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                  <text>Ohio Lottery .

WVU falls
to Friars
76-69

Pick 3:
241
Pick 4:
8041
Buckeye 5:
16-2G-21-35-36

Sporta on Page 4

Cloudy tonight, low In
30s. Saturday, sunny, high
In 50..

...

Vol. 47, NO. 215
01117, Ohio V.lleJ f'llbllehlrig Comp~~ny

"I·

'

'

2 Sectlono, 12 Pog.., 35 centa
A Glonnatt Co. Newopaper

' '

. , Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 7, 1997

.

·-1887 Flood Edition

~~l~ve . never seen·.it 'l his
r.

higt,J,.'•••
'

Continued from P.a.7
.and Gary's girlfrienc!, ~ol there, she sa!d.
,
gas interrup1ion," be said. . · . ·Defibaugh, had· returned w Gal-. . ''Th~ 111111n problem$ are along
Across the river in Point Pleas- lipoiis to ' sel SOII)e items ) nd the ·river and in Vinton," Martin
ant, w:va., much ofibe city is pro. . Defibau~'s dog,
.
{ .. said.
. .
..
tecled by a flbodwall. But ~k. "I JUSt '·Want my d~. .
She also SBJd SIX ~lderlY families
'water d i d . its way. to Harmqn " Defibaujb said of ber. J?almajian . on Dafi·Road were m ~ offood
P&amp;-k, eoveri 0g the city's swi~mi~g ; piiJilCd J?ke:
· : . . .;c and supplie$. . . . · .
· pool ·'!llld a,. baseball field. TWo~&gt;· "Juan!l~ Duncan was evacdled
"We're ~km~ · JI to them m a
·inobiiCI( liomes also . wenl nearly ~ friim her . bo~e ~n . the .li(ater boat," Martin Slid:
·
L
covered. .
..
.
stl!flld seejltn8 tn the kitchen
Farther up the nyer, ~e~cy
City residentl&gt;oil Ward had to arouild 4 a.m.
.
and. law enfofl:ement asenctes
_make a trip to Huntington Tuesday, ., "J U&gt;~ bus~nd, 'Willhw\t ~ , madcM tg ~ ~ I'J.~.~
andwasn~tabout tole&lt; the fkjoctof liaVii'A
feeling,'" she '.illld. Ohio Valley, wl\ere wller·&amp;otaiKI
'97 slop him. , ·
• ''WC've been there 12 years this streams and creeks c•nuod stnJc·
"I bad lo go through montb and it's never been lib tural dalilqe to residelili~ homes
. Char~on." he'said, nOiing that the •• thii."
and infrastructure, such as culverts,
Dl!ncan siid ohe didA'I sleep bridgesandroads.
. usual90-milelrip~tookhim23
miles east through Ripley, W.Va... Monday ni•hl, and was unable to
The Ohio River bun't bcerus
. was inore than 200 this ti~. "Bill t'cst1\!csdly.
much of.a threat as the C(eeks in
· we'can get put." ,
, .
· ~·1 can't sleep," she said. ".1 keep Washington Coun!Y. Ohio, whicll is
.. ~eitb McGui.re, track and ·cross e. wori'ying. I .don't bave any insur- acri!SS the river fro!ll parjtcrlburg,
· cOlintry· toech at 'Oallil!"li$ Hill,h . ance~ How am I soinJ· to replac:e W.Va.
· , "·
. ,
· ·Scliool, had tile day off be&lt;:ause1of· iny ~tove an~ my refrigerator. and
Ia WashiniiOn County'1 liver
lhe;Jdlli waie'r. After fmin1 sand- • my ~ezer? But, I'm-tbankftiii'!D city of Marietta. the Qbio :Rl\rer
bqs. inudl o( the day, be ~opped · alive."
· '
·
almost .IOIIChed flood slap, which
by his school to check out ihe track
"Police oftlcer Wayne '.Sweeaey, . is 3S feet. II cn:sled at ~.6 feet.in
ind footblll field. ·
who kepi drivers away from the Marietta eady Theaday morning,
. ''The track's down 'there ... ·water on the east end of the city, said Jilp Stephens,. voi-r with
somaw~ be ..d. pointing io
told a truck driver lloping to !Dike · the Washington CountY, .Buterpncy
backwater ft'Qm Chiclwnaup -a delivery to Ca!pet Master not to Operations Center.
..
Creek.
. try.
,
"The damaae in the rural at'I!U
More·thin ·10 feet oJm. w•r ···~ .' 'There's 3112 feet of water bas· been quito heavy. 'The city
aoVered the field. Half of the ~w~ theh:," be said.
. ,
.
(Marietta) didn'tsutrer.~ who~ lot
400,000 bleaCben were covered.
. 'Harold Montsomery, president · of dalilqe because the nver didn't
''TI)st'~. a _concession ·;$tand,'' bf:me Gallia County Commission1 ~ as m1111h ~ it did H,l ocbu
McGuire said, pointlnt to about six ~'~ ~alion a! Guardsmen werq . p_18c~'' whtch 1s &amp;ood.news, .fOilinches of mofbll'ely 'visible h~. workinJ 10. the area, lnd tl\at the . Stdenng the caty ciOesD't have a
the water.
·
.
O,s. Coast Guard had used bell'' tloodwall, he said.
·
Many peqple with cameras vis- copiers to fly med~catlon into ~
to-t
I 0 ~amilie~. ba~ lost
ited the flood sites 'in ·Gallipoli&amp;.. a;reaaod tnnspor1Jt to flood vtc· thear~sou~~ideM~tnthe
CUriosity brought dozen• to City tams.
rural commuii!IJCS of WuhiniPOD
Pllfk, where they took p i -·and
"We're j~sl reacting to the County, which alonJ. with. ~ia
compared the Flood of '97 to' the needs," he said. "Someofthepeo- ae two of 14 of Ohio's c:OwalleS
one in January 1937 whK:h, by the pie' who have. been driv.en from' . ~~President Clinton desi8_1111ed a
way crested at66 feet,· I01/4 inch- · theJr homes .., devastated emo-, disasler- on 1\Jesday, Slid B-"
es. That'a more than 12.feet high· ti~y ~ P\'Ysi~)'; B~ we're HimineF!',direcW.:oftheeounty's
er than it was''I\iesday.
. a Ught·kntt cotpmuntty. Netgbbon Emergency Opeta!J!lJIS Center, ·
. "Thi~ i&amp; ieally SiiiiiCthing," said : will help ~~g~bors ,and we 'II get
:t'he desi~!l" . makes I~
lifchinJ resident Jo Rice. "II' a ·. tbro~gh tht5." ,
. . ··
JIOvernments'\"'d tadividuals ~bpscary when-you think of all the peo-'
Jolynn Martm, who as wat1t the ble for financtal help.
,
plelt'sh~l\ing."
,
.
G~lipalisch~roftheR~Cross.
· Hllll~ H....~.
. . Three yo1111g adults froin Qal-' · · Slid nearby Vtnton, -~hio, was ...,pol'hir "''.... .-e CQD•
lipolis,'.Who' are il\ the pi'!ICCSS of. ·hardett ~it in the area. About 10' trlbu~ to dill~
'
moving ·to Covington, Va,, found evacuees were taken to a ~belter.,.
themselyes stnnded at a ~d Cross
' sheller-at Galli!K'Iis Hiah School.
Brothets )immy and ;(lacy FIOI!:;
l. e a s t

CLOSING FLOODWAU. ·A Point PleuMt city .mplorN Ia
plctur8d Ml'ly Monday monilnt u he plaoee a pin lmo the
floodwelllllte et Point Pleltunt Battle Monumant Perk. The
i. Flood of 11187 Cleated .a t the ucond hlgh1lt level s"- the
floodwall wu bulh batwMn 1141 ancl1151.

'97 Point Pleasant flood
second hlghesl in 42 years .
·~ Flood of 1997 crested at SO feet in the City of Point PleasQI,
·the second hicbest since the floodwall surrounding the city was built
between 1949 and 1951.
flood sta1e at Point Pleasant is 40 feet. The highest cresting after
the erection of the Ooodwall was March· 8, 1955, when the Ohio
River reached 51.8 feet.
·
·
Othcr.pn:vious crests for the city include:

Oak Year

..~ ··. 1'80.

M'~-

•

~ ~· l:ft.

Crat
47.9 · 8 ·~·

~0

i:' t:ziJiti.'

45 ·5
44:5

h 1' 1902· •
IlK ..
•
....·19. 11&gt;07.
Mamo 17. 1907.

·•·2
'"·
52.2
5l.l

•• t'! 1912.
"... .
•
llri. ll. 1913 .

- l t i .,J91J .

47.7
.
50.4
6l.8

1-. 10. 1916.

-19.1
40.z

- I S• lt11 •

oiiiO
.

h

19• 189• ·

:r.;

M~zfi~rs · ll·~
1

1:~ i~:S -

·

Ftb.l. J9ll·

j~g

' . :!:'!' l~~·Jt. ::
• 21 ···-

O.., M, itzi."

--

JL ltD

tit\'!~

•

'
1
• • • • , ';'.

.

..

Moolli;: ::::

.loo.:n.,m.
~....

~!: 1 ij,~·~ ·

D«·. 9. 195o •
1 ~ 19'2

..l:;;i.t95~ .

fo1ay 9.1951 .

....u~ tt39-

--

16.1,.7·

.,,,
41 ,4

••. IJ. 1974 .

=~·

SOl
....
JU

61.1

....

.;.:.
%.6
m

-49.5

..

Do&lt;.ll. 1972·
Apli6.J977 .

1•-n. 1978 •

40.9
42.9
42.1
42.9

•H ,

·' loloftiJ 16.1911.· - 41.5
Doc. tO. 1971,.
444
......, . • .• .....

.... ,,...
:::~:;:; ·

' ..

'85

-·
9. 1967 •

4f:.

4H

1l!
47.1

~...u,•.l.-. · . ~.a1

- ~.

.flooCJ

l)2

.00.6
4l7

41.6
491
47.1
40.4

-..

..,..,

199'Z
'

54.7
4!.6
u .6

e-- ··' ·

· Mardi I. i96i •
......,L1961
,.,.... ll.I96J •
:u. 1961.

NiJ llooJMI·
.....
17. IP7l •

u '9

MoJ lt.J,u: · · ~4
U.lt27•
.. .

1•, 2. 19-1~ •
.21.19-ll.
~ • · ll'-15.
~~=· 10. , ..., •
Morcl124. 19-15 •
Ftb. 16. 19-11 ·

ttlotims.

''

,.

.

·~

.

,.

.

· BytheAaeullleCI ,.._

'

The Ohio State Hi~ay Pau'ol
· ·Wedtlllscllay reiMHd the IUIIICs·of
the fiw . people whQ died in lhl
ftoodlq in IOIIthem Ohio:

ADAMS COUNTY
'
. J - Han, 16, of BI1111 c-It
Dcborala Hettrick, 34, of

MOICOw

•

IROWN COVN'n'.

.

'

. J-£0pple, 2.5, tlf Decatur
· GALLIA COUNTY ,
· aw.teiT.f,Wnnlc, 76.ofBUi-

~~
, . . . 0$
'

···· .,...
•
IO,t
J'~"~t' l 'i l•lt1•
. "·,.. ··········,-.·""'"'·''·~'·•'•'••'•~!'•~•·•·••••
•
•
• f~'I'•J
J~ • .~,•.•. ., .• , • ...
• . , . I'•''"··

'

.'

79, or

PiCKING UP THE PII';CES - Piles of soaked
balongi::C era a Common sight in front of
many R
nd h0111111 this - k as residents try
to put ~r Uvea back In order after Saturday's
ftaah flOod. Hera, Jeff Coley and James Vining
attempt to recovar tho&amp;a ltama that are still

usable from tills _ ~)epa~ $treat home. Soldlara
from the Ohio Army National Guard'a 216th
Englnaer Battallori, Cotnpany B, with asslstsnca from the Ohio Dapartment of Transportation, ara expected to ba hauling away 1h• ·
debris today.

is assessing

,,.jl..:-···'~"'~;~~~~~,~-,~;"~' ''
Ohio Departmerll of Transporta- venience motorists but the delays
Jion superintendents in eight of nine couldn't be ~elpcd. Sometimes in an
C,9Untlcs comprising ODOT District cm~rgency. n's. bard I~ know wh~l
. 10 arc beginning to assess damage_ youre gettmg mto un11lthe work IS
· caused to area roads by ·this week's actuaHy underway.
·
Oooding, '~&lt;COrding ' to District I 0 ·
Meigs crews were working Thurss)iokcswoman Nanty Pedigo.
day on a similar problem in the.same
. Only Morgan County was spared arcaofstateRoute681 and arc close·
·'widespread OQOding and the resulting ly monitoring a potentially dangerous
· damage to roadways, Pcdigo ,said. slip on state Route 6KI about one
Also Noble, Jiocking and Monroe mile west of Tuppers Plains. .
.
Besides the major concerns, crews
·"counties ~ustaincd less 'damage -than
:.did Meigs. Galli a, Vinton', Athens and ~rc clearing · ditches and drainage
Washington counties. ·
ripcs of mud and debris', cuumg
All counties in the declared dis- brush that has fallen. reinforci-ng
; aster area have received additional banks that have washed away and try·
· ' ·help lmin ODOT's northern districts ing to deal with othcr.prohlems asso, and from the Ohio National Guard.
ciatcd with the llooding -- such as
Now that llood waters arc rcced· wash outs around bridge abutments.
. ing. county·superintcndents and othODOT crews arc also working a.~
·cr ODOT oflicials arc looking for quickly as possible to clearroadways
'truublc spots on the ' roads. Pedjgo ·and ditches of mud and debris as
'said. Some arc easy to se~. such as wmc.rs recede and mud slides come
' the 100-fout high mud and rock l~ a halt. in addition to tackling the
·slide that fell to the centerline on state bigger problems. Pedigo said.
.Route 7 south of Eureka in Gallia
"However, with several hundreds
,County.
·
&lt;if lane miles lo contend with, it could
· In Meigs County. state workers ·he quite some time he(orc all area
··~were liusy Thursday replacing stone road ways have been restored to nor. ~hill wa~hcd from road shoulders.
mal," she said.
• Meigs highway workers have
It may also be several weeks
made repairs to a slip on state Route hefore all the monetary damage to
:248 cast of Chester and to a culvert 'roodwuys is totalcd.,Totals arc being
· (m ·state Route ·681 west of U.S. ·:'13 kepi as the work " done, but no one.
has had tinic to sit down and add up
ncar Darwin .
· ·, "Wednesday's work on slate Route all the figures, said Don_Johnson,
: 681 ~aused some traffic dclays:"said Di&gt;trict 10 roadway seyvtccs eng•·
·'Meigs superintendent Brett J1&gt;nes. ncer.
"We're sony when we hayeto incon· .

·

:· ~ovP, Ganne.t t to assist ·

i'MGM area flood victims

Utatioil:

'' .

.,;II,

Distribution 'or the money in the
M-G· M area will be handled through
non-profit agencies in each county. It
will he administered hy the American
Red Cross/FlOod Disaster Program in
Gallia, the Meigs United Mctl!odisi
Cooperative Parish in Meigs and the
Otlice . of Emergency Services in
Mason County. . .
.•
Persons wishing to request a.~sis·
tance or make donations in Galli• can
contact the American Red Cross/Gal- ·
lia County Flood Disaster Program',
with details qf the application process
to be announced.
In Mason County, the contact is
Chuck Blake, director of the Mason
Counly Office of Emergency Services. PO. box ~45709, Po,nt Pleas~
aru, W. Va., ~5550, phone 675-9911 and in Meigs, the Meigs . United
Methodist Cooperative Parish, Keith
Rader, flood reljef direcloi'i 311 &lt;;on·
40r Slreet. Poinetoy, Ohi9. 45769,

phone 992-7400.

the sunny skies. Twenty,four inches of water
came Into the building, located at the corner of
Main and Sycamore. Julie Gilkey, right, an
employee, was assisted by her friend, Lessie
Jeffers In scrubbing off the mud.

'·

racuse - e.
o uncil OKs rubbish ordinance
.
'

. Money to help victims of this
:week's severe nooding in Meigs,
·Gallia and Mason Counties is heing
;mndc available through grants total:ing $9,000 from thc-Qhio Volley Pub:lishing Company and the G1111nen
·Foundation, Publisher Robert
:wingett announced today.
: "A lot of fa111ilies have incurred
:personal tragedy a~d arc in ~ced ~~
•immediate help. 1JJ1s can be a •!art,
:wingett,said in announcing grants of
:$3,000 to Oood reli,c f programs in
:each of the three counties served by
·OVPC newspapers. Wangen said be
: ~opes other businesses and individuals will conlriliute .
·: The funds will direcdy assist those
"in need by providin1 money for perSonal bel011gings, food and Qtber fiaTt
lly needs, Wingett said.
· ·
: In total,' the Gannett. Foundation
lias midc ..,_IllS lqt~ling $62;500 to
niinprofit orppil:atlons se.rvi1111 GanMtt communitiea hit hard by the ~y-

UNbER SUNNY SKIES - As flood waters
rec;eded Tburlday afternoon, employees of City
Losn Beneficial moved uphol~tered· chairs
and other furnishings from the building to the
sidewalk to wash It off and let It dry out under

·

'

'\."' .

'~ . :

:nlice~sc~ anot~r,vchic;~s in an in:p.

erablc condition or unfit JiJr further
Syracuse ·
Council Thurs- usc or motor vehicle parts, scrap mel"
day night did as it promised and al. refuse orrubhish on any lot or parpassed, as an emergency meDSure, an eel of land within the city.
People can keep unlicensed or
ordinance it feels will eliminate colinopcrah)c
vehicles within an
lection of refuse and piled garbage on
enclosed
huilding
and huilding mate·
private propcny.
rials
can
he
placed
on property if they
Mayor George Connolly and
council arc fed up with uasightly and arc being used for con,1ruct1on on the
. unh\:althy situations. Not only arc vii· lot. ·It must he remove4 when the
Iage : officials unhappy, but many work is done.
In the event of a violation, the
residents arc also. it was reported.
The ordinance defines· refuse as mayor shall cause ~oticc to be given
paper. bOxes, baskets. wood, rags. old to cease the violation within .IO daY.s
·shoes, leather. hrokcn gla.... and all of ihe notice. Each day after the 10
day period in which the offense con·
other discarded materials.
Under the ordinance. no person. tinucs, shall be deemed ·a separate
firm ,or corporation may store or offense. Offenders will be charged
allow to remain building materials. S 100 with failure to comply on every

'

acco;d;n1;:~

.

incident,
the .incident.
., People cannot move stuff around
in the village io. avoid complying.
according to the ordinance.
Council also accepted the hid of
Associated Fahricators Inc . of
Pomeroy in the amount of $19,692
for the construction of a pole huilding. Work will begin within the week
on the structure and it will he huilt on
property adjaccnt .the park (former
Guinther property) at the corner ol
Bridgeman and Water streets.
J.t will he used -to house all village
equipment.
~
Another bid was received from
Robert Boring Precision Post Framed
Builders Inc. of Cheshire in the
amount of $26.590.
Larry Lavender. council mcmhcr.

-

~·..

reported that T:un Weaver, manager
of the pool lust season hilS indicated
he would like to retain that position
this summer.
The pool cnmmiltcc Will meet
with Weaver. Council also asked
Weaver lU attend the· next council
meeting.
Bill Roush. council memher,
hmught up the prnhlem of water llnw
pn Rusaic Hills that is causing some
prohlcnis and it was suggested that a
huild up of the area he placed along
the edge pf the highway as a temporilry fix until a· permanent snlu~ion
can he found .
Also discussed was the situation
on Third Street involving a drainage
prohlem ncar the Cottrill properly. A
·c ontinued on page 3

Two.relatives
of .Rams~y

eliminated ·
as: suspects
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Two
. relative• or 6-year-old heauty queen
JonBcncl Ramsey have been cleared.
and pol ice reqlieSlcd another hand·
writing sample from her m,other to
compare to ·a tansom note found in
the home.
.
John Andrew · Ramsey, 20, and
Melinda Ramsey, 25, "arc being
publicly · clcan:d of ·involvement,"
Boulder spokesma~ Kelvin McNeill
said Thqrsday. . '
'
. the annl)uncemcnt was made to
spare 'the ~alf-hrothcr and half-sister
- the childrtn of JonBenct's lather
and former wife - from public
speculation ahout their ·role in ·the
death. McNeill said.·
No ' family mcmher had hecn
. cleared prior to the annQunccmcnt
JonBcnet's parents, John and Patsy
Ramsey, al•o have a '10-year-old
son: · "
•lnvqsli@alors obtained a third
handwriting sample f\om Mrs. Ramsey. •

SOAKED MERCHANDISE- Several Rutland
and Langavllla bualnassas took a soaking In
Saturday night's flash flood Including the Rut·
larid Furniture Company which suffered flood
damaged marchandll8. Hera Ed V~oy claana

off new chalra while Tony Grate and Richerd

Adklna work In the background. The chalra
were baing cleaned _In preparation lor a sale In
the village today.

~

Rlld Cross in Meigs to assist.flood victims,
~American

Red Crtlss nt•w lms (.'tmfil nmlitJO nf residence.
an emergency scrvk'Ci center .upcn in
A~ li&gt;r the types of services,
Meig.~ County to serve 11••&gt;&lt;1 victhlls. Jmn&lt;'S s:tid. immediate needs, such a.'
Don James of Red Cross liunily duthin~ . hx&gt;&lt;i umf hou~ing can be
serviccs is in charge of the service provided thruu~h the Red Cross, and
center which opened ThursdaY:
other needs can he rcfcJTCd to appro·
It is located in the Meigs County pri:ttc :t~cncics .
Emergency ·Medical Services oiTicc
Families with more extensive
on Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, and nc.cds l'ur repairs or replacement of
will be open ror about a week, 9 a.m. homes and household furnishings
to 7 p.m.. to assist OIJ!)d vi~tims, arc referred to the federally funded
l8J111'S sllid,
,
,· .
1 proJiflllllS mac!c available by l'fesiThose coming in to a]ply Ire to ·(lent Clinton's declaration. The dec·
take proof of address, like a utility llration, It was painted out, pnlv~·
bill, said lames, so that there
be.·• .. .
..
1

can

•

. , .

lif

ing emergency shelter and meals to
·
Families affected by this disaster families since the Oooding began ~at­
should seck a..sislancc from hath the urday in the 16 counties of Ohio.
All American Red Cross Disaster
American Red Cross and the FedcrAssistance
i~ free ~ is made possi•
al Emergency Management Agency.
blc
through
finaJKlial contribUtions of
James urged ftood victims with a
real nec\lto come in so that their sit- the American people.
uation can he analy1.cd lind action ; Anyone wishing to help the ~ic­
:tims of this. and nthe~. disisters can
tak~ to solve lhc problems.
'the American Red Cross cxpccL~ make a contribution to the Arnericllll
more than $1 million in its ~ed Cross Disaster Relief Fund In
~j:~::~relief openllion. to-~ care of their lac~ Red Cross Or· by
l
have bf/!ln ptovidtml caUina 1-1100-HBLP·NOW (1-101).
.
.
'l'it~~·cial alJd other assj~tance 'i_nclud- 43~7669.

j a hoard array of a"sistancc .

