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                  <text>•. age 1o• The Dally Sentinel

Tuesdlly, Februery 20, 1186

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

;$ister should get her priorities straight before·donati·hg kidney
.

:'

Why can't I ' Janet," the ailing sister, get on the national list an(j wait
her tum? She probaBly won't have ~o
wait long for a kidney match, since
there are so many drunks on the highways these days just begging to
become donors.
There are, however, many reasons
i 8y·ANN LANDERS
why the healthy sister should NOT
'; • Dear Ann. Landers: 1bat mother donate her kidney. Her first obliga:~ho was asked to donate one of her tion is to her husband and sons. If
: iddneys to her alcohol-abusing sister something goes wrong in that opera: $ould echo Nancy Reagan and "just tion, who ·will take care of them?
· 'say NO! " This is one of the heaviest Plenty of problems can arise: blood
• burdens that can be placed on the · clots, allergic reactions, respiratory
• shoulders of a family member. Giv- dilemmas, cardiac failure, medical
' en the track record of those sisters, it "mistakes" (removing the wrong
: i.s incredible that such a request organ), etc. And what happens if her
would be made.
remaining kidney should fail? Can

Ann
Landers

she get her original kidney bacll? And
who is going to pay for all this? The
already-drained ~ayer? Aer bus·
band's insurance company? The tooth
.. ?
flllry.
Why did the healthy sister allow
herself to be cross-matched and considered as a potential donor? Now she
will have to contend with pressure
from all the family members. This is
a real no-win situation -- damned if
you don 't and maybe dead if you do.
-- EL, Lebanon, Pa.
Dear Lebanon: Thank you for a
letter that is sure to spark a good bit
of controversy. I'd like to make it
clear, however, that the risks to the
donor are very small. Here's a gutwrencher from Fon Wonh with a dif-

ferent point of view:
in three years, my body rejected that
Dear Ann Laoders: This is for kidney, and I was back on dialysis. I
" Dilemma in Delaware," the lady confess that I lived recklessly,
Who doesn 't want to donate a kidney smoked constantly, drank like a fish
to her sister, Janet.
and did drugs.
Like Janet, I abused my body
The following Christmas, our
throughout my teen years and early entire family decided to celebrate
20s. I was undisciplined and just together for the first time in ages, and
plain wild. I began having kidney we got along better than ever. That
problems in high school and had one reunion changed my life. My family
kidney removed. I still refused to knew I was in desperate need of a
clean up my act. When I turned 30, I kidney. My sister volunteered one of
was put on dialysis.
hers. When the tests showed she was
After five years on the machine, I a poor match, my brother offered his.
was told I was eligible for a trans- It was a perfect match.
plant. No family member came forThe surgery went extremely well,
ward and offered to be a donor. I was and the transplanted kidney began to
given a kidney from a cadaver. With- function promptly. l am now clean

and sober, our family has. reunite4
and we are closer than ever. It's been
two and a half yC4fS. I'm in terrific
shape. and I f~llike the luckiest per.'
son alive. ·· Another Janet
Dear Janet: Thank you for a frank
and fascinating letter. You've aiven
me the perfect opportunitY to ask my
readers once again to fill out a donO{
card. Write t«;; The Living Bank, P.O.
Box 6725, Houston. Texas 77265. (A
dollar or two to help defray costs
would be greatly appreciated.)

mid-70s were forecast for today.
With a pile of beer cans beside
him and a string of beads around his
neck, University of Texas student Jim
Marcus, 22, awaited the festivities in
a Ia wn chair.
"At first I couldn't move, then I
decided why bother," Marcus said. "I
might as well just rest here and wait
for the next parade."
'
Jazz clarinetist Pete Fountain
kicks it off at dawn as he leads his
Half-Fast Marching Club down fashionable St. Charles Avenue.
Numerous "marching societies"
follow, including the gilded coconutthrowing Zulus - black people in
black fac.e parodying the previously
all-white,Carnival clubs- and then
Rex, King of Carnival.
It all ends at midnight when the
religious season of Lent begins.
Mounted police herd the most determined revelers off the French Quarter's narrow streets, usually into
already crowded bars.
Today's celebrations capped a

.

:Past Councilors install officers
':!llew officers were installed when
.. th~ Past Councilors Club of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of America.
-inet recently at the home of Jean
Frederick.
· Installed were Mary Jo Barringer,
wi:sidenl; Goldie ~rcderick, vice
ptesidC'n\; Jean Frederick, secretary;'
Gharlotte Grant. treasurer. Deloris
'lft'Oif1• scnti~el; and Enna Cleland,
dOwer ~OmflUilee.
·
~ ·cora Beegle, Mary Holter and
~fll!aret'Amberger were reponed ill.

Scripture from John I , the Lord's
Prayer and pledge to ' the flag were
given in unison. For roll call members told of something good they had
· don that day.
Games were conducted by Laura
Nice 'and Marcia Keller with Mrs.
Newell, Goldie Frederick, and Mrs.
Hayes winnmg prizes. Erma Cleland
read "As I Am," and Lora Damewood, "Recyclin' in ·the Olden
Days." . ·
·

..- . .
}{j·Gamma Mu ·_members honored
~

l

~

· .. ·Two members of Xi Gamma Mu

quee~ pin

and her reigning crown. ,
,C:Iii!ptef; Beta Sigma: Phi Sorority,
The C4ftteen was served recently at
· ere-. Itqnored at a recent rneetinll the American Red Cross bloodmobile
ifCld a1 ; the Bradbury Church of by Chatlo'ue Hanning, ·Sandy, Han:
~t· '
ni~g. Maty Wpods,, and Lynn.Wright.
• ·~e Fin law was l!onored for.
A cake inscribed "Belli Sigma Phi"
,i'r ~5
' in Beta Sigma r,Jli and and other refreshnlel\ts wen! served
' ' ··
her silver circle pin for to those named and Kay L!lgan,
A110 honored' was- this ~ Sharon Pratt; Beth- Stivers, Kay
f&gt;i~~Jie Blake. · Adkins, Pat Arnold, Barbara Black,
Your Life' presentation · Paula Haynes, Jackie HQ9Ver, ~thy
tots. Blue by Charlotte John~mi, Maun,ha Nelson, M!lfllyn
~::f:~;~ she was presented'with ~ltns and Barbara.Welsl!.
red roses, her v!llentine

j

·~

lt •

~

•

.'I

•

MARDI GRAS • Anne Wyatt, of Slidell, La.,
dances In the rain during Lund! Gras festivities
In Wolden berg Park at the New Orleans water·

front Monday .eflernoon Fe. 19, 1996 Camlvel
aeaaon ends ori Mardi Gres, or F.t'l\lwdey. (AP
Photo)

POMEROY-- DAV Chapter 53,
Tuesday, Rock Springs fairgrounds
grange hall, 7 p.m. Dinner to be
served. Ladies welcome.
·

APR

FIXED RATE
FINANCING OR

RUTI..AND-- Rutland Civic Center Committee, 7 p.m. Tuesday, at the
Civic Center.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Alzheimers and
Related Disorders suppon Group,
Wednesday, I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs
Multipllrpose Center. Topic will be
"Validation Therapy."
THURSDAY
SYRACUSE -- Meigs Ministeri,
al Association Lenten service, 7:30
p.m . at the Syracuse United
Methodist Church. Rev. Brian Harkness to be the speaker.
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
Beta salad supper Thursday, 6 p.m. at
the home of Clarice Krautter.
POMEROY -- The Wildwood
Garden Club, I p.m. Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Library. Denise Arnold to
speak on herbs.
REEDSVILLE-- Riverview Garden Club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
home of Maxine Whitehead. Members top take fruit for fruit trays. Auction will be held.
FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS -- Revival
services will be held at 7 p.m. Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday at t!Je-St. Paul
United Methodist Chw'i:h, Tuppers
Plains. Rev. Ernie Perkins will be the
speaker. Saturday night a spaghetti
supper will be held from 4:30 to 7
p.m. The price is a'donation.

In Gaelic football, a specialty of
the Irish, there are IS men on each
side.

35cenl!l .
A Glnnett Co. Nernp1p1r ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednes«!ay, February 21, 1996

.

RUTLAND -- Rutland Village
Council will meet in special session
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the civic center to
discuss personnel matters.' Civic Center meeting scheduled for Tuesday
canceled.

'

e

THE VICTOR- Republican presidential hopeful Pat Buchanan
gave the thumbs up algn after winning the New Hampshire prl·
· mary Tuesday In Manchester, N.H. At right Is his campaign man·
. ager and sister, Bay Buchanan. (AP)
.

SYRACUSE -- Syracuse Village
Council will meet in special session-,
Tuesday, 7 p.m.

Harold Gary and Karen Singer, a
daughter and son-in-law, Deborah
and Richard Sullivan, and have four
granddaughters, Arin Marie Singer,
Christina Lynn Singer, Angela Mane
Sullivan, and Sarah Nichole Sullivan.
They all reside in Toledo.
Mr. and Mrs. Singer lived in Toledo for 47' years. They moved to
Bashan in 1992.

4-7-11-16-24

In the French Quaner, costumes
from elaborate to skimpy fill the
streets and balconies.

gotten all about my real life."

Cloudy, rain po..lble
tonight, lows In the 40e.
Thursday, cloudy. Hlghl
In the 50s.

Buckeye 5:

Sports, Page 4

Says New Hampshire victory gives: him 'a fighting chance'-:

TUESDAY
.
PORTLAND -- Southern Local
Building Committee meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Ponland Elementary
School. All district residents invited
to attend.

· LONG BOTIOM --.Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Singer of 49627 Eagle Ridge
Rd .. Long Bottom; will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary next
Sunday.
·· " They were married Feb. 25, 1946
in 'Pomeroy.
Mr: and Mrs. Singer are the parents of a son and daughter-in-law,

0900

monthlong Carnival season that has
seen at least I00 parades across
southern Louisiana. In Cajun Country, near Lafayette, tradition sends
masked riders out just after dawn to
visit area farms and houses collecting
the ingredients for a spicy gumbo.

And while police had said they
would crack down on those who
expose too much flesh or throw
beads from balconies, no arrests had
been made by Monday's huge
Orpheus parade. •
.
"l've-seen more breasts in the last
hour than I've seen in my entire life."
said Horace Wilson, 28, of New York.
Diane Livingston, 36, of Los
Angeles held up dozens of long
strings of faux pearls.
"This is more jewels than any
movie star has," she said. "I've for-

..

Buchanan surprise winner

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing lo BDDOUflCC
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or lund raisers of any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific numb~r of days.

Singers to mark 50th

Pick 3:
474
Pick 4:

Vol. 48, NO. 206
2 Sectlo118, 12 Paget

Community
calendar

MR. AND MRS. HAROLD SINGER

Marauders
comeback
falls short

Send questions to Ann Landen,
Cnaton Syndkate, 5777 W. Cen• ·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

.America's biggest street party, in
~all · its gaudy glory, Mardi Gras
By MARY FOSTER
~IIOCiatlld Press WrHer
:~
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Mardi
Gras madness, in all its gaudy glory,
.has hit once again in a Cajun-spiced
..(!!'gy -of garish floats, ja~gly bands,
,.bared breasts and thrown beads. And
:Oh yes, sobriety isn't considered a
"virtue.
· · · All good sense gives way today in
·.,a Fat Tuesday celebration - Ameri.,-ca's biggest street pany. More than a
·_million revelers were expected to jam
' the French quaner for everything
· f&lt;om parad~s to a transvestite beau• ty pageant.
·;_ · And while gray sides and rain led
.',up to the big day, it did little to deter
•\hOse who began lining up for the
best spots.
'·· · "At this point, nothing bothers
me," said Ronnie Lee Sampson, 28,
. 9f Nashville, Tenn., on Bourbon
• ~trcet. "I've got another day of
· v~cation and it'll take more than a little rain to ruin it."
~ Sunshine and temperatures in the .

Ohio Lottery

.

.~

up · ro~2000

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• GRAND MARQUIS $800

•

By MIKE FEINSILBER
Associated Press Writer
Guerrilla politician Pat Buchanan
said his dime-thin victory in New
Hampshire gives him "a fighting
chance to win" the Republican presidential nomination but predicted that
the GOP establishment wi II rally
around a wounded Bob Dole to keep
the prize from him.
''I'm not the Republican front-runner, but I'm breathing hard on his
heels and I think he's breathing very
hard right now," Buchanan said in a
morning-after assessment of what
he'd accomplished in the nation's first
1996 primary.
He &lt;;ampaigned today in South
Carolina, which votes a week from
Saturday, laying claim to the conservative South.
Lamar Alexander, third behind

No. 2 Dole, pursued a last-man-standing strategy for winning the nomination. He said it was time for Dole to
step aside "and let me and Pat
Buchanan debate the future of the
party."
The Granite State primary decided nothing except that the contest will
have to be settled elsewhere.
" I think we have a fighting chance
to·win this Republican nomination,"
Buchanan said, but he expects GOP
tlders to decide that he can 't win an
election against President Clinton
and to anoint Dole.
"I think they will rally around Bob
Dole and I think they'll make a terrible mistake," he said. "They' ll all
stan calling me names.
"I think in panic they will behave
like men in panic."
Former Vice President Dan

Quayle said Dole's weakness has p~t
the nomination " up for grabs."
From here on, Quayle said, Dole
was "going to have to go and be
energetic and aniculate that vision
and see if the Republicans will buy
it. ..
No one but his opponents were
writing off Dole. The ~enate majority leader enjoys the backing of the
Republican establishment and has
$4.8 million for the next round of primaries and caucuses; his two chief
rivals are almost out of cash .
Buchanan said his New Hampshire victory, atop wins in Louisiana
and Alaska and a strong second in
Iowa, will broaden his appeal among
rank-and-file· Republicans who are
saying, "I always liked the fellow, but
now I think he can win."
Today in South Carolina, he was

picking up the endorsement ofPhyl•
lis Schlafly, a veteran anti-abonio~
leader.
'
Buchanan told supponers that the
pany regulars were frantically seek·
ing a way to block him.
_
"You can hear them right now," he .
said. "The fax machines and the ·
phones are buzzing in Washington,
D.C." And the message, he said; was:
"Somebody's got to get out and take ·
on this guy. "
:
Alexander ponrayed himself as the •
mainstream-acceptable alternative tO :
"a weakened Senator Dole" and an ·
overly divisive Buchanan. He;
acknowledged, " I've got to start
winning soon." In Iowa, he also fin·
ished third. Dole won there , but nar·
rowly; Buchanan was an unexpectedly strong second.
Continued on page 3

A cable franchise ordinance
between Rifkin Communications
Panners L.P. (Cablevision of Point
Pleasant, W.Va.) and the village of
Syracuse was discussed during a special session of council Tuesday night.
Lester Errett, general manager, and
Dan Elias, regional engineer of
Cablevision, met with council to discuss the franchise to which council
approved the first reading with the

stipulation that changes can be made
in the ordinance if council so desires.
Council was given a 30-day extension to approve final passage.
It was noted that through the
efforts of Mayor George Connolly,
village cleanup has begun with the
tearing down of two houses and a
third house by owners Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin McKelvey.

Council discussed the tearing
down of several other propenies
within the village that had been condemned.
Plans for anew concession stand
and press box for the ball field were
finalized . It is hoped that the building
will be completed before the ball season begins.
Mayor Connolly will be in his

oltice every Wednesday evening, due
to the fact that he will be in AkrQn
attending school along with Council;
man Larry La vender.
·
He is to check on din for the ball
field.
· .'
Present were Mony Wood, Donna
Peterson, Eber Pickens Jr., Bill RouSh
and Kathryn Crow. council memberS;
Police Chief Tim Gillilan and Janic;e .
Zwilling, clerk/treasure(.

.Alexander wants
Syracuse OKs first reading of cable· ordinance
.Dole to 'step aside'
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) Lamar Alexander called on Bob Dole
today to step aside and allow Alexander and Pat Buchanan to "duke it
out" for the Republican presidential
nomination.
Alexander called the race "a battic for the soul of our country." •
"We can't allow 'Buchananism'to
be the future of the Republican party," said Alexander, who finished
third in New Hampshire primary
behind the narrow winner Buchanan
and No. 2 Dole. "I've got fresh conservative ideas. Senator Dole seems
to have no ideas and Pat has the
wrong ideas."
·
Alexander conceded that "I have
to stan winning" in upcoming primaries but said. "Senator Dole should
step aside and let Pat and I have a
contest about the future of this pany."
"We'll have six or eight contests
where we ' ll duke it out," Alexander
said.
Alexander said he would suppon
Buchanan if the conservative commentator won the pany's nomination.
Alexander faces two severe problcms- he's not even on the ballot in
some delegate-rich states like New
York and Pennsylvania and he's shon
·
of money.
Campaign repons filed with the
Federal Election Commission show
Alexander raised just $437,000 in
January and finished the month with
about $425.000 in the bank. By compari son, Dole raised SI. 79 million in
January and Buchanan raised
$893,209.
Alexander denied any money cri-

sis today, saying, "We got $500,000
in by maii'Thursday, Friday and Saturday and I've goi a phone call this
morning with 320 finance co-chairmen who see a weak Dole, Pat with
energy but the wrong direction and·
me with a long-term best chance to be
the nominee."
Exit polls Tuesday indicated that
Alexander's Strength · was among
moderate and independent voters,
and that he finished second to Dole
among those who said ability' to
defeat Pr~sident Clinton w~s the
·-most i!Jlponant factor in the race.
Alexander said he doubted that
Buchanan would be the' eventual
nominee and that Dole, for all his
organizational strength and money,
has not caught fire with voters.
In early January, after months of
campaigning; he confessed voters
"don't know me from a hole in the
ground." But he pressed on, faithful
to 'he idea that if the big guys fattered, he'd "scoot up the middle."
Interest in him surged after his
third-place finish in Iowa. His onand-off walk across southern New
Hampshire ended Tuesday in coastal
Ponsmouth in the midst of a media
horde.
Alexander was the first Tennessee
governor to serve two terms. His
folksy. sunny. approach came with a
driving political ambition and a background as a New· York-educated
lawyer and an .aide in the Nixon
White House.
·
He attracted huge Nissan and Saturn plants to the state during his
tenure .

'

Safety issues addressed on clt$ed section of SR 7 ~
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
State highway officials are revis ing signs along State Route 7 due to
safety concerns that motorists unfamiliar with the recent closing of the
highway are not aptly warned of the
barricaded slip area near Tuppers
Plains.
With heavy fog conditions in the
area over recent evenings and morn·

ings, the lack of 'Road Closed' signs
or warning signals near the slip area
have not adequately warned mototists
of the closed section of roadway.
"One-lane Highway" signs were originally erected near the slip area, but
were not removed after state officials

•

decided to close the section of the
road last Monday.
"We are aware that there are problems with the signing of the area, and
we are working to have those problems corrected by late this afternoon.
Hopefully the situation of warning
oncoming motorist near the closed
section should improve today," said
Nancy Yoacham, public infonnation
officer with OOOT District I 0.
Crews were called out three times
over the weekend to work on
mechanical signs with closing information placed near the intersections
of U.. S 50 and State Route 7 and U.S.
33 and State Route 7 that were not
functioning due to mechanical prob-

lems . The problems with those s1gns
are being corrected, and both should
be working later today, Yoacham
stated.
Yoacham also confirmed this
morning that plans for the reconstruction of State Route 7 in the area
of the slip 12 miles nonh of Pomeroy
are ready to be submitted for emergency funding.
"There is a cenain paperwork
process we must go through. ODOT
Director (Jerry) Wray will be making
a declaration that the slip is an emergency situation because of the closing. That will then empowers us at
District 10 to be in direct contact with
the prequalified list of contractors to

·Newspaper says

~ccept cost proposals on the project,"

said Yoacham.
Construction plans call for two
new lanes to be built in a filled area
adjacent to the current southbound
lanes of State Route 7. Plans also call
for permanent improvements to oo
made to Orange Township Road 294.
(Old Seven Road), including widen- ·
ing and possible paving, according to'
Larry Coler, ODOT District 10 production administrator.
The township road is currently ,
being used as a detour for local pas.-.
senger traffic only. All truck traffic is
still being asked to use 'the official
state detou~ U.S .-50 west to Athens,
to U.S.-33 south to Pomeroy,
Yoacham stated.

.

'

State's road program may be overly ambitious:·
I

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
state's plan for 76 road projects over
the next eight years at a projected cost
of $2 .6 billion may be overly ambitious, a newspaper reponed today.
Just repairing Ohio's bridges and

Greenspan · expects nation's
economy to shQw improvement
WASHINGTON (AP)- Hedging
his bets, Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan is telling lawmakers
the economy is "basically on track"
but also is signaling that interest rates
could be cut to ensure sustained
growth.
In a closely-watched semiannual
repon to Congress on Tuesday, the
central bank chainnan acknowledged
economic performarice was dismal in
fanuary. But he expressed confidence that "any weakness is likely to
be temporary" - the result of two
panial government shutdowns, a transitory increase in backlogs of unsold
goods and heavy winter snowfall.
"A number of fundamentals point
to an economy basically on track for
sustained growth," he said.
His comments rattled nervous
financial market traders who fear the
Fed may be less likely than l)ad been
anticipated to push shon·term inter·
est rates ·lower this spring.
'
· 11Je Dow Jones industrial average
1
fell 44':79 to 5,458.53 In trading
Thesday. It had plunged 65 points
when trading opened, ·recovered nearly half the loss by the start of
Gree~span 's testimony in the afternoon and then staned falling again as
he began talking.
However, private economists said

&gt; •

nothing in Greenspan's two-hour faster non-inflationary growth than
appearance before the House Banking the Fed has permitted .
monetary policy subcommittee
"The system's worked like it
altered their belief that the Fed was should. The economy softened a
prepared II&gt; cut the benchmark feder- while ago, rates came down. That
al funds rate, which is charged among stimulates funher growth .... I think
banks on overnight loans, by a quar- the most probable scenario is that
ter point in March and perhaps by we'll return to solid growth and·
moderate inflation, low inflation,"
another quaner point in May.
"He clearly ... suggested he might Rubin said.
The federal funds rate, now at5.25
have to ease another notch or two as
what he called an insurance policy," percent, has been shaved three times
said economist David Jones of since peaking at 6 percent in July.
Greenspan said the last two reducAubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co.
Greenspan was scheduled to tions, in December and January, were
appear today before the Senate Bank- "monetary policy insurance" that
ing Committee, which would hold the could be taken out to bolster growth
confinnation hearing should Presi- without " increasing intlationary risks
dent Clinton, as expected, nominate . unacceptably."
He made no explicit statement
the 69-year-o~d Republican econoabout
future rate cuts, but in response
mist to a third four-year tenn.
White House spokesman Mike to a question, he said, "The numbers
McCurry said no. announcement we saw for the month of January,
would come before the end of the obviously, were · dismal. I would
week. Sen. tom Harkin, . D-lowa, doubt that we will get to negative
urged the apppintment of someqne growth, but there is no question this
else, saying "Mr. Greenspan's time is a soft economy."
has come and gone." But presidential
. In their repon, Fed policy makers
aides said prjvately that Clinton is forecast moderate economic growth
considering no one else.
of 2 percent to 2.25 percent, up from
Trea,_sury Secretary Roben Rubin around 1.5 percent in 199S. The
defended the central bank, five days unemployment rate should stay about
after Clinton said he believed the where it is, between 5.5 percent and
economy may1well be able to sustain 5.75 percent, they said.

potholes in roads could drain the
entire construction budget after 1999,
officials at the Ohio Depanment of
Transportation told The Plain Dealer.
· If state or federal lawmakers don 't
.,:orne up with at least $100 million a

year in new funding soon. ODOT
reponedly will drop at least 20 road
constructiOn projects from a list
announced last week.
OOOT officials estimate their budget shonfall at $100 million for the

fiscal year staning this July I, growing to about $200 million the next
year. The deficit will get a lillie big- ·:
ger every year after that, climbing tO:.
about $400 million a year by 2005 .' · ·
Continued on page 3

.-----In pursuit-----.

r

In purault of the 100M blalt8tblll 11 River
Velley's Jemie Grahein (lower left) and M.lgs'
Paul PUllins (lower right). Grahem Jolt control
of the ball In the fourth quertlf flf Tt•d8y
nlght'a Dlvlaion II sectionaL tourn-t flrtt·
round contest et South Web~· Though till

Mllreuders Cut In 111JC)Int deficit to one·lfl'tl!l
final minute, 1 7c-72 ~ ended their I'IUII
with 1 12·8 ltcoi'd. See story end lddltlollll
photos on P191 •• (OVP photo by G. Spencer
01bome)

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. =6ommentary
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Wednesday, February 21,1916

.,,February~~~ ~

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AccuWellhe... forecast for

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The .Daily Sentinel Lifting ·Iraq sanctions·would be·misguided .
'E.stiJ!Jfisfid in 1948

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111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Oenerel Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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.........,,.._,._...,.,,__,__lncludo_,.,._...,.Jtcw1onumIIOOfl
L...,. 101M etMtot,. MM:omt. Tn.y 1houltl N

300 word&amp; All,.,.

