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                  <text>By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page 10

· Monday, January 29, 1996

Vendors have right to specify terms of payment·
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Your recent
I)Oiumn concerning a sales clerk who
refused a roll of pennies in payment
·for a bottle of Soda caught my atten.tion. You said that even though pen.nies are a nuisance, they arc considered legal tender.
. I had read an article in the Massachusetts Collectors and Treasurers
Association newsletter concerning a
problem faced by tax collectors and
-o.thers: irate customers paying with
s mall coins.
The article cites Title 31 of the
U.S. Code, which s!Jites that minor
·Coins (pennies and nickels) are legal
,tender at their nominal value for any
- - .

\lfere in $50 hags direct from the U.S.
Mint. The rest were in boxes and a
pillow case. Loose were 12,648 pennies.
The taxpayer ignored a request by
the city attorney not to bring in the
pennies and unloaded them anyway.
City employees had to reload the penamount not to exceed 25 cenli tn any nies and take them by truck to the
bank to be counted. The tax collecone payment.
The article also mentioned a 1990 tor issued a receipt but said she didincident in which a restaurant owner n't think it was very funny. The taxin Portsmouth, N.H., brought payer said he dido "t want to look at
382,648 pennies to the tax collector's a penny ever again.
The editor of Jhe newsletter sugoffice in a van. The taxpayer was
miffed over what he described as a gested checking with your city or
rude letter demanding payment of state Department of Revenue before
delinquent taxes. Most of the pennies invoking the provisions of Title 31.

Ann
Landers

Southern Building Committee
gets anonymous $1,000 gift
The Southern Local Building Committee met Wednesday evening at the
high school with Treasurer Kim
Phillips reporting the group has
,received $2,315 to.promote the bond
issue for a new elementary school,
-i11cluding a $1 ,000 donation from an
·anonymous supporter.
·
So far, $500 has been spent on a promotional videotape with an additional $324 appropriated for three rounds
:of promo inserts for The Daily Sen- ·
'line! and ExpressLine customers in
the district.
Plans were made to recruit workers
jn each precinct to drum up support
for the measure. A special meeting for
prospective precinct representatives
.will be held at a later date.
The temporary committee is pursu- •
·ing a 6.1-mill, 23-year bond issue to
bankroll the district's $4,180,000
share of a $7,370,000 project which
iAcludes a new, district-wide ele'mentary school and renovations to
the existing high school.
The next meeting will be held
Wednesday, 5 p.m. in the high school
c.!lfeteria. The group encourages all
district residents to attend the meetjAgs.

-~arns

degree

Andrew Baer of Pomeroy earned a
Bachelor of Arts degree with a major
in criminal justice from Ohio
Dominican College in Columbus. He
is the son of Barbara Bailey and
Charles Baer and is a 1991 graduate
of Southern High School.

To host conference

Plans for the South Central District
Conference to he hosted by the Mid-

dlepqrt Child Conservation League
were made at a recent meeting of the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church.
The conference will be April 13.
Honorary members will he invited to
attend since it will mark the local
league's 50th year·in the Ohio Child
Conservation League.
Kitty Darst presided at the meeting
which opened with the pledge to the
flag and the mother's prayer. A dessert
pizza was served . Patty Arnold was
hostess. Nancy Morris won the hostess prize, and Peggy Harris, the traveling prize.
February meeting will he husband's
night with a potluck dinner being
served. Denver Rice will entertain on
his guitar.

District meeting
A district meeting to be held Saturday at the hall was announced when
Chester Council 323, Daugh~rs of
America, met recently.
Goldie Frederick, councilor, conducted the meeting which opened in
ritualistic form. The illness of several members including Jean Hall, Bob
Harden, Deloris Wolfe, and Virginia
Lee, were reported. Elizabeth Hayes
returned after an illness.
Officers were installed. Refreshments were served, and door prizes
were awarded to Mary Jo Barringer,
Goldie Frederick and Erma Cleland
Others attending were Kathryn
-Baum, Thelma White, Opal
Eichinger, Doris Grueser, Esther
Smith, Opal Hollon, Charlotte Grant,
Mary Holter, Jean Frederick, Marcia
Keller, Elizabeth Hayes, Laura Nice,
Everett Grant and Ethel Orr.

By Ed Paterson
Social Security Manager In
Athena
How much do you know about
your disability protection under
Social Security. Not much? And yet
statistics say that one out of four
young workers will become disabled
sometime during their lifetime. Following are the five most frequently
asked questions about disability benefits:
How does Social Security define
disability?
Disability under Social Security is
based on your inability to work. You
will be considered disabled if you are
unabl~ to do any kind of work for
which you are suited and your disability is expected to last for at least
a year or to result in death.
Who may receive disability benefits?
People who work under Social
Security long enough and recently

.
Magazines suspend publication
· NEW YORK (AP) - Omni and
Lonpvity magazines will suspend
p~~blicalion becaUJe of rising paper
and postal costs, The New York

limes reported today.

• The two maauines were left
" only lllll'lillllly_ptofitable" and will
allo lay off 40 lltaff JIICII'Ibers because.
of the mini costs, said Bob. Guccione, cblimwl and cJikf eJtecutive
qf pubHIIber General Media Intema-

tiOnll. .

Guccione told lhe Times u.t both

m' a•ri- wiD still be available in
dieir electronic wnlons throuab onHie -.vice~ .-1 that publiCIIlion
wuultllle resumed wbell peper costs

. .,.,..

.

., · ; ' - '·ila blmoolbly mapzine of
r· .
~Jied~-~:as start.. ill 17' ,_111 c11 ~ ......on aver-

;. •!'=',

.-

~

aged 703,019 in the first silt months
of 1~9S, according to the Audit
Bureau of Circulation. The magazine's circulation was down 2 percent
from the ftrst half of 1994 but its
newsstand sales rose I0 percent.
Longevity, a health magazine
started in 1989, bad an average circulation of3S8,418 in the first half of
last year, up two 2 percent. Newsstand sales were down 7 percent.
. Guccione told lhe Times that General Media had seen paper cost
increases of 60 percent and postalrate i~~CR~~CS.of34 ~ent in the last
year, lidding that "1995 wu the first
year in 30 yeus that l'althouiC ever
lost money."
·
Pelilhouae is General Media's flagshiP oublicallon.
r I
--...-·-

enough can receive Social Security
disability benefits at any age. Certain
members of your family may also
qualify for benefits on your record.
They include: Your unmarried son or
daughter, under 18, or under 19 if in
high school full time. Your unmarried
son or daughter, 18 or older, if he or
she has a disability that started before
22. Your spouse who is 62 or older,
or any age if he or she is caring for a
child of yours who is under 16 (or disabled before age 22) and receiving
checks. Your disabled widow or widower 50 or older. The disability must
have started before your death or
within seven years after your death.
(If your widow or widower caring for
your children receives Social Security checks, she or he is eligible if she
or he becomes disabled before those
payments end or within seven years
after they end.) Your surviving disabled ex-wife or ex-husband who is
50 or older if your marriage lasted 10

'years or longer.
How long do you have to work to
qualify for disability?
To qualify for Social Security disability benefits,. you must have
worked long enough and recently
enough under Social Security. The
number of work credits needed for
disability benefits depends on your
age when you become disabled. (In
1996, earnings of $640 constitutes a
credit of work; you can earn up to
four work credits a year.) The rules
are as follows:
Before age 24--You may qualify if
you have six credits earned in the
three-year period ending when your
disability starts.
Age 24-31--You may qualify if
you have credit for having worked
half the time between 21 and the time
you become disabled.
Age 31 or older--In general, you
will need 40 work credits. Unless you
are blind, at least 20 of the credit•

must have been eame4 in the I0 years
immediately before you became disabled.
Will a preexisting condition keep
a person from receiving Social Security disability benefits?
If an individual meets the defini'tion of disability under Social Security and has earned the required number of work credits, he/she needs to
only serve a 5-month waiting period
·before benefits begin.
· Why is there a five-month waiting
period?
The program assumes that working families have access to other
resources to provide support during
periods of slion-term disabilities,
including 'w} rkers compensation,
insurance, slivings, and investments.
It is designed to provide a continuing
i income to you and your family when
you are unable to do so. Benefits continue as long as you remain disabled.

Baking the Perfect Sou/fk

By The Associated Preas
The American Dairy Association
has the following tips for a perfect
souffle:
-Read the recipe carefully before'
you begin. Organize the ingredients
and the equipment you 'II need.
-Butter and dusi your souffle
dish very carefully with sugar. The
sugar provides traction for the baking
souffle to climb up the slippery sides
of the dish.
-If the unbaked souffle comes to
within 112-inch ofthe top of the dish,
add a collar. Use a triple thickness of
aluminum foil to fasten a 4-inch wide
band .that will go around the dish and
overlap 2 inches. Butter the band and
dust with sugar. Wrap the collar
around the dish, sugared side in, with
the edge of the collar extending at
least 2 mches beyond the top of the
·
dish; fasten With a paper clip. After
den c;1ub, . Monday, I p.m. Har- ' baking, remove the collar.
nsonvlll~ Fne House. Betty Lowery
-The best souffle goes into the
and Clotme Blackwood will be ho~t- oven immediately. However, you can
esses.
refrigerate an unbaked souffle, covWEDNESDAY
ered, in the dish, for up to two hours.
POMEROY -- Natcotic Anony-Preheat the oven before baking
mous, 7 p.m. Wednesday at Sacred the souffle.
Heart Catholic Church basement,
-Once the souffle is in the oven,
161 Mulberry • Pomeroy. Anyone do not peek. Nothing de-puffs a bakwith problem welcome.
ing souffle like a blast of cold air.
RACINE -- Southern Local Build-When is the souffle done? At
ing Committee Wednesday, 5 p.m. in the end of the cooking time, gently
the high school cafeteria. All district move the oven rack. If the souffle jigresidents urged to attend.
gles in the center, return it to the oven
THURSDAY ·
.
. . for a few minutes more baking. If you
POMEROY -- PERI. Semor Co_to- must let the souffle stand in the oven,
zens Center, Thursday, I p.m. woth . do so with the heat off for no more
lunch at noon.
than 10 minutes.
-You can camouflage cmcks in
the souffle with a dusting of confectioners' sugar.
Night," Doug Supemaw
7. "When Boy Meets Girl," Terri
Clark
8. "Like There Ain 't No Yesterday," BlackHawk
.
9. "Ring On Her Finger, Time On
Her Hands," Reba McEntire
10. "Bigger Than The Beatles,"
Joe Diffie
(So.urce: Cashbox magazine)

.

Food recipes

Country western top 10
Best-selling country western
singles of the week:
I. "It Matters To Me," Faith Hill
· 2. "Rebecca Lynn," Bryan White
· · 3. "(If You're Not In It For Love)
1'111 Outta Here!" Shania Twain
: 4. "C&amp;n't Be Really Gone," Tim
McGraw
S. "Cowboy Love," John Michael
Mon(30mery
· 6. "Not Enough Hours In The

.

penniel were not consil(ered legal means tbC Internal Revenue Service
tender, and merchants had the right to doesn't have 10 accept payment in
refuse them. The Coinage Acts of pennies and your local gas station '
1873 and 1879 made pennies and attendant doesn't have to accept bills
nickels legal tender for debts up to 25 over$20.
I would hope, however, that local
cents. Dimes, quarters and half-dol would keep their cusbusinesses
lars were legal tender up to S I0.
tomers
in
mind
when they determine
However, in the early 1980s, these
laws were combined into one provi- what type of payment they will
sion that says U.S. coins and curren- accept. Allowing a customer to pay
cy are legal tender for ALL debts, for a soda in pennies is certainly
regardless of the amount. This means worth the goodwill it will genemte.
the Federal Reserve System must
Send questions to Anu Landen,
honor them. It, does not, however,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
mean anyone else has to.
Individual vendors have the right tury Blvd., Suite,700, Los Anaeles,
to specify terms of payment. This ,Calif. 90045

Social Security disability benefits

.
't
calendar
m
m
1
n
1
y
CO

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed
as·space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of
days.
MONDAY
POMEROY-- Meigs County Veterans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
Monday at Veterans Service Office,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
PORTI..AND -- The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the township building.
· RUTI.AND -- The Rutland Gar-

Small coins aren't the only pro~
lem. What about those businesses that
say, " We will not accept bills over
$20"? I understand they don't want
to create a security risk, but isn't this
against the law? If they refuse payment because you only have a $50
,bill, does that mean the service is
free?
Please, Ann, ask one of your
attorney friends what's legal and
what isn't. --A Reader in Randolph,
Mass.
Dear Randolph: My staff contact.ed Donald R. Nichols, director of
:public affairs at the U.S. Mint. Here
are the facts : ,
In the late I 700s and early 1800s,

Bush birth announced
James and Ruth Ann Fry Bush of
Virginia Beach, Va. announce the
birth of a son, Justin Lee, on Ian. 2S.
The infant weighed seven pounds,
12 ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Bush have
a daughter, Cheryl, five.
Grandparents are Mr: and Mrs.
James Fry, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Suzanne Bush, Racine. Mrs. Eloise
Stiles of Middleport is a great-grandmother. Mr. and Mrs. Fry are in Virginia Beach with their daughter and
her family.
-

Author of Sermonette
The Rev. Henry Hoppe, assistant
pastor at the Hillside Baptist Church,
Pomeroy, submitted the sermonette
whic:h appeared in The Daily Sentinel
Friday. His name was unintentionally omitted.

SWEARING IN CEREMONY- Jane Frymyer,
sec:ond from left, deputy director of the Meigs
County Board of Elections, wee sworn In aa
aec:retery of the Ohio Assocllltlon of Elections
Official• at a· alltawlda conferanc:a held earlier thla month In Columbua. The other officers
are from the left, Patrlc(a Smith, dlrec:tor of

Huron County, .treaaurer; Steven Little, deputY
director of Licking County, sacond vice president'; Robert Moskettl, director of BUller County, firat vice president, and Pamela Sweftord,
deputy director of Hamilton County, prealdant.
Secratery of Stete Bob Taft conducted the
swearing In ceremony.

Your child's health: Handling teen-age stress
By LAURA L. MEE
positive stress : sticking with a progress in school and enhance selfEgleston Children's Hoapltel
demanding class will enable a teen to esteem.
For AP Special Fnturea
ATI..ANTA - Many adolescents
can lead very stressful lives.
While stress can serve as a positive, motivating factor in a teen's life,
it can also be totally, overwhelming,
unle,ss parents help their adolescent
children learn to use appropriate coping techniques.
Many possible sources cause stress
in a teen's life. The inherent anxieties
of adolescence, issues such as selfdoubt, peer pressure and blossoming
sexuality, are among the most common.
Plus, teens' lives are often busy
and demanding, filled with pressutes
to perform in the classtoom, on the
playing field and in their social
spheres. Adolescents are also vulnerable to the worries about major life
events that plague their parents as
weJI.
Because adolescents' reactions to
stress vary sq widely, parents must
look for differences in behavior for
what's typical for their adolescent,
rather than differences from other
teens' behavior. Changes in eating
and sleeping habits, overall mood or
that fits your minivan.
peer interactions could all be signs of
The Ohio Casualty Group of Insurance Companies, one of the top SO
too much stress.
insurance groups in the United States, is working with us to offer
. The first step toward reiieving
teen-age stress is to identify its
minivan drivers 15% off their premium rate. Now, minivan drivers
sources and determine whether eacli
like you can get top-notch insurance coverage at family car prices.
stressor plays a positive or negative
role in the teen's life. An example of
To find out more about this money-saving deal in minivan insurance,
just call us today! We think you'll find our offer very fitting!

-

Your Independent Agents
Serving Melga County Sine. 1868

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER INSUUNCE
111 Second St.

ltprntfui,.:

Pomeroy

192-3381
Group

Ohio Lottery

Herd thump$
Furman 95-71
in league tilt

Pick 3:
3-G-7
Pick 4:
5-7-3..()
Buckeye 5:
2-6-12-16-35

Sports, Page 5

VoL 41, NO. 191
1 lecilon, 10 Pllgee

Cloudy with acattered
flurrlll tonight, Iowa In the
Ieana. Wedneaday, partly
aunny. Hlghaln the 201.

35centl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 30, 1996

A Gannett Co.

New•.-...

COmmissioners ponder dog pound cost
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
Construction of a new Meigs County dog pound was the topic of the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners during its regular meeting Monday afternoon.
Commissioners endorsed creating a special building fund that would be
used to construct a new dog pound to replace the aging facility now located near the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
.
Commissioners said preliminary cost estimates of a facility similar to the
Jackson County, W.Va., animal shelter were between $100,000 and
$125,000.
However, Dorothea Fisher of the Meigs County Humane Society and
: Health Department Director Jon Jacobs said the cost could be reduced by
using different construction materials and eliminating unneeded space.
"(The Humane Society has) been pressuring for a shelter since 1972 ...
: and we have been ignored," said Fisher.

Reminding Commissioners Janet Howard and Robert Hartenbach that this
is an election year, she added: "This would be a tremendous feather in your
caps."
The goal is to replace the existing dog pound with a new, modem facility. The current pound consists of a series of open dog runs with a small storage area in the rear. The facil ityis frequently targeted by vandals and people
·
stealing dogs.
The proposed building would likely include enclosed dog runs and a cat
arid puppy room.
Another question focused on where any new dog pound would he located. The site of the current pound has been a point of contention for some
time between the Fair Board and the county.
Harten bach suggested an area near to the existing pound, but away from
the fairgrounds and behind the county highway garage where it could he kept
behind a locked gate and guarded.
.
Jacobs discussed a site near the junction of Howell
Hill
Road
and State
,_

Route 7 near Pomeroy,
Commission President Fred Hoffman proposed creation of a building fund
where donations could he kept and used toward construction of a new building. The Huma11e Society wants the board to solicit donations toward construction of the 'building.
The Humane Society is currently facing two lawsuits stemming from- a
raid on an alleged 'lpuppy mill" last year and cannot afford a large amou!'t
of assistance, Fisher explained.
Fisher noted that Jackson County spends about $50,000 a year, including
the dog warden's salary, for animal control. Meigs County spends about
$32,500, including the dog warden's salary.
In other business, commissioners opened a bid from Gene Johnson Chevrolet-Oldsmobile in Gallipolis for a fourrwheel -drive vehicle for the Meigs
County Emergency Services. The $25,210 bid for lease of a 1996 Chevrolet Blazer was the only bid received.
(Contiuued on Page 3)

. - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ , Grudging
Controllers approve
approval?
·new lottery equipment
COLUMBUS (AP) - A legisla- lottery said in a written request.
Controllers approved two com- 1
tive panel has approved without
debate a $1 .9 million Ohio Lottery panion lottery requests:
• A $346,805 contract with Con.lease for a new instant ticket system
Ironies
Systems of Ohio, Columbus,
~ to replace equipment that has become
for
instant
ticket terminal dispatch
outdated.
The state Controlling Board and repair services.
• A $194,615 contract with
.agreed Monday to waive competitive ·
bidding rules for a lottery contract Hooven-Dayton Corp., Dayton, for
with GTECH Corp., West Green- on-line terminal roll ticket stock, bet
. wich, R.I.
·
slips-cards, and terminal ribbon carIn other action, tbe panel OK'd tridges.
The lottery already has another
three marijuana-spotting helicopters
for Attorney General Betty Mont- contract with GTECH through June
gomery, and $36 million for prisons 1997 for computer on-line games and
· in Youngstown, Caldwell and Lan- . instant ticket support services, tercaster.
minal hardware, and maintenance of
The Controlling Board is IJillde up all on.tine equipment.
of six l;gjslatiii'Jl. /llld.L~5.identwbo
G'rECH is p&amp;d' I .68 percent of
represents Gov. George Voinovich.
on-line sales. Controllers were told
Sales of scratch-off instant tickets that would amount to $17.8 million
account for more than 50 percent of this budget year.
the lottery's ann~al $1.1 billion rev- - · Montgomery won board approval
enues.
to waive competitive bi~ing rules
"Despite continued record instant for a $158,310 contract with Aviation
ticket sales, the instant ticket termi- Specialists, Galloway, to refit three
nals utilized by the lottery's ... agents surplus helicopters the state picked up
to activate, validate and 111ark instant at no charge from the U.S. Army.
tickets have become obsolete." the

December retail sales
confirm slow season
WASHINGTON (AP) - In its
last economic report prior to a major
Federal Reserve policy meeting, the
. government said retail sales edged up
a scant 0.3 percent in December in a
lackluster holiday shopping season.
The Commerce Department said
today sales totaled a seasonally
adjusted S198.6 billion, up from
$198 billion a month earlier. That was
a smaller increase than November's
revised 0. 7 percent gain. Sales in
November originally were estimated
to have advanced 0.8 percent.
Many analysts had expected a 0.6
percent increase in December. Sales
!tad fallen 0.2 percent in October and
0. I percent in September.
The December activity boosted
retail sales for the year to $2.3 trilti~n. 4.9 percent above those of 1994
. and the smallest gain since a 0.6 percent advance in 1991 as the last
recession was ending.
· The report was released as Federal Reserve policy makers prepared to
open a two-day meeting to consider

whether to cut short-term interest ·
rates for a third time in seven months
to stimulate the economy.
The Federal Open Market Committ~ lowered the central bank's federa! funds rate from 6 percent to 5.75
percent in July and then to 5.5 percent
in December. The rate is what banks
charge each other for overnight loans.
Because of the partial government
shutdown in late E&gt;ecember and early January, many economic reports
have been postponed, giving policy
makers an abbreviated view of official data. The December retail sales
report originally was scheduled for
Jan. 12.
Anecdotal data and reports from
private organizations and government
agencies not affected by the shutdown have painted a bleak picture of
the economy lately.
A Fed survey of ~gional economic activity in early January, for
instance, found that "'holiday retail
sales were generally reported to he
below expectations, with extensive

Ohio Poll reveals
52% approval
rating for Clinton

CRASH INJURES ONE - An lnvaatlgatlon

conUnuad todaY Into a colllalon betwaeri 1 treetor·traller and car on State Route 7 near Tuppara Plaine Monday. The Gallla·Melga Poat of
the Stele Highway Patrol reported lhallhe rig,
driven by David W. Hupp, 37, 31805 Baahan
Road, Racine, waa eoulhbound at 8:05 &amp;;Ill.
when a northbound car went left of center.

Experts predict new
cut in interest rates

Retail

salii
i&gt;tat retai sales in bilions ol dollaos.

Seasonany ~usted.
$200

:
.

195

AP

discounting."
The finding mirrored reports at
year's end that retailers were deeply
disappointed with the holiday shopping season despite a sharp increase
in sales in November, when gift-buying usually hegins.
Retail sales represent about onehalf of consumer spending, and the
holiday shopping season can account
for as much as one-half of a retailer's
yearly profits.

Hupp turned left to avoid collision but the rig
struck lhe car, causing the truck to atrlke a
guardrail. The driver of the car, identified 11
Mindy Sampson, was transporlecl by the Meigs
EMS to St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg,
W.Va. Damage to the carand the rig, owned by
R &amp; J Trucking, Youngstown, wea11111ere. (Sentlnel photo by Jim Freeman)

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Reserve is ready to cut interest rates for a third time in less than
. a year amid widespread signs of economic weakness, many economists
believe.
And these analysts think a follrlh
rate cut before the end of March is
entirely likely. But after that, the central bank could well sit on the sidelines for the rest of the year.
"I think the Fed wants to get any
easing done sooner rather than later
this year so they don't become
embroiled in presidential politics,"
said David Jones, chief economist at
Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co. in New
York.
The Fed's key interest-rate panel,
the Federal Open Market Committee,
planned to review current economic
conditions during two days of closed
door discussions starting today. If the
Fed does cut rates, it would announce
that action on Wednesday.
The FOMC, composed of Fed
board members in Washington and
presidents of five of the Fed's 12

regional banks, cut interest rates
twice last year, in July and December.
Those reductions pushed the central bank's target for the federal
funds rate - the interest that banks
charge each other on short-term loans
- down to 5.5 percent.
The funds rate had been.doubled
to 6 percent in seven rate hikes from
February 1994 to February !995 as
the central bank sought to restrain
economoc growth in order to keep
inflation under control.
Not all economists are certain that
the Fed will cut rates this week. Some
argue that it may wait until its March
26 session. especially since much of
the government data it depends upon
to ·steer the economy has been
delayed, first by the budget shutdown
and then by a severe snowstonn that
hit Washington.
But Lyle Gramley, chief economic consultant at the Mortgage Bankers
Association in Washington, said he
believed Fed policy-makers will
decide they have enough infonnation
on the slowing economy to act.