•

I

�. Friday, MM:h.7, 1tt7

~. Coinmentaty

u

· PI I
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Jack Anderson
d
an
Jan MolleT

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Village of Pomeroy
needs flood plan

· Pomeroy Councilman Bill Young hit the nail right on the head Monday
night: the Village of Pomeroy needs a standard operating procedure for deal' ina with Ohio River floods.
Last year the village was forced to repair or replace downtown parking
meters -- which many residents and merchants despise -- because they were
left in the parking lot.
This year the parking meters again took a soaking, but this time they were
accompanied by 10 new lights installed along the n•w promenade in the park~~
.
The new lights, constructed of cast aluminum, just can't withstand the
force of the Ohio River and most of them gave way under the pressure of
debris working its way downstream. With any luck, tbe poles will be lying
in the parking lot when the water goes dow~; that way they ~an be repaired
and reinstalled.
.
More lights would have been dcsuoyed without the efforts of Councilman George Wright and a few volunteers who removed four of the 14 new
lishts he worked so hard to install last year.
It remains to be seen how cleanup will be carried out.
FloOds are a fact of life in Pomeroy and village government needs a simple plan to deal with them that allows no room for misunderstanding. When
the river reaches a certain point, the lights and parking meters come out, no
excuses.
• It's that simple.
The plan should also contain (again simple) guidelines for cleanup. The
business people in town know cleanup has to begin before the water even
leaves their stores. Village workers should be pushing mud and debris off
the streets as the waters recede.
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Here are some suggestions to help get things started:
•• When the river reaches 44.S feet, the street department removes the
lights along the promenade and shuts off electrical service to the parking lol
~· if c'ontinued floodin' is imminent.
·
,
. ~ At46.5 feet, the pplice department pulls tbe parking'meters off the poles
in t~ parking lot and the sueet department closes off the parking lot if continued flooding is imminent.
,
' --At' 41.S feet, the police department pulls the plirking meters off Main
Slreet and the street department places places high water signs on Main Street
and Butternut Avenue if continued nooding is imminent.
1
--As the river recedes, the street ~partment will keep as much debr.is as
possible from settling on village streetS. Street department employees not
., operating equipment will use push brooins and hoses to clean off smaller
debris.
·-When the river recedes 48 feet, clearing most of Main Street, the mayor or president o£ council, in the mayor's absence, will request assistance
from the fire department to assist in cleanup if such aid has not already been
rendered.
.
'
-- Following cleanup, lights and meters arc to be reinstalled if no further
flooding is predicted.
.• Water and sueet department supervisors will immediately assess damage to village infrastructure caused by flood or related affects ··such as traffic damage to flood detour routes, overtime costs, etc. -- an&amp; report to the
mayor, clerk and emergency operations center for possible state and federal reimbursement, if applicable.
-- Supervisors in the respective departments are solely responsible for
insuring these directives are carried out.
·
Downtown merchants moved millions of dollars in merchandise to safety in the hours before the nood, so why can't the village with all its employees remove a hand~l of lights and a few do1.en parking meten?
JF
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Satunlay, Mardl8 .
AccuWeather• forecast

Lee Gandee

miiiW)' coup ud lfllll
He- acquainled with the praiclcnt retunlld to power with ~··
and rll'll lady while study ina taw at inwvention.
Yale.
Known for their political 11U.
Oocumenll on file with the Justice ·lieU ud adaptability, the Mena
Depanmentshow that Craig lobbied were~ disirlbuting 8-by-10 color
key players on the administratiOII'I . phOios of Arillide in their moednp
Haiti policy team on the National with 10mnment oft"tciala and busiSecurity Council 'and in the Slate ness conUICII. In Washington, their
Department. He also reached out on lawyer worked to counter the ban of
the Mevses' behalf to rankin1 his clienll. Bventually the ban Wll
DcmOCIIIII and Republicans In Con- lifted.
pess. CraiB represented the Merses
On Dec:ember 1~, Youri Mevs
from Jll)uary 1992 until September made a $10,0011 CODiribulion 10 the
I99S. Records reviewed by our asso- Democratic National Committee,
elate George Clifford m show t1w according 10 doc:umenll on file with
from Febrttary 1993 until June 199.5, the Federal Election Commiuion.
the Mevses paid Craig and his firm Officials at the I&gt;emomtic Nlllianal
$492,3S2.S 1 in fees and expenses.
Committee said their records show
So it came as a hu•e
d1
'
sappoint·
she attended Miami fund-raisina
c
mentin 1994whentheadministration dinl)el'withGore.
blocked the villli and froze the U.S.
Five months ialel', family palriEh
asiCts of some family members. 111e Fritz Mevs is quoted in thC Villap
adminiltnlion ~ited concerns that the Voice brasging about a White Hou11
Mevses . had possibly been adver- reception he attended. Membep of
saries of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the the Men family did not retllm
former presi.nt of Haiti wbo was repeated calls for comment 10 their
~idences and businesses in Haiti
and Florida. .
While most olher foreip dOlOR
· to • the Clinton camjl'aian have
remained muni about their IIIOtivea.
the Mcvses make no secret of their
desire lb influence American policy.
The family has also worked hard
in recelll years to ineratiate itself with
the political allies ol Arlstide, .who
remains a strons figure behind the
scenes in Haiti,. By buddyins up to
the Clinton adminislration, the Menet were simultaneously improvi111
their standing with the new rcJime ttl
home, 115 well as their business contacts in the United' States.
DNC spokeswoman Amy Wciu
Tobe said the party was unaware of
any documents filed by the family
resarding their desire to influence
U.S. foreign policy.
'"People can come ~ live ~
donation with an agenda in mind but
policies are made and c:llanaed
because ofwhll's right for theAmer,
lean public," Weiss Tobe told us,
"not because of a donlllion to a polit&gt;ical party."

a

J.c:k An*'- 111111 Ju Maller

l-----"----...:...-.._..:.RIC..:..:...St.:..:ttNT,..:..:._CU--:~---NAT_IOOAL
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·Recent advan~~~s ill''t he scier-ce-·of cloning
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By Wllll11111 A. Rusher
cloned human being will be essen- "Jurassic Park," the idea being that we might clone a, genetic twin ofthd
Regular readers of this column are tially a delayed twin --someone with dinosaurs cnuld tie cloned from old boy, right down to his IIIUIUIChcj•
accustomed to gettmg the news first, the same genetic characteristics as the dinosaur blood ingested by insects and send him on a leeture tour JIIO':
and . the current uproar over the donor, but not of the same age and that were then captured by pine resin mating the Gospels."
~
clomng of a sheep just proves ·the
and preserved in the hardening
All this is pretty heady stltft', but
pomt.
11.11ll. •
amber. The only projllcm was my guess is that we will set used to
In a column released on June 17,
.,.,, IBm •
US Sf whether you could really set enough it. And 1 don't favor ·lawsto prohi~
1993 -- nearly four years ago -- 1
dinosaur DNA by this method to it it, because they will be essentially
calle~ aucntion to recent advances in not with the same environmental reproduce 'the entire animal.
-unenforceable. To boii'Ow a uscfuJ
the science of cloning and pointed out experiences. This will matter more in
No such problem exists, though. in phrase, "If cloneure outlawed, only
some of lhe poss1blc benefits.
some c~ses than in·others.
the case of the woolly mammoth. outlaws will have clones."
"As lor the northern spotted owl,"
For example, parents facing the This' huge, hairy relative of the cle·
Would a cloned human being
I wrote, " 1L~ survival, if not its pros- death of an infant child might quite phants became extinct about 10,000 have a soul? Of course _just IS '
perity, can be assured without the loss reasonably want to try again with a years ago, but as I wrote in my 1993 twin brother·or sister doea.
·.
of a single lumberjack'sjob." In olh- clone of the original. Someone · column, "almost complete mam11le bigsest nui5811C4:S will ~
er words, the loud wailing and gnash- cloning dear old Dad, however, may moth .bodies have been retrieved ably be those self-infatuated individ,
ing of teeth by environmentalists over not easily adjust to regarding a new- from the Siberian permafrost; in fact, uals wbo now pay to have themscl~
the alleged coming extinction of this born child as a valid substitute for the according to my Britannica, 'cues fmzen and shelved when they die, in
or that species is about to come to an deceased parent.
have been reported in which sled the hope they can be revived 011 some:
end: Any species can be preserved
Now let's complicate the picture a dogs were actually fed the meat happy day when whltever killccl
for~ver, ·and _reproduced in ~ny bit by introducing the notion of pro- from f!'&gt;zen _mammolh carcasses.' them can be cured. Such people will
d~med quanuty, by the clonmg ducingclonesfromdeadtissue. There There •• obvtously no shortage of pmllablyregardcloningas.theirpus:
process. Everyt~ing fro~ the blue is nothing theoretically impoiSible mammot~ DNJ':, to use in cloning pan to genetic immortality. Let's
whale to the.turb1sh lousewort can be about this; it is simply a matter of new spectmens.
hope.their clones have, or manaplq
taken off the Endangered Species ~hether. enough DNA, or ge~lic
"From ,there," I went on, ."it acquu:c. more sense.
Ltst.
mformatton, can be retrieved from would be JUst a step to productng
wuu..n A. Rlllher 11 • .,.....
Inevitably, cloning. w-ill soon be dead cells to serve as a model foe the clones of anything that interests or
fellow of dJe ~
possible m the case of the human production of a living genetic twin. appeals to us. Assuming Russia real· · hlllltute ror tile Slucly til S....
By The
PreM
That was the theory behind ly does have Hitler's lower jawbone, -'Up Md Palltiall'lllloloplly.
j
TOday is Friday, March 7, the 66th day of 1997. There are 299 days left specie,s. Bear in mind, though, that a
in the year.
· ·.
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Today' s Hilltliahl in History:
On March 7. 1965, a march by civil rights demonstrators was broken up
1in Selma, Ala., by state lroopers and a sheriff's posse.
.
.
On
this
date:
.
1
"make a .;.an swing his lant;JhiihDixon had 01her "hits" besides the Her daily horoscope columns Jaw'
By George R. Plagenz
: In 1849, horticulturist Luther Burbank was born in Lancaster, Mass.
As I said the words over to myself, ~r" and may be boon enough-ror any Kennedy ISSassination, but she had her an audience in lhe millions.
:·
l In 18SO, in a thrce:hour speech to the U.S. Senate~ Dani~l Webster
man.
•
her share of bloopers too.' She pre·
I realized they had a familiar ring.
How can the stars or pi-- pos- ·
, endorsed the Compromtse of 18SO as a mean~ of preservmg the Union.
Novelist Kurt Vonnegut told·a col- . dieted that the war in Vietnam would sibly influence our personalities or :
I was doing some research for a
\ In 187.5, composer Maurice Ravel was born in Clbourne, Flilnce.
end in 1966 (it wenl on till 1973), thll the events in our lives? Most :
story on prophecy , when I came
[ ln 1.876, Alexander Oraliam Bell received ~patent for his telephone.
World War Ul would break out in IIStrologcrs·say they don'tll.now. · :
' In 1911, the Uniled Stales sent 20,000 troc)ps to the Mexican border as across a clipping of an interview
1958, and that the Russians would be
another reporter on our staff had had · ..=::.=..=.;:Jil:.::...:...::;:....::..::.=:
''A suology ·should be 1ICcejlteCI •
a precaution in the wake of the Mexican Revolution.
the
first
to
land
on
the
moon.
with
astrolo~cr
and
psychic
Jeane
lege
commencement
class.
"Super,
only
because it works,'.' an IISII'Oioacr :
1 In 1926. the first successful trans-Atlanti~ radio-telephone conversation
She
also
phraSed
many
of
her
pre·
Dtxon
.told
a
Y,ear
before.
"She
touched
stitions
like
asuolon
and
palmistry'
me.
"Causality (WHY it wocb) :
ltook place. between New York and London.1 .
dictions
in
gener&amp;lities
that
could
fit
is a Western hangup.
;,
· In 1936. Adblf Hitler ordered his uoops to· march into the Rhineland, the palm of my hand with her finger," are good because they make people
almost any circumstance, such as,
he wrote, "and said, 'In five or six feel vivid and full of possibilitieS."
"All we know is that.pcople boni •
\breaking the Treaty of Versailles and the Lo/:amo Pact.
years you will reach a new. higher
While mosl fundamentalist "Many of the problems facing the under certain signs do JM!!IW' certain :
I
plateau in your life."'
'churches and clergymen regard world wi II move toward soluli011s." cl!aracterislics, for whloicvor -~ :
.
Why, those were almoSt the euct asuology as "of the devil" (others Her fans forgot her boo-boos but sons."
remembered
the
Kennedy
call.
-words she had used wllen she once dismiss it IS a silly superstition or
GeOrp PI lit r 1 II a Q-1hrh 1 :
Jeane Dixon's predictions were wrtler .for New' ; !Ill 11 lei polw :
gave me a "psychic reiding" ' · harmless pastime), Dixon said asuol·
except that! was not going to reach ogy "fits into Ood's plan by 'helping 'bued ·on psychic readinss. visions A-I.don.
'
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'
•Dear• Ed itor,
In that mind numbing-moment of my "~ew, higher plateau" for seven us understand our pre-ordained tal· and telepathy as well as astroloay.
ents and shortcomings."
'. When Mother Nature rases. we loss, (lCOJl(C fom1 II •piritiJlll bond. years tn~tead &lt;?f five or six.
Ncighhors srcak of the tragedy a&lt;,if
The stm1lan1y w~ so pronounced
Dixon rust iained nationll attcn·
are put to the test.
·
Five yem ago: Democrat Bill .Clinton picked up adr,litional vlctqriea in ·
Trappc:d in a situation where we ii were their own, and people· sif!· it made me wonder. Is' everybody tion in 1963 when PresKtt~t John
the
South Carolina primary and the Wyomilll CNICIIIII ~ while fellow ~ '
IX:come united citizcns,..we demon· ~erely care about people. We pray for who gell his fortune •told by this Kenne'dy was assassinated. Seven
crat
Paul Tsongas won the Arizona CIUCulla. I'NIIdelll BUilt wq~~ the bpub;strate 011r mot;t ba•ic desire, to bond each other and give of ourselves and famous seer headed for a "new, years earlier, in I9S6 she had pre.
~·
higher plateau." in a few ~ears?
dieted in Parade ma&amp;azine that a lican primary in SOuth C110lina.
in preserving who we are, as a po:o· ourposseuionA.
One
year
110:
Three
U.S.
ICrViccmen
-convicted
In
dlo
rape
of
a
12·
The way Dtxon, who d1ed recent- Democ111tic president who would be
With encouragin1 smiles on
'pie.
· '
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ly
.
~ age 79, would give a psychic elected in 1960-- :•atall,younsman year-old Okinawan airl and· sontene:ed by a J111 u nf coun 10 up to " ' weathered
,fates
·their
silence
, The 1lood of '91 is one more
years in prison. Bob Dole hancjlly !f&lt;OII the New York Republica prinwy.
rcOectin~ inspirins strength, I was readms. wuto !~ the palm of your with blue eyes and thiclt brown IWr"
example of humanity.
Unemployed COII'IJII*' (JIOIIIIIIIIW EdWin! '--Y -convicted ot , npt- '
From federal, state and local --to struck w1th the determination of the hand wtth the up of the nnallnaer of -- would die in office.
She said later she had predicled he ed murder in the liRbombinl of IWO New York City aubwa~ 1n1in1,
ncishbor helping nei.hbor, the elderly, but oh. the tciii'S of their eyes, her right ~· She said that linaer is
TOO.y's Binl\days: Pholop1lphw Lon1 Snowdoll II 67. 1V • 0 IIIW · , ·
human kindness of it dispels thinking wuhed away 115 another sad ~cr. supenen1111ve and was (lble to pick woukl be _,sinaled but that the Willard Scou i1 63. Auto l1li:er J - Outhrie Ia 59. N:urt o.u.J J. 'niVIIIHope is an eternal uuck bec,U,se ·up a person's "channel with eternity" maaazine refused to publisl) that. ·
that no one tllfes.
Her prophecy was ~ on a ti ia57. Walt Disney Compll!y Qhaimwl Michael Bane( Ia 55. .Actor Johll
Had we lo;nown what was coming, there is the )Iuman fact we havc, the that Ia found in the palm of the hand.
I di~, not reach any "new, hip .vision she had wb.ile pray ina ttl St. Heard 1151. Rockainprl'llerWolfll "· Sin,...c!:!ff Mild! 1149. Foot· ..
then: WC~~~Id be a fllllllmlllble to save cOIII'llp and spirit to besin 111Jinl - as
1(1\.,WLyt~~~Swllln ·
p i - after live!) yean. Never- ,. Matthew CllboliC Olurch in Waah- ball ~IJ-of•.._.Fnllcofima ia47. Fonner~
thin;t. ~ Is ,orrect, but when a people ll!d as a n&amp;tion.
is4.5
•
pla__yer
Jv~J,endl ia 37.
'
thelea, lllllil " - I ~- ~,.ere iniJIOII ill 19S2. A devout Romu
, nm ....... ,. 1111111 i114hJiVUIIII
We all pua the ·••1of
'l1louiht for 'lbdly: "The moat dena sOlD mMioll of lilY sociely illhll.
11p, I hllf·be ~ ' - . . - fair. Cidlolic. lilt bcpu.:h till)' by-'"
~._,.\"' JOU .- ntflt?" Wilen-~.
'•
fultn - lwaidneti.IIC in die lllrr)' i"' the 23111 PMini and Meendinl NID whO hu UIOdii"'IO lose." ~ J - laldwi,n. Alneric:M lll5hor {1924- ·
l
. . IICir Md loW of~lm).
tr/il .,.,.., ••, .........
hea-. This beliM is 0110t1f ID· - ·
·. '
(/

in
history
Aaaoc....d

!Today
!

A R h'

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auahed

Does astrology

!·

r11ix with religion?

I

Meigs EMS logs 6 stacks

OHIO Weattwr

•

~~ Of a (lrlf' SUpr and DIIIIU• extensive experience 01 c.pitol Hill. ousted by 8

-· - facturinl empire, the MeviCI, bave
WASHINGTON - It didn't take Ion1 been open about their desire to
long for one of Haiti's most power- inOuence U.S. political and ecotiom111 Court St., P~, Ohio
ful families to make the journey from
1514-992·21111• Fax: 812-2157
political purgatory to the inner sane•
tum of the Clinton administration.
By
In 1994, members of Haiti's in flu.
ential Mevs family were effectively
bl!llned from the United States by the
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Clinton adminisuation. Alons with
two other families; members of the
. ROBERT L WINGETT
Mevs clan had their visas blocked as ic policy toward their tiny, impovcrPublisher
pan of the U.S. economic embargo of ished Caribbean nation.
Ham.
Records filed with the Justice
MARGARET LEHEW .
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
But 'not long thereafter -- with Department show they've spenlhunGeneral Manager
Controller
Pres1dent Clinton's frenetic' re-elec- dreds of thousands of dollars on a
tion campaign in high gear -- Mevs well-connected Washington attorney,
nr. S.nllael- family members apparendy turned up Oregory Craig, whose job is tq lob,..,
(JIIII"'-~
.....
lllo
""~
•'*d
Wrt
,.__.
:
at
a Miami fund-raiser with Vice byndkey members of the
Jlol*l _ _
· admin;.....,;.,
....,-.._,....
President AI Gore and at a White a Congressonthefamily'abehalf.
- """*.,.. -·
u.. "' 11te . , . , nr. Sentinel, 111 Coutr II.
House reception in Washington.
At key times they've provided lines
..._.".....•.•.or••Oltlo-"'"-"'.·..or.•••FAX_."'.If_,_,....;;..'.n.:;:...,___....;:...-"!"'-...L In their battle for rehabilitation, of communication between Haiti·and
-~
access and influence with the admin- Washingtbn.
istration, the Mevses have employed
A partner in the in.fluentil)
a number of weapons -- including Williams &amp;: Connolly lil'!ll, Crail is
a veteran WashingtOn player with
;.wll:liDUJIJCII w•

···

", Leitha Lee Gandee, 79, Ravenswood , W.Va., died Thul'li:day, March 6,
ll'?7. at Ravenswood Care Center.
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Sarah E. Voss

