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OPBI

Ohio Lottery

~It's Patriot-.

-111M
Wt-6
Amla..at

Super Lotto:

·vs. Packers

9-11·1~~2~1

Kicker:

.:·on Jan. 26

511111-5

8 12-7...
Plck3:

889
Plc:k 4:

SpcMIS on Page 4

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lloetly cleer tonight,
lowe neer 10. Tu ..dey,
moetly eunny, h~h• nur

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Pom.-oy lllddl1port, Ohio, llond8y, January 13, 1997

Stclloo~10 ...... 3 5 -

A Oarnllllt Co. Us&amp; IF IF 1r

~ritics target Voinovich's unkept prpmises

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: COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. ~ Voinovidl uys his Stale or the Sial&amp; 'i ns a bold budget.
~ss and budset prOposal. will show that the~ has made significant
l'Ho's making preparations to run for anolheroffice in two years, so he's.
~F.'· but some critics conteDd that some promises have 1101 been kept.
soing to be very riSCally conserv11ive," iaid slllle Rep. Rortald Gerheny, D._. "After my Siate of the State 'IIIII after the buc1set pn:sentation. people will Younptown.
ow we're 1101 treadins water," \binovich said in an interview published
"He's going to tread warer for two yean," said Sen. Jeff Johnson, 1&gt;-Cievenday in The (Cleveland) Plain Deater, Voinovich will make his State of land.
·
, ~ State !0 the legislature 1\Jesday. :
.
\binovich countered thai he has kept the majority of his commitments and .
"" Time is running out for Voinovich to make good on any unkept promis- that concern for his political future will play no role in crafting the state bud·
... that he llUidc; durins his two gubernatorial campaigns and six pn:vious State .get.
.,
·
.Jfthe State addresses. His term eltpires in January .1999; and he plw io riltr '!;· While c:onccding· l~Jat his tenun: as sovemor will end with some unfuJ,
:tOr the U.S. Senate'in 1998. ·
.
· .filled promises, the governor told the newspaper that what he has accom·
The main vehicle for, governors to convert promises into pillicies is lhe. . plished with dne j:lrevioustwo-year budgets far outweighs what he has failed
:fu:nnial state budget, but Statc:ho)lse Democrats pn:ilict that tight revenue to .d o. He $aki-Ohi01111s are better off as a result of what he has accomplished.
: .~ Vainovich's plan to ru~ filr the Senate will handeuft' him from ,propos- . Voinovich's supportm also say that the governor has had to cope with

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unforeseen circumslanees 8nd a legislature that sometimes has had olher ideas.
"In 1991, at the beginning of his term, it was real hard to look down the
road and see all the other things he waii going to have to' deal witli," said
House Speaker Jo Ann ' Davidson, R:Reynoldsburs. "If we hadn't had a
Lucasville prison riot, we could hav~ had millions of dollars to put into other things."
·
A major area that critics say Voinovich has failed to keep all of liis prom ises is education.
'
' 'The biggest failure in the area of promises vs. achievement by the gov·
emor is his refusal to acknowledge we have an unfair system offunding for
primary and secondary schools," Johnson said.
·
But the governor said significant progress has been made in edu~ation. ·
~·The fad is )hat today, education has become more of a priority in the
state than ever before," he said.

Fireworks
fire victims'
families add ·
·state to suit

P~Ji~~~.?!~~ ..

COLUMBUS (AP) - Add the
state fin: marshal to the list of de fen. dants being sued by families of nine
victims killed in a fire at a southern
Oliio fireworks siore;
A lawsuit filed Friday in the Ohio
Court of Claims accuses the fire marshal of allowing the owners of Ohio
River Fireworks ·Dear Scottown to
operate thC store unsafely.
It was the third lawsuit,filed during the week. The victims' families
and those inju~ in the fire are seeking &lt;jamages of more than $400 mil·
lion from several defelidants in lawlillilft filed in ·u.s. District.Goun in
who
Cincinnati and Lawrence County
sllaping
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Common Pleas Court in Ironton.
"tibefals
!\ave the'
!lf either iettins on tltC Uliin
Todd Hall. 25, of Proctorville, has
!lfing
left
behind,"
said
Donald
Ketti,
a
University
of
Wisconsin
political
sci·
,
1
~=·~=::=~=~~~:::~:~~,.~~:':~:=~
been
found incompetent to stand tri·
""list. who studies the budlet process.
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111
a!
for
setting the July J.fire, which
": 'lboulh Clinton will not release his new budget until Feb. 6, there wen:
eel to open 1n tf1e eprtng.
:.._ on the former
of the old
also injured II .
.
j\\ablic fiahts he considered proposals to
spending for heating aid ' l~MQ~~~~~~~~n=nclt~:n~•~riL~~Dil~v.~~:!!~=~·:.;th~l8=!•~·=,.~1a~p::ter::;·:...-------------.J
"The fire marshal's people wen:
1pc1
housinr for the poor. Such episodes put the president on the defensive,
there two or three weeks before the
fire and supposedly made an inspec·
•
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tion, but it couldn't have been much
"'' "If you look at the record of this administration, I think 1t would be vety 1
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of one, " Stanley M. Chesley, a
to make a case ihat. we have been callous \'&gt;Ward the poor," Clinton said
· · ··
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Cincinnati lawyer representing some
. victims' families, told The (CleveBen-Ami said the administration's '
land) Plain Dealer for a story pub~fort to ~ance the ~udget doesn't make.cost the primary fllltor·in deci- 'r
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$JP?,·m.akinj.
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. . . .. COLUMBUS (AP) -A comproThe logger. Forest White Lumber, boundary. He m~twith Serbonieh and lished Saturday. "The fire sprinkler
~· . It •.s accurate to say anytime an advocacy group ... puts forw~ an om· mise plan to log pitt oh state forest which is based in Athens County, bid· negotiated .the 2()().foot buffer .an was attached to a pool of water and
\l~bve m a balanced-budget world, you have to talk about offsets to pay
has environmentalists and others $.59,000 for the timber. Semonich compromise that will spate at least couldn't have worked when it was
.,~it, he said.
·
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,.1. up~ because il will take place near told The' Columbus Dispatch for a 265 trees and probably will prevent on, because there was no pressure io
.!"\ Such comments do little to assuage li~rals. Even though many of,ttoem ,_ oril of Ohio's most popular natun: story published today.
any ecological damage to the pre· back it up."
The. lawsuit, which seeks unspec·
'iib longer challenge the need to balance the budget, some say they are appalled · presefVe5.
·
.
Environmenial.groups that learned serve, Howes said.
i
fled
damages. says the fire mii(Shal
Jllat OiniQtl would evep consider doing it by triniming housins. heating assis· . · 'The cut will take P!aell on 6liiiGfCs of the plan object' to the timber sale.
"If !he ODNR was concerne~
did
not
properly inspect the store and
;tnce iu;ld .other.~rograms for the poor.
.
,
of the .~ki,nt Slllte ·Forest within
"Logging this close to a natwe with the integrity of the preserve.
did
not&lt;.&lt;:lose
it for violating local, .
~,c "Thts Is polttlcall~ understandable," .saJd Sen. Paul Wellstone, J)..Mmn. . 200' feet of Conkle's Hollow State preserve ·threatens the ecological they'd give it more than a 2()().foot,
state and federal laws.
~~se are people who .don't have the clout. But it is.morally n:prehensi· Nature Pre'!Cf'Ve. The 9,400-acn: Silk? integrity.ofthe preserve," said Jason buff~r." Tockman said.
The suit also said the fire marshall
.
.forest sunounds the 87-acre pre- Tockmin, a spokesman .for the Buck· · Local business owners who·
did
not. review the background of the
"I don't believe the pn:si~nt. and m~~.te Democrats want to leave~ .1serve, which. is about40 miles south- ·eye Forest Council; based in Athens." depen,d on tourism dollars also are
license hOlders and allowed
store's
. st vulnerable people out 10 the cold, S81d Rep. Lynn W~lsey, J)..Cahf. cas\ of Colull)hus.
The group is opposed to logging concerned about the logging plan.
the
store
to operate "in a fashion and
Sljid she would use her seat on .the House Budget Commtttee to be "cau·
About 120;000 Visitors are drawn public lands.
.
' "Conkle's Hollow is a spectacu: s !Uid protective~,' of proarams for the needy.
,
lO the pn:servc's trails each year,
Preserve manager Mark W. Jar area: You have cliffs that remind mannerlhat would result in great risk
,. Libctals say theif concern for low-income programs was only heiJ!hlened making it the .secoild'niost visited Howes, who works for the Ohio Divi· you of some place out West," said to the life and safety"· of customers.
Bill Teets, a spokesman for the
:by .tui year's enactment of legislation tighte~ing welfare and ending ·&amp;oar· nature pn:serv~ in the state system: sion of Natural Areas tind Preserves. Lewis Barbini, owner of Hocking
Ohio
Depanll)ent of Commerce,
·~coverage for children. That measure, which claims$~~ billion in SBV· '· Und~r a conln~jjl siped Dec. 23, said he was conceme&lt;l #en the Valley Canoe Livery in Logan . "We
~gs over six rCIII'S. has made the poor more vulnerable to any future reduc· ·a commercial logger will bepn cut· forestry division first propOsed the should be doing .all that we can to which oversees the fire marshal, told
~ns in other social programs, liberals argue.
ting ~s as soon os the ground · timber sale two years ago. Both di.vi- prot(\Ct it.:·
, the newspaper that the agency had
~~; "If we're asking the poorest people in the country to make 'h~ge sac.".. freezes e~ough ~ sup!Kxt the ~uiJ&gt; si!'ns are part of the Ohio Department
In response to such criticisms, Ser- not received a copy of the lawsuit and
are we at least goins to be wilhng to look at corporate substdoes buned! '!lent, saod Wolham 1. Serbon~eh, a of Natural Resources.
honich said the state forests are the could not comment.
An operator who answered the
k!i the WI code" and at Cold W~-ept weapons systems, asks R~n &lt;me~- ,. llm~r ~~ement forester from the
The original plan would have tak- besHnanaged lands in Ohio and
telephone
at the fire marshal's office
lili!ln, executive director of the ltbCral Center on Budget and Polu:y Priori- " Ohtb Divoston of FOI'!'stry.
m:es right up to ·!he preserve serve as an example to the timber
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industry.
s:;~1!~teoevening said no one was
a·
to comment on tho.lawsuit.
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uti-poverty activists was supposed to be a·briefing pn President Clin·U&gt;.p·s fartltcoming welfare initiative.'
·
:;:.. But by the time White Hous.: domestic policy adviser Jeremy Ben-Amiot·
,ijaished, it seemed that the prunistration's chief concern wasn't improv· .~
ini propanis for the pilar, but the price 't al·
·
: _"We'd susgest something and he'd say, 'If we fix that. here's what itn
.losts, "' said Jennifer Vasiloff, executive din:etor of the Coalition on Hullllll! 1
AYeeds. :'It was discourqing to have that as the overridins cpncern."
,1,:
..:. ; The session at the office~ of the Children's Defense Fund hiplichts twin
ojorries for liberal lawmakers IUid advocates of the poor as Clinton, hullllinf''
.IJ!e )l!llitical center. readies his
the budset.
• )J! the
l!atne of
deficits 2002,

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draws fl re.from envl ron mentaII sts

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'Gingrich's pl.an,ned·public answering

" lit Me: $21,549

tt:ethl.cs q·uestion~ spu·rs bi.ck,ring •

. ' . -$2400
.... -$4317

;~:WASHINGTON (AP) - House
- ~r Newt Gingrieh will publicly

well," he contenc!ed.
a tape of it to a Democratic lawmaJt.·
Rep. Bill Paxon, R·N.Y.. inter· cr.- who then gave it to the. newspa· ·
· jldn:ss questions in his ethics case viewed with Frost, said the Gingrich per.
.
·xt weekend, on the eve of the pn:s· hcari~p will be held between Jan.
Republicans said tile ·tawmaker
nti~ inl!llgu~ti?n and the opening 17, when s~i~ counsel J~mes Cole was c~lpable. through his ,involve· legoalauve bustness for ·t1le ,new must submtt hts report on the case, ment tn the tllegal reconltna of a
Uonaress. a RcJ!Ublican lawm.er and Ian. 21, the deadline for the com· photic conversation. "The DeniOcrats
1.
' mittee to finish its business.
_.. .
!lflpear to have com!ll'itted a felony in
Democrats said the, Republicanr·
Republicans and Dem~rats on ·order to perpeiuate their attadt on
·
tryina to bury the matter by the ethics panel agreed last week to Newt Ginsrich," Rep. Joh~ BOehner
.rig it-at the SIIIRC time as the inau· ' · five days of public hearinas besin· . of Ohio, chainnan of the House
pion and forcing the House etllics ning today, .but the ajJrecment feil QOP, CSUC)Is. said ·on "Fox News
GiJ!nmittee to make its final reconi- through after Rep11blicans balked at Sunday." ·
· . ·
lilendati!)tls .on punishment by Jan. · . Democratic demands that deadlines
·Boehtier, the o.wner of the phone
~-·
·
_ for the investigation be extended.
that '!"~ tapped, and others on the
~1 "It is interesting to have those
The pattis~n \"f'Bngling' increased · Su4 news programs wen:. asked
l)JI8ring~ during inauguration on Friday after The New York 11mes about a Time maaazine report quotnday· (Jan. 20) when
one is reported the contents ofa taped tele· in&amp; Republican sources u sayinc
iniiJU1~tion," Rep. Manin Frost, phone conversati?n amOI)g Ginllfich ~y f.IISpected ,the · lawmaker
fexas, ,said Sunday on CNN's ilnd other Republicans on Dec. 21 - ·&gt; mvolvelt.was Rep. Jll" Mcl&gt;e\11- Qf
'll:ate Bdition:• ·
- the day tile speaker acknowledged .: WashinJion, the seRICII' ~ on
r~ Frost abo said the GOP was ethical erron and promised not to · the ethi~~'COITiminee.
·
rmining any hope of bipartisan· orsanize a defensive 'strai~JIY wi.th . No 011e o.ITcred f~r tYidonce
lelislative matters in the new other GOP l~aclers· ·
·
·
that ~I had pro~idcd tha
ss by forcins an ~ad to•the
The Times said people in Florida t&amp;Jl!!. a~cDermou's office Sliil it
p'lcll lnvestip.\ion. "What .the·. heard the'conve~sation on a cell'llar . knew not~n1 of the matter.
_
~tJJjCBDI
'
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,. . . have done is poison the phone OVer
. a police IICIIIIICf lind 18W

YOUR COST:

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,. _, D-WMh., oeltllif,lld • •. _ , con,._ICII

of ~·• meulln, of the 1touee ~

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The Daily Sentinel

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Bennett selling
himself hard for
..
n·ational ·post

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COLUMBUS - Bob Bennett knows the field is crowded in lbe cam, paign to .succeed Haley Barboor as the Republican Party's national chair·~

man.

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lbafs why Ohio's GOP chief has gone to the mailbox to make sure his
.
· · message of money. maps and media gels out.
The Republican National Committee will choose BarboUr's successor on
·
Eridly. Bennett, Ohio's Republican Party chainnan since 1989, is one of at
1 least seven contendcts.
Bennett has been busy. He's visited 33 ~sin the past month, lobbying amon1 party regoi!W! and olber state chairs, Ohio GOP spokesman )Jrett
Buerck Slid Friday.
·
.
· A survey oft37 cifthe 165 RNC members appeared IISI week on lbe Pol·
iticsNow website, a partnership of ABC News, 1be Washington Post, Tile
Los Angeles Times, Newswee~ and t~ 'Naeion~ Journal. · , . ,
..
Fifty-three of those respondmg said they weR "uncOIIIIFillled.
Bennett placed sixdl ·with seven votes. RNC General Cou1!5el David Npr&lt;;rOSS finished second with 19.
.
Buen:k said lbe poll was "very accurate at this point. What palls your
attention is how wide open ihe race is."
•
. To improve his chances, 'Bennett haS mliled each RNC member aitd GOP
governor a video and booklet oudiniilg his achievemenll IIIII his ideas for
improving the GOP's national standing.
Since Bennen took over the state GOP, Republicans hive won all six nonjudicial, statewide offices. In lbe national sweep of 1994, Republicans took
control of the Ohio House for the first lime in 22 yean. They.h&amp;ve controlled · ·

......

OhioHou~ seats and one men in
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· dial ~a President's legacy• . , .
1'HE LIMITS VS.
FLY•
J'IT-.T heCiintouampaigois ~- fire fpr accepling "sdft
money" contributions fron;a· (Qreip
souttes -- alJp husrled a hiid mp"~Y
donation from .an unlikely source', 1
. . Pomo,raphcr I:AlrrY. Flynt, thC!
sub.icl:t o a current hit movie i:hro~z
iclinatris \XlUfl battle 181instlhe ~'
• Jerry Palwell, bas made a caree~ ·bf
pushing the limiiJ. AJIJ-en!ly that
acreak also applies 10 poliiii:ll col!;
trlbutions.
'
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Lyn J}lredlt, the· Clinton-0~
c:aliiPIIip's aeneral colinsel, con•
fu;med to ua that in August Fl&gt;'(lt
mlde a $.1ii,OOQ liontribuiion,10 ilie
camPIIian ·.: $9,000 moR than an
ill!lividual is k!allly allowecUo giv~ .
••we refq~ $9,000'' five days later, Utrcdtt siid.
·· · .J :
As fll' as we ean detenrihie, ho~"
ever, Flyni'S genetosiry WIS not I'CJ'
iprocated wilh.un invitation lo sleep
in lbe Lincoln bedroom. ·
, ·

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Jack Ad •- ~•clJan MoUe~

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lll'e WI lien for United FQtu•

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Child
sex
.
a
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e
-~ . continued
the.~~~~- ~~ ;~;;.:~,'~;}~· :;,;;.~ ~- ~~~~~j;;~i~}i~~ ~.~7:~ij;;Jii..;~..;,B~~ 1.'re~~:U"~~t~

the~~y:.a:~~:=De~~;atsweremakingglinsinmanysCPJes,RepublilliDS•picked up four more

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By JOHN McCARTHY
Allldcl.-:1 Prea WWrrlil..
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Mcil/er :•·.

