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                  <text>P11ge 12 • The O.lly Sentinel

Wednesday, January 24, 19116

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:An exhibit to die for at N·ew York murder museum
.By LARRY McSHANE

AMocl.ted Pren Wrtt.r

NEW YORK (AP) - This is one'
- killero f a m~,~Seum show.
'
· , There's the bright yellow crimel
scene tape, separating it from al
Jieighboring exhibit. There's the
barrel pointing the way to its
entrance. And there's the disclaimer:
Some of the contents of "In Cold
Blood: Five Murders that Shocked
New Yorlt" might malce ·the average
museum guest queasy. ·
"I love murder mysteries," said a
smiling Mary Beth Betts, curato~ _of

gun:

the new show at the New-York Historical Society. "And what's intrigu·
ing aboutlhese.is they offer a glimpse
·into a certain time in New York."
That certain time coven 1836
through 1964, and selects five of the
city's most infamous killings - a
tough task in a city where five murden a day was the Q:Cent average. In
chronological order, the chosen five:
- April I! 0, 1836. Tabloid heaven: Attractive prostitute Roswina
Townsend is hacked and set afm:,
allegedly by wealthy, promiscuous
young businessman Richard Robin-

son. Robinson, whole reputed mosive alongside White's bed. Thaw wu
was keeping the young hooker from acquittal by reason of insanity.
revealing their relationship to his
-July IS, 1912. Gambler Herfiancee, was acquittal after alrial that ·man Rosenthal was gunned dowll:
drew national illtention.
outside a Manhattan cafe, shortly•
- July 2S, 1906. A tawllry tale of after complaining .that' police were
sex, high society, insanitY and jeal- ignoring his bribes and closing his

ousy. ·Architect Stanford White was
killed atop one of his greatest creations, the old MadisQD Square Garden, by an old flame's huslia.~. Harry K. Thaw. Thaw's wife, showgirl
Evelyn Nesbit, stoked Thaw's rage
with a tale of boozy sex - and a
naked ride on a red velvet swing hung

Looking for
immortality? Ea~tman's
Detroit ·man
has right
the stuff
By JOHN LARABEE
The Detroit HeDETROIT - If, Norman Bates
'had the services of Bill Huffman,
maybe he wouldn't have gone psycho
keeping his mother's mummified
remains at the Bates Motel.
Huffman, a Colorado, taxidermist
who stuffed animals for 23 years in
the Detroit area, now wants to pmctice his cmft on humans.
In fact, Huffman said he may
undertake his first human "preservation" as soon as next week- if he
can get a cadaver from a medical
school.
"The technology is already here,"
said Huffman, who lived in the
Detroit area from 1955 to 1978.
"And it is legal in many states,
including Colorado. All the law here
requires, for instance, is that the body
be embalmed,by a licensed mortician.
After tha~ there's no mention of what
must happen to it."
Dr. David Johnson, acting chief
medical officer of the Michigan
Department of Health, warned there
1!fe hazards to what Huffman proposes. Some diseases survive death
and could be spread by improper handling.
"There is the possibility of the
ongoing presence of microorganisms," he said. "When the organs are
removed,· one would have to follow
the same precautions as a pathologist
would follow. There is a danger of
HIV, hepatitis B or tuberculosis~
Those organisms could survive the
death of the body for a period o

her three times. The slaying became
a symbol of urbili ·apathy and alien-: ·
ation.
The eJthibits include vintage .
newspaper clips, pboiOgraphs, boolcs :
·and drswings. The White eJthibit :
inch~ a red velvet swing.
"All o( these cases share parallels .
with contemporary eve~ - :
although 1 wouldn't want w, crw :
them myself," B~'¥1 said. , ,.
:
• Visitors catt11rW'tlltit own. The :
exhibit opens today and runs through :
April7.
'

Indemnity." Hard-boiled Queens
· house...fe Ruth Snyder and her lover
did in her husband to c;olleci $96,000
in insurance. The " Dumbbell " was
nota Jeference to the mUrder weapon:
It paid homage to the stupidity of the
li:iUeis. Both died in the electric

gambling operation. A corrupt police
captain, Charlea Becker, was convicted and executed in 191 S although a subsequent investigation
raised questions llbot!t his guilt
- March 20, 1927. "The Dumbbell Murder" was the inspiration for
James M. Cain's novel "Double

chair.

.

-March 13, 1964. The slaying of
Kitty Genovese outside her apartmcnt
was just another city homicide until it was discovered that doiens of
neighbon had ignored her screams
for help, allowing the killer to attack

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel nawa atafl
Meigs County Emergency Services Director R(!ben Dyer met
Wednesday with state and fedeml
emergency management officials to
sllrVey flood ravaged areas of the
county.
Dyer said the group to\lfC(I the
flood area from Story's Run Road
below Middleport to Reedsville along
state routes 124 and 338. .
At one point, Marsha. Manson
from the Federal Emergency Managemen.t Association, got out of the
vehicle and waded through flood
water in the Dewitt's Run area to
make sure there was still a road there,
Byer said.
.
Touring the area were: Ken Larson, a FEMA representative specializing in Small Business Administration assistance; Arvin Schul!z.
FEMA, a mitigation specialist who
seeks ways to limit future flood damage; Carol Focke of tl)e Ohio Bmergency Management ~iation and
Karen Slone from U.S. Senator Mike
De Wine's office.
Following the tour, the group proceeded to Lawrence County to survey
damage there.
,
Byer said he was meeting this
morning with FEMAand OBMArepresentati ves Charle~ Reynolds and
John Spoff along with officials from
·the-county highway department, viilages and townships concerning damage to infrastructure.
This afternoon, he will meet with
Peter Fink from the Depanment of
Natural Resources; Dean Ogden of
FEMA and AI Sands of OBMA to
view certain lR8S of damage from the
flOoding which occurred this past
week to assist t!Jem in working with

MASON .

wv

.......
-·0

COLUMBUS (AP) -,-A sex edu,
eation teacher accused of being sexu8tly involved with at least five students Will receive a w.-supported disability pension,
.. .
· The pension of $38,760 a yw :s
·blsed on psychiatric problems, Herb
Dyer,.director of the pension system,
Slid tqday.
. .
. ..The pension was awarded Fnday
to' David A. Lawrence, 49, who
last February from suburban
Reynoldsburg High School, The
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer ~

.,.pea

toilay.
.
The State Boll'll of Bducalion said
~nee had··~ 10111111-

·,-

,

•

By TOM HUNTER
Sentlnal NeWI Staff
Two Athens women were killed
and a small child was seriously
injured late Wednesday night when
their 1986 Mereury sedan crashed
head-on into an &amp;.tern Local sc~l
bus on U.S. Route 50 east of
Guysville, officials from the Athens
post of the State Highway Patrol statestTh~y..JliQillilllo . . ;
The bus, carrying 24 team memben and staff of the Eastern Junior
Vanity and Vanity Girls Basketball
teams, was returning from a game at
Nelsonville-York. No one abOard the
bus was seriously injured, but all were
taken to area hospitals as a precautionary measure.
According to witnesses at the
scene, a car driven by 2S year-old
VondaA. George was traveling westbound on US 50 in a curve when she

attempted to overtalce a semi over the
yellow line at County Road 42, near
the fonner Spanish Maine truck stop.
She reportedly braked to try to avoid
the eastbound bus, but collided with
the Eastern Local bus head-on.
The impact shoved the car back
and into.{! guardrail where it came to
rest. The school bus slid off the left
side of the road into a guardraii..All
of the occupants on the bus were able
to escape through the emergency
exit The semi was not involved and
did not stop at the accident scene. The
bus driver, Robert White, 65, of
Coolville, had no chance to avoid the
car, patrol spokesman Lt. Michael
Hunter stated.
GC(){ge, fonnerly of Rutland, and
a passenger, 19-year old Misty Mash,
were pronounced dead at the scene.
George's 4 year-old son, Justin, was

the interagency hazard · tilitigat:on
team in the event a presidential declaration is received.
"This will also allow us to provide
information to officials regarding
steps that may be taken to reduce
damages in the future," he said.
"This is what llried to do in May
after the flash flood," Dyer added.
Commeiuing that things are·moving
faster this time .
Dyer said some roads still remain
closed and some slips are showing up
National Weather Service said.
on Union Avenue near Pomeroy and By '""' Aaoclated Pren
Hydrologists at the Ohio River
The rising Ohio River left hunon Roy Jones Road near Syracuse.
Forecasting
Center said, barring sig"Without Roy Jones Road, you've dreds of people homeless, closed
got 900 residents of the village of roads and schools and threw some nificant precipitation, the river should
Syracuse isolated during floods," he communities into a state of emer- recede to 56.7 feet by Friday and to
54.7 feet by Saturday. Midweek rains
said. The road is the sole route in and gency.
could
cause some additional flooding
In
Cincinnati,
the
river
exceeded
out of the village during times of high
later
this
weekend.
its 52-foot flood stage Monday and
water.
Fed
by
snowmelt and rainfall of up
COncerning the current status of crested at 57.3 feet early today. the
the river, Bye:' foresees no immediate
danger.
"We're watching tbe situation to
see what will happen," he said. "I
don't feel there will be any danger to
the city front but there could be some
more roads cut off"
A Hartford, W.Va., woman want- tody, the local sheriff's department
Dyer said 700 families are still ed in connection with a September faxed photos of Leonard and Timofeeling the flood's effects and don't mutder in Mason County is under thy W. Gibbs, 36, Hanford, who is
have a normal way in or out from arrest in Uma County, Ariz., accord· also wanted for the murder of Jack
their homes.
ing to Sberiff Ernie Watterson.
Roush, 52, Hartford, according to
· ''Our bfggest concern is for fire
Risa Lynne Sayre U&lt;lnard, 32, McConihay.
and emergency medical service pro- was detained Wednesday evening by
When the arresting officer saw the
pie getting where they need to go," he Uma County officials and will be pictures, he positively identified
commented.
arraigned this afternoon on a fugitive Leonard and Gibbs. Leonard's father
Byer commenjled residents and warrant, Mason County Deputy Cur- also called the Arizona authorities to ·
local officials .for their coopemtion tis McConihay said.
tell them about scars on his daughter's
during the recent emergencies which
At the time of the arraignment, forehead and face that helped in ideninvolved either snow or high wall:r. Leonard will .be given the option of tification . •
and in one instance, :ln overturned waiving_ or fighting CJttradition.
Gibbs had given the officers false
McConihay said if Leonard waives identification when stopped. Authorpropane tanker.
"Oiurehes offered their services extrsclition. officials will go to Ari- ities returned to the site where the
for shelters." he said. "It was almost zona to pick her •P· Should she fight transients were stopped and found
it, a governor's warrant will be identif:cation with Gibbs' social secuautomatic."
obtained.
rity number, but he was gone. A
gets disability
According to Watterson and sean:h continues for him, McConihay
·
McConihay, Uma County officials said. ·
stopped a group of si~ to eight tran·
U&lt;lnard and Gibbs were both
tic arid sexual relationships" with at sients and checked for identification. indicted during January tenn of grand
least five female students from 197S At tha~time, Leonard,gave hero~ jury for the murder of Roush. The last.
through 1991. He.lost his teaching and
but a wron!l soc:al lead local authorities had on the coucertification in October.
·
, · S:CC~ty,number. When her •~orma­ pie was in· November after their
The board said Lawrence also lion was .ru,n lllrough NC~C. 11 came vehicle was found in San Francisco,
smoked marijuana with students.
back a hit, Watterson said..
Cslif.
Dyer said medical reports on the
After Leonard was tabn mto cus-

r

,.

commended the quick actions of bus
driver Bob White, which helped the
passengers aboard the bus avoid a
tragedy. "He did an incredible job driving, in attempting to avoid the car. ·.
If it would not have been for Bob's
actions, we all probably would not be
here right now;: Eastern girls baskethall coach Scott Wolfe said shortly
after the accident.
·
The car had to he cut apan ll)' the
Coolville Fire Depsrtmenl, in order to
remove the victims. Other units
assisting at the scene were members
of the Coolville Police Depanment
and Athens County Sheriffs Officers.
The crash is still under investigation by troopers of the Athens post of
the State Highway Patrol. A crasl)
reconstructionist was called to tht;
scene, and the National Transponation Safety Board has also been notified, Lt. Hunter stated.

found crying in the back seat of the
wrecked car · by Cory Dunn, a
Rave'nswood, W.Va. truck driver who
had stopped to help at the scene.
Dunn broke out the back window
and climbed into the wreclcage to rescue the child, who was taken to
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens and Iater transferred by Life Flight to Children's Hospital, Columbus, The child
was listed in critical condition with
facial, head, and internal injuries this
moming at Children's Hospital, a hospital spokeswoman stated.
Parents following the bus and
several emergency squads with the
Southeast Ohio Medical Services
transported the bus passengers to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital
and St. Joseph Hospital in Parkers·
burg, W.Va. and O'Bleness Hospital
in Athens.
Several parents and eyewitnesses

Ohio River .crests af57.3 feet in Cincinnati

·Residents along waterfront neighborhoods evacuated; water may rise again

....

End neighborhood. "No one npect!
ed it :o be like this. It just shot up

to 1.5 inches, the Ohio River rolled
through waterfront neighborhoods on
Wednesday.
Hardest hit were Clermont County, Anderson Township and Cincinnati's east side.
"The water came 100 more feet up
(the road) sin~ last night," said
Steve Roat, 32, of Cincinnati's East

overnight."

·

Roat's house, about 50 feet front
the floodwaters, had I foot of water
in the basement Wednesday, but hli
planned to stay put. Many others were
on the rno've, thou~h .
:
(Continued on PaR• 3)

.
·Murder suspect held Racine mayor plans
by officials in Arizona bid for commission seat :

pensiOn despite SeX-related finding

u.. ..... .....

1

-

Outside of HB 264, the remainder
of the project can probably be done
for less than $100,000 using permanent improvement funds, he added.
A new, insulated roof will be
installed on Middleport Elementary
School,'paid for by HB 264. The new
roof will be sloped for improved
drainage. The ~xisting roof has tears
and is not insulated.
The board authorized Buckley and
Trtasurer Cindy Rhonemus to proceed with the projects. Architect Brian·Boyd of Lock One Inc. is working
for the district on the projects.

Ex-Reynoldsburg teacher

'!

BIG BEND

---------c;--

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Meigs flood sites

•

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Products

•

.

Alnerical
Silgles

e~tplained.

In addition, the board proposed hired lise K. Burris and Angela RigsFeb. 16.andApril8asmaketlpdays · by as substitute teachers for the
for inclement weather. The rest of the remainder of the school year and
days will be made up after Memori- approved hiring a .tutor for a health
a! Day.
·
handicapped student.
The district also hired Ed RamsAll schools in the district have
-f!!issed atle&amp;Steight days due to snow . .burg and Benny Wright on one-year
or high water with Salisbury and contracts for the maintenance depanPomeroy elementaries missing nine ment. Mary Boorum was hired as a
and 10 days. respectively.
socretary in the treasurer's office.
Following an executive session,
The board received a parent complaint concerning parking in front of the board agreed to attempt to recovPomeroy Elementary School. One er $20,000 in costs from an insurance
parent said the Pomeroy Police company. The district will be reproDepartment threatened to ticket her sented by the Meigs County Prosewhile she Was parked in front of the cutor's Office.
school for her children.
·
Present were Buckley, Rhonemus,
-Buckley said he would talk to board President Roger Abbott and
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan members Scott Walton, Larry Rupe
about the matter.
and Randy Humphreys.
In personnel matters, the board

Eastern Local bus with 24 passengers returning from a girls basketball game involved

1411Z.

12 oz.

handicapped accessible. Under provisions of the Americans with DisabilitiesAct,IOpercentoftheproject
must address ADA compliance.
Superintendent
Bill
Buckley

US 50 bus-car accident kills two Athens women

State, federal

Asst. 9 oz.

A Gennett Co. Now po.,...

Meigs Local School Board
outlines building renovations
Renovation worlt on two Meigs
Local schools may begin this summer
after the Meigs Local Board of Bducation gave the green light to the renovation projects.
The major of the two projects
involves upgrades to the old Central
Building in Mi41Jiepon. part of the
Meigs Junior High School complu.
Much of the work will involve
energy-saving improvements including new windows, paid for lhroush
House Bill 264, a conservation program where the cost of improvements
are recouped through energy savings.
A new heating system and lighting
will also be done through HB 264.
Fireeltits will be improved and the
bUilding will likely be made more

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 25, 1996

By JIM FREEMAN .
Seminal nawa atafl

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He said the body would have to be ,
posed almost immediately by a local
·funeral director. "Embalming fluid
makes a body quite rigid," he said. 1
Huffman said his finn would cmte :
:the body and transport it to his la))o, ·
ratory in Colorado. It would be
'freeze,dried over the next six to I0
'months.
"We then would penonally rerum
·it to its owner," he said.
The cost? About SI0,000.
' · Huffman said he's been "thihking
.about" the problems involved in
;homan preservation for a number (I(
·yean.
.
: "A lot of P¢oPle will find the idea
' :clis~ing;" he.lldmittal.
: . Bi!l whell yqu think of it, it.is no
'lilore ! distasteful .. th4n having Old .
· ;Shep pre~rved'.ind dueled up on the ,
I

Plck4:

28ectlo..,1&amp;1'11gH

person."

-1

034

I '
Vol. 48,
NQ. , .

Plus

Johnson said he didn't know if the
risk of disease from human bodies
was any greater than from animals.
Animals, he said, "are not my area of
expertise."
Huffman, who operates what he
says is the largest private museum of
animal remains in the country, said he
would preserve humans in the same
way he saves the bodies of iguanas,
various rodents, fox, raccoons, reptiles, birds, cats, dogs and the twoheaded piglet he worked on last
week.
'"First, the body would be
embalmed. Then we would freeze.
dry it. Properly cared for- by which
I mean you don'tleave it out in the
rain or allow the dog to chew on it,
it should last for years. I have birds
here that are 40 years old."
Freeze-drying removes the moisture from the body's cells so that it
does not take on 'the dried-out, mummified appearance common with
recently embalmed corpses.
Huffman said humans likely
would be presented lying down
because "we are used to seeing them
in caskets, or perhaps in some other
favorite pose, such .as sitting in a
rocking chair."
"I think the family that wanted to
preserve the body would wish it displayed in a manner suggesting most
closely their best memories of that

I

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Ohio Lottery
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case were privileged and could not be
divulged.
·
Lawrence applied for disability
pension in March and at first was
refused. He ~led the ruling, and
the State 'Ii:achers Retirement System
board reversed itself last week.
Reynoldsburg Superintendent
Richard Rou told the newspaper he
was. shocked by the decision.
.

.

Diseipllnary hearing will be r~pened
COLUMBUS (AP) -A discipli;
nary heiri~g agalns\ a lawyer will be
reopened fot teStimony from a bailiff
who claims the lawyer and a judge .
lied under oath about their relation,
ship.
LawyerChri¥«JpherT. Cicero and
Judge Deborah P. O'Neill of Franklin

County Common, Pleas C011rt said
they were not _int,imately involved at
the tiille O'Neill ~Jnted CICero~
defense attorney in 'a felony case 10
her court.
Bailiff Norma Mitchell said the
pair lied when they testified in September

Racine Mayor Jeffrey L. Thornton
has announced his intention to seek
the Democratic nomination to run for
the Jan. 5, 1997, seat on the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners currently occupied by Republican Robert
Hartenbach.
'
Since becoming disabled in an oil
field accident, he became involved in
.community work and elected office.
Starting out as a Racine councilman
and later becoming mayor of the viiIage.
Thornton, 35, cites his work in
assisting area farmers in receiving
disaster funds and seeking new markets in Canada. He has also helped
the village secure grants for impioving its water system which now has
an .w well, the first in 45 years.
M:ile mayor, the village received
a $480,000 housing grant and he
wrote a grant to restore the old
Chester Courthouse.
1
Thornton is also proUd of the
S,OOO feet of new sidewalk installed
in the village.
He was a coordinator for stale representatives Mary Able and Mark
Malone. He is a member of the
Meigs County Chamtier of Commeree and was on the board of directors for three years. He was awarded
the Good Citizens/lip Award from the
Ewings Chapter SAR fnr his ·community work.
Thornton's goals 1re to be full..time
commiSsioner and to unite the county by working with the township
trustees and villages. He also plans on

holding community meetings in 1he
villages and townships to get advice
from their residents.
He advocates a five -year and I O-·
year plan for the county and stressed
that county residents need to suPPOrt
the school systems and senior citi, ·
zens.

He is a member of the Racine First
Baptist Church and is the son of Florence Thornton of Letan Falls and
John Bernard Thorn19n of Seattle. He
is the nephew of Bob and Hazel Roy . ';,
of Racine and grandson of Addie·
Cummins and the late Floyd "Buster"
Cummins.

·

�'

ThutSday, January 25.1991"

t

Cemmentary

Page2
"-

. ··~··_:fhe ·Daily Sentinel Clin~on· takes hig·" :. ~oad; GOP,shoots ~elt
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
. 114-4112-21118 • Fu: 882-2~ 57

.

.!1,
ROBERT L WINGETr
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeneraJMtlnager

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

:Excerpts.from other·
:Ohio newspapers
'

.

'

•

Excerpts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest:
Akron Bellcon Journal, Jau. 19
.
· Who isn't intrigued by the idea of a flat tax? Its proponents talk about a
· postcard-sized tax form. Perfonn soine elementary math, fill in the few
blanks, and, wonder of wonders, you've completed your income taxes.
Many economists argue that unless the flat-tax rate is set in the low 20s,
the d~ficit will balloon. They also point out !hat once the rate reaches such
. a level, the I8X burden would fall more heavily on the middle class than it
currently does.
.
As maddeningly complex as the current tax code is, that element, too,
reflects reality. Estimates are Americans spend 4.S billion hours .a year
preparing their taxes. Most of that time involves businesses preparing their
· tax forms.
.· Still if the flat tax may be impractical; the principle at work sh,ouldn't
be dis~sSed. Reduced taX rates and greater simplicity are worthy goals. They
are most readily achieved by closing wasteful loopholes and eliminating
obsolete deductions.

MICH.

bill passed - or at least put the onus
for failure back on Clinton - .bu! 11
seems unlikely that GOP freslmien
and other hardliners will adopt the
strategy.
A "split-the:difference" proposal
was advocated last week in the Washington Post by freshman Rep. Greg
Ganske, R-lowa, and other moderates
are proposing that the GOP adopt a
variation on the budget alternative
proposed by "Blue Dog" Democrats
along with the welfare reform proposal once passed by the Senatx: and
endorsed by·Clinton.
Sensible as this strategy might be"
most House GOP leaders seem determined to declare bodget . talks dead
and to pursue a strategy of "selective
appropriation," which Democrats
surely will portray Its capricious
slashins-and-burning of federal programs.
.
,
,
Meantime, Republicans are geuing
their party 'more or less•fully COI!I·mined to the idea ofa Jlat tal\. which
Democrats will use to·conftrm the
cliricature of the GOP as eager to aid
the rich at the expense of the middle
:
class.
Former HUD Secretary Jack
Kemp has tried to soften the pany's
image by proposing to maintain mortgage interest deductions and .to llllow
deduction of payroll taxes, but '¥
experts insist this will either·ltrive iJp
the budget deficit or necessitate a flat
tax of 30 percent -- an increase fqr
voters in the $40,000 to $ i'oo,~
income range.
_
DOle, as the likely GOP presid~­
. tial standard-bearer, is skittislraboui
endorsing a flat tax, but the enthosi' asm ,of other Republicans will play
into Clinton's hands when he says
\ that a Dele presidency will put the
country into the hands of ''exjRmisis "like Speaker Newt Gingrich, RGa., and likely Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lou, R-Miss.
With so much going for him, it's
no wonder Clinton sought to ride
above·the.fray on TV this week. But
wait al"hile. As the '96 campaign prO.
ceeds, we can expect him to attack
Republicans as the "extremist,
!iestructive, do-nothing 104th Congress." That's the kind of theme that
worked for Harry Trunilln in 1948; ·.
(Morton Kondracke·ls execudft
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Hut.)

plishment even though in 1993 Clio1
l'1f1 had pi'ed up a substantial legdeliver a "confronll!ional" Sllltc of nlllion's bistaiY in.order to get their islative record on deficit-reduction.
the UniCJ!l s~h. this week, but way on thc budget And they are lin- crime and education.
when Republicans began doing
· · ··
This year, Republicans have
everything they could to destroy MO..,O · "ond"'SCke
closed down the federal government
themselves politically, he decided t o J l '
n:
LL
twice and have forced Clinton . to
go the hjgh road instead.
ing up favor for various flat taxes that agRC-to the goal of balancing the fedTo be sure, Clinton drew contrasts will benefit rich people at a time of eral budget in seyen YCWS:
with Republicans over the budget, growing income inequality.
But now they are holding out for
education funding and anti-crime
In the· hucljet fight, Republicans sizable tax c11ts and Medicare polic:y
programs, but his plans for the nation- are repeating lhe administration's changes on top of that. They stand a
ally televised message changed 'Con- disastrous 1994 mistake over health good chance of having nothing to
siderably as Republicans wrecked care -- refusing to take half a loaf, show for all their efforts.
their own political landscape.
insisting on the whole, getting nothTo make matters worse, they are
The original plan, White House ing and earning a reputation for hav- now discussing the close-down of,
various agencies and programs by
Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said in an ing failid to accomplish anything.
interview, was for Clinton to frontalAt any time in 1994, a deal could denying them funding without passly take on the GOf in the speech if no have been struck around modest ing any legislation to offioially debudget deal was reached last week. insur~ reforms proposed by Reps. authorize them.
Even though there is no deal -- and Mike Bilifllkis, R-Fia., and Rey RowHouse Majority Leader Dick
the prospects of one seem ·unlikely- land, D-Ga. --enabling the adminis- Armey, R-Texas, ·what's more, says
- Clinton ·decided instead to paint a tration to declare partial victory and that the GOP may refuse to pass a
visionary picture of the challenges to pt'0111ise further reform later •• but debt ceiling measure if Clinton will
facing the country in the 21st celitu- fii'St.lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and not adopt GOP budget priorities.
ry and how he plans to cope with the president demanded their full That wo~ld force the government to
them.
agenda of price controls an\1 employ- default on il5 debt payments, with disVision is an area where Clinton er mandates, insuring defeat.
astrous results to the nation's credit
clearly out-classes likely GOP rival
So. as voters approached the rating.and intere~t rates.
This perception has led some
Bob Dole, R-Kan. Meanwhile, November election last year, focus
Republicans are securing maximum groups showed they could not think House Republicans to recommend a
fh.larn-e..~..o.r·the-m..se..t..
ves_i..n.th_e_c..urre--nt-•of~a..;s;oin;;:g:.;le;.
· ..;admi=~·~ni:;:str;::a::ti:::o:::n..;a::c::co:;::m.::-.;..·..'th..al_f_-a_-_to..af":="~b...u..d;;ge..t..stra_te.;gy~to..;;.ge..t,a

n

A Gan.nett Co. Newspaper

By The Aaaoclated Prett

'

, budget liJbt. They ~ ni&gt;w tlvu~CnPresident c;:unton had planned .to ' ina: the fmt dfbl default in 1he

By Morton Kondlack.