CINCINNATI (AP) - About half
of the Ohioans who responded to a
survey approved of President Clinton's overall performance. Support
for the first lady was slightly lower.
The Ohio Poll released today was
sponsored by The Cincinnali Enquirer, television station WLWT and the
University of Cincinnati.
The university's Institute for Policy Research conducted telephone
interviews of a random sample of 803
adults from Jan. 11-24. The margin of
error was 3.S percentage points.
Fifty-two perceni of tl)e respondents said they approved of the overall job Clinton is doing. Forty-three
percent disapproved, and 5 percent
said they were undecided.
Similar Ohio Polls put Clinton's
overall approval rating at 49 percent
in October, 46 percent in March and
51 percent in May 1994.
In the most recent survey, 50 percent of the respondents approved of
Clinton's handling of foreign affairs,
while 38 percent disapproved and 12
percent were undecided.
.,..
But 48 percent disapproved of
Cllinton's handling of U.S. involvement in Bosnia. Fony-two percent
approved, and 10 percent were undecided.
Fifty-two percent approved of
Clinton's handling of the economy,
while 42 percent disapproved and 6
percent were undecided.
Tim Burke, chairman of the ·
Hamilton County Democratic Party,
was pleased with Clinton 's showing.
"Here's a guy who was the governor from Arkansas, and his strong
suit now is how he's handling foreign
affairs. That's pretty incredible,"
Burke said.
But Republican political consultan!: Ed Gocas noted that while Clinton 's approval rating is up, his negatives continue to be higher than 40
percent
"He's in trouble in terms of being
in safe territory," Gocas said.
When asked about Hillary Rodham Clinton, 49 percent of those surveyed said they approved cif her job
performance, but 45 percent disapproved and 6 percent said they were
undecided.

Lawmakers claim Reform Party
forged signatures on petiti~ns
. COLUMBUS (AP)- Two Dayton-area lawmakers said their signatures were forged on petitions su~
tnitted by Ross Perot's Reform Party in its failed attempt to gain a spot
on the March 19 primary election ballot
• The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office is trying to determine how
·the names of Sen. Rhine McLin, DDaylon, and Rep. Don Mottley, RWest Carrollton, got on the petition,
The Coll!mbus Dispatch reported
today.
The probe is part of an investigat!on ordered by Secretary of State
Bob Taft.
,
"Obviously it's a forgery," Mott~y said. "It's not my signature, it's
not my Jlame the way I sign it ... and
J)ley put my law office address
instead of my home address.."-~

·.

Mottley said he has spoken before ther were 'Mickey Mouse' and
a group of Perot supporters but nev- names like that on .petitions. I was
er was approached to sign a Reform very surprised we didn 't find Ross
Party petition.
Perot's name on a petition as we went
McLin also said she didn't know through Ohio."
how her name got on the petitionThe legislators' names were on
twice. She said her name appears petition forms circulated by Rosalyn
with two different addresses, both Williams of Dayton, one of the parincorrect.
ty's five official organizers in Ohio.
"What it sounds like to ine, and said Abner Orick, Montgomery
I'm just speculating, is that people County elections director.
have gotten lists and just went
Williams is hospitalized and could
thiough them and staJted putting not be reached 10 comment, the Dispeople:s nam~ on there," McLin patch reported.
said.
Orick said investigators also will
Sandra Reckseit, \he palty's Ohio cbeck petition forms on which one
coordinator, said circulators had to circulator supposedly gathered huntrust that people signed their real dreds of signatures in the same day.
"I don't ~ow..what theY_'re .~oing
names on the petitions.
" People can sign whatever they , to come up with, Orick satd, but I
want even if they are asked (their ; assure you they'll get looked at."
name)," she said. "In another state,

FLOOD DONATION- The Malge County
. Llonl Club racelvad a $10,000 donation for
local flood relief eflorta fronl the Llona Club
lntamatlonal Foundation. Dlatrlct 13-K Governor Tad Keller pt'llltllad the money to local
. club Pllllldant Bruce TNiord and other Llona

n.

money
Club mernbarllllonday allili 110011.
will be uiH for food voucherl, clothing. madleal aupplln, c...n,.:;twt IIIII Md DIPII~IOIIOII
...
II
hyglana productl.
left .... the Aav.
William lllldclleawarth, Keihlr, Kenny Ul\,
TMford lnd C~ Wray.

·-

�I

:C ommentary

...,

---~Area

Wecb,l•day, J-. 31

Helen Elizabeth Roush, 76, Palmetto, F)a., died Saturday, Jan. 27, 1996
in the Manatee Memorial Hospital, Palmetto:
BomAuJ. 21 , 1919 in Gl01!51er, daughter of the late Ira 8lid Ethel "I:enell
Spencer, she was a former resident of Athens, Gahanna and Racine.·
She and her late husband, Paul' "Skeet" Roush, operated Roush's Land·
ing at Racine on the Ohio River in 1968 before moving to Palmetto in 11J85.
She was auxiliary member of the American Legion Post 309 of Palmetto.
She is survived by two daughters, Patricia Stewart of Bradenton, Aa., and
Carolyn Roush ofPalmeno; six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren;
two sisters-in-law, Ann Algeo of Athens, and Honore Roush of Paway, Calif.;
and a brother-in-law, Charles Rousb of Beaumont. Calif.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Paul "Skeet" Roush, in
1988.
Graveside service~ will be I0 ~ - Thursday in the Sunon Cemetery,
Racine, by the Rev. Thomas Fisher. Friends may call at the Jagers &amp; Sons
Funeral Home, Athens, from 1·9 p.m. Wednesday.

T.sttz6B:slid izll!H8
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

.2.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Pub Ilahar
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

.,........,,.,_,___lie..,__,_, w_lie . ....,_.n..•n·
Ill

,_,_not

llf10d

~

Senate struggles to
pass health insurance bill
By DIANE DUSTON
~uoclated Preaa Writer .

frig_
id conditions slated
fgr ·repeat performance

,

WASHINGTON- Congress gave President Clinton a bipartisan ovation
on State of the Union night when he called for passage of a health insurance
reform bill. But it's still stuck in the Senate.
· The flurry of publicity didn't faze the group of senators who are holding
it up. Officially, they remain anonymous, but word quickly circulated that
they are conservative Republicans responding to insurance company con·
cems.
. "It's a rolling hold," said Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., who spent much
of 1994 trying unsuccessfully to get a massive health reform package
passed. "It's called the power of the insurance industry."
·
Compared to the ambitious 1994 efforts, this is a narrowly drawn bill. It's
chief effect would be to guarantee that workers covered by group health
insurance policies are able to continue coverage when they change jobs,
even if they have pre-existing health problem.
. That part is OK with the insurance industry, said John Troy, executive
vice president of the Health Insurance Association of America.
"We have a couple of (other) problems," he said. Key among them are
the provisions that would affect people who leave an employer to strike out
on their own - the group policy to individual policy \11111Sition.
That would be very expensive for the insurance industry and the individuals, Troy indicated. He says states are already experimenting with the con·
cept and they should be left to do it, rather than making it federal law.
But lawmakers who supported health reform two years ago are still bothered by the number of Americans without insurance coverage and want to do•
something about it.
"There are now over 40 million Americans without health insurance,"
said Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., chairman of the Labor Committee.
She and Sen. Edward Kennedy, 0-Mass., who is the committee's ranking
Democrat, are sponsoring the bill.
·"Over one million working Americans have lost health insurance in the
last two years alone," Kassebaum said. "And over 80 million Americans
have pre-existing conditions !)tat could make it difficult for them to maintain
health coverage when they change jobs."
Both Democrats and Republicans were on their feet clapping last Tues·
day when Clinton proclaimed, "We have .to do more to make health care
nailable to every American" and pitched the Kassebaum· Kennedy plan.
Kassebaum, who is leaving the Senate at the end of the year, is deter·
mined to get it passed.
The bill "does not strike out in a bold, new direction," she said. "But it
is a very positive step forward that will help reduce ~ers to health cover·
age for millions of working Americans."
· .
·
She says she'll attach it to another bill as an amendment if the senators
now blocking it don't give up their hold.
In the Senate, nothing can move to the floor without unanimous consent
of the senators. Any senator, for no spoken reason, can block any bill.
"There are IS or 20 senators that have problems with this one," said Sen.
Larry Craig, R-ldaho. "There are several principles. It's more of a general
concern than a specific concern." ·
But Kennedy sayS' there are too many uninsured people in America to
continue to delay national action on health reform.
.
.
"We have. increased by 50 percent in Massachusetts the last five years,
the total number of uninsured," Kennedy said. "The problem is getting
worse in terms of uninsured."
Supporters in the House have not gotten as far as he and Kassebaum, but
.
. companion measures are forming there.
"I think health care reform is inevitable," said Kennedy, predicting it
would re-emerge as a presidential campaign issue.
''This is one of the top three or four issues in every poll," he .said.

Jy The AIIOC..Ied ,..._

the record low was 5 below zero in
1966. Sunset tonight will be at 5:48
p.m. and sunrise \Vednesday at 7:41
a.m.

~ Sunshine will returll to Ohio on
~ednesday but it won't warm things
I!P very much. Temperatures most

, Weedier forecast:

i&gt;laces uen't expected to climb out of

!lie teens, the National Weather Ser-

Tonight...Snow showers and a
chance of squalls northeast. Ooudy
with scattered flurries elsewhere.
·Cold with lows ~ro to I0 north and
I(} to IS south.
Wednesday... Aurries northeast
lllfly...Othcrwise turning panly SUR·
ny. HiBbs IS to 25.
''Extuded lorecut:
Thunday...A chance of snow.
Lows S to 15. Highs 15 to 25.
Friday and Saturday... Achance of
snow. Lows 5 to 15. Highs 10 to 20.

ioice said.
·
: · Some snow flurries are possible in
. the dry Arctic air.
:· Lows toniJht will be in lhe single
digits. St~ow squalls sllould end
toni&amp;ht along the Wb Erie shoreline
jn northeast Ohio.
, The frigid conditions wiU extend
into the weekend. A c~ of snow
ivill return on Thursday.
· 1be record-hi&amp;h temperature for
ibis da~ at lbe Columbus wather,
itation was Mdegrees in 1916 while
•

a

7

NASHVILLE.Tenn.(AP)-1be
Navy fighter jet was not much more
~ a blur !IS. i~ fell from ~ sky,
eng~nes squealing, and cnshed mto a
red brick bouse in a huge fireball,
witnesses said.
1be crash killed five people,
including the . two-man crew, and
engulfed the empty homes on either
side in llames. 1be pilot had been
blamed fur a previous accident.
"It was like a movie, .the squeal
getting higher and higher," said Steve
Bartlett, who lives across the street.
"1be way my house shook, I wasn't
sure it didn't hit my house."
' Others saw the fuel·laden Tomcat,
as the F· l4 is known, fall from an
overcast sky Monday morning.
"It was moving so fast I couldn't
even tell what sbape it was,I!Jid then
this huge fireball erupted and the heat
came through lbe glass of my car,"
said Don Isert, who was driving near
where the crash occurred. •
Blmer Newsom, 66, his wife,
Ada. 63, and a friend, Ewing T. Wair,
53, were killed when the plane hit
their house.
"One guy was just sittilig on his
coucb. He never had a chance. They
were all just sitting . where they
were," firefighter James Dean Said.

By JEFFHEf BRODEUR

•

•'~

' '

,

; \•,',

ered vital to the commission of the
Anoclalld P1111 Wslter
crime," Meehan said.
MEDIA', · Pa•.. ~ Investigaton
Meehan refused to provide any
found no botlby ltlpS at John E. du ' clue on a mOtive: saying he would
Pont's mansion, but they did filld a merely be spcK:ulating. He said ao
.:38-caliber revolver they believe the drup ,.,._ found durins the sean:h
' ebcimkah:oti....f heirusedtotillan alld thatdu \'Oftt had not been iesied
Olympic wresder.
for drugs. Acquaintances and rela. 0fficen were testing the revolver lives said du Pont abused cocaine as
{ound in the mansion to confirm that well as alcohol.
it was the murder weapon, Delaware
MOehan also refused to say if he
County District A.nomey Palrick. L. · would leek the death penalty.
Meehan said Monday.
Du · Pont, 51, was being held in
. Police had ~ du Pont, a mil· · solitary confinement in the Delaware
itary buff with a reportedly larp County Prison on murder and
cache of weapons. had booby-~ weapons charges.
the mansion durina the 48 hours-.he
He was captured by SWAT teams
spent barricllded inside followina Sunday after going outside to fix a
the Friday afternoon shootina.
boiler. That ended a standoff that
. . Instead of ~ndina a~ of trip • beaan Friday after du Pont allegedly
'!'•res and plutJc explosives, howev- shot and killed 1984 Olympic gold
er; authorities said they discovered a medalist wresder Dave Schultz, who
sm~l number of weapons while exewls training on du Pont's estate for
c11tma a search warnnt at the New· this year's Games in Adanta.
town Square lnlrision.
Schultz, 36, coached the wrestling ·
"We turned up a few we&amp;JlORS but team that du Pont founded and spon·
we only looked a1 those we consid· sored, Team Foxcatcher, at a 14,000.
.
squue·foot center on the estate.

I

Don't expect visit by aliens an:y tim.e· soon
..

across space at light-year speed, tak·
ing '35 years·I!! reach the ·newly'dis&gt;
covered planets.
'·
In other words, what the life
forms on these distant rocks think of
us earthlings may well be defined by
their opinions of "Mr. Ed" and "Car
54, Where Are You?" - two of the
top TV shows of 1961 .
Now that's scary.
.
. Extra·ten:estrials, if there are any
out there, could be getting their first
impressions of life on earth from the
likes of Gunther Toody and Francis
Muldoon, those two 'bungling cOps'
from "Car 54, Where Are You?" the
slapstick TV series that turned a
Bronx police precinct into a vaud~:·
ville stage.
Or, they might be watching the
hypochondriac, baritone-voice talk·
ing. horse who began a two-year run
in "Mr. Ed" the year John F.
Kennedy was sworn in as president.
As if that's not enough, next year
they'll sian getting another look at
the wacky world we live in when the
first episodes of "The Beverly Hillbillies" reach their Jiving rooms 35
year$ after they debuted on Ameri·
can television. It's Jeb Clampett and

By DaWAYNE WICKHAM

Today in history

t

Jetl)ro Bodil!ll, not Th!)lllas)cfferson
orfr~k:DoiiiJ&amp;ss.whp:ariJ;~
ing their imi!Se of life on thi~ ,planet.
. 1ben, just two years from now
they'll witness the invasion of this
planet by a visitor from within our
solar system when. the electromag·
netic radiation from "My Ravorite
Martian" wafts into theit . homes.
That's the TV show that starrCll Ray
Walston as an Earth-bound rnanian,
whose antenna sometime protruded
from his head, and Bill Bixby.,as the
young newspaper reporter · who.
befriended him.
!
Imagine what folks on. tt., other
side of the cosmos will think,;.
They're probably terrified&lt;by the
thought that we may one day discover them. Wouldn't you be if what
you knew of some distant •• world
came to you by way of the nlen and
women who created those ;shows?
Sure they were good (Of:'.l,some
laughs. But these program• were
never intended to serve as . ~ primer
course foJ extra-terrestrials t!l,life on
earth.
Still, If the scientists are right,
these TV images will get to the dis·
tant reaches of space long, before

.

'

N~SA's

probes are ible.to signal the
exi~nce ..pt ,rnore~.. j.-Jliliem.·life
here on Earth.
· ·,i
'
In faet, given the ·propulsion sys·
terns NASA is working with, signals'
from television shows made in 197~
will rain ·down upoh' those newlY
discovered planets •well in advanc&amp;
of any craft the space agency might
hurl in that direction - a situatillll'
cenain to mak~ matters worse.
...
It was in 1978 that Bill Bixby!·
who .had ·a ,close e~dunter with 4
Martian 15 year.~ earl'e~. reappea\'ed'
on TV in ''The Incredible Hulk," the
story of an earthling who turned into
a huge, green monster every tim~ hf
got angry. ·
',/
That's har!lly tile Image of thi$,~
world the folks from · Welcome ·
Wagon want to beam ~bqutthe s~ ..
But it is. And as ·a result, iflhere 's
anyone else out there trolling abo\ll
the.cbsmos, dori•texpecrthe!n tole+~
us know they're around.
•
. Giv.e~ '\'hat they may,well "now.;
of us from television; the ·chtinceC~
are good that anyone who lives on
those newly disco'~ereil' worlds will
be in 'no hurry to makt our acquain~­
tance.
~ ··
'

Suspect in trooper killing
ple~ds inn~cent to charges

1

'·

By The Aseoclated Pre11
Today is Tuesday. Jan. 30, the 30th day of 1996. There are 336 days left
in the year.
'
'
.
• (.
'
.'
'
' '
•
•1. ·~
Today's Highlight in History:
Amaru Revolutionary
s~ng in Spii.Oish ,IJ a press conterence he.
On Jan. 30, 1948, Indian political and spiritual leader Mahatma Gandhi, By Sera Eckel
Twenty-six-year-old Lori Berenson recendy Movement, a violent
foqn~ her "total.ly , out of. ~haracler. " ';He ·latet\t
who had led his country to independence from British rule through his phi·
IClliJied that she had been in solitary confinemelllr
losophy of nonviolent confrontation, was murdered by a Hindu extremist. began her life·sentence in a cold and overcrowded guerrilla organization.
Peruvian prison. And back in the United States,
What happened?
.fw 30 days and had been insU:Ucled .by. militii'y
newspaper readers are wondering how this bright,
We can't ever .really
JX':Iice to yell so thaHile ,CP~~ heriwitho!'tal.·
cariog and relatively privileged· young American know, beeause Beren.ft\JCrophone.
·
could have strayed so far from her expected path. son's military trial was so
"I've never,kno.llrn.berJO O}lcD.ee&amp;-aiiBf¥.·Slie' ·
W)len I first heard Lori Berenson's story, I grossly unfair .. it was
very introspective! llil:d s~Je CCI$ Q\!i~t.....ther than
immediately thought of my friend Carolyn.
closed to the public, the
· ~ged;''·said Radosh: · · 1 .' ' •..
'
Carolyn Cleary and I were roommates in col· judge's identity was con·
,;· So the mystery of Lori.Berenaon· remains. Is
lege, and you must forgive a friend's bias when I cealed, and Berenson's
's!fe· the ki~d a~d com~ion~te .soo,t ~ado~~
say she is a remarkably kind and intelligent ·lawyer was not allowed
re,nembers . Or IS Ute a terl'olj~. , . , .
:
woman. While others hold protests and rail to cross-examine witoc;sses or present evidence in
lfLori ·~erenson knowi~ly aided iii tile kiili~
against totalitarian states as they sit in cafes, Car- his client's defense. Prosecutors say Berenson was df. •.innoeen(\ pe,ople; then sJi'e deServ!~S her setj, I
oJyn has always expressed her social conscience a )eade~· O( the rebel group, that she stockpiled · tence:'·Bui·som&amp;iung tells me 'tJierehas bUn a ter-1
through service .. at homeless shelters, tenant weapons and gathered information for an attack. rl~Je misiake. I confess th~ my sympaihy ma9
meetings, homes for troubled teen-agers and Berenson's lawyers say that . though she was . ~iit frol9_the fact that she comes from my world, 1
;
· Cltristmas gift drives.
·
friendly with Tupac Amilru members, she ifillt she rell!inds .me of people I know. 1 -can't, in l
· . , Berenson seems to share this trait. While in the believed they had renounced 'their violent past and . !iiinesty; say•ho,w I'd feel 'i hhe did not. ·, ·
'. \
United States, her community worlc tended toward had no knowledge of any terrorist plans.
•'b But there is something else about Lori Beren' .
practical, hands-on tasks such as serving in soup . I called Carolyn, assuming she would be dis· sl;n that ~ompels me -"' sonlething ~yond the ~·
kitchens and organizing blood drives. Daniel tressed by Berenson's story. She was not.
·soop . kitchens, the needlew'ol\ B!id ~ long, &lt;
Radosh, a friend of hers since childhood,
"She must haye been incredibly naive," said tirown ,hai~.
.
.
:;
~ describes a modesiy of teniperament that reminds Carolyn, explaining that the Ttipac Amaru, along . ;, :; ·!'lcrenson has insisted that she not receive spe- \
·. me of my college c~um. "She was never one to with the Sbinins. Path, anot11er Peruvian guerrilla . q~al treatinent because she' is Jltmerican: She has !
atand 'on.a soapbox," h,e ~d. "l .never heard her group; were.f~ . 1111d hated by citizens across .dlpressed no interest in ~ing transferred to the ~
~.;' ~·say 'i:lass ~ggle' or 'oppression.'' When she the countty.
·
. '
. "i'elalive•ccmifort o{ an Americllll prisqn. And she ~
talked about her experieoees in SO!IIh America, it
But, 1 asked, is it pos~ible that someo~ could ··.11~ t.Old hCr ;~~ts- ~· s~ ~ol,~ly does nO!
was about people who Were s._mnl Or families be a decent periOII alld stdhomehow be IDVOI~ 'WaDI a ·~save LOn'' Campaign. , . . . ,
,
m.t had been separated...
.. .
.with it?
:·
.'
. •,'
Sbe.iS wi)ling to spend the rest of her life ill a''
'flie two women have other things in common·.
"I could see getting ~ucked into it," she con: .~ellish prison ill order to uphold her''jliinciP,Ies. ' .
They were both excellent snldents. They both ·ceded. "The poverty thef! is desperate and heart· ., Who am~ng us can say the 'same?
· '·
enjoy
needlework.
and
playing
guitar.
And
they
·
Wn:ocllina:
And~
IS
an
unjust
caste
system.
1'1
·
..,.lokaNnayncllwbdWrlterfqrNew•
'•
.
both went to Peru when they were in their early And there IS a small percentage of people wh9 ' 1.,...,...'EnterPriM Auoclllkln~ ···" '' ·«·
, ·
Iii ,, ...
~201
to
help
the
poOl'.
.
·,,
,
,
,
have
an
awful
lot.
But
it's
hard
to
justify
the
ter·
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
•
''
' 01·..,~-· '
But c.tolyn is n&lt;ntnising ber two YllURI-., . iorist actions." 1 .
•
· ·,,
·
•
·' ·~~
· ',, a.nct.comment• to the aufl14!r t~.eare Of IIIII'
in Pembroke, Mass., lnd B~ is ~ng, a
'RadoSh rejects the idea .,that Berenson got , t1\tiPIPti',. or'~
-11 Itt ~.
life selllepce fm; ~Jer-affil~ with the Tupac · swept up by anythine:- Whe~ he saw his friend~ - aol.com. .
·~ ·.• ..
, ,
~-~~

When principles land you in pris.on . :·.:

..

·'.The
---------.....
D,aily
~entinel

'l'ubll•hed ev.., lflenloon. Mondoy -&amp;II
Fridlly, Ill Coun Sc.. ...........,, Ohio. by die,
Ohio Volley hblidM .. eo.-.~ Co..
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;

1be following cases Were ~eSolved
last week in the ll,feigs County Court
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were:
John C. Meadows, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., driving on li closed road, $20
plus costs; .Anna M. Chapman,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
Eddie R. Smith, Racine, d'riving
under suspension, $100 plus costs, 10
days jail suspended to three days, one
year probation; Charles Craig, Middleport, disorderly conduct. $100
suspended to $25 plus costs, one year
probation;
Tommy Boso, Portland, driving
under the influence, SSOO plus costs,
I 0 days jail suspended to three days,
90-day operator's licert$C suspension,
one year probation, $250 of fine and

.