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"' Sarah E. Voss, 8'9, Albany, died Thursday, March 6, 1997, at O'Bieness
Memorial
Hospital in Athens.
. , .
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A homemaker, she was born May 22, 1907, in Ambridge, Pa., daughter
nfthe late Emmet 0 . and Lula Byers Taggart. She was a member of the Morse
Chapel Church,. the Great Bend Pomona Grange and the Meigs County
Senior Citizens.
"
."
•
She is survived by a niece. Frances E. McClintick of Albany.
.lishe was preceded in death by three husbands, Dwight Hoback, Leonard
W. Philbrick and Walter Voss. and by two sisters, Frances Droz and Gladys
•
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. By The Aaeocl5!led Preu
.. &amp;~nny. Highs ' 40s north apd 5\)S Harris.
Services will be heli!l Monday. .I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Hon.c in Pomeroy
•
• ,. $pUth.
_Ohio forecast
·
.
.
·,
1
with
the Rev. Herb McChntick and Bill O'Brien officiating. Bunal Will fol.
Tonight...Snow likely nor:th. Oth· &gt; · ~ Extjlnded forecast ·.
. . erwise mostly cloudYe with a ~haqce ·' t~ 1&gt;11nday..'.A chance of sl)9_wers. low in Gre~t Bend Cemetery.
Friends may call Sunday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
, of ,rain.or snow. Lows mainly ·in the .,· ..:Ows 2S to 35. Highs.M to S5'
. 30s.
, Monday.,.A ,chance of showers.
Satprday... A chance of rain or ' Lows in the 30's. Highs in the -50s.
, snow q?,rt~east in the mor~ing . Else1\Jesday...Fllir. Lows in the ·30~
Viewing hours for Iris Weber .Wilso~ . 72, of Rochester. N. Y. , who died
, where . becoming partly to mostly ' qnd highs in the 50s.
..
Wednesday, March 5, 1997. will he held at the Nulton Funeral Home. 1704
Penfield Road , Penfield. N.Y., Sunday from 7to 9 p.m. Cremation will fol ·
loW.
·
.
·
~!. Mrs. Wilson fonncrly resided in Chester and Pomeroy. She was the eldest
daughter of the late Thomas and Jcss1c Gaul Weber of Chesler and gradu·
at¢ from Chester High School in 1941. Among others who preceded her ·
' .
Across the nation
iq,!leath was her husband, Raymond C. Wilson.
lly 1't1e AIIOCiated Prell
·
, Some light snow or rain is forcca~t , Scattered snow was falling across · '"
northern
New
England
early
today,
Like
8
ViSiOiJ
Of dOOmSday
'for Ohio on Saturday morning, 11ut
"""
the rest of the day will-be partly sun- ' with fu:avicr snows in the eastern
'"Y and dry, the National Weather Scr- . yrcat Lakes. Fair and cool weathllr
prevailed in the Midwest ·and ~ast ~
.!vice said:
r
'
1 However, tlic extreme northeast
falling in the Pacifcould some more lake-effect snow.
Snow was exP.,cted to fall over the
· Lows tonight will be in the 30s.
•·
Highs on Saturday will be in the 40s eastetn great Lakes through the day,
lcct abovc. nood' stage in Louisville
wit
h
accumulatlons
of
up
to
8
inchBy
DAN SEWELL
in the north to the SOs in toe south.
1
on Thursday at 38.5 feet. and was
Associated Prell Wrltfr
. ,The record-high temperature for cs tn ' some areas.
FALMOU1H, Ky. - 'The Rev. exrcctcd to crest late today at 38.7
~hi s da!b ~f t'he Columbus 'weinhcr · Fair skies, light winds and -cool
station wits77 degrees in 1983 while iemrcratures were predicted for a George Naylor rushed back to this feet.
"I expect 1t's going to fluctuate .
toe record low was 4 in 1960. Sunset large part of the country. from the coinmunny where he once preached
not
go up a great deal more," sa1d ·
tonight will be at6:30 p.m. and sun· Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes. There to help people cope with the ravages
'was a chance of light snow in the of floodmg. He was struck by an . National Weather Serv•cc hydrologist
rise Saturday at ~ : 54 a.m.
Mike Callahan.
westCt'n Great Lakes.
,. iRlagc"of cjootl)Sday. . . , But in West Point, 'a town of I ,]00
, "ll'sJi~c a Vlsiqn. Jl~batthe end
ncar
the confluence of I he Ohie and
of the world wouldfook )ike the day
Salt
rivers , chest-high noodwatcrs
after." he said. "Things' they never
Oowing swiftly through the streets
belioved could have happened."
rose
several inches Thursday. AuthorHomes ripped from their foundaities
ordered 45 stuhbom holdouts tn
tion• and flung 100 feet. Houses
lcijvc.
although some continued 10
tossed into the middle of roads
hulk.
Tra~crs packed together Cars crum"We just wanl lo slay wtth what
pled and even piled atop e!ICh other.
wc·,,c
got: · smd Carl Hall us the
All cmttc'd with an ankle-deep hrownwater
laprcd
at the porch nl ltts
ish goo.
;. Charles. Fr~nklin Th()ma, 90, di~d Tuesday. Fe~ . 25, 1997. at Riverside
&lt;anch-stylc.
hcm1c.
a Kcotucky llug
. ··11 ?'as more 1han I cvcrlcxpcctt1ospital i11 Columbus after a short illness.
· cd." smd Karen Ohvcr. who saw that llappmg ahuvc the miling Wlllcrs . ..
': He was 1\t)rn Oct 1,1 . 1906,'io Qcorgc and ,Eastcr Hauck Thoma and was
Fm1hcr downstrcQm in Owensher house had hcen washed into 1he
ratscd m the Bunker Hill area' of Mctgs County, where the fa111ily farmed .
horn
. where the Ohio is expected to
property two doors dnwn. "It's
• He wa~ first employed as' a conduclnr on the local trolley cur line. wh1ch garhagc. lfs his,ofy."
crest
Sunday. sightseers stm.d in uwc
'
ian lrnm Hohson to Racine. When this line was discontinued. Charles used
,
of
lhc
water at a nvcrlmnt park.
"Now my grandma's house is
his cxpcnence tu ohtain ajolt wilh 1hc Columhus Transportation System. rutncd ... said a weeping Pam Fields. where only the tirs of the utility pob
~vcmually IX:ing promoted tnthe position of company supcrvis&lt;&gt;r. He retired
"I WISh we could !!el1t huck and holt were visihk on the hank
"Just lm&gt;k at the power out there ...
aflcr 42 years 'with COTA. Mvin~ seen the street cars gradually replaced hy
it ~~)wn ."'
said
Theresa Hendrix. hugging her
lnntor huses.
·
Many cvacU&lt;'Cs got their tir&gt;tlnok
" Followmg his l&gt;ffici;~l retirement Ch:1rlcs kept busy wnh many projects. Thursday at the rcmmns of the town son Zachary. 'Tvc hccn watchim!
jltcludinl! maintenance of the Nu-lc~lk warehouse and ofticc hutlding. and of 2.71)() that is among the hardest-lui trees, whole lrces OUIIhcre. nymg hy
Bthcr apattn'1ent huildings'. He pjantcd a large garden every year and gener- I rom} lloods that forced thousands like lhey'rc nnlhing. Last night there
Husly sHntcd the rrnducc with mherll. He was an ardent o"tdoorsman. enjoy· from fthcir homes along the Ohio Riv- was an RV fl.oa.ting down river...
lng flshirig and camping trips with his sons. and others. He was u devoted er and smaller streams in Tennessee.
In Huntington. W.Va .. police
hushand 'and luther. and hi~ family and friends have many memories of the Kentucky. Oh1o and West Virginia. recovered two ~odies from a suh·
nltfii'Y tunes they hnd wllh him. He W,\S also a Wnrld War II vetcrun lwvmg FI&lt;Kxls -and tornadoes were .blamed merged car Thursday. Carla Sue ire· ·
served in Eurorc with t)je U.S. Army.
for at least' 56 deaths and tens of mil · son. 44, and passenger, Earl William
· In addition' I() ~is'paren't:s : Chhrlcs was prcced&lt;'d in death hy his first wife, hons &lt;If dollars in dan1ages.
Adk1ns. 3M, likely died early Wedncs·
).lhcrta:"a sun. Gordon: four'si~~ers .and one hr&lt;!ther.
day
while going home from their hosAnd while the Ohio was at its
: He is survivelj hy hi~ wife. Edna: sun and daughter-in-law. Garry and h1ghcot levels since 1964 fitK&gt;ds, pital johs.
Pauho Thoma ,,fTcxa.: gr;~ndchildren Kan1. Seas&lt;JD. ;~nd Dylan. all ofTcxa.-= oflicials expressed optimism that the
In Falmouth. Michelle Baker, 25,
a hruther and . si ~tcr- m - law Howard and Evelyn Thnma of Pomeroy, and worsLr ay be over. 11tc river was 15 was anxious ahout her home and a
mcccs and nephews. Sharol1 Barr •ind Marie Curd arc .oicccs who li1•c in the
still-m1ssmg aunt.
Pomeroy -area.
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.1!?Mcmurlal services were held Saturt!ny. Match I. in Cnlumhus at St.
Andrew:s Prcshytcrmn Church. . . •
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;Today's weather ,/forecast

Ids Weber Wilson

:No,~f:least Ohl~».may
.get light snow -·saturday ·
1 ' d

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rles Franklin Thoma

Did Johnny Chung buy his

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.Vcry '..-........n, Monday d.vlilto
frltlly,. l u .coun s. .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by 11"
Ohto Valley PubHihlna ~yiCl- co..
...._,y, Ohld 4'169. Ph. 992·21l6. S..:ond
Publfohed

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One W..k............... .................. .. ..........$2.00
Ofte MoMh, ............................................. $8.70
One YO¥ ........ ............................. $104.00

. SINGLE CUI'V PRittt
Doily ..................... .. :..........1.. 1.. .. ......... :\l Ceon
S~11m not aelirina tO pny dll!l tarrier may ,••

ll"7!""'!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!
. !""!1!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!'11 Chun!!, ~cpt poppmg up around the
Clinto'it White House . squiring a
•roup ol Chmesc busmcssmen into
If
~.
the Oval OITtcc l(l hear a radio
Am Ele Power .......................41'1. "ddrcs~ o h"nding over a $50,000
Akzo ......................................72'k check 10 the first lady's top_ aide ;
c)j""""""""'"'"''"'"""so;o troopi~.l.l friends throu~h on private
8
1. ............................ 41
wurs.
·
ATirT .....................................38}.
S.nk 9118 ..............................47'1.
He vis1ted the White House or its
Bob Evan• .............................. 14· alljaccn1 •onicc' 51 times over two
Borg-Weiner ......................... 40'4 years. Chung even appointed himseH
Ch41mplon ...................,.........11\ an unollidal gn-IX:tween with Chma
Chllrmlng Shopa .................... 5~ to help sc.·urc the freedom of tmprisCityHoldlng
..........
"'"''f... ··~·- · 33~
,Y
Fecleral Mogul
.......................
25'1. oned dis.&lt;idcnt
Harry Wu.
·
Gannett ·........... :............ :....... 81~~
Sound like an old friend of PrcsiGoodyear ............................... 53 dent Cli~!c;m·! A trusled ndviser'! No,
Kmart...........................:......,. 12'4 Johnny Chung is a StTlllll-timc entre-

s•ocks

temit ht adva!KIC du"Ctt to The Olily Snl:i~~el
on • ttne. ~b 011 12 roonlh bnd~. Credit win tie
pw. Cll'rief each week.

Larlds End ...............................28
LimiNe! ................................. 111'4
OVB ............;....:..................... 37'4
One Vllley............................. 31l~
Peaplll ...................................28
Prem Flnl................................. 15
,!!ocltwell •..,...........................611'!.
ftD-SIMII.: ............................ 176~
1~

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Stl'Ck re~e •re lhe 10:30
pfovtdlcl tiV Attwat
OJ' lpolle.

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'Holzer Meclic.t Center
.
Discharges March 6 - Belly
Spriggs~ Louella Brenner, Mrs. Ryan
Hersman and son, Paula Justus, Janet
Bloomfi~id , Klllhryn Sprouse, Lucy
Phillips,' Patricia Gillispie, Mary
Spencer, ¥ary Adkins, William Mas·
tcrs.
Births ~ Mr. and Mrs. David
McCain, son, Oak Hill; Mr. an!l Mrs.
Donald Parcell. daughter, Jockson.
•(Publls,hed wilh .........~)

Calif.: with
no known political connections
IX:forc 1994. denounced hy a White
House national security olficial "'' "a
hustler."
Chung's cxtraordmary access to
the White House seems to have
stemmed from his extraordinary
largesse- S366,(JI.XJ 1n contnhullons
h
· p
to I c Democratic arty over the past
three years.
Now Chung is tangled up in the
wntroversy over the rresidcnl's role
in fund raising and foreign contribu·
· pany. Ckontnms
_to thc. De mcx:ra!IC
@rcss1ona1 mvesll@ators arc as mg
whether Chung bought access l&lt;l the
president and where his money came
frqm .
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The Democratic National Commince says it will relum all $366,000
of his contributions because the origins cannot be verified.

Meigs announcements
To receive Eagle Scout award
Adam Whi te. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Wh ite w1ll receiVe h1 s Eagle
Scout award in ceremoni es to be held
Sunday at 3.30 p.m. at the Rock
Spnngs Umted Methodist Church.
White is a member of Pomeroy
Troop 249 Foll owing the ceremony
a reception will be held m the basement.

Racine Beard to meet
The Rae me Board of Public
Affairs Will meet Monday. 10:30 am.
at the municipal hu1lding .
Road closing scheduled
Eagle Ridge Road in Chc ~ ter
Township Will IX: closed stanm g
Monday until further notice fnr road
repair. Meigs County Engmecr
. Rnhcrt Eason announc ed \his mom·

Lodge to meet
Tit!: Middleport Lodge 363. mg .
F&amp;AM wtll hold a special meeting,
Tuesday. 7·]0 p.m. at the temple. League signup
Work will be in the EA degree .
The Rolland Youth League will
have a mccling Sunday at 2 p.m.
Trustees sel meeting
Signups will IX: held until 4 p.m. at
Bedford .Township Trustees will the Rutland firehouse .
meet Tuesday. 1 p m. althe lnwn hall.

Syracuse

Councii.:o.ntinued from page I

needs to he inSiallcd. Roush
and Councilman Mony Wmxl arc in
charge of the proJeCt.
Wood reported that Union Alley
needs gravel and thai a hole 1n front
of the Radcliff prorcrty needs tilled .

~ulvcrt

as soon a-; pnss1hlc .

The hall park and opcmuon nf the
concessiOn stand was al so discussed

April.
Councilwoman Kathryn Crow
sa1d she= has rcci.!JVCd complamtS
ahout rcnplc puttmg tra sh for pickup m hoxcs and other non ·standard
CtlnHuncrs.
II j ~,; up tn the waste company to
lell people what to,pul 1hc1r garhagc
in. cnunul dccid1..~d
In c1Liu:r hus1ncss . C&lt;1um:1l al..·ccptcd thl" m&lt;~ynr's report m1' the umnunt

wuh councilwoman Donna Peterson
rcportmg she had rccc1v cd a check
from the baseball associatmn lor of$ 1.316 and pollee report present·
cd hy Chief Tim Gillilan shnwmg 25
$200.
Eber P~ekens Jr.. cuune~l member; dtatums ami nne parkmg th.:kct
Clerk Tre;~surcr Janice Zw1lling
discussed the fire truck that was dam·
aged recently in an accident and he presented the tnllnw1ng report . genalso reported a pump is needed for eral fund. (·$M7 .64): slrccl cnnstrUctllln. S2K .21lK .71. htghway.
the truck .
Council approved the fire dcpan- $961'9 2Y, lire . $2.429 .91 . water,
mcnt horrowing the money to over· $1 2. 4Jil.40: pool. $256] 2:1. guaranty meter. $_] .129.14 : cemelcry.
haul the pump nn the truck.
$95
65 . tntol. $577RR.o&lt;J.
Council will advertise for insurancc ..on equipment and buildings in

After leaving health clinic,

Man kills 5 fami.ly
members, himself
' WHEELING. W.Va. (APt -

A

man went on a ki11ing spree hours
alter checking out of a mcntai hc&lt;'hh
clmic. shooling h'is wife and· two
cJaughtcrs. then driving across tnwn

.Rohcrta Myles. Police Chief Ed l.t~ng
said.

He shnl himself IIUtSidc his hrolh·
cr 's home. on an 1slantl m the Ohio

River :.thnut 50 miles southwest ol

lo kill hi' hrothcr and mother IX:forc Piushurgh. Pnlico pulled Sturm ·s
committing suicide. JXlliCc said today. hcxly from 1hc wat er
Police said they d1d n11t knnw why
All six died from gunshots to the
Swrm
was hcmg trc :.ttcd at the Htllhead
crcst
B.;lmvmral
Health Scrv1ccs at
Mark Storm "seemed.- to he
stressed out and ~uict" m" hirthd:ty Ohio V:dlcy Mcd1cul Ccnlcr. Slnrm
party hcfmc the sht&gt;otings Thur&gt;day had checked in Saturday and Signed
n•ght . said, James Gallaher. a ncig,h· hunsell out Thursday nl!&gt;rnm~. Gallaher !old pollee
hor and the hnst of the party.
Polii.:C hclicvc Stnnn. a rivcrhoat . Stonn. his wile and c.laughtCrs
p1lot lrom Wheeling. used a \1 mm attended the p:lfly unt1l ahnut 7:40
scmiautomauc pistnllo shtl(Jt his wiiC p.m. After the family went home.
Betty. then killed Ins daughter&gt; G:1lluhcr n&lt;JtJccc..l Stnnn's cnr was no
JesSica. &lt;&gt;. and Megan. ~ - as .thcy Iunger parked in fnml of the house .
lay mlhei• hunk IX:ds.
,
He !hen droVc- ahout21/2 miles to
h1s hrnthcr's hoUse . where he shol..

BcnJamm Stnnn and lhcir mnthcr

• FABULOUS ACTS
• THRIWNQ AERIAUSTS
• IXCiftNQ ACR08ATS
• AMAZING ANIMALS

. lllrllla,
Chills, Laughter
and lixcllesnent
In the

F•mau•Cole
Trellftl-1

llckell m•y be·obW!ned 11:

Jell Warner lnsutMce
113 W 2nd Ave. Pomeroy
or
Kenneth R. lilt. CPA
2161/2 E. Mlin 81. PomeiOJ
or cd
Into

..,,...far

~EROYtOHIO

M . Hl"h School
Gymnallum

Sllnclay, Metch II, 1111
Perlt:innancea 2:00 l 4;30 p.m.

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By.

I.JaneCiub
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Units of the Me igs County Emer- dleport, Angela Conalin. Veterans
gency Medical Service recorded six Memorial Hospital.
calls for assistance Thursday. Units .MIDDLEPORT
responding included:
9: 17 p.m., N. ·Second Avenue,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Corey Stewan, VMH.
I 2:20p.m., New Lima Road. Rut- RACINE
larid. Milo Hut~ hinson . Pleasant Val6·10 p.m., Tyree Boulevard. Mil·
Icy Hospital, Rutland squad asststed; drod Carnahan. treated at the scene.
5·20 p.m.. Main Street. Rutland. SYRACUSE
Bernice Nelson, Holzer Medical Cen·
I 0:06 a.m.. College Road. John
Hunnell , VMH · ,
ter. Rutland squad asSISted:
9:01 a.m., Railroad· Street, Mid·

~~!N:~~P~~~~Ye p~c~~~-~r~cc,

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MNttttr: 'The A~llltd PrtP., anclthe Ohio
Nt•iifXlP"!• A1BiatiOn.

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Are you OK?

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l!!ilood resl•den'ts get
aklook at the damage

~o~~rt~~~s;ain

. SUISCRIPTION RATBS

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Letters to the editor

!

, ,Born July 14, 1917, in Montsomery. W.Va., daughter of the late Arthur
Lee and Katherine Kina Cook, she was a homemaker and mcmhcr of the
Fll'l\t United Church of RavenswoOd. She was a member of the Grandpar• ctl\s Club of Charleston, W.Va., and the Colonial Club of South Charles!on,
W.Va., Chapter IS of the Order of toe Eastern Star, Ravenswood. and a furmer secretary Ill Ravenswood High School.
.
She i ~ s~rvived by a son , David Gandee ofWorthingiOn: a daughter. Deh- ·
orali Duddmg of Oakwood; seven grandchildren and a sister, Catherine Fox
uf Ravenswood.
.
;,Services will be held Sunday, 2 p.m. at Roush Funeral Home 10
Ravenswood with the Rev. Dr. Dan Hogan officiating. Burial will follow
i[I.Ravenswood Cemetery.
,J;'riends may call Saturday. 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home. Memorial con·
tr.ibutions can be made io the First United Methodist Church Building Fund
or ihe Ravenswood Care Center.
·

, IManSfield !·47" I·

Po8TMAsr£R:.5eJid ~Mkhs" ~ion1 ID
1'be Daily Sel11il\el, II I Coon St, Pomeroy,

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.. The Dally Sentinel• P9 3
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Bendy~~ ~

&lt;CUQ

Pomeroy • Mlildlepof't, Ohio

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·~T~h~e~D-a~il_y_S___e_n-ti_n_e_....,.l· Banned Haitian clan .donated to Democrats
tr.~£t&gt;.L.J ;w

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In the NHL,

In ot her C-USA quurtcrlinals,
Alubamu-Btrnltnghum beat Tulane
74-70 and Marquclle dclcated Memphis 63-45.
'
Adantic 10
Lamont Barnes scored eight ul
his 16 points in ovcrtune as Temple
· won tn the quarterfinals at Philadelphia. The game was tied nt 62 helilre
the Owls (19-9) got the la.o;t seven
points to elimmate Xavier (22-5).
Arlhur "Yah" Davis scored 20
po1nts as St. Joseph's (22·6) bent St.
Bonaventure (14-1'1) fur the third
time this season.
In other games, Rhode Island
defeated Virginia Tech 67-63 and
George Washmgton heat Massachuseus 58-41.
WAC
No. 14 New Mexico 6S ~'
Hawaii 57
Clayton Shtclds had IMpmnts and
14 tcbounds as New Mcxtcu (24-6)
advanced to play Utah in the semt·

Peter Sauer swished a basel me
jumper with SIX seconds lett as
Stan lord won m home.
Brevm Kntght. who had 23 pomts
and 12 asststs fur the Cardinal ( 197 Pac-10, tl -6) drove into the lane
belore passmg to Sauer for the goahead basket. M1chael Dtckcrson
had 22 pomts for An zona ( 19-K, II·
6).

Tournaments
Conference USA
Danny Fortson scored 15 points
despite 5-l'or- 15 shootmg and
Cmcinnau (2S-6) routed the hust
school Three tcchmcal luuls were
called dunng a first-hall' lracas thm
had Saint Louts' Sckcue Barcntmc
shoving Forts!ln.
DeMarco Johnson imd Scan Colson cu~.:h made two free lhrows m the
last I(&gt; as North Curohnu-Churlotlc
(20-S) ralhed I rom a 14-point dcf1cit
10 the second hull and beat Loutsv1llc
(23-S).

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Ocno11 ll6 Wnglu St 47
W1s -M1Iw.mla..'C 7Y Ctcvcl.md Sl 61

~uuthcrnl'.•l lJZ, Wa~hmp.tun S1 K'i

Saanl~trd

HI. 1\m.ona tiO
UCLA H7. W.t~hmtttnn HS

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

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ENCOUNTERS RESISTANCE - Clncinnetl'a Kenyon Martin
(right) encounters raaiatance from Saint Louis: Sekeue Barentine
In the flrat half ot Thursday nlght'a Conference USA tournament
game In St Louis, where the S.Srcats won 71-43. (AP)
12) trailed just64·6 I w1th 6 112 minlinals. The Lobos led by at least 10
utes
lel't before the Wildcats pulled
110ints lor timsl of the second half
and held off a late rally by Hawaii.
away
In uihcr ~tunes. Georgetown
In the _other semilinal, Tulsa will
play Texas Christ1an. TCU heat downcil Mmm1 63-59, Providence
Fresno State IO(l-81 and Tulsa beat West Vtrgmla 7b-69 and Boston
College dcleatcd Pittsh~rgh 76-68.
downed UNLV 68-65.
Southeastern
Big East
No. 24 Genrgia moved o,l\-10 pluyJ
No. ll Villanova 80
Arkansas in the quartcrlinals. In &lt;llht)
Syracuse 70
Freshman 11m Thum:L• scored 20 cr lir~t·rnum.l games, Alnham'a Ocut
pmnts and Vtllanova (22-H) · Florida M0-66, Auhurn defeated Tennessee 67-54 and Vanderhih t&lt;oprcd
advanced to the scmtlinals at Mudi·
Mi.-isslpJ'li'suue 73-t.1ln'o'vcl1inle.
son Square G•~rden. Syracuse (19-

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Dullal&lt;t~l\wH.md. 10 p m
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OrlmMt Ill Clul!kn Su111.•. 10 :\() p m

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~ilrd teams arc delighted by the

ch8;!sc. while the teams runmng

~~al Motors cars arc angry and

confused by the ruhng.
"Ford has been strong," Sabates
said. " Dale Jarrett has just checked
out and left even thoujlh he hasn't
won yet. They have such strong
cngmcs.
"If you took the Hendrick cars
out of the equation. would Chevrolet have done as well? Hendrick, has
won two races, and that's the most
superior team in racing today. Period.

"They've got the best cars.

Tim Sweeney · and Ted Donato the SenatoiS. mcluding thtce
scored for the Bruins. wmless m their shutouts. He also shut nul Onawa on
last four vistts to Long Island (0-3- Nov Ill wh1le wnh the Blackhawks.
I). They have won only ohe of their
Tony Granato and Viktm Knzlov ,
last five games overall (I -2-2).
each had goals for the Shark s who
The Bruins, mired in a 1-10..3 hrokc a iwo-gamc losmg strc~k It
slump, lost caplam Ray Bourque to was the Sharks' hrst shutout ol the
an ankle injury when he wa&lt; struck season
by a slap shot.
"He\ a goaltender who has the
"I'm thnlled Wllh the wm. cspe- ahllny tn wm ga1ncs hy htmself,..
cially as poorly as we played in the 011awa coach Jacques Manm smd of
first period," Islanders coach Rick Bel four "He's proven that ..
Bowness said. "Tommy Salo held us
Rangen 6, Kings 2 ·
in there wjth our sloppy play in the
Mark McsSitr set up three co nfirst penod, when we allowed 18 scculive goals and W.tync Gretzky
shots."
scored agamst hts old team m New
Sharks l, Senaton 0
York 's v1ctory at Los Angeles
At San Jose, Ed Bel four mainMe-ster, who returned to the llnetained his knack for shuning oullhc ur_ Monday . !rom a back InJury.
Senators by slopping 29 shots:
asststed on goals by Davtd Oliver.
Bclfour, acquired by San Jose in Bill Berg and N1klas Sundstrom that
a trade with Chicago Jan. 25, extend- gave the Rangers·a 4-0 lead early m
cd his career record to 5- I. I against the second pcnnd

•

tinkering with rules

'

motors, everything," Sabatcs added.
" Most of lhe other Chevy teams
have new personnel and are learning
how to work together. We •re lcaming. Dale Earnhardt's team is learning a new crew chief, and so is Sterhng Marhn 's bunch.
"We'll all get beucr, but it's
gomg to be tough with the Fords getling the rules changes after they've
done cvcrythtng hut win the first
three races "
"I don't hkc the "'ay thmgs arc
shapmg up at Atlanta, .. said Larry
McClure. who own&gt; the Chevy driven by Marlin. "(NASCAR) said
Chevrolet dommatcd last fall's race
at Atlanta. and that 's why they dtd it.
"If I'm not mtstakcn, Ford almost
lapped the f1cld at Charlotte last year.

