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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Vola repeat
as NCAA
l.,.ychamps·

Pick 3:

·139
Pick 4:

0601

Sports on hge 4

Clear tonight, low In the
20&amp;. TUHcl8y, IUMY, high
In mld-501 to low SO..
,

Super Lotto:
6-18-34-43 44 47
Kicker:

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571292

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VoL lfl, NO. 211
ttlll7, Olllo v.r Publllh!ntl ~

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AOilnowttCo. Hew P 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ottlo, Monday, Marc.h 31,1997

Clint&lt;;»n eyes· gas tax fees to improve Appalachian

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By ..,.ICK JESI)ANUN

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Aalloc!Med p,... Wrtt.r

choose lrGinl
St~;»p by fo~ a
test
.·fodayl

WASHINGTON
Fred
LaVancher's .62-mile trek to work
takes him through some rough,
mountainous terrain that is
AppalactiiL
·
He iias been late to work many
times as one accident - and there
are ..;.ny - can' tie up traffic for
, houl'$ along winding U.S. Route 15,
which runs one l4ne in each direction
{qr, ~y stretche.s. His efforts to get
the . ~lshway straightened and
wideiled 50 far have been fruitless.
Help soon may come from President Clinton, who wants to use federal
tax revenues to more
modernize the
·

Syslem, which ihchodes Route 15 in
nonhem "':nnsylvania.
·
But wtth construction costs
increasing, the mad-building program has come under attack by an
allianceofliberalsandconservatives
proclaiming a common goal of root- ,
ing out "corporate welfare." A battle
is likely, when Congress considers a
multiyear transportation bill this year.
"It's the John Doe dtizen ~ho_'s
benefittng from thos .hoghway •. Sfl!d
La_V~nc))e_r, a mark~hng, executo"f m
Wolhamsport, Pa. It affects every- ·
. daJ travelers like myself, and it
helps create and stimulate jobs along
. the corridor." .
The highway pf9gram, start~ 32
years ago to boost rural econ~ues by
· improving access to the 13-state

Appalac:hian region, is crediied with

same message to individual members
of Congress." said David Keating,
tty of hfe Improvements m an arel ., M1chael Wenger, the states Wash· executive vice president forthe conthat hist?"cally has lagged behind i~ mgton represe~tative to_. the servative National Taxpayers Union.
econorn1~ growth.
.
Appalachian Reg1onal CommiSSIOn,
Gene Guerrero, lobbyist with
The hi&amp;hway system IS about7S wh1ch oversec:s the h1ghway pro- . Ralph Nadel's Public Citizen, said
pe~ent complete, but the final quar- gram. "Our hfe. has depended on the Appalachian . program ·mainly
ter os expected to cost about as much . ~nnualap~pnau.ons, and that's par- benefits construction contractors and
as the. first three because it involves ucula_rly d1fficultm th1s era of tiscal duplicates other federal highway pfQ·
constructjon through some of the scarcoty! '
.
grams.
roushestterrain.
. .. .
The p~gr~ has _survoved past
"lt:s just throwing more money at
Chnton proposed on hos fiscal ~ffons to .klllot. Thos Ume, howe.ver, building more unneeded highways,"
1_998 bud~~~ dedtcaung, for t.he first n IS targeted both by conservatives he said.
. .
11me, exostmg federal gasoline&gt; tax seekong a balanced federal bud1etThe program . was 'des1llned to
dollars tq the ApPI!lachian liighw4ys. led by U.S. R~. John ~och, R- connect the Appalachian regoon with
The system is estimated to cost. at Ohio - and h~rals seekong more the interstate highway ·system. The
least $7 billio!l more !O complete and mone~ foqllternatove forms of trans- Appalachian highways are de~igned
would take decades relying on annu- po~uon. ;
,
for high-speed travel, with two lanes
al .appropnaltons of.about S100 mol· There s. clout w~n yo.u ve got each way 'through most stretches.
lion per•year.
g.roups both left and rtght gJvong the
The uncompleted portions largely
~veryth~ng_fromJobcrealtontoqual-

"It's a very important time for the

fu~ure of the h1ghway syste'!'," said

ro~ds·

run a single lane each way, although·
a few segments will be built from
scratch.
. " The. travel time differences are
incredible," Andrew lsserrnan. a West
Virginia University professor who
has conducted studies on Appalachi. an travel. "Now, you have problems
passing, people, and coal trucks that
tend to be something or a problem."
·
In Ohio, the program· ha.• inveSt'.
ed in the construction of state Route
32. a four-lane highway traveling easl
out .ofCincinnati, and U.S. Route 23;
running' from Columbus into· Ken'
lucky, Both routes have uncomplet '
ed s~ctions .
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McVeigh jury _
selection under way

AS LOW AS:

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falillly
· ·clouna of
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ho!Mmlde
hlltlllild ~ lll1d thoulandl of epectatoo In the ennuel
ijte Of lprJng. (AP)
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DENVER (AP) - Timothy
About 75 members of the news a reason.
McVeigh's trial began in a barricad- media filled a section of the court- .
finally, after 12 jurors have been
·ed federal .courthouse today, nearly house' plaza and federal police selected. six alternates will be chosen;
two years after a terrorist bombing at patrolled the area around the court- .:'ith each side allowed to dismiss
the Oklahoma City federal building house. A protest area that II*! been set .three candid~tcs without cause.
killed 168 people and shattered thou-' up across the str~, just outside the
In the questioning, defense lawyer
sands of lives.
lOth U.S. Circuir.-Coun of Appeals. Stephen Jones was expected to focus
, Bombing survivors, relatives and was empty.
on the purported confessipns of his
reporters filled the courtroom as
McVeigh, w)10 authorities · say client in stories by The Dallas Mornlawyers began cboosins 12jur()rs ~d went from model soldier to a hateful, · ing News and Playboy magazine . .
six alternales from the jury pool the paranoid loner, faces the death penalJones lost an attempt.to delay the
defense team claimed was "poi- ty, if convicted of murder and con- trial when the .lOth U.S. Circuit
soned" by media 'reports · o( ~ i~-April 19, 1995, bomb- · Court of Appeals on Friday rejected
McVeigh's purponed confessions.
ing that ~illed 168 peOple and injured his claim that potential jurors were
Tom Kight, whose daughter, hundreds more. Co-defendant Terry irreparably tainted by the recent sioFrankie Merrill, was· killed in the Nichols will be tried separately, after ncs.
blast, was among Jhose who line&lt;l up McVeigh.
Security wa.' tight around the
outside for the stone-and slass courJu..y .se~ction was expected to courthouse, two days after McVeigh
thouse for a seat The line had grown .,tAke abq~t two.:weeks, with prospcc- was whisked into the building where
· t4j;'~l•a, ilozell people ~ : ho\w ..- ttve juro~ ;R,_us_stionCd individually he '\'ill he kept in a holding cell nor~·'COIII't.ltil~f&lt;1ll;':t"l.t.l11f ·
before U.S:;q.sfri~nllllge",Ri~liilrd many'rcscrv'ed for white collar crim. '' i'My s~glitOr~'~be here so Mats~h and lawyers for both 'sides. inals and. illegal-immigrants.
~e ' ll be here to represent ourselves
After the field is reduced to 64 peo· A hidden, remote closed-circuit
. and bur daughter F...,nkie." said pie who have agreed to consider the camera ha.&lt; been placed in Maisch's
Kigh_t, who w,a&lt; joined by his wife. death penalty as a punishment, each · newly renovated second-floor courtManha.
side may dislili~O without giving room , so survivors and relatives of

State officials explore
options for schpol funding ,

Thousands
·on .hand
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for·annual Easter
.parade in New York

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COLU~BUS (AP) - The qu,es- . demand o~ ade'\uate funding is

bombing victims can watch the trial
in Qrd'ahoma City.
'
For many, the suspects' identities
. have made the horror or the bombing .
that much . worse. McVeigh anll
Nichols are small-town Americansnot the sinister foreign tcrrorisis
some Initially suspected.
McVeigh. a tall, slender 28-yearold from a ,family that can trace its
history bl\Ck to 19th-century Irish
immigrants, served with distinction in
the Gulf War after growing up in
working-class Pendleto.n, N.Y.
Prosecutors intead to show evi. dence. that afier the war McVeigh
emhraL-.:d a culture .Pf ·!Ia•~. ~ism
and . anti-gpye(r\1'\Cnl .,{crvo£, as
spelled out in :&amp;POk he 'lw.S ~id to
have devoured ~ "1'he Turner
Diaries," a fictional . racist tract that"
describes a scene eerily similar to the
Oklahoma bombing ..

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. Local briefs-.~
Flood mitigation meeting slated

· A fl~ miugation meeting will be held Wednesday, 10 a.m. at the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service office in Pomeroy.
·&lt;
Local offic,als including township trustees. village and county officials and flood plain administrators are urged to attend the rilcutin!.
A Fedeml Emergency Management Agency mitigation spC.:ialist
will attend the meeting. Discussed will be mitigation npJX\ftunitic.&lt;.
floodplain management. mitigation through other disa.&lt;tcr assistance
programs. funding options and the Hazard Mitigation Grant Progranli
The Meigs County communities of Rutland and the Laurel Cliff•arcif ·
have been identified as having mitigation opportunitiC!-1. .
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ti&lt;ln is relatively simple: ·
.
through a bog tax mcrease. But they
Should the state. increase taxes in say it's too early to speculate about
· order to give pbor schools lhe same· how much it could cost.
advantages enjoyed ·by rich distr:icts
Not so fast, said Senate Democoi should it come up · with another ratic leader Ben Espy of Columbus.
By BETH J. HARPAZ
like the Worham family years' ago. solution to find more money for ,
"First we need to know how
Aa,.l!fed PNM Writer
were looking for the parade.
schools'/
. much all of this will cost," Espy said.
NEW YORI&lt; ·- On Easter Sun"This is it." one ollkcr told a lady
Righ~now. nobody has an answer.
Until then. talk of higher taxes is preday seven 'years· ago, Nancy and Ed in a pastel suit. "You're the parade:"
The Ohio Supreme CQUrt's ruling maiure. he added. ·
·
Worham arrived on Fifth Avenue nice
Carmen Miranda-style fruit-and· that the state has been shortchanging
Espy wants the Ohio Department
and early, ·S.tlltioned t~rilselyes near , flower displays were _a common sight students has sent government leaders of Education to find out exactly how
the cutb anjl waiJ,ed for the Easter atop straw broad-bnmmcd hats, as scrambling to figure out what to do · much money is needed for building .
The Pomeroy Police Department investigated two minor auto acci-'
Pafadc-to Seji~r·· , ·. ,· , · . · . y;cre bunny ears clipped onto head- · next. Gov. George Voinovich. and repair and how much money is needdents
on Friday.
·
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,'.."We•tf!Ouglit we bad gOod seats,' bands:.' . " .
,,
staff members hayc been meeting ed per pupil.
Clura'M . Kincaid, Middlcpori. was cited for improrcr righttumTt)i:
Brntany Turner, ·14, her 12-year- with ·top •.lawtnakers behind clos.ed. Mrs. Worham recalled. But gradualBut determining what amount will
lowing
an accident at the. intersection 'of Mulberry Avcnuc ·nnd La.•I~ ­
ly they 'realized that there is no parade old sister, Shannon Turner. and their doors since Monday's ,decision.
satisfy the court will he difficull, said
S!reet.
AcCPrding
t&lt;,&gt; the accident report, I&lt;:incilid was turning on Lli~le}t'
-just. thou$ands of pedestrians in friend, IS-year-old Joanna Winter,
Lawmakers have asked for studies Lawfllncc Picus, director of the Cenand
struck
a
1995
Chevrolet driven by Bertha Hawley of Pomeroy,
hOliday finery ranging from the ele- from Long _Island, 'wore; black-and- on such things as· the cost of educat- ter.for Research in Education Finance
causing
minor
d~mage
to Kincaid's vehicle and Hawley's I Y86'Ch9vr&lt;&gt;'yellow plastoc foruh beehoves adorned ing a child while others arc looking at_the Uni~ersity of Southern Caliglint to the outladdish.
lct.
Every year siilce then, the with pipe-cleaner bees atop their to nearby state_s to see what they bave fo(nia,
·.
No citations were iss ued after an accident at the parking lot. of
~orhams of Toms River. N.J ., have heads.
done. There also is the possibility of
"The question is how dramatic a
Woodland
Centers on Mulberry Heights. Bobby J, Harris of Pomeroy
'been jlirt of the pageant This year. ·
"We have bees in our bonnets," asking the court to reconsider its chjlnge the coun wants," he said.
out
tif a parking space, causing front end damage hJ a vehicle
pulled
. they dressed lhtir four little girls. Brittany gleefully,said. ·
decision.
"The state will hav.e. to set the stanowned
by
Lisa
Stewart, also of Pomeroy. Minor damage wa.' rei)\Jrt·
ages I, 3, 6 and 9, in show-stealing
Kevin Walsh, wearing a three. "Everybody's got their own ideas dards high enough to meet the court's
ed to l)oth Harris' 1992 Chevrolet and Stewart's 1991 Chevrolet. ·
hats that were almost as tall as the piece suit with pocket watch. looked on what to do," House Speal&lt;er Jo expectations."
~hlldreri - featuring !lowers. giant like the MadHati'if truly gone insane
Ann Davidson $aid. "But there's still·
Ohio's attorney general office is
cmoti, 'and a wQdding cake topped wft!l a battery-~ell:d chick pop- a lot of confusion about this.''
exploring the state's legal options,
by' bunny bride'nn(l groom. . ~
ping out of a shocking pink plastic '
· The courl has given the Le1isla.- which include asking the court to
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District today announced a
.Pplice spent the day a~swenng egg atop his gray l)eaver hat.
ture one year to come up with an recoosider or clarify its decision. The
planned shutdown of water service in.Meigs County, Orunge a~d Bedquestions from puzzled tounsts, who,
1
acceptable alternative to the current state also could seek a constitutional
.ford Townships. on Tuesday, April I , from 9· a.m. to J p.m. . and it
property.tax-dependent funding sys- amendment overturning the ruling. ·
will affect the following roads: .
tern. .
Attorney General Bet.ty Mont· All of SR 681 west of·Kaylor Road, Owl Hollow Road, Booth road,
State sur~eys ·have shown that gomcry said the ruling' "created more
pan of Tucker Road, Alfred Road to Dutch Ridge Road, Woods Road,
repairing school buildings could cost questions than answers!'
Keebaugh-Follrod Road. Carr Road to and including Bearwallow ridge
as much as $10 billion. Moie money
.Since the early 1980s, 13 states
road, Henderson road and Elk run road.
.
would be t)eeded to ,btiqg spending have been forced to cllanae their
When water servi ~e is restored, there will be a "boil water advilevels to adequate levclsJn some dis· schOol-fundinB systems. Most have
COLuMB.US (AP)- Public uni- as June 30, the b'!llget deadline.
sory" until a water sample is drawn a~d tested for eolifonn'bacteiia
used a combination of tax increases
versities that meet goals for freshman
William'Shkurti; Ohio State's vice tricts.
After the results arc known)o be safe, the advisory will be lifted. .
Davidson, of Reynold!lburg, and and spending limits to satisfy the
retention; fraduillion rates and Ohio Jlresident for finalll!e, said the school
The reason for the shutdown is to relocate a portion of the district's
resideai;y could lil'l tuitioo caps under w_ould not use the: lack of a cap it to other top Republicans say it's likely coilns.
main line along a slip area on SR 681.
·
a state budset bill the House ha• drive up tuition costs. In-state tuition that the only way to meet the court's
'approved and the Senate is consider- for a full-iime undersraduate student
ina. , : .
at the university is 3•468 per year,
Tile Ll!&amp;is!ati.ore approved caps
"We don't view the absence of
T,
The McCuidy family has said it class, they don't go to S~nday school
ranJinJ from S percenllo 9 percent tuition caps·as an excuse to gouge our By JOHN NO~N.
expectot!.'' H...Vey said. "Sbe said a
in each of. its two--y(l&amp;r budgets since studen!S," Shkurti told The Columbus · Aaaoclltecl PJ8e Wrtter
storm is passi~g over. The ciQUd has needs time to grieve the woman's ... And when someone· would come
death and .has declined all media up to you and offer some false doc1990. Beginning·this y-.,d)o!e lim- Dispatch for a story Sunday. ·
·· CINCINNATI - Family mem- lifted.'.'
.
trine; you wouldn'tgo for that,'' .l flt.
it$ would ~ f .aived for schools, that
Instead, the propoul 'offers bers who lost a relaiive in the ficavHII'Vey led his congregation in requests for interviews.
·
·
The
family
still
was
deciding
l)ow
111C41-the c:rnena.· . ,
schools greater flexibility, he said.
en's Gate cult mass suici~ are fiaht- Easter Sunday prayers for the
vey told an audience of more than
'J)e plan currently would affect .
"On the other hand: the reali.ty is ing through grief, their minister said. . McCunly family and parishioners to handle funeral arrangements, Hat- 300 people who packed tl)e chun:h.
The Rev. H.L. HII'Vey Jr., putor defieol the dreary, rainy day with vey said. 'Qle family has been told
Ohio State Uni.versity, Bowlin@ that whatever _we do woll be reported
'
Grooii Stile Universit)', Miami Uni - on the ,?'ed•• ~~ a · r,erc~nta'e , of New Friendship Baptist Church, inspirational songs. Harvey t:Onclud- that California authorities may not
release
the
body
until
Tuesday,
he
Ms.
McCW'dy-Hill,
.39,
a
venity·'aacj Ohio University. Those . mcrease,_ S~kurt1 . S&amp;ld. _We II shll .spokSunday with ·Marion McCur- ed the three-hour service by dislrib10-year Cincinnati postal et~~ployet; ,
said.
scho(lli tl'lldlti.o nllly have raised ·be ~.arcum~ when tt comes to dy. the mother of Yvonne McCW'IIy- lltina f19wers to the eonaroaatoon ..
left
her five chil&lt;lren bebiad' wkh Nl- '
Harvey
urged
the
congresati&lt;?n
to
.
. tuition al or _neu the muimum tuou~n tncreases.
. , Hill . Herdaughler was amona the 3!! · Donald McCurdy, a ch~ ~matives
la.~t summer to'join the cult.
follow
God
an~
avoid
false
doctrines
IIIIQUI!IIbc law I!IJows.
Rtchard . ~itde, a M oamo cult members who kille'd thel!llelvea . ber and brother of the ,cult VICtim, was
Her
h~. Steven HlU, wwt
and
idols.
ThO UlliVCISj~ ~ .wailinJ for . spokesman, sud the sdlool recoa- · lastweekatlhegroup'smanllionnell' arnot~~ diose who attended the ser''The reason people join !hese with her to join tl)e cult 11ut filer .
r~ !'PPJOVil of the ~~~t budget ni~s it m~st use resb'liitt in raising San Diego.
· vice. He declined to speak with
cults
Is because they don't go to Bible returned to the CincjJIIIIIi..,.._
. , ., bill
they • tuouon Increase&amp; tuotton:
"She!s doin1 as well as can be · ~rs afterw'!d'

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Boil advisory announced

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lloi1dey, -.cit 31,1187

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'E.stiiNisftd in 1!H8

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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

81'4·812·2158 • Fa 982·2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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ROBERT L WINGETT
PubiiMer
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
a-nllllnlger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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flillor, n.o - · 111 Court IlL, -..y. Ohio .
-:or, FAX 1011_,67,
·
·

Ruling may sour
relationship between
Legislature, court
By PAUL SOUHRADA ·
Aeiociated Prell
.
COLUMBUS -When the Ohio Supreme Coun tossed out the state's
system of paying for education iast week, it &lt;!reated a ripple effect that threat- ·
ened to upend the Legislature's spending priorities.
·
"Everything is on the table," Sen. Gene Watts. R-Galloway, said in an .
interview last week.
.
Everything, he emphasized, including the proposed move of the Supreme
Coun into roomier quaners .
'
.
The Court - or at least the four-member majority -angered Republican lawmakers and Gov. George Voinovich last week when it gave the Legislature one year to come up with a new funding fonnula that relies less on
local property taxes and addresses ,the disparities in educational opportuni·
ties in districts across the state.
Critics of the decision warn the ruling could result in a multi-billion dollar tax increase or considerable cuts in areas other than education.
''I'm not trying to be petty or vindictive," Watts said. "But because of
their decision ... we need to examine all our existing capital and operating
budgets.
·
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"Does the Supreme Coun need plush new offices when some schools
don't have science labs?"
• ·
The House, which finished its work .on a proposed $36.1 billion budget
for the two years beginning July I just before the Supreme Court released
its decision, slightly increased Voinovich's proposed $180 million budget
for the judiciary system ..
Now it's the Senate'S tum, and legislators there will be asked to resist
th~ urge to take out their frustration bn the court budget •
·
. That almost happened in California after the Supreme Court there upheld
a 1990 tenn limits initiative.
California lawmakers were panicu!arly annoyed when fanner Chief Jus- ·
tice Malcolm Lucas observed that a 3S percent budget cut required by the
initiative might improve, legist'ative' operations. Some legislators shot back
with a proposal to cut the court's budget by 38 percent, but relented before
the budget was passed.
, Senate Finance Chainnan Roy Ray of Akron doesn't see that happening
in Ohio. .
. .
c •
.
" Despite what some people might harbor iri their bean of hearts. there
is a respect for the separation of powers," Ray said.
. ·
Plus, the court has already received $469,000 for a study of a possible
move to the 64-year-old Ohio Departments Building. But renovating the art
dcco landmark along the Scioto River to accommodate the Supreme Coun
would cost about $25 million more.
If the .study shows the move is feasible , the· actual constructiOn money
likely would be included in the next state capital appropriations budget. Cap··
ital ,budgets come out in even-numbered years -this time. the same year
· as the court's de'!(~ line·for a new school funding system. ·
,·
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer, who" wrote the dissenting opinion .to last
week's ruling, isn't worried.
·
..
.
"Whatever happens, we certainly have to have more space. Moyer sa1d.
"We're prepared to review all of the costs with them. " .
Moyer also doubts Ohioans would be very happy with a Legislature that
cut spending on the courts. .
. ..
.
· "If you tried to co~ up wtth a rcsponstblhty of state government that
people could get along without for a month or two, I'd doubt it would be
the courts," he said: "When legislators target the court system ... the people who s11ffer are the people who use the courts.·· .

