<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9140" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9140?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-26T11:54:02+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19569">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7f2f639338f9d65bad7488c96e5b3b1f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d609554690b333e73c87bc53c5ec33a0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29387">
                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Karr, Turley
All-Ohio AP
honorees

Pick 3:
950
Plck4:
. 8302
Super Lotto:

Sports, Page 4

7·14-1~1~3-38

Kicker:
380009

Rain llklt!Y tonight, low
around 410. Friday, rain,

high In th4! 50,.

....
'

-..
...lloro

........
...,•'

·~•~m

.,_. ••a.ct~on. 10 , . _

•~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 14, 1996

A Glnnen eo. New•PII*

···----------------------~----------------------~------------~-------------------------------•.

'

·~

Meigs' oldest voter
.

Meigs board updated on
•middle school• concept

By JIM FREEMAN

Sentinel new•

•tan

The Meigs Local Board of Education was updated on the "middle
school" concept during its regular
meeting at the central office in
Pomeroy Wednesday night.
Meigs Junior High School principal David Gaul explained the differences between the middle school concept and the existing junior high
school.
The biggest difference is that the
middle school concept is more student-center~. he said.
John William Lowen, 104, calli hla abeentee ballot for tha primary alec:tlon
;y at tha Rocksprings Rah•blli11111on Center. Lowen, who didn't begin voting In Ohio until he waa 99 yaara '
· old, aald that he's voiBd •tor at long at he can .--mbar.• Aaalatlng Mr. Lowen Ia Barbala Smith of the Melge County BOIII'd of
,:EiactionL Election Dey 11 next Tualday, March 19. (Sentinel photo by T. Hunter)
..

' '

SENTINEl.· WEDN~DAY, MARC9 ·1311996 •. · • '

w.m ..

Escapee from At
mental ho~pi~al spotted in
·Ashland-Ironton area

..

· ft
1.1 Ca
·•
. :vOnlflu . Sf/e, 46,.IS placed

·on
• • • • .web Slae
••
' OSP's lnaers,aae
• Al'HE)IIS (AP) -The search for
"'escapee from a mental hospital has

slkld!cd;iJ119.ty~..

era· 0
'

•

.

· 11te 'Stare Highway P~trol haS
JIOS~ a picture and informatipn
about the fugitive, Donald Castle, 46,
on its Interstate web site.
, Meanwhile, Castle, who fled from
lbe SoutiJelll!l Ohio Psychiatric Hos:iital last weekend, reportedly was
siehted Wednesday in Ashland, Ky.,
~ss the Ohio River from Ironton.
~I eluded police.
• The patrol said Ashland police had
slaked out a motel where Castle 'wliS
~gisteml and were waiting for a
"f11'1'8111 from a local judge when the
fugitive slipped away.
~· Castle has relatives and friends in
~y South Point, Ohio, the,patrol
said.
: 'The patrol said Castle has a his.t()ry of violenl crimes and is consid· ered dangerous and may be armed.
· "We b&lt;:lieve he is 'dangerous to
liimself and . to others, " patrol
gpokesman; Sgt. John Born. said.
Castle is described as S-foot-8,
weighing 3oo pounds, with gray hair
.and a trimmed beard.

·' • t

'

flementary
atijc~Jnts
~ .
.,
'.
~""· -...;

Our high·achaol ' .
studinta wiiJ rtC.M:

•

' '

,;-:,.dll ·rtcel,.:
" •. :·.
:,. •,
" . ' '
a: ·"
~

• l

·~

t.'

·•Safer Envlronmenl.*~"~·
•

1/;:.t!!'!!WJer re,9hf1'01ogit).. ·':.,
•Scitante Labs :,', '' ...
,

.

J".det
~cu·

r~

l ,

ena
·~osic ROom

,:,
.:ft~~

•Att Room ·

•

'
,.

t.

.~ .,.;

.

·

··

_"to • .

··$ii9e aAuditofiumt•&gt;. ·
:OCMtralized
Ubr~~ia
. ,..__,
,

·~.

'aft ,forecasts 2.4 million
:Ohioans will vote Tuesday

... ·tr....

·~

~ner

,,~· . ~·~

. ~e881anced-sized. . •!;,'~
..Classrooms
• ~~'
··3!JO-S8at GYron~tl~· wit~
locker rooms
·
•More contact time with-special nee9s teachers
•More efficient use of Art
and Music time
•Ample number of
ciB$Srooms for an
programs

'

i:
' I

!I

&amp;entftts
.

say

,•

for

•Center for community events
•l-ocation tor adult cl.a&amp;Sea
•Attract new people to the are~
•Attract new businesses to the area

•'

....

.

.'

'

the
kid.s •••
'''·

COmmunitY Include:

·•'

.

''YES~'

to the.

'·

Patrol Sqperintendent Warren H.
Davies,, on Wedne~!!Jy app. rqved
putting Castle's photo ·~ infoiination about the escape on the patrol's
. lqtornet web site which is 6 months
'
0ld
:.It 1·5 the filJ'S1 t'•me thal we have
used our Inter~.' Site. as a law
enf~rcement tool, he. s_a•d.
. We made the deciSion when the
mvesllgator asked for 150 copies of
a photo (of Castle). We real1zed we
could. have an unhmned nu",J,ber by
scannmg 11, onto the Internet.
Born sa•d ~ pa1rol1s one of ~nly
a handful of h1ghwar patrols nationally to have a web s1te.
.
The patrol may be the only Oh1o
Jaw enforcement agency and one of .
a few nationally to be using the Internet.to search for fugitives, he said.
Castle was recommitted to the
Athens hospital last month after a
court hearing in Ross County. Such
hearings are required at least onc·e
every two years for mental patients.
The patrol 's World Wide Web
page
can
be · found
at
http://www.ohio.gov/ohplwanted.htm
1.

.. •:.COLUMBUS (AP) - Se~:retary
Q[ State Bob Taft.predicts that. with
m§re Ohioans than ever registered to
vote, more Ohioans than ever will
,9~t their ballots in Tuesday 's prima. ·
. ~4 lection .
'Taft said Wednesday that 6.6 milliOn Ohioans had registered to vote,
slilpassing the previbus record of 6.5
rn~lion registered voters set in 1992,
·• last presidential primary. ·
. ;He estimated that ~.4 million.peopl• will vote on Tllesday, compared
·wi'ih the 2.3 million who voted four

'yeirs ago~ ·

!'' This is truly -an historic election
fot Ohio...we will have· our earliest
Pf'imuy ·CI~Iion and we will hate a
reqord number of citilen eligible· to
mjke a difference with their vote,"
Tafi said.
. ii:Jowever, those.figures 'translated
to Ptlly 36 percent of the registered
'

..

voters ·turning out, compared to the
39 percent turnout in the 1992 primary election.
Taft based his. turnout prediction
on data from the 88 county election
boards, which review historical
trends along with current ballot
issues. Some counties. such as Richland and Montgomery, were expeciing higher-than -average turnoul
because ofthe interest in local issues,
he said. .
" I'm an oplimist, " Taft said.
" Seeing some activity by the candi·
dates in the state should heighten voter turnout. "
· Pat Buchanan was the first Republican candidate to visit the state, campaigning in northern Ohio on Tuesday and Wednesday. Fronl-runner
Bob Dole · planned appearances in
Cqlumbus and Cleveland today and
Friday.

'

Poll: .Dole a lock in Ohio
. ~CINCINNATI (AP) - Sen. Bob
DOl~ . R-Kan .• cont\nued to gain

Forbes, who scheduled a news c01/:
ference today to announce the end of
~king amc:ms Ohio Republicans his campaign, w115favoredby IOpcrll(d had .a strong lead going into cent of the people' questioned.
Tllesday's presidential primary, .
Dole's suppon rose steadily in the
aceording to an Ohio Poll released past two weeks , since being favored
toUay.
·
by'4S percent oft!!e'people survey~
1
.. Dole was favored by 63 percent of while,F~s. Lamar Alexander and
the; likely Republican voters ques.. Richard Lug~ were still seeking ~
tKnd, the survey said. Pat Buchanan GOP nom~nauon .
-favored by 12jleroent. And Steve

.'

.II

II

.

Paid for by

arc
southtim Local Building Committee, P.O . Box 98, Racine, Ohio 457'7'

"

•.

'

..

'\).

~I

The middle school concept consists of teams of up to four teachers
who are responsible for no more than
112 students, he said. Each team is
responsible for the students assigned
to it including instruction in language
arts, math, science and social studies.
Classes would be rotated among
the teachers in the team depending on
the educational needs of the students,
he explained.
This is in contrast with the existing junior high school day which is
divided into nine periods meaning
students may see nine different teach-

United Fund doles

~ut

ers each day. ·
Gaul described the existing setup ·
as a "mini high school. "
Gaul and school gu idance counselor John Amott began worlcing on
the middle school idea two yeats ago.
Since then they have visited schools
in Winfield, W.Va., and Zanesville
that operate on that concept.
In those school s, the middle
school concept was found to improve
attendance, academic and student
behavior, proficiency test re sults and
parent involvement.
By giving the lcids more time with

teachers it addresses their academic, ·
social and emotional needs, 01\ul
said.
.
,
"We can't teach them anyll;ling if
they aren't in school," .
TWo weeks -so. when the proposed closing of Bradbury Eleinc:n·
tary School wa.S annOD!,ICed, the.concept was pxP!anded ,to,- include sixth
grade .s~udents liS,''!•ell, he said.
~'It is the uuest $1Udent-centered
concept I've eyer encountered,"
At1lott said. "Ki~s loYt. it.",
' 'Mos't of the problems we come
'.

Continued on PaP 3

.

$14,000 to local groups

Boy Scout Troop 249, said the troop
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
uses its money from the United Fund
More than $14,000 was given to to help send boys to annual scout
local groups by the Meigs County camp.
The Rev. Sharon Hausman, repreUnited Fund at its annual meeting at
the Meigs County Senior Citizens senting the Cooperative Parish. said
Center in Pomeroy Wednesday night. the United Fund has helped the
The money was raised during the parish help more than 4,000 people .
"You've been thCre for us," she
1996 United Fund campaign drive
headed by campaign chairman Dick said.
Warner, manager of the Pomeroy
United Fund president Susan
Oliver presented Warner with a
Krogers store.
Groups receiving funds were the plaque commending him for his work
Riverbend Arts Council, Serenity in the 1996 campaign. Charlene .HoeHouse, the Community Assault Pre- flich of The Daily Sentinel was prevention Program. Boy Scout Troop sented a plaque in absentia for her
249i!_?Y.s~.~~ Troop ~99, _the Gal- . assistance to the United Fund. ln turn,
.
~;:;.p~~u~ . ..W_ion Oii\.er"wiiS presented a plaque for herAgency, Me1p County . H1stclrical efforts.
Warner and Oliver indicaled that
.Soc•et~ and Mu~um, Meigs County
Council .on 1\gmg Yesteryear Pro- plans are well underway for the
gram, and the Meigs County United 1997 Meigs County United Fund
Methodist Cooperative Parish.
Other groups received money, up campaign to be lcicked off Oct. 26 by
the Big Bend Walleye/Sauger Tour10 s2,ooo. through designated nament -- with proccieds to benefit the
CHAIRMAN HONORED- Meigs County United Fund campaign
pledges, treasurer Tom Dooley said.
Warner commended volunteers United Fund. Tournament planning is chairman Dick Warner, left, manager of the Pomeroy Kroger&amp;
and businesses that assisted with the underway with more information to store, waa honored with a plaque at last night's United Fund
annual meeting in Pomaroy. Warner headed the campaign which
!996 fund drive including Farmers be publicized laler.
In
addition,
Chloris
Gaul,
Susan
Jut night donated mora than $14,000 to nina local groupt. PreBank, American Electric Power and
aantlng
.
Oliver,
John
Riebel,
Tom
DoQley,
the plaque was United Fund president Susen Qliver. .
the Southern Ohio Coal Company ••
Vicki
Morrow
and
Debbie
Haptonan AEP subsidiary.
Don Frymyer troop leader of stall were appointed to their second board while Tom Hunter, Robbie Dawn Spalding were appomted to
three year term on ihe United Fund Shields, Roger Hysell and the Rev. their first three year term.
'

U."-&gt;·*

Eastern board adjusts 1995-96 school calendar
By TOM HUNTER
Sentlllel Nawa Staff

The Eastern Local Board of Education approved changes to the 199596 school calendar to allow make up
days to be added to the school year
at· Wednesday's regular meeling at
Riverview Elementary School.
Students. will attend school on
April 13 and ~7 for the minimum
time required by the State Board of
Education; 5 112 hours. Students
will also attend school for three days
following Memorial Day; May 28,
29, and 30.
Nearly ~0 residents attended the
meeting for the final series or discussion on the district bond issue and
ihe $8.75 million proposed districl
·construction project. Several of the
questions broughl up concerned the
proposed coun1y branch library that
will be incl11ded into the new Eastern
Elementary/Middle School, adjacent
to Eastern High School.

"The county branch library is a · a tutor for a district student, retroacwin-win situation for the district. The tive to Feb. 8, 1996.
- approved Toni M. Hudson and
Meigs County Library Board is going
Nancy
E. Scarbrough as substitute
to lease the facility from the school
teachers
for the remainder of the
district, and provide all the equipment
school
year
on an as needed bas is
and furniture al no costs to the district. We're going to have a first-class only.
library facility for our children 10 use
- approved Dixie Say re to fill the
daily, and for the district residents to supplemental position of elementary
use during the days and evenings," choir director (half time) for the elesaid board member Greg Bailey.
mentary operetta.
.
Overall, response to the bond
- approved Ray Maxso n as a subissue and construction plans has been stitute bus driver on a probationary
very positive, according to members contract, pending Meigs Co. Board
of the school board and the local approval and final cenification for the
committee working for passage of the 95-96 school year and allow the district to usc as substitutes after probaissue.
"I've never seen a time where tionary driving time has been sati sthere was more of a need for a new factorily completed.
- employed Mrs. Leah Ord as
school than right now. We are hopeful that the residents or the district guidance counselor to ftll the remainwill agree," said board member John ing contract left due to the retirement
· of Thomas Kelly.
Rice .
• approved a professional day for
In other matters, the board :
• approved hiring Mary Leach as an IEP in-.service day for Nancy Cir-

c~ .

'
,,
- approved supple~lal contracts
fo r the 95-96 scho61 year for the fol&gt;'
lowing: Casey Coffey and Shauli
Bush, volunteer assistant baseball
coaches; Michael W. Ropsh and Kirk
Reed , volunteer assistant track coaches.
- accepted the resignation of elementary principal Richard' Roberts,
effective at the end of the 95.96
sc hool year:
• approved an agreement with Alltel to revamp the current high school
phone system .
- approved lhe list of 1996 graduating seniors .
- approved the district entering
into an agreement with the Ohio
Department of Education for the
Goals 2000 Grant.
A special meeting for personnel
and other matters has been set for
next Wednesday, 6:30 p.m., at the
high school.

Scottish town grieves for its slain children
DUNBLANE, Scotland (AP) The sweet smiles of 29 youngsters
posing for their first school picture
shone out across newspaper frontpages today. The effect was more
heart-wrenching than any report on
the evening news that 16 of them had
been slain.
This small town in Scotland was
grieving today for the 16kindergarten
students and their teacher, gunned
down by a local man who burst into
their school gym ind shot them to
death before lcillina himself.
, Wednesdlly 's. shooting was the
worst in modem ~ritish history.
TWelve other children were
wounded in the massacre, several
badly, including a 5-year-old hoy
who was shot three times. Only one
student in the room was not shot.
"~'were little bodies in !Iiles
dotted around the room and itenis of
children's "clothing like shoes ...

around the floor," said the first ambulance man to reach Dunblane Primary School.
·"The strange thing ... was the virtual silence that we encountered as
we walked in. Children were just sitting there in total shock with bullet
wounds to their limbs and bodies.
unable to cry out or speak," John
McEwen was quoted as telling n.e
Sun newspaper.
·
Residents of this close-kni~ bucolic town at the edge of the Scottish
Highlands placed flowers, cards, leddy bears and other toys on the sidewalk outside the schOOl, where fright·
ened parents had wailed Wednesday
to find out if their children were
among the dead.
.
· One .card with the flowers read:
"May God take better care of yoo
than this world ever can."
Authorities said the 700-pupil
school would be ciO!ed until Mon-

day.
Police said disgruntled fonner
youth worker Thomas Hamilton
walked through the school's front
entrance jus1 after 9:30 a.m.. armed
with four handgun s. He headed
through the dining room, past the
assembly hall and into lhe gym .
There, he opened fire and killed II
girls and five boys, all aged 5 and 6,
and their teacher Gwenne Mayor, 45.
The ambulance man said Mayor
looked as though she had been tryin g
to shield the children from the bullets.
" She was direc1ly in fronl of a
group of clljJdren who --:ere all
bef ond hope," Mc{lwen said, who
called the scene a " medieval vision
of hell."
"One boy or about five was sitting
on the floor looking confused and
shocked pointing at a bullet hole in
his arm," he was quoted as saying.
"He obviously couldn 'I grasp whal

had happened and was so shocked he
couldn't cry. His arm was hanging
limp and useless at hi s side and he
looked up at me as if he was pleading for an exphination."
TWo other women teachers were
hospitalized with gunshot wounds in
their limbs. The Times of London
said they were believed to have-been
hit when Ham!lton opened fire liS
made his way to·the gym.
Police had no motive for the
attack in the town 40 miles northwesl
of Edinburgh.
Hamilton, 43, a llian with a feslerin g grievance about his ouster as
a Boy Scout leader, was a gun enthusiast. He had run boys' ·athletics
groups while dem~n4ing rein&amp;r.te·
ment liS a local Scout leader after
being expelled him in I p74 for
"unstable and possibly improper'
behavior."

�.'

The Dally Sentinel• , . . 3

"'pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 1-t, 1891

..----Local brief

•

Thul'8dlly, u.rch 14, f

John W. Hall

~

,,

.
uon.

