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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

onterence

Su~r Lotto:_
5·10.17·39-41-45
Klcbr:
9-2-4-6-2.0
Pick 3:
D-5·1
Pick 4:
1-4-o-9

results
In NCAA
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Mostly clear tonight,
low• in the upper 301 .
Tuesday , pertly cloudy,
cool snd breezy. Highs in

the 501.

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VOL 47,110. 218

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P9meroy·Middleport. Ohio, Monday, March 10, 1997

01117, Ohio Ylllloy P~n.hlng Company

Sectlone, 12 Plgel, 35 centa
A Ga_nnett Co. -.,.,..,

R.a:in fail·s to slow area
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flood cleanup efforts

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'By The Associated Preas ·
' rain is not going to have an effect, ...- down die Oliio hoped to have service
: Rains ·returned ·to flood-ravaged said ·meteorologist Steve Rowley of . restored Jo many of !hem toilay.
~ iluthern Ohio Sunday, but did little
thc -N~tional Weather Service.
City workers in CinCinnati con\0 sloy; cleanup effons' and did not · ' ~e O~io has fallen below floOd ' t~~ued cleanup -in riyerf~ont ncigh:,top the Ohio Rjvcr from rc~eding .
levels for all of the Slate· except bothOO(!s, said Paul-Myers, aSsistant
: A flash flood watch that had hcen Cinclnn,atj, where it is forcc,sted to ,direCtQr oft~ b~il9ings deranment.
posted lhr th~ ar.ca was canceled ~un- dr~p •. to its 52-foot . flood stage City butldmg mspectors worked
&lt;lay night As much as 2 inches had Wedncsdiy moming..
" · · lhf'OI!gl). t~erain to check aboutl,400.
hccn forecast for the region, but the
Leo' S~iliner, ·spokesman· for the buildings. .
··
National Weather Service said less · state's Ell)\lrgency Operations Cerit~r. ·. ' In California, a Cincinn&amp;ti river"
i han a quaner- in~h had failen during 'said sl~te Qfficialj.did not take spe- front nel!hborh_ood, many homes
~he day.
.
ctfic slept to rrcparc for Sunday's were sull under water Sunday after. Parts of southern Ohio received as , ram.
.·
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.
noon.
much as I 0 inches of rain March I,
Then~.&lt;. was concern Jtboui the
Fifteen miles upriver from Cinclneausing the worst llooding of the . Ohio's tfil!utaries, which· may not be nati.the American Red Cross kept i-ts
Phio River since 1964. The state able to )!andle much extra water shelter at New Richmond ,Hish
)Is ked Sunday that Highland &lt;;ounty beciuse ~ · river ~mains ·so high, School open. despite the fact t~atthe
..OC'addcd to the list of 16 Ohio coun - said Kcvfn Farina, a meteorologist . waters had receded and most people
Jics·"t_hat ,were decla(cd federal disas- with !he'Weather service.
had left the shelter.
. )cr areas.
· Five~ople have been .killed in
The. roads ncar the Ohio were
· The rain did not create mo.rc .Ohio and damage cstin;tatcs ~rc. up to hegmnmgto get cleaned up along
·rrohlcms for the Ohio River. which $155 111illion and growing.
.
· wuh debrts brought by the Oooded
;Jmd hecn receding after cresting·al 64
AI .Ieos! 1,150 homes rcmainc~ nver. and more people . returned
teet in CiQcinnati Wednesday night.
without ga~ Sunoay and.l,800bad no home. All state and U.S. routes in ·
"When the riverbeds arc as elcc'trjcily. Utility companic~ up and Clermqnt County were b~k open.
·swollen as they arc. now, that much
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Out of control? 6th District race ·_
spurs need fo.r .f inance reform

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TYPICAl. DAMAGE ~ Meigs County Emer;
Dltector Robert Byer, J8.ft,
pointed out IIOQCI damage .to Swick Road In

gency..s.rviC:n

De Wine

Rutland Township Sunday to U.S. Sen. Mike
DeWine, R"Ohio.

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answers
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to flood
havoc
.·~ocal

relief f~nd seeking donations
to alleviate s·uffering from fl~oding
Donations to assist last week's !&lt;I make applicalion for assistance:
The office is open Tuesdtly
lluod yictim~ mnY' he sent In the
Meigs Relief fund . established three . through Friday. 9 am. to I p.m. Appliycars · ago hy the Meigs United cations will he -evalulllcd und prioriMethodist Cooperative · Parish in a · lized by the Relief Fund board of
c~)ui&gt;cruti"c ctltlJ:l 'With the Meigs dirccwrs, .it· Wns reponed.
·.~
Ministerial Assodation.
Also it\oailable at the Cooperative
, ·1 ·AC
counts '(o rc~o:~i\lc mo~cy huvc Parish ·. arc cl'canin~ supplies ond
O,:cn cst;ohlishcd ntthc Farmers Bank · p mc'l!ency IC&gt;od help. ns wcll :as ol_!l·
:&amp;.Savings Co. in Potncmy. and the .•cr .·IJI~s \'f ctucrgency assistance. '
-Racine Home National Bank in Questions may he directed "' the
kacioc.
hcadquaners at 992"7400. '
. F~milics needing help with repairs
The Meies Relief Fund·was estab~au,:Cd ' by thC llooding arc inviled tu Jishcd afl&lt;.'l"lhc,M.othcr's Day tlt\(&gt;d of
gu "' the Mci~s l):uorcrati"e. Parish 1995 and at \hat time neltrly $19.000
Office at 311 Com)qr St. in Ponieruy was raised -with help ~oin~ '!' 26 litm1

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ilies. to make major repairs to their
buil"ings.
After the 19\16 lltKJd, churches and
the commun'ity raised and gave
.another $3,700 to help families make
indoor and ould&lt;x&gt;r home repairs
Occnusc of wa.tcr damage.

Assi~­

tancc Wa.&lt; also provided to help with
ihe cost of installing culvens and
pulling trailers' hack on their founda"
lions.

Funds ·arc needed now. said n
parish spokesman. :ind churches and
li-iends in the community arc encouraged 10 donate It&gt; the Meigs Relief
Fund,,

Rutland. As of Sunday. a total of
Preliminary iJamag~ figures arc . I .XOIJ mc.ab had heen served in Rut.
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estimated at $3.5 mill inn-' Bycr said. . land.
Workers
delivered meals in'':
"People in Rullund have had fnur
major tlot&gt;ds in the lasttwn years." he Lan~svillc.
.
Llldnrig
Langsville
resident
Mary•
said.
"Our main ..:om.: crn is that the· HohS\cllcr told De Wine the lliKlding:
streams arc full nf sediment. " Bycr ~ · w;1s the worst she had ever seen .· :
"The (llundingl pallcm&lt; ltav&lt;&gt;; ·
said. "We haven't had mu~)1 luck with
she said.
changed."
··mitigation (Jlond prevention tn\!aHohstcllef
tnld OeWinc that sed-:
surcs)."
De Wine mel wilh volunteers man ~ . imcnt from aham.lnncd strip mines in:.
ning an cmcrpcncy feedin g ..:cntcliin.~
(Continued on Page 3)
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Legislative report calls effe(;tiveness ~.
of Head Start program into questio~ - ~
COLUMBUS CAP) - Ohio is . . The repol'l noted that one in live . than students who Jid not take ran in :
,
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spending millions nn Head Start. hut Head 'Starl facilities: whk:h "rc the prugrum . ·
licensed
l&gt;y
the
slate.
w'"
considered
"There
arc
indicators
that
Head
: .
nnl geuirlg the results c•pcctcd . says
a legislative report nhtaincd hy The murginal or suhstnndtm..l under slate Start hcncl'its l:= hildrcn entering :.
l&gt;uildi1111 requirements.
kindergancn, and we all agree we ·
Cnl~ml&gt;us Dispalch:
Ohio leads the nminn in Head need In ' track children funhcr to : ·
The Legislative Ol'licc of Education Oversight stall' report says the Start spending. pulling· more · than assess the long-term ticnclits ... said :
Ohio Dcpanmenl of Education is · $300 in ' the program since 19911. Jacqui Sensky. Voinovich 's deputy ·'
:
poorly moniloring the program for More than 54,1)(](13- and 4-year-olds chief of stall'.
panicipate.
' Michael A. Fox, R·Hamilton, lhe • preschoolers.
The
Lcgisluti\IC
Ct)mrniUcc
~m
House
Education chairman who also !_
As a result. state officials do not
Educaiinn
·
Oversight
will
meet
.
·
sits
on
the oversight committee, :
know if Head Stan - which received
Wednesday
to
review
the
drat\
t:eport.
qucstionCd·whcthcr
Ohio is gelling iiN :
$14~ million in state m&lt;1ney in 1996
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There
hu.&lt;
bticn
debate
uvcr
·thc
money
's
worth,
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and 1997 - i~ adequately preparing ·
.. This report shows there is quite · ·•
children for school. the newspaper years of the _long-term henefits of
Head Start 1o have this debate dur, a variation in· pnlgram quality, and : ~­
said in a slt&gt;ry published Sunday,
:·Ohio leads the nation in the pcr- ing the budget process wiH he hene- there hasn't been much ac"&gt;untahil" ;.
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ocnl of elig-ible children served. How- ficial," said com mince Chairman ity," he said.
Fcix said the slat~ need~ In eslab-- :
ever, Ohio ·is not a leader in ensuring . Randall Gardner, R-Bowling Green. .
Gov. George V. Voinovich. an I ish and then truck ~urri~ulum olljce" :
the quality of Head Sl!lfl programs."
1
advocate of Head Stan. is seeking lives.
·.
the ~pun satd.
The r'cpon ~ritici~.cs the edu~lllion ;
Problems cited in the ' 3S·pagc $181.3 million for the program in the
.
UtJComin!
two-year
budget.
department
for pw&gt;r rc«l!d-kccpjng :
report Include: poorly paid stall and
failure ofpan-iime programs to~~ . A spokesman for the governor · .and ignoring information f""!' fadl- ; ·
!he growins need fqr full.-t.imc care said the rcpon, contradicts two state. itics lhilt wuld' help evaluate licad :
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for children of parents gomg trom studies that showed Head Stan chtl- Start program, . . ·
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were
a&lt;
well
or,
hotter
prepared
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lllelfllre to w.o~k.
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SENATOR VISITS- U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Dhio, right, met
witl) flood victims during a brief Meigs County visit Sunday.
.DeWine spoke with flood victim Mary Hobstetter of Langsville, .
left.

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Steff
U.S. Sen. Mike De Wine. R-Ohio.
l&gt;ricily visited Meigs County Sunday
aticronn a.' part of :.1 tour of tlom.Jstricken Ohio counties.
DcWinc was m.:cornp;.micd hy. a
lt&gt;&lt;.:al ~ntnuragc headed hy Meigs
· Cc!unty Emcrgcm:y.Scrviccs Dirc&lt;.·tor
' Rnhel'l Byer. who updated De Wine
mid Federal Emergency Management Agcnc.:y llfliciuls on llc)(xl relief
d'fons in the county.
Among those uucndinu were·
· County C(}mmissinncrs ... 1ilnct
Hnwurd. Frt:d Hnffman and Jeff
Thornton. Sheriff James M. Soulshy.
Rutland 11&gt;wnshir Trustee Joe Bolin ..
Meigs County Soil Conservation Scrvi~c Mike Dul)l and Stale Rep. John
A. Carey Jr .. R-Wcllswn.
The tour ft&gt;&lt;.:uscd primarily on
sites stri~ken hy flash llooding the
evening of March I.
Bycr said abnul 6.5 inc~es of rain
fell on the ·county in less than 24

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OHIO 'Ne&lt;1ther
'l'aesdlty, Marth 11

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AccuWeathe,e forecast for

The Daily Sentinel·.Certification·of Mexico is a farce
111 c-t st., ~. Ohio
81,..._-21M • Fax: 1182-2157

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A Gannett Co. Ne!lspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT .·
MARGARET LEHEW

o.n.r.llllaMger

By Jsck Anderson
snd
Jsn Moller

' ago; barely one'third of all narcotics
were passing through Mexico. If
Mexico is fully cooperating, we'd
hate to see the alternative. ·
. The Mexican narco-cri$is, it turns
out, has its roots in a successful cam-'
paign by the Reagan and Bush
administrations to crack down on the
drug trade in the Caribbean and
Aorida. The crackdown made it
harder for. Colombian traffickers to
ship their illicit goods acro:;s the
CaribbeariandintoMiami.Thedealers needed an alternative.
The Colombians' solution was to
forge links with the marijuana and
nattonalmte~st.
heroin networks that'were ~lready in
The fact IS that 70 percent of all place in Mexico. The Mexicalls were

PubHihlr
CHAIILEN! HOI!FUCH

illepl drvp -- cocaine, heroin, marijuana, methampheramines, etc. -!hat enters the United States comes
through Mexico. Only eight years

Controller

.;·-ll.tl"cal
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B
J.
was
a
po
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L
charme~, politi.cal ·anl"m·al

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By RICHARD BENEDmo
Gannett News Service

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WASHINGTON - Thirty hours of tape recordings made public last
month by the Lyndon Johnson Library offer Americans an intimate and some. times s'artling glimpse·of a complex president whose proper place in history still 1s hotly debated•24 years after his death.
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The tapes of Johnson telephone conversations held in the Oval Office
between Ap~l and June 1964 reveal LBJ in all hi.s hands-on glory. .
There he IS, Texas drawl an~ all, pushjng and prGdding aides to get information and complete tasks, twtsnng arms and making deals for crucial votes
\111th mem~ of Congress, complaining about the media storm over his holding his beagle by the ears, agonizing over what to do about Vietnam and
stroking people with nattery before asking for a favor.
Through it all, one senses that Johnson, no matter how baffled or troubled he sounds, is always in control, always a step ahead of his adversaries
and always manipulating us - even from the grave.
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Keep in mind that, unlike Richatd Nixon, who had a voice-activated
rec()rder that reproduced all conversations in his office, Johnson recorded
just phone calls, and only those calls he wanted a peiroanent recotd of. 1bere·
fore, again unlike Nixon, there is. little in the LBJ recordings that proves
embarrassing, let alone illegal. ·
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If there were, it can be assumed t!Je tapes long ago were destroyed.
So when he hear Johnson expressing frustration over whether to increase
the U.S. military presence in Vietnam, we have to wonder if it was being
d?nc for the benefit 11f the tape and for the chance to put his own spin on
htstory.
" It just makes chills run up my back," Johnson says in a May 27, 1964
conv~rsation with Sen. Richard Russell, D-Ga., as he tells of pressure fro~
his top aides to step up troop commitmen·ts.
"I haven't got the. ne~e to do it and I don 't see any ather way. out," he
says.
•
We all know the escalations were made, and the rest is history.
·
On.apothertape ,wehearJohnsontalkingtoSen.RobertByrd,D-W.Va.,
danglingafederaljudgeshipforaByrdfriendil]retumforavoteinfavor
of his civil rights bill, or at least a vote 'o end the filibuster. Byrd, a staunch ·
scgregationi.st at the time, refuse,s \O budge, . . .
.
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. Here ag;1m, one wonden wheiher Johnson made the call only to put Bytd
nn record for history, since he already knew how Byrd felt about civil rights.
Bytd, still in the Senate 33 :.:ears later, refused to comment on the tape.
· We hear Johnson al,ernately at hit most persuasive and most charming
on a tape made in.April, 1964 after he iniervened to avoid a railroad strike.
· He was at his clever best asking University of Pennsylvania labor expert ·
George Taylor to come to Washington and be one of two federal mediators.
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Here's how it went. .
Johnson: "Can y9u joi~ us. ~ 10 in the morning?'.'
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Taylor: "I uh, uh, my wife is in the hospital. But, well, if you think it's
important. " . · ·· .
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Johnson: "tt:s mighty important ... and if you can get down here, why
rn sure be in your &lt;lebt."
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·: Taylor: ··wen. Mr. President. we' ll do it."
· Now the charming part. J"he next morning at 10, Johnson placed a.call
to Edith Taylor, in the hospital.
.
John~on: "t-In;. Taylor, I just wanted to apologi7.C for borrowing your hushan\1. I knu\!1 how ml)clt be means to you in this kind ofperiod. But I am
~ 0 hpppy that you recognized that the country i~ important and let him come."
· Mrs. Taylor: "Well, you tell. him not to worry one bit. I have some wonderful people here looking after me,''
.
. Johnson : "Well, he' ll be doing that. Hell be ·thinking of you ftrst and
the strike se.~ond and his country always. I hope that we ' II be.ahlc to woik
out something and he can come home to you pretty soon...
· Mrs. Taylor·: ."Oh well, that 's wonderful."'
, Johnson thj:n puts her husband on the.phone.