· CHARLINE HOEFLICH

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officer, 11 aervrng five life lertl!l. 1n · Pfllll1llll, ." A Ch1!d~ wclrd-;·(Nov. ,fng clwge.
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, .·to"'sa_y_the._l•east-.·..

ateWbat Bennett hasbeen unable to do,
is deliver Ohio to Repub.. · ·
llllded, "was nolh1n1 sllllfl of on
lican presidential candidates. Preside~! Ointon beat both George BliSh and Floridl fQI' child,sex.abuse. He has 14). Says Underwaaen
~J Not so, say the NiahJiinen, citi11 infomen:ial to .·· advance .(CiviJ)
Bob Dole by comfortable margins in tl\e state.
. ·
·
been in prison for IOyears, Snowden
. "The issue is not lbe credibility of tJ;Ie program's opcnin1. Here ia the Tlmarkln's agenda."
·,
:~
· /lmong his ideas for GOP succeS&amp;: _ .
· was convicted on lbe basis ofa 4'
t~xl: "A convi!:Jed child· mol PI~ . Tunarkin, who !"Orl!ed · «?!' tlJe ·
_Develop organizations at the stare ancflocallevel. relyinJiess on the year-old's testjm~ny. ·As Dorolh~
Nllt Hentofl
,1 ,~voids prison. bee•~ lbeR is doubt "Niptline" pro~f~!R, has in the past
input of consultanll and strateg,ists in Washington,
•
Rabinowitz noted·In the Wall Smet
over the resttmony of a cltlld. ·BUt sii!'JlOI'lCd lbe tesllmony .o f you~g
-Focus on controlling stale redistricting boards. The OOPdid that in · Journal, "the child had repeatedly
.1y.&lt;hen lbe convicred mohn~r Ia- children in certain ~hild abuse cases
Ohio'by winning the offices of goyernor and secretary of state in 1990 and told her mother that Mr. Snowden children ... bul rather what adult ' :~'orne, he kills two childrell."
·: IC$1imony that Willi induced inha·
redrew district boundaries to its advantage.
Jiltd dane nolhin&amp; to ller." ;• ,.
' behaviors do to childRn when adults ·. No pi~ or date are lllqiCd. No man~r · similar to the techniqi!Ps
_Bypass traditional news outlets, which Bennen calls "overwhelmiiiJiy
But after an intense session· with II)' 10 get inforinatilm from lbem." He facts about tbe child's resti11011y and ~· have ~nt Grant Snowden IIi
liberal and Democratic," and deliver the m~ssage di~dy via talk radio, lbe Laurie Braga-- a speech patholosist . cited "the inept, coen;ive IIIII abusive why there was doubt about iL No ,pnson for five life tcnns, and.IJas ~111
lnremetlllll fax, among .other media.
.
in lbe office of Janet Reno (then Dade . ·behavior•of social worllen, .P9l~, .names. Not even the IIIIIIC of lbe ·m .prison other · in~occ,nt pe9piP,.
_Raise money through small contributions and direct mailfrom you"J,, County state attorney), the 4-year-old ' and Others" when they manipulate ;·~ille~.1ltis is convincing evi4ence of iJ!Cludins those convicted in tJ!e
affiucnt,donors and rely less on large donations from traditional sources.
said Snowden had sexually molested . children into saying whit die prose- 1• nauonwide tRnd~ .
n1ghtmare citr of Wcnalehec m t!je
8uerck likes his boss's .chances if more than a few ballots aR taken at her. Because of Rabinowiu's strong cutors want to hear.
· Furthennore; I am IIC&amp;;II~ of not lllle ofWashrnl!o.n. . ,
·
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•friday's meeting.
·
,
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record Is an investigative reporter in
Underwager wrote this in a long telephoning anyone inv!llved in the ,
"Our ~port."!IIIY• Ted Koppe,Cs
· "I think Bennett is lbe one candidate w)1o has appeal to every segment these cases, Snowden finally bas two lcller of protest to Ted Kcippcl ~ ..•.how before wrieing the column. I IIIIFII, "allempted .to clarify an issui!
of lbe party," he said. "It's obvious ir won't be a first-ballot victor)' for any- appellate attorneys who thoroughly olber "Njghtline" ~m about how ri:portccl on whall saw 0111be screen. ~ h• ~n distoned by may
bod
believe in his innocence.
·
his testimony was twisted oq that pro- \Vhen I review a book, ldon'tCIII die ex~ vr~w~;"
·
.
Jiuo Democratic Chairman David Lellllll, who has been mentioned as
In a current appellate brief to the pm. And, he adclecl,lbe atmospben: · author to see if he or she Wlhls 10 NC. N1pd1ne has lidded IO the d~·
a contender for liii pany's national chair when one is chosen Jan. 20, played
lllh Circuit Court of Appeals. Snow- Willi hostile. During the pre-tapina, ·lify any oflheir errors.
.
tllltion. J'~l's. ~r reporters.,.
down his own chlnces.
i'l
.
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den's lawyers .. on lhe basis of a Iran· says Underwa1er, Erin Ha~s, the
I also, it is said, falsely challcrer- Dave M~h. Michael Me~
. "The bottom line is there IR more qullirled people they can Jilek from script of tbe videotape .. write that reponer on the show, Willi "8111&amp;~· ized "Nightlinc"'s intesview wilb Qt-. . and J~ITG~nfield, among ~m, are
than me. I'm just honored to have my name mentioned." Leland Slid.
the 4-year-old "had not~ing I~ say · mentative, harassing and asking ques- Stephen Cccl ·-- an expert on chil· so~ of. t'!C mos~ 'percept1~e a;!·
·Asbd 1o asSess Bennett's campaign, Leland chuckled and said, "It seems about sex" to Braga unul the 1nter- tions which demOnstrated !ler preju- dren's testimony -- IS · "holtlle." prob1n111n JOurnalism, On this pi'O'.
rogator "confused her by mixing fact · dice and bias."
· J That inrervicw, the,"Nightlinc" peo- · J111in;."A Olild's Word," Koppel
like a lot 0 r:activity."
with fiction; encouraged fantasy
,My own criti~ism ofthat proJI'IIII pte say, "was never conFetttioua." . ~ly served by lesser members P,f
about abuse;·lmd refused to accept in the WI!Shington Post~produced When I spqke 10 Ceci afler.the.pro- hiS .stall. ~n reporters, and ~
her insistence that she was not a response frq~ the sia11' that put j l JIWII ain:d.'he slid the intcrYiew had d~crs j!O lnt~ utory ccrtat~ .of wiJ+I,
abused."
.
together. The thrust of that half-hour been "hostile, coitfrontalional and they want to prove, they create Jll'l"
.
The
ordca~ of Grant Snowden was that because jwits 1!fC ·incRU- unuSI!tlly aggR~Sive." And his 1110- •. pag-..cta.
,'
. '
By The •oclltted Preu
underlines
a
point
made
br
Or.
Ralph
irrgly
reluctant
to
believe
children's
ciate
at
Cornell
University,
.Helene
,
Nal
Heatorr
Ia
•
"·~~t
. Today is Mondly, Jan. 13, the 13th day of 1997. 'llteR are 352 dlys left
Undcrwager, a psychologist,who has . testimony in these cases, many pros- Hcnibroolcc. said 11\er lbe inrerview: I twDal aalliorlty .011 lite Flrit
in the year. ·
.
testified
forthe defense in child sex ecutions hive been dropped. I noted "They literally badF~ Sreve ... it . Amt 1
IPUidtlle rest oldie~~~~
Todly's Highlight in History:
.
abuse
cases.
And
he
himself
was
put
that.
"not
a
single
specific.
~ase
was
was
a
very
creative~
of.edili1g
riRtpts
'
On Jan. 13, 1794, President Washington appro~ed. a measu~ ~1ng1wo
stan and tWQ stripes to the American flag, followmg the adm1111on of Vermont and Kentucky to the Un1on.

,.*

Today in .history

',.-··Bercyts World
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Teacher was powerful ,~:r-tluence In writer's life
By TONY SNOW

GeOlle sported neady cr.oppcld
hair and I 'well,irimnicd JI!U.taChC.
· WA!U{lNOTON ;- 'l'beR are few He wore frame glasses of an anti·
lhinp QIORI JloriouS than ·a aRII quarian style, as if to ~lai!ftf ~·J'
leleher(
• .'' '
,
bOu&amp;hl these '14() )'~ '·ago,. I~ Jl
~orgc A~iliy caught pliilos- won't replace them until 'they tums: to.
op1ty 11 Davidson. Col)ep: in ~llflh dust." He .was neither dapper 1nor
Carolina for the better p111 of four fNmp)!. but pressed. ,
decade~, loomiri&amp; over' lbe campus,
He spoke with a hiah-pitched lilt
half-legend, balf-Cminence. He' w• punctuated by occasional breaks:
1he "!find of man whose. name pro- puberty in reverse. When he smiled,·
voiced whispers of awe from students · a dental quirk winked back: The botIIIII profeal:on alike. Upperclassmen toms of his upper ~· sloped ~ndeacribed him as a pitde-wreckcr; . ward, 1ivin1 the appearance of hlvca!Jeaauea rea.-decl him with special in~ been fil~ or inserted at 1an ·" ''lc.
Rvertnce. .
Tlus pve him a permanenumut:
· ~ Jepn4 be.-n ~Y· lie chealOnce you aot in Oeorje's d!tall,
eel cancer as 1 yoiiril profe.-,anll you stayed. He enti'ced Slllde!l~ ~th .
' 1iiter llllribllted hissurvivat CO: Spar· lectures of rare pith IIIII eiiCJ'I)'.J !lid
lllllivina. J1e well.! to bed eech night · S0111elhin1 for hill! I've nevet done
, at 9, rQie ,;. ~. woated two hol!n, befOR or since 1 ~ blck to my
'· JNdieilto lbe campua pool, swam an room and Rwodcecl my 1101e1·~·~
" ~jour, dn d aad walked briskly to serve u much as poNible. '' ' " ,
'lriaollb,.· '
Helovedhiupltorilllllltld!.c·
. 1111 ~·t a chutmny py. You doles, llllCI kept atudenll ~.. - hilllla lbe 111111, ruWnl wldl such eli- peirls 11: ;.~,ant
It• willlflllow 111' 1r k He •void- · I70FFielhill trivial. and lean RMil.
·.alllllllelal cln:uit (ei!Cipl for lie- · YouneverknowwhenitwiUc!llrite!n
111N1 by Wtiliftl tcl)obn) IIIII pre- . '-~)',;,and "HawscltildNII. touw
, ·'. ren.~.-..ewninJawidlhiawife. · -•lJ*Iera-.fllllllarYOflit.
·. ',
SliD~!'"~ i'lll llilil bare lillie ; widlouiiMa"
. ~:~'

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a

He mlintaincd cultivllled foirnati· 1 lhin1 or two abOut philosophy.
,ty, but made· it _cJeaf'he ofteftld hil. ' ,He itsed onC, final motivaei
insishts as sift~, ~ COJ!rldences. , 1001:.At ihc end. of eac,h course. ,.
, He .belie&gt;o:ed. in dileiijlillt IIIII ' wqttld . .low UJ1911 s~t I c ' .
Virtue. He ·l)!lnl no Nlca.and ft~ked 'of a boOt, ;'The ldei of BqitaJity,
anyol!ll •- even ·favontes •· . wh9 Gecqe wrote for a major Jl!!blislte
· ~k1ppcd class ont!c too ofton.
Most folks understood lbe ~ipi
No teacher demanded IIIOI'o. 'would also be the one pet'SOJI in
AlthouJh he ISSiped relliivaly liale c..,_ to JCI an A.
.
,
•
~ins-- aCOU!*=.hundredJII&amp;IIIa · Abentelhy retiredafrer!ftyjuni •
week, mu --he m11sled on lhoriluP year and over time ~ an occ
mastery. He opclied eaclt friday with sioiiiJ mentor/tutor. He read editori
a I ~-minute "~t." He pl!lled a-- als Mel columns • meticulously
tence f~ In aui~ Pice Mel niy old term ~· He SIUJ.IleJile4
asked a potnkld qucsltOD al!oul It - !looks IIIII ..icles. He aked
its~ in P!'iiOIJOIII!ical histOry,'!- lions lnddisptayedcwioiity !hat wl4
~ay 1! 1ll.ummlllld a COIItro\leil)', 111 hoill flattcrina and daunting. Whe
strcnJihs or~-·
~ I WC!Id!uecl, will this rnan'stop lovi!l
, In ou~ dcs1re .to pl.... and 'life and
tre8tin1 ovecy. expesi
~·~· some of us cl,evlsed illl8r· like a 'toy to pick IJIU1
es11n1 ways to pw;k • ~ ~ po. 'probe1
.
,
siblc into our writ essqi.l elialtirtatThe answer~ ltiSI fati1 accon1
ed silpCrfluoua vowels. far i..._. illlto an ll1111111i mlpzi~. dull j
n. - - · ."rt.J ~ 'said aniwcl. Bill there'• one pl.Plato~ ~
M!'!"' for 20ih, •flnilhltl - - · Sewnl
Cenl!lft ~~ reed: "K .,after 1ivU., a talk at Dav•icl
' ~
Ppr ld Plto atd , ....... 4 • C ...._ ldsta'W •loni Jeaer, expltittla1
illl'nlm."
· .
h i - one .of the JliiW•~
0eorte ll:tulllly mas' t IIIIa ' 'ilfltleaceain Ill)' life. .
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Walt

•

Reports show Cremeans
outspent Strickland 2-to.-1 .

i ·, •

0. Cozart Sr.

bl-'f. Aluneeeina ill Oltawa, C.. llboul die idllul 7 . , .,...· }~'s dlh*'•• WI ...va ~
1011 - wllo Mdly to C1rW I cUI officilb JihpOIOd IIRI!IY - 'to up lllld •!za, '' p 'sHy La
;jdeDt AI 0on bas teaJDed '!"lth
lllliDIIepcy Clurina bia oe 1!1111 term · buiped in De!:ernbcr- IIIII would OJiDI IFill Ruail 111w _.. lhly iJ1C0.D1i11 CL\ cbief 'Ibny:yp IFill
in oftice -- Rll)' blow 1n .hilloric: biB lll~nti-pencnnellmd mines by woa'tplllla.,wiiii ... Cr ...... the Joinr Cbiefs ofStlffto.J~Ra fot
opponunil)' to do jlllt lhll.
tlalive. Tile Pe ...,. WGIFid ·. . - the JO,IIOW lpptOIICh. 00\ier U.S.
Tile president is set to decide lilY
1
A_ . , the ldminiltrllion lab the · U.N. tO~ oopeci..Y. Fnnc:c. hive. bc:en
dly whether or not be will be the
~fJCII 1 rvvr -vr' . lpPCOiCh a! wlit for a ci!J PIUs ipubllcly .llfl'?'live of .a lal!d DUne
leader who rids the world of unen. .
StJd
· ' •J nu. doelli'llit well widllally, ~ '!ban bl!t • pnVIlely llild to oppote
ace thai kiDs QIORIIbu ~.000. inno.
u
•
r •·
seea i ~ CJfiiiJDUe Ia die the ICCeleraled Canadian process. .
cent civilians· every .year - · and ·
'
~ J•n
makinJ.. .
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,
·
AP.eritaJOn apokcswonill'! woul~
wOUnds · many times that amount '
•' · · ·i ·
"llhink we baws dliiiNWW!Idolll, · 1101 Cftl!l,....t Clll tbe .,e..!J ~ JIOSI·
Men dlln 100 miUioit antj.penonnel
, , ·.
, . . ·&gt;
· IClpp!JIItlnil)' rip! now, dtlilifit'alolt. tiOII, teferrinl lllsuch quesuoi\J .to
land mines are ICIIIeRd and .buried · 2000. About 50 countnes dill were it'D be 1011 for a Jaai, Jc,.. lime," the Whire HOUle. A call to lbe Whi&amp;e
throupoot the I lobe, most of them ' ~~ at the meeting N.ve ~ to lAihy 191d ua. "And lbe opportunil)' Houle ~ office was not Rtumed.
left behind from wan in impover- 11gn on. Bu~ IIQIIbe Urured S~s.
is lblllbe Unifed Stares e. IFIOVe But lbe Pentq11n spokejwom.an
isbed nations tbat ean't alford to bave
~· Pattick Leiby, P.Vt., became Into the fenfroat. and II)', 'We're llllded lhat.lbe Dej:wtment of Defen10
lbem cleared.
a crusader.181il!st land mines ~ ukina Ill theM uni._.. ·llepl (to bal liken sevcnl lleJl8 in · reeeni
Last May, Clinton lleeded lbe than a decade 1110 when tQUpna ban mines).' We would find that a lot JDUnt1ta . 10 develop a stri,fegy oti
advice of Madeleine Albright IIIII Central _America: His in~e~at ~~ of countries -inclucliD-IOFFie of our "how best to ldlieye an efl'ective"
several members ofConsress in call· sparked by 1be s1gh1 of young ctlil- . all~, who .-e.just watti_ng.for • to 1Jobll
~
iag for i worldwide ban on lbe pro- dri:n,IJieir limbs blqWil off by mines do 11 - wotlld Jump on it.••
. , .
~ biljeves th; best way to do•.
duction and use of,lbese mines. 1'be plant~ IS pan of,a Wll' lhl'Y .~ ~ . ~ Even tho,up ~by~ .· thil.·howeYF, is !o ... byewnpiC:
plan lbett was to work out a solution part.m. Lately_ he s been urgtng tlie would.~ ~t tf )be .Canadita "lfwe"y ibat )lie want.eye.ry ,otbet
throu1h the United Naeions Confer: ~~~~n~ !?.clunb aboard lbe Cana- - IRaly 1111gned, ~ ~llevea IIICh counlly 10 join befen we jOin, that's
ence·on DiS81'11lament -- a famously dtan IntUitive, rather than let lbe tor- a !Jeal)' -- wid! U.S. support- would 11 one-c:ounll)'·veto.... AncHf we're
slow, deliberative body 'that operates pid U.N. approach ruJe the dly.
bring strong prmure 1!11 sa.a11n1 · not po-ful enough to give .diete up,
by consensus, .
·
But Clinton bas .a problem: He naeions.to reconsider lbe use of land hoW can an these liulccounlries do
Tben'lastflll, our friendly neigh- hlresstandinguptothemilitary.And mines.
.
it?"
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bor 10 the north called America's in this case, lbe Pentagon isn't crazy
Sources famili• wiilt lbe adtni1- ·
111esc ·SR the kinds of·questioni

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sOftly

WASHINO'JON -I\ ., 1Clift.

The Dlllly Sentinel •.Pigll

Pomlroy •lllddllport, Ohio

.\\Wd bas "-' .-ivecl heR of lbe death of Alfred o:Cozart Sr., 75, of

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'Mary .·e. Lathey

W.VA.

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Y-..own,on Slluray,J111.4, 1997.
He wu bora Fell. 9,1921 in SCi venville, son of the lire JOIIZpli llllll!sleJ.
Ia , _ Cozart. and reaidecl in lbe Portland area until 1946.
' He .w u a maintenanc:c fomnan for LTV Steel, wbeR he retired in 1983
· ~-36 yean service. He anended Gibson Heiahts Second United Presbyteii8n Church, and·wu a member and fcinner treasurer of lbe Naeional Manapment Association.
''·
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He i1 survived by his second wife, Mildred C. 1ilbot Cozart, to whom
he wu rilllrried on Oct: 26, 1987; a son, Alfred 0 , Jr. of Poland; a dauJhter,
l'at!tell S. flarlderOde of Poquoion, Va.; three sisters, Audra Nice, Gamet
Roulb and Blii:abelh Willford, Ill of Racine; IIIII six lfllldcbildRn.
•· He wa ~ in death by his first wife, Wilma Woodall Cozart, on
JUly 27, 1986; by four brothers, Hob8rt, Clint, Edwin and Roscoe; and by a
iiiler, Vera VanMeter.
·~· services were ·beld Thesctay. Jin. 7, 1991 in the ~ox Funeral Home,

