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I

Ohio Lottery

WVU slips

-

Plck3:

past Fatcons
In NIT play

Plck4: .
40116
Super Lotto '
16-20-21·2:9-41-42
Kick.-:
747769

Pages

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•

•

a1

•

Rain tonight, Iowa In the
50a. Friday, ahowara.
Hight In the mid eo..

:

Vol. 47, NO. 211

2 8ectlono, 11 ,....., " A Gennett Co. N••rpl,_

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 13, 1997

~-.OhiO Ylilly Publlehlng Coinp.ny

Local governments take
first step in flood repair
Byet says clean-up ·
kits are still available

ll

lly JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Coonty·township, village and olh·
e,r local government officials' repres&lt;:ntjng flood damaged areas attended a meeting Wednesday morning as
FLOOD RBJEF
• The Ohio Valley
Comthe first · step ·in receiving ·disaster
panyn:tw o.Jiy Sanllnal lind the. Gannett· Foundation made 1
assistance.
. $3,000 du l!lllit to the Melgl County Unltad Melhocllat Cooper·
About40 people were on hand for
atlve1'c:liJ 11's•aadly morning for flood relief efforts In Melga
the session held at the Meigs Coun·· Counly. Clii!IIC4111&amp;Rich, general manager of The Dally Santy Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
·. tlnel, pniMJila lht dDnMion to RIIY. Keith Reder of. the Mei(la
Although one purpose of the
. County UnltMI .... IIIJt Cooperative .Pariah. In tolal, tha Qan.
meetipg was to introduce officials to
nett Fqundatlon has nllde grantl tolaHng $82,500 to nonprofh . the disaster relief process. addressing
organlzatlona MNing Gannelt communhlea hh by the flooding
immediate needs and !•king care of
. including ttloH HIYed by Tile Dally SantiMI, the Galllpolla DaJ.
residents was given top· priority.
lr. ~bulla aild Point.Pleaaant Regleter newapapera. OVP. pub"If you have people in your area
1ahar Rot.rt: Wl~.sald ha hopea DthM' bualnnaal and lndJ.
that need help, especially the eldervlduale will contribute to thla 1nd other flood relief efforia.
ly, we hav" people that can help,"
1
• I
•
said Meigs County Emergency Services director Robert Dyer; who has
· been . spearheading local disaster
relief efforts since flooding began
March I.
In addition, clean-up kits are'still
.
available, he said.
: By AARON MARSHALL '
·
any yessel round moored. anchored
What
to do is address

el roads •. not surfaced roads.
Soldiers using small emplacement .
excavators -- truck-mounted back·
hoes and loaders -- and five-ton
dumptrucks will likely begin wming
on road repairs today.
.
Meanwhile. the Ohio Department
of Transportation is still taking
requests for assistance, an ODOT
representative said.
To date, ODOT has spent about
3.800 equipment hours and an additiona14,000 man hours on flood relief
efforts, it was reported.
Lance Wilson, director of the Gallia-Jackson-Mcigs-Vinton Solid
Waste District said the district is providing money for dumping fees.
"We want to see the waste placed
in a proper sanitary landfill, not
along your roads," Wilson said..
"We're here to help you out." . ·
Byer said the officials-- many of
whom h'lve garnered some disaster
relief ·experience stemming from
floods in recent years -- need to have
their projects ready to view by Thcs-

·
:.H0USe_
approves ·1eg1S1at10n·
:equating boat dock Site With
.·IJUtomobile parking· s:pace
.
.. . ~
• Gannett News

·

11ie

r:~~~~~~he~re~w~it~h~o~ut~~·~~~~~B~ut~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~s~ai~d1:·.fc~have
it~in~g~ :·;da;y~.:~·:~~~:;3~~~- =~~~~iJ~;~
still

Olld
that they will be
with the · township
--who may a betphone number and address of where ter grasp on the damage in their areas
. lation that
equates the two. they can recover their vessel.
-- to corltactlhose who need assis- .- Kasputis, who introduced the leg· tance and have them call the Amcri· under Ohio law.
House Bill 101, sponsored by islation allhe request of a c;onstiuicnt. can Red Cross at 1-8()()..255-7070.
State Rep. Ed Kaspulis, R-Westlakc. called it a "good, common sense pol"If you have people that. were
: \)'is approved 96·2, with Oft!: abstcn- icy" in an earlier interview: Support- flooded you need to have them call
• lion. ll ·will now move to the Ohio ing the lcgislalion during House that 800 number." he said.
. Senate .where 'it ·:-vm bcgi~ . the leg- comm\llce 'hearings were the Ohio
Ohio Army National Guard rep, )slat1ve procc~s on the semor body Department of Natural ,Resources rescntativcs offered more immediate
: with commiuec hearings.
and the Boali'!g Associations of assistance to townships and villages.
The bill authorizes tlic owner of a Ohio. There was no testimony in · Combat engineers can assist by
. • private dock 10 order the towins of commiuce against the mea.&lt;ure:
replacing wa.&lt;hcd oul culverts and
adding stone to repair road beds, but
~ P o m.e r o y
ere
ants
arc only limited'" working on gravthough,~so
approving l~gis-

a~..·-

'

LS·

'

'M

h

··

•.

Another

'!"ilh Federal

'fuesday at
a.m: in·thc Meigs County Em~rgeitcy
Medical Service training room in
Pomeroy.
··
FEMA . spokesm~n Lloyd Bam•
ingham said this morning that FEMA
has wriuen 637 checks totaling
$1.068.832 in Ohio related to the
flood relief effort.
The money is to be used for housing repair. replacement of belongings. ·
unemployment. assistance. medical
problems slemmin·g from the nood
and in S.:veral other areas.
In Meigs County so far 176 pco:
pic have requested disaster assistan ...

~~ ·

g·r.owth.

•

'

.

0

l :!~~~:c::y~::~~g :1dsal~~~y~~~!:r~~.?:~ Retail~sales up
1

!in connection with the burglary of a the scene and was told that a blue car,
;salem Township cabin and building . from out of the area. had.been seen
;late Tuesday afternoon.
driving around. A car filling the
. Paul J. Hall. 20, 895 Scoll School description was later pulled over a!ld
;Road. Vinton, Is being held in the further investigation led ,officers to'
;Meigs County Jail on a charge of bur· Hall. Soulsby said.
:slary, according to Meigs County . Soulsby_said it appears .nothing
;Sheriff James M. Soolsby.
was stolen, although items·were piled
He is accused of breaking into a up outside the building.
:t,uilding owped by Tom Polls local"!think the neighbor interrupted a
:Cd on, Price Road near the Oallia and . robbery,· ·he said.
:Vinton 'County lines.
,, .
The incident remains under inves·
· • Soulsby said the sheriffs depart· ligation by the sheriffs department
rnent received a call from an area res- and the Ohio Burenu of Criminal
jdent around 5:12 p.m
m
_ y.o.nceming Investigation and Identification
1he burglary.
(
which are also investigating other
• A person heard noises coming bllf'Jiaries in the area.
)rom the building. fired several shots
Hall is being beld in lieu of
.., 'lrom a rifle and 51\W a penon running $75,000 bond. ·
l&gt;ff into the woods Soulsby'Sllid.

'·

:1' .

through FEMA. compared In 6.337
statewide.
Barningham encouraged flood
victims to call FEMA's tclcrcgistralion numhcr at 1-H00-462-'.1029.
"It's the lirsl step tnwiu-d gelling
healed," he healed.
He soid people don't have In wail
for the FEMA inspector before staning their clean-up,. hut encouraged

people to take photos or record the
damage.
"We're concerned

O\'Cr

the elder-

ly too proud In accept donations," he
S.id. "They've been payinp taxes all
these years a,nd its more or less their
money."

·

"If you have any quest.ions, call
the tclcregistratinn number," he said .

Democrats say it will take months
;e~A!!~Hi!~!~zat!?e~ a~~~J~~!or to return ·improper con-t ributions

.

1

call the

.
.
. .'Melg. Cciilnty~ICy.-,!lervicea
Byer updated towri&amp;hlp tril ' jl cltirkl arid viiWednesday on flood relief ettorli, focUsing on
needs for residents and ktcll governmente. He
offlclala to make sure fiDod vlctlmsln thelr arees
numbers for eaalstence.
'

·. j h e a r p r o.g r e s s r e p o r t

· Sentinel Newa Staff
replaced.
'
. · A progress report on Pomeroy's
The merchants•' gave a vote of
WASHINGTON (AP)
The . n 't want to take out more loans.
. And it's going w he gelling less
downtown revitalization project was appreciation to the various.organila· Dcmo.:ratic Pany now says it will
given hy Mike Stroth. consultant. at tio~s who helped during Jhe flood take several months to return $1.5 help frmil the White House in the
. Wednesday's meeting of the Pomeroy including·the firemen. American Red million. in foreign or otherwise ncar future. A temporary freeze had
. Merchants Association.
Cross and the National Guard. Clark improper contrihutions identified by been put on all sleep-overs in the Lin, . Stroth reported that work ha.&lt; also e~presscd appreciation to an audit that party leaders announced coln Bcdromn. cofli:cs and fund-raising receptions and dinners in the
started in preparation for the instal- Krogcrs who donated food, and Peo- with great fanfare two weeks ago.
No checks have · gone nut, and White House, a senior nflicial said
, Jation of 28 more period streetlights pies Bank personnel who served ilto
· _in tbe business section. These will go those alfectcd by the nood.
none of the donors have been om- late Wednesday, spcakinp em the
along Main . Linn and Coun Streets.
Merchants were encouraged to cially notified their money will he condition of anonymify:
. " The president wants In make
The Jighting ·projcct is expected to 1&gt;.; spruce up for spring with allraclive refunded. said Democratic National
: completed within I)() days. '
window decorations and to come up Commillee spokeswoman Amy sure his (uturc rund-rnising at·ti'vitics
comport with the ~;uidclincs laid
' Stroth said tllatthe million~llar ' with promotional material for their . Weiss Tobe.
.
: rcvitaliz.atipn project is '"winding respective businesses· which can be · "We hope to do it within the next down by the White House and the
: down ." Work on the amphitheater is distributed. Susan park, president, several month~." Tohe said. "Wc:ve . DNC." White House spokesman
; expected in he resumed ,o~cc the suggested individual ' bu~1ncs~ ~~cided the right thing to do is to Mike McCurry said earlier. "We 'rc
: O!lio Ri•er has returned to a normal ' brochures showing building sketches, raise the money ahd return it when examining the schedule. accordingly."
• level. he added. About $600.000 in giving historical-material. and listing we can."
In another dcvclop!"ent, The New
: grant monies have g11ne into the ·pro- products available.
President .Clinton has helped the
;jcct with matching funds from local
. A note of appreciation was read commillee raise more than $1 million . York llmcs reponed ioday that a fed; businesses.
'
. ·• . from Karin Johnson for a donation IQ in the past mqnth alone. Bul the·par- eral in•cstigation into whether the
; Flood damage was discussed and the touri&amp;m program. t1was reponed ty reports more than Sl0 million in . Chinese government sought to inllu: George Wright: member of~l?mcfoy that she has resigned (rom the posi- debts tl'om the pa.'il election and does- cncc last year's U.S. elections was
. _••_'?· ..Jera~e
: village Council. reported thal'ull but tion. c. ontlnued p-e
011 -. 3
• four of the period lights have been
1111' Ul
II
••

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. '&lt;!'

.

f)

v

'••

•

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~·r ·

'· .

....

triggered hy National · Security
}\.gency cavcsdruppinp.
The NSA, which eavesdrops on

Most or

th~

suspect donations

uncanhed by the puny's audit were

miscd hy thr~c Asian-American husi overseas l.!()mmunicali&lt;ms. prepared a ncssman ut the ccnlcr of the current
report for the FBI su~gcsting that ' invcslig:ation intn Dcnux.:ratic fund
China wus rreparcd 10 funnel rooncy raising. In oOc case, .a donation was
made- in thc ·namc nf a woman who
In American nflicehofdcrs In huy

had been dead fnr years.
influence, the Times reported .
The new refunds would hring the
The newspaper said lhe FBI predotal
sent hack hy the DNC doling the ·
pared a list cif about 10 mc'mhcrs of
cwnlrovcrsy
over fund raismg from
Cungress who might he 1~1rgcts of the
Chinese ciTort. The ~BI infc1nncd a , foreign snurcc,s 11? alrnust $3 mill inn.
Tohc said the first hatch of
h~lf-do't.en of them Ia'! June that they
were possihlc targ:cts .. hul it is not

improper contrihutinns; 'mnounccd

clear why the others were nol told, sporadically as thCy were discovered
the Times said .
• last year. ha.&lt; hcen returned. ·
As for the questionable ccmlrihuLisa Tucker, an auomcy reprelions le&gt; the Democratic Panv. DNC
leaders announced on Fch. '2x lhal senting Taiwanese-Amcrican busithey were re.turning . $1.5 milhon nessman Johnny Chung, said "it wa.•
more from 77 donors·. They didn' t say hurtful." when the party announced it
how long it ·wnuld take to send the could nut verify the legality of
Chung's $166,000 in donations.
money ha~k.

0.8 percent i,n February

WASHINGTON (AP) - Retail sales represent about nne-third of the
sales rose 0.8 percent in February, nation's cc.onomic activity.
The latest repon was in line with
just half of the January advance, •ug·gesting moderating economic the results or a Feilcnil Reserve surgrowth.
vcy, released Wednesday, that circd
The Commerce Department said improved retail sales from a year ago
today sales totaled .a seasonally in most orits 12 regions. ·.
.
adjusted $213.2 billion, up from
The survey found,· regional
$211.~ billion in -January. Bolh auto
"economies coinin~ to expand at a
dealers and department stores report· · relatively moderate pace," with·'few
ed healthy gains.
sisns of mounting inflation.
The January increase was reviseil
The survey strengthened belief the
shalply to a 1.5 peteent gain, from the Fed will refrain from raising interesi
department's initial 0.6 pereein esti- riles later this J110nth to keep the ·
mate. The advance was the steepest 1-conomy from overheating and ignit·
· since February 1996, when sales .Jhg price hikes.
rose 1. 9 percent.
In a separalc repon, the Labor
Many analysts had expected a 0.7 Department said new claims for joJ&gt;.:
percent increase last month. ~etail · •less ~~fi~ fell by 5,000 last week

to the lowcstlcvcl in more than two ation said today credit card delinyears, reOecting a tightening lnhor quencies rose hi the fmirth quarter to
a record 3.72 pcrccn! of all accounts,
market .
Applications for unemployment from 3.48 percent in ,the third quar·' .
:
insuran•'C tolllled a ·:;ta.'lllnally adjust· : tCr•
1'
. ·
In its report,' the. Commerce
ed 307,000, down from a rcvisod
Department said sales of durable
312,000 a week earlier. · ·
· The closely watched four-week !lKids·rosc 1.6 percent, ~'leepest since
average declinod to 310.250 from a 3. I 'pen:cnl ••in in February 1996.
Auto dl:alcrs ~led a I. 7 percent
310,500 tbe previOII$ •week, lowest
since 309,7S0durjnstl)c period end- ' aain, slislltly below the 1.9 percent
ed May 13, 1989.
·•
. advance in January. Bxcludin~ autos
,
Many analysts prefer to track the sales still were up 1..5 percent.
Sales
of
building
material!,
l'lll'd-.
less-volatile four-week .average
because it sm~ths out the spikes in wii'C and lardel) supplies shot up 2.2
perec~t. even higher than the 1.. 6 PQI'·
tHe weekly reports.
·
cenl
jump in January. Sales of ful!lill:cspilc, evidence of a ·healthy
ture
and
olhe' homc-(umishi1115 l!llll
economy and low . unemployment
ratcs.the American Banlle111 Associ- 0.3 percent

�,
'

COmmentary

'

OHIO Weather
AccuWeather• forecast f~

ne Daily Sentinei._Y!,h.!t hap~~L~~o...~~,.. ~~?..:.. _.... _,,
'EstUiilfw4 inl!H8

Cuatort Syndic Fie

WASHINGTON •• Here we so
again.
111 Court St., P0n•oy, Ohio
Last Mohday, the Wbite House
eu n:N'Ise • Fax: ttz-21117
smacked the FBI with an unusual
accusation ltsaidacoupleofG-men
warned colleagues at the National
SecurityCouncillastsummerthat
the
" .
communist
Chinese
government
was
A Gannett
NewapaiJer
try ins to buy influence in Congress - but then instructed the Clinton aides
ROBeRT L WINGETT
not to tell the president.
Publllhlr
The story held up less than a day.
While it is completely out of characCHARLENE HOEFLICH
ter for FBI agents to $ay: "The presa..nllltng.r
Coidloft1r
· ident's in trouble. Cover it up, " it's
not unusual these days for the NSC
to look the other way when somei body greases a prestdenlial palm. .
i! Consider this: NSC officials k.ncw
1atleast two years ago that the presi•
.,dent and first lady were cadgmg con·
:~;-_...___...;,_____...,.__..,;.___..;,____-li tributions from shady characters.
After fax-machine impresario Johnny Chung squired six Chinese com·
munist officials into the Oval Office
in March 1995, NSC Asian desk

Co.

l

'Dow-track•· n g fund
•s 0 ne of a kl• n.d
.
1

By Dl.n VuJovlch
There are a few unit investment trusts that mvest tn !he so-called "dogs
of the Dow," and dozens of funds that are designed to reflect the peiformancc
of the S&amp;P 500 or other indices. But only one fund tracks the Dow Jones
Industrial Average.
The ASM Fund of Tampa, Aa., which has been aroYnd since 1991, invests
its asset• onto the 30 stocks that make up the DJIA. The fund is categori1.ed
as a growth and mcome fund, according to Lipper Analytical Service. That's
because the stocks that make up the Dow do pay dividends.
There are a number of things that are interesting about this fund, heginnmg wtth the fact that the Dow ts a.&lt; household a name as a Wall Street tenn
ran get. You'd he pretty hard-pressed to find someone who has never heard
of the Dow Jones Industrial Average .. this yeat the Dow turned· I()() years
old.
So one could say that investors on a fund that tncks the Dow IJave invested into somethmg with a J()().year track record. And while the stocks that
make up that average have changed over the last ccntulj -- General Electric is the only stock that's been in the Dow since its inception -- knowing
prectsely where a fund jnvests its assets is appealing to some invoestors. In
this case, the fund is made up of big blue-chip companies. It has 30 stocks
tn its portfolio, and owns 12,000 shares of each company. ·
· Now let's talk about perfonnance. Ponfolio managers know how hard it
i• to beat the averages like the Dow. Looking back at the one-, three-, (ive. 10· and 15-year results ofthe Dow compared with the S&amp;P 500, with both
rcmvesting dividends, the Dow outperfonns the S&amp;P 500 in every instance,
Last year. for example, the Dow was up 28.90 percent, and the S&amp;P 500
was up 22.86 percent.
A look at the year-by-year performance nilmbers shows that the Dow outperformed the S&amp;P 500 in nine of the 14 years ending on Dec. 31, 1996.
The biggest spread was in 1986: That year the Dow was up 27.26 percent
with reinvested dividends, while the S&amp;P 500 gained 18.70 percent. The
btggcst spread win for the S&amp;P 500 was in 1984: That year the S&amp;P SOO
was ahead 6.26 pct'cent, and the Dow was up 1.15 percent.
But those are the index numbers. The ASM Fund's performance numbers smce its inception don '1 run neck-in-neck with the Dow's. That's because
the fund's expenses were hish and dragged down its performance, a fund
spollcsman says. Last year, for example, the ASM Fund was up 24.76 percent, laggmg behind the DJIA by about 4 percent.
·Recently the fund slashed its expe11.se ratio to 0.18 pcrcen! of assets.
"The expenses were high in the first live years," says Steve Adler, prestdent and portfolio manager of the fund. "So we anted up some money to
make us the lowest-price index fund, and now we 're hoping to attract some
assets."
While no one knows for sure why a fund like this hasn't been created
before, the notions of cost and diversification could play into it.
Steve Schoeplsc, senior ponfolio analyst at Moody 's Investor Services,
satd that because there arc only 3q stocks that make up the Dow. an investor
could create their own portfolio of stocks and therefore not need to tovcst
m a fund. He also thinks diversiftcauon could be a reason.
"The Dow is also not a very broad mdex like the S&amp;P 500 or the
Wilshtre." says Schoepke. "II may be big m terms of capitali1ation hut not
m terms of market sectors."
Whatever the reasons. the ASM Fund. with only $18 mtlhon in assets.
is still one of a kind.
·
Diltn Vujovich IS the author fli"Stralght Talk About Mutual Funds"
and "Stralaf!t 'Illlk About InVesting for Your Redmnent,"both of which
are published by McGraw HUI. Sead quHtlons to her in care of this
newspaper.

I

Today in history
By The AIIOCIIIWd PrHt

-

Today is Thursday, March 13, the 72ndday of 1997. There are 293 days
left in the year.
Today'• Highlight in HistOI)':
On Man:h 13, 1852, 1 familiar symbol of the United States, Uncle Sam,
made his debut as 1 Cll'IOOII chancier in the New York Lantern.

On
this dlle:
·
In 1781,
the planet
Uranus was discovered by s·IF w.11·
1 1am Herscbel·

Berry's World

missed Chama as a "hustler'' but
approved releain1 pll\)los f1l the
president with the Chung deleption:
"To the degree that it motlvlles him
to continue giving to the (Democra·
ticNationaiCommittee),"Sueuinger
wrote a to! league, "who am I to com·
plain?"
When Story No. 1 disintegrated,
the White House tried another feint.
It said its aides simply mismterpreted an FBI insistence on discretion.
But this White House ts never discrete about money. When it comes to
cash contributions, Bill Clinton is the
most hands-on presidentm history._
He monitored every penny coming
into Democratic coffers last year -and hke a Dickensian taskmaster, he
constantly demanded more. If AI
Gore wasn't shaking down businessmen, emissaries from the Democratic National Committee were bilking
Cheyenne-Arapaho Indians out of '
their wmter heating oil.
In such an atmosphere, it wouldn't be surprising for aides to adopt a

paft: NudgulldiswrbinaiiiiiiiXlup
the chain of cornrnimd, but not so fir
thlt the presidenL and first lady
wouldn't be able to protest iporance.
In any event, the most imporllllll
aspect of, this tale may not be the
money bin the role of the FBI. From
its early ·days in Washington, the
Clinton administration has tried
mightily to transform the Federal
Bureau of Investigation into a polil·
ical hit unit, more loyal to the president than to the law.
y.'hen the Clintons decided to fire
the White House Travel Office, one
of their aides bullied the FBI tnlo
mounting a baseless witch hunt into
the life and times of former travel
office honcho Billy Dale.
Next canle the liasco of the White
House passes: For two yean, the
adlllinistration, failed to conduct routine background checks of key presidential aides and cronies -- includi~g former Chief o;&gt;f Staff Mack
McLarty. When tbc press first reported the talc, Clinton's spin merchants

HE'S FiliALLY

-----

6ETTIN6 MY
SYMPATHY

I.

Morton Kondrac/ce

son's Goverpmental Afl;airs Com·.
mince has all the mom -- and most
ofthe money -- it needs to investigate
1996 wrongdoing by bqth pariies and
by both Clinton and Cof!gress, with
the Senate Rules and Administration
Com mince put in charge of changes
in campaign financc'law.
Meantime. with less public notice,
Rep. Dan Burton. R-Ind .. has j;CCUrcd
authority to rocus the House Government Reform and Ovel'!light Committee's inqutry totally on Democratic wrongdoing, a..sig"- thrce-quaners
ofhiscommitt&lt;:c's staff resources and
budget to the task, and issue subpoenas and make information public on
his own authority.
Burton rcL-cntly issued subpoena.&lt;
In get the name of cv9ry visitor to tbe
White House since 1993 and every
contact between a \fhitc House offictal and the Dcmox:rdltc National
Commillce.
Wbethcr or not Auorncy General
Janet Reno uppmnts a special coun&gt;el-- which.shc seems In he resisting
in order to demonstrate that the JusIIL'C Department ha.&lt; the indeP.,ndence to tackle an honest probe of its
own prcstdent-- aJ(&gt;nnidable battery
&lt;!f mvcsttgaltvc pdwcr is heing leveled attlte White House.
And Clinton's hyper-aggressiveness m usmg h1s vfficc to raise money -- nne Republican said. "II
rcmtnds you of Spiro Agnew, uccpl
thallhts wa.' checks and not cash" - seems to provide a new target every ·

. .

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After 50 years ol puhlic scrvtcc. ahout it lor a "Thtnk Tank" progmm.
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moymhan's ccn·
"Tbc great achievement of our
trol complaint is that " We don' t seem lifespan ... is learning In manage the
!O have any 'capac tty for socutllearn· business cycle," he says. He recalls
ing. or else we forget what was
' learned."In what augurs to be a cross
Ben Wattenberg
between ~loving Amen can roast and
a. Gennan acadcmtc fcstschnft. we the atmosphere of his youth at City
shall hear ubout . that' on Monday, Colle,e in New )'ork City during and
March 17. when schotars convene at after the Great Depression: "There
the Woodrow Wil.on Center in Wash· was only one real question around; it
tngton. DC., for a full-day rctro- was understood that free enterprise
spcctive: "The Intellectual as Publtc market captlalism had fat led. Indeed
Servant: A Tribute to Senator Daniel ·if you look at the data, the alternation
Patrick Moynihan at 70."
of boom and bust, and hoom and
Moynihandeservessuchauention. crash. had seemed to be amplified
In his half century he has been pro- from the late 1890s... . The question
fessor, politician, editor, ambassador, ' was what comes next; that's what you
Cabinet member, chainnan or the argued about.··
Senate Fina~ce Committee. action
But then came the Employment
· intellectual, bureaucrat, naval aun- Act of 1946.1nnucnced by \he tllink·
nery officer. and White House staffer. ing of John Maynard ICeyne~. and.
His fields of inte~·
ncluclc foreign says Moynihan •. "In a half century
policy, welfare, .
omics, cities, we've had (only) four quancrs of
111t:e, India, Canada,
nicity, edu- negative economic growth. There's
.cllion. architecture. cpidemioloay. been nothinslike it in the history or
the measurements of social scie~ce the species, 50methingthouJht quite
and olftcial secrecy, to he1in a very impossible ... " The dips were relalonJiist.
tively so minor that "If tho; Bureau of
What hAven't
learned? What EconomicAnalysisintheComrnerce
~ve we foraouen?l chatted with him Depanmcnt. 11id~ 't tell you, you

a

..

we

II

&lt;I
fl •

wouldn't know.' '
And now'/ What have we learned
· from such succ~ss'l Not much. says
Moynihan. after tbe (harcly successful) struggle in the Senate to derail
the Balanced Budget Amendment.
which requtred a twc;.thirds vote:
"By one tiny vote, we escaped acnnstituuonal amendment to put us hiiCk
on a 12-month agricultural cycle ... "
Moynihan also ha.&lt; a problem
with what's hllflllCning in welfare. He
goes on: "Surprising events ... just
when that pattern of st~ady growth
settles in and stays in-- your society
stans coming apan! ..
or a sudden, says Moynihan, we
faced "one of our laracst social
changes ever in tbe modem industn·
al era ... the breaking down and em·
ston of traditional family structures
. hy which children were reared with
two parenL&lt;' ... born in two-parcftl
families." Moynihan cites anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski's
promul&amp;llliqn of "the lirst universal
law anthropology, .. which held thai
everywhere -- in ~IITIOI, Chicqo,
Argentina, Siberia - every child hid
an acknowledged mall) parent ...
"Suddenly, in the 1960s we begin to

or

Larry Da~id Barr, 51 , LangsvtUe, died Wednesday, March 12, 1997. at

Holzer Medical Center in Galhpohs.
.
He was born Apnl 6, 1945, in Lan~sville, son of the late Alpha Lewts
and Elvira Ann Phelps Barr. He was employed as a cement mason wuh Local
I in Columbus.
He is sur.&lt;ivedby hts wife, Sharon Lee Thoma Barr of Lang~ville, a son.
Howard David Barr of Chester; a daughter. Michelle Renee Barr of Man·
etta; one granddaughter; sts\ers and brothers-m-law, Jean and Cfiester Mess·
er of Rtchwood and Kay and Jerry Bullis of West Umon; a brother, Duane
Barr of Jackson; a brother and sister-in-law, Michael and Margaret Barr of
Pomeroy; and several meces and nephews.
.
.
Services will he held Sunday, 2 p.m at Ftsher Funeral Home tn Mtddle·
ort with the Revs Sam Basye and Rev Douglas Shambhn offictatmg. Bur·
tal will be held in Gravel Htfl Cemetery.
·
Friends may call Salu!day, 2-4 and 7-9 p m at the funeral home.
In lteu of flowers donaltons may he made 10 Holzer Hosptce

Rain should end Friday

Roger H. Dtllon, 57. Moxahala. dted Wednesday, March 12, 1997
The snn of Kenneth Carl Dillon of Colcord, WVa . and the late Lorena
Dtllon, h~ recently worked for the Petro Ware Inc. of Crooksvtlle and was
a longtime employee of Peabody Sunnyhtll Coal Mme and a, member of
UMWA Local 1640 He auended Oakfield Wesleyan Church.
He ts survived by hi s wtfe. of 35 years, Robcna Kay Hoover Dtllon: a
daughter and son-m-law. Roxanna J. and Jeff French of Enevlile. N.Y: a
son and daughter-m-lilw, Randall J and Kendra Dillon of Drakes; a son.
Rtchard K. Dillon of the home and four grandchildren.
He ts also survtved by a brother. Kenneth Carl Dtllon of New Lexmglon; five sisters and three brothers-m-)aw, Erma Wtley of Dorothy. W.Va.,
Brycie Stiegel of Fanmngton, N.Y.. Yvonne and James B. Walker ot Spnng
Lake, N.C, Luc Etta and CarlE Shenefield of Langsville. Lmda and Roger ,
Wright of Ashville.
·
He was preceded m death by two brothers, Harold and Archtc. and by a
stsler, Corena.
Services will be Friday. I p.m. at Oakfield Wesleyan Church wuh the
Revs. George Hughes and Ralph Cordle offtctalmg Burial will he tn Oak·
field Cemetery. Fnends may call one hour prtor to services.