I

. The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Jau. 21
·
·
Cleveland's schookhildren have heard enough arguments about their edu-'
cation. What they need now are real efforts toward improvement.
. Consensus exists on at least one key point: Neither state lawmakers nor
local citizens trust school administrators to spend tax dollars well.
. Classroom education. ~sidents should work to make sure every proposal,
e\iery decision- indeed, every speech- centers on this topic. They should
. insist that politjcians say how their swipes at one another serve this purpose. They should force t,hose who prolong a desegregation case to show
how their efforts aid learning. And they.should demand that those who want
new dollars 4emonstrate how the increases will help teachers improve edu·
•
•
~Jillon ..
·
. .
, . First. Clevelanders mlt~t want thetr children to be ~ucated. They must
be told what their. dollars boy. Then !hey must judge whether the money
.
'
· ought !O · I!Ci~speilt diffefendy: Only· when resicteniS are satisfic;d· with the
1
1
' sclvllils' spc*"g h8bi~' will theY, 'rotc IQ spendtiwte\
· .
•
:,:r. "'
,-~\'.
-~
.s...
,··
·.~ 1;
·~
- ~ &lt;Marioa) Star, Jtui ; 17 · ;
'r·
,. Chi!ICCs are good that the spee41imit is g,oing to change: .
.
.'
By Dian Vujovlch
The govern(lr seems to hav~ licaded off efforts to take the limit to 70 mph.
The Vanguard Group is well
But a variety of other proposals are being kicked around. I . .
ICnown for its low-cost and often
One proposal that should he noted is by state Sen. Scott Oelslager, Rtimes fine-performing funds. Now it
Canton, who wants to put 8 65 mph limit on four-lane non-interstates.
·makes
its mark by introducing a
' Others want to raise the speed limit on all interstate highways to 6S mph.
prospectus
that's really worth reading.
State Sen. Charles Hom, R-Dayton, argues one speed limit would be safer
Like it or not, a prospectus is a
'than a variety.
.
We 11gree with the governor that the speed limit shouldn't go beyond 6S, must-read for every fund investor. If
but we also agree with Oelslager that a I)WDber of fOIIf-lancr highways in they skip reading it, they could miss
out on learning thc ilnpOrtant stuff -the state could have a 65 mph limit.
·
But we don't buy the argument 'that varying ·speed limits aren't safe. like where the fund invests, the kil)lls ,
of risks involved and how to get their
Motorists must cope with different,speed limits everywhere.
Speed limits should be set to allow motorists to cope with the conditions hands on the money invested when
of the road, the flow of traffic and the need to enter and exit to get to busi- they decide .to sell.
"Given the increasing number of
nesses and homes.
investors who are entrusting their
assets to mutual funds, the need for a
The Lima News, Jan. 16
Human Rights Watch describes conditions in Chinese orphanages that more readable and understandable
fund prospectus .has never been
make tjtose in "Oliver 1'Wist" seem ~ownrightl~urious..
·
.
"lbe brUtal treatment of orphans m Shanghat, whtch mcluded deliber- greater," says John Brennan, presiate starVation, torture an~ sexual assault, continued over a period of many dent of the Vanguard Group. "Our
years and led to the unnatural deaths of well over 1,000 dtildren between new prospectus has been designed to
enable investors to make informed
1986 and 1992 alone," the group reported.
.
The evidence was broushl to light by a former doctor at the Shanghai and knowledgeable investment deciChildren's Welfare ln~ti!utc•.According to Zhang Shuyun~ the ~atment is sions."
If all the upcoming newly
official policy ~pealed .m state-~n ~han ages across Chtna .to.reduce the
designed
prospectuses l09k and read
country'.s population. of ·"excess children. ·
•
the
Vanguard
U.S. Growth Penlike
. tnternational·pressure is desperately needed. So far, economic improvements in .China have 'enriched the communist rulers and enabled them to folio prospectus does, investors realcontinue to rule with an iron grip. Why shouldn't democracies demand that .
China act in.a civilized manner if it hopes to receive the benefits of Westem aid and commerce?

•

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...,

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'r•i~ •-

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lr

·•••.;.

i,O·

t( i

ly are in for an informative and educational experience.
The best part about Vanguard's
new design is its reader-friendly
appeal. Not only has the size been

Dia~

Vqjovich .

changed, but the paper is heavier and
the page· Jay-outs are more inviting
and easy to read. Plus, on many pages
are Plain Talk facts about investing
and warning flag icons that attract a
reader's attention to data th~t they
need to learn -- or at least be iemindedof.
For instance, after a section titled
The Ponfolio's Objective, potential
investors are cautioned, "The Penfolio may not meet its objectives.
Your investment in the Portfolio. as
with any investment in common
stocks, could lose money."
Imagine that: a fund family warning investors that they could lose
money. But wait. &gt;There's more.
AD'Other warning .flag informs
investors about "objective risk,"

which "is the possibility that returns
from growth stocks will trail returns
from the overall stock market."
Along with pointing out the realities of investing, Vanguard's new
prospectuses include some valuable
tips. Tbe dividend, capital gains and
taxes section offers this advice on
buying a dividend: "It is not to your
advantage to buy shares of a fund
shortly before it mak~ a distribution,
because part of your invesl!Dent will
come back to you as a taxable distribution." That's followed by a mathematical example showing the implications of buying fund shares before
a dividend distribution is paid.
There are also tidbits about Vanguard's corporate structure and who
the portfolio advisers are, information
on how to read the financial charts
included in the prospectus, and comments on market timing, portfolio
turnover and derivatives.
A few years ago there was talk
about introducing.an "~ff-the-p~ge"
prospectus to the mvesung pubhc. It
wou.Jd have allowed investors to pur·chase fund shares directly from

-

which, we are told, is a radical eco- after the Reagan tax cut. But that
nomic voodoo philosophy that has ignores some relevant facts. The
been "diseredited."
original Reagan tax-cut proposal was
True? The charge that Forbes' Oat- decorated "Christmas tree'.' style by
tax proposal is nutty comes from that . lawmakers of both panies seeking
distinguished
macro-economist their own cuts. The legislators then
Lamar Alexander. The commentators conveniently forgot io make the
and economists, who blithely say that promised spending reductions.
supply-side is discredited · radical
F9fbes thitllts that cutti.ng and
voodoo and that ' the numbers don't simplifying taxatio_n, and cuuing regadd up, discredit themselves.
ulations can lead to an economic
Glenn Hubbard, professor of eco- boom. For this he is called a zealot,
nomics ai Columbia'University and a and worse: an optimist. It is, howevvisiting fellow at the American Enter- e~, a view that deserves serious' conprise Institute, explains the concep- SJderalion. ..
. ..
.
tual framework of supply-side this
Is Forbes buymg ~. elecuo~?
way: "Incentives matter.;• Does that Money helps. Bwt m~y ncb candlsound so radical? If taxes are cut, say dates .have craotted: hke Jo~n Co~­
the supply-siders,lhere will be more nally 10 l?BO·and.that other ncb busteconomic activii)', bringing in more n~ssman tn the GOP field now, Mortax money. How much more? No one
Taylor. 'M?~ver, nlany poorly
kriows fcir sure. A few fllf·Out supply- lliuinced candidates ha~ dOJIC welltf
sider1 once sild tax cuts wo11ld pay they have an appealmg message.
for themselves, but most oply said ,the Jesse Jackson prov~ that and so did
C\lts would have some important pro- Pat _Buchanan and Jerry Brown.
srowth effect. '!be mOdels thtlt are ~ (I don'tllke evCI¥IIJiltj about,the
~rotted out to show that the'Forbes flat Forlles cam~gn. Some Of liis 'Cointax won'tlidd up~ typically static mercials have.~'too_tougii. I i!Qn't
models, ISIUIIIing no change aener- support term l!~ts. I wtsh he,1111d the
~ted by tax cUts. Thit is silly schol- other R;epubhcans, would put l~ss
anhip.
-'
r emphasts on the green eyeshade stuff
Nor is supply~side ·discredited. of taxes and deficits, and jive grelter
Tho
relates to thc idea that the ~- I~ the major failing1 ~liberal­
bUdpt -deft~: it IQilM in the 1980s tsm: en me, welfare, educalion and
~ ..,
· preference, to name a few. I assume

n:

:Today's weather forecast

ciWae

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all that will emerge unless the ~hole~
field is crazy.)
Is Forbes programmed? With tli.:1
possible exception of Phil Granim, :
who has a Ph.D. in.ecoo!lUlics, Forbes f
is likely the most ecooomically liter- : ··
ate of-the bunch. He has edited, pub' :
lished and written for .a signifiCJII!I ;
business magazine for many Ye&amp;J:S •
and has,won muy awards. (His Oat:- I
tax proposal. by .the way, ia roughly ~
similar to one that was originally promoted by Republican Ml\iority I
Leader Dick Armey, who ·islso has a I.Ph.D. in economics.)
"• · · ;
I've known Forbes for a decade !
and never thoUght of him as a nerd, :
a geek or awkward.
: :
It is true thll( Forlles has never held I
elected office. ·So what? Unlike many.
Americans, I rather admire mOst o(
our elected' officials, inciiJdina SOII1i;
olhen in the curtent Republiciltl ~.'
idential field. But I al5o like it wllen.
non-politici•s run for oft"tCC and ped'~
die their wares, 'Jie they athleJesr,
actors, bosinessmen, joumaliscs, ciet'· ·
gymen -- whlttcv~. Even very rich
people have t1iat risflt ·
.
1
Ben ·WattenberJ? alblorfellow,' 1
a.t the Amerlcu S.terprlae 11111t1- :

I

.
tu.,
1s
8tlthor ota lle'tJ' boo!!. 1
"Valnes Matter M~~~t." UC'II tile. i
'-' ol tile .,.., pllblle tele'¥111ue "
~

William E. "Bill" Dow, .70, of Ravenswood, W.Va. died Sunday, Jan. 21,
1996 at Charleston Area Medical Center/Memorial Division, Charleston,
W.Va.
Born Nov. 12, 192S in Racine, he was the son of the late Stanley Dow
and Neva Elizabeth Eaton. He was a former lockmaster at the Racine Locks
and Dam.
He was a 1944 graduate of Ravenswood High School; a member and former assistant chief of the Ravenswood Volunteer Fire Department; a US
Navy World War II veteran and a former member of the Ravenswood VFW;
member of the First Baptist Church and its choir, a trustee and treasurer;
and was last employed at Wendy's of Ravenswood.
He is survived by his wife, Darylene Ward Dow of Ravenswood; two
daughters: Kathy Comer Grimm of Ravenswood, and Susan Harpold of
Cross Lanes, W.Va.; one son: Dave Harpold of Cross Lanes; two sisters:
Maxine Johnson of Millwood, W.Va., and Madeline Pickens of Given, W.Va;
mother-in-law, Mary Ward of Ravenswood; three grandchildren and four
great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by one sister, Patty Ann; two grande hi ldren,
and his father-in-Jaw, R.E. Ward.
Services were held WedneSday, I p.m., at the Ravenswood First Baptist
Chl!rch, with the Rev. Kenneth Miller officiating. Burial was in Ravenswood

Arrangements were handled by the Straight, Tucker and Roush Funeral
precipitation 80 percent.
,
South-Central Ohio
Home,
Ravenswood.
Extended
forecast
Today... Sunny. High 3S to 40.
Saturday...A chance of snow.
Variable wind 5 to 10 mph.
10 to 20 with highs 20 to 2S.
Lows
· Tonight...Fair. Low ·in the mid
Sundly.. .Partly cloudy. Lows 10
· 20s. Southeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Sales of
"We have an economy that, while
· Friday.. .Increasing
morning to 20. Highs 20 to 2S. .
previously
owned
homes
fell3.2
perit
isn't
cold, is only lukewarm at preMonday... A chance of snow. Lows
.~loudiness. Rain developing during
cent
in
December,
the
third
straight
sent,"
said
Roben G. Dederick, eco·the aftemoon ... Possibly starting as 20 to 2.5 with highs in the 30s.
decline, and the number of new nomic consultant at the Nonhern
·s.leet. High in the mid 40s. Chance of
claims for jobless benefits rose last Trust Co. in Chicago. "It's not keel'··
week to the highest level in six ing over, but it's no longer really vigorous."
·
. months.
The Labor Department said today
, The repons today were the latest
signs of a weakening economy. The first-time claims for unemployment
• government reported Wednesday that insurance rose by 97,000 to a sea·new home sales had sunk to a seven- sonally adjusted 413 ,000, highest
,ey The Aaaoclatecl Preta
Wyo.;-Pendleton, Ore .; and Salt Lake month low in November and indus- since 416,000 during the week end, . ·Increasing moisture' will return to City, where nearly a foot of snow had trial production was practically flat in ed July 15.
Ohio this evening, bringing precipi- accumulated by early this morning . ~mber.
tation back into the. sllltc.
The temperature in Great Falls,
· The precipitation will start over Mont., was a bone-chilling 13 degrees
southwestern sections of the state and below zero by daybreak.
.
spread north. The precipitation will
In Cincinnati, tho Ohio River,
begin as rain possibly mixed with swollen by rain and melting snow,
.snow south and as snow over north- 'crested at S7.3 feet early today, about
,Ci:n section. Lows will be from 2S to S feet above flood stage.
3u.
The overflow caused few prob.. Temperatures will be slowly Jems in Cincinnati proper, but drove
warming statewide and all of the pre- about 200 families from !heir homes
Cipitation should change to rain by east of the city and in northern Kenli!le Friday. Afternoon highs are tucky. Upriver, in New Richmond,
expected to range from the mid-30s Ohio, water stood 4 feet deep on
north to mid-40s south.
some streets.
·. The rain on Friday will·tum back
Areas of light snow were expectto snow by Saturday as the cold front ed in the Northeast this milrning. And
is pushed across the state.
2 to s inches of light snow could
Across the natioa
spread from the north-central Great
The Ohio River spilled its banks Plains across thc upper Mississippi
early today, throwmg some commu- River Valley and into the Great
nitie1 into ·a state of emergency as Lakes.
«&lt;'"'·~-,
·'"·' """
-~
,~-- ~ ~
," __ .... ~ ·-1-~&gt;.'";.'
.
~
huni)reds were left homeless. ·
·- - Rain showers were expected
In the West, ui)J'Cientmg snow across the central California coastal
~
·~~
~but down highways from northern areas inland to the San Jilaquin ValCalifornia t~ Utah, while five unoe- ley.
·
WATERLOGGED VILLAGE - For the second time in a w•k,
watllr covered str•ta In Rutland Wednesday morning. Hare e
cup1ed vacation homes were damaged
A few light showers were expectmotorist from Jackson County tries his luck traversing the vii·
dunng 10 an avalanche 10 the Sterra ed across Clllltral and southern Florilage's Main Street
mountains in Nevada.
da.
.
Tempetatures today could climb
' It was snowin~ this m?min~ in
Buffalo, N.Y.; Canbou, Ma10e; Pnts- · into the 60s and 70s in the Southeast,
burgh; Des Moines, Iowa; Casper. South and deserts Southwest.

· ·

The Meigs County H~alth Depanmenl advises that residents with
private water wells inundated by Oood waters could have conllllllinated
water.
· Any water supply source which was affected by the flood must be
pro~ny disinfected before use to prevent possible illness to users due
to the contamination. Information on the proper disinfection procedure
is available at the health department. ·
If water is to be used prior to disinfection, it should be boiled for
10 minutes to kill bacteria which may have been introduced into the
system.
,

Deadline for announcing
Candidates who filed for nomination of their respective political
parties in the March 19 primary have until Jan. 31 to submit a picture
and biographical material for publication as a free service of The Daily Sentinel. After that date the material will be accepted as paid political advertising.

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" · · ··

Association makes 1996 plans
The Middlepon Community Association held tb~ir reorganization meeting Wednesday evening, announcing
plans for events during 1996 and participation in an advertising venture.
The group approved a measure to
participate in an advertising commitment with the Meigs County Tourism
board. The ad will appear in the
March issue of ·ohio Magazine,
which will feature a cover story on
Meigs County, according to county
tourism director Karin Johnson.
Emphasis for the ad will be placed
on the fact the village is the "middle
pon" on the Ohio River between
Pittsburgh and Cincinnati, and on the
unique Ohio River Bear Company
which attracts tourists to the do'Wn. town shopping district each year.
Cost for the joint advenisement
will be covered by the Middlepon
Community Association and Susan
Baker, owner of the Ohio River Bear
Company.
The magazine, with a circulati.on
of 83,000, will feature the full page
Meigs County ad on the inside cover
of the March issue of the magazine,
according to Johnson.
Bob Gilmore, former president of
the association, addressed the need to
strengthen the association and gener.ate more enthusiasm about commu't
Is
nt y even .

A membership committee was set
up, chaired by Dick Owen and Chuck
Kitchen, to collect dues from members for 1996. The committee will
also encourage businesses to join the
assOciation and help with contacting
new businesses as they come to
town, Gilmore said.
The association set a date for the
1996 River Festival of the third Saturday in September, and voted to host
the stem wheeler Jewe~City to the festival.
The boat, piloted by Harry Batten
and hased in Kenova, W.Va., will provide rides to festival-goers on the
Ohio River. The boat rides will be
strictly a money maker for the community association, as a percentage of
the profits from Cruise ticket sales will
benefit the group.
'
The group set their next meeting
for March 5, 5:15 p.m.. atlhe meeling room of P.eoples Bank .in Middleport .

-Hospital news

Holzer Medical &lt;;enter
DiKh es Jan 24
Kamman
Lee M argCI des · -d
J ·
, rs. y ayre an son, u1te
Matthews, Mrs. Jamey Calhhan and
son, Nancy Mullins, Margarita AI cordo, Ruth Ingalls, Ashley Fisher.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. David
Beaver, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Units of the Meigs County Emer-' ment and squad to Laurel Cliff Road, Mrs. Larry Henry, daughter, Galgency Medical Service recorded six high-water evacuations, Middleport lipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Brent Myers,
River..~ontin.drrompagel
calls for a5sistance Wednesday. Units VFD and squad assisted with. boat;
.
~on, Middlepon.
' The fast-rising waters drove ~ore sinking deeply into ritud.
responding included:
4:24 p.m., Anne Street, Michael
(Published with pennission)
Rcny, refused treatment.
than 200 families from their homes in
Creeks across southern Ohio overciermont County, eastern Hamilton flowed, forcing closings of roads and MIDDLEPORT '
COLONY THEATRE
&lt;;:ounty and Campbell County in schools.
12:45 p.m., Maples Apartments, · RUTLANQ
TONIGHT '
7:36p.m., state Route 124, Mary
northern Kentucky.
The Hocking River at Enterprise, Bernice L. Swartz, treated at the
ROBIN
WIWAMS IN
Barrell, Holzer Medical Center;
. . Flood emergencies were declared Paint Creek near Chillicothe in cen- scene.
JUMANJI
PG
10:06 p.m., Main Street, Carrie
iii Clermont County, New Richmond tral Ohio and the Great Miami River,
ONE
EVENING
SHOW
7:30
Marshall, VMH.
arid Anderson Township.
just west of Cincinnati, were among , POMEROY
STARTING FRIDAY
In Anderson Township, firefighters waterways cresting Wednesday and
2:20 a.m. , volunteer fire departWALT DISNEY'S
SYRACUSE
evacuated about21 children and nine today.
2:18p.m.,
motor-vehicle
accident
TOYSTORY
G
adults from Altercrest, a group horne
About 14,000 customers of the
on state Route 7, 'Racheal Halley,
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
for troubled children.
Burr Oak water system in Athens,
VMH Chester VFD assisted.·
~
. In New Richmond, water stond as Hocking, Perry and Morgan counties
.
in
southeastern
Ohio
were
told
to
boil
·
Am
Ele
Po......
"
...............
43'4
deep as 4 feet on some streets, About
Akzo ........................................54
one-thirdofthe ISO mobile homes in their water because the water plant
Ashland
011 .............................35
the village's flood plain had been near Glouster was flooded. The plant
AT&amp;T .......................................64
evacuated or moved, Village Admin- said water samples had been sent to
Bank One ..•••......••.••.•.••••.•.•..•36\
istrator David Kennedy said.
the state to be tested, and the order
Bob Evana ............................16'1..
"Everything we · own is in that was expected to last at least another
Borg-Warner ••••... :•••••••••.•.•••••30'1.
Champion Ind •....................:.17'1.
mobile home, We didn't expect this to tw'k~~~~· i~ the southeast Ohio counCharming Shop.....................2"1.
hit like this," said Dorothy Dovard, ties of Vinton, Athens and Meigs were
City Holding ............................ 24
who returned to her trailer to find it
Federal Mogul ....................... 19'!.
closed because of high water.
GanMtt ................................... 63
State officials have Said that preGoodyear TAR ......................45'1.
liminary
d!IITiage estimates to prop-- K-mart .....................................574
The D,iily Sentinel eny in flooded
areas of the Ohio RivLinda End ............................. 13'4
(IJSPS,21:1-MO)
Umlted Inc . ...,....................... t 6\
er had exceeded S16 million and were
Peoplfl
Bllncorp................. 23'1.
expected
to
increase.
Tbe
flood
Published every afternoon. Monday through
Ohio
Valley
Bllnk.................. 36'.&gt;
friday. Ill Coun S1., l'lltnetoy, Ohio, by die
waters damaged more than 2,000
OM Valley............................. 32'4
Ohio Valley ~bUsiUrw CompanyiOunen Co.,
homes and businesses, along with
'II
Pomeroy, auo 4j769, Pit 992-21 S6. .Sft:ond
Rockwall .............................. 511\
dnu p»UlJe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
public buildings.
Robblna a Myera.................... 28
Royal Dutch/Shall .............. 136'.1.
\~ember: The A-lk&lt;l l'lm. &amp;1101 die Ohio
Stloney•a Inc...........................&amp;\
, Newspaper AsiOCillion.
Star Bank ..............................60'0
·•
POSTMAS'I'IItt send lddreu coneccions .0
Wendy lnt'l. ...........................20'.0
1'he Dally Seodaol, Ill Coon Sr., Po......y.
Worthlngton Ind................... 21'•

Meigs EMS logs 6 calls

·OhiO

..... ~, ('Ito

-

- .... ~lo/ 11

01Ja.iting

to@xh~le

'1:20 DAlLY

IRl.-.

ONEHIITORK •OVII''
I. '(N) (ll'[l!ft

-="-u.l9

HI AT

.-

Stocks ·

.

.

Now In Progress

Savings of.20 to 70%

.

Lawmen probe
armed robbery
at Super 8 Motel ·

Ohio 45769.

SVBSCRlP'nON RATES
. ByCanieror--

0.. Week. ................................................ $2.00

Or&lt; Monlh ..... ..................... ..................... $8.70
Ooe Yeor ........................................ ;·:· .. $10\.00

..

SINOLB COPY PR!a

OQ;Iy ......................................... ......... .. 35c-

s~blcriben not dairin&amp; &amp;o plY the Clf1'i!lr may
rtmit in ~1\DCC direct 10 The Dilly Si:minel
C* 1 three.IIX or 12 month bull. o.lit will bt
pyeo cllrier cocb - "
H• oebocriptlon by mall pennlttcd In ..,..
where home cltrier Jef'YiOD ~IIVIiJIItle.

:

-

MAIL SIIISCIIIPTIONS
t - Melp C..,-·

'

~

~=::: ::: : ::::::::::::::: ::::::: ::::::::::: ]~I~

52 Weob. ....................... ~......... :........... $105.56
-~MelpC..,

'If,

Water system advisory

· ~emetery.

·More rain, sleet forecast
:f or parts of Buckeye State

advenisements that summarized
prospectus information. That ide~
was shelved by the SEC last year. ,
Then, there has been the 'develo~
ment of a "profile" prospectus. Th!!}
too would summarize what's in a
fund's prospectus.
'
.
But even though shortening .a
fund 's prospectus might sound like a
great idea, study after study sh?w~
that most mutual fund investors lll'!:
hungry for educational material, and
that the best investors are informed
and educated investors.
With those two points in min~~·
Vanguard has taken one giant step ir(
helping those interested in their fu~
to become better educated investorS.'
And they've done so through the on.e,
piece of reading material most woul~
like to side-step: the prospectus.
Dian Vujovich is the author of
• "Strai11ht Talk About Mutul.r
Funds" and "Siralcbt TaiJI;. AboU~
lnvestin11 for Your Retltemeat;"•
both of which a"' published ~f
McGraw Hut. Sead ~ tilo
her In care of this newspaper.· ' ·.~·
·
'·"

JII'Oil'UI, ..~........

Memorial senrices for Jack M. Braley, Sr. who died Jan. 19. 1996 at his
residence will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at the family's residence, 130 Laurel Street, Pomeroy.

Economy shows sign of weakening

'. ~ (

i

Pomeroy police cited one person in 8 two-car accident Monday •
afternoon, 84:Cording to police chief Gerald Rought.
The accident occurred at 2:40 p.m. when Mary J. Murray, 63,
Racine was stopped at the intersection of Wolf Drive and Spring Ave.
Kathy Pickens, 26, Pomeroy was stopped behind Murray, when Murray failed to see Pickens while she was backing, striking Pickens vehi·
cle.
·
Damage to Murray's 1992 Olds was light, while damage to Pick·
ens' 1989 Chevy Cavalier was moderate.
Murray was cited for failure to assure clear distance.

·William E. 'Bill' Dow

Sunny Pl. C/o::ty Cloudy

.'

~

Jack Bailey

W.VA.

,

briefs-~

•

Pomeroy police probe accident

f

IND.

Forbes under·fire_·-~---.....' --~~;

A Washington ritual helps explain
what is happening to Steve Forbes'
campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. Normally, hundreds of politicians would like to be
president. Only one makes it •- by
dint of hard worJ&lt;, slm:wdness, intelligence, end1tr4Dce, luck and sometimes wiSdom. But many of the former )Vannalle candidates and the
press put out the word about the poor
man: "What a jerk!" (So what does
that make all the other people who
wanted to be president?)
In the Forbe~ case, there were platoons of Republicans who considered
running for the nomination. Nine
actually announced, including Forbes,
who was airily· cJismissed· as a
"polopopulist'' and "Richie Rich."
Now ~ is the hottcst,political property inAmerica.,OIJ thecovetof'lbnc,
New.Week and Ponurie. And what is
the line now about Forlles7 We are
lltst p~sideotial nell's conference often told that be is a "deril," a
' !
...
"seek" and "awkward." (What does
4
...
;' '
.,.t.._ 4
wllmen folklwen ~ convwted io thai lllllt:e the ~? Send them
ui the .i96? slayjl!is~!!f seven peo- SOI!IC! nerd pills.) we are told thai he
·is both "lnexpeiieoced" and "zeailatage by Iran for 444 days llrived in OUI."1bat he is "programmed" an~
"buying" the election. That Ilia Oat~r: is "lllllly,'' IIIII that "ihQ
n '
d9n't add \lp." No.wonder.
After all, he is a "supply-sider,"

'

PA.

·r

Vanguard clarifies its prosp~ctus~~.-.

By Ben Wattenberg

r---Local

AccuWeuJler8 forecast for

'

'LstD{;6s/io{ in 1.948

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

OHIO Weather
Fridlly, J1111. 26

Thuraday, January 25, 1196

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

13 - ................... ... .......................... $29.25
:16Weeb................................................. $$6.61
J2, - - ....... :......................................... SIOP.7l

The Gallipolis Police Department
and the Gallia County Sheriff's
Department . were dispatched to
• Super 8 Motel, 321 Upper River Rd.,
at I: 19 a.m., 'Ibursday following a
repon of an anned ro~ry.
According to a press. release
issuCcl' this momins. a black male
wearing a ski mask entered the lobby area of the motel carrying a handgun, and deDianded mohey. .
A motel guest was struck by the
suspect after enterins the lobby. Gallia County BMS resporided to the
scene ' but the guest did not require
treatment.
Thc_su,jte!;t fled the scene with an
ull\lCtcrmined amounc, of cash.

on Men's and Women's Fine
Wearing Apperal

-·-·-

Stock report• ere the 10:30
a.m. quot" provldacl by AdviSt
of Gallipolis.

. BAHR CLOTHIERS
,

145 N. 2nd Middleport

992-2351
Middleport

i

�•

: SpOrts

The Daily Sentiriel
.

.

Basketball

"

Ohio men's
coUeae scores

NBA standings.

-C..AtWollcCootf.
Cue w-.. n,~Ceoyoo n

W......,

llooiJoo 74, Oboo-tin 6?
Eaolblm 74, Ohio
WOOIICrll. 0\llqbeoy S1

EASTERN (:ONFERENCE
A-ot.w.
ll L lsi.

Ita

10 ·"""
IS .62S
Wuhift&amp;IOD ............ I9 Zl .475
Miimi ....................l8 22 .4SO
Newlmey .......... .. l6 Z4 · .400
Bosoon ....................I.S 25 .m

Gl

Orlondo .......•........•. JO
New Ymt .............. %5

1'11iladelpbia ............. 7 32 .179

.

10.5
Adoota ...................:Ll 17 .575 13.5
CLI!VI!LANIL ....:!2 18 .SSO 14..!
lletloit .................... 20 18 .526 IS.S
(]wlolto ......._....... l9 20 .487
17
Milwaukee ....., ....... IS 2-4 .38!1
21
Torootn ..................l2 28 .JOO 2.4.5

14

Son Antooio ..........26 13
Ullh .... ...................26 13

.667
.667

.5
.5

Denver ....... ....... .....16 24

.400

II

Oallu ..................... IJ
Minoeaota .............. ll

2S .342

28 .282
Vancouver ...............9 31 .22S
l'l&lt;tii&lt;Dbbloo

Seadle ................... :28 II

13

.71.8

lriiCI.

Auoc. ol Mideut CoUeceo

Dave Nilsson, archer, to • one-yelr contract.
.

