<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9073" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/9073?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T11:05:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19502">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/328b9dcdfe55c3a26425d5af9af3c698.pdf</src>
      <authentication>53df29cdf36b92085151414235ec484d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29186">
                  <text>.- .

.

. "'

.

.

~

.......

.. . . .

___ .. . ... . . . _...,._

....

-· ... _

~

...... . . . .
•

-.·..

•• •

Long on money·and short
B'y HAL KNEEN

POMEROY - The 1996 y~ar has '
anived, resolutionshavc been made
and the spring season will be here
before you know it. The best part of
the~winter season is it "creates~~ perio4s of time to reflect upon last year's
efforts and prepare plans to improve
one's life whether at home, at work
or at play.
S!imulatc your mind by reading
those staeked up m~gazines, checking out what's new on the local public library bookshelves, attending a
workshop/conference or arrange a
meeting of friends with similar interests.
Homeowners, have your mail boxes been filled with plant and seed
catalogs? Mine have. The latest marketing ploy for the avid gardener who
is long on money and shon on shopping time, is the ability to purchase
six pack trays of annual flowering
·plants. Your chosen varieties will be
•delivered right to your home at the
.appropriate planting time. My preliminary calculations show that you,
the.£onsumer, will be paying three tofour times local cost for this convenience.
For the vasi majority of us,
reviewing mail order catalog contenis
provides hours ·of chel!p entertain- ·
ment. When reading the plant
descriptions, uses and,price jot down
on paper those plants that really interest _ Y~.. with their corresponding

.

.

engaged in the production, feeding or
the inside front cover of the catalog. impoJtalion of sheep or sheep prod- ·
As an enthusiastic gardener, my ucts (except imponers of raw wool
wants usually far exc~ed my only) between January I and Decemfinances. This is where planning out ber 31, 1994, are eligible to vote in
your garden is essential.
the Sheep and Wool Promotion,
Whether a flower bed, vegetable Research, Education and Information
garden or landscape area is being Order.
planted, make sure to sketch out the
In Ohio,. voters may register and
area and calculate the square footage , vote in person or request absentee
involved. A tape measurer, graph ballots from county offices of Ohio
paper, ruler and p.encil with an eras- State University Extension. Producer and a little lime is all that is need- ers must vote in the county where
ed. Go outside and measure the area they live and corporations must vote
you are going to plant and draw it out ' in the county where their business
to scale on the graph paper. The cat- •headquaners is located.
alog description of the plants will
Absentee ballot requests, filed in
_give you some idea 8S to the widtl! person or by mail, may be made
·and height of the pl'ilnts. Note that between January 16 and January 26,
trees, shrubs and perennial'plants will 199.6. Absentee ballots must be
continue to increase in size year after 'received in county offices by close of
year so allow for future growth in business February 2.
your plan. Make Sl!re your purchasThe Fann Service Agency, fores fit your site plan. If you want a merly the Agricultural Stabilization
newly introduced plant that is too and Conservation Service, will count
expensive for your budget just wait ballots. detennine eligibility of vola couple years as the price will ers and tabulate results .
become. more_ afforda~le, •!tempt
· For the order to go into effect, the
pu~hasmg a _smaller Size or find a proposal must be approved
suitable subsutute plant.
either by a siinple majority of voters
----------·or by voters \.·ho account for twoSheep and lamb producers will thirds of the sheep and wool producvote February 6, 1996, on whether to tion represented in the referendum.
If approved, the program would
approve assessments on their products to fund promotion, research
be funded by mandatory assessand educational effons.
All producers, feeders and
_importers who certify they were

.

ments. Domestic proilucers and f~~
ers woUld be assessed I cent JJC7 ·
pound on sales of live sheep and ;
cents per pound on sales of grei\Sy
wool. lmponcrs would be assessed 1
cent per pound or the equivalent on
imponed decreased wool and wool
products. ·
·
Details of the ,voting procedures
were published in the December IS
Federal Register. Copies of the finl!)
referendum rules, the proposed of!ler
and additional infonnation are available from Ralph L. Tapp, Chief, Marketing Programs Branch, Livestocl;
and Seed Division, Agricultural Mlr.:
'keting Service, USDA, Room 26()6..
S. P.O. Box 96456,·Washington, .DC
20090-6456.
.
USDA's AMS, an agency in the
marketing and regulatory programs
mission area, has oversight responsibility for federal research and ptO•
·'
•
'
•
,1
mot1on programs.
,
, · ,i
The Meigs County Qffice of OS~
Extension is located in-the County
1nfirmary Building on Mulberry
1
,heights in Pomeroy and will be open .
Ifrom 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m. for the
•referendum. information contact, Hal
Kneen , County Agricultural Bxtension Agent, 614-992-6696. ,
Harold H. Kneen,_Meigs Couit
ty Acrkultuf81 Ageal, Ohio State
University Extension. }
us copy ~our old fll~nll1• I
lphc•toa. Special 2-5x7'a

:»·'"'·

We alao do paa,spil•rtJ
;'jptrotCl•s, Identification Dht~ -1
end photo flnlahlng.

OVB awards promotions
to 3 ·officers, 3 employees

Understanding agriculture
IIY KIM HARLJ;SS

Finn Buruu

.
q
,

'

TAWNEY STUDIO

.

GALLiPOLIS - The board of superior products and the best service
directors of Ohio Valley Bank has in a customer driven marketplace,"
. promoted three officers and elevated . she said. "We're also excited about
thiee other employees to officer posi- having Tim (Stevens) with us. He's a
tions according to Chainnan and natural for the job of developing and
Chief Executive Officer James L. mappin!l out a sound strategy for
'Dail~
attractinll new business," Hart added.
Promoted were: Dadvid ~affeRr,
. E:d Richard Mahan, senior vice
vice president, retaillen ing; aom . pres1 ent ofOVB's commercial bank
Shepherd, vice president, marketing; group srud:
.
Delsie J Burgess, as~istant vice pres"We're hapjl_y for . Dels1e:s
~nt and trust admimstrator; and new (Burgess) prop:rotlon. She 1s a dedi..' officers· Darren R. Blake, assistant cated, loyal ariO experienced employ. cashier, research and development for ee who is responsible for a wide
manageme,nt information systems: range of imponant duties."
•· · (MIS); Scott W. Shockey, assistant
Blake and Shockey will continue
· cashier and regulatory reporting man- to work in the MIS division, which
· ager; and nmothy V. Stevens, assis- has become a pan of the bank's finan.. ""' tant&lt;''cuhier for ·business develop- .£ial bank .group according to· senior
· ment.
,
vice president Larry E. Miller.
. ,Kattinka V. Han,,senior vice pres"These two men are representative
ident, retail bank J!roup, said Shaffer of the young talent we have throughand Shepherd will help direcJ two - out the bank. They bring enthusiasm
important departments. "Dave will be and a fresh approach to their jobs," he
responsible for bank wide retail lend- said.
ing which includes real estate and · Ohio Valley B'ank has offices in
installment lending; while Tom will Gallia, Jackson and Pikll. Counties in
be responsible for bank marketing, southern Ohio and operates the OVB
retail operations, teller operations Loan Origination Center in Point
and security. We feel this realignme~t PI
wv
will refine our focus on delivering
easant, · a.

Of!Pinlzatlon Director
GALLipPLJS - Lose weight,
exercise more, quit smoking and
· stop procrastinating are New Year's
resolutions many of us are familiar .
with. If you've accomplished, given
up or are just bored.JYilh tbose resolutions. here's a n!w one for you:
Resolve in 1996 to learn more about
'and ulldcrstand the agricultural industry' in . Y!lllf community, Here are.
some' ways to get started.
. Understand agricultural practices
alid why they are necessary. During
' harvest and planting seas.ons, realize
that farmers will be working late
nights in the fields and usipg roads
more. Farm equipment can't move
quickly and sometimes uses both
.SicJes of the road, so be patient and be
·safe.
· ' · Uilderstand why (llany com and
' J!O)'bean .farmers , don'i plow theirfields anymore. No-till farming is a
'gractice that's goal is to leave the soil
115 qndisturbed as possible, resulting
in mqch less soil erosion, labor and
f,.t.agc. No-tiiJ has bec_ome such
ll, ~\llible method because 1f we don't
saw"the soil, food cannot be pro1
a.!Kled"at all. Whichever practice a
fill-mer uSes, conventional tillage or
no-lillac~. ii's because it is the best,
moat ej'fi~~t and profitable practice
• for thllt indiVidual's farm.
Uoderiland why some livestock
ate 'l'kCJ)l in confi~e~ent: Animals

1
J

grow best in an atm\)sphere where .
there is the least amount of stress ·possible. For some animals, including
hogs and chickens, this atmosphere is
a closed, tell)perature-regulated
building where the animal's health·
and growlh can be monitored closely.
Understand that farming is a
unique occupation. Farming requires
large capital investments for such
things as land, buildings and equiP:,
ment; it is vulnerable to weather and
market conditions like no other business; and farmers must be at times a ·
mechanic, veterinarian, market speculator, business person, laborer and
employee manager.
Understand why it is so ilnpoJllllll
that we teach children, rural and
urban alike, about fanning. Food production is the basic economic foundation on which our country . was
built. To protect agriculture, the next
,generation must have some concept
of how its food is produced.
Unders~nd that the word agricultural encompasses much more than
you niay think. Aquicultuie, food
processing, farm markets, tree farming, greenhouses and fruit and vegetable farms are all part of Ohio's $57
billion a year agricultural industry.
Most of all, understand that Amerlean farms provide this country, and
lnlll)y pails .of the world, with the
. safes~ most abl!ndant food supply the
world has evet kllown.
&lt;

424 SECOND AVE.
GALUPOUS

\

I,
\

SALESPERSON OF THE YEAR· Mike
. right, 1111
named "Salespe~"Son of lbe · Year lor 1
ICCOnllng to Gene
Jollnaon. This Is the 1hlrd atrelgllt yur Seri;l,pnl lila eamld the
, ~~onqr, Johnson; left; of Gene JoiiMOn CMvrcMI-&lt;Hcle-GEO, 18ld

send
energy futures ·soaring.
~-:;;;r7;;,;ms

Crude oil got an extra boost from
speculative buying when .the FebruAaeocleted Press Writer
Energy futures prices surged Fri- ary contract broke though $20 a barday on repons of several refinery rel, he said.
,
shutdowns at a time of tight supplies
Weather also played a role. The
National Weather Service forecasts
and brisk, weather-driven demand.
Crude oil, following the advances colder temperatures for the nation's
of heating oil, cracked the $20-a-bar- · easternmost states.
rei banier to establish a contract high
Light sweet crude oil for February
of $20.28 at the New York Mercan- delivery settled near its high at
tile Exchange.
.
$20.26 a barrel, up 35 cents; FebruHigher energy prices coupled willl ary heating oil \PIBs 1.36 cents highadvances in precious metals and er at 60.64 cents a gallon; February
some other markets lifted the Com- gasoline was 1.04 cent~ higher at
modity Research Bureau's index 'bf 60.48 cents a gallon; and February
17 commodities 1.29 points to natural gas was 4.8 cents lower at
246.78.
.
$2.916 per I ,000 cubic feet.
"Energy prices have been on an · . Gold futures hit their hjghest
upward trend since mid-October: mark in more than five months
Now we've got a lot of refinery before surrendering a good pan of the
news," said John Saucer, an analyst gains to late profit lakin~ .
in Houston with Smith Barney Inc.
Repairs or schedul~ maintenance
shutdowns have tightened the flow of
gasoline and heating oil from refineries in Philadelphia; Corpus Christi .
and Texas City, Texas; and Catletts.G 1\.LLIPOLIS - Grace and
burg, Ky.. he said. .
In addition, labor troubles at Charles Judy of Patriot, Riverview
British Petroleum's Marcus Hoo~, · farms of Gallipolis, and Keith
Pa., refinery could close the facility Grate, Patriot, have been accepted as
when its sale to Tosco Corp. takes new members of the American Angus
Association.
•
effect Feb. I.
· "None of these are huge factors
Amber Baughman, Natalie Miller,
by themselves, but put two or three and Cole Miller, all of Gallipolis,
together and it causes some prob- have been 'accepted as new junior
lems," said Gerald E. Samuels, man- members of the American Angus
· Association.
·
aging director of AR~ Oil Inc.

·

.- • .pin died II! belp In~ ~m• !Iff , liqc ~w:pans m-~
. lilt Liwlencc-CoJ!nly imnt Voc• : d n lJj.plllt liecade biJs reaulteicl ih few., ~ &amp;:Ji?Ol In Oeta~Y~.~-.) ~ .wdJ:lknon product nanle brands
t tomlle wtth thia actJoo.i ;~.IIJ- m · be1ng offered in IOCIJy's market.,
1977, •
"
.,
'\ '
· . ' O'DOOiiell,la~toibofortner ·
1992, Q'DQI!a.ell \ has I Allita Tope ~·Rio Grande .-1 they ..
¥!MYed tine "SinJiillll , SaiN I·· are ·~.pli,.il¥ oflwo I!ORI. "·
'•
'
.......... ' .
(•
.
'

~

••

,

1989 FORD

Auto
transmission,
7 passenger
seating, lilt
wheel, cruise
control, AM/FM
cassette, priced
tor a quick sale . ..__..

Auto
transmission,
slant 6 engine,
short wheel
base. New '"'"w'
trade-in.

Auto
transmission, air
conditioning,
AM/FM cassette
player. Hurry this
on9 won'tlast
IQng . .

1991

For a great deal on any of these cars see
Carl Sanders, Mike Sergent, Jim Walker
·
or Larry Thaxton.
'

• (lEO •

•

Pick 3:

117
Pick 4:
0204
Super Lotto:
14-22·24-28-31-32

Sports, Page 4

Kicker:

0519()6

Hometown outer

1616 Eastern Ave.

•

GaUipo'' ¥

614 446-3672
'
'

.'·••
··..

Cloudy, low around 20.
Tuaaday, cllanca of anow
High In 30..
.,

•

..

\~.

Vo1.41, N0.178
1 Bectlon, 10 Pllgte

-/.O.nr&gt;tll Co. Neftpeper

Snow places
Meigs under
emergency
From AP, Stefl Reports
More than a foot of snow fell on
Meigs County Saturday and Sunday,
the largest winter stonn 10 strike since
January 1994, when more than 25
inches was dumped on the area.
Emergency Services Director
Roben E. Dyer estimated up to 15
inches of snow fell on ponions of the
county.
Emergency Services and the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
issued a Level III advisory, requesting driven of all non-emergency
.vehicles to remain off the road.
The advisory was downgraded at
noon today io a level II advisory
meaning most roadways are passable,
but remain hazardous and motorists
should not go out unless necessary,
wd Dyer.
Sheriff's deputies reponed no accidents, saying most motorists complied ~ with requests to stay off the
roads.
As of Ibis morning, all Meigs
County roads have been cleared,
according to Dave Spencer, Meigs
Highway Oa(age office manager.
,- SP.QW removal cmws beaded by
Mabtiiili''~ '·'and• Randy-• Pyles
wmted around the clock starling Saturday, Speni:cr said.
Spencer said crews have begun
s!'"'ading salt and cinders on the
roads now the snow has abated.
All county offices, schools and
many businesses are closed today.
1be storm also resulted in the post-ponement of the sheriff department's
Drull Abuse Resistance Education
(DARE) graduations, which will be
held next week, according to DARE
officer Mony Wood.
Dyer urged homeowners to check
their furnace vents to ensure they are
not blocked by snow or ice.
· By any measure- inches, feet or
hard-to-drive slnlets- the storm that
buried southern Ohio over the weekend was one for the ages.
The unrelenting snow on Sunday
piled up at record depths in Cincinnati, tcmponll'ily closed roads around
the state, and contributed to at least
two deaths. Two children died when
their family's van slid into a snow
plow near Dayton.
There were few serious traffic
aceidents because most people stayed
off tbe drift-covered roads. There was

Deadline
nearing
for first
'96 baby
contest

nowhere to go - hundreds of
The deadline for submitting an
churches canceled services Sunday
application in Meigs County's "Fif$1
morning and many malls and busiBaby of 1996" contest is Wednesd~:i·
nesses were closed.
The first baby born to a Me1g,~
Others had no choice. '(be foot of
County couple in 1996 will receive a
snow arid ·accompanying drifts left
variety of it~m~ and services from
,,
thelfl stranded.
_
numerous business establishments in
"I can 'I wait 'til June," Karen
the amiual contest sponsored by Tl\e
Sunshein said as· she spent three
Daily Sentinel and local businesses.hours digging out her driveway in
Kettering.
Parents of children born after
Many schools, businesses and
midnight,
31 ' 1995, are asked to
couns were closed today as road
provide their name, address and doc·
crews tried to finally ll!ffie the drifttor's report to The Daily Senti11el by
ing snow that bedeviled them all
no later than noon l"~dnesday. '
weekend. Many roads were impassThe contest noles·are:
able. The forecast for today and Thcs• The .winning baby must be born
lk llgbts along Second Avenue in Middleport,
day. included a bit more snoJ'o' and
EMPTY STREETS - Meigs County villages
to parents who are legal residents of
above, signalled their commands to no one in par·
some flurries, but no major storm was
resembled post towns Sunday morning as IDOII
, Meigs·County.
ticular. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)
predicted.
motorists prudendy decided to stay ll!lme. Traf.
• The exact time of birth mljSt be
"I'm hoping a lot of people will
' specified in a written statement by the
stay home," said Phil Fisher, an assis- van with eight people aboard slid
' atteoding physician.
.,
tanl superintendent for the Ohio aero!! a snow-covered road and hit a
•••
Department of Transportation.
snow plow.
• The application must be filed 'in
The light and drifting snow began
Killed were Michelle Thrull, 13,
the
office by noon, Jan. 10.
·.:
in southern Ohio late Saturday after- and Mitchel Turull, 4, of German• In case oftie, awards will be di!rnoon·and did not let up until late Sun- town, according to State Highway
tributed
at the discretion of the conday, piling up to more than a foot in Patrol Dispatcher Francie Gillis. Martest
committee.
·,
parts of southern Ohio.
cos 1\irull, 8, was in critical coodition
Gifts
ini:l11de
a
bea,tf~Jlhio
"Even our.snowp\9,W~ are Jletting . at.Gb!Wren).Hospi~ ~Dayton !?l- __;
· River Bear Co., Mlddli{X&gt;it; a'case of
slllek;'' said Gary 8111111, a dlspikdF "ftitllhg mlgi!IY Iii! Sill'icur.-· - ·
·Gerber baby food from. Big Bend
er with the Butler County sheriff's
A 21-car pileup in southern Wyan- Foodland, Pomeroy; a stainless steel
dcpanment.
dot County left two people with
:sipper cup from Acquisitions Fine
minor injuries and closed a section of
J Jewelry, Middlepon; a $S gift cerThe snowfall set records in U.S. 23 for about three hours, accordllificate from the Fabric Shop; a free
·cincinnati, which got more than 14 ing to the Wyandot County sheriff's
· meal for the parents from Crow's
inches. The previous recQrd for most department.
Restaurant, Pomeroy; a $10 savings
Drivers in nearly all southern and
snowfall from one stprm was 11.3
account from Racine Home Nationcentral Ohio counties were asked to
inches on Jan. 16-17, 1978.
al
Bank; a $20 gift certificate from
The city also broke) ts record for . stay off the roads. Many .counties
Powell's
Super Valu, Pomeroy; a $20
most snow in a 24-hQur period by .were threatening to arrest drivers who
·
gift
cenificate
from Fruth Pharmacy,
,.
picking up 12.8 inches. The previous were not involved in an emergency or
Middlepon; a $10 gift certificate
·
mark was II inches on Dec. 8, 1917., going to work. .
from Middleport Department Store;
Airports
around
the
state
stayed
Other areas in
Ohio carne
opened,
but
there
were
many
de~~s
close to decades-old 11¥1fks for snowA $1 S gift cenificate from The
fall from a single storm. Nonhem and cancellations. Many flights rout· Shoe Place in Middlepon; a $50 saved to the East Coast were canceled
Ohio got only a few inches.
ings bond from Farmers Bank; $25
In Columbus, where 8.8 inches because the storm closed airports in
wonh of baby formula from Kroger's,
fell, as many as 350 travelers were many eastern cities.
THE OLD-FASHIONED WAY - These Middleport residents
Pomeroy; a $10 gift cenificate from
stranded when the Greyhound Bus
of
the
Flights
out
removed snow the okld·fasbloned way...tbey shovel it. Winter snow
Swis~er-Lohse Pharmacy, Pomeroy';
Terminal sltut down about 5 p.m. Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Interstonns provided opportunities for entrepreneurs with strong backs
a baby arrangem~nt from the
MOre than 150 remained in the ter- national Airpon also were delayed by
and snow shovels to earn a few bucks cleaning driveways and parkPomeroy Flower Sbop; a $10 giftCC'
minal this morning1
inglots. ·
deicing, spokesman Ted Bushelman
tificate from Bunons and Bows, ·
"We're not wilhng to jeopardize said. The airport was on a limited
Pomeroy; an ice cream cake fntri)
standstill on Sunday and caused Gov. West Virginians were urged to stay Dairy Queen, Middlepon; a $25 gift ·
the safety of the passengers," said schedule until noon tod8y. •
·
Char Reynolds, customer service
The winter storm that dropped 1- Gaston Caperton to declare a state of off the roads except in emergency Sit· cenificate from Vaughan's Cardinal
manager. "The passengers may gel 112 feet of snow and promised more emergency.
uations.
and a three-piece feeder set from K
Under Caperton's declaration,
iliad at,me. but that's OK. I can take · brought much of West Virginia to a
&amp; C Jewelers, Pomeroy.
it."
The worst storm-related accident ·
was in Montgomery County, where a
'

.

nee.

Sou.

....

