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P~~ge

10 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, March 12,1tee

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Great ~akes Science Museum: Hair-raising~ fun with a ·point
I

,By THOMAS J . SHEERAN
Francisco. Old standards were
enhanced and some unique designs
AIIOCiated Preu Writer
. CLBVELAND (AP) - Revealed were created by museum Exhibits
at last: How is a toilet like a tornado? Director Timothy Large's staff and
The Great Lakes Science Center, two outside firms.
"This is a real eye-catcher," said
a , high-tech l"useum opening this
summer on the Lalce Erie shore, will Large. standing before a 6-foot glass
tank. Filled with IOS gallons of
~swer tliis question and more with
water, the tank drains so fast that it
dozens of interactive exhibits.
It's hair-raising fun with a point; creates a tornado-like vortex.
The shape of the vortex can be
Instill the love of science in a child
today, and that child will be ready f()f altered by controlling the rate of flow.
The same principle operates in every
the challenges of the 21st century.
"We're teaching observation skills · home, creating a mystery every 4and that inquiry is wonderful," said year-old has pondered: How does a
Ellen Griffee, director of government toilet work'
relations with the Association of Sci"Science doesn't have to be serience-Technology Centers. "It's fun 10 ous all the time," says Large.
be curious and ·to mess around with
Cleveland's $S5 million science
science.
museum, scheduled to open in July,
"I think it's kind of whetting their will rank among the 10 largest in the
appetite for science, that it's interest- . count&amp; and will be the ftrst to focus
ing, intriguing and fun .."
on the Great Lakes region, according
Many exhibits were copied from to Griffee's Washington-based assothe popular Exploratorium in San

ciation, which represents 382 science
museums worldwide.
Under construction beside the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
Museum, the Cleveland museum will
he filled with hands-on exhibits
which displa)( in simple terms such
concepts as why static electricity
malces your hair stick out and how
sound waves travel through solid
materials.
" Every one of these exhibits
should be fun. Thai's the whole
point," said Large, 35, who came to
the museum staff four years ago from
The Science Place in Dallas.
•
The museum will have a special
focus on the ecology and technology
of the lalces, including various innovations pioneered in the nation's
manufacibring heartland.
All the time-tested favorites that
have made science museums a tourist
staple in many cities will be present

in Cleveland.
But the &lt;!level and museum thinks
its displays go a step f!Jrther.
A device called a theremin helps
demonstrate the effect that solid bodies have on radio waves. Placing your
hands in the vicinity of a pair of radio
antennae creates audible variations
" whoop.
WHOOP,
WHOOOOOP!"
"In our case, we decided to make
it a bit more dramatic," said Val
Davillier, exhibit production manager. Beside the theremin- named for
Russian inventor Lep Theremin - is
an oscilloscope, which shows graph·
ically how the signals are affected by
hand motions.
Using sight, sound and touch, the
exhibit teaches how an outside influence such as cold air can manipulate
mercury in a thermostat and kick on
a 'rurnaco:
San Francisco-based West Office
Ex~ibition Design came up with a a

multimedia show explaining steel·
mailing and a you-t(y-it mockup of a
magnetic resonance imaging scanner
that will display stored cross-section
views of the human body,
The company also developed a
virtual-reality game of keep-away
that - unlike most vinual-reality
devices - doesn 't require players to
wear special goggles.
Wrapped around escalators will be
a three-story kinetic sculpture with
chimes, spinning panels, pivoting
mechanics and rolling wheels - an
eye-catching artistic summary of science ideas explained elsewhere in the
museum.
"People need to know how the
world around us works,"·said Marie
Elliott, senior designer with West
Office Exhibition. "And the world
around us is a technological world,
without a doubt."
Cambridge, Mass., designers
Eileen Zalisk and Peter Martin have

Ohio .Lottery

MHS winter
athletes
honored

planned a haunted house exhibit
highlightina environmental risks.
Their "alien species"~ explains
about ne~mers to the Grea!LI!ces.
such as the pesky zebra mussel ~ an
unwelcome intruder which probably
anived in the ballut water of a v~­
sel from Europe.
There will also be a child-friendly remote-controlled boat that travels
a shipping challnel modeled after
Cleveland's Collision Bend, a gooseneck on the Cilyllhoga River.
Not everything is serious: a microscope will allow visitors to clearly sec
Lincoln INSIDE the Lincoln Memorial on the back of the penny. And vis·
itors call press their ears to JO.foot
glass lubes to hear that whooshing
sound familiar to sea shell collectors.
But Martin says' the science comes
first.
"We are not trying to make this
into an amusement park," he said.
"It's got to have conten.t."

Pick 3:
'440 .
Pick 4:
1276
Buckeye 5:
1-7-14-17-25

Sports, Page 5

Vol. 46, NO. 22t

TUESDAY
RUTI.AND •• Rutland Council
meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. Public
invited since discussion will be on
:exploring possible solutions for flood
control.

I

r

a

ROCK SPRINGS -- ,Salisbury
Township Trustees meeting Tuesday, ·
: 6 p.m. at the township building.
MIDBLEPORT -- Middleport
F&amp;AM Lodge 11363 special lDeeting
Tuesday, 7:30p.m., allhe Middleport
temple. Work in the EA degree will
take place. All members are invited
to attend.

.

·~. ~~

·.

J

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- l.Jnited Fund for
Meigs County annualll)~tiqg, 6 to 7
P·lll· Senior Citizens Center, dessert
b'uffet to be served. Public' invited.
Allocations will be announced.
EXPERIMENTAL TREATMENT· Ginger Brewer, a str•ke victim,.
rides her tricycle near her llome In Denton, 'Texas In January. Sci·
entlsts say her recovery is due in lerge part to an experimental
treatment In which a small dose of amphetamines are administered prior to physical therapy. (AP Photo)

Campaign aims to help
cybersurfers get Net smarts
By LESLIE MILLER
USA TODAY
The nation's commercial on-line
services, school and consumer groups
Tuesday launch a joint publicity blitz
designed to teach a largely bafned
public how to stay safe in cyberspace .
"There are so niany questions,
and this is all happening at cyberspeed," says Linda Golodner of the
National Consumers League, a member of the Online Public Education
Network, or Project OPEN.
A . variety of public-service ·
announcements and brochures are
planned this ye·ar on four hoi concerns: child safety. consumer protection, privacy and intellectul\1 property.
"As this medium has grown at an
incredible pace over the last 18
months, it's brought a range •of social
and policy issues new to this industry," says Robert L. Smith Jr. of the
Interactive Services Association, a
trade group. "We are moving into
uncharted territory,"

Cheater Courthouse Restoration Committee to
be held Friday night at Royal Oak Park, 6:30
p.m.

Tours set Thursday in.Chester for
Ohio's oldest standing courthouse

SYRA,CUSE •• ~eigs .County.
Chamber of Commeri:e Iuncheon
Tuesday, noon, at Carleton School.
Speaker will be Jim Grobe, head
Ohio University football coach.

Public tours of the old Chester
Courthouse and a dinner lo raise
"fu'nds for its restoration will be
held this week.
Residents are invited to meet
at the Chester fire house Thursday
from 3 to 6 p.m. for the tours.
They will be taken in groups
through the courthouse which
was built in 1823 and is the old·est standing courthouse in Ohio.
It will be an opportunity for
Meigs Countians to see the condition ·of the building before
restoration work hegins, said Pat
Holler, activity coordinator.
The Chester .Courthouse
Restoration Committee was
recently awarded $46,000 in

Appalachia Public Facility Grant
monies for the project. That is
about half the amount needed to
restore the building, Holter said.
On Friday evening the committee will stage a dinner at Roy al Oak Park, 6:30p.m . as a fund
raising project. Special music
will be provided by the French
Ci.ty barbershop chm:us. Tickets
are $10 each for a complete
turkey dinner with dessert. Most
of the food is being donated for
the dinner.
Modern Woodmen, Camp
4798, has taken on the fund rais·
·ing projects of the committee as
a "matching fund project ." This

Voinovich fields questions
0

~L:!~~(~res!~~?o~:!rs~~!~t~~2ate.

POMEROY-- Mei~s Local Board
of E~ucatiOJ\ . r~gular meeting
Wednesday. 7 p.m. at the district
office in the Pomeroy Municipal
Building.
MIDDLEPOKT •• Middleport Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday, home •
of Mrs. Dewey Horton. Mrs. Roy
Holter to review "The Carousel" b~
Belva Plains. Program of Irish music
to be presented.

George Voinovich usually seems
reluctant to talk about 1he chances of
•unning for vice president on a Bob
Dole ticket. But that was not the case
on the eve of a Dole visit to Ohio.
Voinovich did not dismiss ques·
tions about the subject in his usual
manner at a news conference Tues·
day.
"I have no idea who Bob Dole is
going to select as his running mate.
It could be a governor, it could be
Colin Powell, it could be a number of
other people," Voinovich said.
would )le seek the post?
'.'I don 't think you can pursue that
jQb." Voinovich replied.
· He recalled a conversation with
· former Gov. James A. Rtlodes about
running mates.
" He started out by saying. 'The
first thing is. make sure they don't
hurt you, and then. after that, hopefully you may benefit from it,"'
Voinovich said, laughing.
He was among the first Republi-

majority leader for the presidency.
Voinovich has never ruled out
becoming Dole's running mate.
Could the popular governor guarantee to deli~cr Ohio to Dole'
"I learned a long time ago that
nobody can guarantee anything,"
Voinovich said.
Dole was to attend the governor's
annual Winter Appreciation Reception in Columbus on Thursday ·night.
Voinovich fielded questions on a
variety of topics after a news conference in which he welcomed the decision of the new Chase Manhattan
Corp. to continue mortgage operations in Columbus following the
merger of Chase and Chemical Banking Corp.
'
. The merger wiU create the largest
bank in the nation with over $300 billion in· assets. Chemical already
employs 1.000 people in Columbus.
Chase's $35 million project in
Columbus was expected to retain
those jobs and create another 600
over three years.

POMEROY •• Meigs High
School, class of 1971, 25th reunion
meeting, 7 p.m. McClures Restau:
rani, Middlepon.

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers ·
Plains VFW Post 90S3 Thursday, '
refreshmentS al6:30 p.m. meeting at·
7:30p.m.

Law officials searching ·for
Athens hospital escapee

How to find safety tips
Project OPEN's first pamphlet contains basic safety tips, a gl&lt;lSsary and
a list of software parents can 11se to
restrict kids' Net aecess.

POMEROY·· COlMiunity Lenten
Services, Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, the
Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz . speaking. ·
Sponsored by the Meigs. Minilldorial Association.
·'

ATHENS (AP) - Law enforcement officials in Athens County continued searching today for a man who
e~caped from the Southeast Psychiatric Hospital. the sheriff's office
said.
. · Donald Castle, 46, escaped Sunday ·after distracting a preacher who
had come to take him to church,
deputfes said Tuesday.

..
'

I •

THURSDAY , . .
.
POMEROY -- Big ~pnd Stem- ·
wheel Festival Commillee IJleeling
Thursday, 7:30p.m. a1 the Carpenters'
Hall in Pomeroy.
·
POMEROY •• Preceptor Beta
Bet'a mee&amp;ing Thursday, 6 p.m. at the
Episcopal Parish House in Pomeroy. ·
'

e

.,

· POMEROY ••, Rock Springs
For the golfer: A set of Ben Grange, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
with which.she lived all of her life," Hogan Power Thrust Irons - bag grange hall. Prosnm. and refreshsaid Sotheby's Preside-nt Diana inscribed "JFK Washil)gton - is val- ments.
Brooks.
'
to $900.
Sotheby's has said the auction
:could fetch $5 million; Brooks called
. that estimate cciilservalive. Proceeds
:will go to the estate of Mrs. Onassis,
.GARYR.
who died in May 1994 of cancer.
The catalog's priciest piece- valued at as much as $600;000 - is a
40-caral diamond ring given to Mrs.
Onassis by her second husband,
Republican c~
Greek shipping magnate Arisiotle
1
For Meigs .
Onassis.'
·
Co.unty Comlnissione(.l·
Other baubles include a ruby and
diamond necklace valued at $75,000
10 $100,000.

means that the Modem Woodmen
will match up to $2,500 in monies
raised by the local committee for
the restoration project.
Tickets for the dinner are
available at Fanner's Bank and
Savings Co., Rutland Branch of
Bank One, Racine Home National Bank, Fruth's Pharmacy,
Chester Quick Stop, and Suinmerficlds at Chester.
Those attending are invited to
bring memorabilia which mi~
·be used in displays at the courthouse once the restoration is
completed. No· items are being
collected at this time and anything
exhibited a( the dinner is to he
· taken home by the owner.

By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
WASHINGTON - The GOP
presidential nomination all but his,
Bob Dole says the "slate is wide
open" for the No. 2 spot on the ticket- a position he held 20 years ago
- and predicts retired Gen. Colin
Powell would take it if asked.
As he swept seven "Super Tuesday" primaries to move close to
clinching the nomination, Dole said
he had only "in a loose way" thougllt
about .a vice presidential running
mate.
"It 's in the back of my mind
sometimes as I fly around, watching
governors and others perform," Dole

said in an interview. "But l haven't
really thought about it in any concerted way."
Dole insisted he had no favorite.
"The slate is wide open,"' he said.
Dole had said previously that
Powell would make his list, and . in a
CBS interview, he left little doubt thai
he has thought about the prospect of
a Dole-Powell ticket, notwithstanding
Powell's insistence that he is not
interested. ·
Dole said Powell, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. has
"been a soldier all his life and hfs
responded whenever his country
needed him and l believe if anyone
went to General Powell
. . -. I may be.

totally wrong - and latd out a .case
... that he would suit up again."
Poll after poll has shown that Dole
could improve hi s standing against
President Clinton by picking Powell.
But if he does, it could cause an
uproar at the Republican National
Convention because of Powell's support of abortion rights.
Powell said recently that under no
circumstances would he vote for Pat
Buchanan for president. In turn,
Buchanan has promi sed to lead a con- ·
vention revolt if Dole picked Powell
or another "self-declared Rockefeller Republican," like New Jersey
Gov. Christie Whitman.
Continued on page 3

Rutland citizens will air
fl-o od problems March 20
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
A special town meeting has been
set for Rutland residents and village
council to start the process of finding
solutions to the village's frequent
flooding problems.
-- The meeting, 10 be held Wednesday March 20 at 7 p.m. was set afler
only a handful of people attended last
night's council meeting during which
Federal Emergency Management
Administration official Dean Ogen
took part in a brief discussion on the
flooding problems.

"Over 35 properties in the Rutland
area were affected in the January
flooding. We are here to work with
council and the affected property
owners to fi11d solutions to the flooding problems here in the village. We
want to he~_advis ing the begin·
ning of the proces?lo flfld these solutions," said Ogen.
Ogen advised that the village
could be eligible for federal funding
on flood control projects, through the
presidential disaster declara1ion in
Meigs and other southeast Oh1o
counties a'fter the flooding that took

place ip January.
"Wfiat we, the village council, and
the village residents need to look at
are four questions: 1.) What is the
problem; 2.) What solutions can be
generated; 3.) Evaluate those solutions ; and 4) Choose a workable
option at solving the flooding problems," Ogcn explained of FEMA's
role in the process.
Council approved the following
balances for February : general fund,
$1,215 .37; civic center, $601.29;
police fund, (-$445.80), law enforce·
Continued on page 3
•

The group is working to establish
guidelines for buying, selling and
advertising on the Net, and for how
electronic information gathered on·
line may be used.
Participants include America
Online, AT&amp;T. CompuServe.
Microsoft, Netcom and Prodigy,
"fierce competitors" who put rivalries aside. Smith says. because "if
consumers are hesitant or uncertain
about this medium, that will slow
growth."
Seyeral education groups, including tile National Education Associa·
tion, have agreed to help distribute
materials. Many parents, Golodner
says, "are nol computer literate, and
they have children who arc very com·
puter literate."

r=rom rings to a BMW, Jackie O's·belongings on auction plock

hours&lt;

TO SING - Members of this French City Bar·

bershop Chorus will sing 'at a fund ralaer of the

'
SYRACUSE
-· Southern Local
, Building Committee meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Syracuse Elementary
1School. All district residents urged to
1attend.

L------------------------------------------------...1
Tuberculosis
discussed at
Rotary

Predicts retired Gen. Powell will take it if asked;
Republican front-runner sweeps 7 more states

The Community Calendar Is
published u a free service to non·
profit aroups. ~IDa to annoUDCe
meeting and spedal .events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
f sales or fund raisers of any type.
llems are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to f'lll a
specific number of days.

a

AGannett Co. N-apaper

Dole say·s .slate for veep
wide open on GOP tick~t

I

*"

3Scenta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 13, 1996

3 Sectlorit, 36 PagH

·Diabetes
Experiments show hope for stroke patients Community
in African
calendar
Americans
studied

By DEAN STEPHENS
Studies have concentrated on
Associated .Preas Writer
patients whose strokes cut blood
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) flow to&lt; the brain. Other strokes,
- Nearly two years ago, 58-year- such as those caused.by bleeding in
old Ginger Brewer suffered a ·the brain, haven't been tested.
stroke that lefl ber paralyzed and
Brewer, a former stale social
unable to spealc.
worker, said that after her stroke in
.Last October, she rode a tricycle March 1994, she couldn't .talk,
By JEREMY PEARCE
26 miles in a Texas cycling event.
couldn't walk' and had paralysis on
The.Detrolt Newa
Scientists say her recovery is her right sjde.
Morning begins with breakfast · due in large part to a new experiThe Denton, Texas, woman wall
and a syringe. A healthy breakfast,
mental treahnent for serioqsly dis- a11 avid bicyclist and hiker before
says Tressie Knox, but not always a
abled stroke victims.
the stroke. Afterward, she said, her .
fi.lUng one.
The results of a long-term doctors told her "I would not be
Through the course of her day,
experiment conducted in Texas able to do the things I used to."
Knox is allowed to consume only i using a treatment pioneered in New
Today that's not exactly true.
1,400 calories. Her meals can't' Mexico were released in the She still walks with a brace and a
include the sugars or fats that most I December issue of ·the journal cane and still has trouble speaking,
people would swallow .in a single
Stroke.
but she was able, with a little help,
doughnut.
After 15 years of research, sci- to ride a tricycle 26 miles in the
· "This is my lif~. I have diabetes,"
enlists say they are on 'the road to 'annual cycling event.
' said Knox, 63, of Detroit. " If! want
s!jCeding the recovery of stroke vicDelaina Walker-Batson, a clinito stay around until God gets ready 1 lims.
· cal neuroscifor me, I have to wake up and look •
'FI
th ,
enlist who led
Dennis
after myself."
Feeney,
a
or many ynrs, ere s
a the
Texas
University of very pessimistic atti!,ude toward Woman's
Knox is one of 3 million African
Americans nationwide with diabetes, ' New Mexico treating brain Injuries, said Dennis , Unjversity
disease in which the body either I professor of Feeney, a University of Nflw Mexico study, said
psychology professor of psychology and phys- Brewer's
doesn't produce enough insulin or
can't use the important hormone
and physiolo· fofogy.
recovery was
properly.
gy, on whose
typical
of
Within certain age groups. blacks
research the Texas study was based, those who participated in the
are twice as likely as whites to consaid the development may reverse research.
tract diabetes. ·
an unfortunate trend in medicine.
"They
had
dramatically
. Black women are particularly vul"For many years, there's been a increased improvement in motor
. iterable. One in four black women
very pessimistic attitude toward ability," she said. "The interesting
over age 55 has the disease. Among
treating brain injuries," Feeney thing is &amp;hey continued to get better
all black Americans,the rate for diagsaid. Physical therapy is now the even after we stopped giving them
nosed diabetics has tripled in the past
only accepted medical lreabnent the drug."
30 years, according to the American
for stroke victims, he said.
That was a key finding.
Diabetes Association.
The new treatment. suggests that
Feeney's research was tested
The statistics are so unsettling that · small doses of common arnpheta- before in humans by scientists at
Ohio State University researchers
mines administered before therapy Duke University in Durham, N.C.'
recently receive4 a $1.2 million fc;d·can lielp the brain remember how But patients in that study received
eral grant to further study evidence
to move limbs.
only a single dose of the amphela·
The
key
is
norepinephrine,
a
mine and were monitored for only
·showing black Africans and African
chemical transmitter in the brain 24 hours. Still, those patients also
Americans may be genetically prone
that carries messages between showed encouraging results, scarto diabeies.
nerve cells.
ing 40 percent better on standardAnd the .Diabetes Association
Scientists
have
found
that
the
ized motor tests than those . on a
re;ccntly unveiled a $500,000 camplacebQ.
'
amphetamines
stimulate
production
paign to alert black Americans to the
of
the
chemical,
which
is
stymied
The
Texas
study,
which
began in
damaging effects of a poor diet and
by brain injuries. The drugs, in 1991, administered the drug later
other behavior that can encourage the
effect, re-energize circuits between after the stroke to more severely
disease. ·
nerve cells and improve the extent disabled patients and followed the
"We've learned that diabetes is
and
rate of recovery in stroke patients for one year after treatnot a disease you can ignore." said
patients.
ment.
Dr. John B. Waller Jr.• chairman of
community medicine at Wayne State
University.
"If it's not taken care of, you get
sicker and sicker. That leads to kidney disease, problems with the eyes,
even to 'amputation of limbs," he
said. "In combination with hypertension, diabetes increases the risk for
heart disease - ·a major killer of
Connie Kadrschnik, R.N., Meigs
African Americans."
County
Tuberculosis Clinic Nurse,
Theories about the higher rates
have varied, but the Ohio Stale study was guest speaker at last week's
soggests that African Americans and meetipg of the Middleport-Pomeroy
black Africans tend to produce almost RQiary Club held at the Heath Unittwice as much insulin within their ed Methodist Church.
Karschnik discussed the history of
systems ~d often make less effective
~
the disease, how it is transmitted, .
usc of the hormone . .
i
, ftl'ulin is secreted in the pancreas . diagltosis, and treatment "There are
and helps regulate levels of sugar tn currently no'active cases of T.B. in
CONNIE KADRSCHNIK
the bloodstream. When those secre- Meigs County," said Karschnik:
The relative non existence of
tions are disturbed, high levels of
sul!ar can be "dumped" into the tubelculosis cases in the county is
blood, leading to fatigue, thirst, thanks to a· levy which allows the Clinic are free to residents of Meigs
weight loss, frequent urination and clinic to operate as separate entity County.
T.B. tests were administei;Cd by
from the Health Department, accordmore serious health problems.
Mrs.
Karschnik after the meeting, for
·Irregular levels of insulin also ing to Karschnik. ·
The levy will be up for renewal in those who will be working at the
make it difficult to metabolize carbohydrates. proteins and fats, making November, and is a continuation of Rotary pancalce brealcfastlo be held
dnily nutrition a critical factor in deal- the current taX which has been in March 23 at Heath United Methodist
'Church.
place since the 1950s.
ing with diabetes.
Presiding at the meeting was
The clinic is located on the second
In ' the Ohio State s.tl!dy,
Lloyd
Blackwood who introduced
researchers found thai concentra- floor of the Meigs Multipurpose
the guests and announced upcoming
tions of insulin might well be a genet- , Buildin&amp;. above the .Senior Citizens
Rotary
activities.
ic ab~ormalily that predisposes Center. Services ·provided by the
blacks to the disease.
"We conclu~ed that one of the
best predictors is probably a high
next month during a four-day Sothe-·
concentration of insulin along with By RAYNER PIKE ·
by's auction.
·
tess effective use of that i11sulin," said Aleocleted Press Writer
There's even been a run on the catDr. Kwame Osei, an endocrinologist · NEW YORK (AP) - One of
wlio hillped conducl'·the study.
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' dia- alog, which goes on sale today.
"Jf' we can 'find a way 10 reduce mond engagement rings can l!e yours Alneady, 23,000 have been ordered.
high ~n~ions., there may be a - for an esti,ma!ed $SOO,OOO to If demand exe41eds tlle printing run of
30:000 hard bound and 70,000 soft
way to'pb$1011e the.dlsease," ~aid $600,000.
A .little .pricey? How · abou,t an covers, Sotheby's is ready 10 malce
()Sei, 111hli is atlout to embark: on a
new sii.Jdy.to determine if the body incomplete ··el of porcelain and more.
can be "~" to ~palate. insylin. • · saucers that belonged to ·the fonner · The hard·bou!ld catalog goes for
'osei ·has received a ptflv!t\ the , first lady? 11!C biddi~g starts at $7S · $90 an~ ~ soft is $45, if theY're
picked UP' in person. For a mailed·
NatiONI Institutes of Health to fw:- to $100.
•
.
copy,
it's $107 or$SS.
ther study insulin secretio~. He ~ ~ F~ faux Pearls ~ original, an
"'i'be fqcus was on producing a
~ flc)i 19 -his researcb may lie tn ·to 11resideritial aolf clubs· · and
'ftridiiiJI diil ihow blood pressure and · Keniledy half dOllars, .it'a all dotsiled beautiful clllalog that would enable
-.lse rife of Afrityan Americans do in a Cllll9&amp; of S~ of Mrs. Onas- p¢ople all 'Over die world lo,have a
sen'" of Mrs. Onassis and I~ thinss
~ ~ .~!'f ~leeping
/is' .belon~llp. Thei~-~~o·~

Partly cloudy tonight,
low around 40. Thursday,
rain, high In the 60s.