Oor. No uno/JioNd will lie pubi/MI«&lt;. Loflwo llhoukl lie In
· · cling,....., not pamWititN.

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jO.J. Simpson: a ~alking ,

llesson in Constitutional law

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: ay MICHAEL GARTNER
; AMES, Iowa- If 0 J. Sampson can't find other work- and !here as a
:lme or two on has resume that maght raase a personnel dtrector's eyebrows
•- perhaps he should consader teachmg.
: Consbtutlonal law might be a good subject
The
athlete-tumed-huckster-turned-broadcaster·turned-defendant·
;tumed·talk ·show caller and vadeo peddler as a sort of walking demonstra·
: tion of our Constitution - of the nghts al bestows upon a person and of the
:raghts it bestows upon a person's foes and chromclers.
: "I dtdn 't need to take the witness stand" an the tnal m whach he was
•charged wath murdering has ex-wife, Sampson says on the two-hour vadeo he
:as selling for $29.95 plus shappang. "I have a consutuuonal nght."
! He does He had a consmuuonal right ao be consadered annocem untal
;proven g4ilty, 100 -and, of course, he was never proven gualty So OJ
iSampson was not gualty nght up untal abc verdtct was rendered - and he
' n:maans so. A lot of people seem to be havmg a hard ume wath ahat faca But
12 JUrors (there's another constttutional rtght- a speedy and public traall&gt;y
JUry an the state m whach the cntne was commatted) quackly came to that
;conclusaon, and at's unchallengeable The Constatutlon says so. 0 J. Sampson
as not guilty. And he has a nght to trumpet that fact - to call talk shows, to
produce videos, to make ads That's all part of lhe Farsi Amendment.
. But !1COple don't have to hsten to those lalk shows, to buy those vadeos
er even .to run those ads. Those are nghls, too, and that last one - the right
to refuse ads- seems ao be masunderstood by Sampson and has vadeo producer. ,
' • Nq pne has a right to buy any ad m any pubhcatwn or on any broadcast
station ill Amenca. (Well, almost no one. Under some carcumstances, politlcal candidaaes do have that right.) The networks regularly refuse ads about
issues, many newspapers refuse to run ads for guns, and soa:ne magazines
refuse ads for producas as daverse as liquor or pample creams. Be 11 because
of pubhsher's wham or magazme's amage or andustry's guadehnes, any
newspaper or magazme or broadcaster is free to refuse ads.
, The Farsi Amendment gives you a nghl 10 say what you think, bul not a
right to buy space or tame to say at. You can say 11 on a street comer or run
it off your computer, but you can't force anyone else to buy tl or pr10itl or
iisten 10 at.
, , What's more, everyone else has a consbtutaonal nght to an optnaon even
aftpr a jury has rendered ats opanaon That's why at's quite all nght ~ amaz·
ing, perhaps, but quate all nght _ that there as on the Interne! somethang
called "The Unofftcaal OJ Sampson Boycott Page "
It exists, 11 says, "to provtde concerned andavaduals confirmed anfonna·
taon on corporataons or entltaes that may be contnbutang (an any fashaon) 10
~he welfare and lifestyle of OJ. Simpson." 11 says 11 has been accessed more
than 115 ,000 times in the past four months
(There is also an "Offacial Submtt Your 0 J. Joke Page- Post-Tnal Edt·
· lion., Example. "The Flonda Orange Growers Association has offered to
all of 0 I.'s legal balls on one condauon He has 10 change has name to
~ay
")
1
n~eeInternet folks have every right 10 refer 10 the tape marketers as
•"vadeo pamps" and 10 Qlake the generic statement that "murderers should
not be milhonaares " Bua can they call Srmpson a murderer? Some anterpreters of the Constitution say free speech only goes so far ,Just a5 Simpson
has no nght to buy time to speak, his'detracaors have no nght 10 hhel ham.
..; . And calling ham a murderer gets close He is 001 a murderer The law says
so and he can never be tried agaan m the ktlhng of Nacole Brown Simpson.
rotection against dabble jeopardy is in ahe Consutuuon _ m ahe Ftfth
A a1 Pd
1
. ~~~.re~~e Internet chatterers have a nght 10 call Sampson names, he, aoo,
has a right 10 stnke back. He can still accuse the pohce of plantmg evade nee,
he bas been domg an has talk-show calls, and he can assaal the medaa, as
ash
h bee d g
•
1 as
easo
n om .
, • The Sampson case bas' been., tragedy from begmmng 10 end Two people
~ dead, and others' laves are shattered. It's hard 10 fmd anythmg good an
any of this Bul maybe there has been a lesson or two. The tnalm the court·
- and the circus outsade the courtroom _ has !aught us a 101 about
r(JOm . th
t~aals and e press.
ette.~·s
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to the