Sense of ~risis shrouds ~udget.
talks as federal workers returri .:;-

Gasoline prices
notch ·increase
of half-a-penny

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
average cost of gasoline edged up
a half-penny per gallon in two
weeks, and an oil industry analyst
predicted that prices will continue
to climb in coming months.
The average price of gasoline,
including
all grades . and taxes,
The year 1995 saw a sharp
A total of 829 transfer calls were
was 117.47 cents Friday, when the
increase in emergency runs handled reponed last year compared to 663
Lul)dberg Survey of I0,000 gas
by the Meigs County Emetgency for the year before. The ll)ajority of
statiolls nationwide was conducted.
Medical Service, according to an transfers' (450) were to facilities othThe average· was Jt6.90 cents on
annual report from Emergency Ser- er than Holzer Medical Center (252),
Dec. 22.
vices Administrator Robert E. Byer. Pleasant Valley Hospital (76) and
Crude oil prices have risen
A total of 2,698 emergency calls Veterans Memorial Hospital (51).
recently and dealer margins, the
were answered in 1995, compared to
In addition , 66 aeromedical transamount necessary to cover over2,480 calls in 1994, according to the fers were handled.
, head and costs while returning a
report.
.
Also during 1995, the EMS
profit, are at a 10-year low, said
Of the 2,698 calls in l99S, 1,088 replaced one primary emergency
survey publisherTrilby Lundbers.
were to Veterans Memorial-Hospital squad and assigned the new veh1cle
"Crude oil is higher and gasoin Pomeroy; 427 to Holzer Medical , io the Pomeroy station.
line will eventually have 10 cllch
Center in Gallipolis and 232 to PleasIn addition, alerting pagers and
·up with that. Additionally, dealer
ant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, other radios were updated or replaced
margins are under I 0 cents a galW.Va. In additiop, 951 people were and equipment on emergency a~
lon and jhat, too, might mean
transported to other facilities, il)Ciud- transfer squads was replaced w1th
higher prices," Lundbe!J said Sun·
· ing O'B leness Memorial Hospi!aJ in newer equipment and commumcaday.
·
.
Atbens and Camden-Clark MemOli- tio,~s equipment updated.
·
At self-serve pumps, where
a1 Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Also; 32 new basic personnel · more than 95 percent of all gas is
Calls answered by station were as · were bllined; 14 new advanced persold, the average per-gallon price
follows: Middlepon, 704; Pomeroy, sonnet were trained; 20 personnel
was II 0.69 cents for regular
341; Rutland. 461; Raci~, 3S4; were given refresher training and 683
unleaded, 120.91 cents for midSyracuse, 279; tuppers Plains, 216; classroom hours were speniiR new,
grade unleaded and 129.48 cents
Reedsville, U5; and Columbia retre.ber and specialty training.
for premium unleaded.
Township, 25. Also, tbree calls were
'Di~hers handled ~87' calls for ·
AI full-service pumps, the averhandled from the centrlll EMS offtce fire emet'JCncies in add1bon l!l calls age per-gallon jmce was 148.53
in Pomeroy.
•
for Qmerpncy squads aod transfers.
cents for regular unleaded, 1~7.48
' the iaerease in emergell\:y runs
· ibe EMS office and squad per- cents 'for mid•grade unleaded and
were compounded by a 20 pen:ent - · · · t 1,923 man hours han·
164.34 cents for premium unleadlnmase ,,. ~sfer ruas d!1C to the d!in•· the flood emergency last May.
ed.
ti~ k VMH, Dyer teponed.
. By« reported.

It

35~

i

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 8, 1996

County EMS activity
experienced sharp
increase du~ing '95

Nice locally
owned with V-6
engine, j)ower
windows, power
locks, lilt wh"el, .
cruise control,
·AM/FM cassette
~d much more.

t".GIIIjilaed from D-1
Awards'' from PJI!15 Plus, ranking
'I . . . . time hiJ saleS roU~ h,ave been
hiin amol\J the lop 1salesmcn in the
"' ljia,f$111 olily lbe ~al~f¥1h~ store.
company. .
Widi"ltil ~ 1nlmlht 10 young
'Asked what has been the most
I*Jiik~~lwas-called upon, in ~ic chan~ilt aftem)llllcet aut&lt;?-.,
tm. ~illiit~lh.tbetoc:il*!!leqwp- motive sales smce he sta11ed, odie ..
. . .1jiei:ll'il:alions fll! ihB new .o~' replied without hesitation, "COI)lput·
. lle.J~CUon:Vlnton JOUII yocauo~l , en llil ·can, computers ·jn dcjl)cr
.Scl¥!0lll~oO~de, which ~ned ,.._._Ytorea, ·and computers_fn the ~orlt·
II IVlS. Liter, hll Clijklri~ was_ '£'place." He also n\)led ~ of,.

1

'I

Auto trans, air
conditioning,
AM/FM cassette,
· rear spoiler, new
Cavalier trade in.

Gallians named
members of AAA

.1·Q'I;Jonne/1
retire$
••
•
.
.
'·

s•

New truck trade
that .is in
excell,ent •
condition. High
output, V-6, tilt,
· cruise, AM/FM
·cassette.
Locally owned.

'By PAUL A. DRISCOLL

,

Colts,
Cowboys ·
post wins

on shopping tim~:.

4.95. R81J· $19-95. SA1#E:I

I

Ohio Lottery

Sunday, January 7, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

'
.
page numbers. Staple or paper chp

•

ing measure awroved by Congress
expires on Jan. 26, and DeLay, speakAssocletld Preas Writer
WASHING1UN - Afternearly a ing Sunday on NBC 's "Meet the
· rnonth of government worker layoffs Press," made clear that House
and the emergence of a new Clinton Republicans would close governplan, the White House and Congress ment offices again if no budget pact
again sit down this week for what is reached.
"We've decided that this president
they say must be conclusive talks on
a seven-year balanced budget.
. really doesn 't want an agreement and
"After all of this discussion now we've got to do what we were sent
going on for some three or four here to do," he said.
DeLay said that after Jan. 26. "we
months, it's time for action," said
Rep. John Boehner of Ohio, head of are going to only fund those ,pr.ograms we wanlto fund ," Because all
the House Republican Conference.
Up to now, said House Rep~blican spending bills must originate in the
Whip Tom DeLay of Texas, "talks at House, "We're in charge. We don't
the White House have been nothing have to negotiate with the Senate, we
' don 't have to negotiate with the
but policy wonk sessions."
Furloughed government workers, I Democrats."
· except those in Washington and else- I The president's plan calls for
. where stranded by &amp;nowstorms, ' restraining Medicare and Medicaid
return to work today, a consequence spending by only half as much as the
of President Clinton's announcement , Republicans want and also projects
· laic Saturday that he was meeting smaller savings from welfare proGOP demands and ·offering his own Igrams. And it would cut only $87 bil· neJal _outline of ~w to balanc~ the · lion in taxes, compared to $241 bilIM!Igct by 2002 usmg CongressiOnal lion in the GOP plan.
"It's sliD very much an effon to
Budget Office accounting.
The battle over the budget has protect the status quo," said Senate
forced two partial federal goverrunent Republican Whip Trent Loti of Misshutdowns, for six days in November sissippi, who appeared with Boehnand for three weeks through this er on CBS' "Face the Nati.on."
weekend .
Clinton, in introducing his proAlready ·there was a sense of . posal, said it proved Washington
another crisis if the White House and could balance the budget and still
the -Republican-controlled Congress· protect Medicare, Medicaid, educacan't narrow their sizable differences tioq ana the environment. "This is a
~till&amp; Ill gi'Mi~ 11/MI!Wil"promise. We
on taxes and spending.
The temporary government spend- Ineed to find unity and common

By JIM ABRAMS

,.

•

)I&lt; .

..

ground," he said.
Lou and Boehner said it was.poi- •
sible to compromise on Medicare,
where Republicans want savings of
$201 billion over seven years and
Clintun $102 billion.
Lon sa1d enough congressional
Democrats are supporting a compromise budget deal that it might be possible to ignore the president in push- .
ing through budget legislation: "If he
doesn't move within the next couple
of (lays that is an option that "'e' can
consider."

·

Treasury Secretary Roben Rubin,
appearing on "Meet the Press," wiis
not enthusiastic about a Medicait' .
compromise. "I think the answ'lr
there is very simple and that is no.":
Rubin and the Republicans ·alsp' '

Iclashed over the fate ofthe debt ceil:

ling, which has been stuck at $4.9triJc '
:uon since last fall, when Republicans
'linked raising the ceiling to .a budg~t . '

, :deal.

A few Republicans ·have threat;
ened to start ·io1peachment proceed;: 'ings against Rubin because •of his
maneuvers - ·mostly borrowinl ;
from federal trust funds - to Dq,.~ ,
· from e,;ceedinl the· ceiliaa; lulil.
another crisis looms ~n the Ttel['
sury must meel more intercat paj-!1111~
ments in mid-Fcbru¥Y.
'
'
.

.

.,

�.

'

" " ' •• lll .,~ , .

~••ae2·.
Monday, Jenpary 8, 1 ~

.

.

.

. ..

.

~

.. e::·'·:

'J»JI&amp;f

T

Ao:w11' 1 ....... ...., .

Secon~~guessing_, counterparts

The D-~y_ Sentinel

~.

_-:~.._~

lliCH.

r

.

--- ......
•

__,......,

..

WASHING'IO~ - There's a time ,ihe ~ struule played direct- . close to Clinton told us. "There's , v&amp;~:uum that confronted anyone lryto make w~ and a ~ to make ~ove, 'ly into RepubliCIII hands by fuelins nothing in the notes of any conse- 1ing to answer questions" about the
and. Prestdent Cbnton's pnvate pubHc suspicion that the Clintons quence, and they ,let it become a Clintons' controversial investments in
Whi~~ater .attorneys are strugglins' max~v~ something to hide, and it major isiiiC."
. the Whitewater land dev_el~nt:
Gamlett Co. Newspaper
to dis~ngutsh between th~ two,
. Congressional Whitewater invesWhy couldn't the Clinton White
according t~ some of the president's
tigatbrs will soon be training their House have saisl that in the first pliiCC.
. close~! ~vtsers.
.·
.
sights on the multiple inteiJ!I:~!!ltions without the foot-dragging thJ1 has
. ROBERT L
Wllhams &amp; Co"!'olly, ~ htghof the notes, which include tl)is titil- undetcut the president's case in the
Publisher
. powered la": .r~ ._represenuns the
latin~. reference: " vacu11m Rose law court ofpubli~inion ? ".What hap. fii'St fan_UJ~ ·~ Whitewater m~.
m11
''
&amp;vi•
files. The notes were taken by for- pens with theWlliams &amp; Connolly
faces this mdic,bnent from officaals
mer White House lawyer William approach is that it's like us against
MARGARET I .mEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
wbo beheve Cl!nton was needl~ssly ultimately provided what one White Ken~edy lli a few days after tbe them," said one Clinton confidant.
Controller • pushed to the t:'hnk of a consuruuo_nal House source called "oxygen" for a medaa reported tbat the Clintons "'They view everything like it's ·a .
Geaenl Malulger
; showdown WI~ the Senate White- Senate investigation that was due to were named as possible witnesses in death penalty criminal case. Some; )
; water Comnutt~e over access to expire next month.
a criminal probe of the Madison times you make war and sometimes
LEI I ERS OF OPINION are wekome. They should be lesa than 300
notes. Some Whtte Ho~se atto~ys
Clinton and his private attorneys Guaranty Sayings &amp; Loan in you make Jove. 'These guys mil
.wards long. AI! leqas are subject to editiDJ and must be slped with name,
were opposed to the fuble fight wtth · .c;ited the sanctity of the attorney- Arkansas.
know how to make war."
.' address and telepbone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
the
comrruttce,
and
~ve
n?£
bee~
shy
client
privilege·
in
.first
refusilfg
,.,
S_
enate
Whitewater
Committee
This same SOI!tce, wbo h~ been
• sbOuld be in good t&amp;Ue, addressing issues, not personalities.
about second-guessmg thear Wtlhams release the notes. But even some of . Chamnan Alfonse D' Amato, R-N.Y., involved in Whitewater strategy dis~ Connolly counterparts -- at least the president's· staunchest defenders seized on the notes, suggesting they . cussions, thinks timing IIIII tactics
mtemally.
•
. privately discounted that Qument, were related to work Hillary Rodhat!t may be half the battle in fending off
. It's dt~cult to see what the hard- anddoubtthatitwouldhave stood up Clintonperforined for Madison while the affair. "If (we) came out wi"' W
It~ Wilham~ &amp; Connolly appro~h I in a·court battle. M_oreover, ~~ s~ w~ a partner with the Rose Law explanation early, (the Rep'!"licaiiT
yaelded, bestdes an apparent nft safeguards are routinely negotiated m Ftnn m Little Rock.
wouldn't have hiid on a glo.ve on ·
between Cllnton's pnvate and gov- similar cases to enswe that a docu"I undmtand why £!ley fought us Clinton," this official said. ~ 'N:ow
eml)tent att~eys .
:-me!ltdisclosure doesn't compromise so tenaciously," D' An\ato.said ~r we're arguing about the word 'vacu.'
1
'
'
'
The Whate House. was ulttmately privileged communications.
·
the White House turned over the sub- urn." '
JOHN CHALFANT
rotced to ~lease the mtngumg --but . "They (private attom~s) ~used poenaed notes. Kennedy has
Jane Sherburne, a· White House
'· ' AIIOCiated Pnlls Writer
'
!nconclustve
--.notes
ofa
1993
m~tClinton
some
grief
they_
could
have
explained
that
"v111:uum"
refea:red
to
'special
counsel, dispu~ that the two
.cOLUMBUS- A school district sued over a student traffic r&amp;~:cident
mg
about
~lutewater.
Meanwhile,
resolved
easier
and
faster,"
a
soW'CC
a
"discussion
about
the
infonnation
·legal
camps
were in conflict, but does.
occurred off school property has won its case in the Ohio Supreme Court. .
,
•acknowledge
inherent tension
Justices unanimously decided they should not have cot!Sidered the mat.
between
the
"two
separate entities."
ter in the first place.
.
.
"You have the personal lawyer
'The lawsuit-raised questions about the extent to which schools were liable ,
who
is duty bound to protect the privfor accidents like the one in Lake County that killed two teen-agers and left ·
,
ileged
nature of the relationship with
a third a paraplegic.
;
i
his
client,"
Sherburne said. " He has
The coun had heard oral arguments. But justices dismissed the case last
:
to
do
that
as
zealously and ethically
week with a brief statement that did not' speak to the merits.
:
as
possible
.
...
The advice I may give
• · As a result, lower court rulings in favor of Auburn Vocational School and .
·
the
president
relates to his official
Perry High School were upheld.
·
:capacity. It's different than the per"This is the end 'Jl the road," said Peter Weinberger, the Cleveland lawyer
sonal advice the president receives
· for the student whcJ'filed the lawsuit. "I'm very disappointed."
'
.
from
David Kendall (of Williams &amp;
· , ;; Joseph Tira, who represented Auburn, was pleased with the dismissal.
Connolly)
... the entire quality of the
, ' ' "It's Just a tragic accident that happened, but the school districts were
communication
is different." Kendall
ri6t responsible," Tira said.
,
refused
to
comment.
:· The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Timothy Steele, a Perry student who
Sherburne believes that D' Amato
•.. ll'l'so attended classes at Auburn.
was
just looking for a fight for
Students ride buses between the two schools. The schools allow some
"strategic purposes" -- namely, to .,
,.•. sindents to drive but not to give rides to other students.
ensure
that the ?Senate funds his
-~, The accident occurred Dec. 18, 1990, when student Mark Monaco left
committee's
inv igation beyond
the voCational school with Steele an4 student Mark Balash in the car. ·
February.
·' Monaco's car collided with a truck. f:le and Balash were killed, and Steele
"They've been frustrated that
paralyzed.
.
we've
been as 'cooperative as we
· ' The lawsuit accused the schools of negligence for failing to enforce dri1.
I
· have," she said. "We went through
vtng rues.
. .
three weeks of getting bloodied up by
Both the Lake County Common Pleas .Gourt and the lith Ohio District
this, but it wa\ a fight they wantCd.
1 Court of Appeals had ruled in favor of the schools. ,
··
... D' Amato needs to get up credi~ly,
· ~ Justices pointed out during oral argumentS last year that the accident did
to stand up before his colleagues and
, not occur on school property, the driver did not have schqol permit. the
the American people, and ·explain
]tudents had broken school rules and were speeding when the vehicles colwhy it's worth continuing this inves, lilled.
tigation into 1996."
. · ·Weinberger had urged justices to let the lawsuit proceed. He said teach- .
.ers and administrators had negligently failed to enforce rules that would have
Write Jack Alldenoa lllld
Mkllael
Billltel1lo Uaited Fllllllra,
~venltd the crash.
" , ' nra maintained that the driver's negligence was the sole cause of the 81:Ci200 Park Ave., 101~
. . d'l!nt.
·,"Weinberger said last week he thought the court had agreed to hear the
'' case to provide guidance about the kind of conduct fot which schools may
•. , ' or may not enjoy immunity from law~uits.
· ·.
Recently, speaking at Princeton diminished by 'presidential candidate kills."
And I tell of a comment in the
J. 1 , 1 • • Tira agreed that the 1:ore dispute about sovereign immunity was unreBob
Dole
-would
have
placed
Unive~ity,
on.
the
controv~rsy-that­
Naomi
Wolf
has
been
treated
as
a
Journal
of the American Medical
1'' sOlved.
·
fetuses
under
the
protection
of
the
·
will-not-go-away,
I
tried
to
indicate
turncoat
by
some
of
her
pro-choice
Association
by Dr. Joel Hylton in
'"In that it's dismissed, the Supreme Coun hasn't addressed the issue,
1
to
the
students
and
ftlculty
members
Constitution.
comrades,
but
pro-lifers
with
whom
Thomasville,
N.C.:
:hat's.
,_ all. Maybe another
. day, another case," he said.
that the fetus is not only human life
I've spoken are encouraged. They
"Who can say that the fetus is not
-- an assertion denied by several of
regret, to say the least, that she is still . alive and is not a separate entity? Its
very much for abortion rights, but are humanity also cannot be questioned
the pto-choicers there -- but is indeed
But that amendment has no more pleased that she understands at least scientifically. It is certainly of no otba human being. A gentle, thoughtful
graduate student had great difficulty· chance of passage\ with or without part of their language.
er species. That it is dependent on
with the latter claim, following me Bob Dole, than a law mandating that
My own attempts at dialogue in another makes it qualitatively no difout to the car. And so will some vot- all FBI agents, including the director, this minefield. have brought me to ferent from countless other humans
!Jie holes. There i~ a pile of filling ers confronted by pro-life candidates take American Civil Liberties Union Harvard, Princeton, Brown, the outside the womb."
Df;.ar I'Aiitor,'
making that assertion this election courses in the Bill of Rights -- with Columbia University Law School
· . ·Have you traveled from the Court material at the site.
I also ,report on interviews I've
Now there is no reason why the year.
.. Su-eet light down West Main Sll'eet to
. particular attention to the Fourth and other campuses. I'm invariably done with physicians specializing in
Much of the electorate, will, bow- Amendment.
invited by a small. hardy group of pre-natal development. They poinr
town can't have an employee work on
· the bridge in Pomeroy?
.
ever, have long since made up their
student
pro·lifers who present me as out that human life is a continuum
· ' They had a new road but hail to• tlie ptoject.
Politics, therefore. will continue to
.
minds
about
the
pet:~~onhood,
if
any,
If
there
is
no
finances
available,
a
surprising,
atypfcalally of theirs, a ~rom implantation of a fertilized egg
tear it up for water line. ' ,, . ...
be tbe primary terms of engagement
of
the
fetus.
For
instance,
North.There are pot holes that you ,co~4., maybli we could start taking donafor both sides in the abortion wars. non-religious, civillibennrian pro-lif-· m the uterine lining to birth and
b11st a tire, bust a shock 110d bou.nce tions from passing motorists. SolVed. western University professor Adolph There is, however, a small augury er whose mentors have included Jus- death. So, in abortion, it is the life of
Reed Jr. states unequivocally in the that the combat!Uits could begin to tice William Brennan and Duke a developing human being that is
youJ'Self to death. .
, •
Virgil Walker Village Voice, a fortress of pro- speak to each. other with more than Ellington -- and decidedly not Ralph ~illed. At whatever stage, he or she
Now I know that you ~an .not do
R111:ine choice sentiment:
Reed.
ts human, not merely potentially
agy paving, but could at l~as~ fiJI in
epithets.
"A fetus is not a human being. It's
During
these
talks,
I
focus
on
human.
·
·
In a remarkable move to,w&amp;l'd not
an organism growing inside a only civility but also empathy, Nao- whether the fetus is indeed human.
Naomi Wolf qu~res fonn "'The
•
l•
'
'
woman's body, al.beit an organism mi Wolf, an influential feminist pr~&gt;­ Not just potentially human. I cite the Well Baby Book;" which is not a prowith the potential to become a human choicer, has written in The New beginning of a standard medical te~t- hfe manual: "Knowledge is increasWilson
adeCent,
law-abidingMs.
member
ofistht
community.
It is being."
Republic: "Many pro-cboice adv~&gt;­ book, "The Unborn Patient: Prenatal , ing the awe lllld respect we have for
·And as a: majority of the Supreme cates developed a language to assert Di~gnosis and Treatment" (W.B. -th,: unborn baby and is causing us to
preposterous tl)at.she now be faced
with the hardship; o~ l!lwyer's. fees, Court slated in Roe, v. Wade, poten: that the fetus isn't a person, and this, SaundersCo:):
. regard the unborn baby as' areal peretc., money thai she and her family tiality is not enough to q~ify the over the years, has developed into a
"The concept that the .fetus is a son long before birth."
·
can ill afford. CO!nmon sense should fetus for the right to due process, lexicon of dehumanization.... How patient, an individ.ual, )Nbose mal- . Professor Adolph Reed, however, .
' prevail and tell sensible peopJe that equal protection under the laws and can we charge that it is vile and repul- adies are a proper subject for medical remains convinced that a fetus is not .
she is not to' blame f6r the tragic other saving privileges of being a per- sive for pr~&gt;-lifers to brandish vile and treatment as well as scientific obser- a h11man being. He ought to look at
son under the Constitution.'
repulsive images if the images are vation is alarmingly modem .... Only , a sonogram. He will see one of us.. ·
crash.
The' Human Rights Amendment, real?"
Carl 0. Smith
now are we beginning t? consider the 1 Nat Hentolt !1 I nltlonliiiY,
Reedsville long proposed in the Republican
Or, as Barbara Newman, a femi- fetus seriously -- medacally, legally · ; renowned lutl'lorlty on the Firat ..
Party platform -- and now somewha! nist pro-lifer, has said, "Euphemism and ethically."
Amendtne!'t lnd the ,..t of the ·
. Bill of Alghtl.
.
·

I

'

111 Coa:rt ltreet
~. Oblo

WING~

I

.
f!llliSPI R
&amp;lis :11. 11, LaM, W.Y.. l1ild S IHJ• .Ia. 7, 1996 a
6el.ltiu(1'i.Y..)SS.Jfo (54
Bcnla.9, 1917illl.1111d.*-* I
oftltellleOS...,_.
1!1111 ~ l6u · . . . I Sile wui a h
will_. a
~Ole

~

IWaeiea Bille,= •

I

tu 3u!2r I•

By Jack Anderso .
n
Bnd
•••chae/ B'ns•••n

Edith·F. Edwards'

Sileiswwitt4.,.,..1 I I &amp;dE.Ed
, W.Va.._.,.._, L 'l"

Peed&amp;.,_.. , f "

· - ·

was

a

A qu.esti·on of human life..........._______
"

.