He was committed to the hospital
three years ago after he was found
innocent by reason of insanity of an
attempted murder charge.
Castle is 5-foot-8, weighs 300
pounds, has gray hair and a trimmed
beard, and wears thick eyeglasses .
He may be headed to South Point,
where he has relatives,. authorities
said.

Grobe tells
Meigs
.
. Chamber OU football improving
.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Recruiting, fan support, academics, speed ... in every facet of the
game, Ohio University football coach
Jim Grobe says that his young team
is improving every day.
Grobe addressed the monthly
Meigs County Chamber of, Commerce luncheon Tuesday at Carleton
School in Syracuse, and stated that
the rebuilding process which he took
control of one year ago seems IO be
heading toward making the Bobcats
competitive in the Mid-American
Conference.
"We were very pleased with our
recruiting ; signing 20 kids on National Letter of Intent day. We'll have
good speed and quickness coming
back next season. and we hope to be
much improved. We concentrated
heavily on in-state recruiting, because
we want to bring more and more
Ohio kids 10 Ohio University." said
Grobe.
With a 1996 ·schedule featuring
road games at Northwestern, Army,
Hawaii. and East Carolina, Grobe
said that the upgrade 10 the sc]Jedule
will pay big dividends to the prograrl\,.
in the long run.
"In playing at East Carolina, who
has been a perennial bowl team over
the past five lo six years ." they will
come to Athens to face us in 1998.
The only way to develop the program
is to play good people. There are not
any easy people on the schedule this
coming season," said Grobe.
Grobe added that the academic
reputation ofthe university is improving upon its growjng reputation daily. "The incoming freshman at Ohio

U. has an average grade point average of 3.4. We can't be as proud of the
athletic teams, as "'e can about our
academics. We're right up there academically with some Ivy league
schools."
In other matters:
· Chamber members discussed the
"Swing into Spring" Chamber of
Commerce 'dinner/dance. to be held
March 23 at the Royal Oak Resort.
Tickets are available from any cham·
ber member, or at the chamber offices
in Pomeroy..
, · Tourism director Karin Johnson
reported that some copies of the
March issue ·of Ohio Magazine are
still available at the chamber offices.
The magazine. which features a cover photo and story on Pomeroy and
Meigs County, is available on a subscription basis only, with the exception of the chamber sales.
Johnson also announced that an
additional 100 commemorative
bricks for the riverfront amphitheater
project have been purchased by the
chamber for sale. These will be the
final personalized bricks available for
sale to the public for the projecl. With
the sale of these final I00 bricks,
Johnson announced that final bricks .
sales figure will total over 500 for the
project.
- Economic Development director
Julia Houdashelt announced that her
office is working with Ohio University on·couple feasibility studies, one
of which investigates the feasibility
of a NASCAR stock car racing facil ity to be built in the county in the
vicinity of Interstate 77.
Houdashelt spoke about the relocation of a furniture manufacturer to

JIM GROBE
the county. Country Craftsmen, a Agribank applicati ons is March 15.
shaker-style furniture manufacturer
Houdashelt also noted that Triwhich was formerly located in Michi· County Walk America, to benefit the
gan, has relocated to Racine and will March of Dimes, IS scheduled for latbegin operations within the next 60 er this month in Point Pleasant. If you
days.
are interested in walking in'the event,
Houdashclt also noted the opening contact Houdashelt at lhc Meigs
of the new Kroger Pharmacy location County Chamber offices at 992in their Pomeroy store, and a new 5005.
flower shop in the former Racine
- Highways committee•chairman
bank building.
Steve Story discussed the status of
The Agribank farm program, the Ravenswood Connector and U.S .
which is available through all four 33 projects. Story spoke of the new
Meigs County banks, was discussed project rankings recently announced
by Houdashelt. The deadline for
Continued on page 3

Buchanan stays in race; Forbes might call it quits next week

ELECT .

DILL

•

place this summer in the southern
CLEVELAND (AP) Pat egates?" he asked.
.
California
city.
:Suchan an, shut out by Bob Dole's
Fellow Republican Steve Forbes,
Even with Dole 's sweep,
.seven-state ' 'Super Tuesday" prima- meanwhile. indicated that he must do
rY sweep, pressed his campaign in the well in next Tuesday's primaries in Buchanan ·said the votes cast for
next Republican .bauleground : the Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Illi- Forbes and himself were proof that
industrial Midwest.
nois or he might call it quits. A total "40 to SO percent of the Republican
Party wants_this race to stay open and
. liJuchanan, speaking this morning of 219 delegates will be at stake.
on NBC's "Today" show, said he will
Bucl)anan , alluding to Forbes's wants us to stay in, and does not wam ·
)lOt drop his fight for the Republican second !houghts, declared as he Bob Dol~ for the nominee." ·
Buchanan campaigned Tuesday in
presidential nomination and was not arrived in Cleveland, "It's a two-man
Youngstown
and adjacent Boardseeking any.deals.
· race after ne~t week. Buchanan and
man. He turned his attention today lo
· "Why give ·up a battle of ideas Dole all the way to San Diego."
The GOP conveniion will talce Democratic and blue-collar Cleve.simply because you're hehjnd in del-

et," Scharrer said .
Don Thomson, 54, a Republican
from Irwin, Pa., said he understood
Buchanan's appeal to blue-collar and
middle-class voters.

Dole planned to apPear Thursday.
invitation-only reception spon-.
sored by Gov. George Yoinovich, his
state campaign chairman. Forbes was:
scheduled to appear Monday in:
Columbus.

" I think he speaks tor a lot ot people who live .around mill towns," said
Thomson, who also attended the rally. .
Buchanan's two-day visit was the
"Mr. Dole will determine who I
vole for. If he picks a liberal, then l first of the season in Ohio for any of
·
will not support the Republican tick- the Republican candidates.

At the rally in Boardman ....:
before it was clear that Dole had,
swept primaries in ·Texas, Florida,'.
Tennessee, Louisiana, Oklahoma,
Oregon and Mississippi - Buchanan~
vowed to stay in the race..
·

land, a rally i~ Hartville south· of
Akron and an evening rally at the
University of Toledo.
Mike Scharrer, 45, a Buchanan
supporter and steel worker from
Youngstown, attended a Buchanan
rally aftd was already looking ahead
to a Dole nomination and Dole's vice
presidential selection.

~tan

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�·Commentary

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Wtdneedly , u.ch 13, 1111

ng back on ·Buc;hana_ n.'s run
The Daily Sentinel Looki.
.-..ck
a
By

Anclenon .
by Soviet Black Berets during a
lnCI Mlchlalllnataln
demonslration in Riga, Latvia, the
WASHINGTON · • It was late previ?us January; and the UIUIJllled
one evening five years ago in an demonstrators 'who 1were mowed
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
Estonian restaurant that an early down by gunfire the previous Janu·
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157
kitchen Cabinet of Pat Buchanan's ary in Vilnius, Lith'uania.
1992 campaign ~tiled on the man
But the greatest insight came the
they admired most: Winston . last evening in a second-floor
Churchill, one of )¥hose strongest restaurant of Hotel Olympia, in the
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
attributes was the ability to rise like E$tonian capital of · Tallinn. The
a phoenix from political defeat.
usual bonhomie presided for awhile,
The discussion was one of many with a few jokes at the expense of
ROBERT L. WINGETT
insights gained by our associate sister Bay, who turned down the
Publleher
Dllle Van Alta during a six·day drinks proffered because of her con·
whirlwind tour of Poland and the version from Catholicism to the
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
General Manager
Baltic states in May 1991.
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Controller
All the clues at the time pointed Saints.
to what Buchanan has become
tod.ay: the Energizer bunny of the
Republican presidential primary.
The Buchanan entourage -which included his wife Shelley and
his sister Bay .. were late arrivals to
the tour. Later the group expanded to
include conservative direct~mail
fund-raiser Richard Viguerie, politi·
cal activist Floyd Brown altd several
think· tank luminaries. Brown, of
course, is the infamous author of the
In my almost eight decades in Meigs County, I have seen many sheriffs. "Willie Brown" commercials that
Some were pretty good, others awful. With the primary campaign before us, helped George Bush defeat Michael ·
many might want to ask just what distinguishes the good law enforcement Dukakis in the 1988 campaign.
official from the bad one ·in this day and age.
Buchanan enjoyed the status as
Looking back it seems the good sheriffs knew what they were doing. In most-famous tourist, coming most
· such cases eKperience is certainly valuable, but it is much more imponant . alive when being stopped in Latvia
that this experience be vari!ld. Experience is not just the number of years but by a bystander who recognized him
the quality of those yeiiJS. It appears to me that different experiences, 'in dif· from his CNN show. Still monihs
ferent places, at different times, with different people would best equip a law away from the campaign trail,
enforcement official to react effectively. This is a rapidly changing world, Buchanan was clearly enjoying the
and it seems that training limited 10 one place would hardly prepare an Offi· limelight.
cer to deal with problel"s of the future.
The most moving moments for
Another factor that contributes to quality experience is education. This is Buchanan came when we encoun·
panicularly the case when someone acquires formal !raining with the inten· tered monuments to freedom marlion of making that a lifetime career. This approach is especially good when tyrs -- a Catholic priest in Poland
.
it is follo--:ed by on-the-job !raining, because it affords the young officer the who was beaten to death by govern·
opponunity to tum classroom theory into meaningful practice. This combi- ment thugs for staitding up to the
nation makes for professionals equipped to meet the challenges the future Soviet Union; the citizens cut down
holds.
.
Such a background also enables these individuals to be good teachers,
very capable of educating the Meigs County community and its young people on both the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. With crime and the
coun systems as compleK as they are today, can we afford to inves{ in amateurs with little formal training?
Is limited, local experience, however good intentioned, likely to provide
the·imiovative and effective law enforcement necessary to combat crime in
Meigs County? Seems to me that it would produce more of the same. It's
By Joeaph Perklne
time for a change.
Every Easter Sunday for the past 73 years, members of San Diego's
Sarah W. Glbbl Christian community have a made a pilgrimage to Mount Soledad to share
Pomeroy fellowship. Since 1954, the city has required the organizers of the sunrise
service to obtain a permit to worship on public grounds. And for the past 42
years the permit has been routinely granted.
·
That is, until this year. On Easter Sunday, a contemptible band of atheists
When the opponunity to improve presents itself, we should lry to llb;,~ will hold their o-wn ungodly services on Mount Soledad. They were able to
· advantage of it. This levy is an opportunity - Take it or Not! If not we will interrupt a three·quaner century
·
be in the busine~s of education with the same inadequate buildings we now lradition of Christian worship. on .
the publicly owned site because ;. • •.
have.
· This opportunity has come and gone 3 times since 1985. When Southern they filed the first permit request '
Local rotates 'to the top of the list, for building assistance, we lry the levy to with City Hall.
raise o'ur share of the money.
Although the atheists' request to .
No rush job here!
hold their blasphemous rites on
On one occasion a levy was placed on the ballot for the repair of our cur- Mount Soledad are clearly meant
:ent buildings. This was rejected, because the millage was higher than a new to provoke and offend the local
building. The state would not provide building assistance money to repair Christian community, San Diego
our current buildings.
city officials bowed to the · .
Each of us who have served on the school board, at one time or another usurpers. By doing so, said a city ·
have wanted to tell the State to leave us alone and let us do it our way. We attorney, . San Diego demonstrates
could do this, But, since 213's of the money to operate our schools come that it lreats every group equally,
from the State, this would·a financial impossibility. If not for State money including atheists.
SO'uthem Local residents would ha've to pay an exira 45 mills of property t&amp;K
So on Easter Sunday, the pagans ;
to suppon our schools.
.
will gather beneath the 43-fool ;
Reason enough to stay in the system, Mr. Weaver, or sull want to do your cross that hils stood on Mount ·
own thing.
·
Soledad for the past 42 years and
Last election riot one resident of the school district put their name on the mock the beliefs of San Diego's .
Protestants and Catholics. "There '
ballot to be on the school board.
NeKt election is less man t)No.years away. Provi~ Southern Local is still will be atheists and humanists and ·
in existence. I hope to see Mr. Weaver's name on the ballot with all· his maybe a witch will come," boasts
knowledge and wisdom he needs to be on the board, to find out what he Howard Kreisner, one of the Chris·
doesn't know.
tian·bashing event's organizers.
Tlie atheists claim that their
Let's see, Mr. Weaver, if you put your money where your mouth is.
· . ·
Don P. Smith anti-Easter services an! not intend- : ·
Racine ed to spite the local Christian com·
munity. "I think it's unfortunate
that anyone would consider this anti-religious," said Peter Irons, an attorney
,
and political science professor at the University of California Ill San Diego.
In the ongoing debate for new Sfhools soon to end on March 19th, the
local educational establishment is presenting a theol'y that, to my knowl· Irons obtained the permit for the atheists.
·
But Irons and his fellow atheists
being deliberately deceitful, a trait
edge, has no corroborating evidence.
. :
.
not uncommon among the godless. Their actions are a calculated affront to
This theory is that new and tmproved school buddmgs will produce qual- Christians. By pre-empting Easter services on Mount Soledad, they succeed
ity education. I have a BA in .Secondary Education and have worked in the in desecrating one of Christendom's·holiest of days.
field for years. To my knowledge, there is no evidence 10 suppon this theo·
Th the thinking of this Christian (who is neither a so-called "fu'ndamenry; but whenever a school district wants new. schools, it is th~ publicized tatist" nor a card-carrying member of the oft-slandered "C.!lristian right"),
view. The evidence against Ills overwhelmmg, but stnce same think that evt-.
.
dence from other places has no bearil)g in Meigs Coumy, let. l!\e give a per- ~hi~~~~us~~~~:;u:c~:~::~:· ~tc~o~~ ~~e~~~tk~:fJ~.~~~~n~ ~=·tika on
sonal example.
.
.
.· .
.
.
The city attorneys in San -Diego are so concerned about violating the
My son is not educated in the pubbc schools or tn a. e~penstve ~nvate putative "rights" of the city's atheist minority, that they gave short shrift to
school, but he is home schooled by hts mother. The bwldtng '" whtch he the far more legitimate rights of the larger Christian community.
learns waS built around the tum of the ceinury. He does not have access to a ·
Indeed, while the constitutionally required .''separation of chufCh and
school library, school gymnasium, science labs, etc. and he does not sit
San .
under the accumulated knowledge of all. the professional educators of this state" means that
Otego cannot compel people to attend an Easter .sun-'
district. But somehow my 11 year-old son scored in the 93rd percentile on rise service, it does not mean that the city has to allow the atheists to defile
his standardized test and does well in Algebra, Basic Chemislry, English a place that Christians consider hallowed ground on Easter Sunday.
Grammar, World Hist""' and is proficient in comp~ter skills.
We · will continue to see tl)is kind of assault on religion until the U.S.
-·,
, .
h
Supreme Coun sets down clear new parameters concerning church and state.
If you want your children to gain computer skills, buy one .or your ouse.
k the
.
ta e
"separauonist" view that reli~ion must be absolutely
That' would cost less than tHeir proposal! Not to mention that his Bible ~godless
ex~luded from all aspects of government, whether 11 be the schools, pubhc
knowledge would challenge many ministers. If the theory :·new building "' funding or use of public property.
quality education" is true, how has my son been able to achteve su.ch educa·
But clearly the Founding Fathers never intendeil that. The First Amend·
tional excellence? In home-schooling, such proficiency is the norm, not the ment proscribes "an establishment of religion." That means that there shall

'Estailfisfwf in 1948

.2r

The convef1!ltion took distinct
tum to the seRous, howeve(, when
Bay Buchanan revealed ·that her
brother was thinking of running for
president..
The discussion quickly sidetraCked into the temporary isolation
of conservatives in the Republican
Party. There was disagreement as to
what defined "neo-conser.v!!Uves"
and "paleo-conservatives."
But the most intriguing discussion
came at the end, when Viguerie
PQsed this question: What&gt; person
has done more for freedom ·in this
century than anyone else?
Finally, Viguerie proposed Win-

stan ChurehiU. Within 10 minu~;
lhe Buchanans· agreed. And not j\1$1
for standing up to Hitler, but for
identifying the Soviet threat in his
famous "Iron Cunain" speech in
Missouri.
'
Buchanan was intrigued. Hj
espoused great admiration fot
Churchill - a man who turned m~
a political defeat into ev~ntual tri~
umph. He was a man who .stuck t9
his principles, however unpopular,
but finally brought everyone else
along with him. "There was a man, ~·
Buchanan concluded.
:
The core of the Buchanan earn,
paign had been formed.

·
·
·
·
tau·
f the NEA and a politi- ·
II!,Doral cumcu1u~, . soct?1ogtca1 expenmen on o
•. .
cilly corrupt ad~J~tstraUon. To correct these would not cost ~lhons of d~l'~-but save mdbons of dollars. Lets fix education !'cfore we spend mJI- .
llons on a new school.
Scott ROM
· Racine

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,· .To~ay . ·in.h:istory ·
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1y ~ Alt~clated, PiWf
' •·
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''(Oclay 11 ~y. Min;h 13, the 73rd day of 1996..There lre·293 days
Jilft ill die year. .
J
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·· ~·· Hiafllipt in History:
.
·'
· ·
.o GD MilCh . J3, 1852,'.8 familiar symbol ?f the United s~. "Uncle
1. . ." ..-..hll debut IS a c~QOII charltcter tn the New Yorlt·Ltiitlcrh.

• 011 til d*:
.
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Ia 16)9, Hlrillid Univmity wasllllliCd for clerJYilwl Jolm Harvard.
IIi 1711,1111 plllict Urinu wudilco-.1 by S.lrWilliam ifendtel. .

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Tliunday, March 14
AccuWeathe... forecast

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Youth escapes injury in accident
No injuries were reponed following a single-car accident at the junction ofAatwoods Road and Lovers Lane in Chester Township around
8 o'clock this morning.
Alyssa K. Hbffman, 16, Pomeroy, was westbound on Aatwoods Road
and lost control of the 1991 Nissan she was driving, which went off
the left side of the road onto Lovers Lane, striking several newspa·
per boxes, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department repon.
Damage io the vehicle was listed as moderate aqd no citations were
issued.
·

William Levi Hammon

Mailbox vandalism investigated

William Levi Hammon,·59, Bidw;ll, died Monday, March II, 1996, at.
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis. .
.
Born May 9, 1936, in Glouster, son of tbe late Levi William and Pris!=illa Green Hammon, he owned and operated a lawn care business.
He is survived by his wife, Sarah Rutter Hammon of Bidwell; three
daughters and sons-in-law, Priscilla and Paul Clark of Bidwell, Linda' and
Paul Campbell of Glouster and Lisa and Dana Tucker of Olouster; four sons
and one daughter-in-law, James and Patricia Hammon of Cheshire, William
•
and Richard Hammon, both of Bidwell, and Alan Hammon of Ravenna; a
. SoutbeiiSiem OhiO
.
south.
~ Today... Mostly sunny. Higll 55 to
Fridlly... A chance of showers. daughter-in-law, Andrea K~ Hammon; 12 grandchildren; and one great·
'.60. S9uthwest windS to 10 mph.
Highs from tbe lower SOs nonheast · grandchild.
Also surviving are four brothers and three sisters-in-law, Gerald and Lin~ Tonight .. .Panly cloudy. Low 10 the lower 60s far south. Saturda
Hammon and Harold and Fred'a Hammon, all of Glouster, Mike Hamleround 40. Light southwest wind.
day...A chance of showers. Lows 35
mon
of Glouster and Robert and Mary Hammon of Circleville; a sister-in·
·~ Thursday... Mostly cloudy. 30 per· to 45. Highs 50 to 55 nonh and 55 to
law,
MBKine
Hammon of Glouster; several nieces and, nephews.
•cent cHance of late afternoon
60 south.
·
He
was
preceded
in death by a stepmother.Freda Hammon, two broth!
Extended forecast
Sunday... A chance of showers.
ers,
Roy
and
Leroy
Hammon,
and three grandchildren.
, Thursday night...A chance of rain. l;ows in the mid 30s to lower 40s.
Services
will,be
Friday,
II
a.m.
at Morgan Center Church in Bidwell with
•Lows 35 to 40 nonh and ' 40 to 45 .Highs in the lower and mid 50s.
• t
•
the Rev. Mike ThOmp~on officiating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Ceme·
tery in Che&amp;hire.
, Fri~nds may call Thursday. 6-8 p.m. at the church. Fisher Funeral Home
from
I
in Middlepon is in charge of arrangements.

