<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8701" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/8701?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T16:48:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19123">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/d3304053bf0416aae3f13daf1e2e0d9e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f80d04032619876cdb94b8b7a8d427ba</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28061">
                  <text>•

•••

\

•

••

..

-

-

.~

•

'

...-,,•

•

~J

"••
••

Ohio Lottery

-Southern

•

Pick 3:

'"
i

443

Marauders

•

.'

Pick 4:
6889

•

BuckeyeS:
•

••
•-

•

••

••

••

•

•

5-11-17-2G-35

Sporta on P~~ge 4

·:

•

r

~

-

'

•
'

.

•'

•

••
•

-· -.... O!llll'llllllr P.t•r••• Camr ny

'

p

::- VIII. 47, NO.-i71

· ~·~--~--------------~----------~----~----------------~~-----------

,
•'

JVI,igs
Chamber
briefed
on
government
buying
.

,

•'
•''

...'

••

.'
,
,'
•'•

CHEVY VAN GIVES YOU

"
••

That's why· it's the right choice· for your upfitled van. It's the
strongest roomiest full-size van Chevrolet® •has ever built.
packed -with safety. comfort and convenience .
features you'll enjoy mile_after mile. Features like a
powerfuiVortecn• engine that can go up to 100,000 miiE!S

.

.

~ -

,•

...,...•'

..••

'

1~ •.

r
I'

,-

'•

••

,'.

••
•••
•••

•'

•

~ Voinovich

seeks
~~ cash to aid urban
;~: s~hool system!J

••

•

~

,.

·-·
'
-·
··!...
'

~

•
••

...
•
•

..

..,

.
•

•

'

)•

"•~

•

-

•

•

.
•
•

'

,.

'

'·'""
'

~

•••

••
••
•••

..""•·

..,

-..

~· t

'

•·t

~:

'l

••..•

••

..'
••
,,•
•

..•
••

I

l

-.,
-...
.••..
•.
•.
•

••

•,,

•

•••·
...••
.~

...•~·,.

..
•..
•
••

~:

-""
,.:

~

.3By PAUL SOUHRADA
• T.

AlwelriW , ..... Writer

'

COLUMBUS - Warnina that a
aisis threatens to overwhelm Ohio's
, .- , eclucation system, - Oov. - .George
::. Voinovich challengecl swe fawmak- :;; en.on 1\Jesday 'to pUmp more mon;:..: ey into the state's urban school dis-

.

•I

•

'

.
''
"
...,,•

••• •
••.
;

. ,.,

•....•••
•, ,

,.,
-~

"I
:,,
.

..·•'
Ill

1,

j't

,.

-· .

.

ride ~ bicycie.
Chamber officers have approached commissioners to replace former eco; : SenCIIIIII ..... Staff ,
· "If you are a business owner, you've got the bike," she said. "The pro· nomic development director Julia Houdashelt who announced her resign~&gt;.. ;'11Im; is nOihlna the aovcmment does not buy."
curement outreach center se.Ves as the traini_ng wheels." .
· tion on Dec. 2, 1996.
'
-, • That is accordina to,Connie Freeman, director of the LaWrence County
"We will help you through each phase of the process e&lt;cept forbidding,"
"They wanted someone from the chamber to show them around." she
, ., · Economic Development Corporation !'rocuremenl ~treach Center, who she- said. "We are there to help."
. added. ,
.
.
..· · addr:ncd the Meigs County QwnberofCommerceduring its regular monthW1111tecl:
It is difficult for a company to come here without a contact pe!JOn to help
_
development director
· them contact utilities, find housing and do other things, said Judy Williams,
, : ~· ly luncheon Tuesday at Trinity Chun:h in Pomeroy.
; · 1be purpose of the procurement outreach center is to identify busine~s
'\ Recent queries from companies seeking places to relocate underscore the chairperson of the chamber's Tourism Commiuee.
,.;: fimis·d!at.lll1l qualjfied to sell their goods or services to the Departme~t of need for an economic development director for Meigs County; according to
"Every day we don't have someone doing that (economic development
•; Defense and Qther federall!gellcies, and state ~~~td local governments. ·
chamber secretary Bemeas Brumfield.
.
director's job) we are losing," she said.
. ·
; ; 1be jxocuremcnt outreach ·center, funded in -part by the Dcpar1menl of
She said the chamber office has received three calls from companies seek"If we feel economic development and tourism are imponant, we need to
· ~ . Defense, offers a wide range of free services including personalized match- · ing information about sites in Meigs County, particularly the Tuppers Plains keep at this," she said.
·~: ing of g~ and ~rvices provided by companies with the needs of the gov- · induslrial site..
. .
'
.
.
· If you are a business looking for a place to Iocate "you are going to go
:: cmment, ag~ilcics.
·
"They need a contact person." Brumfield said.
.
where you are getting the best promise and getting the most.help,'' she added.
_,.: . On ·average, every · 17 seconds the government accepts a bid wonh
One business owner from Texas asked for someone to show him around'
Williams considered it a good sign that commissioners agreed to meet with
. n $440,000, she, said.
the site, but did not want to go through the .office of the Meigs County Board chamber and tourism members and members of the Community Improve'
,, · Fr~~Cman cOmpared delving into government contracting with learning to of Commissioners~ she said.
·
·
(Continued on Page 3)

'•r

'

.

~

, ; • By .J~ FREEMAN

p

'

28uh•.., 12 P&amp;gu,as_..
AGrllmettCOrrla rp r•r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 15,1997

'
,._,...• tncts.
-~ . "Thousands of our young people

, ; from those urban distrlcts·are.not M·
.~ ; ly
their
·
tal-

Rutland Council
fills one of a pair.
·of vacant seats
•'

every ~ligiblc child in Ohio, up from
75 percent now.
• Expanding health care coverage
throul!h r,Jedicaid to 96,000 more
chi~ from low-income families.
• Creating a pi101 pro~t of cbar- ·
ler schools in eight Toledo area dislricts.
• Increasing the number of vouchers available to low-inc0111!1 Clevetheir chltclren to
' I8JICI'failliUes to
priv"e ithoot,
·
·

A new counc-ilman was appointed
and officers and committees were.
named at Tuesday night's meeting of ·
the Rutland Village Council.
_
Herb Elliot! was named to the seat
vacated by Marie Birchfield, who
resigned. A second vacant scat on
council has not been filled.
Judy.Denney was -re-elected president of council. Appointed to commiuees were Denney. Richard Fetty

the Ohio Depanmcnl of Transportation of that support. A public hearing
on the issue is scheduled in Athens at
tlic Ohio University this afternoon.
Fund-raising projects for the Civic
Center fund were discussed and it
was noted that Phi Din and the Doz:
ers have been booked for April 26. ,
Because of the group's increase in
cost, the price of tickets for the concert this year will b.c raised to $10 and

Plans were also made for a rumannual
$tat~ spccth. ·
gi,nen for
dis· ,
mary Snowden
finance. All mage sale to benefit the center, to be
"I W. v6 it no•r
' ·.,, · ·,~,,,,·, ·
_.r moral re•nnn- lricts.members, ihe clerk and . Mayor Jo held in early June. All proceeds from
-.~ , sibilit; ·to "'*jlCllld:" ·•• · ·
' · Voin'ovidt said thai failurc .to
.Ann Eads .will serve on the Civic the events will go toward improve"~ · Meinben of both 'bouses of the address the needs of the 21 urban disCenter Committee.
mcnts at. the center.
, , - ugistiture,' elected statewide offi-- lricts, where only ~3 peri:ent of the
.
I ,
Marlc Proffitt. who has been seovDavis discussed the cold hallway
:..: cials and Ohio Supreme Coun jus- . students ·graduate, will hun Ohio's
_ STATE OF THE STATE-~. GBCII'gll Volno~h gestured dur·
ing as a part-time police officer. was · and the threat to pipes and suggested
:: ti~:es 1Jathcrcd _in the newly renovat- eff9rts to create jobS and strain the · ·_lng ht. 8tllte of the State 1pa1ch to a combllltld usslon of thtt
hired on a full-time basis due to the purchasing heaters.
·
_LAg111iture TuHclly In Columbua. Seated at right ere House
:: ed House ·chambers for the speech, welf~ and prison budgets. •
res-ignation of Officer Bill Gilkey.
· Council approved the purchase .
8p81111ar.Jo Ann Davld1on and Sanate Prnident Richard Finan.
'"We can't let that happen because,
:: the lint held at the Statehouse since
who has taken other employment. A Repair on sewage grinder pumps was
_;: . 1993.
·
practically speaking, there simply
salary schedule was approved for also discussed, and it was: voted to
..; ' Among the proposals Voinovich won't be any money left for anything Reynoldsbu,g,
agreed
with D-Columbus, said the increase Proffitt.
· order necessary pans and pumps to
:: - said he-will include in his budget rec- else," he said. "Wll have io aitack the Voinovicb's assenion that education planned for preschool programs is a
In anticipation. of receiving , a he used when replacements arc nec;: • lllllniendation~ to tbe.Legislature: · problem at its roots.'"
should be' the state's top priority, both good stan, · but that the funding $'300,000 grant for nood control cssary.
"
. ·;; ; .. ··An extra $300 million- includ· . Generally, RepuiJiicans praised said conccntr.a!ing on urban districts increases fell shon' of the state's work, officials discussed hiring an
James Birchfield met with coun· -. . ing $100 million for Ohio's eight the speech, while Dcll).ocrats criti· may be. a tough sell to lawmakers needs. ·
administrator. It was noted that the cit to discuss grinder 'pump damage
; : : largell districiS -for schQOI build- cized Voinovich for ' not goil)g , far · from suburban .and rural scbool disEspy also wants more money to ·swe has already approved the grant, on one of his rental properties. He
replace crumbling school buildings. and it is now in the final stage of fed- said that a tree had been cut down and
; •: illg improvements.
.·
enough.
• · tricts.
.;
• An additioiial $2 Bmillion in the
"I think,
chai.'·
At the rate Ohio is fixing them, it eral approval. .
·
that when the stump wasremoved, it
:~ neJ!I two years for the. state equity lcnging·thc
SenBut in' the longrun, most members would take 118 years to finish the job•
A resolution of suppon for the crushed the pump.
:,; ' fund di-' provides extra money for ate President
Finan, R- will see the issue in terms of its he said.
proposed improvement and relocaIt was reported that someone has
.:~ , poor school dislriets.
Cincinnati, said.
statewide impact, Davidson predict"A lot of us won't be around in tion of U.S. 33 from Darwin to been getting into the Civic Center
';· • Extending the Head Stan early
'And while.
and House ed:,
118 years. We need to make a push Athens was passed by council and without ·permission, and council
'~ : childhood education program to Speaker Jo Ann
R·
Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy, now." he said.
arrangements were made to advise.
jContlnued on Page 3) ·
~...

t
_· e

.

'

.-~. Thornton,
-:j~ Hollister · ·
·. ~~ convars.e
=~.. on Issues
't' ~ '

.

'

.

C.linton~'s proposed bu~get boosts

welfare,.cuts savings in Medicare

' '

.

Commissioner Jeff Thornton met
~: last week with Lt. Gov. NIIKly Hoi::.: lister and fi.ve other area commis&lt;:&lt; • sioner&amp; to discuss economic devel.;: opment issues concemins sout~ast- ·
...
,.,... em' Obi
. o.
~ •.
H!)jlister spoke on upgndes to
~ • U.S. 33 connec:tina Columbus with It: 77 at Ravenswood, W.Va.
· .; ;
She Sl!id the corridor, when coni"' • plcted, w.ould provide 1\eeded trans. · ~: ponation access tQ the southeastern ·
Ohio cou!'t~s to attract business and
;. , ~Otulllei'CJalm..unents, as well as to
. _, ' foster a deVelopiniJ tourism industry.
·"; Other discussion focuscd on the
,;: extension of· water and sewer lines
. ,; :· and Jreatment facilities to replace
~ • agins infrastriJCture, industrial and
~::;, : commel'cial
site development,
· ~. tourism, p'anning and education,
,
· :~: Thorntof1 s~,
· .•
.
, _· ft6ESENTA110N "'"" Meigs County Commialloner Jaff Thorn. ~: She nOted that the LegiSlature w•ll •· IDn ptiiAie.d Lt. Qov• ...,.q. Holllltttr with a '*:'~lnd Chester
.· :; ~· · (Coi)IPiail an Page 3)
~ wftM mug during a meeting 1•":
..
. ·
:::

r

~~A~ea R~
J..

~

..

-

•

Orosi strike come• to an end

!'~: HUNTIN010N, W.Va. (AP)""·lbe 8ed Crosa Will resume collecti~:iiiJ blood donlliona this week with
:;: lhereaolulionofal6-dayllribby68
; , :emptoyte. who ...,.,.,vee~ a new con•
~~·tract.
:"":

~;:. The.memben ofOillriCIII99 of
·~ •lhe s.tvice Ill~-. Inlltnational
~::tinloll
io; the ~1110111
?~'iia ~ _..u11 oa 'IMiday. · ~o•t

'v-.s

n.w

, l~!liiiJii~WIDre&amp;am' to\voit}l'_...
·~.·,~:., J:.,

.

.!. :
'

•

I

.

ly u toda)', and all ,mployees will
~ by Thunday. when blood collections will ...,...mo, the Red Cross

s.ld.

-

·

,

ply," An~lc.said.
•.
NesotJ~Uons. resumed Fnday for
the fiRI ume s1nce Dec. 26, when
talks broke down. The strike ~g~n
Dec. 30 .~ affected 32 CQUnues m
West Vira•ma. Oh1o and Kentucky.
1be new three, year cont111Ct gives
workcn a 9 percenj w~e increase
over three re.-, unoun11111 to about
81) cents 411 hour, The increase is
. 1eUoacliw to Dec. IS, when the old

"lt.d Croll hu had two weeks
witho!Jt collecd111 blood in the Tri·'SIIlC R,eFon.''llid 1bm AIIJic, chief
executl.ve ol'licer of the Tri-State
Region of the Rod.Croll.
"When we do 1'11!11118 open&amp;ioas,
we will need the help o( the commu'nity in ~nilhiaJ,the bl\)lld sup- ~meMexpftcl.

J; ..

training for welfare recrprents. The
WASHINGTON (APJ - Presifocus is .to be on private-sector jobs .
dent. Clinton's fiscal 1998 budget
Some $400 million would be used to
would ' boost the newly overhauled
create tax breaks for employers who
welfare program by about S16 billion,
hire people off welfare, an initiative
chiefly for disabled·Jegal immigrants,
Clinton
discussed du~i ng his camfood stamps and job-training, people
paign.
familiar wiih the plan say.
_ For the military, Cli nton will proThe proposal is sure to be one of
pose about $260 billion for the fiscal
the inost politically contentious in the
year beginning Oct. I, some $5 bit· ·
spending blueprint Clinton unveils on
lion less than th.is year. The president
Feb. 6. Republicans, the chief archi·
wants less · money for anti-missile
tects or the ' welfare law enacted in
defenses and some weapons purl
August, say .the new system needs
chases than Repu~licans, who are ·
time to -work before changes should
sure
to propose hoosling Jllilitarjl
· be considered. ·
spending above the 1997 IQvel of
The president will also propose
$265 billion .
trimming military spending, plucking
According to the ~ources, CJintori
savings from Medicare· that to a
also will propose saving about $Job
small degree would come directly
billion from Medicare over the IICXJ
fron1 recipients, and delivering &lt;in
five years. The health-insurance~
campaign promises to provide tax
Prnldent Clinton
gram for ehe elderly covers about 3~
reductions for some college students .
.Clinton's package. which aims to companies that hire welfare recipi' million Americans and cost S191 bit~
balance the budget by '2002, was cnls....: could jeopardize the working lion last year.
,
described by administration officials. . poor, who "still need jobs."
Since
signing
the
legislation
five
Most
of
th~
Medicare
savln14
congressional aides and lobbyists, all
of whom spoke on condition of months ago. Clin\on has pledged to would come from doctors and hospi·· ,
.fix what he calls its problems, chiefly l~ls: But a small pon1on- a_bout $8
anonymity.
_
Some details are still 'being fine· its denial of most benefits to legal b1lhon --:- would come from ,rcclpi; , toned. IM it will be similar to the immigrants and its . reductions in en!S by mcreasmg the.prell)!um ~ • .
president's proposal of a· year ago, food stamps. The new law, which' ·would pay for cov!:fage bciJIIIIi-elii
' !
which prompted budget negotiations _ends the federal guarantee of51ipp0n 1999, officials_ said.
. That prem1um, bow $4l.at 11
with congressional Republicans .but for the poor, is supposed to SIIVC $55
billion over the next six ye,ars.
month, grows each Ytaf 1111 by 1t11w
no agreement.
Clinton
will
propose
usin1
r11out
co~
2S percent of the
"There are no _ broad new
themes," one official said.
S13 billion - perhaps more - to c:osu. Under current law, 1111 ~~~
ia Ii
Senate Majority Leader Trent restore benefits to legal immigna~s um il to grow
Lou, R-Miss., said last weellthat it who became disabled after en~lis IIIIIICh overall
moa slowly than
was premature to, "stan fiddli~" the country, and to provide moa
food
stAmps,
sources
said.
•
jilopaecd a
:with welfare. And m a letter to Chn·
· He will also seek an 8cltlltioq ..,_would instread
ton, House Ways and _Means Commiuee Cl)ainnan Bill Archer, R· S3.4 billion for a "welf~Wift" PIIWiDa 1
wJij;ch. IIIIOUIIhM
Texas, warned that part of the prai. 'lailillive, mostly for
.
lild
municipalities
would
Ide
tor
jgbly
il
t
liP
pnmillm
inc•' dent'$ rlan_ . - giving tax bteab IC!,

._....._.i

r.r

Ill

8J111!Ia....... .........
.. r' '»
,o,

~

·

�-

0

Comlnentary
•

..

•

•

,.

•

Wedn111tey; JlrM*Y 1~ 1~
••
•

and

11o---. ol,., ,.--.

Letters to the·editor
Portland reslden.t s recalled

Kudos to Tiger Woods' parents
s~a-

)

wal~i\ed

0;

