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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

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

Plck3:

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

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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

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an1zes·
ruary

nd dri·ve
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: 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
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·
on to. $8~~aLthe .
frymycr
js
· th~t the gbal

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she· ~d- educa-

will bC g~ing into

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, 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$.

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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

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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.
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ing that Lentes, Assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenaglia, former assistant prosecutor Charles Knish!, fonner prosecutor's investigator-Gary Wolfe, Meigs
Stiff
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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
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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
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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.
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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-

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;;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.. . . ·
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. ~ 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. .
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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. '
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chaber COUld- oa to lea- Wilh America''·domlnlll:ed dJa qcniI
on ~he ediics c~-. is!llive bull_,, ·
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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.
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. ''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

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

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

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

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'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. · '
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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

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

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

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

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

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"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)
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Commentary

t: Wadi 11dlly, Janurt I, 1117'
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ronoca~~

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Letters to the editor
Where is the wildlife

;:~ Ohio weather·· forecast

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John A. -Ord

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On thil elite:

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Joseph·Perkins

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·Cattle: steady to 4.00 lower. ·.
Slaughter steers; choice 61 .0071.75; select 53.00-66.00. Slaughter
heifers: choice 60.00-70:50; ~elect
52.00-65.00.
Cows: ste~dy to 4.00 lower; all
cows 40.00 and down.

. ,. Boars: 36.S().38:oo:·
·
f;stimated receipts: 3s.ooo:·
J• SuiU!iry Of1\tesdloy's Pnidoc·
~ U~estoek 1\asoclalion auctions
~iDtoli, Fanmnto\m, Lancaster,

City H«!ldl!lg ....................... ,.. 271,
Fedwwl Mogul .........................237

4'80(1' ''· ..

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'Caldwell:

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Goodyear .! ...........................51'4.
K-mart ..........................;.........10'•
tanda Entt ..:.............~ ............27~.

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·Umlted ••~ ...............................18/a

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Ohio Valley Bnnk..................351.

one .Vfllly,t·~;.........~.............3&amp;r

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Peoplea •••• ~ ............................26f
Prent Flnl.............. ~ ..~ ............. 13,'h
RockMII........................: .......61:4
RD-SMII ......., ...................,.. 17'EI•
Shoney'a ............ J....................6'.4
star Bank ........ ~ .....................91'•
Wencty'' ••••• ~r···'"~·
~.~2or
Worthlngt011 ..........................18 ;~,

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Joseph Spear

._.Piris.

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Hospital news
Veterilna Memorial
. Tuesday admissio_ns - PaiiY. Har~
mon, Rutland.
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Tuesday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharge&amp; Jan. ) ' - Sandra
Walls, Carissa Bailey.. Gary Sheets,
JamesAutherson, Ruth·Blain.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. David ·
Donnally, son, Gallipolis.
(l'llbllshed wllll permission)

$2.00

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..p.e;r........ _..................................... $104.011

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,hMI'IOlan~rh\J
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Ttle symbol for Prescription
is Rx
The symbol for Oxygen
is 02 The sympol for excellence in
Home Oxygen Care is
·PRESCRIPTION
OXYGEN Ax 02 INC.
,

.· services

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.Oxygen M~hine (Concentrators) •24 Hour Emergeney service
•Portable oxygen
•Nebulizers
•Free delivery &amp; set up .
·•Portable Nebulizers
•Same Day Service
•Accept Medicare Assignments
.
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-courtesy calls for portable oxygen users on Mondays &amp;Fridays
•All oxygen machines ire.Brand New models and analyars are
bullt.lnto the machine f~r safety and confidence ·
.
.•We do all bllll.ngs ·
•Private pay oxygen machine&amp;
$50 per month
·
*wheel.drive vehlcles _to service you in severe weather
•Respiratory Therapist available for Home Assessment

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We are very excited to be opening In Meigs County. By providing · •
Home Oxygen SWvloe only, our oxygen patients knoW they will receive
t~e Immediate llttentlon they deserve. We know that our patients are .
not obligated In llhlylng wlti'J ua,and that they can change companlea at
any time. That Ia why we will do everything we can to tend to your.
needs, and treat you like family.
.
In ~;~dvance, Thank You Meigs County, for yqur p,.1ant and ftpura
patronage.
RANDY MARNHOUT .
FAMILY AND sTAFF

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p a.-, tl• ar 12.- boJIL Cn:dit'wiU
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210 &amp;. MAIN STREET
POMEROY
Locally OWned I OIDII*Ill'ltltttldild

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·211 ,.................................. ,............. ,$-ll,Bl .
S2 ..,_..,,,, ................. ~!''"~' .. ..............S.0$-'6

By Randy

..-nhout

Home 814 etf.at$3

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CIIIAnytfnla

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614-992·7267
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Offlct Houre

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t:oo.t:SO

tJuPfa.l Yollr Lo¢el BU.

- -.... .:. ..:.............,.. 1...... -..,..... $10'-72
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PRESCRIPTION.OXYGEN.INC.

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DAV to meet
Disabled American Veterans and
its Auxiliary will meet Monday, 7
p.m. at the hall. Refreshments wi ll be
scrvod at (dO p.m.

Dno Maolli:..:.......:..........::..... .-....................10

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Cookie crunch Th11nday
The annual "great cookie crunch"
will be held Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Meigs Junior High School Cafeteria.
The event will kickoff the annual Girl
Scout cookie sale. The "crunch" is
· being sponsored by the Big Bc}ld Girl
Scouts and prizes will be awarded to
the winner. For infolmation on participation, residents may contact
Shirley Cogar at992·2668 or Debbie
Cooke. 992-3155 .

· r.ti,IJiicRJI'TION RATES ,

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held Sunday in the Southern High
School cafeteria, with serving from
II a.m. to 2 p.m. under sponsorship
of the Southern High School cheer- .
leaders. Proceeds will go into the uni'
form fund.
·

1be 01111' Sendncl, 111 Court sc.• Pomeroy.
Olllo•57$
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Stock noporta ere the 10:3()
e.m. QUOtea,provldad 'by Adveat
of GRIIIpolla.
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oi'OSTMAITIR: Send aildl&lt;u «in'edlon•,.

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Am Ele Power ... ~ ...............,.•. 41 ~
AkzO .......................................70'1.
~ahland 011 ........................... 44'1.
AT•T ....••...:................... ~•....,.38'1.
Baftk One .!J•.•••••••...•••••••••.•..••44'!J

OlinMit ••...:J. ......................... 72 ~

The Daily Sentinel

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Stocks

Bob Evan• ....... ~ ..................... 13~
aorg-wamer .............~ ......... ~ ..ssr
Chllmploo 2 ............................23 ~.
'
., Ch~nnlng ~~• .,..~ ................. 4"(•

· Hogs:, I .OO·tp 6.QO lower. .
Bur~hl1r
hogs:' 40.S0-33.00..
~(w · . , ,: .