Vandals using explosives destroyed at leasl two mailboxes in the
county over the weekend. ·
A carbon dioxide cylinder was used to deslroy a plastic mailbox on
Wolf Pen Road while another plastic mailbox was exploded on Hap·
py Hollow Road, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
On Happy Hollow Road, pieces of the mailboK were scattered over
a 50 foot area.
.
Also, Todd Tripp, Pomeroy, rqioned Monday that his co~n wagon
was shoved over a hill and his milkhouse was shot .up. The incidents
occurred at his propeny on Carr Road .

,=~VII::e:::~ss:::s

:·'roday's weather forecast

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PaP

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·: "Why should conservatives sup- my 1bompson, of Wisconsin, John
.: port a vice presidential nominee, Mr. Engler of Michigan and George
:Powell, who first joined the Repub, . Voinovich of Ohio. ·DOle also has
Mars he I C. Johnson, 82, East Fon Myers, Aa., died Monday, March II,
•l.ican Pany only three months ago, praised former South Carolina Gov.
199§,
at F~n Myers, Aa.
. who is slrOngly pro-abortion, who C~l Campbell.
native
of Delaware, Ohio, he was a former Hebron resident where he
A
.believes in affirmative action, who
Asked today how he thought a
was an auto mechanic. He_was a member of the Fan Myers Tropical Lodge
declares himself a · Rockefeller .,' Dole·Engler tk:ktt woold fare against
Republican," Buchanan said on ·~ Clinton-oOrC: El)gler said, "I think it 54 F&amp;AM and the Scottish Rite Consistory.
SurVivors include his wife, Edythe Johnson of Fon Myers; four sisters,
NBC's "Today" show this morning. would win."
' .
t;;lla Yeager of ·Fon Myers, Roxie Belle Anderson of Hebron, Flora Dixon
'-' ... If Bob Dole sets it on a course to ':?! "I think f Bob Dole ticket's going
,go back to Rockefeller, Republican· , · to wiri. 1 think a Q!lle-Thompson of Millersport, Gladys Dilloh of Reedsville; and many nil'(:es and nephews.
He was 11receded in death by his first wife, Neva. in 1982, and by three
;ism, he's going to have a battle at thai .ticket \1/o'!ld win. And llhiltk Dole· .
brothers.
' 'COnventiQJI."
anybody else ticket WO\IId win,"
Services will be held Thursday, I p.m. at the Anderson Funeral Home
. Governors whom Dole has men- ' ·Engler told DelrOil tele•ision station
in ·Fon Myers with the Rev. D. E. Clay officiating. Burial will be in Fon
tioned as possible picks include Tom: WXYZ.
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Marshel C. Ja,hnson

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Many questions have been asked about the closing of Racine Ele•
mentary as we have campaigned for a Southern K-8 Elementary. First7
why· was Racine Elementary closed?
The Southern Local School Board had to make SOJ11e deep cuts in thO
spring of I 995 because of our borrowing fro,m the State Loan Fund. 11ie
closing of Racine Elementary was a logical move because it was the old•
est building, it Was iq need Of the QJOSt repairs in the district, and the COR~ .
cern for student safety was greater.there than in any other building. Tliis
was a decision that was made aft~ careful study by a committee made
up of staff, parents, and school board members.
Where were any staff cuts made as a result of this closing? A cook,
custodian, and secll'tary were laid·off, but due to the retirement of tile
two high school cooks and the resignation of a stcretary, all lhret were
rehired. Three teaching positions were eliminated, although due to the
large kinderganen size, one teacher had to be brought back.
Why was the building given to the village of Racine for one dq.Jiar?
The people of Racine paid for this building once when it was built in
1911, why should they have to pay for it again? That was the feeling of
the School Board. By giving the building to the village we eliminated me
cost of utilities. insurance·, and maintemince that would have existed if
we would have kept the building.
Hopefully, this clears up many questions that have been asked. If anyone has any other questions concerning the levy please call us at 9492611. We have tried to answer all questions that have been directed to us:·
Every vote is imponant to the future education of our children. Please
vote YES on March 19.
•
J.mn-Law!wlliii
Superlntenllant
Southern Local School•

.

Points to consider

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,Meigs EMS IQgs 12 caUs Grover C. Oliver .
. Uni~ of the Meigs County Emer· Audry Davenpon, Holzer, Medical
.&amp;ency Medical Service recorded l2" Center
·
·
: calls for assistance Tuesday including' POMEROY
• (our transfer calls. Unjts responding
2 p.m., Mulberry Avenue, Ruby
. ·. included: .
Baer, HMC. .
.
MIDDLEPORT
,. REEDSVILLE
, . 12 :25 a.m., Village Manor Apan· , ,, 9:34p.-m., Coolville Road, Eliza·
•ment.S, Evan Wiseman, treated at the •. beth Dulin, Camden-Ciarlc Memori·, ai Hospital
•
:_scene10:05
M'ddl n F' Sta
' • ··"YRACUSE
''
. a.m., I epo tre
..
lion, Jeff Dowell, Veterans Memori· . 2:04p.m., College Road, Brittany
· .
Guinther, treated at the scene.
. al Hosptla1'
.
• . 8 ;49 p.m., Broadway Street, TUPPERS PLAINS
· Ch 1 ~
. VMH· ·
, 8·3S p.m Pine Tree Drive Beth
; ~:: oungS th
·Avenue . -Am~tt, CCMH.
'
. . · p.m.. ou
. ·
' , 1.

Third

Gfobe tel/s..;ominued from page 1
on the reduced "Super II" projects.
He also confinned that no approval
has been granted as of yet on the

ment fund, $287.33; stteet fund,
$95 1.89; state highway fund ,
$3,892.23; water fund, $5,588.57;
utility deposits fund, $7,967 .21 ; sewer fund, $2,370.18; sewer debt fund ,
$6,069.14; replacemenl fund,
$18,747.25
In other matters, council:
' hired a village marshall to work
39 hours a week, at a pay rate of $6
an hour. The officer will assume his
duties sometime in the next two
weeks, according to Mayor Jo Ann
Eads.
• learned from councilwoman
Rose Mary Snowden Eskew thai
poster and tickets for the April 27 Phil
Din and the Dozers concen have
been picked up and are being distributed to various local businesses.
- approved a motion to dispose of
an old wrecked van owned by the village for $6().
• approved payment of bills, and
minutes from the February meeting.
• approved a motion to continue
accepting village water payments
through Peoples Bank, after they
acquire the Rutland Bank One
branch.
• learned from clerk Sandy Smith

Grover C. Oliver, 69 •. Rutland, died Wednesday, March 13, 1996, at Pleas-.
ant Valley Hospttal, Pomt Pleas'!Jll, W.Va.
· ·•
, .t;lom Oct. ~7 •.1926, in .Verdunville, W.Va., son of the late Monroe and
Besste Combs Ohver.- he attended the Rutland Churchof the Nazarene, was
. an Arms y vegterarean ~ofuWorldt WarFII aned a fdormAnerhcoaMI tt pple flaRboretl r. d _h
urv1vtn : •• r sts ers, annt an
ur t11er. o u an , wt 1_
;hom hef ~tded, ~~te a~d~a7re~ce B~lch~r ~~burg •. ~a. , ~ess~e
owcenlo. arsdaRw,b no.t'an fCerte eLan anwmvo C el wayd, Edour Orol! ers, a vln an u y tver o ross anes, . a.. ar os an
na tverofCollege Park, M.D., Jame~ Monroe Oliver of Orlando, Aa., and Naman
J or
add
k
d~
I .
d
h
.
. Htver,
reedessudn n~owathn,ban . v:ra ~tecesMa~ldrednep edws . . ' b h
e was prec
m ue
y an m.anl Stsler, 1
, an an tn•anl rot .
er Arnold
:.
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.
~
Servtces wtll be held Fnday at 10 a.m. at the Rutland Church of the
The following actions to end marNazarene with the Rev. Samuel Bayse officiating. Graveside services will
riage were filed recently in the office
be held Fnday, 3jl.m. at the Old Fteld Cemetery, Huneywell, Ky.
of
Meigs County Clerk of Couns Lar' Friends may ~all Thursday. 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at Bircftfield Funeral Home
ry
Spencer:
,
at Rutland.
• Dissolutions asked •• Phillip R.
King. Pomeroy. and Tammie R. King ,
Athens,
March 8; Tina An neue Lam· dance at the old legion hall in Mid·
Sylvia A. Williamson, 74, of Southside, W. Va., died Tuesday, Mar~h 12, bert and Donald _Lee Lambert, both of
~~pol1 Friday, 8 to II p.m.
Pomeroy. March 6; Amec Sue Ward,
1996, at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis, after a long illness.
Born September 24, 1921 at Beech Hill, W. Va., she was a daughter of Syracuse, and Troy Eugene Ward.
·the late Clarence 0. and Naomi A. (Halblieb) Eckard. She attended the Con- Portland, Feb. 28; Lisa L. Heaton,
cord Baptist Church and was a member of the Mason County Republican Chester. and Kevin E. Healon.
Reedsville, Feb. 28 .
Women and West Virginians for Life.
Am Ele ~ .......................40\
Divorces asked- - Palricia K. Day,
Akzo ............................,..........54\
She was preceded in death by a granddaughter, Aimee Williamson; two
Aahland 011 ...........................37\
brothers, Raymond W. and Chfford 0 . Eckard; and a sister, Evelyn E. Knotts. Middleport. from Ferrell W Day,
AT&amp;T,..............................................
Survivors include her husband, Ney R. Williamson, Sr.; two sons and Rutland. March 6.
Bank
Dissolutions granted .. Rebecca L.
daughters-in-law. Ney R. and Rhonda Williamson of P~!fkersburg. W.Va.,
and Clarence E. and Jotja Williamson of Southside; four daughters and sons- Trent and Michael J. Trent, March I;
in-law, Alice and Karl Click of Mt. Alto, W. Va., Anne and Ste'!'e Chapman Sheryl A. Patterson and Bobby J. Patof Nashville, Tenn., Rebecca and Donald DeCoy of High Point,· NC, and. terson, March~ ; Scott A. OberholzGayle and :William Atwell of Cary. NC; two sisters. Inez Oliver of Point er and Sharon K. Oberholzer. March
4; Jay D. Rowe and Cynthia L. Rowe.
Pleasant, W. Va., and Eithel Halstead of Southside; and 15 grandchildren.
Service will be held at II a.m. Friday, March 15, at Concord Baptist March II.
Divorces granted -- Pamela S.
Church in Henderson, W.Va., with Rev. Paul J. Chapman and Rev. Stephen
Fitzpatrick and Donald Yt. FitzCarder officiating. Burial will be in the Beech Hill Cemetery, Southside.
Visiting hours will be at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, on Thursday from 4-9 p.m. and at the church one hour prior to service. :

oi

Vouth League
,
, Middlepon Youth l..e4gue signup
: will be held Saturday, 1·5 p.m. in
·Middleport Council chambers. Fee
$•10, $25 after Saturday.
'
.
•Bold Dim:tlons to meet
v· Bold Directions, Inc., will have its
;monthly meeting March 22. 10 a.m.
(.,noon at the Gallipolis Counhousc,
~oild floor. Carol Caner, Social
~curity Adminis~or, will be .the
guest speaker.

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;Booskn to -a
; Eastern Athletic Boosters will met
:titursday,. 7;30 p.m. in the cafetc'ria.

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:Dance to be held
· · C, J. and the Country Gentlemen
will play for a ft1Und and square

(USPS

The following couples were
issued m~age licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Coun of
Judge Roben Buck:
Monte Howard Swindell, 22,
Shade, and Rebecca Jean Terry, 24,
Middlepon; Larry Clinton Holsinger
Sr., 56, Racine, and E. Darlene Tillis,
48, Pomeroy;

213-MI)

P.bu&amp;hod ....., ..-.. ...... Mooda' tJwuush
Frida). Ill Coun 51 .. l'omero)&lt;. Ohio, b)' lhe
'Ohio Vollel Mliohi"l Conoooi!11Giiooa Co.,
Ohio 4J769. I'll. ~·2[56. Secood
dl..• pootqc PQid .. Pomeroy. ONo. ·

fo"""'' .

Mfllllttr: 'Jlte AA501:illled Preu. lllld.lbe Ohio
' Newsp~Ptr Auoclation.

'

· IOSTMASTBR: Send IMWreas ~~ to
·n.e 0.111 Sendnel. Ill Coon 5&lt;., Pomero1.
. Ohio 4S769.

Corrieror--

StmSCRtPI'ION RATIS

a,................................................. $2.00
. Ole ~
,

·YOUR ' €0UNTY

SINOLI COPY PR1CB

Ooily ...................................................

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~ahing

Things
Happ~ti In Meiga
County

In -

.*-..
J-.. __
.. ........ ... ......,.c_,
........ ...:...........
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.$2 -

-I.- - l i ..olllble.
MAIL 8UIIICIIPI'I!INS
.
·-Miilt~ 527.:10
111~

.....,..,,..,...:.....,....,,.,.,,.,.,,.,...lllt.fl

~-.................:............................$101.72

that the village is undergoing a
mandatory audit for the last threeyear period. Smith reponed that the
audit will coslthe v1llage $5,400.
- reviewed a letter from county
economic development director Julia
Houdashell, questtoning whether lhe
village would be interested in offering the Civic Center to relocating or
expanding businesses. Council tabled
discussion on the issue.
· learned from Mayor Eads that
trash hauling permits and com operaled vendmg machine permits have
not been paid for 1996, and asked that
those operating the aforementioned
be billed again before council takes
further action.
- approved a motion lo auend the
next Meigs Local School Board
meeting Ia discuss possible relocation
of the district bus garage outstde of
Rutland .
- set the~r next regular meeting for
Tuesday, April 9, 7 p.m., at the ctvic
center.

Present were Mayor JoAnn Eads.
council members Danny Davis, Dick
Felly, Judy Denney, and Rose Mary
Snowden Eskew.

patrick, March I; Kenneth E. Stewan and Jennifer S. Stewan. March 4;
Gregory Todd Johnson from Danelle
L. Johnson, March 4; Steven Ray
Hupp from Loura Jaye Hupp, March
7; Maryrosc Darst and James A.
Darst, March 8.

New

Yellow 89~~&gt;.
Onions ·

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
TUESDAY
Admissions: Jonathan Fowler,
New Haven
Disch1111es: Clara Grueser, Racine

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I"'-'.
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A Mountain Stata Murder Mystery
The Mountain Slllle Myatary Train TM
P~l

· The ~- EIGIAI Ig1u 'IHi

T

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See and expea1eJ ICI lh bllhlnd tha cold walls of tha former

Will ~lmloll t?.obllllliEX
Round T.._, from Htgn. Chas.

Sunday, U.rch 17 a 24

..................................... ........ $105.56

ll ~ ......o.......................................... SZ9.25 '

26 -

'clifford ·Ray Smith Jr., 21 , and
Cynthia Marie Proffitt, 27, both of
Syracuse; Bobby McConaha, 22, and
Mary Marie Francis, 30, both of
·Shade; Kenny Eugene Lunsford, 27,
and Pamela Sue Fitzpalrick, 33, both
of Pomeroy.

COMMISSIONER

35~

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. ~o lUbecripdo!i b)' mall porrnlaect

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Ole Mood! .............. ............................... ....70
Ooe-...................... :........................ St04.00

cnvironmei11al studies for the Athens
to Darwm U.S. 33 project.

Divorces and dissolutions

Couples issued marriage.licenses
'The Daily Sentinel

I

Call 1-304-626-7333
Evenings &amp; Weal:wldl until 8 pm. Cal304-529:-8412

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Rutland citizens..~ontinued from ~ge I

~•M~igs ·announcements Sylvia A. ·Williamson
:Mid!lleport

room.:

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60"

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One person was cited in a Thesday morning accident on East Main
Street, according to police chief Gerald Rought.
According to police rePQrti, the accident occurred at II :3S a.m. when
Neva Gall Sisson, 84, Che$ire was struck as she was pulling onto
East Main Street by Laura Davis, 39, of Middlepon.
Sisson stated to police that she saw Davis' vehicle, but thought she
had time to pull on}o the street.
Damage to both vehicles was moderate. Sisson was cited. for failore
to yield .

Charles Lemual B~s. 73, of Mansfield, formerly of Middleport, died
Feb. 21 at the Woodlawn Nursing Home there.
,
He was born on April28, 1922 in Middlepon, son of late Charles L. and
Maude Matlack Brooks, and was a graduate of Middlepon High School.
Mr. Broo'ks. earned a business degree at The Ohio State University and
was a member of the ROTC. He served in the U. S. Army during World
, War U in the field anillery and taught arms at Fon Bragg in Nonh Carolina for three years.
He worked for McKesson and R&lt;,~bbins Drugs and Armstrong Furnace
before movtng to Mansfield in 1959.
There he founded Mansfield Motors and owned the dealership for 19
years. He was a pioneer in foreign car sales, first selling Volkswagens 'in
the 1960's .
He is survived by a cousin, Marilyn Rob~
·
n of Woodstock. Va., sev·
eral cousins in th~ Columbus area, by a bro
· -law and a sister-in-law.
Memonal servtces were held 'at the Ftnefr k neral Home and burial
was in Mansfield Memorial Park.
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:\Dolti says. ~:~tlnp~

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Charles Brooks

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Pomeroy accident probed

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With the fast approaching eMarch 19th voting date, I thought thai
maybe some readers may nofhave quite decided whether you are for ot
against the bond issue. For those of you who are pondering your deci. ·
sion, would you please consider some of the following points? It has
been said that school buildings-do not make the education but, have you
conside!'Cd how much a good.~'cenlral facility would affect learning? . .
I. Constder mslrUcltonal ttille. At the oresent there are six teac~
traveling between all the sch®ls to provide mandated services require([
by the state department of c;d~cation . Approximately 7112 hours per
week is road time traveling between schools. With the new,. building,
conven all that time to insttuction. Our children would receive around
. 270 hours of increased iosu'Ui:tion time. Does the new building affect
learning? Yes! 1 '
. ·:
• .
2. Please consider, if you: ~ill. what it is like for student who is ,I cy·
ing to receive insttuction in classroom located in the comer of a gym.
The students in this classrootll just can't quite stay with the teacher whea
the other classroom located on the opposite ~ide of the gym is changing
' class or talking above a whisper. (Gyms aren't known for their quiet
acoustics.) Does a new buitaing affect learning? Yes!
3. Consider now what it ~outd be like to have a "ttue" library instead
of a collection o( hooks s~ked in a hall. Have you been to a sch~
where !here was a ~brary ~jth books, magazines, newspapers, periodi:
cats, vtdeos, computers wtth Internet hook; ups (soon required by the
· ~tate), CD:-Roms with inte,t.active l~ing, and an up to date computer:
tzed card catalog? Our cl)ildren mtght even have an enticing, rich. in
print, quiet environment jit_sl for leBf!~ing . This is totally the opposite of
our current so called hbraoes found m our elementaries. Does the facility make a difference? Ye~l
4. Next, please think about technology. Our current eleinentaties have'
niaybe one or two outlets in each room (if that). At the present, one or~
the federally funded programs would pay to put some computers in la\15•
or classrooms f?r our stui!jlnt_S •. It hasn't been do~~ because of (I) tack of,
·space, and (2) madequat!l wtnng. Does the facthty make a difference?
be no offficilal ~li~ion ofhethe United States; that the government shall be tol·
Yes! ,
~)~
•
·
erant o at rehg1ons, w ther they be Cluistianity, Judaism, Islam, Hin-.
S. Please focus now oit&gt;'bow children learn. Children not only need the:
duism or some other faith.
-..
academi~ but they at~ peed a chance to develop musically and lrtisii· ;
The godless element has turned the First Amendment's religion ct,use on
Cally. In our elementarid the mustc ·te~~cber !ravels from room to
itS bead. The constitutional, principle of "freedom of. religion," which
If musical insttuments qr areas are needed for dance and rhythm, fj)(;
informed federal, state and local law for 172 yeilis, has been misinterpreted
insttuction,
'the teaeher·niusl either wait for a sunny nice day tq go out·.•
during the past.33 years (since tl!e liberal Warren coun banned prayer in
side
or
be
scheduled
in the gym which sometimes displaces other ci8S6' '
schools) to mean "freedom from religion."
es.
What
if
a
child
~as
anistic abilities? The an teacher now ewes tfteoi
· But the men wlio fought and died for this nation's independence, who
many
supplies
needed(&amp;class from room to room. There are few pi&amp;C(:il!
established our republican government; who crafted the Constitution, never
for dispt.ay ordean up. boes a ne)W building affect lell'nins? Yes! • •
meant to exclude God from every .aspeet of government Indeed,_,every presI realtze thts letter IS lengthy, but I feel there's so much cach,i nd evei'y;·
ident since G~ Washington has sworn an Olllh before God, with his hand
one
of 111 can learn if._.e ask. Go to ,your area school, look around and'
firmly planted on the Bible. And every rnembe'r of'Conaress, since the first
ask
questions.
Each and everyone of us can find an excuse not to voie fll!:
Continental Canpu, has swted each clay with 1 prayer to the Nmighty. · ·
the
bond
issue
but not OI)C of those excuses can surpiSs the value of; it
. If the Pounden were alive today, ·they would be' shocked to find thll a
thild's
~ucation.
is no excuse for not giving Southern UM:!Ij'•·
tiny band·of aihei.u~ humanists and witclles la ible to 111e the Pint Amendchildren
a
chance
foe
·
educational facility which would sive them i
ment to block a relipous observation of Eater mi -public 'lfOUIIds. The blis·
better opponunity for \ICCCS,S·
.
,
·
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1•. , .,
phemers believe they have the same·ripll IS Christiana to hold services
R• ._..
beneath Mount Soledad's cross. I say theY should 10 to the devil.
..ChiMne ~
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Jmpo'l Perltllflla a ooiiMWIIIt for tile 8en 'Diego Uftlon.Trlbune.
• J

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.---Local br·iefs

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are

exct:':l?:~e the problem with public education is not old buildings, but is an

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Atheists desecrate Letters to the editor :
Chr.istian holiday Why was grade school closed?

No evidence to support theory

OHIO Weather

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Has seen the good and the bad

Levy is an opportunity

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Letters to the editor

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�Wecln11day, March 13, 19a&amp;

The Daily·· Sentinel

"Sports

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P.4
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Weclnelday, March 13, 1996'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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·On the AP all-America men's basketball team,

Pelk
and
Fortson
join
Allen,
Iverson
and
K.
i
ttles
on
squad
...

h

JIM O'CONNELL
AP~IWrtter
• Only in the Big East can you be
thb third-best player in your conference and still be considered one of
tbe five best in the country.
For the t1me ever, a league had
three members of The Associated
Press' all-America team as Ray
Allen of Connecticut, Allen Iverson
or Georgetown and Kerry Kittles of
Villanova were named to the first
team Thesday.
Marcus Camby of Massachusetts
came within one vote of being a
urtanimous selection and Tim Dun~n of Wake Forest rounded out the
~am. which was selected by the
S1111lt 66-member national media
P4netthat votes for the WCC~kly Top

z:s.

