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Pomeroy • Mlddl,port, Oh~

Page 10 • The O.llj 'SIIttliMI

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app.etite
. Powerful·
.
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1Y MALCOUI HI I I ER
AJt SCience Wtlw

In a new

• IC8d for developing a pil110 help peoplt: corlttol their weight. scientists
repoiled today that they have idenli·
fled a powerfUl appetite suppressor in
me brain.
Tite substanCe made rats cut back
on· feeding by up 10 95 percent and
sho11Id have a similar effect on
humans, researcher Dr. Stephen
BloOm·said.
Scientists might need only two
·years or so to develop a pill for
human testing as a way to fight obesity, ·~aid Bloom. professor . of
endocrinology .at the Royal Post·
J11111uate Medical School in London
and a researcher at London's Hammersmith Hospital.
The substanCe is called glucagon·
. like peptide·1, Or GLP·l. Scientists
hild known it Clid somelhing in the
brains of mammals but didn't know
'

1"111111 ;,

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·ohio Lottery

··n:u 1 ... , .
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Shula steps
down as
Miami ~:oach ·

suppressor works in .rats. ..

what. The new work suggests it is a
lcey pan of the brain's regulation of
food intake.
GLP· 1 and the brain-cell struc·
rures it acts on are found in·a pan of
the brain called the hypothalariius, ·
which regulates appetite and other
·
basic behavior.
While the SJJbstimce has been
tested only in the rats, GLP-1 is found
in the hypothalamus of people and,it.
acts on similar structures, so Bloom
said he is highly.certain that GLP-1
has the same role in people.
I_n a study reported in today's issue
of the journal Nature, Bloom and 1\is
colleagues injected GLP·I into Ute
brains of rats. In animals that hadn't
eaten in 24 hours, the injections
reduced food intake by up to 95 per·
cent, depending on the dosage.
Rats injected with GLP-1
"behaved like any animal does after
it has a meal," Bloom said. "It gets
sleepy, it grooms itsClf, it doesn't
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~YORK (AP) -

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moye around SGmuch.': Th~t shows :
GLP-1 was cutting appetite by mak·
ing the rats feel full rather than sick;
he said.
·
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Scientists also tested a su~stance
that blocks the effect of GLP-1. The
blocker more than doubled food
jntake in rats that were full already,
suggesting tbatj t was interfering with·
the rats ' GLP-1 stoj&gt;-eating signals.
In slarVing rats the blocker had no
effect, presumably because the hun·
gry rats had no GLP-1 signal to be
blockelt.
.
. Bloom said the researchers plan to
study GLP-l's relationship to the
r~ently discovered substance leptin,
anothj:r signaler of satiety, which is
created by fat cells .and acts on the
brain. One question is whether leptin
does its job by turning on produ~t)lln
of GLI~· Iln the brain, Bloom said.
To turn th.e GLP-1 research into a
pill for people, scientists might look
for a subs1ance that acts like (/LP-1

but can reach the bnljn after
swallowed, be sa}d: .
Another poss1b1hty would ·be
devise a drug that slows the nabinl
breakdown of GLP-1 so that it
longer than normal, he said. That
drug would be effeetive only if a. ~r­
son already is full and therefore has
~he GLP-1 SJgnal..
Such a drug m1ght make fat .
pie eat less l)ut not help anorex1cs
starve themselves, he said.
..
Timothy Moran of Johns ijopkins
University in Baltimo~, who studies
the bod,y's regulation of appc!ite, said
Bloom s study contaJns coriVitl~n~g
evidence that GLP-1
.
.controlling food int~.
in rats have generally been shown
apply to people, he said: ·
At least four other kinds of
tides - substances built up
amino acids - alsq serye .as
body's apPetite-suppressing signals,
he said.
•

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MIDDLEPOIIT •. Middleport Lit·
erary Club meeting 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public Library with Mrs.
Dwight Wallace, hostess. Mrs. James
Diehl will review Ladder of Years by
Anne TYler.

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Vol. 48, NO. 175

$17,949

·Documents show pulp
mill seeking tax breaks,

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The cOIIrthou11 atltue 1 Union army soldier peer~ Into
, the ..ty Frldlly morning horizon with • treeh blanket of anow
draping hllehoulderl. The Bend area waa covered by nearly two
lnchea of anow overnight Thursday, as all three county school
dlltrlcta eanc:elled clu- for Frldlly due toJl1e Inclement wuther. (Sentinel photo by Tom Hunter)

,----Local briefs·-.....,
Theft of money investigated

The 51st annual reullion of long-time frie\ds, Kermit Fisher of Gal.'
lipolla and Virgil Walker of Racine, Io;ft, was held recently at High Country, Eagle Rid11e, Racine. This year they were joined by B. J, Diddle of .
Racine.

applepie.

·
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&lt; .
MASONUMW
Each received gift bOxes conlllln·
The Mason 't:Jhited Methodist
ing 18 personal items"and were also Church has a drive underway for
given gifts of money. They also each funds to build a new church.
received gift trays of homemade · The piuposed new building )Viii
. fudge. Drew Webster Post 39, of replace the existing facilitY and will
Pomeroy provided each veteran with include a sanctuary, educational
rooms, a fellowship hall, and a mod·
·
-· ..
a $5 cash gift.
· Members going from Unit 39 .em kitchen.
were Jane Snbuffer, Mary Martin,
The building's one floor plan will
and Gladys CumJD!ngs.

be hanllicapped accessible)
construction of the new building
existing one will be removc;d
replaced with a parking area. •
A C8J11paign to raise money for
project has already started. Friends
tho church; area businesses and
nizations who would like to
tribute are asked to contact the ch~IJ'Ch
at773-5211, Rev: Damon Rhodes.

·

brother, the Rev. Gail Burbeck of
Olive Branch, Miss.
Mrs. Mildred Phillips · spent
Christmas with hcirdaugliter, Marilyn
Wilt ~!rid family.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane S!anley's
I'I!Cent guests were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Williams, Phoet)ix, Ariz. Mr. and
Mrs. Sidney Townsend, Columbus;

Bend Area Reflections
By TOM HUNJl?R

.
Meigs Local School Board. Joining
This is the first'm a senes of week· l!lnes on the first Meigs board were
ly columns-in which·we'll look back · Mrs. E.O. Rilil, Virgil King, Hiram
on wme of the ne~s and eVe~ts diat Slawtct and W,i!liam King. ·
have shaped memori~s
the Bend
'Iilil Siate Board of Education was
area for many ·over the past half·cen• considering· recommendations that
tury. The recollections will ~ng back SI.!I million be awarded to the Meigs
· many memories for those readers Local SchOol District_1£1 aid in con-,
who Jived through these events, and struction of the new comprehensive
brio&amp; many of us in \he.&gt;Y.otinger g~n- high school at Rock Springs.
er'alions an enlertainillg look. at Metp
The lltYf 1966 Ford Mustang Six
County's yesterdays.'
hardtops were jus! arriving at Keith .
1&gt;5 we look back at .~ week of Goble Ford in ~iddleport, and a
Jan. l.through 7, 19~6~ readers ofThe three-piece chicken dinner was on
Daily ·Senti~! fony .Years ago.were sale for 93 cents at Crow's Steak
ftlling'ourmadbag w1th Clltnes 1n the House.
"Mystery '4'"" contest. The offi~
In sports, ~art S!arr and the Green
steff would select a mystery man tn Bay P!!Ckcrs beat t!te tlten Cleveland
me'i c,ont.II)Jin\iy a!l'l giv~ 1i .clue tO 'Browns ~3-12 for- their third NFL
~9ft; ti)C contest: For:ev~ry day ·the Cha!l)pion11hip since 1961. Who
mysu;rw ftUIIl would go untdcnulied, ' would' have thought then .t~at the
f~ for the winnerwotild·go up Colts would, le~~ve ,Baltimore for.
$1 .' florence :so~tith ?.f: Butternut. 'lndianapcjlis and be replaced by the ·
Avenu~ identified mystery MI!D Browns?
.
· Betbol ColoJnan of Lineoln Smt.
Work on the $12 million new ,
Midd~•.br the clues "~k fi~ Racine l-ocks and Dam project was
10 • dluJ'Ch and man of' tO! I. Snuth -nearing compleilon during this week
wa the Winner ofSS.
.
,25 y..-s aao. in 1971. The work, by
· In ~· the 19S6·POmeroy High the Johnson Construction Company,

of

and Mrs .. Steven Stanley and Bobby Arnold ,They also visited
children, Norwich; and. '-'&gt;rene and and Kathy Arriold, Jeff and ,c.,:u •
George Scott,' Nelsonville.
.
Bole and attended services
Mr. and Mrs: George Lowery and Chun:h of Christ. Doug is a ministeJ
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lowery traveled to of a church in Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania for the burial of Mrs.
Vladymyr StHanovych,
George Lowery's mother. She died . exchange student residing at the
here while visiting her daughter.
home of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole, vi~~
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Shamblin of ited Snowshoe Resort over the holi·
Pennsylvania visited over the holi· days.
days wilh her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

'

TALON ES

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RiC'*" .Jpna. jllon beiJ,
rice.......- of~ farmers lank . bowll·-16.

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A 14-year-old Albany motorist was cited following 'a two-car collision on slate Roule 681 Thursday around 3:50 p.m.
.
• ~i,n~cMa us Athens, was nortbbounJI whe"· a-ow.llrivel! .by
·c~t
f1&gt;'Augustino (ailecfio. yield..the right of wa~ and sln!ck
her car, ~~:cOOling to report.from the Me1gs County Shenffs Depanment. •
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Light damage was reported to McManus' 1995 Oldsmobile and
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·
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D'Augustino's 1986 Dodge
D'Augustino was cited to the Meigs County Juv!!mle Court for failure to yield and no operator's license. No injuries were reported.

,

4 c:yt, I ipd, t./C, Ill, N,
PW, PDL, tilt, 111'11111,
AM1F11 Cillo More.

The filing deadline for placing issues and levies on the March bal·
lot passed Thursday, with two school bond issues filed for placement
on the primary ballot, according to Board of Elections director Rita
Smith.
.
Eastern Local School officials have filed for a 4.5 mill, $1.5 million bond issue t~efit construction, reconstruction, and otlter
improvements for buildings in the district, for the purpose of paying
the costs for purchase of classroom facilities from the slate.
Southern Local School officials have filed for a 6.10 mill, $4.2 mil·
lion bond issue· to help finance construction, reconstruction and oth·
er improvements for buildings in the district: for the purpose of pay·
ing the costs for purchase of classroom fac1hhes from the slate.

SUN BIRD

,.,-..................
I Dr, 4 OWl. I

••••II. 11/C,

sa,949•

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'H. NC, .... .
PI, PW, POL, tilt, ~

CM8,

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$9,949

Jack R. Slavin has announced his
intention to seek the Democratic
nomination for the Meigs County
Commission seat currently held by
Republican incumbent · Robert
Hartenbach, whose term commences
Jan. I, 1997.
A retired Meigs Local School
District teacher, Slavin attended the
University of Rio Grande and graduated 'from Ohio University with a
bachelor of fine arts degree. He is a
member of the ,American Cancer
Society of Meigs County advisory
board, and a member of the River·

· j

No il\Juries were reported following a deer/vehicle collision
on U.S. 33 near Pomeroy Thursday morning.
Larry Cleland, Chesler, reported a deer ran into the left side
of his 1992'Ford truck.
'

2 Or, 1.4 ...

&amp; Whiuemore Inc. of Rye Brook,
N.Y., was seeking to build the mill.
The Development Office wanted
to keep the documents secret, saying
releasing information about negotia·
lions could kill business-development
deals.
Parsons &amp; Whittemore has consistently declined comment on the
pulp mill and related matters. Gov.
Gaston Capertbn, a key mill booster,
had no immediate comment, spokeswoman Carolyn Curry said.
"''m amazed but not ·surprised.
The governor, in JUs zeal to secure the
mill,
has
clearly
gone
overboard,"said Steve White, director of the Affiliated Construction

Trade Foundation, a labor group also
fighting the mill. "It's time to rethink
this project. I think we can gel a be~­
ter deal."
Dana Davis, director of develop;.
ment services for the state office, sai\1
Parsons &amp; Whittemore likely woul~
never receive the full $738 million in
!ax breaks.
. .
"I donUt think you're going to~
profits that are going to see them pay
$73 million or $74 million in taxei
each year," Davis said.
.
But Parsons &amp; Whittemore still
could wipe out about 90 percent of itS
tax bill over the 10-year period
through the tax credits, Davis said.

Lisle contends it is owned by the
·village while Moore claims he owns
the property.
They are gojng to try to settle the
dispute.
"I'm going to insist it be seuled
and there is not going to be hard feel·
ings over this," Moore commented. ·
Also meeting was Muine
Vealmear. and Marvin Krider in
regard to adding rooms to Vealmeafs
trailer. Council approved as long as
the addition complies with state law.
In addition, Bill Cundiff met with
council concerning Ash Alley, portions of which council earlier agreed
to close.
Council must now pass an ordi·
nance on the matter and go through
other procedural steps before making
the closure official .
A bid from The"Pool People for
$7,711.50 to repair the pool was
accepted with work to begin as soon
as possible.
Connolly appointed Bill Roush,
Mony Wood and Eber Pickens Jr. to
be in charge of snow removal.
Council approved a tempor4ry
appropriation of $10,000 to be split

between the general fund and water
fund.
·
Also, council is now accepting
applications for pool manager and
life guards. Applications may be sent
to ClerkfTreasurer Janice Zwilling,
Box 266 Syracuse OH 45779.
Pickens reported the fire depart·
ment would like to purchase a $5,000
certific~te pf de~. Atequest that
was approved·by council.
The fire department is trying, to
save money to purchase a new rare
truck, he noted. The present fire truck
is 35 years old.
In addition, Pickens appealed for·
ideas on how the fire department can
raise money for the new truck, which
will cost around $132,000.
With the $5,000; the fire depart·
ment will now have close to $30,000
in savin.gs toward a new truck, he
explained.
He11tso stated that a sprinkler sys·
tern will be' placed in the truck bay
and that the department is accepting
applications for new fire department
members.
Council asked that a represcnta·
live of Cablevision meet with them in

regards to Cablevision's contract with
the village.
The mayor's report of $831 was
approved and Police Chief Tim
Gillilan reported issuing 14 citations
and investigating one complaint.
Connolly named the following
committees, with ' chairmen listed
first: ·street·· Bill Roush, Eber Pickens ,and. Mo~y ' Wo'od;· finince· ••
Crow, Larry Lavender and Roush;
ordinance ·· Wood, Pickens and
Crow; safety, fire and emergency ••
Pickens, Roush and Lavender; planning and development .. Donna
Peterson, Crow and Roush; recreation •• Lavender, Wood and Roush;
London Pool ·· Roush, Lavender and
Wood; news media·· Crow, Pickens
and Peterson :'health and sanitation·
. Wood, Roush and Pickens.
The treasurer's report showed the
following balances: general ••
$32,258.13; street construction •••
$23.306. 17; highway, $8,024.21; fire
department·· $7,743.19; water •• (·
$136.40); .pool ·- $76.04; guaranty
meter •· $3,029. 14; cemetery
$89 .21; total •· $74. 389.69.

Slavin to seek seat on county commission.

Deer/vehicle accident reported

)Juring month~ December...

.

~Eastern,

bend Arts Council advisory board.
During his 20-year tenure as an art
teacher in the Meigs Local School
District, Slavin was a four year assis·
tanl coach of the Meigs golf team,
and a member of the CORE. team on
drug and alcohol abuse. Slavin also
taught art at Wahama High School for
three years. He other occupational
experience includes two years as a
coal miner, and six years at the
Goodyear Rubber plant at Apple
Grove, W.Va.
He is a past member of the Unit·
ed Mine Workers and the United

Rubber Workers labor unions; an
active member for 20 years in the
Meigs Local Teachers Association ,
the Ohio Education Association, and
the National Education Association ;
served as past president of the Meigs
Local Teachers Association and was
on negotiation teams for 17 years. He
was a local delegate to the OEA Rep·
resentative Assembly for 12 years.
Slavin and his wife, Rita, also a
retired teacher reside in the village of
Syracuse. They have two daughters:
Shannon of Memphis, Tenn. and
Mary of Florida.

.

Southern school board·s
~pproVe sites
for
·new
buildings
.

me

~ bilskeltilll,t~'
by :~-~~~~. t~o~beijc~ornplete for a ,
,..__.ic
$~IMI, .O!JIIIIed c~
!he -.oR
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.~ Ohi..d!&gt;.....
wltlla 3.,_ .
. .I '·· 1~- r

"My office will be open to the res·
idents of Syracuse from 7 to 9 p.m.,"
newly-elected Mayor George Connolly told &lt;village council Thursd~y
night at his' first meeting as mayor.
Connolly expounded on his open·
door policy noting that there are
P..~Qbl,e,JIII r~~ille~ts ~i&amp;h.l • discuss
with him' rather than coming to a
council meeting. He noted that he
will refer any problems to council.
During a discussion in regard to
property that has been condemned,
Connolly slated "lets make the spring
project to clean up the town."
Council agreed that owners of
properties that have been condemned
will again be notified by lener and
will have 30 days to repair or tear
down buildings.
· Council named Kathryn Crow as
president, I. Carson Crow as village
solicitor and Robert L. Wmgelt as
grants administrator.
Meeting with council were Butch
Lisle and Dennis Moore concerning
Carleton Alley which has been contested by the two for s om~ timr.

·Deadline pass~s for issues

''

I;NGELS .CARPET
January Carpet Sale·•

By KA1'HR'!N CROW

Sentinel correepondent

Thursday night's snowfall was blamed iq a two-vehicle accident on
state Route IZ4 near Salem Center Thursday around 10:40 p.m.
Frank M. Colwell, Edmundson Road. was en route to the Salem
Township Fire House and slid left of center in the curve at Salem Center, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.
Colwell's IWI Chevrolet struck a weslbound 1991 Geo driven by
Tom Stover, Pomeroy. ·
Colwell's vehicle sustained light damage while damage to Stover's
was listed as. moderate. No injuries were reported.

I

'Mr.

credits over 10 'years, The Charleston
Gazelle reported.
That amount, nearly three-quarters
of the $1 billion price tag for the mill,
would be the largest tax break ever
granted by the slate, the Gazette
·
reported tpday.
Under the slate's "super tax" cred·
its program, companies are given taX
breaks for creating jobs. The mill
would create at least 520 jobs, the
documents show.
The state Supreme Court earlier in
the day ordered the office to make
about 150 documents public, upholding a Kanawha County ruling sought
by the Gazette. The newspaper want·
ed to know what incentives Parsons

'

Snow blamed in accident

--,~~---Harrisonville news-----~-""!"""

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ·
Opponents of a proposed Mason
C!Junty pulp mill says it's no wonder
the West Virginia Development
Office wanted to keep secret docu·
ments that show the developer wants
$738 million in tax credits.
''TThe public is goiJig to pay for
this project from start to finish .I think
people should be outraged," said
Janet Foul, project coordinator for the
Ohio Valley Environmental Coali·
tion, which opposes the mill.
Documents released Thursday by
the Development Office show that
the mill beside the Ohio River at
Apple Grove would be eligible for
about $738 million in "super tax"

New Syracuse nrayor plans open door policy

Youth cited in collision

..

..•

The Harrisonville Senior Citizens .
held a dinner and gifi exchange at the
town house. Sixteen members attend·
ed. •
·
Leodell Davidson who recently
underwent hip iurgery in a Parkers·
burg l!os~Jital is recuperating a1 OO..C.
Mrs. Louise Eshelman has
receivtd word Of the dealh of her

.

Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Depanment are investigating
the theft of money from an Albany woman Thursday m~ing, according to Sheriff J!lllles M. Soulsby.
.
Lori Saunders, North Star Road, reported S I ,000 was stolen from
her purse, Soulsby said.
· . . .
.
Charges are pending in the malter. The name of the mdiYldual 1s
belng withheld until charges are filed, according.to Soulsby.

'·

American Legion Auxiliary units
staged a Christmas partY for ve~nms
al the Sout~t Ohto Psych1atnc
Hospital in Athens recentlY,.
Units sponsoring the party wero
Vinton, Coming, Pomeroy, and Nelsonville. Games prizes were ~ward­
ed to the seven veterans preE-.nt. A
· chicken dinner was served to the men
along with dessert of pecan and

A Gennett Co. -PIP I(

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.........----Society scra·p book-----

~~·JildBlU~. ·.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 5, 1996

$14,449.

$14,449

LONG BOTTOM ·· Porterfield
Baptist Clowns to perfonn at 7 p.m.
Sunday .at the Faith Full Gospel
Church. Long Bottom.

A\J¥JtiAJlX ,,

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SUNDAY

RACINE •• Southern Local Building C~mmittec meeting Thursday, 7
p.m. in the high cafeteria.

.

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FRIDAY
POMEROY •• Meigs County
Pomona Grange regular meeting Fri·
day, 7:30 p.m. at the Hemlock
Grange Hall.

THtJRsDAY

Snow flurrt .., Iowa In ,,.
teens. Saturday,llght snow
High In 208.

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t' •

, LONG BOTTOM ·· Faith Full ,
PoMEROY •• Meigs County
Gospel
Church service Friday at 7
Library Board of Trustees meeting
p.m:
with
the Evangelist Don Miller
Wednesday, 10 a.m. at the Pomeroy
library' with architec~ for the Racjne · as guest speaker.
Branch ,Library.

•

Buckeye 5:
14-19-2G-24-27

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POMEROY·· Regular meeting of ·
the Big Bend Aotilla of the United
States Coast Guard Auxiliary Thursday, 7 p.m. at the Carpenter Hall. .
Public welcome. Members should
wear uniforms.

. 'MIDDLEPOIIT ·.. Pomeroy
Masonic Lodge 164 Regular..Meet·
ing, 7:30p.m., at Middleport.

•

4507

· RACINE ··American Legion Post
602, Racine, 6:30 p.m Thursday.
Dinner to follow.

WEDNI!!SDAY

·; =·dltiril '~M~ct_to

Pick 4:

RlTILAND- The Rutland Township 'lhlstees organizational meeting
Thursday, 6:30 p.m., at the Rutland
Fire Station.

...,..teed

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864

Sports, Page 5

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-Community calendar- ~Together · again-·-· .....

ne CoaimuDity Calendar .. .
pa.....W u afreetenic:c to-·
jroftt pociups wllhlna to 1111-C
IIMidaa and special. event&amp; The
celeadllr II DOl d 'pw4 to p101110te
IIIIa or fluid n1tcn oluy type.
llnll an prlated u spec:e permitl
ud qaaot be
tQ run •
~number of days.
' .~ ;
~

Pick 3:

'

s7,449

s7,~4~ · .
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: The following is a third in a series already holds licenses for 10 televiof reviews of 1995 news highlights tn sion stations and owns and operates
II radit. stations and 83 daily news.Meigs County.
papers,
assumes control of Multime• DECEMBER
f Dec. 1 •• The Stat Board of Edu· dia's holdings which include the Dru·
eation ap,proves funding to~al~ng ly Sentinel, .•Gallipolis Daily T~ ­
~10. ~ miilion for proposed bu1ldmg bune, Point Pleasant (W.Va.) Regis~ in the Southern and East· ter, and Sunday Times- Sentinel.
Dec. 5 •• $650,000 in slate Issue
em Local Schools. The planned con·
1tniclion of new K-8 schools, and II funding is secured for a proposed
fec6nsln!Ction and renovations to expansion project 'that will double
s;xiating facilities will occu~ w1th p~­ treatment capacity at the Tuppers
Pli.il!I-Che-sttr Water District water
lllge Of MUCh bond issues m the dts·
iricts to support local shares of.total treatment plant in Long Bottom.
Dec. 7 •• New :Syracuse mayor
'broject costs.
~· bee. 4 •• Media giants Gannett George Conriolly is sworn in with
.i;:o. and MUltimedia Inc. finalize their · other village Officials at the regular
$1.7 billiori merger. Gannett, who meeting of Syracuse village council.