~!X;ut

'
l
Belle:: ~

Time to check condition of flags

What they are saying ·
·elsewhere around Ohio

mr

"*

o·re·amt·n·g ·of the· e·rook_.· ;lyn D'o·dge·rs ... ' ·=

nlisflurise from !heir perceoved faolurc to provtde needed medJcmcs and
;
eqllfpmenl to treat sick passc~gers . .
•
.
:
The fedora) Aviation ~dmmostratoon , under fire for other shortcommgs,
I had the most agreeable dream the to the manner in which the Qrecn Bay be given to·the city. The owners nixed
·
'
collltiltatdy hi!&amp; d1'agged Its feet on thos ossuc.
. ·
.
other evening.
Packers have been operating for 75 . thc _notion in a hurry.
·
Minnesota in I96t; and Bob Sho.\.
t).S. airlines compete with ~ach other by braggtng about on-umc land- It had been a busy day, and I had years. The Packers arc a safe 'bet to·
Well anyway. back to Pan On.c of who moved another Senators team .:0
ing~, takini care of luggage, wtde seats, bettef food (or peanuts) and low- not had the time to read the plcasur- . stay in Green Bay forever, and they my dream. The idea of bringing the Texas in 1971.
·
~
cr f;.eJ
I
·
·
·
al:&gt;le parts of the newspaper until just
·
··
Oodgers lpck to Brooklyn proved
. tn Part three of,my dream,( fol. It wou'•-'
.':: ..t'ts,fyinJ 'to begin seeing· them boast thatthe_y arc well- b r
·
"" ,·.""'
,.. e.orc 1 went .to bed
_ . .Th e 1asttmage
, Jose~h- SNU~r ·
wt'ld
_ ly popu-lar. and the citizens tined lowed th_e_ shuffies' of a hn•ch.......,
-· - r
equjpped' 10 ~for medical emergencies. ~~- , · '
, ·.
I saw before turning out the light was.
!!.
~
·up for md)y hlocks to buy shares. who ~eft the steamy owne.,•-p,llrgtj'
a story headlined, "O'MALLEY IS . .
·
· , . . ~kin California, the Disney peo- tory every day and climbed a (ew lid: The ('nlledo) ·Blade, J - 9SELL_ING DODGERS."
· · have the mostloyQI f11n~ in Amenc . · stepped forward aod urged for- ders to a level w~re the sun shoni!
:
Those who Jive by the swor!l, it is said, often die by the sword. That might
It wasn't long before I was deep Why ha.,n' t some ba..;cball brain ·
sa
fans n6t to fret. Disney would and Oowcrs bloomed and a sign.said
be ttie politic:lll epitaph for the author of the sweeping Republican congres- into Pan One of my, reverie. (You interested observer thought of public boil a Bull World, they said: with "Abused Managers Department·.V
• siollfl victory of 1994.ln winning the House speakership by just three votes probably didn't know this, but writ- ownership before?.
plastic grass and plastic bleacher There sat men·by the name of Yc:lp
over' an unilllpirin• Democrat, Newt Ginsfich did not die, politically speak- ers tend to dream in chapters.) I was
Well, sonic · interested observers scats with_plastic splinters and out·of- and Billy, and Bucky. Tile old map
inJ but he is nunlng a pretty. deep wound.
fl'a4ipg a headline tha!_said, MYS- have. In July 1990, New York ~ov- work actors selling plastic hot dogs.• waned on them, bringinc fiuit 81111:
a'epublicans
. , rrom. force of habit, refuse to abandon their leaders,_even TERY
INVESTOR
BUYS emor Mario Cuom(/ suggested that
In Pan Two ofmy dream, I saw ·a -&lt;l1mfections and occasionally getti!IS ·
if ~nee d~etates tl.
.
.
DODGERS, WILL MOVE TEAM the state or the city of New York buy walled-off comp&lt;iund with' a sign down on hos hands and knees to po'-'
rj(;,"u clear in _the 1996 campaian that the Republicans lacked a good BACK TO BROOKLYN. .
the Yankees. It would be a "great over the entrance that said "Owners' ish their shoes. ·
l
cou.bmuncher. In light arM
. r. GinJrich's close
_ call, i_t is evident they still
llf~ pulse quickened: I read on.
i~vc:stment, " he said. And a colum- Purgatory." Inside were many men
At one point, the geezer tumeltT· • ·
Thts moneyed man, tttumed out, ntst by the name of Spear has. ~Jeen engaged i~ sweaty labor and sleeping · toward me and I saw it was Georg!:
: do. .
'
·
had spe~t many glorio~s ·afternoons ~out in~ several, public OW!Iership on IJI8ts of arlif~eial iurf. J\nlong them Michaei·Steinbrenner nr, and I snutC·
1
\" ·
··--•
T : n.. Recionlll',
1'
as a child at Ebbets Foeld. He had tdeas smce September 1989. .
were Walter O'Malley, ihe man who gled ,dow" a~d,fell iriJO ~peaceful?
word 011 Social Security is simple _ something has to be done.
. odohzed people by the name of CamBaseball teams are important civic took the Dodgers to Los·Angeles in slumber_as I've ()ad in rriany'a night. '
' J~pll Spear Is: a
1
1 whll to do? Even the Social Security Advisory Cof!lmission does- pane II a, Fu~llo and Robinson. Now institutions, much too vital to the gen- . t9S8 _,.d eventually lurnCd them over
; n'tE. Askod to malce a·recommendatton, the commossron made three !'&lt;was buymg the Dodgers and tum· eral sanity to he entrusted to the buf- to his son, Peter; Calvin Griffith, wha writer for Ne...,.,_r
, _
oitetod ill mjlort 1 yell' Jato 11 that.
mg them over to a nonprofit_corpo- . foons, bean-counters, unbalanced moved the Washington Senators 10 . AIIOdallon. .
.
'
oae thinJ lhe three pl8u did qrec ,- some of the money coming ration, shares of which would be personalities, moguls, cowboys, piz,
.
•
inio SOcial Security lllould JO into the stock market.
·
offered to the public.
za makers and car dealers who curO.ne y~ar ag?: Risking the lives of more than ·100 hostages in an efT~
Two plans
pvs peOple some COIItrol over their retirement investThere were a few provisos. There rently own them. They should be ·
menu. One wouldleavelhc ia~CIIIIIIIOill decisions with the government.
would be no dividends, and profits owned and controlled by the fans to WI~ out thetr Ch&lt;7hen .rebel taptor:s, the Russillli military hurled rock-: ,
cts and shells at the uny voltage of Pervomayskaya. Ailing Greek Premic:i"'
Already the~ Jat uiJ are IlninJ up to keep Social.Sec:urity as it would be plowed back into the team. who cherish and support them.
A,ndreas
Papandreou rcsianed.
·
·
il. They are Wflllllo Wllboul
_•· chanpa, SOcial Security will~Shares could not be sold except biCk
There are many problems associ·
.Todaf1s Binhdays: N~lear physi~ist Edward 'feller js 89. Actor Lloy.J
to the corporation. The team would ated with the proposal, of course, not
be run by an executive comntilile. ·the least of which are the rules the Bridges rs 84. The An;hbishop of New York, Cardona( Jo~n J. O'Connor, i'3
which would hire an opcntlionld!Ne- -owners have against publi~ owner- 77. Actress Margare~ I;&gt;'Brien is 60. Sin.er Don Van VlieJ (a k a ''CIIIIai~~
tor, who would hire . ~ _, ship. It is "inefficient," they 11y. Beefhearf') is_56. Actre~·sin~ Charo is~. ROck singer Mll1lla o.{.ls ii!!
~les is. 40. Singer Lisal,isa (Lisa Li~ \lfld}:
ilcJOiiate with players.
,
Back in 1989, San piego l'ltllm · 46. Actor-~irector Mario Van
Cult
Jmn)
ts
30.
Actor
Chad
Lowe
("Ltfe Goes On") is29,
"
Hmm, Satd I, thinCII IIJIJI,W ,ownetJoaf!Kroesugsestedthewm

J_;..

IJDdlclite.i

Eaterp1

would

' ".

. IMar..nald (33o I~

J

'.

'

•. • ••
•-•' •

''
.

.

-~-

. '

"

•

.

~­

•~
•

.

He is iUI'Vivod by, bla Wife, 1bolma Banks Cadle Huper; a son, Charles
D. JC.yan ofMcl ...n,lJ.; ~four grandchildren, six great-grandcbildrenand

INO.

'I

. .

w~.

two pell·JRil-jnMclllldren.
.
Services w• beld Monday, Jan. 13, 1997 in the Cooke Funeral Home,
Grove, W.VL, with the Rev. NJXVciiAtkins officiating. Burial followed
Katuiwha
.
. . . Valley Memorial Gardens, Glasgow, W.Va.
- -

•I Columbuii2B" I ·.

'

me

•=
•INNtl- d..,..
'"'"" __ ,.,,...--,_ ... _;_.llould-•oJg-..
If,_., •

1/

-,1

Otar1es M. Harper,l5, "'*-&lt;&gt;i. f11111*1y ofShtewsbury, W.Va., died Friday, Ju. 10, 199hlltillwidoace.
· Bam April I, 1911, .0. oftlae late OlarleiAdam and Sanh Eliubeth Garnes Harper, he - 1 reliml coal miner, and a member of the United Mine

....
'
••

. .•.•

IIIC

By
·

Charles M. Harper

ITolldol . . I

Dale Van Atta Ill the 1.... IUCh · on teaching neaotiali0111ieehniques to 1project to preserve the e~
qency, the U.N. DevclopcDMt Pro- Brazilian. diplomats. In an
r, Arabian horse.
•
pam, proves the point 1bo United $117,000 went into a project
a-- ~ahrain: $147.000 for thecott
servation and restoration of someStates provides I0 percent of UNDP
nizing the museum Ill the Instil 1e of thing called the AI Qal'at a1 Bahrair\:
·111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Ethiopi!!ll\')tlll/ies in Addis baba. S30,000 for dental care; and $9,()()()
814-982-21118 • f.IIX: ~-2157
And $3,000 patd for the cons tion
Jack Anderson of
a memot'ialto air crash vi tims in tow~ health care for the elderly. :
Tanzania. All worthy goals, perhapS,
•• Qatar: SS million to suppo(l
bu
hard! 'all d he bri Qatar University. .
· :
1 they
y •· un er t 1'1! c
__ Japan: sn,ooo for the ~'tranll',
of development. ·
Jan Moller
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
•
Some of the most curious pr6jects " portation of great woots."
funding.
involve UNDP aid going io 9ch
-- Singapore: $4,000 to study
· ROBERT L WINGETT
'There .are UNDP projects which countries that can well afford to fund feasibility of frog fanning.
:
Publisher
seem heartening, considering the tile efforts themselves. The following
··Finally, the two.richest countri~
cies.
The U.N. has many overlapping areas and people served: a hydro- are among the more egregious exam- on earth were still judged to nee(!
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
agencies, especially in the develop- electric dam in Ghana; stabilizing pies that we found of UNDP funds some help from the UNDP: Kuw~
Controller
o.n-1 u.n.g.r
ment field, which is one of the rea- sand dunes in Mauritania; jump- (sometimes commingled with funds received S2~?·~ for "p~mii!J
sons .the Republican Congress has starting dozens of sm\111 busin~sses in from other U.N. agencies) going for health care;, whtle Brunet . g~
Tonga; l!fld studying plants, animals projects in wealthy nations:
~?een withholding America's dues to
· $17,000 for ~vclopment of "2ma.
11teSentlnel I
ioaonllo
on
and
Indian
tribes
in
the
jungles
of
.
t
he
world
body.
·. -~Saudi Arabia: $1H million for ·' ry health care "and $9,000 for oral
.... - - ( I I I I I - "'~- ... ·r' CUwllltd dlyMM p1to1te.......,. lf»ddY 1 dlfe
,...,..a fD •,... :-' _Our own investigation has found 'Venezuela to protect _againsl overde- a range and animal research center; health fe!lowsbips...
.': ' .:
velopment.
that
none
of
the
U.N.
development
$11.2
tpillion
for
the
King
Faisal
One
IJNI)P
:n:port
assessmg
all
....,. ·• - 10&lt; '--1111 11o - · Till Senliliel, Iff Coutt St.,
P'wiMDit, CWo ~ Gr, flAX lo 11......,ff7. '
But there @fC many others that bla- Foundation Cultural Centre; $4 mil- development 11d (government at!¢
agencies is run efficiently, or with an
eye to ·maximizing the contributions tantly make no sense. The thousands lion for the development,, manage· . private) alleges thal \he fundi!'&amp;~
of UNDP projects we reviewed ment and maintenance of a road net- dox -- sligl)tirig the poorest countriel
from member states.
An intensive look by our associ- include one where $66,000 was spent work; and $826,000 for an ongoing to benefit richer ones -- means "~
t
richest 40 pereent or the dCvclopiot
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - - - - - - " - - - - - - - - - , world receivesiwice as much aid~
ciiPita: as the poorest 40 percent" For
example, Egypt receives $280 in aitl
William Watson lived on the river
per poor person, while India receivei·
Dear Editor,
bank
in
the
first
house
north.
of
only
$7 -- even though Egypt is thret'
William Wells lived at the mouth
William
Wells.
Henry
Wells
had
a
of Wells Run in Lebanon Township.
times wealthier than India in real pet
ISN'T
capita income:
·;
The family were pioneers and ca111e way of trapping muskrat~ ~hat beat
THAT
Much of the aid, when not beint
to Meigs County early where they anything you ever saw. Wilham Wat·
sent to wealthy oligarchies in tli~
jlought land. William Wells was a son was very old the firSt time I saw ·
Qtl.? .
he
had
a.
remarkable
personality.
_
but
Middle East, is given to -counlriCf
powerful man. He could pick. up the
'with atrociOUS records of humaR
back end of his Model T Ford. He During the depression he offered to
sell his house and eight acres for $40.
rights abuses. China, f9" ellmpl~
didn't need jacks.
recei vcd $1-19 million from UNDG
William Wells lived at the edge of
In 1921 William Wells sold the
not long after the Tiananmen Sqlllllt'
the Ohio River bank. He owned and
massacre. The unrepenlllnt Comma!:
operated a small packet boat, the Annie L. to William Price, my
nisi dicllllorship of Vietnam receivQ4'
Annie L., which was powered by a favorite uncle, for $600. Price ran a
$6 7 million in th8t same year.
·:
big gasoline engine. The boat made packet service from Parkersburg,
Other funds are used to suppot!
regular runs from Wells Run to W.Va., to Ravenswood. Whenever I
Ravenswood, W.Va., carrying freight heard the chug of his engine I ran to ·
some of America's 'Worn enemies :
- like Iran, Iraq and t::ibya.ln Iraq, till'
and passengers. This boat had no the river bank. He always landed to
U.N. was doling out $58 ll)illion 1ft
reverse: To move_it backwards Wells take me on. I was his deck hand.- If
development aid through the UN~
used a long push pole.
there is an afterlife I want to be the
in the same year ·that it passed ~
In 1919,theyearofthedeadlyflu, first to greet him. He had a doublelotions
authorizing the American-led
he moved the Price family from Port- barreled shotgun on the boat. SomeII
fighting
force that won the GulfWa'ft ·
land to Ravenswood, milk cow and timeS I used it to shoot ducks as we
Some of that aid, we suspect; wai
all. The cow's name was Red. We led pushed through the water. There was
used by Saddam Hussein to bolstel ·
her with a rope tied around her neck a johnboat tied alongside the boat.
. his ~ttered armed-forces.
:
· from the Ravenswood wharf to our When he quit the river he gave me the
house on Gallatin Street.
Jack
AndenM
Ud
Jan
M~
johnboat and the shotgun which I still
are writers for United Feata11
Big boats throwed waves so big have.
Syl!$1icate, Inc.
•
·!hat sometimes water was-thrown out
Wi IIiam Wells had a daughter,
of the river into Wells' flat. He used Minnie, who bought a new Plya tarp hung over the edge of the nat mouth auton)obile and taught herself
to keep the water out of his nat
to drive.
I
.· Henry Wells 'lived C!n the river
Gayle Price
.,. ~k just squ~ o( Wil!iiiii!.)Vells ~nd
P"rtland
•.
.
'
. WhenlsecTiger'Wbocls; lseethe !,1won i_;.o ·'o(his l'ii'St
\vhen:· t
!he two warmly
how
Albert
emOodiment of the American dream. nients as a profe~sional •. a ,,record ,embrace,after each of_you~g Jiger's Chicago White-Sox-slugger, .who IS
I see a 21-year-old lad of'blic:k' and unmatched by any golfer m litstory. • t1.S. Amatcurchampionships.ll'snot had 'so many run-ins with fans arM!
Asian extraction vaulting to the top .
Not by Arnold Palmer: Not by often on television that you sec that reporters that he's had to receive
lion.
•
Dear Editor,
of
a
professional
sport
at
which
kind of relationship depicted between · anger-control counseling?
;: ,
As she is lowered we can say a job
Well, it's that time.
JOSe'Ph Perkl
black fathers and sons.
·
Then tl~re's Dennis Rodman, tf
· No, I am not referring to tax-- well done and as her new partner is · exceedingly few minorities have
excelled.
And,
no
less
impressive,
I
nS
Tiger's
mom
"Tida,"
of
Thai
herthe
Chicago Bulls, who not only ·i&gt;
raised
to
the
top
of
the
mast
where
adding time.
A lot of ny Okl Glory outside on . she is unfurled tony free in the wind sec a young gentleman who is a cred- Jack Nicklaus. Not by Greg Norman. itage, was no less responsible for unsatisfied with the natural hair co~
So it is against this backdrop that keeping the golf prodigy grounded. ot God gave him, but also feels" a
a mast day and nigh~ 365 days a year. it reminds me of words I have read it to his old-fashioned parents, Earl
and
Kultida
Woods.
1
visited
La Costa Country Club (just As a toddler, she recalled in the need to degrade himself by traipsinj
It's time to examine her condition and which were and gives us a new birth
Anyone
who
follows
sports,
or
north
of
San
Diego) last week forthe Newsweek cover story, Tiger would around in a wedding dress.
:,
of freedom .
tend td her needs.
She is probably weather worn arid · The retired Rag should now be reads Newsweek or People magazine, Mercedes Championship, which ~ffi- watch tennis bad boys John McEnroe - These pros are disgraceful. And2
frayed and needs to be retired. She stored and at ·a later date .some veter- is probably well-acquainted with bally opens the golf .season, Most and Jimmy tonnors on TV throwing hope no black youngster in Ameri~
has been a loyal friend, signifying as ans' organization will properly dis- Tiger's resume. lie is the first golfer fascinating was the nunl~r of black racquets on the courts. She adman- · vjews them as role models. 1bo}'
in the history ofthe game to win three professionals who were ori hand to ished her phicociou~ Tiger, "I don 'I have·been blessed with extraOrdin&amp;iJ.
a keeper of our freedoms from any pose of them fbr you.
,
straight
U.S. Amateur titles. After his witness the proceedings, At the two want you tb ruin my reputation as a athletic proweSs that has 111ade eaeli
Virgil Walker
who would trample on them. She
Racine most recent victory, this past August. dozen or so golf tournaments I have parent I w(il spank you in a_ll)inu(e of them millionaires many time&amp;
flies high no matter what her ~ondihe turned professional.
previously attended, I c(&gt;uld count the if you actljk-c that"
over, and they have done nothing IMA
. So promising is his golf career that · number of black golf aficionados on
Isn't it a·pity that many other black bring shame upon themselves and, b~
Nikc, the sports apparel maker, and one hand.
·
athlctcs.didri't rec_eivc ·the same kind association, all black athletes.
·:
Titlcist, the golf equipment manu- . It seemed to me that many of the of parenting at home? That's why so
If Tiger Woods ever roughs 11~
facturcr. signed young Woods to black patrons at La Costa viscerally many, it seems, get into so much.trou- some young woman, if he ever g~
eqcJorscmcnt contracts valued at $60 felt they had finally found a sports blc. And I, '(or one, can barely stand postal on his fans, if he ever puts o•
B The Alaocllded Press
.
million over the next (ive years. Such hero with whom they could identify, to watch \'r(ost professional sports a dress of any kind, he will break
YE cerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio ·sums arc unheard of not only for a a pro athlete whom they wouldn't these daysEauSc: ljU$1 can't sepa- heart and many others as well.! view
"
_ rookie golfer. but for virtually any mind their own upper;middlc-class rate the ath etcs' f'!)J'filrmancc 01) the him as a black Luke Skywalker;
newspapers:.·
kind of professional sports rookie.
kids emulating.
fict.d, -the ' 'amond, ,the court from last best hop&lt;; for 'a world-famoU?.
The Columllu Dispatch, Jan.J3 ·
·
.
Woods' staggering contracts put a,
Again, lthink this is a tribute to thetr nerso\\at coll!luct. ,, : '
superst~r athkltclrole model. MaJ
~n President Clinton.nies abo~d Air Force One, tbc plane's medtcal lot. of pressure on. him to perform Tiger's patents. .
· , · Look · a('·;Michli~l IrVin and Erik the force !\') w1th h1m. .
_· "f
,
emerJencyklt includes several dcfibnllators, 10 case of a heart anack. Many . right &lt;iut of the box (as docs the pres, Earl Woods is a former Green , Williams, ,\lie Pallas C~wboys bad
Joseph Perkl115 IS a columnlitii
foreign airlines also carry such cquipl!lent.
sh·urc frbom fellow r~o golfcrs. whofmahey .. Beret; who raised his son with·equal, boys. The two fOo!ball play~rs 1were for the San Diego Unlon·TrilluM
But 10 far no u.S. airline docs.
ave _cen JUSt a 1 Ill 1e Jea1ous o l
· measures of love and discipline. I ' .recently acchscd of sexual assaultjng and tbe outhorof "Right Like Me'!
(Jlm,&gt;n·1J:ibi!De l'u.!llidllnl). ":
. Finally, Amerjca~ Airlines is brea_king this barrier and-soon \viii begin new kid on the block). But Woods confess that I got a lillie teary-cy~d : a 23-ycar-old woman at gunwint.
to outfit ils planes woth enllanccd mcdocal kns. Some wrhnc a~alysts beheve .
.
,,
~

UNITED NATIONS -- The recent
British pullout from a U.N: agency is
just one signal !hat the U.N. dcvel~
opment gravy train is out of control.
Last month, Great Britain
announced that it would withdraw
from the U .N. Industrial Development Organization, following an earlier decision by the United States to
do so. The British rapped UNIDO's
waste of funds, but particularly complained about its lack of coordination
with other U.N. development agen-

thaloth\!rcarriersmi~htcmul_ateA~ncanman~ffontoavotdlawsuns that

J

••
•

••

(Canttnued '""" .... 1)
:
Corporati011.
. .
'"
To
improve
commuflicllices
between
the
clwnber
and
commi11inB,
_
.
:
1
lbers agreed with a augautioo from the Rev. Roland.Wildman_tbat . . ~ :
miuioners be invited 10 the IIIOIIIbly chamber meebag ud ~~- a Wn • • •
:report or the chamber'ncti vities.
.
, :
1
Thwportatioa ebaiJb1aa S.VC Story, wbo is also co-chairman ~ dllllauiJ !
'33 Corridor Committee, said the corridor committee met recetllly ~tb.... :
:offiCials in an effort to upgradethestatusofthe u .s . 3311-'1'? c~ttom. :
The committee's effortS hinge 011 recent developments, •ncludinJ-tbe Pos- :
ton industrial site ia Athens County and the Great Bend Industrial Center Olr- :
poration in Meigs County.
·
·
•
Story also encouraged. all Meigs countians who support ~he ~ !:
improvement and relocation of U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwm to ~ a"':
public hearing at the Ohio University lnn in Athens ioday from S-7 p.m.
:
"It is important to support this, please be there,• he said. "Some folks from :
Athens may show up to oppose this."
·
_
;:. 1be chamber agreed to write a resolution support the highway tmprove- :
menl.
·
•
Trip plunod
~
. In. her report, tourism director Karin Johnson said she is plan~ing a ~ ...
. in conjunction with Leo's Cruise and Travel of Pomeroy to the ptUltldclphia :
Flower Show from March 5-8.
The show, the largest of its type, according to Johnson, features I0 acres "
of flower displays and 60 full-size; horne 'and garden displays.
·
••
She said that local flower gro,en and other residents are welcome to par- _;:
ticipate in the trip. For more information, call Johnson at 992-2239.
. :
. · Johnson said the trip may lead toward more tourism focusing on local . ~
greenhouse growers and events like the Racine.Flower Festival. .
"
Presiding at the m~ting was chamber V.U President Sue Matson. She
reminded members of the upcoming chamberdinner-dance to be held March·
' 15 at the Royal Oak Resort. ·
ltleDl

U.N.
'development'
agencies
squander
funds
t
The Daily Sentinel

..:lr.