Meigs~ EMS

.

Sunon Townshtp residents can obtatn appltcatton /onns for 199798 Ernest A. &amp; Maxine S Wirtgcll Memonal Scholarshtp awards I rom
etther Sh~rlcy Sayre, Southern Htgh School gutdan&lt;:c counselor. or
Robert Wingett. 1367 College Road, Syracuse
Dcadhnc for submmmg the completed apphcauous "Apn I 15 The
scholarship amount IS $1 ,000 annually for up to four years.
In addition to legal rest dents of Sutton Townsh•p, hneal meccs and
nephews o[ the hllc Mr. and Mrs. Wmgett and their d~rect descendants.
regardless of where they reside. are ehg•hle to apply
.

Pomeroy Merchants...
Continued from page 1
I
Flowers were sent to Wendy's by
the assoctat10n on tts grand opcmng
Monday. Clark reported.
She welcomed Randy Mamhout
of Prcscnption Oxygen. a new
Pomeroy busmcss, and he announced
I ormation of a Beller Breathers Cluh
a support group for people having
breathmg d•fficully
Discussed at the mcettng was the
fashton show lo he held Apnl II at
Pomeroy Elementary School. Any
bustncss or ind1v1dualm town mtcr-

Couples issued marriage

J1m Anderson announced a dinnerdance lund IUI!-iCf lor th e M~1gs

County Chamhct ol Commcn.:c to he

held Saturd,\y ntght at Royal Oak
Resori Cost ts $15 a &lt;:oup/c for the
steak dmncr and hvc mustc A gnl ~
tournament ts also hcmg plan.ncd. he
satd

The Cancer Sqctl:ty's datlodtl sale
was noted ll was noted that the Mcr1

chants AsM"~l'tatwn's mcmhct slup dnvc 1s underway

p m • sunnsc scrvl!.:cs. 6 a.m wn h 1
hrcaklast to lollow . Sunday sr..:hool.lt ,

9 45 am In! lowed hy ,on e~~ hunt.
;.md evening scrvu:c at 6 30 r m

Cantata planned
"Watch the Lamh" . .1 mus1r..:.IIth a

ma. WI II he perfonncd hy members nl
the Racmc Unucd Mcthodtst Chutch ..
Elm Street. Raunc. Sunday. M.och
23. 7 p.m. and Good,Fnday. March,
28. 7 p.m . A nursery w•ll he pmvtded Rclreshmenls will be served lollowmg the drama. Puhltc tnYlted to
ancnd

.

Easter cantata announced
"A Joyful Celehratton of Resurn.-clton Life" wtll be presented hy tl&gt;e .
Mtddlcpon Church ol Chnsl Adult.
Chmr Easter Sunday. 6 a.m.; and
Wednesday. Apnl 2. 7 p.m A breakfast wtll tollow the Easter prcscnlalton. Puhltc tt\Vtlcd

•

Daisy N. Sisson

Divorces and dissolutions ';

•
•

The Daily Sentinel

,
I

I

sec this pauem break up in tbe Unit- ~
cd States, to tbe point where almost I
a third ol' aU American children arc l
horn In a single parent, unmarrie&lt;l ...
with profound lundestrablc) coniif;; ,.

I

--!f',

qucncc.~. ••

"Hnw did this happen'/" Mnyni- ,,:
hun asks, and then says. " I don' t .
know!"

i

-f

When it is suggested that it haf&gt;· ·I
pcncd because of counterproductive • ~
government welfare and povcny pn~ : •

grams, Moynihan snaps, uWc'rc
)IOtng to find out, III'Cn't weT' He says
be fears that l'We.wjU fipd millions
of children unsupported and possibly
even abandoned ... " In fact, he says,
be predicts it. "It's the biggest samble we've ever taken with social policy... " II would have been wiHCr, be
believes, just to tougben up his 1988
Family Support .Act, which was
working. W.e should not flll)cl the
lessons of social hiJIOI)'.
Mi1ht it he thai the shol:k ~y
of lhe 1996 welfare-reform lcaillalion ha.&lt; sent a mcssaac. and already
show$ some sips of rovcninalhe ill
effects of welfare? It is not impotsl.
blc, Moynihan acknowledges, but
hiJhly dubiou..

:

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"1
":
••
·!
.t
•t
•
; [,

i

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~~
,.
~ ...

Stl)~ks

Newaptper Auocl~lon.

'

Ashland 011 ............;..............40\

POSTM4STIR: Seftd addf'eQ con-et~ion!l to
The Dally Sentinel. Ill Coun St. Pomeroy.
Otrio4l%9.
SUIIIICRIPTION RATBS

•

• ., Con1orJ"'"
.. -1.. ........· .
. ... Jl.QO
One Mood!- · ..................................... 11.70
O..Yeot ................................ $10400
()nt \\feek.L.... ,•.,._,

H ....

S,tNGLI COPY . .ICII
Dtil)' ...,.... ... .. .. ... . .......

.. .......... 35 Cen11

Subterlben IKII dellrtq 10 pay die carrier may
remit in advance direct ro '\'be Daily Senliael
0C1 I thl'ee.,' lilt (If 12 moneta t.iL Oalit will be

AT•T ....... ,..... ~.......................35'14

Bank One .............:...: ............45\
Bob Evans ............................13'-

Borg-Warner ...........................40
Champion .............................18'~
Charming Shop1...................s"'.oo
City Holdlng .......: .....,.,. .........33'1o
Federal Mog&amp;~l ....................... 25'1.
Gannett .....................;.T.........12C
Goodyear ............................,.5311
Kmart ..........................~ .......... 12'.\
Lands End ............................. 28'4

No ,.b.triprion by moll ponnlnod In ~"
'Where home c:llnel' lti'Vke ilawallabat.

Rockwell .:.............................17~

1-MolpC...,.

! ) -............................ .......... $27.30
26-...................... . ................... $U82

$l - .............................................SIOl.~

..... -

l

..

RD-Shtll ........................!! .... 175\
Shonlly's ................................ &amp;\

Slar hnk ..............................44'-

Wendv'a .................................~21
Worthlngton ..........................20'h

-·-·-

Stock repone art the 10:30
a.m. quot" provided by Advest
of Galllpolle.

.

~.68

.12

••

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618 EAST MAIN ST. • POMEROY
OPEN IION•..f'RIH. SAT. H

MolpCwnly

¢

•

Prem Flnl .....................~~, ....... 15!4

I ) -............................................$29.25

»-............................................
n -...............................................st

a

ova .......................................37}.

One Valley............................. 39%

MAILSIJIIIICRirnoNS

.Do you have an IRA?
a Keogh? or SEP?

Llmltad .................................. 19'1.

ahen canter eoch-

Pllblioller- ... rlp "' odjut- ....
1., the ,.-pcloa period. Su-pdon cllaqes . ., .. " " " - by c:honp.. the
...... ol the ... lpiOft.

t

mcn.:hanls

Anna L. Wolfe

•

t

rcl'reshmcnts. Juntor Chamber of
Commerce mcmhcts wtll .us!'.tsl 111.
handing oul rnzcs . Tickc1s !01 thr;
style show wtll he sold hy &lt;eve•a/

logs 12 calls

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----Meigs announcements.---

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Application deadline April IS

Today's ·l ivestock report

cuts .

It's ltme for a hc:~&lt;l-lo-hcart
between Clinton. Lntt. Gingrkh. and
Democratic congressional lcudcrs
and 11 resolve tbat even tf 1~7 can't
avmd hetng tbe Year of Scandal. it
will also be the Yeur nf tbe Deal.
(Morton Kond,.ke is ell&lt;CU·
live editor of Rol CaD, the newspaper f1l C..,Itol HIU.J

Applications and resumes for 10 scholarships or $500 each to be
awarded by Stewan Johnson VFW Post 9926 tn Mason are betng
accepted from post members and their famtlies wtth an Apnl 4 deadline.
A Post 9926 spokesman satd if all the scholarshtps arc not awarded to members and lhctr families, other veterans and the~r famthes will
be considered Those who apply must be accepted at their respective
college or universuy.
Resumes should state the applicant's relattonshtp to veterans as well
· as tncludmg the college being attended and maJor course of study.
Apphcaltons arc to be sent to VFW Pos1 9926. P 0 Box 586.
Mason, W. Va .. 25260

Jerry Lambert

Ora C. Richmond

day for.mv.11s1igators to· sbootlllJ •.•
Therc'• rio escaping a full probe, of :
alleged wrongdt'ling. The chips arc
going to fall where tbey may. The :
question is, will anything else get
done in Washington while that ·
process is unfolding'/
If Clinton is to have a prayer of :
claiming a share of above-the-fold
space on Page I of the newspapers •
for anything other tht111 scandal;r, the :
president htts In start mnvjng on budget-balancing negotiations. To do
that, he needs belp from congres- ·,
sional Republicans
So far. - Loti claims, the White
Hou.&lt;e has been uucrl~ unclM&gt;pcrative, refu.&lt;ing to join htm in propos- :
ing: a commission to work out a new
cost-of-hving index and doing its
utmost to defeat his pmjl&lt;&gt;sed hal- .
t111ced budget cnnslilutinnal amendment.
.
White House aides, meanwhile,
arc poinling fingers hack at Congres.&lt;,
claiminl! that GOP leaders arc unable
to produce a budget resolution of
their own liy the April 15 deadline ;.
becuu.&lt;;e ol internal conOicts over tax

Scholarship applications being accepted

nse Fnday at 6:44 a.m.
Across the nation
Rain continued,to drench the lower Mtsstsstppt Valley this morning,
while snow and gusty winds blew a
chill mto ~he Dakotas and Mtnncsola.
1
Stonns cente~4 in eastern T~xas
were predicted to-slowly move mto
cstcd ;n parttcipali ng m the show arc
Arkansas and ;l'enncssee and up
asked to call Vtckt Ferrell. Buttons
through Indtana today. Rainfall of up
Jerry Lambert, 43, Ewington, dted Wednesday. March 12. 1997 in.HoJz. and Bows 9920-SI77 Clark satd
to 3 inches was jlredtcted to aggra· ·
there was a need for people to serve
vale flooding acrfss the Ohto Valley er Medical Center.
reg1on
•
Born Feb. 12. 1954 m McAnhur. son of Lawrence and Lu&lt;:y Dtckey LamTo the north, ~he weather worry bert, he was a former employee of the Dixon Constru.:tton Co.. Clovts. N.M.
was snow - wtlfl up to I0 mches
Surviving in adduion to hts parents arc !its wtlc. Dcbbte Shuler Lumbert, Dance slated
A round and square dance wtll be
possible. Bltzzard-hke condiltons whom he mamed July 4. 1973 m Vmton County. a son. Jason. at hm;nc: a
were predicted from the Dakotas 10 daughter. Truoy (Jay) Speakmen ofWtlkesvtlle: a bro!hcr. Tommy (Nancy) held at VFW Tuppers Plums Post
Lambert of Katy, Texas; two ststers, Jenny (A ndy) Dufty of Wellston, and 9053 hall. Sto II p.m Saturday. Guy
Wisconsi.n
twin sister. Pam (Floyd) Newsome ol Vmton ; hts father-m-law and mother- Thomas and True Country will pro·
'
m-law, Ross and Beulah Shuler of Langsvtllc: and seve ral mcces and v1dc mus1&lt;.:.
' nephews.
Graveside services wtll be I p.m Fnday m the Wilkesville Cemetery. Alumni to meet
Chester Alumnt Assoctalton wtll
Fncnds may call at the McCoy-Mnnrr Funeral Home. Vmton. from 7-9
Units of the Meigs County Emer- COLUMBIA TWPVFD
have a meeting at the Chester Ftrc·
gency Medical Service recorded 12
1:50 p.m., Happy Valley Road, tonight.
·
In ltcu of llowers, memonal gtfts may he sent to Dchhte Lam hen, in care house. Tuesday. 7:30 p m. Offtces
calls C,i&gt;r assistance Wednesday. Units brush fire. no tnJunes reponed.
and others mtercsled should anend
of the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home. P.O Box 148. Vmton. Oh10 45686
respotiding included:
POMEROY
·• ·
10:05 p.m., VFD and squad to
Slgnup set
CENTRAL DISPATCH
U S 33, Katherine Reitmire propcrThe Mtddleport Youth League
12:59 a.m.. state Rou~e 124, ty. brush fireli.no injunes reponed.
Ora Ccctle Richmond, 97, Elyria. formerly of New Haven W.Va. dted wtll have its final stgnup
. Saturday. I
Rcedsvtllc, Kiphng Reed. treated at RACINE . e·•
to
4 p.m m Mtddleport Counctl
Wednesday,
March
12.
1997
in
the
Allen
Mcmonal
Hospual.
Oberlin.
the scene. Reedsville squad assis\ed; '
3"2S p.ll!',.- Oak Grove koael.
Born July 20. 1899 m Ktmberly, W.Va . daughter of the late Wtlham Hen· •chambers at vtllage hall.
3:43a.m., Mtll Street, Middlcpon. Bcnha Johnson. treated allhe scene
ry and Ida Uaderwood Fleeman, she was a homemaker
•
FredaHood, •Vcterans·Memoool Hos- RUTLAND 1' ' ·
,'
She
was
also
preceded
tn
death
by
her
hushand,
~ohn
F.
Rtchmond.
m Singers cqming
pitah •·. , · ' ,
· •
'7:25p.m., state Route 325, MarThe Mc..sengers of Wellston wtll
. •7:1(11a.m., West Main' Street. Jorie Gwi~l:dowski .. 'O'Bieri~ss 1967; a daughter. Gcraldmc Rtchmond; twm sons, Ronald Rtchmond ond stng at the MI. Umon Bapttsl Church
Donald Richmond; a son. Leon Richmond; and by five ststcrs. a brother, and
Pomeroy. Nina Di~otl, VMH:
Meln6rial Ho~pita'l. '
Sunday located south of Carpenter.
three grandchildren. Tnna Rtchmond. Tma Taylor and Ferhn Mauox.
10:26 a.m., John Street, Racine. SCIPIO ~rVFD
Survtvmg arc live daughters, Thelma (Edward) Mattox of Pomt Plea.,. 6:30p.m. Sunday. Good Frtday serPat Snider. Pleasant Valley Hospttal;- _ 2 17 p.m , \.\mold Road, brush
vices wtll he held on March 2X. 6 30
II :55 a.m .• Maples Apanments, lire, no injuries reponed. Rutland ant. W.Va. Nina (AI) Syx of Wellston. Maxmc "Mtcktc" (Lawrence) Rose
of Racine, Barbara A,l!hcide of Elyria, and Oma W~rd of New Smyrna Beach,
Pomeroy, Ida Cowdery. VMH;
VFD and squ:l'd a..sisted. ·
Fla.: 23 grandchildren and several great-grandchtldrcn; and several meces.
1:43 p.m., Keller Street, Tuppers TUPPERS PI!.AINS
Platns, Christi Tucker, O'Bicness
3 27 p.m., VFD and squad to slate nephews und cou~ins.
COLUMBUS tAP) - Indiana·
Route 681 , Randy Huffman proper- , Services will be I p.m. Saturday m th9 Foglesong Funeral Home. Mason,
Memorial Hospital.
W.Va.. with Pastor Jerry Scoll offictattng. Burtal wtll he 10 th¢ Ktrkland Ohio direct hog pn&lt;:cs at selected
ty. brush fire. .
·
Memorial Gardens: Friends may call at. the tuncml hnme I rom 5-8 p m. Frt- buymg po101s Thursday as pmvtdcd
hy the U S Department of Agnculday.
.
·
li~enses
lurc Market News:
BUrrows · and gaits weak to 50
The following couples were and Luanne G~llilan, 37. both of
cents lower. demand lightlO modcr~
issued marriage licenses recently in Syracuse;
Daisy N. Sisson, 91. Middleport. uted Wednesday. March 12. 1997. at ale nn a moderate movcrncn1
Shawn Mtchacl Hawley. 23. Mid- Veterans Memorial Extended Care Center m Pomeroy. Arrangements wtll
the Metgs County Probate Coun ol
U.S. 1·2. 230-2(\1 /hs country
dleport.
and Heather Bess Hudson. · be announced later hy Ewmg Funeral Home. Pomeroy.'
Judge Roben Buck.
pomts 46 IX)-4 7 IKl. few 45 50 and
Receiving licenses were· Monte 21. Pomeroy; fll)yd Dantel McClel47 50. plants 46.50-4X.(Kl
·Dale Chapman. 30. and Traci Eileen lan . 35. and Ktml,outse Annstrong.
Wtlson, 25, both ot 'Mctgs County: 28. hoth of Mtrlcllcport. Dale Lee
Jason Bnan Ridenour, 23. Pomeroy. McGraw. 77. and Dorothy Maxmc
AnnaL Wolfe. KI. Shade. forn\erly of Rae me. dted Tuesday. March II.
and Natasha Mac Hamthon. 18. Greathouse, 63. ~lh of Racine.
1997. at Pleasant Valley Hospnal. Potnt Pleasant. W.Va.
Coolvtllc. Kelly Robtn Counts. 33.
Born Feb. 17. 1916. at Racmc. daughter of the late Herbert Howard and
Lydta May Cozart Ours. she was a homemaker and an a&lt;:ttvc member of
the Rutland Church of the Nazarene and also ancndcd the Pcntacostal Assembly Church of God m Rae me
She married Kenneth J Wolle nn July 6. 1'.136. at Racmc and he preceded
The fnllowing acuons to end mar· C. Phtllips. Rutlan·d. March 7. Betty
her
10 death on May 22. 1993.
riage were filed recently m ihc olhcc R. McDonald. Tuppers Plains. from
She IS survtvcd by three daughters and sons-to -law, Etlcen and Davtd
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar- Gary E McDonqld. Columbus,
Trill
of Darlington, Pa . Ruth Ann and Robert Grabam of Pomeroy and PenMarch 6
ry Spencer.
ny
D.
and Gene Powell of Pomeroy : live sons and four daugbtcrs-tn-law.
Dtsso/uuons granted .. Jon Peter
Diss.&gt;lution asked --Terry L. LauHoward
and Ruth Wolfe of Oeorgctnwn. Del.. Carl Wolfe of Mtddleporl.
dcrmtll. Middleport. and Max E Karschmk ond Constance Len
Kars&lt;:hnik. March I0: James Clifford Gale Eugene and Gail Wolfe of New Castle. Pa., Marltn and Emily Wolfe
Laudcrmtlt. Middlcpon. M~rch 6.
of Rutland and Benny and Robm Wolfe of Shade; 14 grandchtldren: 12 greatDivorces asked -- Rhonda G. and Faye E ChtTord. March /0.
Divorces granled -· Dcwnync R grandchildren; a brother and stslcr-m-law. Carl and 0/ma Ours of Flond"·
Phtlhps. Long Bollom. from Benton
,
Fisher from Wilma Sue Ftsher. March several nieces and nephews
In
addition
to
her
husband.
she
was
als.&gt;
preceded
in
death
by two grand·
10. Terry L ·Jewell a~ Tom a K Jewell. March 10: Jacq\jfline J. Spaun children, two sisters and an mranl brother.
Services will be held Saturday. 2 p.m. at the Rutland Church of the
from James E. Spaun.. Murch II.
(USPS JIJ.'MJ
Nazarene with the Revs. Samuel W. Basye Jr and Charhc Swtggcr olftct ·
ating. Burial will he in Letart Falk Cemetery. ,
Publ••hed every nfternoon, Monday through
Friends ma~ call Friday. 2-4 and 7-9 p.m Fnday at the Crcmc~ns Funcr·
f\idoy. Ill Court St .. Pd.....,., Ohlo,'by lht , '
Ohto Valley Publiah•na Cornpany/(jattnett ~o ,
'al Home m Racme. Tl&gt;c hndy will lie 10 sltll~ at the church one hour pn"r
- y . Ohio 4l7~9. I'll. m-21l6. Second
Am Ele Power .........~..............40'h
to services Saturday.
_ ._ __,.....,...-.,....,.,
claJI P"'hl&amp;&lt; pold at P""""'Y. Ohio.
Akzo ......................................71\
M_.,: The A.uoc:iattd Pren, and 1he Oh1o
AmrTech ...............................61 ~

By The Aasocltted Pr•••
Some unwelcome news for
already saturated southern Ohio The
National Weather Service predicted
ratQ, posstbly heavy at limes, for
tonight.
The rain will spread across the
state before l!lJ!Crtng off on Fnday,
forecasters ,said.
Lows tonight will be 45-50. Htghs
on Friday will he in the 50s
The NWS predtcted a cold weekend for Ohio with the mercury not
chmbtng out of the 30s
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 78 degrees tn 1990 whtle
the record low was 7 in 1896. Sunset
tonight will be at6:~6 p.m. and sun-

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Roger H. Dillon

90045.

The Clinton campaign limincc by the Nixon adqunistration's use of ,
scandals are not "bigger t.hnn Water- Cold War national security agencies
gate," but they may destroy chances and methods for domestic p~litteal ,
for legislative problem-solvtng thts advantage.
year unless the While House and congress tonal leaders act qutckly on
balancmg the budget
Nixon used wiretaps, burglaries,
Reports circulate that Senate and tbe FBI to investigate and harass
MaJOrtly Leader Trent Lon, R-Mis&lt;.. adversaries, and also tried to suhom
and tbe Whtie House arc cunductmg the CIA and 1hc IRS. When cornered.
quiet talks on the budget. But, in puh- he tried to mvoke executive privilege
hc. rancor is escalating and threatens to conceal hts wrongdomg.
In potson the almOs')Jherc for bar·
On top of tt,at, the 1972 Nixon
gaming
campatgn used nearly every agency
Republicans arc roptdly mukt}lg of government to milk and extort
appomlmcnl of a SJX.'Ctal prosecutor money from husincsses and individtheir top pnlnical pnority. House and uals. collectin~ some of it in cold
Senate mvcsugativc commiuecs soon cash.
w1ll take center stage, and commcn·
But gcuing the htstory nght docs
tory on the budget from hoth ends of not dunimsh the potential forthe curPcnnsylvanta Avenue is angry.
rent scandals to wreck Clinton's sec- .
House Speaker Newt Gingrich. R- ond tcmt and chances of solving
Ga.. has taken nearly 100 days this maJor natwnal prnhlems such as the
year to lay down a legtslntive agen- hudgel. education. and entillcmenls.
da, much to the chagrin of his one·
Voters muy not be c·nnvmccd that
lime supporters. Instead of lcadmg. , the Clinton scandals dc&gt;ervc to be at
he has pummeled Clinton Wtlh the the top nl tbe nation 's agenda. hut
charge that the 1996 While House they already top Washtngtnn's agenfund-ratsmg scandals arc "much btg· da and arc dtstracting key players
ger than Watergate."
from thctr other duucs.
Nonsense. It's true that Chinese
Senate Repuhltcan and Democramvolvcmcntm the Clinton scandals tic leaders, fortunately. have ~topped
gtvcs them the potential to nval trytng 10 hlcx:k Sen. Fred 1llompWatergate. but at the moment. they snn 's, R-Tcnn . inquiry into tbe scancome nowhere ncar matchmg the dals. hut they haven't yet swtlcbed.to
wrongdoing of the Ntxon era.
tukc up scnous g:uvcrnmcntal husi·
For one thing. nothmg Clinton &amp; ness .
Co. ts accused of equals the threat to
Lon dc&gt;ervcs credit lilf working
constitutional government presented nul a cnmpnmusc wberchy Thorn~-

Larry David Barr

IToledo I 46" I

Write Tony Saow, CnatonSyadlcate, 5777 West Century Blvd.,
Suite. 700, Los Angeles, Calif.

Will '97 go down as Year of Scandal?

conditions and hilh

MICH.

leaks had been plugpd. FBI Di.ector Louis Frech IIIII his apnts knew
bener -- but kept their sil.ence.
Not long after came the illicit
transfer of more than 1.000 files to
the White House-- files containing
sensitive background infonnation
about former government employees,
almost all of them Republican aides
for preside'nts Reagan and Bush.
Just last month, Clinton aides
tried to pry information about the
Chmese investigation.&lt; from the FBI
while Frech was on a tnp to Egypt.
The law fOibids such contacts, and
Freeh, who confessed to feeling
betrayed by Filegate, blew his stack.
Now, Freeh looks like the fall guy
for the China intrigue. But as the
Wbite House disses him. Republicam
in Con1 ress •• including ~ouse
Appropriations Committei: chainnan
Bob Livingston, Rep. Harold Rogers
and Rep. Bill McCollum •• arc: asking the right questjons. They wan! to
know whether the FBI has been subomed politically, as it was by r{ixon
during the Wateraate yeltll.
Judging from the bureatl's body
language, the us,W~ is y~ FBI ,
agents reponedly want to shut down
their own task force for investigatinB
the Lippo-DNC-China fund-raisins ;
scandal becausc' thcy don't believe ,
the White House or their Justice
,, 1
Department overseer .(Asststanl
Attorney General Ja!'Jic Gorelic~l
will let them operate uidepcndently. ,
The chairmen of the House and
Senate Judiciary Committees. Rep.
Henry Hyde and Sen. Orrin Hatch,
also seem concerned. They intend to
send Attorney General Reno a letter '
this week, demanding an independent
counsel for tlie fund-raising scandal. ,
They will cite the recent Wbitc .
House-FBI · tiff as justilication for
. seeking outside help.
That makes sense. But no matter
who docs· the looking,. investigators·
not onl)' should follow the money. :
The) also shOuld ask: What has hap- ·
pcned to tbe FBI?

Pat Moynihan's festschrift _ __

/

r----Local briefs----......

Frkby, March 14

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The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thul'lday. March 13, 1987

Pllge2
·Thur.clay, IIP'C11 f3, 1117

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~y • Middleport,

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The Daily Sentfu.!!

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On the NIT's opening night,

Thuntday,~13,1987

•

Big East wins four out of five games

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Div(slon IV all-Ohio girls' basketball teams named

Turley and Karr stand -~mong nine area players honored
&gt;

The oddity is that the Schlabachs Rachel Faeth is a 5-9 senior with grade and scoring avetage):
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) flnt 1~1•: Slephuie: Slewart. SCMMh
are
not relat,ed, even though Bruce's marks of 13.7 points, 6.4 rebounds
: South Charleston Southeastern's
Oulrbton Southealllem. S.foot· 7. Senloi. 10.6; Julie
' Stephanie Stewan and Windham 's niece plays in Dave's program at and · 4 assists a game. Kalida_'s McDivitt, Windham. j . IJ , St.. 24.8; AmAM1
Francine Miller, a 5-11 junior, aver- Williams. New Bostoa Glenwood, 5·10, Sr., 19.6;
Julie McDivitt share the top honors Hiland.
Joining the co-players of the year ages 14 points, 7 rebounds, 4.assists Mcluic Kwas. Centel'burJ. S-9. Jr.• 20.5; Michelle
on the 199ii-97.- Associated Press
Bilansti. Bellaire St. lotl1, S·B. Sr.• 25J; Oidi
Division IV girls' all-Ohio basketball on the first tearr. were : Centerburg's and 4 steals a game.
Reynolds. Bucom HopcweiJ.l..oudon. 6-1 , Soph .•
Melanie Karas, a 5-9 junior who
Kalida (24-1) takes on New l~J ; Laurtn Shenk. Min$Wf, 5-10. Jr.. 19.8.
team announced today.
SHand tan~: hbndyWi~U~er. Fort~- 6Stewan, a 5-foot-7 senior, guided averaged 20.5 points, 5.8 rebounds Riegel (21-4) in the tournament . 2. Jr:, 1.5.1: Julie Weavm. Balin H.ilmd. .5-.5, Sr., 8..5:
~I Faeth, New Riqel. .5-9. Sr~,. ll7 : Frucine
· Southeastern to the state champi- and 5'.2 steal s a .game; Amanda opener at 2 p.m. Thursday. followed
. Miller. Kalida. !.II. Jr., 14.0: Kdslt:n Sl:ih. Gtyaho&amp;•
by
Berlin
Hiland
(24-2)
against
Fort
Williams.
of
New
Boston
Glenwood,
onship last March and to the No. I
, )flj., .5-11 , Sr., 17.7.: Leah Donaldaon. South
· regular-season ranking in the AP poll a 5-l 0 senior who grabs 16.4 Loramie '(25- 1) at 4 "p.m. in the sec- Charleuon Soutbeaslei'O. ' · 10. Soph ., IS ..\:
this season. She• averaged' 10.6 rebounds and scores 19.6 points a ond semifinal. The winners go for Stephanie Striktr. New Washinatoil Bucke)lt Central. 6-0. Sr., llO: M_, Zolc:iak. W:.mn kennedy.
points, 6. 7 assists and 6.7 steals a game ; Michelle Bilanski of Bellaire the championship trophy at II a.m.
S-7. Jr.. 2(l.2.
.
4
game for Southeastern, which lost in St. John, a 5-8 senior with averages Saturday.
Third lnm: Marisa Roprs. Marion Calh.. 56. Sr., 2:t.3: Laura GOias, W11.erford. ' · I0. Sr.. lS.":
· Lee, also a successful football
the regional finals in overtime in its ·of 25.3 points, 6 rebounds and 7
Conney AUcn. Old Wuhintton B~teye Trail. ~-9.
coach
at
Bluffton,
guided
his
team
to
· assists a game; Bascom Hopewellbid to defend its championship.
S.... 2'2.7: Ann Stcc:hschuhc, Bluftion. ~-9. Sr.. 14.2;
Amber R05C. Leesbura Fairfield. S-9. Sr.. 12.1: Sta·
Loudon sophomore Didi Reynolds, a perfect regular-season record for
McDivitt was chosen as the
cy Wri'tht Elst Canton. S-10. Jr.. 18.tll: Sara May.
. player of the year based on recom- a 6-1 center good for 23. I points and the second time in three years.
An:lld:ia. 6-1 . Jr.. 22.2.
. ,
Bruce Schlabach took" a Triad
mendations from a stale media pan- I0. 7 rebounds a game; and Minster's
· Pia)'~ ollht ,car: Slephanie Sttwart. South
Charles10n Southinstern: Julie McDivitt Windham.
el. The 5-11 senior, who will play at Lauren Shenk, a 5-l 0 junior who team that had won only 20 games the
· .Ca.rhn of the year: 8~ Schlab:~eh. Norih
.last
four
years
combined
to
a
19-1
. Akron this fall, averaged 24.8 points, scored 19.8 points a game.
l.ewisbuiJ Triad: Dave Schlat*h. Berlin Hiland:
Dnni1 l....ce. Bluffton.
10.5 'rebounds, 3.8 steals and 4.4 , All four state semifinalists arc record during the regular season.
Special mention
Dave Schlabach was at the controls
assists a game. She was also all-state represented on the second team.
· Becky Holden. Fayeueville: Laurie Henry.
in volleyball.
Mandy Winner is a 6-2 junior at as Hiland went 18-2 and earned its
North L:witburg Triad: Mandy Addair. D:anville :
Molly Fi1hcr. SuJIW' Oruve Berne Union: Emily
The coaches of the year arc Fort Loramie who averages 15.1 third trip to the state tournament.
Youna. Grandview Hts.: liffany Srockt!t. BOwers.ron
Here are the 1996-97 Associated
Bluffton 's Dennis Lee and a pair of points a game, while Berl·in Hiland's
Conotton Valley: Marina Run . Zantsvilk RMCcraos: Shanoon SimL Shadyside: Amy Amstull.
Schlabachs - Dave Schlabach of Julie Weaver is a 5-5 senior who · Press Division IV girls' teams, based
Pandora-Gilboa: Jenny Wachtmnn. Liberty Center:
Derlin Hiland and. Bruce Schlabach averages 7 assists, 5 steals and 8.5 on the recommendations of a state · Jenny
Montieth, Mowrey1town Whittook : RENEE
of North Lewisburg Triad.
points a ,game. New Riegel 's 5-9 media panel (with school, height,
TURLEY. RACINE ~OUTHERN : ~riSty Colle.

