<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8694" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/8694?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-15T09:02:37+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19116">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/f317c0c7f6e662cbe0d328cd64462415.pdf</src>
      <authentication>01bea037888e45f36edd0b1edd4393d0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28040">
                  <text>-~

' "

I

~

.. '
'

~

I

osu rgid

.·":
....•
•

~

•

..

Ohio Lottery

~UCkl[

sta'rs ead
for draft

,.

I

'

'

•

.

_..

I

I

(

.Pick 3,:·
7-8-8
Pick 4:
2-3-3-0
Buckeye 5:
1-4-10.11-29

•• •
•

-...
i -.....
•

•

t

•

•*

•

•

•'

..
..""

..-...

'

"'

.--.

•

•

.

• "
• •
•
• •

....
'"'

.

..• ••

THE NEW CH

VAN GIVES

.;;..;;;.;;;.;;;;;...;;;..;;,;;;;;..;;..-......-.-~
. o.....;;.....;~~;;.....;;..;.
_ _,;;;,;;;;..._.;;....;;;...;;;;.....;-...~.

.

~

..
..
•~

•

•

---..

-"'
...

;TO

I
'

•

•

·,

'

•

'

-

'

'
'

2SectiOna,12 ....... 3 1 A a.nnett:CO. ltea I$ 5

_Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tueeday, January 7, 1997

'

'

""

'

~ '&lt;

•

; 01117, Olllo v.tley Putllhll. COIIIp811J

'

'

I

~' Vol. 47, Nd.t72

i,."~·

gives

.

•
•

....,

;

I

a_

e.

..

..~

h;.. .

That's whiY it's the right, choice for Y2Y· It's the strongest.
Daytime Running ~mps for added peace of mind. And. }'OU'II
roomiest full -size van Chevrolet® has ever built. packed with
find more .spru;:e 'inside aod a larger rear opening than ·full·size
safety. comfort and convenience·features you'll enjoy mUe after
Ford or Dodge varis. Whetheryou~re looking for a versatile _.
· mile. F~atures like a powerful Yortec TM engine that
work van. or a roomy conv~rsion.'van to add greater
-can go up to 1oo.ooo miles before its first schedul~ _ THE NEW
pleasure to your travels, Chevy Van®
you more
tune-up,* a rvgged. full-frame chassis _design. stanCHEVY V.l N to build on. Come in today ;;~rid take advantage of our
dard 4-wheel ABS. dual air bags and a~&gt;Jtoma~ic
great. Umifo(J~time incentives going on now.'

•
'

I

••

--....
--...

, ·'

•'

~

.."'

•'

",

·' .

'

15. Wedneactav, partly
cloucly. Hlgha In the 308.

..

'
••",

"

c... tonight, . _ 5 to

·~~C()mmi~~iQner$_ give approval
·).to ·paredi.down county budQet
'

,..

•

....

'

IIIII
~,__

.

}

•,-• '

.,.

l

'

.

~

.

. .

'

.•

'

•

•

'

-~; By·JIM FREEMAN
,
·ey.
,
... · Sentinel Newt! Staff
.
Last year, commissioners appropriated $50,000 toward ec~nomic devel;: : A new Meigs County , B&lt;iard pji ' C_pmmissione~ Monday afternoon opmentofwhich$45,000wasspenl.
,.&lt;~
.:;. . 'approved 'the annual appropriations resolution, -,vhich included cuts in many
HoffmarAaid the board has not yet discussed hiring an economiC.devel'
: county.budge! requests,
;"
opmbnt di.rector, but said the decision has to be made soon. _
·; • Cominission President·Ffe\1 Hoffman explained thtll budget requests from
domm1ssion Vice Presidcnt1anet Howard said the board is examining Olh. : - county offi~eholders.-nd departptent ~eads exceeded the 11mount of mone9 .• er fu_nding o~o~s for econo~ic develoi!menl, including the ~hio Stat.e Uni: the c0unty tS expected to receive by "!Ore tban $2$0,000..
. .
,
verstty.~xlenston and the Ohto Department of Human Serv1ces. •
·
,_ · · · In 1996, total" expenditures were .$3,211,309 wi~ receipts totaling
Shenff James .t-f. Soulsby ,and DARE. officer Mony Wood collared com.: $3,187,1~8. leaving a balanc~ of$239,697 as ofJan. I,',Hoffman said.
missioners on DARE funding. Co111missioners al.located enough money to
:~;
Requests for all departments for 1997 totaled $3,3~1,555, Hoffman_ run the. pro~ for n_ine m011ths.
.
_
-: explained. The amount cenifted by tbe Budget Commission.for 1997 was
During the dtscussion, Hoffman said the board would pledge an additionid
,: ; $3,070., I70, including the $239,697 balance.
·
: .
$5,000 to the program in money that the stale owes the county as reim: · "This means that at least $261;385 had to-be cut from the total requeSIJ'· bi,II'SCment for a blood-ale~ c~mtenttesting machine.
· ·
:- ed amount of Ill depamnents," Hoffman·said.
· 'I':
Souls~y Jhc,n as~ed com,!ll~ers if the county would continue to pay
: "We tried to do this in a fair and impartial way by considering what each fot' housmg JM:ISOners out of the county. Hoffman said the money would be
department had spent in 19\¥) and estimating from their requests and prevl- . ~·
·
.
·
,
·
.
; ; ous year's expenditures what we feel was a fair amount for each department," ·
Talk then wandered to the subject of the I00-plus-year'Oid Meigs Coun•
-' he-said
: •
·
,' ' ti 1ail and conditloris there. · . ·
.
'FIRST.BABY- Dorothy Older and Orville Ray Hill Sr. are pic•
He then ~ailed on ofticddders and deportm~nt heads to wateh their spend- - ''ThO on!y '.~f~g Yill;t c~n d~ i~ try to d~ss it up and make it presentable,"
tured with lhelr Infant son, Orville Ray Hill Jr., Meigs County'a find
_:, ing.
. ·' ,
• .
· •
Souls~!)' sllid. No Jll4ller w~~~ you do to that place, you can't make it meet
baby of 1997..
., ·
•• "Even by in~ng ~se cuts, if all the appropriations were spent, We: would (S!tlte ahd federal) Slllpdard~:· .
~
' . "
.. :: have .very.llttl~. if 8/IY; balance at the end of this .year," he said. "Since we
The ~eeti~B. i~J~~·the first for'Coquriissioner Jeff Thornton, who stan,,; know w_e mustliave a healthy halance at the end of the year to carry us through ed out wuhan tndlvtdllal prayer.
"• . January and Febru81')' 1998, we must monitor spending very closely lhisyeoir . , lbornton asked that t!lc·board open its meeting with a prayer and by repeat,
: .' : and hopefully find ways of inc~ing revenue into the county."
. , 1ng the PJ~ge.of Allegiance. '
'
"'
"If addilioqal revenue i\ obtained, we would.certainly look favdl'ably on
PrOsecu!JngAuomey JohnR. Lentes, citing recent controversy in Vinton
... restoring SQIIIe.qf ~cuts which were nilde in ,varjous depannients," he said. County ~neeming sep~tion of chu(l:h and stat~. said he would present the
'.
The cuts in .budget requests do ~o~nece5$arily reflct;t cuts. f~m 1996 hoard wtlh a legal optnton on•the mauer.
.
.
~ _expenditufes. :Hoffman said most dep~n\5 will receive about ihe same . _"Con~ does .it, why ~~~ we1" remarked Thornton, who then proceeded _
"• for 1997 that they did in 1
, · ·. .' -_-.
.
man tndtv1dual, silent prayer.
. _
·
·
.
.
.
~
~
Ray Hill Jr., born on Jan. 2. 1997 at 8:22p.m. in Hol1.cr Med~~~~=g~~~~· ,Meigs· c;:ounty ' icalOrville
Center~ is tile unofficial winner of Meigs &lt;;&lt;runty's "F~rst B~h~ of 111&lt;17"
,
Cheryl -!Did Jin,N'roffitt.
cantest. · · •
. . · ·
., ·
·- 'Y
Howard M:••ki~l)d. ~~ ~.\Y.~in1 ' . ,i_1~ _\ :' •
. _Pare~ts,of file 7-pound, 2-ouncc infant .in: D&lt;lrBilj}ibldet a"" t.J.•vollc ·I
.
'
·~· ,ll:·
.
.• ' ; ! ' .
'
Ray
Hill Sr. of Middleport. The new baby h!l-' two sisters, Mariah Hill,
.
.
'
-·
5; and Addie Mac Hill. 2.
_
'
·
'
Maternal grandparents arc Fred and Sharon Older of Middleport, and
paternal grandmother is Donna Mi Her of Middleport. Dorothy Roush of
_M1ddlepon and Agnes Woods of Fanners, Ky., arc maternal great-grandmothers .
While the Hill infant is believed to be the first ~ahy horn to rcsidcnl&lt; ·
of Meigs County, the prizes will riot be awarded until after the contest
cutoff date Friday.
.
Information on a bally born prior to Jan. 2, 8:22 p.m., must be submilled to The Daily Sentinel hcforc Friday "'I''"·
. ·
- The pri7.cs include a·$5 giji certificate from the Fabric Shop,_Pomeroy:
an 1cc cream cake from the Dairy Queen, Middlcpon: a $20 gift ccnifi"
calc from Powell's Super Vatu Pomeroy; a free dinner to the parents of
the baby a( Crow's Family Restaurant. Pomeroy.
·
A $10 savings ·account from the Racine Home Bank, Syracuse: aS 10
By JIM FREEMAN
gift certificate from Swishcr-Lohse Pharmacy, .Pomeroy; a $50 savings
Sentinel Newa Staff
..
'bond from Farmers Bank, Pomeroy; A $25 gift ccnilicatc from VaughRacine Village Council kicked
an's Supermarket, Middleport; a three piece feeder s~t from K &amp; C Jewoff its first meeting of 1997 in new
elers, Po!lleroy; a case of Gerber b_ahy food-from Fondland, Pomeroy; a
chambers, with a new mayor and
$15 gift ccnilicalc from The Shoe Place. Middlcron; a $20 gi'ft cco:tificounci !man.
catc from Fruth Phannacy.
Retired Southern Local educator
A stainless steel trainer cup from Acquisitions, Middleport; $25 wonh
Jotln Dudding was chosen to Jill a of hahy fonnula from Kroger's, Pomeroy; a lirst hear from the Ohio Rivvacancy on village counoil. The er Bear Co.. Middlcpon; a $10 gift ccnificatc from the Middleport Dcpanvacimcy was created after co_unciJ..
mcnl Store , Moddlcport; and Bullons and Bows; Pomeroy, a $10 gift ccrman Soott Hill was named mayor lot-· li fie ate .
·
·
lo.wingfonner Mayor Jeff 'Thornton's
1
·resignation. ·
· Dudding -and George Cummins
were considered as new council
members, with Dudding being elected by a 3-1 volj: . .Councilman Dale
Han voted for Cummins. · .
::'; , WORK UNDERWAY- Afour.foat trench 11M ~ tfafftc twltlilm changn alnce the middle block
Dudding will serve the remaining
::: . liMn dug acrOaa EutMIIIri Sbul'ln downiOWn
of ee.t Melli and !Jnn.~ cluacl, Ia explcllld
three years of Hill's unexpired tcnn.
The resignation of Susie Grucscr rc~cwcd.
• • Pqmaroy hi ptep!ll'lltiOII for lnltalllna ccinciUh ·
to t~~Q --~a:: COfllllll... .._.while,
Councilman Henry Lyons was _as a !&gt;oard member wa.&lt; accepted at
The hoard authorized the supcrin, : _ to the P~ 'etftpttllhOIIltl', Milch Ia cur·
matorlaiJare
the aha bynwllng liP
elected council president. ·
· - MDnday night's meeting of the South- tcndenl to employ temporary per': ._ rent1y unc:ler conatructlon•.TINt worll:, ,.qUirlng
ttte twrlclng lot,pr ll.tn9 S.cbnciStl~
The meeting was· the first held in em Local School District Boar\l of sonncl as needed for emcf!!Cncy siti!
.
the new village municipal huilding, Education.
uations. It was specified that,in each
c

~

•

i: .

Middleport couple ._
has Meigs County's
first baby of 1997

••

-

'

~

h

..,•

.
Rac1ne

......
~

*

.

~

.,
~

•

;.

I

I

.....
..,.
... ;

••

Counci.l ·

--...

-vacancy
is filled

..
'

.• ..'
• ••
.••• •·•
~

~

~

:1

-

1\

• •

.••" "'.
....".,".
~

'

.• .."
. ..

..

..•••' -"'
...

h

"•

."'

,,
.,.
,..

I"

,,

.:

u

;
c
•I I k
· sPoine.roy · OU~CI 00 S ·t~ explore

...

••

· · ·
't d t h · •
~~iII age-contra c ·e. · .r as . '.:· serv1 ce

·"'

,"
..·-

II ' •

..."" By· JIM FREEMAN

•

;, .

-

••
••
•
'
·'
•i "!

.

i~~
~

,C

·

board for 15 years. Leucrs of appli-

the next regular mcetin11 •

~~:.a:~;&gt;.;~~~~~~~~:h:~ ~~;~~ ~=·~:.;~";a·~~ti.'~ii~~ ~~~~ts~~~k sur~~:="~~o.~~~~~~~~::·r:;

wast~ · in their basements or in th~ir ', ·~!!. ~ amended parking· ordinance,

••

"0

. t,•-

..•

-~

are

,."
..,.",_
v

r..,..

t
' n

G'rngnC
_, h a,,...,k..,.l fo .,._,
,.rp

•

.'
,
•

"

-r.- .
• •• I
I

\

•

r-.;;;:.:::......;:;~----------··~......~--'··-

aS

=,

.-:etc

&gt;;·

• "

.,

ation of portitions for orliec spaces,

..E:

l •

•·-

•

- ~~=~~~~~c~f::~~ri~;:;~: of~~~;~~:.~:~::i:~:v~~~~~~: ~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~g~y·~~tb~.~~;

office.
directed to Superintendent James auditor when funds arc available and
The sewer oflice wi.ll also he in Lawrence.
c .
. pay'ablc to~ school disttict, and to
t!iintlnel Newa Staff
homes. ·
• ·endmg about a year's wonh of dis- the !DUnicipal building.
· The board organized lbr tile new pay all bills as they are pn:seritcd,
What works in Middlepon may
Las! month, Mi4:1dlcpon _Village ~ussion concerning parking in ·the
Hill appointed council mc111bers to year, with Boh Collins hcing named provided funds arc available, and
.._)YO~ for Pomeroy residents too. . Count1l awarded • one-reno: &lt;Ontract do&gt;l!n.iow,n area. · . - .
·
the following commiuccs: Street president, and David Kucsma vice then to n:pon monthly 10 the Board
:::. ·Monday night, JIOI1)Croy Village for wilSie and refuse scrvtcc 10 the ~II•
C!'4ngcs tnclude restnctlng ~~ Commiitee - Dlike Bentz, · Larry president. Meetings were set for the of Educaiion those bills that ·have
:I Council discussed meeting with vii- lage to ~neral Refu~ Services:
park•ng 10 two hours 81 a ch~ of Wolfe; Han and Dudding; Finance founh Monday of cxh .OOnth at1:30 been paid.
.
:hase trash haulen and\lillagc Solie·!h' !dtlton, W.Va., ftrm submllled five cents for 30ll)lnutes,
IOcents.for Committee- Rliben Beegle, Lyons p.m. at the high schooL The salary of
B
a
·
r
·
ed
!!!;,~Chris Tennolia to di&amp;Cuss ~illagc~ • b1d w•th a monthly_ n~tc, of$6.691"" one hour, a~d 20cents for two hours. and Duddin. I'• Ordinanc.e Commiuce board mcmllcrs wws s·ct at $"0 a · ' r~no uhlg 11101 was accept as
- ,....,.
-..
'
11
d t f the 1 Th exc...,ton wtll be meters on the
"
a ooretgn exc ange ~tudent at South-.
VI •
·d;'
f he
k' 1
here' · -Beegle, Bentz and Lyons.
meeting, not to exceed 13 meetings em for the second 5el!lcster of this
: contracted trash service for Pomeroy cust,c;omer .'or a rest en 50
,...R:sidents.
, ·
• . lage, wiili a $6 per mogth ~ate for street 51 0 1 par mg ot w
· 1be fire and police committees a.ycar. l
. ,' school ~car. He1s a sophomore ~u.
10. centS
C;,•nct'l-·~
r
_
,
W
eluung
noted
seni·
o
r
citizens.
·
.
t\
_
h
,
e
hrates
are
.
per
~ur
up
!O
·
w1'll
be
appointed
later,
Ht
'
ll••t'd.'
.
I
ed
be
h
'"""'
,
~
,_, -·~
ed h he
.. I was ~ot to renew mcm rs 1p ing wilb' th,e Herbert Ervin family.
0
1
1
·-!flat·Middleport-~si&lt;leftts pa~ al~ost ,
· Wehrung not . at
~uint Y r ~rsa'mcndmcnt ·alSo ~includes 1
Cou~i! also ~pled .the annual m the Oh1P Schuol Boord~ Assoc1a- .
Members, moved illlo exct;~ti've ~
•.: S5.1ess per inonth, aliout
less per pays more than $II · per mon h for
·
ii&lt;'
. . fo the appropnaaons ordtnancefor 1997 for lion at SI,OOO'and the subscription to session to discuss tjle upeomin" arbi· ~ear, than do P~y rt$idents fo~ simiJar service.
. Sfhedu.'e for pa . tng ~nmts r
· $338.134.99. ',
'·
•
· .the ~nnual Briefca"' at' $99 a year. - tration hearing.·,
~ • _
· ·ctuh pickup.
· ·j
..
•Jt's 'ilbo much difference," he , n'ver, 51~ of 1~ parking lot, SSO. ~
1be
appropriations
'lltc_perfO(IIIance bonlls forthe board
Auendltli ;,..;rc C.T. Chapnwt, .
:- The difference betvoeen II'8Sh pick- said.
'
· ,
y:~.- 1·0' Nn from January 10 Decem- ·S'I5f.654.81 less than lut year. since member$, superintendent, trea.~urcr · c 111 K
nd
.. •
, · liP
'
the v1-11• ..,11·1 lhal Middleport
Councilman Bill Youna aareed ~r. 'S., a quarter, or U a mllnth.
'Conlln'*l
on )
nd
..
.
. p ns, ucsma a Marty ""01'1111·.
3
1
•
-...
k . the
F niter pro-... is the "'""blino
1
a
assostant treasurer were a so- ty
.·
. ,
.
~:lias a contr.ct with a hauler to pick
and l8icl pNncil should loo mto
u .
~ ,
~~
.. ,
·
·
_
·
. , ·
:
_.
;:Q!i trash, and then bills residents fcir ~.while other council memben of the c"-Je for ptrlctnJ vtolatlons
I
I'
•• .
. .
. . t.. ,
.
.:n.h pickup alona .with their water uit }4yor FrankVaughan rqiOI1ed !'rpm SI to Slfor over park,in1, and S TI
rn f8 SrtJCuQft
IP8B~to8f · _
·'iills.
•
they have been~ by villap $2 to S4 for late payment of dck¢!J.
.
·
• · ., .• .
,. •
-~
; · c d l'oiJICI'OY hollleholds residentJ with similar.questions. · · Council 11111111imously re-elected · WASHINGWN (AP) .- After a Republican leadef! predicted vi"' - today, ~:t.&lt;~ty Lellder Di!:k
:.set;~~/~wn trash haulers from •
If Pomeioy were to adopt a simi- 1ohn Musser Ill cOIUICil ~lden! and : persOnal -~ fot .SUJI!IM by an • tory iatoday'l e~ect!ion II Con~ress · Arme~, R-T'e~; ,_ld ~ - "~ ,
''lmole who have a fmlehise to oper· lar 1y11em it would libly mean all . abo approved the 1997 vt.llapllpPID- unrepen'IUt Newt Otngnch, House convenes, ·but-.five OOP lawmiters 01101111ous outpomi.llf of~ ror
within lite vll'-ae _ or .do 1101. auh ~In lha viUap \lfOUid 1oee priaticms of S 1·,576,883~91.
; ' ~~ ue j~n1 ,whethet !0 said ,they ,wciuld v~ fQt somooae 'the spel!ker'.' w.hn he'~
~ 1.
~ve ~ .,rvice, which cre11ea om- theii- ~ill ciii!!Httm. · ' \'auahln mod a lciJA!r lilldlltM\Ir· • n~..eliK:t the Oeorpu as speaker else. · • ·
.
. .for .ne!l'ly four houn .wtlh
'
. (~Vad Clll , . . . ,_ , :-- -: despi!Obi~:~"!iltedetllid vloiiii!Qns. ' On Fo•·1V's "Morning NI'Ws'': ··,. ~-~on MOnday nllht
, , . /~.
· problems!Yilh reslden,uwh!lstore· · • council al~ pve.~ll*l ~~· ·

F
~

Souther.n Board OKs
mem~et's resignation ·

J

-

\-

,

·~ -~

· -

~

' . ,;,__,

•

'----~~ ~ ~~~---·;--;,
......

---

'

;-,-~~

;t'

t

�--

I

f

........
•

. '

entary

'

J

'

••

•

111 Court St, P-oy, Ohio
614-192·21541• Fu: 992·2157

•

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

General Mlllnager

-,_or- -10:

n..S...IIDel--R&gt;ItN~,_,.,.-flflfiiDI..,..
Ice. . , .,..,. (31111 Dlllo/nf ,___
!)pod- . . , _ - I l l / , . . , IJo · E.. ,..,.- /neluM 1 ,.,.,.,._
• n Jt, end t1q11mt1 phoMnumt»r. stitJC11Y • dlllelfmtnJ't • • • • • to • _.

""-1 - ,.. -

U&lt;Wo 10 ... - . n.. StnliDtl, 111
Ploft.. ot'. Ohio.,; 0t, FAX to f1~167.
"~ '

cou.tlt,

I recendy quit my job, llld I
walked out thC door with IIOihins to
show for it but one final paycheck
and the clothes on 111)1 back. I'm not
complaining , ·mind you. If my
employers had offered me even a
fraction of whai M1chael Ovitz
claimed Disney gave him when he '
took a hike, I'd have thought there
was something wrong with them. If
they'd even otfei-cd me a fruit basket,
or a discount coupon book, I might
· ~ave called the Ipolice. And, unlike
Ovitz, I actually did something at my
job, occasionally, when the mood was
right. Anyway. why should an
employer reward a worker for leaving? I don 't get it.. "
Not only that, Michael Ovitz only
worked at Disney for just over a year;
yet, according to him, or his spin doc·
tors, or somebody, Mr. Ovitz walked
away with 90 gazillion dollars, three

Columbus lawyer
finds himself in center
of.controversy-

...

,.,

Harald @home.
Cell phones,

I

l·

I

want

•

!

-Berry's World

0

....

....

~

-

.

~

..

·. ,·

;llled

·

(I&lt;

··•

were

.·-

fi'*'

=

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

-45 ,...., • .. -

.

· rt~

...
....

off!ci'.,.

.'

..

•

...
...,,"'

•

.
,

"'