,"".

oec: 9 ·· A Pos!al Rate Commis·

sion appeal of an earlier U.S. Postal
Service decisior(will delay the clos·
ing of the Shade post Office until at
•
least mid-year 1996.
The $2.6 million Tuppers Plains
Sewer District awaits approval of a
$500,000 grant from the U.S. Depart·
ment·ofCommerce Economic Devel·
opment AdministratiOQ which will
cover lhe ·costs of installing direct
system-tO::.house hook11ps for the residents 011 the system .
Dec. II ··Middleport councilman
Dr. Nick Robinson and Oerlclfrea·
surer Teri Hockman submit resigns~
lions to MiddlepPrt Village Council.
Dennis Hockman assumes clerkltrea·

surer duties effective Jtin. I, 1996.
Dec. 12 •• Felony charges are flied
against Howard Whited of Amesville
in connection with the illegal dump·
ing of nearly I0,000 tires at a former
tire shredding facility he owned in
Scipio Township.
.
Despite a longer gun season, Oh10
Division of Wildlife figures show the .
deer harvest during the 1995 season
down to 3,626 from the 1994 oneweek i0!81 of 3,792 .
Dec. 13 .. Former Multimedia Inc.
· executive William deB. Mebane is
named senior group president · of
Gannet Co. Inc.'s new Piedmont
Newspaper Group, which includes
Contlnacd l!n J18P 3

PERMANENT SHUTDOWN ,AVOIDED • ~ 1'00
Melga County .Mil ehutdown In t1rly November·•
top atorltl during the later part of 18115. The jell 1¥11
the wake of ftnt code violation• found by ttirleta\1 ftnt
oftlce•.After newelery rep~~lr• en~ lmpi'OVIIIII,IItl,_.
Sheriff JMiel Soulsby, the Jelltwopened Nov. 17. · ·

�.
Frldlly, January 5, 1996
.

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-"Commentar

; Page2

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·:TII;e Daily Sentinel
,'
'

~·

should be in good taste. addressing issues,.nol personalities.

Drips aren't just
Jn .the bucket

By JOHN CUNNIFF
· .; AP Business Analyst
' NEW YORK- There are now at least 860 corPorations !hat allow direct
purchase of their shares- that is, without broker participation- and ~orne
even offer discounts from the market price.
The benefits are enormous. Small investors become shareholders wid! lit'Ue risk, low or no commissions;.;md potentially great rewards. Companies
.raise capital and solidify customer loyalty. Economic growlh'is enhanced.
·.· Still, you don't hear much about the medjum for such inveitments, called
dividepd reinvestment plans (DRIPs). .
·
., Companies are restrained by regulations, and ret.uctance to offend die secu·
rities industry, which they depend on to raise capital. And brokers are loathe
to promote an investment technique that largely excludes them.
· There are, however, no limitations whate..ver on individuals taking tbe iniliative, the most common way being to purchase atleasi one share through
jl broker, thereby becoming eligible for enrollment in the DRIP.
.
Even that might not be required, since' at least40 companies have received
approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission to sell to individuals owning no shares at all. But the initiative must come from the individual.
·
In most instances the effort is worth it. DRIPs are not drops in die,bucket.
Standard &amp; Poor's lists 76 DRIPS in which $1,000 invested on December 31, 1984, with l!ividends left to accumula14 and compound, would have
been worth $6,000 or more I0 years later.
'·
A lot more in some instances. That sum of $1,000 invested in Franklin
Resources would have reached $36,123 on December 31,1994, or $26,855
if left untouched in die Home Depot DRIP, or $22,796 if left wid! Paychu,
Inc.
While such amounts are extraordinary by any measurement, they help
·fuustratc two olher factors, patience and compounding, about which you
lnight bear little in an age were instant gratification is sought.
·
·.. Compounding takes times. It is slow 8S an old steam locomotive atlhe
'start, but unstoppable as its momentum builds, wid! dividends earned con'iributing to future dividends. Meanwhile, the price might he rising too.
. Such expectations are np~farf~tched. 1be Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stock
't~ilex rose inore than 3!Xl'percent in the 15 years through 1994, but with div·
'idends reinvested the increase would have been more than 600 percent.
,
' Panicipll\ts in DRIPs also benefit Jrom die ability to add to their initial ·.
Investment through monthly or quarterly contributions that give them addi·
tiona) shares or fractional shares.
.
' ·
· By George R. Plagenz
When we were children we
.
.
would sometimes try to mimic die
foreign-speaking people in . our
neighborhood by talking in a kind
.
of gibberish that we lhought would
fool everybody into thinking we
.,
were speaking £olish or Gennan or
Bohemian. .
Dear Editor,
there are so many who throw away so
• It never fooled anybody.
1want to exte11d many thanks and much! Come on, people! It only takes
Actually, we couldn't get even incocongratulations to die Meigs County up a smlill area of your home and
herent sounds to .come ou't.
Litter Control and Recycling office hardly any time to collect and prepare Gibberish is not something that can
and its hardworking employees for all 1 items for recycling. The Meigs Coun· be easily faked. Try it sometime.
!hey do to make Metp County a ty Litter Control and Recycling proSpme people dismiss "speaking
cleaner place to liv~. · . ·.
gram has made it.so easy to dispose in ' tongues" as nothing more" than
: My family recycles nearly every- of lhese items, with new drop· sites fluent gibberish, but that boyllood
lhing and only contributes ·two bags available.
experience of mine leads me to
of garbage to the local landfills a
Keep up the good work Meigs believe that the common person
month. On Jan. 2,1 drove from Swe County Litter Control and Recy· cannot become fluent in gibberish
Route 124, through Bradbury R~lo . cling, and !hanks for being there for
and that we have to.'lhink of anoth·
State Route 7 and nearly every home ~s!
er explanation for the phenomenon
liid at least five bags of garbage set· , Sincerely,
o( speaking in tongues so wide;
Debra A Bullington
ling out near die road for collection.
spread in the Pentecostal churches.
Rutland
' My effons seem useless when ,
I have heard someone speak in
tongues only once. It was during die
t
1"1"
I"
service at an Assembly of God
Editor,
'
We still need some one to remove church. A woman stood up and for
~ ,The support group presently ' a freezer and a piano from the counIS or 20 ~onds and spoke fluently
~~~ as the county home support ty liome. If you would like to help,

:.Letters to .the Editor
Thanks ,for recycling efforts

Sunnort groun to meet '

dear

J-:ub~e:~~in:o::i\~~i~~ 6959.
~:::c:~;2~~~~~orc~.-::::~~:~~
,

ersV(IIe on 7 p.m. on Mondays.
; .Qtt :J~. 9 we will name the group.

IND.

•I Columbusl2so I

Jean 0.::~!

W. VA.

Tod y's weather forecast
I

S theastem·Ohio
Today...C oudy with snow flurries.
High in the pper 20s. Light north
wind.
Tonight.. loudy with snow flur·
ries. Low
the mid teens. Light
northeast wind.
Saturday ...Cloudy with a chance
of light snow. High in the upper 20s.

By The A!lsociated Press
freezing temperatures through the
weekend and more snow is possible
on ·SI(nday, forecasters said.
Overnight, the mercury dipped
into die single digits in die north but
were a little warmer in die south.
Much the same is on tap foltonigllt.
A few snow showers could occur
in central and southern Ohio on Sal"

r·

gian and author. of ':Fire From
Heaven," a history of the
Pentecostal movement, is quoted in
the Utne Reader as describing
speaking in ·tongues as "an expres·
sion of a spiritual feelinj( that
breaks out of linguistic resqictions.
This has been going on for millen·
nia. As cultures go, we .are abnormal in not recogqizing this. We
have an ecstasy deficit"
The author of the Utne tteader
··anicle gives 'tliis picture of the congregation 'at a typical Pentecostal
church: "Arms ·stretched heavenward, !&gt;&lt;&gt;dies gently swaying, eyes
closed and lips slightly open, they
radiate a sensual, almost contagious
religious passion. They lay on
hands and say people m;e heal~ ...
"They are Pentecostal Christians
and when historians record the most
important religious mov~ments of
die 20th century, these believers
could be at die top of the list."

.

By William A. R~her

to

Appeals to mailbox vandals

it

to

Qlac,.

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ii_.........-&lt;· - -l-.. _ ..... _,.,.,.....,_ ., . . . ,........ ,_ . . . . .... . .,_,.
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· ' · · iullllioe't drinlt'llllimolce\ 'fl!cl. " ,
·. · . · . ·" 1, recently ~ to bot!Onl out at smokers. 1be EPA declared tluli the sion thatETS represenlll "an imporNo wonder die miinstream
tJae wflb ha¥e did this ' '"
fee! our ·.~ hi~ beea· a~t 2S ~~t of die idult .popu- scie~tific evidenc.e of the cancer- tant IOUI'CC of indoor air conllmi' media ignQI'ed the cas report! It
. 1111 lllll1f1...,doa'te;:· it.. ~·~' die ~· ~,10 .Would lauon, andli .IS 119~ pretty !f.ICir that ~:ausan1 p~~rues of tQbacco nants'' wu rev~sed to "an important mates hash~~ of the whole ."JlUkiiQW 41!10
wei;;! you ~ lift thii llulden 1;1Y ~ lhef!l,.people cu,not be scared 0111
. of smoke and ·~ mtake by ,non-smok- source .of toJUc and carcinogenic sive smoking" IC8III and r,vll8la
' ~-f!l•••t"dlls.fl e~y ' .......... fiii:M,Iboxeyin9fe? smo~ng. PCrllapl ·tbey ~w that 11!1. "lssuffictent by ttselfto estab- ' ·ilidoorairconiaminants."
lhe true 'mptive of
who are
' 111 lllwidl _._..,"" ~ ~&lt;Ve ,!If . . . . . . . . . "pleii! filr Y~: lllllre)'_.. theY . have · ~~en chancea, out .of l11h .ETS u a known. hum~ lung _ A!ld 'the illlportant qualif~ti1&gt;11 • peddling it: to fwl mOniJy. a~or
• , 'ad 1
~., ~fii . IIU lind .,.... ,~ 111 have · 1 nJht
eiJht of dfi!IJ of. iOiilei!Bn&amp; ~lse . carcmogen...,"
c;sumated that it that ''Thele esllinlfea, however, are to miDioris of their fellow ciuzm.
~--to
.~ lq ~-out
0111 ~on 1111 route. anyway,apd the"'
. idull lilt •trikes cauJeS 3,!100 death
. s from luna can- bued on 1 number of usumptions The kind 'of cancer they have does.._. M
• we lilre l'lelle di.~ a.y,111 our
·by any . ,thell\u a reaaonlble·jli!lble; aiven c;w every year.
,
that may noc hold" ( whicluppeared n\~z,.iutte in the tun
· ·
Wt hl
, ; ,
.... ". F
pOrleasure
t
With m,t, the heal)h 'fascists in two secticilis of the draft) ·was EJ!•••

· """'11M

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flf.! ::- ~r=!

-~ ~~~':r:!.~ , :; ;a.~.!t,;::g-:::e:o: :::.::;.~toptber in the iqlort in ::t' ;1•••;::_::• .iii~r'ir~ ~
!'f

20s.
The record-high temperature for
Ibis date · at the Columbus weather
station.was 61 degrees in 1946 while
the record low was 16 below zero in
1884. Sunset tonight will be at 5:20
p.m. and sunrise Saturday. at 7:53
a.m.

McArthur removirfb
cross from courthouse

. their fellow citizens to survive into · consider die cbn~uences for die
But worse was to come for the
Th.e he&amp;!lh fasctsts of die ann- !heir 90s as pitiful caricatures of the smokers' sake; they could furiously anti-smoking
brigade.
The ,
'i
smoking bngade were dealt anolher people !hey used he.
demand lhat smoking be banned Congressional Research Service an •
severe blow recently ·- so severe
Anyway, it hec!lllle clear that ~ everywhere for their own sake.
independent research arm ' of :
, ,,
,
r:1ear Editor ·
•
' mailbox. We plead for your mercy !hat the mainstream media: who can health fascists who get their moral
But the story doesn't end there. Congress, spent two years studying
t ~in plea to !he ones who have and ask you to no! damage ~111 box never get enough of stones about highs out of condemning sml)kers For one thing, in thC·Cato Instjtute's •.the very same data on which the ·
'vf'"!AI!zedmymailboxjustoff·State ... anymore. I have ,play~ gw~ f~r theadverseeffectsoftobacco,have would have to tighten die screws. publication" ·Regulation (1995 EPA relied, and recently issued a i
ROute 7 on Bone Hollow Road. •
years and my wtf~ an(! I smg m dectded to tgnore it completely. 1be Environmental Protection Number 3) one can read Mardis 70-page repon ' on ETS. As :
· l l!wantt~ introduce myself, James , ch~h. 'V_hY don't, you learn to .play That practically guarantees !hat A g e n c y
Perske's aston· Investors Business Daily C()itorial- :
Mohler,llild m~ife, Wanda Mohler, . pittar, It IS more fun than teanng what follows will be news to you.
p r o 111 p t l y
ishing account ized, "It's· hard 10 read die CR$ ;
thf OllC5 who .\oe had such fun the down t;nail!loxes. I would.e~en teach . Fjrst, let's revit,w the bidding. obliged, pub· ,
of how an EPA repon and not' conclude that' thO ,
,lilt r:eekin,.e tinuing the .damage , you hov/1 pia~ P,~tar tf 11 w~u,ld . The crusade to stop people from lishing i!l 1993
WILLIAM A. " science advi- EPA has 'bidly misled the Pllblic on ,
f(lurjOrfi\le,iimes ,tooiU'mlllboX.
stopyou~cjotngas·youaredotng. smoki~g cigarettes baa been under a reP?n !hat
. RUSHER
siH-y board" . the hWih etfecil of environmental ,
!•·. ¥fill' you try ·toppt ~ourself in my
I doot menuon thi,s fm:.pity.l have way stnce t.be early 1960s, wtJen . raised a ~·
• twisted
die : tobacco smdke."
·
'...
:
iryinJIO kpep mtbOx fixed as had~ diffetenhurgeri~s iii J99S. successive SU!iCORS 'general began new
issue:
arms of die
Among the CRS fi!ldings:
.
Fl diHblid and lilY wife isn't well I have had "'lii'FlY ·for ~r and linking smoking to lung cancer. In ' ' pas s i v e
drafters of lhe
-lbe "statistical evidence does.
fj
· ,r; 1: . ··, ,
pouibly ·mare IUIJery, in lhe near the past 20 years that correlation smoking," or
EPA report to' not appeat to support a conclusion i•
'• ' b.:ve. Jived at thia residence · fUture. :You wllo have 4c!ne dill to Ill ~ ~ome· pfctty firmly estab- "environmenmake them beef !hat there are substantial hWih ,.
'• ' 1~1. mostofl)ty Iii! in _Meiss will, if ypu1h:e
eli~ tia~e llstt¢. ~ a gQOd many I!IIOkers 'tal
tobacco
up their conclu- effects of passive SIIIOki!tJ."
~~~..,.;~I~Gve" thiS·. , we ...ve beabb p~ ~- ilieft' yw Will have qutt rather , dian run .the smoke" (ETS)
sions and elimi•• "It is possible that very few or
lill,t. idl. We 111 ~ reaiU,. if•'an)'OI!C" tears_, down your increased risk o( IURJ canoer.
•• in either words, smoke involuntar- nate important qualifiCations.
even no deaths can be attributed to

1Jle public is welcome.

urday, the National Weather Service

011\.1\ will temain locked in sub- . said. Temperatures will warm to the

H.ea It. h. n.uts ·are
· ·b low
· ··... 1· n
·
·.g smoke
•

·Chance of snow 30 ·percent
Extendtd forec:ast
Sunday...Chance of snow. Lows 5
to IS with highs around 20.
Monday ... Chance of snow. Lows
zero to I0 with ·highs in the lower
20s.
Tuesday...Chance of snow. Lows
10 to 20. Highs in the 20s.

Subfreezing weather will qontinue

McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) - A
Vinton County commissioner said a
cross was removed from atop the
county courthouse because commis• sioners did n'ot anticipate winning a
court fighno keep the symbol.
::yv~ saw it was probably a losing
b&amp;(tle, ":said· David Bolender, commission p~esid.ent.
.
Bolender also said it likely would ·
.have been too expensive for Ohio's
most sparsely populated county to
respond to a possible lawsuit by the

"

ently lasting."
1be source of the tongues-speaking is the speaker's "unconscious"
mind, these researchers said.
Speaking in tongues, they . determined, is like "baby talk" -- automatic and fluent speech of a kind
that an ordinary person cannot produce by conscious effort.
"Tongues-speaking" is first
mentioned in Acts in the Bible. It
was on die day of Pentecost, a
Jewish festival celebrated 50 days·
after ·Passover, that ' the disciples
were gathered together and "they
were all filled wid! the. Holy Spirit
and began to speak- in ' other
tongues."
Pentecostals trace their origin to
this biblical event, but the
Pentecostal .church movement did
not begin until nearly 2,000 years
later •• in a bi-racial church on
Azust/ Street in Los Angeles in
1906. Today, according to an anicle
in the Utnei'Reader niag~ine, !here
are 450 million Pentecostals world·
wide.
.f
Harvey Cox, a Harvard lheolo-

House .OKs plan to end
government shutdown

IRS instituting

~CK'EfA
UP!

in Hebrew, although she was
Slovak and told me' later she didn't
know a word of "Hebrew.
How do you explain such a
thing? I can't
and the
Pentecostals need no explimation. 1
lbey are sure it is die Holy Spirit
speaking through · the born-again
Christian.
· In moments of high ecstasy, they
say, when Christians "filled with
the Holy Spirit" find their vocabu·
lary woefully inadequate to .express
the gratitude they feel, they· may
begin "speaking in tongues" -often some ancient, lost language,
sometimes a known language, but
one unknown to -the ·person speaking, as was the case with the woman
I beard at the Pentecostal church.
A study by the National
Institutes of Mental Healthconcluded that speaking in tongues is "an
. overflowing kind of emotion so
overpowering !hat it gives rise to
one's speaking in non-co~scious
- language. It provides release from
tensions and brings great feelings of
peace and relaxation that are appar-