,..•

Meigs Chamber brief~

...... ~

......

•

..

Tbe Deily S1nHnel • P Jl I ...!

Pomet oy •lllddleport, Ohio

••
••

___..·Local News in Brief:. Juveniles arrested In alleged theft

•
I

~ juvcnil~ were mested Tuesday for the alleged drive-off theft of
gasoltne from Joe s C(/untry Market at Rutland, Meigs County Sheriff James
. M. Soulsby reported.
.
_ .
The al~eged theft occurred around .s p.m. with $6.82 in gasoline stolen.
The driver of the vehtcle also recetved a citation to .~eigs County Juve. n~e ~ on a charge of failure to mainlnin control of a motor vehicle. After
dnvmg off, the youth &lt;!rove down a country 1'0111!, struck an jcy spot and slid :
off the rondway into a diJch, Soulsby said.
No injuries were rejlorted.

•

..
•
"

.:£,
1111

'.

.·

. .

Pomeroy Pollee Investigate accident

rief respite 1rom cold
'temps
en
' d"··ng' Thursda'
y
. ::
· .
,
·
:B
.

_.Sy The A8foclaltcl Pt...

.

- , .""A mixture or aleet: and freezing

rain failing on "Ohio today was
.-~xpecied'to tum to snow tonight, the
.National Weather Service said.
. . . Snow accumulations \\Iii) average
.. 2-4 inches.
. _. The snow will taper to flurries
· overnight with lows 20-25.
-, On Thursday, it will be windy and
-colder with temperatures f•lling
· .!hrough the day to readings in the
teens. Lows Qn Friday morning like. ly will be in the single dipts.
The record-high temperature for
· )his date at thC Columbus weather
. station was 64 degrees in 1932 while
· the record low was 12 below zero in
. -1893. Sunset tonight will be at 5:31
· p.m.. and sunrise Thursday at 7:51

:-.m. .

Meigs announcements

No injuries or citations were reported following 'a two-vehicle accident on
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge 1\Jesday around 9:57 a.m.
BennieF.Nuuer, SJ, -Pomeroy, andWilliamP. Rizer,47, Syracuse were Skating party
d~vin~·opposite ~i~~ns on the bridge w~n their Chevrolet pickup ~cks
Family skating Thursday night, 7_
_
. sidesWiped, sustatntng hght damage, accordmg to a Pomeroy Police Depart- 9:30 at the Chester Skate-a, Way, $1
rain. Rain ·may mix briefly with . mcnt report.
admission, skates extra. Sponsored
freezing rain. Lows in the lower 30s.
·.
' •
·
.,by the ~eigs Area Holiness Associ·South winds 10 .to 20 mph.
ation, the Meig_s ~i_nisterial Associ- .
Thursday... Partly doudy with
ation, and the Mi'{dleport Ministeriscllltered nilrries. Turning much cold~
al Association. For more information;
er with an early morning high in the
residents.may contact the Rev. Peter
Estimated receipts: 34,000.
30s, then tCmperaliltesllllling.into the . COLUMBUS (AP,) ,;. IndianaTremblay,
992-4152.
Ohio direct bog prices 111 selected
Summary ofThesday's Produc·
·single numbers. ·
'
,
Thursd•y night ... rartty cloudy buying points Wednesday aa provid- ·era ~tack Association auctions ·Eastern Boosters
with scattered flUrries. Windy with ed by the U.S. Department of Agri- at Eatan, FIU'IIleltown, Lancaster,
)he Eastern Athletic Boosters will
,
Wllpdoaeta and CaldweU:
bitter.cold. Near reconllow of 50 to culture Market News:
meet
Thursday, 7 p.m. in the high
• Barrows and gilts: unevenly
Hogs: 2.00 lower to 3.00 higher.
to below.
school
cafeteria.
steady to firm; demand liaht to _modButther hogs: 34.00-56.00.
Extea4ed foac cut:
a moderate
Caule: steady IO.J .OO higher.
. Friday and Sa,turday...Part!Y crate to good late with
·
Slaughter steers: choice 59.00- Trustees to meet
1
.cloudy with scattered flurries. Windy . movemen ·
·
71.75; seleCt 54.00-66.00. Slaughter
Letart Townshi'p Trustees wilt'
u.s; 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
.
"
with bitter cold. Near record low of
meet
Monday, 6 p.m. at t.he office
.1S to 20 below and a hig~ of zero to points 50.50-52.00, few so:QO and heifers: chQice s...00-7 1.00; select buil~ing.
~~.so. plants 51.50-53.00, few at 48.00-65.00.
5 -above.
,
S3.2S.
.
.
Cows: s~y to 2.00 higher; all
Sunday...Mostly cloudy with a
CCL sets' meeilng
U.S. '2-3, 230..260 lbs. 44.00-. cows ~5.00 and down.
chanee of snow. 'Bitter cold. Near
The Middleport Child ConservaBu s: steady, to 4.00 higher;, all
record low of I0 to I 5. below and a · 50.00; 210-230 lbs. 39.00-44.00.
tion
League will meet at 7 p.m.
SPws: steady to firm;
bulls 45.00 and down.
high of zero to S abOve.
Thursday_
at the Rock Springs UnitU.S, I-3 300.450 Ibs. 40.00-43.00,
Veal calves: little higher; choice
ed
Methodist
Church. Speaker win be
fl!w i.t 39.00; 450-SOO lhs. 43.00- 72.50. and down. '
, .
45.00; SQIKiSO lbs. 4S.00-48.00,Jew .
Sheep . and lambs: 2.00 lower; Norma Torres ' on breast cancer
48.50-49.00.
choict wools: 97.00-IIQ.OO; feeder awareness.
Boars: ·37.00-38.00.
lambs: 106.50 aod down; aged sheep.
Thornton, Hollister
-50.00 and down.
(COIItinued from Page 1)

_Today's ·livestock report

.

.
Weather fo.-t:
· •
· . Toni~t. .. A 90 percent chance of

[sw~ IAi meet

The Meigs Soil and .Water Con' servation District Board of Supervi. sors will meet tonight (Wednesday) at
.8 p.m. at the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District office. Officers •
wiil ,be elected.

Crash leaves ·
three injured

· CHESHIRE- Three River Val' ley High School students were
injured in a two-car accident this
. morning while on• their way to
school.
!
According to the Gallia-Meigs
:Post of the Highway.Patrol, a truck
driven by ·Will F. Dambrough, 44, •·
. 13.3-112 Third Ave., Gallipolis, was '
southbound on SR 7, when he was
struck by a northbound vehicle driven by sophomore Steve Boso,l6,
Patriot Rd .. that was making a left
tum onto"Little Kyger Road .
The driver's brother, J.B. Boso,
14, a freshman, was a passenger in
tile vehicle. A second passenger was
identified as Jeremiah Triplett, 17,
Patriot Rd., a junior.
Trip len, · son of football coach
t
be working on certain mandates the
Federal government places on coun- ·, Merril Triple!\., WIIS r&lt;;_A9t;t¢ly life' •
. Fined ' were: Karen· ·S. Jones, ties and villages, adding that the new nighted to Cabell -Huntingt~n· Hospital.
j
I
• .
•
Pomeroy, $25 plus COits, obstructing laWII !Viii help with funding.
:Of
the
two
other
students,
,initial
traffic; Charles McCloud, MicldieThornton was given several hooks
port, $100 plus .costs, open contain- with names of agencies to assist him reports·"indicate that one was lifeer, $100 disorderly manner, $200 as a county commissioner. After- flighted to Columbus, and the other
criminal mischief, SIOOdisorderly ~ wards, he presented Hollister with a was transported to Holzer Medical
intoxication; Alice Lynn May, New personalized Chester Courthouse cof- Center.
Conditions of the students were
Haven, $100 plus ~osts, disorderly by · fee cup.
.
unavailable
at press time .
fighting; Arleen Hagemeyer, Mid.Thornton said he will hold a town
dleport, $100 plus costs, possession meeting Thursday at 6:~0 p.m. in the - Dambrough. reportedly suffering .minor injuries, was taken to
· of marijuana; Loretta L. Adkins,
· c
S · C"
C
Rutland. $25 plus costs, making ille· . Meogs ounty entor mzens en- Holzer Medical Center by a patrol
ter, and invites those with questions
gal U-tum.
about county government or want to car.
No formal charges have been
have their crafts put into a Meigs
filed
as the accident remains ti!Kier
County craft booklet. ·
.
_
investigation.
according to Sgt. Dale ,
elgs
Units of the Meigs County EmerHolcomb of the Galli a Patrol Posi.
ICIICY Medical Service recorded six
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
OU C
responding included:
'
(Contlnuect frOm Pa-1) ·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
.,..
5:33a.m., State Route 681 , Sharon decided lhat anyone caught in there
,,
Roseberry, Veterans Memorial Ros- without ~rmission will be prosecutpital;
·
ed. ·
S:S9 p.m., Aatwoods Road, HarCouncil.asked that anorney Scott
ry Johnson, VMH. Pomeroy squad Pow~ll be called to the meeting soon
assisted;
to discuss some village !llatters.
U:SI p.m., Pomeroy Pike, Eva
The mayor's rcpon showed
RObinson, VMH.
receipts for December of $2,143.50,
POME.ROY
with $688 to go to the state and
4:31 p.m., Rocksprings Road, $1,463.50 into village f)lnds. It was
Wyatt Radford, liolzer Medical Cen- noted that 28 tickets were written by
ter.
police offices during the month:
REEDSVII.:LE
Council moved into executive
_,
. II :29. a.m., Eden Ridge Road, session to diS(:il~ e,mployee policies
' ""·-""''•
; !:
Mike Smith, St. Joseph's Hospital.
and then retorned to the-table to grant
-.oSAnsu• '""·' ""
-. •
TUPPERS PLAINS ·
insurance' to the clerk, effective · in
-.:":.':.!:."!" ,•::,~~ : :
• 4:31 p.m., SR 681, Calvin Hawk, January, by unanimous vote.
•• · - · "'-""" ··~
., ;_

:_oa·maging _rebuttal deflates
~ end of Simpson's defense ·; SANTA MONICA. Calif.
.,. (AP)..
.FBI-·.. .print analyst
., William. Middlepo_rt mayor's court .
sh~ 1

; OJ. Simpson's de(en~ rested, but Bodziak testified earlier that , tile
The followi~g cases were settled
:-.got no rest.• ·
shoes in the ,picture '\"ere a 8runo Tuesday night in . the Middlepon
; ... .• Soon · .11fter .. Simpson's lawyers Magli model I the ~ani,~ kind of shoe Court of Mllyor Dewey Horton:
:. wrapped up llleir 14-,day case in the_ that left bloody pnnts near the bodForfeiting bOnd$ were: Kimberly
:. wronaful !Ieath trial Tuesday, the iCs ·of Nicole Brown Simpson .and · S. Dowell, Middleport, $60, runnins
- judge ruled against them on several Ronald Goldman on :l'une.l2, 1994. red light; Cathy A. Oliver. New
1'1uues and' they we.e confronred with
-As late as Mond,ay, Simpsop Haven,'W.Va., $ISO, disorderly by .
':;an aggh:ssive rebuttal thitt hiahlight- ~nied ever owning that .tyP,C of fighting; Clyde Paul Castilow, Bruce.·led some..of·the most damaging evi- ;shoe. . .
ton Mills, W.Va., $60, failure to dis:-llence. .
·
. , ~odzullc ts" scb,eduled to return play registration; Jason P. 'Ervin,
;,;, liy ihe end o.f a tense day, defense Thitrsday to testify lhat the shoes Racine, $60, running red light; Deb'· awyers were looking at last-minute 'Simpson is seeq wearina in 30 m:ent· orah J. Stump, Cheshire, $5J , speed;
•depilsitions they didn't want to talce, ly discovered photographs· talcen C. Richard Hagen, Middlepon, $49,
, Y,iinesses they didn't feel should tes- on the same day aa the Seull picture · speed.
&lt;~fyandapossibleappealtheydidn't 7 alsoareBrunoMqlls.
.
Jhink the judst sh'ould have forced
. On Tuesday, E.J. Flammer, a Buf~m- into. · '·". ·
· , · falo, N.Y., ti'ee-lance photographer.
. . Vete1'81U Memorial
~ The. defense1s roughest Stretch testified he took the ~ pictpres of
Tuesday admissions - Elwood
~e in . the ·testimo~y of plaintiff Simpson on a foothaiL,fi~ld i~ Sep- Phillips Rutland.
-'Jihoto expert Gerald Richards, former tember 1993. To prov~,hts potnt, he
Tu _:, di harg
e
~chief of the FBI's photo-examinati011 produced a pay stub for the assign- ""' ;"cZer ~ecUc!: C-ta~: .
lab. who di$mantled and dismissed ment, an invoice from 11\e photo 1~. DlltllaJ'Ies J- 14 _ _Pauline
"-]he testimony of Simpson's photo· and a copy ob (l!ovem!!er 1993 Buf- ·Jackson, Herbert Seth. .
~pen about a picture taken by free- falo Bills newalettcr .lha\ published
Birth _ Mr. and Mrs. .Samuel
one of the pictures.
N ell daughter Letart WV:a
]Jincet Harry Scull. ·
~- As jurors took copious notes,
Later tbis week, Richards is e(Publlsbed witb ,...;..~~)
· ;ii!chards. who returns today•. said expected to say that tb,e Fl~mer
~fensewitnessRobertOrodenerred phQtogtaphsarealsoauthentic.
Jiajlly when ·he brarided as a fake a , That testimony comes ovc;r the
:pi1qto of Simpson in the same kind of strong objections of l'ad defense.
Meigs County conlmissioner feff
'~as the kitfer's.
·
· lawyer Robert Baker; ivbo argued Thornton will hold a town meeting
· ;;.!, In the ·'end, Richards said: thlll Richards' testimony was forbid- Thutsday at 6:30 Jt.lll. in· the Senior
;::-..,\There's no• &lt;tontit in my mind ·den in rebuttal 'ince the defense put .Citizens Center in Pomeroy, not
~~gardinJ tile ihoes in this photo- · oo no evidence .for him to.rebut. Bak- tonight as was .epOrted 1\Jesday. Peo.;:.,taph that they have not been illtered er p~sethenteduthe
_no ex!M:rt wfttnPiess ch~- , pie with questions about,county govwchinged in any way."
lengtng a
nuctty o ammer s ernmtnt or who want 10 have their
:;;
. .. _-~ .•. · • . __ ' pictures. ·
_ :
crafts put inti&gt; a Meigs Cpunty craft
•Baker
also
objected
to
Bodziak
booklet are invited 10 auend.
1
\T he J)aily
giving
aboutitthe
•
, Sentinel
pictures,testimony
again IUJUing
wasFlammer
improp' r:::.:::::::'---~P~I~ea~sa~n~t~Va~l~le~y~H~os~p~ita~l;_.--~~==~..:==.:...----lo.-~:~=====~~~
'
n-s ll).t(t)
er rebuttal.

HospItaI news.

M
. •

Date corre
' cted

every _.. I gn, M-.y tbfou&amp;h
Ill c-t Sl., Pomotoy, Oltlo, b)' the
- iltiOWtey"'-l¥ ·~eo.,

EMS runs
·

'

•

·j

Stocks

'

I

.

. ·l..•. ••··~r
·~

9.99%

' fOI!MABI'&amp;IIi
s.,td - · 0011 .&lt;dMI 10
no Dolly' Sondnot, 111 &lt;:oan so. •..........,,
4,\'NI'J'' '

.

.'. . .,.c.htor·-&gt;

...

', .

Ll .......

llt1IIIICallTION IIATII

I

.Qoe - . . . ............................................$200
. Ole .................................................10
'Ole Y• .... ~ .:~ ..•.•..•".,......................... SI&lt;M.OO

,

IIJIIOLBCOPYPRICI
11111)' ................................................
,
'
.,
'

t

» Cooll

:s_l ,il&gt;ota
"'"\llllii'!IIOI'!l' ......... ..,
, . - dltocl., .n o Dill)' - · •

......
.
,
.
,
:
'
=

·-•or
,_.,.....,.

· 'ao

n II

Fast Re:lief.

PU~

l'ltd!iY.

• ,.........,, Olllo ..,;~ J'li. ' 11~ SOcond
- ,...... """ •
' Oldo.
' ~1 t iu The ~tltd J?reu. ud ~Ohio

R'utla·nd c

12-lJMI~ Oodk wiD be
(

.

BILL CONSOI,IDATION LOANS

.Q;·.·

.

.No lllbolriplioa toy 01111 ..,.,..... Ia .._ '
&gt;t
-

""i: •
-r-:- b imllable.
.
_,.

M

,_ 'P't ..................... ...
111 Cbl •' I; the Jlriod. 'by
a.blortpdal
. . . . .-. .
altM ' '; Joe. :
I

~

. , .......... ~

'

•tJ :II -

_..,....

1

....:...................... _. .................S5Ul

I

,12 w.tia ....... ...................................St05.5d
'
- - ..... C.., .'
'
~3
~
2d .........,.......-..:.........- ....... _,"..
J

- . . . .-.. ..... . -..... . . . =lS ;'
.

.....~ ..;...... ....-..... ..:.

:n

I

•
•

I .

r.

•

I

•

II ,,

•

I.

•

....... ................... ................. -121.30 1

•

• Ma• 77WS14 • New Hawa •..aiJII • Nat Plaunt 111-lltl
· • Or c:.D MINI On 'l1le Peapl• llllk Lila 11a111ne 615-.ASAP

•

MAG.Il-.•liOie

I PDIC

'~

'

.

•

'
1

•

'

••

...

'
"

.I

•

:

I

�:.-

t

•

•

•

'

.J'\f.

•

~

i Wellston boys notch 82-63 victory over. Easter
~

-

•

&lt;(

A filly %7-11 bliiii!J tile Well~ 1~ • ... ,. •....
~ 5
8
1.. 1"
-

in 12.
Mike a.fin pMlDd the Rocbu
willl23 poila. Sh.t WQIICien addld

ldllll • • 12-63 'Di-'YIIIey
Cmzrz-Yictai)«Mrthcllallem
,...._,. h7 niaiiL
E 1¢ all6-4 .._
its
lliinl•lli&amp;lttlou..
·
Br:ic Dillard led E I n with 23
: poiP ~~Otlotoueci

Behind a lo.point q - by
ShadWondcls.Wellltonedpd&amp;Rerio16-151(lcrtbe fint round. Then
in the second CUio. Mike Chlfin
went on a miuiound tossed in 10
points, while Stewart, Wonden and
Pugy each added great complimen·

..

ill':

:
..

.. I .....