WASHINO'ION -· The Commerce Oepartmeat is, payin1. a 2S·
year-old Hlrvard gqduue student
nearly $SO,OOO a year to develop an
"international tr1lde program," ·
· ' Juan Verde, who is registered as a
full-time student at Harvard's John F.
Kennedy School of Oovernment,
moonlights as a globe-ttouing
bureaucrat for Commerce's Minority
Business . Development Agency
(MBDA). Verde's travels have taken
him to China, Ecual:lor, Chile, the
Dominican Republic and Costa Rica,
among other' places, and have cosi
taxpayers more than $18,000.
In defending Verde's employment.
MBDA director Joan Parrott-Fonseca says the agency estim-'ed Verde's
skills were at the lev~l o( a OS-9 gov- ·
ernment employed... But federal
guidelines stipulate that a GS-9
should have amaster's degree and at
least five year's experience •• . or •
much more than the meager q11alifi- ,
cations Verde brought with him when
he received a government contnict in.
November 199.S.

At thai time, the most impu&amp;ive ·
"11Je sovernment got a deal with didn't have to juple his duties al
item on the lflln 23-yqr-old't raume Juan Verde," she told our usocillle Commerce with tenn ptpen. Neverwu 111 unpaid intemlhip with the Kathryn Wallace. Parrott-Ponseca theless, Parrott-FoniiCCII claims in a
Commerce Oepiiitment's Iatt:ma- now claims thai Verde is doing the writlell .-ment that "there are no
job of two full-t,ime senior employ- .OCher staff members (at MBDA) witlr
for a fraction of the cost. She the necessary international trade mis.ees
By
.
insills that Verde has "unique quali- · sion capacity to successfully develop
ftcations" for.tho job.
·
the international trade program. "
Verde's windfall co• as the
Verde himself seems unfazed !ly
MBDA is layins off f19zens of qual; having to.balance studies at one of
ified, long-time · employees. the · the world's most demanding univertional Trade Administration. He also agency recently fired 5S veteran sities with traveling the globe for the
had completed a Oraduale Certificate ernplpyees in an effort to i:ut costs. Clinton administration. "I'm doing a
Pro~ in International Business at Among them was Gavin Chen, an lot and trying to do my beSt." he told
Georgetown University, earned by international trade specialist who us, insisting that he is properly qualauending classes four hours per week . once had many ·of the same job ified to develop trade initiatives for ·
for. one semester. That's a far cry responsibilities Verde now has.
the Department· of Commerce.
from a graduate degree, which ~rde
Chen has a doctorate: in econom- Though Verde promised twice to send
won 't receive until next spring.
ics and fin111ce, 111d has specialized us his resume, he never di~·
Whep we first asked Parrott~Fon- in international financial developParrett-Fonseca's initial denial of
seca. about Verde's employment last ment for more than 20 years. He con- Verde's employment raises serious
summer, the director dismissed our dueled trade missions for the MBDA questions. If Verde is truly qualif!ed
inquiries as · a being based on a as far back as the mid-19110$, when . for d!e job, why hide it? Parrott-Fon"rumor" and ·a "complete, absolute: Verde wasn't even old enough to seca insists that "at all times" she's ·
untruth." But sc:veral months later, have.adriver's license.
provid"!i Us with "truthful and acCU•
after we presented her with fun,her
.Chen was making 530,000 more rate infonnation." But the MBDA
evjdence of Verde's employment per year· than Verde when he was director was certainly well aware of
Parrott-Fonseca changed her story. ' fired in,December, Then.again, Chen Verde when ·we first started asking
ques6ons last summer. MBDA travel records .we've obtained teveal that
Verde accompanied her oo trips to
China, Ecuador a:nd Chile d.uring the
spring of 19%.
Parrott-Fonseca herself has come
under fire for extensive ~veling at
the expense of taxpayers. As we first
reponed' last year, the MBDA direc- ·
tor was on the road for 212 days during an.IS-month period beginning in
1995. "I don't want. to travel (this
much)," she told us ·last fall, main- ·
tainirig that her trips involved more
grind than glamour.
,
But documents we've reviewed
detail a !ravel schedt,llc that often put
Parrou-Fonscea in luxury loealibns.
On one 1995 visit to fueno Rico, for
. example, she stayed at thO.' Bl. San
Juan J{otel .and Casino, a 39Q-f90m
beach front reson with twp swimming pdols, ,health club 1IJ¥I four
restaurants.
'
·
During her stay there, ~-Fon­
.seea ran up a $29.25 tab atthe wine
&amp; cheek:" bar and charged a~r
· $20 at the "Ia veranda" pool bar.
Jack Anderson imd.Jan Moller
are writen for United Feature
Syndicate, IDe.
'