1 ,~
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· AKRON (AP) - Outspending
your political opponent does not
gull'llltee success. Just ask incumbents Prank Cremeans and Mlftin
Hoke.
Campaigo finance reports filed by
lbe two Ohio Republici!D congressshow they outspent their opponents in the November election by
more than 2-to- I - and lost, the
Akron Beacon Journal Rported Sun. dly.
In the state's mosl expensive race,
Cremeans, of Gallipolis, spent
$1,705,602 compared with $706,097
.for Democrat Ted. Strickland of
Llilillsville.
· slrickland, a psychologist and
Methodist minister, served one two, year tenn before Cremeans defeated
. him in .1994 in the 61h District
Cremeans, a businessman, spent
the most of the 36 Ohio candidates
who filed reports with the Federal
Election Commission. Strickland
spent the most of any c.hallenger.
The reports cover all money raised
and spent from Jan. I, 1995, through
Nov. 25, i 996. ·
CRmeans and Strickland relied
heavily on contributions from political action committees representing

men

' Mary Elizabe'lh·Lath;y, &amp;2, of Middleport, died Sunday, Jan. 12, 1997 in
flolzer Medical Center.
·
·
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. '·1' '•.Sbe ViiS born.July ,4, ·1914 in Cheshire; the adoptive daughter of the l~te
• ·1
,GlbarleS· IIIII ·E ua Brooks, she was a homemaker IIIII a member of lbe Mid·
~'
''itlepod Nuaiene Church. · .
·
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•'"
· ShO•is·surviveCI bY'Ihree sons and a dlughter-in-law. Charles ''Bill" Lalh?i
., . .
,
,
•eyofMiddlcpon,LanyandCaroiLalheyofLetart, W.Va., andRogerLadl·:ey of Hamden; IWII daughrers and a son-in-law, Marlene: and Jay Hall Jr. of
l1
~
' ChcshiR,IIIII Lindl Lathey ~ of Middleport; and 14 Jl'llldchildren and
caeveral nieces and nephews. ·
Sbe was also pRCeded in death by her husband, Lester "Jack" Lathcy; a
son; and byseveral brolbers and sisters.
·
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S~rvices will be I p.m. Wednesdly in the Middleport Nazarene Church,
!"'Y .,,.., ~ PrMI
stabon wu67 depes m 199~ whiJe &gt;."'Yiilh ibe ~·· Greg Cundiff officiating. Burial will follow in the Riverview
~' ~r frigid nipl is 00 lap for the record
S .. low w~hl4 .bc1obew ze~ 18,;~"cemetery. Friends may call at Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, from 2-4
197
7
;,J lhio ~fen a warmi!I&amp;IRnd begins,
. . unsettontg t w1 11 at ... ; .rr ,..d 7-9 p.m.
!he Jll&amp;~tiorull :Weather Serviee said. p.m. and sunnse TUesday at.7:S2 a,m.·~;· In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to lbe Middleport.Nazarene
~'! · Lows tO!Iiaht will range from
, Weather forecut,
~~ Church.
··
.
·
- ~ro to..,lOde~. Seill very,cold but .
Totitght..:Moslly clear. Lows ne~
·
·
...5' I0 degrees ·WIIJ'IIler than -ly Io. Light west wine[ . .
. ~)' A
l.today.
.
.
Tuesday... Mostly sunny. High~·
l~· Clouds will lieain to build QVCJ' i1C8' 30
• ·• ·
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Tue~ay Riabt.,.Mo~tly. , cltarJ ' ' Aai_nabell ~otler!S Nell, 67~ Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday, Jan. 11.
·!OIIio 011 Tuesdly and ~ures
Will climb into lbe 201, fOieCISten LOws in the lower reens
· · 1997 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,aid.
Extended forn~d:
· ~ . re ~~ gl~~!~a~~~ln c:mobertsl)',W.Va., she was the daugh·t. An approaching low preiSUfe sysWednesdly... Panly cloudy. 1HigiiS'
r
van
.us1e
ove
·
,
. iojem will prod!ICC some snow on · near 40. ·
She was also preceded 1n death by ·her husband, James Ernest Nell Jr.,
~/oVednesdly and Thursday and temThursday ... Light snow likely. on JulyS, 1993.: 1~0 sons, James Paul~ IIIII James B. NeiiiD; and by a
.,peratlll't!S ,will continue· to arow Lows near 2S and hiafts 30 to 3~.
brother~ a Sister.
·
.·
,
Friday...LighL sqow likely. u,~
· ~· ' Surv1v1ng ,.., fou
. r daugh~erJ.• Nancy A. &lt;?YO\'ko of Mo11antown~.W.Va;:
,:flightly warmer.
..) . The ~ord-hip temperature for near 20 and highs in lbe upper'2 · ,, Patsy L. Ff!Wer IIIII Jan~ Hodge, both ofPmnt Pleasant, and Debra Duke
lhis dlte ll ·lbe ColumbUs ,•tl!er.
.
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.Phelps elf Pqmeroy; nine gtandchildren and four aRat-grandchildRn; and a
.
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,. ·. , ...brother, BilhRoberts of Atwater, Calif. · .
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Servi~s.~illbe2p.m. Tue.sdayintbe(:row-HusSellfuneraJHomc,Point
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Pleasant, w11h the Rev. Louis A. Hussell and lbe Rev. Mike Lambert offici- .
~~·
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\. .ating. Buriil will be in the Belle Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove.' W,Va.
3 '
Frie~maycallat~funeralhOmcfroni~?tonighL
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·
d
f
rt
.
warm
I
t
ng
ren ' 0 a
SO '
d
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,.sIattt to beg1n. on , uesday

business, labor and profeuiClllal
groups.
Cremeans raised 1 third of his
money, $523,263, from PAC., men
than any olber candidate. Strickland
raised the most money from PAC. ·
among challengers, $292,8 I I.
Fonner Cleveland Mayor Dennis
Kucinich spent $686,822 10 defeat
Hoke, who spent $1 ,382, 187-in hit
bid to keep the IOth District. Hob,
·a Lakewood businessman, Spel)l the
third most of Ohio candidares.
Nearly half of the $702,908 railecl
by Kucinich came from PACs. In
.addition 10 funds left over from hit
pRvious campaign, Hoke rai. ·
$1,335,759, the fourth-highest
amount among Ohio candidares.
All but $23,350 of Hokt's money
came from individuals. Hoke aides
said .iluring the campaign that Hoke
only accepted money from PACs thai
were established by individual members of . Congress, not by specialinterest groups.
·
Political scientist Jesse MII'IIUCi!IC
said a large and well-organized group
or volunteers, along with labor's
muscle, helped Kucinich compensate
for Hoke's finahcial advailtage.
j

•

-Local News in Brief.....

29

. b e.II Nea I
nna

o·'ld sn·ow ·gr···p natl•on . , .
as Winter asserts ttself .
i~ttOLLY~IU.
. andMountBlancourihere,"Ank~ Charles F. Powell. Jr.
Pi
Wt
die
AI~

Fire damages Tuppers Plains area home
No injuries were reported following a stniCtUR fjre involving a two-story
home.on Owlliollow Road in Orange Township near Thppers Plains Sunday. .
Firefighters were summoned to Charles Bailey residence around 10: 18
a.m. The fire started around a wood stove in the front room and was contained to tha_l room, Thppers Plains Fire Chief Bernard Bobo reported. The
house, owned by Paul Holsinger, received smoke and heat damage upstain
and fiR and water damage downstairs, he said.
·
·
The Thppers PlaiM VFD responded with lwo trucks, a squad and eiBht
firefighters . Assisting were the Coolville VFO with three trucks and five fii'CfiBhters: Pomeroy with one lruck and' three firefighters and the ~Yille
VFO Wllh two trucks and seven firefighters.
. Fit:efightprs remained on the scene for almost two hours.
.

Patrol tlclcets driver following crash
A LonB Bot10m area youth was cited for assured clear distance by the 011lia-Meigs Post of \l)e State Highway Patrol following a two-car accident Sun- .
day on State Route 7.
·
. ·
.
· Troopers said Manhew W. Marcinko, 16, 50483 SR 248, was northbound,
10 feel wesl of County Road 26 (Flatwoods) at 4:{19 p.m. when he was u~le
co stop in time and struck the rear of a car driven by Bobbie J. Ranis. 23, ·
110 Pleasant Ridge Road. Pomeroy. .
Hwris had slowed to make a left turn at the time of the crash, according
to lbe Rport.
·
·
·
Dam~&amp;e to Marcinko's car was moderate and slight to the Hwris vehicle,