Genqeto\m 67,11ctheJ.T... 66

Hilhfud 76, Copley 61 .
Hudaon 74, Tallmadse 37

T9nl&amp;bt's aimea

51

V~~M»UwtarTcwooto, 8:30p.m.

Delroit 11 Dallal, I:JO p.m.
Denver • 1:-A- Clippcn. 10:30 p.m.
54

Friday's J1811MS

Orlando 1t ArlaNa. 7:30p.m.
PhoeniA 11 Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.

p.m.

Big Ten standings
c.nr. .

Overoll

ll L fl:l. ll L lsi.

14 I .933
14 4 .778
14 5 .737
II 7 .611
10 8 .556
12 7 .632
14 4 .778
10 8 .556
13 6 .614
I 7 .533

.667
.667
3 .571
3 .SOO
.M - .....2 4 .3]3
lltiooil ...........2 ' ..216
OHIOST.......I 5 .167
NOflll-.1 5 .167 6 9 .400
Weclnetdsy's aeons
11Hnoii77,0HIOSTATE46
MlchipnS111068. NOflll-54
WiiCOIIJin 73. Minneoota 65 (01)
...... State 87. Punlue 77

~~

Sooday's pme
Michi1aa at Iowa

MAC standings
c.nr.

30

.ooo

3

New Albuy 55. Millersport 5 I (()"0

Keith Gllberuon auiltaal defensive
coach.

Richmond Edison $8, Toronro '2
Rock Hill ~8. Franklin Furnace Oreen

Nomed Mark Aoanol'ich

WadswMh 65, Re•en: 58

I .933

l .BOO
7 .611
6 .600

7 .533
9 .400
6 .600
10 .444
10 .m
14 .m

Stnlt!JI•illo 79, Modina 73
1ipp Oty 52. Sidney l.chmaD J9
Tot Calholic S9, Tol. Bowlher 47
Tol. N... Dame: 87, Tol. Woodwllrd

21

INDIANA STATE: Named Bruce
Cowdrey offenaive line cmch llld. football
r~lriD&amp; coordina!or. Relllllgned Bill
Dudley to off'cmivcc:oordiaaror.
MISSISSIPPI: Suspended Anou Sesay,
Jolu\ Jacbon and Jon Cantrell. foowonb,
ond Kenny Dawo, JWd. 1oom the baoltet·
blll1c:am for brtakinc tcun rukl.

AtloatkDI•IIIoo!

rll L I f!ll. lif
N.Y. Roaam ..... 29 11 9 67 1111

\

•Meigs Marauders
•Eastern .· Eagles
•Southern Tornadoes

.
.
.
.
=

Nei1tl1 I If Dhillon

JO 14
a-................19 II
Balrlilo............... l9 23
llatl0nl ............. l7 .24
Oooawo .................8 36

3
6
3
'
I

63
44
41
:19
17

~111¥-

li:::..........JJ \ J ra M·~
135
165 "

T -..............22 17 8 52 147 137.
5I. Lotoio ............ l919 I 46 125 129
Wl,..,. .......... JO Zl 4 .. 169 174
llolllli................ J3 2310 ·)6 12'1" 162

' Soticta. .

, _ ~ilw I !6,.)Coilooal Cltdliao_·
)'"

I

. . ... $$

158
159
147
142
184

wrsntRN CONJ'EilENCE.

"""-,a. TOUI ADI61 Can

. uaA-.-Otln .

229
155
ID
120
103

............21 19 6 48 140 144

lltl0aso...............2A IS 10 58

.' ..=r::rr"'i"~
.-.n.aJiw..,lla "

li&amp;

,·,..-

Colondo .....,......%5 14 I 5I Ill 133
CaJi1r1 ""'""""'''17 22 9 43 143 lSI

v -...........161911 · 43
1M Aat~~w ....... l621 II 43
... • ..........1724 6 40
"""""""17:11 ' :19
S.Jc. .............I03J 4 2A

161
160
119
135
143

159
161
112

161

215
&lt;

,,

•

Rely ·On Us For
Co1nplete Coverage Of Yo r
F· vorite sport and.Tea•
THE DAILY SENTINEt
'

'

..

'

away from a 46-441ead in the last 14
No. 15 UCLA 99
1/2 minutes. Harold Deane scored 28
Southern Clllifornia
points for the Cavalielli.
UCLA shot a schooJ ..reconl 73
No. 11 North Carolina 82
percenl from the field 'and Charles
FlOrida State 71
O'Bannon scored 27 points during a
Dante Calabria had 19 paints as testy game at Pauley Pavilion.
North Carolina beal host Aorida
The Bruins (13-4, 6· 1 Pac- 10),
State for the ninth straighl time.
who lead the nation in field· goal per·
Vince Carter, Jeff Mcinnis and centage at 51.8, shot 85 percent in
Shammond Williams each had 13 for the first half. They finished 38-forlheTar Heels (14-4, 5-1 ACC).A 12- 52 - including II of 14 by O' Ban0 spurt spanning the last 3:33 of the non - and broke the team record of
ftrst half and the fii'St3 :43 of the sec- .667 (40.for·60) set last February al
ond half gave North Carolina the California.
lead for good.
UCLA" guard Kris Johnson and
No. 12 Memphis 86
Southern Cal forward Jaha Wilson
Alabama·Binningbam 77
. were ejected afler a verbal co.nLorenzen Wright's 21 points and frontat ion early in the second half.
12 rebounds led Mtmphis at home. · J.R. Henderson had 17 poinls and
The gl!llle was tied at 74 with 2:18 Toby Bailey 16 for the Bruins:
left, but Mingo Johnson made four
Mississippi 82 .
foul shots down the strelch as the
No. 21 Auburn 69 ·
Tigers (13·3, 4-1 Conference USA)
Keith Carter, one of only eighl
pulled away. Carlos Williams scored Mississippi players in unifonn,
27 points for Alabama.. Binningham. scored 23 points for the Rebels.
No. 14 Penn State 87
Before the game, Ole Miss coach
No. 19 Purdue 77
Rob Evans annonuced 1ha1 four
Penn State took over sole posses- players were suspended for breaking
sion of fillit place in the Big Ten with team rules. Another player left the
a win at home. Pete Lisicky scored team for personru reasons, and two
13 points, including 10 in a row for others fouled out.
the Nittany Lions in the middle of ·
Mississippi (6·9, I ..s) scored 18
the game.
slraight points early in the first half
Penn State ( 14·1 , 5·1) beat .a and stopped a five-game losing
ranked team for the first lime this slreak. Auburn (15·4, 3·3), ranked
season. Roy Hairston had 14 for Pur- for the first time since I 988, has lost
due (14.. 4, 4-2).
three straighl SEC road games.

n

Trammell to remain
with Tigers in 1996

•

~

securi~ TWOarr~a~n.ty

Meigs County
Winter Sports Programs
.

supposed to. I just had a bad game.
There are going to be games lilce
that"
In other college games, No. 2
Kentucky defeated Georgia 82· 77,
No. 7 Villanova beat Providence 69..
65, No. 9 Wake Forest downed Vir..
ginia 81-64, No. II Nonh Carolina
topped Aorida State 8:1... 71, No. 12
Memphis beat Alabama.. Binningham 86-77, No. 14 Penn State
defeated No. 19 Purdue 87..77, No.
I 5 UCLA trounced Southern CaJi..
fomia 99·72, Maryland stopped No.
18 Clemson 65-60 and Mississippi
upended No. 21 Auburn 82·69.
No. 2 Kentucky 82
Georgia 77
Tony Delk scored 29 points and
Kentucky won at Georgia for its 15th
straight victory.
The Wildcats (16-1, 6..() South..
eastern Conference) led 59-45 with
16 minutes left, but Georgia tied it at
65 with 8:43 remaining. ·Walter
McCarty helped preserve an 80· 77
edge in the closing seconds when he
rebounded a missed foul shot and
bounced the ball off a Georgia play..
er out of bounds.
Georgia. ranked No. 14 earlier
this season, lost for the fourth time
in five games. Bulldogs coach Thb·
by Smith was an assistant to Ken·
tucky coach Rick Pitino from 198991.
No. 7 Villanova 69
Providence 65
Villanova overcame a five-point
deficit in the last three minutes and
won the fln;t game played on its new
parquet floor at the duPont Pavilion .
Jason Lawson scored 18 points,
six down the stretch, and Kerry Kitdes had I 5 for the Wil&lt;k:ats (IS-3, 62 Big East). Derrick Brown had 29
points on 12-of-18 shooting for
Providence.
No. 9 Wake Forest 81
ViraiJUa 64
Tim Duncan, beating the zone
defense Virginia set up to stop him,
scored 20 points for host Wake For·
est.
The Demon Deacons (13· 2, 5· 1
Atlantic Coast Conference) pulled

( John Carroll gets win &amp;
•.·~ .r ecaptures OAC summit

'

Best Wishes To All Our

135
12 ~ 63 164 121
Philadclphia ....... 2A 12 II 59 163 119
Waololn11on........ 21 19 5 47 127 117
T-8ay .......,20187 47135151
Newletae)' ........2022 4 44 119 116
N.Y. 111-. ....IZ 25 I 32 129 169

NB-73.1.-41.

. NWIIt

Fo,r all additional information, call 992·2697, or stop by our office at 112 ,
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio. ·

Plorida ............... 29

~,,_,.

,.....,~52· -c

'

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.......
•

.

You m.-y also register at the following locations: Meigs County Department •
of Human Services, Meigs County WIC Office, Bureau of Motor Vehicles,
Board of MRIDD, Meigs County Library, Middleport Public Library, Meigs
County Treasurer's Office, and all area high schools~ You may register on the ' •
Meigs County BOokmobile at Its designated stops.

.

NHL standings

."" «St. 61. '*~• ' St. ~'
N.-91,S.IIboil65

,.

DUKE: Named '8ob Troll derensive

coordinator ud ~ive backs coach.

Hockey

w•-•1. Vupaio64

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

Collqe

52

VL Co•••wCaldl 73, "AIItCrlc:u
Uaidl

· ~~·

Mikael Renbcra. riahr winJ. oa the In·
jwodliM.
·

Wi-BO,S....-29
Xeaia47,Clnoeooo42
Zlneol'ille R - 61, Col. Hatley

Seutb
Atlllin Peay71, Morobad St. 65
C-111, Wol!ord62
a-lootoo Saulbcna 91. Coutol Caloliaa71
.1!a11 Caroli• II, Ric:ltmood 65
Florida77,V-It55
Ge&lt;qjo ,._ 95, William &amp; Mill' 92
OeorJia Tech 76, N. Caroliaa St. 71
~ 82, OeorJI• 77
Louitvillo6l,St. Louis 57
.
M......_. 65, Clemooe 60
~16. Ab.·Binni ....... 77
Mlddlio Teen. 88, Sooot11on 73
MIIIINi.... 82. Auburn 69
N.C.!AJhiville 83, WiMhlop 65
N.C:~ 73, Radford 68
- Caroliull. .,_St. 71
OldDomiaiolmi.J.... IIIIdiloo45
s. c.n.JIM St. 83, ~ 65
- c-tiaa 77. Mlailaillli St. 69

' .._,.,,.....,.1 ' .

•
•

Jacquu Martin coidl.

so.

OeotJdown !U. S)'I'ICOie 64
Holy Crou 77, For-. 64
J.afa)'CII&lt;I 84, Lehi&amp;h 64
Navy 75, Army 44
PeoaSt. 87, ....... 17
Villaaova 69, Providcace 65

1 •'

Cornwall of &amp;he AHL.

Tol. Scott 64, Tol. Ropn 51

Eut
Bucltaoll &amp;l, Colpte 75

Ff

COLOR,o\00 AVALANCHE: Re·

Tel. Sl. Ursula 6S, Tal. Ubbr:y 41
Tol. Sran Sl, Tol. Waire 31
Tri· Val~} 48, Crollk.nille 44
Valley Fqe 62, Mealor 43
Varn~lloo S8, Midvicw 29
W. Geaup 52, Wicklffe :18
W. MUJitinpm 46, Sheridaa 44
w..... lltrdi•a You. Eut 30 .
wcm..,.. 59, Clearview 49
We.tavme N. S3, Dublin Coffman 49

NCAA Divsion I
men's scores

.

ey Lape

called Aaron Miller, defenseman, from

River View 49, John Glenn lS
Ri•cnide 61. Aahlltbulo Ed&amp;ewood 29
Rot:ky Ri.., 37, N. OlnutCII 36
Rootllown ''· Field S2
Sandu1ky ~S. Lorain Southview 42
Shodyoida 42, Cameron, W.Va. 20
Solon 48, Weatlake 4t
Sprin1. Soutlt :18, Cenlcrl'illo 37

Salurda:y's pmes

t

OffeR·

8:30 a.m. tin 5:00 p.m.
8:30 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
8:30 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
8:30 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
8:30 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
8:30 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
8:30 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.

24-houre~~

Yofk41

Akron Ill Bowlin&amp; Green
Kent ... E. Micbiaaa
Miemi at Ball $1.
Ohio II Cent. Michl&amp;•
Toledo • W. Mldllpo

.

January 29-February 1:
February 2:
February 5-8:
February 9:
. February 12·15:
February 1~:
February 20:

Dally Sentinel • ·page 5

Aw, getting help from teammate
Jerry Nichols, shut .out Wallace for
the game's fillit 7:48. Near the end of
the game, Aw and Wallace lined up
next to each other on the foul line.
· ~
.
;
PUSHING THE BA!-L Into the line patt Illinois' Jerry Gee (right)
"I told him 'You don't get what
Ia the talk of the moment lor Ohio State'e Jennalne Tate during you used to get,' and he said it took
Wedneadlly nlghl'1 Big Ten conteat In Champaign, Ill., where the Ull· a team effort to shut him down," Aw
nl Won 77-48. (AP)
said. "I said, 'No, it was just one-on·
one, you and I. I don't have nobody
helping.' He was smiling, but I knew
he was unhappy."
Aw did not score a single point,
missing his only shot. But the
defense played by the 6-foot· 7 112
·.
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) -llli· to sustain good play. Bul we're
sophomore on the 6· 8 Wallace
·: nois coach Lou Henson says he headed in the right direction."
earned plenty of praise from TholllP'
Illinois jumped to a IJ.() lead
' understands exactly what Ohio State
son.
.
coach Randy Ayers is going through. over the Buckeyes in the first five
"I thi nl, Boubacar and Jerry did
"When you have young people, minutes and held· a 23-3 lead afler an excellent job on Wallace,"
particularly on the road. it's.tough, .. ·just nine minutes. Ayers called time· · Thompson said. "Boubacar so much
Henson said Wednesday after Illinois outs and made substitutions, liul Dli·
so that he gol but of the context of
romped Ohio State 77-46. "It was a nois' stining defense and hot shoot·
our team defense. He was so fired
case of youth going against experi- ing proved too·much.
up."
ence ."
·
With guard Kiwane Garris back
'
Allen Iverson scored 26 points
.
Even though Ohio State (8· 7 in the lineup, the lllini have won two and Othella Harrington 23 for the
: overall, I·S Big Ten) started three straight conference games - after host Hoyas (17-2, 7-1 Big East).
· freshmen and a sophomore. Ayers five earlier losses.
Syracuse (13-5, 4-4) has lost three in
. said he expected his team to do betAyeri said he saw a big difference a row and five of seven.
in Illinois' play with Garris back.
· ler.
"lbey played good defense on
· " There's a reason for (Illinois' us," Wallace said. "And we didn'l
"I thought we were well-prepared
; to play lhis game. Obviously, llli- poor conference start)," he said. execute our offense the way we're
• nois' start hurt our chance of devel- "They were playing without one of
: oping any rhythm," Ayers said . the best P,Oint guards in college bas.
: "Tonighl. it just snowballed and got ketball."
: away from us."
Ryan Blackwell came ·orr the
1be game's outcome was never in bench to lead Illinois witb 14 points,
: doubt. The Buckeyes trailed 43·16 at all in the second half. Jerry Hester
P.S.: Remember,
: halftime, and Dlinois (13-6, 2·S) and Garris added 12 points each.
keep this our
• forced a total of 2S turnovers.
Ohio State was led by Jennaine By BRIAN S. AKRE
of my motives about playing again.
secret.
- "Our defense· was excellent.'' Tate with nine points . .
DETROIT (AP) - Everybody I want to learn from somebody
: Henson said. "Ohio State has good
The Dlini shot 42 percent from the seemed 10 think 1995 was Alan else."
· players aJ)d ran a good pattern, but field, while the Buckeyes hit only 29 Trammell's last year witb the Detroit
: oul'. playel's "'c'an' \:1\use tliem some percent of their shots. Illinois outre- Tigers.
.
· problems; We're not going to play bounded Ohio State 4842.
Except for Alan nammell.
; like this every night because il's hard
The veteran shortstop and tbe
Tigers said Wednesday that he 'II be
back this season as a utility player.
''I'm going to be around for one ·
more year, and I'm not goinf 10 say .
this is going 10 be it, guys,' Tram·
mell saicJ. "It very well could be, bul
I'm
going to see how it goes."
your
d
•: John Carroll found its touch again the Pioneers.
Trammell,
who turns 38 next
D I our Roa
lason Hayes, who was 13·for· l7
: : and found itself back in sole posses·
otters
: : sion of first place in the Ohio Con- from the floor," scored 28 points and month, also will assume something
Of
a
player-coach
role,
helping
develHazan.o
c1s·de ~
grabbed 17 rebounds to lead Mari:· ference.
·
op
Betroit's
younger
players.
And
.
you
r'epair,
etta.
The Blue Streaks were 31-for-62
the
Tigers
have
guaranteed
him
an
Ryan Stumpf led the Crusaders
: : from the floor for SO percen1
assistance, fre t &amp; more!
: : Wednt.$day night in defeating Hei" with 13 polnts. Capilal , which unspecified role once IUs playing
full replacemen
: · delberg 82· 73. Their perfonnance missed all 15 of its . three-point days end.
"We feel that Alan still can con· : was in sharp contrast to their previ- attempts, shot 35 percent from the
tribute
in a variety rif ways on the
: : ous effort. when they went 19·for..65 field while Mariela madeSI percent
'field,"
general manager Randy
: • for 29 percenl Saturday while losing of its attempts.
Ohio NortJ!em beat Otterbein "67· Smith said. "Once his playing career
": 78-56 to Marietta.
•. Jeff Sesplankis scored 18 points 59, Hiram edged Muskingum S6·55 is over, we look forward to ulilizing
~ · for John Carroll, which took a 43-40
and Mount Union downed Baldwin· his experience and expertise."
Trammell wore a first baseman's
:: halftime lead by scoring nine slraight Wallace 76-66 in other OAC games.
glove
10 the news conference. He
: : points at the end of the first half and
Elsewhere in Ohio college bas·
said
he
will head to spring training
ke1ball Wednesday, Case Western
· : never trailed again.
:
That nm followed a 14-2 spurt by defeated Kenyon 82· 72, Denison in Aorida nexl month and prepare
:· the Student Princes, which had giv.. was a 74-67 victor over Oberlin, himself for playing as a backup first
·, en Heidelberg a 40·34 lead. Josh Earlham go1 past Ohio Wesleyan 74· or second baseman .
"I know people are going to say,
~ Murphy led Heidelberg with 17 64 and Wooster ripped Allegheny
'Whal
is this guy doing?' But I still
82-57 in North Coasl Conference
=~ points.
have
the
desire 10 compete, and that's
•
John Carroll (12 .. 5'overall) is 8·3 games. Conference leader Wi!len·
bottom
line. And whether or not
the
~ in 1he OAC. Capital. which had been berg was idle.
I
get
in,
I
think
I'm still going to be
: tied for the league lead, fell back to
Thomas More posted an 87· 70
;. second place at 7-4 with Ohio.Nonh- victory over Wilmington in the Asso- recognized as one heck of a player
for a long period of time."
':. em and Marietta bv. losing 60-57 10 cialion of Mideas1 CC?IIeges.
The only season in which Tram·
1~1ell played a position oilier than
~ ·~A
(Continued from Page 4)
shortstop was 1993, when he took on
;:· IV114
•••
a utility role after recovering from a
game's top scorer with 29.
;' nals the lead for good at 47-46.
broken ankle the previous season. He
Only . . .... . . .. .. . . ,5 79
60Month Low
Kent ggt within 84·82 with 10 played third base and the outfield
!·· He added"two more free throws
Maintenance
~· with 14 seconds remaining to make seconds remaining, but a free throw before reluming to his regular posi·
Battery
Up to 530" cca 0 0" F (835 ca
· •: lhe score 54-SO and led Ball State by Kenny Drake clinched the victo- tion at mid seasOn.
0
31" F). (493320) 44.99
~ with nine rebounds. Antonio Daniels ry for Central Michigan.
Trammell deClined to say how
without t rade~in .
I'H8te - · - :: with 17 points was the only player in
much he:will be paid, but acbiowl·
4DMonthlow
Akron's all-freshman starting edged it will~ less than the $1 mil·
&gt;double figures for the Falcons.
PEAKe
Mlllntenance Battery
Be
prepare
d
ANnFREEZE 1r
;: Sad&lt;li Washington's performance ' lineup had one of its best games of lion he got last year. He had .223 at·
Up to 350 « a@ 0" F (450 ca
for
w1nter
COOLANT
0 31" f) (493478) 37 .99
•: in the closing moments made; the dif· the season, but fell sliort against bats in 74 games in 1995, hitting
dnving'
1 gallon (351692).
without trade·in. JZ.99 with
:: ference for Wes.tem Michigan in its Toledo, which was led by Casey .269 with two homers and 23 RBis.
triOde-ln.
;. victory over Ohio. He came off the Shaw's 18 points.
The Tigers had the third,worst
Kevin Covert had 18 for lhe record il) the American League last
.; bench to score seven of his 10
Zips. who led 29·26 at halflime.
:: poinls in the final four minutes.
year.
Akron went on a 15·6 run and
:: Ben Handloglen led the Broncos
Trammell said he thought about
::with 16 points, while Geno Ford had tied the score at 58-58 with 3:43 retiring only because everyone else
~.--111,,..,
remaining on a lhree·pointer by in baseball, including the Tigers,
··25 for the Bobcats.
:: Three players had more than 20 Scott Gooden. But a basket by Shaw assumed '95 would be his last seapoints apiece for Central Michigan put the Rockets back on top 60-58 at son. But duripg the offseason. he
·~ .agaiasl Kent. Charles Macon and the 3:17 1118(k and Craig Thames, . decilled he still wanted to play.
~:J'i'ate Huffman had 23 points and who scored 16 poiols, added a free
Last month. he publicly expressed
Windshield Wuher
his anger with management when he
~-Aaron Brown scored 22. D.J..Bosse throw to make it 61'-ss with 2:16 to
72 Month Po-r Pro Plus htterv
Solvent
Up to 875 cca 0 o• F (1175 ca o 32" f).(74344])
~(If the Golden Aashes was the go.
learned through a newsp11per story
I gal. (368712)
64.99 without trade~n.
,.
.. •
that he was being considered for a
non-playing job.
,
But Trammell said Wednesday
that he was excited about working
with new manager· Buddy Bell in
what is expected ,to be a rebuilding .
Prlat good 'lhnday, ... ·~ 25 thraugh s.tunlalf, J-.ry 27. ,,., .
year.
i
"Buddy Bell js young, he's now,
he's going to have different ideu. l
PLAZA
SILVER
want to pic~!!ls brain: ... That's one

, llli.n ois tallies 77-46 win
::over young OSU squad

The Board of Elections will be ·open the following additional hours for your
convenience.
.
_
·

-•ath and coa·

OTTAWA SENATORS: Named
PHILADBLI'HIA FLYERS: PIIOCCI

.

Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at the Board on Election Day
by changing your address (if you bave moved within the county) or if you .~
have changed your name, by updating. your registration by February 20. 1996.

Jrei Trdilov. &amp;oaltendcr. 10 Roclater of
the AHL for 11 rwo-week condirioaina period.

Mayol'ille 68, Pl1i 0 46
Miami Tnce 43, Day. Stebbino 36
Midpaott 37, N. Rnyaltoo33
Minena 60, Caoion S. 29
New l..eliaaton 51, M&lt;qnn46 (OT)
Newbuoy l?rKlnlond 25
Ottoville 67, Fort Jnninp Sl
PaOOa 41, Ooardon ND.CL 34
Pamta 37, w.....,.,;u. Ht1. 36
Petry 70.I'ymaluniOJ v... 59 (OT)
Reedavllle Ea1tern 69, Nelsonville·

Ball St. 54. Bowtiaa Gtocn so
Cent. Micltipn 85, JC..t 12
E. Mlchipn 73, Miloni 60
Toledo 67. Altroo 61
W.Michl... 66, OHIO 59

·~·

Natloool

points."'

'

BUFFALO SABRES• Aulped An·

Oammavllle 67. Woodridp 48
OriQit Vol. S), Ledpmont 44
Ha1111ibQI River 58, Frontier 35
Holy N.,. 76, a,-131
JefTenoe. 11 ,'Asbtnbuhr. 32
Jeffenon Am 71 , Ashtabula Oty 32
Laltownod 57. E. Cle,.lond Shaw 48
Lopn 62, Cheshi"' Ri•er Vol. 39
Lorain Adm. Kiq 38. N. Ridaeville

Weclnetday'siCOI'el

•

'S;;.--Rr

:!~:

•

Toledo, Bowling Green, Ball State ~
and Western Michigan - bunched •
up in second at 4· 3. Then come KenI :
and Ohio at 3-4, Central Michigan at .:
2-S and Aleron trailing the pack at().. ~
7.
,
In other MAC games Wednesday .
night, Ball State edged Bowling ~
Green S4- SO, Western Michisan got .
by Ohio 66--59, Central Michigan •
nipped Kent 85-82 and Toledo held :
off Aleron 67-61.
The conference's top scorer, Ball '
State's Bonzi Wells, had something ;
of an off night with 16 points against
Bowling Green, but still led both ::
teams in points. A free lhrow by ,
Wells with 4:13 left gave the Cardi- :
(See MAC oa Paae 5)
:

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE MARCH 19,1996 PRIMARY ELECnON
YQU MUST BE·REGISTERED BY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1996.

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS:

MIIIIICIII 84, H.-vcy 47
. Mapifical65, Elr.·a 51

o-.JI
l!Lll&amp;.l!Lll:l.

1

Nonoa 71 , Green~

.

llllnoil ar Northwestern
lndiooa at Penn Stale
Michigan S~a~e at MiaBeSOta
OHIO STATE II Purdue

o

-.FOad.u~

E. I&lt;Do&amp;43, Wclti- 27
Elyria W. 42, Keyltone 38
falrllom 54, Wayne 44
f"uelando SO, Oberlin 45 (01)
Garfield IIIJ. ~3. Normandy 28
Glrl".eld Hts. Trinity IOS. Lab Cath.

41

Saturday's pmes

Akron ...•........

Foot6aU
MINNESOTA VIKINGS: Named .
Foae Fazio defeuive coonliDMor.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS: Named

.

Atron Spriq. S8, MarliDJlon S4
Amllcnt Steele 51, Lonia Cath. n
AoJwabula H.....,. 63, Gcae•a 32
Avoa S6, Brooklide47
Bamaville 56, Shenaadoab 43
Deal«&lt; Local 51, Richmond Etli101143
Bea•ermolt 94, ¥.•s. North 37
Beoea43,Btocka.. lle40
Berbhino 59, FoiJpon 30
Briaol43, Cardinal 39
Canal Fltlton NW 57, Carrolltoa 46
Caaton McKlnley 36. Clo. lleishiJ 30
Clllnlon 56, !llanlon 43
Clo. Cadtotic 53, Elyria Cadi. 43
Clo. Nonhwat 57, CortoiMon 46
Clo. Sautbeut57, Mopdore SO
C1overk:af S2, Brunwiclt 49
Col. DeSa1rs 55, Col. Rady 43
Col. W111en0n 57, Nown Cath. 55
C...twood 48, W-loo 40
Day. Dunbar 133, Day. Belmonl-41
Day. Panmon 70. Day. Mcadnwdale

PortiiDd • Saa Aatoaio, 8:30p.m.
Urah at se.~. 10 p.m.
Sacnmento ar Goldea Stare. IO:JO

E. Mich.........7 0 1.00 · 14
Miomi ............4 3 •.!71 12
Toledo ...........4 3 .571 II
BGSU ....... .-....4 l .S71 9
8~1 St ......... ..4 3 .571
8
W. Mich ........4 3 .571 6
ICetO ...............) 4 .429 9
OHIO ............3 4 .429 · 8
Cent. Mich. ...2 5 .286 5

jured lisr. Placed Steve Schef11er, cenll!r,
on the iajuted lilt. ·

Obio H.S. girls' scores

Miami II Cbi"''I,=,.f;m.
L.A. ~...aka~ II Phi
' L 8p.m.