The Daily Se'ntine( the Gallipolis ny. a subsidiary of Peoples BancoiJI .
·.
Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant (W.Va.) Inc. of Marietta.
Dec.
20
-·
Additional
charges
in
Register, Huntington (W.Va) Herald
1
Dispatch, Marietta Times, and Chill· connection with the Nov. 2S alcob~­
related traffic death of two tcenageis
icothe Gazette.
Eva Blazewicz Wilton, 83, of Rancho Cucalmonga, Calif., died in late
Dec. 15 -- The William Ritchie near Letart Falls are filed in MeisS
December at ber home.
·
Ravenswood Bridge shuts down for Counly Court . Sue Wilson, Chestej',
Born in Pomeroy on Oct. 15, 1912, she was the daughter of the late Stan- nearly four hours after it is struck in is charged with one misdemean~r
ley J. ai\d Clementine B. Blazewicz. She graduated from Pomeroy High early morning fog by the coal barge count of sale of alcohol to a minor,
School in 1930 and then moved to Warsaw. Poland where she attended the and tow, lhe Joey C. No nne is injured related to the alleged sale 'of alcohol
an academy alld later worked for the American Consulate. She and her sis· and no structural damage to the to three youths involved in the acctter, Helen, returned from Poland in the spring of 1940 following the Ger- bridge is detected as a result of the dent.
t
Dec . 20 -- The Eastern Loc$1
man invasion' of Poland in 1939.
collusion. ·
She is survived by her son, C. Loren Wilton of Hermosa Beach , Valif.;
The Meigs County Bookmobile Board of Education approves a pollher sisters, Sophia B. Stephenson of Delaware, and Lili B. Sullivan of Los begins sc heduled bi-weekly visits to li on of the 84·acre si1e owned by tit
Alamos, New Mexico, and by her sister·in·law, Virginia V. Blazewicz of county elementary schools. ending a di strict adjacent 10 Eastern Higtl
School for construction of a new I&lt;;.
Pomeroy.
·
20 year absence at lhe schools.
,
· Besides .her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Louis P.
Dec. 18 -- The Southern Local 8 school.
Dec.
23
The
Tuppers
Plai&lt;t;
Wilson, and two brothers, Thaddeu's J. Blazewicz and Selim J. Bla~ewicz.
Board of Education approves the site
owned by the district adjacent , w Sewer District is eliminated froljl
Southern High School for construe· consideration for a $500,000 U.S.
EDA grant due to a conflict of inte(·
tion of a new K-8 school
·
est
citing Sewer Board member
Three area branches of Bank One
Homer
E. Cole's part ow nership of a'
of Athens, N.A. in Pomeroy, Rutland ,
proposed
Tuppers Plains industridl
and Gallipolis arc acquired by the
silo!.
•
Peoples Banking and Trust Compa·
. WASHINGTON (AP) - House entire government through Jan. 26 al
Republicans today agreed to a plan to • a m!nimum .of 75 percent of last
end for now a record 21-day panial years spendmg levels - but would
government shutdown that has dis· be contongent on a seven-year bal·
rupted services and idled hundreds of anced budget agreement usong esll·
thousands of federal workers.
mates by the Congressional Budget
Speaker Newt Gingrich, who per· Office.
The ombudsman also will prepare
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
suaded skeptical members ,of his
The.legislation also would need, to lnlernal Reven ue Service is imple· annual reports identifying the most
party . to accept the deal in a 15- pass the Senate to end the shutdown.
serious taxpayer problems, offering
me~ting taxpayer protections on its
minute closed-door speech, said the
The House GOP leadership on own after a taxpayer bill of rights I recommendations for improving IRS
burden is now on President Clinton Thursday' failed to sell its rank and became snared in the budget fight procedures and tracking the agency 's
to agree to a balanced budget that file on a plan to restart the govern· between President Clinton and Con· response to the recomme ndations.'
w~uld pennanently end the crisis.
ment through March 15. Many gress.
For businesses, the IRS will pef·
The GOP plan. which headed for Republicans said that would remove
mit
increased record keeping on
Republicans and Democrats in
.
.
'
a vote today, would immediately pressure for Clinton to bargain seri· Congress and lhe administrati on computer 1magmg
systems rather
restore 280,000 furlou'ghed workers ously on a balanced budget.
support the provisions, but Clinton than paper and it will shorten thl:
to their jobs with full pay through
"Right now, March 15 seems like vetoed them last' month· because appeals process in disputes over
· Jan. 26. It would restMt the salaries a long time," freshman Rep. Todd they were included in Republica n's whether workers are employees or
of 480,000 olhers in unfunded agen- Tiahrt, R-Kan., said.
independent contractors.
massive budget·balancing bill.
cies - who have not been paid for
GOP leaders then moved the date
Rep. Nancy Johns on, R·Conn:.
On Thursday, IRS Commissioner
work perfonned since the partial c!o- back to.Jan. 26, giving congress ion- Margaret Milner Richardson tol&lt;j chairwoman ofthe Ways and Means
sure began Dec. 16.
al leaders and 'Ciinton 21 days to reporters the agency was moving oversight subcommittee, which
"We have felt very strongly we work out an agreement before there unilaterally to put some protections developed the taxpayer bill of right~.
had to find a way to pay the federal was another government crisis.
praised the IRS for moving aheail
in place.
.
Until Thursday, House Republiemployees;" Gingrich said after the
"We decided il was so important without enacted legislation.
cans l!ad refused to reopen the gov- that we wanted to act now rather than
meeting. But, he said, "The House
" You hear a lot about partisan
Republican Conference has no faith
emment or pay employees uiuil a waiting for congressional action in conflicts ... but I think thi s reflec ts~
the president is negotiating in good
White House deal was negotiated.
order to .make sure tbat taxpayers lot of good faith on the part of (Com·
faith, has no faith the president will
Solomon said the deal was a com- would have these exjlanded protec- missioner Richardson) and her
promise. Republican conservatives tions during the filing season," she troops," Johnson said.
ever provide a balanced budget. "
•
Rep, Lamar Smith, R· Texas, cred·
sought the earlier date, and·moderates said.
ited Gingrich with persuading his - including Washington-.Uea law·
Among the changes, the IRS wi II
rank and file to suppon the GOP
makers- wanted any bill that would make ils agents - rather than tax·
leadership.
put their constituents back to work payers .- responsible for verifying
"It was one speech by Newt Gin·
with full pay.
disputed mfonnation on returns such
grich," he said. "We may call him
None of the 760,000 workers in as the W-2 and 1099 fonns submitKnute Rockne after today. We're unfunded agencies were being paid ted by employers, mortgage lenders
DELAWARE (AP) - The motq·
going to play as a team." .
for work they have done since the and interest and dividend payers.
er
and
grandfather of a man identiWhite House spokesman Mike partial shutdown began Dec. 16.
II also will formalize its practice
McCurry said he would withhold
Programs to be funded under the of forbidding agents to lower the tax fied as ·a suspect in a murder c.Se
judgment until after the plan passes.
Republican plan include funds for liability of an informant in exchange said questions asked of them during
" We are hopeful that ' the club that administering unemployment bene- for information about another tax · a grand jury appearance did n9.t
implicate him.
'
some in the House Republican cau- fits, foster care and adoption help, payer.
After
spending
three
weeks
in
jail
cus hoped they could use on the pres· · national parks and museums, pass·
Starting in March. the IRS will .
ident has gone back in the c)oset," he port and visa services, many veter- . notify divorced and separa1cd spous- for refusing 10 lestify, N~n cy Whit~
said, referring to threats to keep the ans' benefits and the Meals on es when it takes action to colle ct and her father, Eugene While, gave
government closed unlil there is a Wheels program for senior citizens. jointly-owed taxts from the olher in and appeared before the grand jury
·.
A major welfare program, Aid to spouse. Many divorced spou ses on Thursday.
balanced-budget deal.
Her son, Jason White, 18, has
Clinton likely would sign the Families With Dependem Children. complain the IRS goes after the most
been
identified in court pap~rs as a
ineasure although he would prefer a would only be funded through March readily accessible spouse :... often
broader back-to-work bill, a White 15 , as would the adoption assistance the woman who stays in the family suspcc1 in the Oct 16 slaying of
Timothy Huffman, 18, of Delaware.
House official said today.
and foster care programs.
home - rather than the spouse who
Com mon Pleas Judge Everett
The House Rules Committee
The bulk of programs in unfund· is most responsible for back taxes.
Krueger
jailed Nancy White and her
cle'IJ'ed two options for votes. One cd departments would not be
Divorced spouses say they 're tiS-year-old father on Dec. II for
would send 280,000 furloughed gov· financed, however, which could leave hampered in responding to the
contempt of court when they refused
ernment employees pack to work many workers with lillie to do.
agency because they're kept in the
with full pay through Jan. 26; return
On Tuesday, the Senate had dark about how close the IRS is to. to 1estify despite rece iving immunl·
480,000 others in unfunded agencies approved a plan by Majority Leader securing payment from the other 1y from prosecution .
" I thought it was rude and am):
to full pay through, that date; and Bob Dole that would have uncondi· spouse.
ganJ
for them to ask me to testifY'
finance a handful of still· unfunded tionally restored all workers' jobs and
The IRS also increasc.d the agai nst my son," Mrs. White, 38;
programs for the entire fiscal year salaries through Jan. I z.
authority of its ombudsman, whose
'•
thai began Oct. I.
Dole has opposed the shutdown office is charged with intervenmg on sa id in exp laining her holdout.
Prosecutor W. Duncan Whitney
An alternative bill would fund the openly in recen1 days and split with taxpayers' behalf to resolve prob·
sa id 1he Whites provided granq
more militant House GOP leaders )ems with the tax agency.
jurors with "worthwhile infonna.'
who have insisted it was the only way
New rules willlimilthe ability of lio n."
·..
to keep Clinton negotiating se ri ous- other IRS officials to overrule the
The Whites said they were asker
ly over eliminating federal deficits. ombudsman's office and give the
about what, if any. fireanns were'
Am Ele Power ...................:".41'1.
ortice increased atj,thorily lo issue available 10 Jason White and where'
Akzo ••••••..••.•..••••..••••...•.••••••••• ,.58
refunds 1o taxpayers facing severe he was the night of the slaying. ·:!
Ashland 011 ........................... 36~.
'
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana· financial hardship.
ATlT ...................................... &amp;&amp;)"
Bank Omt .............................. 37~
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
Bob Evans ............................ 18'4
buying points Friday by the U.S .
Borg-Warner ......................... 31 '·
Department of Agriculture. Markel
Champion Ind .......................23~.
News:
·
Charming Shop ..................... 3'1.
Bao:rows
and
gilts: fully steady to
City Holding ..............................,,
finn,
plants
finn
to SO cents higher:
Federal Mog\11 ....................... 20~
Gannett ............ ~ .................... 60~·
demand moderate.
Goodyear TI:R .............~ ........ 44~•
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 40.50·
K-mart .....................................7~
4
1.50,
a few 42.00; plants 41.50... 'B- ..,.
Lands End ............................. 13~
43.00,
a
few
4
1.2S.
Limited Inc ............................ 16'·
JVO """'"J'
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 36.50Peoples Ban~:orp ................... 23
40.50.
'
Ohio Valley Bank.................. 35'1.
.OM Velley •...... ~ ..................... 3071.
Sows: steady,
Rockwell .............................. 52'1.
.U.S. 1-3: 300-500 ·Ibs. 26.00·
Robblna &amp; Myers .................... 28
29.00; 500-650 lbs. 29.00-33.00, a
"DIShell .............................. 140:1o
few over 650 pounds 34.00.
·
Shonay'• lnc ......................... 10~
Boars:
25.00-26.00.
Star Bank .••.......••...•••......•.... 57'1..
Wendy lnl'l............................ 21'1.
Worthlngton Ind
... ..................... 21

Eva B. Wilton ·

Dep""

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned Ieners will be published. Letters

.,

AccuWeatbe,.. forecast for daytime conditions and
MICH.

-- with major U.S. Joens on its rWminder lhatthe only way to deal fund finished $7 billion in the red,
And~ -.STEIN
books -- goes bankrupt? What if a wid! such a diSMter is to prevent it and naysayers like Ross Perot were
United,__
.
banking ·crisis in a major foreign from bappenin~. Financial {NIIIic is busy · predicting a giant wave of
WASHINGTO!'i -- ·For most of economy, such as Germany or like nuclear war; once it starts, it's banking failures.
America's banks, 1995 was a , Japan, spreads to the United States? very difficult to cont&amp;in.
But a growing chorus of critics
"dream" year •• one of s~ng In responll,e, a select team of
More dian a decade after these believe the , good economic times
profits and billion-dollar mergers bankers and economists sat down to plw ' were p~pared. die risk of are causing die , governmentto ~ease
brought on by
write what is financ.'ial meltdown seems more up on its role as guardi@h of the
low interest rates
· essentially a bow· remote dian ever. Last year f!W banking system once again. Clinton
and low infla••1bii/Wd deep In-- 1t1e ff/H to manuill for more than I ,000 ' bank mergerS . administration officiils an: divided
tion.
n~onalizing the word! a record $1 SO billion, includ· over die issue of bank premiums.
But buried of · the · Feder.,
banking system.
ing such giants as Chase Some believe that now is die perfect
deep insid,e the /naunmce CofP· Ia • blwprlnf More than a Manhattan, Chemical Bank and time to save for a rainy day, and
files of die for •IIWY 1»11/rer'e n/glllm.,. •
decade after !hey First' .Chicago. Forecasts indicate have argued for keeping premiums
Federal Deposit , . • the fed,.e/ 110vernment'a
were pr~pared, that lhe trend will continue; or per- at current levels.
Insurance Corp: contl"':;'cr p/MJa In cae one. die plans remain a haps even accelerate Ibis year.
Others believe banks and
.is a blueprint for ot A,. ce • 10 Ill,.., bank• closely guarded Whelher lhese mergers will help bankers should be rewarded for a
every banker:s P•.llelly-up.
·
SCflCL Thcly were everyday bank customers is anolher job well done.
nightmare ~- the - - - - - - - - - - - never distributed question entirely.
• The optimists have apparently
federal goverpto olher agencies, nor to die banks •
One expen predicted die _!:urrent won die fight
.,,
q~ent's contingency plans in .s;ase
Buried deep in the bildset plan
themselves. No congre~sional merger-mania will .result in one-half
one of America's 10 largest banks leader has ever seen lhese . plans, of all local bank branches being submitted by Clinton last month is
goes belly-up.
.
die factlhat the White House won't
!hough some know of !heir exis- closed by dte year 2000.
Their solution7 In case of a tence. But that doesn't mean ·!hey
fight
the Republicans .on deposit
Things have J;&gt;een so rosy that
major bank failure, the 10 largest weren't taken seriously. within the die FDIC has essentially eliminated insurance.
,
American banks would be national· FDIC. Officials there eve~.wrote up bank premiums for 92 percent-of all
Republicans, in a move that's
ized before they'd be 'l'lowed to a sample press release, to be given domestic banks.
very popular with rhe banking
fail. In other words, the feileraJ ·gov- out in case of a takeover.
,... lbe ~ank Insurance Fund is operat- . lobby, have included a cap .on the
ernment would take over the bank·
What die plan really · revealed, · ing at record levels, with $25.1 bil- · growth of die Bank insurance Fund
ing system •• with all its liabilities • however, was not so much a strate· lion in reserves as of Sept. 30, 1995. as part of their plan to balance die
-and stick it on the backs of the tax- gy for nationalization as a sober This comes just four years.after the budget.
payers.
The re115oning is simple: If a
majo~ails , it could erode confidence m lhe entire system. This
could CfCllle the kind of financial
panic not seen since the Great
Depression, when endemic bank
runs forced President Franklin D.
Roosevelt to declare a bank holiday.
' This doomsday scenario was
dc;yised by top economic officials at
lhe Federal Reserve, die Treasury
Department and the FDIC during
.
.
lhe early . 1980s, at a time when
bank d~regulation had brought on a
wave of new lending and new risksL
1be plan was inspired by a 198z
visit from Mexican government
officials, who showed up at die
treasury Depanment one day to
· announce that their country was
broke and could no longer meet !he
interest. payments on its American
obligati\)ns.. The oil boom in
Mexic9 had gone bust, and officials
there were considering an outright
repudiation of their _country's foreign debts.
The Mexican crisis never materi·
alized, but the incident got Reagan '
administration officials thinking:
What if a large foreign government

ROBERT\.. WINGE'IT
Publisher

'i '

-

By JACK AND1R80N

Gannett Co, NeW'ipaper

Geaeni'MIIDIIpr

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Eastern.~:,_'in-ued-'ro_m_p_•...:....·--~-

OHIO Weather
SaCuntay; J.h. 6 .

1995 a ~'·dream year' . for mo.s t. bank~·

• 111 court street
. · Pomeror. Oblo

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.

Friday,.Jlnuary
- . 5, 1 •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.
J

American Civil Libenies Union of
Ohio concerning the 12-foot metal.
cross.
The ACLU last fall said presence
of lbe cross on a government build·"
ing violated the constitutional separation of church and state.
The organization also has asked at
least four Ohio counties to remove
·monuments that list the Ten Com·
mandme~ts from their ~o urthouse
lawns.
6

Meigs·announcements
Portland PTO meeting
The Portland Elementary Parent·
Teachers Organization will meel
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the elementary
sc hool. A representative of the
Southern Local Building Committee
will speak.
Election board meetbig
The Meigs County Board of Elec-

lions w011 meet Tuesday, 9 a.m. at the
Meigs County Board of Elections
office in Pomeroy.
DAVtomeet
The Disabled American Veterans
will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
Rock Springs Grange hall. Women
are welcome.

Meigs EMS logs 14 calls
berly Ritterbeck, VMH;
7:24 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabili·
tation Center, Della Norton, VMH.
RACINE
9:04 a.m., volunteer fire Qepartment and squad to state Route 124,
smoke odor ai·Dave Grindstaff resi·
dence.
RUTLAND
8:.11 p.m., volunteer fire department and squad 10 state Route 124,
one-car accident, Jennifer Hattery
and Gloria L.ines, Holzer Medical
Center, Salem Township VFD assisted.
SALEM TOWNSHIP VFD
10:20 p.m., stat~ Route 325, chimney fire at Ray Ward residence, no
injuries, Rutland VFD and squad
assisted.
SYRACUSE
I :05 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Eugene Erlewine,
VMH;
10:10 p.m., Glenn Street, William
Brown, VMH;
.
II :05 p.m., Osborne Street, Bernice Goble, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
7:53 a.m., Taylor Road, Junior
Hunt, VMH;
.
I :33 p.m., Main Street, Marvin
Walker, St.Joseph's lfospital.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded I4
calls for assistance Thursday includ·
ing one transfer call. Units respond·
ing included:
MIDDLEPORT
1:04 a.m., South Third Avenue,
Julie Dailey, treated at the scene;
11 :31 a.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Rief Hennan, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
,
5:56p.m., West Main Street, Greg
Wi llett1 VMH.
POMEROY
12:38 p.m .. Pomeroy Pike, Kim·

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113.910)
Published enry afternoon. Monday through

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Membtr: The Aupciate:d Press, and die ~lo
Newlpaptr A111Xial:~ .

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Veterims Memorial

Thu[lday admissions - Junior L.
, Hunt, Long Bottom; [)ella Norton,
No slbiCI'iptioa by mail pennin.ed in lft!ll
Pomeroy;
........ ....,oavlce lo avoi1obtc.
Thursday discharges - Jane
.M-'IL SVISCBIPTIONS
Wi~gins, Lai\gsville.
......... Motao c_,
.
· Bolar .Medkat Center
1 ) - ..;............................................... $21.)0
Dilcbraa Jan. 'I - Inize
26-. .................................................W .82
52 Weeu ................................... ............ S1DS,'6
Miller, Betty Morris, Clyda Call,
-. ~J)Itlp c_,.
Melvin Wheeler.
13 - .......~....................... .......... ......... $29.25
MWeeu ..........................................-'16.68
&lt;rublilbed wttb pennia·
51 -s................................;....."....:::11'09.11
slon)

i

taxpayer bill of rights

Two end
,holdout

Stocks

Livestock report

__._

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotas provided by Adwat
of Gallipolis.

Fit Together
At;ROBICS
NEW 9 WEEK SESSION
To Begin

January 15th
Mon.-Tues &amp; Thurs
. 7-8 pm

Royal Oak Resort
For more Information or preregistration
call Jeannie Owen 992·6893 ·

Pfease !l{espect .Life fmttfl
Conception ti( Veatli.
:Meigs CountJ
J(igfit to .Life :Meets
'Eve'!J Second !Montfay
of tlit :Montfi

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i)ou Jllre Corrfiaffy
InVitet!to 54.tttttti

1or Moll Injor maticm
· cal£992·5898 .

�The Daily Sep_t!!~l

·sports
"" In the NBA~

-Friday, January S, 1996

·

::. T-wolves beat Suns; .Kn.icks, Bulls &amp; Hawks al~o get wi·ns..
'By The M.acillted Pna

with a 19~6 run bridging the end of"'
road loss.
Howard had 27 points, Robert the first half and the start of the secCharles Smith carne off the bench ·
to lead a fourth-quaner rally as New Pack 21 and Gheorghe Muresan 17 ond. Jordan had seven points in the
York broke a three-game losing points and 13 rebounds for the Bul- surge, and Dennis Rodman added siK
points and six rebounds as the visitlets.
streak.
Jim Jackson led Dallas with a sea- ing Bulls built a 10-point lead:
The Knicks, losers of fotir of their
Hawks 104, .
previous five games. won for the first son-high 33 points. and George
McCloud
,
had
21.
The
Mavericks
time since'Patrick Ewing went dowri
Raptors 101 (OT)
.with an ankle injury. The Knicks held haven't won on the road since&lt; Dec.
Mookie Blaylock scored eight of
New Jersey to I 8 points in the final I and have dropped eight of nine -his 26 points in overtime after Steve
,
period and had seven players score in overall.
Smith forced the extra period with a '
Bulls 117, Hornets 93
double figures. ·
three-pointer.
P.J. Brown led the visiting Nets, · Michael Jordan scored 27 points
Smith scored 27 poin!S as host
who have lost four of five games, and helped lead the decisive run in Atlanta snapped a three.game&lt;losing
with 23 points and II rebounds.
Chicago's victory over Charlotte.
streak.
Jordan added five assists and five
Bullets 112,
. Alvin Roberton led the Raptors
rebounds before sitting out the entire with 21 _points, and Damon
Mavericks 100
Juwan Howard scored 18 of his 27 fourth quarter.
Stoudarnire added 19. It was the third-·
There were 16 lead changes and loss in a row for Toronto and its sixth
points in the secQnd half as Washington dealt Dallas its eighth straight four ties before Chicago took control .in seven games.

Knieks 105, Nets 93

down a three-point miss by Michael while shooting.
While their Pacific Division rivals Finley
hitting a free throw.
Kevin Willis scored a season-high
''~~p on win.ning, the Phoenix Suns
·'I don't know if this can do won- 25 points and had 15 rebounds for the
~ are sinking fast.
ders for us, but it is definitely a step Heat
" bra season of unfufilled expecta- in the right direction," said MinKings 126, Nuggets 96
~-tions, the Suns hit a new low Thurs- nesota's Terry ~orter, who made two
Sacramento liit season highs in
•dAy night, losing to the Minnesota free throws wit!{ IS seconds left.
points and margin of victory in a win
·Timberwolvcs for the first time ever.
The triumph, which snapped a over the tealilthat kept the Kings out
·':The team that was .1-7 since Flip four-game skid by the Timberwolves, of the playoffs last season.
Sauflders replaced the fired Bill Blair was their first in 26 games against the
The Kings, winners of nine of!!
''beat Phoenix 98-93 behind Christian Suns.
home games, gained control of the
; "Laennec's 21 points. •
· In oth!'r NBA games, it was New game with an 11-0 run to stan the
"This is as low as you can go, I York lOS, New JerSey 93; Washing- second quaner. In the second half,
guess, ... said Charles Barkley; who ton 112, Dallas I00; Chicago 117, Denver never got closer than 16 .
failed to score in the fourth quaner. Charlotte 93; and Atlanta 104, Toran- points.
"They outplayed us."
' to 101 in overtime.
.
'JYus Edney had 16 points and I0
. Seattle, which leads the 'division
SuperSonics 84,-Heat 81
assists for the Kings. Mahmoud
the Suns have won the last two seaShawn Kemp had 21 points for Abdui-Rauf scored 26 and Bryant
sons, ran its winning streak to seven, Seattle in a matchup of two of the Stith 19 for the Nu~~ets, who have
·'beati_ng Miami 84-81. Sacramento league's best defensive teams.
QI'Opped siK straight road games. •·
•1won its third in a row, getting 41
Kemp connected on two free
points from Mitch Richmond in a throws with 2:55 left to put the vis~ 126-96 rout of Denver.
iting. Sanies ahead 79-77. and his
··; Tom Gugliotta .gave the Tirnber- layup made it 81-78 with 1:49left.
·wolves the lead for good with 2:3.9 to Keith Askins hit a three-pointer to
'
play. Doug West made two free pull the Heat to 83-81 before Gary , Rio Grande's men's baskell:&gt;all
throws with I :48 remaining, and fayton, who had 18 points, countered team pulled up to the.500 marie in
..Gugliotta assisted on a dunk by West with a free throw.
·
Mid-Ohio Conference play with a 91. wiih 32 seconds to go as Minnesota
Miami had a chance to send the 77 win over the host Ohio Domini~went ahead 95-91.
game into overtime, but Rex Chap- can Pan~rs Thursday night.
Gugliotta. who had 19 points, also man's three-point shot missed after
The Red men ( I0-6 overall &amp; 3-3
got the game's last rebound, p~lling he collided witli Hersey Hawkins in the MOC) were led by 23-point
perfonnances ·by Jamaal Burris (it
I
was his career-high effort) and Eric
Caudill. Junior postman Eric Burris .
chipped in with IS points - he had
12 after halftime- and a game-high
I0 rebounds.
Bryant Jones and K\lrt Ponkotter
led the Panthers with 16 and 15
p1lints, respectiv.ely.
- .
The fUture: The Redmen will
begin their four-game home stand
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. against Mt
Vernon Nazarene in a contest sponsored
by McDonald's restaurants in
tBy The Associated Presi
never got closer than nine after that.
Gallipolis, Rio Grande, Athens, Nel- They were barely ranked in the
Ben Davis had a career-high 20
sonville and Henderson, W.Va.
·pre-season, just managed to return to points and 12 rebounds for visiting
the Top 25 five weeks later and Arizona (10-2, 0-1 ), which 'had not
RIO GRANDE (39-52::91)- J.
dropped out immediately thereafter. given up more than 84 points this
Burris 8/15-010-711=23, Caudill5/8. On Thursday night, though, the season.
3/5-415=23, E. Burris ·6/II-0/0-~~
· alif9mia. · Golden Bears showed
In other Top 25 ·games, No. I 3n=t5, Morgan 112-l/3-2./2;;7, Sny·!y~9ne that they might deserve ,Ill Massachusetts edged No. 3 Memphis
der 213-1/2-0/0=7, Schreck 0/I-216~ bllck among the elite real soon. 64-61. No. 4 Kansas beat East Ten0/0:6, Kerns 0/2-111-212=5, Omer- · Bears crushed No. 9 Arizona 99- ilessee State 108-73, No. :t 6 N&lt;irll) cajic 0/0~ 1/1-0/0=3, Seitz 1/1-010: 75, handing the Wildcats their worst Carolina · defeated North Carolina
010=2. Totals: 23144-9118-18125=91
~loss since 1983- the year before State 96-72, No. 18 Virginia Tech
Total FG: 32-62 (51.6%)
JLute Olson took over,ss coach.
beat UNC-Charlotte 76-60, No. 20
Rebounds: 40 (E. Burris 10)
"This, frankly, was just a plain UCLA beat Washington State 78-73
Blocked shots: 4 (Seitz 3, Caudill
old-fashioned tail kicking, and it in overtime and No. 25 New Mexi- I)
was allil kicking becau!lC of the way co beat Air Force 61-49.
Allslsts: 23 (Morgan 8)
tliey shot the ball," Olson said. "Our
No. 1 Massachusetts 64
Steals: 7 · '
perimeter people could not handle
No. 3 Memphis 61
l them. It was a case of a team that _ At Worcester, Mass., Marcus
lcouldn'! miss."
Camby had 23 points and seven
• Cal was II of 15 on three-point- rebounds in getting the better of one
ers' and hit 32 of 42 free throws.
of the country's best big men, Loren.
Freshman sensation Sh~reef zen Wright.
Abdur-Rahim scored 22 points,
Donta Bright had 15 points,
'!including II during a 16-5 run to including five that gave Massachu- ·
open the second half. California (6- sells its last two leads in the final
.. ...
3,1-0Pac-10)alsogot2:Zpointsfrom 2:06, and the backcourt of Edgar
!Ed Gray and 20 from Randy Duck - Padilla and Carmela Travieso comjboth tying cilreer-highs.
bined to force Mingo Johnson of the
·~1 think a lot of teams fee
. I if they Tigers (8-1) into 5-for-18 shooting.
an contain me, they can control our
Th~ win was the siKth this season
ff~nse;" said Abdur-Rahim, who over a ranked team for Massachusetts
veriges 23 points 11 game. "But I (11-0) and should allow the Minutehink we ·showed them we have men to stay atop !,he rankings for a
!some other offensive weapons."
third consecutive week.
The Bears, ranked No. 25 in the
No. 4 Kansas 108
~ason and No. ;l4 in the fifth poll,
Eut Tennessee Stale 73
!fell out of the top 25 by losing three
Paul Pierce scored 30 points,
t'Jf four games. They took over this making him the first Kansas freshiame at the outset of the second half, man since Danny Manning in 1986 to
jolng on a 16-5 run in the opening reach that plateau.
3:15 for a 60-48 lead.
"I just appreciate my teammates
,; Cal built the lead to 68-5 I with 13 giving me the rock in scoring situa- .
!'limltes left and Arizona, which has tions," he said. "lt_boosts my confi{l¥n ranked as high as third this year,
(See TOP 25 on Page 5)