~

Jack Anderson
. .
and .
Jan Moller

a

Our nation's.overprivileg~d prisoners

a

In ~tate legislat~res and on some · oners' famili~s.
tion , and so the daily terror at liis'hands and feet shackled and belt
television nevis shows, it has become '
ln.ajail.in Muscogee County, Ga., Tutwiler rema\ns' 'unconstiiutional, tightly '· fixed around \\is .wai~i, the
indignantly commonplace to rail at Keith Poner, a mentally ill man, was to say the least. ,..
'
prisoncr.is then fully prepared for his
the frivolous lawsuits beiirg filed by placed in an isolation cell after the
, Stephen Bright·has told
of the ordeal by having a football helmet
prisoners. Fred Francis on "NBC
freewheeling style of Georgia's Cor- .placed on his head. "Inmates were '
Nightly News,'" for example, has
rections Commissioner, Wayne Oar- . restrained for' days at a time, during
aired a section on ''The Fleecing of
ner. a foifuer undertaker and state which they frequently defecated and
· .. about 1'!1-1y tnmates
·
· no experience
·
· pnson
·
· d on I he mse' 1vcs, were un able
Amenca
c1og- correctional staff saw him barking ~nator w1th
m
unnate
ging the court system with ridiculous like a dog: Within a day of being in management.
io sleep, and experienced.psy_chologlawsuits.
isolation, Porter hanged hiinS.If. The
In the Atlanta Constitution, . ical trauma." '
There are frivolous suits, buttbe jail, with almost 1.000 inmates, had repo(ler Rhonda·Cook tells of the suit · Writing recently about prisons
emphasis on ~m adds to the gener- one doctor -- working· there four that the Southern Center for Human , throughout the nation, the Economist
al illiPression that our prisons are not hours aweek. Then there 111'1! the con- Rights has brought against Gamer, noted that :·in general, the United
nearly punitive enough. Instead of ditions of confinement -- unreported who sometimes·accQmpanies tactical States is not content l"ith.depriving
having access· to law libraries, pris- hy · "NBC Nightly News" -- at the squads on sweep searches of inmates criminals of their . freedom: whi'ch
oners should do the hardest time pos- Julia Tutwiler Prison for Women in and cells. ·
.
.
· ·
l/8dcprivation .3/8 thCy generally
Alabama:
As
noted
by
Stephen
•
d
·
sible.
.
B . h , th
..
. h ld
"The lawsUit," writes Cook,
eserve; 11· a1so seems bent on•dotng
0
It might be instructive for legis Ia- · ng t, ' e segregatiOn umt
s · which lists 10 inmates as plantiffs, all it can to make their lives more
·
women on (jeath row, along with "claims inmates were abused dunng
.
·
ble. " . . ·
. h aII pnson~
tors who want to aboI1s
m1sera
ers' privileges if they were to anony- maxilflum· security and protective a sweep of Scott State Prison.. · Television-watching has been -limmously spend a month or so locked custody women, and those being held According to the suit, handcuffed ited, exercise and education courses
up-- in.Con:oran State: Prison in Cal- for initial 90-day evaluations." inmates were beaten, prisoners' heads have been cut in a number of prisons, .
ifomia, for instance.
.
Locked in their cells for 23 hours a were slammed into cinder-block as have visiting bours; and cl:tain
Mark Arax in the Los Angeles day, they are joined by women· with walls or onto ·concrete .floors, con- gangs are back in vogue in some
Times has written .of confidential serious mental· illnesses.
victs were kick~ or punched, and states, as well·liS "stun belts" which,
prison documents .-- as well as com"These mentally ill women," says Gamer watched·much of the abuse." by remote co~trol, can electrically
plaints by some dissident prison offi- Bright, "scream and curse at all · During a deposition in the suit, a &lt;hock a prisoner thro.ugh 50,000
cers --that describe Corcoran as "one hours; . spit at,' threaten and assault guard reponed thai Commissioner volts into losing c·ontrol of his bladof the nation's most brutal prisons." other mmates; and ·regularly t~row Garner praised his law-enforcement dcr, bowels and balance.
The conditions there are so frighten- · fe&lt;;es, unne and other ~nsamtarr, officers that day for "kicking ass. ~·
When Charles Dickens visited
ing that the FBI has been investigat- ' ob)ecL~ at·!l"ards and other mmates..
In a ,successful suit by Stephen American priso~s. he ·.wrote of
ing. and (my favorite) · reading and ing.
Dear Editor,
·
,A m_al!~trat~ JUdge ruled that the. Bright, Georgia's Department of COl'· inmates' ''depth of terrible
· Back in the 1940s our neighbor wriiing. What would life be like withIn Georgia, the Southern Center ppson IS vJOiaung the Unued States rections decided that the prisons can endurance." That has not changed··
·drpn!t so ·much pOp we called her the out addictions'!
.
for H.uman Rights, directed by. Consutuuon, but h~ also fo.~nd that somehow function 'without putting ·exceP.t for those.frivolous lawsuits. ·
. Last week a major cigareit~ com- Stephen Bright, keeps filing decid- the present offi.~•als are not subjec- inmates , in "five poi~t restraints."
neighborhood ·addict. Her intense
Nat · Heotoff is a ·nationally
cl'jlving for soda pop was legend. and · pany admitted it added chemic'als to edly non-frivolous lawsuits on behalf · uvely culpable .m tljat they were. not ·This practice is ai59 known, among ftiiOWned aut~M~r~ty ·~ the. First
coul&lt;;l have been wriaen as a best-sell- get smokers hooked. The love affair of prisoners. And sometimes for pris- deliberately mdlffe~ntto conditions . inmates. as the "motorcycle." WiO) Ameoo-nt ud the rest ol'the Bill
injl inspirational novel; because her ,with "smoke death" usually begins
there. He refused ~~ ISSue an InJURe·
or R!ihts. . :
·
lllj)St profound love was lor her p_op. early in life.
There is a cure for smoke addicI saw a boy, abou! 10, stufhng
tion: breathing. It's been on the marc~ocolate .jn. his mouth. an Easter
b1411ny. He bit the ears off. ·swallowcd ket for years. but doctors didn't write
a~d then attacked the l)ead and body. . many generic prescriptions for just
.
. ·
· 'coffee ·groullds, piles of leaves, c.J.
You may have noticed ovet the · part.~ store. .
baked a cinnamon bun that looked pets and the fac;es of goldrish, squiiplain air.
,
H~ ctevouted thu~bitand licked .his
In OeKalbCounty, G.a.. travelers like Mother Teresa. Fortunately,~ ·rCis and big .oJtl bullfrogs •• all in
However, many doctors · did past decade a dramatic increase iii
fing~rs clean. I ant of the bpinion he .
admonish some smoking addicis. sightings and ~ira~ulous happenings. al9ng M~mon_al Dnvc s_aw .the face resen\bl~e was noted before some- · search of the spir:i'ts that .miy resicle
likes chOcolate.
·
. .
·
·
·
lu one television set !!lew a tube, "Either take up breathing or die," The experts say· 11 1s related to the of Jesus m a P1zza Hut btllboard fea- . one ate 11, and 11 was shellacked and within. ·
m~·. aunt Kate: hail an extra TV . w!tich they did.
coming of the year 2000. People tend
· laid qn ~-velvet bl~ket ~nd put on
lloolc at a bcl~l of quiv\lriiig Jeti• d1splay. Nun Bun , 'f..sh1rts, coffee 0 and see Bill Clinton.
:
. because she didn'l want ·to miss ally
If someoi)Ci gets you hooked on to get very anxious at the tum of a
mugs; postcards·and bookmarks were
lloolc at a swirl of hair gel and sc!c
eJ:Iisode of "As the World Turns" . She breathing, or.you fall in love with·free century, they say, and some go positixelx _bonkers at the end of a mil- sauce. Some who came to behold the created for people who wanted to buy T;..nt Lott.
. ·
•
Wfl h9oked - ,li~ ani! sinker, and air, yo4 have found a true friend.
lennium.
..
miracle
thought
they
saw
WiUie
Nel'
somctlling
to
remember
their
visit
to
.
lloolc
in
the
face
of
a
fat
cat
and
became addicted·to "sOap&lt;". ,
Breathing is highly addictive.
Most Of the visions and mystical son, Jim Morrison·or John Lennon.
the doughy shrine.
..
see· Newt Gingrich.
•
· Humans are compulsive and
If you withdraw from hreathing oc~urrences appear to be related to .
In Marltioro Township, N.J., a . N~ll all of the recent v~s10ns and
It is maddening. The other monjoll!iged to tend to thew neeils: la~gh' • it is very harmful to your health.
iiiJ. takinJ out ~ trash. sleepmg,
·
Roger Reeb, rehglon. The country seems blessed homeowner claimed to see 1 vision .of "'ghtmg.&lt; h.1vc had to do wuh matte~s ing I was having pancakes and 1 saw ·
milsic, praying, a;y1ng, working. eat-.
Racine with surfaces o~ which appea~ . ~ the Virgin Mary near a relijious stat- of fai~h. Some ~re very SCCIIII( m AI Gore in the puddles of syrup. Lai;
' '
vtsages . of Chnst and the Vtrglh ue on his !Jatio.1bousands ofpeaple natun: .
er I was· walking in the rain and l
!
.'
'M
- Th4) dire~tor of a Mali~, C~lif. , · SpOiled Parso'n Pat Robertson in a~
. Mary,_ atld we seem su~e~ted With eventually .carne by to share the
.. bleeding and wc:~pmg rehg10u~ stat- experience and the hQmeowner'fi muNC~m of the JNiranonnal stlldled a oil slict lloatin1 on a plll!dle. 1 went .
ues:, ·
.
"
·
nciahbors camolained aboul the trar- •at~!hte phot? of Mars ~nd saw 1'~- home and had Mexlclll\ and saw Sari.
I ·111ake no Judgment on these · fie, whereupori the homeowner dy IC.~nnedy 5 l1elhy JOWls •ta~?ng DonaldSon's smiling countenance iti
lk, The ~•1oclilbicl Alii
·
.
· ·•
, . thinp,·u I belie.ve religious faith is announced that Mary and Jesus had bJU:k. Th4) same person clai~ also a bowl of refried beans, aiKJ ·~
-~Today i1 Mooday. March 31 , the 90th day of 1997. There are 27$ days
a priv11tc: affair. But I will n~ a few 8ppeared together and told him they to have seen the face, of Timmy Faye .Stephanopoulos glowering 11 me in 1
of the stranger episode$ of recent would not retlll'll.
Bakker on the IJ!~t uurface.l have dollop of sour cream.
. 1 : •
IC~ iri the yell'.
• .
•, Today'• Highlight in Histol)':
.
..
·
.
· years, so as to establish my premiiC
In Con yen, Ga., a woman claimed since_been medi'-l!ng on the chu~ky , The next day,l \Vent for'a wilk-iri
On Maidl31, 1889, flrench O!lgineer Alexandn:•Oustave Eiffel unfurled and JQ !Bke .you logically ffl1111 where to see the Virgin Mary on 1 ceiling man m the moon and cannot de&lt;ade :1 cow pasture. 1 happoRed to look
t11f french trit:olor arop the Eiffel Tower in Paris. offiCially marlcinr its com- I sllrled to ~hen: I Willi to elld.
and to converse with her on the 13th whether I ,am seetag Haley Blfbour ;down and there, as ,clear IS yoU
..Lorino.
'
.
.
.
r~
Ambridse.
Pit.,
a
stptue
of
ofevery month. Once the in&amp;ermedi- or ~h ~h.
· .
. . :please, was the vinp of Oliver
~··
Th1s brings me to my Rllln pomt. ·Nonli swing-up at me
-Christ thai hid stood for 60 years ary said the Virgin requested that
llld
1•11• of Spain iaued 111 edict . ~th its eyes open sucldenl~ closed everyQI!e pray for the local offiCials I think J ha~ cauaht ~ Mil~nium : And to think. 1 ~ .._ stepped
. aPflli.,
frclm Sp111illt lllit, eu.pt thole'willil!l to !:(lnven to Chris• them..
'II
·
wile! were trying to fcm:e the vision- rBua. too. Uke ,the faith-motivated /on him.
. ·
.
the~-~~::: i'i:.ase of . aryloprovideparkinaandtoiletsfor ~· 1::~ in ~fgri~of
JGHpb
~
Riiae
in La
'
I'
"=-of 1 shower
an 0• , her many visitors.
.
c•--~~~~hado::. s·1?l.~f
~~~ ~-New a; i ptr B•*- p~
l,n.N-.hvlllc, Thno., a coffee shop · 11 ........,
~·~·
'1~,
}

me

Nat Hentoft

L.etters to the editor

l!lreath/ng ra n addictive habit

Waiter,.there's a visage·in my soup \

· Tc&gt;day~ i'ri ~istory_ . .
•

:f" ,':a,~
Jew ~iaand

I

.

~

~i- ~..~ ~nc:h pbil~

~was ~
t

stal:'!t

·creie

•

r

t

~

.

l

'

1

I'

1

•'
1,\

•

•

...

'l'uettllly, April I
AccuWC*~ forecast

There are. kids· in-the han ·at Commerce:

The Daily Sentinel

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••

..,....,, IIM:h 31' 1117

...

.,

=
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w.,.

.':::!,

-

s.-r •• .,.... .....
..--. .,
·I

'•

Lenora M. campbell

MIC~I.

•

Lenon Meredith Campbell, 92, Marion, died Sunday, March 30, 1997
at her residence.
·
Born in Racine, Aprill4, 1904.-ahe was thedaushtc:r of Jesse and Jessie
Sal!a'Cuapbell. She bad been a nlliilent of Marion since 1976 coming there
from Euclid where 111e hid mired from the Buctid School System. Her school
experiences had incl~ being ~ teac;her, an elementary school
principal and .the supervtsor of stUlsenfOieaehers.
. .
.
Surviving are a brother.~ W. Stoblrt of'Thplpa; Fla.; and two meces.
. Graveside services- will be held at 2 p,m. Saturday at the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Memorial contributions m~y ~ made to th~ Lenora M, Campbell Memorial Scholarship found lithe Umvers1ty of R1o (Jrande.

I TM~ol 52" I

· IManlfleld ls1·l•

r

IND.

t

•

•
57'

•

.;

•I ColumbusI54" I

Franklin H. Casto
Franklin Halrison Casto, 58, Rutland, died Saturday, March 29, 19',17, at
the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant, W Va. ·
A former construction wOrker, he was born Apri1.6, 1938, in Point Pleas.,
ant, son of the late: Elmore Franklin and Mae Harrison Casto. He was a mem.
. ber of the Boilennakers Local667, a member of Cheshire Baptist Church
and was active with the Boy Scouts of America.
·
FLOOD RELIEF· In addition -t o food, cleaning equipment and
He is survived by a wife, Darlene Smith Casto of Rutland; a son and
other
tteme, th" Upper Sanduaky FFA CMpter aleo made a dona·
daughier-in-law, Mark and Beth Casto of Gallipolis; two daughters, Carolyn
lion
of
approximately $400 to the llt!igl County Cooperative
Casto of Pomeroy and Tra~:i Casto of IW:ine; T. P. and Debbie Smith, a Parish disaster
relief fund. Here, Upper Sandulky FFA Chapter
·step-son and daughtc:r-in·l!lw, LaLu.z, N. M.; three grandchildren; two broth'- President Nicki Callan len pteHntJ the check to Rev. Keith Rad'
ers and a sister-in-law, Homer and Barbara Casto. and John Casto. all of Hark- er of the cooperative pariah. Durtnz;: chapter'• 111ty In Meigs
er Heights, Texas; several nieces IUI'I'nephews;
County, there were given a tour of .
atrected areas and local
He was preceded in death by a son, Anthony Franklin Casto.
farms by the Raclllii-Soulhen\ FFA Chapter. Upper Sandusky
Services will be, held Wednesday. 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home, advisor John Lltwyer 11ld the donellone were from Wynndot
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Robert E. Robinson officiating. Burial will follow · County raeldenllt.
in Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy.
.
Friends may call Tuesday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

W. VA.

.

me

n

"

:&lt;

"

'li d. ' weat
· her .f orecast

.:,' 0 . ay s
.

:.. By The Maoc:letad Prell
• Ohio foRCUt
·
.;, Tonight...Mostlyclearwest.Pan,
~ ly cloudy east with scattered snow
;:: showers extreme northeast Lows in
;. the 20s.
~
Tuesday... Partly to mostly sunny.
~ Milder. ·Highs mid 40s northeast to ·

mid SOs southwest.
Extended forecast
Wednesday ... Dry. Lo·.-.-s in the
30s. H1ghs 55 to 65.
•
Thursday and friday .. .Dry. Lows ~ Margaret V. Frost, 80, Ashland, died Saturday, March 29, 1997, at New
in the upper 30s to mid 40s. Highs m London.
the 60s.
· Daughter of the late frank and Della McGill Roby, she was born March
.
15, 1917. in Nelsonville. She \!lOS • homemaker and a member of the First
Christian Church of Ashland.
Sheissurvivedbyason,H.B. "Buzz"SaylorofVentura, Calif.;adaughter. Wanda Paulsen of.Coppell, Texas; stepdaughters, Helen Heaton of Pal·.~.forec.
metto. Fla.. Ruth Paulsen of Ashland, Shirley Lindal of Dayton and Jackie
Wesi of Bradenton, Fla.; and by a brother, Paul Roby of Newark.
·: By The AasociJtad Prall ·
from northern Pennsylvania to westShe was preceded In death by her husband, K. Hall Frost. in 1992 . .
Services will be held Wednesday, 10 a.m. at Ewin@ Funeral Home in
" Mostly clear skies. acro5s Ohio em Massachusetts, with 4to 8 inchPomeroy with burial f9llowing in Cherry Ridge Cem~tery . Friends may call
. tonight will allow temperatures to es likely.
Scattered showers and thunder- at the funeral home one hour prior to services.
· drop into the 20s, the National
'.' Weather Service said,
storms were forecast· for southern
,, Temperatures will rebound some- Florida and southern Texas. Winds
., what on Tuesday, with highs ranging were exPected to whip across the
William J. (Bill) Gray, 48, Gallipolis banking e~ecutive and broadcast~ from the mid-40s in the northeast to souihem and central Plains, with
er. died Sunday morning March 30, 1997, at his home on Kineon Avenue
.. the mid' 50s in the southw.est.
gusts up to 35 mph possible.
..
·
Gusts above 45 mph wen; con- in Gallipolis following a shan illness.
,. A warming trend will continue
Calling
hours
and
funeral
·services.
to
be
announced
later.
will
be held in
·
' with the mercury reaching the 60s sidei'ed likely from western Montana
~ over the entire state by Thursday..
into Nevada a'nd the Sierra Mouniains his home town at Paulding, Ohio.
Details for a memorial service in GallipOlis will be announced .
~ . The record-high temperature for of central Cali ornia. Rain was
~ this date at the Columbus weather expected, with ,th(mderstonns possi•• station was s2 degree~ in t986 while bte in the deserts of sauthem Aittona. .
: the record low was 9 m 1923. Sunset Heayy snow WI$ forecast for the
Louise L. Heines. 80; of the Maples in Pomeroy. died on Saturday, March
' tonight will be ar6:55 p.m.' and sun- mountains of the Northwest.
:;rise Tuesday at 6:15a.m.
On Sunday evening, gusts ahove 29. 1997 at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center following a brief illness.
She was born on November II, 1916 at Hemlock Grove, the daughter of
;.'Acroes the nation
.
50 mph blew from western Nevada
the
late Avery and Alta Weber Nelson. She was a retired employee of the
• Rain fell in the East early today, . 'into eastern Oregon. In Mukilteo.
Meigs
County Recorder's Office .and attended Hemlock Grove Church of
~ with light snow in western New York Wash., a woman was killed when her
';and Pennsylvania. It was dry in the pickup truck was crushed by a falling Christ.
She is survived by ·her son and daughtcr-in~)aw. Larry and Carolyn Heines
,,flains t~~~d the Rockies, while scat· tree. Winds may have .caused the
of
Pomeroy,
a daughter and .son, m-law. Sus1e and Don Grueser of Racme;
~:iered sbowers and thunderstorms lin- crash of a.home.-built plane into an
seven
grandchildren,
two great-grandchildren and two cousins.
..
";gered across southel'l! Texas.
empty house west of Seattle. The
Besides
her
parents,
she
was
preceded
in
death
hy
her
husband.
Theo
. - · In the Northeast. a low pressure _pilot was in critical condition.
. ·
~system was expected to develop
- Temperatures today were expect~ "Pete" Heines.
'Graveside service~ will be held on Tuesday, April l . 1997 at I p.m., at
. rapidly into a s~owstonn late: today. ed to climb into the 30s and40s in the
Hemlock
G;..,vc Cemetery, with Rev. Alan Blackwood officiating.
New England was expected to be Northeast, the 40s in .the Nonhwesl,
Fiiends
may ·call at the Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy from 6to 9 p.m.
'windy, with heavy snow likely in the the 40s and SOs in the Midwest. the
·
·interior sections and rain along tbe 60s in the Rocky. Mountains. the 70s on Monday.
coast.
in the South and Plains states. and tbe
.. The heaviest snow was forecast 80s in the desert Southwest.
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Margaret V frOSt

- . . t emper
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atures
:"·w. armer
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ast for .liuesd ay

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William J. (Bill) Gray
L0 UI•se .L. HeI•nes ·.

George W. Kauff

:,Mother.tried everything
·t o rescue.$On, his wife

Eight die· on Ohio
roads over holidays
GEORGETOWN - Lloyd E.
By The A11oclated Preis
Kin1,
87, of Georgetown an&lt;~ Curtis
Eight people, including three in
one crash, died in traffic accidents on A. Gilbert, 63. of Sardinia, bnth dri- .
Ohio roads during the weekend. the vers, and Anna Burl&gt;age, 88. of
State Hig~way Patrol and local law Georgetown, pa.&lt;scngcr in u two·vehj~te· accident on a Brown County
officials said today.
The fatalities were counted from road.
X~NIA- Charles Cunningham,
6 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.
23, of Springfield. driver in a two-car .
The dead:
accident
on.a Greene Cn~nty road .
·
SUNDAY
COLUMBUS
- Angel BazeWOOSTER.,.. Belly J. Bollinger,
more;
S,
of
Columbus,
hit by a car
66, of Massillon, in a two-car colliwhile
riding
her
bicycle
on a city
sion on U.S. 30 in Wayne County.
COLUMBUS- An unidcntilicd street. ·
CIRCLEVILLE·- Douglas Tate,
driver whose sports car slammed into
18,
of Grove City, pa."cngcr in a •Nlea utility pole ''" the South Side of
car
accident on state Route 665 in
Columbus.
Franklin
County.
SATURDAY

George W. Kauff, 75. of 224 Condor Street in Pomeroy. died on Saturday.Man:h 29, 1997, at his residence. following an extended illness.
A retired' coal miner, he was born on May l. 1921, the son of the laic
..:.By DEBORAH HASTINGS
, his wife. Yvonne Hill's body wa.&lt; one William A. and ltose E. Morris Kauff. He attended the Pomeroy Church of
Allociatecl Prell Writer
· of 39 discovered last week at the the Na1.arene and w~s a member of the Post 1;39 of the American Legion
SAN DIEGO - Eanha Hill is a cult's home.
and the Disabled American Veterans.
no-nonscnNC woman . .When h~r son
"We got towels, we're crying so
He is survived by several nieces and nephews, sisters-in-law. brothers· and · daughter-in-law started shed- much." Mrs. Hill said . ·"He tried in-law. a step-daughter and a step-son.
·ding possessions. right down to their everything to get his wife out of
Besides his JNirents, he wa.&lt; preceded in death by his wife, Mary L. Kaufl·.
. newborn twin daughters, Mrs. Hill there. but they blocked him."
Funeral NCrvices will be held on Tuesday. April!, 1997 at IOa.m. at· Ewi~g
'stepped in .
·
· · .
The couple found the cult on the Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Glen McClung offidating. Burial will
,:. She took the twins and two other . Internet about a year ago. then began · he at Middlepon Hill Cemetery.
·children. She called the law. She tried giving away belongings and saying
Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. on Monday.
'everything short of.violtince to keep they were leaving.
.
Steve and Yvonne Hill from aban•
"That man. Do. or whatever h1s
~ •doning their Cincinnati home and name was. this mah was not right.
Chapter to meet
Literary Club to meet
v•joining the Heaven's Gate cult. ·
Pomeroy Chapter 186. Order of
The Middleport Literary Cluh will
" "I used to think I would get a gu~
Bernice H. Nelson. 8S. Main Street in Rutland, died on Sunday. March
the Eo."crn Star, will meet Tu~sd~y,
meet at 2 p.m. on Wednesday at the 7:30 p.m'. at the Shade River Lo\lgc
~.and go over there and shootth!:m in
30. 1997 at Holter Medical Center in Gallipolis, ft?lloWing an extended ill- home of Mrs. Roland Wildman.
•.~the foot so they couldn'tlcave," the
.Veterans Memorial
. ness .
hall, Chester. Members arc asked tti
,'63-yell'·old woman said in a phone
SATURDAY ADMISSION
take a toy for the hoSpital and someShe was born July II. 1911 in Rutland to the laJe William and Madge
Leland Clonch. Pomeroy.
'~ interview Sunday.
thing for an auction.
Romine Haley. She was a secretary/clerk at Rutland Furniture Store, a mem Revival
slated
;...~ Herson returned last foil, withoot
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
ber of the Rutland Garden Cluh and a member of the Harrisonville chapter
·~
.
A revival will be held Thursday · Revival services to IJealn
None.
of.Order
of Eastern Star.
."
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS- None ..
through
Sunday at . the Carpenter
Revival services will he held at the
She is survived by two sons, William Nelson·of Rutland and Robert NelThe
Sentinel
Baptist
Church
~n
state
Route
143
Rutland
Nazarene Chun:h Tuesday
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
son of Owensboro. Ky. ; two brothers. William Haley of Dayton and MariCUIIPI213-NO)
Nolie.
on Haley of Grove City; two sisters, Pauline Tillis and Kathleen Tillis, both · featuring Evangelist Clovis Vanover through Sunday, 7 p.m. each evening.
of Rutland: II grandchildren; 22 great grandchildren and a ~reat-great grand- of Columbus. Services will begin 7 Special music by local chun;h t.:.!cnt.
l'llbli•hocl nery aftmoon, M()flday dlrouah
p.m. nightly ' with the exception of Rev. Charlie Swigger will he the
son. · ·
~- IIi Coon sc, ""''"'01'· Ohio, by lhe
Ol!io Wiler Puloll....,~,o....,, C. ..
Besides her p~rents , she was preceded in death by her husband, Victor Sunday services which will begin at · evangelist.
l'onlm&gt;Y, Otoio 45769, Plo. m:mtl. Second
'
.
41'r.
"Ed" Nclso~ . a brother, Larry Haley, and a sister, Dorothy Archer.
. 10:30 a.m. Entertaining will be the
o l W - pold II l'onoetoy, 01lb .
Am Ele Power ........
, .. ,...........
. Services will be held on Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Rutland Community Chun:h Jubilee Trio, Thursday: Sunrise, FriAkZo ........................................7rit4
M·o·The Asoocl""' Pma. and lhe Ohio
AmrTach ...............................eo'l. with Rev. Samuel Basye and Rev. Roy McCany officiating. Burial will be day; Sommerville and Brady fami·
Aahlllnd 011 ...........................40'1• in Miles Cemetery in Rutland. Friends may call from 4 ·p.in. to 8 p.m. on .Jics, Saturday. Pastor John Elswick
roi-n~Anmi. Seid .................. 10
AT&amp;T ...........'..........................34\
invites the public .
1be Doi(J Send•t. I It C01111 Sr., Pomeroy,
Blink One ................................40 Monday at the church. Arrangements are under the direction of Birchfield
Ol!io 4576J.
Bob Evans ............................13'1. Funeral Home.

Meigs announcements

Bernice

H~

Nelson

Hospital News

Daily

Stocks

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Worthlngton ..........................19'l.

-·-·-

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. qugtea provtdacl by AdVIII
of OIJIIIPOIIa.
·

·n-................ . . . .. ........... . .

Mary Ann Spurrier
Mary Ann Spurrier. 88, Pomeroy. died Friday, Mar.:!a 28, 1997, at Kimes
Convalscent Center in Athens.
. ·
· She was boril June 8, 1908, in Pomeroy, daughter of the late Steve and
Mary Bolin Eblin. She was a homemaker and a member of the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel.
•:
She is survived by a daughter, Betty We~ersmtller of Pomeroy_; sons anp
a daughter-in' law: Clarence "Bud" and Dons Spurner of Eagle R1ver, Alaska, 'IOd Steven Spurrier of Nashville, Tenn.; four grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren; one sreat-great-grandson; two bro~. Henry Ebhn Sr. of
Rutland and Ira Eblin of. Syracuse; four SISters, loul$e West of LewiSion.
N.Y., I::.Jith Barton and Mynle Grover, both of Pomeroy, and M.Uchne
Pendleton of Middleport.
. '.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Clarence Spurner, m 1993,
and by brother, Ben Eblin.
. .
Service• will.be held Wednesday, 10 a.m. a1 Fisher Funeral Home !n Middleport with the Rev. Kenneth Baker officiating. Burial will follow m Rock
Springs Cemetery.
·
Friends may call Tuesday, 6-9 p.m.

a

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____._......,......
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The Daily Sentin~~

·sports

." ..

.

In tonight's NCAA men's final,

Tennessee women
capture second
con.secutive crown

-Arizona seeks.
to halt Kentucky's
repeat title drive

Wooden, who won 10.
"John Wooden is safe for a long
national championships w·on by the time," Summiu said with a smole.
There were no smiles on the Old
Tennessee women, this latest wal
Dominion side. An emolional, freeclearly the most improbable.
I! was won by a team that lost its spirited team. Old Dominion was
starting point guanl to a lorn knee taken out of its game by an aggresligamen( in October. By a team that sive, physical Tennessee defense
.was 10-6 in early January and that ooncenuated on containing allappeared to be beaten down by a America point guard Ticha
rugged schedule. By a team that fin- Penicheiro and preventong the ball
.,
Ished fifth in the Southeastern Con- from goins inside.
Penicheiro, who scored 25 points
ference and looked as if it had no
'
chance to even make it to the Final in Old Dominion's 83-72 vicrory
over Tennessee on Jan. 7, was scoreFour.
.
But somehow, some way, the less in the first' half Sunday night and
finished with more turnovers ( II )
Lady Vols pulled it off.
When a team has Pat Summitt as than points (l(l).
Indicative of how the game went,
its coach and Chamique Holdsclaw
I
as its go-to player, nothing, it seems, Penicheiro threw the ball away on
Old Dominion's final possession
is out of n:ach.
TAKES AIM - T....._ forward Chamlque Holdecllw (rlghi}
Tennessee won its second con- with two seconds left and went to the
take&amp; In ae Old Domlnlon'a Nyree roberta (00) dlihnrda on the play
secutive nati9nal championship and bench in tears.
In the HCOnd half of SUndey'a NCAA women'• ohlmplonahlp 1J111M1
"In the first half, we. were a Jinle
fifth overall Sunday night with a 68In Cincinnati. The Volunteerl won 811-59 to claim their eecond
intimidated by the kind of pressure
59 victory over Old Dominion.
straight natl01111l title. (AP)
·
•·1 think d~e p down !his team Tennessee put on us," Penichciro
believed we could do it and that we said. "We turned ii over way too
·' could be alive m March," said kel- much. That had a 10110 do with the
'
lie Jolly. the mJured point guanl w~o result."
Clarisse
Machanguana
led Old
·returned to actoon Jan. 12. " We just
Dominion
with
16
points
and
Nyree
· hnd to have faith and believe in ourRoberts scored 13. The LadyMonselves."
The Lady Vols (29-10) believed' archs were hurt down the stre_tch
so strongly that they bea\ No. J. when Mery Andrade, their best
ranked Connecticut in the Midwest defender, fouled out with 8:01 left.
Abby Conklin added 12 points for
Regional finals to get to the Final •
The 1997 Southern softball squad only lhree returnees have varsoty
Four, knocked off Notre Dame in the Tennessee and Jolly had a champi·
hopes to duplicate the successful sea- experience and the club is extreme- ·
. semifinals, then broke Old Domin· onship game-record I I assists.
son it posted last year as disuict run- ly you~~g at various positions. Three
"I think Tennessee, with pressure, ncr-up with an I8-5 overall mark as of the inlield positions will most
. ion's 33-game winning streak with a
- brilhant defensove game plan con- cenainly took us totally out of it,"
it opens this spring's campaign wolh likely be filled by sophomcires.
: jured up by Summitt and an equally said Old Dominion coach Wendy