Portsmouth Clay: Holly Houteholdrr. Southh1&amp;ton
Cbalka: Clthy ZurtJrun. Scbrina McKinley: Holly Koepp. Lorain Calh.; Amanda Croston. L.orlio
C-..; Dena WaJnllf. Fairpott Harbor: MeliSIA
Laicin.l'hompsoa Led,emon~ : t(j3 Robinson. ftktl.
mond Hts.
·

Honorablo mention .
Mclodi Monn. J;ll;'kion Cenler; Shawnll BroWR.
Dayton Jefferson; Nicole Ptlltltiewin, Midclae.ow"
Fenwick : Heidi DauiiOn. Oecqctown ; Julie Mueller.
Fon l.onunie:

Andrea Euch~tin. Col. Academy: Stacy
HOMC"ktr, New Albuy; Alilha . Kina. Lanca•ter
Fisber Cilia.: HeadJcr Noel-McAlister. Col. Trte of
Life Chrialian: Emil)' Snow. Newark Cath.:
Samanlhl Sicvenson. Bellaire St. John: Ami
Hri11. TorOnu~; StephQnie Cochran. New Mauwnoru
Fronlier: Sue Hoop. Old Wuhin1ton Buckeye Trail:

Laura Cordery. Rridaepon: s.ah StiR. Bowuston
Conot4on Valley: Julit MAll. Berlin Hiland;
Amy Sc:hrndll. Findlay URr1y·lknlon: JeM)'
Strinkt, New Bremen: Joslyn Pfau. HolaMC: Jenny
M~am. Old Fort: )ai~ Knippcn. Ot1oville: Cllily
.Maner. Bluffcoft:
lina Owen•. Willow Wood Symme1 V~llc)':
Kendra Rineh111: Beaver 'Ealletn: Brandy McDaniel.
Latham Wettern: Erka Remmln&amp;- Crooksville:
'VALERIE KARR. REEOSVIU.E EASTERN' Kri~
ten Caton. Croobvi lle:
Lauren NCJrtriln: Lcetonl:.:' Jill PetenOft. Brisml.ville Brbcol; Tracy Minmda. W~n K.:noedy; Jcn
Lutt. Moaadort: Uta Myen. Souching.ton Chalker:
l:x:qui NosWI) Oates Milll Gilmour:_Laurie Sed·
don. Newbury: M;r-lana M!olcciarone. Kntlnnd: Ruff
Sdomnl«k. Kinlarid: Bcdy -·Fairport H.-·
bo&lt;.

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VALERIE KARR

TAKES POSSESSION - Weal VIrginia's Damian Owens (24)
grabs the beakalballln front of Bowling Green's Jay Larranga In
the first heH of Wedne.day nlghl'l NIT first-round game In Mor·
gantown, W.Va., where the Mountaineer• wan 118-95. (AP)

'Trinity's Randall wins Ms. Basketball honor for second time
COLUMBUS, Ohio' (AP) - · "nanimous choice as the lOth annu- 7.6 steals, 5:7assisls aod 2.8 blocked two-time winner of the Ms. BasketThrough four years, two state cham- al recipient of the award. She also shots a gome for the State's top- ball Award.
pionships, 2,799 points and 99 vic- said it was something she would ranked team in Division II. Through
Raised by her mother, Bertha,
tories, S.emeka Ran.dall has left her treasure - as soon as she gets over four years, dating ~ack to when she Randall said she's becoming more
mark as one of the greatest girls high Trinity's regional championship loss starred as a freshman starter on the aware every day tha! she's about to
&lt;ehool basketball players ever in last weekend .
Trojans' state championship team, move on to another phase.in her life.
· Ohio.
'·'I tend to forget the awards and · she has averaged 25.6 points a game.
"As the days get closer, 1 think
Now she adds to that list of the honors. It's so sad. one day it's And T~nity has gone 99-10 with her she gets stricter with me," Scmeka
' accomplishments by becoming a your last YJ'ar and the·next day your m the hneup.
said of her mother. Laughing, she
Now it's on to Tennessee, whe~e added. "She knows we're going to
•two-time winner of The Associated career'so~~r. It makes you, feel bad,"
' Press Ms. Baskeiball owan:f for 1997. she satd . . But, m time, I II sec that she has already met ·all ~ademtc be leaving each other since I'm
True to form . Randall, a 5-foot-10 I had the best c~recr that any g~rl re~utrements to play shootmg guard . going to college. Wherever 1 go. she
thiS fall. She follows tn the SIZable calls me like three times: 'When are
senior at Garfield Heights Trinity, could ever have.
said · she was honored by the
That she did ~ As a senior, she sh?".s of 6-6 Vonda Ward. another . .you coming home• Don't forget to
announcement today that she was a averaged 32.4 pomts. 16.8 rebounds, Tnnuy star who IS the only other do this' Don't forget to do that!"'
Trinity's 52-48 regional final loss
to West Chester Lakota 52-48 Saturday caused Randall to miss a
fourth straight trip to the state tournament. Trinity coach Pat Diulus
said what Randall did in that game
- 27 points, 15 rebounds - might
Cavalli said he felt the league not have SJ!id as much about her as
"The season has gone really well
By RON VAMPLE
.
the corner wfJ.!:n 570 players what she did afterward.
.
turned
·and
the
players
have
.
s
hown
that
this
·
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) showed
up at Atlanta in May and ·
"It was a·-crushing ' defeat. She
. Now that the American Basketball is a higher level of women's basket- ·
paid $200 each to try out for spots on eo~ldn 't have been more crestfallen.
:;'League has ended its inaugural sea- ball," Cavalli said .
ending her career that way." Diulus
"Some of the players say it's the·eight ABL teams·.
l' son with an exciting championship
"Yuu're
going
to
see
this
league
said.
"But for an hour after the game,
much
better
than
playing
in
the
Euro~ series, its chief executive says the
take
otT
hecau~e.
players
and
fans
there
she. was signing autographs.
pean leagues and certainly better
~ foundation for future success has
including
snme ·t(&gt;r several of the
will
want
to
be
involved
with
S011)C•
than the NCAA Final Four."
Hbeen solidified.
thing like this," said Quest coach West Branch players she had just
The NBA plans a women's league
:! "I think people ore. most
•i impressed with how hard the women of its own that is to begin play this Brian Agler. "Players are accessible.
to fans and they enjoy what they' rc
~ play," Gary Cavalli said' before -sum flier. The teams will be spondoing.
They're willing to be ambussored by eight NBA franchises and
~ Tuesday's fim1l game of the ABL
'sadon; as well as ba,kctball players.''
will play in NBA arenas. ·
~ championship series. "Fan support
Rage fan Connie blass, 36, of
Cavalli · said that although the
~ has exceeded our expectations this
11
Richmond,
said the teams have drasWomen
's
Naliom1l
Buskcthnll
Asstl·
~ scuson.
tically
improved
since the first game
ciation
had
a
bc\lcr
television
pack·
~
Cavalli, who also was a coof
the
sca,on.
She
said the ABL was
., founder of tHe ABLe. said the age und more marketing money than
~ league's average attendance of about his lca~ue, "we think those arc tem- much more fun to watch than college
·basketball , but e&lt;pressed conce~n
pqrary advantagc!-i. ''
~ 3,500 fans pet game this season was
about having competing leagues.
"We
're
playing
basketball
in
bus~ about 500 more than he had antici"There's a lot of !alent and. g(K&gt;d
, paled. He said the average increased \ kelbltiL season." he saiu. "We're
~ in February to 4,1 00.
.
. playing in markets lhat h;t.vc pruven players." Glass said. "I just hope it
to he strong markets for W()mcn 's lasts .' But I'm worried ubout a pos~ C~uhy Adams. 38. of Columbus,
sible merger with the nth&lt;r league.
~ is a season ticket holder "" the , basketball ...
"I want to sec the ABL make it,
Cav-alli said the league had come
, Columbus Quest. She •aid she went
but I don't .think two women's
~ to every Quest home game and u long way in o.nc sc~1son. -·
ICitgucs &lt;;an survive."
··A
·ycur
ugu,
we
were
Just
a
co~­
~ enjuycd the entire season.
1 · ·" Crowds were sparse. at the ccpt and there were a lut of skeptics
Cavalli said there was u 70-pcr~ beginning, bull felt that if.everyone" and cynics." he said. "It was kind of
l.ike Butch C"ssidy and the Sundance cent chance the league would he
~ would ·come out just once, they
Kid. YtJu know. 'Who arc these expanded for the 1997-98 season. lie
~ would be hooked," Ms. Adams Sliid.
'
guys?"
'
said a decision would be made by
l "There is no basketball like this. The
·"There were times when I had end of March.
i presentation is so professional." ·
"We're in the linal stages of
j The Quest dclcutcd the Richmond · ~orne doubts. We kind uf vacit'lated
lium
reeling
trcmcnduus
gratilica·
putting
togcther.deals in Long Island,
1Rl)gc 77-64 Tuesday for the ·
lion
and.cxcitcmcntlo
waking
up
in
N.Y.,
and
Anaheim, Calif.," he said.
;~title llc_lorc a capacity crowd
3
colc.J swcut at three in the morning. " "We· rc also considering Las Vega,."
·•fans at Battelle Hull.

played against."
·
what I needed to work on. I came
Randall stretched her game her home and worked hard. II paid 'o ff."
senior year. pushing her shooiing
Randall will receive ·a plaq)le in
range beyond the lhrec-point arc and the shape of Ohio.
improving on defense, in rebounding · Runner-up in the balloting by. a
and in even more important ways.
state media panel 'was Oak H1Il
"I think I've maturcd." she said. point guard Jamie Lewis. Third was
''l'~e played with girls of" hi~ber .Pickerington's Tamara S~ocks, with
cahbcr of play on the Jun1or Nauon- West Chester . Lakota s Brooke
at Team. That's made me realize Wyckoff fourth.

By BUCKY GLEASON
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP)Toby Bailey docsn 't understand what
allthefusS'isaboutwithUCLAbas,kctball.
• . Perhaps he should remember the
·! II national championships and 'the
;: 31 conference tilles.
:
This is uCLA, the team most
• re .• ponsible for building the NCAA
: tournament - not the other way
: around.
! But Bailey said everyone should
• forget aboutthe coach who got fired
: . two days before·the ··~son and the
: Bruins' poor start, and remember the
: new coach and their great finish . ·
•
"We feel we're back to where we
·;:should have been," Bailey said
; Wednesday. "It's not like we'.re a
:- U!arn that's·out of nowhere. Rememli.Jiefi....W~ )A'cn:~n~"\1 jn ,tl)e ..op. fiv~
f&amp;i'ihC start of the season. We're sup-

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8~ TOM WITHERS

'$5,000 for each plate appearance ·
over 30 I and up to 600 -- a chance
AP Sport• Writer
·
.
Apparently, the San Dieg&lt;i Padres · at $3.5 million overall. Last season,
weren't busy cnough'with the Hide- he had·602 plate appeara~ces lor the
·
ki lrabu situation . Now, they're try- . Padres.
A
source
close
Ill
the
possible deul
·
.ing to tn1dc Rickey H~ndcrson, too.
said the Padres would receive mid·
!. Or arc they '!
·
l Depending on whom you bi;lievc. die reliever Chuck McElroy fur
• the Padres arc close to swinging the buscbull's career leader in steals.
While the Padres cxch;tngcd
: biggest deals of the spring. Thc·club
: is said to he considering uftcrs from phone calls with other clubs. the
: 10 different teams for I~abu. the Reds and St. Louis Cardinals
• highly touted Japanese pttchcr. In swapped threats.
The teams ·completc'tl thci.r 1wu: addition. San Diego has also worked
: out a deal to send Rickey Hendcrst&gt;n gamc spring tnaining series .in Plant
City, Fla., with un ugly alTair featur• to the Anaheim Angels.
:
The Yankees, Mets, Indians. ing three hit batten; and Dciun
.
: White Sox and Mariners were all Sanders ' cjccliun.
"We'll
rcmcmhcr
it,"
.said
Brut
: thought to be among the team~
• .vying for lruhu's scrviJes, and on Buone, hit by St. Louis pitcher T.J.
:Wednesday the Cincinnilli Reds also Mathews in tbe cigl)th inning uf the
: entered the bidding, rcportc~ly uflcr- Reds' 3-2 win. "Thut's ulll have Ill'
.
! ing pitcher Pete Schourek.
· say."
· Tensiuns have hccn high between
- • Hey. who ducsn 't want this guy,'!
the clubs fur months-since Cardinuls
. ',. . ~Then again, who's seen him pitch'!
"· : · Mets manager Bobby Valc!',line nuan~tgcr Tony La Russu guaranteed
• has. While in Japan. Valenfine man- to tl group of fi.ms that his tcmn
: aged Irabu with the Chih" Lulie would win the NL Central again .
The prediction upset Reds man:Marines in 1995. Valentine.,who has
! said lrabu is one of the 10 best pitch- ager Ray Knigh\. and La Russu's
• ·: crs in the world. disputes the daim prediction was llisplayed in the
Reds' clubhouse when spring train•that the ~ard-thruwing 2K-year-uld
.
.: only wants I&lt;&gt; pitch f\" tbc Yankees. , ing hcgan..
·"I' vc gut grcat respect liJr the
~
" ' Not ·only don't I belicvo..thal
Curd.inuls' organilution. and Tuny,
~ now. I ilidn 'I. believe it the fir~ttimc
and we ' ve talked abi&gt;ut all that othI I heard it." Valentine said. "He nc\'er
stuff," Knight said. "But it lends
l cr mentiuncd the Yankees . I'm not
itself
to licr~:cly contested g~\mcs,
· even sUr~ he knew they exislcd . As
an~d that's whut ymj ' rc going to sec.
a miutcr or fact, our unifunns hxtkcd
"I'll just say this: We're no(
like the Yankees. and he ncvcrc\cn
going
to back up frutn anybudy ·ur ·
'l mentioned how gm&gt;d he f(K&gt;ked ...
• If it wns nlwuys Irabu's wiSh to ·anything . Wh .. tever they bring at us.
we' re going 10 hrin~ it ri~ht hack tn
:pitch for the Yankees. us his agent.
them."
·
:oon. Nomura, insisls, Vu1cntine says
Knight
wasn't
kidding.
:the right:handcr is in lor 11 hi@ sur- .
Cincinnati pitcher Scutt Suliivan
pnsc.
.
~ol it sturtcd by gru1.ing the Cardi: "If that docs go tbrough .. I'll say
nals' Brian Jordan with a pitch in the'
:one thing." Volentine.said. "He's in
sixth. St. l!.nuis catcher Tom Pag:for u rude awakelling. If it's his
noi.Zi was then hit on the right wrist
:Childhood dreum, and he rcali1.cs that
by a pitch from Mike Remlinger in
&lt;dream, he's in for a fude awaken•·
,,
the seventh and was forced to leave
.mg.
for
X-ruys:
: Valentine. ljkc. almo•1 everyone
in the eighth. Sanders hi.l a
·
Then
&lt;else in ba,eball, wishes he had a betgame-tying
triple off T.J. Mathews
~~r handle on the lrabu·saga.
and scored to complete the Reds·
: . "There's only been innuendo and
three-run rally. The next batter.
~ystcry to this whole intrigue, ·•
BQonc, got behind in the count
"Valentine said. "No nne really
when Mathews threw behind him.
inows what's going on."
Mathews didn't miss Boone with
~ Meanwhile. the Padres hayc been
his
next pitch, nailing tile second
)rying to trade Henderson thts spn ng.
on the hip. ·
.
baseman
l-ather than keeping him as a buck up,
"I
felt'
like
hitting
s~&gt;mehody,
so
I Henderson has a base salary of $2
1nillio!l for 1997, plus he i~ set to gel · I hit somebody," Mathews said.

•

'II

It

II

'

'

I
••
'

at what• Ten o'clock'! We're going Lavin said. "We hit some Grand
to start at 9c50. If we can scorc he fore Canyons."
they get out there, we'll be all
But things slowly t.:_;.amc l,,gcthcr.
right."
UCLA heat Ctlii{Jrnia on the ruad
UCLA was the one in trouble at and was 12-7 before winning nine
the beginning of the season when straighl en route to another Pm;. 10
coach Jim Harrick was iircd after he· title.
Lav.in wa'\ rewarded fnr the tumadmined falsifying expense reports.
Lavin, 32. was handed the keys to around with a four-year contract
the team and an interim tag before worth $1 .6 million last month. allowschool officials wished him good ing him to ray off his own student
'loans . Five years ago. he was earnluck.
For a while. it might as well have ing $16.000 as an assistant to Hatrick. And the Bruins since have beco
been good riddance.
UCLA had problems coming rolling along.
" All (the adversity) taught us was
together in the beginning of the sc.ato
play
a little better and work a litson before hitting the bottom with a
tle
harder:·
0' Bannon said. "We
•
48-point loss to Stanford.
learned
there
arc no days off.·' .
" You hit some valleys in life ...

·:

i

,, .

I'

·.

•

Spring is on the way- ·WE NEED YOUR HELP!
. We have taken a SWEEP through our inventory...
and we are completely overstocked!·!! ·
Through all the devastation our area has suffered-

"They're a. pretty arrogant team. I
dmi'llikc that at all."
Boone had words for Mathews,
and Sanden; came out of the dugout
yelling nt the pitcher. making ittn the
first base line before stopping.
Home plate umpire Wally Bell
ejected Sanders for coming onto the
field .
"You've got to put a stop to it
right here and now. ~· Sa~dcrs said.
"That way it won't happen during
the season. You don't hit ;mylll&gt;dy in
spring training. You can seriously
hurt a guy. That's amw,ing."
In other .spring games;
Royals (ss) 2, Mets (S.) 0
At Haines City, Flu.. Jose Rus;tdo and three relievers combined on
u fiv~-hitter liS Kansa' City stopped
u seven-game losing strc11k.
Blue Jays 2, Pirates 2
At Bradenton, Fla., Dale Sveum
hit a two-run hcnner in the eighth
inning of a game stopped after II
innings. when the teams ran nul of
.
pitchers.
Royals (ss) 14, White Sox 4
At Sumsi&gt;u~ Fla., Jcn King hit a
grand. shun in un cigrn-run · li&gt;urth
inning.
Astros 6, Mets (ss) 3
At Port St.' Lucie, Aa.: Thomas
Howard went 3-lhr4 and I'IX&gt;kic Bob
Abreu had· thrcc RB b; l(&gt;r Houston.
Pllillles 3, Bra~es I
At West Palm Beach, Flu., Chris
Tremic dnwe in the go-ahead run
with a squeeze bunt in the ninth arid
David Doster hit a.run-scoring sin-

"'

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EJC!iol 4, Orioles 3
At Furl Luudcrdalc , Flu.,
VhKiimir Guerrero led off the Hllh .
inning whh a homer us M()ntrcal
stopped Baltimore's six-game winning streak. · .
Cubs 6, Brewers 5
At
Mesa, Ariz .• · Brooks
Kieschnick· hit ·a two-run homer un
Murk Dewey in the eighth as Chicagu rallied.
An1els 10, Marinen 7
At Peoria, Ari1.., Anaheim's Darin
Erstad !lit two home runs a~d Eddie
Murray added anolhcr, sending the
Mariners to their seventh straight
loss. ·
Rockies It, Giants 10
At Tucson,. Ariz .. Colorado's
Joson Bates singled home the winning run in the bottom or the lOth ·
inning.

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N. ~rizona 75

(22- 12) routed Alabama-Birmingham (IK- l4). Carlos Williams and
Credric Dixon ca.:h s.:ored 16 points
for UAB .
· Bradley 66, Drexel 53
At Peoria, Anthony Parker scored
15 points and Bradley (17-i2) held
Drexel (22-9) to 32 percent shooting
from the field.
N. Carolina St. 77
SW Missouri St. 66
At Ra!eigh. Danny Strong scored
25 ' points, including seven free
throws in the final 69 seconds, as
North Carolina State (17-14) beat
Southwest Missouri State (24-9).
·Nevada 97, Fresno St. 86
At Fresno, Faron Hand scored 27
points as Nevada (21 -9) bear Fresno
State (20-12). Richard Brown udded .
22 points for Nev ilda, while Chris
Herren and Daymond Forney each
'scored 20 for Fresno. '
UNLV 66, Memphis 62 .
At Las Vegas, .Kcun Clark came
off the ben_ch with 23 puints and 12 .
rebounds. and l)NLV (21-9) used a
19-2 run to ·r\tlly lrom a 15-poinl

At Fayetteville, Put Bradley
scored 17 of his 22 points in ihe second half as Arkansas ( 16-12)
downed Northern Ari1.ona (21· 7).
Andrew Mavis led Northern Arizona
with 26 points .
Nebraska 67
Wasbiniton 63
.At Lincoln, Mikki Moore and
Bernard Garner hit free throws in the dclicit .in the second half · against
final 12 seconds to give defending · Memphis (16-15) in L1rry Finch's
· NIT champion Nebm.,ka ( 17- 14) the
last gainc as the Tigers' coach:
victory over Washington ( 17-11 ).
Hawaii 7l, Oregon 61
Texas Christian 8S · ·
· At H&lt;;nolulu,AiikaSmith had 23
Alabama-Birmingham 62
points and Anthony .Carter. scon.xl six
AI Forth Worth, Mike Jones ·straight durin_g a aueial scconti-Qalf
scored IK points and reserve James· run that carried Hawaii (21 -7) pas(
Penny added 17 as Texas Christian Oregon ( 17-11 ).

UCLA revolves around Charles
O'Bannon, Cameron Dollar and Bailey - all of whom were pivotal to
its title-winning learn from two yean;
ago - and solid starters J.R. Henderson and Jelani McCoy.
What the Bruins want to avoid js
a repeat perforrnance from last year,
when the then-defending champions
were heavily favored over Princeton
beforc losing 43-41 in the opening
round.
. Several .UCLA players arc still
slewing over the loss. which docsn · t
help Charleston So\lthern's hopes for
a letllown . .
"We're going to pull a sneak
attack," Charleston Southern coach
Tom Conrad said. "'The game starts

South was not awarded an automatic bid until last·season. ·
Guard Breit Larrick leads the
team in scoring at 19.6 points per
game. The Buccaneers will most
likely be Without second-leading
scorer Errol McPherson. who s.ustained a knee injury.
"I know it's going to he tough.
but we came here · to win,"
Charleston Southern forward Rolando Hourruitiner said. "We'd like to
show we can play even though
we're from a small school. It's five
on five. There are ~0 names ...
In the other Midwest Regional
games. No. 3 seed Cincinnati opened
againsl No. 14 seed Butler, and No.
6 Iowa State played No. II Illinois
State. No: 7 Xavier plays No. 10
Vanderbilt in the first night game
before Charleston Southern-UCLA.

;·Padres consider making deals
· •~to trade lrabu ·and Henderson

Friday ·is trash._Pick-up
Day for all Homes in..the
Village of Middleport!!

6

posed to be here. We wanted to get · ·
it together before it was too late."
It's not' too late for the secondseeded Bruins (22-7) after all, pro- vided they don't have another firstround meltdown against tiny
Charleston Southern ( 17-12) tonight
at the ·Palace.
Few teams could be more opposite than the powerhouse at UCLA
and perennial pipsqueaks at
Charleston Southern.
·UCLA was wrapping up its first
of II titles in 1964, the same year
Charleston SOuthern was foundedand one year before Bruins coach
Steve Lavin was born.
Charleston Southern (17-12) has
just i.500 students and has never
before reached the NCAA tournament. It won the Big South two years .
agQ, when t35,?&lt;JO~st~(!ent UC~
won its ~~~ nat10nal utle. The B1g

·i'Pt1 baseball's spring training scene, ·

Middleport Residents •••

1

Bowling Green had u chance to tic,
but Antonio Daniels missed a threepointer as tbe buzzer sounded.
Plltsbu'lh 82
Newort ... ns6J
At Pittsburgh, Vonteego Cummings scored 25 points and the Panthers ( 18- 14) used their height
advantage to beot New Orleans (227).
Notre Dtune 74
Oral Roberts S8
At South Bend, Admore White
scored 18 points a11d Pat Garrity
added 16 to lead Notre Dame ( 1513) over Oral Roberts (21-7). Tim
Gill led Oral Roberts with 21 points.
Arkansas 101

round -tonight

AFRISII START?

·ABL chief claims foundation
for future success is in place

.l

coach Pat Kennedy said.
.. In other opening-round games. it
was Connecticut 71, lona 66; Michigan Stale 65, George Washington 50;
West Vi~J~inia 98, Bowling Green 95;
Pittsbu(gh 82, New Orleans 63:
Noire Dame 74. Oral Roberts 5K;
Arkansas 101 . Northern Arizona 75 ;
Nebraska 67, Washington 63; Texas
Christian 85, Alabama-Birmingham
62; Bradley 66, Drexel 53; North
Carolina St;~te 77, Southwest Missouri State 66; Nevada 97, Fresno ·
State 86; UNLV 66 .. Memphis 62;
and Hawaii 7l , Oregon 61.
Connet'dcut 71, lona 66
At Storrs. 'Richard Hamilt6n
scored nine of his 25 points down the
stretch as UConn ( 15-14) held off
lana (22-8). Kc.vin Freeman added
18 points and I 3 rebounds for the
Huskies, while Bryan Matthew led
Iona with 19 points.
Michigan St. 65
. . George Washington s~
At East Lansing, Ray Wcathcn;
scored 18 points as Michigan State
( 17- II) defeated George Washington
· (15-14) . Shawnta Rogers led GW
"'iih IK points. but the 5-lhot-4
guard wus only 6-for- I 8 from the
lield .
,
West VIrginia 98
Bowling Green 95
,
At Morgantown. Seldon Jct1'crson
scored 29 points as West Virginia
(20-9) heat Bowling Green (22-10).

•

co-

l

The Dally Sentinel• P9 5

Ohio

••

�Pomeroy • Mlddlapolt, Ohio

Thureday,llllch 13,118l

•

In the NBA,

Magic gets ~Y Rockets 96-95; Bulls,_Jazz &amp; Pacers also win
odyssey with a 96-95 victory at
Houston to finish 4-2 on a trip that
staned with a victory in Seattle on
March 4.
The Utah Jazz, meanwhile. made
the third stOp of a seven-game, I I day trip and heat the New Jersey
Nets 117-102.
The Orlando-Houston game went

down to the final seconds, and Penny Hardaway won il wilh a IG-foot
jumper over Mario Elie with 1.1 seconds left.
Eddie Johnson had a chance to
win it for Houston, but his long
jumper missed at the buzzer. •
Gerald Wilkins added 19 for
Orlando, whic~ swepllhe lwo-game

season series. Nick Anderson sat out
with a bruised right qoudriceps lendon and Rony Seikaly was out with
a lower back strain.
OJ' Orlando's 20 remaining
games, 12 will be at horne. The Magic currently hold the eighth and final
Eastern Conference playoff spot
with a four-game lead over Indiana.