77

20. ... '-7 ~hid nine.

a-.I.•IIIDIDck·

•111

,..Ia,

ihtet

••

J •

~

t

Iiockeis to 5, Hollon 5). EMS hid fqa( ttel!s ~ 1Ewiai Willi aiDe 8IMI ~ ttldl ·~a~~~ ' U»alr.z.5.•iddtftaZ"'
43-2ht thcllalf.
•
(Dilltnl two); 1~ 111n10ven, ae,ven licmM&amp;Se-.: ullll :q , ,.__ 04-2/W, D; I I Olw'2-1·,_12,
Blaen Clll bolo the Je.d ia tbe llljii};(DiUanl 3),' .ct 17 ....._
~ • 1 )I led by
' Ccny YoMcr 142J2,o 4, ~
third hne'(2G-16) for a 59-46 talWlstop.hit 30-41 ~·len, lcji)• 10 . , tiaht '""'
K4ll 0.1-4e3, S.Oinl4+ol.
ly,huuheRocketshtlmecourtadvan- 3-13dtreo-poi--.,13-21•1heline, , SMdln..,
•
· ~134-lltl'-6). · '
m,e-justl00muchinthe82.-63 and hid 31 rebounds.(Chlfin 9).; , Tlte~B ltdl·a-.;.filtl~· ·." &amp;ot.Stuqtll 1-0.
finale.
·I
,WHS had ninesteala(Chlfin3, Mer- " tn'l ~)'- ' ·
. •
315=5, Mike ~ 11-b-!12a23,
Eastern hit 13,.29 two-pointers rill 3); 12 tumoven 23 assists Ct •111111
·,
~flogy l-1..1N, Brodie Met·
'IIICII-26 three-poynas,while hittins (Chafin J)~ and 16 fouis.
·.J!astim'•'• '/ • _. ..J.S·lf!2Q.J7=6~ , oU 2·1..0..7, 1a=h Holupfel 2..().. .
13-16 at tl\e line )IIIith only 27 · Relerve notesr Wellston wdn ··.wc;llston • .. • -. ~6-274~2)a82 . 31~1. K.yJe.• S~~twllt· ~31~11 ,
n:bounds (Cut~ 6, Durst.S. Yonker tlje rcsetve game,42-fi lee! by Bren: · 'E1~1iw: BriC,DiJI-d-4+~~:·::ti~'t~~- ~ ,
1lry .Wori11o boost the

-t,X::

;unn~~bNo.
7 Minnesota;-KentUCkY
and
Vill&amp;~~v~ \~ldn
j
. . ;,
\
;
•
~

'
~ tblj game."
60 points'per game.
CHAMPAIGN.- Dl. (AP)
The Golden Gophers (15-2, 4-1
lllinQis outTCboundcd Minnesota
Kiwane Glrril itijeCied IIOIIIC iatism · Big Ten) had ~ ~v!nl a great 23-15 in tl\e second half and used
1 • after Dlittoi$ ended No. 7 Minneso- season·so far. Thcrr ranking was the some scrappy defense to force the
• ta's 10:~ willnina sircak. • .
' school's best in 15 yem, and the · Gophers to stay on the perimeter.
' ~
"It - ·• good win, but W~:'ve Slart WU·IIleir best in 20.
. . "The guys did a good~ob ofcon• still got aloq way 10 go, '·'IIIC senior
Thinp ~!I looked sood for Min- tinuins to attack." Illinois coach Lon
j prard '$814, ~ ICO!jaf.•14 Jll!i~ts nesota is it led for ~~ of the sec- .. Kruger said. "I do,~ 't think the guys ·
r Thesday_rughtJD~fiJ!tli,naDii~t's o~ .. haJf, ~~ ~ sconng ll'las 100 ever g~ttentau~c.
..
.
~ 96-90 VICtory. ''We're Jll,lllookmg hrsh, eonsidenns t~e Gophers
Chns Gandy s t~n:c-pomtcr wtth
~ forward to havina a JfC8t season entered the game allowing opponents 3: 161eft gave the llhnt ( 13-4, 3-2) an
"
· '
84-8·2 .lead.
.
..
"We. we~ !ooktng at e~h ~thcr
and saymg, It ~.gut check ttme, and
we re_sponded, Gandy satd.
.
Minnesota closed to 87-86 Wl~h
Cloonloa ND-0.49, a...taa .s
I :39 left on Russ Archambault s
Qiwew.,.. -61
three-pointer.
But Archambault
a .. • , - n. o .. IKIMt 66
Cia.-97.Cia. TiU'l.:zor
fouled out 28 seconds later, and he
Cia. flo( tllllsM, Cia. llooritooo l9
NBAII(andinp ··
was followed to the bench by Qut'!·
a .. -as. Holy o-n
•
Clc..
CoiUawood
II}
Cle•el•nd
cyLewtsandSarnJacobson;
andDhEAS'I'EllN C()NJI'ERENCE
Kenaody84
.
nqis
made
six
free
!~rows
down
the
Cto. f,arr Tecto 88, cte. EaM 6.' .
:r..
. .II .L ,. lloli ·. Gil
Cto.llli:roYillo 84. Cle. - 7 4
· stTCtch to ~at the wm. ·
Milmi ........ -·····-+26 , ao· .m
Cle. ..., 'I'J, cte. · New Yotl...-........ 26 tO .722
"We didn't play th!'t poorly,"
Clc. Mlnhall 73, Oe. UIKOID Welt
Wllloia&amp;ICJII.-........ 19 17 .n1
7
66

• IJJ lliATT ICEUEY

-

«.

r.

I
.,

.,

'

I

Jll,;

.:1
... ,_1

Ryan Norris flipped in a short Roush. But Meigs battled back to tie Mirauders' II llllists and Witherell defeated Vinton COunty 66-52, Wcll. jumper from the right baseline with the game at 46-all on a basket by .three. Williams had three of the siOn dropped Eastern 82-63, Miller
maroon 811&lt;1 gold's six·blocked shots. defeated Belpre 51-48 and Nel"
seven seconds left to give the South- Daniel·Hannan with 4: II left.
"This is whit hish' school athlet- son ville- York defeated Trimble 74em Tornadoes a thrilling 55-53 vic- .
Southern got a bad break wben
! wry over the Meigs Marauders Tues- Jamie Evans pi~ked up his fifth foul . ics ' is all about," Southern coach . 53.
Reaene IIQUs: Ia the re&amp;erVe
day evening at Larry R. Morrison with 4:03 left in the game, .but Howie Caldwell said after thli game.
game
Meigs outscored Southern 20"One
side
full
of
purple
and
gold
and
·Gymnasium.
Witherell .missed both foul shots. Bur
12
in
the
fourih period aitd went on
It was an excellent basketball Daniel Hannan rebounded the sec- . the other side full of maroon and
:game between the two county rivals ond miss for Meigs and scoied with gold. ThiS is about as good'9f a game to defeat Southern 45'3~ •.Waylon
before a packed house with a cbam· 3:521eft togive Meigs their first.lead as I've been involved in in a Ions ~cKioney led the winnen .With 15;
. Setui O'Brien added II. Southern .
· pi_Qnship game aunosphere. Tbe Tor- of the night at 48-46. .
. . time:
was led by Jason Allen with nirte,
"We had runs, 8Jid they had runs,"
· nadoes had to come back from a
'!Wo free throws by Norris tied
Thly
Hoback and Mitch Walker
· three-point. deficit with 22 seconds the game at 48 with 2:27 left. And ,Caldwell said. "l lhousJtt that Ryan
·
left in the contest. Jesse Maynard Meigs tben received a bad break Norris came out geaml and ready to · added eight each.
The flmlre: Meigs will travel to
;was fouled as he attempted a three when point guard Whitlatch picked · play. Maynard went to the line and
:point shot from the top of the key up his fifth foulat2:14 mark. May- hit the three big fouls shots. Our Belpre on Friday and return home on
Saturday to play Fort Frye. Southern
~ with 22 seconds left. the senior
nard hit one of two from the line 10 ·defense rose to occasion tonight,
will host MiUer on Fri"'Y·
'
~ calmly hit all three to set the scene
give Southern a 49-48 lead.
.
[when we necc;led a turnover we
ngerftr&amp;lilll
·
j for Non:is's heroics.
Adam Roush hit one of two from came up with one.
Southern
.14-18·9-14=55
• The win for Southern is the fifth the line with 1:35 left to ~ it a
"A lot of people ¥ mouthed this
,
Meiss
8-18-12·15=53 •
~in as many tries against Meigs in the 50·48 contest. But Robert Quail• learn when we were 0-4, but I bet not
Soutbml:
Adam
R~h 2-0-3=7,
!young rivalry. The Tornadoes. with came back and drove the lane tq 'to many schools in Division IV have
Ryan
Non:is
7-2-4=26,
Jamie Evans
~ their second 11raight.win, are 3-5 in
score on a lay-up and was foul~ played ttJc schedule we have," Cald1·1·7=7. Jesse Maynard 2-0-8=12,
~ the Hocking Division an!l4-7 overwith 1:29 left. Qualls hit the free well said. "Of our three losses we
1errod
Mills 1-0-1=3. 'nlbdl: 12-3~ all. Meigs fell to 3·4 in the Ohi!l . throw and Meigs had a 51-50 lead.
have lost 10 the number 3, number 7
111=55
' .
; Division and 4-7 overalL
Matt Williams came up wi!h a big and' number ·9 learns in the state in
Melp:
Robert
Qualls
1-0.·1,.3,
, : Both teams started out slow on defensive. play for Meigs wben be DiVision ill," he concluded.
•the offensive end, but they playe9 intercepted a pass at half court and
· A dejcc:ted 1eff· Skinner's onlv .' Brad Wllitlaich 3-0.7= 13, COllin
Roush 4-0-1;,9, Matt Wiiliams 2..()..
~intense on tbe defensive.end. Norris drove in for tbe lay-in to give Meigs cofllment ~ the game was "We
0=4;
Daniel Hannan 2-0-1=5, Josh.
;hit ttoe games first bucket at the 4:49 a 53-50 with 40 seconds left.
gave it away."
Witherell
7-0-S=lg, Totals: tt..O.
:mark of the first period on a running
But Maynard was fouled as be
ln other 1VC action Aiexander .
15=53
b0 footer in the lane. '
tried to fire' a three pointer with 22
! ·SOuthern increased the lead to 7- se&lt;;ends ·left. Maynard hit tbe first
at the 3:4:i mark of the period on two and Meigs called a time out to
=a Norris trifecta, before Brad Whit- IJ'y and ice the senior. After the time
~latch hit one of two foul sbots at the
out Maynard hit the third free throw
L3:23 rii~~J;II.'9111!ake it "'-~s\lntest., •.. IO.tic.the aame.at 53.
• . ..
• The purple and gold incre&amp;sed the
Meigs then turMd the. ball over
!lead to 12, 1, ~fore the ~audcr$ wit)l 14 seconds left s,ttil)g the
istarted tc&gt;'chip away at the Southern scene for Notris. Ryan then drove the
lleoo. A short jumper in the paint by- right baseli'ne and pulled up and
;collin Roush with IS seconds left flipped in a seven footer to give
1
.
:pulled Meigs to within 12-8. But Southern the win.
in~rested
•Maynard drained a three pointer
Norris. who has been coming on
tfrom the right wing at the buzzer to strong as of late exploded for a game
!givt~ Southerh a I 5-8 lead.
high 26 points to lead all scorers. He
.
; In the second period the Toma- ' was joined in double figures by
;c!oes built a 21-9 lead at the}:03 Maynard with 12.
·
lmark on a pair of Adam Roush free ' · Southern hit IS of SI from' the
llhrows. But Meigs clawed back into : floor igcluding three of 12 from long
:the contest and pulled to within 32· range fqr acool 29 percent. The pur·
Commi,ssioner Jeff Thomton
~6 at the half on a bucket by Whitpie and gold were 18 of 26 from the ·
Paid
lor by Colnmleelcmer J64i lloomton
•latch.
'
line for 69 percent. Southern pulled
'
j The play of 1osh ~itherell off the down 27 rebounds with Evans ind
«nch sparke4 the Marauders come- Norris grabbins seven each. They
)back in the third period. Roush ,had nine steals with Roush and Norpulled the Marauders 10 within 32· 'ris getting two .each, Southern turned
j28 at the 7:44 mark, and Witherell's the ball over II times.
. 1ollow-.up ' shot made it a· 32-30 ·
Witherell led M
. eigs with a career
Jarne with 6:58 left in the period. high 19 points, Whitlatch a,dded 13.
1 Three different times Southern
Meigs hit 19of46fromthefloor41
~ilt a four point lead, and each time percent including 0-10 from three
~therell scored in the·paint to. cut · point range. Meigs went to the line
. back to a two point contest. A l'&amp;ir 26 times and hit 1S for 58 percent
free ·throws by•1errod Mills with · The Marauders pulled down 32
lit s0\1onlli left· in the period put , rebounds led by Hannan with nine,
, ··rbeJ.n on fup 41-38 heading into Witherell eight and Williams with
~: tinlll period.
seven.. Meigs had three steals with
· , ~increased the lead to 46-. 'Witherell, Hannan and Williams get; ·
. llO at;the' 7;1!0 mark on a basket by ting one each. Roush had four of the .

J

'

'f

'

-'--

4'

~ ................ .14 18 .4:111
NewlenoJ ..............9 24 .:m
...,.......~ ......9 :D .265

~ht't hia .............

a

llorioit................... lrl

B

. ~t4

m

12

t~
19~

.471

'

~~
L fill. Gil

r.II
Hooition ...........:.....21

9 .757

Uhh ................ ~.....24
Ml-o .....- .,. ..:.16
Oalt...................... l2
so.-:............9
Deojer .........:.......... 9
v_... ..............7

12
20
21
2.1

· .667
, .444
.3M
.265
21 .241
~ .tl9

. ,..

-,

l~
II~

14
1711
19
21

LA Lajlas .... ........21 10 .7ll .
II .'1 0) .
16 -~~

l2 .421.
LA. cu--........ 14 21 .400
~$iate .......... &lt;l 22 .m
.......................... !} 24 .351

.,.._11••1 Classlfleds

U.S.OA

;...-

s-re .............-.....26
Pwrtooid .................20
s.c..... o............ 16

·

7

7
12

12~

.

m

at 6:30· p.in. at Senior 'Citizert Cen.ter
for areat residents
. in
development 'of Meigs County.
and for
local crafters .that are interested· in
marketing their crafts in a booklet. :

14~

.,

-

116, Golden ..... lOll
. -~.: ·"
Ar'- 95, M l - 9J
-III!&gt;.NewYodl6.
Clii.... t!JI,Wiirhl-1117 · ,
l'lloooil IIO.Ilpwer 101
:
l'onlaod M,,Doirotr 16
'
LA. Lalon91, v-..,81
SaufL•*-1~.•..-. ts(an

'

BUYTHRI!'E
CAFFEINE FREE

.

0

.•
.

-~·

How a s1111e panel of .P,..s wi-ilers

and broadc:Mtcn ralcl Obio hip school
&amp;itls' basketball teams ht thc' s«ond

NCAA Division I
men's scores

.-o·

Jri

t=:ennaiUn (JJ) 10-0 . . .. •.- . ..... .
l-W~n 12.0 .... . ..... : . .... .. 2011
.l-Btaven:a-ek (I) 11..0 ............ 19~

.

4-Cic~lnlkl

·c:c····'.:

I

,.

-··
'. ..
~~

Full ·

.C&amp;I_I

.

-:;-,·, 72. -

~

n

'

•

·St- '

Walrh72.&lt;iliiolioonol-62

'l

no.~a C
~

•

1•

'

,,.

... atact

BahJWin-Wallaof f),

•

~..

.. t
I

&lt;!lllo·~ '

· f.!l:'" 7.,~••
1~~ c:-_,
- 1~
.

.

u.o . . .............. m

l·tlold-14) 12.0 .... . ... ' .. 18)
4-0t.VA-IIfl) 12·1 .. ........... 16l
S.ldoftW. h:h (I) JJ..O. · · · · · · · 144
Koptey 10'1. , ....... .......... Ill
7-0.....11-1. i. ................. I II
a,..y,.~
· ll "tr,.tt-l ........ · , .... · 80
9-Ni
. Holmrs 10-Z . .•• . .. 67

10-Col, Han .Jl'L , ............ 21

f)IMflf

r-

1'..,12·er...,•-=

(. Ill•' I aDI' .

4.

.

·

flit,

... :, ......

1••

. l~o. W~(U!IO.O ......... l24

Ill
..._
"' neace....,..

. 2-'1'--itlll.o . J

Ccrlt. So.. Olllo80,' 1odi.,..,_ 31

:l.llrb 121 11.0. .', ........... ... 147
~·-(1)160 ...... - ..... tll!

Sweet
Onions

i

~'

•

,.

' GAWPOLIS
349 Third AYI!nue
NIDDIJIIIOtlT .
97 N. 2nd Street

ti,Buai.C ~' '

,,

Fres~ ~-

Kale ..

69¢

. Lb.

'

POMEIOY

s.km Slreet

~10.0 ... .... .' ...

. . : . .... . . 70

..c--E.I!.I .......... 57

j O . i 2 : S'orVoJ. (I Ill· I ..... 52
-1().()............. ~2
•
Odltn
Jntl2 .. ~ .-nu:
· II·Mamrl Ridtedale ~7. U·OAIC HtU.
Ill 4l. 13-BELPRt?.ll l H. toi-Su..-k
Otlraway l'J. U-Loudon,ille 2~. 16-·

...

• Doyhllwo Chi(WNI ll. 1 7 - - 22.

~&amp;2ndSts.

iUI1AND '

1-H.U..S.. . . tt-ll .. ..·....... 116

'

.•.

•

$1.99/b.

.

II·ASHVtU.I!TEA'IS VAU.I!V'2.~. 12·
...,,...., 24. r:~....,.t9. ·14-Eiida 11 . .
l!I-I\'11111WRi'*VIiWt6.
. .~.

delbaJ 60, Himm Col. 42
MuHI"Juoii6.,,M..,oir~~
. . 01-oo 68. Mlri&lt;OID 61

Nea

.

~rA-IAloo

Cedarville 61/. Tjlllo 52

Findl.,9l.tUQOIIANDEIIO
Sh•wllft Sr. 1t. Mctt~'lil Vern..
N
56

:-1\~

.

DioiiiODII '

"'ttlt·::!!I'IQ.O. ··· ·· '····· ... .YO
..... Py. VII.C2)Jl-G ......... 9t!

~[.

·. •I

',.. ~·-

'

.
Pick Your Own

£11,
l:oddd tiD. Trinit)l ( lA) 10-2 ..... 24:1

. Mld-Oitla.ee.re,, ce

j

·

~

$1-3 9.5

3 Por',

'

•
•

.

~. '

Z

..

I.J'.trol. Cent. C1:11h. 24. 12 (lie)-llroad.W. H11. 8l'C'I!Iuvil~ . On. HuJhes 20.

:r...

••• ·•.

14~

6-Day. Cham.-Juht:nOL!(I) ll,(J , .... II~
1~Wadfwutth(HIO.O.......'1 . . . . . Ill
.., , 11-C()I. Brooklmven (I I 10-0 .. :· ..... . 44
4J.You. BtWdman Il -l . ..... , . . . •.. ~7
•
IO.W. ~ Lakoo• 11·1 .... ... ... :14
~' .•·. Odlen reed•... J:Z or MDft pofnu:

,•

•

Hlr.. ll-0 .... .. ... . .. . IM

5-:Ro..:ty River M~nilicllll ~· I . . ...

'

('?

'

Dlvlilon I

. •.
Z

·'

sugar sweet
strawbe"les·

.

_.,,......._poll olt996-97 ,...
Thr Auoci•tcd Prc11 (b)' Ohio Hl&amp;h
S~:hool Athlelh: A11oci111iu. dhiaiou : ,
Mlll-kllt m:Oid lhrouJh Cor Jan. I:Z:
lint-place·~ in I*'Cnil
):

·,.

'•

''

Ohio H.S. girls~ poll

.I , '

"

PEPSI COLA

I'I.CIIIIIGA

~ ... :

.~

DIET

'

TDI'DIIID • Sc.blc. 10 p.m.
Dehoillf Vucw.-. 10 p.m.
lodi-• LA. Cllppen. ltt:lOp.m.

-'

~

DR.PEPPER. .

a..toooo, BO p.m.
ClliCQ~G at Mm..Oia. I p.m.
fll't.lo at Dlllu, I .P.m.
·
New Yod 11 S. t\rirooliO,I::IO p.m.

~·

'

24-PACK 12.0Z.'CANS

New Jonqo •

1

I

·• • ..... ,~~u, ,., ..,.., .1

p.m.

• J)

.

WHEN YO'U·I,

--

Toalpt'•a--

Goldeft Stalt 11 Philadelphia, 7:)0

·r

,' ,

afOICE

Boneless Bottom PEPSI
Round Roast
.

I~

. Tueotlay'•-

To\Vi\Mebting ·Thursclai, :l~~atY ~ 16

··· Na~e.-

a'

16

10~

.556

_._

n..e

11~

.611!1

23 . .l4l

MinncS&lt;~acooch Clem Haskins said. 78-71 with 5:26 to go.
' wfttch ~ 15-of-50 IOd comrtlitted
"Then: arc good lossc.~ and then: are
Min'nesota's Eric Harris thch 20 tumovel'l.
. •'• •
had k"""-'· This wasn't a bad loss, fouled out on an imentional fquJ·with .
~ lt V'" •ftl
this \va., just a loss.''
·
.
4:57 left, W¥1 Man Heldman made
. ' ' ' •N oqe
S'f I •
.Kevin Turner, coming off a 1-for- both free throws 10 give.lllinqis a 79- • . 'ITin:IboirnM lllit 18 pclilltsalid 14
I) shooting pcrf0{11l'IJICC againstJire11n
781ead.
•
' rebounds ali lhb....tldettl (.13-3, 4-2
State, was 5-o(.1 from three-point
In other games involving ninked Big Eist)IIMiie ~ IIane ill again
ra~gc and had . ~ 'career-hiF 24 teams Tuesday nisht. it wd !'fo. 5 b)' ·tecbnicai ·'fOIIII. In lhei~ •loss to
pomts forthc llhnt.
.
.
Kentucky 86, No. iJ Georgta 65; Mi!llilion'Saturri!'Y;1holnu.aftesb.
"After th~ secondt three-pornt and No. ·16 Villanova 68, NbtfC malt ffiitWatd, cal~ ·a timcbur the
shot 1 took, 1 felt like every ~hoq Dame57.
. ,
WrldQats'didn'r have IIIith .8 eeeOIIds
took wa.s going to go in," said Tum- •
No. S Kentucky 86 .•
10 play in,a tie liiiM• !U'd lhe ,H wri·
cr, who a!so made three free throws ·
No. :n Georpj 65 ~
· Canes made two· flee dlrows Jbr.lhe
in the final 36 seconds. "My confiThe Wildcats ( 15,2, 3-1) avoided · victory. Ori Tues&lt;lay, technil:al fouls
dence was way high."
consecutive Southeastern Confer- againit Thclm~ aitd coach Sieve
Bobb~ Jackson bad 21 ,points, ence losses !for the frrst tim~ since
Lapp8s were part of I nlli illlr JaW
nine rebounds and nine assists for the . 1992 as Derek AndersOtl'scored 24 theF'tghting lri.(7-7. 1-5) W.VF all
Golden Gophers, while Sacobson points. Kentucky went on a 15-6 run bot t:irte poir;tt off a ((!:point cleftcit.
and John Thomas both h81115 points. in tbe final 5:43 of the first balf for . Alvin WillillffiS then sc!Jicd lt!llt die
Minnesota led 74-68 with 6:26 . a 40-261ead. and the Bulldogs (12· points. in a' 14-0--rlln' that pve.VilleftwhenThomasconvertedathn:e- 3, 1-2) never were closer than 12 hinoya ·a 59-44Jead with fi'vo JllinpOint play.. Illinois re,sponded with a pointS again even though Kentucky ute•, tO ~lay. Pat Garrity' '*! J'7
9-4 run capped by Gandy's fast- had serious foul trouble. Adrian pointS ~or. N«!tre Dame,: wh\!:llllls •·
. bre_ak layup that closed the lllini to Jones had 15 points fot Georgia, ' ,lost four straisht.
.: .

