmg.GOP pos 1 1Jon~ and left runniTig
the House largely to Majority Leaokr
Dick Armey, R-Texas.
:
. In hindsight, Gingrich erred jn
spending too much _time "in the
weeds," said press spokesman Toay .
Blankley - working on details 'l&gt;f
·proP?sals like ~edicare and beco'!llmg Immersed m budget negotia!lions.
:
Gingrich is expected to travel : a
lot, selling the message as he r.ais~s
money and campaigns for Republi·cans. But given his low poll numbers,
some are wary.
"I've never been a big fan of any;body coming out of there (Washington) and telling people what 10 do,"
said Rep. Jim Ross Lightfoot, R;1owa.
• Waming the country cannot
afford four more years of Clinton .
In part, Republicans bank on the
economy continuing to soften, perhaps slipping into recession. Most
blame would fall on the White House
occupant.
But Republican s will argue they
h~d to force Clinton into offering a
balanced budget an&lt;l, even then , he
has failed to tackle the biggest problems - Medicare, Medicaid and weifare.
"The president . would take us
d?wn the other path ... of the stifling,
b1g government status quo," said
Armey. Added Gingrich: " President
Clinton offers empty promises; we
offer real action ."
• Completing a gentler "Contract
With America," passed by the House
last year but which has languished in
the Senate.
Several Republicans indicated
they are more willing to compromise
wrth the Senate, where Majority
Whip Trent Lou! R-Miss., wants by
·the end of March to pass three Contract items: the line-item presidential
veto, and scaled-down versions of
legal and regulatory refonn.
"Now, it's not exactly the way we
,wantedit," he said. "But it is major
1 reform m those three categories."
1
House Minority Leader Dick
Gephardt, D-Mo., believes the GOP's
new strategy is wrong-headed.

614-992-7270
Investment and.•Tax Constdtant
Representative
of HD Vest
.
. Financial Services

�...

In Top 25 college basketball,

.

o. - -

- .

Q!

•

.

.

Western Carolina 69-60 in die cham-! :ence tournamcnU - Nodh C.Olinapionsbip game of the Southern
;Greensboro of the BiJ South, s~
terence ·tournament, feels the same · !Carolina State of the Mid-Eastern
way.
.
~ Athletic Confen:nce, AUSiin Peay of
"I think the facts an pretty : t the Ohio Valley and Centtal Florida
clear," Davidson coach Bob McKil- · of the Trans America Athletic Conlop said. "This isn't just a team that · • ference .- and Purdue as regularhas won 2S games, this learn has . . season champions of the Big Ten.
won ·25 games and made a statement . In games involving 11lllked teams
about winning those 25 games."
1Saturday, it· was: · No. I Kentucky
8y The AIIOCiatecl Preu
WcsternCarolina(17-12)eamed 101, Vlllidcrbilt63; No.2 Masaa'The longest week Qf the season its fmt-evcr NCAA bid with the vic- ·chusetts 62, No.' 21 Louisville S9;
lias beaun for Wisconsin-Green Bay tory in Greensboro, N.C., and was ·Oklahoma 8S, No.3 Kansas 79; No.
and Da:vidson.
one of six schQOis to make the field •4 Connecticut g7, Seton Hall 58; No.
, Both lost Sunday in tPeir confer· of 64 over the weekend.
.S Purdue 79, Northwestern S6; No.
ence's_ post-~on tournaments and
Anqucll McCollum, the Southern 8 Georgetown I06, No. 6 Villanova,
~ust wait until Sunday's announce'
Conference player of the year, fin- 68; Marquette 74, No. 7 Cincinnati
itle!tt of which teams get the 34 at- ished with a season-low 13 points for 72; No. 9 Texas Tech 14, Rice 70;
~ bids to the NCAA tournament. Western Carolina, but he made three and No. 10 Utab 96, Brigham Young
:• It won'tbe easy even though both · big free throws down the stretch.
85. .
teams went unbeaten in the confer· "This is a tremendous win .not
Also, Minnesota 65, No. 12 Penn
~nce regular season and each wiln 2S only for the playen and coaches, but State 60; No. 13 Wake Forest 72,
this is a tremendous win for Western .North Carolina State 70; No. 14.
·, "We'd like to think that we're in
Carolina Univcl'$ity, everyone who . Memphis 86, Tulane 75; No. IS
but it's now in the hands of the com: · has been involved with the pro- S~r~use 71, Notre Dame 67; No. 16
~."Wisconsin-Green Bay auanl
gram," McCollum said. " ... This is VtrgJma Tech 73, Dayton 54; No. 17
Gary Grzesk said after the 22nd- · for the alumni, the teacllers, and all UCLA 77, Oregon 71; No. 20 Iowa
iariked Phoenix (iS-3) lost to Detroit tllose who didn't believe, but espe- 73, Ohio State 64; No. 231owaState
~6-50 in the semifinals of the Midcially for \hose who did believe. ... 74, Colorado 6S; Sl Joseph's 86, No.
western Collegiate Conference tour- I'm a proud Catamount."
24 George Wasbin~on 82.
.ament. uwe deserve to be in."
Five schools won automatic bids
In other games tnvolving ranked
: Davidson (25-4), which lost to Saturday, four by winning confer- tean'ls Sunday, it was: No. 11 Arizona

. sames.

Con-I

.

;67, Wuhiqton 65; No. 18 Georgia
iThch 87, Clemson 74; No. 19 North
!Carolina 84, Duke 78; and Califor·nia8S, No. 2S Stanford 69.,
~y'slldloa

No. 1 Keatucky 101
Vuderblt63
At LcxinJIOn, Ky., Tony Dclk
scored 23 points as the Wildcats (261, 16-0) lied the school record with
their 25th sttaight win and became
the first team in 40 yiars to go
unbeaten in the Southeastern Con;ference. Franic Seclcar had 17 points
!for the Commodores (17·12, 7-9).
! No. 2 M~~t~ACbllldtll 62
i
· No•.2t~!9
: At Louisville, Ky,, t.1an:us Cam- .
by had 23 poin1$; i'ncluding two free I
throws with 6.9 seconds left, for the ·
'Minutemen (28-1). Brian Kiser liad. ·
14 points for the Cardinals (19-10), who had a chance to to tie but ·
Cannelo Travieso blocked DeJuan
•Wheat's three-pointer with two seconds left.
Oklllhoma 85
No. 3 KaJIIu .79
At Norman, Okla.. Ryan Minor
scored 26 points for the Sooners (17- ·
II, 8-6 Big Eight), who held the Jay- ·
hawks (24-3, 12-2) to one field goal •

rop25ho~ps.~~~
· un_~_tro_m_P.~4)--------------~~--------------------------------~t

.,

4 I

.over the final 4:0S to win their fmt
Marquette 74
,game againll a ranked team after
No.7 Clndmultl72
.
seven losses.
At Mllwa~~kee, Roney Eford had'
No. 4 Coaaecdcut 87
20 points for the Bagles (20-6, 10-4
Seton Hall 58
Conference USA). Danny Fortson
At East Rutherford, N.J., Ray had 32 points for the Bearcats (22- ,
Allen scored 31 points and the 4, 11-3). but he had the balllcnockcd :
Huskies(27-2, 17-l)broketheirown .out of bis 'bands'with two seconds
Big East record for conference wins. left.
·
Adrian Griffin had 21 points for the
No. 9 fuu Tech 84
Pirates (11-15, 7-11).
Rlce70
.
No. 5 Purdue 79
At Lubbock, Texas, the Red
NortlnresterD 56
Raiders (25-J, 14-0) wcn!J?Crfect in
, At West Lafayette, Ind., Justin the final regular season of the South-..
Jennings had 17 points and the Boil- west Confmnce. Cory Carr had 24 ·
crmakers

'

.

Detroit sh-ocks Wisconsin-Green··Bay; UK ·also win·s
Kentucky blasts
Vanderbilt 101-63
to finish perfect
SEC regular-season slate

.-~-~-~~~·-~~-~~--h_4~,-11_1_a__.-------------------------------~p~~~m~MW~O~y~·~M~~~~~po:~~O:h:lo~--------------------~Thi:::D:al~ly~S:e:n:U:nM:_•~P:~~gi:;:

5~y,llarch 4, 11M

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

Scored 16 points and the Golden
Oophen (16-12, 8-8 Big Ten) made'
10 straisht free throws in final ·
rninule. Dan Earl hid 17 points for
!he Nittany Liolli (20-S, 11-5).
No. 13 Wake F~ 77.
N. Caro1111a St. 70
At Raleigh, N.C., Tim Duncan
had J 8 points and IS rebounds for
lite Demon Deacons (20-5, 12-4
1-CC). Jeremy Hyatt scored 16
points for the Wolfpack (14-15, 3)3).
No. 14 Memphis 86
Tulaoe 75
·; At MeltlPhis, Tenn., Cedric Hen~erson scored 31 points as the Tigen

..

•.

(2~:4, 15~2) ~!~!!}~, the.. ~:.~~~~.~~X:S.t~~~ c"·~

.rcn titles.

5

Basketball

)

~iuinippi

64

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~ ......... . . .JJ

L fill.

9~

1

: The 1995-96 basketball season

e)lded in tile semifinals of the Great
!Jakes Regional for the University of
Rio Grande Redwomen, as coach
Qavid Smalley's' club fell to Transylvania University 79-61 at McAlister Field House in Lexington.
: Both teams were cold from the
field in the first half, which ended
with the Rcdwomcn leading by a 2120 margin. Rio Grande held Transylvania to just 21% from the floor,
but managed to hit only 30% of its
own field goal attempts.
Transylvania opened the second
half with a 12-0 run over the first fiv~
minutes and Rio Grande never _
recovered. The Redwomcn made a
late run.in the clo5ing minutes by hitting a string of three-pointen, but
couldn't overcome the large lead,
Michelle Tab9r led the Redwomen with 20 points, 14 of which
came in the second half. Tabor bit
several late three-pointers to help
trim the second half deficit. She netted 5-of-14 trey attempts.
Stacy Riley scored 19 points on 7of-19 shooting. Riley led the Redwomen with eight rebounds.

I

rour

In the Southern Confers,.,.women's title game,

·

Appalachian ;:)tate slips by

18~

SoWil-

n

HOUJIOII 86, Texas 76

Uloh ......... .............. l9 !7

.696

1\arooven: 23.

SanAntonio ........... 38 ·18

.679

•

Two winners advance lo the OU
In Athens.
Dlvllllon 3 Dlltrlct Finale
AI OU, Athenl
March 8
'
! North Adams va. c;:hesapeake, 8:30 ·:

to psychological ploys. And somcWASILI,._A, Alaska (AP) - · times that can decide the race.
H~ing into the wilderness toward .
Such gamesmanship is cenainly :
Nome, 60 mushen began the start of . ·part of the repertoire of J9831ditar- .
! the. lditarod Trail Sled Dog race, .a . od winner Rick Mackey of Nenana,
J,l.S0.1!1ile trek of guile and Jrit. . who finished second in this year's
'By Sund~y evening, Bill Hall of ·. · Yukon Quest International Sled Dog
T~r Creek was in front, He
Race.
reached tJ1e Yentna checl\point, II S
By no means did he have the secmil~ into~ race at 5:24p.m. local
ond best dog team, but Mackey ·
talked a line of trash to Bill Stewart
· time. .
· The mushers made !Jteir ceremofor the first thousand miles, trying to ·
nialllllrl in downtown Anchorage on convince the Canadian he posed no
Saiurdly. Tllis year's race, the 24th, · .threat.
·
.opened Under clear skies with tern"Right up until I passed him he
peratu~ in the low teens. But forewas pretty sure he was going to be
caslen are predicting a relatively second," said Mackey, who's sitting
Wllp!l race during daylight hours.
·out this year's lditarod.
'The1closer the mushers get to
He.left Stewart behind about I00
Nome:' the mQJ"e likely they'll resort
miles from the finish line in White-

. ·f v'' ...~~"'

'

.

'

.

.

·

~

r

Cltvt~~land mayor
•

it',

·.!&gt;~• •(

'

•;,' I

' •

•

...,,,mror "''" "' '( AP)
u. b
','We're very much concerned
.. M:h:J~ r'Wtiite wants-tt;~6~ ., that before we lock ,ourselves intq
Co9RC!it 10 1Jipr8\oe by FJ:iday a.deal 'paying bills for 30 years on a longhe wOrked_out w.ith the NFt.. but the ltenit lease, the public and council
2'1-,...niber council would prefer · ought to lcnow what we're getting
not co inake a decision too quickly.
into. 'The (stadium) site issue is OfiC
A chance to question .NFL Com- we can ·deal' with later,"- Westbrook
millioller "'"I 'Iagliabqe was on the said.
COUIICi!'aaacnda toc!ay. 'Iagliaboc is ·
"'The council can see a J*hway
. ex~ to uqe the council to act · to make aome of the dccisiOIII now
~y to. approve an ·~nt thit .• aDd ~ aive oumlves and 1110 -pub'WoU!d obliJI'Ie the ~ to put a · lie tinie to weiJh Poe Qdlcr iliilel."
- . j~ Cleve~ by 1~, if Cleve, ·
Wcatbrocik ~id · he· ian't .~on. ·
~ tiUililla ri!:W stadium. .
vinced a new 'llaillutri .&amp;Upt to rise
, . ·dNI aliiO would .allow .Art , at'~be •itc Ill Clevcl.ad Sla4ium. _
Mo4FII to move hia fOO!baJI frail"We .have a onCe-in-a-llfellmc.
chlll·to. Baltinlon iDd .provide' the opportu~ity · to open up. our take-:
. ~it)''j'• JOan or 'up to '~ milliOI) . front,"'Weldlrook aald. ''ActoN the :

toi!%

.

. Republican c.Ddkwe
. POrMeip
'
County Commi..ibner

ci•

n COIIIII'IICijon
.

,; .

..

~

~r

~

Ti

l

zens."

"'

~
. _ "-'

\o

&gt;' .

I

2n
9
!6 ·
19

19~

20
26

.:t\3

Mld,l!oll41!' Alloletlc

Orlando 11 P!Otodeljlllia, 7::10 p.m

S. Carolirm St.

'

11 Vancouver, 10 p.m.

Tuaday'• pma

Dehoitllt Toromo. f p,oa.
L.A. c;tippon 11 New Yort. 7::10 p.m.
Seoalttlla.EV£1.AND,7::10pm.
MinM~CJ~e• Wa.mi, 7:l0 p.m.
llwlonc, 8 p.m.
Milw;aqbe •IO!icqo, 8 : ~ p.m
New Ieney ot Dalllo, ~
· p,m.

Or-•

Hou~on 11

.

Poolu4. I p.m.

Vancouver nt Golden Stale. 10:30

p.m.

.

Big Tel! men's standings
Coot.

''

Ovtnl

n~ ~

~ . .. . . i'f ~ ~·

I

I

Penn So ....... .! I

S .IIIII 20
lowo ............ IO · 6 .62$ 21
tndiana .. :..... IO 6 -62.~ 11
Mlchipn .......l I .!100 18 .
Minncaoi• ...:.8 8 .!100 16
Mlciliaan
l , I .!100 14
IIHooia .. ,.... ,..7 9 .438 II
Wia:onoin .....~ 9 .438 ll
OHIO ST.,.... J IJ .1811 ID
Nunllw....,...l 1$ .111 1

'.
•,.•
I
I

s....

''

S .800
1 .1!10
II .1111
II .621.

12 .m
14 .!100

10
13
IS
19

.64.1

.SJIS
.4110
.2611

Satunlay's_..

l

Purdue 79, Noni'IWeslem

~

Min-a~ 1 -So01e~ ·

I

,

l"· -.