II
llw
said of
mounds of snow outside
'
·
ALBANY, N.Y.
Bill her houae in Redfteld, about 40
ChulesFranklinPoweiiJr.,68,LongBottom,diedfriday,Jan.IO,IWT
Olposbavett moved fivm Connecticut ·miles northeast of Syracuse.
· in Veterans Memorial Hospital. .
;Bd;;:lplans Jan. 27 meeting .
to ujistate New York
. eiaht
8fO
'
.
.'
u.,!.l.ia_l.o ·llhtoff eiSY
,
. ~ilh
., 20. inc
.."
Bom Feb.·6, 1928 in Portland. son of the late Charles and Ruth Newlun
The monthly meeting of the Gallia,JacksoncMeigs Board of Alcol!ol, DniB
._
- · ,.- ·
·
Powell, he
IIIII U.S. Anny vereran•
!IWl!lti\~.IJeJ!\~I,JIOWMli&amp;::l.lllc~v-... es. .'• •
.s . I a hiretired.• timbennan
" "therl Edd p
II· ..._
pel ...
"~
A'ddi~l'l!in and Menial Health Services'will be '7 p.m. Monday,'Jai\.' 2'7 arthe
~nih hea"en nQ'!o'.: ·
.
,
. 1~. MQ'llaJ,IM.'• l!)8ds well1 cl~ ..
urv1y ng are s w~ae,, ~
a: y. owe ~ "." "" s~ au.,:re~s, .~na
..
~'' · ,''ll's"one of the bliJer Clnet J·'ve 11111 even lbe plows 'were stay,in·t:81f , Ables, A'Hene (Bojl) WoOd and Blste (Delbert) Roush, all bf Rac1ne, a scep. lloard office, 414 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
·The
board
usually
meets
the
third
Monday
of
the
month.
;&gt;iver seen up heR," OJP.Osha!wi( !llid 1be stRet. ,This Illest storm lirouiht son, Danny (Sue) Roach of Wooster; II stepgrandchildren; five brotben, Har\
' .
'
. •!Sunday from his home in M0J1ta8UC, tliis ·season's total to 250 inches .-;- ry Powell IIIII Robert Powell, both of Torch, David Powell and Delbert Pow~
east of Lake Onwio; wbeR 90 inch-_ jUIISO inches below the averaae 1~ ell, both of Reedsville, and Randall Powell of Belpre; and three sisrers,
~~~ of snow fell over the weekend.
·for a -·whole season. Snow flurries Frances Bellamy of Athens, Betty Kiser of Racine, and Nettie Young of Thp1~: ''It's been quite a wild winlcr so wc;re expected 10 continue.todly ailcl 'pers Plains. . ·
5:56 p.m. Sunday, Page SIRe!,
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
~l'ar," he said •
into the .week.
•
· He was also preceded in death by two infant sons; a stepson, Ira Roach
Middleport, Jean Null , lrcllted at the
gency
Medical
Service
recorded
16
""'· Winter madC its presence known
Two feet of' snow IIIII 60 mAtt Jr.; and a brother, Roy Powell.
~
1be
lh'15 · tend anA
'lid
k 1 S n1 · U Bit.
Graveside services were held at II a.m. Ieday, Monday, Jan. 13, 19t7 in calls for assis~e Saturday and scene;
6:27 p.m. Sunday, RRC, Manda ·
.,..across
country · l'fCC:
.,._ WI . s struc ate · atu ay In 1 ' . the Bald Knob ee111etery, Portland, with the Rev. Helen Kline officiating. Sunday. Units responding included:
~~howed little sign of RtRat. . . :
causing small avalanches IIIII p~.
VMH; ·Pomeroy squad
1:astman,
• CENTRAL DISPATCH
1 In Utah,-2 feet of snow and blastventing about·4,000 skiers fromleav· Arrangements we,e by the White-Blower Funeral Horne, Coolville.
.
''2:3la.m. Saturday, St. Clair Road, assisted;
~ing winds ·stranded thousands of in'g resort areas. '
9:49 p.m. Sunday, Dexter Road,
Darwin, Ashley Roach, Veterims
't)ders'at northCm RSorts on Saturday..
SoJliC. roads were still closed this
Dexter, Robert Boho, HMC, Rutland
Memorial Hospitlil;
· ·~~ deep .-f~ze enYel~ the, Col- mornina but expected to open up
squad
assisted.
..
7 a.m. Saturday, Rocksprings
•tirado 'Rockies, and lee storms · in today. Others wefi! opened for brief .Wilma Jean Sayre, 65, of Columbus, died Friday, Jan. I0, I9'T1 in Mount Rehabilition
.
MIDDLEPORT
Center, Pomeroy, Belly
.l'cxas sllltled tiaffic IIIII forced wicJe. periods Sunday, allowing most peo- CII'Jnel Ea,st Hospital.
9:48 p.m. Sa,mday, Over~rook
Dill, VMH;
.
A graduate of Sout!tern High School, she was a member &lt;if the Maize Road
' 4weacl'school closinas.
pie who wanted io go 10 get out.
Nursing Center, Middleport, Naomi
2:07
.p.m.
Saturday,
West
Hysell
~~~ It was theeasrern OrCat Lakes thll
Temperatures dipped to as low.as Baptist Church for 12 )(em.
Ohling~r. Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was preceded in death by .her parents, Peter and OHie Sayre; a broth- SIMI, Middleport, Doris Carter,
~~ dumPed on.
S deirecs alona the WISalch Moun:
RACINE .
Holzer Medical Center;
·
·
. Four feet of snow piled up in just tain · Range overnight in northern er, ltichard; and a sister, Col vis Mae.
4:02 p.m. Sunday, Elmwood Ter2:56 p.m. Saturday, RRC, Phyllis
Sua:Viving are a brolber, Robert K. (Elaine) Si)'R of Boynton Beach, Fla.;
·24 houn outside june Ouderkirk's Utah, with todly's highs exjlected to .
race Apanmenls, 'Racine, Vteki Boso,
Crosby,
VMH;
..!louse lrl;dlc tiny upstltc town of Red- rise into the 20s. About 1-112 feel of a sister-ill' law, Juanita Sayre of Racine; and numerous nieces and nephews. , 9:23p.m. Saturday, State Route 7, VMH; .
•
Friends II)IIY call at the Schoedinger North Chapel, 55$4 Karl ~oad,
"field. "
.
snow was due 10 fall in the higher ele5:15. p.m. Sunday, Third Street,
Bradbury, Kenneth Barnell, VMH;
Columbus, from~7:30p.m. Thesday. Services will be held at 7:30p.m. Tues11· '•Wilen ·1 answered the phone, I valions today .and Tuescbay.
Patrick
Snyder, PVH;
3:28 a.m. Sunday, ArL Lewis
·
~*as stlnding on a stool trying to look
AmonB the coldest' spots. in Utah day, with the Rev. John Kirby officiating.
6:34 . p.m. Sunday, Riverside
Street, Middlepcx:i: Michael Camp,
·oot mY dinidg room window," Oud- · was Hill Air Forc;e Base 40 miles · Friends may contribute to Maize Road Baptist Church, 425.1 Maize Road, treated at the scene; .
Street, Kim Annstrong, VMH.
. •~ir:JI.:Said in a telephone. interview' south o~ Salt. Lake. On Sunday, the Columbus, Ohio.43224, in ~er memory.
.
RUTLAND
II :41 a.m. Sunday, Slivcrsville
,
.
1 ,u. .y'afternoon. "TI!ere's snow 10 w1nd-chdl fattor was 52 degRes r11,
Road, Portland, Hazel Milan, HMC;
I I :48 a.m. Sunday, New Lima
lltches'ft'Otlllhe 'top .~. Alii can see below zero.
,
Road, Carl Hysell, VMH.
1is thC 'lnaWnlobiles '~t~ing by, aliOut
"It feels like an icc box o~t
TUPPEilS PLAINS
.
13 at a'pap,"
· '
there," said 'airman Freel King, 19. ':': John Thomas
10:18 a.m., volunteer fire depart32, ofOoshen, Ind., died Friday, Jan. 10, 1997 at his
ijelen-:Anken, S4, said her Sundly "You can still feel the cold through
·' men! and squad to Owl Hollow
· resicl,ence.
· .
.
Veterans Memorial
'\1\otiiinJ: churcb service was cance~ . the two jackets rhnt I pul on,"
" Born in Athens on Jan. 30, 1964, he was the son of Franklin E. Shiltz,
Road, slructure fire at ~es Bliley
~~ · most of us couldn't get we~olorado fell the winter cold .as ..and the late Ellen Grounds Shiltz. He was retired from the U.S. Air Force
Saturday admissions- none.
residence, no injuries reponed,
and belonged to lbe Columbia Chlpel Church.
'
,
,
Saturday discharges - none.
Cool ville, Pomeroy and Reedsville
"I think I've got the Maucrhoril
Wind chills made il feel as if' it . He is survived by two so~s. Thomas and ¥ichael Shiltz of Albany; two
Sun&lt;lay admissions - none.
VFOs assisted.
·
··
was rninus 35 uvernig~l in El Paso .,)lt!lthe.rs, Keith Shiltz of Goshen, Ind., and Even:u Shiltz of Rancho-La-CosSunday discharges - none.
c;:ounty, just sopth' of Denver. Goi- bll C1ilif.; IWO sisters, Cecilia Horn of Goshen, and Sheny McKinney of Rut. Haber Medical Center
'OI'ado Springs recorded its ·coldest land; his stepmother, Arlene Shiltz.of Albany, IIIII three stepsisters, Marlyn
Daily
Disebaqes Jan. 10 - Della
Jan.
12
temperature
ever
at
6
below
0
.
E
.llouis
sotefr.New
Lexin.gton
••
June
Graham
of
Albany,
l!lld
_
Nonn
.
..
~
.
Am
.
old
f
Henry,
James Whiteside. Benjamin
• (UIPII21,...,
j,
Riddlebarger, Virginia S~eets .
zero
·
:
,.breaking
the
old
mark
Of
.
0
'·
'
· biWIId ...,. 01 ~ gq MoMIJ dlrovP · minus.4aet in 1963.
Services will he 2 p,m. Thesday in the Columbia Chapel Chun:h, with the · Discharges Jan. 11 - M..S.
~. ,I~Cooll SC.,
1CWO
Rev.
Marvin Markins officiating. Burial will be in the Scl!ool Lot Cemetery, Charl~s .Ohlinaer and son, Mary
VII PWIIIIIIII CMipii,Ot .. •n Co.,
"""-·
~ill&amp; miiitary Bfaveside services to be conducted by the Albany VFW Post Jen~::. _ Mr. .and Mr5. William
'.
flu&amp; ...... ~. " · llt1-2156.
Ohio: . ' 98112.
Friends may call at the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home, Albany, from
. 'i• a .ne~ ..... ,__..~
2;!1 ·p.m. today.
Scott, son, Wellston .
~-Pozzar .......................~
Diseharaes Jan. 12 - Donna
"'"$$ Altt"c' • .,..
~ ,
Smith,
Elizabeth Bellomy, Mrs.
r~ Sad...., ooise:dau eo ·
. 011.,....;........;...........
William Scott and son, Della Rose·
ATlT .........~.••:.........,............aa;;
Tho Doll' .... lll Coon .... """""'· .
rf1Mo45169.
bcny.
a.nk Orle
.41~
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Harold
13
'jj\;,E.
Showalter,
48;-R~ville,
died.fridly,
Jan.
10,
1997
in
lbe
Carle
'j
·~WA'nl
Rose;
son, New Haven, W.Va.
~it,aJ, Urbana. Ill.
.
.
·
.
·~Wf..,.,····
~0. - '.,.c.mo.
.. -_,,. .....
Cltlillplolt ii..........................J..~· · ,.~ wu bOrit in Chester on Dec. 13, .1948, tile son of Mary Powell Showai:-......................
- ......1100
.(PIIbllahed witb perinllllon)
!tJoo Moolilt .... ,,_,,,......................- ..........10
~
8ltopa .....................
.C!'~Chester, alld lbe !are Forrest Showalter. He was a tniCk driver for lbe
Ooe- J...:............................."..--1104.00
cij
Express Inc., Farmer Cil)'.lll.
.
Mojlll......................
·~ ·
SINGH' ropy PliCI
'
0 is survived by .his wife of 28 yean, Karen M~ny ~howalrer; a fos,
' I)' .........-:........ _..............................35 c-.
~
ter
. .. uaJ\Iet Rachel Lees of lleedsville; a brother arid Slster-rn'law, Dale and. Skad• party
l
~··
K......,. ....................................11'
Family skatins nia~t at the
k n: ..
Plii)'":'SltOw;lter otGMnsboro, N.C.; a brother&gt;Earl Showalter o~Chesrer;
...... lo'--!0'111oDIIIJ
.
a.-Ide lnd ............................
Chestet
Skate-a-Way, Sl admjssion,
a sister, Fern M~l of Chi:srer; and nieces and nephews.
· .
""·-•• or 12- blriL Clodk wtlllll ·
UMII'd .........- ...........-._..........1t
sklkl extta. Sponsared by the Meigs
He Will preceded in death by a ~ister, Joyc~ Showalter. .
.
.
Ohio
'-*•--'toU"!OOOOOO . . .
AM Holiness Associllion, the Meip ·
Se~ices
will
be
I
p.m.
Tuesday
1ft
lbe
Leav1n
Funeral
Home,
Belpre,
with
Or. v.,..y: .... ~...........................M
No..;l\s;ripd0.. rtJ IIIMI ......... II 1
MinisiiDrial
Associltioft, and die Mid- MU STAIJ'MUlhC Rev. Phillip Ridenour officiatina. Burial will be in ·~~~e Heiney~.
PIDPIII ................ - ............ ..21~
..
dlepon
Ministerial
AISQciltion . For
~vjlle. Friends may call at the fu!IWII home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
,.a_aar-11 ..............................
information -~ts may C!JII•
liD lhlll ...................... --.171i
tact lln. Peter.Tretnblay, ~1~2.
S~~
$~2
......,.••• _.,_,_................1).
.WIMirffll. ~
-~
(AP)
No
tickets
rnatcbecl
..
ll!x
numbers
aelected
in
...a1
QIIIJMJIW• • '
~·· $8 million:Super Louo drawiftl, so lbe jackpot for Wc~IICI'Iay's StiCW a II 1
A special meeting of Middleport .
,.~ drawlq will incaeaae 10 $12 'million, lbe Ohio Lcitrery llic1
Lodge 363, F &amp;: AM. will be held II
~in Super Lotto totaled $3,03~.112. Kicker ..... totaled $523,437.
'
'
'
7:30p.mThesday•lllbeball.
Work in
ltloll Npa."11 - the 10.:t
~ ~ 89 Super Lotto tickets with fi~e of tho aumbels, IFill eiCh is
For
Jlorw lii(M r"tn
enrered appentice dcp will be .
~~~:=p!Owldldbf
. ~~38. 'file 4,067 tickets showin1 four of tbe lllllFibera n
worth lbe
99t~-68•~
held. Refreahments will be served.
y e a•r s ,

.»
•.

wu

a:

EMS units answer 16 calls

.Wiln)a J. Sayre

:uohn T. Shiltz

Hospital news

si.ilu.

The

Sentinel

...._:OW.."'.
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.
,

Stocks

... ..............................44r

Bob.,... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
·······-····11"·,...........

= . . .-. .-. . . . . . .-=. .t

Ita E. Showalter

..·········..·······•

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................................
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Lotto jackpot to hit

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·-e Daily
Sentinel
_.
_
, P,p,4 ...

Sports

•

.

•

I

• ..

~.~13,1117

f / •'- ..

'

"

Patriots b~at Jaguars 20·6·
:~o win ·AFC championship
' By BARRY WILNER
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) , Some teams appear to grow up
' overnight. Others take several years
. of nurturing to reach a championship
1 level.
' Some, as incongruous as it seems,
' do boll!. The New England Palriots,
,, for instance.
The Patriots completed their first
1 •
.• 1 " trjp .to the Super Bowl in II years
/ when they beat the Jacksonville
Jaguars 20-6 Sunday for the AFC
title. 'Thty did it with a defense.that
hu blossomed in the past six weeks
· and an anitude that has taken coach
Bill Parcells four years to develop.
"We've got some wild guys on
. . this team," Parcells said. "It's all I
: aui do to keep them under contror'
sometinles .... But I'll tell you what:
They ··worked their butts off to
achieve this, so in that 5ense I can
ltind of understand it."
Parcells has understOOd how to
get to the Super Bowl for years. He
to&lt;ik the New York Giants to NFL
· championships in his two previous
· appearances, after the 1986 and
1990 seasons. He now is the only
man other than Don Shula to coach
different franchises to the big game,.
and will attempt to become the first
coach to win with two different clubs
when the Palriots play the Green Bay
Packers on Jan ..26 in New Orleans.
New England appeared on the
· verge of an AfC championship two
years ago, when it improved from 5·
. II to 10-6 and made the playoffs as
a wild card. Then carne last season's
6-10 disappointment.
When his team recovered from an
0-2 start and went from 3-3 to 11-5
and the AFC East crown this season,
Parcells found an analogy in the boxing ring.

. "Club fighters· have a cenain
. mentality," Parcells said. "They take
a beating and go home. This franchise may have had that mentalily.
We malle reference· all year long to
elevating expectations.
"That's what this team has done.
You can't call them club fighters
anymore."
The' Patriots got to their first
Super Bowl since being routed' 4610 by Chicago in the 1986 game the
way you would expect a Parcells
team to do so: with stingy defense.
But that hardly was the ttademark of
this club until a 34-8 home ·loss to
Denver.
While that defeat didn't stun Parcells, the manner of it did. The Patri•
ots were thoroughly dominated.
· "That was the turning point,"
said rookie safety Lawyer Milloy.
"We were embari'assed on national
TV. It was a big game at Foxboro
Stadium. The biggest thing t.o tum
arm!,nd was the attitude."
They did it almost immediately.
In the next six games- the last four
of the regular season and playofhictories ov.er Pittsburgh and Jackson ville- New Engiand yielded an
average of 10 points and 77 yards
. rushing per week. ·
On Sunday, the defense overwhelmed the Jaguars, who finally
looked like a second-year team.
Jacksonville won 30-27 at Buffalo
and at Denver after closing the season with five successive wins.
But the Jaguars showed little
offensive spark against the vastly
improved Patriots defense, which
held Natrone Means (315 yards
rushing in the two playoff victories)
to 43 yards and quarterback Mark
.Brunell to 190 yards passing.

I ' ' 1
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pmugalnet the vl•ltlng Jllc.Qonvllle J~~g~~-,
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Super Bowl In 11 yell.... (AP)

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today."
"We've been working for this for
The next .when for the Patriots is four years," said defensive end
in New Orleans, against the 13 1/2- Willie McGinest, wh~ got the best of
point favorite' Packers, who ended · .former Soothem California teamthe superb season of the other secmate Tony Boseli in the ba.ttle on the
ond-year expansion team, the Carline. "But we've still got one game
olina Panthers.
left. That's the big one."
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Sculhcn deft trd Vktlston s~ Cl Amott 4-0-0=8..Teall 11-:Z.
ia a Tri-Valley Conference mike-up 1fi1ta5l
ow-... ·
COIIIell at Well•ton u Southern's
In a r=nt contest with llciJR the
Tudey pou1ed in 22 points to
Tornado gals lost 62-50, but beca!ne
split; the Tornado effort.
The win lifts Southern to 9-S one of the only teams in the area to
ovcnll IUid 5-5 in the Tri-VIllcy .come within llrilting disla!IC.e of lhe
tough Golden Eqlcs.
Confm:nce. Hocltina DivisiCIIl.
Coach Jenni Rousfi said, "Thii
Southem ·nced to a 13-10 lint
period,lead. then hod to setde for a · was by far the finest game we have
28-24.1cad a1 the half. Wellston came played all year. It was a total 1.e11m
Nc:tc with a huae thitd quancr (17- effort. Everyqnc had a job to do and
IO)IUid tooka41-38lead going into the did it very, very well."
"Cynthia &lt;;alwell had anotller
the final round. Southern pU;ked up
the pace defensively, was well as net excellent defensive game in hoklinc
14 points in the final frlmc to claim one of the best guards in the stile,
Kathy Coyner to only ihree poilUS."
the 5.2-48 triumph.
Additionally, Caldwell took a
Sootbem was led .by Turley's
great overall floor game, whil~ Bri- charge to draw Coyner's fifth perune Proffitt had 12. points, Erica sonal foul .
Coyner. has already signed with
AmoU eight, Kim Sayre six, Cynthia
Caldwell two and COnpy Horst two. U-Mass, the University of MassassWellston was led by Katie Crab- ehusetts, a team thai has going to two
final fours in the past four Yeaf)l· .
IRe wilh 1s and Mandy Leach with
' )1
.
. Roush· continued, "I can't say
Southern hit 20-SS from the fi.eld enoogh about Renee Turley. She hit
for 36.3% and was 2-13 from the several key baskets, including two
three point line, whle connecting on · big three-pointers in the fourth quar·
10-19 me throws. Southern won the ter. I am proud of each and ever)'
·bailie of the boanls 41-36 led by Tur- player. We gave Belpre all they
IC:y's double'&lt;louble of 22 points and wanted tonight."
16 rebounds. Kim Sayre also
Belpre raced to a I5-5·first peripabbed seven. ·SHS hail five ISSistJ, od lead, then held a 28-18 edge at the
no blocks. eight steals (Turley 3), ten half. In the third frame, the tally endturnoven and 13 fouls.
ed 48-34. but Southern clung close
Wellston hit 20-57 {or 35%, was to the coattails of the now Il-l
6-16 on three-pointers and was 2-4 Eagles.
·
from the line. Leach clai111ed 13
Southern hit 15-36 from the field,
ri:bounds, while the Rockets had 3-7 three-pointers and was 17-23,
three assists, five blocks, four s~s. wilh 21 rebounds. Belpre hit 24-56,
17 turnovers and 17 fouls.
3·11 three-pointers and had 2~
There was no.JV game.
rebounds.
Southern had 10 steals (Turley 6,
0 rt= 1111111
Wellston
10-14-17,7=48 ·caklwell3), had six assists (Turley ·
Southern
13-1 S-1 0-14=52 4), had 24 turnovers, 18 fools and
WeliltAID: Candace Robinette 2- one block.
·
1-h•8, Katie Crabtree 0-5-0=IS,
Belpre had 13 steals, 13 assist£
Ali.On Manin 1-0-0=2, Mandy (Coyner 5.). 14 turnovers and 22
Leach 6-0-0= 12, Libby Swafford 2- · fouls.