NstHentoff

.: Letters to the editor
West Main Street a disgrace

a

Seller

of alcohol blameleSs

~

~:~:i~=t]~:·~~~:~:~

· More on education

W.Wl

I

1

7

a-.

...

.

!;)ella Margaret Nolan
Vi ·r 1 :.a- _. f 1 at *"vices for DeJa M p a NaiNatlll
...
a M, of
. PiwrUJ,...,tlritiS da;,J•. 6. ?996a¥-s wi1 ai11Ho..pe4,
lllftle ?sceu I 1 ldueiD dte lleavy -rail.
Fii k _ . , Cll!l• k E.1fiw&amp; F
.. Hcate rn- 7-9 p.a. Y' t ..,..
F
al iCIWices will be lldd a die t nJ 1M-= M I p.a. 'Dw. .;. wiZII
Neill'h...nr- ulfit ··4 ~ wjl1 be ill Slktu Ceaei:I'C
I y. ,

Mary B. Sisson
Snow forecast for state
except on Wednesday
.., .... ,

7

7~"-·
- - ., 7 willlltriltB
J

a

.... 0
---ID&lt;aip .. T

1942. s.s::::!·~·~;~w:a be • s:n
JU1L-'
&amp;e'J1 h)a7:Sla.a.

w
I ; , fun&gt;.
T...... a ,.;.. c:Jo.ly. 'A
c.-:ns aid. 11le be
llliud wiZil sleet ......,. Ollio.
o f - - · utdlinllaftia'
. I M u diatb i-. die lOs. ri' .... Lotn-IOIDIS_._
lfi&amp;lts .. die . . . will be ...., ill -IDa+ '20_...aut.
1

......

a.w

tbe 20s..

•

l'io:ada;....S.OW li?tdy. ,... ......
tSseiiJIIIa'lOswtl
101Pte~
Tcwipt, Ole -.a.:y will 1 II'
lOs
.....
•*=silt&amp;ledi&amp;izsiaskwl
....
• • U.tbe _ _ _a
I~
W '
ley-A '
ol. aow
a Us 7, dteNt4*
'W I Sa--Otcatot.. Dry I a?ue. Loas !Oto
Yil:e Slid..
Saow is • Ollio ba:at 20. Pfi&amp;hs en. a• I 25 - I : •
nay *Y Ellis .a; evqio 1M I ._ ID6i:~l0s . . . .
day.
•
n.iday..A 1
e o f -·
Lotts iaO.:lOs ........... lOL
~..A·t
o f -. Lows
Ellis liMe • .... Cl
- - - l i l i d susi111937wlile ia dsr: 20s ........ 2511D 35.
tbe-"br-12beluwzauia·
7

•

.........

7

1

D£•euad;~s~·::~-~~~~,==~:

May B. Sissou, 96, lk;sra , buw:tl; of :c:,..-. olied Fridtty, Jaw. s.
1996 ia tbc ~ Na . 1,. . Maysvi?ie.
8CII'x 01:1. 6. 1899 ia :c:,..-. I g!• of tbe .iMe Allie ad F1cn J: F'V.s
IIi 7 ; , s!lewauJil'et'
oftheK,..-Uailedl' t'~OuiJ:Io.
tlllltae
Knal • 1- . 7 b ,;»years.

*

wid! the Gallia c
1 s . .. cr.; ....
asua of the
Pin: Clapn', Onler of the F
a Sla:
1
oJo!ia det41tiiJ Ia first? I d, &amp;II Rape, is ?9lS;
. Pta ec••P ,_. I, Dlle s;s.., wllom she
ted Ia. 9, 1945. e. April
21. ?'JIIS; a-., WaSe Rxpe.•Apail XI. 1979;aliilu', 9 I -'six brothus,C
llidauy.iiiNua ""'199S, .dW) ' Bo..,_y, Balkai"*-J, l'llilllidauy, CIJde Boalwy .d To. Boalw).
s..iwix&amp; ae twod / • s. Gat (Jell) SaYius of~-' 1=- ·
So I I of
ad cI ........... R..a Mae D-ol
.......... Ooobotille; II
25 .... p +"ilcln:a ... .-e pal"""lal •
'·
_ . - siaas. 1 • · ,_., _. hrille Mxlfunl. bods of n l'•e.
Sa rices will be I p.a W I hJ in the Mc:Coy-Moole F
a! HoiUc
'IIU ILbolt Oapd, C.aJiipnlis, with tbe Rev. O.G. Davis olliciMit~~- Barial
wiDbeilotla:GmdHiiiC
"'J. o dWe.Fti h_,.caliMthe l14 I
fnn 2-4 _. 7-9 p.ua. T..tay.
.
t' t •WI ooa51i ...... awy be ..SC so die KYJCr Ullilod u.ilrd

a

•-•sa
a

.

5*-··-•ca..

..... ....,........ ._

1..

sultiiD_, ..._ ....,_
•11iiul:it's ...-......-.I
. lee I '
...... •• , - . . ........ G.y
Pa:t.jagilc . . . . Wlilllllfora.e.

.. .

._ • • a...,

4

U'S

,0.C..poe@iG
n1rl P J 5F I

7..t-

*Y aft.

1

I

•t's.-ofGod'sK · a • k
o•
ol W P· zt•. I ...-"
said ,... s ali&amp;- . . , of A itaF I ._ofGiia;.,.,u~:~~~-•
F*i6J
.
Aaa-110 ..... _ 1 I
: ..

...... )_,.will-

_.... s ?.

a.s .,._... . . . , ..... - ..,
Jll-, ...,. or
-•• - -~...

.

' . : - of 0. 1 NJ~
-·
r IIDB t ·
-...
.
s .., ..... ltera-11 ' 'f-=t
ia a w al ' I • die New Ja.:y
....... h S-1/l,._ APW fiaiS..
I; II' .... ldp. Pie ' .. ..... •
R

·--·--aiL
~v

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

I'

z ...

ot:

Uuils ofsbe McipC
7 "-:r.-=1 M '" 4 Sa tiDe iqiillll:id !7
calls for rrLe F £ day ..J
·S' •.,.. · hr g 1nc.. , calk.
u-.s " 11• ..::.-- •• •·

paCUil said

.. . , ....

==·~--

- - - - - -

7

11

7

The dw.- of the dhia · ·
mittee. Rqt.'W'dlian G. B I P

~

··s

_,wee

a

He defc:i.ded the OOIIIIIli=~';
dccisiOIISongifls-'•u ;.,
·~.
" RacicaJiy. &lt;M'il'lliCip••t4io-sh..on the lanBJDF of the aJde," ~~ ~

./

Sen. Judy B. Slleuu, D? 1 J~ .
lbghls, who scnes oa the c0tg
' rommiaee.. ..-I tbeeshics •.,;.., .
pn,W. liS
. · .....,,
.. ~ need to haw: • uwiUAi"!'=, .

-= se-e '

bil?,.. Sheau said. 111ae
-.s thal.-.1-daity."

Petition drive will launch
push for riv~rboat gambling

A-,ltiaobul; Jc I e, 'IIMH;
JI:I2JU1LS "J, NorttSoow!
A - . RIISIICIII' h as. VMH..
fOMI!IlOY
6:14 p.aL s lay. , . . . . . . .
R.old. Dill Gt I
HMC.
RU'IIAND
5:19 a.a. S..day, M::ip Mise
31. Teny L McC,.ft, VMR;
6:0 2aa.S daJ. SR692.~

L

I

o.-...

7-.. . .

I

Hospital news
I .

'

..7.. -

AnnouncemeniS

I

•-

··--o-· ·; _. . . . . .
I

•··

_.

ew:.y1n • ..,
. . . . . . . 7-9. - nay llipa • S De
-~=~=~:::::~1\ i** Bela Bela
IC4Jillll:id ealia:. The Dlily Sc::tliael

IUIIIII~t:.~-

...-..c

COlUMBUS (AP) - Ba:lras of •Ri\'erboal G..;.g C
" DAi : '
a piau to •g Jiu rivatx. pabling appoi*"'"' by the I 11' I
e wiOtA.
ia Ohio wi?l ~a Jll"ihm ..-;.., in six 01011ths of die • I
7"1''
approval.
\
~
j'~- f.
llboul a -..:dt ID p:t tbe 11•
COI.IlMUA TWP.
if 3JIIIIUYCd. tbe lira .
~ .
the Nov. 4
aide Wlot..
fd11 a.a Satladuy, w+
1ft
be
opcnliiiJ!
by
?991,
F.a
.......
a~and
dqwt
·toOaaaiyao.l ?,dlimco-fonpdcl'
of
Ba:hye
EdravaptThe
Ollumbus
Di,.-b
for
a
..y
iiiCJ fiae MIWat I'D::It ,..W e.
.
IIIDDUII"'RT
'
.·
·c
za, •11'1111P aallal so pou;b the gam- published Salunlay. llsi:
would
allow
the
l.qidt4we
to
.
.
'\
lllill&amp; issue. s.id dtedriw: 1D p:t lbout
7113 a.a s dMj. Pea:ll On:lc. . Dtu*-ws.VIIH;
~A. co~;- s ,..;.rm I' or,
I :33 aa. S ! ;:. HaitPJ lloiSow 33S.OOO &lt;ig • u of lqistt:ml vor- two "'wilc?canl" sileS ia 2000..
'"I lhillk Columbus wou?d' be ,..,,
cn will iaitiMIJ ••• 4•&amp; ma dw::
iall:lorpial;
.
R.old, Rabat p · I -r VMH;
(]e,
1
.
.
Cje
•
sri
-=as.
leading
COIIIalder thea.. .. he Slid..
1:47p.a.S ....,..1
1ft
8:43 p.aL s I ; . SR 692, ~
~
SOD
1D
!.000
IW1;ow
s
dqwt
--IIIC6idc: DuUibea.... VMII.
wiiP . . t so " ' 7 k tigwwes.
• . , .. SIMca-7. DIIIsl.d
SYRAaJSii:
Della Glu;d. ....... .. .. .. 0
•
8:20 p.aa. S..Ut. W11U sacec. Pftsllna Slid. His ag · ••• pllns
10 spend ....... $SGO.,OOO ... c:dlcct
1\moy
.• ':
David 11 . '" VMH.
MicallSIJI,5DI_ID_hav-"
9-.27 ,_._ S..da;. Railrmd
Stra:t. Bill; ftw:ti&amp;o. VMR;
ill UiOiilh Vllid si&amp;
'¥lt'I'DANS IIDIOitiAL
B ' yc Euau t •a, ~ ia
9:47a.a. s ..,. a • s.c..
s 2 ...,
· - - FIA:es Gay w.a ~ ~ VMH;
the Clew? d wlwbiil{l'lpta Pih.,
Ma1iu. Pi
UJ, ltllben P. IW:a,
12:+10 p.a s-lay, Co ay
Ollio
Qwtib. . . 11le
.......
MobiPe no- PD. Qlaslia Mi?ler,
Mt" JC
... _ .
alow casi._. • wtWitol tiwa'• e
VMH;
s, llaj
..., ...
- .... - ~keu---I . 'w
TP:e..__Mwilua;
C
ihrili
Ill tiMet silrs .. Oe ;
Iiies
S:34 p.a S I y, Soidt Fo.1h
-a2p.a•Ja.I6Mt!ae~
......_Ra ' a ••I W.W.
S l j r I JCI .-c.
FallsP
y Sthw• . .u,....- -'..., is F&amp;JNWlllaiJ&amp; ia L *
111'£ r ofa
. . ..... to a-y.
The
....., pu1Ait.
nc ..,orof·Si·
wrill bold
fctnaS "' c:asiao 1
1 Cily . .

·•

____

Bhse Sbidd Ohio, whido iCiively
••· · 1iaOP ' •
,...,._ r &amp;liD the d!lics ClOIIIIIIittee, dice iuodsing
wish sdl

EMS units answer 17 calls

••w-.. .

·

bThaalat ._ ba:a -

~~a:--

I t

~---

-------- ..

1

,.

c~

.

••

---~------

'c

,.,~.

• Pre--Need Funerals With Gumnteed Price
• ServicesArnogat AnywlreR:
• Coirflrldc Line of Caskets and Vaults to Fat Any
Budget
.
· • Rd•xing IIIII Comfortable Homelike
Aln~ which iodudc:s Coffee I.Jwrnge, ,.
Visitatioo R()C)IN, and Clwpcl seating 11X»
• 100% Wheelchair Aa:essible
• SfJecioos Ofi-Stn:et·Pmtiug
• WeAaqlt Other Funcnl " -

,·

. .

i!ntUilld
lizle
11 8oval poses..
a.l lie
6eP.
ft •1
· • 'f• would be :q; ! 7 I bJ a

"Orir Ffllllily Se~ y,.,. Ffllftily"

.
J

*

~ofemtr..

Correction

._,

. . P z• m'llli«&lt;l5 _.in many
ascs Us ,...owed questionable
... f
• llle ........... Slid.
.
11xe .l'biu DaPer cited as an
ea . 11t- the $J.OOO a lldJACh payID
t * lqL c-:y C.
' - . D-Taledo. ia ?994 ~ scaing
.a .,
iiip fCII' Blase 0... &amp;

•:x

.. .-m-..,...,.-,- s,..

lte sail.
........ .

.

The ~ LqislaCive Ethics
.,...... docs-~ inw:s-

a·
AArrfiwe
pta
afficia?s
• 1 ofJilli.slll Ci · · iaa!lead- ?ultbjitclac:al
!cpL He c:Gi1ld- be
to-lleal I W
I 1 , S.S.-~e ~ • • 5 al his hlliiC Sunday' f..Majority 1_.... Bob Dole, tbeOOP
A who
fica:
. _ . . . . , _ . , _ . .?itil I
idtaifiod lllnclf •ltis wife Slid he
g . . 46pa
of Ole -IOCist- --ofzowa~awcek.
toa's 47·paCUS.
AfUxtliwCaa., . . . .j111y has
The SIIU!C pal Ntw. II • aca!
' - iau ·s ia&amp; wl I -ciDJen
Ci=m • I' g DaldS paWIDJ9 !l.w I 0 \WUC111iilXBfar•ntJ5ing
pacur.
dot
tk of dollm U. spetlki• fees
11ais t ' 1"'s
dl) wa.-,
for 1 tis« iafmnally wis?aloiJbyisls
of ?,OOOall?ts I . • al-faiut-- litat 1991-93.
'

.,.,. Es•= r • • 1 - 17

·a.r•-it's.,..IDbealiia
. . . . . . . ..::twlail~toobl
...-... -·
I' ••- ..,..
Owe of Ole ''i• . . . ilil
- Easz ... 10 JIC8IS, Zlic . . . . is
protia&amp; ..... jlisla pliu .. ad, willa pms of p
y?s .
New .kncy . . New Ycllk &lt;*I"" •d
.. ..,.._..,..,lr.tof_..,_
_. of lllllay. .
AftadJ. XI isdiC&amp; W We&amp; ia
F 'J I'I I " 22iiiNnrYcllkn....
-~
Aad ZiiD aawl II isdiC&amp; ill Wallt-

t••: 4?

-w-..

wish a W ' slily _.lcft-*of
..

c

a 'I . I . ut £1U11P payias a R-Mca!iaa. a:bow!t:dtcd
, .,,
1Wo w I aso. Oiuua led 48 ,Ia• .a
I
tr- "
IIi
'"
- ..L..- .-.L:- ' - - ·
....
••ar
or•y es1.nu-.;~....
·l ·
JIC'' 7 42 JiUU8L
~
•• gr- • :aftt:diag
''That was a pmty Mdly .... p 'f'
l••4i • . * - l ID ':lo
2
tioeio- r s
piece or --t." Ba~cbe?dc:r -..:: ' .
pa • I ial 11 iite, die pall lsdd
~Slid s!le I * J - - f..- ~~haw: bad it• o • csof""
" ·

· w-.t~teu.t

-

aor... .

Poll finds apprqval fell for
Clinton in budget flap
aiwloa..

...... 6 ' 1'cit81id

cdlics . . . . - $We le&amp;isi""'S
JUs
s...tlws ioupltoks
.... ...,... . . . . , . to funnel 11..-y
10 laWIIIIbrs. 11le Plain DeaJ&lt;y
itp:Jlltd s
fey. .

ucsra.m.

Br LISA J. mu 7
1 ..

aJM:LAND (AP) - A mea•two yem -,oto iuapose

Sift • • •

••••m;

AI., ' ' II PI 16 W;Z
A74j

Report: lawmaker ethiCs bill·'"
,,..
has too many loopholes
'r

SJtt: - - ..ne .. ,

Sllioa's dit

Clinton, GOP obs~inate in budget battle

,f

•. ~

Sbe- pa I' I ill deMh bJ
Kenlit B. Edwads.
Gtaa ' +w:niaSwillbe l p.a11i S PM)iadte7D:Pc!Sc~C;J::~J· willl
da:ltev. D:J ~'RaK!tuiiW '1!4 Fi' $ ..,ai ..... Ft a' .. ~­
.a l 1• , u-., rro. 6-9 p.a T e.,.

$upreme Court rules ...
lo.r schools in lawsuit

that:

*·_, S a'

afW.:.. C I I - ,
W.\IIL;OtNe-,o..&amp;W.&amp;IuadiofiAIIIf.,D i G.&amp;l aafa.tfonl, W.VIL, _.David It Edwadi of l.dat; a lila, Rll!y II. Giltla of
l.dat; a laCJihu:o a
• E.,_., ofl.dat; _ . . • 1 1 s _.two

liD.

.

·. iY

t

·CREMEENS
'

FUNERAL HOllE

••

!''
•••
'l
~
' J

·-· - - - - - -

- - - - ---

-

•='

Jay A Aadaea Claoec:ns, Dirtdols
Scott Hill, A .c "l'e

949-3210

128 Elm s.et .. rro
JW"jpe,OIIio

·------'11-r--- ..

;'

....-.-...- ..... 'W

�•

•

·'.Sports.

Th~ nail~~~~!~!~

..

3

J~~~~o-di~i~~o~-~~;~9p~v~rlo~l~~;~ob~~~p~;~se~l-s-_:K~a-n~s-a~-s--~~~==~~======~~~~~
~ . City 10-7

in AFC playoffs

~ jiy lARRY WILNER'
.
· , KANSAS crrv; Mo. (AP) - It

den with the flu.
:
"Our team played with a lot of
· ' :WII outdoors at Arrowhead in Janu'courage," quartelback Jim Harbaugh
~ Ill)', none of which favored the Indi·
.s aid after. Cary Blanchard's 31-yard.
iutapo!is Colts.
,
field gQ8llate in the thil:'(l quaner proThe host Kansas Clty Chiefs not ~ideit'he margin of victory. "Not bad
only had the best record in the NFL, fC?J' a bunch of ragamuffins.
they 1!feJe the league's only unbeat·
"We believe_in ourselv~s and we
en home team this season. More have for a long 11me. There s no mag~ problems for the Colts. ·
ic involved." ·
.
, , Indianapolis' best runneF, MarNor w~ there any magiC Sunday
~ shall Flllllk, wasn't around. Neither for the Ch1efs, whose 13-3 regular
- w111bny Siragusa, the inspirational season and 8-0 home record were the
.leader of the defense.
•
league's best. They also were tops at
',, So, naturally, the Colts ignored all protecti_ng the ball and threw the
that and moved within one step of fewest mtercepllons.
their first Super Bowl in 25 years .
Why, then, did they self-destruct
:=~ "There were so many negatives in their bi~est gam~? Steve B~no
us,'' linebacker Jeff Herrod said threw three mtercept1ons, Ttllllanck
;:Iunday after the Colts stunned the Vanover fumbled a punt return, and
~sas City Chiefs 10-7 in an AFC Lin Elliott missed three. field goals,
'• playoff game. "And yet, here we including a 43-yarder with 37 sec: are:" .
onds left.
:
Here is going to be Piusburgh next
• SuDday in their first AFC champi"It hurts great deal," said wide
: onship game since 1972. The Cults' ~eiver Lake 'Dawson. who caught a
: lilt Super Bowl was a victory over 20-yard touchdown pass from Bono
: Dallas following the 1970 season; 20 · in the fint quarter for Kansas City'~
• current Indy players weren't even only points. He also couldn't hang
; born when that game was played.
onto a high pass from Rich Gannon
:
History was not on the Colts' side one play before Elliott's final miss.
: Sunday - dome teams rarely make "You work so hard and come so
• championship games and never get to close and to lose in the final seconds
! the Super Bowl. .
.
!Old that was it for the season .. , you
:
Nor were conditions favorable wonder how it slipped away.
.
• for an indoor club: Game-time tem"It was just us not making the
. : perature was II degrees, with a plays we made all year."
wjnd-chill of minus-9.
Most noticeable among·the errors
, Flllilk underwe~t knee surgery were those by Bono and Elliott.
Bono was just 11-for-25 for 122
~lilt week and Siragusa was bed-rid·

:=pn

a

I

.:fn ·the NFC playoffs,

yards and was interoepted by Ashley
Ambrose, Eugene Daniel and
Quentin Coryalt b,efore being lifted
on the last series.
"It doesn 'I matter whether I agree
or not," Bono said of coach Marty
Schottenheimer's decision to yank
him. "Yeah, it hun ."
· Hurting the most was probably
Elliott, who. slumped late in the season, then made four field goals in the
finale against Seattle. But he missed
from 351qld 39 yards before the killer
ended ihe Chiefs' dreams .
· . "I tJ:Ied my hardest, "Elliott said.
" Maybe I'm not good enough, but I
tried. Maybe I was not good enough
for today, but it's good enough for me
as a person that I uied.
''This is not going to be the best
night of my"life. We're not going any
funher, and that hurts."
The Colts, of coune, are feeling
no pain. They hardly seem like a
ieam that squeezed into the playoffs
with a final-game victory over New
Eogland.
Last week, they gilt their first
postseason victory in 24 years, at San
Diego. Now, they are one step from
perhaps the greatest longshot run to
the Super Bowl.
"Going into San Diego, I knew
we'd win before the game," said Harbaugh, who was helped greatly by the
running of Lamont Warren, Faulk's
replacement. Warren gained 76 yards,
while Harbaugh ran for 48 and threw
a five-yard touchdown pass to Floyd
Turner in the second quarter. "This

IRVING, Texas (AP)- Most of
Dallas. Cow&amp;oys don't care that
•they ·WOn't have a chance for revenge
:against 111eSan Francisco 4.9ers. The
:new Obstacle on the way to the Super
!Bowl is Green Bay, and that will be
ienough of a challenge.
.
Dallas put it all together. just in
:Cime for the NFC championship
i,ame, whipping the Philadelphia
iEagles 30-11 Sunday to earn a founh
~naecutive trip to the tide game.
~
"They (the Packen) are a team to
!J,e reckoned with," Dallas· running
ilack Emmitt Smith said.
;. The last three seasons, it's been
Dallas vs. San Francisco in the NFC
!tide game. But the Packers changed
:all ihil Saturday, when they defeated the defending Super Bowl
:

:the
l

~hamps.