·: Teammates have made the first
team - the last time in 1991 with

UNLV's SUlcey Augmon and Larry edging .1\llen, who had 324.
Iverson, the only sophomore on
Johnson - bat never three players
, the first team: received 318 points,
from the same conference.
Camby, the 6-foot-1·1 center who four more than Duncaa. Kittles, the
drew as much attention this season only senior, had 246. The other three
for collapsing before a game as for players selected are juniors.
Camby, an honorable mention allwhat he did on the court, is the first
America
last season, collapsed
player from Massachuseus selected
before
the
St.
Bonaventure game in
to the first team.
Duncan and Kittles both ended January, missed four games and
long droughts for first-team honors returned to lead 'the Minutemen to
for their schools. Wake Forest's last their fifth straight Atlantic 10 resufirst-team selection was Len Chap- lar-season and tournament champipell in 1962, while Howard Poner in onships.
"The individual honors are nice,
1971 was Villanova's last first-teambut I would trade them all if it meant
er.
Connecticut's last first-teamer we would win the national champiwas Donyell Marshall in 1994 and onship," Camby said.
Camby averaged 20.7 points, 8.0
Alonzo Mourning was Georgetown's
· rebounds and 3.8 blocks this season
last in 1992.
With each voter selecting three as the Minutemen went 31-1 and
teams and points awarded on a 5-3- held the No. I ranking for 10 weeks,
I basis, Camby received 328 points, _longer than any other team ..

"1bere are some terrific players
around the country, but with Marcus
I don 't have to do any posturing,"
Massachusetts coach John Calipari
said Thesday. "Other people say he
is the best player in the country. I
don'l have to. Good players put up
numbers. Special players make
everyone around them better. Marcus
Camby is a special player."
The 6-5 Allen made the jump
from·third team to first team by averaging 23.3 points and 6.5 rebounds
as the Huskies won the regular-seas~n title for the third straight year:
w1th a .Jeague-record 17-1 mark.
"This is a high honor that I'll
,cherish," he said. "I felt this season
would be·a challenge, because oth- ·
er teams would be gunning for us
because of our success in the past.
Our success as a team unit has
allowed me to reap this special indi-

Scoreboard
Charlelton~Tcnncucc

winner v1. St .
Joseph' s-loi\D-Providence--Falrfield win,.;,
r..w.,, Mardi :12
Miami, Ohio-fre1no St-Wa•hlnstoa·Michigan St. winner va. NebrukaColorado St......OOilUia-Wuhini'On 51.
winner

Basketball
NBA standings
EAsTERN CONFERENCE
Allaotk Dlvlllan

~

I~ ~

Iii

New York ............ Jl 26 .514

II
16

p,:

~ Mi(lmi ... ~ ..... ...........31
~

Washil)llon ............28
New Jertey ...... ., ....:23
OO.tol'l.. ... .............. 23
Pbiladelphim ...........l3

i

•

.

J2
J4
J6
39
48

.492

m

.:\71

33

.21)

CmtnJDivloion

l·ClliCUJO ............. S4 7 .885
• .. Indiana ................. ]9 23 · .629
' AII&amp;I'IID ............... ,.. ~j: 27 .S6S
CLEVELAND . J4 27 .m
Detroit ......... ......... 34 27 .557
'OWiocte .... ........... 29 31 .483
· Milwaukee ............ 21 :w .3SO
ToroniO ................. J6 43 .262

U'l:
19~

--

Vnncou'VCf ...... .-...... 11

22

~

16~
22~

.31\
.183

24

.3~9

41
42
49

31~

hdftc Dhillon
Scaute .................... 47 14 .no
• ~ L..A.I...aUn ......... .. J8 22 .633
. J·Phdenix ..................31 31 ..500
8
P011land ................. 29 34 .460
S~JCBmento ............ 27 33 .4SO
•,(]olden Slale .. .... ... 28 · 3l .444
L.A. Cli~ ......... 22 40 .lSS
' :s-fli.l(;hed Playoff sp&lt;M

19 ~

20 ·

2~~

,.

NIT slate
First round

T""""'

Mmri ar (22 -6) or Rhode ls l:md (I 8, 13), 7::\0 p.m.
Collc&amp;c of Cl\orlcsron t24-:t) at Ten-

'ncuce !14-14),7:30p.m.

Davidson (H-4) at Soulh Carolina
{ll·lll. 7:30p.m.
·
Waatl!RJion (16-11) 111 Mjchiaan St.
~I ~-IS),· 7.30 ~ . m .
Saine LouM (\6-13)'" 01 Minnesoca(l8'12). 7:30p.m.
· Murray St (.19-9) at Milsouri (17,14). 8 p.m.
Moont St. Mary's. Md. (21-7} Willi.. ,noi1 St 120-11), 8:0!1 p.m.
Manhanan 07-1I) al Wisconsin (161114). R: O~ p.m.
· Tulant (18-9) m Auburn (19-12), 8:30

.p.m-~rkanau-Little RO(k (21-6) Ill V•n. dcfbih ( 17 - 13~ 8:30p.m.
~labama (16-11 ) 01 Illinois (t&amp;-12).
9:30p.m.
• . MIAMI (OHIO) (21 ·1) ao F,..no So.
(20-1 0). II :59 p.Rt

__,

S1. Jo1eph ' s (U-121 ullon.a (21-7).
7:30p.m.
.
..
Nebmsk.a (16-14) at Colomdo Sr. (1811)19:30p.m.

·
.
(21·8) Ill· Wa•hinaron S1.
:· (16-11). IO:OSp.m:
'
Oon~aaa

~.

•
'

':·

.

~

,

AtNewlllnnC....._

rwwa..m.c-.

·

\trovicknce (17-11 ) n . fairfield (209), 7:)0 p.m.
~~. ~

Second round

T _ ... oloaTBA
1
A
I MondiJt Mlf'ciiJI
\. :· ·bavid•on·Soulh Carolina wi•nO-

.

111 .

~-Unlc:

Roek·Vandccbilt vtilllft'
.
·; .. .. Alablmo-llliaoia winner n . Mumay
.• St.~Miuo.ui winner
.,
lf.alane-A_uburn•wlf\ncr VI. Sllnl
• ~I · MinMSOfa winr.er
•
~ 1 ·, ~anhauan·Wilcon•i• wiancr v1.
) r.,ounr ~1. MU)''I~IIIinoia· SI. wirwr
\

'!'

·!~,.

... ' •

i~·

.

.,
~•-

FRIDAY .

15

Coli.

._ _

- ..

SATURDAY

16.

".

CAFFEINE~~ PEPSI.

Hockey

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dl•lllon

»: L I

24·~ · 1.2«. Cans

ba. liE lit.
ll 2.16 186
78 m 197

s

•

lOO 228
211 206

Round Steak

225 225
19l 21!
·194 207

Pound

I.SO 24S

WESTERN CONFERENCE
CmlniDMMn

»: L I

ba. liE lit.

:s-Delroil ............ ~l 12 4 106 1S9 148

Chi'OIO .............. J4 23 II

S1. Louis ............ 29 26 12

79 229 185

70 1114 192

Toromo .............. 2631 II 63
Wil~tnipeg ...........2~ 34 4 62
Oallos. ........... 22 32 12 S6
'
Pldf1c Dlvloloin
Colorado ............ 38 20 10. 86
Vancouver ......... 27 26 l!i 69
Col!l"Y :......... .... 27 29 II 6l
Los An&amp;eles ....... 21 33 I~ !l7
Anaheim ............ Z.'i J6 6 S6
Edr~MJmon ........ 2336 7 S:.l
San Josc .......... : .16 46 6 J8
HI inched playoff 1po1

197 211
2.'\0 246
192 222
269
243
202
219
186
184
211

•

197
l.l4
201
2S2
21'
243
292

Tuesday's scores
Washinaton9. VancouverO
Dttroft ~. Winnipe&amp; 2
Calsllr)' 4. S1. Loui• 2

Tonlaht's pmes
PinsburJh 111 Hartford. 7 p.m.
Dallas al Ott11wa. 7:30p.m.
Mootreal Dl New Jene)',7:l0p.m.
Winnipca.mToronro. 7:30p.m.
Allrida 01 N.Y. R.111Jers,7:l0p.m.
Tampa Ba)' at Pttilodclphia. •7:30 p.m.
Edmonton at San Joae, 10:30 p.m.
Buffalo Ill Los AnJeiei, 10:30 p.m.
Colomdo at Anaheim. lO:)()p.m.

Thursday's pmes

*

Pinsbw:ah Bol,toll. 7:30p.m.
Vancouver 111 c;tUcoao. 8:30 e_.m.

B. .ball
Mlllor l.apo • - •

or·illo ~ '

uotsEAmE;~;;;~;;:.

Mosllmproved-Taryn Doidge; Most
son).
pionship. If they ex~t to advance to you."
Valuable Offensive Player-Cheryl
The
girls
worked
hard
to
improve
to the next level they are going to
Senior team members honored
Jewell;
and Leading Assists, Cynthia
and
we
came
back
to
3-5,
but
then
have to get in the gym this summer. were Travis Abott, Cass Cleland,
Cotterill.
Bronc and Jewell were
The summer work is what makes a Nick Haning, Brent Hanson, Mark- ' lost six tough games in a row,"
ball player."
Mills, Paul Pullins and Donald Yost. Logan said. "With little luck, a honorable mention All-TVC and
Team members honored were Haning had the Besl Free Tlu'ow Per- break here or there I think we could senior all-stars were Brown, Dassylva and Cotterill. Second teaii\ allDave Anderson, Jeremiah Bentley, centage a1 66%. Other members have gotten over the hump.
district was Jewell. Other team mem"When
you
win
sometimes
you
Miele Barr, Brad Davenport, Daniel were Aaron Hockman. Chris Lambers honored were Carissa Ash, Jenhave
to
be
lucky,
and
we
weren't
Hannan, Jason Mullen, Sean bert, Tim Lewis, Brad Whitlatch,
ny Clifford, Brandi Meadows and
·
lucky,"
Logan
said.
O'Brien, Roben Qualls, Steve Rice, Josh Witherell , and manager, ShanErin
Krawsczyn. Clay Crow and
Logan noted that his club missed
Collin Roush, Matt Williams and non Smith. Statisticians were Carissome picture perfecl shots jn one Michael Leifeit were statisticians.
Ma:hager, D.J. Blanks.
sa Ash and Danielle Peckham.
Varsity and reserve cheerleaders
Then Meigs varsity boys' mentor
Skinner highlighted his senior game and that the other team had
were
then honored by Advisor,
banked
in
three
in
a
row.
coach Jeff Skinner presented his club players' careers : Travis Abott, a
Cindy
Fields. Members of the
Logan
added
to
his
younger
girls
its hardware. Skinner said, "My bas- career 534 point scorer, had 214
reserve
squad
were Lauren Anders,
especially,
"Every
year
at
camp
we
ketball season begins 30 days after · rebounds, shot 51% on two point
Carly
Chasteen,
Jessica Evans, Shanour last loss and lasts until our last shots and 30 percent on threes. pass out basketballs. Now, we've got
loss·next year.
Abott had 20 or more points on five to use them .. use them every day. Our non Jenkins, Sarah Larkins and
Melissa Reeves. Varsity members
shooting and free throw shoaling
"Much of our success comes different occasions.
were
Jennifer Ervin, Whitney Hapmust
improve
nd
the
girls
must
work
from the effon these boys have put
Cass Cleland had 446 points with
Jonslall
. Sue Henderson, Stacie
hard
I
his
summer."
into the program," Skinner said. 320 rebounds, shooting 53% on
Reed.
Lori
Russell , Cynthia Sandy,
Logan
praised
his
varsity
for
"It's a full time job. This group had twos and 37% on threes. Cleland was
Teresa
Simpson
and Cindi Stewart.
a 98 percent atte~dance rate lor all AII-1VC and all-district with 11 improving throughout . the y_car,
Stewan.
Russell
,
Simpson and Henworkouts, including open gym and double figure games in rebounding. adding, "You expect I00% from
summer work outs. That's a credit to
Paul Pullins had 555 career your kids and they gave that every derson were all honored as seniors.
All -TVC academic honors were
points, 360 of those as a senior and day."
everything they did.
presented
by Rick Ash. Honored
Anne
Brown,
Kristen
Dassylva
·"The banquet is something very had 384 rebounds. Pullins had 85
were
Cindi
Stewart, Stacie Reed,
and
Cynthia
Cotterill
all
received
special to me, because we get the assitst, 56 steals, 49turnovers (great
Lori
Russell,
Erin Krawsczyn , Anne
three-year
senior
awards.
Special
opportunity to recognize our kids. for a point guard) and shot 43% from
Brown
,
Adam
Sheets, Taryn Doidge
awards
went
to
Dassylva-Most
ValuWhalever time I take to honor them the field on threes with 51% on 1wos.
and
Cra1g
Knight.
The benediction
able Defensive Player (Most
is not enough: .
He had 18 double figure games in
was
given
by
Jennifer
Sheets.
Blocks/Most Steals); Anne Brown,
''l\vo years ago we were 0-21 and scoring and five times had 20 or
these kids have come a long, long more points. Skinner added, "If we Leading Rebounder (151); Cheryl
way," Skinner said. "What many gave special awards, Brent Hanson Jewell, Best Free Throw Percentage
__;&lt;c_o_n•_.i~~ue_d_fro_m_Pa_g:..e_4&gt;_ _ __ 'people don't know is that of the II and Donald Yost would have been (72%); Coaches Award-Becky
Smith; 110% Award-Ashley R~ach;
teams in the 1VC, we had the fourth co-Best Defensive Players."
(5'71.
Georgia· Tech and Shareef.Abdur- ffiPJJason
best overall record. This year and the
Ne~t . varsity girls' basketball
Sr&amp;sacr. Te11.u Tech. 6-7. 210.tcnlor. 19.0
Rahim of California - Lorenzen PI'I- 8.0 'PI· 2. 9 apg (~41.
pastlwo years, only Federal ocking, coach Ron Logan awarded the girls
Wright of Memphis, Brian Evans of
Belpre and Wellson have had mo.:. reserve squad tor their outstanding
HunoraWt lnnlt'-n
Indiana and Jason Sasser of Texas
In the Eastern spons banquet sto~ Bnny. Georsia T«h: Mll'tul Brown.
wins during the period. That's a cred- 114-5 season. The team started oul 2Mumy
Suue:
A~;t
Cu1is
.
Viraiaia
'hdl:
Erick
ry
in
Monday's edition of the Daily
Tech.
it to the work these kids put in."
2 then went on a nine-game winning
Dan~. Mlasiuippi Suwe: Adontl Foyle, CoiJIIe.
Flnttn..
TQdd Fuller, N011h Carolina Stale : Man
Skinner continued by highlight- streak. Along the way Logan told of Sentinel, varsity cheerleader Jamie
MIU"CUI Camby, Masm.::.huseus, 6-11 , 21~ .
Hai'Jll'iil. Gcortia T«h: Roanie Henderson. LSU;
Drake was omitted as an All-Tri Valjunior. 20.7 ppa. 8.0 'PI· HI bloclu ()21 poinll). .
ing some of the year's magic the revenge his team sought by
Brcvin ,~Jhl. S1aaron:t: f\!te Liaicky, Penn Sla~e:
Ray Allen, Conaecti~o:ul, b-S, ~.junior. 23J
ley
Conference academic selection.
moments.
~Mann. Miniuippi Valley Stm~: A~~qt~ell
defeating Eastern and NelsonvillePPI· 6. ~ tpJ. 3.~ apg, 46.6 3-Jlf r1 pel, IW.l ft pee
The
Daily Sentinel apologizes for
McCoOVtm.
Western
Carolina:
Ay11n
Minor.
Oklu·
Among those were two huge York after early season losses.
(3241.
.
"On the T" Middleport 99W141
homo: lJJm: N.. h. SontaO..: Jell'Nordponl. Wil·
Allen l~enon. Gr&lt;qctown, 6-1 , 1 7~ . sopbo:
the
error
in the story.
comebacks against Nelsonville-York
(OftSiii.Oreen Bay.
·
He said, "This club played very,
..,.., 24.7 I'PI· 3.8 '1'1- 5.0 "PP· l .l 'PI (318).
~~ O' BoMOO . UCLA ; Edaar hdilln,
in Buchtel and against Vinton Coun- very well and continued to improve
nm Duncan. Wnb fofesl. ft. fO. 110. junior.
MwacildCs; M:alill RDK, O.Cxel: Sla·Sellls. 1\ii19.61'1'J· 12.1 ·'1'1. 3.8 bpa. 3~.9 ra pel, 37.6 "'PP
ty
where MHS came from behind throughout the season. They are the
IA: Jeu ·~llcl, Iowa.
014).
.
An~ne
Walker,
Kenn1ck)';
Bonzi
Well1,
Ball
and
outscored the Vikings 52-18 in best I've seen at a 1-3-1 defense."
Kcm-y Killles, ViiiMOYll. 6-~ . lt'O. senior, 20.~
Suuc; Dedric WillovJhby. Iowa Scatt. ·
PPJl. 1. I 'PI· ll 'PI· 2.4 spa (24&lt;1).
the second half. He rioted thai Point
J~nior varsity team members are
Pleasant came just one game away Stephanie Bunon, Tracey Coffey,
'
• ~j.
Keilh' Von Hom. Ucnh. 6-9. ·227, juniiX. 21.7
from the state, but that Meigs had Tricia Davis, Danielle Grueser,
Ron1
Brown
ef
the
Los
Angeles
,.. 9.1'1'1· Jl.71s pel, 41.33-pt ra pa. 84.9 ft pe1
handed them their woo;t defeat. a 20- Myca Haynes, Jessica Johnsoq,
Rams bad two kickoff returns for .
(189~
.
point drubbing. Two other wins. a Tonya Miller, Danielle Peckham. •
TonyDeiii.Kentu&lt;ky,6-1 . 193.-.17.lR'I.
touchdowns in a 1985 game against
4.3fPI, I .9 q, 49.9 fl pa, 43.93-pt f&amp; p&lt;t, 83.1
victory over lOth ranked Wellston Wendy Shrimplin, Bridget and
Green •J!ay.
This Week~ Special:
ft pet, 2.1.9,- (180).
and
the double-ovenime win over Melissa Werry.
.
DANNY FORTSON. CINONNAn 6-7. 24l,
'
Nelsonville at home were also high......,..,.. 20.7 PPI· 9.2 '1'1· 330ia pa. 26.8 "'PP
Logan then praised the members
(Iii).
·
lights.
of
his
1995-96 varsity club. This is
KOI\IIJ, 6-0, 19l,j11nlor, 11.0
Skinner concluded, "You could the 12th year Logan has been at the
..,.. 6.3..., ~f.o l-pt r,,.,. (151).
John w.~~o&lt;e. syroc-. 6,1. nl....1..-, :11.1
never count these kids out. They helm of the Meigs girls, the founh in
PPI· 8.8 'PI• 14 .... 40.0 l-pt fa p&lt;1 ( 140).
worked very hard for what they his last stint.
,·,
have. They've spent a lot of time in
Logan said, " Our first game we
Stophoo ~. llooqio 1«h. 6-1. 1!10.
the
gym
and
this
should
be·an
exam·
scored 17 points. When I got home
llalvnu. 18.1 PPI· 4.3 ..... )1.lmpa (84). '
.__Wrilllt.~6-11,2JO, .......
pie for the younger players. We lose I )QOked up the slats for our return- ·
..... 17.1JIPI,IO.l .... 54.5f&amp;pct.10blao:b(ll).
a lot in our seniors, but to the ing lettermen and theit average colShlnol Abdu~Rahi01, Colil'omi' 6-10. 225,
younger kids-if you put the time in lectivefy was 15 points. They didn't
, _ 21.6 PPI• I .7 '1'1- 52.311 pet &lt;61), ·
llriiAI!._I_ 6-1. 220,- 21 .7 JIPI,
in the summer, it's wide open. It's up do much about that (in the offsea7.3 '1'1· 4.0 ..,.. 404 J.po ra ,.,.. 84.6 n pe1. 17.3
By SCOTT WOLFE
i."
Special Awards went· to Josh
Sentinel Correspondent
·~ Roberts , Most Outstanding First
An outstanding banquet, com- Year Wrestler; Adam Thomas, Most
plete with fine food and awards, was... Outstanding Underclassman; and
staged for the fine young men and Adam Sheets, Most Outstanding
women athletes in the school cafe- Senior.
'
teria at Meigs High School Thesday \
The ~reshm~n boys' basketball
night. First, the wrestling team , team wh1ch plac~ §!:CQnd tn theTnreceived honors for yet another out- { Valley ConferenceTournament (oarstanding season.
.
I, rowly losing 50-47 to Nelsonville)
The team received awards and ·· was honored by coach Gene W1se.
much praise from coach Jim Sheets. Wise's club finished the year at 14- .
Honored were seniors Craig Knight 5.
with a 21-11 record, Vova Ste'
Team members were John David- •
fanovych, and Adams Sheets with a
32-5 overall mark. Otlir team mem· so'n, Clinton Hendri_cks, lT. ·
bers honored were Shawn Michaels, Humphreys, Marc Jones, Pat Martin,
McKinney,
Angelo
Matt Ault, Adam 'Thomas, Josh Waylon
Roberts and Jay Fisher, who were ·Rodriguez, Chad Schuler and Clark
second Jearn 1VC honorees. Other VanMatre. The Meigs program is on
members 'l'erc Vincent Broderick. the upswing as the freshmen (14-5),
Matt Dailey, Phil Edmiston, Mike reserves (17-3) and varsity ( 12-8) all
Frymeyer, Josh Howard. Alan Lee. 1!9sted winning seasons.
Ben Molden; Adam Moodispaugh, f" Junior varsity boys' basketbnall
Ike Parker, Fra'nco Romuno, Jason i!'Oach Rick Edwards awarded memRoush and manager Johathon Dick- l)!:rs of his super 17-3 club and
p{aised them for an outstaniling
ens.District qualifiers were Knight, ·elton. Edwards said, "These boys
Parker, Adam SSheels and Craig worked hard throughout the season
Knight. Sheets won a special award and worked hard at camp this sumfor slarting varsity all four years of . ntter and brought home the Rio
cfr.lnde summer camp reserve chamhigh .school.
·

a

Name omitted

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS :
.Nncd llol.: Edwards major k11Jr.ee sea.~t.

......... 10 Cantoo-Aluoa

SENIOR GIRLS' BASKET.aALL HONOREES....: Tuesday night at the. Meigs winter apot18 banquet
were Anne Brown, Kristen Daasylva and Cynthia
·
~·
'
Cotterill.

Lady Marauder• clalmlng tl;l!lr last cege honors

standing efforts were (front row, L·R) Erin
Krawsczyn, Cynthia Cotterill and Rebecca Smith.
In the back row are Anne Brown, Krlaten Da•
sylva, Taryn Doidge, Ashley Roach and Cheryl
Jewall.

Honorees...