. N~AA ttur·,~ament

to Georgetown ~0-49. And la.•t year.
Western Carolina wenl tu the wtrc
before l'alhng to Purdue 73-71 .
So it's possible. But pack h~htly.
No. 15. A toast to Richmond m
1991. KudostoSantaCiarain 1993.
The only two 15th seeds to ever win
a tournament game. They 'remember.
So do Syracuse and Arizona. The

,llli,
t"'

,

CatP,Y•f....,.Boy,I::IOp.nt

1ft

driY~rs

Ohio's· F:otd ·and.Sears
receive ·aii·MAC honors

~ .w-

Rfi'Ckllr Recll,.... '

&amp;ltntMIItlllatl&gt;ullu, V:10pm 1 ,
rt Y M.an..'l'allll AAIIIII!im. 10 .10 p.m.

'

Rieky Craven occupy positions one,
two and five in the standings; but the
rest of the top 10 ts all Thunderbird

the lowest seeded team ever to go to
the Final Four. Dale Brown
10 conpreache4. They believed
Np. 10. One year later. the Tigers
'mplatc seeds?
l No, no. Not pctumas. The ones
were !&lt;Ceded lOth, and nearly did it
NCAA will plant on each guest
agatn. Not until the final seconds of
nday night .when its liaskctball
the regional championship against
Indiana
dtd they fall, 77-76.
galla is organized. It is never hard
No.9. Eastern Michigan seemed
t!&gt; sec where your team stands wnh
a tad oversce&lt;,lcd here la.&lt;t year.
the NCAA cQmputcr.. . In Mafta \' ictim~ .
movies, the doomed J!Cl kis.o;cd ori the
No 14. Two years ago, a' pa1r of Until the Eagles beat Duke .
• No.8 Cinderella's Castle. From
cheek. In the tournament, they gel
14th seeds posted upsets; Old
th1s
obscure spot. Villanova launched
sccdccf 16111. '
·
•
Dommion over Villanovd and Weber
This can. be confusing. &lt;;omc State over Michigan State. But the lis 1985 dnve to a remarkable nationSunday, say your herO&lt;ls II!'C No. 13. . patron saint of the No. 14s is Cleve- al · champio nship victory over
' Does ''-mean you probably' can · land State in 1986, when it sJartlcd Georgetown. .
N9 . .7 Once upon a time, David
liiss lheir fmmie~ gOOdbye In the first Indiana in one of the most shocking
Robinson
wa.&lt; a Navy man. As sevhours of, the 1oumoment'?
upsets ~oh Knight has ever endured. Not tkccssari ly. Princ.:to~ was
I'Jo 13, The magtc moment of enth seeds, his Middies came withNo. 13 Ia.•( year.
1996. Princeton 43. UCLA 41. But '" one game of the Final Four in
Here's a seed catalogue, since the 11 should not have been that surpns- 1986.
No. 6. Two lasting tmagcs from
NCAA besan passmg them out in ing. A 13th seed has won a first
1!!79. An historical primer to the round game in eight or the past 10 sixth ·~~ds-turncd-champions · Danny Manning carrying Kansa.&lt; to the
numbers of destiny: .
years.
,
title
in ,1988. And the late Jtm ValNo. 16. Have mcrcy,on their!lllul.
No. 12. Nmc of these teams have •
'!:_ang,_
disbelief on hts race, after
No. 16 seeds, cuj'scltto always open ended up in a regional . Strange bcdagamst the No. Is, are 1}-48. ;rhetr fciiQws start popping up here. Drex~ ' North'!=arolina State stunned HousavemJ!C margin of defeat this decade cl was a No. 12 seed last year. And ton in 1'!183.
No. S. Mississtppi State swept
ha.&lt; been 26 points. But for eternal so was Arkansas.
past
No. I seed Connecticut and No.
in•l'inttion, there is 1989 Prl'!Celon.
No. II . A round for appi4Use for
2
Cmcinnati
to get to the 1996 Final
whtch captivated a country in losmJ {..SU, circa 1986. Those TiJers are
four. Stranae.though. The Bulldogs
••
are the only No. S seed m htstory to
make it there .
No.4. A bloody number. this one,
with some inf,mous first-round
thuds in the 1990s. UCLA last year.
.,
Manhauan over Oklahoma in 199S.
Shaw, Toledo, 6-II, Jr. ; Saddi Wash- Southern Univcrstly over Gcorgta
layThe.~aiMIIcdP! ••
ington, W. MichiJan, 6-3, Sr.
Tech in 1993. Bl!t S~racuse gOt to the
-.-f'lntteua ,
· HOIIOI'IIbHmeadon
championship game from there in
S.l BO)'kips,. E, Mic:hiJan, S-8,
.
Jr.; Antonio [lllniels, llowling Green, · · Charles Macon, Cent. Michtgan, 1996.
No. 3. He was a little-known
6-4, Sr.; pevin Davis, l'diami, (&gt;.7, 6-6, Sr.; Nate Huffman. C:ent. Michi7-I. Sr.;Anthon)' Stacey, BowlSr.; G-. FOrd, ~ $-8;, Sr;;
Michigan assistant until fate, and the
Bonzi' W.IJI, Ball St,, (&gt;.~. Jr. ·
Groo11. 64, So.; ,,. ' l'{twble, abrupt de~~Brture of the head coac h,
·•
'Milllli,
(t.7, Sr.; Ed Norvell, Kllllt, 6- banded Sieve Fisher the third-seed" lil'c .... ..,.
.
2,
So.
·
,
Jhlltlllf e.tl, Akltln, .5·10, Ft.;
ed Wolverines on lhe eve oftht 1989
(1'11. ululh• wen _ . by tournament. 1'lu'ee weeks later, !hey
'Deirick Dial,~. t.fj(:l)ipn, 64, Jr,;
............ U,--sr., tasey tliuutltnan'l n dm)
·'

We Sell Comfort

LI

Saturday's pPICI

By MIKE' HARRIS ·
Thunderbil'ds to race with an eighth
·frAMP10N, Ga. (AP) - Felix of an inch lower front atr dam, with
Sabales, as an observer of Winston a 3 875-inch ground clearance.
f_up racing,. can't figure out why
The Chevrolet Monte Carlos and
•NASCAA keeps messing with the Pontiai: Grand Prixs that compete in
:.Vies.
NASCAR's top senes have a 4.0: · "Why they muc these rule ~ inch ground clearance below their
~hanges,l don'tknow," said Sabatcs, front air dams.
who completely reorganized his
Although Chcvys drtvcn by Jeff
:.Oabeo Racing team thts season, Gordon won the first two races of the
~witchmg from Pontiacs to Chcvro- season, Thundcrbnds have led 785
Jets and htrmg rookie Kobby Gordon laps to 206 for Monte Carlos so far.
to replace Kyle Peny, buying Joe
Last Sunday at Richmond, the
Ncmcehek's team and adding Wally Ford driven hy Rusty Wallace won
llcnbaeh Jr. as a third entry ror and a Monte Carlo fatled to finish on
an of the ~&lt;Cason.
··.
the lend lap (or the lirst time since
This week, headins into Sunday's. .the second race of 1994 at Mtchigan .
m~slar SOO at Atlanta Motor International Speedway
~pecdwliy, NASCAR is givm1 Ford
Gordon and Hendrick Motorplillie more down force. allowinf! its sports teammates Terry Labonte and

~ACAR's

'

They' ve got two,ditTerent cars they
run at Daytona a~d Talladega. They
want all the cream and all the huncr.
And just because Chevrolet was
lucky enough to win Daytona and
Rockingham, they get a rule change
for Atlanta.
"I hale to say it," Mc'Ciure added.
" but it pretty much to me looks hkc
luck is the onl,y way Chevrolet won
euher of those races . .. . As rar as I
can remember, there hasn ·, been a
conccsston made to Chevrolet smcc
the Monte Carlo came hack (rcplac·
ing the Lumma) m '95."
Jack Roush, whose driver trio or
Mark Martin, JciT Burton and Ted
Musgrave all dnve Fords, satd. "I
woke,up to the fact that we were diS·
advantaged on atr dam la.&lt;l week m

a i:hscussion With the guys on uur,

team.
"Gomg hack to Atlanta (in
Nnvcmhcr). hascd on the way Jcffi
Gordon and the Chcvmlcts mn m thc l·
fall and the way they arc running : ·
nght now. rt 's gomg to he a rou( t.
unless they do snmethtng.
"Before th1s cha nge, the Thun- ·
. dcrhtrd was dtsadvanlagcd ahout ]0
horsepower on drJg and 150 pounc.Js :
of downlon.:c . Bu1 J'm n,;t a pro· ~

ponenl nl lhe Clghth ol an tnch
(change) Takmg away the atr dam
dispanty

1s

one oJ

the

W,itys ;

NASCAR can halancc the down- ,
force and Ur',lg

sttuallon

But I've

~

asked them fot a h.1ll an mch van- '
anLC for I he f'oi(IIO nu.Jcr lo lighten ~
1hc lhmg up so we t.:.m h~tvc a good
rou.:c ·•

gives hope to seeds 9-15

were natwna1 champions
No 2. A seed with great root•.
Both of Denny Crum's Louisville
champums came from here. So did
Mike Krzy1.cwski's ftrst Duke title
team. wh1ch upset unbeaten UNLV.
And Mich1gan State tn 1979, wuh

Mag1c Johnsun.
No I. Savor the upsets EnJOY the
narrow escapes. But at the end ol the
day. the tnurnamcnl mvanahly
reverts to ronn. The 1990s have
crowned seven champums. S1x were
No. I seeds.

In the 63 gnmcs ufthe 1996 tour- ;

nmncm. a h1ghcr seeded team lnst to a
a lower team 15 t1mes. II that mcn~s £

anything. the chance ol upset the ;
next few weeks " JUSt less than 25 ~

f
•

pcr~cnl

•

.

6, (.'11lorut.ln]

r-.,.'1\1 0!')' 0

Drivers show discontent with

ltY Mil(~ LOI'f'.S11

Hockey

NatioMia.art...ll A!IMiflutkMt

I

Gennett New. Servh:e
: May we have a m&lt;1ment

• 11

M llfCol lCII
M I'H 202
62 1'2 1M
~' IVl 227 •

,!()

•

.ccasionany,

l'i~
2:\~

Kl lUU 161
7C• 20~ 14Y

.

"or the season.
s\4te Buffalo visited feb. 8.
Cap1tals sco~ed a season-high four tn
"We watched them last ntght
~lsewhere in the NHL, it was the second period on only nine shots
against Florida, and thought thts · ~hmgton 6, Colorado 3; the New against c;olorado goalie Cratg
quite yet in Florida, the Phoe11ix • team lfall speed to bam," l,ightmng York Islanders 5, Boston 2; San Jose Billington.
Coyotcsju.&lt;l created one of !heir own cpach Torry Crisp said. "Obv1ously, 2, Ottawa 0; and the New York
The outburst gave Washmgton a
by sweeping the state's NHL teams.• · we didn't come prepared, and they ' Rangers 6, Los Angeles 2.
5-3 lead.
As if a l..() win over the florida burned us up."
· ' Capitals 6, Avalanche 3
"Bondra had a career-game kind
Panthers on Wednesday night wasn't
Mike Gartner provided all the
•·Peter Bondra ended his slump of output," Colorado coach Marc
impressive enQUgh. the Coyotes offense tht Coyotes needed, scoring with four goals, and Joe Juneau Crawford ~aid. "When you get four
made it two •hutouts in a row with
goals against · two Tampa Say added four assists to help Washing- goals, that's a special night "
a S-0 victory over the 1impa Bay
goalies. His 30th and 3ht goals ton beat vtsittng•Colorado.
Jslanden 5, Bruins l
Lightnin1 on Thut'sday night.
marked the 17th time in his career
Bondru had been scoreless for stx
Claude Lapmntc and Marty
"This has been great since we're
that he has scored at feast 30 in a sea- games, but came to life against the Mcinnis each had a goal and assist
not known ·,as. a' defensive hockey , son. The oilly time he missed was defending Stanley Cup champions, as New York beat Boston in a game
·club,'' Pliocnix coa&lt;:h Don Hay said •. during the lockout-shortened 1994- whb had won t!Jtee strafght and nine . matching two or the two worstteams
of the back-to-baeli shutouts.
9S season.
of their last II.
in the NHL's Eastern Conference.
"We've been preaching defenSe all
Craig Janney, Dallas, Drake and
. 'liondra became the first player
Derek King, Todd Bcrtuzzt and
. year, and now it loOks like it's . defcnseman Olcg Tverdovsky also tHis •scason to get a hat trick against Dan Plante also scored for the
heginning to pay ofT." '
scored 'for tht Coyotes. The loss thi\ Avalanche, and the fina to score Islanders, who now trail eighth·
This time, Coyotes goalie Niko- · snapped a seven-game (6-Q..I) home fout goals against thetr franch 1se place Hanford by five points m the
lai Khabibulin stopped 30 shots l'oi
unbeaten streak for Tampa Bay, since November 1993 He had three playofl' race. Tommy Salo nOtched
his secpnd straiglit shutout and fjfth
which hadn' t lost at the Ice Palace goals in less than nine minutes as the his 14th win with 30 saves.

Str.t,IICIII..i' J,m1o.,'li WIIIUIII\.'0

Natawl Hnd;; ~J l.tatAin
S'l' I.OUIS IU.UI.S Scn1 &lt;i Jun
('a~y nntl J) l..lhnr1Jihr.tllsky 111 Wun'l'~
'~" nr the I\ HI . k1.'t.::tlk."!.l 0 Jumk· Mll.cn-

llukotbllll

held tbe Cbppen to just one basket in the finil ~ : 16.
''This was a huge win for the Magic. We played
good 'D' in tht second half." said Penny Hardaway,
who led Orlando with 21 points. "In . the last nine
games, only oile or two teams have scored over 90
points against us. That means our defense 1s really coming alive."
The Otppers missed three shots m the final five seconds Darrick Mantn had a dnving shot partially
blocked, the putback was missed, and Loy Vaught got
another offenstve rebound, but his 15-foot jumper h11
the front of the rim and bounced orr ll.&lt; lime expired.
Nets 101, Grizzlies 96 - Kerry K1ttlcs and Shareef Abdur-Rah1m, two of the contenders for Rookie
of the Year, played to a standoff as New Jersey snapped
a three-game losing streak by wmn~ng at Vancouver
Kittles, coming off the bench, scored 21 pomts and
added seven rebounds. Abdur-Rahtm scored 13 of hts
23 pomts tn the second half. mcludtng hiS fifth threcpomler of the season
·" It was mce to see the two rook1cs go after each other and kmd of break even," Nets coach John Calipan
sat d. "We are talking about two of the premter rooktcs. Hopefully they can be co-rookies "
The Gnzzhes matched a season h1gh by losmg thctr
ctghth straight

' ccordlng
""
to Ltiprestlf

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lkmue lll.ult.·~ tu :llhl\'l'-)'Cat" ~umm~l

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Ohio women's
collqe scores

~,

l'ltrllkl»hl. .
Ct•lnn1tln
. 41 17 K 90
l'tlmullltlll
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Allalk:un
. 27 ;10 ' H 62
Culj!ary
, , 17 JJ 1 til
Vuucnuvcr . .lK J-1 J ~
tus 1\n~-L:s
.24 3S K 56
Sm1 Jn~
... 1~ )~ 7 ;II~

1\t Ma.'&lt;~IUun Jadt!IOII Hiall sd.ol
O.~tfidd Ha Trln''f d"J-21 "' w

U.•Mt-):.10p.'1'·
(,'Ilk. . . . Y'Uit. ~· JO p ..
N&lt;w Jcno.')',. U 1.a1m. 9:.111 p.m.
Slk'ramcntu 111 &lt;liJltk'n $til..:, ro..'O

n.

)'\:ill" ~unlm~l

lr!! .1. I &amp; lit: llA

liJ 21 4
lktn•ll
11 11J 14
PhtiCIIIl
10 '2 4
Sl I ums
2K ~ H
Cht..::,l.tu' ............. 26 :lO 10
1uruntn
2~ H J

l'ur1l.!ll'.llllll' M. Cruulr.~vllll.' 'i7

Br.mch(24-l) S.nunlay, i m
AI Mornf Rid
H Srhoal
i.ei.IIIJ.Itln
hcl11 (2\-J)
FmJay. 7 :\0 p m
AI Zcux:;• Hlp SdNial
Vincnl Wmrrcn UO·•U n . W
Holmn (22-.1), Friday, '1 :~e. m. ,
At v...... llllltr ~ 8chal
C11l Harlle)' (22 ·4) VI. Hamllwn
ladinrl0-4). f'fiddy. 7..l0pyn. ~
•

AII.ANIA 11\l.l'ONS AJtro.:t:lllu
1\lftnK w11h 111 Uu\l '-'hnstJ,ll\ uu ,, lhrw•
)'C:u" ~U IIU o lt.:l ,\Jill
I:.U Wcsl Itt •• IWU·

Mqic 94, aippen 93 -At Los Angeles, Orlando ralhed from an II -potnt third-quaner defiCit, then