The 1997101\ballscuon holdlla

•

Conferet~~:e ~ ra~:e, cOICh

p.m.
S.Carolinn·Coppin St. wtnncr vs ,
W1K"Ons1n·Te!Xa5 win~. J0 minutes a(t.:r
pevtuu,; tHlll~

NBA standings

Snninnal•
Friday, M•«h 21
AI TIM- C•rrkr Dome, Synell!r, N.Y.
N Cnnllinn-Faarlield- lndiana -Coltr.ldu winner vs C;ai-Pnnt.:L,on-VIIIouKI•

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AdaRtk Dh•ision

:r...

li.ll

.1. r.:L

:1!

~w YOfk.. .. ., .. .... 47
Miami . ,...... .... 46
Orlando .. ,.............. :W
Wnshington ..........29
~w Jcney ....... .., IK
Ptliladelj'lhiD .......... :Ib
Bostotl ................ . 12

17
17
28

.714

.548

.464
.290

44
46
~I

(."hampiomhip
Sunday, Marth l3
At Ttw Carrin' 0omf
SCmilinal win~rs

.190

Cmtr.l [)I vkion
ll-O.ica1u .......... l5 H .K73
Detroit .................. 4~ 11 .726
AtlMin .. ~.,. ..
.1] 20 .61B
~lotte . . .
. .41 22 .b.'U
Clevellltlt.l.
J-4 27 - . 5~1
lndianu .............. ~ .' 2 .. 4K4
Milwauh.-,:: . ---·--· 26 .' 6 .419
Toronto .
... 22 ~ . J~~

•'

SouthellSI Regimuol

"

f1rsl roUnd

14

Today

20

24' .
2K ',

-·-

.12' ·

WESTERN CONFERENCE

•

Michrut Divisiun

Tam

. :1! L ld.

. X•Uiah ......... ..,. .. 46
Houswn .
. 4l
Minnt:llOIII .. .......... .11
Dalla.~ .... . ....
.. 20
llrc.n'+'Cr .. . .. . ..... : Ill
Snn Antonio ' .. I~
VniJi:tJuvcr ..
II

17
21
.10
41
44

!ill

Tll.l
.672
-~.
.l2K
290
.242
169

fl-7
~4

.1'·
14

At Tht P)nmkl. Memphis. Tmn.
Kanlla-' IJ2 -IJ v:. J o~ksun S!;~lc ( 1-115). 12 : 2~ p.m.
l'urdui.' ( 17-111 vs. Rhcxk Island 120-9). ]0 minUIL'S :tfl~o"f l"fCVIUUS ¥arne
Marylimd .U 1-101 n . Ctdlt'l!.'-" u1
Charlcsron 12K-2J. 7:50pm
Arir:nna IIIJ -YJ vs. Suurh 1\l:rham;r
(2:\-61. )() minule~ ;afler previnus ~:Utk"
• Frid•)
AI Cta.rlottt Collleum, Chlrlotte. N.C.
Geu~J.ia 124-Kl v~ . Teru~~sce-{.lmt ·
r:muutta (22- IU). 12:)0 p.m.
lll1no1s 121-IJJ"" StiUih..'fn Cllirmni:r
( 17-IOJ. :\0 minuri!S nflcr rrevmu~ ~:unc
MarljUCI!e 122·1'11 vs . Pruvidc1-=c 121 - ~
Ill. 7:40p.m.
!Juke W·K) vs. Mun-;~y StniL' I~I~IIJ .

2 .~

21 '·
.lU'
]6

ttatllk Oivi!Uon
Sc!-!dlloc
.. --'· 4.1 I K 705
1. h , Lnkers .......... .42 20 .677
Punlanc.l .................\6 2K ;%J
Sacmmento
... 1M ]5 444
LA c;hR-cn.
.. lfl ]4 4~:\
Phclcnix ..
....... 24 JK ~M7
Golden Slate ....... 23 ]'J ~71
x-c:lindJC:\1 pluyolf spnl

I'·
IC' ·

JO llllllUII!li itiiCr jM\'ViiiU~ j!:IIIIC

16
16'·~
I\1'·1

Sm&gt;nd ........
S.tunlay

20' .-

/\11M P)'OIIIlld
Krut:ru.~-J:a.:kron S1:1te WiiiiiL'r VS l'ur·
tilli!-Rhutle lslt111tl Wllllll.'f. 2 : 2~ Jill!.
Maryhmd-('ull ol &lt;::11arks1111l WIIIIICf
.-.. Arirono1-South Alah;unu winner. \0

Wednesday's so:ores
Utah 117." New Mley 102
IOH. Philade:lphlll I04
Wa5hingtun UN, Vnm.-ouver K2
lnllianu Ill. Alluntul!l2 .
Orhtntlo WI. Huu~;run 95
). A. I.Jdi:LTN 100, Gnlllca Srutc 101

minutt:~ t~fiL'f previ11Us

ChiCO~K.U

Tool&amp;ht's games

;rfler p!'i\'im•~ pmt

SmrlflnMifl
Friday, 1\t.rch 11
AI BirmlnKhtlm~Jetrm.n Ci¥ic Cl'ntrr
Bl .........m.Aia.
.
K;msa5-Jadosun St.-P.unluc-khullc
! ~ l and w'nRcr n . MaryluutJ.('ull ni
Churle5tttn-Anzolm-Soulh Aluhumu
winner
Uuke- Mu"ay. St .- Murqueue--Pnlvilic•tL-..: wmner vs. 0...-ort:,la-lffl'-llliiM.It~ ­
Snuthem C01l w•nner

Phuemlt al L.A lliPJil-&gt;n. IO::tO p.m
Clcvdand at Golden Sulle, 10~ )0 1'1 m.
Tnmmo m Sncrnmr:nlo. 10:30 J•.m.

FridaY's games
{.1ticlttto ar New Jency, 7&lt;\0 p.m
Miiiiii..'!Ull:l ul PhilatltlplliiL 7:)0 jl.lll.
l1wkMic at Orhu.OO. 'uo p.m.
Vm~~:uu~ lit Miwni. 7:.10 1} n1.
Scillllc a1 A1L1nta, 7:30pm.
Urah ullndiilruJ. 7 )0 p.m.
Wa1hin!!.ton 111 Milwi!uk«,IUO p.m
Bus1nn ar Snn Antotim, K:.\0 11m.
('Jcy~:J:mll at Pnr11nnll. 10 r.m.
I..A. l'hppcn at L.A Luker!!. 11: :1()
p.m.
,

Challl,.....lp
Sunda)'. Man:lt 1.1
At llrmln~m·Jefl'erMn CiYic C.rnln
Scn1ifinot1 wimiL'f"!l

'todl)'
A1 Tht Palatt of AuiNm Hills
Auhum Hlllfl. Mid!.
Cin.;innau (::!~-7• v~ . Dt11lcr 11.1-t.l\.
12·:\0 11111.
_Jnwu !-itnt~· (20 -IH vi lllinui5 State
12-'· ~) . .14lminul\.'!'i af1er llfl'viuu~ JiiiiiC
X.waer. Ohm {22·.~ I \'K. l(;mllertult

.fir.lf mund
Today
At l~awrmct' Joel Culiwum
WifllltOno,.~m.N.C

California (~1-XJ v~ . PritiC!.'IOII (24-:\).

UCLA {~ 1-71 v~ . Clmrksl•m S.M.1II~t.'fl1
t 17-121. ~0 nu nmt•s :1ftl'f Jln.: \· iuu~ ~amc

p.m.

11-t·fl)

v~ .

J.'riday
/\I Ketwpt'r J\rrna, Kansas ('ity. M••Cio:IIIMIII L:!:I-YJ \ "S Mil&lt;llli tOhitll

F:rirficl\1

(II-IX). 7·-tOIUII.

"lnllimm (22-101 n l'n"lfllllu 121-IJJ.
al'k:r JM"~·~ iuu.~ ~ank'

'

.W.Iminul~'!i

1-'riduy

At

Piltlibur~h

.

( :i¥it An'IW

l'illfihutllh l'u.

Wl.\0:11111(111 (lt:.IJ) v!-. T'-'XII~ ( Ill- II ).
t.2 ·15pm.
Suuth C;.ro lirml 2-l-7 1 u. Clljljllll
Sr;rre !21·~) ..m minut~$ nfl~·r 11rt:\'1utu

~&lt;llltl."

S•·«tnd round
S01IUrd11y
AI Tht&gt; l'ahttt&gt; ol Auburn Hill!!
Cmo:illlmli·Uutkr wimk:!r vs luwa Sl.lllinuiw St winner. ~ : -41) 11.111.
Ul'LA -t'lmrl,· ~r.,n Suuthcrn WIUM'r
n . Xor\1\'I'· V.rmlcrtnh Wlllll\'1, .Ill fnimll'-"'
:Iller prcnuu~ j!illll\'

Nl•W Mclli~-~~ (24-71 u ~ OIU lluntlll·
1un1!:!- IUJ. 7:-lOp.m.

l..mu s\'dk t2 1-M) v.•. Muuaebu~et"
( 1'1· 1.1). .lO mi1tute ~ •""k•r 111\:¥ 11~1' )l:tme
St"cund rwnd
Satunlay
AI LaWI't'IK"I' JOt"l ('uliMIIIh
N. (.';rnlli11.1-l-'a;rlidd wiutll..'f "" hklianor·l'ulufl•k• wim11.-r. 1.!: I !li p m.

Sunda). M11n:h 16
1\1 Kt'Pia-r .\rt&gt;nu
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Urab 126-.11 n. Navy (20-H), JO rhinure~ :rfl..-r lll"cvious J!.:lmc
w.,kc Fures1 t2.1-61 vs . S1. Mary;s.
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Utah-Navy winlk."l' vs. N.C. O!arkllite·
Gcurj!\.'UIWP winn&amp;:r. 2 . 3~ run
Wake Fon:st·St. M;rry · ~ winner vs.
Stanlurt!-Oklnlmma winner. 30 minutes

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'fhunda\", Murrh 20
. AI Tht&gt; AI at~. Sun Antunk1

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SCmifinuh

ThunidltJ• Ma~h ll
At Sin J.R 4ma., San JMr, Calif'.
Kcmudo ~ -'Monuum- !uw;•- Virsi ni it

'wumcr \'.~- Duston Cullc~':--ViLlp;tr;U~u­
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U1ah-N;1vy-N.C Chnrlotlc-GeurftC·
town winner H\. Wuk!! Fur~o•st - SI.
Mary ·s-Sianl•wd-Ol; lahl~tllil wrlllk'r

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The Finlll Four
Sa1urday. Mard•l9 Hminnals
4t Thf RCA Dome, lndla... polbl
E.u~ ~:hampitm "" Soulhc;r5t ch1111111i·

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Munda,. Maarth 31
s~·•mfinal winners

NCAA Division I
women's tournament
Midwest Roj!i&lt;on•l
1-'inl round
1-'ritl.. ,·
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t\1 OUU t'leklhou.'ie, Norfolk. Va.
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: John Stockton had a season-high
~I points and II assists, and Karl
Malone scored 20 of his 27 points in
r.;,; l!econd half as Ulah wore down
~cw JcfS()y. ·
.
1 "John Stockton really carried

54
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S!.;pl"--'11 F Austin-Tulctlu witmer vs.
l'ulunl•ln-Mursh:.ll Wlntk'r. 10: W1 p 1_11

•

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AD'YERTISING -DEA.DLINE
_MARCH 13, 1997
..•

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AND nBEACH
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something that happened to a particular team and they get upset, and
then it gets itS own momentum.''
In another decision, players no
. lonaer will be allowCll to iake off
theit helmets while still on the playing field during gao:nes.
· In an effort to reduce taunting and
overexuber3n1 celebrnlions and in the
name of safety, the league made a
rules change Wednesday. Removal
by a player of his helmel after a play
while he_.is on the field - except
during timcouts or between periods
- will result in an unspor1smanlike.
conduct penalty of IS yards.
Players caoi take' off the helmets
once they reached the hencb area.
"The colleges have done ii for
two years and it ha• worked well ...
·Holmgren said.

"You',re getting into oaunting
areas,'' added Gianl&lt; GM GeQrge
Young. the other competiti'on committee co-chairman . "When he
knows he has to keep his hat on·. he
will keop his hat im.''
l
The vole wa.&lt; 23-7. lhe minimum
for passage.
.J
The other rules chan~c applies to ~
punts. When a team fakes a pun! and ~
ohrows &lt;he hall downlicld. pass interlcrence calls on the lwo outside •
de lenders who arc acoually trying to :
hiQCk.a coverage man l'rum gelling ~
downfield - and might not even
lmoiw the· hall has hccn thmwn have been eliminat¢d.
.
"It was n cheap -way 111 make a
first down.'' Young said. "lo's a l&lt;lopholc."
I.

r
t

NBA's hest record to 55-K.
"Early un (in 1he season) he gnt
-Iverson wa.&lt; IS-for-23 from lhe. caught up in a lot oftra.•h laJk and
field in uric uf his mnsl. impressive sluff of thut ,nuturc. hut he's a goxtd
perli&gt;rmanccs of the season.
·player and utday l)e had much het"I like him us a player," Pippen ter focus on the game i.nsteud nr all
said of Iverson. who wa&lt; involved in that other sluff."
a trJsh-talking banlc with several
Paeerslll, Hawks 82
Bulls the lirsl time he pluyed lhcm
At ltldianapnlis, Reggie Miller
and almnsl gut ·intn a sculllc with scored 25 poiniS and Indiana

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Aviance Nfiht Muik

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Complete Stock

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goals going into, the third period. the ' Wcstern Conference standings ,
we'd feel good ahoul the lie ... Coy- and within tWO or Edmonton for •
otcs forward Darrin Shannon said'. fourth, lnnk a 5-4 lead with 9:34 left I
"As it was, we're disappointed. We on Shannon's SCC!•n&lt;! ¥&lt;&gt;31 of ,the
played well and did a lot or' good game.
,
- ,. . ,.
1hings. hut we didn't l!Cl' the two
The Penguins. who hild
~-&lt;ix
poinls." .
. straight road games and arc winless
PhocniK. which moved one point in 12 (,f 14 games overall, tied it in
ahead of St. L9uis for liflh place in the final minute uf regulation.

""i

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"I 11tartcd il 111111 year 110mchow,_"
he 118id. " It amazes me thll you can
SOIIIithint for ' 26 year1l IIIII you
chlnp
year. ll's not like piling
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a . new bike ·and pul_titij traiain8

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• Home Impro~ment Center • Air Conditioning
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12 days. During that 11111, the llco6women will face- oflhe !Opt
teams in the NAJA' Glul Lakel ,
Region al the lnd;.poiia CollcJiatc
Tournament March 21-22.
· ,
Prior to the Indy .10Ur11Cy. RiP 1
Grande trnvels to ·Pikeville, Ketolucky, March 15 to play Pike-rille
College and Brescia College. After ,
!hat, it's un North Carolino to face ,
Belmont Abbey. College. WinP,W
University and Coker c;&lt;~lcgc. • •
· The Rcdwqmen travel ui Capi\81
University, Marictt.&gt;. CoUcJIC \\Pi~
Ohio Valley College before returning
to Rio Grande to face Thuma• M.,e
College March 29.
·'
"We're looking forward tu thC
season and want to invite folks from
1he local area 1o come out and enjoy
L'OIIcgc softball," said Forte.

p~-;,;~~~~~~d c~~;;; ;;~~·~t;~s:s -;;d;~k~' l

-Russeil Stover Russell Stover
TrumeEggs

Tllumpson-Dulin~ An•n01
Kno"'ilfl', T~nn.

Oret!olll !! l·flt ,.,

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tlom

J.lll lfl(l

1-I J. X'.'{' JIIII

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length or games.
Redskins . general manager
Charley Casserly said a straw vole of
lhe coaches shOwed only three were
opposed: Bill Parcells of the Jets,
Marv uvy of Buffalo and Tony .
Dungy of Tampa Bay. .
· "We'll be back next year,'' said .
Casserly, whose own proposal and
one from the league office were
combined i~ the compromise on
which the owners voted. "I'm disappointed, liut replay will not go
away when there's 27 of 30 coaches.
who want it, when fans want il, when
the players want it. The issue .,;on '1
go away.''
Holmgren wa•n 't so sure.
"I just don't know when it might
come up again," he said. "I think
when it does, it will be because of

us," said Malone. who made· only 19 rebounds as'the Jazz won for the Chicago ahead in a game thai was
· closerthancKpected,mO!Itlybccausc
two of his first 10 shots. "I di~n't ISlhtimein 18games.
Rookie Jc;crry Kiltles had 23 of Allen 'Iverson.
play a great J!3!11C.II was ugly. Guys
Pippen linishcd 12-for- 18 from
kepi looking lilt me. but you have points and Kendall Gill 22 as thoi
games like lhal. But I wasn't going· NeL&lt; lo.st for the sixth lime in seven the field and 4-of-5 from lhrce-point
.
range. Michael Jordan added 23
lb stop. I'm not,a quiuer. I just kept games.
Bulls
108,
76ers
104
·
points - the first -time in four
playing hard.'~ ,.
.
At Philadelphia, Seonie Pippen games t.hat he finished with less than
Greg Oster1ag had 10 paints and
sc&lt;1red 31 points, including six in the 30 -and Bill Wennington had 14

.

~

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2tk't
f1l 172 IIJI
~1M'

the second half, and we've had it for penalties.
eternity, .. ·Raiders owner AI Davis
But a replay official off the field
would
not be used. Instead, the refsaid aftci voting againSI the mum of
replay, which disappeared after the . eree would make the decision after
1981 season beJ;ausc .. it was 100 viewing a monitor on the foeld.
cumbersome. "I don't want tO have Coaches could make two challenges
·instant replay compromising it.
a game, using a timeout to do·so.
· "I don't think this kills it for
Sorry. Even some coaches .who
good. We need a manipulation ofthe support replay fell they couldn't
process, The mos~ importantlhing is sacrifice a timeout.
to keep the three tlrheouts in a half."
"The challenge system was difJoining Oakland in voting against ferenl from the old sy~tem," said
, the measure werp both New York Packers coach Mike Holmgren, eoteams, Arizona, Buffalo, Chicago, chairman' of the competition ,comCincinnati, Dallas, Kansas City and mittee. "The idea or a challenge wa&lt;
Tampa Bay. The proposal needed 23 a linle uncomfonable to some coach'
votes to pass.
es. Then having it tied to timeout•
This plan was similar·10 lhe sys- made them more pncomfor1able."
tem in effect from 1986-1991: it
But the committee was adamant
would apply to possession, out of about the use of a timeout, which
bounds and s.:oring plays. but not would help avoid extending the

wheels on it and you star1 pedaling
again."
•
PLANT CI'IY, Pia. (AP) - Ter- .
Pendleton had knee surgery
Larkin out.
PHOENIX (AP) - The Pitts- couldn't keep the puck out of our
ed!ll'sdily, a double setback for the
Shortslop Barry Larkin sal out a
burgh
Penguins Struggle on the road . own net...
ird baseman: He won'l be on lhc 3-2 victory ,, ,over Sl. Louis on
as
much
as the Phoenix Coyotes do
The Coyotes,,G-4- I their last live
'incinna\i R¢s: .qpening.day roster Wednesday With a sore leU heel. He
home l!;uncs 13-18-5 overall at
'l!'._.d__ lte won 'I be going anywher~ came' out ora·rgame Tue;,ljay and. is 3\ home.
So
there
was
lillie
surprise,
but
America Weso Arena, even. helped
~
e~pecled
,to
miss·
three
ID
five
~ays
:
cil
considerable
disappointment
when
the
slruggling Pinsbjlrgh offcm;e
I Pendleton tore car1ilage in ~is
,
Cook ahead ',' '' :
the
Penguins
and
Coyo[es
skated
to
when
Jeremy Roenick accidentally
~ghi knee.' hefore the first spriaj
John Smile~ was scheduled to
a
5-5
tie
Wednesday
night.
tapped
the puck into his own net II
ll'llining game and has not played an - lllar1 for the Reds today aaainst
"A
lot
of
guys
feel
like
we
should
seconds
after Tkachuk's goal.
ipning. Last ~cek, doctorS diaanc-1 Kansas City at Hain~• Cit( Former
have won the game," said Keith
"If we had bee~ down three
tfie slight leal' butlhotighl Pendleton . Red nm Belcher Will star1 fnnhe
Tkachuk. whose 39th goal gave
·
~ld avoid surgery hy doing exerRoyals.
qises lo strengthen the leg.
The Reds will he trying fur their
1 li hasn't workc'd out. He new 'to
four1h win in five spring IJames·.
Vail. Colo.. for a second opin.ion ·
Dr. Richard Steadman. who
A;:rfonned ar1hroscop:: sprgery to
• ~ir Ihe curtilage. Pendleton will.he
oot Jiu three In six ,weeks and is .
~pee ted to start ihe ·season an Ihe
~Good Through 1\.Jetday, March ~8th
!lisabled list.
.
. ! "He's Ill!~ no spring training."
general mll!'agcr Jim Bo:wden said.
Pendleton's unusual contract situaliOif also is aff~cted by the injury.
Cream~ggs
The Reds signed Pendleton for a
$350,000 base salury. plus jn&lt;:enReg.49~ ·
tives. The contract specified that if
the Reds did not increase his salary
to $6()0.000 by March HI, 'Pendleton
cuuld terminate the contract and
ONLv 1
become a free agent hefurc Murch
24. . '
His base 'salary also would
increll."'l lo $600,!100 ifhe 'wus traded befiii'C opening day.
12 oz.
The Reds have chosen nyo to
.
increao;c his salary. a club source
Reg.$i.85
cunfirmed . Wednesday. Although
Pendleton no)W is free to leave il' he
wishes. no 1ean1 is!J&lt;&gt;ing In he interested in a~quiring player with a hud
knee. ·
··
Mercker's hand
Is, uh, UIISI!llmly
Kent Mcrcker's pitchinl! hud still
had a scum mark on . lhe palm
WcdneiKlay, u duy after he w:t&lt; hit by
2·3
a line drive.
"It feels all right thruwin!J,'' he
·said, his hand wrapped in ice. "It's
not bruised. I still have a scam mark
there. It's more stiff than unythins."
~-mys li&gt;und nu l'rncture and
Wlndsotig,
he "s nul expected 111 miss a star1.
'
. Mercker also had a scrutch ~~~~the
ring linj!cr .of his pitching ha!KI. a
'Fragrance
du.: thai something's wnmg wi.th the
wuy he's griPJ'ing his fastball. Mcrcki:r said His thumbnail g:t&lt;hed the
rinl finger after he threw a pitch. .
111 Oz. Reg. ~ .
"I came out in the· second inning
and. said. 'Ow.' " Mcrcker said. "I
hM)ked down and my finger was just
blocding."
.
.
ije rcalii&lt;Cd he's holdong Ius
thumb uci'Ollll the tiottom'of the b\111
.
instead of alonJ Jhe side, which
might he a rellliQn why he's had
problems with the I'Withall in the 111111

tyJOEKAY

Itt
15.'i
lfll)

K-1 IKM
7~ IKO
7.\ ll~
ftl IIU

1 1

lhriT11In ............ J~ 21
l'ilblllrr)llt ....... U !K
Harllunl .. .. .... n -'~•
Mmltrt·ut . . .. .!.t .\:!
Cluuwu . .: .. . .11 .\2
lttllillm ... .. ....... .J.I 36

' Suutl~~o-rn t'01l ( 111-K) ,,~_' S:m l'r.rnd.~~-~~
~ ~5-:'il. fl:tlf1 p.m.
Fluri1lil 111-XJ ,.,. l·l a Jnt'-·ru:.timwl
12 1-KJ. Jll ntinul~·s rnlluwintt lir.!l J!3111C.

li4

(.500) and tbe Redwomen's top ed llllltso:ason due loan injury.
pilcher from a year 110. Brenda
New faces in the outf1111d include
Brady.
·
· Robin John....,, Jcn Diedrich and
Brady, now a sophomore, had an Lisa Denney.
8-7 record in '96. She slruc:k out 43
Johnson, like fonncr hilh school
batten and had an ERA of 5.30.
teammate Murphy, is from Healh.
Newconiers 10 the club this sea- Diedrich is from the nor1hem Ohio
son include some good freshmen town of Huron. Denoey hails from
pil~hint prospects. Rebecca Evans Columbwi and F0r1e's alma mat~r.
from Ea:nern H1gh School in Mei1.5 _ St. francis DeSalcs High School.
County _and . Jenn~ ~urphy from
FOrte can earn the lllOih vic!ory
Hc_at_h H1gh School on Locking Coun- of his .coaching caRCT thi~ season.
ly JOon Brady on lhe staiT for lh1s sea- His current career record is 97-117.
son.
Also new to the team this year·are
The Redwumen kick off'lhe 1997
freshmen infielders Dana Stevison. campaign friday, when they hOst
Brandy Van Brimmer and· ~~ichele West Virginia Stale for u doubleUlmer. Stevison is from Wellston. header star1ing al 3 p.m.
Van Brimmer and Ulmer are from
After friday's con1es1. Rio.
the Marysville area. Ulmer redshir1- Grande hits the road for 19 games io

.: ,

=tleds
,notes
•••
_
_
_
•

Atlanlk l)lwiaun

shorutops in the conference. ·
She is joined in the illf!Cid by sister Bobbi McOhee. She played second buc for forte lastiCISon, but
will move .,_ to first bMe for the
'97 campaiJII. ML'Ghee batted .239
wilh 13 RBI last year.
Moving back to her ori&amp;lnal second buc !lpol after a season on the
hot CQmer is junior Roxanne Sagle.
Sqle wu the MOC stolen base
q~ in 1995 wilh 25 thefts and fol:
lowed lhat up with 16 swipes lasl
-so,.. Sagle baned .299. scored 30
run» and drove in seven in '96.
Other returnina players include
outfielders Shellie Weiner (.189, J5
runs scor'ed) and Robin Cordle
(.368j, catchers Shelly Rheinfrank
(.260, 18 RBil and Stacy Brosher

•

gannes••• ~(eon~,i~~~~f~~~~e~6~~-.-.--~--~---~--------------~-----------------------------1

~tate 169-101.

(\lj11il1ot.~ -th
I :by. Ulri!i!ian 117, M:lfiun ll~t•ll hU
tlami~T l';ttrid. Hc1cy f11J. EwrJlrL'\.'U

(."lc V1\-SJ M. IAIUIS\'illc

EASTERN CONFERF.NO;

71. :\C.ImtiiUIL'~ fullowin~ ll~st ~011111.' .

AI

u , bl.' ''-'"' K~·ntt~~;J.:y

~fr)l

Hock ey
NHL standings

t'il'!il mund

\\,llllk.'I"S

Re~lnnal
l-'in1 n!UIIII
f'riday
At The- (;t'Or~lu l"oliHUM, AIMII!Io (;ll,
Ari.t.IIIIOI 1.. .2·11 \'~ - w\'St~·rn KI.'IIIIK.'~)'
ll!· MJ, C1:{k\ 11 111

Tul. t"CIIIr:tl

•'

nliniun•Ub.:rtj~ WIUIIL'f. I ;Uh 1'-111

West

7~.

Division Ill semin.W.

Sanda,, Marth 16
At OIKJ l-1ddt!uu.w
l"unllll"·M;Itylmlll wimM.'r vs. Oltll&gt;tl·

Monday. -~•rth 14
('hlfntplun.'lhip
('11rolin·• ('nl~t'UIIl

7K. h('munl

llclj11\' ()2, t111o'SI1jiC:lkL• ~~~
&lt;.111. Wyo111in,rt ''~- l&gt;;~y. Nnreltrid~t·

Al"fht' U"('onndl Ct.,.lt&gt;r

C..'anlli·
1111-Hllr\':~rt! winlk.'f" u . "l'ulmtc- UC SanHr
lt;vb;.•m-&lt;k-nr~c Washiu~ttuu winnLT
Nutre l);lll"IC·Mcmphb-T~xas - SW
I ~·Jius S1 winiiCr v,. St. JmiCilh "s- Kmt~L'I
St - AI:lh:rrna·SI Fr;~ndi. l"a. willlllT

l~wunl

l.:•il•wuntl St
Rus.~ -l6

Mideast ReJllonal

Se-..

Mit."!ri~:u1 St . - l 1nrtla!~Nnr1h

r'"'

regio~al tournament~

Ch•mplun.odtip
,......._,, M•rclt l4
AdllmM lo"idAou.""
Semifinal wimk'ts

lim&gt;nd .......'
s.nd•Y· Mt~rth 16
At Thr- Smilh Cn11l'r, Chapel Hill, N.C.

C.-rolhu tulbleum. Ctlumbla. !'U.'.

:or

S..&gt;tnilin.:1l wini)I.:O:

,\dam" 1-ldd~MM~sc. M~. Murll.
St;mftlf\1-- How .ln.I-Tc1uu T~\:b·Mt 111t:rna winncr 'I'lL Utah-I11Wa Srnt\·-Vir~inia-Tru)' S11U1.' WiTIIILT
Ariwn;~- Wc51~:rn Kclllut:k)' -{i~·ur­
¥ia-l;11s1ern !):.o:nlud.-.y n . Y;uukrhih·

w•......,..... u.c.