,

Our editDI',
,
Qo Middleport atudents ao back to Dear Editor:
We are truly fOIIUIIatc to have l
I do not' consider myself a politiAt the February 28 meeuna of the Sd!&lt;ilnd 6lh llflldea at the bus garage?
Meigs Local School Board, Mr.
6. In li&amp;ht of the recent drug raid cian, nor does 'my family. However, man of Bob ~·s capabilities IQ
Buckley presented t't"O proposals for at the MJHS, can the safety of these when the need arises, I feel that I serve as our County Engineer. Whe6
changes for next school year in the students be cuatanteed?
sooi!Jd state my opinion'and my polit- the Keno · Bridge wu ~folcd. B~
dislrict.
,
7. What is the point of l~ving so ical views on Cef\lin issues. I don't came to the rescue--of the surroullllThe fJrSt· proposal which he tee- much space available in the elemen- have to reson to sayi~l anytliing bid ing community and liOOD rq&gt;laccd ~
A Gannett Co. f':'ewapaper
ommendcd to the board included the taries •-which will lose their ·6th about Gene Triplett. To the contrary, aging bridge with a new .structure ljt
following: closing Bradbury school, grades? Mr. Buckley said the long· we have been neighbors and friends no additional cost to the taxp&amp;y~.
moving Bradbury Sth grade (cur- range plans call for closing all ele- for many yean, and not once have we He was able to obtain advance Issue
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publither
rently Middleport's 4th grade) to . mentary schools llxcept two. 15 this had a disagreement or an argument. ·II money thtough his associliion antl
· Pomeroy Elerilentary, moving all 6lh the beginning of the end for the small However, I ·do feel that Bob Eason work with Regionll and State ()$
grade students in.every elementary in elementary schools?
has distincuishcd himself as a leader cials. Issue II money bas l!evtr bee~
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Controller
the dislrict to the old central building
8. A second proposal offered as our Meigs «;:ounty Engineer.
o.MN~u-ger
advanced to any Other communi!f
at MJHS te create a middle school, called for usina Bradbury for the bus
Not only has he distinguished prior to this allocation.
. 1
and the renovation of . the current garage/administrative offices and himself as a leader as o.ur County
I have traveled numerous miles of
'--..,,. _ _ _ _ _, _ , . _ _ _ _ All_
structure at Bradbury to house the bus moving all of Bradbury Elementary Engineer, he has molivaied
his
· county highways the past.fO!Jr y~
I
'
.. ...,.,., ... _,_mUIII»IIft*l__
_ __......,...,.,_,
garage and the district's administra- . to the central buildi!lll· If thO move is employees to excel in the1r day to day and know with qertaintyJ"at99,\)
tive offices. Tliis proposal ~s necessary, woul~'t'thai mal&lt;;~ more &amp;ctivities. He has not only vaslly of the county hig~way .ioads tbat'
""· IWI ....,_, ..... d I»,.-. ~ I» .. , _ - .
.
brought questions from many parents sense? Isn't Bradbury simply Mid- improved the offJCC quarters at the have tnaveled have been jmprovod
in the disttict. Some of our questions dleport's Sth and 6th grade annex? county garage; but he has remarkably . under the cuidance ·and direction of
are listed below.
Wouldn't the potential for.collabona- improved the employee facilities at Bob Eason.
1. Since we recendy passed a lion between the two schools be the garqe as well. Those improvebooks, buildings, and .buses levy, why incredible if tliey were closer togeth- · ments include a locker room, show- · &lt;Throulh associllions) I gains.
weren't we told that one of the build- er? WQUldn't it~ more sense than er and addiliOI\al ~ facilities, keen awaretless ~?f nbC (OIIly Bob' ·
i11gs which serves Middleport-- disruptina every elementary in the ·which are now handicap accessible as ability to calculate figuies iii his ·
To voters of the Esstem school district · whose residents strongly supported dislrict?
required by law. The employees and his quic.k mathmlllic:lllkills, but
the levy--would have to be closed.
The bottom line is that we don't appreciate these improveQICnla, and, also hia desn to improve this area for
• In a few days you are going to year term. 'Those were four hectic Was this poor planning on the part of agree wi!IJ the proposal to disband in turn have learned to excel at their
his faDtily and·the cornrill\nity. , . •~i
vote a school levy, which I think is years. We had school levies turned the board or were we deceived in Bradbury school. These are. just a daily assigned tasks.
. PI~ be advi~ -~ il !fi~&lt;
very important to our school district. down by ~ vOtets, then had to have order to pass a levy?
fraction of the questions we h&amp;ve in
Addiliohally, over the past three absolutely no inuaitce",lortfi¢ ~P.r.
In Baum Lumber you can see a dis- a special election during which we
2. Why is.there money available to regard to this issue. ~e staff and the years, Bob illd his staff have paved .County Enpneer's OfiK:e·bt'li~
play which has a drawing of the pro- passed a bond iSS\Ie for two new renovate the cunent Bradbury school PTO have formed a partnership this S6 miles of cdunty hipways and Departmelu. Nor would I eVer, .as
posed new K-8 grade school and schools. The district and Eastern for a bus aarage ( recently mandated school year enabling us to make it the sealed 7S miles of roadway. He and long as Bob Eason is County EnaE'.:.·
library which will be open to the pub- High School wcte on their way, for by the state) aitd administrative best year in Bradbury history. We his staffliave-installed 30,000 feet of
. . ~· :lic, and renovations to the existing which I was very proud of. My son offices but not 10 bring the building would appreciate the :opportunity to guardiail. painted 4S,ooo feet of neer.
1 urge each and every Metp · '
high school. I cannot tell you all of and daughter graduated from EHS, up to standards for our studen~?
. contil\ue with that partnership at guardrail and .,.nted 4S miles of County resident to get out and vote,"
the ficures due to my failing eyesight. and now I have two grandsons who
3. If House Bill 264 can be used Bradbury either in its current loca- edge ·Jines: "In addition 19 these for the candidate of their choice on
but one thing I can read is the mes- I hope will do the same.
tor renovations on a building in as lion, or .across from Middleport Ele- accompliihlnenla, Bob and his staff
.
;~
We have in our district four fin: poor a shape as the central building- mentary which would _be tl)c least have paid off $300,000 in Hiherited March 19.
sage we should take seriously, it says
Mf
.
J!lilnf:I
it is time .for a tum, it is now lime for departments, two emergency squads, -which was condemned--why can't intrusive for all involved. Please debt from the prniw administta.. Pomeroy
' .'
us to make that tum and go ~orward a good telephone system, and a goOd the same money not be uSed to repair consider our concerns when making
and get this program on its way.
water system, Ill of which I worked Bradbury ? Qr better yet the renova- this imponant decision. And parents,
I am now in my 88th year, most of hard and long to get in our dislrict.l lions with HB Z64 are sure to have ·please give our cona:fns dreful conit spent in Chester Township, with the don't know what any of the dislrict saved levy money eartnarked for sideration, add your own, and voice
Dear Editor,
will be a big issue this fall, so let's
last 52 yelii"S living in Chester. I have residents would do without any of buildings--couldn't that he used?
them to the board at the March 13
In
response
to
Barbara
Stahl's
discuss
it now.
; :I
taken part in about every important these services.
meeting at the central office or at the
"response"letter
in
the
March
3
issue
We
have
ih*
candi~
running
project we have had in thi,s IRS of the
Right now; we need to get this
1c
4. What are the advantages for the March 27 meeting--where the final
o.fThe Daily Sentinel, it seems to me for reelection who are in their midcounty during the ·last 52 yean. The lev}- passed for our children. I hope students of a middle school?
decision will be' made--at Salem
that she asked a lot of rhetorical, to-late 70s. P-roject five years lldde4•,
first was the football boosters group, .some of you would try to forget some
S. What happens if th~ middle Center Elementary.
now knoWn as the Eastern Athletic of the things that you don't like, and ·school is a bust or the student popuBrenda Plutlln unanswerable questions but did not to that (one year l~ft in this term pi~ -;
Boosters: We also ha:o:e the B&amp;Jid lOok at the good things about.it for the lation outgrows the central building?
Middle
contradict directly anything I had to a new four year term) and we would·,,,
port say. Question for her: Can ~ou II!: have people in their 80s runnina .. ;
Boosters, and the PTO'S which future generations.
together they have raised hundreds of ·
naive enou&amp;h to sugaest lhat Harten. important parts of county gove!'II-'.;J
So what do you say neighbors, let
thousands of dollars for ow; schools. , us go out and pass the levy. I am hopbach's children and an in-law as well . menl. U is my opinion that now iS: :!
I served as a two-~ appoinree to ing I will be around when it's done,
as Jones and Roush all got their jobs time to prune the court· house tree of&gt;~
on their merit or in a ·competitive · these aged branches.
· ... in
the school board wheil ·the Eastern and I have eyesight acxid enough to
Local 'Dislrict was · foimed in the see it
Qear Editor:
inadequate. The business education manner? Other families should be so
I speak only fa, myself but if, ~
1950's, then I was elected to a fourDel-r
Baum
lam
quite
sure
that
the
majority
of
room
is
cramped
with
the
equipment
lucky.
However,
that
·aspect
of
Hartenbach
wants to defend·himselff&gt; i
!
Cbester the ~~esidents of the Southern Local . necessary to learn the trade. The com' Hartenbach's performance is well I will meet him in.a debate on his pen.;1
School Qislrict ~ave been informed puler lab is nothing more than a lit- known and un~rstood so I will not formance and the issues fating lhilf. ~
I'
•,
~
il
of the new tax levy that the district tie niche that was carved out of the belabor the potnt.
.
.
county. All I ask is that it be publil:,: l .
•
would like to have passed. Since that library which left it crowded. After
As _fo~ her contenllon th~t three that we agree on a moderator and he:·i 1
Dear Ed.itor,
, . '· ..
' &gt;,,
•. of todNe
. . ·will be wotk,ina" inC,olum- has come out'in Ute open, there have, taking ...!ffis into·· ~onsideqti&lt;lp; . ~ ·· comrrusstoners
were
for. ,can c~-·~-""'
.....
.
.. responstble
'. .. .
,,.,.,...,w.....
,. ...
,.. When ···"" --·!\"'
6
Out tax'payers should be awire of .. bus, C~l~e. CalifDn\ia, or some- been a few tinfnformed souls who can anyone arcue against the need? , the Joncs/Roush affjllr · 1 ne~ wu
Meanwhile, be wary of the· wJUi..-,,.
this law as pertains to the upcoming place else.
.
took to their pens and paper to
am
certain
that
this
is
trailing
off
d~fe~.
Roush
restgncd
as
compers
and innuendos that will surely ·
1
'lection"s. The ramifications of this . ,It's goOd we have a medium by declare their disgust and outrage the subject, but I promise that it ties "!tsstoner and went to the co~nty come regarding many candidates~ ){;;;,
tax increase we are considerin1 on 19 ·- .Vhich"1Ch important and all-encom- through the very venue that 1 am in. Some . people have recently highway dep.~'!'ent and Janet you hear a rumor call the candidate;;1;
March could be far more.severe than passing issues .such as t~is can be using now. That is one of their Con- · attacked the use of technology in the Howard voted no on every facet of affected and give him or her a chanci! ~ ~
is cnmmonly suggested. ·
' publicly discussed and opinions .stitutiotial rights, but 1do believe that classroom. Technology makes today's that fiasco. That_l~ves Hartenbach as to confirm. oi deny. ·~dood ol' boy•·...~
Ref; The Daily Sentinel-- Notice aired. Some publicllions are partial to what is written should be factual and world go 'round. Watch any of the the onl~ one still 1n office who was politics hal ruled in Meigseoiinty f01-,,;
of Election:
·
..
those opinions with which the editors from experience rather than pure con- evenina news programs, and you can responsible. ,
too long but it can't work if there ithu
Titere shall be submined in con- concur. Thank you Daily Sentinel for jecture and myth.
sec that this is true. This is now a
The c~ls I ve had: about my letter open debate and honest dialogue. . ~'"
junction !herewith as a single propo- an open forum. It's the only way
First of all, a new consolidated ·. global community whether people ha~e all ~n po'1t1ve. But ?ne• . The future of Meigs County rests ).;,
sition, the additional question: "Shall many have to express their diverse elementary school is most definitely like it or not, and it isn't fair 10 iso- whtle a~tn~ '!.'-'my observ.atlons on the ability and moral fiber of ~he "''
an additional levy of ~es be made views.
needed. The buildings that are in use late .our kids .~n expect.them 10 1;1e ' were vabd, ,said :'fou we~ a btt hahl oftkials we have representing us. 1'' I
--etc., etc.. etc. -- e~cept that in those
R.E. Weaver now were fine and great in their day, able to compete with kids from oth- on htm. He s gettmg old.
. .
hope both parties will study closely-.M
years in which the Sl!lte Board of
Racine ·but those days have most assuredly ers parts of the country as well as othThat_ remark got me to thmking and choose wisely. Then·we can have'""
Educittion, pursuant'to Sec. 3318.0S I
(Editor's note: ORC HCtlon passed. OUr community is trying to er parts ofthe world ~ 0 have been about hts age as well as a c~uple of a debate this fall on political pbilos.;r, i
of the Ohio Revised Code, requires 3318.051 refers to scbool dis~ grow, but with the lack of space in exposed 10 computers, the Internet, ~rs ~n the ballot on both Uckets .. I ophy and the direction and role of ; ;
the dislrictto increase the tax rate to wblcb lru:nue tbelr bonded our schools this is not possible. The and other forms pf the. latest tech- don t thtnk you can expect!~ see his government.
· ,
.. 1, ;,
no more than 10 mills".
lndebledise• fartbe exp~ pur- dislrict is currently scoring the high- nology. To abandon technology, one age menlloncd m anr of ht~ adverGay F. JnhNoo·
From 6 to 10 mills is a potential JICIIC of.reducinc the lllnouat they est in the county on the ninth gnade might as well sit the kid~ back in the · tlsements. But tf he IS nomtnated 11
Albany,ll:
65 percent increase, ()I" a raise in the owe to the state. Under tbe section, proficiency tests and placCif sixth out one-roomed schools anit ha_'Ve them
•'~·:·
local tax oll27 peri;ent at the discre-' the llate ean Inc-- the mlllar • 0 fthe 27 hool d" · · the So th d · the. " "pheri • ;- ••- 'th
..........
..sc Thattstnctstn
u - the
Otng
ng ,~..,...WI
Bu,··~,·ngs
tion of the ~ig 'spe!'!!ers in Columbus. • by ping tbroup
tbe CGUDI)' budeast Dislrict.
is one reason why
aid oftranClabacus.
. " • ..,
IU1
r v, II
.
.There has to be a better way for one pt eommlsslon and state board of parents are .wanting their children to
As things stand now, Southern ,is
'
· ·
• li i
of the poorest ai'eas in the state to education-- to ensure It gets paid. come to Southern. The disttict had to indeed a great school disttict offering Dear•Editor,
same problems )lolil! exist, Rl~, ,;,
resolve this problem priorto the next A~1to PrwcatincAitOmey tum away some ofthcse open enroll- its students one of the besteducllions
Southern Local's buildings are of whai buildinas the dislriCI "-' fJ
school bQard el~tion.
' Jolul R. Lentes, who II • member ment students this year due to lack of in the state. But; how long can they only a small p~ of the di~.trict's prl_lh- Sure the Slate will supply new equiP!,;~;
Many that I have ~lked wi~ aren't ol.the budpt~ommlsllon, tbe - - space. Another problem is that these hold their own with other schools that lems. The 6.1 mtlllevy. ~1th S.6 m~lls m~nt and.computers,~·· but who it. I.;I ·
sure we can afford thts obhgauon f?r don"does not •ppl:t: to eitller South· aging edifices are beginning to come , supply iheir students with the best forconstructton.and .S null for eqiup- 1omg to pay the matntenance ~..,
23 y~ars. By the year 2019 many wtll" -.m or Eatem districts since tile close to not passing the safety inwec- and newest accouterments. One can ment, will get a new building. As I not the state.
·
·1.';;
be tcying ',to retire, some trying to purpote oltbe levies II for bulldlna tions. This js assuming that· the)i only imagine what Southern's teach- understand the levy languate the
I, for orie,lhiilk they build Oil ~/
meet. the obligation on a reduced c-b uctlon - not to reduce the haven't already reached that mark as ers and principals could do if the)' state has the right, anytime in the next terrace at the present,)tnio.r higll, 'Th!f. 1
income, and most of the area youth · .i-nt o l - y owed tbe state.) had Racine Elementary. These build- had state-of-the-an facilities and 23 years. to raise the .S mills to as, would ~t.the c~$1 of 11 new gym~,·,,
·
·'
·
' ' ·
ingsitrealsoillequippCd. Evenifthc equipment. Theonlywayourdistrict much as 4 mills wit4the taxpayers some classrooms.
,.,.,
state is ge11erous enough to allocate can ·.~ hold its own" and educate our having no say(~ ~itor's note).
Jt. A.Jo)lnson
• .'
,,
funds or the
, students are diligent chilarenaswellasanyotheriswith
·- Thcdistrictisinadeficitsituation Racine .
'.
. ~ · ,~
Deai Editor,
most likely will die before it is paid enou"" to rat
·
...__
ak
ad
·
d.
(Eel
.
Ito
'
'
•
-•ORC
·
·
. ·se money for co
_ mputers,
our. help, and that means voting now.....y m e vance raws on
r • n..... : .
tectlot(!"'. '.
I .have been reading with much off.
.
~"'
tax ·
d th
· 1 the tate 3318.051 ---6&lt; to _..... __ , _......._ ,_ · ' 1u •
: lhl! buildings are not outfitted with "yes"onMan:h l9th'or·'-newle"".
engomo
s
....era ...,...... uWUidl
interest on the two bond issues fac- .
I· have payed property taxes in ·
'' u"'
., 10811mcomean
fund last 1 M h 1996 A
bl b •-•'--1 ._ __ _. __.
'
·
·
'M
·
c
•
·
enough
outlets
to
handle
the
needed
Th--'Ji:·
you
·
•
oan
an:
.
·
"
c
-.-.-e
..... r ina """"
u.i.,s County voters.
,
e1gs ounty .or the past 22 years powe.r supply. An e~ample of this
"''
•
the
board
...__.ded
..........
d
"-oOL...
'
Da-~.a F. ......._.
.ew years ago
......1 to --'!tcU•a...- ..... ap.._.t)llll):~
I am very much aware that all pne . and ha
, ve never had a kid in school.
•ou
ra•~·N
conven all heati g !ants 10 gas nat
' .,__.._....., .....
T
_,__
· o.. (--o..
1.....,
Dl..&amp;. "-bool C
nsedl
P to
• - JICIICtotlle
. •..._....
•R~Mat ..._~
1lftl....,smestco.to
readsaboutanissueandhowgoOd.i
.,..,...atmy&amp;ax would. be Syracu••
- Elcmen·••rv.
_,
77" Southem ....
u.,.
&amp;1 LP.
~ nd
•••,....,
__.__
-7
soil.ildl ii not always true. Ge11erilly , .sl&amp;tement and see how much goes to · · The high school is,also in need of
· Valedictorian ura or • suppo
Y save u s, owe ' state: u......-lbe Mel._, .
.11 w·l·'il'"""
. · •.nt us for several years. · die schools arid bow liale •oes to our a retrofit. The science labs ate very
Portland ·. but no savings have ever be\ln made tbe lt8te can lncrtttlt tbe dap · 'z
,.,...
o
·
. 'public. Nearly all levies passed ,in the • by 101n1 tbroup die couuty .,..;;:;tl
' lfihibt&gt;.ndissuespassandido!l't t~nships to : mai.ntain · our rural
last 20 years have gone to silary aet~....O..aad~boudG( !: t
tltinl, ~Y will you better get pre- roads. Unti.l someone comes up with
SU'nnnrf
increases. 1M PTOs of each. school od~~a~liou -eo -...It.-....,,,::; •
.,.red for another one in the near a~ way to fund scboQls and tal&lt;;c
r II
1"1'' "
u
ha e bee the pn·..,..., source of any A......_.,_ ,._
_.. ,
future: Theyhavenottoldusabout _theleia4offtllelandownersuch .8$a
v
.n
· ··-• ·
- - -,ton-tlilaAUo wf ·'
.L ·
sal
·1 · 'II
•
· ·
Dear Ed1·•-r,
· $7,'106,000, leavt"ng c1"''zens of th1"s new equ~P"!ent placed tn the sc~l. John R. Lentes, who il,a mim..,,M
~UJC addtdcostofoperating.the
, es tax, WI not vote .ora ruse 1n