$hut down Lightning 5-0; .Caps &amp; Oilers also win

E

clh:l11VC 111 IWH

IJdS I ON 1(1-:{) SOX l~tn·hascli the
~~~n i ~Vd nf or Steve Huscy lrmn Smtul
l'nlb of the Nt1nl11:rn l.c.!puc
t'I.IWEI.ANI&gt; INDIANS 1\~n..'Ctl IU
term~ wu" RHI 1 Chlll..l UJW.t ott" Uln.oc·
)'~'olf CUIIIftle1 , IIIUJ p JlartnJu l'olllll, p
~b .. mw.• Ucl ultusa. () l&gt;;.umy (ir;~vcs. P
Stc\c Khnc 11 J\lhtl.' I.AIJJCl. INI' Hl:rht.'f1
!'crT)'. INI· l~lfllti!C Walsu11. 01' l'tcllki,JI.f
Hubbunl. OF Alex Ramtrc:t .1nd &lt;.: Lnutr
IJin:t 111\lltiC·)':OU" ~UIIIfii1.1S
Ki\NSI\S &lt;..'ITY ROY Al ~'i hgn.'L'tl 111
terms w11h INI Kc11h l . u~:kllolfl C S.tl
FaJ,IU\1 .md OJ Mtd.otcl 'I udtl'r niL mit.:·

Cmtral I:H.,Mun

:wm
(.),dl,Js

Division II finols

.1

..'-t:et••
, ....~~~.,..

Dlvi•ion IV semifinal•

MIISI.\11 t22-2J vs W Oll.'~ll.'r l..uku1u
tl2·21 Smunlay 1111 m
AI WllmlnRion Collr~tt
l'ickcrin~um (2,-0) v~ Vu1kl.th.1 llu1 krt22 · ~) 1:r1day 7 :WJIIII

~~I

21 'I ll
21 l~ 9

,

-"'-

All)ayton Ann1.1

Tournoment.

AmtrkW!n L~ul'

WF.STERN CONFERENCE

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EASTERN CONFERENCE

H...·nry -'~ l.mt.l Cath 4\
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NHL standings

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RAPPOPORT

fl!ill" ~trtltro~~:l~

Hockey

Shcnatuh~lh

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7Wrl 104- Christian Laettner hid 23
points and 12 rebounds, Steve Smith haJ 25 pomts and
10 ass isiS and Dikembe Mutombo added 12 points and
12 rebounds in Atlantll's victory at Plnladelphia.
With Tyrone Corbin and Mookie Blaylock scoring
IS points apii:(:C, all five Atlanta starters reached double figures.
The win, Atlanta's 40th of the season, was the
Hawks' fourth in their last five games. The Hawks had
a IS-II record at the end of 1996, bat they have won
24 of their 32games in 1997-and are primed for a playoff run.
"It's that time of the season now," Laellner satd.
"We need to get to the highest point and get ready for
the playoffs."
Bullets 99, Heat 95 - AI Miami. the Bullets came
back from a IS-point deficit in the fourth quaner and
knocked Miami out of first place in the Atlantic Dtvison for the first time since Jan. 15.
"Just a terrible loss," Heat forward P.J. Brown sa1d,
"probably the worst of the year."
Tracy Murray scored a season-high 22 points.
tncluding 16 in the fourth quarter, as Washington won
its third in a row and beat a first- or second-place team
for the first time this season in 19 tries.
The teams play agam tonight at Landover, Md.
"We can't get happy,' ' Murray said. "We have to
tum around and play the same team, and they're mad "

By KEN
AP Hqckey Writer~
If it isn't· the hurricane season

B-b•ll

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WESTERN CONFERENCE
'!Jiul\ ..................... ,

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N11w York

~·lrctla(17·7)

11'7;

Tony Smith's lo
off an assist from Mason with
39 second. left p '
the winnins points after
Boston took a 121- . lead~· Marty Conlon's dnve
with 51 MConds le
overttme.
Williams scored 'points to lead the Cclties, but he
·lost the ball in the IaiitWith thrlle seconds left. Dell Curry then dribbled out·,tbe clock.
Rice shot 18-for-.t'f from the field, including five
three-pointers, and (lllislled eight points shy of his
career-high 56 poin1'5'~t against Orlando on'April IS,
l99S, when he played'for Miami. The Hornet5' previous record was 44 poipt5 by Larry Johnson against
Boston on Nov. 22, 1995.
·
Rice's 48 point5 IMd for tht second-most scored in
an NBA game this seasoo. Michael Jordan had 51
against the Knicks 01) Jan. 21 and Hakeem Olajuwon
had 48 on jan, 30 against Denver.
·
"I want to make ir clear that I'm not in a 'zone,"'
Rice said. " A ~one is something thatlast5 maybe one
or two gliDes. I'm ji\st playing the way Glen Rice is
capable of playing.·~
Con~inued problems with a sore left knee kept Hornets potnt guard Muggsy Bogues out of action The 5foot-3 Bogues has mtssed 12 games because of the
problem this season.
In other NBA games, Washtngton surprised M1am1
99-9S, Orlando edged the Los Angeles Clippers 94-93
and New_Jersey defeated Vancouver I02-96.

.

Coyo~es

Scoreboard

IWl

~ Hornets need Rice's_record effort to defeat ·Celtics in OT
W"tlh Gllrn Rice scarina a fi'IIIChise-recont •a poinls,
IIOidlin1 IIIOihcr triple-double and
VI. . Dtvac; al111011 puinaone. you'd dtiok the Owlotte Hornets would have had an easy time.
But that WWI't the case.
In f~. the Hornets l;tarely escaped qainst the
9ostonCeltics ~ one of tht worst teams in the NBA
The llomets played poroy or. defense almost ~
enure
bul Divac made the biggesl play of all caustng Eric Willt110s ro tum the ball over on the
Cchits' last ~jon in tl!e final five seconds- as
Charloue hung on to wip lts fourth straight game, 122121 in overtime, ~.:.. •, •
The victory 1qlt
twci pmcs behind Atlanta
fort~ fifth playofl'seeil in the East as the Hawks beat
the Philadelphia 76ers 117-104.
Mason's triple:.c!ouble was his fourth of the season
and his sccolld in a 10~. bl!t be had little positive to say
,,
· .•
afterward.
"Out deferise stinks:" Mason said. "It was terrible
toni.ghl. Without being too specific, it's gelling to be
toom~n of a habit A lot of the thinss we're not dQing
are hetng covered ul' by the wins." ·
·
"We shouldn't gtve up 121 points to any~. If it ·
had been Miami, they would have scored '120 8114 we
would probably have been ia double digits," Milson
said.
·'

WE DID ITI-Utllh forwllrd Keith Yen Hom (44, with only the sscond 4 VISible) Is congratulated by Mveral of hla t.llmiMtH lifter
scoring the winning basket against Southern Methodist In Thura·
day night's WAC quarterfilllll action In Lea Vegas, Nev. Van Hom's
basket, which went In on an Inbound• p..s Into, the pelnt with :00.3
left on the clock, gave the Utea the 59-58 victory. (AP)

The Dally S•uUnel• P~~ge !I

,

Antlton): Muon

M1chael Chadw1ck limshed wtth
By The Associated Press
For Ketth Van Hom, it was the 20 . pmnls for Georgia. Duane
perfect ending. For Dale Brown, the Speru.:cr .:cored 12 for LSU
Brown's 25-year coaching career
end came too soon.
•
Van HOm, proJected as a top ptck at LSU, however. came to a clo~e
1n the NBA dralt, made the biggest
with a 75-54 loss to No 24 peorgia
play of hts college career, upping 1n m the first round of the Southeastern
u lob pass at the buzzer Thursday Conference tournament.
night to give No.3 Utah a S9-58 win
Brown, 61, announced m January
over Souihem Methodtst in the WAC that thts would be hts lost season.
The loss lett hiS LSU record at 4J8.
tournament.
Only three-tenths of a second 30 I, mcludmg 10-20 thiS se:bon.
"It's been a good run," Brown
remained when the Utes inbounded
under the basket. Andre Miller loft- sa1d. "I'm really disappointed that
ed the pass and the 6-foo\- I 0 Van we lost I knew we were limited m
Horn reached hack over his he~d what we could do, but as bad as the
with'his right-hand and made the tip record and cverythtng was. they
from the middle of the lane.
d1dn 't qun. I' m really proud ol my
"I overran the b.all a little bit, hut players."
In other games, No. 2 Mmncsota
luckily it went in," Van Hom satd. " I
knew they had to call it good as long heat Mtchigan State HI· 74, No 9
UCLA defeated Washmgton 87-85,
as I dtdn 't touch the noor."
Utah (24-3) held SMU scoreless No I0 Cmcmnau stopped Saint
for the final 8:20 to advance to the Louts 71-43, Temple upended No II
Western Athletic Conference semi- Xavier 69-62 m overllme. No. 23
Stanford ntpped No. 12Anzona 81finals in Las Vegas.
Van Hom missed a short Jumper SO, No 14 New Mexico beat Hawati
with about two seconds !ell. but 65-57, No. 19 St. Joseph's beat St.
SMU knocked the ball out of hounds Bonaventure 75-59. North Carolina
Charlotte toppled No 20 Lou1svtlle
with three-tenths of a second !ell.
Utah called a tnneoullo plan the 64-60 and No 21 Villanova defelll·
lust play - rules state that w1lh ed Syracuse 8'0-70
No. 2 Minnesota 81
three-tenths ol a second leU or less.
Michigan State 74
a player cannot catch and shoot for
Sam Jacobson scored 18 points
u ha.•kcl to count.
"We had to have a tip," Utah and Minncs&lt;lla fmtshed 14-0 at
coach Rtck MaJerus said. "Andre W1lliams Arena, Its ftrst perlcct
threw it up and Keith threw It home record smcc 1948-49. The Btg
Ten champ ton Golden Gophers (27·
down."
Van Horn scored 25 points. SMU 2, 16-1) won thetr 12th m a row
(16-12) led by 15 points tn the sec- overall .
No. 9 UCLA 87 ·
nod half.
Washington 85
"It's a tough way to lose any
Charles O'Bannun scored a
game. but aii-Amcnca players make
aii-Amenca plays," SMU coach carccr-h tgh 31 pomts and UCLA rallied liom a 16-pomt delicti m the
Mike Dement said.
AI Memphis, Tenn .. LSU tru1led first hall to wm on the road
O'Bannor_.~ whose prcv1ous best
by three points Wit~ 9:45 left before
was27 points, led the Pac- IO chamGeorgia (22-7) hro~c away
With one mmutc left, longt1mc pmn Brutns (20-7, 14-3) lo their
otlicial John Clougherty p1sscd by n~nth straight wm over Washmgton
•
BrowJi on the stdcltnc and held out (16-10. 9-8).
No. 23 Stanford 81
his rlght hand. The Tigers' Ctlach
No. llAriz11na 80
grabbed 11 wtth hts left

EASTERN CONFERENCE

In theNBA,

AP hal Ill"' Wtllee

Van Horn's c·l utch
basket helps u,ah
get by SM·u 59-58

NIJA standings

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By CHRIS IIIMIDAN

In NCAA Division I men's hoops,

Basketball

Frtcllry, . . . . 7, 1117

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Friday, 111 dl7, 1111

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frlcflly, March 7, 1"7

Man comes out of the closet with cyberspace lover~..
great kids. When "AI" forst bought again. Every time I meet a man, I
h1s computer, he spent a lot of time wonder if he's straight. I feel humilAnn
with it. He wanted to check it out to oaced and keep asking myself how I
Landers
see how it worked As time went by, could have been so blind. Can you
1W! V.. o\lftle•
he spent more and more time surfing say something to help me? Roght
Ti~Rno s,..J~ _. c~
the
Internet, "downloading games now my self-esteem is zero minus
atonSy~!CiiiC'
. and programs for the kids," he saod. 10. -- West Coaster
I behcved him. There was no reason
Dear W.C.: I'm sorry about your
sad experieoee, but perhaps you will
nollo.
By ANN LANDERS
feel better when I tell you what hapWhen
AI
began
to
stay
up
until
3
Dear Ann L•ndcrs: This is in
and
4
a.m.
on
the
Internet,
I
began
oo
pened to a bride in Alexandria, Va.
re&gt;ponsc to "Cahfomoa Hcar1Margaret Ann..: Hunter ,.vas -marwonder
what
was
going
on.
but
I
had
brcak," who saod his wife of IM
ried
four months when she discovyoars left him for a man she met on no clue as to the seriousness of ot. I
ohc Internet. Sister, can I relate to came home from work one day, and ered the man' she had married was a
thai! My ex-husband did the same AI was gone. There was a note on woman. She met Thome Groves onchong to me, licerally -- he lcfl me for the kitchen table, saying. "l have line in an Internet chat room and fell
left lo be with Larry, my on-line for him hook, line and sinker.
u man.
We had a good. solid marnage. or friend. I hope you woll understand .'' Hunler is seeking an annulment and
1 can't even think about dating has filed a $575,000 lawsuit agaonst
so I choughc -- 13 _years and two

her husband for fraud and to recover
the cost of the lavish wedding put on
by her parents.
.
She said the reason chey did not
have sex was because he told her. he
had AIDS. They did some highschool type necking, she said, and
he fooled her by wearing a prostbel·
ic penis. .
.
Occasionally, people accuse me
of making up letters. Who ~ould
make up anything to compare wnh
what goes on in real life?
The nextleuer gives a bit of balance to the Internet scene:
Dear Ann Landers : I agree th.at
computer chat lines can be addictive. You wind up on-line for three
hours instead .of the 20 minutes you

'*! planned. And, yes, they can be .
dlnaerous. If you asree to meet an
on-line pal in person, bring at least
two friends along and.make sure the
meeting is at a very public place.
Granted, there are hazards, but
the Internet also can bring love. My
boyfriend and I mel on a chat line
four months ago. We sent e-mail
several times a day and "chaned"
whenever our schedules perrnined.
After two weeks. we exchanged
phone numbers and discovered we
had a lot in common. We then decided to meet in person. I knew instantly that I had made the right choice.
The chemistry was perfect. Wc'v.e ·
been dating ever since. I have met
his parents, and he has met mine.

Some bedwetting can be blamed on genes
' run to the
until the last minute 10

..

Chefs salute one of their own the late Pierre FraneY ·
By JERRY SHRIVER
USA TODAY
.
. NEW YORK - When the reignmg masters. of French cuisine gather
to honor one o&amp;theor dep~rted mernbers and do a httle cook mg. the art
-{If hospllahty soars heavenward.
Eoghteen poul].ds of black truffks, 521 herb-crusted pigeon breasts
a~d a pantry full of fond reminis. ~nces emerged from the kitchen at
'~'v,em on the Green Monday night
d~ong an all-star tribute to culinary
a~Bassador Pierre Franey (pronounced fra-NAY), who doed last

Our relationship is · stton4'
because it is based on mutual inter.
ests and long-term goals. Our perl
sonalities mesh, and we are wonder;
fully compatible. So, please, An111
stop bashing the Internet. It's not for
everyone, but for some of us, it caO
bring true love. It cenainly did for
me .•• Totally Happy in N.Y.

.

.

Dear Tollllly: II souo·ods heautifu~
1 wish you and your ~yber-soulmate
a lifetime of happiness.
!

'

f~ll.

For nearly 40 years, as a chef,
New York Times "60 Minute
Gourmet" columnist, cookbook
author ~nd TV cooking show star,
Francy mtroduced the United States
to the glones of the French table and
tQfluenced several generations of
chefs.
His memory woll be earned on on
·:Pierre Franey Cooks With His

or diaper

By JANE HARRIMAN
bathroom,·· he said.
Wilmington News Journal
Walters uses behavioral treatment,
If your child of 5 or 6 still wets the bed at noght, don 'I
and has completed a study that shows
hlame him. Blame his underwear.
Persiscenl bed-wetting may he more common it works beuer and costs less than
l&gt;ccausc young children do not know what it feels like to med1cation.
The program uses an alarm 10
"'
be wet, said Dr. Roben S. Walters. who runs the bedwelling treatment program at the du Pont Hospital for wake the child as he begins to urinate, and slowly conditions him to
.Children in Wilmington , Del.
hold
it or. of chat's tmpossiblc, to
·
Disposable diapers and pull-ups - doapers that pull
up and down like n:gular underwear - seldom feel wet awaken.
Me,dici ne docs nol necessarily
to a child. They're designed to draw ·unnc away from a
child's tender bouom to cut the risk of doaper rash. and cure the problem, Walters said Once
allow the feeling of dryness even when the doapcr IS 11 stops, enurcsos - the technocal
term for hed-welting- recurs unless
soaked.
.But -this has eliminated what Walters calls the "dos- the child coincidentally has outgrown
comfon factor," che soggy and soon-fngid doaper, pi1Ja· it.
The most frequently prescnbed
mas or bedding that encouraged previous generations of
medicine is an anll·diurct1c hormone,
~hildrcn to stay dry all night. Among the lirst things he
tells the parents of a child who wets the bed os to drop desmopressin. given as a nasal spray
to supplement the natural supply. It
rhe pull-ups.
decreases urine producuon. possobly
"Nobody wets the bed on purpose," he saod.
Children who come to his program are not occasion- by reducing thorst.
The spray helps only about 50
al bed·wettcrs, but those who cxpenence such serious
·embarrassment or parental frustration that the family percent of choldren, and costs
between $156 and $302 a month. The
doctor or pediatrician refers them.
About5 to 7 milhon children younger than 18 wet the behavioral program - two appoint. bed, M'altcrs said, but most thonk nobody else share's ments wtth the doctor, an alarm and a
their shame. About 15 percent of 5 and 6 year-olds wet book- costs no more than $301
lite bed -It's "c&lt;trcmely common ," he said.
Until the child stays doy every
Most bed-welters eventually stop on thcor own, Wal· noght, Walters suggest parents usc
ters said, but without help some would con11nuc until mulllple layers ol sheets and
high school or college age. He sees abounhrce new chil- padding, so the top layer can be
~rcn a week who need help - most older than 6. when . pulled off. causong Jess disruption to
parental sleep than a full linen
the program's behaviQral approach begins to work.
Some parents already have tried punoshment or change.
Common sense measures include:
humiliation, but this only creates a psychologocal dimenRcsinct fluids after 6 p.m., but
sion lo !he problem, Walters said.
not
to
the pomt where choldrcn suffer. !-'--=,_--.,---,==,....,..,...,.------?"&lt;:--....;..:
·Parents occasional,ly insist the child wets the bed on
purpose because he stays dry when he sleeps away from If they are vc_ry thirsty, they should be BEDWETTING- A doctor at du Pont Hospital
In Wilmington, Dill. examines a child ready t o - Dr. ~obert
homo;. But thai. Walters said, is usually because children · allowed to dnnk.
.
S. Walters, who runs tha bed·wattlng traatme~
at the hoapltal. Children who coma to hla program are not occa•
arc .so terrified their problem woll l&gt;c discovered they
- Same goes for oc~d lea, sodas orslonal bed·wetters, but those who experience such nrloua embltr~aaamant or perental frustration-that the family ~tor
chocolate that contain caffeine, a mild or pediatrician refers them.
·
make a suhconscious effort for one or two nights.
.
,
"Eighty-live percent have a family history," he said. dourellc. If children arc at a party, let
·"If one parent wet the bed a.&lt; a chold there is a 40 per- them cat cake.
appointment, Walters advises against having the child do '
In families with more than nne bed-weller, Walters ·I
cent chance the child will , and a 75 percent chance he
The family also can usc a "star chart,.. a colcndar the family laundry- it is too much like punishment.
works forst with the oldest. This spares the humiliation
wjll if both parents were bed-welters."
page where bright stars mark each dry night. When the
Children with small bladders that may aggravale 'the of being beaten by a ynungcr sibling's success. And
For. rea.•ons not completely undci'Slood, three-quar- child has enough stars. he gels the reward he and hos par- problem learn to stretch them by holding unnc ._, loog as when the oldest succeeds, he becomes an example and
ters arc male. But the problem affecL• all races and social cnts chose. But Walters stresses to the chold thos system they can at home and then measuring the amount of Inspiration.
cla&gt;isc:J&lt;, Walters saod.
woll not continue indefinitely.
urone they produce. Each day thcy try to break their
"Most arc deep sleepers, and the kind of kid who
When accidents occur. the child should help launder record.
"The pr,ogram is not a panacea... Walters said, hut 80
whcn ,he's watching TV is son of in a trance, and waits his clothes and beddmg. But much to some mothers ' dispercent arc helped sogniticantly.

Friends" (Artisan. $30), a cookbook
- The most sentimental erehe finished just before his death, and auon,..and the most sublime dJsh,
in his filth PBS cooking series, was the coulibiac of salmon, a hogh"Pierre Franey's Cooking in light of Franey's book "A Chef's
Europe." Both are due in-April.
Tale." All the chefs shared m the
The breadth of Franey's influence preparation, which took two days
)lias evident as 18 of the most and called for such unusual ingrediacclaimed chefs from the two coun- ents as vesiga, the gelatinous spinal
tries showed up to cook for such pio- marrow of the sturgeon. The heavneers as Julia Child and Craig Clai- . enly concoction is a delicate mixture
borne. This time, so many cooks ele- ' of salmon pate;'ll!ushrooms, rice and
vated the broth .- and the fried oys- eggs encased on brioche pastry.
tcrs and the grilled lamb. Before the
- What do you serve worldchampagne flowed, these scene s class chefs for lunch in the middle of
emerged from an all-star kitchen
a long day of cooking? Host Patrick
-Throughout the day, more than Clark of Tavern on the Green kept ot
250 chefs and suppor,t staff bustled "real somple" with Caesar salad,
on and out of the Tavern kitchen. Al grilled flank steak, swordfosh,
tome s 11 resembled Grand Central salm0n 1in bii!,Ck olive vinaigreue,
Station, with infinitely beuer smells . mashed \Potatoes, chee se and frull.
Anyone walking from end to end They sipped Burgundies, Beaujolais
passed through distinct aroma zones , and bouled water. Some smoked.
as fresh beet juice gave way to
- Clark, who prides himself on·
baked pastry, then grilled meat, mastering logistics, reminded his
roasting garlic and simmenng bouil- staff midda~ that "If we do thos, we
ion.
will have pulled off one of the

The program, "A Call to Proyer ·and on other countries that help '
and .Self Denial" was led by Ella cnahlc women to recreate their comMIIC Hill at t!Je February meeting of munities as they face very dofheuiL
the .Racine Unued Mc!hodist cirCumstances.
Lee Lee led the group in reoding
Won1~n . Specoal booklets and ondoviduul candles were. given to each ."Promi.c Yourself' and "Our Purmember to be used for participation pose". ·
The secretary's report was g1vcn
in the Hcrvicc.
The w&lt;)rship selling table was hy Chns 'Hill and communocations
pn:pared with four candles. repre- were read. Clara Mac Sargent gave
senting hope and inspiration, to he lhc treasurer's ruport and lhc hat and
accessjblc for hghtong by reader&gt;. mollcn fund was taken.
Melissa· Harkness, Spiritual
Chris · Hill, Clara Sargent, Margoc.
'Wcst.Melissa Harkness, Karen growth chairperson. gave a rcporl on
Walker and Alice Wolfe. A basket "Culture." Lee reported !hat there is
wa.• placed at the front of the table to a sox year Umtcd Methodist Wl)mcn
membership Campaign. She gave
rccci\C the offering.
Scrlpcurc was read frnm several ideas for care·and nurture as
Manhew, Phihppiuns and Deuteron- you buold membershop. She recently
omy. the theme centered on all peo- aucndcd the Leadership Enrochmcnt
ple coming together as an communi- Day meeting at Cool•ille Methodist
ty of faith. Mrs. Hill led the leader- church.
The UMW Spring retreat will be
group in the unoson roadings and
prayers from lhc bookie~ ..sort music held April 26 at The Plains
was' played liS c:u;h parucopant came Methodist church. Due to the high
forwaro to place her offcrinll on the cost of renting the lodge for an over
altar and lig.. her individual candle night rctrcat 'at Camp Asbury it was
and return to IJcn;cal. This year. the decided to have the retreat at The
offering goes to women's organiza- Plains for jUst nne day ·as it is a ccn·
·
tions and groups in the Unite-d States trallocation.

On April 15 a donner will he
served to Alpha Delta Kappa at the
church. ·
11 was voted on to reserve a table
for the Rocinc Flower Festival April '
26. Discussion was held concerning
the School of Mission, July 7- 11 at
Ohoo Northern University, Ada.
Ideas arc beong welcomed for the
mother-daughter banquet, May I0
"Noah's Ark" theme will be carried
out.

Plans were made to deliver flowers to the sick and shut-i ns on March
20. Lee has contacted Vcrnagaye
Sullivan to be the speaker for the
September meeting.
Refreshments were served by
Margie West and Lee Lee. Get well
cards were sogncd.
Attending were Manha Dudding,
Karen Walker, Etta Mac Holl, Sally
Caldwell, Chris Holl, Sharon Hall.
Gladys Shields, Alice Wolfe, Melissa Harkness, Ruth Frank. Lois
BeiiCiara Mae Sargent, Margery
Roush and guest Nadine Roush,
Margie West and Lee Lee.
The next meeting will be March
24, 7:30p.m. at the church.

D.on't .·hold on to all
that ancient makeup
, .

I

By ELAINE GROSS FLORES
Cobwebs oil your concealer'!
Mold on your maoocara? Nothing
lasts forever - and chat includes
co5111Ciics. Know when it's time to
loss t!t!ll ancient makeup.
H~ arc. ~orne· cosmetics guidelines from Maybelline:
·
-Liquid makeup has~ life span
; of six · months . to· a year. Warning
siJiiS that it's goin'l bad incl\((le
thlckenin&amp; a~d texture . change.
alte,rejl e9lor tlnd 0!19f. .
•,
- Creme concealer lllsls about Ill
th~~~e to six monllls. Color ~haniJc or
tbk:lwlinl' iR sips thll it'• gcttiniJ

.oJcl.
•
:
' - ,ljye al!adow emile kept for up

- Eyeliner stays fresh for three
to six months. Be on the lookout changes on odor. texture or color
means it's time tn ditch it.
- Lipstick lasts for two years.
Beware of slickiness and changes in
caste or odor.
- Blush can he kept for three
years. Drynes. and altered color apd
tccturc change upon application arc
bad signs.
Additional tips can be found in
"Bobbi Brown lkauty: The Ultimate Beauty Rcsoun:e,'' by Bobbi
'Brown nnd Annemarie Iverson
. (HarperCollins, $30). , The bollk.
which is due out next mOI)Ih, offers
the followin¥ advice:
. .
.,.. Throw ou1 chipped, messy or
111 nny makeup.
- Toss brushes lhlr llrC fallina

~~~ out1f you·
in ~or and.
, --•...,.n il'• .llcinl ..- aad Pt,dl:• and
10
noac:.

'

IIIICIIIftS

dlit;'arfallilit~·- 1 '"

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utili lies Commissron of
Ohio has sel for piJbll~ hearing Case
No. 96·101-EL·EFC. to review the
fuel procurement practices and pol~
cies ot Ohio Power Company. the
operation of its Electric Fuel Component and related matters. This
heanng is SCheduled to beQin at the
Commission offices at 10:00 a.m.
on March 11. 1997. • ,
All'interested p'artll&amp; wiU 'Iii giveo
an opportunity to bt htlrd. Furtller
Information may b\, bbtainld by
contacting lhe Comlfiistion at 180
·fist Broad Street, ColumbUs, Ohio

thllt ~~e

'. !' 4326&amp;-o573
'

''· ,.

.

• 6.00o/o APR flood relief loans are now being

. J

offered by The P~oples Bank of Point
Pleasant to those who have suffered losses.
Loans are available for up to $5,000 and ~p
to 36 months to qualified borrowers. No
application
fee
is required and loans can be
'
.
closed the same day.

The Peoples
Member. FDIC

,

nk

I

,

-On thos night of the tall hats, a
few toques stood taller. When Paul

BY CATHY HAINER
USA TODAY
Queen

Ellen DeGeneres

'~llt?_IJ: gyl}._s~sing gB:_(T1~-- pv~r:.

'

. ...
DeGeneres'
character is a lesbian
.
'

turning out a medoocrc eposode after so much hype.
Dosney signed off on the script last week but only after

By ALAN BASH
USA TODAY
ABC. made it official Monday, announcing that sending it back at least once for major revisions.
Adverlisers accepted the episode .as a fact months
Ellen DeGeneres' sitcom character will indeed come
ago, and ABC said it expects the show to be fully
out of the closet.
In the April 30 "Ellen," timed to the forst week of sponsored.
ABC Entertaonment · president Jamoe Tarses
a sweeps rating period, Ellen Morgan rcahzcs she's
promosed that DeGeneres' character "will remain the
attracted to a gay woman, played by Laura Dern .
"Confused by this startling discovery, " the ABC endearing and entertaining character viewers have
,
·
anno'uncemenfsays: Morgan seeks the help of her new grown to love,"
Such an insistence bY Tarses and the network 's
therapist, played by Oprah Winfrey.
In the episode, which begins propuction thos week, avoidance of using the teim lesbian in its press release
Morgan becomes the first lead character of a prime- suggests "they're trying to play it as cautiously as possible," . said Alan Kleiq ' of the Gay and Lesbian
time sitcom to declare she is a lesbian.
ABC, DcGeneres and Disney - which produces Alliance Against Defamation. "I can understand that,
the show and \)Wns ABC- have been coy about their and I sloll applaud them for going ahead."
plans since fall. But the actress has joked often on her
show and elseWhere about the proposed plot line ..
Other groups are harllly applauding. Andrea Shel-Now, Disney 'executives are said to be less skitish , don of the Traditional Values Coalition in Washington,
about turning off voew.ers and advertisers than about D.C., said, "Walt Disne}"is turning over in his grave."

Robinson paved way for today's baseball superstars

• 1hOse needing assistance may apply' at The
Peoples Bank offices in Mason, New Haven
an~ Point Pleasant, or by callir:1g The Peopl~s
Bank Loan Hotline at (304) 675-2727.
Collect calls will be accepted.

.

Gennett Suburban Nelftpllpllnl

--•

Your

To Victi1ns ()f Tl1e
Rece11t Flooding

'targesl dinne" of the year in nearrecord time." His mission: have the
'team of 127 waiters serve six courses in 2 hours 29 minutes and pock up
521 plates on 6 112 minutes.
- Much of the kitchen talk
revolved around the chefs' new projects in New York: David Bouley,
soon to launch a bakery and food
store in Tribeca; Souha Khunn and
Jacques Torres, gearing up for the
openmg of Le Cirque 2000 . next
month on the Palace Hotel; JeanGeorges Vongerichlen, about to
open the French eatery JeanGeorge's on Columbus Circle; and
Jean Louis Palladin, soon to sign a
lease for a French restaurant. Among
other projects: Georges Perrier ofLe
Bee Fin on Pholadelphia os readying a
cookbook; and Paul Prudhomme is
finishing renovation s to his K-Paul's
Louisiana Kitchen in New Orleans.