~

·\·

'

»:

W. Mich......13• · l .7ll
Miami ........" 2 6 .667
, Ball So... .. ~. II 1, ,611
01110 .... ........ . 7 .611
Toledo ......... ,.9 9- .soo
BGSU ............9 9 •.!IOIJ

IS II
20 6
IS II
16 13
16 13
14 · 12
r&lt;eno ............... to ..... 14 12
C. Mith ...... ;,.] ,ll .tfl 6 20

s

...,,.
'

ldiiml, Gblo 17, -

63

· NCA~ Division I'
' men's Korei

..

,:z.,

Senlln11*P Couftb' Slnt:e 1"'

Division I
Tutsday-11 Wilmin&amp;Wn
Pi,k eri nglon vs . Col. Brookhaven.
6 : 1 ~p . m .

ZAnesville vs . Mioamisburg. 8 p.m.
ctwnpionship Frid:ly, 7:30
AI Daylon
Day. Dunbar ~~ . Beavercreek, 6. 15
p.m.
Day. Otaminade-Julienne vs . Sidney.
8p.m.
Champio111hip Saturday. 4:JO p m.
~I Willard
Rocky Rtver Mngnificml vs . Tol.
Calbolic, 6: 1~ p.m.
Findlay v~. Stronfsville, S p.m.
Championship Fnd:.y, 7:30p.m.
At Canton
Brecksvi lle vs . Woos1er, 6: I~ p.m.
You. BoArdmnn vs. Cle. Collinwood.
8p.m
Championship Friday, 7:30p.m.

Division II
Tuesday-at Massillon
Avon Lake· vs. Jefferson Area. 6:15
p.m.
S1ru1hen vs . Garlidt.l H11. Trinily, K

I

Championship FridDy. 7J Op.m.
At Vandalia
Col. Hanley v.s. Homli.lton Badin. 6:1:1
Belk:fontuim.:

~s .

\'

\

I

..

I

...

Cin. St. Ursulu, K

p.m.

Championship Fridny, 7:30p.m,

p.m

Buckeye Cenlml vs . M~ion Plea5Un l.
tl p.m

.

Championli hip Soalurd:ty, 7: JO p.m.

Hockey
NUL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allanlk Dioiolon

Ium

ll L I flo. !if !iA

N.Y . Rangers ..... .'~ 17 12
Aoridu ..... ...... .,~ 20 8

PtliladeJphia ....... J2 191 2
Washington ......~I H 8
T:tmpa Bay ....... 29 2.'i 9

NewJeBey ...... 292~ 8
N.Y. Islanders... IKJ1 H

S2 226
78 209
76 216
10 181
67 194
66164
44 I RJ

Northeast Division
Pittsburgh . .... JK 21 4 KO
Montrcul ... .... ... JO 27 1 61
Dosh&gt;n .............. 21 27 8 62
Hanford ......:... 2629 1 ~9
BuiTnlo .............. 26 JO 7 59
Onnwu ............... l2 411 J 27

1e1rvltte

178
182
172
167

199
I~

247

28;\

21~

210
211
IBJ
186
141

20:\
214
!99
19:\
237

:'

..

'.

'.

•

Manaaer,

at 446·2332 for our ~-~
MINUTES OIL CHANGE

29

OR LESS

.-

'95 GRAND AM SE SEDAN
~

18320

'.

$19

'96 PONTIAC SUNFIRE SE COUPE

19213

Suoday'staurnaments

-·•
...
..

llaTe~~tc..,.wllll

Penn St. 84, Ohio St. 70

. Ohio B.S. boys' scores
Saturday's toumamonts
OM... I

Akron Buchtel 69, Akrol Cen~ .•How-

TIH wheel

er S~nshcnl 78, N. ltidJeVille 71
Canlon Timkco 68, Mauilloa PelT)'

«

Electric rear defogger
Antl-lock·brakes

Cin. LaSalle 7J, Hamilton S7
Cin. Oak Hills 66, Cin. Elder M

engine
Air conditioning
Tile wheel
Controlled cycle wipers

AM/FM/CD player
Rear deck lid apoil!!r
Dual air bags

Power windows
4·Speed auto. trans.
AM/FM/cassette
Air bag

Cle. Collinwood 46, Mentor 44
Cuylhop FaJis 6l Akn:m E. ~)
Eu&lt;lid 62. Wilto.,.hby S. S~

.l38
·' "
.l.ll
.1 ts

"

VOTE

'95 FORD UNGER "SPLASH" .
Only 4,600 miles, NC, cassette, 5 speed.
..·

JEFF

WAS .
$13,900

THORNTON
.For' Meigs County
. Commissioner

FIOM

Bumper to Bumper Warranty

'13,900

prepa~•l

\)

.

V-6 engines, loaded.

Loaded, power windows, cassettes,
tilt &amp; cruise.
71NSTOCKI

REouauo$1 0,999

'95 BUICK CENIURYS

'95 IUICI( REGILS

r

'

' '

AI Elida

Minster, 6: I 5 p.m.
Ouoville vs. McComb. 8 p.m.
Charnpionlhip Saturday, 7:JO p.m.
AI !'ttassillon
E. Canton vs. Beriuhire, 6: 15 p.m.
Mineral Ridxe vs . Zaneivillc Rosrcr.ms. 8 p.m.
Ch;amptonship Saturdoy, 7:30
Allniflllon
Danville vs. Hopewell-Loudon. 6:15

Mount Union65, Capital62

are approaching the 21st century and we must
the future.

...,.

Ht~lgate ~~ .

p.m.

·••n- ·ne.ttts. As commlaaloner 1.will work to find money's to
l' hrt'~" to Meigs Co1,1nty through federal, state grants and
'lf6unclatlcm funds. I 'have gained experience over the pae1tl
·' •
. years in these areas. •

DOWNING .CHILDS MULLEN
IllS..UNCI·

Thursday-at Vandalia
S. Charleuon SE v$_ Middle! ow n
Fenwtck, 6: I~ p.m.
Crooksville vs. Fayetteville, H p.m.
Championship Saturdlly . 7:JO [).m .

.

Ohio U.S. girls'
regional pairings

•

'

Division IV

AdanlkR.............. _..
Oennnce 94. Salisbury St. M

· My goal Ia to work hard for the :Nhole county to unite
l~!!h~lra time to listen to the people. I will hold town
'' I•
,. ljl ..ch township 'nd vlllag88 to find out what each

.. '
· Your lndlptndent Agenta
I

s.n lilt C...tnMt .-ric• IIi. .

NCM DIY. Ill

Dooidrm92, MARSHALL 17
W. C.Oii1W.97, VMI93

XaYier, Ollio 76, 0uqueo•75

•

•

..

NAIA 01•. 1

G - LaltH ...... ,_lllnilla
Centtat St 104, Soaldina 41
Truaylvmnia 79, ruo GRANDE 61

BootooCotieJe7l, Ro1pn n
St.loho't 74. Pintburab 68

&lt;On

At Vandalia

Kenton Ridge n Cin . .Wyoming.
6:15p.m.
Georgetown vs. Utica. 8 p.m.
Ommpionship Salurday, UO p.m.
AI Alliance
Akron Hoban vs. You . Mooney , 6 : 1~
p.m.
ChQ&amp;rin Falls vs. Brookfield. 8 p.m.
Chnmpionship Salurday, I :JO [).m.

.5S2

OHIO 81, ""'I St. 67
W. Mi&lt;l,i;;;"6! Bow... Ooao 44

w"

I•

~

Garfield Hts. Trinity 66.. Copley 54
JefTenon Area !i9, Conlond l.nkcvicw

S4

S1 I~ '"' Ca1flnncc .,....II

.

Division IV
Berkshire~ -\ Windham 49
Buckeye Central 40. Mansftrld St
Peler's .15
E. Canton 55, Lorui11 Cnlh. 50
Fayelteville S8. Covington 46
Hopewe ll loudon 64, New Reige146
Holgare 45, Liben y Cen1er ~9
McComb 57. Van Burtn S I
Middle10wn Fenw ick !114, Russia 41
Mineral Ridg e 65 , SotJthin&amp;ton
Outlker J1
Minster 45, W.aynesfield·Goshcn 42
Ottoville 50. Kalida 3,'i
S. Chnrles1o11 SE 69, Ci11. St. Bernard

811 Tftl ~umrflna~
Ohio Sl. 70. W!Stonain !18

Holy Crou II, L&lt;hi&amp;h 66 '

Eaal

57. Cadiz~

Healh 66, Marion Ri ver Val. 50
Eastwood ~7. Kan sas Lilkota ~~
Upper Sandusky 51. Huron 32
Utka 46, Ridgedale 44
Wheelersburg 7.6 . Richmond Dale
Southeiutern 60
You . Mooney 61 , JQCkso n-Mi lron ~2

Division JU
Wcdnuday•al Bucyrus
Co lumbio n Coldwater, 6: 1~ p.m.
Upper Stmdusky vs. Enslwood, 8:30
p.m.
Ouunpionsbip Sarurday, 1:30 p.m.
Atl.anclllrr
Garoway vs. Wheelersburg. 6:15p.m. ·
Paint Vat n Heath, 8 p.m.
Championship Saturday, I :30 p.m.

.m

Cent Michtpn 69, A~ 68
E.Ml~ 9S, To~ 15

•.

The Ohio Casualty Group of Ins!arailce Compl!llies, one of the top so
insurance groups in the ·uni~ States, is working with us to .offer
minivan drivers IS% off ihcir .preiniu.l! rate. Now, minivan drivers
like you cin get top-ooreh Insurance coyerage at family car pnces.

1.1 ,000

.m
.71o9
.m

' Satunlay'l
rqular.._llnalts

I

....... ..._nrot ......
Army 64, Navy ~8
Buckllell 56, Lolo)&lt;toe S5 (OT)

Cl&lt;Huaa• 64, So. Mary'•· Cot. Sol
"-'&lt;&lt;ioe 63, s.n .. Clan 60

o.ntl
0....
IMa . J! L fill.
L llL
E. Mich .. ,.... 14- 1 .711 21 ~ .108

Atron ............o

.Wp
Auttin Peay 70, MUITiy S1. 68

Suaday's
......r«111011odloo

Q;~raway

p.m

Col. HIW'IIc:y 59, Col. DeSulea 51

S.turday's t•rnamenb
Allolllk It c..r.......
Qurterflnalt
Georae Wuhinaton 82, Xa~ier ~I

a. , .

w.-c-c.nr~nt­

MAC me~s standlags

OIYiaion II
Avon l..llllte 56. Olma~cd Falls 4:'1
Bexley 6.5, Big Walnu!!ll
Camon Calh. .'i4. Louia~ille Aquimu

OHIO 86, Batt So. 67
Toledo 7CJ. E. Michipn 70

Olito va1e1 c..,,._.

Por11and 78. San Franci&amp;Co 72
San Dleao 7~ Lo~tm Marymount !I 1

W001ter Sl , WAdswprth 41.
You. Bonnlman 60. Wantn Hnrdina

MW-A-Conf'rma
Akmn 77. Cr111. Midti1an 61
Bowlin&amp; Green S6, W. Micllipa !!i I
Miami 7), Kent68

"

T - AoocricaAt~letk c.......,..

'

Columbia 54, Lullleran W. ~9

Saturday's

Towson St. 15, Delaware 78

Clo-ohlp
'
Ccoo. Fkwida 86. - 1 7

con

r,qular-- adloo

SW LouitiDD198. W. IC.cllt1lcky 94

lndioa.,rOHIOSTATE
Iowa it ~iiiDeM!II , ,
Penn Slllt M WiKGMJn

42

Ohio women's
college scores

Mr-ri Valley C..mKt
Flnlnond
llrodley 64. Drake 51
llliMil St 64, N. Iowa .S&amp;
SW MiaiOUri Sl. 6."i, CreiJIMOI.SS
Tulsa 65, Evaasville .S.S

Pickerington 80, GX.anna 60
Sidney 49. Cin. MtAutey 47
Saonp~o~ille 72, Berea .Sl
Tol Calholic .58. Syl~aniu Swthvicw

44

. NCAA DIY. Ill
Grtat Laket Rtlion-tteend f'OMd
Hope 80.1obn c.rrnu 6!
WilteDI:Ier) 6S, Capiud 60

'

Qoorterflnolt
bon U. 69. Northeastern 54
Druelll, Hlrlfonl11
Maine IM, Vr:nnonl 75

47

n

Midwtllem Cofleaillt Colllerenct
Ftnl ...nd
-neuoit67, WriRhl S1. 61
111.-Chicqo 107, 8utler'97
N. Illinois 80, WisA..tilwautee 78
Wio.-G... n Bay SR. Loyola, ttl 40

...... 62
New OrleMI67, Loooiriana ted&gt; 57

Mic:hipaal NclrlhWatefl\.
llli.ais at Michipa SIIIIC

Mllnificat74.l..akewood Jl

I'IAIA Dl•.l .
Gn.t Wka RaloMI-!ft''lnllloololll
CedlvviUe 92, W. VirJinia S1. 89
Findlly Sl Tmnsylvaaia

6:.Coppin St ~

l~~~:bciooitle 63.

WildiieltdiQ''I,._

Day. Ch"minndr·Juli enne lS, W.
Chester Lakota 28
Findlay 64; Elicb ~4

Satunlay'J.tournaments

P9or~

Americ•71

. Suoday'• KUre
Illinois 7~. Wk:hipn62

DiYillon I
BrccksviUe 68. Barberton S8
Cle. Collin_wood 63, Cle. Hriahts48
Col . Brookhaven 81, Col . Wouerson

n

West Cout C.ferenct ~tt~~lflnall
Oouag111 76, Pepperdine .a
Ponlond 6S, San DieJO ~l

Arlt .· Liuh: Ro.;:k &amp;9. T.eus-Pa•

lrwli11U176, WIJC011i868
Iowa 13. OHIO STATE 6C

••

Satunlay'stournamonts

Sun IWt Cwllt; ena lftlltllull
Ark.·UIIIe Roc:k 67. JoekJonville 60
New Orle1111s 75, SW Louisiana 71 (2
OT!
'

Ohio men's
college scores

Nortll Att...ck Confwrt'l'ltt

Utah • .SxrameDio. IO:lO p.m

Ohio B.S. girls' scores

Sou... mc...r.rence d&gt;...........tp
W. Carolina 69, Davidson 60

QO '. ,I .... ~

Atlat.ID. • Detroil, 7:}() p.m.

llldiana • Phoenix. 9

Pelrioll..aaut 1t111illnllls
Col[lllll! 67, BuCknell 61
Holy Crou 68, Anny 65

Al-alak
.CamOn Cath. vs. Bexley, 6:15p.m.
lifTl:l BBlh v1 . l..cAington, 8 p.m.
O.ampionship Fricby, 7:30p.m.
AI Zantnille
Minford vs. Maysville, 6:15p.m.
McClain vs. W. Holmes, 8 p.m.
Championship friday. 7 : ~0 p.m

Division Ill
Akron Hoban 44, Loudonville: 40
Brookfield 64, Cle. VA-SJ 52
Chngrin Falbo 47, Garlidtl41
Coldwater 74, S~ood Fairview 69

Z4nesvillc Rosecrans 51J. Berlin Hi13nd S!l

DIYWon IV

Nartll Atlantic Canllfft.n •adft..a.
Bolton U. 66, Maine 64
Drncl84, Towson St. 74

N.C.- WilmlnJIOll 63, William rl
Mary Sl
Old Dominion 7.5, J&amp;Unes Madison 12
Va. Commonwealth 89. Richmond .55

lellington 47, Clyde 45
limo Ba1h 66, St. Marys 47
Slruthers J2. W. Branch 30

41

Anna 71, DeGraff R;vcrside !12
Columbinna 16, Mintnl Rid~ 71
Cuy!WKig:a His. 75, L.or.Un Cnlh. 60
Jockson-Millon _,9. Sd:lring S~
Kidroll Qr. 70, Elyrin Open Door S.5
Kintand lo9. Mopdo&lt;e 45
LowellviUe •:-. Berlin Cen1er Weslern Reserve 40
Richmond His . 51. 8ristol46

Tulsa69. lltinoh St. .52

Canil.iw 74, Loyola, Md. 67
Fairfiekt 69, St Peter's64
lon;a 71 , Sieoa 59
Ni. . 62,Milllloal10n60

Moadlly'• 1._

Mounl Gilead 61, Grandview 47
Norwuyne ~8. Wnyn~dale ~9
Petry 46, Badg•r J6.
Valley View~. E. Clinton .53

"'....,.. v.., c...rere~~n ••• •
Blllllley 64, SW Miuouri St. 62

Colonial Alhtetk Auoc:ladon

Milwaukee at Boston,7:30 p.m..