Charles W. Heck, 92, Portland, died Sunday: Dec. 29, 1996 at his residence.
He retired as a signalman and lrllck maintenance worker for B&amp;O Rail.
road with 21 YCIIS of service, IIIII Iater worked as insurance salesman for
West Virginia Life, in the maintenapce depanment at Camden-Clark Memo&lt;
rial Hospital, and at Weatherrnl!ll's Feed Store, ThPJ?Crs Plains.
·
•
He
was
a
horse
trader
and
altended
tht
United
Brethren
Church.
•
Pomeroy pollee Investigate accident
Born in Hamlin, W.Va., he was the son of the late Alva D. and Minnie
No injuries were reponed after a two-vehicle accident on Second Avenue
' .,
Smith Heck.
•
in
Pomeroy
Monday around 10:55 a.m.
He is survived by a son, Daniel E. Heck of Belpre; two dau~hter.; ; Janet
J1mmy L. Young, 44, Long Bottom, was attempting to park his 1991 Dodge
V. McKee of Portland, and Wilda E. DePue of Morgan County: and si~ grandand struck a parked c'ar owned by Juamta Heater, Coolville, causing light
children Jtnd five great-grandchildren.
damage to Heater's 1992 Buick, according to a Pomeroy Police Depanment
He was also preceded in de8th by his wife, Bessie I. Heck; a brother, Aoyd report .
Heck; three sisters, Gracie Galloway, Fannie Edward$ and Alta Nichols; and
No citations were issued.
'
a granddaughter, Michelle DePue.
·
.
Funeral ~rvices were held Tuesday, Dec. 31, 1996 in the Lambert-Tatmil!'
Funeral Home, Parkersburg, W.Va. The Rev. Kenneth Bater and the Rev.
W.VA.
Alan Wright officiated. Burial was in the Mount Carmel Cemetery, Walker,
• (Continued from Page 1)
.
Reed, Larry' Wehrung and Nancy
W.Va.
'
ance Services Office lnc: representa- Thoene, while Jane Walton, Maureev
' live Jack Ross concerning tbe vii- Hennessy, Lennie Jewell, Don
I
Thomas and Bill Knchen were
lage's fire protection class.
Tl)c
fire
protection
class.
due
to
named to the zoning appeals board.
Ric.hard C. Martin, 71 , of Portsmouth Street, Jackson, formerly of Meigs
.
upgrades
to
the
village's
fire
departNamed to the records committee
County, died Wednesday, Jan. I, 1997 in the Ohio State University Hospi. '
ment
and
water
system,
has
been
were Vaughan, Hysell, Tenoglia anll
tals.
.
·
·
Born May 8, 192S in Jackson Cc,mnly, he was the son of·the late Alva and changed from class six to class five, Village Administrator John Andel,
· ··
•
Laura Basquell Martin. He was a mathemali~s teacher and athletic coach, a meaning some residents and busi- son.
nesses
may
see
a
decrease
in
their
lite
In
other
business,
council:
veteran of the U.S. Navy, and a life member of the Holy Tri~Jty Catholic
• Approved the mayor's repon of
Church, Jackson. He graduated from Jackson High School and Cedarville insurance, depending on their coverage.
$4,968
and accepted the mmutes Or
College, Cedarville.
Vaughan
read
a
lisr
of
needed
the
Dec.
16 meeling;
He is survived by his wife, Gracie Sprig~ Martin; a son and da!Jghter• Agreed to pay tbe vtllagc's share
in-law, Michael Richard and Annette Martin of Reynoldsburg; a daughter and equipment and tools for the village
street
departm~nl
,
mcluding
one
of
$3,500
for upgrades to the cmerson-in-law, Helen Naomi and Dr. Dennis Newland of Reedsville; two brothdump
truck,
two
pickup
trucks
and
gency
medical
services radi~ trans30s.
. . By The A11oclatecl Prest
ers, Harold and Bernard of Columbus; a sister, Rosemary Ross of Jackson;
_
other
MISCellaneous
items
including
m1ssion
system;
The record-high temperature for six grandchildren; and several nieces and nephew.
. .
Clear skies and northerly winds
'
• Noted the cable television ratc,s
. : will create very cold conditions for this· date at the Columbus weather
Besides his parents, he was also preceded in death by a brother, Wilbur sh9vels and Hasher lights.
No action was taken on the through Cable Vision of Point PleasOhio tonight, with lows reaching the station was 64'degrees in 1_907 ~hile Manin; and a sisler-in-law, Jaunila Manin. '
·
ant, W.Va., would incrca.&lt;e 1n the vJirequest.
.
the
record
low
was
6
below
zero
in
_. single digits some pl~~te~. the NatiooServices were held Sa'turday, Jan. 4, 1997 in tbe Trinity Catholic Chu'rch,
'
Vaughan
also
read
a
letter
from
lagc, contingent cin the number of
1942. Sunsel tonight will be at S:23 Jackson, with Monsignor Roben Metzger officiating. Burial was in the Mount
. . al Weather Service said.
·
AEP
Galhpolis
area
manager
Ron
channels
the subscriber rece~ves;
But the lake-effect snow in lhe p.m. and sunrise Wednesday' at 7:53 Olivet Cemetety, where military graveside serv1ces were conducted by the
McDade. '
• Approved · New Year's Da)l,
. • e~treme northea.~t should taper off a.m.
Disabled American Veterans.
McDade
indicated
that
AEP
no
Memonal
Day, Independence. Day,
forecut:
Weather
· : after dumping another4-6inchesdurlonger
allows
banners
to
be
hung
Labor
Day,
Thanksgiving, the day
Tonight
...
Snow
sh~wers
tapering
, ing the previous 24 houn,
·
·
between
its
utility
poles
and
sa1d
following
Thanksgivmg,
and ChristTempeni1ures early today ranged · to flurries before ending northeast.
workers
could
install
two
used
poles
ma•
as
holidays
for
village
worker.;;
: ·. from the mid-teens near Mansfield 10 Otherwise mostly clear west and
Dorothy
Elizabeth
McKenzie,
92,
Racine,
d•ed
Monday,
Jan.
6,
1997
in
excluSively
for
banners.
'
·
•
Asked
1f
Anderson
could
attend
partly cloudy east.Lows 5 to IS.
. ., the mid-20s in the sotllhwesL
the
Darst
Personal
Care
Home,
Pomeroy.
"
Kathy
Hysell
presented
the
the
Jan.
20
mcctmg
to
give
an
update
·Clerk
W~dnesday ... Sunny northwest.
Increased cloudiness is forecast
Born Oct. 29, 1904 in Meigs County, daughter of the late Oliver Perry following balances for December: on the new water well project.
:
Partly
cloudy elsewhere. Highs 30 to
·. • for Wednesday in all but northwest
and
Louella Priddy Coe, she was a homemaker, a member of the Racine Un•t- general,
$32,784.50,
safety,
Vaughan
closcd'the
mectmg
wil)l
35.
.
.
··, Ohio, where sunny conditions will
ed Methodist Church, and the United llfethodist Women.
$4,191.29; street, $33,089.24; state a rctrospeclive on his first year in
· • prevail. Highs will be mostly in the
•
She
is
survived
by
.a
daughter
and
son-in-law,
Addalou
and
Roben
J.
Lewis
highway,
$3,S93.87; tire. $23,751.42, office .
.'
of Pomeroy; a granddaughter, grandson and three great-grandchildren; arid cemetery, $1 0.163.13; water,
"It's been a ,challenging year," lle
$51
,415.24;
sewer,
$57.805.90:
guarsaid,
"hut things have gouen done: I
.'i
Mattie Hoelzel of Columbus, and Laura McKenzie of Gal- .
anty meter, _$_118,423.75; utility, hope we hav~ done things to malec
I
.
She was alSo preceded in death by her husband of 73 years, Ralph Stan- $15,S79.92; uuhty, $15,579.92; fire the village more likable."
· :.
The following 'cases were ~uled plate, $63 plus costs: Mary Evans, ley McKenzie, on April t9, 1995; and by seven brothers and four sisters.
truck, $0; pelpCtual care (cemetery),
He thonked Hysell ·and "count:)\
Services will be 1 p.m 'Thursday in the Fisber Funeral Home, Middlepol1, $7,301.06; cemetery endowment. · members forthcircouperalion durftr_g
last week in the Pomeroy Mayor's Racine, no taillights, $63 plus ~o~ts;
· Court of May.o r Frank Vaullhan.
Troy D~r~~m, Pomeroy, dnvtng with the Rev. Kenneth Baker officiating. Bunal will follow in the U:tan Falls $38,153.24;
pohce
pension, 1996
.
Posting bond were: Paul E. Han· uqder ndiJitntstrallve hcense suspen- Cemetery. Friends may call a1 the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m . $2,838.1S; building fund , $479.89;
"I hope_we'll have more acconi.· na, Charleston, W.Va., s~. $70; sion, $ISO plus casts, driving under . Wednesday.
.
m~ur~ncc rctamage. $2,40S; recrc- plishmenL&lt; this ysar," he said.
:
·
Dorothy Grim, l.etart, W.Va., speed, financial responsibiltty suspension,
alton, $4!872.43; FEMAI, $3,814.50;
Vaughan said ?us goal" to try ro
564 ; Gerald McDaniels, Pomeroy, SJ50pluscosts~CharityA_nnBrown',
perm1ssavc tax. $2.410.14: law stop some of the prohlcms w1(h
. ,. failure io comply, $83; Amber L.' lip- Letart, traffic hght, $33 plus costs;
•
enforcement, $2,278.96; COPS drunks downtown and to meet mo(c
. ·. pie, Sbade, s~.,$70; Patrick Sny- B,qley Dugan, Rutland, ·fallun: to
Word has beep received he~ of the'death of,Eimer J. Proffitt, S9 , Boston, FAST grant, $7,656.95; FEMA II, w1th village supervisors.
- ' der, Raci~e; assu~ cl~ar ~istance, comply, $63 plus costs,Patnck D•ck- Mass., formerly of Meigs County, who died Thursday, Dec. 19, 1996. He ' $530; Downtow_n Revitalization,
"I've found out yuu can't plca'IC
, . $63; Melinda Dadey, Ala:ol!. speed, son, Pomeroy, destructton of proper- • was the son· of the late Elmeo L. and Edra Proffitt.
$89,500; tot:ll alllunds, $413,038.58. everybody Most of the time you can't
' " $69; Mary Ellis, Letart Falls, speed, ty, $213 p~uscosts, trespassmg. $100
He is survived by his wife, Mary, and three children. Also surviving arc
Named to the zoning hoard were plca&lt;e anyhody." ·
'
'
Eugene
Tripleu.
Joe
Struble,
Tol)l
, • , $6S; G~ J. F~ley, Syrac~/speed,"' plus c.osts,
one brother, Gordon Proffitt of Portland; three sisters, Benha Diehl and Jean
.
, , , $66; Davtd Frtndley. Ractne, speed, ·'-Rebecca Moore, Syracuse, seal Bradford both of Racine and Janet Theiss &lt;;&gt;f Patriot· and several nieces and
$64; Terry Michael, Middleport, !'o , belt, $45 , p_lus costs; 'J!m Coats, 'nephews.'
'
'
••
Insurance, $70; Thomas Tobtn, Mid- l'omeroy, dtsorderly conduct, $63
He was also preceded in death by a brother and sister-in-law, Ray and Bet' .. dle~rt, speed, $73; J. Ryan Lemley, plus ~osts, fatlu~ to comply, $63 plus ty Proffitt.
. Racme, speed, $6S; SheUy Wolfe, costs, Jason May, Belpre, faJiu~ lo
Services were held in the St. Mark Church tn Boston.
. Pomeroy, disorderly, $83; Sandra comply, $63 plus costs; WJih~m
\
largest benefit program, wh1ch is
._: Hood,h-1iddlepqrt,disorderly,$83.
Foley, Pomeroy. assured clear diS·
WASHINGTON(AP) - Ifgiven
Ftned were: John . Salla, Letart, . tance, $43 plus costs; K1mberly Thm.
' the chance, would people invest their headed for bankruptcy after rctirmg
,
Bahy B•x11ners stop paying lor Social
'; ; fublic intoxication, $113plus costs; . er, Coolville, speed, S46·plus costs;
(Continued from Page 1)
Street Com'm,·sst'onerGienn R•'zcr Sociladl Shccu,rity savmhgsf whiscly'!t Or
Secunty
and start collecting ot.
: · ·: Gregory Sellers, P9nland, spe~d. · David Parks, Pomeroy, expired tags,
wou t cy osc muc o I elf re •rcBy
2029.
the system is expected to
•. $SO plus costs;·· Mark Reitmire, $63 plus costs; Kcwin McDonald, last year's appropriations included reported the VIllage pumped ment money in nsky Wall Street
be broke. with payrnlltaxcs covering
., ' Pomeroy, disorderly, $63 plus cosL•, Pataskala, speed, $45 plus costs; consfruc1ion gran1 money.
38,285,900 gallons of water in 1996, . gambling'!
' '· no insurance, $2S plus costs; Tammy Connie f!$tep, Hanford, W.Va., opeq
II was noted that council is slill down from the 40,726,300 gallons
EacJt· ·itt!:/Of a deeply divided only ahout 76 pcrccm of, hcnclils
, •. Stump, Pomeroy, ,no front license container, $88 plus costs.
going to be prudent and conservative ' pumped in 1995.
adv1soloy panel trying to find a way lo already promised.
Lookmg for an answer hut diVId,
with its spending.
It wa• noted that one possible rca- keep Soc1al Security solvent makes a
ed
among three doffcrcnt plans, the
Viilage resident Gary Willford son .for the reducuon wa.~ the instal- passionate case.
attended the meeting and asked coun- tatio• of water meters and new tines
"It's preposterous to figure people Soc1al Sccurny Advisory Council
' ell tf it was considering closmg in ihc village - one of the reasons are too s1up1d to handle thc~r own relcascd.Jl&lt; much-delayed final report
' ., Units of the Meigs Coun1y Emer7:04a.m., Walnut Street, Middle- alleys in the village.
·
thc'mc,tcrs were •nstalled.
money," said a leader on one side of Monday.
All three plans would muvc bilCouncil said it ha.• no plans to
In other business, council:
the JSsuc.
gency Mejlical Service recOf&lt;!ed eight pon, Pauline Greathouse, Pleasant
lions
of dollars from safe government
.
close alleys at this time.
·
• Renewed village msua:ancc wnh
"It\ ""' importont to gamhlc
' ·..calls 'for as~istance Monday. ·Units Valley Hospital.
RACINE
He also suggested thai· counc1l Kindcrlnsuranceoflrontonaspanof WJih," countered a union leader on bOnds to the volatile- but prolitahle
,
· ' responding in&lt;:llided: . .
- stock market, wh1ch histoncally
II
:23
a.m.,
volunteer
fire
-departhave
guardrail installed on State the Ohio Government Risk Manage- the other SJdc.
BASHANVFD
has paid much higher returns. But
meni
and
squad
to
Apple
Grovc-Dor-.,
Route
124
nearlhe
north
entrance
to
.
mcnt
Plan:
The
hattlcj~ikcly
to
last
at-least
'8:26a.m., structure fire on Eagle
there.
are Important differences·
•Authorized the mayor and coun- another year
1hcy-mukcrs search
Ridge Road, R11ndy Deckard resi- cas Road, brush fire at the Alan Crisp~ the.village.
'' ~
The!' Racine Volunteer Fire Depart- cil president to mayor's schooling in tnr a way tn rescue the government's
dence, Che~r Volunteer Fire Depart- residence;
6:34
p.m
.•
Portland
Rond.
Justin
ment
reported 83 calls for ;lid dunng Gahanna later this month so they can
'
ment and Thppers Plains squild assistAllen,
Holzer
Medical
Center.
,,
1996.
including
IS
srructurc
fires,
hold
court;
ed, no· injuries reponed.
REE[ISVILLE
:' eight automobile fires; 23 accJdcnls;
• Authorized clerk's ·training for CO
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:28 a.m.. Arbaugh Lane, Rose 26 assists; 10 bruslrfit:lls; one hay fire Clerk Karen Lyons later thts month;
U
S CaSeS
S:24 a.m., Children's Home Road,
Peterman.
St.
Joseph's
Hospital;
·
and
one
fatality.
•
Rehired
Rizer
as
street
commisOne
man
was
fined
and eight oth· • Pomeroy, Doro1hy McKenzie,· dead
4:36
p.m.,
~olunt~r
fire
dcpal1·
The
depanment
logged
I
,09S
man
sioner
and
wa1cr
superintendent;
crs
forfeited
bonds
in
1he recent
• on' arrival;
• Authonzcd the clerk to pay bills coun of Rutland Mayor Jd Ann Eads.
ment and squ~ to State Route 248, hours, 1.481 vehicle miles and 406
chimney fire at Charles Rhodes res- --man hours of training.
as •oon as .possible.
Fmcd was Steven Brumfield, Rutidencc.
Also present wa.~ Fire Chief John . land, $250 mcluding costs, on a
RUTLAND
Holman. Bentz d1d not attend.
charge of driving 'undcr suspension.
7:40 a.m., SR 7, Ferrell Day,
The regular meeting time was .
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
(liSPS 213-HO)
HMC.
'
scheduled for 7 p.m . on the first Mon- chargps were Melinda Norman, Rio
fu~lbhed ftflrJ .aflemoon, Monday dvouJh
An Ohio University student arrest- day of each month m the mumcipal Grande, SS4; Kevin Billions, Grocefriday, Ill Cwn St., Ponoeroy, Ohio. b)' 1hl
ed on drug charges l~st week now building.
land, Ky., $54; John Collins,
()hlo \Ioiiey PulolbhiOJ co....,yl(l_.. Co..
faces additional weapons charges.
Reedsville, $~8 : Mildred S Sm 1th,
Ohio 4j769, PI!. 119'.1·2156. Second
ollu - p i i d o1 " - • Ohio.
Stephen L. Manjn, 2S, Athens,
MJddlcport, $,1j9; John Whitfield,
Allison, Pa., $.57; andArthurThtcryPNu. ond llle Ohio
Am Ele Power .......................40\ ' was charged last week in an indoor
f'ti I I Auoc'-tion.
marijuana
!rowing
operation.
During
Veterans
Memorial
oung,
Goshen, $58.
Akzo ..................................: •••19'"a followup investigation, the South
Also li&gt;rfciting honds were SherAehlancl 011 .............................44
Monday -admissions- none.
.
l'(lSTM.ufaa, s.d iddroot - ATIT .....................................38~
East Counties 'of Ohio NarcoiJcs
C
ry
Haley,
Middleport, stop sign vio11le Doti('Send•t, )It Coon St..
Mondgy discharges ora
Ohlo4S769.
.
Barlk 0.. ..............................43~
Task. ·Force recovered- five firearms . Wolfe, Reedsville; Lora Arnold, Mid- latmn, $60, and Suson ·Scarberry,
Bob Evans ............................ 13:t · allegedly belonging to Manin that
Sunbury, fictitious tags,. $75.
IWIICIIIPI'ION IIATIS .
~W.rner ...... ;•••••••:...........39'4
had been hidden in another res• ence
. Holzer Medical Center
,
.,~
C111mplon .............................33 ~
One Wack.
.. .. ~................,............... 1. ........ ;$2.(1)
'd
dlepon.
iii
Athens,
according
to
SECO
ComCharming
8hapa
...................
4"!.
One Mondo ..................., ......:..............:...... $1,10
mander Scott King.
Discharaes Jan. 6- Mrs. Kevin
One v............................................... .$104.00
City Holclng ..........................271,\
Martin
is
not
allowed
to
own
Jackson
and son, Mr&gt;. Christopher
,.,.1Moglil .......................22\
SINGLII COPY PIIICII
Bryant
and
daughter. '
.Qunett .................................73~
Dolly ......................- ........................ 35 C.nb
firea,nils due to a prevtous felony ·
Birth _ Mr. and Mrs. Clmton
~r ..............................52'4
drurt conviction, King said. In addi- ·
K-mart ......................~ ............10'4
lion, one of the firearms is a sawed- Bailey. daughter, Long Bottom.
.. l.llndal!nd ............................. H~
Qff 12-gauge shotgun with the serial
(Publis]Jed witb pern,~ission)
Umlltd ................................... 18"
numbers removed. This will bring
Ohio Valley Benk ...................35
additional
chtirges against Manin,
0111
V•lley
.............................
36~
No •bocrtpdoo "' moll .....110d •• possibly at the federal level, King
The. following couples were
Prwm Flnl.~..............................13'4
issued marriage licenses in the Meigs
Rc:lolcw•n . . .:.............................&amp;1 ~ sajd.
County Probate Court of Judge
172
Roben Buck:
8hol•r'• ................................. 7\
8ttr llenlt ..............................111'1.
Dance set
Charles William Cochran IV, 2S,
~...................................20
There will be a round and square and Debra Kfm Baldwin, 36, both of
w
tgtolt ......................- .... 18
4ance at the Tuppers Plains VFW hal! Page vi lie;I David C. Horner, 50,
Saturday. Music will be presented by Racine, and Alma Loretta Perry, 33,
SfQOII reports ara tht 10:3
For IIIOFe
or·prngl8bitlon
the Happy Hollow Boys, beJinnin,-at · R&amp;~wood, W.Va.; slmuel MeJCfl,
.....~bYAcM
8 p.m. Caller will be L.B. Wilsoll. • 29, and Hiedl Anna Mantz, 28, both
~,
ofGI
.
·Refreshments and door prizes.
of Pomem~..

an

Dorothy E. McKenzie

~·

P.omeroy may0 r 's court

::,.[~ler&gt;-in-l~w~

Elmer J Pr0ff1"H

Divided SS overhaul plan
.committee delivers report

Racl"ne Councl"l fills vacancy

.,.,, EMS
· .'I"tS answer. 8 ca IIS
. un

'

Dian

.

Clear·skies to guarantee
: : dropping temps tonight .

Sar,•a

Before 'the year draws to a close,
" How satisfied are you w•th'lhc scr- your ponfoli~. al.though there is room· perfurmoncc . .Keep it up!
why not take some tome to look at the , vice aad the accessibility provided by for impruvcmpnt. Find ways 10 bring
,B1g Picture? Then .ask yourself how your financial adviser?
your portfolio f\IOI'C in line with your
Dian Vujovich js tbe author Ot
your portfoho ef mutual fUJids is
3·. Calculate the amount you spent expectalions. ·,
"Straight Talk About Mutual
working out. '
'
-- 37-50:~Congratulations! Your Funds" and "Stfllilht 1Wk Abotd
' ly·The AuOclated Prell
Tocjay is 'l'uesday, Jan. 7, the seventh day of ):il97. There are 358 days
Hcadi Steiger, directqr of the indiy,IOV/ch
ponfolio is in line with the bench- Inv"tilll for Your Retire-nt,"
vidual asset managemc'nt division of
- .....,_ __ ---.
marks, you're getting good service bath of '!hich are publillled hy
lett in the y'ear.'
.
· Today's Hig!Jiight in History:
.
Neul1crgcr ~erman, has created an this year on sales charge~. eommis- for reasonable fees and arc comfon- McGr~~W'·mll. -Send questions to
On Jan. 7, Ii89, the first U.S. presidential election was held. Americans . invcstmcnt quiz to help with your sions and fees. Fees and.charges typ- able with your investments and their her in care or this DeWipaper.
~
evaluation 'Her five-question quiz is ically range between I percent and 3
voted for electors who; a month later, chose George Washington to be the
below. Ansv;'~r each question with a percent of your ponfolio's total val' nation's firsl president. '
·
,
•
·'
' On this date:
' '
•
•
,fi3,d~; 7 odr .J 0~J. . being "v~ry uns,at- up. •'
,.
,, .
It\ ~610, the astrononoet"Galileo Galilei sighted four of Jupiter's moons. · 1s •c an I ..,mg "'very satisfied." . " How acceptable do you find t~e
In 80(), the 13th Qre!iii'lent of the United Stales, Millard Fill~ore, was, , Tl)e total you arrive at will give you charges you are Jl!lyini?
a good sense of how pleased you
4. Under.;tandin)l your tolerance
bont i Summerhjll, R Y.
'•
t•
~hou)d be with your fund portfolio's .for riding out volatild markets or risk- •
·
In 894, one of the ea~liest motion picture experiments took place at the
performance th1s year. And it w11l ing a capital loss can be a. cruci•l
~Edison s~io in \'(est Orange, NJ .. as comedian Fred Ott was filmed
giv~ you some 1dcas about what componenl to any portfolio's good
sneeztng.
&lt;
•
.
.
In 1927, commercial q;ansatlllnlio telephone service was. inaugurated
~~~;ges you ttiight wa_n! to make for health. Do you lose sleep at night
'
bel'l"~n New York and London.
worrfing about your investments? Or
In 1'142, the Wo"rld War U sieg~ ofBataan began. ,
- I. Pcrfonnancc can-and should be are you at the ·opposite end of the, I, I
.In 19S3, President Harry Truman announced jn his State of the Union
mcasured.,,Bc sure to ~nd an appro- ~pectrum, frustrated that your portaddre~ that the United Stales.liad developed a hydrogen bomb.
priatc berichn\ar.k, like the S&amp;P 500 folio doesn '( have the potential to
· In !959, ~ United States recognized Fidei_,:Castro's new g.ovemment in
for large cap Stocks, the Russcll2,000 yield more income or offer more capCi:uba.
•
.
for small caps or the EAFE for inter- ital appreciation?
·
nauonal stocks. Also, know whether
. In j97~, Lewis F. Powell Jr. and William H. Rehnquisl were sworn in as
How satisfied are yo\J with the risk
•· the 99th and JOOth ~mhers of the Supreme Court.
·.
,.
.. or not the benchmark rcnccts total component of your portfolio? 1•. .
In 1979; Viebl~ {ore~s capturql--the Cambodian capita! of Phnom
return. You 'll want to be sure the
S. Do you have an a.•set allocaiion
' n·
Penh ovenhrllwinJ the Khm9r Rouge government.
,.
·
•
' benchmark's handling of distribution plan that !•:reassessed and rebAlanced . \. ~
1
m'l989. ~ror Hirohilo of Japiln djed at age 87; htwas s~ded l .(dividends and capital appreciation) yearly and takes into account 1your
•
; by Crown Prince Aij=~·
matches yours.
. invest~nt horizon, risk tolerance . ·
''I '"
111n ;..... aao: As i~s using a remote-controlled car bomb tried but
How satisfied are you with your and fin81!fial needs? Or do you' lack
' •IL.
to .A!t.ui~t~~~e.fonner Lebanese !'midenl Camille Cham01m. Pour othportfolio's performance?
a central' plan and make investments
•
t I I,
er people, hOwever.
killcid. 1' '
.
2.1t's important that your financial on an ad-hoc.basis? . •
,
, t ,..;
·Five,_. aao: Presiderlt Oeota~ Btlsh IITived in Japiii_OD IIOUgh·ta!k . planneJ. broker, money manage~ or
How well planned and e~ecuted is
•'
trade miNia!l. Serflforces' 4hol down a Surop,ean Commllnlty helicopter tn othet:•jt!Vestment adviser'is acceuible your ass~ allocation plan?
•• •
Ci'oalia; tilllna
tt~,~ee Obler•m. Pitchets Tom Seaver aitd ~!lie Fin- when .yOu need help' or have que$· . How did yoo score? •
••
JCfl- elec:tld,fD bit! bell's Hall o(FfiiiC.
,:,
; -tioas: Yout adviser. ·shoold notify
-- S-20: You need to look 11 your
•
"'9«~.
•
· One~ ,P: One of the biJIUI blizzlrdl in U.S. 'hi~ patalylled the YO!J of £Jlapge's that can affect your ponfolio and see what you can.llo to
·'
••'
Eut. (More dllil1!ib deldu were IIIIer blamed on~~- -~.) , investmenls,tlndyou~tiOuldhavethe improve it. The new year i~ an
I
"For,._..., MkN - F~l U.ten,' ~- at ;..
,.
' ~'Ji}eCitll PlwlcleiJ( CliiiJdll'l budJI( plu • wllllitd}jlly wOuld opponunhy ' for ooe-oti-One meet- • opportune time to. ·start shapinJ up
•
STILt
lflughlng
about
wtlat
yoq
did
11
.th.
~I II!~-~ !hey didn'tlike if lhe~ Y(lri no~~~~ 11ft . i~.,P- Plus,,YO!!' statem~nts should be your po!1folio.
~~~party." . ' ,, . .,
.
•""
lt
...:1..-fn the nell
feW'111111eU.•'
''I \i
,·
' ,' llfCII~fl~ and ~y JO tead.
·
-- 21-3ti:. You are wisfi~ with
• .,....
f
~
'
"•
•
!

Charles W.
. Hec·k

A Pomeroy man was cited following a one-car crash on Mulbeny Avenue
in Pomeroy Monday around 8:43 p.m.
Danny Ray Merrill, 43, was westbou'lrl when he lost control of his 1995
Chevrolet which then struck a utility pole, accotding to a Pomeroy PoliCe
Department report.
•
The vehicle sustained moderate dantage and was towed from the seen~.
according to the repon. No injuries were repbrted.
• Merrill was cited on charges of failure to control and driving under the
·
influence.

Richard C. Martin

makmg this qualification and whyt barricn, but
wanted the world to They sound stuffy, academic, co~-.
The results fellmto three basic calc- know that feminism didn't make fi ·
The · 1 h
·
gorics.
•nang.
Y amp Y I at one JS a~
First, thi:rc were the women whd· them do it. Sue Ross, one oflhe coun- activist, thai one is "carryin@ I'
try's first women country club pres- torch." Mo.~t people= nol activists.
who, having been denied her right t~
tr::cLe/
ide
_ ntJ_s, has_ actively worked to end They arc,n't walkin• down the &lt;lrcCt
compete based on her gender, is suing
.., ._, "'
f he
c
r ,
,
6
the Texas Interscholastic' Wrestling
.'scnm 1natton'!n one: 0 t 1ast oron-. · with bull horns and bjg signs. ·' •
Association and the Teus Wrestling said 11 I'm not a feminist but" and ., her&gt; of sexlllm: the golf C.QU11!C. Yet,
B~t that doesn't mean they ca0:1
Officials As$ociation on sex-dis- then.proceeded with a statement tha~' she told the_ Arizona Republic, "I'm be feminists. Indeed, the only quaUcriminatidn charges.
would 'make Gloria Steinem proud. nm a fcmmast;, ~'!" npt out there car- ,fication for being a feminist is th61
·
Tiie
Rev. Patsy Brown told
I are saymg we're fem1- ·
" Pcope
. , the Los
.'· 1rymg·a
B Iorch.
d1d ,S•mlllltly,
the bo. xer' Kelhe .you believe that women. i1n: cnlill,..
..,
1
1
msts because of the lawsuit " Mona- Angeles Times that she tsn 1 a femt- Y cagon • n enter rmg •or
to the same rights and OflPOI1uniti!fS
han 's mother, Karen Herring, recent- , nist. However, she was "sent .to pel)';, good of womankind. "I'm not trying . a.• men. •
ly told the New York Times. "We're pie w~o arc hound bY a scxfs! t~adt- 10 make some.kind of stand," she told
· Of, course, -feminists have· bcei.
no fcmin1sts. Good lord. We justlik~ tton. I m the Rosa Parks of the pu!: the Ashury (N.J.) Park PrcsK. And saying this for years. Ncverthelcsi.
sports."
• pit. I'm not going to take the! back ~ary Ann_ Polley, the first wbm~n the "I'm noi a feminis! but .,. "quaiFemimsts have long lamented -- seat." In a New York: Ti~s inter- · md~clcd mto an Elks L~ge 10 Hier persists:·Is this likely lo chang&lt;?
and antifeminists have long trumpet- .~icw, swi.m~er and Olympic medal:!' ~ame, wants, thereto be no mastakc; l douht it. .But I also don't think It
cd --· the fact that no matter how. !St -Summer Sanders waxed philo; .}. hope 1don 1come across as~ fern• really matters. Whql mailers is lhll
mamstrcall) the •deals of feminism sophical on her debt tQ the feminist' dl~,dL•t: ~ca~s~ 1 amhe not a fem'mts_t. 1 women contin'!'llO ch&lt;K&gt;sc their own'
· ~ ~ , I n tJUSij,mn tob ,, a woman gcllmg destin_ ies, and thai they ch•llcnW,'
become, most women do not call • movement wh'lt e at the same .um~
" 9.1
1
themselvcs feminists U.is discrep- rejec]ipg it: "I was hom the year,Ti).J!l 11110 a mans c u ·
anyone who tries lo keep them frotiJ
ancy as cnhcr seen as a naw in the IX (which require,s ,chciols to providl: '. And ~nally,. there .were. the doing so.
; .~
femimst ' movement, or a result of eqUal' resources for girls' and boys' women, hke acti'C$$ !&lt;ate Mulgre'!'•. ·
So IQiJg a.s tbey do that, this fcl(media mampulation, depending on ' spotl&amp;) was acti'!aled, and I've seen and author.Annc:ManeAlonzo who inisl doesn't care what they c'l!l
whom you ask.
it and benefited fr6m it. ... )'m nota simply ~uhid · thcy weren't feminists tl]cmsclvcs.
•
because t cy, "detcstCIJiabels." .
·sara B4;kel 11 a sylldlc,teit
But I suspect the reason is much femimst. but 1 ilo believe equal
1 think thiil'!inal.s(!llcment gets ti'i," writer ror ·Newspaper Enterpnse
simpler. Recently, I ran a Lcxis-Ncx- opportunity is imponant." ·
, the root of why women don't call A-*latloo.
, :
JS cpmputcr search on the 'phrase
Nex'l; there were t~ trailblazing . 1he
1
~ · ·
"I'm not a feminist, " to sec who was, women ·who have, broken gendcro
msc ves cmmJsts. Pebplc don't · . Send Comments to the authorip ·
\.
like to be put in.~~~~·,; cs~~i,ll!, ca~:eafthls newspaper or send 1M$'
l·
the ones that end tat" 1~1 or asm. · e:JIIliU at saraeutllllol.corn.
•

1

•

••

Pomeroy Council·looks

.•

tlow are y·our·i:.n-ve_~n:-ent_s wo,rking?