Bocuse, the best-known ambassador
of French cookong today. strolled
into the kitchen m late •afternoon, it
resembled the pope strolling through
St. Peter's in Rome. Students from
the Culinary institute of America,
the French Culinary Institute and
John son and Wales Unoversity, who ·
volunteered in the kitchen, kept the
three-star chef busy throughout the
day signing menus and posmg for
photographs.
-

T1cke1s for the event were

pnccd at $200, $500 and $1.000 and
sold out quickly. About $150,000
was raised for sc holarships m
Franey 's name at the Cuhnary Insutule of Amenca and at Johnson and
Wales Uni,versny College of Culinary Arts_.
Alain Ducasse, who arrived
late from France via the Concorde,
was st11l downcast over the n~ws
-

become the forst chef to be awarded
three Mochclin stars at two restaurants simultaneously. " For the Paris
restaurant (Alain Ducasse), it was
very su&gt;prising :.... it h;ls never happened that they rewarded a new
kitchen with rhree stars. For Monaco
(Louis XV, downgraded from three
stars to two) It was very unfair.... we
worked harder than ever there."

Tavern on the Green wasn 't lhe only •

place m the cny where celebroty '
chefs were holdong forrh .Across
town at the James Beard House, "
Chicago's Charloe Troller (Charlie :
Troller's) and New York 's Daniel :
Boulud (Daniel) and Charlie Palmer ·
(Aureole) Wl!re prepanng dmner at a :

pnvate party And nearby at Les :
Celebrites cxccutjvc chef Chnstian •
Delouvncr and h1s menror, Alain ·
Sendercns (of Paris' three-star Lucas :
Canon reswurant) , cooked at a :

$-250-a-plate feast for 55

earlier that day that he had failed to

Queen Victoria still reigns

IJ;;,!ii;!!i

Racine United Methodist Women meet

The Dally Sentinel• ~age 7

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By TODD RHOADS
Gannett News Service
Boston Red Sox first baseman'
Mo Vaughn thinks there should be a
Jackie Robinson day every year, not
just on the 50th anniversary of
RobinSPn's ontegrating baseball.
"Jackie. Robinson should get.
inore recognition, as much accolades and awards as he could possibly get," Vaughn .says. "He is not
remembered enough by anybody
white or black."
Jackie Robonson of the thenBrooklyn Dodgers broke the color
barrier for Major League Baseball
' 50 years ago April 15 when the
country was still very miJch,a tale of
two nations.
Many historians credit Robinson's feat, which came eight years
before Martin Luther King Jr.'s bus
boycon in Montgomery, Ala., with
helping to pave the way for the suecess of the Civil Rights movement.
While he endured scorn, abuse
and doscriminauon -wherever hi s
team played, Robinson showed the
country that African 'Amencans
could compete with white people,
and opened the doors for today's
black superstars to reach fame,
influence and multi-moll ion dollar
contracts:
Va~ghn says that it scares hom to
think that wothoutthe likes of Jackie
Robinson, he might nol have been
able to reach· hi s posuion as an All ~tar slugger and a role-model for
today 's youth.
: "The chought of me not beong
~ble to play baseball is scary,''
,Vaughn says. "I think of all of us out
hen: swinging and slugging - hke
Frank Thomas and Ken Griffey and
Barry Bonds- and 11 frightens me
. ~o think th,al we wouldn't be able to

do that because of our color."
Robinson was the first black person in the maJOr leagues since
Moses Fleetwood Walker played for
Toledo in the American :Association
in 1884. The grandson of a slave,
Robinson was born in 1919 in Cairo,
Ga. His family soon moved to
Pasadena, Calif.
11,1 1941 Robinson entered the
Army, liaoning soldiers on Texas to
drive tanks. He was honorably discharged after a coun-martial involving his objection to segregation in
the mohcary.
Robinson decided to have 'a go at
baseball, jooning the Negro League's
Kansas City Monarchs in 1945. That
year he caught the anenuon of
Branch Rickey, who ran the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Rickey was looking for a black
athlete· who could play in the major
leagues, and most omportantly, who
could endure a nallen's abuse. He
signed Robm son to a mopor league
contract with the Dodger's farm
team in Montrear, where Robin son
excelled and earned a spot on the
big-league team in 1947.
Raymond Doswell. the curator at
the Negro League Baseball Museum
in Kansas City, Mo.. says there were
plenty of more. cslahlishcd Negro
League stars with · bener Slats But
few had Robonson 's mental toughness and dedocatoon.
Robinson . wa.&lt; subJect to tauats
and threats from tans. opposong
players and even teammates.
Kenny Lofton. All-Star.outlieldcr
for the Cleveland Indians. says he
thmks he and some of today's alblctes could handle what Robonson
endured, but many others could not
keep cool in the face ,o f suc.h abuse. '
" It was a real l&lt;?ugh situation for

somebody to go through," Lofton
says.,. " Somebody like Charles
Barkley would explode, but somebody like Michael Jordan could go
through it and keep walking."
Although Robinson had to
promise to keep his temper when
subjected to bitter racism, he did not
refrain from standing up for equal
nghts' when he could, Doswell says.
Often Robmson would challenge
hotels and restaurants that dod not
want to serve him along with the rest
of the Dodgers. And, Doswell says,
an11udes ,about him gradually
changed ·
''There's one story where he .was
al a St. louis hotel that allowed him
10 stay '" the hotel but-didn't want
Afn ~an Amencans to eat in their
restaurant," Doswell says. "Well, he
wanted to cat in that reslaurant anyway, so he sal down with I he team.
"He not;ccd everyone at the

restaurant was stanng a.t him. wh1ch
w.asn1t unusual. He saw some people
come up to .him and was expecting
trouble, but it turned out they wanted hos autograph."
Doswell credits kobinson , and
the black players who soon followed
hom, with doing much to change the
country's racial climate.

" Baseball at the lime was truly
America's pasllriie ,'' Doswell
explains . " People chought it was
nnportanl People thought integratong baseball would bring down a lot
of the barriers in thi s country. A lot
or people fe It those events started a
domino effect for civol rights." ·
Ro~inson retired on 1956, havmg
won the Roo kie of the Year and
Most Valuable Player Awards while
helpmg the Dodgers get to six Worl,d
Series and win one. ·

Victoria.

Himmelfarb on her seminal work
The De-moralization or Socoety:
the

British

From Victorian Virtues to Modern

monarch famed for her long reign Values. Many of those same vinues
(1837-1901), just won 't-gl'away- have been neatly repackaged into
not even here in the former the contemporary buzz phrase
Colonies. From the broght hghts .of "family values."
Broadway to the highbrow world of · Lillie wonder that Ingrid Seward,
an galleries, Victoriana has become · eduor of Britain's Majesty magathe hottest English expon sonce Earl zinc, considers \1octoria to be the
Grey tea.
19th century equivalent of a soccer
First it was the indefatigable mom. ·
Manha Stewan resurrecting Voctori"For all those years, she was a
an crafts and retailer Victoria's powerful ruler, but she wa• also the
Secret trading on the era's lacy, racy first to set up the monarchy as a
lingen~ .
moddle-class, ordinary family with
Then came word that Victorians lots of children and dogs."
Queen Elizabeth could learn a
themselves were regaining eminence. A massive biography of Vi c- thing or two from her royal ancestor,
tonan absurdist author Lewis Car- adds Mingo, who believes the dysroll ("Alice ln Wonderland") landed functions of today 's royals have a
in bookstores last year. A bio-pic of role on our yen for the Victorian ,age.
notorious wit Oscar Wi,lde is coming "Victoria wasn't as uptight as peato movie theaters ne.t year. A the- pie think. But she did believe in
·atncal production of Jekyll &amp; Hyde, decorum. There were no toe-sucking
based on the book by Victoroan scandals wnh her children."
author Robert Louis Stevenson, is
Royal scandals may lill today 's
Broadway-bound.
splashy tabloids. But newsstands
And just this week, the first ri;tro- govc funherevidence of the boom in
spective or Voctonan painting came Victonana, says Bill FISchelis of the
to America. The Victorians: Bntish Vi ctorian Society in America.
Painting in the Reign of Queen Voc- " Bridal magazines are hoghlighting
Ioria, 1837-1901 os at the National Victorian weddongs. Decorating
Gallery of An m Washongton, D.C., magazones are doong Voctorian
through May I L
Christmases. Building magazines
Why this continuing fascinalion? , are remodeling Viclorian homes."
When we look at Victorians, do we
Almost overlooked: Victoria
see oursel,ves? Or is th1s JUSt a

magazine,, wh1ch focuses on bring-

ktnder, gentler - and more arostocratic - way of channeling all that
greed left over from the '80s?
Ja~k Nachbar, professor of popular culture at Bowlmg Green State
Unoversity in Ohio, opts for the latter.
" We're not interested 1n Dickensian Victoriana, which showed the
impoverished class,", he says.
"We're interested m the affluent
Victorian world (of) · Portrait of a
Lady and The Age oflnnocence."
Victoriana, Nachbar says, has
special appeal for the new aristocracy - .. what he calls "the PBS.

mg Victorian elegance and gentility
into modem life. Currently celebrating ots lOth anniversary, Victoria is
in major growth mode . In the past
five years, circulation has risen by
more than 150,000, and ad page revenue has increased by more than $5

crowd .

,

million The magazine is so popular

!hat it's introduci~g a line of writing
papers and i'f'lruments.
The desire to re-create life a Ia
Victoria has even spawned a publishing house, Teapot Press of Scotia, N1Y Teapot specialozes in howto Victonana, like Dressing Up Vo ctonan and Grandmother's Flowers.

abour 19th century gardening . Its
next book . Temporarily VJctonan.
!ells hov. to add V1ctonan touches to
your home w1thout brcakmg the

bank
"Many of us baby boomers, at ·
least those lucky enough to have had
al-homc mmhcrs, want to rediscover
that type of made-by-hand Victonan
domesllcity." Teapot pubhsher
Cheryl Hurd says. "Look at Manha
Stewart. She IS our new domestic
goddess. She says, "You can make a
cranberry wreath all by yourself'" .
Of course nothmg says V1ctonan
like afternoon tea - and the ntuals

that go wnh 11
"The covility of tea ntuals has the
same attractiOn as the CIVIlity of the
Victona n era 1tsclf.'' says Dana May
Casperson, who teaches a class in
tea euquettc at the Rit z-Carllon, San
Francisco, one of many upscale
hoicls ·that offer aftern oon teas.
"There were guodel ones and rules
and rituals I hal went along with l1fe
in Victorian times. We 're m1ss mg

that from our hves today."
Victorians d1dn't JUSt drink tea,
they also read lea leaves Spiri tualIsm in the fonn of sea nc es and
occult matters boomed m V;c tona's

time, Cokovsky says.
" So much was chan gtng so
quickly, the tenets of sc1ence and
even the church were bemg ques-

tioned. People were looking for
alternatove sporitual outlets. And of
course the same thong IS reflecred
today in all those new age books and
psychic hor Ion es.''
Just as Victoria's re1gn had to

end. woll our love affmo with all
thongs Voctonan fade too'
Mingo believes s&lt;&gt;c
"As we get closer 10 the millen·
nium , people are afraid of the furure .

They 'te dreading the odea of a new
century So

we·JL~

chngmg to what 's

dependable and val uable. But by ·
2001. we'll be sayong 'Victoria
who'' There'll probably be a noSial:
goa for Ronald Reagan."

:

"It's remindful of an era m whichi
there were cerlain manners and ceremonoes that defined status and
class. That's attractive to people
who have status and class on this•
counrry, which is supposedly classless. They identify with a society
where people &lt;B&gt;were identilicd as

93 OLDSMOBILE
ACHIEVA 4 DR
4 cyl, auto, air, A great small car at
·
a small price ... Red

aristocratic. ''

94 PONTIAC
Another cultural commentator,
Jack Mingo, author of the ".Whole
GRAND·AM 4 DR
Pop Catalog" (Avon, $20), sees . Tilt, cruise, air cond, stereo, reclining
something dofferent. For him, it's
seats, defogger CHECK IT OUTI
mOre a matter of timing.

"Both contemporary Americans
and the Victorians faced life at rhe
turn of a century," 'he ex.plams. "It's
only natural that we'd look back I00
years to see how they handled it."
Nock Cikovsky, the National
Gallery's curator of American and
British paintings, agrees.
"There are profound snnilariues
between Victor1a's era and our own.
In the late 19th century, England
was the richest, most powerful country on earth, as the U.S. os "ow," he

says. "But 11 was a country very
much beset by profound socoal problems - poverty, unemployment,
·moral unrest - as the U.S. is now."
The Victorians met those obsracles with di sci pline. honesty, and
fonhnghtness, says author Gertrude

News policy
In an effort

10

provide our reader-

shop with current news, the Sunday
Times-Se ntinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of
!he event
Weddings submitlcd alter the 60day dcadhnc woll appear during the,
week m The Dooly Scntonel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
· All club mccungs and other news
articles in the society sect1on must

be submitted withon 60 days of
occuncm.:c.
All borthdays must be submitted
within 60 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to edicing.

$8499
Auto, air, 4 cyl, DRIVE THIS ONE
HOME. .. BALANCE OF FACTORY
WARRANTY
.

90TOYOTA
COROLLA DX 4 DR
IF YOU NEED A CLEAN CAR.
THEN CALL ON THIS ONE.

91 FORD RANGER XLT 4 cyl, a1r --·--·~~---··---·-···$3995
MERCURY COUGAR L~
_$5495
91 DODGE SHADOW 2'Dr, air, lifO.'"-··----..--..-·.-·..·--~195
92 CHMOLn CAYAUER 4 .-,
---$5995
93 FORD FESTIYA Low tttlu
---_.:_ _____$3995
95 GEO PRIZM 4 Dr, Great
DNLY $1995
&amp;9 CHEVROLn IWEI4X4, 4.3, lifO, alr---------56995
WORK TRUCK SPEOAL UNDER

Se.Mf---·-----·-,',...

0..--------

Clr-··-·--·--..--....

�..
'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ofilo

Suo.-. 9:30 ....

E:: p1 ~,co p ,!!

ChtliCh o f Ch•1 ,t

~:e. a~=
-Rev. D.A. ...Piandcr

p

., Cloon:hiQdol

Cdlee

Sunday Scllool -\1,:10 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wtdntaday Servieea. 7 p.m.

, _.., w-

Apo s t o', lc

S"":'
l.
W

Mid :I I*' l Cbrdl oiCilrlll

PaaocAIItarlson
. Youdl Miniller. Bill Fruier
Sunday School • \l,lO Lm.
Wonhipo 8: IS, 10:30 a.JD., 7 p.m.

ao-

?

S70 Oranl St., M!&lt;kllepcot
S""""y 11&lt;hool . 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip · II a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wtdneoday Service . 7 p.m.

Burnllow Rldp C~~oM or Clorlal

Free Wll Balldli ~

•

Alb Slree~ Middlcpxt
Paotor: Les Hayman
Sunday Se"'ice :. 'f:30 p.m.

Su= School· 10 a.m.
Wed
y Service· 7:30 p.m.

•••

I
l
''

'

t

Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.

'r

•,
•

Puaor: E.. t..mar O"Bryanl

•,•

61h and Palmer St., Middlepon
S""""y School ·9:15a.m.
Wonhip ·10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
w.-y Service· 7:00p.m.

\

•

...
.

.

Raclat Flnl Bapllll
PutOJ: ReV. l.ilwrf:nce T. Haley
Youth Putor: Aaron Young

Sunday Sehool , 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Services· 7:00p.m.

••

Pucor: Bill Liule

Sunday School· 10a.m. .
Wonhip · 11a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneadfy Servocea· 7:30p.m.
MLUoiHBaplill

Sunday School-9:43a.m.

1

' ..,a ., .
1

Ptstor: Daniel Berdine

· Wonhlp ·9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study •.7:00 p.m. Wednesday

. 1 Old llllllti Fne WID llal&gt;lb1 Cbu~b
:
•

•

28«11 Sl. Ro. 7, Middleport
· Sunday School· 10 a.m.

j
J

S2S N. 2fld St. Middlepon

Evening- 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worahip • 11 a.m.
MLM.W.Bopllll
Fourth 4 Main Sl., Middlepon
~:Rev. OHbtn Cnis.Jr.
_ , Seliool· 9:30a.m.
wonhlp. 10:45 a.m. .

llllliJ llltMiat

s,....... Pint Clou~ of God
Apple and Second 511.

Cltnter .
Pastor: Sh1ron HauSman

Sunday School and Wonhipo 10 a;m.
Evening Service,. 7:30p.m.

Wedneaday Servica ·7:30p.m.
C.•.U aiGod afPiap•u::r

Boplill

OJ. While Rd. off Sl. Rl. 160
Pulor: PJ. Chapmon
Sunday School; 10 a.m.
·
Wonhill·lla.m.
W...,_y Servicea • 7 p.m.

-~ Ia¥. Paui.Taylor
Solidly Schooi · IO a.m.

....,illl·?p.m.
Wodnaadtp Sirvica • 7 p.m.

.q

Co nq rrg at10 1'd I
TrboiiJ Cb•~•

Second .t:: Lynn, Pomeroy

Putor: Rev. Roland Wildman

Sunday ll&lt;hooland wonhip UI::ZS

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wooship · 10:31h.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Strvlcea -7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10 o.m.
Thuoaday Services· 7 p.m.
Joppo' ..
Pillor: Doh Randolph '
Wonhip - 9:30 1.m. ·

Loo11ot1om

'
.
Reodl¥111tFellow 'ir

Sunday School • 9,30 o.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

a.rc•ottlleN•=,.,

Pulor: Milk A. Dupler •
Sunday School • 9:30 un.
Wonhip -10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
· Wedneaday S.rvioea • 7 p.m.

R-•111t .
Paslof: Rev. CharleS! Muh
· Worship • 9:30 1.m. .

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6,30 p.m.

,.

'

iiiLL
MIIIW~

.Cabinet Making
.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main street
Pomeroy
.992-3785

RAWUNGS-COA!S

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME .
992-5141
284 South 2nd

·

It

.,• • • Jlnt tJ....... .....,. . .

-Re·.--s-tarSchooi·IOLWL .
Wonhlp • II a.m.

.. .........

Hwal

Eveoine • 6 p.m.
W-y Service· 7 p.m.

-c

u 1 CHre~~

OIIRI.124. .
-lidaeiHUI
- y Sdlool · 9:30 .....
W.onhlp • 10:30 a.m.•7::10 p.m.

, .

~c

~r '

''

,.

'

,.....
....
OAVII-GUICKEL

,_,...,..'IO.!Rn r-

RACINE MOWER

.,..... ".......,
CUNIC

II. I r lerVlce,.....DIII'I

'~

S4VETIME
' WITf:IA .

Ct:ASS/FI£0 AQI

INSURANCE
· SERVICES ·~

~
182·5130Pomeroy
214E. Maln

P.J.
. PAULEY, AGENT

Ina.Oh.
Co. ".. .
.Hltlol1wldt
; of ColurnlfUr,
•·2318Pomeroy

Cheater ·

Middleport

Bropn-W.-ner

804W.MIIn.

.RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

·

· ~.

·

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
'
We Fill Doctonl'
Preecrlptlons

992·2956

.

-=La---

.... at "".....

Plil~

. =lic$ool·
-=

._lllc
···
124

· on Slalo ,_,Rev.Madoloy

Sml... Sr.
Sunday SdiOol· 9:30a.m.

Wadi

IILJL
·10:00LII.a7mp.~~. '
Savica. 7;j0 ....

, ) 010 Senice 7:30 p.WI.
A

FOR SPRING
c• EANING? .
"Fetlturlng KMIIucky Frlfld Clticken"
CINn out yocu ~'""tt:f or •
~8 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Crow'• Family

•fflc Wlflt . . , . ,

992-5432

of,.

I

C'-ASSIFIEDSEC11QNI

.

·I

•

Vetenlnl
M111101181
' ltOipltlll

You don't have to /oolc.tar

•
d

to spy the bBst buys In
claSsltledsl

~

8NOUFFI&amp;i
EWING FUNERAL HOME
FIRE' SAFETY
"DDgnfy and.&amp;.Met .AA..yS·
8A1.18.A 8IRYICE
&amp;lrbllatlad 11113
112·70/6

172

SIDoo'ldM.
Oh

OH

.

(2)24,2113)3, 7, 110 .

~ ulllllod io 1n.i 1o Clorlll ·
2 112 milelllllllb or

·-= . . -E.

.

OH41772
1171

. any or Ill 111m•

Wonlip. 10:30 L•.• 7:30 P.•·
w-r5avica·7:30p.•.

·U-I'ioldoCio_.
. R1. 7 on Pomeroy By,,..

FREE

•
.,

'

.

," .,

'Notice

I ··

20 Ylo.

,-··~::'•t
FUAIUIIn .
.,...,, • • 7
10111-tM

, . . . , •• lnlltPolt121
Amii'ICIII Lag! In , _
• Btrwl,lldlllp ai1
'YIIIldiii ..JIO,I',__
CIIIIFMI II
1J1D

'

HOWARD
EXCAVADNG CO.

. Body work, Cit', truck
&amp; truck pllntlng,

Backhoe, Trackhoe.

· TUflt.upa,PI Chlnge,
W.X,.8utnng . .
· Lang St, lfulllnd, OIL
7424135, Alii for Kip

Septic Syllllma

lnltalled

(614) 992-3838
2fl111

.. YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
.

.. .._ Adtltlonl
.....GII'Igel

oEIIICIJul• Plumbing
...,.dill"" : - :.
..otlrlor • Extarklr
:PIIIntlng
.
Allo CotiCIIIII Worlt
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG IU
112-82111 .
"--y,Ohlo

. repair.

...

.

NHdAIIylype
.of Cleanl.. .
Dollt?
Hone8t, Deperovllllal*
......
end rru.twotthy l8dlel
retiCiy "' cJeen your
1tome or busl-.
Ret110nable Ralel .

992-6342 (Diane) .
or 992·7275 (Brentle)

--

llollel•pm••••ts

New Homn, Addltlona,

oRenHII;Ielng
oAHidenllall
Commercial

Siding, Pole Berni,
Doclls, Pointing,
Qaragoo, PorcheL
Call Us For A Free
Eatlmato

.-nllrv

Mike

814-742-3090
614-742-3324
614-742-3o7&amp;-

7/IIWII

PlckupdiiCifdld
IIPJIIIIncea, lwtlowlll,
•.,..,, 111111111 •
·'
lilotor bluclai.
814112 402611111-8

. .. ·-·. .

A fHJ OUNCU.IEhTS

BINGO
POST 467
MON.&amp; WED.

6:30P.M.
.STAR BURST
$1500.00

,.. ...

BElCH GROVE
ROAD

Jonoo

3351 Happy Hollow Road
lllddloport, Ohio 45710

olltterlor" Exlellor

minor mechlniCit j

·11'11. Owner. -

Ill IS'

MARCUM&amp;
BUILDING

IRUESEI'S
IIIAIE

Drtvway ·umaatone
Col!lplete,Howe
.-,d Tnlller Site
Work, Bulldozing',

r

Plaine-Cheater.
. . . . . . . 30

the IVCI!on

• Top • Trim • Removal .
• Stump Grinding

ESTJMATEES

· ~~e-llll!*lot

· r1.n rvee-.

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

. 985 4478

Tile Bidding .,_.,.nta

-.-.~
Sunday llci!ool- 9-.30 UL

Sundar Sehool· 9:30 o.m.
Ev&lt;niiiJ. 7 p.m.. ,
Wednoday Service • 7 p.m.

vigYI

Stop&amp;Compare

nor Pabruary, ,...,,

......