e:ISI'eitl"7
fti!litMoi-~·Nia

sooa being paijl vast sums 10 trans- Colombians as the No. I drug smulpan Colombia's contraband ~ glinr country befon: the decl!de is
the' porous, 1,933-mile border with Out.
Our associate Dale Van Ana
the United States. Colombians would
be waiting on the other side of the recently spent more than \WO months
border, ready tQ distribute the con- in Mexico, traveling from Chiapas in
traband to waiting customers·around the far south to Chihuahua in the far
the country. .
nOflh, investigaJing Mexican drul"
By the early 1990s, the most cun- running and the high-level corruption
ning Mexican cartel chiefs insisted on tl)at allows it to flourish. None of the
being paid in drugs instead of cash, substantive charges against Mexican .
aiming for a share of the huge prof· IIOVemment officials, leveled in this
its available to thoSe: who could column, .have been denied by any
smuggle their drugs across the bolder. Clinton administration officials.
"Many Mexican trafficking gangs
Yet the administration has just
now are routinely paid by Colombian maintained that Mexico Is :'fully
suppliers up to 40 or 50 percent of cooperating" in 'the war againsi
any cocaine shipment 'in product," drugs. There is a reason that has nothsays an internal working paper of the . ing to do with that d"!g battle, but
Drug Enforcement Administration. rather with economic realities. Under
"They constitute the only criminal . a 1986 IJ1w, the president is required
~rganization lo have wn:sted a porto notify Congress whether countries
tion of the market from Colombian re,eeiving
aid
cooperating
wholesalers ill the Uniied States."
with internati9nal drug control
, So the Mexican cartels have gone efforts. .If they are not certified as
from being mere transporters, to full· being cooperative, that aid may· be cut
•. .fledged partners with the Colom- . 0 ff.
. ·bians .. U.S. intelligence repons preIn practice, allies like Mexico are
dic,t the Mexicans will overtake the routinely certified-- oflen regardless ·
of the level of countemarcotics coop-·
eratton -- and advenaries like Syria
and Iran are decertified. Sen. Ctui~to­
pher Dodd, D-Conn., calls the whole
certification process "a charade, year
. in and year ou~" because of the politIcally motivated detenninations. •
· Two senators, Dianne Feinstein,
D-Calif., and Alfonse D' Amato RN. Y., nlounted ·an effort last ye.;. to
decertify Mexico; but the Clinton
ndministration spumed it. This year,
they'll try again. More than 40 members. of th~ J:louse and Senates, prior
to hts dectsljln, urged the president
not to certify Mexico. Feinstein wrote
in a lett~r to the president, "I believe
the evidence is overwhelming and
can lead to11o decision other than the
decertification of Mexico."
President Clinton dismissed them
' all and instead chose to giye n corrupt
government his good 'housekeeping
seal of approval. But Congress
shouldn't take it lying down. Expect
~llf!ngs at the least, and perhaps leg·
tslauon to end this lig-len~ policy.
JI!ICk Aftclersm od Jan Moller
are writers ·for United Featare
Syndicate, Inc.

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·lilm'had been more honest llliout the made an even ·!itrongef· ~-~Qj''
Not long before t~e Supreme al sta\-erv.
·
of Hustler, it would .have 'First :Amendment · ·
Court made it~ decision in Hustler
1!!:!!!2!!£!!!!!~
Magazine v. Falwell: l was debating
the issues involved :on CNN 's
"Crossfire" with the Rev. Jerry Falwell 's attorney, Nonnan Roy Grutman -- a combative man of ~weeping
. ~elf-conlidenae . He assured me that
the court would rule for his client in
a.unanimous vote.
'
There was a uoanimous 8-0 .vote.
SHEA THIJIG PLYWOOD
(Anthony Kennedy had only just
been sworn in.) But the court decidZ58 12" X 12".
ed against Falwell. Speaking for the
112" X 4' X 8'
. . 40sqft
.
court was Chief Justice William
'Rehnquisl, hardly known as a devot.MZ 24" X 48"
314" X 4' X 8;
ed believer in the First Amendmht.
I had expected ~closer decision,
for here was a claim of intentional
innic\ion of emotional distress based
RoofCement
on an ad in Larry Flynt's Hustler that
FlberM ort&lt;loft$of ofiJ
had Jerry Falwell ~aying the first time
l'lbaNCI
Roof
Cotdlng.IM&amp;
5~
he had ever had sexual intercourse
was with his mother-- while he was
Aluminum F'lbeNd
drunk -- in an outhouse.
Roof Coltllng
and
In the tahlc of contents, the Fat·
well "interview" was listed as fiction •.
QUALITY PANELING
and "personality parody." At the bot-·
tom of the page where the ad itself
. WHth..-.d Cidar ' 9'f
appeared, there was the disclaimer,
Amber Hickory · • • 9"
. 1/2" X 4' X 8'
' .
"Ad parody ·:· noltu be taken seriDllcovery
Pecan
•
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Topping or '10"!
••usly...
Sanderling
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.
Still, Falwell said he had been
Joint
Cfompound 5 ~~-'
Ught
Bln:h
J;&gt;ear.Editor. ,
,.
community is likely the only an~wer. greatly embarrassed and'oiTended. He
Plul 3 Ute
.
5 (Ill
MOmlnt Bouquet
' We ajrec with much of ihe com- There·~ very little that is worth while was. after all, a nationally known
l'nco!le
and
w.r
p
tLJII"'-. ... tiT. 4'. 12'
menjs troni BobH, since IHi has the . ~ny~Vay. other than weather and a preacher of moral stmidards, and
cixperictJCC lind commoo sense to dis- .news channel .
many peqpfe might not have actualAluminum or
~ct current QITairs-- and not so cur- .. Also the expe~se of di~rcgarding
ly seen the small-print disclaimer or
10' White or Brown
R"nt ones as well. Do .keep smiling the law on the use of scat belts. As looked at the table of contents.
Alurrinum Gutler
iod l(eop ~p the ,8o0d work Bob. · •. revolting as it i~ to have Big Daddy . Nonethckss. Rchnquist said. "We
OAK WI WHITE TOP
10' \lllhtte or Brown
: His: Olillook on the :cable rates telling me to wear a ·helmet or a scat conclude that public ligures and pub22" X 11• LIGHT
i)lcreaseilit, raw nerve. 1bese peo- belt or any other "protective:· devise, lie officials may not recover for the
Vinyl Gutler
OAKwiWIAIETOP
. ele have the idea \bCY can raise .the . the $25 line talks pretty loud. Of . tort of inteniional inniction of emO'
2o·
Vllhlle
.02198
ilue tiS jhey please with no repercu~-. ~9urse the big·lie about the cost of · tional distress by reason Qf publica. Many other .e.lllld
Aluminum GU118r ,
slons. 22% increase in two years with msurance coming down wtth the tions stich as the one here at issue -'
~ total ofless than·6% inflation?? No introduction of seat ~Its in cars was- without showin11 in .addition that the .
~ayl!! ~s SO(In as we can g~t a~ qth- n't long in surfacing. At least the publication contains a false statement
~ FIBERGLASS
INTERIOR
. err system the)' can keep thctr manop- insurance rip:off isn't due to a .' of fact which was made ... with rcck.,
INSULATION
Qiy. Won't be tons till the phone tines monopoly like the cable TV is.
less disregard as to whether or noi it
PAINT
14
'fill carry all the inf~. but unt!l ''¥!! :
So hang in there BOB H cause · was true."
·1
:.15"
· 11 appears the satelhte system will , things are guar~~nteed to get much -Slate the " inicrview- . had been
suffice. .
•
worse before they get to the ultimate labeled as fiction and parody, thefl .
1111 u· .
floed . .
.
.
must . ·state of absolute Bliss. But it is on was no false fact.
·
, When atqonopoly ex hils
Ilk~ ii or leavp it~ few options. A mass the way.
· '.'Such a standard· is necessary,"
R1115"
floed
exodus from the manopoly now in .
R.E. Wn•er Rehnquist emphasized, "to give adeR11
ltrlft flced . . .
c»ntrol of~ cable system by each
Racllle quate 'breathiil'j space'· to the free- ·
•
·
·
dQITIS protected by the First Amend111111" .llllft fiCIICIIIMI
~
ment" It was an important decision.
'.
;
strengthening parody and c&amp;ricature
- .... llllft faold
Qe. Editor,
.
..
Whete do we draw tile tine? After. as fot'rns (!f free expression.
; 1Jlis is in ~'P?"se to .all the ~~~~~ · the bam door is open and the horse
I looked forward to the celebration
of compliance wtth Je~ 'flK!mton s ia aorie? Thi: ·supreme Court of this of the Fim Amepdtnent in Milos For~t for pray..- pnor .to. com~ country said to leave this issue alone. man's movie, "The'People vs. Larry
nl0ncin1 the ·county .commtsstonen If we porsue i~ who knows whll Pan· Aynt '' And.I enjoyed it, having susi
~np.' If Mr. Thonlton WIIIIS.to . dora's box holds? Who will pay the . peilded my memory of what Larry
••
Jiave 1
10 the Christla!t God, lepl expcnies if the ~ounty is forCed Ayn! had persistent!~ cho~n to felllien.ito mUll be awn that I have· 10 .defend tbis positiqn bef• tbe lUre 1n Hustler. Glona Stemem .was.
•
Jf;wilh IIIII ,..llilim l'tiendl who live cOUIU? W'Jtb' all the et:ODOtnic prob- . the fint to spur me 10 recall ihat .. as
•
it ..._. ~· w tlta)o lillY
1enu Melp Cotinty ,_, wit)' 818 , lite put i.t in ~ ~~ Y&lt;ri Tt~s ;·
J
• llitdiefc allo lie • prayer 10 we dweUina .on •uch an i ..... ·
II!OV~ OI!Utted ~ ntapZJne s
Yeh•lh ... 01110 A111Jt blfQIII die dciipcd Ollly'IO divide the cOot,? ._,.. OJ -.en beJnt bealett, lor·
nl• 11111. 100, And, I heanl thl!l .... .
t·
Uta Cdrn a, timid UN! raped, W9f11en ,ubjocttd 10
..,. . , .tit I ill Meip ~- ' '
'
•
., . clejndatiO!I from beltillity 10 R!U:.. '

'1~

•Z&amp;•

'1P

-~

.Letters to the editor

'&amp;•

P

Pr/Cft increase hits raw nerve

•JZ-.

•u•

'lP

I

'ZAH
u--.

C

~

••Mtt
......

knlft-.db.tt '14
knlft
knlft
btltl'lP

•z1•

we

.r

Where do we draw'the /Ins?

.

zs•

.

........

prayer

wen

!he

I

\
"'

"

•

Charles

•

t

CMrJe. Goode, 79, 753 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, died Satwday March 8
1997 at his residence.
'
'
Born June II , 1917 in Gallipolis, son of the late William and Viney Coleman Goode Sr., he was a retired auto dctaiter for the former Bob Rees Pontiac, Norris-Northup Dodge and Turnpike Ford dealerships.
He was a 60-year member of the Paint Creek Baptist Church.
He was also preceded in death by a sister, MIIIJIICrile Goode; and two
. brothers, Jerry G()ode and William Goode.
· Surviving arc live cousins, Judy Payne of Gallipolis, Ida Ragland and Bet,
ty Reed, both of Dayton, Justine Butler of Columbus, and Phyllis Miller of
Los Angeles, Calif.
·
. Services will be noo~ Thursday in the Paint Creek Baptist Church, with
the Rev. Dennis Hurt officiating. Burial wtll be in the Pine Street Cemetery.
Fn"ends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel from 6:30-9 p.m. Wednesday.
'J'he body will be taken to the church one hour prior to the service.
.

IND.

• IColumbus 146• I
•.

Roy Newell Jr.

W. VA.

Roy Newell Jr.; 68, of Middleport, died Sunday, March 9, 1997 at Holz:
er Medical Center, Gallipolis.
.
Born on Sept 30, 1928 in Mason, W.Va., he was the son of Roy Newell
of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va., and the late Freda RaybUill Newell. He was seifemployed as a track driver. He attended the Rutland Freewill Baptist Church.
B~si'des his father he. is survived by his wife, Charlotte Priddy Newell;
twq sons and daughters-m-taw, Nelson and Treoda Newell of Letart, W.Va.,
ics
and Michael and Deborah Bales or Wellston; two sons, David Newell ·of
Vlo ~ted Pross Gr&amp;plllcSNo/
Columbus, and Timothy Newell of Circleville; four daughters, .Delores
Thomas of Bidwell. Connie Sue Newell and Bonnie Lou Isaac of Gallipolis; and Rose Mane Prosser of Davtsboro, Ga.; two brothers and sisters-inlaw, Robert W. and Lou Newell of St. Petersburg, Aa., and Donald D. and
Linda Newell of Bidwell; and two sisters and brothers-in-law, Betty Jane and
Frank Miller, and Marie E. and Alfred Plants Jr. all of Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
By The Associated Prell
tonight
be at 6:33p.m. and sun- nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; and several nieces and
A forecast of fair skies over Ohio rise Tue~y at 6:49a.m.
nephews.
·
.
for the .next three days should be
Weather forecast:
In addition to his mot~er, he was preceded in death by a brother, Nelson
good news for waterlogged southern
Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows in . Roy Newell; and a son, Ricky Newell.
· ·
.
·
. ';. !IJe UJ!pel' 3Qs. Southwest winds 5 to · .Services will be !_p.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, MiddleOhio: •·
. . After a; seasonably cool day on .Js fi!P!J;;
·
port, wdh the Rev.. Paul lay lor o~ciating. Burial will be in the Suncrest
. Tqe~y. te~peratures shouid )\'ann
, · Tue5!lay... Partly cloudy...Cooland •Mell)onal Park, Pomt PleiiSft!ll. F.nends may call at the funenil home from
to IICaf 60 on Wednesday and Thurs- bree~yiJlighs in the tower 50s.
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesda~. . ·
. ·
.
.

Dry weather is forecast
for region next a.''days
will

~~.the

National Weather Service

Northern Ohio could get some
light rain or snow tonight, but it will
end on Tuesday, forecasters said.
Lows tonight will be in the 30s. .
Highs on Tuesday will be in·the 40s.
Tile record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
. 'station was 77 degrees in 1973 while
the record tow was 2 in 1984. Sunset
.

30.Tue~ay night...Ciear. Lows 25 to

.

Robert .E. Walton

Extendecl'fo....,ast:

•

lyROBWEU.S
APTaxWrlar

IRS spokesman Frank Keith said ·
he couldn' t n:spond to the allegation
WASHINGTON - The Internal because the tax code forbids disclos:
Revenue Service's former hisiOrian ing information about any taxpayer's
says the agency mishandles. even return - even the president's. Pres~
destroys. important historical records. idents since Gerald Ford have vol•
Law violations ·she alleges include untaiily made public portions of theii
the vandalizing of presidential tax lax. returns.
•'
.
returns . by IRS employees seeking
. Keith denied charges the age nc~
souvenirs.
vtolates the Federai'Records Act in its
. A new book by Shelley L. Davis, handling of old IRS files and tax;
who resigned in 1995 after seven payer returns.
.
•
years as IRS historian, hits the stands
"The notion the IRS is engaged i'
as the iax-collecting agency faces, in wholesale destruction of records .is
the words of Commissioner Margaret not correct,' ' Keith said.
Milner Richardson, "unprecedented
Davis' allegations formed tht
attacks on the tax system."
basis for a federal lawsuil filed laSt
More came Sunday. Rep. Billy 1month by two grou~s of historiani
·Tauzin, R-La., a longtime critic of the 'and a newsletter pubhsher, seek1ng I!'
.agency, described !he IRS as " ihe force the IRS to obey the Feder:t
most un-American agency we have in Records Act in handling and storinJ .
the country, where you walk in guilty crifll:inal investigation fi.les.
~
and you stay guilty unless you prove
Keith&lt; said the criminal files are
you.' re innocent."
being preserved until IRS and t~
Appearing on "Fox News Sun- National Archives work.out an agreeday," Tauzin recommended the rnenl on how historians can review
agency '.s dissolution and a "great tea lhe doc uments wilhout running afoul
party" of Americans to toss oui the or privacy Jaws.
.
incoine)aX in favor qf a national sales .
While Davis' boo k provides new
,tax.
details about • Ihe long-running
In a passage of Davis' book records di spute, it also provides a
"Unbridled Power: Inside the Secret breezy and at times gossipy read of
Culture of the ·IRS," she describes IRS' inner workings. To some, it's lit. reviewing tax returns of presidents tie more than a chunk of red meat
dating back to Woodrow Wilson, who tossed to IRS haters.
·
,"The IRS has a lot 'of probiems,
·Was in office when the income tax
was imposed.
.
but Shelley Davis and that book ,..
. Davis. writes that IRS privacy She's more into character assassinajlaws prevent herfrom detailing con- tion than policy analysis," said
:tents of the· tax returns. But, she Robert Tobias, president of the
· wrote, "I can note, to my dismay, that National Treasury Employees Union,
the signature b.llx*s on nearly all the which represents IRS workers.
returns had been tom off- where
"That book is regurgitaled conthe president had set down his auto· gressional hearings and GAO
graph."
· reports," Tobias said. The General
' D.avis said she brought this van- · Accounting Office ·is the invesligative
i dalism to the attention of an IRS sec- arm'of Congress.
.
retary, who "mumbled somethin~
The agency is struggling with a
·about :souvenir hunting' by fonncr computer modcrnizalion program
members of the commissioner 's that, by its own admi ssion, has misoffice ."
used or wasted $400 million