Salurdu)'. Marth ll

Cha 1' .-ap
Sllildll,.
Marrh lO

S...HI....
Saturday., M,Jin-h ll

Tulornc Clb--.&amp;J v~ UC S;rnla DMrhar:•
12+5). 6:06\l.ftl.
.Ot:Orgc Ww.hill&amp;tnn 12~-:'i• VII, Nunhwe~wrn 117-IOJ . •to miuuleM l'11lluwinl!
rtr!!ll!illlll.'

Monday. M•rth 17
i\1 to:rwln S~ial F.vtnt!l Crnlu
Nmre l)atite-Mcmjlhi s winnl.'r v~ .
Tex:1~-SW Texas Sl . wuu.:r. '1:.\flt•-m.

··rillay,Ma~ltll

AI The ltlwerf'.-... Coli.wwp. (."ladnnllll
I:U.,..ch:ampitHI vs,_ Millwcsr~oi~an•1inn
Midt::L'II L"ll:tlllllinn vs. w..-~• .:h:•l)jll'~'

--

PALM D13SERT. Calif, (AP}-

i Well.- inslant- replay ultimately
· :faileil 10 get enough supjlOrt for,a
:rerum to tilt NPI.: becansc 100 many
)coaches didn 'I want to take a lime~110 use it.
: When the league's competition
'committee cO.me up wilh this year)
~sal, it tied coaches' challenges
offi~iat,ng calls to use of a timerut_..lf the call was upheld, lhe timewas gone. If the call · was
· versed, lhe·timeout stlll was gone.
Too much of a price to pay, I0
ams said, voting against the prosal' Wednesday. That 'was enough
o kill it for .this year.
"We have three timeouts in the
1rs1 half, we have three timeouts in

'llui Fi1111l Four

. su..-y, Mardll6
AI Th• C...... Colo.- .
1\ntuna-Wcstcnt K\·naud.y winner
Ocorl!i:t·I~Jlern Kentucky winner.

Wol~hill)tlnlt--Kan.'lils-llL1nlit

:

MacktyA~

Tt•x;~~

1be Dlilly Slllllnel• P111 7•

Ohio

debate drives league vote against instant replay

•Just how precious is a timeout?

Scu1ilillirl wiii.IJro.'fll

At Alltn fo'idd HouM
VllndcrhiJr .WashitiJton wimter vs
K:ms;rs-1&gt;.-truit winnL'f. K:~ p.111.

n
I'I:UK llll\.

•

Mondlly, Ma.-t• J..l .

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

~

:By BARRY WILNER

l ......,.......,

minut&lt;."s lulluwielJiiOiljt:Ut-;.

E. Smlllt Cf'Aift"

(kttr,~u:lt!~-5)

(2~­

~

Nurth (';1ruhna St . III.J-111 \~ . I11Wa
117-11 J. fdlt'lll.lll
l 'ururc~o:ticut L'O-OJ ls l.dti)!h I I:'i·

(We appreclte all the area volunteers who gav_e
their time and risked their lives to help those
atrapded
·o r need!),
.
.
~

Nutn•l&gt;:Ulk! 127-6) \'~ . Ml.'mphi~ 122·
b). 7:00 pIll.
.
Te11a,. (21·71 vs . SW T,·!lla~ St {17·
J I J...lO minute~ fullnwin~t lin.l Jot:UIIC

S~·nu\inal

MunhlM

~Timeout

Stiturdaly

' ' •.

J

Alllilln, T~llllll

Chlrle~t

VI.

All !lui thNe pla,.n return fi'OIII

11111: RMOII'I r.ll club. Lading the
8nlllp of ret~~n~iaJ playerJI is !ICIIior
oudldder Meliu Siuooo. Siuon bet-

•
;1n the NFL's latest.meetings, ·

l2

-

1\t Gumpr!l•at,·iliun, Storrs. &lt;:unn.

bedding
~;Ar) .eddltipna1.1.Oo/o off r•placement ,
furnitu~e
·
~. Free removal ofold.beddln_
g &amp; furniture
- ~ 'Frett·delivery: ': ·:· .
·,
.
-~( 90 days SAC (on.approved credit}
* Will accept Red Cross Vouchers
j

Sat.Uy
J\t l:!:rwln Speca.t Event• Ct'llt«

At cttarktc ¥- Sl'l\llh Ct'llter
Tulm~~.:-UC Sanm lbrbura winlll!r vs .
G,·ur~..- W.JSlun~tun · Nurrhw.:sh:nr win·
!ll.'f, K:OK p.m

\Ill

~ ,priced
.

At Cokmm CGILWUIJI.o 1'ulalae!UI. Ala.
St. Joli4:flh'5t2:"i--l) vs Kan~ Sl (1911 J, 7:twll'-111
•
Alaborma (2.1-b) vs . Sl . Fmno.:es. Pa.
(21-K}. ~{I miRUies follnwin~ lir.;l ~;unc .

/\I Colrrnan Coll!arum. Twwalouu, Ala.
Sr J.uS~..~Jh·s : Katl!iliS Sr. WIIIIII.T \-N . AI·
ab:mm-SI . t-'r:u~~.:•~. P:t. Wllllll.'f. H:Of111.111.

.Take an additional 1Oo/o off our already low
1'·

F'lrsl ruund
fo"tiday
,\1 Cannit'hlitl A,uditorium
.
l'II.,.O llln, N.C.
Mi~o·hitm•r St. &lt;ll-71 v~ . l11111land t272). fl (Jhfi.Ul
Nurth C;1rn lina 07-2) vs . Hltn'Md
'120-M•.'&lt;lminulcs follnwinl! fir!lt li.IIIIIC.

Nunh C:rrullt101--Hou-"anl wimll.'f. ft : l6tun

A1 S.. Jow Arma
St:ruilio;•l wml"-''"''

· The devastating floods of the past week have
taken ~ its toll ~n so ·many ~amilies. We at INGELS _
fURNITURE Be JEWELRY.would like to help ease
t11e: burden ·a little .bY offering the followi,ng
·~clal to all flood v1_
ct1ms:
,
J•

Eao.1 Regional

Michi~an S1 .~ Pnrtl:md winnr~r ·vli .

tlall•piomhip
Satur.a.y, Mardi 21

,\t

Monday. :\brth l-t
Carver·Hawkeyr Arfnll
St-milinal winlll..'Ts

At

Texas Tl'l-h ( 19-K)

Munday, Man:h I'F
AI Tht' 1\JapiH Pa•llien
Slallfilrli-Hnw:ltd ~inner v~
Tct:h-Mum;uJ:t wilmer. ll:Ot. 11 .111.

Ch•m~p ·

v~ .

Gt.'\M"ftlltown t 20-91. 1:421' m.

'

.h 12:06 :un.

Soh Lab Cllr

(24-b).:! .&amp;2 p m

SUnrord.Colt.

.

SliiMnhay,l\larth 1J
Camr~H•wker, Arona

s.o_,__

Mod!trAnM. W.Lofa,...,, .....
Pu rtlue -MIll')' l:mti-::-Clld t&gt;uminin'nUhcrt:y winoo w. C\.,'UIIOn·Morrqu..'ti\.' L.IiU.Mlti.e winnd '
'
SoulhMI Cal-San rrmt~:iM.'tt-Finri­
tla-l=la. lm~orna&amp;itNJO&amp;I "wi lllk.'f' v11. Aullunt·
l.ouinille-IAIUisiana Tc~· h· SI . 'l'cter"H
willftl..'f

StunronJ (3()-1) vs. Howard 121 -!'i ).

v•r.m.

At Tilt HuntS111811 Cenltr

At 1'ltt O'Caftndl Ct'nl«

~'llllh&amp;.'fll Cal-San rr:~-..:ir.cu winlk.'l'
Fk.OO.~ 1111~'11\allltq.al Wi..ll.'f. K:Otl

..-,:,
p.m

s.o.ntoy
At T1tt Mapln Pt"llion

Die1-o Sr . winner vs.
l · .Ut p.m.

SeminMb

Todar

(Jl,l.jJJ, J ·ollljiUI.

VillannvnJ2J -Y) vs. Long Momd Unt·
vcrsity tl i -K)..10 minute~ ;r(k:r j\h!viuu~
l';~ru lnw

f1ntround

· flnt round

F..ast Roglonol

Nurlh

West Regional

Mldwolil R•gioNlal

NCAA Division I
men's tournament

J!.llllk'

Or~J.on-San

~

wimk.'f. Y:Oill' 111.

Scull

Tl"IIJICiilieC·Gmmhlin~ winnt!r.

olfl~o'I' IK'L:Vinu~ j!iUilC

S.llllla,-.Mardll6
AI ChrloU~ C.&amp;lwum
Oukc-Murmy ·St . winno.:r n Mnr ·
4U&amp;!IIC · Pruvitl&amp;.·~c winner. '12: 15 p.m.
. Geurttiu-TP.·l'hliii;UK"IJ!il wmncr u .
llhm1is-Soull)l.'rll Co1l winn\.'1'. :\0 minmL·~

S~alllc at Min!'CSuttt, Kp.m.
Ou~IUII ut Uallas. HJO p.m.'
lktmit :11 D:nver. IJ t•.m.

12 : 1~

ttmlll.'

•

Af~ntAnn~t

Luuisvilk-UMa!i!i wmncr

. 2~1\

Monday. Mardll7

~.c_.,..,w..

Main~!

At llnMnily lbU, CharlllllenNit, \IL
Utah jl-t - ~J VI . low:~ Strue C17-111.
6:06p.m.
Vii"Jim• (21-71 n Truy Srak rlJ.ftJ.
.\0 nurw~e~ fnlluwinJ fir'll J:l!IW.
.

niiMnt 11111: year. we're hunary 10 p1

1.111 .371 in 1996 wilh oa homer and
to act this -orr and runaing.
20 RBI. She also ICORd 19 n1111. Sis· The Redwomc:n will abo be IIIII·· lion. a native of Rutland in Meigs
nina for a re1urn 10 the playoffs after County, Wlls a leC!IIId team AIImiuinJ oul on the Mid-Ohio Con- MOC player IIIII: - erence toumament IIIII: yew. Rio
"Melisa it QUI' lolt ·ICJiior IIIII
IJirucle I05t 0111 iri a tie;bniaker with we'll look 10 her for~.· said.
lWna University:
. P&lt;m. "She's improvtleac6 llC8IOn
_"We've Jot a lot talent on this she's been in lhe p;iiJI:l:llndllhink
club," said Forte. "We have many she's on lr8Ck for a big ycac-."
young players, but our ve!Cnns have
AII-MOC shoitstop Billi McGhee
,shown a great deal of lcedcDhip io also returns. The ·Junior {rom
!our preseason workouts and are anx- Delaware hit '.363 wilh 12· RBI.
:ious 10 _play. Mter missing the tour- McGhee is one of the top defensive

(See NBA..ot~. J.&gt;aae 7)

(14-$), )() mintlfn (oiJuwiDJ fwst JOOII:.

A.t AIMnlbly H.U

Dukc·DePaul winner vs . lllinoi•llnb! winnrr. K:OM p.m.

North C01rolina Sl.·lowa winntr ,., _
Ct~nl"'.~k-ur - U.:hiJh wiDIIL'f, 9:.16jl.ftt.

Vil·LIU WIA~r
S C;~rohnu-C.:np1un -~1 - W•~ o:u n ~i n TellaS w~nnt:r \'!i
UNM -OI&gt;U -

7~

:o

UCL.A-Olllrles10n Southcm-JCavkr·

V:mderhil1 win.ftl7 vs. Cincin.wi-Budrrlowa Sl.·lllinois Sl. win*r
Mi ..ni:IOI.a-SW Tcus St.-Miuinij,_
p-Ttmplr Winrter vs.' Tul~a-Boslt}n U.Ckn~-Mmmi. Ott1o win~

.....

AnleJo Fane 11!111 his IQI*I IR elF

Scoreboard
Basketball

lol of promise for the Uni-.ity ol

Rio Grande Redwomet•
After liaiahinJ 12-14 in '96 IDd
oul of lhe - y ill lhe Mid-Ohio

hur1 his lcfi hip on March I apinst
Dallu, hopes to play on Tuctday ut
New Jersey.
In other NBA games, Chicago
edged Philadelphia 108-104,1ndiana
beat Atlanta 92-82, Washington
downed Vancouver 104-K2 and the
Los Angeles l..akcts defatcd Golden

Orlando is just a half-game behind
Cleveland for the sevenlh spot.
Hakeem Olajuwoa led the Rockets with 32 point• and 1'2 rebounds,
and Kevin Willis had 21 points and
14 rebounds. Clyde Dreder, out the
lasl five weel(s with a pulled 'left
hamstring, expects to return Sunday
at Miami. Charles· Barkley, who

~suor • Mlddl1port,

Rio Grande softball s~ason ...to begin Friday with ·wvsc

..

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP llulcetl*l W.IIW
Every team dreads them, yet
every team has to go through those
long road trips to the other conference.
The Orlando Magic finished.their
last one of the season Wednesday
night, capping a siK-game, nine-&lt;lay

•

Jhul&lt; ;, M all 13,1...,

675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

99-2-2156

�·-

..

;r'hllnlclay, March 13,1e97

Ponllroy •llk;k118port, Ohio

,

The Dally Sentll)el • , . 8

·1Mom should ac~ ike landlord and give so·n evicti.on no~ice
Ann

Landers
1~. loll AIIJ(k)
Ti~ SriiLit~;liW' t-..1 Cre-

•roo Synd..'IIIC.

!iy ANN LANDERS
;· Dear Ann · Landers: After my
father passed away, Mom offered
~y brother the downstairs apart men!'
of her home . Mom lives upstairs and
agreed to let him live o~ the ground
· floor for the first year rent-free.
.t\fter that, he was· supposed to stan ·
.paying rent.
It is now seven years later, and
niy molher has yet to see a full
inonih's rent. She is a very good-

I

With Factory Rebates
You Cari Actually Pay
LHa Than Factory

·

~Art .grdup .to'bring

multi-media
.display to F['ench Art Colony

1

I'

hear1ed person and believes my er, on the .outside chance that it breathing until the paramedics
brother when he tells he~ things are might make a dent. Meanwhile, it arrived . The police officer kept
tough and he can give' her only a few would be helpful if someone could curiosity seekers away from my
bucks here and there.
make your mother see that she is home and consoled my daughter and
Mom is 73 and working two jobs. crippling your brother even !)lore by a friend . My daughter told me how
She has four other children who are allowing him to get away with such caring and compassionate they all
struggling, but we all ma~age to get shameless freeloading. Make the were.
by ahd try to help her a little. This effort.
Three months later, I wrote a letslick, brother will be 40 soon. If he
Dear Ann Landers: Last Septem- ter thanking all of them for working
' lived anywhere else, his landlord ber, I attempted suicide. My .whole . so hard to save my life. Ann. I was
would have thrown him out by now, life was a mess. I was unconscious not prepared for what happened
but because it's Mom, .he thinks he for three days and almost d.ied, but nex.t.
can get away .with it.
·
thank God, I lived.
Tl)e three firemen took time out
I hope you will print my lettet so
The very first people to arrive at of their busy schedules to come to
my brother will see it and maybe it my home after the 911 call were niy house witlt a Christmas card and
will shame him into shaping up. -- three wonderful firemen from a plant. I have never been so.amazed
Long Island , N.Y.
·
· Engine 1441 , a:lon11. with a wonder- in my life. These complete strangers
);)ear Long Island : ·Moochers like ful officer from the Dublin, Calif., cared enough to go out of their way
your brother are generally shame- police. These four me'n worked hard to show kindness.
less·. I'm printing your letter, h9wev- 10 save my life. l;he firemen kept me
'Newspapers tend to print only the

Invoice on Most

r..,..,..,

of Busit1ess
* LIMITED TIME OFFER*
Now thru March 17th

'•
SUNDAY, 'MARCH 1
1:00·5:00,

USED ·C
&amp;TRUCKS
1996 FORD MUSTANG GT

1996 FORD CONTOUR
4 cyt, auto, air concl, PS,
PB, PW, PDL, cua etc.
WAS $13,9411

lOW .

'$12 949

. T.Jl9t9{tl( :fOt[J
~1997 FORD .F-150 SC
~.

"...

;:

Supercab, Auto, V-8, XLT

24 MONTH LEAS!:

._,;,:-

......

""

'

$JM

-..

$0

""

Several Unlta In Stock

. ~great 6ig tlianR._gou to a{{ wfio offtrea
assistance luring .o.ur recent ti1tu of nut!.
tifU lie(p we reU.ivetf in evacuating ana santfbf11J9ing our tfeakrsliip was ~1JeruJiieCm.i.ngf
We are e)(_trem.e(g gratefuC to tfie many
intfivit!ua!s, {oca{ 6usitt£Sses, ana state ana city
no~1er'n1m
.. rent agenciLs, for tlieir efforts.
1'our' e~ression ofgootf citizensliip ana
6rotlier(g Cove is a tribute to tfie area in wliich.
weu~.

'
~orevergratejuf,
Jolin. '£.Sang
President

•

Indiyiduany they are educated artists in their 'chclser•l'
medium; coUectively they find strength in numbers, nv11nv.
•co-creating and co-evolvi'ng together. ·
· "Standing Stone: A Commune in the Country'' an exhib"it at the French Art Colony through March 23 demonstrates ·
· the cohesiveness and diversity that can come from mixing
.media and joining talents.
Standing Stone is an alternative Collaborative Art group ·
near Amesville, (15 miles from Athens). The group is
·comprised of Todd Carroll. Curtis Hinds; Wendy Minor ·
··and Mike Walker.
They live in the hills of southeastern Oh,io surrounded
·by trees, an unlimited inspiration for their work.
Collectively having a
A Meet the Artists · wide range of skills and talreception will . be ents. they give inspiration and
direction to one another.
held In Standing
They live and wo.rk
Stone's honor from together to share resources
1 to 3 p.m., March 15 that they might otherwise;~~&lt;Jt ·
at the FAC
have access to, such as thilir
expertise · in different,o\}l.r t
forms and studio and lillng
,spaces .
.
Ideas, and a forum in which they can expand and devel' op concepts; ar~ ~lso invaluable resou~ces that come with
·the their living/working setup, they said.
'
The groups feels the words ofJalauddin Rumi express
'best the meaning of their work and lives; "Let the beauty
we love be what we do - there are hundreds of ways to
·kneel and kiss the ground."
. ·
Carroll , originally of Great Falls, Moni.,is-a graduate of
TI!e·Co)umbus College of Art and Design (CCAD); where
he studied fine an. He is a potter/sculptor and concentrates
on large-scale outdoor installations collaboratively created
with _e~vironmental themes. . .
·
··fllnds grew up. !Jl· s;:entervolle ~nd a~e!lded,l.lC6p •
m:eivihg a bachelor of fine arts dl~lli ih '~93.''ftt;Jias t'iad
extensive professional studio exP.efience in bothh~lass
and ceramic production environments. Hind Jocui~j on
collaborative ceramic sculptures ·emphasizing · critical
&amp;.'
usage of negative space in organic forms.
Minor was raised outside of Circleville. She studied
·under longtime friend and painter Janet Nicodemus. L.ater
· sh~ attended CCAD with a scholarship to study fine an.
ShC spent .five years ai CCAD majoring in painting and
sculpture. Minor works at home as a painter.
•*
Walker was raiseil in Southeastern Ohio and attended
CCAD from 1987 to 1992 earning a bachelor of fine arts
degree in painting. tie is experienced in the "glassblow. ing," sculpture and ceramics as weU as painting and draw·
·ing.
•
'":"
A reception will be held at the FAC from I to 3 p.m.,
COLLECTIVE ART • PiCtured Ia collaborative art work by Standing Stone. The
ru; gr.o up's work will be displayed In the French Art Colony galleries through March
.Saturday, March 15.
. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 23 In "Standing Stone: A Commune In the Country." A Meet the Artists receptl.on
:and Saturday and Sunday '· to 5 p.m. .
•+&gt; will be held In their honor from 1 to 3 p.m., March 15 at the FAC.

•

Will work for paY..
By !JSA FAYE KAPLAN
Gannett News Service
Do you crave freedom? Thrill at
learning new things? Want to ,earn
money for nothin!\1 'Eat for free?
Then you' re the perfect candidate .
for temporary work, says Briim Hassell, a veteran temp and author ·or
"The Temp Survival Guide: How to
Prosper As An Economic Nomad of .
the Nineties" (Citadel Press;
$1 1.95).
: "You couldn't pay !lle to have a ·
job," say's Hassell, 35, who has ,
IYorked at I ,000 jobs in the past 15
years. "You'd have to be able to
offer me something better than t(\
wurk whenever I want, to go io a
. ne.v building ev,ery day, and meet
new .people."
,
··,
- More than 2 million people in the
, . United ·states each day .show up at
~ .temporary jobs: In 1995 , 10 million
p\l~le received checks from U.S.
temp agencies, which, employ them
to work whenever.
• Traditionally, office and factory
workers sought temporary jobs .. But
tOday, lawyers, accountants , marketing executives, even corporljte
· CEOs seek and find temporary positions. Computer techies are in partiCular demand, says Brpce Steinbi)rg, a:~pokest'nan for the Natiomil
Association of 'Temporary and
Staffing Services., the temp world'S ·
trade group.
'
·
Thirty years ago, Ann Matie
(Marlo Thomas) on TV's ''That
Girl" worked as a temp between acting roles. This season, actress Debi
Mazar plays a temp on CBS's nc.w
show, "Temporarily Yours" (8:30
p.m. Wednesdays).
In real life, temps are :
-Victims of corporate downsiz'

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temporarily, of course
'

.

ing' searching for a j:&gt;ermanent job;
lions, from the agencies that place writer," he says. "If not, I'm .going
to keep temping. It 's so much fun.
- Recently graduated or return them. ·
''A lot of the time you're paid
workers beefing up skills wh[le
Best of all , temps work when
just to be nice. Everybody gets realsearching fora permanent job;
they want, where they want.
-. Actors, writers, -ray-c~tchers
"I like to bounce around," says ly stressed out at this thing you call
who need to rake in some dough Hassell, who works, maybe, three a 'real job.' There 's all this office
while pursuing their dreams, which days a week ... when he feels like it. politics. Temping, you don't have
never include searching for a perma"I can work Friday, Saturday and any of this. You come in with no
'nent job.
J,
Sunday, and then take the 'next five · baggage, and you're not carrying
In Hollywood "probably 10 I . or six days off so I can write."
. any when 'you leave."
An ace typist, Hassett has made
percent of temps have (written) a
screenplay," says Si.c.inberg. " In $30,000 some years working now
New York, they ha,ve a three-act and again . The New York reside
p)ay on ·a floppy in the(r front fJ?Ck- prefers to .temp at law offices durir
et. It's a way to maintjlin income, a 4 p.m . to midnight shift, where I
work and contacts while ,you pursue often dines for free .
different interests.!'
Lawyers "talk on the phone a IC
. Hassell, a writer. when he's riot a. take long lunches, and tlley hagg
'temporary word proce ~pr, always over words fm hours," he say
'!frives ~~his jobs with a computer . ,"You've been there for about '·
disc of his current writing, project.
hour, and they .aJI sit down for (dil
"Whenever there wa~.~pwn time, ner). And they get catered food fro·
I'd be writing my novej~ or screen- the most expensive restaurants i
play," he says. "hvas getting paid to town. " Hassett also willingly tak&lt;
be put m front of the same machme graveyard shifts, where often he
that I'd be sitti~g in fronto&lt;Jf anyway, paid just "to be there" until the su
if I had the day off. lt'5" part-time comes up .
·
funds to fund the, full·time dream."
"You've got this fantasy sk)
Temps don't put dow'!: employ- scraper to yourself with gorgeol
ment roots, aren't members of the corporate 'lounges,'' he say
workplace "family,'' doh 1Ui!~rn gold "You're there 'the moment the su
watches for.cradle-to-grave service · begins to rise and the sky goes froo
at one company.
,
· dark blue to orange to red , Ano
Perhaps, that·~· why, only.t.S per- you've gottliese (rays of food."
cent of the nauon's wort&lt;force 1s
During his temp years, Hass.e .
tem'pbrary by choice.
.-has written a novel about time trav•
"Most
people do,n 't like and book about, th~ 1994 Worn
change," Steinberg says. "Most stock music festlval.
·
people like to go to the .same place
Neither has
published. Bo
every day. "
.
Citadel Press commissioned him I
On the other hand, temps don I share his insights into the tern
develop root rot at jobs they' ve QUI- world: On his way to becoming
grown. When a task gets borong, successful writer, it seems, Hasse
they ·head to a new asstgnment. has become an outstandingly SU&lt;
Some even get some benefits, such cessful temp.
as health insurance and paid vaca") would like to make it as

negative about the police and fire
departments. Please let your readers
k'now how kind and gentle the men
and women are who protect and

serve lheir various communities. --

Here 's the dilemma: My family
problems have been resolved. ·1 have
graduated from college and have a
good job. I want him back.
After I got my life on track, t
realized how much I missed him. I
still love him, Ann, and want to
marry him. How do I IIJIOlOgize for
what I did-1 Is there any way I can fix
this '?-- Raleigh, W.Va.
Dear Raleigh: The best way to
"fix" a broken relationship is to be
totally honest, make no excuses and
just ask for forgiveness . Goqd luck.

Forever Grateful in California
Dear Grateful: What a splendid
tribute to the firemen and policeman
who helped save your life. These
extraordinary people perform acts of
heroism every day and think nothing
of it. Bless them.
· Dear Ann ·Landers: Several
months ago, I broke off my ·engagement to my fiance. I was going away
to school and rarely found time to
Send questions lot\M Landen,
write letters, much less .visit. I was Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen- ·
also having family problems and .tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, ·
couldn'ttake the stress of maintain- calif•. 90045
ing a serious relationship.

-c·ammunity
The CQmrnunity Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special .events. Tbe
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of an'y
type. Items are printed as space
permits .and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of clays.
THURSDAY
.
· POMEROY -- Lenten services
sponsored by · the · Meigs County
Ministerial Association, 7:30 p.m .
Thursday at the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene with Rev. Charles
NeviUc, speaker.

calendar~

County Grange Youth Group will
meet at Star Grange Hall at 7:45
p.m. All members urged to attend.
RUTI..AND -- Signups, Rutland
Youth League '97 season Saturday, 2
to 4, p.,m. and March 20, 6 to 8 p.m.
at the Rutland fire house. '
~ACINE -- Southern Junior High
all-sports .banquet, Saturday, 6 p.m.
Each family . to take two covered
dishes, Southern High School.

CHESTER -- Shade River Lodge
453, F&amp;AM., regular meeting, 7:30
p.m. Thursday .at lodge halt: .

CARPENTER -- 7 p.m. Saturday
at Carpenter Baptist Church, Carpenter, . Bluegrass Gospel Singers,
The Adkins family, and the Summerville Family. John Elswick, pastor.

POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, .6:'30 p.m Thursday, Grace Episcopal Parish House: Velma Rue and
Reva Vaughan , hostesses .

SUNDAY
POMEROY -- The Rev. Aruis
Hurl, pastor of Forest Run Baptist
Church, guest minister at the Naomi
Baptist Church, II, a.m. Sunday. ~-

RACINE
Racine Youth ,
HOBSON -- John Elswick, evanLeague, signups, Thursday, 5 1\l 7' gelist, revival' Sunday through
p.m. kindergarten room .
March 23, Hobson Christian Fellowship Church, SR 7. Sunday Unroe
POMEROY -- JEWEL home Family of. Crown City ;· special'
·
·
School Support Group, Thursday, 7 singing each evening.
p.m. at the home of Tammy Babic.
Guest speaker; Gail Ferguson on
POMEROY -- Big Bend Sternherbs. For more information, Brian wheel Festival committee, Sunday, 2
or Kim Hupp, 949-3119.
p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall.
MOND,\,-Y
·TUPPERS PLAINS -- Tuppers
LETART -- Letart Township
Plains VFW, Post 9053 will meet at Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m . . at the .
7:30 Thursday. Refreshment~ 6:30 office building.
p.m .
HOBSON -- Hobson Christian
MIDDLEPORT -- Mei_gs County- )'~llo)y,ship Church1. rev~al Sunday
Family and Children First Council; through March 23. Evangelist, John
· ·
spe,cial meeting, Thursday, I p.m., Elswick.
Meigs County Department of
1. Must Sell !I 1994 Redman
Human ·Services.
56x 14 with central air. Only
$12,995.00. Will help with
ji'RIDAY
delivery and financing. Call 385Chester
CHESTER .
4367.
baseball/softball assoc.iation regis2. Great Buy!! · 1993 Fleetwood
tration Friday, 6 to 8 p.m. and Saturday, 9 to II :30 a.m . Chester Ele60x 14 with central air. Will pay
mentary School.
for delivery and leveling. C.!lll
385-4367.
LONG BOTTOM -- Hymn sing,
3. 3 ~ROOM 2 FULL BATH
Fri~ay, 7 p.m. Faith Full Gospel
l4X70. 1986 Skyline very clean .
Church, New Covenant Singers.·. $800.00 down and $193.73 per
Steve Reed; pastor.
month to qualified buyer. Call
385-4367 .
REEDSVILLE -- Special meetlocated at the Junction of 33
ing of the Olive· Township Trustees,
and 595 between log~n and
7 p.m Friday at the township buildNelsonville.
ing.
DANVILLE -- Revival services·
at the Danville Holiness Church ,'
Langsville, will be held . through .
Sunday,' 7 p.m. each evening. The
Rev. Tom Reed of Chicago, evangelist, and the Rev. and Mrs. Johnny
Blair,. Portland Ind., song evangelists.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER-- Star Grange
778 and Star Grange 878, regular
fun night and potluck supper, Saturday, 6:30 pm at the • hall . Meigs

OPEN
Mon-Fri. 8:30-8:00
Saturday 8:30·6:00
Closed Sunday
"Where service means your
stJiisfacliott"

ft1VERDALE
.
b
HOMES
1-800-466-7671 '

ome on Over to Bob's. •e
and Get Ready For Spri.ng!