0-I,.S. Rachel Henneman 3-0-0::6,
Belpre won the reserve game SlTohlk 14-6-214=48
25 led by Michelle Mays and Abby
Souther.-: Renee Turley 7-0- Rouse each with 12. Stacy Lyons and
s=22, Cynthia .Caldwell . 1.-0-0=2, Kim Ihle each had. seven forSooth- '
Kim Sayre 1-2=6, Blianne Proffiu S- em and Pany Lawrence had six.
.•
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.

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The defense . forced 'three ·
wmoven in t~ final four. minutes.
First, Brunell, trying to find Derek
Brown from the New England 5, was
picked off by Willie Oay in the end
zone. Then Otis Smith, cut by the
lowly p.jew York Jets earlier this season, sped 47 yards with James Stew. a,rt's fumble for the clinching touchdown. Then Tedy Bruschi interCept·
ed Brunell.
·
"We were unable to run the
ball," Brunell said, "and unable to
get that good balance we've had the
past few weeks that had allowed us
to have the success. Overall, the
·.Palriots had great defensive effort.
They outplayed us."
Almost from the beginning, the
Patriots were in charge. Jaguars
punter Bryan Barker took a high.
snap, then hesitated before trying to
run froin deep in Jacksonville territory .. He. was tackled by I,.arry
Whigham at the four.
Two plays late(, Curtis Martin
scored from the one, the 15th straight
home game he'• gotten a touchdown,
line . for 38 yards to the three.
giving New England an early lead.
· Vinatieri made a 20-yarder for a 13Rookie Aaron Beasley's inter3 halftime lead.
ception of Drew 'Bledsoe's tipped
Hollis kicked a 28-yarder in the
pass set up a 32-yard field goal by
third period, but the Jaguars Mike Hollis. making it .. 7-3. But
coached by Tom Coughlin, a former
Adam Vinatieri booted a 29-yarder
assistant under Parcells and his good
after an 11-minute delay when a
friend -could get no more against
transformer fuse blew, causing a
a team that has allowed nine points
power outage at frigid (zero-degrees
in two playoff games and one touch·
wind-chill factor) Foxboro Stadium.
down in the last four games.
Jacksonville still seemed to be in
"We were always waiting for the
the dark in the final moments of the
big play," said Means, who sprained
half. The Patri01s convened a fourthhis right ankle midway through the
and-three at the Jaguars45 on a fivesecond quarter, but returned in the
yard pass to Ben .Coates. And with
third. "All year long, it has not been
just 15 seconds to go and no time- , a matter of if we make a big play, but
outs, Bl,edsoc found a wide-open
when. The 'when'neverc31'1e for us
Shawn Jeffeoon down the left side-

·Southern girls hand
Wellston 52-48 loss

Scoreboard

~

30-13 .win qver·Panthers

11le lOp 25 te1tM iD Tile A...-d ...
,._. C:oUooe bolt&lt;tboll pol~ widt tlnl·
, place voiel In parcntheaea. ruord1
thnJqltJ... 12.-pol•abaed oo11
poi.u rcw • rUJiopllte vote thn:MIJ,h OM
poiat for a 25th·plac:e votce, aad 1111
wed'• .-..kiftJ:

'.

I,

By DAVE GOLDBERG .

gie White, the NFL's all-time sack · total yards- 88 yards on 10 carries 60,216 fans:
"Green Bay, I hope you're proud
GREEN ·BAY, Wis. (AP)- All leader. The closest White had ever ·and 117 yards on five catches, one
of us because we're proud of you."
season, Mike 'Holmgren talked about been to the title game was last year, for a touchdown 1
"that game," refusing to utter the wbe,n the Packers lost38-27 to DalEdgar Bennett added 99 more · Carolina, meanwhile, almost
name 9f the game his Green Bay las in the conference championship yards on 25 carries, including a 4~ seemed satisfied - as they should.
.;·.
Packers had as their goal fqr a year. game.
,
''
yard touchdpwn run fql)~wing a 66- No team·bas'evcr.before' w~n a diviSay it&gt;Mike, you're going to ,..
· Wh.ite was good Sunday, and so yard screen pass from Favre to Lev- sion title in it~ sceond year, and only
Well, not Disney World, at least was · the rest of the Green Bay . en, that made it 27-13 and effec- Carolina and Jack$0nville, which Jos1
. not yet.
·
defense. holding c"arolina to just 45 lively put the game away ..
the AFC title in New England, had
· "It'.s very special to have an _ yards on the ground.
"Dorsey," Holmgren said of his ever come this far before.
opportunity to get to (gulp!) the - '"Overall, it was simple," said second-string running back, "is a
. They should be able to build
around . Collins, the second-year .
' Super Bowl," Holmgren. said after Carolina coach Dom Capers. "Our special player."
:·Green Bay's 30-13 win over Caroli- inability to stop their ninning game
For Carolina, .which finished the quarterback who was 19 of 3'1 fi&gt;r .
• na Sunday. "The locker rOom i ~ a had a tremendous effect, and they did season 13·5, it was the end of a glo215 yards in tough conditions.
warm place to be right now."
·an outstanding job stopping our rious second season !hat included
"I hope we've been able to estabWarm was the operative word run•"
·
two wins over San Francisco and a
lish a foundation far the future,"
But· the offense was even beucr, victory last ·week over defending l!apers said. "To me, getting into the
after a game that might be described
as "Son of Ice Bowl," the game 29 particularly Bn!t\ Favre and Dorsey Super Bowl champion Dallas. The
playoffs and 'experiencing the playyears ago that sent Vince Lombardi's Leven.s. It accumulatC\1 479 yards Cougars ~l•o had early 7-0 and 10- offs is sometl)ing you can take and
. Packers to what turned outto be their , against a Carolinateam that hlid giv- · .7 leads created by aSam Mills inter- use to your advantage in the future."
· For the Packers, the future is in
l&amp;St Super Bowl. Temperature at en up an aVerage of 295 per game. ception of Favre and Lamar Lathon's
game time was 3 degrees with a wind 201 on the ground.
recovery of a Favre fumble.
two weeks.
"You haye to take advantage of it
· chill of minus 17, and it didn't get
Favre completed 19 of 29 passes
But that was it.
when you &lt;;an," says Favre. "You
much warmer during the game.
for 292 yards and two touchdowns.
The Packers used 7:52 of the sccAlso a special sec:ion 'ror Ia Memory Valentine Pets.
Holmgren brings with him the
Levens, who played in the shadond quarter to drive 71 yards for a never know when you' re going to get
the opportunity again." .
man most of the Packers had want- ow of Favre, Reggie White and a touchdown on Favre's 6-yard pass to
ed to get there .- ~5-year-old ~eg- host of other stars, accounte4 for 205
Antonio freeman to make it 14-10.
.Thirty~eight seconds later, after -Sports briefs.Tyrone Williams' diving interception
of Kerry Collins. Chris Jacke·kicked
Boxing
a 31-yard ficl,d goal to make it 17~ I 0
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - .
l at intcnnission.
·
F.elix Trinidad.and Terry Norris had
'Then the Packers came out and
knockout victoljes Saturday night to
hcld .thc ball for the first 6:44 or the . set up a planned fight for May or
.ti,c Meigs Marauder warm-up home fifth-place honors. River Val- second half, getting a 32-yard field lunc. .
.
goal from Jacke. That gave them · Trinidad stopped
w~ling tournament was ~Jd ley defeated Gallia Academy to take
Kevin Lueshing
more than .14 consecutive minutes
recently at l,.arry R. Morrison Gym- Iiome the seventh-place honors.
in the third round to retain the IBF
Taking home first-place honors in
with the ball - minus that one pass
nuium.
welterweight title, and Non:is put
n,e toum&amp;~~~ent was a round- their weight classes for Meigs were that was intercepted ;- and 13 away
Nick Rupa in the lOth to retain
robin Olympic tournament featurmg Jay fisher in the 135-pound weight points.
the ..!Bf and WBC super wellertwo lf'DIS- A and B; The winner of class and Adam Thorhas in the 140"The Packets belqng .in New
weight titl~s . Norris (45-6, 29 I&lt;.Os) .
pound
class.
Orleans," said the 37-year-old Mills,
'!hi:tJiai:er in .Pool A met the winners .
will p~t his 154-pound titles on the
Pleas.e enclc;»se 11elf·
Secon.d-place honors for Meigs
of pl~er in Pool B in the finals.
th~ heart of the Carolina defense.
lincagai~st Trinidad (31-0, 27 KOs).
"PET'S NAME"
addrelsed stlmped
In Pool A, Philo came in first went to Jeremy Morris in the I52"Th~ way we played, ~e belong in
· On the ilndercard, Khalid Rahilou
in second pound class, David Shuler in the
Owner's Name
Charlotte."
envelope to retum
stopped'.Frankie Randall in the II ih
and Riv- ' 160-pound class and Jason Roush in
It was an extra special win for the round to .capture the 'WBA junior
your ptM»to.
the 189-pound class. ·
Cheeseheads, the Green Bay fans welterweight title, and !lenry AkinThird place honors went to Ben
who have been waiting for those 29 . wande outpointed Scott Welch to :
Molden in the II +·pound class,
years - ·Since Lombardi's teams · retain the WBO heavyweight title ..
·Mike Klein in the I 1!1-jlound class,
won five NFL titles in seven seasi&gt;ns,
,I
Alan Lee in the 125-pound clas's, and
including the first two Super Bowls.
Shawn Michaels
in
13~pound class.
Many of Lombardi's players were on
.
. .
hand Sunday to celebrate.
" I feel great," said Ray Nitschke,
r-----------~--------------the Hall of fame middle linebacker
fpr .tbe Lombardi Packers. "It's a
I pet's Name
I
great team and it dese..Ves everything
,I
.
I
it gets."
·
OWner's Name
But the Packers (15-3) still have
to finish the job against New 'England i~ New Orleans -they're an
Addteis
early 13 1(2 paint favorite to run the
I
·NFC's wi'n streak to 13 in the NFL's
ti~e game. O!her than White, the
stars of Sunday's game - Favre,
Amount Enclosed:
. · for
pactU...s
Levens, Bennett and defensive tackle Gilbert Brown weren't born the
$6
lut tiple Green Bay 'I'~ in a ~uper
&gt;
Bowl.
Tourflll(tMrill.
r
wmn
,
Dtadllne Friday, February 7th at 3 p.m. ·
.
11\cy'll miss L&amp;lllbeau and those ·
~
' '
. . . Mall ~r brl~g the entry form: . . ' .
Chectcheldl.
Sund1y's win waa their 18th
•·
) '
·llniabt II home lUid 28th in their last

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M~IIALI, 76. 6.1

EASTERNCONnRENCE

Ohio H.S. girls' scores .

·,

~c·,...i'C

.·

NHL standlap

•

Sund8fs ..~~on
o.;....... St. ~&gt;lio ·,..._u... &lt;..'ll\h. ltl

Miltmi l&lt;llliO) MO. E. Mi&lt;ill,_ fH

$1. ~~~. Pa:•60. Mlde 45
'j'eritple 61. Sl, --~,.53·
.
wuner 87. Mou•t Sf. M-:r'•· Md.

. The Vintoo County Vikings con- em could have cut the lead to four,
tinued their string of dominance in dissolved their chances of a come.
the Tri-Valley Conference by tlefeat- back.
VC had gone 0-~ at the line, but
ing the local E!Jstem Eagles 70-S5
Saturday afternoon in a Tri-Valley then .Jenny Zinn hit four straight and
Conference girls' ·ba.•ketball make- Amy Jewell hit3-4 safeties ·going
done t~e stretch to widen the Viking
up game in McAnhur.
Vinton County is now 10-3\lver- lead to 15 at the end.
Brannon ended the night with a
all and Eastern drops to 3-7. Both
clubs had been decimated by injuries game,high 31 points, five steals and
and illness, forcing cancellation of 14 rebounds, while Valerie.Karr had
the originally scheduled date along- ·l :1 points and eight rebounds.
Jewett had 28 for VC, whi lc
with two other Ea.•tem cancellations
7,inn netted 14 points, three steals
la.•t week.
Eastern coach ScOit Wolfe said, · and nine rebounds.
Eas~!:m hit 22-62 from ' the field,
"Considering that two days last week
·1-3
three-pointers"ajld was 8-18 at
. we had only three players to practice
because of the nu and injuries, the the .I in e. Eastern had 28rehounds
girls overcame adversity and made deficit that hit the Eagles hard (48quite a gume of it. Still, had we had 28 on t!¥&gt; boards). EHS hlid nine
a better first quarter, I think we could steals (Brannon 5), 18 turnovers,
· have won. We played a greatsecond three assists (Brannon ''2, Wolfe I)
alf and · Jessica Brannon had an and 28 fouls.
VC hit 2'1-50, 3-11 three-pointers
exceptional game."
and
was 19-34 at the line with 48
.
Vinton County had lost leading
rebounds.
VC had II steals, 21.
scorer Heather Hayes to a severe
turnovers
(Fee
10), IS. assists (J·ew·
ankle injury. Liz Zinn was has been
ett
8)
and
19
fouls.
·
sidelined with a back injury. Hayes
There was no reserve game.
saw limited action Saturday.
The
future: VC plays · Meigs
Eastern took a 2-0 lead, but JenMonday
and Eastern goes to Trimny Zion coupled with Aniy Jewett to
ble.
·
give Vinton County a 10-6 advantage. Vinton County then went on a OurJcr ildala
20-16-20-14=70 •
9-0"run to push the score to. 19-6. VintonCo.
Eastc:m
I0·14-18-13=55
Then l'lastern fought back to 20· 10
Eutcm:
Becky
Davis
1-1-00=5,
at the end of the firsi frome.
Amy Jewett began. to dominate Stephanie Evans 2-0-012=4, Valerie
for the Vikings, scoring 13 of her KarT 5-0-0:: I0, Jessica. Brannon 12·
team-high 28 points inthe first half. 0-719=31, Chasalie Hollon 1-0Her second-quarter dominance led 113=3, Angi Wolfe 1·0-0=2.
the Vikes to a 36-24 halflimc advan- U-1-8118=55 .
VInton Couaty: Julie Orlowski
tage, but an outstanding effort from
Brandi Minton 1-02-1-2/2='9,
sophomore Jessica Brannon allowed
00=2,
Heather
Hayes l-0-0=2,,funy .
Eastern to keep. pace. Brannon also
7-2-8112=14,
Gina Fee 2-0Jewett
had 13 points the fil'llt half.
Valerie Karr, a 15-point scorer for . 217=6, Belinad Hayes 2-0-,J/2,.5,
the Eagles, .sat out·three minutes of M~gan Goodlin 2-0-0=4. Totals: ·
.
'the second quarter in foul trouble, . zt.1·19/34=70
then later fouled out in the final
tag of the third quarte It was here.
S es
r•
that Brannon took charge en route to
a stellar 31-point pcrfonnance.
Karr added.two bucket£ before
' and
her Cllll· an d Becky Dav••
Stephanie Evans c~nned some big
th'nl
I quart
. cr buekel!l· a.~ VC Jed 5642 al\crthrce rounds.
Guaranteed
V' ton C 't
hed
. I
J610
. oun Y pus
oa
High Interest
point lead, hut Ea.&lt;tem surged to an
"
eight point lklficit foimuch of the
Al'allable
fourth qUirtcr. Brannon, Evan.• and
• No Loads or Peei
, ··
1-iollon ~id the Eastern scorinll, 11nd
~ Accumullle or Mcdlly
Brannon likewise controlled the
Income
boards.
•Hip~l
Trail1'n" 61 S3 at the 2·35 mark
• \VIde Choice ol Allllliltcil of
Eastern
to ~ay . ~
AIIKinda
lfi'CIIive defense andfint Jlllllb)C"
Ca)lfar)~,
for the ,stcal, then later fool to stop
the loelc
SCOTf IN8mtANcE'
' . •L
.AI fnt ""'-BY worked, bUt
614·m
"'::~:·
• _.
Jwountimelytumowrs,whereEastz.

..._..j

Piii•Btotlf&lt;Wd 'f'l, ...... lli&lt;·!ll

ctma"""6.1.&amp;. r ....... 5t. 'l6

Pomeroy, ohlq 48769
f

.

scores
' Saianl•f•lldlon .
....

Cent.

11 o Co~rt St.
..., ;

W001t« lll •.C.-Aaavt: 17

-·

.

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WU••Ik'l·?!· Deoi"IO M)

10 .
'
x.,;e,,Oblo7J.f&lt;ltdham64

The·Daily Sentinel

)

Hit.':.~~-=•:a·•
Nefdl Cilll C • CCL
.......,.., 7J; Ohlo Weoleyoo
Keojoa Yl. Eorlham IC1 JCfl'l

.

a

t!teC l'ucae

1•-·Milw.-67
N. IHhPa ,6, WriJhC 51. S'

St. Frnncls. NY 49. M.....-.. N.J .

S9

.

· Clev.:a.JSi. J~.

Penn ~9. Brown ' j
Plltlburgh 7S, Ruta&lt;n 67 ·
Jlrinceton SB. Yale 4J
Rodronl 19. Md.-Bakim«t County

.

White, who four yem lfO ~ .
111 ~- Second St., Pomeroy
a $17 million COnb'ICI with Oh:cn
Bll)' abr proclaimins he wanted to
992-3381 •I ~
go 10 a~e~m
he i:oold 'Jll'ICtice
hisminillry ,intheinitercity,to'i~ .... .llil...

w"*

· .

.

MWfiiilltiAC"

GeorJc Wlllhin:Jton 69, DIKfll :siW 55
llln'..t 7~. Cornell 61
· Jamn Madl1011 AI. Anak:on U. 'n'
1.11 Salle 6l Do~on ! I
·
t.Dnatsl.uid U. 99. ,76
M-~l. New H.....hi,. '16
MIIIIAi-61 . Vlllunova ~

I·:
I
I ··

~~-------~------------------~

DoWning, Chllcts,

29h0tneflmel.

each.

MW.C.l . 1M C huaMC
:rmy 51. 72. Y01o11111!1on St. 6l

f1Wrlei&amp;h Dkkiuon 9!1, Raben Mof..

I

....

s......,........

)93

riaiiO

'

2

104. K... St. 6:l

Ohio men's

n

~

,

Taa~

. college scores

Fiirfleld ~- Ctnt. ConKCiiL-ut St. "f

66

llliooi• St. 76. s. lllooit 1CI
SWM-St. 17.llnt&lt;lll

r.w...
· u•~ S.t ~$. kWkt n

10

714 12
.723 11
6911 • 1
671
I~
·~IS
16 .
4114 · 21

Amly 76. Holy Croa 61
. -117S, Ldli&amp;IIS1
BllfllliO 110. Mo.·!Ctto- Oty 62
. • • Col.... 64, Navy 60
.'
c0o-i&lt;ul69. Gt«...... S4
·DIIrtmouth Colunitl• '" .

·1 '

a- .

--

men's
•

••

11. 5L !II

~

I

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VALENTINE PETS

7

· , NCAA. Division I
·'..

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.

.

u ••!rS4.Mas .• "'

UCl.A1.Pri-ooi.SWMi-St. I.

PER PICTURE
PRE-PAID

·.·. ·

May' I 161,

' · Fre1no St. ]. Hawaii 2. Tuhutc 2.

Meigs wrestlers get
fqurth in tournament

defeat Eastern 70-55.

-~

-V;,p.io90, St. !*,'• 71

21. O&lt;oraia .................. IZ·Z :m 24
:11. NmthCan&gt;li!lll .........9-f 11$
13
UT... .......................I-4 247 22
:14. 0..... ......., ........... 10.2 . ·177
17
2,. TauTtdi ............ I0-3 169 20
Olltn nrelvlnawetnJ Iowa 91,
Colorado t;10. M..-..uette 76', Connccth.111
6.5; lllinoia 6!1, \ "ir1inia l.S, Providenc.:
32. l'al:illc lO. c.u: of Cbatleo!oo IS. E.
Miclhpo J, flotido St. I , " " - 7 . A~
- 6 . NewOrte.&amp; 6. ........... 6.
Tolta ~. T&lt;w (loriotioa 4, Weii VifJitl!a

THE DAILY SEN.TINEL

.1

1,119
199
ISS
Ill

20. Mi11iuirPI ..: .......... II-l

WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
. FEBRUARY 13TH.IN

.

l,l91

Vinton County girls

-10. !CM•!""'II!II'".?.I
St.
-··
69.
VloJjolo
Tos:
. .Lopolo.,,*,._
:l. M_, ·,."!!' 47

~ ) , Clemloe ................ ,....l4-l 1.582 ~- ~ '

''FOR PETS ONLY"

. .·. Hui'ryl Deo~ne
.
~ridGy, fehrua~y ~th at·3 p.m., .

...._ . Nw l
· looo9l'. -SII

.!iti •.Qt•.,l
(14) ..... 12.0 1,718

1. w... -

......

...... u. 71 . Oln&lt;I6710Tl
Odawae11 , v.....-..-.o
-onl7fo.T...,..&amp;.W ,

.....

~ (S71... .

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

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TAMPA.FIL(AP)-DanGoOdn.llle fll!ler of New Y~ YukMs

hudied Df
...,_,....~.1' kidtley anc1 rupiralory failure . .
I (lit)

1pililhor Dwilhtpooden,

· Aa ,ow..41Tlt. ·

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AmnJ!!e . . . . . . "'·

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The Daily Se~i:IP.~}

iBy 'Fhe Ben

:_. -~~~~------~~~--~----------~~~----~------------------~--~------~------~~--~------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~~~1~·~·~7~
. lla: 111, J1"n my

•

DEER CUT I. L HOLLON

[Cross-dressing boy.friends will ·r;1ever cAarnQe
'
t

.

ByANN~RS

:

Dear Ann Llnders: That letter
: • from " Somewhere in Pennsylvania"
' caught. my ey~. " Somewhere's"
~ fiance, "Tom," is a cross-dressing,
t .successful lltlorney. She wanted to
t know if he is a homosexual. I can tell
"-her - it ain't necessarily so.
~
I am a cross-dresser and .sbicdy
! heterosexual. When I was growing
: up, there wun' t much reliable infor: matio.n on this subject My encyclo-·
• pedia said cross-dressers wen: homo-·
1• sexuals, so I fought the urge to
: cross-:dress for many yeus. I knew , .
: wasn' t homosexual, but I was afraid
: of what otjlers might think.
1' . After I m.,-ied 1 I told my wife
t aboUt my secret urge. She did her best
' to be understanding but then forced
me to see a therapist, who insisted I

the inpu1. K~ readi11g for more:
From Or~gQn: Your response
about the cross-dressing lltOmeY was
surprising. Why didp't 'you tell her to
dump t!Je aeep and his pldded bra?
She said he has no liomosexual char. acteristics. Well, what do you think