Pomeroy man cited after crash

and hiah temperatures

•1Columbus!30•1

••
•
•
•

woo

AccuWeather" forecast ror

...

more ! ·

SIXIeen-year-pld Melany Monaha~ is fighting for women's nghts,
but her mother says she's no femmJst.
She Is simply a hagh-school wrestler

•

- .Local News in Brief:-

..-

~·mall, .

"

arc

·

.-

.

.Ye.s, H~rry,

.

-.

lanShoales

How feminism becam.e a dirty
word
.

fix it."
_
That's not a sentiment shared by a good percentage of state lawmakers,
who may balk come budget time at plunking down any more money to ba1l
oul the university.
·
On the other hand, he still has Voinovich's backing.
"The governor thinks he's doing an outstanding job," sa.d Voinov•ch
spokesman Mike Dawson.
'
.
Ransier and his two colleagues on the civil service comm1ssion also came
under fire last week for wl)at some perceived as a too-lenient punishmcnl
for Jackson. The commission took ·away five of the chief's vacallon days
after holding eight days of hearings on cqarges that Jackson was an incompetent manager.
·
AI least in public, though, Lashutka had only nice things to say about
the cqmmission and its,work on the Jackson affair.
·
Ransier was originally.appointed to the commission in 1987 by then-Mayor Dara Rinehart. Lash~tk~ - who, hkc Rinehan and Vomovich, as a Republican - reappomted h•m m 1994.
.
Ransie•, a registered Democrat, ducked qucstJons about whether he had
politic~! ambnmns of his own.
.
''I'd like to build on this," he said. "I'd like to think these situations w11l
help me deal better w1th similar situations in the future."
.
For now, he plans to-get back to h'is law practice - wh1ch he shares woth
his wjfe, Kathleen- and his family.
·
~
."These were JUSt two of the matters I am'involved wn,h," he said. "They
jusl
more high-profile "

_TQd~y ,in 'history\

VVedaelday,Jan.8

.

fa'lC· modem, 8d"anced

·.By P~UL SOU~RADA
·Associated Pre•• Writer
.
COLUMBUS - Six months ago, someone mentioning Frederick Ransier's name outside of a Columbus Bar Association gathering likely would
have been met by a blank look and a shrug of the shoulders.
~
These days, the response is decidedly different.
"Wov;, is that guy a glutton for punishment or what?" was a typical
response heard last week when Ransier's name came up.
• •
There's no do~bt that Ransier, an unassuming 47-year-old bankruptcy
lawyer, has been at the center of controversy lately.
First, Gov. George Vomov•ch appointed him to the reconstituted Central
State University board of trustees after forcing the resignations of the previc us board member&gt;.
Vomovich likes to joke that he doesn 't thmk the new trustees would have
accepted the appointments •f they had known how bad lhe situation was at
the historically black school in Wilberforce.
The first thi-ng Ransier and the other new member.; discovered was that
Central State's debts were millions of dollars higher than they thought, its
financial records were in shambles and the school suffered from a management meltdown.
Ransier, a 1971 Central State graduate, later was elected board chairman.
Then, Columbus police Chief Jarne&amp; J~ckson was suspended by the city's
safely director - w1th Mayor Greg Lashutka's blessing-. and wound up
in front of the Columbus Civil Service Comm1ssion y;nh h1s JOb on the.Jine.
The commission ~s chairman? Frederick Ransiel\
·
''I'm JUSt a fool who was at the wrong place at the wrong time,".Ransier joked in an interv1ew last week.
In reality, he enjoys the challenge.
' "I'm a child of the '60s," he explamed. "I enjoy pubhc service. These
are the kinds of things I went to law school for. "
.
And if he's feeling th~ pressure of having the eyes of the governor, the
Legislature and most of the city government trained on him, he's not showing it.
. "'I ,have oftentimes said that I'm kmd of naive tq the political. side of
things," Ransier cqnceded.
·
·
"My attitude with Central State, for example, is that it's broken. Let's

•

oll'ic:e buildinas, a car, a llciiCh home people whO do lhinp who mate the
llld a privllle jcL (II wu cloeer to 90 bia bul:ks, it's the people who aet
mil, a.ctua~ty, but y~ aec the idea: thinKs dolle,
.

as if he'd resigned in exchlnac &amp;.r
discmi011 as to the tmns of his disengagement. B~ in a~ Slnlb_pf
,pretty good wages f'l' a glorified · ir I'd forqone the process of IIIOik spin doctoring, Mr. Ovitz went indias sucb, and simply assembled peo- rectly to lhe n'ledia, turning a private
pie wbo were frightened of me, then humiliation into public lriwnJI!!,
barked at them over speaker phones inspiring the envy and diSJU$1 of
schmoozer.)
10 do the work I ,could have done
wod&lt;ing stiff's all across the land! And
ldon'tknow what went on behind myself in half the lime, I'd he fully after all, what else are these HollycloSed doors. Eisi)Cf may have hissed ·entitled to a golden parachute. But 1 wood (excuse me, Brentwood) typ;s
betlljeen clenched teeth, "Ovitz, did not l'm , stri~ly a·remaindmd good for?
. ~·
you're through, tlilte this 90 million item of lillie street value.,
Allegedly, however, Disney is
and get out," or maybe Ovitz threat·
Now The New York Observer has mightily ticked at OvitZ. 11\e Observened Eisner, "Ninety mil, Mike, or 1 sugges(ed that Mr. Ovit.z' paning gift er maintains "that Disney is now
go to the media with the Goofy pho- was not as generous as fint assened. investigating whether it has to pa,i
tos." But ever since the news was " Informed sources" place it closer to Mr. Ovitz anything at all. Unck!r
leaked, Disney's people have been $2S million, some of that in stock scrutiny an: three issues. .Did Mf.
hunkered
. in their colorful bunkers options that have yet to reach matu- _Ovitz and/or his nepresen14tives .;,
aggress1vely not commenting.
rity.
• violale an aveement with Disney not
If you live from paycheck to paySo what's the real deal? If you're to disclose lhe severance packageg
check, this is the kind of story that into rarefied gossip, my personal Was Mr. Ovitz fired --and allowed to
gets your blood boiling. I don't know favorite rumor has it that Ovitz was say he resigned -- or did he in faet
'ol\'hy euc1ly. After all, it's not the canned, but allowed to mate il appear resign, as his representatives viio~:
·
· . ously maintained, which normallY .
•
,would not entitle him to any sevef'
ance at all? Finally, did.Disncy have .
cause to fire Mr. Ovitz, lhus obviat•
com:
we have
ing any conlractual obligation to pay
him severance'!"
•,
Instant Web 'access, pagers, high-speed
The
lad
could
have
spun
himself
eommun1catlor1 Softwal'8-into early retirement. In an exte~
Somethinq
mano a man6 with Da Mouse~ personally I'd bet on Mickey ov~
MichaeL As a measure of their lost
social , standing, the Ovitzes have
already had to cancel one. Brentwood
dinner. poor kids. Rumor has it thai
Michael may be forced to move to
Manhattan. I can just see him there,
hanging around downtown in his tattered llalian suit, thrusting.a goblet
into the faces of pa.~sing brok~. h~
ing to gather enough change to pa,r
his cell phone bill . I'm glad I don't
have these problems. I have cnoosh
trouble trying to pay the rent. If I did:
n 't have that fruat basket to fall back
on, I might starve.
·
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoale• newsletter, call 1-800-989DUCK or write Duck's ,Breath, 408
Broad St., Nevada Caty, CA 9S9S9.)
Ian Shoales is a syndkatet
wrikr for Newspaper Entefprist,
Association.
•

.

but

·-·

TUMday,......., 7, 11ft

•

'Jhe Daily Sentinel Done .been ·spun.....;.__------~::
·

OHIO We;lther

The Deily Sendnel•,. s•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

......

'

•

t ~--------~~----a.--~~~=-~~-----------'E.st4Dfislid u.. ma

.-

•

••
•
•
•

..

Rutland mayor's
rt e d
n

Suspect faces
&gt;•more charges

The Daily Sentinel

l'o"""'' ·

Stocks

,.,._The,.,_..,..

..

--

----boYiitoble.

I·
Marriage I censes '

,....................."...............21,.

...,..,.,1 . . . . . . . . . . .:. . . . .

.
'

••

Hospital news

',

'

Announce'ment

·---------------------•-ii
Fit Together
AEROBI£S
,......
...,.........,.
IIIW 9 WIIIIIISIO•

' J••...., 13th

. 7·1 ....

.

,ROYAl 011111011

-·-·-

lnfouMtlon
· call J••nnle

1121183

.

-

.

'

•r
•

•

'•

J

�-·

J

..

t

•

In Top 25 college basketball,

Pace and Springs
leave Ohio State

.

Providence beats Villanova; Kansas and Louisvi_
lle also win
::. By FRANK BAKER
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) " '"Four weeks ago, Prov1dence coach
'Pete Gillen was exasper:ued-when
h1s team was embarrassed m a 17, )!Oint loss .to m-state rival Rhode
:. :Island, an(! the Fnars' record dropped
· to S-3
•rl
Gillen's team appeared selfish
and unmouvated, and preseason pre"' dJCIJons of its first NCAA touma' " l:nent berth m three years seemed farfetched
'" Not anymore.
The Fnars (11 -3, 3-1 B•g East)
·have won s•x straight 'games, beatmg
W1sconsm on the road and wmnmg
at home last week agamst then-No
'" 18 Texas and St John's
· on Monday n1ght, the Friars

'

.: :tn limited NBA action,

.
"We don't lose very often, so
. each loss IS sigmficant We always
try to get back at whoever 11 i,~,"
Chtcago's Steve Kerr sa1d "Ccrtatn
guys on th1s ream have to search for "
.challenges- M1chacl; Scottie, Den, ms - and geumg revenge ts defimtely a challenge for them."
Elsewhere in the NBA, Portland

By MIKE NADEL
CHICAGO (AP)- MichaeiJor,dan shoved John Stockton Denms
' Rodman planted his fo{eartn in Karl
' Malone's back and kepttt there most
of the game Scotlle Ptppen smoth" ered Bryon Russell.
,
Determmed not to lose agam to
' the Utah Jazz, the Ch1cago Bulls
showed a phys1cal s1de sol'ne don"t
know they have
"We're the target for everyone,"
Jordan sa1d Monday mght after the
"''c:lefendmg NBA champiOns reversed
' a November loss at Utah by racmg
to a 26-point lead and coasting to a
102-89 VICtOry
"If we're gomg to s11 here and be
passtve, let people comeJn and take
what we have, we \Von 'I have tl for
Jon$," sa1d Jordan. who had 23
pomts. "We'lve got to defend whjlt

J'

"They could have beaten us by 50
pomts," said Sloan, whose team 1s 67 smce startmg the season 17-2 "I
was embarrassed. That's o_ne of the
few 11mes we came out and didn't
even compete. They did everythmg
they wanted to do. and went everywhere they wanted to go It was pretty easy for them."
In the November meetin$, Malone had 36 points and 15 rebounds,
wh1le Rodman had I0 rebounds and
sa1d he was dtsmtercsted. Monday11
Malone had 27 pomts and II
rebounds, but was only 1-of-8 in the
first half when the game was dec1d- ",
••
ed; Rodman had 16 rebounds"
Russell outscored Pippen 17-16 '
and made seven of nine shots the first
time the teams met. Monday, Russell
had 3 pomts. on 1-for-12 shootmg•. ,
P1ppen had 24 points.

.

beat the Los Angeles Lakcrs 88-84
and Charlotte defeated Golden State
109-101. ''
• Trail Blue~ 88, Laken 84"" '\
At Portland, Kenny Anderson
scored the Blazers' final eight points
as they won their fifth straight and
ended the Lakers' stx-game wmning
.
(See NBA on Pa11e S)
'

his

PICTURE YOUR PET

•

~ ~atriots

AMONGTHt~•••

PET

'

'

•

VAI~NTINESI

....

I

Basketball
I

NBA standings

i

Te1u1s Chnnum II. UCL.-\ II.

~

Ium

.w

'1. &amp;1.

New York

21

Wadung1on

16

9
I~
17
21

Miami

24

OrlandO
New Jency

II
1:1

Phll,tdtllphiu
Bos1un

8

8 2'
7 2~

7&lt;110
719
19~

276

14'1,

231

16

2~8

Ctnlral Dl~illon
ChiCII~OO
: : : ; :::29
4 879
l&gt;ctmll~·:
24 7 714
CLEVELAND
21 10 671
AllaRin

JH

11

621

l.1tarlutu:
Milwaukee

Ill
I 'i

I4
I6

~61

4K4

14

16

467

10 21

Ul

IIKJIIIRII

-·-

Toronto

.w
24

J.

2\

9

7'\0
719

Mnull!sutn

14

Ill

·118

Oallus

10

IIJ

14~

1.1

21
K 21

100
2S9

6 27

I112

San Antunm

Depvcr
V;apcouvcr

•

•

J'~Mifk

... A Lnkcn
S.a11~

L o\ Cllj'lp..'l'll
~nStnte

PJJO&amp;!III~

'

II

.

10

21 II
JtJ IS
14 2o11 IIJ
12 19
JU 21

•
"

1 0 1~

114

676
5'19
412
406
.lK7
1!1

••

I0

St

rr.m~ts,

l:'i~

I K11•

,.I'

to'
IU'~
II

ll'

102. lh.;lll K9

gam..

Midwest

Southwe•t

rrcsnJ.I St 7Y R1ee 76
NW !..llUI~I.IIt.l 7~. SleJtlll:ll I 1\UMUII

Pr,ulb.' V1cw 64 AlnhnnllL St 60
Suullwt n Ml-1h MI Y ,,k: :'17
fl'"l.ol) Soutlk'm 7H J,kksllll Sl 70
1cl. 1~ Arhn)!ltlll 71 S nu Huustull St

61

Arl:wnu St HY t'bummm!C' 'i4
Uu1sl' St 7K LmJ lka~:h St ~~
Nl'v,Wa 7H St M.~ry M 1Cl.IUI bH

The 'Of 2., tei&amp;JI1I tn111M AIWI;Ul~
Pn:s~ n.:n • ~:ollq!! ballk.:tblll poU, wtllt

fh~~~~J~.:o~~~.,~:!~IC::~Je::r~

•
•

pmn11 for a firii·JIIai:C Yllll: lhrouah o*
pmnt for a l'.,lh"PiitCe \lOll!, and lu•t

;

w"d 5 r;mkll'll,

I

t

-....

)

Ohio men's
college scores
Vnlpnr.lt~l

1

'i7 'VtlDIIJIIt)Wn Sl

Midwe.lem
Collegiate Conference

,.

WnJ!II St 79 Will ·GI\!tn Buy 72

'
Non-eonferen&lt;~ play_
WilmUIJ!:IOtl, Ohio gJ CuJMIItll'l2

'
Ohio women's
c:olle~scores
.

St Louts "
Clucup.u
runmtu

"

121
12~
ll~

••

if

THE DAILY SENTINEL

N Y hl.tndcu 1 10

•

Baseball

~-~------~--~--~-----------~,

~·•rmcntund htHlll! \:luhhnuiiC mana~er
0.1\KLANil ATHtl;rK.:s AltJ'.'l.-d k~

I
VALENTINE PETS
IPet's Name•
IOwner's Name

IL'tms wuh (' lluv1d Vulle und RHP R1~:h1e
115·

81lJ,IM!tJ lltcnl ICI &amp;inKIHiilll of tho J'upfit.: 1,

Con:tl l»uttue

l..e•-••

CINCINNATI KEUS Numlld R"lt

'i

'

BMII.-hcr dtrueu• ur tiLoditl rulti1U08
COl URf\00 M:OC~IU.~ Aif.n.~t:JJ lo
term' wllb RHP Jerry ~l'nlu nn a fllk'·
yt!.lr i!untnll.'t N.1n:l.l h1ly y,'lllli! hunu~
nnd fi"'IU mlllru~lor rur NIJC"WIII~ or the
Soulh Allnntt~ l..caatiH! ~

I
I"Addre88
I

nur·ICIItlue ~.:nnll-.:1

Buktlbllll

N"'lanol -othoU A-lollon
MIAMI HEAT StJfll.!d 0 John Ctotty
ton JQ.day comra:1

NEW JERSEY NET~ Wtnvcd F
lloyd Dant!!ls aod &amp;: ·Robtrt Wenlann
NEW YORIC"kNICkS· Wa~ved C
..,Eric l.-kn&amp;.or llAfl F Ovis JeM
•
Ok LAN DO MAC IC A~;IIYAICd 0
Alnf~ HariJDway rrom the tnJII~ 1111

Wulved GKnoy Snulh
PHOENIX SUNS So1pcnded F
Rnlllrf HUrry for two a- fur fhruwjiiJ
a lowel Dl c;OCICh Lloftny AIA~tln a Jan. !

-

Zunavllle lO, Cambridao 40
7..aauville Ro.t.:n181 43. Pfttlo 39

eel

SEArrut SUI'I!IISONICS: Ml••·

P-C Steve Sdo:lllor r,.m 1bo tnj1

-

IC!~

SAN FRANCISL1) GIANTS Agn."f!d
lo lm1t1 wt'h (' l&gt;.l:mun lk'n)'hllltm 11 nu·

.•
~

•

•I

•

IAmount ~nclosed:
I at $8 each.

for

I
t

I

I
'I
I

'I
·pictures I

·.

I

...~------------~-----~--------~
Deadline Friday, February 7th at 3 p.m.
'

Mall ;or bring .the entry f~rq1:
L'

The Daily S_entine~
-, , 10 Court St."
PomtliOY, oHio 45781p

'

'

0

. ..

,
•

'
i

fi?m.

a:;..
vJ!r:

'.._.in

'

"

mre offer a year for 2S years. I may
he here for a long lime. II will not be
a c1rcus"
When asked how his lather, who
died tn 1979, m1ght react to his
announcement. O'Malley said, "He
would have" said, 'Peter, tl's your
call, thtnk n thn&gt;ugh,' whtch I think
I have done. He would have supported it."
O'Malley sUJd lam•ly ownership
of sports today 1s "probably a dymg
breed;' and that he •-an "del end corporate ownership "
Tony Tavares, preSident of the
Anahe1m Angels, who were purcha'ICd hy the Walt D1sney Co., ln&gt;m
Gene and Jackie Autry la.•t year, sa1d
the Dodgers won't be the DndgeJ:S a•
far as he's concerned after they 're
sold
.(See DODGERS on Pa11e 6)

(Conliaued fll&gt;m Page 4)
: •
No. 1 Kaasu 86
struggled aglin with their shooting, •
CINCINNATI (AP)- Stale reg- sometimes1storing the vehicles ut her
•
No. 12 texu 61
but held Thxas lo one field goal1n 1~ ulators will meet next week lo dis· estate and sellmg them at auctton
; , The 1lyhawks ( 14-0. 2-0 B1g 12) final 9: 12. The visiting Lon@hqm. • , cuss a complamtthot qlleges Cmcm- months later.
"
(7-4, 1-1) led 41-39 with 14:Z7 1fo ·nati Rlids owner Marge Schotlfaked
The Cincimwti Ettqurrrr reported
NBA , , . . . ..
phiy, 1but Kansas went "!' a IS-3 run Cip- ~les at her Chevrcilei-Geo deal- thallhe names of Reds general man1,
(Continued from Page 4)
and pulled away. Paul Pierce had 17 ersh1p.
agcr Jtm Bo"iden and John Allen, the
~- sre·" • Sft ullle O'Neal had 34 pomtsforKan~,andRaefLaFrentz
~avid Cook,_spokesman for the club's managmg cxccuuve tn Mrs.
j I ...... nd,~ bo nds for the Lak- added IS. Regg1e Freeman led Texas Ohto Motor Vehrcle Dealers Board. Schott's absence, were among the
£ po~nts a
re u 4 ror-! 4 from with 22 points. The Jayhaw~s. who sa1d Mooday that hearing examiner nafll'ls used in the falsJ,Iied sales
~ :·r:.:=o:~~~tv~ Sabonis shot 29 percent in its 62-59 ~icrory , Larry Jones wtll conduct a status
Mrs. Schott has not responded to
t led ka Bl
•
th •24 points
over ·Kansas State on Saturday, conference San. 13-on a complwnl tbe board regardmg GM's L'Om' Andet.,~ -~ 1~ 1hut was JUSt 3: missed their first seven shots and at filed by General Motors Corp.
plaint, Cook said. She JS not IIXJUIF\XI
\
rson SCO•"" ' fore his late one point werejusr3-of-17 from the
The board has thO- autln:irity to to attend next week's L'Onfercnce, but
I fori!:
the field be
'
fteld. The Jayhawks fi~IShed the first rorce Mrs. Schott to Sllrrender her may send her lawyer or other rcpre' out
., Want.~ 101 , half shooting 24 percent' (7-of•29). dealership. She aiso operates a Buick , sen;;;~~;~hott could not he reached _
I A1 San 1 1 (nen Rice scored 'a
No. 14 LOuisville !12
dealership in Cincinnati.
'
h" h';' 1 1 ind Anthony
N.C. Charfaall! 81
GM told Mrs. Schott a year age for comment Monday. A woman
~ seas&lt;?"· IIJ
po,~ 1 inU and
DeJ'uan Wheal scored'21 points thalherChevroletdealersh1pwasnot wbo answel'i1d the telephone at her
18
: M=d added~O: beat Golden and the Cardinals (12-1, 2.0 Con- mceting~ompany sales standards. In home hung up without givmg her
' re
Dine had 18 "l!lllllil &amp;renee USA) improved on their best June 1995, She reac::hed uettlement, name.
~~,""'•llj)s for "the Hor:., who
22 ye.-s while mavins coach , with 0~ that s~ would surrender
In June, Mrs. Schott surrendered
· mtldeUof 14 free diroWI ilowtJ the , ,Dlnny Cnun within one yictory of 1~ dealership if it did not meet its day-to-day control or the Reds
llltldi llld fmlihed 36-of-40 at the 600 for his - · ~ Jiilinic;la quotas in two of the fjnal thrto quar. because of comments ilot:med ln*nfolll r Llllell s,ewe11 hilt! ~ had 27 ~ ~ ~lne re6oundt for ,. 1et1 of 199S or the first two quarters sitive to mihonlles and women. The
, · 11111 ~aeyehlllliltafort;h!IWII'· the4tm(H,O.I),Who101tforthe J Of~9116.
punishment continue$ through the
:.., JOe
~ poillll ~ lint time iillix pm11 in dwirOM has told the bolrd that Mn. .1998 s,eason.
1of.-k ~ 22.
Dale P. JWtoit Arena.'
.SCiiott falsimd 57 sales lUI year,

S!aldl__.

'

'

Peter Angelos forthe Baltimore Onoles tn 1993.
The O'Malley famdy also owns
Dodger Stadium and the 300-acre
s1tcncardowntown Los Angeles that
holds the stadium, the spnng !rammg facility in Vero Beach, Fla ,
known as Dodgertown; and some
Pf9perty in the Dominicaq Repubhc
known as Campo u.~ Palmas.
O'Malley, hts Sister, Terry Sc•dler; and her hustiand, Roland, are •
the team's pnmary owners.
O'Malley, about 60, said he ha,d
no tdea how much the Dcidgers arc
worth, and that stx months would he
a rcahsllc timetable to 11nd a buyer.
Baseball's approval process could
take another 6-12 months.
"There's no pressure," he sa1d.
"Results are more important than
t1ming. We've probably rece1ved
' )

••

NEW YORK (AP)- For Hall of
. Fame voters, trymg to assess Phtl
N1ekro's career was JUSt as bafllmg
as trymg tel hit h1s knuckleball.
Kept out of the Hall 10 his first
four years of ehg1bility, N1ekro,
wbo •• lrom Lansing, Ohto, and
played for the Cleveland Indians,
easdy made 11 Monday. He was the
only player elected, leavmg fejlow
300-game wmner Don Sutton and
former Reds slugger Tony Pere'z to
wan at least another year. 1
"Well, someumes you Wonder,"
N1ekro satd atAIIanta, Fulton County Stadium "I thought someday 11
was gmng to come "
Niekro was selected on 380 of the
473 ballots for 80.34 percent, well
above the requ1red 75 Jl!lrcent
. Niekro was the top votc-getrer
last year when no one was elected,
wnh 68 3 percent -He never had
come so close - he recetved 65.7
percent 10 h1s lirst year of ehgibJI•ty 10 1993, followed by 60 percent m
1994 and 62 I percent 1n 1995
"It's a day ol a dream. I've had
my nightmares," N1ekro saJd
N1ekro, 318-274 10 24 seasons,
mclstly with the Braves, was at a loss
to explam why he suddenly became
so popular w1th the voters Ccrtaml:y his uming , was good because of
the strong crop ol cand1datcs commg
up- Gary Carter in t 998 and then
Nolan Ryan, George Brett, Robm
Yount, &lt;;;arhon FISk and Dale Murphy in 1999
"Gtvmg a description ol today 's
phone cull IS 1mpossJblc," N1ckro
sa1d. "I' vc been stunned before I
JUSt d1dn't prepare mysellthls year.
I was not gomg to get myscll so
high."
Career h1ts leader and lormcr
Reds manager Pete Rose, mchgiblc
for election because he 1s on hascball's banned list, received 20 writein votes.

'bailers m the Hall when he 1s
enshnned as the 229th member. The
date for t~ mduc11on ceremomes
this summer m Cooperstown, N.Y., ~
has not yet been determmed
'
Billy Wilhams was the last play-_
er who had to walt as long as N1e~ro
to make it mto the Hall The former
Ch1cago Cubs sta( was elected on h1s
SIXth try m )987.
N1ckro p1tched two seasons m
M1lwaukee, moved with the team to
Atlanta -from 1966-1983, and later
1
p1tched for the New York Yankees,
Cleveland and Toronto. He made a
final, farewell appearance for Atlan1a
in 1987 at age 48 and timshed 1.v11h
a hteume 3 35 ERA
N1ekro sa1d his plaque at the, Hall
wdl show an Atlanta cap
.
A five-11me All-Star and a fivc ttme Gold Glove wmner, N1ekro
ranks 14th on baseball's career Ylm
list and IS e1ghth 10 stnkeouts
(3,342). He 1s one of JUst 20 p•t~h ­
ers to wm 300 games, and the only
one to do 1t w1th a knuckleball
In h•s 300th wm 10 1985 forthe
Yankees, however, he threw JUst one
knuckleball, on the )a,,t pnch &lt;&gt;f the
game He later sa1d he'd alw,Jys
wanted to show he could wm wnhout h1s favontc pllch
N1ekro com hi ned wllh his hroth
er, knuckleballer Joe, to WID 537
games, the most m maJOr lcuguc his-

tory by hrothcr.;
•
N1ckro hnlds v~rtually all ,ol
Atlanta's p1tchmg records, mcludmg
wms (266), games (689) .md
shutouL' (43 ). He also pllchcd the
lirst no-hiller m Atlanta history, m
1973 agamst San D1ego.
·
Dcsp1te all ol h1s wms, some sa1d
N1ckro was more a testament to

longcvlly rather th,m cxcdlcncc. He
never W&lt;in a Cy Young and limsh)lt!
In the top nvc 1R votmg lor the UW~rd
JUst three t1mes He h.ld ,1 total ol
three 20-wm sca"ms
N1ekro ranks hlth on the "''"''"
hst oi losses aq.d never won ,, po:tsca"'" game Then agam,thc Br~'-.ts
only made 11 to the playof1s rw~c

Sutton, on the ballot lor the
fourth time. fell nmc votes short ol
the necessary 355 Sutton called
Nickro to congratulate hun
durmg h1s tenure.
:•
"There's a guy who won ~24 '
Alter retinng as a pl.1ycr. .N•ckro
games, more than I have," N1ckro managed and coached m chc Br,Jvts
sa1d "You try to figure that one org.mJzat~nn He es ahou1 to sl.ut l••s
out."
lourth season managmg the womcB' s
''I'll tell you, I'm very dtstlp- Stiver Bullets team
:
pointed for !urn," he smd "I thought
Sutton was 324-256 Wit~ ,, 3 tt&gt;
maybe we'd go m together. Actual- ERA 10 23 seasons. nmsl ol Lhl-111
wuh the Los Angeles Dodgers. Li'&lt;

~~:~~~~~~;~~~ r~~~:~~~~~-:

gomg through "
Pcrel, on the ballot for the SIXth
umc, miSscd.by 43 tn voung by the
Baseball Wntcrs" Assocmtu&gt;n of
Amcnca.
N1ekro Will JOID reliever Hoyt
Wilhelm as the prccmment knuckle-

N1ckru, Sutton never wun

4\

'•

son

Perez ranks 16th on h.ISch.ll~s
career RBis hst wuh 1,652- &lt;vcfy
player ahead ufhun IS alrc.Jdy 1n l~c
Hall.
•

•
I

UNC-Asheville ·men
beat Marshall 83-63
ASHEVILLE, N.C (APJ - A
lackluster shootmg performance IS
no excuse for a loss, Marshall scormg leader John Brannen said after
the Thundering Herd Jell 83-63 to
North Carohna-Ashevllle.
Marshall wa• outshot 49 pcrcent
to 32 percent The Herd had been
avcragmg 49 percent from the field
Marshall (8-3) hi! JUst seven ol 26
tJvce-pointers, hut "11 wasn't JUSt the
threes," Brannen satd after Munday's game "We weren't makmg the
layups culler. You have mghts hkc
that You sllll have to wm. We're not
always gojng to shoot well, so that's
no excuse lor losmg ,,
Kcvm Martin "'"red 24 points, 12
rebounds and c;•ght as.,sts to lead
North Carohna-Ashev1llc. He also ·
h11 10 ol II free throws Josh Ptttmun
added 17 pomls for North CarohnaAshcvtllc, wh1lc Robert Stevenson
had 16 pomts ami I0 rebounds •
Marshall ' was led by Keith
Veney's 21 )Xllnts, Brannen's II
pqtnts and Stdney Coles' IO.points
and SIX assists
North Caro'!ma-Asbevdle •(6-6)
avenged a 109-82 loss to Marshall
on Dec. 21 m Huntington.
It Was the Thundcrmg Herd's
next-to-last non-conlerence game
Marshall has a game remaining Feb.
·5 at Butler. The Herd opens league
play Wednesday at Davidson
"lllC c ll"urt has got to be better,"
smd Marshall coach Greg While
"Mentally. we wercn 't ready to play,
It was the first lime all year that we
wcren 't ready to play. We missed at
lca•t 20 layups tontght. They outplayed us."