•;:

and

'

Redmen hand Ohio Oominican 91-77 loss
•

'

-

'

Thmovers: 16
Fouls: 17
OHIO DOMINICAN (3245=77). - Jones 3/4-214-416=16,
Ponkotter 1/3-4/9-112= 15, Kitsmiller
4/9-112-lfi,.J2, Wolford 215,2/5-

'

•

I

'

21&amp;=12, Be114/l 1-0/0-21&amp;=10, Dennis
Blocked shots: 2 (by Gray &amp;
0/2-0/0-3/4;3, Dillon I/1 -0/0-I/1;3, Kitsmiller)
Beggrow 1/1-0/0-0/~2; Chrisman
Assists: 17 (Bell 6)
112-012-010=2, Porter 113-010-0/0=2.
Steals: 9 (Pottkotter 3)
Totals: 18141·9122·14118=77
Thmovers: 15
Total FG: 27-63 (42.9%)
Fouls: 21
Rebounds: 31 (Wolford 9)
Fouled out: Pottkotter

·In Top 25 college hoops,

~c~lifor.nia ·upsets

~-Arizona;

UMass
.
'defeats Memphis

,, Frlday1 January 5, 1996 ~-

By STEVISfll WINE
MIAMI (AP) -, .The toughest
season of J?on Shula s career turned
- out to be hJS last: .
.
Aftef 347 Vlct_ones, SIX SUJIC!'
Bowls, two NFL hiles ~d the only
perfect ~on tn lea~e history, ShuIa. ~~ dec1ded to qun. . .
It. was a tough ~1s1on, one I
haven.t ~to make 1n 33 years of
coachmg, Shula told WfVJ-TV on
' Thursday, h1s !)6th b1rthday. .
. H~ planned to announce h1s res1gnatJon m a news conference at 4
· p.m. EST today.
As recently as Sunday, Shula said
· he would honor the final year of h1s
, contract next season. But there had
· been specilllation about his future for
much of the season as Miami, the
· preseason AFC favorite, struggled to

. By BILL SCHULZ
A11..ANTA (AP)
Cleveland
Mayor Michael White says his city
still has a very long way to go toward
lcecping the Browns from moving to
Baltimore. ·
, White said a meeting with NFL
owners Thursday was beneficial
because he was able to show that
Cleveland's $175 million financial
package to induce Browns owner Art
Modell to stay was solid.
The mayor and his delegation of
political and business leaders met for
three hours with tbe NFL's stadium
and finance committees at an airport
hotel. Both White and the owners
said the pow-wow Wlli positive, but
no one said it exactly made progress.
"We in Cleveland still have a
very, very long way to go," White
said during a news conference fol-

•
owner Pat Sauber, Rio Grande men's head coach
John Lawhom, McDonald's co-owner Carol
Sauber, Rio Grande president Barry M. Done)
and Rio Grande women's head coach David Smal.,.
ley. The Redmen's game will begin at 7:30 p.m. ~
.

. ----

.

•

.'

(6-5) despite being guarded by three
Clev~latid
· nien on a rotating basis.
.both had !mig trips back from WisElsewhere irl 'Opio &lt;College bas:
consin, whei'C both were beaten by ketball Thursdar, Mount Union, led
J.,.C marjins in Midwe~tern Colle· by Aaron Shipp s 26 points, ended a
~ C011ference openers.
nine-game losing streak. against Ohio
1 ·Cleveland State ( 1-8) lost 73-5~ Northern with a 76-71 Ohio Confer'ihl!i'ldJy. night at Wisconsin-Mil- ence victory o_vcr the Polar Bears in '
wau~ for its eighth straight defeat. Ada.
.
, '' The Panthers won their second
Ashland was beaten 85-76 by
. .n;ghlgame to improve to 4-6, one Gannon .in the Great Lakes lntercol- .
' 'l'~ vi~ than they had all last legiate Confereftl:e, while in Mid. lilhson Vihen they .went 3-24.
Ohio Conference action, it was Rio
. '~ ;' l&gt;efl'i~k Zeigler led- Cleveland Grande 91, Ohio Domini&lt;:!!il 77;
$.r.' wilh l3 PQints. The Vikings' . Shawnee ·State 86, Moun'! 'Wemon
&gt; •,CO,Idt, Mike Boyd, said his team has
Nazarene 76; Urbana 72, Malone 68
~-~ 'struggling all se8S(ln in all' . and Walsh 74, Cedarville 71. · ·
' ~~ of its game. ·
. · , ~nison beat Bluffton 83:-6~
. · ~ "lcp't.putmy.fingeronanyone Georgeto~n tif Kentui:ky outlasted
diinJ," loyd said. "We are def~&lt;:ient Findlay 102-8.1 in non-cnt~ference
..ia thiee lir four or five areas." . 'play. .
'~
' . r ~k Durham had 17 for Wis-·c:tJMin-Milwau~. whlclr limited ' r"~-""""~--..,.;--~
· ~;;' s~ to 17 baskets in so'

,

. $~JIIII:CIIIal"andrebound
flJUr" told ~ stjlry for Wisconsiq·
qreen Bay' •in i\4 78-52 victory
jip...t Wr!Jilt State. ·!he Phoenix.
.... '55 (li!J~ of its 'sllots to . .
--~·· ~5 pen:ent and held a 43-&gt;~3"t
·a~diftJadV•tap.
. . ,&lt;
·~ .r.NorJ · ...t ~ 25 poi~ll
fiir Witcc&gt;,:jla~Oreen Bay · '(9•2), .
.- VIUilfi rc.,p en'to hit for his
_ai• ill ~ tpoints fwWright ~
~- . .

'

-----

Philodr:lpl&gt;o... ,........6

23 .207

17.3

.,

9.3
10

.500

12

.467
.452
.379
.281

13
13.5

IS .S
19

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MWwestDIYIUon

W L Ed.

Iwa

Houston ..................23 9 .719
Saa Allooio............ 20
8 .714
U1oh .... ,................... 21 10 .677
· Denver .................... ll 18 .419
Oallu ....................... 8 21 276
Minnesoca ................. 8 ll .216
Vancouver ............... 5 2!1 .167

Iii
1

U
9.5·
13.5
13.5
17

Pacifie·Division
1'11111 ,

'

L.A . O;pt&gt;en .......... ll

'

.

8 .7ll
9 .667
16 .300
I~ .464
17' .432
17 .433
20 .355

'Ill
2.3.
7
8
8.5
9
11.5

Thursday's ~~c:ores
New Yrrl. 16!1, New .Ieney 93
WasbiiiiiOA 112. Dallu 100
Seattle 84, Miami 81
Chicqo 117, Ctaiotte 93
Atlanta 104. Toronro 101 (OT)
Mimtesota 98, Pbocni11. 93
Sacrameato 126, Denver 96

'lllnlcht 's games
CLEVELAND a1 Bo51on, 7:30p.m.
Dallu 11 New ,!cncy. 7:3Clp.m.
S..Ule 01 Orloado, 7:30p.m.
Indiana II 'San AMODkl, I p.m.
.• Potlland II Milw•be. 8:30p.m.
Pltilacklphiaa~ vancouva=. 10 p.m.
Pboerli&lt; or L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.in.
•• U1ah a1 L.A. labn, IOJO p.m
Minraoca 11 Golden Scale. 10:30 p.m.

I

..

.

against the league "to its logical conelusion" if an amicable settlement
isn't reached.
White said he was sati~fied with
the presentation. "I don't think there
is anything we could have said or
done that we did not do."
·
He thanked Ohio Gov. George ·
Voinovich for his pledge to cover 15
percent ofth~ $175 million .
He was ~ble, he said, "to wave the
governor's letter (pledging the mooey) in front of the owners of the
NFL."
The funding package, which is
basically unchanged from previous
plans, would move the Browns from
the top third in the NFL, financially,
-into the top guarter.
NFL President and CEO Neil
Austrian said there was no pressure
from the owners for Cleveland to

ante up more money.
emment and business communities,
"This is not a question of improv- and the bulk of the citizens.
ing the package. we ·didn't ask for
"Cleveland has been a bastion of
more. They didn't offer more. " he the NFL," White said. "We consissaid. "We wanted to know how far tently put 72,000 people in the seats"
that would go in a rebuilt stadium." for a Browns game, keep Browns
The next step is for the commit- J11erchandise among the hottest-selltees to meet with Modell to hear his
side of the story, Austrian said.
-----Sports
Austrian did not promise CleveIJaseball
land would keep the Browns or get
PllTSBURGH
(AP) - Major
another team, but said the league still
league
baseball
is
pressuring
prospechas both Baltimore and Cleveland on
tive
Pittsburgh
Pirates
buyer
Kevin
its top· priority list for teams.
McClatchy
to
line
up
more
money
What the fans in Cleveland must
know, he said: "is a very f:iir process · and settle a debt with the team 's foris going forward until we can reach mer owners before ratifying the sale.
McClatchy, who has raised $57
a resolution that will satisfy everymillion
in cash, has long expected
body."
f.onnal
approval
by cluli owners at
White said Modell would be wel their
mid-month
meeting in Los
comed back to Cleveland by the govAngeles.
Auto racing
DEARBORN, Mich. (AP)
Three-time Formula One champion
ference) lulled the Wolfpaclc into an "And we weren't hitting the shots." Jackie Stewan is returning to the
outside shooting game, and N.C.
Antawn Jamison led North Car- Grand Prix circuit as head of a FordState (8-3, 0-1) fell into a trap of ali- olina ~ith a career.:tligh 26\points, backed team that plans to begin racor-nothing three-pointers.
and Vmce Caner had a career-high ing next year.
"I think they were basically dar- 18. Shammond Williams, subbing for
Stewart, 56, retired as a driver in
ing us to beat'them from tbe outside." injured point .guan Jeff Mcinnis,
1973, buf stayed active as a broadWolfpack guard·Curtis Marshall said. added 14 points.
caster and as a consultani and test dri-

~

Saturday's pmes
Atlanta at Otarlone. 7:30 p.m.
Orludo 11 CUVELANI&gt;. 7:30 p.m.
Wuhinaton atlletroil, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at 0\ii::aco. 8:30p.m.
lndian111 HOUICOil, 8:30p.m.
Miami 11 Denwr, 9 p.m.
Golden Sbre 11 $acrunmto, 10:30 p.m.

Sunday's games
l.A. Clippe.-. 11 Vancouver. ~ ,p.m.
Dall.ot 111 Boston, 7 p.m.
Atlanltl at New JeNey 7 p.m.
Seaule al New Yort. 8 p.m.
Denver 111 LA. l..aktrs. 9:30p.m.
Minnesota 111 PortiM 10 p.m.

' NCAA Division I
men's scores

,

'

••
'

•

..
,,
'

'

El:moact 16

Anlerican Univ. SO.

Bosroo Ualv. 73, Hortfurd 68

Btowa '17. Holy CioN 89
C.oc. COMOCiic\ll St. 97, W. Illinois 69
, CoiJIIO ~. Vole 36
Loyol~ Md. 80. St. lOICph'o 78
Moirre64,DelJ.... 62
MIOIId&gt;uoeao64.Mempbio61
Nav} 54, IUce .!16
,
' St. 79. New Htqoollioe II
• """""" 73, -11!1
. VJra!orla 'IOclr 76, N.C. ~ 60

Marlington S4, CantonS. 37
Manins Ferry S6. Union Local 53
Muon 4.5, Goshen 34
Maumee 41 , Bowling G~11 31
Mayfield 67. l.ake Cadt 6S COTI
McDermott NorthWcst.S9, Port1mouth W. :5.5
Meadowbrook S6, St:. Clairsville S4
Mec:hanictburg !18, Triad 56
Medina 89, Brunswick .53 .
Medina Hilhland 32. Nonoo 37
Miami E. .S2. Day. Stebbins 44
Mineral RidJe 80, McDonald 56
Minsscr 48, Russia 4!1
Nelsonville- York 49, Vinton Co. 3.S
New Bremen ~2 . Mario11 Local 39
New KooAville 58, Fort Recovery 37
New U:~inaton .58, John Glenn 41
New Miami 47. Cin. lockland 44
New Rei Rei 72, Fostoria St. Wcndelil153
Newbury~ . Fairpon 24

Akron K«!nmore 63, Akron Ellet S6
Alexander j9, Trimble 29

CampbeU 60, Geor1ia St !17
Cent florida 93. JacksonVi lle St. 73
J Centenar) 76, Aonda Atlantic 1!1 (2 OT)
Coli. of Owleslon 98, Mercer 6S
Eu1 Carolina 62. James llltdi5CI\ 36
Jacksoaville 85, Lamar 7~
MeNeest St 94, NW Louisiana 7!1
N .C.- Wilmin&amp;~on 68, GeorJc Masol144
NE Louisiaaa 75, Nic:holll St. 72
. Nonh Carolina%, N. Carolina St 72
S . Carolina St. 72. M(qan Sr. S6
SE LouisiMia91. Aa. International 71
Samford !16, Sleuon 54
S:oulh Alabam~63, SW louisiana oil
Troy Sl. 90, Mo.-ICIWU Oty 89
Va. Conwonweallh 70, William &amp; Mary 47
W. Carolina 92, Wofford 67
Wis.-Packside 88. Tennessee S1. 86

Allen E. 61 , Upper SciOit1 Val 37
Amanda Clearcmrk 68. Fairfield Union 41
Anthony Wayne SO. Holland: Sprin&amp;. 43
Arcadia 43. Leipsic 38
Arlington S3, Hardin Northern 43
" Aurora 39, Independence 21
Puberton S4. Cuyahoga Falls 45
Bta\let Local 34,· E. Liverpool 28
Bellaire 6..l Buckeye Loctl44
Bellevue 57, Bucyrus 39
Benjamin Loe;an 55. lndiu lake 52
Berkshire 66, Kirtland'JO
RerUn CenlC'tWes~ Reserve 39,Motbews 'z:J
Berlin Hiland 70. l.a~land 26
Berne Unioa 63, Millersport 40
Bexley 81, Jonathan Alder 27
· Blumon 61, Spencerville 46
Bridgepon 39, StladyJide 35
Brooklyn 46. Beachwood 36

~=~.~=~~
Ol!tario SJ. Crcsdinr 44

Buckeye Central 69, Wynford SO

Midwest

Cambridge .SO. Oaymont :\I
Canal Winchnler 54. Logan Elm 42
Canf~eld 4.S , Poland 40

But»er 711, 111.-Chicigo 58 ,
~:&gt;rake 66, Wichita St 62
E. Illinois 89. Chicq:o St. 66 .
Karlsu 108. E Teanesaee St. 73
Michipn St. 65, hidiua60
N. Jlli.oois 65. Loyola. Ill. 62
Valparaiso 91, NE llliDOis 80
Wis.-Green Bay 78, Wright St. .S2
Wls.· Milwaukee 73. Ocvcland S« . S~

Orange Chr. .SI, Akron Chr. 26
Ottawa-Glandorf 52, Uma Shawnee 46
Ouoville 64. Kalida !14
Pandora-Gilboa 66. Vanlue 51
Paulding67, Ada S2
Pmy 68. Grand V~ . 55
Piketon .53. Unioto 52 .
.
Pt. Pleasant. W.Va. ~7. Oahirc Ri Vr:rVal. S4
Racine S. 64, Hemlock Miller 43
R.ivC:nide !! I, Wayna:field 47
S . Ccntra162 .. Mapleton SO
Salem 66, Niles 29
Seneca E. SR, Old Fort 41
Sidney S6, Piqua 24
Solfthern Local47, Usbon 44
Spar1a Hi&amp;hland 41. Mount Gilc:ad 40
Spring. Local 68, Lawellvillc ~2
Sprina. Shawnee 54, Sprina. Northeastern 46
Spring. Valley 48, Ridgeville Olr. 23
Springboro 67, Norwood 38
Stow 66. RavcllRa S3

Canton GlrnOak ~B. Kenc Roo~velt 46

Cant:on McKinley 52. N. Canton 42
Cardinal 59. Lcdgemont27

CIVdinal Slritch 42 Ottawa Hills 29
Centerburg 62, £ _Knoll 20

Cin. Finncytown 57. Cin, Deer Park 28
Cin. MIKieira 60, Cin. Indian Hi1128
Cin. Mlriemonl SS. Cin. Reading 41
Cin. Mercy 52. Cin. Sr. Ursula 44
Cin. Mt Hea1thy 41 . Cin. Wimon Woods 23
Cin. N. Colle&amp;c Hill39. Cin. Chrislian 22
Cin. Sevea Hills 44, Cin. Landmark 27
Circleville 52. Bloom Carroll47 (OT)
Clc. Lutheran W. S!l. Cuyahoga Hts. 41
Clc. S1. Joseph 83. Bettsville 17
Clc:. VA-SJ SS. Clc. Heig~rs 49
Col. Academy 61 . Maranatha au-. 26
Col. BrookhaW!II 73. Col. Beechcroft 39
Col. DeSales 63. Newark Cath. 45
Col. Easunoor 69, Col. Briggs 34
Col. Lin&lt;len-llld&lt;inley 71, Col ~-~ 19
Col. N011111and 93, Col Easi 39
Col. Soolh 6~ . Marion Franklin 42
Col. West 11 , Walnut Ridge 34
Col. WheiSione 62, Col. Miffiin 3!1
Coldwala' 68, Parkway 47
Columbia 62. Richmond Hts . 26
Columbiana Crestview 4~ . Scbrinl! 42
Columbus Grove !17. Ur'na Pt:rry 37
Connotton Val. 60. Bellaire n john ~3
Cory-Rawson 36, Van 8Un!n 22
Coventry 60, Manchester S4 (OTI
Danbury 48, Maumee 'Val. 41
Danville 56. Johnstown 32
Day. Carroll 53. Lemon-Monroe 23
Day. Jeffmoa 47, Kenering Alter 44
Defiance 43. Cdna 37
DeGraff Riverside SI , Waynesfield Gosl\en 47
Delphos St. John 's 48~ ~1. Hcr.y 39
Dover 53, Coshocton 29
Doylc:siOWil 96, w_Salem Northwcskm 4!1
E. Canton 70. Sandy Val. 48
E. Palesdi-le 49, Columbiana 27
Eas1em Pike J5. PonsJTlOIJth E. 28
Eastwood 75, Genoa .\9 "
Edaewood S8. l.cbilllon 43
ElidB 72, Sl. Marys 56
Fairview !13. Amhers1 49
Faycnevillc 78, N. Adams_41
Federal Hockin&amp; 61 , Reedsville E..46
Findlay 4ti. Sylvania Northview 44
Fisher Cath. 49, New Albany 40
Fort Frye 47. Beallsville 40
Fremc111t Ross 49, Napoleon J8
Fmnont St Joseph 83. Beusvine 17
GaUipolil 59. Jackson 34
Ganway 71 , Newcomerstown l7
Gilmour 42. Hathaway Browa 24
Oree.eview 66, Clinton-Mastie 61
Hamillon Badin Sl. On. Purcell Muian l4
Hannibal River 58, Monroe Central'~
Hellh 77, Uckioa Hu. 3S
Hubbard 41. Bodser 36
Indian Val. ~. 1\tscan.wu Yal. 32
Jackson Center 47, .Bodc.ina 31
Jacklon Milton 71, S. Range 6li
Jewett-Scio 69, Malvern 64
Kenton Ridae 97, Sprini Nonhwelten. 39

Southwest
Ark.-Unle Rock 66. Louisiana Tech 60
ArkaniGI St. 80, W. Keatucky 68
New Orlean• 69. Texu-Pan American SO
Sam Houlton Sl. 7S , SW T~ St. 66
Sscphcn F.-Ausun·99, Telllas-San Anlonio 82
Texas AAM 69, B,ethune-Cookmlln 50

Farw..t
Cal Poly-SLO 82, Oral Roberu 74
Cal St.-FullertOO 79, Pacific 69 (On
California 99, Arizona 7S
ColOrado St. 74, Hawaii 69
New MeJI.icb6l , AirF~49
San Dieso St. 80. Wyoming 77
S~anford 83, .Jtrizona St. 70
UC lrvinC 78, Saa Jose St. 70
UCLA 78, Wu.hington Sl. 73 (OTI ·
UNLV 66. U1ah St 37
Washington 94, Southern Cal 72
Weber St. 9.S, Denver 59

°

Ohio men's
college scores
Mldw.Stern Collegiate
Wis.-Green Bay 78. Wright St. 52
Wis.-Milwaukee 73, Clevellftd St. SS

Grut Lakes Inte.,ollqi~te
Gannon 8S. Ashlud76

Ohio Atbledc Conterenee
Mid-Ohio Cooferenee
Rio·Onmde 91, Ohio Domi11ican 77
Shawnee St 86. Mount Vernon Naz.arcne 76
Urbana 72, Malooe 68
Walsh 74. Ccdtnilto 71

Non-coaference play ·
Denison 83, Bhafftori 6$
GeorJC10wn1 Ky.. 102, Findlay 81

Ohio women's
college scores
Great Lakes lntercollqlato
Ashland IM. Gannon 64

'

Ohio 1\tbletlc Conforenee
Mount Union 68, Ohio Nonhem 46

........,.,.·--

•

.]'

'•

..,·- ·..J

.. .....

-• - -II

·~oacli to guide i team throui!i an
' unbeaten season when the Dolphins
went 17-0 in 1972. The DOlphins
won the Super Bowl again i n the
1973 season, finishing IS-2.
Sh~la was the youn,gest head
coach tn league history when the Baltim~;~re Colts hired him in J96j Bl age
33. His teams apJ:ll:ared in more
Super Bowls than any other coach's
and re~ched the playoffs in ·(our
decades. He has coached two of the
NFL's greatest quanerbacks .- Johnny Unitas and Dan Marino.
"South Florida doesn't know
what they're going to miss yet,'.' Dolphins linebacker Bryan Cox said on
his weekly radio show. "NeKt year at ,'
this time they 'll be talking about, 'We •
want Shula back."'