Athens, Ohio,

-·-

IOIEIT IISSELL

Plant, LMa
Con•oiet
...~ctda~·
,. •
·' i
Tha
aatlmat iii
conatructlon coat fir

.. Clorlll CloiiM
Texai 'ccnmnitr aft Clll2

Attorney At Law

(614)592·5025

614-992·7643

ConbiiCI ...1 Ia •1.m,aoa

ML Olft c;-,. Clolrft

992~2121
.
.

New

~ -

H.O.M.M.

TIANSPORTADON

L.owRates)

WICKS
HIULIIIG

11-..:ISUVKi
n&amp;nlp h llllkM for
lncllvldulll .......

whllllohelrL M&amp;dlDIIId a
Mid' eiCDJ~IId.
Oocllor'a .....
hoapltalvtllfll. ale.

Phone81......a3
.... 814 112 30111
....,,...... 11M3?'!'
Pln-

.,.1-.·

R. LHOLLON

Umeetona,

· Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

Umeatone • G,ravtl
Dirt • Send

FREE 3mln.
Psychic
reading for
'"Love ~Money
*Career *Health
18+
1.o800-992-4170 I

985 4422

visa/me

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Cheater, Ohio
,_,.,

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

1-900-567-3727

.....

lnlroduclrJQ,

. 537 BRYAN PLACE
MIOOLEPORT

• · 1:00 l.m.-3::10 p.m.

;; •t:t•••nt
WW.Ws
GwiJIS
.

H1rtw111
HilliS
'

YiANTED: COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR position available to teach
i •S... Doln&amp;
community and personal ski!ls to an adult : W'.rJnn
with learning limitations In Meigs County. ! . . . . AI''hn
HOURS: 11 pm·B am, Thurs./Fri.; 4
h..S./wk. as scheduled for appointments;
2·hour bi-monthly staff meeilngs. · High
school degree, valid driver's license, good
driving record, three years licensed
driving exiJertence, and adequate auto·
mobile insurance coverage required.
Training provided. Salary: $5.50/hr, to
· 'start. Send resume to: P.O. Box 604,
Jackson{OH .45640; attn.: Cecilia.
Deadline for applicants: 3114197. Equal
·Opportunity Employer.

WAYNE'S PLACE
PriiSents

.

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?
· Consider:

THE MAPLES
In Pomeroy, Ohio.
Ranta are computed according to
your Income. Lovely apartments
featuring wall-to-wall carpeting,
· . with all ~lances.
.
ALL PR!IIARY UTIUT1!S PAID
Must be 82 Sirs of age or

. hand

1ped.

.

Must meet H 0 ellgibllty

reqUirements.
·
__........ F~ fyrther _.~today

'1;e14 112•7022 . .

.....

(UtnaSt-

11112'2772

Conll:aot ...,A • Complete.

lJiilll'CI flr!'thlo il
MLIIoa I . _ . . d w

'

.BQSELL BUILDERS,

f'!alll.

'

·

wv

tilt folio ut11g~

•aoiiJClo-

·

Attorney William Safranek

FAX 773-5181

Contract ts-1 • Complel.o

SL'Vt'lltll·D,!V /\.,!v,·~Jtr·~l

Wonhip ·10:45 a.m, 7:30p.m.
' Wedneoday 7:30p.m.

·

Public Notice
Iolii of any ciomlllntdiGn of

,, i

·

For InfOrmation Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

We wll work within YDIK budget-·-

773-8173

sso.oo .....

s.darSc:hd•9L•·
Waoolip-IOLGI.

-=~
Slinda~
• 9::10 a.m.·

"""

\

slll!da'y SdiOOI· 9:lo Lll.
. Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
M- Clolpel Cllon:ll
Sunday lldlool • 10 a.m.
. · Wonhip· II Lm.
w-...y Service. 7 p....

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeooy
1182·2104
.

'

dletribution of 811 BIB. Oeblonl in ~ may
keep ·ex"""""'rty tor their personal uae •
"''"'' ,.•..,..This m,.y Include a qar, 8 house, clolhee, a~.
household goods.

~·-~· Rlillnge, Pllio F.ut'nlture, fireplace
lteme, .....,... ~. TreiUies &amp; lola Of olhet: Slutlll
. "No Job T~ I.M'ge or Too Small" .

. '' .,

·~ .....![. . . . . a.dl

Wonllip·¥LM.
_ , Sdloal· 9:45 .....

st::;!':.::.

\ W_ I •Ill
~Machine_...,.
S1Mcls • a.eJ Slllee &amp; F'ebriclidlou • RepeJr Welding
• ~11 11 • T,...o er-lng. Ornamental

·.•

.

can relieve a debtor of
financial obligation a and arrange , a fair

And unlike Michelangelo, mbstl,, ...._.._,......-.......__ _ __._ _ _ _.,.....
viruses are nOI trigsered by dales.
1be most . serious usually are not
associated with an extraordinary
even~ says IBM researcher Sarah
Hom.S .~
s~1ng New
Gordon. ·
·Garage~ ·Replacement Windows
To guard against viruses, Rist
Room AddiUone • ROoting
suggestS PC users refrain from
COMMERC~ and FIESIDENTIAL ·
opening e-mail anachments from
.
'
suangers and recommends caution
FREE
ESTIMATES
when doy;.nloadi~B files from the
Web.
However, experts say the most
·"'
Calls)
effective protection is to install an
anti-virus software program, such as
IBM's
AntiVirus
(http:(slash)(slash)www.av.ibm
. .com),
McAfee's
Viru~Scan
· COISIBCIIOI
(htlp:(slash)(slash)www.mcafee.co
-Newttomea
m(slash)) or Symantec's Norton
-Garagea
AntiVirus
oCompteta
(htrp:(slash)(slash)www.symantec.c
Remodeling
om): '

·Bailey ·birth
announced

'

Church announcements

I

i.

I

-Rev. airl:llaloci
Sdlool· 10 LOI.

-~Sam­
SUnday SdlooiiOLil.

Somlly SdloolSt.,
• 10 a.m.·

'•

Fim Sunday of Month .. 7:30 p.m. service

Thin! Ave.

.,,._
......
•••• Bri••- sr-

Mldcllcport Clio~ ofiH l"na LJIO •
Pu1or. Ortaory A. Clondiff
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
''
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

· MII.;tP ,

-Rev.

Raclae F1nl Chrdo or111t.N...,...
Pulor: Scott ROlle

Swclay Sdlooi·IO L81. ·
Evenloa·?p.m.
W-y s.rv;... 7 p.ow.

Bailer 111n Road
Bllllnell RaSuldoy E-ina 7 p.m.
'l'llullday Savb • 7 p.m.

NJzilrcnc

· Worship - 9 a.m.

II" J'J
51. ll. 1~. ...... .
Putor: WiUiam 1loMdl

r.s

, .... v..,,... . ... Cloordl

Sunday School • 9:30 a.n\.
Wonhip. 10:30 Lm.

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

Putor: Rev. Davld Ruuell

. . . , ;::;.,. • 9:30a.m.
Waioitlp · IO'AS a.m . .
n..-y Scrvka · 7:30p.m.

w•

Worship. 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Allred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Putor: Bill Sllteo
Sunday Savica -10 Lm. A 7p.11.
W•l by· 7 p.m. A: Y'1"'11 7 p.IL

Evenina • 7:30p.m.
Wodo •;y Service ' 7:30p.m.

'
TorchCloom
0&gt;. Rd. 63

Nortbnlt Clalltr

Pllllor: Randy Birr
Suoday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Seryicea • 7 p.m.

.

d

Worship· 11 1.m.

Wednesday Services • 8 p.RL

Metp c-roll•• Part•

RIIIIIM Cloon:~ of God

-

OrandSireel
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
·

3m 0oarp ereet....., Olllipollo. OH

lC
'QO dl
Pearl St.. Middleport

But even now,'expertS say, there's
no need for panic: "P"""Ie get
--r
worked up about viruses in tbe
wrong way," White says. If one
were to compare them with the kind
of viruses that make people siek,
"most (computer) viruses are nOI
cal$lrophic -they're more like the
~:,.:. ..a persistent cold you . ean'l

lyzed by researchers. White likens it

·£."'.

_._.,....,~

r-:RobttiVIIIICO

Hac~ICioo~

Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Wedneaday Service• • 7 p.m.

'P.•·

RwMieeH-orrn,...

M'IE

I Cllordl

Thundap some. •

If

Sonlazwonlllp-IOa.m.
Wodo .yaervice·6:l0p.•.

Townallip Rd., 41i8C
Sunday Sehool· 9 a.m.
· Worship-10a.m.
W-y Seovioea • 10 a.m.

Off 124 behind Wilkeoville
Pallor: Rev. Ralph Spirea
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.
Wonhip • I0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:4S a.m.

·

I

Oillon, W.VL
_ , Sdlool· 10 LJII,
Wonllip' 7 p.m.

(II Borliqllall dlun:h o f f - 33)

-Qua

ML 011.. UoiiUcl Mllllodlal ·

,
PUIIW: Rev. lorna Sallerfocld

·

Wonhip • ll.a.m.

Grailam Uolltd Mllllodlll
Wooship · 9,30 a.m. (lit &amp;l.!nd Sun),
?:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)

an. T

S-y • 9:30 •·•· and 7 p.m.
W-y-7p.m.

Sunday School · 10 Lm.
Wonhlp • 9 a.m.
'l'lladay Servlcea • 7 p.m.

United Method1 s t

s-tay Sdlool·\1,30a.ll.
Wonbit&gt;. 9:30 .... and 7 p.11.

HarP' ., .·c
r-: 1'lloron Darblm

·~ ~

•7:00 ......

Priday· :00 p.m.

..,.Chrdl

..

CooMio UIIIOd Metlloollol l'lrllll
Pallor: Helen Kline ·
CooMDoCIIMain A Fiflh St.

· Worship • 11 a .m.'

~ne

Putor : Ariu&amp; Hurt

~51.

·-

w

Servica: Wednelday, 7-.30 p.11.
Suoday, 2:30p.m.

Putor: Bri1n Harkness
Sunday School · io Lm.

St. Poul LeiHno Cburc~
Comer Sycamore &amp; Secollll S1., Pomeroy
Sunday School • 9,45 a.m.

ML Morloll C1oordl of&lt;l&lt;NI

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

••• 'frle

Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Rev. George Weirick

Church o f God

Railroad St. Mason
Sunda1 School· 10 a.m.
· Worahop • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servlcea • 7 p.m.

M

Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonloip Service: 10:30 Lm .
· Bible Sludy, Wedneaday, 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Service • '7;30 p.m.

Fllllh Baptllt Cbn:h

!

.

In trim paltOn: Rev. Roben Hupp

Rev. David McManis
Sunday School ; II a.m.
Worahip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Services . 7:30 p.m.

Wonhip • 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdneaday Services · 7 p.m.

O...Sa....,Lollltno Cloor&lt;h

LooaBauant

NowLioleM,

Pallor: Brian Harkneal
Sonday School· tn a.m.
~'".'2 9 a.m.
W
y·7p.m.

Walnul and Henry SIS., Ravenawood, W.Va.

PallOr:

Pastor: James E. Keesee

l

.

'...

=t)p.m.

'-:William V M -

PM!Or: Rev. Mupnt I . RobinaGn
...

"

~lSc:hnOI·IOa.ll.

h1A7p.m.
.Friday • fellowlllip ..,.ice 7 p.m.

EutLIIart

Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

Sunday school . IO:j(j a.m.

....

Putor. Llwi • Foe I

•••= ,

'"

r--------------..,
BANKRUPTCY

tfi6J,!, ,I(a,/,

The Commualty Calendar is MONDAY
POMBROY ·· The Big Bend
published as a tree servke to nen·
profit groups wlsblo&amp; to IIIIDOURce Farm Anliques Qub, regular 111eet·
meeting 'and specilll events. The · ing, Meigs High School library, 7:30
calencla~ is not deslpecl to pro- Monday night.
mote sales or fllnd 111~n of .any
POMEROY .. Brooks·Grant
type. Items ·are prin~ as space
pennits and caaaot be guarabteed Camp 7. Sons of Union Veterans, of
to run a specific number of !lays•. the Civil War, Monday, annex Hope
FRIDAY .
.
...
··.
Baptist Church, Middleport, 7: 15 . 1-~'
p.m. · Speaker, Terry Lowery,
POME~OV ·•• The monthly
meeting of the Book Shelfers Writ· Charleston, W. Va. who authored
ing Support Group will be held Fri· "Last Sleep: The Banle of Droop
Mountain, Nov. 6, 1863'." He wil.l be
~ay, 7 p.m .• u 1he Pomeroy Public
speaking on the baule history and
Library.
will have copies' of book for sale and
autographin,.
CHESTER •• Shade River.Lodge
453, F&amp;AM . inspection, Friday.
BREANNA BAILEY
POMEROY ·· Pomeroy Youth
degree.· Di.nner
work in the
League signup Monday, ~:30..7: 45
.6:30. Members to take iwo pies.
•l.lt · ... ~ :r·• ,,_,,
, . •I,•' .f.',~:... , J&lt;~
· p.m..~tPi&gt;meroy Elemen~sc)IOOI.
SATUR~Af''
· . '. '':· ·~ ·
.. ·' AACDIE~:. Rllcine Y~utli:LOagi/e • TUESDAY ·
POMEROY .. Meigs County
baSebail llltlf soft~all sig~'ups~ ' 10 '
a.m. Saturday,' ·kindergarten build- Chamber of Commerce luncheon
Tuesday, noon a! Rocksprings Reba·
ing. Ta~e binh ceniticate:
Clinton and Carissa Bailey of
_ bilitation Center. Gerald Droll of
Long
Bonom announce the birth of
. POMEROY •. Meigs Chapter, Cohinlbus will speak on Americans
their
daughter.
Brcanna Elizabeth
Daughters of the American Rcvolu· With Disabilities Act.
Bailey.
.
tion, noon' Satutday at Trinity
Born
Jan.
6,
.
she
weighed 7
CHESTER
...
Chester
Township
Church, Pomeroy. .
Trustees will meet at 7 p.m Tuesday pounds and measured 21 inches
long.,
.
•
nl the town hall.
SUNDAY
.
Grandparents
arc
Don
and Mary
· EAS't MEIGS ·• 'E~t~m High
RACINE ,·· .Southern High Hill of Letan Falls and Jim Bailey of
Schodl Conccrr.Band
w'ilf(ll'lisenl
a..
l
• .
• .
" ..
' '
School
Class of 1977 reunion pfan- Long Botton\. Great-grandparents
concert Sunday,·3 p.m. m tbe gym·
nw;ium. Susan Climer is the band nin~ mccling Tuesday, ~:30 p.m. in are Inez and the late Julian Hill of
thc high ·school cafe1crin. Cull 992· · Racine and Elhel and the late Hen·ry
· ·director.
Euler of Pomeroy.
6752 after 5:30p.m.

a....

w...

holor:.Kl:-h Baker
.•
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonlolp • ·tll:45 Lm. (111 4 3rd Sun)

Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirick·
Worship· 9:00a.m.

lltmla&lt;k Groft Clolirdo
Paslor. Gene Zopp

Hll'tflrd (:llon:h olekW II
ClorlallloUoloa
HArtford, W.Va.

VIet.,. Bapllall llllependaol

,. ,, ,..,

SL Joho Lalbt- Cloon:h

~

..... "

. -:s-Reod

Keanelh Blbr
Sunday SdiOol • 9:45 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m. '
Thursday Services • 7:30 p.m.
• "'I. .... ... ..

''(c.iw
Salell Sl., Rlllllnd

'I'M lal f&amp;l"

I ·•

to "e immune ~~ for cyber·
SfliiCO" 81111 says it should be rolled
OUl by next yeor. Symulec: is wortc. lr;,;,;t.:,;lllliiOiiiillii_....,__....__.._......,_....,.
ina 011 • similor technoiOfY called
Bloodhound.

C&lt;;&gt;mmunity calendar

.,~

.·w • ySenica· 7p.ll.
Clowdl or J - Cilrtol,
A 1 , : ,_..
1/4 mile poll..!.. Millt• New'U. M

Paalor:

Lutheran

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

rllilo .... co_. ao..-

M01111qStlr

s.d-amenl Sef'lice g..JO:lS 1.m.
Homemakina mectina. lit Thurs.· 7 p.m.

' ·.&lt; '

. 1be National Computer Security

...... Q !JIID ..... " ''( a.-,:11
Rev. Oyde Jleolle11011

PUIO&lt;! Keonelb Blbr
Sunday Sdiool • 9-.30 Lll.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m. (2nd .t: 4111 8111)

Cbrillol LII..,...Doy Salob

Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

-DmdDoiloJ
SUidiy Sdooill 9::10 Lm.
Ewm,..·7p.m.

-Sunday Mtvico, .10:00 a.m., 7::10 p.m.
Yl"'h Fcllowiblp Swclay, 7;00 p.lli.
W-yaerVIco,.7:lOp.•.

=Baker

... Cioriol

~tl1 . . .
Dl til. Zalll Ave .• M't' ·r 1

c....r

ne Cloon:~ of Jnu

Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service 7,30 p.m:

.

~

.- . .... FrankliD Didralo

Suldoy Sdloai·IO a.m.
Wonhlp·11:15o.ll., 7p.m.
Wall lay Service • 'p.m.

Sunday SdiOol· 10 a.m.
· Wonhip·9LJD.
Wedneaday Servica • 10 Lm.

51. Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday So:hooiiO::ZO.IIa.m. ·
Relief Soo!iely/Priealhood li:OS·ll:OO noon

Chnsttan Un1on

Worshap • lll.m., 6 p.m.
~ed~y Services ·7 p.m.

•

Wedneaday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Pallor: Philip StuntL.

Sunday School: 10 a.m.

j

Worship ·10 a.m., 7 p.m.

· ........ o.m ofCIIrllt

HIJ!aldo Boptllt Cun:b
51. Rl. 1431usl off Rl. 7
PMIOr: -Re\1. James _R. _Acree. Sr.

.· P.-:

Branch Pr'&lt;lidenl· Michoel Duhl
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
WO&lt;Ship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;:es · 7:30 p.m.

Sunday School • 9 Lm.

4

Thunday Services - 7:30

i

Wedneaday Services • 7:00 p.m.

Wonhip 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Evening · 7:30p.m.

•

Worlhip · 8:00a.m., 10:30Lm., 7:00p.m.

SaoWl'lllo

Sunday School • 10 Lm.
Wo11hlp • 9 Lm. • ·

Biolpobed Cloon:~ of J - Cllrlll
of Liller Doy Salllll
Portland-Racine Rd.

Llop•Uit Clorlaltla ClloM
Sunday S:c:hool · 9:30a.m. ·

. . lklhldlemBipltll
.J(acine, OH

•-=

.

, .... , ... 1\

--E.-

Sunday SdiOol .I},JS a.m.
W""!'lp ·IO:IH.11.

Latter·Day Saints

Sunday Sehool • 9:30 Lm.

Sunday Evenina • 6:30 p.m.
Thursday Smli« , 6:30 p.m.

Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

',

Com•• of St. Rl. 124 .t: Brllloury Rd.
Minlater: Doul Shamblin
· v·~h Miniller: ill Amberpr

Wcinllip ·7:00p.m.
Wodo I 1 lliblo Study· 7:00 p.ll.

0

-~
Ron F'lmle

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Sanday ~·enlne • 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servicea • 7 p.m.

-Jolln-

Sundly Sdlool· 9-.30 ....

' -Midlael ......
aervlco, 10 a.m.
y ....leo, 7 p.m.
5

A

.._., W.Va.ltL I

-a.-.
wt

0.'

1 'I Service 7 p.m.

,.....,_CIIordl

Flllaa...ol()pw
923 S. bird St., Middl

Sunday SdiOol· 9-.30 a.m.
Worahip - 10:30 L&amp;
Thunday Servieea • 7 p.m.

Rev. l'loillip•Suldoy Sdlool • 9::10 a;m.
Wonbip • 10:30 Llll.

Wo'

'DeC I' t•• C....
320 E. .Main SL, l'tw!WliOJ
~"'"''"nemtowy Mlllicipal Buildlna auditorium)
, _ , ... Codner
Wonhlp aervica: Sullday, .IOLm. A 6 p.m.

•A t

P1110t: Rev. Roy Mc:Culy

Bnclford Cloon:~ or C.....

Robi111011

Wonhlp • 10 Llll.
Youdl Pellowalup, Sanda~ • 6 p.m. ·

Rollatod Cl"'-lllp Cllon:~ .

UbtrtJ C1oriallu Cllll'dl
· Dexter
Pulor: WOody Call

Putor : Joe N Sayre

••

PUIO&lt;! Ptler Ttemblay
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service • 7:00 p.m.

Cllopal W..,a
Coalvillollod

773-51117
Service tinle: Sullday 6:00p.m.

PUIIW: Keith llador
$unday SdiOol· 9:15 un.

t.

-·a

603 Secand Ave. M_,

-S!'!'!.P

Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Hkllory IIJDa Cloon:~ ot Clorlal
Evanp:list Jo.eph B. Holkina

Slll'tr Roao Bipllll

.''

Putor: Roben Manley

Swclay Sdlool · 9-.30 ....
. Wonloip-7p.11.

-.JoM&amp;PIIIyWade

BibleSiudy~y . JOa.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

Sunday School·· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

E.

Bald Klob. on Co. M 31
--· ~Wilfald

-

week

I

. t: .
.
Computer viruses are bits of soft· in minutes, doing damage · before
ware code that' either overwrite or anti-virus people can react to it, ..
attach ,them;~elve~ to programs and says Steve White of IBM Research
replicate themselves. While some and Development. When researchers
, viruses are merely initating; taking . discover a virus, they analyze.it and
up val'l•.~le !lisk, space,. others sueh W{lte a ·.computer program lhat will
as the Mic~Jangelo vinis CJJ~ wipe destroy it. ·
out your entire hard drive. If that
Alex Haddox, SARC's director,
virus is on ·your ·compuler, it acti· says " !here's this whole· under·
vales on March 6, the anist's binh· ground of computer virus wrilers"
day.
who adopt swaggering mon.ikers
Since viruses were.discovered in like Dark Avenger and Death Star.
the late 1980s, IBM's ·Thomas J. They are typically age 14·24, talentWatson Research Center has collect· ed and driven by a rebellious, ado·
ed more 'than IO,ooi&gt;, and the lescent need to call allention 'to
· Symanlec AntiVirus Research Cen· themselves, he says.
ter (SARC) estimates that six to nine
IBM is working on new techno!;
new one; are found daily. About ogy that w}ll automatically destroy
I ,200 are in circufalion.
even viruses that h11ven't been ana-

GolfllloC'

1'1.

-

l'ulor: Mad&lt;-

"- ...... ~
"Friii.(Jo,pel a-ll"

Sunday Scllool-\l,JS a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.

Hfllll Ru n.U.. C~•n:•

1.-nl 0111 Free Metltodlst Q..U

Rol- Clio~ of Clorlat
Pallor: Euacne E. Underwood

Putor: Mark Morrow

Putor: Roben

W.....,
No-yor'W-1 Nfalll Senica

llrNIIOk 'M'?IM
O l d - Lc&amp;ioft Hall,
l'ourlll 5nel, Nidolcpaol, OH
,_,Rev. Nary loldlaftie1
Swclay Servica: tel Lm • .t:: 6 p.m.

rwt Cloopel .
Sunday School· 9 i.m.
Worahip.-10 a.m.

Paaoc Rev. John Neville ·
Chilchn~ aervice • 10 a.m;
Wonhp . 7:30 p.m.
Wedneaday ~rvice ·7:30p.m.

• .........,.c~-orCiorlal

Plnl Boplllt Cloon:~

' •

Sunday Sehool· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 Lm.

Thuraday Service • 7:30p.m.

Pallor: Jake Copley
· Sunday 5e!lool· 9-~ a.m.
Wonhop · 10:30 a.m.

7
2 1 '0 ..
K' aturyllod
JcffSaollh
_-, Sdlool·
9-.lOLJL
5ervico IO:lDLII;;:. ..;...