·~

-·

. .,:2S '
"

.

.

Announcements

Tbe Ligbf
'n

Funiture

What do seven-foot basketball
players do in the oil season?
They go to the movies and sit in
front of you.

***

It's a good Idea to learn from
other people's mlstakos, since
you'll never have time to make
them all yourself.

*

Tact : art of**
making a point
without making an enemy.

***

Nobody knows the age of th11
human race, but most of us
agree that it's old enough to
know better.
.

GOOD "OftEST PEOPLE

ftNBS'I BQ111PMBNT AVAIJ.AII,I

VeterMI M•will

.i-

Union .Avenue
closed for repair .

Union Avenue near Pomeroy will
be closed the remainder of the week
so workers of the Meigs County
'
Highway Department can repair a
slip, County Engineer Robert Eason .
said.
The road will be closed for
jail suspended upon completion of
leSi.dential treatment program; Deb- Special meeting
approximately one week, weather
bie Shuler, Salem Center, criminal
Shade River Lodge #453 will permitting, Eason said. Hiland Road ·
hold a special meeting Saturday, can be used as an alternate route.
trespass, costs, two years probation, 7:30 p.m., at the lodge hall in Chester.
restraining order issued, t1!ree days Work in the master Mason degree
jail suspended;
'
.
·1
·. DUI
takeh place.. Refreshments w1l
Roben Johnson Jr., Rae1ne,
, will
~
$500 plus cos~. 10 days jail sus- 0 11ow t e meeung.
pended to three days, 90-day OL sus- · Letart t tees
pension, ~n~ year probation, $250 of
The ~art Township Board of
fine and Jail suspended upon com·
·
M d 7
pletion of residential treatment pro- Trustees wd1meet o~ ~Y· p.m. at
By
'
the township office bUIIdmg.
gram,. Jeffre y R. G'll
1 and, Rae me,
theft, costs, two years probation, six
Dave
months jail suspended to four days,
Grate
40 hours community service; Glenn
L. Mahomey Sr., Langsville, domesof
tic violence, $150 plus cost, 10 days
jail suspended to three days, one year
Rutland
probation, restraining order issued.

... __

Hospital news

son wa5 not present at the arraign·
ment. Gibson participated by spea)(· · ·
er phone.
Kreutzer did not enter a plea.
Attorneys for Kreutzer have the
option of entering pleas of innocent
' or innocent by reason of diminished
mental responsibility. Aguilty plea is
not an option in a military capital
murder case.
Under military l~w. Army prose•
cutors had I 20 days from the date
Kreutzer was put in jail to bring him
to trial, but defense ·requests fot
delays voided that requirement. No
trial date has been set.
·He has been in jail at the CamJl
Lejeune Marine Corps base since he
was captured on the day of the
shooting. Charges were filed on Nov.
3.
In addition to premeditated murder and attempted murder, Kreutzer
is charged with four counts of maiming, wrongfully transporting weapons
on a military installation and larceny
of military ammunition.
.
The maiming charges are for soldiers who suffered permanent damage in the shooting. the weapons.
charge relates to the recovery of three
guns found in Kreutzer's possession
at the shooting scene: an AR-15 rifle;
a .22-caliber riDe and a 9 mm pistol:
Military Judge Col. Peter E.
Brownback set March 26 to begin·
two days of pretrial motions in the
'1
case.
,
A jury pool of 20 officers and I0
senior enlisted personnel has been·
selected, said Maj. Rivers Johnson, a,
spokesman for the 82nd Airborne
Division. A panel of 12 jurors will be'
chosen from that pool.

LegioD post to meet
Racine American Legion Post 602
will meet Thursday, 6:30p.m., at the
post borne in Racine. A meal will fol·
low the meeting .

REEDSVR.LE
Units ofihe Meigs County Em~r·
II
:05
a.m.,
Hudson Road. Kathy
gency Medical Service recorded eight
Barringer,
St.
Joseph's
Hospital.
calls for assistance Monday. includRUTLAND
ing on~ transfer call. Units respond6:49a.m., New Lima Road, Lois
ing included:
Snodgrass, Holzer Medical Center.
COLUMBIA TWP.
TUPPERS PLAINS
3:32 a.m., volunteer f1re depart·
8:
12
a.m., volunteer fire department to Carpenter Hill Road, struc·
ment
and
squad to SR 7, motor vehi·
lure fire on Don Cheadle property,
cle
accident,
David Hupp, refused
Rutland sqhad assisted, no injuries
treatment,
Mindy
Sampson, St.
reported;
I :12 p,m., Carpenter Hill Road, Joseph's Hospital.
rekindled fire.
( -~,,,
RACINE
9:40a.m., Racine Home National
Banlc, Raben Ritchie, Veterans
Memorial Hospital; •
6 p.m., voltiilteer fue department
and !!Quad, motor vehicle accident on
State Route 338, q.act Wolfe, VMH.

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

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

FORI' BRAGG, N.C. (AP) Prosec1110rs are seeking the death
penalty against an Army sergeant
accused of killing a fellow soldier and
wounding 18 others in a predawn
sniper attack last fall, a spokesman
said today.
Sgt. William Kreutzer was
arraigned today on charges of pre·
meditated murder and auempted mur·
der. He wore a bullet-proof vest and
had heavy security for the. 6 a.m.
colUI appearance.
Prosecutors claimed in court documents that the number of people
wounded in the attack warranted
seeking the death penalty.
"It'~ . my 'understanding in this
case that the prosecution intends to
seek the death penalty," said Capt.
Paul Wilstln, a spokesman for the
judge advocate general's office,
which ,is the Army's legal affairs
departmeot.
Kreqtzer listened auentively as the .
judge explained his rights, but waived
a full reading of the charges. He faces
one count of premeditated murder in
the Oct. 27 death of Maj. Stephen
Mark Badger and 18 counts of
attempted murder..
The gunfire began in early morn·
ing fog as hundreds of soldiers stand:
ing in a Ooodlit field were complet·
ing calisthenics and preparing for a
four-mile run. 1be suspect, who was
tackled by a group of soldiers exer·
cising nearby, is a member of !he unit
that was fired on -the 2nd Brigade
Task Fore~. ·
Inside the courtroom, he was not
· shackled or handcuffed and spoke
loudly in response to questions.
Kreutzer told the court he was satis·
tied with his representation, although
lead defense counsel Mai . James Gib-

Meigs squads logs calls

Monday admissions - none.
~
Monday dischargea - Shirley
.
Royll~ ....- .....
Wolfe,
Rutland; Donald ervin,
10
N;. ~pd"'' by no1ll ~ 11 •
.,...~r~c
~.llt
Racine
.
.................~.-...- ..........11\
---...~colo
·.~
' · Holler Medical Ceater
lnl'l·-~·.. ·
~~ilfW,IIONIIN
w
..
-ltD hi. ·-··--·....21\
~
19 - Shelly
13 ....•~....
121.30
CcJuabenour,
William
Slone;
Timothy
:15 w................... ............ .................. l$3.12
..· ~~~ ,..;;;·;-,. .... 10:
Masten, Charles Kisor, Chasity
SJ~ro···'···~".I, .....! ., ·'·M•••••··••;,,,,.~JQS.56 •
lUll- . . . . PiOultlld by
Craycnfl,
Dillan McCoy, Marsha
II CllllpoiiL
J) _.!i:.~ ....~:....
~.~
~. Erma Bntler.
.l6 ,................:......... _...:._156..
(P •11 'lhldl pa I !Ia)
S2Woob..........................................I!Ot.72 ,. llii!-...------~~~~~
I
.,
:·'·-~·
r
' "
.;
f&lt;·
I
I 'J
"'-;
~
' ~ ..
~j.
.... ••'
I
.. -~
""'*'a!
• '
~

. Estimated receipts: 43,000
Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
Cattle: 1.50 to 2.00 lower.
SlauJhter steers: choice 58.00.
6.5.00; sel~t 50.00.60.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice ·58.00.
M.SO; select 50.00.6().00.
Cows: steady to lower; all cows
41.25 imd down.
Bulls: uneven; all bulls 45.00 lind
down.
Veal calves: lower; choice 145.00
and down.
,.
Sheep and lambs: 5.00 lower;
choice wools 68.00. 76.00; feeder
lambs 104.00 and down; aged sheep
34.00 and down.

Army
IS requesting
death
··
•
penalty for sn1ner
susnect
I"
I"

County court cases ended

Koofllllt -·--·-·-··-...........

Ooe V.. ...........:....................:............ SilN.OO

M"'l ·.ller

~.

~ 011 ............................31\
~TIT .....................................85\
a.t* OM ..............................~

Auocl...,. l'less. ""'lbellllio
Ne•-A....tllioil.
'
•.
P'OITM~Ib Send .tdrna conee1i0111 to
,.. Dolly Storinet. Ill Coon Sc .• Pamaoy.

....;

""

Am lie Power ..............- .......44~

Allza •••-•ooo.o•••ooooooouooooooooooooo . . 53\

- ·The

./j

· ·"

tocks

(IJSI'IUI,_,..)

--....

-

er James Gross, 27.
Gross was· shot after he ·stopped
White's car early Jan. 19 on IRterstate
71 near Ashland in north-central
Ohio, police said. Police in Reynolds:
burg said that about I· 112 hburs ear·
tier, White had shot his mother. Jean
White, 52, in the foot.
White appeared before Ashland
County Common Pleas ColUI·Judge
Rob!:rt Henderson in handcuffs, lea
shackles and an orange jail outfit. He
staml down at a table top during
most or the brief ~ng.

. ASHl.AND(AP)-Amanplelded.innocent Monday 11111 was oolenld
to stand trial April 8 In the shciotina
death '9 f • State Highway Patrol
trooper.
Maxwell White Jr., 30, of the
Columbus suburb of R.eynoldiburJ,
ent,ered the plea on charges of agsra·
vtded I)IUnler and one count each of
abductiOn and having a weapon under
disability.
White could face the death penal·
ty if convicted in. the death ofTroop-

COLUMBUS (AP~- Indiana·
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Tuesday by the U.S.
·Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: fully 1.00 higher; ~ gQOd on a moderate supply.
.
U.S. I -3, 230.260 lbs. 43.5().
45.50, few 46.00, mostly 44.00.
45.00; plants 45.00.46.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230.260 lbs. 39.5().
43.50.
Sows: 50 cents to 1.00 higher.
U.S. 1-3, 300.500 lbs. 28.00.
32.00; S00.650 l.bs. 32.00.36.00.
Boars: 25.00.27.00.

(Continued from Pace 1)
.... ,
COIIIDiissioners tabled accepting the bid pendina review by Emergencx
Services Director Robert Byer.
•
In addition, Engineer Robert Eason and Highway Department Manqes
Dave Spencer updated the board on rq~ai~ of a •lip on Union Avenue neat
Pam~.
•
1be board approved Eason's emergency hiriog the Ohio River Bridge Co.,
Cambridge, to wm on the slip for $26,347. County officials can bypass solic~
iting fOJ bids if there is an emergency.
1be road will likely be open by the weekend, Eason said. .
.
Following lhe meeting of two weeks ago, the board approved a $33,643
proposal from Landis &amp;: Gyr Powers Inc., a Cincinnati-based contracting
group, to perform energy-saving renovations to the Meigs County Courthouse
under the Ohio Senate Bill 300 program.
:
Under !lie program, the cost of construction is repaid through energy sav·
ings. The company projects annual energy savings of $5,034.
:
The board also received a $54,944 proposal from Honeywell Inc.
· The board passed on including the Meigs County Multipurpose Center
in the project. 1be multipurpose center currently has a maintenance contract
with Honeywell. .
Commissioners also agreed to set flood plain building Permits at $25 and
paid weekly bills of $170,353.42 consisting of 138 entries.
PresentwereH:ffman.HowardandHarte:bach,andClerkGioriaKJoes.

Also killed were the pilot, Lt. .
Cmdr. Jolui Stacy Bates, originally of
Chattanooga, and his partner, radar
mterceptor officer Lt. Graham Alden
Higgins, originally from Dover-Fox·
croft, Maine.
The crash occurred 2·112 miles
south of Nashville International Airport, minutes after the fighter took oft'
on a training mission to its base at
Miramar Naval Air Station near San
Diego.
,
The Navy said the plane was not
carrying any missiles, rockets or
bombs.
The cause of the crash was not
immediately known. The Pentagon
sent a team of investigators.
Last April, Bates lost control of his
F-14 and crashed into the Pacific
Ocean during maneuvers with anoth·
er fighter. He and the radar intercept
officer ejected.
After a review, Bates was recommended fully qualified for return to
flight status, said Cmdr. Gregg Hartung, a Navy spokesman.
Bates' fighter squadron, VF 213,
has had four accidents in the last 16
months, including the October 1994
fatal crash involving Lt: Kara Hull·
green, one of the first women to qual·
ify for a Navy combat aviation
assignment.

Investigators find du Pont
mansion not booby-trapped Today's livestoc,k report

Gannett Newa Service
WASHINGTON - Somewhere
in the deep reaches of outer space,
aliens may be getting a glimpse of
life here on Earth. If so, don'-t expect
them to · come a-callin' anytime
soon.
Scientists peering ihrough the
Hubble Telescope say they've dis·
covered. two planets in distant con·
stellltions - 35 light years awaythat seem capable of supporting
some form of life. Even more
promising, they say, are their moons,
which are thought to have in abun·
dance of life-supporting water.
. But along with the news that we
may not be alone in the cosmos
comes the chilling possibility that
the inhabitants of these far·away
worlds are being bombarded with
television signals from mother
Earth.
That's right.
·The boob ..tube images that
Diane Dueton cover1 health and welfare lnu.. for The Aleoclatad
bounce
about this planet's atmos·
Pren.
phere on their way into our homes
leak into space in the form of elec·
tromagnetic radiation. Once clear of
Earth's gravitational pull, they dart

a,.. . . . . .

Pent agon Iau nches pro be
• . Navy Jet f"19hter,s craf!5h
Into

W.VA.

'--110 .,_ - - • • - · l ' l l e y - lie--~~~~~-. A H -

w . No .,.,..., ,...,. . . p4 II~ 'ltd. ~ add •••,._
Pfllatltllllltle&amp;

Deaths-.- Commissioners ponder

Helen E. Roush

..w;uw~ rom:Ut fOJ

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genel'lll Manager

The DallY Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

2 and 4 Wheal Alignments (Compute~)
•Brakes •Shocks •Struts enres
eQII Changes '-Lube Jobs •Turia-up_
s
-Engine Diagnosis

~ (au, ./).IJCflns 1Nd.
808 w. Mllln St., Pomeroy, OH 45e7lf
%mile DOwrl Rlvw from ~ridge ·

..:::.::;::.:

• P9KM1e

i

1414

~~
,_

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***

Our friend kept rea~lng IIDillut 1
how bad ci~ttea are lor you.
So he gavlt up reading.
'

�•

.

The Dally Sentinel
.

.

.

.

.

Riley. again brings out ·best .'in ·Knicl&lt;s

. · MILLS TRAPPED Clsveland forward Chris Milia, right, Ia
· · trapped by Charlotte.' • Matt Geiger (52) and Don Curry, left, dur·
lng Monday night's NBA game atCharlotte. The Hornets won, 88:: H.(A~)
·

By The A:ssoclated Preu
· No m~tter what side he's on, Pat
Riley seems to spur the New York
Knicks.
The Knicks, who came within a
basket of winning the NBA title
under Riley in 1994, beat him and the
Miami Heat for the third time this
season, 94l85 Monday night.
"We play very well against them.
Maybe when he is there it brings out
the demon in us.lf it keeps going like
this, we should play them every
game," said Hubert Davis, who
scored 19 points.
Patrick Ewing scored 35 points as
the Knicks improved to 7-0 against
Miami in !he ·last two seasons. New
York is 17-1 overall against !he Heat
at Madisoti Square Garden.
Riley was loudly booed when he
returned to the Garden on Dec. 19. In
his second trip back, he was only
razzed for three seconds when Miami's lineup was introduced.
"There wasn't 36 stories before

the game, then: wasn't a countdown,
IIM;n: weren't any banners and the
people were rather subdued tonight.
I have nothing but respect for Knicks
fans, and one day it might be normal
again, I hope," Riley said.
In other NBA games, Charlotte
beat Cleveland 88-86, Seattle stopped
Portland 92-88, Utah defeated Detroit
106-97 and Philadelphia downed
Vancouver I 03-92.
Davis •hit three 3-pointers and
Charles Oakley made five foul shots
in a span of five minutes late in .!he
fourth quarter as !he Knicks opened
. an eight-point lead.
Then !he first physical confronla·
lion of !he game- Derek Harper of
the Knicks lllngliag with Rex Chapman- seemed to Ignite Miami. The
Heat closed to 75-74 before New
York pulled away.
"Maybe we need to get in a fillht
more often, go back to what we are,
do it !he diny way. Get in someone's
face and everyone responds," Davis

:NBA players say they no longer fear Magic's return
OAKLAND. Calif. (AP) - Tim
:Hardaway has ·visited AIDS patients
:in . children·~ hospilllls. He has read
;about !he virus and its transmission.
·He has attended NBA flayers Asso:ciation discussions about AIDS.
: The ·result, Hardaway says, is that
'he knows a fot more about the virus
:!han he did a few years ago. And the
:Golden Slate WarriorS guard says that
:explains why most players no longer
fear Magic Johnson's return to the
·NBA.
Hardaway and his tearnma~s will
be the ppposition tOnight when Johnson, who retired jn 1991 after testing
positive for the virus that causes
AIDS, plays his first game back with
the L&lt;is Angeles Lakers.
"I'm not going to b~~:ck off him,"
Hardaway said. 'Tin going to slap

the ball out of his hands. He's just like
a regul.ar person. "
In 1992, when Johnson planned a
return, several NBA players
expressed concern about the risk of
catching the AIDS virus from him~
leading Johnson to decide against a
comeback.
· But doctors have since largely discounted the possibility that the '{irus
could he spread througll 'the rough
and tumble of pro sports, and players
have become better educated about
the virus and its transmission.
"Back in college, you really didn't think about it. Then Magic came
along with the virus," Hardaway
said. " Now, when you go to all these
hospitals and stuff, they educate you
on the virus."
Warriors forward Jerome Kersey

said Johnson's open discussion of his
health has been a big factor in his
peers' education about the virus.
. "!.think you 've got to look back
and say it was a great thing !hat he did
by cominl! out and standinll up to it,"
Kersey said. "When you first heard
of Magic having it, you thought you
could get it if Magic breathed on you.
It's not one of these things that's
taboo now. " ·
.
As Johnson was announcing his
return to pro basketball Monday, !he
Warriors were becoming the first
team to designate an NBA game as a
benefit for AIDS care, research and
education.
The timing o_f the two announcements was coincidenlal - !he Warriors had been planning the AIDS
· benefit for several months and had

Scheduled Monday's news conference
days before.
.
Kersey joined Warriors officials in
announcing the Feb. 7 conieS\ against
!he Chicago Bulls will he designated
. as the league's first "Until There's a
Cure" game- with proceeds of pre·
mium ticket sales, a pregame reception and an auction going to local
AIDS organizations.
The Warriors hope to raise
$100,000 at the game, which will feature pregame ceremonies and a laped
message from Johnson. A percenlage
of the funds will be donated to the
. Magic lobnson Foundation.
"This is a diseaSe that ,a few years
ago, we didn't have !he information,"
Warriors assislllnt general manager AI
Attles said. "Now we have the education."

said.
land after taking the team plane to
Chapman scored 23 points, Alon- Ariz~ma for the Super Bowl. .
zo,Mourning 21 and Billy Owens 19
Portland's Rod Strickland sat out
for Miami.
the entire third quarter because of
Hornets 88, Cavaliers 86
hack spasms.
Kenny Anderson made a running Jazz 106, Pistons 117
bank shot with six-tenths of a seeond
Karl Malone scored 40 points and
left, lifting Charlotte over Cleveland. Ulllhcoasted after building a 26-point
At 21-21, the Hornets reached the ' lead late in the first half.
.500 mark for the first time since Nov.
The host Jazz were ahead 69-45
11.
with eight minutes left in !he third
Anderson dribbled at top of the quarter, but Detroit closed within nine
key before driving left and shooting points in the final period. Malone
over Michael Cage for !he, winning scored 13 points in the fourth quarter
shot. Larry Johnson blocked Danny to help preserve Utah's lead:,.
Ferry's 3-point try at the buzzer.
John Stockton had 19 pomts and
. Anderson fmished with 16 pciints 14 assists for Ulah. Grant Hill scored
and Johnson hru! 20 points and 17 34 for !he Pistons.
rebounds. Terrell Brandon scored 22 76en 103, GriDIIes 91
•
points for the visiting Cavaliers. ·
Jerry Stackhouse hl!d 29 poin~ as
SnperSonics 91,
short-handed Philadelphia stopped a'·
TraD Blazers 88
nine-game losing streak. The 76ers
Gary Payton hit 10 of 12 shots, ' won their eighth game, fewest in the
including a 19-footer with 13.5 sec- • league and two fewer than expansion
onds lef1, and scored 21 points as Vancouver.
1.
S~attle won at Ponland for its fiflh
The Sixers had only nine players.
Derrick Coleman and Sharone Wright
straight victory.
Clifford Robinson scored 25 for .are injured and Vernon Maxwell, senPortland despite shooting only 8-for- tenced earlier in the day in Houston
24. The Blazers, on pace to become to 90 days i~ jail on a marijuana posthe worst fouJ. shooting team in NBA session charge, did not show up. •
history, were 19-for-31 from !he line.
Sean Higgins had 27 points and· II
Seattle slllr Shawn Kemp was rebounds for the 76ers and Clarence
held out of !he slllrling lineup by Weatherspoon had 23 points· and 10
coach George Karl because he arrived rebounds. G~g ·Anthony had 18
late. Some of !he Sonics went to Polt- points for the visiting Grizzlies.

STEALS BALl.· VIllanova's Eric Eberz, left, ataal1 the bldl from
Syracuae's Todd Burgan (30) In overtime action at Syracuae Mono
day night. Thil Wildcats held off the Organernen to win 72-419. (AP)

· :~Panthers

nip
·. Penguins 2-1
MIAMI (AP) - The Pittsburgh
Penguins were one tc;am !hat had given the Aorida Panthers fits this season. Mario Lemieu&lt; and Jaromir
Jagr had combined for six goals and
three assists in two victories.
On Monday night, the Pal)thers
·once again show~d · they belong
among the J'!HL elite this season by
shutting down Lemieux and company 2-1.
·
"It was a great win," Aorida
coach Doug MacLean said. "It was
nice to go head-to-head with the big
boys .... It says we are playing pretty
well."
The victory came before a sellout
crowd of 14,703. Today,the Broward
County Commission votes on
whether to take the first step in
building the Panthers a new arena. If
the motion fails, then ·hockey in
South Florida is all but history for a
team put upJor sale last fall.
MacLean called on backup goalie
Mark Fitzpatrick to stop the offensive
power of Pittsburgh. It was the third

PET·

!