Non-coDf'mnce play
Buffakt 73, YoulJ'IO'Wn St. 65
Centr11 S1. 87, tadi- Tech 45
'J)omu Mort 67. O.oisoa .!17

Ohio ll.S. girls' scores
A1cn&gt;o ~oei 43, Alaon Gllfleld 42
, A1cn&gt;o
- - 73. Aboo F'ua1onc 57
A1cn&gt;o E. 49.- N.47

NFL playoff!&gt;

Sunday's games
Philodclphia at Dallas. 12:30 p.m.
lnd.ian&amp;ROiis 11 Kansas Ci1y, 4 p.m.

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atludc Divilion

Ium

W L I lll Iii 1i4

N.Y. Rangen .... 26 II
Philadelpllia ....... 2J II
Florida ............... 25 II
Washingtoo ...... ..l9 16
Tompa Boy ......... l7 16
New Jersey ........ 16 19
N.Y. lslandcn ...... 9 22

6
1
2

38 ll7 119
33 146 103
32 I 36 99

3

41 106

6
4
1

40 114 130
36 · 97 101
23 107 143

97

Northttlt Di"Vision

Pinsburgh ........... 2S 10
Montn!al ........... 1917
Bosron................ IS 15
Buffalo ............... 16 19
HortfonL. .......... I2 21
Onawa ..... ............ 8 29

3
'

6
3

5
I

53 187 118
41 116 120
3fi 130 13!1
3S 113 12!1
2'l 91 122
17 89 lSI

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cttural Di•ision

Tum

W L I lll !At: 1i4

Dclroit ................27
Chicago ..............20
Toro1110 ..............20
St. Louis ............ l7
Winnipeg ........... 11
Dallu ................. IO

1 3
13 8
IJ 7

57 141 78
48 138 117 ~
47 127 113

1-7 S
19 3
18 8

39 103 103
37 139 1-46
28 93 11.5

Saturday's gam..

Green Bay at San Francisco, 4 p.m

anuary Sale
Waverly Fabrics
&amp;

Laura Ashley
Fabrics
Buy The Yard

$999

YD.
In Stock Only ..

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND.SHOP
MEMC)ft~ II!IRIDGI

u
175 N. 2nd Ave.
Monon Rlv«VoJ. 511.Buct.re val. 3 6 1

. I

'

APP.AOACH ON GARFllio ,
AyL, PMKI"P" ! '

I'

--,--

ver for Ford. The team will be called.
Stewan Grand Prix and will be based
in England.
Biathalon
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (AP) Three-time Olympic skier Curtis
Schreiner of Day,. N.Y.. won the
men's 10-kilometer race in the U.S.
Championships.
Schreiner missed m\e shot from
the standing position and finished in
33 minutes. 41.1 seconds. Debbie
Nordyke of Bend, Ore., won die
women's 7.5-kilometer title, missi.ng
one shot with a time of 30:27.5.
Tennis
DOHA, Qatar
(AP)
Venezuela's NicolaS Pereira, ranked
122 in the world, upset second-seeded Boris Becker 7-6 (7-4), 6-7 (4-7),
7-6 (7-5) to advance to the quanerfinals of the Qatar Open.

Buffalo 11 Pinsburgh, 12:30 P.m
.

Ml$11eport, OH

Vlaa, Mli...r..wct &amp;
DJ

* " -Welcome

m.-7028

~"~~------~~~----~----~------ -·~--------------~~~
-~ + -

briefs-----

Reg.
'2915 SALE

laBrae 74, Brookf~ld ~9 ·
l.abYjew 68, Newton FallllO
l..edonia .SO: Unhcd 31
Lexl- 53, Ashland 49
Uberty llent011 68•.111cC&lt;&gt;mb 37
Uber\1-Unicn 66, Granville 48
Uddftl Vol 46, UUco 38
Limo Both 91 , Waptk-• 36
Uneolnview 43, Convdy CtaMew 37
J..oaon 48, Aiheno )l · l..cMidonvil~ 57, Bt.ck R.iw:r 20
Mlldi&amp;OII Pl'oiu 48, Cedlnllle 33
Mllfllo H11. 33. Bruoh

1Uiin 7S; MQuat \anoo Naun:nc 64

- - - - -·- - · - -·-··

ing in the league and have more support groups worldwide than any other team.
White said Modell "decided to rip
an institution, out of our city. If Cleve.
land is not safe then no NFL city is
safe."

KJdton 34~Templ&lt; Chr. 2l

Mld·Oitl• Cooferenee

"

.

Suasburl! 44, Tuscarawas Cath. 36
Strutben !17. Girard .19
Sylvania Southview 58, Perrysbura 33
Symmes Vnl. 64, Glenwood 32
Teays Val. 64, Hamilton 1\vp. 27
nmn Calvert 66, N. Baltimort 39
Tipp Cily SB. Graham 4.!1
Tol. Christian 77, Emanuel Bapt. 38
rol. St . U1sula S6, Tol. Waite 40
Tol. Whi~ 60, Clay 33
Triway 63. CleM Fork 33
Troy 38. Trotwood Mldisoo 30
Tuslaw .Sl. Fairleu 36
Uniontown Lake 51. Akron Spring. 42
Urbana S2. Tecumseh 47
Valley View S8, Day. Nonhridgc 38
Van Wert 52. Kenton 37
Vandalia-Butler !18, Nonhmonl31
Vincent Warren 62. Marietta S6
W. Jeffenon 61 , London !53
W. Uberty Salem !19. Ridjemont Jl
W. UrUon 40. Eastern Brown 35·
Warren Local 62, Marietta S6
Washinglon C .H. S8. Grandvi~w 4S
Wauseon 84. Montpelier 3.5
Wt~vcrly .S.S. S. W~bslt'T .53
Woyncsville 55, E. Ointon 32
Wellsville 42, Tor01110 28
Walern Pikl: 64, A.bon Manchester 41
Westfall 43, Richmond Dale Southeastern 40
Wooster 4.S, Massillon Jacbon 40
Worthi11gton Olr. 85. Lucas J6
You. Boardman 61 , Austintown-Fitch 24
You. Uberty ~0. W~t~Ten Champior\ 45
You. Rnyen 49. Campbc1144
You. Ursuline 38, You. Wilson 34

INGELS CARPET
January Carpet Sale

•'

,

halftime of the Miami Heat's game
against Seattle, some fans cheered a
broadcast on video monitors and the
public-address system saying that
Shula had resigned.
But Heat coach Pat Riley had only
praise for his counterpart. The two
coaches shared the cover of a recent
Sports 11/usrrart'd issue that chronicled Shula's difficulties in Miami.
."He's simply. one of the i;reatest
coaches in the history of any sport penod, " Riley said. "I believe that
under the circumstances, the man has
so ·much dignity and pride and
respect that it was a very difficult
year for him."
In 1993, Shula broke the NFL
record for victories of 324, set by
George Halas. He became the only

Scoreboard

Mount Union 76. Ohio Nonhem 71

Rely On lis·For
...c·
plet• Coverage .Of Your
Favotite Sport a ·d TeCI
THE DAILY~ SENTINEL
'

W L ll:L

Seaule....................22
S11Cf0111&lt;n10 .............18
L.A. Laken ........... .16
Phocnilll .................. 13
Ponland ................. .l4
Golden Slate ........... l3

"
· ',.
•

.

~...,....-'tf..;...L__

4
8
8.3
II .~
12.!1

DeiTOit:................... l!l 15
J\tlll'l(a .................... l4 16
Qlarlot:te ................ lol 17
Milwwkcc .............. ll 18
Tororuo ..................... 9 'B

"

j

Iii

6 .800
10 .667
14 .!133
14 .m
_17 l 414
18 .379

Chicqo .................. 27 3 .. 900
Indiana.... . ............. .17 12 .386
CLEVELAND........I6 11 .371

•.

"

W L ll:L

Orlando .................. 24
New Yott. ............... lO
_WIIShins•on ........... .16
MfiiJ11i ..................... u
Bottoa .................... l2
Ncew Jmey ............. ll

Ceatral Division

•Meigs Murauders
•Eastern Eagles
•Southern ·Tornadoes·

.lJ'· ·n.. Al.ac!Mecl
Pres•
State and Wright State

·AU..tk INvklon

1'11111

1

~

at home ·and now has held its
opponents to less than 50 percent
shooting for 41 straight games.
- No. 16 North Carolina 96
N.C. State 72
..At Chapel Hill. N:C. •. the Tar
Heels (I 0-2, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Con-

South

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Meige County
Winter Sports Programs

Clevela State &amp;·wsu /
~~se to · isconsin crews

.

~me

NBA standings

Best Wishes To All Our

.

lowing the three-hour meeting of two
NFL committees and a Cleveland
delegation that included political and
business leaders.
The bulk of the mo]\Cy contained
in the package will go to renovating
aging Cleveland stadium. That didn 't
please all the owners.
"I would rather see them build a
new stadium, but I'm not moving to
Cleveland," said Tom Benson,.owner of the New Orleans Saints.
White said two other points w,:re
made to the owners.
One was that Cleveland and the
Browns fans have been wronged, but
not by the NFL. "Our enemy is not
the NFL. Cleveland has been
wro~ged and the ,only entity that can
make it right is the NFL."
That other is that Cleveland is
determined to carry its court case

·

'I

~

a 9. 7 record. .
Johnson taking the job. Other possiIn Miami, Shula's name is on a
· The team w1th ~ high payroll and ble candidates include Florida Gators steak house, athletic club and
low morale saved Its wo~t game for coa;ch Steve Spurrier and Kansas_City expressway. But critics dismissed his
last, a 37-22 collapse 10 the first Ch1efs coach Many Schottenhe1mer, career record of 347-173-6, and
round of the playoffs last Saturday at a close friend of Shu Ia's.
instead noted that he last won a Super
· Buffa\o.
.
·
Huizenga attended a birthday par!' Bowl 22 years ago. No coach has
Shula bnstled at newspaper ty Thursday for Shula ~t golfer Ray gone so long in one town without a
:otumns a~d polls suggesting it was Floyd's home, but declined to con- championship.
t1me to ~u1t .a~ter 26 ~ears in Miami. fi"!! tha,' his coach had resigned.
"The press staned with the negaThe avallab1hty of J1mmy Johnson,
We II talk tomllrrow," Huizenga . m and everybody in town stanfonner coach of the Dallas Cowboys told WPLG-'IV. "It's not appropriate Wbeiittling him "said Earl Morrall
and Miami Hurricanes, onl¥ to say an~thing right now."
a backup quart~rback on Shula'~
mcreased pressure on Shula. ,
Dolphtns spokes man Harvey championship teams in 1972-73. "It
His decision followed i meeting Greene said he last spoke with Shu- really made it tough for him. Here's
Wednesd~y with team owner Wayne Ia on Wednesday, after a reporter , a person that's been on top and done
~uizenga. It WIIS _uncl~ar whether phoned asking whether the coach still everything. And to have all of them
Shula would remam w1th the Dol- planned to return next season.
pecking away at him, they were bruphins in another capacity.
.
"Coach's answer to me was, tal."
ESPN reponed he would stay 'Nothing has changed,'" Greene said.
In South Florida rea~tton to Shuwith the club in the front office, "This has caught me by surprise if Ia's decision was ' mixed. During
which would reduce the chance of it's true."
,
·

:Cleveland mayor presents city's case for keeping Browns to NFL :

de nee. It boosts my confidence in my ·
shot."
The Jayhawks (9-I) held the Buccaneers (3·5) to just 25 first-half
points af\er limiting Cornell to nine
,in the second half Tuesday night.
Kansas won for the 20th straight

SPONSORS GAME - Five McDonald's
restaurants - the Ohio restaurants in Athens,
GaUipolis, Nelsonville and Rio Grande and the one
In Headenon, W.Va. - will sponsor Saturday's
MI. Vemon.Rio Grande men's basketball game at
Lyne Center. From left to right are McDonald's co-

The Dally SenUnel• Pill 5

' Don ShlJia steps down ·frQmDolphins' post on birthday

Top 25 hoops••&lt;~ontlnuecl from Page 4)

-·-·-

i

, Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

1

I

MON. THRUJ=IJ, N:30
SA'f. N:30,

sUN.·,...

428-1"61&amp; ·

'I

I
-

�'

•

...

-·.

• .
.-·
•

Chur c h of Chr1 st

I

- . . y Cloosrd oi'Ciorltol
212 W. MainSL
Pastor. Andrew Miles
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

•

l

Danville Holln010 Cberdl
31057 Stau: Rout&lt; 325, L.anaavlle
Pas10r: Rev. Rick Maloyed
• Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
• Sunda,Y wonhip • 10:35 a.m. &amp; ? p.m.
OUidr&lt;~~a church -10:35 a.m. Youth 6p.m.
Wcclnelday pn.yer service - 7 p.m.

Pastor: A1 Hartson
Youth MiniRer. Bill Frazier

SIDlday School - 9:30 un.
Worship- 8:1S, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
. Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

SIOiday
Wonhip • II o.m. and 7 p.m.
,Wcdnelday Service - 7 p.m.

Free Will Bapdst Ch•rdl

••

Ash Sueo~ Middleport
Putor; l..CI Hayman
Sunday Service - 1:30 p.m.
. Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servia:-7:30 p.m.

••'
••

t··~·

Ru~d

First Baptist Cburdl
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First BapCist
Putor: l'lul Sliruon
Eon Main SL
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
First Sotllhern .Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pasror: E. LamarO'BryanL
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:45 o.m., 7:00p.m.
W....,.lday Services · 7:00p.m.
First BapCist Church
Pastor: Mark Monow
6dt and

'I

'I

I

Palmer SL, Middleport
-Sunday School - 9:15a.m. ·
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m. ,
W....,.ldoy Service- 1:00 p.m.

r

Rachle First Bapllst
Pu10r: Rev. Larry Haley

••
••

Voulh Puwr: Aaron Young

Sunday School- 9JO a.m .
Wonhip - 10&lt;40 a.m., 7:00p.m.

•

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

· Silver Ruo Bapdst
Pu1or: Bill Lillie
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship - lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30_p.m_.

I..

•

1!/11. Union Bapdst

'

l

-

I ,

•1.,

r

Belhloltem Bapdllt
Racine,OH'
Pas10r : Daniel Berdine
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible S&lt;udy ·7:00p.m. Wednesday ·

I

Il

-

••

Paslor: loe N. Safte1
Sunday Sc:ll«&gt;&gt;-9:45 a.m.
•
Evening • 6:30p.m.
Wednetday Services· 6:30p.m.

'* a:,a.il ~...
·

Will B~st Churdl
28601 SL Rt. 7,-Midd'iepen
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
_ Evenina- 7:30p.m.
Thunday Services - 7:30

Hillside Bapclst Church
SL RL 143 juSL off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev.' JIIJ11es R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - to a.m.
Wonhip - lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeMces -7 p.m.

VI&lt;Wry Baptlstlndependant
52S N. 2nd SL Middleport
Pa1tor: James E. Keesee
Worship - IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.
.,

_,,••

.. •

. Faith Baptlol Church
Railroad St., Mason
· Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m. •
Wednesday Services

••

Tuppers Plain ChurCh of Christ
Pastor : Stanley Mincks

SW1day School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:45 a.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.
Pastor: Rick.Snyder

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Pastor: EUgene E. Underwood
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - I0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Bradford Church or Christ
.
Cnmer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Keith Cooper
SWiday School - 9:30a.m. .
Wonhip - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday,Services • 7:00p.m.

Hickory Hills Ch~rch of Christ
Pastor: Joseph B.·Hoskms
SWtday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

.

Salem SL

Paator: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sjlnday School - 10 a.m.
Evenins • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Ca tho li c
SaCni1 Heut Cllloollc Cltosrch
161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992-S898
.
Pa_, Rev. Waller E. Heinz
SaL Con. 4:45-S:ISp,m.; Ma11- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -1:45-9:15 a.m.,
· S... Mus - 9:3oa.,,
Doiloy Mass • 8:30 ....

Wesleyan Bible Hollneas Church
15 Pearl St., Middlepon.

/'

Thunday Service· 7:30p.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Churdl
Pastor. Peter Tremblay
Sunday School - 9:30-a.m.
Worship · I0:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service-7:00p.m.
•

Rutland Cosnmunlly Churdl
PISLOf: Rev. Roy MeCany
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Evenin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wedllelday Service•- 7 p.m.

L.atter-Day Sai nts

J-•

.
~
Liberty Christian Church
'
Dex1er
Pastor: Woody Call

Sunday Evening · 6:30p.m .

Wcdnr:sday Services • 7:10 p.m.

Thursday Service · 6:30p.m.
Langsville Cllrlstlan Church
SWiday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a,m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday ~emce 7:30p.m.

The cliurch or J_.

Pastor: Gene Zopp

Christ of Latter-Day Salnll
St. Rt. l60, 446.62.47 or446-74&amp;6 ·
Sunday Sehooll0:20-lla.m.
Relief Society/Priuthood II :05-12:00 noon
Sacrama1t Service 9-10: IS a.m.
HomemakiJII meetins. Itt Thun. • 7 p.m.
"
'

Sunday school : 10::!6 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7 p.J!!.

Luth eran

Homlock &lt;&gt;rove Church .

Reedsville Church of Christ
Pas10r. Philip ~tunn
SWtday School: 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Christi an Union
Hartford Church of Christ In
ChriStian Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McMIIlis

SID1day School - II a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday ~ervices -7:30p.m.

Chu rch of God
Mt. Morloh Church of God
"
Racine
·

Reiland Church of God

Pastor: Vemapye Sullivan

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
. Wonhip-10:30a.m.
Mlnenvjlle
Pastor: O.arles Neville

Purl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worthip • 10 a.m.

Worship· !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.
.Hysell Run Holiness Churc•
·.
Putor: Robert Manley
SU.day Sdloel - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - !'0:45am., 7 p.m,

Heath (Middleport)

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Reorxanlzod Church of
Chrlll
.r Latter 0.7 Salnta
Pootland-Ra&lt;:ine Rd.
PastOr: 11nice Danner
Sunday School ·9:30a.m,
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Rllllapd Free WIU BapCIIIt

Sunday School -10 a.m.
Wonbip - 9 a.m.
Thunday Services • 6:30p.m .

Pine Grove Bible Hollneaa Church
1/2 mile off RL 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 t .m.
Wonhip - !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Youth Minister: Michael Teagarden

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Bapdst
Founh &amp; Main St, Middlepen

Pasror: Owles Neville

Pastor. Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wedne~y prayermeeting- ,7 p.m.

. Bradbury.Churcb or Chrla

Pastor. Ke1th Rader
, Sunday School - 10 a.m.

•

Foro.tRun

Pauor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.

Evenmg- 7 p.m.

Aollqully BopCIIIt
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.
Thu!Jday S&lt;rvicos - 1:30 p.m.

,.
_,.

Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Sunday S~hool- 9:45 a.m.

·Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

•·'

Pastor: Roger Wauon

SW1day School- 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 un., 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Arius Hurt

P111or. Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.

;'

' Zloo Ch,.ch of Christ
Pomeroy, Harriaonville Rd . (RLI43)

En':!"''riH

Worahip · l l a.m.

LeOdini Cnoek Rd., Rutland

•

Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 10 •.m .

R01e ol Sharon Holiness Churt:h

Pastor: Jack Colegrove

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday'Seiviceo - 6:30p.m.

Paaor: Oaar es Neville

Sunday _School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Pastor: Keith Rader

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Bearwallow Ridge Church or Christ

•

FlatWoodl

Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.

l1t and Jrd Sunday

S~ John

Lullleron Chercll
Pine Grove
Pastor: J?awn Spalding
Worshtp ·9:00a.m.

Sunday School - 10:09 a.m.
Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sts .• Ravenswood, W.Va.
lnlrim paston: George C. Weinck
Swtday School • 10:00 a.m.

Wonhip - II a.m.
St. P..l Lutheran Chorch
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pt.neroy
PasLor: Dawn Spalding

Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip : It a.m. ,

Potneroy
Pasror: Robert E. Robinaun
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
Worsbip - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - I0 a.m.
Roclt Sprlngo
PallOr: K01th Rader
'Sunday School - 9: 15 a.m.
Won~ -·10 un.
Youth Fellowihip, Sunday • 6 p.m.
RuU111d
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhil&gt; - 10:30 a.m .
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.
Sal... Center
Pastor: Ron FierCe

Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Wonhip ; 10:15 a.m.
SnowviHe
Sunday Scll«&gt;&gt; - 10 a.m.
Woilhip - 9 a.m. ·
Bethany
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Wedneiday Services -,10a.m.

Clrmel
Putor: Kermeth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 Lm._(2nd &amp; 4th S"!')
.. M~~t~~lna Stor
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School ·9:45a.m.
Worshi~ • I0:30a.m.
Thunday Servioea - 7:30p.m.
Sutton
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip_- 10:45 a.m. (1st&amp; Jrd Sun)
East Letart
Pastor: Brian Harkness

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness

Gnham United Melhndlril
Worship - 9:30a.m. (In &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m . (3rd &amp; 4th SWl)
Wednesday ServiCe - 7:30p.m.
MI. Olive United Methodist
Ofll24 behind Wilkesville

Wonhil' · 9 a.m ~
Tuesday Set'Vlces · 1 p.m.

Bethel Churdl
To)Vlllhip Rd., 468C
Wedne.sday Services · 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Syracuse First Church or God
Apple and Secood Sts.

Meigs Cooperadve Parisi!
N-Ciuaer

Pastor; Rev. David RU.Sell

Hvenin&amp; Services· 7:30p.m.

Wedne•day Service.s ·7:30p.m.
Church of Gnd of Pl'ophecy
OJ. White Rd. off SL. Rt. 160
· Pastor~ PJ . Chapman
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m,

Wednesday Services -1 p.m.
Chaster Cburch of G.od
S. R. 248 &amp; Riebel R..d, ax:PasiOr: Rev. William D. Hinds .

SWiday Scl)ool - 9:30a.m.
·
Wonhtp·- 6p.m.;
Weclne!day,'7 p.m. Family Traiaina Hour

Congregational

Alfred
PltCOr: Sharon Hausman

Sunday Sc!Jool - 9:30 a:m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
PasiOr: Sharon Hausman

Worohip - 9 a.m. Sunday ~ool - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Lon&amp;BoUom

Pas10r: Rev. Charlu MUh
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W01ship • 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Service&amp; · 7:30p.m.

Trinity Cburcb ·
Second &amp;-lynn, Pomeroy

Wonhip - 10 a.m .
Hoddngport Church
Grand Stn:et
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Servicos • 8 p.m.

Youth Fellowohij&gt;Sunday, 7:00p.m.
7:30 p.m. ·

HCHH',

OPEN HOUSE
JERRY &amp; PHYLLIS SCOTT

In lllinory Of
My Father
MAHLON (Doc)
EBLEN who Jllllled

_,_

Services: Wednesday, 7:30 p..m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

H-vllte'CommuniiJ C~urch
Putor: Theron Durllam
Sunday • 9;30 a.m. and 7 p.m .
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

............ ....,.l.tlle

Sentinel Classifieds
-~

- ~onhip - 7 \'·Ill, ...

Pentecostal
PenteoJ!biA--.y
S1. Rt 124, Rocine
Pas1os: William Hoback
Sunday School - \0 a.m.
Everung - 7 p.m.

Wednesday seiVic:e • 6:30 p.m.

The Saindon Anny

..

.Thundiy -7 p.m.
' Sunday -7 p.m.

Mldd.._l &lt;;,..snunlty Cburdi
57S Pearl SL , Middleport
PaStor: Sam Andenon
SW1da~ ~110

a.m.
Bvenmg - 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service · 7:30p.m.

·Micldleport Peoteaiotal ·
. - 1liitd ll've.J'H• I: l•l•Hl

PasiOr. Rev. Clark Baker "
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenins · 6 p.m.
Wednelday Service• · 7:00p.m.