Tra nsactions

AIDericonLelpo
CAliFORNIA ANOElS: Released
Mark William1on, pit~;:her, arid Ralph
Bry1111. ootf.elder. Optioned Darin Enud.
Jovioo Car~ajal, Marqui• Riley ood Ernmill Cohick. outliehlen; Brian Grebcck.
P.J . Fo~1. Ty Van Burkleo, Jamie
Burke, Tim Harkrider and Keilb Luuloo,
infielders; Todd Greene. John Ortot~ ud
Faua1o Tejero. catchen: and Ryan Hm"'
~ocl Mike Holtz, Goeff Edlcll. Pep Harris, Pe1e Janicki, ShAd Williama, Mike
Frcchill, David· Holdridae and Jelf
Schmidt, pilehcn, 10 their minor-Acaa~
&lt;amp.
CLEV~LAND INDIANS: Sianed
Jrnc' Levll, carcher, 10 a one-year eon'""· s..o JJ. Tholoc, phdoer, "'a!"'Btr' 10 1
•
. their miii!H'-Iealut ~· ReiPi
tolo ~00. Doiooy Qntv01, Wll 9mlth,
Aftd Kevia Tollr. pilcbcn: Ryan Mlnindlle, catcher: and Drew 0..101, Stevt
Duo• and Don Sporb, lnflelden, IIi doois
mi ...-~ ....... Opel- Jim Lowll
ud Cosey •Whin... pi1~. ud o.n..
Jack1on. infielder. lo B•ffalo of the
American AIIOcillion, lid Mlii1no Dellllosa. Jeff Se.IOii. Dlroo Kirksdt ud
Steven KIIK, pitehCn. 1111 EIIW Di~

·

GIRLS . BASKETBALL AWARD WINNERS These baskatball playera were honored Tuesday
night at the Meigs winter sports banquet. Honorad for another good year and for their out-

Meigs w·i.n ter athletes·get honors at awards banquet

76 :'20 178

North- Dl•loion
Pinlb\o'gh ..........4() 22 4 84
Momreal ............ l2 27 7 71
Bollon ................ 30 28 8 68
Hanford ............. 2731 7 61
Buffalo .............. 26 33 7 59
Ottawa ............... 12 SO 3 27

DEw.

Diet Peps/ or·
Peps/ Cola.·

NHL standings .

Iwl

at New Jmey. 7:30p.m.
Bos1on 01 CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m. .
Allamm Bl Houston. 8:30p.m.
Miami a1 Sllll .Aintonio, 8:30p.m
Dallas 'al L.A. Clippt:rs ·at Anaheim,
Qllif.. IOJO p.m.
.
·
L.A. Lukers a1 Golden S1a1c. 10:30
p.m.

Frid•)'

14

n

Thursday'' a•mes

lld~M~~I1

.

Philadt:lphla ...... J2 21 12

W~ing1on

,

THURSDAY

Tampa Boy ........32 2S 9 73 202 201
WashinJion ........ l2 27 8
191 17..
NcwJmcy ........ )l_2.'iiO 72 175 1!19
N.Y.Isloll\dcrs.. .. 2C38 8 41 195 l.l6

Philadelphia at Boston,7:)()p.m.
Utah,.. Charlone, 7::\0 p.m.
Phor:ni11.111 Detroit. 8 p.m.
Wostlinglon at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
New York Ill Minnesota. 8 p.m.
Orlando az Scanlc. 10 p.m.
Milwaukee :u Saenunrnto, 10:30 p.m.

''

15

SprilJ. Cltholie 39, Madeira 38

N.Y. Rangcn ..... 36 18 ll

Tonight's games

With Chromium Plcollnate

Southington Chalker SS, McDonald

Florido&gt; ............... 3524

Phoenix. 98, New Jersey 88
Philadelphia 118, Toronto 110
AdiUUQ liS. Utllh 89
Miami 12$, Dallas 118
Denver 110. Orlando 93
Portland IOl. l.l\. LakeR 99
San Antonio 106, Golden SttJie 98

All Hltural T-Liteno

lO

Iam

Tucsdoy's scores

: ,'

61

:C

1 n
19

quet. Honored were (L-R) Clndi Stewart, Stllcle
Raed, Lori Russell, Erin Krawaczyn, Anne Brown,
Adam Sheets, Taryn Doidge and Craig Knight

Cardinaton 71. Minster H
Dalton 79, Tuscara.wu Cath. 58
Lincoln~icw S9, Edsenon ~I
Norwalk St Paul 81 , Fairfield 73
Old FoR 78, Kalidl75
S. Otutesl:on Soolhcastcm 63, Anna

Gl

.435

were

Walth Je1ui160. Camoa GlenOak Sl

38

.6!11

J~i

I

ALL·TVC ACADEMIC HONOREES- Ali-TVC
academic hon~rs
presented by Rick Ash
Tuesday night at the Melga winter sports ban·

Dlrillonl '

:\2~

:is

I

.

at the Meigs winter epona benquel were (-.!·
ed, L·R) Can Clelllild, Paul Pullins, Travis
Abbott. Stllndlng 11 Brent Hanaon.

Regional tournaments

24&gt;

' Mklwett Diviltoa

I~

I

.

sENIOR BOYS' BASKETBALL HONOREESSenior boya' beaketbllll honorees Tuesdlly_nlght

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

2(}
2(}

18 .705

WfDNESDAY

Thlnl PIKe: SemifinaUoicn, 7 p.m.
Cltalnplondlip: Semifinal winners, 9
p.m.

Dl•loioniV

lJ

I

Th•-,, Morell 11

WESTERN CONFERENCE
l:.:nlonio .......,...
Uloh ......................43
Houlton ................. 41
Denver ..... ...: ........ 27
Jmllas .....................21
Minnesota ............. 19

·

LOSE·: 10 Lh.
IN 3 DAYS

.,

Items I Prices Cood ThrouOh Marth 16, 1996.

TBA. 7 and9 p~ m. •

21

release

va's ~areer scoring . leader in the
opening game of the Big East tournament. It was his first game back
after serving a three-game suspension for unauthorized use of a uni,
versity telephone credit card.
"For as long as I·can remember
.it has been a dream of mine·to be a
first-team all-American," said Kittles, a second-team selection last season. "This definitely makes my
Senior year special."
·
.
Keith Van Horn of Utah led the
second team with 189 pointS and was
joined by Tony Delk of Kentucky,
Danny Fortson of Cincinnati, Jacque
Vaughn of Kansas and John Wallace
of Syracuse, yet another player from
the Big East.
The third team featured two
freshmen - Stcphon Marbury of
(See.HONOREES on Page 5)

-

At M.dhon Squn G1 ..... New Vorl
TlllldaJ, Mll'dl26

18~

.4.52
.410

tract.
, PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES : PIIICCCI
B.J. Walloo:, pilcher, on waivers for the
purpose O( Si~inJ him bit UDCODditiauJ

White. pi1chen; Cba1 MattoiD. outf~eldn;
and Tim Belk, first bucman, IO their minol"·leaaue camp.
MONTREAL EXPOS: SiJned Rondell White, ootfielder, to a fi~e- ycar con-

vidual honor."
Probably the quickest player in
the game, the 6-1 Iverson was a
' highlight clip waiting to happen this
season for the Hoyas, averaging
24.7 points, 3.8 rebounds, 5.0 assists
and 3;5 steals. He was selected the
Bis East(defensive player of the year
for tl)e sec'ond time and was an honorable mentio.n all-America last~son.
•·
"It's a great honor," he said. "It's ·
something I l\Jways wanted to be.".
The 6- 10 Duncan put up consi~­
tent numbers as the Demon Deacons
became the first team to repeat as
Atlantic Coasr Conference tournament champions in .14 years. A
third-team selection last year, he
averaged 19.6 points, 12.3 rebounds
and 3.8 blocks this season.
"I have worked hard this season
and there is some sense of fulfillment
in being named an all-Ametican, but
at this time I am more concerned
with our season and the NCAA tournament ahead," . he said. ''After
that's all over, I' II perhaps take time
to consider my personal honors."
Kittles, a 6-5 guard who averaged
20.5 points, 7.1 rebounds and 3.5
assists this season, became Villano-

..J-

Middleport Dept. Store

•

-J-. . . . ...

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
'

Your

..

.

,

'

�....•
•

•

,... 6 • The Dally Sentinel

, Wedne,day, March 13,1996

"
Wednesday, March 13,1998~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

9•

In the upcoming NCAA men's tourney,

Marquette, Tulsa, Mississippi State and GW seeking upsets
8y IIIKE LOPRESTI

. a.nnett News service

. KANSAS CITY, Mo. - On lhe
day the No. I Kenwcky WildcaiS
tvmed mona!. the NCAA issued
marc~ing orders for the tournament
that had long been considered theirs
to lose.
: 1be It-point severing of Kentucky's 27-game winning streak by
~ississippi State -!he first sign of
Wildcat vulnerability in monlhsput a breath of fresh air into March. ,
And just in time for Selection Sunday.
Among the messages from the
NCAA Division I committee and its
tournament bracket:
-Kentucky's loss did not deny
the 28-2 WildcaiS a No. I seed. They
are there in the Midwest, as expected. Joining them as top seeds are 31J: •MassachusetiS in the Bast, 30-2
Connecticut in the Southeast and 25~ Purdue in the West.
. : Purdue was an II th-hour replacement for Kansas, changing spots
'with the No. 2 seed Jayhawks after
Kansas lost to Iowa State on Sunday
in the Big Eight-tournament final. It
was a decision that iook 50 minutes
for the committee to hash over, with
Cincinnati also under consideration.
- A down year in the Atlantic
Coast Conference? The comm ittee
would beg to differ. Six ACC teams
made the field .
1\vo conferences with recent tournament woes- the Big Ten and Big
East- each put in five. The Big Ten
went l-61ast year. The Big East has
not had a ·Final Four team since
'seton Hall in 1989, and its last four
league to.urnament champions did
not survive the second round.
· - The Southeast is the deepest
region. with not only Connecticut,
Cincinnati, Georgia Tech and
defending champion UCLA at the
top, but also Kentucky-conqueror
Mississippi .State and dangerous
Temple, Indiana, Duke and Eastern
Michigan in the next wave.
-About the bubble. "There were
more teams in that category than
ever before." said Bob Frederick,
chairman of the committee. 1
. The last two teams into the field
were Arkansas and California.
Among the notable non-invitees:
Presno State (20-10) and old NCAA
Chum Jerry Tarkanian, 1995 Final
'Pour member Oklahoma State ( 17JO, but winner of seven of its last
10). Minnesota ( 18- 12, but 7-3 its
rast 10 games), College of
Charleston ·(24-3 was not good
enough) and Providence (neither
.was a 17- 11 record app Big East
pedigree).
A sure bet for unhappy camper
was Minnesota coach Clem Haskins,
who said only Saturday. "I think it
will be a crime if we don't get in
;here." And having his own athletic
director, McKinley Boston, on· the
committee did not even help.
• But Frederick came armed with
~tatistics for all the grieved.
Minnesota'! A 5-1 road record and
8-12 mark against teams rated in the
. ilip 100 by the NCAA computer.
: Fresno State'/ Beat Utah twice, but
5'-6 against top I 00 teams.
: Oklahoma State'! Weak noncon-.
ference schedule.
• Purdue instead of Cincinnati or
Kansas as No. I seed? The Boilermakers were 9-1 their last I 0 games,
t&amp;e Bearcats and Jayhawks each 73;

loaded, and heavy with fin~ and
brimstone. Temple's John Chaney
and Cincinnati's Bob Huggins could
meet in the second round. Mike
Krzyuwski has had a good March or
two. And Bob Knight is in the
neighborhood.
Connecticut did not get a break in
geography. The Huskies might have
to beat Cincinnati in the regional
final in Le~ington, 80 miles from the
Bearcat campus.
One other piece of bad news for
Southeast contenders. Had the SEC

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID

...
...'"..•

· . WASHINGTON (AP) - No longer feeling pressure to get married by
some magic age, Americans are taking their time before tying the knot
But they also are showing less patience with problem marriages as growing numbers unravel the marriage bond with divorce.
A new Census Bureau analysis found that in 1994 the typical bride was
24.5 years old and her groom was 26.7.
That's the oldest for both bride and groom since the bureau started to ask
about age at marriage in 1890, according to the study " Marital Status and
.Living ArrangemeniS: March 1994."
· In year• past, many people felt pressure to marry by some magic age,
'observed Stephanie Kenitzer of Odenton, Md., who wed in 1992 at age 27.
But that no longer seems to be the case.
"People aren't saying, 'I'm 20 or I'm 25, so I'm an old maid.' It's no
·longer looked
as a negative that you' re not married at a certain age,"
she ·
more
own and so

•

.,

.
does not want Arizona to get ~ :
shocked by Valparaiso in the first:';:
round, like it did in three of the past. ,.
four years by East Tennessee State ... - ~
and Santa Clara .. . and Miami of; ·•
Ohio. As for Syracuse and Jim Boe- ; :
heim, ~_is one of only two coaches ;
since the bracket went to 64 teams in !
1985 to be No. 2 seed and lo~ a · ;
first-round game.
"
_ 1be other, alas, is Olson.
' "'
Arizona got lucky in location, : ,
anyway, starting out in Tempe.
,l

Aaaoc~

Prees Writer

by iob Hoeflich

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS

are waiting longer. I waited longer ... there was no pressure."
But Carol J . De Vita,' a population expert at the independent Population
Reference Bureau, says that while "young adults are delaying entrance into
marriage ... very few will forgo it altogether."
In 1890 the median age to get hitched for the first time was 26.1 for men
and 22.0 for women, according to Census Bureau records.
This dechned gradually over the years, bottoming at 22.5 for men and
20.1 for women in 1956, before beginning to rise again as young people
increasingly pursued college and careers before marriage. Median indicates
that half were married by that age and half married later.
Increasing educational and employment opportunities for women have
~ontributed to their postponing marriage, De Vita said. For men, she added ,
a stagnation of wages in the 1970s and 1980s made the prospects for mar,
.
riage less affordable.
.
. Of course, postponing marriage means an increase, at any given time, in
the number of people who have never wed, and that is reflected in the Census study.
'

From 1970 to 1994 the number of Americans aged 18 and over who had
never married more than doubled, from 2 1.4 million to 44.2 million.
While they are slower to tie the knot, Americo..1s are proving faster 10
break it. From 1970 to 1994 the number currently divorced climbed from 4.3
million to 17.4 million.
"The high levels of divorce and remarriage in the United States today
suggest that Americans may be placing a high value on forming successful
marriages and may be less tolerant of marital problems than were earlier gen eratiOns," says De Vita.
The increasing economic independence of women -today helps ease the
financial pressure to remain in an unsatisfactory marriage. she added.
"The delay in first marriages and rise in divorce among adults are two of
the factors contributing to the growing proportion of children in one-parent
living situations, " said Arlene Saluter, author of the Census study.
"Children are considerably more likely to be living with only one parent
today than in 1970, " she observed .
Her analysis found that between 1970 and 1994the proportion of children

RED RIPE
STRAWBERRIES

49

. You might have noted in an Associated Press sporiS story that Mindy
PoPe of Gallipolis was named to
AP's Second Team All-Ohio in basketball. What the article didn't say is
that Mindy is the .daughter of the
. former Candace Bahr, Middleport,
now living in Gallipolis, and the
·granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cash
Bahr, Middleport. They're proud? Of
course .

Do any of you have photographs
'of the ill-fated Silver Bridge?
. If so, the Grand Chorale of the
.University of Rio Grande would
surely appreciate borrowing them.
The group does a song about the
·bridge and would like to show
slides, made from the photos you
loon, during the ·vocal presentation.
Maxine Owens of Pomeroy is
making the request on behalf of her
If you get hungry ne~t Tuesday,
·grandson, Andy Sigman, who is a
March
19, try the First Presbyterian
member of the vocal group at the
•
Church
in Syracuse. Beginning at II
university and is a senior at Rio
Grande majoring in music. If you a.m.. a spaghetti dinner will be
can help please call Maxine- at 992- served to the public. Dinners will be
$3.50 for adults and $2 for children.
3251.
Dessert is extra but after the big
Jeremy Evans of Bloomington, pasta dinner you might not want
Ill., is turning into quite a swimmer. dessert anyway.
Jeremy is the son of Donna and
Areil't the musical television
1\eith Evans and the grandson of
Betty and Vernon Evans of Pomeroy shows that the public television staand Sara Smith and the late Glenn tions haul out at this fund-drive time
S"mith. Bloomitigton, formeiiy of · of the year great? One program
recently featured a whole batch of
Pomeroy.
Only a sophomore at the Normal name singers among which were
Community High School in Bloom· Rosemary. Clooney, Palli Page, and
ington, Jeremy was the subject of a Teresa Brewer.
''My," I thought as I wa!ched the
feature article in the newspaper
there as a result. of his swimming program. "these people have really
h~ld up well with the years."
accomplishments.
At the end of the program I just
Evans' state qualifying effort dur.·
irg a recent sectional meet was happened to catch a note that stated
48.44 seconds in the 100-yard the program had been originally on
freestyle and that destroyed the 14 television in 1981 so actually I was
year old school record of 49.30. seeing how the performers looked
Jeremy also carne painfully close to 15 years ago. Why do I have the
the all-time city record of 48.40 set feeling that in 1996 they really don't
look that well preserved?
in 1984.
So much for small print. Do keep
Jeremy preceded that perfor·
mance with a near school record of smiling.

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the 18 year old
mark of
Evans is improving every yeai and
his ~wimming coach says that is due
to 'the fact that he doesn't take any
shortcuts in training and "really
invests himself in the season."
'Evans is the state top seeded
sophomore in Illinois in the I 00
freestyle and is the second sophomore in the state in the 50.
By the way in case you think it all
comes easy, lei me advise you that
Je'remy gelS up at 4 a.m., every day
to.start practice at 5.

backs." However, Russ and the
Gospel Tones are' being revived.
It's been 12 years or so since Russ
and the Gospel Tones were performing in many churches and other
spots. around the county with their
gospel music. However, R.uss and
his wife, Juanita, decided to revive
the vocal group and are now taking
bookings. Rounding out the group of
fi,ve singers making up the group are
members of the Coe Family of
Coolville.
. If you need music al your church
just give Russ a call at 985-4192.

FIRST OF THE SEASON

ROU.ND STEAKS

Tbe Community Calendar is
p11bllsbed as a free service to non·
,PMit KfOUps wishing to announce
meeting and· special events. The
calendar is not designed to prolllOte sales or fund raisen of any
type. Items are printed as .space
permits and cannot be guaniuteed
to run a specific number of days.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- United Fund for
Meigs County annual meeting, 6 to
7 ; p.m . ·Senior Ci!izcns Center,
dessert buffet to be served. Public
invited. Allocations will be
announced.

.

: POMEROY -- Meigs Local
BQard of Education regular meeting
Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the district
ofi'ice in the Pomeroy Municipal
Building.

24 packs

s

99

: MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Liierary Club. 2 P·'ll Wednesday,
h&lt;!me of Mrs. Dewey Horton. Mrs.
Roy • Holter to review "The .
Carousel" by Belva Plains. Program
oflrish music to be presented.

----------~P----

~~·~------------­
Must be 18 or older to enter.
Good only at Foodland.

; POMEROY -- Meigs High
SChool, class of 1971 , 25th reunion
meeting. 7 p.m. McCiures Restaura!lt. Middleport.
THURSDAY
:POMEROY -- Big Bend Stemwheel Festival Committee meeting
'fliursday, 7:30 p.m. at the -Carpen..

'ters' Hall in

Pome~oy.

POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
Beta meeting Thursday, 6 p.m. at the
Episcopal Parish House in Pomeroy.
'JYPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 Thursday,
ref"'shments at 6:30p.m .. meeting at
7:30p.m .
POMEROY
Community
Lenten Services. Pomeroy United
Meth¢ist Church, 7:30p.m. Thursday, the .Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz
speaking. Sponsored by the Meigs
Ministerial Association.

Tap into the possibilities of cooking with beer
imporiS priced at $4.49 to $19.99.
So how do you know if a dish needs a Wolf Pack wheat beer, a Cave
Reno Gazette-Journal
. Talk to someone like Candy Schermerhorn -who is. a,.whiz at cook- Creek chili beer, or a Pyramid beer flavored with apricot? Or will a plain
old Corona do?
'
·
ing with beer ~ and suiidenly you see a world of possi6llities.
·,
Schermerhorn's advice boils down to one word: E~periment.
Of course': you know traditional ways of cooking with beer. Such .as
"It's anybody's guess as-to what beer you use. Each one will lend its
making a batter with it or throwing it into a hearty meat stew.
own
personality to the dish," she says.
But Schermerhorn, an Arizona author who's written a book about beer
cuisine, ("Great American Beer Cookbook" Brewers, $24.95), taps into
Cooking with beer, it turns out, is a lot like cooking with wine. You use
more ideas. She's not timid .about using beer in omelets, in minestrone white wine when creating a light dish and red wine for a robust one. With
beer, it's similar.
soup, in salad dressing. in salsa. even in chocolate truffles.
"If you're doing chicken with lemon and herbs, don 't use a heavy stout.
"People think that cooking with beer is boiling their ribs in beer and
that's it," says Schermerhorn, who also conducts beer-cooking seminars. A Pilsner or pale ale would be a better choice," says Schermerhorn. "If
you're doing a heavy roast, lean toward the heavier beers.
"But beer is a very versatile ingredient."
But how do you know which beer is what?
Cooking with beer doesn't mean you drown a dish in. say, "Pete's
We could launch into a discussion of beer styles at this point. But that's
Wicked Ale." It's a whole lot subder !han that.
"The amount of beer you use doesn't qualify it as beer cooking," she a subject more appropriate for the brewer than the cook.
For cooking purposes, think of beer belonging to three categories:
says. "It's the beer's flavor and essence in a dish that does."
Take for example, that omelet. Instead of adding milk to your eggs, use Those that are light-bodied, those that are medium-bodied and those that
beer. Schermerhorn 's formula: 2 teaspoons of beer, say a Pilsner, Ameri- are full-to-heavy-bodied.
- Light-bodied: classic Pilsners, German and American lagers. pale ale
can light lager or chili beer, to 2 eggs.
"Beer adds p wonderful flavor to eggs ;-- but people don't think of the and wheat beers. E•amples: Heineken, St. Pauli Girl, Corona, Henry
two together," says Schermerhorn with so much enthusiasm you want to · Winehard.
- Medium-bodied: Vienna-style beers, Oktoberfcst or Marzen beers.
fly into the kitchen and try it.
But there's an intimi1ating side to cooking with beer ... starting with the Many microbrewery beers also fall in this style. Examples: Spaten,
choices of brands - Coors and Bud Light have LOTS of company these Paulaer, DosEquis. Samuel Smith.
-Fuller to heavier-bodied: Scottish ale, stout, porter, bock. and rauchbier
days.
Any market -.yorth its suds carries more !han domestic beer. A well- (a beer with a smoky flavor). Examples: Anchor Porter, Guinness, EKU
Kulminator, Paulaner Salvator.
stocked market offers popular imporiS as well as microbrews.
GUidelines are helpful. Bllt there·s nothin g like jumpmg 10 and tasting
For instance, a('Ben's Discount Liquors in Reno, Nev., the beer selection
for yourself.
goes on and on .
"Take every opportunity there is to add flavor - start playing with
The store has 4091abels. In addition to 126 domestic beers, it sells 115
microbrews, ranging in price from $4.99 to $11.99 a six pack, and 168 beer," says Schermerhorn.