Frost -Proof Pansies
Cabbage ··
Brussel Sprouts
Cauliflower
,
.
Broccoli .
.
' ..•
Head Lettuce 'O•

a

4

4._1

been

Bulk
Garden Seed
Fertilizer
Lime
Onion Sets
.,
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P·
.... Seed Potcdoes
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(; 1// 1/'UI h (, I l:t 1/ \ ( I . \ I I 1:
\UII lJI'I \
1/4 Mile North 01
Pomii'Oy/M..On Bridge

IIIMon, WV

'

Phone (3041 77W721

·

�)
P8gii10~TheD

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Pomeroy •Ill Lldleport, Ohio

lylllllitll

~.11.-clb 13, 1.-T

111111 Counlylatltlllmotnce
• Mlfty times parents coRsider
as little adults. They
give them more
responsibility
than what their
maturity level
caA handle, or
they push them
'
'
mto
too many
different activities.

~ir chi~n

co.ches, and society. This pressure
may resull in stress. Some children
may experience feelings of depression or sadness, or begin to withdraw from participati"' in regular
activities. Other children may show
their stress by misbehaving.
Parents need to he mindful of the
possibility that their children may be
involved in too many things. Parents
may need to step in ·when stress is·
starting to effect their children's
health - both physical and psychological.
According to Mary F. Lonso.
Marion. County Extension Agent,
here arc some signals that may indicate that a child may have too many·

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.Denison's summer
$cience program offered
to high school juniors
. : Denison University is again offering scieni::e-mindcd high 'IChool juniors
(~igh school class of 1998) a summer opponunity to do hands-on collegel~vel research ranging from astronomy to microbiology.
• The I Oth annual Investigations in the Sciences Program will run from
Sunday, June 22, to Friday, June 27. The deadline for applications is Friday,
1\Pril 18. The cost is $350, limited financial aid is available.
' The program, led by ProfessOr Todd Feil, is a series of laboratory and disc~ssion sessions under the guidance of Deniso~ faculty. The 30-to-40 stud~nt program allows for hands-on investigations of current areas of scientifiG inquiry.
.
.
·
·
· Participants will ~lect one or two of sev_en research labs in biology,
chemistry, mathematics. or psychology in order to obtain a range of cxperie~ces in different sciences.
· .; • "Exploration~ in Microbiology," where participants will learn basic
microbiological techniques and apply them to the characterization 'of an
environment of their choice (soil, water fountain, throat, pond water, etc.);
! ' • "Biology of Human Cancers," where students will analyze invitt'9 char. ~teristics of human cancer cell lines in comparison to nonnal cells in labotlltory studies and hear lectures on the genetic and cellular changes rcqu,ired
. 10 transfonn normal cells into cancer cells and environmental factors which
.ilay increase risk;
;: • "The Chemistry of Color," where participants will study how the struc;
tjlre of molecul,es can lead to different colors using computer mode)ing tools
and the techniques or quantitatively measuring color' using spectroscopy;
:, • "The Hi•tot'y and Dynamics of Raccoon Creek," where students will
c~aminc the stream.channel and sample stream bank exposures,' 111alyzing
weter and sediment samples in the laboratory. Workshop participants will
~:So 'cons1ruct the history of Raccoon Creek and its valley since the last
· glacial ice and employ spread sheet and drafting programs to display their
·results"'
•
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:• • "Cryptology,"
whe':" students will "break" mathematical codes u.•ing
litnison:s computer network and programs, including work with the RSA
citlcryption method which is cpnsidered practically "unbreakable;"
'· • "Problem Solving Workshop," where participants will be exposed to
droblems from several area of mathematics designed 10 give insight into
;Jomc of the theory of mathematics and to develop problem solving skills;
:· • "Social and Cognitive Psychology Laboratory," where students gain the
t,.swcr.; to ':How can we tell when another person is lying?" "Do the ways
women and men are portrayed in the media (from news programs lo soap
opera.• to MTV) have constqutnces for our own -livesT' a_nd "Does being a
.~ember of a group affect_the way a person reaches a decision?" as well as
?!her questions . .. ·
..
,: Optional even_ing programs will address issues -such as college admis- .
~ioos, Denison's computer network aod Jink io the "infonnation highway,"
·~cmonstratioi)Ji.nf the latest computer-based hardware/software used in edu·
aation, construction of a helium neon laser and demonstrations and cxperiobents done to explore the characteristic wave phenomena of light in the new
l)lhs of Denison's F.W. Olin Science Hall, and accc.•s to the new Olin plancIP,rium and_ the Dcni~n Biological_ Resc~e for sl_ar gazing. · ·
.
.
I· All pan1c1pants w11l be housed m Dcmson reSidence halls and will cal 10
t))c college dining halls. Participants also will have access to Denison's new
!'r,litch~ll Recreation Center, tennis courts, indoor and outdoor tracks, bas- ·
ki:tball courts and sand volleyball courts. .
1: Applications, due April 18, can be obtained by writing to the progmm
~irector, Professor Todd Feil, c/o Department of Mathematics and Comput.
qr Science, Denison University, Granville, OH 43023: or hy calling Feil at
(614) S87-(i248.
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something else that is causin1 the eau IR over comt~~illld. childrel'
ditr~eullies, such as a classmate who
may become nervous and llmled
is also involvcd7 Work with your about how their schcdoefcs fit into
children in estllblishi"' a schedule their parents' pllftl.
thll will allow "time-off" for play
Talk to your children's pcdillriand relualion.
·
·
cian. The doctor may supest outParents should spend some time side help if there are more serious
with each of their children every underlying problems.
Even. though parents and othet
day. Even ·a few minutes together
adults
may have the children's bell
can pt'OI!lOie the child-parent relaintereSts
in mind, too many activities
tionship, so thai the child will feel
comfortable in tclli'ng the parent thai a!IOO yOUIIg an aJC' may CIIUSC probhe or she no longer wants to contin- lems. Study the circumstances thai
ue a partieul.- activity. The !went · are c.ausin1 the difficulties and
will also be able to better understand develop strategies that can help your ..
childun cope with their · many
tf1e child's individual needs.
'
Parents may want IQ evaluate responsibilities.
their own hectic schedules. If ~-

commitments: The child develops thlft in the past.
physical symptoms, such as
Parents should be supponive, but
headaches and stomach pains. The not pushy when children start new
child seems restless, tired and agitat· venrures. 1bey should be encouraaed~The child appean depressed and in@, offer pnise and attend their
wi II not communicate how he or she children's activities. However, if the
feels.
children change interests, ·the parThe child seems less interested in ents should accept thai. II is imporan activity that was once very tant that the parents watch that they
imJ!Illlant to him or her, such as themselves don~ become over comb~ball or dance class. The child's . mined to the children's activities;
grades begin to fall, and he or she pushing the ch1ldre!l too hard and
has )e$s interest than usual in auend- too fast.
.
ing classes and doing homework.
How can parents help their chil~ chi~hibits antisocial behav- dren balance their different pursuits7
ior, such as lying and stealing, for- Here are some suggestions: Examgets or refuses to do chores and ine those activities that are causing
seems more dependent on the parent problems. Is it the activity itself, or

.•
·

·Litera,ry Club hears
story. of Orson Welles .

ATTEND ROTARY SEMINAR - Four local high school atu. dentl attended an ethics nmlnll' In Nelsonville aponaCII'Id by
Rotary International. Among .thoaa attending wera: Alma
Loaiza, a Meigs Local High School atudellt and rnembar of the
. Middleport-Pomeroy -R011ry Club Foreign Jxchange Student
program; Michelle Miller,. an MHS student and daughter of
Shirley and Joe Miller of Middleport; and Hll~ Herrle, • South·
· em Htoh School student and daughter of Jeff a!ld Debot ah Her· .
ria of llortland. Shown with the atuclenta Ia tha Rev. Father Wal·
ter Heinz of the Sacred HMrt C•tl)ollc Church In Pomeroy, 1
membar of the Mlddleport·Pomeroy Rotary Club.
·

Rotarians discuss
ethics·.in.the •gas
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' Ethics in the 1990s was the theme o'f a seminar sponsored hy Rotary
lntemationallield in Nelsonville.
Four participants representing Meigs County allended.
Participating were: Alma Loai1.a, ·a Meigs Local High School student
and member of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary C!uh Foreign Exchange
Student program;· Michelle Miller. an MI-lS· student and daughter of
Shirley and Joe Miller of Middleport: 'Hillery Him-is. a Southern High
Sc:hool student and daughter of Jeff and Deborah Harris_uf Portland: and
Bill Francis. an Eastern High School student and son of William and Jo
Ann Francis of Reedsville.
·
The seminar involved four areas: ethics in education . ethics in law.
~lhics in international business and ethics in government.
The Rotary :·Four-Way Test", Which ROlarymcmh~rs should practice,
was also discussed. The test comprises four questions: Is it the truth '! Is
it fair to all conccmc4'1 Will it build gqod-will and bcucr friendships'!
Will ii!K; beneficial to all concerned? . ,

Fashion:
Eyes
lead
the
way
to
.an
attractive
face
.y

MARIE YASAAI
natural look, says Clinique consulBut Revlon's fat applicator hrush mascara.
.
$1111 Bernardino County Sun
!ant Aorence :t'fioma.\, who works at proved prqblematic. "The brush did
Don' t 'sleep on it. Remove
t If eyes arc the windows of the · Gouschalk's in San Bernardino, line ,on the .top lashes but made it mascara at riight -. leaving it on
l!oul, cyelt~~~hcis are the sills that rim Cali I'.
hai-d to apply ma.&lt;eara to the lower ov~rnight can cause dry. briule la.•h·
t~Jcm.
.
.
"Lash builders arc very big right lashes without also coating under · cs.
f, Cpqueuishly lowered las.hes are
now," she says. A good thickening my eye,;.'' s~id ihe lcsler7 who_also
- Skip the snap. Washing oil
qmohg the most lltrtallous gesture_s mascara coals md1Y1dual lashes and reported a bll nl smudgrng alter a ma.;cara with soup and water may be.
llCtwcen the sexes. So pull out that ·conditions to keep lashes from dry- day of wear.
cheaper. hut it also forces you to tug
be of mascara, brandish that wand, ing. she says. Thkker lashes arc a
The PlentiFull mascara. however. and pull on lhc d~licul~ skin around
dlcttltc ~rush strOkes fly.
good way to draw emphasis \O the quickly won over its te-ster.
your eyes. That can cause fine ,lines .,
, Ma~ar~. '"""' whether it'S used to eyes while sticking with the more · ''I'm a convert.'' she wrote of the and wrinkles. Buy an eye makeup
dramatically lengthen lashes. fill in natural look many women prefer.
mascai"J. While it didn't create ultra- remover. which dissolves mascara
thin ones or l!''fiiY accentuate the
Dawn Kelly. a lancomc sales- thick lashes. il did create length and without s.:ruhhing nr lugging .
...\.cs - is undergoing a revolution.
clerk. agrees that women want a lit· definition.
·
- To make lashes look thicker,
). A few decades ago, false eyelash- ·lie more drama when it comes to
- Cover Girl's Thick l.ash apply a slightly heavier coat of mascO were the ticket t!Jiong lashes. A lashes. but they don't want lashes ($4.49) added definition to our cara at the roots of lashes. then a
Jot, of adhesive, a few_seconds of thai look fake or clumpy.
teslcr's· lashes but not much thick- light coat along the length of lashe.\.
tf\!tience dllrinJ drying lind - voila
Taking that advice. we decided to ness. It also smudged a bit after a
- Tp achieve a thick hut natural
.J.. instantly long, curled la,•hes.
see for ourselves how well common few hours of wear.
look when using a thickening rna•~ But cosmetics manufacturers . brands of ma.•caru ~clivered on their
Tips from the experts:
cara, start with a single coal,
moved on.
· ,
promises of beaut1ful, trouble-free -Start fresh. Mascara adheres best because some brushes may hold the
i: (:olored masCaras - . · i~ vivid lashes. ,
.
to clean lashes. so m~kc ·sure any · equivalent of ahi1ut three non-thick'
~II, gr~~~· ·ptujns apd other hues
We tested five br11nds of mas· . reSidue from old makeup or makeup cning mascara wands. Apply a •in-+- enjoyed a''Iuick blink uf ~ular- caras, priced from $4.40 to $16, all remover is gone hel&lt;1re applying glc, even swoop to lashes.
ily, 1but Maybelline's Great Lish in of which promised to thicken lashes." ,_-------·---------·----~
11'.uc is now ·one ·o r the-lOne holdouts Each 'brand was scored on its-ease of
,~ the rainbOw
'(m c~metic applicatioh. durability, case of.
""lei.
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removal. how wpll it thickened,
The color pendulum swung back whether it. separated la.,hes and how
he · basics • • with most wearers · well it resisted smudging and llak·
sing blacks, browns or a combi· in11:
•
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ri4tion of both shade».
,
OUR FINDINGS:
And. while some WQmcn still - Money may nOt buy love, 6ut the
l
pcllllash len"". more are fol· 'priciest brand· we · tested - Estee
IJ a tn;nd toward tidicr, ,'rnore . Lauder's Pure Velvet ($16 at
Ullll-lookiniJ makeup with fulla(, Oous~chil]\'s, San ~mardino)
JP,I!Os.
·
·
ti:vcd ' ~p best to its promises of dra~ l!stce Lauder unveiled a palette malic. volume .. 0111 111inor smudae
~ ~mcties in$f!ired by Madonna's · incide.nt aside, tliis mae~ created
· ~~ in the rcccl)lly released Alan ·full lashes with .n_o clumpa. .
film "Evita" - ncaa. natunll
The drawback? ·It eliits about
Willi pall iyi lhldQW.. ~ 11n11 ti!I!Ci as ~ ._ elch of the
ln~ow
lip-- odier ~- lliltll d'cres the job.
....... OfOOUIII,IItlull~ .
- L'Ontai Volvm~ ($5.94)
1
· ' ·
rated 14!cDIMII; Md •.-lvect hiah
I Clinique recently roformulatcd marks for bulldiiiJ volume and
i~ Nllunlly Ol011y .IIIIIICJI'I (S II) lenath.
tt • pl·bllld pmduct for .a liafllcr.
· ,....,Revlon 's Luhfull ($6.24) and
IIIIIUi1f ~on
Phyaicilfti Fonn!lla Plenlifiull
,111'1 panicutlrty ·ao0c1 for ~ . ($-4.\M) ~ lied ,for lhird. ~ •
.Jidi 1oq 1111111 wio Willi I bk of . IWII~ hit~\ llllrki f«!!' ' cWii!IN
~it oit their fYM but ~te a lalhel Wtreaillilil flatlt!J.
·

' fl
I

,NqW IN STOCK, SHOES FOR:

BASEBALl• SOFTBALl• TUCK

"Rosebud: The Stbry of Orson Welles" was reviewed hy Bernice Car· ·
pentcr at a recent meeting of the' MiddlcPQII Literary Club. ·
.
The author. David Thom~n . found himself at age 14, in an almost
empty London theat_cr watching the movie "Citizen Kane". After 40 YCIII'!I he
responded to a lifetime fascination with Ol)on Welles by writina the book,.
The reviewer said it is more thon striclbiogrnphy for it seldom follows
chronological order and depends little on documentation. ·
Carpenter
said that most of all, the author looks into the soul of a man who was loved;
hated, ~n,vicd and even idoli1.cd but who w:~,• never truly happy. She said that.
Welles has been called a master.. a manipulator. a ham, but above all, a
.genius, who father, Richard, wa.• un occasional inventor--and a man of lhc
world, who gambled, arank and had his own !\pedal hrand of cigars, and
whose mother was a musician and a writer.
The revi¢wed described Welles a.• an undisciplined chi.ld adored by hoth
parents with·only snatches of ordinary childhood, often resented for his
intelligence. R~ords . she ,said show. that when he wa.• H) was given a bat·
tery of tc.•ts, and ·wa.• found to be able -to read, write, type, recite veise
including Shake.~. was mw;ical and could dmw.
The psychologists, Carpenter said. were ama1.cd at his res)lonscs which
were lengthy; he corrected SO!liC of the questions and quoted Voltaire and
Oscar Wiloo
. .
.
. ,
AI 18, Welles played some roles ·in Ireland, and spent time in Spain.
where he loved bull fighting. Carpenter continued. His cnonnous size and
consiant talking did little to conceal the traces of loneliness and 'terror. He•
wa.~ an uncomfortable mix of boy .and giant. Radio became a successful
career fQr him, the reviewer said, because of hjs deep, cultured voice and no
one could sec that W~lles wa.' llat faced and overweight.
·"Rosebud" narrates a life of !'lldlcss striving and contlnuobs drama. The
author who also wrotb "A Biographical Dictionary of Film", describes fully
Onon's worl&lt; in movies. radio, TV and on the New York stage. His book·
docs justice to the gcniu.• and the fraud, the ladies' man, the person who took
Broadway and radio ~y storm, said Carpenter.
. _
·

p-

""*· · ,,

'i!!
~

,, ,.

&gt;

I

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1&lt;.

''!.,.'

T

J

~"

'•

~

Ru~and Youth League held its first meeting of 1997 electins Dee
Cross, pres1dent; Frank Ebenbach, vice-president; and Sandy Hysell, secre.tary-treasurcr.
The sign-up fcc was set at $10 with a family maximum limit of S2S. Also,
parents of ball players whose uniforms must be returned at the end of the
season will _have to sign ~ statement at the time the uniforms aie passed out
that they Will be responsible for turning the uniforms back in. If this is not
. done, a $20 fee will ~ave to be paid. If this has not been done by the signup Ume of the 1998 season, the child will not _be allowed to sign up.
There will be two more sign-up dates, Saturday from 2-4 p.m. and March
20 from 6-8 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.
''
If )ieople cannot make the two dates. they can call Dee Cr~ at 742-2209
or Sandy Hysell at 992-7467, Rosters for the season must be turned in by
M'!!'Ch 2S to. the Big Bend Youth League.
•.
A date w1U be announced later to clean up the fields of any debris left by
the llood aod m preparation for the ppening season.
·
The nexr meeting will be held March 20 after sign-up. Anyone wanting
to coach, volunteer to help clean up or work in the concession stand should
attend the meeting or contact one of the officers.
,

.

.

By TODD RHOADS
Gannett News Service

of the
Bend
I" Roller Frame

By BOB

HOEFUCH

----,.:News policy-;__ln an elTon to provjde our readership with current news, the Sunday
11mcs-Scntinel will n9t ac•'Cpl weddings after 60 days from the dille uf tlw
event.
·
Weddings submitted after the 60-day deadline will appear during the
~e.ck in Thcpaily ~en~ihel a~d !he palljpolis ~ail¥ Trihunc.
', ..,
· · All club iilc'Cungs and other news articles 'in the soeicty section must he
' submiucd within 60 d~ys of occurrence: All birthdays must he submiticd
within 66 days of the occurrence.
· · ·
··
·
All material submiiil:d for publication is subject In editinj!.

~

,

J

-If you·really •elleve
Cable's Shopping Channel
has the lowest prlc•s on
lewei•J•e•
,;

Stop at.ACQUISITIONS
FINE JEWELRY·••• fi••
o~t •hy you are'wro.lel

Due to the wicked flood of '97, a
free cholesterol testing program
scheduled for March 4 had to be
postponed.
·"The program has been resched·
ulcd for Monday, March 11, at the
Meigs County Health Depanment
and all of those residents who had
appointments on March 4 are to
report for their .tests next Monday .
Testing will be done by the home
health services of Veterans Memorial Hospital, tlie Holzer Medical Center and the Oak Hill Medical Center.

•2.
~~
5 Quart Pintle
Pali'll Pall
Solvent resistant

potye!hylene
780248

1. recentiy again mentioned in a
you may object to ·
wearing your seat belt in the car, it is
the law in Ohio and that you could
be · cited 'to court for failing lo do
that
In former times, officers could
not stop you to check out whether or
not you were wearing your seat belt.
Back then, they had to stop you to
check out another possible offense
and tllen if they found you were not
wearing-your seal hell you could be
cited.to court for that too.
. After receiving a phone call from
a reader on the maller, I chcck'ed
· with Sheriff James Soulsby who
advises that, indeed, his officcrs .can'
stop you if they suspect you aren't
wearing your seat hell and thai you
can be cited if you're not. No other
offense has to he involved, Sheriff
Soulsby reports.
So there you have it You can be
stopped for that rea.~on alone and if
you aren't wearing the belt. you have.
a $25 problem. You might prefer to
ignore the law. But keep in mind that
each offense is 25 hucks. It's the
great American way. You have a
· choic~·-either )Ncar the scat belt or
be prepared to. lay out your hardearned cash. ·

·

;By THAYER 'WINE ',

'

'

.I .

.,

maximum paint plclc-111' &amp; .......
~

After Five Cook: Start meal with ·~ savory slice of Bruschetta

..~ . . . . 01111 . . .llf.

318' nap. H!!;l denaily tlbllc lor

. Relnfon:ed- hancle. 717808

Bartleby, the title hero oi'Herman MClville's short sJory, got so frustrated
sorting lost m•il at a ()C;ild J--etter Office that he went ipsanc, '
Workers al today 's dead letter offices, now called,_ U.S. Postal Service
Mail Recovery Centers, still have to deal with some tedious, repetitive tasks.
buJ compl~x - machines now do the bulk of the grunt work.
If employees of the three recovery centers do stan Jq get bored, thc·mailing public always manages to send a bit of a shock. , ·
. For example, the occasional poisonous animal might get postal employ-·
Do you remember when Ohio .
ces" attention, says Dale Morioka, manager of. the San Francisco center, observed its sesqui-centpnnial celewhich along' with the centers in Atlanta and St. Pau1. Minn ., handles the bration? '
·
.
The celehration observed in 1938
undeliverable and unreturnable mail in the United States. ..
"A clerk once came running up to me and said IJxmer look at this par- ·was broughi bacl110 mind through a
eel," Morioka says. "I looked in and jumped 10 fee\ back- it was the ~kin prografll from that time. the properand head of a rattlesnake. It was dead, but allached was a note warning ty of Ralph Graves, Pomeroy:
somebOdy that i~, ~h~Y. ,kept, \~ up.•_,n,cxt rime it ~ou!&lt;!.\!C .~Uve . " :
. . . . You !l'ay rememberthat a wagon
.PC. cpur.;c,, most o? ':4hal ~nds Ufl a! the three:rec9c~e!'Y centers isn '.t ahve, irain traveled' thrciugh the state in
but rather bundles and bundles of "dead" maJI of aJI kmds:
observance of the' celebration and
' ''We 'get everything f,-i;m p~ncils to bicycles to c~r tires and muffiers," - the historic caravan presented a
says Greg Hawthorne. St. Paul's supervisor of undeliverable mail. " In two pageant at the Middleport High
ye;us we get enough car parts to make an entire car."
SchooJ ·football stadium on Oct. II
On average, the St. Paul center gcts-I§O,OIJllleucnj\1 day: 12 trailer loads to conclude the local observance
of t'mli! u week and 3SO,OOO parcels a year, Hawtho~ says. At_husy ti~s which . was shared by Pomeroy · and
like Christma.\ and Mother's Day. the volume can· 'ump II&gt; 300.000 to Middleport.
,
1-.r'
The Meigs County Pioneer Soci400.000 icttcr.; a day.
Why docs so much mail ond up at the ccnters7 Hawtholl¥' hlames the cty:held a memorial service on Suosloppiness on the pilhlic. '
.
day, Oct. 9. at the Simpson M. E.
" People have a tendency to procrastinate when it comes to paying bills ·Church in Pomeroy to open fhc local
or mailing things off... he says. "They do it at the lust minute and they trans. observance. On Monday hiswrical
po•e a number or misspell a leiter in the address .. ,
relics were displayed in the husincss
Mail arriving at the center\; is sorted a&lt;cording to ~))ether it has vnlue. houses of Pomeroy and Middleport.
Machines scan lhe mail for anything magnetic (chcck.:Y"urrency), metallic
On . that evening, Oc1. 10. a
(electronic products) or _lhick (wills, legal documents);!!' an item is deter. scsqui.ccnlennial ball was staged ar
mined to have no value, it's shredded.
••
the Pomeroy Junior High Auditorilf il docs have value, postal sleuths look inside the npcRuge for a return urn with music by the Carleton
address. !fall clues arc exhausted and nobody has clai~d the item. it goes Brcxiks' orchestru. And, by the way,
to the highest bidder in one of the postal centers' lucrati ~c auctiims.
admission to the ball was just 50
The St. Paul center holds eight auctions a year, which net $1 .2 mitrion in" cents a person.
sales. The money, along with any unclaimed cash. goes into Post Office cofA parade of the wagon train perfcrs. ,
_ ·
sonnet and animals along with bands
· The auctions arc open !o the public, hut since must of the items arc sold and noats moved from ·Middleport
in bulk . most of the huycrs arc Ilea market d~alers and smull business o'!'n- to Pomeroy on the final day of the
crs who plan on reselling their purcha.•cs.
observance. Oct. ll . The late Walter
. "Anything that's sold here is in mass quantities," Hawthorne says. "If we Wolfe and the late Ffcd Swutzcl
·sell watches. it's in lots of20 to30; TVs we'll sell 10 to 15 at once . One per- were parade marshals. A program
son buys most of our clcctninics, repairs them and sells th~m tti college stu- was presented on the Ppn'lerny 'Park· ·
ing lot at 2 p.m. that
dcnts. .. .
.
.
. day and ~16 thai
Mail in the religious veiri that recovery centers often recc.ive include evening prcc•-dmg the pagcunl, u
" Dear God'' .lcuers, although not all of those arc sent by the pious and holy. · banquet was held al the Middleport
· "One perso~ mailed God $500 bepusc he haJ taken i1 frnm somebody High School. The late W. A. CompaJWI felt guilty about it," Hawt~ornc says.
·
10n was wastmas(cr and the hue
Money isn't the only ilcm people try to give hack. ullhou£h the other Judge C. E. P~nplcs presented lhc
items are usually a bit more diflicuh for the mail centers to handle .
address. .
Don't forget Monday is - St.
. '.'Somconc·s neighbor's dug Cdclccatcs) in their yarJ. th~y £et so upset
they put it in a box to mail back to their neighbor.'' says Hawthorne . "Unfor- Patrick's Day so you'll want to
tunately, thcy"re so upset they transpose u number. on the addr~ss_ when . remember the wcarin' of the 11rccn .
tliey' rc mailing it. and of course they don't p'ut on a return address. so 11 ends Yeah. I •UtlJlCISc just being gn.-cn
up wj_th us."
. wilh envy could work.· You· keep
(,.
· smiling. ·

•

Semi-Sil'Joulh Roller Co-M

. Deluxe quality fr..,. 11M 5-wire cage.

'

col~mn that while

A day_in the life at
Dead Lett~r Office

What.euer your sport -is, stop
for a great selec·tlon .
of Rthletlc Footwear!

.,. ........ - .Aid

The

Travis also had a birthday cake at ·
the home of his grandparents. Ann
and David Zirkle in Racine. Sending
gifts were his great-grandparents,
Rob!:rta arid Harley Swisher and
Brenqa, Bryan "and Kyrie S.wann.

l'

=

Beat

holds first meeting

Travis Anthony Hysell, son of Terri
and,· Bruce Hysell . celebrated his
. si_xth binhday Jan. 14 with a party at
h1s.home in Nitro, W.Va .
· Others attcnqing were his sisters,
Samantha and Jessica Hysell . A
"Popeye" cake and ice cream were
served. Sending gifts ·were his ·
grandparents, Patty and Norman
Hyse!l, Pomeroy. .