tor

·Vote for the 'best qualified man'
;' .. Wath the pnmary electaon JUst four weeks away, at should be the earnest
cpncem of every v01er to, look ~arefully at the candad~tes of has or her party
: aji,ll VO\C f'?r the ones !"ost qualified and able to do a good job an the office
tfley ~'k.
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!; With that an mmd and' being 1\ lifelong Republican, I would like•to offer
opinaon on a man whollJ I consadered a friend for more than 30 years.
;.: I be!aeve that Bob Hartenbach'bas proven himself to be totally meffecaive
IIi; a county commissaoner. It is my feehng, and I think evadence suppons,
tbaa he is totally lacking in vasion or Cl!awactioii. One need only to read the
: ~c~nrs of commassioner meetmas in The Sentmel to see that he seldom
• • r?lkeil'any contribution,Jo tile prO&lt;:eedmgs.
1• However, in his first sax months as a commasstoner, headline news was
:lo~:e~~ week while he and Maninng Roush :were creating what I believe
· ~~ a;gfavy JOb for Rich Jones at the ,Welfare Department and later a htgh
fo~el jjlb for Roush at the ~nty highway departm~nt. I thank these two
1
~
· • , i did more ':" S?ur fwthful.Repubhcans on thear party than any l0c~l
,
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·00 ll8s an !IIY bfehi!IF· •·
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j l olfer ~.e.vidcnce the fact that a I three Repu~hcan.legaslatave cardadates
~ . ~,failed to till')' Meigs COunty in the 1994 General Election. Hartenbach's
,
'j.j:tiens, ai.I see it, have maldc indcpendents·(lut of Republicans who ,then
· 'VOle ~c -- 11 great payback for die many Republicans who have
~. 110 aOOd to him over the yean. '
•· a_uc, ilpoq·retleclion, It wu to bt e~pected. I think lie ~lei! like a SfOiled
~ 1fta&lt; his I!C(~ fqr ~Iff few.xears ago and then. disap~ ant9
• ~ pO!ilil:s in @all.il&gt;~ .-J.IIcputy slleriff'until be hild-a hefty
,. ~~ sifelj "'"koil11!flY· baf alm~t all of his itg~~~e'diaJe' fllll!iiY ·on
' ~~ riiiHitV pjiyrolllllld Jiie Mjbsc f111~ifta up 'lOllecting,lwhat I view as a
~;;~
~~~ (eCillor:, note: Salary and. benefits ovcrc a four
~~- t/tla ~who, in mY opinion, has ilone nOthinj coli-

,

1bat's what startles,' Americans
m power.
· here 11 the Oniled Natio\as, and the
The' reason
mternational staff of the U.N. Spe·
is simple: Sadcial Commission on IraQ, when they
d8J!l has always
hear Saddam defended py Russian
been a cross
and French daplomars: '!bey urge
between Stalin
hfting the UN. sancuons, sayang
and a Mafia
Sad!lam has complied wath enough
kangpan .
He
of the provisaons to allow him to sell
.uses brutal lac·
otl
.
bcs .. such as •
torture
and ..;;;,;.;,.;;;;;;;;;;.;;.;..,;.;;;;;..
Yet Saddam has not ehanged He
executions .. to keep suboti:linates in would use abe money to rebuild his
hne. And !hen, like a Godfather, he regame by retooling the mtlitary,
foroed them to "draw blood" wath us10g those weapons agamst has
ham .. puttmg them up to thetr necks people for greater control. And he
tn the same blood-lettmg that Sad· would dtstnbute the extra cash to has
dam as hated for.
crontes to keep them in lane wath
Thus, the secunty force that sur· perks and pnvaleges.
rounds Saddam conststs of thou·
For five years now, we have
sands of fellow cnmmals, related by revealed countless cases' in whach
mamage, village taes or polittcal Saddam has gaven the.li.N. commis•
party posataons, who cannot afford to sion what he describe~!~ "full, final
let Saddam gave an mch or waver and compleae disclosure'; .on Iraq's
Nor wall they hkely mount a coup, weapons programs. 'But each tame
smce they would no doubt ·be soon the lraqas have made that vow, U.S.
ousted by an angry Iraqi populace mtelhgence officials' have found
The fear Saddam has created new evadence of somethmg ahey
through repression as the glue that were hadmg,
:\&gt;
keeps such men 10 power.
The latest such dance came last

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summer, when a high-level lraqa •
defector began revealing new mfor· ~
mataon oia Iraq's nuclear program to :
the commassaon, and Iraq nashed out ;
wath thousands of pages of docu· ,
ments they had maraculously discov· :
ered. Once again, they said 11 was':
their full, final and complete dasclo· :
sure.
•
Don't beheve it The lraqas were :
forced to dasclose an ahe last year
that they produced much larger :
quanttltes of nerve and biologacal :
agents than they had prevaously :
admatted And some evadence has •
emerged that they are secretly trying :
to rebutld thear long-range mtssile :
program -· an vaolataon of U.N sane· :
lions.
!
Hmdstght to the conarary, the
way to celebrate the vactory five ;
years ago agatnst Iraq -· and do •
honor to the soldters who risked •
thetr laves theft ·- is to hang IOU{Ih :
on sanctions agwnst Saddam until •
eather he fully complie~ or leaves the :
scene, dead or alive:
JAck Andereon 1nd MlchMI ••
Blnateln are writers for United' '
F•ture Syndl~, Inc.

T()(I5H t{E',\S)

SIR •.

VIOLENT FilMS
AR5: OOIN6

WELL IN THE
POLLS.

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Bu~ha_nan,

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no matter the vote, W_
ill leave his mark

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
male fence along the Mexacan border to keep all.e·
Gannett Newa Service
gal ammagrants from commg here to take what
WASHINGTON- Pat Buchanan as the cham· Jobs remwn.
paon of socaal conservatasm, whach has become
Buchanan wants to end foreign aid and conthe mantra of the reiigaousjctavasas who dommate gressaonal pensaons to help balance the budg~t
the process by which the fepubiican presadentaal He's pledged to abolish the Depanment of Educ;~­
nommee-as chosen.
1
uon if he wms the presidency and restore prayer
This doesn't mean that Buchanan will overtake in school But his real goal is 10 turn the American
Sen. Bob Dole, the GOP frontrunner, but it does melung pot mao a Euro-Chrastian socaety.
'
mean that the dogma of social conservatives wall
Buchanan says he's waging a "cultural war fqr
greatly influence the ahinking of the ultimate win- the soul of Amenca " Has first shots were fired
ner of thts campaign.
yeats ago when as a young boy he used to hurl
While ahis realny is a victory for the mullahs snowballs at a bus. he called the "Boston Blac~:
of the r.eligaous nght, i( spells certai~ defeaa for ae" that earned black domestac workers through
the Republi~ who gets to face Democrat Bill has neighborhood. Now he throws bnckbats at mon wnh Bull Connor than Jack Kemp.
Clinton an the November p~sidential election
socaal programs meant to offer such people a bet·, want to mandate less government and more
Soba! conservatism is a good name for some ter hfe.
gaon an our lives Already the Republican party is
bad ideas.
All
of
thts
goes
over
well
wath
the
fnnge
ele-'
startang
to' steam under the pressure. 'Ibe rift
1
It's a euphemism for C11'ii,stian impenahsm and meniS of the Republican party that have a dtspro·, belw!=fn socaal and economic conservatives, once
social antoler~J~Ce
porttonate anfluence over the selecbon of a GO~ largely behind the scenes, has ruptured 1010 operr
What it acl}lally espouJCs is not religious free- presadentaal nomanee. It maght even proi\Cl VIew.
- dom, but rather ibli creation of a spintually intol· Buchanan anto the general election, but it won't'
Texas Sen. Phal Gramm, who dropped out o£
erant Chrisban state. II as the linear successor to get him into the White House.
·
' 1 the race for the GOP nomanation last week, tried'
tile biblq-thumping bagotty of Strona Thunnond
Instead, ' the socaal conservatism Buchanan to straddle thas growang dtvi~. But he didn ·~
' anll Oebrge WJ)Ia'ce.
champions wall rally vOlers in support of Clinton,r· spew forth enough asolationist and protec~o11ist
Buchanan is itS leading advoca,te. He navagates a social moderate. Just as li!M;ral extremists once,1 venom to satisfy most social conse,vatives. Steve:
1
the
adeologicll swamp between his opposataon to dictated selection of the Democ111bc party's pres- Forbes made no such effort and is ostracized by:
"W• . f:{,
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, .....~. rdJiie for&gt;"* tO' Jive Gary Di,ll a' lOOk lnd listen&gt;He's nan- affirmative acbon and his advocacy of a con~tu· 111dential nominees - and their general electio1 1 those who want to llse the Republican party as i.
:
' ~S (oil 1f.nealllldl in ~arch 19 pn!114fY f~ the ~publican notlli- tiona! amendment to prohibit abortion, as easily defeat- the social conservatives of the Republi· launching pad for cultural warfare.
as ElmOr Gantry went from sin to prayer. He can party are now nen:ising great tnfluence over"
.t~
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And although Bob Dole genuflects qn com-:
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whip~ audiem:ea into an evangelical fervor by
the GOP's nominating process.
mand foi social conservatives, Buchanan is theart
decrying trllde aprnents that he says send
They are not the mainstream of Republican favorite son, A fact thai pulls all Republican can.!
American jobs overseas~ and then he sates ~·[ conservatism, which as rooted in economac policy. didates farther to lhl: right - and lessens the:
appetite for revenge by proposing to build a 200- They're an ugly offshOO! who have more In com· • chance that any of them can unseat Clinton.

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IToledo I 43"· I
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W. VA

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William B. Pettit, 55, Pomeroy daed Monday Feb 19, 1996 at the Ohio
State Unavers.aty Hospilal, Columbus
~
Born May 20, 1940 1n Pomeroy&lt;/ he was the son of the late Joseph Pet·
bt and Avanell Maude Hayden He was a truck dnver for Sugar Run Mall,
Pomeroy, and a member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, Pomeroy. He was
also an Air,Force veteran.
He is survived by his wafe, Nancy Davadson Petbt of Pomeroy , one
daughter and son-tn-law, Chnsty and Kenneth Maham of Atlanta, Ga.; two
sons. Wilham J. and Steven M. Pettit, boah of Ogden, Ut.; one stepson, Jeff
South of Columbus; stx sasters and brothers- an-law. Bessie and Toin Dorst ·
of Middleport, Phyllis and Larry Hudnall of Middleport, Frances and Adam
Ol&lt;~¥er of Mason, WVa., Karen and Douglas Fletcher of N. Augusta, SC,
Tammy and Martin Woodard of Pomeroy, and Vanessa Crites of Mt vernon; four brothels and sisaers·in-law: James and Tamalene Pettit of Pomeroy,
Jlarry and Marie Petta of Hanford, W Va, Larry Pettit of Pomeroy, and
Harold Pettit of Rac10e; six grandchildren, and three step-grandchildren .
He was preceded tn death by a stepson, Timothy Davidson
Services will be held Thursday, I p.m , aa abe Ewang Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, wath Pastor Donald Barkman officaaung Bona! wall foll ow an
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshare
Calhng hours for famaly and fnends wall be held Wednesday, from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p m. at ahe funeral home.

Iva Pearl McKinney

Today's weather forecast
fog ...'Iben becommg partly cloudy 1
Highs in the low to mid.SOs.
Extended forecast
Thursct· ·aghLDry - Lows mid
30s to mid 40s.
Friday...F111r and warm. A chance
of ram late in the day Haghs in the
upper 50s to upper 60s
Saturday A chance of showers
Lows an the 40s and haghs in the 50s
Sunday . Dry Lows in the middle
30s to lower 40s and haghs an the
upper 40s to upper SOs

Iva Pearl McKinney, 72, of Albany. form erly of Dexter, dted Tuesday,
Feb. 20, 1996, at Edgewood Manor Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
Lucasville.
I
He was born m Maddleport, son of the laae Samuel Pearl and Ehza Rehec·
ca Santee McKinney
He is survtved by four ststers and three brothers-in·law, Emma Priu of
Akron, Mary and Jack Nelson of Bradner, Vtrgania and Warren Ra ggs of
Columbus and Janel and Roger Mowery of Shrevepon, La
He was preceded m dealh by sax brothers and three ststers
Servaces will be Fnday, II am al Bagony-Jordan Funeral Home, Albany,
wtth minaster Ball Carter.officaattng Bunal wall follow m Nelson Cemetery,
Dexter
Fnends may call 7-9 p m Thursday at the funeral home

Saralyn Rawa

.

Two men sentenced to pnson recently were transported Tuesday to
the Oraent Reception Center 10 begin servang sentences amposed an abe
Meags County Court of Common Pleas.
Transported were Jeffre y Coon, Portland, and Jerry Moore, Raci~
Coon was sentenced tci two years for the thefl of a vehicle from the
Btbbee Motor Co of Tuppers Platns. Moore was sentenced to terms
of two years and 18 months for the brealcing and entering of the Tom
Wolfe caban on Horse Cave Road.
Judge Fred W Crow III ordered both men to undergo Southeast Probataon Treatment Allematave Center evai uataons and also ordered post·
sentence mvesttgattons
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Burglary at feed store investigated

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Deputaes of the Meags County Shenffs Depanment are anvesttgallng
the burg_lary of Jeffers' Feed Store. Com Holl ow Road, Rutland. lale
Sunday or early Monday, according to Shenff James M. Soulsby.
Entry anto the busmess was made through a stde wmdow and severalllems were reported m1ssmg, Soulsby satd
Soulsby satd anyone wnh anfonnation concemmg abe cnme should'
contact the sheriffs offi ce.

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Pomeroy Police Clled one draver an a two-car accadent Tuesday after- :
noon near Big Bend Food land on West Mam Street, Pohce Chac f Ger- ;
aid Rougha satd
,
Accordmg io pohce repons, ahe acc•denl occurred at 3 32 p m when •
a 1992 Dodge Dynasty draven by LoiS R Bumgarner, 67, of New
Haven, W Va , was slruck m abe front end afaer &lt;he pulled mto traffi c :
from the Foodland parking lot
•
Bumgarner was struck by a 1988 Olds Cutlass. dr1ven by Patncaa A ;
Layney, 57, of New Haven Damage ao Bumgarner's veh1cle was IIghl, '
whale damage 10 Layney s vehacle was moderate
&gt;
Bumgarner was cued for faa lure 10 y•cld

Driver ticketed in two-vehicle crash
A Gallipolis man was caled for ass ured clear dtstance by lhe Gal·
IIa·Meags Posl of the Slate H1ghway Patrol follow mg a awo-ve h!cle
acctdenl Tuesday on Slate Rouae 7 al Hobson
,
.
Troopers sa ad Joseph A Chapman, 20, 1934 Eastern Ave . was north·
bound al II 25 am when he was unable to stop h1 s car m umc and ·
struck the rear of a p1ckup truck dn vcn by Dan n W Ye auger, 22, 27061
Lower SR 7, Cheshlfe
Yeauger had slopped to turn onto Sal asbury Town sh1p Road 345
(Story's Run) at lhe t1me of lhe crash. ac cordmg lo the repprl
Damage 10 Chapman 's car was severe.. and Ye auger's pa ckup was
moderately damaged

Word has been receaved here of the death of Saralyn Harmon Drenner
Rawa, 57, of Halltown, Penn., who died Tuesday, Feb 20, 1996, al
DOylestown Hospatal m Doylestown , Penn .
A former restdent of Pomeroy, she was born Aug 9, 1938, daughter of
Continued from page I
ahe late B1ll Harmon and Thelma 'Harmon Ashworth She was a regastered
more, monum enl to abe ~reateSI of
Dole gamel y went through ahe presidents
nurse al Doylestown Hospttal
motaons Tuesday ntghl of acceptmg
Survavmg as her husband, Frank Rawa, a daughter, Kimberly Saaats of
Alexander was headmg bac k to his
Mtddleport,
a
son,
Kevm
Drenner
of
Doylestown
,
Penn
,
and
a
brother,
Ball
more
New
Hampshare
defeat,
has
nat
ave Soulh , too, whil e Dole looked
one
•
thtrd.
Hts
usual
oouncy
optimiSm
was
solace m ahe Dakotas, m the
for
: By The Associated Pren
spms tropjcal moisture from Hawau. Hannon of Sunbury.
prames
that prod uced h1m
reduced
to
a
lame
mvuataon
lo
a
Dole
'Ibe West can expect more snow in
She was preceded m d.eath by a brother, Len valle Harmon
: Fog again may be a problem r6r
mauguratton
Mass of Chrasuan Bunal wall be Saturday, ·11.30 a.m at Our Lady of
: mueh or. Ohao olt Thursday morning the hagher elevabons A few thunder
Buchanan won m New Hampsha re
"Everybody who knows Bob Dole
, as cool northern breezes clash wath showers were expected to develop Sacred Heart Catholic Church an Hilltown.
by
fewer than I,400 votes of a rec ord
knows that ahmgs haven 't come easy
In heu of flowers, the famaly requests memonal donataons to the Amer·
; the unseasonably warm aar '{he fog thas afternoon an northern and central ·
203
,000 ballots cast Wnh 99 percent
for me," he told a subdued crowd of
: thas morning reduced vasibahties to a Cahfomaa, and some of them may be acan Breast Cancer Soctely at 43'S Ma10 Street, Doylesaown. PA 18901
of
precmcts
counted, Buchanan had
supporters "We 're not gomg lo g1vc
! quaner of a mile and caused dnvmg strong with gusty wands and small
Whltmare Funeral Home, Hallaown, as tn charge of arrangements
27
percenl,
to
26 percent for Dole and
up "
; problems m northern Ohao
haal.
Dole had often satd dunng the lasl 23 percen t fo r Alexander
Lows tontght will be 35-40, the
Wands should be gusty across the
week
ahat the wmner m New HampNauonal Weather Service saad
Great Basm ahead of a disturbance
Magazme publisher Saeve Forbes
Skies wall clear from the west on droppmg down from the Pact fie
ContinueCI from page I
raase the state gasoline tax or ratse shlfe would get lhe nomm auon
Buchanan remmded ham of that when was humbl ed by a dtstana founh-placc
; Thursday and the northerly wands wall Northwest. Gusts above 50 mph were
Some of the•proJecas whach could veh1cle registrati on fees to pay for
the voaes came m Tuesday mgha
ftn ash. wath I2 percena Forbd
: keep temperatures 10 the 40s and low passable.
be killed are a $14 mall ton wadening road s
'
Today,
Buchanan
tpok
ahe
figha
planned
to press on but assocaatcs
: 50s
Scattered areas of rain should and repavmg of 1·90 an Lake CoonBut even af ODOT find s a way to
South
and
10
ahe
Dakotas.
where
he
he
was
reassessmg hiS unusual
saad
; The rec9rd·htgh temperature for Ianger m the Northeast, and m the ty, a $28 maiiion bypass around the ancrease revenues by $100 mdhon a
planned
to
scope
out
Moun!
Rushca
ndadacy
: lhts date at the CQI11111bus weather sta· mad· and south-Atlanbc states. Some caty of Medina for OhiO 57 and Ohto , year, that stall won't solve a longer·
• taon was 69 degrees m 1930 whale the saronger afternoon' thunderstorms 162, a $30 malhon wadenang of J. 77 term problem that threaaens abe bud• record low was 81:1elow zero an 1885. were posstble in the Carolinas.
an Summat County and a $6 mallion get decayang bndges and roads
: Sunset tontght wall be at 6: 14 p.m - · More record htghs were expected wadentng of Ohto 43 an Portage
Accordang 10 Procaor, ODOT curand sunnse Thursday at 7 16 a.m.
across th~ nabBn 's madsection aoday, County
renaly spends about $450 niUh on a
Prices from The Producers
COLUMBUS (AP) - lndaana·
Across the nation
wath tem)ll:llltures an the upper 70s
Gordon D Proctor•• ODOT s year fixmg bradges and repavmg Oh10 darect hog praces at sclccacd Livestock Association :
It was rammg an Los A,geles and lower 80s an the central Plaans deputy darector of plannmg, sa1d the roads "Thai's nol enough," he sa1d
Caule I 00 to 2 00 lower
buymg potnls Wednesday by ahc
. aoday, addtng to an earlier downpour Temperatures could approach I00 agency wasn 't try10g to deceavc any Paul C Mtf&lt;ud, lhe lop aade to US Departmenl of Agnculture Mar·
Slaughter steers ch01ce 58 00thai dumped more ahan 2 mcnes of degrees an the lower Rao Grande Val· one wath tis proJeCI hst.
Gov George Voinovach, saad the ket News
62 00. select 54 00-59 00
ram. San Francasco and Spokane , ley.
"We really do anltctpate more rev- governor wa&lt; lobbymg hard m WashSla ug hter he 1fers ~ ch01 cc 58 oo.
Barrows
and
g1lts
50
cents
lo
. Wash., were also hat with predawn
The forecasa called for readmgs in enue from some source.'' Proctor mgton lo persuade Congress lo free mostly I 00 lower. demand li ght lo 62 00 sclccl 53 00-S R00
• showers.
the 80s m Flonda, pans of ahe south satd
up about $115 m1lhon a year for Oh1o moderate on a moderate supply
Cows steady to 2 00 lowc r,•a:ll
Much cf theE' :' Coast was blan· and abe desert Southwest II could lop
Legaslators have been reluctanllo !hat as now &lt;allmg 10 lhe h1ghway trust
cow&lt;
41 75 an d down
US 1· 3, 230-260 lbs 45 50·
keted with an early morning fog as 40 an the Northeast, Madwesa and deal wnh ODOT's fundang problem. fund Bua there 1s hesalallon ao release
Bulls
steady to 2 00 lower, alj
47 00, a few 45 00 and 47 50, planls
' mdd weather contmued to descend on Pacific Northwesa.
Lasa year, House Speaker Jo Ann federal money that may be needed to 46 50-48 00, a few 48 50
hulls
45
25
and down
.
the region
'Ibe nauon 'shot spoa Tuesday was Davadson led opposition ao a plan IQ reduce the defic11
Ve al calves 8 00 h1ghger, cho1ce
US 2-3. 230-260 lbs 41 00·
The forecast for Southern Cali for- Laredo, Texas, aa 99 degrees The
ISO
00 and down
45
50
• ma called for another 2 to 4 inches of coldesa spoa was Ely, Mann , at 8
Sheep
and lambs steady 10 50
Sows
unev
enly
steady
, ram today as a Pacific Ocean storm degrees below zero.
US 1-3. 300 500 lbs 29 00- h1gher, ch01ce wools ~0 00-90 50,
cho1cc chp&lt;90 25 and down , feeder
33.00, 500-650 lbs 33 00 35 50
lamb &lt; 89 00 and down , age d shcCjJ
Boar&lt; 25 00 26 50
CINCINNATI (AP) - Prosecu- Sanders' trtal m Hamallon County
37
50 and down
.
Estimated reccapas 4 i ,000
wrs say mmaae Carlos Sanders Common Pleas Court
planned and led ahe 1993 not m
Sanders. 33. could be sentenced ao
which 10 people d1cd al Ohto's max - dealh af convacacd He has been on tn FRESH VEGETABLES
amum·secunty pnson The defen&lt;e al smce Jan 16 on 15'charges
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Senate ed to let the bill take effeca hefore says the stale as makmg Sanders a
He IS charged wath aggravaacd
Am Ele Power ....................... 43\
commauee amended a ball on speed March 3, abe deadline for passage scapegoat
murder m the slaymg of Robert ValAkzo ... ......... ...........................57
Ashland Oil. .................... ...38Yo
limns to restore an emergency clause under a federal law ahaa permits
landmgham,
ahe
only
pmon
guard
Lawyers for both sades were lo
AT&amp;T ..••••......•••.•.••...•••••••. .... .• 661.
ao let the proposal take effect before states to set thear own highway close thetr presentallons w11h final kallcd durmg the 11-day nol al abe
Bank
One ......................... ..... 34~
a federal deadhne
speeds.
arguments today to ahe JUry hearang Souahem 0hlo C'orrectlonal Facalny
Bob Evans .............................. 16
The commmee met Tuesday to
Senaae Transportation Chaarman
ncar Luca&lt;valle
Borg·Wamer ........................32l.
' yoae oil the House ball thai would Scou Oelslager, R.Canton, saad the
Champion lnd .... ...................16\
' maantaan currcoa speed hmlls on full Senate will vole aoday on the ball
Charming Shop ..................... 3'1.
City Holding .................... .... .... 24
some antcrslalc haghways and raase If approved, the amended ball would
Federal Mogul. ..................... 18~
Umts of the Meags County Emer· saructure fire at Kevin Fmk resadence.
go back 10 ahe House for another vote.
· hmtts on others
Gannett
............................ ....66~
The House versaon, pasSCII last gency Medacal Servace recorded eaghl no tn)Urtes, Mtddleport VFD assasted ,
The House removed an emerGoodyear T&amp;R ......................48Y
.
8.52 am , Overbrook Nursang
gency clause last week that the com- week, would reaain exastang speed calls for assastance Tuesday mcludmg
K-mart ............................ ......... 7~
mauee reslored The clause was need· limns bua allow ahe Ohio Department two transfer calls. Units respondang Center, Beulah Whue. Veaerans
Lands End ............................. 14 ~.
Memonal Hospital
Limited Inc ..............................17
of Transportalaon to study linuted· ancluded:
Peoples Bancorp. .................. 23
access haghways where speeds maght
Ohio
Valley Bank .................... 39
RACINE
MIDDLEPORT
from 55 mph to 65 mph
The Dally Sentinel ancrcase
One
Valley
....................... ...... 32 ~
9 06 a.m , volunteer fire depan6 49 p m , Ash Sareea, Flora GabIn · the amended ball, four-lane
Rockwell
..............................
59'1.
(USPS 213-Mtl)
ment to Fourth Streel, gas odor at
diVIded pnmary haghways would be son, Pleasant Valley Hospnal;
Robbins &amp; Myers ..................29'1.
11 ·08 p m , North Second Streel Doroahy Johnson resadence
added to the study The legaslataon
hbh&amp;hed em')' afternoon. Moaday throuah
Royal Dutch/Shell .............. 138'4
Fnd.Dy. I I I Court SL. Pomeroy. Otuo. by the
Rusty
Smtth, lreaaed at the scene
would make at passable for the speed
Shoney's Inc ...........................&amp;'!.
Oh•o Valley Pllbl1shinJ CompanyKlanneu Co ,
RUTLAND
Star Bank .............................. 64'1.
II nut to go up on all ODOT-controlled
Po...,.y, Ohio 4l769. Pb. 992-lll6 Second
Wendy
lnt'l ................... ......... 18'o
9 45 am ., Landaker Road , Varell\\~ poJlage pud at Pormroy Ohm
haghways consadered part of the POMEROY
Worthington
Ind ..................... 21
12:14 am., volunteer fire depart· ganaa Jordan, Holzer Medtcal Center
national highway system, addang
Mr~nbtr : 1be Auociared Prtu' mnd 1he Oh1o
ment ' and squad to Lincoln Hall,
1,300 males of haghway to ahe bill.
Newspaper 1tuoc•Dllon.
Stock reports are the 10:30
The
amended
ball
would
increase
a.m.
quotes provided by Advest
POSTMASTIRI Seod _ ,, &lt;OnOCIJOftl 10
of Gallipolis.
the amount ,of tame ODOT would
The .Da•ly Sentinel. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,
()hJ045769 I
have to stud1,' the highways to 360
days,
up from 120 days an the origiSUBSCIIIPriON IIAII'JI4
p.m m the French 5UU t&lt;oom at HoJz.
By Canin' or Motor .._.e
nal version. It also would permit the Blood pressure clink set
Medtcai Center an Gallipolis A
er
One Week. • • • . . . ... . ....... Sl 00
The Hamsonvalle Senaor Catazens
department ao reaurn the speed limit
One Mondl .. . .. ... •
........S81V
nutnllon
demonstratiOn wall be gaven
to SS mph' if population growth Club wall hold a blood pressure clan·
One Year
• •$104 00
by
Nulnllon
Servaces All mvated
acTuesday, !0:30a.m. to 12 30pm
necessitates slower speeds.
SINGLE Cor.\' fRJCI
Opintons daffer about what would wtth danner and mee11ng to follow
Doily
• •'·
• •• 35 Ccnu
hap)len if the state dad not establish its Putlhc invated to attend screenmg.
Sul&gt;l&lt;rillers .0. ~., i!ri 1111 ~ ~
own speed hrnats for all its hishways.
~mit in lifVIIICC dinld to 'fiae Dilly Senti~tl
Speeill senlca staled
on a three, 11x or I:z monlh billa Credit wtll be
Vomovich wanrs to koep speed
The Rutland Church of God wall
con~«-lintits at current levels, wtth some hold a special service Saturday, 7 p.m
No tllbsc:riptJOft by maU ptrnlted 1ft lftU
limited-exceptions.
with guest speaker Scott Kazee and
wtJele home carrier JlnJCe II tvaiJable
special singing by Remnant. All welcome.

lMore fog sched~led

Buchanan upset winner. ..

lThursday morning

Today's livestock report

·Ohio Senat'e to vote on
-amended ,highway bill ·

Sanders could get death penalty
if convicted on riot charges

Stocks

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls

Meigs announcements

NEW I·SIZE WNITE

POTATOES

2 LIS. 99c

•
•

:
•
,

&gt;

;

Police ticket driver in accident

-·-·-

om s

of

- william B. Pettit

•

Meigs men bt}gin prison sentences

State road projects....

Basic skills test does not discriminate

~':"'"::"::'::::==========
ByQJt.AIIph Perklnhs I b
h ld
20 :
than test baas .. they are pennatted to take the test
. n aarport s utt e us can o , at most,
as many tames as necessary to achaeve a passmg
passengers per lnp. What IS the least number of \Jii'(;
grade
lnps to town that the bus must make 10 transport
So gaven ahe sampiicaty of the test (agam, the
90 passengers from the auport to town?
average hagh school student should pass at), and
(a) 3-1/2, (b) 4, (c) 4-112, (d) 5, (c) 6.
the opportumty to take at repeatedly. those who
Thts as an example o~ the kind of qu~suon that
to make ahe grade probably are not cut oullo
appears on the Caiifomaa Bas~c Education Skills
be teachang an the classroom.
Test (CBEST), whach the state s aspmng teachers
That's not lo say that they cannot play some
are requared to pass be~ore they are licensed to