w
u
Thcdistnct has to beopetllcd hke oltbe bud&amp;et ......,m~a•-- ....._ -.:""
• 11
· ew
·
"'•t"ldt"ng
wt"ll
come
from
such
as
""""'rty
tax
.....
_
Easjem
Local
School
Dism"ct
dislrict
with
$l,i06,0oo
·
t
obemet
by
b
·
1 .........
If•.._. uc tlondoesnotllpplyto~~~-~
--·d
~ .
.
,..•...,... · · · . .
""'
a ustnesstostaysovent
·;t':, n~ ".::rs, office ·help, elecmc,
~bet l~t sounds IOQ good to is once again beina offered'the oppor- taxpax~rs. This opportUnity is a rare excess assets, sell them, don't iive .it .el'll 0!' Eatern dlltiietl ~ ...:....
. water, , Dl,etc.
. ou .
tunitytoundergoabuildihgprogram occaslbn.
·
·
them away for a toke~ fee. Sal~f! pu..,G.eoltllele~liloriJ I'IIIC".::J
!·A tot of our old older people are
Jim LDcu to ~Iter accommodate the state ·
No.one el)joys paying lalles, but costs must be reduced to ~XI- cCIIWCttwclioa _ Dot to··......_. tile
,on a fixed income and cannot afforil
,,
·r-troy demands~ requirernents"dictatcd to .the stali' o{ .Riverview Elementarr mately 80 percent of income ~the . - . t
the ~ in taxes and a lot of us
.
us at the present time.
•
reali;ed the priorlty of both teachers
_
•oil
~
As our dislrict is now s~uatcd. it and ~nts is to provide for ourchil~n~ntro/
S"
·
is impossible to supply r~ our stu- c1ren the opporiiJnities nKJuired to bet., •
·
'
, , . . · . . ., ;
,
dents the privileges and opportunities .. ti!r prepare atudfnts for the demands
,.
children in other dislricts are reeeiv- of tomorrow's world. We believe our
Dear Editor:
· shall be as wool."
' .. :1.
1:::.~
.ins. Our student body is desefvin1 of .ci)II!:Cri!s ~ould be on looking ihead
I listen to the news and rCad the
In Isaiah 1-20, ~
"bill if ye .-.
·~TodaY.lli 1
Mare
t h 14,thc 7.4th day q(·J.996..There uc 292 dayi such facilitiea u .111111ic roonu. com. at•childrenoftdday will be fac- newspapers. I hear of a lei of things refuse and libel; ye lhalibednounld·· '"'
1
pule!&gt;- labs, 111 labs, libnry resouree ing tomorrow. A financi.al sacrifice happenins in IICidy every slalc 11\d with the s"''ord: for the itl(jQth of~: :~
Tildav'•~ibJjpr-infli.Uiry: . ' .. · ;' : •
. ;
rooms,andadeq.remedialclus- could·not.biiJotter~ntllttnono\11' aroundtheworld. MaybeourGotl15 Lordhath ·lpokenit."
'
.
14,.1194, ~i ~y received a .,..,t {or hia'cotton ajn, u
room IIJ*O for all p.ie levels. How chi~n.
,
.
\·
. trying to get people'ultcntion.sotblt
If you ask most myono, they ••:
~~ .~i j:ottoR li)du.lfY: , , I_ .. · . can ~ supply tliia?
· .,
·
Let's all become better anformed they will. remember that he I~ stl!l ~D?lf. say they are ~ ~~~~ But.~~
~•f.:.:._ ~~~.. in·. .. -~--. . .;r.:_,_._· .. ~~
- '.•·.:
'I'1uitld'lllly, we i!R not invoJvcd,in and involved. Join us in ·~ of God and is in contrpl.
· tr IYC!' arebelnj bved cortbwy 1,0
,,
,.., ........... , ... --,---;- ,..._,...., Wli~"""''"" ..~ thelllfll loin P'**"•ofaow. This · the~ Local Sehool Dillrict's Maybe the lord is Wllllin1 peOple God's word. I see'dlat too. We are to.-. ,
'' ' "
' ·
'
• •.
· · entitles u to rnljCh pe11er llenefits liitin lor a continued and iqtroved to come blclt to him 'and wOrship • be holy as he ia holy. ,
. ,•· :.-1 l
1
"
for financialltllle ~for a i\WJd.. ed~ propa.
·' .
him. In Isaiah ~~~he uyJ. ·~
People, search ).'0111' hNrts and'' ' l
."' ' ini pl&lt;ipMI wbic:ll WOilld iJ!volve the · p.iJ Q
'fw' r ' DOW and lee Ill
toatJ!her,.uith compare your life '? 0011'1 word. •·'~ i ;
. . ~The Pii¥AIII ~-it ; ·. . '
.
~ .... the Lord; thou&amp;h ~~be ai
Seln:b ~ ~ ICrlpjlfta; • I• 7 . ; •• ~~ I
would,.
tQtal
IPJ!roXWWOIY'..
,
··
ltlyt,...,
Bh••la.rJ'·
let,
they
shall
be
white
as
~.
,
.
,~_If!,. , a4 ,,...,.t
~~~}l!e•
S8,75Q.000Withthji-..
a
blrebeinl
·
.
,
·
.
·
·
tbouah~beredlilcecri-,lbey
·
. •11• • •
·
.,
~
~I
~
-r
'
~

IMansfleid 1411"

111 Court St., POfiiii'OY, Ohio
814-192·2156 • Fax: 982·2157

I•

·.!lr

•

r

W. VA.

-..-.,-. ,..,,__

.-

4,•

.....

·..:

The_ age issue ::

Vote 'yes' for levy

'

f

.. is.ed Cod'a 33.18.0't::1
Oh 'o R\e. .,_

only part· .o·f p·•ftb'em ..··.·,_·,:

. Voters,beWBre

'(

.P""'g·r.·•m

n•esse

I

be

·

·. .' ' ."

.,_,owed ...e ........)",.·,

, · n h "' tory
,
1
1
,._
,

God iS

says

, .,.....111:.2.

'w.l. .....

'

'

f

"'*: .

•

'I

John Will Hall, 89, of Landrum, S. C., formerly of Hanford, W.Va., died
Tuesday, March 12, 1996 at Luke's Hospital in Columbus, N. C.
He was a retired coal miner, a member of the United Mine Workers of
America, and attended the Father's House Church in Hartford, w. Va.
Born on July 11 , 1906 at Hartford, h~ was the son of the late Willillm
.and Anna Cunningham Hall . He is survived by his wife, Etta Louise Nitz
Hall of Landrum, S. C., a son and daughter-in-law, John and Lorain Hall,
Jr., Landrum, S. C.; two daughters and a son-in-law, Mildred and Robert F.
Chitwood, Campobello, S. C .. and Alice Hall Norman, Montgomery, Ala.,
six grandchildren, five great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.
Preceding him in death besides his parents were a brother, Pearl H. Hall,
three sisters, Esta Hall, Mary Frances Carroll, and Bessie Scarbe.
Funeral services will be held Friday at I p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home. The Rev. Clyde fields will officiate and burial will be in Graham
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 6:30 to 8:30
p.m.

Jean ·

·

Letters
. to ,the edito'r .

.

Election Test to be held Friday

~:
Daily ·Sentinel Letters to ·the editor~-------.....--......_--:-...,.
'
.Vote for csndldate of your·cholce i
Doesn't agree with proposal

~

today,~s. weather forecast
r.'
Southeutem Ollio
•qoday...Clou!fy. A chance of rain
late i.n the day. High in the lower 60s.
Southwest windS 10 10 mph. Chance
oFrain 30 percent. ·
' T~night. .. Rain likely... Mairlly after
midnight. Low 40 to 4S. Southwest
wi-~d S to I0 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
' Friday.. .Showers ...With a chance
of-"lhunderstorms... Mainly in the

afternoon. High in the lower SOs.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
··
Extended forecast
Salurday...Dry. Lows in the lower
20s to lower 30s.- Highs from the low- ·
er 40s north to the middle 50s south.
S d A hance of rain . Lows
u~yH.. he . th
per. 40s 10
35 to SOs.. tg 5 m e up
Iower
Monda· ... A chance of rain. Lows
. HY. h
45 50
40
35 to . · •g s 10 ·

•
c
t y c·O urt
e·
•
g
·
s.
0
u
n'
llf."l
·
·
d
.cases processe
;,

1\1
,

.'fhe following cases were resolved Candace M. Barber, Reedsville,
last week in tbe Meigs County Court underage consumption, $170 plus
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
costs, three days jail suspended, pro·l'ined were: Brenda' Ball , Racine, bation; Janet L. McDonald, Tuppers
seat belt, SIS plus .costs; Joseph A. Plains, underage consumption, $170
Chlpman, Gallipolis, assyred clear plus costs, three days jail suspended,
dist.ance, $20 plus costs; David Cal- probation; Tara L. Congo, Long Botho~n. Athens, speed; $:30 plus costs; tom, underage consumption, $170
Edward Schaekel, Long -Bottom, seat plus costs, three days jail suspended,
belt, . $25 plus' costs; Dana Frye, probation ; Jason L. Carleton,
South Point; drug paraphernalia, $50 Coolville, underage consumption,
plus costs; falsification, costs, ·two $170 plus costs, three days jail susyears probation, 10 days jail sus- pended, probation;
pelldcd to three-days; Michael Carter, · Emily M. Johnson, Middleport,
Point Pleasant, W:Va.,. disorderly underage consumption, $170 plus
conduct, $50 plus costs; Ricky Lau- costs, t~ days jail suspended, prodermilt, Pomeroy, no operator's bation; Shannon L. McComas, Midlicense, $125 plus costs, 30 days jail dleport. underage consumption, S170
suspended flO , fiva ..da~s, ·.t~ - YCI!f!'" pi'!' c~, l~rec d,_ys jail su.spen~ep.
probation;· •
'· ·'• ·,
' ·
probation; Rtc1C1e ·L. Causey,
Parney " Hiles, Middleport, .Reedsville, underage consumption,
attempted.arson, $100 plus cosl.i, six $170 plus costs, three days jail susmonths jail suspended, two years pro. pended, probatioh; Christopher K.
bation; Ray L. Reed,'IUppers Plains, Becker; Middlepon, driving under the
•eckless operation, $3S plus costs; influence. SSOO plus costs, 10 days
·Bobby R. Moore, Dexter, misuse of jail suspended to three days, 90-day
credit cards, costs, ·six months jail OL suspension, one year probation,
suspended. two years probation, rcsti- . $250 of fine and jail suspended upon
tuti~Jn ; James D. Riffle, Syracuse, completion of residential treatment
·
·
improper. backing, $20 plus costS; . ·program;
Votinie F. Todd, Rutland, assault.
Paul D. Cottrell, Pomeroy, DUI,
coS($. 10 days jail 'suspended, two $SOO plus costs, 10 days jail susyears probation;· Toby A. Hysell, pended to three days, 90-day OL susColUmbus, wrongful entrustme,.t, pension, one year probation. $250 of
$125 plus costs, 10 days jail sus- fine and jail suspended upon compended, two years probation;
pletion of residential treatment proOzzie Blair, · Long Bottom, gram .
attempted . cultivation, $1,000 plus
costs, six months jail suspended,
two yean 'p~tion; Jason E. Hendrix, Middlepon, reckless operation,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
$100pluscosls; PaulaS. Funk, Mid- WEDNESDAY
.
dleport, t-.6 cbiln~ · passing bad
Admissions: None
cheeks, $25 plus costs on each, resti· Discharges: Jonathan Fowler,
tution; .Sara" ·D. · Neal; · Langsville,
New Haven, W.Va.
faillire to ' control, $30 _plus costs;
chrlsRisk, 'Athens, speed, $26 plus
HolZer Medl~al Center
costs; Starlit Ray, Rutland, drug para- '
Discharges
March 13 · Leonard
phtimalia, S50 "plus' costs;
'Foster,
Clieryal
Webb, Johnathan
rerTy ·t. Gardner, Gallipolis, failBragg,
Selena
Crossen,
Heather
ure to conltol, $30 plus cos!s;_Rndney L. Smith, MiddlepO!'I, ~.o OL, Ruth. Timothy Willis, Mrs. Jaso.n
$100 plu~ costs, one year probation, Hysell and son anll Sharon Griffith ..
Births Mardi 13 - Mr. and Mrs.
three days jail and $50 suspended if
Charles
Davis, son, of Crown City
valfd OL p~ented within 90 "d)lys;
and Mr. and Mrs.'· Del bert Peoples,
.
.
'
.
' .
daughter. of Wellston. ·

Hospital . news

-

.

'(he Daily Sentinel
.

' '

'

''

Livestock report

I·

(IJSP$ 21J.9fl)

Weed

Jean Russell Weed, 84, of Columbus. a fonner Pomeroy resident, died
Wednesday, March 13, at a hospital in Hillsboro.
Mrs. Weed was the daughter of the late Hattie Merrick Russell and Alben
E: Russell . She graduated from Pomeroy High School and Ohio State University and taught school in Pomeroy and in Columbus .
. She was preceded in death by her husband, Lawrence Weed, a sister, Alice
Allen, and a brother, Alben Russell, Jr.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Steven Weed and Mary Kaye
Weed and two grandchildren of Columbus.
Burial will be in the Walnut Grove Cemetery, Columbus, Saturday, 10:30
a.m.
c ti ed f
1
on nu
rom page
·
·
• • •
.
.
up agamst are due to a lack of an
. The board accepted the restgnaemotional need," he said. "The mid- tton of Dorotliy Roach, cook at
die school concept will address those Pomeroy Elementary, for retirement
Do nna Bent1ey as ·
1
.
needs. "
.
.
purposes and h"red
Teachers questiOned how !he rrud- a substttute bus dnver.
die school concept would address the
Also. the board amended the drug
needs of students with special con- . and alcohol testing program policy to
cems: Amott said the concept is state, "It shall be grounds for termidesigned to include special education nation from employment with the
students.
Meigs Local School District when ·
Gaul said Ohio University may any employee who is subject to this
teachaclassontheconcepttollelp policy... testspositivefordrugsorhas
teachers adapt to the change.
an alcohol test indicating a .02 or
In personnel matters, the board greater breath alcohol level."
.
approved granting a three percent pay
In other business, the board
raise to exempt, non-administrativ.: accepted an intervention grant from
employees which includes secre- the Ohio Depanment of Education
taries, the assistant treasurer, and for approximately $26,000 and
cafeteria, maintenance and trans- approved using Disadvantaged Pupil
portation supervisors. It does not Impact Aid grant lf\Oney to provide
include the superintendent, principals for summer school at Metgs Htgh
and certified administrators.
School and for the su(llmer enrichThe board hired Mike Chancey as ment program.
head boys' track coach for the 1996
Pres,ent were Superintendent Bill
season and rejected the resignations Buckley, Treasu_rer Ctndy RhoneofMary Grim and Christine Blaetmar mus, board .Prestdent Roger Abbott
as assistant softball coach and assis- and board members Scott Walton,
tant junior high track coach, respec- Randy Humphreys, John HOOd and
lively.
Larry Rupe.

Me1gs
• · b 08fid

Forbes·withdraws, will support·Dole
Dal Col said one reason Forbes
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Trounced by Bob Dole in the latc!st .put off the fonnal an"nouncement for
series of primaries, Steve Forbes a day was so that his family could
decided today to abandon the Repub- join him.
Forbes had vowed as recently as
lican presidential race and throw his
.
this
morning to stay in the race
support to GOP front-runner Bob
through
next Tuesday 's MidweStern
Dole, campaign aides said.
primaries.
Forbes planned a Thursday afterBut after spending much of the
noon withdrawal announcement in
Washington. said campaign manager day closeted in a Washington hotel
Bill Dal Col. A senior Forbes aide, room with advisers, Forbes accepted
speaking on condition of anonymity, , their judgment that the chances for a
said Forbes would endorse Dole and victory in Illinois, Ohio, Michigan or
pledge his help in defeating President Wisconsin were bleak, given Dole's
big lead.
Clinton in the fall.

Meigs announcements
Texas Road on Wickham Road.
Elec;tion dinner set
The Rock Springs United
Methodist Chu.-h will have an elec- · Special servil:es announced S
tion day dinner with serving to begin
The Rev. Arius Hurt, Gallipolis,
at II a.m. Soups, sandwiches, pie, will be speaker at the Naomi Baptist
cake and beveniges with take-ouL Chu.-h Sunday at II a.m.
available. To place orders, residents
may call992-3334 or 992-7580.
Trustees to meet
Letart Township Trustees, 6 p.m
Open dance announced
Monday at the office building.
The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will hold an open Cemeteries to be cleared
dance Saturday at 8 p.m at the Senior
All cemeteries in Letart Township
Citizens Building. John Waugh will should be cleared of grave blankets
be the caller.
and other decorations by March 25.
Slgnup time ·
The Chester Baseball/Softball
Association signup days will be Friday from 6 to 8 p:m. and Saturday
from 9 to II :30 a.m. at the ,Chester
Grade School. gymnasium . The
signup is for all boys and girls in the
Chester area interested in playing
baseball/softball this summer.

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
()h;o Yoltey l'ul!lilhinJ CO-)'I(lannelt Co..
buying points Thursday by the U.S.
...,._, Ohio ~'769. I'll. 992·1t56. ii«ond
Department · of Agriculture Market
ct..,"""""! ......~~- Ohip.
News:
Revival services set
MttUcn 'he Auocilted Pre11:-.d die Ohio
Barrows and gilts: steady; demand
New.~~pli9JI: ~ ,. h
~ .
Revival services will be held at the
'
..
.
moderate on .a moderate supply.
Mt.
Hermon l,Jnited Brethren in
POSTMAI'I'iilt~ Seftd liddfeO edrree~IDIII 10
U.S.
1-3.
230-260
lbs.
46.50Christ
Church, March 17-24 at 7;30
Tlle.Dolly ~11101. llt•C&lt;Oon So.: POmeroy.
,
48.50,
few
49.00-49.50;
plants
47.50each evening. Evangelist is the Rev.
Ohiq &lt;t5'~~. . I. ' '"• • •
49.50, few SO.OO.
Robert Shook, a former pastor of the
. SIJIIICIIJtnoitiAT!IS
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.50- chu.-h. Special singing will be preOne wc!.~: .~.~:~.-~.....$1.00, • 46.50.
.sentCd each evening. The church is
OM Mo...o.•.•.•..•....•.••....&lt;•••••.•.••.•••••••••.••••• S11.70
• ·sows: steady. · .
Ooe v.. _. ...................................: ........ SIPf:G\l'. .
located in Texas C~mmunity, just off
.
'u.s.' t-3, 300-SOO lbs. 31.00~INGLI COPY PRICI
34.50; 500-650 lbs. 34.50-38.00.
Dolly .....................•.•.....•..•...... ..•...•.•..•. 35 Celllt
Boars: 24.00-31.00, mostly 2S.00s.blcriberi nOt dniri~ 10 ~y the carrier may
30.00.
.
nmh in Dance clrccc to 'Thc Den~ Seldnel
Estimated
receipts:
39,000.
Mltlwe. &amp;il or ll ,moMh blli&amp;. Cledlt will be
RICHARD DREYFUSS IN
Prlca from The Producers
~~~·---wm,
MR. HOLLAND'S
Livestock Auociation:
No 011bteripcioll ,by ll!lil ponniae4 lo "'"'
OPUS ..
. · Cattle; ~Y·
wlloro"homo,~~ I•avol~
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
· Slauahter steers: choice 59.00, MAIL ~tti'PTIONI • ·
STARTIIQ FRIOAY
, 64.00; !elect 54.00-59.00.
JACKIE CHEN IN
~~~~
.
13 - . .•..:.•.:•.....:.•..•. :•.•.•.....•. .....••.•.•..$21.30
' Slaughter heifers: choice S7.00RUMBLE
IN THE
26 't¥ecb.......,...: ........ ;........~.·.................$Sl.t2 . 63.SO; select 52.00-$7.00.
105
2
BRONX•
'
.56 '· ·
• .... •
' Ct!oll1
Cows: steady to 1.00 higher; all
ONE EVENINQ SHOW 7:10
J3·WIIIII: ...i!...-........:...~·.•Y.. L .......:....:.•. $29.2S
C!/WS 3_
9.50 and down.
26 . . . ........,.,..-:..........1..~1-.1·~··· ···•·1 $J6.Q
Bulls:
steady; all bulls 39.2S and
~ _ . .l';'l''l'';;,,,.,o:;,:;.,,,,;,_,M,,!-• ••"' '' ''''SJDO.n
down.
·,
P,~IIUed -~ - - · Monday ll&gt;roo1h
Aillar. ttl.Couo1 So.. Pomeroy. Ohio. !&gt;Y tho

The Meias Courny Board of Elections will hold a public testing of
their election. tabulation equipment Friday afternoon, 2 p.m., at the
board offices on Mulberry Avenue, according to director Rita Smith.
Smith noted that several questions concerning switching political parties for the primary have been raised. "If you voted in a past primary
and this year you want to vote the ballot of another party, you change
your affiliation by signing a statement to that effect when you go to
vote at ~e polling places Tuesday," explained Smith.

Bedford Twp•.road re-opened
A bridae repair that forCed the closing of Bedford Township Road
82 (Wickham Road) has been completed and the road has been reopened to traffic, county Engineer Bob·Eason stated Thursday morning.

First-time jobless claims
hit lowest level in weeks
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of first-time claims for jobless benefits fell by 10,000 last week
to the lowest level in eight weeks,
new evidence the economy may be
regaining strength.
The Labor Department said today
that new applications for unemployment insu~ance totaled a seasonally
adjusted 353 ,000, down from
363.000 during the week ended
March 9.
It was the smallest number since
claims tQtaled 316,000 during the
~
week ended
Jan. 13. Many analysts
had expected a slight increase.
Cl · h d · b 5 000 d ·
atms a nsen Y ,
unng
the March 9 week, bu( analysts said
that was a rebound from the previous
week when many newly laid-off
workers were unable to file because
of the holiday-shortened workweek.
The latest decline followed the
depanment's report last Friday that
the ~conom~ had created 705,000
?ew JObs du~ng February, the btggest
JOb growth tn more than 12 years.

- ···-,·,rnt'i""i"··•-···,···'"'

-

I

.

Tow
· Oh 1•0 t ·rms
·nvolv
·e·d
1
1
I ' 0
•n.tobacco settlem·en·t·.s
1

CLEVELAND (AP)- Two Ohio with Sammy's physicians and having
law firms with reputations for their them draw a profile and indicate '. .
work in civil cases were involved where he had tlie cancer." Climaco
"
with an alliance of 60 firms which , said.
The settlement is partly aimed-at
negotiated a class-action settlement in
New Orleans with the Liggett Group. reducing young people 's access to
John R. Climaco said Wednesday cigarette advertising.
"Every day, 3,000 American kids
he thinks the deal with the cigarette
maker will help stop children and begin their experiment with tobacco.
teen-agers from becoming involved These kids never think they are
with cigarettes. Climaco heads the going to get hocked on a deadly prodCleveland-based law firm of Clima- uct," Climaco said.
Tobacco company executives tes•
co, Climaco, Seminatore, Lefkowitz
&amp; Garofoli .
tified under oath two years ago that
The Cincinnati finri of Waite, they diq not thirk,nicotine was addicSchneider, Bayless &amp; Cheslty also tive .