~~

.743 ·
.676

9
II
14
, 16
11
18

............... ...2.,
CI.EVI!LANIL- ...21
a..-..............20
M l -........ - ..t8
........... -....,..... 16
. T -................ .12

.I

10

.m ,

21

•'

m

~4 .11119

~.................. )2

........."..,.......

ro

I.

.... ,IS..:Coldw*'ll. '19-Rod.)' Rinr Lu:h.
.. · . W.,. (I) II. 20-0......•11~ Oorlloid 14 .
•· lt·Mioeralllld&amp;e H , 22 (lle~Aoblaod
. ·.
~:w- Cllornpiorlt2.

·

FULL LINE .

stouffel"s

Lean cuisine

____ ....

.,_,.
.----···~-I

~--·~------------------·-·_
·•.~------~--~---...,____.:..,___ tri:--.--••'----I·~--------~----~~ . II
.~

I _

----

..

=:;.,~...;-' 'I'II
.... _ _

. . . .- - - · - : :
·

• ------·'\'
-.:

·-

'

r

.

:==~==· ·i

====~i

~:!!.....·---~-~"'"" :

•

I

I

'

..

�.,

..••

•I

\

........
Yarlous

.· .

"'

!f*ln••c-.r.
Januery 18,1117
.
...

.

~

-

•

Aligela Laten belt v-w, 9181, Ponland dr" Ml ~ Detroit 9S-86,
S.:nmc:nto ~ Jftdiaa• 105-98
in ovenime, Phoenix dowllld Denver 95-86 and Bostoa beat Golden
Swell6-108.
'
...
Rocba ·106, KllleU 86
The rematch wu a miamau:h
between ' Charles Barkley and
'Chadtii
_..,__LOUietaJ
" kinyg. much...,...;. •L·-· ..

CHRI&amp;IIIEHIDAN

AP BD.wlllllll WIIIW

'

I

.

~

'

Here we - lllliD. It'a mid-Janu.ry and the Chicqo BuUa - on a
r.:ord·~IIJ victory peco;
I!IJ8iiW.IUIIAN
i
.Reidy'-another.,.,·win-7
,
.J ........ ~ ........ ta
('D)
......
·~
_,
• II'II.IIAl'l- ~.....,
,...
: Ready for aaother peatne~s cleblle?
ARNOLD pat pER
·1
S.:O. I U118 w ......,. for fteeina.the
II aiheeJIII to lie filling into piece
city illl984 to .... his CoJU to
once again for the best ream in the
22agai~~~;~,.rsformerream. Mookie
, . _ p~~~~~n~: Robert may is· ' timore and became the Ravens. · NBA.
Blayl~~"~ahed,l,Gw~t
·.l.. :.·
:Jrl/ll_
i• (lle,
r •. "' ·-i
I I
.. . . ill r.dillllpOiil u a There has boen_recent speculation I The Bulls improved their record
uunu~w ......
........
· '
~
'
il!ld-llllled -eaneeur wbo did the Colli might move again -to lto32-4ThesdayllisJttbybeatingthe usual, Barkley scored 2'1-first-half
RobertHorrysparkedU,.Aft~ ,._'ft ~
'.I'l__l~ _,
:.
wJilt hen~ W IDdo.
Oeveland - although Jim Irs.ly, · ! Wuhington Bllllet1108·107.Exact- .point! apinal l)lc player who body- les in liis (mil pme with Ill. ne)'l IU
rt;r
::;:
' Aftcrmontha in and oulofhos- Robert lnay's son and lbe team's ly one year ago. tonight. the Bulls slammedhimtolbecouninancxhi- team, getting II poinll, seven
'
'
~i ·
pitlib ai- lllfferiiiJ I llroke more . gcncral manager and chief operating beat the Bullets to improve to 31-3. bition game in November. The OUl· rebounds, ,two usiltl, lb!ee .steals .
• YW aco. m.y died of hear! · officcr,~q~e~redly has said there are
Chicago's latest win- the Bulls' bl!rst led Houston 10 a 2().point half· and·two blocked sho4s in 26tnlliutcs.
I '
)
lUid kidlle)' faiiUJO l\lelday, a day no plans to leave.
first one-point victory margin of the lime leact
"I'm just ecstatic· to bo here,"
·~:
..,.. .. -~,Ill lndima Ulli· , The Colts have lieen negotiating season -came courtesy of.anothcr
The Knicks, who had a four;game Horry said. "The first half, I was so _I, S_
~'9
~J
winlty llolpilal. He - 73.
with Indianapolis for a beller finan- finemorable performance by Michael winnins streak snapped, got no clos- . eagerlo get OUI there,lloxt my wind
". I I
• ,
'
.:;
....!...
_·,:11. !'i~-thM ~~~rdafYth·e" · cial packaae. Michael Chernoff, .Jordan. This lime, he shook' off a .er than 13 in lbe second half.
real quick: The sccolld half, I felt .
j ',
L_....,~-.~. ~... L:. WI•.._
Colts executive vice president and jlltnmed neck loscoreeightofhis l9
. "I've always had lot of res()C(:t more Clllllro,uble. Bveli 'though it
y·
.
·n '
rua ,.., --,
chief financial officer said he didn't • points in lbe final.two minutcs.
for Oakley, but he (made me angry) . didn't show in Phoenix, I can.-play
A
~
d nay, Plftillly pl!'llyzed by a expect lnay's death lo ,rrect lh!:
"I didn't have a feel for what I'd in preseason," Barkley _sai~. "I don't thi~ gamc _a tilllcbiL" ,
1
.
,
..
'
N'ov. 29, lm lll'Oke, spent his lut lalks.
, be Qble 10 do ~t the end when I had k~w what .he was thinking a~ut.
Shaquille O'Neall¢ the Lakcn :· ROCHES I~ M1nn. (AP)
~ at home with frienda
"We will continue lO negotiate soine sholl," said Jordan, in obvious . II$ not o~er. He hun'l apoloa•zed. wi•L 24 po'm•·, 12 -L----'- and five ' Amo_ld Pal. mer n expecled
.
torenuun'!
,.,
~~NFLp~ she said. Yfith the city of Indianapolis. That's pain after the game. "My ' neck is It won't he over until he ~lo- .bj~qd.;, Nick~el scored hoap1ta11zed for. ~veral daya,u ..0.
·; "H~ 11Dap1 Gree!a Bay would nOl.an iuue," he said. "We do not hurting. I' ll take some anti-inflam· gizcs."
17 poinll. , _
·
, , , '·~yers, ~ ~ tor ~
I' 1ria the ·S ap.- Bowl, llut he bet on
anticipare any changes in the opera- matories and hope it.won'lbe a prob' The Rockets were 21-of-24 atlhe
The Lajceh iJitde only one of · '. oancer.',- ~..
' · '\':'&gt;'. '~ '&gt;-&lt;'
=~.lly:.if10 belli the odds
. ·."
lion. Things will continuh~ seamkles~; lem tomorrow niglft. 1 got fouled in line and 9-of-23 on three-point bas- their first (2 alll!mpll from the foul ...... ~k
·ed
· . 6?;Yel!!thc
!old. .c oif star, w!Wf:i
1"'""'
a -1
ly just as they did after 1s stro e.
the head and il jerked my neck and kets.
line and fmished 8-of-24.
.
1nto·
•'Mayo Clln.ic 0\t)
~ '' 8Gi'll11 Olicigo, !nay.made his
While he gained a reputation in pulled thai muscle."
·Hawks 95, 1lm1Jenrol- '3
'Iftll.11aen 95 Platona 16
!Monday, was sclieduled .lo ha~~:
fclnulle iD healing llld .Ur condition- "altimore as a ~dlesome, lighl·
Scottie Pippen scored 2S points,
Atlanta won its 14th straight
ArvYdae·Sahonis 'who sat out the !surgery today. After his n:IOale Ov,n ::
ilif. Jn 1972, .. pur,daased the Los fisted 1)'1'8111, he generally kepi a low hilling three of his six th~pointers home game and drew a crowd of tean)'s practice Mo~day with a sore !the hospital, he will re~in jn~:
AI!Mies Rllma and iWipped,owner· profile in lndianapoiis, luming over in the fourth quarter, and Dennis ~~ than 14,000 for the fifth lime ·_ back. had 1,6 poi~IS, 13 rejlounds a_nd 1'!-oches~r f?F..Irealment as an ou~
l!l!ip With Cmoll Rosenbloom, who . mosl of the day.to-day operalions Rodman had 18 rebounds to reach m s1x games.
·four blocked soots and Isaiah Rid· ,bent. thecllnac said.
.
~ ,,
oWIIId lhD BallimORI franchise.
and player negotiations to hi"' son.
10,000 for his career.
"It's great to sec a lot more peo- er scored i2 points' 10 lead' six Port- .
Doc Giffin, Palmer's spokeaman;::
· 'nle Colts .won the 1971 Super
In Indianapolis, lrsay sliOw~d a
' Cliris Webber scored 33 points for pie coming out," said Dikembe land players 1n double figures.
· said Palmer was prepared for the';:
.-~ lid CllptUred three Slraight
'willingness to make some bOld and ·the Bullets, inclUding a basket with
•
!'
.
surgery.
-;
APe Bllt tilllll in the mid· '70s, bui expensive lfiOVes to n:s1ore the team eight seeonds left that sliced Chica· ' ' ""
'I
newr pllllolherwinningsea- lo the glory of its earlier.days.
go's lead to 106-104. But Toni
iQII in Blllimore. !nay became the_
He approved one of 1he biggest Kukoo; waaleft alone for a layup that
,,
..
""" of iacnuin1 criticism in the trades in NFL his lory. a I0-player, sealed the win befon: Webber made
medle.
three-team swap thai broughl Brie a three-pointet at the final buzzer,
" fa 1914, then-NFL coauniuion· Dickerson lo Indianapolis in 1987.
"You _can't send a message 10 the
.~ ,. ._ Rozelle said lnay wliS con· ·He paid a heavy price in 1990 for the Bulls," Web~ said. "What can you
&gt;'
·alderina movina the Colli, and on
right to dnift Jeff George, and !nay's say? ·I don't think we sent them a
' w.n:h 29, the MarYland House vot- wallet also took a beating in 1992 message. Maybe we earned some of
·M to aivo Ballimote die power to
when the Colts got· Steve .Emlman . their ~I/'
·
over lhD Colli throuah eminent and Quentin Cory all with the first
. ·Ft wu the aeventh straight win f01:
~liu 'nle city acnt Irsay a '' and second picks j n, the draft
the Bull~. who Jut year broke the
Da ·d S Georg M 0
II!!IJSiail otrering $40 million for the
lnay brought in Bill Tobin u NBA record of M regular-aeason
· VI •
e, ' ·.
~·
dileC!or of football operations, and victories and finished ·the ICIIon
Scott H. Strickler, M.D.
•'
piCked the Colis' equipTobin fortified the roster thrOugh free with 72.
.· ·
.
. .. ·· · Borad Certified Opbthalmologists
"'
·.iiiiM iiiiQ moving vans in the mid- · agency and the draft as the Colts
J..ast season, the Bulls ·went into
· ··
·
·
· · 'I
·'
...
•
(Ill ~!hi Diibt and tciok his.learn 10 reached lhe playoffs the pasl two the All-Star break with a record of
SJwdallppfln.SmaJIInclsfoli, no stitch, no Shield cataract surgery
' '
~lit, leavin1 a 3().year Ira· years.
. ..
42-S. This season, the best they
• Phacoemulsification and foldable implants
·
.
·
C!idola in Baltimore and bi~~Cmess
He · also brought back Ted could do is 44-4. But it will take vic. ilijlt (jlslld for years.
Marchibroda for his second stint as , tories in lbeir_next 12 games, includ·
• Clear Corneal cataract surgery
.
· ~ Nilij« Indianapolis · mayor
Colli coach' in 1'992,-the Year the ina road games in Houston. Los
• Astigmatic reduction with cataract surgery
'
~ Hudnut. who metlhe mov- Colts wenl9· 7 and matched an NFL Angeles and Sealllc, and a win
·
, •Spaall~sti!m~onpossible.fmcatar:!lCtremoval .
., ·
• ~ 1~ .11!. ~ _ arrived in ~~~~i- " record first set by Marchibroda's toniahtatMin~ '- . .
"'"'-'lo, , credits the move With
Colts iri Blltimore from 1974 to '75
Of pift~l NB RIPICI ·ptayed
ar
, .: t ,., l
•• ~~lldiUii \;ofllliilliito
.for the. f.'e&amp;teit lmprovemenH'nim _ Tuelda_y' fd'gttt, 'thil h'Ome 'ieam wlis
·"
'new r,~.,en s rre come
!~;!!"""
Wlfl. ~.~ne. . o.ne ~ lo the next. fi &gt;'"l'"'•w~V~QUI iq ell;.of ~~Jiouston
·~
:r
, , . , ~~~~rs
1,;•1.
11 would bo prelly ·
;:. .,
Man:hibroda, whose 1rs1 sunaas crushed New York 106-16 Adanta
•14474-5575
' !pd-pniaed -to name s~me~y
~oach ended with hi~ firing by lrsay edged Minnesota 9S-93,
'the Lo5 , •--~-.· -·
·
· Wllo; alleat in modem limes, d1d
m 1919, ~ailed h1m as a tough
·
.._ 'sillaJe-handedly for boosting - DWner.
llii-tc:OIIOIIIY of. Indianapolis than
"He was a har1f man )o gel' .to
I
.BOb,"' Hudnul said.
·
know, but once you gotlo.know him,
; ,"lk Will your typical entrepr:e- you had to like him," said Marchi·
;,, He- tough 10 work w1th !lroda. now Ballimore's coach.
1,;:~~:': thai he drove a hard barAfter his stroke. lrsay appeared to
aj
.. -also somebody who · lie maki11g steady progress unlit he
' a lot to·offer a city, and he was
developed pneumonia in Augusi,
'!JP:;of~
·lhlt." ,
forcing a 41-day stay al the Mayo.
.:
Maryland Gov. William · Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
.
~- ~=~Sdlll~ fer, who wu mayor of
He returned to his Carmel, Ind.,
B
when !nay fled with the home in September, but was hospi·
llollillhu bitter fecllinp. · ·. lalized again less than two months
liied in every ftY 10 aceOm- .· later for a·heart rhythm disorder. He
" Schaefer ll&amp;id. ·~We · came home again in mid-December.
,
and the buai- ··
Other survivors include ·a son,
. .l!!,l!ity and we met time after 'Ibm; and three granddaughters.
wete IIi II talking to hiin
He married·Nancy Irsay in 1989
thOupt we were close to him · · after divorcing his first wife Harri· ·
I
'I'm piing to ally in _Balli- et,lfler 41 years of marriage. Ownership of the Coils reJIIIined with
'''""""I found out he atready had' Roben lnay in the divorce sellledell .... One thinJI resent ment. although both NIIIC)' lnay and
lbe Colt niiiJIC and the ~im lnay filed suit to gain cootrol of
,,._·;, .
' .
·the rest of his estate after the stro!t.e.
r
ne...&amp;ren:nce in · Several hours after !nay's death,
eiMd"Z'nse media · .Harriet may and Jim lrsay went 10
•
.
.
reuon- he - court in Cook County, Ill., seeking to
' Bllllmore. The · den)' any claim that Nancy · Irsay
W,uMujland'• mipt have to a Cannel horse facil,,lhrough fmi- il)'. Nucy Irsay argues that the late
&lt;::olll o~~r gave her _the rijhtto the
property for which he paid $1 .6 million in 1994.

..,_ldcled In ..· ,..,..
·-· •· .•• .'
1

·..,'..

hB'

cance... , ·'

U
._·· ·6'"'·
t
d
·1. Q · ra_

:=. 0

J

71

OHIO VALLEY

Eye Physicians
I

'•

·· and _S urgeons

ua

...

,. ••·i!lay

,I !if

Qf:fJce , ,Ttl.

, •,
-•-- '

#

'

of

wbo ICONd oiJht hlw
11 .,.-. in lbe filllll:-48. "We raJ. •
ly ba!lld them chlnlillg 'Defenae,
DefcMe.' &lt;They allow IIIIo pulh our·
selvea and 1o try 10 finish
.......
.
...
•
.
·--..
Steve Smith led Allan~ with 26 ..
poinll, and Ouiltian r
Mnt!MIIM,

The Dilly Sentlriiel• Paige 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

;J. iy The Bend

.Butls slip by Bullets 108-107
·te mirror 1995~96 victory pace

aliments
kllllrsay
at 73 -· ,

'

..' ' -

••

, In thfl NBA;

...... ..

3

-----•f;.;ne-.liil.i'1VVV"--7iii51iiiaii!f1iliftiii$ii.lil.i9iii3ii.7).-._______...

,,

s. no way to win when
-with a control freak
take John to court. On the day of the
hearing, John did not have the com~;;jAnn landers: Ir~ May 199S,
mon decency to appear before the
~cl
my carlO "Jiilln," a 20;Ye&amp;r·
Lan~ei'S
judge.
I won the case. The judge
neighborllood fri~nd. He had 1111
1":,l~........
.
awarded
me $450, plus the filin g fee
'IIIDt.:l
s
and
Cfe.
anjl returned itlo me with a
.,.s}'lldk• .
of
$5.84
that I pilid when I filed the
windshieid and · wrecked
summons. His mothe~ slopped lalk·
·
The repair cou amounting lome.
$1,087. I hail to go i~to my sav· ·
Continued on page 8'
he would paint my ap¥)ment and.
to pay fiJI' it.
,
have been living at this address give me $200 in cash. He ,painted my
22 years. I always have boen on apartment b11t did not honbr his com·
terms .with John's mother and mitme!llto give me the $200,
Despite my long frielljl~bjp with
~·~en. Since the accident, I tried.to
his·mother
and sislers, I ~lized the
to help me pay the repair bil),
no 11vail. We fanally aped that only way to get the mohey was to
Tbe Community Calendar Is
pubUsbed as a
service to non·
profilgroups wishing to announce
meetiDJ and special events. The
c8lerular Is not designed to promole
sales or fund raliers of any type.
.
·.
Items are printed as space permits ·
, . by Bob Hoeflich
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days. ' .

Ann,.

ANN LANDERS

Community·
calendar:

,,

·
a
r
••
•
'

0

to

FOOD CLUB

CHICKEN NOOD

SOUP

of·the Bend ...
'

.

.

.

10.5 oz.

· Can

na
SAVE UP·TO 72 on 3
FOOD CLUB

·i':,_

.food Club

.

'MACARONI ·&amp;
CHEESE DINNER
7.25 oz.

Box
..

.S.AVE

a

GENERAL MILLS CEREALS

··------'--,
c!)r

13 to 15 oz. Box
Cheerios, Honey Nut Cheerios, Frosted .
Cheerios, Lucky Charms, Cinnamon Toast
Crunch, Golden Gra'hams, Cocoa Puffs

.

lim

• WI•

.OF1•· •.
PERMONIII
FOI6 MONIHSI
• WE'RE

"*-' .

Red Tags Reflect 33%
Off Savings To You

A MESSA(;E TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Reme~ber that special someone this
·
Valeutine's Day with a message in

., ,...,

.

'

.

l.,., ......

•

t

'·

.~ .,,..,~.

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

............ for

..,.

"'·

' '

The D,Uy Sentinel

.• S:w~ • ,Mo•· &amp; •Dl!ds ~ Grandparents • Teachers
· .
· ··
• Babpltter5 • F ~cis
· .·

l

••

FAMILY. SIZE
.

BIG BEAR WHITE
B READ
.
..

20 oz. Loaf
.·

·Anyone wbo • d appreciate'~ thouptfulword from youl All Vale_ntlne
Hear1s wiJJ be .publlabed In the February 14th Issue at a,eGS! of only $6.001
.
MUS'l' BE PREPAID!
..

,. .-yfor
,&gt;1 . . . . . ., ,

·''.

,.. ........
the·~=·- ..t.:..
' .
......

•WIUGIUI··

OFA

... $6.00

Wlllllowllts,

S.AVE .
.

Strlppl•l·

'PICKENS
HARDWARE

'

..

.l
'

'

. • 1

J

.. '
·~

\

'• ·)
\

'

• ,.'