11116\f2, P ~ C1"leo Calilei dMd in Arcetri, Italy.
By Joaeph Speilr
·
The Internet is teeming with postings Quarterly, a~d on and on.
• . 197().., made some calculations~
In 1Jl5, U.S. bllN led 1!Y G!B- ~Jackson defeated the Bri_tish·in
I ~m· ha, ina .an anti-millennial for millennium merchandise.· We
We have nuts, weirdos and·phony on·biblical evidence and sugge.,tecl;&gt;
the._..qlNewOih p-tbepllllllg .engt~JementoftheWar11f 1812.• · reaction.
have the Mazda Millennia, Farber·' baloncys comin11 out of lhc'wood- .'·the end might come in 19111. His~
· ~ 189t. fire C'M re@ llrit,lul dlilnaBe at the ;world's Colllmbi&amp;D ~~posiJ
There are well over a thousand w,arc's Millennium pots and pans, . wilrk. There's th
_ e Eanh Chan11cs . (lost-1981 books ignore sUch. ' refer-~
4
..._
...
a
=.
',,
•
·
.
.
.
.
days
left
until
the
Third
Millennium
r lk
h
hel
_ , . - · ,...
,
.
,o s, w o· revc '·hat I hc. v•car CIIJ!Cs. Jehovah's Witnesses W.,rc l
· '· Ji19l .. P u atWIJciilwwWtlsonolidinedhis 14pointriot'peaceafter arrives and already. I am surfeited
20011 will hrins Ooods. pestilence, famous for t!lcir forecastS ofl
WGrld W. L
.
with it. I feel like l'~c got Millenninl!Cl~ar · warfare, eanhquak~s, and Annagcddon. Now, they say, il w•l
'. ·fa l"f,
lw J;)l O.tJh- iilauguratetl as preaidcnt of France's Fifth urn glollulcs oozing .from my pores. Elizabeth Arden's Millennium line of me lung . 1cc clll's. There s the all speculation and that Jesus was•
.....,... .
· · ·
·I feel like I ~ gasping.for.aidn a ·skin care products. You should clip · Atkansas &lt;occ.ultist who wrote the rip when he said "no one knows the;
··'' 11t 1Mt.'f\ til; I~ JobtiiOD clcCllarcd a "War O!i Povcny." ·· · ~lotte!. of Mili~Mium gas. I feel like · and save the advertisements for such thrcc-volumt!- NtJstrad~mus set after day or the hour."
,
,·
' fi. .!IQ, .... Sl!lr.of IJ!dia and other sJOI.cn gems wc;re returned to the I arP sloshipg througffi .JI'CBt Mil· things, people. Your descendants arc spoaking to the ,'ocer ~~~ough int~r; . Which reminds If you haVcn'l
All f r »mel• OI'Niillnl HIIIOiy in _N~w York.
.'
. ·lennilim swamp.
,
not going to believe bow schloi:ky it' medrancs. ~ s ilicAril.onuhou.'iC- made your reservations for New .
.,.,11 tf'D, - . ~ t.ur. bctWC!Cn the United States and Nonh Viet- .·
It llll1ed coming Oil in August all was without tangible evidence. · Y"~fc who cnvosJons In A"!'=r.1ca thlll Year's Eve J999,timc is running OUI.
1·
.
'
-1989, when the New York Times
. We have. organizations. Thcrc's ·ls · mostlyunderwatcrandrsrcsc~ ' NewYodtCily·hotelsuedrawinaup
r. lm, .... Jalllf, liricaOidcnclthe relc~K of Waterple fiprei John publi-'ted a column with the headline, , the Millennium Group, the Millenni- • by _four Ascended Maters ~ns waiti~g lists. One·family rescrvtd 1
· W. DiiiiiD.IIiltllrt W. K"n+acb .and Jeb Stuln Mqntder from prison.
,"The'Bial\tb 1liple0; Let'• Party." urn Symposium·, the Mtllcnnium whttc ~s,
,
,
Marrrott suite on Times Squlltll a
, Ill ~0' r 1
En-lai.dHid in Beijlna,at aac 78.
Oh no, I thought. Here comes one of Society, the Millennium Institute
And, of course, wc~avc ·the self• decade 110. On the other coast,
Ia, ~- A =~ .t 'Jelearaplt, MttW the Ju.uce•l&gt;eP'rt'
l - .ovents_-~h)'ou~l!\'t·esc"'"', the Fi~st Millenniai Foun&lt;llation, arid , I!Ppltnled holy !110'1. ~tth thctr.. Pn:• three deCks ofSc81tlc's space·ncodk; ~
_ .... $ dl 1 1
· •,
Ill it., qreeiDa to,. d i - itself'of the Z2 lk,II
~ ihas ohe tsa Cosmr~ Morne~t.
on and ~Jn.
.
· .. di&lt;:tions of A~aly~. These llr!' a . have been rentci4. · . .· · .
,I
•
,
·
.
Then, in the Jail o~ 1992, Time
We have books. There's "Count- persoll41 favonte ·arid a trealllli!d
My person~ calendar for New· ~
flnl a-. the Dow I.- inclultrial ava,...clllled -, IIIIJIZine I!Ublished' upecial edition dow~ to the.Millennium," ·:rt~c Mil- ·· resou~. ~at I_~ire ~ about Year's Eve three yean hence i'
!lay at2,002.25.l'lelidltltltAIIIald R·ar 1NllimOd
c.alled "BeyOnd ,&amp;he v- 2000." lenmal ProJect," "The Mtllcnnium . them 15 thetr rcsthciKlC. L!lte weath· · alfl*ly fu,ll. I'm .aoina 10 &lt;qanizt
Brdo r h NavalllowJital, wht!re be'd ~ n.. the WuhinJlon l'olt declared, Wh~Jc Earth CataloiJIIC," 'i'llle Mil· , ermen w'!D cal_led ~ run and sot . '!'Y desk .~y. check my doJ for - · - in .... n,. - ··aowlaclr of • ,on Die. 31, 199S,,IhiJ it I!IU proud- lenmu.m Book of Prophesy," "Con- S'!IJ.,they Jill! ptck. up~·~ on an_d treks, ch8ria_e r;ny V&amp;cllllm c l - 1,
'· ·
,
·,
· Jy. beC!)IIIinJ "the fil'lt;~wsp&amp;per in vcrsatrons Wrth Nostradamus" (the . we JUSI ~p wntnJ rn. HtsiiH} 11 ~~- If I retain a~y lood loiiise at all; ·I ·
~ lkrlb_coi'CICIU?IIF•PFIGd Chlrina I.-e~- ~a to oiTrcially jump the JWI on '16th.ccntury F.rench soothaayer- who . replete with ckamples, lind our own I won't even w
_.,. on the tube. , .. ,.
•1=:~:::
tsidBUih-llllll'eriaafnl!lulmlfi:hflu.
theencloflhcmillenniam.:'Andnow, red ed
h'
vo1
abounds i them
J--'.,__
._
1'
F I wl 1 ,.,.,.. Who IIIli beel! out of wort fur woeb .of coune, the Oood is \IPOD us. You p _ret everyt tn@) in three • era
~ .·
.
. .....- • a 1J • 'tl
llllniqllillbeir ....._,how· can't.tlll'll 011 the rube or pick up a' urn!~· ahand on and~· , and
..;:
..~o·reatal LI'I~~~y~~therl Aw~tlal,_ll New paper, r 1 uprise ~
_....,...idledbyahup
JIIIIC!'orruaazinewilhoutseeina'~f· ters.nen..re's
the Millennium..._
.
· :; ·
ve magaztDCI
.,........ l 11eJt·sellinJ
'"" ...- nonfiction
......book
""'""•of~ •
Man ,_lOOJIIIIIIIe- tilllcl . _ to tht Millenaium, ·
zinc and the Millennia! ·Projll*y.
·
' ,
.
'
Cllllbed ._, 1-. u t'll&amp;l'taboft'.
Corporate Alllelicaja~:Ismorinl Repon and d)e New Mllletlilitnll
, 11KNibl fur}bd.Y:' "lclal, • ditlinplabed froall\'ellll, aevw·;
liir............,l-.iliifiMililln..S &amp;d • • "·
· aboitd die Yctr 2000 banc!Wa~. · Ma~in~ :•nd New MiOenDiU&amp;It , ~ - ~nalt'l\rendr; ~can authiJt 1114 hilladaal - ·.'

Dinner set
A chicken noodle dinner will be

COUJMBUS (AP) .:::_ Indiana·Ohio direct hog prices at .selected
buyiqg1i&lt;Jints Wednesday as provid•ed by the U:S, Department of Agri•uulture Market News:
,: 'Blll1'ilWs and gilts': steady to ..50
~igher' latc;'demand' moderate with a
moderte movement.
·i U.S'. 1-2, 23().260 lbs. country
points "S0.00-51.00, 'few 49.30 and
51 ,sO,·plltrits ·so,s6~s2:oo. · ·
'·' !J.S.-'.2-3-, 230-260 lbs. 44.00·
49.50; 2'1().!230 lbs. 39.00-44.00.
Sows: weak to 2.00 lower. ·
-i •u.s:··· r~3 300-450 Jbs. · 39.oo.
+3.00;' '45().!500 !bs. 43.00-45.00;
j00".:6SO lbs. 44:00-46.00, a few at

Future schlock: H,yplng ·the y,ar·- 2000 1
.

Announcements

~!f~d~;~~;·hli;;stock report··

ry

~J!r.\ 1935,-'l'.vHtellftd~V:. Presl~ywasbomi~ThPclO,

·

Ticket nets ·Buckeye 5 prize

s:

What did Clinton know?---.;;,_...____-_
..

h ·1"' sto·

Strickland tackles first

Clara F. Lightfoot

lilt-.

IT,oda·y '1"' n

'

..