·• G~n Bay, which has lost six con:i ecutive times to Dallas, including a
·34-24 defeat this year, will caine calling next Sunday in Texas Stadium.
. "I have a lot of respect for Green
. ~ay," Dallas quarterback Troy Aik·
malt said.
: "It's almost as if a monster is on

In the NBA,

reo

,

.

. INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) ~
Rookie Antonib McDyess knew he
watching something s~ial. At
fint, Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf wasn't

make things happen and put pressure
on them offensively."
.
"He passed it all right, right into
the net," Lakers coach Del Harris
said. "He is so quick with good
sure.
; The Denver Nugge~;guard start· range. It is hard for our big people to
•
~ 11111 less tha!l -con(ident aJ,out his affect his shot." 1
The
Nuggets
snapped
a
six-game
fhoadnl Sunday. In the second quar·
. ter
Abd!ll.·l~.auf.~us~ted it road losing streak with their first win
.~· of;'· ~ l!ijliU ~hen he away from home since beating New
York on Dec. 14, while ending a
' uld .make ne.rly evCiyihing. ·
·
· , Abdlll•RaUf ICored' 33 pqints on three-game skid overall.
"I didn't feel extremely well•n the
·J,;.tor· 19 ~illl!nd tied a record
·.for a LIUI;I!,~nt by'making 7- first quaner, but in the second quar,,Of4 tine-point allenipts tn Denver's ter, I thought! may have a big night,"
, ~93 ;ict(Jry,over I,os Anseles .
• Abdui-Rauf said. "Setting the picks
' ''k'l unbelievable when he can at the top (of the perimeter) as
. ..Jib thii:" ~ McDyess, who. opposed to the side was the main dif..... 201poilltl.••• know sometimes ference. It created mismatches, so 1
he'' ~ with hi!Jiself too, but was coming off a pick against a big
~ Y«1U - hil shot&lt;aoing iii and guy. It was difficult for the bigger
Hiii - - JO MIJIY tremendous guys to .stay with me."
~ ll,._juat -zinc."
The last four games between the
teams
have been decided by three
-~? .~' lij J;.O. ~&amp;'.lea toforoe
~·~ 10'
aiistt\ad of $hoot points or less. Again, it carne down
:pro' 111,a~•·, And the Lakers' big to a seeaaw fourth quilrter.
mea
· i:OjldiJ'i stop .the- Hoot· I '
Lo~ Angeles hl!d 11.chance to win
•.., .o&lt;!; ·" ''..;.!1 '
.
with
1:01 remaini 111 . Eddie ~ones
'" ADUUI·~·
.
't need much room, it was 2-for-IOshooting when he CDr!·
~ 11 qd,l' flc ,llid, "I was lrying to
netted on' a three-pointer to tie the
~
1
y
..

.ivll

.o

lhouibo

Pa's•

.,a

,•·r dldn
•

(

j.

LaPhonso Ellis hit a jumper as the
shot clock expired to put the Nuggets
ahead 92-90. Nick Van Exel was
called for a charging foul · on Dale
Ellis, who sank two free throws as
Denver led 94-90 with 11.6 seconds
to play.
.
.
Vlade D1vac; completed a threepoint play to draw the Lakers within
one with 4.3 seconds left. But Van
Exel missed an off-ball!nce threepointer as time expired.
"I think we're immune to fear
now, " . De~~er coach Berni~ Bickerstaff sa1d. All we could th1nk ~bout
was that we had a chance to wm the
game, and we wanted to keep it
cIosc_. "
.
D1vac led Los Angeles With 21
pomts, Van Exel added 19 and Elden
Campbell 18.
.
The. Lakers led 82-78 w1th S: II
remammg before Denver closed out
the game with an . 18· II run, ~ith
~bdui_-Rauf .sconng 10 pOints,
mdudmg h1s Sixth and seventh threepomters of the game.
.
Oj:nver stretched a ~ve-pomtlead
after three qu~ers mto a 78-71
advantage early m the founh on a

·l

. ..

'

iaiaior·forward

'

Mepn Winters
'
l~pl$pciintl .to lead
Orlllde Reclwdn'lcla. to a 90,rti!P¥•1he
WlllhCivaliers

"

.00.

' ·

' .

Totals: 23/43.9/17-17il4=90
Total FC: 32-60 (S3.3%)
Rebouads: 31 (Bostic, Smith &amp;

ofl'ens•ve J?Crformances
ever a htlle longer. .
.
On Saturday, Kc1th V~ney_ hit · a
school·reco~ 10 three-pomten and
the Thundering Herd broke 1ts own
Sou~ Conference record for treys
ID the wm o~er H~pton.
.
Veney ~mshed W_lth 39 points for
Marsljall ID s_urpassmg tlie mark of
mne three·1101n1ers SC! by Skip Henderson a_gamst The &lt;:•tadel•~ . 1987-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
!!tate's defensive coordinator, .Biil
Young, is "!king the same position at
the University of Oklahoma under
newly named head coach John Blake.
Young, 48, said the decision to

leave c0ach John Cooper after a 16year association was "one of the
toughes(things J' ve ever done," but
he couldn't resist the chance to return
home to Oklahoma.
Young and his wife Lawanna both

graduated from Oklahoma State.
Young said the offer from Blake,
who until last week had been defen·
sive line coach for the Dalla$ Cowboys, came out of the blue.
"I never thought·I'd leave here for

Bas ketbilll

MEWiJt 6S, Robert Morria •55
Mauaehu""o78, D")"oo S8
Monmoudl, N.J. 79, Rider 54
Mounl St. MaJ')' 'I, Md. 92. Lon&amp; Island Univ. 74
N.C.-Wilminaton 61 , American Univ.

J. lsi.

7 .781
10 .667
Mi.Mn.i .................... 16 14 .533
Wubiqton ............ 16 IS .516
Boston .. ......
.13 18 .419

.

"'st

l8

UNDe:R PRESSURE - lndlanapolll quar·
terbeck Jim Harbaugh (4) finds hlmaelf under
prenure from the Ken111 City Chlefa' Nell
Smith (90) In the fourth quarter of Sunday's
game I thought would be even and
would be a matter of turnoven.

AFC divisiOnal playoff contelt In Klnaea City,
Mo., where .t he Colta'10.7 victory earned the
guests the right 'to face Plttaburgh In next
weak's AFC championship game. (AP)

"I think we just have to keep
grinding and come back every day

and believe in ourselves."
Even if nobody else believes.

o,

11 .5

.400

12

Philadelphia ............6 24

.200

18

olinaagainst Elon in 1988-89.
_The Herd was 18-of-3S on three·
pomter.s to break the conference
rec.ord of 17 in a game it set against
VMI last .season.
"It was just one of those . nights.
When I get iJ, I'm ready to shoot.
Sometimes, 1 don't know where I'm
shooting from, " Veney said.
Hampton (4-10), led by J.J.
Williams' 39 points, stayed close ear:
ly on as the game saw II lead
changes and fourti~. Frank Lee gave
Marshall the lead for good at 31 • 30

a lateral move, to be a defensive coor·
dinator someplace else, " Young said.
"And if it wasn't this situation, I
wouldn't have.''
Young arrived at Ohio State with
Cooper. in 1988 and took over a

1•
16
19.S

Ia ·
Z
2.5
10
1•
15

17. ~

Pacilk JMwhion
Sea11Je ....... ............ 22 9 .710
Sacrnmento ............ l9 9 .679

1.5

L.A. Lukers ........... 17

6.S

17 .500
18 .4ll
16 .4.48
18 .438
20 .394

Saturday's sco"s

Swiday's acono

Atllmllaat New Jeney, ppl.. anow ·
Sean~ at New York. ppd., anow
LA. Cfippen 101. V11100Uver93
·Dallas 117 Boston 96
Denver 96, L.A. l..aken 9:\
Poctland 113, Minne1011a fJ1

Tonillhl's games
Orlando" P1iiladell)llio, 7:30p.m.
WMhinston a1 CL~VELAND, 7:30 . . _
p.m.

Utah. 9 p.m.

Tuesday's games

.
.
Dana Barros ran his NBA record ;
streak to 87 consecutive games in ·
which he has made a three-pointer. :
Trail Blaen 113
•
Timberwolves 97
,
At. Ponland, Clifford Robinson's •
career-high 41 points led the Trail ~
Blazers past Minnesota.
;
Robinson hit 17-of-27 field goal ·
.attempts, and had eight rebounds and '
four assists. His previous career- :
high was 40 ag~inst . Utah three years :
'
ago. '
The Timberwolves, who never :
got closer than six points the last :
three quanen, were led by Christian :
Laettner's 19 points. Isaiah Rider ·
added 18.
•

Pitcher Dutch Leonard · of the :
1914 Boston Red Sox set a record •
with an ERA of 1.07.
•

Auburn 101. Arkansas 76"

Bettlune-Cookman 92, Delaware St.
81

Chartoue u Toronto, 7 p.m.
Boston at New York, 7:)0 p.m
New Jmey a1 Cklando. 7:30p.m.
Sacramento at Atltu1ta, 7:30p.m.
San A111oaio m Ho.11on, 8 p.m.
Seo.nSe a1 Milwaukee, 8 : ~ p.m.
lndi.ma at Dallns. 8:30p.m.
L .A . Ctippen at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Minnesotmat LA. Lalters. I0:30p.rn.
Vancouver 11.1 Golden Slate, IO:JO
p.m.

Iolll

rss. :w

0 1.00

8

MichrSt... 2
Penn 1.. ........ 2 0 1.00 It
Purdue ...... .. ...1 0 1.00 It
lowa .............. l I .!100 ll
Michipn ....... l I .!100 It
Wisconsin ..... 1 I .!100 9
Minncsofll ..... l I .!100 9
I~'diana .......... 1 I lOO 8
Nonhwealern.O I .lJOO l
lllinois ........... O 2 .000 It
OHIOSL .... O 2 .lJOO 7

.64)

.64:\
6 . ~71
l .!100
) .786
4 .636

N.C. Cb;vlooe 88, Lafayelle Sl!l
Nicholls S1. 7_1i, NW Louisiana 67
Nonh Carotina "· Moryland 86 tOT)
Radrord at N.C.--Green•boro. ppd .•

MAC standings
Cool.

0 1.00

~9

W. Milingan .2

0 1.00

4

Miami.. ..... ..... l
Toledo .......... 1

I -~
I .SOD
I .SOO
I .SOO
I .SOO
I .500
2 .000
.2 .lJOO

9
g
6

5
6
..
6
3

I .900
6 .400
I 900
5 .615

4 .600
s .!100
7 .462
6 .400
4 .600

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Saturday'aactlon
l1all

Army 74, Woffonl71

Boaton Univ . 69. Vamonl ~~

Btteknel10,e«.Ol9
CUtlus 6.'\. Faidield ~
Columbia 76, Ldti~ 6IJ

........

w.ana st

Delawlft 57, New Harnpllhire S2
DreuttOO. Hofon71
Gecqe Waslli...OII87, o..-.. '9
Goorac~owoll. Scion Hall '6
llan{mJ 13. Htod
• 74

SYU~USI

-59.~40

hr ••,. ..........

Mid-Continent Conference
youngstown S1.·60. W. Illinois '-8

Nono@nfereoce play
Centro.l S1 . 67, Tri-Stalr 60
DePauw 69, Wilmington 67

Ohio U.S. Jroys' scores
Saturday's action

haUtime.
•
half/' SaiJiuel said. "We 'Weren't dis·
" What did they end up shooting, couraged at all because t~y played
70 or 80 percent? Ninety-e ight per• great. We're a salt-and&gt;pepper team . ·
cent? We haven't seen a gaud better They have cinnam&lt;in. papri~a. nut·
than J.J. all year until tonight," said meg . ... They're so deadly from the
Hampton coacb Byron Samuel. perimeter. We got in their face, but
" They shot the'lights out."
again, they just shot the lights out."
Marshall bltw open the game·
Sidney Coles added 12 points and
before i ntermission, shooting 70 per- 12 rebounds for Marshall , while John
cent from the f~eld and hitting 11 of Brannen scored 19, John Brown
IS three-pomters en route to a 63-46 scored 13 and Lee scored 12: Fbr
. lead at the break. lt.shot 59 percent Hampton, Williams scored o'(er 25
for the game to Hampton 's 41 per- points for the ninth straight gam_e,
cent.
while Jermain Gholson sco\ 15 ~d

M.- 1$, Tow~n $1. 71
M-73.Cal... 60

Grandview 69, BiB Walnut .S5
Greenville S8, W. Canollt01 !2
Grove 01y 61, Hamilloo Twp. 5!
Hamilton 74, Uma 69
Hamihon Badin 71 . Odcrd TalAw.,..

•s

__...

em&lt;6

an

rarw..-·

DIOJon 70, OreJOII Sl, 59

'
42

IC&lt;omb 49, Adll48
Miami E. 64. Fnnklia MOGIOI! S6
Miami , . _ 49, Lopo Elm 48
Middlclowa 7kFairllcltl70
Mllior Cily ll ' ~- 43
MiiUIIlcr 89, Jicboit.ea.-61

.'
•.

Mountv..-so, l'kbri-35
N. Adami 31 , Uaio4o 6CI

'

,.

••

,

Lokewood

64.-

noo36

.

.!

6L Kirllaotd43

Gnnvllle 66. Millonpon 21
Green 43, Tallmadle 39
Gra!nevirw •7, V.lley View C3
Hamiltoo Ross S!5, Kinp 46
H.wlten 68, Beatchwood Jl
Howland 64, Yoo. Mooney ll
lnotiU&gt; t..ob l7, R.,.._t 44
Jacbon CeDicr 7~. F'airlawa 36
Jerlenon ""' 70. Gene.. 39
Jolin Gleao Sl. Sberidoo SO (2 OTJ
IWido lB. Fon R.covay 26
K&lt;nston 611, Chlrdon 46
K&lt;- Ridae 69. Sprina. CodiOiic 51
KelleriOJ Flirmoot 62. Sprina. Nonh

'
L.Melllld 41, Neweomentown
34
llu. 41
~sa. o.y. Coloael White 27
tala&lt;n- 37. NewM ll .
l.onlo Adm. C.h. 4l. 6100blde Jl
Lonio Klaa 4l. Sudusky lB
L.ouisviUe Aquinu 61 , Akron Ken·
-41
Madi1011 5.S, PlinesvillefRivenide 48
M11oi- 66, A - Hoboo 57
Mol""" 36. S"""""' ll
M - 4 l , Altn&gt;o Flreolooell
Mananeld Madiao• 63, Mo•DI Ver·

Limo T"""" Chr. 65, Bluftlon 62
Lillt:Olnview 51 , Limoc.h. 45
Linoly. W.VL86. Sbodyoide48
LA&gt;odon 86, Uli&lt;l78
Loooin Adnl Kioa 69. Elyrio 62
Lonin - - "·
Midykw 4l
Modi..,..Ploinol$,
~64
MwliddChr. 68. IMM44
MMion Slain 80, Col. NIXIIImor ~
Muaillon Walbinaton 59, Alliuee

Gonzaio 66. Soc.......IO St. 44

OW.A..MikCail&amp;w;

"

Kin&amp;s 17, Hani10o 72

l&lt;lpaic l4. Conti- 47
Lickina Val. 34.1 - Alder 29

Teua ChriniM 98, Montini S.. 96 (~

O!ti&lt;! N - 76, Bttldwi•Walloce

~Val .

H•din N~ 50. Uma Perry )I
Indian Val. .7 ),£ C•toa61
Kalidn 70, Al~n E.
. Kenton 87, Riverdale &amp;2
Kemon Ridac SO. Sprina. Northwctt-

·Midwal ;I
LouiniUe 81 , ~Paul71
MarQueue 69, St. Loui• 47
SW Miuouri St 89. lndiaAa St 78

c..-~.~66

•s.

dal4 ,

Virpnia Tech. ppd.,

WOOMer 68, Ohio Wesle.y111 49
Detli10177, Obortia 51 .

-66

Dillie 60. National Trail S5
Eaton 65. Tri-Villaae 61
Edaerton 56, Hilltop 53
Fllirless 48. Tuslaw 40
Fr•nklin Hu. 71 . Wonhinlton Chr.

l4

onow

Saturday's ac:IIOn
Nortlo c.ut c-rmco

Cle. VA·SJ 62, Euclid 4)
Col. DeSalcl49. Teays Val. 38
Col. lllnley 62. Be•ley 56
Col. Ready Sl. Col. T,.. of Life 43
Col. School for &lt;iirlt $7, Shaker Hts.
Brown 37
Col. Wanmon 72. Dublin Scioto 44
Ccpley 'lo.
Conluwl 53, C111ficld 46
Cuyahoai Falls 64. Akroa Cent.·
Hower)9
Cuylhop Val. Chr. 48. Woodriqe
47
.
Danville 65. E.- Knoll. 43
Day. Bellbrook 45. Ftukin .W
Day. Christian 43, Day. Mca6owdale
40
Da.)' . Dunbar79, Col. South 32
0.)'. Oakwood
Mikon-Union ~ 8
~gnff Riverside 52, Fairbanks 36
Dover 57. aaymont24
Doyac.aown Olippewn 66, Oallon ~8
E. Clevelud Shaw 58, Parma 46
Elyria 6.1, htidview 29
Fairbona !§6, Cmtcrvillc J.4
Fairview S6. Rocky River.CS
,._Cadi. 44, Bloom-Citm&gt;ll 34
Fon fTye l9. MAriena "
Frederic:tlown 49, Colonel Qnofonl
41
Gnway 12. Rid........ l4
&lt;Mfteld Htl. Trinity Ill , Ola.el II
Gormtsvlllell. Oalwood 44
Gecraetown 34. Eulcm Broiwn 4l
Gir.d 49, \'cu. Unulilae 36

Del~ Jcffmon 63, AdiftJIOO (10
Dclphoa St. Johns 64, Uma Shawnee

~6

Canton McKin~y 63, Alliance 29
Carrolhoo !II. louiJYillc )9
0\qrio FaJis 74, w. Geau8a n
Cia. Hilk Olrittian SO.IIKiian Hi1129
Cin. Mariemoo164, Felicity 4~
Cin. MI. Healthy 3&amp;, Cin. Pnnc:e1on

Wooch 25
Cle. Collinwood 58, Wlllouahby S
43
Oe. Heigll!s 79, Nonnwady 21
cte. Mrialll7. Cle. St JOJCph ~

Cin. Woodward ~8. Tol. Soon !3

.,.

defense thai for a couple of seasons
was bereft of talent. He helped build
it into a unit that for five years has
been at or near the top of the Big Ten
in terms of fewest points or yards
allowed.

:

Meadowbrook 57,

~usc:nraWill

M.-ioa EIJin C9. M.1on ,__. 40
M " ' - l1, McDermoll Nontt-t

)l .
· Mlryo'lille 51, Aookllo Hm. .00 •
M.oo 67. Wlbni ..... Z4
McCiail 74,
.00

Wltl-

-

Cooper was out of town alid
unavailable for comment: But he said
earlier he would understand ifYoullg
took the Oklahoma job.
.,
"Sometimes you' ve got to do
what's best for your family," Coo~
er said.
,

Val .

Medina 83, N. R~allon 27
.. Mentor Lake Ca1h . 79, Elyria Cillh .

42

Miami E. 60. Eatoa 52
Miami Trace 71, Mllldison Pbins 40
Minerva "36. Akron Sprina. 33
Morpn 49. Philo 39
Mount Gilead 33. Buckeye Val. 32
N. Olmsled .. l. Amhent3$
N. Union 47, Nonhmor 46
New Albany S9, Col . Academy 34 .
New Lc~na1on Sl, Crooklville 39
Newark 73, Grovepon 44
Old Fort ~J . I&gt;:Jnbury 47
Olmsb:d Falla n. BD, 30
Open Door 56, Akron Elms Sl
Paineavillc Harvey 7S, Ashtabula 52
P!ll"ma H11. Holy Name iS, Chw-don
NO.CL 72
Parmn Padua 65. Cle. Ca1holic 41
Perty 66, Fllirport31
Pid:erington H . Reynoklsburg 1'1
Piqua ~3, Dny. Nordlmont 4:\
Pyma1uning Val. 57. Cardinal JIJ
Ravenlla !:\, Mogadore F1eld JY
Revere S4. Norton 51
Ri chmond Edisoa 60. Sleubenvi llc
Cnth. Sl
Rivenidc S2, Fairbankl36
S. Range SO, McDonWd 49
Shelby 48, Bel~ue 43
Sidney $6. Trotwood-Madison 45
Solon -41, Twinsburg 4S
Sparta Hiahland ~8 . Cardington 34
Spring. Northwestern 51, Triad 46
SprinJ. South 60. Xenia 42
Sprinlboro 61, Goshen 38
Stow 77. Akron Garfield 21
SlrongsviUe 66. Mi~nrk 26
Temple &lt;lv. 36. Wa)'Side 0... 32
Timkert 63, ·Akron E. 47
Toronto 46. Indian Creek 42
Tri-\lillage 43, Na1ional Tmil 34
Troy 48, W. Carrollloa 45
Urbana 58. Logan 56 (Of)
Utica 96, Waverly 49
Valley Forge 66, Garfield Hts. SO
Vandalia· Buller 81 . Greenville 34
Vermilion 71. Elyria W. 41
W. Branch 6C, Canlon S. 3!
W. Holmer. )9, Medina Buckeye Z3
W. Libmy S~ 57. Mechaniabur8
45 .
W. Mutkinpm S7. Tri-\'alky :l~
WOOswontl 76. Medina Highland 30
WrncUVIIIe 52, Mentor 4S
Warsaw River View 70, Maysville _li_,
Waterloo Sl, R0011town 35
Waynesfield Goshen 7~. BenJamin
Logan

Jf.::urgh .. .... ..