'

Phils trade Slocumb to Boston Re.d Sox
PHII.ADELPHIA(AP)-Unsure Duquette said should make him
how center fielder Lenny Dykstra's "effective on the grass fields of the
. riglit knee will respond to offseason American League, particularly in
surgery,the Pliiladelphia Phillies paid Fen way Park."
a steep price for an insurance policy.
Slocumb's 32 saves were fourth
The Phil lies sent Healthcliff best in the National League and good
Slocumb,.the NL's best closeF for the enough to earn him a spot on the All·first half of last season, and· two Star team.
minor-leaguers to the Boston Red Sox
"I know we gave up a very good
for outfielder .Lee Tinsley, reliever ·-closer. He had two great years in a
' Ken Ryan and power-hitting prospect row," PhiUie~ general manager Lee
Glenn Murray.
Thomas said. "We're probably taking
In desperate need for a,closer, the a .calculated risk."
Red Sox agreed to part with Ryan, · But Slocumb struggled with the
·their closer for much of the last half Philli'es through the last half of the
of the 1994 season; Tinsley, a swift 1995 season, recording only 12 saves
switch-hitter; and Murray, who hit 25 after June.
homers in lhe minors last year.
Thomas is gambling that Ricky
fn return, they get the 29-year-old Bottalico, Philadelphia 's setup man
·Slocumb, who spent 1994 as the last season, or Ryan, who has 20
. Phillies' setup man, then moved up to saves in the past two seasons, can take
the closer role in 1995 and recorded Slocumb's place. .
The Red Sox lqst closer RiCk
·32 saves in 38 oppoltunities. ·
He is a ground ball pitcher, which Aguilera to free agency \lfter the seaRed Sox general manager Dan son. They acquired him from Min-

nes~ta during the season, and he was
an effective closer for them before he ·
returned to the Twins.
Phils manager Jim Fregosi said he
ciidn'tlose confidence in Slocumb in
the last half of the season.
"I lbink he pitched fantastic,"
Fregosi said of Slocumb, who has
given up only two homers the past
two seasons. "He's got a heck of an •
anii. Realistically, he's just come into
his own."
Tinsley will be given a shot tojoin
fonner Red · Sox Mark Whiten in
Philadelphia's starting outfield, but
the Phillies wanted him in case Dykstra's knee doesn't hold up.
"It does give me somebody,
besides Lenny, that can play center
field," Fregosi said, adding !hat Dykstra will be his center fielder "as long
as he's physically able to play there."
Tinsley, 26, hit .284 in I 00 games
for the Red So&lt; last year, the fourth
organization he's played for in his

Champion .Cowboys return home
GRAPEVINE, Texas (APJ- Dal-·
' las Cowboys owner Jerry Jones found
·a way to circumvent Arizona's I a.m.
cutoff.time for serving alcohol.
Jones, who complained publicly
·last week, that the alcohol curfew
. ;would cut into his team's postgame
.party, kept the celebration going well
into Monday morning following the
Cowboys' 27-17 Super . Bowl win

nine-year pro career. In 504 major·
league at-bats, he's hit .282 wilh 10
homers, 57 RB!s and 31 stolen bases .
"Probably last year was"the first
time he ·really had &amp;'chance to show
what he could do," Thomas said. "We
don't have any speed and he's a
switch-hitter. We can really use him
in a lot of ways."
With Dykstra and right fielder
Whiten penciled into the starting
lineup, Tinsley will be competing
with Tony Longmire, Jim Eisenn:ich,
Pete lncaviglia and Murray, who
Thomas said has a shot to make it
wilh !he Phillies.
The Phillies hit a league-low 94
homers last season. In his last three
minor-league seasons, Murray has hit
(8 home runs, including. 25 at Class
AAA Pawtucket last season .
"We don't have an outfielder in
the upper levels of our system !hat has
his kind of power numbers," Fregosi
Continued on page 5

VIe
llature
Drivers, Ho•e
Owners And
Mobile Ho1ne
Owners Specl.-1
Savin&amp;•·

over the Pittsbu·rgh Stcelers in Tempe, eyed and partied out.
Ariz.
·
''I'm tired, man," said cornerback
''I'm tireljl. I haven 't slept," Cow- Deion Sanders as he trudged ·across
boys coach Barry Switzer said as he the tarmac holding one of his sleepsteppe(! of the team's chartered jet at ing children. "Where 's that limo?"
Da1la~-Fort Worth International AirCornerback Larry Brown, whose
. polt late Monday afternoon .. "We two interceptions earned him MVP
stayed up late last night. Jerry threw honors fo[ the game, was tired- but
a great patty."
beaming.
Our statistics show that mature
Many of the players were bleary"It's a great feeling, l)ut I'm gonna
drivers and home .owners have
go home and get some rest," he said.
fewer
and less costly losses .than
Brown, who labored all season as
other age groups. So ij's only'fair
the Cowboys " other" cornerback
to
charge you less for your
opposite superstar Sanders. said he
Insurance.
Insure your home and
was surprised by being named MVP.
car with us and save even more
"I ·saw my name on the scorewith our special ' muHI-policy
board," he said. "Everybody on the
discounts.
team started chanting 'Larry! Larry!'
I was excited and happy. It's something I' II clierish for the rest of my
life."
· · Brown said he needed to rest
because of a string of lalk-show
' .
.
appearances he has scheduled.
"I'm doing interviews with David ·
Letterman, Conan O'Brien and Jay
Leno," he said. "Kathi~ Lee Gifford
and Regis .Philbin is Thursday. It's a
full schedule. I'll be 'Hollywood'
now."
Few ~ans wen: ·allowed neat the
remote cargo are~ where !he c;owboys jtt stopped.
• ·
Those who were there were airport
employees and their children, like 8· ·
ytat-bld Trey Howse, whose mother
works for American Airlines.
' The third-gradc;r sjlorted a Cow.
boys hat and jersey and clutched a
~
s~
· owl pennant and a small foot•
__
ball.
"I g~ t of school~ my teacher
said it was OK because she's a Co~
214 EAST MAIN
~ys f~." he said.
•
POMEROY
: Scotes offJins lined the roads lea'v·
~ :
• ing the airport as IPe fom: clwtp buiA~unlfiiW'Gnee
es \eft. eai!h emblazoned wilh signs
1:.11tt Home car BuelrMIIs
sayioa• ."Dallas CowtiOys. Super
BowDCXX Clwnpions."
L-...;.:::Z~~~~-..J

... ltOGAN
B,~NER
~nce~ices

t

~

.

slllrl for Fitzpatrick in four games; in
the foulth game, he relieved aii·Sillr
John Vanbiesbrouck.
" It's nice to play," Fitzp!ltrick
said. "He (MacLean) .called me up
during the Super Bowl, and he told
me I was going to play. I had to stop
concentrating on the football game."
Pittsburgh hardly had an open shot
at Fitq~atrick, who ended up with 23
saves.
'
Lemieu&lt; - coming off his fiflh
lhree-goal game of the season- was
held without a point for only the second 'time in 42 games. Jagr had Pittsburgh's only goal, but hardly made a
move without·the Panthers swarming
him.
Florida surprised Pittsburgh by
outshooting the Penguins 33-24. It
was 9nly the second time Aorida has
beaten the Penguins in 10 games. All
lhree games this season have been
decided by one goal.
"Piusburgh always gives you lots
o~ trouble," MacLean said.

· SYRACUSE, ij.Y. (AP)- Syra·
cuse did a great job taking Kerry Kittles out of his normal 8IDIC with its
shifting zone defenses. It didn't count
on Eric Eberz stepping up in Kittles'
place, even if it was for just one shot.
Eberz, enduring a poor shooting
night, hit a 3-pointer 51 seconds into
()vertime Monday night. giving No. 6
Villanova the lead for good in a 7269 victory the 18th-ranked Orangemen.
Kittles led the Wilde~ (17-3, 82 Big East) wilh 26 points, but he did
not score over the finai7:5S of regulation and the overtime.
"We concentrated on him in our
zone. We tried to play him as hard as
we could and make somebody else
hult the whole last 10 or IS minutes
of the game," Syracuse coach Jim
Boeheim said. "They didn't really
make anything from the other positions until !he overtime wben Bberz
got that one."
.
I
Eberz, who finished with 14
points, was just 1-of·7 from 3-point
range before the decisive shot.
"They say good shooters just keep
shooting. I 1"as getting open sho~'· I
just wa5n't making them," he said.

" The 3 that I made was pretty much
an open shot. !just shot iland the ball
went in the net
"That zone was giving us trouble
!he who)e night. It was something we
didn't expect. I don't think we've
seen a team this year play zone for
thai long a period of time."
In the only other game involving
a ranked team on Monday, No. 13
Virginia Tech beat St. Joseph's 85-76.
Syracuse (14-6, 5-5), which lost its
first home game of !he season, made
up a nine-point deficit over !he final
7:55 of regulation. The Orangemen,
however, failed to score a field ~oal
in the extra period and missed four of
eight foul shots in overtime.
The Orangemen had one last
chance to tie when Todd Burgan
grabbed a missed free throw by John
Waii~~Ce with 29 seconds to play and
Syracuse trailing 72-69. Syracuse
called two timeouts while running the
clock· down, but Wallace bounced a
25-fooJer off the backboard with less
than a second left.
Wallace, who finished with 31
points. hlamcd himself for the loss
after missing three of four from the
li&gt;UI line in oveltime.

· "Every time I shoot a free throw
I think I'm going to make it.'' said
. Wallace, who had 21 of Syracuse's 31
second-half points. "I feel if I had hit
those free lhrows, we would have
won the game."
· Eberz added two free throws and
Alvin Williams hit a fall-away bank
shOl from the foul line to finish the.._
sconng for Villanova, which won its
foulth straight game.
Jason Lawson blocked Wallace's
shot down low and then Otis Hill's
follow shot in the lane "&lt;ith 10 seconds to play in regulation. Williams
made one of two free throws to give
Villanova a 65-63 lead with 8.8 seconds to play.
"!thought after that block that we
had the game won," said Lawson,
who had 15 points.
~ut Lazarus Sims pushed the ball
upcourt and hii a driving jumper in
. the lane over Williams at the buzzer
to send the game·into overtime. ·
"The kid made a tough shot," ViiIanava coach Steve Lappas said. ''I'
thought we did a great job defending. ·
This kid made a tough shot with Alvin
Williams in front of him the .whole
way."
'
.

Sims, the Big East assists leader,
said be never thought about passing.
"I was definitely trying to get to
the hole and not looking to pass it to
anybody, " he said. " If I missed and
we lost, I could handle that." '
The Orangemen trailedJ9-48 with
7:55 to play after Kittles hit a 3-pointer from the left wing. They outscored
Villanova 11-2 to close the gap to 61 59 with 4:08 to go.
Kittles scored nine points in the
first six minutes of the second half to
lead a Villanova spult 'that turned a
two-point halftime deficit into a 4940 lead with 14:04 to go.
No. 13 Virginia Teeh 85,
St Joseph's 76
Damon Watlington scored 18
points and Ace Custis had 17 points
and 12 rebounds to lead the Hokies ·
(14-2, 7-1 Atlantic 10), who scored 20
of their last 24 points from the foul
line. Terrell Myers had a career-high
23 points for the visiting Hawks (7.
8, 2-4 ), including his rebound basket
that made it 73-70 with lhree minutes
to go. Shawn Good then blocked a 3point auempt by Mark . Bass and
scored five straight points for an
eight-point lead with 56 seconds to
play.

Marshall returns to·win column 95-71

GRilliNVJLLE, S.C. (AP) - A eight assists and four steals, Keilh
key reserve and a lineup change Veney scored 18, including four 3sparked Marshall to rebound from its pointers, and John Brannen scored 14
worst Southern Conference loss ever for the Herd.
wilh a 95-71 rout of Funnan.
Marshall went ahead for good on
Frank Lee, a freshman guard slllrl- Veney's 3-pointer in a 13-0. run that
ing in place of injured Sidney Coles, produced a 20-9 lead. The Herd led
had 17 pOints and six rebounds Mon- 40-33 at halftime and blew the game
day for the Herd (i0-7, 3-3). Coles is open in the second half with a 24-8
out wilh a bruised right hip.
run to lead 64-4llead after Brannen's
Carlton King, a freshman for· rebound basket wilh 14:51 left.
ward, also stepped in to replace John
Williams scored eight in ·a 22-4
•
Brown as coach Billy Donovan shook run that gave the Herd its largest lead,
•
up his lineup following a I06-57 88-54, after two free throws by
•
home loss to Davidson on Saturday. Refiloe Lethunya.
King had five points and three
rebounds:
•
Troy McCoy and Andre Kerr
·" "Without Sidney, who is an emo-. scored II each for Furman (7 -II , 3tionalleader for us, we had two fresh- '3) and Wes Collins scored I0. The
men step irtto !he slllrting lineup and loss was Furman's worst at home in
respond. We played good defense, conference play since the 1984-85
an&lt;\ that's what we've been stress- season, when Marshall claimed a 90ing," Donovan said.
62 win.
"Frank Lee in his first slllrl got 17
"It's really emotionally and physpoints and six rebounds. He under- ically draining coaching these guys,"
slands what it takes to win. He and said Donovan, who accused his team
,
Carlion King will be playing · more of quitting against Davidson on Satbecause of their levels of effort," urday.
Donovan said.
Marshall shot 49 percent and was
"After facing Davidson, we had
12-of-28 on 3-pointers while holding no emotion or intensity. Then after an
FIUUlan (7-U, 3-3) to 34 percent eight-hour bus ride, I was happy with
shooting.
the way we responded," Donovan
' By The Associated Press
That opened the d001 for Bexley to
"This is a good win for us. It said. "Our coaches really challenged
Then: was no movement among move up two spots and into second, shows that our kids do care and can them, and I wasn't sure that we'd win,
the No. I teams in the fourth weekly with VA-SJ third, Lima Bath fourth bounce back," Donovan said.
but we'd play hard, and that's all we
:. Associated Press Ohio boys basket·. and Chardon fiflh.
Jason Williams added 22 points, can ask."
'
. ;: ball poll - but that doesn't mean
Liberty-Benton, the defending
state champion, won its two games by
there were no changes.
Orrville, the pole-sitter in Division an average of 16 points each. The
'·
:- II, sustained its first loss of the sea- Eagles also received 17 first-place
YPSIT..ANTI, Mich. (AP)- Good was 62 points more than Kentucky,
son and watched as its lead fell from votes to eight for Lincoln view, yet the
the runner-up each week since UMass
63 points last week to 29 in this point differential was only 292 to 287. news travels fast, even from Ypsilan- moved to No. I.
ti.
Congratulations
wen:
pouring
in
•. week's poll, released today.
Springfield Catholic Central,
Kansas, Connecticut and Cincin~
Findlay Liberty-Benton, which Southington Chalker and DeGraff from around the world early Monday, nati again followed Kentucky.
:: held an 18-point lead coming into the Riverside filled the next three spots including a fax from Paris.
Villanova moved up one place to
At the center of all this attention is
: .week, was perfect in two games but for the second straight week.
sixlh
and was followed in the Top Ten
still lost ground. The Eagles now ow'n
The top six teams remained the Eastern Michigan University. The · by Ulllh, North Carolina. Georgetown
just a five-point pad over .second- same and in the same order in the big- Eagles ( 15-1) are ranked for the first and Penn Slate. Utah and North Carplace Van Wert Lincolnview in the school division: zanesville. Toledo time since becoming a Division I bas- olina each moved up three places,
media rankings in Division IV
St. Francis, Clevel~nd Heights, Gal- ketball team before the 1974-75 sea- while Penn Slate's jump was four
son. They broke in at No. 23 ,in this
Zanesville maintained its superi- loway
Westland,
Cleveland
spots. Georgetown,, which lost to St.
week's poll.
ority in Division I, while Archbold Collinwood and East Liverpool.
MasSachusetts (18-0) remains No. John's on Saturday, dropped three
took advantage of an upset to increase
In Division Ill, second-ranked
I. The Minutemen, the only unbeat- places.
its le~d by 31 points. .
Versailles lost both of its games to fall
Memphis led the Second Ten and
en Division I team, received 59 of 63
Orrville lost to Wooster Triway seven spots. Archbold's lead grew
was
followed by Wa_ke Forest, Vir74-72, yet retained th~ top. spot from 63 points to 94, with North first -pla'ce votes and I,S71 points ginia Tech, Arizona, Texas Tech,
from the national media panel. That
because second-ranke&lt;) Cleveland Lima South Range, Bedford Chanel,
Iowa, Purdue, SyrtJCuse, UCLA and
Villa Angela-St. Joseph was idle 1\lld Lisbon Anderson and Wheelersburg
Michigan.
lhird-ranked Chardon lost to 1\vins- each moving up one spot behind the
Boston College was No. 21, and
burg Chamberlin.
Blue Streaks.
Continued from Pa&amp;e 4
the rankings wen: rounded out by
Auburn, Eastern Michigan, Clemson
and the week's other newcomer,
27, saw duty with Boston
Georgia Tech.
and the Red Sox's farm teams in
But the big news was Eastern
Trenton, N.J., and Pawtucket last Michigan, a school that has lived for•:
year. In 28 games wilh the Red Sox ever in t,he shadow of Michigan,
•
he had seven saves and 34 strikeouts located just seven miles away in Ann
: By The Associated Press
scorers with 26 point~. The Raiders in 33 innings.
Arbor.
" Ohio major college teams were (9-9, 3-5 Midwestern Collegiate ConIn 1994, Ryan was the Red Sox
The well-known Wolverines are
: winless in three games Monday night ference) got 22 from Vitaly closer from July I through !he end of almost l\lways ranked. Michigan
.· against out-of-state opponents.
.Potapenko, along with 13 rebounds. the season, finishing with 13 saves plays to big crowds in the Big Ten.
~ Dayton played the closest of those
Central Connecticut made 61 .5 and a 2.44 ERA in 42 appearances.
Eastern Michigan plays in the Mid: games, losing 59-56 at Duquesne as percent of its shots, including 5 of 8
"We think Ryan just needed a American Conference, where it has
~ flJSI·year Dukes coach Scott Edgar from 3-point range , in defeating change of scenery, and Boston was a an eight-game winning streak.
.
, won'his first AtlantiC 10 Conference Youngstown State 79-65 in the Mid· little skeptical about moving him for
"We've
got
a
very
competitive
that reason," Thomas said. "Pods
~ game and his team ended a seven- Continent Conference.
league," EMU coach Ben Braun
~ game losing streak.
Dwhawn Edwards and Garrett (pitching coach Johnny Podres) has said.
"Our league is murder. 1can say
• The Flyers ( 10-8 overall, 2·5 con- Pettaway scored 16 apiece for the had a way of helping power pitchers, that I' been in it a long time."
~ ference) scored one point i,n the first Blue Devils. Marcus Culbreth and and this guy is a power pitcher."
· ve
~ five minutes of the second half, but Hank Raber with is were !he cO-leadThe Red Sox also got Rick
~cut Duquesne's lead to 56-55 m the ers for the Penguins (8-9, 3-6).
Holifield and left-handed pitcher Lar·
........-.
' ..
:final minute.
Ohio teams played out-of-state ry Wimberly:
.
.
• Mike James scored 18 points for schools in four small-college gamc:s
The. Phllhes PICked up HohfiCid
:the Dukes. Ryan Perryman had 13 and won two. Oberlin defeated · off wawers from the Toronto Blue
~points and 12 rebounds for Dayton . Bethany, W.Va. 64-59 and Rio Jays last season, and he spe~t ,most of
: Wright State was beaten 71-63 by Grande took a 93-80 victory over the season With ~luladelphia s Class
•Nonhem Illinois, which used a 10-2 Ohio Valley. Case Western Reserve AAA farm t~am In .scranton-Wilkes:ruri to take a 51-42 lead with 8:20 was beaten 72-64 by Johns Hopkins Barre. He hit .206m 76 games then:
. ·
and stole H bases.
:rema.lning and never was threatened and Kenybn lost 63-59to Washmgton
The principals in !he trade have
•after that.
&amp; Jefferson.
been known for weeks, but the Red
: T.J. Lux of the Huskies led all
•
Sox held out for Wimberly before
J&lt;in Koenig .naJ'I\ed MOC Players of Week · they would make me deal.
.
'
"
.
..
·
. Wimberly, 20, has a 13-5 record 1n
: CEDARVIT..LE (AP) - Tiffin's rebounds m a 74-72 ~tctory over · two minor-league seasons, including
thad Kin and Urbana's Kim Koenig Mount Ve~on Nazarene. ~or ·the a 10-3 mark and a 2.67 ERA last year
6ave been selected as !he players of week he hn 56 percent of hiS shots · with Class AA Piedmont, where he
lite week in the Mid-Ohio Confer- . from the.field.
. S!fUck out 139 batters in 135 innings.
fnce.
.
Koemg, a 5-foot-7 freshman from
With Slocumb gone, the Phillies
• ·Kin a 6' foot-IO junior from Akton. hit 61 ~rcent ?f her shot,s will have a djfferent closer for the
had 21 poihts, 17 rebounds and from the field wh1le sconng 22 points lhird time in as many years. Slocumb
four wists in a 10 J. 72 victory over with four assists in an 84-80 victory followed Mitch Williams who belped
fhaWIIOt Swe. He lidded 18 points at ~als_h and had 19 ~ints ll!'d five . Phih!lletpi:Jia~n the (Je!!Dant in
~ 11 iebounds in a 93•74 loss to asststs m • ·75"-69 overtime wm ·over 1993, atid.Doug Jones, !he Phillies'
C)hio DOminican and 13 points,and p Shawnee Swe.
clot« in 1994.

PIC,.URE YOUR PET:
••

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

No. 6 Villanova edges Syracuse in OT

Page4
Tuesday, January 30, 1996

Hornets nudge Cavs 88-86

PonMti'oy • Middleport, Ohio

· Orville still on top in
,~. Divl,ion .11 despite loss

BROWN SHOOTS • Marshall's John Brown (40) shoots over
Fui11Vlln's Will Coles during Monday night's Southem Conference
game in Greenville. The Herd romped 95-71. (AP)

Eastern Michigan ranked in top 25; UMass remains No. 1

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)
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WILl BE PUBLISHED TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 13111 IN

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Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

THE DAILY SENTlNEL:
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PER PICTURE
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1:
.IPet'a N~m•--------------l1:,

.

•

,1;

~---------------~

·Deadline Friday, Pebruary 9th at· &amp;p.,llmlm~rt
.
Mall or brln~ the e.ntry form:

The ·Daily .Seniinel ,
1-10 Court St.

accepted. It turned out to be a mistake
at the NCAA Clearinghouse , which
rules on freshman eligibility. Iowa's
loss was EMU's gain.
"James has really developed ,"
Braun said. "He hit the weights last
summer and went from 210 pounds to
225. He's a nice post player, now.''
The fact that EMU didn 't crack the
Top 25 until this week is no knock on
the quality of Braun's program . )..ast
season, he took a team that included
eight. players with no college ex peri·
ence and fashioned a 20-1 0 record.
That resulted in an NIT helth .
"This group is stdl relatively
young," Braun said . "We have two
seniors, one junior. and the rest arc
sopheimorcs and freshmen."
The young Eagles needed two
overtimes to defeat Toledo and one
overtime to get past Ball State. Their
only loss was to Texas-EI Paso in a
holiday tournament.
Will the national ranking become
a distraction?
"We don't play to be ranked ,"
Braun said . "We play to win championships. But if we get ranked ,
that's a nice reward. It will he good
for recruiting, that's for sure. You 'd
better believe this is going to all our
recruits!"

Yet the ranking can certainly he a
burden. Just ask Marquette and California. Both broke into the rankings
for the first time last week. But both
suffered defeats and are gone now.