•

'

free

' often ~n said that 'fou've got big bucks for the en~~..ljr.
WEDNESDAY
the good with the bad. I supAnd forget about spring cleaning.
ATHENS •• An open house pubRP~ that applies to all upects of our Just do it now when you might be lic hearing on the proposed Athenslwes and so Wfl ha.,.e JaniiM)'.
pinned in the house anyw1ay.January Darwin highway project will be held
· ~:Baby, it IS cold outside, but that's is the greatest lime 10 clear out all that Wednesday, S-7 p.m. at the Ohio Unially. Compared to a lot of plac~s stuff, esjlecially papers, you've been versity Inn, Richland Avenue, Athens.
~doing well ibis winter and we're accumulating for montlls on end. Wrillen and oral comments will be
llilflhrouglaJanuary--onemorething Saving them and probably for no accepted. Officials will present inforIa be thankful for.
good reason. We're a nation of paper· mation regarding two feasible roules .
·;:January really isn't all that b.tid work. Even if you needed one of the for the proposed highway.
~e you ~it--is it?
papers you've been saving, the .
·••·For one:lhiia, yoil can take in a11 1 clulncesuffinding il ainong all of the: . WEDNESDAY
.
.
.
.the sales which ""!lilY got under- things you've held on t{&gt; ~n'l too · . RUlLAI'!'D :· R;utland Townsh1p
. lhe day after Chnstmas. ~~u ;see · , proinisjng. Unless, of course, you put Trus1ees; orgamzauonal and regular
Ill: the st1_1ff ~u , bq!g~t- to milke , an lntport..-,t paper where you were meeun_g, 6:30p.m., Wednesday, R~t­
~meone Happy .be1n~ sold for~~ .s~~~e you'd be able to find il. In that · land F•re Slalwn.
~what you pa1d dunng the holiday case, jlistgive up lhe ship--it's never
· ~ing season. Nolan encouraging
where you thought you pul it--is il? THURSDAY
. POMEROY -- Prayer and planflictor,Qf
course, but. sl\oppi!lg sprees Seems to me we could
bet·
.
. .all make
' .
i)tver faa! to tum up a few •!Oms !hat .ter use Qf ~ file 13" on a daily .basis. ning meeting for Feb. II concen of
yoia probably can't live without. It's
However il isn't written in stone "Harvest", Thursday, ·ro a.m. al the
~'Patli~C: ~ pi,ck !IP thoae g~es · that you ha~c to do solh:thing con· •Pomeroy Public Library meeliqg
atbarsam pricles.--now doesn l that struclive as you while, away these room. For more information call the
illlike you ~I good--as merchants go · cold _days and nights in th'e warmth of · Rev. Peter Tremblay,'9920-4152. . ·
l
your home$. At leasl, I hope there's
.Wut reducang ·stocks.
} :Or you might use these ~old days warmth;·and light-,and water. You . ALFRED .. Orange Township
of January to set a~Ul. wnung that . might just dellide to tun( on. !he tele- Board of T111s1ees annual appropria)lok that you know 1s an you. After vision andboc011111,a dedi41M-couch • 'tions meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m..!ll
. .; they say we .all hav~ one, il jus.l potato. That's good t~. What with the home pf Cterk'Osie Follrod. :
~ms so d1ffitult to gel II onto paper cable theS!l days you ma!hl just find
1\iM! when )'011 pt clOwn to it, who's a progranl or two you haven't already
RA&lt;;:INE ·· American LcS;on Post
("!"'a read it? Admilredly il takes a seen. If worst comes to wunl you can 602, business meeting, 6:30 p.m.;
lqt of work to act down those pearls always rent a video or two, but lliat's dinner to f'lllow. ·
of wisdom. However, if you hap- lbe couq oflasl reson. After all, to do ·
p,e.ted 10 be a principal in lbe 0. J. that you have 10 go out into the cold
DARWIN .. Bedford Township
~jmpson trial, your book effons will
to pick them up and trudge out again Trustees, organizational meeting, I
p.m. Thursday.
··
~arently pay off big. 1 notice !hat
to return them.
,
P!'oseoutor Marcia C1irk hu given up
And if all else fails, there'~ always
SYRACUSE .. Meigs County
liCr job in order to complete her lit- reading. Certainly there's book
etary contributions about the trial. around the house you've been m~n- Board of MR/DD, 1:30 p.m. Thurs·
Mer all that publicity, play by ·play ingto get to. Now's a good time. ' day, Carleton School.
ac:&lt;;ounl of the trial and all of 1be tele, Si~e we don't seem to be able lo
o,;jsion appearances by participants bypass January, we'll just have to
RUTLAND . -· Leadillf"Creek
~w can she possibly add anything to
make the best of it. As usual, this, too, Conservancy District, organizational
die scenario? Apparently, someone shall pass. Meantime, do keep smil- meeting, Thursday, 5 p~m . Thursday,
~ks she can since she's being (laid · ing.
followed by regular meeting.

•••

' ,,
'

-

..

�'

•
•
•
••

-.-·.,•

Po1Mroy •Middleport, Ohio
Ohlo University
Collep af Osteop.lhic Mcoclicine

11,1-

~can icam the best -ys to liad

Famlly ,
Medicine
Job" C. 'Milf, D.O.

.. Auoclate I'Jof II Dl'
of Family Mcoclitlae
~
"
:
••
•
:
:.

Quealion: I was Iislening to 1V
"FIIIIIIly Mcoclldae" Is • weekly
lui nilhl, and lhe newscastet read a cohunn. Th submit qusdoas, write
st&lt;ll}' about something called "hand, to Jolm C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni;
foot and IIIOillb" diseaSe. He said dial vcnlty · College of O.teopathlc
several ~~a schools w- closed MedJdae, Grosyenor Hall, Athens,
hec•nse a number of childR:a in those Ohlo45701.
schools lllld this disease and dial it
:· · COIIId "spread like wildfire." What is
. hand, foot and mouth disease? rve
:: never heard of it before. How serious
:· is it? II it relalcd to hoof and mouth
" disease that affects caUie?
: . Answer. Hand, foot anC! mouth .
: disease is a very common illness that
;: lypically afllicts children, and no; it .
•• is not related to hoof and mouth dis~ ease. Although, some individuals
_ :: incorrectly apply ~ "hoof and
;~ mouth disease" label to the human iU•: ness as well.
:
Hand, foot and mouth disease
6· begins like many illnesses in children .
E --- a low grade fever, sore tlvoat. body
•. ' aches and generally not feeling well.
:: One or two days lalcr lender "bullips"
•· develop in · the lliouth. These then
t; become small blislcrs that ultimale:; ly break, leaving a red, sore ulcer area
· _( ~ that may be u large as one inch
r- across. These are usually on the
f; tongue as,well as on the inside of the
:: cheeks.
:•
As yoU. would guess from the
~ name of lthis disease, sores also
;: develop on the skin, panicularly on
i• the Jl!llms and backs of hands and
: · : bottoms and tops of feet. These stan
-: u small bumps and progress, just as
~ the m011th sores do, to form blislers
~ that ultimalely b~ and leave ulcer~· like sores - or lesions in doctor lan•• guage. The ones on the hands and feet
:: 1re usually somewhat smaller tha~
&lt;' !hose in the mouth .-- uncommonly
~ larjer the one-half inch across.
..
The skin lesions can look a great
~ deal like chicken pox, but heal with. ~ 'out fOI'IIIing crusis or scabs, as is typ~ ical ofthal disease. The lesions. also
. ·
· ~ lyp~ly heal without scarring. The
entire illness usually lasts 7 to 10
~ ~ya, and complications arc infre.
r... quent, .
.., J, ·The reason local officials closed
!" achools it. dial this illness is very con. ~ ~~ lid .:~ads li~e wi!dtire'!
·usu.IIISPICID .
fj JUSt as ihe'.~WIC8Sicr Slid. This type
~ of epiclemiuoccurs because children
!• often c6mc· to school with inild ·
•: ~ym~ thai accomJ!!Iny the begin~ nlng otihis illness.

Thc _Jacomc Opponuniliet ~shop will be offered 1!1 two localiocla:
Feb. I, 199J II the Piketon Rescaml
andExlenaionCenlcr,J864Shyvlllc
Road, Piketoa; M~h I, 1~7 Ill
Southern siJIIi, University's South
Campus, 12681 US Reule 62, Fin-

~· ~-

•

. '

* Noney Orders ·
*Wired Money Transfers
* Postage Stamps
* Prepaid Phone Cards .
* Utility Payments (Where avalllble)
*Lottery Tickets

POMEIOY

FOODWID

OPEN
MON.·SAI.
8 111•1 0 PM
SUNDAYS .
8 111·10 PM

POII1 MEASAIT

OPEN

:;

£II]

•·BUY

'.

......

·~

'.

l

1

:1

ONE•

L FREE i
I

FOR

•. ~

1..

.

UIIIT OltE FREE wn:tt COUPON·
GOOD THRU 1/11m' ONLY AT I'OOOI.NtD.

BRiWNY

coca~coLA

PROilU.
CTS
..
..
·~

(

. '

·~

lOLL

GROUND
.BEEF u.

....

I

'

'

,

one. · · '

'

.

. :.

'·

My ..tvite to Nellie is thi~: k~n as ·
fast as you C-"in the oppos11e di~Ction. 00 NOT take the promotiOn.
Your health lind .Cif-esleem are more
important'. if ~ou. 'take this job, you
will aever do 11 ~ghl' If Y"!! ask f~ .
~ · 'bia ...vice 100: ft111~tly, &gt;be wdl .
~ t111keyouleelllke·lf11!11'0R·Ify011dO .
~ nOt do the jab exactly ~ he WOI!Id
~ ha"e done it, be will ridicu~ you. If
.·., you n 100 aucaiaal\il, be w.lll put ·
; · you clown becan.., you are a ihrelll to
• •~ him and his job accurily.
.
·~
Get the~? Theri is no wrr~
.• to win whcin you cleAI Wllh a COIIavl .
: "freak.' You will never pt a comph- '
: mont. Y011 will never know if you Ire
• on the riptlnCk. You can nJYer be ·
~ sood enoulh or 1111111 enouah to
· ~ pta. him. YQII will 1111'1 doubtin1
: younelf and WOIIder wl!r.you ever
t thoupl'you cOuld hll\diC the job in
~- 1111 ._. ..... Yanrill ~ 1lup1Da
'- laaa.SGIYill~
.
1 bfni itllitlla
I atn mar- .
; rJed 10 one._.~"tw~ *k
;
;
•
;
;
•

t

~ fill

'·

I*••

. . . . . II!Y· .

C~cken Breasts~99¢ ......
Stokely

Squeeze , ·

PubHc Notice

Catsup .
28

for tunhtr lntormallon,

·I

oz.

¢

IJ.SSUL .BUILDERS, INC.

101.1111SSILL
COISIIIChOif
'
-

. 9PACK

Bush Lt. 'Red

.

Kidney or

· · .Mew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows_
•'" Room Additions • Roofing
"b OMMERCIAL and RESIDI:N'I'IAL
~
FREE ESTIMATES

•NewHo-.
oQangu '
:

·Remodeling · •
Stop6C0mfNIIW

.."

FREE
ESniiATEES
985 4473

Chili Hot
Beans

'

'

614-992•7643

BLUE BONNET . .

I

. . ....• ~....
lb.
.Margar1ne

7

SQUEEZE IIIII

CAIIPIELL'S

LB.

.TOMATO SOUP

~· 2 ..'1

FIUI

ggc
BBC
·BACON "'·
·
Ll.

CAULIFLOWER u.

OLE CAROLINA

KETCHUP BANQUET .

FRIED ·
.
8181
. . . .~: CHICKEN

Top, Trim,
. . Removal&amp;.

"No Job Too LJI~ or Too Small"

Grinding

' w, will
Ph.'773-9173

'• Ow,w: .

ggc ..·

PEPPERS
II.

101.1.

78~

work w~hin your

·..

'I• IUuur

,

.

.

A7 IIlYAN Pt.AC! ·
IIU77Z

DUMP TRUCK

MIDDLEPORT • ·

WW.Ws

·-

'scoRE A FREE PEPSI
.. '
, P.O. BOX 70!U
'
"
. ·vouNG AMERI~ t.4N 55673'7031

24 PACKS-

·I

WITH

GET ONE Fill · ::.~

I

I
I

1

'

'WICKS
HAULING ·

Umestone, -- .
Gravel, Sand,
Top' $ftll, Fill Dirt
814-992-3470 .

'

I

--

Door• Open 4:30
' Game Sfl!rtll:46

Sib.

Per out ... "aanllng to

nutnber of pleytra.
Under new IMftlllmlnl

iRUESII'S
Body work, • • truck

~

a truck...-.
minor muhii'IIDII

.Patclng Loti

!

Domino
·.sugar

$179

Stokely·Tomato
Juice

GAUII

.. IIMOVAL

0.

AP·or SR

Umlt2
. pleaH

Public W.lclimt

TYIOI HOLLY FluU JUMO PICK

Split Chicken·· Brea•ts

$149

Llmtt4 ,....

. liNGO .
RACIHf, OHIO
AMERICAft LEGION
POST602
EVERY SUNDAY

,; LOwR-)

•

....... llill$11&amp;1
.

Gold Medal

'

Clltater, O"lo

. (Ume Stone-

4-tl I ...... q I I Jti!;I/WPIIJ

Wesson
Oil ·.

2/$1 .00

12oz.

985 4422

' a.ltla•s

___

48 ~

rtpllr.
~
Clllnge,

·rune-uW:

69¢

l..onl8t.. At.. lnd, Ob.
741. . . . Alii far Kip

MWn zwant

7/IWI

•
'

...

•

..

.

~

~·

"'

('j

'

,,

.

~

. . . J.

'

''
l

•
''

Flour' ·

Carnation
. Evaporated Milk

Umeltont • Gravel
DlrJ •Sand

Glt'llll
Deers &amp;

'

00~

...

Sib. ·

SERVICE

I:GO l.fll.-3:3!) p.m.

WLV't•s .

·--~-------ZH'·

773-6861

R.L. HOLLON
·TRUCKING .

INSULATION

3 PEPSI

•

wv

&amp;

••.
.
1. ,

48oz.

.,

strHt

1 LL•IH

.
2/896"

16 oz.

'

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Weldlng'Supplles •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
S.rvlca • Steel Silos &amp; Fabrication • ReJ!!IIr Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, Rlllllngs, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other slullll

FUSI
a·
.
'1.
,
.
a... 'I
. CU(U.Eis
I '

filS ..

CELERY

' 1/~1.; lfetal.r

TREE

lt•25 OZ.IOI .

·SALAD TOMATOES

12 oz. Pll.

BUY

14.5 oz.

contecl ....., .. --7430.
(1)111, Ill, 17; 3TC

2LIBR

&amp;IOU
TURKEY

Whitne.y .
Pink Salmon ·

wanMttH given.

•Comp'-.

no...
..'·•• There's
Continued from page 7

BEEF .
STEW

cube24 pk,
12 oz. cans

- · • call-.1 wtn be
condition II Ia In,
no
uprose or Implied

r··

Now John ltas ottered to pay me
1: the preViously agreed amount of
1; $200 inslclld of the coun-awarded
i · atnount. He says if I agree to th1s. h1s
· :: moihcr and sisters will "forgi~e" me.
1: I would·be willing to accept this offer,
,. ' but 1 fear he made it only to get out ·
~; of Jl!lying me more money and he
,i will not honor his agreemc~t. What
:; is your lldvicc7 -· Unconv1nced 1n
·' 'Brooldyn
:~
Dell' Brooklyn: You have stated
~i that John' 11u offered to pay you $200
!' instead of the coon-ordered $4SO m
:~ cxchanp for his family's forgive;~ ness, but you doubt that h1s word 1s
·i good. Since il is obvious that you
·, don 'llniSt him, huggcst you take the
: $200 and find something ·else John
· } liouJd. ~. iuch as wash you&lt; car every
~k. run en:ands.. shOvelthe. sno.w_or
~ OK)w the lawn, until you both agree
·~ ihalthcfdebt is' paid in full.
•
~·
Dell' Ann Landers: I must com- .
, n.nt on your re1p011se to "Nervous
: Nilllic," the woman who has a chance
: to 110 promoiell and work for a con: trol fiNk, Ann, your ~nswer shows
- that you ·have never had to wo~ for

Pepsi Cola
Products

and

·I
I
.I

BIG ROLL
T~OWELS~ . ..... BATIIISSUE

I

$ 39 '

NORTHERN

PA~ER

.80% LEAN

~

•

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

r.

'

12 pk, 12 oz. cans

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAV..SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

Margaret Stewan, was chosen Valentine .Queen for her Florida sorority.
While a member in Florida, Slewan
spends several months a year in
Ohio and atten~s Preceptor Beta
Beta as a visitor.
·
Af!er the closing t:itual, Charlotle
.Elberfeld
Joan Coider served
fruit, cookies and hoi beverages to
·memtiers: Grueser, Martha McPhail,
Jane Walton, 'J)prothy . Sayre. Jean
Powell, Donna Dyer, ·Vera Crow, · 1
.Clarice Krauner, Carol McCullough,
Velma Rue, . Ann Rupe, Eleanor
· Thomas and 'Reva Vaughan.

Pubic

Public Notice

'

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
PRICES GOOD THRU JANUARY 18, 1997.
.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

·,

·; A· lctlcr. fr9m Beta SiJ1111 Phi
Carolyn Grueser reporlcd she bad
lhlemational ·regarding tile ln1ema- received a thank you liom ,Hilda Tll'a~onal Eildowment Fund •Proposals do, Serenity !-louse manager, for the
' )was read Ill the recent meeting of Pre- chaplcr's contribution o~ supplies for
lleJllo.r Beta~ Chaplcr held 11 the ·the ballcred women's shelter. Tirado
11arlsil liouse of Grai:e EpiscOJ!!I) swejt the .asency needs additional
:fbun:h ·
·
·
ilems .and, for any future donations
The ~hapler voted In f~vor ofiup- sugaeSied wqmen's lind childt:en's
jloruna inlernational funding Of pro- unde.rwear..
...-..ns inEiudii)g'Lupus, Down's Syn.Charlotlc Elberfeld thanked the
:drome, and Gene Therapy ~esearch. group for the floral aJTangement giv. :; Treasurer J~ Walt!IR reporlcd on en to her by members for her role i'n
~ finarices of the chapter. There was hosting the Christmas dinner.
~ 0 ways and n\cans report The social
An announcement was made that
~ommittee will have a soup supper at our frequen!·visiting sorority sister,
'6:30 p.m., Jan. 23, at the church. .
....
.

'LARGE
. EGGS II
.
.
I

I

POMEROY, OH.
~...- Cr.cllt c.da

~roup to support funding of programs

FOODLAND~ fI

2 LI.IOI

298 SECOND ST.

Royal Crown
Cola Products
I

. LastJan\!&amp;'Y. Fossett made it liom
Rapid City, S.D., to New Brunswick,
Canada, before technical problems
forced him down. He set the wodd
distance ballooning record of S,43S
miles in 1995 on a flight that began
in Seoul. South Korea, and ended 2.50
miles east of Calgary, Alberta.

:1n

7 AM MOI.·SA1. MIDII8111
SUIDAYS I-10M ·

·SALTINES

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8AM·10PM

not

a

-·.•

WEEKDAYS

DOZEI

coaltorPortugal or'SJ!!Iin on Friday,
and the Russian border by Sllurday.
There was some concent becauJC
Fossett had not yet received permission to cross Russian unpece. "We
are working very closely with the
U.S. State DeJ!!IrlmCnt and the Russian Embassy," said J,Jo Kemper,
fli1ht project manaaer.
·
· Branson said he wished Fossen
success.
"It's a battle against the elements.
I mean, it's
really 1 race against
each other," he said.
' spend IS
To succeed, Fossett must
to IS days in his capsule just 4 feel
wide and less than 6 feet hish. .