......'!".:Sports brietras~PHo'ENix (AP) _,The Phoenix
Suns suspended forward ltobert Horry for two games'without pay by for
throwmg a rowel and swearins at
coach Danny Amgc durins Sunday's
game at Boston. The penalty is
maxtmum allowed under the NBA's
collective barsammg agreement.
Meanwhile, the Viail Corp said it htid
sold its 26 percent interest back to
the team for $31.5 milhon.

•

Gy

Young and had only on&lt; 20-wm soo

•

State officials ·probe _
alleged
~ faked car s•les by Schott

~ Top 25 hoops...

Friday, February !t/1 "' 3p.&amp;

n•

Nationll

"PET'S NAME"
Owner's Name

Hurry/ Dellllline

1

CHICA(iO WHI'ffi SOX AJtl..'Cd lu '
1ero111 wnh 28 Nnrbi.-nn Mnrnn on ll nne·
year ~:untn.:t
CLEVI..LANI&gt; INDIANS Aa;n:cd lo
'"'"'\.'" with RHP J).:,ron k~rlcrcn
11 pit·
nor· k:UJUU imnlrm.:l Numed Ted Wnl~h

anti

•

Please enclose aelfaddresaed stamped
envelope to return
your photo•

American Lc..-.;

l.eWII OA hiiOI.)f·km~UJC t.IOIIIUt.:l!i

.' seven ye~ be(ore they moved from:
LOS.ANGELES (AP) - l!eter Brooklyn to Los Angeles.
· I
~ O'Malley says estate1)1anning is tile
"It's probably sman to plan for
f pnmary ~n he plans to sell the the-future. That's probably the mum'
;. Los, Angele~ J:?odgers. Baseball's reason," O'Malley said. "I'm not a
i labcit~blemsmightalsojlavebeen tax expe~. (bUt) it's a pretty good
i a factor. ' '
1dea not to have all your eggs m one
'i[•.tllink that Peter,has_Just been basket." ·
1
i unluippy lately with the situatiqn, the
O'Malley sm:ceeded hiS father, ~
~ direction the game[ of bilsc:hall is
Walter, as team president in March ~
~ g!ri~g," former Dodgers manager .1970, but none ofPetcr'sthree chll- ~
! Toq~ ·Lasorda said Monday, several dren has held more than a•part-time
~ hoors pfier O'Malley made hJS sur- position with the team.
t JW,isj;llg announcement.
"J'hey've started their own
•
Q:Malley drdn't g1ve a du~ct careers," O'Malley said of h1&gt; chil· c
:• answer at a Dodger Stadium news dren - Katherine, 24, Kevm, 21,
~ oc;Qnference when asked 1f his deciand Brian, 19. "I've never tal~ed to
: sro11 had anythmg to do with base- any of tire chtldrcn about runmng the I
• ball's labor problems. but he d1d say DddJers, My fnther never put any 1
: his only regtetm baseball was '"the pressure on me. He saw I WIL' mter··
: inabtlity of the own~rs and the play- ested."
t ers I)SSOCiation to work together for
The sale price could be more than l
~· the good of the game." •
$300 milhon, well altovc the cuncnt '
• " The O'Malley family has con- record for a baseball team, the $113 '
; · trolled the Dodgers since 1950-, million paid by a group headed by

By Jdi:IN NADEL . •

I'

PER PIOURE
.
PRE·PAID ·

,If N Y R1111~cr~ 7 10
•
( olurmln ut N~·w J~rst:y. 710 Jllll
l~ntunmn nt t"'uutp;n t1 )() p m
lk·lrnlllll J)ullus II lllll m
lluml.tiM An.tlk!llll, 10 :W p 111

around, he went mto a Dunkm'
Donuts, and a state trooper came m
and said ptople were bemg let into
a stad1um lot
"Everyone JUSt flew down, and
the lucky people got mto tlie parkmg
lot," he said.
R1ch Landry of Weymouth said
he had been m Foxboro since 8 a.m
Monday, and was at the front of a
line of people on foot walling for
vouchers. However, he said lhat
although police had said vouchers
would he gtven to people in cars and
on foot, it was only people m cars
who got them.
"! was "ght at the fr'ont of the
line, and I dtdn't get a vouc'fr,"
Landry sa1d.
Lt. Fay said vouchers could not
be g1vcn to people standing in hnes
because of d1sorder.
The Patnors had announced that
no ticket-seekers would be allowed
tnto sta.dmm parkmg lots untd 6 a.m
today Those let •nto the lots were to
be gtven vouchers to buy 11ckets at
lO a.m.
·

O'Malley ann·o unces he will sell Dodgers

i

Transac tio ns

~

'"

&lt;

;

Also a special secion for In Memory Valentine Pets.

J)O

126

ram11.1 H.ty

Jllll

~ liil

'

127

Wednesday's Ram..

Hockey

../

9K

IIIII

Yoo -..,..,,8.Unulat11
Yoo IJb&lt;rly ,., ltubt&gt;onl '7

.

~

I

IIIISUHI.II Plul,tddphl.l 1 )0 Jl Ill
1:11nmntu11.tl .Sl l.um~ K :lOp 111
'"'''""' .11 C...tllJ.:••r)l 1,1 10 11111
llul11lu 111 San JuSt.· Ill \0 p 111
V:memtver ul I us t\na:clcs 10 \0

w-

Ohio H.S. &amp;IriS' scores

WILL ·Bf PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
'
'
FEBRUARY 13TH IN
..

JIIU

Unioo Locol43. Indian c...t 1~
Van &amp;wrR 56, R1~lc J4
Vlno:c'"
n. Morioeiii~~J ccm
w JcfftrSOn :17. Homll1on Twr 1l
WOO&lt;rloo 41. Stmuboru 40 •
Wau1e011 6t ~Owk-t !li I
World-7l.M-ho0lr 61

'

17111 120
34 12~ 14ft

g~me

•

Tonlght'•ICliDI••

Trulwood-"'*'JIOII ~2. Day Pan~"'

t1a11 St 69

l'i21 7
17 2-1 II

l 1 ttt~htu~h 11

Ml"tt'

~ld-Ainerlcu Ca'nre.;nce

40 120 I:W.

MmMtc.ll ~. H.trtlurd 4
(ulur,lf.lll 2 N Y N.111~1.'f~ 2 (llt:l
Vouk:miVI.'t "i 1\n,tlwmt I

'

B"J'' .l-1
, Tul Sl Ursula 62 En.~lwtlltd ~2
T"l Woodwonl66. Tot Ubl&gt;ey 41

B11Ten

'-'FOR·
PETS ONLY"
.

M(mdl)' 1 !ii St.'Ure'ti
'llunJM ltay ;a Ouawa 1

Tul puwshl.'l' 71. Holland Spr.w~ 6)
Tlll Chrllllan 56. Tul En\'inanucl

,,

IK 20 4

Pudn~: Ul•l!llon
Columdu
2-1 10 1 ~c;; 144
IWmun!nU
Ill 19 4 40 B6
V llk,:IIUV~!
IY IY I lt) 124
Annhl.'tm
1421 ~ Hll~
C.tl!!nry
1412 "' H 102
San JuSt."
1421 ' 1l Jdl
I oN l'ut~dt~ • P 2.1 4 )tl liM

M llllltl.-.:" 41 Mus~Jun.lll
M.mmce VLtl Cnuntr)l Duy H:C;.
Ut.&gt;ttsulle 24
M~.;Aulcy "\llj Cm M~o;NJ~o;huht.~ l'll
MdA,I~.tld "i4 lkrlm Ct.ortiCr Wc!d('m
Rclll.'r-wc 16
M1:1~s 42 Tnmble 1K
M1 tnu~hur~ bo&amp; I r.mkhn 40
M~tldll'flllllll I CIIWt~k S4 (llhtrd l~·
ltw.tnd.l41
Mup_,ido~ S7 WuuiiMIII •W
r ....~.-htc~ M l ..tm•m lkt1wn U
11111111 l'lc.lMIII 1W V,, ) 00 L1Jt.•sb•re
lhv~r V,11 4 I
l'ol.tnd "'c; Au~IUIIUWn·l Udt l9 •
Pymnmnm~ \lui 71 1\:dnahula .W
K,t\em~o~60 W Gcompn44 ~
MldHnnthl Ldu~iU Hli Uwukc
(W\I,t)7K(2{fiJ
S Admns tlmJ J 6\. P:u-kway 11
St.:nll ~ Sm11.111 Kl·t•tun \6
~h.ttlyHtdl' HO C:ln~run.(:W. Vo1 J 6\

(UTI

U11noi•H9. otuo SC 11
Toledo'~'

IJ!IUL:III~

SIM:!n:.utdtK~I49 l'mml!!r 29

'¥&gt;•

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

2'\1~'
49 IlK 100
211 D 7 4-7 12" K~
IK I'll 4 4() 110 1111

llall.tll
lk1rntt

Sn.lney 67, R~t~lllol :'1(, '
S"utlk:lt$1,.1. O.trrcttll\'iJic W
Soullunar.ton K9 Lut"dl!l.own"27
Sprmg Nunh U Spnn11- C.tthoh~: 41
St lkm,wd "iJ Cm Summtl c;.:a
St M(U'y '{W V,~ I tJ7, S Galm ~
S!cubcnvlllc 11,1, E Uvc11,.)UI 11
Steuhcnvlll!! C'u1h !iK. Tvmnlo "i2

Mid-Contiaenl C011Cerence

.,

DlwMon

.W L I Et&amp; Ill' !iA

Iwn

M.mms l1..uy 70. Ot:ll:11rc W

1 ok.•J.It.l 70 Bnll St 60
Yulpar.tulo :'i7 Youni!atuwn St 46
Wral!hl St 7'J, Wts ·Gm: niJ.ty 12

.

WF~~TERN CONFERF.NCE
Crntral filvl!lion

cti(WV.t)17
•
Htllshorn 62 Nl!w R1dunund 47 •
hKit.m Vul CiiK (&amp;~~hl': "i7
Kcllhlll Rtd~~: 61"• Sprut~ South 'iK
Lallmc "'I IJrtMlklield 47
l:.cbmmn M t:.d~~.:wotH.I :'12
l ..t.'l'~hu~· l ,urh~ Ill fl 7 N Ad.mt~ 44
L1hcrty Ccnlcr 'i9 l'~:tusvtfle .J()
111\lll C.llh 7'\ SJ"ICUI:erv/IIC 44
IAilJ.illl :'i(J, Ailll:IUI47
Mnnshdd Chr 49 Oren Uut~r 2K
M.mu111""~''' 'i4 New KnmiVtllc 41

K6 Ic11.ns b I

,,

«

. .•

-·-

Oti.IWII

~)

F11~ld '\4 WtMillndgc '\4
I nrt 11)'1: ~9. W olh!rlord '\4
l·on I :mmuc :C;() St Hl!nry 2"1
G.llh!•'h~ 'iS Juebun 1~
"'
(,cnrw.-tuwlt M Western Umwn 21
Grl'ettfu.•ld M~CI,\111 CiiO i\m.J!I1.1,,
(.'h;,trul-.:k 47
Hltnmhnl Rtvl'"r "I fylcr Ccin~lltJ.,t

Ctl)l IOl 1'm~ St K6
Murr.1y St KO. li:nn ·M1111111 M
f!.l l ·Ashl'vJik !H MARSHALL 6l
N C Cin.·cnsl'luro • Mtl . nalltnkJh.'
County ~7
Nl . w,lmm~tmr60 /uncm:un U ~W
SLI outsMJM Kfl Cl'nll'nary KU
Sl. M1ssnur1 71 I('1\lk:S.'i\.'C St :'i l
rcrm~:s~~'-' rcdt72,1. Kmtwky 'i~
Tl'nlt·Chau,mno~ 1K1 Wt•flnr.J 46
Wmthrop79 llorJJni'Uintllll: 12

..

S6 Wclb•nn

4'i IO:'i lUI
4 l~ 109 110
'i B II) 127
K .Jl ~ Ill

\

,,

lb IH K 40 l1b 144
IS It\ 6 16 II) ll6
1220 1 11 UJ7 IIY

Du~1011

24

F~r.ll Hod.an~

Ka11~1Ls

Kan~.L~

Muntl\'ul

llclphtlli St Joh11'5 :'111 Cunlltll!mul#
Dell,, ~:i. I .tyeue 4:'1
l.lyctlt."VIIIl' tt.l Whllt.'Oilk ~

Al•:um St 7l Gnuuhhn~t S1 $7
Appo1l.tclmm Sl 77, VM I 72
lkthuiiC·C,lokn~o~n 7 1 St Peter • $K
('itiUJi:l K2 W CIU\!Itna 62
Eo1s1 Cun•lm,1 H0 G.:url!c MO!Nilll 7-1\ Geor~m Soulh ..'fn 6'\ I lcnnc~sel'
St flO (00
Ll.tul~vtUc 92 N C Ch.ulott\' ~I
M1dd~ renn 7K. MuMn.:,Jd St 72
Mt~5 Vnllcy St Kl) Snttilll'rn 1l
Mo

Nortltra~

C'reNtwnud 46 Ruotsluwn27
C..woksYJik fH Hcntlu~k Miller 21
IJ:~y Ullunl'l While S4 IJ.ty Jdlcr·

1110111

!")

Oufl.tlu . , ...... , .. 21 I"' 4 46 121 106
P.ul~burgh
21 Jllj 4 46 14H 127
Hartlurd
1716 7 41 122 111

Cut Htlls Chr Acudcmy 4K Cm

IJL:Imu111 "'l 0.1y Mtmm V.tl -tl
U.ty C.1rrull SK l.t;mun·Mmtn..: 41
U:~y Ch ummllk Juhctm~: ~~ I .ur·

FarWe•1

ToplS men's
coUege pol!
I

P.1 74 Sl I r..n~l~&gt;, NY

21 lc;
17 20
1420
12 19

W!LShlllj!IOll

l:;tiU 21

South

p "'

:

"

'

14

D,llln" nl Pluhllphin. 7·10 11m
Phrw.."'IUI Ill WMhlnf.IUn. 7 3() r m
Holllitlllllll CLEVaAND. 7 1U J1 1\l
Se.tnk· a1 Denw:r Kp m
Utt.!t .tl Pwhlwuukct, g,\10 fl m.
M11lm1 ut Punlu:uJ. 10 p m
OtnriUII¢ ut L.A Luken, IU JU p m
Vanni1J11Cr at G,,ldtlt Stille 10 \0

•

-I

54 l:n IOU
~1 IlK
92
SO l:'il 122

2"i 12 4
21 10 11
2216 6

TamfttiO,ty
NY lslatt\Jel'll

Cut Nurwuml H.1p1u1 117 VJII,I}te
Chr 21
Cm Ouk Htlls Cii9 Cm H.u-.uun Cii4
(m f.Jit Nl Cm Atkcullj2
Clc VA-SJMl C.uttmt{ath 6'\
(unvoy cre~tVIl'W ~7 Inn Jl'IUIHl~S

St Botwocnturc 1.- Gcc\rgc W·•~lUll!!·

Ii

l1hlhttk!1tlu,,
HonU.t
NY R.mg..:n
New Jeney

murk 22

PmvtU.:n&amp;:\.! 91, V•llnnnvn 6K
10116)

S.m Antuni&lt;» ut Bosltm, 1 r ~ m

I,

Lont; l!d.uul U II'\ Rokr1Mor'lu 94
Mnnsl67, Mullnt St Marys Md &amp;I
Mnnmuuth. N J M. Wagner 6)
NE llhnms 67 ,.. C.:m C:omk!~:lh.: ut St

I

Wedllflday's pm..

0

_.fo

"

Pru~~.:etun71 Rut~mM

EASTERN CONFERENCF.
Atlonllc DlvWon
:r..m
:W I. I fb. li.t: !iA

Cm Lu&lt;.:k111nd 70 New Mtnlltl 1'1
Cm Lo~d.Lnd 7"i Ckrmutll NE 2K
Cut N Cnlll'!!e H1ll :'12, C111 Lnnd

H.Lrv.Lrd 64 O.lrllllnuth 'iO

Iii

L A Cbpp.:u .lt Tnronlu, 7 p m
Onll:u AI·NI!W York, 7 30 p m
S1111 Arurmm al New JI!I'M:)I, 7 10 p m
PtJIIOOclphu:tUI Orlando, 1 10 p m
Phul:m~ at AlkuMa. 1 ~ p. m
Milwaukct nt Dfcf'Qif, 1 J(J_p m
CLEVELAND u1lntlmna. 7JO p m
M1.1m1 at ~allk:. Mp m
HVUIIOO at Mm~lbl MI" m
lk•wcr 111 SO\..Tot~nlo, IO:lO I" m /

•••
•

iOTJ

~'

Punl,1nJ HH. LA Li1kcn tw
011\ri(JIIC 109, Gukfcu St:lfc 101

'•

•

NHL standings

Seven H1ll~ 42

Duque~n~: 76 Vargtnm Tech 6 ~
Fanh:tgh Dtdl05nn 79 RILI!!r 7S

ll'•
18

Monday'• scores
Ch•~nttO

Toni~ht's

''.

&amp;1.

41

Cornell 69. Lafn)'elle ~9

4
7

Olwllion

2S

Pnr11nnrJ
~
S"'-TUmcnto •

1:1

Easl

- Cnmslul7~ Fmrfieh.l60

Colg.lt~ 76, M11nh 1Hun :\1 • '
Columbm 86 L.clttgh 66

Mldwt"Jil DI\'ISIOII
How.t\m
U111ll

NCAA Division I
men's scores

l~~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

7

Orleans 2 SW Mtuourl St I

!ill
I
1~
II

~16

Pru:1fi~.:

Beqven;n:ek tiM. Day Dunb,1r :'12
Bellmre St John s 58, B1~hop Donohue fW v.• ) "i6
Belpre 62 Rrn:tne SouttM:rn SO
Bt:lhel Tal~ 57, WtllumJNburg 40
Olundte51Cr 60 Fdu;:tly 4~
Br.dtteporr "i2 Mt De Chnnt,tl
(WVa)H
Dn~tul70 Cord.tnd Maplewood 20
Urouk111lle W Nuuunul TrmJ :\4
Ouckeyc Tr.ul 62 N!!wl.mmcntuw.ln
11
C.Lmf'bell Co 6Cii, Con~r ~
• Camon'Mt.:Kmlc)l 'i!i. Cle Shaw lO
Ctn Olen Estc 1 i, Cm W:llnut Htlll

E Mu.:hljltn 4, llhno1s Sl 4, Alitbnmu 1
Oklahom;,1l Tuls.11 Georgctowr1 2 N.:w

EASTER~ CONFERENCE
A.llantlc Dlwlllon

handed out at about 2 a.m.
"I played by the rules," S!!id
Doug Mascou of Marblehead, who
said he got to the stadmm at 4·45
a.m., but did not get a voucher.
"We drove here all the way from
Marblehead, and they handed out the
vouchers and sent people hl me.
That's not fair."
Ernest Griffin of Westboro sai4 he
and his brother Marl&lt; parked then car
away from the stadium ansi walked
toward the gates
"l)le cops were telling us to go
home, there was no. way we were
going io get a ticket," Ernest Griffin
Said.
However he spotted a car wa1.tmg
in hoe to get m the lot with no one
m the. back seat He pa1d the dnver
$40 to let him and h1s brother nde m
the back, and he got a t1cket voucher.
,.
"That's fmc," he sa1d when told
his car might have been towed.
"Th1s IS a golden ticket "
Roy Bomlla of Waltham, who got
a voucher, sa1d he got to the stadmm
at 9 p m. Mond~y, ..After driving

rl

.'
Others rect1111n(ll vote51 Connctll~ul
76 MIUIUtppt 7$. F\ondu St 6K W1s·
cnn!JO '8 ProvuJence 11, New Mexu;o
Sl 19 Iowa IB Call ol ChW'k"Ston 14
Mnrquettt 14, Cnhfornm II H:awnu II

call. off ticket
sales
for
title
.

• By "RICHARD LORANT
relations for the fatriots, sa1d the
~
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)- Tickvouchers "will be honored." He esti:i er sales for Sunday's AFC Champ•· mated S00-700 were given out, each
·1 onship were called off today after gO(ld for two tickets. There were
" vouchers for tickets wert handed out 3,000 seats available for the game.
j-l ~qur hours earlier than .ll.tlnounced.
The decisiOn to distribute the
"I won'! be allowing ticket sales vouchers was made by state police
J today," Police Chief Edward and sUidmm management. But the
• O'Leary said at 8bout6 a.m.
early distribution left thousands of
:l He said.llie siwaJion at Foxboro fans, a great deal of· anger and
~ Stadium was hazardous, and recom- dozens of police officers at the staJ mended that the New Engla,nd Patrid1um.
~ ots not distribute tickets I for the
The nonhbound lanes of Route I
~ game against the Jacksonville were jammed with cars, and ticket~ Jaguars.
,
seekers who c~uld not get in a p!\fk·
State Police Itt.'· Maitin-'Pay, a ing'lot tauntedipolice.
·
r; -commander at the Foxboro barracks,
"There were so many peQplc!'.on
! sa1d as many as 7,000 fans had foot and illegally parked: they had to
• showed up at the stadium. He said open one of the gates into the sUidi: several officers were assaulted, none urn," Foxboro - Police Patrolman
: seriously, and about 10 arrests were - Timothy O'Leary said. "It was so
: ' made.
congested. They wanted IP g~t them
•
Fay sa1d he decided to let people off the road."
: mto a stachum parking lot at about
He said between 2,000 and 3,000
: mtdnight for public safety.
people wm waitmg at the stadiUm,
:
"I could no longer control the' ·• hoping to gellickets atabout3 a.m.
• crowd," he said. :'I thought it was
State Police Trooper James
: best to get people «?ff the st~et " .
O'Leary satd it was his understand:
Don Lowery, dueclor of pubhc ing that the ticket vouchers were

Scoreboard
f'

'

By BEN WALKER

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Offensive IaCkie Orlando Pace wants to be
No. f -overall 1n the NFL draft. Cornerback Shawn Springs will settle for ·
the top 10.
,
Based ~n draft projections, the Ohto State juniors -the Big Ten's play-'
ers of the year in 1996 on 9ffense and defense- announced jointly Monday that they would give Jllp thetr last year of eligibility to move on to !he
pros.
Pace, the only two-time winner of the Lombardi Award, said he considered mounting a legal challenge a year ago thai would have allowed him to
be. drafted after his sophomore se"on.
"I want to be the No. I pick. That's why I came bllt:k for my junior year,"
said the 6-foot-6, 330-pound left tackle.
,
A 6-0, 190-pounder who was the conference's defensive player of the
' year despite not havmg an ,intercepllon, Springs said, "Obviously, I think
I'll go m the top 10 picks. If not. I wouldn't be coming out."
With Monday's decisions, Ohio State has lost 10 players to the NFL m
the last s1x drafts who sttll had eligibd1ty remaining.
WE'RE LEAVING -With claa111818' OrlandQ Pace alttlng at 11 disBoth sa1d Ohio Slllte's dramatic 20.171ast-minute victory over Arizona
tance, Ohio State lunlor dafllnslvl! back !Jhawn Spring• (left)
State in the Rose Bowl also led to thetr decrsion.
announces
his deci1lon to llave the university to try the NFL 1hft
"What better way to go out than wtth a win?" Pace sa1d. "I did everyat
11 neWs conference 'ruisday ' In Columbu1, Ohio. Pace also
thing I wanted to do. It's time for me to move on."
'
'
annouileed a almllar clec•ion at the conference-lAP)
E
Oh1o State finished the season Il-l 'dad second in the (lation with its first
Rose BowJivJctory since 1974.
•
·
·
on pass plays whtle safeties Damon Moore and Rob Kelly moved up on run
"At the begmnmg of tl;le season, we set a goal to gQ to the Rosc'Bowl,"
coverage.
Sprmgs sa1d "Now that we accomphs)led that- going ro ,the Rose Bowl
The son of fanner Ohio State and Dallas Cowboys runmng back Ron
and winnmg it- it played a big part m my decision.",
Spr1ngs, he had 38 tackles in 1996 mcluding nino solos. He broke up· IS
In addition to winmng the Lombardi for the ~ond time and also receivpasses, includmg four m the Rose Bowl VICtory
ing the Outland 'ITophy, Pace finished fourth m balloting for the Heisman '
He said he was - at Jeast m pan- insp1red by his father to make the
Trophy.
•
deciSIOD.
lmmediately after the Heisman ceremony in New York, Pace sa1d he
"I think every hnle k1d growmg up wants to be like their father," he sa1d.
would be returning for his senior season.
Oh1o Stare coach John Cooper was at a national coaches convent JOn and
"You'll see No. 1S in the Hprseshoe next year," Pace sa1d, refernng to
could not be reached for comment
,
Oh1o Stachum by its nickname. "I need another year. I don't think I'm menIn the days prior to the Rose Bowl, he said he d1dn'1 thmk Pace or Sprtng•
tally or physically ready for the next level."
were ready for the NFL and would benefit from another year at Oh•o State.
He sa1d Monday he later changed
mmd.
Previous Ohio State players to declare early for the drafi mcludctwo play"That's what I was feeli!ij! at the time," he said. "I sat down with my
ers with two years of ehg•b•hty rcmammg (Robert Sm1th and Dan W•lkin: ! family and re-evaluated 1t anij decided to mov\} on."
.
son).New England Patriots standout rece1verTerry Glenn last year and three
•
Springs was a star of Ohio State's .,.-ess defense. He usually drew smplayers who left early for the 1995 drafi (Cra.g Powell, Korey Stnnger and
~ gle coverage on the opposmg team's best receiver and receiyed little help
Lorenzo ~ly les).
'
•

_
-Bulls down Ja~z 102-89; Trail Blazers and Hornets al~o win.·
'

Niekro finds -h imself
·only player elected
·to Baseball HOF

•

By RUBTY..MILLER

.

we have 'It's toughness It's not just the ftrsl half, so be tl.
a walk through the park."
"Someumes he gets away With
The Bulls, 12- I overall and 9-0 at some of that sneaky stuff," Jordan
home smce Dec. II, spectahze in said. "I'm a veteran, too, so I tned
payback.
\
to get away with something sneaky "
.The confrontation was notllble in
Chmago lost only I0 limes in
wmmng an NBA-record 72 games that Jordan and Stockton are two of
last season In rematches agamst the best guards m NBA h1story.
teams that beat them, the Bulls went
"We've had some battles in the
6-0- w1th an average VIctory mar- course Qf play, but that's the first
gm of 21 potnts.
lime that the fans got to see two comAnd so 1t was agam Monday petitors trymg to find an edge," Jormght when they faced Utah, the first· dan said. "I have a lot of respect for
team to defeat them thts season and John We played on the Olymptc
the f~rst to feel the1r wrath
team together. But he's not gmng to
"The guys expenenced a hule out -compete me here at home."
los~ of pnde," Bulls coach Phd JackSa1d Stockton: "No b1g deal
son sa1d qf the I05- 100 loss on Nov. Part of \!le game "
23. "We made 11 a pomt to do what-·
What bothered Utah coach Jerry
ever 11 took to wm th1s game."
Sloan was that too few of his playIf that included Jordan's pushmg ers were wllhng to mix it up with the
·
Stockton to the floor near the end of Bulls.