r,ullll8k·

Clubhouse ethics

Susie Circle Harris

Wonl has '-t received here of the death of Susie A. Circle Harris, 95,
Cedarville, formerly of Meigs County, who died Friday, Dec. 20, 1996 in
~ rt
Xenia.
,
,.
,
She
was
born
in
Racine
on
Sept.
I, 190 I, the daughter of Matt and Alice assisted~
-"
•ro
Archer
Circle.
She-attended
Rio
Grande
College
and
taught
in
area
schools
8:
I
7
p.m.,
SR
7,
Tuppers
Plains,·Ciilford
Sheppard,
Camden-Clark
Memo•
for many y~. She was a member of the. Ohio Retired reachers Associa- rial Hospital, Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
·
•1
tion. . ··
.
·
.
II :22 p.m., Overbrook Nursing Center, Middleport, Clorena Davi.s, VetShe is su~ved by chiidren, .Leta and husband Arnol&lt;l Thordsen 'of erans Memorial Hospital, Middleport squad assisted.
~a.,
Ccdaivillc, RuSsell and wife Pat Harris, and Micki Liming, all of Xenia, Irene.
MIDDLEPORT •
.
and busbalid J(en Dubie of Springfield; 14 grandchildren, 46 great-grand12:·13 p.m., volunteer fire depanmcnt to Second Avenue, wash down due
"
chiklren and eight great-great-grandchildren; and a sistcr7in-law, Lula Cir- 10 ruptured automobile gas tank at Citgo Station.
RACINE
cle of Racine.
8:16p.m., SR 124, Keith Musser, VMH.
She was aiso preceded in death by her husband of 66 years, Lee R. Harris in i990; a son-in-law, Ken.Liming; and by a grandson and great-great·
.
SYRACUSE
10:12
p.m.,',Second
Street,
David
Donahue, VMH.
: gr&amp;llddaughter. •· ·
Services werc_held Monday, Dec. 23, 1996 ill the Jackson-Lytle &amp; Ingling·
''
Williams Funeral Home Cedarville Chapel, with the Rev. Don Payne officiating. Buriitl-followed in the North .Cemetery.
W.VA.
(Contln11ed from Page 1)
labor issues," said George Saunders
are here. His bean is wiih the peo- and his wife Judy of Vinton, Ohio.
pie."
.
.
Strickland's office is decorated
Some · of Strickland's other si~ with momentos to remind biin of his
Clara F. Ligli!foot,
Middleport, died Monday, Jan. 6, 1997 in the Holzlings just seemed to be enjoying the family and southern Ohio. .
.
er Senior Care ·Center, Gallipolis.
·
mornemt.
Behind
the
desk
is
a
large
photo"
A housewife, she was born Jan. l;i, 1921 in Minersville, daughter of the
,,~
·"11 feels grea1, great honey," said graph of his deceased parcnt~.·aRd a ·
late John and Bertha fhle Custer. She was a member of the Mount Herman '
another
one of Slrickland 's sisters, large map some constituents made for
United
Brethren
Church.
·
•
'j
.
·
him during his lirstterm in Congress
Surviving are her husband, Francis Lightfoot of Middlcpon; a soil and Helen ·Hurst, 70.
Strickland's
wife
Francis
who
·
is propped up on a table. It reads:
daughter-in-law, John and Sue Lightfoot ofMiddleport; two daughters and
sons-in-law, Barbara and Max Grueser 'o f Shade, and Tanya and Roger Bam- like her husband is~ psychoiogisl, ... ·"Remember the folks back home."
proudly sported her new "spouse
. On othertables are mor~ photos of
house of Wellston; and nine grandchildren.
·
.
""By The Associated P~ ,
pin" on her plum suit. Francis, who h1s parents and so111e of hts br01hers
Services
will
be
I
p.m.
Thursday
in
the
Ewing
Funeral
Home,
Pomeroy,
·Winter stonn watch tonight and Thursday for southwest and central Ohio.
; il
"I:onlght...Stiow developing from southwest to northeast. Snow coulil with the Rev. Robert Sanders officiating. Burial will follow in Rock Springs was Strickland''s chief of staff during and srsters.
Cemetery. Friends may ·call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. his lirsl term, isn'o sure what role
.
·: becoin~ heavy south. Lows upper teens to mid 20s.
she'll assume this rime.
In addition to·Hclen and Shirley,
·
"
' · . .
'
;J
Thursday... Snow north and west central. Mixture of snow and sleet south- Wednesday.
"I might return to a private prac- Strickland's other siblings are :
In
lieu
'of
Dowers,
donations
may
be
made
to
the
Veterans
Memorial
Hos: ' west. Snow possibly changing to _sleet then rain ~outh central and cast cen..
tice in southern Ohio or get involved Richard Strickland: 66; Betty Jenkpital Hospice, 115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
~' tral. flishs in the upper 20s .to the mid 30s.
·
• . ·
witli a tourism project for Ted;, she IRS, 68; Jruh•pps, 61; Roger
r
· ·•· ·
· ·
.Extended forecast:
said.
'
Strickland
: and Ch~1rles Strick~· . · Friday.. ,Snow likc,ly in the north. Mostly cloudy with scallered flurries
Strickland, who was sworn in by land, 72, e .e sl Stnckland who
·' south. LOws in the 20s with temperatures remaining nearly steady during the
House
Speaker Newt Gingrich, said ·,. !'lade hts marden voyage to WashJohn
A.
Ord,
82,
of
Syracuse,
died
Wednesday,
Jan.
8,
1997
in
the
Rock' day
•
.
1
he felt "angry" whc"' he heard the tngton to celebrate his youngest
'
Saturday:.:snow showers in the nortbeast...Otherwise partly cloudy with springs Rehabilitation Center, Pome10y.
Born Sept. 21, 1914 in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., son of the late John Hen- new House leader say lhat his new brother's re-election.
~·· scattered'Ourries. Lows 10 to IS. Highs 20 to 25.
·
: ·: Sunday... Pair,.. Bxcept snow showerS likely nl)rtheast. Lows S to 15 and ry and Minnie Yandel Ord, he was employed at the Atlantic Foundry. Akron, priorities in Congress would be to
and was a member of the United Steelworkers.
end racism and fight drugs and igno'• .. highS .from
neat 20 north.• to the mid 20s south.
,t
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Helen Louise Black Ord; a rance - traditional Democratic
brother, Clarence Ord; and two sisters, Lillian Robbins and Charl!J!te Jones, themes.
Surviving are a son. Bobby J. Ord of Syracuse; live grandchildren and
"I just felt that there is a discon·
10 great-grandchildren; and two brothers, Doyle W. Ord of Mason, W.Va., nect between what this man is saying
•, Wilbur H. Ord of Stow.
, ,
and what he docs," Strickland said.'
ServiceS will Le 2 p,m. Friday :in the·Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, "He wanted to cut the school lunch
.With the Rev. Andrew Hoover officiating. Burial will be in the Suncrest Ceme- program and education. I don '!think
tery, Point Pleasant. \V.Va.,Friends may call all\" funeral home on Friday Newt Gingrich has changed." . ·
..
Constituents and friends (illed
.from I p.m. until the time of the service.
Strickland's three-room office suite in
the Cannon Building as'they lunched
.
on cold-cut sandwiches, chocolate
Jolin A. Ord, 82, of Syracuse, died Wednesday, January I 991 in l~e.
CLEVELAND (AP)- The ownIn Pick 4 Numbers, !he winning chip cooki~s. and Georgia pecans.
"itocksprings•Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
.
er
of
one
Buckeye
5
ticket
with
the
number
,;,as 3691. ..
The room broke out in cheers and
~ ~ Bom'stptemb&lt;lr 21, 1914 in Gallipolis Ferry, West Virginia, he was a son
Sales
·
in
Buckeye
5
totaled
correct
five-number
combination
app1ause when Strickland ca•t one of
of the late John Henry and Minnie Vandel On!,
his first vo)es for House Democratic
He was als.o preceded in death by his wife, Helen Louise Black brd; a may claim an Ohio Lo11ery prize of $371,978.
The
93
Buckeye
5
game
tickets
$1
OO,QOO,
the
lottery
announced
leader Dick Gephardt to be ~peaker
broiher; Clarence Ord; two sisters, Lillian Robbins and Charlotte)ones; and
today.
·
with
four
of
the
numbers
arc
each
of
the House.
a special friend, lcey Dailey of Racine. ·
.
.
worth
$250.
The
3,949
with
three
of
The
winning
ticket
was
sold
al
"We just think he's a good man
Employed at the Atlantic Foundry, Akron, h~ was a !llembcr of ~e ~"'\
Waco
Oil'No."
23
ih
Cindnriati.
.
th&lt;!iitilftbers
areeath'worth
'
who
cares about working people and
C:d .Steelworkers. ·
.
I
'
• I
Here are Tuesday night's Ohio
'• · Sorviving are ~ son; Bobby J: Ord of Synicuse: two brothers, Doyle W.
Lottery
selections:
1
Ord of MasOn, West Virgio1ia, and Wilbur H.'Ord of Stow, Ohio; and five
The
Buckeye
5
numbers
wer.t-12,
•"gran&lt;khild~n and I 0 great-grandchildren.
,
,
'
JJ ; ·The runeraiiVill be 2 p.m. Friday, January 10;•1997 in the Foglesong, 13, 16, 29 and 30.
In
Pick
3
Numbers,
the
w.inning
·•Funeral Home, Mason, with the Rev. Jl.ndrew.Hoover officiating. Burial will
number. was 216.
':be in-the Suncrcst Cemetery. Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
'
Friends may call a! the funeral home on Friday, January I 0, 1997· from I

~

n

•

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded eight
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units responding included:
CENTRAL DrBPATCH
I:06 a.m., Mill Street, Middlepon, James Hensley, Holzer Medical Center, Middleport squad assisted;
7:02 a.m., Martin Stre'et, Rutland, Gary Cremeans, treated at the scene,
Rutland squad assisted;
·"·
.
5:54 p.m., State Route 338, Racine, Clam Adams, HMC, Racine squad

conditions

•i

By Jack Anderson
an·d•
Ja MDII!