supportang role m the schools .. whatever that
hold down a classroom JOb.
may he -- but parents m California deserve lo
Thts month, a federal dtslnct court tn ~an
have leachers who can pass a sample skalls tesl
Franctsco bega_n heanng_ testa'!'ony an a massave
mstructing thetr ktds
employment dascnmanataon sun -· heheved to be
That's the way Lawrence Ashe sees 11. He's abe
the nation's largest ever .. anvolvang Haspamc,
Atlanta-based auorney who as dcfendmg abe Calbl~ck and Asaan·Amencans who have faaled the
afornaa skills aest in federal court. The fact that so
skills test. ~awyers representing the tens of thou·
many mmoritacs faa I ahe skalls tcsl the firsa ume
sands o~ manorny teacher candadates claam that
around does not mean thai the aest is culturally
the aesaas baased agaanst non·whnes
btased, he argues. Rather, "it as an indtclmcna on
Th~ pn ma fffacte ev.'dence of ahas baas, the @~!;=j!!;;!l;!!::::::.~~===~=~ the quality of education avaalable ao racial
mtno~ly P1aa~u s say, as lhe f~caahal 80 percent .
minorities in thas country."
of white applicants pass Ihe skalls tesl on _ahe first try, compared to 53 per·
The mtnority teachang candidaaes challengmg Cahfornaa's hasic skalls
cent of Astan·Amertcans, 49 percenl of·Haspamcs and 38 percent of blacks. tesa wanl the federal court 10 elimmate the skills acsl allogcthcr or, at the very
But !has samply as a fallacy Because the baste skills test docs not yaeld leasl, order ahe stale ao make abc aesl easier and lower abe passang score
equal results among the vanous racaal groups does not mean aha! the lest
But, 10 Ashe's mind, California's mmonty populataon should be msulted
atself as dascrammatory. Indeed, to the extent the test as btased, that baas as by that prospect "l:lhmk at as raCISt and o!Tensave," he says, "to argue that
agwnst teacher candadates whose readtng, wntang and math skalls are below racaal mmontaes ca~ot acquare the skalls to pass CBEST."
the level of the average hagh ~hool sophomore
It is unfortunate1 at more black, Haspamc and Asaan aeachmgcandtdates
Moreover, the state Commasston on Teacher Credentaaiing, whach admm- do not pass lhe state's basac skalls test the firs! tame around. But at wall he
asters the basac skalls test, as extremely Iemen! 10 applicants of all races when even more unfortunate tf the baste skalls test as thrown out as ractally dasII comes to tak10g and ~ssang the ltcensmg exam.
cnmmatory and suddenly, tens of thousands of teacher candadates are given
On abe read10g secuon, for ansaance, an applicant need only correctly licenses even though they have faaled to measure up to the competency levanswer 28 of 40 questions On ahe maah section, only 29 of 40 math ques· els of those teachers who have actually passed the skills tesl
!tons What that means IS !hal an aspmng aeacbercan blow one of every four
Most of these newly hcensed, lest-failing teachers no doubt would end up
readmg and math questions and sull gel a passang score on those secuons aeachang minoriay kads So, perversely, tn ahas misbegotten effort to enlarge
So one needn 't be a gemus to pass the test
the ranks of minority teachers, regardless of thear skills levels, manonty stuAlso, although half of the manoraty applicants faal the test the first tame denrs would be subject to a lower quahty of anstruction than that recetved by
around .. for reasons that probably have more to do wath thetr preparataon whites.

MICH

: Southeaslem Ohio
Tooay.. .Areas of low clouds and
dense fog into mad morning Other. wase becoming mostly cloudy with a
chance of a shower dunng the after·
• noon Htgh an the upper 50s to low·
: er 60s Southwest wands 5 to I0 mph.
: Chance of ram 30 percent.
: Tontght .Mostly cloudy wath a
1 chance of showers. Low In the Jow to
[ mad 40s. Laght northwesl wmds.
: Chance of ram 30 pen:ent.
Thursday. .Early
morn~ng

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Local News in Brief:

'Ilaursday, Feb. 22

••
•

UNITED NATIONS - Fave-years after the Gulf War, it's easy to
understand why Saddam Hussein is
sttll m power and Gedrge Bush as
not
·
But what seems ao truly defy
logtc as what's happenmg behind the
scenes at the Unned Nauons Russaan, French and other daplomats are
arguing for a liftmg of sanctabns
1\SWRSt Saddam Revasaonasm about
the ruthless naler of Iraq, however, as
not confined to the Umted Nataons.
Some mihtary analysts and Bush
admtnastrataon cntacs have argued
ahat ahe alhed mahtary force should
have pursued the Iraqas all the way
ao Baghdad, found Saddam Hussetn
and killed him Even President Bush
hamself appeared 10 rethmk at a btl m
an intervtew wath Davad Frost
"I mascalculated," Bush confessed "!thought he'd (Saddam) be
gone" after losmg the war.
But knowledgeable mthtary,
tntelligence and Maddie East experts
have confinned to us that Bush's
decasaon was essentaally correct.
Wtlhout 10tolhgence on where Sad·
darn was hidmg, coahbon forces
would ha~e become mvolved m a
patched urban battle. Even non-supporters of Saddam , mcludmg
women and chtldren, would have
come out lo defend thear capaaal
from foreagn mvasaon
Monday mornmg quarterbacks
convemently forget that the reason
coalitton troops did noa have to du~e
it out w1th Iraqa civalians an souahern
Iraq as because the region as domt·
nated by anu-Saddam Shane lraqas
Those people welcomed the
mvaders with open arms as fellow
enemaes of Saddam. The Sunna
Mushm mBJortty an central Iraq,
who give Saddarn has power base,
would have welcomed the mtruders
watt! a dafferent kmd of arms ..
weapons.
The great irony as ahat Bush won
the war, but anattentaveness to
domesttc pocketbook assues cost
, him the prestdency a year later Sad·
dam lost the war, and as responsible
for the physacal and econom1c dev·
astatton of has country, bul he as stall

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

m...~~~~~~~~~~======~==a.mm~==~~~==~==~==~~~~~~~~~~~~======-=m.~~~~~--~~~~~==~~===-~

I

'

...

.

Hospital news

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Suppon group to meet
TUESDAY
The Heanline Education and Inter·
Adnussions· Beulah White, Midacaion Group of Holzer (Cardiac
dleport.
Support Group) w~l! -~t Sunday, 2
Dtscharges: None.

••••part Dept. Store

'OnlhtT" llctllroit 1*-3148

�-

Sports

fednesday, February 21, 1998

The DailY Sentinel
RiverValley(9-12) ...... :........ .............. .12
Meigs'(l2-9).........................................12

IS
8

26~
36~

2'1
16

River Valley Raiders
Player
.
~
l:Jll,
Greg.James .........................................9-15 . 0-1
Bruce Ward ...................... ., ................ 8-14
0-1
Jamie Graham .................. :...................4-7
0-1
Joey James ................:... .....................4-1 0
0-0
Matt Toler ............................................0·1
0-0
Totals
25-47
0-3

.Massachusetts and Ke~tucky · get wins
By The Atsocllltecl PrMa
Seven of the 26 viciOries in Massachusetts' perfect season have been
by six points or less. Two or the close
games have been with Rhode Island,
which doesn't mean a whole lot to
the Rams.
" I don't see any real satisfaction
in that ,'~ Rhode Island coach AI
Skinner said Tuesday night after the
74-69 loss to the toP-ranked Minutemen. "This team is too good for
moral victories. I'm happy with the
way we'vel played, but we're not
walking out of ~ locker room
pleased that we were close."
In fact, the Rams (15-9, 7-6
Atlantic 10) were one point closer
than their earlier meeting with Massachusetts (26-0, 14-0), one of the
four games junior center Marcus
Camby of the Minutemen missed
after mysteriously collapsing•
Camby was highly visible in the
rematch at the Providence Civic
Center with 25 points, 13 rebounds
and five blocks.
"If he isn't on the floor, Rhode
Island wins," Massachusetts coach
John Calipari said. "Marcus didn't
play paniculilrly well and he gets 2S
:~d 13. I guess -that says how good
a player he really is."
It was more than just Camby,
however, as guard Carmelo Travieso
redeemed himself and clinched the
win, all in the final 10 seconds.
Preston Murphy 's three-pointer
with II seconds left brought Rhode
Island to a 72-69 deficit. Travieso
was fouled and had a chance to put
the game away, hut missed the front
end or a one-and-one.
The Ranis called timeout with
5.1 seconds left. The first inbound
attempt was tipped out of bounds.
Travieso stole the next attempt and
went in for the dunk that sealed the
game.

74
72

.11 n:
-13

&amp;

30
21
12
10

5-7
4-5
2-2
1-2
24-30

I

,.

74

Tot.ltl FG- 25-~ (50%)
Rebouads- 33 (Ward 14)
Assists- 12 (Graham 7)
Steals- 7 (Graham 3) '
Tumo\'en- 12
Fouls-15
Fouled out- Toler

~·-·Melp
Man1uders

&amp;tla

Player

Travis AbboU .............................. :........6-9
Paul PUllins .. :....................................... 4-9 '
Nick Haning ......................................... 2-4
Brent Hanson .......................................0-0
Cass Cleland ........................................5·6
Brad Whitlatch ..................................... l-5
Donald Yost .............................. ...........0-3
Totals
18-36

n:

J:aJ.

0-0
2-5
3-6
3-6
0-0
0-2
0-0
8-19

. lla,

4-4
2-2
2-2
3-4
1-4
0-0
0-0

16
16
15
12
II
2
0
72

12-16

Total FG- 26-55 (47.3%)
Rebounds- 19 (Haning 5, Abhott4)
Assists- 14 (Cleland, Haning &amp; Pullins 3 each)
Steals- 3 (Pullins 2) ·
Tumoven-10
Fouls-20

. BASELINI; SHOT- Meigs center Travis Abbott (00) flrea the bue. CLELAND SHOOTS -Meigs forward Cal8 Cleland (wearing light
llrie jumper In front of an unldentHied River Valley player during jersey) bikes the ln·th..,alnt shot while being surrounded by River
Tuesday night'!! Division II sectional openar In South Webster. Valley'• Jamie Graham (15), Joey James (23) and Bruce Ward (far
·Though Abbott and fellow senior Paul Pullins had 16-polnt effortB, right) during the third quarter of Tueaday nlght'a Division II netlonal
:the Marauders ended their aeason with a 74-72lo1B. (Sentinel pho- . opener at South Webster High School. Cleland finished his school·
:to by Dave Harris)
. boy ca.reer with 11 points. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

a

a

In Division II boys'·South Webster sectional,

River Valley weathers Meigs rally and wi·ns-74-72 :

'
'

By G. SI'ENCER OSBORNE
an eight-point lead with 2:38 left in
OVP Staff Writer
the opening act
·
But Meigs, which scored the last
·River Wiley senior guard Greg
James sank his last four free throws eight points or the frame, saw point
in · the last 30 seconds of Tuesday guard Paul Pullins sink an in-the-lane
night's Division II boys' sectional jumper that beat the buzzer and tied
baskC\ball tournament opener at the game at 12.
South Webster High School, where
In the second quaner, the Raiders
ihe Raiders outlasted the Meigs denied M~igs second and third shots
Marauders' 36-point riot in the founh while turning a 7-for-13 shooting
quaner to win 74-72.
effon in the paint. That fueled their9The decision accomplished t~ fol- 2 run in the period's last four minutes
lowing for the Carl Wolfe-led that gave them a 27-~0 lead at halfRaiders: ·
iime.
• The Raiders earned a return trip
Greg James' 13 first-half points
to the mid-Scioto County coun Sat· came mostly' from quickness that
urday at 6:30 p.m., when they wi)l caught the defending Marauders a
face South Point for the bracket #I second late and a step behind. Teamtitle.
mate Bruce Ward had 10 before
• The Raiders claimed a 3-2 win in intermission, four more than his
their season series with the Maraud- counterpart, Travis Abbott. Abbott got
ers for the second straight year.
· · rour of those six second-quarter
• The Raiders tallied their sixth points on fadeaway jumpers.
victory in eight meetings with Meigs.
River Valley needed its 9-for-14
A tie-cracking layup from senior field-goal shooting in the third quarpoint guard Jamie Graham with 5:39 ter. Why? In that frame, the Maraudleft in the fir st quarter was the start of ers, who turned in a 9-for-24 effort
the Raiders· I0-2 run that gave them from the field in the first half, cleaned

.,

I,

I

\j

•
· their sights and nailed seven out of 15 stripe to go ahead 68-57 with 51.6 River Valley led 70-67 at that point. .
from the field.
seconds left.
.
With 20.2 secol\ds left, Meigs
If tllat wasn't a good enough reaThen the Marauders rebelied.'
f()rward Cass Clelaljjl, at the line for
son, Marauder forward Brent Hanson
"We were playing more timid," the two-shot bonus l\ecause of Matt
sank two three-point shots in the peri- said Graham, who saw his club' held Toler's founh.foul, 'missed both free
od. The second of those cut River Val- to a game-low seven field-goal throws. But 1.7 seconds later; Toler
ley's lead to 35-34 with 4:361eft.
attempts in tbe founh quaner.
fouled out after blocking Haning's
But the Raiders went on an 11-&lt;1
With 44 seconds left, Nicl( Han- ' shot attempt
run after Hanson's second trey and ing, the Marauders' 6-foot-2, 20llijaning made both foul shots, and
saw Graham put in a buzzer-beating pojlnd junior forward whose first Meigs had River Valley's lead cut to
layup to give them their second 12- three-pointer from the right wing a 70-69 margin.
point lead of the night
(7: 12) cut the Raiders' lead to 4~-39,
With 17.3 seconds left, Brad Whit·
This was a quarter that saw River hit a three-pointer from the same spot. latch's second foul sent Greg James
Valley continue its pursuit of taking The Raiders' lead, Which shrank to a to the line. He made both foul shots,
the ball into the paint. To th~t point, 68-60 margin, never ~gain ex.pahded and River Valley led 72-69.
the Ra1ders had only taken s1x shots into double-digit temtory.
On the Marauders' nex.t downcoun
outs1de the lane.
Abbott's two free tluows (:37) and trip, Whitlatch missl;d a three-point
Ward, who had seven points to Hanson's left-wing trey (:32). gave attempt from the right wing. In the
lead all marksmen,in the frame, saw Meigs five more unanswered points scramble ·for the rebound, Meigs got ·
Graham and teammates Greg and • before' River Valley, ahead 68-65 at the ball bnck, o~ly to lose it after its
Joey James join AbbOtt (four each) this point, got a foul shot from (Jreg timeout when Pullins stepped on the
and Hanson (six) as repeat scorers.
James to lead by four with 28 seconds ibaseline with 7.2 seconds left
Prime lime: River Valley's lead left.
i With 6.2 seconds left, Whitlatch's
fluctuated between seven and 12
After Pullins got his layup to fall third foul sent Greg )ames to the charpoints for more than seven minutes. with 20.8 seconds left, his founh foul ity stripe. He ml!de both free throws,
However, the Marauders' constant put Greg James on the line with no and River Valley leil74-69.
fouling put the Raiders in a position more seconds off the clock. He made
"!thought no one was in the gym,"
to sink 12 out of their first 16 a[ the. the first shot but missed the second.

said Greg James of the mental exer- _
cise he used to sink six out his last ::
eight free throws. All of his foul shots ;
\lfere taken in the final act.
·~
However, the Marauders had the · S
last word when Pullins, with two sec- •
onds lefi, nailed a trey from the left :
wing that created the final score.
In the last period, River Valley
made 18 out of 24 fQul shots. The
Marauders' 10-for-14 showing at the
line in that period included a 4-for-6
effon in the last minute .

,I
If

The other two schools were
· By The Associated Press
Zanesville, Orrville, Archbold and Mogadore, which won the Class A
Van .Wert Lincolnview each won its football poll title in 1979 and was No.
first Associated Press boys high I in the Class A basketball rankings
school state basketball poll champi- in 1980; and St. Henry. which was
onship on Monday. But Orrville also topo in the 1990 Division V football
poll and also the 1991 Division IV
wou a piece of history.
basketball
ratings.
Orrville became only the third
St.
Henry.
however, is the only
school ever to win a boys basketball
poll title in the same scholastic year school to ever follow both poll titles
tbat it won a football rankmgs crown. with state championships.

None of the last 16 poll champions have gone on to win a championship and only two of the last 28
have proved they were No. I in the
state finals.
Zanesville and Orrville won state
championships last March at St. John
Arena in Columbus.
Zanesville, 20-0 on the season.
won the Division I crown behind the
play of stars such as Edwin Young,

Seth Manin and Cedric Hall. But
they could easily have cndc&lt;,l up out
of the No. I spot. The Blue Devils
had to overcome a 13-point deficit
with five minutes remaining to beat
Wheeling (W.Va.) Park 87-76 last
week in double overtime.
The next two teams behind
Zanesville have been perfect so far
this season: Cleveland Collinwood
and Cincinnati Woodward. The only
loss for fourth-ranked East Liverpool.

was to Zanesville.
Orrville is led by standouts
Renauld Ray and Marcel Denson,
who were also All-Ohioans .on the
poll champion football team. The Red
Riders wqn the Division Ill state bas:.
ketLall title gam~ last March, but
were behind defending Di~ision II
state champion Cleveland Villa
Angela-St. Joseph in the initial poll.
After a VASJ loss, OrrVille took over
and held it the rest of the way, even

Harper leads Bu.lls to 102-76 win over .Ca~aliers

.
By MIKE NADEl:
CHICAGO (AP) - Remember
Ron Harper? •
The Cleveland Cavaliers didn't,
so their eight-game winning streak is ,
history.
.
Harper, once a big scorer but now
~ bit player on a team that features
Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen.
outshined the stars Tuesday night
and led the Chicago Bulls to a 10276 victory over the Cavaliers.
"Sometimes," Cleveland's Dan·ny ferry said, "you can·concentrate
on Jordan .and Pippen too much and
it .frees·up somebody else."
•
: , That somebody is usually Toni
· K.ukoo "or Steve Ketr or Luc Long·
tey,~ho waS activated from the dis·

I

·•
'!

\
abled list before the game after sit- •
ling out nine games with a sprained
left knee. lt'sjust about never Harper, who has had to totally alter his
game the last two seasons.
· " I know I've got the skills to
score, but I don't have to score for
this team," said Harper, who had a
season-high 22 points - almost
triple his 7.4-point average. "There
is not~ing I have to prove to anybody.''
Harper's 10-of-14 shooting. six
·rebounds and four steals helped
Chicago overcome bad games by
Jordan and Pippen, who had 14
points apiece just one game after
combining for 84 pointS. Seven players had at least eight points for the

'
Bulls, who are 47-5 overall, 24-0 at
home and have a 31-game home
winning streak dating back to last
season.
"Ron ended .up being the guy
~hey were less concerned with,"
Bulls cpach Phil Jackson said. "Ron
had some open areas to drive to ...
that ended up being easy baskets.
Once you get rolling, things stan
happening. And it did for Ron
tonight."
Harper avera2 ed 19.3 POints in
eight NBA seasons with Cleveland
and the Los Angeles Clippers before
coming to the Bulls as a megabucks
free agent in 1994. He was expected
to hell' fans forget Jordan, who had
retired a year earlier. But Harper

l
. '
averaged only 6.9 poinl.§last sea$on Cleveland's 30. The Cavaliers, who
and was benched after Jordan calne . shot 48 percent during their winning
out of retirement in March.
streak, made only 40 percent against
"After the season, Phil said, the Bulls. Even Terrell Brandon
'What is your roleT" Harper said. "I struggled despite scoring 21 points,
thoughtand said, 'To play along~ide committing four turnovers and miss·
MJ, free ·him up, be a good defensive ing several easy shots.
guard .and play wit)l two guys Who
"We had a chance. hanging on in
can score. '
the first half; but we missed shots
"I had no problem. having that · and had a number or defensive
role. I think I've handled it very ~ell . breakdowns," Oeveland coach Mike
I know guys who would cuss, fuss, Fratello said. "They played a terrifcause problems.! just go out arid ic second half. And we.didn't.
play and have fun."
,
"We just need to try and pick it
Harper's performance was just
one thing that hun his former ream. . up where we were before this game.
. Dennis Rodman had 15 rebou~ This one is over. We can't do any·
for the Bulls, who had 53 boafds to thing about it."

·Sanders
to
skip
baseball
in
1996
..
.

By DENNE H. FREEMAN

; DALLAS (1\.PJ- Deion Sanders

took his first vacation and decided he
Jik!'il it'so m.uch 'hC was going to drop
his aummer.jpb.
·,
·
:We had a si;eat vacation trip to
FJdiicla, somet!rinJ we Iiiii! ~wr ·
done before, and'it helped me deCide
!~needed 10 .~ around my f~lly
··ore
· '' "·-""'rs · said. "That was
m
' .,........ .
"·
why ~~~~un'Ut !he Supl!r Bowl ,ie.
tory p•dt. I jam thouJht my funi·
. /Y:WU ~.impcirtllli.ll WaS a ~t
i

two ,veett. ~
So s..den ·~ided 10 ~~yp-..
t*e~~a~• · r~~~: ~ JeM&amp; one· ~
white w c1e~ hiJ ~ .tjl
I

"'

I .

"

.

tf

J

•

becoming the NFL'&amp; only full-time
two-way player.
.
'
"Now, we'llsee how good I can ·
be," the Dallas Cowboys cornerback-wide- receiver·ki~k returner
said Tuesday. "I want to have an
impact on both sides Of the ball."
· Sanders is so ier'ious about
becoming a great receiver that he
will attend his tiist full ~ninJ camp
· in /uly, worki~l On pass pat~
with quarterback Troy Aikman and
receiYer MK!IIIiel Irvin . •He once
SJI!!nt tWO Weeks in camp with the
Atlania Falcons.
.
"I'm looki111 forward 19 mixing
it up in camp, lliOitiilg with 1'roY and

.

).

J

Michael and all the guys," said
Sanders, who made alii ~nnounce­
m~nt from his posh "Primetime 21"
nightclub in Nonh Dallas.
"I'm a foo&amp;ball player now.l'.ll go
over the middle, do1whatever J have
to do to become a greaa rea!lver. I
think l'm.loina to have it1lpacll
have hiah cx.peciations. 1think tllis
• team iS aoing to win .a lot of Super
Bowls iii the nex.t five years." ,
. Sanders' llUeball marketability
has daupped.
. , .
, Sanden said his baseball eamin~s
WOI!ldn'tlave mt*:hed the $2.5 mal·
lion he made IMt yur playing for the
Cincinnati Reds and San Francisco

I
I

r
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

an

I

after a defeat to Wooster Triway.
Archbold led stan to finish in
Division Ill while going unbeaten.
Challengers such as Lisbon Anderson. Versailles and Nonh Lima South
Range all pulled into the No. 2 spot
but fell back. Bedford Chane! finished as the ruimerup.
Archbold won the 1988 football
poll crown.
In Division IV, Van Wen Lincol·
n&gt;iew stayed on the heels of defending state champion Findlay LibenyBcnton for four weeks before finally
overtaking the Eagl~s last week and
holding onto the top spot. Springfield
Catholic Central, led by 7-foot senior
center Jason Collier, 'was second.
Each of the poll champions will
receive a plaque from The Associated Press.

.

Orf;ando .................. ~8
~ Ynrk ....... ..... 11
Washinalcn ............ 2~

Miami... ...... ~ ..........l.J
Nrw Jersey .......•... 22
~IOf1 ...... ,..... , ....... !9
PMadelphio ........... IO

I.

...
19

ra.

.731
.620
.4"

28
29 .442
29 .431
)3 .365
40 .:zoo

ChiCOI0.-..... :.........47

5

Indiana ... __ ....... 32
CLEVELAND ....... JO
Atlantq·.................. 28
Octroit .................... 26
Chnrloue ............ :!.~

19

!ill
6

52

1~
19

27

.1'04

14.S

21

. ~83

2~

. ~9

16.l

23
2!\

. ~JI

.500
.400
.280

18.5
19.S
21
16

w...-.

WESTERN CONFERENC..:

w

Utntl ..................... :.~

16

.686

ra.

Iii

San Antonio ......... :\4
Houston ...
........ )4
Denver ................ 21
Onll.u .................. 16

16

.680

.S

19

.642

2

JO
J4
Minnesoto .............. l4 J6
Vomcouvcr ............ .11 40

.ill

J20

I"
18.5

.280
.216

20. ~

Inll

••
.
••
•
••
••
•••
•
I
I

'·

•••
I

••

••

I.

Baldwin·Wtllace 76. Otterbein 72

$~tL"'':ll'''Cnlo ..... : ...... 24

24

-~

I:U

Phoenix .................. 24
GoldenS..0. ..........14
Portland ........... ... 24
L.A: Clippen ......... 17

26 .480
27 .m
29

. 4~)

14.5
ll

J.4

.:U:t

22

U

~

Tonlpl's &amp;ames

,
I

•••
I

:
•••

I
••
•

Miami at Philadelphia. 7:JOp.m.
Washington a1 Ch•k&gt;nc. 7:30p.m.
Ntw York at Oecroir. 7:;\0 p.m.
Orkmdo a1 ln4illAa. 8 p.m.
Housron nl MinntiOia, tl p.m.
New Jcney nl Milwaukee. K: ~ p.m
bumtnco a1 Dollas, 11::\0 p.m.
Boston at Photnix. 9 p.m.
L.A . Laken at L.A. Clippen. IO:.lO

p.m.
Sun An10nio' tU Ooldcn Stale,

10 : ~0

43

l2

I,•
••
••
••
•
I

I:
I

,.....••

n.

Hopewell-Loudon 73. Cory·Rilwton
70

Howllllld 61. Girard 46

Hudson 75. Kenr Roosevell !10
K.ali~ 88, Uppn Scioto Ynl. 61
Kidron 60. 1\minsula WoodridJC 51
Kin land 7J. AunMISI
l...abwood 84, c~. Sooth ~·
Lakewood St. Edward 6.l. Parma Pad·

ua J S

Louin Adm . Kin1 80,

Nordonilt69, Revere~
Northwood 12, M~&amp;~mee Val. :'6
Ncwwaynr 16. Medina Budtcye S6
~ 71, Chordofl ND-CL ~
l\onjobufa62: Hollaad Sprii!J. l8
........ 7T. Salem ~7

1wn

Dctmir. ..
C hi ~.:ngo

V-110o61,1f. Ri4pyjlle55
Wahll Jeou;l61, Ellet l8

7.:!7 5 ",, Intere s t H .t!e
7 . 97 "" A.!'. H .

Louis I

172
19M
175
179
220

~

I. I 1'13. !.i.E !it.

.. .....42 I I 4
.........12 16 II

SS 2l.'i 12')
75 20."i I ~J

Tuni2ht 's &amp;ames
Momretd a1 H;mford, 7 p.m.

Piu shurj:h a! Duffaln. 7:JO Jl.m .
l~onda ill New Jersey, 7:JOp.m.
T:1mpa Dn)l a1Toronto, 7:10p.m.
Va111.:ouvr:r al Wi11uipc!!-. H:JO Jl.lll .
l.m Angeles 111 Edmonltm, ':U Op.m.
Btl~ ton :u

Anaheim. 10:.\0 ['1 .111

Thursday's ~ames
NY hhmtlcrs m N.Y. RHnpcn , 7::4)
fUll
W&lt;~ s hin ~ t u n

al Philalk: lph1b, 7:JOJ1.1ll.

. .,

None

5%

...

1

'

15 Ye ar
F ixe d Rate

-*!..,....

•IIIII*

= ..,..,._., ot•IIOO (8lij. ,..,_of Cbo t47,1100.....,. loon -..1c1 be

, _ ...,..._tonotft&lt;jUiredb&lt;-J*JinC•t--cbm.

..
..

'

(;. H7 5 "" In t l' rt", t l{ .t I L'

None

7 .5 2 11 11 ,\ .PH.

.......,.,_.. .,.11001!1111. Tem.afebot47,1100_..,....__be

I:IWII'LII ,. . . . . . . . . ,....._.C::"'*000-*~....-••1
110 . 2\ P4-*flll•aa. , r 1 \ - 5 I'...._F
·,
~!:.

\ \\·,.l

.

Jtat1J .. ....._ .. f\Ol.....,..ilrtbc.epaJinlat .... 2fMdawn.

.' .

....
Yt .t t I·l xt'&lt;l H.llL'

li. l

~ l"

\'l t l~i n l.t llou ~ ln ~

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

I

..

Inlt · n·~ t

G . ~ Hi 11 o

, . . . .· . ,. . .

1\ M-lilllaftl!l.ll.plulm 1\

aDD

n:.:J

.•

H .t to ·

''

5%

A .P.H..

'
•'

.·.
' ..
.,.

000-*l .......i . . l -· ..,:.,_ltaf-11001!1111, Termoofebot47,1100 ....... 1oon-"dbo
J

·-F--

!-. and,...a-p~~oottmiCUpplj.

,r,

WVIIDI' IIOUJn".AJRailiiORTGAGB CBRTJli'ICATES
• 'n IN a ta • • • eqlllll te a p
ef tbe emm•• IDterut pel4 oa J'01Ir lllOftll&amp;ll
• 11 • . . _. ezt""wc 1 ,.... .'IF lle&amp;JJ, •-"=tand.h-ea
e11fi1b1e

••*•

,.....,, ... ,.. · _,.u... -

........

~~oo-~,_..

oo..,.r

••obOe .._..

·. '

~~ano-l).lncludlnc_ant,....,_.pr~oe,_,

"

' •I

'

For .lfore lqformatfon. call Tammu Beaver At (304} 67~-JJ:;Jl
I
..... •ofll/15/tll ani .,l!fect"' -.,.dall)'. ~ IUbjoct to..- "Pi!1"'!"L

w..... HaodioC 67. Voo. tbancy 66

W....,Yille

His."·

MJIIIe Hu. M
Wllerloo 63, .Berlin Wes1em Reaerw

ColleJe of W-.Vt .

~·6.)

"-&lt;Mir.--

\Tuesday's scores
Ot t;lW&lt;I 7, S1

POINTS

aDD · 1'fH-IilllafMI&amp;07,plulm&amp;'fmJI - P

.........

PymaluniRJ, Vel. 9~. Ad'ltabula Sr .
loluo ..
~ 60, GlllCIIsvillc Olrftcld !16
Roaaford 52. Sylvaola Soulilview :10
S... Nuch•• 60. LoainiUe ~)
Soloo 6J, Eaotloko: N. J7
- - 8 0.MiiiCOII Riqe67
............ 109, ...... 70
Tot. t.ilobey 69, Tot. Ropn 6l
Tol SO. Jolla'• 711. Tol. St FTanoio .Ill '
91, Obertie 66
U . Lo&lt;a165. C•~lileri .... 61
Vol]ey Fogo 54. Panno N~y 52

)I

.

'

.Willouahby S. 69. hiDeavllk Aiwr·

W....... 61, Eao!wood4l

w....._a..63, Noodoklp S9

· T-Il

C...R...,...15,o..-1l
Nootll
eo-

ISS
19.l
IW
lbl
138

Ctnlral Ohislon

Bradford S I. Newton 49
Fronklin-Mooroe 63. Covtn.:tm1 ~ I
Middk:town Chr. ~ .New Miami 28

IIWIIII.&amp;: A.._willa • ,......_ ,....afNO.OOO

Lonin

MI!Wrft 54. Millbury Lake 29
McDonald ~9. Windlllm &lt;46
Midpwk 72, BNMWick 6$ COT)
N. Crutton .t,, Musib Jocbon ..C
N. Olmsted ~J. Midriew 21
N. Roylllton 80, Ckwerlc~ ~
Napoleon 74, Bryon 66
New Philadelphia 64, Woosaer S7

· Nea co:zl'tacwc ..._
Lillo Erie 73, 1111e16'1

.

2."i7 IH7

WESTERN CONFERENCE
DMston IV

'

Soolhv~w6Q

··ohio men's·

100, RIO

Wellston 88, S. Webster 68

30 Year
F ixed Rate

Fairview ~. Bn:JobQ 44

' college scores'

GRANDE 'M (qt)

Shenandoah 78. Rid&amp;ewood ~7
W. Union 56. Huntington Twp. 43

I IBM