Presbyteri an
Syracuse Flrst United Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinaon ·.

Faith Tabernacle ChUrch
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
SW1day School - 10:00 a.m .

Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m. '

Harrhosnllle Preobyhrlu ChWonhip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.

Evening 7 p.m .

Thursday Service- 7 p.m.

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School · 9 a.'m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

1 ~ 11

Pallor: &amp;hiel Han

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -'iO:JO a.m. , 7:30p.m.

(114) IKI2..as35
114 '11112·2713

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Ught Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed,
'Misc. Jobs

. ttJ-2156

Wrecker service

Muat Ill 11 y,.,
Touch lone phone
'*!ulrecl.
s.rv.u (814) 845 1434

(114) 11112-1143 .
23 Coltllge Drive
Mlcldleport, Oh. 45710

Public Notice

PubliC NotiCe

NOTICE 11 hereby given
IIIII on Slturday, January 6,
1816, at 10:00 1.m., a public
llllwlll blltllcl at 211 Wilt
Second SlrHt, Pom•roy,
Ohio, 10 Hll for CBih tile
following colilttlrll:
'18M CHEVY 8-10
IGCCS111t888:150411
Tha Fanner• Bank •nd
S.vtnga Com!Hiny, Pom•·
roy, Ohio, r - . . Ute right
to bid at thl1 aall, and to

IISSE·LL BUILDERS, INC.

&amp;UN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

1--1-

withdraw th1 above
collateral prior lo •a••·
FurtiMr, The F•rmer• B1nk
end _ Sevlnga Company
r-rve• the rlghl to reject
any or all blcY aubmltNcl.
th1
above
Furlher,
colla!Mal will blaold In the
condition II 11 In, with no
11pre81 or lmpllld werrenllelglven.
For further Information,
conii!CI Dllll'H at 8112-2136.
(1) 3, 4, 5 3lc

12 . . . .
Factory a..ke o.1y

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C•
PRIVATE CARE
HOME
Openlnga for

ML Hennon U - - . ....
loChriiiCburch
· Texa\ Commwnty off CR B2

M""" Chapel Church
Sunday ochool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Putor: Robc:n S..nden

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30pm.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Fal~~:!urch

1

Eden Ualted Brethrenlo Cltrlot '
2 1/2 miles nollh of Reedoville
on Stale Route 124
Pao10r: Rev. Roben Markley
Sunday School • 10 ._.,;_
'
. Worship-7:30p.m.
Wedne•day Servieeo - 7:30p.m. ·•

· Pasror: Lawrence Buoh
Sunday·School- 9:30a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
W~ay Servioe - 7 p.m.

·1

l
't .

c......

Siding, Roollft9, Patloa
R-neltle
lnlurere -Elqteriatsced
CaiiW-rntNeff
892-4405
For FrH Eotimatee

..

...

SALE.
: CALL

614·949·2512

icate your life, then you need to re.,, ad cannot be I'JU'IIIIteed to run a
dedicate your life lo Jesus Ghrist If
specilk number of uys.
Dr. James A•.Acree, Sr.
He tells you to start walking slraight,
Hillside Baptist Church
then you need to walk straight That
FRIDAY
.
Pomeroy
is how you present your body a livPOMEROY
Meigs County
Romans 12:1,2, "I beseech you ing sacrifice. God wants sacrifice that
Pomona Grange regular meeting Fritherefore, brethren, by the mercies of is holy and .acceptable. The body
Pick-tip discarded
day, 7 :30 p.m. at the Hemlock
God, that ye present your bodies a ' m'!st be surrendered and given to
washers,
dryers, hot
Grange Hall.
living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto · God. The Holy Spirit must have
water tanks, stoves,
God, which is your reasonable · ser- charge of your body.
Cf. LONG BOTI'OM - Faith FuJI vice. And be not conformed to this
fu'naces, and many
.• , :Gospel Church service Friday al- 7 - wor-!cJ;-hu1be ye transfonned by the
PRESENT YOUR TO'NGUE TO
metal materiels
· • p.m . with the Evangelist Don Miller renewing of your mind, thai ye may
THELORD
.
Call 992-4025
as guest speaker.
prove what is that good, and acceplYou need lo speak wilh kind
between 8 am-8 pm
able, and perfect, will of God."
words and a smile upon your face.
SUNDAY
Mon. thru Sat
Paul said, "I beseech you there- 111e world needs to know thai you are
LONG BOTI'OM -- Ponerfield
fore, brethren, hy lhe mercies of God, going to love Jesus Christ no mauer
4!&lt;,.Baptist aowns to perfonn at 7 p.m . that ye present your bodies. • I would what the circumstances are . You
~:SUIIdey al fhe Faith. Full Gospel like lo say that throughout the Bible need to tum your tongue over to the
Church, Long Bottom.
God is talking about a man presenl- Lord and use it to tell people about
Qu.l~w.r·
ing hi's life liS a sacrifice for Jesus Christ
MONDAY
Christ In Phillipians 2:S He said,
There is always time, always an~ I. D. CONSTRUCTION
POMEROY -- Big ~end Fann "Let this mind be in you , which was · opponunity and there is always the
Siding, Porches,
Antiques Club meeting Monday,7:30 also in Christ Jesus:" Christ was will to tell people about Jesus Christ
Decka,
p.m. in 1he Meigs High School about His Father's business . He was There is NEVER a time lo quit Some
Home lmpr0\IWIIIII1U,
Librw:y.
telling people how to live like God people say ''I'm g611!\lto lay down ",
Remodlllng,
Add-On'1, Rooting
wante&lt;! !hem to, how 10 do 'he lhings "I'm going logive up", I'm going to
RACINE-- Racine Village Coun- thai He wanted them lo do, and how rest" . There is no lime to rest! There
S.H•fal:tlon
cil, 7 p .m . Monday at Slar Mill Park. 10 be lhe man thitt He wanted them . are people dying and going to hell by
GU81Wrt1Hd
to be for Jesus Christ He wanl5 this the thousands · and nobody cares if
Bill Doerf•r
TUESDAY
mind to _be in you. You ought to lhey hear 'about Jesus.
(614) 992·2979
PORTI.AND-- Ponland Elemen- THINK like Christ, BE like Christ
When you s'tilnd before Jes us
tuy Parent-Teachers Organization and ACT like Christ at 'alltimes.
Christ, the blood is going to be on
meeting 1\tesday, 7 p.m. at the eleyour hands if you were given the
mentary· schooL A representative of
P~ESENT yOUR EYES TO
opponunity lo tell someone about ·
the Southern Local Building Com, • mELORD
Christ and you didn't
mince will speak.
We have people loday going
•New Homes
astray because their eyes have gone
PRESENT
YOUR
FEET
TO
•Garages
POMEROY -- Meigs County as1ray. They started looking and
THE LORD
Boanl of Elections regular meeling seeking after things that ihey should
•Complete
Colossians 2:6 says, ''As ye have
'1\Jesday, 9 a.m . at the board of elec- not have sought after. l'he bible therefore received Christ Jesus the
Remodeling
teaches u,o; in Psalms 141 :8; ·"But
Jions office.
Lord,
so
,walkye
in
Him".
You
need
Stop It Compare
mine eyes are unto thee, 0 God the
'•
lo
gel
some
soul-winning
infonnation
Lord; in thee is my trusl; leave not
FREE ESTIMATES
into your body, lake it down jnto your
my soul destitute." How ma«y times
985-4473
I
.
shoes and get out walking for Jesus
• . In 11!1 ,e ffon to provide our rellder- have w~ walked by someone and not ·· Christ,·
Wiip witlr cum:nt news, lhe Gallipo- !old them about Jesus Christ? How
Get bus y doing something for
Duly llibune and The Daily Sen- many times have we worked side by God. If all you can do is pass out a
ENDYOUR .
jiael will llol accept weddings after side with someone and never meogospel tract, then DO IT! Call somefill days from lhe date of the event. lioned Christ because our eyes were one on the leiCphone, write them a LONEUNESS NOWIII
There is someone for
; All club meetings and other news upon man llfld on the' circumstances letter, do anything you can to gel
everyone. Whatever
and
not
upon
heavenly
things1
We
.,Ucles in the society section must be
them lo tum to Christ
your prelerence
need
10
lt.ecp
our
eyes
upon
the
cross
~intd ~ilhin 30 days of occ~­
May God Bless You.
Nelionwide
or Right ~xt
leiiCCI. All binhdey:i must be subnut- and our minds upon Christ so that we
Door.
OonlWute
wilt be able to~_.~iemelhing for Jesus
led within 42 days of the OC(un:ence. all
Another Minute
the time. ·•·
' All mllerial· submitted for pubtiCllll Nowlll

FREE

ROIERT IISSEll
CONSTIUmON

·-

t12-28l5

Nationwide Ina. Co.
of Columb•. Oh.
804 w..'MIIIri
" 8112:2318 f'!omiloy :'

•Dignity w Service Atw..y.&lt; •
l!ltlblilhod 1913

992-2121
108 Mulliii!Y Aw.

A'U FE1Y '

.., n a IEIMCE
· . ...7011

172 -

8lloond ,..,._

~\Ph' ,

ret

'f ...

1-t00-255 54114
Ext. 43711

bo 18 yn.

'lb\lch-10118 Phone FI*IUil8tl
Serv-U (111 8) ~5 1434
'

Phone 9411-2044
Mll-2t85

S20.00/HR.
28583 BASHAM RD.
Racln1, Ohio 45n1

11411-3013 Phont
11411-201a FAX

MODal surraftol

H&amp;H

POMEROY, OHIO

,.,,..,.

' ,_

SAWMILL

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

lanll1aw Mill

Umestone, S•nd, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

321 :MIIttppy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45710

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Dl!nny I PlllllY Brlcldft

992·3954 or 985-3.. 8 . -

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, putln septic
systems, lay lines, underground ·bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512 ·
ll&amp;UONAI 1 I LU'U
........

12.1111 PI" min. -

Bring ad for FrM C.rd

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION

HAY FOR

In Psalms 8S:8 we read. "I will · ·
hear wlw God the Lord will speak:"
we need lO le¥11 to Usteil to tile voice
of the' Holy Spirit · When the voice
comei ~. we 1111111 put into action
whllever a; ays. If He tel.ls you that
you.fteecl lo gel saved, then you need
to
sav~.lf He rells you to re-ded-

4:30P.M.

CHEAPER RATES

The c-Wiity c.leadlir Is
..blkhed·M·8 ·free IenKe to DOD•
proftt aroaps wlshinc to announce
--cia&amp; ud ~peCial en:nts. The ·
!eDCIU'il ootd 'pwd to promote
~-: 'a or fund Nllen of any type.
j;t'.- •re prlated 11 space permits

· Pomeroy
.
204 Condqr St.
Pomefoy, OH

a

P.O. Box 587

PRESENT YOUR EARS TO
THE LORD

Doors Open

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
MACHRIE SHOP, INC.

BALES OF

is iu!iject 10 editing.

Starting
Sunday, Dec. 3rd

11411-2512

J . E. DIDDLE, OWNER

·calendar

SOUL-WINNING

.

Rac:lne Amtrlcan
Legion 1802.

Tr••h Remov•l • Commercial or ReeldenUel
septic nnkl Cl••necl &amp; Portable Tolle.. Rented.
D•lly, -kly &amp; monthly .-.ntlll rltee.

Aetnodllng
Room Addltlone

lis

EWING FUNERAL H.OME

1-

ROUND

.

ThUI'I. It SUn.
1D2 Eaet Main

Ill-nATE WilER SYSTEMS, INC.
The water treatment company cordially Invites you to
participate in a free, no obligation, c:omprehenslve water
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mlrten~l H...nen, Iron, PH.
Pl..•• ceH R•iloSoft 1111112-4472 or 1-100401 3313
to HI up your free water .,.lpla.

ndn..moklng home.
614-992-3200

HouM Ropalr A
Remodeling
Kitchen I Balli

CIOMd

Durribured by

Chriltlln
ltmoaphtre for
elderly care In a

News policy .

J.

Equlp111ent

2.

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

Fri.·Sat. - ~:30

Water

u.s.... &amp; Gravel

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

United Bret hren

',;;r, "·······
6u;v·

EICIVATION
Septic Srsteas,
Traler&amp;IIGIHSitts.
Reaso•alll• RiffS
Jot N.Siyre
SAYlE IIUCIIIG
614·742·2138

REG. HOURS
Mon.·Wed. 104:30

011-

(No Sunday Calls)

HAULING &amp;

1_, ........

Dyesvllle Com., unity Churdl
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

614-992-7643

~ Community

Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

"11.5 Buuemul Ave., Pomeroy.
Saturd!l)l - 10 t.m.

ReedsviHe Fello-lp
Church or the Nuart11e

lo phlce •• INI, c.al

'Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

Enddme House of Prayer
(at Burlin&amp;ham dturch off Route 33)
. Pas10r: Roben Vance
Sunday worship - I0 a.m.

Full
Li&amp;hl33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Putor. Roy Hunter

...------------,

CIIftOII Tabernacle Cllurch
QiiiOn, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.'

AWE EllliiATES

Repair

PUBLIC NOTICE

love,Nible

Sunday-7:00p.m.·
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.'-

•Rooting

•P•Inllilg

SUI per min.

Gone but attn living In_
my '-1 forever.

· RACINE

SUN. IPM

•Skiing

Car/Heavy Truck

llt.ll40

Wont. ~•lOt MY
. _ much I mlu
yoU IInce- .you _ .

, Pastor; William Van Meter

New l..ilh.e Rd .. Rutland
Paator: Rev. ~fltgarea J. Robinson

•Aemodlllng

l·tO.S71·1100

1111101101

..., ...... 5,191M.

•;,

.. •Addltlone
•NewGIINgH

SQCIS

SPOilS

fiiiiCE

Churdl of Jesus Christ,
Apostolle Fallb
•
1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New lima Rd.

lliltg

........
.~4\Hr.~.

UP.INIIE

Sunday School - 10 ,a.m.
Wndnesday St!rvices.-7 p.m.

~~~···'"·
•New HolliN

992·2269

Saturday &amp; Sunday
12 Noon • 4 P.M.

Plstor: l..awrmce. Foranao

SMITII'S
COintiCIIO

·. 1111 Slack

214 Fifth St., New Haven

Kdoldnc Lite Cbl!r&lt;il
sao Iii. 2nd AYO.,Mid\llepen

The Belleven' Fellowship Mlnhl'l

Pas10r. G!qcny A. Cnncliff
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Lump &amp; Stoker

Pa1tor: Rev. Frankliri. Dickens
Service: Frid8y.7•p.m.

Sunday servi~, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m . .

rem

·l
&lt;.lHIO
1.

1

1611) JE :-6212

Faltlo Fellowship Crusade for Chrlat

Hohaon Chrlsllan FelloWahlp Chordl
Rev. Clyde Hendenon

Uolted Faltlt Church
RL 7 on Pomeroy By-Pan
)'astor: Rev- Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Worship ·- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W...,.sday Service - 7 p.m.

.'.T I L S

---11::!;!!" . '

Fairview Bible Cllurdl
Letart, W.Va: RL I
Paator: Rankin Roach
Sunday Schoo,l-•10,30 a.m.
Worship : 9:30a.m., 7:!JO p.m.
Wednelday Service - 7:&lt;X!p,m.

SUversvllle Word Of Faith
Pas10r. David Dailey
Simday School9:30 am.
Evenina • 7 p.m.

MJ. Olive c...munlty Chu~

··,fi~IE.f~T

POO BAH &amp; SWITCHON
Tonight &amp; Saturday
9:30 p.m. • 1:30 a.m.

Willie's Chapel W. .yan
.
Coolville Road
Pallor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10::!0 a.m.
Wedn•sday Service - 7 p.m.

Christian Fellow.,lp c ....,.
Salem SL, Rntland
PaslOr. Robert E. Musser
Sunday Schooi - IOa.m.
Wonhip - 11 :1 5 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday _Service • 7 p.m.

Nazarene

AMHIINC.

WAYNE'S PLACE

Sunday School - 9:30 LDt .
Wonhip- 7 p.m.

Col•ary Bible Chprch
Pomeroy Pike, Cn. Rd.
Pastor. Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30 L,m.
Wonhip 10:30 Lm., 7:30pm.
Wedneaday Service-7:30p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Church
l.o!J&amp; Bottom
Pas10t: SteVe Reed '
Sunday St;hool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

614...49·3127

Middleport, Ohio PreSents

Paator: Rev. Roger Willford

Oth er Chu rc hes

~ervice,

\.

F.-..d...,Gospel- .
Bald Knob, oo Co. Rd. 31

Now Haven Churdt of lhe Ntwireno ·
Pallor: Glendoo Stroud
Sunday SchOOl - 9:30 a.m,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W¢neaday. Service• - 7 p.m.

Wednesday

(Stock up 0(1 your
holiday baking
supplies)

COURT STREET GRILL
KARAOKE
SAT., JAN. 6, 9 TIL?
Featuring Jeff Nor:th

Kin&amp;•bul')' Road .
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Wonhip SCrvice'I0:30 o.m.
Wonhip Service-Itt and 3rd Sonda)-, 7 p.m.
No Wednesday Evenina Semce
,

Porllaed First Church of the NaortDe
PasLOr: John W. Dau&amp;Lu
Sunday School -10'00 a.m.
Worship · 6:30p.m.
W~esday Services - 1 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:45a.m., 7:30. p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Mldcleport Church of the Nuarene . ·

ca.. teton lnterdenomlrilltlm_. Church

'

Torch Churdl
Cn. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30 a.nl.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Rlcloe Flrst Church oftH NUII'ine
Paa10r: Scott Roae ·
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wophip - 10 a.m., 7f.m.
· Wediiei'day Service- p.m.

R•tla"' Chtircb &lt;I the NuanAe
Putor. Samuel Basye
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10,30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Walnesday Services - 7 p.m.

Huel Community Churdl
QffRL. 124

Sunday School- 9.30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday_Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.

Ch- CI!Ur&lt;h of the NIWirane
""""' Rev. Herbert Grau:
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m .

Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.

Somday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Thomas McClwt&amp;
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. .
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednelday Services - 7 p.m.

· Pastor: Helen Kline

Coolville United Mellindlst Parlih

United Method ist

'.

l'omeroJ Church ol'lhe N.......,.

SyracuoeMialon
Bridgeman SL, Syracuse
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
·
Evenin&amp; - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 pm.

Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Panor: Rev. Ral~ Spires

Pastor: Gregory L. Sean

'.

Wonhip • 9 a.m .

Pastor: Rev. Victor Rotilh

Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace

Forest Run Baptist

1!11~ 1!/lostah

Calvvy Pll&amp;rlm Chapel
Harrisonville Road

KendC hurch ofC~rlst
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - ]0,30 Lm.

Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield

- ,
' ·&lt;

~ p.m.

Tuesday Services · 7:30 p.m.

'

Putor: Roben Barber .

Pastor: Bill Ssires
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
• Wedneilday Servicca • 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 Lm. ·
Wonhip- 10 a.m.
- Central Closter
Alllury (Sr,nCUJe)

Sil.orRid~

SJ111CUR Church &lt;I the NuanAe

Paaor: Sharon Hausman

Holiness

Tuesday A Thuraday-~J:19.P.m·

SoJ/Ih lltlltel New T--•t

Tuppers Plllno St. Pout.

Sunday Schooll0:30 a.m.
Coffee hour lollowina

Middleport Church or Chrllt
•
Sth and Main

•-

SL, Paneroy

Rc:c&amp;or: Rev. D. A. duPiander
Holy Eucharist and

Worship - !Oa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

As sP mbly of Go d

Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF SIOiday 6:30 p.m.

WATKINS
PRODUCTS

•

Sl!ftlliy School - I 0 a.m.
. Bvenin&amp; 7:30p.m.

PasiOr: John W. Douala•
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Ser;via:s - 7 p.m.

Putpr. Rev. Chule1 Muh

Ep1scop&lt;1l
GrKe ~~ Clsos""
326 B.

'

·-lUI

Putor: Rev. Roland Wildman
s...day school and wonhip 10:25

Sunday Sd)ool • ll a.m.

w

I

_____... ---

hurc
Potneroy Westside Chur&lt;h of Chrlot
33226 OUIW..'s Home Rd.

I.

Friday, January 5,1991

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,..... I • The Dally Sentinel

614-742·2193
1111~1

....

J.D. Drilling Company
Racine, Oh. 4Sn1
Jamea E. Diddle

ANNOUNCEr,l ENTS

Personals

005'

OWM Seeks Single Or DWF To

Laurel Limousine Service
"Ride In a Chariot of Luxury"

1&amp;11411 ....

Bt~f Rtttir

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts

C&amp;W Music And Want To learn
C&amp;W Dancing . Send Response
To : CLA 367 Clo Gallipolia Daily
Tri~ne. 825 Thtrd Awnue, Galli-

For all your Special Occasions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
-flrvloe
• ..........
Night Out on the Town OpereiiCI
- •Dy·
wtth
~~ (614) 992-4279 Joh.;:..r;:•
33058 SR 33 *Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Oat Step Cettplete Aute

Share Racing lntereats, I Enjoy

614-992-6223

pal&lt;' OH -45631 .

30 AIVIOuncements
Christmas Treea will be on dis·
play thru Jan 7th II the home ol

Jefry &amp; l'lly~s Scott, 214 Rill&gt; SL, New Haven. ~at-Sun 12noon .
4pm.

40

Giveaway

3 cats &amp; 2 kittens 10 ~ home.

814-992-5t22.

6mo. old part Beagle, par t Bas.
aen. mole dog. 304-895-3313.
Beagle Pu13, Good Rabbit Dog
Male, To Good Home, 814-379..:

9457.

v- 01c1
White With lltawn Sttoll. Sllota &amp;

- Brittany Spaniat About 1

Wormed, 614·448-2740 Even ·

ingL

Free Estimates
Insurance Woi-k Welcome

Free
ppies, AN Malta, Part Jle.
. kin ea , Part Cocker Spaniel,

614-

State Rl33
Derwin,' Ohio .

ay il no1 claimed- 1wo

Gi

c ~le puppi", large bfeed,

S., 81 4· 742·2889 or 6 t&lt; ·2475.
.

1Cit'l11141ltn

One 2501300gat. fuel Oil '*"k. ln-

YOUNG'S
CARPitmR SERVIa
•Room AddltiOna
•Niw.GM-e-a
•Eitclrlal I Plumbing
•Rooftng

'

•Interior I Exterior
Painting
Alao Conctlta WOlle

N••d o l'llol~er for
your Specu.l Oumion?
•Weddlnp/RICeptlonl

-coupon.

(Engagllnlnt Plcturn)

-Reunion•
·~
Ruaonabll Prlcll

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Call 182·7747

892-1215

Pomeroy, Ohio

1/1/ttn

Aftw4pm
During Walkclllyl

An

Pot bellied pig &amp; lirawood, 814

Seven puppies to give away
mother i1 German Short· ha i;

I'Wo~et,

814-941H129.

Someone To Tet~r Down And Re-

.

(FRI!:E ESTIMATES)

-·

~75-211-47.

move A One Story Oldo&lt; . _ tn'

-Grollpa
•FIIIIily

atalted in baaem&amp;nt. Remcwe ·ito
,o,,.
..

me on wutctJtdl

The Pomeroy ~reo For All llatariolo, 614-388-9010.
Two 112 English San., po~pplaa,
,.. ., IIOOd -~75-lll588.
Used couch and coffee table

l14-992-e31!5.

.

.

.

60 lost and found 1t
(Litni~Rme)

WICKS
'

HAULING
(Speollllle In
Driveway Spreading)

um...aor.e,

dreve_J, Send,
Top Soli, fill Dirt
614-992-3470

STAR GUITAR

Found On Campua 011 Of Unlor Rio ~ Stnert Black
Doa. No Color Or ldoriHvonity

IUITAIS

ca11on, 814·4-48-3217 To Cllilm.
idortlify s.. &amp; Brood.
i .

$300&amp;up

Found: young mote ca~ to~
cotorad hair, ""'Y ~~
n

Lessons on
Plano,
Guitar l Drume
Ill N. Locu.l St.
Chnhlra,otL

114-317-o3CJ2
Roger Watklr
11/Mo'l!lfl -

Shot,.,.,.., ot. 114-982.'/S4i.

Loat 12-2.4-05, one ·J ••r ...

block &amp; tan OoMrman, Rutiand

area, REW4RD, phone1114- 71123041.

f

' •
LOST: llloclcittJOW11 liooalo 11U11aw
IN*lAoo...... ~-en.Zlllt( ·'
Loll: Doa Port Rod ......~ ltl '

JJeoon L•~• Area, 111

. . 1.

'

.

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•* ·
~

LOST: ~ galcl tiion br:

FOIIL 1011

· 304-4~.

.

~OST:

./

.

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.,
~

Large .... ....,...,... ....
OIL laat - · 1215

F_,._ ...
--HMn.···~--·
f

.

�Frldey, Jenuery 5,1998

Friday, January 5, 1 • ·,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

_....

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

40 Poe111110

45 c:anctu.ion
.. Loclt

14 ......

47 Bullflglll

lltl - •

KIT 'N' CARLYLFAD by La.,.Y Wrtaht.

41 l.ong 111111

1 . . _ god
ol ,... \
7 .tdlcent
13 Nlgllt ol
~

43 PI'OIIetlon

opener

~

15 s.ntplod
.. c - . t
Ul Wild laney
e1._t
17 Eqllollve 51 Seoled

70

0

•

0

NORTH

..

0

p.m.

REti1ALS

the clay before rha ad Ia to run.

Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition•• 10:00 a.m . .Sat-

410

tor Rant
1 Bedroom

Golllpollo,
'614-446-

Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm tho
day belore the act Is 11&gt; run, Sun• day edition· 1:OOpm Friday, Mon• day edition 10:00..111- Satufday

20 lltlenlglrte

21 Gulf.

bltiJ11n

o•
" 0

•

BARNEY
TATER II

I'll. F~!O IT
TOTH'
HAWI!iS

EAT YORE
SUPPER
OR·-

DOWN

24. Chow- .I 1 Slrukof
color
25 Wild
2 African
aheep
land
273 Glol'
4 Lion, lor
0111
deg.
5 Chemical
31 Cult

29=

SUII!l

32 Thlclran

33 Tltua fir
'34 T
of

6

Gtldot -

Thut'IIIM

57 Sltuna

bird

eon.-.
. advoclla

~- . •7 Acu.a
Uwa11n111

Vulnerable: Neither.
· Dealer: Eailt
South
West North East
Pass
I a
Pass I NT
Pass
2a
Pus 2a
2NT
3a
Pass 4 •
All pass

0

55 SlleiC!Ior

23 Mythical

loQ J 3 2

0

=lnlr

54 SotM-

58 Aftnue

Africa anti
Arabia

oK

•• 0

~-J.,

fi

aJ 3
•AI0753
• 10 8 5
aA 9 7
WEST
EAST
aQ95
a4 ·z
•J
•K9862
•AJ92
•Q7643
aKI0864
a5
SOUTH
aAKI0876
•Q 4

Ralph-

37 Pillow

cov.fng

' 1.-.
10
tcea limb
' 11
12 Clothing
' fllbric
19 ErichStrohetm

31 motllaf
-··

o..- . 31 Rodaill

.

22 Puaheo
gll'llly

24

31 W•tdatwcl
(about)

411 llllrlls
42 Anlelopa

44 Fortuna......

~~ '

49

:.::rer··

26
50 AIMf - ·
28 TheActora'
52-fklmln
aignals
1,004
30 Smootheot 53 Tum lhl
34 Nelllb lui
page
35 Act-.
(lllbr.)

I
I

I TOLD I-IER ABOUT
D06S WJ.IO ARE LIKE
FRIENDS .. D06S '(OU
CAN TALK TO, AND..

SHE SAID."NO~..

'

..
' t~

'

West led his heart ja~k: three, king.
four. The simplest defense now is for
East to switch to his singleton club.
Declarer cannot avoid losing four tricks,
one in each suit. Yet this w8lln't clear to
Lombardi. Not knowing his partner had
a spade tri~k, Lombardi gave his partner a heart ruff, which cost West his
natural trump trick.
Note that this potentially lei\ dummy
with two heart winners, the ace and 10,
for two club discards. But Lticena re8d
the position perfectly. He C8llhed the diainond ace before leading the club king
from his hand. This dislodged dummy's
enlry to the heart winners . And al though it ga&gt;e him three club tricks, declarer couldn't avoid losing the fourth
round of clubs to West's 10. The defend·
ers took onelleart, one heart ruff, the
diamond ace and a late club for one

I

I

1995 Polaris 425 Magnum ~ · f
wheeler, only 4mos ok:t, 270miles. ..

304-675-2590.

THE BORN LOSER

;

750 Boats ·&amp; Motors

for Sale

· YOO~ ~

;·

1993 201 Pro XL, zo· Strutol '
bass boat, 200 XPHP, 61~·687· ,
7347or61~·2B79.
:

-=

John Deere 110 Riding lawn

Ollllrter HotM; Mossburg
12Ga. Shoe Gun, 814-387~219.

Uncoln Rangt&lt; 8 .G u Weldor, 25
Hour~, $2,000, 614-143-2255.

Square bales $1.50-$1 .75. Saturday only pickup. 300-675-3860.

TRA tJ SPORTATION

110 Autos for Sale

Lot Splillol, Gr•t Dant PuppiH,

614 44638ell.

760

N'lER- N.J.... 'fWVE:
GOT /&gt;..LOT a:- WlNl:&gt;':l lo'ONE:.Y ~ T _ _,_I

ln.T,

(7..H)'(~ ...

.

~

- ~

&amp;J'(!

'

i

~

"1tN\ ... N-Il) WJ5 Wi. ()II..y
~ I\£ (:£11" llJOSE 'IRII-lC&gt;~:

'1'00

10
f'PI.Y FOR

S10

u..-.,

........

~

gine, 4

r, All Options, Excel-

lent Con,:lition, 4 New Tires, IS14256·1924.

Sam Somervllle'e regular. Army
by Sandyville Pait 1987 l)odgo Daytona $1 ,200,
·Gfltce, Fri-SUn t2noon-epm; 304· 000, 61~2~5-1215.
273-15a55. Junior olzoa. Exct.ngt ·bema lo be In .by Deoom- 1987 Honda CRX, 74.000mi..
llor 31, tOGS.
.
110od goa mlloago. Call 304-6755317 aflllr Spm.

11187 f'Untiac Sunbird, gray, 5opd,
air, good s_
hape, $2,500. 304-8623852.
f98a T-bird: 3.jll, V6, new pain~
like new, runs great. 304-6 75 -

E W U ~

UP

LONLGP

PUHXMHX.'

·-

UO. LWBF .

..,_·'.....

SFTWPPG.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ; I'm doing another picture with Redford. I'm pl. . .
Minnie Mouse and he's Mickey,"- Paul Newman .

tilT IIAILT
Pllllll

Clfil'.l ~ Jj)' ( ~ 1) 'C
......., CU.Y I. POWUI

· Ofour
ReorronQa lttttro ol
Krombled -•do
low to form four -da.

flbse" ....
Will

"' P&lt;r

P\!Q 1-'CJU ~~

..--··

.,

,

tiro

.-

..

be-

'

'.

G YT E C N

PI
&gt;.

H I RS I

1~

'

B 0 TU0

I I I'
_ _ _ _
1

-~~'"...,',

.
. was always
~nmng around tn circles. 1think
tf a person has his feet on the
ground and his head in the

5

_

b .

f9

BIG NATE

f)

1•

.

•

by f•lltng '" the mtllipg wcwds
you develop from step No. 3 below.

•

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

·-

'

I

.

I I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER
•

.-'

SQAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
Tht Trtosurt You
Sovinrs You 'II Find

In tht

Clossifltd Stcllon.

Rector- Ebony - Opera - Revoke • BROKE
The guy my roommale dated liked to spend lots of
money. He has mastered the art of being prosperous
even though l)e's BROKE

'

'

Appliance Parts And Service: All

,,

Name Branda Over 2S Yaare Ex..

perlence All Work'Gueranteed.l .
Fr_onch City Maytt• · 814-~48.'1
7795.

••

"•'

'·
C&amp;C

General Home Main ·
tenence- Painting, vinyl siding, ·

.

; ...