WJNGm

for

1--l-...
:::.C::.:Ii::_
. --:::~

A,ent 003, the~.-..._ li~
QcQurrina il ni~ lhe eYeiU _fe_lt
berish. lnlteld the wtina officer almost"unreal.- cant bel~ lhia 11 ·
Wlllr.edthe.;.;.tbjlicklponwhal· aoing on." The .,eat dolcribed .a
office{ assisncd, to the Pentagon's Anny Captain by trainins, who had ever wu out dlere on the "psychic' !"clans.'' a "screech,'' ... a nillalhc
111 Cout St., Pomeroy, Ohio
·super-secret "psychic spy" unit may
·
sipal linC," as one remocc viewer ' squeal that set teeth 011 edp..He
114-1112-2158 • Fu: 1112-21157
have "seen" the accidental 1987
deac:ribes il.
described smoke, and ~duns
bombing of a u.s. Nayy frigate in the
Wbat followed.was a remarbbly falling do~. People lyraa. he
'
Persian Gulf by Iraqi pilots two days
·
·
detailed one-hour session in which , Wl'ote, amid me!'~ debris lnd "-·
before it actually occurred. · .
.~&lt;'
Apt 003 begill) to slowly . skttcli
_Agent 003 wd -~event appealed
Or so says a log detailing the
what he was seeing, and wrOIC down to mvolve two entities--!" e~ts
Gannett Co. Newspaper
activities of•the spy unit, which spent
ef
StJ:eam-of.Consciousness descriptive of .two drfferent OIJanlzat~OIII ·:
$20
million
in
taxpayer
dollan
over
•
woids of the impressions be was get· whrch could tncludc two drffmnt
ROBERT L
'
nearly two decades trying to use been assigned to the psychic spy unit ~ling. .
nationalities or races. Overall, then!
Publllhir
"remote viewing" as an intelligence- ~y his superiors and had shown a dis. The 19-page report was so spe· was a "sense of (the).unex~·:
gathering ~method, which was dis- tmct talent for the work.
, -·cific, and so startling in retfOspect, :about the event •• ~t .the "~11'01
· CHARLINE HOI!FUCH
MARGARET.LEHEW
continued
in
199S.
Ac~or;&lt;Jmg
to
lhe
log,
~o~t
of
I~
· that it was quickly sent up the chain (was) not as professiOnal or
G I ltlwlllll'llgll'
Coniroller,
· · Most - if nOt all .. of the spy psychrcs work 1_nvol~ed vr~wmg
of command, possibly as high as ing as (11) should have been. He llt(l
unit!s work turned out to be a rom· events and locatrons m realtime, as then-Vice , President George Bush. thought "possible ,sam.,. naults
n.f *d 19\U l. . . . . . . .., . . . . . . lrDml 1 . . . . ..._.,.,.,..,,..
plcte failure. No icrrorists were ever ,!hey were occurring someplace else. Our assOciate Dale Van Atta ·has ,(were) unintentional."'
·
,... . . . . - - " ' _ , - , . - - . . . . . . pull/lahed.
captured, no hostages were rescued Only four times before ·the morning · obtained the . priginal handwritten
At II :36 a.m., ~ ~aliff'teei ·
..._, ,.,.,. ,._.numlltt. SpecJty a dill,....._ ••••• • •,..
and no calamities avoided as a direct of Mpy-.15 had the psychic spy unit · report, as wetr it a typewrillcn ver- called off the session, ......)1 dilap'...........
at-·
111: , _ , 10
~ S..llael, 111 COW! II!.,
result of the unit's-work. But accord- tried to,predictthe'fulllre-- each time . sion. .
,
\•
pointed .. He had. been hOpinJ . the
.?ra 0J1 Ofllo . _ 0t, MK ID If~IT.
.
· '
.~
ing to the log, the Penlligon's psy.' meeting with failure.
.
Agent003sawaneventoccurring agent would zero in on:a'dilferent
chics were sometimes eerily accurate
Atl0:23 a.m., Agent 003 was giv- over land and water, involving a U.S. project that he had been thinking
in their ind,ividtial predictions.
en an encrypted coordinate -- y.'&amp;nhip that had a purpose of "wait- about.
·
. This is the. story of one such 3691471312200-- and asked to con· mg, watching." He ~aw a "bright
What a difference a weekend call
m&amp;tance:
.
centrale. The coordmate was usually flash," a "glare" and,then heard a make .•The headline in lhe Wuhing· ·
Agent No. 003 reported to wodt as · a disguised latitude and longitude rushing ("zzzzzlll") sound. The ton Post three days later sent chills
usual · on the morning of May IS, locator for the object or indiviilual objecl,involved, he wrote, reminded' · down the spincs·of everyone lssoci•
. Dear Editor, ·
seed, 100 pounds of Niger seed and 1987, to a leaky old building on the . that the agent was supposed to "spy" him of an air-dropped, French-made · ated with the psychic unit: ·~Iraqi
Missile Sets U.S. Fripte Ablaze,
Deer, and other wildlife, wheR: are I 0 bushels of ear com from Novem- grounds of the Fort Meade .military on, But on that day, unbeknown to Exocct missile. . .
·
Causing
Casualties.,. .
they? The DePartment of Natural her to April. This has. decreased by
Resources say they (the deer) arc still more than SO percent. Rabbits and
The previous night, an Iraqi fiJhl·
here. They say that more standing squirrels arc way down in numhers. ·
cr plane fired two E•ocet m!uilcs ••
cOm and more private land posted is We're seeing Jl few more grouse. but
an American guided-missile ftiJIIC,
the cause of lower deer harvest. This quail have been sone for almost 20
the USS Stark, wl\ich was provllling
may be true in a sense, because pri- ·years.
protection to Kuwaiti vessels in the
''
vale land owners are the only ones
· Of the hundreds of acres of. land
l&gt;crsian Gulf.. One struck, maiking the
raising crops and .feed for the deer located in this area and owned by the
first (and only) time in thc lmn4raq
and they don't want outside'ts coming State of Ohio, Fodte&lt;l Run State Park .
war that a(l American ship wu hit .by
in harvesting deer that th!&gt;Y feed all and Shade River l'orest, I know of
hostile fire.
.year before they get a chance to har- ·not one acre used·to plant fOOd for the
Iraq wa.&lt; not considered an enemy
vest theirs.
wildlife. No wonder the deer and othat the time -- in fact, the ·u.s. was
In odier parts of Ohio acres upon er wildlife bother the landowners and
:;c~retly helping Iraq'in it&lt; war qaill!ll
acres of food for wildlife arc plant- (God bless them) the farmers, they
Iran. So the United States acc:cptr:d
ed. In our pan of Ohio &amp;II we ·get are are the only ones that are feeding
· the explanation that the bombing wa.~
clear cuts and torn up roads. Then them and giving them a chance for
an accidental act .hy an unpmfci.they plant pine trees for'·a quick har· survival. Maybe this is more than the '·
sional Iraqi pilot.
1 :
:,; vest and money the next time around. destruction of habitat, besides clear· ,
Did Agent 003 "!iCC'' the ~vcpt
You can't destroy hardwood forest, cuts we have new homes and busi·
two days before it happened '~ Critics
den tree~. etc. and plant pine trees and • ncsses going up: Maybe lhis'is enviof the unit would charge · that ttic
.expect a balance in wildlife. Did you ronmental, the contamination of air,
Army officer, 'who was a hishly
ever see deer getting fat eating pine water or land. Maybe the hunting
rcsatded intelligence anil)i!it, Wts
seeds and needles? Now the ODNR pressure is too heavy.
imaginati~ely extrapolating an event
has introduced tuilceys, which eat ·
Whatever· the cause it needs
that might occur durilJJ the tense .
what mast is left, and coyotes, which looked into now, not five years down
"tanker war" of the Gulf in those
eat the deer.
the road. Now I hear ·of a new . plan
days.
Come, walk with me and rn show by the ODNR, "Earn A Buck". You
' Jilek Aaclenoo oi.Jaa Mllller
you the !leer tt:ails that a few yean have to kill a doc first, then.you may
are writen for· United Falut'e
ago were a foot wide. and tw.o-to- kill a buck. Maybe we should .ask the
Syadleate, Inc.
three .inches deep with nothing but Ol:INR to separate themselves from
muddy deer tracks, that are now cov- insurance companies in Ohio. We
I
cred only with leaves and you only should ask the ODNR to listen to our
see an occasional deer track. I am opinions and answer our 'questions
ialking about lUI area in Meigs Coun- and concerns, instead of someone
ty bounded on the west by state Route . located a hundred miles away in
· 7, the east by the Ohio River, the Columbus.
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south by state Route 248 and the
Remember, the squeaky wheel ay Joaeph Perldne
dent Clinton,· in fact, knew all these to normalize relations with Vietnam and DNC co-chairman Don Ftnvlcr.
north ~y Athens County. Myself and _ gets the most grease. •
"What did he know and when did things. Moreover, it suggests that he (where the Riady family conglomer- ' The president had 10 k~w about
my family have seen a steady decline - ·•
he k~ow it." That was the defining . purposely withheld knowledge of itte,the Lippo Group, happened to be . these meetings •. whiCh almost ccr·
. of wildlife in this area in the past five
William_ D. Dunt, questron of the Watergate scandal a · these felonious actions not only from making substantial investments).
tainly are a violation offcdcmt' ethics
ReedsvUie quaner-cefuury ago. .
• . years, I used to feed a ton of ":ild bird
.
·
Also defying )&gt;clief is the insis- and eleciion laws.
· '·
II was posed by Howard Baker,
tence by White House officials, priClinton also had to know thil ~
'
the respected Republican from Tenor to the election,' that the president businesswoman Pauline Kanc!Janal.k
nessee, who served-as vice chairman Congress, but also the American had absolutely no knowledge of the " donated more than $2SO,OOO to his
Dear Editor,
ey you made from the pie?"
of the Senate's select committee' on peopl~, until he was safely re-elect- fund-raising activities of Democrat- . rc·clcction, much of the money origIn the world or ethics, I had occa-·
"I used it to stan a publication, presidential campaign activities.
ed.
ic buckmker John Huang, who inating from foreign liOIIrtes.
sion to witness children playing in a 'Club House News' that I will throw
President Nixon was unable to
Indeed, how belie...able is iUhat solicited more thail $1 million in·
Last month, the .White Howle·
· backyard. They were discussing who in for free - whenwe Anish the club- . answer the question to the satisfaction : the president didn't recall until 10 campaign donations from foreign · aeknowlcdged that Kanehanalakvi!l- ·
would be in charge of their club- house."
of Baker and other congressional · days after the eloction that he and sources (a violation of federal clce- itcd the Executive MIU1sion at leur
hOuse, and had jitsl watched a show
"I think all the ki~s in the :neigh- Republicans. And with the loss of his Jam~s Riady (scion of the billionaire , ·lion law).
. 26 ·times, including one occasiQII
on television concerning ethics in borhood should vote as to your pany 's support and the threat of Indonesian family suspected of ille·
Shortly after Clinton's re-election, when she brought along three of her
Washington politics.
· behavior, anll if they want you to rep- Impeachment looming, the 37th pres- gaily funneling more than a half-mil- White House officials disclosed that fore ian business clients for a J'CI'liOII'
"I am clearly the leader," said the resent them."
; ident resigned.
lion dollars into-Clinton's campaign the president met with Huang and at meeting with the Jli'C!Iident. . ,,
J().year-old. "I am the oldest and
"That's fine with m~. as long ·as .
Now we fast-forward to 1997. war chesllhrough third panies) dis- James Riady in September 1995 and
II scem.Hlear that a hosr of indihavc more education."
lhey get a chance to·hear my side of And we have another president cussed U.S. policy toward Asia on at · discuslid Huang:s leaving the post' viduals connected to President Cll~t
"But you also lied to your mom the'story. Can you round them up and embroiled in a campaign-related ·tcasttwo occasions? ·
the president appointed him to at the ton -- either din;ctly or indlrectly. .;.
about the pie you took from the oven meet me here at the clubhouse.'' ·
scandal. And the pertine~l question
Ye~, the president f&amp;id nothing Co!llmcrce Department to take a violated federal - election taws 'by
and sQld to a restaurant.~~ was not
· "OK, I'll round them up." '
remaons the same: What dtd the pres- back m October when.White House fund-raising post with the Democra- · raising campaign donations from f~~~;.·
ethical." ·
"Gillal, and if they get here after id~nt kno~ and when did he know it? Deputy Counsel Bruce Lindsey char- . tic Nationa1 Commillcc.
cil!n sources.
·
"I told my dad and he said he . dinner. I'm. treating for desert.".
. Was Boll Chnton awa~ that mil- Si'_teri~d Clinton's 14to 20 meetings
Two months after thafOval Office
At lea.•t some White HOUliC offiwoukltell my mOm- so you can't say
Roger Reeb, -hons of dollars m rllegal fore1gn cam- wrth Rrady as purely "social." Lind- conversation, Clinton instru~ted cials knew ahout the«t illegal d~
I didn't. have good counsel."
Racine pargn contributions was raised iri his . sey pooh-poohed the suggestion that White 'House aide Harold Ickes to ·lions, hut dccided to cover up until
.•'
"What did you do with the mon..- ·
~~: ..
n~me? Had he.any ideathat much ?f. Riady used his Indonesian money to arrange Huang's hire by the DNC.
the election wa.• over. If President
·
•
· · ·
'
' thrsrllegol forctgtimoney was sohcrl- curry favor with the president. ,
:Ickes, Clinton's depoty chief. o{ Clinton ill·one nf them, he deserve'S
ed. by u~scrupulous,Democratic fundSimilarly, it seems highly improb- staff, has also' been cqnlinncd a• a to be impeached.
, .
ll
.
· ,
·
rarsen; m exchang~ for access to the able that Clinton didn't recall until participant in weekly fund-raising
JGRpb Perklas Is a cal•=wW
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,
White House and,intluence with the early last month that he had received meetings on the White House for d!e SI!JI Diego UaJoa.........• ..
BylbeAIIOCIIIIdPIIII
· . , '
· president?
c
a three-page letter .fninP Riody's , grounds, along with White House . udtltuulhoror"RJptLII&amp;eMef.leftsi;::;~Y:~:~~~-~·day of 1997. There are 357 days
The evidence ,s.11ggests that Presi_- father, Mochtar, urging the pre.sident , poli~cal affair.; din:ctor Doug Sosnik. (Unlon·liibune l'llblls.il!l).
•.:

A

'EMS units answer 8 qalls .

!;, I

By JIOk Ancler80n
reservation in M~tyland, which also
lnd Jen Malllr
houiC$ !he aper-secrct National
WASHINGTON -~A U.S. Anny. Security AgeJ~Cy, The •tent was an

.!1,

Pomeroy • Middleport, OhiO

OHIO Weatht:l
1bunday, JII£L 9

Did ·pentagon ·psychic pr~lct bombing?
The
Daily
Sentinel
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Wedl lll'ey,..........., .. 1117

orts
·
The D~y Sent~l
P
--------~----~--------~------------------~----~----------------~----~~----:w~•;n~•;•~;''MmUMY~~~

~ victory
;; By DAVI HARAIIi . '

N-Y
records 77-70
.
win over .Southern

-

a fine 20-point effort
from Daniel "Big Cat" Otto, lhe
Eastern Eagles let the Waterford
Wildcats out of the bag aod suffered
a scraichy 61-56 non-league loss
. Tuesday night ip boys' varsity basketball action.at Waterford.
·
Eastern; second in the Hocking
Division.of the TVC at 4-2, was previously 6,2 with one of the best
· t.eams- in the region. Despite its suecess, Eastern brought Jess than 20
fanno the game to cheerthe Eagles -

on. Cross country in Racine, Southern played to a packed house against
Nelsonville.
·Eastern was sputtering on less
than all eight cylinders as many of i.ts
contingent, including point guard
Eric Dillard have been battling the
llu. ·Already two of Eastern's girls
games have been postponed due to
the epidemic.
Ouo, who hit 6-12 from the field
and 5-6 at the line, dominated in
many. areas . Otto .grabbed nine

. Marshall men get Davidson
81' ~lrst SC.opponent tonight
. HtiNTJNOtoN, W.Va. (AP)- . game in which Southern (:onfcrence
)t...hall heads into Southern·Con- · leading scorer John Brannen was just
,._,play off a l;&gt;ig Joss in .which I of II from the field.
it.l filidinJ scorer had a mi5Crable
Davidson broke a two,game loll. oudhJ. . . '
·ing streak Sunday with a 9().66 win
. But coach GreJ White isn't com- over Connecticut College.
plaiainJ aboui his team's 8-3 o;tart.
David10n last season went 25·5,
· "lf someone would have 18id, includinJ 14-0 in the Southem.Con.
Hey c:o~~Ch, we'll Jive you 9-2 or 8· . fcrence before being upset by West3 aoinJ into conference play,' I em Carolina in the toumamC:nt finals.
would have taken it and skipped That knocked David10n out of a
every pme."
chance II advancing to lho NCAA
·. Marshall, the favorite Ill win the · tournamenl.
• leque'i Northern Divi1iob, plays at ·
David1011 returns just on.e 111.111er
Davidson (6-5) IO!fay ia iho telllll' this seuon. Narcisse EWOdo ~
leape opener; TIPoff is 7 p.m.
ihe team in scorina witiJ 16.8 poi nil
· ~I'IOit to Nonh '~Ji~- . per Jlrnll, Mark Do~Jiy averaaes
Alhlvtllt 83-63 011 Monday in a ,.. 13.5 per·conlelt,

Brooklyn Dodgers west after the
1957 season, a move still regarded as
bctray.
. B aldby many in Flat bush.
roa wuy producer Manny Kladitis said his investors, including
J~panesc backers, were interested in
bringing the Dodgers back to New
York, too, and he planned to.talk to
the muyor.
"It is crucial that the future ownersho~ be more than a faceless c~rporale cntoty or another cg~tistic,al
sports owner," Los Angeles Coun- .
cilwoman Laura Chick said in a.res,
olutio~ .she introduced Tuesday.·
Chack ligures the Dodgers arc
already home, and her resolution
urges 0' Malley to explore public
ownership of the team. ShC ·hcld up
the NFL's Green Bay Pll!'kcrs as a ·
model for the nation's second-largest
city.
Over 4 600 shares of Packers
stock arc ~wnetl by 1,898 poople,
with' no more than 200 shares owned
inqividually. When shires are sold,
which seldom happens, no profits are