Central Dlw-W.. ·'

.;

W L I ttl. Gf liA _.

Iwn

~

Odroit .... .......... 28 -. 8
Chicago .............. 21 14
Torooto .............. 21 14
St.Louis ............ l817
Winnipca .......... .l720
Dnllas ................ It 19

S9 146'

83

~

~

.50 1•3 122
1 49 133 Ill f 1
5 Cl 106 105
J :f1 143 lSI
8 lO 100 124 .,

P•eifk Divi. .

11' L I ttl. lil liA .,
6 to 161 1'17 '

Iwn

Colorado ........ :... 22 13
Los Ang.elc:s ....... l6 16
Vuncoovt'f ........ .14 I~
At101heim ........... .1~ 23
Edmontoo ......... .14 n
Calgary ..... .........1322
San Jose ...............8 2B

141 133 •
145 136 .
122 140
Ill IM
119 1)7
20 118 18)

9
10
4
6
7

41
38
34
34
33

4

Saturday's scores
Bosaon -'· Harfford.2
N.Y . lslanden 5, Onawa C
Buffalo 1, M&lt;*rcal 6
New Jmey 3, WashiDJIOO 1
Toronlo 5, Colondo:;:
Delroil3, 0\ic.:ngoO
Calgary 2, Aoridu 0
S1. Louis 3, Pillsburgh 2
Vancouver 9, Tnmpa Bay 2
Los Anaelca 7. Son Jose ~

,~

.....

Sunday's scores

s, Dallns 2
EdmontOn 3. Anaheim I

Olicaao

Tonight's games
Colorado at Boston. 7:30p.m.

VaBCou~er at PinsburJb. 7JO p.n•
Tampa Bay :u Montrenl, 7:30p.m.
Wush1ng1 on al N.Y. Ranaeu . 7:30
J•.m.
"
Winnipc&amp; IU Dctroil, 7:30p.m
. l...m Anaelcs at Dallas. M::\0 p.m.
Florida al San Jose. IO:JO p.m.

Tueoday's

camdv

Chicac:oat N.Y. Is!Aiden, 7:l0p.m.
St.l..o4.tis It New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Anllheim at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Hartford Ill Edmonton, 9:30p.m.

Transact ions
Baseball
COI.OR=Jc'Kf;, A8=d to
teuns with ~n Baylor. manaaer. on a.
rwo--yeu conrract extens•on through the
1998 siaaon. Invited Sc:ou Fredrickson.
Doug Mil!iOft and Jamey WriJht. pilchtn;
Ben Petr•ck. Will Sc:alzini and Mark
S!riltmallcr, eatcbert; Pedro ~1ellano
Todd Hehon, David Keoeedy, Neifi Perc~
and Cbrit Sexton, iaf~eldr:n ; and· Angel
&amp;:bevania and Dmick Gibloa, outftdden. 10 apring training.

NFL playoffs
Saturday'• scores
Pittsburgh 40, Buffalo 21
G~n Bay 27. S11n Francisco 17

BaskotbaU

Suo4ay's scores
Oallns 30. Philadelphia II
lnd1onupolis 10, Kansas C1_ty 7

Conference championships
Sunday. Jan. 14
,Indianapolis at Piusburgh. 12:30 or 4
, p.m.
... Green Bay at Dallu. 12:30 or 4 p.m.

NoltonaiBIII&lt;elball A-'llbo
DENVER NUGGETS : Activated
U.Phon10 Ellis, forward, rrom the lnjumd""
list. Wni•ed Regie Slater. forward. ·
'
MIAMI HE-AT: Activaled Aloni:o
Mourning. center, from the injun:d lise.
PHILADELPHIA 76£RS: Ao·
nounced the retirement or Scou Skiles,
guard .

Football

Super Bowl

National Football Ltacuc
Vi .

Green Bay-Doll:a winner, 6:20 P·n;'·

Sunday, Feb. 4
Pro Bowl at Honolukl

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUantic Div._.

.11: L I &amp; Gf liA

N.Y. Rangcrs..... 26 II 1
flooda ...............26 12 1
Philadelphia.. .....23 II 1
Wnshin&amp;lon ........ l9 17 4

3 41 122 &lt;127
.1 39 12-' L\2 ...
6 )I- 13.5 · Ill ~
~
31 99. 129 _;
I 1_7 9.5 160 \

WESTERN CONFERENCE '

~9

Football

lam

~I~ ~ ~ ~ ~ "

Montrenl.. ......... 19 18
"Buffalo .............. 18 19
Bos1on ................ l6 tS ·
Hartford ............. 13 22
Onawa ........ ,........ 831

Wellington 46. Marion Carh. :12
Wenfall $8, Hunrinpoo •2
Whitehnll76, Grandview 59
Wickliffe 43. Oranae 39
World Hanest 56. Faith Chr. 17
Worthington Chr. 67, Nonhrid1e 62
(OT)
Yellow Spring 48, Xenia Chr. 26
Zanesville 66, ~wood 60

Sun ()e,ll St..U•M, Tt~npc.o, A.riL
Sunday, )•n. 11
lndian;~rol is-Pimbur&amp;h winner

~

NorlheutDivlolon

46

c.nton Cadi. S6. Orrvme 44

Cin. Seven Hilla 4S, Cin. Country
Day31
Cin. St. 8emard 75, Lockland 4S
Cin. Withrow 60. Day. Bclmont29
Cin . Woodward 27. Cia. Winton

Cle. VA-SJ 70. Tuocltnwu Cadi. M
Ointoa-Massic 74, Carlisle 61
Col. Acndl!my 69, CenlerburJ ~~
Col. Reody n Allier Coth. 69 ((]f)
Coldwllter !2, Elida •3 .
Cokrain 71, Cin. Northwtlf 67
Columbus Grove 66, Fort Jenninp 60
Coc1onon Val. l7, Torvntoll
Day. Meodowdole 94; Doy. Std&gt;IO•

Geora11 Tedt 116.-~
O.lo: 81

Other Ohio men's
college stores

36

~9

Niagara ~3. St Peter'a 50
Symcusc at RuiJCfS. ppd.. IOOW
Winlhrop at Loyola. Md. , ppd .. Sf'IOW

lit

!10

Akron Covemry 74, Akron Mmnchcsret 64
Akron St\1-St.M 90. Cuyahoga Vnl.
Otr. S6
A.mht-rst-S I~~ 76, Ashland 61
Ayers ville S9, Hicksville 31
Benvercreek 60, Day. Colonel White
51
· Bellnire 76, Hannibal River ~9
Bellbrook 8l Greenevicw '~
Relldonlnint ~6. Grecoon J~
Bellevue 79, Bucyrus 63
Belpre 69, Fort Frye 67
Bexley 64, OlentanJy S2
801kins 47,"l:ovin&amp;J.on 41
Brookville 92, Ansonia 51
Buckeye Trail SO, Munroe Central43
CanAl Winchesler ~3. Amanda Ciean"JCCk. 4~
Clnton Timken M. Ci:anton Cmth. 44
Cardinston 81. Mansf~eld St. Peters
)9
c ...y 17. Ridgedale 62
.
Cenrerville S~. Keuerina Aller S4
Cin. Country Day ~8. Lockland 36
Cin. Finneycown 61 . Hamilton Ross
lO
Cin. Hills Christian ~0. Taylor 49
lOT)
Cin. Roger Bacon ~6. Day . Chamlnade-Julienoe S4
Cin. Syc.-nore 75. W. Oc:stcr Lakota

67

Alhtabula Edaewood !7, Conneau1
Avoo l...ake44, Wesdake 28
Beaver LDco1 'I, Cadiz 46 tOTJ
Beaven:roek :W. Doy. Wayne 33
Bellaire 71, $1. Oainvillc $0
BellaiR St Jo1mo 48. Bridaepon 44
BellefoataiiC ~~. Wapakoneto 46
Baa. 53. Bnutawick. 41
BtddNrc 44. BrillOI l4
Berlin Hilud 68. Jeweu-Scio S3
Bm:bville 76, Cloverleaf 46
Buckeye Local67, M.llnins Ferry~
Campbell Memorial ~1 . Lowellville

Ashland 86. Ferris S1. 18

Sunday's action

S1. Josep\l 's

49

G"at Lakes Valley Confer·•
ence

-

7 .300

A - l l Ball St.
BowlinJ Greo a1 Cent Michipn
W, MichipD 111 E. MichiJIIR
OHIO wkellt ~
Toledo 111 Miami. Ohio

connrcnct~~7~.

X.avier {Ohio) 72, DuquetM 64

Cn::iatnon 66. Wichita St. 51 .
III.-Chicqo91, Wrlgh1St . 79
Iowa 92. Minacsota 6:1
KIWIS 83, Soulhem Meth. 61
Kansas St. 72. Iowa Sl. !IS
Minouri 71, Colontdo 66
N. Uiinoi1 80, Detroit 60
NE Illinois 96, Troy Sc. 92
Nebraska69. Lone Bcucf1 St. 6M
S. lllinois 97, Illinois SL 7~ '
Tuba 67. EvaiUYilk: n
W. Illinois 64. Youngstown S1. 60
Wis.-Orcen Bay 71 , Cleveland St. ~7

101

n.

AllandciO

Col Poty-SLO 86. ldal&gt;o 84 tOll
Caifomia 9i, Arizorul S.. 82
Fmno St. 81, TCAu·EI Paso 71
LoyolaMacymooat67. N. Ari:wnafll
Mon:ana70, St. M~ ' s, Colli. 63 (OT)
Oral Roberts 77, S. Wah 7•
·
SUI Dieao 7S, San Francisco 66
Soulhtrn Cal 83, Washinata~~ St 81
Stanfonl 80, Arizona 71
UCI.A 78. Washinaton 70
Weber St. 108, Al:uka-Ancllorage

.11: L fsl. :W J.lsl.

E. MidliJan ... 2

Saturday's action
Allton Mancheatcr 45, Akron fire· ·
aeo.33
•
Akron St.V.SI.M Wakh Jesuil43
A......_Cieormoek 74. Bemc Uoion
l2

G«Jrsc Washinston 75. DD)'ton 69

Art.-Uuk: ltlx:k 84, W. Ken1ud.y 76
~St. 62. Louiaiana Tech .SO
Baylor 93. Hrin-Simmuns 47
HQulfoa fh, Mcmphia67
Lamar 76, New Orleans 70
Rice 80. Tew 69
Sam HOUlton St 81 . Tcus·San Antonio78
Stephen F. Aus1in 63. SW Texas St.
62
Texu·ArlinJton·66. North Tcx~ 6J

Ovtrall

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

S6

.

Sprinp54

Wed,.....y'seames

•••m

0Ucrbeinll:I,Capila172 ·
Marid.la 78, John c.roU71
Mount Union 66. Hiram Col. 46
Musk.insum 76, Heide~ 67
Baldwin--Wall;a 108, Ohio Nonhem

FarWat
Boise St. 61. Pepperdine $8
CS Northridge 73 , Colo.-Colo .

Saturday's scores

MillS CO.
cw• WILL
,...Wimi,CYQU
OIJIIUID 111111
CI1 LDOI SCIIOOL

OhMJ All•letk Conference

Soulllwest

Sunday's score

OHI06.:'i, Mi•llli (Ohiol56.
W. Mic:hipnll, Cent Michi&amp;llR 74
E. Mkhlaan 82. Akroe 73
Toledo 92, Ball St. 69
Bowlin&amp; ORiel 83. Ken168

boards.

Ohio Wesley!lll69, Wooster62
Willrnbn] 79. Case Weslcm 70

RaNier 87, Portland 80
Cent. Connecticut St. 95. O.it:o1go St.

Penn Stile 79, Wi~eonsin SO

B;all Sc. .......... I
OHIO ........... I
Ceat. Mich., .. I
Kent ...............0
Akron ............0

North Cout Allllelk Coni.
Denison 69, Oberlin 49

MldBmdley 60. N. lowoll
B11ffalo 48. Mo .-Kansas City 43

4 .7JJ

Michigan Stile 68.111inoi• 58
lodiano 89. OHIO STATE 67
IowA 92. Mini'ICIOia 63
Michi&amp;an 83, Norihwnlem ~I

BGSU ...... ..... I

I&gt;etroil 70, Wnght St. 66

w•

LOO

w..... Keoncdy 68. Hublllnl 36

Wayne Trace 6j, Van Wen '2
Wcllington61. MDrionCalh. 5)
Wellnille 82 . Weirton (W .Va.)
Madonna S5
Wesrenillr N. 71, Marion Hardi"' 52
World Harve&amp;t69, Failh Chi. 45
Ydlow Sprinp loti. X.nioO... 37
You . Mooney 63, Braote, W.Va. 55
ZanesviUc 61. Maysville 33

Mklwnltm Colkl;l•te Conterehft

c.:an -'-'
So\llh Carolina8S. Gcorsia 73
Sootllem 92. Gromblina St. 89
Tcna.·Martln 78. Tennesaee Tech 74
T,xns A&amp;.M 67. Oeorsia Soolhcm 63
Teus Southern 67. Jackson St. 63
Texas Tech 99, E. Tenne1~te St. 81
VMI77. Richmond 65
Va. Commonwealth 8S. Old Dominion70
Vandcrbih 6S, Tenneuce ~~
VirJinia 7), N. Carolina St. 69
F...., 75. Florida St 71 con
William A Mary 96, James Madison
71

l .846
2 . 3~7

Saturday's scores

Iaa

Mkl-,\merkln Conftnntt
OHIO S4. Miami {Oiiio) Sl
Toledo 9~. Ball St 60
Ken1 92. Bowline Groen n
Akron 73, E. Michigan M

Owolifll St. 67. Howard sa
SE Louisiana 72. Florida A1lantic 69
Samford 92, Cent. Aorida78
South Alabama 62, Tex.u-Pan ...._meri·

L r.a.
.,71

~
~

'.

McNeete St 81, NE Louisiana 6~
Mil-E. Shore 71. florida A&amp;M 66
Middle Tenn. 88. Austin Pea.y 69
Miu. \Iaiiey St 113, Alc.:orn St 78
· Miuiuippi St 69, Florida 66
Munay St. at Ten•esacc St, ppd .,

Ovcnn
6
0

. ll

t.SU 99. Alobama 77

Big Ten standings
11' L

Mki-Ohio ConfertMt
Tiffin 77, Cedarville 54
RIO GRANDE 90. Walsll116
Urbana M , Moon~ Vernon N ~ne

Liberty 78, Mon1rea1-Andenon 66
MARSHALL 121. Hampton 95

83

Sprina. Shawnee SO. Spri•J- North·
eaRem43
SpriOJ. Souu-taa77, Triad S2
Sprin1boro :til, Day. Valley View 43
51. Heney 57, Fori Loramie 42
Swantoo 69, N. Central 60
Teays Val 61, WatkiN MemoriAl 55
Tecum.eh 84, Uobolta 80 (OT)
T......, 64, Cltttoo Cltl!. 44
TmoralS. Delta l4
Ttee of Life 84. Miami Val. 77 ((]f)
Tri-County N. 63, Middletown O..r.
l4
TrirOOk 49, Croobville "'
VII~, W.VL 71, Bealb'lille66
v...... ltes64. MariaoLocaJll
WalniM Riclae 64, l.ancaslet 58
Warren tfardina 6•. Campbell·
MenmaJSS

Saturday'actlon

Compbell60. Mercer l7
Centenary 107, Aa. lnlernohona19~
Charleston Soulhern Sl. N.C .AaheviUe67
Cioc•nn.ati 71 , South AoridD 69
Coli. of Cbarieston 91 , Geof&amp;tA S1. 7~
C~nSt . 82, N. CarolinaA&amp;:T71
Davidson 87, Navy S&amp;
E. Kentucky 89. SE Miuouri 7'
Furman 72, CoauaJ Carolina 50
Georae Muon 88. F.asl Carolina 76
Jacksonville 80, SW Louiaiana 69
JackJonvillc St. 96. Stet10n 67
Ken1ucty 90, Missi11ippi 60

......s.

ll

Ohio women's
college scores

~ ,..,..

s..mu-o
.. _,

Conr.

• Non-criennaploy
, PefiMCe 82, Huntington 67
Bluffton 68, Coocordia. Mich. SO
Thoriw More IJO, Lake Eric 85
Wilming1on 8-'. Wuh. 5: Jeff. 67

S8

•

Rourord 79, Lima BalhM
S. Clwleotoa SE 77. Trildl2
Sandusky 62, N. RidJevine 39
Sandy Val. 64, Tulcarawu Val. 61
Sidney Ldtman67, Arma6l
Smitbvilte S8, W. Holmes~
Sputa Hipland S8. Morion P.......

MaloDC 91, Cedarville 69
Ohio Dominicaa 95 , Shawnee St. 82

Ala.-Bimiinshun 71·, Tulane 70
Alabama St. 71, Pnlirie View 70
Appalachian St. 61 , St Bonnventu~

d

Owlot:1e 96, Atlalu 90
CLEVELAND lOS. Orlando 94
l:lomMt90. Waslli""on 32
Olicqo I u, MihttMlkee B.f
Hotwon 99, lndianl87
Miami 88, Denver 86
Ill. Goklea SIMC 106

TAKEDOWN - Dalles defenalve IIDellllln Tony Tolbert (92) takes :
Philadelphia quarterblck Rendall Cunningham down foi e six-yard ·
loll In the third q•rler of Sunday's NFC divisional playoff game at :
Texaa Stadium. The Cowboy!J ~n ®-11 to·•m the right tci hoat the
~FC championship game 11g11lnat GIMII Bay next Sunday. (AP)

n

Soulh

ll.'i

Mld_DI_
Ita
11' L r.l.
Hous1on ................ 24 9 .1TI
San Antonio ........... 20 9 .690
U•oh ........ ...... 21 tl .6l6
Penver- ................... 14 19 .•24
Dallas ............... ..... 9 22 .290
Minnesota ............... 8 2:\ .l.'U
Vancouver ............ 6 26 .188

Ill

Mld.OWOC-.....
• Urbana 83, Walsh 80
Filldlay 74, Tiffin 689
RIO GRANDE 88, Mr. Vernon Naz.

\lillonova 94, Boston ColleJC
Wragner 93, St Frnncis. NY 69
Winthrop &amp;9, Md.·Baltimore County

10
IO.l
12

Gr._

Ferris St 65, Ashland 62

Xavier, Ohio 69, La Salle 60

WFSI'ERN CONFERENCE

Miami

son61

N. ColleJP.' Hill '12. New Miomi 67
Nelooovdle-Yod&lt; 7l. L6ton 61
Newull8.
4J
Oakwood 71. Milton-Union 56
Oberlin 61, Elyria c.h. fiO
Ona"'...Oian00rf69. Wau!ICOn:\1
p..,(dj•• l7. Anlwerp 17
Perryobural&lt;l. llefo"""' .oo
Piqua 47. Wapakoneta 44
Preble Shawnee 98, Qa.~ . Chrisrian 9:\
(OT) .
Rocky IU..,. S9, Midpivk 44

Heidclbera 59, Muskingum S6
Capi1al69 (OT)terbdn 68
Hiram 68, Movnl Union 64
Marietta 64, John Carroll62
Grut taka V•lley Conference

6)

Cenlrll Dlvillon
Chita.J0.................. 28 3 .1)()3
lndi1Ul1&gt; ................... 18 ll .581
CLEVELAND ....... 17 l3 .l67
Detroit ................... l6 IS .ll6
Chulone ... ,........ 15 17 "69
...._llanta ................... 1&lt;t 17 .452
Milwaube ............. l2 19 .387
Toronto ................ ."... 9 23 .281

Ponlond ................ ll
Phoenix ...... ............ l3
GoldenStote .......... l4
L.A. Clipper-1 ......... 13

game at New Jeney were postponed
jumper by Jalen Rose.
Then Los Angeles reeled off 13 of by a snowstorm.
Clippers .101, Grizzlies 93
the next 16 points to take an 84-81
In Vancouver, Malik Sealy's 25
lead with 5: II remaining.
But Abdui-Rauftied it at 84-84 on points helped Los Angeles hold off a
his seventh three-pointer and second late rally by the Grizzlies 101-93.
Sealy hit 10-of-15 shots from the
to
'Jr--.-_
in a row with=:ll
LaPhonso Ell'
·ssed two free field, and Lamond Murray added 20
throws, but A ui-Rauf came to the points for the Clippers.
The Grizzlies erased ·a. I 5-point
rescue with a jumper to put Denver
deficit
in the fourth quaner and took
ahead 86-84.
. '
the
lead
with eight minutes to play
The teams traded baskets until
but
saw
their two-game winning
.Jones tied it at 90 for the final time.
Denver didn't take its fini lead streak end.
Greg Anthony had 25 points and
until S:SS of the third.
IS
assists for the Grizzlies. Bryant
Abdui-Rauf's perfonnance proved
Reeves
had 16 points but was limitextra valuable with center Dikembe
ed
to
just
34 minutes because. of foul ·
Mutombo in foul trouble much of the
game. Mutombo finished with I trouble.
Mavericks 117, Celtics 96
point and had four of Denver's-nine
Jim Jackson scpred 30 points and
blocked shots before foulinc out. ·
"I'll take the win, but I'm not hap- · Jason Kidd added a season-high 29 as
py at all," he said. "This is the sec- Dallas beat Boston for its first road
ond straight game where I haven't win against the Celtics in 161ries.
George McCloud had 28 for Dalbeen able to play more than 2S min·
utcs.''
las, which had never beaten Be&gt;Sion
In other games, it was the Los on the road.
Angeles Clippers 101, Vancouve~
Dino Radja had 28 points and 13
93; Dallas 117, Boston 96; and Pon- ~boudds to lead the Celtics, who
land 113, Minnesota 91. Seattle's hPe lost six of their last seven
game at New York and Atlanta's games. Dee Brown added 16.
Lorenzo Williams had 16
rebounds to pace the Mavericks,
who held a S3-42 advantage on the

Burns 1/4-213-212=10; Frasolak ·
S/1 O-()l()..()r'O= 1 Hcrcec 3f1-01'1.·
1/2=7, McMillen 1/8..&amp;1~212=4.
Jones 112-00-I/2a3. 'Ditall: Zl/69-

4
8
8.5

66

Penn !§7, Prift(eton 5!li
Piu11Jurah SC, We.u' Virainia83 (OT)
Provide"" 112,$1. John' • 78
Rhode l!land 9.1, F01dham 60
Siena 83, Holy Crou 78
St Fnmcil, Pa. 64. Fo.irteiJh Dickin·

Gil

18

NewJeney ............ 12

•=····=

.