a game Wnlght with Wellston.
· Caldwell cited, "Everyone knows
brollianl offensive game by Hold- Larry, whose team had averaged 85
Southern suffered some heavy that there is a marked difference
points a game. "As physical as our
sclaw.
losses to graduauon in losing all-· between lhe levels of Cf:!mpetition at
basketball
team is, we were defi" This year was a uemendous
TVC selections lonna Manuel. Bea the reserve and varsity level. As the
blessing for me, for our players and nitely outmuscled."
Losle, Sammo Sisson and ace polch- season goes on and wolh experience
Despite ots problems, Old Domin- er Jenniler Lawrence, along wuh · we should be competitove."
: our stnff on that we faced a lot of
' ildversity," Summit! said. "We had ion sti'l managed to· keep the game
fil'8t baseman JenniferCummt.ns and
Aiding Caldwell this season will
from becoming a rout. Tbe Lady
·injuries. We had tough losses.
Second baseman Tassica Cummins. be Alan C:.isp and Pete Sayre.
~- "But we never had attitude prob- Monatchs turned the ball over oil
Only three players return 10 the lineThe outlook forthe year is bright;
lems that we could n01 move on From their first four possessiOns in falling
up. Veteran ~oach Howoe Caldwell "We are looking forward to a good
:lmmedoately, and-this is a group that behind 6-0, and lhey Uailed 27- I I
noted. "It will be very difficult to season in this league. There are some
·Jo.ill always be vei'y special to me after Jolly hit a three-pointer with
replace these players."
very good clubs. Eastern, with Coach
.personally as well as professionally." 5:57 left in the lirstlialf.
All-League performers Amber Douthitt and Coach Jackson, are
Old Domtnion linoshed the half Thomas at catcher and Keri Cald- a) ways the team to beat. Miller and
&gt; Holdsclaw, more than anyone,
:helped make it that way. She scored on a high because Aubrey Eblin
well, hoth seniors. are among the Waterford are ,always good. I guess
]4 of her game-high 24 points in the banked in a runni'ng 30-foot three·
returnees. piUSJU~ior Cynthia Cald- tunc Will tell."
;)econd half Sunday night and was on pointcr•at the buzzer, drawing the ·well at center and senior Renee TurAnother plus is he number of gorls
:-charge when Tennessee put the game Lady Monarchs to 34-22. They got
ley. who returns after a year's Southern has out. If strenght comes
the lead three times in lhe second
:jaway at the end.
absence and leuerong us a sopho- in numbers, the Tornadoes will be
'i Alter Old Dominion took a 49-47 -half before being done in by Holdmore.
tough. Thiny players are bidding for
~cad on Amber Eblin's three-pointer, sclaw.
Caldwell noted. "AJ'ter lasl year's a berth on the team.
"Something that she ha.&lt; that
:t-Joldsclaw scored I0 points, handed
ucccss and the success they have had
Caldwell concluded. "We arc
·out two assists and blocked a shot in -makes her really special . She ha.' a
on volleyball and baskcthall this looking forward to the season, look:lhc Jinal 6:48. Old Dominion (34-2) tremendous desire to win," Summitt
year (Southern won the scctoonall in ong for omprovement on each game
:had no answer for that, leaving said. "When the pressure is on, she
volleyball f nd baskethall. finishing and w~ are pleased with the number
~ oldsclaw 6-0 in championship wants lhe ball in her hands.
as Divisoon Ill district runner-up in of girls that have come out and
"I told her, 'Quit passing the bas·
' tlames.
bolhl we think thai this will give us expressed a genuine interest in the
. She won lour state champi · ketball .'There arc a lot ot· great playa dostonct advantngc. Kim Sayre, game."
~ onships at Christ the King High ers out there, but roghl now I feel
even though she has had only two
Looking to share pitching duties
· School in New York City and now she ·s the besl in Ihe game."
stans on the varsity level, is going to with Sayre, a sophomore, is ·another
has two national titles in two years
he an exceptional pitcher."
sophomore Regina Manuel. Keri
' pi' college.
Sayre follows the bloodline of Caldwell and Amber Thomas will
The Texas Rangers had four man"I fell I let the pressure get to me agers durong the 1977 season father David "Pete" Sayre, who anchor the onlicld. Jennie Sellers.
early," said Holdsclaw, who went Frank Lucchesi, Eddie Slanky. Cor- hurled several no-hit victories for the Erica Arnon. Ashley McKinney
through a 1$-minute stretch on the nelius Ryan and Billy Hunter.
Uunoors). Ashli Davis and Manuel
Tornadoes in the mid-1970s.
lirst half without a basket. "In the
Southern's strengths lie in its rich (sophomores) woll vyc lor inlicld
second half, I went out and let
tradition. liS rcturnong Jetter winners positions, while Turley. ncct-li&gt;oted
things come to me. Right now, we
and great desire. Caldwell rcverber- Cynthta Caldwell, Jennifer Yeaguer,
kind of have our place in history."
atcd, "The team has worked hard on Tricia Holman Uuniors) and Kara
Tennessee became the first
trying to duplicate last year and go King (soph.) will vye for outfield
women's team since SQUthern Cal in
one step furth&lt;:r. Addouonaliy, we berths.
1983 and 1984 to win back·to-back
have an exceptionally quick outfield,
The reserve club 'will consist or
titles. And with five chl!mpjotlship.&lt;,
whkh should give us some goo&gt;d junior Eva Glowacka, sophomores
-,Summitt has more than any other
del'cnse, to back up a talented Jodi Hupp, Jennil-!owerton, Trisha
•major college basketball CQllch_,men
on field."
Weaknesses lie in the fact that
(See TORNADOES on Page 5) ·
or women. except UCLA'$ John

·Southem softball
.
season s-cheduled
.to begin today

Your

Baseball

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•••

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of Kentucky's two losses to South
Carolina.
"Wilh BJ McKie, Larry Davis
and Melvin Watson breaking down
their pressure all night long, Kentucky couldn't contain them," Arizona captain Miles Simon said.
" And I think 011r guards have the
same capability as those guanls. I
think we can cause them a lot of
problems.''
But Arizona shouldn't pin its
hopes on what South Carolina did to
Kentucky.
"Maybe \Ve learned from those
two lossqs," Kentucky coach Rick
Pitino said. "These guys are
resilient. "
-Resilient. indeed.
ster.
Kentucky kepi winning even after
They'll get their chance tonight,
when Arozona meets Kentucky in stnr Derek Anderson went duwn with
what promises to be a wild. catch- a knee injury ... kept winni~g after
your-breath-if-you-can champi- Anderson's replacement, Allen
Edwards, hurt his ankle ... kepi win·
onship at the RCA Dome.
Ari7,ona (24-9) will try to use its ning after All-American Ron Mercer .
4uickness and fearless attotude to had to leave Saturday's game with
become the only team to defeat three leg cramps ... kept winning with its
top seeds. Arizona, seekong its first ball-hawking, terronzing;nsk·laking
title, already has taken down Kansas defense.
. "When we 're in our press," Mer·
and North Carolina.
Kentucky (35-4), which forced 26 ccr said, "we act like there's a
turnovers to beat Minnesota in Sat· minute left. we're down by five and
urday's semifinals, is trying to join we really nll!'d the steal."
While Arizona will he under
Duke as the only repeal champions
pressure just to advance the basket·
in the last 24 years.
"Playong them, it begins and ball from Point A to Poont B, Merends wit~ their fullcoun pressure," cer will be under a different kind of
Arizona coach Lute Olson said. pressure. Hav.ing already committed
"Butlhe way they want to play is the . to leave school early, he ' II be tryong
:
way . we want to play. We want it to impress NBA scouts. .
"Ron Mercer knows right now ·
wide open."
ll's doubtful. however, that Ari- that he. has to play gn:at," Piiono said.
zona really wants to play Ken- "That pressure makes him run faster,
tucky's game. And it's doubtful that jump higher, focus better and show- ·
1
Arizona has seen a defense like it case his skills."
Pressure, however, has never ·
will see tonight.
·:some teams will Uap you once bothered the sophomore lorwurd,
and if you make the pass. they'll fall who had 20 poonts against Syracuse
bock." Kentucky forward Jured in last year's title game.
"He ha.&lt; no stress because he has
Prickett said. "With us, we trap and
if you make the pass. we trap again. extraordinary talent and a team he
Make the pass, we lrup again. And if can depend on. I think if he didn't
you get across halfcourt, we'll come · have this enonnous talent, he'd have
at you again. ll's chaos out there, and stress rather than pressure," Pitino
they don't know where you're com- said. " I think pressure is the lhing
that droves us at Kentucky. We enjoy·
ing from.''
it. And we don't hide from it.''
'
So how docs Arizona respond'!
Arizona's
players
secm
'io
thrive
·
With a press of its own.
"Coach Olson told us that teams under pressure, too. Some of them ·,
that like to press don't Joke to he lccl they are destined to win, hut
pressed," Arizona forward Michael Simon simply believes that his team !
Dickerson said. "It's gotng to be a is ready to take what it deserves.
"I don't think we're a team of
mad scramble . They' vc probably
got the best fullcourt press in the destiny. I felt we could be here all
country -besides ours. Whoever is a_long," he said. "When n team docs
things time and time aguon , it's not
in the best shape is going to win."
Arizona has heen watching films luck any more."

•
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - h's a
monster with I0 legs and 10 anns.
Thrashing. SlasiJipg. Hounding.
Harassing. Driving its horrified prey
to panic.
'
It'• Kentucky's agpessive. relent·
less, fullcoun. uapping defense
And it's the reason Kentucky, is
only one win away from its second
consecutive NCAA title.
''Teams that have tried to press us
have only done it a couple of pos·
sessions," Arizona point gutlrd Mike
Bibby says, "because we have broken it eyery time."
But Bibby and his teammales
have never rried to break the mon-

761
fl76

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MONTVILLE, Conn. (AP) Heavyweight Brian Soon, knocked
oul in the sixth round by James
"Buster" Douglas, said he didn't
expeclthc 36-yeur-old fonner world
champion lo he so t.~uick and strong.

"I was on there fighung a hell of
om ex-champion." Scoll said. "I
didn't thil\k he· d have the speed he
hood. He had a stiO'. hard Jah. "
Douglas ui&gt;ed a powerful combination to knoc;k out Scott 30 seconds
onto the soxth round Sunday.
The win was th&lt;: fourth straight
1'&lt;.- Douglas (34·5· I) since resuming
his career after n,early six years in

Padfttlllri.._.
11 - ~ault ..

~II 22
A. l..1kc~ .. , .JM 23
"-Pordnn\.1 . .. 4) 30

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Slk:tullll:nll} , .... 29 43 .403
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Qull.len SllltC , ...... l.&lt;li 46 lS2 ~ 24~
A·~lnll:hN pluyuff bet1h

Solllrday'l S&lt;Ores
Wushlns•on 94. lnll111 81
Alluma KS. Sarwnento 74
Ctucqo I I I, New Jersey 101
H1.1uJ1un 120~ Denver J()j
limh II~. SnnAnlon10 102

Tnmn~u 101. Milrni 47

CIJ!VELAHD 114. Dollu•80
Pllilodeipllo 116. Dclroio 92
~h11tt10111 Ill OtJidH State 102

.=."ro~t.-:::

Nop-.lealaht
1'11eoda7'• P"*

ll~

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17

2',j

LA. Cljipon 01 Mlani, 7:JO P·'"New Yorlt II CLEVELAND, 7•l0

p.m.
W - a - 7:J0p.m.
LA, a..bn • S.Uie. 8 p.m.
....,. _.a.....,.a:lllp.m.

HQI'tfunll, N.Y

Houston al Denver, 9 p m

Sunday's Kores
New Jt:ncy t Lm; Angckl~ 2
Anuhmm 1. l&gt;t&amp;ruit 0 lOTI

EASTERN CONFERENCE
.W L I ba.

Chiculi' 3, Buffalo 2
Unlhl\ ). VQtK:IIUYCr 2
St L.1U1s 3. Phihak:lphiu 2 ,

'·

at: !iA

11-Ptuludclphiu ... 0 2211 97 ffi JW
x-N..owJI."m:)' . 4121 I~ 9~ 21~ 171
lt· Fiorit.la ,
. l\l."iiK 842().4 II)

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1)4
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211 '

l! L I Dlo

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x-0.11111 ...... '45 23 6 96 1J I
•-Denuil ........ .l6 24 15 11137
Phoenu• .............35 l5 6 76 :u '
St Lou•• . . . )) :W 9 7$ ll I

190

l6J
2.12
lll
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9 101 2:19 I87
7 11 2.16 ll6

n 226
12 :10)
,.Lll &gt;10 , tH 2:18
1M AoteJoo .......:zt. 41 10 62 ,..
S..l. . ......... ..!p4J 7 5I 118
o-&lt;H-plo!Ofl'

I

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Salarilay'l--

N. Y.' Ir~l.-2

.

Transactions
'

BueHII

lib.

l'ldlkII

Tumpa at Rtiladelphtn, 1 :\0 p m
New Jt:!KY itt: WMhinBt~. 7:30p.m.
St. Lout~ IU Detroit, 7:30p.m.
Buffalo iJl N.Y Ran,ers. Kp.m.
San Jose at Phoefttx, 4J p m
Ctm:1110 ~&amp;~ Aoohc:tm. 10:~ p"'

2~

176
181
226
22'1
Chicqu ......... )I 33 12 74 20o1 196
Tommo .. ..... 28 41 7 6.1 216 l.'n

v--.. .

Tunday'spmos

66 202 l.ll

WESTERN CONFERENCE

lt.Coloradu. . ..46 21
~;Jmonoon ,,,
J~ l4
. Anohcim ........... J) J~
CoiiJI&lt;)' ......,..... ..-.12 )6

l'onl(lht'• gam..
AoriW ul Pittsbura,h. 7·30 p m
l&gt;IIIIU IU F..dmontoo, 9:30p.m

79240112
6K 11M 116
67 219 ltl

·
k•lhff•lo .."' )K
26Dl•lolon
II H1
Pilllbur&amp;h .... 15 33 1 11
MDfttreol . . .. 28 34 14 10
HPIIfonl ......... .. 29 J6 10 68
Otlawa .... , ....... 26 :W U 67
Bolton. .. . . .24 4) ll ,.,

Ialll

I

Phll&lt;ldlllphi.a 1. Wa~ii~Jimt :\
Tumpa Duy I. Floril.lu I 10'1'1
Tot'Oftln 3. Culor.ll.lu 2
f.dlnllflltJn 3, Phol:nix I

NHL standings

NY ·Rttnam . 15\2 '1
Wubinaton ......10 )"- II
N.Y, ld11ndcn ... lKJ(t II
Tum)'\11 Buy . ~ 29 )K !I

I

Ot1aw11 ~. Montral'l

Hoc key

lam

Rnlt@L'I'S

Pill~butl(b 4. LOii All!!Ck:s
Vnn~.·ouvL'f :-1 , CalsiU')' 2

Ookk:n SHllt a1 Portland, 10 p m.
Milw:w.kce II Vanoouvtt, 10 p.m

Atlantk Dl•lolon

l19
11'

·2.18
'2.!)

lola

...

..

..

·ca:.t i·o·ns

.

·- really

Toroa~~s.~.~

retirement. The boxer from Columbus, Ohio. retired after losing the
WBA, WBC and IBF titles in 1990
to Evander Holyfield.
After ballooning to nearly 400
pounds, Dougla.&lt; returned to the
ring on June 22. 1996, scoring a second-round knockoul over Tony
LaRosa·.
Douglas wetghed 240 pounds
against Scull, his lowest weight lor
a light since beating Mike Tyson on
Feh. I I, 1990.
Aller a show start, Douglas hcgan
to dominate the light against'Scott in
the lhord· round.
'

A..-r..o-

BALTIPojORE ORIOLES: Sold C Ce•"r Oc•are&amp; 10 tb~ Tampa Bay Devil
Rlly1. Auiped C .Krl• Omhiun to their

mloor-teooue....,.

CLEVELAND INDIANS · Trodod

RHP Terry Har"ey to the Tampa Bay
Ot"il Rar-: fOf future: t:onaklrruttons

MINNESOTA TWINS. Placed OF

Robcrio Kelly on the 15· dly dir.abted 1111,
rccro.;t~ve to Mwcb 14.
TEXAS RANOERS: 0polooo4 RHP
JOIC Albcrro and 0P Mike Simms 10 Qk•
-

Chy , , . . . , . _ ..._,..loo.

TOR&lt;lr!TO BWE lAYS: Pla.ed
LHP Phi Spoljanc on che I ~..dly dilatlled lilt, MroaCtive to M•h l l

All.Atfi'A BRA VI"~' Opolooo:d INI'
LW Oiu¥111'1ulu ni!J LHI' Oc;m Han~ro1vc'
hl Rllihmtmd or 1hc llllttnal•onal lcaj~.

Auiancd or Tommy Orclll., C Fuusm
Tejero, LHP Bnul Wuullilfl anti LHP
Kevin Rupn tu lhclar miaur·Aeuauc ~ump .
5\:nl RHP Scull Brow outrishl to Rich·
nM.IItl.l Plnc.:~\.1 Of Danny Rlklti111u u.n the
l~· tluy diauhk:tJ list. n:mroc1iv~: to M,~n.:h
2.1; II.HP Br)'an Ham:y nn tOO I_,_lilly tli•uflkd ltst. 1\!lru.,ctive hi Mlln:h 24 , unll
I.HP Pt!ilru Rurbun on the 60·day dl•·
nbiOO liM
COLOII.ALJO kOCKI~S : Waiv.:t.l ·
RHI1 Mtkc Uyer Pun:has&amp;:d the contRK:I
ul RHP JcH McCurry from Cc;lu.rudo
Sprinpol the PCL

I.OS ANG~LES IXlDG6RS . Op·
lluncd RHP Antoniu 05una 111 Albu~UL'"IUC uf 1hc PCL Sent LHP Nari5cu
hlvm1 nulri&amp;ht 10 Albui.IUL'f"'llol.
PHILAI&gt;ELPHI~ I&gt;HIUJES: Pbced
01· !any IJybtra un the 60-..Ja)' disblcxl
liM aiKI RHP Mwt. Pt'"uJul, RHP ,l!daar
N.um:11, RHP Ken Ryon. RltP Milu! 0~
11ntl RHP Tyll:t Oreen on tbc: U·daJ dia·
nbletl lls1 Sent On:cn to SL1llllton1Wilka·
Barre 1hc ln1erna!lnnal Leatue and
Rilmli)J lu Clc.-wutcr nf the FloridA Suate
Lt:~uc for rchnb Mlli¥nll"Klnfl Optioned
C ChriR Tremie RelldlnJ of the ~tom
Lnaue Purchllled the COnlfll~U oF
Rubc_n Amnru, OF Dcmck May, RHP
Re@.Jie HAnb. ulld LHP Erik PlantenbetJ
ln1m SefWiton. Ret.lk:d RHP Ron Blaizer
from Scranton and opt:ionrd INF Kevtn

or

Junlnn 111 S~:ranwn.
·
PITISBURGH PIRATES: Trudod

OF Trey BellmOn lllld C Anplo Ent.:ama·
cion toth= San Di:po Padre~ ror OF Mwk
Smith und RHP 'H 0_,,
SAN DIEGO PADIES: Opoloned
LHP Juey Luna to lM VIDfll or the PCL
A11i1ncd LHP TCI'r)' 8un'ow1, OF Doua
. U......W, IHF Rene Gonaaieo, INF Tt~ry

Silo-.
RHP .... Smllh lid INF Jim
Tat•m their miMlf·IMpe
Pw·
lo

~:amp.

.-....
-Scooo
· "'c
C.loode&amp;, RHP Tim
and C lloo SIIUJN
fn&gt;111 Lor Vqao.
SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS; Ploced
)8 Mait Lewb on lhe IS·dDy dlnbtH
lilt, reli'\*tlvc to Mlrch 28:

.

(ContinUed :from Page 4) ..
Wamet and freshmen Hellther Dai-·
ley, ~ta\:ey 'Ervin, Kim lhle, Laraine
Laws01)'. Stacy Lyons, Amber May;
nard•• Andrea •Nctuzling, Tabitha
Roach; Dena'Sayre. Autumn Thomas
and.Stacy Wilson. ·
, .
Wilh all the youth 11 Southerp the
Tornadoes should again dev~lop into
a j!ontending team and post enother
grear yea'r. ·-" ·

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sOftball slate

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Uak

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March 31
April I
April3
· Apri14
April 5
Apn17
AprilS
.April9
April I I
April 14
April 15

'

Oppgpmt
Wells,IOII-4:30
Federal Hocking-4:30
at Wahamn-4:30 p.m.
(N's to follow)
at Vinton County-4:30
Fort Frye (DH)·I I a.m.
at Trimble
at Ravenswood-4:30
(JV's to follow)
Nelsonville-Yortc \
Eastern
ul Meigs
· Ravenswood-4:30p.m.
(JV's to follow)
Waterford

• rl

·,,.
,~

.! 'l:'r
"
r:._

April I 6
April I 8
B~lpre ~
April21
atMiller
Apnl 23
at Alexander
Aprol 24
South Gallia
April 2S
at Federal Hocking
April 26 at Beaver E. (DH)·I p.m.
Apnl 28
Trimble
AJ!fil 29
dl South (lallia
at Eastern
f.pril 30
May 2
111 Waterl&lt;&gt;rd
May _5
Miller
May 6
Wahama-4:3_0 p.m.
,
(JWs to Jollow)
_ (ldl pmes •n at 5 p.m. unless
Othenriie DOted)

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FQ·r ins-t ancei
we. just heard
.
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.,

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"
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'

you say, ''Yeah, right.''

-'
!L

''

,..
'

'

:(:
'
&gt; 1,',

•,

••

•

.,

Southern's
1997
.
'
baseball slate

I

I

Dill

Opponept
March 31
Wellston-4:30p.m.
April 1 Federal Hocking-4:30 p.m.
April 3 ·
at Wahama-4:30 p.m.
·
· · (JVs to 'follo.l,;
April 4 at Vinton County-4:30p.m.
April 5 Fort Frye (DH) 11 :00 a.m.
April.7
at Trimble
April 8 at Ravenswood-4:30p.m.
'
(JVsto follow)
April 9
Nelsonville- York
April II
Eastern
April 14
at Meigs
Al!ril 15 Ravenswood-4:30p.m.
(JVs to follow)
Waterford
April 16
Belpre
,b,pril 18
-1
at
Miller
April 21
Wahama-:4:30 p.m.
April ,22
.. (JVs to follow)
at Alexander
April23
South·Gallia
April24
at
f'ederal
Hocking
April25
·Cadiz (DH)-noon
April26
Trimble
April28
at
South
Gallia
April29
at
Eastern
April30
at Waterford
May2
Miller
MayS

There's. o very good reason we listen so carefully -and
respond so quickly to your questions,
.
• I

.

.

.

problems and even your concerns. Better service comes from being closer to our customers. We~e

.

.

:·your neighbors, not just your long ·distance, paging ond ceUulor service providers. Stop by or if it's
. ·more convenient, coli 1-BBB.:.CALL-360. We feature state-of-the-art c~llular phones by Motorola.

.

'

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*

., (All games 111 5 p.m. unless oth·
erwise noted.)

•,

j)

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·'',.

Sou~rn's1997

Trimmer Douglas KO's Scott

Uetroit II·O.IIu. K~ p.m

Iii!

fa.

Plli~a-7:J0p.m.

.

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

a .............,...~

J4

New Yurt 101 , Orltuxlu 16
lftdl.nna 103. L.A Oipflm IJ6 (Of)

EASTERN CONFERENCE

. . . . . . . . .)11, ......... lO

21

Sunday's 10&lt;0res

'

w•i'•"...........
.,. . . . .2.1~
""' -

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4K 21

IA·nh'r
Sun 1\nuuuo .

'

Thursday'• p.,..

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',.

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N Y. Mcts tt'l.&amp;rk 14-11 ) Ill Swal&gt;il!¥-11
tAihby ~-~1. 10 J~ 11.m.
·

l&gt;&lt;trnil tBrucail 1-St 111 MhtiKIIUta
l~ Jl -16.._ti:05pm
'

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.'1. - Huu~wn
Mllllli.'SUIU

Fh•itl:a(A !..!iter lb-12). 7 l5tHn

N.Y . YanktW~ ((.' nne ~-2) ut •5a.IJk(fi&amp;uen.II~-II), H:O.'\pm
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.. ... ... .lS \6
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2() "7

-•.WF-S'fKRN CONFERENCE

"··U u\ CIN(.liN·

St . LA.1ub tPcltll~i&lt;.!k 11 .2) 111 Momn:·

Chictl¥n Wb1t" Sqx tNn~nrro 1~- lll

•

(Holme ~

NATI (8urh:lll-1 lt. 7 ·1'\ 1• n1

Tuesday'• opeDOI'I

'•

MliWiiU~
I'UfOIIIU

Wed.....tay'spma

AL slate

''

lnt.lmna ..

', Southern's v1nity baseball team ~- Young and~ Sisson are fight·. The key will be if Jesse (Mayhard) with a combinllion of speed, sinJies the success we have had the past few
havinJJ a shot· II the chlmpionship.
. is preparing for the 1997 se.son, n~g 11 out for a spot 11 second. Nile can recover from liTO problems that hitt.en llld power ovcor the yeiii'S. years."
Federal Hockinc should be the
which is scheduled to open today 11 S1s~, Bucldey, Blount; Ball, Riflle, have p~ him the past two yeiii'S." ThiJ year we are lwnina in the speed
. The veteran mentor lamented, favorite of tht division.
home against_ Wellston. Southern Wiltiams and Styre are liJhting it
Cllldidatesforthepirehinscbons defAI:btoedt. Otoly one player can "Oefenseshouldbesolid, buthiuing
Winebrenner will be usisted by
has 33 boys tn camp this season, out for the two rem11runa outfJCid are Maynard, Ched Blount and Matt consrstendy steal a bue. ~ we has been slow comina around . Hit·
Ryan Lemley, volunteer assostant. '
i~lnding five starters and 12 JetTer spou.
Dill _with a 1~ up between Corey have !ID uue power hitter."
ting should improve u the season
The resa:ves V.:ill be coached by
wrnners. .
_
. Southom lost. five tey playen, Wolltams and Bolly Young for theM
Wrnebrenner ex.,essed confi· progresses.
Scott Wickltne woth Gary Norris a
One year ago an inexperienced mcludinz thrt&gt;e s'-len in top pik;h·
slot. .
dence in his infield and middle
Over the last four years, southern volunteer usistant.
Southern baseball squad started out er Kevm Deemer, Shawn Dailey and
J~n1or D~nny Sayre. who was a defense, but the outfJCkl play is a · has five sectional titles and two
. Reserve players include junior
slowly, but finished like a Tornado, Jay McKelvey. Also, John Card and' · dommat~: Little League, and Pony question mark; He nOied that a cQOd regional appearances in 1993 and Mtke Freeman, Sophomores: Jason
barnstonning throughout the tourna- Paul C~ graduated.
~uer, could be _the 'do'!'inatins •attitude and great wortc ethic will 1996._
Allen, Dusti~ Huffman, Benji
ment trail to the first game of the
Coach Mock Wmebremer noted, potcher Southern os lookmg for, make up for a 101 the team lacks iot
Wtnebrenner added, "These play- Manuel, Dave Nance, Jesse Lottie,
regional. This:ycar Southern hopes 10 ''We've got~ good ~n'lout and IICCOiding ~o Winebrenner. "lf~e can natural skill . Early practices have ~rs would like the uadition to co~- Josh . Ervin. Adam Williams, Jerrj
gone great.
bnue and are working han! to do so." Lewos, Jeremoah Johnson and Josh
start stronger and finish strong . ~ ~ n_ucleus to work wrth. Pitch- only get hom to throw strikes.
Unlike last year, Southern puis a mg, unlike the ~tart _of last year,
Weak points ofthis year's team is
''This group believes in them· . Wi~~b~nner n01ed, "The Hock- Davts; _Freshmen: ~ussell Reibe~
mostly veteran lineup on the field.
should be a stroll~ pomL H~wever, overall lac~ o! 1~ speed. Wine- selves. The seniors provide good ong DIVISion of the TVC should be Ryan Htll,_Kyle Noms, Adam Cu":'·
1
The Tornadoes fell victim to none are donu"!'~ID~ type J)ltchen. brenner saod, We ve been blessed lead~rship. They want 10 continue well-balanced with several teams ongs, Chros Randolph and Jam1e
Columbus Bishop Hartley 17· 1 in
Baker.
the Division IV regional semifinal
game at . Dublin-Coffman High
"
School near Columbus. Hartley
advanced to the il:gional final .
- ln 1 the district championship it
took IQ inninp of hard ball, but a
great pirching bailie ended up in a
hard-fousht S-4 Southern win.
Southern's Joe Kirby, a returnee this
season, ,laced an opposite field
grounder to second hase with the
.bases loaded to bring home Jesse
Maynanl, also a returnee, with the
• j
wmnins run to give the Tornadoes
the district championship victory
' '
over Portsmouth Notte Dame.
'
Southern, finishing at 12-12, ended . the season as one of Ohio's
"Sweet Sixteen" by winning the sec·
tiona) and district chainpionships.
' '
Of the I ZJetter winners, seven are
~niors (Listed with their probable
starting .position: Jesse Maynard
(shonstoplpitcher), .Travis Lisle
.
(caccher), Joe Kirby (first base),
' .
Tyson Buck~ey, Nate Sisson, I ..On
Lawrence and Chad Blount. Addi·
tionally, senior Chris Ball is up from
the reserves·.
'·
Mayrwd is the ·top mumoe, a for·
mer two-time TVC frnt-teamer II ,
shortstOp and pittM&lt;.I,.isle was also·
a first tiWD Ill·TVC se~on.
Other leln:r wimers iioclude Billy You9g, ·Mat1 Dill (third base),·
':~':f'~c;:;,:
' .
Mike A-sh (cent~r fteld), Danny
Sayre !ind Corey William,, all .
juniors. Other juniors inc'lude' Pe~ ; Sisson, Jason Neij!ler and· Milt Rif··.

By MIKE NADEL

Scoreboard
Atlanla (Smollz 2-'·8) al Hous10n
(Rcynnli.l § I ~ 101 MU'i p m

:Southern baseball t,am to face We_
llston in opener te&gt;day ·

lllelr*v. u.ch 31, 11117

By besting ODU 68 591n NCAA final,

By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
CINCINNATI (AP)- Of all the

The Deily 81 ....... • ~ 5

Pomeroy •lllddllpart, Ohio

v

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Beat
of the
Bend

With 2000 nearing, UFp believers taking

/

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Ott:

~·
Atlantis and . fuiUristic. "crystal" cities vie for . 5,...e with uait
cutouts of Oymg saucen.
..· ·
.sAN DIEGO -:- In a corner storefront in downtown Ill
Oil portnits of-the Olendale, C-"•.,
•L-t '-·-•-• ,._
''The U.S. is a place where there's u enonnousllliOUIII Ut
Calon decorated w1th pastel murals of Oying saucers. Chlrles
ad
Ernest
_,, ~.....,... uJ&amp; """"""'""' religious creativity," he said. "Becauae there's no establis'*t
43
Sp~egel holds forth on his vision for the future of llanh.
ac emy. years ago,
and Rllth N01!11811, han&amp; hiah oo (national) church, it's become a JPirillW supertnari(et and
1bt • ......,...h.
.
•
the w~lls. l_lnanus IS an. acronym for "Universal Anicullle there's a constut bubblino up of entrepreneun. Most ot'•L-11enmum means "we're going into fifth lnterd1menstonal Understandin• ofSc;~·."
. ,. -.:r·--:- tngI mt
"
""lf s11d Sp
76
" he had
- lt'v-•the
-.
..~ •
tege. • a rettr· ed psyc ho1ogy professor at San
Ernest Nonnan, who believed
lt' 'e of Jesus 1ft relatively hlnnless."
Otego Stale who heads the Unarius Academy of Science a
ad 1
..,
"
•
Spieael said there an: 90,000 people on a mllilin1 list for
h
nonprofit educational center. " We 're like a rotor in. a mo'tor re pa ms at c llfChes and dance halls during World War II Unarius books, literature and pins.
.
.•~
that's been picking up energy for 150,000 years."
· He -~ied at 1~ 67 i~ Hl?l. Or, 85 \he ic:ademy's literature sai~
The center's v,ideo programs have aired since 1978 on 25
. The climu. he said, comes in the year 2001 when a UFO he made hts transttton 10 a hiJher plane "
cable stations throUghout the United States. Spiegel said .aboltl
tr
h I'
M
.
Ruth Nonnan belie.~ed she was the biblical Mary as well as cnn 000
•ld 'de
om t c p anet " yton" will land in the Bennuda Triangle·on \ Socrates, Charlemagne and Qllecn Elt' zabeth I. She ran 1 cafe -""'•
pcop,., wor wt have gotten the Unarius message. ' ·
a submerged but soon-to-rise land mass that once was home 10
d
1 k
Devotees bristle at. any comparisons witb , the apocalyptiC:
the mythical lost city of Atlantis.
an was a c er at 8 dcpanment store. She died in 1993 at age cult Heaven's Gate.
· ,
.
n.A d h
. . ·
-..e're all living
. nonnallivcs," said Marian K~ymas, 45, Of .
.
no
~ne
need
commit
suicide
to
join
with
these
exlrater.
"
And
reMnals, Sptegcl said. .
roun 1.e center arc huge photos of her posjnslike a beau- Ch~la Vista, Calif., who h&amp;S received material from the ccn~ .
" lt.will·be evident to everyone on a;.rth. It will be on TV" ty queen, wuh heavy makeup, ·flowing robes, tiara and royal for i!O years and moved to Ill Cajon seven years ago.
:
he said, warming to !he pitch.
'
scepter. In· her 705 • ~he commissioned 1 ponrail of herself u
- "I definitely believe there's going to be a landing in 2001,. •
"Th
ihe Mona Ltsa, behoving she had once been the model •or b
''
ut I'm not making any special plans. I'm just sllyinJ post:
ese are ~umans like us but hi¥hly evolved. They come Leonardo da Vinci 's maslerpi~
as consultants, hke the Peace Corps, to help us join with the 33
Groups like Unarius often find • w;l
.1 ·
he ' C 1. liVe."
·.
. ·
•
other llanh-like planets."
fomia 10 laUIIch their.ciuse.
•e•w. e sot m sout m at- · . K,cymas, who works with a travet manage,mcnt company,
And how does he know all this'?
Th
·
Slid she saw a UFO IS years ago in the desert ncar Victorville·
e ~ea ts a hotbed of New Ase doJmS. Groups promote Calif. "It was ·a starship from one of the planets." ·
:
"This is infonnation that has come to me. I've lived on
these planets before, millions of years ago."
·
everythtng from aromathcrapy and "self-realization" to past·
.. •
.
hfe••expenences and con'lact with aliens.
,
,. . ·
·
w. 1th f II
.~nanu~ h~ p~icled other UFO landings. notilbly one atop
Sp1ege 1's predictions match his surroundings. With funding
from wealthy donors, he runs the Unarius Center primarily for '
· e ge. e · u spcctrum;•:said Dick Madsen. a sociologist a C~ifomta htllstde in 1976, that didn't materialize.
people seeking insights into past·life experiences. ButvUFO at the .. Unlversny of Cali~omi,a-Sa~ Diego who has studied
·
" .
.
., . , ....
· .
buffs also are welcome.
,
~~~sihe:J~~~~~~0:.~~ here, and lher like the sun and the surf "If the same resuU comes in 2001, Spiege[ Si!id, it mu$1 mc.an
Roman statues and columns stand amid cheap plaslic llower
What lias happened in San Diego and elsewhere on the West ~ tsn't ready yet to receive visitors. · '
.
gariiiJI!Is draped from the ceiling. Gaudy scale models 'of Coast, Madsen said, is in some way.s a distinctly American
;,theY can'tland in an jnhosp!table environment."