cross-ilressjng is? I walked in on a
former bOyfriend and wu shocked to
see him wearin~ my silk neJiip and
a great big smile oil his face. This is
a guy who was very macho and into
weight lifting and deer hunting. We
never married, which was lucky for
me.
·
Portland, .Me.: Bravo, Ann, for
your wise responSe lo "Somewhere
in Pennsylv.ani~." There .i ~ no way
her fiiiiCe wlllpve up ~ing.
If he says he will. he'll do it behind
her baclc.Jt was decent of him to lev-

Ann
Landers

1

-=..........

...11

had to give up cross-dressing to save
my marriage •.It was very painful at
first, but I did it.
l still think about cross-ilressing,
and even writing about it causes me
pain, but I owe my kids a decent
upbringing, and my sexual fulfillmerit
is less important than they are. I hope
Tom resolves this dilemma before he
marries. -- Middle America
Dear Middle America: Thanks for

1

el with her befare they IJUirried. holn'·wu 110 piece of qlte, either. · luininJel¥1icucetlwblllllldeme
Many men in his posiliO!IIIIilllbn· My ps)'ChWtilt s.;jl I hlid a problem mlll:b 111111' toleraat Many of dae
· men have become dear friends. Bvery
ly believe marriage will "cure" ihem. because I·couldn 'tiiCileiX it.
El Monte, Calif.: 'J'hank's fonour . mile hai a. "failina" - be it pm·
It won't
Somewhere in Arizona: I offer a response on crOu-dressina. I'm a bllnJ, druai, drinking, womaaiziJII,
. lifetime of experie~ 10 "Some- psycholopt' and a iransveslite, and etc. I'll settle for cross-dressing uy
I
w~ . " Her fear th8t her transvestite .I'm married to a wonderful, iupport· day. Jt is.totally harmless.
ive
woman.
I
takeexcepti6n,
how·
So,dearrelders,you'vejilsthelid
boyfriend is hOmosexual is groundless. I hive enjoyed cross~ng ever, to your· use of the . word from peclple who ltriow 1he story
for many years and .am completely "deviant"•I prefer "vatiant." It .is from the 'inside. I hopa it has llllde
,
normal. I've hid a successful busi- ' tess jud~~~~Cntal .. J wish our society you less judgmental. '~ did me.
would stop equating cross-jlressing
' 'A Collecti~ ?f M~ ·Favori_re
nes~ career and 1m married with four
with sexual orientation. One has Gems of the Day" as thai perfect lit·
children aitd five pudc:hildren.
de gift for that specials~ Who
Hamilton, Ontario: "Somewhere nothinJ to do with'the other.
San Dieso: For the last 11 years, is impossible to buy ~or. ~nd a self·
in Perinsrlvania'' should act out
. NOW. Her cross-dn!ssing ,boyfriend I have ~il worltlng with uansves- iddres~, long, ~sariess•saze. enve·
will never 'change; I've bCcn there. tites, &lt;lOins makeup, ' wias. , hair . lope Mel .• ~heCk or money order for
Comlngl)ome and finding a man l'n removal ancl. body wax,.inJ. s6me of · $~.2S(thastnc1~ postaje and hall·
a dress never turned my cranlt. The my clien!J · ~ . doctor-. Jawyen, dhna) to: Collection, c/o Ann .Lan:.
prospect of tellinJ die ki~ why Dad CEO. and businessmen · who are ders, P.O. jlox. 11S62, ,Chipago, Dl.
locked himself in the bedroom for extremely auc:c:eufui. It has been a 6(1611-0~2· (in Canada. $6.25) ..
'
.

Questions about ben-efit cutoff .-~
for drug addicts and,alcoholiCs :
1

8 I"II

Cosby WI. n-s 1'5th
's CH . .e Aw"a'rd
eople
~.
GARTH BROOKS

~

BILL COSBY

~.
: · LOS ANGELES (AP) - Bill
~ Cosby's return to television gave him
.,..is 15th People's Choice Award for
Tstarring in "Cosby," which also
·: picked up an award for favorite new
': television comedy series.
"
Cosby tied with Michael]. Fox i&gt;f
; "Spin City" Sunday for favorite
.~ male in a new television series.
: Other repeat winners in th~ 2lrd
•annual event iacluded Oprah Win·
~.frey, Tim Allen, Brooke Shields,
!Reba McEntire, Garth Brooks, Mel

NBC garnered most of the awards
in· the television catesories. The TV
daytime show, "Days of Our Lives"
was honored as favorite dramatic
series, a new category this year.
. Jean Stapletdn and James Woods
joined Carl Reiner in honoring his
son, Rob Reiner for his 30 years of
achievements as an actor, director,
writer and producer. Reiner recently
directed "The Ghosts of Mississippi"
and early in his career gained notoriety as Archie Bunker's sop-in-law on

t

·The films "Independence Day"

. ~.

om mun"tI y .cale ndar.

~

·

' · The Com111ilnity Calendar Is
: publishetfas a free serl'ke to.non·
~profllgroups wishing to •n.nounce
.mee~ll and special ·events. ·The
!wendarlsnotdeslgned!Opromote
~sales or fund raisen or any type.
;Itemsareprlnteduspacepermlts
. ~and cannot be paranleed to run •
'lepec:lflc number cl days.
·
'
.
:MONDAY
: MIDDLEPORT
Disabled
:American Vcteraos and Au~iliary, 7
. ~ .m .. Monday at the hall. Refn:sh·
~ents at 6:30p.m.
•
~ POMEROY -- Meigs County
rR,ight to Life, Meigs County Library,
17:30 p.m.

rity office must have had the.ir appeal
~uest in writing before the 60-day
appeal period expired. The 60-day
period began when they received the
te1111ination notice, .which is assumed
to be five days after the date it was
mailed.
·
·
Additionally, SSi ·beneficiaries
must have filed their appeal within 10
days after receiving the termination
notjce to continue 10 receive SSI after
January I, 1997, if Social Security
~not make a decision by'January
I, 1997.
Can benefits be continue(! dufing
the appeal process? SSI recipients .
may choose to continue to' receive
payments during the appeal process
if they appealed within I0 days after
receiving the tennination notice. If
Social Security does nOI make a decision by January I, 1997, benefits will
continue.until adecision is made.
Social Security disability insurance beneficiaries who appeal will
receive their benefits through December 1996 but not after January I,
1997, even if SSA has not made a
dec:i~ion on their1 a~k.• ,,
Wll~n will . cash benefits end?
When · ~ill Medicare and Medicaid
.

·
OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) .:._ Scienlists who've been looking for love

in afl the wrong places now have a
new site to try their hick.
lt'scalledtheScienceConnection
- a·maich-makingserviccfor .thosc:
who feel more comfortable in the lab
than out on the town.
.
Canadian wildlife biologist Anne
l:ambCn says she got the idea after
noticing colleagues needed some

Grange pans
,.
to
•
·
·
.M
'
.· COOt lnUe prOJ9'-'l

.
· POMEROY ·· Meigs Local Board
of Education. organiza,tionall!leeting
Monday, 7 p.m. at the central office
in Pomeroy. Regular meeting to fol·
low.
.
·

·

coverage end?
- 1
c1anes who .WR in treatmeni to
Unless Soc:iai'Security finds that . ensure thai they-cPI!IJ!Iied with their
the person is di, ablc:d ;beca~se of an treatment plans.11iese agencie!iendimpainnent other than drug addiction . c:d operations on Dec:em.ber 31 , 1996.
or alcoholism, cll!lh benefits will end Persons who ··receive benefits after
January I, 1997. The last check was December at, 1996, for a disability .
for the month of Dec:emlicr. Howev- other ·than druJ addiction or alcOer, if the Jierson appealed·on or before holism are encourapd to remain in
July 29, 1996, and we have not made treatmellt thou1h they are no longer
a decision. by December 3'1, 1996, required to receive treatment as a
then bepefits will be paid for the ·condition of receiving benefitS.
month .of January.
Persons who apply for disability
Medi~ will end when Social henefits.onorafterJuly 111997, who
Security disability insurance benefits are found to be disallled, w~'have a
end.
· ·
drug addiction or alcoholism condi·
If the person is n:eciving Medic-· tion and w~are not capable of manaid based on SSI. 'Medicaid should aginS their own benefits will lie
continue as 101ig as tbli beneficiary is rQferred to th.e substance .libuse
receiving SSI payments. After SSI agency in their stale. That aaenc:Y will
stops, the state ·Medicaid ·agency be responsible for detcrininin1 their
should decide if the peison qualifies elisibility for treatment. ·
for Medicaid under another provision
What happens to tliose 'beneficia·
o( the sta~ Medicaid plan: Persons ries who hlven't appealed? Their benwho are no longer receiving SSI efits will automatically term.inate Qll
should contact the Medicaid IJCncy . Jania~ 1,1997. If they' believe they
in the slate where they reside for arc d1~abled for reasons other than
information about Medicaid cligibil- drug addiction or alcohOlism, they
ity.·
shquld contact SSA right awa~. It ·
-.,~hat-will hllppenitQ peilc:ih- oilho ma)"'benec""arftoflle 'Uibw'appli·.··
an:. iri treitment? Up until December cation for. disability. New applica- ·
31, 1996, ~eferral and Monitoring tiOI)s.for disability may be filed at any
1
Agencies (RMAs) moflilored beneli- time.
·
'

A project of remembering those
less fonunate with fond basliets will
be continued in 1997, it was decided
at a meeting o( the Hemlock Grange
2049 at last week's meeting.
Rosalie Story, master, welcomed ·
TUESDAY
those attending which included new
EAST MEIGS .. Eastern Local . memben from Rack ,Springs Grange
Board of Education organizational which recently combined with Hemmeeting Tuesday, 6 p.m. at the high . lock, and other visitors.
school. Regular meeting will follow
· The opening included the pledge
at 6:30p.m.
to the nag, group singing of "The
· Beautiful lesson we team in the
POMEROY .. Regular luncheon . Grange, and' the National Anthem.
. meeting of-the Meigs County Cham- Reported ill were' Louise Radford,
ber of Commerce Tuesday. noon at Bernice Hawk, and Ziba Midkiff. The
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy. Guest birthdays of Edna Clark, Sylvia Midspeaker vi ill be Connie Freeman, · kiff and Maxine Dyer wen: noted:
director of procurement at the
11 was reported that·a legislative
l
·
'
Lawrence County Economic Devel- conference will be held in March.
t POMER,OY .. Big Bend Farm opmcnl Gorporation's Outreach Cen- ·The literary program on "Winter" was
ll\~lllq1uc Club regular meeting Mon- ter.
presented by Linda· Shocppner and
p.m. at the Meigs High
included n:adings by Jape Frymyer,
:£cl1oollibrary.
POMEROY
Meigs County "Snow Show", Opal Dyer, "Woods in
Board of Elections, Tuesday, 9 a.m. Winter", Murial Bradford, "Winter
RACINE .. A college financial aid regular meeting.
Blues" .1114 Patty J?.yer iiJid Rolllllie
Story,
"Knqck·Knack.": .
;, :
~~\~~:Y; 7 p.m. at t)le Southern High
J
cafeteria to ,help parents of THUI,lSDAY
Memorable happening in their
POMEROY .. Prayer and plan- lives during 1996 were shared by the
school seniors complete FAFSA ·
10secure finandat' aid for col- 11ing meeting for Feb. II conccn of members and a game wa.• played.
for more information, call "Harvestk", Thursday, fO a.m at the The February meeting· will include a
Pomeroy Public Library meeting oyster supper.
Sayre at 949-2&lt;! H. .
· room. For more information call the
~CINE:· Rac:jne BQ&amp;rd of Pub- Rev. Peter Tremblay, 9920-4152.

Atrain~~r~n'ty:·', ~·m.i~ •

•

Scl"entl"sts hav·e' new S.l"te to try t.hel"r luck for _lov·e ··~·'I

Actress Roma Downey and actor
Don Johnson hosted the eveni

!and "The Nutty Professor" also
,:oeceived.awards. ,
~c

•

By Ed ~a, Nnaaltl' . . .
Soda! Security Oftlce, Albe111
On March 29, 1996, President
Ciinton signed Public Law 104-121,
which prohibits pay ina Social Security disability insurance and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits afterJanuary I, 1997 to persons
whose disability is based on drug
addiction or alcoholism.
During June, .the Social Security
Administration (SSA) notified
appro~imately.207,000beneficiaries
that their disability benefits ·and
heal.th care would . end January 1,
199.7, unless they are found to be dis·
abledonsomebasisotherthanalcoholism or·dmg addiction.
·
Following are answers to some of
the questions raised by the new law.
Q: What should bener~eiaries have
done after .they received their terniination notice?
·
·
A: Benefit termination notices
· were mailed to beneficiaries and
their represeiuative payees in June
· 1996. People WhO think their benefits
should not be stopped should have
. call~ SSA's 800 nli~r (1-tloo772-1213) or visited thiiir local Social
Security office right away and filed
a request to appeal. Tile Social Secu·

lOibson,shows,
SandraBullockandthetelethe television
show' "AIIintheFam~vision
"ER" and "Seinfeld." ~ ily:··
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MESSAGE to'tQUR SPECIAL VALEN'l'IN:i
Remember that.spedal10111eooe this
Valentine's Day with." Qmaageln

The DaUy S~ntinel

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Anyode wllo,woald apprec!aie 1 ~o.piruJ word .r .. yeal AU Vllellllae
H,ear-Js ·" ''"' Jl!lbllsbed In the F~ 14th . . . It a Colt or OPly "-001
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MUST
BE. PREPAID!
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A repon on ChriS!mas ·giving io
,l he'Gond Works JII'C1~ at Athens
was presented when Syn~euse Asbury
•.• ~ AJIIOEJ ES (AP).- Amon: · lion. "Turbulence," a 9ritically . J.Jnited Methodist 1 Women at the
1
Ia a m~lll!l featured in panned aircraft-in-peril , film, was church last week. ·
·
took the lint-place- No, 8 with $4.4 million. ·
·
li was noted .lhat seven shoe boK· ·
l'fom··J(Ihri TtavOJt.i' s eanhy . · The top, 10 fjims and the.ir esti·, es of gifts had been sent for the proin ~·MiCiuiel" at the weekend m~ed grosses fot Fri{lay ,,througll gram which ·mists· the underpriviofftce, · · , · ' ·
.
SunCiay (final' fisures w~ .!l~t . Ieaed: .
.. ' • ~ '
.
. ··~ ~Wic," utory\ ofa partial: Mon~y):
,
. .· '
~- Mary· Lisle jkesided at the •meet- .
human cri"- that munc:lies people'
I. "The Relic," $jl..4 mllljon, ,
ang opened with !I readin1. "Oiving
S~.4 million in ticK2. "Evita," $8.6 millio~:Jbanlts in thf ~w Year:" J~ SIOIU
'in its debut, act:oldi.ng to
3. "M~l.' ' $8.5 Dlillion.
gave devotklna. 11 WM· ~ that
NDJI '1'1 on Sunday.
4. ''Jerry.Mquile,': ~7:11 mi,llion. 23 e~ls on~ sick and confifted hid
•
Michael!' fell to thitdpl8Ce with- • . '· "ScrAm," ~7.6 malhon.
been made 111, Det;emller.
llllilHon llelli!ld "Bvka," .in i., ·' 4. , "J~ Chan's flnl Strille,"
. The binhdays of Jean S10ut lind
J11N11t in wide aalc• The musi- $6., million.
. linda Femll were IIOied.
· .
le
The
'
l .taa~J!I M kn" w Bn.Peroll
7. '~The Peql vs. -·~ r1ynt,
propm, "11,11np we~
ml)lioft on 704 smena. $5.6 !llillion. '
•
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(rom MIIIMr' w• _iiven by · LiJle
"The R.elic:'" 'two o1her
8. "Turbulence,"$4.4millioil.
~ithreadinpbyStout,Fen_.l.lfclea
M ulld fn tHo i6p 10 lill.
19: ''One Fi!)O i)q/' $3.61DIIIion. 'IHI'ord, Freda Welda, E!lma Louks,
Slrike," the . . 10. "Beavis 1!111 Bud~ Do Bcullh Wll'd, R01e Ann JenlDaJ,
~~!~?!~
l'clllniil ~ AtMrlca," ~3: millioai:,_
.. ~:g·~ llld Nlrie ~t . ·

P8$ses 'Michael' at box office

wlltl$6.00to: .' .

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Skin • Cut • Wrap

· Umestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sind

949·2734

985 4422

Cheater, Ohio
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1CII2!rtWI!fn

,=I

:::tw:::=o~::m.ooJan. 2l

Rdute 338. Hope to see you there! · influenc:ed .their operalionmore than
·
·
110y other Ex. tension progiam. RegisAn: you looking to improve · tration cost is $3S and' includes
yot.g" longle(m farm's profit?
lunches. Space is limited. If you ~
Begin the new year with learning interested give me a call aa992-6696.
liow the manitgement functions of
Plan~in1. Organizina. Staffing, Upecll!liq Coafere-:
Directing.and Co~trolling can assist
. .. January 20-22 Central Envi· you iri maldng your farm business a ronmental Nursery Tnide Sl\ow is
succes~.
·
being ·held at the Columbus Con ven'Ole Ohio State University Exten- i tion Center, Columbus Ohio. Land·
· sioo is offering a new management st;apers, .nursery operators, garden
class called- "AgExcel". The class center owners this is the educ:ation81
has been designed spec:ilically for . and green gOOds supply show for
local owner-operators of fann busi· you. For more information call Ohio
nesses.
Nursery ·and Landscape Association
This class will require you to · at 1-800-825-S062. , .
· mike a two-day commitment of time
.. Ohio Power Show will be held
(Feb. II and 18) for itr-class instruc· January 24-26 at the Ohi~ Expo Cention and ~~ized discus~i?il with ter (fairJrounds) in Columbus Ohio.
fellow pan1c1pants. In ~Ilion, you This is the place to see agricultural '
need IQ be ~~ to set UltJt: several equipment, construction equipment
. hours tor t~J.tial prepara~l&lt;~n and and outdoor power equipment for the
~work -~~.nments. Thts IS not a home, . farm and .business. ,. Pick ·up
SU~.JC&lt;:I matter ~ourse as much.as free admission ticlcets from your
beg1nnmg S!f!P to 1mproye yQur fann local power equipment dealer. .·
management.
_,
Harold Kneen 11 file Agrieul·
OIIU SO M~agement Excel ci8$S- tunl Agent, The .Ohio State Unl·
~ ~aye been gwen by OSU Exte~- venity Extensloa· M~lp Caunty.
ston an Ohio With over 700 partiCI·
,
•.-

Stewart leaving

~BC

show

r ~ification Classes Will be
NEW YORK (AP) . - Martha said. ''For economic reasons and
,held on [an. 14 and 30. For those Stewart is getting ready to set• up strategic reasons, it's a very much
;,f~ w~ al~y have ~heir pes, · house on a new network. '
•
more favorable .move and situation ;
.,11c1dt; a~)~tator s c~. ·~etp Coun- . ·The hornemaltin8 guru said Sun- for me."
rtY. ~SIJCide Recertl(iCallon t;:luses ,day that lllc is leaving NBC's top-t"atMs. Stewart also produces spe· .
. ~jll be~ld on Jan, 30.at~~ ·~- ,. • eel '!Today" ;dlow for ·CBs' ·ra1ings- · cials, such a•lilt morill\'s' "Home for ·
.s1on offi~e . .Tw.o separate limes w~ll challenged sflow "This Morning•.''
th~ H&lt;i!idays"prograni for CBS. ,
.111e off,~•.from 1-4 p.m. and agam
Ms.- Stowart, . who contributed ·
at 6:.»- 9:30 p.m .. Please call 992- cookink. and· household hint.
.BLOOMFIELD, Conn.' (AP) ~96 to reserve a space.
- ments twice a month to "Today," will dlympic figure skating champion
· The Letart Falls area growen - he on·CBS once a week starting Fetl Oksana Baiul wu hospitalized with
have requestdd a specific greenhouse II. ·
· aconcussion * r an early-morning
and vegetable recertification clw on · "I do have bean pang's about·it car crash.
!Tuesday, Jan. 14 starting at 6:30p.m. because I've made friends there "~ ·
Ms. Baiul, 19, of Simsbury, suffered a cut to her scalp and received
12 stitchc:s at St Francis Hospital and
Medical Center, said _a hospital
· ·
·
'·· spokesman.' '
·
,By Mfl, Lyle 8akl4non ·
Canton; Gladys and Bill Meredith of
Another perSon in the car, Anirat
Mr., 11114 Mrs. Ralph Wigal were 'everly and granddaughter, Teresa Zak · 30 0 f N v. k c·
1
!recent visjtori in LonJlllont, Colo. Meredith, a student at Antloi:k 1...o1~
anan, · · '
ew ,or lty, was
with Mr. and Mrs. Rusty Wiaal and le"'"• Dr. .An and Mary Ruth tr~ated for a broken finger and .
""'
rel~ased from the hospital.
sons.
·
DeLamerens of Gallipoli$; John and
p0 r
ded 10
f
· Mr. and Mn.Jaclf Westfall spent · Joy Stewan of Middleport; Grace and: .
ICC respon
a report 0
he hoJ;.t'.y with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mark W
. cber, David and Debbi • , screeching tires at 2 a.m. Sunday imd
~
found that the car Ms. Baiul was in ·
Welcl! of Belpre.
•
. Weber, Moraan and Erin, and Lillian~ had gone off me road .. Police were