. '
Robert Earl Walton, fiJ. of Wellston, died Saturday, March 8, 1997 at the
in the upper .50s.
Adena Regional Medical Center, Chillicothe.
. Thut'sday ... Mostly clear. Lows in
He was born at Puritan in Vinton County on Aug. 19, 1927, son of the
the upper 30s and highs in the mid late Earl and Be$Sie Mae Tolbert Walton. He was a member oftht First Pres60s. •
. byterian Church, a U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, a life member and
Friday... Mostly cloudy with a past post commander of American Legion Post 371, Wellston, past comchance of rain. Lows in the lower 40s marider of American Legion District 8 of Ohio, and past state assistant and .
and highs in the upper 60s.
sergeant-at-arms of the American Legion of Ohio.
.
·
He was a member of the Black Diamond Lodge 538 .F &amp; AM, a member
Banquet slated .
e'
·$~,·
ofVei,eransofForeignWarsPostg402,Jackson,andpastcommanderofPost Tnstees to meet
rl• .
r
lq ·
~2. a memberofDisabledAmerican Veterans Post45ofJackson, the LoySalem Township Trustees, special
The winter sporls banquet of
meeting, March 17, 9 am. to open Southern High School will be held
o·~~
.
"eiJ
.~·.
at. Order of Moose 1626 of Chillicothe, Fraternal Order of Eagles 2279 of
I
~
McAnhur, and a graduate of Wellston High School Class of 1945.
. sealed bids for fence building, at the Sunday, l p.m. at the schooL Those
He was a retired owner-operator of Walton Coal Co.
Salem Fire House near Salem Cente.r. ·attending arc to take 1wo covered
He is survived by his wife, Anne Snider Walton; a daughter and son-indishes. Decorating will take place at
· By STACY MORFORD
iown, Ill., where the Ohio has risen
law.
Rebecca
and
Chris
McCray
of
Petoskey,
Mich.;
a
brother
and
sister-in9 p.~ . Saturday.
.
Boil
order
off
· Associated Press Writer
nearly 2 feet and is expected to crest
law,
Donald
and
Peggy.Walton
of
Wellston
;
a
sister-in-law,
Jane
Walton
of
The.
Tuppers
Plains-Chester
Water
BIRDSVjLLE, Ky. - - Twelve- Thursday.
•
.
District announced this morning that Club to meet
year-old Phillip Sharp was on his
Downriver, Smithland is sur- Pomeroy;. four grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by two brothers, Wayne and Kennit Wal- the boil order place on March 3 in
The Catholic Women's Club will
front lawn casting a fishing line into rounded by water that is waist-tligh ton.
·
·
·
Bedford and Scipio townships has meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Sacred
th.e..exl\anding,.Qhio River when ,the ~nd rising, with a crest.expctcted.friHeart Church. Spouse night will be
Services will be II a.m. Thesday in the Jenkins Funeral Chapel, Well- been lifted for several roads. .
Coast Guard came t() take him to day. ~hoolchildren helped fill sand- ston, with the Rev. Steven .C~nn officiating. Burial will follow in the Ridgeobserved. A barbershop quanct will
They
·
arc
Rocksprings
Road
f!ighl;~.ground . _,,••• " ·
• · bags qptil midnight Saturday to boost wood Cemetery, with military 'services by the American Legion Post 371.
around the Ohio Valley Chri~.tian · entertain.
, ••!·,wasn't seared, I was having the heiJ,hrofthe town's nood wall to Friends may call at the funeral home from2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.
Assembly, State Route 681 east of
fun," Phillip said. "I was canoeing- -~ feet:·,
U.S. 33 to the Columbia Gas com- Potluck plann&lt;d
llfOu~d. and fishing, in my frO~ I yard.
"The' wholf town is ·relying on
Burlingham Modem Woodmen
pressor station; all of SR 681 west of
J?•dn t,oatch an~!hmg , but I was get- that wall," said George Green, a town
will
have a potluck dinner and meet33; from Darwin on 33 to Burson
tmg .some biles.
councilman.
ing
at
the hall Saturday, 6:30 p.m.
. ·fruit Farm; all of Burlingham, Jones
· Wi!h floOdwaters IJ)Iickly surIn t(iis tiny hamlet, a few miles
Road, Swindell Road. Burlingham Speaker on family life will' be Thd
roundt~l the hot:nes and ·tratlers that
upriver from Smithland. the river was
.Road:
Kingsbury Road, Peach Fork &lt;Cuckler..
dot. rural western Kentucky•. many 12 feet above nood stage and expectCOLUMBUS (Ail) - Indiana' . ducers Livestock Association aue·
;Road,
Gold
Ridge Road, White Oak
restden~&lt; ·are stanmg only now to ed to rise another foOl before crest- Ohio direct hog prices at selected tlons at Hillsboro, Eaton, Farmer·Road,
Devenny
Road, Smith Road, Office to close
~how ~e~pe!'t for th~ raging wate~s. ing Thursday. Already, residents have · buying. points Monday as provided stown, Lancaster, Wapakoileta,
The Boatd of Elcclion~ . will b.c
. by the· U.S. Depanment of Agricul- Mount Vernon, Bucyrus, Crestiln, Holley Road, Vance Road, Landakcr
that devast.~ed upnv.er towns thts abandoned 25 of the 40 homes. ·
Road,
Pageville
Road,
SR
684,
and.
closed
Friday so that employees may
Caldwell and Gallipolis:
past ~eck;
"lt's.really starting to scare some ture Market News:
all
of
Pag!'ville.
attend
a
di,;tricl meeting in Athens.
Hogs: steady to 3.00 lower.
Pht!hp s paren_ts called.the Coa~t people .now, •• said Coast Guard Chief
Barrows and gilts: mostly steady
Butcher hogs: 34.50-52.35 .
Guard to taJ{e thetr son to an uncle s Warrant .officer . Keith fclcyn , ~Vho to weak; demand· and movement
hou.se, even though tbey stayed spent Sunday checking fami lie~ ·who moderate.. ·
'Cattle: 1.00lowerto2.00higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 60.00beh~"l! ; 9t~rn. who ,staye~ also ~ent chose to-stay in theirinundated comU.S. 1-2, 230-26j) lbs. country
(Continued from Page 1)
is old strip mines thai have not been
thcifc~i!'trcn anil elderly relatives to munili.CII•
points 46.00-47.50; plants 47.00- n.OO; select 56.00-65.50.
Slaughter heifers: ~boice 60.00- western Meigs County'havc filled up reclaimed.
safety... . ·'
.
The Coast Guard has urged · 48.50. few 46.75.
the creeks.
Duhl showed DeWine a portion of
The SIXth-grader had Spent the dozens or families living along the
U.S . . 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.00- 69.75; select 5&amp;.00-65 .00.
pasl wq:,k ,watchmg nearby fann · Ohio and its tributarie~ to leave their 46.00; 210-230 lbs. 36.00-41 .QO. .
.Cows: steady 10 2.00 higher; all
"It takes less rain to cause a Swick Road ncar Rutland thai had
cows 49.00 and down.
·
fte. .Ids l!f?W ·into .lakes and the river homes ~~r emergency shelters on
Sows: near steady.
Bulls : steady 10 2.00 higher; all Oood," she said. "The small town of been washed out.
~p11l a·'!lilo ~e~ 1~s banks. The water higher g und. but legally there 'is
U.S . 1-3 300-450 lbs. 39.00· bulls 2.00 and down.
Langsville was just devastated."
"This is typical of the damage we
5
· m frotfl;ofPhtUtp .s tratler was.5 feet nothing l ey can do to make them 43.00; 45():.500 lbs. 42.00-45,00;·
Sheep and lambs: 11 .00 lower to
Hobstctter said relief workers are encountering;· he said. "Roads
deep by the time he w.rs evacuilicd. ' leave. ·
500-650 lbs. 45.00-49.00.
5.00 higber; choice wools 95.00- have been a great help to residents of are undercut by the streams. All the
Tho.ugh noody;aters were st~rting
"People don't realize what thcrivBoarst 37.00-38.50 .
117.00; choice clips 92_00 _112.00; the flooded areas.
·stuff up on the hills ts coming dow~
to recede. upnve~, the Aood ~f
1s cr can do'iwhcn it jumps out of its
Estimated receipts: 33,()00.
feeder lambs 118.00 and down; aged .
"The FEMA people have been and clogging up the slrcams."
~
~ar from over, :-"1th water sullns1ng bank~:· s''\id Coast Guard Lt. Thomas
Hog market trend for Monday:
good ... the Red Cross people have
•·
sheep 48.00 and down.
been terri lie," she said, adding that
. m downstream towns. The Ohto was Tarrants. '' It'~ going to take the path steady.
e~pectcd to crest Tuesday m Evans- of least rcsistanc-.: and if you 're in the
Summary of last week's Prothe local volunteers and firelighters
were also extremely helpfuL
vtlle, lnd,, Wedn~sday. m Mount Ver- way, God help you, because it isn' t
DeWine said he started touring the
non, Ind., and J:nday m.Paducah.
going to sjop fot anything .'"
Volunteers and e!"ergcncy crews
On Sunday. the body of a 27-yearlloodcd countie~ Friday. beginning in
were busy sandbaggmg to plug holes old Falmouth man was found in a
Cincinnati.
MIDDLEPORT
Units
of
the
Meigs
County
EmerHe said he is seeking long-term
. in the.maln leve~·: n,,Otd Shaw~ec- field, bewroi_ng .Kentucky's 19th
4:02 p.m. Sunday, volu~teer lire solutions to the flooding problem~.
Medical
Service
answered
16
gency
.:... _,.. .. · .. _ , ,,..... .......
flood VICUI). .,
department and squad to High Street, .
More than a week has passed calls for assistance · Saturday and . automobile lire, Carrie Williams ~olution~ that can be enacted once the
Units responding included:
cleanup is over.
The
Sentinel t ~ince then ,oding began with • !vio- Sunday.
owner.
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
One thing De Wine is examining is
weather
system
l,
e
nt
(UJI'S 213-!NII)
RUTLAND ·
3:0ll.m.
Saturday,
Morning'
Star
whether
mitigation, attempting to
.•'·
"
12:11 a.m. Sunday, Nicholson minimize future damage, is feasible.
Road.
Racine,
Ruth
Smith,
Holzer
Publlohed every
M-y -all
Hill, Billy Laudermilt, treated at the
Aidoy, Ill C... ~. Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe
Medical Center;
"There has to be a .lot of assessOhio Volley ...,....., e o - - Co., ·
· I0:31 a.m. Saturday, Eats Main scene;
ment done ... to · minimize future
........,. Olio 4!79...... m:zt 56. Secotld 1
.... ~·jlold II l'om&lt;ooy, Ohio.
Am Ete 'Power ...................40 718 Strecl. Pomeroy, Joe Sook, St· · 6:37 a.m. Sunday, Price Hollow damage,'' he said. "We hove to look
. ...
Road, Richard Swanson, Pleasant ·at the options that have been proJoseph's Hospital;
~0 ................ ... ............. .. ..73 318
U
rz n. A,.m.., ~ 1ad lhe OWu
AmrTach .~ ..........................61 718
, _ _ Aloocloilon. . . .
6:09 p.m. Saturday, Wetzgall Valley HospitaL. .
posed."
·
Ashllnd 011 .......................40 511
SYRACUSE
Street, Pomeroy, Nellie Morris. Vet. "It is important to me to see things
I'OITMASTBRtSeod- ......,•.., iO '
AT&amp;T ...... ~: .........................36 311 ' emns Memorial Hospital ;
9:15 p.m. Satutday, volunteer lire . first-hand and talk to people," he
Tile Dilly SOnlloel, Ill C.... St, ........, • .
Bank Of't6!.t,..........................48 112
.Ohlo~69.
Bob Eyana ................. :............1"4 - -7;59 p.m. Saturda)',. Mill Street, dep111ment and squad to Salser Road.· added.
Middlepon. freda Bing; VMH;
brush lire.
The problem, accotding to Duhl,
Borg..Wamer .....................40 1/1
8UIIIlCIIIPI'ION RA1118 ,
· 8:.42 p.m. Saturday, Darst Nursing
'Champion .........................18 511
.,~
Ooe Week.
.....:......:...... :......... .... ., ............ f.UIO
Charming Shopa ................ 5 118 · Home , Pomeroy, Charles King,
Ooo Moodt.....:....... "......".............- ....... $l111
c.
:.J.:Icllng
. ..................... .» 1/4
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital ;
()le Yw... ~.. .;..................................:...$10..00
Veterans Memorial
F
MI!9Uf ... , ..........., .25 1/4.
••
6:14 a.m. Sunday, Waters Edge
' •" ·I
Gannett
..
,
......................
.
...........
80
admissionsEdith
Reed,
Friday
BtNGLiit'OI"'' PRICE
.·
Apartments, Syracuse, Paul Baker,
''
Goodye~~r ................................13
Qoily ...................:......................... 3$ Cellll
24 PakCube.
Middleport.
Eekrieh
VMH.
Syracuse
squad
assisted;
Km~r.t .................................12 ·1/2
Friday discharges - none.
It :30 a.m . Sunday, State Street,
Mountain Dew
Landi End.........................28 111
- - ... .... poy dloCIIIierlliiJI
Skinless
Turkey
Saturday
admissions
'Bomlie
.....lin ............... to Tile Dlil)' - " " '
Ltmltt&lt;t
....
.
................................
11
Pomeroy, Ausiin Phillips. HMC;
oo a-. t11 or 12 . - looiL Qodlt Will bo
ova ....:......~.......................37 1~
I :49 p.t:n. Sunday, Lincoln Drive, ·walker, Racine .
.
One Velley.... ,....................39 1/4
Saturday discharges - none.
Pomeroy, Atislria Russell, treated at ·
,~ ..........,....... ,.................28
No •l&gt;!&lt;riplioll t;y".I'IOII .,...,..,. lo 1'
·
Sunday admissions - none .
·~ ,'·
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the ~ene; •
Prem Flnl ~.~ ...... ~.~ ... \....~ .............15
1 Sunday discharges- none.
.
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• , , . 'r.' .
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3: I) p.m. Sunday, Railroad Street,
Rockwell ...........................81 711
With In store coupon
, ttl' ~dl;rtpiiD ....... -~
Haber Medical Center
,
Middleport,
Jeane till Miller,.HMC;
IID-llhtll ...:......................179 1/4
.I.. ~ lit' I;Nioa Period. S t ipdoa . '
I&gt;Qcbar,es ·Mardi 7 - Mrs .
......,..,... ..,..1 ·-.,..._....... i 8hcNMy'•··'······""''"' ................ .
7;45 ·p.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Check out our HIHn Sttlld, I
2
Hot
D088
Star Btlnk·..........................44 112
.......oflil ! ill~ I!"'*.
i&gt;
Nursing Center, Middleport, Teresa · Robert Allbright and dllughter, Mrs .
ChlcMn s.tad
I'
Wenciv••
............................
21 1/i
David 'McCain and · son, Worthy
'I
Byer,,VMH;
.
loWI.IiJIICRirnONS
'
wortttlngtef'............................ 20
9:25 p.m. Sunday, Rocksprings Siders.
t 3 -..
. ........ p7.311
Dllcllllr,es March 8 - Mr$.
Rehabilitation Cenlel', Pomeroy, June
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:16 ~......,....................... ,..._ ...... S5,l.ID
Stock r9~rte
re the 10:
Donald
Parcell and daughter.
.
n-..~~
SIM.t&amp;S
Griffin, VMH;
s.m. quot• ·
by Ad
St.
Rt.
7
II
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Point.
· 982·7331
• &gt;'
Ollildo Ntlll (loiJolr
•
Dllcllu1el Marcil 9 - Terry
of
~lllpolls.
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II
:47
p.m.
Sunday,
Powell
Street,
OPIN MQH. SATURDAYIAM.·12 MIDNIGHT .
'· '' '
u,. ~ , _.................."............m.l$ 1
MiddleJ?Ort• . Emmett . Liahtfoot, Hamilton .
:16 --·~ ...................._ ........$16.111, •
8UNDAY I AM •12 MltiDfQH1:
:t:.U;..'.. .w{;;••,(l,:. ...... ::-.........., :
(I'll\ II 4tel with penalllloD)
HMC.
.' ..
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Wed~esday.. .Mostly clear. Highs

Meigs announcements

.r=•oodl"ng merne
'::# ,.' ncy
$"""m
tucky
I'
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n

'·'"n

Today's livestock report

DeW•"ne seekl"ng answers ·.'

??

EMS un'its record 16 calls

D8ily

I

"'"*-n.

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Stocks .·

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Hospital news

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-·
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....

Thlt Weeki Deli Special

•4.19·lbs.

.,,

'"

99¢

t.~.~~
. . .... . ..... . . . . ,. ..:.