*

.briP&lt;Jc

Pomeroy • Mldd~ Ohio

Sixth·birthday celeb.(ated

'

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•'

Rut~and Youth League

fime out for tips on the amount of responsitlility put on kids
' BECKY 8AER
lr

'

· ·.
sadcc on top just bel&lt;•k · scrvin£. It's .· san or mouarclla cheese
Ttle NalhVUie Tenl')elaean
espcciully tasty v.:ith th ' grillctl'cgg-'
I. Preheat oven to 350 dctyrces. In
Brilse.hella. a · crusty piece of plant.
·
10-inch non-stick skillet. ~aute
bread with a 5avory topping. makes
You alsll ctm dtcss up u simpi'c union in oil until soft but nut hruwn,
a .ilandy snack; ~j&gt;pctizer or first grilled or h~ile~ chic~n hre1tsl ur about 2 or 3 tm.nutcs. .
counie· ror. a fancier meal. his also a fish fillet wllh this sau~q. tun.
. _ 2, _ M~unwh1lc. dra~n tllmatocs.
handy nibble to .IQkc In a friend's · For-the hrusch~ua~ , Q1&gt; the toast reserving juice, and 'Ciiop. When
hOf:'SC for a pol-luck party. .
apd snuce.With a h1tnl grated cheese ?~tons arc soft ; add tm~atocs and
, Start with a crusty l~af of Italian and heat !"' a warm oven·.Just long JUice to .pan. Sur tn garltc,_oregano
or. French bread. For an appc;tizcr enough lor 1he c~cc~c to ~cit. " nnd ~st': C~10k over med1um heat
p!J!1Ioit. the long, thin F~nch Although they arc besl ~rved ~1ght . unull!qu1d,. mostly gone_~ndsaucc
ba1uette i~ a good choice . because out of t~c oven. theY, can be ollcrcd . hns thtckcned. I5 1~ 20 m1~ut~s ..
the -sjicc:s are noi too big. Toast these at room temperature. too,
3. Wh1i~ sauce. ls .cookmg._ shcc
sliecs' in (he oyen finn so-they don 'I
BRUSC~EITA WITft~MA·
hread on d1agonol1nto I5·20 p1c~cs ..
be~mc · SOllY ' when you put the
TO~ .
.
each about ~ne:half-lftch thick.
sauce on lOp. You can do sev~ral at 'Makes IS-20 servmgs
Place .on cook1e·sheet and 1011SI m .
once bn illar@ecookie sheet. _ · '
l&gt;repa!ation time: 10 mi.nutes
• pre~eated oven_ about .s mmutes. c.- [
The followinl recipe indudes a
Cookm@ lime: 20-25 m1auteK
.. untd bonom 1s · ltghlly hrow~cd . •'·
savory ti&gt;mato S.uce for the toppinJ.
) and 0~-half teaspoons olive oil . Remove c~kic sheet from oven.[
This particular sauce his lots. of
2 tablespoilns finely chopf1Cd t~rn bread shces over _and toast ot~r ·.
other uses, tOQ. ScliSoned with sar· onion
side a~ul 5 "'?re mmutes, or until,
lie, .basil and oregano, it is someI can ( 14. and one-half ounces_) both s1des are lightly browned . .
4. Spoon about I tablespoon of •
thins· like the versatile ·marinara . tomatoes
sauce.
1 clpve garlic, minced "
. the'tomato sauce on top ~f eaci'ISI~ce ·
Serve it with Jinguine or ansel
one-half te~poon dried oreaano
o( toasted bread. Sprtnkle wllh
hair pasta lopped with arated Parmechec~c and return to oven 1-2 min00e-half teaspoon dried. basil
san, . Or srill !lome ·mushi'Ooms, · I baJuetre. or Ions thm loaf of utfs. or JUst until hot and c~se has .•
sweet ~II MlliCts zuccl\ini . and French brea(j 1
. \ r ,
. melted. Serve a1 Qnce as ·111 _appclizegg~lant ,.~d spoo~ some of the
thrcc-(ourtha cup grated ,farme· . er Or finn course. .
'

:

1·
' .

2" x 60 Yds. Maaklng
Seal
small. packages &amp; light bundling

.89

2" Paint
Brush
Chisel

776297: ............................69¢ / ' t---'
776327 ........................ $1.

9' x 12' Ptaatlc Drop Cloth
Embossed design lor greater holding power
to grip Sllrfaces. Clings bener to furniture &amp;

Chisel bimmed
781333

bimmed
784306

appliances. 795720

. ........-.......
--

Available in white and pastel colors

Sllieonized Acrylte
Caulk
j
780081 Clear $}-89
· 791628 White $1.59

._ .::-::-

..~~

Primer/SHier•
Use on wood, plaster, drywall &amp;
burned areas. Gallon n3301

. Latex SemiGloss Enamel
Wall &amp; Trim
Palnl
For kHcheos,
balhrooms. Soap

blher Colors
Available

&amp; water clean up

781997
'

'

"Do-lt-Best"

Lalex Floor &amp; Trim EMmel
Use lncioofs or out on untreated wood,
metal or masonry. n3229
·

Floor and Trim
.
• Ourrible alkyd gloss finish for wood, .
metal, COI"'Cf&amp;te floors

• Good on boat decks · made lo wall&lt;
onn1s10
·
'

$}288 Gal.
.

1

Gal.

.Av!jilable In while and pastel .ealocs

Kitchen, Bath
&amp; Trim EMmel

Specifically
.
designed lor use
on harcl wearing
surfaces. very

774772

•

!&gt;·

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La1tx Flat WhHa
Calling Palnl .
For Interior cellings.
Soap &amp; water dean up.

88

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Latex Exlertor Wood Primer
Use on properly prepared bare ,

dunibte. 797995.
797979

exterior wood. Dries to recoat in.4

Available in wMe and pastel colors

to 6 hours 77$0311

'l388 gal.
Economy
Paint
Use on Interior

· Interior Latex
Wallboard
Prjmar Aflrstco81t"lor priming &amp;
seaHng new dry wall
or wallboard. 780168