Ot11c1 Churches

Mbialf •
, _ , Ooorlca Neville

· Sunday Schooi · IO:!S a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Servi&lt;ea ·7:00p.m.

~·

Wonbti!'.30p.m.
· 6p.m.
·w~" Sa-·?p.m.

Sunday School · \l,lO a.m.
W&lt;inlolp ·10:30 LOI.

Blole H-Cloordo

"

Sa- · 'P."'·

' Plnl CHrdl or111o No

Poi I

Bn.. (Middh,.-rt)
, _, Vemapye Sullivan

W..,..
75 Ptul Sl., Middleport.

Communion· 10 a.m.

Flni Sotothono ~~~
4t8n Pomeroy Pike

PISlO&lt;: Chulea Neville
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.11.
Thuoaday Servioea ·6:30p.m.

.
·Zloo Cllon:hf C1oatal
Pomeroy, Hanilonville Rd. (R1.143)

A

Worship - I0;30 a.m.

Wedneld.y Service • 7:30p.m.

Wedneaday Smlice • 7:30p.m.

Toppen Pilla Cbll'dl of C1oatal
·
Instrumental
Pallor: 5coc Brown
Wor.llip Service 9 LJR;.

Pu1or: Paul Stinson
East Main Sl.

__

Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 P,m.

Wedneaday Servieea • 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Pamei'V)' Flntllaplial

· II

Wonlolp. 111'.30 Lm., 6,:10 p.m.
W I 'ySavioM·7p.m.

,

112 mile ofl' RL 32S .
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School· 9:30 un.

Worship J. 10:30 1.m., 7:00p.m.

Sunday Sehoul · 9:30a.m.

W

w

t Cloonl orlllo N -:s-.etllaaye
Sw*y Sdlool • 9::10 .....

Sunday Sdlool -10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Pall.obJack Colearove .
. Sunday Schooi·I},JO a.m.
Worship • 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servicea • 6::10 p.m.
.

=SdK&gt;o·.Lm.,6p.m.
9-.lO .....

Nl

lfanitonvillcRoad .
P -: Rev. Viclor Rolialo

Plot Groft Jlllolt Bollaeal Clo-

Pallor: RC&gt;f't WaSunday So:hool -\l,:JO a.m.

Rollatod f1nl Boplill Cll.,..

a...
fllllo N ,_,
.... ~a-

t'lllw-

Lesdina Creek Rd., Rutland
Pallor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday ll&lt;hool· 9:30a.m. .
. Sunday wonhip •7 p.m.
Wedneaday p-ayer meelina· 7 p.m.

Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10::10 a.m.
PIJIO&lt;·Ief!roy Wall...,
Ill and ltd Sunday

-

Clo rt

P -; Kl:idl Rader

-or-Hon-Clo-

ora.n.a

6J a..dllifiiiiP'

A

Sunday Sdlool9:30 Lm.
Wonlfip. II a.m., 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services • p.m.

&amp;!Sa•ioM ·7p.a.

-ttev.-McC'
..
s..day Sdlool· 9-.30 ......

-

Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
Wonloip·.9a.m.

CalnrJ' ...... Cloopd

Sdl and Mail!

Kno

Eate:r."'
P -: Kl:olll Rader

y prayer ~ervK:e 1 p.m:

-k.

.'!O:lO .... ,,...

I

WonhiD . 111'.30 un. and 6 p.m.
W ' d•y $efwiels ~ 1 p.m.

Sunday School · \1,0 a.m. ·
Worahip • II Lm.
w _ , Servioea • 7:30p.m. .

310S7Sialc Rouoe 3:ZS, Lanpvlle
Pulor: Dr. J.D. Youna
Sunday - \1,30 Lm.
W~ • 10:30 Lm . .t:: 7 p.m.

·

p

Pulor: Chulea Nevillc

O.. . Jic.... 0..0

a.... orCioriol

33226 Clildnn~ 1loroo Rd.
Stonday SdiOol· II Lm.
Wonllip • IOLm., 6 p.m.
W-y Servica • 7 p.m.

WI

"*-J(S-) .

Hol1ne ss

-I

-

AsiiOCialioe (IKtp:(sluh)(slallll)www
.nc:sa.com(alash)) and Microsoft
joiJ!cd r - this
to t.llle lhe
:Five YUill aao thia
the &amp;rowing virus dvettl. Their 1\rllcro
Miehelllllgelo complller virus lint Vwus ~lion lnitillive will help
SJWbd fear of calaslrophie hard 8llli:vinas SQftwll'e vendors st1y on
drive failure among millions of PC top of new viruses wilh sueh serusers.
vices as a newsgroup for developers
While lhe initial scare was more and a joint Web site at
hype than harm - only a couple htrp:(slash)(slash)www.microsoft.co .
tho~d computers !UC believed to . m(slash)&lt;?ffice(slash)antivirus(slash
have been affected- the lnlemct is ) ·
.. ,,,
making lhe danger of computer
New Internet programming Jan·
viruses much greater.
·
guages such as Java "will only make
"Viruses 31e e real trueal," says the virus problem WQI'se because
Oliver..&amp;ist of Communicalions they have securily loopholes that
Week magazihe. "Once you get a virus creators will be able to take
virus, you 'll never undmstimate its advantage of," Rlst says.
power again." ·
·
Ori the Net, "a virus can spread

~s.-·9-.lOua:

Ctlllrll Cloootor

hour,........ .

Clllrtli .... "

By TAMARA E. H0U1E1
USA TODAY

W...... ·IO:l0 ...... 6p.ll·

Wonloip · IOLII.
1\oqldly Servica • 7:30 p.11.

Swclay Sdlooi!O'.:JO Lin,

,_,Nell,_...

--Siino

.,,

hllar: ~ H _.,
Sunday SdiOol· 9 a.• .

Holyl!u&lt;:harilland

212 w. Main Sl.

Computer viru.ses' insidiqus spread

Director
,.................

1loilcy - . 8:30 ....

Pom lfOY • Mlddllpott, Ohio

. Frtclet, ll•ch 7, 1117

Saturday Night Only
MEIGS CO. BIKERS'

SPRING PARTY

.MEN'S &amp;WOMEN'S
BIKINI CONTEST AT 11 PM

Mualc;By

BAD HABIT
ALL PROCEEDS GO TO THE
TOY

COUNTRY TANH

. 8112-11788 .
OPEN HOUSE MMIIII • 10 1111
. 1M Rlmatl W8VO ••5

~~=~:~tla::al:· · DtiWitllll

�,

'

,.., ,, "•rot. 7, 1117

,.

Porn•

ar• Mlddlaport, Ohio

The Deily SenUnel• Ptlgl 11

I

NBA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

,._to...... ......

M IJ'
.,c:...-P'

PHILLIP

ALDER

1 Mill Mit t1
..,...
7 flttahlee•
401 I
:Colo.
1S llollltl
lllld ....

14$

41~

r

11Dicll

!.!.!!!
... _.

Bur ,or Mil. lllvo&lt;IM Anllqoeo,
1124 E.- .......... AI. 124,
......,.,. H.ou11: U.T.W. 10:00
lUll. II 1m p.m., 8unclll' I :00 II
I :GO p.m. 114·812·2528, Rull

.

CAU.IIIIIIft

fllllll* hours. lu1GMt1ge of _,.
llolplul, 114-8112-11211 or I·

~1 -,

'

- ...:lfJ!ao
llwU (111)1411131

.

-.gEM,

--·

I KQI
•

lllln:hlndiM

.

lhlad)' warkl excellent income.

100•

_don,

IIY11.

1115 USA Made Sander Talocu•r Whh CU.. 1400. Rotallo
1150 . . . .1.31111tl;
Muak Center,

45140. C -

40'11. 0111 II 4·211·

pwlence, reaaonabl1 ratM. 304815-31581 a"- e:oopm, no job •

F/dH.' ~)JPPll: ~'"1
.&lt;.I I'll ~;roc r.

HAVE~NEEI»7 '

IIW

••••uoa

v:=-.::

O.C.W¥.7

r

'

llvlnoicon•• b11emen1 warer·

proofing, all baMme~~t repair~ ·
dona, frM ••~motoa, Nr.dmo
gu~tantM. 10f',. on job expert-

WV.31)t.871ot421.

.:,;:;:,::::;=~-:-----1

. _ :J04.t7S.2145.

~

\lory- 14170 Mobile-. 2

Cdll......,21.

Rldlne Lawn - ·

~~~~~~-S=•=m=m=o~r~I~I,=I0=0=. Farmall
NH Grlndormlxor,lntornallonal
12'
!Eloc~lo
1
Kllchon
-.L Wolka tianopcirl801dloc.dleatlAll ..tractor,
od cand.

33CI f.armt for Sl!l
I 50

Part _.,. pupo-- g

eu•s

, . ..... _ , . IICIVeriiUig In

all or nomlng. Yollldo, Availlblo A Minimum Of
-lmpm.
51lay1Wll "'""Dolly.

-k•

11111 no 1'4 1• luubjaciiO

lho F - I'll~ HOtlllng Ia
of l l j M - .Illegal

..·-"""'
'~.....
.-.color.

To D•llwr a Route In Your'

4 112 _,.,. old, aoill Nolahborhaod. Call 1·100-127·
z.., .
1201l Jab 1114-G.

lliltlllkHior~

boaad an
Nllglan,
-lamllltiiiiUI or t1111on11
o~.

orany-ICI

rnoko any IUCh ""'""'1011,
limitation or dllci••lllllltlor..•

lhl8 ntWI~ Mil nol ,

-opy....,C

-lion
,..do,.

-lorraollain
of llelaw.
· OUr
mwhooeby
lnlonned that d dnelbiga
ac:tviiUHd In thla ne •paper
arw n~labte on an'equal
opp&gt;rtunlly-.

810

torm, I 112 IIDry .....,.
hou••· new garage, new

au caal&lt;ll-. ,_. ~
Top. Worka Good; Anlfquo Dinino
.au Sat. 114471-,2720 AFTEll
1Roorn
-

octO

d•d

To Otli\1., "tbu Muat S. At LHII

14-oldlonftiO,..r-lo II...,. Old. Uao Of An lnourod

Lawn Mower par11 &amp; ,.pillr.
Sldonl Equ_.,_ :JOU'IS-7421.

N• Ho1Ft080
Hoybloto,
Good
Shape, •n.
"'zoo
114•
!~~~~=-===;=I -IJIIS-7P.II.

Bedroom, VInyl Siding, 2 Dodol.
Flraplaca, NeW Corpo~ 11,000,

old, -

• KI S
• 10 4 2
• QJ 5

•

'111m o.t~al Call Rulli 114-4*1-•
~l.
.
;

cera RL 1M MlleJI

Good.

callar and outllullclnp, 114·742.
2157.
.

340 Bu11neu ancl
Buildings
GalAti bualnaulor toll· SoMt, Rl. 33 In ....... 3114-773-

Ra~lna,

11,*:

IIIIHI Ford F-2110 111 colt,
mlloa. 111,eotl muot aoll . so~
773-IAD:l. .
.
, I

IIIII Fonl 1114 lin ruciL 304-1571"•,
2545.
.
:
.
, .
,
1101 GMC Sonomo Air, Till, ,

1111, clothe• r:1ck &amp; Ice chlltl.

.. ,, cloon. 't8,400. 104·773· 1
1111.
.
l
!let Fonl Von Aorollar Body In t .
Good Candlllan, Noodo Trano· I
million 1750, Call Allor 4 P.ll.!
·

'l'Rf.

rK)Gl

I Acraa, Largo Brick

122 Highland Avo. 3Boclraorn, 2
tur- conlrll air, full baoomonl. 145,500.
:J04.t75-ll 20.
.
Or 3 Bodraam Houao, Nawty
Above

~"·

CHECK -~

WH~T
nil~-

Aero Wllh 2 Bd. Houoo 130,000,
11 HI 18 2520

bolh, brcocl air 101

IZf.SEN1lN6

'(QUII:. 'IkE.·

' Holi£~'(!

wa·

ter, tewer &amp; electric, alto ·13
bulldl"tl loll, Molelopod wtpubllc

wattr, HWer &amp; electric In place,

304-773-1511+4.

.

3 Ac:iaa In Hondoraon. SOoH75!051 or :JOU7S.2445.
Approxlmalloly 15 ocroa an Dlhol
Rd. all Sandhill Rd. 304·075·
3015.

JET
AER.VlDN IIOIORS
Raltod.
- .1-8IJO.S37-01121.
In Slock.
cat-E-.

Bolts •Molen ·

GrlcloUI ilvlng. 1

-

1083 Sony 21 fl. Cuddy Cal*\) '
- 110 Ewrrlhlne Gooal ~ :
lent Condlllafll814,4tll-1713 At~ ,
111r7P.M.
,,

.m 2 tlldrDOm

34 Foot Haute Boat

al Ylllapo llanor and
Rlvoralda Apartmonlt In lllddllport From .1238-1304 . Call 11411112·&amp;06-4. Equal Houol"tl Opper·
apartmonll

Rccllaprlnp Rolwbllllallon c-r
Ia IOOklno 1 lui lma 1H RN wilh
preferred eJiperience In long •rm
and rehabilllatlan nuralng, We

.

1 Modern 1 Bedroom Api,rtnwnt.

114-l~il-03e0

One bedroom rurnlahed apan-

recognize your c:.,..., go&amp;ll with
c:ompelilive lllary and benttlt
package. Apply 11 Rockaprlnga
Rahoblllladon Cenlor. 81 4·9i2·

ments, two bedroom furnlahed

houao; In Mlddloporr, 114·11112·
2178.
Twin Rivet's Tower, naw IICf»Pllng

I=:_~~~~~~--

applicadono lor 1br. HUD aublllcllzed apt. for eld~rlr and handl·
CN&gt;P14 EOH ·:JOU75-18N. .

vaeancr In my hOme tor eldtrl1 I·
'""· :JOUl'S-1183.

2 Apartments lor rent In Pt.
PIHaanl. 1 I 2br, Kitchen appl.

' Included. Dapoall &amp; Rar.roncn
roqulrocl. Call 304,175-2144 ba·
foro •pm ar 304·875-3&amp;53 al,.r

l

for Sale

Furrilhed Ap.rtnlnf.; 1 8 I d OOift,
S3DOilla.i Ullll~l Paid. 107 Soco
llld AWinue, Galllpollo, li14-4413844 Alllr 7 P.ll.

5115.

,

304·773-~J
I

TRMJSPORTA l !(HJ

1084 Black Crown Victoria, Au·
1ornodc, Good Candlllon, UOO;
114-371l-2721.
.

.

.

' M'f

TIIAT WAS OUT,
·WASN'T IT, MOM?

MOM WOULD

·u"'"" CALLED IT "IN:'

Motor lij)mel

Allpuo

211 TollY
UFII
.

30·a... oeny
34 Cup'a.. :
. •

.,'!': "1•

35 . ,..

31 Saloon
31Ct8Wd
31 Sh.-cl

'

:.=.=1 ~
i...-+--+--l--1--1--l

44 Slehtk.... . '
41 C)ppol..nt . ~

......

·eo homJI

,

52 Wldl ....,.

'

~

'·'

53 Oppatlll or

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.:

',_

by Lula campo•

'

...

Ctlllbl1lr~c:r::u:•--,. CINMCihm,.
': • taw ........... !)Uland~
. Eacl'l
ln . . . . . . . . . . . tor....ehtf. Todlyar:U: N ~D
.

I

' DGFOIN

TLFIEB

. C D I F I U E. T C 0 .
Z I W

TM

IRV

URHG

EGTV

ZIW

TLFII!B

\

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CTRMFRMU . '

LOT,I!VGB
VTWUOFIM .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' Grand opera will never pav.:- Thomes Beecham.
' Opera has no business making monev ." - Rudo~ Bing.

''

·,

. 8
f1--rl

I

uTEs
I.: :,. :. .1~I..-~I ·

0

:;....T-1

..
My husband came home
and took his bad mood out on
·me. I commented that. "Home
is where we are treated best
and · · ····· most."
Complete the . c.,uclde ·quoted \
by filli"SS in the m•ssing words

you develop frOm step Nc. 3 below.

,.'·

,,

'1 1

-

(;

PRINT NUMBERED lETIERS
IN THESE SQU ...RES

II

6 · Gfl
UNSCR~MBlf lETTERS TO I
ANSWER .
sCUM.ms ANswas
Avatar · Begun · .Rover . Vertex . NEVER TEAR
Before getting married my elderly aunt took me aside
and said , "Marriages that are stitched together with love
will NEVER TEAR "

4:00.

450

3NT

22 Doilte

P101

L-L-....L......L-....1.-L......J

New gaa llnkl, 1 ton lru~
whaola 1 radlatora. 0 1 R llouro..,
Rlploy, WV. 304·372·3.833 or I· 1

Small-"

24 Sllclder

2•

Q

. ..\

1884 Ford E;ac:ott 8.1,000 """"· J :100:;;2T.HI32ll::::=::·-----790 Clm~ &amp;

1500. :JOU'IS-5738.
.
1885 T·Bird 11,000 IIUII, .Batao
Color, 1850. 114-441-7el2.

6 Comr1·n

Pau
Pau

1

,·

7=
·=

plant ·

W01t Nartla Eut

·B=I Prlca Trlltamllllona: -;
at tllll.oa aild Up, IIOI,CI/
Rabtl All ~pol, OVer I_O,ODO.
I HI Cadllloc I I ,200. 304·1115- Trantrrila!Uona, Acces,:r,...t.r
Caaaa &amp; Roar. Endai 11l+2~531511. '
5177

4

11 Aug. lin.

,.~'--~A~cc~..~-~od~~·~·~·~~\:

710 Auto• for Slle

.... .

,_s,.....

Gull&amp;l
•
-1 E¥WYihlt11 1
10 Crlnlile
I
11 Rubbed"oul

~r.

:i

760 .. Auto Parts &amp;

.......

3 Aaeert without

QB 7

labie presence to "smell out" where
· the cards lie, and there are techhi·
clans, who rely totaUy on the percent· ·
"'IIII· &lt;Justin caae you're -tdering, I
t.JJ Into !be Conner caleltJrY.l
On this deal, South wao Brian
Jacbon, a London rubber-brldce play·
er wbo earns blo IMng from blo lmowl·
edge of the three' opp9nenta - all
right, two opponents and one partner
- at his !llble. ·
.
Here, Jackooq was 'in three .no·
II'IIJ!IP. Annoyingly, W01t led a spade.
How did Jaebon conilttue?
With seven.top tricks, the technical
line of play is to leal !be diamonds. If
· the alii! Ia aeneratina four tricb, de·
clarer cuhea bistop clubo, hoping tbe
queen and jack will drop. U they don't,
South faDs back on the heart llnene.
· However, If the t!iamondl ate pr¢111)btg only three tricks, declarer should
run the club 10, laking the percentage
play fur four tricb.
Jacklon, though, immediately led
·the heart queen from hand. When
West played low·smoothly, Jackson
drew the conclusion that be didn't
have the king. So, Jaetion called for
dummy's ece apd ran the club 10. As
,YOU can see, lhl8 Une WOrlt:ed beautiful·
ly. He ended with an oveitrlck, wln·
Dinl one 1pade, ODe bellrl, four dia·
monds and four clubs.
· To my mind, nothln&amp; beats an ~·
tale noae, but perhaps the ideal pUt·
nerahip' Ia a technician and a •noatril" ·

~r~.·ea~~.~ ~

Camp Gtounda

Land 3.DI acral, hal publtc

33 - Laniel

I CevatryiWOI'd
2 llolpltal of I
1011

·. I enjoy comments like lbia one by
Charles Lamb: "Your ablence of mind ••1-..L.....L.....L......I-1..we have borne, liU your preeence ~body
came lo,be called ill quesiion by II.•
In bridge, there ate playen wha 1111!

:

Water Front Lata $2D,ODD: 1·

310 Homes for Sill

,_

\12 Guldo'a hltlll

. DOWN

By Phillip Alder

CruiM, 4.3 VS. Standard 1,()C)Oi!!

,114-311H532.

r,~-:-.

Technique or ·
table prese~

•I
now'

Lara• paved Commercial lot I
apt building an down town Main
SL In Pt..P'-aaant 114-4otl-11147
Coii-.Spn.

27 Culllvlllitd

Opening lead: • 5

, ... .clloVy van; 310 .......
barrol&gt;· lull olza, IOod llrn.

1 M; &amp; .2 M; lola lar aalo In
Scenic Vall., Subdlvlelon.
Woclll RHity, Braker 304-871·
:1:122. .

River

ZI

""'!

350 Loll &amp; Acnlge

Ohio

Soullt
!NT

I ,lj(

304-273-1215. ·
'
730 Vinl,l.e.:WI)a ·I
ford 3,000 Dteool Tractor Good
•
Condl~qn. 6 FL Bruih HOI 1 Ft ltii4.Chovy Ya~ .1.2 dlaaal
Blada 17,000 For All 114·31'1- gino. t4.!DO. 30411115 3121.
:14:,:1.:;7·:__ _ _ _....;,_ _ 1 1111 Chovr 8-10 Blozor 414,
loutor. AI&lt;•.Tilt· Crulao, - . Wind- o
- · - . Lock-. 75,000 Milo-. ,
t4.20110801t44'11-2174.
••

51151.

14 Clllntpfc,.

12

~~

,

' 51 DMclng-

·'11 f

720 _ltuclllforSIIe 'L

1o1110,114-SI7.0111.' ,

.

~.)
. ... RuJ;;' · 47

Vulnenible: Both
Dealer: South

Mb*· 301 411 , • .

,- . ,.

.. ,, .....

4111111n

I A8 I 7
6 AKI 8

Bldg. Haa Aptt And Rooma
US,DOO O,.nar Finance 1 Aero

REA L ESTATE

111108.

• 10. 5

Q 10 7 3

s-tlt
• AV

'1111 CIIIVy Sllv.o rdo Po!""f:
Wlft-1, /Locka, AJC. Crulaa:1
aos 4bbl, Now Tlr••~-Br~~ t
Extlllll' Dual GloM l'lc:IIO. ~:
HJdraullo·DII tl~50·5tl•l poll. ~nt Job. ·E - Condlllon n;,
Sfdaro Equipment Hondoraon, lido I OUi, ..._250 080 11..-.;

MII'R 11......,.

.•;,m·:ko

•

Soulh of Loon, WV. Flnanclnt

-or •BIG. VNCalllll

~

Eut

nanclng, 1a.. Down; -·Paymen~
AI Law A• t1eo .Pw Monlh. N6;

41-

' 24 Woodod Yttllly : ~ =rd
211 Scot. • •• •
57 Pllntod .

•KJ054

Crd Prabltlfll? ~ft.. ,

UpiOn Uaad

~

Wesl

• 7I 3

Fuml.,ra reftnlolll,.,
rapolr and, upholtltiY. Superior
work. Buy and Salll A Counlry
ca•••L304-741100.
HARTS IIASONARY • 81ol
brick &amp; atDna work. 30 yaara IX·

za :::;;~a~~wa

tl

olldl8ld

UA

I

20 GIMk21 Ill lpl' 'II

10 4 2

• J 5

m

IS'•

18 Flllt

N
• I 2
• AJ 4 2

540 . Mllctlllnloul

HBY-

-

43ft

11 ptiNft'
17a-lnl

'

Fumllhed

RQ91111
_ , , lor ron1 · - o r mondi.
.. at t1)!0hno.- - ·
Nicer Homo WIWO Acr- Bol· li-MO.

•·I

"••
.[I

..\

.,,t.i

ween Rio Gtandl! I Jac:kaon 1

Wollllon, Gollla Dr Jackaah

Counlp. 114 441 ~··

• h'l

. '. '1

RUITALS

,.,

1J

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BEDEOSOL
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tor I,IOiiiO ......, _ . .Yau . . ~
.., • t 11 ~ 1111 pabllll! TfVInli

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lias ...... lla1DIIl1"1W - ~ Jilt!

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�</text>
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