By PAUL
HOVERSTEN
. ,_,.
TOO'"v
v....
..,

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·:!c:ED PITERION

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1111 Security Menllger, Athen•.

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. ~~ould you t.ake bcnefi_ts as a wife·~ Women often lind themselves in the ed by remamage

position of havmg to dectde whether to take a benefit on theor own work
S Why should. women need spec tal tnformau~n about Socta~ Secunty tf record or the1r husband's work record. ~ornetimes, the decision is whether to·
octal Secunty IS the same for men 11nd women. Th" 1s a queshon we often clatm a benetir on the1r new husband s e&amp;mHij!S or a prevaous husband's
get when we tell women they.need to he especially alert about their Social earnings.
.
.
Look at alllhe options. We will show you how much your benefits would
Secunty nghts and responsibilities.
We expl11n.that women as a group have different ~ork patterns, dtfferent be under any of the scenarios listed above. The decision is yours. bu1 we will
levds of earm~gs, dtfferent soctetal roles, and lend .to lave longer, all of be gl!ld to give you the information you need to make it.
whtch make a dtfference m how well they fare under,th,e.Social Security .proDivorced wives have benefit rights. Remember, if you have been married
g~. For example, altho~gh Soctal Secunty p~y s 1\enetits to a spouse of a for 10 years. you have the same rights to benefits on your ex·husband's
rettred worker, women are more likely to qualify·because they are more like- Social Security earnings as a current wife. And your benefits will noi affect
ly to have worked as homemakers rather than outside the home.
those of the current wife.
. '
The·following list should help you focus on those aspects of_your Social
Marriage may.affect benefits. Generally; marriage tenninales entitlement
Secunty coverage that may have spectalampact on you as a woman :
to divorced spouse's or mothds benefits. ~enefits as a widow are not affect~

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Ttle Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mlrch 31, 1997

I

·Social ·. security·checklist .for women planning retirement

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Note Government Pension Offset. If you receive a pension from work in
a government job that i&gt; not covered by Social Security, remember that it
could reduce your Social Security spouse'&gt; benefit
.
You need a benefit statcmeill. You can get a "Personal Earnings and Ben·:
efit Estimate Statement" from Social Se~urily at any time to get an estimate;'
of the benefits you would get on youM;wn earnings ,record. Your husband
would need to request a statement of his earnings to see what benefits .you :
. could get on his earnings record.
for more info1111a1i on on these an~ other Social Security questions. call
Social Securily's·toll-free number, (800) 772-12 13, and ask for the booklet .
"Social Security : What Every Woman Should Know."

.----Cheerleading honoreud-------Community calendar-The Community Calendar is
published as a free senice to nonprofit JrOUps wishinl to announce
meedng and special events. The
&lt;alendar is not designed t 0 pr:o·
ioole sales pr fund nisen of any
·type. Items are printed as· .space
permits 110d cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
MONDAY
.HARRISONVILLE •• T. B. test·
ing clinic, Scipio Fire 'Department,
Monday, 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. to .
be conducted by Connie Karschnik,
R.N.

RUTLAND . Rutland Garden
Club regular meeting on Monday at
.] p.m. ai the home of Pauline
Atkins, New Lima Road.

the Pomeroy Library Tuesday, 6:30
p.m . .
MIDDLEPORT .. Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM regular meeting ,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the temple.

TUESDAY
PQMEROY .. Eagles Auxiliary
POMEROY· .. CHOICE home
· ·
edu~ators,
Tuesday, 10 a.m., . meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Pomeroy Library conference room.
POMEROY · Meigs Countx
Take sack lunch, coffee served. For
more inform;uion, call Tammy Right to Life organization's oratory
comest, Tuesday at 7:00p.m., Meigs
Jones, 992·674.3.
Counly Public Library.
ALFRED -· Orange Township
Trustees meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m. WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · Middleport Liter:
POMEROY •• Meigs County · at the home of Clerk Osie Follrod.
·
ary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home
Veterans ·service Commission, 7:30
·
p.m. Monday at the Veterans Service
POMEROY .. Internet users of Mrs. Roland Wildman .
, Office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
meeting for beginners will be held at

I

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What causes lack of desire?. ~----· awenwnn~lband- ~~~
DR.OOTT

Middleport CCL plans for conferences :.

Plans for the South Central Dis• is in honor of Fiist Step's 20 years in
·trict spring conference to ·be held . Ohio Child Conservation League.
April 18 were announced when the Several MCCL members are plan,
Middleport Child Conservation ning to·attend. .
The state conference will be held
·League met recently at the Rock
on Oct. 3 and 4 att.he Dayion Mar·
Springs Vnited Metbodist Church.
The conferen~ will be held at the riott Hotel. The theme will be "Fly·
Rodney United Methodist Church ing High with OCCL."
A workshop was conducted by
with the First Step Mother's League
Becky
Baer of the Meigs County
will host 'the conference. The theme
of tbe coofei'ence is "Celebrating 20 · Extension Office. Each member
Years of Heartfelt Mem(\ries". This " made a decorative outdpor flag.

Wint~r

.. .'
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Medicine catching . with pioneer Benson .

,.

Bt MA~I.LYN ELIAS .

·

one-third of Al"ericans use 'altema-

.,

will

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;t

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ronor students announced :.

A SPECIAL SECTION

In The
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• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
• GALLIPOLIS DAitY TRIBUN~
.••.POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
•

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:

THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1997 - 12 NOON
INSERTION DATE:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL30, 1997
Call992-2155
Fo., More Information .
Dave Harris - Ext. l 04
Bob Atwood- Ext lOS

''k

'•

· the workshop. The meeting wa'
opened with the Pledge of Aile·
giance and the Mother's Prayer. li
was noted that an auction will ~
held next month at the regular meet:
mg.
The traveling gift was won b9
Linda Broderick and the liostess gift
· was won by Helen Blackston.
Dessert was served by Peggy Harri&amp;.