participated.
In Cincinnati, Ahron Leichtman,
Climaco said !hat he involved his executive director of Citizens for a
firm in the case in 1994 and that it has Tobacco-free Sn&lt;;iety Inc., said
invested more than SI00,000 in the Wednesday that his organization
litigatio·n.
wants to see such cases "tried in a
" I've had an interest in tobacco . court of law in full public view."
litigation for a long time. It actually
He doubted that the settlement
comes out of my friendship for 25 terms would become effective and
years and my representation of Sam- said Liggett's motivation in the setmy Davis Jr.. and he died of larynx tlement could be a business decision
cancer. I'll never f\)rget sitting down linked to· a proxy battle aiming to
force RJR Nabisco to split ill&gt; tobacco and food businesses.
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 10
calls for assistance Wednesday
including one transfer call. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
3:17a.m., North Second Avenue,
Todd Quillen, Holzer Medical Cen-

EMS logs 10 calls

ter;

9:41 a.m.• Hysell Street, Loyal
Johnson, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
4:39p.m., South Second Avenue.
Mary Butcl)er, HMC.
POMEROY
2:09 p.m., Second Street, Ora
Carsey, Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
8:07 p.m.. Childrens Home Road,
Mildred Fultz, treated at the scene;
II :23 p.m.. Condor Street, Chester
Francis, treated at the scene.
RACINE
9:55 a.m., state Route 338,
Nathaniel Young, treated at the scene.
SYRACUSE
5:33 p.m., Park Road , Sam Zeigler, VMH.
RU11.AND
3:21 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center,-Maude Carney, VMH .

.'

Kllrt A. Ktlbler, E.A.

"Enrolled to Pntctlce Beto,.
the lntiii'MI Rev.nue s.rvtce.•

CHILD CA-RD
EXPENSES
May I claim a credit for
child care expenses I pay
while I'm looking for work?

A. You may claim a child

.

.

-

The new jobs helped push tl!ejob- :
less rate down to 5.S percent from-5.8 ·
Jl!:rcent in January, when payrolls :
shrank due largely to the blizzard. •
The four-week moving average of
new weekly jobless claims also fell
last week, down 7,000 to 364,000. It,
too, was the. lowest since ]an . 13,
when the average was 360,000.
Many analysts prefer to track the
less-volatile four-week . average
bee ause II. smooths outthe spt"k es in
the weekly reports.
During the week ended March 2. :
34 states and territories had reponed
an increase 'in clairr~s and 18 regis- :
d d 1·
0
tere ec mes. ne was unchanged. ·
The state data is reported a week lat- :
er than the national totals. •
';
States with the largest gains were
New York, 7,033; California, ~.045;
Michigan, 2.779; Missouri, ' 2;124,
and Washington, 2,093.
States with the biggest decreases
were Massachusetts, 4,262; Texas,
I ,632; Rhode Island, 1,542; Georgia,
1,423, and Tennessee; 888.

f AS!f~ vou~ SEATBE~..TS

1111 1111111

....

DICII't'll-

Re·Eiect

JANET
HOWARD
Yow County

C..Pssloier
Pd. lor by the Clllldltlltt

.. .

care ~redit for expenses that
are work·related- those that
allow you (and your spouse, if
you are married) to woric. or to
actively look for work. To
clajm a credit for child care
expenses incurred during your
sean:h,'however, you must
have some earned income

during the year.

...

�•

•

Sports

'

Thurscfay, March 114, 1996

'AP girls' Olvls/Qn IV sii-Ohlcileams named

\: ~astern's

JESSICA KARR

I Brookhaven and Division lli Heath.
Wenzlick is a 5-8 senior who
scored 22.3 points a game to go with
6.3 ·assists, 5.3 steals and 8.3
~ebounds.

They shared the top billing based
on the recommendations of a state
media panel.
The other two !eams in the 21st
state tournament semifinals at St.
John Arena were also represented on
the first team. South Charleston
.Southeastern's Stephanie Stewan (57, Jr., 18.8 points per game) and

17.0.).

.

'

• There's a.reason Connecticut and
:; Louisiana Tech are two of the best
: ; women 's basketball teams in the
:·country.
They have players. Good players.
Second-ranked Connecticut had
:' two first-team choices, while No. I
·:;Louisiana Tech had a first-teamer
.: :and a second-teamer among The
:· :Associated Press all-America selec: :tions announced Wednesday.
·.: ·. Center ·K;~ra Wo1t11rs and feisty
.: ia·aid Jennifer Rizzotti ofConnecti• :Cut both . made the first team.
• · .Louisiana Tech landed versatile
•~ Vickie Johnson on the first.team and
: : guard Debra Williams on the second.
: · · Those were the only schools with
: : more one player on the·three teams,

ch06Cn by a national media panel.
Also on the first team were Georgia
guard Saudia Roundtree, the leading
vote-getter, and forward Latasha
Byears of DePaul.
Wolters and Rizzoui have kept
' Connecticut playing at a high level
following the depanure of all-everything Rebecca Lobo. The Huskies
(30-3) repeated as Big East champions an4 are seeded No. I in the
NCAA Mideast Regional.
"Think of it this way," ConnecticutcoachGenoAuriemmasaid.
" We lost the national player of the
year who scored 2,000 po~ts and
.had a thousand rebounds, ye~ we go
30-3 with all the pressures that come
with being the defending· chaR)pions."
!he 6-foot-7 Wolters averaged ·

18.9 poinls and 7.9 rebounds and
shot 63.7 percent. She also was a
presence on defense, blocking 91
shots.
Rizzotti's scoring is down slightly this season, 10.8 points a game,
but her value lies in other areas running the teljlll, passing, playing
defense and diving for loose balls.
The 5-5 senior averaged 5.7 assists,
3.1 steals and untold floor bums.
Though only 5-9, Johnson is a
fierce rebounder and defender. She
averaged 15) ,poi ts and - ~ .3
rebounds, shot '52 perceni1 and&gt;·
teamed with Williams to give Tech
perhaps the best perimeter combination in the nation. · •
Williams led Tech in scoring
with an IS-point average and made
(See PICKS on Page 5)

~: By The Associated Press
•:
1996- Semeka Randall, Garfield Hts. Trinity, 5, foot-10, ir.. 30.7 points, 8.4 rebounds, 8.8 steals, 6.2
assists per game; 47.1 percent field goals. 31.3 percent
3-pOint~rs. 71.7 percent free tl)rows; started on Divisi9n I state championship team as a freshman ; Trinity
in its third su'aight state tournament with ·her in lineup; team 74-7 in her career.
1995- Beth Ostendorf, Pickerington, 6-0, Sr., 21.5
points, 7 rebounds, 4' ~ists, 3 steals per game; 60.2
·percent field goal, 80.4 percent free throw: on two st_ate
championship teains. one runner-up, one semtftnahst;
team$ went 1,04-8 in-her career; plays at Vanderbih.
1994- Na'Sheema Hi limon, Garfield Hts . Trinity, 6-2. Sr.. 18.7 points. 13.8 rebounds.4 .7 steals. 4.4
assists, 3.1 blocked shots per game; 54 percent field
goal, 68 percent free throw; pluY.s at Vanderbih.
1993- Marlene Stollings, Beaver Eastern, 5-10.
Sr. A~.s 'poi'nts; $.3 rebounds, 6.1 assists per game; 67
pe~rlt z;p,oi~l':rs, 46 percent 3-pointers. 86 percent
• . free, ttitt;&gt;"'s; Ohto's career. sconng.leader wtth 3,514
poinlti'in 96 games (36.6 per game); sc;ored 1,022 potnts
·: • in 24 gall;ICS her 8enior•season; P.layed two years at Ohio
: · State, ha~ transferred to Ohio University.

.

I:

-··

'

SPRING FOOTWEAR
Arriving Daily!
.

MENS • Womens • Kids

• croa Tnllner8

~~·.~.

I

• Baseball Cleata
• Softball Cleata

"-.

\

.4

. .
.

•

· ·..

. ,

•i

•
I

'

.'·

Totman, Z....nilleR....,.ons.~-7.Sr. ,t7. t ; Betlt

Sc:llt, Waynmille, S-5. Jr.. 16.5.
Playen of the yur: Kwame Oll'k, Za.nesviUe

RoiO&lt;riUio; K.la Wenzlick. Oooville.
CoachnoltiN)'ear:BarryandMic:beleBono,
Sc:bria1 MdCioley: Kirt Manin. s. Chttrlettoo SE:
Roger McEklowney. Jackson Center.
Spedal mention
Melissa M_c..\lisler,·Col. Tree of Life: Emily
Snow, Newark Coth.; Twa Swaoey. Marion Pleas·
aot: t.auraGoin•. Waterford:Aniy Arnold. F"'""""'
Lakeland: Eric Bowm..., Covington; lle&lt;k)' Hol4·
en, FayeneviUe; Rachel Alcorn. Cia. Lockland;
RENEE TURLEY, RACINE SOIITI!ERN: Beth .

Stephanie Bowlin,. Bowenton Conouon VaUey;
Holly Fillipovich. Bellaire Sl. John ; Jennifer
Thomas. Beallsville; Amy Stalder, Beallsville; Tri·
cia L)sien, Shadyside: Lee Ann Huck.. Wa1erford:
Failh Pmy. Williamsbura: Amber Sherman,
Mechanic:lbWJ; Diana Holden, Fayetle\'illt'; Melodi Mann, Jackson Center: Stephanie Miller. Sidney
Lehman; Shawlllla Brown, Day. Jdfmon;
Jenny M0t11eilh . Mowreystown Whiteoak: Jamie,
Moore. Beaver Eastern; Amanda Williams, New
Boslon Glenwood; Amanda Strickland. Ponsmot.~ th
East Janie Hopkins, Lathan Western:
Rupa Narra: Eimore Wood~ : Jenny Magers,
Old Fort: Lauren Shenk. Minster: Shiva Davis. Ashland Creslview; Denise Blockberger. Delphos Jefrerson; Didi Reynolds, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon:
Snrah Francis. Sali~villt! Southern Local ;

A Few Of Our Home Standard Features
• Andersen Tilt Windows
• Stanley Door!
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 ln. On Center
• Armstrong solarian Floor Tile
• M.arellatc Cabinets
• 8 Filot Ceiling
• 2xl0 Floor Joint, 161n. On Center
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpets .
• Delta Faucets
• Master T-lock Vinyl Siding With Ufetirne Wananty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year StruCtural Wana~ty On The Home

~

'
•

.

Harrick said as the defending N~ AA
won't mind at all .
UCLA didn 't really want to be in
"Next year the Final Four is here. champions prepared for their tourIndianapolis for this year's NCAA We like the fact we get a chance to nament opener tonight against
tournament. Next year, the Bruins play on this court," Bruins coach Jim Princeton.
UCLA won the ·Pac-10 by three
si/-Amer/csns.&lt;f.ontinued from Page 4) gameS"over Arizona, but was made
the No. 4 seed in the Southeast
zotti 157 and Byears 109.
· 41 percent of her 3-point shots.
Byears averaged 22.7 points and Regional. Arizona was No. ·3 in the
'
Roundtree dominated the all.• America voting after some stiectac- 11.8 rebounds in leading DePaul to West.
UCLA's ·opposition is Princeton,
' ular play in leading fifth-ranked a berth in the NCAA tournament.
its final season under coacli
playing
Georgia to a 23-4 record and a No. She. had highs of 38 points against
Pete
Canil.
1be Tigers have lost their
2 seeding in the Midwest Regional. Memphis and 28 rebounds against
last
four
NCAA
tournament games
She averaged 16.2 points, 5.8 Northeastern Illinois.
by
a
total
of
15
points.
Williams was joined on the secas~ists and 2.4 steals, and the bigger
"For the last 10 or 15 years, the
the game, the better she played . Dur- ond team by Stanford's Kate Starteam everybody would least like to
bird, Oregon State's Tanja Kostic,
1 ing a five-game stretch in January, all
play
in the NCAA tournament in the
Texas
Tech's
Michi
Atkins,
Vir, against nationally ranked opponenls,
first
round is Princeton," Harrick
Roundtree had 20 points against Ten- ginia's Wendy Palmer and Ohio
said.
"They play that style for 30
nessee, 26 at Auburn, 27 at Con- State's Katie Smith. There are six
games
and you never play that style.
necticut, 29 at Penn State and 32 at players because Palmer and Smith
I've
always
felt that when one team
Florida. Oeorgia won all five games. tied for the final spot.
plays
one
style
and you play anoth-.
The third team has Tennessee
Roundtree was the only player
er
and
you
never
get to see that (othnamed on all 40 ballots. She was a freshman Chamique Holdsclaw,
er) style, in the tournament, they'll
first-team pick on 37 a~d compiled Alabama's Shalonda Enis, Penn
have an advantage over you:"
State's
Angie
Potthoff.
Vanderbilt's
192- out of a possible 200 points
Basketball at Princeton is a little
· awarded on a 5-3-1 basis. Wolters Sheri Sam and South Carolina's
different from the other NCAA
bit
had 165 points, Johnson 157, Riz- Shannon Johnson.
tournament teams. Carril, the Tigers'

By The Aseoclated Pre11

: AP women's

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model llomt Located at
Intersectloo of Rts. 7 &amp; 33

Pomeroy, Olf 614-992-2478
Model Home Viewing Hours I:00-S:OO p.m.
The.. Sat. or by appointment.

I

'2511

.

.,

8osl0n.................... 24
Philadelpt\ia ........... n

22',
:n

Mlolw~

•\

1"2:-5G7

27
27
ll
40
4:'

- ~~

.:'i!l7
.492
.344

.262

16
20
20

20~

24b
JJ h
38'~:

J. la.

$499

.70!11
.694
.6~1

lil
~

Minnesota~

Saint Louis 52
Bobby Jackson scored 17 points
and David Grim had 15 as host Minnesota (19-12) won its fourth
straight.
Saint Louis (16-14) shot just 32%
(I 8-for-57).
Rhode Island 82, Marist 77
Tyson Wheeler scored 24 points
and Antonio Reynolds added 18 as
Rhode Island (19-13) downed visiting Marist (22-7).
Maris! trailed 80-77 when the
R;ln\s' Randy Encarnacion rebounded a miss and made a layup with I 8
seconds to go. Wheeler hit a free
throw and ttammate David Arigbabu
sealed the victory with one of two
free throws with three seconds left.
Michigan St. 64
Washington SO
Quinton Brooks and Jamie Feick
each scored 16 points and host
Michigan State (16-15) had a 14-0
second-half run in its victory over
Washington (16-12).
. Mark Sanford scored 12 points
and Jason Hamilton II for Washington, which was playing its first
postseason game in nine years. The
Huskies finished their season losing

16~

.J.W

22'h

.306

2&lt;4'.1:

Podft&lt;DI.W.
a·Seallle ......... :....... 48 14 .774
L.A.Lak&lt;n ......... 18 22 61J
Phocni-' .................. 31 32 .492

11'1:

a.cJioctEd playoff spot

49

J4

.460

3.1 .4~9
H ....W
40 .m

19\,
191,

Iliie·s899

Sc:anle 100. OrlandO 99

1111, Phoeni• II~
New York 106, Miuaota 112
Chica&amp;o IOJ. Wuhiaglon 86

SICI1Imtntc 104. Mitwlll.lkce 9!i

Toalpt's games
WO&amp;IhinJtonnl New kney.1:30p.m.
Boilon at CLEVELAND. 7JO p.m.
Atlan4a at Hol.lslon. 11::10 p.m.
Miami lll San Ant~o. 8:30p.m.
Dnltaa 11 I:.A. Clippers at Anaheim.
Calif., 10:)0 p.m.
· L.A. Loker• 11 Golden Stile. 10:)0
p.m.

'J·.,·.

\

$159

Friday'••-

PhDenilnl Philadelphia. 7:30p.m.

Tort~nto at Chlll'lOIIe. 7:30 r .m.
CLEV~AND 111 Detroit . 7JO p.m.

U!lh at htdinu, 7 : ~ p.m.
Saci'UIIlenlc ~ MinneiOta. 8 p.m.
~ ae OiCAJO. tl:.\0 p.m.
L.A.Oippcn 11 l'ortlaod. 10 p.m.
Dallal at Sennle. IOp.m.
Orlmtdoal V~ouvcr. IOp.m.
MllwatJbeat l .A. labn. IO:JO p.m.

•

"We Service

Wedi!Hday's
nrst-reuod ICCinl

49

r ·

1
'

'
HOUN
Mon....._ 1:30 8ftloi:IO pm

49

.

Tenne•~

'
Soulfl CIVOiiAA 100. Oa•idloti7J
Mi&lt;hipn St. 64, WultiOCIO• ~

Minllel(l(a 68, Saint Louia ~2
Miuouri 89. M~y 51. 1.~
lllinoit Sl. 'il. MouiLL St. Mory' • Md.

...

Wi~ ~J!

Th~n-1:30-12-

II

Rhode bland 82. Maria 77
ColltJC of ChiU'Ie11oq ~!1 ,

w.• n

-62

,..... 17.-71t&lt;m
V........li 16, Artt.....·U\IIe Ro.k

'''

80

Transactions

Reponal semlft.,.ls

coach for 29 years, remembers having to play short-handed during a
regular-season game in 1975.
"We were coming off a long trip
back from Cornell on a Saturday
night and playing at Virginia on a
Tuesday," he recalled . "Two of my
pl~ers were being interviewed for
Rhodes scholarships."
No. 14 UCLA (23-7) and Princeton.(21-6) will be the final game of
the day at Indianapolis; following
Duke (18-12) vs. Eastern Michigan
(24-5) and No. 19 Mississippi State .
(22-7 ) vs. Virginia Commonwealth
(24-8).
Twelve other games will be
played on the tournament's opening
day:
At Providence, R.I., it's Bradley
(22-7) vs. Stanford (19-8), topranked Massachusetts (31-1) vs.
Central Aorida (11-18), No. I8 Penn
State (21-6) vs, Arkansas (18-12) and
No. 20 Marquette (22-7) vs. Monmouth of New Jersey (20-9).
-At Dallas, it's No. 2 Kentucky
(28-2) vs. San Jose State (13 -16),

.

Sherm~~n,Pbando. oulfiekler, to the Mon·
treal f.Apos ror Tony Tarasco. outfielder.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Opcioned
Julio Vinas. catd1cr, mnd Ste\'e Schrenk,
pilcher. to N!1Shville of the American Alsodatiotl, and Brian WoodJ, pilc:her, and
Jimm)' Hum . ourliclder, to Binninaham
or !he Southern LeaJue. Reassianed Steve
Worrell, pitcher, Mark Johnson . cllfchc:r.
Crai&amp; Wilson, infieldef, and Jeff Abbon.
Briilll Simmons. Ryan Topholm.lllld Kerry
V~tlrie: oulfielden, 10 !heir minor-lequc

~0

Wcaler"illc N. H. Thomas W!X1hinaton .\~

an

Oiwision II
Bellain: 74. Foirland 64
Carobridse 13, lron1on 64 ,
Clc. VA·SJ 9!i, Wurrensville Hta. 79
Col~ . Eas!67. Olm11ed fall1 64
Col1. Whec"oor: 48. Bc:Udontaine 47
Kenerin&amp;. Alter 61 , Sprin&amp;boro !10
OrniUe 46. Polaod Seminary ~7
On~awRilandorf 68 leltlloJfon 66 (2

!!: L I fla. lif li&amp;

N.Y. R"""" .. :1&lt;118 14 86 219
Florida ............... l5Z4 9 79 224
Phil;~lphia ....... 32 2 1 IJ
71 221
Tampa Bay ........ 32 2.~ 10 74 203
NewJmcy ........ :\ 1 2.~ 11 73176
WashinJIOn ........ 32 27 lt 12 191
N.Y. Islandets ....20 3~ 8 48 I~

Basketball

189

200
119
202
160
174
l~6

MINNESOTA TIMBER WOLVES•

Ner1hcest Dhllion
PimhvrJh ·~·- .....40 23 4 84
231
Montn:ai ............ J2 27 8 72 218 207
Bot1on.. .... ......10 28 '8 68 22~ 211

m

the injurN list.

Football

Har1ford .............28JI 7 61 19R m
Buflal0 ...............27 ll 7 61 200 209

Ottawa ............... 13 :'tO 3

29

1~4

x-Wheelersburg ... 22
Chesapeake .... .. .. 20
Marietta ............... 15
Fairland .......... .... :16
Logan .................. 15
Jackson ..... .. ........ 14
Greenfield ............ 14
Meigs .... ............... 12
South Point.. ........ 13
Warren Local.. ..... 12
Point Pleasant .....10
Southern ............ .... 9
River Valley ..... ...... 9
Athens ......... .......... 8
Gallipolis ............ .... 5
Portsmouth ............ 4
Vinton County ........ 2
xStlllln tourney
Division 3 Regional semifinals
AI OU, Athens
Tonight
North Adams vs. Martins Feny,
6:15p.m.

Signed Fredrik Olausson, Ocfcnsc:n'tiln. to
a 1wo-yeur contract ~~tension .
DALLAS STARS : Adivnted Bob
Bauen.cemer. from the injured li sl.
HARTFORD WHALERS: Rcu sssiJ.ned Mike Han.ling. ri~hl wing. from
Richmond cl 1~ ECHlto Springfteld or
1he AHL
FLORIDA PANTHERS· R~turned
Brett H..-kins, 'enter. to Carolina of the

AHL.

Russell Stover
Cream. Eggs ·
Reg. 59¢

ONLY43(

Naltonal Footblll Lfl&amp;..e

OKLAHOMA: Announced the re!iremcnt of Burl Plunkett. women 's ba sket ·
ball coach.

Jr ~~ ~ ~ ~
Chic:q:o .............. 2.1 II 79 229
~...

J-4

St. Loui• ............ 29 26 12

TOfOniO .............. l6 ~I 12
Winaipea ........... 29 J4 !II
Dallltl.......... 2211 12

70

I~

1114 192

64 200 214
63 2H 2-49

"" 191 226

............. 27 29 I! M 202 201
Anohrim .......... 26 :16 6 58 190 2ll
LotA ...Iel ....... ll :14 I~ 57 221 258
Edmoaton .......... 2.06 .7 ·55 192 2.11
"",........... ,_.. 16 47 6 . l8 214 lOO
Cal~

•-dLLdtod ployoff ...

-

CONGRATULATIONS
Carpenters.Local Union 650
104.Years in Pomeroy
March 16, 1892·1996

Wednnday'11100n1

Hortford 3, Pl-... 2
Ototwo 4, Doll• t
-.e.II, N&amp;wJcnerl(tie)
WitnPII ), T - l (tie).
floridal, N.Y. ~ 31tte)
T - Bay I, PltitailelpiLto lltie)
-I.S...Jotel

Truffle Eggs

..

Reg.

soe

Butter Eggs
Timex Watches

·Jewelry

Complete Stock

.Complete Stock

1/2

30% off

12 oz.

246

~

·oNtv3SC·

Reese's Peanut

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cmti'IIIDi•W.

Rag.-

Russell Stover

Body Sprays .5 oz

fir~r

Nalional Lnpr
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES : Pro·
moted Kelly Hea~h. inf~ld-h i lllna coacll,
from Martinsville of the Appalachian
Lc:01gue.eo RcadinJ of tht: Easrcm Le~t~uc.

Atbntk Otvldon

OP

College

baseman; Tom Evans, third
Anael Ramirez. outftelder; and
Murk Sic:ver1 o.nd MiU Gordon, pitchers.
10 Syracuse of the bltcmativnal Waue.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

TP

Acrivlltetl Sam Mitchell. Torward . from

OJ.

~man;

NHL standings

Wheelersburg vs. Malvern, 8 p.m.
Wednesday's resillte:
Division 2 Raglonals at OU
I 1600 t248
· 2J513 t214 . Bellaire 74 Fairland 64
6 1245 t 192 Cambrid~W 73 Ironton 64
81596 1445
713011171
714131319
71387t313
913731345
10 1492 1375
1013151197
131344 1446
13 1402 1482
13 125$ 1321
14 1240 1272
161096 1246
151164 1381
1913971599
L

Prince Matchabelli
.Fragrance

CLEVELAND INDIANS : Traded
Scoo Pose:. outfiC!Ider, to the Toronto Blue
Jaya for Joe Us, infleldtr. '
' DETROIT TIGERS' Claimed Ki""""
B:r.nec, ou1fielder, ofr waivers from the
Bal1imore Orioles

Hockey

W

N......l Bukdboll AUKiotion
BOSTON CELTICS : Acti vated
Thomas Hounillon. ccnlcr, from the sus Jltnded lill.
HOUSlUN ROCKETS: SiJncd Tr:~­
C)' r.t~ , guard , 10 a I0-«by contract.

~omp.