:old

24 HOURS

I UOill \ '\ U 4 Ul I'U"

FOODLAND

Dldeof 11,-400 feeL t
,.,_..SteWIFoatell-IILC{dl
Fouea'a r!eo laic• toBy •alow:w-,lla)'iaajoYill ad spikia1.hil er altitude tt.~a:en~ ........,.,. pull
food with llllacidl as he headed him where some of the WCill wcathacroa the Atlantic today on his quest . er OCCUIS, said British tycoon kicha1'd
. to become the first balloonist to cir- Branson, who failed in his lllenlpt to
-etc t1!e Eartll1'101lstop.
complele the trip earlier this mo~th.
Barty this mornina, the 52-year- Another E!aopcan team also failed
Fosselt was approacllins Bcnau-. this month.
:4a. said Alan Blouat, a member of
"What Sieve is lryiaJ to do is
~Fossett's ~ support team at quite remarkable 8J!d incredibly
:'-eyota Univtmty in Chicago. ·:To brave," Branson said on "~ightli"':."
·Ole best of QUI' 1;!\owledge, everything
FOssett, who comm11mcates wtth
:0; penect" ,
'.
his support tcam by computer, said
In a S.telli!C 1elephone .inlcrView - both his. hl:aters w- working well.
"with ABC's "NiahUinc" on Tuesday. He reported dial the lempcraturc was
Fossen. soft-spoken Chicago secu- II degrees outside his capsule and SO
rities dealer, looked out over Greeill" inside.
·~~oro N.C. and said, "I'm standint
·Rib:hie said she was ·baflled by
!~ i~ the c~le' with my lUll out. - one of Fossett's remllib: "llating
~- I'm prettyh.IPI'l here.':
MRE with antleids. " Si!e didn't
~ Fossett took off in his '150-:foot, 'know if Fosactt · thought ~dins
:li(ver-colored .''Solo Spifit" balloon antacids to his ready-t~t llll:als
•MO!lday night. (rom ~usch Stadium made them Wte bellcr, if he wasn't
St. Louis. Jennie Rib:hie, a.\sistant feelinV"Cry well, or if '; be 1ust said
El'.rojcct manager; said Fossett was it to be funny."
, ·
.
· ;yavelinl at il!o~tM mpb_at an altiPlans cal) for Fosse, to reach the
~·
..
'
.
. i' CHICAGO (AP)- Mllllonein:

L'S

POWE

balloonist heads across Atlantic ~

inveaancnt capital, ~their prodlie~ fee for the W.._bbop 11
uct, purchase 1 fnnchisc, and access
SIS and 1ncl~, ~· a...1
informalionalmourceswhilcstaying
luac:h. For more 1nfOI'JIIIItllp or to
within the Jaw
reJi*r by phone call (sal) 116{);
The workshop will feature OSU
7232.
·:
bldiness ·andeconomicdevelopmenl
••
spi:cialists and busineu analysts as
well as current busineis owners who
have faced and solved the problems
of staning a business. Small-group
teaching sessions insure thit malerials presenlcd can be tailored to each
participant's needs. As a follow-up,
attendees can register for free business counseling tlu.Jugh the Small ·
Business Development Center. ·
_ _ _.;__ _~------...;_..,.--_,;.;:.:.;.._,_~
, .:t;
_,

~~~~~~~------------~~I:I:G:IE=N=D=FO:O:DU==NI=.====n.==N=I~M~H~
· =:

i··- . '
.'
I,

'-Everything_perfect as millionaire

:;

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8

~(PoiMroJ •lllddl•port, Ohio

I

·Dates set for income opportunities w~rkshops ·i
Local entrepreneurs have the
opportunily to 11p businesS experts
for JUidance in slartina a new.busineas in the income opportunities
workshops, Feb. I' and March I.
Presented as a collaborative program of OSU Research and Exle!lsion, the Small ~usincss Cenler and
Ohio Valley RC &amp; D Council, the
worksbop will focus on several different types of small businesses arid
the many aspects of staning and run·
ning a business.
Whether the business is home
based or storefront, marketing services or agricultural products, or
operating a franchise, business own-

.

w.dlnQay,.-..ry15, 1...,

'

·"

'

.

Maxwell

.· House Master
Blend Coffee
'

I

'

'

. Umlt 2: please ·.
34.S oz.

$

99&gt;

�•

~OJ •

lldlllapOtt, Ohio

........

RIA er. .word Puzzle
ACROII

PHILLIP

ALDER

1"

'nl--

I'

lrnl

. . _ , .. , .. /IS,...

441111RI ...
.._

•?

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

AI"

• ' •

2

11....._, II • . . .: .
11Piu111Md
...... .....
14Dc '1•

MR

11 Adlpl
Compuler Uura NHded. Work

own hours. $20k 10 S50klyr 1·
I00-348-71IMI X1508.
,
~~~

Earn 1000's

ttuftlnQ tn·

v.tapea at· hom~~. 8e your Dota.
Start now. No

''"rienct. ftH

aupplias info," no obl loation.
Sond S.A.S.E. 10 Nuggot.Unl1
38&lt;-t, 10151 U.iYoraity Blvd. Ot-·
Iondo FL 32117

IE WlUII OWN 11081
BuiiNUand
Earn $2,500 l'llrHimt S8,000
Full-Time I'll• Month Pllleo&amp;&amp;i!la
BuildingS
Insurance Cla tmi for HHhh
Carl Providers. SGftwart Pur- Commercial a.pace for rent. 51h
chaM Required, Fi..nclng Avail· So. In Now Havon, WV. 3!)._112·
oblo 1-100·722-Sama Ot- HTTP:\\
WWW.SAMI.COII

17

•

2bdrm. apll., lOlii •ltclriC, IP.

pliancoa lurnl&amp;htd, laundry ....., King 'alzt waJ:etbH, ctnopy wt
tacllititt. CIOH 11) KhDOI in laWn. mlrrara, choac, dro11or, ~ night
Appticaliant availabl• • t Vil'-te atanda. Mallt Gfftr. 304·175·
a...., Ap11. •&amp;a or call 11•·GG2·
3711 . EOH.

-·

-

.

EllA

Fulf.. Time. Bab~alntr Wanted.

Weokcloyo, Roletoncet Roqulrld,:
Mull Bo Ablo To Drlvt 2 Chllr·
dren, 1 Child Htndi&lt;appocl, 81&amp;·

••

. •
•
•
•

FUtt-Time, Pau-Ttrne Tu,ppe11nre
HourL Cal Bt_, 1 And 5 01 ..

ol&amp;e-&amp;530.

Furniture, SaiD, .Retail : Salta

Col1sl'looaol

~ltrall•n . MiRed, Nice Needs

--..·Ro.

To Gl..away AKC Rogl tttred

a-a....a1 ..- 1.

Home, ' 10 MlnuiH FI'Om Gallipolis
For A 2 Year Old Child. Sand Resume And Lenerl 01 Recom-

Lost and Found ..

· ~--

Class alze is1imlled. Three reference papen aru requited with application. Apptr in paraon between 101m &amp; 3pm M· F. SlUdtntl
. Gallipolis
'that auectufully complete the
&amp; VIcinity
TCE ciall· will be eliOible lor em. All Yard Sa1et Mull Bo Paid In ployment. Absolutely no phone

70

AMnc•.· DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. ,..._ EOE

tM

dllr before ltlt ad it lo run.

llu...., ....., ·

2:00 p.m. Fridoy.
lrlonday odlllon • 10:00 a.m. Sol·

u...

t•

CllTTIJS ·
'AMl'
.WVIN'
OUT?

1:~~~=~aaloo clerk ntt&lt;lld tor
1,
PI PleosanL Stnd r•

All real ...... ~ In
lhll ••wapapar II~ to
1l1o Fldtral Fair HouolngAcl
ol1988 which ....... ......
10 ~ •any "' ..... .,.,
llmiC&amp;tkW1 or dllcrtmli de 1
baaed on 1'8D8., calor, Nilgkll.
... lomlial . . . . Ot l1lliOI!II
'brlgln, or any _
_Ill
make any IUCI1.,.,.,• .,.,

gas walBr

&amp;81 Cornpu,'., Wlitl Color
$G50, 080, 8H·•D·3DU, 81•·
-11555 E..,;ngo.
Booll By Redwlng, Chippewa,
Rocky, Tony lam.. Gu•rantled
Lowo11 Prlcea AI Shoo car., Ga~
1[1011.

-for--will""'

Thla
k.-lngly-

wlllelllolnYIOiaUDnoltnl
law. 0 . . -.. horllly
Informed thlljll"' 111:101

are avallabla on an equal
opponunl1y i&gt;ula.

Nice rwo bedroom apanmtnt In .

."

ant Register, 200 Main SL, rPt

Plooaonl WV 251550.

REAL ESTATE

'

1liH:k ...... good Condition, $200,
114·881·7 -.

~inlhilnto 1~""11.,

-.y,nopaoo,l1..--.

5 raoma &amp;;. balh. 2112 lincoln
Avo. $2501mo. 0tpGIIi &amp; rtltr· One bedroo"' apartment In Pt.

-..o,e1--

orx;oa. 300-1175-1385.

.

l'omtro)' CNH ~ loCalld

at 2•5 Union.......,., ~ 1a
now accepting application• ror

on• bedrqom aparlmtnlt. C~n­

llct managemenl at tht aHict
Monday through Frid•W'· l•m·

Sprrl.

Small 1br ap~ upstaifl, ll1001mo
+ utili tiel. AppPanttt, .Waitt 1
IJirbago PIGk·UP lurnllhtcl. Can
30&amp;-11715-&amp;Gl'S.

Livestock

DO Ia

Cu11enil~

Acctpllng Appll·

c:a.tlon1 FOJ The Following PoiJ·
tion In .The G•llco Work1hap:
Regilllfed Set'Yice. Adult Setvce
Worker
Dutiea Include: Ani sting .Phyafcally And Mentally Challenged
Individual•. 32.5 Hours · Per

10

W8ntacl to Buy

Week. S7.59 /Hour

ADto!u11 T\IP Do(lar: All u.s. 811-·

'·

I

1231:

8pm, 7dayl.

'180 Wanted To Do
Any odd jobs, pain ring, guttlfs

clt•ned. 614· 245· 5879 or ·30o4·
875-7112. .

RiHe, Madt ·1n

•• 1....,
'"

.__

~

.._..

awMIIM:aft .

a 1ox tor....,.

• Get 111 ~' 37 Bour dr1nlo
31111111
311 All ........

• llcMik 11!111

4 Cllll oul

10 ~--~1111.,._.,_

1 ' • cit or
lnydtr
I EIU!Iw7

. Snftmln

=-·

11 c:.wn

eo.. _...,

41 - -

Ccmcrelt &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallon&amp;, Ron
Evan&amp; EniOrl't'IHI, Jackoorll OH
HIOII-S37-a52&amp;·

"'\""i"'\ir: &gt; I· I~

Lacuat fence
long-s• an lm&amp;ll end.

30H73-5829.

,.

iRA N SPOfl TATIOtJ

'

Firawood. Seasoned Olk. cut and
iplit. Delivered locally. 304;07534011 ahti Spm

.qulppM kitchen, air co_Nlitlon·
.,., big 1111 1n Po...., -r l!a•
pllal and school, rer.rencn ,..

n. Poo1...,_ OH.

CO&lt;flr Siding S.cUonal, 3 Bid·
rooms, 2 Full B•ths, Pool. Out·
bu ildlne. Cla1e to School And
Groc•r~. Potier Art•. Evening

,..

I

'

..

I

. lo.l ~ :«&gt;0, H~ClN:\E
'
AATIIE"! ·

,

&amp;

/

about Weal'i ddi.U'to Ollen tbe
bicldlna ·and to
ltrf.~ve dla. monds at unfavorabl!l talnerabllity.
~~~~~--._----~·~~--------~~L-~ West didn't billa 1111111 l1llb cards, as
East evidentiJ bad tbe tbrae club hoD·
on. Theaelote, Wellllad to b&amp;ve a dis,
trlbutlonal band.
..
.
Bactin1 Ilia, jud1ment, Cbagas ·
piQed_a apede to lbe ltlng, a heart to
hil band, ud a apade to dummy's
jack. When tbe llneare wolied, declarer took bia discard and cl'almed.
Exeellent!' ·

=~SIO&lt;*.
:t

J: U.,N'T

eEL111.VE •
WE'RE

REALLY
GOIMCir
OUT!

' I DON'T EVEN
J,:4AVE A D06 ..

.

wv. 300-755-511&amp;
·

· BWtneu
OppOnunlty
INOTICEI

OHIO .VAU£Y PUiliSIIING CO.
rocom..,.,.U !hal you do bull·
n - wf1h
you knOW, and
NOT 11 . . - , ilirOuen 8io
mall unlll ,... ·-lfgllod

.,..pl.

uo

wantac119 Rent

.........

low 1a form four simplo words.

UiTRAK

II PI

I
I·

S0TFI

I

12 . 13

......

C 0 N P.. E
I~

5

"The trouble with kills to·

\

l I

--

day: the elderly woman told

I
1-'TI;;..;,.1, . ;._;Tl;;,..T17,r.TI--1 G
1

F R

0

L

\

0

her friend, " is that they think

~~~~~~~_is

•

•

only

'f~und

in'

•

~ THIS! S9UM!S

PIM NUMIUEO LERUS

I

IWEDNESDAY

Wan1Ta Rant: . ,
3 Bedrooms &amp; G•rage Country
SeUing Ca" Cliril_61&amp;.. 78o&amp;3G 1.

MERCHANDISE
----------

~

51 o

3 ·Btdroom ; 2 full baths, '13751
ma. S2001Hpoail. No pets. Rtf·
~renee•. In Hendtfsan WV, 30•·

Household .

GOOds

518-402&amp; .

CountrY FUrniture. 3CW-~75-e820.
Ro 2 N, 8mll~. Po Ploaaan1, WV.
Tuoo-S&amp;i9-6, Sun 11·5.

I·

Mobile Homo 2 lltdrooma. S10...
Retrlgtrltor. Vtrr Small, g2o

\aa3 Sahltn ~l2 Alii~.~.
PoWer Sun'root~ Leather Interior:

'·

:!\~ ~,:X
1

feae Mustang V-1. A~10 Spoiler
151&lt; Mull $0!11 Will COI)oldlr "!'f
l!ooioonalilo Ofllr For El- Vohi·

Mobile Homo For Rani.' Or Mobllt

liMITED OFFER! W~ walt,

HomeLOI, 014·448· 127&amp; or 014·

don' ••1-1283.

Cit,

=:!!.L'&amp;:"!:':i

1172.014-256.0251.

Call8i4-446·•584.

.

1

119$ Z-28 L!ic 8 ·&amp;pao\!,jo.QOO
m11ea:, BOse~ plf!1tf, ••aMen~
condililn. IHI,Ooil QBO, 81...._
1312.

"N,-ic-•""2"'Bo,-.,dr-o-oJ1li,---:S:-:2-,2S"'"r"'M-o.- ,.,.
lint 1-800·251 ·5070. WoaiWOOCI Miloa Down 218, Nice, RoloroncHome Show.
\
11. Dtpolil Requ ired, 81

•·•4«1· .

CANCEII(June 21-July 22) Your enthu·

"'

~illid optimisn\ wiH have a s110nger
elltct on your companfons today !han
You will
sagging llpir-

•

:,'realize.

BEaNICE
BEDEOSOL

Muat It! I· 18971 ~x70 ,_, Include&amp; s FREE 1o1 Nico ihroe bedroom mobile homo
,..., Only 1115.57 per mond\ """' In Mlddloporl, no poll, 11&amp;•GG2·

:::-5•-::··-~r:--~~~
Now 14•80 Only mako 2 poy- lorSmal-1-In....~.,..~
2-~.0

..,.. a ,_.In, no I!IYm&amp;nl ••·

lef 4 rHtt, tr•• HI·UP 1 dati¥·

ory.OO...
' NIWI •••• Aopo•a, Owner ft.

· do ~ that will give you a sense
oiiiCIIie ..IMnt, btd H may not lmpreaa
)'OUf 111 c 'Jt11 . Your lime wMI come.

~...
- btdr~m mobile home 'In
1!.'!~!"'""'"· no po1o, 81 ..IIG2·

VIRGIO IAug. 23 'lrpt 12) BOring ....._

.......

fNY be lao much for your , . I l l Mture

to

,-ng -ISI711rno. Frot Twil bldraom mobile hramQ 1'1 Ml·
~ • 111-Up. :IIM-:715-7111.
-llo anao, dopooil ond relor·
nco&amp; roqulnod. call 814-1192-1777
· '
• .... Spm.
llull atll 5 ciiiPIIIII Dou·

J'S.--

............ a

I•

wv. 304..

IUOOinn.:!OoH7NIOO.

1 .. 2 b

I

ICII L(ODLIIIIIr.lltVIIIftiWII

*" ......... _...

wf- -.a.... .

-~ t2dl, fllr ....... 2br, ,.
~
I
IC,

~.

run...,..--••lllftiiOteotlft,.1 I E..,.,.il wll be . t '*1111.

, _ control elr.'

Olk IOd Ho,.,. Mitra.

will.........,.

'

LJIIt4 ...... n.oel. ll)llietNd Of
!llllllllrll ........... lodly, lmrlle • fliw

IIAIIE"... Freo HI·

~llvtlf,

handle todaY · Try to parllclpate In
...,
your- or

ICIIitl

,,....

Iii-..

lift'"""'

. LIO ( - 23-Aug. 22) TOdlty you may

_ __Call -100-137·323&amp;.

up I

..........

UNSCUMIU! LmtiS

GET ANSWEI

TO

r r r r I' r I' 1
I I 1. I I I I I
,.

· Almost , Pekoe-- Faith - Public • TALK ABOUT
Say what you will about trouble," one 11ossip said to
another, "it always gives you somethmg to TALK
ABOUT."

Limited Offer! 1087 doublewidl, Fourth Avenue. OaRipolls, •2251
3br. 2balh; S17GII down, S27GJ · Mo., Water, Trash Paid, 814-&amp;48·
monlh. Free dttlvery &amp; setup. 3&amp;.44 Aftere P.M.
Only at Oakwood Hames, Nitro

IIIJI\IJCII\1

properly-

'::~::~' S©\\cillA~~r.~s·.
- - - - - -.141104 loy CLAY II. POllAN
Rearrange letters of th,
0 four
ICrombltcl -d• be-