TAl BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN FOR THE
FIRST HALF. 1995 COLLECTION OF
REAL ESTATE TAXES AND ALSO
FOR DELINQUEN~ TAXES.
FINAL CLOSING'DATE WILL BE MARCH 4, 1996~ ·.
TUlLER TAl
IS .JANIARY.31, l99·6•

1
I Owner's Nam•--------------1·
IAddret&amp;I
I
I·
I City
f.
I Amount EncloHd:
for
plcturee I
Ut$8HCh.

drops 59•56 sai~yan,
battle t' 0 Dukes

Like most MAC coaches, Braun
frequently settles for players the Big
Ten doesn't want. But he knows laient when he 'spots it. "
This is the lith season at EMU for
the youthful-looking Braun. He is the
winningest coach in school history
with a 174-123 record. In 19 seasons
total, Braun has compiled a 322-230
mark.
"First, you have to believe in
yourself." Braun said. "We want our
players to eompete. l'm a competitive
person. We 're always challenging
our players to be better than they
are."
Earl Boykins and James Head arc
two good examples of that.
Boykins is a 5-foot-7 sophomore
who weighs 135 pounds after a big
meal. Boykins has started all 45
games since arriving. He sparks an
up-tem'po offense that averages
almost 88 points per game .
"He's been a big player," 'Braun
said. "He has grea~ leadership and an
indomitable will. He's played two
years here and I've never seen anybody post him up. They've tried. I've
just never seen it."
Head, a 6-7 sophomore averaging
almost eight points and six rebounds,
is the younger brother of Dena Head.
liis sister, who now plays in Hungary,
was an AII -Amencan at Tennessee
when the Volunteers won two NCAA
titles.
.
.
Head had s1gned w~th Io.wa, but
two days before reg1strauon the
Hawkeyes told him he hadn't been

t:Mev.

.Ni

J

pomeroy, Ohio 45769
r

..

.,.,

HOWARD E. FUNK
MEIGS COUITY TREASURER

---

ll

\ JI

/

•

I

�.

.
•

, . . •• The Deily Sentinel

\lMarried to a two;.timing liar r worse than being sirigle
_ _ _ _...., . home, and thouab I'm not beautiful,
I'm nice·lookinJ.Iscem to make dis·

Ann
Landers

·1-ewrc-sew• ....
U.Angllll
a

1-

:sy ANN LANDERS

.

: . Dear Ann Landen: I was divorced
•eiJht ycaB ago. My marriage was 19
~of misery and abuse, and I end:ed up being the sole suppon of four
:Children. I've hid a couple of rela;t~onships since, but they didn't
emount to much. What I teally want
~s another marriage.
: I make a good Jiving and own my

.

astrous mistakes in the men I pick,
·and end up getting dumped big lime.
My last relationship lasted three
years. For the fust two years, we dated llleast twice a week. I was thrilled
when "Ed" filllllly asked me to marry him. My joy ended when I found
out be was already married.
I cut the relationship off and
stopped hearing from him. Then, his
wife died. Ed called and said he had
missed· lliC and wanted to stan up
where we bad left off. I really was in
Jove with him and hoped be wanted
to marry me, but I was wrong. He
came back just to play.

l was hun and told him I would
have to think about tencwing the tela·
tionship. I heard nothing for sevel'll
weeks, and then, he ';ailed on my
binhday and Aid he loved me.
As I said, I would Jove to be married again, but I'm afraid to risk it
with Ed. ~ you have any suggestions? It isll't fun to be 47 and single.
•· Sandy, Utah
·Dear Sandy: There are worse
thinp than being single, and if s-ou
marry Ed, you will find out what they
are. The man with whom you are
consi.ring marriage is a liar and a
two-timer. You say it isn't any fun
being 47 and single. I can assure you

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

TUHdey, January 30,' 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

i will be less fuo to be Iaten for yet
another ride. Trust me.
Dear Ann Landers: I m:endy
attended a retirement party held at a
very nice restaunllt. The bus band of
one of the office staff arrived after.
dinner.
This man, ·who seated himself
across from me, lit UJl 'cigarette.
Oneofthewomcnatourtablelcaned
over and said in a loud and ·aggrcssive voice, "You ue not su~ to
smoke in ·thia restaurant, and further.
nlore, I have a heart , condition."
Needlessto say, this did not make for
a pleasant situation. The smoker and
his wife left the party without saying
goodbye.

0.

AltbouJb I fouild 'tbe· smoking able, it i1 paf~y OK fOr a ~
rude·and offensive, I did not care for who has a heart condition or aJtlm¥1;
them.- in~ tbo WOIMII han· or simply find• cigarette liDO
died the situaliolr. ~ spoiled an oth- /mpleesent 10 say something. ~pli:-;
·- ue plea•rit eve nina. Would it not "Smoltc bocben me. ~ wOuld rcallr!
have been bcller 10 have qujedy gone · apptee~ •it if you would pui CJI!{l
to one of ihe waiters and uked that your cicareae." A soft approac~Jn
be infonn the offender that smoking rather lhan a command or a threat ~
wu not ~illed in tbo n:&amp;ta\I!'Bilt? definitely the way to go.
~ _.:
What is·lhe propu 'way to deal
...with a situation such as this? I am not
Gem oftbe Day: More diets beail\·!
the type 'of person who enjoys a . in dress shOjJS witb rear-view mirrol)i;
scene. ~- Plainfield, N.J.
than in doctors' offices.
·
::.:
Dear 'Plainfield· When a smoker
•••
· ,... •
lighta up in a n~-smoking area, a'
.Sead qu~ tO
waiter should tell the offending par. Creaton Syildicate, 5717 W. ~~
' .ty that SIIK!king is notl)!lllllitted.
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los A.~t~chllj ;
If no waiter or wain'ess is avail- Calif. 90045
• •··

YOUNG'S

~

fiH 1M .., lllyll1 th

. I

••

IN.GELS.FURNITURE

.

flwESOME~
·.

'

'

'

In-STORE
'

I

'.

with. Kroger empJoY-u, front. Olive keeling,
IIIII, tmd Olry Grueer, and eaconcl roW, John
Sl18011, Alan Cunningham, Frank lhle and Pet.
Barnhart.

~bleSociety

1

..

IINAL 4 DA'fSI

Educational opportunities avail~ble
!scrapboo·k · · for '4-H teena_
gers in MeiQS County
.

HUGE SAVI.NGS IN EVERY
DEPARTMENT.

OVC DEAN'S LIST
T~nagers from Meigs County will he held at Camp Ohio, June 28 be one of the best 4-H conservation
RObin White, !on of Roben and
have the opportunity to participate in . July 3.
camps conducted .anywhere in the
Dove White,• Coolville, bas been
a number of statewide 4-H opponuRepresentatives from Meigs world. The participants learn about
named to the Dean's List for the fall
nities in 1996.
County, at least 14 years ofage (16- the.importance of soil, water, forests
semester at Ohio Valley College.
Ohio 4-H Youth Expo to be held 18 preferred), are invited to partici- wildlife and human impact on land
· White,, a senior elementary eduJune I 2- IS is a program in which pate in the Camp. Se~tions will be use planning. They develop a land
cation major, Wfl selected to the list many 4-H teenagers will want to par- based upon members past leadership use plan for a 160 acre farm applyon the basis of maintaining a 3.5 or ticipate.
accomplishments and potential for ing what they have learned. At least
higher grade point average and car.A variety of seminars, assemblies, future leadership development. two 4-H'ers age 14 an~ over may be
eying a minimum of 12 semester · tours. speakers, entertainers, ,m:re- Campers from ptevious years indi· selected from Meigs County, ' and
hours.
·
·• ational and social opponunities, cate that Leadership Camp.is one of addition.al applications willll!l accept·
VETERANS PARTY
exhibits, athletic event§, cultural the best camps in the state, ~.d pro- ed on a first-come, firsc-serve basis.
opportunities, and bands-on e~peri· vides lifelong inspiration. Exciting Any member interested in conserva·
A pany was ananged and provid·
~ for eight veterans at the Southeast
ences will make Expo an expenence- programs in leadership skills, local lion or natural teSO!IfCeS should take
Ohio Psychiatric Hospital in A~s
of-a-lifetime for participanta, said club and county progr.amming and advantage of this opportunity to par·
on Jan. 18. The sponsor represenung
Haggeny.
.
.·
ideas, cultural heritage and citizeandn· ~cipacte in 1996C State 4-hiH Conserva·
American Legion Auxiliary Dist. 8
Local donors will pay pan of the ship, communications, careen
tlon amp at amp 0 o.
was Flilf.eld Unit 11. Food and game
registration fee. Being selected as an personal development are some of~
~e South. District, ~f which
pnzes were awarded to each veteran. Ohio 4-H Youth Expo participant is opportunities available at Leadership Me1gs county IS a pan. w11l be par·
Those attending from American
an honor since our Meigs County.,. Camp said Haggetty. .
ticipating in the Citizenship WashLegion Auxiliary Unit 39 in Pomero_Y
egates will be ~eptesenting all coun' The State Conservation .· ington Focus pro~ in :ashinJIOD
were Frankie Hunnel and the Hospt·
ty 4-H members as a part of our del· Camp will be held July 21·21i,alsoat D.C. June 9-14.
o 4- teenagen
tal Disl 8 Olairmall for the Veterans,
egation.
..
Camp Ohio.
fron,t Meigs County )"ill be invited to
Jane Snouffer.
The State 4-H Leadership tamp
It is considered by !'~any to pan1ctpate.
'

.

.
'

.,

·'
.'

.I

' &gt;

l

-·

CUT YOUR ELECTRIC BILL
Suri-Twlnlf!) cost. no 1110/V to operata fhlln your
coffee-malcerl And It's easy to Install- ~no~~!,.
wtrtng needed.
Come fola ddefHmnoiOI,.,,.,.Inllfloil tlc'n
lin l

.
.
alternatiVe mcome opportuntlles,
en. by Wilbam J . Taylor, Agncu1tur- small business management, cr.afts
al Econom,ts~ ~ath the Cooperative and crafts marketing, and tourism.
Servaces DIVISIOn of~ USJ?A RurRegistrations for the seminar are
al Dev~Jopment AdiDJntstrauon, ~ due on or before.Feb. I 7, to: Buckan AdJu~ct ~ofes,sor at the Ohjo eye Hills RC&amp;D, Route 2, Box ID,
S~te Unaverslty. ~dl al~ oper.ates a Marietta, OH 4S7SO. More infonnas~all woodworki.ng bus mess from · tion about the seminar can be
has home .. D~ng has ~eyno~e obtained from Bob First; Buckeye
address, B1~ Will be. s~ng his Hills RC&amp;D (614-373-7936), or John
secrets for Excellet~Ce 10 Promo- Carr, Little Kanawha RC&amp;D (304lion." '
,
679-3639) or any of the following ·
Participants wiD spend the remain- seminar sponsors: the Marietta Col~
der of the day in workShops focusing lege Small Business Development
on marketing the products, skills and Center, and your'local Office of The
services of nn1 small business ven- Ohio State University Extension or
tures in Ohio and West Vuginia. West Vtiginia University Extension
Workshops will follow tracks on Service.

A seminar, "Marketing· the Key
to Ini:ome Opportunities", will be
be.ld S~~tunlay, Feb. 24 at ~ Wash·
ington County Career Center m Marl·
etta, 8 a.m.' to 4:30p.m.
Sherry WeSt of Parkersburg, W.Va.
will aJ1are her experiences in starting
"West's Belt." aspecialty foods busi·
IICII. She win discuS$ her operation
. · and offet tips for those interested. in
sfarting their own business dunng a
workshop on producing and market·
ing specialty foods. The worksh~
will also include insights from Leshe
·Schaller of ACNET.in Athens, a specialty foodl cooperative.
. The keYJIO!e addn:ss will be giv•

----.--Community
calendar-~,
......c--·lty

c.le•d•' .. ~ns Center, Thursday, I , p.m. with SATURDAY
p~:t'l rd ... a me tervke to-- lunch at noon.
SALEM CEN'IER •• Star Gnuage
7878 and Star Junior Grange 878 will
' ·preftl lf'JIIP' w' 'h&amp; to ••a•ee

. -...

pdil · ot~pw kfltonuaa .

rn., ... GlclaJi,

WIUTI AMISSAGI TQ·Y01Jit SPECIAL VAI$NTINI
Remember.t.... speci•l·someoac this
· v.Ientine's D1y witla • m l •F in
The Dally Sentinel

widiJMublenJi'.welcOIM.

who pa888CI
away 25 yrs. ago

$2.99/mln. 18+
Touch lone phone required.
Strvli-U 61N45-8434

"

.

·MO." .......
Dacll
.
.(;~

•IWIJiltten

··~

,

...

"'

.

By MARILYN ELIAS
A TODAY
. As children in the late '70s, Gen·
·on X women watched the first
ve of violent, heroic women pored on TV in shows like "The
Ba nic Woman" and "Charlie's
Angels."
. Now, ~ study out Monday finds
1hat the ' ,lnore violent shows they
· viewed pack then, the more physi·
cally aggressive the girls became, and
the more, violent they remain even as
women ,in their '20s.
It's the ftrstlong-term look at how

Trustees, Friday, 6 p.m. at the Rut- at 8 p.m. Junior and youth baking
land Fire Station. ,
conteats to be held.

·· . f!o ·you..h~v~' a!l IRA1
·.If,

·..

Southern Juaior Hiah
7th Grade ·• Macyn Ervin,
Jonathan Evans, and Shawna
Manuel; all A's. . Sarah Ball, Katie
· Cu!Dffiiils, Clay Enslen, Jeremy Fish·
er, Chad Hubbard, Garrett Kiser,
Brenna Sisson, Emily Stivers, an~
Erin Struble.
Bthl'Grade ·• Jamie Baker, Kyle
Norris. Chris Randolph, and Brandon
Wolfe; ~I A's. Jessica Alley, Adam
Cummings, Autumn Hill, Kim lhle,
Amhet'.Maynard, Dina Sayre.
..
Syracuse Elementary
•
2nd Grade ·• Ryan Am~.
John ~ntz, Myca Michael, Chelsea
Smith, "Jenny Wainer. and Jennifer
Wolfe; 1111 A's. Nicole McDaniel,
(:aitlin Nease, Joe Nottingham,
Joshua Pape, Derek Roush, and Selena Spencer.
3rd Grade •• Ashton Brown,
Racbael Cottrill, Jordon Lidel, and
Stacy Snyder; all A's. Heather Duffy,
Holly Puffy, Asblee Hill, Wallace
Hill, Timothy Klaiber and Tyler
Robensr · · ·
·•· "' ' '· · •· ''
4th Grade •• Bethany Amberger,
Codi Davis, Sarah.Hawley, and Katie
Sayre; all A's. Shawn Bamban,Jor- '
dan Bass, Amber Mills, Andrew Phil·
son, Joey Riffle, and J .0. Smith.
5th Grade ·· Melinda Chancey,
Crystal Cottrill, Marium l:JDabaja,
and Jennifer Walker; all A's. Racbael
Chapman, Justin Connolly, Jeri Hill.
Jordon Hill, Amy Lee, Curtis' Lidel,
and Tiffany Patterson.
6th Grade ··lYler Linle: a11 A's.

RYAN TRIPP
Sinclair, Chad and J&lt;rjsta Sinclair.
Sending fits were Harlan Whitlatch,

8een in TV heroines

·~

l :or.a SEP1 .

~

·'

Sadly miiHd by
wife, Dorothy Ev1na

violent female heroes on 1V may
affect girls' aggression over time.
Most resprch bas centered on boys'
aggression. ·
The new findings suggest "girls
get desensitized to violence just like
buys, and when heroines' aggressave
acts are portrayed positively, girls
conclude it's a good way to solve
problems,'.' says psycholoaist .L.
Rowell Huesmann of the Universi.ty
of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Huesm&amp;nn's study followed 211
Oak Park, 01., girls during the late
' 70s until they were 2 I to 2!1 years
~d

Oxygen Acetylene CO.
Helium all 1tzes Medical Grade 0.
Trtmlx.Uitnl Mix
~~

PIX., IIIII

'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

985-4422

614-992-7643
IIIMift

.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. 1 PM

w~n his plane crashed in a.soybean
field. Also killed were rockers J.P. .
"Big .BOpper" Richafdson, Ri«:bie
Valens and .pilot Roger Peterson.
H~ly fans w~o still mourn the
Day the Music Died can lake bus
tours to a memorial that has been set

(No Sunday Calls)

1-614-371·9101

.ISUIDERSTOODI
LIVE II
COIIVERSAnOII
OIIE • 011 • OlE
1·900.484·21 00
lit. 2074
$3.99 per min.
Muet tJe 18 Yra.
PAOCALLCO.

WICKs ·
HAULING

P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.

Llmeston,,

614·992-3470

.......

MODERN SANI,.AftON
POMEROY, OHIO

Trash Removal • Conamerclal or Rasldentlal
Septic Tanka Cleaned l Portable Tolleta Rented.
Dally, wea~ly &amp; monthly rental rates.

FREE ESTIMATES

WE HAVE A·1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

.

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Oirt

For Free estimlte call 949·2512

II&amp;UONAII.IIIATU

-

(Umesto. .
Low Rate&amp;)

J.D. Drilling Company

AN NO UNCE MEN TS
30 Announcements
Fortunes will be made new MLJ4
stop smoking. all batanical . doctor
recommended, 100"4 guaranteMI~"

1-1100·870-5118 7.

40

Giveaway

3 Terrier mix puppies. Black/white,

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

long hatred . Black wJIIoppy ears;·
pot belly. Black w1cu rly ears. AlP
approx . 4mos old, to good home

Llm•tone, St~nd; Gravel, Coal l Water

or;y. 304-675--4650.
Australian ShaptJaro, male, mec:li· .
um 451Ds. goOO wlchildren, rimid,

992·3954

or 985-3418

·~····

., bell home. 304-675-4650.
Beagle, male, 6mos old , house
pet, good wlchildren, well trained.:
304-675-&lt;650.
Golden Retriever / Border Collie •

pups, cai614·9411-2313.

Opening ·Feb. 1st

PMk·A·Poo dog, prelerably 10 el·
derly person. gen tly, 614 -949 ··

~[ l'flttcl ..... , ........ ..,.
271 North 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH. 45760
AKC Reg. Puppies, Kltten!J, Blrcl1 l More
3 Experienced Groomers - Financing Available
B. Jolene Rupe/Owner

(614)992-t244

J&amp;liNSUlAnON

Are Yo• Ready
For love?

MIDDLEPORT

U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE
HOM.E

Openlnga ~or 2.
Chrtatlan
atmoaphare for
tldarly care In a
non-amoklng horna.

537 BRYAN PLACE
11112-2772

Callllowllll ·
1·900·255·2700

Houre: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,

Ext. 9402
$2.99 per min.

VlnyiRe~,

Touch IDM phone
required.

WlndoWI, Blown
lnaulatlon, Storm
l;loora, Storm
Windows, Garagee.

Serv-u 811 845 8434

F-Eat!-

llluatbe 18 rr-.

2957 aner 4pm.

Puppies Wanting To Find Good

Homes, 7 Months Old, Reg1sterec(
Shots, Rabies Shots, Allec~onaae,
Good Wilh Ki&lt;la. Can Be WelChDogs, 614·245-51152.
Terrier mb:, "medium, 'good WIC:h ild-:
,.,, house pet 304-675-4650.
.

60. Lost and Found

oM-

OnoUnHNow
Avalllble
10x28, $15 per mo.

SPIIIISOFT ·

.192:-3161

OocHard Hill Road
6 14·2511· 17113.
Found.

up on the site. Otherwise, ~y ' ll be
enjoying lhe dressed-up d1gs where
Holly last rocked.
·
· "This is a national treasure," Surf
manager Jeif' Nicholas ~id of the
ballroom. "lt'sjust like il was when
they opened in the late '40s." ,

Hlwiii.WV

· J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

Pres·cr iption l•n's Glai a.'

Found : Small Colht, 6U· ••&amp;·.

28M A"" 6 P.M.
loll· set ~~ car keys on ring, Mid··
&lt;iepon •~nhy, 81&gt;4-742-2058.
'

Lost ladi~a biltfold, ~ack, •·xe·.~
Pizza Hut flo"*"!'; vicinity, kaop
everything, return Important pa·'
1*8. 61&gt;4-1102-!&gt;474,
•

YMII Site

70

GIHipolll . ·
• Vlclnlly
ALL Verd S.leo Nut! Bo Paid In ;
Advance. DEADliNE : 2:00' p.m.

tflt da)1 befOre the ad is to "'' n.,
Sunday odidon · 2:00 p.m. Fri&lt;lay,
Monday edilion • 10:00 a .m. &amp;1.'
utday.

CHEAPER RAJf.S

lfti.I·WIY
. MINI STORAGE

882·2996

WllDIIII I 'tJICAIIOII
UO.OO L
. ·
I

. 211!83 a•INJI RD.

Racine, Olllo 41771
••• 30111'tlone
MX

....

;. $ ill . . . 1-PIIoll
t

'"..,

· ~. ,

Ml-2512

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp;MACHINE SHOP, INC.

••

•

Ulr Wtok.

as., On Pose Behind City Build ing
614·3118·V162.

CltoaW.ItrSJII._

.,.,. Wiler ......

·

Found : Beautiful Siam~•• On4

OIESTER STORAGE

614-992-3200

99~2116

l ''

$2.50 per ft.

:111&gt;~~2/~fft

"Supp1i..1 for nU ;your pel needo "

.

,....•• ..., ...
.........
d..,.
.....
Sentl•l Cl•••lflltls

Overhead &amp;
underground
.utiiHies &amp; lighting
Bucket, Digger .
Truck Services
Service Pole

(602)954-742o

•New Homes
:Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

985-4473

CONSTRUOION CO,

"n· .t .rs.,..MttaJs

SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

CONSTRUCTION

A.C UTILITY

St. Malon, WV

108 Pomeroy .

Chester, Ohio

By : Nellie Parker
The Alfred United Methodist
Church and the community offer their
sympathy to the families of Floyd
Avis, Wilbur Warner, Elmo Coen, and
Junior Lee Hunt, who all passed
away recently.
' The January meeting or the Alfred
United Methodist Women was can·
celed due to inclement weather. The
next meeting will be held Feb. 20 at
the church, with Martha Elliott lead·
ing the program and Osie Follrod as
the hostess.
The church also thanks Harold
Lee Henderson and.Elza Pullins for
clearing the snow from the churchyard after tb~ storm earlier this
month.
Alan Watson was injured in a
sleighing accident earlier this month;
and is now recovering at home.
Sarah Caldwell spent last week at
the home of her daughter and ramily, Doris and Ben Ewing. Pomeroy.
Rick and June Avis have returned
to ~ area after spending several
years in Florida.
Thelma Henderson spent last
week at the home of her daughter and
family, Linda and Dave Williams,
Belpre.
Mattie Pullins is now home, .
· recovering from a broken . rib. She
was visited recently by Wilbur
Pullins, Marietta; Jim, June, and
Janet Ridenour, Chester; Janice and
Bob Pullins, Lottriltge; Judy an~ Bill
Leach, M'JneraJ m..e11S, w"
. •I.