TORONTO BLUE JAys, Sent

'

1995-96: All games
Team

NEW JERSEY DEV ILS: Acquired
Dave Andreycbuk , le ft wms . frum 1he
Toronto Maple Lc:afli ror ctther the V::sncoo\'er Can udr..~· 1996 second-round drnfl
&lt;: hoic:e or New Jerse y's 1996 secondround drur1 choi ce and al.m eil her the
Devils' 1998 fcurth·round .pick or 1999
third-rourxJ pick. Ra:...Ued Scon Pdlt=rin.
left wing. rrom Albany or the AHL under
emergency condit io ns . Pla ced John
Maclean, right wing, and Mike Peluso,
Jeff wing, on the injun:d list.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS : TrOO~ d
Kenny Jonsson. defcnsemnn: Dnrby Hcnd ri duotl, center; s~nn Haggerly . left
wing ; and a J 997 first-round drafl pick to
the New 'r'ork lsl ...llllers for W.:=ndd Clnrk,
left wing , tvW1 Mathieu Schneidc!r and D.J.
Smith. &amp;fensemcn.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS : Rt ·
turned Scott W;:.lkcr, right winc-dcfensd·
man , IO S)TDCliJe of !ht AHL. .
WINNIPEG JETS: Re called Brent
lbompson. defensenun. from Springfield
of the AHL. Assigned MQtk Vi sheau. derensman, to Wheel ins of 1~ AHL. ReM·
si&amp;ned Brent Pope. defenseman . to
WhcelinJ. Returned Rob Mumy. center.
10 Springfreld.

Bo•lon,

loa

Hockey
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS'

AmtridD Leapt

Cin. Ouk Hills 6S. Sprint. South 60
Clc, Glen"illc HH. Clc. S1. IJnatiull 114
(lOTI
lakewood St. EJw1:1rd M. Cle
H~i~hl • 61
Tol. St. John '~ ~4. Caaton McKinley

---Cage standings·

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS ·

Aareritto term!i wirh ·Shawn Jdrerson .
wide rccei"rr . o.nd Willie Clay, so.fety, on
foor-yl!aJ controcts.
NEW YORK JETS: Tmdcd Marcus
Turner. drfensive back , 10 the G~n Bay
Packers ror a cc ndili onal 1997 draft

Naliorul Ho.:key lAacue

BALTIMORE ORIOLES ' Traded

74

At Albuquerque, N.M ., it's No. 15
Syracuse (24-8) vs. Montana State .
(21-8) , No. 16 Memphis (22-7) vs.
Drexel (26-3), No. 4 1'\trdue (25-5)
vs. Western Carolina (17-12) and
Georgia (19-9) vs. Clemson ( 18-10).

Wisconsin-Green Bay (25-3) vs. No.
22 Virginia Tech (22 -5). No. 17 Iowa
State (23-8) vs. California (17-10)
and No. 12 Utah (25-6) vs. Canisius
(19-10).

ONLY

Reg. $2.75

$199

price
Reg.99¢

ONLY69(

Russell Stover
Jelly Beans

Zippo Lighters 30o/o off

Henry C. Peery
Busiless Representative
1954·1979, Retired

..'
I

.

Bu&lt;:ky Richards~&gt;n. quanerbock, 10 a twoyt¥ ccntrocl.
i

.:hoi ~..-e

Due ball

Division I
Cin. La Salle 82. Tml:wood-Madison

hdftclliColo&lt;ado ............ l8 21 10 86 269 201
Va""-'OUwtr .........27 26 I!J 69 lO 2.14

NITaction ·
,I .

Ohio U.S. boys' scores

26

~roil

Friday's pmes

AI New Hnta, Cann. : Providence
( 17-11) vs. Fairftdd (10-9), 7:30p.m.

20 ~

Wednesday'ssrores

Otorlotte 91, Utah 8!

*FrM
~llllrf *FrM~
*80 Dlye
Slmt Cllh (rrlttt lfJPIOI/ef!tndlt}

The Badgers trailed 35-26, but
Okey scored his first points with 14
minutes to go, staning a 19-3 nan. He
scored nine points during the streak,
and Wisconsin led 45-38 with five
minutes left.
Collece of Charlestoo 55
Tennessee 4!1
Playing in Knoxville, the College
of Charleston (25-3) held
. Tennessee
.
( 14-15) to 31% shooMg to post tiS
first postseason win.
The score was tied 37-37 with
I0:02 left befbre Charleston
outscored the Vols 8-2 over the next
3:07. Rodney Conner tipped in il
missed shot and Stacy Harris made
a three-pointer during the spurt.
Tennessee got no closer than three
the rest of the way.
The Cougars made five of six free
throws in the final 15 seconds to pre·
serve the victory.
VanderbDt 86
Arkansas-Little Rock 80
. Frank Seckar scored 25 points
and Vanderbilt (I 8-13) went 12-for14 at the free-throw line in the final
3:05 to down visiting Arkansas-Little Rock (23-7).
The Trojans pulled to 82-80 with
19.4 seconds left on a pair of Ders:k
Fist\er free throws, but got no closer.

Signed Dana Hall, so.fety.

Cnlgury at Buffillo. 7:JO p.m.
V:nw:ouver at Onawa. 7JO p.m
Dallas at Toronto. 7;JO p.m.
Tampa Bay·a~ New Jersey. 7JO p.rn.
Boston .'*' Washinaton, 8 p.m.
S1. Loo1s a1 San Jo~e. 10::\0 p.m.

116-11). IOOS p.m.
Fridlly'•c-s

9

Ros1on 110. PhiiDiphia 1"00

Double
~clining Sofa

' Service Hotline 742·2212

eight of their last II games.
South Carolina 100
Davidson 73
Playing at home. South Carolina
(18-11) got 33 points from Larry
Davis, who hit 12 of 13 shots and
was perfect on seven three-pointer's.
Davidson (25-5) was the winningest
team in the NIT.
·
A pair of three-pointers hy Davis
put South Carolina ahead 40-31 . And
his acrobatic, reverse layup closed
the first half to give the Gamecocks
a 45-33 edge .
Illinois St. 73
Mount St. Mary's 4!1
Maurice Trotter scored 18 points
as Illinois State (2 1-11) outshot and
outran visiting Mount St. Mary's
(2 1-8).
Despite 21 turnovers, the Redbirds shot 53%. including 4-of-12
from three-point range.
Rico Hill added 16 points and 10
rebounds for Illinois State, and Dan
Muller had 10 points and 13
rebounds.
Wisconsin 55
Manhattan 42
Sam Okey scored all II of his
points in the second half as host Wisconsin (17-14) rallied from a ninepoint deficit to beat Manhattan (1712).

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS ,
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS : Signed

Pinsburgtl :u Bo11on. 7::\0 p.m.
V~~~Kouvcr at Chicqo. 8::l0 p.m.

(21-1).

11). 9 ::\0 p.m
Gonu.go (21 -8) :u WashinJion S1.

3

.43:5

Jt ~

Ponl:ind ................. 29

. illarked doWJI•

Middleport

I~'.:11~

.tM:\

S0&lt;111mento ............ 21
Gokkfl State ..........28
L.A.'CI;ppen ........ 22

•

. 119 1Uiee6nd '

.J81
.21o.

Dhilllon

·varw.:ouver ............. ll

.

40"

J9
49

IM
Utah ...................... 4~ 19
Hou11on .................41 22
Denver ................... 27 J5
Dallas ..................... ll 41
Minrc101a ............. .l9 4.l

With
Remote&amp;
On-Screen Programming

In various colors

20'1t

:ru.
' lit
Su'Antonio ........... 4~

1V

Swivel Rockere

10

. 7~

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Color
Coneole

SJ99

New Ylirl&lt; ............ :16 26 .!lSI
M11mu .....................ll J2 .492
WasWnaton ............ 28 H .......
New Jcncy ... ......... 2."i 36 .410

Detroil .................... )~
CLEVFJ..AN0 ....... 34
. Owlouc ..•........ .... .\0
Milwaukee ......... .... ll
Toronto .................. l6

21!1111

6' Ligh~d
Curio Cabinet

lil

Ctnl,_. Dhklon
a-OUcqo ........... .S5
1 .887
·Indiana .......... ..... .... -' 9 n
.ll'i29 ·
A1lun1a .... ..... .... .\~ 1.1 -~~

,.•.

$299

J. la.

17

ollom~

Nebr:ukatl6-14) at Colorado St. (18-

4u.ek lllwWDn

:ru.
!!:
Ort.ado .. .............. 47

Tonight's games

Toalpt'•P"'"

St JoK'ph's (1!1 -12&gt;
7:)0 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

\

Rocker
Recliner

.

'

• Running Shoee
~Track Splkea

'up to

17. ·Darnell McCulloch added 14
points for the Bulldogs.

GREEN BA V PAC~ERS ' An·
nounced they won ' t mat~h the Mi11mi
Dolphins' offer sheet 10 Chnrle&amp; Jordan,
wid&amp;: r.:c:ci\'er,

Bull'alo 6. los Anaelcs 2
Anabeim 4. Colorado 0

Alnbama 72. Illinois fll
•
Frtsno St. ~8 . MIAMI (OHIO) .57

NBA.staitdings

7 Piece Dinette

- ··

.' '
·SAVEl

The opening round continues
tonight with St. Joseph's (15-12)-at
lona (21-7), Nebraska (16-14) at
Colorado State ( 18-11 ), and Gonza. ga (21 -8) at Washington State ( 1611). Providence (17-11) vs. Fairfield
(20-9) Friday night at New Haven,
'Conn., will complete the first round.
Second-round matches on Monday will have Vanderbilt at South
Carolina, Missouri at Alabama,
Tulane at Minnesota and Illinois at
Wisconsin . On Tuesday, Rhode
Island will . play College of
Charleston and Fresno State will
play Michigan State .
The other second-round pairings
will not be completed until Friday's
game..
Fresno State 58
Miami (Ohio) 57
Dominick Young scored 15 of his
18 points in the second half, including a pair of free throws with 28 seconds left; as Fresno State edged vis·
iting Miami of Ohio to win for first- .
year coach Jerry Tarkanian.
Damon Frierson, who hit a threepointer with I 0 seconds left to pull
the Redskins within a point, missed
a running jumper as time expired .
Frierson led Miami (21 -8) with
24 points, while Devin Davis added

:. UCLA unhappy w.ith facing Princeton in NCAA cagefest's first round

Basketball

cas•··

Shop our "Stile Room"
For Everyday Barplns
Mo,-e lhoelln.siore

- no State 58, Miami, Ohio 57.

Alabama (17-11) responded with
10 three-pointers in outscoring Illinois (18-13) 3~- 15. When Rogers hit
a two-point basket, the Crimson
Tide led 67-57 with 4:59 to go.
lllinois was finished, however,
pulling to 69-67 with I :41 left as
Garris completed a four-point play
- hitting a three-pointer, then
adding a free throw. But Garris and
Bryant Notree missed subsequent
shots and Jerry Hester's basket with
5.8 seconds left wasn't enough to
overcome Brian \Yilliams' three free
throws in the final 30 seconds.
" It seems like down the stretch
we dido 't play as sm1111 as we
could," NO!ree said. "We wanted to
win. We didn't want this to be the
last game of the season."
Alabama returns home for a second-round game against Missouri on
Monday. Missouri advanced by nipping Murray State 89-85.
In other first-round NIT games
Wednesday, it was Rhode lslarid 82,
Maris! 77; College of Charleston 55 ,
Tennessee 49; South Carolina 100;
Davidson 73 ; Michigan State 64,
Washington 50; Minnesota 68, Saint
Louis 52; Illinois State 73, Mount St.
Mary's. Md. , 49; Wisconsin 55,
Manhattan 42; Vanderbilt 86,
Arkansas-Little Rock 80; and Fres-

Scoreboard

Sallle~
/;\
,, ,

S.

Jr., 21.3: Julie Fullu. Dola Hudin-Nortllem. 5-9. Sr..
2B: s..pttlllie StrilceT, New Wash. BtL&lt;teyeC.nt.
6-0, Jr.. 17.3; Jenny Markwood, Tol. Ovi&amp;rian, 6-&lt;4.
Sr.. 22.7: Catlly Zurbnagg, Sebring McKinley, 6-0.
Soph .. 21.3: Michelle Bielanski, Bellain: S&lt;.Joho,
S-1, Jr.. 19.1 ;S&lt;acy WriJhl, E. Canton. S-10. Soph.,
t7b.
11tlnl ,...,, Holly Bycr&gt;. D1111ville, 5-11. Sr..
15.0; Beth Sells, Waynesville, 5-S, Jr., 16.$; Brap4y
Hump!Ln:y. Latham Westem, S-9. Sr.. 18.2: Amy
Bendey. Frontlin Furnace O...n, S-10, Sr, IS.I:
Holly Housebolder. Soothinglon Chalm. :5..,., Jr.,
223; Julie Weaver, Berlin Hilu•U-6. lr.. u .~:Amy

8

,.

Kri"'"

Soa.niltam:IESSJCA~ REEDSVILLE

90
DaY

•Aerobics
•Walking

""""' Kio Robi-. RieltmOIL4 Hu.;

B:y BOB GREENE.
AP Sportl Writer
When Dlinois turned away Alaba·
rna's inside game. the Crimson Tide
turned to its three-point eame.
That turned a IO.point ilcficit into
a 72-69 victory for visiting Alabama
and a second-round berth in the
National Invitation Tournament.
"We hit the three-ball pretty well
in the second half," Alabama coach
David Hobbs said. "We don't usually do that."
Wilting under the long-tange barrage was Illinois and Lou Henson.
who coached his last game after 21
seasons at Illinois and 34 seasons
overall.
"It's kind ofsad to go out the way
we went out, but we're not quite
goi&gt;d enough to beat the clubs we're
going up against, " Henson said. " If
we were, we'd win these games. The
story of this ball club is great effort
and a great 9unch of guys."
The story of the game was Alaba:
rna's three-point shooting.
With the lllini zone putting the
clamp on Alabama's 6-foot-10 center Roy Rogers, Henson's team
grabbed a 42-32 lead on Kiwane
Garris ' three-pointer with 16:57
remaining. It was, in effect, Henson's
last hurrah.

$499

1992- Katie Smith, Logan, 5-11, Sr. , 30.2 points,
7 rebounds, 7.2 assists per game, 56.7 percent field
goal, 80 percent free throw; first in her class academ·
ically; Big Ten player of the year and all-time leading
women's scorer at Ohio State and in conference.
1991 - Vonda Ward, Garfield Hts. Trinity, 6-6, Sr.,
23.8 points, 13.7 rebounds, 4.4 assists, 3.5 blocks, 2.6
steals per game; 59 percent field goals, 74 percent free
throws. played for Tennessee. Now playing professionally in Germany.
1990 - Vonda Ward, Garfield Hts. Trinity, 6-6. Jr.,
22.1 points, 13.6 rebounds, 5.4 blocked shots, 3.8
assists per game; 68 percent field goals.
1989 - Carol Madsen, Reading, 6-0, Sr., 24.2
points per game; played one year at Purdue, then transferred to and played for Xavier; after graduation,
became head coach at Finneytown High School.
1988- Janet Haneberg, Cincinnati Seton, 6-3, Sr.,
15.5 points, 9.6 rebounds, 4 blocked shots per game;
57 percent field goals, 59 percent free throws; played
at Long Beach State, transferred to andgraduated from
Xavier; now works in programming at WLWf-TV in
Cincinnati.

.

Y..... Newbury; B&lt;dt 'Hard&lt;My. ~ Ledp-

CUyabop Hu.

.

.::·Alabama., Fresno State and three Big Ten teams get wins

Deu W•JDCI'· Flirpon Harbor HMttiaa; Cllria

Tosha While, E. Cutoo.; EriD L)'dal, Bertin Ctr.
Wcaum Rexrve: Kcllic: " -· Mdlonald: Shlron
Ncuenschwuder, O..toD; Jill Pesenoo. Bristolville
Bristol;

7 · Sr.. I5·2·' LynettcKeppder.f.daer·
EASTERN.~·
oon,
6-1, Sr.. 20.8;
Rachel F.eth, New RieBel, 3-9,

~:Ohio
Ms. Basketballs
remembered
.
.
..

• BUketiNIII

, On the NIT's opening night,

ee-.

Koons. Glouster Trimble; Hri.di Geiser, Dalton;Julit'

UConn's 'Wolters and Rizzotti
join
OSU'·
s
.Smith
as
~onotees
..
.
; •o\P Sp9fls Writer

Press Division IV all-Ohio high
school basketball team, based on the
recommendations of a state media
panel (with school, height and scaring average):
Flnt .,.., Kwome aortt. Zanesoille R.,...
crus. 5-fooc-10. Senior, '23.1 poincs per pme; KM·
1a Wenzlick. Ottooitte. s.s. Sr.. ·22.!: MMdee
McComb•. Danville. 6-0, Sr.. 18.0: Julie Repla.
lttttuoa
~ - to, Sr.. 18.~: Amy Bundy, Minaal R.idp, .5-10, Jr., 17.0; S1epblnie Stewart, S.
Owluton SE, S-7, Jr., 18.8.

The coaches of the year were the McDi•i" Windham;Steph Busdt, Lenin Cath.: Jessica Franb, Burton Berkshire; Marjie McParland,
husband-and-wife tealn of Barry and Bunon Berkshire: Jacqui Nosan. Gales Mills
Michele Bono of Sebring McKinley, .Gil""""' s... R..id&lt;a. Garet Mill• Gilmour: lenSouth Charleston Southeastern's niter Gtos•. Cuyohoaa H11.
·
Honorable mention
Kirk Manin and Roger McEldowney .
Aimee Bibby, Danville: Maagie Cuhdollot.
of Jackson Center.
. Millersport ; Ashley Dickerson, Newtri; Ca•h .;
Here's the 1995-96 Associated sa
Heatlter·Noel
McAtisf&lt;:r. Col. T,. of life: v.,.,.
Nehru , Wonhlngton Chr..

· AP women's aii-At:J1er/Qsris chosen

:::ay CHUCK SCHOFFNER

!.

.

Danville's Mandee McCombs (6-0,
Sr., I 8.Q) also were on the first unit
Southeastern (25-1) plays
Ottoville (24-1) at 7 p.m. Thursday,
with Rosecrans (24-2) taking on
Danville (24-2) at 9 p.m. 1be win• th u'tl t 2
ners come bac k .or e e a p.m.
Saturday.
Also selected to the first learn was
. R I (S lO S
lS 5)
JuIte
egu a - • r.,
. , a
mainstay as Jackson Center won the
state title last year and won the AP
regular-season poll title this time
around. Rounding out the !tam is
Mineral Ridge's Amy Bundy (5- I 0,
J 17 0)
r. , • ·
The second team was composed
of: Jessica KarrofReedsville Eastem (5·7, Sr., ls •2); Lynette Keppeler of Edgerton (6-1, Sr., 20.8);
New Riegel's Rachel Faeth (5-9, Jr.,
21.3); Julie Fulks of Dola HardinNorthern (5-9, Sr. 23.5)·, New "'ash"'
ington Buckeye Central's Stephanie
• Stn'ker (6•0 , Jr., 17 ·.3); 1enny Mark •
wood of Toledo Christian (6-4, Sr.,
22.7); Cathy Zurbrugg of Sebring
M K' 1
("' 0 S h 21 3)
C tn ey
v- •
op ·•
· ;
Michelle Bielanski of Bellaire- St.
John (5-8, Jr., 19.1); and East Canton's Siacy Wright (5·10, Soph.,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

L

Karr and-Southern's Turley among selections

RENEE TURLEY

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Zanesville Rosecrans' Kwame Clark
and Ottoville's Karla Wenzlick, who
have led their teams to this week's
state semifinals, share player of the
year honors on the 1995-96 Associated Press Division IV all-Ohio girls
· team announced Wednesday.
Clark, a 5-foot-10 senior, aver. •aged 23.1 points, eight rebounds,
'·· four steals, three assists and ·three
'blocked shots per game for a ~ose­
crans team whose only losses came
· to No. !-ranked poll teams, Division

Sent~el
Page4

The l)ally

: Thursday, March 14, 1998

•.

'

�•

Thu...ctey; March 14, 1886

POfMI'OY • Middleport, Ohio

~---Community

(:~

.

'

H 'l1le C,..

'l)t Calkdv ill
afnuenke to-:· .... p 'J w' ''ml to IIIIIIOUCe
1d 1 111111
ewata. The

.H" h t •

.,_w

·"f

•: f .hriiDDtd ··dtopi'OIDOie

·"*- or ftuld nlMn ol u:r type.
n- are priated ••paee permits

111111 t:aDDOt be panateed to run a
1peclftc awaber ol days.

THURSDAY

calendar--.

Hall in Pomeroy.

POMEROY -- Rock Springs
Orange, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
grange hall. Program and rcfrcshments:
'
·

POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
BetameetingThursday, 6p.m. atthe
Episcopal Parish House in Pomeroy.

POMEROY -- Pomeroy Merchants Association meeting Thursday,
7 p.m. at Pomeroy Council Chambers
to discuss 'parking proposals.

1UPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 Thursday,
refreshments at6:30 p.m. meeting at
7:30p.m.

EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Athletic

Bqosters, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in
cafeteria.
POMEROY -- Big Bend Stemwheel Festival Committee meeting
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the Carpenters'
~bile Notice

PUIIUC NOTicE
1n accordance wHh the
requirement• of the Job
"ll'alnlng P...,_hlp Act of
tta, Saetlon UM, 1!11 1WO
Y••• eummery plan for
. Service Delivery A.-a 124
(SDA 124 Ia compriNd of
11ven
aouth•utern
counlll• of Ohio deiCflbed
11 Athlnl, G~la, 'Hocking,
L.IJWmiCI. Malp, Perry and
VInton) operation ollhl Job
Training Partn•r•hlp Act
(JTM) Employment and
Trllnlng Program lor th•
Program Yur 11111,
blglnnlng July 1, 1 - Ia
avlllabl• lor ravltw and
comment at the Ironton·
Lawr•nc• County CAO
Office, 305 North Filth
stiHt, ltonton, Ohio during
norm•l bualneet houra,
8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
llonday through Friday.
(3) 14; 1TC

Wlltaca, Sr. and Leona E.
Wlllace, executad 1nd
delivered to w Saving a AIIOCIItiOn I
mortgage d11d, which
. morto•D• dud wu
atelgned to N!!rth Central
Mortgage Corporation, nka
National City Mortgage
Company on May 25, tt7t,
lor th• '"ldtnce at At. 2
Twp. Road 75, Pom•roy,
Ohio, aka 33710 Hiland
Road, Pom•roy, Ohio,
conveying , the following
d .. crlbed
prY'IIU,
1ltultld In thl ToWillhlp of
Sallabury, County of Mllgl,
and Stet• of Ohio, and
bounded and dtecrlbld ae
lollowl, t - :
, llalng H 1/2 rode 1111 of
tha eouthwllt corn•r of
~at; thane• north H
112 rode; th,nc• •••• 54
rode; thenc•aouth 42 112
rode; thenca -•• t rode;
thenc;a north 14 toda;
thence- 20 rodt; and 18
Public Notice
IInke; thence lOUth 12 rode
..d 11 IInke; th•Ref 1111 t
rode; thenca eouth 2f roda
PROBATE COURT OF
and I llnk1 to thl Iouth Uno
IIEIGS COUNTY, OHIO , of eald fraction; thence
In The Millar of
w..t to the place of
LatriCtl Lynn Funk,
beginning, containing 17
CIH No. 21200
or tau.
NOTICE
EXCEPTING from th•
AeviNd Coda, Sae.
alpova 17 acree, more . or
2717.01(A)·
1111, tha " lollawlng
Notice le he.:eby glvan deecrlbod rut eatatt
thet Deborah Kay Llach, . 1lluated In Sallabury
Cue No. 21200 of tt3 S. Toiwnahlp, County of Melga,
Third, Middleport, OH, and Shlta of Ohio, being In
457110, hll applied to the Fraction 31, Town 2, Range
Common PI••• Court, 13, of tha Ohio Coinpany'a
PrGblte DIVIIIOR of llelgl Pu;cha..; beginning at 1
Cqunty, Ohio, lor an order · poet with 3 notch11, baing
to !lh•naa ·hal' olllld'l nama ' the corner of the Guy F.
to~ L~nn llmllh.
Martin and Drullll• F. Mertln
Said apPIIO.tton will b1 and 01!"1 ·o~onee larma on
hllnl In 111d Court, lit 10 thl w.atllna olthl Richard
• .m., on ~~~· 1s1h day of Wlm•m•on ••rm: thence
April, 11M, at IIIIa• County .111t 1110 112 1111; thence
c-t Hou...
lOuth 2-3/4" - · · 701 flit;
Deborlll Key Lllcll thiiiCI _ .. 150 , ... to lhl

-.mew

(3) .14; 1TC

Spring is just arouna tfie. corner ana
temperatures are .rising...but at Mason ~urniture
Prices are [owe:ring...
T/VE!l(9" ITE!Jvl I?( Til'£ SrJ09{_'£ ·

Public Notice
County n ..aurer, may
claim to have- lnteNit
In 11ld real prop•rty;
the,.lo,., plalnllfl d•m•nda
Judgment · lgalnat
d•lendantl, the eahlte of
Raybon A. Wall•c•, aka
Raybon A. Wallace, Sr., lor
$15,512.13 with Inter•••
therHn It a.75"' par annum
from May 1, 18115; that 11ld
mortgage bl loriiCII&gt;Ied;