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-·-·-

Til'S ·U UTIOI &amp; DRIVE TIIU

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Ex-historian alleges
IR.S destroying data

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

•

WASHINGTON -- President Bill
Clinton lied 10 Congress on Feb. 28
-- and bod! he and Congress know it.
He told Congress on thltl day tliat he
had signed off on a document certify ing that Mexico was "fully cooperating" with the United States in·the
battle against dru.s.
Som.e lawmakers, including a few
in the.president's party, are outraged.
But most of official Washington is
willing to let it pass as a white lie ·akin to complimenting the appear: ance of your homely a.unt. Mexico
may not be " fully cooperating," the
apologists admit, but this li.ttle lie is
necessary lest the United States
. offend poor Mexico.
.
Members of the House finally
·Showed some courage late last week,
':"hen the House International Rela. tions Committee voted 27-5 to decertify Mexico, ;which would override
theprestdentsdeciSiontfpassedby
the whole Congress. But the measure
also left Clinton the .option of waiving.~con?mic sanctions if'it's in the

The Deily Sentinel• , . 3

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Pomeroy •llkldlaport, Ohio

lllli'ldey, i1111Nh10, 1111

Sports

Tough non-league slate helps Texas make NCAA tournament
•

Division I men's eonferenet~

In

8y DOUG TVCKER

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Kansas, UK and Nort Carolina stan~ among champions
I

By The Associated Prns
The next goal is wmmng the
Top-ranked Kansas closed the school's third national title, and
inaugural Big 12 tournament .with Kansas is seeded No. I in the South·
impressive perfomiances at both cast Region in the NCAA tournaends of the Ooor.
ment. The other top seeds are MinThe Jay hawks (32-1) beat the nesota in the Midwest, Nonh ·caronly team to beat tbem this seascin olina in the East and defending
with an 87-60 victory over Missouri champion Kentucky in the West.
Kansas' impressive offensive perin the first-year league's title game
fonnance
against Missouri came One
Sunday.
,
day
after
holding
No. 18 Iowa State
:·We' ve accomplished one of our ,
goals by winning this tournament.'' ' to.48 points in the semifinals.
"Yesterday, f was .talking about
sophomore forward Paul Pien:e said
after matching his career-highs with the defense, but that LO. or I 2-~
'30 points and II rebound,;, "Now minute stretch at the end of the first
we're ready to accomplish,the next half was about the best offense
we've ever played," Kansas coach
goal. We· re just excited.''

Roy WiUiams said!J 'It wu an ·up~nd-down came; flU when ,we get
1nto an up-and-down game,· we're
preuy dog~ne goOd'."
·
In other conference at'wnpionship
IIIJ)Ies Sundly, No. 4 North Carolitc
na beat North Carolina State 64-s.f'
in the ACC, ~o. S Kefltucky beat No.
17 Georgia 95-68 in the SEC and
Pacific beat Nevada 63-55 in the Big
West.
·
Raef Lafrentz scored 16 points
for the Jayhawks, while Jacque
Vaughn had 13 and a season-high 12
assists.
Kansas led S 1-26 at halftime and
was up ·72-41. following Ryan·

nament championship in six years
and 20th overall. Ray Harrison had
13 points to lead the Bulldogs (248), who trailed 44-29 at halftime and
by at least 20 points for the final IS
mfmite·s.
Bla West
Padfk 63, Nevada ss .
At Reno, Nev., Tim Bowman
scored 10ofhis 25 points in the final
2:07 as the Tigers (24-S) earned their
first NCAA toumame.nt berth in 18
years. Faron
had 17 llOints to ·
lead the Wolf Pac (20-9).
.
Satu
's pmes
·
' Western A etic Conference
(see-FINALs on PagoS) ·

Roberuon's tht=·pointer IJlidway
At Greensboro, N.C., the Tar
through the second half.
.
Heels (24-6) won their 14th ACC
Deiik Grimm and J111011 .'Sulher- title, lllh under coach Dean Smith,
I~ each scored HI points for Mis- who gt'lt his ~75th caRer victory, one
souri (16-17), which beat Kansas 96- short o( careir leader Adolph Rupp.
94 in double overtime at home on Shammond Williams scored · 23
FebA.
pointsasNonhGarolinawonits 12th
."We . some injuries. 'We bad . straight. The Wolfpack (16·14) was
some illnesses," Missouri coach , the first No: 8 seed to a,dvance to an
Nonn &lt;Stewart said of ·the ~isap- · ACC tournament final .
pointing season. ''We had a few
~tbeutem ~oale~
shots that didn't fall . The other
· No. S Kentucky·
teams had some shots that fell."
Jllo.'/17 ~Ia 68
At Nashville, Tenn., Anthony
Sunday's11ames
Atiantk: Coal&amp; Coafereuce
Epps scored a career-high 22 points
No. 4 North Carolina 64
.and Ron Mercer had 20 as the Wild·
• N. Carolina St. 54
ca_ts (30-4) WO!I; ,~ir fifth SEC tour-

i

J·a rrett wins Primest_. SOO ands lead~ Wlnston:·.·c up·standings
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By PAUl. NEWIU!ARY

winller in"the previous two r~es, savorlit~ his third straight top-fiv• l weuld~~ to victory lane ..H~'s beaD..
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - Dale having led the most laps at bOth finish~ ··-'If you just keep put)ing ' my biggeslslipporter, and it's great'
Jarrett has dominated Winston Cup Richmond Md Rockingham before youn;elf Ill position, you know thai to have a dad and a friend woo
racing all sea&lt;on. Now ))e has a vic- coming up shon at the finish both ..(~ vict"'l'~f?ing to happen." .
knows enough about !he sport that he
tory to show for it.
times.
·
' ' Jarretc·.-.tlo heart .the advice of can help you. :·
.
Nothing could stop Jar:eu- not
Jarrett's Forll
led his ratller,' t~r Winston Cup rae. , earned S 137,MO and
a broken ignition, not a huny ofcau- 253 of
er Ned Jarl-ett.
·
·
to the. front of the Winston
tion flags, not a speL111cular crash
this time, he 111ade
"Dad just
tbllina me to keep
that halted the iace for~~- -.,. ·
was accompan~
we W.W, doing,"lhe
track.
- as he · ran away from tl!lT.eld
flag.
· · '
~arreu reeallod . ."We
great, thinpijust
Sundat at the Pl'imestar soo:;lib, first
triumph of the sea$on. .
·
We .ju.t
Jarrett easily ~&lt;itild ha~ been

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up lakt in the 42-car liekl.. .
switch to a backup ignition system,
"We're losing a lot of paiius that t~was never il do.ubl thai ~is No.
we're going to have to fight hard to 88' Ford Thunderbird wa.&lt; strongest
make back up." said donlon, a. two- car on -the track. After the ignition
time winner this)ill\ISOn\vlio dropped trouble,· Etni~ ltvoin took over the ·
to _founh in the sc.nnding~ •with 562 lead, but Jarrcit quickly gut hack u!'
pomts- 72 behind Jarrett: "T!lose to speed aod took back the top posithins¥ happens. I guess it was just · tion from his Robert Yates Racmg
our thfle."
·..
teurilmiltc five laps Iuter.
even Gordon wollld
"It touk me oi second to romenr
10 IIliich Jarrett
ber where the switches arc," Jarrett

and the Tar Heels meet Fairfield (II• KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)-It's 18) in WinlitOti·Salelfl, N.C.
not so much whether you win or
KenttlCky, the defenc!in&amp; NCAA
l01e, but whom you played in the champion. Willi made No. I seed In
&amp;arne.
the West Jtetjonal and will open on
Tcxu ca.ch 'Ibm Penders bas Thunlday ap).. t Monllllll.
scheduled hard'to-beat non-confer·
A£ r.- u tra~~eling so far, Ril:k
ence foes like Rhode Island and
Pitino 1111ys it:s no big deal.
Loui1ville that tend tQ depress the
··All you see isa basketball ~ourt
won· los~ record, and the Longhorns and a hotel," the Kentucky coach
got the lpst laugh Sunday, making said.
the 64,teal)l NCAA f~eld Sunday
One of tht most. intriguing and
with 8' I~-II mark, worst among,l/le hilitoric 'mat~ht•ps of this or any oth·
at-large teams. .
er toumamept could come Saturday
· A hosl of bigger winners tasted in Winston;.salem when North Car·
rejccJion.Afso-rans ineluded South· olina's ~ Smith tries to pass
west Missouri !24-8), New Orleans Adolph R"pp as the game's all-time
(2Z,6l, Bpwlina Green (22·9), and a winningest 9oach.
couple of members of the mo.sl dis·
If eighi·,SOeded,lndiana has gotten
appoin1ed conference on the i.411e· . past its fi!lt-round opponent Col·
giate land~- Syracuse (19-12) orado. then leading the opposition
and West Virginia ( 19-9) of the Big would be, n~ne other than the thirdEast. .
.
biggest wi~r among ~~Ctlve college
"~~as ~id exll!.'tiY what. we ask. coaches, Ji~b Knight. 1: ·
schools to do," selection commillee .
Just being the _team tbat Smith
chairman Terry Holland said. "They . beats to lie Rupp's. m.-11 of876.wins
played_a tough schedule. TexJS had . is enougii.Jo impress Paul Cannier,
six wins over teams in the top ·SO. We ·
"I coulltbe a:·pan ofhistoryt the
fell that was sufficient to get them in Fairfield coach said.
the field.' :
An ·unus.ually small. number of
Said.. Penders. "Writers some· upsets .in , ~mifcrenee llottr)'UimCnts
times g~lfooled:,by th!l.record.thina . o~er, the w~kend made the selection
and A$li&lt;X&lt;i~te&lt;l P"t:eSs pofli'IIQd all , .• cQillmiL~'Iijob m!l!.'h ,easier, Hok
this and,they compare it to football. land said, ~pd led to the power con(ln basketball,).you're rewarded (or . ferences gobbling up every one of
your schedule." , .
•
the at-llirge bids.
ToP' run )led Kan»as (3l-1 ), NoJih
"The upsets thai did occur tendCarolina (24-6) and Kent~cky (30-4) ed to occur early and allowed us to
were given No. I se!l«)s 'along with at least &amp;~an preparing," Holland
Mi~ne.Ota (27-~). which a year ·ago
sai(l. "It Jlllso )!ave us a few more
couldn't even g~l a bid despite hav- spots topl~y~ith in terms of the at·
ing Ill wins.
large bids,''
·.
~ ' ""1F~:~sood f~li~g•.~a11se . · ,, :The-~·, mittec d~d gc~ ofT to ~
~st ~~!~!~eye~· I! wps ~n;e~p- !'?"gh ;- .~unday. L1g~tmng·st~k
y:sf'O! ~~~ ·~lly,').•coach ·c;lo~ . , lllf,i)Oiel~. fore dawn, ~~mporanly
HW!kias.Sti1ir. .. :., .
., ,
.knocktns;. tphoneserv1ce.Noone
, ; . The.Golden Gophers' firstrourid was hun.
· ·
ppponent in the Midwest· Regional
Forty-three of the 64 benhs on FriUay iri K~~nsas City is South- iik;ludingaii:Wat-largebids-,went
west Texas Stale (16-12).
to nine ·conferences. Anoth&lt;ir 21
KansiL• and)'lorth C31'ofina also leagues., such as the Milillouri Valley,
open· Thursday, against the only Southland and Patriot, all got only
teams in thl! iouma~pt witli !qsing one.
rci:ords. l'he Jayhawbtoke on JackThe Big East, long one of the
•on State ( 14-15) in Memphis, Tenn.. most dominant leagues, got only f~r

l

vs. ~aon·

;~h

Atlll- OlvWad

.1.

16
17
2K
JJ
43

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. 7~

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29'..

Ctftlral Diwl&amp;lon
r;-l11icng~~ ........... :1:\
1'1 .K6Y
lklfoil... .. ... ......... ~ 16 .7JK
Ad11111n .......... ......... 2 19 .6KY
(.lanrlulle ........... ..40 22 .64~
CLEVUI.ANU .... ,. JJ 27 . ~!'ill
lndillllll ................29 U . 47~
Milwnukc."(' . ....... .2tl .l!'i ...26

Totunw .... .. .. :.... 21

1

44 .267
~0 .194

40

.344

0n:JOII MK, On:~qn S1. 7l
Sltnlfurd K6, Aritt11111 S1. M .
UCLA H7. Wushinttlnn St. K6
Wu.dlinJion W . Soolhern Cui H4

Saturday's tournaments

)4:·~

A.tlunlll' IOthumplooilhlp
Sr. llllit..1'il'll6/ . Rhudl: l1larnJ ~

II
II

l .l '~;

Nnith Carolina H6, W:~kl." flll'~st1J

lr L lEI.

Vm!cnuvcr ........... II

16 .7:\H
20 '.b77
30 . ~
41 Jl7

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2~~.
27

46
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Sundaay's ll'ftrts

. · :ib1rq place

Suulhbu1d Cunrertrn:c (hllmpiuMhip
SW TciHL~ St. 74. NE Lm1i~iuna 64

Wt5ltm Allltlt-dt ConFt'nnct
Champklmhip
Ul:~h Kc,l, Te.IHL\ Otri.~inn OK

Valk'ttuwr 111 (1•arluttc. 1 ..\ll p.m.
Utuh 111 Allnnm. 7:.l0 11,m,
PIJiJadcl1~1\ll :11 PrJilllti.'MliOI. Kp.IU.
Huwlun ut S;m Aiihml\l. IIJUit
Mii1111i 0111 Mitwaukl.'l!, HJIII1.lll.
New ,Yuf'k ni DaiiWI. tl:.lO 11.111.
()rlull\J(I ullA'liiiL'f, t} )I ln.
1't~RNIIC1 It rhttcitht . ., p.t\'1 ,
L.A. C'llflt"-'1'1111 PurUW 10 p.m. .
l)l,'tnlit 111 S~Jank·. 10 p.nt
Cl.l~Vm. ANU ;II SiiCI'IIMI.'Iilll. 10:.10

Wu,hlnt~tun

."iK

Ooy. l.&gt;uubur 1'17. Truy 7.l
frl!mun1 RHu 7.1, Munslicld Sr. bK
'

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.

M!!nlllr K~. Ck. Glc1lville 74
Tul. C.'i~thuli\: b7, Tot. Swt JM
. TruiWlM.I\IoM:u.listlll 75 . Cin. Woud·
. Wllr~l 1 I (&lt;n' ) •
Vulll.')' FnrJI&amp;: W. Urcck,;viltc .U ·
PiYI.donll
Aknt1111\k:htd b2. Wabh

UIJ l:Z rhamphmsWp

Je~uil ~1'1

IJcUev11C 42.ler;ln~tm140
(.'anton S . b7. Calllunl'nlh. ~7

117, Mi~sl"tri f!41

~(.'lc. Dct~r..'dicliuc 12. ('1...-. Univl.'l'lut)'

Ilia Wul thamplon.'ltlip .
Pao:iliL' n.t Ncvnol;a ~~

~It

S..ht&gt;Utrrn Cunfenn~t thiHIIpklnKtalp
Kl.'ntud)' IJ!Ii. C.cllf~lll rtK

NIT slate

' J'

Jl·"'·

·.., f\lw)..Sttlur4ai)'. 7::Wp.m.

lk:Jrru c12-.121 n .,a-.-.-~· (ll-2),

Wl•tb~&amp;.~.a..~. 6 :15 r .nt

· DtYlolon II .
AI lJRiYenlt)' .t Aknrit

WOfthinJluiHlll'. HO. eur.M.pun ~

· Sund•y'• district nnali

Cnntun S\'ll.lth (17·61 n 1\khJR Qttcl._
till (IH·C.I, Thui'llduy. 6: IS p.m.
M~euor Luke Cuthulic O~·M) n .
Yoonptowh Mooney (I b-tl). 11nir51luy. K
p.m. .
Fin:~I- Salurday, 3 p.m.
AI U.lftnollf oi.T ......
.

.
Dlollllon I
SpriRll. Nul1h 54, Cin. ()uk Hill• SI
. Olw~Mtl\1
·
Frunltlin Jo'um:H.'C .Gn.'Cu 6K., I.A'Ibura
1:;1irlidd 4.l

Cll:!'vch~ Belk~i~tine (IY·~)

. Ohio H.S.'boys'
regional pairings ·

v/. l!li·

da (I R·6), l'IMnday. 6.30 p,m.
Olm•tctJ Fnlh (22·1 1 Vlt Bellevue
(22-2). Thundny, K:l!'i r .m.
'
Fintti·&amp;IIUrcJny. 3 I" m.
1·
AI Ohio Unlve'?lly, ~t·HIII
Cin:lcvillc ( 10.14} n Hillsbum ( 17·
~~ 'rbun"'-•y. l'l :l5r.m.
.
Duvcr a :t -1) n . Culumhu' M1fniu
( 111-.11. nur!lduy, Ktl.lll.
Finai·Suturd:~y. J p. n~ · .
J
AI Wrilfll Stale Vnlve""J~ l~lon
Sunbury Rill WiliiiUI (1\l · .ll ~~~.
Ci~~&amp;.:ltumlli Rojl.er Bucun (20-4), '11111001)'.

Here 'are the TC(th.uwi11;Uriu[l.ll fur lhl:
7.11itll ~lal\: buy!i'' ba~kelbulltuul'namenl .