Mnrion Pleasant 78, Bloom·Carroll

Detroit ~. Wis. .Qreen Bay ~
N. IUinoia 9!1, 111 .-0ticaao60

. Anttrialll Wett Coricrcnec
Cha•olonalolp
S. U11lh ~~. CaiPoly-SLO 53

Avon 62. Wickliffe 51
Caldwell !1.5, M onroe~Central 52 (0'0
Chagrin Falls 54, lknchwood J9
Clinton-Massie 78. Greene&gt;~icw .59
Grand VDI. 68, Pymatuning Vnl. 58
Loudonville 62, Smilhvillc 47
MAdison Plains 60. Co l. Acadrm:t 50
Malvern 61, Gwoaway ~6
Marion Elcin 63. Canal WirK:heater

60

Seaoltfooto

Metra Ata.ndc Atbldk: Cool'trenn
. Flrot""""'

MiiiiiCIOCIII9, Miami 81
H-on Ill, L.A. Loken 107
New York 109, OoldM Srate 9.&amp;
Wlllhini'Otl 108. Sammeovo 99.

,..

Mldwaten Colleallte C.nlermcc

Saturday's tournaments

Quamrflnals
EIW CtvOlina 76, American U. 60

Toronoo 100, CLEVELAND 89
tndi,...I03, a-tone 100

..'

.

11J s..u. ConrerttK"t

Suoday's tK'OI'U
121. Dattu t 14

1

ELE,CT

'DILL

ll~

Al.....k A.dddk c.fen~Ke
S..llloolo
Cani1ius6l, 1011111 62
Fmitfw:ld 70, Niaaara 47

Mid.contintnl Contennee.ffnt ,..nd
Crnl. Connecticut S1. 89, Mo.-Kanau
CilyiiJ
E. lllioois .59, Buffalo !1.5
Valpanliao 118,Chlcaao Sc. 8J
W. lllinoia68, Younaatowil Sa. 48

MDIII... St 92, E. WuhinJIOn 64
· New Me..Uco 86, Frano St 84
New Meaico S1 . 66, Nevada 62
O..Jon Sl. 56, Sooollocno C.l S4
Ua.A 17, On:pon 71
UIM 96, Bri&amp;ham Youn&amp; 8.5
U~ $1. 82, UNLV lo9
Washinaton S1. 103, Arizona St. 78
Weber St 101. N. Anzona64
WyominJ69, San Diego St. 68

san Antbnio 11!1, ~llderio. 101
Den\'ft' 108, Vancouver 8
Detroit 107, LA. Clippers IOJ

To find out more about thia money-saving deal in minivan insurance,
jlitt call us today!
think you;II find 0!11' offer very fitting!

• GA;RYR.

IS

19~

l'lloeiol•

'•'•

69!2Dn

Champlonlhlp
N.C.-Greensboto 79, Liberty S:t

'i

:Brie ~.;ld cost'the least to prepare
.. and woold require no land acquisi. tion.
.
1
, Ostendorf-Moms property bro- ..
1kcrs prepared the study at no charge. ;

1

Dlvlsion Ill

Mttn~~

L.ona ~h St 7~. UC Santa Barbar"

Seonle 103, New kney 92
Orlando t I~. Pont.nd 89
Oaicaao 107. Boalon 75
Milwaukee 110, Atllml 106

Wutlilta~

that fits your milllivJm

Va. Commonwea.hb 7S, Eul Carolin1

Idaho 84. Mon«ana 75

1"

. -~~~­
N.C.-Wilminaton
S9, Old Dominion

60

Far West
Boioc So. 65,1dobo Sl . 62
Hawaii 7.5, ColoraOo Sf. 6.5

Iii

"" .200

Saa ANoniu II Denver, 9 p.m.

Some mushen, such as five-time
champion Rick Swenson of Two
Riven, say they'll try to rest their
dogs when tlie sun is high.
Several mushers also have put
nylon jackets on some of their dogs
.to reflect sunlight and keep the dogs
cooler. This is a new tactic and irs
not clear how effective the silver
coats will be.
Swenson said that if a team is
clearly dominant, such as 199S win. ncr Doug Swingley's was last year,
· then all the talk in the world won't
· affect the outcome .
"Doug didn't have to talk any
trash to anybody last year," he said. ·
"He told everybody what he was
going to do and did it."

· ·,J , ~ntry.
are uaiallbelr ~- '
.
·_,1 '!iD ~ n&amp;Uhel'or ~ frQn" fot .m~jor retail drawl 0.. fOr
..-· r 101, council Praidenr Jay Vo\llt- open ~ flll'·flllliliel'llid fill' cili-

broot llld. '

:

•

wan,ts deal with ·NFL approved by Friday
A stlK!y that White commissioned
· has endoned his plan to build a foot. ball stadium at the downtown site.
'The •!udY coneludes that the 17ilcrc stadium site oV&lt;doo!clng Lake

36

Siotunlay'sscores

Marchi
; Beaver va. G11111n, 6:30 p.m.
Portsmouth East vs. leesburg·
••
Falrfield,8:15 p.m.
Welt VIrginia AliA Tournament ;
Reglonale at Pe~
Man:h5
Pt. Pleasant va. RIDley, at
Parkersburg Aeld 1-louse.
Winner advances to state .
toumament.

·

7

:ro

ll L fill.

L.A. Ctippen .......1. 19 38
• -'"linched playoff~

p.mDt~elonAt4OU,
Dletrlct S4tmlflnale ~
Athena

Hall begins 115-mile opening phase of lditarod in .front
.
By ·JIM CLARKE

21

Podlkllhlllon
Seonle .................. ..4S !2 .789
L.A. Loken ............ l6 21 .632
Phoeni• .................. 29 28 .S09
Sacrunc:nlo ............ 25 30 .455
Golden Slate .........26 31 ·" '
Ponland ................ 26 33 .441

1 reglonals

77...75

]9

!lOT)
.
Southern Mcth. ,., , TCJUIJ Aa.M 72
Tcw Chrislian 77, Baylor 1S
Tnns Tech IW, Rice 10
Texu-EI Paso 69, Air Force ~9

n~

Houston ... .............. 39 20 .~ I
Den..r ................... 24 32 .429
Datt.. ..................... zo 11 , .:13t
MinlleiOio .............. l8 39 :J t~

l

horse, Yukon, biowing through the
· Bracburn checkpoint just as Stewart
was settling down to enjoy a hamburger with his family.
.
One of Matt Dcsalernos' favorite
tricks is to rearrange·h~ team to keep
his best lead dpgs)n the back when
he's near other teams. That way, he
said, It's never clear to the competition what you've really got.
Dee Dee Jonrowc of Willow,
fint out the chute Sunday, is count- ·
· ing on changes in dog nutrition and
a solid winter of training.
"I don't uy'to play those games,"
Jonrowe said just before leaving. "I
know people uy to play them with
me .... 'The only dog team you have
to race is the one that's in front of
.you."

19~

.Sl6
.491
.37S
.261

Z..

---Cage standings----..•

Marsha~l

Tc•n.-Manin 69
SW Tc11.as Sl. 76. Tcxa,s...ArlinJIOO 58
Sam Housron St 92, NE louisiana 86

t4

.~I

Asllsta: 3
Steals:S

v-..... .:....... :... 11

I

()ql Roberu IS,

IS ~

.S19

Elyrin W. 50. Avon Lake 40
Fairluid 6~. Alhens 4.5
Hillsboro S7, Rock Hill44
John G_
lenn 49, Mn~IVillc 41
Minerva 79. Triw;~y 77
Rocky River 62. Keys1one l6
Twinibulf 61. Kenaloo 60
Wnrrensvtlle Hts. 42, CreSiwood 37
Western Brown ~2. Clennonl Northeostern 48
You. Raycil 58, S!ruthm J6

Colonial Athlclk A-.Jallon

Oktahomo 15. K....,79

.89'7
.6SS

S9 (0T)

Sunday'stournamenta

Nonh Tens 7~. Texu-San Antonio

Jt

MW_DI_

~~Trace vs. Wheelersburg, 8:15

.

Di•blon II
CantonS. 7~. Nonon 47
Chardon 69. Conneaut 4!1
Cin. McNM:holas SS. Loveland 29
Ck. Benedicti.e 91 , A;btabula 52
Col. F.nst69, Fairf~eld Union 50
Col . Wanmon 72. Bi g Walnul 63
Corti(Uld·L.akeview 6l, You. Uberty

FerWal
Ari"""" 67, Wuhloaoon 65
California 8~ . Stanford 69
Pocific 80, UC lrvioe 14
San Jo~e:St 90, CaJ 'St.-Fullecton 80

7o4, Oacinnali 12
Virpnia Tech 73. Dayton S4

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Foula: 34 , .
Fouled out: Bostic &amp; Kolcun

-·-·-

Mldwat
Netlralb'ro, Kuw Sl. 66
Oklahoma St S I , Miuouri 49

L

I

seaons at Rio Grande.
.'Thtals: 17139-6118-9/lz.-61
1111( t.alall
Total FG: 23-67 (34.3%)
Transylvania..................... 20-5~79
Rebouods: 43 (Riley 8)
Rio Grande....................... 2t-40=61
Blocked lltots: 2 (by Smith &amp;
Wi'nten)
TRANSYLVANIA - Thompson 3/S-3/6-214::17, R~t~~seii21S-009111=13, Sanders 3n-214-0IO=I2,
Franz 3/5-011 ~519=11, Caudill 0/4- 1
189511: AILgamea
.214-414= I0, Vessels 012-012-6/8=6, '
WLTPOP
!Vauhn lfl-012-212=4, Duell 010-010- · ' TNm
x-Wheelersburg
...
21 11600 1248
'3/5=3, Huffman l/4-0/0.Ifl=3. x-ChBIIIIP8ake ..... 20
11513 1214
Totals: 13134-7119-32149=79
· Marietta ............... 15 612451192
Thta1 FG: 20-53 (37.7%)
· x-Fallland ............ 15 714651305
Rebounds: 50 (Huffman &amp; Rus- Logan ...........:...... 15 713011171
' sell 14 each)
·
. Jackson ............... 14 7 1413 1319
Blocked shots: 2 (by Caudill &amp; : Greenfield ............ 14 71387 1313
Melga ................... 12 91373 1345
Huffman)
x-South Point....... 13 91444 1311
Aslllts: 16
Warren Local ....... 12 1013151197
s-...:9
x-Point Pleasant..10 121295 1390
Throoven: 17
Southem ................ 9 13 1402 1482
River Valley ...........9 131258 1321
Fouls: 17
Athena ................... &amp; 141240 1272
Fouled out: Sanders
Galllpolia ................ 5 161096 1246
Portsmoulh ............ 4 151164 1381
RIO GRANDE - Tabor 113- Vinton
Counly ........ 2 19 1397 1599
5114-313=20; Riley 6/12-tn-417=19, xStlllln tourney
- Winters 416-00.0/0=8, Johnson lfl~':::zl)l.t:::mw
0/0-212=4, Smith 214-0/0.010=4,
Hillsboro
57 Rock Hill 44 . ..
Bostic 1/6-010-010=2, Kolcun 113-·
Fairland
63
Athens 45
0/4-0/0=2, Patch · 111-0/0-010=2.
. Dlvlalon 1 Dlltrlct
(At Stlubenvllle)
.
.
MafCh9
.
·
Zanesville vs. ChiHicothe, 1 p.m.
.
Dlvlelon 2 Dletrlct Flnala
At OU, Athena
March9
·
Ironton
va.
South
Point, 6:30p.m.
a ju111per, but Appalachian State
.
Rock
Hiii-Hillaboro
winner va.
rebounded and Hinton made her
1
Athens-Fairland
winner,
8:15 p.m
layup.
After a timeout with 8.9 seconds
left. Marshall wasn't able to get into
its offense, and Wine's long 3-pointer was off the m&amp;rk at the buzzer.
Appalachian State's Shannon
Spencer set a single-game townament record with eight steals. 'The
old mark of seven was sh~ by

Marshall (I S-14) chipped away at
the double-digit margin. Aftet dou- ,
blc-teanling Hinton led to a pair of
steals, the Herd took a 75-73 lead .
with I :20 left ·on a free throw by
Stephanie Wine, who scored 20
points.
However, Hinton made a layup
12 seconds later to tie the score. A
missed 3-pointer by Marshall set up
one final possession for the Mountaineers. Meredith Thompson missed th~ playe~.

The ~ountaineers, .the only ·
women's team in league history to go ·
undefeated in conference play, trailed
38-37 at intcnnission but rallied
around Hinton's inside play to build
an 11-pointlead midway through the
second half.
Hinton, who struggled fi'om the
field in the first half with 3-for-10
shooting, made 10 of 13 shots in the
second and grabbed a season-high 13
rebounds.

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) Q .
Appalachian State won its fifth ·
Southern Conference women's tournament championsip by edging Mar- :
shall 77-75, dropping the Thundering ·
Herd to 0.5 in title-game appearances.
Andreia Hinton scored 26 points j
Sunday, including the winning layup
with 12.5 seconds left, to help ;
Appalachian State (24-5) g~n the ·
conference's automatic bid to the .
NCAA tournament.

..