that the amount ofllena on
the prGparty blmlrlhlled;
that the raal proparty be
iold and the amount· due
plaintiff be paid from the
proc••d• of th• aela,
toglthlr wHII coati heraln;
that dltlndante, Raybon A.
Wellace, Jr., &amp;x,cutor ol tha
Elhlta of Raybon A. Wallace
aka Raybon A. Wallace, Sr.,
Raybon A. Wallac•, Jr.,
Naomi L. lllack, and tha
Melge County ~...,.,. bl
raqulr.d to lit up lhelr Ilene
or lnter..t In 11ld real
property or be loreYir
barred from 1111rting the
1 - and lor lltOI'ftiYI IHI
lndCOitt.
Th• defendant• flret
hereinabove named ere·
lurtlllr not1111c1 t1111 they require to anawer aald
complaint on ar bllor. April
11, 1 - Which Include• 21
daye from th• tnt
pllbllcallon or ludgem•nt
may be r•nder•d ••
d•m•nded tht,.ln.
IIRICKER &amp; ECKLER
Kenneth C. Johnaon,

·
, . . •• ... •r1

r•

'rtgl!t, .....nd .nter... to the

abcive
dllerlbed
A llald
aurv•y8.52
of ·eeld
property Indicate• the
pro..rty diiCrlbld tol811
only 8.1331- 'SIIid field
IIIIYIY diiOripllon .te II

In~· Exparlencecl
Cal Wayt~e Nell

.

:.-z 1.405:

·FQr FrH, Elllmalal
•. '

'

1-~~ 776-0100
Ext. 6057
$2.~ per min:
Must be 18yrs.
Touch"Tone Phone ·

Glbaon Electric Automme dryer...................................'409 ....... '339
Gibson BuiH·ln Dishwasher- Full featured ...................'439 ....... '329
Glbaon 15.4 Cu. Ft. Refrig· Rollers ...... ;........................ '649 ....... 1499
Whlte-WeaUnghouse 18.0 Cu. Ft· Glasa ah!llvea ...... '879 ..... ,. '629

, ' Required..
' Se~-\J (&amp;19) 64!1·6434

pc. White Oak· Doored Pleces...................... '899 ....... '499
Cherry French Style- 4 pc. Large Drawers ................... '999 ......:'639
Ute Pine 4 pc.· Door Druser &amp; Chest.......................... '899 ....... '599

~hley 4

·12 Rutland
IICMiin • boMIIor

-lora &amp; dlllbled.

State"llcanled.

Singer 5 pc. Pine- Hutch·Miror-wtatand ..................... '1295 ....... '799

Lola

V/Bassett 4 pc. Oak- Country Style .............................'1199 ....... '749
Singer 8

Pine- "Southweatern"-Biack Pulla ........ '2299•...•1

pc.

T\BLE~ET~

or nc. Family

~ llmOiphere.

ReaiOnable Ratea

1399

992-6()42 or 742-1120
.~~rv o1: chr.,__

•

WASNOW

(UmestuiiiLowRIIel)

549 Ht
Riverside
Solid Oak Storage Tablea- ckt./2 ends ..... '1050. '799 Ht
.
Ashley O~k French OVIIII Ckl/2 ends ............................ '380. '229 Ht
Olik Pedeatelaet- OVal ckt./2 round enda ............ ~.......'720 :ftiJ9gWI' ~

WICKS
..AULIIG-:

Oak Legged Set-ckt/2 rect. 8nda ...................................'299. '199 aet

·Limestone,
Grav,J, Sand,

Top Soli; Fill Dirt '

6fi.M92-3470'
'
.
;,...

pc pillow arm-Blue/Mauve Prlnt..................'799.:..... 1499

'•..

pc. Brown Stripa..Oak trim .....................'1095 ....... '699
&lt;;:ontemporary 2 pc. Mauve-Rope Skirt Trim·PIIIowa'1299 ....... '899

•

Colonlal2

GUN SHOOT
$.A.L. &amp; LADIES

Bt~~~tlsaw Mil

•

••

•'

,_

'

'I

.

Ejlrly American 3 pc. Blue wlmauve, tin &amp; grHn ftaral.'1599 ....... '899

t

MIDDLEPORT
YOUTH LEAGl/E
Sign-up Sat., March. 16, 1·5 pm
Middleport Council Room

Traditional Queen Sleeper-Blue/mauve awlrl ............ ,. '699 ....... 1459

.••

t•

La·Z·Boy Con~emP{N'Irv GrHn!hin etrtpe qu,Hn . . . .•1079 ........ '699

Sign-up fee $10.00
:&gt;IIIURIIIY $25,00

: En: 12n
$3.111."" .Minuta
M.... llil18

••
•

Colonial Quean Size Floral print-mauve/blue .............. ~ ....... 1499
Recliner 2-way-3 color choice ....................................... '229........'119

loving memory

.

of my Mom,
H~L,EN FARLEY

:

~went home wllh
Gbd 19 years ago ·

Gilder Rocker • Oak Bow Back- Tan or

OPEN-STAGE NIGHT

~~-MarCh . 14.
' \·4
'
.
· M!)n'lt you're gone

I

STARTING TONIGHT
MARCH 14AT-8;00 PM

3 pc. Dropleaf Table, 2 Braaa~. . &amp;iph. chalra .......... '1t9........'119
5 pc. Pine Trestle Tlblel4 Paddid Seat Chalra ............ '3411 ....... '199
II pc. Country Oak 38x48 Table/4 Wood Chalra ........... '44i ....... '279
II pc; Almond Metal Frame/4 Tan Vlnjl Swivel Chain ... '1199 ....... '749
6 pc. Oak Traatle Table/Bench/4 Bow Back Chalra ..... '799 ....... 1549 ·
7 pc Whlte/Natural38x80 Table/8 Bow Back Chalra ... '799 ....... '569
7 pc. Country O.k 42" Table/2 LealaiS Slllt Back Chalra '619 ....... 1489

Play an instrument? Sing?
Or just come and listen.
Several entertainers already
scheduled. So bring your friends
andcome
us.

MEIGS CO. BIKERS
ASSOCIATION
1ST ANNUAL SPRING
FEVER FEST.

Front 48" Oak

••

•

AT WAYNE'S PLACE
TWin or Full Size Foundatl9na (Cnh'n Cerry) ...........................'42 · ·

Bean Cllllrs- 3 color choice .. :.........................................'71.......... "49
A~c Pine Bunk Bttda ... :...............................
'271 ....... 1198
Wtl Pictures· StiKted Prlnta. .........................................141 ..........
'19'
.
O.k PU'tllh ~o- Ughted ... ~..................................... ~..... -2ee .. ~ .... *177
Foot Stoola· Cholca Colora &amp; Styles ..............................'411 .......... '29
,I
.
..
.
. .
~ c~ T•bl• o,.,.;ct.erry ..................................•1u ......:...'68
8tLidlnt .,.......... Flnllh ..........;............................... ~.~...........
u ...............

=
•

tOOk' you home
INith him. No
pain nor

~

!

,.n,mw

l•

614-742·2193

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

•New Homes

•'•
•

'

.••
'
I

j

Middleport, Ohio
(Special-Price on Aluminum cana
from March 1 lhru 29)
Bring In ntlnlmum of SO lba. of aluminum cana to
regllltar tor Bunn Coffeemaker to be given away.
Drawing will be hlkl on March 29th.

Ser-11-818 845 8434

FANS
Let your fingers do the
walking to the sports
line. Finance Stock&amp;,
NHL.. NBA, NFL, Poinl
Spreads, Daily
Horoscope.

992-3894

tmlfFN

·2

· W•t•r

1-900- ns-0100

EXt. 3685

Di&amp;tributed by

$2 ..99 per min. Must be
18 yrs. Serv-U

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

The. water . ~eatmcnt company cordially Invite~ you to
partiCtpate tn a free. no obligation, comprehensive water

yt~Em

I

TDS, Mlnt,.l Hardnoao, Iron, PH.
Pl1111 cell Roi.Soft at 112-4472 or 1 80CHI06 3313
to oat up your lrH wltlr anlly1le.
10/111101

lnlil•,.' lldnhitl.
Sttnr&amp;~

CJr I fStmce
, l'rwtr Wtt•
hi Anita61t
TV&amp;VW..

Racine American

Howard [xcovatin

Leglon#602

Trucking·
Umeatont
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Services
Houae Sltea and
UtiiHiea

Sun. Nights
Lueki!Y Ball $300.00
with 21 players or
more Raises $5.00 ea.
week. Pay according to
the Number of players

,.,.,_Au Jla61e
, _ (!MJ 615-1651
In

949-2044
949-2038

TERESA RODATZ
STONE

We Miss You Very
Mudl, Terry. 'We Have
Fond Memories
The Times We Speal

Together. May The
Lord .Keep You Undl
We Meet Once Apia.
Lisa, And The
Gil mores.

All Kinds of Earth Work

-

992·3838

SUMER IMAGES
TANNING

Howard L. Wrttesel

12 Sesalona For

NEW-RI:PAIR

$20.00

Guttera
Downspouts
, Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

18 Sesalona For

$25.00
Open 8:00 to 3:00
4:30,to 10:00 P.M.
Ownerw: Pete &amp; Dlene
Hendrickl
Phone: 614-992·2487

ROOFING

949-2168
511&amp;94 TFN

311/1 mo.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

In Memory of

Go4i we will see• you

ELLSWORTH
DILL

mls.

y~u . wlth each

pa.ngday.

.

.,Sadly missed by

•Room Addlllone
•NewG1regaa
.
•EIIIItrlc.il &amp; Plumbing
·Roollng
,
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
AIIO Concrete Work
(FREE ESnM~TES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

1182-6215
"Pomeroy, Ohto
'

Sept. 16, 1915 •
March 14, 1976

left us 20 yea1sl
It's . been
But we
or' you eacllll

'"

1/lllf~

LINDA'S
PAINnNG
tmiiOI·ImiiOI

...........,,.........
FREE ESTIMATES
t.lcet•ellllleMtaf

~

RIY na101111.1

unun..-m
61MII-4110

212111 mo.

uve1

1

:S:~ ca

1'900·255-()300
ext. 5488
$3. 99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch- tone phone

Daughters • Con1nle,l
Fftda .Grace,
Alta, Graackblldren
&amp; 81'¥t grandsons

Mlion, 'NV

Authorized AGA Dlslributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
,'Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Slaps -Stairs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
nems, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol other stuff!!

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
We will wOII&lt; within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX n:l-5861
106 Pomeroy Street
Mason, WV
PROFtSSIONAL
SFF1V ICE

LICENSED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

MIKE MARCUM

Call 992-4025
Pomeroy,

between 8 a.m.·B p.m.
Mon.- Sat.

Middleport

&amp; V~lnlty
Be
1:oopm the " ..
i to run, Sun- ·

IAd11anc~• D:eadlina:·

Asbab~n~·s

Fridav. Mon-. Saturda~.

Silver Bridge Plaza
614-446-4462 .,

28 Ye&lt;Jr s Experience

PHONE

1 800·377-4477

614 ·245·0437

. 6t4.9g2·5275.

Booo•

:..77~50::.._ _ _ _ _ __;_·....

Mt Alto Auction . Ever~ Frid*t"' ~
7pm. Every Sarurd&lt;iy 6pm. Rt 2-33- ...
~crossroads'. Groceries. new• :"

required.

Serv·U
(619) .645-8434

win a handciaflld eolld walnut and cadar lined
blanket cheat valued at $800 to be given away
March 30th. Tri. Co. Recycling open 7 dllys a week
to..veyou.
N Mon.-Frl; 11-3 Sat. &amp; aun. Located comer of
St. Rt. 143 &amp; 7, Pomarov, 614-992·5114.

full ~ i me auctioneer, completb"' ••

auctton

90

Plano, Dr1•1

l icense&amp; ' ..

Wanted to Buy

: : :'

Antiques, collectables, eS1a1es • '
Riverine Antiques, Russ Moore: •.

, &amp; &amp;•liar

o-.61 ...992·2526.

rl..

Gt.l..n '79 I I .
AIIO Acc....
61

service.

.

lf66,0hia &amp; Wesr Virginia, 304~ " .. •
773-57850r304-773-5447.
' J!'f'

Lessons for

._

, , :.

Rick Pearson Auction Company '

" ••

Clean late Model Cars Or ' •
Trucks . 1990 Models Or Newer. •..
Sm11h Buick Pontiac, 1900 East- ' ·
ern Avenue. GallipoliS.
•

,
367 0302

~:.;;;:;OI

farm. Working canle !arm. 501.~, •

!!!

ere• ...

holJse, hay- ,

sen Counr., ,

a farm, will not be de- ~
. Send informa tion : PO• ~ .
. W\1 25106 , '
.

Nef.IJ At lngJCs Bleetronies

.

.

llaflle lhaeli Dealer
Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

Old U.S. Cmns

I~::~:::~~~~~~~.'
Diamonds, All 01~
11
I
Paperweights, Etc. ,
Shop, 151 Second

. 814-446-2842. • ·:
Used furniture- antiques , one '~

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

piece or _complete estates, atse _ ~
do appra•sala, Osby Martl" 614 - , •

992-2825

992· 7441.

11311tfn

J.D. Drilling Company
RJcine, Oh. 45771

P.O. Box 587

E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512

t~==~==~-~~~~~IO~N.:r~~~~~~~JUUnll~~;;;:~~~;1
FREE
Pick- • ..ded

Frw EalllllltH
35YerwExp.

R-.1111 Rlltla
985-4198

...,.

''111•
'"

.Ktl &amp; ·--·r
-metalsl

614-992-4025

BISSELL BU,LDERS, INC.
.New Hom~s • VInyl Siding New
Garages ·.Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992-7643
(No Sunday

------~ ~-.L--~~~~~-=~
.,

merchandise. ~cl Fraztet 930.

111
Gui 9AR

Do your part for our environment. Bring us your
alum. caM and other recycables and register to

.

and Auction

STAR

Announces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March

_

Public Sale

80

Mon.-Sat. Hl-6

ftll CO. BICYCLIII

•

&amp;·_Saturday, \ 112
Run. household

Prom
Dresses
levi's

POLE BARNS AND GARAGES
RESIDENTIAL &amp; C:::&gt;MMERCIAL

James

"you

In tt;tavBn someday.
'
. ~.
'
We ', IOV!l you and

FREE

Pick-up discarded
washers, dryers,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials.

onalysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:

TRI·STATE SEWER &amp; ,
DRAIN QEANING

we i are right with .

Ohio
3/111 mo.

~.:u!: 1.Jf- Treatment ROOFING &amp; REMODELING CO.
S HINGLES • SIDING • W INDOW S
el[,(~ .~ Equipment·
BUlL T UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING

.

ON FURNI·TURE CO.
(304) 773- 5592

503 Mill Street

'
'
-v• . ... years and we
Iii' -our hearts ·If

•

2nd Street.

1'-I00-77'$-G100
ext. 7823
$2.11pWmln.
Multblt8yra.

tauiihf\..iJjli•:wttll ·thru

..•
'

• II IIIII

-~•::,, MANLEY'S
,:At~111
•~' RECYCLING CENTER _,,,,

menu.

Chester,

814 594-2008 NIGHT

IOIICE •

.,.. ...... ea{th.

•'•
•••

•

Dirt• Sand
985-4422

(814) 948-3013 Phonl
(814) 94•2018 FAX

$32.00/HR.

Updated Every 15 Min.
No wafting direct

Umestone • Gravel

21513 BASHAN AD.
Racine, Ohio 45771

HYDUULIC REPAIR

Five Star
L Vagas Pkk
Sports Entert•118111

•MOWing (Resldlntlal
and CIIIIRmerc:lal)
•Shrubbery
Mllnllnanea
oQdd lob• par requut
No l..aoon Toe UIJII
or Too Smt11/
Plan Ahead, C•ll Todlyl
742-2803 _ _

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
. $20.00/HR.

985-4473

Mcntgomarp.

•Tree Trimming

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

CHEAPER BATES

'

our love

.l'
~

.

LIIRY'I
LIRCUI

R.l. HOLLON
TRUCKING

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

•

to bear. He

........ . .... ¥

:tm/1

941-2512

be ,

•

•••
•

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Remodeling
Slop I Compare
'FREE ESTIMATES

wv

wlfh ""',.,.,. " - - · to bllt:lc It up
, Serving S.E. Ohio &amp; Weet VlfVInla
Toll Free 1-800-872-5167
·
tte 1418

ROBERT IISSELL ·
, CONSIRUCIION
•Garages
•Complete

Bw. Pboao (304) 4115·Utl
ToU F,..1-801).4S3·711M

11127 Munloch Aft. .'
l'lrbnbtq,
21101

.

took our Dad to
~lth you 17
otjttf·s ~ ·ago. You

••

'

SKATE-A-WAY
'
ANNOUNCES
40TH YEAR
ANNIVERSARY
PARTY
. FRI., MARCH. 15th
7;30 PM-10 PM
Qa5-3929"0r 985-9996

but. not forgotten.

•;

SATURDAY,
MARCH 16, 1996
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Fealurlng MUiic 01
"WHITE RAVEN" 9 pm-1 8111
·
Fun&amp;~es.
'
$3/pe1801'1, S5 cp~.~~lle

-

Slrv-u (1118) 845 8434

In

La·Z·Boy Rocker Chalae/racllner- Blue or green ........ '539 ....... 1369

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PRESENTS

' .

T~Tone~r.d

Flexateel wall recliner· Mauve or Turquolae ................ '528........'275

PA'ma•JaG NIS5AN INC.

'

·· Aaalat You
1-eOo 988 8800

pc. Tan multi color awlri-plllowa .... '111119.....'1088
TradHional 3 pc. Multi-color stripe-green plllowa......'14H ....... '888
Early American 3 pc. Oak trlm-GraanJmauve floral ...'24H.....'13$9
Contemporary 3

March 17, 1 p.m. til?

Nillsan Headquarters
Lowe&amp;l Prices

32124 Happy Holiow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Bricklee

;

Love
: Bualneaa
Family Matteni
Allow Your
Peraonttf Paychlc to

I

Basaett 3 pc. Tan-Reclining Sofa &amp; Chair, loveaeat.'1899 ..... 11288

...

~Direction?

'•

TradHional2

Bailey Run Rd.

.March Spaiallf

7

~···~
~ Middleport~ .

Four Drawer Cheat- Maple Finish ........_. .......................... '79 .......... '49

Baaaett Brall/glll8 Oval Ckt/2 Ract Enda ................. '990. 1

Sun.,

·Portable

.. '

tt2-21s•

Feeney Bennett Legion Farm

a..c• illfth ... ,.,.

'

Entertainment Line!l

Maytag Auto waaher, l!lrge capacity.............................'539 ....... 1~9

SAWMILL

4fla.tt

Give Yautself The
Sports·Edge Sports

Tappan 30" Electric or gu range ................................. '449 ....... '329

11~1

~

~,:.=i:atlol

NOW

Zenith 27" Pine or Oak console wtremote ................... '699 ....... '579

Columbut,·Ohlo 43215
(2) 15, 22, 2t;
(3) 7, 14, 21; II TC

Sentl'nel Classl'fl'eds

H&amp;H

Remodeling .

Zenith 25" Console w/remote-3 cabinet cholcea.........'63!L.... '529

Attorney
100 South Third Snet

aL-

992-3954 or 985-3418 , .-·

Houn Repiolr &amp;
RIIIIOdellng

Zenith 13" COlOr •••••• ••• ••••• ••oooounoooo oooouoooouooo• •• •••••n•••••••: '269 ....... *199
Zlnlth 11" Remot8 Color ................................................1319 ....... '269
Zenith 20" Remote Color ..... ~ ......................................... '339 ....... '279 · ·

lr--------....:-------....,
, II
lo •lace att a", call
1.._
111...1 AL- L.--

WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

KHi:hln &amp; Bath

WA S

WE OfFER GENERAL HAULING
Umeatone, Sand, Gravel, COlli &amp; Water

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
· lt90n!~

\PI'U\\CE~

I

Serv-U (619) 645- 6434

rr9{_T/JYUC'EfJJ."
T\"~ ..~

rat•.

1-900-776-0100·
Ext. 7830 $2.99 per
min. Must be 18 yrs
Touch-Tone Phone
Req.

.

loiiOOI!a:
Comm•nclng at th•
SouthW11t corn•r of
Fraction 31 th•nea E11t H
1/2 rode (1,017.25 r..t)
along the eouth ·u"" of aeld
frlc:llon; thence North 114.0
la•t to • railroad aplke
found In thl c•ntertlne of
T-hlp Road .75 and the
place of beginning of thll
tract; thence N 0" 04' 411" W
15011.231ftl; lhlnoe s 31" 24'
04" E 217.11 flat; thence S
II" 40' oe• E 247.77 flat to •
corner of the Catholic
Cemetery; thlnca s n• 51'
31~ E 148.21 t..t wHI) the
line of aald cemelary;
th•nea S 0" 04' 411" W 351.15
feet along the lint of eald
c•metary; th•nc• S II" 51'
31" ' W 331;54 feet l•avlng
11ld cemetery line to th•
centerline or th• Townahlp
Road; thence N 44' 21' 08"
W 121.131m; thlnce N 51"
35' 34"W 157.10 fHt to lhe
place of beginning
.containing 5.1331 acr..,
lnttndlng to convey the .1.07
acra tract conveyad In the
Melg1 County Dttd
R•corde VOl. 251, page 751
and Vol. 258 page 101.
That the dtlendantl, thl
•••••• of Raybon A.
Wallace, aka Roybon fl.
Wallace, Sr., and Leona
Wallace have failed to pay
11ld note according to thl
t•rme end condition•
thereof, that dtlendtnte,
Raybon A. Wallaca, Jr.,
Executor of the Eateta of
Raybon R. Wallace, aka
Raybon R. WIIIICI, Sr.,
Raybon A. . WIIIICI, Jr.,
Naomi Black, and the Melge

POMEROY, OHIO
Traeh Removal • Commercial or Rtllcltntlll
Septic Tanke Cltaned &amp; Portable Toilet• Ranted.
. Dally, -idy &amp; monlttly rental

~::'m4ch .

POMEROY -- Friday scramble
will be held at the Meigs County Golf
Course, 9:30a.m. Friday.

Public Notice

of the Catholic
C•mllary; thane• north 231
lm; thine• wttt 342 felt;
, PubliC ~otiCI
thence eouth 208 fe•t;
, l"aJC NOTICE
thane• nortl! 81,3/4", w..t
•FORECLOSURE OF
241 flat to a loeuet etek•;
IIORTQAQI!
lhlnca north 38 112• - I t
Common PIMI c-t
218 IHt to • at•k• In tho
1111p County, Ohio
Oren JoiiM Mid Merlin lin•;
Caee No. 11 CV 107, thlnCI north&lt;IOI 1/2 fHt to
:iatlonal CHy llort"D' the place of beginning,
·~. pt•lntllf, va. · conhltnlng 11-tl/100 acraa
Raybon A. Wllfloe, Jr., excaptll"!l co•l and other
Extoutor of thl Eahlte of mlnerala aold by Jamae
Raybon A. Wlllaca, aka Martin and II. J. Martin, lila
Raybon R. Wallace, Sr., at will, to S.D. Horton by dead
11., ~dllad January 30, 11!12, and
Th• eeteta of Laona E. reconltdd In Volume 84,
Wallace and tilt unknown !".11\f• 113, of the Raconle of
1pou1e, helre, davlaaea; llelgl County, Ohio, with all
benellclarlte, llgat•••· right•· neceuary or
edmlnlotralora, ex110utora, convenient to th• mining
thflr aucc.. aon . and and -rklng of the ••m•
•••ton• of Leona E. without lncumbranee to the
Wallace, who" lot known lllrflcl,
add,....• Wll'l unknown,
K le the Intention of the
upon whom aervlca of former grantor h-ln to
,...,mona cannot bo made, convey to tiW .g rentH, 6.52
bleauee the ralfdlnCI and acral, IXCiptlng thl COli
al othlr l"ddra•" of llld : . and tli• right to· min a the
defendant• are unknown eame •• aold to S. D.
and CIMof with -•oRIIIII lfo!'lon and record•d In
diligence bl ••c•rtalnld, Volume 84, page 113, of the
.,. hlraby notlftld thai on · D'eel R1cord1 of MeiDl
Decambtr 7, 1H5, Ill• ~Ohio.
plaintiff flied a complaint"In .: f!urther •xc•ptlon from
thl Common Pleae COurt, the above · real 11tate the
MelD• c-ty, Ohio, In Call fil"""•ltll Thl -loHowlng - •
No. 11 cv 107 agalnat Ml8ta bol~g In Fraction 31,
Raybon A. Wall•c•, Jr., . 81H1IIury Townlhlp, Mala•
Ex110utor of the Elhlhl of County,·Ohlo, and bounded
Raybon A. Wall-. aka and de1crlbld •• lollowa:
Raybon R. , WIIIHI, lr. lllglnnlng lbout ·H 1/2 rod,
llaybon A. W111101, Jr., .ea1t of the eouthweet
L
and the - r or Fractl.on No. 31;
11 thlnCI north 114 flat to thl
ori oeritef'· of Road No. T 71; ·
thenOI ICII!th 153" 30' 11et
157 ..., to a pohlt In the
sr. and ·centar of 111d road; Jhenca .
01011..11 ICIUth .44"15'Mit121.1 fm
to Waatarn to • point In the cent•r of
~~~A~Iaoclill!ol),
1 211.4
1lld road;
wilt
note, which
feat to lh•nc•
the place
of
note waa blglnnlng, conlalnlng .45
Central ION.
nkl , Excepting· .. from the
abovt-dllcrlbed tract of
land the mineral• which
..... prevloully lOki.
Dead reference: VOlume
•••• page 7155, Mill•·
Cc!Unty llleMde. .
H 11 ·I ll• lnhlntlon of tho
....,..o,. to convey 111 thllr