Middleport; JesSica Reiber, Racine; dent's list for the winJe: ~nil. These
HOCKING .COLLEGE
The following Hocking College Cynthia Roush, Rutland: Renee students maintained ~ ~rade point
students were · named to the winter Russell, Racine; Jennifer Saylor, average. 167 students have been
Athens; Charles Whittington, Mid· named to lhe dean 's list with grP.de
quarter dean's list:
dleport;
Teresa Williams, Pomeroy; point averages beiween 3.50 md
Amber B.ennett, Albany; Heather
Buc:Ideyt Rutland; Anita Calaway, Tyler Wolfe, Middleport; Darla Zus- 3.99. Among those students nam&lt;:d
to the President's List were Roxanna
Coolville; Tara Clark, Pomeroy ; pan, Chester.
To be named lo the dean's list. a D. Rupe of Coolville, Sherri l.
Arnie EUiou, Rutland; Tracy Fife.
Middleport; Tamela Fry, Middle- student must have achieved a 3.3 Roush, Portland, and RicharJ C.
port;' Maria Graham, Pomeroy; San- grade point average and completed Tuttle of Reedsville. Local ,;u&lt;knts
,, on ~. tt;L,e ,, Dean'S Li~l . wer~ . L.~a ~- ~
dra Grint;jstalf, Racjne; Cara Hayes, 12 or more credit h&lt;&gt;urs.
Gwynn of Coolville. Debra, J. Ted' ·
' Pomeroy; Edna Hensl~y., Tuppers
ford of Portland and Catherine J.
WASQINGTON
STATE
Plains; Debi Marshall, ·Racine;
Coram
and Christina D. Maxey of .
Washington
State
Community
Michelle
McCoy,
Syracuse;
Reedsville.
•
College
has
announced
that
86
stuStephanie Otto, Pomeroy; Tonya
Phalin, Middleport; Lora Rawson, dents have been named to ils Presi·

dered into tabOo country but wasn 'I screen of NIH. We need a change of, she objected. saying, "suffering in
willing to tiun back- even if it cost attitude over there," DeFazio said. , · silence wasn't good.'' Tile group
him his job at Harvard Medical
Pioheer Benson carefully draws "was the first place I could clear out
School.
·
•, •
· distinctions botween unproven alter· my inn~ds, the bad feelings that
"Friends told me I was throwing native techniques and the scientifi· were really &lt;:ating away ~t me."
away a very prrunising career," . cally tested. But he's still game for
She's now a peer counselor, help·
recalls Benson, then a 36-year-old · adventurous 1tsting.
ing to lead groups for other patients.
cardiologist. "We'd been taught the
The Mind!Bildy Medical Institute "I'm a different person .... I'm not
mind was separate {rom the hody."
he founded at Harvard five years ago witho~t worry, but I know how to
But Benson's early research will stake ou111,ew ground this Octo- relax and deal with my stresses."
Could that make a difference in
showins .that•meditation·could lower her in openihs. a women's health
blood pressure threatened to shatter center. to research and do clinical Weinberg's survival? One pioneerthis. core principle. When he won a work exdusively on mind/body ing study suggests it might. A 10·
large grant for' further stu~y, ~eteran medicine for Women's health prob- year Stanford Medical' School study
faculty members argued he should· lems. Among priorities: heart dis· compared women with metastasized
n't .be allowed to accept money for ease, menopause, breast cancer, bre•st cancer who attended groups
such unorthodox work. If for]&gt;idden, liigh-risl( pregnancies. Randomized, similar ta We.inherg:s with a c'ontrol
Benson said, he'd resign;
oontrolled studies are planned.
·group of comparably ill women .
It was Harvard that blinked, ·a
Even if methods are proven to Even though all were tenninal, 'the
move Benson now auiibutes to a work, the "wh.y" can be hard to pin women in the special supp&lt;irt groups
well-placed mentor.
down.
lived an average of 18 months
That was 2S years ago. Since
,But brain scans now show in longer.
Benson's seminal work, the .sea vivid color what's happening d_uring
Now the study leader, psychiachange that's swept ov~r A~erican the relaxation response. Psycholo- trist David Spiegel, is looking at
society ' is reOected in mainstream gist Qregg Jacol:&gt;s of the Mind/Body how such groups affect relapse '3nd
U.S, medical schools today. Ninety·· Medical Institute ' has documented survival for women with breas't can- .
· two of 125 scfioofs (including Har- dramatic brain wave change - ·the cers diagnosed earlier.
·
, vafll)'offer courses in nontraditional onset of tranqyl l waves and swiftly
Animal research shows stress
: healing metho4s. shows a 1996 sur· dimirtished mental alertness - after hinders the endocrine system. and
'!· vey by the Association of American , just five minuies of practicing the Spiegel is testing this in hutpans. "If
·· Medical Colleges.
relaxaiion technique.
stress turns the endocrine response
·
Some techniques ~mce scorned as
In recent studies, Jacobs has used 'on' all the time, it may impair the
. Oaky, among them Benson's "relax· this type of meditation: plus a pot· body's ability to tight illness pro'atjon response," aren 't even consid· pourri of behavior change strategies, gression," he suggested.
ered "alternative" anymore, since to turn 75 percent of middle-age
Maybe so. but most U.S...insur·
there's scientific evidence they hard·core insomniacs into normal ance firrrts and HMOs still aren't
work. .
sleepers. ' ., '
·convinced such nontraditional pre·
. A National Institutes of Health
"Stress and depr~ssion play a key venlion and treatment metbods are
·panel recently decreed tbat relax· role in causing or worsening many worth paying for. Said Mike Sass of
ation therapies·are effeciive in treat- health problems," said Margaret Foster Higgins, a large employee
ing chronic pain:;Privately repeating Chesney, a mind/body researcher at benefits consulting finn, "It's a
:l.¥!ords · or ..aunds'.: ·while ' ignoring University o_( ~alifornia M~dical 'cocktail' trend - lots of them ~lk
intruding •thought, can markedly School, San Francisco.
. aboul' it at parties. but not many are
ease thl! pain of low back problems,
For heart attack suryfvors, streSs doing it.''
8flhritis and headaches, the panel and depression both predict· higher .. Only about a dozen companies do
agrcied·. . ..
:
·
rates o( repeat. fatal coronaries. '€over "complementary" therapies
·" Doz~ns of clinics, offering eclec- Benson 's institute offers preve11tion . such as acupuncture. homeopathy or
tic fare · from acupuncture to herbs and post·hear,t. allack group pro· stress reductiQn groups. But coverand homeopathy, have ·. sprouted. grams.
·
age could expand rapidly. In a new
Experts say more private doctors are
Stephen Blank. 54, credits the survey of 80 HMOs done by Land·
sending, plltiimts to programs tpat changes spurted by group allen· mark Healthcare, 58 percent said
te~h mental strategies for lowering dance with lrilhsforming ·him from they plan to offer ahemative the(l· .
stress and lifestyle changes to pre- "d nervous wreck '' with serious psy- pies to members in the next one to
vent jli5ea5e.
•
chos&lt;imatic a~ents after .a heart two years. And 70 percent reported a
Some 'critics,. though, claim altack tu a ca!IJler guy ,whooe arteri- rise in requests for· t~ese options
promising therapies aren't getlinll al bloekages h~ve now disappeared. from meml\ers.
tested .quickly enoush: A new .bill- Diet and exercise changes, using the
That doesn't surprise James Gor·
v.:ou,ld ,v*'II.IY lncfl:ase the funding relaxation rest/&lt;?nse several .times a don , a professor at Georgetown Uni·
and auton.omy of the. federal Oflioe day, "and a saner perspective on versity ~dical School and director
of Alternative !lledicin:, created five life:· did the !ric~ ; he said.
of the Center for Mind-Body Medi·
Y~':l ago'?ji~plore nbniradi\ional
The institulj; :also offers groups cine, Washington, D.C.
'heahng meJ1il&lt;ls.
. .·
for cancer. · 1 and HIV-positive
He often does radio talk shows.
· The office •now must get all its patients. Mari'Wcinhcr~ .5 l , leamed "and you can S.e it's the public
• . . rc~earch approved through NIH of her breast cancer as she was that's driving this change.'" said
institutes. Its $12 million· annual struggling to save a doomed mar· Gordon . "The questions are far
bUdget :·is paltry."• grumbles Rep. riagc shortly aller her only child left more sophisticated than they were
Peter Defalio, 0-Pre., sponsor of home for college. She got medical five years ago. It's no longer.
the House billtl\ill would elevate the treatment, wit!J a good prognosis, 'What'~ this mind-hody stuff all
office lo a "center" awarding its but ·still felt trapped.in a .black box of about'!' They already know, and it's
own research grants with a yearly pessimism.
nol even controversial. They treat
budget,of $198 miltiori.
Weinbel't! shows her certificate you like you're the Marcus Welby or
·•we, k~ow from surveys that . for completing ~hcmotherapy, which . Dr. Spock of the '90s."

·
· ·

. · Gracious Helen Fisher of .
J'O!I'Iei'Qy will be .guest of honor at an
. ~n house next Sunday, April 6, .
,ffwtfa 2 to 4 p.m. 11 tbe Senior Citi.
· leils Center in Pomeroy. Its difficult
· ~o believe but the active Mrs .. Fishcr
be observing her 90th birthday.
, Her family cordially invites you
tp; attend the open house but docs
rcguestlhat gifts be omitted.

praises patients for :'hav,ing suffered

•• .,..,~ft-...,,
,v, . ..;. 'L , , ;, Ji\;.e~ . i~hniqlll:S. byt ~~e. 'c~genl 'in sjl,(l(:~;,.lllilh.'iqpd,,bpod counts,
f •:; .
rrB~nson1CnellV M'd"wan' . office tsn't even a'l:ihp on the -radar· courage. and detenn1.n190n.l" But,

'

A short meeting, conducted by

co·pre~ident Kitty Darst, followed

p ....

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. . . .,. 1'1 ch 31,1117

7~~;;:;:~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliijiiiiii•illilid-idlilip-iort,i0hiilloi.iiiiiiif~~;:~1l~n:•~Del:ty10Saullnel•
P~~ge
W.klltD

~:What tag switcher lacks in remorse she makes up ·for ·with self pity
Ann

landers

• By ANN LANDERS
•
Dear Ann Landers : I read the let~ ter from "Sorry and Ashamed" with
great in!eresl. She was caught
switching tags on· menchandise, and
· .. the store manager told her she could
" never come into his store again.
I was a retail ·store manager for
40 years. My mission was to keep
our company in business and serve
·, the I 5,000 honest customers who

shopped with us each week.
ShopliftinJ and tag-swiiCbing inci·
dents took from two to four hours to
handle. If an incident went to court,
il took another 20 to 30 hours. I
could have used tha~ time to serve
· our honest customers.
Shoplifters and tag switchers cost
my company an amount equal .to I
percent of our total sales. Our prices
had to include this loss factor. The
dishonesty of a few ends up costing
everyone a lot of money.
Too often, I had to give a problem
customer a "life sentence" arid banish him or her pennanently because
I couldn 'I lake the loss of time or
money. I would hope, Ann, that' your
sympathy would be with the store

manager. •• Ronald Ziff, Sherman
Oaks. Cidif.
Dear Ronald Ziff: Keep reading
for more:
Dear Ann: Your response to the
person who "switched a couple of
price tass in a shop and got caught"
cannot go unchallenged. The writer,
despite proteslations, does indeed
whine when !Jemoaning the harshness of her fate -- being forl)idden to
enter the store again. She said the
sentence was too severe since this.
was her "first offense." Sounds to
me like the writer was only sorry she
was caught.
,
Why is anyone entitled to d pass
on the first off.ense1 Thai woman
broke the law. Not being allowed

--

Wintaol To llllr: W. IIIIJ Jilnl
c...,.
... """'·Or 1 1 -

lllllllest etA of cavilr was $40. Shi
slipped it iiiiO ~ tn. bouJhla cali
of soup ltlld wllbd out.
,·
lt turned out !I* both the boai
and his wife on salt-free diets
and &lt;:ould not ell cavia'. She considered this "a JDeUaiC &amp;om God,"
dropped $40 extra ·in the churcb
offering basket the followinJ Sun·
day and never .pin toolt anything
that did not rightfully belons to ber.

back in a stan: is not an unbearable
llanlship. It is merely an embm'usmcnt and an inconvenience. The
woman who wrote should be gnte·
ful she wasn't Sent to jail. -- Karen

To lleslon ud All Wbo Wrote:
You n rip. but I was blindsided
by the woman's obvious ~
and desire for f011iveness.
I cannot end this discussion withJohnson, Mll)'land
0111 being reminded of a leiter I
Dear Karen: Yoo'n: not alone. received from a woman several
Read on:
years ago. She had to confess to
Dear Ann: 1 am writing about someone, she .sajd. and I was lhe Qnc
.~·sorry
and Ashamed," who she 'chosc.
switched a couple of price lags and
It seems Mrs. X was having her
got caught. I have 'a sister who not husband's boss and his wife over for
only switches price lags but returns dririks before din111=r. and she wMted
used merchandise and asb for c:rcd· to make a big impression. She made
it. This is costing the consumer .. canapes of smoked. salmon · and
that's you and me .-- money. I con- decided at the last moment that it
sider it Stealing. [ agree with the would be even more elegant to serve
store manager. and you snould have, caviar, also. She ran to the store and
too. -- Reslon; Va.
was IIIDIIZCd to discover that tbe

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, .
r. .,. A nii'!'! computer ll!ld-on promises to make the brain-pu.nishing task of
_To use the PhoneMiser, you'll need an IBM-compatible ~~puler with
•-ifledni the llflliapest long•dis~nce service obsolete. . ..
.
. ·
W~ndows 9~. arleast 1611)egabytes of mcmof)l and a 14.4 lcilob•ts per sec·1
tilled the PhoneMiser. the device is not yet availabl.e in stores 'but is due ond.or faster modem. No _Macintosh version is planned,
'.'1! be te~:ln -late spring. About the siu and·shape of an electric razor, it The device is always on, .as long as your.computer is on. You'll be able
•1pibaa. intlj the parallel pon of.a computer l'l!nning Windows 95 (with a pass- to tell that it's working, Lande says, because it has a::special dial tone that
~lit rpr the primer) and into your phone-jack.
.
kicks in after about a second.
'
: ()ncc 1nati11Jod, it automatically routes anx long-diStanCe call made from
"By tlie second or third call, you forget it's there," she says.
(t!!'t·telephone' line through whatever long-distance carrier is cheapest for
1\lrning off'your computer doesn) mean you'ILbe without long-distance
1diilt ~~Ill" call. NO' five-disit access codes. No worrying about whether service. however. When t!Je computer is off. you will get a nonnal dial lone
.II* lOwer na.O. ~ck in before or after 5 p.m. All you have to do is pick up ~~J~d the call will be carried by yourreaular long-distance carrier, Lande says.
1111 ~ .,)d dill, and lhe PhoneMiser does .the .est.
The PhoneMi~~s e)!pe¢ted to retail for about $99. In addition to the cost
"It's ~.":joked Ellen' Beth Lande, director cif marketina for Media· of J)l!l'Chasing the dcvfce, ui'era are also charged a 111onthly f~ of $4.95 to
' ;~the ·Bedford, Masl., start-up company that crelled the ~qnc:Miser.
pay for the cost of updatinl the database each month. (Updates are 'done
Mtciclllld 1101111101\ware. When you hook up your PhoneM1ser, you also . automatically by modem.)
j
1111111 a .
lon1J-dii18!1Ce carriell: The d•tabue c~tains infor- ·
· , .ol\ at
hu
lona-dist8J1Ce servttes, but yo.u re&lt;;etve only the
"The ftrSt tlll'le months aie free to make sure people have paid off their
' 'GIII*.._dlll·~rele M!ltoy . areL
·
'
.
4 inve~n. t.inlheproductiuld
. .~. happy. w. ithit,".Landc. says..
.
1
1
'"')pMMII)) you' u
more than sfx or seven differen1 phone.t:Otn·
"
.
lj ·
,.U. caly:ill your. Cllll," Linde says.
.,
PhoneMiser c~ also help you save up to SO percent on dittctory assis. BWD ibo11P your calli may be noutpd dtroup a half-domt dilfllmll IInCe callsltlld calhna card feq, she says. In areas where the local telephone
" · ec..,.tl., dill dollll'l mean YO!! Wl~l ~iv~ an .armload ol phone bills , ~y bll ~.l'hojteMiaer will even I'OIIte for the lowest rate on
D:illltl. Wblii )011 ~epw, pa pve Mod•~ your Cl'lldlt.card 1111111• prjc4iy 111-1111e .!o'll-d•llnee C.lls, she aays.
·
_,ewryiiiGIIIII. you'ie bllllit a up cllllpl for IOq diiCIII.:e ilrilc&amp;
•
·
, ......C• • .-t- eire or upin1 you up Wltb cadlloq-diJI :e ..-.
lor . ..,_,.,.., •lilt · :the Phoadliler Web site
' vb.
(lllilplllwww...oaemller.-)

·e·

'

.

·

··

*

.,

;

~ ~ '

~·

••

•+

•

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IISUUNCE

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
A:i IEN11DH
Fonnor Oullldo S.loo Ropo. UM
Coblo COOCOPII Or Kirby, Elc.

---cat!

-":.:f.

(614) 367 -0266
1-8 00-950-3359

-1-·737&amp;

G~Uaawey

40

2molo-III.IMI..llr.IMI.,
......,. . . . . . .1111.

RonTDI

IIOTTUD WILL ~I LOSE
up • 30 pounda, 30 I)AV UONEY BACK GUARANTEE! Nollrol,
Doculr Roeomrnondod, 814-«1·
1-Froo,..._
Co11111ultr Uaora Needed. Work
own houro. SZOk lo ISOklyr ,F ·

a

34171M x1601.

. Earn .1 .oOo Wooldv Slulllng En-

IIOioPH AI Home. Ston Npw. No
Erptr\onct. Froo SUppHH, lnfv.
No Olllloallon. Sond LSASE To:
ACE, Do!lt 1:1111. Box 8137, C.
monel Bor. CA 11 7R .
·

Gallpolls
&amp; VIcinity

NOT1Ca Of AYAII.AIIIUTV

~A~EJU:

,,

DEMRTMEHT Of

'

TRANSPORTA110ft
. c............ Ohio

Public Notice
Public Notice
Ww.'ll11gl0n CouniiM,·OIIIo co~ 0111o, unt111o:oO
for llllfli'OIIInllolatllltll ATII- a.m.
.
NI.OOO end varloue, StMe
~nioda~A!H11P8,1817
Route 7 e.nd · ,erloua,
lmpriW-In:
verloue vlltegea, by lor
At~'ene, O.ltle, Hocking,
IMtlllllng raleed ~nt Melge, Monroe, Morg•n,
Ill&amp; ..... .
Noble; VInton and
"Tho data .. t .for · -hlngton Couna.a, Ohio
comp)eJion of thle -•k tor Improving eectlone ATHehefl ... • Ht tort!t. In the 33-1.1114 end verloue, u.s.
bit' agprapDIII."
Plana and Speolflolltlona Route 33 and varioue, In
varloua vlltegee, by
era on tile · In the epplytng
pqlyeotor .
of
·Dopertmont
...-ntllllf1dnga.

The Ohio D•JI•rt!Mnl of Trlnipa: tallon.
JerryWfiY
·Trahajloretlo'n (ODC!TI
Dlt-,of_Tranaporl8tlon
hereby notlllea all
- t i d ,.,.._ lhel the (3) 24. 31210
jlropo..d
1ltl-2001
. S1otewldo

"The deto ..t tor
oilmple11on of lhla work
wn 11e .. ut 1or111 In the
bidding -propoaal. • Plana
·and Specmcetlona •• on
lila .In the Depertment of
.TrlnaporUdlon.

Public: Notlc:e

.

JerryWray

Dlt- ol Treneportlltlon
{3) 24, 31, 2 ta
~

'

70

tCenlral-OIIIco
alrlc1 Olllcea,
of Pl••••..
oll of 1110

IDoo~ejj

.