•

to try NFL draft

' 8·13 The Fri- pomts1 with Croshere hitting a fadeend, where they held a 19-13 advanfield goal m the first
tage. Garces, a muscular ~foot-9 ars increased the lead to 20-9 on a away Jumper to end the run and give
center. had seven offeps1ve rebounds.
between-the-legs pass from Corey the Fnars then largest lead, 66-39.
"Providenc~ played. great. The;r
Wright to Garces for,a dunk.
Providence's next two games are
JUmped all over us," sa1d Vlllan 0va
Villanova clawed back behmd on the rolld ag&amp;tJ!!I conference foes
coach Steve Lappas, who got a tech: Thomas, who made four strrught free , &amp;:ton Hall and Mtami How the 1:-(inical il\ the second half after comthrows, then added a three-pomter ars fare will he ameasure of·how far
plaimng about a call "We didn't that was followed by a short hOQk by they have come in the last month,
respond for even three minutes. , Lawson to cut the deficn to 30-26 at Croshere sa1d.
,
'
They deserve a lot of cred1t. They , 2.54.
"These next two games are very
came out and played like they wantProvidence led 44-29 at halfume big for us," he ~id . "And a lot of it
ed to wm. They k1lled us on the
after a spurt thai saw Brown hit con- will have to do with how we handle
glass."
,
secutiv,e three-pomters, Croshere the success and how we practice the
"Ruben was tremendous," Gillen make a threre from the comer, Sham- nex I couple of days."
satd. "I thought it was the best game · 1 mgod hit a dnvmg' layup and foul
In other games mvolvmg ranked
I can remember litm playmg "
shot and Thomas add a tip-in.
teams on Monijay night, it was No.
Providence; which lost to Vii_The Fnars put the game away by I Kansas 86, No. 22 Texas 61 ; and
lanova by II pomts earher m the seaoutscoring the Wtldcats 22: 10 in tile .No. 14 Louisville 92, Nonh Caroli-,
son, took a 14-4 lead as the coldfirst 6:12 of the second half. Garces na Charlotte 81.
(See TOP 25 on Page 5)
shootmg W1ldcats mll9e only one
and Croshere combined for 14

scored I 8 pomts, Jamellbomas 14
and. pomt guard God Shammgod
added II assists agamst only one
turnover.
V1llanova, wh1ch shot 38 percent
from the field, wlls led by freshmlin
Tim Thomas' 17 pomts.Jason Lawson and Alvm Wllhams, who averaged a combined 29 pomts, were
held to a total of 12 and were
benched most of the second half.
"They played really hard and we
d1dn't respond as a team," W1lhams
said. "I take a lot of the blame as the
captam and point guard I didn't run
the team hke I was supposed to."
VIllanova entered the game averagmg II more rebounds than 11s
opponents, bur the Friars dominated
tnS(de, particularly On the offenSIVe

played the1r best game of the season,
thrashmg No 8 Villanova 91-68.
" We JUSt couldn't have played a
lot better than we did tonight,"
Gillen sa1d.- "I thought we were,
1mprovmg subtly, but I certamly dJdn 't expect to beat a team ltke Villanova by 20 pomts I thought we
were getung better, but I never
dreamed we would wm a game ltke
thiS by this margin."
Prov1dence used a 15-0 run that
straddled balfllme to budd a 48-29
lead, and VIllanova (11-2. 3-1) got no
closer than 16 pomts the rest of the
•
•
way.
•
1 Austm Croshere had 27 pomts
and 10 rebounds and Ruben Garces
added a career-h•gh 19 po1nts for
Prov1dence, while Dernck Brown

.,·----

The Dally S1 IIIMI• hge 5

Pomeroy • Mlddleportj Ohio

/

TUIIday,January7,1997

'

..

•

'

•

The Daily . S~nt~l

:sports

'

•I•
•
•

•
••'

Tbe Light~
To

By
Dave

Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture
Etc : an abbreviation used
make believe you know mort
than you do.
!

***

'

** *

.

Strength Is the ability to breal
a chocolate bar into plecd
with your bare hands - theO
eat just one of the pieces.
:
Economist: lin expert who wiD
know tomorrow why the thingl
he predicted ,yesterday didn1
happentoda~
:

***

•I
American: someone
knows the lineups of all the·ba"
teams and hall the words
the national anthem.

***

We're all a bit like tea bags:
don't know our own slrenglh
we get Into hot water.

�- - --. •....

f

..

TUI 1 ;ley, ...,_,., 1, 1117

Pomeroy • lllddllport, Ohio

.

.

,

·

·

~angers and Avalan.~he tie; Lightning and Canadi.ens win

,li&gt;

•

•

~ ICI!N RAPPOPORT

Cohference in the 1111. I 8 All-Star B~ffalo's Domini~. HaMk and New three of their top four scorers -Joe at 17:32 with New Yod:Dft a powtr
AI Montreal, Vincent DamJ).
NBW YORK (AP) - Mike game in San Jose. Roy made 30 Jersey's Martin Brodeur of the East· Saldc Peter Fors'-- --• "·'--' · p1
housle scored thn:e aoals includini
--~·
""' I« won't be playing in the
saves in an equally stellar perfor- em All-Star lelm.
Kamensky._
.
"We did 1 pn:tty good job ~'Om- the came-winner with 3.4 ~
• NHL All-Star game, even though he mance as Colorado extended its
"Bui(Richter) just keeps plus"We hid a tough time mlll:hing ing back againSt ·a good team,"
left in regulelion, as the Canad.en'
ia playing like a star.
" unbeaten streak to seven (5-0-2).
ging along and keep&amp; winning big the lines aad We had to chanp: 011 the Richter said. "They~ a good team extended lheir unbeaten streak to 1
The New York Rangers . gbalie
"It WIIS a super hockey game," games for us and keeps playing the fly... Cnwford said. "I was quite even without their top two players."
season•high seven games. Damp;.
extended his unbeaten· streak to 16.' said Colorado's Keith Jones, who kind of goal that everyone knowa "' pleased at the way we came at them I
Elsewhere in the NHL. Tampa housse, who got his ~ . careet
· with a 38-save perfonnance in the "scoredoneoflheColoradogoals. "It is able to play." ·
. .
. and really battled hard. It wasn't a Bay beat Ottawa 4-l, Montreal goal in the second penod, tied I~
· Rangers' 2-2 tie with the Colorado ; was playoff-type hockey."
Roy was no slouch, either. After · game for the faint of heart.;,
edged Hartford 5-4 and Vancouver · game 4-4 with I:53 left an the thud
Avalanche on Monday night.
· Richter, overlooked for an All- giving up two goals in the second
The Avalanche quickly put the ' defepciAnaheim S-1.
·
~is winning shot hit. goalie Jason
. JPtaiag4, Seaaien 3
Muzzatli's leg pad and dribbled
" Richter has been outstanding, Star berth despite winning ·the NHL period, he stopped the Ran1ers the Rangers into 8 hole with first-period
, and he's a big reason why we have player of the month award in . · rest of the way-·pn:serving the tie goals by .Jones and Jon Klemm, ·
. 1 Xanalf, defenseman Bill across lhC goal line.
been so good in our last 20 games," Decenlber. WIIS at his best in the third . in overtime . with a great stop' on . With Colorado holding a twoulder ~oied his first goal of the
Canueks 5, Might)' Ducks 1
said Wayne Gretzky, whose Rangers periOd. when he made 16 saves. ·Grelzky's lO-footer from the slot. . man advantage, Jones scored. from
on as Tampa Bay beat Ottawa.
At Anaheim, Pavel Bu,re score!!
.are 15·3-2 in that period.
·
Many of them carne on Colorado's
"Our defense has been pretty outside the crease at· 11 :16. The Alexander Selivanov, Daymond twice and Mike Sillinger had a goal
"'
Richter allowed two power-play three pow~&gt;r-play chances in the good," Colorado coach Marc Cnaw- Aval111che still had a man advantage Langkow and Shawn Burr also and two assists as Vancouver won its
. goals to the Avalanche on their fi..SI period,
· · ·
ford said, "and our goal tending has wheJi Klemm scored at 12:49, scored for Tampa Bay, which with- third straight. Scott Walker scored
five shots, then stopped their next35
"(Richter) is probably disap- . been great."
. .
deflecting a shot from the top of the .stood a Senators rally after taking a his firstoNHL goal in IIIOle than a
as the Rangers rallied to extend their pointed that he's not going to the AllThe Avalancbehave relied hpav- llight cin:le by Claude 4glieux.
4-1 lead on ·Houlder's goal early in
year and the C111ucks scored twice
home-ice unbeaten streak to seven Star game, and it's a tough decision ily on Roy lately ~iuse of th~ir
The Rangers came ~to tie it the third period, Alexei Yashin, · while short-handed. Dave Babych
(6-0-1 ).
because you oilly get three goal- physical, problems. The defending in the second u Bill Berg jammed . 1Lance Pi!lick and Randy Cunney- .added his third goal on a power play
·11 wu a standoff between Richter tenders and all three guys that are Stanley Cup champions came into· . the puck past Roy . at 10:24, and worth scored for Ottawa.
. with 3:55 remaining, . The Ducks
and Colorado goaltender Patrick g'!ing
very good." "Gretzky said Monday night's game with seven . Adam Graves.SC!Jred on a one-timer
Caaadietis 5, Whalen 4
have lost five of their last seven.
. Roy, ,who will start for the Western of Florida's John Vanbiesbrousk. regulars out of the lineup, inCI\)ding
i · ..

··-h

.

•

• .

a

are

ByTh~Bend
ly ANN LANDERS
,
:·; Dear AM Landers: I am writing in

.,

Ann

response lo the letter froin "Oak
Park;" the 60-year-old man who is in
love with ·a woman in her 30s. She
.:&amp;nts a child, but he doesn 't. He is
&amp;incemed about being too old to
· raise .another family and &lt;!oesn 't
lliink they could afford to llV!: com~nably if they had a child.
? ·l was married to an abusive hus~d and had five children with him.
\Ve divorced when my youdgest was
6; :months ·old: A year later, I mei
-~eorge." I was 27. He was .57 and
Jtad three grown children . · · ·
:.;·. After six months, George and I
f!:alized we were in love. My children
l9ved him, too, and he was wonder-

~ lcin~e~
.J.

'
19M,
~
1.-.: S}'lldil:* ..t Qe..

... s,....,

ful to them. He took them fishing and
to.ball games, showed them how 'o
plant flowers, and w~ a real dad. It
rook me five years 10 talk him into
marrying me. He thought he was "too .
old,'' ·
George passed away last yeor,
-after our lOth wedding anniversary,
I can truthfully say they were the best
10 years of my life. He treated my

By R.B. FALLSTROM

fun

'•

'•

.

'

.

of the AHL in 1993-94.
"I didn't know lhilt much about
him, but it looks like it's going to be ..
good,'' rookie forwiml Jim Campbell
said. "Practice was much more pep,
pier because the guys·were·working.
It·was fun.
·
"Now that we have a new coach, .
everyone's got a little bit more en&lt;&gt;rgy. And he looks like a nice guy."
Quenneville and Keenan have a
, few similarities, Both believe in
· short, brisk practices and short shirts
on the ice during games.
· But the new regime will have a
lot more stability than the revolving·
door style of player management of
Keenan, who alienated fans by dealing away popular players Brendan
Shanahan and Curtis Joseph and
turning over the entire roster sa~ for
Hull and AI Macinnis. .
"It's going to he ·fun · again to
work," said Ron Caron, who had the
word. 'interim" removed from his
general manager title on Monday in
a related .development. "I think our ·

team, ... Caron said... He's an1ious lo
rience. as assistants.
"I think this is as good a staff as
work." ·
you can find in the NHL," QuenQuennev.ille, .38, goes fr!lm a
neville said. "They're going lo he team tied for the NHI.. lead·witb 54
very helpf~l for me and they're points to one that's i'n a three-way lie
going to help the hockey club."
for fourth in the Western Confen:nce
.Q.uennevilie ha• been behind the standings with 40 Jlilints and a Ik- ·
mo~entpus.
.
scenes with Avalanche coach Marc 20-4 record.
. · . "I think this is a terrifat: day for
'
·
'.
the franchise, a huge day," Sauer Crawford, but on Monday he was .. . " Our objective from hen: on but
saicj. "We just knew we were deal· calling the .shots during·a brisk hour- · is to.qualify for lhc playoffs," Qucn-..
ing with abright head coach in waitlong practice.at tlie Kiel Center. .On
neville said. "lr we .can show steady
ing."
Tuesday night, he'll coach his first
improvement and he competitive
Caron, 67, was GM.from 1983- · game wtlcn IlK: Blues are at home each and every night, ' thai's our
'94 when he was kicked upstairs hy , against Edmonton and he said that's
goal."
the Keenan hiring. He was .reinstat- been his dn:am since he concluded
F Steady describes Quenneville's .
ed on an interim basis when Keenan · .a 15-yearcareer an NHLdcfcn.C- style . of play as a slay-a!-homc
was fired Dec. 19 and will run the man in 1992.
·
dcfenscman. A first-round pick. of lhc
learn lhrOU!Jh next season; after
"1'111 very, extremely, excited,"
Toronto Maple.Lcafs in 1978, Qucn-·
whi~h time he'll become a consul·
Quenneville .said. "I really look for- . neville played 803 gamcolfor.Toron-.
tant.
. ward lo the chaiiC:nje."
to, Colorado-New· Jersey. Hartford .
Neither Caron nor Quenneville
So excited he wouldn't dream of and Wa.•hingtori and had 54 goals,
w·ant lo make wholesale changes watching an unfamiliar team· fr4lm· 1.90 poinL• and 70S penally minutes.
with . the team, which WllJi 3-3-3 · the press hox for a few games heforc.
"I think I hring a workmanlike
under interim coach Jimmy Roberts.
taking over.
approach to the coaching process, ·
Quenneville everi agreed ·to keep
"A lot of guys would say, 'Hey, much like I hroughl when I was a :.
Roberts and Roger Nielson. who hey. bey, whoa, I don't know ·this player," Quenneville said. '
·
,,
both have.NHL head coaching expe-

rape esse allegedly Involving two CowbOys, .· . .
,
.
:
'
..
Accuser of lrvin .and ·Williams has bruises consistent with assault
o

I

\

.FORI' WORTH, Texas (AP) The woman · who accused Dallas
Cowboys Michael ltvin and Erik ,
Williams of sexual assault had bruises l"onsistent with such an attack~ an
official familiar with the case told lhe
FtNt llbnh Star-Telegram.
-The official. who spoke on condilion of anonymity. told the newspaper ill today's editiotts that d&lt;ictors.""'
at Parkland Memorial Hospital in
Dtillas found bruises on the woman's
back and thighs. .
According to the soilrce, doctors ·
also found "vaginal
"sing that's
nof consistent with volun
sex."
The 23-year-old woman
uSed
Williams and another man of aping
her at William~· home Dec. 29 while
lrv_in·beld her al gunpoint. She said ·
·lrvin videotaped portions of the
·alleged allack. · .
·
Williams and Irvin have denied
.the allegations. None of the men has
:been·cltarged, and no name has surJ~ for the other man purportedly.

•

involved. Police have not com.;.enlBut city cou~~~:il member AI Lip- · identified the third .man that the • appropriate."
.
parts that were taped over. the&lt;source
ed ordbe investigation since ~ news scomb said detectives should have woman said was involved. Accord. In a meeting with. police la.•l
said.
·
conference in which detectives out· declined comment after initial broad- ing to . ~ police rePQr), the wom~n ,, w~~· Ginstx:rg ~aid_ he shared "cer, Law offi~-ers ltavQn'l detennined •
lined t~ accusation.
'
cast.reP.,tts of the allegation.
said she didn't know him. .
lam mformauon whtch cormhorate.•
when; or if, Irvin and Williams will
The official told the ·Star-·
"The police departn)ent has . . l~vin's lawyers liRY they . have a the fact that _J:~i~ ~•,inn&lt;tccnl of any
he qucstipncd, S)lllnccr said, •,
Te/egram.lhat, as of late last week, always been in a position to say, 'No witness 10 support his claim that he · · unlawfulllciiVllles.
Gi,nshcrg said he isn't sure .hp
police had "no physical evidence comment."' Lipscomb s)lid. · ·'
was•·in a sports bar .at the ·time the · Gi..S~ &lt;W,ouldn'LcUillrncnl on
wants•Williams, who will play in lhc.
that Michael Irvin was there."
. 1 Police .also denied thai the NFL . woman says she was raped.
spccitic evidence, i~cluding a,video- . , Pm Bowl on Feb. 2, to talk to policc."There are no Michael Irvin fin- playoffs had any bearing on their · · Peter Ginsberg, Williams' lawyer, tape that reportedly shows Williams
· "When the policcdcmon'i'ratc to
-gerp(ints, ~· the official said. •
investigation.
· said 'he believes his client will .he . having sex with his accu.o;cr.
·
us that they are proceeding profcsAs the pOlice investigation conEd Spencer, a spokesman, said cleared.
;' A police sour&gt;:c told The 'Dallas , sio~ally and thai they arc taking
linues, so dcics criticism of the way the pace of th'e inquiry · was not
· ''I'm confident that all the evi- M11nri1111 ·News that investigators
approprjatc ·steps to hall unsu~stan··
police have handled the case pub- delayed because of a playoff, game dence gathered by the police ·will haven't determined whether the
tinted and cmmeous leaks, we will
lic)y.
.
·
involving the Cowboys on Sunday serve as an alibi for Erik," he said in . encounter was -rape or consensual
c&lt;msider silting down with theappn~
Police. ~hiefBenCiick is defend- and won't he hastened now that from his Washington. D.C., law ; sex. The woman said she was · ,priate authorities;'' Ginsberg said.
ing lhil department's actions, saying they've been eliminated. Dallas .lost office.
.
·
' ordered 10 pretedd she was enjoying
- Irvin wouldn'lllpeak to rcponcrs
the woman's complaint, which ·con- 26-.17 to the Carolina Panthers in an
Ginsberg; asked why the woman ' hersclf.on the tape.
··
·
a.• hC left the Valley Ranch practice:,
·rained the players' names, was pub- NFC divisional playoff game.
would level such accusations, 1 Irvin is nol on t!lc tape, although
f~~~:ility Monday with his right arm in·
lie information.
·· "It ·never -has been a factor," replied: "I also am not going· In investigators a~ using sophisticated . a sling, the result ora sprained shoul"I think we. handled thC' i.nvesti- ·. Spencer said. "'The detectives were attack her publicly as Erik has been analysis in an altcmptlo delenninc · dcr ~un;ered in the first quarter of
galion appropriately," Click said told al the beginning of the investi- attacked publicly. I don't4hink that's , whether his voice can, II!: heard on . Sundays game. ·
,
Monday. "I'm not going to second- · gation to conduct a thorough, proguess the delecliveslhal arc handling .fessional investigation and take as
this case. I think il was handled the long as it takes to do the job properway we. traditionally handle cases Jy."
like this."
Spencer said police have not

Bettis s.ays he wants to ·stay with .Steelers·
I

1

·I

I

PmsBURGH (AP)...:., For All- season in !cum history.
look at any other offers,'' Bellis said.
"Yeah, there is a bottom line, hul ·"You have to look at the whole PockPro running bi!Ck Jerome Bettis, the .
opportunity to run the ball almost at the other thing yoo have to look al age, and I'm going to do that. But
will for the Pittsburgh Steelers out- is the sy~tem and how·you think you you also have to look.althe system . ..
. weighs the possibility of a fatter pay· . fit into the system," Bellis suid It's not just a. case or going to the
· check .with a di ITerent, less run- · Monday. "If you just lake the mon- l)ighest bidder,"
.•
ey and you go lo where you don't fil
frie,ndly team. , ·
.
Followin~ the Steelers' 28-3 loss
!!ellis, soon to be a f~ agent, · into the system, (the money) is of no lo New England, Bettis plans to
said he prefers to stay in Pittsburgh use and no avaiL"
return lo his Detroit home· in a few
Bettis and his agent, Lamont days.
and hopes to re-sign with the SlcclSmith, plans lo talk lo Stcclers din:c·
ers.
·
. ·
"Now is the time to gel .away
Bettis, trndeil ·by the Rams in tor of foot bali operations Tom Don- from football and not think about" it
Apiil, took advantage of. the Steelers' ahqe within a week. If Bettis docs- ll)Ucb and 'try io n:focu.• yourself so
emphasis on a ground-attack offense . n'l re-sign with Pittsburgh by Feb, you'rc.not burned out and you're not
and·the blocking of Qermonlli Daw- 15. he becomes an unrestricted Jree ·upset," Bettis said. "You want to be
.
!IOn and Will Wolford to rush for agent
optimistic"and ready IP go back at it
.
"I
won't
say
I'm
not
going
to
(next
season)." .
J-,431 yards, It Willi the second·he~

D.odgers fo.r sale .. ~&lt;_c_on...lin_u._df-ro_m_Pa-ge_s_&gt;--~---_..:,­
n.olhing has happened/"
· LIISOrda, who retired as manager
of
the team last July after a minor
hall been involved for So long; soing
heart
allack, said O'Malley treated
back to Broilklyn," Tavares said. "I .
am disa,Ppointed that he's getting out. everyone in tile organization •like
they were lmemhen; of his \family,
. ';.. J;'t:ertainly don'tthjnk it's ·a "hap·"He's doni: so much for the com·py ~y in baseball when a guy like
munity
of Los Angeles," sliid LasorPetpr·n O'Malley gels out
of the
,
.
.
da, now a vice president of tile
sporJ.
.
.
:Rae Oodgers hav~ long prided Dodgers. "He's. a great owner. I'm
really going to miss him." •
~IVes for hayjng ihe loweSt
The O~ MaUey family is ~'Ond in
· t~ pr!cei in bale&amp;all, and 0'~1,
te)' :..MI."commilmdt ·,~ the .~m· . ·seniority'among baseball ownell!hip
Souihem Cehforn1a, _10. groups. trailins only the family of the
lei' ilthetllo:f•I c:rilllria" for laic Tom.Ya)Ykey, which pun:hasec!
&lt;the Boston Red Sox after the · 1933
the new owner. '
•
·
' 1'Jte. bOdpn becBme the ' first ··season alid turned it over lo the")ean
R. Yawkey TI\ISt, which remains the
tellm ,10 . eclipt!l tile three million
·
"!!Wt Jil home apeft!lan!fe in' 197-. team's primlll)l oWner. ··
"The
O'MI!IIeys
leave
to
bjueblll
· iuld'l!lve done it 10 ti-. towecJ 11y
a ri~b 1111d powerfull.,acy," acting
• tllillt of 3;608,88l"ilt 1982. .
commiasioner Bud Selig said. "I
''I think q,uality ownpnhip is
Yf11Y ~t/' O'Malley sail!.... w~ 10 usure Dodfer fana. Peter
will' 4;i~thini poiiible to iclolt-' · llici the leilm dill wewlll.welfk wilft
tlfY 1M ma.t;qul!4y OWMNIIiip to . theiJI .to keep the f)'lllehi• ' in I.;oa
~lei. :'
: ,·
fall-·- (lllrilly, ' . . the liilnli·,
;.,.:.-.,., ..... _ ..........:o..oa •
.. if
WU. O'Malley- hired • the
...... :eo ................ - I!' 011 .
"The Dodgers minus O'Malley is

. · not"the Oodsers, because ihe family ·

~

'm'
*1r,:o
·
I

'

• ""~ ~t\i.r
.~

I

•

;!!.

~

'

.

1

·'

'.

.

"

. .

' '

..
'

'

learn's lawyer in 1942, began acquiring shares two years later and took
, •'Onlrol of the team on Oo1. 26, 1950,
from Bra.nch Rickey, who had been
icncial .man.ager since OCtober 1942
. pnd a p.art ownersince Aug~st i945 .
Jol)n L Smi.th and O'Malley
jointly owned SO Jll)rcent of the team,
and Rickey owned 25 percent
· O'Malley acquired Rickey's shares .
alld later bought out Smith's widow,
raiUng his percentage lo ot least 67
percent by 1951.
·
·
Walter O'Malley moved lhe team
from Ebbets Field to Los Angeles
following the 1957 season. and con• '
vinced Horace Stonelwn to move ·
_ the New York "Giants froin the Polo ·
Ground&amp; 10 San Francisco, ushering ·
in ~ · n81ionwide expansion of tiM: .
inajor le&amp;luCI, Which had never put
a frlllchl~
of Kansas City.
. The ~ ha_ve been ·one of ,
'bucball'a iiiOsl succelliful teams on
""r'teld well as o_ff; finilhinl fil'lt
pr IKond in lhCir division .IV.time~ ·
' in,.lhe lilt 27 ~lis
' &gt;

west

a

•

'

A(ter 10 years of biting my tongue n't quite do it. When you ~keto me
childfen as if l)ley were his own. My . the age difference is no big deal and
every
time I saw a young person light that way, something cljcked. I no
youngest is now 17, and George money doesn 't matler. Tell "Oak
raised her. My olber kids are all doing Park" and his 30-year-old sweetheart up, I decided I was going to say longer wanted to buy that pack of cige~tremely well, and.I know George
to go for it. --,.Been There and Done something. I looked at him and blun- areues. I'm quilling."
ed out, ·:1 hope what happened to my t Struck by ernotian, I asked if I •
~lped make them what they are
That in M011ntain Home, Ark. ,
tod~y. My only regret is tllat I h'!d no
Dear Atk.: You told 'ern and in a husband doesn't happen to you. Ten could hug him. Weembpced, aoo he •
children with George. I would· give way t never could. There's no suO-_ years ago, he died,of lung cancer after said, "I will rememb\lr you for the
my right ann lo have his child with slitute for having Been There and . a lifetime of smoking." I then tamed rest of my life." Needless to say, I left
·in. tears. -- A Grandmother in Wisme•now. ·
Done That. Thanks for the autobio- and headed for my car.
. If that woman in her 30s under- ·graphical input and your wannheart- . The :young man came running consin
after me. "Ma'am," he said, "I'd like
Dear Wisconsin: Thanks to you,
s~nds. that she migbt·lie raising the ed encouragement
chtld · by herself, the two of them
DearAnnl..anders: Ihopeyouwill to say something. II will take just a that young man may have a longer
would be foolish not to try for a life allow me to share an experience that minute." I braced myself for whal I life aad a healthier one. What a sweet
together. As for the financial prob- made a tremendous impact on me. · was sure would he an angry outburst·' story. Thank you. for sharing it.
Yesterday,l was at the gas station, ending ·with, "Mind your own busilems,they will work themselves out.
Send questions (!&gt;Annl,anden,
George and I had nothing when we paying for"the gasoline at the counter, . ness. " I was stunned when he said, '.'1
met, and we ended up owning a when a young man approached and want lo thank you for speaking to me ·· .Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenhome, a boat and a car.
ordefed · a pack of cigarettes. He as you did, I've heen wanting to quit tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anseles, ·
smoking for a long time; but I could- Calif. 90045
. If people truly love one another, appeared to be In his early 20s, .