Acrivllf-

ed Oetlef Schmnpf, l'ooward, from the i•

School of Arta 64, School of Science

"

Indiana at Bolloo, 1:lO p.m ·
ChorlolteMNewltney, 7:30p.m.

X..

BMketbd A ru clelion

Jac:Uon74, Polnl (W.Va.) Pleuanr 67
NelaonviDe-Yort 69. Hemlock Miller

Houlloa II' WubiD&amp;tOU. 7:30p.m.

2
2

Basketball
Nil.,_.
SEATn....E. SUPERSONICS:

Cia. McNicholas SI, Ketla"ina Alter

so

Utlh 100. Goldea Stal019

Michigon .......4

and Bm: Buberie, infielden, to
minor·le.q;ue c:omncu.

Cin. MDriemont 93, Cin: Walnut Hilla

Seanlell6. Dea&gt;er 79

lttdlana .... ......4
Mlchipn St... 4
WlsconJin .....4
Iowa ...•.•..•..... )

CHICAGO CUBS: Sianed Leo

Oo~z

AkronStV-Sr.M S?. Akron Hoban J:\
Barbenon 101, Uncoln-Wesr79
Buci&lt;e&gt;el.ocal 53, Bea.tr LocAl ~9

s . . - 84

Punlue ...........4

NalioaoiLeope

Obio H.S. boys' scores

lndi-9'7, Mil-19

I .8Ji
2 .667
2 .667

Jeaaue cootract.

NOJlooCOIIIennce play

told coach John Thompson that he
would shut down John Wallace. Lat·
er, he even told the Syracuse star
how he did it.
· Aw slowed the high-scoring Wal·
lace for most of the night. Ieiding
No. 6 Georgetown over the 17th"
ranked Orangemen 83·64 Wednes·
day night for its 14th win. in 15
games.
Wallace, averaging 23' points,
was limited to 17, and six of them
came in the last I 0 minutes when the
outcome was no longer in doubt.
"We talked in practice, and coach
told us that he was the focus of his
offense, and I just told him I was
willing to guard him," Aw said. " I
j11st volunteered.! told the coach 'Let
me guard him. Let me guard him 40
minutes, and . he won't have his

OF MEIGS COli if?

YOU I

BLUE JAYS: Slaned

Ruben Amaro Jr., outfiekler, to a RUDOr·

Cenrnl Sf. 82, Campbellsville 67

62

"Most of his career he has turned
a disadvantage into an advantage,"
Earl Boykins stands all of S·foot- Braun said about Boykhil. "He has
7 and weighs 140 poutlds, but his used his quickness well. He's really
· coach says the sophomore is Baslern a solid player. Our teammates real.·
. Michigan's big man.
ly believe in him."
"Our team starts with him,"
Brian Tolbert added 22 points to
coach Ben Braun said after Boykins help Eastern Michigan to its seventh
scored 23 points Wednesday night to straight victory. The· Eagles scored
lead the Eagles to a 73-6()' victory 10 consecutive points while holding
over Miami of Ohio, keeping them Miami scorel,ess for more than six
unbeaten in Mid-American Confer- minutes to take a 61-48 lead with
ence play and increasing their lead in 2:08 remaining, then put the game
~conference race to three games. out of reach by hitting 12-of· l4 free
It was Boykins' second big game 1hrows in the final .l :47.
in a row. He made a basket to force
Damon Frierson and Devin Davis
overtime Saturday against Ball State, each scored 14 points for Miami.
then scored five of his 26 points in
Eastern is 7·0 in conference
the extra period.
games, with five teams - Miami,

MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Sianed

TO~ONTO

'

By n_. AIIOClated P,... .
Before tile game. Boubltclr Aw

·EMU stays on top; We~-te~n
Michigan defeats OU 66-59

Trammell, inrll!!'ldcr, ro a one-yeu con-

Ohio Weoleyan 67, Earll&gt;am 55

'ntomu More 71. Wilmiaston 70

CltiCIIO 104, v........ 84

Penn St. ......... 5

·" - ' -

DETROIT TIGERS: Si&amp;ncd Alan

Wooi1«6l, Allo.....y48

-oa

Irul

BuebaiJ

Nortb eo..t Conrereltce

15.5
18

l.A. Loltcn 12.4,
107
floulloo 98, New ....., 19
CLI!VELAND 91, Pllilldelpbia 88
New Ymt 88. Miami 79
a-toae 121, Wllllli-113
-IOI,Mm-91
Deuoit 85,

Transaction s

Bowtia1Goeen 91 , Boll St. 70
Katl69, !At Midliaal 57 .
Miami (Obin)77, E. f.tichiiiD 71
OHI077, W. Michipn76

Wednetday'IICOI'el

'

n.Jiu If Calpry, 9:10·p.m.
N.Y. l1landen 11 EdmoDton, 9:30p.m.

Mlci-Amerku ConfenDW

S.,....,..to ............ll IS .595 . 5
t.A. uma ............22 18 .sso 6.5
Ponltutd ... ..•...........20 20 .soo
8.5
(loldeo s-.......... 17 23 .42.! . 11.5
Phoeni1. ...•....•......... HS 22 .421
II .S
l.A. Ctippen .........IS 24 .385
I)

,,

Friday'llllllll!li
Buffalo II WubiqtOD, 8 p.m.

Allude 10 Conference
Dt'&lt;l!
74, lloytOO 31
Xaw:r90,St.- 6 7

Gl

.667

,._,.,~Collopa

Obio women's
coUege scores

WESTERN CONFERENCE
HOUIIOD .................21

1M AD&amp;elea • Hanford. 7 p.m.
T - Bay at a.-.. 7:30 p.IIL
Detroit II Oltawa, 7:30p.m.
Wuhin&amp;tco 1!1 New Ieney, 7:30pm.
Moatnal 11 florida, 7:30p.m.
San Jose 11 Oicqa, 8:30p.m.
V~DCC~ver 11 Colortdo. 9 p.m.

....,_ Mue 87, Wllmln,... 70

•

ByTIMPUET
Aaaocl.tect Preu Writer

TOIIIPt'o pmes

IB Clrrollll. Heidel: a 73
Marieaa 60, Capital 57
Moull Unio176, Bal&lt;lwi..Woliloe 66
Ohio NortbaD 67, Ortorbola 59

IS
22.5

ll L lsi.

64

T~e

Georgetown &amp; Kentucky among victors·

.,

Delroit4, s.. Jose 2
St. Louio 6, Winnil"'l 5
Calli')' 4, N.Y. b - I
Dallaa.S.- 3
Anlheim 2. v -... 1 (0"0

Hinm 56. M.Wnaum '~

12
14

--

~o2.T.....,2.de

OIMAII*IIcCwf;aciic:c

S

II

CtalniiiiCbiCIII0.................. 36 3 .923
lndiua ................... 26 14 .6SO

Irul

Wecl:::::rBul!olo
4, .
1 ICGI'I!Ii
PittSburlh 4, O.....a 3
l'llilldelpllia 4. N.Y. ltaapn 4 (tic)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

In Top 25 college hoops,

·
Page~
Thuraday, January 25, 1896

·In MAC. bssketbll/1 set/on,

Scoreboard

.. Thursday, January 25,1896

.\

,,

C .

~29=·~

r

59~-

'r&amp;u'H be (looting on a cloud witt.
. -. the buys tjou'll find IIJ.the
dassJ(Ieds.

'· ~ , ~~'--------------·--·----------~

FARM&amp;FLEET

�·- ·---

...

. ..
Thursday, January 25, 1996.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

, ••••• The Dally Sentinel

.

'

ln.the NBA,

•

$uns.
and Hornets get wins; Cavs slip past
. Sixers.91-88.
..
. .

fy The AIIOC.._. PNII

wme a six-j,oint deficit in the fourth period.
Miami lost for the eighlh time in I0 pmes.
Alonzo Mourning had 2S points and 10 ~bound.•
for Miami, but couldn't contain Ewing.
Miami had its biggest lead, 67-61. when Ward Start·
ed a 9-0 spurt with a th~·pointer - his first points
of the game. 'Ward ·also made a steal and perfect pass
to John Starks for a ~away layup, and Ewing's
dunk put New York ahead 70-67 with 7:30 left.
Ewing dunked again and hit two free llirows as thC
Knicks buill their lead to 78·70. Ward swished a~pointer as the 24-second buzzer sounded to make it8112 with ~ minutes to go.
In other NBA games, it was the Los Angeles Lak·
en 124, Boston 107; Houston 98, New Jersey 89;
Cleveland 91 , Philadelphia 88; Charlotte 127, Wash·
ington 113; Chicago 104,Vancouver 84; Indiana 97,
Milwaukee 89; Detroit 85, San Antonio 84; Seattle 86,
DeQver 79; &amp;lid Utah 100, Golden State 89.
SUDS 101, Timbenrolves 91- Barkley helped
Phoenix TBily from a five-point halftime deficit by
outscoring Minnesota 3hl4 in the quarter.
Kevin Jolmson also had nine points in the third quarter, anll finished with 21 points and 11 assisls.
Tom Gugliolla had 20 points and 14 rebounds for
Minnesota, which missed a chance to lie a franchise
record with iiS fourth straight home win. Christian Laet·
tner had 18 poiniS.
Lakers 124, Celtlcs 107 -Elden Campbell

:• The New York Knicks and the Plioeaix Suns are
i:customcd to having a lot mcn success than they' ve
lJad lately.
:• The Knicks lost five of their previous eight, and the
$11111 dropped nine of II ..On Wednesday nijht, both
IPms gol' much-needed road victories, even if they
~ aaainstlesser opponents.
• " We redeemed ounelves, a little bit anyway, !'ron!
tlae fiasco TUesday at Madison Square Garden," coach
Qon Nelson said of a 20-point humiliation by Chica~·
.
• Since Pat Riley took his leave of the Knicks after
list season, an intense rivalry has developed, and the .
~icks' 88-79 victory gave them a 2-0 edge in the
series.
; Phoenix and Minnesota are hardly rivals, but Minnesota stung the Suns with at victory on Jan. 4, the only
tOne Minnesota has beaten the Suns in 27 games since
jl!inina the NBA.
• Charles Barkley scored nine of his 22 poiniS in the
decisive third quarter and also had 16 ~bounds as the
SJlns beat the Timberwolves 101·91 .
: "When Chuck is delivering, they all get pumped
up," Phoenix coach Cotton Fitzsimmons said. "They
Iebow they can count on him, and that's been going on
fqr years."
• Patrick Ewing scored 37 poiniS and Cltarlie Wird
hit a pair of key three-pointers to help the Knicks over·
:

V
k 69•41
E• ast ern defeats Nels
. onv1"lie•10r
: The Eastern varsity girls' basketbilllteamplacedfourplayenindoubJe figures, en-route to a 69-41 victory over the Nelsonville-York at
&amp;chtel Wednesday night
: The Bailes (10-4 overall&amp;:. 8-3 in
t1Je 'Iii·Valley Confc;rerice's Hocking
Divilion) jumped olit tO an early 178:tead, and led by a 33•16margin at
tile elid of on~ half:
• Nelsonville,York cut into the
E4stern lead early in t)le third quartc!l', but could not overcome · the
h~ftime deficit, a5 the Eagles
oatscored lhCBuckeyes 36-2S in IJie
sdcoad half.

Heather Cagg paced Nelsonville- Nelsonville· York....... 8-8-15-10=41
York with 16 points, and Aime
Eastem-BetliBay 1..().010=2,
Adams added nine poiniS, 8 Rebecca Evans 6..().213=14, Jessica
rebounds and three blocks.
. Karr4-0-3/4=11, Niwle Nelson 5·0No other details for Eastern were 0/0=10, Patsy Aeiker 3-0-3/4=9,
available on the varsity game at ~s Manie Holter l-0-0/0=2, Tracy
time.
White 3-0-112=7, Michelle Caldwell
Rese"e DOtes: Eastern made it a 2·0-0/0=4; Jessica Brannon s.'0clean sweep with a 37.:~6 win in the 010=10. Totals: 30-0.9113=69
reserve contest. Eastern was led by
Nelsonville·York - Sarah Ogg
Valerie Karr's 12 poiniS, and Kim 3-0-214=8, t,1onica Johnson I·OMayle's nine. Tiffany Critchfield 0/0=2,' Heather Cagg 8-0-0/S=I6,
led Nelsonville with II.
Aime Adams 4-0-114=9, MilldY
Onerh:rlllfllll
_ McClelland 1·0-tW=2,AmandaHall
Eastem................. .. l7-16-20-16::69 2·0-013=4. Totals: 19..0·3118=41

thursday, January 25, 1996

scored a season-high 26 points and Ni~k Van EXel
added 18 as the Laten swept their two-game season

•

Pomer~y • Mlddl~port, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnef. p... ~
•

•

sop 19 and Matt Geiger 17 for the Honiets, who sent
Washington to iiS fifth loss in six games.
.
series with Boston.
The Bullqs wm without Chris Webber, who did·
Dino Radja led the Celtics with 21 points and 12
n'I make the trip to Charlotte because of a sore siJoul·
rebounds, while Dee Brown canie off the bench to add
der. Juwan Howard led them with ZI poiniS.
•
Bullll04, Grizzlies 84 - Michael Jordan scored
17 points. The loss was Boston's third straight and fifth
in their last six games.
·
a season-low 12 poiniS, bufScouie Pippen's 30 made
Vlade Divac scored 16 points and Jed the Lakers,
up for it in Chicaao's franchise-record 27th straight ~g­
who have won five of six, with II ~IJCI(Is. It was only
ular-season home win.
the seventh road victory for Los Angeles.
Chicaao won its 13th straight game, and Jordan sat
R~keb 911, Neb 18- Hakeem Olajuwon scored
o\Jt th'e final period.
Bryant Reeves Jed the Grizzlies with 23 points.
36 poiniS, including eight in a row late in the fourlh
I'Men 97, Buclul89 - Reggie Miller's 27 poiniS
quarter, as Houston ended its season-high lhfee·aame
losing ~-..by winning 111 New Ieney.
·
sparked Indiana to its fourth straight vietory. ·
. Clyde Drexler added 17 points.
Mark Jackson added 17 points. and Ricky Pierce got
. Kendall Gill had IS points on 4-for-11 shooting in · 1S off the bench as Indiana won the season series wilh
h1s tint home game as a member of the Nets. Chris
the Buc:ks 3- L
,
Childs, the replacement for Kenny Anderson at point
Glenn Robinson led host Milwaukee with 2~
guard, led New Jeney.with 24. Shawn Bradley added . points, and Terry Cummings had 17. ·
PlltoM-85, Spun 84-' 'Jerry Mills' three-pointer
17 and Armon Gilliam16.
Ca\'lllien 91, 76en 811-Cleveland snapped a twowith 2.6 seconds left lifted Detroit over San Antonio
game losing streak and extended Philadelphia' s losing
· for ihe second time in six days.
stnng to seven.
Grant Hill led the Pistons with 21 points and,l3
Chris Mills had 22 points' and Bobby Philis tHor
. rebounds. Joe Dumars added IS poiniS.
l}1e visiting Cavalien.
Avery Johnson scored 15 of h~ 19 poiniS in the sec·
Cl~nce Weathenpoon scored a season-high 25 .
ond half for the Spun, who have lost four of their last
points for the Sixen.
five games and fell at home for only the fifth time this
Homee.12'7, Bulletl113- Kenny Andenon made
season. David Robinson added 17 points and 14
his debut with Charlotte, arid the Hornets produced a
rebbunds.
..
.
season-high point total.
SuperSonic$ '86, ~uggets 19 ~ Seattle handed
Denver iiS fifth strai&amp;ht Joss and beat the Nuggets for
Andenon, acquired last week in a trade with the
NewJeneyNets,finishedwithl2pointsandiOassisiS
the third time this season.
. With Shawn Kemp in foul trouble and Gary Payton
as Charlotte snapped a th~·game home losing smak.
Glen Rice had 28 points, Dell Curry 21. Larry Johnshooting only 3-for-16, Sam Perkins led the Sonics with
· 18 poiniS.
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, January 25,1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, 0~~

: ' • 8 • The Dally Sentinel

,
The Dally Sentinel• Pagel

Thursday, January 25, 1et6

·In prepartJtlon for Super Bowl,

.

.

Aikman &amp; Greene among walking wounded 'i tching to play
"My back is about 90 percent, my
flu's about 70 pe~a:nt, but this is the
Super Bowl," Haley said. "I'm
man's a physical wreck. So is
going to play."
Charles Haley. Kevin Greene is up
Woodson, the Steelers' stellar
· imd moving despite the 10 "mini"
· concussions he says he had this sea- cornerback who had reconsuuctive
. son. And Rod Woodson hasn't surgery last September, says his
played a down sin~ the first ·game right knee is "80 to 85 percent"
" I' ve had four months to think
of the season.
about this," Woodson said. " I asked
No doubt about it, the Dallas
Cowboys and Pinsburgh Steelers the man upstairs if I should play or
not. I don't think I'm going to get
arc bruised and banged up in the
hurt. I think the knee is stable
days before Sunday's Super Bowl.
. But neither ailing elbow, aching enough to play."
Greene, the Steelers' mad-rushing
back, hazy vision nor totn anterior
linebacJc,er, says, "I've had so many
cruciates will keep players from
concussions I can't count them all. "
. playing for the NFL championship.
Haley, the Cowboys defensive
And wJlen he gets what be calls a
· end who missed the last five gaines
ubasic . minor concussion," or a
following · lower back surgery on · "ding/'be stays in the game. "I nevDec. 6, vows to be in the lineup: On er knotS· when it's going to happen,
Wednesday, his playing status was
but it takes me 20 to 30 minutes to
upgraded from questionable to probsnap out of tt. I just keep my head on
able.
a swivel - looking around to see
ByR~HARDROSENBLATT

what's happening."
Aikman, meanwhile, goes in10 his
third .Super Bowl with injuries all
over his body. His calves and knees
are ltilling him, his back aches and
he's going 10 h'ave right elbow
surgery after the game.
Of course, playing hurt is nothing
new for Aikman, or just about anyone else who ever had a Super Bowl
shot. For Sunday's game, the Cowboys listed 16 players as probable,
while the Steelers have four probables.
"I don't think anyone is perfectly healthy for this game," Cowboys'
tackle Mark Thinei. "We've played
23 games and-it's a long season."
TWo years ago, Aikman was
woozy in the week before the Super
Bowl after suffering a concussion in
the NFC : tide game against San
Francisco. He cim~t 111member the
first half of the Cowboys' 30-13 vic-

1EMPE, Ariz. (AP) -Troy Aik-

WIN CASH!
On January 28, Super Bowl XXX
will be played In Tempe, Ariz. The
outcome of the game will be
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January 27th for a chance to win
$501 All you have to do Is predict
the .correct final score of Super
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'

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'

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Clip out the entry form below and
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Submitted Before
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January 27; 1996.
Employees of this
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purchase nece111ry.

Pittsburgh
Steelers.

~--------TO--~-----N!lme - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Addreea --------------Ph. No. -----------------

WheelHorse
TRACTORS and

cle and leg injuries.
. ~OURNE, Australia (AP)
For the title SatUrday, the top seed
- Monica Seles didn 't dominate. will face No. ,8 Anke Huber of Ger· She survived.
many, who reached her first Grand
'Teen-ager Chanda
Rubin Slam final by beating No. 16 Aman.re(Jieved some of Seles' best shots, da Coetzer of South Africa 4-6, 6-4,
pushed her around for mucb of 6-2.
today's match and came within two
Rubin's best previous Grand Slam
points of beating ~ tbree·time Aus· 1-esult was reaching the quarterfinals
tralian Open champion in the se111i· of the French Open last year, but her
finals.
marathon matches have put ber in the
~n Rubin, tennis' marathon
record books. At Wimbledon last
woman, couldn't finish it.
year, she ~eta Grand Slam women's
Seles won 6-7 (7·2), 6-J, 1·5 after record for most games in a matchtrailing S-2 in the final set, stretch- 58 - in a 7-6, 6-7, 17-15 second.ing her perfect match record in Aus- round victory over Patricia Hy!raliafl Opens 10 27-0. Among her Boulais.
eight Grand Slam titles, she won the
To reach the semifinals here, the
Australian in 1991, 1992 and 1993 No. 13 seed set Australian Open
before taking '3 1/'l years off the tour women's records for longest match
after' a deranged spectator stabbed and final set in beating No. 3 Aranher in Gennany.
txa Sanchez Vicario 6-4, 2-6, 16-14
.. She said later a sore shoulder, in 3 1/2 hours.
from lifting weights, fon:ed her to
"She was the one who was
~top practice the previous day, when
maybe supposed to feel tired," Seles
"I couldn't lift my ann." But she said of her 19-year-old opponent.
uid she felt fine going into today's "She was running down balls that a ·
$emifinal, despite earlier groin mus- . lot of people won 'I even run for, and

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MULLEN

Even with a new cOai:h and goaltender, the Ottawa Senators had the
same old result. This time, there was
a difference.
Jacques Manin made his debut
behind the Ottawa beneh just hours
after being named coach, and Damtan Rhodes was playing his first game
just hours after being obtained from
Toronto in a three-way trade.
Yet when Ottawa fell to the vis. iting Pittsburgh Penguins 4-3
Wednesday night, the Senators
received a standing ovation from
their fans.
"Everyone played their beans
out," Rhodes Said. "I'm looking forward to that first win."
It was the third consecutive
Ottawa loss in the new $217 million
Palladium. But the fans didn 't mind
this time.
The .Senators outshot Pittsburgh
· 40-27 and matched the NHL's highest scoring team goal for goal until
Peter Nedved and Joe Dziedzic
opened a 4-2 lead midway through
the third period.
Ottawa's Rob Gaudreau scored
with I :44 left in the third period, but
the Senators couldn't get the equaliZer despite putting intense pn:ssure
on.Penguins goaltender Tom Barasso, who was outstanding.
"Martin's got to be happy with
their effort because ... they took us
right down to the last I 0 or 15 seconds," Pittsburgh coach Eddie Johnston said.
Martin replaced Dave Allison,
who was fired on Tuesday, and
seemed 10 inject new life into young.sters Alexll!ldre Daigle, Radek Bonk
and Alexei Yashin.
"(Manin) told us in a meeting
that this game is fun - that's what
hockey is all about," said Bonk, who
played his best game for the Sena. tors. "l think everybody had fun. Too
.IN!d we lost."
· · The viciOry was Pittsburgh's third
il!:a row and improved the Penguins'
·rei:ord to 30-14-3, behind only
~troit and the Ranger.; in the over·.all standings. Ottawa fell to 8-36-1.
' wOrst in the league.
. :: "We improved and the players.
J)\ned some confidence,_'' , Martin
s6id. "I think the most tmponant
U,ing is to enjoy coming to work
. every day and to feel some progres-

James C. Birchfield
Owner-operator

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I got very nervous.','
charge. I made a decisjon to go for
' Seles also admttted, "I really it"
I
thought I would be gone.... !love the
On the volley, "I maybe went for
stadium CO\Jrt here and that is why I
it a little bit too much,' ' she said. "I
was so down ... on myself that 1 am gave myself the chance and just didnot going to be able to play maybe n't come through.
another match here."
"I tried to stay aggressive and get
Rubin, tl!e 13th seed, nearly broke
in a little bit and put her on the defenservice for a 5-1 lead in the final set. sive a little bit more, and I think I did
Down I 5.-40, Seles hit a forehand
that pretty well."
crosscourt winner and got to deuce
One example was a key point in
when Rubin hit a forehand long
the first-set tiebreaker. Rubin preswhile trying to attack a second serve. sured Seles with a forehand blast
She held on a forehand crosscourt
down the line and then put away the
· passing shot under pressure' and short return.
another forehand error by Rubin.
She gained her .b~ ak chances at
. th e fimal set wt'th a pomt
· on
Serving for the match at 5-4, 4-1 m
Rubin was two points away at30-15. which she chased down two apparShe double-faulted to 30-30 and then . ent winners by Seles and then forced\
hit a forehand volley wide. Seles her opponent into a backhand error.
missed one break
, point, but ctmThe ag'gressive play gave Rubin
verted the next when .Rubin netted an 40 winners to 33 by Seles. But she
easy backhand putaway.
gave away 56 unforced errors, to
Rubin said she most regretted that Seles' 18.
double-fault. She hit one secondDespite the marathon match two
serve ace earlier in the match, and " I days earlier, Rubin said she fell great
knew that if I didn't go for my sec- physically and mentally.
ond (serve) that she would take
" I was very lucky,'' Seles said,

CANTON, Ohio (AP)- Malone Each was found to be unsuitable .
College basketball player Meghan
On Aug. 8, 1993, the liver of a
O'Flanagan says she lost strength, teen-age boy who had died matched
but can ni'ove.{~k,r II!.! result of a _ the profile or' the liver O'Flanagan
fiver transplant.
'
needed. The surgery took 12 hours. ·
''I'm a quicker player than I was, ' "It never occurred to me I wouldbut I'm not as strong," said O'Aanagan, a 5-foot-9 junior from Lodi
"I've become a different player."
She also said the operation made
her want to become mon: involved
with others.
" I realir.e you need to do little
things to make other people l)appy,
or make a difference in their lives,
right now," she said. "Don't wl!lt for
another opportunity because it might
not tome."
O'Flanagan was diagnosed with
Wilson's disease when she was a
high school freshman. The condition
prevents copper from being
processed by the liver.
She controlled it with medication
until the summer of 1993, wben she
began tiring easily while playing bas. ketball. A dqctor a1 Barberton Hos- ·
pita! recognized how serious her
condition had becomo.
Two days later, she was taken to
a Pittsburgh hospital to await a new
liver.
During the first 10 days she was
there, three liver.; were donated.
'

-~~~~J;Sa.br~s . aiSO ;;~in;;

.J;..id

!

PR.O.,.c.
DUCE
........
....,,

·Aikman looks like be can't wait
for the game to end so he can go
have his elbow taken care of. NoliO
mention his back, knees and calves.

Edmonton 3; and An~im 2, Vancouver I in overtime.

Rangers 4, Hyers 4
Mark Messier had two _goals and
two assists as New York extended its
home-iee unbeaten streak to 22
games.
Messier scored with four minutes
left to give the Rangers a 4-3 lead,
but the Flyers tied it on R,od
Brind'Amour'sgoal at 18:51, giving
Philadelphia its II th tie of the season.
Brian Leetch and Adam Graves
also scol-ed for New York.

,,·~

Sabres 4, Whalers 2
.,
Derek Plante's slap shot early in
the third period broke a tie and lifted Buf(alo over Hartford, halting the
Whalell 'three-game winning streak.
PlaniC also helped set up the host
Sabres' firnttwo goals, by Mark Astley and Brad May, before be beat
Sean Burke with his IOth of the season 4:35 into the final period.
Andrew Cassels and Andrei
Nikolishin scored for the Whaler.;.

Pllone: e14 11:111n
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ltor.Ho&amp;n: ,
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Huber's style of play is different
than Rubin's, but she said she hoped
she learned the lessons from two
losses to Seles last year, in the U.S.
and Canadian Opens.
.

" It's just a great feeling .... unbcilievable," Huber said of reaching the
final after a bad stretch in 1994 whe~
she fell out of the top 10.
As for feeling satisfied just to
come this far, she said, "For sure,
there's a danger because it's the first
time that I am in the finals of a Grand
. Slam. But still! try to do everything,
I try to win, and try to play my best.
I·hope that I still can concentrate on
Saturday."
In the first set against Coetzer, a
first-time Grand Slam semifinalist,
Huber said she tried to hit too many
winners, " a little stupid, I think."
In the second, "I played a little bit
smarter, some more topspins, some
high balls, changed the rhythm a littie bit, and I think that was the
important thing," Huber added.
Coetzer said, " She had the
momentum. She won the second set
and just kept going."
The roof was opened again for the
Huber-Coetzer match.
.

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n't make it," O'Fianagan said.
"We started to see a remarkable
recovery" after 48 hours, said her
mother, JJ!P. Van~e. ·
-~ .
"As soon as I woke up; I felt better," O'Flanagan said. "I felt strong.