Liltex Sernl-l:
Gtosa
Enamel
in kitchen~,
~~~tns.&amp; on
trim. Soap

walls &amp; ceilings.
Soap &amp; water

water clean
782059

clean up. 784413

.!I.e!

$}}88 gat.
Lltax Wall Paint
Use on interior walls &amp;

ceilings. Soap &amp; water
dean up . 783352

DRYLOK® .
MASONRYWATERPROOFER
GUARANTEED TO STOP
WATER.
710268 &amp; n2961

6':~~~it:~~;j~~:;:~~~~~

·Heavy-duty
Noncondutlive. Has
top with
tool slo1s &amp; pinch resis1ant spreader
· braces. Meets QSHA requirements.
TVpe I d~ty rating 250 lb.s 791598

7842110 '59...
20' 791021 $89':''
24' 791030 $119"'
28' 78274.; $149'..

16' Aluminum Extanalon
Llddar
1·1/4"ftautep rungs. Type Ill
hOusehold duty rating 200 lb. UL
listed. 784280

ThomaS :loitcenter.

Jd. JU. 35&amp; t60 Oalllpoll•. Ohio Ph!'ftl': 614-448·2002
Store Houro: Mon.-SaL 8:00a.m. to 8:00p.m . Sunday 11 '00' a .m.lo !1:00 p.m.

,·

Valley Lumber
&amp; Supply Co.55!! Park 5I.

Pbooe: 614·982·1!611

'Middieport, Ohio

~ Houre: Mon.-S.t. 7:00a.m . to S:OO P·III-

S.L 7:00a.m. 10 3:00p.m.

'

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;J1nnday, llarce, 13, 1987

Thul'8day, March 13, 1ti7

~ e Middleport, Ohio

..

•

Experts address cloning·

·Seven_Israeli hi_
g h school girls kill~d,

US:~AY

Scotl lllillt bn Wilm111 a~ his cnlleor""" in
lllld ''" the ""'f'd 011 " ' head when IIIey
-:!Jhey hod 5UCtc:SIIfully cloned a
sheep
Dully f~ lbe cells or another
~sheep- IOIIIClhing never done heforc
w~ nwnmals. 1. . .
..
.
ow the world ' trying to decide what 11
IIICIIII and whether ckm1n1 • ohecp m1ght he
the f'I&lt;CUBOr to clomng a ~uman. Wihnut
~before Congn;•s Wednesday to ~ive
1uscviews._An_d the Nauonai _Broelhlc.s Adv1.,_,.
!fi.u~m!s.&lt;IOn h?ld' heanngs on the top1c
y In Washington.
'
.10 SCI the_ stage, USA TO_DAY, s lim
Fnend led • dtocuoston on clomng wnh throe

six are wounded .in border shooting_

SHOOTING VICTIM- One of the six students wounded In the
border shooting bye Jordllnlan soldier from an observation post
on the Jordanian river laland of Naharayim on the lsraeii·Jor·
danian arrives at an larHII hoepital Thursday morning. Seven
students were killed. (AP)

Russia marks
50th anniversary
of assault rifle

I

'

MOSCOW . (AP) - Mikhail rifle, capable of firing 600 rounds a
Kalashnikov, th~ man who designed minute. .
·
.
the AK-47, no longer-worries about
"You can put it into the water and
showing pride in the weapon that has · it will fire hundreds of rounds imme·
anncd the world since it lirst went· diately after without any problem,;, .
into production SO years ago.
. he said, his voice thin and trembling
"Look. how beautiful it is," said with age. "That's how ·.onc must work
the silver-haired man, clutching the for our Russian soldiers."
The AK-47 and its derivatives
, ifle as camera flashes popped around
him. "They taught us before not to have been used by 55 countries, and
speak in the first person, but now I an assonment of guerrillas, terrorists
and thugs . Kalashnikov accepis no
finally can say: I did it."
Dressed in a general's uniform and blame for the innocent victims.
wearing all his awards, Kalashnikov,
"We created this weapon for
77, was the center of anention at a defending the motherland," he said in
recent cere1nony marking a half- an inte.rview with the military news;
century since the first of 70' million paper Krasnaya Zvezda. "And if it's
AK,47s came off the Russian pro- used for an unjust cause, in ethnic
rluction lines.
conflicts and other ·places, it's the
He was greeted at the Russian politicians, not designers who are to
Anncd Forces Museum by goose- blame ." .
stepping guards, a military band and
The AK-47's ·story began in the
· cadets bearing flowers. A Russian
fail
of 1941 when Kalashnikov, a 21- ·
Onhodox priest presented him with
year-old Red Anny sergeant, was.
an icon after the ceremony.
Kalashnikov touted the virtues of wounded in a battle with Gennan
·
the rugged and reliable automatic troops a&lt;jvancing on Moscow

NAHARAYIM, Jordan (AP)-A
Joraanian soldier in a watch tower
opened fire with an automatic
weapon today on Israeli junior high
school girb visiting a bonder post,' ·
killing.seven students and .wounding
six .
·
After the initial burst of fire, he
climbed down from the tower, chased
the terrified seventh and eighth
graders and changed clips in his gun '
before being overpowered by other
Jordanian soldiers.
The auacker's motive was not
known. Jordanian soldiers at the
scene said.the gunman was crazy.
The shooting comes .at a time of
crisis between Jordan and Israel over
an impasse in Mideast peacemaking.
It prompted King Hussein of Jordan
to cut shon a trip to Spain and the
. United States today to return home
and head ·an investigation into the
shooting.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, who earlier this week had
exchanged angry letters with the
king, said he expected Jofdan to act
swiftly.
"This was a violent, criminal
auack," Netanyahu said. "Young
girls were murdered. We expect the
Jordanian government to act vigorously to bring the perpetrators to jus- .
tice,"
·
Hussein has accused Netanyahu of
endangering Mideast peace with his
hard-liric policies regarding Palestinians. The king's leiter said he
feared the lives of Israelis and Arabs
were "fast sliding toward an abyss of
bloodshed and disaster, brought abOut
by fear and despair" over
Netanyahu's actions.
· The soldier opened fire j!JSl before
noon when the Israeli stude-nts .were
standing at a observation post on the

Jordan River island ofNaharayim on
the
lsraeli-Jordanian
border.
Naharayim, 55 miles nortlieast of Tel
Aviv, belongs to Jordan, but Israelis ,
have free access under the 1994
peace accord .
Teacher Rosa Cherny said when
the group arrived on the island, it met .
with a Jordanian oflicer wh.o checked
the girls' 10 cards. Israel TV said the
students stOOd near a Jordanian anny
watch tower when the gunman
opened fire.
'' We went with a guide to get an
explanation and we are standing and
listening and all of a sudden we hear
shots,'' Mrs. Cherny told Israel radio.
" A Jordanian soldier who was
standing above, began shooting. .We
rounded up the girls and ran down, "
she said . "He came down from the
outpost and began chasing·us," Mrs.
Cherny said. ·
'

.

Seven girls were killed and six
wounded, Israeli and Jordanian offi•
cials said. . .
Seven vtcllms were taken to a
nearby Jordan hospital, and ofth~.
five were dead on ~n:ival, said theJordaman Health Mmtsler, Or. Aref.
Batayneh.
.
.
Two dead girls. were on the Is,rae(
side. Four wounded received treat-.
menl m Israel, pollee satd.
.
Israeli g6vernment spokesman,
Moshe Fogel. said he doubted lhe'
shootm g was linked to the worscntng_
relations between Israel and Jordan. ;
"Thts type of terronst attack
underlines the fact that we have,
legitimate security concerns and that
... our actions to ensure the safety of,
Israel are are based on the realization
that there are still Arab terrorist' cle- ·
ments who want to kill as many Jews •
as possible." Fogel satd.
'
'

. PARIS (AP) - Pie,rre Salinger 17, 1996.
"It has the blip of the plane," a
today offered an expanded version of
The images, . also published in federal law enforcement officialtofd
his theory that a Navy missile shot Paris-Match magazine today, show a the Times. "It has the blip of other
down TWA Aight 800, this time blip ·identified as Flight 800, and planes. It hak no missile . It never did.
offering a 69-page document and a another blip heading tow..,-d it that It never will."
set of radar images to ,bolster his case. Salinger claims is the missile that
At the news conference. Salinger
and Sommer claimed the missile
"We have now reached the point brought down the plane. ·
The tape "completely. confinns a was fired during a "super-secret''
where we are totally sure what we are
· saying is true.'' Salinger, the fanner missile fired down TWA 800, ·: ·. U.S. Navy exercise off Long Island.
•
N.Y.. a.nd was meant to target a Tom,
ABC newsman and press secretary to Snlin:ger said.
Early Tuesday, the FBI sei7.ed a ahawk mi ~sile, but hit Flight SOO
Prcsi&lt;!ent Kennedy, told a news con-·
videotape, su~poscdly showing the instead.
fercncc.
radar
Images, from the Aorida home
They claimed the mi.-ile was
Saling~r. whose original claim
that friendly fire brought down .thc jet of retired United Airlines pilot either a kinetic energy missile or a ·
wa.' widely discredited, said that this Richard. Russell, who is listed in continuous rod ·missile.
Salinger's rcpon as a member of his · "The Navy has noi been ·honest. It
time~ he had absolute proof.
says no missile was fired that night," ·
He and Mike Sommer, a fanner · investigative team.
Salinger fir.;t based his friendly Sommer said. "That is not true. It
colleague from ABC news and an
investigative reponcr, presented a set fire claim on a memo Russell wrote tells half-truths. half-lies and qucslions those who question it. "
of radar images they said were taken and circulated on the Internet.
The
videotape
\Vas
examined
The Paris-hound 747 exploded.
from an air traffic control video
from John F. Kennedy International closely and found to have no indica- . and crashed minutes after taking off.
Airpon, where the flight took off July · lions of any missile, The New York killing all 230 people aboard.
· lnvcstigatqrs say' three possible
Times reponed today.

rmminent_ experts:
.
~Colin Stewart, dtrect&lt;~r. the Laboratory
of CllliCCr Developmental 8to!o~~ at the AblBaste ~search Program.. Fre~cnck, Md.
-.Tho"!"" Murra_ y, btocthiCISl, theRc. enter
for Bromod 1 E h c "'
. . . IC8 I ICS , ... nestem eserve
Untver."'r· Cleveland.
.
;- ~cd Furst: pror~s•or of _an~mal science.
University or WI!ICOftSlR, Mad,.on. .
quESTION: What ~re your though15 on
the 1m~~~ or llus dtscovcry? _ .
Funil. I m rmpressc4that snmelhtng that I
thought • ·u goinrt~fhe impo&lt;Sihle ~ to use
(aduh) cell• to mnke _orrspri.n g- wauctually aceom
11 hed · w.e ve got a 1nt of rcsearch
.
~ '
to do _to realty "?dcr&lt;tand the science ~nd
molce.tt. more efficient.
I_ thtnk _on th~ 11[111licati&lt;m side. that it's
exerting SCience In tcnn• of animal agriculture, fmm the standpoint initially rif new rroducl5 tn "!II~ that may be more useful to society (~) rn lh&lt;; lonstc!"" of actually pc:rh~~ps
reductna the cost of milk.
You notice I talked primarily ahout domestic animals because I think this is probably
Whore l~ use will exist. Therc have been no
compelhnz reasons I've liOCn where anyone
should do It (on humans). · .
'
Stewan:· I agree very much with Neil.
However, beina more interested in the hasic
reseli!Ch questiOils of·embryology, 1 sec that
' this technique, particulaiiy as it clin be applied
to other animals, may give us deeper insights
into the procc-. of aging and ju~t what hap. pens a&lt; cells becnrne more predisposed · or
(develop) cancer. , .
On the broader front, I dnn 't kMw if this is
perhapo son of overstating it, hut maybO it's a
hit like the Sputnibituatinn in the mid 'SOs.
Given the enonnous degree uf interest rrnm

''

_Salinger tries again on TWA crash missile theory

crash theories remain - a bomb, a '
missile or mcchadical failure- but :
they insist that investigation has '
ruled nut an errant missile strike by _.
the U.S. military.
,
N~vy officials .say no missile test• ,
were under way at the time of the 1
crash. and an inventory of tbe Navy
arsenal turned up no evidence of ~
friend!~ tire.
' . ~
Salin~cr's report ."iay~ wilncsscs j·
monituring secret Nuyy anli-t~;rror-'

ism exercises rcponedly heard a ~
!nale voice say. "Oh, my God. I just, '
hit that plane, .. and that anmhcr
sailor reportedly confc~'cd lo his .
father. " Dad. we shot it down."
Federal investigators received an ·
adv.mce copy ,;f the repon. dated :
·March 6. It contains few dm:umcnt· "
cd facts and is full of unallributcd ''
quotes, lcchnU.:al jargon and mmhling· ·'
speculation allout mi~silcs. aircraft,
ships and secret, Navy activities.
;'

Insurgents attack northern milita_ry instcallations

become l'nnrc aware of.. what is ac1ually

Murray: I think it's imponnnt to keep doar

look at the i&lt;&gt;ue of the ethic• or human
· clonina. and we' II do that.
Q: What arc the prospects someone might
try human cloning within live ln 10 years'!

Peru women praise
congressional action

Henry ( Peer
· y·
Busin.ess Represent.-t..•e
1954 1979 R JH

ailing Mother T~resa

And again, as we know, the older you get,
the greater the .chance&lt; you have of develop-

hc"·nu~

rcn·c'lidsl~ · cslim~lc

Public Noilce

...

LEGAL NOnCE
P.O. Box 375, Racine, OH
FOR SALE HIGHEST
45n1, SEALED BIOS lor a
FERGUSON 40 lndulllrlal
BIDDI!R
. TIIAClOR
Raclna Vlllega . Clark
YINIM407704
Ker•n Lrone, will r-Ive
·until 4:00 o'clook p.m. on
lloy be oe.en 11 the
Monday. April 7, 1117, Ill her RACINE
MUNICIPAL
office In the RACINE BUILDING.
IIUN!CPAL BUILDING, Fifth IIINIMUII 810 $500. SOLO
6 Mllln Street, or mallld to "AS IS'':

.

'

.

s

~

'

'.

'

•-·

WI( KS
HAULING

-,.

"oom .Add.ltlons • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE.ESTIMATES
·

TOWN8IIP .

' VIAll ENDING
DECI1118111 :n; till
lclplo Tnnahlp,

(No Sl,.tnday Calls) .

it

Gravel, Sand,
TOp Soli, Fill
614-992-34'70

-

i

R-.......·
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- OHoltpllotl
~l'utlda

Reoelpte:

,...._.....-...·-----·.
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Llaenn•,

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P~rmllt

•nd

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other--·.....

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can relieve a debtor of.
financial obligations and· arrange a fair
distribution of aasets. Debto,. in bankruptcy may
keep "exempr property for their personal use.
This ITIJIY Include a car, a house,, clothes, and
household g~.
For lnfonnatlon Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

CHICJ&lt;EN &amp; RIB 880
SUNDAY 11:00
POMEROY
FIRE STATION

_

WAYNE'S PLACE

~··

··'
•''

SAT. NIGHT 10-2

. •RENEGADES"

Pullllo lalwty.. - ....~ ,...,_

oNew HolliN

992·2753

992-5535

20 Yre.

Baths, Grooming,
Kennel Care
and Love "
Mon., Tiles., Wed.,
Thuni., Fri. 1~;
Sat. 12--8; Sun. 12--4
271 North 2nd
Mkkllepor1, Ohio

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

-lno. Owner. Ronnie Jonoo .

985-4473

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill .
1!12-8215
Pomeroy, Ohio

·........
.•.,......

Umeatone a Gravel ·
Septic. Syaterns
l'rllller a.
House Sites
·

.WIId.BIULJII'r CALl..
992·7074

Gravel, Llmeatone,
· Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand, Refuse.

-at the f!'Ont desk of The
Daily Sentinel, 25¢ each.

LNEOR.SII

Gollipolla.

American Cafe, 39 Court Sttetr. .

l:lffiF
Mlnuta Muat Bo 11 Yra.

$3.1111 P.,
Strt-U (e18J 045-8434.

18+
1-800-992-4170
vlsalmc
1--90().567-3727

MARCUM &amp; SOli
IUILDIIIG

otntertor 6

l!xt&amp;rlar
Remodeling

and Trustworthy ladlea

Commercial

-General Cttrpentry

Chester, Ohio

tiHtiAnylype
of Cleanint
Done?
Honeat, ·Dependable

oReslclerlllel a

Sayre Truckktg Co.
Public: Notice
~·-"

......"......_.......a.ooo.oo

Retlnd---·-·-·-I ,144M

~.~:~~': .

I oer111y lh• following
rapor1 to lie GorrHI and
true, to the lleet of my
knowlldle: ·
Connie K. ~Cleric

.

. . . ... 1.

" - " ' OIIIo...,..

(3) 13; fTC

Publ~

Notlee
PUIUC M!1J1C1 ·
NOTICI le ~'""
tlleton.........,
11,

ready to clsen your
home or busln888.
· Reasonable Retea
992-6342 (Dl-)

OIIIH'11Syr&amp;

Mlkl w. Mai'cum .

--

91~141

or 992-7275 (Branda)

liNGS'
HOlte l.,ov....ts

H.O.M.M.
TRANSPORTAnON

33111 Happy Hollow Rood
Middleport, Ohio 45710
11ft " - • Addlllone,
Siding, Pale Barna,
Decke, PllnUng,
Garo[lft, Porch•.
CaH Us For AFrft
EeHmata

614-742-30110
814-742--3324
614-742-3078

All . . .lum SIIVICI
Traneportallon lor
lndlvlduolo ualng
wheelcholre. _.cald a

-tcanr ICCeplld.
Doctor'• vteltl,
hoapltll Vllltl, etc.

Phone 614-1182-3053
FIX 1114-9112'-31153 ·
Pager 1--8011-1182-2327
Pin 28411
a'1WJ71-.

...

,...,, 11110:00 - · · •11!111110
.... wll lleiMIIIIIItf Welt

-~t3.1111

Por Min. IIUat Bo II Yra. Se&lt;v-U
(011111146-1434.

eild 10 wi!IIIIIIW ... allfte

I• r

Mt•.

..nsteral prior to
,.... . . , 'hi,. . . . . .
llld
COIIIIIIII)'
1'111111 Calli' 1 ......... ,. ........ """ •
D•pa'lll: rl 1 • - -..rwllllldla t m
-·---111.4D
........
lh•
c:.Me~~Hand, __..,..
1 ............ . .
Totlll\111 IYII'I•- -IIIII1111t le In, 111111 no
,,.,_ ••P•••• or llllpllod ·
·" - 011 . . . . CMIIta . .............
_
·
--~Por lllriMr lllfomlotlon,
Totii'IIIMi----- Ni lllloii!IYil-7410.
ou " • .,,.._ ,,,.. Cll1t,1t,tot; rrc ..

hviRII

'n

r

•Ito••

moady daya, tome eve~inga in
New Hl'len-Mason area. Call ar·
ltr !ipm. 304-812-3331.
llllllntiEni'J'
Steady Work/ excellent Income.

Flo~blo houri, knowledge of windOWl holplu~ 1.-.a:IS-0553..

BOTTlED WILL POWERI LOSE
up 10 30 pounda, 30 DAY MON· •
EY BACK GUAJWjTEEI Natural,
Doctor Recommended, 8,4-441- .
$2.1111 1982, Fraell8fl'lllos.

. IIEET SOIEOIIE NEW

FAU.INLOVE
&lt;:AU. NOWIIII
1-1100-8118-1468 Ext 1755,
Por Min. Mull Bo 11 Yro. Se&lt;v·U
1111-141HM34.
.
IPOA1SFUNI
POINT -ADIIII

CABLE lV ORDEATAIIEAS
Eam $15 -S11 Por Hour + Com-

miulona. Extremely High Cuetamer Demand, No OverniQhl ,
IIOIIDICOPEII
Travel. lmmedlare Openlnoe. ·
FIWICE, IOAPSI
c.-ea Muatlle Allallo1ile To
~$2.1111 Sllrt PoldTrUIIng " " ' - " ~1-IYra.

&lt;:AU. NUL lOLl FREE

So!Y-U (ei8J 045-8434.

1.-432·7371 __ I'r
_ _....;,.==.;,;;.;.:;_

WANTED: To correapond with

members dan.ol 1857, PPHS.

DELIVER TELEJIIIoNE IOOK8

t,

Don Ruaaoll, 6 Woo&lt;lblne Rood,
-EARN EXTRA MoNEY
Shollbumo, vt 05482.
No EIIJI(Irlonot ·
t
~S.nM~
r
40
Giveaway
Ntoded To Dollvor The
4 Puppiea to good liome. 304- People
5111-31311.
. New Ohio Valley, OH Telephone
Dltectorlea In: Crown City, Mlct.

&lt;llopor~

Coo!Yillo, l'llmttOy, Ru- .

1

tland; Langsville, Apple QroN, · ·

A~elne,

Sy~acne,

Portland,

·

~'"'·
-... · '
Tu-o, LQog
Ploin.Bonom.
Leran, Wilkoaville,
304-11115-3255.
,_.,
•
su
....
nding Aleo•
Uolo 11 month old Sllophenl nil,
good waiChdoj[: 8 week old !&gt;UP' To Oeliwtr You Uuat Be At l•st ~
pltl, ShtpherdiRonweUer mix: 18 Yoors Old, Uu Of An lnaurad ·
Flrewaod. You cui I JOU ttaul.

814-742-26112.
Vehicle, Avail- A Mlnl.-.,m Of .
5 Oaylighl Houla lloilJ.
,,
. Malo Puppfoa, 014·387-0305 Al-

To Deliver a Ro~te In Your I.~

i WSP.U.

· ~::~~· 10 G~-r

Huaky Blue Neighborhood. Call 1-800-827.Croa 114-245-9557 ·
1200 Job 1104-G.

Pllppita; 3 Main, 3 ftlmoiH, Father Bl•c:k Collie, Mother Part
. Beagle Basset Combo, I 14·2581258.
·

Sll'd

Playful Dog To Good Horne,

Delivery

.

AOS COrp.

'..

EOE

1

Drlvera Little Caeaara ·'

,Now Hiring! Flell Schedulea:
Hou~r

Wage • Cash Commilllion

SL Si~o PD&lt;itlto, And I Puppioa, Eam $1,000 Weol&lt;ly StuMng En- .1·
To GivNMy, 114-381-11875, 114- ..topaa At Home. Start Now. No ,,

Tomtd Domtalic Rabbi!, 614441-112110. '

Experience. Free SuppUea, lnfo.
No Obligation. Sand lSASE To: "
ACE, Oept 1351, Box 5137, Dlamond Bar, CA 111765.

Ttlr" puppitt• lWO malet, part

Hair Styllat Wanted Rent Your · ·r~

381-0010.

·

Gorman Shephard and Golden OWn SIBiion, Or Malot S10 To S15
ltol-742-23211.
An Hour, Call Carol King, 814·
446-8022.
llwao ,_, old malo Beofllo, good 1..:..:....:-='-:=--'-----pot or hunling dog, 01H92- HOIIEnPIS-r.t.

Rt-.
75570

,,,

60

4343 ~·· s-113611.

Found--~

Needed 10 Lodies To Sell Avon,
Cal &amp;14-4&lt;0-3358.

Loet 111d Found
hound, on Co. Rd
10, (HJHII Run), hoa coNor wid!
..... --114-11112-7442.
Loti T-- Pll BulliColllo,
tan wid! Dluo-. "Ginfltr", L•
11r1, 011 vicinity, 114-247-24CIO.

a-n Potch A,.und

One Ere (Female) Black T1n

PM-tlmo;rMellllla.

e.IIINI-IDIOm
.......... \'1111,..
lllllliMtal Halpltal

-111 1.11111101111 DrMt
Pontwoy, Oltlo 41718

11• UN104

.

1\p,loetlona IIIDIIIIY be
.......... ~ il1llplkl.

102 E. Main ·

~

Overblook Center in Uiddlepart,

Ohio ia now accepting appllcoIiona lor STNA't. For mote lnlor- · !
motion clll614-992-&amp;&lt;72.
oDit, No Exparitnco Necaoaary,

For lnlormadon, Call 1-t~18-71t&amp;-

/

&lt;lorman Shopllord, (Mola) 114- 1010 Extlf021.

',.

317.01111.

:

70

AEIPIAA'IORY '!HEA-T

YnSIII
Gllllpolls

I VIcinity

SOMC 1-joa lmmedioio Oponlnt~a
For 3·Conlintlein ReapiNIOrr 1'11~dant. Mutt Be RRTJCRTT Aeo~trv Etfalblo. Deal•• Graduataol)l
AJRCR'IE AIX:Iodiled Progmn.

ALL 'lard Soloa Muat Bo Pold In Duli11 Include Routine Floar
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Thlropy, ABG Drawa, lloniiOr Of

tM dar beiDrt tt. ad It to run.

Non-lnvaalva /Invasive

SUndar odillon • 2:00 p.m. FlldoJ lion:
MondfW adlllon - 10:00 a.m. Sol-

...,_

P!1111 Conract Karen

ond---

11.00
liitl - Frldar
dey, March 14-15. Thrift Shop In

dey -

. . ad Ia lD run, Sun-

Pl.PIHUntc
I VICinity
u...........

_-Do--

11111 1-100·127·8181. 1!4 houro

J

·'

,.
. .,

Walburn 1JJ

__
.....-. ......

tiOUTIIEAH 01110
IEDICALCENTD

~Lant

1\NI

dar &amp; Mondoy edition· 1:OOpm
· Fric!IJ
t

.111111.

VentUa~

014-354-7807, IFax 114-3113·
~.r," _tn Poraon Or Send

; All Yard Saloa Muat le Pold tn
Advance. Oeadllna: 1:DOpm 1111

992·7696

•-'

Lott In Bulaville ArN, Whitt Pot(al Job1 3 Position• Avaii-

Torrler Wlfl

M~

IIIDID IT OIICE
I·UY
TICIIIIOLOIIST

~,
lf

P.C utert needed. 145,000 inc:ome polential. Call 1·800·513- .. i.

.· Hirtwell

le""

.

nntory, 1·800·736·0188 indfalll
liP'
Bebyliner for 1 child, part-time.

LIVE PSYCit!CII
lEU 'lOUR
FU1UREI

Introducing_

OVWII....., Old.;,_,_ =otZ7SIQI0141t

---·T·~-·- -"&lt;It,ll?
The. l'annara
l!ftll
l'und , u .. ll lal•n••· Ievina•
C•lllpany,
J--r 1.~ ..'"'--""" ..._,. OhiO, riHrvft
l'und c..ll ••••noe. · ... rlgllt.to IIIII II t111a ....,

Avon $1 ·115 tHr, No Minimum .

Order, No Door -To -Door, No ln-

Pan ~ Boaglt, 11.-.31138 Plld Dallr. Unlloom PIOVidtd. ,._
Or 11~7275.
ply At Any Linlo c;-L

Sarvtngl/werH tor

_..,

•career *He~th

$3.89 min._, ....

RuiiOIIIIbltl Rata
Joe N.Siyre

614-742-2138

· reading tor
*Love *Money .

Rep.

All· Poaillona Available: Stop ln.
For An . Application: Mogia'a ' ·

f'r*dy, 81~3551 .

FREE 3 min.
Psychic

Avon Repra1entat1vea

nHdtd. Eorn moMy lor Chllat·
moo blh at honWII -"- 1-800- _
8112-1350 or 304-882-2045, Ind.

HEYOU'ISt

· Block 1 Whllt Female Cot, Very

11, ____........
. ·flood T~ are available

-

LONELn

•New Homes
•Garages

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding .

Help Wanted

Able

~$2.1111

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
(614) 367 ·0266
1 -800-950-3359

Wanted
buy chip
wood. 304·
773-5010to Day
1, 114-1112·1021
E""'*''IL

,.

OUV86GALS

992--4514

11/11117t mo.

Eat&lt;·

nuo, Galllpollo, Or Col 11-C....a- AVON I All .Arooa I .Shirlor
59wa. 3IU-1175-14211.

1122.

FHIIS..pUn
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Extra Coplea of the 1997

AtH lOLJti CI 1.1E !ITS

Athens, Ohio

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~cloa. Sotllnt1 porlL 304-

. Attorney Allaw ·

(614) 592·5025

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Strt-U (el81 045-8434.

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. Attorney William Safranek
·

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Pick up d~

SERV ICES
ATTINI10N
Hu '~bur Mama.. Or Rlltationlhlp Gal Up. w.c, Slop In Prln- 1-------~­

BANKRUPTCY

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61 ..''-992• 7643

ofnWrlor a l!xt&amp;rlor

, C~nctl- the right
to accept or reJect eny
andlat altllkll.
BIDDeRS SHOULD IIARK
ON ENVELOP TRACTOR
BIOS.
KAREN LYONS;
CLERK·TREASURER
RACINE VILLAGE

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.PRESENTS MEIGS COUNTY'S

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BISSElL BUILDERSI INC.•

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CARPENTER SERVIa

Public Notice

.

' Aboolult Top Doll•: All U.l. II-

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9115-4422
Antiquoa, lurnituro;gl- ci1IM.
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110 Cour11t.

,90 Wlntld to ..... ·
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DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

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YOUNG'S

St•t•f ict11!

Public Notice

United JDdta)

(O,....A..tlolileot....,_Cootl

animals.

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Stkll
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'l'r;uhk
in
fluk
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the cell that cmncs in. Anuthcr (i!ii when cell~
arc· cultured) and whether they maifltain
I winS. c•ccrtthcy ha'tlc m)llutd lhc 5amc utcr·
gcnclic normalcy or whclhcr thc~c are
inc crlvinmmcne. :n~e· clmlf: would he missin#- changes
in the cells.
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the pO!Unatnl developmental environm-.:nt.

our

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SJ!PS.OO INSTALLED

TIUCII'II

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see ·the technique ur nuclear transplant with
cloning from adult cells applied to animals
like rats or mice. where we know so much
about· the genetics of cancer dcvcletpmcnl in

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"FACfORY DIRECI'
PRIC""C!tt

long) you have heen ~round and the&gt; amount of ·

the~

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clmtcd collie lhut they are sort n( identical

CONGRATULATIONS
.
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·

Successoreho~ehlor

sheep looks like. I'm not sure. Maybe lbcif
wool falls out or 50mething. · ·

J&amp;l $11118 &amp;
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Fur.n: I .think you have to nsk Ihe question:
• W'1Y..'\'!JI!Id. ·~~nne . )\'aq\,Jo do iJ'! A~&lt;! 11tvse ,
Fursi:...Thcre. arc seyeral .fl&lt;rints ,in what
whh tbtnk they arc goinJ to (make 1111 identi- Colin is.soyinJ, I think. One JNI!l is -O~ aginc
· · cui cop9i 1-lhink art mislcndin&amp; themsclv.,.: of'Ihe animal, pcrhaJ" hecause of the. a~c of

Rebel forces capture another town in eastern Zaire

.

going lo show any si~ns uf sorl of premature
aging , althoup:h what premature Df!:in@: in a

lhc'dislinclion between the research on animal damage yoo",ye accumUlated lo YOl!f DNA and
donin,. which has tremendous scientific the resulling muU1tiuns in gcnc!rl that arc critipotential With the (XlSSihility uf grcnl humnn. cal for whether a cCII rcrimin:-; noonal or
benefit, from lhis horror st:cpruio of po~tsihle whether il becomes cancerous.·
human "Cloning. The president has a&lt;ked the
NOtional Biocthics' Advisory Commission tO
It's for these reasons that I would love to

"\ I

' .,

Stewan: Yes, I cenainly think this is why ,
Dolly, even in her own uniquc:nC!&lt;s; is 5till
going to .he quite a fascinating individual tn
follow. Because as has been pointed out. •he
was cloned rrom the udder of a 6-year-old ewe
and now •he's 7 months old. Does that make
her n 7-monlh-old ewe or dues ·that niakc her
a 6-year and 7-munth-old sheep? What will be
very intere!iiling with her .iS to ~e if she's

ing some fonn of cancer. jusl due to (how

~ntcrest

TIRANA, Albania (AP. -Insur- three other annorics of weapons, looters were suppuncrs of Bcrisha or State Dcpanmcnt onlcred home more ; i
opponents. advancing from their than 160 non-essential personnel.
•i
gents ransacked heavily mined · according to rcpons from Shkodra.
The mobs ignored signs warning strongholds in the south.
Amcritans working fur U.S. gov- , 1
annorics in the biggest city innonhLooters also auackcd an arms crnmcnt contraclnrs also huve hccn t 1
ern Alhania. killing four people in a of mines' protecting the miHtary
night of fire and looting. hospital installations. Hospital workers said . depot ncar the industrial city of told to leave, said a Western diplo. they were treating many leg injuries. .Eiba.'Hill, 22 miles southea.•t of Tirana. mat. speaking on condition of
·
workers there said.
and caned away automatic weapons • anonymity. ·
•
:1
The violence in Shkodra- - 55 apparently from mines.
A showdown loomed· in the - adding to the cache nf guns and . l'l_ew Prime Minister Bashkim .:.
miles nonh of the capital- .vas the
worst so far in the nonh of the impov- nati~nis capital, jkhcrc gangs appar- •· munitions seized by mobs the pa.•t Finn --'- a So.ciali.st from t"c ~nu.therri ",', .
.
tc&gt;wn ol GJirnka.•tra · ~ acknowl- , ,
erished Balkan country. Opponents to . cntly supponing Berisba have anncd · two weeks.
Just 50 miles · from the ~apitai, edged it was impussihlc In '(&gt;rce . 1
President Sali Berisha already have themselves with guns from a vacal-' seized the southern third of the coun- cd military academy. Police did noth- mobs plundered an annory in the oil rcllcls tn put down their looted , ,
LIMA. Peru (AP) - Women's Beatriz Merino, who introduced the try.
ing as the men calmly walked out nf refining center of Ballshi, a vantage w~apons tn end the crisis. ·which ha.• • •
_
rights activists in Peru are applaud- -repeal j11ea.•urc, was quoted as saying
Hospital officials reached by tele- the military acadeniy Wednesday pomt that gives insurgents control splintered the mthl"!'Y and wtped nut ",:
ing congressional aclion.to climinale by the government's Andina news phone from Tirana said the four with AK-47 auwmatic ·rifles slung over a main highway throu~h south- stm~ security posts m the_south.
"
ovcr.their
shoulders.
ern
Alhania.
llts
up
In
the
Will
ol
the
people
a law that lets rapists go free if they agency.
dead included two military officers.
marry their victims.
A mob in·a Tirana suhurb stonncd
Wesicm cmha.&gt;isics evacuated stafr to surrender Ihe weapons,·· Finn told
. " The act of sexual violation was and that at least 22 people were hurt
considered a crime againsfhonor that - two of them seriously.
Con~rcss ' Justice Committee vot· the Yzberisht barracks later Wednes- and dcpendeqts. Thc ,U.S. Embassy the private Greek ti:lcvisiun channel
ed unammously T~esday to eliminate could be recti lied through marriage."
Insurgents hurned a garrison close day. seizing weapons. stale televis,iun sent out diplnmats families and the ~ega m QJtrnka.•tra.
the anic le lrom the penal code. Giv- · she said, adding that the new law to the hospital and st_rippcd at least reported. It was unclear whether the
en tha~ievel of committee support, redefines rape to make it a, ··crime
the full Congress is expected t6 fol- againstlibcny:· · '
At least ·25.00Q women a year arc
low suit when it votes thursday.
''II was an important victory not ·raped in, Pe(u, and in at least 60 per"We've got to cmss that river. or at the Tingi-Tingi camp, 60 miles 111 camp two weeks ago as the rebels • .
only l(n' women, but for all of Peru- cent of cases the victim know# the · · GOMA, Zaire (AP)- Rchcls tryIng to topple the government said it will be too late:·· said Samuel the southeast . They ahanduned the advanced.
. vi an sodety,'' said auomcy Gina anackcr, Yanez said.
Yanez of the Manuela Ramos
She said social pressure often today they captured another town in Uwimana. a Rwandan Hutu who tled
women's group.
made marriage an acceptable eastern Zaire, while thousands of his homeland in 1994, "It's not safe
Besides allowing a rapist to cscnpc response to rape in Peru. where refugees trying to escape the insur- here."
No one -knows fnr certain how
punishment if he otl'ercd to marry his women often fcellhey have lost their . gents made desperate attempts tn
,.
cross
the
Zaire
Ri
vcr.
'
many
Rwandan refugees arc still in
victim and she agreed. the law value once they have lost their virRehel
forces
led
by
Laurent
KabiZaire.
An
estimated
two-thirds
of
the
(
••
allowed co-defendants in a gang ginity.
·
la
took
Kongolo,
about
410
miles
1.2
million
who
originally
ned
in
rape to go free if one of them married
Relatives often pressure ·youn~
·
the woman.
women who have been raped to con- sou thea." of the strategic river pon of 1994 returned home late last year.
;'
,
" A rule that for decades has sent to marriage to "save the family Kisangani. on Wednesday, rebel
spokesman Raphael Ghcnda said.
The refugees left
Ill
offended the dignity of all women has honor... Yanc1. said.
The rehel~ took Moha, a pon on escape rctrihution for the H_utu gnv;,
been eliminated... Congresswoman
•
Lake Tanganyika. 225 miles south- ernmcnt-orchestratcd slaughter of a
cast of Kongolo, a day earlier. ·
hall~millionminorityTutsis. Manyof
t .
•
'
;i
"Our forces make progress every the refugees arc memhcrs of the for'. \
.
day." Ghcnda said.
mer Rwandan Hutu army and militia
The rebels havc·capturcd much of implicated in .the slaughter: They
•.'
eastern Zaire the past five months.
have been fleeing westward ahead of
·-~-·.- ~~
There wa.• no news of the situation the
rebels since January.
IY
Teresa had buill with her charitable
CALCUTTA. India (AP. in Kisangani itself. Rehels claim In
Most of the refugees arriving at
Mother Teresa's order elected a new works. fund-raising savvy and close control access on three sides m the
Ubundu
were am()ng the estimated
,
•
t · If F
;.
leader toda~ for her 50-year-old char- tics to Pope John Paul II.
Zaire River city, and have hccn sayMother Teresa. still frail but no
· 170,000 who initially sought shelter·!
~
ily mission~'hecding the aged and ail·
ing for more than a week thai Kisaning nun's rcquest.to let her step down. longer bound to a wheelchair. was gani would fall "stK&gt;n ... .
~~
Mother Teres~. H6. was present at likely to remain ·an intlucntial voice. . The Zairian government disputes
&lt;..
"She will always be there as the those claims.
the selection. which ended munths of
~·•
uncenainty over .the Missions of 'Mother,'' said Sunita Kumar, a frie~d
The U.N. World. Fond Program
' ',
Charity's future follnwing the Nohcl . o( Mother Teresa for 30 year~ and was attempting to fly .60 tons nf food
. .r""
•••
one. of the few outsiders who was into Kisangani today.spukcswoman
laureate's hean auack la.~t year.
•
••
Mother Teresa blessed the nuns' · privy to the sisters' dclihcrations .
Michele Quintaglic said in Nairobi,
'
. "The Missionaries of Charity will · Kenya.
choice: Sister Ninnala. a Hilidu con·
~vcn to Catholicism. Cakutla Arch· ·go on. The sisters have hecn working
••
She said the plane would land at
very closely with Mother for years. a smaller airport in town hecausc the
bishop· Henry D'Souza said.
·~
.. :.
The vote among the mote ' than They arc ali very capable and dedi- main airpnn nonh of the city is
••
•••
I00 nuns was nearly unanimous, c\lled:' Mrs. Kumar said.
'!heavily militarized'' and.therc could
The nuns of the electoral college be problems with · military check·.
D'SoU7.ll said.
~:.
•.:.:
· At Mother House. the headquar- came to Cnlcuua in January for the point•.
,.._;
ters of the worldwi!lc ch~rity organi- difficultta.•k of choosing a' successor
. Croniian and Bosnian Serb mer.
zation. flowers and garlands were to Mother Teresa.
cenaries. who appear in charge ai the
•••:.·'
delivered to the front door. where the
The election had been postponed airpon where the iairian army has its
~. t
sisters were cloistered for the clec· twice. apparently because ·no con- regional. headquaners, have said tbe
•••
8ensus candidate had emerged. While perimeters arc mined.
lion;
·:!
Sister Ninnala, whose family had d~libcrations dragged on, Mother"
Quintaglic said the food is intend~:·
a military background in the Indian Teresa spent an hour a day discussing · ed for an e.stimated 70,000 Rwandan
army. was n.ot eonsiderel! among the policy with the nuns, and conrinued Hutu refugees who have straggled
~j
leading candidates for one of the
to be the guiding force in the chari· into a makeshift camp at Ubundu, 60
~.
most visible positions in the Catholic ty.
'
miles south of Kisa0gani.
church outside the Vllliean.
Molhet Teresa has long had health
Convinced that !he rebels who arc
She led the Contel!iplative Wing problems, but the nuns in put yean out to topple President Mobutu Sese
of the mission, and once HI'Ye&lt;f as a had 'resisted her mcives lo ltep down. Seko arc also after them, tens of thoub ·
Mother Teresa founded the Mis- siJI(Is of refugees were tryinJZ to cross
missionary in the United States. .
Sister Nirmala, 63, will ·be aided · sionaries of Charity in 1947to rescue the Zaire River at Ubund'u. ~n: is
by 1·council of four members to be . destitute people from lonely deaths. rio bridge.
Tile order now has more than
ele~:ted bCfon: the nuns dispei'H to
Some have ventured across on
000
nuns and runs 17 orphanages.
4
!heir mis,ions around the: world.
precarious
· bamboo q~fts 1:1uilt by
'
homes for the poor, AIDS hosptces. flshenn~n. Others pleaded with relief
II wu not c~~whelher !he littleknown Sister Nlrmal1 c:ciukl ruintain and other charity centers around the workers Wednesday to ferry them
•
I
.
t'
world . .
~ ordel's hl1h ·profile that Motjlcr
across. "'
·'
·. ,.
..
'
.,.

Rwa~da

ha~

pening in ~iology arid in embryology? This i•
~ huge, huge .ll'CI of research and or great

,I

arpeliters Loca Union.650
1OS Years in Pomeroy
March 16
·. 1892 1997

And then the twain wnuld c"cntially be •iuinr roost or the same cxpcric111.-cs.
So they ellimlle thtt1 lbout 10 pct-.ct11 in
just milk productlott, of whll woold be b
would he the rcsuh of the clones heinl olike.
Murray: 1 think thai's 8 Ye')' i-inf
point. Do I undcrsland you cnrR.:tly to soy
thlu even with cloned caHle, you only gel a 70 .
pc:m:nl similarii~ in milk rroduction, even
though the~'rc genetically identical''
·
Furst: That's the modelinBihe geneticist&lt;
have •iven us.
,
•
Murray : I think that's very interesting. I
mean clearly some or the more vibrant public
fear.arethatclo..,.willberunninlarou. ndos
not merely physically resembling each other
hut a&lt; essentially kind of perfect rliotocopies
or each oilier, and tiJat'~ a fear thll I think
many of liS have tried to put to rest.
Stcwon: I would ju51 like to point out at
thissta_•c thll when "OU look at 'tbc nctual em•
'
cicncies of doing tht. experiment ·-and you
can see this in Ian Wilmut's papers - even
. when you do this experiment you can't star1
orr with a single egg, fu.&lt;e iliO ·~ adult nur:le·
us nnd expect to get a newborn child at the
end. You' re going to 1et a very high de~ of
ahnormol embryos developing as a conoequcnce of thi&lt;.
You' re gnin• tn run into theSe hishly
ahnonnal fe!uscs• or embryos· or buhie&lt; that
mny even be hom. The ethical tmplica(inns of
that I think nrc quite obvious.
Muimy: There's one panlcular kind of ri•k:
namely that in die course of the life of crcating an adult ,of any species. but let'! take ·
human•. the cell• that actually .difrcrentiate 80
'through many, many divisionsl"'nnd in the
course of those divisions accumulate 1 variety
of mutations.
If you were to clone from one of those
tells, the cloned version would incorporate all
those mutations, includinr some which might
be quite danprous, even lethal.
·

"lhc public on this question. is. this going tn oct
as a major catalyst ur stimulus for people to

.I'
.

The Dally Sentinel• Page13

Pomproy e Middleport, Ohio

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Appareatly_laat year group of
Aualrlllaa acleatlata tried to aeleet
the bonlee tlllt would not will - ·
And II apPe&amp;ra that they were rl&amp;ht
oaly IOIDe two-tblnll of tbe tlmel Do
you thlat oae mlpt do better with,
u,y, a few da111?,
Ia todat• deal; South put lu.IIIOIIe)'
on a 50 pen:eat bone .wben there wu
a healthier mount available. How
JrOuld you plan the pLty Ia lbree notrump? Wa.t leads the spade five :

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clone, fr" utilftllee, lifetime
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17,1100 Sorlouolnqulrloo nly,
Col Allor 5 P.II.1114-441-D1311.
1 AC • 2 AC loll lor ·ulo In
scenic · Valley SubdiYiolon.
Wodoo Realty, Brollor 3114·e75-

- ..

oiro bedroom 'oporlmon'lln
............. ptli. 114 11112

· Thil new psper • not
.lut0Wir9\' acoopl

111111 Clayton 141M, 2br, 1. balh,
like now co~d. 114,11011. Coli
!04-175-3111111

-lorroiiOIIIbi
wtict1 l o i n - ollho law.

Our- ore horollr

~···

lr*&gt;fn'lld lhlt
..new I 'It'll'
ldVIttiNd
In thll

OfiiiOI1IInlty -

Hr.draullc OIIS12.50-SOal paiL
s dora Equipment, Hondtroon.

BORN LOSER
.

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~TI-0\E,~Y?

lllio .... 111,5110. 3114-4111'1721

"" .'6u.P'15 ;:, ()I lit N.L. Jll£ Til'€. ..

mt~~lltl(,~! .

Auto Partl &amp;•

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Acc•••ortt• _., :1

CARS FOR .11101 TnN;U. bolill,

4·-*•·
motor I\Omoo,
wra; oWclronlct. ~'"' otc.
lufnl·

Ill' FBI, liS, DEA ..Aftllllllt ,...,

21117.

122 JiiQhlond AYe. 3Bodroom, 2
............. olr 0111 , _ - lrll alr, -lullbue........ . 45,5011.

oorlto 1250. liTO chl-/ohrecldtr, Shp, 1)"t old, ullld · once
$21111. Clil Jim 304-1175-8728.

- CUI Ilion -be. Dllltronl
Colort, 814-370-27211 AFTiiR I

Shonnu

2 Oftl'bllhVfll IJLtn'ltll•ln Pl

PIHtllln~ will otll on lond con·
- 114 IIIIUIIi'
1111 houoo, In lilod or ropolra.
11 1100 or Bool Olflrl 3114.. 75-

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PREVIOUS sOLUTION: , 'have nothing , _ 1D teach die world. Trulll and
· nO&lt;wlolence .,. !18 old u die hllll. ..,. Mohandlll K. Gandhi.
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.Granips always told me lhat
it's better to be a nobody who

.WEDON.T
J.IAVE

.,r, Willi 4 FL Bulh Hoa, And I
Ft Qradlno Blode, Slnolo. Plow;
For 13.000, Col After I' P.M. 814441-01511.

'f'OOlE 8ECOMIN6

I plishes --~-- - -!

~-

.

Complete 1M chu&lt;kle quoied
by filling in the missing wo,d1
vou dovolop lrom llep No. 3 below .•

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INCREASIN6L'( ·
· WEIRD, SJR ..

COOKING ·
CLASSES,
SilL

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than "·"
· aaccomplishes
somebody somelhing
who accom-

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ITHURSDAY

24ltdootn-IMJIIftml.
~~
Kitchin, 1 112
Ful· Liroo
....,_,.,
Pool, Ffoo
(1M,
114-317.-.

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1l--,r.6~~r,,~7...;1-=:,,-'-L.-..1.-..1.-.1• .....1

3f)U71-1131.

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moad lliDI oaly half the time• .
'

0101111 Picture I DIOIIII Sound·.
No Equlpmont ID Buy. C.U Nowl
T.. Free , ..... 531-4121 . Dinlbuted by Tlmewarner S.telllle
StrviOH

310 Homll.forSIII.

hi- lllr

II' - cl- at trick o~ that West ·
·had the ace-IG of apadea. So, tbt! oaly
contract wu Eut'a get·
retumla1 a apade.
the diamond~
lata the tiuMr hand, declarplay a club, to diiiiiiiiY'•IIIDI
IJid run tbe heart nlae.
West wlaa wltb tbe queea aad
. awltcllea to a dlamoad, but declarer
· calla for dUIIUIIy'a ace, leadl a heart to
bii aee, eontlnuea with a club to du1D· .
· 11\)"1 ace, and ~ the heart elpt to
bla lG. WbeD tbe I«&lt;OId belrt f!aaw
wlila, declarer baa nine trlcu: oae.
spade, tbree hear1a. ..., dlamoad and

Note that thla 11 the percenta1e
lillY. East wiD ba¥e at 1aat one heart
hoitor some .three-quarters of the
time, " " - - Wilt wiD have tbe ella·

Kiln, dried for u .., comr-ddve
p~ooo. J.B. Kin, Sl R112, WHI
Columbia WV. 304-7711-51110 or
1.08GI7183.

..

2

.IJI8de: one clown.

lourcluba.

P.ll.

ltrolk Addn. 304-173-5108 -

· KOW ·5tOJUll [ KNC1o1 r

WV. -.75-7421 •

uttd 4 opool top tor·
11•r $300 080. Outen olzt WI·
1Wo bedroom oporlmtillln llld· 1orbtd, hot-rd ond all occoo·
.,.,.. ......... 8......_. .. .

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,s

ot3114o'liU121.

780

-Imago
J 01 45 Faahloitlllll .
.._..48 .
._ , .
47SIIIrt._..
41 Typeofdag

.... _

a+-+--lf-

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Upolllro 4 Room• • Bolli, 11001
Uo., All Ulllllloo Pold, EYII\IIioo:
114 •.• BDa

.,.....-onantqull

AulD lotnl: Auio Dool• WIU fir·

••

orea noW. CaU 1--513·4:143'
Ext S-11:1111
Credit Problema? Gauro.- fl.
HJdraullc oil 111 lor Sgol pol!. nanclng, 1K Dawn, Payment I
Youoor Farm Supply, Soulhlide AI&gt; LOW AI 1110 "-r llonth. No
Turn o-rol Coli Rulli 114-441wv. 3114-175;21178.

Pt.

Ono bedroom lurnlohod oport·
mentl, two btdtoom tumlai'Md
houoo; In lllddltpor~ 114·882·
2178.

1074 15' Bonill Flohlno Boot;.
1011 IS HP Evhudo UoiOr; Fool
C01111041od Trolling Uo"" $1 ,21101'
114-245-57111 Allor 51111 P.M.
!

•

wltb three no-trump, but be dida't
ltDow wbat elae to do. And when the
dummy' was tabled, be Aid, "Sorey,
pnlner. Probably mlind it. •
However, after ta!Png tbe flnt trick,
·South feU at the next fence: He fi.
· · neaied the diamond lG. East llfBbbed
., · lhe Irick with tbe Iring IJid returned a

•

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p,.,.

Coao 3011 Tractor Wllh 3 Point
HICh 720 John Doore PS, 3 Allrt
Hll&lt;h,~ Wot Unoo•. Front End
. . - . Concteto llixtr, Eloclric
llotar, Porbiblo Hobart Goo
Wtldor With New Loodo, 114245-8212.

•
1
..

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1•
SoocWm Punmon Boot 2tfo•
70hp Mercury, lull

range Fk1artclng Even It You
HI.. Boon Turned OoMi Before.
T-OrBoxu,
"-PPor TObiC·
- · Loano Available For No Crodlt,
31 Raw
Tobllcco
Bod Crocll And llt!lktup~:y Buv·
co Sdclcl. 814-317-7!811.
.... Ctlllltrio il14o4*8172.

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origin, 0&lt; a n y _ ...
molroany...., po .........
ln'.ltalkwl or dllcrtll*tltlon.·

Ill

610 Farm Equipment

1 Acre. Water, Sower, Footoro,
Gorago On Poooum Trot Road,
111,111111, ~~2.311 Acre Lql In Raccoon Torp.,
Gallla Counll'. Phono: 114·2452222.
l~:--:--:-:--:----::::-:-=­
3 Acreo In Hondoroon. 304·175- G - living. 1 tnd 2 bod Wii
... ~75-244&amp;.
ljllrantnll II Vliilal llliiOr tnd
RIYiroldl Aporrnonll In lllddl•
port From 112311.4304 . Col 014·
1182·!1014. Equll Haulino Oppar-

blood on 1101,-~··•lion
colOr, Nllglan,
oox 11m11111...,. ot reltonll

357

FARI.l SUPf'LIES
&amp; LIVE.SlOCK

2
,._'22.:---:-::--::---::---

... -"anY proforonct,

:

750 BoalS &amp; Moten
.-1111.
for Sill
·1008 Ood111. Noon E•proi oo

.

tbree,jaek, ldDg.
•
South nrrled tbat be hid undettllcl

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Hummingbird MUIIC Centtr, 111115 Mazda lllota. loldocl, Uko
Joclulon, ONo 4!18411. C I - - Now, 24,11011 lllloo, lllllnco Of
Solt, Up To 411% Offl 114-218· facll&gt;r' Wott1111)', 118.100, 114-

Going buliMOI lor 101~ -nd
5oHI. AI. 311n lluon, 304-773-

Slrvlcel

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1805 USA llo~o Fonder Tole·
caotor Wllh CoN', 14011, RoiiDI
$850 New, 014 388 8131.

Buslneullld
Buildings

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monllln- of April

$4,111111.

Fa~

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$5.110ofr Ill araomlng lllPOirt·

1Wo ~room, Skyline. VO&lt;y
ooad condldon, copper wlrlno.
... -.... -hoi ...........

.,71 .....

35COMI8ill

ABIQ-1
MARCIHS-31

~OFF EVERYllll«liN

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2t Sbll gi ~
'rT Grind Olit 2t Klnclof211 Jolnllflll city
31 Stlac1

Do you like to bet
on losers?

GloOml,.-""""""

Golda-

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Opealng lead: • 5

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25 By lha lime -

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Pau ••
Pua Pua

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17ealer: NorUI

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210

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Humane • Troth - Dregs - Viable·· OVERHEAR
My college roommate was a gossip. She believes that
what you hear never sounds half as important as what
you OVERHEAR. .
. .

....' ....•'!
~

MARCH 13·l
'I'

1817 doublowldo 11445 down,
•2211mo. FtH delivery I tolllp. I~~:-:----=-~'""":­
t-..1.f777.
2 BedroOIM, 1. lith, Mu11 Sell

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