!herr

New Yorlt .............. lO

SllliWltha Pack led the Cavaliers
(8-5) with 22 points. ·
Winten 4 each)
Tile future: Rio Grande will head
Blocked shotl: 4 (B~;~stic 3, Tabor :zn.WJ:z-116
Total FG: 30-76 (39.S'II&gt;)
to · Portsmouth Tuesday to face · I)
RelloOndl: S3 (Harmon &amp; Pack 9·
Shawnee StaleJ Da 7p.m. encounter.
Aall: 10 (Carson 4)
'·
..-•....•Stall: II (Carlon .&amp;: Tabor 3 each) · •
lllocW ......: 5-(Fruolak &amp; each)
-~·--Pact 2 elldl; HUrt I)
Turaoven: .28
A lll!l 13 (Enolak 4) •
Foiill:24
·'
Sllall: 14 (PniOiak 3)
WALSH (.48. U 16) .,-PICk '
_,_
FOIIII:23 26
7115-WI-8110=22, Harmoft 6/14- .
FOIIIeda.t:Pick
OO.SI6=11, Bauer 418-00-518=13,

'

shooten ~tlll'\ed •m~ately·talking
about ~r. nel[l opponent.
Now•. •fthey ~ly knew when-they
were g~mg to pl3y they could really
.
get senous. .
Marshall (6;4), a 123-9S Wll!ner
over Hampton on S:tturday, was suppo~ to be ho!"e agamst Jac~sonv1lle State tomght. B~t the ~arne
has been postponed mdefim\ely
because of a wmter ~to~ that shu!

University of the District of Colum·
b•a.~n 1991-92.
, .
Our guys played wel_l. I d ~.ke !o
see us get better de_fens1vely, .~d
Marshall coach B1lly Donovan. We
~on the game ton•ght ~ause of
off~~se: ,
.
.
Ke1th Veney was unconscious .
Those type of game~ don't happen
too often. He had Wide-open looks
tomght. !~ WasJUSI one ~fthose rughts
for h1m, . Donovan sa1d.
.
The JUmor guatd also t1ed the
Southern Conference record set by

:w
Orlando ........... ....... l.!

.

Tabor, S(Jey Riley and Carrie Car-

weekerid.

AtkndciMvilllll

Rtdwomen get 90-86 victory over Walsh
' t.. . ...

HUNTINGTON,_W.Va. (Al') -'-

Af~r a record-breaking pert,ormance
At l~t the Thunde':'ng Herd
agam51 HllllljiiQ~. M~ s·s~ . plarers -wdl be ab~e to enJOY one of

Ita '

defense."
founh-and-one call from his own 29
Sanders, the Cowboys' $35 mil· in a Dec. 10 loss to the Eagles.
lion man, scored his fint Dallas
Switzer didn't have any tough
touchdown on a 21-yard reverse to calls this time, except for founh down
ignite the win. It was the first tiine, at the Eagles' one. He called for the
other than on kick returns. he had field goal.
scored on a run in the NFL, and he
Dallas is 13-4 in Switzer's second
treated the fans at freezing Tuas Sta· season.
dium to his customary end zone
"We got Deion loa~ for the fint
dance.
time, and he showed what kind of
"It felt great to finally have a large speed he possesses on that reverse,"
impact on a game," Sanders said.
Switzer said. "It was a great all·
The Eagles were hurt in me sec- around effort from the defense to the
ond quaner when quarterback Rod· offe~.se . I didn't get to see the dance.
ney Peete was knocked out of the I wasn't invited."
game with a concussion. He was
It was the kind of play Dallas
replaced by an ineffective Randall owner Jerry Jones dreamed about
Cunningham.
when he gave Sanden a $13 million
It was the end to an overachieving bonus to leave the 49ers.
season under coach of the year Ray
"h was a great, great run," Jones
Rhodes, who guided Philadelphia to said.
a 10-6 regular season and a 58-37
Sanders ran for a touchdown,
rout of Detroit in the wild-card round. caught a pass, and intercepted a
"We exceeded a lot of people's pass.
expectations, but not mine," Rhodes ·
Asked. the difference between
said. "We've got .to reme111ber what playing for the 49ers and the Cowit feels like to \Yalk off the field after boys, Sanders said, "the team 1
a tough loss like this."
played for last year is at home watchThe win served as sweet vindica- in g. The team I play for this year will
tion for Dallas coach Barry Switzer, be playing next w!'Ck for the Super
who was criticized for.his abonive Bowl.''
.

take every little advantage to try to game 90-90.

-~ ~arshall men set shooting record in 123-95 win over Hamp_
ton

EASTERN CONFERENCE

"'uggets edge Lake·rs; Clippers, Mavs &amp; Blazers also win'
;y BETH HARRIS

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

'

NBA standings

!Dallas hands Philadelphia 30-111oss
the loose in Green Bay," safety DarWoodson said. "We know Brett
Favre is going to come to battle, but
he's the same quanerback we aced
early this season. He's scary." ·
If the Cowboys recall ancient history, they can surely get worked up
over the fact that the Green Bay
Packers beat them twice '\n two
wrenching losses in the late 1960s.
Green Bay beat Dallas 21-17 in
the 1967 "Ice Bowl" game at Lam. beau Field ahd edged the Cowboys
34-27 in Dallas at the Cotton Bowl in
a 1966 title game.
Only Dallas wide receiver Kevin
Williams said he was sorry to be
- missing a shot at San Francisco.
"We really wanted _to play the
49en, because they beat us earlier.
because we were out for a little
revenge," Williams said. "Green
Bay is in line. Let's take 'e111.on." ·
Even Deion Sanden, who"played
for die 49en last year, didn 'I do any
mourning over the lost matchup.
"We'll be playing a great team
. anyway," he said. "No doubt the
Packers will be ready to play. They
have Favre and one hell of a

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

;~~:~--;;:;;;'"c,~:-;;~~~~=~~;;.,~;;~~ :;:;~;~;~~;~:;;~in:~;:;o:;~~ ~~;~:~~a ~

'

:sy DENNE H. FREEMAN

Monday, January 8,1996

S9 161 123
l4 t39 101
S3 146 103
42 Ill 104
Taq&gt;a Bay ....... .1717 6 40 116 139
New Jersey ....... .17 19 4 38 100 102
~Y . Isl~ders ....IO 22 7 21 112 147

.CLEVELAND BROWNS: Anoounced 1~ resignalion of Steve Crosby,
offensi ve coordinator.

Hockey
N•tlonaJ Hockey Leq:uP
LOS ANGELES KINGS : Rccalle4
Burry POiomski . lcf1 wir1g. from Phoenil
ofcht- IHL
SAN JOSE SHARKS . Re called
Shean Donovan, right wing, from KllllSWl
City of lhc.: IHL . R e;1s ~ ign r:tl A'ndrc
Nazarov, righl wins. 10 K :~ n sas Cily

Pro football ·great Jim Brown.]

stam:d in five sports while in high,.,
school.

·

v

Don Budge, one of the all-timei,·
tennis greats, reportedly had thi:.,.
finest backhand in the history of the 1;
gf\me.
•:

�Pes
j

Top 25 cOllege~ ·

. ia Tech,

U~,

.

.

1

Uf • n

•·

.

·

·

•

1"""" 01*'

Monday, January 8, 1996
I '

UC &amp; ·Nort~

Carol~na

a·mong ~ v.~cto~s
..
Cuoloollluldlnt l~~tmcldoll~ol
•New Hom••
•Additions

•New(hrwgew

(Stock up on your
. holiday baking

YOUR'
MESSAGE CAN
BE .SEEN HERE
FORA TOTAL
OF $14.00
PER DAY.

supplies)

'

614~949·302'7

'

11,....,

EtiD Y~_\.IR
There is someone for
everyol)e. Whatever
your weference
Nationwide or Right Next
Door. Don't Waste
Anq!her Minute
Call Nowlll

Public

6-45-~
1
1 ...

Notice

'
...

It Will 8e Music 10 lbur fan
When You fUM In To the 8est &amp;uy$.

. •

All lnttruted poreono aro
lnvltlcl to atllnd.
JoanTru•oll
ExecutiVe Director, MMHA

(1)1; 1TC .

. In thr Ctoul(leds.

I

I

.... tn-2111-lfl=.9, ...

213-114-lll=l. Jlostasa 2H-112-

00=7.Pipe~N+:
ISI'Z7-UI.J6..12f17=175
T.WIIG: 26-63 {41.3~)

:

'

-~- ......

•-

!!- ,_....- - ........ , ...

.Laurel Limousine Service
"Ride In a Charlot of Luxury"
For all your Special Occa$ions
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
• R•tl•llll Night Out on the Town
- •
S.I'VIclwllh
Oporo1od by

~~-:

0

'(614) 992-4279 Jah~:~.

33058 SR 33 * Pomeroy, Oh. 457.69

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
'Free Estimates
lns·urance Work Welcome

•
••

~

State Rt. 33
Darwin, .Ohio

•

ti'Qn\ a hMrt tfaneplllnt OtherS pl~red are lett
.frOnt, E~l Hirt, and back, Marie Harrla, holder a Sjranddltld, Aletha Randolph, George Korn,
husband of ~ raclplent, and Leland Parker.

keveral projects of providing assislAnce to those in need were carried
dut by Burlingham Modem Woodmen, Camp 7230.
. .
,
J • The Camp delivered 't6 Christmas
~nners to sick and confined .residents
Of the community and then met at the
hilli for a dinner pany.

~lY

Following the dinner the matching
fund check of $2,109 was given to
Carolyn .Kom who is recovering
from a bean transplant. She still
required e~pen5ive medication and
the funds will ,o tOJWard lhat.
Read at the meeting were !etten; of
, .

lodge

(Ume Stont:Low R.._)

--·~Mrll
B. D.
CONSTRUCTION

WICIS

P~,ople in the . new~ . · ..
IX

,

f·

•

1

;1

· .NEWYORK(APl ~ Intblfutlll:·
istic thriller "12 Monl:~ys~"
MadeleineStowe plays a psychiatrist
who treats time traveler Bruce Willis.
SO what's the good doctor's anidysis?
·
"I think his maip objqctive
is 10 have fun,"she ttlls People IIIQ·
aiinc, "I liked to t~ him and say,
'It's good to be Bruce, isn't it?' And
he'd swy, 'Bruce likes being Bruce. "'
'

---

f

.

"

·

~·

1

.

• .

1

.

- ,,.

'

'

~
~ .s~. .~'7•.lillt ~ t.I . ~heofstheirunbornchil~nwill
~· a;tcir Bnanll~ben, ~{!~_ 'look- go to. Is this breeding better kids?"
IIJI! forward to the btrth of tbetr first
.
cliild.
·
·
·
NEW YORK (~P) - The
"I have a linle ·airl on the · audience Vias delighted with Brooke
wayrdile in June,' ' sbe sayr. "We'll Shields' latest on-screen kisses, but ·
' life bll' our lens I'IIICb "-u10 it'a site uys her leJI-Iifc boyfricl!d felt
. far away lrol!l 'llle '}fDIIywoo'il. like ,throwing up.
mwchine. Los Anjelcs Is ridiculous. '
Tennis ace Andre Agassi
People there arc worried about which
Continued on page tO

--

Dlc:kl,
Home ~~~vementw,
Rw · ling,
Add..On'1, Rooting
S.tlafactlon
Guerenteed
Bill Doerfer '

f

..

.

.

~

FRIE ES'nMATES ·
985·4473

'

' ,J,.

...iNiil

'

'

. SPOtTS

fiUICI

'

" · mtciS

111 ....11
~~-371•1•00
' lat. Jl4t

'• $1.81 Jill' min.
: lluet'be 11

rra:

'

TOUCh._....phone
Nqll!red.
SetviU (1141 845 8434

"

1"'""-·

I

.~4~ ;

Wrecker Service .

Car/Heavy Tntck '
Repair ·
(614) 912-6843
23 Cottage Drive

.,

Mlddlaport, Oh. 45780 .
....... 1 . . .

TREE TRIMING r
AND REMOVAL
:.
.
Ught Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped · :
and Removed,
Misc. Jobs

1111 Slack .

Need o Pllol"'f"Jplter for
yoar Special Oce.._;,,~
•Woclcll~epHona

oCouflot!a .

HAULING •

Siding, Porches,

•Geregea
•Complete
'
· RemOdeling
, Stop.l, Co'"Pire

'

-

992·2269

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

appreciation for the "good neighbor"
program of helping a family with ill- • - (614) 992I2979
ness, at a cost of $500, and two "care
and share" programs.
Cost of the projects was $2,859.
ROIERT BISSELL
On Memorial .Day the group held
COISIRUCTION
a dinner raising $951 which weqt for
•NewH'omes
repair of the hall.

'

12/1.,--

~

----·-li· .... -.

'

-

"'

~

O•¥ , _ . , . . . .

· Aaclne1 Oh. 41771'
' .'

Dozer, BacktKM,t, Dump Truck,
. .Jackhammer,
Available
24 Hrs.
'
"'
We dig basements.. put In septic
systems~ lay llnei, underg,round ~~·
For Free eathnate call949·251
RUIONAIII RAI'U

•..

'

,.

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

project completed

-~...

992·3954 or 985-3418

Trackh~;

t
·'

1

- ._., . . . . I··--

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL fOR SALE

One Step Cemplate·Aute 81.. Repair

RECEIVES -t&gt;ONATION - Mildred ZlegJB,
: secretary of BurHngham llilodem Woodmen
; Camp 7230, centtr, front, preaented a c~k tor
$2,109 to carolyn Korn who Ia recuperating

mo

1

James E. Diddle

''

·DAILY. SENTINEL.

992·7~

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

P.O. Box 5J7 .

..,._

·~HE

Pomeroy

J.D. DrJIIing Company

I

•

Mon.-Wad. 10-4:30...
Fri.-$at. 10-4:30 .
Cload
Thlire. a. Sun.
.102 Eaw' Main I

Ummon•• Sand, Grwwl, Coal &amp; Water

HOUII Rep.alr I
Remodeling
Kitchen • Bath
Romodellng
Room Addftlono
Siding, Roofing, Pallo•
Atatonoble
lntu,... Exporloncocl
Call Wayno Neff
992-4405
For Fr11 E8tlmat11

..

I

REG. HOURS

POMEROY, OHIO
Trwwh RemovJI • Commercial or Rtlidtntlal ·
Septic Tanks Cfwtnecl&amp; Portable TolletP·Rtnttd.
Dally, WHkly &amp; monthly rental rates.

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

j •

IQYW''L .
IIIII

ERS, .INC.

MODEll

1/WI/1-pd.

•'

'

1112W&amp;'t-

(No Sunday Calls)

Call 992-4025

•

. 149:2685

614-992-7643

between 8 am-8 pm
Mon. thru Sat.

0 ·Us For
plete
eOf

4;30 P.M.
Bring ad for Fr.. Caret_
Phone ·948:2044

Room Addltlon s • Roofing .,.COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES .

wa1herl, dryers, hot
waler tMkl, ltOv..,
furnace•; Bfld many
metal material•I

s rauderS
•Eastern
Tornadoes

~reOpen

1

PlckoUp Clllc:arded

-

Starting
Sunda)', Dec. 3rd

Garages • Replacement Windows

FREE

cb 10)
• 2 . . . ](by~
A ' I 7 (Mag ' l)
Sl
7{.f:lltwris 2) ~
111lueuL9
1'-*:16

Racine American :
Leglonno2

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

CALL
614·94,·2512 '

I

I

BISS.ELL

SA.LE.

-·-·-

BIIID

215e3.BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(814)948.3013 l'tlonll
(e14)14il2011 FAX
ill14i 514-2001 N HT

f32.00LHI.

HAY FOR

uo

2/l=ll, s

11/1_1_

14..-2512

HYDUifliC iEPAII

ROUND
BALES OF

...., llipliioolhchosts'finlpaeof
t\
I 9 (l)owoidli "' IWI 2
1996.
.
each)
'l1le ....... {11-ti ~ "'4-3
St
s {l'lpe 2)
iw lhe Mid-Ohio ~) wen:
"'lwwousi 13
led, by sa-a Saydcr's 21 poiDis.
Eric Burris' 19 points awd 14
•ASp t'
..........., ..r 1"-JJoiww dfor!s from
,_,_, Bunis ... Eric c.dill.
CllANDE (tt It II) llle(loppn- Jed by 18-poiM Saydcr 9tll-M:YJ=ll. E. Bwris
efforts fmrp SCQII Dlppiidl .... 7114-00-Sfl0=19, J. Bunis lifiODuasSi I
. Wl-214=14, CwU 4110-717-00:14,
De ' I e: The ILrr'
Will Kaas 2/3.112-IH=I, lluig (Lt4..
has!Cabnille Thaiday. 7:30p.m. V2-010=6. Seitz 1/l-00-lll=l.
Sc:lnck ~lll=2. tiak:
MT.. VDNON {37-31=15) ~ISfJ'7·
0 11 idli m-419-113= II. st I =
'&amp;IlliG: l4-7l.(46.ft)
~II , MWt 113-117S6(E. &amp;.rii;I4,'SwyI

614-742·2183. .

WELDING &amp; FIIRICAJION
$20.00/HR.

12 Gauge
flctory Choke Oaly

a · · -..: 1 (by Pipe)

•

:

Danny • P11111y Bl1cktti·

CHEAPER RATES

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. 1 PM

The Melga Metropolitan
ltollllng Authority Board of
Dlrectora will hold tho
Annual Meeting ·or tho
BoArd on Januarv 10, 18M
In the Houalng Authority
Conflrenoe Room at H350
Union Avenuo Pomeroy,
OhiO It 7:~ p.m,

'

't

32124 Happy Hollow Ad. ,
lllddii!I&lt;M'I, Ohio 4l7eO

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

RtaiOIHIIIIt Rates
JoeN. Sam
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

PU8UC NOTICE

.

J. E. DIPQLI. OWNER

Utnestoaa &amp;Gravel
SeptiC srst•s.
Trailer &amp;tiGuSt Sites.

TriucMqne Phone R~red

,.

each)

water lreatment company cordialy ii9.-ltes you to
participate In a free, no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, MII!INI Hnneu, Iron, PH.
PIIIU callflahoSoft at 112:4472 or 1~3313
towlt
rfreowotero
alo.
,_

The

HAULING ·a,
' EXCAVATION

El4. 4$75 $2.99permln.
' Must be IByrs.
'

l6(11ulloi:PIIJIC7

.......,.,,
Portable

TII·SYAII WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

614-992·3200

'

SAWMILL

Dueributed by

atmolph•re for
alclerly care In a
non-1moklng h9me.

1III00-255-5454

Se!v-U {619)

I

·.. H&amp;H

1;/f:- 1rHI•enl

Opening• for 2.
Clvlatlan

mo.

LONELINESSJ NOWIII

~

••

Water

.J

.

1'llc u.iWI'Sily of Rio Gr.de's
_,.,I eldlwll--. d f g t v&amp;. . ML ~N••
18-7SS.

., .
6.v;v E•••P••••

MIDDUPORT
U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE
HOME

WAlKINS
PRODUCTS

fEngagament Plcluret)
-Reunion&amp;
,•Annl-'ea

(Spacllllzl"ln

ort-y Spreading)
Umestone,
· Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt "

.

614-992·3470

oGroupa ·
of•mlly

R•aonabie Prlc:wt
'
'

'

(. Call812·7747
,_AIIer4pm

[!urlngDIIWIIIIetlda
~··· .

SIARGWfAI

eunw·

$300&amp;up · •
Leuonaon
Pleno,
Gultlr • DrUm.,
.. N.Locuat~
' Chnhi~:~,QI\
81+317o0302

Roger Walker
11/HIN/1

Boll Devla
•Soft...... •FIIter8
•AIVIf'll Otonoele
441-4721
-St. At. 7 So.,
AWWUNCE W U rc;

,.

..•
'

�..
•

Monday, J..,uary 8, 1996

r

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page 8

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER.
•

ACROSS
1 u- tluid
I c.atr. elrport
I Swindle
12 Dill13 Old ega
14 By,llld by
15 Gllunt

40Poe41 T...,l...,ourt
. .,_
42 UIIIMI (2 well.)
48 TYPe of dog
41 lfoickl- unit

50

Slllln

51 Building
aupport
52 Lel - -

16 TV'a-

·pnptea

·(lle8tleuong)

17 Computer tann 53 Typio ot bun

NOin'll
•Q 8

, 350 Lots &amp; Acrelge

•J 7

Garage 1\partm•nt
28-1/2 Nell Avenue,

83 ·Acroo Of land, Keyotono
~ YrltDn. 114 411 1117.

tQ9874
•A 10 7 3

t2751Mo. UtiUeo Paid,
.U11 4flllr 7 P.M.
'

WEST
•7 4 3

,Pomeroy,
., Middleport
&amp; VICinity

t2

tA J
•J 8 8 4

oa.

•• 52
SOUTH
•A K J 10
954
tK10653

18 Leal

54 - - flrat you

22 1WoiOIM
23 S.C...t
Dicturea
26 haaega

56 Jolin -

20 llarny8rd bird
21 Dollar bill

don't ...
55 Talk boock
to (at:)

P••-

30 Scooby31 Ray
32 Gums
33 Poetic lime
ohley
34 Porta ot e yard
35 Code dol
38 Tangled

57 ·Short lallor
DOWN
1 Newborn Infant
2--the
ground floor
3 Give lor
temwary uoe
4 Earlier form
ot 1 word

38JIIPIAmertcan

r
10 Seidl

5 Feel

6 Dart
1 Harem room
8 Primate
8 California
countv

•KQ

.. ..
South

odllion

110

PUblic Sale

Help Wanled

•Nice two ·bedroom apartment In
'" ". - · 814-1102-58SII.

.

BARNEY

!NT
3 ..

. ·I CAN'T TALK
NOW, EL\!INEY--

8nd Auction

Well

Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass

2 NT
4•

..
.,

11 Leg Joint
'
19 Cricket
poaltlona
20 PacHic lalend
22 Mild ••plellva
23 -ot March
24 Film director

Joel25 Mro. Chorlea

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
1

80 .