•

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

~~~ hOmes an sate. Free delivery
&amp; - p.

. 114-317-7010.

X•

XATONJ

Comple1a the chuckle quoo.d
by filling In the missing wordS
'-..L-.L...L-.L.-"-,. you develop from step No. 3 below:

2 Baihs. 2 Bldroom.
Bedrooms. 1. Bath,
BUY IN JANUARY. No payment
Porter .Area, You Pay Dt·
IN APril 18117. E·Z financing. Call
&amp; All Ulillliea, Rtlerenco
lliolnonceline 1-800·251·5070. t~~~~l'v~IB~,s~1~·~388-~G~182.~

-

JIDOK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Bravery 18 lha capacity lo perform
!Nh8n scat8d haN to dealh." - Omar Bradley.

•

3Tralltrolor oalt. 304-075-1070.

Proreulonal TrH Sentict, Stump
Rtmoval. Free EatimJJfll l In·
ouranct, Bltlwtll. Ohio. 01•·388-

TO

JZ

SCil•M lETS ANSWERS

!'!!300-755-5885.

!02:1 or 81~-ia2·332•.

NVLXJ

VKFIAIO

XACYXNOII . .

._ ,

5858.

=•

Prlvalt Caro Home. ·eu-882'

IAJZCIJVFI8811

WONVZAWSM.'

•'like

~;:::::==~-

Two 1 bedroom apartmenlt for
sale with storage building. Wifl
sell on land contract, It •-Q92·

1997-'141J8D w/Giamour bath .
•11ttmo. FrH deliver)' &amp; tet-up,
O•k Wood Homes. Nitro

for male or fem•l• PI"
llenl In ~oonal care homO, Oarll

.

• my's ]aS. Rota...,~ Woatlerecl ..

'I''.

\·800-&amp;:17·8528

Babrslnlng in my home, in the 1882 1&amp;x70 Mobile Ho.- On 1.1
BidweU area. Chfkken of all ages . . Acres, Pprches, 1,15.900,' 513·
Relerencet ~vailable Upon Re- . 574-2539.
3 Bedroom Houae Trailer For
quest 28 Yean Experience Call
New·10D7
1.Wid•t
balh,
$1191
,
R.,~ In Rio GIIII1Cio, lloposi\ Ral·
014-387-05211
down, S139tmo, with approved erances Required, No Pe1s · AI·
lowed Inside, 81•·379·2720 AF'
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't crediL Clll1·800-6g1-&amp;7n.
T£111 P.M.
haul your IOQI 10 lhe mill jus1 call
1997 texeo :J bedroom, 2 balh,
30~75-11157 .
$1 ,321/down, $218/mo, tree •ir, 3 Bedroom Mabil8 Home Ne•r
Haul Most Ali· with ~ppro\led credit. t-800·8D1· Vinton Available Now 814-3880&amp;1!41.
Leave Ues· 8m.

~lng

'

two rounds of trumpri wltb bonon
from hand, Cbagaa paused for

"

JET

•20 · Mobile Homes
tor Rant

Pale
Pale

He needed to -~ a i!plide on
which to discard · the club 10.
Normally, one wOuld itiV iipedee from
the top, u an,y W Gi!H !Ired would
allow one to wtrHIIb IIIII cub dum-

For Ro~o Mobile Homo tP-o,..A.t
Solo: living Room SullO, ~kor
Fledintr. 32" o-. e1.....181o:

TWo bedroom 'hou at,
and otoan,' no ln&amp;ldo pail, .
"""'""'81 .... 2-30110.

ZNT

lhougltl

Plano- tuning &amp;
Problema? NOecl Tunld?
p;ono Dr.814 ••e ·~

3-' blldraam hau•. FAGF,

Eut

band, . be'-...~redouiJIW
.
Agalntt live Ileana, the tlefenden
began with a top tlllmond; a club to
the ace, ruld the d!ab ~- After wift,
nina with !be dull llini ud drawing

,.

SomorvHio Realty S04·875-3030
or :JOH'IS-3431 (J,oan Calol.

DbL ,
Pale
Pale

Eut'a j!uilp lo two n•tnunp OVflr .' . K Z J .
North'• t•"o tii~I~O:.e:~
JXO
mond qraft, . .... ·a .......

0 ·1 -b;NQirlc.

lor aale.

post,

Nardl

,_,...._:c..-"' ·

..

rooms, full baa.,.,.nt &amp; garage,
....., roof, lldlng &amp; wlndowa. Call

qulnlll. Box

'

.

.&gt;'

.22 S&amp;f!ll Au·

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

az 8potoig 11 r11t1a1 a .. .., •

.
.
Benjemln Franklin aal\1, •If you
would not be (orgottellu HOD u you
are dead, either write tblnp worth . ....,.-+--+~
reading or clti thllip worth wrltlna.•
Well, hopeftdly you wiJl tbiDk lhill eoJ,
umn worlh reed'~&amp; u I Judie South's
play worth writiDC (*M).
.
The tletiiiCCIII'riltl duriDC lui year's
Cavendlllb IJivitatlp~ Pain In New
Yorio: City. Sl111ng South wu Gabriel
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Chap~, the amall, claPPer. mercurial
by Luis campoe
·Bruillu pll,yer who baa IUCb a bigb
~Qohoou
......rooo
. . . - ..... .... - -. ....... Ealii!W.
. ...CipiW...,_tarWiahr.
mellbolle rate that Iller the neninl
aenloll iMf-. eft'tlllih food to aellafy
NVLXJ
JZ
TO
XOINI
IZOW
'J X 0
two or three people with norlllal appejltel.

.......

AraaiJul'l&lt; Cars,_81•-~-

DOWN

1 Deo.t U J

I

Reading the cards

lion,G1 ...o.6·3180.

.., And Gold Colna, Proolsooo,
8 1•-388-8009 ·or Day 81&amp;-UI·
011.......... Anlqut ,Jewelry, Gold
3&amp;13 $57,000
Aln•, Pr•· 1130 U.S. Currency,
Slorlina, Etc. Acqul&amp;lllono ,_ry Deadline For Applying, Januarr GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo
_. M.T.8. Coin Shop, 151 Se&lt;ond 31
For Pennies On S1 Delinquent
, 1997
Ta•. Rapo'a, REO'a. Your Aru .
Qd~'···--~28&amp;2Toll Frto (1) 100-218·9000 e ...
Ciean" lata ·YOdel C•ra Or The Gallla County Board Of MRI H-211&amp; For Cu..... Ll&amp;lingL
Is An Equal Opporounlcy EmTruell" 11110 Models Or Newer, .pD
. .
HouH Salt: 1 Milt To GaiJipolll,
Smllh Buick Poni)Oc, 1900 Eali· player. .
3
Btdrooma. !lining, Udity, Porch,
- Avtnue, GIIIIPOiio. ·
WLOUFEJCONSERVATION
31' Acre, fireplace, 1 112 Batha.
JOBS
J &amp; O't Auto Perla. Buying aal$45,000, Cal 014-4&amp;1-2aa1 . .
~.;::.clao. Selling parla. 304· Now hlrinQ Game Wardens, SeLargo. Nawor Partially Fini&amp;htd 2
curity, Maintenance. Park Rang· S1ory Homo on Applo•imaoely 2. 7
Non·vtarkint Waltltfl, Oryert, era. Na experience necenary. Acres, Oulbuildingt, Rural loca·
Stont Refrigerators. frMZtrl. Far •ppllcation and into call 1· nen Sell8fl Trans., Our lou Your
"'' condlttonara. Color T.v:a, 800·299·2'70, ut WV135c, 8am- Gainl sos.ooo, 01•·3111-2138.
V(:R'a,

:Elf:
Ill I

_.

,., . . ..

.._
11 llu!t . _

'

THEM

SANDWlCHIS?

Cobra 2000 CB For Sale, H••
Many Options. $350, New Concl-

208 Pl.. Drlvi-'IWo ...,, 3

Tho Gallla Co~nty Board OIMAI

WH~'S

f Am.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; I IVE S lOCK

£~,

Nm_.,. or d4KIIndnadon.•

aume to Box CW-Bi %PI Pttll•

he!altr, 81.-:-

.._
s•

MAW -11 ·

WHAT OTHER

N..dtd ~ A Baby&amp;llltr In My

FOUIID: . , . . .... dog, roddiah mendation To P.O. Boll 105, Galliwlllliioii bock In lt1AII aroa. 30&amp;· poli&amp;, ONo, •5631, By Janual)' 1(
IGG7.
•
lOST: - B l o c k Lab w/Whlio Nurse Aide Training ProgramChell, no collar. RIW•rd. 304· Roekspringo Rellabllltadon Con,.,
-3012.
wih be offe,ring training claaMS in
L111: UcCiinlic ._(ta: 2 female the r:nonth of Febfuary. Applications are now being acCepted ai
Bruatr1 · CIIII3CM-7el-5087. ·
38759 Rocksprlr)ps Rd., Pomeroy.

'

43
K Q J 10 7 6 3
3
K 10 8

wea

HOME COMPUTER USERS
NEEDED. $&amp;5,000 Income polonllal. 1 - 800· 51~- &amp;343, Exr. BG311&amp; C!l11 For Dolalo.

IDgood- oriy. 814-1192-&amp;213.

-.

• 8 5

.. •JJ0882
•AQJ7i

•

Awnue, GalllpGIIa, No .Phone

1!111 \';, Good Homo: 5 .,..,. Otd

eo

- ....

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

Helpful lmmldillo Optlilnga, Apply: ~llottyle Furnlbn, Ill&amp; Tl'oird

'

i

. .....

• rl 3

Otatara Wanted 'Stl Your Own.

'

'

tAit7854

387-031 &amp;A11er &amp; P.M.

Oil 11 '81-·2&lt;15-5135.

• 7

,..: ~

I.

•. .- . -~
~~~~

23 A t £1
RubY24 =~·

• 54 2 .

I

. . : . ..

17 Cll•'lJ •• In
IM l*r

Lli1a......

6AKJ85
• At 4 z
·• Q

eaJ

IIIIo-.....

11 c:-11g1dly
11
21lndlr•iltl

01-15-97

6QUt12

•

_ . . - ~ ns; 4 -~~~~~;au
....... .Ill ........... . . . . l'l\11
...-.. Cu:u · ' tara .,. 1n on111t
t'lln~,._••u.at)Orillll

nlalqod and unlurnl-. -'!r
tllriO&amp;It roqulrtd, no Plllo

It•·

.....,.

•

._.,.

.........., t• ,14-

1 INroom
~"

Uqlurn!lhtflAIIr1•

=~ N- llolatM

i.

;

r

~·..

.

~

.

.

.

....

. . . . . . . . . allllriOr-1 ....

iP:

'·

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

HA'Ie .,.,.lion, Dl"tlll II w11t1 two ,

'/,

•
\

�Ohio Lottery

Photo man .
feels wrath
of Rodman

Super Lotto:

11-13-20-38 38 40
Kicker:
3 8. 7-3-9
Pick 3:
7-G-6
Pick 4:
9-3-7-3 .

S~onPage4

. '

e

. ~

.

•

·~

Vol. ~. NO. 111
., 01817, Ohio ¥Iller P • I Una Campeny

-~s,LSPKG

.

Moetty cloWy tonftht
with ecattered tlurrlea.
Lowa ne1r 0. FrldiJ,
~ with ICittefld tlur......~-10.

•
2 So ctlao-. 12 ,.._, 3S ..... ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Th~, January 18,·1"7
. . '

A ~IIIII Co. fllllll~

· ODOT .lays out plans
:·:for u.s..33 relocat-ion
· : By JIM FREEMAN
highway from Athens t~ Darwin.
· Sentinel News Stlllf
Approximately 300 peOple allend.
The Ohio Department of Trans- ed !he meeting at !he Ohio Universi. ponation held a public hearing in ty Inn so input could be offered on
. A!!Jens Wednesday night to ~ive two proposed routes for the. reloca: . comments on a proposed Super n tion project, accol'ding to ODOT .

spokeswoman Nancy Pedigo.
She said 260 people actually registered upon entering !he hearing, but
some did not register. .
ODOT officials and representatives of Svel'drup Assoeiaies Inc., a
Columbus·b~ consulting fi.rm.
presented two possible routes for !he
proposed highw.ay, designated alter·
native alignments A and B. ·
.
Both alternative routes are located west of the existing U.S. 33 and
have generally ·similar impacts in
most categories, but alignment A
would cost approximately $20 million less to construct than alignment
B. accorc!ing to ODOT offic.ials.
Alignment B is approximately a,
'\
half-mile longer, consists of more
curves and requires more' bridges,
, EXAMINE. ALTERNATE fH)UTES - 1Wo
Wtldnndly 'n .Attiene.
Lel.kei- of sveraccol'ding lo an ODOT brochure.
.
'ahern
...
,
r
oullll
far
ttie ~relocation of
drup
Aaeoclltn,
INning
over .~ble at left,
Presently, .alignment A is.recom'
U.S..33'fr9ftl A"""a to DelWin were pnsented
explained tha routetl to people attending the
mended as 'he preferred option, but
hearing.
afinal decision will not be made until by the Ohio ~abnam of Ti'aneportetlon
a[ler _the close of the comment peri- uled to open to traffic in late 2002.
shouldeo:s. poor sight distance, steep
The proposed. project will ultiod and· upon the review and eviluaThe proposed relocation extends grades, frequent fl~ing problems mately provide a four-lane, divided,
limited-access highway. Initially. a
tion of all comments received, from the soilthem pan of the city of and few opport~nities for passing.
according to the brochure.
Athens at U.S. SO southwal'd; approxMore than 75 percent of the curves "super" two-lane highway wil~ be
A proposed project schedule imately 13 miles to the existing four- along this j&gt;ortion of thl: highway do constructed on a fo~r-Janc right-ofshows right-of-way acquisition lane ponion of U.S. 33 at Darwin.
not meet current standal'ds; and the way. Access to the new hjghway "(ill
beginning in January 1999; con- . The e'xistlng roadw$)1. ~ing · accident rate is three times greater be allowed only from public roads.
struction is sche!luled to begin in •. ·to QDOT, is·a winding, '
' rOad -than the statewide average for two- Consultants said truck lane.• arc heing
mid-2000; and the pro~t is
~';~~til;.; iaad~\Jate or
~ rural hishways, ODOT stll~d:
(Continued on Page 31
'
'
.!
'
·, .,./oy-• ~ ;;•'•..;.. • - :.~~- ~~····.~~ ::-=--~-·-:--~-,..~·
~~~- r.~

Joe

1

·( '00,
~1

..

J...

.
OPPosED TO CONSTRUCTION ~ Ohio Un!vwslty grac1u1te
atudant ct.d Kilter, left, 1nd OU aophomore Joe Fl\llhaber were
11111011g t11we It
ODOT .......ng vojclng
oppo•ltlon to the

an

't*r

Pf'DPDIId reklaatlon of U.8. 33.
.

s

.

'

sehed':;

•'

of Arctti ·: c old ··
to hit region tonight
· 1

over;

·more urban

By The Altocleted Preu

;school help

.

Don't be fooled by those balmy temperatures. Forecasters say another blast
. of Arctic air is headed our way.
··
By"tonight, temperatures were c•pected to be in the single digits, the
National Weather Service said; Wind-chill factors of 20.35 below 1.cro were
likl;ly.
,
.
.
Clear and crisp conditions arc forecnsl for Friday as a high pressure -system pushes the clouds out of Ohio skies.
Lake-effect snow is expected to continue·in the extreme northeast.
. ~mperatures tonight coul~ dip llS low as S below zero.
.
Frigid conditions arc cxpeclcd to·hang around for _the weekend, with highs
only' reaching in the teens for this area by Sunday. Lows are anticipated to
, be below zero Friday and Saturday, according lo the.National Weather Se,..:.
vice. Light snow or flurries will accompany the cold temperatures.

;' · COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. ,
· :George Voinovicli hasn't yet released
' all the details of his plan to help out
: Ohio '.s urban and poor school di,.
tricts, but he's already facing some
. resistance from lawmake{! from his
..own party:
"I don't mind helping our south·,: eastern Ohio SCh!IOis," Rep. Jay Hot. ,linger, R-Newark, said at a news con,: .fereqce \1\(ednesday:·..J
•
~
"I don't mind helping urban
'schools. Bul,) have a problem when
·we continue to help certain types of
: "SChool districts rcgal'dless of what
, they're doing to .help themselves."
CHESHIRE - Two of the three
Troopers said Steven Boso .was
: Hottinger was one of a dozen
....River
Valley
High
School
students
northbound
op 7 when he attempted
. :GOP lawmakers representing suburinvolved
in
·a
two-vehicle
crasb
a
left
tum
onto
Little Kyger and col~ -ban or middle-class school districts at
Wednesday ncar the school remained lidcd with a southbound pickup truck
:. the news conference. They released
in Cabeii-Huntinglon Hospital.today driven by Will F.- Darnbro~gh: 44,
. ~study of taxes paid by every school
undergoing treatment for their 5447 SR 7" South, Gallipolk ·
. district in the state, com~d with
injuries.
·
Darnbrough was also injurCd i~ ·
: the amount·o f state aid they receive.
Sophomore Steven R. Boso, 16, the crash and was 1aken to HMC by
· : What they found was that resi.
4619PatriotRoad,Patriot,andjunior
the patrol . He was treated and
• • dents of suburban districts devote
Jeremiah
M.
Triplell,
17,
770
Patriot
released for a strained neck, accol'd.: more of their income to school-rclatRoad,
&lt;;Jallipolis,
were
airlifted
to
the
·
.
ing to the HMC spokesperson.
·
. cd taxes than Ohioans overall, and
Huntington,
W.Va
..
I)Qspital
followWith
confirmed
entrapment
.: recei'!e less state aid.
.
ing the 8:20 a:m. accident at the inter- reported, the EMS rescue team
: , "People in middle-class districts .
Wldnetdaly
In
Columbue.
Volnovlch
vlaltld
tha.
BACK
TO
SCHOOL
Gov.
George
of State Route 7 and County responded to the scene and extracted
section
; 4o a great deal to suppon school disVoi'11!VIch
fllnked
by Beck Elementary
~hool the daly lifter his State of the State
Rond
15
(Little Kyger), according to the injured from the car. Calls were.
~- tricts throughout the sUite," said Rep.
Sc:hOolltUtletntl
Terry
Ky~ 18ft, and~ McinIPIICh w!)ere hl.callad lor lnt:I'I!IMd.,.a~!dthe
Gallia-Meigs
Post of.the State put out to airlift the injured to C-H,
&lt;Jeff Jacobson, R-Vandalia.
lng for edllcatlon•.(AP) ..
·
tyre .. lhef prectlcei:l on tha achool'a coanpu1er
Highway Patrol.
· 'qd the MedFiight air ambulance
.,.: ; · Voinovich
devoted a large' porlion
.
·
·
Boso
was
in
critical
~ondition· from Wellston and West Virginia.
•· of his State of the State s~h lUes- ·•
.
.
'
He also proposed . to . spend an votllfll eventually will sli!p silpporting · Legislature ~ltimalcly lo sci: tltat the today inC-H's inte~sive care unit, a · · based HealthNet responded. The heli•
. _ilay to the problems .of OhiQ 's urban
· schools. He said · the · state lrad a additional $213 million iii the next local school levies if they lie.e the · problems in the urban districts pose hospital spokesperson said. Tripkitt is copters arrived almost simuliancous., also in the ICU and is in gOod con-' · ly lind landed in a field bol'deriJJg SR ,,
'&lt; moral responsibility" to respond to two years for the stale equity fund · money being used to subsidize an economic development- as well dition.
,
7~ troopers said: . .
.
'
~~ situation·where.only 43 percent of . tha.t· provides extra money for poor ·schools in ·areas lhat arc not paying as a prison and welfare - proplcm
Freshman James B. Boso, 14..
Both helicopterS were used in
· i'
their fair share.
' for all of Ohio.
·. students graduate, and •prisons and school districts,
also
of
4619
Patriot
Road
and,
like
transporting
· Steven Boso . agd
Rep. Michael Fox, -R-Hamilton.
House Speaker JoAnn Davidson, .
Scn~ic Minority Leader Bell Espy,
· ~~!fare rolls are filled with the sysTriplett, a passenger in the car driven Triplett.
•
noted that the state's eight largest R-Rcynoldsburg. and Senate Prcsi- D-Columbus, agreed that Republi. tern's failures.
by
Steven
Boso,
wa.•
taken
to
Holz·
Tile
crash
severely
damaaed
th!o
·.: Voinovich proposed a number of school districts get 12·1 percent of dent Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, cans will fall in line behind '!he cr Medical Center by the Gallia car dri~cn by Steven Boso llld canlled
. solutions, such as an extra $300 mil· what )hey pay in taxes back in slate JJCkRewledJCd if1!mcdj111Ciy after the Voinovich plan. But he repealed his . County EMS. He was treated and ~odcratc dam~JC to Darnbrouah's
l.ion .- iJ!CiudiiiJ $100 million for .aid, but pay only 85 percent of the speech that some lawmakers would offer to part[cipalc in a bipartisan released later Wednesday for Iaccra~ p1ckup. The accident remained under.
raise the fairness issue.
commission to examine school 'fund· Ohi9's eishl largest districts - for average. state school tax bul'den.
tions · to the face, a hospital investigation today, troopen s.jd, ·
Fox predicted that mid~le-class
But both said they expected the i~g issues.
#'
~ ~hool building improvements: ·
· spokesperson said.
,.

Two River Valley students
remain hospitalized today

.,
"

•

•

•

f

~

.

••

~·

w..

'

'

'

:~-PDNR. notes 'sign~ticant' de~li. n.e . in regic&gt;n's ·deer..herd· population:~ ~ .
I

"

f

&lt;•

'

·. ~li~inary weight "-ta collected at se~ted check stations lh~ghoul
·, .Oh1o dunng tbe. tw~week firearnis deer season strongly suggests the con.' dition of ~ state's ~r he~ is decliftin~ in-several eastern and sOutheast·
~ em couftttes, tbe Oh1o Div1s1~ of Wildltfe reported.
· ' Deer fiwelid-dghts,]~~ ~....uredfjlcleery~ wOhi~lift:h...gellncy jn J9h82, ~nd~CificanJethed
average e rei..,.. we1 10..1 o
1n 10 s 1 country as stgnt
y
~- !*lined.
. '
.
. .. ,
.
'
.
.
; •. The reuon pven for this decltne 1s tllat deer abundance remams too high
.~ jn SQme of the state where avatlable food SOIIJtes eiKI quality d-habi; 111 have declined sipifiCIIIIIy.
.' ·
·
.
• The Div;tion of Wildlife gy&amp;OIIib'slleerherd haucarly quadrii,Pied since .
1982 •weisfu and,antler beam dlmle111r ilata Wel'e• coll~. 'lbe lllllO'•',
• &lt;~ haMit llld hundllf ~ )lave alto rilcn lil!lifJCandy since 1912.'
· ~_'j\IK)ut tw,r-lhirda of ~o·• clii!li' ~ ia found in the eastern and ~·

:ihe
'

.~

~ ·

,

1

l

•\j

em counties, the division n;poned. · . . .
.
AverliF field-dressed we1pts of yearling does fell from 98 pounds 1n 1982
to 94 pounds in I~· Adult doe wci~hts ~re ~~wn_ from I06 tQ I02 pounc:ls.
Among the yearhng buck populatJol) IR Ohto s htll country. avorqe field.
d]04!essed ndsWCiJAduhtsmeltbucasukred !!!_t monthdoshow~d I dec hnepoufrondsmlolll4lpoundsS
poundsto
pou .
we~,... were . ~ •f9lll 147
.
. The f?,iYision of Wildlife considen the weight ditrmnces "swiitically sia·
nificaftt.
• .
. .
.
"Deer in the hill country are Slgnlficaftll)' smaller than they were "' 1912.
This f~et, Ilona with IOIII·III'IIl decli~ . oblerved in antler beam lliamoler
yCIIIlaa bucb in..-.. our~ ()l)k&gt; cOUII!Ies.-•trWiy

15

'

'

,

'

ing·accesl i• high, .but are up significanily in areas fith :limited or no bll.ltir..
access.
·
,
During the two-week d_cer gun season w~icb cndld Dejr. 14, ht'nt•t lllll,d
120,925 deer. The prehm1nary total of !hilt seastllll'llpl Mia 1 dnq
fll
~rceiU from last year's recol'(l_fuwms ~ I tl' • ...,... Of. tn,t'J4

.....,.,

,

•

.

"All of 01!' data, as well as !llplll from fi':ld paiiC!IIIICI, iadic 11 d diU M
deer popullbons were ~very btt.u
or lliJiw
-.a. era IJilia ·

north'MII Ohio as poSSibly 11 few
1sollled
fiCI we ifi!OIId to put ~ ~~=~~in~Oh~io'•
or
or
COtllitlue tobe.,..a'ive ill
~- theitlllli'loi'Ohio'adew~ in,lhis~:eaion ildecliftillfo~. IQI[\r. . llidl'llriclt~••I'CIIIioio
Mike Toa~ I DlyilliQII of Wildlife rorutgiiiiC \JjoJC)Jist.
'
.
for the l);vi&amp;ion of Wlldllle.
. Wildlife bloloiiiiiiiY tlelr ~ ia ~ ~ ~ whe~ deei .huiil- '
a,

sua- .

~

1

. . . l'lilllh

w11 .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="396">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9775">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28063">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28062">
              <text>January 15, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="905">
      <name>harper</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