By SANDRA MACIAS

Cooking with beer? Here are some recipes to practice with
By SANDRA MACIAS

one-fourth cup porter, bock,
Reno Gazette-Journal ·
Oktoberfest or other full-flavored
Ne•t time you cook, throw a beer
splash of beer into the pot . Suds are
Heat oil on medium heat in a
a natur"/ in everythi ng from choco- large saute pan. Add onions, salt,
late ca~ to omelets.
pepper and cayenne, stimng conTo get you thinking about beer stantly.
.
. POMEROY -- Rock Springs cuisine. we offer' four recipes from
Continue cooking slowly until
Grange. Thursday. 7:30p.m.- at the Candy
Schermerhorn's book, onions reach a golden caramel color,
grange hall. Program and refresh- "Great American Beer Cookbook " stirring occasionally. (This will take
ments.
(Brewers Publications. $24.95). about 20 minutes.)
They are arranged in order of their
Pour in the beer and cook an
POMEROY -- Pomeroy Mer- degree of difficulty.
additiona13 to 4 minutes. Serve hot.
chants Association meeting ThursThe first. beer-glazed onion s, is
Serves 2 as a side dish.
day, 1 ' p.m . at Pomeroy Council not only simple but quick - ·figure Nutritional analysi s: Calories: 333
Chambers to discuss parking pro- no more than half an hour. These per serving: dietary fiber: 4.12
posals. ·~·
guys are great alongside steak, grams : fat: 27.6 grams: cholesterol:
s~sages, or other ~rilled me_
ats. 0 milligrams: sodium : 540 milRACINE -- The Racine Board of 11\ey,' d also ·go great m a sandwtch, hgrams: 74 percent of calones from
Public Affairs will meet Thutsday. in. tacos or as a piiza topping.
fat.
·7:30p.m. at the annex.
BEER·GLAZED ONIONS
MARVELOUS CORN MUFFINS
4 tablespoons olive oil or butter
I cup yellow cornmeal
POMEROY -- Friday scramble
4 large onions, sliced a quarterI and one-fourth cups unbleached
will be held at the Meigs County inch thick
flour .
Golf Course, 9:30a.m. Friday.
one-half cup sugar (more or less
one-half teaspoon each ~alt and
to taste)
pepper
Pinch of cayenne (optional)
2 tebspoons baking powder. sift-

ed
one-half teaspoon baking soda.
sifted
one-half teaspoon salt
I egg
one-fourth cup oil
I cup creamed corn or fresh corn
pureed in a blender
one-half cup Pilsner or pale ale
(see note)
one-fouith cup dry powdered
milk
Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
Generously grease 12 standard muffin cups.
Combine cornmeal, flour. sugar.
baking powder, soda and salt in a
l~rge bo':"l and wh1sk until combmcd. M1x egg, ml, com, beer and
powdered milk in another bowl and
beat until thoroughly combined. Add
wet ingredients to the dry ingredients, stirring just until moistened.
Spoon into prepared muffin pan,
filling three-quarters full. Bake until
muffins are springy to the touch and
golden brown, about 20 minutes.

-

Rutland Garden Club plans therapy program at developmental center
\

·' ' .pnat UCLA. '
·
'!:t.
p....: the braeket · is

.01

'

Flnt-round feature: Iowa vs .
George Washington. Iowa coach
Tom Davis i~ 8.0 in first-round
gam'es. No. 9 won' t come easily.
George Washington is the ·1 on the
loss side of MassachusetiS' record.
Batde plans: Four big-time
coaches are at the top, but the tournament has not always been kind to
them.
Gene Keady waniS to get Purdue
to his first Final Four, Roy Williams
wants to get Kansas to his first
national championship. Lute Olson

.-••·...

.Beat of the Bend ...

..

·I

ended earlier Sunday, Mississippi
But No. II seed Thlsa has left a lot
State would-have been n~warded for
of misery in its wake, storming to the
beating Kentucky 'with a No.4 seed
regional e~h of the past two ye~n.
somewhere else. But the committee
Battle plaas: On paper, the weakhad no time to adjust, so the Bullest region. Say thank you, Kentucky.
dogs stayed hen~ as a heavyweight · Sunday·' s stumble notwithstanding,
No. 5:
Rick Pitino's bunch will be hard to
Midwest
stop. Upset artist Wisconsin-Green
Big dop: No. I Kentucky. No. 2 Bay could be 811 intriguing second
Wake Forest. No. 3 Villanova. No. 4
round diversion for the·WildcaiS.
Utah.
West
Fint-round feature: Louisville
Big clop: No. I Purdue. No. 2
vs. 1\tlsa. Denny Crum has his CarKansas . No. 3 Arizona. No. 4 Syradinals flying again as a No. ·6 seed. cuse.

.

Americans slower to get hitched Census report shows.

,a

,

-*-*-

. Here is a look at each of the four
f'tgions.
East
: Big dogs: No. I Massachusetts.
~o . 2 Georgetown. No. 3 Texas
tech. No. 4 Marquette.
· First-round feature: Penn State
yg; Arkansas. How can the Nittany
Cions, losers of si~ of their last seve)l road games, prove their quality
away from Happy Valley? Bring on
the Hogs; even if their _lineup is totally new from last year's national runntr-up.
• Battle plans: Te~as Tech has
won 21 in a row, but its Southwest
Conference heritage leaves it suspt:ct.1Tech should get its chance to
shine in the second round when it
will likely be trying to deny Dean
Smil~ and st~ggli ng North Carotin~ a r,gional btd for only the seeond
time lin-16 years.1
: fast-closing ~arquette is a true
t(ouble-maker here. But it is hard not
''! anticipate an eve~tual Massachu5Cits-Georgetown showdown. Massai:husetts will see plenty of friendly
ft~;~s the first two rounds in Providence, R.I. Georgetown :s firstreunder could be li~ely against Mississippi Valley, whose Marcus Mann
~.28 rebounds and 27 points in the
.. cvnference championship game.
, .
Southeast
• ; 81&amp; clop: No. I Connecticut. No.
. :z: Cincinnati. No. 3 Georgia Tech.
No.4 UCLA.
; lllnt·round feature: Duke vs.
~Michigan. An old giant looki91 for new glory against a Cin"
ilerella lhrCat that gave 'Jl:xas Tech
IIi only loss, by 16 ·points. Another
~ one has retiring Princeton
eo.i:fl Pete ~I trying for one last

......:l.
·r-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohlo

:Plans for a therapy program at the Atkins had attended tlie arranging
Gallipolis Developmental Center to clinic held recently at Athens.
: Mrs. Denison read "The Legend
00: held this spring were made _when
the Raindtop" for devotions. Roll
of
the Rutland Garden Club met
·
call
was answered with "Something·
· recently at the home of Marcia
Telling Me It's Spring."
Denison.
A letter was read from the outgo' It was noted that sunshine plates
ing
regional director. The traveling
had been delivered to the residents
prize
was furnished by Mrs. Atkins
. of' the Meigs Couhty Infirmary for
and
won
by Clotine Blackwood. EVIl
Valentine's Day. and that Mrs.
•

Robinson and Neva Nicholson won
Clotine Blackwood article on
the door prizes.
"Birds in the Winter Garden" from
For the program. Margaret Weber Aower Garden. She said !hat the
had an article on "Gardening Aloft" majority of birds that visit winter
using material fro111 Horticulture gardens are quite small like chickmagazine. She said that when the adees that weigh less than an ounce.
window sill is full, it is time to move They maintain a high body temperaupw~d. It's best to look for a plant ture and demand lots of food._
that ts compact and capable of
M~one Rice_ ga~e an arttcle on
branchmg out.
the artichoke whtch can be gown on

the window sill. She talked about
pinching out the _top of the plant
from time to time so that it will grow
into a bush tree plant.
Hint for the day was to cut
branches from puss~ willows and
f~rsytl)ta and ~owenng quince and
dt~play them m a large vase filled
wtth water.

Note: The liquid content of corn will
affect the amount of beer needed.
Use the amount called for: if the batter seems dry, add an additional 2
tablespoons beer: if too moist, add
flour.

MTD
LAWN

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3.5 HP· 3.7 H.P. • 4.0 HP

PICKENS
HARDWARE
.IIASOII; W. Yl.
304·77~·5SU.

�.
,.
Wednescltly, Mlrch 13,1.

Pomeroy _.Middleport, Ohio

Pllge 8 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

.Girls with low rise jean get no rise f~om from teenage boy~!
Ann ·
Landers
1995, 1M A•JC..

, . . . , _ ... C..·
IIDfl

Sydi:::IR.

Dear Ann Landers: I am a I 7year-old boy. I am not a prude or a
nerd, but one lhing some girls are
doing lately really bolhers me. They
are wearing low-rise jeans. with
high-rise underwear so that the
waistband of !heir panties is visible.
I have nolhing against low-rise
jeans, but showing off underwear is
gross. If they are trying to be sexy,

they are failing. I have asked several
girls about lhis, and they all agreed
that .it's ·disgusting. I also asked
some guys if they were turned on by
seeing a girl's underwear, and even
the crudest dude I know said it didn't do a thing for him.
Not a lot of girls do this, Ann, but
enough do it to make me wonder if
they are trying to make some sort of
fashion statement. Please print this
letter, and let lhe girls know it's not
just lheir parents who are bothered.
Their peers don 't want to see their
underwear either. -- R.M .. Long
Beach, Calif.
Dear R.M.: Wow, times have certainly changed! I remember when a

girl was embarrassed if her slip
showed, and now they are showing
off their underwear. You've made
the point that it's gross, and I agree.
Bag it, girls.
Dear Ann Landers: You missed
an important part of the message
when you advised "Silently Weeping in Kansas" to remember the
good things about her SO-year marriage to "Wilmer." After he died,
she found condoms in his wallet and
pornography in his desk drawers.
Her husband probably had 50
years of hearing, "Not tonight,
honey, I have a headache. The kids
might hear. It's too late . It's too
eatly. It's too dark. It's too light. I

. ,.'

grounds in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Love offerings will be taken at the
sings prior to the May .event so that
admission' to that can be free, it was.
reponed. Several national known
groups including "The Isaacs,"
"Primitive Quartet," "Billy Fields"
and the "Melody Trio" will be among
the 30 groups featured from West VU"ginia, Kentuc~y. Virginia, Ohio,.
North Carolina and Indiana, at the
May Jubilee.

Harrisonville news notes
By Hazel Stanley
Mrs. Juanita Bowles is recovering
at her home f(lllowing major surgery
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mrs. Katherine Weaver, who had
a heart attack, was taken to Grant
Hospital, Columbus, for treatment,
Feb. 25.
Mildred Phillips visited her
daughter, Marilyn Will of Lancaster,
who accompanied her to Riverside
Hospital, Columbus, for medical
treatment.

ASK ANNE • NAN

By ANNE B. ADAMS end
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My
husband likes to wear suspenders
with some of his trousers. So often
the buckle part breaks or will not stay
fastened. I have been unable to find
replacennents for these in stores. The
elastic part of the suspender is good,
so I hate to throw -them out. I am
wohdering if there is a company or
catalog where I could order new
buckles.
I've also been trying to find fab-

I
\

~o

· •
/
'

Ch•rleadera receiving apec:lal I'IICognltlon at Sunday'a &amp;at·
ern boya' basketball banquet - e Mellau Dempsey (left), who
was named Outstanding Cheerleader, and Kelll Bailey, who was
named Moat Creative. Other award winners who were abeent
Included, VIcki Adims (Moat Improved) and Chrlatl Milia (Moat
Spirited).
.
.

ric to make diapers. I saw an article
in the paper several years ago stating
thar it can be ordered by the yard -not the flannel, but the fabric used in
the ones that are ready-made. We will
·be having .a new grandchild in a few
months and would like to make
some as they may be cheaper than
ready-made.
TWILA
LENSTROM, Comstock, Neb. ,
DEAR TWILA: Good news! We
found ~uspender parts in the Gohn
Bros. catalog. This company specializes in Amish and plain clothing.
They have a selection of suspender
clips. The 3/4-inch wide and l-inch
wide clips cost 40 cents each. The 11/2-inch wide clips cost 50 cents
each. There is a shipping charge,
based on the item's destination.
To Order, write: Gohn Bros., Box
Ill , Middlebury, IN 46540. To
receive a catalog, sen~ $1 and a selfaddressed, stamped, business-size
envelope to the same address.

Birdseye diaper fabric, which is
36 inches wide, is avliilable from
Newark Dressmaker Supply. It costs
$3.25 a yard and is item Ml40. To
order or to receive a free catalog, ~all
1-800-736-6783.
STUMPED REPoRT: Dear Readers, Our "Stumped" box is over flowing. We're counting on you to help us
find solutions.
·
HOW.TO TAP DANCE VIDEO - "Pat in Colorado" is longing to
learn to tap dance in the privacy of
her home. Does anyone know of such
a videotape?
MEN'S VELOUR JOGGING OR .
LEISURE SUITS -- Audrey Lee of
Glendora, Calif., is looking for these.
A couple of years ago they were featured in slews of catalogs, and now
we can't find a single one.
BLANKET SLEEPERS FOR
GROWN-UPS-- Erma Davis of Preston, Md., says Sears used to carry
these, but now they don't. Her hus-

gency Management Agency. The toll- Agency administered program Is
. free teleregistration number to call 10 funded with 75 percent federal mon.apply is 8()().462-9029.
ey and 25 percent state funds.
Anyone from the 12 declared
More than $1 .1 million in housing
grants to cover rental assistance, counties who has suffered damage
essential home repair and individual from the floods and has uninsured
mitigation measures has been dis- damages to their home or business is
tributed by FEMA to date. Iridividual ·encouraged to call the toll- free numand family grants totaling $336,000 ber. The 12 counties.are Adams, Bel·Brown,
Clermont,
have been made by Ohio to cover mont,
Columbiana,
Hamilton,
Jefferson,
serious disaster-related needs not
met by other programs. This state of Lawrence Meigs, Monroe, Scioto
·
Ohio Emergency Management and Washington.
'

GARYR.

DILL

more.

1-900-n~1oo

Ext. 7830 $2.99 per

!

NEFF REMODEUNG
SERVICE
HOiiH ...,....

Rantodellng
RtiMdtHng
Roam Adclltlone
Siding, Raollng, Plllloe

llenoMbla

w..,...
11112-44011

IMUctaw ·Experienced
c.ett
Neff

.,

..

For ..... Eatlrnet~

.~..
_ .- - - . . -.. -. -.. . ..;;;"'.....
;:; _,J

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge Sports

Entertainment Unell
1-eoo-ns-0100 ·

Ext. 6057

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
· Touch Tone Phone
Required

PulillcNotlce

:J 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 1111111111111 L.:

-

....

I • p • rate

and
·Independent bid a will be
NCilftd with ,.apact to tiM
lneu,.not required to be
pwaheud •• provldlld lay
the
apeolltae~lona·.
Specification a
and
tnetruatlona to bldcla,. mey
be olltlllnlld at t1ta otnoe of
the
Melga county
Commlealonere, Pome,.y,
Ohio. ,
Said
Board
of
Commllllonere ruervea
th • rlght t o wa 1ve
formalftlea and to eccept
and/or rwJect perle ar all or
any andlill bide.
'
•

AARON MAXSON

Third birthday
celebrated ·

llhltl• Coun&amp;y

Commllllonen
"" 1'" 20: 2TC
,., .., '
.

.

PUILIC NOTICE
,...._on 01
flltrlela Calawey wa the
laard al Truateee ot
.Oreqe Jownelllp llllge
~~the

~llt'f,

Ofllo 11'8 IOUpiJ18
.,piiOIIIcilleiOr tile polltlon
~

el Townehl' Clark.

NIUIIIM Muet ~ . NDetved
IIV I trueiM by 1:30 p.m.
~11,111ML

•r_.

.

:

.

home~.

Retta.'1llble Alltl

'
''

•• •
•
' '•

•

· 992-5042 or 742·1120
Polly C!l' Ch~-

'

..._ .

~

..:

. '

I

,I

.

ThelamH~ ~Brian

'

Keams II (Grendaon of
Carroll •• Eva T~)

- wlah to. express their
thankl to all who aent
prayer, cards, money
and gilts. 1"- people
Include: P.V.H., . St.
: Mary's, Holzer, James
Cancer Center, a long
' list of churches,
: employees
from
American Alloys, and
. several organizations
·a nd Individuals and
family membere. ~
: contlnua to pray for B. W.
; and his famlllea during
• hie Illness.
.
'

..

Gun Shoot
S.A.L ~ladles ·
Feeney Bennett l,.egion Fann
Bailei,Aun Ad.
Sunday Maret\' 17, 1:00 prn till ?

••
· Middleport Youth League
Sign-up Sat March 18th 1-5 prn
Middleport Council Rm.
Sign-up fee $10.00 after
Saturday $25.00

H&amp;..
SAWMILL
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Mldclepon, Ohio 45780

.

.__ _ _......_ _-. ...

IOIERIIISSELL
COISTIUCnOI
•JIIew Homes
•Garages
•Com'plete
Remodeling
Stop • Compare
FREE ·ESnMATES

•

I •

ao-•

.

.

'

IRH1dentlal
and commercteO

Niasan Heedquarten

IWV010212

Lowest Prices
t8Z7 Murdocb An,

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

.

I

lip 11-'Every 15 Jilin.
No Wilting cinct

menu.
1-ecio-77H100

' id.7123

llullllle IS.,...
Ser-u.tlt 141 8434

:111/1 ....

utterly Nifty
' Rose Werry is

:

'

r

I

..

"50~'

Happy.Btrthday
'
· Gue38 llll•nl

848-2512

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt •Sand

IGIU • IGIICI• IOIICI

•P-':,,·

MANLEY'S ,:~,,,
•"'• RECYCLING CENTER
.. '"'"

Middleport, Ohio

(Special Price on Aluminum Cans
' from March 1 thru 29)
Bring In minimum of 50 Jbl. of lllumlnum oana to ·
Dnlwlng will be held on March 29th.

992-3894

~.:Ut: ~)j Tr=~=~nt
~IU(_~~
.
.

·JEFF'S CARRY our
·:

Dirt Taw

111

. sn••r, iladil7..

·s•.;•i .ll!,.
Stwt3:30 .... ·.

,·, Alhllllf. . . . . .

::; ... 20illtlu

-, Wfw
.letals
'
' '

' . 99l·3756

Equlp•ent

Diltributed by

lRI•nAJE Willi SYSTEMS, INC.

Rllclne American
. Legiolll602
Sun.Nialda
Laeltey Ball $300.00
with 21 playen or
more Rdles $5.00 ea.
.week. Pay ICCOI'CiliiJ ID
lbe Number of playen

life

-

T lud ill Ia our '-rtl
todly..
.

AU we have~
. cllerldled IMIDCkies .
.

~·

.A.d-JOIII!IIway.
It bl'l)ke our~ to
!ole you
Bat you did DOt tD ·

12 SNtlona For
$20.00

18 SNII!)ol For
$25.00
Open,8:00 to 3:00
4:30 to 10:00 P.M.
Peta Dlltne
Hendrlclca
'
Phone: 114-ttZ-2487

0••--=

..........

s.dly . . . .

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Waking Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum'Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps ·StaitS, Ralings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
ltema, Planter hangetS, TreDises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

"No Job Too Large or TOo Small"
We wiH work whhln your budget .
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
108 Poma
Street
Mason, WV

I

YOUMG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•Room AddiUona
..... 011'111181

•EIIclrlcll • Plumbing

oflootlng
.
ofnleilor " lbWior
PllnUng
AIIO Concrete Worlt ·
(FREE EmMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
11112-ta15
Ponwoy, Ohio
.

Houae Sltea end
Utllltlee

of
Work
-All 992-3838
Earth

Howard L Wrtteael

ROOFI~G

NEW-REPAIR
'

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2188
5116194 TFN

.....

1/Min

.LINDA'S
PAINTING
lmiiOI-ImiiOI
FREE ESnMATES
Yeke•••pitl8 ... of

FREE
Pick-up discarded
washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materi"'ls.

~ llntJill
FREE ES Tif.I,UES

•20e.

Princtll Video New ShiPIMnl Of
Adult VIdeo's 814· ••&amp;· 2501,
I 380 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis,
Open Sunday's New Noon · 10

P.M.
Reduce your weight-Tatce ·New
Shape Diet Plan" and Hydrex
Water Pilla. Available Fruth

OPAL rai:Hta and E-Vap diuretic.

Av!Oiable Fruth Pharmacy, loliddlepo&lt;L
33 Likes Dancing, Movies,
Evenings AI Home. Seeka
With Same Interests,
: .
Box 533, .Gallipolis ,

•5e31.

30 Announcements

nn·nasOiam

11

S Hi r~G L ES

• SiD ING • \'II NDOWS
BUlL T UPS RUBBER ROOFING
PO L E GA R!VS A'IIJ GA RAC&gt;ES
11ESID ENTIA L &amp; COW,IE RCI AL

puppy, soon to be

puppy, cute, cuddly, good

with kids, 814·992·7557.

2H Ye~ r s Expcr&gt;c ncc

PHONE

HliJil-1'1- H /i

6 1.J 245·0-1 37

ftll CO. BICYCLIII
Announces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March
Do your .part for our environment. '!itrlng ua your
l!um. CIIM llld other rwcycablw IIICI rwgllter to
win 1 hlndcl'llled aolld walnut llllci c:edlr lined
blanket cheat valued It $800 to be given away
March 30th. Trl. Co. Recycling open 7 deya a - k
to aerve you.
N Mon.-Frl; 9-3 Sit. 6 aun. l.oclted comer of
stAt 143 a 7, Pomeroy, 614-ttZ-5114.

Free Kittens, 2 Males, 2 Females,
Free To Good Home : BeaQI&amp; Mix
Puppies, Lovable, 3 Females, 1 .
~:~ ~od With Children, 614 -

9

t.tixed Beagle puppy, good w/
children. inside pel only. 304-675-

4650.

•

Oldl upright p iano to giveaway,

cal814;992·7249.
Pltr1 Collie pUps, 3 rnonlh old. le·

. . .. 614·1192&lt;56«.
SmaU white female dog, very pr01·

ly. 304-675-5419.

To good home - Chow/Lab mi x
born 9f95, good watch dog, good
with children. call614-985-9820.

Mon.-Sat. 1G-6

STAR
GUITAR
LesSNsfor

Plaao, .Dr•••
&amp; , ••••,

&amp;.liars •79 &amp; u,

Also Accessories

Zenith Color T.V. Console Model
Swivel Base, Works Sometimes
Mornings, 614-2•5-1 108.
'

60 Lost and Found
Found : Puppy Tan With Black
Face . Vicinity : 850, Close To

Rodney, Friend~. 614·245·5540.
Found: set of seven car keys, Super Sundry vicinity, cal l to 10 .
614·992·2964
Los t : Black ""d Tan Rotweiler
Male. Answers To Cody, Lost In

The Vicinity Of Graham School
Road , 614 ·387· 7244 After 3:00
~M . Or 614-446-8358.