~~~~=~~~~~~~~:. TRO
' ·ORA PH

can help you
what to do to
make th&amp; relationship work. Mail $2.75 ,to.
AI
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station. New Vorl&lt;.
NV 10156.
.AQUARIUS (J1n. :ZO.Fab. 191 Act sensibly In regard to safety procedures today.
BERNICE
Pay attention ~o the lillie things, like
too much staner fluid on the fire
squirting
BEDEOSOL
when barbecuing.
. PISCES (F8b. ::zo.M8n:h :ZO) Play games
...________ for pleastlre today and not solely to
embarrass your opponen1s. If you take
things too oeriousty, everyone'S run could
be spoiled.
ARIES (118rch.Jl.Aprit 19) Do not try to
catch up on all the tasks you've lell
undone around the house in one fell
Saturday, Jan. 6. 1996
swoop today. Use your time productively
Looli lor "!liya ·to put your earnings and and take.a law breaks.
resources to work' in l~e year ahead.' TAURUS (April :zO.M1y 20) Even if an
trw JSHQIIte valid jlt'Ograme and find waya abrasive acquaintance berates you with
to 11M your~ io lllllke more !"0"8Y· some caustic- comments tod1y , don't
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jin. 18) You, iespond in kind. C011n11o 10 and consid·
could be mqra llhon-tempetec~ lhan.UIUal er the source.
today, eap•clally il trlenda want to GEMINI (Mey 21.Julll :ZO) v 011 r willpowqhange YOIIr·ptana_to &amp;u!t, themaelna. er COt,lkl be low today.•A ~rp salesperEven I you 1M1 ~out,
1'1180 H·• aon might recognize 'lhis and try to sell
big dell. Trying to ~tch u~ a br~k~~ .you ~ndile you won't ever use.

Batttiry, Stortq, 97K, Ex 1. oor10n• Condition, Rei-, $8,500,
_
_
614~13l_M

Cutlass Supreme Mor•!"!:_
Fitnc ~ Dr., PW, POl, PMR.
AMIFM Ca11., Ext.

DIVIIIo, ,11,..00 -

clot\,

li0ii~i1 ~~~~~~~= f~~~;;~~~~ 1_.::::;__~u-3_,oo_o_._"_~_..._7J

1

'·

BOO

BY F J F

0468 Rogen Waterprqollng. Ea·· '
lablilhed 1111'5.
·

Maroon, 4
Auto, AIC, New Tires, Ex-

'

D I FJ L

' ,.

• ·~

BASEMENT

Ta,ota cem~r.

•\.,.

'UH

.:\:

WATERPR&gt;OFWG
... ~t
Unconditional. lifetime guarantee. -. , ~
local references furnished. Call
(814) 4~8 - 0870 or ·(814) 237-' ,.

8323.

"

.

f "·.
'•

'

1

.

: free estimalllt call Chlr. 814-182-· ,

.If..•

..

~

CLBLOF.'

C 0 J. E F

0 L

C

UDIOL' HS.

L l J 0 H

_

l

carpenrry, doors, - · bolita, ...
mobile home repair and 11"1DM. Fot·· r-

..

'DIFJ~ :

and Pl'lllnll

1
'
.;.18.;;8.;;5;;;Pon;.Doo;..b;.ac_Pa.;..;rl.;;oe.:;n;:ne;.,..;v_-8_E_n•. 1 ___11_1 .;;1Pt~ro::,vemen,.,;,;;,~ta:...-.~·
,,,
61~~-

oomot~llagt

i

~·

Celebrily Cipher cryptograms arl!l crultcl !rom quotahons by lltnO!Js
•
EaCh lener n thll copher !llands!Of anottwr. TOO.y's due: Cl~

I

SEF1VICES

And Dryers, All Reconditioned
~nd Gauronteedl 1100 And Up.
Wl~.814 61188441.

'..

' l'"~~-E~..JM~-~uL.
·r---A~~R~~~~ ~~~~~~
~-~ should
puU himself·
7 I I 18
e Compll!te
lho chuckle quolod

Ower 10,000 Transminlonr'"'~
Clutches. Pressure Platea,' 814~ '
379·2i35'
• ....•
.
.· .1
Naw gas tanka, one ton truck ~,,
whaeiJ, radiaiDrs, Boor mall, ·~
tt

Rtfrlgeratora, Stovea, Washers

by Luis Campos

I

built, All Typea, Acceulble To 'I

11185 CIM!vy
Monte
Carlo,
Body
In
Condition,
Runa
Goo&lt;l,
614·
~~~=-===-:=~=~ Good
44&amp;4251,
-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

'

f\~VE

t""· $300, 614-742-2734.

D &amp; It Aulo, Ripley, WV. 304-3723933or 1·800-t73-932Q,

-·
.....

PI I

Budget Transmiaalons. UHd ~ ..,

Place Drdtr Call A"er 8:00 304578-2088, Prices: .1k/Bd.Ft. To

.,

01~1

1978 transfer case with 350 au·
tomatic transmissi_o,n, good condi·

2 Chevrolet ~ lnclt Railey Wheel• ; ,
$115; t Set 01 Small Blodc Chovt· •
400 C. I. Cylinder Heodl $too,: ~
614-~1-1053 .
'
.
~
.
~
--~------...:·

..

This was a classic Merrimac Coup,
named for the American coal-carrying
ship that was sunk in Santiago Harbor
in 1898 in an effort -to bottle up the
Spanish Oeet.

J'
i w.e:,tl\!

.,

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

.

lumber: Oek Poplar, Pine To

r
[ 0()1\ ~ 1.1\'(

....

(

•

down.

j'

19.91 Honda 300 4114, ~I main·
- · $3,.200-lir"" 614&lt;742-3190.

i

killing defense.

EMPLOYrAEN T
C.E:RVICES

1968 Honda TRX300 Fo~rtrax, :t
WD, Excellenl Condition, $2100
OBO ; 61~ · 446-0821. 614 - ~~6 6651 .

_

-1-+--1 ' ..

Argentina was doing &gt;ery well in last
year's Bermuda Bowl until the Daily
Bulletin editors pointed it out on the
front page. After that, the Argentinian
·
team stayed in reverse gear,
However, during the move to the top
of tlje table, Pablo Lombarcji and Carlos
Lucena played well. In particular, on
this deal Lucerui found a brilliant move.
East's bid of two no-trump, which
showed the red suits, is more typical of
a pair event than a team game.
However, it did help West to ·find the

~EANUTS

HAVEAD06,M

..

'

Smiles, then tears

•

I

,.

Opening lead: • J

n:

1 ASKED M'f MOM
A6AIN IF I COIILD

..

..,

By Phillip Alder

1979 Ford E·35D van, 1 tori ;
chaeaia, good . body. new 18.5 ...
tires, no motor, no transmlilsion ~ 1
11350,614-742-2355.
i

,.

'.

..

~~~~(June~~~~~~J1t!

your pals today. Lo.ok for the value in
every nilationship Try to Ignore the flaws ·
that only trigger criticism.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Use caution
when involving yourself in activities that.
are too physically laxing today. Some of
your muscles might not be able to meet
these requirements.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) Someone

'

.."
.,

'

'1•·

. ''

Mysteries

.
..

·~,.

encountered In a social situation today

could have a 'bile as bad as his or her
balk. Back ofl gracefully if you start getling warning signals.
UIIRA (Sipl. 2~. 23)1! yoo intend to
helP others today, favorable results will
be possible: Conversely, you may be dis:
appointed if your purposes are too sen·
centered.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Today try
not lo becQme lrwolved with a companion
who always ·allempls to do _the thinking
lor olllers. You wit nol want to tolerate a
knoW-it-all.
SAGitr~ (New. 2NIIc. 21) Do not
permfl impulsive aaaociataa to make
financial commflmenla on your.behall
today. Make sure you know what is going

on at an times.

.•",.)'
"•

'.' "~· •
jj

ll'f. .. ,·..

....

..

1(CC)
.

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. .'•,

�•
, . . 10 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Friday, January 5, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Alonq the River

~eaaer should
be on. ' alert with
accused qhild molester in farrilly
!r
.
.
.,
t

•

Ann

Landers

...

. , ... Lt»~

.

-~
CNIIIn
sr s , ·

Recently a rel.lilive by marriage stepped forward
fnd accused another family member
lt.f repeated childhood sexual abuse.
1lte accused denies this vehemently
!!fld the family has become divided by
ttlliances on both sides. Need I say
i)s has tom our family apan.
:' I'm mainly concerned about my
c;hildren.
Should I keep my daug!tters
,

away from " Uncle John" based solely on these allegatiops7 1fl allow my
girls to continue to see their uncle,
what signs should l watch for that
would indicate a pJQblem?
My husband says i must not discuss this with anyone. My hean
wants to believe Uncle John is inn&lt;&gt;ceill, but my head cautions me to
watch out for my~ children's welfare.
Please advise.·- "Sally" in S.pokane
Dear Sally: I hope you have a
warm and open relationship with
your children. It would make things
easier.
Start a dialogue with the children
about the importance of not allowing
anyo1le to touch their private parts ~ ever. Let them know if ANYONE

tries 10 do this, they should say " I
don't ~ant you to do that," thep c~e
and tell you at once.
I recomm,s:nd supervised visits
. with Uncle John since no proof of
guilt ~ been produced. Meanwhile
bear in mind the accusations may noi
be valid, so no names should be mentioned.
Dear Ann Landers: A while back
you printed a letter fnim a father who
refused to dance with.. his daughter
" in front of all those people" at her
we~ding because he was such a
lousy dancer. May I say something
aboutthat?
·
I am the world 's lousiest dancer
and no amount of lessons would help,
but I DID dance at my daughter's

.

•

•

•
·9{emem6rances

-

izens for Public Actio'n on Blood
Pressure and Cholesterol, P. 0 . Box
30374-HBP, Bethesda, Md., 20824. •
• Jeny Wilson, Executive Director
Gem of the Day: (Credit Robin
Williams): Our kids embody oUlgreateff{antasies and our worst nightt
mares. On one hand, I see my lei~
standing before the cameras saying,
"Fd like to thank the Nobel Com:
miuee." On the other hand, ! see him
saying, "You want ketchup with
those?tt
..

Please, Ann, urge your readers to
· wedding and it was the high point of
· the evening. Tell that guy it could be discu ss any change in medication
his, too, and not to miss it.•• Mooile, with their physician. They should not
·let negative news reports stop them
Al a.
Dear Mobile: Beautiful! !love it! from takinll blood pressure medicine.
Calcium channel blockers, while
And I'll bet your daughter did, too.
safe
and effective, lire not appropri~
Dear Ann Landers: Millions of
ate
for
everyone. There are many othhigh blood pressure patients were
frightened and confused recently 'by er treatment options and the effects
news reports that a blood pressure can vary depeiiding on the individual.
medicine' known as a calcium chan· 'This is why it is important to discuss
nel blocker may increase their risk for therapy options with your physician
a bean auack. As a result, many before making any decisions.
If your readers have any ques~o ns
patients discontinued .taking their
about
calcium channel· blockers or
blood pre~sure medication. This
other
high
blood pressure medication.
means their blood pressure may rise
significantly, putting them at risk for they can call 1-800-896-9925 for
more informatipn, or' write us at: Cit·
a stroke or possible heart attack.

i

of tliings past
Featured on page C1

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Mammography
unit to visit
Meigs County

.,

I

,.

REEDSVILLE NEWS

{ The Reedsville Community
thristmas tree lighting was held at
the Reedsville-Belleville Locks and
·~am park in early December. The 25
:foot live tree was decorated with new
,Jilulti-colored miniature lights. The
iwitch to the lights was turned on by
'frarik Bise, a member bf the Olive
.Township Fire Department.
Pastor Steve Reed gave a short
ehristmas message. Frances Reed,
iresident of the Riverview Gat-lien
i;lub, conducted the program and
thanked all who helped with the tree
project, including chief Mark Smith
·ind the Olive Township Fire Depart·
iiient and member of the Riverview
Garden Club.
,; · Maxine Whitehead led the audi·
jnce in the singing of Christmas
lbngs.
;t

These 35 students have completed requlramentl for graduation from the Practical Nursing School of Buckeye Hilla Career
Center. Recognized for achieving the hlgheat academic grades
In the class were l,.aura Betzlng of Pomeroy and Shari Foater of
Gallipolis. Graduating were left to right, fro'nt, VIckie DeWeese,
New Haven, . W.Va.; Pam Morgan, Jackson; Linda Murphy,
McArthur; Donna Smith, Gallipolis; Jenny Thomaa, Middleport·
Stacey McDermitt Gallipolis; Debbie Webb, Crown City; Caroly~
Webb, Oak Hill; · Melinda Barr, Pomeroy; Angela McMillin, Gal·
llpolls; and Laura Betzlng, Pomeroy; aecond row, Trlna Duncan,
Gallipolis; Angela Hunt, Jackson; DeShawn Sandera, Gallipolis;

Karen Cox, Galllpolla; Linda· Bartlett, Wellston; Dawn Lanning,
Jackson; Kathy Riddle, Jackson; Tammy Hunt, Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va.; Sberl Foster, Gallipolis; Gloria McDaniel, Jackson; Pam
Sellers, Middleport; Shawna Langford, Thurman; Sue Krannltz,
Jackson; Connie Qllllaple, Bidwell; ond Sondra Holstein, Jackson; and third row, Pam Moran, Instructor; Phyllis Brown, coordinator; Brian Gibbs, Galllpolla; C. J. Harmon, Jr., Gallipolis;
Joyce Gibson, Galllpolla; Stecy Tyree, Middleport; Robert
Rhodes, Pomeroy; Dan Marhoover, Jackson; Tammy Pl!lnta, Gallipolis; John Arnold, Middleport; Connie Carnay, Oak Hill;
Rebecca Stump, Instructor; and Betty Plymale, lnatructor.

.