Garfield Hts. Trinity 60. Gilmour 40
Gtetn Hills s-4, Elnan~ttl Bapt. 46

VM Wat ~.litHia"

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

169
201
1H~
217
1 ~2 216
160 192
IX2 2:"6

We Make It Possible With Our
"Unconventional" Secondary Market Financing!

/
QcstwQOd 66. Newton Falla .56
Cuyahoga Falls 61 , Wldswor1h S-4
C.yohop Val. Chr.' 70, M........ 61
E. Canton R2. MintrVtt79 (01)
E. Paleltine 7~. Wclbvillc 10
Elyria az. Sandusky ~7

Niles H. CantiFJd 48

Arl.-Unlc koct87 , SW LouislMa67
Tuu 80, Bl)'b 7l
Teet&gt; Southem Mcdl. ,.

233
2 13
175
195

New Home For Only 5°/o Down

Elyria W. M . Awmt.ab- 46

Eul

Southwest

Pacilic Diri~iOn
Colonul o ........... n 17 10 74
Van~.:ouvt!r ........ 22 ! J 14
SR
Calgary .
22 27 11 .'i:'i
Los A n gd~Cs ...... IR 28 14 ~~
Edmont on .......... 20 31 6 46
Anaheim .. ......... 20 JJ 5 4~
San lOSt:
IJ 40 6 J2

17.\

Let Peoples Bank Put You In A

Can~on

77

Purdue'
"·lllinoil 71
Xavkr. Ohio J02. DaytOft 95

50 19 1 202
4J It)~ 205

60 171i

•.

Llllhmll E. 62. Led&amp;&lt;moM 4~
M:willon Chf. 86, Medina Fira Bapr.

NC¥, Division I
men sscores

Northrast Division
Pinsburgh ......... 15 18 4 74
Montreal... .... .29 22 1 65
Boston ............. 24 24 I! -56
Hnrtfon.l .... ... .2426 6 54
f:lufrnlo ......... 22 29 6 ~ 0
Onawa ... ...:. 124 .~ 1 27

Minford 80, Federal Hocking 64
Piktton7J. Ponsrnouth W. ~9

Elm !i~ . Teays Vtl. 53

Fan-port Hardin&amp; 8.5. Willo-Hill Chr .
43
.

Thursday's pmes

rex..

~an

S. 76. Ravenno Sou1helm 68
Carrolltoo 62, lndi-. Y1l. 60 COT)
Chancl %. Kcns1on 64
Cin. Huaha ~3 . Cia. Walllut Hills ~I
Cin. l..nndmtrl: Chr 61. Sl. B«nan:l 60
Clc. lknedictinc6J. Akron Hoban ~4
Cle. Collinwood 94, Bectrord 78
C~ . HcritlliC ~~ - Luke RidJc :'1 I
C~ . VA-SJ 76. Akron FircstOO( 72
Co!Mrnbl~a6 1, ·Avon &lt;16
Columbian:r..Srarview 51, Lordsaown

Jl.lll.

Otie13o at Adanta. 7:30p.m.
Hoo!loo a1 CLEVELAND. 7:JO p.m.
Toronto al Utah, 9 p.m.
Denver 111 Pmlaad. 10 p.m.
Golden SIBle at Seal•~ - 10 p.m.

J7

4
II

C:Jil1:JJ Y :'i, San Jose J

Mariemont 60

Day. CBrTOI162, BenjllfTiin Lozan 4!1
Hamillon Twp. 4l Col. Centennial

BrttklviUc 61 . Medin~47
Bristol71 , Maplewood ~7
CaRll Fulton NW 60, Looinille H
C.nron GlcnOak. .52, Musillon Perry

llJ, Pllilodelphial04

••

79 212 162
75 201 162
69 199 ISI
63 lb~ ISS
58 14:'1 137
58 174 I R7
40164 217

60 !60 111

8owlin1 GrteJ~64, Anrhony Wmyrre 62

Tueodoy's score~
Milwoukee 92. New York 87

Orl:~tltlo

I. I 1'13. !.i.E !it.

10
10

An:hbold 85·, N. Cemoi 6'1
Badsa 11. Molhcwo •1
Barbenon 99, Aboo Spri... 59
Bloomfarld ~9. Howland Chr. ~s

16

O.icago 102. CLEVElAND 76
Utnh r12. 8osto~~98
S..n Antonio IOl. Por11and lOS
L.A. l.akm 121 ." LA. Clippers 104

'~

Reculllr-aeuon action
,., u,;_..., LoU ~I (OT)

24

12 .7b5
19 .620

w....,

~

N.Y. Rtlf1gers ..... 34 1411
Aorida .............. .34 17 7
Phi iOldelphia ... 29 17 II
Wnshinglon ........ 28 23 7
New Jersey ....... 25 24 8
Tampa Boy ..... 2524 R
N.Y. hlilllden .... 16 32 8

Bauwia 70, Fclicily 6~
C in . N Co lle ge Hill 69. Cin

Col. Sl. ChDrlcl S4, Col. Mimin 50
Col. W111enon 80, Col. Briw 64

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Al~

L.A. Wen ............ JI

1wn

Vol . OS

Caphal11,0hioNGnhem51.

l'lldllc DIYiolon

Se.~t~ .................... J9

Waverly M , Sheridan 56
Western Brown IU, lkttJci-Tale 59
Whllehall 8~ . Lakewood 65

Division Ill

Dh-11
62. Ole"'-Y ~~

~ire ~vn Val. 74. Meip1l
C1n. Roecr Bacon 79, Goshen 38
· CirtlcviUe "· Lictina Vtl. 54
Col. DeSoteo 67, t..nc1on 52
CoJ. Eur 78, U1ie11 49
Col. Eulmoor 50, Mllr}t Villc 46
Col. Ll•den-McKinley 78, Buckeye

MNM U1iol66. Mlrielta Sf
~uWnpm 14, JQhn Carrol162

Midwal: Divisiall

Atlantic Division

Tn&gt;IWOOd-M""""" 70. W. C..,.lllon

Bla

·

l2

EASTERN CONFERENCE

too..all

Ohilt AlWIIk c.r.tnc:t ftnl ,_,..
ton

NHL standings

Sl. Cloinvillc 60, Richmond Edi son

•

'Thomu Wonhinitoa 74, lteynolds-

52

St. Lm1i ~ ...... 25 24
Toromo .......... 25 24
Winnipeg ....... 2:\29
DallaL ........ 16 .l l

49

Mout Vernon61, Grove-City ~I

Air...,..,,., Ohiow..r.1an 52
W0011cr83, C. RtKrVC 11
Konyoa ~ Earlham 45

32

Mid wen

.

Mou11fVenon N..e~~e B5. Malotte

NottiiC_A_c..t.-n n t 94, Doni.., 76

South

I

Vernon Nazarene, 5-10, Fr. ; Tonya :
Miller, Malone, 5-4, Jr.; Angie Kalb.
Ohio Dominican, 6-1, So. ; Nikita
Thompson, Urbana, 5- 10, Fr.; Erin
Littlepage, Ohio Dominican, 5-6, So.
Honorable mention
··
Angie Calcamuggio, Findlay ; ..
Carrie Carson , TONYA S MITH , ~
RIO GRANDE; Brittany Harmon:;;
Walsh; Jodie Martin, Malone; Jaime ·;
Myher, Urbana; Katie Riggs,
Shawnee St.

Hockey

Meadowbrook 6llndian Creek ~7
Philo sa . Moraan 10
Spring. Northwestern 61, lndillfl Lake

Kettm .. ~airmotM 50. Day. Ptwtenon

4J

15 . ~

Kcatucky 84. AJabMna 6.S
Memphia 91 . Soulhcm Mlu. 66
Mianli 96, St John '1 91 (2 01)
Tlllone 79. Florida Alllnok M
W. K.ooodty 90. LMw 6'1

773-5513

TERS, RIO GRANDE, 6-0, Jr.:
Nicole Ritter, Findlay, 5-8, Sr.
Player or the year: Jen ni
McGraw, Findlay.
Coach or the year: Robin
Hagen-Smith, Shawnee St.
Second team: Cindy Cremeans,
Cedarville, 5-6. Sr.: Renee Walls,
Shawnee St., 5-5, Sr.; Wendy Nance,
Urbana,• 5-l 0, So.; Samantha Pack,
Walsh, 6-1, Sr.; Misty McMillen ,
Walsh; 5-9, Jr.; Tara Seiter, Mount

Mclliennott Northwest SO. New In·
ingtoa40

Col; Nonhland 67. Wmlnut RidJC M

Mki-Oitie C.*ltiKII lllllllf.t'.. ..._.

Rutgers 71 . Pimburah 70
Seeoo Hall 80, Syracuse 79
Temple ~J . ~•n 42

IASC)ft. W. VA.

BOOM!- Kentucky's Mark Pope comes down after taking a high- .:
percentage shot during Tuesday night's SEC game against Alaba: ·,
main Lexington, l(y.; where the Wildcats won 84-65 in part because
of his 13 points, eight rebounds and four steals. (AP)

Women
Firsl'team: Jenni McGraw, Findlay, 5-4, Sr.; Vernita Provitt,
Shawnee St., 6-0, Fr.; Melissa Hanman, Cedarville, 5-5, Sr.; Molly
Linville, Shawnee St. , 5-9, Sr.;
Monique Maher, Mount Vernon
Nazarene, 5-11. Sr.; Ashley Allen,
Tiffin, 5-6, Sr.; STACY RILEY, RIO
GRANDE, 5-5, Jr.; Kiya Starr,
Urbana, 5-8. Fr.; MEGAN WIN·

IM•Won I

(OT)

T•l'tUIIIIOIIII

O.nel87. Md.· BaltimoreCouhly 5~
HofSim 69. Fordh;n !i7
Maunchu.cm 74. Rhode lslillld 69

·PICKINS
HARDWARE

Urbana, 6-4, Sr.; Dan Wingate, Malone, 6-4, Jr.; Corey AlliSon, Shawnee
St., 6-2, Sr.; Ted Wyp&amp;Sek, Tiffin. 63, Jr. ; ERIC CAUDILL, RIO
GRANDE, 6-1. Sr.
Honorable mention
Pat Beard, Shawnee St.; Steve
Hanek, Shelton Norman, Michael
Farrington, Walsh; John Miller, Greg
Gaskin,' Tiffin; Steve Wood, Mike
Mahek, Malone; Chad Miller,
Urbana; K'urt Pottkotter, Ohio
Dominican; Randy Siefker, Findlay;
. Doug Speelman, Mount Vernon
Nazarene.

Tournaments
.

14 . ~

.627

. Milwaukee ...... ....... 20 JO
Toromo .................. l4 )6

..

••r

CEDARVlLLE, Ohio (AP) Six Rio Grande basketball players
received all-Mid-Ohio Conference
honors, according to voting by the
conference's coaches.
Here is the list.
Men
First teann: Bob Boldon, Walsh,
6-2, Jr.; Jerry White, Urbana, 6-4, Jr.;
Tim Halnen, Findhiy, 6-1 , So.; JACK
MORGAN, RIO GRANDE, 5-9.
Sr.; Jason Carver, ¥alone, 6-3, Sr.;
Mike Bell, Ohio Dominican, 6-3, Sr.;
'Jy Davis, Shawnee St., 6-0, Sr.;
Martin Gottfried, Walsh, 6-4, Sr.;
Jeff Bradley, Cedarville, 6-6, Sr.;
SHAWN SNYDER, RIO GRANDE,
6-7, Sr.
Player of the year: Bolf Boldon,
Walsh.
Coach of lhe year: Steve Loy,
Walsh.
Sec:oud team: Chris Kitsmiller,
Ohio Dominican, 6-0, Sr.; Chad
Kin, Tiffin, 6-10, Jr.; Doug Meyer.
Walsh, 6-6, Jr.; Jason Quinn,
Cedarville. 6-2, Sr.; Chris Ireland,
Findlay, 6-3, Jr.; Hysaan Goode,

You. Rayen 95. You. Calvll'y Chr. 4J
You. Unulir.c 6l, You. Mooney-61

Ohio women's
college scores

Central Division

•••
•

•S~tC...

. .chilli

w

Ium

Rental Rug
Sllampooer ·
Machine

,,
'

Att.nlic: Dl•lsiDn

Vac

•S•••poo

with an 8-0 run in the second half.
Jay Poemer had 19 points for the
Mustangs (6-17, 2-9), who have lost
seven straight games against Texas
Tech. ·
Seloa Hall 80
No. 15. Syracuse 79
Adrian Griffin and Levell Sanders
each scored 17 poinlS as the Pirates
( 11-13, 6-10 Big East) ended a sixgame losing streak. The visiting
Orangemen (19-7, 9-6), who had
won five straight, had a chance to
win.

Six Rio cagers get
aii~MOC honors

.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

••
•

Blue luster
Riase &amp;

st,raight conference title. Matt Heldman had 20 points for the Illini (169, S-8), who trailed by 10 with 6:18
left and clpsed to 67-66 with I :41 to
play.
No. 9 Texas Tech 75
SMUS4
Jason Sasser scored 24 points as
the Red Raiders (23-1 , 12-0) won
their 29th. consecutive home game
and clinched a:.lShare of the South·
west Conference championship.
Texas Tech, playing its first game
ever as a Top Ten .team, took control

Obio Wesley~t~71. W001tcr 62
Alleahmy 58, Kenyoo5l
w;""""'1 95. E'Milwn 68

NBAstandings

.

£J

•

Basketball

••

Zanesville, Orrville, Archbold, Van Wert claim AP Poll titles

"It's a. high risk. But once I saw
the pass coming,! went for the ball,"
said Travieso, who finished with IS
points. "I was ~tty upset after
missing that free throw, so I wanted
to make up for it."
Massachusetts 1Jas t1u:ee games
left in the regular season - at home ·
with George Washington and St.
Joseph 's and at Louisville. The only
team to go unbeaten in the regular
season since 1979 was UNLV in
1991. The last team to go unbeaten
and win the national championship
was Indiana in 1976.
'
"!told them in the last two time· outs, 'Play to win,'" Calipari said.
"'Don't play not to lose."'
Antonio Reynolds had 18 points
· and 13 rebounds for Rhode Island.
In olher games involving ranked
. teams Tuesday, it was No. 2 Kentucky 84, Alabama 6S; No.7 Purdue
74, IIIinois 71; No. 9'Texas Tech 75,
Southern Methodist 54; Seton Hall
80, No. IS Syracuse 79; and No. 19
Memphis 91, Southern. Mississippi
66.
No. 2 Kentucky 114
Alabam• 65, ·
The Wildcats (23-1, 13,0) won
their 22nd consecutive game and
38th Southeastern Conference title.
They are· three games away from
becoming the tirst team to go unbeaten in the league since Alabama in
1956. Tony Delk had 12 points for
Kentucky, seven in a 26-6 run in the
last II minutes of the first half.
Anton Reese score!~ all 19 of his
points in the second half for the visiting Crimson Tide (14-9, 7-6).
No.7 Purdue 74, Ulinols 71
Roy Hairston scored 23 points
and the Boilermakers (22-4, 12-2
Big Ten) made five of six free
throws in the final 32 seconds for the
road win that gave them a 2 112game lead in_pursuit of their tliird

Scoreboard

"We stopped playing hard, and we
played not to lose," said Wolfe of his
charges' effons precc&lt;,ling their recovery. "We played conservatively. Our
defense was way1oo passive. and we
can't let that happen."
"Losing these seniors (Abbott,
Cleland. Hanson, Mark Mills, Pullins ,
and Donald Yost) that have been part :
of my family the last two years hurts :
far more than losing this gal)le."
Mei"S head coach Jeff Skinner said of
bis veterans.

'Burg 4th, 'Peake 6th in Division Ill

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

' .Top 25 college hoops,
.In

River Valley-Meigs stats
Owtcr 1!11111

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Xala Sl. Fahllon 69

55

Yoo.- s1. w.

Ke~

•Pt. PkwND~
•Maeon

PEOPLES BA1Qt IIORTGAGB P.INANCJNG
r ,.,.,.... ,_., .,, - . '+t. 'hit. •·

MenberPDIC

•

•

,.

·New~

I

• l

~ ~.

�....
•
y

•
; . • 1 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mlddleport, Ohlo

Wednesday, February 21,

:~College

of West Virginia tops
-~Redmen 100-94 in overtime
"It was our best petformance in

•

and a game high 12 rebounds.' Mike
Wilson scored 13 pciints · for lhc
; of Rio Grande head coach John Cougars.
• Lawhorn after lhc Redmen lost an
Both clubs were hot from the
: 'Overtime thriller to lhc College of field, shooting beller than SO percent.
• :West Virginia. 'The final score of the . 'The Redmen nailed 35-of-68 lield
ieauJar season finale was 100.94 in goal attempts, while CWV was good
: "'li game played at lhc Raleigh Coun- on 37-of· 73 shots from lhc floor. 'The
~·ty Armory in {lcckley, W.Va.
Redmen bench outscored the \
: : · "This was an·exciling game and Cougars' subs 28-6.
~ ;bolh teams worked extremely hard
"We played really hard and turned
•iUKI should be conaratulatcd," he in a good night's work," added
~ed.
Lawhorn. "I thought this was an out. ; : Redmcn senior , Shawn Snyder standing total team effort. We're
~lcctrified the Armory crowd by going to give lhc guys a few days off
:~oring a career best 42 points and
and then get back to work this
;lqabbing tr eleven rebounds. He weekend to prepare for the Great
:~:onnccted on nearly 54 percelll of his Lakes Region play-offs."
• f'aeld goal attempts (IS-for-28) and
The future: Rio Grande (21-11 ,
:idt 9-of-11 free throws. Snyder MOC 12-6) plays the waiting game
: scored 25 points in lhc second half now to see who they'll face in the
: and overtime. He also blocked a shot first round of the Great Lakes
: and 'had one steal.
Regional. That game is tentatively
; · Eric Caudill added I 5 points on schedllled to be played at Lyne Cen; 6•of-11 shooting from the floor. ter on Thursday, Feb. 29.
' ]ames Lavala scored II points and
An announcement concerning the
j grabbed II rebounds. Jack Morgan opponent, time and ticket availabil: ~ored nine points and dished out six ity will be made as soon as that infor· assists.
mation is available.
• Roinct Lynch led four CWV Half1!WIII
; players in double ligures with 28 Rio Grande ...................40-45-9=94
; points. Lynch hit 11-of-19 field goal Colt. of W.Va .. ..........42-43·15=100
' auempts. He also had nine rebounds.
I Brian Kidd scored 23 points
RIO GRANDE Snyder
~ r.-hile Alan Brown .tallied 21 points

: lbe ,.,. I0 games." said University

-·-·-

... .

12129-319-911 1=42, Caudi114n-214112=15, Lavala 419-00-3/4=11, Morgan 212-112-215=9, Kerns 213-0/1112=5, Schreck 2/3-012-012::4, Seitz
. 213-0/1 -010=4, Barnes 0/0-0/1-212=2,
J. Burris 112-0/0-Q/0=2. Totals:
Z9/48-6/20-18118--94
Tolal FG: 35-68 (51.4%)
Rebounds: 35 (Lavala &amp; Snyder
II each)
Blocked shots: 3 (Laval a2, Snyder I)
Assists: 9
Stellls: S
Thrnovers: 10
Fouls: 23
Fouled out: Caudill

~ By

Public Notice
·'NonCE TO BIDDERS
Sealed prepoaala will be
received by the Board of
:Education of the llalga
·Local School Dlatrlct of
pomeroy, Ohio, at the
'rreaaurer'a Office until I :00
p.m. on Thureday, March 14,
1118, and at that t101e
opened by the Treaaurer of
aald Boerd tor live (5) new
aevanty-ona (71) pllltngar
dlaael achool buaaea and
one (1) new· alxty (80)

that point. I just took a chance and
got it."
The play came after Boston's
Rick Fox passed to Eric Williams in
the post. The rookie forward then
drove the baseline, and Stockton was
there for steal No. 2,311.
"He was going to get it eventually," Williams said. "There's going
to he another time when somebody
else sneaks lhc record and then I'll
be out of the history books."
Stockton capped the milestone by
passing to Chris Morris for a threepointer, one of his 14 assists in the
game.
"I wanted to get it over with, but
I didn't want to jeopardize my teammates and the win," Stockton said.
"I didn't want to run around just
seeking a steal."
After Adam Keefe's layup made

LL

Public Notice
paaaenger handicapped
acceaallil•
bua.
S pee Ill call on•
and
lnatructlone to blddera may
be obtained at the office of
the Treaaurir, 320 E. llaln
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
or by calling (814) 1112-5850.
By order ol Malga Local
Board of Education
Cindy J. Rhonamua,
Treaaurer
(2)7. 14, ~1. ?.8; 4TC

PubHc Notice

Public Notice

PUIUCNOnCE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, February
14, 1tl8, II 10:00 a.m., I
public aala will be held at
211 Weal Second Street,
Pomarov, Ohio, to
lor
caah the following .
collateral:
19111 Pontiac Flreblrd
tG2FS21S3KL225213
The Farmer• Bank and
Savlnga
Company,

Further, the above
collaleral will be aold In the
condition It 11 In, with no
axprua or Implied
warranu.. given.
For further Information,
contact Daalree at 882·2136.

••II

Pomeroy, Ohio, reserve•

•1•,

the right to bid Ill thla
and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to aala.
Further; The Farmeta Bank
and Saving• . Company
· raaarvaa th~ right to reJect
any or all blda aubmltted.

.OIEU BISSELL
COI$1RUCTIOII

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conversations

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32124 'Hippy Hollow'Rd,
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o.nny ' Peggy llrlddli'
. 814-742·2193

Jon T. Mugrage
Army Private Jon T. Mugrage has
araduated from the armor crewman
course at Fort Knox , Ky.
• The course is designed t,o teach the
crewman to serve as a member of an
armor unit in defensive and offensive
combat operations. In addition to
basic combat training, the soldier was
taught to drive the armored weapon,
load and fire the weaponry. perform
ammunition supply duties, and to
process intelligence and operations
tlata.
He is the son of Charles I. and
Evelyn M. Mugrage of Racine.

$

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CHERRY PIE FILLING

79c

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JOAN OF ARC .
.. LT. RED OR CHILl HOT BEANS
b.s oz.

$1
3
·• I

nutnUo)l to keep flymg, while '?~­
mats become comatose. Sea-diVIng
fowl can hold !hear breaths for long
penods .because.' m part, then lun¥s
are .venulated wnh constant fresh wr,
, unhke the fresh-stale maxture of the
1 human resparatory system. Bards k'7P
' cool by losi~g ~y neat to the·moasture m the1r atr sacs -- a heatexchange mechanasm far more effi~acaous than our trouble~me and
mconvenaent habit of sweatmg.
I am sure than when Mother
Nature desi~ned human lungs, she
had something in mind ... but effi-

' PETER
GOTI, M.D.

me. And, I wonder, if God had meant
us to exercise, why He didn't bless us
with better-planned lungs. What we
got is for the birds.
Copyright 1996 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

I

· ciency wasn't it. As I puff up hill on
my 10-speed bicycle, I envy the swatlows swooping effortlessly around

GOOD 2/22-2/23 &amp;
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NOT GOOD ON AD
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SEE STORE FOR
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,.

Victory Baptist Church held lhcir
.annual Valentine banq11et Feb. 9 at
the church's fellowship room, which
was de~orated in a red and white
theme by"Wanda Ashley and Angie,'
Hall to com111emorate the ev,ent.
· · Games .were played. as Mrs. Lin·
da ·Bates won a prize and everyone
reci:i:ved Jifts. Mrs. fhyllis HudnaiJ
was lhc winner of the docir prize.
The meal was prepared by several ladies of the ladies missionary felloWShip. ·Pastor Jaines Keesee gave
lhc bl~ssing on the meal. Mr. Char'

.,

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$116 87
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rom,.,'s
8-oz. Pkg.

Christine A. Grueser
Air Force Airman First Class
Christine A. Grueser has graduated
from basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio,
Texas.
During the six weeks of training,
she studied the Air Force mission,
organization, and customs and
received special training in human
relations.
She is the daughter of Leverna M.
HoHman of Rustic Hills. Syracuse.
She graduated in 1989 from Southern
. High School, Racine, and earned an
associate degree in 1995 from Hock' ing Technical College. Nelsonville.

l.ie Hall had the closing prayer.
'The followil)g people aitendod the,
banquet: Pastordames Keesee and:
Lind11 Kee~,1'&amp;Stor John Hart and:
'earot·Han. Dwigljt and Wanda Ashley, Don and Vereliia Barkman, Aoyd
and Helen Jane Brown, Bill and Patsy ColneiJ, Charlie and' Angie Ha11.
Bob and Lisa JohnSQD, Walt and Sandi· Laudermllt, B~tty Barker, Phyllis
Hudnall, Sarah Fowler, Myrtle
Quillen. Sharon RusseiJ, Margaret
Nunn, Molly Johnson, Linda Bates,
Gary Snouffer and Thurman Smith.

.

ASSOillfD VARIETIES

news~--

Victory Baptist Church
holds ·Valentine banquet

FOR 5 TRIPLE
COUPONS

-- -----

- m a steady stream that bathes respiratory tissue.
I'll bet that any serious runner
would give his or her eyeteeth (or
new color-coded JOggmg outfit) to be
able to mimic the respiration of ~irds
whose lungs are made up of mamatore tubules, unlike our own cumbersome system of bags that have lo
mflate and deflate. .
The av1an syste"! as so much more
effic1ent than ours m that at P_Crmlls
smaller lungs and slower respuatory
rates. Large bird~, hke o~tnches,
breathe only sax Urnes a mmute at
rest. Some buds can even breathe
lhrou.gh thea~ bones; how they do at
remams a mystery. .
.
At oxygen-poor hagh altitudes,

... -.. ...

(

2/$ 1

pataents w1th emphysema know that
expelling used-up air can be a major
·part of the cycle. They trap old air in
worn-out lungs.
.
Birds don't operate this way. Their
respiratory orga.ns functio~ as two- ·
cycle pumps, wnh the eqwval.ent of
a turbo-t:harger, to boot. As a bird
I inhales, fresh air bypasses the -lungs
and is stored in reservoirs called posterior air sacs. During exhalation this
o~ygen-rich air is literally pumped
into the lungs under pressure. As the
bird again inhales, stale air is sucked
from the lungs into expanding anterior air sacs, to be exhaled through
1 the beak during the next breath.
In essence, birds' lungs are not
composed of tiny, blind air pockets;

Question: My busband has a gall- abnormalities of the gallbladder can
bladder problem that comes and be the cause. Gallstone attacks usugoes. Can you give me some infor- ally "come and go" just as your husmation about this condition?
band's do because some meals are
Answer: 'The gallbladder -- a mus- easily digested without the benefit of
cular, sack-like structure that is bile.
attached to the liver -- is an important
The typical "gallbladder attack"
but not essential part of our digestive occurs when the gallbladder contracts
system. This organ collects ~ile as it in response to a meal with fats, cabis slowly produced by the liver. bage, onions, raw apples or other
Then, when needed for digestion of foods that need bile for digestion. 'The
certain types of food. it rapidly contraction forces a stone into the
squirts the bile into the digestive tract narrow duct connecting the gallbladjusl "downstream" from the stomach der with the duodenum -- either parin an areacalled lbe duodenum. .
tialty' or totally blocking it. 'The·
Bile is made from cholesterol, oth- 'attack subsides when the stone passer lipids, pigments that arc the residue es on through into the duodenum or
of recycled blood cells. and other is pushed out from in front of the duct
components. These chemicals aid in . so thai it is no longer blocked.
the emulsification, digestion, and ._ Now for the really important
absorption offoods. particularly fats. inform-ation: What should your husThe liver is capable of excreting these band do now that he is haYing gall. products into the gallbladder in a con- bladder attacks? Since he is already
centration so strong that crystals pre- in that sniall portion of the population
cipitate out of the solution. These who has stones and also has sympcrystals arc what form gallstones. toms, be should consider seeing a surThis gallstone formation process is geon about having his gallbladder
similar to that used for growing sug- removed. Following a "gallbladder" ..
ar crystal candy, for those of you who diet will reduce the amount of dishave done this with your children.
comfort he has, but it doesn't change
Gallstones are very common. the 50 percent chance of having a
Somewhere betw~en 10 and 18 per- serious complication that would
cent of U.S. citizens have gallstones make emergency surgery necessary.
by the time of death, but only two
Cholecystectomy, the doctor and
percent ever have symptoms. The insurance company term for removal
typical symptoms .are discomfort -- of lhe gaiJbladder,•is typicallx done
ranging froll) sharJi, knifelike pain to today using the "high-tech" laparomild discomfort-- in the upper scopic method.
abdomen or chest. The pain usually
Patients who have this type of
begins 30 to 90 minutes after a lfleal surgery are usually out of the hospiand may radiate to the area or the tal the next day, after an overnight
back between the shoulders. Belch- stay, and have a quick and total
ing. llatulence and bloating often recovery.
accompany gallbladder auacks. and
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
these symptoms may also be present column. To submit questions, write
without any pain at all.
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
Gallbladder auacks are usually verslty CoiJege of Osteopathk
due·to gallstones, although infection.. Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
. calcilication, cancer and other rare Ohio 45701.

6.5 oz.

oz.

DR.GOTT

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

STARKIST
TUNA

7 v.

also from readers who had mel some
APOAE09397
very special frien48 by writing to
For Navy and Marine Corps perservice people in tile Persian Gulf.
sonnel aboard ship, write to:
Please belp us out again . -- Red,
Any Service Member
White and Blue in South Carolina
Operation Joint Endeavor
Dear Red, White and Blue: Bless
FPOAE 09398
you for asking. Our service people
Gem of the Day : English is a
now serving their country by keep- strange language. There's no egg in
ing the peace in Bosnia would eggplant, no pine nor apple in
appreciate hearing (rom new friends, pineapple, no ham in hamb11rger.
old friends and loved ones at home. Sweetmeats are candy, and sweet•
Send a letter today. Here are the breads are meat.
addresses :
For Army, Navy, Air Force and
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Marine Corps land forces, write to: Cftalors Syndicate, 5777 W. Cell·
Any Service Member
lufY Blvd., Suite 700, Loo AnaeJea,
Operation Joint Endeavor
Calif. 90045

Family
Medicine

·

KRAFT
MAC &amp;CHEESE

wmdp1pes (resulung m more dead-wr
space), and less elas.tic rib cages than
do humans. In addition, buds can't
sweat. The~ ·r~gulate body heat
through respnatJOn.
Yet, buds don 't become short. of
breath. Have ~ou ever seen a bluejay
pant? O~r [eathered friends accoll!phsh lhcar a~azm~ feat because then
lun~s work m a dafferent way -- one
that s much more effecuve than our
own.
. When we txeathe, ~e e~hale stale
aar m preparataon for mhahng fres~
a•r ~- m.and out. Normal people don t
ordmanly apprecaate the amount of

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

(

•

excuses for Allison, and in his eyes, Allison move out at once. He does
she can do no wrong. I realize I have her no favor when he permits her to
a serious problem on my hands, but live rent-free in your home and
I am powerless to bring about cleans up after her.
change without divorcing my husWhen Allison is out on h~r own ,
band.
she will develop some badly needed
We both read your column every self-esteem and hopefully some
day, Ann. Please help us. -- A Flori- respect [or her parents.
da Dilemma
Dear Ann Landers: Where can we
Dear Florida: Your "dilemma" write to the service men and women
began several years ago. Allison bas in Bosnia? I'm sure they are lonely
been out of control for quite some for home and some mail from the
time. I suggest three-way counseling good old United States or Canada
with a new counselor. The one would give lhcm a lift.
you' ve been seeing for three years
I remember reading lots of letters
has failed miserably.
~ your column from soldiers servYour husband should insist that ing in Operation Desert Storm and

h~ve less relative lun~ volume, Ionge:&lt; work inv.olved in this process: but rather. air is forced -- bagpipe style - .bird~ . can extract enough . gaseous

1""'"-------------,

32 oz.

21

'

99

fAMILY PAK

'

H&amp;H .

By PETER H. GOTT, M.o:
We humans like to think we have
arrived, after millions of years, at the
pinnacle of the evolutionary process.
We congratulate ourselves on having
advanced to such a high level. of
physical and mental prowess.
However, this form of hubris is
becoming the mark of the uneducated man. Like the philosopher who
finds that answers· simply te.ad to
additional questions, lhc more we
Jearn about our environment, the
more we recognize the ways we
aren't so special after all.
. For e~ample,'consider lhc lungs of
birds. These fascinating creat~res

(

Chops••

The Dally.Sentinel• Page "1