70

Yard Sale

80

Public Ssle
and Auction

614·367.0302

New At lntles lleetronies

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

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

Recine, Oh. 45771

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hra.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay linea, underground bores•
For Free estimate call949·2512

uru

-

Need Direction?
Love
Bualneaa .·
Family Mattera
Allow Your
Personal Paychlc to
AaalatYou

1-900-988 8&amp;00
Ext.1277
$3.99 Per Minute
Muat be 18 'lrl·
Touch-Tone RaquiNCI
Serv-u 1818) 841 8434

614-915-4110

AIIIIICIMble Altll
985-4198

Plck....... ded

35Yeraexp.

Bogoa Auction Service, 6114-44677~ .

Mt Allo AuctiQn . Every friday
}pm. Evory Satu""" 6pm R1 2·33

"Crouroads". Groceries, new
.merchandise. Ed Frazier 930.

Riclc Pearion Auction Company
lull time at.~clionear. complete

fREE
F1'18Eitlmat11

auction

DELUXE
Finders of lwei to
find auto perta.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

..

SeiV·lJ

614-992·7643

service.

licensed

•66.0hk&gt; &amp; · West Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 31)4. 773-5«7.

90

Wanttd to Buy

Antiques, collectables, eatatta

Riverine Antiques, Rusa Moore'
-

(619) 645-8434

.

6Weel&lt;s01d, 614-446-4999.

Dresses
Levi's

~ew Homes • VInYl ~ldlng Ne!i
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and.RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES

--

Beagle mix puppies to giveaway,
81•-985-4318.

A$babe11e'$
Pro111

ext. 5488
$3.99 per min .
· Must be 18yrs.
...
Touch- tone phone
required.

....

Giveaway

Mixed breed female dog, tan and
black, shots up to date, friendly,
81··1192-57:l8.

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING CO.

UVIIIfiBICU
112&amp;'1 mo.

40

between 8 a.m.·B p.m.
Mon.· Sat.

Sillier Bridge. Plaza
614 446 4462

· 1-900-255-0300

-'"':!V:.:r=tl

Personals

Gu11 &amp; Gala Your Area, 1· 8009110·3737 Ext.
$2.9t !Min,
18. Sorv.U. 8111-645-843o4.

Call 992-4025

MIKE MARCUM

.....1......... ..
for ,,...

Live Psychics
1 on 1

~:z:l
,...

Services

urFw;r 11

SERVIC E

;

Slbllap;

llelllll, b

005

8 week old mixed Border Collies,
good home only, 614-742·3307.

James E. Diddle

WI-. God c:decl yo,.

.._.

Trucking.
Umeatone
Bulldozing end
Backhoe

311/1 mo.

For'put Ot•,...)

.

Howard hcavatin

Kinds

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

....

willl;.

ANN O UN CEr ~ E NTS

31111 mo.

l' li OFESSIO NAL
2I2Wmt

TDS, Mineral Hllrdneaa, lnin, PH.
,.._celt ll.oifl5./lati82-M72 ar 1~13
· to Mt your frM water analyala.
. ,_,

It's a to~
without you '
ADd ud hall been tlae
way
For life and IMDe are
aottlleiiDle ,.
Slace you were Clllled
away.
.
Words amnot- the

614-992·3470

Chester, Ohio

21513 BASHAM AD.
Rllclr)e, Ohio 45771
841-3013 Phone
84t-2018FAX

The water trealment company cordially invites you to
part~ In a free, no obligation, comprehensiVe water
nnalysla. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:

willl!old llletiJ ,..

Limestone,
Gravel, San~,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

985 4422

Horoecope.

Jn lAvin&amp; Memory
SHARON (~WNEE)
INGELS POOLER
Wbo God Cilled Home
lYeanA.,
nme·Clll never take
IWI)' the memories
or the past of you the
oae we lcpvecp,~
mucb.OIIrbellrtl ·

HAULING

le L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

FANS
Let your fingers do the
walking to the sports
llr)e. finance S1ocka,
NHL; tiiBA, NFL. Point
Spreads, Dally

I -900-776-0700
Ext. 3685
$2.99 per min. Must be
18 . Serv-U

.

REDUCE: O..tn oH lat last Tako

8.E. ONo I Weet VIrginia
1-100-872-Ril
448 9418

Toll

.

Pharmacy.

lllrvl"'

503 MID Slreet

SUI per min.

742-2803

WV ZlllOl

.,. flit;.... ...... to~ It up

51•

LYapPkk
$parts flied
Ill

lllllntenance
-odd jolla per request
No Lllwn Too l.vge
or Too Sm•ll
·Pill! AhNd, Call Today!

PAIIIIISiuaG NISSAN INC.

949·2044
949-2038

'

..uc:n..

!~ng

F1'18EIHmetea

-~73
,,,.

. '·.

By onlar or lila
Bolrd of T N Benjlmln Upton, PrNiclent

C"'

•TrM Trimming

•Shrubbery

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Public
__
;...;.;;;.;,..nu;.;;;;.....,..;;.;;.;;...,._· . ;

a-.......

LIIIY'I
Lift CUI

Hell Pumpe,

IE

Danny &amp; Peggy Brtcldee
614-7~~·2183

New

~,:,::::

Manufactured Housing

f.Js11W8

WICKS
.

....__;...;..;;;.;..;;.;.;;;.~;......-------1 L....J!!!l!

lnetock

·:= ====

FNCI Hollman, p,...ldlnl credft ..... to 10 ,.._r oi :
....... County the bid. A letter of oNCIIf :
. Commla11c-. may be ,._... only 'bw •
Roger Rlll:ltla, vtce (3) ·13, 20; 2Tc;
the - · Upon etQrl=· :
Prtaldent
Into. • .cont~aot with
•
J - w.t.on
- . the oonlntclol ·:
131 13, 20, 27; 3TC
Public Notice
than fila a bond for tltf '
- n t of the conllwl, anct :
·
· '
the oiMok 011 latter of oNdlt •
Pul;lllc Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE TO
will then be returned to th~ :
s.7:c::!~bld~ lor a u e c a • al u I .
• n d1 ·
unaucceaalul bldd.,. when' .:
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
the lowlntl component• the i:oub..1'1uxeeuted, or' •
of the ..lddl"""' llunlctpel
· ;~ •'
HEARING 11
Pool Ranovetl(!na will be
''2) A bon d to r , .. lu1t
Tile Melge county recatwd by lila vtllega ot emount of thla bid. Th• '
Commtaalonera Intend• to
o - wilt rlllltln the llond
apply to the ·Ohio llkldtport, ·ottloa ot tha of the auccenlulllldcler but
Depertnlent at Development lleyor, VIHa.. Hall, 237 the owner will Nlum the
1011 the Ohta small em.. Race Straat, Mlddlapart, bond of aach unauceuatul
4571!1 until 4 ' 00 p.m. bidder IIIIer a c01itute1 '"-•
CDBG FY' 11 Communi"'.
Dhlo
·• an
March 31, 1"' and then ....__
-'""""
,...,
Hauetng Improvement 11 . eald otttca will be -..n
Prograni/ HDME Progrem
Attention of bldde,. le
.,rant lunda tor Matge
opened and read called to all raquiN~
county.
Coub i1CI 11 : Pool Bottom contelneclln the bid ~
The ftNt of two public Re-..ton lind hinting
pertloularty the Stat•
haarlnga witt be held on
contract 12 : N- Pool '--lllng Wete proVIalana;
Manclay,Maroh 25, , ... 111 llecllan1C81 Equipment
varloua
tneuruce•. _
1:00 p.m., at the Melge
Contract u: General raqulrema1,1ta, and wrtoult'"
County · Commlulonera Structure! Repatra and ~~•• D.pportunlt":"" ·
Office, Malga County Adoltlona
.
,.. •••
Courthouee, Pomeroy,
Contl'llCI 14• Chain ·Link
The eucceaalul bldjle.:
Olllo, 1011 the purpoee of ' Fencl
·
muat be en · Equel·
dlaauaatng the general
"'
Employment Qpportunlty;
provtalona of the CDBG
Contract IS: Electrical Employer Which prohlbl..·
CHIP/HOMI! Programa and IIPII'Idll
·
dlacrlmlnllllon becllUH of •
tile amount of lunda
Contract apeclflcatlona . , _ col« Nllglon,-. ot
bl T
·
· and bidding dOCument•
...J....; .
· •
ava 111 a. ha ectlvltlee 11ll'f belltewad Ill the otnce
No bldde"':";.- ......... _;:;
mull be daelgnad to of lilA COneullllnte 1no 111 le
-• , ••u""'""" ,
r,rtmarlly to benefit 10247 Chillicothe Pike; P.O. ~...:,~"!!~1:C.:~ ": '
111
· ow/moderate Income
-•· ..... u ..
paraona, · aid In the Box 730• Jeckeon, Ohio opening tltereot. All blda·'
'prevanttan ot alum· end 45140 (PH: 11 ""2...11 111) .W be prop11ty algnad W
111'-llt
.
•I'd mey be picked up or a n
• u t h o·r II • 4i&gt;
.., ' or _ . an urgent ll!'daNCI by melt for MO.GO, . -... lbtlbe of..._ wtd.~ ,
need oltha ooul)ly.
whlcltta nor...relundable. '
"'P"
•
~L-" ,.,. "'"" ·~~
,Aif lf1let'lllled ,.._..,. · 'Thle orojeet Ia t.eln:r,
All bide ....., be ••11••·
lnvllld to attend to melle
· r.
and plttlrlly lrierbd "Sellall
lid l'or Munlclpel Paol augg ..ttona Qn vertoua =::::z.:,lu:u~·~D:...
a9Uv1tlee whlo~ mey lie
...... 18 .... 000 1 r 11 RlnOvatlope, Middleport,'
........k
..... ..... c
pro.-. • .-v'r
or • Ohio.o
u........ •n "'' ..,. ounty . . . . aomlllnad. ·
.
The ;We..,.. the
undeftltlelriinn.
,
A .l!ld guaranty, •• .......... ~.
... - ·
Wlllttit
will be raqu!Nd by lfitlon 113.14 ~·~::.Itt
_!!f'l_!!,__ ::L
aooepted unUI 1:00 p.m. Of 1ft 11 vllld "-~
•..,.. ...... -'71
lllerall2l, 1..., lr!d .....,.IN
•
-• of -lrregulertu
.. · In tile~'
malleil ta the llhltl• Counl1 Ohloi:811111 ·~umplft'l eech pnapn!lfennlwd.
:f .
Canllllt .. lonere, iieiJ ·tr;~;•• aubmltted, ••
lleyar Dewey 11. Hontlft•,
County Courthou .. , · 11 A aerUfled oheoll,
-=:MIIIdl=·
Pamao,.OIIIo41'NL
· oi•h*l ohaoll. or llllter of .IJI Ill, 13,20;~ : , ,

.

Lowllltet)

•NewHomee
•Addltlona
•NiwGaragea
•Aamodallng
•Siding
•Roofing
,
•PIIntlng
FREE'ESTIIIATES
812-5535

PARKERSBURG

PortG61e

:' _ __;,;Happy=;..·.:.;Ad;:__...;...

. .._.._

., , ;i

992-3954 or 985-3418

(UmeStoM-

CUllom Building &amp; Romodlllng

register for Bunn Cotfeemlker to be given away.

... ...'

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
Let's Try Again
Beginner's Clogging ClisB
Big Bend Clogge1'8
March 16th 7 prn
PomeroyNIIIage Hall
Information 614-992-7853

"

StMe llcenald.
Lota of TLC. Fllllllly

.'' .'

Public· Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
IHIURANCE
MEIGS COUNTY
. DEMRTIIIENT-OF
HUMAN SERVICES
SHied propoaala will be
reoelved by the Metge
County Commlaalone,. at
their ottloa, Courthou..,
Saaond Street, Pomeroy,
Olllo 41111 Willi~ noon on
the tel day of · 111, 18t3,
and Ill 1:00 o'clock P.M. on
thlll date be opened and
Nad aloud by the Clerk of
nld llollrd lor Man:entlla.
Robbery lind 8u'lllllry Food
Stamp lnau,.nce cowrega
to protect thamaelvee
1talnlll robbery ton In tiM

, lllddlep

12 Rutlllncl
Room • bolrcl for
~en d'Hbled.

'

OWner: Ronnie Jones
Cheshire, Oh

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Kllchen.Balll

:~···"~

••

Um. .tont, Stnd, Gravel, Coal &amp; Wllttr

. ' i

STATE REP VISIT
State Representative John Carey :
(R-Wellston) of the 94th District :
will hold an open door from 3 to 4 ~
p.m at the Middleport Village Hall on :
Friday, March 22. Anyone with ques- ;
tions or . concerns regarding sta!e :
government are invited and encour- •
aged to attend.
:
'

...

20 Years Experience *Insured

Serv-U (819) 645-8434

:·· r

point average at Marieua.
:. :
- Established. in 1991, The Ol)io :
Schooars Program was developed by :
OFIC to encourage corporate and :
foundation investnnent in individual :
student scholars. Scholarships are •
awarded io students based on fin an- :
cia! need, area of study, ethrueity, D.
.demic standing, or geographic region, ,
.and are applied to help defray a por- :
:tion of their tuition expenses.
'
·

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

WE OFFER GENERAl HAULING

.

min. Must be 1.8 yrs
Touch-Tone Phone
Aeq. •

:

band has a heart condition ·and is
always cold. These keep him toasty
warm. She's looking for ones that
would fit someone 6 feet tall.
.
DIRECTIONS FOR SOLVING
RUBIK'S CUBE -- Sue Svreck of
Donora, Pa., is looking for these for
her husband, who is recovering from
a sttoke.
PUNCH TOPS FOR EVAPO. RATED MILK CANS -- Cleo Aniello of Hartford, Conn., is looking for
these .handy gadgets that both open
and cover cans of evaporated milk.
We've searched but have yet to tum
up any. We're counting on our readers.
· Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
·Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to the volume of mail, personal replies cannot
be provided.
.
'
Anne B. Adams and Nancy
Nash-Cummings are co-authors .of
"Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and
"Dear A11ne and Nan: Twa Prize
Problem-Solvers Share Their
Secrets" (Bantam),

llnOillll of MOO,OOO.

Republican Candidate
For Meigs
County Commissioner

.,I

.

SIIITII'S
COISTRUCYIOI

JONES' TREE SERVICE

PO_,EAOY, OHIO
Treeh Removal • Comllltlrclal or Residential
Septic Tanka Claaned I Portable Tollett Aen,dd.
Dally, -idy "·monthly rentlll'lttl.

Spreads and much

•
• •

old pair of suspenders

ELECT

..

$ports Funll
Scores Point

• Serv-u (619)845-8434

Deadline for disaster assistance approaching
March 27 is the deadline for the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency to accept applications for disaster assistance. Anyone who has
experienced losses from the flooding
which occurred Jan. 20-31 is urged to
· apply for help made available under
President Clinton's disaster declaration issued Jan. 27.
"Even when unsure of eligibility,
it is best to report the losses and let
disaster officials make that determination, reports Dale Shipley, state
coordinating officer, Ohio Emer-

DISTRICT MEETING
The advisory committeq1to the
policy committee of the Galli~. Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Join' Solid
Waste Management DistriC\ has
scheduled an organizational ~eeting
for TueSday evening. Purpose' of the
mee~ng w!ll be to prepare f~~ '!Je
re_q~tred tnenmal ~pdate of the diStnct s solid was.te management pl~n.
The meetmg wtll be held at lite.dtstrict office, 722 East Tenth Street,
Suite One, in Wellston, at 7 p.m:

SCHOLARSHW
Kevin Larnliert of Pomeroyi·has
been awarded a scholarship fJom
Bank One through the Ohio Fouru:lation of Independent Colleges as part
of the Ohio Scholars Program. ·
Lambert, ajuniorpettoleum engineering major, earned a 3.75 8tJ\de

'

Louise Eshelman received a
phone call from Mrs. Lora Boring
who recently moved to Florida to
inform her friends that she and her
two daughters are settled and well.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley·visited their son, Steven and family,
Norwich, recently.
· Mr. and Mrs. Bill Foley assisted
her sister, Barbara Dill, move from
Michigan to her new residence in
Pomeroy. Gary Foley, Syracuse, and
Woody and Lisa Hendricks of. Racine
assisted her in the move.

How to give new life

Dear Alaska: You certainly sound tell you. My sister, Dear Abby, ~ I
like a man who speaks from experi- put in over S,OOO houn as ~y
ence. Fony years Qf .''Nbt .tonight, Ladies at Lutheran Hotpital iq•I:l8u
llear" can be a long l:me when Claire, Wis., between 1945 apd
there's no heat in lhe igloo. You've 1955. And we enjoyed every minlte
made a good case for WiJmer. Thank of it.
:
you on behalf of all my IIJI!e readers
Gem of the Day (Credit 4.11
who are similarly frozen out.
Buchwald): Americans are Jiro4dDear Ann Landers:· ! Jlave been minded people. They'll accept lhe
reading your column for a long time fact that a person can be an al,ro_
and notice that yo/keep telling both holic, a dope fiend or a wife-bea~.
women and men to do. volunteer but if a man doesn't drive a C)ll',
work. I wonder how much volunteer everybody thin'ks there's somelhill,&amp;
work YOU did before you became · wrong with him.
.
: .'
Ann Landers. I'd like to see !his letScad quesll,oas to Ann Laadel'l,
!Cr in the paper-- and your"answer. - Creaton Syndlcilte, 5777 W. Ceo- ·
-A Reader in Sullivan, Mo.
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los A111eles, ,
Dear Mo.: Since you asktd, I will Calif. 90045
- ,:

Cheerleading awards ~societt scrapbook

' Gospel jubilee set for
:- Father's. House Church
Father's House Church in Hartford, W. Va. will host a benefit
. gospel jubilee on Saturday beginning
at 6 p.m.
'
Several singing gnl!IJIS will be fea, tured at the jubilee. nie.church sane. tuary has recently been renova~Wnd
provides comfortable seating sjillce,
it was noted. Fattier's House ls one of
several churches that have joined in
the upj:Oming Sixth Annual Bend
Area Gospel Jubilee to be held in
May at the Mason County Fair-

just had my hair done. I need to
make some phone calls. I'm too
tired. You're too tired. The phone
might ring. I haven't talked to my
mother today."
Aft~r SO years of excuses,
Wilmer probably decided to go elsewhere to satisfy his sexual appetite,
and who can blame him?
The ritessage you inissed, Ann,
was for the .women in your reading
audience. Men who do not get sexual satisfaction at home will find It
somewhere else. Wives who don't
want their husbands to stray should
not provide them with·a good excuse
to do so. -- Forty Years of Excuses In
Anchorage, Alaska

· 814-9112·2528.

'

Cll&amp; Or
Or-Nawor,
1900 Eut·

�--

e Wednesday,l(arch 13, 1996

i

Pomeroy • Mlddl,port, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Deily Sentinel • Page 11

NEA Crossword Puzzle

I RID OK

J
~

ALDER

·=) .

•c-.
Dole'l title

ACROSS

PHILLIP

~

1 ActorTMIIrillr
li llntlelt ICIOr

31

g ::::..•

12 ::;::;.; l8rtd

13 1M Olympk:a 44 - - -ldaiiH
....
47 .Uhtr-14 Thllnb (Fr.)
rcnow

Buy Uao&lt;l MDbllo .
814-44e-0175

15
r----,"l~O"'R;:;TH;;;----:os::-.::u-~96~ 1
•J 9 4 2
11
·,
9A Io B6 4
18
;
t7
18
•J 73
20
WEST
EAST
22
••
•to 7 6 5 3 21

; Wanto&lt;l To Buy: 8.2 Ton Bolt Po••Wack Unit To Fit A 11168 Chewolle Can Use Any Of The Foi-

f

' I.Wing Carriers, fl5· 70 C,hwrOiet,
i" •'2 Chevello, 84·72 Chevy Ill
;ttava, 87-70 Camara, 81~ · 441-

~----~-------'· W.nted
To Buy: Junk Autoa With

·ar· Wit1'1out

ME RCHANDI SE

'10 Houees

•lfanto&lt;l To Buy: Little Tlkeo Toys,
_'SIT\d Box; Picnic Tabla, Play
Hou98, 814·24S-58117

tor Rent

510

Houaehold
Goods

2 81droo.m House, 2 Bedroom
T.-llar In GaiiiPQIII, 814-448·8849
For lnlonnodon.
·

Wanted To Buy: Sand Stone,
Fotinda"on Stano For Landacap•no. 1114~1-1013.

EMPLOYMEN T
SERVIC ES

"I keep having this nlghtmara ... In lfle lead wittJ~
24

H&amp;lp Wanted

_1_1o__
1

laps to g(l, and only 23 laps' worth of gas.•

_w_lntlcl.....;..
·--·.1_3_1_o_Ho_mea
__for_..;.sa,;..le.,;..__

$-WANTeo-s
He_1p;;_
·
10 .people who need to lose Immediate openings: excellent
weigh! I make money, 10 try now opPQrtunlty to join the long term
patented weight -lou product. health oare field. Seeking part304-773-5083 24hrS/(jay. ·
time Aagiotered Nursu and Ll·
$20P·I900 weakly. Yaar round canoed Practical, Nursoa for vari·
posltiona. Hiring mon, women. able ahifla lor 68-bld lnlllt'mo&lt;llate
F1ee room, board. Will train. 7 care nursing facility. Point Pleaa·
a&amp;ys. 407-875-2022 ext Q505C10.
ant Nursing I ~abllitation Con·
tor. State Route 62N, Point Pleas·
$35,000 IVA. INCOME l'otential. ont, Weat Vlrginlo 25550. Apply
Reading Books: Toll Free (1t800- in parson. 304-675-3005 (A
898-9n8 Ext R-2814 For Dataila.
Glenmark Associates Facility)
EDE
$40,000 IYR: INCOME l'otential.
Home Typilla IPC Users. Toll Pen Lingerie Homo ParUH, Now
Free (1) 800~898·9778 Ext. T- Racruillng Conaullanta And
2814 F'i" Liatings.
Booking Showo In Thlo Area.
Groot Opportunity For Extra
.......... Point p•--sanr
~• m
Caah, Travel I Fraa Llngorlel For
Postal Positions. Permanent full· Information Please Call Johnna
time tor clerk/sorters. Full Bane- At814-o2~S.9833.
fits. For exam, applicallon and
salary info call: 708-264-1830 Ext. !'oint Plaaaant bu'olneoo
a
3670, 8am to 8pm.
·
· part-time peroon who maau the
f1JIIooring requl"'""'"ll. C.......tor
AVON .I All . Areas I Shirley a-doe 11 a
11 oil
Spoara, 304-875-1429.
ottter secretarial 1 . Ttlia fiOII·
Able · Avon Represenuitlves lion could develop
I full-time
position. Address
needed. Earn money for Christd
1·• 1 B
mas billa at homelal work. 1-800· an rep ••• o: ox
Pleaaant Aaglatar, 200
1
992-8356 or 304·882·2645, lAd. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550 by
Rep.
20, 11186.