::cr~~~~~~~IT.·
Iii

. •Seore&amp; P.oint

RACINE -- The Racine Boatd of
Public Affairs will meet Thursday,
7:30p.m. at the annex.

POMEROY- Community Lenten
Services, Pomeroy United Methodist
Chun:h, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, the
Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz speaking.
Sponsored by the Meigs Ministerial
Association.

Public Notice

Sports Funll

.,,

.

:::-=---:-.:.....-:----....;· '·.

SPORT'S CAl
DELUIE

Wanted to Buy Used Mob1te · '.
HomeL Coil: 614-441l·0175
•' •

Wanted To Buy : 8.2 Ten Bolt

•

Finders of hard to '
find auto parts.

614·992-4060

Po.: :

sitrack Unit To Fit A H)6 8 ChQ, .:
vella Can Use Any 01 The Fol.- •
lowing Carriers, 65· 70 Chevrolet '"' '
84·72 Chevelle. 64·72 Chev111 j ' • ·
Nova, 67-70 Camaro, 614 -441 · - '
1053.
• .,

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos Wim . ; :

ANNOUNCEMEN TS

005

Ot Without Motors . Call Larr¥ . :
:::llv_•~.:;.·67·=-··.:::38:.:.8-.::9303=-._ ___:
· .. ,; '
Little likes Toy a:

i

PersonalS

·· ..·

Table, Plai- ••

·• .. •

Guys &amp; Gals Your Areta. 1-DOO·

Wan.ted To Buy:

Princess Video Now Shipment 01
Adult VIdeo's 814· 448·2501,

WMtod To Bu1 : Standing Timber;; ·:;
Ani Amount. 814-388-9906.
·

990·3737 E•t: 4208. $2.99 fMin. Foundation Stone. For landsco10~
1a. Sarv.u, 81~~-&amp;~S-84 34 .
i~. 814-44Hot3.
• .•.•

1380 Eaatern Avenue, Galli""'lis.
,....
0 pon Sunday't Now Noon ·10

wanted: Amtr1ca.
· n Ford son'- ;;,·~; .•..
Tractor Or Othor Old Tractoro, . • :

P.M.

Reaaona!:tle Priced , 614·837- - ·
4928 leave Mess•go . can cot)'

Announcements

~~;;;;:i;-;;;;iiAi;~~ l'ect

. '

EMPLOYMENT
Sf RV ICES

aear:5

8t4-

~; puppies
18.

(0

giwHwa~.

Droppocl puppy, ooon to Ill
pound pupflr. cute. cuddlj. good"

"'"' kldo. 8t4-fi2·7557.

f ..

•
,

�. Thursday, March 1•, 1SI86

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Cro..word Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

=~
40~IInlle

ACROSS
• t Adorlble
: 5 a.nlle

47 Slllnlo .........

tU~

41lleUIIMefor
5t RID!
55 C.

...,.,.. org.

=

t2 At eny time
t31nallna

Rooma lor ..m - """" or month.
s..ang •• 11201mo. Gallia Ho!BI.
81&lt;4-44H510.

2 Bedrooma, 1 Beth, $300/Mo.;
Deposil, Raference1, No Petl,
614-441-1817' AflerO P.r.t.
3 Bedroom House For Rent In Rio
Grande, 2 Car Garage, Patio, ()e.
posit Requ ired, No Pets. 614 -

379-2720, AFTER 8 P.M.
. 18 ·$1 5 /Hr. No Door To

Sleeplno rOoma with coOking.
Alto trllltr apace an. river. All
hook-upa. Call alttr 2:00 p,m.,
304-773-MSI, u.-WV.

.

'

t4 Clttllar
t5
ta
for
NORTH

.'

'

r.1ERCHANDISE

51 o

,

•• 1~27-&lt;4640 lnci'Sis.l1ep.

Bebyoltl&lt;. needed lor seYenteon
monlh old, preforobly in 1he Rock·
sj)l'lngl,~raa. Call6t4-992·2292

a'lt&lt;epm.
BATES BROlliERS AMUSE'
MENT~Y.

Mull'tbe· 18 yi'ara or alder and

~- to travel. CaD 81oi-2M-2950,
·8am-4:30pm, Monday thtu Friday
Ma{d122 .. apply.

•wo, ·~~~&gt;mode;. 380 ll-

8 two barrel, air con&lt;llllonlng recondy cl1arged, r~ rotto!Wd.
runs gr,al, looka gro~t ~300
81&lt;4-tm-7851.
•

Hou..llbld ·
Goods

oeo.

tKJ9

•K10

.

·-·-

4•

I I-lATE OPENIN6
·TI-lE 6001(!

ExPerienced P•rHime eishi&amp;r.
Larry's locker. :!!M-895-31\Q3.
Employm~nt

Services has · a par'l·time (as

noeded) vacancy tor a job coach
In th' Maaori County area. This
position will ,be responsible tor
providing on-tho·)Ob support tor
people wllh disabilities. Experience with disabilities preferred.
Conmct FOES, 304·522·3337 no
la1or 3-22-98. E.OE.

'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Allf YOU AILf TO OPEMTf
;.
Yourc NEw VC.Jt1

·\ef-f·Vf$/ON'

Homo Typists, P&lt;;,allfll n~ded.
$45,000 Income potential. Call 1·
800·5t3-4343 Ext 11-93118.

\

VC/?.t
co.PlAYI,('s'

._ ~. l&gt;ON'T ~NOyl.

.l tMVf/11'1 FIGIJICfl&gt;
OUT tfO~ TO OPE/II
T~~

'
'
\.......-.,__.___
· ·~· '

750 Boats &amp; Motors

This ~per wll nol

fOr s.le ,,

Guarantees, Call After 5 P.M .

..

AKC Regillered, Show

Quelit~

.

.

304·875-t 433.

Male Cocker Spaniel Puppy, · 1 ~ 88 Mercury Cougar, low mlltl,
Good Bloodline, Excellent Mark- 1 owner, exc. cond., $5,000. 30+

8 Foo1 Sola And 2 Matching
Chairs, Green And G!lld In Color,
Ve&lt;y Good ·eo~n. Price: $325,
e1.._..1~13.
'

lngs, Bladt /White &amp; Tan In Color, .:.67:.:5-:.:7_19:.;5;;.
.-,.-----Date Of 'Birth: 8/31.95, Housebro· t98S Nlssan Son1l8, 2dr, auto, ac, ·
ken, 814-379--2728.

'

t owner, 98,000mi. , like new,

1Ogal tank iet. up spac!als. Fish southern car, $3.000 OBO. 304·
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Japkson 675-23$! aher 5pm.
Ave. Point Plaasant, 30•·675· 1989,Pontiac Grand ·Am, Excel·
2063.
'
~nt Condition, Loaded, Low Mile·
. 1 Owner, 61oi-3e7-751l0, 61• ·

10)( YiT.

,

r-....

·,
~ ,
" , ' ~·
PlAYttl' ~ Ge5, EJ\ ?' "

•;. • ._,, '

EV~

, '

fU..Y ~ C:fF .~

"q

w-~~

~

.

~f\EN YOlt~e:. ~ t'&gt;®l t..a£f{,

VljeyUN...I'V-LITY !tlTEkM.TIV€

1182 Wollcraft boat with 198'r ;
lJ'ailef, 150 fiiOIOf, illl lc:cell0f'i8S 1
11
lnduded, $2700, 11&lt;4-1186-3375.
I'

25" Magnavox Console

Needs $75 -$tOO In Work,
For $100, 14 ljon&lt;l Equll~tf
25 Wan Power Booator, $tO:

r

I
1

VI~TUN-

~

Maybe you have seen Clive James
on PBS. He is an Australian author
and television presenter with a very
dey sense of humor who immigrated
to England many years ago. As an ex·
ample of his style, here is a comment
he made in 1981 about a line-all dispute at Wimbledon: "McEnroe... did
his complete Krakatoa number."
Denis Priest bears some physical
resemblance to James. He is also an
Australian writer, though be alma at
the smaller bridge-playing marllet in
Queensland. As far u I am aware, he
hasn't had any bridge programs on
television. Specializing in tricky de- ·
clarer-play problems, Priest gave his
readers only the North-South hands of
this deal last July. How should South
plan the play in six hearts? West leads
what you know to be the singleton
spade seven in answer to his partner's
openillg bid. and East plays the two.
Priest didn't say how South got to
six hearts and I couldn't come up with
anything sensible, so please ignore
the given auction!
There is one legitimate chance to
make the slam - if East has th~ee
trumps. After winning trick one (even
with the spade ace!l, declarer should
draw one round or trumps, cash the
club ace, discarding his last spade,
and lead the spade queen. If East
plays low, declarer throws a low dia·
mond. Lucidly West cannot.ruff. Next
comes anot)ler spade. Let's suppose
,Eaat c:overa IIIia Ume. Declarer, Nifl,
plays a trump to the dummy and Calbes the spades, discarding his remaining low diamonds. The only trick lost
is to East's trump queen.

R.£WTY I-\CX.C6 tlO

N'ffAL.!

'?'

BIG NATE

l,

"i

.

(

i

You'll
In lite
Clcml(led Secll011.

Sovlnrs

'

!THURSDAY

!

4
n~-.:or
~ ~
\i.
'.BASEMENT .
&gt;
.
w.\TERPROOFING
• ; I•
uocronditional liratlme guarantee.

r

(814) 4•6·0870 Or (814)' 237·1·
o•n Roeara Waterprooting. E•·
~ .t915.
'

f
l
Aj)pllance Pens And Service: All l
..

Nama Brandi Qver 25 Ylara E~· •
,porlonco All Work Gu~ranleed;· I
Freoch City Ma~tae. 814·4•1•, l
71115.
"
j

gov.

~u · em you in the year ahead.

.;...____________

send for your~o

Astra-Graph predictions today by mailing
$2 and ti ASE to Astro·Graph, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1759, Murray Hill
Slatton, New York, NY 10156 . .Make sure
'to stale your zodiac sign.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Penny-ante
goals
will not have an~ s&gt;gn111cance
· BitltNICE
today. Qo. your best to aim high, so even
BEDEOSOL II you laM short, ,you'll be better off than
you are now.
TAURUS (April 20-Mlly 20) II will wor1&lt; to
yo~r advantage today IO SOCialize With
P8&lt;lPI4!
wi]O can helP. your career, Do not
-~ .
to tall! sl1op *ltlontiver posalble.
GEMINI (May, ~1·J~ne 20) You can
remold 30I'18C)ne else's iR!IOmplete ldeu
· ibdly anit tranelorm ·~ Iiiio sorn8ttling
wortllwhlle lot everyone InVolved. UIUize
IIUS ae&amp;el.
'\
Generally ipeUing , yqur maleri•l CANCiil (oluM 21-,~U~y· D) When assoproepocta took encou,ragiD~~, lor the•ye_ar• .;tallng wllh .trusled companions today,
ai!Hd.. lf,you.f..l XQII hawt IOfll!tl!tirtO ,
will be i ...!llial. fl. )lOu liP up·
vailulbla ialllliw, lriike your ll!llfllll· ~ 'lrOnt wtllriiMim,, it.y' l(jlll be.IIOniit with
llllato~Jft111111··
.
1.
\
' ~- ·
·
,
·
• .
Ptecas (fall. 20·March 201 A ~:' lEO (Julr 2•-Aug. ;it), Take prlda In
et111jhqr &lt;lhlith'lw '. . , yOur lnW- • ~-work~y. Nginllala ollhli ilre or
· _. IXIIIICI·be 1 ~· However, yq~~'M ~nlfl!:anca ·cif !he Iaske yoti partorni.

1 112 Baihs, LOcated
Ga!ipolil,
, 814-446-

.

1o$e Chevy S-10 ahort bod, reliuiiJ engine, 41pd, Urea,
clwomo whoala, S2,110Q •.30&lt;4-875-

SM2,

1888 Nluan PO, • Cylinder,' 5
Spa*&lt;!, Very Dei&gt;ondable Truck,
81&lt;4-256-8117 . .

he81tate

danclor

,_to' do,_ l!lllil II.-IINI'Ik lllollll.
Ydu mu.,t\._ iiGIIDn~

.

•

loy

•••
lAM I

~-ra•to lottera of !!'0 lOur
ocramblod -.Is .,..

low lo form lour -.!1.

I

L I H Yl

l_ I. I_ I. -·
5

I
..,6,_..,,,......-,..,7.--r,-T,-1 Q
_

,.,

_

_

_

the

_

a.t a~ on ...

LETTERS TO

II IIII II

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

I I I

oso 814·••~~­

EX K C

'::~::~' S@\\.Q{}lA-/&amp;t.~s·
141to4
aAY I. POUAN

v~t

local rtfefencea furnlaritd. Call ~··.

.

RPN

$VAXJNAA . ' - GPUXARDOPNU
K N N. :.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Music: geometry in lime."- Arthur Honegger.
"You just pick a cho!d, go !wang, and you've gol music." - Sid Vicious.

on .

,.

lnt.Finiahed, '·insulated, 10' Cell·
ing; .corlcrete floor, Apprx. 1

DE

DJKL

I'"'

I

Malching Couch &amp; Lovesaa1

R P X J T

6 ~~iC:~~!'EER

ve.r .

'

' . •...- .-i:_-.~:.

$150, Reciner'$50, Lamps, $25
Set, Plus Other ltema, '814·3117.78111 .
'

RD

LDV

)( J

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

810 •·'. HOm '"" .•..., 1

' JET

R D WI L

HDUKW

PI Z N

ZICOXUNA

Complele
chuckle quoted
by fllltng 1n the missing words
L..--L-...L......JL.......L-.L......J you develop from step No. l below.

c:t

1e94 lnnllllq,Dit; luHy ·IMded; 1o111
of exnao, 1811. Sarlo us IO!juirieaj 1
only. 304-87saci3.,
&gt;
...
'

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, Now &amp; Rabulll In s-.
Call Ron Ev&amp;hs, 1-IIQ0.537-9528.

RPN

C IJ L

I UN

' RPNUN

~-

contlllned, gOOd COnd., lt,OOO . ~
31M·fll2·2979 or 304-S20p.
~'

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

rrom

I

~

SlllVICES

by Luis Campos
Cellbr1ly Cipher cryptogrv• .,. cl'alted
QU(Mtiont by lamou~ I)IOple, put lf'ld ~
Each 'lttei ifllhl dphitr ltlndl for .oolhel. Todly'l: due: G._.. C

"That guy isn't entirely
worthless .' the girl told her
..---,,...,,....,,....,,......,,....,-...,friend "He can be used as a
p I D E ME
bad - - - --- _, ..

k

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~

Budget Tr1uwmisliona. Used 1Re·1•
bull1, All Typu, Accollib1o To ,.
Over 10,00,0 .Trantmilllan , ':
etH•S;S!'~ •·
.
. _I.
Car 11areo ~lpmenl for tale,
_e_1,.._1M9__
20_s._alk...;..tor;;..,;~::;.;.
u ...· _ _ ,

'

''

1.

••

MQtorHomes .
::1e::::n=-:-H:::i,~co~...~....-.~.~tar-.-:~~ft~.-..,-:-:,
.

1;0~ ,s7.~.ooq

Euoopoan.

.--M-I-X...,.0-A---.'~_:,'

:.:.:~=-~------··

79o . c.mpera·.

Heat, CAir, Vinyl Sidir\g, 7 Years
Old Include'&amp; 72'x30' Polebarn,

IIIOIIIIr I

Phillip Alder

Auto Parts &amp;

3133or .1-JQO-~. ~ · '.

19f Hilltop Drive, Gallipolis, 3
Beckooms, lR, Kic, 1 112 Bath Gas

12 wda.)
8 Onaula
nlckMme
7 Po11tlfta
• Northom

t Grilli
2 r&gt;.rt orttw eve

Pass 2 •
P""
Pass 8 •
AU pass
Opening lead: • 7

New gas tankt, D~l. ton lruck \

'

DOWN
3 Gollpoga
4 V81Uibltofur
!Pet-•

31--~

beper?

;:
Accessories
::
19 78 Ford F250 body pa~la. 30•· I;

760 '

...... -~ lloor "JII.. .... ~·
0 &amp; R AIIIO, Ri!lto;, WV. :!!M-372· 1

311!'. Homeator ·S ale

12 - MINI'Illllal
13 ~
.,.._.. (el.)
114 Al:tar -Penn

·Find the winning lie

Springs,
'

REAL ESTATE

31 Comecll8n l'hllpo

molding

It Cllru8 fi'ult

1•

2•

WELL; SOMETIMES 'fOll JUST
~AVE TO OPEN TJ.IE 600K.
AND 60 RI6HT AT IT ..

' lcnoYo1lngly •co;aPI .
· actvertl""""'nta lor 111al eslale
Ia In vlolallon ot the law.
Our 1118&lt;1818 818 honlby ·
tniotmed lhal all dwellings
aCiveitteed In this newspaper ·
a111 available ., an equal •
opponunlty basts.

33Compenpt
34 Mollter olllila.
35 Gun(amOIIor)

aulftx

eo 8-tthlped

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
South Weet North Eaat

Earn' $10\10&amp; -kly atufllngenve&amp;opea at home. Be )'OIK bOll.
Start now.1No oxp.. lroo ouppli",
inN&gt;., no o,.igetlon. Send S.A.S.E.
to Prestige Unit IL, P.O.

Filbert Oiversilled

•Q 10 •

•QJ987 5 2

By

Winter

22Diuentlng
¥018
23 Look II
24 Powerful ruler
21 Quiz
3Z Inial

SOUTH
•A 4
987 165432
tA 6 54

House For Rent/lea,.: Gallipolis.
City, Convenlen\ Location, Newly
Remodeed, Furrlahod Kit, 3 Bedrooms~ No· Pets; Reference&amp;. For
Info Send S.A.S.E : 844 Fourth
Aven"'', Gallipolis, OH .ss:l1.

195609,
32719.

or3

20 ~ G. Roblnaon

tQI082

lf?Ok~

llaiWII

17 ..... child
18 Lna dllllcull

•J

19S. Ford Bionco ll.&lt;i••·
.
needa l*tll·.galke~
'
Call.3o4-$7H291

.

03-14-M

·
55 ualla e n11a
55 Fcnhelld
1111 a.n~a~

•Q J 10 • 8
•A K.
•A 6 4 3
EAST
•K6532

WEST
•7

1979 Jeep ChiiOkeo"Spoit, quill
~ac!&lt; wllh

3bodroom, LR, FR, ful basemen' Admllll Drye&lt; lil&lt;t N• lt~&lt;cG.E.
In New Hoven. No HUO. $400/mo. Wuher Hea,Y Duty, $t5: WlilrlDeposit. References . 304 ~2 73 · pool Wuhor Heavy Duly, 185:
3492.
.
Hotpolnl R•lrigeraror, Froatfree,
$150: Goa Ranoa 30 Inch AI·
5 Room ,Houao With ·Beth, Year mond, Nlc'o $185i Rolrlgerator
Loaao, 1400/Mo., + Utllltiea. $350 Actmlral Almond, .LikeN..,, 1350;
Oepooit, 42 Vlnto~ Avenue, Galli· 1 Year Warranty: Maytag Wash·
polio, 814 448 3604.
' or New ·Modol 1 Year Warranty,
1205: Skaggs Appliaiica, 18 VIne
flour bedroom house in Pomeroy,
GaiiiPQIIa, e1•-••e· 7318,
JuH boaeman~ largo yard, $2501 Stroot,
mo: plus deposit; releran'ces re· 1-800-o489-34Uil.
quired, call 814·992·5228 alter
7pm or weekends.

Door, Na Minimum Order. Bonus·

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

Oolng ~wei cOuld P'IWide yc)u with
a~ baM.
.