EAST
. . 6 52
9A Q 9 6 2

9K 10 8 3

•

•••

01-GI·M

Chaplin
26 - olf (alerted
e golf gamal
27 Bier
28 Tennl1 pro -

Eaal
Pass
Pass
All pass

Nita-

29 Film director
Jacques31 Honey

Opening lead: • 3

producer~

Top for the year

..

..

34 Level
37 -Scholer

38 Comparllllve

By Phillip Alder

ending

39 Lilt with

lnveotmont

"'-11 In

Ol!nlr Ma~ Be Ablo Ta

Samo Financing, Coli
&lt;1345 Allor 8 P.M.

~ WE'RE WRITING A STORI(
ABOUT A LITTLE KID WHO

WANTS A D06 BUT HIS
. MOM WON'T LET HIM ..

Tower, now accepting ·
lor 1bt. HUD oub~ ­
elde~ handl-

. I

All ...

f '.1 f' l 0 Y1.1 F 1-J'i'
o~l

110

llVICES

I

..

l::lelp,Wantld. .

-$200-$~00 weeki~. Year round
·positions, HirinG . men, women . .
Fitt OOOM), baaljl, Wll 'lllln. CaH
d!IYI
4~1;~75•2022 ""·
0505C81. •.

.

...a..lldWntalng In

af iilee Willen rnak81 H'lltegll
1 0 - "any preference,
llmlallon ardlecrlmlnatiOn
bleed On racf: COlOr. religion,
""famllllt &amp;ta!Ua or nattonll
Oltgln, ar any lnten110n 10

88 Pltmouth Grand Voyager
AuM&gt;. AI-. VB, Excal Cond. 14,!100;
814-«1.0777

740

llllkeany IUCIII~.

llmlt8ttori ·or ciiiCrlmlnatlon."

01H42-28118.
1881 Honda 300 4x4, wtll mlln-

~ NecesslftE

..
·.

1se_, aoa:..'s:':tQra

.opp&lt;Mtunlly ballo.

\

,

.. ,...

,.

1D95 Palaris .&amp;25 Magnum 4· ·
-r.
4moo old. 270miiH. .
304-875-2fi!O.
,.

·ara aVIIIOble on an equal

)

I

·j

w!'iCh 18 In vto1a11on of 1l1t law.
OUr tNdetl are hereby
lnformld IIIli III !IMIIInllll
IICIVerti1¥ld In 11111 newapeper

II

I"

•I

lllnod, $3,200 linn, 814-742-3180. • '
ot)l~

f.
"'
l

';

-'IIY IIDCept

·-lorreat-18

Local Compenr lo NO.. AcceptIng Applications Fqr, Full Time
Worttlnllili=~- •

Motorc:yciH

1870 Harley Spanaltr bukol·
case, $1800; new utility trailer,
S~O; '81 Chev~ pickup, S215;

Thll newopeper will nat

'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
. • . . - -A/'ll&gt; Tt4tN Ttln PUT .DN Tt4tl,
VGLtES'T GL0Tt41f'IG ANr&gt;
\
LAY Tt4tl, E6GS ·1111
Tt4tSE ~ITTL.E tlOLt$.

• ·ne·•PII*tsautJtectlb

tilt_. Fair Hauling Act

DON1T READ IT IF 'f'OlJ .
FEAR HAVING YOUR
HEART WRENCHED..

IT'S A HEART
\._WI~ENC HIN6 TALE ..

i
l
I

,,, ..............._

Q

THt: BORN LOSER
r-

r1-JW.,IF' 'ltiJ , ...._.,

\.JAAT l Ui((
NIOOT '!OJ,
KI()W

CAA'r "'""'" '-"

T}Oi:N~ffl£ ~

effort
Each year the International Bridge
41 Requirements
P'ress Association gives awards for
42 Nile bird
the best-bid, beat-played and best-de- .
43 Greek
cheeoe
fended deals. So, for the next three lm+-1--1-44 Graba '
days, let us look at the winners for
45 Rookie
1995. First, bidding.
..-;Oats
Sitting North and South were Larry ""'+-lf----1-47 Coup d' Cohen, of Little Falls, New Jersey,
48 Evaluate
and David Berkowitz, of Old Tappan,
50 Failure
New Jersey.
They use the Precision Club system,
in which a one-club opening is artili·
CELEBRITY CIPHER
cial, showing at least 16 high -card
by Luis Campos
points with any distribution. Also, a
Cetebrily Ciptler cryplograms are created from QUOiaiiQflS by lamous peopte, past and present
one-diamond opening doesn't promise
Eactt leiter in 1he ci ph9111tands lor another. Today's. clue: W «ltJB/s K
diamonds . It is often the bid for
v z z u v S 0 YF V
•FH
ZDZO
F
"putting the ball in court," showing a
hand worth opening but having no
HOCB
cvz
RY V M
F
MOVVNTAYVM,
more descriptive bid available. So,
Berkowitz preferred to slart with an
WVCR
off-center one no-trump, showing 14·
v NTCOMNROFMZO . F ' A A
16 points, r11ther than the nebulous
XC Z
one diamond. However, after receivs z z v KNZU .
VZDZO
F M 'N
ing a -raise, which denied a four-card
major because North hadn't used
TYMZOVC .
Stayman, Berkowitz's heart holding
PREVIOUS SOLUTioN: 'Opera: La forme fatal...... -Aaron Copland .
made him nervous about-no-trump .
"In
opera there Is always· too much singing."- Claude Debussy.
Thinking five diamonds would be impossible, Berkowitz tried to reach four
spades pn a 4-S fit.
WOlD
To Cohen, three spades sounded
fAMI
like a five-card suit, so he raised.
West probably should have led a
Rearrano•
of the
heart, but he selected ·a trU!"P·
tour ICrllmblad -d• be~
Berkow;itz won_jn hand and piayeclthe
low 10 lomdour -.!1.
,
•
diamond king. It was hard for West to
envisage the diamond rulf. After winRULUNC
ning with the diamond ace, West
switched to a heart. East won with the
ace and returned the suit, but West
missed his last chance, exiting with a
spade.
Berkowitz drew trumps and claimed
1
L -1
/ the remainder.

•tt•rs

0

·~s.. -,-T
I ...,o,s-rH
I ...,rr-11
I ...: _: ,

r

COM~YOFERS

'E...I«II"-"t

• Rapid AtMncoimort

~~~ ·

cH A T TH

.

I

,,1-'1''1--t

...

.

Granny says that people
should always have a cushion
to fall back on, and that cushion.should be - - - - - - - -

'_ • • • • G Complo~
the chuckle qucitod
1t--lir•i:r
_
by filling in the minin9 words
.__,__.._--t_....__.__. you devel,:&gt;p from step No. 3 below.

FOr Fl.nonat lntervieiot, ~I Mo0-

dly a TuoodoJ C!lnl)' For App;lntltMtnt Betw11n t-4, 114-441-1G7&amp;

•.

1

I'
I lrltl.
,~ y{ r

Training II Pmldod, Start lmmodltirolyl

·
•·

..,. PRINT NUMBERED
'1::1' LETTERS IN SQUARES

,.,

' l

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

The Trrosurt
S.vlnJI You'U Find In the
Closs! fled Seccloll.

Cygnet - Irish - Doubt- Mature - TOGETHER
Our neighbor was always running around in circles. 1
think if a person has his feet on the ground and his head
in the clouds he should pull himself TOGETHER.

..
~

,.;,

.•

JANUARYBI ...-·

IMONDAY
'r~
.

' ~

'

~~~~=~===~===~broken
ASTRO·ORAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.

t t. \ \. !t,.~ ~~-~tJm.

romance? The Aslro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand
whal to do to make the retati9niflip work.
Mail $2.7510 Malchmaker, c/o this,__
paper. P.O . Box 1758, Murray Hill
Statk&gt;n, New York; NV t0t56.
AQUARIUS (...... »FFb. 11) Instead of
telling others handle important asaignmenta today. do !he won. yourself. You
could be exposed to op~rtunities that
are denied~ them.
PIBCE!&amp; (Fe1.. zo.lllnlh 201 Try lo haOO
out with !ri8nds who share common Inter~· today. s•- c11at or Ilia clique
that haa oau11d you some dlacomfort

CANCER (June 21.July 22) You mighi
have to IISIOCiate With someone you 111111ty don't like today. I lowe o'er, don1 let this
influanoe ~ H hlaor her kleas are better

than yours.
----....,
LEO(July~Aug 22)You'mayhavaan

opportunity to profit linancillly today, but
~ must be poepared to eam your keep.
The rp.vy 1n11n _,be IUIW1inO ~­

vtRQO (Aug. n

l1pl D) Even lhol9t
certain people may make you feel
uncomfortable at a sclclal gathering

today, ~'tlum'.down an Invitation. All
•
a..A (lapt. D(lct_ 23t Remain hope~- lui regarding 1111 outcome ol event•
AR~E8 (llart:h 21-Ap~ll 11) Several today, even II you feel unlucky .
:rt.H!i8dlty, Jan. 9. 1998
CirW QbjactNel Can be ac;tlie0'8d IO&lt;ily Everything will work out lor the beat
A doll~ W1to haa lh!!ay&amp; '-" ~
procad~Mw•INn'l abreaive. AsMrt ewr'IUIIy.
lor you Iii the put might brfrlll mora yourself. but also know when to atop ICORPIQ (Oct. i4· Nov. II) Do not
~ for1Une in the year ahaad. Nurture puahlng.
•
.
llld 1110rt ~ 1I1IIUinil with
thia Nilllpnahipwith-IIUII, parity and gen- ~TAURUS (Apotl ....._, ·:10) Try to an uaoclatw 'Who hU a cloHd mind.
aroeity . . ·
both IIIIIJIIIive and poe1t1ve diVa~ a There w111 be
to aocept your
CAIRICOIIN (Dec . 22·Jan. 11) In p/lltoeopltlcaNy today. II you keep calm ideullldpa~'*•·
.
_
anaroilat..ntl aher8 you lunGIIon incle· llld don, l*lw - - . out of. PIO- IAGfi'T,.... (Jitw. D liM. 11) Foclll
pertellillllr.ot othen, you could be quHa- palllon, you wlll1110011d.
- . on lite · ~ •"''iiriilhii ,_your
~ lbday. Joint encleaWnl wil be TTl {llaJ' 11.Junalll) In oommerdll a11¥1tOh tlii niaM IDdly. You . . blln a
quei~lll8 • .,.aatty H your auocl-'' mallent today, O!hers will a~rlve to tt'MI good cyc1t lor l!llgmetttlug your Mmlnga
itw Pflllmialic.
TIYiniJio patdl up
.
. 1 you llllrly H they beiiiVII you re not trying and_,..,
8IIOuld lliOrlc outftll. ·

'r!IUr

0111ers..,

150 4~4. ihort bod,

304-875-324t Qt 304·

*"
..

.

"

-·

·~ ..!

,_r,.

'"'

••u.:f
n p. "•
: ,~~

.,.Y r-

.....
R''&lt;

)l ::• '
;

)

·,

�-.

•

.

,.... 10 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

'

!

Be~t
of the.
Bend
...
.
.
.by Bob HoefliCh
'

Ann
landers

.·
!

. Glenna Riebel was at her home in
.. the Baum Addition near Pomeroy for
· Christmas--the hard .way.
,. Gl•nna became ill .earlv in the
~
'
· morning on Dec. 16. She lost conprocess. She was
.~~r·o
- ..- •ness 1'n then-Clark
Hospt.tal by
talcen to Camde·~
.the pomeroy Emergency Squad. Lat•
.er She Was taken to St. Joseph Hos •
:PI.tal, also in Parkersburg, 'or
'' hea11
catherizatioll. It was derermined thai
Glenna had suffered-a. heart attack -·
•nd
.-she was taken-by the Camden-Clark
trans'er
'' unit to the Charleston Area
·Medical Center where.she underwent
.angioplasty. By-pass surgety was
ruled out.
And on Friday, Dec. 23, Gle.nna
;was returned to her home for Christmas and quite an arrival il was. All
of her neighbors in the addition had

.,decoraled with yellow bllloons lltld
streamers to give Glenna royal welcome home.
. •'
Those wen: happy tea-s of .........
ciati!)n that Glenna shed as she-rr·went
up the hill io the Riebel residence.
She appreciates so much the cards,
expressed concerns and prayers of
area churches, neighbors, friends lltld
family. She especially thanks her
nephew, Dorsel Thomas, who
answered the call wilh the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad--which Glenna
also commends--in order to be with
Glenna during the trials and tribulations she underwent in getting to the
Parkersburg hospital.

from "Ou,...~.. v--'t'n
-"'"" Arizona" hil
close to home. He was the ntan
whose wife began an affair over the
computer.
Six monlbs ago, my wife, "Betsy,"
!old me I had been neglecting hor
~ause . of
l~ng . hours on the
ntght sh_1ft. Thinking tl would occuPY her ume: I showed B~tsy how to
• use the online char.servtce. Before
l~g she was spendmg hou;s every
ntght on the compurer, chatung with
men.
Betsy told me not to be thrcarened.
She e_ve~ showed me some pornographic ~mages sent to her by one of
her new "~ends." I asked why she
would continue to tallc lo peoPle who
~o~ld send such kinky ptctures. She
tnststed they ,were "~!ice guys" and it
was all in fun.

mr

Dick Warner, manager of the
Pomeroy Kroger Srore, advises me
that his Mother, Mrs. Grace Warner,
is doing well following surgery at
Grant Hospiral in Columbus. Grace
underwent major replacement surgery
to both knees and it will be eighl
·weeks before she can do much navigating at all. However, Dick says
she's doing super and that's. good'
..
news. Grace is a special person.
By the way, if you've seen Dick
recently you're bound to note the BY ED PETERSON,
weight loss. He's wo.rlcing at getting Social
the body into good condition and has
giv~n up 30 pounds. Often, that •• L.. Me~ In A
r
......,.
• • A survey of new Social
a lot of fortitude. !and especially dur- Securiry beneficiaries showed a high
1"ng the holt'dav' season.
de.....,.
of satisfaction with the quali..of--........
ty
service
Social Security provides.
A d th ~ I bed 'ed ,. ric
n
e
.ur
oug
"
era
wo
•
Most
people
rated our service "good"
· h ded ba 1c 1
1c d
ers are ea
c o wor an now or "very good."
·
·
may be hcld up bYweather cond'1Uons
A year old customer service
tn many Parts
. of· the country.. From pledge sets six stlltldards of service
the co~pIatn!' I, had heard
.
ratsed on based on earlier survevs in which custel evtston, 1dtd n 1real
that
lhey_are . tomers identified what
' they expecled
. tzc
to be pat d re troacu ve1Y fo r the time . from Social security. The latest sur· d F lei r
lhey have . mtsse .
ran ~· ve vey asked new beneficiaries how
always felt tt mtghl be a good tdea to . they felt lhese standards were being
close down the government for a met. The following progress report
week or so--without pay. Seems like lists the standards and summarizes the
thai might be a good twis! for the results:
national debt Bur, then, that would
We will provide service
be discrimination or something. Do through knowledgeable .employees

Two monlbs ago, I found a com·
puler me!.sage Betsy hid sa~~- S~
had told someone named Bryan
that she was falling in love with him
and ~as.eager to m~t him "in a neutral ctty to find out 1f they were soul
mates.
. .
Wh~n I confronled her, she said It
w~ a JOice. Then I ~ound a message
saytng s~ ~ sel·g Bryan a video
l!f her stttpptng.
s shook me up
and made me
ze the fun and
games had gone too far;
I tol_d Betsy the_computer ~as
destroy.mg ~ mamage. She.sa1d I
was bemg ndiculous. Lasl week,
. I got on the day s~un ana nope ells
wtll .help. Meanwhile, Betsy_ts sttll
on-hne . With Bryan, runntng up
chargesmexcessof$300permonth.
! need your help, Ann. -FRESNO
~EAR FRESNO: I ~ave ~n
heanng a lot of late aboul on-hne
romances and have concluded that
there are now hundreds of married
men and women flirting with
strangers in Ibis manner.
.
.. You and ~our w1fe should seek
JOmt counsehng at once. Other mar-

ried folies who are-engaging in what
appeais to be a harmless pastime
should be aware that they are playins
with ftre. Therapists have labeled this
a genuine addiction.
·
Dear Ann Landers: I'm writing
about the woman who was upset
whe? a loan kissed her husband on
the l1ps at a funeral. When she questi'oned him, he said they were both
Masons and this was a Masonic custom.
I am a 32nd Degree Mason, a
Knight of Templar and a Shriner. I
have been a member since 1968 and
can assure you !hal there is no kissing on the lips between any of my
brothers.
I have also been a member of the
Elks Lodge since 1964 and am
presently an officer of the Salem, Ill.,
Lodge 1678.Thereisnokissingon
the lips among .my Elks brethren
either.
Ih
h Loci th
bel
t -1fpekt e 1g~aj gu: h?ns
-~ ~'w ~ ~~ ~t1M ~ at tm.
· · ·
•
·
DEAR SALEM: Befqre we judge
"the guy" too harshly, let me tell you

SecuL

who wt'II treat you w1'th courtesy, d'1g·
nitv and respecl every time vou do
'
'
business with us. Social Security
staff receive high marks in these
areas. Their knowledge and skills
were rated "good" or "very good" by
97 percen t of the new be ne fiICtartes
· ·
surveyed. And !he courtesy rating for
Social Security staff also was 97 per·
cent. Social Security's overall service
received ·the highest possible rating
from 61 percent of these beneficiaries,
and 71 percent said Social Security's
service was bener than the service
provided by other government agencies.
We will provide · you with
our best estimate of the time ~ceded
to complete your request and fully
explain any delays.
Of the new beneficiaries

•

'

'

surveyed 87 percenl s•'d thev were
~
adv1'sed how long 1't would
take to
process tlieir claim, and 90 percent of
these · d' 'd a1
rted th t th
u equalt
s repo
actual m
u·meIVtwas
1 a th e
·
o
or
ess an
the est'tmate ·
We will clearly explain our
dects1ons
· · so you can un derstand why
and
d0 1·fhow we
d. made !hem and what to
youN tsagree.
be fi · ·
ssed
ew
ne
tctanes
exprc
t' ' ·
'th · t ·
• 1
sa u·IS•acUon
exp af thwt 1 m
· erv1ewers 96
na onsfthe
o · e c atms
process
Le th 10 per·
0
cenr
ume. ss an percent
of these customers staled that our mail
was hard to understand.
We will make sure our
offices are safe, pleasant, and our services are accessible.
Our office locations were
considered convenient by 89 percent

college students during his "Parade
of Stars" telethon.
Rawls was joined by co-.
hosts Alex Trebelc of "Jeopardy,!~i,
and actress Sheryl Lee Ralph in H~
lywood, and singe,r Johnny Gill from
the Apollo Theatre' in New York City
early Su~~ls started the telethon

~~'!%~:eraJIIIIIIIrliZPbod·s~owedped~in ~~~:~~~G~~~~~:

thetelethon.raisedarecord$12.6million •.exceeding ·lastyear's$12.2million. Proceeds benefit the United
Negro College Fund and its 41 col_ leges and universities nationwide.

By Alllll Bash
USA TODAY
, The Corporation for Public
Broadcasting is spending $8.4 million
_its largest payout ever for kids-orierited programming _ to bring foor
shows-to PBS' "Ready to Learn Service"lineup beginning in 1997.
With two series aimed at
young viewers and rwo corresponding
series targeting parents, public TV
· will increase its COIJlmitment to
improve school readiness.
Ready 10 Learn, created in
l992, has until now consisled of PBS
· shows such as "Sesame Street" and
"Barney and Friends," combined

regular car. We had a cherry red 'S1
Chevy"
·

Co·
~
:
m
unity
calendar
.

The ComtJI!t~ity Calendar is published as a flee ' service to non-profit
. gfo;Jps wifhiN'~ ~ounce meeting
lind ~iJI e~;~c•lmdar i$ riO!
. ll~iped to l.ote sales or fund
, !'aisets of any~f)'Jie· Jtem~ arc printed
II' sp,.ct pemu~:andcannot be gua,ranteed,to nin ' l( ~peci(tc number of
days. I
• •'" • · •• •
' ' '
•

•

'

I

.!-. •

·'

'.~

'

1;.'

j

,.,~

,·•

; MONDAY · {,' ·· .

· P&amp;MJ?ROY~M .~ig B~nd Farm

An~~ auG1~tilig ¥onday, 7:3o

· .p.m. ' ·~ thj~·toiiitgs Htl~ School
'.
Lt·~nry·;
,
.

from Boston's WGBH and Sirius
Thinking Inc.: "Between the Lions,"
featuring talking animals, will focus
on literacy for 4-7 year olds; and
"Kids' and How to Grow Them," lbe · ~
related parents' show.
"i ;
Each producing pair will ~
get $4.2 million to malce 40 episodes
of the kids series and I 3 episodes of
the parenl series.
·
Also planned: lesson tie-ins
via online, radio and print material . . ·
CPB, relying in pa11 on a $7
million Departmenl of Educalion ·
grant, will unveil the project Monday
at the start of !he winter gathering of
TV writers in Pasadena, Calif.

'
·
Don Bolles, whose investigative stories for The Arizona Republic shook
up state government two decades ago.
The man who admiued
planting the bomb that killed Bolles
testified during the trials of two oth·
ers that the killing was arranged for
land baron itnd liquor magnate Kemper Marley, who was angered over
news srories that forced his resigna-

Johnson cel~brates birthday

I
tion from the state Racing Commission. But Marley was not di~tly
linked 10 the crime, was never
· charged and denied any involvement.
Marley, who died of cancer
in 1990 at age 83, gave $1 million in

1986 to the Arizona Historical Sociery for exhibits at the stale agency's
new museum named after him. The
Marley Center, a $15 million project,
_is to open later this month in Tempe.

ONE

You've gc~ a lot' on your mind. You're building
your wor:d and your insurance needs are
reel. But you don't need to add this worry
to your list.

Foreman
· . b'
h
.
lrt
board office in Pomeroy.
CHESTER. -- Cheater Townlhip announced
Trustees, 6:30 p.ni Tueaday,
the

Talk to yOur inJependent agent. ln1ist on longterm experienct1, community presence, and
•omeone Vl(ho is with you both before and
after things happen. Juet do this one thine.
'IIIII ' - " the Ju'tlln' 11ct to ua.

POMEROY -· Meigs County

It

Cheiter tow"hall.

'

.