Four Hdroom houl8 in Pomeroy,
lull buem~nt, large yard, $2SO/
mo. ptus deposit, referencea required, call 8U-Q92·5228 after
7pm or WHkonda.

gralors,
French
7795.

Countrr Home 2 Acre&amp;, 3 Bedrooms, Canlrat Air, 1 Batll, Eat-In Ramodilad, Furnished Kit, 3 BodKlll:hon, CA. 814 148 8832
rooms, No Pets, References. For
Into Sand S.A.S.E: ~44 Fourth
Five bo&lt;lroom, throo bath home, Awnut, Galipols, DH 45831 .
. _ GriMI Ad.,
l'omaroy, two bldroom, large LA
kitl:hen,' heat pump,• kll men~ nino....., 614-t02-5085.
and kll&lt;han, WID hookup, $300/
mo. rent, call 814-992-8886 after
FoUr bldroCIIT1 houae on Mulberry ~:30pm.
Heights, equlppo&lt;l kitchen, full
baaemenl, heat pump, nice loa 420 Mobile Homes
ctoae to school and hoopital, ona
for Rent
car garege orith breez-y, o14902-3119 leave meooagil wtlh an-

•·

I
J
'

Postal &amp; Gov't Joba $21 1Hr +
Benefits, No Exp. Will Train, For
Appl And tnlo 1-«XX-538-3040.

BATES BROTHERS AMuS'ii.
MENT COMPANY.
Must be '18 yeara or older and
lree to travel. Call 614-268·2950,
Sam-4:30pm, Monday lhru Friday
blloip March 2210 apply.

Social Worlcero, Now Hiring $23 1
Hr + Benefit' On Tho Job Train·
lng To Apply In Your Atoa, 1·8003311-6150.
'

Driver Wanted: Clall 'A' COL WI
Haz-Mat, 1yr OTR experience,
must bl able 10 pall DOT phyalcal and drug screen, willing· to
, work 81 8 contraclor..t_.uat be
: Willing to work 5 daysfweek for
&amp; 1125% · of gross bonus, 2% tor
9,000mllealmonth. Aeferencea.
Leave meuagl, I'll call back
304-l!75-5570.

Quallllod, experienced, CNAI
HHA, able to care f1Jr tile elderly
In their home, please call 614·

902-2049.
SAN()IE'S hao,openlng for your
child. Playroom, maalo, snacks.
All hours, my homo, Cheolllt', 814'

985-3406.
Sun Valley N~rsery School.
Chlldcare M-F &amp;am-5:30pm Agoo
2-K, Young School Age During
Summar. 3 Days par Weak Minimum 614-448-3857.

Earn i1000a 'weakly atufflng envelopes lit home. Be your boll.
Start now. No exp., he suppMu,
inlo., no o~igadon: Sand S.A.S.E.
to Preatige Unit IL, P.O. Box
. 195809, Winter Springa, Fl Two wallpapar hangtio, IOoa. par
hour. Referancea available. 304-o
327,19.
675-22~9.
Filberr Oiversilied Employment

Servicea has a parr-time (aa Will do home and offlct ~aanlng,
ne&lt;ided) vacancy lor a job coach rea10nltbl; ratk cau ·e1•·7•2·
in the· Meson County area. Thia 3504, Uk for, Allclo.
position will be responsible for
FI NAt&lt;C IAL
providing on·rhe·job support for
people with disabilities. Experience with diaabilitiea preferred.
contact FOES. 304-522-3337 no 210 ,
Business
liter 3-,22·96. EDE.
Oppdrtunhy

"'DOUBLE DEAL"' HAWKS
IS IN TOWN FER TH' CARD
GAME TONIGHT, MAW

lift kR, asking S6, 700. 304-

MlsctllaneOus

SHUXII I'D

I-lOW ASOUT A .BIRD
AND A D06?

Block, brick, aawor plpN, windOWl, llntala, ole. Claude Wlntero,
Alo Granda, OH Call 614·2455121 .
.
M11al Roofing And Siding Gal·
vonlzed, Galvalume And Painted,
614-245-5183.
.

n

Apartments

540 Miscellaneous

for Rent
·and 2 bo&lt;lroom apertmonll. fur·
'
and unfurnished, security
required, no pels. 614·

Merchandlee

1984 Oldsmobile g9, 4 door,
$1800, call 814-742·2418 after
'1pm

1994 GSX 7SOA Sumkl, 1,500ml.,
$8,000. 304-77941811.

-f9yaccapl
advor1iseman1Bior iaaleotato
which Is In Yloiadon of the law.
Our n98darl are hereby
lnforrnad that an -llilga
In this nowsplper
are ava~le on an equal
_,.,nlly bllltl.

in Pomeroy,

1915 300EX 4-whleler, $3,500.

f ;

1988
New,
Yamaha
Acceaaorial, 814-3117-0594.

. ThP&lt;J ,._VOTE

•

~II£

15 /1.. VOTE.~ ~
UNII'(!

I "11-1~\!1 ~(:,1;\T." HE.~
100\~"(00UI(£.01

I

. -load

5•
Pass

Pass

Pass
Paas

320 · Mobile Homes

for Sale
1973 12&gt;65 2bldroom, whltelto&lt;l·
diah brQ\IIn on right aide In cbur1
across from Gallla Rural Water,
$8,000 OBO. Contact Harry 304·
675-6102.
1978 14x70 Schultz 1876 12x28
Varnco Add Room Many Extras I
Excellent Condition, Price Re·
ducodl 814 ... 8034.

not

::::

~
l'
.

15
.

8

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

A
V

UNSOAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER . ·

I I

16
_

I e

Complete .the ch~~~. qublod
by' ftlhng "' the mtlling Words
L...-l.-.1-.....1-..L.-L....J you develop from llap No. 3 below.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Bunner PRICES •·:r JACKSON
,...
~
ESTATES, 52 Weotwood Drive
~om $244 to 1315. Walk 10 ahop
&amp; movies. Call 614·446·2588.
E"'al Hou~ng Opportunity.

Bodo Navar Uood Solid
With lnnar Spring Mattreaa, living Aoomo SUhtl, $275,
Phone: 614 _8118 _8373 Route 7
Bealde Glovannla'a Pizza, Proctorvila, OH.
·

Sovlnrs You'll Find In the
. Clossl(led Section.

Beach St, Mlddllport, 2bldroom, Concreto &amp; Plastic Sepdc Tanka,
lumiahad tiPartmont, uU!dea paid. 300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Aon
Oepoolt &amp; references. 304·882· Evans E~torprlsoo, Jackson, OH
25611.
1·80Q.537-9524
Country

Sidli Apartments, Nice 2

Disney area. 5 days, 4 hotel

BedfOoml, AC, WID, Water, Sew· nighta, uae anytime. Paid $310,
or Garabge Included, $350/Mo. 1811 $100. 304-353-9131.

Dapoalt RequO&amp;d, 513-822-G294.

·1WEDNESDAY

SERV ICES
FAR~1

SUPPLieS
&amp; LI VESl OC K

ROBOTMAN

:2200
~~--~iN(j~El':-----­

ASTRO·ORAPH /

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

are IC)manlically perlecl for you.
VIRGO (Aug. ~- 22) Lucie might be
$2.75.10 MatChiiiJikar, c/o this newspa- on your side today In regard to a signifiper, P.O . Box 1758, Murray Hill Station, cant development lltal has pof~lcal overNew York, NY t01S6.
·
Iones. You can maneuver youraell into a
ARIES (lllrch 2t·Aprtl 18) In competi- flOMr sfol.
live cereei slluatiOns, you ana now In a LIBRA (llept. 23-0ct. 23) You will be in a
II1Ud! llronger position than you realize. . beller posllion today to naoofve a compiiThiS might become obvious to you today. catad arrangement which ·has troubled
so maJte llt8 moat of 11.
you p1811ioualy. The end reaun should be
TAURUS (April .u.y·20) T&lt;&gt;&lt;1&amp;y you dueirable.
.
may haw uniqUe abiflly to solve prob- SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) fn lhls
Iems lrlends lind insurmounlallle. oo· cycle, both old and , _ frlanda can perwhat
can 1o
while your jliOwe(a fqrm benaflcial ror.a in your affairs. Do
are peaking.
.
no1 play ~. and wor1t to strengthen
GEMINI (May 21•Juna 20) You can youralllallll8S.
.
achieve the gnaateat amount of ljnencial SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 21-Dec. 21) H will
succen from secondary apurceu today. work to your advantage at thlli time to
Search these channela carefully for ulw prioltty ,lo any eltuallon·lhat is potenpotentlal
llfllly profllabll, even • H is In an unfamllCANCER (.hint 21-.luly 22) Wh!lll 0ta1- ilr inae.
ing with peOple you cane about todly,,lis- CAPiiiCo!IN (DR. 22-Jan. 18) Try to be
ren to your lt88ll natltar titan you~ heed. a --lllitar today. Do not walt ior oiii8IS
What you want lor them, they will want to appnlWI your plano. They w11 1iop on
!Or you.
lht baud lgtllt 11t1er hhat you oonc:liYa
, LEO (Juty_' 2S-Aug. 22} Tltings ~ lttiVe loolca promlllng.
a way of worlting out to your advantege AQUARiUS (Jan. Ill-Feb. 11) In thla
today, pro~lded you're conalatent and lime frame, YC!U Will not ·be deprlvad of
lncallirloui.' Oo not atatllllingtl you can1 . th1 thlngl you deaerve. I ~ you have
! flnlllli.
·
, _.,..lta!d. ~"'Will be WOIJd.
1

a

you

. .. Tlulday, Mirdt 14, 19118
ln !Ita yMr ahead you might have tnOIW
luck With' old encleavora .t hin with new
prajecll. S11ck·Wtth wltat ydll ~· nlnuy
be 1110 lell to IIIICIIIII otclq _,. trlc:kl.

I!!ICU ~ . .. . . . .., ,nW old-bOY
~.could provide big edvanlagee lor
you at fllll11me. Do ""*illr you can to.
mM8 ,your pre1ance·tu-n In 8oc1c11 clr·
\

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SCRAM-lETS ANSWIIC

1

cloAutiand,
Mayor, 01145775.
Rulland Village, II
BoX420,

Pass
Pass

· Pass

49

--,-J'Y7"R.-U~R-II~,
. I I I ..

'

27 Ft. Round
Ground Pbol,
With Solar Cover, Ladder &amp;
Pump, 2 Years Old, Aaklng :
$1,000, Call A~er 5:30P.M. 8144411-0440.

"Lumblr Pricoa Up?" Steel blllfd.
ingo deaJer prolha are UP II Coot
as low as $3.00 aq. lt. National
Licensed Opera1Dr Clall 1tor Wll· manu,acturer awarding local
tor and woator vwatar. Send ra- DEALEASI!IP. 303·759·3200 axt.

1
' umt

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0

AKC Reoiattrad Boxer Pups,
$200 Talla Docked, 614·2566128.

· Home
T~pista, PC ularo nto&lt;lo&lt;l.
$45,000 Income PQttntial. Coil •
800-513-4343 Ext B-11388.

laborws' org.

r::~:~~~, S@\\~lA-l&amp;t.tfs·

llalme~

25· Uagnavox CoF)aole T. \1.
Needs 175 -1100 In Work, Sell
For $100, 14 Band Equat~or $15,
25 Watt Power Boollor, $10; No
Guarantee•. Call Aller 5 P.M.
30&lt;W75-1433.

. Thlo rteWIPIIPII will not

36=;:::,

Cl=rnt

_SUpplies

4-tO

Llke-7 Director ICazl\n
8 Computar type
9 EcOn. lndle8tor
10 American

34 P..tlxlor

Most bridge columnists !including .
you-know-who, he added modestly!)
write up their own clever playa anonymously. One or two happily pat them- ,
sel.ves on the back with'regularity.lill:!rt-+--t-t--t-1-And there are a few who try to resort
to subtlety to IP.II the reader who the
.genius was. I think the describer of
CELEBRITY CIPHER
this deal sat We.st.
South was aggressive in bidding six
by Lull Campos
.
~Cipher
•re ctU.Ied from quoiiUonl b'f tamout ptople, put and pt'8MI'It
hearts opposite the pre-emptive raise
Each
in ttw ciP* IIW!dllor ll"tCCIIW. fodl¥t Clue: R_,.,.. P
by North. However, his luck was apparently in, The percentage play in
'KMUJO:
ZXLKXEIA
JW
EJKX.'
the heart suit is to start with the ace.
This works when either opponent
N I BP M I
PLWXZZXI .
holds a singleton king. To lead the
queen from hand succeeds only when
'A L M
D M U E
RJOH
N
OPLIF,
East has the singleton jack. Ani! South
ZL
was an expert who knows all the perEVNWZ,
NWF
ALM ' BX
ZLE
centages. Yet it didn't work out like
that.
KMUJO.'
UJF
BJOJLMU.
After cashing the club ace &lt;leading
the ilce from ace-king), West continPREVIOUS SOLUTION: "ThiS is the sort of English up w~h which I will
put.· - Winston Churchill.
ued with the club two. ,
South wondered what West was cJo·
. ing. Usually, suddenly underleading
top boneirs shows a side-suit void.
141to4 ~y CLAY I. POUAN _,;;,..._ _ _ __
South concluded that West was hop·
ing East would ruff this trick (but how
Reorrange letters1 of the
four Kromblad word1 be·
could South use Blackwood · with
low to fOrm fOur words
queen-third of clubs?) and deliver a
rutJ in return.
KOLTEC
Judging that this increased the
chance of West's having king-doubleton of hearts, South ruffed at trick two
and put the heart queen on the table.
See if you agree that the writer was
ANAL T
West. He described the key play thus:
"Well and good - but West threw a
&amp;JII!nner [wrench) in the works by continuing with the two of clubs at trick
two ... Down one. Smiles all round 0
We have so many satellites
foUowed by congratulations to West."
I~
going a, ound the earth today
thai it would be hard to hitch
c--5
--1-V-H_A_R--.,1 your wagon- - a- ---.

Building

AI raat -18 aifllettlalng In
lhli neMfllfl&lt;rr IIIUbfoct to
1te Federal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 which - . . Illegal
to II&lt;Mirtlae "any preference,
limitation or discrimination
balad.on race, ootor, rellglali,
aexfamlllal statui or n a O"'Iffl. or any intanllori 1o
make arty ..., prefentnee,
Umltadoll or clso~mlnallon."

&amp;Some

~uu

The modest
columnist

HOW CAN I PRACTICE
WITH A SII~D SITTIN6
0~ M'{ PIANO?

Work Bench, Coot To Build
11 ,000 Will Soil For $550 Firm,
614-441 -1291.

11 stall horse barn + 20acres for
' laaae, AI 2, Crab Creek Ad. 304·
l 756-AENI
I I"-'~~~~;;;;;;..;____

DOWN

Opening lead: • A

THAT II

PEANUTS

And Pine Interior, Shelves &amp;

AKC Lab puppiu, bred from
proven duck and goooe dogo, re~
erencea on prevJoua litter, ahota
and wormed, vet checked, 814·
002·31179 after 5:30pm

Pekoe, eta!

By Phillip Alder

Wooden Sho&lt;l 8'x8' Only 2
Months Oid, lnaulated &amp; WI rod
For Electricity, T-1·11 Exterior

180 Wanted To Do

2 person team will do houie
DELIVER TELEPHONE BOOKS
Earn Em Money, No Exporlence cleaning on regular basil. Rea·
Necessary, Deliveries Start late aonablo ratea. 304·675-5963 or
March. 80 Poople Neo&lt;lo&lt;l To Dt- 814-448·7389.
llvor Your New Ohio Valley, Oil
TelephOne Directoriea In: Gatlipo- General Maintenance, Painting,
lia, Crown .City, . Patrlo~ Kerr, Ala Yard Work Windowa Wl\shod
Grande, .~ . Hill, Bi-1, l{lniDn, ~utters . Cleaned Light Hauling,
Cheahlrt. MlddloPQrf, Surround- Commerical, AesldonUal, StOYO:
•
Ing Area,. To Become An lnd• 614-3811.()429.
pendent Contractor You Mull Be Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
AI lta11t 18 Y•ara Old, -Tho haul your logo to f1e min juot call
Use Of An Insured Car, Van Or
Truck, And Bo Available A Mini· 304-875-19!i7mum 0( 5 Daylight Houra Dally. Lawn Mowing, Mulching &amp; Trim,
To Reserve A Roule In Your Modern Equipment, Frae Eotl·
Neighborhood Call 1-800·827- matal, 614-256-8314.
1200 Job 1804-K, 10 A.M. -e P.M.
Mon Thru Fri, AOS.Corp., EOE.
Mowing Lawn, Cometary, Other
Yard Work, Has OWn Equlpmant, .
Do you have room in your heart Exparieilcad, Aafaronc:es K Naadand your home lor a neody ctild? adl614-386-8010.
Becotne a Protesslonal Treatment
Parent and join our team. Free Professional Tree Service, Com·
training in ~our area, 24 hour plate Tree Care, Bucket Truck
support, compe,itive rliimbur'• Service ·50 Fl Roach, SOlmp Aamont and 1t1e opportunity 10 make moval, Free Eatimateal In·
a dlflorence in tile lifo of a·child. surance, 24 Hr. Emergency ServWant to kn 0w more? Call AYC Ice .Call And Savel No TrH Too
FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER at Big Or Too Small I BidWell, Olllo.
814-388"9848, 814-387-7010. .
1·800-835-5277.

Fcrd Aariger Xlt 4x•·. Ve,

Oro.., Veil &amp; Slip, Sin
4-3117-11258.

I

AVON- $8 -$15/llr. No Door•To
Door, No Mir;mum Order. Bonuses1-llb0·827-41140 lndiSI&amp;IAap.

ofw81er.
2IICan.prov.
32 Molquho

•Q, 8 6

59 F-11 dilly
60

t9854

4NT
69

TUXEDO RENTAL SPECIAL,
place order by March 27 ,· Savt
15%, for usa anytime thla year.
PAINT PLUS 30H7!1-4084.
.

n-

~-:J,.

tQJI02
•A K 9 54 2

19

STORAGE TANKS 9,000 Gallon
Uprlgh~ Aon Ewno Entorprlaea,
Jackaon, Ohk&gt;, 1·800-537:o528.

-'no aervlce.

B..-Jyn

Approxlmetely

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East ·
Soulll
West North Eaot

llln:handlee

new-·

Hm cliveller

28 ... tofwtch--

•to

Aam Van B-250,
$8,000, Can Be
At: Gallipolia Daily Tribuna,
Third Avenue, Gallipolis

Hou~ 'For R*nt llee~: Gallipolis I£c~ryiF;,;;rt;;;;:!_Q4:;J;Hi;;;G: s.tO
City, Convaniant Locauon, Newly

57 Receiver of
proputlf
,
51--0fowaln

9K

SE', Load-

Reconditioned
Ranges, RefriGuaranteel
Maytag,, 814-4.48·

52 Dizzily
51 o~

Hollhxlc8n

9J 9

•A K Q
9Q 7 53 2
t A K 6 3

Sbo&lt;lroom, LA.. FR, lull bl""""'n~ •·=~~:-·:
iri New Haven. No HUO. $400/rno.
Dopoalt. Relaroncas. 304·273· ·
3492.

UPS employee, 48 ~

•.g.

I
• C'::
IMI gnt n
-~1

SOUTH

3 Bedroom Houae For Rent In Alo
G!Bnda, 2 Car Garage, Pa~o. DoPI&gt; II! Required, No Peta. 614·
3~. AFTER e P.M.

Watito&lt;l To Buy : Slanding Tlmblr,
Any Amount 614-388-91106.

..

Ford
II, 4x4, looks
&amp; runa, needs head gasket,
OBO. ·can 304·578·3291

RE N TAL S

Motora. Call Larry

:LI'iely. 014 388 9303.

110

l
L..___.~:::~~~
'!

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
l;teaudful 2ac lora, public water,
Clyde Bowon Jr., 304-~2338.

.

~

poptu

40 JUIIIp

.

.

cln. Know .-Mre lo look for to'1tlnce

. and. you'll find II. The A~tro-Gruph

I

...

,,

Prolita.

helP

.

•

Stucco - Grass - Windy · Heckle - LONGEST
While attending a bus:ness seminar business colleague sighed, "Those who need no introductions, usu·
ally get the LONGEST ones.·

a

MARCH13l

�.

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.

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:'_;;•;..12;.
_•Theii.i
_-~
·-Dallliiilly~Seiilllntlneiii.
__I_ _ _ _ _ _~~Po~me-royi.i.•.M-ldd-le~port,~O-hlo_ _ _ _ _ _ Wednesday, March 13,1991~

•

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•••

. 7 UP,
. DR. ··
PEPPER,
FLAVORS ·

STORE HOURS · ·
. MOIIday tin s-lay
8AM·IOPM
. 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

.

24 PK 120L

.· s

49

Accepts Credit Cards

WE

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU MARCH 16, 19t6.
.

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

COCA COLA ·
.PRODUCTS

'

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAIU

U.S.D.A; CHOICE BONELESS BEEF LB.

English Roast •••••••••••

KITCHEN PR~DE

· .·

_

Bacon •••••••••••••••• !!:~..•
. ECKRICK

t')

lb.

.

Bologna ••••••••••••• ~ ••••••

SUPERIOR-MOUNTAIN

.

( · OSCA~ MAYER

· PEPSI COLA
149 PRODUCTS

s

.

$399

Picnics ••••••••••••••••!!••••

F~ESH PORK CUBED

-

Steaks •••••••••••••••~•••• ~.
FISCHERS MILLWOOD BREAKF~~.l

(

$ 39

1
99. (

.Bologna ••••••••••••~•••••• 69 We•ners •••••••••••••••~.... .
SMITHFIELD SMOKED

2LITER

.

JIF PEANUT ·
BUTTER.

79 (

.

l.

.,

'

•

...

.... . .' .

..

.

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180Z.

$219
ARMOUR ·
TREET LUNCH ·
MEAT

$ 19
1·

on......... •••••••••••• .

120L

' . c
•

CARNATION
E'l

59(
.c~lery....................... . _
s9(
-~

FRESH

·

.

MILK
120Z

staU'

KRAFT PARKAY ·

.

.

SU~NY DELIGHT

oz.

_

Cttrus Punch..............
64

$ 119

·

•

(

•

7.Boz.

HAGAN PREM ROUND .

.

.

5

MEDAL

S

. CAN'ESUGI\R ~.

FLOUR

5LJ..

$LB.

c

S· ·79
•

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. .•.

'.

.

.-

'

ATO CHI
"

.

·

Ice Cream •••••••"....... 2/

.

..·

MIKE SElLS .:
1$0Z.

·

.,

1-

89( s1 ~9
Ptzza........................ $·
~

.

..

-

Marg_arine .-••••••~•••••.••••

_ JENO'S

..

'
·· ·The Daily Sentinel .
Wednesday, March 13, 1996

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