I wanted to sit up right away. "

O'Flanagan returned to classes 22 .
days later and was granted a medical
hardsh\p.sel!Siln · ·b)'.. -!he-NAIA. In
1994, she returned to the basketball
court. ·

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s~.

&lt;· "We lost to a pretty good hockey
club out there."
.
: In other NHL games, it was Buffalo 4, Hartford 2; 'the New York
R'.loaer&amp; 4. PbiladelpJtia 4; Chicaso
2, 'l'otOO!O 2; Detroit 4, S111 JOIO 2;
~ ~lr6, Winnipeg S; Calgary 4;
, _ iheNewYorldslancleri I; Daiiu S,

.
mentioning some of Rubin's misses
at key points.
" I wasn't probably attacking as
much as I should have, but she is a
tough player and she ran down so
many balls. There. were one or two
points in tl!~re like, 'OK, when are
you going to stop running for them,'
but she never did stop." ·
The match was intenupted 35
minu.tes for rain after the third set's
first game. Center Court's roof was
Closed for the resumption of the
match, but both players were happy
· d wm
· d
wt·th l he change. Ru bin ctte
·
d
pro blems an d SeIes menttone troubl e seemg
· f rom
· some ang1es whe n
the roof was·open.
Hube r sat·d she lhoug hl Rub'm.
"played the right w,ay.... 1 think she
shou Id have won , actually."

O'Fianagan 'a ·different player' following liver transplant ·

'

'

-In theNHL,

STIHL· ·
Dealer

and .

1111

'

'

Vs.

m--------------------

RIDING MOWERS

POMeROY
FLOWER SHOP

.earn."

~

"Just like a lot of other players, Cowher is playing him because he)
I' m pretty banged up. My knees are obli,gated to play him. Is it becal~S!'
hurting and they've given me some Pittsburgh doesn't think they will be
problems, " Aikman said. "The right back in the Super Bowl any timi:
calf is still not healed up. It's both- soon and they want Rod to get ill
· me tn
' two d'"'
enng
tuerent spots, and there?."
I've also had problems with the
. There are some players ~ho ~iii
elbow· and back. Quite honestly, . mtss the game because of tnJune'none of it is going to get healed up such as Cowbo~s center Ray Doquntiltbe season ends."
aldson (broken nght ankle) and cot:"
The most remarkable heal er is nerback Kevi n Smith (right Achilles
Woodson, who could be the first tendon). Both were placed on injure(l
NFL player to sustain a tom anteri- rese~e and couldn't play Sunday
or cruciate ligament and come back even tf they were able to. Woodso~,
to play in the same season.
however, was never placed ~n
Michael Irvin, the Cowboys ' mJured reserve and coach Bt~
receiver who missed 14 games- 10 Cowher may reap the benefits .'r!
in one season, four the next - after Woodson can come up w1th a bt'
suffering a similar injury in October game.
1989, questioned Woodson's return.
"It's the Super Bowl," Woodso~
"If he can play and play effec· said. "It's the last chance to play.":
lively, that's amazing," Irvin said.
. And that's why injuries seem'?
"I'm shocked. I don't know if dtsappear on SuNf ~owl Sunday. .

to see Huber. in final after getting by Rubin in semifinal

·By PHIL BROWN

'

I p!'Mict 1111 winning team l final aeon

T..

.S~Ie$

Dallas·
Cowboys

1996 SUPER BOWL
SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY

All Entlres Must Be

Welffl'le
II Yow
LivtJtodc &amp; ,,,

FJowera For Every Occlllon
We Deliver &amp; Wire Floware
· 1.-..33-ao:J or
(t14)tlt2-t414

led ,10-6 after 30 minutes and Aikman was 19 of 27 for 207 yards and
no touchdowns.
Going back e~en funher, Steelers
wide receiver Lynn Swann had a
concussion leading up to the 1979
Super Bowl, while Cow'boys quarterback Roger Staubach had to
recover from one of his 12 concussions before playing in the 1972
Super Bowl. Both played .and both
won.
Although Aikman's clearly not up
to par, coach Barry Switzer doesn 't
seem concerned.
"He's a lOugh physical kid,"
Switzer says. "He's played hun this
year, just like a lot of players on our

In the Australian Open,

.,
,_,For

"YOUR GIFT

~

IN, TO.OI

kiry over the Buffalo Bills. The Bills

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�•
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P 1 10 • The Dlllly Senllnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Thursday, January 25,1996

·Thursday, January 25, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page H

I

)Nalking on Egg' Shells s~m,dd walk away 'from cr·uel mother..
I

••

my 11-year-old son that I don't love
him and am a terrible mother. After
my divorce a few years ago, I slart.ed to date a man sbe didn't C8nl for.
She made up a lot of lies to break ~
up -- and I'm sorry to say, she succeeded.
I have never had a word of suppon
lly ANN LANDERS
· or kindness from my mother.
: Dear Ann I.anders: I am 33 and Slnlllgely enough, we were never
!tie youngest of five children. Like abused as children, verbaliy or othJIIOStfamilies, we've had·our share of erwise. It seems she has become like ·
poolems - divorce, alcohol abwe, this only in the past 10 years.
e}c., - but-for the mast part, we are
· Mental illness runs in her family.
~sponsible, liard-working adults.
If you have concluded that my. moth• The real problem in Ibis otherwise . er is mentally ill, what should I do
·~ormal" family is my'mother. She · about it? I want t(J:cadd, she treats othiS cruel and hateful to me. She tells er people just fine. Sign me-- Walk-

Ann
Landers

ing on Eggshells, No Town, U.S.A..
Deaf Eggshells: It should be less
plinful kpowing that your mother's
abusive behavior could be the result
ofmentalillness,butitstillmusthun.
My advice is to keep your dislance. Don't subject yourself to her
punishment any more than is
absolutely necessary. And since your
mother seems tci be bent on poisoning your son's mind against you, I
sugsest that you keep him away from
ller. too.
I realize this will be difficult, but
self-preservation comes ahead of
faked family togetherness,
Dear Ann Landers: Can you use
another response to "Issaquah,

Wash,," the middle-aged woman
On an exam for one position I
who was celebrating her husband 's 1pplied for, I scored higher than anynew job after three years of being one in the room and still didn't get an
unemployed? You said their negative in,terview. Did l mention that between
attitude may have· something to do 1,000 and 2,000 Oilier people showed
with the bad luck she and her bus- up for .the same job? Huge turnouts
band had been expaiencing while job seem to be the norm these days.
bunting,
"Issaquah's " letter didn't sound
Ann, jobs are not that easy to depressing. It sounded truthfuL My
. come by, no matter bow old you are, girlfriend, who never understood
1 am 53 and have a back disability. I · why ,some people can't find work,
have been trying to find suitable part- recently was demoted and put on
time work for nearly 10 years. I have part-tiine. So, now she is also joba bachelor's degree and two associ- hunting and, like me, hasn't made it
ate degrees. I have taken three- and to ao interview yet.
four-hour pi!ICCment tests, scored
I have worked alongside people
well and not made it to an interview. from other countries and di!ICOvered

'

1-ra ·Oua

S-r·ocK UP

0

~·"'-:t,-

' ...-

that they have work visas. I can t
why our govet'lllllent
!allows this when so many U.S. citi:zens need jobs. Care to comment? - ·
Facing Forward in Fre~no
Dear Fresno: It would be virtual•
ly impossible as well as. ungenerous
for the government to deny work:
visas to foreigners until every Amer-:
ican 'is employed:-:
Your situation is a difficult one,.
and i wish you the best of luck.
1understand

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8y FRAZIER MOORE

lP Televlllon Wrllilr
• NEW YORK (AP) - Who's
fORna drink the Diet Coke?
. That's the question on everyllQdy's Ups. at least the Aspilrtameadmitting Ups whose owners Coke is
oourting with its latest ad campai8JI.
: The solution to the riddle Coke
110ses is one of your friends from
NBC's sitcom "Friends:" Ross,
ilhoebe, Chandler, Rachel, Monica·
l(nd Joey.
,
· Here's a better riddle: Who's had
ii up to here? Who's gonna say
·:Enough!"?
· Answer: I, for one. Enough!
Enough puff!
: Mine is a feeble outcry against 1he
thunder of cross-proinotions, product
tie-ins and general hucksterism that
will rise to a deafening roar this
weekend with Super Bowl XXX.
: A notable part of Sunday's international bazaar rnaaquerading as, a
football game will~ "Friends" and
its oh-so-friendly lie-in with Diet
Coke.
: Alas, tonight you'll have..to make
do with a
in the UsUal 8 p.m.
~Tslot, where ''Friends," in its second.smasb season, tracks a sexy sex.tCt of twentysomethings cocooning in
Manhaltalj.
: A spec18l hour-long episode will

rerun

air right . r the Super BowL If the justify the huge price it is charging
"Friencls" character on your bottle them for advertising time (reported-·
cap turns out to be the one who drank ly 50 percent above "Friends"' usuthe Diet Coke on one of the neigh- al rate of $400,000 per 30-second
lx!rlng commercials, you win a ~rig unit).
prize.
.
Therefo.re, Sunday's episode of,
Is the episode good? Is it funny? "Friends" will take no chances. As an
Will Ross kvetch endearingly? Will added audience draw, it is pitching
Monica flash ber navel? You'll have extra-special guest stars.
to see for yourself, since no review You'll see Brooke Shields, Jeancopy was available.
Claude Van Damme and Julia
All that is beside the poinL This is Roberts. ·
not a program, it's an evenl A sales
These guest stars are performing
event Who's gonna get pitched? It's as their' own commercials. For themgonna be you.
selves. For their importance. For the
S~mala: sure you'JJ:.tuned in. And other things they're doing. '
have plenty of Diet Coke on hand. A
Sunday's "Friends"·star-stunting
merging of amusel!lent with con- is b~y unique. Scan the tele'-;ision
smnption: life's.perfect state.
· , sc~ule and you find celebrities big
· l\s the caffeine courses through . and small stepping into the picture to
your body, feel free to marvel that a play themselves, or some self-serving
TV FRIEND,S - Julie Robll'ts peaaa wllh ector
soda and a sitcom can be jointly spoof of themselves, in a nudgeMltthew
Perry (who playa Chandler) on the set
deployed to sell you on each other.
nudge•wink-wink television cameo.
of
the
NBC
18rlel "Frlenda." Roberti! g1111t
The show serves as a draw that
You need only recall John F.
ltlll'l
"
Suale,
a makeup artlat and former
delivet:S you to the commercials. Kennedy Jr. selling hunksmanship
Your ·hope of winning something and his new magazine with a muchHow many more things can the
draws you to the commen:ials that publicized "Murphy Brown" walk- ·cast of "Friends" sell? They have
accompany the show. A si}l-pack of on last fall.
haw~ed milk, long-distance phone
TT
soda, A six-pack of characters. Back
How many more times must you companies I!Jid Wmdows '95 and •
and forth, yin and yang. It's all mer- see "Entertainment Tonight" veteran themselves with ·coundess TV intercbandise. It's all merchandising.
leeza Gibbons restate her famous- views and magazine spreads.
Coca-Cola and the program's oth- ness with a cameo as. an '·'EntertainAnd now Diet Coke.
er advertisers demand a vast audience ment Tonight'' correspondent ~ as
So don't just sit there and watch •
to see their commercials. NBC wants she did most recelidy last Sunday ·on "Friends" Sunday night. Watch it
to guarantee sufficient vastness to "Cybill"?
.
'
)With Diet Coke. Guzzle lots.

•

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U.S. No.1

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Idaho
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tOday's issue of the journal Nature by
AP 8cllnoe Writer .
Gary J. Fisher, Dr. John J, Voorhees
· NEW YQRK (AP), - .A drag , anil'cqlleagues at -~ University_of
s~ ori the·Skin ~redilce yninldeS ' ':Michigair MeiJ\cal• School· m· Ann
mtgbt also be able ~ prevent the Arbor. In a statement, the researchers
effects of·years of exJ!Qsure to the declitled to discuss the work, saying
sua, IU8Jeiis a stully,.relef!Sed today., Renova had not been approved for
r'Wl\eit a.PPlied to; lhc ski~ o! vbl-' :·, preve~tion 'of wrinkles or other,s'un
u~teers . before IiieY,• got a dose ,'of damage.
,
_
ultiiviolet light, the drug sharply
The Nature paper does not indire'dli!ied the · prqductibn' of s~in· · c•~ any industry funding.
en¥*JIII's .that mi8ht ,promote' wnnDr, John E~in, clinical P.rofesldifli; 't .. •
. ,
sor of dermatology at t!te University
, 'The 'drug, tretinoin (pronounced of California at San Francisco, noted
ttelt·tili!O,H-io), is the active ingre- that it hasli 't yet been shown whether
dient !n 'Re!"'va, l' pmcri)!lioit cream . Jretil!oi~ or t, second drug.used in the
~n~Y-. ~ ~ the fed~ . s~y actually prevent wrinkling. ·
govemtllent for leductng fine wnn- ·- ' , .
.· ,
~~ ·brown spoil aad lou~ o!·•, ·.AndDr. David Bickers, chairman
faCial skiD ITom clifbnic sun expo- ··Ofthe·dermatology ilepartment at the
slri. •\
, ·. • •
· Ci/olumbia 'Ut!iversity College of
. it's alSo the aciive illp'edient'in' l!hysicians anll Surgeons, cautioned
~-A. ,e,' 'JII'Csct!~on ,ac~ , drug . that e~lrap&lt;l!atii\g frOm the shOrt-term
nijlnyl dei'tillltOiogtsts , use to treat· ex~nt to the long-term effects of
wrinkles. Redn-A and Renova are sun e~posure is "fraught with hazmirketed bY 'drtho Pbannaceuti~al ard."
The other drug in the study, a
· The
work is reponed in steroid used in skin creams to reduce
•

inflammation, wclrked about as well whether the kind of damage caused
as tretinoin.
by the enzymes actually leads to
Scientists studied the effect of wrinkling,
ultraviol~t ~' light, or iJVB, the part
Dr. Shelddn Pinnell, chief of.derof sunshine most effective in causing -matology at Duke University, said
wrinkling, on volunteers' butt'!Cks, · recent studies suggest that ultraviolet
Sua-induced' wrinkliQg is·iho'ug~ light otb!:r than l/VB may also conto .result ftom da!J:tage t~ '!'e ski~~~ . tribute to wrinkling. The effect of
collagen and elastm; whicli provtde ' tretinoin on that is not known he
strength and 'elasticity, These sub- said.
.
'
Sl8Jlces can be dlirila~~ by certain
Currently, to lower the risk of pre~zymes created by skin cells. .,:.
mature wrinkling from sun.exposure,
The new work, showed that s~all dermatologists recommend sundoses of UVB ~llmulate prnducllon screens, long sleeves, broad-brimmed
of. th~ ~amqmg. enzymes. The hats 'and avoiding the midday sun.
r~seart;~rs . the.~Jnzed · that over
The study also found that a UVB
decades, repeat«.f assaults on the col· dose equal to only two or three minlagen .and elastin by ~ en~ymes utes of summer sunshine .on unprocould cause premature W!'l'*:ltng.
tected skin can tum on production of
They also found that.tf trebno~Jt or · the enzymes dermatologist Dr Barthe steroid was app~i~ to the skin bara Gilchre;t said.
'
before the UVB dose was given, the
'
amounts ·or ~nzymes produced after
UVII e~posure were sharply reduced.
Tretinoin was aiso shown to suppress
a genetic switch that turns on enzyme
production.
Epslein · said it's not known

••

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P.omeroy
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....;._
_.;.._~

Thursday, January 25, 1996

.......;.;.;,.;,;;,;:.;;.:.:,~,;:.;...;_..;._

/

..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page13

W
store shelve$ near you by summer
......Fat substitut~ olestra .may be on
.
.

:;.:.BY JEFF HARRINGTON

:·: The ClnciMIIII Enqulrw

•
Oleslra's thn:c-delilldc wait to move from the laboratQry to supcnnatket
• · shelves is over.
·
:
Procter&amp;: Gamble Co.'s COIIII'Ovcrsial fat substitute will be..introduccd this
year- perhaPs by this summer- in ,fat-flee versions of the company's
Pringlcs polato chips, competitors' produc:ts and possibly other snack foods.
After spending up to $300 million developing olesua and encountering
• • countless skirmishes with consumer groups challenging the fake fat's safe: ty, olestra was approved Wednesday by the Food and Drug Adniinisll'alion
for use in some snack foods. .
P&amp;G executives predicted olesira could quickly become one of the biagest
innovations 'to emerge from the consumer prodilcts company that last year
registered $33 billion in sales.
Indeed, some industry analysts said the product, being marketed under
• the brand name Olean, could increase the U.S. market for low- and no-fat
· snacks as much.as $1 biJlion and would soon become a $1 biJlion brand for
- P&amp;:G by itself.
.
• But critics who have challenged its safety vowed an anti-olestra campaign.
They may even lodge a fonnal compl~nt with the FDA within 30 days.
News of the approval catapulted P&amp;G stock to a record high 90 S/8 before
it closed Wednesday up S2.12S at 88 114.
"Americans can get ready to taste history," said P&amp;G 's chainnan and chief

uecutive, Jolm Pepper. ""Snacks made with Olean eliminate the taste trade·
Underscoring its awareness of health concerns, the FDA is requirina P&amp;G
off with many fat-flee or reduced-fat snacks. With Olean, "no fat' doesn 't to label olestra-made products with what some may find a distasteful wanimean 'no taste.' "
ing; "This product contains olestra. Olestra may cause abdominal cramping
Just hours after the FDA's approval, the nation's largest snack food com- · and, lOose stools. Olestra inhibits tho absorption of some vitamins and othpany, Frito-Lay Inc., said it,planned to test Olean on its salty snacks, though er nutrients. Vitamins A,D, E and K have been added."
i.t didn 't specify which products. Among Frito-Lay's brands: Poritos, Lay's,'
Olestra "sure has the potential to be one of the company's greatest" innoRuffies and Raid Gold.
vations, said Gordon Brunner, P&amp;G senior vice president in charge of research
. "Given consumers' continued interest in low- and no-fat foods, we believe and development. "This is going to be a tremendous step forward ... If it
that the idea is worih exploring," said Phil Pifer, vice president for Frito- works, it can be a whale new platfonn for the company:"
.
'Lay,. a division of PepsiCo Inc.
P&amp;G said test marketing of snacks mlldc with Olean will begin over tho
Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Pub- next several months, with reformulated Pringles likely in stores in six to nine
lie Interest, olestra's most vocal opponent, said he will use the center's . months. Talks are underway with other snack food makers, but the compa800,000-cin:ulation publication to continually urge consumers to avoid the ny had no agreements beyond the Frito-Lay pact
·
fat substitute.
·
In late 1991, then-P&amp;G Chairman and CEO EdwlnArtzt said that if olestra.
"Frankly, I'm astonished that,(FDA) Conunissioner (David) Kessler would accounted for S percent of the replaceable fat in the U.S. diet, an investment
approve a chemical that certainly causes diarrhea and cramps in the short of $7SO million in new factories, equipment and other property would be
run and almost certainly will cause heart disease, cancer and blindness in needed. The company would not be able to recoup its cash investment until
the long run," Jacobson said.
1999, he said at the time.
.
The FDA ·decided that while some snackers will' find olestra's effects
P&amp;G was coy about when olestra may take its next step with the FDA:
.unpleasant, it is safe for the general population to eat in potato chips and oth- a: request to use olestra in baked goods, ice creams, salad dressings and other snack foods.
er fOods.
•
' '"l~re are real effects in some people," Kessler ~aid. "They may be
The FDA's approval came a day before a key patent on olestra was to
annoymg ... But we do not believe they are medically signiftcant."
expire.

Mother delays cancer treatment while .
pregnant, risks .own life for another
By MARYANN MROWCA
Associated Press WrHer
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - For
Margie Janovich, it was an easy
decision. She put her baby first.
Instead of going abead with
radiation to fight the cancer spreading through her body, sh~ put it off
during pregnancy to make sure ber
daughter was born healthy.
Now, the 43-year-old mother of
nine must wait to find out whether
that decision proves to be the ultimate sacrifice.
"I would much rather give up
my life for my baby," she said as
she fed her newborn, Mary Elizabeth. "Any good mother would do
the same. I know there's a lot of
them out there."
In fact, Mrs. Janovich's own
mother-in-law made a similar deci- '
sian 45 years ago while carrying
her future husband. 1be woman
had a double mastect~y after giv·
ing birth, survived the breast canMOTHER'S CHOICE -Margie Janovich holds
cer but died years later of lung canher life but the 43-year-olll mother of nine says
baby
Mary Beth Jan. 22 In Omaha, Neb. When
delaying treatment was her only choice. Other
cer.
femlly members from left are Andy, 2, husbend
"That was the same type of sit- Janovich was five months pregnant she waa
Ron Janovich, Denny, 5, Jim, 15, Terri, 16, Mike,
' uation. It was selfless sacrifice told ehe had en lggNSIIve thyroid cancer but
11, Joe, 8 and nne, 18 (•on Nick, 19, Is not pic'• from my mother," said Ron delayed traetment when she leamlc:l It would
tured). (AP Photo)
·
.
Janovich, who runs an automotive kill the baby. The cleclslon could coat Janovich
repair shop.
doctors say her unusually aggreshe spoke Sunday at an anti-aborfrom neighbors, family and friends.
Margie Janovich·was about five
sive cancer has already spread to
tion rally in Omaha. The RepubliMrs. Janovich said she toleratmonths pregnant when she leatned
her breasts and the lining of her
can urged the cr!Jwd to help the
ed her first chemotherapy treat·she had thyroid cancer. Although
lungs.
Janovich family with food and
ment well and regained her
she had surgery to remove most of
It may be months before she
prayers. He sent the family pizza:
appetite after three days. She
. , her thyroid while pregnant, she
knows if the drugs will work to
Mrs. Janovich says she is too ·expects to receive chemotherapy
delayed i.odine radiation treatment . _ stop it.
busy with her children - ages 7
for six months.
.because 11 caul~ have banned her · "I didn't want to harm the baby
weeks to 19 years - to be active
"I feel real optimistic .... things
· fetus.
·
in any way," she said. ''There wasin the abortion issue.
·
are going to work out fi11e," she
•
She began chemotherapy treatn't much discussion."
And while the couple says they · said. "I've got too much work here
Rep. Jon Christensen ofNebras· • ment a few weeks ago lifter her
appreciate the offers, they are
on Earth."
daughter was born healthy, but
ka told Mrs. Janovich's story when
receiving enou~h food and help

the search for faster ways to diagnose

the infection and better ways to treat
and control it.
The bacteria are spread by deer
ticks, the same pests that carry Lyme
disease. They cause .a flulike illness
called human granulocytic ehrlichiosis, or HOE, that is fatal about 5 percent of the time.
More than 200 Americans have

'

i Fifth birthday
:celebrated
,
Travis Anthony Hysell, son
:of Terri and Bruce Hysell of Crass
:Lanes, W.Va. celebrated his fifth
birthday, Jan. I 4, with a party at the
;home of his grandparents, Ann and
'David Zirkle in Racine.
A Sesame Street cake was
. :ierved with ice cream and soft drinks
)o his parents, Travis and Debbie and
'/tJftber Maynard. Sending Gifts but
:Unable to attend were his greatirandparents, Roberta and Haley
)$wisher, , and his aunt and uncle,
;Brenda jnd BJYan Swann ancl.Kyrie.
;.
~()n Jan. 13; his grandpar~~~~ ·~orman and Patty Hysell of
~roy; gave a party for Travis at
meirhome . .
; ·· Mungle cake was served to
~ · hOnored juest and his mdther,

Residents must be registered by
Feb. 20 if they are to vote in the
March 19 primary election. ·
Those who have moved are also·
asked to update their registration.
For purposes of registering or
changing address, the Meigs County
Board of Elections will be open Jan.
29 to Feb. I, Feb. 5-8 and Feb. 12·
IS from 8:30am. to S p.m.; and Feb.
2, 9, 16 and 20 from 8:30a.m. until
4:30p.m.
Residents may also register at the

ALL IN
CARPET AND VINYL ON
SALE. PLUS, TAlE AN ADDITIONAL 10%
OFF SALE PRICE THIS WEEK ONLYI!
TRAVIS HYSELL
Terri Hysell, and Samantha and Jessica Hysell, Tabitha Synder, Steven,
Brandy and Raven Hysell and his
grandparents. He received gifts at
both parties.
·

Volunteers of the American Asso- AARP llix aide volunteers visited
ciadOn of Reti~ Persons will be l,lSS shutins tn help with tax returns.
avli!Jble at' the Meigs County Senior · 'When meeting with. a volunteer,
c.n• Wedne${1ay, Thursday and senior citizen are to take their tax
PiiclaY of. each week to offer tax pactaae. copy of their last year's
QOUDSCiillg. by appo\ntment !0 the income tax return, any W-2 forms
IIIey received, their SQcial Security
. .y. •
atatcment,
all 1099 fonns showing
•Jo IIUiouDCillg the prolfllll callod
"1\Uide " AARP strcued that helpo illlliwlled, dividends, pension or misJill ~eniJr citizens fill out their tax cellaneous income, recorda of uy
. . . II mle: 'f!.\e service will be ocber income, such as Sale of a house
fro~ Feb. 1 lbrouJh Ajlril !Jr investments, lnd receipts or can· 15 to ljiW II!!! moder.Uacome .._. c:eled cbeclgi'IIJowinJ ··mecliCII llld
. . . . ..
I
'
· dental expenses, contributions to
, '1111!1 ""'· ,leerS Will 1110 call on charitiel, INl e111te taxes, Mid Olber
.-ior cltizeos who ..1evut iaformltilon. aiOIIJ with em. be1P wltll tlleir Ill tilllll'lll. It mated income tax payuiellll alrudy
. ~ .
.
. . . . . . . . . ~ ·ja Ohio llllde.
.

a

· ••le

·=-boll..cl•

.

(PIIdcllng &amp; Llbor em1MYI

KARAOKE
EVERY MONDAY &amp; THURSDAY

ONLY
$600
PER PICTURE
PRE·PAID
Please enclose selfaddressed stamped
envelope to return
your photo.

Help Wanted

•.'

Beat of the Bend ...