Respiratory functioning: These lungs are for the birds

2 LITER

FLORIDA GOLD

WANTED: . Part-time COMMUNITY SKILLS
INSTRUCTOR needed to teach community
and personal skills to lndMduals with Ieeming
limHations in Meigs County. Ho11rs: 11 pm - 8
am, Th/Fri; 4 hrslwk as scheduled; 1~hour
weekly staff meeting; or as otherwise
scheduled. High school degree, valid driver's
license, good driving record, three years
ll~sed driving experience, and adequate
automobile insurance coverage required.
Salary: $5.00/hr. to start. Training provided.
Vacation/sick benefits. Send resume to: P.O.
Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640; ATTN; Cecilia.
Deadline for appllcanls: 2/28/96..
Eqilal Opportunity Employer.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I liave been married for :!'0 years
and raised four children. All but one
have grown into responsible adults.
I'll call the misfit "Allison ."
Allison is 28 and still lives at
home. She works as a waitress. pays

PEPSI COLA:
PRODUCTS

bered.

110

Cre-

llOn Syndil:a~e.

12 PK 12 OZ CANS

card of Thanks

TheFamll

1995, LD1 Arlpla

n MCI S}'JIIIIicMc and

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

s

no rent and has been taking classes
at a junior college for nine years.
She's a slob and trashes our house
with her litter. If my husband or I tell
her to clean up after herself, she tells
us to drop dead. Her falhcr lhcn does
lhc cleaning up.
My husband and I have been in
counseling for three years. One of
the things the counselor tried to help
us with was getting Allison to move
out. She refuses to budge. I did get
my husband to ask Allison for rent
money, but after two months, she
stopped paying, and he hasn't mentioned it since.
My husband is constantly making

Ann
Landers

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRIC.S GOOD THRU
FEBRUARY 24 , 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Parents have to be cruel to be kind to slovenly daughter:=

24 PK. 12 OL CANS CUIE

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Suaday
8 AM·lO PM

(2) 21, 22, 23; 3TC

We would like to
expre11 our elncere
gratitude to those
who helped In any
way during the
lllneu 1111d death of
our loved one,
Gilbert Hart. Your
kindness will forever be remem-

Wednesday, February 21, 1996

PRODUOS

COLL. OF W.VA. - Lynch
511 1-6/8-011 =28, Kidd 8/15-0107110=23, Braun 8111-0/0-3/6=21,
Wilson 3/S-1/8-4/6=13, Staples 3/4114-010=9, Blankl;nship 1/2-0/0010=2, Cline 012-010-212=2, Sauk
111-011-010=2. Tolals: 29/52-8121·
16125=100
Total FG: 37-73 (50.6%)
Rebounds: 40 (Braun 12)
Blocked shots: 2 (by Daye &amp;
Lynch)
Assists: 22 (Wilson 8)
Steals: II (Lynch 5)
Thmovers: I4
Fouls: 20
Fouled out: Staples

it I02-72 with 7:31 left, officials
stopped the game and teammates and
owner Larry Miller converged on
Stockton at midcourt. Miller presented him with a small glass trophy
during a brief ceremony.
"It could have gone on for games
where you don't go for steals,"
Stockton said. "You can start playing selfishly if you're going for
assists -or points or steals - that's
not how the game's suppo~d to be
played."
Alvin Robertson of Toronto is a
distant third on the steals list with
2,050, while Chicago Bulls' Michael
Jordan is fol\flh with 1,958. The
NBA didn 'I begin counting steals as
an official statistic unti I 1973.
. Averaging 1.69 steals this season,
Stockton tied the mark with 5:08 left
in the second quarter

1~

7UP

;stockton breaks NBA steals record
BOB MiMS
\, • SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
: ~)lortly after John Stockton broke the
· NBA career steals record, he was
: JllObbed by his teammates and giv;en a standing .ovation by the Delta
: Center's 20,000 fans.
· · The Utah Jazz guard was just
: lhrilled to get it over with.
: · "I was nervous a lillie bit. I found
: mysel' ihinking about it," Stockton
· said. "You're caught between not
: trying to hurt your team by reaching
: in, and just not trying."
With 8:21 left in Utah's 112-98
: yictory over the Boston Celtics on
: Tuesday night, the eight-time All. Star saw his chance to break Maurice
Cheeks' record.
· "Basically, I took a swipe at it
: ·and knocked it loose," Stockton
: said. "I didn't wanted to lose it at

r

•

~TED

VARIETIES

f!IOJt lleluxe

P,.en1()-Qz.Plaa•

OnehtOne

OnehtOne

"It TIE OELHWa:IIY"

IMII5Qfe
CoolliHI Ham
a.y Ona Lb... One

,

..........

Illy Cine hi Cine

,. . """"-•PaCk.~liE'·'
"""t
40W, IIOW, 75W OR 100W

loltWIIIte

Jlllllr . . , ,
fllnlr salmon
14.75-0Z.
a.yOnaa.tOne

sea.Pille

1uy on.

Shtfmp PoA:etL.---11-al. ptg, Itt Olio
V.UIE PAc;K RSH PORTIONS 011
luy Olio -~
Gorton'S, Stleb.._u5-0l- Itt OrM rll55f

r;,~=---·~· ------. . . . . . . .

....

.Lll.. . ..

•

.

.
I ·.

�..
I

•, . . 8 • The Deily S,uUnel

,.•

Wedneld'Y, February 21,

1996:

restaurant breakfasts: No grand sl~m: for health--·

•

PomeroY. • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

.

. The Dally Sentinel• ,...9

.

::~amily

, , By DARLENE SUPEAVLLE
' Aaa~;~clalid PMM Wl'l*
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Start
· · the day with a typical family-style
: restaurant breakfast and you could be ·
gelling nearly a day's worth offal and
• :niore than 1,100 calories :_ all of
·them before that !flaming meeting, a
, consumer group said today.
- But there was good ·news too.
Diners can get healthier breakfasts
. at these restaurants by ordering cau· tiously and reque~ting SllbStitutions,
'said Jayne Hurley, senior nutritionist
,'at the Center for .Science in the Pub-

.

lie Interest.
"But if YOI!'re not careful, it's
easy to consume an entire day's
worth of fat, saturated fat, cholesterol
and sodium, all before 10 a.m.," said
Hurley, who announced the results of
the group's latest restaurant survey.
Previous studies by the WashingtQn-based consumer·a~vocacy group
have examined the healthfulness of
restaur&amp;l\t·prepared Chinese and !talian foods, deli sandwiches and
movie-theater popcoi'T!.
For its ~west stwjy, the center
.dissected 12 popular breakfast

enqees and side disbes bought at 17
locations in ·Chicago, Denver, Los
Angeles and Washington. The restaurants included Denny's, the International Hou$e of Pancakes and Bob's.
Big Boy.
The survey found two days ' worth
of cholesterol, 49 fat grams and
more than I,IOOcalories in the most
popular breakfast choice - two each
of eggs, sausages, bacon and pancakes- such as the Denny's "Grand
Slam."
·
The government recommends a
daily fat -intake of , 65 grams for

adults.
"A Grand Slam-type breakfast is
a nutritional strikeout," Hurley said.
Attempts to get comme11t from
officials at Denny's, IHOP or Bob's
Big Boy by telephone Tuesday
evening were not successful.
To make such meals healthier,
Hurley suggested .l!$king for egg
substitute, skipping the butter or
margarine and substituting fresh fruit
for sausage or bacon.
But there 's Ii.ttle hope for improving the beloved Belgian warne.
A single waffle • sans ·whipped

cream had 17 grams of fat - the
same as in two McDon*''s Quarter
Pounders - and 900 calories, mostly because of the egg buller and
milk in the batter.
\•
Pancake or French"toast platters
with four sausages c!)lltained about
65 grams of fat, as did the biscuit and
gravy platters analyzed.
The best breakfast choice was the
hot or cold cereal platter, wit11 fresh
frilit, juice and toast and jam, minus
the butter or margarine~lt weighed in
with about 600 caloriei and 7 grams
of fat.

' 40·

•

't puptM... No! •alan Elkhound,
'Woll &amp; G•rmen pollee mlr .
_..._ • ..,.,.. 30Wl'W748. '

Health-conscious eatefs should :
take advaritage of breakfast bqffet
bars to stock up on unlimited ·
amounts of fresh fruit and cereal, ,
Hurley said.
But diners who must have their ~
favorites should remember that:
•·
- Hash browns have II grams of
fat, half as much as french fries, and ·.
roughly the same as two slices of
toast with margarine.
'
-A side order of sausage (four
links) ~ about 32 fat -grams - 10 •
times the amount in a 2-ounce order
of ham.

Four blocl&lt; ilmoa. Border (:ol~w

'

tlll&lt;:k Lob mbr. a -k• old,
7&lt;2-211211.

DE

FIIIL YOII

•

r-~---------------...;..;..._..,

A-( UTILITY
CONSTRlknoN CO.

I

Overhead &amp;

underground
utilities &amp;,llghUng
Bucket, Digger
Truck Service.
Service Pole
$2.50 per ft.

·, community
· calendar

1-614-378-9108

MISUIDIRSTOODII

LIVE II
COIIYEUAnOI

The Commualty" Caleaclar is
.ppblls~ as a free aertlce to aon·proflt groups wlshliltl to llDDOUDCe
· · meetiag and .-pec,lel eveat&amp; The
. c:aleadarls 1101 cJedgn&gt;d to promote
, ~es or fuud nlser-. of any type.
: -Items.are printed as space permits
'and cannot be guaraaieed to run a
· ' Specific number of days.

.

~'

SYRACU.SE -- Meigs Ministeri-

7 p:m,\ t the Asbury Un1ted Metllod1st
~·.c;:))im:h.

R,ev. )3rian Harkness to .be
:'~,s~ak~. ..
.

·. }~

'

'

'

' \·

'

} . "PoMEROy -- Preceptor Beta
·.:sell! salad s'upper Tiiursday, 6 p.m. at
·· the holl'e of Clarice Krauuer.
'
··\"
:·' ~O~ER,OY -· ,The Wildwood
Galllen qub, I p.m. Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Lib$)'. Denise Arnold to
;sPeaK on herbs.

.

'

:.·,, REEDSVILLE-- Riverview Gar~
r
.
• .den
Club, 7:30
p.m. ·Thu rsday at the
· honie of Maxine Whitehead. Members top take fruit for fruit trays. Auction will be held.
'
. ' RUTLAND •• Meigs County'
Churches of Christ' Women's Fei.Jowship will meet Thursdliy, 7:30
p.m. at the Rutlan!l Church of Christ.
Zion Church of· Christ will , have ~
devotiQns: ·
· '

.

'

COKE

-

Gallon - Regular Only
.

CLOROX BLEACH .

't

2 LiterBottle

64 Oz. Ctn. Cranberry Medi'Y, Grape J'-'lce,
Plus VItamins, Plus calcium, Homestyle or
, Regular Orange· Juice

•

'
,

. . bc!detPierce read histort of St.
' Vali!tine and gave out ~opi~ of the
;_t\fstory tel m~m,bets : ,!Jet· well cards
. ' ·were signj~ct'~y the, group fpr Mary
· ~mbert whO haf,Pen ill.
, The'ne"it meeting will be March 7,
r pilil., with the guest speaker to l?e
writer Goldie Love from Pt. Pleasant~

-'fil.:w. ,

c

•

.

,

'

'

ractice ·

=~·:a'Wrna'"·

•Siding

Puppies- Husk~/Callie mill, 7

,

8411-2512

FREE ESTIMATES

Three

\

'
-~

Fresh Express Tossed

·Boneless

'11me

Out RL.I43,
Mala : Black Labrador With Purple
Collar, Female : Black &amp; Tan No·
Co ll ar. Last Seen Friday Nighl.
Child's Pets, 61&lt;-992·6595 Man·
day Thru Th ur sday After 4 P.M .

CLARK'S CAB CO.

lost set of car keys with child992·6591 or614·992· 7488.

2/WI mo.

.

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

"Supplie• for all your pet lleedo "

........... ,........ ..,.
Opening Feb. 1st

271 North 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH. 45760
AKC Reg. Pupplea, Klttena, Birds &amp; More
Experlanced Groomer• • Fl111nclng AVtlllatblell
(61~)

B. Jolene Rupe/Owner

Reaaonable

·

.,.

992-6244

Gallipolis·
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Mus t Be Paid In
Advance . DEADLINE · 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad is to ruri
Sunday edition · 2 :00 p.m. Friday
Monday edition - 1o:oo a.m . Sat·
urday.

Al l Yard Sa les Mu st Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline : 1:00-pm the
day before ltle ad is to run, Sun·
day edition- 1:OOprtl Friday, Monday edition 1O:OOa.m. Saturday.

lnaurera • Experienced
Call Wayne No"
For Free Eollmataa

Yard Sale

10

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

Houoe Repair &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Addlllono
Siding, Roollng, Palloo

992-4405

21BB.
ren·s photo holder attached, 614·

Starting Sun. thru Feb.
29 Sr. CIUzene Special
Fee for day·rune.
$1.00 per person to
Pomeroy &amp; Middleport
Days: 541·1124 (local)
Nlghta: 992·2741

...

PubliC Sale
and Auction.

80

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time a uctioneer . co mp18te

auction
service.
Licensed
156.0hio &amp; Wesi Virgmia , 304 -

69

22.1b. bag

urina oo·gChow

'S 29

99
t

240Z.

·~

4'2- Load
Reg • 33 Load w/Bieach
'
..
'

s1 ~oo A Day For
15 Words

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

TRUCKING

(Over 15 Words- 20¢ Per Word, Per Day)
Minimum run 3 Cons~cutive days to
receive special rate. NO REFUNDS!
·Offer good with coupon only.

'I

MikeS
Potato Ch

s 99

OFFER
.
EXPIRES

,•

----------------------~----Print one word in' each space below. Each initial or :

1

: group of figures counts as a word. Count name 1
1 address or phone number, if used. You'll get better 1
1 results if you describe fully, give price. . The :
: Sentinel reserves the right to classify, edit or reject 1
i any ad. Yard Sales Excluded.
1

:Nme
I

1
I
1

I

Address•-------- - - - - - - : - -

I
1
I
I
I

I

Phone
.

1.

I

3.

4.

5.

8.

'

.

'

..!.

II.

'

. ',...

•

a.
12.

14.

'

1·901Hp56·2600 Eat•
3136, 2.99,.... +
11 yn.. ..n.... to
sllglts locatttlll! Q!!!!

-

,..,..Serv·U
.... ...

Flnclerl Of hard IO
find auto parta.

\

.

'

.::.

."

·~

"'-Acldlti-

,.,...AIIIIch
A ..pi ....... OI,..._.

I,

.
'
Mall or btlng
thla cqupon with payment to:

I
I

&gt;

'
''

'

· The DallY Sentlmil

.I

P.O. Box 729, Pcimeroy, Ohio 45789

i

-·--- ------·

·[ ~.:ur;
e.v__~

MUSTIE

• _I

WV

Doon opt1 at 4:30 p.m.
Lucky Ball $200.00 and
Raises $50.00 each
wk. Pay eccording to
the number of players.
Keep lid for FREE card

l/3/lfn

113111

Water
freatment
Equipment

TRI·STIIE WATER SYSRMS, INC.
The water treatment company cordialtY invites you to
participate In a tree, no obligation. comprehensl\le water
analysis. Wfi. WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mt-al Hanlneu, Iron, PH.
PIUN CIH RninSojlat !1112-4472 011-----3313
to aet up your lrae water 1111tyalo.
I!WIIfn

POMEROY, OHIO
Traah Removal - Commercial or Residential
SeptJc Tanka Cleaned &amp; Portable Tollala Rented.
Dally, -~Jy a. monthly .,.ntal rataa. .

..... CIIrlll••
•Eieclr!cal a. Plumbing
·Roonng

·~1teilor •

ext.rtor

Pllnllng
Alao ConcNie WOrk
(FA&amp;E ESJJMATES)

V:C. YeuNG Ill
' 1112-41215
Pomeroy, Qhlo.

MIIYftlll

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Kick Boxing
Training

Umeetone, S.nd, Gravel, Coal a. Water

At Big Bend
ijealt~

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418

......

Bus (304) 882·2756
Res. (304) 882-3328
West Columbia WV.

rum ffrl &amp; lllslllll

-.

Help Bumecl Out Vlctl1111

.. . :!:

c.u

,..,_."'*
MAt 1

1·90HS6-2600
IIIHCitiJOI2

' plfiM.Atil Us

Youell toni p11ont NqUhtL

lh

rv&amp;vw.

· , _ (!14161s-TIST

Wanted To Buy : Junk Aulos With
Or Without Mo tors . Ca l l larry
l 1vely. 614· 388·9303.
Wanted To Buy : lit tle Tikes Toys,
Sand Box . P icn i c Tabl e, Play
Hou se, 614 -245-5887
Wanted To Buy : Sea ffhng Iron
Skillets . Clocks , Pocke t WatcheS,
Km11es . Tools , Fur niture, Trac to r
Eqwpment, ~14·379 -2 160 .
Wanted To Buy: Standi ng Timber,'
614·379 ~ 27 58

''

Wanted To Buy: Standi ng Timber,
Arrt Amount, 614-388-9906.
,~

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted
S·WANTED·S

10 peop l e who need to lose
wetght &amp; make money, to try new
palented we 1ghHoss product.
304-773-5083 24hr&amp;lday.
$1,000 Weekly Pro cessing Mail
Free Info. Send Seli-Addrened
Stamped Envelope : Express·

Dept.131 , 100 East Whitestone
Blvd., Suite 148-345, Cedar Park
TX 786 13,
S200 -$500 Wkly. Assemble Pro-·
ducts, No Selling. Paid Direct. Ful ·
ly Guaranteed. No Exp. Neces sary. 7 Days 407-875 · 2022

Ext.0526H06.

,

$35,000 I VA. INCOME Potential. .

' $40,000 I VA. INCOME Potentia[.

Paraonals ·
REDUCE: 11om on fat fall Take

&lt;lPi'L- m1 E-Vop tluroac.
AYIIIIotble FMh Pharmacy. ~lddltporL

30 Announc:amenta

$2.9tlmln. 11+

ser.u e1e ••s ••34

Used furniture - an ti ques, one
piece or co mplete es tates, Osby
Uartin, 1114·992-744 1.

fOr DeltiiJt

005

'

'

Collectibles, Paperwe1ght s. Etc.
U .T S, Coin Shop, 1S1 Sec o nd
Ave nue, Gallipolis, 614-446-2842.

CIIJ992·3967

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

Top Pnc'es Paid : Old U.S. Coins,
Silver, Gold, Diam onds , All Old

'

.

Ho me Typi.s ts 1PC Unra. Ton
Free (I) 800· 898· 9778 EX! . TC

. 281 4 Fof U stings.

Pluo 10 Centa l'olllge
Send
l\tiOMY Order to
lox 1~ Glutlbo, A~l

sus

.

House In Gallipolis. 2 Or 3 Bedroom, Garage, Wa lking Distance
To Stores. 614 -388-8936.

Reading Book\. Toll Froe (!) 80().
698-9n8 Ext R-2814 For Details. ·

..-----..:111::.::.:,11::::mo.:::.~

Socks $1.75 per pair

S...&amp;"*

Ch~Jsts.nb

Cluaea

CUlm WI

Beef and Hog

&amp; Fitness

Children &amp; Adult

Fortunes will "- mode new IlLII
11ap llll'&lt;llllng, oil bo"'niCII, doctot
100% guaranleed,

. .,.ommonct.a.

I'I00-870-M17.

~

. .

•,

mo.

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge Sports
Entertainment Line!!
1-900-776-01 00
Ext. '6057
$2.99 per min .
Must be 18yrs.
To.u ch Tone. Phone
Required

Dutributed by

SERYIQ

I

'

6.,1..Jr

'

l'or AdMaMI Wonle

15

. ,,'

Slllplycal

1Q.

13.
'

'

2.

I

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.
For Free estimate call949-2512

NIMirti'-'Dittsl

CAR
DELUXE

..

Racine American
Legion Post 602
EVERY SUNDAY .

P.O. Box 587

~

Clean Lar8 Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1987 Models Or· Newer.
Smith Bu ick Pon tiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.

773 -5033

BINGO

Serv·U (619) 645-8434

'

I

Cl•uiiiCIItlon:

I
I

11.'

Serv-U (619) 645- 8434

1619) 645-11434

I

7.

Sports Fun II
Scores Point
Spreads and much
more.
1-900-nG-0100
EXt. 7830 $2.99 per
min. Mu!lt be 18 yrs
Touch-Tone Phone
Req.

5·7 Miles , Gallipoli s, No Resnc ·.

tions, 614·446-0034.

J &amp; D's Auto Parts . Buy ing sal ·
vage vehic les. Selling parts. 304·

J.D. Drilling Company

· Jli.UONAI' lllAfl&amp;

Photo Copies Not Accepted

Approxima te 1 Acre Level l ot
Prefer Alfeady Deve loped W1thin

CALL
.14·949·2512

(No Sunday Calls)

Wanted to Buy

Anti_q ues. collectable s. estates ,
Riverine An tiq ues, Ru ss Moore .
owner, 1'14-992·2526.

SALE •

614-992-7643

R. L.HOLLON

90

ROUND
BALES OF
HAY fOR

FREE ESTIMATES

Excluding Yard Sales

\

•

32
. OZ. • ..

i mately 1 year old , Happy Hollow
Rd. area, 614·742· 20 12 allor 6pm .

: Friday, Satu rday, Sur&lt;lay. All Day

OWnera:
, Harry &amp; Donna Clark

DAY

Lb.lilted

USDA Choice

'LB.-

ZESTA·CRACKERS

60 Lost and Found
Fou nd· lemale Beagle, appro&lt;·

TAXI

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Speelal

Round ~r Rump Roast

c
COnAGE CHEESE

sound , no

All Whue With Blaclo. Nose &amp;
B lack , EyEJ:s Weat ing light B l ue
Collar, Victnity : American Legion .
Ch ild's Pe t", Reward I 6l4 -o!l4i3 -

~ew Homes • VInyl Siding New

•

bag

Westover

2s· TV's . 1 has

: Lost 2 1Jo9l 5 Miles

Call992·3967
for Details.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
Ra(e

1 lb.

12 Gaugt
Factory Clloke Onlr

Three mo.nth old temale Austra·

lian Blue.Hee{er, 814-378-6135.

..__ _ _ _....:~::,:11:,:.1'"":=..~
· _lost: Pan Terner &amp; Part Poodle

UCINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUN. I PM

1

Two

'.

CLASSIFIED
AD SALE

grown cato 10 g6od

p1cture. Other Works. fades in &amp;
OIJI. 304-773-5087.

.-AI..... -J 8
-NlliiWIUI
rrogrtlm-

949-2018 FAX

lull

home, 61 .. 992·7505.

Middleport

BASHAN RO.
Racine, Ohio 45771
84&amp;-3013 Phone

379 9122
.

~;.~~:t mate and ,ema,• . a...

At Big Bend
Health &amp; Fitness
87 Mill $1.,

28563

...

:::~~~~

WEIGHT LOSS
PROGRAM

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

61

773-5785 Or ~4 - 773-5447

s

.

"., Attending were: Jackie Preece,
;;;IK:~ Ki!Chen; 'Bob Eads, Ho17'1!r
.tl~, Chester ~xlon. Jo11nn Eads,
-~)~iii Hysell, Francis Star, M!IJY
~~n, Catherine' Weaver, L~lla '
l(lu Miakinc Hart,.Gayle Hqdman,
,~ B"fH~tdJIIan·, · Geraldine Sexton,
, t Fi)lnkl~n King, Yvonne Se~ton and
r:• ~raldme Sexton. t, · 1 ,

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

.614-992·3470

PAPER TOWELS

..

as

:=:~~:;·

.._....l,;.61;..;4~99;,;;;2.;
·2;;.75;,;3;..._,

1131/lfn

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

BI·Rite Slngie Roll·

TROP.ICANA SEASON'S
BEST

FRID.AY
;o
•
. - TUPP~RS PLAINS -- Revival
services will be held at 7 p.m. Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday·at the St. Paul
United Methodist Church: '· Rev.
Ernest Perkins will be the speaker.

' The. senior ·Saints of the Rutland
Chur6h of God enjoy~ a dinner at
Dalft Restaurant in. GaUipolis .on
Valen!ine's Day, Feb. 14, whereAhce
Kitchen was chosen "Sweetheart" by
die group.
' ·: Kitchen was presented a bouquet
'ol red rbSes· and' a card, as she was
honore4' .J99§ sweetheart for the
year. The blessing was given by DB
J1erdtnan.

992-2825

WICKS
HAULING

'
·J.Jmlt 1: with 11111 coupon
a. additional purch~

'

Rtltland Senior
·Saints meet

Puppies llothers Australian Cat·
Dog Falher Border Collie? 2

lie

(614) 992-5535

Low Rl,lel)

r

; 'a! Associ~on, Lenten_ servjce, 7:30

Your favorite artist
•
on Tape .or CD
..

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

014--1685.

•New Homn
' •Addltlonl

(Ume Sloni-

:·

. f.'

CUIIOmBulldlnoiRtmodtllng

802 1154-7420

'

~THURSDAY

Pupt&gt;es.

• IIQ~ Dealer

$3.89 per min.
'MIIIt Be 18 Yra.
PROCALL CO.

. .

TUPPERS PLAINS -- Eastern
·:i.ocal Board' of Education will meet
• ;WCd~~Csday, · 6.:30 prf!l . at Tuppers
:.JlJainJEiementary to discuss the pro! pd¥:d building project· and bond
r' issue. 'All' district residents urged to
,attend, ; .
·
1
•j: •
..,.

IIaa

' E1t. 2074

',

'

ent. Chases chickens. 30H58·

1·900.484-2100

POMEROY -- Middleport Literary.Ciub meeting Wednesday, 2 p.m.
. at the home of Mrs. Roy Holler. Mrs.
. David Bowen will review 'New Pas.• sag~s· by Gail Sheehy. A musical pro-,
·_gram is plan~ed by Mrs. Holter. . .
':;

otd blonde
or, opoyed,
lhots. Gotdon
l"'lng &amp; ollodi·

OlE ·01 ·OlE

Asst. Varieties

au.

,----------------.., r-------.--'"'1·.. Lw •rr
Rom...
NatJ At lllf..S DafNIJfe•
SMITH'S
•
CONSTIUC110N ~::~::-:.:::.ter
~........u

-

: wEDNESDAY
.
.I
POMEROY ·· Alzheimers and
' Related Disord!lrs support Group,
: Wednesday, I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs
· ,Muhipurpose Center. '{opic will be
·"Validation Therapy." ·
·

GhN_Wir

••

AYON I All Areas I Shirley •

Spoors, ~"675·14211,

.Abl11 Avon R.epreaentat1Ve11 ... .. ' "'"
needed. Earn money
Chrl&amp;t· ' ,. : :
·maa biDs 1t homeiat work. HIPO- • ..: ~ "

tor

992·6356 or 304· 882· 2845 In&lt;!

Rop.

•

· .. •

•

�Pomeroy e Middleport, OhiQ .

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio
· -- ...

__________ _ _____
•

-

-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11
__;_

__.:._

NEA CrOSIJWord Puzzle
ACROSS

PHIL~IP

ALDER
KIT 'N' CARLYLM by Larry WrtPt

M._. ,.. JIOU looldnil

lliotarr
br a uria~ng and
,._,; cholc:e?

CO·

Hurling a[1d Aelllbllftlllon Centlf
nt~eds a Dle1ary Manaatf wllh

tor Rent
1 and 2 bedroom apartmenll, fur:
nilhed and unfurnished. security
depoait req uired, no pets, 814·

state and local aanitajon regula·
tiona. Reaponslblllrles include
· Pf!I!Pirlng schedules, supeor'lising
rood preparation and dlsbursa m8nt, monl!orlng IBWs, lnurvice

992·2218.
1 bedroom apartment in Mktdle·
port, available Decemb'r 1, aU
util i ties paid, 1250 per mantl'l,

education. Uusr have higl'lsthool
mini~

$1 oo deposlr, sam to 5pm 814992·78Clll.

mum of one year in dietary man.

agement, long term care Dt hospl-

ral aerting. Corllfied dierary man·

1 Bedroom Near Holzer's Super
Nice, 1288/Ma. Plus Utllitieo,

ager prefeued. It you ate quali-

fied, please call 30&lt;0·675-3005 or
write: Point Pleuant Nl.lllino and

-Rehab ilitation Center, Rl. 1 Box

326, Poln1 Pleasan1, WV 25550.
A Glenrnatl&lt; Facllily. EOE
Cuke Cleaner• In GaMipollo Apply

1i1 Person Wllfd, Thurs. Fri, After 1

RM.
"Sure, I know h's going to melt eoon.
f!ut, hey ... let the buye[ beware!"

Earn ', 0001 weekly stuffing en·
velopes at home. Be your bo11.
l Slart now. No oxp.. ~.. ouppllft,
Info., no obligation. Send S.A.S.E.
to Presti ge.. Unit ll, P.O. Box
195609. Win ter Springs, Fl

llcllitln, cioae to achobl in ·
AppHcatiano available st: )IIHage
Groen Apto. tJ4D or call ft 1._,802·
3711.EOH.

•A K J 10 8
WEST
EAST
aAQI09B
a&amp; 4 3

11185 S·10l!lazor. ;104-875-4859.
1986 Dodge Van 3t8, Automalic,
Goad, lt,400, 6t4·256·
6854, 6t4·256-B329. ..

Range 105: Frigidaire 30 1nc11
Eloclrlc Range 1125; 30 ln~h
~ic

Columbus Gaa Range, t150;

02-2t -96 _..

•K 53
t i\ K

117A CJ5, tiC. cond., owner Shlr·
'"'SalVIrll 30¥7S.1!je4.

Wh i te , Like New, $205, 1 Y•ar
Warranty; Kenmore 30 Inch Elac-

•A 7
•J 9 2

•B 2

• • 6 2

• ? 5

tQ1087 54

1988 FOrd E150 Corwt~raion Van,
AutomtUc, Crulae. 4 Doluxo Caplllno, ~n Slzo Bench Faldou~

SOUTH

Excellent Exterior &amp; Interior

U3

aK J

• Q J 10 9 6 4·

$5600 8t 4-446-264 7,

•e

1HO Dodge Caravan New Front
TJrtl, Brakes &amp; Belts, looka
Groetl v-e 3.0 u,.,, $4,800, Neg ..
614-l!AS-l)717.

34!19.

sao

NORTH
17 52

EEK4MEEK

Vans&amp;

eu.

ptlancn furnished, laundry room

310 Homn Car Sale

180 Wanted To Do

Whirlpool Washer White, Heavy
Outr $95: Kenmare Drror IVS:
Kenmare Waaher Hei&gt;J1 Duty
11 25: Martag Orrar $125: G.£.
Waohor H:avw Duty Whfte $150;
Kenmore Wul'1er H1av~ Out_.,

Whirlpool ~lrigoratar White
Fro11 Free It 25: Hatpoinl Refrig448~7.
erator Fraat Free Advacodo
Green Nlco 1175: Almond Welt·
2 bedroom apartment. $350 a lnghouse
Frost FrH Relr~rator
manlh, uriltlal included, $200 de- 1265: Admiral
AolriaoraiOr Frail
posit, no pall, 614-992·572&lt;.
!=rae $350; 1 Year WIHII'IIY On
Comprelaor like New, Slfaggs
Apptlanc:es, 78 Vine StrHt, Galli2bclrm. IPII., lOIII eltc:lrlc . II)- . pOlis, 81~-448-7308, 1·800· 499Leaae IOepos!t Required,

""'--' : ! 3 '

19113 Ford Spluh, Pidt·Up Truck,
Loaded, like Now, $8,095, 6t4258-8753.

Apartments

knowledge tn th~ liMa of clink:al
charting, eare planning, MOS.
b4dgeting, quality as1urance and

diploma or equivalent and a

roee....

tU2 Ford F-250 414, DIHol.
53,000 MUoo, $17,500, l14·37i·
27M.

•-dinO
Point Pleasant

1 Oct. 31 eight
8 110210
cherateler
11 Appr-.nlice
12R- - -

:=roup
54
5S
56
57

Cond.-.1
Is annoyed
Printers' units
Heavy olelgho

DOWN

-Itt•
24 Govt. farm

agency
HaH a dance
Forearm bone
Robber'
Hai'Yfttl
Partldlaea
Type ollly
Ideal place
lnventor'a inlto.

1 Schqol org.
2 Spoon bender
-Geller
3 Wedlock
4 Plumbers'
concern a
5 Fort s Comparative
suffix
·7 Caught
8 Actor Robert

De -

4 3

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
West North East
2•
2a
4•
Allpass
Opening lead: • 2

BARNEY

Antiques.

Clt-

45 SitU
~ Dintf llndWich
(-.}
47~

130'Hweor
LaOIM!n:Ua
14 Pour•
17 Oedipus 18 ChineN
pi!Uoaophy
20 Granl'o foe
21 Himalayan
Plant
23 TV cartoon

25
26
28
30
34
35
36
39

40 More or43 Poelllva vola
44 No' lfa, ends,

Play to your assets

327t9.
Easy Work ! Excellent P8y l Aa·
semble Products at Home. Call
Toll Free 1·800·467-5566 E)(:T.

By Phillip Alder

3t3.
Experienced Roofers Foreman
And labo re rs. Also Carpenters
Experienced In All Phases Of
Res~nt ial Reroodeling, flt4-•464514, Man -Fri 8-5.

Tf#tMITf

Home Typis ts, PC users needed.
$45,000 income potential. Call 1600·513-4343 Ext B-9366.

PEANUTS

Immediate opening for EXPERI·
ENCED legal secre1ary. Must
have computer/word pracessmg
eKperience. puDiic relations. general olfice skills. Salary based
upon experience. Send resume
and references to: Legal Secretary, CJo Daily Se nd~. P.O. Box

729-20,

[
HAVE A SLED!

Po-. Ohio 45769.

Managemen\ Opjlar!Unity
Take advan~age ol this last ll'ack
career opporturil)', good salary,
top benefits, executive vaining,
opportunily for,advancement
Must be w1lli!"G ro work hard, assume responsiblittes, think br
you•self and be customer service
oriented. Call BenefiCial at 614·
992-21 11.
Smoke free and drug tree environment. Equal Opportunity Em·

plorer rMIOJV
Managing Cosmetologisl Needed
In Gallipolis Area , Establishe~
Cliental A Plus. 8 14-446 - 7130

Oualifi ad, experienced, CNAJ I::::::;~~::;;:~::::~;-:-::-:-:::­

HHA, able to care for !he elderly '-'-" .
in their home, please call e1~IHI2,2049.
14x52 mobile home, 8X12
Rooling. Free Eatimatn. 304-895appliances, window air, rea·
3483, ask br /my.
~~~~-30+~;578-~22fl&amp;~~a~ltor~~:...,
Sun Valley Nurser~ School. 1983 1~110 3 BedfOoma, 2 Batna;
Cl\ildcare M·F sam-5:30pm A9ea Dishwasher, CA, Tatall~ Rema2-K , Young Schaaf Age Our1ng deled On Rented lot, New Star·
Summer. 3 Daya per Week Mini · lge Building, $13,800, 814-24~
mum81H&lt;6-3657.
5755.