TURLEY RECOGNIZED - Southern ..nlor bllakelbeH pleye#
Renee Tllrtey, who acored 35 polntl Monday night ~g~lnlt Belpre,
ICored 1he 1,0001h point of her career earlier In the 11110n. Turley
WBI hCinO!'Id before the Southern-.Nel1onvllJe.YOJ'I( bo.,.' conteat ,
Tueaday night tor her landmark achievement. Turley, whoJhaa 1,186
polnta overall, Ia one.of four totll Southern girls to ecnleve that
mark. The awarda preaentatlon was made by_coach Jilnnl Routh .
and athletic director Howle Caldwell. Ranee Ia the daughter of Ed
Turley of Racine. , .
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rebounds (Mills, Evans, Norris).
Southern goes to Eastern Friday.
Maynard had five of Southern's II
Quarter mlllll
steals, while' the team had 1.4
Nelsonville-York 18-21 -25. 13=77
turnovers, and 20 fouls.
Southern ·
·15-23-IS-17=70
N-Y hit 32-SO. 0-2 three-pointers
NelsonvUie· York: Eri~ Mitchell
and was 18-21 at the line with W 6·0-4= 16, Jeremy Schuhd-0-3: 13,
rebounds(Mitchell II , Smathers II), Josh S:wope 5-0-2=12, Flynt Smath·
26turnovcrs, 11 steals, and 26 fouls.
ers 3-&lt;1-.4= 10, Jeremy Thrapp 13-0Southern lost th~ reserve game 0:26. Totals: 3l·0-1Y22-77
52-51 at the buz1.er led by Buckeyes
Soythem: Ad11111 Roush J..(l-0=2,
Oliver with 16 and Higgins wilh 12. Ryan Norris 3-2-6=18, Jamie Evans
Jason Allen had 17 for Solnhcrn, . · 3-4-5=23,)cssc Maynard 3-0-2=H,
'while Bcnji Manuel had 11 and Troy Jcrrod .Mill.s 6-0-0= 12, Billy Shopliobuck liud u gqod game with nine. pard 0-0-2=2, 1)oson Buckley 2-01=5. Totals: 1~1fillh70

lsYo•r Ho•se
.l-ady for
Winter?
·we carry:
....latlon-for
Pipes,
Window Kits,
HHtTapes ·

. Whitllleh nailed a three pointer and

frel:

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WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember. that special someone this ·
In
.Valentine's Day with a

mesage

The Daily Sentinel .
• .Sweethearts • Moms &amp; .Dads_'• Grandparen~ Thacbers
·
, • Babysltters • Friends
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r-·-··-·--------------------·----..
Print,. . . . . . .
thelleal ..... alollg
wflll $6.00 to: .

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In thtJ NHL,

Llmr2o
words!

••••..•.,
Stripping.

.PICKENS
. .
HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.

: " By The Alloclltecl Prell
" If l~y ·were passing out super~
)lcro capeJ, the Pittsburgh Penguins
would rate three or four. And then
• : there's that guy in Philadelphia.
:.
Jaromir Jap, Ron Francis and
: • Mario Lemieux combined for seven
:: points Tuesday night as Pittsburgh
·: beat the New York Islanders 5-3.
::; That line ha' combi~ 7l .goals
: ~ and 102 assists this season.
:.~ . ~'When you ha.ve Superman, Bat, man and Robin, they're going to get
· :;~ u few,'' 'New York's Travis Green
~~ said.
,
,
::: Also.worthy ofmerllion was goal·[' tender Patrick Lalime, who ninde ~9
:, saves; including 19 in the first peri.; .od in holdins ·New York to a 1-0
·pead.
; t . At Philiodelphia, Eri.i: Lindro!l had
[ Ja goal and two as.•ists to extend his
: l scoring 11reak to 17 games, one shy
·~~·of Bobby Clarke's ·team record, as
; tile flyers beat Boston 7·3. Not coin~ • cidentally, the Flyers are 14-0,3 dur. ~[ iog Lindros' run, the longest unbeat·:' en run since Pittsburgh ·was undc·
reated in 18 games in 199,3 '
; ~ ~~I think it's QUr skating," Lindros
O: ..id of the Flyers' streak. "We're on
:: tile puck quitker ·and we've tcally
: • JOI:IO!Ile jump out then:."
:: ,LaJime wis a wall until the Pen:: auins' biJ 1uns 1101 untniked in the.
·: second period. .
·
:: Lalime stopped every shot in the
:· first J11Drioc1 cxcepl for Bryan Berard's
:: 40-foot slap ahot II 8:30.
; "Someti~s. you iake.tcams a lit: •tie liJhtly. ~ Penguins ~oat:h Ed191!!!·:: ston said, "and it ·looked like we
•: wen: standinr around in tile· first
·;period and nothinJ wa happening.
: ~ . "We were very fqnun•te IC! come
~·out of the first perioc! down only 1~ ... Johnston said. "I ihink if they got
:.two or three pis. they,would have
--L-.1
.....,.rn .
.. ,-.-...-....
us pretty ........
: ,New York took 1 2-0 lad II 3:48 .
; of the second · period on Bryan
Smolinlki;slllh loa! of ihueason,
.)lu! i! -. n'J lonJ before Pittsbut]h
-itOnnlld aholll.
/
·
:L "I !hough~ we wen playina pretJ®CI. but tl!en theY'IOI 00 • roll,
:lnd they just .exploded," Islanders
forward Many Mcinnis said.
• JqriCored 116:47, Francis tied it

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without Smits.
''He was big factor," ~aid coach
Larry Brown, who got his 600th
·NBA victory. "Him being there
meant a lot to this team."
The Pacers wol).withoutstar Reg- .
gie Miller, who was.sidelined by the
flu. Filling the:offensive void were
'Dale Davis (9-for-9 from .the field,
21 points), Travis Best ( 19 points)
and Jalen Rose, who scored 16 as
Miller's replacement.
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was the ·
Los Angeles Clippers 87, Toronto
80; New York 102, Dallas 72; New
Jersey' 90, San Antonio 74; Atlimta
105, Phoenix .103 in overtimej Mi'Jwaukee 86, Detroit 76; Houston
l04, Minnesota 95; Seaitle 94, Miami85 ; andDenver 109,Sacramento
96.
Hawks 105, Suns 103
Henry James hit a three-pointer
with one second left in overtime lO

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give Atlanta its 12th straight home
Nets 90, Spurs 74
over Miami, including f 0•0 at Scat 0 ;
victory. Christian Luettner scored 30
At ., East Rutherford, Jayson ·tic. Tim Hardaway scored 2K points .
points forthe Hawks, while Dikcm- Williams had 19 points and 16 for the Heat, who lost 'their second
be Mutombo had 22 points and 21 rebounds In his return after missing sll'aight on • West Coast trip· after:
rebounds. :
. 10 g!lllles with injuries. Williams; winning 14 in u row on the road ..
Clippers 87,·Rapton 10 ·
· who was sidelined with tom ligaRockets 104
At Toronto, Loy Vaught had 21 . me,rits in his righi thumb and . a
. Tomberwolves .95
•
points and 14 rebounds as the Clip, strained right knee, helped the Nets
Clyde Drexler scored a season-;
pers rallied to win their fourth snap a thrce:game losing streak.
high 37 points and Hakccm Olujustraight. Damon Stoudamire sc:_ored .
Bucks 86, Pistons 76
won shook off a poor shooti'ng"per::
25 points'for the Raptors, who have ,
Vin Baker had 25 points and 12 'formancc with 14 fourth-quarto;,
lost four in a rolll.
·
rebounds, and Milwaukee held points. The loss sn3J111Cd Min'ncsota'" I
Knicks lO:Z, Mavericks 71
Detroit to 28 points in the second home winning streak at four garnett ·
At •New York, Dallas barely half to win at the Palace of Au~um and improved Houston's road record,.
avoided its lowest point total ever. Hills. 1'\le Bucks snapped a five~ . ·to 13-2, best i~ the Western Cclnfer~'
The Mavs were on pace to break game losing sneak ·and ended cncc.
their franchise low of 68 before Detroit's four-game winning streak.
Nuggets 109, Kings 96
·bac~up center Greg Dreiling scored Grnnl Hill led the Pistons with 24 . . LaP)10nso Ell.is scored 13 c)f hiJ
.five points in the tina! 32 seconds. points, nine assists and caght. career-high 33 points in the third
Pairick Ewing had 18 points, 10 rebounds.
quarter a' Denver won at Sacm, :.
rebounds and seven blocks for New
SuperSonics 94, Heat 85
. menlo. Ellis, whose previuus high
York, which played without ailing
Gary Payton scnred 30 points ~nd • was 30 against San Antonio in the
starters Chris Childs and Larry John- Sam Perkins had 13 in the fourth Nuggets' last game. connected on 14
son.
quarter, including four three-point- of21 shots from the field a.' Denver ·.
crs. The Sonics improved m 16-3 · ..snapped a four-game .losing streak: ··

.

at 12:47 and Kevin Hatcher made it
3·2 al 14:20. Lemieux assisted on
each.
". "It hardly seems fair, but that's
the way it is," Islanders coach Mike
Milbury said. " It's totally unpredictal&gt;l•.totally fascinatingtowaich
at times and frustrating when you're

Jonas· ·Hoglund and Oermait Titov.
Jamie Baker had two goals and
M~ts Sundin one for the Maple
Leafs.
· Kinp 6, Canucks l
.