Dl•lsiun I
AI U~trsily oi'Tolcdo
. ).ukcwuod Sa.'f.dwurJ (22-1) n Frcmunt Ru~:-. ~ I:J.K). Wi!dncnlt•1· b:.'\0 p.m. '
Tulcdn Ccnual Calholic ilK-~) vs.
Punnu Vulk:y 1 :or~ ilK·~ I. Wcdncsduy.
K: U ~.m .
.
l-ln&lt;~l-Saturlkly. 7JO JUn.
AI C•iltun Ciwic Ctntt&lt;r
(k"tt:land l:klr.htl (2().)) YJ. l 'UMIUII

6;15 J' .lll. .

·
Saruhavllle Shc:nan..mh (21·21 n .
Bcllnitt:(l6-7l. W~y. Mp.m.
1-'in:II-S:Ilutdo•y•.J:JOp.m.
'
·
,
At l/nivfl'ltlty f1l O.ylon
·
l&gt;aylun Chrisliun Cli-JJ 111. Mnricm
l~lt~~in (21-2). Wr.."thh..'Sd:l)'. 1\: 1.111.m. ,
Jnlu&amp;uuwn Nnrlhrid,:c f 1'1·•11 va.
t.;'f~· innmi Wyumin~ (II · Lll. W~o.odl~5 ·
day , Hp.m.
,
Kt!ltimlal ChampitiiiRhii• ~atunlny ,

.

k~ll.lll .

Ql~lsll!ll IV
AI Cuna.n l'ieldhuu.w
.
'l'.un~.'ivillc Ru,ccm••s t2l·IJ Vll. MI.'·
IAln:tld (l{tJ)~ 'l'ut~y. 6: I !'I jl.llt
(iatt!ll Mills Gilmour (11-1 0) Yl.
t'uynhugu Heltth•~ 11 7-~ 1. 'l'u~·~dll)'. K
(1.111. •

Fmnl-l:rltluy. 7:_.\0 p.m.
AI Unt.ct'Mif of -r.k-du
M\.'(:untb ~I ~-UJ) n Vun W\., l.in·
..:ulnvkw [2.1~01 ;1~~. 6o~,W p.n"
Hult~.:tlc! t 1~-1 t) ~vll . l .. cir1til' Cll · l ).
Tl~elld••y. K:l!i Jl.pt.
',_..
l:"innl-11ridny. 1:)U jl.m .
'
' At F11lranM.IKis Cllliilet.ini. Colu.._
WnnliinJUHI tbris1iun &lt;22-l) Vs. Nur, Willk Sl. Puul (2:!·2). T~ido1y. l't:l!'i 11.U1.
hunl•.lin Funu ...'C' Gn.:..:n ( 16-7) 115. St.
Hl.'nry t 1~·41. ' l 'ucld&gt;~y. HfUll

. ,.

Ketleriftp.' Alter (11·21 'f'll. Hntlullmr
DN.IIn (I k·~). 'lliiUsday. H)I 11'1 .
11 , t
Fimti·Satbrtkl)', I p.m.

''·

, Division Ill

McKinley (20.]), Whhk.'W&lt;I)'. 7 p.m.
Ab01a Fh~lllohc 117-bJ vs. Mcllhlt
I 16· 7), ll•ursday.'7tun.
Hnai-Stllurd!ly, 7:JOJl.m.
At Fa~lraruund~ Colilleum. Coh1..._.
Vay1~1u Dllt!b\lr (IIJ.4) vs. (iullolllll)'

M C_.• fltldlaouH
•
Clna::lund Villu An~Jela-Sl. Ji.illcldt
(If~.(\) 111 . Lnui&amp;vilh: A\luinuM (lii-IOJ, ,
Wcduc.'llla.y. 6; l!i p.m.
Yuunll.lllowu . Libl!rly (20·4) n .
YIIU/Ij!:lh&gt;Wn Unulinc II !'i·K). W'"'tlnc$Uay,

W~1land

(22·2). WW111.:miay. 7 p.m.
1..ui)I!SVilk: 122-1) ~ . Culambrndndc·
1"-'tllkncc (I Y-~).''llnlr!iday, 7 p.1h.
-l;i!"II·Snturdny, J;JO jl.IU.

K j).lll,

I

'

'

l~lmi-Fridlty . l :JO)•. m.

At Unlvtr.dly ~ D•yt•
.
vs. Pk!lL1a1u Hill NL'WtiHI

Am~;~l21).4J

120-JI, Tucsll:~1. b: I~ p.m.
· Sjll'in~Jiel1 C111holi\: OW Ill

• .'·

· Fumi·Suturduy, 7:JO Jlom.
,
AI &amp;wlina GrHIJ Stllitt Unlwnity ·

hurt! rruuklin·Milllnlll

Yli. l'illl·
(I Y-!il. Tue~~•Y· K

p.m.

l&gt;lvl~'-1

C:111tuu McKiuky 611. Muuillun

Kmtt !112

J\tllllnlk CuaNt Cenl'tf't'lkr
Chomp,......p
~unh l'nruliiu.1 fl-1. N. (uru!in11 S1 . .~

··

Salurdoy 's district nnals

Oalluway \YL'IIIInfid !IIi, Col. W~w'!lt K0 •
l~llh•wuud S1. Edwurd b7, l.uruin

Sunday's tourn~merits

Ml'tllinuna ~vt.TttR.'CII (t;1.1J) v~. Hnm·
lcr Paari~· k Henry (19-4). Wcdm::ul11y.
1'.::\0JUU.
O•arkJ (ll•IJ U . l ~vmill t'li.!;nil:W .
(11·2), Wt..'diM.•tduy. !1:15jUil
Finaf.SM~I)'. 1 : ~ p.nt
AI ()h.. Vnh tnky, Attwt.

· Ohio li.S. boys' sco~s

((1r}

Midwrst
MkhiWUI K6. Uhiu S1. Ill (OT)

Ka11:Ut~

1

AI MIHH110n Squ•re Ga~rden
ThurRd11y, M•rch 27
S&lt;-mifinal wim'll.'fs. 7:.\0 11.m.

~·

· Sunday's'
regul11r-season action

l 'tm:nato Ill fltKIUII. 111.111.

At M.d'-n SQuai't Ga~rdtnJ
Th•l'lday, Manh 27
St:mifin:•! losers. 5 p.m.

Cin. Aiken6H. Fairftekl !il
Cin . Prin~·ctou ~4 . Cin . Winton
Wund5 49
Clc. Hdt~hiH I.J I, Euclid 66
Cui ln~jlCiadl.'l~t.-c bM. W~~~~rvillc S.

Sout•wutrrn Alhlrllr CQII(rti'nct&lt;
ChumpiDMhlp
Juck~tm St. Kl, Miu. Valley St. 74

Tue!'Ciay's l(llme•

•

;
· ' Chamalonshlp
...

Ken!ul.'ky HI!. Mis~iS51JlJll 70

ToplaJ&gt;t's
-·""'
(iuhl..:11
Stale 111 I..A.
(.'liJ'Jl~n. 10
11.111. ' ·

p.m.

,

Soulhrlli'lltrn Cunftoi'eRft s~ihnaL'I
Gr..vrlliii7M. Suuth Cumlim1 6J

1\tl.imtu 114, Husum IJO
K2. Mimni 76
Turu111n Ill. Vmh.'uuvcr 11
Phlloldclphil&amp;IJY, W:!!ilJint~:tlm 9.'
Huu.q~m MM. l&gt;olla~ M.l .
Pht..-uia 121. OrluntJu K~
Pnnl:uad I OJ. &amp;:auk IJ.l
Uwh 11.1. Mim.es111a 106
Nl.'w Yurk 117, lllictlll'' 9]
I•.A.' I.olker~ liS. New k~y 10~
Gul~·n St1tk.' 102. Stll.'tiltlll.'lltu911

I .

Arknnsas-N~:w Orlcun~·Piltshurgh­

. (OTI

O~&gt;u-k1tt..-

I

, O{al Rnbcrh· Notre O.f!meilJA'B·
Te1u1s Chrislian-Miami·Mil:hit:an-Tu·
htRl'-Oklahomu Sl winner 'til. N.Aritono-

· Mld·f!::U'Itrm i\lhlrtlc: Conrtrrnre
ChMmpioMhlp
,
Culll'in St. tii. -N Carulim1 A&amp;T 74

Saturday's sciti"I!S

l

1\1 Mudftln Sqw"' Ganim. Nnr.Vort
Tursduy. March 15 (tkna l:BA.)
lunot·C unn..,'-'1 kut·Urcllcl· Bradl.:yNcvadu· Fre11nu S'1 .•Wu~hl IIJI(lff•Ncbnl~ku
winn~ 'Ill. Flnridn St .·Syratu•e-Citorll!
WtL\hinp.•on-Michi~nn S1.-SW Ml~suuri
St 1·N.Camlinn S1.- Bowlin1 Green ·
W.V01. winner

,

Mi1W;1ukr..-c '10, CLEV~I.AND K2
Sou1·Antoniu 102. hklluna YH
lkt .....titiJI , I..A. CliJIIII.'I'l' H~

f

(lita.ndtimaJBD)
· ~
lnnii·Cunneeli\:UI-Dfea'ei·Brndlcj
~,·· ' winntr vs, N~vw.lu·Pn:snu. Sa.-Wa!ihint'
-~
lliii·NdtraKka winnc=r
Flnrid11 St-S yr;~eule-Georgc Wushiii,\IIIIII·Michigan S1. winner n. SW· Mil·
suuri SI.-N.Curulinu S1.-Rnwlh1J Gn.'t.'fl·
W.Vn. winner ·
Orul Rubcrt•·Noue Dam~:-UAB ·
TeJUL~ Cbrhltiun. winltllr n Miami-MM:hi·
,U1.-Tulmtc.Oklabom.1 Sl . winner
, 'N .Arii!I.II ...·Arlnnlni-Ncw Orlcnm·
Pinshurgh wlnnt.-r \'ll. Mcn'flhili·UNLVC)re,nn·HiiWIIil wimll!l'

Mld-Amerku CoofrrrnH
.
t'holiopl...,llip
Mimm .' OI~iu % . E Mid1i~m 76

1\

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M.m.Jt,lOM-·2·

.

Mcmphis-UNLV.()rcgnn-Hilwttii winm'l'

Conftrtnce USA ch•mplonithlp
_ Murquene 60, N.C. Churlnnc ~2

r.anc l&gt;i•INktn

'

Bl1 East ch11n1plonshlp
,
8t,hm C~YIIcr,c 10. Vlll;umvit ~~~

Hlk w"'t "mlnnat.;'
Ncv;\dn KO. !'kw Mt:ll.icn St. ~.l
~ifi~· 71. Ulilh St. 54

Sc:~nk: .................... 42

Ill .7CXl
!..A. L:tkt'l'll ... .. ,...... 41 20 .671
Pucll;uul .................'~ 211 .:156
Sa~oToiUlll:ntu .... .... .".lit J4 .4.12
L.A. Clit'1"-'fS.... . 2~ .U .4~1
.,lucnix ....... ,.......... 24 17 ..l'H
Gulc!Cn Smtc ........ 23 J7 JK.l
,;-clinched l'layol'f sput

K9. Oklahonm l'IU

1111 Sk)' CMI'r~nu rh•mpiomhip ,
Mll!l!nn.u !12. C~ Nurthridac
..
.79

,1'1,
14'..

4~

Nunh~S2

You. UIM:fly 67, W~. KT146

Semlnn•l•

hiK 12 ~&gt;tmlnnuiN
Kau~ a~ 72. lnwa Sl. 411

MWwrd·Dhollllun ·
U111h .....: ... , ......... .4~
HUUMIUII .. .. ..... .:.. .. .4'l
Mim.c~tuhl ...... ~..... ,..lo .
Uullu.~
. 19
lkiiVCr ....... ....... IK
S;uiAIItuniu .......... l~

'

Atlantic Coul Cenfrrener Hmlnnllil~
N. (.';~n.liun St. fo~ . Muryland ~tl

IIJ'•,
24

·-·WESTERN CONFERENCE

Iam

. :r·1:'l

:.\) ParWnt
CalifunUa 7\1, Ari:r:unu77

l 1:
IJ'•1
IK

.lt,l;'i

, ' Louuwillc: Aqu1nn1 C.7. W. Saltm

Plerick Henry68., Coklwartr s~

Third reund .

Do,....

Cin..:inna1i Print:ehm ( lb·1) n .
CiRCtnaati Aiken (10.31. 11tutidoiy. r.: I~
p.ln.
,
SpriuttfMd ' Nonb (IM-6· 'd. Trt~l ·
w~Ddisun (22-1 J. Thurkluy. K

E~tt !li7. Miilbury Lnk~ S3

NBA standlnli ".
&amp;4S'ttllkcoNFEII~.:
~, !11:
New York.. .......... ,,41,
Miami ................... 4:1
Orhmdo .................\2
WMhinKiun............ 2H
New lersuy ............ IK
Phi1Mklplli11 ........... 1b
Bullion ,............ :.. .. 12

AttJnl...,.; ar

Dt•lllaollt

Bas kPtl •. 1

.

Dover 75. lndinn Cn."Ck ~2
Eli~li1 ~Y. Rmsl'urd :'17
.
Latc.Calh, '1J. A!il11uhul:~ Hurbnr 61
Olm~t~o-d Fall~t ~I . K1~~:ky Riwr 26
Yuu. Muolk')' .t ,, Y1111. Raycu-t~

'

offered by The Peoples Bank of Point .
Pleasant those who have suffered losses.
Loans are available ,for up to SS,OOOa~d up
s to qualifi~d b¢&gt;rr&lt;?wers. N~ .' · ·
i$,,JequireCJ and loans can be

to

~;

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' •,

.

f;r; .
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been an additional IICiection, I ca~~'t ••
tell you.''
•
Also playin1 on 'l'hunday Ia '
Memphiswillbeeipilu11 htli'W· !
due against No. 9 Rhode lslatld;
S Maryland apinlll No. 12 ColleJe
of Charleston; and No. 4 Arizau
against No. 13 South Alahama. . }
The other games in the Souu-t
will be played in Charlotte, N.C., on :
Friday
'

No.I

r-----.,..~-------~---...:...__.