Ylrcl Sale

":.SZ!-

• Aquatron Boats • Cutty

Bathl,' Groo~nlng,

• Bow Riders • Bass

KannaiC..

• sea Ark John Boats

llldLM

Mon., TuM., w.cL,

• Johnson Outboard

. -Tbu..., M1N;

'

ROOFING

Tho IIPO MM&gt;fl

• Waehlnglon County,
1110 arae II the WoodWUhlngton.Wiri lntoratate

tlannlng Conlmlaalon (304•22·411131 'loutltll It 1200
!lrand Avenue, Vlonnil, Wnt

Downipaua

oDecks

Free Estlmatea

VIrginia. To facilitate the

STIP IWYiaw, the Dlatllcl and

he Wood-W..hlngton-Wirt
lpomml•aton
ntora1e1e ·
will lolntty
~Ianning

IIPO')IOr an apon houee on
tlluradaY, AprH 10, 1H7
hm 3:30 p.m. to ?:3D p.m.
_. tho Waahlngton County
Public Llbrer;, tt4 lth
~hlaM,Ohlo.

.Any comJMnte concornlng

DUMP TRl.fCK
...
.
.SERVICE
.
Umeetone • GfiVII

Real Time
Savers

Dirt • Send
185U"

· Cheallr, Ohio
I

.

lrloldo: llorcll211h, Thru April
5111. No Sunday, Fuol Oil Slovo,
Air Cond, Swooporo, Clolhoo,
Oithtl. 4 Room• Full 1CI88 Me·
Cormick Rolli. Ollpolo, . . P.ll.
Pomlro~. ·

Mldd ......,rt
.....,
&amp; VIcinity

JICK'IIIPriC I .
Pll I "-A-Jill IIIIICI
.. POMEROY, OHIO

614•992·7119
A.mlon Motor oSalea a. Repairs

I

--

CuatomHomaa

Remodeling

.

All 'lard lain Muoi Bo Pold In
Advonco. Doodllno: 1:OOpm lhe
cloy bolore lho 14111 • run. SUndar I IIOndiJ ediUOIF 1:OOpm

f'rldlr.

April

Ire!.

•11. 11111. -.llecol!r·

:..~=:-=:ea.=.-:....~
""-· crrs•T . , . _ , Sill-

C-lng hptlc Systems
Port-A-John • Flantltla • Servlc:ecl Weekly
No Ex1ra ct.'ge for Evanlnga or W111ritnda .
24 Hr. Prompt Service
7 Daya A WHk

... l •. HOJ,LON
. ',TRUCKING .

crall pop up compor 13150; llo
Pod blko, donee cooiUmea.
clo!holl and mD&lt;e. 33120 Child·
,.,.. Homo Rd. .
. .
'

lila rard Nlo, April 1. 2. 3. 0-4,

lour mlloo ou1 143 Pameror. old

~llpN!k,nUc. '

••

Adrnlnlltntor

:•

Offloe ol ........l ....

..........
we•·•·
. 992·7074

11111 Martin 8trHt
Pomeroy, Ohio &lt;15788 .

OneUnltNow
. Available,
10x28, MJ per mo.

982-3981

FRIDAY FISH FRY
·..! FLIA MARKET
FRIDAY, APRIL.11,

POST121
AMERICAN LEGION
ANNEX
- ....... Mid lllpHt
'Mdllll N • 8' Tllllla
CIIIIRIII . . . .
742-21114

....., ..-nr... Moreau,
VlntOJ! ana

-.111.,

'

til

'v

•

•

•

Hourlr par roroo: D-2 UIIIIIJ,
18.25:
DIT Ulillll',
lllllmon
CT, ••.ss:
Clooo18.•o:
C Pockogor,
-.18.1S.EEO

·

Poo!al Jobs 3 Pool!lona Avoiiable, Na Experience Necesurr,

For lnlorrnation, Call 1·818·7U9011En 11013.
Progrot~lve Braock.. Uft11 Companr Lookl1111 For Oualiftecl Secrolarr Wllh Compurer Skills...

Good Knowledge Of Windowt,
liS Word, Ell:. Ia m.&gt;orwrL.. AI&gt;
okaliono Utrr Bo llrvppod Off Or

l.tollod To: Uoglc 101 WMGG,
111 l'llr!lm!l!llh Rood. GohlpoUo,
Ohio •5831... Applicauono lluot
Bo Received At Uog\c 101
WIIGG Sludloo No Lorar Thon
Woclr 1 lrllf April2. 11117. EOE.
AESJIIIlAlORI'THEAAPIST·
Southtrn Ohla Medlul Ctnttr

Hal Contingenl Opt!"IRgl For

RRT /CRTT RegillrJ Ellglblo In
Tho Hoapllal S.lllna And Condnoent Ope~Jng1 Far CRn'a In
O.ur ·lono Term Cart FaciiiiJ'

,.._.... Uanorl.

tRoom Addlliontl

oENctrlc:ll • Plumbing

oRDOtlng

...... lor. Extlrlor
,falnltag
AJM) ConcNie Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ul
11112-1215

·-

· ~,Ohio

•Roo

WANTED: ·

Commlaolon. Ouolilied Alll&gt;lloaNa
Call814·448-•514 M-F:Reforentll And Reliable Vehicle Required.

ofHwG.-.gee

&amp;
Ha.•ehlprav...t
'lotttrily lltll Afftr41WIIt(

Free Estlmalu

388 8878

.

""
-... ••••11111111:
A......
G81111, lloGidng,

lor Human Reaourc:.a Direc:1or.

And ROGfing. Flvo Vn 01 SalOl

YouNG'S

'· 11oui1 Sba
Rl11mWIIe RlfN
.Joe .N. 8lryN .·
1817

Appllcorus ploo• t0p111 ID
l.ancllater Slreet parking lot. aU

E•perlence Required. 4Sal1ry 1

(AIPEJmR SEI.Yia

n.uera.

....

work durlne the current ..bar

-·

SALESPERSON

Sa~Sylltelrla

·~=~:~

lllgneUc Speclolll'. 707 Gllmon
Slrool. Mlrlello, OH 45750, 'Ia hlr·
lng limp. roplacomlr'll _...,. ID

Must Be .Experienced In All
- o f Rooirlondal Rorr-ng

u.n.ton. a C1ranl

Pomeroy, Ohio

-·

!uniOn, nioc.

Joa Wll1011
(114) 112-4277

·. FI!ENlY BENNm

~~·~ 9t/tS~

calana NDW Being Taken At
Scenic Hilla Nurllng 'Center, 311
Buc:luklgo Rd., -~ OH 11-F, I

Holglllo, ThulldaJ, Frldlr. April
3nl-41h, 11-7, 111&lt;11 clo ... 3T·5T,

"Build Your Dream"

10AM-7PM

11; 1TC_

i.ooklrig For Pan·Time Coli-Ina.
All Shllll, RN'o And LPN'o. Appll-

M&amp;.J

CHESlER STORAGE

Your

... .,. polenlial. Coli 1.eoo-5134343Extll-113e&amp;