. them, they lind a way to score;
"That line makes. coaching as
useful as an Edsel," Milbury said.
"We· have some pretty good talent,
but that gr9up ha.' three of the finest
· players cvcrto lace them up."
·
In other NHL games, il " was
Edmonton 5, St. Louis 2; Calgury 4,
Tbronto 3 in overtime; Los Angeles,
6. Vancouver 2; and San Jose I, Buf· falo 1. ·- -~ • .
Flyen 7, Bnllns 3
Lindros. has 12 goals and 16
a..sists in. Philadelphia's unbeutcn
run, which has the Flyers atop the ·
NHL with S~ points. Dale Hawcrchuk also scored twice. and Kjell
Samuclsson, Mikael Renberg, Joel
Otto and Daniel ~roi~ had goal~ as.
the Flyers won at home. Philodelphia
took control by scoring four goals in
6 1/2 minutes in the first period.
Ollen 5, Blues l
, Doug Weight had two goals and
an assist ;o.s Edmonton spoiled the
coaching debut at St. Louis of Joel
Quenneville, a former Colorado
. assistant who took over on Monday
from interim coach Jimmy Robens.
Edmonton's fourth wrn in a row
JIIIPped a foua;-Jame unbeaten streak
fOI' !he BlueL
·'
·
Edmonton's Andrei Kovilenko
· added a JOIII and an assist to run hii
scorina sauk to .II games. 5ecoJKI
behind Lindros among IICiive streaks.
· Brett Hull.and Tony Twist had tile

LAKEWOOD. Ohio (APl. Cleveland Indians pitcher Jose Mesa
and another man were due to be
arraigned today on charges of gross
. sexual impo.sition and carrying a
concealed weapon.
,
Both are free on $5,000 bends,
pending arraignment in LakewoOd
Municipal Court.
Police in this Cleveland suburh
said two 26-ycar-old women rcported that Mesa, 30, of Westlake, and
David F. Blanco, 34, of Solon, fundied them in a Lakewood motel ·
. room early on DCc. 22.
Arrest warrants for the men were
issued on Dec. 27, and Mesa was
arrested 'thut night. in the Flats, an
area of Cleveland knbwn for its
rcstaurunts ·and night clubs, police
said.

Ed Olczyk scored three goals and , had tw~ aSsist~ aPiece, and K:c~il;l
Vladimir Tsyplakov had two as Los Stevens scored only the third gnal in
Angeles ended a four-game losing 14 games for the NHL's secondstreak.
Brad Smyth and Dimitri ·Khristich
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Worst power-play unit as the Kingli
ended Vancouver's four-game wiO::
ning streak at the Forum.
.,

Poll"ce arrainn
/ndi.an.s' Mesa .
:#
~':.':,':!';:~~!;a~~:;~~~~~~~~!~ on sex and weapons charges·

St. Louis ~··
,
· . n u MQie Lllll3
At CalJII)', 'l'heonn Fleury
fon:ed overtime wilh a JOil 31 secOIIda from the end of repllliOII, and.
Dave Oqner ICored wi~ a minute
left in 'l'n64 time. Steve ·Chiasson
••;111 d011 Pleur)l's JOIII and • got
an lllilt on the winner when his slip
shot - deflected inlil the net by
0
scorinJ for Cai,.,Y

c.

-=

Later that night, Blanco was taken into custody when he went to the
Lakcwood.jail to liail out Mesa. .
· Bla!ICO lind Mesa could lilcF up to
:one year in prison 'on each felony
charge if convicted, police said.
Lakewood Police Capt.. Alan
Clark said t&gt;oth men told pulicc that
they had not molested the women.
Police said both men had loaded
9mm handguns in ·their vehicles
when they were arrested.
Mesa, who is from the Dominican
Republic, last. week told a Santo
Domingo television station lhul he is
innocent and expects to be cleared of
the charges in cou'rt.
Mesa was 2-7 with a 3. 73 earned
run average and 39 saves in 44
chances in 1996. ·
·

'·

'b·. . .
openat8am.
.Monday-·

l-UI."""'

Ulllo
·

~[.
GALLII'OUS '

•

~

...

349 Third AYellue
MIDD~

luriAND

..

..

'"!~
POMEROY
Lynn &amp; 2nd Sts.

___i?)f.1ttd Street

i
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·penguins be~t Islanders 5•3; Flyers and Oilers also .win

:!

Anyone who would ippredate a thoughitul word from you! All Valentl..e
. Hearll will be Pllblilhed In the Febnary 14ih Issue.at cost of only.$6.0111
MUST BE PREPAID!

Meigs: Brad Davenport 2-1-0=7·~;
each. John McGrew and Donald
Paige led Miller with eight points Brad Whitlatch 4-2-0=14, Colin •
Roush 3-2-0=12, Mull Williams S-0-_;
each.
·
1=11. Daniel Hannan 3-1-1=10.' :
The future: Meigs is off this
weekend and wiJ1 ·host Southern on Totals: 18-6-2=56
'
Miller: Shaun Ncnl 8- I-7=26, ;
Tucsduy. Miller will host Trimble on
Nick Altier 1-U-1=3, Jeremy Ma~sey •
Friday.
1-1-5=10, Doug Gill 6-0-3=15, Ryun
Qjlarter .lliJalli
Beal
1-0-0:2. Totals: 1'·1-lfia60 :::
Meigs
1'0-11-13-22=56
Miller
10-15-14-21=60

had II and Hannuri chipped in with
10. No other statistics were available
on either team.
·
Reserve notes: In t~e reserve
contest Meigs outscored Miller 2010 in ihe second half to pull away
from u·one point halftime lead and
postu 39-28 win. John Davidson led
Meigs with 13, J.T. Humphreys and ·
Grant Abbett added eight points

•

·." By The -oclllted Prest
shooting," said Smiis: who was I'
· .
Penny Hardaway returned Ill lhe for-8 from the field. "I was just hap·' Orlando lineup, and Rik Smits was py to come back to a win. That's all
baCk on the cOurt for Indiana. Nei- that matters. in the end." ·
ther had 6 great aame, but both
ln addition to getting Hardaway
tlelped their stntgaling team• win,· · back. Orlando got a boost from the
Hardaway, sidelined mOlt of the rewm of Horace Grant and Nick
season because of knee problems, Anderson, who also had been sidehad IS points, seven assists and six lined with injuries.
tumovers as the Magic·beat Philadel- · Grant scored 20 point~ and
.' phia 109-88.Tuesday night.
Anderson had ·12 points, eight
·•
"I was never nervous, just anx- rebounds and five assists for the
· · ious to get out there .on the floor and Magic, who lost 13 of their previous
~ run up and down,'' Hardaway said. 16 games. ·
.
.
-&gt; "I wasn't really worried about my
"That was fun fora change," said
..•. 1\nee. It was just a matter df how I coach Brian Hill, who has used II
· was going to play. I see I had six starting lineups in 29 games. "But
, 'turnovers, so I'm a little rusty."
just as we expected, it's going to take
·
Smits, playing his first same of us a little bit of time. We've got to
.! the season followina surJery on
getalittlebitoftherustoll"
both feet, had two points and five - • Smits was rusty in his ·season
rebouncfs in Indiana's 95-90 victory debut: but the 7-foot-4 center helped
over Cleveland.
the Pacers by just being on-the court.
"I was pleased, but not'with my Indiana struggled to a 14-16 record

I

INE LOVE LINES·

hitting 16 for 70%. Meigs went to
the.line only four·times and hit t:wo
for 50%. Meigs was called for 19
personal fouls, while the Falcons
were whistled foronly five.
Neal, who led all scorers with 26,
was joi;ned in double figures hy
Doug Gill with 1S and Massey with
10. Whitlatch led the Marauders with
14. Colin Roush added 12, Williams

GETS OFF SHOT - Mllga guard Bred Whitlatch (21) gets off -:
ahot IIOilllufler• ·~ the thrw-flolnt line while Miller's Ryan Bee .,
often belatld defilnM during Tu11day night's TVC contest ,_,...
Hemlock, wh-.the FalconaiUrvlved Whitlatch's 14-polnt effOI'I 10:.:
win 6().58. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
~ :

0

Waterford: Thad Skinner 1-0- ·
0=2, Mike Wright 3-1-2= 1I, Aaron
Powers 1-1-8= 13, Tyson Gillis 2-04=8, Nate Long ·4-0-3= II, Jeremcy
Millcr4-0-0=8, Ben Heincr0-0-1=1, ·
Brian Mjller 3-0-·1=7. Totals 19·1·
19/U=6l
. ' ..
Eastern: Eric Dillard 1-1;8=13,
Josh Casto 2-0-0=4, Rick Hollon 10-2=4. Dunicl Otto 6-l -5=~. Corey
Yonker 1-0-1 =3, Steve Durst 3-0· ·
6= 12. Totals: 14·1-12130--56

.

OETTING IN POSITION for the Nbound arwMelga trontmen Daniel
Hlnnan (far left), Matt Wl•ma (30) and """' \Yitl14nll (50) and Miller
Falconi Nick Altllr (30), Shaun .Nell (5) and Ryan BIJ!II (43) during
TUesday nlght'l TVC ga11111t Mllllr Hlah School, where the Falcons
won 6CHII. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
·

.: Returns of 'Penny' and Smits help Magic and Pacers win

there w~ul~ be more investors, Chick·
··said. When she empha.,ized 10 col· the I'dca d'd
'
lc.,gucs that
I n't involve
lax money, ;'they got excited;'' she
·
·
saad.

range of $300 million. And the
c11 unty has about 9.1 million more
. people than Green Bay. .·
.
"In a city this si 7.e, I think it
would work even easier," because

0

·

In theNBA,-

'·

allowed. The team tutned .a $5.4 million profit. last year.
If the 9.2 m
. · illion people ,·n Los
Angeles County bought a $30 share
apiece, they would be in speculating .