1::::::-::-:-:::---:-:::-:-:-:-:-:-::-::

Babysining in my home, fle1dble
hours. Reasonable rates , have

references. Close to schoola.
304-875-27&amp;1.

EOJenings..
Need someone to sit wlelderty, 5
days pe.r week, d~ys/eOJeninge
availa~e. $75/Wk. 304-882·3m.

210

1986 14x70 3bedroom, 2batha,
appliancas &amp; washer/dryer in·
eluded, in Morgantown, behind

Be Moved,

Opportunity

2 BednlGm Trailor Wilh 2 Add On
R~oms ,' Big Yard, B&amp;(M, Fruit
Trees, 1 Car Garage, Outbuild-

!NOTICE!

759-3200 ext 2100.

ings, Front Porch,· Close To
School &amp; Stares, St3,500 , 61A·

Responsibil i ti es:
Supervise
9raduqte students tor and deliver
off-campus speech pathology
services in va riety or health care
seulngs; engage In contr~cls ne·
gotia ~on with such agencieS; col ·
lab.orate with lacull'/ toward integration of services and academic
curriculum requirements.
Interviewer : Send complete CV,
names o f three references and
letter of application to : Edwin
leach. Ph.D., He~ring and
Speecn Sciences, lmdley Hall
201, Ohio Uni\leraity. Athens, Oh.

2459,

wv.30+755-5885.

IN ''-""'- I&lt;IU&lt;PV

New t4x80. 2 or 3bidfoom. Only
make 2 paymantl to move ln. No

Till DINNU.!'

S588.

/SERVICE , 2+acres, improved land, 3mL out
Milalllne Rd. lltlled well, red bim,
out building, $13,!100. C~ll collect
5t5·905·1098 or locally 304·675·
dUelS seu. tfo Glnvnlcko.
5752.
HI00·569-8Ut2
New Growing Espresso Cappu,:: - Building sites with road lronrage,
clno Bar On Rio Grande College back ol New HaYen, rural water,
Camf)IJs Call 614-245-5682. 614· and financing available. 304·882·
26811.
24S.55860wnors Relocating.

230

457Qt .

half-.. 614-949-2025.
Scenic Val ley, Apple GroOJe,
beautiful 2ac lots, public water.

Professional
Services

Clyde aa..en Jr., 304-576-2336.

Applk.tlon . Deadline: E&gt;Jaluarion Construction work, all phaae11.
Qf apl)licatlons will begin fmme· Additions, siding, pJasterlriQ, stuc~18teiJ and will continue until co, stnthetica, finish drywall, roof
· March 1at

Five acres,
aetator, near
Racine,$16,000 can finance with

repairs, installing windows .

~04 -

675-6902.

Wanted Approximate Acre Level
lot Prefer Already Developed
Within 5-7 Miles, Gallipolis, No

Rasrlcliana, 64-&lt;46·8034.

Ohio University is an Affirmative

Action/Equal Opportunity Emptor·
or
~. . . . . . . . . . . .. .
,,sral &amp; Gov't Jobs 121 /Hr +
Benefils, No Exp. Will Train, For
Appl And inlo HI00-536.3().40.

450

Circle Motel, Gallipolis, OH 614-

Sleepino rooms with cook ing .
Also trailer space on river. All
hook- ups. Call after 2:00 p.m ..

1986 Chr~sler LeBaron convertible, loaded, looks and runs good,
$1600, Clll614-247·2961 .

304-773-5651, Maoan WV.

460 Space for Aent

Our....,..,.,..,

Uormed that al ct til 'Ill
~lntltll~e II r+

Need A Place To Hold Meetings,
- · · Or Private Pallie8? Call
614·2AS.5e82, 814·245·5588 An·
ylime OAHWA.

JET

AERATION IIOTOAS
Repaired, New &amp; ReliuHI In Stock.
Call Ran Evans, 1-1100·537·9526.

Trailer 101 for renl - 760 High
Suae~ ·MicldiOf&gt;Ort. StOOimo. plus
$50 depoai~ call614-3o14·3296. .

470 wanted to Rent

MERCHM~DISE

510

Household

Kenmore
Dining Tabte,
$100: Air Conditione,.; Amomanaf

Microwave ; learher
Bookcue SSO; Twin
Beds: Rugs : lamp• . 61•.,,.,.,
90211.
like New Kirby Sweeper,
pooer ·Attllchment, Car Vac

COlt $1,500, 614-388-6861 .
Moving: 4 Year Old Dryer $125,

614-3711-2720 AFTER 8 RM.

Musical

... .,,, Heqnan¥
~-

..

·

APPII:,ncoa:

Fle~ndltlantd

WI~:. Dryers, Ron;oo, Rolrl·

grata11, 110 Dar GuarantHI
French City Maytag, 114·44t·
7181.., '
.

Counwy Fumltuto. 30H75r8B20.
For. rent or sat~: 7 r.oom tiou11, At 2 N, emile:, Pt Pllll•n~ WV.
707 Main S t . $AOO/ma. Deposit .&amp; T,._Sa!D-8, Slln 11·5.
r ·· - - 304-8?5-1876.
Do 'lltureair 1 a- On Carpet
FloarC_Ina._
Njco cloon 2 -...m, In ,_,_.
Rt7 N, 114-44l-7444.
ay, lor ,.,.
.wlft Op4ion .,
buy, HUD accepted , 1300 1&gt;0(
monfl with d!!Paak. no- 814-

'

Voly .nics llollra In FDrNtroy lor

,..., 814-812-- .'
'

NDDO

BOL

ORX

PRCOL
XKSDL .

TBOXSOA;

S X

LSPPSUCHX
ASHNDKX

I .

UZOFXDKXRO .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I've seen lolethons that didn't lasl as long as the
Orange Bowl halftime show ." - (LA . Times columnist) Allan Malamud.

O four
Rearrange !etten of
ocrombled word1
low to form four words.

....
tho

C0 T AL E

I I I I I'
FL Y0 T

Improvements
;
Instruments ·
Paint, Sharp, D7 ,000 --~--~~~~--~·
BASEMENT
'•'
Runs Good, 34MPG,
WATERPROOFING
Console Piano Whitne~ By Kim- ~~~~~.0~556~·~...,:.:___: Unconditional liletime guarantee. ~
ball Dark American Walnut Ex- Loe~l ·- reterencea furnial'1ed. Call 1
1
CIIIenl~ 614--5.
SS6J=l'li,fiNan'·~••noo
·' ne.2~ OaoEngrtr.'u··~ (81~1 448·0870 Or (8t4) 237· •
Spe
Vlol
. . . ..
"'
n 04Da Rogers Waterproofing. Es -,
bick, PS, Sunroof, Aloi!FM Cas- llltllohed 1875.
1
Mile, New Tires /Battery; Clean
FARM SUPPLIES
Runa Gr~at, 38 !lPG, Aikin~ :::':;::=-;::;:-::-:-::---:--:-:: -•
&amp; IIVf-S lO CK
1000, S1A'3-5.
. Appliance Parta And Service: All : ,
Name Brands OVer 25 Years E•· 1
1080 Chevy Crosica Loaded, peritnCf!l All Work Guarsruaed, •
$2,600 080; 11165 Chevy Ctltll- French City Maytag , &amp;1• ·U6· :,
Equlpmenl
ril)' W!tgort,l.eadetl, $1 ,100, 080. 7795.
I
I
.
'
10% an·au tractor engine over- 61,~1·1449, 814-A1-45114.
C&amp;C General Home ' Mai n- !..
haul kits, m February. Sider's
{890
Cougar
LS.
tully
loaded.
ttnence- Painting, vinyl\ siding • .!'
Equipment 304-875-7421 .
!i8,0C!Qmi., Mke - · 304·675-3656. c;arpontty, - ·· w i -. ltolho, ,.
1985 M111ty Ferauaon Tractor,
mob1e home repair and rrore. For, " '
Very Good Condition, Runs Ex·
sod. .,. call !;:hot, 814-992· ~
colon!, 61HA2·2ol57.
•·

t

ROBOTMAN
~E Of liS
H.S lll~ll

~1\I~T

p1o Farm

""S IN 1&gt;.

PYSFUNCiiONJ&gt;.L
~li\TIONS\1\P.
1

----:-::--=----·'
Hlr&lt;l. finiah. _..
: 1'

DRYWALL

,.

~~itEi~~a~

....