1 - ~ .... 1833 Lincoln

~tatewldo

Improvement . Program
•hould lie In 'trrlt1en form

HOllE TVPI818,
PC uaera needed. t45,000 in-

~~~~~~Pro_:.::m::.::_D,.~•=,.=·~ 1 t5.!55: Cluo Ill - - 0!&gt;-

992-2753

nM'S CUSTOI1
CARPET .

Pu!Jfic is invitetl

f&gt;.

t O.r Only, S.tur·
10-5, SR. 554 To

oNo Job Too Small
•Any .a nd All of Your .
Home Repair Needs
oCaJI.Today for Your

-Ramoclellng
-Garages

50"·75"

April Servbla from 4:30 • 5:15
Donation $4.00 for meal

•

Crlfto.

oNaw Homes

E

~73-0212).

Salo: 11 Doblllo Drivo,

April Firat Ttvu Flhh. Alao. New

,. "IJIMIIr N..,; Owlmllip"

NEW·REPA~R
Quttws

·san

of

April 2nd -llh, 1o.e, Loll Now

Oa"'go

111ft

Howard.L Will 111

31171141TJ1N

&amp;_.

,_, 141 FrontOIGIWon Sd1oolo,

No- O!ot 11.1111, lllbr Fur·

A. II . .·4 P.M. Apply In Poroon.

948-2168

Ill Columbue,
aeelad prapoaala wHt lie
•nd oech of .1ha alxtftn. aooeP1•d from ell. pre· r-1 .. ~ 111fwldtls.
Ohio~ PIIIIWIIIIII . &amp;'=lad bldclera at the .
Sepia fh o.,t
Orllenllltlon (IIPO) offteft
o1 Contr-, Room ' .1.. 11•
&lt;1-Stlt
~urlng normel bualnel8
111 of the Ohio .,.,.blwnt 1 ...;·. .•..,_·_ _..,._._ _ .
. tura from April 7, 111tl' to
T ran~I!P~GJJ~Ia~lkw~··~-=====
prll 11, 11t7. The STIP
Jjlentlfloe tho etatowlde
30 AllnCIWic:llllln
program of highway end
tr•nol1 !ftolntonanca a,d
oow 011pec1ty; and "toycle
EVENING MEAL
tnd other tre1111portatlon
..loled p~ u.t wiiiM
at
()nplellltntetl throughout
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR ,....,.,.,....,D
Sllte over the naxt 4
ra. Tha ODOT Dlolrlc:l
Mulberry HeJabts, Pomeroy
0tr aervtng yow oroa II
llo011tld ol 318·11ueklngum
Thesdays and Thursdays during
li)rlve, llariettll, Olllo {t14- .

-

April 111 ·11411, 1:00 .e:OO, Con•

11otnt Dolly. 1 1/4 IIIIo Norlh On
110 Pool HolZer Hoopllal, Look
Forllpl

Sat. 1M; Sun. 12-4
271 North 2nd.
Mldlllp art, Olllo·
112 451,

·FREE E8n.T!S

......
··

,_.._

E)IPERIENCED • SECRETARY •
RECEPTIONIST All Typoo Dfllco
Work. Downlown GoHipollo. SoriOUI, Rnpo,..able l'eroonl Send
Rotumtt To P.O. Box 1111-4, Gollipolla, OH 45e31. All Rooumoo
Corilclanllol.

P...... lhrulor MMioo • 11:00

hinting

cnlh,.....,

•••1111 ~ol/87

__ _.,

G. . . CIIInlng

•Ha~.~...
u -..s•
......... . . _

Lagllt .
. UNIT l!1ll!;e CON1'RACT

lll

.

.-tho
___.
··
.......... .

ALL Yanl laiH lluot lo Pold
In Adwooot, DIADLINE: a:oo
p.rol.lllo
lo to

.CHIISft'S Pm

QI'IIQI, Lhn•lal-.
HIICI.I, FlU Qlrt,

..'

f

TillES HAYE CHANGED! Sm.
S-Ilo Dlahot
SOIItrl.
Grut Opporlunlly
11 'ibu In

•

IJ

'JEFF

'C..O

a&amp;xwlor

==~

..

o

'

~.r·J

•ullDIH

on an·Items In store I

(614) 992·6278

.,f

~,·==~~====~: ~~UO=~===k====~========~~~~--6_1_~-~--~~7~9~·--~-=W~IM
·uacu•a•

..

·1 0% to 70o/() ·Discount

354 East Main· Stre~

1

.

360- Communications

Quality Windo:W ~Yt!l.l4~1118

. 982_7888

lloO!a '4 il

CraM! Glftsl Pictures! Tractoral
Lots Qf little goodies! ·

·.·

r.'j'j~

(upto!'JVIIItedltldlea)
{OfiiiMA....... • 27 !1

. . 1t'IIMmltllltiiO:,
• , Mr. Larry F. lluthorlancl,

,

'

....

$195.00 INSTAJJ.ED

·
Soci_
e
ty
scrapbook· Sweating ·out whether you're sw~ating?

BRIDAL SHOWER
A ~ridal shower ~ beld recently for Melissa Shaley, bride-elect of Sam
By LISA FAYE KA~LAN
Nicl!!lls011,. at thli Rock.Springs United Methodist (:burch. Teny ~e hostGannett News Service
ed the shower.
·
·
What is it about sweat,. that
Caines
were
played
with
prius
going·
to
Desiree
clemons
·
l
llld
BrenM
human downpour we fear and purCox. Refreshments were served.
·
sue?
Attending
"iCfC Heather Whaley, Dorothy Chancy, Rosalie Storey. Janet
We panic when sweat moisten.s
Peavley,' Brenda COx, .Desiree Clemmons, An&amp;ela Colu. Brenda Cogar,
··. our upper lip or stains our underNondus Hendriclca, Bonnie Dearing, ffelen S!Nartz, Carla.Swaru, and Caitanns. But we look forwafd to a
lan, Lucille Athenon, Lynn Hoffman, · Dorothy Robbins, Teny Neece.
good sweat with friends in a sauna
Christina Neece, Amy Smilh. and Coleen Whaley.
,
·- .or sweat lodge.
Sending giris were Dorgchy Jeffers, Thelma Jeffers, Thlcy O'Dell, Carol
In the boardroom, sweat is
"
Tolliver, Sheny Atherton, kay Rowe. Ro~mary Randoljl!l, Fannit Barnhill
deaflt; in the gym, it's achievement.
and Virginia Sm'ith. , , • '
·
•,, , ·
We howl when Albert Brooks
.
·
9qlljiRTHDAY
. ,
:• ·
.
nearly drowns himself in flop sweat .
An open house celebration of the 90th birthday of Helen,Fisher willl)e
in "Broadcast News." But some
held .at the Senior Center, Sunday, April 6,' from 2 to 4 p.m~ Her .family
.• , pulses race wben rivulets run down
invites friends to attend. It is requested that gifts be omitted.
,
,.
Sylvester Stallon_e 's checks and
•'
.
· ETHICS COMMI1Tli:I!!"''II. .~ICE -~ '
·,
·
thighs.
Orela L. Rifne, a second-year law student lit the West' VIrginia UniversiOn a date, sweat is a turnoff;
ty College of law in Morgantown, W.Va., has been elected by ~he student ·
under the covers. it can be delibody to be the chairperson of.the Ethics Committee begilinhig in 'May, an4
cious.
continuing until her gradllllion i~ May, 1998.
.
.
.
"In the United States, particuShe has accepted employment this summer with the Public Defender"~
larly, ·sweating is· not . something
·•
Oft"ICe in Fayette Coun!y, W.Va.
.
: • .
,
0.
people want to do. or like doing,"
RITUAl. OF JEWELS
; 1 says Michele Ezynal, a spokesper~i- Garnma Epsilon Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi con4ucted the Ritual of
~, son for· The Gillette Company in
Jewels ceremony•on March 20 at the home of or. R.R. Pickens in-Pomeroy.
Boston, which maintains a sweat
Ansie Roush waS indlleted into the proer, aftei which meiqhers enjoyed the
lab to try out new fonnulations for
Ritual of Jewels tea.
its Right Guard and Soft &amp; Dri
Susan Well 'asked to ao on leave.
.
. ·
•
sweat-busters.
i TJle Fair, ads were.diStributed with each member asked tq take four ads
"It's not so much sweating, but
and bring hack tile money at the. April 3 meeting.
. · · .
the odor associated with it," Ezynal
Programs for ~ounder's· Day were 'reviewed. lbc .art department ;~t Eastsays. Sweat is the human body's
ern High School is making decorations for the event.,Members were asked
princip~l way of tegulating temperto bring their money for the.Founder's Day dinner to the next meeiing. Memature. When thil)gs get too hot - ·
bers were reminded to bring a gift for their secret sister to .the Founder:s Day
through exencise. climate, an IRS
BOOY'S COOLANT • DOn't sweet It If you want to tJ. liked by otherpeople In moat social sltua·
·dinn~r. to be hel&lt;l on Thursday, April24 at tbe Blenner~ssett Hotel-in Parkaudit - glands under '?"r skin pro- lions. Though sometimes seen as undealrabl• sweat Is the human body's principal way of regula!·
ersburg, W.Vn.' ·
·
.
duce sweat to cool things off.
.lng temperature. When things get too hot- ~rou'gh exerclte, climate, an IRS audit- glande under
. Scholarship applic~tions have been sent to Meigs High School fOI\ intcrSweat is a more efficient tern- our skin produce sweet to cool things off.
ested students. ·
··
, '· perature c.ontrol tha~ a dog's pa~ I day grew hotter, says Ezy 0 al.
· doing, what your emotional state is, oranges," Kohl says.
.
}'he clecti.on of officers will be held at the next meeting. . .
'
or a horse s lather. says Dr. R•cha&lt;
Southern ladies at a dance a hun- what your overall health is," says
Pher.omones, schmeromones.
Attending were Patty Pickens, Judy Williams, Rhonda Ketchum, Nancy
L. Dobson. professor of_ d~atol- dred years-ago held hand coolers, Kohl. "On a subconscious level, Dobson says sweat·is sexy'for some
Campbcl_l. Darla Staats, Angie Roush, Pam Diddle and Eleano_r McKelvey;
ogy ·at the !'-'!~•cal Umversny of ice-box chilled crystal eggs · that your pheromones are going.lei give because eKercise -, for men and
.. ,South Carobn~ •n Charleston.
kept their palms dry.
·' away even the stage of your 'men- · Womerf J!.! 1iS itl" 'fa'shion. •
And sw9atmg •s. certamlr less
In the late 1880s, Mum intro- strual cycle."
·
"Because sweating is part of
messy than r~lhng 10 mud hke .an duced the first commercial deodorThe ·more someone sweats, the physical exertion, it also is accept'.' .overheated rh~noceros . or unnaung ant. Today, there are about 65 dif- more pheromones yackety-yak able," he says. "But only accepton. your leg, hke emu who need tO-. 1erent brands. After World War II, about that person.
able under well-specified social sitch•ll out. .
. ·
weekly baths evolved into daily
"What is it about a hot, sweaty uations."
.A program on congestive heart failure using a film, "Heart to Heart" wao
· No ammal, 10 fact, ·sweats as baths or showers and "the idea of man thai sometimes seems auraeSubsequently, weight-lifting
pre!ented by Lenora I-eifheit when the Rock Springs Bet~ Health Club Wll:'
profusely as a h.~man. (In barn- . offending became part· of our cui- tive?" Kohl uys. "One thing is that sweat is good; boafdroom sweat is · held at the home QfHelen Blackston.
·
.
yards, P,',gs sneer, You sweat hke a · ture," Dobson says. ·
he's producing more of the male bad.
· Vice President' Phyllis Skinner conducted tlic meeting with the Lord*
Prayer and the Pledge of Allegiance. {llackstoll had devotions titled "ThC
••· human. ) .
..
"What·human beings have done pheromones."
.
.. . , ~nd no animal has the abllny 10 is regard. natural odors as being
However, pheromones are mereFirst Crocus", "Rencctions" ·and "A Gift of Spring".
;
So sweat boils down to this ' . nd 1tself of heat as efficiently. Con- · inappropriate," says Dobson. "Per- ly 'messengers, Whether someone time and place.
I Officer rcport,s were given and dues were collcctcil.
•
'r sequen~ly, · humans . are able to fumes, aftershave, bathing - · any- finds the message attractive
Thank you notes were received from Helen Goeglein. Nina Swishel'.
'·' cndu~ Intense heat generated from thing \O inhibit nonmil body odor depends on past experience and
'.'People wbo think it's sexy to
Phyllis Monis, Emma Broderick and Gertrude Finlaw tor Christmas treat'
given to them.
·
,
- · sus~med cxenct,se.
. .,
_ are considered far more appro- a.sociation, .\\lhich ·begins at birth sweat, don't think its sexy all the
' Horses don t r~n five mtlcs at priate than natural odors... we're and often, is not within conscious time," Ezynal says. "Women and .
Donations were made to the American Lung Association, Silvation Army
and March of Dimes. ·
·
.
'' a stretch, ~bson says.
distinguishing ourselves. from per· grasp.
men ~ork.ing up .a sweat rollerblad·
' • · Sweat 15 . secreted from two sons in society considered less fas- ·
Some call' this lov~ at firs! sight : ing are.looked at as powerful. But if
Refresliments for the infinnary for March were taken by Nancy Morris.
"' type~ or ~lands. .
.
tidious. Being fast;dious marks you Actually, it's love at first smell . you put the same people at a dinner
April rcfreshmeqts will be laken by Dorothy Jeffers and Peggy Crane. ··
r.! ·• Exerctse turns on the ec_
cnnc as a member of the upper class."
And it c~plains why sweat is a tum- pany, it's 'Wow! Why arc you
Athank-you note was sent to Helene Gocglein for a donation to the club.
'' ' sweat. Jlands concentrated m the . Then why do we sometimes on·for some; a turnoff for others.
sweating?' ... It's a weird sociolog'The April ~t~ccting will be hosted by Nancy Monis with a program by ·
Helen Blackston and contests by Barbara Fry.
·
·
' •
. und~rarms, . !'alms and soles.. consider sweat sexy. i.e. the sweat"Some like apples. some like ical, psychological phenomenon ."
The
contest
wa.&lt;
conducted
by
Dorothy
Jeffers
with
winners
being
Fran· ' Eccnnc S\Yeat IS compose~ mostly soaked shirt that clung to Matthew
::; of water and salt and doesn t usual- M~&lt;:onaughey's chest in "A Time
cis Gocglcin and Phyllis Skinner. The hostess servod refreshments to Helen
ly stink.,
.
.
To Kill?"
Goeglein, Dorothy Jeffers, Phyllis Skinner, Lenora Leifheit and Nancy Mor- ·
.
.
.
.
EmQtlo.nal excitement· turns on · Credit pheromone·s. those little. the · apocn~e sweat ~lands un~er understood and very controversial
Look to language if you want to know how ambivalent a culture is
lll1TUI and. tn the grom. Apocr~ne chemical . signals delivered in
about anything.
.
~-·
policy-~---sw,eat, ,mt~ ~lly-slarts pumpmg sweat,
Here are some popular sayings about sweat.
•n an effon to provide our readership with current news, the. Sunday
at pubeJ'l)', IS nch 10 org~n1c mat~r·
. Pheromones, perceived through
, · - Don't sweat it.
•
Times-Sentinel
will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of the
~· ; i!!l' tha~; when ·~o~bled by bacten~. the nose; are lattletales that reveal
- · No sweat!
event.
·
p{OduCfli the dJsuncllve odor deh- information on a. subHminal level,
- One .part inspiration, two parts perspiration.
Weddings submitted after the 60-day deadline will appear during the
i:;· ,catel~ lptown as B.O.
says James Kohl. author of "The
-Don't ever let them see you sweat.
week
in The Daily Sentinel and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
.
.-. . lt . ~e!"l that hlul ~~ns hhave . Scent of Eros: Mysteries of Odor in
·- . Working'up a sweat.
ff
All
club
meetings
and
other
news
articles
in
the
society
section
must
be
.,, all"ays med to sme ....uer t an Human Se.xuality.. (Continuum;
- Don "t sweat the small stu .
submitted within 60 days of occurrence. All birthdays must be submittell
· ~~ their JIMidl n•turally allow . . In , s24 _9S).
-He's sweating bullets.
within 6d days of the occurrence.
··
' ..
·
, dyn~ 'Egypt, people wore perPheromones "can tell another
-Sweat equity. sweat box, sweat factor, sweatshop.
All material submitted for publication is subject 'to editing.
.
fu~:f411ed cones of _wax that person what your hormones an:
-Horses sweat. men 'perspire, women glow
·
'

CELLULAR PHONES

PRICES"

'

..

[

"Ji'ACIORY DIRECI'

.Tomorrow, l'·m going to tell you
abuut ·my personal experience as a
"shoplifter."
~ qu tba 1o Anal .,.,...,
Creaton S7adlcate. 5T17 W. CeJt..
hlry Blvd., Suite 700, Loa ADa~
· Calif. 90045
·

8

Co.

Wlnled•IIIIJ•-·"'"

713-- Dtlfa, .ll a IIMOH
Ewr.lfll&amp;
•
-

·- - ·

Bur u.._

,Wanted To
llllllle
H-. CoN: ,.tli!-414&lt;0111 Or

1

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_pan«ap, 'T•FDII11,1117

The Dlllly 11£lllftiii•Page11
•

NO Cro••word

Pu••••

PHILLIP .
ALDER

'J ;'.,I, 1 I ;,l

torllll

INI«

• K Q 10 I I
• Q 10 7 I
• KI

410 Houul tar Rent
3-oom Oldw fetm Houuln

c.n..,.,..
Re..,.,.. a Dlpoeft
R1q d eel 114 '110 IDSI

• Ks
11u "azda an, tour oloor, 1

-

Local Vend. Rte. For Sale. Big 1811, 14X70 Carral•n. 3 llodCill1 Weakly. Call 1-IOO·a11 · 11+2CS-1517
ooom,111d\Ea '·~
1112 14170 2 0 , ...... 2 8doo.
llrloo Kllehln, Cennl &amp; Air,
Caihodral Calling. Ellra CIUnl
Good Condl~on, •14,100, Will
~ 11+-1411, 11+2!111311.

230

new •r,pllancoa; Nfartncao I

depot ~ no omolllto. 304-17111112.
Smill ...aaga.

-

lot 1 _

udii~L

...

30+17J1.

I 4
eae 5 •

~

30 1111111, S1aotl 080, 11+
- 2ICM oi't14-7~
18M Dada• Spirit Runo Good,
•1..1100. 010 11+21R002 Aft!it

IDr Con1truction WOtklrt or
T . . - - , 114-448-2115

.1711/mo. pfUt

Thriving Co10r1n1 Buolne'aa I
aqulprnano tor lifo. Prlcod upon
~on. 30+1~2111 or 30+

17&amp;-2111.

Furnfahod 01 Unllirnflhad 2 Ia a
Badroom, Short Tomo fwlfllllflhJ

NewiJ' decol'llr.ct ar. bu•ment.

e II

-..,no ru~ mow runo-

.

PIOIHIIonli
Servlc:el

Trallar lollor ,., In II~
11+002·7317.

...,000.

=;..;..;=-----..,..-.

rna

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Pia

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Pua
Pua
Pua

Opealng.lead:• 2

Stating
the unnecessary

there

Lut year,
wu an article ill
The New York TID181 about the mmatch betweeu Garr~ and a ·

Far Sale,

And2G~ 1

MY 'l&gt;lftiS yl0~kiNG1

%'M ' A~NOST f)Oy/H
'\._--:._ TO WHAT ~ i&gt;II&gt;"'T

. ¥1AN7' .TO

ftt' UP TO! . ..
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t..:;:-) .

.,... 'wait ·N ri ....

All"••w·
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Job

cllpUII

,VUinerUle: J:ut..Weat
Dealer: North

Siiii"l;iOiUiiiiC:id--

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1183 louin, 14170, - roam•. twa bathl. konl penh.
An&lt;ly't Lown llowlng Service. c1ac1c, hill """"" oufJUII!I·
lnge, al1 acrH of land, can bt
~anwsorn.
.
-at11Anna--oy;
114-1'61 41114
420 Moblli Homll
HARTS ·IIASONARY • Blocll,
Freezer, Washer, Drrer. VCA,
lotlclt&amp;.-.0rk,30J_.II·
Rtfrlger~~tars, UJctowave, 114·
for Rent
1106
1
lxiO
Rodman
Daluaa;
I
WM"IeiiiCio rMIOnabllt ratn. 304a.12:11.
'
185-;111111 oro. 8:110pn\ no job 111 Bedroom•. 2 Balli• Wllh Air, 12d0 2 -.orna. Locar.cl On
11arw
Eaoraa.
"""'
Nice,
T.O.P.
or
-Rood. eu 44831187. .
0000 USED APPLIANCES
-or 101110. Wll-021311
laiiCd114 •• 0571.
Wathero, dryera, relrlgoratora,
HUI Top lMm Care. Call lor 11M 1111 3 ·lledroomt I Balli. CA. Z Bedroom Tral~r. 1 Mile From ranaet. Sllagga Applllltlcat, 71
WUI Taka Pay Off, 11+311-0301, Holzoft, County Sdlooit. 1300/ VIne lhrH~ Can 114•....a•7!111,
Mo., PIUI Dtipooi~ 11+4411o7321 , 11·-~~-~3~1111~=---:-:-:-Llvlnglton'l b&amp;aement water- 114 381
AIIIt 7 P.M.
"proofing, all be11meno repalro 1117 14a70 .2 or a Bidroo.m. ·
l&lt;llohen CariJIIte.~ rd. Salt on
done. frea ttdmatee. Klo~a •116 down, • 1111mo. Only
11 2 Sldroom Vtfy Clean Carpor~ o1 ~ Aoom SIB llooly1a 11+.
1
guorantea. 1Qyit on job taporl· Oakwood llomH,
ljllra, wv. .3 0+ Hett ......... No ...... I'DIIIt 111M, Ill 12"1 ·· . .
-~2148. .
· .
11 ...-1100·
766-158811.
·
.
Sofa chair U50. Bunf bedo wl
2 btdnlom. gu hea~ 2 niloo tram . manrooa. Codar chooi. Curio.
Rudand out Now u . . Rd., 11~·
oultt. P11111t and .....
742·2100or81+742-2421.•
Couotry Furnlu,.
. R12 N Pt Pl.... ,
2 Sodrooma. Addlaon Arao. No IIC.C-UoollioyL
Pttl, ·~!full Have 2 Reftrence1
Ad&amp; Oapollt. 814-317·1111.
Uaod Furnln 130 luloMie Plitt,
s T-.lllt • 30+175-1018.
2br n1Jer 6n 'MidtiiJ!Drt. ,....... 81dl. Uattrllltl, Color T.V,
AnliNTION FLOOD VICnlll •
c - ~. eou-. ct.~ro.
•3287·
Ollotnat, Much lloro I 14-441·
Help It On flo WoJ. lmmadlota • &amp; clopolll
- For Rent: 1 Bed· 4712 H11 10·4, We Buy Uaod
Doffvory On Or
Pro-Ownad 10 Ft Trllltr
__,.In
Homot. We Will Wor~ Dfrocdy - . No ""' Dapotf1. RaFt ...... Fuml!ure.
thll
tsltbtlet to
With Intranet Companr. Over Oo,l1+387·n43.
Ill F - FJ~ !lo&lt;Jsii1Q kJ.
AntlqUel .
1130
Two Hundred .Homot Avallablo
ol1111- mol&lt;o8h lloglll
For lmmodllll Deffvtfy. cau 1. Nice 2 Badroomt, 1221/Uo., 8
1011-25!·5070 Cradlo Approval In llflto Down 211, Nice, Rolarenc- Buy or 1111. ill¥orine Antfquoo,
10 odvoillle •any ""'-·
lfmiWion or olfiCIIIiilllaiiOn
10 Mlnuttt. WI Will Pay Up To ·-· Dopooll Roqulrad, 11+441- 11114 E. Main
on AI. 1,114,
'
bliNd on,...;, color, !lllglon.
POm,.-o,. Houro: U.T.W. 10:00
Twa -k• Molal,Or fill llonlla 8172, 114-2SH261.
. LOll. .. f:OO p.m., Sundoj I :00 ..
-~~on~~o~lllllliiornadonal
Lot Rant Wo'lf llaka 'illu Foal AI Nlco Cltan 2.0tdroom
e:oo p:m. 114·112·2521, Ruoa
origin. ..- any lnlenlfon 10
Homo _ Ag~ln. WillWOOD Homo For Ron~ 3 Ulloa
NOIIIIIIIOW,
INC.
.
""""'any"""" prelt......
Goflp(lls. 01+2111-151•.
llmllleon 01 dllcrlmlnation.•
1140
Mllcellneoue
Dl "" " - ' ,.,._ ·. Thrt! l&gt;iodioom mobflt homo. ..,..
wo he¥• •1000 oo uooo par aide or Pomaroy, 114·882·1031
lllln:hlncllle.
Thll new1~per wtl not
homo
In
dlootttt
rtfftl
Iundt
tcnOwtlo 9'1 IICilllfll
1523 lbo Tobecco For Loaot In
avalllbft 111 htfp you ll"rchall a
--oi81118foriHIIIII1e
ropfactmont homt. Call 1-800· Two Bodroom 124S Monill UOO Gala Co. Cllf 11+371-2174
- I t In -liOn of tile law. 411·7171 to 111 appolmmonclot Dopoal~ llldwll. Roltfancao, No
1171 ~ SA 2110 ~ Ga...
hereby
'"-tt, P1iJ Uilffde' Available 411111 nne
Waldlnt llachlnL 4 e Lug
lnfonned 1\11 all dnel -..,.
87 eu 388 8312
Rally
&amp;
Cloavy Alu·
FAClORY
DIRECT.
idvwtMd k'l thlll n• 'IPIPf'
NO Mlllll.E IIAN.
ora avallabltonan llqUII
i4o~'Pi;tiiiiiiiii~-~·
mnum
Running
11oan11 Fll.lllflz·
440
....
But SNifd,
11+31M106.
SAVE an.
_,.,ntybull.
Oallwciod Home• Ia the onlr
1117 lroc
•s.200: 25 Fl.
deaJer In tt\e trl-1tate lrtl that
Eleclflc Foil With A .70 Amp
loulldo an~ IIIII lhelt • OWn
lloioo •100: 11 HP•Riotlng·
I\OiioH. Fol' lacto&lt;Y dlrtol pricea. 1 and 2 - . . ..,.,-. '"~ ·
HLIIL !:.S TAle
nfiihod..., unlumliihod, aecu~oy lawn llower $260: ~50 Gallon
dopooll "''llilrod, no poll. 114- Fuel 011 Ttn~ .36, AIMrl .. n
1112-2211.
Saddle ··1,000, 114387-G211.

food
• 811111
7 DJd a blllarL"'I!

• A KI I I 5

5~.11.

241Safwliprn.
I
NICI, Vory CIHn, 2 Sad.- 1510
room Houaa. r~ GalllpoUa Cltr
Goocll
lfmlto, Convonfant To High _ _ _ _..;_..,..;......;...,..__,
SChoof a S..,.o, Non-8mofloio,
R
dl'' nod
No. Pooa.
· A:f.lfoadon, Crodlt Appllancao:
ocon uO
Wathero. Dtyero. Ranae4,,Rofrl.
Chtclc, Dopo I, a LHM, Rant grotoro, 10 Day Guaranteal
Plut Udllllot. Available 4/llh, French i:ltr llaroag. 114·441·
114 44031B1For~
1715.

v.,

·~
I ' m&amp;IIOI·Conaumed

~

• a 71

-

t lll.nlcll

a Uon'~ 10111111
• Ami bone

EM&amp; '
6A:J41
.• 2
I A lO 7 2
• Q J 7 2

J4

_.t,lllr,
loiutblue
- co6Df
hi,1 ""'"'"
......
boll)' tltlll

r

-~IC!e !'

program numlng on a,~t- b-+-+--lf-f-+er. Above tbe text wu a , .
ol
ICUparvv beside a,tomptlter JI!OIIIIor.
The caDtlon.wu: ."Tbe etll'lilnt world
clleu ~:!eft.~ '
.. '
CELEBRITY CIPHER .
Tnle, ill 20 yeUI we mtpt .need to
'
.
by LUll Cempoa
inelude .tbat differentiation. Yet I
c.~~twty~et;;l , . . . . . cr-..rromQI 1 r •brt.mou.P~CPt. ,...*~
doubt a computer, 11¥111 a world cbeu
cbamploa computer, will become
a target for tbe paparllll.
At~ bridge table, IOIIIetlmea de'I LA X
!iZNO ,
HSHA
'8LYLOW
leaden make 1ill,y aipal1 that help
· decll{er lllllfe tllu putaer. Mon 0/·
RPHW · DZW,
'c J z w VZJJI'
YZJJI'
tea, thou&amp;II.IMY,doll't alpal clell1y
-uaJLii! ibl4.clell, '1\DW abould th;e ' R L T H
RPZR
T HZBD
PZI N BE
. e:u:·· ill tourtwoheartJ '·after ~~~~ hal ,.
' ~ .• ' ,'

....,_....

. sOuths:t.J...·Iri...,A·filiu-,... il , .,

dub cue-Ill~ but lie dldli't.llloie 1116 ioolt
· ol.bla tbtee IcwiOiplidiiol U J11'1i¥!1!llrl be,.·
' ' • JllUdeDl decialon ,. . ' ' ' ' \
· It lla't recaiameaded IIi leild a iln&amp;lttoo illtlwnillY'1 .._ .llllt, ~ Jiere it
... the Wlf Ill cllr,ai ~· CGIItrac:l.

~l!:',:.";.:::t':
-aadretumedtbe'ropadelour.How·

Tl-.
Z·••

e.er, tbiillooted llu a low-apot to .
Tblalllnalt wu
· a IIUlte-.........
... ~~
ent:e alpal fCII' ciuba, ·after rum111.

w-.

e':l·
. with •

.WIIIt.QrllebeJIIII
~·
. rema
~I
wotarump• an dace,
C11'11dwed •a
DIna
conce
14Ct'111 tbe ,.,.,..,'~~" - · ·
.
. "DDda't)'IIUHe tbit.tbe IJIIICie tbtee

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( C M R R D Y FA E P

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DRZAE HJ J •

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'ReligiOn It a way ol walking, not a way ollalkfng.' Qean Willam

R. ~·

·

· .

·.

. w;::' S{C..,..\\~
..-~_4J.~S·
..
,
~

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·O lout
''" •••
1a11art ol
IICOOOiblad _.to
law to 1anoo four - •·

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=·=:·s =·s~-I. . . .

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~:.-..:r::~th ... bld·l...

ill&amp; lt. Wh.1 didn't )'qU r$1'11 the apade
Jodc? It 1IIIUkl be lmpouible flir me Ill

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""·~. lrrs-. r1-::-TI.....,..I-1
. • • • •

"::::;;~::::;::~~
..., , T R H I M ~=~'

. A cutle told her vain bOyfriend that; 'A dog is the only
... thing on earth that loves you
.--N,.,....,I'""F'=-=-s-:1:-.~H--,1 more than - • does -- - ---

5
•

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-r·

1810 Fltaowlng 1r Willi Awnt!J .
1171 Wlldarnau 26' Wllh
1175 Mallard 27' Wllh . Awni~Q
1
1 1 1 - .- ·
01(114-441-1511

Now lank Rtpo'ol Dnlr 3 loh.
owntt lfnonclno available. 304·
766-7111.

a...-

Own jililr now HUD

IOU Nltoon mini molor hollll.

:104-eJ&amp;-2141.

homiit· -ely

lor lnotant oiOIIVtf)'. Ttldo-ln wof·
como. Your choice: 2BR, S850
- . . only 11711/mo. 38R 11 ,050

'

I

11M FtNi!, THANK I(OIJ ..
t&lt;JNDiltW'fEN .?

Size Speclat• 1t•IO·Your~ for
only .1.450 down U3111mo. All•
homo• Include doflvorw and Ml·
up. 1·S,r. _.nty, 1Jt. olhoine- BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
ownerl Insurance paid In full. BUDGET PRICES AT J/IIJKSON
Plul'lf you cal now, your choice ESTATES, 52 WillWOOd Orfvo
ollrea aklrdng or limo. kH lol rrom 1210 111 1334. Wllk ·oa lhop
"reno 0 patll of JOUr cholct. No &amp; movlao. Call 114·441·2511.
appNcatlon ttluoadfl Phona In Equal -.trig~
your lrH apPIFc:,llon loa- p,...,..
pro¥11110 te0e)413-at3. I no an- . llotich St Middleport. 2br fur·
Rfl' 1~ JWM ancl number on nf- apt. ullldolpolld, dtpooll
IMCtint.
&amp; • • • II SOt M2-2:Wtll Rlpl., Homtt 304·372· Furnlthed 3 Rooma I Balh, No
a400. Now 21~41, 3br, Zllalh, .,.., RolooooiCI And o.,oott Re001. .17,-. . . . , .,
quited, 114-448-1511.

,.., I

j

11 j 441 0111 Alter a P.M.

ClorltVSI'III ·.
271 N. SaoondMI~fgport 011814112-tlt•

.

'fES; t'M DOIN6 RNE
KINDER6ARTENWISE .. •

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r= I I I

DOES

I I -II I I I I

SC!IAM &amp;ITS ANSWERS

1183 Hy·lfno a2 FL C~a
looded Willi All Of)llont, Eo
·
lint Con&lt;!idon. No Palo Or
fila•• 11,600. Alto, 1813"""'
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