...'·
•.
.;•

by Bob Hoeflich

'·•,

,,
..,'
Tony Jones of the Tuppers Plains
·: community has been going through a
:: lengthy ordeal with his health lately
·. and only yesterday was taken to
Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va., for further tests and
treatment.
Tony is fighting sugar diabetes
- and has not been home to stay for any
• amount of time recently although he
~ did getto spend a bit of time there on
·.: Christmas Day plus has been home
for a few shon visits.
·•
The Tuppers Plains resident was
~ admitted to Camden.Clark wbere on
~ Nov. 8 he underwent several surg' cries on an ulcer of the heel with four
doctors treating him in an attempt to
save his left. On Dec. 6, Tony was
taken to the Health South Western
Hills Nursing Facility for physical
therapy and to continue IV's twice a
Jay. He made great progress eventually being able to walk with a walker. On Jan. 8 he was taken to the
.. Arcadia Nursing Center in Coolville
. to continue therapy and the IV's. He's
·: : had a great positive outlook and has
·~ made progress until the setback
· which required that he be returned to
:. the Parkersburg hospital Wednesday.
: Cards can be sent to Camden·
• Clark or perhaps, you'd rather ~end
: them to the Arcadia Nursing Center,
~ 25625 Main St., Coolville, Ohio
~ 4S723, ~ince Tony will probably be
• returned there in a few days.

l
.
fOwner'e Neme
~~~~·
I
• City

.

IAmount Enclosed:
I

· . for •

at t6 eiiCh.

plctu~a

~--------------Deadltne Friday, February 91tl at 3 p.m.

1.

.J

Mall. or bring the entry,.form:

The Daily Sentinel
11 ~ Court St.
. Pomeroy, Ohio 45?69

I•

' For Love?

Call llowllll
1·900·255·2700

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
UO.OO/HR.
'

21563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, Ohio 45771
949-3013 Phone
949-2018 FAX

Ext. 9402
$2.99 per min.
Muet be 18 yra.
Touch tone phone
required.

Serv-U 619-645 8434

.

~y

·-

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

The Community Calendar Is
published as a l'ree service to iloa·
profit groups wisbin&amp; to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not tleslped 'to pi'OIIIOCe
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items l!ft printed as space permits
and cannot be gutll'llllteed to run a
specific number ol days.
THURSDAY
REEDSVU..LE -- Eastern Local
School District levy committee 7
p.m. Thursday at Eastern High
School. Public invited. Child care to
be provided. School representatives
will he on hand to answer questions.

CUIIDm Building 6 Aomodotlng

•New Homes
•Addition•
•NewGaragea
•Remodeling
•Siding
•Roofing
•Painting

Middleport, OH. 45760
AKC Reg. Puppies, Kittens, Birds &amp; More
Experienced Groomers - Financing Available

a Prlcel

11111'111'1 mo. pd.

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE
HOME

.
)
· water
'C ~~~r;~1;/T. Tre~tment
~IV:...~ r
Equ1pment
D~tributed

.

ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-cUMMINGS
' Lots of FEEDBACK to share
~ith you!
&lt; T-SHIRTQUD..TPATJ'Eirn: Barbara Lanier of Baton Rouge, La., was
l!JOking for this. Patsy Thompson of
Crowell, Texas, wrote to let us know
that a T-Quilt pattern is available
ltom Clotilde, 2 Sew Sni'iut Way,
88301, Stevens Point, WI S4481·
!i03I (1-800-772-2891). The .order
number is 424429, and the price for
i!le pattern is $6.48, plus shipping and
lptndling.
.
·• WHO WAS BEITY BOOP?:
Shirley Kilpatrick of Colcbester, Ill.,
was lookiog for a pattern for a Betty
~doll (\ve found, her one), and ii
IOd us to wonder if Betty Boop was
a )'ell person and, if n01, who invented her.
: Karen Roddy of Lutcher, La., had
received the following promotional

material from The Danbury Mint,
which was offering a Betty Boop
Porcelain Collector Doll, and kindly
sent it on to us.
" Betty Boop sashayed onto the
movie sc~n back in the 1930s. She
was in .'Talkartoons,' the first talking
cartoons. She batted her big, flirty
eyes ... walked with a cute little wig·
gle ... and when she exclaimed
'Boop-oop-a-doop!' in her babydoll
voice, she stole America's heart,"
Janet Block of Rutland, Vt., adds:
"Betty Boop was modeled after a real
person, the daughter of the man who
drew the Betty Boop cartoon. They
lived on Long Island and the drawing was somewhat of a caricature of
her. I used to work in New York City,
and the man I worked for grew up
near that family and actually dated
'Betty Boop' when they were teenagers, which had to have been some
60 years ago!"
OLIVE BUITER RECIPE: WarIY Sanders of Sierra Madre, Calif.;
remembered having had "olive but'ter" wben sbe was at boarding school
years ago, and she and ber friends
became addicted to it! She wondered
if it can still be found.
Elizabeth Kames of Elk Grove
Village, ill., writes: '.' Some years ·ago
'olive butter' could be purchased in
ajar, from Durkee's. When I could no

614-992-3200
·~-

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

SatJsfact/on

Guarst]tHd

Bill Doerfer
(614) 992-2979
(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone, .
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

Never Be
Lonely Ag11in

AI King

q;he ~tame
eo'lne'l

Call
1·900.656·2600
Eltasio1 3082

405 North Second Ave., Middleport 992:-so:!o

$~.99/min. 18+
Touch tone phone required.

,

992-3954

or 985-3418

Authorized I l l Distributor

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

Help Wanted

St. Mason, WV

11113115 1 mo.

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

A·C UTILITY
CONSTRUOION CO.
Overhead &amp;
underground
utilities &amp; lighting
Bucket, Digger
Truck Services
Service Pole
$2.50 per ft .

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

2/1:1J1211tn

1-614-378-9808

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine,
James E. Diddle

Oh. 45771

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512

Houn Repelr &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen 8Ith
Rampdellng
Room AddHione
Siding, Raoflng, Patloa
Renoneble
lneu,.,.·Experlencecl

a

C..l Wayne Nell

882-4405

._

For ' ' " Eatlmlt.l

TUT110k~.

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brlcldee

614-742·2193

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

NEFF REMODELING
SERVIa

IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

'"'"''""" Mill

Fll

R'UONABI E .LU'U

YOU'lLSAvE-El

.H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Porf116le

Oxygen Acetylene co,
Helium ellaizes Medical Grade 0.
P~.Pane Trlmix Ultra Mix ~hwil;i

'Ntc os...Mtta

...

lut"

Welding Supplies • Industrial GISts • Steel
Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
Aluminum/Stainless
Machine Shop

108 Pomeroy

We need a few
good people to
assist persons with
MRIDD with daily
living skills in Meigs
County. Various
positions available.
Call
1-800-531·2302

longer locate it I wrote to Durkee's
and they kindly forwarded the following recipe."
DURKEE'S OLIVE BUTI'ER
I cup pimento-stuffed olives
I tablespoon plain dry bread
crumbs
I tablespoon vegetable oil
2 teaspoons vinegar
I teaspoon dried parsley
I teaspoon fleeze-dried chives
112 teaspoon onion powder
114 teaspoon garlic powder
Place all ingredients in a blender
and blend till smooth.
REMOVING
SCRATCHES
FROM PLASTIC EYEGLASS
LENSES : Bob Heaberlin of Goldendale, Wash., . writes: " Recendy a
reader asked bow to remove scratches from plastic lenses -· you said it
coul.dn 't be done and suagestcd .a
couple of alternatives. Actually, it
CAN be done with a product.called
'Windshield &lt;:leaner and Reconditionet,' available from Sporty's Pilot
Shbp for $5.611. This is at least a lifetime's supply for eyeglasses! It can be
ordered from Sporty's Pilot Shop catalog, - Clermont County Airport,
Batavia, OH 4Sl03-9747 (l-800S43-8633). If you like catalogs, you
will probably find other useful'products in this one."

by

The water treatment company cordially invHes you to
participate in a free. no obligation, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hai'dneaa, Iron, PH.
PI•••• call ft,.inSojlalll2-4472 or 1-800-606-3313
to ael up your rr. . water enelyall. •
oOIMin

Pl. m-1171

Openings for 2.
Christian
etmoephere for
elderly care In a ·
IIOn-amoklng home.

a beeline for this T-quilt

(614) 992-6244

B. Jolene Rupe/Owner

Decks,

Home l"'provements,
Remodeling,
Add-On's, Roofing

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

882·2996

110

271 North 2nd Ave.

Siding, Porches,

Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

MINI STORAGE

POMEROY •· The Pomeroy
Group of Alcoholics Anonymous
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in the
basement of the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. Open-lead speaker
meeting.

,_.,,,..,....., ram111,.....,.

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

..........,

TIJPPERS PLAINS -· The I Oth
anniversary of VFW Post 9053 will
be observed at 6:30 p.m. Thursday
with a dinner for all VFW members
and their wives and Auxiliary members. Ten year pins will be awarded.

Qwdft31 Worlt

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal ·Commercial or Residential
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dally, weeidy &amp; monthly rental rates.

614·949·2512

~Sial

B. D. CONSTRUcnON

MODERN SAII'A'IOI

CALL

POMEROY -- The Meigs County Library Board will meet Thursday
at I p,m. The Library will be closed
from 3 to 4:30 p.m. to discuss per·
sonnel matters.

Opening Feb. 1st

Serve-U 61H45 8434

ROUND
BALES OF
HAY fOR
SALE.

REEDSVU..LE •• Riverview Garden Club meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Grac~ Weber.
Program will be hints for attracting
birds.

...... Estt......

Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.

FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 892·5536
814 892-2753

MIDDLEPORT ·· Meigs OAPSE
Local 17 meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. in
the Meigs Junior High School cafeteria. Bad weather will cancel.

"Supplies for aU your pel need."

HELPII

ASK ANNE 6 NAN

IPet'eNam~

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

Commu!'lity
·calendar

And, of course, I don't have to tell
you that tho weather is nasty. It
changes every IS minutes into some·
thing worse and everyone is watch· ·MONDAY
ing "old man river" hoping there will
POMEROY·· Meigs County Vetbe no come back. The only thing that erans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
remains constant is the fact that you Monday at Veterans Service Office,
do keep smiling.
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

uPET'S NAME"
Owner's Name

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING

. Traveling home from his work the
: other evening, Vic Young encoun. tered a liter soft drink bottle which
: has washed onto the street :in tbe
: flood.
. The bottle had a large white smi· ley face painted on the front. He
: investigated and found another mes::sage on the bottle reading "Look at

~ Make

.1
I
I
1
I
I'
I

nME

.

.

VALENTINE PETS

me." Inside the plastic bottle Vic
found a note written by a I0-year~ld
girl, Sarah Garrison, in Marietta on
April 8, last year. Vic has a 12-yearold daughter so gave the letter to her
and she was write to Sarah whose
message in the bottle took a long time
to reach Pomeroy.
--·---I should have advised you earlier
but as ·the saying goes, "better late
than never."
Owen and . Lora Damewood
marked their S8th wedding anniversary yesterday, Jan. 24. Congratulalions! Belated cards can be sent to
them at Lick Skillet Road,
Reedsville, Ohio, 45772. I'm sure the
- couple would be just delighted to
hear from you.
·

12 huge
Factory Choke Only

REfiL

Despite discouraging aspects at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, the vol·
unteer organization which does such
a good job in helping in so many way,
the Women's Auxiliary, has four new
members.
They are Fern Grimm, a retired
teacher; Effie Pickens, whom many
of you will remember from Shuler's
Market over the years; Sandra Southem and Lisa Compson. Sandra and
Lisa are students in medical fields at
Hocking College in Nelsonville and
ilre spending 34 hours a month at the
Meigs County hospital. As a part of
their activities, both have joined the
auxiliary .

.... !!~'!1!..'!'!'!!'!1!!!'~~!.'!!.'!:,
I

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. 1 PM

$6 couple

If you have a background In sales
and would like to make a career
change, we would be Interested
In talking to you.
Please Call
John Bennett or Steve McGhee
(614) 446-9800 For Appointment .

.,,,, •••,,•.

1

ArtYO.IMtly

111-

"THE CHAIN GANG"
CoYer $3 per person,

Meigs County De~nt of Human
Services, Meigs County WIC office,
Bureau of Motor Vehicles, Board of
MRIDD, Meigs County Library,
Middleport Public Library, Meigs
County Treasurer's office, and all area
high schools, as well as on the Meigs
County bookmobile at its designated~
stops.
•
For additional information, resi-:;
dents may call 992-2697 or stop by;:
the office at 112 Mulberry Ave., "':
Pomeroy.
.,~

THE DAILY SENTINEL:

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

SATURDAY NIGHT

OPPORTUNIR IN SALES!

Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

1149-2512

985 4473

D.J. FRIDAY NIGHT

CLASSIFIEDS

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)
"Ji'OR PETS ONI,Y"
WILL BE PUBLISHED TUESDAY, ·.
F_EBRUARY 13n1 IN

antibiotics tetracycline or doxycycline.
Until now, experts knew generally what caused the disease, but they
could not grow it in quantity so they
could study it.
Experts also hope that isolating
the germ will lead to development of
a
accurate blood test for the
infection .

Remodeling
Stop I Compar~
FREE ESTIMATES

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

J. E. DIDDLE,

CHEAPER RAJES

•Complete

1 10

PIC,.Uil YOUR Pft
G 'BE•••
Pft VILEN,.INES!

INGELS CARPET
lnvento Reduction Sale

·RSVP to offer aid to ·seniors

..

been diagnosed with HOE since
1990. Experl$ suspect many more are
infected and don 't know it; the illness
can seem like a bad case of summer
flu.
In people, the infection causes
sudden fever and body aches and can
lead to kidney or breathing failure.
Unlike the flu, it diles not trigger run. ny noses, and it can be cured with the

•New Homes
•Garages

Board of Elections
to register voters

.Scientists discover tick:-·carried germ causing iUness
: By DANIEL Q. HANEY
· AP Science Writer
. BOSTON (AP)- Scientists have
: isolated a germ responsible for a new
: wave . of tick-borne illness in the
· Northeast and Midwest.
· The breakthrough, reported in
· today 's New England JOUfl!lll . of
: Medicine by doctors from the Uni. versity of Minnesota. should speed up

FREE

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

-

Need 11 Pl•oiDp'tl.pl•er for
yor•r Special Occa•io11?
·Wecldlngi/RecepUona
oCoupona
(Eng~g~ment Plcturaa)
•Reunlone

•Annlverurlea
-Grvupa
-Family
Rellonable Prices

Cllll992·n47

Afttr4pm
During Wltkdaye

me on -kande

CHESnR STORAGE
One Unit NOw
Available

10x28, $65 per mo•
812-3881

J&amp;L INSULAnON
537 BRYAN PLACE .
MIDDLEPORT 992-2772

9fHee Houra: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m•

VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
VInyl Rep~Kement,
WindoM, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doo..,storm
.WindoM, o..ges.
F'" IEitlnta1la
IN-

SrtiiiiOfT

c........, ....

D.'sw.t.t......

New...._,wv . .
304 ..2-2118

,.
'•

,

�Cl~uraday,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

January 25, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dilly Sentinel• Page15

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOII:
ACROSS

PHILLIP
M m OU tJ CEI,1E NTS

005

ALDER

KIT 'N' CARLYL~ bJ Larry Wrl&amp;ht

Personals·

nished and unturniahed, securlry
deposit required , no pets,. 814·

992-2218.

· 40

Giveaway

1male Border Collie, 3yrs old.
Alae

1femala

Australian

snepnard, 4yro old . 304·882-

281111.
1yr old Austral ian Shephard,

short hair, browntwhite. good wf
chik:lren, trained well~ has shots,

to good homo. 304-117S.o41150.
275gal fuel oil tank. 304 -675·

t9t8.

This - r wttl nol
knowllngty accept
for realeSlate
which Is In violation ol the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwOtinga
advertised In this newspeper
are available on an equal
oppoii\Jnlty bOola.

3puppies, 2malea, 1lemale.
Springers. long l-air. good wlcllild·

. -.menta

ren, to best home only. 30-'·6754650. •
• Puppies, 2 Moles, 2 Females, 2
WNto. 1 Black, 1 Brown. Molller
Is Husky, Father : ? 614 -441 -'
0508. .

"You

only deaned the windows as
far as the drapes open?"

NORTH
•7 6 4

•s

992·7806.
t 8edroom. New. Gao Hea \ S2etl/

le,ae

-~

6 Deposit Aet:~u i red . .

614-44l!·2957.
2 Rooms, Furnished .Efficiency, All
Utilities Paid, Downstairs, 919

males, Born 11118, 614·446t517.

NewAnttque&amp;CraftMallraadyto
open. Needed are vendors of antiques, quility crafts, &amp; collect&amp;·
bles. No Fleas piG81fl SeriOus
inquiries only. 304-675-7824.

Terrier mil, male. very good na tured, 1yr old, to good home only.

3()4-675-4650.
Two 2yrs old Beagles. full blood·
ed. 304-882·2583.

60

11 0

Help Wanted

$t,OOO Weekly Processing Mall
Free lnlo. Send Sell- Addressed

Lost and Found

Found: Large Breed Dog Wearing
A Greenish Sweater, 614-367-

71t87.

Stamped Envelape : Express
Dept.13t, 100 East Whitestooe
Blvd., Suite 148-345, Cedar Park

TX 7ll8t3.

LOST: n1Bie, tan cat. subdivision
acro1s lr,om Beale Elementary,
Doc. 27111. Phone 304-675-8717.

Loll: Man'• llfack Billfold, Import·

ant Pap~Jri, Unr&amp;placeable Pictures, Please II Found : e14 -446·

0218.
LOST : on Gill Ridge , 1·18·96
8\IPning. black 3mos o'ld, luzzy
furrea pupPV, wearing red collar.

304-811S.32t3.

70.

Yard Slle

::i:::==:?=:::==:::====J
lllpolls
Ga

&amp; VIcinity

""A'"'LL""¥"'e-rd=Se-:-le-s""M~u-s":"t0::B-e'::P":"ai":'d":"ln" 1

S200 ·SSOO Wkly. Asspmble Pro·
ducts, No Selling. Paid Direct,· Ful ly Guaranteed. No Exp. Nec:as-

$~00 - SSOO weeki~ . Assemble
products. No selling. Paid direct.
Fully guaranteed. No experience
necessary. 7 da~s . 407 -875-2022 .
ext 0505HO.t~ .

Able

Avon

Representat;ves

needed . Earn money lor Christmas bills ar home/at work. t-800·

992-6356 or 304-882-2645, Ind.
Rep.

HI00-742-4738

Monday edition - 10:00 a.m. Sat-

urday.

AVON I All Areas I Snlrley
::.:::!:...--------1 Spears. 304-675-1429.

:Leoor=.:.'R:.:ao:;;.:d:.;•Ea:;;.:11t:.;L:;-=~::.Clt1io=
· ::.·--l

Pomero
·

y,

Earn up to $1,000 weekly stuffing
envelopes at home. Start now. No
experience. 'ree supplies, infermation. No obl igation. Sond self
addressed stamped envelope to
Express Dept 36, tOO East
Whitestone Blvd., SI.Jite 148-345,

Cedar Park. IX 78613.

Middleport

-.,.,......,..,,..&amp;.,...V-:-Ic.,-ln-:-lty-::'--:-:'7":-"l Easy Workl E&gt;eellent Pay! As All Yatd Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before.. the ad Ia to run, Sun day edition· 1:OOpm Friday, Monday edition !O:OOa.m. Sarurdav

80

Public Slle
and Auction

semble Products at Home. Ca ll
Toll Free 1·800-467· 5'566 EXT.
3 13.
Experienced Babysitter To Sit In
My Home, 4 To !5 Days Week,
Located In Bidwell Area, Refer·
ences A Must! Co nlact: "61.!1 -441 -

t 269 After 5 ~M .

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
licensed
l£16,0hio &amp; Weat Virginia, 304-

Own

Hours, Call (909) 715-2300. E&gt;t.
t351 . (24Houra).
No EJCperience Necessary! $500
To S900 Weeki~ /Potential Processing Mortgage Refunds, OWn

Part-Time Dental Receptionist
Needed. Send Re sponses .To:

CLA 36e, Clo Gallipolis Daily Trib-

sarv. 7 Davs 407·875· 2022 une, 825 Third
Ext.052!1H04
OH 45831 .

the day before the ad is to run . EarnSB-$15/HcAtWork -Home

Moving Sale : Furniture, All
Housewares To Bare Walls, Lawn
&amp; Garden
Equipmenr. fri~ 28th
1
At 2 P.M., Saturday 9 A.M . ·All
Day, Sunday 9 A.M . -12 P.M. East

c:essing Mortgage Refund~.

Hours, Call (909) 715-2300, E•t.
782, (24 Hourt).

AGENT: AVON SELLS ITSELF
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. Need CASH For Winter Bills?
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m. Frida)'.

No Experience Neceaaaryl $500
To $900 WaeKiy /Potential Pro-

E 1perienced Scrap Burners . 1mmediate Openings. Call 304·232·
1333 Mon ·Fri. 8:00 To 5:00. ·

~venue, Gallipolis, .

Postal &amp; Gow't Jobs $21 IHr -t
Benefits, No Exp. Will Train, For

Appl Ard lnb 1·1100·536-3040.
If You Enjoy Working With The
Public And Have Cl8rical Experience, This Job Is For Voul PC
Experience Desired . Please Submit Your Resume And Wage Requirements To Christian's Construction, U03 Eastern Avenue,

Gallipolis, OH 45631 , 6t4·446·
4514 (M·F. fl.5) .
Wanted: legal secretary, good
communjcation akllls, typing skill,
use of Word Perfect 6.0, rafefences required . Send resum4t to Box

G-21 . %Pt Pteasanl Register, 200
Main Street, Pt Pleasa.ru, WV

25550
Wor ld Book, now hi r"i ng. local·
saleaperson needed . Margaret

Pierce. 304-675-3775 altar Sprn.

180

Wanted To Do

"Certified Nurses Aide will care for
elderly person in their home. Point
Pleasant/Gallipolis area. :304-675·
4500.
.
Eleclrician Any K ind Of Electric

owner. 614-992-25211.
Clean Late Modal Cars Or
Trucks, 1DB7 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick 'Pontiac. 1900 East em AJ.Iei'IJe, Gallipolis.
J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying sal·
vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304-

773-5033.

6t4·379-2744

HOME
TYPISTS

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. Coins•.
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old PC Users Needed. $45,000 InCollectibles, Paperweights, Etc:. come Potential.
Call t -600-5t3-4:M3
M. T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Ext B· t0t89.
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-446--2842.
Used furniture- antiques, one
"piece or complete estates, Osb~

Home Typis!s, PC uaers needed.
$45,000 income potential. Call 1·

Martin. 814-9112-7441 .

800·513·4343 E&gt;t. B-9368.

. . .---------...1.-----------i

posit Required. 8t4-446-15t9.
Fumished Efficiency All Utilities
Paid, Shar8 Bath, $145/Mo., 919
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 6 t 4·

wtiltS HW Ref:. Rutland. one balh,
ln-gn&gt;urd pool, 8 t 4-992-5067.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riwerside Ap,rtments in Middle·

320

port From $232·$355 . Call 6t4·
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor-

Mobile Homes
for Sale

H~78

14X70 SChultz Mannchesltr
With Ux28 Factory Add-On

Room 814-446-IIO:M.
1987' Sanville 2 Bedrooms, 2

Balhs. CA,
P.M.

814·~74.

Aher 5

Bank Repos. Eeay Flnanciflll. Call
Russ Murdock HI00·25t-11070.

tuni6es.
Large 2 Bedroom Upstairs Apartment, 466 Fourth Avenue, $2501
Mo. 1150 Deposit, Refrigerator,

SIDYG FIJrnished, 614:-44&amp;-3870. ·
l-arge two bedroom apanm,nt
with stowe and refrigerator, $2501

mo. pius depo&amp;ll 814-992-4103.

or 3bodroom. Only

make ·2 payments to mowe in. No
payments after 4years. 304· 755--

Nice two bedroom aparonent in

5586.

Pomerov. 614-992·5858.

New Bank Repos. Onlv 4 leh. SUI

One bedroom furrlished apartment in Middleport, 6~4 - -446 -

in warranty. 304-755-7191 .

Price Buster! New 14x70, 2 or

Smokers. S300 Deposit, $350/Mo.

3br. Only $995 down. $ t 95/month.

Applications At 17-43 Centenary

Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nitro WV. 304·

Road,

755-5885.

350

.

Lots

&amp; Acr!lage

2acres., surveyed, county road
access. 17ft chest Unico. freezer.

304-675-t9t8.
7 Miles From Holzer, 7G5 Clark

Chapel Rof!. Por.,r. Ohio.

~llpol~.

614-446-2205.

2-K, Young School Age During
Summer. 3 Days per. Week Mini·
mum 614-446 -3657.
Consrruction work , all phases.
Additions, siding, plastering, stuc:co, synthetics, finish "drywall, roof
repairs, installing windows. 304-

Va lley, Apple Grove.
beaiJtifu l 2ac lots, public water,
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304-576-2336.

360

Real Estate

Wanted

Wanted to buy- One story 3 bed-.
room home in Meigs County with
separa1e dining room and ample
yard space. Send responses clo

Rooms for rent · week or month.
Starting at $120Jmo. Gallia Hotel.
fl 14·446-9580.
S leepmg rooms w1th cook1ng .
A lso trailer space on river. All
hook-ups. Call after 2 :00p.m.,

304·773·5851. Mason WV.

MERCHANDISE

41 o Houses for Rent
1 Bedroom House Furnished 735
Rear Third, Gallipolis, $,50/Mo.

$150 DepoSi\ 614-448-31170.
2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom
Trallar In Gallipolis, 814·446"·8849

For lnbrmalion.
2 Bad room In Golllpolia, $3151
Mo,. lease &amp; Deposit Required,

814-4-18-2957.

51 0

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refr~ ­
gralors, 90 Day Guarantee !
French City Maytag, 6,4 -446·

7795.

882·2904.

Nice clean 2 or 3 bedroom house
in Pomeroy, HUD accepted, will
lease with option 10 buy, deposit
and references, no pets, 814-698-

72«.
Unfurnished rwo bedroom house
nice and c:tean, ·depollt required:
no Inside poll, 814-992-3080..
Wetzgal Street, Pomeroy, WID,

$350/Mo.llepoait. 51 3·922-0294.

reconvnends that you do buli·

420 Mobile Homea

the oflarlng.

Electric Wheelchairs /Sc:ootars,
New fUsed, Scooter !Wheelchair
Lilts, Stairway Elevators, lift
Chairs, Bowman.·s Homecare,
814 .. ol8-7283.

for ,Rent

1togal tank set up spec ials. Fish

GE

20~

Hand 01Jitted Quill &amp; Comfort
Made Out Of Trouser Cuffs, &amp;

Nurses GaPe· 614·448-3375.

lntenherm &amp; Muter Mobile Home
Furnaces. Gas, Oil &amp; Electric In
Stock. Large Distributer ~uy Out
of New Mobile Home Furnaces .
Bank Financing Available , Call
Bennelts Mobile Home HTG &amp;
CLG At 614 -446-9416 or 1-800-

J&amp;B TECHNOLOGY

VITATABS.

~Two

1 year old black male Poo dles to good home, 814· 742 ·

Owner, 614-367-7623.

2656.

1994 Ford Explqrer XLT, 34,000
Uiles, 4x4, loaded With Extrasl

Musical
Instruments

Csll Ron Evans. ~-800·537- 9528.

576-2988. Prices : .15e!Bd.FI. To
.50,8d.Ft
Matching White Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer, £1 Years Old, S2SO
Both: White Westinghouse Dryer

4 Years Old, $t25; Desk $50:
White Wnirlpool Dryer S75. 6 t 4379-2720 AFTER 6 F!M.

Deci&lt;, Snarp CD player Wlremote
conuol·$400.00. 814-448·9255
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprighl, Ron Ewans Enterprises,

Jackson. Chic. Hll0·537-g528.

Tondv 1000 Computer With -Color
Monltbr, Printer, Floppy I Hard
·Drive, Hardware I Investment
Book; $250. 8t4·U8-8577 Or

Complete home fJJrnishlngs.
Hours: Mon · Sat. g.5_ ea.-.48 -

0322, 3 milto out Bulaville Pika

Freeo.,Mrr.

PICKENS 'URNITURE
New!UIIod
304-675, t450
Ammana Side By Side fle~;gera ·
tor. -ltnllh Floor Model Color T.V.,
Cable Reilly. Wuntr, Dryer. Cor
B a -. 81H.t238.
VI'RA FURNITURE
Bt4-448·3t58 •
'
OUIIity Hou- fumiwre"""
Appllancea. Groat Daaia On
C&amp;oh Ard c«rrrl AENT·2·0WN

""" l""""' ·~ ~­

"'" Dollvtrr Wlfiln 25 ~

530

Antlq!Jel

Buy or sell. Al"rfM Anliques, '

Can

.

Ba Seen At 381 ·auckrldge

Road. Apartment 37, - 1.

Tandy 2500 SX/33 Computer WI
Super VGA Monllor, Sound
l!laotor Sound Card, Tandy MMS·
· 10 Stereo '-mP. land~ DMP- ·
240 Color Printer, Plus 12000.00
of Software on hard drive· ·

l1200.00 814--Col8-9255
. Toddlor bed 140. Coli 304·773·
8178.
1Wo-bialn Mafgs ~Gar­

--~IOand
ea-elndud!lcl.
. ~~~~
lng • $2000 ltllr .,.... Cll417·
-4174colltct. .

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

..

Yamaha Warrior, 7mos old, ~
&amp; runs good, $3.150. 304·

,.

Farm Equipment
1996 Honda 4x4 like New, UGed
On~ 2 Tanks 01 Gas, $4,350, 64·

304·1195-3441.
1965 Massey Ferguson fractor,

I;;;;.;;.._=.;_-------

Verv Good CondWon, Runs E"xcellon!, 614-742·1457.
Ford 3000 Tractor S3, 995 ; 6!5
Massey Ferguson Diese l ResiOfed, $4,350; 9N Ford Restored

760

675·7t95.

.

herOic avanta

36E•37 Got taller
39Ak&gt;M
41 Medical aUIIIx

1
2
3
4

Boat

Singer Turner
· 11 Olympic
vaadar Rohe
7 To whom--

Urgn

LHttnlngof
-lily

r.:;:::•t-

concern

-llotnaa
8 CIHing forth
10 Short aklrt

5 Anglo-Saxon

B

lellar

6 Archltacl -

17 Shade- .
18T1ktto- '
23 Fumbler'a
oulburat
25 ~nlah hero :

26 &amp;mill dog&amp;

•

28 Mldjley
31 Columnlat -

·

_..... .

n-+-+-+-1 .27
Mila28 Filled wllh
Bombecl&lt;
32 Dlatrlbute
..rda

35
36
40

Nanow

-rtura
Jokealer
Left out
TYPI ot jaclr81 .
Flahdl- ·

43
45
47-111111
.
49 OW1Whou•
50 --lorAII

Saaaona

52 Bird J11r1
54 eo.monaut

-Olguin
68 TVhorw
(2 wda.)

se'taroroot
seo..n
59

Compeea pt.

CE.LEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

·

Celebrity Cipher efWIOgtams are creale&lt;l hem quotaoont by farncHA people. pasa and plll58rlt
Eactl Jetter in the ~r stand&amp; lor another. Todty's clue: D 9QUIII5 C

a

ZVJVA

CZWB G

wyv
E R

B

H0 I

0 ·

I0 H

'w

TBAHW
GBTV

GOJOWUAR

v z.

B

WIVZWR

OGEUHW

HMVZW

RVOAH

U T

OUZWBZCOGGR

YCZXAR.'
OZWYUZR
SCBZZ .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Oh, what a tangled web we weave, 1 when first we :
practice to deceive!" - Sir Waner Scott. ,
.

r::~::.· scaR4\\~-~£~s·
........ ltr CUT R. I'OIIAN

0 fec&gt;IIOngt

Will
lAM I

lettero of the
be-

-d•

foo11 ocrambled
low to form four -do.

I

1 1 1

I

PARNO

SUTTAS]
1

r 1J

I

'

~~~e~~ra~s;z:~i~~~.~:f:1 ::c;·

.