1' ·

LESS
THING

FOR YOU
TO

JuGGtE ·

Pomllot

. .1111.

e.. :a;•&lt;=,~ualty O.:oup
W a n t ... ean;mllw

.

W H E R E E X T R A E F F 0 R T' I S 0

'•

UR

p 0-ll C y

'·

35 centa
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 9, 1996

·Blizzard~

Of '96 fails

to impress residents

(

From ~P. Staff RepOrts
Meigs County residents began
recovering frvm the Blizzard of 1996
today as employees began reluming
to work across the county.
The Meigs County Courthouse
reopened for business this morning,
allhough all county schools remained
closed.
For the most part, the stonn failed
. 10 ruffle Meigs residents, many of
whom felt the Blizzard of 1996 paled
in C!Jmparison to storms in March
1993, and January 1994.
"W~re holding our own," commented Emergency Services Director
Robert Byer. "Everybody's trying to
get back to work today."
However, Byer noted that a Level II emergency is still in effect,
meaning all roads are passable, but
remain hazardous. If possible,
motorisls should stay home.
Four-wheel-drive vehicles conslituted a sizable percentage of dll
·vehicles on !he road and most drivers
made it to where they were going

· without incident.
The Meigs County Sheriffs
Department reported no snow-relat·
ed accidents.
Byer could verify no snow-relat- ed injuries in the county, but a snow·
covered patio at the Jan Zahrain residence on Locust Street in Pomeroy
collapsed due to the weight of the
snow.
The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department responded to the scene,
but no injuries were reported.
Approximately 12 to 13 inches of
snow fell Saturday and Sunday.
Meanwhile, one to three inches of
new snow greeted county residents
·this morning, resulting in addilional
work for state, county, township and
village snow removal crews.
Around the state, motorists minded the sheriffs when they were
ordered to stay off snowy roads during the first big stonn of !he year in
Ohio.
"Everyone stayed home for fear
of getting stuck," said Knox County

Middleport Council
informed this _year's
budget is balanced
BJ..:f.OIUWH:rEa.-..,___ .... _
sentinel News S141ff
The village of Middleport report·
ed a balanced budget for the end of ·
199S, Mayor Oewey Harron
announced al Monday's council
meeting.
:!Jie budget was balanced for the
first time in two yeat'l\. after officials
first believed that it would take pos·
sibly five yeats to balance the viilage's budget.
'
The funds, with balances at the
end of December, were: general,
$6,229.98;
nwolving
loan,
$27,258.59; ODNR Waterways,
$83.67; refuse, S16,910.19; street
mainrenance, $20.957.56; law
enforcement, $3,237.57; water tank,
$359.55; water, $36,075.74; sewer,
$12.476.79;
meter
deposit,
$30,572.26; economi~ development,
$2,916.85; pool improvemenls,
546,289.91; CHIP program, $482.97;
fire equipment, $2,571 .60: fire truck,

$2 .15; lssue ·II: 't391,:.tree. planting, $440.81; mini-golf, $6.79; cemeiery,
$35.47; recreation, $7.02.
The only deficit funds for December shown on paper were: public
transportation at minus $20,270.76,
and the COPS Fasl program at minus
$2,708.97.
Village Clerkffreasurer Dennis
Hockman explained !hal the public
lransportation deficit was from the
village's past operation of cab services. The village has since turned
that over to a. private company, and
the amount is basically what the vil)age owes itself. COPS Fast program
monies are simply cash !low monies
for the village.
.
Hockman said he intends to con·
tact State Auditor Jim Petro's office
ro clarify what must be done to eliminate the public transportation fund
from the village's books, since it will
not be used again.
Council unanimously approved

Sheriff's Dispatcher Carol Brown in
north-cenlral Ohio. A stonn that
began Sunday dumped up to 18
inches of snow on the state. All but
northeastersn and extreme north·
western Ohio were affected.
Snow began falling again early
today in central and northern Ohio.
The Associated Press contacted
sheriff's departments in 20 counties
that declared "Level3" snow emergencies, meaning motorists not
fighters and emergency squad personnel .
SNOW COLLAPSES ROOF - Tfle heavy
involved in emergencies could be
responded to the home to assist Zahrain, who
amount
of
weekend
snow
was
too
much
for
subject to arrest. Lesser levels warn
was
trapped in the house. No· Injuries were
thla porch roof at the Jan Zahraln residence at
motorists to drive cautiously or lo
reported.
(Sentinel photo by Tom Hunter)
East
Locust
Street
In
Pomeroy.
Pomeroy
firestay at home unless travel is neces·
sary.
None ofthe departments respond· Sheriff's Officer Charles Dowler in
Union County Sheriff John Over- state's 88 sheriffs ofthe·three-tler sysing reported any arrests. A few . southeast Ohio.
ly said he did not have to cite any tem for handling traffic in weather
deferred to their sheriffs, who did not
Preble County in western Ohio motorists in the central Ohio county emergencies.
"We' ve always had snow emerreturn telephone calls. The snow ended its ban on road travel at 8 p.m. with misconduct at an emerge.itcy, a
gencies - but this year we were
bans had been issued in parts of the Monday. The ban was effective in misdemeanor.
southern rwo-thirds of Ohio, extend- keeping people off the highways.
"We probably would have if we 'd more successful in delinealing
ing north to Richland County.
"Oh. boy, I bet we've had 500 found anyone out horse-playing between levels ... and this is the first
winter since we've had them · that
" We didn't go out looking for calls in here today wanting to know around," Overly said.
people because we didn't want to be if the Level 3 is still in effect," said
The Buckeye State Sheriff's Asso- we've really needed them," said
out either," said Hocking County sheriff's Major Wayne Simpson.
ciation in December reminded the associati on spokesman Robert Cornwell.

Klan rally
was costly
for city, state

COUNCIL MEMBERS TAKE OFFICE- Beth

slivers. right, and George Hoffman were swom

In as members of Middleport VIllage Council
•

an emergency measure to award all
village employees 25-cent hourly
raises effective with the Jan. 15 payroll , with a review of the raises due
in six months.
A stipulation on the measure noted that all employees must document
overtime to supervisors, also effective
with the Jan. 15 payroll. The raises
are the first for village employees in

during Its regular meeting Monday night.
Swearing In the two members is Mayor Dewey
Horton.

nearly four years.
Mayor Dewey Horton and council commended the village street
crews and the police department for
quick action and long hours of w0i'k
during this past weekend's snow-

uted it 10 overlapping shifts at peak
times that have increased enforcement in the village.
The dcparlment also purchased a
Ford Bronco with remaining law
enforcement momes from 1995. with
storm .
the vehicle to be used in severe
Horton also commended the weather such as this weekend's snow.
police depanment for 1he decrease in
Council President Bob Gilmore
crime shown during 1995, and allrib-.
(Continued on Page 3)

·State controllers waive bidding for fair entertainment

Paul Gerard has been named
chainnan and project director/administraror of the newly-organizc!d Meigs
County Violeneo; Prevention Council.
· The council was organized by
order of the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners in late December.
Its purpose is to develop and ~ar­
ry out violence prevention initiatives,
as well as to seek grant monie.s to carry out the program and activilies.
Emphasis will be on reducing the level o( violence in the county by promoting ~aceful relations i? hotnes,
neighbofhoods, schools, busmess and
communities and serve as a referral
'Service for violence preventio- initialives.
With terms commencing immedi·
ately, the members appointed include:
One-year terms - Greta Riffle,
Pomeroy, victims advocale, repre-

IOWIIIII CIIIII-UII
IIIUIIII(I

Low Jonlghl In upper
teens. Vf"ednesday , snow
flurries. High In 20s.

VIII. 46, NO. 177

in government subsidies to universi· This year's entertainment lineup grounds support of the 52 events.
Most expensive: Midway Caravan at
ties, 'community and technical col- still is being dctennined.
leges, a 6.7 percent increase from last
But of rhe 1995 total, $848,980 $26,000.
was spent for 32 acts that played in
year.
The cost of what was described as
The Controlling Board is made up the Celeste Center, with an extra
special
enre'rtainment amounted to
of six legislators and a presideD\ who $217.985 for support cost'tr that
$276,045
last year. ~ith the Ohio
represents Gov. George Voinovich.
include staging.
This year's entertainment budget · Country music stars commanded State Tractor Pullers Association tops
for the fair is $63,320 higher than the highest fees, with Alabama tops at $106,500.
Controllers . approved an Ohio
1995.
at $125,000. Vince Gill was next at
"This increase of 3.7 percent ,$122,500, and John Michael Mont- Board of Regents plan for distribu tion of state instructional subsidies to
reflects stagehand union wage gomery third at $122,500.
college
campuses .
increases and nonnal inflation," the
The fair spent $213,900 on variIncluded
in the total : $2.3 million
expositions commission said in a ous'entertainment spread around the
wriuen request.
fairgrounds , wilh $149.769 for the institutions would not otherwi~e

•

New violence prevention
council names officers

•

'Your lndepenclll~ Agenta
~ Allp Corny SNI 18B8

•

Pick 4:
1643
..,.
Buckeye 5:
14-17-18-26-29

1.Sectlon, tO,....

COLUMBUS (AP)- The country music group Alabama was the single-most costly act booked for the
1995 Ohio State Fair. Overall, the fair
spent $1.7 million on entertainment,
and expects to spend about the same
this summer.
The state Controlling Board
agreed Monday to waive competitive
bidding rules to let the Ohio Expositions Commission sign entertain-'
ment and related contracts for the
Aug. 2-18 fair.
In olher action, the board
approved distribution of S1.3 billion

Austin Johnson, son of Van and
Marlene Johnson, celebrated his first
POMEROY ·- The Meigs Band birthday on Dec. 31. with a party.
Boosters, 8 p.m. Monday in the band
room.
Attending besides his parents were
grandparents, Jugger lltld Grace JohnPOMEROY -- DAV meeting, son and Minnie and Charles Young,
Monday, 7 p.m. at Granse hall on and Bill Ogdin, Jason Lisle, Missy
Rock Springs fairgrounds. Women Kisner, Dusty Adkins, Zach Kisner,
welcome.
Jessi Huuon, Mindy Riggs, LuAnn
and Jessica E.ans, Debbie , Ciurie
TUESDAY
and Zach Glaze.
PORTLAND -- Ponland ElemenOthers presenting gifts and cards
tary_Parent·Teachers, 7 p.m. Tuesday were Ed and Pat Hutton, Keith,
at ~ school. Representative ot'the Karen and Nick Lisle, Jim and
Southern ~ Building Com)'lliuee Michelle Johnson, Adelaide Walden·
to spoalc.
·
mair. an&lt;! Kathryn and Mary l)ybos.

Coun•~~~~~~~Village
!
11 Star Mill Parle. Board of Elections,~ arn. Tuesday,

County

caregiver and the child."
Two series come from a
partnership between Sesame Streetmaker Children's Television Workshopand Columbia TriStarTelevision
Distribution:
- "Dragon Tales," a musicbased weekday series inspired by
artist Ron Rodecker's drawings,
which will stress behavioral lessons
such as ·courage and leam..:.ork for 25 year olds.
- Its corresponding weekly parent show, "Show lltld Tell Me,"
offering ways to· re-enfo.rce "Dragon's" messages.
The other lwo shows come

Vic_
tim's l_amily balks a.t pronosed
f"
hIC
• te
museum d•ISplay 0 f dea th. I.J'
:
e
V

~~C:':,!:;':;;~,~:O•:~.:Zgu~~!:::g
·
.
·
to protetl my family...
.
By PAUL DAVENPORT
• ___,_.__. ..__ Wri•Lee said she can under. NEW YORK {AP)- Ash~- .-......
,_
recently tan·
PHOENIX Cht'ldren of a
Stand Why AJ..:.osfdwin
-- "'l"'.
ley Judd says that even during the
gled with a v!ileo-.~hotographer ':JY· -hard times, her family had sryle.
slain newspaper reporter liked the
ing 10 get tape .o fhts newborn child.
"We had a lot of flair," she ideao~the ~bed ~kage ofthe~r
The •Video-photOgraphers tells W magazine. "Mom bought all fathers car gomg or:' dtsplay- until
often provoke ,stars into i:onfronta·
the ._
d hand
• lhey learned where tt may be shown.
tion;·dlen selttlje:tape to tabloid telc- her clo luum ~?n •
stores.
"If I'd have known, I'd
.
t'
on
sho\ls'
for
anywhere
from
She
ran
around
tn
40s
dresses
all
ha
'd
• ... 'd Da 'd C Bolles
VIS
through the '60s '70s and '80s
ve Sat no, S81
~· •
•
Sl,SOO to $50,9QO.
•
And, of course, V:c couldn'l have~ eldest son of the longtime reporter
\ · , LOS· •ANGELES (AP) · ,,_.

with short between-program seg·
ments. Ready to Learn magazines and
lesson plans: also ·are distribllted tO
parents and schools.
·
But the four new shows, featuring animated tales for kids and
practical how-to advice for grownups,
mark the first original series to join
the RTL lineup. They're also RTL's
first atrempt to caplure adult viewers.
"This is an investment in
America's future," says CPB 's Carolynn Reid-Wallace, who calls the
project one of public TV's "most
ambitious" educational efforts. "It's
the first time such programs have
been worked our to connect the adult

'

-n9

...

6o6· ·

CBS spending $8.4M to air four new
~:~fif~n~~d~~~=~~~~~ef~~ shows for for young viewers, parents

Pick 3:

••

s/

of new beneficiaries. In addition, 89
percent raled the office appearance
"good" or "very good," Social Secu•
rity office hours were rated "good" or
"very good" by ~ percenl of those
surveyed.
Further, 88 percent of other
customers we surveyed knew they
could make an appoi,lltrnent wilh
Social Security, and 78 percent wen:
aware lhat almost all Social Securily
business can be handled by telephone.
When you malce an appoint·
men!, we will serve you within 10
minutes of the scheduled time .
· Among new beneficiaries,
74 percenl had scheduled an appoinlment lo apply for benefits. For 92 percent, the appointment was kept on
lime and on the scheduled day.

*

Sports, P.age 4

sOCia
· • I s. ecu rl•ty Se·rvlce
• rated .hIQ
• h.

16 years ago when he sa',Y there were
few furid-rai~rs for minorily college
students.
. "Y/e weren't doing any, thingforeducation,"hesaid. "We've
got a lor of young minds out there
NEW YORK (AP)
who just need a chance."
"Baywatch" babe Pllf!lela Lee knows
Others appearing 00 the
whatshe would do if a member of the seven, hour show were teen-age

.
"If some Y JUm
mto
mywindow,espec:ially1flhadachild
athome,Iwoulijblow'emoutofthe

LIQns off1o
best cage
start ever

about .Omething-out of IDY own petsonal eaperience.
I was·going through the receivinJ
line of a fancy ~ption. A gentleman
whose identity 1shall not reveal was
in that line, greeting the guests. He
. leaned over to Ieiss me on the cheek.
which he had done many times
before since .we were longtime
friends. I was . not expecting such
informality under !he circumstances
and turned my head to look at him.
Lo and behold, the kiss caught me ...
smack on the lips. His wife gave him
a look that wilted his boutonnien: and
dried out my corsage. So -please
don't be too hard on the fellows at the ·
funeral .
Have trouble sleeping at night and
don't want to get involved in a novel ? •A Collection of My Favorite
GemsoftheDa "isthe rfecibedstand
d
1taddres
1
Ion ma _e. n. a se • .
sed,
g, bustness-slze envelope and a
~heck or money order for $5.25 (this
mcludes postage and handling) to:
Collection, c/o Ann Landers PSO
Box 11562 ch·
Itt
II0562 (' C ' ad IC$a6g0 •
10 an a,
.25). ·

p;;pj~"'·i~tt,;~;ws...
.Continued ~m page 7
wiiS on the sel of "Friends" when
Shields kissed star Mati LeBlanc for
a spec_ial hourlong_episode scheduled
to air iftet the Super Bowl on Jan. 28:
"We. had two kisses on•
screen," Shields says in the Jan. 13.
issue of TV Guide. "The audience
oohed."
But Ag&amp;Ssi let die entire sci.
know he wasn't ·too pleased with the
lip. locks, objecti.ng in a loud voic_e.
· "It's hat'd for him," Shields
said. ''To watch the person you're in
love with kissing another person
111alces your stomach a little ill."

Ohio Lottery

'

Affair.on comp~ter proves costly

'

I wtmed you at lbe Chrisunu . .~
ty wllen you aiogins "Let It
·Soow" with such psto that you were
going 10 bring us nodling but trouble.
"'
didn't pay.any ~ntion
· to my
~aou
w..-njnp, h9wever, lnd for a while I,
lOQ, though! they Were iti vain. After
all, then: were at least two heavy
SftQwstorms that somehow missed )IS
after I told you to lay off.
But this weekend.really eras.d all
of my pleasant. weather thoughtS as
'the biggest snowstonn in decades
~truck us·as well as a wide ares of the
n..lllion.
While such weather does just
'about mean rota! confinemenr. there
•arc some things to be thankful for. I
-·'didn't.hearofanylocalpoweroutages
lltld our heal sources were holding up.
. Too, we had the inagic of television
, · to keep us entertai~. Wonder what
they did in the "olden days" when
they were snowed in? You don't suppose they ~ books .or cooked up
$ some delicious,goodies in the kirchen
, .dQ you? .Naw!
I . And !his, too, shall pass-and I
_hope very soon.

Mondlly' JanJJary a, 1

senting women and victims; Richard
Roberts, principal, Chester Elemen·
tary, representing schools; Chief Ger·
aid Rought, Pomeroy Police, law
enforcement: and Roscoe Mills, business.
Two-year rerms - Janet Howard
Taclcen, Middleport, county commissioner; Cindy Oliveri, exte11sion
service; Mony Wood, DARE program; Susan Oliver, Meigs Counly
Senior Citizens Center.
Three-year tenns '- Judge Robert
E. Buck; Juvenile Court; James
Souls by, Pomeroy, sheriff; Fred Hoffman, Middleport, cilmmissioner; and
Gerard. court administrator/criminal
bailiff. All members will ·~erve without compensation.
Succeeding appointments will be
for two terms, and vacancies which
occur in the membership will be

COLUMBUS (AP)- A Ku Klux
Klan rally cost the state more than
S) 1,000 in o:Yertirpe and equiptne!Jt.
Costs to the city are expected to be
aboul lwice that much.
There was linle violence at Saturday's evenl, but the Slate Highway
Patrol was investigaling the beating
of a man .
Patrol spokesman Sgt. )ohn Born
said Monday charges could be filed
in the beating of Andrew HolTman,
18. of Columbus, wh o was cut on his
head and face when he was attacked
by several anli-Ki an protesters.
A man who idenlificd himself as
Justin Bramblctl to ld rcponers he
beal Hoffman because he lhought
Hoffman was supporting the Klan.
In a separate incident, Nathan P.
Greaney of Dayton pleaded innocent
Monday in Franklin County Municipal Court to charges he hit a Columbus police horse and resisted arrest.
He is free o.n a recognizance bond
while awaiting trial.
Born said the patrol paid about
$6,000 in overtime, using 208 troopers .

The CapiiOI Square Review and
Advisory Board spent $4,000 to lease
have been entitled lo receive because a fence that separated the Klan and
their actual enrollments lhis school the protesters. It also paid $I ,020 in
year fell below levels on which the ovenime for .,.;even civilian state
employees to be on hanq.
state budget was based .
Columbus police costs v;ere no.t
Instructional subsidies for higher
education are based mainly on the available Monday, but city officials
number of Sludcnts at each campus. · said the cost would be about $20,000: '
The Franklin County Sheriff's
But since the slate budget was preOffice
spent less than $500 to cover
pared in advance of the school year,
the rally, Sheriff Jim Karnes foaid.
subsidies were based on estimates.
The rally cost the Klan about
Actual cnrollmen!~ this year were
I. 7 percent below last year, and $I 18. In addition to its $20 fee for the
about 2.4 percent below the projec- penn it to use the Statehouse grounds,
lions on which the budget was pre- the Klan spent $30 for podium setup
and a sound system hookup, and $68
pared.
for a stale emolovee to do that work.

Budget talks reach critical point

Pltul Gerard
_
ftlled by . appointments from the
Meigs County Commissioners..
According •to Gerard, the local
council is in the process of preparing
a budget and will be applying for
$5,000 in grant monies through the
Office of Criminal Justice.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Budget by tonight whether a deal was possi- the other, I think the leaders are gettallcs between President Clinton and ble. White House spokesman Mike ling to the point where they wan! clocongressional leaders are at a crucial McCurry said !he negotiations had sure."
point and could imminently produce evolved to "where they're either
The budget stalemate, which has
either a historic budget-balancing going to get an agreement or they ' re prevailed since Republicans took
compromise or failure, participants · not. "
. over Congress last January, has
from holh sides say.
Two Republicans, s)lCaking on already provoked two partial govThe barg!liners were gathering at condition of anonymity, said that at ernment shutdowns, including a ·
rhe White House again loday to sec Monday's session, Clinton said the three-week closure that didn't end
if they can reach a deal for cutting two sides should bring to today's until this weekend.
I&amp;Jtes and eliminating federal deficits meeting their final offers and an exit
by 2002. They mel for four hours strategy - that is: be prepared to
A failure of the lltlks could presage. ·
Monday despite a snowstorm that explain to voters wh~ the talks failed. a third sh11tdown commencing Jan.
Participants from both sides s~g- 27, when a temporary spending bill
crippled much of the capital and
movedtowardeachother'sproposals gested another reas9n for expeclmg covering scores of programs will·
for paring Medicare, Medicaid, wei: action shortly: Clinton. Dole and · lapse: It also would all but ensure that;
· fare and other programs, as well as House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R- the two sides' wiuring viewp\lints
taxes.
. . .
Ga_., are eager to hit the campaign over the budget and scope of 'gov- ·
But · multtbllhon·dollar gaps trail and leave the ncgouatmg table emment would dommate this year's'·
. remained. Participants from both behind them.
political t;ampaigns for the Wliite '
sides said the talks could go either
"Things suggest that it's pretty House and Congress.
'
way- and soon.
_ _ ·
close to coming to an end," said one
If the negotiations Succeed, how."!
Senate Majority Leader Bob Do1e. Republican participant who spoke on ever, annual deficits could be elimi- : ,
R-Kan .. _said bargainers should know condition of anonymity. "One way or nated for the first time since 1969.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="383">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9755">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29188">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29187">
              <text>January 8, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="332">
      <name>bradbury</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3003">
      <name>nolan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6104">
      <name>sdwards</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1203">
      <name>sisson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