Wake Forest 72, N. Carolina. St. 10

18

n .42t

6
20
24
2S
26
29
lS
•1

Gcorpa Tcdl81. Clemson 74
North Cnrolina SA, Duke 78

M~e

. !6~

Boston........... _....... 20 3B .:ws
l'toilodelpbio ........... ll 4S, .l'l6

x.O.caaa -····· ....... .52
lndi..................... JB
CLEVELAND .......13
A1tan11 ................... 32
ll&lt;troi1....................l0
Chlrlone ................ ll
Milw..U. ........... :zt
Toronro .................. l!§

St 67 , Aubllm j I
N.C. OW.lotte TI, Southern Miaa. 66
So.!1h Floridl73, Ala.·Birminah.,

Mldwat
DePaul66, St. Louis 51
Iowa St 7-4, Cokndo ~

Ill

IS .74!
New York .............. 33 24 _,9
Miornl ........ ............ 27 32 ..4SI
Wuhinp01 ........ ....U ll .431

NCwJmey ........... 24

-

M.i.n 66, Proowidoftce .59

NBA~ngs

In the Great Lakes Regional semifinals,

Transylvania end S ·Redwomen's ·season _w ith 79-61 victory

Hawks (14-11, 9-7), who had taken Ibid, the other was in 1989, as Eric'
UMass to overtime on Wednesday. 'Fernandez scored 19 points in the
Shawnta Rogen had 22 points for Mid-Eastern Athletic Conferencet
1
the Colonials (20-6, 13-3).
championship game. Terquin MOl\
Saturday'• bids
had 16 points for the Eagles (19-10):
N.C.-GI'ftmboro 79
. •
Ausdn Pea:r 70
Uberty 53
At Lynchburg, Va., Eric Cuthrell
Murray St. 68
had 15 points and 13 rebounds as the
· At Nashville, Tenn., Reggie Cren-·
•Spanans (20.9) earned their first shaw made twQ free throws with .7.
NCAA bid by winning the Big South seconds remaining to give the Gov'title over the Flames (17-12), who ernors (19-10) the championship of
were on their hon\e court.
the Ohio Valley Conference andSouth Carolina SL 69
lheir first NCAA bid since 1987.
Coppin St. 56
Vincent Rainey had 23 points for the!
At Tallahassee, Aa., the Bulldogs Racers (19-9).
:
(22-7) earned their second NCAA

Scoreboard

io

The win was the lith
po~
Utlib 96
•:
~traight for Purdue. Gcno Carlisle
B - y,
85
~ ~4 points for the Wildcats (7-10,
At Provo, Utah,~~ VIJI Hom :
•No. 8 aeo etown 106
scored acareer-high 38 points f9r the :
111
No.6 VHianova 68
.Utes (23-5, _IS.3kwho: won the_1r
At Landover, Md., Allen Iverson second strat,ht ~rn Athlettc .
had 37 points for the Hoyas (24-6, Conference udc. Kenneth Roberts :
13-5 Big East). Chuclc Kornegay had had22 pomts for~Cougars (IS-12•. ,
25 points to lead the Wildcats (24-5, ·9-9).
Min
Ia 6S
·
14-4), who went 1-2 over the threeDeiO
game suspension of.Kerry Kittles for
1 N.o. 12 Pe~ St. 60
.
unauthorized usc of ·a university
At Mmneapolts, David Gnm
telephone credit card.
; (See TOP :ZS oo l'qe 5)

&lt;

been

Hekies (22-4, 13-3 Atlantic 10). scored I 9 points for .the Hawkeycs
Apdy Meyer had 18 points for the ·(21-7, 10-6 Bis Ten), who have won
Flyen (IS-13, 6-10), who had their six of seven. Jermaine Tate had 21
ftrst winning regular season in six points for the Buckeyes (I 0-IS, 3years despite the death of starting 13).
center Chris Daniels in February.
No. 23 Iowa State 74
N~~o 17 UCLA 77
· Colorado 65
Orepo 71
tl\t Ames, Iowa. Kenny Pratt
At Eugene, Ore., Charles O'Ban- scored 2S points as the Cyclones (20.
non had 17 points and Kris Johnson 8, 9-5) wrapped up second place in
made six straight free throws down the Big Eight. Mack Tuck led the
the stretch for the Bruins (21-7,' 14- Buffaloes (9-16, 3-11) with 25
2 Pac-10). Jamal Lawrence had IS points.
St. Joseph's 86
points for the Ducks (IS-13, 8-9).
No.
24
Geo. Washington 82
N9. 20 lciwa 73
At
Philadelphia,
Reggie
Ohio St. 64
Townsend
scored
20
points
f&lt;ll' the
At Iowa City, Iowa, Jess Settles

f~rstsc~ISI!ICCO"!oStatt~y~ McGh~ led the Owls (13-13, 6-9); : ~"
lgo to Win three straJghtoutnght Btg , l.v'th 20 ·nu
·
•.
1

CtalniDIY..,_

Megan Winters added eight points , has really
a tremendous boost
and six rebounds for Rio Grande. ·.for our piogram and the univenity.
Winten also blocked a shot and had ! The people at WMPO .have done a
one s~.
I ~ great job and we ippreciate their
Rebecca Thompson led
Lady j hard And dedication ...
Pioneen in double figures· with 17: ·-: 'Riley and Winten were both
poiqts. Elaine Russell scored 13 i selected to the all-Great Lakes
points and grabbed a game high 14 ; Region team. Riley was the number
rebounds. Ashley Sanders added 12· j two vote-getter in the region which
points while Stacy Franz chipped in 1 j means she's eligible for all-American
with II and Kelly Caudill had 10. i ·consideration. She surpassed the
Leslie Huffman also grabbed 1.4J 1,500 point mark this season and is
rebounds for Transylvania.
third on Rio Grande's all-time scarSmalley said aftcrwanl, "It's dis- Jing list.
.
appointing to end the season with a
Winters crossed the I ,000-point
loss, but our kids played really well barrier this year and is just behind
this year and grew as a team. We Riley on the career points list in
have everyone back next year and· fourth place. Riley and Winters are
look for more good · things in the both junio~ and will be back in the
future. With the talent we have and red and white for the 1~6-97 camthe dedication of our playen, 1know patg~. '11_t~re were no seruors on this
that we'll be right back in the hunt' years edtlton of the Redwomen basnext .season."
'
·
ketballteam.
The Redwomcn wrap up the
Smalley added, "I want to thank 1
all of our fans and boosten for their i 1995-96 season with a 20.14 record.
suppott throughout the season: These ; That mark tops the final ~ord for
. people are really the MVP of our)' the 1~4-95 season_ and gtvcs the
program.l'd also like to thank all the squad 1ts third 20-Vo"m season m the
businesses that sponsored the broad- last foil!'. Smalley's career record as
casts of our games on WMPO. That head coach is now 89-41 after four

(21 -6, 11-3) earned a share of-the
Conference USA tide with Cincinnati. Patrick Lewis led the Green
Wave {18-8, 9-S) with IS points.
No. 15 SynCUM 71
Notre Dame 67
At Syracuse, N.Y, Jason Cipolla
hit a three-pointer with 29 seconds
left and added two free throws with
.4 seconds remaining ·for the
~gcmcn (22-7, 12-6 Big East).
Ryan Hoover had 24 points for the
Fighting Irish (9-17, 4-14).
No. 16 Virginia Teeb 73
Daytoo54
.At Dayton, Ohio, Damon
Watling!on scored 18 points for the

\

$11,900 PropiC.

··-

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·_.._..hio News in Brief:-.... Driver concerns reveal flaws ·in Fern:a•ld}tl%'1. musician recovers

instrument

By MIKE GALLAGHER
·•years experience at 1he pl~t
Otftee. The GAO was Called in Feb. . · FEIOO~O .
. The Clnc:lnnlltl Enqu....,
· "The stuff in those barrels leaks 112 by U:S. Rep. Rob J&gt;Qnman, R· · -,OH,"!..o·t;~~~~~~~~~;~~
'Jbcllllique hom, valued 11111 eslimlled SI0,000, wu recovered 11 a
CINCINNATI - Barrels filled on other barrels underneath~ and Cincinpat!, ',l!ld other COIIJ~t,Ujonal
·•t
with radioactive and oilier toxic liq- soiiletimes all over the floor ... and jleadm to prtlbe reports·'of financial
drums remrovci4
local pawn shop.
1twu stolen on Feb. 20 fiQm a locked beUhop's closet 11 a down·
uids at Fernald arc allowed to leak that's what we often walk into on wrongdoing, ' safety problems and atelyis.up to them (FERMCO).:i.,
town hcitel. Teny wu in town to play five concens wilh lhe Columonto other cootainers and the floor of' Monday because this company lax Energy Depaitment ovenigbt at
The drivers als.o ~ tbat FEJqll·
bus·Juz OiCbesua.
.
...
·
:a storage area during weekends! (FERMCO) doesn't wartt to pay one ·Fernald, located 18.miles norlhwest CO officials were "under.rcP&lt;&gt;rtinJ"
1my ii recOIJnizcd as one of lhe world's greatest juz musicians. He
!because the company hired to ! Jean ·of us to be on hand over the weekend !of Cincinnati.
~
,
· · the number of lepky drVII!l\.that f£C
has . .yed with Duke Ellington, and U&gt;uis Annstrong once described .
up lhe site wants to save money, . to immcdjately move them like
G~ne Branham, vice presiilent : being discovered on tne Pl~i'l ~
·d
him u "my' favorite trumpeter."
•
employees at the plant have told The lhey're supposed to." The driver and offiCial spOkesman of the Fernald area.
buk Valinkevich, 111 employee at Lev's ~wn Shop, said he bought
Cincinnati Enquirer.
asked for anonymity.
Atomic TrJdes &amp; Labor Couni:lt,, . Stegner, in his letter, told
. the born a daY after it was stolen. He said he realized he had the horn
Twelve elllployees of Fernald
The employees said FERMCO which represents more than 6SOi Enquirer that "it is important to
ifter hearing about the theft on the news.
Enviro'nmental Restoration Manage- and the Bn~rgy Department have a worurs at Fernald, including the dri· emphasize lhllt the .Plant,' \ pad, is
"We found out thll this was a very famous hom, and we are very
ment Co., ·working as "motor vehi• policy that requires human "moni· ven1, said:
·
designed to contain all leaks." Maleproud to help return it to its owner," Valinkevich said.
" I can confirm that the union has rial leaks are ca~pgorized as fo!l;
cle" drivers responsible for movinll tors" to inspect daily .the more than
Neither~ employees nor burglary detectives would say how much
lhe leaky drums to a "repackinS 25,000 barrels filled with nuclear ; repeatedly received complaintS from. ~ I leaks~ Wlleri a drum
the shop paid for lhe instrument.
area," said they fear lhe coaipany is ·.waste stored in the Pl
. ant l pad_arca. •our workers ahout the lea!ty druiiiSj riorates, resultin&amp; io mat~,J.Ifl~= ,
Detoctive Melvin Jones said he plans to interview lhe person who
·putting employees' safety in jcop- The barrel~ arc stored Jbere pnor to ' "'d the f.:t,t,hat the c_oml!l!!')' 2fte~~~ , ~®1\~IICI::,~itb)lCCIIJ!I
~ l
~ the hom to lhe shop. He said lhe man could face .charges rangiJ1g
ardy. ·
·
.,
being shipped tQ such. plaees as . lebei thenr&lt;• lealcing' ihrouclHtltll: bnthi!'l~ngcontainmentor~- 1 •
fnil)llr=~iviDg stolen property to pand theft.
The diivers say:
.Nevada for disposal, said Energy . : weekend." · ,
"
: let; Type)leaks ~ur.W~if~.,ri- , ,,
• SS• and 85-gallon drums that 1&gt;epartmeot.spoiesmanOaryStegn• .: Stegner, responding in . a : t~o. alsA!'e'fDIInilbnly MI))Iieilterio~ of \
!spring leaks on lhe weekend are often er.
·
, ·
' page letter to Enquirer questions the drum (np· ma~tjal llJIChes the
MANSFIELD - Donna Dolly may get back some of the belongings
:teft leaking on other drums and on the
But that monitoring policy does- about the problem, said the depart· underlY,ing containment or P,allett"
that disappeared when her family's reptal truck was stolen as they
:floor until Monday because the com- n't mean a leaky drum is removed mcnt does not require FBRMCO to
· hi 1995, Stegnef-sii(l, ifiere· w~re
moved to Louisiana.
·
pany does not want to pay drivers immediately, he added.
have a driver "on stand-by for lhe 33 Type 1 leaks on the Plant I pr;J.
But she won't get the ones that meant the most.
overtime to be !here to move them.
The 12 FBRMCOemployees told purpose of moving le@lling drums. · and one Type 21eak. Ie 19?.1!, "lhpc
'lbclicez.er, barbecue, chairs, lamps and clothes that have been recov• • Both low-level radioaCtive waste The Enquirer that, untill!)St summer,
"If the (FERMCO) Assistant have been no Ty~ I m: JY,pe 2le~
ered arc appreciated, but !hey were among the less importanl items lak·
:and non-radioactive toxic waste leak the company required thaLdrivers be Elliergency Duty OffJCCr (utility engi- on die pad, to date.'' ': ''
•
en.
out of the drums because of small assigned to the Plant 1 pad storage neer) determines Illata drum needs to
All .12 drivers said the··Energy
"llje things that mean !he most~ lhe things we" won't get back,"
punctures or corrosion.
area.to work with tile monitors every be moved, he will utilize available Department "was lying" ' or tbat
she said. "Deputies told me IIIey burned anything that had our names
: • The Plant 1 area occasionally is day, including weekends, to ensure personnel on-site, or if necessary, the FB~CO officials hav~ 1\ed to \he
on it or that could be traced back to us."
s~ut d&lt;Jwn .and sealed off because leaking drums were removed as soon utility engineer will call in a driver," Energy Department in· their repdfts
Deputies arc holding a 37-year-old Columbus man who bas confessed
radioactive material has leaked out of as they were discovered.
Stegner said~·
.
about the number qf.leaks.· · ;
to stealing the truck, Capt. Larry Faith said.
·
the drums. The oon-radioactive mate·
But last summer, the drivers said
The drivers told The Enquirer that.
"We just mo\ed four leakers
Mrs. Dolly, her husbancl, John, and their two chilclren were lraveling
rial that leaks out is soj,ped up with . they were told by FERMCO super· since last summer, FBRMCO' never (leaky driub6) this·ji&amp;Sl-week that~ad
from Buffalo, N.Y., to their new home in DeRidder, La., on July 31
giant pads by workers.
visors that no drivers would be calls them in on 'the ·weekends to ' leaked clri ·other 'dl'il!119 ' and on !he ·
when the truck was stolen from outside their motel room.
floor," said one•clliv'er. ' ·· ', · · ,
• FERMCO monitors fail to ideo- assigned to Plant I on the weekends remove a le.aky drum.
The truck was found, but it had been cleaned out.
•ti{y some leaky drums because the to remove leaky drums.
Stegner said he wouldn't deny that
'
~
'; '• ,/ " :.
I Failh said cleputies got a tip last month that a person in southern Richliquid already has leaked down to the
The 12 drivers whqse identities
.. ·
··
• ,. • ·
•
land County was holding stolen property. Officers found property tak·
puncture level. Failure to discover and employment at Feml!ld were veren from storage lockers in Fairfield and Richland counties. But the
•these, they say, could result in drivers ified by The Enquirer, asked for
investigation led to Morrow County and tbe suspect.
being splashed when the drums are anonymity, citing fear oflosing their
Faith said the ll)an was arrested Feb. 18. He told deputies that he and · , moved.
jobs or retaliation by FBRMCO offihis Jl4rlller 109k what they wanted to sell right away and what they did·
i
\'Every Monday we ·report to cials because they spoke out.
n't want they stored or burned. '
work and almost every time we have .
The men also said they would be
1a backlog of leaky barrels from the willing to discuss the safety problem
1
weekend that have to be moved," · and their concerns with investigators
COLUMBUS- A Columbus man and his girlfriend arc being held
enj~
1
said one driver with more ·than 10 for the U.S. General Accounting
on $,100,000 bond apiece in the death oftheman's 3-year-old son.
1'1\trick Bourgeois, 25, and Traey Lynri Bratton, 22, were charged Frireti)jmept~
day with one count each of involuntary ·manslaughter and endangerI
ing a child, Detective James McCoskey said. Th~y remained in the
H you're retired and con~med about the s8fety'of your )
Franklin County jail Sunday.
.
Patrick Bourgeois Jr. died Wednesday at Children's Hospital.
nest egg - come ahd join us for an informative seminar. . j
· The boy died of blunt trauma to the head, and his cleath has been ruled
Find out ways to help beat the tl\ree biggest threatS to !
a homicide, Franklin County Coroner William Adrion said.
your next egg, as well as ways to: · · ·
Ia arresi warrants filed in Municipal Court, Bourgeois and Bratton
were accused of binding the boy's feet and hands with tape for several ho~. Bourgeois allegedly bit the poy in the ribs and struck him in
• increase your income pQtential and .
ihe face. Bratton is accused of biting lhe boy in the neck.
cut back on your taxes
WASHING10N (AP) -.An Ohio zine. "I trusted them fully."
.Sratton's daughter is being cared for by relatives, said Kay Marshall, .
family says their retarcled son died of
Officials of the diocese and Good
a spokeswoman for Franklin County Children Services. Sl)e showed . AIDS after he was raPed at a home Shepherd Manor could not be
; • make your.nest egg last longer
no signs of abuse.
·
financed by the Roman Catholic reached io comment further Sunday.
Church, a magazine reports.
A phone message WaS left at the
• reduce YOIJI' investment risk
,,
The
family
of
Joey
Busam,
who
·manor.
No
one
answere4
the
phone
at
MANSFIELD - The sister of a Mansfield Correctional Institution ·
who died after he was stabbed by an inmate has filed a lawsuit · died in January at age 44, is suing the the diocese office.
A Seminar Entitled: . · ·' ·
church. The family Silys he got AIDS
According to records in Hamilton
•
asking for a change in the official cause of cleath. '
from members of a religious order, County Common Pleas· Court in .
Corcne Shelton filed the suit against the Richland County Coroner's .
Right . .
the Little.Brothers of the Gopd Shep- Cincinnati and the !eStilpO)!)' of forOffice in c0mmon P.leas court on Thursday. Her brother, Thomas Davis
herd.
''
mer residents.• brothe~ at OO&lt;MI Shepfor your Ne~fEgg'i';
Jr., died in Junei992.
,The
church
clenies
that
it's
rcsponherd
Manor
held
drunken
parties
in
The lawsuit asks the court to order Coroner Stephen Banko to amend ·
sible for the man's death. But in a sto- a special "playroom" and roamed the
Davis' cause of cleath to an overdose of steroids.
Featured Guest Speaker ·
Davis died after surgery at Mansfield General Hospital. Former'coro- · ry being published in lOday's editions facility at night, molesting sorn~ of
of
U.S.
News
&amp;
World
Report,
the
men:
"
KRIS JAENICKE ·· . "
ncr William Jeffrey ruled he died from a stab wound.
Columbus Bishop James Griffin said
In interviews with a psychiatrist
However, Suminit County Coroner William Cox conducted a second
. if the church loses the case it .might and relatives before he died, Busam
. ~~NIOR REGIONAL_Vi,CE PR~{I;)~N'f.. . 1•
autopsy and reported in February 1993 that Davis' died from a steroid
have to withdraw supPort from social said he had sexual contact with two
overdose, not a stab wound. The steroids reportedly were injected into
:
agencies
and hospitals because it . brothers, Paul Hayden and Guy Dale
This free semiJulr will be held
Davis' spine during surgery to reduce swelling.
I
could
be
held
liable
for
any
problems
:Shaffer.
Shelton filed a malpractice suit against Mansfield General Hospital,
~"'
.MARCH 5, 1996 at 5:00PM
· Hayden had pleaded guilty to
Dr. Albert Tlmperman, Dr. Anthony Jahre and Surgical Neurology of · at the centers. ·
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER of MEIGS COUNTY·
The family said brothers . who i attempted sexual battery charges in a
North CentralOhio Inc.
,
operated
the
Good
Shepherd
Manor
~
sex
abuse
scand,al
at
the
home
during
MuLBI!:RRY HEIGHTS- P(}MEROY, ·( j)J
Tlmperman. a neilrosurgeori, is still on staff at MedCentrai/Mansfield
in
Wakefield,
Ohio,
rapCll
_
and
the
mid-19SOs,
the
magazine
said.
Hospital, formerly Mansfield qenerat Hospital. He could not be rcachecl
sodomized Susam. The liome foJ , The matter was not related to Busam.
for tOIIIIilent. )abre is not on staff at the hospital and could not be locat. Come and bring a .friend! Seating:is limited, s6 pi~~
adult retarded men was run by the
Hayden. who lives at&gt; the order's
ed for coirunent.
,
us today to reserve your place:
.
Little Brothers, which received mon- residence in Albuquerque, N.M., had
Roy Slider, who was in prison for murder and kidnapping convicey
from
the
Columbus
diocese
to
no
comll)ent,
Majella
Marchand,
the
KEBLER BUSINESS .SERVICFS
AT (614)
992-7270
, lions, w&amp;S charged with attempted murder for Davis' dtath but con- ·
' .
'
'··
operate the center.
local superior, said Sunday. In court
victed of felonious assault in August 1993. He was sentenced to 12to
The
diocese
said
!hat
under
church.
pleadings,
Hayden
denied
having
Attericlees will also receive a FREE ~y of Km\per's ~Jar
2!1 years in prison,
law it did not have control over dai· sex with Busam.
"Nest ~gg ~Oil Kit," ~h inc)u'*' l)roc!lu~ that ~Y~.~
ly operations of Good Shepherd
The order says Hayclen does not
review~ and approved by The National Col!nc;il on The Aging, Inc.
Manor and only gave "charitable" have the AIDS. virus. Shaffer, who
NEWBURGH HEIGHfS ~ Mayor Edward Kolar was arrested on
(NCOA). Pios~scs foJ several investment :
and "spiritUal" support to the broth- died in 1989, tested HIV-neglllive, the
a charge of drunken driving e.-ly Saturday.
'
companies will be available.
ers.
order told U.S. News.
Kolar, !18, was arrested after officers received a telephone call from ·
, The Little Brothers, which
Lawyers for the Little Brothers
another motorist who said that the driver of a van had cut him off.
stopped operating the center in 1985, suggested that Busam may have been
KAfiL KESLER Ill, REGisTERED REPRESENTAT1VE ·
Pollee reflised to release cletails of the arrest, but records show it
· issued a statement denying that the' infected by an employee who worked
· 'i ·
liNurliiM othreifll1rough
' ..
ocC:urred shortly after I a. m in this Cleveland suburb.
order was responsible for B~ 's at Good Shepherd Manor after the
·'::,~,, . . H. D. ~IIIVNII!- ~ tnQ. , · . · :. :
recotds also show.!hat the mayor was given a breath test at the
1illness or death. The order said it brothers left. The employee died of
,.413 E. L8e Col"-'lllvd.; 1lllnl
Til 71031·
Valley .View police s~ion, then jailed at the Cuyahoga Heights ~plice
Depll'irncnt.
· ·
no evidencethe
ofallegations
wrongdoing
its
.investigated,
and by
found
.
.....
Kolar was released after posting $1,000 bond. The case willbe heard
members.
on Wedne$day in Garfield Heights Municipal Court.
: Wakefield is in Pike &lt;;ounty, 81
Kolar did not relllm telephOne calls to his home on SatUrday! the
PublleNollce
·miles east of Cincinnati..Busam
(~veland) Piain Dealer reported. Hfs phone number is not puj)lished,
:
from
Cincinnati.
,
-The Auoclated Prtss
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Busam had lhe mind of a 6-year11 hereby given
,old.
He
had
lived
in
lhe
home
sJ111:e
.•
.
to
he was 16, his mother, Cl~, s'aid. .
"It was a very trusting relationship
we had with the brolhers, all of
them," Mrs. Busam told lhe maga-