Over tO ,OOO Transmission, New
Clutch Kits, New Pressure Plates ·

1

Startiflll S-10"• $89.95, 614-379:
2935.

•

SCIAM-lm ANSWERS

The Trcosurc You Set~ Is the
Sovinfl You'll Find In the
Clossifled Section.

Square bales, never wet , $1 .50

per bale, 614·992-24!&gt;4 evenings.

TRANSPORTATION

Sale

'83 Firebird, 82,000 miles, 2. 5 4
cy l., new tires, ba1tery and eJI -

naus, t·toPI. 814·742-2648.

810

Home

"89 Thunderbird sc. two door, 3.8

Improvement~

and leeks, "Groat Cor,' $8500

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

litre,. V·S, elite model turbo, PS,
PB. M;. 5 speed, power seats
814· 992·7478 or 6a· 949-

2879.

ITHURSDAY

SERVICES

''

Cooker· Mouse • Crush · Bal(ery • CHECKBOOK
After buying our first house, my husband and 1discovered that homeowners have to be handy with tools
or a CHECKBOOK!

JANUARY 251

.'

'

.~

·'
• : ::

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. · •••
local references furnished . 'Call : ·~

- - - - - - - - - - 1 (et•l •46·0870 Or 1814) 237- . • ••
1978 Chrysler Cordovia, Alto 0488 Rogers Waterproofing . Es· • : :.
White Firblfglau Topper Fo 1Bb11Shed 1B75.
: -~
long bed S· t 0 Pick-Up;
• •.

XRtOO Motorcycle, Needs

On Motor, 814 -367-7705, 814367: 1043,

- - - - - - - - - - · •••

Appliance Parts And Service : All
Name Brand&amp; Over 25 Yea rs Ex·
~:':":':"--:---:--::-::-:---1 perience All Work Guaranteed,
runs ~~:';~ ~:?s •
French City Mayta9, 61 4-4rl16·

0

4

trade. 304.£175-1575.

2 500

7795.

: ·;
~ " .•
• : ...
: ~. ~

. ••

.. .
General Home Main· : ~ -:
1984 Pontiac Fiero, As Is,
tenence ; Painllng, vinyl sidi ng,
614-44Hl694, Ask For Mu
corpen~
doors, wlrmwo, batns, ·
Cathy.
mobile
repair 'and more. For ·
~,9::8::'7-:H-:-o-n-d:-a-:A:-c-co_r_d:-A:-u-to_m_a_t-:-ic-.1 free estimate call Chet, 614· 992·

::-:--:-::--::-:----:---:---:--:--1 C&amp;C

Moon Roof, 4 Door, Air, $3.000.
810 448 4880, 8t4-448.073t.
.
C
t 988 Po ntiac, Nice ar, Loaded,
St .800, t987 Dodge Nice Car
S850. Both Auto. 814..41·0564.
t 989 Piymoutn Sundence
U~es. Auto. A;r, PB. PS, Cruise,
lloo
38fi.O 1

.::::::'·~·8=t-•·..:..:..:-::..:30..:..:..·_7_::--l

~6:;.;323
:::.._·--::=::-:::-:---D!l'IWALL

ASTR()-GRAPH ·

.

•

Hang, finish, repa~
.Ceilings textured, plaster repair. t.:

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Call Tom 304-675·4180. 20 years ·
experiern
R

T

on's V Service, specializing in
Zenith also serv~ing moSI other
brands. Ho~Jse calls, 1-800· 79 7.

t 1190 cnovy Aotro van Creotlinor, _oo_t_5_.w_v_30_4_·5_711_
·239..:..:..8:.:.._ __

maroon &amp; mauve, 4 captain
-.8811, loaded, $8,500 OBO, 614• Rooting and guuers- commercial
742-2241 .
and residential, minor repairs . 35

- - - - - -....,-- - - - 1 reors experience, B&amp;B ROOF· '
lNG. 81•·992-5041 .
.

.."
RHidentlll or ootrtmeiclaiJl"i''""
,...... or ._tro. Mllltr

u:

cenatd electrician. Aldenou'

Elactrtcal. WV0003011; 30•-8iS·

1'118. .

.

- "•· .

•

TM course you are presently pursuing
appears to be the best one lor now, and.
you should enjoy rewards when you '
reach your destinatiOn. Taite care not- to·
awllclt ·itr8Citons when the end' Ia in sight.\
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fell. 19) You
not be able to !unction ,.. htdependetiiiY
•• you ~till&amp; todaY. tip not makli a
bad 'iluatiQil .IVOrf! by gn~_&gt;Yi,g Cfn the
toa~ h . Get a 1llmll_ on IW~ t1&lt;) '!"ders~and-

rna,

I.

endeavor. It you

try

to a ccomplish every-

ing lne influences that will govem you in
the year ahead . Send for your Astro·
Graph predictions today by mailing $2
and SASE to Astro-Graph. c/o this news·
paper , P .O . Bo• 1758 . Murray H ill
Station, New York, NY t0156. Make sure

thing at once, lhe results could be shabby.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Just because a
companion can talk louder and faster
than you can . his or ner ideas may not be
right. Rely on your judgment.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept : 22) Tolerance

to state your zodiac sign .

and patience will be required today if you

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Monitor

become involved wilh co -workers who
your conversations today because you do
don'' grasp ideas as quickly as you do.
not want to reveal confidential inlormaliori LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Speculating on
to the biggest btab"'rmoulh in lhe CrOWd.
Pf!Ople Or Situations COUld ·prove unwise
~ES" (...r,h 21-Aprlllll) TOday, if yow today . Bad decisions could aflect more
go shopping with IHende, don'l let theln lhan just your finances.
talk you into buying unusual merchandise SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Impulsive
or strange gadgets you may never use.
· behavior could create complication s
TAURUS (April
20) In career today . You might make a hasty agreedevelopments today, don't
as If you ment which does not serve your best
don'l really need your associates. II they _ lnlerests.
lei you lend lor yourself, you "mlght nol be SAOm;.f\RIUS (NOv. 23-0.C. 21) Try not
sucaoutu.l.
.
,
to attempt tasks that require total CO"il'!"·
GEMINI (May 21-.luna 120) Re-examine tratlon and tenac~y today. You• short
your l~a of Inspiration today before attention span might not cut the mustard.
springil1g into
Under closer scruti· CAPRICORN (O.C. 21-Jen. 11) Strive to
~·they rn,y "?f •loilk ~great as You ftn;t restrlcl your extravagant urgas today ,
~· J :
.
Vou· should J10t wiSte resources on
C~"'CIR· (J~ne 21-July 22) ~ou must • something foolish. Make every penny you
have patience today In regard to a new spend count.
,
·

2May

· Friday, Jan. 26, 1996

Suppll. .

plr•·

blera'aSin.
34 Striae of

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Round Bails Of Hay,· Never Wet &amp; I~~~~~~~~~..:::::.
Stored In Barn, 614-245-5117.
I·

neg.,

DOWN

30 LOC8Ied
33 Cara...m-

NJVl:J(~!

'Building

1124 E Moln S~- on RL 124, Block, brlcl!, oawar
wind·
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. tO;OO IWRo, 11ntllfs, etc. Cl&amp;ll Wlntara,
a.m. to e:oo p.m., Sundey' t:OO to
lo 0 ro~da, 0~ Coli 814·245·
·1:00 p.m. 114-IH·IIM.
5t2t .

~

Many people, myself includeli, were
saddened by the death of English actor Paul Eddington last November. I
really enjoyed "Yes, Minister" and
"Yes, Prime Minister," in which
Eddington played Jim Hacker, a
Conservative politician who, in the
first program, had just become the
Minister of Administrative Alfairs. He
wanted to make his mark, but had to
struggle against his personal secretary, Sir Humphrey Appleby, played
by Nigel Hawthorne. Any legislation
Sir Humphrey doesn't want passed,
im't, despite Hacker's best elforts. Sir
Humphrey is Hacker's right·hl\lld opponent. If you've never seen these
programs, catch them ·next time they
are on your local PBS station.
In this deal, Hacker had to make
three no-trump after the opening lead
of the club two, East playing the four.
"Humphrey, I appear to have nine
top tricks: one spade, one heart, four
diamonds and three clubs (after trick ,
one&gt;. Even the Chancellor of the
Exchequer could make it."
"That is true, Minister, except for
the concomitant impediment in the diamond suit."
"What?"
' "The diamond suit is blocked,
Minister."
"Ah, yes, Humphrey. What would
you recommend?"
"Win the first trick wilh the club
king lor ace). Then, afler unblocking
your two diamond honors, you can
lead a low club towards dummy's jack,
forcing a dummy entry to your eighth
and ninth tricks."
"So, Sir Humphrey, you're saying
that it's right to waste a high card early to get two tricks in interest later."
"Yes, Minister."

Grain

Autos for

.._,..words

1978 Ford F250 body pans . 304· '

Or 6 Year Old Golding. 814-3670633.

71 o

68

wl11111d

1993 201 Pro XL, 20' Strutos. '
bass boat, 200 XPHP, 614 ·667-·:

NH489 Deluxe Haybine $4,000 .

Hay &amp;

. .....

Lltht tour-

edL 1IF l'M. FIV£ Mlf.~Ure) lA"i::, l"'-

for Slle

7:J47or 614-949·2879.

640

..

'ltiJ CAA J.OSn£ AAD &amp;AT mE

750 Boats &amp; Motors

$1,995: 8t4-286-6522.

Livestock

'

IF YOJ'R€. FIVC.Mif..IUIB LA"!t",

·I?PJ.,LY

258·1357.

1·25

~

~OT

Army Surplus by

:;;;:::t"7:~~=~~~~~

80VNI&gt;

E~NI~.

Sondyvilt Poll Ofllco. Noon-epm, .
111-Sun. 304-273-58515-

S50

Tttf

,.. M~,GfftS, IT

.Winter heavy clothing. Sari'

Somerville••

A~L

WITtl

TO tiAPPfN,

Registered Quarter Horse, 5 112

GOOD

j

;·
'

89 Ford Aerostar 7 passenger
, cleen, $4,000 080, 614·992·

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock. 1:;-----::----:-:--::-~

1:00.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

6t4~46-e5B9 .

3 Year Old ACHA Mare In·
cenlive Fund Shown In 4-H 614446· 7693 Afier 5 P.M.

446·7398, 1·1100·499-3499.

Vine Street. Call 814·448·7398.
1-800-499-3499.

1

yi,A$

630

Washer $205; Matching Dryer
$205 1 Year Warranty ; Ponable • Super S1ngle Wlterbed N... Mat·
Washer S95; Skaggs Appliances,
treu, Semi-Wavoloaa $150 Or
76 Vine Street, Gallipolis, eu - Boot Offer, eU-31'9·217• After

APPLIANCES

SJ.IE WAS ONLV
AND I
ASKIN6VOU
KI~EW T~E
WI1EN '(OU WERE ANSWER!
BORN, SIR ..

'

11193 Chevy ·s Blazer LT 4x4
35,000 Miles, leather lntenor. , .

1-&lt;:.

Sele, Gaurantaedl
a14-44, ·0950
JET
AERATION MOTORS

Sansu 1 AMIFM Stereo Rece1ver
W/4 Speakers , JVC Cassette

USED

A DOUBT, TI-IAT I KNOW ·
TilE ANSWER!

1992 Jeep Rangier 33,000 Actual
Uiles, like New, 614-441 ·0177
Days, "304-675-3981 Evenings.

Chewablel nutritiOUS. Avai lable O·

814-379-2744.

Weslinghouse Dryer S75; Whirl ·
pool Washer $95: Kenmore Dryer
$75; Whirlpool Refrigerator .Frast

Washers, dryers, refr i gerator~,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances , .78

Ohio.

Make sure your dOQ and cal keep
their Wintry coals. Ask R&amp;G Feed
&amp; Supply, 614·992· 2167 about

We Have A Large Selection Or
late Mo·del T.V.'s &amp; VCR's For

And Gaurantoedl $100 And Up.
Will Deliver. 6 t 4-669-6441 . •

Was $150 Cui To $t25: Maytag

S(}RE, BE'f'OND ASHADOW OF

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-250,
72,000 Miles, $6,000, Can Be
Seen At : Gallipolis Daily Tribune,·
825 Th~rd Avenue, Galllpoll(

NEKOTE . Delicious nutritiof)al
bod supplement

570

LIFE WHEN I'M ABSOLUTELY

614·448·9372 Davs. 814·446·
6457Nigtll.

Insure your pat's winter coat. Ask

JACK

Tf.IIS IS ONE TIME IN Ml{

digital remote telev ision,

G.E . washer Heavy Duly $75;

Range 30 Inch Advac:oto Green

Chroma New Tires, Size -3e•
loaded, Extra Clean, Very Sharp,

R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply, 814·992·
2164 about HAPPY JACK TO -

HAPPY

[ KNOW T~E ANSWER!

t9891lodge Full Size 4 WO Exira

Firewood Seasoned $40 Pick-Up

Refrigerators, Stoves, Washers
And Dryer&amp;, AU Recond i tioned

REAl E S TAT E

SAV£MONEY

hard drive, Word Perfect 5. 1 Plus,
Print Shop Oelu1e, True TJIP&amp;
Fonts, includes Printer Star

For Your" Carper &amp; Vinyl Needs
Mollohan Carpets Rt "7 N. 614·
446· 7444.

Was $t25 Cut To $95; Eleetric

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

mail until you have Investigated

12 MHZ, I MEG RAM. 20 MEG

Fuel Oil Stove With Blower $50 :

2bedroom house in Hartford. 304 -

ness witn pecple you know, ~nd
NOT to und monor through tna

Compt.ner lor &amp;ale- PC Clone 286,

Country Furnirure. 304-675-6820.
At 2 N. 6miles. PI Pleasant, WV.
Tues-Sat9-6, SI.Jn 11 -5.

Harves1 Gold Frost Free $ f,2!5;
Electric Range 30 Inch Whira

Business
Opportunity

P!ices At Sl1oe care. Gallipolio.

Lumber : Oak Poplar, Pine To
Place Order Call After 6 :00 304·

Goods

Free, Wnilo St 25; Refrigerator

21 o

Boot&amp; By Redwing·, Chippewa,
Tony Lama. G~Jaranteed lowest

PEANUTS

firm. 304-773-5109.

Baby bod, otroller, Wlllke&lt;, swing, · Tank &amp; Pol Shop, 2413 Jackson
·
.-ve: Point Pleasant, 304·675·
Black Walnut Kernel's 814-388- 2063.
8836.
.

ed. $800.00 Cost St500.00 Hand·

Household

ve·

tar seat 304-875-4548.

1cap Electric Scooter $400.00 Little Rascal; 614-388·8661

614-448-1358 9 References Re·
qui red.

FINANCIAL

:-=.:...;--:--::---::---

Kirby Sweeper Shampooer at tachment/ Hand auth vac. includ-

Will do house keeping or take
care of elderly during the day, $10
_per hour, cal l. Pegg~ 814-992·

304-675-7365:

Had Shots. $50,814-379-2932.

872·5967.

446·2501 or 6U·367-06t2. Efle·

Daily Sentinel. ~0. Box 729·19.
Pomaroy, OH 45789.

RENTALS

Fumlshed .
Rooms

2 Bedrooms, Total Electric, Small
Yard, lease, Sec ..Oep., No Pets,

Wil l provide child care in my
home, M·F. Excellent references.

Remotti. After 3 P.M . 84·4484t89.

,987 S·,O Blazer Tahoe 4JC-4,
auto,
overdrive,
loaded, .
, 40,000mi., run&amp; great, $4,800•

1954 Ford NAA tractor, lilw new.

675-8902.

5933 or 6t4-69fl.6364.

50 Projection TV Color With

AustrBiian Shepherd Male, 7
Months Ok:l, Blue Merle, Friendly,

Duct Syatems And Air Condition·
ers. Free Estimates.

capped. EOH 304-675-6679.

1984 Chevy S-,0 Blazer, VB 8uto,

Tai~

26

By Phillip Alder

&amp; 4-WDs

Wormed, Dew Claws Removed,
Docked, 614·256-6807.

.pm.

At Bossard library AI 61 4-446·
73Zl.
Twin Rivers Tower, now accepting
applications lor 1br. HUD subsidIZed apt. for elderly and han.di ·

vans

ac. locks &amp; runs good . $3.500 . ·.
304·802·3652.

610

ciency Rooms, Cable, Air, Phone,
Mlc:rowave &amp; Refrigerator.

1Scenic

730

SlgnMute tune 60 TWJa o1 bean
(2 wda.)
61 llhrllhon, e.g.
18 Oulmoded
62 Llon'a priCia
20 Actor - Mlrieo 53 Crlmaon
21 EaplonaOa org. 64 Singer Paul 22 Numero65 -out(.24 !fon11rotlt org.
frugllly)

The fact of fiction

15,000 MileS. 8t4·367·7B23.

cock81 spam.:n
·-• p ups, shots,

Librarv: .S350 Par Month. Deposil
Required, No Pets; Contact Judy

.ve:.:::n:..:
. 304::..:.-.:882:::..:-2904=.::..:·-----

cnildcare M·F sam-5:30pm Ages

AKC

Hi-Efleciency L.P. Or Natural Gas
92'14 Furnaces 100.000 BTU t 800·291·0098, 614·446-6308,

Three Room Apartment, Next To

General Maintenance. Painting,
Yard Work Windows Washed
Guuers Cleaned light Hauling,
Commerical, Residential, Steve:

SchOol.

9 prom dresses, plain black velvet , sequined black velvet, red .
All size 8·10. 304·67s:'5108 after

$15!). 304-875-6582 aher 4:30pm.
leave message if not home.

Lots on Midway Dr. in New Ha·

Nursery

96. Call304-875-3445.

Small One Bedroom, Excellent
ar,· Dryer, Stove Refrigerator, Non

SHE DONE IT
BECAUSE YO'RE SUCH
A eooo PUPIL II

TODAY!!

256·6753.

AKC Boxer pups , tails docked,
dew claws removed, ready 1-26·

Wheets,.$275, 81•·379-2282.

Onlv 2 left . New 1996 2-3bod·

WDrk Done, 814-448-1137.

Sun Valley

··minion Case, Set Of 33 12-50
111'11, Grea1 Condition On Chrome

rooms. $995 down, $189/mo. Free
delivery/setiJp. C11ll ~uu Mur-

Condition, Country Setting, Wasn-

SCHOOLMARM ·

MOVED ME UP TO
TH' FRONT ROW

1993 Ford Splash, loaded, lm·
maculate Condition, S9,800, 614-

Pets for sale

Groom Shop -Pat Grooming. Fea-

Load 614-388-9265.

Circle Motel, Gallipolis. OH 614 -

814·388-9643. 614·367· 70t0.

Merchandise

3091 , 614-992·5304 or 6t4·992·
2178.

dock 1·800-25t-5070.

TH'

'Nmaha Blalter Runa Good · turing Hydro Bath . Julie Webb.
1994 GMC 1500 Series Short
$1,500; Chevy Roarend &amp; Trans· Call8t4~1.
.
Bed; 2 Tone Paint. Autonla,c. AC,

$250/Mo. $250 Deposit. 814·446·
3717.

Milos, $7,200, 814-245-

,gg2

N 3rd, Mi&lt;ktleporL 2bedroom, fur· · N~IOOO, $700.614-992-7788.
ntshed apartment. Deposit &amp; ref·
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,
3br, 2batn, St 799 down, $2751 erencet. 304-882-2566.
300 Thru -2,000 Gallons Ron
month. Free delivery &amp; letup.
Only at Oakwood Homes. Nitro ' Nice 2 Bedroom Garage Apart· Evans Enterprises. Jackson, OH
ment With Refrigerator &amp; Stove, t-1100-537·9528.
wv. 304-755-5885.

450

614-3811-0429.

560

Miscellaneous

limited Offer! 199fl doublawide,

Five acres,
aerator, near
Aacine,$16,000 can finance with
haltdown,614-9~-2025.

ish References And Work History ~ Professional Tree Service, Com At Time 01 Application . 1403 plete Tree Care, Bucket Truck
Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis, OH
Serv~e ·50 Ft Reacn. ~lUmp Re·
45831.614-446-4514 (M·F. !f-5).
mowal, Free Estimates! In·
surance, 24 Hr. Emergency ServHelp Wanted on Dairy Farm:
ice -Call And Savel No Tree Too
Milking, Feeding, Bedding and
Big Or T,.o Small! BidWell, Ohio.
Equipment
operater.
Andy
A~am's Da~rv.

Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath.
Downstairs, Utilities Furnished,
Clean, No Pets, Reference, De·

446-3945.

Three bedroom nome in country,

RECEPTIONIST !INSIDE SALES: New t 4x80, 2

Georges Poriable Sawmill , don't
haul your logs 10 the mill just call
773-57850r304-773-5447.
FURNITURE STRIPPING &amp; RE· . 304-675-1957.
.:.;.::..:;;.:;.;;;..;~.;...;.;...;_;.;___ I FIN ISH I NG Mu51 Be Roli able.
90 W11nted to Buy
Hard Work;ng, Seii-Motivalod, MATH TUTOR· will tutor high
- - - - - - - - - - ' - - · 1 And Ba Knowledgable Of Wood. school &amp; college studenll In bas•c math, algebra &amp; ttigonometry,
Antiques, colleotables, estates, Full Or Part Time Available. Inex- contact John at 6t4·992· 7096.
perienced Need Not Apply. F urnRiverine Antiques, Russ Moore,

Huge !led&lt;. 614-388-9o4117.

Deposit Requir~. 513-Q22.:.a294.

BARNEY

5165.

Country Side Apartments. Nice 2

Bedrooms. ,..;, WID. Water, Sew-

'~-

Speed, New Rims, Tires. CO,

540

Laclga

a IIC01116ng

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South Weal North Ellal
2 NT
Pass 3 1'('1'
All J1111
Opening lead: • 2

Firm. 614-367-0612.

~o.ooo

ReYtM (!ext)

VIla

~

ebbr.
5pMm
41 Plvlngmelarlll
51 Second mo.
53 Seuonlnil
57 - pert.

•A K 9 5

PS, V-8, Ready To Work I

2bedroom apartment, available
Feb. 1. No pets, very nice . 304 -

Equal Houoing Opportunity.

tA Q

1980 International Dump Truck
With 9 Ft Snow Plow &amp;1 Salt Box

. Green Apts. 149 or call 61 4·9923711 EOH.

lot. lhls 2 atory 3b8droom. bolh &amp; er Garabge Included, $350/Mo.

lovely New 'Home 90 Acres, Spa·'
cio~Js Interior, 2 Baths, 2 112 Car
Garage, Fireplace Heat Pump,

tiD 7 6 4

•A 9 8 2

facilities, close to school in tcwn .
Applications available at: Village

Beagle dog, male, 8mos old,
lriendly, to best home only. 304-

_6588-·- --::-::--::-::-::=-1 Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile Need 5 Ladi" To Sell Avon. 814Peekapoo ·&amp;Chihuahua Mix, To Home, 614--446..0175.
446-3358..
Loving INDOOR Home, 2 Fe 1...;.:...:.::.:.:;__ _ _ _ _ __

...

aA 53

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
· Irom $226 10 $f9 t . Walk to snop
&amp; movies. Call 614•446-·2568 .

1f2 has a small basement, 2 out
buildings, has new roof, i'"l8¥f electric: furnace, $3,000 down, paymenll of S~ 80 a month. Call for
appointn-.nt304-5e2· 7250.

•KJ76

pliances furnished, laundry room

1992 Ranger XlT 4 Cylinder, 5

leon-Mason Co~Jnty, WV over looking Kanawha Valley, beautiful
view of the river .sits on tl2acra

'

4

2bdrm. apts .. tota l electric, ap-

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

110 Help Want~d
6:-7-S.o411_50_
. -=-'-:-:~--:--I 90
Wanted to Buy
Black, part Bardtt, Collie puppies,
1male, tlemale, 4rttos old, to good Wanted To Buy: Ju.nk Autos With Law office seeks full-time experi·
home. 304 -213-3115 or 304-fl75· Or Without Motors. Call larry enced secretary, with good grammar, twing, word processing
lively. 614-388-9303.
4867
skills. Send resume to Box G-24,
Female English Setter. Also part Wanted To Bu~ : littl8 Tikes Toys, %Pt Pleasant Regliter, 200 Main
Street, Pt Pleasant, WV 25550.
Englisn Senor puppy. 304·875- 814·245-5887.

•K J 2
•Q 10 3
t9 8 s
•Q I 0 8 2

Ot-25-M

tK J 3 2
•J 7 6 3
EAST
• Q 10 9 8

SOUTH

7Wk old pum. part Pit Bull. 304·
. .
Homes for sale

WEST

rcy

446-3945.

1984 Nlasan 4-Wheel drive, good
cond.. $2.500. 30H75-2457.

· 31 o

~ -

Second Avenue, Gallipclla, 014-

773-9136.

875-~

~

, bedroom apartment In Middleport, available December 1, all
utilities paid , S250 per mon th,
$tOO deposit, 8am to 5pm 61-4·

Mo.,

4 ActriU Moen

12
13
14
15
16

1 and 2 bedroom.apa.rlmltnts, fur·

All real estate advertising In
tniS n e - r Is lllblect to
the Fedefal Fair Housing Act
of t968 v.t11ct1 makee tt Hlegal
to adVertise "any preference,
, limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion,
eex famllal status or national
origin, or any lntentk&gt;n lo
make any sucn 'preference,
limitatiOn or diSCflmlnetton."

1 Pigpen

• Promo....
...
Hurry

ApiJtn)ents
far Rent

--.to Pucwlaue lluall

42 Fiber p11111
44 llagllglble
... W.kand-

act

- '

'.

I!Ciion·

'.

'
I

-.