--·

____ _
n

~13-14

•

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..... 13-14

EAST ·

~~~.!!.

.

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1111) CJkW\ofnl ll-10 '

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I

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,

MIDWEST

! t·~~21-3

ftt) ~ '•liD

Ill MIMitippi 20-t

-MM:f\14......
&amp; 10110.

I~! r.~..~" . . _
~2)~UIIJ-:·~: ·

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L41~~~~~ ·h1:tl~~~'.:' ',
\l)lowiSlafll 20-1

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CT~~ ~....·~~l,. ·- ~ .. ' ,--,
t~£~21·1 ..,

141~2341... ~}··..
•
17f~nltor~ ~i;!'~ ·

I Jl IPDIII
Uarch2t

-

(1)

~~::~~·,;:~}

SOUTHEAST

--Mar~

13&amp; t5

•

AliNIIIIM

.. .

""'..."" ..•.. r- ·- .-

•J

_ . . ,...

Scufl CIIIGIM ,..7 \1)

··- ...... ...
I

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r....,.n ... ~ _..t'';l

NATIONAL

CHAMPION.

\

(!JT~11-10_

. . . . . . . . ~·1

0111 ~ 22·10 1141

Maren 14 a 16

,..

81. 18:11'2

.,
~1)

Pill.

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lti '? 1 N.Y.
Mlrdt21 &amp; 23

II tr JGIII
Mln:t131

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"'-II .,,_ -- '
t.lfll'ttl 14&amp;

'- -

13) ~- friiMI ~

10~»• -

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Tulan(' (20· 10• a1 '0k(ula• 51••~
1111-ll).'BI'fll- '
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Member FDI(.:

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~~::;· (zJ
Pt......O..ow21·1~

15J_Cha~So: 1f11 ..

Mutr.., ~~...(1$)

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..

No. HJtah 89
. SW Texu St. 74
,
Texu Christian 68
liiE Louisiana 64
· At Las,Vegas, Keith Van Hom, · . At Shreveport, La., Dameon San.ilho won th&lt;~ first two games of the som scored 18 points for the Bobcats ·
tournament with buzzer-beaters, had ( 16-12).
·
37 points and .IS rebounds for the
Southwestern·
Utes (26·3)
.
Athletic Cooference
,.
M-.t;.c 1(1
.Jackson St. 81
No. 12 St. J-ph's 61
.
..Mia. Vlllley St.'74.
. Rbocle Island 56
.
·,At Q~llas, Doug Williains,had 21
:
!· At . Philadelphia, Rashid Bey
points for tiM; 1'i&amp;ers (14-1 S). one of
!!Cored 17 points as the Haw~ (24- two .team~ with a losing rel:ord to
6) secured their first NCAA toJma- make the NCAA tournament. Fair·
riicnt berth since 1986.
,
- field ( 11-,18) Qf the ·Metro Atlantic
·Big Eallt
AthlefiC Con(crence was the other.
No. 23 llo&amp;toa Colege 70
Rqular season'
· Wilconsin 66
·No. 20 VUianova 58
No. 3 Minnesota 65
· .At New York. the Eagles.(21-8) .
won their first conference toumaAt Madison( Wis .. Ty Calder·
· mcnt,. withMVPScooniePennscor- wood hi!d 19 points, including two
ing 14 points. The Wildcats (23·9) free throws with 11.8 seconds ldt,
had shared the regular-season title for tljc Badgers (I ~-9, 11 -7 Big Ten).
with Bost~n Coliege.
Bohby J~j&lt;:kson scored 17 p&lt;iints for
'· Coalere!lce USA
the Golden Gophers (27-3, 16-2),
I
60 . ...
who had'\Von 12 straight.
'
;. ·~ N.C. ChlirtOtte' Sl
: • No. 7 UCLA 87
• At St. ..:Ouis, Chris CrawfOrd had
· \VIIIhington St. 86
21)'pointii for ihe Golden ~les.'(Z2l"
At P~Jiman, Wash., Carr'cron
K), wh(l wpn four ganic!rin ils many DO!Iar d('ll.ve the lcngtl;l .o( the noor
:l_llys. \ !
..
·
frn: a laytlll:with nine-tenths of a sec·
Mid·A-ricaa .
ond left (Qr the Bruins (21-7, IS-3
"· Mlansl, Ohio K ·
Pac-10). ·~
; · Eutet'II·Mtchlpn 76
·1 Callronla 79
. At Toledl\ O~io, lra . New~l.c .. " .: ~ 15A~77 .. , .
scil~d ·~~~J:high 2? poi~~ I!' the · :. ·: At _sa, J'fllnc.'sco, ~ll!'dY D~l\
Rcdskms (21 -8) won thc~r eighth ued h1s career h1gh wnh 22 pomts
straight game.
and Scan Marks made two
·
Bill Sky .
throws "-:ith 21 seconds left a.• the
MonbiOa a ·
'Golden· Bears (21 ·8, 12-6 Pac-10)
Ca. State-Northrldge.79
beallh~ Wjlttcats (19-9, 11-7).
·At Aag.stafT, Ariz .•. Chris Spoja
Pardue 77
had cwo free throws and a Rteal in the
NO. 1911inoill69
fi~al44 seeonil~ as the GrizZlies (21 -! ,'; At ·WeSt I Lafayette, Ind., Brad I
IPl won their fQurth NCAA touma· Miller scored a career-high 27 points
mentbert,h,.
: ·,.
asthcBoileiJnake!'!'(I7-11.12·6.BiJ ·;
Mid·~
Ten) beatlhe illini (21-9, 11-7).
'
AthledeCOIIfetence·
. · ..
Jllo.-ll Stanford 86 ·• ' ·,
Arlzon• St. 63
Copjiin'SL 81 ' .
N. Ca.P!IIA A&amp;!T.74 (o:f)
. , . 1\t Stanf~· Calif., T~m \'QUng
• At Norfolk. Va., Reggi~ Weich · had 23 potnts and Brcvin Knight
and T~rquin Mott scored seven added 21 as the CardinaiJ20.7, 12_. jl9ints .apiece in overtime for the ·· 6 Pac-10) completed a p:rfe&lt;;t hoille ,
Eagles (21 ;s). ,
.
sc!L&lt;on.
·' Slluthllind Conl•.-.nce
.

.. f ,.

'

Open a mortgage loan or home equity line of credit
·at The Peoples Bank and we'll send you and your family to your
~hoice of one of six great.vacation destinationsL
·

Atlantic City

Gatlinburg ·

Branson
·Holiday Hils Resort &amp; Golr aub

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RM!r li!!rrace Aesolt

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Crystal Sands Crowne Plaza Resort

OCean Creek Plantatlon Resort

Orlando .

5
c

The Onvll Ro!Jen Holel

!•

vacations include +day. 3-night accommodations
at a resort hotel. Mel depending on the .
destination you choose. you'll receive little

••

Three Ways To Qualify!
. '

• l:lke ou1 a loan 10 purchase or rellniince )OM' 11rst
rllOftgilg&amp; or $40.000 or more ·

'

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-!

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~

1'

•• '

'·

,J"t_

•

~'~-

.• Take ou1 a Second mortgage or S~tooci or mo.e

. .

,.-.J

BUSINESS LOAN fJJ~P. ORI.,~':RESOIEpuLEp

The Meigs ,County Microenterpnse -Revolving Loan
Fun~ . ap~t Technical "Qilltance program orientation
originally llcheduled 'for Tu8sd8y,' Mlrch 4, at the
chamber office hal!, D&amp;en re-schecM~ to Thur8Cky.
March 13, 1997 froin ,s:oo .".7;~ PJ,4. a the Pomeroy
PubliC Ubrary.
·
:. · ~'
.
,1'
T-he goal of the orientation . will II!' to introduce
participantS to sett-emptoyment and provide them with
the requirements of the training and loan program. the
p~ram, being a~ln~~~rtd by the , ~iga Co!Jnty .
Commieelonell tti'i'dUgh • G~ Miciro8ilarprtae G1'81lt. ·
will offer an ·eight-week buelneaa training cla88 to
Interested. participants, who may then apply to the

...

.

..,,
•

(lot .I

ll)t_~'!"'!
ll!JUClAZI•l' .

Conference finals ..•&lt;continued from Page 4&gt;

Q92.i7Gllll
. ~,~~

. '.

-

•

program lor a bualheea etatti.IP or expanaion loan, wltb
·the niaxlmum amount being $10,000. Further
imomi.IIQri may~ -IJ8d by !liltqJ.+. ~·. ~~ ,

.NCAA Dhiil ... 'I
.. ...... ICOtlli

..

-·.

Ill

~U.ti '!M

ChlttMII, N.C.
. Mitch,.. &amp; 16

AIIIIUn . . . . . .. .
MMI!t3&amp;11i
'

...

.

"'

u 1
Ill

So.. CMI. INO

· extras like tree green fees. continental
discount coupons and
. morel

.i
i

breakfast.

.

~

• Those needing assistan~e may ~pply at The
People~ Bank offices in Masbri, N,ew Haveh··
aad:Pqint Pleasant, or qy calling The PeopJes.
at (
).675.~~727.

·I

'• •.• ·--.. . , ....... l1 ·1.1__ _j_

free

APR flood relief loans are now being
• 6.00%
. .

::."1

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'

don't care where you play, that's Kentucky deserved it."
imp-essive. n
The Bill 12 probably would have
. Juat me fact that Kentucky .is • had six !tams·if Texu Tech had not
No. I seed iuomcwhal ofa surpri"se. withdrawn from consideration on
Seeded No. 2 in the East is South .SIIurday when they forfeited I0
Carolina, which beat Kentucky Jeaaue wins for using two academi·
twice.
cally ineligible players.
"That was one we wrestled with
"All of the teams that are in
for a long time," Holland admitled. would have been selected from that
"Two wins for South Carolina is . conference,"
Holland
said.
impressive. But we finafly felt like " Whether Texas Tech would have

.

M•N•ette

rro VictiiTIS ()f rfhe
Rece11t Fl(lodi11g
'

J

bids, while six went to the Big Ten
andACCand five flowed to tile Pac·
IO,Southeastem,Atlantic IOandBig
12. Conference USA also had four
teams and the Western Athletic Conforence had three.
· "Obviously our league gets no
re!;pOCt," Providence coach Pete
'Gillen said. ".Four teams from our
conference, to me, is a slap in the
face, a disgrace .... Hopefully our
team, as well as the other three; are .
pla~ing for ·pride in the league,
because obviously our leasue is
held in very low regard nationally.';
"Most .or all, I'm very disap-_·
pointed for our players because t~ey
had. a great y_ear," West Virgmia
• coach Gale Catlett said. ."Being the ·
first Big East sehool ill history with
not only ll 'leaaue wins, but with 19
regular-season, wins not to get an .
NCAA bid is shocking to me. I don't
-know-wbaJ else the!'\: is to say."·
Kansas fans who've been planning a trip to Auburn Hills, Mich.,
! figuri.ng their Jayhawks would be in
the Midwest Regional are now
.scrambling to find transportation to
Memphis.
"As we looked at the map, we
fouhd they are closer not only to
Memphis, but also to Birmingham
than they are to the sites in the Midwest.. We just got out the map and
saw that it made more sense mileage- ·
wise," Holland said.
While Jackson State has losing
record, the Jayhawks will be faCing
·al)otteam.
"The first thing that jumped out '
·at me wlis that they closed the sea·
sq~·with scven straight wins; ~U~d the
most ifllporlanl (hing was that the
' firtlthfee ganle• were at Southern.
:ru Grambling ·and at Mississippi
Valley State," coach Roy Williams
said. "They got three in a row on the
road in their own conference al)d I

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·

)t'

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s1o, ooo or

• Open a horite equtly line or aec1t ror
tnO!e·NEW~RRESI ·

.

Service and selection makes The
Peoples Bank the best plaCe to
go fOf ~rtgage nnandng...
and the onty place to go If you
could also u ;e a vacation!

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.··
• polntplarsn 674-1000

773-5514

•newhlven 882-2135

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• loan hollll• 67s.MNJ
. I

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�Porn I"'( •Middleport, Ohio

lloncMy, March 10, 1997

/

Pomeroy •lllddleport. Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7:

K-enny·Rogers has a new album ·on the way
'

VALDOSTA, Ga. (AP} - Kenny
Rogers has more than a honeymoon
planned after his fifth wedding. A
new album is on the way.
The S8·ycar;old singer ·has·
planned a June I wcddinl! at his
Athens, Ga., ranch with production
assistant Wanda Miller.' They met in
·1993 while she was working at an
Atlanta restaurant and he proposed
last December.
"We were really·good friends at
first," said,Ms. Miller, whose family
hosted an engagement brunch Saturday for about 400 friends and relatives. "Tiien it grndually turned to

.·1

romance and then into an engagement.,.............._
This wiT! be Ms. Miller's second
maniage.
The new album, titled "Cross My
Hean," includes a song- "As God
As My Witness" - which Rogers
co-wrote and dedicated to his bride·
to-be.
Rogers, known for such. songs as
"The Gambler" and "Lucille ,"
expects the album to be released this

-summer.

MIAMI (APJ - With · tickets
costing up to $2,500, you'd think the

With FICtory Reb.-.
You Can A~ally Pay

1
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ln~olce ,o rt

Most · ·

and 30-foot jumbo screens. Concessionaires sold fine wine.
The tenor.; are on a world tour of
nine cities.

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP} - There
were some dark times before the
bright beaches of "Baywatch" for
GregAian Williams.
In town to promote his new book,
" Boys to Men: Maps for the Journey," the actor called himself a
along once."
.
"deadbeat dad" to his first child. He
said
he tried to soothe his guilt with
The stadium was dressed up for
the occasion - the elaborate stage drugs-andcouldn't look himself in
had Roman-style columns, palm trees the face.'

•

•
"Even if a man doesn 't act like a buffs hope everyone list.cns.
Jones, the sonorous voice of Danlr
father. as I didn 'i, he is still a father,"
Williams said.
Vader in the "Star Wars" trilogy an&amp;
Williams told an audience Satur- Mustafa in "The'Lion King," urged:
day night he learned as a boy that suppon of preserving ancient movieS:
honor was detennined by how a per- during a Saturday slop of the Nationson died. Butli fe, he said, taught him al Film Registry Tour.
~
that living can be a bigger challenge
"Movies are the widest ranginl( .
than dying.
expression of our culture in this cen"No !]latter how difficult our tury," Jone~ said.
'
death , we only die once ," he said.
More than half of tbe films made:
"Life, on the other hand. must tk in America before 1950 have cithe(
. faced day after day."
been lost or have deteriorated beyond;
reparr. said Pat Loughney, a library;,
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) of Congress film archivist.
-·
'
When James Earl Jones talks. film

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'f-

Leu ·Than Factory

Three Tenors would stan on time.
But the 25-minute delay was only
a small glitch Saturday nisht as
opera superstars Luciano' Pav3rotti,
Jose Carreras and Placido Domingo
dazzled 42,000 people atl'l:o Player
Stadium.
"It's just an opponunity to hear
the best singers in the world," said
Edna Cohen of Venezuela. whose
$275 ticket cost more tl&gt;an her airline
fare. "Something like this comes

•

slibrtcut to long dista':lce savings ·
..

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..... '· .,.

ood Relie.f /Loss of Busi 11es.s

··,.·

~·-·-··~
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Get

Aarolt MaxsQn recently celebrat.ed his fqunh.binhday at the home of .
his pare~ts, Rop and Wendi Maxson.
A dinosaur theme was carried out .
fOr the pany, and ~ake and ice ct;eam
Wei'!)·Set;Ved . .
sister,

. .

L..,~

'··~·

'·

ty
Do~ and Ge~1eva Mltxso•n,
Aimee Kloes, and Tlllllmy, C. J. arid
Kayla Harrison.
Sending gifis ·were Ron Maxson
and Nonna'Hawthome. "

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A!C· tilt, crulaa~
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lalthar mora. WAS $21,948

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A pizza paity was held for Trista
Simmons on· her eighth binhday at
the Pizza l;lut in Pomeroy. Hosting
the celebration were Trista's paternal
gtandpare~IS; Mr. and mrs. To!llmY
Simmons Gf Rutland. .
Attendihg were Mr. and Mrs. ·
Roben San'de~~ •.Ul~\ernal gr~n&lt;lpar­
ents, Deleah Sander.;, Trista's parents
·and brothers, Thomas, Tyler and Mr.
and Mrs. T. T. Simmons, Danny, .Judy
· and Tilfa)ly McDonald , Kathy Jef-'
fers •.Dav~ Mohler, Melanie Dudding,
Roger Dent , Kim Davis, Millie
Marcink~ .
Ron and Tarnova
McGrath,bsa Sidwell, -Jill ian Brannon, Linje)i Davis, Brittany Bissell,
Jennifert Seers, Kimberly &lt;;astor,
Amber Wilibarger, Kelsi Boyd. Jason
Marcinko. Alex McGrath, and Abby
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J NEW: YORK (Af!) ' - · Biurr.~d
vision ~aused by diabete.s .forced
Mary Tyler'Moore to cancel her stint
as hostess for the Directors Guild of
Americ.a 'awards pver the weekend.
The a~trcss was supposed to work
·the East ·Coast half of the ceremony
•! •
. held simultaneolisly in New'York and
';l.os Angeles but canceled in·the days .
'before s:itturday night's show.
. : · "There are a number of side.
:effect• to diabetes, and this is one of
them," · sa'id~~Ms : .. Moore 's agen.t,
Wendy Morris: ''Small blood vessel~
.in the back of your eye can burst or
:leak blood into your eye. It can be ·
~eriOus.

It is not that serious · in
.M;ary 's qase."
Ms. Moore, 60, has e&lt;perienced
Jhe problem before and the only way
..to qure it is to rest, Morris said Sunday.
. Diabetes is the' leading caus9 of
·adult blindness in the United Sta(cs.
:Ms. Moore has' scr.v~d as ~tlair­
:woman of ttie Juvenile Diabetes

I

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OH

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•n. off« is ¥lid ttw'ough &lt;4112197 and i1evailable ~to first-1irrw CtJStMWFS of 3W l.!lng Distance ("JW"}. ~ Ndl reiciential long list.o lt&lt;OI.rlt~~. 360" -Mil cl'ldil1tlltJCCOunt with up to 60 rrinutes ofdomestic long dist¥u callng tim! 'ctumg Ndl of the 1st. 2nd .-.d 3rd