.II!J

Pr.t;
• ltl1171

•

I

II

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

--

Buddy Holly memorial c~ncert planned
' t~R' I..,A.KE, Iowa (AP) Rock '11: roll fans can bop, boogie
and twi~~o.the sOunds of Fabian, the
.. Dlamonf$ ~ the priginal Cricketa
~~~ 11th annllill Buddy Holly tribu this weekend.
~ore . thila 2,000 Holly fan3 paid
$~each' io:'anend the $old-out concelt • the Die'wly ~novatect Surf Ball·
J'OIIIp,'111~ Holly save his Jut pcf·
f~Jit,959.
.
HOlly wls killed after tbo c!)ncert

Authorized Ill Distributor
Welding Suppllea •lnduatrfll G - • Steel
Salel l Fabrication • Repair Welding
Alumlnum/Stalnlell
Machine Shop
·

DUMPTRUCK .

ROBERT BISSELL

9112-5535

.

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

12 Gauge
Fadory Choke Only·

FREE ESTIMATES

&amp; Framing Accessories.

TRUCKING

Alfred
news

· TDS, Mlnerll Hordne..,lron, PH.
PI•- caii'R~·••Sofllllt2-4t72 or 1~3313
to HI up yol!r lrft woter Rlllllplo.
,.....,..

&lt;105 North Second Ave., MiddlepOrt

,
I. L. HOLLON

Letart Elemeatary
Due to the multi-age at Letan
Flt11s Elementary · there will ·be no
honor roll for the first and second
grade.
3rd Grade·· Autumn Reed; all 1\'s.
Dustin Barnette, Christy Hanley,
Brooke Kiser, Craig Randolph, Ashley Roush, Aaron Sellers. and Nicki
Tucker.
4th Grade ·• Mike Roush; all A's.
David Gloeckner, Montana Jarrell,
Amy Noiman, and Natasha Van·
Cooney.

obligation, cqmprehenSIVe water

eotnet
Picture Frame, Mats

·CALL ..
614·949·2512

Portland Elementary
3rd Grade ·• Sara Cammarata,
Joanne Pickens, and Ryan Smith; all
A's. Jessica Gloyd, Andy Hender.;on,
Kyle Mees, Nikki Riffle, Bryan
Smith, Brandi Vance, and Felicia
Wallbrown.
·
4th Grade ·• Stephanie Bradford,
Andrea Tedford. and Robbie Weddle:
all A's. ~a Harris, Adam Johnson,
Tabitha Jones, Paige Musser, Shana
Richardson, David Shamblin, Liz
Wamsley, and Tyler Whitlatch.
5th Grade •• Megan Combs,
Madonna Cook, Ashley Miller, Alan
Moore, Tara Pickens, Zach Picket,
Brandon Smith, Tom Theiss.
6th Grade •• Lori Sayre and
Amanda Huddleston; all A's.

no

\lhe

ROUND
BALES OF
HAY FOR
SALE.

Man Ash, Joe Cornell, Sheri Cummins, ·Amber Duffy, Jile Manuel,
Rachel Marshall, Nathan Martin,
Aaron Ohlinger, and Lindsey Smith.

a free.

New At

--

Jan, 30, 1971.

Lov.d and miUid,
Your l11ter, Mary

~·i~~·;;~;;;e··;~;;;n

•Sweethnrts

•

wiPNJ&amp;DAY .
· POMBROY - 'Narcotic ~onr­
- . 7,p.m. ;wedliaday at Sacred
a-t Cllholic Church baeliiCllt.
J6! Mulberry , Pune1oy, ~Y911f '

Soutberu Hilh Sebool

9th Grade ·• Nikki Circle, Joshua
Ervin, Kara King, and Jesse Little; all
A's. Teresa Bush, Jenny Carleton,
Sara Ervin, Suunne.Evans, Jeremi ..
ah Jo~nson: Paity Lawrence, Jerrod
Mills, Sarah Roels, Crystal Ro'se,
Jason Roush, Kimberly Sayre, and
Jessica Smith.
·lOth Grade ·· Cynthia Caldwell,
Crystal ColeM,n, Jennifer Friend',
and Evan Sinlble; all A's. Matthew
Dill, Melissa Layne, Jobn J-tatson,
. Ashley McKinney, Tara .Michael,
Nikki Robinson, Jennifer Roush.
Ianetta Wheeler, and Billy Young.
~ 11th Grade •· Jessica Sayre; all
s. Mimhew·Bradford; Emily Duhl,
. ie mo!IJIS:,Jiilia Gopfen, Hillery
·s, Mark·Le\Yls, Greg McKinney,
nia Nazan;wycz, Kim Roush,
yson Taylor, Amber Thomas, and
h Watibrown .
12th GOJde. •• Jason Barnett, C.l
·s, Jennifer L8wrence, Jonna
anuel, Jay McKelvey, Jason Shuler,
d Rayan Young; all A's. Kim Corn. Robin Gillispie, Rochelle Jenk·
, Bca Lisle, Becky Moore. and
ck ·smith.

·_.,

meet in regular session Saturday.
ae 'IN ._. SJ«Ial e-a. The FRIDAY
RUI'LAND •• Rutland Township Poduck supper at 6:30p.m. Meeting·
lr' trrlnotd ...... topnamote

...... CJt CQd nllen f/6 aay type,

The names of. students in the
SoutheQi Local S~hool District making the honor roll for the second nineweeks grading. period have .been
announced.
'Making a grad~ of "B" or .above
in all their subjects to be listed on the
honor roll were:

Ryan T1!4d Gordon Tripp, son of
Todd and Kelly Tripp, observed his
f\,urth hirthday'recently with a pany
1\!·his home. .
,
• '.'A Looqey Thries" Jheme was carri41 out. Attending were Keitha Whilla!fh, J011nifer Wolfe ,''Bub and Alvin
Tnpp. Fred and Bertha Smith, Kathy,
Donnie and Jessica Barringer, Mike,
Sheila, Cory, Qlad and Shannon
Whitlatch, Amanda and Ra'ndi King,
Rodney, Stacy, Megan, Amber and
Haley :I'ripp, Pat Aeiker, Debbie and

I

~I

eye•; IIJ1d lite,.. Jlaall be
no 1110n denlla, neili.er

lo phlce •• ... coli
99 2-2 156

ou.rth
birthday
celebrated
..

:Seminar for small business offered ...

~-.-

Elt•sfoa3012

.Honor roll students ·named
.

•

WAREHOUSE ··

rm

.........

CECIL EVANS

S.•tinel Classifltds ·

. ' I

: During the business meeting plans
jrfere made to eontlnue financial suppcl!'l for missionaries. 'Each member
will like a linen of theit choice fill' the
lnissionaries eal:h month. A love
~ffering waS' taken and plans for the
'weetheart banquet weR discussed. It
be held on Feb. 9.
. Prayer requests were gi:ven by
fbyllis Hudnall .and Mqarct Nunn
. llad the closing prayer. The .next
Deting at the cllurch is scheduled for
feb. S,
.
: Attending be~ides those . menboned wete Luch Hendricks, Molly
Johnson. Helen Jlllie Brown, Mynle
·Quillen, Pars¥ Cornell, Verenia Bark·
r,nan, Angie Hall, Wanda &amp; Jennifer

I

....., God .,.,.,
"""')' olllenn from !Mir

Call
1·900.656·2600

In

analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:

lo11ely Ag•i•
.

21: 4

partiCipate.

,,,.,.••

In Loving
Memory of ~Y
Husband,

Ret~.

'IRI·STITE WATER SYSTEMS, IIC.

The walef treatment ·company cordially itWIIes you to

.....

In MD!IIOIY of
LUCY CftESSER,
who Plllldaway
Januery 30, 11187.

10,.,..,. dr c~.

..' -

·-

•NewHomee
•Addltlona
•New Garagea
•Remoct.llng
•Siding
·Rooting
•Painting

JJ, ,Iribu r..l by

ln8Urera • EKperl.,.ced
C811 Woyne Noll
992-4405
For frH Eotlmot..

Pomeroy, Ohio

+

.

a

Siding, Roofing, Polloo
Re.....,oblo

Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

In Memory

a

lil' 1."&lt;'

eu-eulldlo1g• IIMtlldolr.J

h~i.i•h Add1l1ona

Painting

In Memory

••
••

r

•Interior I Extera.••

1--

•

]1.

•Rooting

IMI2-8215

COIISTRUUIOII

Hou.. RtPalr •
Remodeling
Kitchen llalh

•EI«tr!C81 I Plumblnp

ful'fiiCeS, and many
mellllllltarlals
Call 992-4025
between 8 am-8 pm
Mon. thru Sal.

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

SERVIa

'Roam Acldltlona
•New Garagea

Plck.Up diiCirded
w•tten, dryeR,.hot
·water tanka, etoves,

Anll'•nderii::

• Mission participation was planned
~ben the Ladies Missi91181'Y 'fellow. lhip of VICtory Baptist Churc:b met
teeently at the church.
'
• Betty BUker Opened the JMCting
with prayer 111\d spoke on tl)e topic of
~Time" using scripture references ,
from D Samuel 14: I4 and Proverbs

NEFF REMODELING

. WPfiiTER SERVIa

...-----Givin for victims---....

Ladies
'ellowship
meets

The o.lly Sendnel• Pllge 7

Middleport.
Ulclnly
All Yon!' S.loo Nu01 Be Paid In
A...an... DMdtlne: ,1:OOpm lho
doiJ bolofo lhe ld II II Nil: liiH\.
doir -.!llloft .. 1 &lt;OOpin Frider, lion· ~

•

doir.....,,o-..... ~

80

Pullllc Site .

ll'lcl AUcilon
Rick Pworion

'

j

&gt;

Aucllon C'lifllptony '

_lull lime •uctione,r, ,com&amp;M,ti _
auctlan MrVic. - u.-led ,
llle,Ohio I Weoi.Y,Iralnloi a.!·
113-f?ll Or iiD+7JS.'Iil,t7.

"'

�fJ

Tuesday, JlnUIIry 30, 11118

'

- ~~)~I;.I,;EY~O~O~P~--------~--------------------------~====.=mDO===E====~~====~~~~==============::

· -P111 8 • The Dilly S1ntlnel

,

E~~-THo'T ""''~ NUO$ A

'-,,

NEA £rossword Puzzle

MDII£ FI~·TUN!Neo Oil

~r--ON_E,THIIIII!s~TV~~~~

PHR.LIP
ALDER

r-

Scenic Valley, Appl•

Gro~ .

bnu11ful 2ac Iota, public wafer, Now Taking Appllcatlona· For 1 0.
Clyde 8cMon Jr., 304-516-2336.
2 Bodn&gt;&lt;&gt;m o\perlmonrs, 614-3881100.
fif ~JTAL S
450
Fumllhld

Roome

41 0 HoilleS for Rent

198• Toyota.,.., Fair Condilian
$2000 OBO 814 4481111117.

,)

NORTH
aQ. J 9 s

.EEK &amp; MEEK
...

WEST

1992 Ford Ranger XLT. 4cyl 5
opd., air, aluminum rima, 15~

~~~m.~~~
- ~~~~~~~510

a

"'!"_-;

'"'

Wanted To Buy: Uaad Mobile~------..,;.;._~_...;;..._ _ _ _

~'[',14-446-01'15:

1 .·

E r,1PLOYMENT
SERVICES

''

.1!9

Help Wanted

$-WIINITED-$
1Q. ...,eop,le \Yho 'need to· lose
weight 1 make monay, to try ,_
pa\8nted weight -loss product

304-713-5\)83 241n/clay,
$1 ,000 W•akly Processipg Mail
Free Info. Sorlll Seii-Addrasaed

110
FU~).

OR PART-TIME Car l
Truck Mechanic. Muat Be Honest, Rellabla, Have Own Toola,
814..46-4514 (M-F, 1-5).

inquirlos only, 304-675-1624,

No experience neceaaaryl $500

Benefill, No E111p. Will Train, For
rll'f)l And lnb 1·1100·538-3040.

mas bills at hometal work. 1-BOo- Postal Jobs 1$15.90 /Hr. No Ex992-6356 or 304·882-2645, Ind. perience Neceuary. For AppliRep. .
cation lnb Cal1818·764-11016 Ext.
4175.
AGENTt AVON SELLS ITSELF
Need CASft For Wlntor Bills? ?rofesaional Experience BookEarn $8.-$1 5/Hr, At Work -Homa
keeper ·Tax Preparation No Job
. l-600-742.. 738
Too Small I Call Sandra For Illfordable Prices 814-446-o870.
Ambiuon, Not Oegr,e, Required RECEPTIONIST !INSIDE SALES:
Vour Dedication And Enthusiasm II You Enjoy Working With The
Propels YOI.l To Succaes. Fan- Public~nd Have Clerical Experl·
tasdc qpportunily With Growing
1his Job Ia For Voul PC
Teiecommunlcattona CQ. Offers
Desired. Pleaae SubPersonal F.readom And Th$
And Wage Re·
Ctl&amp;nce To ._.otivate Others. Call
Chrialian'a Con· For Meeting Info. (614) 245-11063
Eaatarn Avenue,

Ask For Doug.

·

·45631, 614 -446-

Are you elllperienc,~ in phyai cian'a blllln~? I may have me position lor you . Pleaae send resume: Bolli R-25, %Pt Pleasant

nered Children, Ages 5 &amp; 8, 614- taldisabilltles.Mustbea regis441 _1177.
t«ed nurse or licensed practical
nurse currently licenled in tht
Cellular One of Athens, Ohio is Slate of Ohio. Pratefrecl quaNficalooking for Inside sates Consult· lions: Experience In public heallh
ant. for our new Pomeroy_location. nursing. experience working with
Please send or lax resume to children and adulta wlf\ daWiop-

1100 E. Slsle Sl .. Athans, Oh . mentaldisabilitieo. Send resume
45701, 5eHQ.19, Attn Chad.
by February 9, 1996 t&gt;:
..;__CO_;_U~N-::SE=LOR::-ff::HE-=::RA::-P::I::ST:--I SI8Ye Bohs, Executive Director
'
Meigs County Board of Menial
An Oujplltienl Chemical Oapend- R&amp;.mrdation and Developmental

ency ·Agercy located ln~ackson
Ohio Is Seeking A Qualified Par~

Disabilities
1310 Carleton Street·
~0.

son To Provide Alcohol And Other Drug Coun!leling. Knowl•dge

Box 307

Syracuse, Ohio 45779

Of Chemical Dependency Re- 1--::-:::-=::-=-:-::-::::::===:qu ired, Bachelors Oegroe PreWILDLIFE !CONSERVATION
lerrad. Send Rosume By February
JOBS
g 1996, To : FACTS. 1770 Jack- Now Hiring Game Wardanl, So•
curlty Maintenance, Park Rang·
era Etc. No Experience Necea:sary, For Applicalion And lnfor-

Earn up to $1.DOO weekly stuffing malion, 1-407-750-3122 Ext
envelopes a1 home. Stan now. No OH112C ( 7 AM. -8 P.M.) 1 Dayo.
all!parience. Free .supplies, i nfor-

matiqn No obligation. Selld self
Book, now hiriClg. Local
addrtlsed ' 11amped=envelope to
I
needed. Margaret
Expr'll Copt 36, 100 East Piorco.
llter5pm
Whltllltone' BO.d., &amp;lite 148..345,
Codal·Pllrii,'TX 711i513,
180 wanted To Do

Ell!pe~er:ic.ed Baby~itte( To Sil In

Buslnesa

. Opportunity

!NOTICE I
DHIO'VIIllEV PUBLISHING CO.

::-'---:--::----~--1

Hour Care For 1 Eldorly Or
My Kil'lhei. · 4 Ta 5 Days Waek, Handicapped Peraon In Licensed
Locaied In Bidwell Area, Refer- PrMite Heme. 814-441-11000.
encea A Mus!l Comact: e14-441 Care For The Elderly In Tholr
1269 ~ltei 5 P.M.
Homo Cooking &amp; Cleaning Included, Full Or P6rt-Tlma. Wookdayo
Oilly, 814-446-2427,
2~

General. Maintenance, Palnt1ng,

Vord Work Window• Woahed

Homes
fOr Rent

420

Mobile

12x85 With 18x16 Expando, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Ntwly Carpeted, M:.. E•cetlent Condition,
PrJvalo lol In Choahira, Alter 5
P.ll. 814-387-1611 .
All real 811118 advlfllalng 1ft
!his .._ , Ia Si.lljacl to
1he Federal Fair Houalng Ac1
of 1968 -.t1ich makes RHleQal
to aCIVtrUie "any preference.

For Your Carpet &amp; Vinyl Needs

Mollohan Carpott R1 17 N. 114446-7441.

pickup. $200 deposit Naw 18g5
2badn&gt;Om, no pols, 1 child, $3501
mo. $300 daposit. 304-875-6277
alter Spm,
Nice Clean 3 Bedroom Mobile
~~~ ~ercervill,e Area, 6141 -

7

Traller For Rent On Georges
CIOOk, 614-446-1219,

eu-~•6·

0322, 3 miles out Bulaville Pika

Freeo.tivl!'y.

PICKENS FURNITURE
Now IUIOd
304-e75-1450

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
ni&amp;ned and unfurnished, security
deposit required , no pets, 8H·

992-2218,
1 bedroom apartment in MK:Idle·
pon, available December 1, all
utltiries paid. $250 per month,

3967.

1100 daposit, Bam to 5pm 814·
992-71108.

112 hao a small beaemont 2 oul

446--3617.
Utili tiel Paid, Oownatalra, 9 10
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, $1851

lovely Now Homo 3D ""'"· Sao· 2bdrm. apta,, total elaclric, apcloua lntarlor. 2 Bollia, 2 112 Car pliances furnished, laundry room
Garae.e, Fireplace Heat Pump, facilities, close to school in town.
Hugo !lock, 614-388-9467.
.
Applications available at Village
Nice home in Racine, large buYd- Grten Ap11. ••D or call 51~ ·992·
lno will houae small businesa, 3711 . EOH.
a.lao a one car garage, fenced BEIIUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
llrd, out ol flood area, uking BUDGET PRICES· AT JACKSON

$47,DOO 814-949·21104,

ESTIITES, .52 Weatwood Drlvo
Three bedroom home in country, from $226 10 $201 . Walk to ohap
Whilll HI Rtl., Rutland, one bolh, I movies. Call 614-446-2568.
Equli Houoing OpporiUrtily,
In-ground pool, 61 4-992-506 7.
_,

for Sale

1972 Norrla Mobile Home, 614448-0527.

Antiques
River~ne

WOlFF TANNING'BEOS

1124 E. Main Street, on At 124.

Cou·nuy Side Aparimenta, Nice 2

Badrooma, o\C, WID, WatO&lt;, Sewor Garabge Included, $350/Mo.
Oopoait Rsqulrtd, 519-9~2!14.
Furmshed 2 Rooms I Bath,
Oownatalra, Ulilllies Furniahad,

I 978 14x7D Schulll MannchoaiOr Clean, l'io Poll, Reference. DoWllh 12•28 Factory lidd-On pail! Rsqun.l, 514-446--151g,
lb&gt;m814-441H1034.

~

...

"""' .... ~- • 1 ~~-111
-FrM
- ~-,
- · ~·.
• •~"-'
dtlhtery
I aorup.
Otlly el·
0811- Homos, Nitro WV.- :104·

,...

TRANSPOfHATIO N

a chair, small.

bedroom furnished apart-

in Middloporl, 814-448814-~2 •5304 or 81•··n
~2·

11-13. 304'675-5786.

Boots Br RedW"inu, Chippew~.
Tony lama. GuarantHd lowell

ows, lintel a, etc:. Claude Wlnt a.l-

Rio Grande, OH Call 614-24 5121 .

Concreto &amp; Plallic !!epic Tanltl, 560 ' Petl for Sale
900 Thru 2,000 Gollono Ron
Evan~ Enterprlsea, Jackaon, OH Groom Shop -P61 Gn&gt;&lt;&gt;mina. Fea1-800-S37-0521l
turing Hydro Bath. Julie Webb.
Col 814-441-0231 ,
Couch, Choir $100; Colloo End
Tablea, Dre11er, Table, Chalra, AKC beautiful while American
So1r1 Wolhar, Box Springl Ma~ Elkimo. mala, Smoa old, oil lhots,
tntu, 614 416 3224.
rMCiy II go. il04-e75-11113.
Couch, IOYaaeat, tablea &amp; lamps; AKC Boxer pupa, talla docked,
9 pc. dining room auila: bunk dew claws removed, ready 1·20·
beds a dreners ; picture•: cur· 8B. Col304-875-3445.
Tupperware;

conning oupplleo; nigh! 1.1and1 AKC Cocker Spaniel pupa, ready
violin; very good condlllon. 114- Fob. 8 lor Vol,..tine's Dey, bull 1
black. 304-075-1192.
092·3244.
Eleclrlc Whoelchalra IScoolara, AKC Reg . Dalmatian puppies,
N- IUoad, Scooter !Whoelcholr $7SaL 304-1175-373&amp;
Lifts, Stairway Elevatora, lift
Chairs, Bawman'l Homacara. AKC Ragiatorad Siberian Huaky,
male, 3moa old, wormed, ahota,
514-- ·1283.
and hDullb oken. 304-175-4227.

Carat. Call For Price, 114·4482424, 614-446-4!104.

l-IE NEEDS A BOX
WITH LOTS OF SLUES,
AND 'fELLOWS,
D GREENS ..

HE l.II&lt;ES TO COLOR
Bl6 BLUE SKIES,
SRI6~T SUNS, AND
BEAUTIFUL LAWNS ..

I-lAPP'{ PICTURES!

fL-YAWAy

t9g5 Polaris Magnum 425 4x41
garage kept. 304.0751

1)0

1\

'At~LiNeJ

I

1995 XR IIOR din btko, $1300, ex1
calltnl condilian; 1986 Fourtra ,

250, $1300, good condition, 814
742-26117.
~
1g95 Yamaha Tlmborwoll A
Ul• Now. $2,600,614 146 8365. t

II

l

j.'

o,

1093 201 Pro XL, 20' Slrutgl
ball bOat, 200 XPHP. 614·68jJ
1347 or 814-049-2819.

'

'.

THE BORN LOSER
'IB.~IR., I'VE &amp;Cf:Aio£.

~

~HET·HOO!" I
DOJol\!Qo¥)WI'OloJ

ACceSIOI'Ies

AKC Sholllto, sable lnG White,
$250; AKC Cockor Spaniela
black, $150; no chocka, 614-9925073.
10g11 tonk aot up apoclall. Fiah
Tank I Pot Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave. Paint Plauanr.
2063.

30~ · 875-

1D83 Mercedes 2•00, tooks &amp;
runs good, •cyl,
S2.500 or
trade. 304-675-1575.

••pd.

new tire&amp;. good body, runs good,

$1,000. 30U75-3824,
1984 Camaro, au1omat1c, v-e.

rrade for
3042.

4x~·

or $1500, 814·7•2-

1885 Nlsaan Maxima, loaded,
rune 11"~ tully _..r, sunroof,

~

~

.

fOt.l Po,WJTYOU, ~Pf't.E.;
OOYOO AA.VE. E.+"NL ~?

m

,..

,,..

'

1·)0

'

..

N'£ YOUKIDOI~ '?1-\E:iTIU.~
t&gt;. li:rn'Nt'l' PHOOE 1

GI B

I I rI

rr r I I

I 1,200. 304-e15-6S18.

BIG NATE

•

'lo

aaking $2,000. :104-675-2714 or
304-e75-16n.

SEfh IC:t S

Two 1gee Chevy Cavaliers
$2,000 Each ;.Two 199~ Chouy
Coval lara $3,500 Each: Ono 1084
Ford Cargo Van .$1 ,g95; One
1088 Ford 15 Paasenger Van
$3,500; l'.t Evans Rtnlli c ...,.,.

1530 Ealttrn Avenue, Gallipolis,
814-448-e502

1988 Pontiac, Ntce Car, Loaded,

$1,800, 1987 Dodgo Nice car
seso,. 8ofl Auto.-614-4414514,
19D1 Rocket Chauia race car. au
new In '91,
bolt olav•
rylhing; Mild, three 'Mhells, draa,
Neal pedals, fuel cell, on board

w.-.

.

ttome .
lmptovt1111111B

J.B. Ployor o\co•otic /Electric
cor-..I3SI,114-370-2lll01 .

f l\IU.1 ',IJf'PIIf c'
"I ,,, 1 ~. T(.!"

-

i

Appliance P6rta And Sorvlco: Allf.

Name Brandt OveJ 25 Years Ex· r
perle nee All Work Ouaranlwd, t

French City Maylag, 814-448-t
170$.
;,

C&amp;C Ginerat "Hofne.. Mai
tener1c.• · Painting, vinyl eldin ·

corpomry, doora, w~.-, ba~
rnobilotlomo Mpoir and-.. 1'!!0

1003 Day10nllroc, v-e. 5 Spoad, Roofing and guttora-' ...,_.;al
Air, TH~ Cruiao, AMIFM Cuaotto, and r-tlol, minor repalrl. 3543.000 MIIH, 17,700, 080, 814- yaara ••perlonco, BIB ROOF256-1538, 814-25&amp;--e\119,
ING. 814-992·238• or 1-800-8119.
3043.
• ca,_., very tiODd condition.
14100 firm, 81W82-2388.
Tn-s.. ~ a Drain Cloanng,
Roaidontlol ' &amp; lndual71al, High
Aut&gt; LDana. ooOror wll onongo .. Power W110r Jtl 1\vlilablo, T.V.
nanclnt ~Yen II you hovo boon &amp; Video· lnapoctlon ._,lllablo
turned down elnwharo. Uplo~ 304.075-,57.
I
Equljlmont Uoad Caro. 304·~M·
1018,

720 1hK:Ica for Slle
11110 Ford, . . . ..... :102.
llandotd, t2,100. 304-e7S.Zol57.
11110 lnl.,noUonal Dump Truck
Wllh 0 Ft - - &amp; Sah Bo•
AuiO, P,S, V-1, Roa4y To Work!
15,0011 !;1m 11 Wll7-01112.
1tl4 Chow)~ S-10, 4cyl, 4opd,
runo OIIC ., toad ilcHiy, 11 ,100.
:104415'S74.