•

-:'.
I ,

�•
Page 16 • The Deily Sentinel

Thursday, January 25,1116

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'Spontaneous' shrines ·help communities face . grief \\'11:\ ri ,.S ' 1~ \\ '
,By TOM CURLEY
USA TODAY
• In Union, S.C., mourners left red·.dy bears and ClOSSC$ at the shin of
_Lake John D. Long, where S~~~a~~
Smith drowned her sons in 1994:
' In ()ldahoma City last year, a put..
lie shrine was born when so~
,hung an American nag on a liglll pole
~car the bombed federal building.
:Soon there was a makeshift shed
.filled with stuffed anjmals, ·wreaths,
candles and cards.
: In Oovenlalc, Calif., FBI agents
left poinsettias where the body of 12year-old Polly Klaas was found in
1993. Today, Oowen and personal
'offerings still are left at the sill.
. And in Arlington, Texas, last
week, mourners left small mementos
..'where the 'body of kidnap victim
Amber Hagerman was found Jan. 17,
four days after she disajJpclrid.
Nationwide, spontaneous shrines
have become an accepted expression
of public mourning, a sort of community sympathy card.
Experts say it's ~ol a new pbe- .

nomenoa, but one !hat's bappeniog
more and 1IIOIC in response to the
seemingly endless stream of teleVised
tragedy and senseless death.
"These are deaths for which the
traditional rituals and customs of
grieving don 'I seem to work," says
professor C. Allen Haney, who teaches the SOj:iology of death and dying
at the University of Houston. "The
public finds (these deaths) incomprehensible. We can't fit them into
any of our handy, explanatory models. We can't say, 'It's God's retribution' or 'Some chemical company
was just being greedy."'
Commonly, these shrines are Occt·
ing tributes; others have acquired a
more pennanenl status, remaining a
point of pilgrimage years later.
Lynn Mills, 43, lives about a mile
from where Klaas' body was found.
She helped search for Klaqs, and likes
to visit the site early in the morning
or at dusk. "It's peaceful," she says.
Mills says people travel thousands
of miles to sec the shrine, maintained

by residents of the IIMII, northem
California community.
''This is something that is fairly
universal worldwide," says professor
Ronald Banctt of Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.
"Almost immedi•tcly, people show
111spec1 for the !ICIIIIIlocation of the
loss of life as a way of honoring the
departed spirits."
Dcaley Plaza in Dallas. where
President John Kennedy was assassinared in 1963, sliD beckons the curious, some bearing tributes. The same
is true of Holocaust and battle sites
in Europe.
The Dakota, the New York apartment building where John Lennon
was shot in 1980, became an immediate shrine for fans of the worldfam!Ns musician. Lennon devotees·
regularly visit Central Park's Strawberry Fields, a 2 Ill-acR garden
memorial to the former Beatie.
But shrines to onijnary, everyday
victims of horrific crimes are springing up all over. And playing a major
role are the ~a. which can trans·

form i senseless death in one community into a nationally ~HI
morality play.
Plastic flowers and a rosary
marked a Dcttoil curbside shrine for :
Malice Oreen, 35, who died in police
custody in 1992. 'JWo officers were
convicted in his death, which sparknd
claims of police brutality against
blacks.
" We're seeing and we're able to
experience people's pain perhaps
more than we have been able to,"
Barrell says. "We're ... more
informed because of the immediate
transmi.ssion of images 'llcross the
planet."
At the ruins of a burned-out clothing store in Harlem, New Yorkers left
flowers, cards and candles in late
December. The store had been the site
of a racial dispute !hat turned bloody
when a gunman shot six people.
Whatever people leave behind, it
gives them "a chance to reach out
and say we are connccted," says
Michigan psychiatrist John Schnei·
der.

IN l l SI~It .\ rl ,
ri,LIICN 1 1 11il~·!·?
1995 MEROJRY
COUGAR XR-7

v..,

auto, AJC, AMIFII
tilt, cruiH, PS, PB,
PW, POL, Pwr wet '
Pwr. Moon

C811,

R* ·

5

15,949

ty after hla humoroua lllpad Vlt'llona of weekly IChoollunch menua - . broaclcast by l'lldlo
atatlona across the country. (AP Photo)

Lunch Menu Man hopes to enjoy
more than ·15 minutes of fame·
By PAUL NOWELL
Associated P111•1 Writer
. CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - The
· : voice could cut through sheet metal
: - high-pitched and twangy, a mad. cap mixture of a coon dog's howl and
: a 1V preacher's rantings.
· "TREA-SURE of the OCEAN ...
: that's
TUN-a
NOO-dle
· CASSEROLLLLE! ... or PIZZA!
: PIZZA! PIZZA I ... KER-nels of
:CORN .. . warm, spice!f CHER·
· RRRIES ... CRUN-chy VEG-gie
:BITES ... and a ROLLLLL!"
This is the menu for Monday, Jan.
• 8, 1996, for !he Charlotte,Mccklen•burg schools, courtesy of !he one and
:only Lunch Menu Man - David
: Price, a fonncr car Salesman who has
; parlayed a brief weekly phone mes• sage into a peculiar fame.
: The Lunch' Menu Man can be
: heard on radio stations across the
; country. He has appcarcd.o,n a nation· al 1V talk show and cut his first
: album. He's even done a couple of
: commercials.
It's bard to fathom all that has hap: pened to Price since September,
: when he left his job of 10 years sell: ing cars to take a job in the advertis• ing department at !he Concord Tri: bune.
• He had always wanted to be a
• co~ntry singer, Qlll did not view his
· n.ew position as a ticket to fame and
: fortune.

"I wanted," Price said, "to spend
more time with my girls" - wife
Cathie and daughters, Maria, 3, and
Kara, 2.
· One of Price's first duties at the
newspaper was to record the weekly
lunch menu for Cabarrus County
Schools for a call-in line.
"It was kind of dull doing the
same thing every time," Price, 33,
said in an intervie~. "I figured, 'No
one's listening anyway, so let's joke
around a litde.' "
He noticed !hat nearly every day's
menu seemed to end with fruit and a
roll. "By Thursday, I was doing it,
'FRUUUUIIT ... and a ROLllL!'"
Price said, his eyes twinkling.
When Cathie beard the tape, she
worried that he could be fired.
"I said, 'Nah, let's leave it.' "
Price said.
Soon, !he Tribune's switchboard
was swamped with calls for the
lunch menu line. There were 200
calls in September, 5,000 calls in
Oi:tober and 35,000 calls in Novem·
ber. As a point of reference, the llibune has a circulation of jusll3,200.
Then, several radio stations in and
around Charlotte heard about him,
and began to play Price's recitations
·or school lunch fare.
The Lunch Menu Man was ready
for the big time. He left his job and
went on to declaim !he lunch menu
for the state's largest school district

on The Charlotte Observer's information line.
"CIDCK-en LICK-in NUG-gets
... with KET-chup or SAUCE ... a
.. dinner ROLLLL ... mashed POTATOES ... broccoli-woccoli? Jell-0 and
· FRUUUUIIT."
The Lunch Menu· Man precedes
his bread-and-butler recitations with
exhortations against droppill'g out of
school, and offers to visit classrooms so be can spread !hat message.
"Call me if I can help," he
implores. "It doesn't last !hat long.
When I went to school, school was
cool!" .
.
Price had no idea how popular be
had become until a friend asked him
to take a walk through downtown
Concord.
"He brought me into aboutl5 different busi,nesscs in town," he said.
"He would say, 'Do you know who
this is? It's The Lunch Menu Man."
They all knew The Lunch Menu
Man; the legend had taken hold.
Since then, Price's been featured
on radio programs from Texas to
Rhode Island. He was featured on
CBS-1V's "Day and Date" talk
show.
The Charlotte paper doesn't pay
him for his work, so The Lunch
Menu Man is a scrabbling guy !he~
days. Price has cut commercials for
cars and cellular phones.

·- -----... . . . . . ~·S;ociety scrapbook--1,

WEIGHT CONTROL CLASS 1 exercise techniques and other phases
•
The Meigs County Health l&gt;cpaJt- i of weight conttol.
•:men! wil) begin .a series of six week
Oasscs are to be held in the con:classes for weight conttol on 'lUes· ference room of the Multi-purpose
-day, Feb. !\• at 6 p.m.
building,
Mulberry
Heights,
: The classes are free to Meigs: Pomeroy.
:eourity residents and will be of two
Residc:nll shollld 111gister.as soon
. ;hour duration. Classes will include as possible due to class size limita' -nutrition education, stress manage- tions. Those wishing to register may
:mont. weekly weigh-ins, relaxation· call the Meigs County Health Depart.· ~uea. recipca, diet recall~. : ·ment at 992-6626.

TRUSTEE ORGANIZATION
Delbert Smith was elected chairman of the Sutton Township Thistees
and Grover Salser, vice chainnan, at
the organizational meeting held at the
Syracuse Municipal Building. Kenny
Wiggins is the third member. RcguJar meetings were set for the first
Monday of e~~~;h month at 7:30p.m.
at the municipal building, Paul
Moore, clerk, announced.

1!Ae~ Cr0s~i~o~rse ·to ae·offered at.uRG ,
'"

;: ' n.-Uum'lityofRio~o;
:~CommunityCollegidlrouJhi
·, Zlbl' .Oftii:e Of ~t and Continuing;
; :Bd!rlfinD Will oft'cr a coune fof.
t ~ led Crou P'll'lt Aid and;

payment in DC~:CS..iy. DewUine is

Feb. s.
In the combined act of courses,
J!:VIicipants will fulfill the ~uirc­
11101111 ~both Slllidlrd Pint Aid and

, .CPR.
. . CJ'R certification cards. l'llticipanll
• : Tbo .,_ will &lt;be ~. F,b. . lllllll be~ 1eut 13 yeus of 1p or to
. ~ W l:aG a.Di:co $:30 ._m. eo.t, . bave c:ompler!'JCI the cvenlh llfllde,
Jl11!1~i113d~lflyollld · .The course invCJMi dllalonatnlioo

.••
....
••. '
·r' ·

· ~ ItO
~~-.... --~

.

-"1"

'

You'll be considered a married
etaxpayer for 1995. Your.
Imarital
&amp;taNs for
purposes is
tax

detennined as of the final day of
the tax year, mearting you'll need
to choosc.between filin&amp; a joint
return or filing scpariiiC returns.
It will be beSt to compute your
tax boll! ways for compari1011, and
then select the fiUn1 status that
~suits in the lower combined tu
HlbiUty. You and your spouse
sliould •h rovlow your Ponnl W. 4 filed with your employcn to
your tu wllhholdin&amp; to
reflo101 ,.,..,. new lliluallqn.

films Ud pnclic:e scui0111. Amaicm
Red Cross workbook is rcquind and .
c• be purchucd livm the inllllilctor
at a cOIC of$10.
Por more infonnltlon IIIli to
ister COIIIIICI the office of Adult and
\)OIIIInuiiiJ nducalion, p. p. Box F13,
University of Rio Grande, Rio,
Clnnde, Ohio'4S674 Ot-CIII614-24S-'

reg-

S3S3, extenaion 732S.
· ·~ ~--

Lowa in mid-30t tonight.
Rain. Saturday, Rain chang·
lng to anow. Hlgha In mid·
~-

...

e
Vol. 46, NO. 188
2 Sec:tlona, 12 ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 26, 1996

.By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Santlnel Newa Staff
The Eastern l.ocal School District
will gain a Meigs County Public
. Library branch if !he proposed ele: mentary sc~ool building project goes
forward thts spring.
. Meeting Thursday afternoon, the
: Library Board of Directors approved
llletter of intent to be sent to the Eastem Local Board of Education.
In !hat letter, the Library Board
~~s to establis~ and operate a pubhe hbrary branch m !he new building

1995 OLDS'

1994 BUICK

Y·8, auto, A/C,AM/FM
can, tlh, crul11, ~. PB,
PW, POL, Pwr .... t.
ONLY 10,000 MILES

V·8, auto, AJC, AMIFM
c.aa, tilt, crulae, PS, PB,
PW, PDL, Pwr 11at.
LOADED CAR

'13,8.9

516,949

CIERA

PARK AYE.

1993 LINCOLN

LASER .

3 DR Hatchback, 4 pyl, 5
AMIFM 'Caa•,
PS, PB.
ONLY 14,000 MILE-

•pet, A/C,

MARK VIII

V-8, auto, A/C, AMIFM
ca11, tlh, cru111, PS,
PW, PDL, Pwr 1111,
lellther.
CELL PHONE, LOADED

s

·1993 MERCURY
COUGAR XR·7

DR, V-6, auto; . A/C.
AM/FM Clll, tilt, crul11,
PS, PB, PW PDL ifRE

V-6, auto, . A/C, AMIFM
caaa, tiH, crul11, PS, PB,
PW, PDL, Pwr 1111.
MORE

510,849

$11,949

·LEBARON

Conwertlble, v-e, •• AJC,
AM/PM cua, tilt, cnlji., PS,
PB,PW.MORE
-.~.

Q

ycar'l

1167

!he current Eastern SchQOI Library
and librarian.
The Ieuer of intent said that if
established, it is to be "regulated by
joint agreement between the parties
so as not to unduly interfere with !he
rights of !he general public to use the
library nor to interfere with !he day
to day operation of !he school system
and the library.".
If the bond issue is approved by
voters in March, then $7.2 million in
assistance from the State Building
Assistance Fund will be released for
the $8.75 million project. ·
In other business, it was noted
plans are moving forWard for devel-

See photo on Page 7

1993 PONTrAC
GRAND PRIX

"Enrolllcl to PI'IICIIca Before
the lnlllmal Revenu1 SW1o1cl.•
CHANGE OF
MARITAL STATIJS
I got married in November.
• What will my filing status be
on my 1995 tax return? Willi be
considered married because I wu
married at the end of the year or
will I be considered single beausc
I was single for the majority of the

Plck4:

35 cenll
A O.nnett Co. Newapel*

Eastern Schools may receive library branch

You Don'r Hovt To Loolr For
To Spy rile Best Buys In
the Clossl(ieds. ·

b1 A. Kebllr, E.A.

' 168
Buckeye 5:
13-17-23-29-37

Pwr -t, GrHn.

Parent
teacher
conferences
scheduled

· LUNCH MENU MAN· David Prlcit, known 11
1htt Lunch Menu Mlln, center, clown• with atudanta at Greanway Park Elementary School In
Charlotte, N.C., Jan. 3. Price became a celabrl-

Pick 3:

Sports, Page 4

V-8, auto, AJC, AMJFM Call,
lilt, crul.., PS, PB, PW, PDL,

•

Parent-teacher conferences in the
Meigs Local School District will be
held next week.
'The schools and hours when con- '
fcrenccs will be held are as follows:
BradburY: Tuesday, 6 to .9 p.m.
and Thursday, S to 8 p.m.
Harrisonville: Monday, 6 to 9
p.m. and Thursday 5 to 8 p.m.'
Middleport: Tuesday, 6 to 9 p.m.
and Thursday, S to 8 p.m.
Pomeroy: Thcsday, 6 to 9 p.m. and
Wednesday, 5 to 8 p.m.
Rutland: Thesday, 6 to 9 p.m. and :
Thursday, 5 to 8 p.m.
·
Salem Center: Monday, 6 to 9 pm.
and Thursday, 5 to 9 p.m.
Salisbury: Thesday, 6 to 9 p.m. r
and Thursday, 5 to 8 p.m.
Meigs Junior High: Thcsday, S to ·
8 p.m. and Thursday, 6 to 9 p.m.
Meigs High School: Wednesday, ·
5 to 8 p.m. and Thursday 6 to 9 p.m.
Supt. William A. Buckley said that .
conferences arc being changed to two
~venings this year in order to give
more parents the opportunity to meet
with teachers to discuss their children's ·progress. He said that p&amp;rFnts
will receive a letter describing the
conference scheduling procedure
alon11 with infonnation on the con·
fe111nccs.
Parents are encouraged to take
advantage of this opportunity to communicate with their children's insu:uctors. Questions regarding the conferences are to be directed to the children's schools of attendance.

No. 5 Bearcats
sluggish In
Thursday win

1995 FORD
MUSTANGGT

516,949

Ohio Lottery

,.

.,I 249
,
1991 FORD

CROWN VIC LX

v...

4 DR,
IUio, Air cond,
AM/PM cau, Ill, crulae, PS,
PB, PW, POL, Pldded Top

'8,949

. 1992 CHEY.
LUMINA EURO

· 4 I)R, 11-8, auto, Air ·

AiiJFII cau, lilt, ci'!IIU,
PW, PDL, LOADED.

'

.

59,249

Over 40 Trucks &amp;

Vans In stock All
Slzes,.AII Option$
All Must Go
Call Us Todayll

to be consttucted on land adjacent to
!he high school building.
Whether that consttuction goes
forward will be determined when voters in !he district decide a 4.5-mill
hood issue on March 19.
The letter said !hat the library will
open a branch to be available to students of the Eastern School District,
as well as members of the general
public.
It was pointed out !hat it is the
intent of the library board to operate
!he library branch in cooperation with

opment of a library branch in Racine .
Plans call for the renovation of a
bam on the Tyree property into a
library building. Burgess &amp; Niple
Ltd., architects, will present final
plans for the renovation at a meeting
scheduled for next Thursday.
The house, on !he six acres purchased by the Library Board last year,
has been advertised for sale and several people have indicated interest in
moving it, according to Ruth Powers,
librarian.
Pat Holter, Library Board presi·
dent. appointed some staff members
to inventory things in the bam and
house prior to Thursday's meeting

Accident
highlights
'concerns
·o n safety

Clinton signature
may avert another
federal shutdown

By TOM HUNTER
semtnel Newa Staff
Any parent's worst nightmare
might best be described as the one
· experienced when a child is expected home from a school bus trip and
never arrives, because !he bus was
involved in an accident.
That nightmare became a reality
for parents of the·. Eastern High
Scllool girls basketbill te8n1Widnes-"'
day l!ight, whc;n many Qf them
learned !he bus t;arryillg Jheir children
was involved in a fatality-related
accident on U.S, 50 near Guysville as
they waited at the school for the bus to arrive.
C9ASH AFTERMATH - lnveatlgators from
lhla Eastern Local schoolbus, which was
the Ohio State HighWay Patrol apent aeve111l
Vonda George, 26, and Misty
Involved In Wedneldly nlght'e double fatality
hours Thul'llday Inspecting the wreckage of
Mash, 19, were killed instantly when
on U.S. 50 ••t of Guysville. (Sentinel photo)
!hcir·l986 Mercury struck the 24-i&gt;assengcr bus head-on around 10:15 related fatality in the area since are transported each year in this area
Buckley said Meigs Local's bus
p.m. Wednesday.
1990, when Eastern High School of the state.
fleet logs around 300,000 total miles
George's 4-year old son, Justin, graduate Mickey Randolph was
Meigs Local Schools Superinten- each year.
suffered serious facial, head and killed when his vehicle was suuck by dent Bill Buckley said !hat while !he
"In terms of the safety of the vehiinternal injuries and was still listed in a Warren Local school bus at !he inter- districts in the area take every possi- cle, schoolbuses are probably the
critical condition !his morning at section of state routes 7 and 248 at ble safety precaution, an unavoidable safest vehicles you could ride in," he
Children's Hospital, a hospital Chester.
situation such as the Eastern accident added. "I thmk our bus driver~ . as
spokeswoman said.
With this week's events, the issue . issues a call of re-awareness to well as all the drivers in this area. do
School officials, including Super- of bus safety has jumped 10 !he fore- schools everywhere.
a great job. There are going to be
intendent Ron Minard, ~d at the front for many school officials
"When something like this hap- accidents somewhere down the line.
scene shortly after the accident, and throughout the state.
pens, it really makes you think about For several reasons, the area districts
along with pa111nts and eyewitnesses
how
safe we are," he said. "Reflect- have luckily not had many serious
For school districts in southeast
commended the quick actions of Ohio, children safety on the roadways ing on this accident will certainly ones."
Eastern Local bus driver Bob White. has been very secure, with high safe· make our district analyze how we do
Southern Local Superintendent
which kept the accident from becom- ty marks posted by school districts things, and we'll look at beuer steps James Lawrence said that his 23
ing even more tragic.
who bl!ltle the odds, particularly we could take to prepare in the event years as a teacher and administrator
Tile accident was the first bus-car with the'·amount of mileage -students of an accident."
(Continued on Page 3)

Middleport man Jailed on probation violation
A 36-year-old Middleport man General . imd Super I 0 stores in
was sentenced to 18 months in prison . Pomeroy.
Thursday on charges of violating his
He Wll$ sentenced by Judge Fred
probation on previous charges.
W. Crow JII in the Meigs County
Mike Bums, formerly of Detroit, Coun of Common Pleas.
The probation violation was based
was on probation for two charges of
breaking and entering. according to on a conviction for assault in the
Assistant Meigs County Prosecutor Pomeroy · mayor's · court, Powell
explained.,,.
Scott Powell.
Bums a[,o faces a new charge of
Bums broke into the old Dollar

McGlone named new
commander at post
Lt. Wayne E. McGlone. fonnerly is a graduate of Dawson-Bryant High
assistant commander at the State School and later studied at the UnitHighway Patrol's Lancaster P951, ed Electronics Institute and the
has been appointed commander of !he Northwestern University Traffic
patrol's Gallia-Meigs Post.
Institute.
· McGlone, who was promoted this
McGlone and his wife, Sue, reside
week from the rank of sergeant by in Logan and are the parents of a son
Col. Warren H. Davies, the pattol and daughter.
commander, succeeds .Lt. Dan GibGibson, commissioned into the
Son at Gallipolis.
·
patrol in February 1977, served as a
Gibson, who assumed !he G-M trooper at Jac~ !111'1 West Jefferson
~ommander's position in January · befo~ transferring 'lo the patrol's gen1!194, has been promoted to sta(flieu- eral headquarters as a member of the
tenant and reassigned to Jackson,· executive protection section.
where he will be assistant commanHe transferred to Circleville in
der of a I0-county district.
1987 and was promoted to sergeant
McGlone, who rcceived'his patrol ill September 1988, where he was
commission in January '971, has again assigned to•!hc e!tl:cutive prosel"'ed mo111 than 20 years at Athens, tection section. He was assistant
where he was niUIIOd trooper of !he commander at Chillicothe before
year in 1972, j 981 , 1985 and 1987. coming to Gallipolis.
_ He was promoted to serJeant in
He was named trooper of the year
September 1991 and was reasslgnC!I -'Jackson in 1978 and 1979, and and
to Lancaster.
· • Circleville in 1987.
Originally from Ironton, McGii&gt;ne
Originally from Columbus, Gib-

. -.-..

when the final plans will be reviewed.
Executive staff members were
The bam has I, 700 square feet, also recognized. They are Ruth Powand additions are planned to bring it ers, director of !he main library; Kristi
to about 3,000 feet, according to Eblin. director of extension'services;
Doug Lillie, board member. The Olita Heighton, assistant director and
goal, he said, is to start consttuction head of technical service; Connie
in April or May.
Bailey, clerk-treasurer and technical . ,
Don Mullen was appointed for assistant, and Wendi Maxon, branch
another term on the board and was supervisor.
given the oath of office by Meigs
The board voted to join the Meigs
County Prosecutor John Lentes who . County Chamber of Commerce,
serves as legal counsel.
heard reports on book circulation, and
Lentes also installed the officers, agreed to install fax machines in
Holter, president; Patricia Mills, vice library branches.
president; Wanda Eblin, treasurer;
An executive session. was held io
· and Doug Little, di~tttor of building discuss job descriptions and the
programs. Mary Kay Yost, secretary. ~al,uy schedule at the conclusion of
was not present.
the meeting. ·

contributing io the delinquency of a
minor, according to Powell. He was
living with a 17-year-old girl, he
alleged.
Bums is being held in the Meigs
County Jail pending transfer to
pnson.
Also Thursday, Barry Duikeman,
21, Nelsonville. pleaded guilty to an
unrelated charge of corruption of a
minor, a felony of the third degree

punishable by a maximum prison
tenn of two years.
·
Duikeman had sex with a minor
female , according to Powell . The
alleged crime took place in !he Car·
pentcr area, he added.
Duike·man entered his plea before
Crow, who then ordered a pre-sen·
tence investigation. He is being held
in the Meigs County Jail in lieu of
bond.

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated P1111s Writer
WASHINGTON - With~ midnight deadline looming, the White House
said today President Clinton is willing to sign a bill approved by the Republican-led House that would keep !he government running through March 15.
The Senate today was taking up !he measure, which would extend federal spending authority another seven weeks while cutting back funds for
dozens of federal agencies.
·
Without the bill, thousands of federal civil servants face a third'partial government shutdown beginning Saturday. But !he White House said Clinton
would sign it before !he current temporary spending bill expires at midnight
tonight.
.
"We fully expect Congress io take care of that today," press secretary Mike ·
McCurry told reporters. Earlier, he said, " We're satiSfied that a lot of giveand-take has produced an agreement the president can live with."
However, Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle. D-S.D., said today
Democrats would offer two amendments to the temporary spending bill. One ·
would raise the nation's $4.9trillion debt limit by $185 billion. enough to
last unlll March 1997. The other would restore federal education spending
to last year's levels, up from the 75 perccntleYel in the bill.
Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer. who appeared with Daschle at a news conference, said without !he restoration Detroit schools would suffer a $16.1 mit-:
lion cut and could have to lay off 419teachers.
The House on Thursday passed the temporary spending measure, 371-42
marking the first fruit of the new mood of detente between Congress and th~
White House.
·
Having abandoned any hope of reaching a balanced budget agreeme~t
soon, Republicans and the administration have agreed to seek more modest
goals, seeking smaller spending and tax culs while keeping the government
open and raising the federal debt ceiling.
"This has been an incredibly tense negotiation," said Rep. Bob Livingston,
R-La., chainnan of the House Appropriations Committee. But "both sides ..
have come together and crafted a compromise that keeps the government open .
for the next 45 days."
Stung by puhlic criticism of the budget impasse that led to two shutdowns
keeping federal workers home for nearly a month, House Republicans agreed .
that another shutdown wasn't politically feasible.

Suspect in murder case
plans to waive extradition
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - A Hartford woman accused of murder in·
Mason County, under arrest in Uma County, Ariz .. plans to waive extradi- .
lion Monday, according to Deputy Curtis McConihay.
Risa Lynne Sayre Leonard, 32, was taken before a judge in Uma County Thursday on a fugitive warrant from Mason County. Leonard is wanted
in connection with the September murder of Jack Roush, 52, Hartford .
McConihay spoke with Uma County officials this morning. The officials
told him that Leonard plans 10 waive extradition when she appears before a
JUdge on Monday.
A search is still underway in Uma County for 'Timothy W. Gibbs, 36, Hartford , who is also wanted for Roush's murder. Leonard and Gibbs were both
indicted on murde( charges during the January session of Mason County grand
JUry.

Appellate ruling affects state DUI law
RAVENNA (AP) - A state
appeals court ruling could lead to !he
dismissal of hundreds of drunken-dri·
ving cases in a five-county region of
northeast Ohio.
The lith Ohio District Court of
Appeals in Warren on Tuesday ruled
!hat !he state's drunken-driving law
punishes defendants twice for the
same offense, in violation of constitutional protections against double
jeopardy.
Under !he slate's revised 1993
drunken-driving law, drivers who
fail blood-alcohol tests or refuse to
take the test must surrender their
licenses for at least 90 days. Last
year, more than 67.000 licenses were
suspended staiewide.
LL Wayne E. McGlone
AI issue is whether administratively suspending licenses through
son is a graduate of Westland High the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles is
School and holds a police science a criminal punishment or a civil
degree from Columbus Technical Jtmoval of privileges intended to
Insli!ute.
·
. keep intoxicated drivers off the
He and his wife, Stella, reside near strccts.
Appeals Judges Donald Ford,
Bidwell and are the parents of two
Judith Christley and Joseph M.OOOey
daughters.

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

.

·"'

said Tuesday that the primary effects Victor Vigluicci on Thesday ordered
of the law are deterrence and pun- all police departments in the county
ishment.
to slop seizing driver's licenses while
"If the suspensions were purely making arrests .
remedial and imposed solely to pro"We're seeing a number of filings .
tectthe public, the~ would be no rca- for motions to dismiss ," said Ashtabson to keep a defendant 's license ula Counl)i Prosecutor G~g Brown
once he was determined to be sober," on Thursday. "What we have done is ·
their ruling said. " There is, howev- to notify all . the law enforcement ·
er, no such provision."
· agenj:ies in Ashtabula County, tuid·.
The appeals court for the lith we liave advised them to apply the
Appellate District, which includes DUI laws as they were prior to when ·.
Lake, Gcauga, Ashtabula, Portage the administrative license suspension ·
and Thlmbull counties, has become provisions we111 in effect, or !he way "·
the second-in the Stale to reject !he it used to be done."
''
state's revised drunken-driving law.
Lake County Prosecutor Charles ·
The Youngstown-based 7th Ohio . Coulson said he had not had a chalice
District Court of Appeals is the oth- to review the ruling and wasn't sure
cr.
of its effect
The Ohio Supreme Court has set
uwe haven't had that big of a · ·
a hearing for Fetr. 7 on the state's rush," said Virginia Hanson, a clerk
drunken-driving t,w and conflicting at Chardon Municipal Court in Oeau- · ·
rulings at !he appeals court level.
ga County. "We expeclcd a biuer -"
Portage County municipal judges one. The attorneys aren't aware of it. · began dismissing drunk driving cas- but the word is getting out.''
es ~ncsday. Judge John Enlow
A message requesting COIIIIIICIIl
said about 300 pending case$ will be was left with Warren Law Directot _.
dismissed in the county. Prosecutor Greg Hicks.
·

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      <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>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>January 25, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
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    <tag tagId="272">
      <name>bailey</name>
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    <tag tagId="6107">
      <name>dow</name>
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</item>