Hispanic patrons sue over. tavern's English-only policy
:

•,t Y lVivA"L..'IR~NDT

· · · · this was an English-speaking country
Prell Writer
and I asked them to speak English," .
.· UNION GAP, Wash. (AP)- The Ostrander said.
'iign over the bar 'at the Old Town Mike Cantu, Carlos Olivera and
:Jump reads, "In the U.S.A. it's ·Enrique Mendoza filed a lawsuit
,English or adios, amigo."
Wednesday alleging Ostrander vi&lt;&gt;. , Proprietor Joyce Ostrander takes lated a state law prohibiting busi;.e sentiment seriously. In November, nesses from discriminating on the
·she asked three Hispanic customers basis of race or national origin. They .
who were playing pool, drinking beer are seeking unspecified monetary
and conversing in Spanish to start damages and an order forcing Ostran·illking in English.
der to drop the English-only policy.
., The three men say she also kicked
The three men met at the tav~m
1bem out, and for that they~ re suing Nov. 9 after work at a nearby fruit
Jler, charging discrimination.
packing 'plant. As they shared a
. "I'm not discriminating. !thought pitcher of beer and a plate of fries,
t,.~aocllted

Ostrander told them to start speaking
English or leave the bar, the la~uit
alleges. Olivera doesn't speak English, and Cantu and Mendoza are
bilingual.
"These were three very decent,
very hard-working Hispanics who
were doing everything right, and they
were' kicked out of a tavern for speaking Spanish." said their attorney,
David Putney.
"I have never seen anything this
blatant. It's absolutely Neanderthal in
its approach to dealing with the
races," Putney said.
Thursday, Ostrander told . The

·Associated Press she did nothing . me they wer~ going io sue me."
more than ask the meri to speak Eng·
"We have the right to refuse serlish.
vice to anyone," she told the news" I never kicked them out or paper. " This is America, where Engeighty-sixed ~hem. I didn 'trefuse to lish is supposed to be the main lansert'ethem. ljustaskedthemtospeak guage. We don 't want Spanish gib'
berish here. and we mean it."
English," she said.
But _in interviews this week with · Many in Union Gap and neighthe Yakima Herald-Republic, she boring Yakima, abo~~t 140 miles
said she did tell them to leave. She southeast of Seattle, agree. .
said the men were already "loud and
" They start speaking their own
boisterous and sounded cranky" language and we don't know what
before she approached them. When they ' re saying. They could be insultshe asked them to speak in English, ing us, making fun of our wives or
she said, " they got very irate and figunng out a way to rob the place.
jumped out of their chairs and told We don't know," said Wes Wise

The Riverside Mobile Mammography Unit will be in Meigs County
on Jan. 19, Nonna Torres, nursing
director, for the Meigs County Health
Department, announced today.
She said that &lt;~nit will be on the
parking lot from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
The charge for a mammogram will be
$60 for the x.:ray and interpretation.
The service is open to women · 35
years old and older who have never
had mammography, women 35 to 49
who need follow-up every two years,
or women who are 50 or older and
need yearly mammography.
The Meigs County Health Department will give vouchers for payment
of the mammography to any income
eligible women, 50 years old or old·
· er. 1lle funding is provided through
the Ohio Department of Health
Breast and Cervical Cancer Project.
To participate, women must have
no symptoms, be non-pregnant, nonnursing, and with no personal history of breast cancer. Results will be ·
sent to both the client and the physician of choice. For those unable to
pay, Riverside has a special fund.
Those women need to be assessed for
eligibility and will be required to
show income such as a pay stub or
tax return.
Appointments are to be made by
calling 992-6626.
One in .eight women wili develop
breast cancer during- her life time
based on 1994 statistics. Breast can·
cer is the leading cause of cancer
death in women between the ages.qf
35-55 Cancers detected in early·
stages can be treated successfully up
to 90 percent of the time. Annual
mammograms can reduce breast can-·
cer deaths for older women by 30
percent, it is reported.
Successful educ.ational programs
for women fa¢us on the need for
breast self-examinations, physical
examinations and the screening test
of mammography.
The philosophy of the Mt~igs
County Health Department has long
been directed to providing equal
ac~ss to medical care, said Torres, in
noung that no one IS refused because
of inability to pay.

.Women make it big this year with top spots in '95 Gram my nominations
~r

.

~~·-. Y EDNA GUNDERSEN
SA TODAY
.; · LOS ANGELES - On first
«Jance at this year's Grammy nomiliecs, you'll wonder where the boys
li:e. Wome'n enjoyed big briak·
(lroughs in 1995, and those triumphs
ife reflected in the upper ranks of
l'Pusic's,most coveted awards, which
1ft the past sporadically deleted the
female rock category for lack of
wable c~idates.
1; The ~mys, Once derided as the
~gran~1 awar&lt;!s," deliver further
J!!:oof of progress in their refreshingIt blunder-free list Jf nominees, the
I,'ISUit of a new screening process that
.Uccessfully weeded out embarrassttlg choices or glaring misplace~nts.

..

P.op songbird Mariah Carey and Record'tng Arts an d Sctences.
·
"They venomous response to be traya1. 1t's
edgy newcomer Alanis Morissette broke ranks and wrote ... fearlessly, up for best .song, rock song and
lead the pack with six nominations paving the way for Alanis and Sha- female rock performance. The Canaeach. Joan Osborne has five , along nia and PJ Harvey to surface this dian singer's "Jagged Little Pill" is
with the Grammys' leading men, year."
in the best album and rock album
songwriter-producers Babyface and
Nominees in 88 categories were slots.
Glen Ballard, both honored for mate- announced Thursday; winners .will be
Osborne's hailed debut, "Relish, "
rial popularized by women artists. revealed
_ at the 38th annual Grammy is up for album of the year, with track
Country am val Shania Twain and Awards show airing live on CBS Feb. "St. Teresa" in the female rock vocal
R&amp;B trio TLC have four each. 28 from Los Angeles.
slot . Current hit "One of Us" is up
Hootie and the Blowfish is the only
Carey's current No. 1 hit with for best record and female pop vocal.
male presence in the new artist slot, Boyz 11 Men, "One Sweet Day," is
Overall, the list reveals a shift
which boasts Morissette, Osborne, up for record of the year and pop col- toward younger, hipper taStes, preTwain and Brandy.
laboration. "Daydream," the nation's sumably due to a new blue-ribbon
"As I look back at years when we top-selling album, has a shot at best panel that reviewed the choices of
had a helluva time getting enough album and pop album. Carey is also 7,300 voters. The group of 25
nominees for female rock, I have to a contender for pop vocal and R&amp;B NARAS members, whose identities
credit k.d. lang and Melissa vocal.
were concealed, studied the top 20
Etheridge," says Mike Greene, presMorissette, 21, rose 10 fame last vote-getters in the four major cate·
ident of the National Academy of year with "You Oughta Know,'' a gories (album, record and song of the

:!.; The

jtutland Friendly Gardeners
G;.ve announced the results of the
ifuttand ·holidar decorating contest
&amp;!-sponsored by ·the club and area
lilsinesses.
.
·. . .
~ All hjllnCs wiihin the Rutland cor·
JIO~ion ,. li!Jiits .~ere. eligible and
~Diadered:an the JUilgtng, l!ut homes
:·. . hadwontophOnorstbe.pastyear
p J101 eliJi* for thOse awards this
yt~C·
. -~ dthird
.
1 wan'. ' $ Pjni,:IICCOiu an
pace
flln m,tfvee'ta~egories judged by the.
~

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out of town judges, listed respective- Ban~ One, Rutland Emergency Medly, were: religious, Bruce May, Earl ical Services, Rutland Fire DepanMossman, f nd Dan Davis; non-reli- ment, Hysell Used Cars, Snowdens'
gious. Brian Denny, Margaret Weber, Tree Sales, and Pomeroy A ower
and Rick Bolin; doorway, Robert Shop.
Snowden, Jim Young, and Don
The Rwland Friendly Gardeners
Hysell.
also brightened the holidays for sevPrizes wefe ~rovided by area busi- eral in town through their sunshine
nesses includmg The Rutland project. Each member chose a resiDepartment Store, Joe's Country dent who hils 'been ill or otherwise
Market, Birchfield Funeral Home, . shut-in and delivered some homePizza Dan's, Rutland Mine Supply, made food, decoration or otber
Rutland Furniture, Rutland Branch of goody.
.

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.P~t~en· c~U,b ·meets-for Christmas ~in~er
. 'I

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ltlvervlew Qarden &lt;;tub
r'....ift
enjbjefl 8. , Chrisliilas
~~ltd~· at the "'\)inC oft TGm
'lihe ~
- ~· nome .
fotlhe
liolicliy IICIIQR
1
~
. P,l by the mem,

n.

;.:ur'rll
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J·

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head and Ella Osborne consisting of
':A Gift So Wonderful" aqd ''Christmas Hash:' by Ogda.·n Nash. Christmas songs .w~re sung, with accompanist MulJ!C'Whitehead. ~ prayer
was given by Ella Osborne and the
,· · ..
,
,.,.,.,...,.. wu cone
. luded with ·die
... v ... - · ,
,niejpated in ' tbe song"It.MIIIl·B~ Santa". .
~by Mulne Wbire: .Mar!e.ne ' J'utman reponed on

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ANNOUNCEs ·
.At 2415 Jackaon Avenue

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So~one You Know I~ Hutrlng.

'

Dr. Mark Chandler
· Dr. Nancy Graham
Dr. Allen Kayser
-Psychiatrists-

Thllthem about DivorceCare, a
special weekly seminar and support
group for people who are
separated or divorced.

Sponecnd by the

MiddlePort Cllurch of
Chrlet .
Wedneedaye 6:45-8:15
Jan. 1G-Aprll 3
Cell992·2914 formora
Information.
Regla~n required.

delivering a g~ft fro~ tlJe ell!~ to Nell .·
Wilson, who ts a pall~l at the Area:
dia !'lursing Home. crrances ~·
presid.ent, co[l4udlid.a sl!On blrsut.ess
meeting at wblc!' a~~ ~as gaven
on~ communtt}t Chris!Jilas tree.
The January mcetJng,of the club
.;Qme f
will be held at 1he·
o
"--.....;~-------.J
Weber.
•-

arace

674-4644 or 1-800-933...4644.
I

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-

Patricia Ostrander, Ph. D.
JoAnne Vrab~l, ~h ..D.
- PsychologistsTradHionai,'Famiiy-Ori8nted Treatment for
Depression, Anxiety, Panic Attacks, Hyperactivity;
B~havior Prob,lems, Eating Disorders .

PIease Ca.II -,o
T. S hed I "-• • A... "'' '
c ue ·~. r. ~P.utntm
. e_
rJi1
~~~~~-----------,11111!"----------·

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Middleport • Pomeroy .. Pt. Pleasant • January 7, 1996

Vol. 30, No. 48

of his· own money, if n~,
esSjll')', . as he did in the
1994 race.
..
"If he (Strick;land}
wants to be a serious candidate,, that's what it;s
going to take," Bennett
said.
During the 1994 cami
paign, Cremeans' raise4
about $862,000 in funding
compared with sr·ckland't
income tax credit, which
$533,000.
~
applies to 35 ,000 poor
DEJA VU - Rep. Frank Cremeans, R·Galllpolla,
Strickland sai his firsi
working families in this dis- left, and former Congrenman Ted Strickland, D· Federal Election Commisi
trict. And he's voted with Lucasville, pictured here during a debate during sion filing due Jan. 31 will
(House Speaker) Newt Gin· the 1994 campaign, are squaring-off for another
grich and the Republicans, hotly-contested race for the Sixth District this yeflr. show he has raised aboul
$135,700 for ~he perio4
whose policies favor big
ending Dec. 31.
~
business and rich people against the best interests of the
Cremeans' FEC filing will stiow he has aboui
people of southern Ohio. My message is this: Ted Strick- $150,000 in his campaign treasury and raised aboul
land cares about you, the working people of southern $600,000 in 1995 to pay off his debts, according to hi~
Ohio, and will fight for your interests."
press secre!ary, Mike Slanker.
.
'
Bennett said Cremeans is prepared to spend $1 mil. Strickland doubts he'll have to spend $1 million tJ
lion to keep his congressional seat, including $400,000
Continued on page A2
!

·ay PAMELA BROGAN
means and Strickland give southern Ohio voters clear
GanneH New1 Service
\
choices.
· WASHINGTON - Southern Ohio voters this ye" - "Frank 'won because Ted Strickland is for raising
will decide one of the most hotly contested con ession- taxes," B~nnett said. "We supported tax cuts, everybody
,81 races in tbe nation.
in our district is going to get a tax cut. And we've cut the
In the 6th Congressional District, a close rema
Washington, D.C., bureaucracy by 20 percent and cut
expected between Republican Rep. Frank Cremeans d spending by $50 billion dollars. We support a balanced
'former Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland. Cremeans budget. Ted Stickland is too liberal for this district. "
unseated Strickland in 1994 with a 4,000-vote margin .
Not so, argues Strickland. "What distinguishes us is
. Not surprisingly, democratic strategists predict they · Cremeans' coD]mitmentto a political and economic phiwill recapture Strickland's seat, and Republicans predict losophy that takes care of the rich and well-off at the
expense of ordinary people," Strickland said.
•victory - but are preparing for a tough race.
Barry Bennett, Cremeans ' chief of staff, said ~re"Cremeans voted to reduce funding for the earned
·

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Road kill: Funding for food assistance ·

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co~nties

Familiar mess·more
·than 'meats' the eye

programs down in G-M

By JIM .FREEMAN
nme•Sentlnel etaff
MEIGS COUNTY -- There it is,
on tbe pavement ahead ·· the famil iar flattened, hairy mess most
motorists recognize instantly as ...
.Ugh, road. kill.
. But by whatever name, road kill,
pavement pizza or turnpike
turnovers, some people in.· Meigs
County are .trying to puf it, particularly road-killed deer, to good use.
Every fall, numerous local whitetail cleer are .killed by automobiles
lllllqiOIChtl-5;· 'pi'diltrcjllg- pte-ar.y-.qf
meat 11\at would otherwise be wast·
ed without the effol1s of local jaw
enforcement officers.
·'
· . Currently, . the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department maintains a list
of about 30 families wanting deer
meat to stretch' ·their meager food
budgets... or 10 simply feed other
animals.
The. list's tradition goes back a
lollg ti~. with Sheriff J,llffies M.
Soulsby ' commenting his office
inbep~ the N&amp;Ciice of maintaining
the list from previous administra·

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
CHESHIRE - Programs
offering food assistance to
needy or emergency-struck
. families in Gallia and Meigs
counties are getting _supplemental funding, but the total
is lower than the amount
received in 1995.
The money - $14,882
for Gallia and $12,117 for
Meigs - will be adniinis1ered by Gallii-Meigs Community, Action AgC~~Cy. Fot
ballia County, CAA distributes half of the money
directly through vouchers
and the other half goes to the,
county :s Council on Aging.
CAA likewise pravides
vouchers for the needy in
Meigs Coun'ty, but also supplies assistance to the Meigs
Cooperative
Parish,
eKplained CAA Executive
Director Sidney Edwards.
The money has been
CHECKING THE LIST - Gallla County Outraach Center worker sanawarded to CAA by a national board of voluntary organi- dra Mdtombs, left, and director Sue Johnson checked the nutritional
zations, chaired by the Fed- pontent of an item In ~ canter's food pantr.y. Funds received to superal · Emergency Manage-. plement food programs In Gallla and Melga counties offer nslata!lce to
ment Agency, for more than organizations like the Outreach Center.
12 years. But the 1996 fund•
ing levels for both counties
funding for Meigs to help stock the cooperative
decreased.
.
parish's food pantry, Edwards explained.
Ga.llia County received nearly $3,000 less than it
CAA also works with the Gallia Outreach Center,
did in 1995, and Meigs was down by nearly $2,500 which also possesses a food pantry.
from last year.
The center grants emergency food aid, which it also
· But Edwards said it wasn't indicative of a down- receives from other sources, three times a year to the
ward trend.
same families , explained its direc.tor, Sue Johnson.
"It's fluctuated back and forth over the years," he Johnson estimated that the center helps about 90 fami explained. 'The way they do it, allocations are based lies a month.
on such factors as the poverty rate and census. So, of ·
CAA's assistance .comes through referrals from
course, if the local level shows any improvement, the human services departments, the Red Cross and other
amount of funding received will vary."
agencies, Edwards said. The assistance, he added, is
Assistance is provided on a one-time basi ~ through not designed to supplement food stamps, but only to
CAA,and the aging council, while CAA uses pan of its
Continued on page A2

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tions.

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"lt's\~n done ever since I came
into;office," he said. "It's a pattern
that ~. ~n going on for a number
of years;«
Fof!llCr sheriff, and now county
comri)ls.siOner, Robert Hartenbach
said the list Willi already in use when
he became sheriff in 1957.
"If somebody needs some food
for whatever reason, it saves the
problem of disposal of lhe deer
while providing food lor humans or
animals," Soulsby commented.
Interest in the list peaks during
late fall ahd early winter due the
. higher number of deer/car collisions
during those times, he explained.
: Soulsby said he does not know
· Continued on page A2

Commission

Area residents brace toft.•
firs~ heavy snow of '96 :
•

· GALLIPOLIS - Predictions of up to a foot of snow before the. end of
the weekend sent area residents scrambling to grocery stores to stock up on
supplies and prepare for the first maJor winter storm of the new year.
!
Light snow began falling around 2 .p.m. Saturday and was expected t~
increase in intensity before dark.
Various forecasts for southern
Ohio put the amount for Satur·
day night at between four and
eight inches, with another fqur
possible by midday Sunday.
State and courity road crews
in Gallia an~ Meigs braced for
the weather bY preparing. trucks
with salt ancl cinders and other
anti-snow combinations. and
highway
officials
urged
motorists to stay off the roads if
at all possible during the snowfall .
Initial reports of severe
weather surfaced Friday due to a
combination of cold air from the ·
north and moisture from the
· south entering the area. A winter
storm was expected to leave
areas along the eastern seaboard
and the interior with some
WINTER RUSH Saundera of
amount of snow, possibly up to a Evergreen filled her grocery b•ket with the
foot in Washington, D.C.
neceooltleo Saturdoy oltemoon at the 0.10
·
ff
d
b
h
G
II
'
llpollo
Kroger store. Saundera Joined
A dVICe o ere
Y t e a Ia numerous area residenb who mobbed toe.~
County Emergency Manage - otorei in anticipation ol heavy anowlalllhla
ment Agency included having weekand.
'
plenty of food, fuel, medication
and other necessities on hand before the snow hits. Grocery stores in the
Gallia-Meigs areasaw business increase dramatically as milk, bread, and
other food and household items di sappeared from the shelves.
The EMA also advised people that if they work Sunday or Monday,.IO
arrange for rides with people they know who have four-wheel drive vehicles.
By 4 p.m. Saturpay, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported that two weather-related accidents were under investigation in Gallia County, and none in Meigs.Highway crews were already out treating
•oads and "they' ll be out there for awhile," a patrol spokesman said.
No decisions on having school Monday had been made as of Saturda}'
afternoon. but at least one high school basketball game, between Gallia
Academy and Portsmouth at Portsmouth for Saturday night, had been postponed.

News capsules

bigger balance ... We
still need to look at
ways tO Increase OUr
Income ... Hopefully,
7996 w/1/ be IHftter.

By JIM FREEMAN
, , , n '"rea'....__,
Comm •·88,,0 r, ,...,,
nme..S.ntlnel Stiff
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Fred Hoffm•n
Board of Commissioners Friday
afternoon approved a 1996 county budget of $3,066,888.70, similar· to last
year's county budget.
.
.
· The 1996 annual appropriations resolution, as approved by the board,
calls for a budget approximately $5,000 less than tbe 1995 county budget.
· . Meanwhile, c11mmissioners claimed the county is better finan!iial shape
than it was a year ago due to shrewd money management.
"We did a pretty good job in 1995," said commission President Fred
·Hoffman.
: Hoffman said tbe county is carrying over $263,000 of 1995's .money into
1:996, $21,000 more than from 1994.
: ''We speot within our receipcs. but we still need to try,. to build up a bigger balance," Hoffman explained. "We still need to lfiiil&lt; at ways to increase
our income.
· "Hopefully, 1996 wib be better."
,
"You always hear about (govemmenls) spending more ... but we've been
watching our spending," said Vice-president Janet Howard.
J'be hoard also~~ with Frank H,erald, co-owner of the Meigs Motel concemiiiJ discussion of a bed tax to promote tourism, which he opposes as this
time. ·
· Henkl explained that he built the hotel to help Meigs County by providing a pl,ce for visitprs to stay.
'.
Many cif the motel's customers are wo!icels who would go elsewhere if
Contln~ on~ A2

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warning!~

Storm

"We spent within our
receipts, but we still .
needtotryto buildups 1----...;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

H

(In cooperation with the Insight/New Hope Offices)

Economic development ~PageA3

Details on
page ·A3

Southern O.hio voters will decide one of
;nation's hottest Congressional contests

budget for
Meigs ~ounty

The Opening Of Its

Low:'""' :

,Close rematch in '96

OKs$3~

Point Pleasant Location

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ating excellence, asking them to strip
away the pubIic personas, hype, popularity, scandals and everything ~at
swirls around recordings. This not
only accrues to the benefit of young
artists like.Coolio and Alanis, but also
to Michael Jackson

r:T'D::T'T Ml-funti r 1 ~o~1 J (,
DOD
enta I(~ut 1 JltHlp

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.Ho·liday lighting winners announced .

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year, plus best new artist) and decided finalists aftel\ marathon lrstening
sessions and secret ballots last month.
"We sequestered them for two
days in Los Angeles, and they lis·
tened to every recording nominated,"
says Greene, long a champion of
Grammy refonit. "We kept accentu-

HI: 201

tmes.·

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Society ~--------Nu~mggmduams~------~
{Scrapbook
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CHRISTMAS BUFFET
• A Christmas buffet and gift
~xchange was held when the Big
·Bend Sams held their meeting at
~Royal Oak Reson recently.
; Plans were made for a spring jam- '
:boree to be held May 17-19 at Holly ·
~y Park in Sutton; W. Va . .The fall
, jamboree will be held Sept. 12-15 at
.the Mason County Fairgrounds.
&gt;Chapter banners and flags are being
iclesigned.
" Donations of food were taken to
to the P~int Pleasant Fire
•
ntto be given to the needy.

College &lt;
basketball . Page a1

Send questions to Ann Landeq,
Creston Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045
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Good Morning
Gallia, Meigs at opposite ends of traffic accident rating [Troc~;;d;ay;:;·.;1cii;;;;m;;:j
...s~~
~
From AP, T-S Raporta
.
GALLIPOLIS -- Both Gallia and Meigs counties
featuied prominently in a recent ranking of Ohio counties with the lowest and highest traffic accident rates.
But. at opposite ends ·of the rankln;g .

Gallia County, with 40.67 accidents per 1.000 population, ranked as the fifth highest in the state. Meigs,
with a traffic accident rate of 22.64 per I ,000 population, came in among the hottorn five counties in the
state.
The study, based on 1994 figures , shows 1,915
accidents occurred in Gallia County during the year. In
M~igs County, 531 accidents were reported.
Across the state, two other rural counties •• on the
opposite eQds of Ohio -- topped the-state's lists of the
lowest an~ highest traffic accident rates.
Putnam County in northwest Ohio had the lowest
rate in 1994, with about 15.4 accidents per 1,000 people. There were 590 accidents in the county, which has
34,476 people.
Meanwhile, Jackson County in southern Ohio had
the hi.ghest rate with nearly 44.6 accidents per 1,000
people.
_
The county, which has 31 ,375 people, had 1,398
accidents.

Pulp mill tax break: Probably around $155 million
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. (AP) ·· The tax break for a proposed pulp mill
in Mason County should total about $155 ~illion ov~r 13 years, ~ltho~gh
the developers are eligible for nearly five umes that, a state offictal S8ld.
·The estimated amount of super c.redits that Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc.
of Rye Brook, N.Y., would use was based on estimates of profitability and
tax liability, said Dana Davis, lawyer and direftor of development services
for the West Vtrginia Development Office.
And even that humber may be high, Davis said, because it assumes Par-

12 Sections. 9II'Pa11es

.

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sons &amp; Whittemore would sell
most o( its pulp and paper prod•
ucts in West Virginia. The company prooably willsell more products out- ,
side West Virginia than in it, meaning it won't be eligible for as many
super. tax credits, Davis said.
.
. ',
.S.lier Ibis week, The Charleston Gazelle reported Parsons &amp; Whine' ,
more qualified f~;~r $738 million in tax hreaks because the mill at Afi11!!= ' ·
Grove would create about S60 jobs.
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