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Vi1k1 rn, dlliniJI thl tnon~ billing C)'d! in which thty m i5sued - CU510mlf CM1n0t CoWTY unultd rnffl'-1 OYif into the ntKt ~ bi11ir1Sr cyclt, cannot trnt.r frM rni'lutel to.ln01t!et' attOUnt or~ lfCM crtdit lew unustd rrinl.a5. ~ 'Will begin 10 tppt,o lht ~ ~
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Monday, M1n:tt 10, 1817

By The end

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The .Daily Sentin..!.l
~. 111reh

10, 1111

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.hy ANN·LANDERS
,
·
•~ De..- Ann Landers: I hope you will
t.nnt
one more letter ahout cross~..
ssing. Nobody complains when
~en . not only dress_but act like

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, Women have succeeded in invadtng the male world to an alarming
~egree. It's not uncommon to see a
remale security
_ guard in I male club,
1

dressed like a man and using the dressing, and yours was it. Although
men's bathroom. Female reporters you sound like a male chauvinist oink
walk into male locker rooms, and oink, II ~at many others share your
their noses get out of joint if they are views and you deserve to be heard .
not treated with Victorian respec1.
Dear Ann Landers: How can 1
.When a guy complains, they holler diplomatically tell my sister that 1
about "discrimination."
don't think it's a good idea for her
I visited San Juan, Pueno Rico, son, who is 14, and his sister,"who
recently and was imj!ressed ·to see will soon be 12, to sleep together?
that \\'Omen dress like women and
They have separate bedrooms.
enjoy their femininity and men but almost every morning, the 0•irl
· the ends up ·m' her brother's bed. Their ·.
respect Ihem. The on 1Y•oema1es 1ft
Unite&lt;! State.s who look and dress like parents think it is wonderful that they
women are prostitutes. No wonder are "so close" and have so much to
they .do such a great business and t:ilk ahout. I am worried that they
mamed men are t)letr best customers. m1ght he, doing more than talking.
-- Shrewsbury, Mo.
I presume this same situation
De ar Shrews:· You asked me to \.occurs in other families,
·
so if you
·
t
I
bo
·
I
ak
pnn one mote etter a ut eros~· pnnt my etter, m e sure the finger .

isn't pointed at me. My sister woold
be furious if she knew I wrote to you,
and I would never hear the end of it.
Please put me on the 01her coast. -·
"Auntie Mayme"
Dear "Auntie Mayme": 1need not
identify the location of everyone
whoseletterappearsinprint, sodon't
worry.
'
A 12-year-old gid should' not be
sleeping with her 14-year-old broth-·
er under any circumstances. They
ought to be able to do all their talking'before bedtime and each retire to
his or her own space ~ and stay there
until morning. I hope someone in that
family reads this column and takes
my word for it.
, Dear Ann Landers: Fie on you for

.~checklist tor measuring ·sociai _
Security proposals
. vate in~ustry. The cost of adminis-- more than a retirement program'!
SJ)CIAL SECURITY
tering any retirement plan must be
Does the plan provide for current
MANAGER IN AmENS
considered.
beneficiaries during the transition
, The recent rcpon of the Social
Docs the plan guard against risk of period? What happens to those who
S~curity Advisory Council .providcs. failure? Social Security benefits arc are paying benefits and planning
t'*' basis for a natjonal dialogue over guaranteed by the federal govern- their retirement under the current sys• hyw best to finance Social Security · ment. Similar guarantees should tem'! Does the new plan provide afair
hoinefits to meet the needs of future apply to any proposal to provide ben- and equitable arrangement for them•
generations.
efits for future generatia,ns. ·
Does the plan provide for a fair
D&lt;_Jes the plan prescribe specific rate of return? The Advisory Council
· The 13-member Council presentc&lt;.l three opliuns. to address the long- levels of benefits? People rely, on believes that the Social Security sysrdnge financing issues facing the pro-· ·Social Security. benefits for their tem s,hould meet a test of providing
gram. In evaluating these and other retirement, as well as for disability a rea•ollablc rate of return on the conproposals that will bethefocusofthe and survivors protection, as a tributions. of younger workers and
ptiblic dialogue over the next few "defined benefit." You need to know ·future generations.
/
years, you' should consider ·the fol- how much you can count on under a
Will the proposed system require
lowing questions:
· new system:
you, your employer, and the selfDoes the.plan provide for cost-ofDoes the plan protect disabled employed .to pay higher, lower, or the
living increases? Increases in the workers? Under the current program, same amount of taxes you now pay?
price beneficiaries must pay for the 80 percent of current workers would Currently you pay 7.65 percent of
gqixls and services they use reduces receive benefits if they are unable to your earnings for Social Security
· the value of their monthly' payment, · work becauSe of a severe physical 6r fllliremcnt, survivors, disability and
unless there is a mechanism for mental condition. More thari 5.1 mil· Medicare's hospital insumnce proenabling benefits to keep up. The lion workers and their families cur- tection, and your employer matches
Advisory Council strongly supponed .rently count on these !Jenefits as their this amount. If you are. selffull, automatic cost-of-living adjust- ·primary source of income.
cmployed, you pay both.the employ"
IJ!Cnls in benefits.
·
Does the plan protect ·famil}' ees and employer's share, I5.30 per.Does the plan have low adminis- members if you die or become dis- cent.
trative costs? Social Security spends . abled? Workers with families need to
If the benefits are paid to you in a
less than one percent of Social Secu- know that they will receive an lump sum at retirement, what guidri(y taxes on' the at:lministration of the · income if they become disabled or ,ance will you receive in converting .
program,
a figure
unmatched by pri- die. Does the proposal provide for ithe lump sum into monthly payments
'. .
"
.
•
that you can expect to continue until
l
·your death and your spouse's? The
risk of making the wrong decisions
·about investing the lump sum bene'
fit you receive may .be higher than
you
think.
·
·
..
, These are some·oflhC'btls'ic ques. lions you need to ask about any proposal to change Social Security. They
reflect to a large extent what we ha~e
come to expect of our Social Security system hased on our experience
over the pa." 60 years.
.) .
Social Security Debate Raises Need
to Know
'
·
Do you know that Social Security is much more than a retirement
progmm? Do you know how much
you have paid into the system'? Do
· YOII know how much it costs Ill ru.n.
the program'.' If you don't know the

By ED PETERSON

-r·

,,

. NOW THAT'S A LOT • Lane O.nlela, e realdent of the Rutland
6rea, ..-ntly tuned the e.~ plano of hla carwr. Jn the bueJ.
ness. n Will the pilino of Carol Tannehill, Middleport. O.nlele
lleaan hie tuning eervlca .ln 196.5 with the encouragement of tha
late Clira Lochai'y, a well-known Pomeroy teacher of piano. This
ynr ha will completa 32 years of going from place to place to

~plano•-

. ·

~Community

Calendar-

POMEROY -- Meigs Courity
The Community Calendar is
"-L~.a
fl
.
Chamber
ol' Commcrc
· ·e luncheon
pubrrancu as a ne t!On&gt;ace to non·
prOfit aroup!i wlshiatl to announce Tuesday. noon at R\lCksprings Rcha·
· ••-and special e~nts
mee~.,.
.. • The hilitation Center. Gerald Droll ·of
~ ........... •- not ..r..1......1 to promote
Columbus will speak on Americans
,....,,..
'"
-__ ,_ or fund
n'--ra
or any type With Disabilities Act.
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Items are printed as space_permits .
aJ¥1 cannot be paraateed to nan a
CHESTER -- Chester Township
specific. number of days.
Trustees will meet ai 7 p.m Tuesday
at the IOWn hall .
MONDAY .
POMERO'V
The Big Bend
RACINE -- Evangelistic/revival
F~ Anti(juf:s Club. n;guljl" meeting, . meetings at the First Baptist Church.
Meigs High School library. 7:30 Racine. continuing through Wednesday night. Service times arc 7 p.m.
tdcinday niJht.
·
each evening. Evangelist Ray Stag no.
REEDSVILLE-- Olive TowMhip missionary to New York City. will be
the speaker..
Trustees. Monday. township hall.

.

DARWIN -- Bedford Township ·
Trustees. will meet Tuesday, 7· p.m.,
at. the lol"n hall .
.
· MIDDLEPORT "· Middlepon
Lo&lt;!ge 363, F&amp;AM, special meeting,
Tuesday, 7:309 p.m. at the temple.
Work in the EA degree. · .

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lng II recent chapter mMtlng. sPeakef .far the
d•y wu Michael Garlach on aerly aettM In
Meigs County.
.

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outand named by Phillip)ones. Ger- 1791. ·
lach said the name of Middlepon was
According to Gerlach Middlepon
chosen bec~use Keel boats .cha~ged takes credit for these fu'Sis 'in Meigs
crews there as it was considered to be County: Tavern 1816, brick house
one-half way mark between Pitts· boilt by Hamilton Kerr-1816, Doctor,
burgh and '.tincinnati.
underground railrmid stojl, County
The fi(lt settler in Meigs County Seat, Photographer, house to bll!"'
was Nathan Burl in 1777 who settled coal. Shares with Chester fot the first
near Chester. Other settlers were at school.
Forked Run, 1778, and Letan Falls
Eleanor Smith, chaplain present1780. The '. rapids at Letait caused ·ed an-American Flag to Kristi Eblin,
many pioneers -to stop when coming library director. The flag was pur4own· the Ohio River, the speaker chaS&lt;;d by-Miss Smith rrom the Parnoted. .
alyzed Veterans Association. She
Before the Civil War, early histo- ·also gave a video showing ConstituI)' of the prea was recorded in detail
lion Hall, the National Headquarters
but was not recorded after that time of the Daughters of the American
until many years later, Gerlach said. Revolution at Washington, D.C.
Among the early seitlers of MiddleHostesses Bernice Carpenter and
pon he listed the families of Hamil- Jeanette Thomas served a luncheon
ton Kerr and.his fathedn law's. James with Phyliss Hackett and Mary Stein
Smith's son, John was bora there in as contributing Hostesses.
.

'

LO~ ANOELES (AP) - The to die in a drive-by shooting in less
sticker,:,,.Q!\ lhe NptoriOus B.I.G.'s than a y~=.ar. Tupac Shakur was killed
bullet-ni:ldled Suburban read "Think in Las Vegas in September.
B.I.G. March 25, 1997"- a promoThe pany was sponsored by VIBE
tion for his U(lComing album "Life ·magazine and attended by its founder
After Death... 'Til Death Do Us Quincy ' Jones, publicist Arnold
Part" and a pn:sage t&lt;i the rapper's R11binson confirmed . Iones did not
demise. ·
·
immediately 'retum calls Sunday, but
· The Notorious B'.I.G., who went Robinson said the well-known comfr.om a Brooklyn crack dealer to a poser anil producer was '§tunned by
p!atinum-splli!l¥.gangsta rapper, ,..J!s. Wallace's death.
killed Suiiaay outside' a pany'cele- ' , ' Walla~e·s estranged ·wife, Faith'
brating the lith · annual Soul Train Evans, 'and dozens of pany-goers,
Music Awards.
security ' guards and parking atten• The 24-year-old rap star, whose _ ~ants witnessed the shooting. But
. real name was Christopher Wallace. authorities said late Sunday they had
was gunned down while sitting in his no description of the gunman ~nd that
parked GMC Suburban. He was wn~esse s were . afra1d to. talk . to
rushed in the same spuns utility vehi- pohce.
.
clc (0 Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,
"It's frustrating," said Detective
where he was 'pronounced de.ad. . Raymo_nd F~tami , one _of almost a
police said.
·
dozen mvesugators ass1gned 10 the
Wallace. also known as Biggie case .... I'm sure there's a little bit of
Smalls. wu.• the second major.rap star arl'intimidation factor ... because of

The Public Ulillties Commission of
Ohio has Set lor PUbliC hearing Gase

Dowillng, ~da;·
Mullen, Musaer
111 B..Secoad Sl, Po.Wloy

992-3381

. the reputation of some of the people
whq are involved.in this case."
Wallace built his gangsta rap persona -around authenticity, making
much of his past as a crack cocaine
dealer in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, one of New York City's tough-·
est neighborhoods.
·
The 6-foot, 300-pounds-plus rapper worked with Bnd Boy Entenain
ment. run by East Coast producer·
Sean "Puffy" Combs. His "Ready to
Die " debutrecording went platinum.
"We are overwhelmed with grief
by ihe death of a great anist, a family memhcr and our friend, the Notarious B.I.G.," a company relea.o;e said.
The shooting came six months
after Shakur was shot in a Sept. 7 drive-by attack in Las Vegas as he rode
in a car with 'Death Row Records
president Marion "Suge" Knight.
Shakur died six days later.

Spring rally plans are ·announced by D of A.

/lsJ@out11!!17&amp; ~
· lisflbout!Y@m
.

me

. Plans for
District 13, Daugh·
tcrs of America, spring rally to be
held April 19 at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy were made at a
recent meeting of district members
held at the Chester lodge hall. ·
llsther Smith, district councilor,
presided at the meeting. lt was noted
that the rally will begin at 9:30a.m.
and those members working on tables
should be~there ready to work at 8:30
a.m. Practice for the rally was held.
Therq will another practice on April
13 at I P·n:'· at the Senior Citizens
Center.
.
Sylvia Bowns, deputy state councilor, a member of Logan Council,
invited the Chester Council; Guiding
Star Council and Belle Prairie Couol-

.

_..,-

ell to attend the Logan Council's
inspection on April 2. A supper will
be served at 6 p.m.
.
The ritualistic opening included
scripture and pledges to the Christian
and American Oags. Janice Zwilling,
district secretary. and Opal Hollon,
district treasurer, gave repOftS.
Reported ill were Betty Wolfe,
Logan Council; Laura Mae Nice and
Thelma White, Chester Council;
Carolyn Douglas, past state councilor, and Lilian Bowman and
Blanche Moldiney. The death of
Evelyn Neison ofDistrict I was also
noted. · ·
A loss 9f 92 members in Ohio
from July I to Dec. 31. 1996, was
reported.

Refreshments were served by
Ouiding Star Councill24, Syracuse.
At the piano was Helen Wolfe, dislfict pianist. Attending beside those
named were Faye Haselton, . deputy
state councilor, Belle Praire Council,
Belpre; Iva Shutts, Belpre; John
Grilndy, 'Naomi Grundy, Mary C.
Moose, Faye TrOwbridge, Logan
Council, Logan; Esther Harden,
Nathan Biggs, Bette Biggs, Margaret
Cotterill, Guiding Star Council, Syracuse; Goldie Frederick, Charlotte
Orant, Everett Grant, Marcia Kelter,
Mary K. Holter;. Doris Grueser,
Kathryn Baum, Ethel Orr, Erma Cleland, Jo Ann Ritchie, and Elizabeth
Hayes.

Need extra cash?
Use the classified ads!

;

.

~

KIT 'N' CARL\'LE ®by Larry Wright

Bingo
· wed&amp; Thurs

MARK MILLS.
' Air Force Airman Mark A. Mills,
a 1996 graduate of Meigs Local High
school, Pomeroy. hits graduated from
basic militaty training ·at Lackland
Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas.
He is the son ()f t.lary ~ -. Mills,
Middlepon, and Alan· P. Mills, Rut-

PO~E!WY •• .Mei1s County
Genealogical Society will meet Thesda~. 5: I5 p.m. at Meigs Museum.
IIIIKI.
Encapsulating documents will be.
available for a small fee.
JEREMY FORD

- .
WHEN Ir CoMEs To YouR HEART, DoN't WAIT
~

.

•

17 games $50.00 ea.
combined coverall

$350.00
·(2) paper games

You tell yourself it's nothing to worry about. But there's 'that nagging lit(lfi pain, A little , ,
s/'lortness of breath. Symptoms your body's giving you that maybe everything isnr
perfectly fine. When it comes to your
.
heart, it's riot worth irto wonder. .Don't
'
wait.
Have
it chiJCkep out. Give us a
'
'
.

·call.

.

'

'

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

JUftUU..
992·7074

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

GI"8Vee, Llmeetone,
~~ Fill Dirt,

992-6342 (Diane)
or 992·7275 (s-da)

~'

- Ins. Owner: -Jones.

Send, Refuae.
&amp;wta},

nn

I m•alls

Ioi:::1311 Hippy Holtoff Roed
~":~
......_,

,

cookie jars

Open 5:00pm
Bingo 7:00 pm
Min. 50 players

AmVets Post 23