· M;, aJ)d MIJ,·:L}'le.Jiilderson and ~ns of~ville, and the White··· investigating the crUh and woul!l not
rs. Lillian Pic:kei)s visited with Mr. heads granddaughter, Sarah. Fryd- · say who --:as driving.
d Mrs.: Jay Long and Counney at ~· a studenl.at ~An lnstnute of
Ms. Baiul won a gold medal at the
itic:Cnt.Ovcr the holidays.
Pittsbull!h; Pa. A Jlf~ e~change was 1994 Winter Olympics.
Chi'Jstn\as dinner gue~ts of Mr. held dunng the evemng.
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n&lt;! Mn. Chester Mundty wen: Mr:
Mr. an~ Mrs. Ernest Whnehea_d
· PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) ....!
d ld
.. rs. Ch~es Prict·o.f Lone Bot· . .spent Cuistmas at t.he ho~e 0~ their ~~ Christopher Reeve is coming around
. ' m,'\lnd Mr. and·'~rs. Brill) Bailey -' dauJtm;r and son-~n-law, Juh a~d ~gain.
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!IUld ..ustin
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Walt Htnschandchddren of~sll- .
Th . 1 •• ~
· .. . ked IT
!'!\:-, "" ,. • , · · · ·
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h
J ne' d
e paray..... actor •lc
o
11o •. ,Mf$'·, A,da Congrove visned on
,?,~~. 0M101011 andtemh..wldere ~ d Jan
fund-raising effortS .Sund,11y for his
hris.!m~ Day )VitJ:i Mr. and Mn.· ."''"" . eyer
c 1 ren, an . ean '•}I'Csearch foundation with a concert
, 1er Chen_ey, A,ng1e and Kayle of and Satab Fry~an. Jean Frydman . starring .John Lithgow, Mandy
ppers Plams.
retu~ ~me wnh he_r ~nts for a ·:'J&gt;atinkin, Mary Chapin Carpenter
1
.,
, ·
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short VISit before returmng to· New . and Carl Simon
·
i Mr. and Mn. Frank B1se were Jersey where she is a senior allorney ·
Y
·
. n·s'tmasF dinnefrBes uests of Mn. ._with the BASF.Corporation in Mor- iuren:~::~~~:~. ~.;e:~~;
1pre.
1o.e&amp; OStel' o
·-•
L' H' · h and·Sarah Fry
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f Muine . and Ernest Whitehead ns.•own. 158 tnSI:
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after a ·song by Ms. Simon, was
. ' •• ~ , holida
' f: 'I bufti
.....,
dman spent a few day~ wuh their expected to raise $2SO 000 for the
os....,. a
y anu y
et at u .... r
randparents before Christmas
.
' · ·
Qm!::Attendins were Juli and Walt ll Mr and Mn. 'John Srhith Metis- Christo~r Reeve Foundation. The
ensc:h, Lisa and Jordan of Massiland· B..""""- dChris B ' . h' f foundat1on w11l sponsor med1cal
_n, ·- Jalle and Wade Meyer, Matt, ·. sa
,.,,_
o1rcM1o
· 1cord In
· Junes.
· ··
w
W. ., .. an. . d M and
researc h. ~n spma
le; Matthew and Kale of North ..,elton, , · ·.a. VIStte
r:
rs.
., "Th1s 1s the one and only place to
·; . ., . , · . .
'· , "'~
:'Dale ~'!lith during the holidays.
. sllirt the Chrislopher Reeve Founda~- ·: . .,
.
, , · Mts, Orilc~ We~r and Mark, Mr. •'dbn. This is my hometown,'' Reeve
fftC$1'S
and Mrs. David Weber and daughters, · said. "I would not have discovered
r ·,
visited Mr. and Mrs. qscar Weber I' ' · .
'f 1 h d
for the rnt six months of . ""-•~..
""-"'--· D
h . . hC a.• an actor I a not grown up
and vuulll on '"'" ,.,....., ay at! e1r here "
997 , .. , installed when, the Past Lon- Bottom home.
· ·
·
uncillirt Club of Chester Cowacil
g · .
Reeve, 43, grew up near PriftCiltOn
3. l)eucliten of America, 1nel at Honored
youth wcirk
a!¥1 work~ at the McCaner Theatre:
h8ll tecelitly
·
ll!i ~ ~tagelland and performer. Best
1. In"'led by O.,lores Wolfe, 01!1·
Ethel Han, Burlingham, has been knb~n for histitle role'iii'the "Superjoins·prelidtnf, wen: Mary Jo Bar- honored for &lt;!Utstandingleadership of man mov1~s, Reeve was paralyzed
n,'nger, -~.'1 ~ Goldie Frederick.·
)'OIUII people durinJ 1996 as direc· from the neck down. when )1e .was
... ~
tor of the IQCal Modem Woodmen of thrown from a hone m May J99S
11ice preside!lt, Opal Hollon, treuur· America Junior Service Club.
··
·
ci-· Llluta Mat Niee secrelllfY· Ertni
J.
· NEW YORK (A,P) George
~l..d. nowef c~iuee
Ethel
nan led the group to merit status. Clfl!liiCY may p.lay a kid·lovinJ docOtt sentinet l •· . . • ·
·
ll!honorgivenbyModemWoodmen tor, op "ER," but in real life he's
i· ppen
meeting Wolfe 'read' to recognize leaders of youth clubs steering clear 'offatllerhond. ' ..
tJic 6~ PWm aJid led in the Lord'• . for top-level perf~.
"ltdoe$n't seem lllce • smart thing
J&gt;rtyet~ 'lJeclae to the flaa; fQr roll,
Selection is based on quality, and for me to~· and I'm pretty lldam~t
c~l t)ltmbc!' ~ad inspirational vers- quantity of meetinp, proJII'IIIIS, and about ~a.t,. says Cl~y, 3S, who s
e• from Cirda liVC!' to them by community service activities held . bee~ dividing ~IS ~t.me bet~n ~~
\tblfe. tejlo.u
civen by Inzy dtiriaa 1he ye..
. setS of the commg Batman mov1e
~ell, ~retary, and Qpal Hollon,
The youth clubs are orpnizations an~Jiis hit w _show " ER. '.' .
treuurer. i
.
·
for children who are members of - &lt;''lbc most nnportant thina 10 my
161 were won by Goldie Modern Woodmen and are l6 years life.i~~y work," he says in the Jan~ and Dolorea Wolfe.
of aae or )'OUIII'ef. The teadea aae 1180' tv i.ssue of People maauine. "I
Es - .. Smith bel ' Ruth Smith ,Modern Woodmen adult members. don 'I have anythin1 in me that says,
wete , ases llllid ICrved refresh- . The c.lubs follow a fnitenial youth 'Rush out and have kids.' It's the ultilo tbolf tiiiMd and Marpre~ pr&lt;llnlll whicll provides children mate reJpOnsibility." .
~· op.J Elc:hinger, M!lfY K.
~,::~~~~~
But Midlelle Pf!lifl'er, Clooney's
Hollbr, Marcia KA!iter, and 11telma activit~.''"'
. ,.,,..,,.,.. co-star in "One Fine Day," predicll
White.
'
he will eventually become a did. ·

"No Job Too t:lllfl• or Too Small" . · ·
We will work within your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
.
FAX 773-5811
108 Pomeroy Street
Maeon, WV

Wbtbws

A.llftlt

Public Notice

UDIOCOITIOL ·

c--Tnclas

,... i

IJertrlc)

Dp''

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SIPII SlllcqMI
...tic ••••,• .

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BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows .
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDEtfTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

HOBBYLAND

Ill All:.

U1 PI Tftglr
_ 1171CIIIvYIIIpVM~,, gine.
Ford 311 Wlncllar ...

Fllflller lnfonNitton
obtained lly calllnJJ
~

•n•
Loat a.. o.-.ge

• : : ) 114N1110.

.

Bolrcl of Education
,.,......,
..,.,,."' tile rlghtlo waive
.lnformalhlee to ilocept or

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·(No Sunday Calls)

1at lsall llllf 11¥

I·IM-776-0527

10 Ill TO I . .fAilY
IIIIIAYS 1 . . TO . . .

S:::.,allllldl.
'
Loal 8011'11 of

n)ect

.. .

EdUcation

llr. Dennie E. Hill, TNalftf
Box 178

Racine, Ohio 4S771

(1)1,13,20,27-410

614-992-7643

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DAVIS
•Rem!)dellng ·

HAULING

•Dtckl
•VInyl Siding
•I neurad
F'"~

, Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

992-6711

614-992-3470

S1nttt He11t
Ctnlfructlen

. BINGO

•Niw Conltnlctlon'

AMERICAN LEGION .
P05T602
EVERY SUNDAY .
Doora Open 4:30
.Game Starta 11:45

Undor new managament.
PullllcW..coma

1f1-11110.

SAVE

SMITH'S
CONSTIUCTION

50"·75%

, CURMtlulclngln ian•
•Newllomes

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET .

•Addhlona
•NewGI,._

.-' •Aamodellng

Jult off Bredllury Rd. '
(look for eigne) '

•Sidlntl '
•Aooftntl .

•Palnll"'l

llkldleport, OH

~

614-192-53711

•

Day &amp; Evening Hra.

~

FREE ESniiATES

(1114)192-1535
14) '192-2753

KIT 'N''.CARL VLE ® by Larry Wrighl

;

Pay out Ia ICCordlntl Ill ;
number of player~.

. 614-742-3411

'1tlets me know if a suitor
interested when I'm not around." ·

'

. RAONr, OHIO ,

R!lf1IOC]ellng
Kitchin CabiMta
VInyl Siding • ~oofa
Dtcka • Garagn
FI'H&amp;tbMtft

.

GRUESEI'S ·
GAUGE

11/1rW 1 mo.

,. &amp; REMODEUNG
l!lw Homea,
Additions, Rooting,
Palnll'ng, Bllma,

Body work, car, truck
&amp; truck pelnllng,

Ger~gea,

minor mechlnlcll
repelr• .
Tuft8"Upa, Ofi.Chlnge,
. Wilt, Burnng
Long St, Rulllnd, Ot!.
742-2935, Alk for Kip

Concrete

Free E1tlmataa
25 yaara exportanee
I"• fas lr "' if it ..,.,. .,.
ONIR home or lnuineN.

Aok 101'
192-31117

711- .

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONSTRUCDOI
•NewHo"'••
•Garages

•Complete

. Remodeling
Stop a. Compare

InStalled

.

~

FREE

"&amp;

ESTIMATEES

fOr

4473

•

·na
Pick up dlecarded
appll-a,lleiiMM,
many IIIIUie &amp;

. . motor lllocka.
. 114-112-40111aril-l

!he'

IUTLAND.II

SUPPLY CO.

..-m

·

WICKS ·

•Rooting

New Conatructlon &amp; _

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Ree .SVI e. p·ers..on a. s

:!"ial

(llmeSIOMLowRIIel)

CONTRAOING

BEATTIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

!Jeg.

~

Stepe • Stai1'8, Railings, Pallo Furniture, Fireplace

hems, Planter Hanger~, Trelllles &amp; Iota ol other .wtlll

Top, Trim,
• Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

. 8111·2772
I;DO a.m.-3:30 p.m.

I lit Wllllawl
:~Assistance ·a.vailable for pesticide certification . • ...
••u .
.
-s
...
DMn&amp;
.
li· By. Pllllln.•nt~
HA~ I,&lt;NEEN .
.. .
. at the Farmers' Comer IDeated at the paniS since,1991. Many participants
to appll re~t(icled pesli· corner of Buc:lttown Road and state ' have commented that the c~ has
ctdes ·this year? I '(e JUS! returned
from 16 hours of trainins in pesticide
law and label chaniJes, the latest pes~ci.des on ~market llid 11m! tO min1m1ze peshctde Use through mtegrat·
ed pest m11nagemcnt techniques.
. The ~~ o~ p!)io COIItt;ols resbi~ed pesll(;lde application I! the P9int
ofpurc:hase. You mustbave a private
pesticide applicator's certification
D card to pun:~ pes~cides that may
1rbe ,harmful . to the · envitoluncnt ir
.1iniproperly applied. · A card ·. is
.i obtain¢ by passing a leries of writ·
1' ten tes~ administered by the Ohio
v Pepartment of Agriculture and pay~ ing a $30 {ec.' Ex!ension plays an
n important role in qaisting you with
.,.educational clisses,,written material
• arid ~vidilll a lime One! place for the
lest.
,. ~
~ · Fanners ilid greenhouse.opera~
0 have the· llpportuni!Y to !alto the ini• tial td'si for certification 011 Ian. 2&amp; at
-. 6 p.m. at the Me.igs County axii:n~tin .,office. locate!l on 'Mulbeny'Heights,
~J'O!Utro~, (li.xt to Veterans Memori·
~ al H.ospltal), ~tudy materials can be
1•obtajned at.cost from our office. .
, If you want some help in prepar·
ing for the t~ I will ,be holding a

• .Aiumlnum/StalnieH • Tool Dressing • Ornamental

20 Yean E:~rperierace •.

a71RVAN PLACE
IIIDOLEPORT

·

Auii10IIzed AGA Disll1bulor
• Welding Suppllee • I~ Gases • Maclllne Shop
Servlcee • Steel Salee &amp; Fabrk:allon • Repair W.ldlng

.JONES~ TREE SERVICE

INSULITIOII

menls

• .•~ ~~
,:
• r.

..

SERVICE

J&amp;L

I!

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DUMP TRUCK

1212198 t mo.

To

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_1!""'.

1

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MAPLEWOOD
·.lAKE

and

-um.lltd

Wfi.UI6~'
nUi~
.v!
-

••

• Babysltters
• Ftlends
.
.

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• Sweethearts • Moms &amp; Dad!I·· ,Grandparents •1\!achen

Christmas giving
reported by UMW

·

'
.1\ssistance in the area of mating you the sun, moon . and stan and
behavior - of the human variety.
deliver!" ·
Sofar,herpublicationhasl'\lfiJl'?f· .
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'
.
sonal ads from about 1,300 North .. LITCHFIELD, Conn•. (AP)American scientists.
Call it blind luck. ·
.
!· One.woman's ad dcscrih9s herself
Bob ·lvcs had the winning guess
,as a . "stun~insly B011COUS raven· on the number of peanuts ·ill a bil
hairod cdui:atol'." Another says'"Date .glw jar. Ivcs' said 603 nuts - and
an astroriO~DCr! Who else can promise )"&amp;.~just one-shy.
•I •

TRUCKING

AT

t

N'm.U~!faa&amp;

RUTLAND, OHIO
114-742 2111

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PEA DAY:

Briar Proof
Hunting Clothla

c.ts
..
YIItl

lilt Ceks
lltill SJ..-

· .ll•d·
--~
...a.... .
-~

005

~·
Tilou Cotlod '

• Join Tho ThouUIICit

Pa&amp;lion, FUn. Marrlaoe. ·ae1 j. .
........ Coli - · 24 Hrt. 1-1001... 7711 E11. 211MI2.H /Min
Mu11 a. 18 + S.rv·U Ill·..~

-·

.

orve..,
~~·
~

lllack PuPil¥, 3 lhnllto 0111.'
...,.,. "- )1111 ...... 11!111 - -

111.11141-87· 7153

. .

•

Ftmoloa- 11 I . -·

.... ""* .....

FrM l.o L0¥1no Home; FriOfltliy I
llaell a ._n Slior1 L - Mill "
Oot. 11~11. .
. ~

�Panu o,. 'S dGJp ort. 01*»

T(MIJIIMy, Janu8ry 13, 1117

TMD 'y81t d iii•P8gel

ALLEYOOP
PHILLIP
ALDER

l!!:.·.:..

MilD iT

,

:::..
...
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· ·------=~
14 .....

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IOR 1 1 -

11•

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7 "" .......

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1

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?'

2 ....

,._.,

aC...4Llllll'e

ltwc•

I

I ,Ro:uaNI(ol

.....

7 8rlt. _,.

£':'u
-Q:auM

I IE&amp;IIU181111d
I lourtnoll
tOPe l&amp;ii
12 tMrly clllh
11 .........
11 Aulhor

tA?tQJI
•A at

FtSO SW8, llcyl, ...... Ta·

· t887 Fprd Rouioe&lt;.4 Cyllndtt. s
Spood, Good Co~IIOn. $2.300, ·

.11Aa

~··
·r ml't

"' • 5

••ot.

hoe, runs ornt, looka great,
t 1,800. 2323 lit Vernon.• 304·
075-1&amp;18. .

t7...,•W•....

~~--•

• AI t

Pomeroy,
Middleport _
&amp; VIcinity

·
. .. .- - -

~

10 t I

.....

- .. u.ooo.-.-to.

ta"
X 77 '7

·:IDC to?n

•QU
• EM*
.JIIt72
• XI I
"'?tt 'S •
"' Q .7 I
• 10. 2
•• 7
• 'K I 2
• J 10 7 I

1113 Dadge Ram t 50,

.........
••a.-•

11111111 .

Vulnerable: Eut-Weoot
Deller: South .

1·1:1.

-

'
~. BARNEY

01+4*2075.

; '

21=.....
...........
··=·
_...

1 •

lt?n ....

Wt MISSED YOU
IN CHURCH
YE!STIDOY,
LOWEEZY
!!

Fonf lllngtr ·~~~&lt;"~P. &amp;7,000
00. 5tpd. VI, 00001 In;
, •••. $3,100

2 1 =....
22 Talln 't, •·•
lillie,_ be'

HOW WAS

TH'PARSON'S
SIRMON

a~~o~.n

Opening lead: • J

MQualz

.??

Make your own luck

·='

·=-.e.;z

11J PIIIUip Alder

• Footy--

Ill "Riebard n: ~ Bard wrote, • ...
filii at teen am I. clrlaklnl!lll8'1el8. ID--+-+wlollat you lllliwlt up on blgh." UW. •r+-+-1-++dld b.e anlidplte bow this would lllin
Up a bridle deal eo ICCUn1ei.J..
ln--+--+-+-+::'!:'=~
Bow did tlie pll)' 10 ID three DO·
48Fib·
1nUDp after Will led the . . . . jldl?
Nortb'a tJtree.club rebid II eelled
lllm'cfwok He wu cJieo , ..
for
e H Foeert Ill Wbea South eoulcllt't al·
fer three-eenl hurt 111pport, Nortb
CELEBRITY CIPHER
ewua-uct to aree ao-triuDp.
., ~ c.mpaa
.
.
Solllllltarted with - - tap lrleb:
ClllldJQNro£1:
=•
.J:-•
•llr .... ...,...,.._..,._
one IJIIIde, one heart, r.ur diulolidl
and one d11b. ObvlouaiJ, • Ofth die·
mond trick wae likely. Alld for the
YA
L T .S V ·e 0 D Z
L Y H H .D Z •
'YUD
ninth trick. there were chlneea In
eeclt oftkother IIUita.
YA GEC . V~J'H LTJV, TN
R I~ II
nnt, ~· cded for .dounoio.J'a
lpade queen, but Eut pnlduced "the
Y R T.
LYHHDZ.'- LCWYLLYY
V EJ ' H
lliDI· SOuth ductal this triCk IDII the
nest.- . wiDnllll the third IJIIde.
Now Cllllle a law heart towud the
PREViOUS SOLUTION: , kMw thlt will1 a moulllliltot mine, ljuoolladda be a
4ummy, biat Weat w1a ready. He
10trl8thi • ."- - Shlland.
~ the lmtg.
.
Note that If Weal~ • Sow heart,
dedlrer .wiD a-... ••1111117'1 eight If
Eut ducb this 1o ldll the Foeert IUit, it
_
Ia dec:l8rer'a Dintb tiick.lt.Dd If Eat .
...... ltr ClAY I. POUAII _.;,__ _lAIII
__
wiota with 1be queen, South can lab
the c7ub switch with hie 1ee, pley ~ ..
ol the
heart to duonmy'a Dille, anclllulnrtth
1041&lt; ICIOmbled wordl b.
.10 tridoa.
.
low to lonn four limpfe -.Is.
'After Weal bid pl1y8d tbe heart .
ldng, So11th had DO wiDDiDI ripolle.
RODOSI
He WIRI with tlwtmt(a -IDII CGDtiDued with the heart jlck. but Etoet with the q.- (be lmn !Iouth diolll't
.·
bave three bearta from the bldclingl
and awltcbed 1o the dub jeck. Here,
Sou1b coulcllo't do better than will wllb
the aeeiDII cub hll...........,.llar one
dawn.

~
m,._.

,,lledl

I

-,, .._ --.T--10'-H

FARM SUPP\IfS
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Non-Working Washers. Dryers,
~loves , Refrigerator s, Fre;ez ers,

610 Farm Equlpnient

A ir Condil loners, Color T.V.'s,
VCA'a, Al so Junk Cars, 6-14·256·

Hydraulic 011 $1 2.50·5011 pall.

1238.

Siders Equipment, Henderson,
wv 30«75- 7021 .

630

Livestock

-·Old,

1805 Fo.rd RetiOar, With.To4•4 V-1, "Rellullt ~10 TtMoml•
lion And Top 112 Of Motor, New
Paino Job $UOO Fl&lt;m, ., .....

...

; THE BORN LOSER
-··~

.

.

U~\Et.l TO ll\l:), elilffi.):) ...

...--....

TRA NSPORTATION

Wanltd To Buy : Antiques-

~

-Of

337 PWR£ WT" DfVqz&lt;ED
lt.ITI\I~~~y

....
':~::' SCC~4\lA-lt£2fs•

N 19961

Regisrered Angus Heifer 1
814-3ell-8700.
Selling out· 32 held ol c11111.
muced breed; 60 round biles ol
hay: 814·7o42-20811.

~

1182 Ford llili·O 414 Backhoe
3000 Houra Cl•l!ln. Uftder W..r·

.loa,...... .......

ranor. U7,ooa Firm, Ran E•na
.leclllor!. t-800-537'

Enllfpri110,

81121, 114-211-111311.

I

nlture, 61.t-446· 76 1 ~.
Wanted ' To· Buy : Lillie Tykes
t&lt;lt,hen Sel. wor kshop, Play house. Po &amp;ilble Any Olher little

Tyke Toys, Please Call 614·245-

5887.
Wan!td To Buy : We Buy Auto's
Any Condition. 614-388-9062. Or
814-448-PART..

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

.

Overheard a1 party: ·some
people make you feel at home
others make you • • • • you
•

JET

AERATION MOIORS
Rlplnd, No!w &amp; RllluNtln Cal Ron Evano. t 0800·531-li!l28. .

Kirby sweeper WIIUIChmtnll.
Cal81 4:11112.•1•2- 5pm.

--

1983 Nissan, iutomatic, PS, PS,
air, make goad WOfk car, 814·182·
UJ84 Crown Victoria, high millis,
conduion, ga~ge kepr,

ea~ellent

pnce reasonable, call

2012.

e14-992-

1985 Otdo 98 ~cy PW, POL.
PS. DDK ACIUII ililta. 6t4· 2455887.
Tauru1 , V-8 automatic, •
Joaded, IDoka ~nd runa

4282.

Good N -

814 . . . .,.

11200; '83 Ford ana tan,
remodel, ttOOO: IU-247·

1989 BOrelOJ GT Rod Sunrool, 2
Ooara : Engine &amp; Tranamiuion.
151( ...200 513·574·25311.

111119 Tampo GL. 4 iloO&lt;, 5 SI'Hd,
AC,. Sunrool, R'una and Otiwes

Greao 'I1.!1DO OBd 01•·3711·2045

wu T T I

0
;
I'
I I I I

NolhiniJ tll25.
.

.

'

1887 U-80 Kawiloid, ... cand.
304-511-81101.

760

•

t'M ·T\RED OF
Ai:.L TU15
KINDER6AATEN
Sfl/FF ..

tU84 CR 125 Hont!a E•cellenl
Condldon U,&amp;OO Call ~!tor 4:80
P.ll. 8t..liii7-0II:!II.
• .

Allto 'Pirtl &amp;

Acceseortn

I

.fJ

wheelo, Ovamual Kill, 014·2 ·
-

•

Nlw gn t~nkf, 1 ton"' 1ruG
whHII I radlaiOII. D I R AuJo.
Ripley, WV. 304·37:!·3$3$ or·1·

SERVIC:FS

lion. 11,800, 8t ... " 1&amp;62.

810

Home

lmprovernema
'

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·.'

•

•

BERNICE
BF;DE OSQL

Meil $2.75 to 'MitchrnaltM, c/o lhll _ .
paper, P .O. Box 1758, Murray Hill

Slalton, New Yollt, NY 10t51.
AQuARIUS (Jin. ....... 11) Tooay you
might feel more ........ than """''· ao
wr.n )'Ou arrange your oehedule, allow

yourNIII)eedom to -

' lcally 8nd eodaliV.

•• ChO¥r 2 dr . .hdan, good
llhepo, 12.400: H G&lt;lnd Pri._ 2
dr .. auoo, nice. S3.150, 2 lfroo
lhiiiiW Ci. .l . goad •hape. I 14·
--0&lt;81---~.

mtmttv. phya·

...._,..,...____ PIICII (Fib. 20 March 10) Potenllllly
IH01118bte OIJIIOIIUnlliN ehoiuld 1\01 be P!11
' 011 -the block bumer !Oday. Treat every·
tNng .. lllough " might not eldli,tomor·

..
.1H8 'ord llualal1fl G'l, brighl