.

.

'

...

a

. FUNDING FOR BOOKS • Becky Mankin, right, repret1811tlng the
•.F......,.I Order of the EligiH, Ladies Auxiliary, pt a~&amp;allld a check
for $500 to Krletl Eblin of the.Meigs- County Public Library to be
ul8d tor the purchase of large print bo!llttl tor the elderly. Manl&lt;ln
. .. uld thllt the~heck rapreaenb a guture of .aupport to the library .
for Jtaeervlcea tor aged realdenta. Auxlllarlea ,_lve the !JII'IIn&amp;
-~~ _the Order's Memorial Foundiltlon In appreciation of eupport I
.of the 1!,811lor clt1Dn1 orlenllld Golden Eagle Fund which the toun··datlon admlnlatera. E11Jiel raise money tor the project and annu· -' Tltc junior baking contest was held at .
ktdon Barrows, legislative chai~- : son, re~ed ?n the Mandy Project, · Vicki· Smith, Lecturer presen!ed
~ally contribute to program• aiding the aged.
.·.
a recent meeting of Star Grange 7878 man, reporte~ that the presideilfs li~e a new educauon program the com- the program on Jan~ary.
,,.
held at the ball.
item .veto Jaw has been sent 10 the mumly and grange members .
. Readmgs mcluded Ne~ Years by
Winners wjth peanut b~ttter bios- Sup~ell!e Court for ~ecision . . . .
It w..S noted that 20 Jl\'opl_e attend- Janis M~comber_; "Rea~m( by Larsoms were Stephen Yost, CarsQn
Janel Morns, women's actovottes ed the youth bowling an~ ptzza par- ry rvtont~.ome')', and Don t Count
" Yost, and Cheisea Montgo~. Tiley chairperson,· rep~med that 320 food . ty m Dece!ftber. · ·
the Years . by V1c~1 Smllh. Me111bers ·
..__
.
.
will advance to the state competition · items were delivered to the Meigs
l}'pcommg events announced were were. asked to wnte down theu New
•
in May.
County .Cooperative Parish and 23 Metgs County Grange ,Banquet Apnl years Resol!lllons for themselves
· "Everything's cha~ all ot a
: AUSTIN, Texas (AP)--. A Texas
Master Patty Dyer conducted the fruit baskets were delivered to·local 18, . Pomona Grange! March 7 al p~rsonally, the grange and the world.
~$man who niel former While House sudden," Barbara Pfaffiin tl)e child's meeting with 57 mem!Jers, visitors sick and elderly.
Racme·Grange. Hall, and. Star Grange
.Thud degree . pracuce was · held
Jllllitical advisor Dick Morris when mother, told Mond~y 's Kustin Amer- and juniors present. Three appli.caJimis Macomber, deaf chairper- soup supper March, 21 at the Hall.
pnor 10 the meetmg.
she worked for an escort service says ican-Statesman. "He's ashamed of it, tions for membership were read.
he is taking a new interest in the and deep down thot hurts me."
· Ms. Pfaffli"D, 41, who calls Morris'
daughter born or iheir affair. . .
! Morris, whose current wife said "the love of my life," said Morris has
s)1e is ending their 20-year marriage been paying $5,QOO-a-month in child
•
~cause of his alleged tryst with a : support paymenis. '
In
November
he
asked
a
court
for.
Washington tall girl, had not seen the
visitation
rights
and
a
say
in
the
girl's
6;year·old.child since she.was 2.
GREENWOOD, Wis. (AP) - It
·
; He recently flew the girl to. New future .
was no easy feat, but Alice Olson set
Ms. Pi"affiin met Morris in 1984, a triple-play record that has stood for
York City for a five-day visit that
•
when she wo'tked for an Austin 50 years.
i~cluded attending the ballet.
escort service
.. Mrs. Olson gave birth to h,~r first
5on, Gerald, on New Year's Pay,
1,?43. Her second hoy, Duane, arrived
Jan.
I, 1945. The third child. Richard,
'.
entered the worl\1 th• first day of
,
The Community Calen· tools.
1947.
.
far Is published as a rree service to
"We're still the world's New Year
aon-proftt groups wishing to · THURSDAY
.
trio, and It has yet to be repeated anyRACINE -- Jewel Home where," said Gerald Olson, who
announee meeting aod special .
1
t ventS. 'fhe calend.~r is not School Support Group, 7 p.m. Thurs- l'lflled 54 last week. "I've kept my
ilesigned to promote sal~ or·fund day .at the Racine Nazarene Church. ~s open. Nothing has ever come
i'aisers of any type. Items are print- Topic by Brian Htipp and his daugh- iijiywhere close to this."
ed as spate pennits aDd, eannot ~ ter;Michelle, will be "Courtship ver- 'f. When Alice and Elaniel Olson's
ltJaraoleed to run a speclfk: num: sus Dating.", For oadditional informa- . third son arrived, his birth was herber
of days.
·
tion, residents ma)' contact Kim aJ:ded · with headlines like "·Every '
'
.
Hupp, 949-3198.
Other New Year's Dily" and "Three
, TUESDAY .
of Kind or Is il a Full Hou5e?"
~
POMEROY
The
CHESTER ·-- Shade-River · The family even _found them·
CHOICE Home Educillors'.group, 10 Lodge, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m, Thursday. selves t~e ·subject of a Ripley's
a:m. Tuesday, conference .room, pub- Refresliments.
Believe It or Not cartoon on Jan .. I,
~J:: library, Pomeroy. For infonnation
POMEROY ,. Preceptor 1948.
contact Tammy Jones, 992-6742.
Mrs. Olson said that after that, her
••
· Beta Beta Chapter of&gt;lleta Sigma Phi husband got a little teasing every
~· MIDDLEPORT -- Middle-' . Sorority, 6i30 p.m. Thursday at the March about planning another New
.
'
port· Lodge. 363, F&amp;AM . meeting, Episcopal Parish House, Pome~y.
Year's Day baby. But the coup.le 's
7~30 p.m·Tuesday. Refreshments:
two other children - both girls TUPPERS PLAINS •.: Tup· broke the cycle.
7'
•.
•
·
pers Plains VFW Post 90~3. 7 :~0
;, WEDNESDAY · .
.
.
.
. POM}:lROY -- Middleport · p.m. Thursday at !he hall . Spec1al
•
Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m, anniversary dinner, 6:30p.m.
Pomeroy Library. Mrs. Roy Holler
will be host~ss .
SATURDAY
.
' LOs ANGE!-ES (AP)- Frank ·
•
,
,
,
1
•
POMEROY .: Burlingham
;~ ' . PoMEROY-- ChCsier Gar- . Modem Woodmen, soup supper. Sat; Sln~lni, who returned to the hospital
~n Club me!,lting Wednesday; 7:3,0 urday, 6:30 p.m: at the hall. Those · for. undisclosed reasons, is nol suf.
•
p!tn. ~1 . \1!11· ho~e f&gt;f'Mrs. ' ~i!li~m . auending to lake a dessert. Guests ferlng from a life-threatening illness,
'
according to a hospilal source:
Buckley: !i,feinbers should b~mg solk welcome.
Sinatra, whose hospital stay two
· oi:,. dtied ·.flowers, · a container a~d · ·
·
~l~ '
'.
.
m(Wths ag0 led to sensational reports
about his ~ealth: wtis admitted to a
priyate room Monday ar Cedars-;
•
Sinai Medical Ccnler.
•
"'.· ·,, '. .
. . : '.
'
. .
' He ~as expected to retu~;~~loday to
&lt; t'
i
'
: Weekepd visitors ofMr, aqd Mrs. children of Indiana spent several hi ~J)everly Hills home. .
.
. •
\!itgil· King 'o~er ·the holidays were •days here visiting her father, Robert .: ). hospital source SJ?"akirig on
JJI(Jy Comer,Of lllinoi,, Mr. 81)~ Mr5, ·Mahr who was confined to Holzer condition. of anonymity told The
MelYfnFeltsandfamilyofMichig811• . Medical Center fot 16 days. He has Associated Press on Monday that
.
Jt\:.d LCa King; Mary Smith a~. now been returned lo his home and · Sinatra, 81, was not being treated for ·
an)'lhing iife-threatening.
and Mrs. M:ichael King ofColu.tfJ~S. is improving slowly. ·
·
••
I
"1\1 Sinatra's request; the hospital
Debbie Foley and sons of, Picker·,.; Mr. 111d Mrs. Bob Alkire, Mr. and
'...
":Mfs.Qinton Gilkey wen; ,Wednesday · ton spent the weeke~ ~ith Mrs. Pre- refuSed to disclose why he was there..
•
In Nov~mber, Si~atra was hospidinner gUes\s of Mrs.. Alice Whaley, . ·da ~ahr aad· also .Vlsl!ed w1th.Btll
'
.
.
.
Oincaster
,
. ·
., and Yvonne F?ley of Col~mbus . . . talized for more than a WI'Ck for a
· •1 : Mrs. Robert \l&lt;{ahr spent Chrisbnas . ,. Jerry Bemc 9f Athens and L,'sa· pi~ched nerve Bl)d slight pneumonia, ...
~iJy with .her s'bn and family, Mr. 111d a~d ~ Dtll and_children w~e Chnsl- The h~ilalization ·led 10 a series of ·
•jltrs. G~ Fole~. Syracuse. "
mas d1nner gues~s &lt;1f Mr. ,and Mrs. sen5ationalized TV l'!lpotts that the ,
•
singer
was
near
death.
·
: :,Mr. and ~rs. Mike Whitten and Sam Slemrnentz.
.
. . •'
l(f'l.,.
•
'
.

Name winners of junior.baking contest ··.

._

·woman reflects ·on affair
·with:·ex-White ·Hcn:Js-e advisor
..

'

Record stood
for 50 years

RE CH OVER 18,500!,
HO 5 WITH
YOUR ESSAGE!-

l. Commu,nity·calendar-

•.

'

ADVERTISING IN THE

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIALVALENTINE

Remember tliat special someone tbls
. Valentine's Day with a message hi·

. The Daily Sentinel

·

·

.· • Sweethearts ~ Mpms &amp; · Qads • Grandparents • Teacliers
·
.. · :· • Babysitter!
•. Friend!!
.
Anyone wbo wouJil.appndate a ~tllll Word from y~! Ail Valentlae
Hem. will be published In the Feb111ary 14th Issue lit a cost ol only $6JIO!
"'
.
MU~T B)i: PREPAID! .
·' .

,e.
·
·
.
..····-......
Print
•

•

$6.00to:
.

a

TV. TIMES:
AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
·FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
.TV TIMES

Frank Sinatra
b;ack in hospital

~! .rHartisonvHie.
news--.

·CAI.L-_
. NOW •••

'

I

'.
\

.

.

•

, ..

.

..•

PT. PLEASANT, WV

GAIJ.IPOLIS
.

446-2342

.

.675-1333"

POMEROY~iUDDLEPORT

992-2156.

...,...
... . "'
••
.

•

J

•

Page7
Tuaeday, J8nu8ry 7, 1111'

'

a.'

In

.

.
· ' NEWYORK(AP)-Parkinson's · with this acting thing,"' said Matlhau, 1995 U.S. Open ~nnis tournament. 45t " and · ···The Martian Chronidisease has slowed Muhammad Ali who currently stars in "''m Not Rap- Letterman repeatedly aired the. cles," has heen picked lo receive the
down, but the bpxing legend called paport," tbe film version ofthe Tony- · footage .on CBS' "La~ Show with Silver Award from tbe u.s. National
David Lettennan," calling.Bronslein Commission on Libraries.
his i~lness "a blessing." .
. . wi.nning Broadway hit · .
·a:"seductive
temptress" and initiat- .
Bradbury was scheduled to
But
Presley
really
needed
some
"I always liked .to chase the .
receive
·the award Jan. 19 in a cereing a nationwide search for her by
girls," he says in this month's issue · help ·keeping his lunch down.
The two bad a fight.scene during putting ·her . picture on the Times mony kicking off a yearlong celeof People magazine. "ParkinsOn's
bration of the Los Angeles Public
which
MatthaO broke a balsam-wOod · Square Sony Jumhotron.
stops all that; Now I might have a .
chair
over
Presley
's
head.
The
King
Bronstein
got
in
touch
with
LeiLibrary 's 1251h anniversary, the
chance to go to heaven."
terman.
through
her
lawyer,
filing
an
hii
the
floor
and
Matthau
struck
him
. . .
.
library said Monday.
Padtinson's disease has left Ali,
The award will be presented by
55, with slurred speech and slowness again with the leg.of the chair, mak- invasion of privacy lawsuit last Fe~­
ruary in Stamford Superior Court, actor l..eVar Burton.
·
of movemeni. But it hasn 'i robbed ing ~sley sick.
.near
Letterman's
home
in
New
"lt·was
just
after
lunch
and
it
was
Bradbury
has
wrillen
more
than
him of his wit.
50" books and dozens of short stories. .
When asked 'what his plans are for · warm in rbe ·srudio "lnd then all this Canaan.
But
Leiterman's
lawyer
said
Monactivity
and·
that
,final
thing
of
"!e
He received the Grand Master Neb- ·
the future, Ali, a Muslim, said: "Go
smacking him on the back,'' Matthau day the lawsuit should be thrown out · ula Award in 1988 and the"" Wnter s
· o to Mecca, pray" fiv~ times a day and
because Connecticut courts do not. Guild Award in 1974.
said.
·
stay pretty." 0
have
jurisdiction, slnce Bronstein,·
"We
couldd't
use
the
shot,"
he
-'--Letterman's
show and most witness'
said.
NEW YORK (AP) - Walter
Using computerized pictures,
es
are
based
in New York.
Matthau says he made Elvis Presley
materials
scientists are able to easily..
·
There
was
no
immediate
ruhng.
throw up .
manipulate
complex molectlles and
STAMEORD. Conn; (AP)
The King got sick while the two
..
their atoms on a screen.
were making the fihn "King~le," David Letterman wants a judge to
I:OS ANGELES (AP) - : - \
Matthau said in Monday's New York dismiss Jawswt·by a wonian who .
rn 1942, the FBl announced the
another
sl;u to Ray Bradbury's consays Lettetmim humiliated her for
. Post:.
capture
of eight Nazi. saboteurs who
stellation
of
.writing
award~.
.
.
.
"The first thing Elvis said to me eating a peach iii p_ublic:
had
been
put ashore from a submaBradbury,
the
author
of
science
Jane Bronstein, 55, &lt;Jf New"York
was, 'Mr. Matlhau, I sure would
rine
on
New
York's Long I.sland ' ·
fiction
classics
including
"Fahrenheit
.
appreciate it ify?u could help me out City; was filmed e.ating a peach at the

guys had lOS! their desire to jump bn .
the .ice, even in the 20-minute work- ··
out before games."
Tham president Mark Sauer, who
joined the team on the day Keenan
was let go, said · the hiring was

.'

The Daily Sentinel

Parkinson's disease hasn't robbed Ali of his Wit

'

know him yet, but they know he's
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St.,. . not Keenan.
Louis Blues were all smiles on Joel
"Mike's reputation preceded
him," Hull said. "Joel is coming in
Quenneville's first day on the job.
The man named as the replace- with his first job and he comes in .
· ment for Mike Keenan on Monday with everybody saying nothing but
has only 2 1/2 years to get the job positive .things, and how great his
done after signing a contract through attitude is and !low muc)1
he.is
· · : the 1998-99 season. Then again, he· to he around. · r·
·
figures to gel a decent grace period,
"With Mike, you knew all the
· considering the 2 1/2 years of tur- horror stories from all the othe(.
bulence that preceded him.
teams and other players." ·
· Take Breit Hull, who Clasbe~
Quenneville, 38, has a clean slate,
countless times with Keenan. Hull He has been Avalanche coach More
remembers playing against Quen- &lt;Crawford's top aide in Quebec and·
neville, who retired in 1992 after a Colorado for the last three seasons.
.. 15-yeor career as a defenseman, but and became the· lop a8sistanl when
somehow he couldn't remember gel- Jacques Martin •. a former Blues
· ling any of his 500-odd career goals · coach, left in the middle of last seawith Quenneville on the ice.
. son to become the head coach in
"Oh no •.there's no way I could Onawa.
He also worked under Crawford
•·have scored against him," Hull
· :
, forlwo seasons with St.John's of the
joked.
.
. :.. The whole team seemed a lot AHL, including one .S player-coach
·· . looser after Quenneville grabbed a at the end of his career in 1991-92.
whistle and Blues cap and ran his He· has one year of experience as
· lirsl workout Monday. They don't head coach, with Springfield, Mass.,

S" .

•

jf it's true love, age, money, doesn't matter

Blues hire veteran Avalanche .assistant as new head coach .
.

•

'

•

I

. -In ~ NHL, .

·--- ·---"·-- - ---~--~---·-··"'-·-

•'

.

). •

.

,,,

·'

.."
'

.

I

.

,

.

.

.

�•'

•

•

..

'

'

•

..

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

..

Gunfire heard _
early to-~ay.
at ambassador's compound ~

·- DAVIS .
CONTRAOING

"'

LIMA, Peru (AP)- Gunfire was vented rebel conlaet wilh the ouuide. Peruvian government's side, .. Japal\!hcard before dawn today at d)e
'The government's chief negot~
· Prime Minister Ryutal'll
Japanese a~bassador's residence .tor, who has met wilh the rebels on y Hashimoto .told the Kyodo neW~
whe':" Peruvtan rebels have been once since tliey took over the res
agency in Japan. " It will be a Pro:
holdmg 74 hostages for lhree weeks . . 'dence, told El Comen:io ncwsp~ · r tracted war. I am worried about
Photographer Scott Dalton. who !hat the government will not meet ·_unexpected accident."
··:
was on the rooftop of a house across them again without a "clear sign"
Japan says it opposes the usc Of
the street from the restd~nce, said _that the rebels want dialogue.
fon:e, and in theory· it has the_laiSt
several photographers stakmg out the
Each side is blaming !he other for .word tM:cause the embassy reside~
complex were startled about 4 a.m. !he lack of progress.
· is-technically Japanewterritory. ·,
by what sounded hke a gunshot.
A high-ranking Peruvian official
Mirroring Fujimori's intransiDaUon, who was w~rking for ~e speaking on condition of anonymity gence, the rebels have shown no flexAssocoated Press, saod the notse told 'The Associated Press !hat !he ibility on their main demand ttiat
seemed to be coming from inside the government is content ''to wait until some 300 fellow revolutionanes lle
compound _and sounded like at leaSt they get bored."
.
freed from Peruvian jails.
";
one exploston, fol!owed -by an echo
Bit by bit, the rebels have released
The rebels have released n~
or ano~her d~tonauon.
. many of the 500 hostages they ini;- hostages · since Wednesday. ~It
· Pollee saod the myst,cry sounds tially captured.
·
most recent statement carne Sa1urday
appeared to be automatic weapons
Bolivian Foreign Minister Anto- as messages were scrawled on bed
fire b~t s_aod they had no repons ~f nio Aranibar met ~ilh Peruvian Pres- sheets and hung from the residence
any mJuroes.
-·
. identAibettoFujimori for more than roof. '
·
·
:
It was the second time since the an hour Mon~, ·. .
·
·
The writings said there co~ld tk
standoff l;&gt;egan J?e~. _17_thatthere has
Bolivia hollis foul jailed Tupac no progress without dialogue.:
'· been, a !letonau\)n onstde the, com- Amaru rebels arrested for the 1995
On'Monday,agroupofsharnan$,
P,o,und. The_last time such an expla:- kidmq)ping_of a businessman. but who mix traditional Indian .belief!!
ston occurred was Dec. 26, and t.1 was says ii will 'not barter them for free- with Calholicism, burned incen'\i;
' blamed on on~ of the ambassador-'s dom for its.ambassador to Peru. That shook rattles ami chanted in ancieat
dogs, whtch tnpped a land mine and diplomat, Jorge Gumucio, is one of Andean tongues to invoke !he spinis
was killed.
.
the hostages and is believed to be in . to solve the crisis.
.
Rebels have said the_y have mined poor heallh.
the 20 or so sl1amans from arout¥1
approaches to the masstve fesodence,
Peru has said it will not use force the country held their cen:mony :)l
wh1ch they took over during .a gal~ to end. the crisis, but the stalemate is block from the rs:sideilee.
;:
cocktaol party.
.
·
, . raisingfearsthatlhegovemmcntmay
"We hope our ·prayers and pell•
Chances for-a doalogue that would rethink !hat stance if nothing else . tions gain me freedom of all tlie
end the hostage crisis appear to l)e works. · · ' · ,
. hostages .,..ithout bloodshed ,dr
fadmg, af1e~ the government choked .
"Therehllvebecn miscarriages on death," said the organ,izer, Juan~
off all oftictal mfonnatmn and pre-- the guerrillas,'
side aad also
on the
•
.
'
.. , ·

esc

'

r

WORKS .WITH .D OG· A Peruvian National
pollee offiCer works with an explosives-detectIng dog Monday altha residence ofthe Japan- .
ese ambassador In Lima, Peru. The hostage

standoff lnslda the compound entered day 21
wjlh Tupac Arnaru rebels still hold 74.hostages.
(AP)
·

..
Opposition is seeking criminal
. {: ,
Churches blame Shell, Nigeria-n ·charges against Milosevic associates 0,.
'

(

••

GENEVA (AP) - Years of oil - 26-years after the incident.'
spills and politicill repression have
, "The soil and oil are caked togethdevastajed the Ogoni region of south- er into a thick black crust which covem Nigeria, Ca$1ing its people into ers .the area. Liquid crude oil iS"Still
poverty and spreading fear, according present in deep crevices two to three
to a report by the World Council of feet deep formed in spots where trees
Chun:hes. '
·
.
once stood. The air remafns polluted
The organization, which has 330 by the vapor," the report said.
member churches in more than 100
The council questioned Shell's
countries, accused the oil CO\llpany claims that the spill occurred during
Shell .on Monday of destroying !he the civil war, when a retreating at:mY·
livelihoods of many Ogonis and cut a main pipeline.
The account conflicts with viileaving the environment a mess.
According to the environmental lagers' version of what happened,
group Greenpeace, Shell's Nigerian . and, according to the repori, with the
operations were responsible for · fact that 12 people out fanning were
spilling 1.6 million gallons of oil in · killed in the resulting inferno.
27 separate inCidents in Ogoniland ·
"One would not expect villagers
between 1982 and 1992.
to be casually tending fanns and tapThe WCC team -ttiat visited the ping palm oil from trees if one is in
oil-rich·region early _last year.said gas . a war zone and troops are retreating,"
flares that have dortoed the litr for 35- !he report noted.
years a_lso have harmed plant life,
The .WCC, whtch is made up of
polluted surtacc water and caused Anglican, Protestant, Orthodox and
acid rain.
other non-Roman Catholic chun:hes
Despite the fact that Shell ceased disputed Shell's contention that mos; .
operations in Ogoniland in 1993- of the spills were the result of saboit is sjill the largest foreign 'oil pro- tage by the 500.000 Ogoni tribal
ducer m Ntgena - the 106-page members.
·
report listc&lt;! six_•pills sin~e then fr.om
Compensalion disputes over damruptured ptpehncs nowmg through aged land in the region have led to .
the re,ion. · ·.
··
·
, lengthy negotiation,s and expensive
At j':hubu, sotc of one the most lawsuits, piuing poor subsistence
publici1.ed oil spills, the wee team fanners, three quarters of whom canreponed a scene of total devastation . not read or write, against a powerful

.,

i\
'

Taking
on the lnternfJt:
. .

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
Zajedno, the opposit-ion coalition organized and ordered by Sokolov;b.
- Slobodan · Milosevic 's political whose name means Together, hilS led The coalition also identified peoplejt .
foes accused some of his closest asso- daily protests for seven weeks since said took pan in the beating, includmultinational corporation. the report ciates 1oday of organizing poliCe couns.a.ftd election coml"is.•ionscon- ing some police commanders.
:•
noted .
·
beatings ·of demonstrators anil said trolled by the Serbian leader annulled
Under Yugoslav law, public proS,
A Shell spokesman in London, they would pJlrsue criminal charges. Nov. 171ocal elqcli!'J's the opposition ccutors arc respOnsible for filiJI'k
Eric Nicl{son, said Monday the comTh~ Serbian ·capital was .quiet won.
criminal charges. .If they -do not acl.
pany would not comment on the today as people celebrate.d Qtristmas
The opposition said in a statement . citizens have the right to file charges
report until it had details &lt;if its aile- according to the Orthoddx calendar. that its lawyers would seck criminal' directly. Prosecutors a11jl couns ate
gations.
,
·
On Monday._more than 200,000 peo- charges against lnicrior Minister loyal to Miloscvic, and it seemed
. The report documented personal pie turned out for a combination' Zoran . Sokolovic and his assistant unlikely that the officials would be
accounts of harassment and repres- · protest man:h and Christmas Eve eel- Radovan St!&gt;jcic, both of whom arc prqsccuted.
'
sion by Nigerian authorities seeking ebration.
,
very close to Miloscvic, because of
_ A delegation of Belgrade stuto quash protests against the oil com- .
_T he evening was marred by an . the beating of demonstrators last • ,dent,, wh() also have been protestlrig
panics.
·
explosion, likely caused by a month.
against Milpscvic, met Monday with
Covert operations were carried out grenlide, on the groun!ls of the headMiloscvic la•t. month deployed · Sokolovic but he did imt agree to
by the Nigerian government under quaners of a party allied with Milo- thousands of police to try .to curb the their demand to pull police from tlic
the guise of "ethnic clashes" between sevic, the Serbian president. No one. protests. On Dec. 27, riot police and streets. The students warilcd lhat as
the Ogoni ·and neighboring ethnic )Yas hurt in the blast at the·offices of dolCns of people in ci.vilian clothes of Thursday. they would no longhr
groups. the report said, ~esulting ·in · the Yugoslav United Left, the party of cl~bbed smaller groups of demon- back 6(1' when confronted by the
thousands of deaths and injuries..
Miloscvic_'~ wife, Mlrjana Markovic. · strators -a~ well as reporters dispct's- police.
· ., ·
"It was in 1~e ·interest of the
Opposnmn leaders accused the ing from a daily protest. Dozens were
1llcrc were no roli&lt;'C on the stn:G\,•.
Nigerian government to provide pro- party of stagmg the blast itself to give__,,injured.
.
Monday night, and the crowd th\11
tection for Shell so that their opera- , . ~hewgovernment a~ cx_cuse to crack, · . Za~edno clanned thai its own gathered was one of the largest since
tions could proceed smoothly. Ncitho n on the protesters.
onvest1gatoo~ showed the action was the pmtcsts began.
ing could be allowed to stop the production J oil, the lifeblood of the
country," the report said.
· The WCC report called on the
'
.
Nigerian ~ovemment to restore free:
· TOKYO (t\P) - ~trong winds (uel oil when it broke in two Thurs- port, but couldn't rtach the area
-dom ·of expression, release p&lt;ililical and 20-foot.waves prcvl:nted Japan- · day in the Sea of Japan, 90 miles orr because of winds of up, to 67 mph,
prisoners' and withdraw troops from esc ships today from reaching an oil Japan's \\'CStCrn COIL'I.
lwa•awa said.
Ogoniland.
The captain of the Russian tankc'r'
spill that . they hoP" to clean up
By midday today, the spill had
It. urged Shell Petroleum Develbefore it pollutes coastal fishing wa' mis.,ing. The either 31 crew broken into three large oil slicks aad
opmeiu &lt;;orporation to clean up all gr.o~nds~
members were rescued. The cause of numerous smaller ones - with the
.
oil spills and usc its innuence to end' . The slick was moving, towar~ the accident rctrla,ns unclear. . ·
longest 3.7 miles long and 1.2 miles '
political repression the area.
Hiroshi lwasawa, aspokesman for wide, the coast guard said.
shore. The eastern tip of the 962,000gallon spill from a sunken Russian the Maritime . Safety Agency, &amp;aid
On Sunday, coa•t guard ships
tankc( was about 14 miles 'from the three ajtcraft were monitoring the dumped chemicals into the water ·
city of Fukui late today, Japan's c.Qa•t noating ~ludge today, but three patrol with little,noticeable result.
'
guard said. Earlier in the day, it had boats were · kept away by the bad
weather.
been about 25 miles away.
Two Japanese navy destroyers
The tanker Nakhodka. bound tor
Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula, was . loaded with chemicals designed to
Drivers, ~~ ·
carrying about 5 million gallons of break up the oil slick left a nearby

Storm ~ampers oil sUck cleanup

French .w atchdo.g s seek
l,gal Maginot Line
·
.
'
PA~IS (AP) court ~ase, French

.