Gallipolis, Oh

'

Pick up discarded
appllancea, batlerln,
manymetala•
motor bloclca.
•

• ElttMior ·

llltl"lll art, Oltlo 4&amp;'7110
llllw H-, Adtlltiofta,

614-9112--4025 8 am-I

.

,_..,.

ANNOUNCEME NTS

Glngee, """"*-

. Clll =Free
&amp;1.4--742--3090
81 4--742-3324

LL_..,!!!,!~~~!Jiul

l

...

.. . . ....
(Umeston..

FREE3mln.

-- - ~-

-~

·-

....

Lowll8tn)

Psychic

reading for
*Love *Money
*Career *Health

WICKS
HAULING

18+

Umestone,·

1-800-992-4170
. vlaalrnc
1-900-567.:3727

· Gravel, Sand~
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

.'
DATES!
GUYSI.GAI.S
ROMANCE!
_
.1
1 .gOQ..05Q=055B f11 . ?"M 12.91 '
Ptr Mlnutt. Must Bt 18 Yra. ' •
Soni-U (018) 04!HI434.

.,

' f.•
...

S3.1111 Po&lt;

614-992-3470
1

EXCAVADNG CO.
Driveway u-tone
CompteteHouae

and Trailer Site
Work, Bullcloalng',
Backhoe, Tr8clthoe.
SeptlcSylfema
·lnetalled

•New Hom••

.OiiragM

.Complete
f'emodellng .

.

........

2111n-

Llmeatone &amp; Gravel
Septic SYetama

Trailer A

ttouaesne.

~,.,..

J~N.Saynt

S.yr1 Trucking Co.
614-742·2138

1117117 ..

TEU'IOUR
. FUTURE!

YOUNG'S
CARPIIIIEI SEIVICl
ofloclm Addlllotra
oNtwGngee
•a.ctrlcal • Plllllllllng
oRaoflng .
.
olntlrlor • Extat1or

..,.lnllng
Al8o.Conctalll Work
(FREE ES1111ATE8)
V.C. YOUNO Ul
892.f216
Pomeroy, Ohio .
.

,.,.. .........
" 2"2156

110 . Help Wlnltd

lntroducinq,

,

Lon~~? Take A Chance On Me,
White Male 34, P.O. BOx D93,

HlrlWIU

Gallpol' ONo 45631.

H11es

f:
:

. ~FUN!

POINT SPAEADSII
HOIIOSCOPESI
FIIANCE, 90APSI
'·99'Hi?f!·5'Km ·Ext 2MB $2.88
Per Minute. Must Be 18 Yrs.
Soni.U 1819) &amp;4S6434.

992·7696

WANTED: ·To corroopond with

102 E. Main

memberl cla11 of 1857, PPHS.
Don Ruuell, ·8 Woodbine Rud,

R~

L HO~LON
TRUCKING

2yr

·'

2 Femlle Pupa, Frltnd!y, Playtul,
Will Be Large .Dogs, 114·378~
8457, Anytime.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

2 Floor Modal T.V. Sat1, Sbma

Olhor ll:c.t_., et ..&lt;I46-17SS.

Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

D4 Year old farm house to tHr
down &amp; haul away. take all or
nothing. 304·675-2208 after •

~

e:QOpm.

Cheater, Ohio

1

ApwbilllltS
tor Rtnt

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

THE MAPLES

In Pomeroy, Ohio . .
Rents are computed according to
your Income. L.Ovely apartments
featuring wall-to-wall carpeting,
with all .-ppllances.
ALL PRIMARY UT1U11ES PAlO
Must be 62=of age or
hand
.
·

eligibility

· requirements.
.
..-... For further details call today

'1-614-992·7022•

Part Beagle pupa·

:

two 8 weeks ;:
call ~t

'
•
· •·

60 Lostand Found

=-Fo"'u·N"'
"' o,...:"'at,...ac7k-:&amp;,-w-:h-:-ll-o.-:fo-mo-.,....lo.

INSUUTION
137 BRYAN PLACE

Lost male Miniature Pinscher, 21
28197, norlh ol Coolville, TR 11S:
around 4 lane, reward, BH·B87·.
8151 .
;

IIIIDLEPOAT .

..

~

mixed Shephard, with collar &amp;
piece o1 chain. :IIU82·3833.
~

lt2'2n2

LOst: VIcinitY ot Crab Crook Rd.;
black, male Chaw with purple
. co!ar. 30+G75-39e3.

WANTED: COMMUNITY ·SKILLS IN· ;lel1aplia-' Wiltlows
Geng11
STRUCTOR pOsition available to teach
Deors&amp;
community and personal s'kills to an adult
WW.Ws.
with learning limitations in. Meigs County.
HOURS: 11 pm-8 am, Thurs./Fri.; 4_
. hrs:/wk. as scheduled for appointments;
2·hour bi-monthly staff meetings. High
school degree, valid driver's l~nse, g~
. driving record, three years licensed
driving experience, and adequate automobile insurance coverage required.
Trailiing provided. ; Salary: $5.50/hr. to
.sJart. Send resume to: P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640; attn.: Cecilia.
· Deadline for applicants: 3/14/97. Equal
Opportunity Employer.

.

old, ttlrH 4 112 monrh1 old,
81 ..98~-·· · .

a.m.-3:30 p.m.

..

.

l=IQQ·ZGZ·MM Ert zrn 13.88
Fer Min. Mull Be 18 Yrl. Sent· U '
Ja1D)845 B43A.

VT. 05482.

...................
S.tintl Cl1sslfillls

Must meet H

. ,,

LlYE PSYatiCSI

Stop It Com,_.
FREE
•
ESnMATEES
. 885 4473

lie 1B V... .'

Soni-U 1819) 045-3434.

ROIEII IISSELL
· C:OistiUCTION

(614) 992-3838

440
'.

WILL BIUL-

'

Ndiorious
shooting·
. . a~ 1. G. killed in drive-by
.

LE8AI. NDnCE ·

' Galllpolla, Ohio 45631

"'llot-lMI,..t Dependllbla
and Tnalwii111)y .....
ready to c:laan your
home or bueln11 •
RIIJDolllble Ratea

Gerlach presents .DAR -program

Military news

POMEROY - Pomeroy Youth
Leap lllnup Monday. 5:30-7:45
'
p.m. M Pomeroy Elementary Schoo!·
'
.
.
. lt\CINE •• Southern Hiah School . Navy seaman Jere~y M. Ford, a .
·RACINE •• ~ine Board of Pu\1- Class of I?77 reunion plannin1 meet- . I~ ~uate of River :Valley High
llCAft'llin. MondaY, 10:30·1111. at the i~J Taesday, 6:30 p.ni. ill the hifh Si:hooi,t)leshire, is curtently servina
~hoot cafeteria. call 99¥752 after· 1 six-month deployment to the
!lllllliciflll builcliilt.
S:30.p.m. · .
,
Mod~nean Sentioerd the attack
aull,lnlriae v.s.S. Atlanta. . '"'-'.
J'
:

I

PRESENTEJ:! FLAG • Elaenor Smith, chap- .
lain, RetUrn Jonathan Melge Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, praeented I!
flag to Krlatl Eblin, 'Malg• Library dlractor, dtir-

Local historian Michael Gerlach
gave a 1progr8!" on early •illegal Set·
ties ofMiddleP,Ortand Meigs County wheq he $pdie at'a recent meeting
of Return Joqathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughter:s of the Americpn ~volution, at-ihe Pomeroy Library.
Ger'lach · noted 'that Congress
ordered riuiny settlers out because
therewa$afre@ty. i~ 177!)thp!,allarea ·
nonh of- the 'Ohio River was to ·.
belong lothe Indians,'
· '
'
He said that the .settlemenis or'
Marietta'arid Gallipolis were considered leg~•.and a!ihoup the Delaware
lndians tried to f!ght the pioneers ncar
Marietta, the are~ of Meigs County
was spared.,
In April of 1796; Middlepon and
Chester bec,Wt!e lepll,~ttl~cnts
with Mia~leport jncorporailng as a •
village :i• 1'8S7. The toi\11 wa• laid ·
'
.
' .

.

(614) 592·5025

ofCI••I.. . .
1oM? .

'

,,.., . ~--

Altomey At Law

......, 1'JIM.

ROYALTY • John and Mary
Pltullna Southern, cei11111, - .
'named king end quean of the
Syracuse church of the .
NezaltM during the eMit·
h,e art banquet held at the
church by Caravan !)apart- .
ment _on Feb. 15: Rtlllflel'8oup
far the honor-... Jarrod and
Mlchalle Folmer end Kevin arid
Mandl GI'IIIIHI', left to right.

.

Attorney William-Safranek

614-992-7643

Sead ques!Jou to Anal ,aedera,
Creston Syncllcate, ~77 W. Ceft.
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Leo. MillS.
Calif. 90045
.

All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard. Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission·at180
East Broad Slraet, Columbus, Obio
432661)573
.

household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruplcy conlact:

COMMERCIAL and RESIOENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

=

~

POMEROY -· Bl'ooks-Grant
Camp 7. Son,&lt; of Union Veterans. of
thC Civil War, Monday, annex Hope
Blplist Church, Middlepon, 7:15
p.m. Speaker, Terry Lowery.
Ch!trlcsto0, W. Va. who ~uthored
•'List Sleep: The Battle of Droop
..,ountain. Nov. 6, 186~." He will he
KpeakiAJ on the battle history and
win ha~ .copies of ~k for sale nnd
auiOif'llllling.

"oom Addltlona • Rooting

'

..

ThcMcisschapterRighttoLife
is sponsoring an oratory contest
Tuesday,
Library. April I. at the
· Pomeroy
Titled "Take a Stand for Life" the
contest is open to high school juniors
d
an seniors residin_g in Mcias
"' County. Speechos arc to be originally
researched. · wriucn and presented
· from a pro-lite position on ahonion.'
infanticide. nr euthanasia, and arc to
." last hctwccn five and'seven minutes.
Prizes will he awarded to the top
three linishers with the winner receiving an all expense paid trip to tit&lt;:
state competition in Columbus.
Addition~ I inforfl\atiori and applications may · be obtained from AI
Honsaot .at , 9?2·2914
992-6168.
Registratk!p deac!!il)p is.lilfarc!l21 .
.
.
'

'G.ag11 • Replacement Windows

and I shut him up by sayina if I die
first and he ever talks lbout OUR sex
life, I'll come back and strike him
irreversibly impotent. ·
.
He often calls me by his ·second
wife's name. When l1et mad; he says · ·
I should be Oattered ~ause he
loved her so much. I really don 'L need
any advice. Ann. I just wanted to get
this off rqy chest. --Freepon, Maine
Dear Freepon: I hope you feel better ~ow. Meanwhile, 'stop competina
with women who are in the cemetery.·
ftc is· yours now, and tlua,t is all that
matters.

No. 96-1 0~ ·EL·EF9. to review the
"-' procurement practices and poli·
cies of Ohio Power Company, the
operation of Its EIICirit Fuel Com·
ponent and riiJtlld matllnt, &lt;This
hearing is SCheduled to begin •t thtl
Commission offices at 10:00 a.m;
on March 11, 1997.

can relieve a debtor
financial. obllgallons and arrange a
I dl&amp;:tribl.lllon of a sets. Debtors In bankruptcy ma~rl
keep •exempt" property lor their personal use.
Thia may include a car, a house, clothes, and

NIW Home I~ Vi~ Sieling New

'

answers to such .questions, you may
have difficulty taking pan in the current debate over proposals to change
the system to meet future needs.
The 2-1/2 year study recently
completed by the Advisory Council
on Social Security provides a basis ·
for public dialogue on the future of
the system. We can expect to hear
many proposals for change in ·the
coming months. Unless you under- ·
stand how the current system works,
. it will be hard to tell how you will be
affected by the proposed changes.
The 13-member Advisory C&lt;iuncil
rejected the notion that Social Security will not :be there for future generations but recommended that additional income be generated to meet
the needs of people retiring after
2029. It presented three di.fferent
options for achi~;ving that goal.
People make it a point to request
. information from Social Securiiy
that will answer questions about ihe ·
. program lind how it affects them ..He
suggested · that people call Social
Security's toll free number R00-7721213--.and rcqucst one or both of the
following publications:
--A "Personal Earnings and Benefit E.•timate Statement." This tells
you ltow much you have 'paid into the
program and provides an estimate of
the hcnefit• you would receive at age
62 or 65. or 'ifyou were to become
disabled, or to your family if you died
today. We will send you the application, and.you,will receive tbe estimate
within two weeks after sending it in,
-·The publication. "Social Securi- .
ty: Basic Facts," provides a brief
overview of the program and a picture of how it works to provide . a
measure of income security for your
family and society in general.
You can also get these publications and other information from the
' Internet.

Oratory
con tes·t··
s 'a ted .
April .1
/1

saying a second wife should not be
offended because her husband put a
memorial notice for his first wife in
the paper on the annimary of her
death •• worded "your loving hasband." That's like adv~ising how
much he still loves. the first wife -·
maybe more than the new one. I don'~
blame her for being upset.
I am a 70-year-old woman mar-ried to a 73-year-old· man who has
buried two wives.ldon't mind hear·
ing ahout.the happy memories of his
ftrSt wife of 39· years because he
doesn 'i ram her down 11\y' throat. But
his Clilnstant· yakking about his fabulous second and much· younger wife
(they w~re married less than five
years) b!lms .me up. Once he stancd
. to go into detail about their sex life,

BANKRUPTCY

-.U.SEU . _

Many share ·views of. this ·male chauvinist
·Ann
landers

The Dally Sentinel-• Page 8

Pomeaoy • Middleport, Ohio

70

Yard Sale

========·'

a"11oa

Gallipolis
_ _ _&amp;:..V_Ic:..l_n.;,;;IIY:,__·,.,
ALL Yard Salaallual Be Paid t~ •·•

r--------.1·
GIUESER
I$

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
lho doy boloro lho od Ia to run. ' ''
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Friday!, ,
edition- 10:00 a.m. Sa1;'r.'

GARAGE

·.:,_n;.av

Body work, car, truck

a truck painting,

·

minor mechenlcll ~
.
· rapalr.
lUne-upe.PJI Change,
lufftng
L.ong St., Rutllnd, Oh.
742--2135, Alii lor Kip

wax.

.----------.,1

•1

POmeroy,

....

.Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

All Yard S.lea Wual Be Paid lrr f..,.~
Actv1nce. Deadline: 1:OOpm

tnt

dBt btlort tnt ad is eo nm, Su,..:; .
d1y &amp; llanday ed iti on~ 1:OOpm 1-W"I

Friday.

.

Pt. Pleasant

,. ,_~

· - t~

&amp; Vk:lnlly
Make SIS 1t garage 111. .. Ot· . ('!'
1·800·027·3B58. 24 houri '

. tails

lid 1503.

�•

llonclay, ....,...,.,,_
•• ,
-~·

·Pc~~Mrer. ~Ohio

n l.

Slnllnll•

lfiA Crouword

Pu••••

PHD..LIP
ALDBR

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-1011\'THEIW'IIT
14&amp;79 .W.ohor I Oryw C.,tral '*'-1110 . . - ....
Air, a lledroomo. 2 a.n, 1371 lledl, llalll'tiHI ' Twin, Full,
llonth Deposit 1300 No Pelo, Qu~ Coucftn, Cfttka. 01·
e1-1-n•s.
..- . llucft llort. 114-448·
47121h 111-4 Wt a.,'*' Fur-

SOMe HM lnwntclllte Oponlnol
For 3 COnllngont RotplraiK)' flO.
llullt Be ARTICRlT Roo~. ""' prl- pold. - - '"' .Antlquu, !'omtroy, Ohio, lltry EllalbiL Doolro - - 01
1111.. llooN owl\er, 114·H2· AJhCRtE Accr- f"nnarom.

...

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Outlto ·Include ~·::.~!•g;
C.... Latt llodel Cart 0t lhtrafll', A8G o-a.
ltucb, tHO llodola 0. · Noh-lnvatlve /lrwttlve V.ndll·
- .IWorlio.
l'onUtc, IIICIO Eutem
Cllllpolll. .

i

O'o Auto Pant. Burint Ml~ Stllln9- 1104-

J

WantOIIJ To Bur UMd lloltllt
=:~~ 114-448'll175 Or
11.11'1 0!1.11_'11
,,[llvll'f s

P leaH Contac'r Karen
114·35~·7807,

I

570

........... ,
-~1018,

'

720 'Ducks 101' IJIIII

1

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6 A XI

Qt711

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""---IIOU1IIERN OliO

10 .......

• 7

11 Aulo-

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

ttee Ford Rongtr f.l. ·v,i, s·;
ontr 1 Ltlt,

:'.

ft,700 DBO Runa. ~~

=
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11417.

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1'111

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1'111 ' . . .
1'111 1'111'

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111!1.

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Ford a.aoo Dl- r ....... Goo4 CIOad·•·~·
COndllan, I FL Bruth Hog 7 FL 1111 NIIMn Plck·Up I s,etdl :
Blaclt· 87,000 For All 114· 811· AiiiFU SporiJ, 13.Hcl • • - ,
'

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Vulaa'lble:.Both
Dulr.Nartb

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11lnl .....
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9 A J U .l I 4 I
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17Wind . . . .

tlluy--

6 I 11·

wv. :11114-71J5.1511111.

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701a..

· • .X 4

UmhodOIItrl ttt7 d o u -.
Sbr, 2bath, f1711 down. 12l'to'
month. Fret cltllverr &amp; "tup.
Onlr at Dakwaod Homea. Nitro

IIEDIC.'L CINTIA

6 Q 10 .1 I

At7112

.;:
U::pton;_U_Md-:-C::'ar_o_RI::. 1::::2:-:-3:-:M:::IItl;:::,i!
South ol Lten, WV. Flnanclftt

or._-.....-...

jFox 114·3113·
151144), Apply In Po&lt;oon 0. &amp;end
-...To:

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Llftt ultcllon ol Utod homtl,
two
I
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CELEBRITY CIPHER
. by Lula c.mpoa

..

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__, ... __ , _ _r--G-r
~~----• w II

WYV

WDYZH, ·

RYZKDJG

!'CH

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IIDZD

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~· "®~1 Ql'(OOTO
~Ml!Q~ .: '' ~mt:J. Pit-~fd:~JM
r---c--1 .... Tl:\1~ il~
~·lmiiiiJ 15 ..,., on Otllil
Ad. off Sandhill Rd. 304·875·
3015.

Gru~o Pia,.. blnlng &amp; 18ptlra.
Pnlllltml?- TUnad? Coll·tht

t_lti,P'!i~.~~~ Praloulonll TrH S..VIce, Sblmp
RemoV•I, frH Eltlm•te•l In• '

.,,.,.., B-.
'**""

Furnlthtd 8 Roorno a Bath, No
1'911, Re....... And DoJ10tll Ro-

Phlo. 11~~

- . 814-387,7010.

'

Grun Carpot &amp; .l)iapoo To
Match, Utod V.rr Good Condl·
lion, $135 Both, 81 ..... 1542.

.

q001d,l1~151~

Will ht.ul junk or lrPh - - 1351
IOIId. 311+.417$-!ilali.

plorio0r, 01~525 .,j. . '

' JET "';
'
AEIWION MOIORS
RIMJrid.
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aportmenll at Vlllato Manor and
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