••ngarine, 1700 miles, loaded,
S1D,ODO. Call OU·882· 7Gt5
·-dayl .~.. 5:00, -kandl
unil 10:00. ........... llllly. .

r r r 14 r r 'I'

UNSCRAMef.E FORI
ANSWER

I I I roij

•

_

_

•

I'• .I•

JANUARY13I

IMONDAY

801).273-03211.

1880 Ford Elco&lt;t Good Condl·

. PRINT
LETTERSNUM8EIIEO
IN SQuARES

Quarry· Lowly- P1K19y- Lawyer- WORLD
Ar1 old English teacher teught me lhat words are the
. moat powerful weapons in the WORlD.

Robulll, All Typos, O..r 10,000

yn

Complete tho cflucklo quoted
by li\l;ng in tho milling words
you dov_.lop from S1ep No. 3 below.

sc••M-UTS ANswas

Budeer Price · fo.rar,ami!IMafll,
Sllrllfll al IIIIUIO ond Up, U_, I
Tranamilliana, · CIUICMI

IG

•

··.r

Jan. 14, 18i?

" Numeroua \Heatano ...C:111 exptlitrae

l,.re lndlceied lor the year ahead. You

;lnlgllfl'lln eotabtlah llil!ve&lt;ai ralaUon~flip~ w1111 people you can bllr-'Y to~nte.
·~~PRICORN (Die. 22.Jen. It) II you
1haven1 been spending much time w~~~~·
. •·¥our family lataiy, trY to correct lhla today.
\'ou wll ,anjoy baing with them and 111ey
J wll enjoy being With you. Trying to pe1c11
·''Up a !!roken romance? The AlliU-Grlph
, .Mitcl)int&amp;ker can ~elp you unde(lt&amp;nd
J-tto do to make 1111 r•!lonahiP work.

,,

-·

CANCER (June It ..July 22} You w11 rile
IOday. but don1 -'t c:onlroniettons. ttowe.,...: Y6U IIIOUid atand
up lor youtNI7 I you .,. ptOYOMcl.
.
LEO (olulr 2Nug; 22} Getoetll?y lpeik·

_to~ ~alange

lng, conditions look favo_rebla for y0 u

today, provlcled IINit you IIUbdutl yo~r
lnipuiiNII Ill. YoU riiUII rat1lin pelilnl.
VIRGO (A1&amp;11· .l~lept . .22) S!Jm11011e
,might olfll to ..... ~ todaY. but hit
expertent;e II "mittel. Therelora, do not

...oy on IIlii per1011 too hlaW!y.

L7BRA (lisA, :a Qot, D) Tblldl lmpot·
tan1
111uee hlad on IGdey 1n111a2 o1 PfOo
AAIII !*11ft JtoAplil 111 Malllla lhll '
.
c
rullilltlng.
Dilly 1111. not \mpi11we your
nlmpotlli~ to you petiOI...., allouid 111
p:
I Noro: In IKt. I OCUd CIMII
glyal prioltly loldey. " you i!t'DP lhl 1111,

clon1llfpiCIO!IInll-loryou.
TAURUI (Aprl5 II-IIey 20} You wiN
ICCOmplilll more today wyou Htllblilh
'. 'YOUr _, peel and wollt in .., II!MtOir
rnent lrw from OUieldl ill&amp;llflol!oce. a.k
HC*o.lon In I qut.l nook. ·
=-n {lllr 21..?unl . , In your eoc111
lnvolvement!OdiY you mlgltt Ill mono,
populllr tll1n uellel wltlt yourlrlltnda.
, ~~ I llp8Cilll ~ to ....,. a1 ol your
,... eqUally,.

· ·

I

,.

• ·· • ·

i*t41i • .

,_com-

ICQFVIO (Oot. I ....... II) You wiH
NgJwt • , . , .111 . ........ r ruu don,

.... ~ ..... ~liiFIJ. PIIn

Ill ~· procMIM IIQinc?IIIICI
ldhllltol.
.

~- '"""· D hi 11) Toy ll

biNic ...., . . . Vtllir IIIUIIIIInlllllillnla
IGdey and 114M 101M fUn. AI wo11t n
no play 11 not hlallly',

....... ..
--

. ..

, "I'

•

�-

.

... . .

••

•

Ohio Lottery
-'

as

Pick 3:

coach
~

'

•

.

8-4-7
Plek4:

4-7~

Buckeyes:
2-&amp;-16-18-19

Moatly cl•ar tonight,
Iowa ....alna from I to 10
above. "ecJnetdlly, light
anow, hlgl\a In the lo-r
301•.

•

• •

'.

••..r""•

..•...•
'

••

..

,• ... .

(I
CASS, ·LS.PKG .
'

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'

~e

~o~.;.

·-·

L

.•~· .v

-----·

- ""

.,-.-.,.•liltr

H!

~...;;.'

•

'

28utlane,12 ....... 3 5 - ~
A a.nuwtt eo. rica prper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tueecley, Janwuy 14, 1887

~wliJ

'

Meigs Local Board
approves spending
plan for ·new year

lead· oard
~-~f.· Gom_ mission_ers .in· '97

,

• 'It

'

''

I

j

'

'

;

·-

'

'

:

'

I

· JIM FRI!I!MAN
..... tt.ff·

devel!]pment. However, no action pay scale and draft a policy 1118111181
was t.lq:n ifter Howard cautioned for all deparunents:" ~ iaid. ''To me,
- anet Howard wu named presi- that the money may be needed later this,, ls the only fair way for all
~~ of the MclJS County Board of for paying the salary.of an cconoin- Clllt11oyces at the counhouse."
\AIII~"~~~-n~-nissioners 'Moilday aflernoon.
ic •velopment dim:tor.
Hoffman puinted out that office,
.·~o\Yard, a Democrat, wai nomi"Tourism is important," Hoffman holders can set up their own policies
dWd for the P!Jiilion .by yieldinll said. ''The question is, who should · an&lt;! pay scales. ·
. ·
fund it. I ·don't thinlt the county
· r.we can't impose it," he said. · .
l!li$ident Fred Hoffman.
~ appoinunent reflects the new · should fund it.~
.
. Lentes said he could produce a
· ~itical compasiiion of the bolrll of.
But pjbno~ pointed'out \halwilh- wHey, but added none of !he office·
cbn)missioners after the election Of out fundit\1 assislallce, tlllirislil,:pfo-f h9,lde1' ;would be :obligated to abide
i:Jcmocrat Jeff Thornton .in last JKi11ents · hive to spend lheir",time bJ jt. E~n ifthe.officeholders a~d
1'14¥cmber's general election. 1be fund-raising, instead of focutfng on to the terms, 1n the filture, new
~ is now comprised• of · two their mission of promoting tourism. officeholders would nol he limited by
DliJrocms and one Republican. .
Last year, the county provided t1it policies or pay scales, he added. ·
•.Jioffman, tlie lone ltepublican·on $5,000 fortouriSD) and paid approx- /· "It all goes hick to the Ohio
tlttboard, was !hen e~ vice·pres- ilnately $2,50q for advertisetnents Revised Code - that.you are in
~nt.
•
promoting MCia,i County.
Chqe of your .own office," Howard
··-Tllurllla
·~y thinkin&amp; is· we should fund
~aid.
•
:'.j,{iddJepon reslcienund business- touri11111, at 'leas( for half ~ .year," '
mp'ilray aWolutlon
lliln Bob Oiirnolulked.the board to 'I'hol'htOn sai(l. ·~ are a lot of ' Hoffman presented a resolution to
cilhlinue its assistance to the tourism tl!in&amp;, develoj,inl, ~ Chesti:r Cour- 11hc boar!! supporting the proposed
~ duri~l:t997· ,.
.. . ·
· th~se. ~ ~ ·,11111phithtiat6r here in ·{ improvement and xclocation of U.S.
~ ·I think the tourill!'l baud is -very
Porn~. the gi'tenhOilsesl _ '' •:33 from ~thens-' to Darwin.
i~nt," 'laid Giltnore: · .
· ' COmmissiollen did ala:ee to meet ·J) . . . 1be improvement and relocation
'"Giltnonl.'bi;~ dlti ,~-has done., .
~t intereated in,l&lt;.:ism to. •· wou~d ~an incenti~ for business
fulld,lfill!nl dunng· tile YC/11' f01111!1l..iLa fundil1a pi~ . . · ' .. ,, '&lt;" &amp;f!d tndustry to ~~e 1n southeastern
· .. · t .:R . ployft Palic;J·
, ,' '"! Ohio and would provide an important
the $1,500 made from its
~~=;~~::!!boolh~ at lhe 1tate fair.
Thcimtoli .~lC&gt; •~~ell ~ling', lint in a loilil-needed adequate high·~
IeffThonitcin said
JOlin R. Lentes to prepue a way system from the interstate sys-.
needs to IIIJI!IDrl tourism
scale and draft a policY..; tern, the 1ea0lution said.
commlatoncn transoffices. .:;·
The board approved the resolu-the tourist11 offic~ frptn
the employcesat lion. which will presented durins a
fj$~,illOOJ1alllocalted for economic
xcview ~ · public hearing at the Ohio Univel'l;i·

AS
LOW

AS:

witli

WtaS;
. .

By JIM FfiEEIIAN

ty Inn in Athens Wednesday from 57 p.IQ.
.
"11iis, meeting is more important
than most people realize," said
Howard. "We urge everyone to go if
at an · possible. We need· to show
stronasuppon at the hearing." .
1be board met with Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer,and lrilnsferred
additional money to bi~nlra!JI ser·
vice and equipment.IICCOUlits.
· Spencer asked if offices could
sive pay raises this year and Hoffman
said the budget does not allow for a
pay raise.
Courthouse employees have got a
three to five pereent pay raise every
(Continued on hga 3)

-"

81£1111111 ..... 8tlllf
.
John Hood and Scolt Walton were named president and vice president,
respectively, of the Meigs Local Board of Education at the board's organi- .
zational meeting Monday night.
'
Hood beal out Walton and the existing presideni Roger Abbott for the pres- ,
ident's job, while Walton was selected over board member Larry Rupe. Wal- :
ton ·was also renamed the dislrict's Ohio School aoard Association legisla- -.
tive lil,lison for 1997. · ·•
.
,
In the regular meeting, which followed the organizational meeting, the ·
board adopted a budget for the year commencing July I.
· ·
lbe.budget calls for revenues of $10,289,3~7, with the bulk of its fund- :
· ing, $8,299,479, coming from state sources. Local sources, including prop- ·
erty taxes, comprise $1,974,018.
•
Predicted are total expenditures of$10,260,628, leaving an estimated end- :
.
,
of-year balance of $28,771.
In pen;onnel matters, the board accepted the resignation of F11ye Manley· :
for retirement purposes and hired William Capehart as a bus driver on a one- ·
;
year contract, effective Jan. 13, to fill Manley's vacant position.
Dave Barr, Stlzy Carpenter, Donna Wolfe and Gloria Van Reeth were hired :
as tutors for health handicapped students, while James Hayman and Darin :
.P. Logan were hired as substitute teachers.
·· .· . .
:
1be board set its reg11lar meetings for 7 p.m. on the second .and folll:th :
Mondays of each month until the second meeting in March, at which time ;
meetings
. . will be held on the second and fourth Tuesdays at the ~Central Otfoce ,·
m Pomeroy.
·
1be board voted 3-2 to hold all of its meetings at the Central Office instead ;
of rotating the meetings once-a-month to dislrict .schools. Board members '
Randy Humphreys and Abbott voted against the change.
:·
Board members sct their salary at $80 per meeting.
.
:
A proposal from Meigs County Emergency Services Director Rohen Byer ,
for an upgrade to the radio transmission tower, which the dislrict utilizes along ;
, .
.
..
onPa913) _
• •
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-&gt; •n•.·'

. . governor·

By CHAALENI HOEFUCH
sentinel Nawa Staff

,...CHARLESTON, W.VL (AI')~- CecjiJ:JII!Ier.Nood wu· out at
7#0 .:m. today' ptilill state
Ci'Ploycci-:'1. tliey Canio to work,
.e~ thouah he didn 'cleave the inaubaltlill!i1 almost '!. a.ni, .'
'.-,,·"I w~ to Jtti!C4uainted with the
P!oJIIe who do all the wo;tcu futu
~'WI " salil Unclalwood, wliGiC Wice

AS

LOW
AS:

11Je Middleport Board of Pllblic
Affairs,inplaceformanyyears,was
dissolved by a vote of Middleport
Village Council Monday night and
the board's duties were transferred to
Bill Brownins, village administrator.
Jan. 1 was set as the effective date
ofthe board dissolution, with council voting unanimously on the proposa1 from Mayor Dewey Honon.
It was notC\1 by !he mayor that the
action is a pan of some ongoin1 viilase administrative restructurins.
Serving on the board were Tom
Anderson, Bru.cc Fisher .and John
Hood.
Action to dissolve tlic board followed a discussion on the issue of
ch1111ging bow water bills are colJected in !he village.
1be Board pf Pllblic Affairs in
December deci!led to make property
owners responsible for payment of
· ·
their tenants' water bills.
1be mayor sai~ that "!he ~n
the Board of Public Affairs came up
wilh that idea was because of the
Southeas~m Ohio LeJ.il Services .·:
· and the things that they think will be
coming down the road. lbeir inten·
tion was to address somethinll which

.p.m

. . ~Uulo.pa~y:~.. · '·, .. ·: ·•
k' ~·You:ie ptiWiif'duln I am llld I'm

·.

iipl)ally pretty 1)Myt' •Mid-·Sandra .
..,_an, a· Division CJf Personnel

Jliployee. ·, ....

'I

II

"'

I

~ llryan said .later,. ''We've never
1ii4 ihat done before. I've Worbd for
'~ JO~ment

for 19 yem.
":'; "I thin)!: he's ·JOinJ to he more
~11ible-to the state' workers," she

.

~

~ ,:. ;Many ~inpl~ye~ coripatulated
'tltiderwood btl becolllina governor

"iml many SC4lmed swprlsed, even .
· '1it.iled, to see him.
·$. ;''I doli't believt: this," poe w.QIIltln
.....id.
... ' ..•
!Pf
'
•. ,-, :"I thiftk·it!s ·p:at.l knew he'd he
~
. · :. •~ 118i!l DoniUI fi.•elda, a ~hild
. ~ 'nfon:cnieq! w~r-,
' "'~·It's Jood tP. se'e Nltn dO' ~­
' lliPg like 'tliat," said Jim Elay, 1111
(f!Jicc of Behavioral Health Services
"ji!nployce.
·

.,

..

·toiriovicb pla9J~j9 fo9u~- :most of ·.his

![a.ft:·:.q!.Jh,: ·~!!l~~~pe~c~-"on ;sct1ools

11f ~OLU.iBUS

(All) :... Gov.
~e ~llbvich ,was: uPI!J;ted .10
. ~ to_a fatniliir tbeJiie wheil ·he'
:~s to{ilililiar'iun'OIIndings today
J !l(his s~ ·Qf the state-tpeech. .'
y-• -voinoYicih ·will devoie· abiNt 70
';;iicent of his aeventh annAl ljleech
:education; Mikt Dawsoh, his
-ljol!.e'sman. salci Mon~~tyu the aov· ~pratt~ his deliveli)' ln •the
:Mwly renovated House chemben.
·-1}1C Statehouse will be the site of the
~h for thC firstliJlle iince 1\}93,
"'~ ·"He'll tollcll' on 11 nu,aber or
but the guts ·of it wilt be·on
icliication·- specifically, urban edli~loon." ·'
'
.

.a.

;re.s,

. . "·I(I't!lat sense, t(le speech 1\Jesday ·
~WillJ~.:iitrJ1lllf to !ts ~ssors. _ ,
,._ Last· year, Vomov~eh .lamented"faifu~s in uiban distritts 1\Ja! ~said
,had.becn .de)&gt;astatmg to fiiJl!lbes.
; :fWay, he was expected to
annou_nee plans for a multimillion~Jar progfi'D to provide ~~ to
lietp:Ohio:s-largest school d1stncts
niiiUce their'dropout rates, imll!Ovt:
:tesi !!!:ores and solve social ills such
u -Cirilg usc and teen pre~ancy.
"·r,- A!~ expected ,to. ma.ke a ·cdmeback- tn th1s years speech: ch~
sc'!O'&gt;lst,~so know as "community
a:~l~. I~ schools would he inde·-~lident, autonomous !lnd f~ CJf

..

~- Newa Sll'\1ce

-=::

~~.. to "stake out

1
:~

ifound fOr ·

Democrats in the emerafundina dcblle, State Rep.

Shoemaker is pij)J!Oiillll that
billion in lottety funds ovtr 10
·
forOhio'acrum- ·
· pro- ;
time for the
known u Ohio's

schopl fundins system.
.
~wllh the Ohio Su~me Coun diiC
to rule soon - jl0as1bly as soon as
next ·week - on a landmark school
fu~ing case seekinJ to sl_rike down
Obto:S cutrent school fundiDI system
as unconstitutionally inadequate,
Republican lcJislatiY!o ..aden have '
iRdicllled education fuildina will hi 1
cop priority.
·
•
,l!

•'

might create a problem in the future."
ResOlution adopted
•
AI the Dec. 23 meeting of counAn appropriations resolution:
cil, three landlords were !here to adopted by council calls for a total of:
procest the policy chanse. charging $1.110,500 in expenditures for the:
that it would be "disastrous for land- village operation in 1997 .
lords."
Cterk Dennis Hockman noted that•
At that time, council · ·members -there is a carryover balance from:
denied knowing the reasoning behind . 1996 of $175,884.55 and antici,pated:
the board's action. lbey promised income of $1,166,937, making a:
some explanation before.the change total of $1,342,821 .55 available for.
went into effect; and a meeting with · 1997 operations.
·· ,
rental propeny owners.
This year's appropriation for vii-.:
· At last night's meeting, rental llige expenses is about $46,000 below:
propcny owners ag11in expressed the 1996 appropriation.
opposition to the board's action.
Anticipated expenses · included:
After a lively discussion !he may- geneml fund, $475,850; street main,;
or said that any change is being ."put tenance, $65,250; lire equipment:
on hold. until he can talk with !he law expense, $19,600; fire truck expens·'
director about the legal issues, and es, $43,9QO; refuse expenses,; ·
then council will address !he matter $76,000; water expenses, $212,000;;
again."
cemelery expenses, $19,750; sewe[· ·
He canceled a public hearing on expenses, $165,000; meter deposit;
the policy change, pending further expense, $5,000; mini-gold expen&amp;es,'
information from the village scilicitor $2,8509; recreation expenses,:
on the necessity .for making any $15,000; Cops expenses, $10,300. :
change in !he way water bill collec· Other bus'- '
tion is handled at this time. ·
In other action, council:
.
1be village now requires a $65
• Passed a resolution of support fo~
deposit from .!lew customers, hilling the proposed improvement and rel(}o:
is 'tnade directly to the consumer'by cation of U.S. 33 from Athens to Dar''
the villaJe, and any delinquent water win. Honon will attend the Wednes-;
bill payments are handled from the day public hearing in Athens, 5-7•
deposit.
. · (Continued on Page 3)
'

·Athens-Darwin project
opponents to air views

ATHENS - Oppo~ents to a proposed
relocation of U.S. 33 froni
finance;.
.
Athens
to Darwin will air their con. 1'he , House passed a bill tbat
cerns at Wednesday's public liearing
~o~ld lljve creat~ ~haner ~hools
hosted by the Ohio Department of
~~ns ~last lellslat•ve.sess!on, but
Transportation. ·
11 died m the Senate. Vomov~eh was
1be hearing, set for 5 p.m. at the
expected;;to propose apilol project for
Ohio University Inn, Athens, is to
To~. 11 :
gather input on an environmental
VomQrJch w~ also expected to
assessment
that considers relocating
suggest mcreas•n1 the number of
33
·to
the
west
of the existing high~ouchers available to allow lo~·
way.
1ncome Cleveland fam1lies send the1r
Qov. Volnovlch
1be IISSC!SSment considers ' three
chi~ren IP, private ~~j:hool.:
..
I doii,t expect 1111yih1nl new,
neJteC:tina the most pressing prob- alternatives, two that would direct
senate Mlnori!Y Leader Ben Espy, D- . le!ft~ in education wh!le han!finl out OOOT to build the new highway, and
Columl!llfyS81d Monday.
mllhons to pel pl'OJCCis, such as a third "no action" alternative. 1be
new roadway would be devel,oped 1Espy .;accused Voinovic~ of school computers. .
112 miles (Alignment B) or 2-2112
miles (Aiisnment ~)from the cunent
33.
"It's kind.of like a shotpn wedS~m.aker said. he realizes the
Concerns have been raised by
dins whe~ the groom wants to mar- $2.50 million a ye•m loltery money landowners whose fanns and forest·ry the bride 'II loq as lhllt I"" is for 10 years will have to ,be taken land would be affected, and by local
citizens worried about tile impact a
pointed !It ~~"''" said S¥e!"aket.
~ somewhere else.
"As lana .~ the coalt~ton holds ·
In essente, thai does force the new highwa~ wou1J have on rural
that l~·aaqe everybody,!' Jolnllto extra money from t~ l~llery to be. character, according to a news xcleasc
be excited ~ut sc~o:ols, ~ ~ used.for schools and 11 Will short ~I from ~At!1en~-bued Buckeye ForreferrinJ-IO th,!: coahuon of over~ A~cone somewhere else," he said. est Cou~M:il, ·
school districts .suinJ the Mite Q\'er "Sonw;body may not .JICII' 10 bliild a
oppo.ition is rootec1 ill• wuce of
the ·fundinJ i11uc. . .
··
·
.,11ports !iladiutn...I've been waitinJ,to taJt dollm, lou ol fCINII
.....
j.fl)elbldfort..,pys."

some state mandates butstill publicly

$"oea:naker suggests lottery fur:tds repair buildings·
"

'

' .. ' ..

..........

lane will bring'lhe type of economic
growlh that Athens and Meigs coun~
ties need.
:
"The s(}ocalled improvement ·of
U.S. 33 is a $100 million boondoggle," 511id Todd Acheson' of Athens
County. "A new road is unnecessary,
hannful to !he environment, carries a
huge- price tag and will degrade the
rural character of our tommunity." '
Depending on the alignment cho.. .
sen, building a new 33 would destro~
I 83 to 366 acres of forestland~
according to the council. It woul¢
also disrupt Pratts Fork and th~ .
Shade River with 29 to 3 I crosiings;
totaling approximately three miles o(
waterways impacted.
·.
•
Dennis Hall,!laeoloJist ;.,.ith tt.Z
Ohio Department of Natura~
Resources, called the .mt aljln1 tbl
.proposed C.Cit idol'S "extremely prot~(
to erosioft ud lllldalidia1."
t
''This is a mlsplod~
eddl:lwllbyODOI"iCu:__...
__
ncn dull
111111

'-"'

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::

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