COLUMBUS - Jw: 111¥1Cr Clark Teny has, his fluegelhom back.

!

Personal items lost in truck theft

'
!

LLHOLLOI
Aobabelle'o
,, Silver Bridge PIIZI
TIUCIIII
'814 448 4482
.
~

"
:~~·

.

-

•
"

r' '

Couple held in 3-year-old's death

!Catholic-operated
home comes under
fire·in man's death

t·.'

•Garag•

•

I

;•

•

•Complete

985-4473

'

FREE

l

·UCINE IIYDUULIC REPAIR
. . &amp; MACIIIIIE SHOP, INC.

·- .
''

'

Health &amp; Fitness

-

-

..

~· -

.. .nfii'
... II·-·-

...,_

. ·Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
""" , ,.,. " ..,..At:e to back, up .
. Serving S.E. Ohio a WHt Vlrglnls
Tol FIN 1-II00-872-tl87·

TRI-STATE SEWER &amp;

lotolgo Coun11 Shorltro oflco,
mtfOY,Ohio.
I

ROM! Acldlllomi

Siding, Roofing, Pllloe

R-11111111

lnluNN·~ced

Cell Weyne Nett

112-4405
ForF-EetliiUilel

..

....

SINGlES)I
. . . . . . htnl

SlalplrCIIII
1-tDCH$6-2600 bt.
3836, 2.99,. ....
llyn.,lldlittlto

+
.•. tl•••.. ••

.

(21 19110 Chevrolet Impalas,· ~
do«, mlnimlm lid. 1800
:
(111889 Ford 4 door, minimum

'

PI 1 985 Cheilrolet Impala, ~
do« mlnimJm .bid, $500
;

ownera:
Hary I DonN Clllrk
Stanlng Sun. thru Feb.
29 Sr. Citizens Specisl
Fse for day IUIII.
$1.00 per person to
Pomeroy &amp; Middleport
Days: 541-1124 (local)
Nights: 992·2741

21111 mo.

(1)1884 Ford B&lt;onco II, mlninilm
bid $500
' '
I

Vettlcloa are aold AS lSI
The vehide&amp; will be available" kJ
inspection Thursday and Frida.f
one hall hour prior m lhe oalo.
,

~ick Pearson Auction Compan)S

full time auc:lioneer, compltte

auction

service.

Ucenaed

186,0hio &amp; We&amp;l Virginia . 30~
773-5185 Or ~ - 773-5447,
• •,

90

wanbld to Buy ' ·

rvuw.

IIJIHNAI'II
I
J

" - (JMJ,. ITJoliJT
'
Sports' F.unll
Scores Point
Sprea~ and much
..
more . ..

1-900-ne-o1oo·

(619) 645 1434

Serv-U (619) 114S- 8434

'

Touch-Tone Phone

Req .

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
'i Uineatone, Sanct, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

992-3954

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

..,•.
Port""'
..

32124 Happy HOlloW Rd.
Middleport; Ohl.o 45711a
Danny &amp; PIQijy Bric;klee

614-742·2113
TFN

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge Sports
Entertainment Line!!

1·900-ns-o1oo

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
'

Ext. 6057
$?.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch Tone Phone
Required

•Roam Addition•
•New GllfliiH
•ElectriCII &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•lntarlor 6 Extarlor
Plllntlng
AIIO Concrete Worll
(fREE ESnMATES)
· V;C. YOUNG Ill
112-6211

serv-u (619) 645 8434

Pomeroy, Ohio
1/IMo

•• u

Announcements·

......

'

Do your part for our environment. Bring us your
..um. CIIM n . other recyCIIbles 1111d regleter to
win s 111ndcndted .OIId W.lnut lrld cedllr lined
bllllket Chest YIIUad et $800 to be given IWIIY
Minh 30th. Trl. Co. Racycllng open 7 days • week
to ..rve you. .
.
·
9-6 Mon.·Frl; 9-3 Sat. a sun. Locstad corner of
St. Rt. 143 &amp; 7,
614-992-5114.

SWM 33 likes Dancing, Movies,
Quiet Evening• At Home. Seeka
SWF 21 ·43 With Same Interests.
Write: P.O. 8011: 533. Gallipolis.

Gutltrl

.. ==·
l,,.,......
-Jr

;;;,;~;;;:-;;;Tl"~~~;l
Evan RosSi , MAGICIAN. Parties,
Churche s. Schools. 304-8751847.

67S.5404 .
Las1 chance this year- beginner's
clogging clus . Big Bend Clog gers, March B. 7pm, Pomeroy Village Han, $3/donation , ~nlormation

61&lt;·992·7853.
Sprina Is Coming, Sc Is Ttie New

Downapouta
.Gutter CIHnlng

.

Adult VidaO'S 614·446·2501 ,
1380 Eastem AV8!1Uo, GaWpolla

Freezer Beef Sale. USDA Choice.
Custom cut wrapped &amp; frozen.
$1 .29/lb. Crawford's Grocery. 304 -

w dllnllfll1'• i ••11oM

Porterbrook Nursery. Centenary Road . Trees Flowers, Shrubs,

Horbo.

Plll~g

cau-..7747
····
w ~ pm
1i1J11o•'*
.

FREE ESnMATES
949-2188

1

victim's family ·
rja:~tflrt·l'l killer'S parole

.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

oColoplua~~~ ..,~.,.,

'

•
Something from the
honey's
Live girls 1-to-1
conversations
1·900-288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+
$3.99/min.
Procall Co.
(602) 954·7420

Princess Video New Shipment Of

&amp;/1MMTFN

Wlalllnda •

ladle lllaeK Dealer
Howard h.cavntin
. Trucking ~

··um..tona

MARIE MUSICK

BulldOJing arid

Born lllil/95 ,
Mottief -t~ ·.u....t
Musldt. ·, .
,,,

·· Backhoe
Servlc.a
HOUII Sltil lfid
;; / Utilities' ·

r

J~li.rt

All K1nd1 of Eo1lh Work

-

992-3838

Live Psychics
1 on 1
1-900-255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch· tone phone
.required.
Serv-U

(619) 645·8434

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

992-2825

......
SPORT'S CAR
DELUXE
''

FrH EBHI!IItes
35 Yars Exp.
RuaonlbiiR11t81

Finders of hard to

985-4198

614-992-4060

find auto parts.

$-WANTED·$
1o people who need to lose
weight &amp; make money, 10 try ntW
patented weigh t- lo &amp;!!l produ Cu
3Q.4-773-50832oitrS/da)'. •
1 .l

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

ECONOyiC QEYEI oeuENT : ~l
Q),OOO An,.,al Salary • :~ l
Project Coordinator Needed

12,8eaelona 'For

,.. $20.00

1.8eeekH.For
\'1

$21.00 ··

Open t:OO 10 3:011

4:•1o 10:00 P.li•

o-: ,.... • iMine

'

. .IIOUinllol

.................
. ....
FREI E81.ATE8

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

......... i.itt .....
.

:IIIII . .~ Filial
61 ........1il

Mlil1 ....

••

"

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

RaCine, Oh. 45n1
Jamta E. Diddle
Trsckhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
JICkMmmer,'Available 24 Hrs•
We dig bllumenta, put In Mptlc
syatams, lay linea, underground bores.

for Free eallmate call 849-2512

.......... .ura

-

fd~

Implement ,n 18 Month Rogiooll/
Economic Development Ptanni~Q"
Etl~r t To Create NMW Job Oppotl'

tum tiea For A 4 -Couhty Art'Suoroundtng Th&amp; U.S. Deparunof1\
Of Energy's Gaseous Oilfusiqf'\
Plant In PikeiDn, Ohio.
·"
I ,

Requirements: Elcperienc:e In fler.;
forming Complex Economic 00: ·
ve.lt:tpment Planning Activitit•
W1th Public And Private Sector-

Input. Ability To Work Well Wilh'
Comml.lnlt)' Groups In Public Se,t.l
tings . Knowledge Of Federal And
_State Grant •Programs, lnduatrlaf.
_Park o.v,mpment, Grant WritinQ,I
Personal Computers. Researctf.
And Marketing Experience Prt~ ·

letred.

•' :
'

'

Public Oi Bu,lnos.o Adminlotr.a:\

tion Or Related Fields Plus " '
1/2 Austrailian Shepherd pup- Minimum 01 Three Years ~XP.tUi-~·
pies, 112 mit breed, &amp;wks . old. · ence In An Economic Deveiop··'
304-675-4156 after 5:30pm, all ment Capacity. Master's Degree;

Preferred.

day saturday.
2 German Shephard puppies.