.

.

In a landmark glc language except French, legislalanguage watch- tion that placated lniditionalists. But
dogs are pushing for a crackdown on the law has been winked at by busithe U"'f o~English l:&gt;Y building a Mag- _ nesses geared for foreigners or aiming at the cxpon market.
inot qne in ~yberspace.
The groups arc alSo going after
Using a little-enforced law, the
stores
and restaurants that fail to,
Association for the Defense of the
French Language .and the Future of include the 'language of Moliere.
If Georgia Tech loses the case, the
the Fr~nch Language went to court
Moodily to pross a Georgia Tech school could face fines of up to
campqs in eastern France-to translate $5.000 each time the untranslated
Internet site is visited. The Police
its lnt~rnet site.
An estimated 85 perccnt .of Inter- Court · in llaris • is . expected to
net si1es a~ in English _worldwide, appounce its decision Feb. 24.
while ,only 'about..2 percent arel in
• Georgia Tech Lorraine, located in
French, and the watchdog groups arc the city of Mctz, said the Websiic
·to'ying 'to protect cyber sites based in must be in English. because the
school's curri&lt;:ulum is taught solely
l'ianc~.
,.
''IJolder the Fn:nch constitution, in that. language by Atlanta-based
French is the official l:ii\~age, and professors. Only the site's directions
parents who haven't m8$tcred Eng- to the campus are in French.
lish hllve the righ! in France to • . "The Website is an information
understand the· education offered to structure and not by any means an
their childrc~ ill Fl'l!nlie," said the advenisemetit," said the school's
groups' lawyer, Marc Joben. ·
deputy director, Francois Malasscnel.
1'\Je groups, panly funded by the ·:Ifyou do~'t know how to (ead EngCulture Ministry, cite a 1994 French .. lish, vou wtll-not be admitted. "
·law that bans. advertising in any sin.
'

..

'

w.

· Georgia Tech lawyer Jacques Sha·,
ciTe~ asked the coun to dismiss the
case because the watchdog groups
lilcd 'the suit without first 'alerting ·
French judicial authorities, a condiliQn of the language law.
French usc of the . Internet has
lagged behind other countries, and
Malasscnct blamed that on a lack of
French Internet sites as well as "the
French govc;rnmcnt's commuOica·

lion policies."
State-owned France Telecom 's
rat9s arc oritic_izcd for being inflated,
though the company will face Euro. pean deregulation next year.
· l'\mid debate _fraught with irony
over policing the spoken ' word,
France adopted the. 1994 law to forbid ads or products in a foreign language unless they arc. _accompanied
by a French translation.
Under the law, manufacturers can.
not sell goods without instructions in
French, and broadcasters cannot usc
English words on TV and radio when
French equivalents exist.

·~

·,

•

OURO PRETO, Brazil (AP) the stale capital. " Bill what's importhe hills and toni is that I am alive." ·
water flowed down the cobblestone
Rescue crews working under a
streets of this tourist city, named a · gray ' drizzle Monday pulled ' live
world historical treasure by the Unit-, bodies from under thick rc!l mud in
ell Nations. · '
Ouro Pre to, colonial-era ~ity that is
Torrential stonns in southeastern . Brazil's most important center of
Brazil have killed at least 71 people haroque art and architecture.
·
and have driven more than 34,000
Jose Apqlinario Ferreira's eyes
from their homes. Floods from '• is moistened a~ he described a mudslfde
·~?lien ._rivers have deluged 175 . 'that swallowed up two of his neighctues. In many areas. residenls hors' houses. ·
·
rcmai~~d witho.ut , drinking water,
"It was like a thunderclap," he
elcctnc1ty or telephones t.oday.
said. "When I opened the window, all
"All I have is the clothes on my I saw was eanh.'' ,
·
Just yards away from Ferreira's ,
hack," Margarita Meyer told Globe
television as she.swept water out ,of' hrick home; the mud huricd Murilo
her. badly damaged home ill Bctim, a Ca,imiro de Mclo, his wife and their
small City so~th of Belo Horizontc; live children Saturday morning.
Mud~lidcs '·blanketed

a

&lt;' .•

•Declet

In Sundays Newspaper Advertisement..
.

~

~

: BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
- Bolshrid by me holiday spirit atid
an army promise to stay neutral, more
!han 200,000 opporienrs of Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic turned
out fill'·• protest man:h on the Orthodox Chrisunas Eve. ·•.
ilot police alao stayed away from .
Moadly's nWch.
"au;.tnw iu day Of ~.love
f'd reconcitil!ioil," Jaid ~uk

''

1·

~

.PRESC~IPN OXYGEN INC.

Rx~

~

ofaskovic, a leackr of tite opposition broke · an ~lliance. with Mtlosevic
co81ition Zajedno. .,. - shaking his .rule and bousting thei;
. "Hu_ndreds of·lll,OUSIJlels of people ow~ s~ding among the faith(ul.
tn Serbt~ are on the st_reels every day
Mtlosevtc must go if Se£1!ja
and lhetr one O!ristmas wish wants to live," said Father Sava a
which we all share- is lliat this y- priest in Belgrade's Bezantsica
will brinJ 'freedom," · said Zoran Chun:h.
·
.
Djindjic,IIJOiher ~-~ ~',
In their strongest auack ever,
Afso Monday,' after supponins .bian brthodox Chureh leaders
Communist rulers for declldoli lead• I!.Uai(o~c!. Mill~Sivic. last week for
~ll of the Setbiait'Orthodo!l O!urth "crushing the ;.,;ill of the peO.,Ie" .

.

'
I'

,"
-

992-671:1." . ' '

-.

,

"'

Mobllolo••
Chimers Spocl..
Sol....
Our lltlltlstlcs show that mature
drlwq 1!'111 home owners have
fewer and less cosily '-than
other age groups. So It's only lair
to charge you leas lor your
Insurance, Insure your home and
car wlth us and save awn li!OAI
with our · special multi-policy
dlscounla.

RUTLAND, OHIO
814-742-21156
Briar Proof

·. ·

..

Hunting Clothea

',. .

· •.
,•
· .~
.· ·

DOLI:.AR DECUNE,S- ....==-.:~

Tokyo Foreign Exl:h.noe ·
hand
signal• during Tundlty mornlng1nldlng. 1l1e
U. s. tlollar against .Japer\eM Y'" wUtradtd
1 - II 115,82 yen, down 1.02 ·yen, 111 lUI

cent.
•
Big Three sales rose just 1.5 peri
cent last year.' A 7 pen:ent gain in '
truck sales offset a 4 p~~rcent decline
in purchases of cars.
The year ended-with some weak- ·
ncss: Total sales were down 4 pen:en!
in Dcccrnber.
""·'es
_. lltll a little soft because of
cautious consumers worried about .
their debts and because of the weak- ·
ness in.used-car prices," said analys1
David Healy. of Burnham Securities
Inc. Soft u~ed-car prices make new
cars less attractive.
"But we're not going off a cliff;''
Healy said. "We're seeing a little bit
of an easing rather than a collapse;"
.
Fogut:es
re1cased M onday ·showed
!hat overall truck sales were flat and
car sales droppe4 8 percent compared
wilh December 1995. Among the Big
Three automakers, total sales slippccj
3 pen:ent in December.
Last . week, · Chrysler reponed
·
·

a

·-

'.

••

I :

•

'

'

may

••

lHIIStraps

Pick up diiCanled
eppllance1, batterl11,
meny mltltl1 a.
motor blocka.
. 114-tll2-4025 8 lm-I.J!!!!

Public Notice

being Hit of' exletlng u.s.
Route 33, to 1M lntaructlon
with Stell Route No. 881.
· Seld point being 0.13
rec()rd 1996 sales while GM said its kllcorn,ten (11.08 miiH) net
sales. fell 3 petcent.
of u.s. Roull 33, lllence,
Ford and Honda were the last of continuing lor a dlltance of
the major automilkers to rePQrt their 0.81 ldlomellrl (0.38 mll•l
December and year-end figures : In to
tfte exlallng
divided
ngmenlfour-Jan•
of· U.S.
the race for the best-selling car title, Rille 33 near O.Win, Ohio.
the Ford Taurus won for the fifth Corridor B having en
straight year wilh sales of 401,049 approximate length of 20.5
k II om ete r Elllbllahmenl
•
( 12.71
om'ts . '"-·
""' Honda Aceord was secon d mll•).Sald
at 382,298.
of Limited Ac..ea Ia to
Ford's sales of pickups, spon uti I- Include all Jnterchenge
ity vehicles, vans and-minivans were areee ·and extend along
up 19 pen:ent last month. Sales of tnllrchenge cronroeda for
Ford cars ed'c•ed up just 1 percent, for the
eeleoted " ll~ernall
corridor In accordan.. wHh
a total increase of nearly II percent. 1 h 1
T ranapct111111on
Healy said Ford's numbers ben~- o.partmenra
Limlt·ed
tiled from a weak perfonnance in Accea8 Polley.
December 1995, when the automak- Tile final lllectlon of 1
· through changeovers on preterrecl
aillrnetiYe
wm be
er was gomg
made after
the public
some of its best-selling models.
hearing, Tile. project will
."Ford had a horrible December of Include the relocation and
1995," he said. "Those numbers cloe- o f - county and
rooodl.
were easy to beaI· "
. toWnahlp
PROPOSED,
-THE
Honda posted 12 pen:~nt drop in ABANDONMENT OF A
sale~ last month. ·
POimON OF ExtmNG U.S.
'
ROUTE 33, SITUATI!D IN

a

.::I:PA.,official _says~ gas-fi·r~d· plant a
.
·• .better·choice .tha.n trash·~urning _plant
COLUMBUS(AP)-Agas-tired
. power plant, which i_s
possible
t:eplacemeJII forthecity'strasb-buming power' plant, is expected lo
release fewer pollut;mts.
"Natural-gas· firing is inherentlY.
cleaner than burning coal or burning
refuse," said Bob HodanboSi, chief of
'" the Ohio Environmental Protection.,
•--' Agency's air pollution division. .
"The fuel itself has fewer conta· -: minants in it, and it can be n\ore casily controlled."
" Columbus Power Partners has
' · proposed the gas-tired power plant.

Ott Calln

na

: :Chrysler-gained_market
:.:sha·re, GIYI. lost in 19:96
·DETROIT (AP) General
Motors Corp.-lost market.share in lhc
United States last year and No. 3
Chrysler Corp. appeared to be the
. major beneficiary.
An analysis of year-end sales fig. ures by The Associated Press shows
. .GM, the world's largestauto eompa- .
' . ny, had 30.1 ~rcent of the u:s. mar•
ket in 1996, down from 31.6 pen:enl
··,in 1995.
, ··.. Chrysler's share increased to 15.6
·. -percent from '14.1 pen:ent, while
· , . Ford Motor Co.' dropped sligh)ly to
. · . 24.4 percent from 24.8 pen:ent. · ·
· Asian automakers gained :26.5
percent of the U.S.·markc!t, up from
26.4 pen:ent. European companies
.. also enjoyed a slight gain, to 3'.,3 per• · cent from 3 percent in 1995. _
, , For !he year, domestic sales of
. · cars and· light trucks industrywide
.. , incn:ased about 2 pertent compared
. with 1995. Truck sales rose 7 pen:ent
·_.. while car sales were off about2 per- ·
.

c..ts

Vests . rc.. Tags
Gaps · ll..ttitl Lights
...s .hits 1211111

morning. JaPIIMH ptayar. 'ware r-.luctant to
·, push the dollar up after remarltl IIY i Hnlor
finance ministry offiCial which cauSid the dollar'• overnight dlcllne. (AP)

·a~~~~~r:

~=~~:;. :~i~~

The, tw_o.c·ompanie• involved in environmental issues related. IIi the
C,olumbus Power Panners- Cogen reuse of the plant, which was closed
Development and Destec Energy- in 1994 'partly because pollution
• Operate a natural-gas-fired. power problems would have forced the city
plant in Ludington. Mich. That plant . to install costly equipment. '
has remained at or below its allowed
The plant will not be pollution·
emission limits of sulfur dioxide'aad free when it reopen_s, but city Utilinitrogen oxides, said Janis Denman ties Director James Joyce, said all the
of the Michigan DepartmentofEnvi- · environmental infonnation will be
.ronmental Q_uality.
made Pli~lic.
, Ctty offieoals have also been nego"The mayor has been consistent
· tiating with Superior Graphite, which all along in saying that we will have
plans to refine graphite for industri~ public discussion ·of these proposal !ubrication uses:
als," Joyce said.
Officials are concerned •rn:ut the ''
·

.

REVERT
THE -CITY
OF
ATHENS TO
STREET
SYSTEM
AS APPROPRIATE AT SUCH
T 1M E
THE
CORRESPONDING

-~~':fo"J:'f ~:1:~:N~~
TO TRAFFIC AND AFTER
THE FINAL AIIAHDOMIIENT

RAONE, OHIO
AMERICAN UGION
fOST 602
EVERY SUNDAY
- · Doora Open 4:30
Gam• s..rts 8:45
Pay out Ia according to
numbctr of playora.
Under- mart~~gomont.
Public Welcorn1

le_L.IOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE _.Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt.• Sand
985-4422.
Cheater, Ohio
•

!VteM~ !fetJ.r.
Authorized AGA Olslributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial (&gt;asea • Machine Shbp
SeNices • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Wetcting
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool DresSing • Ornamental
Steps • Stailll, Railings, Pado Furniture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangara, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuffll .

"No Job Too urg•10r Too Small" .
We wtll work wllhlh your budget.

Ph. 773-9173

of

the

FAX 773-6861
Maeon, W\1

JONES'-TREE SERVICE
20 Yean Esperienee •

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding
0Wn1r:

Public Notice
lnvtro....,lll document In
the
form
ol the
envtronrnant81-l,
u _, u mepe, draWinga,

environmental lnlormatlOn
and other penlnent dell
developed by the Ohio
Oepartment
of
Transportation, and any
written commanta ...,.IV...
'a a ,..ult of ooordllllltlon
at the'-lnf and ro; prior
viewing at the Ohio .•
Department
.of
Tranaportallan'a Dlltrlct
Offloe, Miieldngllft Drl¥1,
Marlotl!t, .Olllo. Coplea of
tile
·environmental
doc-1 IIIII\' tte 'viewed
et the daignltad locallonl,
a llet of which may be
obUIIn~d froin the above
mentlo.nlld ODOT Dlatrlot
Oflloo.
Anyone wlalllng110 lllllmlt

a written etatement or
exhlbli concerning thla
proJect may do ao by
preMntlng It at .... "-'""
or malllrig_lt to
Ohio
'Department
of
Tralltportatlon Dlatrlct
Deputy Dlreetof, Dlllrlot 10,
Mueklngum Drl¥1, lleMtta,
OH 45750. The flrt11l ditw lor
eubmlulon of etatemanll
or uhlblta will bet Jitnuary

1...

(12)3t,(1)72to .

Dtrecklr

50%·75'%

•New Homes
•Garagaa
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compar•
FREE .
ESTIMATEES .

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET

....

- 7/22/lfn

.DEER CUT

CUSTOM BUILDING
&amp;REMODEUNG

AT

N8¥f Homes,
Addition•. Rooting,
Painting, Barna, .
Garages, Concrete
Free-E8tlllllt81

'MAPLEWOOD

LAIE

25 , .............

.

Robert Hartenbach
~
and family.

'

lf'r {1Z if n• 1/ il _,,. i:mr

Skin • Cut • Wrap

"''"" "om• o'r bruinl'u.

Aile for

949·2·734

John (114)1102-3D87
or Dellaa (114)841-30311
1 1-

121211lt11 mo. pel.

(U1111 St0111-

GRUESER'S
.GAUGE

LowR....)

WICKS

Body work; car, truc11
6 truck painting,

HAULING

minor mechanical

ed.

0

Jult ofiBrsctbury Rd.
~ooll tor 1lgn1)
Middleport, OH
814-112'537'1
. Day ·a. Evening Hr-..

985-4473

30, 1997,

JerryWnty

SAVE ·

ROBERT BISSELL
CONnRUCTION

rtp~lr.

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand, .·
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Tune-upa, OH Change,
Wax,Butnng
Lang St., Rutland, Oh.
742-21135, Ask for Kip

___

614-992-3470

7/11tt11n

,.,

. SMITH'S
COiSIRUCIIOII

'&lt;'

... .

.#

....... .... '(&gt;

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

• •llewH•Addlllona

•llewGaragea
oflemodelllll r
,Siding

•Roofing
•Ptllnllng
FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 112-5535
14 tlll-2713

J&amp;L SIDIIG&amp;
IISULATIOI
837 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

~

· program.
A copy

.

101 Pomeroy StrHt ·

II!.• etralght ne dletan.. of

conetructlon will · be
dlocuulld . a• well •• the
relocation auleta11c•

(No.Sunday Calls)

,,,

a

to the lntlrteotlon with
Alhelll• County Roet! ·No.
102. Said point bellll 0.64·
kllcwo•l8ra (D.33 mltea)of U.S. RouUI 33; thence,
oonllnul111 for • tlletafiM of
3.74 ldlomatn.(Uil mllnl

ANNOU NCE MENTS

. . l82-27n

8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.

eR. . . . Witllows
ettrltiGtrt111
.
•Staril hlri &amp;

WWaws
.... AMIICIIIS

005

Personals

:Join The Thou11nd1 Thai Called.
Pa11ion, Fun, Marriage. Ger A ·
Spoolol. Colt Haw. 24 Hro. 1-1100·
858· 71~1

Eol. 2e58 U .lltllllln.

Uuat Be 18 + Strv-U et0-845IICI4.

Giveaway

40

:r:r.r.::.::~r:-=

lntentaoilcin wtth A County Road No. lt. Saki
belntl 9.811dlon .....
mille) - · of

-

u.s.

tile

-BloCk COI 'I .,.,., HouHbro- ,

. Years Old HOullbroMn, •••· •
-1075,
.

I

.

.
•

• AGoociHDIM,I1-

;

«'

:

""""'"'
good black
.......... d!fll&lt;tnt
alroo a ..
ogeo,
llllllto :•

.............
.................
...........a,....

;i:FOU=NO=-:_;•~·II=mo~;,:;lld~tlltl-f_,llm-a""ia.:!

a

klun,
pink ftll collar, •
laund 1·5-17 C"""'h co So. •·
Rt. 1111. Calll04·14t-110l, I· :
.

!t1'

I

*"U1f.4ta.
i

.,.,..,,.

'

10 · LOit and Found

,.,-=:::nd~12111/M;:;::.~Ia~fll:-;io~Oer~me~n :

.....,.,, ........ VICinity, 'clii •

............ .....
111177HIU

''

.

4 1/Z Yoo11 Old, To •

Mille -

.... 1 . 24
. . ..

•

•

·ken, Female Calico Cat 2 112•.

...._a

nlllae) . to

Qoldon.Rco.--'

258-111 1.

end
oroeelng
the
Alhenalllelal County LIM.
lor • illafitnae of 2.40
ldlo........., (1.4t mlteel to
the lnlll'l UtiOI! wltl! O.S.
11111· Malge County
Roed :t7; tllenoe, for i

:1 ...... of 0.411dlom......

!'upploo,

Aualtollan Shopherd 1111, 11 •-

a; ..... oonllnlllniJ

(0.10

I

1..........,

cess, and -to my
-frO!!! !M lnWMcllon
&amp;.11 ldlometera (3.79 mttea)' many friends who
Aleonder Town•lllp RNd aolllh of the Athen.-tge
a ld ell the nice
No. 82 end Allllna County County· llna, and ther•
things about me•
Road No. 21; -thence, term' nate.
Said
Thanks for my
·continuing for e dlatence · abandonment to Include all
4.10 kllotJialerS (US miiH) that portion of the exletlng
glfta, plaques, and
to the ~n wltll Lodt - route not n - r y for tlie
the phone calla
r-hlpAoldNo.II4.Seld conetruotlon
or
and
cards, ·and the
polnt 'balng o.e kll........,. maintenance of the
(0.37 miiH) weet of u.s... propoead corraapondlng
Bible given to my
ROIIII33; lhenGe continuing ,.location or naadecl for any
·wife
with all. your
for • dlaUince ol 1.35 other hlg!May.
1111-. (0.84 lhllle) to
At thll hearing, map•
nalliel In It
lhelntlrWGIIor! wltll Athena lhowlng the propo11d
This day I will .
County ll0t1d No. 1&amp;. S.ld changaa and alternate
alwaya remember
nt beltig 0.28 ldlornaten
location• and deelgne to
18 mi...).Ollhe U.S. 111e hlahway .,..... will be
and again Thanks
ute . 3~; thence, dlepfa~ld.
Tentatlft
to you all. It waa
conllnul111 fOr 1 ~ of echllduiH lor rtghl-ol-way
1.10 lcllolllallnl (1.18 mlllsl • cq u IIIIIo n,
and , deeply appreciatCl.2llldlolrlelaN (C1.211 inltea

...

BINGO

HAS' BEEN ENTERED ON
· Carel of Thinks
THE
Dl
R
E
C
T
ORB
AUTHORIZATION UST.
And being mora fully
I want to say
deaei'lbctd • followa:
thanks to Judge
· Beginning at • etratght
Crow and to au my
line dlat.no• of 30.18
co-workers and all
· ~:~:'et~~· A\:: H:'/:~
my
friends In
County line, which 11 th1
lnterchanr oJ U.S. Route · Meigs, .Athens and
'
50 and u. . Roull 33 In 1111
Gallla countlea
City of Athena. Than ..,
who played any
along the exlellnO U.S.
Public Notice
Route 33, 22.0 kllomet...
part In making my
kllomatera (0.81 mil•I to j13.64 m...l to ttoe exlallng ' Appreclatt?n Day
the loteraectlon with our-lane divided 1111n1n1
IUCh I great ~UC•
Alexlnder Towrtllhlp RHd of u.s. Roull 33 In Darwin,

•

'

RUTLAND MINE
SUPPLY CO.

"

61~·7643

FrN &amp;flmljfN

'

Main Street e Pomeroy

should bave read
Private Pay Oxygen Macblnes $SO·per inonth.
The newspaJ)er reatets any lnconvenleuee
s.;,.
'
Ithis
have caused.
.

'

•VInyl Siding
•lnaured

e

CORnECTION

'

I •

\

Brazilian b'roque city
tr-r~atened ~by floods

'

'

Be/graders
walk through
city despite
police
ban
'
.. ,
'
.
t
..
-

ow..n.w

Garages • Replacement Vllndows
Room Addition• • Rooftng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES .

•Remodeling
·New Conatructlon

'

governl!lent for. oil pollution

.
•

New HomH • VInyl Skiing Ntw

oRoollng

in

l'

IISSELliUILDEU, IIC•

•

oo·IQ-mlf72.

-•ilit

•

..•
••

•

�•

Ta.day, Je"'*Y 7, 11117

·=·
-.......
-

PHILLIP
ALDER

'-

'~
::;
,' '
'~

-

LOST: BIIMII Hound, mining
alnoe 12111/IMI !rom Crib Crook.
REWARD!! Cal30«75-75t5.

-·-

~ 304-e75-lo1211.

-

Aklge, Vanlanl Rd. llta. Lango·

!:=

LOST: Gl'lir and black cal, min·

Cill Tina Toll Froo At 1·888-&lt;132·
7318.

You're No.1 Making S8. 50 /Hour

• •.• .... In Htndtraon area. Call SOot- AVON Solu. $S -$15 1Hr. No
Door To Door, •Bonuses• Fun

:_:: 175-2'38 1.

Lost : nur Pine Grove Rd. malt
Walker hound, bluk, tan anCI

I

,. .. whit~, 01.+882·7888.

70

'

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
~'

ALL Yard Salts Mutt Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day befOre rhe ad is to run.
• Sunday edirion .- 2:00 p.m. Fridlr.
Monday edlt1on - 10:00 a.m. Sat·

n • tlldoy.

-

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
" ~~~~~~~~~~~

41..............
13-·
==s-1·
lwlllecl '
45Dry---

.

10--&amp;1 ....... lnT....:ilo
$!Slop

Apply Todlly, Starl Tomorrow. It

• · •• Ina. pert o front paw &amp; mo11 of

a~~~eap·a-

- : : : . " • &amp; 1~1'10

AVON I All Aroaa I Shirley

loll: lomalt German Shtphtrd, Aslisra,. Manager
CIRCLE liE!
:.;. black 1"d crMm colored; Briar

: ": ¥ft. 114-7-42--228• .

• Lelll....Gao
.........'
,...._.,.

a

Eatyl 1·800·827·•8•0 lndiSIII
Rep.
..

All roo!-~ In

11t1t- IIIUIIIOCt 10
tho F - Folr Houliltg ~
of 1818 w111C1t- MllleQII

____.,_

10--..,..--...

1 u.a·• .,._
2l.GM3 AdverliMnwd

..

origin, Of a n y - 10
make any ouch~.

BEHAVIORIST

RENTALS

.·

410 Houses tor Rent

'~ARM SUPPLIES

$200

VOCA CoipO&lt;Oiion • Cl.t
5~5 ParMcttuer Circle
Suite 240

Moderen 1 Bedroom Downtown·
Carpeted, Complete Kitchen, .All
Eltctllc, ot .....e.o131.

REAL ESTArE

610

FeRn Equipment

4.

s dett Equipmen.c. Henderson,
WV. 30Hi75-7•21.

...

Thl Now F111t10&lt;1 Tobacco ware..
houtt, RipleY· Ohio. Will 1111
l.tonclly JJI!. 8111, 3 Cllyl I - " Call 10II·Ir.. I 1111f-8•4-C385 or
call EdiSon l.tayo&amp; 304·075·
1158.

_ &lt;&amp;
Selling out-·32 h&amp;ad. ol cattle,
mixed bfeed; eo~ round bales ol

hay; 61&lt;'7•2-20~.

1991 Ford Ranger. Standard,
14,000 Miles, "2 wn-.t Drive.

730 Vans

".iOWO. .·.

·a2 F.ortl .at• .,. 41cli toto or parlt, runt .gr..n $2900, 814·
3117-o:JZI.

·~·

""

•

.

..

.t

Alldng $21!0. 3DH75-!IOD.

LtiCf

•'

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

&amp;..IT'I NOT t4AGG'-fl
If YOU viANT IT,
IT~$ YOV#CS.

11800.
.&lt;

••

1888 Full llzo Bronco. Eddie
Bauer Edlllon, loaded, 351,
41,.000 original mlltl, .txC:tlltnt
cbn&lt;lllon •.~75-5037,

...
; · THE BORN LO~ER

18~8 Full ·size ·aronco, 4·wd,
aulo, air, am-fm, blue wlblut lnltlrior. rebUilt engine, many new
paris, ~una great, ere stiape.

~

'·

1892 Cht';y Shon WIIHI Batt

.7•2·132•.
1982 U110 l.toblle Homo On t.e
Acres, Porches, $1.5,9QO, 513-

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Corport Ettao 01 Galipolio On 588
S1751Mo.. 'Plus Deposit No Para,
814--'.t6·0622.

773-5881.

1988 Schultt l.tobilo Hom•30r, 2
bath, 8x20 txpando, cathredal

2 a.&lt;~room l.tobile Home On l.tc·Cormicll Road, 814-408·11888..

304·1182.:1502.

•

1883 Chtvy Short Bad ·lllo4, •• 3 '

2 Bedroom located Ofl Broad Run
Rd in Ntw Haven. S280 pir
month' de~osil 4 ulilities . 30&lt;4 ·

57•-~-

ceiling, island II'\ kitchen, titling
on '3 large tots. with garage,· nict
nelQt'lborhood, Call after Spm,

Condition, AT, PB, PW, Pill~ Til~
._,,, Bedtalta, Bedliner, t.XItl
Chrom.o, Book S1•, 100 Quick
Salo $13,000, 0~ r.\~;"&lt;8·
9228, E""'ngut..
·

12x50 2 Bedrooms, Natural Gas,

' •.