ITUESDAY

;;

0

8otO Ellclrleal,_.

. .RlfriNAlo.o.loi'l
. . , t., r,
..,..-=~~;;:;:!IP'~~
...
i-::-:::-...f'');':
, RSES CERTFED DEALER IJ ~,,
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES , ·
Holt Pumpa, All CGndition.:JS'
'fbu Don'! Call ua W.llolh loM •'
froo Elfmti~H; 1-·20i
.
114 ... 8:101, W'l0021145.
" "RHI lolllfal ot -clollllrind:•"'

_ _ or..,..._..._.tJ; x,

canoed oloctrloilln. Rldeneur
Eloct71cal, WV0003oe, 304·8751718.

I

:~~f~~~EnEIS

r r r r 1 r I' 1
5

I 1·1 I II I

SCIAM I.ITS ANSWIIS
Purely -Nomad- Irony • Yankee • YOU DO

II you dress like a bum you'll act like O(le . Dress as
though you have class and people will assume YOU
DO.

'

lteo udmate call Chi~ i14-00't*
lire sysl..m, rolling chsslis. $5800 8323.
•111- Call Scon Wallo, 614-g49Mol!a ua your dcia and Cll klep 2879, 81·4·949-2045 or 814-9g2. Hang, ftnlah, ORI'WALL
rapoir.
their wln!IY cooll, Alk RIG FOld 8103.
I Supply, 614-802·2187 obout 1.ggz tauruo Gl lo~dod, Now Collinge ttXIured, !QIItr repair.
Call Tom 304.075-41!11. 20 y1111,1
HAPPY JACK
VITATABS.
77.000 MIIH, 17,600, 614- ~~. ' .
. ~
Chawablol nu1rllloua. Aulllablt o- Tlroa,
441-2151 .
t-c.
~n·a Til Sarvlco, ape.ilouiing 111
1013 Cavalier RS, auto., air, tilt, Zonllll oloo sarvfclng moll other
cruioo, A8S, lako ovtr poymon11 bronda. House calli, 1-800-107or PIIY oil. 3114-875-«!53.
0015, wv 304-5711-23111.
Gul., Wllh Nanl Sholl Coao New

Sovlnrs You'll Find In tilt
Closslfltd Secrleln.

'0

.
WA~IIG ~
Uncondlllonal lllatlmo guar"'"t~
Local rolar,ncoo lu~, Ctlk
(614) 446-0870 Dr (814) 237~
0488 Rogero Walerprooting. ~
tobliahod 1075. '

·.

·~:cA=~LETJfiSTOI

TO HAN!l\.E IT'
t CAN ~E C.il/1 L
THE ...

Campn&amp;

1986 Jena, auto. air, cruise, am·
fm CISHtl8, pi, pb, 114,000mi.,

1987 Chov. Cavalier C.S. z.Ol.
Air. Auto. $1,195.614-245-1108.

I~ ·
r'\~TURE ENOI..J&lt;;H

D &amp; R 11&amp;110, ~. WV. 304-3~- ·
31133 or 1·800-213-13211.

810

•

.. eVT

Single 4xlo Camper Sloops
Good Condition, ....,. TlrM, 814·•
370-28511.
•

19.87 Cavalier Z-24, 2.8 Litre, Fiborglau Hood. Runa Good, Good
MllaBgo, Good Tlroa, $1 ,800, 014446·3'189 Alter 5.

~

~

Hom••

I

c
~i""""TI-,Ir;,r--j7..-""TI__, 0 Complete the chudcle . quoted
~y lrlling in t1oo miul~19 -ds
.._..,_..,_..,_..,L_..,--J you develop
from step No. 3 below.

! '

•

Motor

"12 Ailvtae
"""-

It often
thai my
elderly aunt can't hear a
thing. But I've discovered that
r--:::-:-::-::---.., a compliment wilt do wonders
0 T E RK
lor her · . • ...•.

a•• tanks, one ton ·truok '
Whaela, _...,floor mo.. IIC. .

790·

l:t:l

--:S::-:-:W:-:-1-=r=-H~,, ";,'

buill, 1'.11 Typea, Accooolb'- .
Ovor 10,000 Trenll11illion, N
Clutch Kits, Now ,...,. Platop.
Slanlng 5-10'1 $119.85, 814-37J-

New

tO

A Chinese proverb is:
all the 36
allemaUvee, running a_way is best. " I
wonder what lhe other 35 might be.
Luckily, in bridge deals. you never bR-t--tbave 38 possible lines of play. Even
half a dozen are extremely rare. In today's deal, lhere appear to be two possibilities, but one is much better than
lhe other. How would you play in four ._......
spades against the lead of the club
queen?
The Immediate reaction is to laugh
when you see thai you have all 13
.
by Lula C1mpoa ·
trumps. Then you ruff in the dummy
c.brily Ciptlef ~•:N .,. c..-d from quotation• bv lamow peop.. 1*1 ..t pWen~
Eech
intheciphetlllndllorlnOiwr T~clw: J ~p
·
and lake a diamond finesse. But at
that point the smile lades from your
'DB P
.IPUIA\{
RBA
F WAR I
'BAR'
face . West wins with the king and
switches 1o lhe heart 10. However you
RHYY
SVRSEI
BSLP
GAD.
DIP
turn, the defenders take three heart
tricks to defeallhe contract.
JPUIAW
RIA
F WAR I
'R 8 E
RHYV
True, you were unlucky to ftnd both
key-honors~ · 1M "hal else did
SVRSEI
OP
8 H I
0 A II.'
IIHSWP
you expect in a newspaper column?
And you shoul,d have inade the conUSLHDYB .
tract! AI Irick one, you should discard
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "When ~ou win, you eat better, sleep better ... and
one of dummy's diamonds. Aner East
your wffe looks like Gina Lollobrig;da .· - (Manager) Johnny Pesky.
wins wilh the club ace, h~ cannot attack hearts safely. Suppos~ he switches to a diamond. Win with the ace and
lead the diamond queen , throwing a
heart from the dummy if West plays
low. Even if East wins with the king,
he will have to cash the heart ace to
stop an overtrick . Here, I hough, as
West has the' diamond king. you collect
11 tricks.
In conclusion, how do you think East
and West should have got into the auc•fion? As you can see: lhey are laydoWII
lor five clubs. And should West have
led the heart 10 at .trick one?
Et
Sometimes this game is ju•t too difficult.
·

Budge! Tranamiali&lt;N1s, ~Hd

1g83 Olda Cullan Supremo, 4 2935.

8 Tenant
7C_m_l
a Ramen 58

"
tA' 3Q2J 10
4oK

~

'

1-UIIfiU8

s

MotorcyciH

Boatl &amp; Motors
for Sale

3 Snoolv4 Heretdlc c:roaa
5 Airline Info

CELEBRITY CIPHER

·~

742-380:1.

Baby bod, stroller, wtllkor, awing,

car seal. 304-67~548.

Ladloa Diamond Solltllre Ring In
14K Yellow Gold 16 Prong, .62

ves,SJR .. I'D
LIKE TO BIJI( A
:SOX OF CRAVONS
" FOR MV D06 ..

~mlles,

750

!2 wda.J

33 Praying tlgu111

lo::!r+-t--+-+-+!!;llr+-t--+-+-+_..__,_....t._.._

080, 61,f..9Q?J

I

+954

document

2 Dye

·or

1988 Suzuki Quad runner. nt'il
tires, brakes, runa groa~ Wftraller,(
I1,QDO, 30oi-G7!HI:J18.
I

.

32 .:::::&amp;lyle

DOWN
·fTrawter'a

By Phillip Alder

gc Ford F-150 4X4 XLT, loade.s;
16,200 mllol, excellll1t conditlont
aokil1g 117,200 614-367-0288 •!
814-849-2481 alter&amp;pm

740

trAJ87

22" till car trailtr, hauls 2 cara 't
elactrit brakes, u1ed very little~
COli 13200 - · 1011 $2300, 814-,

• prom dreases and acce1soriea.
1 summer wadding dress, sizes

knickkn~eka;

e;.

821~

21AIIer·lhoWer

and locka, "Great Car," 18500 1978 fO&lt;d f250 body ports. 304neg., 614·002· 7476 or 614-g4D- 875-7195.
2819.

$35/ML 304-MZ-2438,

tain a;

1987 GMC Salari Mini Van

litre, V-6, elite model turbO, PS,
PB, AC, 5 1.peed, power aests

$20aa., or 135 lor both. Danlah

Computer Syatem Tandy 381

;

·oo Thunderbird SC, two door. 3.8 760 · Auto PWta a

2 old wooden porch swlnga
modern lave11at

10811.

614-387-0323.

Merchandise ·

Furnished Efficktncy All Utilities
1987 Banville 2 Bedrooms, 2 Paid, Shore Bath, $14Wo., 919

Price Buaterl New HxJO, 2 or

Round Baila 01 Hoy, wor &amp;
Stored In Born. 614-245-5117.

tomalic, PS. PB, PW. -

Miscellaneous

senger, 13800. 304-e75-1874.

van, ciMn, ... tXIO

.........

It's those
altematives again

89 Ford Aeroa1a' 1 passengp•

Livestock

710 Auios'for Sale

Pomlfoy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00

HI-Efleclancy l.P. Or Natuial Gu
02'1. Furnoceo '100,000 BT\1 1·
Commorlcal, Resldontial, Slave: Botho, CA. 814-448--8374, Aller 5 Socond 4venue, Gollipolls, 814- 800·2g1·0Dte, 614·448·6308,
P.M.
61 4-381-04211.
Ouct SyaiOm&amp; And Nr Condition446-3945.
oro.
FrN E-lK
Bank Ropos. Easy Finonclflg. Call Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
Run Murdocll 1-800-251 -5070.
aparunen11 11 Village Manof and lntorthorm &amp; Millar Mobile Homo
Furnac11. Gila, Oil &amp; EIHtric In
Umi1ed OUerl 19gs doublewide, Riverside Apartments in Middle· Stock. large Dlatrlbuter Buy Out
port.
From
$232-$355.
Call
8143br.
2bath,
S119R
down,
$2751
MATH TUTOR-- will tutor high
992-5064. Equal HouSing Oppor· of tUw Mobile Homt Furnacea.
ICi'IODI I college lludenll in baM month. Free delivery &amp; letup. !unities.
Ban\ Flnanc;ng Available, Coli
ale moth, algebra &amp; ~~nomelty, Only at Oakwood Homea, Nitro
Bennona Mobile Homo HTG I
coniiCIJohn at 814-092-7088.
wv._
.
304-_-:75_5-:5-:8..;.a!i_.,--,---,....-I L~rge 2 Badroom Upataira Aport- ClG At 814-446-9418 or 1·800·
'
'
::
men~ 468 Fourtn Avenue, 12501 672-5887,
14XIO, 2 or 3bedroom. Only Mo. $150 Oeposll, Refrigerator,
nke
2
p1.1menta
to
move
ln.
No
-poymonllaftor 4yNra. 304•755- Stove Furnilhod, 814-4411-31170.
J&amp;B TECHNOLOGY
We Have A lar~o Selection 01
5518.
Nice 1 Bedroom In Kanauga, La to Model T.V. r I VCR' a Filr
NOll! Bonk Ropot. Only 4 l..rt Still Carpotad , 4pplioncoa Included, Sale, Glurln-1
·
in -nty. 304-755-7191 .
No Pall, Depaoli &amp; Ralaroncao,
614-441-08!0
$25Mto. 814-8811-7102.
Only 2 loft. New 18ila 2·3bodrooma. $105-.,_ 1180/mo. frM Nlco thrM bedroom opar.trnont,
deliverrlaetup. Call Rull Wur· nice one bedroom apartment In
1-800-251-5070,
"""-· 814-092-58&amp;11.
Gutters Cleaned light Hauling,

Winter heavy clothing. Sam

Somerville'• Army Surplua by
Sandyvila Poot Olllct. Noon-epm,
fri-Sun. 304-213-5656.

Antiques,

130

NEXTLITTLI
, ••,If ,-.{c~)l!('~

MY P"ISY BANK

8

12 - k old plgo ·lor oalo, $35,
Super Single Wotorbocl Now Mal· 81-2017.or 014-g4g 2901.
trail. Semi-Wavtlesa S150 Or
Belt Ollor, 814·37g·2114 Alter 3 Year Old AOHA Mare lnc,..llve Fund Shown In 4-H 814·
8:00.
448-11183 Allor 5 P.M.
T..,loll fn Meigs Memory Gar·
Hay Bought And Sold, HOflt And
dons- hoscllltlnoo, plaque and
Dairy Duality, By Tho Strri load'
carelncludad. $4800 value- loll·
GermaniDWn, DH 513-8118-2822.
;ng at $2000 tlr both, CoD 417·
889-4874 colocl. .
640 Hay &amp; Gnlln
Video Store, Reatocklng, Over
800 Video'o For Sale, Oldies Good mlxad hay lor oala, 814Classics Some Nowet Releaoeo, 002-3709.
SZ.DOO. 614-387-11612.
Gran hoy, aquore bol01, Balhan
Rd, Racine, 814-848-2287.

Mo. 614-4411·3945.

ment, No Pets, S 1951Mo. lnclud·
tng Water, $100 Oeposir, 614·

appointment 304-582-7250.

STORAGE To\NKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evano Enterptlsoa,
Jacltaon, Ohio, 1·800-S37-8538.

wtndowo I Word -~ S1 ,200,
614-36811932.

1 Bedroom Unfurnished Apart·

ments of $180 a month. Call for

Sola &amp; Matching Choir Dak Trim
Good Condtion, 814-367-7188. ·

2 Rooms, Ful!)ished Effici"'"'Y, AU

looking Kan•hs Val ey, booutiful

tric furnace, $3,000 down, pay-

530

1

4 Steal Arch SyUo Buildings,
40x30 Wu 16,100 Now 12.900:
40x58 Wao 111,250 $5,900;
Prlceo At Shoo Colo, Glllpolis,
50&lt;76 Woa 113,6110 le,800;
50•150 Was $23,000 . Now
Ciloopl 25" Sharp T.V. 2 Yaar Old 115,1100.
Endwallo Are Available,
Dlahwaohor, While EIKtric Cook 1-«io-320-.2340.
SIOY8, 61'4 -3-1.
Block, brick, oawar p~o, · lnd-

view of the river aita on 112acre
lol, rhis 2 smry 3badtoom, bath I

buildings, has new roor. new elec·

614-446-3158
Dually Hou- FurritUte And
4ppllancoa. Great Deals On
Cosh And Co"yl RENT-2-QWN
And ~ Noo 4vailable.
Free Dsl08ry Within 25 Mila~

12ga. pump gun like""'"· l14g;
410 tingle aha~ $60; ~lh ...ve:Hn modal 10, 38 opoc. , 1 14o;
Now Craltoman 120 pltco socket
sot, 180.50; Flattop guilar, $125;
Guna-Toola-Toyo, Dave's Swap
Shop, 8129 SR. 7 N. Choahlrt,
614-387-7108.

POL, cruise, air, nice car, $1800·,

Condo, ground level, 2 bedroom,
2 baths, completely furnished, in
Port Charlotte, Fla., 6U· 985·
Leon-Mason Couritr,, WV over·

VI'RA FURNITURE

Ruger llmm PBU, $288; Mavtridc

540

Apartments

I'LL GET IT

1g55 Massey Ferguson Tractor. conant Condition, le,IOO, ·814·
Very Good Condition, Runa Ex- 388118:12.
•:
-~ 814-742-2457.
1988 Chevy 4X4, 2500 S-adil,
Forgu son 30. runs good , 8 u - loaded wlopUons, low miles, mull
992-8803.
ua to apptaciate. 112,800. ~· 8&amp;2-3582
•
·
'·
JD 2155
-2800 Hra; JD 2355 2300 Hra; Coae .1194 43 MP -eoo 1988 Ford .lorain ConversiQil
Hra; Ciao li 5130 With Co• Air, Van, Automatic, Pw. PD. Rai~
"'
Roof, 814-367-7568.
Heat -1~ Hra. Ex·; MF 231 ·224
Hra; MF 235 ·!200 Hra; JD 535 R 19811 ~ Ful Size 4 WD Extra
~~Veraybmtot
'no·r, N~«; ~ BaiHa"'yb:l~e~. ChromeE ow Tlreo, Size "3*''
v
•
Loaded, xb'l Cltan, Very Sharp,
411 Diacblno: NH 2511 R't"' , 814·44&amp;-g372 Doya, 814-448'
Mlan'u7ro0 Raka; d,.ll Sizapl H 6 8457 Nigh•.
'
9 prea era · aymenl
Unlit Jan g7; "O'IIo" Fl- 1990 Dodge Rim Van B-2so:
nancing On JD Round Baiera: 72,000 Milts, $8,000, Can Bo
Low S.ti~Mt On JD Hay Equipment seen Ar: Gallipolis Oaify Tribunei
Or Cuh Bonua; We Trade. C1r- 825 Third 4venue, Gallipoli,
mlch~ero Farm I l•n 614-448- Oho.
,
24120r1-800-5114-1111 .

, ...,, water and tralh included,

for Rent

shop building, $22,500, call Butch
614-992-39114.

MerChandise

610 F~nn Equipment

'88 Thunderbird, 3.8 litre, V-8 au·

for Sale
m Syracuse, 24x30 1.5 ltory

Mlacellanaoua

a.m. 10 6:00 p.m.. Sunday 1:00 to
6:00 p.m. 81&lt;·002-2526.

814-002-2167.

home on 2 loll

540

Two and three bedroom mobile

440

.

Hours: Uon -Sat, g.s.

Buy or 1111.

••••••••••I homao, llarllng al 1240-$300,

Mobile Homea

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete noma furnishings.

2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Gaa Heal, Ammana Side By Sido RelrlgeraS285fMo. Includes Water, GarM lor, z,..ilh Floor Model Color T.V..
bago, No P6ts, Doposil. 814-441- Cable Roady, Woahor, Dryer, Car
Battariea, 814-256-1238.
0000. '

adYentsed In this 1"11\\lJlec:-tr
are available on an equal
opponunhy balls.

320

rangoo. Skogga Applillncoo, 78
Vine StrHI, Call 614-446-73118,
1-1100-499-34011.

81 ~ 388 fiG48.

Thll-por Wll nol
la-IQIY 8CCOPI
edvellltl6m0nta lor realestalt
"'*"IS In -lion ollhe law.
Ouf readora are hereby
lnlormecllhet 0! --.gs

2 bedroom

Waahert, dryers, relrloeratora,

Fron1 Porch, .Small Yard, W11er 1
Traah Paid, $250/Mo., Depaoli,

2bedroom, total elecuic, no pets,
1 child. $27'5rmo. includes trash

a 4-WDs ·

1014 Btonco 11, 12,200. il04-t75-

Remodeling : Coblnotl, Counter
G. E. Wuhor Heavy Duty $75; Topo, Sinko, Doora And Other
Westinghou H Dryer 175: Whirl- Mloc. &amp;Fumlture, 014--!14.
pool Wolher 105; Konmoro Dryer
$75; Whirlpool RelrigoraiOr Froat Roach's CuaiOm BuiChoring. Now
Free, White 1125; Relrlgtralor Open lor boelor hog. Call lor
Harvell Gold Fro11 Froo 1125; appt: ~4-882-2756 Bua. or 882Electric Ron go 30 Inch White 3328 ~
Wao $125 Cu1 To lOS: Electric

2 Bedroom Troller, Rio Grande,

llmllallon or dlscrtmlneuon
bosacl on race, COlor, religiOn,
sex 1811'iilsl elatus or nalfOnel
origin, or any lntanllon 10 ·
make any such prelellftCe,
llmllallon or dlocrlmlnallon."

730 Vans

tlll'llly)
'

EAST

·---

~toPieo1au•,...

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: Sooth
Sotllh
West Nortb E.ut
t •
Pass 4 a
All pass
Opening lead: • Q

_BARNEY

3123.

,:;."
.. -':f'.;'j
,.,...",
"""'"-

30H75-8820.~;~;~~====~;;;~;;;~~;~;~
81154ahefllpl1o
'
T
1987 Ford Club Wagon, 15 pao-

country Furniture,
Rt 2 N, 6miiH, Pt Pleasant, wv.
Tuoo-Sat 9-e, Sun 11-S:

House In Syracuae, 6 rooms a
balh, col 614-002-38110.
:::---:--:---:-----:---:-1
Throe bedroom home, beautiful
country setting, fuel 11111 included,
$400/mo., 614-985-3341 or 614me ollsrlng.
992-6468.
Gallta County's Largeat Hair &amp; Unfurnished two bedroom house, Range 30 Inch Advacoto GrHn
Tanning Salon, Seeking Bualllon nice and clean, deposit required, Was $150 Cur To 1125: Maylag
Partner, Great Lo~atlon , Good
Washer $205; M&amp;lchlng Dryer
Business Great lnveatment Only •~~~~:_!.8!_!14-~99~2!;:·301l0~!:,·-:-:-l S205
1 Yoar Warranty; Portable
Serious lnquirlel Pleaae, Send Vory nice ho,. in Pomeroy lor waahor 105: Sk111g1 Appllancaa,
Name, Addreaa a Pho~ Number ....,~ 814-002·58511.
78 \line Stroot, Gallipolis, 814To RO. Bo• 633. Galllpollo, Ohio
448-7398 ·1-800-4SS-3489
45631 ,
Warzgal Slr&amp;Of, Pomeroy, WID,
' '
.
S35Mto. Dapolil 513-022.02!14.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

REAL ESTATE

RogiSier, 200 Main St'. PI Pleasant. WI/ 25550.
1
Babysiuer Needed lri Uy Home tor (RN or LPN) to work with &amp;tud·
From 2 -11 :90, For 2 Wall Man- ants ar)d adUitl wlm devttopm«&lt;-

sOn Pike, Bict.wtll, OH 45614 EOE,
• MIFIH.

Yard, Laue, Sac. Dop., No ,Peta, french City Maytag, 01&lt;1·•••6t4-446-1358 3 Rolorences Re- 719 5.

Now Anliqua I Ctah 1!811 raody to recommandl lhlt you do bull·
open. Needed are vtndorl of an- ness with people you know, and
tiques. quality crafts, &amp; colltK:ta- NOT to '"'"d money through lho
bles. No Fleas please! Serioua mail until you have inveatioated

to $900 weaklylpotantial procosoing mortgage refunda, OWn houro. r
Stamped Envelope: EJ(presa ·Call 909-715-2378 ox1 1377 (24
·"O•pt.131 : 100 Eaat Whlteetone hou..).
Blvd .. SUite 148-345, Cadar Perk
TX 78813.
No Experience Necessary! $500
To $900 Weekly 1Poten1ial Pro·
1200 -$50o · w~y. Assombl.e Pro- coning Mort- Ralundo, OWn
duCUI. No Soiling, Paid DOK~ Ful- Houra, Call (g09) 715-2300, Ext.
ly Guaranteed. No Exp. Neces- 782, (24 Houra).
oary. · 7 Daya ~07 - 875 - 2022
EICI.0528H04
No Experience Necesaoryl 1500
To sgoo Weakly /Potential Pro$200-$500, .wookly. o\ssamblo ceBalng Mortgage Refunds. Own
products.' No seiling. Paid direct. Hours, Call (909) 715-2300, En
Fully gwaranteed. No expetience 1351 . (24 H"'l,r,s).
neceasary. 7 days. 407-875-2022
Now Taking APplications FOr Gal·
ext 0505H04.
llpolis &amp; Pomeroy Domino's Pizza.
4VON I All Areas I Shirley
Po&amp;tal I Gov't Jobs $21 IHr +
SpeaiS, il04-e~1429. _
Able Avpn Re"presentatives
needed. Earn money for Christ·

210

2 Badn&gt;&lt;&gt;ma, Total Electric, Small orators,

qulrod. ·
'
3 bodroom hou ae on Lincoln
Htighta. caJI614-992·3829.
5 rooms &amp; bath, baHmenr, nice
location. Rtlorencea 1 deposit
requiled. il04-e75-1090.