~-67S.4452.

Sui:Jmil Cover letter

i

·

Anc:l"~ume1

With Roforencoo By March 11 )
1118e, To E•acuM Diroc:tor Ohio~
·
3 and 4 montl'l old pups, Lab and VaHey Regionll DewetoPmen
G;:a9fiS.t
O!'l"a~·. c ute and lovable~ Commi11ion, 740 Second Street
6 "t
~
Room 102, Portsmouth, oH ~
·

5662
Fornalo Part Lab. &amp; Pan Aottwell· •
·&lt;1088.
· I
"'· 6 monlhs old Pupio. lo...,bie,
"liN EQUAL OPPORllJNrrY ' ,
::~ Good w/Children. 614-441 '
EIIPI.OVER"
,
Five mixed breed fuzzy puppies,

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

~

'·' ;.,

61&lt;·992-6555,
Free

Call lonnie

Or Sue,

wtmanren, double
304-e75-3134.
Wilh

or

ft1~ -

Easy Workl Excellent Poy.1:.;..1:\
semble Products at Horne. Cat~
Toll f ree H!00·48l'·5Sti8 EXT ,
311
·•
t

.LINDA'S
PAINTING
"

''•.

'

Bachelor's Degree In PlanninG '

GIYIIWIY

New.At lntles .lleetronfes

:

Help wanted

11 D

Announces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March

Howard L W1lteeel

~

I'

ftl CO. IICYCLIII

or 985-3418 .·.

· ......lllf~ar fer

. 1~

Er,lPLOn lE NT
SERVICES

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Wt

'·

'

.

J.l Ai '

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

rAI:D:S~i:n~19:8:9_..:,.;..~~ ~---~~~==~:~;;;~==~=!!~~~t.~~

.

•'

Term s: CASH IN HAND.

. ,sn..
....a. ,_...,.,
II

Ext. 7830 ~.99 per
min. Mu.st be 18 yi'S

~

[,

f.'&lt;i·

.. ·{ ,..,, I I liW
S...&amp;Ht

Klf!:llen a ~
RliltOdellilg

n.

10:00am, Salurday, March ..g~
1!lUll at the parking lOt bolide me

DUJN ·CUAfiNG,

Houu·Repelr 6
RMIOdeHne

Suburb's mayor faces DUI charge

We will work w~hln your budget
Pll. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
108
Street
wv

.,

·for Details.

"

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sallis &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum'Sialnless • Tool Dressing • Omamental
Sleps ·Stairs, Railings, Patio FumHure, Fireplace
Items, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

"No Job Too Lllrge or Too Small"

Call9t2-3167

,

to•owtno u1ed vehicles w~
be up lot oale 1&gt;1 public auctlqn-

T,he

CLARK'S CIB CO.

"tWv010212

IWIIJ. .

·

PUBUC AUC110N

TAXI

!r

F.NII Estlmette

87 Mill St.,
ft'!lddlei*t

eall

"""''

., ... ,

, 1

bld.l800

Heel Pumps,
In Block

At Big Bend

SERVICE

Bogoo AucUon Service, 814·4il
7750.
.

614-992~3470

Man-..ractured Housing

NEFF

WICIS
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

8 ti.m..S p.m.
Mon.· Sat.

~·

80

Limestone,

~

Public Sale
and AuctiOn

(UmeStoneLow Ratss)

HAULING

'

1

8484112

-

''Do You Have the

.

. J . E. DIDDLE, .

hot water. tanks,
. furnaces, batteries
• Remodeling
and any metal ·
'
materials.
Stop Jc Compare .~ '
c:' FREE ESnMATES
' Call 992-4025 ·
•

~-

Mix

1

·

'

All Vard Soloo Mull Be PlJid 1ft
Advance. Doadlil)t : 1:OOpm ·lh'
d11 before the ad 11 to. run, Silnd01 edkion- I :j)Opm Frldor, ~
·*'t tclllon tO:QOun. S.llr*'t;Jl

Jt111RD.

(,

·You've worked hard~Uof·y~ur .
life to build a comfortablt:' nest ;
egg- now learn ho~.'tdlie,l~;: ]
,;,,· ·
protectit while you
your
·; •· .. ,·

Slain guard's sister sues coroner
iuaro

Nll4422
Cheellr, Ohio

. . -· " .

~

Middleport
, &amp; VIcinity

Um11tont o Onwll I
Dirt o Sind ·

Mcin.•Sat 10-6

"·

Pomeroy, .

'' " · ROIERIIISSELL · '
...' COIISTIUCnOI Pick-up discarded
,, •New Homes ·
; washers, dfyers,

l

~

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Prom
Dresses
Levi's

"y j

'.

t

�•
.

Po~y • Middleport, Oh~

-

Monday, March 4, 1996

The Dally Sentinel• Page t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•i

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ALDER

40 Pelly hOclfiUIII
41 Vlolenoe

ACROSS

PHILLIP

. 1 ~ l)o
5 lecnll8ry'1

=·...,ta

:

AI Deplrllcl
error
lOGI Acliwa Hlgln 11 On lhe
12 ~
lllllnMtJve llcle

=~olor

13
14 llinbMI'I bird

NO

03-Gt-M

•&amp; 5 3
•J 9 3

1994 Chwrolet liairO Converalo~

Von, Tlera Packave;• Captaif&gt;
· Chlllra, Excellent Condition, 61

. 448 03!iO After 4 P.M.
. 1994 Fotd

!

WEST

EAST

•• 7
•Q 8 7 6 z
• Q 10 8 7
•10 Z

•K 10 9 4
•A 5
H 96
•J 9 6 6

SOUTH
•A Q J Z

AanQo&lt; 4x4 4 Cyllndl

4 SpHd, E1cellent Conditio~,
23,000 llieo;-'.t2,100 Firm, B1+
3 - , Al!,of.~. IJ ·
I

18 NMI

17 Unit olllllll

•A s 2
•• 7 • 3

. i994 Jeep Clierokeo Sport .4
Door, 30,000 MileS. Garage Ke~
' Excellent Condition, ·8t4· 44t
. 7825, 81 ...1192·,7075.
'
'

115t"-

•K 10 4

•K43
•A K Q

:; ~::-

Acicldaa (ebbr.)
58 Long llmM

10 Fork pert

11 Flligl

=pole =.
w-··

11 Reel ...

12 Poo11)1eytng

20

13

21 SoU(IIax)

M

22 In - - (ona
p11r1ot1c ooc.
lfllf IIIOIIiaf) . " Experl24 Come up
Ill Unutual
2fl Kin of mono
pnon (II.)
21 PoalpOMI .
31 L8r111 bUin
DOWN

33 OppoaiW of

poa.

34 ~-31 Fencing NOrd
U Mr. Qujyla

~hull

F1ctory Rebate: R.._hlo

M,rch '20, 18ti!: Single Or Muld
SecUpn. F..... h. City HOmoo, .1.,~
GdiPalil. OH'8t4-4*1340.

HE HAD FOUR
HELPIN'S OF
MASHED TATERS
AT SUPPER

JU41iMAIDII

HOW CAN YOU
SAY SUCH A
THING?

+m::&amp;oe•:

7 - Allo, C111f.

1 D11ma1 color
2 Helpar
3 - polaonlng

SECONDS! I

+

. Per llonlfi, Harrloon Townehlp,

G1llla Co., Trailers· Welcome,
Also Laruer Tracts With land

ContJaCt614-W-2.

'PEANUTS ·.
1

1VE ALWA'fS WONDERED Wll'(
PIUlES CARRIED PARROTS
TMEIR .:lt!VIIL.IIl~l\::r,.l'l!

UNLESS I STOP TOO QUICK ..

·l-IE LIKES RIDIN6-UP THERE ..

~

0

~\@~~·~

.•.

i
Tablet, Laat Yaara Hold
• n •• ,.

8' 1105: 8',
$45, 814·,
i

Olf·,thouldor, w/royal ~· • 100. 304•07~·2314

••

,.,

HousehOld
Goods

~-

{(t\.OFFro~ ...

~---,

~ 'IOJlONIGKT

,.

·-,.-HI..V€...

~

I AATE. IT
1-JHCN !*1€.'5

foil(£

Ff-(£.TIOU:&gt; \

JICk -

36 Realdantof
Ylennl
31 ExploehM
(8bbr.)
37SIIede
of blue

43 Enargy

unit

•

••

How do you get a speech from a
politician? Nowadays, give him a mi·
crophone and an audience of at least
·one. But in the early days of the1centu·
. ry, it was tougher. Commenting about
·Joseph H. Choate, who was the U.S.
Ambassador to Britain from 1899 to
1905, Chauncey Depew said, "All you
need to do to get a speech out of Mr.
Choate is to open his mouth, drQp in a
dinner, and up comes a speech. •
In today's deal, all South needs to do
is drop away a high card and up
comes a vital entry.·
1
Against three no-trump, West led
the heart six: three, ace, four. Back
· ' came the he&amp;rt five: 10, queen, nine.
: · West exited wilb the heart seven, East
· . discarding the diamond six.
.
Declarer had seven top tricks.
! Hoping for luck in the suit, South
cashed his three club honors, but
West discarded a diamond on the last.
Now came a diamond to dummy's ace,
a spade to the queen, the spade ace
and another spade. However, East
took two spades and one club to defeat
the contract.
Assuming the heart six is West's
fourth·highest, after East produces
the. ace, West is marked with the
queen. So South has only one heart
trick coming. And he 'tlesperately
. needs a second dummy entry for a
spade finesse. Uf Weal bas the spade
king, declarer is probably in trouble.&gt;
At trick one, South should unblock the
heart king under East's ace.
·suppo·tie 'East switches to a dia·
mond. South wins with dummy's ace,
laltes a spade. finesse and leads a low
· heart. He must get into the dummy for
a second spade finesse, which pro·
duces nine tricks: three spades, one
. heart, two diamonds and three clubs.

45MUIIIIY

41E~

47 RacMtlon
device

... Exploelve

(II.)
52 Dl•lplled

,.

111811

53 Smell biHa
55 Kin of pre
56 M811CIOua

. look

5I JFKIIght

---by--_. ._

CELEBRITY CIPHER

·

by Lute Campos

..........

~-=-E..:hlentrlntheclpher...,.foranoltlef.
• L

I

p

RN

TRGANZG
WON

ZLXXBIBRW
DLWS

BYJB

YBCJ,

SMIIZIBZ

Toct.Y.ct.: M - - U

TRZ

SLWJ.'

X IN P

'

WON

TIPJ,

XNIWG·WDN
-

I NJ B •

EBWB

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •uncomplicated gll1a can1 act."- Joe Pasternak.
"There's not much 10 acting as lar as I'm concerned."- Roy Rogers. ·

. '::~:t;~' S©~lllA-~t.~s·

.,....

..

- - - - - - l~lto4 ~J ClAY •. POllAN,:=:::-----

.'0 Reorrgnge
l.ttera of
four tcramblod words
· low to form four ~ords.

the

be·

r---0::--:R-0::-::C:-::-K--, :

1
t

[)!\'('

oeaolng·llonaeo• ~a.
Houri, Call (totI 715-2300,
t351, (24 Howa).

32 PolltlciM

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

I

FAHM SLH'Pl !ES
&amp; LIVESlCJCK

•·.

42F-'

•e.soo Eoch, ,teso Down, $100

No Expari0.,.. Nlc1111ryl
To $900 WHidy /Potontlll

Indian

27Shollllelll .
21 .18cob'lwh .·
30 NIIOIJ'I Y.P. ·

By Phillip Alder

Building litOI with tOild frontage,
bock ol Now HaYen, 111181 water,
and flnonclng aYOIIabla. 304oBBZ,
26811.

.

23 Actr-. HRiar;
21 lnvllllllon
lnlla.
2fl ....,.,._ :.

(2 wda.)

t Art- polliOII

4 Loom blir

·;

movement

8 Sometime

Feed yourself
with entries

AN' KEPT ·
CALLIN' 'EM

350 Lois &amp; Acreage
10 Troc11 Of Land, 6 Acree

11 Piercing
11 Haltd

8 Thy

Vu,lnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Soulb
West North Eaal
Z NT
Pass 3 NT
All pass
Operiing lead: • 6
•1 ,600 Rebate With Any Now .
Schult Homo Cilrdorep Boloro

10 ....., bPoll8 '

5 Tllkeoll8bet

~~--r-~-r-~~

I work with a fellow who has
a
very
negative attitude. I think
' he would
L-...L-1-...L-1-...1 ~
complain about the
r---U-N-N---:-R--E:----,
pattem
in
a
magic - - - •• -.
0

·

Q

Complete tho chuckle quotld
by fillin; in the mining words
.__.._..___.__.__.___. you do•olop from step No .. 3 below.

A

'1:11'

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETT!RS
TO GET ANSWER

SE:RV1C.lS

SCRAM-Lm ANSWEIIS
The Treosurt You

Sovlnts ·You'H Find In the
. Claulfled Section.

Drover- Waltz -Await- Sherry· THEIR own WAY
Most people don't need to be led into temptation they
usually find THEIR own WAY.

430 Fanns for Rani ·

'
11 etoll horao barn + 2/Mc'"

1 - . Rt 2, Crab Creek Rd. 30... ·

7!i6-RENT.

440 ' • Aparlmlnll
torRent

ASTRO·ORAPH '

1 and 2 ....,tmonta, lur·
nilhed 1nd unturniahecl, security

dopotlt required,

11112·2218.

'

n~

Pttl, 814· ,

.

fend 2

_..,..__
The Aslro-Greph Matchmaker can help
you underatarid what to do to make the
· relationship work. Mail $2.75 lo
Matchmaker, c/o thiS newspaper, P.O.
Box 1758, Murray HIN Slalion, New York,
NV 10158.

.

.

Undoorstand your obligations
lend what'you can'l anord.
VIIIGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today you

might have lo deal with someone who
fnalata on doing things his or her way.
Unfortunately, this person follows a palh
sliewn.wfth obstacles.
· LIBRr. (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Altend lo
responslbllltie&amp; prompety today anc1 do not
try to sweep anything under the rug, If
you fall behind, ~ will bli hard to get back

. AlliES (Merch 2hAprll 11) Tocfay,
l3f:RNICE · " .. .gUard agalnellhe tendency to attempt to
BEDE .bSOL do. mq;e than your time 01 talents permit.
Both liave their limllallona; so achedule
your agenda llllnSibly.
in the ~· .
TAURUS (Aprii2Q.Mar 20) Before com- · SCORPiO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Belore
milling yourself fo a -"'1 !unction today, attempting lo manage lhlngs 101 others
check the guest llal 10 make sure 11 . : today, m.ka 111111 you have lhe llblllly to
doe8n1 Include an Individual you've trleel l1ariclle your own atlllra.
to awld.
.
. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. DoOeo: 21) II you
· QIMINI ('*r t1.June 20) You have a · · go after -thing~ today, pn~­
'·t . ·r
imagination, and tliis Ia a won- pare to llllUggle. You can ac:ltieve your
·
' clet1ul a888t. However, don't use these . goala. but only wfth lor1ltude arid determl·
oWhen you operate !ridepende~lly • YO!I , creative 'Powe\a to worry about thin~M nttlon.
.
will teCfiW ou~eta\"!1!19 re.~U.III 1in the! t11a1 •
hlppen.
·
CAJI.IIICI)RN (Die. 22-.lln. 11) You wiU
ve.r ahilid. Do nol auociale with people !. CANCER (June 21-JuiV 22) H you want not hrlve much palienoe with ir)divlduala
whO have ftOih4ng tiiMICi8l to contribute. .; an accurate llllll.!!lenl of a sltuallbn !1!10 opiiOaa· your Ideas and poaltlona,
PIICEI (Fft.. 20 M1,.rt '20) 'fou ltrive · aboul which you have conCerns, dOn't even lhoujlh you know their polnla are
t!r be an optimf~. ~ ~. but ·· ·aak .a negative person to give you an , vdd.
when you analyze developmenta, you .. "apptaisll. '
· AQU~
aooM. 18) Try not to
~llme4 put too mUch empheala on . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Prudence arid : like ~ ~ Mw klnQ·rangtt obllgMiOfta
b deik illde. Today I'(II!Y be ln.u.nple. dlaclpllne will be imporlanl today In today unlll you have all ,your old onea
TrY.tntl. to Plll;lt .YP. • ~- romanqt? ..rigard lo your financial endeavors. Cieel'8d up. Do not Nmil your opttona.

maiveloUi

&lt;•

····•

)- .