1983 ~issan. automalic. PS. PS. Lller V.IJ 84,000 Mlltl Gooci .Con~~ke good- ~or.. 614-11112· .dftlon. St2,800 Call Baroro l pm
614·441-8113
~

'
TannlfttBida

2 BedroOm Trailer $300/Mo.,

ComiTIIf'daiiHome unils lram
S1911.
•
Low._monlhly JII!Ymenlf

$2011 Dopooit, 81&lt;-387-7272 Or
8,.-3117-06.0 After o~~~-

dtc-•OB-0881 ·

740

TOyota

Pick-up

Four

Moton:ycles

PW, POL.~.~~~~;~;~~

198590K Aclual
RtQency
PS,
Miles. 6U·2•S5887.

Cal TODAY HI00·71t;OI58 .

t 988 Fo•d B•onco KL T. 1992
Oldl Toronado Trofeo, low miles.
Call304-675-328&lt;1 .

550

1997 16x80 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
1 ,325/down, $21 8/mo, free air,
lth approved credit. 1-800·691 •
777.

1114

OidS 98

FIII!E color caalog.

New-1997. 1&lt;4 Wid• I balh, 18991
down, S139/mo, with approved
rodit. Caii1-800-88H57n. .

1884 FOrd Tempo, good condl-

.::::n.-;S-:500-:;-.30ol-:~-67757·-:25-70-:.:--=:::- . l Wheel Drive 29,000 l.tlloa eu.
1"'1985
' '
Chevy Col~ity Baol Olfer, •&lt;t ·D2• 7

TAN AT HOME
buy DIRECT and SAVEl

1888 Ford Tempo_ 30C-57B-2S78.

tiC cond.

19118 Honda 300 Udllty 2 WD •
Witft T,.ilot ·U,IOO, .,..
137; Evening• IU-~81-

TIIU£~ CN(.If\1.~ 0\ll..l !

••

c•

swilch tO clubs.
·
Declarer won with dummy's ace and ·

ran ihe spade jack. After it held, he
continued with the spade 10, covered ·
·by the king and ace. When West dis·
carded a heart, declarer returned to
· the dummy with a low11iamoiad to the
jack. South lineased his spade eight,
;J • cashed the spade queen. and contin' ued·willl the diamonchinl· Wheh East
discarded a heart. South couldn'\ avoid
lfising two club tricks. Conceding one
down, South wailed, "Why did dla·
monds llave.tll be 4-1 as well?.Why
couldn't the jack and queen of hearts
have been the king ol spades?" •
-Nortll' knew better. "You Overlooked
' m,y diamond nine;" he aaid. "Don't play
a low diamond to'dummy's jack at
trlct six. Instead, lead \he queen and_
overtake with dummy's ace. You are_
always· OK ir.the dl•monds are 3-2.
Alid hete, when East discards under
the diamond king, you can· finesse
dummy;s diamond nine and run the
8ull, cliscarding both your club losers.
You end with an overtrick."
Don't just watch t~e royal cards;
watch the spots too.
-

I

I

EIIV

TV W U V, W NV
T

.J Z y ' .

'

E·z Z ·

tV M G B W D

ucv

B .W

_ ,- N P II B Z

z a v ·v

J A W j) V H W .

' it

WOlD

'IIIAf IWll
Nlllll

,lAM I

O

Roanango lottwt of .,.
_ · _ lour ocrornblod -d• b.law Ia form four limpfo wordo.

Sign nangmg tn classroom:
"The Object OfTeaching Chil•
dren Is To Enable Them To Get
Along Without The - ·- -- - --·

1

Q

Complete the chuckle qUoted

by filling in the missing wordS
'-...1.-..L-I.......L-..L......I you dovolop fr~ stop No. 3 be~.
·

needs

aomo work, .$t.OOQ. 81&lt;·742·
1803. I .

PRINT ~BEIED ~ETTER$
IN THESE SQUARE5

MERCHANDISE

Llmllod Ol,.rl 111117 doublewldo,
3br, 2balh, S1788 down, $27g/
monlh. Free ·deltvery I aelup.
3 Bedroom Mobjle Home
\l i nlon Water Furnished,

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

Household
Goods

.eu .

KltAM Lm ANSWEIS

l.tuol Mil- 19117 ux10 lhrot bodroom, lncluciH B monilia FREE 1o1
rorr. Only $185.57 per monttl wlttl
fWS __ C.It-800837-3238. '

Jobber- Nudge- Rough- Trusty, YOU'RE NOT
If you stand in front of the refrigerator wondering
whether you're hungry or ra- YOU'RE NOT.

••
•

S EFiVICES

AKC

r;lftgi~terad

•
'

~omerar:'lian

Puppift, 81.~_8253 .

.

itrettd SPfinQer Spaniel

6U·258·8782.
AKC Shellia pupa, ailble and
while, 1250 &amp; ·~ 8 tc-992·5073:

Nice 2 Btarooms. 1225/Mo.; 8
Mitll Down 218, Nice, ReferenC-

530
Buv or

Ant~
ttll. ' ~lverlrie An1lq~11.

oa, Dopooll Requtrea, eu ••..s. 112• E. l.taln S,_, on RL 12-4,
Pomoroy: Houri: M.T:W. 10:00
8172, 51"258-8251.
.
1.m. "' 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:oo 10
Clelin 3 Bedroom Mobile e:oo p.m. et•-1182·25211, Ruu
l ·':'''m• For Rent In MtrCtrvillt
Area. 8t4-258-G574.
Nlee rtv" bedroonl mobile hOme
lrt Middleport. no ..pelt, 114·1112·

58!58.
Ont bedroom mobile hame in Po·
tl*oy,. Ptrli.lly furnished, '1501
mo. piUI ulili• 51..0112-203ol.
~moil 1"0 bedroom mobile homo

tor-In~.

~40

et ..9112·5031.

Apanments

-

......
..
540 Mlic:elllneoue

-

-,

A~C 'tlollow lab P0pa, $300 BU258-3 Allor 8 P.l.t;

-

10Qa11lnk ser up ·epecillt. Fish ·

Tank 1 Pot Shop, 2ct3 Jockoo•
Avo. Polnl Pltltanl, .3 0•·075·
21183.

Lind (CCI

.Mercbandlse
1088 Ptcltard Ball SIIIH ""'"""
18 Track IR. .I To Rool, S20D;
Wood Ttblt Wllh 2 LH'itl I 8
Cl\alrt. $2110. ,,.... ,.om.
2nd Edlllon, Cknltlno

i A-

,,

rile. 50'11 011 All COWII I SWM~
oro, •os StllCNid'·-uo. Gill!·
polio.
-.· '
. ,·

Upalliro.2 Bt j . - , Ulllur·
nlahod ~rlmOitl, In ~oart 01 =IOprn.
_
~ ·8"' lion-Ill!
GalllfoNtl I ·llock fiWin ldoooit,
Contrll Air I Hoo\ 8afl I llloo,;
11y Aed1rJng, Clllpp_,
ert, KIII~IOI AptOIIOI!Mt And JROICkr, fonr l...,.., Guaron.._., llW 1-MM, I Monlll 0.
Pllcot i('iho. Colt ""'
110tlt, A t
Fltquiftd. llol- lpollt.
. '~
· • -·

... 717•,

'

BAHAI.tA CAUISEI II- darl!•
nlg~ll, Unclorllook~ Mull WI
121181~u=i llrnilod Tlci&lt;aiL

for. -Rent .

**'

'

.

Doberrren Pupt AKC 11 WHit'
MaiM, F.-. Bltodl ~ Rut'
$110EIIc:lt, 81 ..370-2121.
'
Fom11o Chlno&amp;t Puo puppy,
-olcl, I17Ut+M-4507f!.

e

Concr._ I P1a111c &amp;.pic T..U, Golden. Atlrltver Pwpa. Fwu~
BEAUTIFUL APAATMENTI AT 300 Thru z.aoo Gailona Ron Blooded, 'born - · 28. 175.00
IIUOGET PRICES AT JACKION Evont Enltl'flll.... Jldllon, OH Parenra on Prllmlsts. 814·141·
' 7100• .._ ... D
EITATEI, 52 Wet..,.., Drlvt t-"M.D7M21.
· !rom t~•• ttl SI1L WW1t
::::!::
I mo•l.._ Call ll•.,.••tae•. arfl'!,~ ror ..,.,
.,._~
Equa!Houlini!Oi:l · .....-.l'HODJ

1t1 ......

eo...

'

... '.

•

V

PREVIOUS"SOUJTION: 'lllhe Astrodome is lhe Elghlh Wonder ol !he World,
.

'11\en 11\8 rent is the nlnlh. • - (Houston Oilers owner) Bud Adams.

SICURE

wv.

E

.N H WW H Z Z P .

r--------,

only at Oak.Wood Homes, Nitro
:!CW-755-5885.

Only 11 Oakwood Homes, Ni1ro
WY. :!CW-755-5885.

'i ~~~E.Ill\E~;arr

'l:n:--+--+--

P.M. 81~387.o32e.

1DD7-14x80 w/Giamour bath .

t~ome,

•&lt;

In 1983, The LOs Angeles Times of- · m-+-+--i~
fered this snippet of acftlce to Its readera: "If you find you.ire to bt praent- ed to the Queen, do not ruab up to her. .,..,..._,_
.She Will eventUally he brought around
to you, Hire a dessert trolley.at a good
reataurant." · ·
_ .
Of'course, If it is Queen £Iizabeth II,
·she would never say dessert trolley -it'sa pudding trolley!
· .
This is a useful hint to the lfey card
CELEBRITY CIPHER
in the critical trick of today's. deal.
by Lull C.mpoa
~st four spades, the defe~~~e· be·
·C....V
~.,. r:...-.t ttom ........,.. bW' t.rnot-. people. 1*1 and pruen!
gan with tWo rounds of hearts and a
Each liiaei~ 1M cipher Jl.ndllor MOther. Tod.ty~ ct.: J 1!1CJUM; D
.-.

188• CR 125 Honda ExcoUonl
Condition S2,100 Call Allor •:30

$1791Jno. frH 'deliverr &amp; sat-up.

71 t2xe5 mobile

,,
R&gt;ZZ'(, ·
.,

51\'&lt;.~~' WAAT I~
. eucJ(. N-It&gt;~~~ EII*T ~?

or - .

4x4 Silverado Trim E•cellllflt

1979 Windsor, 14X70, thrH bed·
room, one barh, large living room
and kitchen, new furnace, new
water he.ater, 17500 OBO, 814-

TO GIVf YOV

SOMETtlrNCi FO, Tt4f
- · · PArN1
r .

,_

18&amp;5 Ford Ranger With Tappet
4•4 V-8 , Rebuih Auto Tranlfl'll•
Ilion And Top 112 Of Motar, New
Paint Job S2,QDO Firm, 11•·258-

$8,1100. 30&lt;1-1!75-3582
2531.

4

· By. Phillip Alder

'·u-

ac..rter a battery. Iota of extras.

building. Will
81ol-g82·

'

lhe~ming •still ®Un1s'

$3,700, 080, 0,.·2511-1233.

,g82 FOr~ Econollne Van, - •

apattmen'' for

Wett Nortll . ~
faas 2.
Pus
ru._ a•
Puo
Pass . Pus . Pus

. ' Opening lead: •

'

Hr,drauHc&gt;. Oil SI'2.50·Sgal pail .

Dublin, OhiO &lt;43017

Soulll
,. .,.

st

&amp; I IVF S lOCK

$100. $275
. 'pell, 30.. 773·

'(

I Opp.ol....._

lim-or-·

VOCA Corpora tion. A Leader In
The URIDD F1ald Is lookmg' For ·
A 8ehavorrst To Prov1de Ouallry
Services To Individual s Who
live In Gallipolis And Marietta,
Ohio . .Duties ln~IUde Providing
Training For Stall, Develop Sup..
part Plana And Consult In Crlala '
Sltuariona. Requiremerita Include
A Bachelor"s Decrte And 1 Year
or Experience In Providing Services To Persona With Mental Aecardatian. To Apply Send Resume
To:
'

EOEII.t!FIOIV

.,

.''-'-.... -

DOWN

llmi!MmOtdllcrlmlnltlon '
baed on race,~. religion.

.

�Ohio Lottery

-Area bOys!
.tea"'s post
:losses

Plck3:

.

2·1-6
Plck4:
3-6-9-1
Buckeye 5: '
12·13·16-29-30

•

'·

en 1ne

.
:!"•'•·...... w'-' Publlhll• Can 1

,,

'

"

'

'

jlELPRE (AP) - · Shell Chemical Co. his settled lawsuits with the-famof three workers killed iii an explosion 11 a company pl~tlhre$ years

in Ibis city across the Ohio l(iverJrom Patkersburg. Hundreds of resident&amp;
in Ohio and West Virginia had to be evaeualed for several hours;
Gary Reed, 41, of Williamstown, W.Va., Michael Ray Harrl$; 36, of
The amounts of the settlements were not revealed 1-foilday. Each family · Reedsville, and George Nutter; SO,.of Coolville, were killed.
sought a total of$20 million in damages.
·
· . ·In lawsuits filed in September 1994, their families accused Shell of neg"We cannot' disclose the figures, but 1 will tell you that we would not have ligence.
.
~tJmtnended to the families to accept dlis ~ment if we did not feel they
The Occupational Safety and Health Administtalion cited Shell for 53 saferec«;iving a fair and just settlement," an attorney for the families, John ty viol &amp;lions and fined the Houston-baSed company $3 million. The comQimaco, tokl The Patkersburg (W.Va.) News. ·
pany denied violating safety requirements but settled to avoid a coun fight.
The explosion and fire on May 27, 1994, desttoyed the plant's 1(raton unit
The plant produces ICQiton 110lymers, whic~ are used as perfqnnance

rt •unit

.

an1zes·
ruary

nd dri·ve
'

: Volunteers are being organized in
for the 1997 American
amual door·toiq Febniary.
and Donna Carr are
fund drive and are

i:::~ sothethatprOcess
of securing
the (hive
l:an get
early .next month. Anyone·
~~:!'~~ in asslsting is asked to call
PI
at6%-t285.
joal ll!is year is to collcic:t
•~.41110 l9 be used for research and
:dU(:ati(llial programs of the ArneriAssociation," explained
'cytnyer_: "This is just a slight
l_nclceas:e _
over last· year's col)ectjiin at
•~•j''~• • she .continued:
·
on to. $8~~aLthe .
frymycr
js
· th~t the gbal

u.an

.' '

..

}

she· ~d- educa-

will bC g~ing into

•:·, ;1:;·; ·/·

, This year's.l,.merican HeilrtAsstr
t:iation theme : for February Heart
Mondsy is "Get in on the Action,"
which urges everyone to inake physical activity a p~ oftheir daily lives.
Someone ill America dies every
33 seconds from cardiov~ular disease. ·the number one killer- m the

hoiJIC$.

· ·
is ~till the
one cause of death in Meigs'
~ant to be sure peorec~pize the warning signs of
,~:;!i·n:·d~ck ·and stroke," . she

::

~;·'· ~

,

(~ "'·

U.S. today. Lack of physical activity
has been cleari!Y shown to be a risk
factor for . cardiovascular disease.
Yet, only 22 percent ofall Ameticans
get enough exercise to achieve cardiovascular fitness, ac'cording to statislics from the American HeartAsstr
etatton.
.

.

'

ing that Lentes, Assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenaglia, former assistant prosecutor Charles Knish!, fonner prosecutor's investigator-Gary Wolfe, Meigs
Stiff
. .
,
A
Ponieroy anorney. who recently levied ldlegations of criminal County Stleritl's Deputy Danny Leonard, and three other individuals com·
· against Prosecuting Attorney John R. Len~ and other officials, mitted several (~lony and misdemeanor criminal offenses during the course
·
himself back in the counroom Tuesday morning 1 this time to answer of his arrest and criminal investigation.
L\151 month, Meigs County Court Judge Patrick H. O'B.rien issued a deciallegations that he violated his parole by dljnking alCohol.
·
: D. Michael Mullen, South Second Avenue, Middleport, appeared volun- sion dismissing the affidavits as having been filed "in bad ,faith" and "withJ
·
before Judge Fred W. Crow Ill in the Meigs County ·Coun of Com- out mcril."
Mullen
wJs
released
on
a
$1,000
bond
on
his own rccogniz~nce pending
Pleas, where he denied the allegations.
, :
a
final
hearing
on
Jan
.
31
beforq
visiting
Judge
Dan W. Favreau from Mor: Mullen was earlierfound guiliy of proviiling 'drugs to tWO girls, ages II
gan
County.
.
,,.
·
·
....
_
·
·
.
13, It his Pomeroy residence on March 12 and 13,J 993, and is currently .
Crow appointed-Pat Story and Steve Story a.&lt; co-public defenders to ·rep·
parole after being released fi'OOJ prison pn Aug. 11 ...1995.
resent
M~llen .
More recently. Mulle,n a!)(! his brot~r. Brian Mullen, filed affidavits alleg-

.. . .

.· ll .

·.

.

. ~. .
;;n':~!~~~~~ (AP) - Newt tee moved to cha11ge -Rxblican"That will be out of the way: We
~
· · ·rejoicins over his re;elec- ~' proposCil rules'ill1accoimn
eCole, will then have no reason to have any
as House speaker, but the victo- ' but Republicana rcfu!ltld. ' '
distrat!tioll from the serious legislane
by a pub!ie air- · Rep. Nancy ' Pelosi. ,D-Calif.• il tive work of the body, and we will,
misdeeds and a like- member of the' ethics ·investigative of course, go right to it,'' he said.
vote to rebuke his conduct. 1 subconunillee, :&gt;aid, "I thought· I
Gingrich on Dec. 21 admiued he
~vereame a groundswell \ would never see the day when tHe violated House rule~ by failing to
in his own party Tue:$- 'chaiitnan -of the ethics commiuce ' seek specific legal advice about the
· . the first re-elect~ 'wi!uld ~oine 'do~n to the .floor and use of tax-exempt projects fdr panispeaker _in 68, y~iu-s. t\'m il0wn the request of the special. san ~urpost!s and by ~pproying subHouse eth1~s commtt_tee. counsel ... for a cOIJple of exci-a weeks m1ss1ons to the e.th1cs panel that
commencmg to complete the
incorrectly denicdthe involvement of
Gingrich fC.: ,
·The su!Jc;omlllilllee. two Republi- his · political aCtion commiuee,
the chamber. cans· and two 'llem~raiS,. unani- GOPAC. _w1th the IIIJ!~xempt pro.
drama accented mously backedt'lhe extension. But jccts.
·
day of the !05lh eth(cs ChairwoMan Nancy JOhnson.
On Tuesday. Gingrich's wife,
a climactic. hou!'-long roll R-Conn.~ sa!d tile Rep®lican lead- Marianne,_and his receqtly widowed
vote; _an ac~ speech punc-· ership wlinled n~ more changes in the _mother watched from .a crowded VIsWith_apolog1es; and a n~ty ~hedule: She did say 11 vote on penal' itors' gallery as the roll call vote for
spat ~yer. when the ethiCs 11es, tile fin*l action in the case, like- speaker was taken: 216 votes to 20S
Gtn~c~ would end..
IY. )l'Ould be held Jan. 21:
, for Democratic leader Dick Gephardl
h1s v1ctory, Gon8f1ch · . ·Co~mitt~ .~C!Crllls ~cused of Missouri.. . . ·
..
. ~ c~kl be s~re Rewb!tcans of~t uote on Jan. ,
Five Repubtrcans ~oted pre,
daril~n~ mf~auon 20, .~he. Preal\lill'll ClintQII wilt be sent," while four more voted f~
~eahMI on ~~~ elh1cs case. ' in~-~~ 011 ... Welt steps of the alternative ,GOP candi~tes or.thetr
~.ot. ~ tol~
Capitol. .
. · .
own choosing. By iradlh&lt;l!'• Democ·
I can l , predict
Col'e wilt 1Mb &amp;!WpOIIIla still· rats voted for Gephardt m a ntual
outside colin· ~ac:heduled public hNrint on sant:' show of solidarity..
llllhs. The ¢0111mlttee thee wiD recTwo y..-s ago on the openins day
·p.ni·si1ft fight came over a ommend a pwi41aewat to the House
the counsel, James M. - llllllllikely a \'OIIIto npnllllnd the of Congress, there wu a much dif·
mOi'e time to CO!JlPiele' his spaalcer.
,
ferent drama. Then, Oinaricb
1
--"'-' ""· .. would have necessitated
a'ousa Map-jty LNiler • Dick assumed the speaker's poll after the
~-~~~~:Jnbeyond the Jan. 21 ~ · Al;mey, R-~xaa. aaid he loolled fOr· stuanin1 Republican llktc!VJ -o f
coJIIIIIiltee has aet for ' ,_.. to the lmd qt: the OiDpich . _ Congress and. d4 ~· "COii!ncl
~·::~wr~the cue. '
' '
chaber COUld- oa to lea- Wilh America''·domlnlll:ed dJa qcniI
on ~he ediics c~-. is!llive bull_,, ·
da.

'

'

.

:

.

'

By PAMELA BRQO~
Gannett New• Service
.
WASHINGTON - Rep. Ted
Strickland. 1lankcd by his wife and
. family, including seven botllcrs aticl
sisters, got plenty of hugs, kisses, alld
handshakes Tuesday as he walked
froin · the U.s, Capitol after he was
sworn in as. Ohio's freshman congre.&lt;-&lt;man ifrom the 6th.Cmigrcssion, al DIStnct,
,
To some, Strickland was a .famil: iar faee a&lt; he strolled along Independence Avenue and walked up the
stairs to his office in the Cannon
· Building where he was gf'C'lted by
- supporters.
'
. ''I'm glad to sec ya' back," yelled
· 'one Wl)ll-wisher.
';J'm glad to lie here," said the
southern Ohio Democrat liS he
: · stQPPcd to shake his hand. ·
Strickland .unseated the . GOP's
Rep. Frank C~mcans to wjn back: the
seat he lost to Cremeans in the 1994
elections. •
. For. Strickland's younaest sister,
, Shirley Ralstin; 51, of liortsmoulh,
this was a hiJIPY day that drew 1ean1

!.

to""

.

'

•

•

I
•

''

•I

&gt; '

!· '

t

~·

•
• !

No charges will be tiled against the driv_er of a car involved in Meiss
County's first traffic fatality of the year last week, according to Lt. Wayne
McGlone, commander of the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol. .
·
.
.
McGlone said the_pattol's investigation of the Friday accident that killed ,
pedescrian Charles D. Jones, 54, 1562 Nye·Ave., Pomeroy, has been completed and that Paul M. Darnell, 43, 38509 State Route 143, Pomeroy, is :
not being charged in connection with the accident
Darnell was nonhbound on SR 7 near Union Avenue at6:20 p.m. when .
his car struck Jones a&lt; Jones attempted to cross the ~ighway on foot: Jones.'
wa' declared dead at the scene by Dr. Douglas Munter, lhil Meip Coun- r
ty coroner. ·
·
. · ·
· · •· · · d r

'

P·" ·

'

Driver
won't be cited ·'
.
in Meigs' first fatality·.

Strickland ., ,
tackles flr_
s t -~- ~
day in offiCe · .

ingrich Jo:~·ta_c ·_H~use rebuke
·nowlng ..,r~-ele
·
ti_
o
o
as
speaker
.
.
~

'

'

FREEMAN

.

.

'By LAURA MECKLER
arc 60 percent of the way toward ed equally between employers and
A11oci1Dd Preu Writer
keeping the syst~m solvent ·lor the workers.
WASffiNGTON - Proposals to next 75 years:
A big ta• incrca&lt;e, thti council
invest Social Security money on
Retirement age is now 65 for full agreed, enjoys "little suppon."
Wall Street are creating quite a stir, benefits, set to increa&lt;e to 66 by 2005
But less controversial plans have
but there is an older idea that could and to 67 by 2022.
·
nearly unanimous support on ihe
be just as controversi,al: raising the•
Eight of the 13 council members counc;jl and would go a significant
retirement age.
support the accelerated plan, saying_ way toward fixing the problem.
They are:
. An advisory committee looking it would -encourage people to work
for ways tq secure the program's longer, meaning more taxes would he ·
• Forcing local' and slate governfin_ancial fut~~~e wa$ billerly divided paid into the system while benefits ment wo~kers to participate in $ocial
over whether to .allow individuals to were trimmed. When Social Securi- Security · rather .than independent
iilve$1 some of their money -into the ty was created in 1935, life expectan- plans. This would bring about 3.7
slock market.
·
·cy was 77 for men, 78 for women. million new workers into the program
But there was more, if not total, Now it is 80 for men and '84 for who would pay taxes now without
qrcementto increase the retirement women.
collecting benefits until later, solving
age to 67 by 2011 - . II years abead " · But longer lives have not been 10 percent of tbe problem. ·
of sched11le- and.to allow it climb accompanied by more -years on the
• Calculatin_s benefits by· averagas life e•i&gt;ectancy increases.
job, dissenting council members said. ing earnings over a recipient's bestIt's a "natural splution," said the Some people arc too frail to contin- eami,ng 38 years instead of the best
finai 1-c~ of the Mvismy Council ~in phy~ically demanding jobs; oth- 35-ycars. Adding thrcc lower~_ing '
o~ Social Seculity, issued Monday, er5 are victims of corporate down- years to the average woilld help
w~h . l~~ed for ways to prevent the sizing.
bring benefit payments down by an
-nat~s -- 1~~--'lllld-, most 1 popoll..- · · ~ '"'Mo:!t worken cannot votuinari- average·of 3 percent '&amp;nil iOiv'c about .
benefit program from going broke' by ly choose whether or not to extend 13 pereent of the problem.-,
' 2029. · '
'• • t.,
·,.~. I
their working lives," they Said,
• Changing the w.,Y bllncfits" lll'l''
OthCr solutions,1nchidipg adlting ' ' So how big i.~. the S\)Cial Security ta.cd. The proposed system WQUld
. state and local government workers problem?
tax 100 percent of henefjts b.eyond
to the s~tem llljd reconstructing the
IfCongres.~ wanted to make up the what a worker paid into the system,
way benefits arc taxed. had wide- entire deficit by raising ta•es, it plus interest. Currcrit law uses a com-,
spread ,apc:emcnt. Takelll together. would have to raise,the payroll tax by plicated fonnula ba&lt;ed on a retiree's
these ideas alone would &gt;olve more nearly 2.2 pcreentage points from the · current income. Thi~ would solve 14
than one-third of the program's finan- current .12.4 percent, which is divid- percent of the problem.
cial problem.
.
Raise the.retircment age, and you '

•attorney defiles parole violation

.. '

enhancers in. food packaging.toys,sPorting goods, adhesives-and lubricants.
The company said that human error and an abnonnal chemical mixture contributed to the explosion.
"It's heen a tough road for everyoru; and I don't believe we will ever have
closure on it, but we are trying to move forward," Shell spokesman Michael
"
White told the newspaper.
·
Still pending ate 1wo lawsuits filed on behalf of about 130 residents who
claim they were injured in the explosion. 1bc Ohio Supreme Court upheld
the dismissal of a Class-action law_suit·Ciimaco liled because there were not
enough people to support it.
.

Reti-reme,nt age increase .
could · e·xt~nd SS solvency

•

~

2 lllllal... 11 ....... · AO.W•UCo. tku ; rp1r

Pomeroy·Midd~ Ohio, Wedn11day, January 8, 1997

,,

ell settl ·S with ·f amilies· of -killed workers

~

'

.. I

"

..,, N0.173

.

•

o!joy.

,•

' '

"It's very emotional forme," aaid
VICTORJOUI8PIAKEA- NMrt ~ IIIPear.d -L1dllll ' Ralslin wllo csmplijllleda blllalfof
prior to 1W N 111011on .. tplllllr of. U.l. tlc4tM of ltlp,._
herbttAhor.. "h reallydoca feel fiOd
Nlllllo. . 'IUIIdiY, thetlntdlyofthe new IUIIQntfoCar;zwa .. toboblt:ll. lknowthlt'W will Walt
1111Hollienowlunlillu•ltlantothepunllhmelllfilrlwllear, · · hlider fllf d4 JIO!Itlle 'of IOUiht!n
gil R•pulllnn'l ellllce vlaiiiiOn-.t hlt cloudtd hie clllnan for •
Ohi!Jboc!Mtcehiafllllily-.Mt hia!**J
••an~tnn 11 1p11111r. CAP)
· .
(l1• ollhtld•
t ..,
.
'
'I

...

,...,1'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="396">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9775">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28042">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28041">
              <text>January 7, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4144">
      <name>coe</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2944">
      <name>heck</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="39">
      <name>martin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2339">
      <name>mckenzie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="297">
      <name>proffitt</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