1-0V3.1-Do-,_--ln!c, v-.e-,-,-Speed,-- I
Fiotdu'l.t Sons
Ar, Til~ Crulae, AMIFII CuiOI,., Specializing In home ompro\re·
43,000 Milos, $7,000, 080, 8t4- menrs: pointing, wallpaper, sren251-1531, 814-2!115-4181~
ciling, borders, drywall · repa ir,
minot repein . Even d)e ~m~llesr -:-

Astra-Graph Maictimaker instanlly
reveal$ which signs are romantically per·
AS'I'RO-GRAPH
feel for you . Mail J2.75 10 Matchmaker.
·.
c/o this newspaper, P .0 Box 1758,
MurraY Hit! Staliof!, New York, NY 10158.
ARIES (Merch 2!.-Aprll 18) In crillcal
career ~velopments today, you might
behave in a pretentl'oua manner to
impress aasociatea even though you
ks10W lhls behavior donn'l suit you.
TAURUS jAprU 20·Mey 20) Today.
..,..._ _ _ _ _ _~. guard againellha ~lion to dis(:usa a
confidential matter with a lriend who is

~~l F:~~=~~ ,tr~~~~ ~r6:~~'":'~-~ll\ponanr ro

IU . . . .tic

-riw.

wilh
I .,, garage kept, •17,61)0, tU.t·

11112-3DIUII:r5pm.

You'll Find In cite
Classified Se«&lt;on.

Coffer. Vouch • Snarl - Needle - AROUND
My, elderly aunt says that history repeats itself because most people weren't listening the first time
AROUND.

IWEDNESDAY

FEBRUARY 21

Sov1n1s

....

Chry~" NY Loaded. Loelh·

eJplrlmee.

eee.n.... ·,·.

Z B F

P R C 0 L

NDDO

SCIIAM.t.ETS ANSWERS

cau Tam
. ' 304-87S.4tl6. 20 , .. ,. •.

or.-

B 0 L

0 RX

s

SERVICES

675-207~.

570

No PelS, 614-367-7438

410 Houses for Rent

3bedroom hou1a, email. bait·
ment, In front or Lock' i t ~pplo
Grove. 304-782·2330 or 30._,5782642.

XKSDL

ZBF

LETTERS IN

t91M1 TravoiMauor Class C 27 ,
Ft. long, Air, Generator, 6 New '
Tirn. EJ:cellent CondiUon, Inside ·:
l_
_
_ , II No An- •
I_
Ou!,
8t4_
·4481211

1986 Ford ~scort, 4cyl, auto, 1~':"---:-::------ ~
'good clean cond., $1,800. 304·
0
Home

For Rent: Total Electric, Empty
Mobile Home lot, Concrete Pad,

Rent, Gallipolis 1Cen1enarr Area.
814-446-7279.

3 Bedroom Hoult Near North
Gallo High Sc:hoal . _ 1-100
Oopooit. et o~-..e-&amp;4111.

' UZKSFXSBOSXE

16,000 firm. 304· "

. Rooms lor rent • week or month.
Starting at $120/mo, Gallia Hotel.
614·44&amp;9580.

An Alii eolal8 advertising In
this --.paper Ia aubject to
!he Federal Fa" Houalng Act

-lion

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cf\'Pograms a~e c reated trorn quotations by famous people, past and pre&amp;Mt
Etdll8tter in the cipher standi for anotntr. Tod.!y's clue: T squals W

OfYOO~!

31 ' dual axle, ac, awn- .1

many extras. Must see .....

· Cllilfngs textured, ~)taster repair. ' ·

to adllertlae ··any proloronc:e,
llml1allon
or maket" lllogol
1968an_ race.
bioed
color, rollglon,
ae• lamlllallllaiUo 0&lt; nallonal
origin, or any inl8nllon to
maklany IIUCh poeiiiMICe,
limitation or c:llctln*\atlon.•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

mtTUOC

«8·2501 or 614·367·0612. Elle.
clancy Rooms, Cable, ~r. Phone,
Mi.,._.. I Refrigeraltlr.

Goods

;~~~~~~~~~;· II·'

contai24 Plalnllfl
26 Remainder
27-M.....
(conotelle·
lion} .
29 Antalopes
·
31 Bringing Into harmony
32 Teen's exam
(abbr.}
33 Watches
.,--t---t---1 35 Spanish
aunt
37 Popeye's
friend
Ollve 38 Actor
Brock 40 Cauallc
-+-+---t-+-i substance
'--rr-+--1 41 Slippery
'"
fish
'---t---t---1 42 Ruotlc atop
'
44 Lessened
46 Four·postera
and cots
47 Kennedy
matriarch
49 Decade
·- number
51 Set
52 Seult - Marie
53 Future bks.

~

Rooms

Aoc~oprlngs

Aellebilration Cenier
lo accapting appllcatiana tar arata
teated or test tiiQible nursing asslatant only carlng responsible
poroono noed apply,
I at
31!7(i8 Aadtaprlnga Ad..
oil. 45789 E.O.E.

23 Mayonnal•

10THINK.

Fumlshed

Profeasional 2 Income Famil~
Neecla 2 -3 Bedroom Home To

RENTALS

21 Apex
22 Dull thump

[

payments after 4years. 304-755-

SALES

0612.

(:£)1~ TO ~ThY

Only at Oakwood Homes, ·NIIro

Snacks To Taverns IC· Stores,
$125 Startup Needed, Our Pro-

Taning Bed Business For Sale,
Located At Finest Hair &amp; Tanning
Salon. Call Anytime, 614-367·

rT}\(R£ I YOO~ ~----r--,

Limited Ollerl 1996 dou~ewlde,
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $275/
montn . Free delivery &amp; setup.

350 Lots &amp; "creige

LON INVESTMENT

ROUTE

TilE BORN LOSER

388-t001 .

-n.

habilitation agencies: CCC·Sp,

SPLINT II

110,500, 6U·

Carol King's Finest Styling Salon, New 8ank Alpoo. Only 4 left Still
Position: Clinical uperv~sor
Seeking Business Partner. Excel- in warran~. ao.. 755-7191 . ·
s'alaru : $-40,000 minimum lor 12 lent Location, Very Good Busi - Price Busterl New 1411:70, 2 or
mon~
neo~ Anytime, 814-367-«11112.
31&gt;&lt;. Only $995
$1~.
Commercial tM.iilding for rent in Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
Mimmum Qua li fications: .M.A. or center/of down town area Midc:lle- Oakwood Homes, Nitro WV. 304M.S. degree in speech-la"nguage port, 2500 sq. It, call614-992- 755-5885.
pathology : three . years or clinical

QUICK It
GRAB ME A

aladum. I 13,500. 30+875-1226.

Business

OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
ParHifT)e barten~er. reliable and recommends that you do buai·
hol"'est. cal l 614 -992-3756 be t· ne11 with people you know, and
ween 9am-3pm.
NOT to atnd·money lhrough the
mail until you have lnOJestigated
Plumbers.&amp; Pipefilters L.U. 1577 the offefing.
Wlll Be Distributing Apprentice
Applications Beginning February All STEEL realdential, commer19, 1996 Through March 1. 1996. dal, agrKulture buildi~ DEALER·
· c 8 p· k d u SHIPS B\lailable. Big Potential
Applicat•ons an e lC e
P prolita rrom sales ind constrUeAt 1236 Gallia Street, Portsmouth,
Ohio Frorh 7:30A.M. Until 4:00 bon. II qualified, buy factory direct
P.M. $35. 00 Appl ication fee . from National Manufacturer. 303-

e~per lonce including hospft:aiSire-

DO' It WE. GOT A
BROKE ARM IN
TH' WAITIN' ROOM

rooms, Fireplace, Total Gas, Underpinning, 16x12 Deck, CA.

8974·

:E~EO=·---------------I
S
·

FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

1986 Grandville 14J70 2 Bed·

FINANCIAL

Needed Babysitter In Your Home
In Washington School Disctrict
For s Year Old Boy, 614·4,.6-

I

i1M LUCKt.(

I'M WAITIN6 FOR 'fOUR
D06 TO CO¥.E OUT, AND ·
PULL ME ON M'( SLED..

Sir Thomas Beecham, the conductor
and impresario who founded the Royal
Phllhannonic Orchestra, said, "There
are two golden rules for an on:hestra:
start together and finish together. The
public doesn't give a damn what goes
on in between."
Only someone in Beecham's position
could say something like that. Yet there
are bridge playet'!l who, when they are
dummy, only care that the declarer
comes home with the right number of
tricks. What goes on between trick one
and trick 13 doesn't matter.
In today's deal, though, what goes on
• in the middle does matter. A misstep
costs three tricks.
How should South play in four hearts
against a diamond lead?
South opened with a weak two-hid ,
showing a good six-card suit and some
6-10 high-card points.
Tbe play began with a diamond to
dummy's king, a heart to the queen and
ace, a diamond to dummy's ace and a ,
heart to the jack , which pulled the
trumps. Next, declarer took the club fi.
nesse, but East won with the queen and
switched to a spade, defeating the contract when West had two tricks to take .
"What did you have for your over·
caD?" South asked West.
"True, I had only 11 high·card pbinls,
but I had a good sui~" West replied.
" What does it matter?" North asked
South. "If West has the club queen , the
contract is always safe. You should
cash dummy's top clubs . Here , the
qtl!!l!n drops and you can claim the remainder. But if the queen doesn't appear, play a third club, hoping West
must win the trick. The heart king is
still in the dummy as an entry to the es·
tablished club winners."

9 --rule
(generally}
10 eBnine parts
15 Actor Beatty
16 Adrlallc, e.g.
19 Pierro's friend

Pal's Home lmpr6vement:-remo·
doling, roalino, oicling, coil 814-

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1182·4683., et 4-Dtt· '1:11 s.

AuJ&gt; ........ Doalor wll ..
nencl~g oven II rou havo boon Aon'o TV Son/leo, apOclaNzlng In
tur~ed clown tletwhort. Upian Zonlth alBa I!O'VIclno molt olher
Eqolpment Uooll Ca11. :104·458- brando. Hauae'callo, t.8dQ•.787·:
10111.
00t5, wv 30+576-23118.
Roofing and gunefs- cornmtrclat
and rosidentlaf. minor ropairo. 35
experience. B&amp;B'AOOF·
814·1182·2364., 1·800·889-

not · YO!lr tiiiCrllt8 ~ become
common kr~.
·
ne··- 21..1Unt 20) Do
acquaintance lndif(erenlly -today juat

immediate ~ SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21} EnjOy
rourMII 1n social situalionS today, bul do

becauleyouenvyhisorhera:liw••t.,ota.
Jellayly Will be penialved by Ofhenl.

kiue pui1Uila. Strive 10 get a good value
for your money.
CAPRICOI'IN (Dec. 22-Jen. 18) Do noJ
take on more asaignmant• than .you can

not-.,

.

'ThunMiay,feb.22, 1890

'

Your probebilllleS pe11aiui''9ID your earning
power IOOii enc:ouraging lor the yR" afMiad,
Try not to make a V0C81iona1 Cfianga Lilli
you examine allhe nottilbilioo•.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mercll 20) A friend
who b!'rrciwad lnoriay from you and
,tllgloNAed to repay~ might~ enoCh·
lldm you toclly. "Try 10 weggle aut
of lha ailualion ~- Know where to
~for romance and }oou'l flr!,d H.. Thl

·.,lOan

(Aug. 2Hiept.
might have 1o associate wi11t a person
you know from pasl o•perience to be'
deceitful. Keep your guard up during lhis
involvement
LIBRA (Sept . 23·0cl. 231 Mind the
promises you've made to your male so
thai you 'fill not forget to fulfill them
today. Oversights on your behaH wiH be
oonstrued as ihoughllessness.
SCORPIO jOel. 24-Nov. 22} Unless you
have something complimentary Jo say
about co-worl&lt;ers loday, do nol say any·
thing at al. Your commencs will evoke an

CANCI!II (June 21.July 22) Failure to
a llrm poSitiOn could both confuse
and annoy your compenlona today. Strive
. lot declalvenea and do not act in a condeaceudil~g manner. ·
·
. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) If you have to
· WOflt wtth unfamiliar taola or materials
today , seek proper instrucliono from
experts belore you atart throwing swfl&lt;:h-

- take

eundpuehing blrttona.

not waste 1\ard·eamed money on frivo·

manage comfortably today. If ' you begin
lhlnga you .dOn't finish, lhasa endeavors
may be ahelved for along time.
AQUARIU&amp;("-'. »feb. 18) In ord8r 10
IIICCMCI today, rou must maintain a pool·
live alliludt. Do not Ill doubts cauae you
to worry about lhlnga that may not hlp-

pan enyway.

I

�Pllge 12 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· Wednesday, February 21, 1911

..

Ohio Lottery

Bu~~eye$

Plck3:-

420
Pick 4:

lose another
road game·

7819

Super Lotto:

Sparta, Page 4

5-15-25-34-36-37

Cloudy lind foggy

Kicker:

tonight, lows In the 40s.
Friday, partly cloudy.
Highs around 70•

94954~

•

•

.VaL 46, NO. 2Ci7

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 22, 1998

1 Section, 10 .......

AGIInnettCo. Newopepr

M.i nard resigns Eastern post
Gulc:lance counselor afso leaving; teachers endorse bond issue
' in the school year.
be set up later
In other mailers, the Eastern Local
' · Eastern Local Schools superinten- T~rs Association announced they
dent ·Ron Minard will step down from will fully endorse . the March bond
his !Uiministrative position with the issue that would allow $8.75 million
• district, effective July 31.
in construc.tion and reconstruction to
Minard announced his resignation occur in the district.
· !luring Wednesday's special meeting
The 4.5 mill, 23-year bond issue,
of the Eastern Local Board of Edu- will be used solelY. for costs ~soci'
cation at the Thppers Plains·Etementary School.
Minard "thanked the board for the
opportunities and the challenges
, offered to him over the p~l three
· years," in his leiter of resignation. He
· plans to,pursue othcir options.
• • Two other staff resignations were
Blso submiued to the board', with the
· retirement of guidance counsel~r
Tom Kelly arid the resigpation of~­
. surers office employee Dorothy Kel. ly. Mr. Kelly will retire from his guidance counselor position effective Feb.
' 29. '
.
'
Tite board approved acceptance of
· all three resignations. Board president
Jim Smith stated tbal a search com. millee for a new superintendent will

By TOM ttUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff ·

Pharmacy Manager
Jennifer Trent
Graduate of
West Virginia University

ated ·with construction of a new $6
million, 650 student K·8 central
school and over $1.5 million in renovations to the 30-year old Eastern
High School building.
Over eighty percent of the total
project costs will be paid by the State
of Ohio, if district voters support pas·
sage of the bond issue March 19.
"I think we've got a chance to
make a new start in many ways with
this new building projee·t. No extra
staff or money for salaries is going to
come from this bond issue. lt is strictly for construction·costs," said board
member Greg Bailey, who along
with the rest of the board thartked the
ELTA for the support of the issue.
"Wbat it.all comes down to is this
fact: if you vote against the bond
issue, you're going to be vbting
against the kids. If you support the
bond issue, you're supporting our kids
in their efforts to better their education," explained Bailey. Tite new K-8 building will hold 36
classrooms, a cafeteria with a stage
which will allow the area to be used

~ an auditorium, and ' 300-seat gym·
nasium with a wood playing surface.'
All costs associated with equipping
the classrooms with items such as
desks, chairs, and chalkboards, are
figured into the construction costs.
· The proposed branch of the Meigs
County Library which will be incorporated into the new construction will
'be equipped solely with funding provided by the library board, allowing
the district to use money originally set
aside for the library in the project
budget to be used in other areas in the
project.
"Shelving, furniture, and other
expenditures we have in compl~ting
the library will not be paid for fiom
our construction budget. The agneement with the county library board
not only benefits us from an educationa! standpoint, but also from an
economic standpoint in the fact that
it will free up money that can be used
elsewhere in the building projeci,"
said Smith.
Tite library will be staffed by a
Contiaued on pqe 3

BUILDING/LIBRARY PROPOSAL· This sketch shows the $8.75
million proposed Eaatem Schools building project, which votera In the school district will m8ke a daclslon on during the March
19 primary. lncludad In construction plans are vast renovations
.t o the high school, and construction of •1111¥' 72,000 sq. foot K·
8 elementery school. The , _ school wlllinc1ude a 4,000 sq. foot
brench of the Meigs County Public Library, located on the front
left comer of the new building adjacent to the high school.

:
·
:
:
·
:
;

Monday· Saturday, 9 am.· 9 pm.
sunday, 12 pm.- 6 p.m.

\ ' I

1. Just bring In your refill bottle or simply call us.
2. Our pharma~lst will contact your doctor for a new prescription if necessary.
5. Our pharmacist will then fill your prescription at Kroger's everyday low price!

Phone: 992-5736

In case things don't go as planned.
We care About our customers...

And We Put It In Wrltlntll

,

Becaqse we care abou~ your health, we provide the Kroger
"Pharmacy Facts· patient counseling Information sheet.
It provides Important Information.

·Provided

(unless we are excluded by your Insurance caf!ier)

CINCINNATI (AP) - A jury threat of punishment to coerce other
resumed work today to decide inmates to testify against Sanders.
whether inmate Carlos Sanders is
" These inmates are in the control
guilty or innOcent of charges accus- of the state of Ohio. They can be puning him as the mastermind ofa riot in isbed," Smith said.
which 10 people died in Ohio's max- · J\Iine inmates and a guard were
imum-security prison. '
killed in tbe II -day riot in 1993 at the
The Hamilton County Common Southern Ohio Corr'ectional Facility
Pleas Court jury deliberated almost 4 near Lucasville. Sanders, 33, was
tn hours Wednesday before being charged wi'th aggravated murder in
se(juestered for the night. 11ie panel the deaths of guard Robert Vallandof nine men and three women went ingham and inmate Bruce Harris, and
back into deliberations this morning . with the auempted murder of anoth'Ote defense argued WediiCisday er prisoner, felonious ~sault against
that proseciJiors made sure all the evi- two other guards and· kidnapping a
guard.
.
dence pointed to Sanders.
CARLOS SANDERS
To acquit Sariders, the jury would
" Early on, it was decided in this
investigation that he was the guy. All ha,ve to believe a series of inmates inmates during the standoff.
ers to make sure they had beaten Harevidence~ to point to him." !awyer ,, and prison guards tiCd in repealed1eS- . 'Sanders was the leader of a group ris to death, Gibson said.
· "Who could control this madness?
Timothy Smith said in closing argu- \imony during the 'five-week · trial, of Muslim prisoner$ who assigned
tnents.
·
· said Rick Gibson, an assistant prose• · tasks to fellow rioters and ordered the You heard the testimony. He was i~
•. Sanders is being tried on m4rder cu~Qr for Hamil~9n Collnty. . .
'
killing of Vallandingham and Harris, there. He gave the orders. When he
said something, it got done," Gibson
charges tbal could incur the lleath
Prosecution , ·witnesses testifi'ed Gibson said.
1Jiinalty.
they saw Sanders .help round up
Sanders· shined a flashlight into said. "Hold him accountable for
Smith said authorities used the guard1hostages and help beat some Harris' cell as he ordered other riot- these crimes."

'

Senate OKs speed 1imit, ·highway construction bills
For Having ANew or Transferred Prescription Fllled.At Kroger.
we make It easy to transfer your prescrlptlon. Just bring us your
prescription container or label and our friendly pharmacist will do the rest.
• COUpon c.nnot be combined with other COCJPOfl$

•Exciudes alcohol and tobacco products

. •Limit one~,.,. cus~ •Not viJIId on transfers from other Kroger Pharmacies
.•MinimUm ,~tton ~of $20.0() required

Pharmacist's Signature Rgqulred_
· ...............----..----...;...._ _ __
COc4icn goodu,
·IOOitlrrau{lh!R Saturday, AIM'ciJ JO, 1996.
~

l'tU-N:Y COUPON

COLUMBUS (AP) - A liill to .
renew a tO-year, $1 .2 billion progr&amp;!ll
of state aid for road, bri~ge. water arid
5ewer pro»:ts ,is beaded to the House,
followins.~lillie passage the ~ill.
. In other Senllte action bn Wetlnes·
; day, law,Diakers paS$ed' liill32•1 to
maintaiti existing speed limits on
some Ohio interstates arid autborizin~
the itate,tf'UiudY sijppcirts it, ll1raise
the' limit$ on other hishways, " '
• ' That' bill also is headed for the

or

House.
· Opponents of the public works
spending . bill, w.hich the Senate
pUled 30-), said ' tile Obio
ment of Tnlls~tionl!ioulil cut its
operatiiiJ costs to pay for ne.w CQII;

!ltl*'-

.~ (If),

struction.
inC,rease from SS mph to b' mph. .
Sen. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ciev~Senate included four-lane
land said he was not convinced that divided primary highways in the
the ;tate's capital improvements pri- study. T1)e legi~lati n .w~uld make it
orities wete con*t. .
, " possible for the $pec!j1 hirulto tncrease
"The iinpruyements which 1M along all OOOT-conttolled highways
~ed ~ tJic toads, 111e liridses, tbi: . cqnsideted ~ b~ the national highsewers _ impio\'Clments that are way sys~m. ~mg 1,374 m1les of
needed at the locallevel.are going to ~ighway to the btll. .
. .
be at risk, aiid tbi:Y'n: going to be sacUnc!er the ' amended bill, ODOT
rificed ln order fqr,more freeways to would ¥ve..360 days to .s~y the
be buill" Kucinlch said. · ·
highways, instead of the ongmal120
· Last 'week, lhe House passed iti days. lt also would perinit ihe departvep ion of~ s~ li~ts bill,~~ R~Cnttoretum.a;fhighwpulay'~ spee41.~t_?~
.would retain extsbng mterstate -a- it to SS mph 1 po anon growu•
limits but allow the Ohio ~t necessitlllll slower spcc4s.
.
of Tlinspclttation tp stlldy limited·
The restored emeqency dause

that the House removed last week
was needed for the bill to take effect
before March 3, 1he deadline for~sage under a federal law that permits
states to set thetr own htghway
speeds.
' It_ was not c~ what woul~ ~
pen tf the ~~~ dtd. not. es~bsh tts
own speec!_bmtts for alltts highways.
But Ohio Au~mey General ~~IIY
Montgomery wd m a legal ~pm~on
prepared for Gov. George Vomovtch
that ~ limits on freeways would
.rempham ' : :.~:; ~f:g~ti~~
m . IICbon. .
. ·
. .
,
Sen. Richud Fman, R-Cmcmnali,

access highways, where speeds misht

voted apinst the speed limits bill.

The

· ' '·

·

'
" '

0

Felons continue to slip
through gun checks
COLUMBUS (AP)
A
spokesman for the Ohio altorney
general 's office said the state hopes to
make it harder for convicted felons to
slip through background checks and
illegally purchase handguns.
"We' re working to build a net
which will catch more of these cases," said spokesman Mark Weaver.
" But the current nei is beuer than
none at all ."
Incomplete slate records allow
about 60 Ohioans a year to buy handguns illegally, Tite Columbus Dispatch reponed Wednesday.
Records kept by the Ohio Bureau

of Criminal Identification and lnves.
ligation , which conducts background
checks on gun purchasers as required ·
by the 1994 Brady law, are at best 80
percent complete or accurate.
Of 63,938 background checks
conducted for gun purchases last
year, 12,788 may have been flawed,
the newspaper said.
Ohio's average rate for applications thrown out because of a felony
conviction was less than five out of
1,000. Thatmeansabout60of 12,788
flawed background checks could
have allowed felons to buy guns. · ·

Police officer talks again
after being in coma 7 Iuears
'
CHATIANOOGA, Tenn. (AP)- It WISII't alluke after till.

The b~ police oftlcerwbo IIICidealy lpQb IMt week
alter a 7 IJ2..year sileDce talked ._.m WMrday, IP"Idnc for
the ftnt t1JH siJ1ee aa opefllioll
bad rt.bcl ~ blm ~

.._t

a c.ballke state. And today, he wu ~ed out fiiDieaslve care.
Gary Dockery spoke 011 three separate occas1oas WedHiday,
livial doc1on aa4 family hope be mlabt lujly ftpin bla ability

tO..,.._ . .

.

Dockery was ratlq today In a rep1a. boilplt.l rodm, said

.

wif:;::

11
ltl'rmr ~,_Columbia Partridae Medbl Center. He
be&amp;la lela to determine bls abUity to IIJI'IIk llllllllllnk, tile
talllid.
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