·''

'.

'

..
•,,

I

'

�•

•

•"

By The Bend

•

I

8!f Ed Peter.on,

:::'·
Social Security Ofllce

oh

l)ro ounces.

BRANDEN IIOLLINQSWOiml

.Marketing seminar set March 7
,.

.

Some people are saying that
younger workers win never see a cent
from Social Security when they retire.
Well, here are the facts.
The latest trustees report on
Social Security shows that the program is sufficiently financed to pay
be~efits well into. the· next century.
Another fact: polls show that most
Americans are behind Social Security and are willing to support changes
to keep it solvent.
· Added together, these two facts
mean that we have the time to make
whatever changes are nei:ess.ary to
keep Social Security adequately
financed and the will to make those
changes.
You can count on Social Security
because Social Security can count on
_you to support a program that pays
benefits to one out of six people. and
provides retirement, disability, and
survivors protection to 95 percent of
today's workers and their families.
It will be there for you, too, today
and tomorrow.

Retinmeat lacome
Too often, people rely on Social
Security to support themselves in old
age.
Well, you should know that Social
Security was never intended to be
your only means of support after 65.
For the kind of retirement you hope
to have, plan to supplement your
Social Security benefits with savings,
investments, pensions and insurance.

Delay retirement
If you are nearing retirement age
you may be wondering when is the
best time to stop working?
Well, you should know that the
·Jonger you delay_retirement, tile larg.er your monthly benefit will be.
You can retire as early as age 62.
If you do, your Social Security benefits will be reduced by as much as 20
percent... to take into account the
longer period of lime you'll he drawing benefits. Or JOU can wait until
your full retirement age ... 65 for peapie retiring within the next few years
..; and receive your full retirement
benefit. Or you can keep working and

put off collecting Social S«urity and
your benefits will increase for each
month you delay retirement after 65
up to age 70. To find out how much
you will receive from Social Security when you retire. just call I -800772-1213.
IS.S. dlsabWty iosui'IIJKe
A lot of people \hink that Social
,Security is just for old folks.
Well, more than two million peo- ·
ple who aren't old receive Social
Security payments every month ...
payments through Social Security's
disability program. Social S«urity
disability insurance protects people
against the loss of income while.
.they're young if they become unable
to work beca~e of an illness or
injury. And if the disability lasts for
tw~ years or longer. there's Medicare
too, to help with doctors' and hospital bills.
Nine out of I0 workers are eligible for disability benefits if they
become disabled. To find out more
about how Social Security disability
insurance can help you, call 1-800772-1213 and ask for a free copy of

!

l

•

"Reducing the Risk" is an in nov·•live curriculum that is designed to
,help adolescents build skills to pre•
vent pregnancy, sexually transmitted
·diseases and HIV.
. . The workshop is being offered by .
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
Ohio to train teachers, counselors,
•and social workers on how to use this
highly effective curriculum in class.rooms and other settings. ·
The workshop will be held on Fri-day from ~:45 a.m. to ·4:30 p.m. in
Athens, Continuing Education Units
have been applied for to the Ohio
Department of Education.
The goal of the "Reducing tlie
Risk" cu.rriculum is to provide students with the skills they
to
postpone sexual intercourse, orto be more responsible if 'they decide to
bccome sexually active. Research on
the "Reducing the Risk" curriculum

need

' 1· ~~ '

~:

~j

··...: .j t',}jy •
'

d)e pamphlet "Disability." Thil num-~

. ft\' _:

Services are free
A lot of people believe that you
have to pay for services from Social
Security. Well, that just isn't so.
'
All Social Security services are
offered free of charge. That means
that if you marry and want io chanse
the name on your .Social •Security
records, you can do so ... absolutely
free.
If you need to get a Social Security number for your newborn child ... .
there's never a charge.
And if you want to check yoW:
'earnings or get an estimate of whqf
your retirement benefits will be ... you
can do so without payipg anyone to,
do it for you .
Unfortunately, some·unscrupulous
businesses do charge a fee , anywhere ·
from $10 to $2S or more, for the same
free services you can get from Social
Security. To take advantage of any o:f
Social Security's services, just call 1800-772-1213.

..
Vol. 48, NO. 215
1 Section, 10 Pagee

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New1 Staff
.
· Veterans Memorial Hospital received a vote of confidence from the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners, which pledged its support to a planned hospital addition Monday.
,
The pledge was in response to a letter signed by 124 hospital employees
. and volunteers sent to commissioners requesting their suppon for a proposed
. medical arts building.
•
·
Commission Vice President Janet .Howard 'read the commission's
response, a letter signed by all three commissioners:
"We ... pledge to do everything within our power to make land available
near the hospital for the construction of this facility.
"We understand that five areas on the hospital campus have been selected as possible sites and that none of these sites will interfere with the operation of the Meigs County Home."
·
The board also said It would assist in the selection of the site and encour. aged all parties to proceed "as rapidly as possible to ensure that the health.
.

LAURA LEE
.

,
'

The Grand High Priest of the

...

\ B &lt; ll -~ .I Ill
B 0 \ I l \1 \ I&lt; 1\.1 I'.'

Orand Chapter of Royal Arch
Masons, Arthur. Ross, and his wife,
Carole, Sandusky, will be in Middleport for a dinner-reception to be held
at ,the Middleport Masonic Temple
Saturday.

&amp;
High Interest Yitlds
Available
• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monthly
Income
• High Safety!
• Wide Choice of AMuitles of
Ali .Kinds
Call for lnfoimation:

'

The

I

Community Calendu Is

ptiblllli'ed u

free 1ervlce to non·
.·P. . . '""-'' wilhlllg to announce
' Ill r ttlrilllid fi'CCIII even11. 'The cal........ II, ~ ,delliV«&lt;Io promote
..w.:.ol',,'liliid niHrs olany type.
11

~~ IIJJ prlnle!fuspace permits
aDil c1ta1111t"' piannleed to n~n a

, ~ oialliber o1 days.

MO~AY ,
. : Rt.J'h.,AND -- An indoor camp
·~'"'' ,ponsored by the Meigs
' ' ~ 1 .tfQiiP~~ ~ssociation, will
•.bC!flblil'from ~arch 4-9, 7 ·P·I1'· each
~' ~venlfll, ~M~h. HI. 6 p.m: 111 the
I\Ptllnd·~uatene Cliurch..Evangelist
Will l!e ,the ReV- 1\ic~ Strickland
~. evangelia!S; Ralph and
.;IOA'iU!'tJ.unillil'ti· ·
·
· ~ JSA~p- •- Tile Lei1rt 1bw11ship
~ Monclay, 6 p.m: at -~ pffice

.with

\!P.i!iliiil .

'·

.. .

'

. ' UclNE.; ~ ViiJase Cowlcilt 7, ~nl~~cinc,ijy It Stir Mill Parle.
· i -~ .f.¢r.s - Letsrt Falls
p.DL 'il~y. dlildienls pro-

' PTO.,,
·~

·~

·~

i!f&gt;/'.'4.

.....; l-1.,
,;;
.~

¥

,·fll·- ~·'.' '.. ~+- ;,
')

·~

COLUMBUS (AP) - Southern
Local Schools in Meigs County will
receive $187,000 in an emergency
· loan approved by the State Controlling Board Monday .
Southern Local, which had earli~r applied for the loan, was one of
seven school districts to get their loan
. applications approved. The largest
amount, $1 million, will go to the
Madison Local Schools. ·
· Meanwhile, construction defects
continue to plague the state's computer center.

•••
'

.

•

~

SCOTT INSURANCE

Community calendar
'

State controllers approve ...---~"'ontest
:loan for Southern Local

Guaran~ Safeey

The dinner will be served at6:30
p.m. Tickets are $7 a person and
reservations are to be made with
Harold Rice, education officer of the
12th Capitular District of Royal Arch
Masons, 742-2922. All area Masons
and their wives are invited to auend.

STOCK PICKING WINNERS - Mre. Sarbare
Logan'a Second Grede clan at Middleport Ele'
gram, and presentation by Southern mentary waa honored with tha preaantatlon of
a $400 check Thuradly by Peopln Bank offl·
building committee.
clall for winning tha 111111&amp;111 Stock Plcklng Con·
RACINE -- Racine Chapter 134 teat. aponaored by the bank at their • Partner•·
OES, regular meeting. Mock initia- In-Education • achoola In Mel a, Athena, and
liOII, refreshments.
.
REEDSVILLE-- Olive Township
trustees, Monday, 6:30 at the township hall.
.
. SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
7:30p.m. Monday, Syracuse munic. ipal l!uilding.
POMEROY-- Meigs County Gar·
den Oub Association, 7 p.m. Monday
The week of March 4-11 will be
tit the Meigs Ubrary. Pbin~ fothost· observed as "Save Yo.ur Vision
int .regional meeti!'lg ·and for 'Meigs Week" at the Senior Otizens Center.
Cotlnty Fai~ flower ~how.
·Tuesday the Retired Senior Vol·
qiE;S:rBR-- Cheater ElelllC!llar)l unteer Program will sponsor a speakP'ID m~lina MOiiday, 7 p.m. at the er and free vision screenings at the
sehool. All weli:ome.
Center.
. PO~OY- Meip Band Boost- '
Dr. Je~l'fY McAdoo of Eye
m; Monday, 7p.m, in the band room. Physicians. l)td Surgeons of Athens
TUESDAY -'
·
will talk on catancts at 10:30 a.m.
· MIDDLE;PqRT -- Middleport · ImmediaieJy followin8, he will cooMasonic Lodge, .Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. duct free vision screenings to conat the telll(ill!.
linue until 11:45 a.m. ~o appointment
is necessary'
,.

a

Vision week to be
observed March 4-11

Washington Countlea. Stuclente choae atoclca ·
from a llat of 99 poulble Hlectlona, 'nd the
atoclca wars meeaured over a three morrth pert.
od. Pictured with the claaa are, back (L to R):
Middleport principal Don Heming, Mre. Logan,
Cathy Unacott and Carla King ol Peoplea Bank.

PRIDE

614698 4011 (CGI!eet)

3122 Swert Rd.

_______

.••.

Albuy, Olllo 4$710
• AMuities are i~ued by Insurance
Companies and · have substantial "
penalties for early withdrawBis.
.....,.~

•

State Architect Randy Fisher told
the Controlling Board that inspections have turned up problems with
the fireproofing system at the $62
million building.
It was just the latest in a string of
headaches for state officials who
thought they had a top-of-the~ne
building when they started moving in
in 1991.
. : Then the roof started leaking and
tnoisture trapped by' raulty vapor
seals started collecting on the walls,
leading some workers to claim that it
iomelimes appeared as if it was
raining indoors.
·
"In all my time. I've never seen a
j,roject quite so convoluted," said
Stn. Alan Zaleski, D-Vermilion.
• Zaleski objected to a Department
of Administrative Services request
for more than $81 S,OOO. The money
will pay to hire consuliants to !Jeter-

* GROWTH* PROGRESS
'

VOTE
.Patty Goe,glein Pick,ns.
For County Commissioner
''I BeHeve In ~~i~ ~o~ty~.~·
Election Day March l9 · ·
Paid fDr by IIIIi POP,,tw.m

38215 T - ·l'd1 ~'181W· p!l~88

•,

·,·

..'

..
~

Pomeroy Council
considers par~ing :
•
1ssues once more

B~TOMRAUM

N E I~\' ( ) l1 S

..
.,..

•

•

support

care needs of Meigs County residents are taken care of."
stance in support of the hospital.
"We feel the construction and operation of this facility will not only proHoeflich said people in the county were beginning to get the impression
tect the jobs already there but will result in many new jobs being created and that commissioners did not support the hospit~l.
·
will provide great economic benefits to the citizens of Meigs County through
"No one would want to come into a county without a hospital," she said.
the existing and new payroll which will result from this new .facility," the '"''m surprised the chamber (of commerce) hasn't taken a position on this."
commissioners' response added .
Commission ~resident Fred Hoffman - no relation to George Hoffman
"Our support will always be with the hospital," said Howard, who added - said all three commissioners have supported the hospital and commentthat the hospital is vitally important to eco nomic development i• the coun- · ed that George Hoffman and Hoeflich were the first people to address the
ty.
commission on the subject.
'
VMH financial officer George Hoffman said VMH and Holzer Medical
Howard, Commissioner Robert Hartenbach and Hoeflich cited personal
Center directors have been planning the construction of a medical building examples of people whose lives were saved by having ready access to the
since soon after the two facilities merged last spring.
hospttal.
"Everyone is very committed to seeing this building built," he said. "We
Hoffman said the VMH board has the infonnation on the proposed sites
can't make progress without the building starting up."
and added that 25 to 30 jobs may be created through construction of the new
Charlene Hoeflich, general manager of The Daily Sentinel, who attend- building.
ed the meeting as a private citizen, advised commissioners she considers their
The letter from the hospital employees notes that the proposed medicaf
commitment to be "a real pledge" and added it was "high time" they took a
(Continued on Page 3)

· Asaoclated Preaa Wrher
Republicans were awarding the
_biggest prize so far of the primary
season, 259 delegates in I0 contests
today. A rebounding Sen. Bob Dole,
told by supporters his nomination
was looking more and more
inevitable, said a sweep this l!(eek
"could do it" and clinch the nomination.
~is rivals· baitled on, ·bu~ conced­
ed the Senate majority leader was ..
once again in the driver's seat after a
crucial victory in South Carolina over :
the weekend.
Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar
Ale~ander, after a series of disappointing fourth-place finishes, said he
GREETING SUI;IPORTERS - Republican
ly at a Franklin Square, N.Y., restaurant Monwould press on through todafs conpresidential candlslate Bob Dole shook hands da!f, the clay before the latest round of pritests but would quit the race if he
with supporters during a Dole for Prealdent ralmaries. New York's primary Is Thursday. (AP)
can't beat Dole in next week's Florida primary.
And commentator Pat Buchanan who continues to say he'll fight on to Dole. Buchanan and Alexander all
Dole, meanwhile, had moved on
conceded while campaigning in the GOP's August convention in San campaigned there Monday, Dole win- to New York, which holds its primaGeorgia on Monday that, if Dole Diego, soughtlas·t-minute support in ning a vote - if not a formal ry on Thursday.
·
keeps on winning, _ a "sense of New England on Monday, but gen- endorsement - from House SpeakAlthough Dole started out in
inevitability will develop."
erally drew unenthusilllitic crowds.
er Newt Gingrich.
Georgia saying the race was "far
Eight states were holding priThe newly rejuvenated Dole leads
Gingrich voted by absentee ballot ·from over, " he became far more
maries today, most of them in the in polls in all eight states holding pri- and said that, although he had sought . buoyant in rallies in Albany and on
Northeast: MassachuseiiS, Connecti- maries.today.
to maintain neutrality since he'll Long Island - among his bestcut, Maine, Rhode Island, Vermont,
And forecasts of snq.)V and messy chair the GOP convention, he had auended and most boisterous gatherMaryland. Georgia and Colorado. rain across much of New England cast that vote. for Dole.
ings to date.
And two sta~,es were holding caucus- today were seen by GOP leaders as a
He called Dole "the next p;esies, Washington and Minnesota.
potential boost to Dole, who has deni."
At an airport hanger rally in
Delegates to be chosen today rep- establishment support. in all five
Forbes protested that it was not up Albany, Dole said that wins today folresent rQughly one quarter of those states in the region with primaries.
to Gingrich to decide who stays in the lowed by a victory in New York on
needed to win the GOP nomination .
Georgia was the biggest single race. "The voters make that decision, Thursday could nail down the nomi Wealthy publisher Steve Forbes. delegate prize of the day, with 42, and . not politiGalleaders," he said.
nation for him. ·

Ann
LAnders

Masonic
Lodge event Saturday
' .