FINANCIAl

Help wanted

on 180~ Ford f'-150, low milst,
elllcellent ~ondltlon . 1!114-D(g.

114· 4C1..Q881.

"You've rescued her twice by offering food.
Now n· 'slhe on'ty w•y 1can· get .... r 10 eatl"

•

Someone Iii lako O'ier peymetlts

G~l

20 Look •t

2t Sulllad
25-nal

311 Frown

grHn,

8753.

Hou.mo~

2 Bodraoma On Mill Croak Road
1100 Depolit Roquirad, SZOOIMo.,

1011

1inled .-indowa, am·ff'l caaaatte,
pa, Pb. air, low mlloaga, mull 11 oppreciate. 113, 500..1114-~8-

r.1Ef1CHANDISE

2 Bedroom. 2
Flroplllco ; 19 Acroa. L~~··~-~'!
warda FUdge in

Silverado,

37 SlloniMt
31 FIINI&amp;
1 More extenelwe
foltunltWQer
1 -41 eon. prov.
1100111
.... Pouch
13 tr.'letent
45 F~~-14 Srt.oothe&lt;
(elur.J
15 Indian
45 Olotent pll1net
languege
51 Actor
group
CMrttonte Skirt ~pe
54 Convince
17 Priest •
55 Fruit rlpevntmont
58 Convertible
1a - - fault
couch
(overmuch)
57 Coalta (the
ACROSS

4oAI09764 , 34 F111nch cep
35Pronounc:eSOUTH
monl8
aAK1074

1gg3 IUII· IIZo Chevy Sllvorado,
loa dad, 38,000fi1L, · aaki~g
$10,500. 304-675-3736.
.
1994 Chevy

·---

•QI09
+K832
4oQJ8532

!

neg, 304-11~-

ot-30 116
1 53 2

trK 5 4
• 7 6

1988 Chevy S-1 0, ahor~bod . 4
ely., 4ap, $1800, 614-742-2357. '

Wiiilleq To Buy : llttlo Tlk&amp;a Toya,
614-2. 7.
, .

The Dilly Sentinel• P... I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

~!!~!!!!~!!!~~U;;;;?~s;lda;;,,rack;;~you=.~A;;;quarius. troet yourself to
ASTRO-GRAPB

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

;Ia =-lblh9
0

··'

•

, Wednelday, Jan. 3t , 18De

New and poil!lve aspects have been
addtd to yOur persona through teudne
yaii iNmld the hard WI!Y lhll past year.
Y~r new personaHiy will ellhence your
~and

reput8tlon.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·FIIII. tt) Thll
lhould be a ·;.warding anll productive
~for you. You wt1 be gNiad lor bwal.-. llf!d Y!lU will not let lrfvoloul ...,..
T'

II

a birthday gift. Send for your Aslro-Graph
predictions for tho year ahead by mailing
$2 and SASE 10 Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper, P .0 . Box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New York, NY t0156. Mal&lt;e sure
to 11118 your zodiac: sign.
PISCES (Feb. IO·IIIrch 10) Even
thouglt It's early In the week, take • break
from your mundane rouli!IU today with
aome kind r:A reaeationaiiCIMty.
21-Aprlltl) Try to devote
ARIES
as much lime and ellllfl u Pill ltla today
to a matter you feel can sll•ijjlllell yo~(!
financial bQe, Milke money your ~
motivation.
•
TAURUI (April ZO.May 20) Valuable
Information can be acquired today
through convaraatlona Wlth peROns In
your field ot endeaVor. Make your telephone your prjmllry,tool.
,
.Gil . . (lllly'21""- 20) ThiS wiN be B
good day to ,nop lor esaentlol ~ems. You
wilt hive 1 good senae of values loday
and you will not rnakeloolieh purchales.
CANCER (,luna 21·July 22) Today,
conditions will lavor advancing or
your per-f lnterMIS. Set

(Mirfh

•IIJNI!'dlrl(l

I

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) II Is usually
unwise lo rely roo heavily upon your
hunches and intuitive feelings . Today,
however. ·you can heed your inner voice.
VIRGO (Aug, 2:i·Sapt. 22) Associates
wiH hava subBiantlal influence over your
atlltudes and objectives today. Pal
around with people who have positive
goals.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 13) You can
achieve everything you set your mind 10
today. Several impedimenta mighl slow
you down a 1rifle. but n you persiSt, they
_, .,~you. '.
iltoR!'IO (Oct. 24-flo¥. 22) Your logical
~Ia wiM be aeaaonad Y!i111 sensitivity today, flll!klng you an 'excellent per·
son to give adVice. Speak 110m your heart.
SAOITTAIIIU!t (Nov•.23-0ec. 21) Ptojecla
begun todlly tlhould _ . . . . WOik out to
your Wttlotlacllou. You ,.. " ' - how to uee

.. t h e - .. yoiA' t ... ltlll

CAPRICORN CDac. 22-.1811. II) Taaka
can be aceomptlthed more elfectlvely
with the aid of an allliltant today . You
ehoukln't ~VI any problem gelling the
kind r:A OOIIIIJ!l&amp;tio!'t you requi1'11.
'

•

JANUARY 30 I

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, January 30, 1996

Diet: What is healthy~ what is not
By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.

DEAll DR. 001T: I use the beef

marrow bone in my cooking. Since I
melt the marrow, I know it is fllly.ls
jt hiah in cholesterol or other sub:Stances whic:h IJii&amp;hl be detrimental to
•a person's health? Many years ago I
:was told it was healthful.
'; D~ READER: Many years
ago. we were told that many things
-were healthful. For eumple, good,
"red, nwbled meat was considered to
~ the mainstay of a nu.tritious diet.
,However. today's authorities insist
that dieU high in meat IIR associated
,with cancer and heart disease.
' MOre important, animal fat, a rich
;source of artery-clogging choles.terol, is the perceived bad guy in the

fimess sceiWio. Forget that lud was
an essential ingmlient in really outstanding baked goods, that butter was
what l!lldc C1UD1 sauces so delicious,
that bacon (or sausage) and eggs
(apsrtandeferaardblyAmfried bubiter!~astere once
encan re ....... , ·
Now you ask about marrow
bones, and I'm sorry to say that this
delicacy also provides unacceptable
amounts of die••~ choles•-1. vou
probably should give it up, unless -based on a low-blood cholesterol leve! __ your family physician advises
otherwise.
Modem nutritionJ.sts tout the value of fiber, vegetables, frul"ts, and
complex carbohydrates, such as
bread and pasta. But who knows?

!n

-,

-·u '

PertJaps the next aeneration will discover unrecognized but humbling
facts about our pnent dietary jlreferences, in the manner of the character in the Woody Allen movie "Sleeper," who was fast-frozen and "res uscitated" in the future, to discover that
cigarette-smoking was healthful.
Dietary dogma changes, as new
· "fi rudi
bli bed Wi L
SCienb tc s es are pu s . ltnout some sort of di vme
· kn owJed ge,
we have to depend on our scientists
to tell us what activities and foods are
healthful. Beef marro'f isn't.
To give you more mfonnation, I .
'-- copJCs
· of my
.. you •=
am sendlng
"Und
tandi
Ch
Health ReportS
ers
ng o· lesterol" and "Eating Right • for a
Healthy Heart." Other readers who

••
•

Ohio Lottery

SWCD elects officers

DR. GOTT

=:----..---PETER
GOTI, M .D.

•
- •••
would like copies should send $2 for
each report plus a tong, selfaddressed, stamped envelope to P.O.
Box 2017, Murray Hill Station, New
vork
· to mention
·
,, • NY 10156. Be sure
th ftl
(
)
e 1 es·
Copyript 1995 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Thomas Theiss was elected chairman of the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District at ·the recent
reorganizational meeting.
Other officers elected were
Charles Yost, vice chairman, and Joe
Bolin, secretary-treasurer.
Plans were made for the annual
fourth grade poster contest and sixth
- " - essay contest and to incorpo,.,_
rate a new first grade coloring contest with all the county schools to participate.
A cooperator agreement was
approved for Brian and LeAnn
Harold in Salem Township.
Committees for the coming year
were appointed as follows : John
Rice and Diana Kimes, education;
Joe Bolin, resource conservation and

Meigs boys
win; SQuthern
drops contest

.,

development'; Marco Jeffers, infor·
mation;' Joe Bolin and Tom TheisS:
fiscal agents: Charles Yost, ruraJ
abandoned mine land program;
Charles Yost and all supervisors.
cquipnent; and Tom Theiss an&lt;Uohll
Rice, budget.
The board approved sending two
students to Ohio Forestry Camp[ and
applicants will be accepted for the
position from local schOols and the 4Hprogram.
Regular board meetings were set
for the fourth Wednesday of each
month at 8 p.m at the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Office.
Others attending were Mike Duhl,
Blair Windon. Robert First, and Opal
Dyer.

Pick 3:
233
Pick 4:
0167
Buckeye 5:
1-2-5-15-29

Sports, Pages 4-7

Cl.. r

tonight,

Iowa

betw ..n 5 and 10. Thurwdlly,

~t

anow. High In lower

•
35-

Vol. 46, NO. 192

2 Sectlona, 16 PlgM

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 31, 1996

Slip being repaired...

AO.OneiiCo.Ncw.....-.:

Government, SOCCO agree on
Meigs mine pollution penalties
Coal company will pay at least $2.5 million for restoration
of fish, mussels and salamander life killed in 1993 discharge .

By KATHERINE RIZZO

Aaaoclated Prua Writer

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WASHINGTON -The government still isn1t convinced that some
Ohio River tributaries had to be polluted to save coal mining jobs, but it
nonetheless reached an agreement on
repairing the damaged streams.
Southern Ohio Coal Co. agreed to
pay at least S2.S million and restore
· the fish. mussels. salamander and other life killed in 1993.
All aquatic life along IS miles of
creeks was killed when the contaniinated water was pumped out of
Meigs Mine No. 31 . The mine flood ed because water worked its way
under a 20-foot concrete and steel.
block 'that was supposed to contain it.
The company said the swift
removal of that water was essential to
preserve 82S jobs, including the jobs
of about 300 miners. The state agreed
and allowed the company to bypass

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'

:I

began."
All species of fish have not yet
returned, but "the streams are recovering nicely on their own," Rennie
said.
.
The EPA said it may take a decade
for some species to rebound, but Ren- ,
nie said "That's way too long in our
estimation."
The maximum possible restoration
cost was not estimated, but the terms
of the settlement require the company to:
- Develop a plan to fix the
watershed.
-Pay the government $1.9 million to carry out that plan. plus pay a
$300,000 civil penalty.
-., Reimburse the government for
$242,000 it spent to monitor the damage done by the mine discharge.
- Pay West Virginia SIOO,OOO
'" for the benefit of aquatic communities or habitat on the Ohio River."

"We think if they had done it rigllt
in the first place some of that money
could have been spent to treat the
water in the beginning," said Assis~
tant Attorney General Lois Schiffer;
who announced the settlement with
Herman at EPA headquarters.
The coal company, under stale
orders, fully treated about half of t!IO
discharge, Rennie said. The other SOO
million gallons either was partially
treated or untreated.
:
Rennie said full employment al the
flooded mine resumed in February
1994. "'They're . setting some mine
production records ,",he•said.
The negotiations involved the coal
company. the federal EJ'A, the Fish
and Wildlife Service, the Office of
Surface Mining, the West Virginia
Division of Environmental Protection, the Ohio EPA and the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources.

·Prisoner gets death sentence in riot case

:.1

Worlulra of the Ohio Bridge Company of Cambridge beglln
.
work repairing • allp on Union Avenue neer Pomeroy thla week.
DAYTON (AP)- About a dozen
Hera worlcera -lhown driving alllel piling along the rOad. Counprison guards looked on as courtroom
, ty Engineer Robert Ellaon eatlrneWi work ahould be done on the
spectators when inmate George
I'CIIId •rty naxt - " . Eaaon Nld the allp wu due to exceulve
Skatzes was sentenced to die for his
-&lt;ti;i,rllkl;;;
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--p .____.t-;.._ _ _-; ...;.·.;.;·-;..·_ _. ~ rOle inihol tlilyings of t.Wo C.:llow pris-

J
I
I
I
I

nonnal treatment processes.
Steve Herman, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency assistant
administrator for enforcement and
compliance assurance, was still arguing that point Tuesday.
"They have never shown that
jobs would have been permanent! y
taken away," he said. "Jobs and the
environment are compatible. Here we
didn't really have an opportunity ...
we were forced into the litigation by
the company's action."
The coal company got a court
order that prevented the EPA from
blocking the discharge. That order later was overturned on appeal.
Public Affairs Manager Jeff Rennie said Southern Ohio Coal began
cleaning up the waterways right after
the mine had been pumped out, and
the damaged waierways now " physically and chemically are the same
that they were when the pumping

With
Coupon

.

-

"""

Lilglslstlon gains momentum in Congress

• d not .,.&amp;0 ·
::,-armers ad VISe
wait-on ·Federal programs
~'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Farm
legislation is picking up momentum
J n Congress. with the House Agri:.: :culture Committee finally voting to
:: -end traditional crop subsidies and
~~ :most government controls that go
: :with them.
~ :
But the chairman of the Senate
, jlgriculture panel says farmers still
'~ had better look to the market for
. l!lanting guidance because final leg,, • islation still may be a ways off.
. :"Farmers should not wait for the fed, l:ral programs to detennine what
!heY want to do," Sen. Dick Lugar, RInd., said Tuesday.
.
•· : The House and Senate may debate
farm measures on Thursday. Both

would end traditional subsidies that
rise and fall with crop prices. Instead,
farmers would get guaranteed but
declining transition payments over
seven years. .
The measure faces strong opposition from Senate Minority Leader
Tom Daschle, D-S.D. Senate Repul&gt;licans and Democrats are working on
a compromise.
In the House Agriculture Committee on Tuesday. three Democrats
joined united Republicans in sup.porting the bill. .
The 28-17 vote was the first time
the legislation had cleared the committee, chaired by Rep. Pat Roberts,
R-Kan.

Murder suspect will return to
:Mason County to face charge
. · POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A Hartford woman will be returning from
· Arizona to Mason County soon to face a murder charge, according to Mason
: County Sheriff Ernie Watterson.
:- Risa Lynne Sayre Leonud, 32, was taken before a Uma County, Ariz ..
· judge 1\Jesday where she waived extradition to return to West Virginia, Wat· lerson said.
I
: - Officials are now making arradgcments with the West Virginia Depart: ment of Correctiong to return Leonard to Mason County.
·: Leonard is wanted in connection with the September murder of Jack
: Roush. S2. Hartford. She was picked up in Uma County on Jan. 24.
: · Arizona authorities are continuing the search for Tim01hy W. Gibbs,
: 36,Hartford, who is also wanted in connection with the Roush murder. When
: leonard was picked up, Gibbs was with her, but gave authorities false iden·
: )ification and remains at large, Watterson said.

- - T1"""'"'""3

•

'

·:: · OFFICIALS BRIEFED ON FLOOD RELIEF • Dan Wlnnlnghllm
Management Agancy brlafa township and
~ Tuceclay'a meeting on ledcnll flood nllltlf
-j; eflorla In Pomaroy. Melga County flood victim• will be e_llglble
·:: tar flclalel ualatanCI, liking with eight other Ohio couniiM. (SinphOtoby Tom Huntw)

EJJT,cy

'~ •o1 the Ohio
' ~ ·001.11ty afflcllla

,

:1::tlnel
. ..
~

'

•

.

oners.
Skatzes. who broadcast demands
during the 1993 riot at the state's
maximum-security
prison
in
Lucasville, also was sentenced to life
inprisonwithnochanceofparolefor
30 years in the death of guard Robert
Vallandingham.
Assistant Franklin County Prosecutor Dan Hogan, who tried the case,
said he was happy to see the Southem Ohio Correctional Facility guards
,in.. the courtroom Tuesday.

"As far as I'm concerned, we did
it for these people," Hogan said.
Visiting Judge Thomas Mitchell
sentenced Skatzes (pronounced
SKATES) in Montgomery County
Common Pleas Court. The judge
adopted the recommendations of the
jury in imposing the sentences. He set
the execution date for July 30, but
death -sentence appeals are automatIC .

Vallandingham and nine prisoners
died during the 11 -day riot.
Skatzes, 49, identified himself as
"lnmale George"' when he issued
demands on behalf of rioting pr isoners during a radio broadcast April 15,
1993. He warned that inmates were

convicled Dec. 16 of aggravated
murder in the deaths of Val Iandin$- .
ham and prisoners Earl Elder ani!
David Sommers. He was convicted of
kidnapping Vallandingham, Elder lllld
another hostage-guard, Darrold Clark.
out.
·~.
Skatzes was sentenced to consec'Tm here to take whatever you've
utive terms of 15 to 25 years on each
got to dish out, ... Skatzes said.
He showed no emotion as the sen- kidnapping count.
Defense attorney Jeff Kelleher
tences were read.
" I do not know why my son was said prosecutors presented a strong
murdered," Vallandingham's mother, case, but that it will be appealed.
"Defending thi s case was like tryWanda, told the court. "Something
ing
to stave off a rising tide," Kellehas to be done to stop people from
her
said.
"We kept throwing sandhags
killing other people and thinking
on
top
of
each other, but inevitably
they have a right not to be punished
the
river
crested
and came over the
for it. '" ·
·
top."
After a six-week trial, Skatzes was

prepared to die if their demands for
religious and others freedoms behind
bars were not met.
Skatzes told Mitchell that it was
not the ti~ ?JYplace for him to speak

•

Wholes /e prices up 0.5 percent

Nat· n's economic slowdown evident
WASHINGTON (AP) - Who~e­
sale prices shot up 0.5 percent in
December. matching November 's
increase, as energy prices posted
their biggest advance in more than
five years.
The Labor Department report on
its Producer Price Index today came
as Federal Reserve policy-makers
met to consider whether to cut interest rates again to stimulate a lethargic economy.
AnalySts said the energy price
surge was a one-month phenomenon
due to cold ·weather and a spike in

crude oil prices ~nd noted that prices economists had expected a 0.4 percent advance in December in the
already had fall en in January.
" The bigger story is that basical- index, which measures cost pressures
ly there is no wholesale inflation, ·· before they reach the consumer levsaid economist Bruce Steinberg of el.
Although many analysts expected
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co. "I don 't think
the report will have anything to do the Federal Open Market Committee
with the (Fed) meeting. There's to cut short-term rates today because
ample evidence the economy has of mounting evidence of a weakenweakened pver tlie last several ing economy, others felt it would
months and they will go ahead and defer any decisi on pending the availlower rates:·
ability of more economic data.
The back-to-back increases in the
Many official economic reports
PPI were the steepesl since a similar ·have been postponed because of govadvance in January 1995. Many ernment shutdowns caused by the

federal budget impasse and subse~ :
quent blizzard. The PPI report origi~ :
nally was sc heduled for Jan. II.
;- .
Analysts said any evidence or :
mounting price pressures could rein~ :
force arguments against any further easing now out of fear of accelerat- :
ing an inflationary spiral.
:
Fed policy makers nudged the fed: :
eral funds rate down from 6 percent to 5.75 percent in July and then to 5.5 :
percent in December as signs of ceo- :
nomic weakness persisted. The rate is what banks charge each other for :
'
•
overnight loans.

Federal, state aid available to Meigs flood victims
•
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Federal and state emergency management officials qcurrently working with local officials in Meigs
County and those in five other federally-declared Ohio counties in helping eligible flood victims obtain
financial assistance.
..
Officials with the Ohio Emergency Management Agency and the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency met with township and county officials Tuesday in Pomeroy to
discuss application details for homeowners, renters, and businesses
affected by severe stonns and flood -.
ing that besan in the area on Jan. 20.
A toll-free teleregistration line, I800-462-9029, has been set up by
FEMA for area flood victims who
wish to apply for federal assistance
under the Presidential Disaster Declaration. For those who use TDD,
assistance can be sought at l-800462-7S8S.
The numbers are open from 8 a.m.
until7 p.m. daily, and will allow individuals and small businesses who
suffered any kind of damages to
apply for assistance programs available from a variety of FEMA, other
fedeial agencies, the Stale of Ohio,

and voluntary agencies, said Lee Entnar of FEMA Region Five, Chicago,
who spoke at Tuesday"s meeting. .
Some of the assistance progiams
available include:
Federal Emergency
Management Agency
- Disaster Housing Assistance:
Housing assistance to individuals
and families whose pennanent homes
were damaged or destroyed in the
flooding . Types of aid include grants ,
for: (I) alternate rental housing; (2)
emergency repairs needed to make a
residence habitable; and (3) mort~a~e
or rental assistance in cases where ~e
disaster has caused extreme economic hardship. Funds are available
for mitigation measures to minimize
ihe effects of future flooding.
- Individual and Family Grant Program: Provides grants to individuals
and families to meet serious disasterrelated needs and necessary expenses not covered by insurance or other
· federal , state, or voluntary agency
disaster assistance programs. Funds
may be available for mitigation mea.sores to minimize the effect of future
flooding.
- Disaster Unemployment Assistance: Weekly benefits may be available to those individuals out of work

due to the c!isastc;r. including self- area. "The main thing we want affect-:
employed persons, farm owners, and ed individuals to do now is to call the"
oth~.rs not covered under regular
1-800 nu.mber. That begins the:
unemployment insurance, Call 614- process of getting financial assis-:
_
lance.'"
466-4057.
Small Business
Before calling to register for assi~­
Administration
tance, it is helpful to have the foJ;:
- Home/Personal Property Disas- lowing infonnation ready for FEMJ\_:
ter Loans: Disaster loans to home- officials:
.·
owners and renters for restoring or
- Your current phone number. .
replacing underinsured or uninsured
. - Your address at the time of ~ ·
disaster-damaged real and personal d1saster.
·
.
property. Available in declared coun- Your Social Security number. : .
ties. Funds are available for mitiga- A list of damages and losses you
tion measures to minimize the effects suffered.
··
.
of future flooding .
- Good directions to the location
- Business Disaster Loans: Dis- of the damaged property.
.
aster loans to repair or replace
- The name of your insuranc¢
destroyed or damaged business facil- company and your policy n11mber. •
ities, inventory, macl\inery, equipIf you have insunmce, officials ask
ment, etc. , not covered by insurance. that you contact your agent ,prior t6
These loans are available to large and m~ng an application for federal
small businesses in declared counties. ,asststance.
Loans also may be available to small
"Many people are very humble hi
businesses for working capital to these situations, and don't ~ssari;
assist them during the disaster recov- . ly th!nk they are eligible for help and
ery period. These loans are available they will pick up and go on with thei;
in declared and contiguous counties. lives. Our job is to say, 'Don't short;
Enmar stated that FEMA c:Jum1e yourselves.' You have-~
has established a disaster field offic:e Itially caqte into a program ill wllicb[
from ' which they are working in 1once the President siped'Oft 01111Qj
Columbus, and teams are cUJTently and dec~ tbei!Uadi.... ...;
working in the six county declnti011
~-·' . . . . l
•• '
•
.,.
•

"

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