'·

23-Sapt. 22) Try
some quality time today to people and
activilies you enjoy Lei go and have fun.
even if ii is expensive. Your money will
be well-spent
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Sol a good
••ample lor family members today by
unsellishly assisting anyone who ~eeds
your help. Your aclions will convey an
important meS58ge.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Do not lei
the size or scope ot endeavors inlimidale
you lod,y. As matter Of feel, YOU Will
excel in sjtuetions Where lhe stakes are

a

much higiJer thlln usual.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your
lUck wiH locus on maierlal areas today.
Remaining alert wiU help you to recognize
opportunllifi that could Increase your

-~~ SignifiCantly.
CAPRIC~ (I*. 22-.lln. 11) You wil
see eVIdence of lite benefits ol positiVe
thinking loday

II you

toc:us your mind

accoldlngly. NilgiiiVe -a. muat dialppeartromyourthoughls.
.
.
ACWAP~".JS (Jan. 20-fall, tl) Try 1o lilten alllnllo(ely \!!d!IJ H aomeone who has
yQUr besl 1nterwt at !tMft 1aett 1te or she
has.to tell you eomethlng. Yau Cflll 'beniiIii fibril IIIIi advice.

Locket. Natal · Juror- Ravish - TO a STAR
We have so many satellites going around the earth
today ttlat it would be hard to hitch your wagon TO a

STAR.

'

MARCH14I

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

Family
Medicine

K1a1111t W. Swill!...

QUestion: )'ve seen adv~nts er methods are compared .. but it isn't
for new the\inometers that take the very convenient. Measuring the temtemperatim: in the ear. Are they as peraiUre in the mouth is quite com·
good as the old-fashioned ther- mon, but it is often inaccurate when .
inometers?
.•
compared to the core temperature
' Answer: Elevation of body tern- reading obtained with a rectal !herperature occurs with infection or mometer. The most common reason
other types of illness. The magnitude for 'this inaccuracy is the heating or
of elevation above normal is a fair cooling of the mouth by food, drink
indicaiion of the condition's severity. or mouth breathing. Despite these
Therefore, you should measure the possible sources of inaccuracy, oral
temperature when you, your children, temperature is often used because it
or other adults in the family are ill. I is convenient and socially acceptable.
mention this obvious fact because
Placing a thermometer under the
while parents routindy take the tern- arm also produces a reliable temperperature of their sick children, adults ature reading. The temperature
rarely take their own temperature obtained in this way called axillary
SENIOR CHEERL,.EADERS - These cheer·
when ihey are ill.
'
temperature in doctor language is lndere were honorad for their yaara of servlca
The body has a number of pro- consistently l.S degrees below a rec- '{ueaday nlghl at ihe Melga winter. sports ban·
tective responses that help keep us tal temperature. So adding ,I.S
~live despite the changing threats degrees to an auxiliary temperature
from the environment. The important . gives an accurate guess, usually with·
response for this discussi.on is the in I degree, of the actual core ternbody's "homeostatic thermoregulat· perature.
ing" mechanisms. In plain language
Several yean ago, fever strjp ther·
this means that the body implements mometersQthose liquid crystal strips
many subtle \:hanges in circulation, that are held against the forehead
perspiration and muscle activity to became available. These thennomekeep the teinperatuie of the brain, ters can have an error of up to two
heart, lungs and digestive system at degrees, and the inaccuracy is greater
a constant temperature. ·
the higher the person's temperature.
Dlness can cause these normal Therefore, I don't recommend them
mechanisms to work improperly ·or . to my patients.
!he body may lie unable to cope with
The newer "in the ear" therlhe extra d~mands placed on it by the' moineters measure the temperature of
diseaSe process. ~end result is that the eardrum which is deep inside the
the body temper~~ture goes up.
. ·head at the end of the ear canal. .Its ·
. The body systems try io maintain temperature is very close to the·
a constant temperature in the "core" "core" reading. These thermometers
areas of the head, neck, chest and are accurate within 112 degree and are
~bdomen to keep the vital organs also fast. I think they are great for use
within them working most efficient- in hospitals and clinics wl)ere many
ty. Measuring the temperature in any temperatures are
of these areas should give a value that 'taken. And, there is nothing wrong
Is, close to the temperature .in the with their use at home, but a simple
remainder of them. Temperature mea- .and very inexpensive thermometer
~ured at the hands orfeet can be sev- will do the same job.
·era! degrees cooler, so ·they aren't
"Family,Medicine" is a weekly
used to detennine if .a fever·is present. column. To submit questions, write
: Measuring 'temperature• with a lo John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Unlrectalthermometer is considered the,·~ versity College of Osteopathic
most accurate inell)!ld and therefore, Medicine,'GrMveoor Hall, Athens,
•it is the standard against which olh- Ohio 45701.
door. s ·speed, rear spoiler, air.
cai;se~le, all power.

Navy ~ recruit Mi~ael E.
Phillips has departed on a 10-week
western P~~:ific ~ dejiloyment
about the U.S. Seventh Fleet flagship
US$ Blue Ridge.
·
Phillips is one of 7SO Sailors 1!'4
marines who work aboard the command ship, home based in Yokosul(a.

ere

· 'ned
quet. From feflto right
Mnlora T.,... Slm~ JapanPhi.ll'tps JOt
aon, Lori Ru11ell, Clndl Stewart end Suanna ruary, 1994.

the~;
· feLor·
"'avy m

Hendereon.

1993 FORD
MUSTAMG LX
Convertible, euto,
cond, AMJFM ella, tnt,
crulu, PS, PB, PW, PDL

1995 FORD
T·BIRD LX
V-8, · •uto, A/C,

CIN, tlit, crulu, PS,
PW,PDL
MOONROOF &amp; MORE;

Att~l)ding

------r~News policy'--~
, In an effort to provide our readerAll club meetings and other news
ship with currenl news; the Galhpo- ·articles in the society section must
!Is Daily Tribune and The Daily Sen- be submitted within 30 days of
tine! will not accept weddings after occurrence. All birthdays must be
. 1)0 days from the date of the event.
submitted within 42 days of the
,
occurrence.
.

~--j

Sf;!Oft• r~.--~41ftJ . If6)

I· ··

I

On Jine

996 NISSAN 1995 NISSAN
4d
QUEST

MERCURY VILLAGER

air,
pers , rear

f-.

AMIFM CUI, tilt, CN!w, Ill· powe~,
"
-.
~

1994 LINCOLN

MARK' VIII
V·8, IUto, A/C, tilt,
crillae, CIIW, C.D, PS,
PB, ~W, PDL,
Phone Moonroof, etc.

1994 LINCOLN
TOWN.CAR·'
V·8, IUIO, A/C,, tilt,
Cl1ollle, AMJFM Claa,' PS,
PB, PW, PDL,
ate.

1·

1994 BUICK
PARK AVE
V-8, euto, elr cond,

crutn, AMIFM C:...,

·

. aster s·zz ver ·
, Rounds &amp;
I'
..
.., . Bars

PB,

• Diamonds
• 14K Gold Chains
• Watches

· J~.cquisitions
91 Mil St,..C
Middleport, Oh 45760
514-912~

PW, PDL, Pwr
More•

=

151 S.:ond Ave.
Galllpolle, Oh 45831
814-4411-;IIG

lutO,

elr

AMJFM Clll, tilt, crullu.
PS, PB, Much More.
•

~8,949

......

•s..Re~

,.•tr.;;....;... ·,
'

.

1993 FORD

TEMPO·
4 cyl, IUtO, llr
AMJFM Clll, PS, PB,
PDL, . tilt,
SPOTLESS.

'1989 LINCOLN
TOWN
CAR
'
V-8,

· ··~

0:3-4-9 .

Sports, Page 4

Buckeye 5:
4-17-18-26-29

•

J

CIUflng tonight, Iowa In
30a.
moatly aunny
with hlgha In the SO..

. the

Satu1J:;.

•

,
\
,

~..... N0.223
: f Secllon, 1DP~ga

3Scenq

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 15, 1996

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Wea·ker anti·-terror bill slated for revision
By CAROLYN SKORNECK
·Aaaocletecl Prell Wrttar
WASHINGTON-,.. President Clinton and House Speaker Newt Gingrich
:hope anti -terrori~m provisions dropped from the House-passed crime bill can
. ,be revived th!ough negotiations with the Senate.
, . "If we're going to have a bill we need a real bill ," Clinton said as he headed home from a multinational anti-terrorism summit in Egypt and a vis~ to
Israel, the target of several recent.deadly terrorist attacks.
· . "It needs to be a bill that will help us to combat terrorism at home and
·'!broad," the president said. "So I certainly hope that when thi s bill gets into
.conference it will be made much stronger."
The Senate last June passed its own anti-terrorism bill containing numer·
ous provisions the House cut out of its version, which passed 229- 191 on
Thursday.

Gingrich said some measures. removed from the House bill this week on
grounds they would give the government too much power, will resurface in
some form.
He cited a provision that was intended to make it impossible for agents
of groups such as Hami\S- responsible for a wave of suicide attacks in Israel
- to enter the United States and raise funds. .
"The challenge of a free society is to have a government strong enough
to protect us from danger and carefully enough constrained to not itself be
a danger," Gingrich said.
.
Both the Senaie and House bills would limit federal appeals by state prisoners, including death-row inmates. With few exceptions, the measure would
require prisoners to file appeals within one year after their state coun appeals
are exhausted, and would limit the subject matter.
"~o citizen who believes in the death penalty would want to vote against

:New time set
for meeting
on.Monday
· .. An informational meeting to discuss possible sites for a proposed
$l.S million medical arts building
will be held Monday, 2:30p.m. in the
Meigs County Coun room on the
third Ooor of the Meigs County
Courthouse.
· The meeting, being held in conjunction with the regular weekly
meeting of the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners, had been scheduled for I p.m.
'The time change was made nee·
essary due to the night schedule of
the architect who will be coming
from' Texas, according to Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
Piesident Fred Hoffman.
The meeting follows a pledge
made Marti\ 4 by ·county commis·
sioners to suppon.the.pwpo~ ,med· .
ical arts building which by some
accounts will house between seven
and 10 physicians and create 2S to 30
jobs.
The board also pled,ged to do
everything within its power to make
land available near the hospital for
construction of the facility. Five
areas near the hospital have been
selected as possible sites, according
to commissioners.
Acco·· •;~ g to George Hoffman,
VMH lmancial offte:er, VMH and
Holzer Medical Center directors have
been planning the construction of a
medical building since soon after the
two facilities merged last spring.
Doctorsjn the medical arts building
would use VMH facilities to serve
their patients.
The meeting is open to the public.

Authorities ·hold
three in alleged
theft of checks

dl+..:.:~-

'.IE·

Pick 3:
G-6-2
Pick 4:

Mlc:hMI E. Plallll,. .

::_Sqciety
scrapbook.

V6; automatic, 7 passenter,
power, tilt, cruise.

Princeton
upsets UCLA
in NCAA pl.ay

_

· Navy Seamaa Keanelb W. Swilher son of Ken Swisher of New
H~ven, W.Va., is servin&amp; in the Adriatic Sea near Bosnia aboard die aircrsftcarrierUSS Georp Wllbinpxl.
Swisher is one of more IIIII\ S,OOO
Sailors and Marines aboard die all'·
craft c~ ~~ill UJ, ~ lif·
month oversea's ' ileployment,' lind
helping enforce the peace process in
B~a.
The 1994jp'llduate of Ripley Hish
School joined the Navy in May, 199S:

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Profes&amp;or
of Family Medicine

ATTENDS SERVICES
dents for being named February Stufuneral ' services' for · dents of .the Month at the school.
Otho Young, Wooster, at the Murray They were; Matthew Dunkle, kinder,Fune91! Home, Creston, were his sis- ganen A; Heather Hawley, kinder~
ters, 'Bemtce Blllley, Long Bottom; .. garten B; Adam Lambert, first grade,
Elva Hudson and Jean Roush; Adani Humphreys. second grade;
Racine; and Lewis Hudson and Har- Justin Coleman and Beth Williams,
ry Roush of Racine, and B,obby·and ,ihir~ grade; Cory Vaughn, fourth
Michael Bailey, Long Bottom.
grade; Crystal Jacks, fifth grade;
·HONOR STUDENTS
Gabriel Jenkins, sixth grade; Travis
Rutland Elementary School Siders~ ·intermedia.te LD; Jesse
recently honored the following stu- Ollerdtsse, mte{lllediate DH.

Ohio Lottery

Military
news

Ohio Univenity
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Meigs County authorities are urg·
ing local businesses and individuals
to be on t~ lookout for stolen bank
checks.
Blank starter checks were reponedly stolen from Robert Snowden Jr.
of Rutland and from Racine Home
National Check. Starter checks are
us.ually issued for new accounts and
do not contain the name of the
account holder, Sheriff James M.
Soulsby said.
.
. So far, three arreSI!i have been
made in connection with the check
thefts, Soulsby said. Arrested were
Teresa Alderson, 3S, and Precious
M.oore, 20, both of Middleport. Also
arrested was Kevin L. Roush, 27.
Middleport.
''
(Continued
on
Pa')e
:l)
·
.

this bill, because without this bill, the death penalty remains ineffective,"
Gingrich said.
While the appeal process needs to be speeded up, Clinton said Thursday,
"There are some problems in the way it's done in the bill. But we need the
terrorism provision so much,) was prepared to work With the Congress and
go along with some things that I didn't necessarily like."
The House bill would require criminals.to pay restitution to their victims
and make it·a federal crime, punishable by death, to kill a federal employ·
ee because of his or her work.
Plastic explosives would have to include "taggants" so they can be traced.
The House and Senate bills would increase federal penalties for terrorist
crimes and conspiracies involving explosives and create a new death natty for terrorist murders. They also would let U.S. citizens sue terrori nau s
for injuries from terrorist acts.

Forbes' withdraw
draws Dole hopes
for inter-GOP unity
COLUMBUS (AP) - Sen. Bob·,
Dole suggests emerging Republican
unity will soon cancel President Clin·
ton's "free ride" in the presidential
campaign. He praises former opponent Steve Forbes for adding to that
harmony and reserves his sarcasm for
his lone remaining major rival.
· .. He's a commentator, he 's not a

candidate," Dole said dismissively of
Pat Buchanan's stubborn, delegateshort effort .
Campaigning in the Midwest in
advance of primaries next Tuesday in
Ohio, Michigan, m:nois and Wis-

race for ·
~~~~~;~~~~:;~~~~:~~~Do=~le~~~~:~
tried focus
campaign against

·
~
- · GUID! OOG'tliFT --' :Jefi'S'CIIn'yaUtMllllmliroy·cionated
day to the Meigs County Lion's Club to be lrllned aa a guide dog for the blind.
er Belva Miller, second from left, presented the puppy to Lions Praaldent Bruce
AltO
shown are Lions members the Rev. William Mlddleawarth, left, and Jeff Warner. rlghl (Sen-

/·~m ,5.. ,donatl•on

tlnel photo)

o"er.s
,.6.t
Ill
91
j

of sight for impaired person
For the second time in two con·
secutive years. a blind person will
be able to "see" through the eyes of
a dog donated by a local business.
Jeffs Carryout, a Pomeroy
establishment, donated an eightweek-old black Labrador retriever
puppy to the Meigs County Lions
Club Wednesday.
The pup will be trained by
Pilot Dogs Inc., a non -profit guide·
dog school 'school in Columbus,
and will ultimately be assigned as
guide to a visually ·impaired person.
This marks the carry out's sec-

ond gift to the Lions Club. A dog
donated last year has already com·
pleted basic training class and is
now in advanced class, according
to breeder Sherman · Mills of
Pomeroy.
Although generally raised as
hunting dogs, Labrador retrievers
also make excellent pilot dogs highly trained dogs that serve as a
blind person's "eyes" and enable
them to lead more active lives.
The puppy will be placed in a
foster home, where it will be raised
as a family pet, living indoors and
learning socialization and expo-

sure. The pup will also be put
through a basic obedience course
by the family.
At 12 to 14 months of'age, the
pup is returned to Pilot Dogs and
starts its formal training to become
a pilot dog.
Although Pilot Dogs Inc. has its
own breeding program, it appreciates donations from private breed·
ers due to the demand for the
train~d canines.
Local insurance salesman and
Lion Jeff Warner said the club
appreciates the carryout's gift.
"We hope it will help," he said.

~over .....L.;'and

10

011 the

the

Clinton in the fall.
He portrayed Clinton as "old
Veto Bill" and said, "In the months
ahead, we're going to attract inde-

Steve Forbes

pendents and Democrats .... People
are looking for a common-sense con"I think Steve Forbes brought a
servative."
·
message to this campaign," Dole told'
his Columbus audience.
The Senate majority leader was
less charitable toward Buchanan,
Illinois and Wisconsin over the week- who has indicated he will stay in the
end.
race through the GOP convention in
He called Forbes Thursday August, regardless of how few deleevening from his campaign plane to gates he has.
thank the publisher, who withdrew
Dole, speaking with reponers ,
from the nomination race Thursday, belittled Buchanan's charge that he
for his endorsement.
had no ideas.
"I told him l.knew it was difficult
"Well, he never read my record,
but I wanted to call and say I appre· he's been so busy attacking me. I
ciate his help. He offered to help me think I'll send it to him. Probably
any way he could," Dole said.
wouldn't read it if I did. He's a comHe said he hoped Forbes could mentator. He's not a candidate ...
Later, he brushed off Buchanan 's
contribute to congressional hearings
on overhauling the tax system, and most recent suggestion for a debate.
his call for a 17 percent Oat tax obvi- "I'll run my campaign. He can run
ously struck a nerve among a lot of his," Dole told reporters 1n Columbus.
Americans.

~:i~~:~;~:;::n~~~1~~~~~

GM·strike prompts layoff at -Borg Warner's area plant
From AP, Staff Reports
A local manufacturer that supplie s
General Motors Corp. with ' parts is
beginning to fed the pain· of an II ·
day-old strike by workers at two GM
brake plants in Dayton
On Monday. the Gallipolis divi sion of Borg Warner Automotive will
lay off so percent of its hourly and
salaried workforce as a direct result
of the strike. plant manager John K.
LeBlanc said this morning.
The walkout by 2,700 workers at
the Delphi Chassis plants has forced
GM
. to shut down 23 of its 29 North

American assembly plants and 13 of employees on this layoff back ascus·
tomer demand for products returns ,"
its pans plants.
LeBlanc said the BorgWarner LeBlanc said.
The Gallipolis plant manager said
workforce reduction in Gallipolis
renects the loss of 70 percent of the all BorgWarner plants are being
plant's parts orders. The remaining 30 impacted by the GM strike.
Across the nation. more than
percent of the plant 's business is in
121.000
GM workers had been idled
supplying auto manufacturers other
than GM .
or affected.
Harry Mayo Jr., vice president of
In total, 114 workers - 91 hourly
and 23 salaried- will be affected by Mayo Industries in Dayton, had to lay
ttle temporary layoff at the Gallipo· off one-third of his I SO-person work
lis plant, LeBlanc said.
force because of the strike.
" As soon as the situation resolves
"It's vinually shut down SO peritself, we will bring all of our cent of our revenue," Mayo said

Thursday.
Mayo's company does metal-linishing, plating, packaging and assem·
bly work. About 7S percent of its
work is for GM or the automaker's
suppliers.
" It 's just awful difficult that when
they shut down, the little guy goes
down also ," said Jim Domin, gener. at manager of Jamestown Industries
· Inc.
Domin 's company, located in
Moraine, a Dayton suburb, supplies
door panels and carpeting to GM 's

nearby truck assembly plant. When
the strike shut down the GM plant
last Saturday, it also idled Domin's 60
production workers.
"I've got 60 people on the outside
that don't have any income coming
in. So it hurts," he said.
No talks between the company
and United Auto Workers Local 696
were held Thursday and no new talks
were scheduled, said GM spokesman
Jim Hagedon.
An attempt at a negotiating session apparently misfired.

China turns up heat with more war games
JAIPEI, Taiwan (1\P) - China agency said the new ground, sea and
Increased pressure on Taiwan today air e~rcise will take place March 18by announcing yet another round of 25, straddling Taiwan 's election.
Chinese troops are currently con·
war games, this one even more dan·
,ducting
air and sea maneuvers in the
getously close to the island.
Taiwan had expected the maneu- Taiwan Straits that separate China
. v.efs to expand, and before the Chi- from Taiwan. Those maneuvers, to
ne'5e announ·cement a combative end Tuesday, overlapped eight days
·J&gt;rFsident Lee ~ng-hul said the war of ballistic missile tests that China
games were not cowing Taiwan, and said ended today.
·The current round of War games is
that he an:d his p~mier were not
takitig
place in a zone that sirctches
''wimps with weak feet."
,
the
mid-point
of the Taiwan Straits
to
• China has said its maneuvers are
iniended to quash pro-in~ependence - abQut 30 to 70 miles from the
seluimeht on Taiwan as It pn:pares far soutl)west Tajwanese'islands of Queits: first direct presidential electiQn on moy and Wuchiu.
According to the Taiwanese miliMarch 23. China claims sovereignty
tary,
ihe new exercise zone comes
over Taiwan . and accuses l.ce. the
even
closeronly II miles north of
leadinJ presidential candidate, of
the outlying islet of Wuchiu, and the
plj)tting an indepet\dence drive.
Xinhua, the official Chinese news same distance· south of islets in ~-

wan 's Matsu island cluster, which lies
five miles off the mainland·coast.
Taiwanese soldiers held a major
military exercise on Matsti today,
practicing repelling an invasion by
parachute. Civilians on Matsu held an
air raid drill.
The new exercise area is 50 miles
north of the current live-fire exercis·
es, and China may be using the two
maneuv,ers io show that it is able to
launch a large-scale assault from two
points.
.
Taiwanese newspapers had speculated about a possible Chinese
attack on Wuchiu, which has a population of six civilians. Such an
attacl!, couid score a propaganda vic·
tory for China without involving ·a
major battle.
Chang You-hua, a Taiwanese mil-

ititry analyst, did not expecrit to happen. "China wouldn't bother with an
attack," he said, "but they are telling
Taiwan, we can seize these islands
whenever we want to."
Chang Ling-chen, a political sci·
enlist at National Taiwan University,
said China was sending Taiwan a
message that it is unmoved by U.S.
efforts to deter conflict by deploying
warships to the area.
Taiwan's Defense. Ministry said
the new war games zone covers
about 2,400 square miles. Xinhua did
noi say whether the new exercises
would use live ammunition.
: The war games ~tarted Tuesday,
and have pushed tensions between
the two sides to their worst since the
.late 1950s, when Taiwan traded
anillery barrages with China

••

.•

. ON PATROL- A Navy A-41 P1ow.... '•lralnd for
atK.rd the cerrler USS lndaPelldiiiCI I I lha ,...... IM•Wl
cloHr to the Talwln Strllta u .....lona t.lw11n CIIINI anct ¥
wen IICIIatlld Oftl' nterby 'C hlnale Wlr IIIIIIIL (AP) ,.

:
•

:

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="385">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9757">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29389">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29388">
              <text>March 14, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2223">
      <name>weed</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