~ommission's

Dole pins
·his hopes
on 'junior
.Tuesday'

Abusive husband should never have a second chance ,

35 cenla
A Gannett Co. NeweP"per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 5,.1996
•

VMH addition gets

'Wheel-of-Fortune' official game show of Summer Olympics

8, and Cayla 6, both students at Middl~port Elementary School, reside in
Mtddlepon.

Rain tonight, Iowa In the
SO.. Wedneeday, rain,
mild, hlgha In 60a.

ber again for a free pamphlet from,
SociatSccurity on d~illty.ii 1-800- •
772-1213.
•
•

coordinator, Casa Nueva Restaurant;
Stacy Hall, dairy, meat and veggie
farmer and co-owner of Dix-Hall
Farm; Ed Perkins; newspaper columnist for The Athens Messenger; Rulli
Morris, owner/producer of herbal
vinegars with Southemwood Trace
Co.; and Keith Wiens, VISTA worker with the Sustainable Agriculture
Committee of Rural Action, a farmer
So how did he like the music?
book some Olympic athletes as conShe W!IS auto~hinl ller 'bestNEW YORK (AP)- Hey dad and activist.
"Now I know all about who Seal testants.
'
seller,
"It Takes a Village/ ' ·He was
get
with
it!
Reservations are required and the
is
is
.that
his
name?
And
I
thought
The
deal
marks
the
first
time
signing
his 'I Holding Court·&gt;·ReflecThat
was
the
gist
of
first
daughter
enrollment is limited. To enroll resihe was quite good."
Olympic
organizers
have
sold
spon~
lions
on
the Game I Love." :
Chelsea
Clinton's
nudging
to
get
the
dents should contact ACEnet at 592sorship
righ~
to
TV
game
shows.
·
The
authors n\'et brieflY. and
president
to
tune
in
to
a
little
of
the
3854.
AlLANTA
(AP)
If
letter-turn"Jeopardy!"
is
the
other
TV
game
exchanged
inscribecl.copi¢s,
Grarnmy Awards show.
'
ing
were
a
sport,
Vanna
White
would
show sponsor.
"Best Wishes, Dick. Forever a
"Chelsea joked I've missed 20
fan," the first lady wrote.
years ·of music and I need to get my be a shoo-in for a gold medaL
It isn't, but she and Pat Sajak plan
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - U
The sportscaster's inscription washead right," Clinton told Newsweek
to
tape
"Wheel of Fortune" in Atlanta you're keeping score, it's Hillary n't too different f(om -his play-byin the March II issue. "I was trying
to become somewhat less irrelevant to this month - as the official game Rodham Clinton 2,000, Dick Vitale play: "I really respect any individual
600.
who faces the pressure that you fac~~
my own daughter and the other teen- show of the Summer Olympics .
For
three
days,
beginning
March
That's
how
many
fans
lined
up
last
on a daily basis. I truly have great:.
has shown it to be one ofthe few cur- agers of the world."
29, cast and crew will tape 14 shows month when the literary duo showed respect for you. You' re awesome,
Clinton
conceded
that
he
doesn't
ricula nationwide that significantly
get to watch much television, and his from the city 's famed !'ox Theater, up at the same store at the same time baby."
postpones sexual intercourse.
•
from a set decked out with Olympic for book signings, Sports Illustrated
Planned Parenthood "Of Southeast taste runs toward "specific movies or .
'
images.
Producers
are
even
hoping
to
reports in its March 4 issue.
Ohio provides family planning and sporting events or news."
related preventative health care to
over 5,000 women and men each year
at health sites in Athens, Chillicothe,
Chesapeake, Gallipolis, Jackson,
'
Dear Ann Landers: You recently want letters about how we met ou~
Logan, ,Middleport and McArthur. By ANN LANDERS
.
printed a funny letter about chivalry spouses, here's a good one:
Dear Ann Landers: I am tired of
PPSEO is a private non-profit orgaEarly
in
1941.1traveled
to
a
new
.
-- a woman fainted when a man
nization whose governing board con- reading letters from women who
air
base.
My
friend,
"Rob,"
and
l
· offered her his seat on the subway.
sists ·of community volunteers from complain about being abused. You
When she recovered, she thanked stopped off in Cincinnati . for the ..
the region. Private donations are a have said many ·times, "No one can
·him, and he fainted. You replied, evening and were told the USO was :
significant source of support for the take advantage of you without your
medical anil educational programs permission."
"Thanks for a joke from the '50s. I close to the YMCA where we were.:
offered lly Planned Parenthood.
I don't know anyone pe~sonally
kicked the s!~ts out of my cradle staying. While Rob napped, I wan"
dered over there and lined up dates·
Those introduced in the training who is being abused, bull have seen ter how many times he apologizes when I heard it the first time."
Your response didn't add up for the dance that-eve11ing.
workshop on March 8 may call !alk shows and read artiCles about and professes his love. Please tell
When I told Rob, he said, "I'm '
,Planoed Parenthood at 1-614-593- girlfriends and spouses who have them again, Ann. They need to get the numerically. Meaning no disrespect,
not
interested. You always. get the 3375 to register or for more infor- been beaten up and knocked around message. -- Seen Too Much in Balti- Ann, but you were long out of the
good-looking one." I promised him
for years. Often, the woman says she more
cradle in the '50s.
mation.
·
Dear Baltimore; Thanks for the
Of course, we all know that the he could have first choice this time,,:
can't leave the guy because she
.
. "loves him." They gel married, and opportunity. I hope somebody listens. Ann Landers column was born in and he relented. ·
\fter
the
war,
we
lost
touch, and, :
Wife-beating is probably the most · 19S5. So, Happy 40th Anniversary,
the abuse continues. The woman
'I
didn't
see
Rob
until
1985.
GuesS" ·
thinks if she has children, the abt'ise underreported crime in the country. A Ann. You're doing great.-- Wes Pedwhat?
He
married
the
girl
I
fiKed
him ·· :
will stop. It doesn't. Seven kids lat- great number of .women are scared ersen, director of communications
up with in Cincinnati, and they have:
Laura Lee. a multi-modality Tech- er, she says she can't leave him silent. Many fear reprisals; others are and public relations, Public Affairs been together more than 50 years:'
because
"the
children
need
a
father."
afraid
to
he
alone.
They
figure
an
Council,
Washington,
D.C.
nician at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Over the years, the woman calls abusive man is better than none.
Dear Wes Pedersen: Thanks for a Not bad, eh? -- Paul in Bloomfield
was recently registered in Obstet,.
the police repeatedly and has the man
I urge these women to get coun- :perceptive catch. Would you believe Hills, Mich.
rics/Gynecology Ultrasound .
Dear
Paul:
Beautiful'
I
hope
they,
In order to apply for testing, Lee arrested. The following day, she seling. They need to understand the 1that gaffe got by me and three edi- named their first son after you. , ·;,
was required to have a specific drops the charges and lets him back importance of self-respect. No ' tors?
Sharp-eyed readers such as you
amount of clinical experience in her in the house. Three days later, he woman who allows a man to knock
' Lande..._
Send qu~tlons to Ann
beats
her
up
again.
·
keep
me on my toes, and I appreciher
around
can
have
a
decent
opinion
field. She took the test in October,
ICI'CIItors Syndleate, 5777 W. Cen-':'
A woman should never give a man of herself. Once women get this mes- ate it.
and recently received notification
a second chance to abuse her, no mat- sage, they can move forward.
Dear Ann Landers: If you still 'tury Dive\,, Suite 700, Los An&amp;eiCS: ~:
she had passed the test.
Calif. 90045
&lt;
Lee received her associate's
degree of applied science from
Columbia State Community College
in Tennessee and hllli been a member
of the "Family of Professionals"

sin~:~- her two children, Cassie

562
Pick 4:
9731
Buckeye 5:
2-5-20-27-28

Spc&gt;rW, Page 4

Lee receives registration
.

Plck3:

baseball
results

:Planned
Parenthood
.
:workshop slated Friday
.

Ohio Lottery

Exh lbltlon

. P.10,
Monday, March 4, 1991":

Social Security secure well into next centu~

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Michael
Hollinpwonb, the former Angela
Ponollue of Harrisonville, Lake Dallas, Texas, announce the Jan. 26 birth
son, Branden Michael.
:, 'J1ie infant weighed eight pounds,

A seminar on finding local mar.kets for food products will be held
Thursday, March 7, at the Commu·nity Kitchen, 98 North Columbus
Road, Athens.
.• The emphasis will be on various
~ng strategies that some farm. m and food producers are using to
market their products locally and .the
expectations of wholesale buyers
and will also explore ideas and
Opportunities for marketing food
lJroducts within the community.
: PreS.,nters at the seminar will be
~ike McKniff, food and operations

.

•'

Birth of son
announced
:- Maternal grandparents are Ruth
~ue of Proctorville and Stephen
Donohue of Harrisonville. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. David
ijollingsworth of Mount Vernon,
1\'xas. Great-grandparents are Mr.
an4 Mrs. Jettie Arix of Proctorville.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue of
Harrisonville, and Mrs. Juanita Sowell
and Mr. and Mrs. Ray
~ollingsworth of Texas.

The Daily Senti.D.el

mine what caused the building
defects - and help recover the cost
of fixing them from the contractors
responsible.
The controlling board voted 4-2 to
approve the request fi&gt;r consulting
fees. Voting no )"ere Zaleski and Rep.
Ross Boggs. D-Andover.
··
But Rep. Tom Johnson, R-Ncw
Concord, suggested that the department wrap the situation up quickly.
"I need to feel more comfortable
that the end is in sight and that it can
be fixed before you come back here
asking for more money," Johnson
said.
Coopers &amp; Lybrand of McLCJin,
Va .• and Raths, Raths &amp; Johnson Inc .
of Willowbrook, lll., will help determine what caused the problems, figure out ways to fix them and to force
the contractors- either thrOugh the
courts or a settlement - to pick up
the tab.
t
The cost of repairing the exterior
walls alone is upected to reaoh $2
million, William Becker, assistant
attorney general, told the board. A
complete cost estimate was not available.
·
In October, the department filed a
lawsuit in Franklin County Common
, Pleas Court against architect Robeit
P. Madison International Inc. of
Cleveland and contractors MilesMcClellan Construction · Co. of
Columbus and Forest Ciry Erectors or
TWinsburg.
·

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Parking problems, both in front of
Pomeroy Elementary School and in
the downtown business district. once
again dominated discussion at Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy Village CounciL
Melinda Strong, mother of two
Pomeroy Elementary pupils, met
with council to update members on
her efforts to solve a parking dilem.
ma at the school.
She is concerned about the safety
of students walking to school, as well
as those dropped off at the school by
their parents.
Mayor Frank Vaughan said he is
in the process of contacting owners
of property across from the school to
see if it can be used for additional
parking. Some people already use the
space for parking, although recent
floods have left large ruts there.
Later, Meigs Local Board of Education mcmher Randy Humphreys
told counci I that he supports Mrs.
Strong in her efforts. She has met
several times with council as well as
the school board.
"I've got to give her credit ... she's
trying to do o~&lt;o mething ," he commented . This is something the town
and school can work out. he added.
Council members said they would ·
investigate the installation of another traffic signal east of the school,
while Vaughan said he would direct
the street department to repaint cross. walks .near the sc hool.
Vaughan and council members

1asked if teachers could park across
:the street from the school once the
parking areas are upgraded so sm~ll
children would not have to walk
across the street.
Meanwhile, Vaughan said he .is
directing village officers to sl~rt
heavily enforcing village parking
ordinances, particularly those referring to people parking illegally in 'no
;parking' zones, handicapped parking
·zones and sidewalks .
Too many people have been parking in these places, he said. A longtime e.ception for law enforcement
officers parking cruisers in front of
· the jail will still he observed, he
add~d.

In addition, merchants will hold a
meeting March 14 at 7 p.m . in council chambers to discuss the future of
. parking meters in the village. Everyone with suggestions arc invited to
attend the meeting.
During open discussion, council
members discussed problems with
potholes, water leaks and junked cars
and butldings.
In other business, council:
• Approved an emergency resolution authorizing $1 0,320 for construction of a block building for a
water storage by Jeffers' Construction
of Pomeroy;
• Approved use of the lower end
of the parking lot and the Riverfront
Amphitheater for the. 1996 United
Fund Big Bend Wallcyc/Sauger Fishing Tournament on Oct. 26;
• Discussed dirty streets and slde(Continued on Page 3)

winners hailed-.. . . . Arson blamed

in hotel blaze ·.

IRONlDN (AP) -A tire at a residential hotel that injured eight people was caused by arson, police said
today.
Daryl Brown, 42, a resident of the
Marting Hotel , was arrested Monday
night and charged with aggravated
arson, vandali&gt;m and inducing panic. Ironton Police Sgt. James Carey
said.
Brown was being held at the
Lawrence County Jail, Carey said.
Arraignment was · scheduled for
today.
Eight people were treated for,
smoke inhalation. but none required
hospitalization.
·
Seven people were treated at
Lawrence County General Hospital
in Ironton, nursing supervisor Wendy
Grimm said. A firefighter was treat•
ed at Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital in Russell, Ky., nursing supervisor Eleanor Broaddus said.

. "Why my family 11 Important to me • was the theme of the naay contest for Melga County
fifth gredel'l sponaored by the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite Masons of the Valley of Columbua In obaervance of Family Ufe Week. Winner was Megan Combs, abaent when the picture
wa1 taken. Pictt.lred here receiving a plaque from David Fox Is Tommy Thelaa, honorable men·
tlon, with hie father, Tom Thel11, atandlng behind, and teacher Linda Fisher accepting a check
for $100 to be used for claasroom. suppllae from Larry Lavender. Fox and Lavender are on
the Melga County fraternal relation• r;ommlttae. (5entlnel photo)

Neither the hosp1tals nor authorities had identities of the injured.
The fire was reported about I0:15
p.m. Monday, acting chief Capt. Jim
Reidel said. He said Brown's apart'
ment was gulled and all six floors of
the hotel suffered smoke damage. · ·
All the residents we~evacuated
~though .th~ exact nu~ber of ~op~ .
10 the buddmg at the lime could riot
be determined, Reidel ~- Some res..
· idents may be allowed to

~--------------~---------------------------------------' loda~
' \II

retun\

...

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="385">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9757">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29344">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29343">
              <text>March 4, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="382">
      <name>mcdade</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="752">
      <name>mcgraw</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