Meig~ ·

;t

Ueberroth and Murdoch stand _among prospective. bidders
By LARRY GERBER
Angeles-based Fnx .Television, a
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Fonner unit ·of Rupert Murdoch's New~
. baseball commissioner Peter Ueb!:r- Corp.
. ·
roth ~ays he and a group of investors
Observers said tile accjllisition
woul!l consider buying the Los would make sense for the network,
Angeles Dodgers if lhe price was which will broadcast Dodger games
right.
this season, and for Murdoch, who
· And what might be right? The could then profit from Dodger telcBaltimore Orioles sold for a record casts on his other communications
$173 million to a group headed by holdings.
Peter Angelos. That was Jn 1993;
"[[buying the Dodgers became
"The Dodgers baseb'aR franchise part of the sports plan of Fox,"
is, in my view, the most valuable , Ucberroth told the Trmes, "Rupert
franchise in· baseball," Ueben:oth Murdoch would more than likely be
said Tuesday, a day after owner Pet~r ·the successful bid!ler•.in my view."
O'M~IIey announced that the team ··
· Fox executives could not be
WI!S ~p for sale.
. ,
reached by ihe paper for comment.
"We would have a strong interest,
Industry experts speculated that
but I dmi'tthink we'd be a very like- ' the Dedgers' starting price would be
Jy winning bidder becailse of the $200 million, but the closing would
marquee nature of the Dodp:r fran- ,be closer to $300 million. O'Malley,
chisc," said Ueberroth, wh01e whose family has controlled the
gro,up's bid forthe.CilifomiaAripls franchise since 1950, said he would
last year was outdone by the Walt iake his time. .
Disney Co. ,
~·Results are more important than
The Los A~rgelu 1inr!' ICJ;IOrled timing," he said Monday. "We 've
.!cxfl)' lhlll·othe_r prospe~l!v~ bidd~rs probably receoved one offer a year
1ncliide O.J. Sompson cnmonal tnal for 25 years. I may be here for a long
lawyer RObert Shapiro and Robert time. It will not be a circus."
•
Daly, the ·co-phainnan of the music , · Politicians did get into the act,
an4111m divisions of Time Warner. however.
., aaCfi.told the;papc:r he would conIn New York, Brooklyn borou~h
1i~ bid!tlna as ·part of ·a group of
President Howard 6olden senllcners
welllhy investC!fS.
, .... · · ·
to Gov. George Pataki aoid Mayor
11le paper also r_eported · that Rudolph Giuliani asking for a comnuroe!'llu• in~i~fl in ~he SiK!rtS and mission tO look for ways to bring the
telclcommunocauona mdustroes ate team "home.".
,
speculatinJI .ilbout a bid from Los
Walter O'Malley moved the

The Dilly Sentinel• P8ge s·

!

rebeunds and had four steals. Despite e..S to the tunc of 16-8, then despite . WHS had·28 reboun~s (Powers 7) ;
being under the weather Dillard hit being ·outscored 25-22 in the last 18 turnovers, II assists and 29 fouls.
8-10 at ihe line ·to push his game round, Waterford strutted a 61 -56
Reserve · notes: Waterford won
totals to 13. while Steve .Durst hit 6- victory march:
the reserve game in a 57-17
Eastern hit 14-35 twos, hit 2- 10 sideshow. Nick Poumeycr had I8
8 at the line for 12 points.
Aaron Powers oulpowered the three-pointers and was 22.30 from and Luke Crock 'had 12. EHS was ·
Engles with 13 points, While Mike the line. EHS had 27 rebounds (Otto led by. Robert Harris )Yilt) six. ,
Wright and Tyson Gillis each haa II. .9, Hollol!._~); II steals (Otto 4); 20 . The ruture: Eastern hosts SouthThe game was tied at 8-8 after . turnovers, six assists and 24 fouls . em Friday.
· ·
·
one round and like atthe half at East· Wat~rford had a 19-43 shooting Ougrter lll1llb
. e~ was ucd 23-23 after .two. The
night, a 2-9 night from three point Eastern
8-15:8-25=56
th~rd, quarter was fatal to the ·Eagles.
land and a 19-26 night ill the line. Waterford
. 8-15-16-22=61
The Cats ci1pped the EHS taolfealh·

On the future $Bie of the Los Angeles Dodgers,

over

. Ro111h scored on a IS footer to pull
;;
Moll:.
Meop 16-21im1 Meiga to within 29-28 with 6:20 left .
,. the foul hne and went on to defeat
Daniel Hannan gave the M111811d;: the Mlrltlden 6().~ in 'l'ri·Valley ers a 34-33 lead with 2:02 left in the ·.
~ Conference buk~thall action Tues- . period on a bucket off the offensive
day evenin1 at Miller Hi1h Scho&lt;il. boards. But the Falcons came back
. ::
~eig~ ~el.l to 3-3 in the TVC's and scored the finalsix points of the
:• Ohjo Do viRion .and 4-6 overall. !ll'riod and took a 39-34-lead atlhe
.: Mille~ raisc:s .i~ record ~o.2-4 in the · end of the thiro period.
. Williams hit one of two from the·
.: Hockona Divtloon and 3-7·ovmll.
:• . Shaun Neal did the damago for line with 7:46 left in the 1ame, but
.~ the Fa_lcon~ ~ng in a aame ~igh
Robert Qualls pulled dOWn the .
rebound off the offensive boards and
1: 26 pmnts. oncludong seven of eogilt
: ~m the bne. Neal led three Falcons fed Whitlatch for a three to pull
• tn double figures.
Meigs to within 39-38. ·
, :
The Marauders.carne outaod took
Miller took a S2-4S llljvantage
.~ an early 4-o lead on two Brad Whit- with I :17 left on a pair off= throws
~ latch buckC!S· But the Falcons reeled
by Doug Oill. But Hannan answered
~ off se~en on a row and took a 7-4
with a three from the top of the key
; lead woth 3:07 left when Jeremy to pull Meigs to.wilhin 52-48. After
·~ Massey scored.
.
Neal hit one of two from the line
.~o straight buc)(ets by Matt . Davenport put in a put baok off th~
., Wolhams. put th~ Marauders on top offensive boards to make it a 53-SO
8-? with 2:JS left in the ~riod. But Falcon advantage .
.
.~ Moller~a 10-8 lead wtth.)6SIIC, Massey hit fourstraight.from the
:1. onda left ·on the period when Neal line and Miller took a 57-SO lead
, sc~ on a layup. ~itlatch ~ored with 23.9 seconds left. But Meigs
. ~oth 18 seconds left on the penod to refused to die as Davenport drained
·; lie tile. game II ten at the end of the a. long three with' 20 seconds left to
. ·penod.
.
.
.
pull Meigs to within S7-S3.
The Falcons took a 18-14 lead
Massey hit the second of a two
: . with 4:06 left in the period when shot foulto give Miller a 58-53 lead,
~ Neal scored two straight buckets. but Roush answered with another
• But Meigs came *,k IJIId tied the three with five seconds len to pull
· game at ~ 8 when C:Ohn ~oush scored Meigs to within twa at SB-56.
off a,Whollatch asstst. Moller went on ·
Neal however iced the win with
a 7-3 nm to take a·1S-2 1' lead at the a pair of free lhrows with four sechalf on another Neal .bucket.
onds left to give Miller the 60-56
Neal gave thC home team a six- win.
·
~int lead on a pair ~f
lhrows
The difference in the game was at
woth 6:34 left in the thn-d pertod.. But the line where Miller went 23 times ·

·· waterford cracks halftime tie to get past Eastern 61-56
~spite

-

'

Ohio

Miller gets 60~56
:} II •~!'lei~ a~il

eyes I..St possessiO.. as the Tornadoes
By SCOTT WOLFE
were·content in Wlllching its chances
Selrtlnef Coriespondent
Ranked fifth 1n the state. the Nel- slip away with each tick of the 1:36
sonville-York Buckeyes got their left on the clock during N-Y's final
biggest scare of the year in narrow- . possession .
Caldwell closed on another posi. ly defeating Racine Southern 77-70
Tuesday night in a wild, exciting, tive note, saying "If we play with
and physical exhibition of boys' var. that kind of effon, we can.play with
sity Tri-Valley Conference basketball a lot of clubs from here on out."
N-Y coach Jay Cline said, "This ·
at Southern High School's Charles
· game was a dogfight. Southern just ·
W. Hayman Gymnasium.
The unbeaten Buckeyes were kept coming Ill us. lbey wouldn't let
again on the ropes late in the game, down and we couldn't shake 'em. At
but a pair of Jeremy Thrapp cheery this point, eve.ryone wants a crack at
picking buckets in the waning stages . us. 1 though! our kids came through ·
though when it got to be crunch
·.widened the final gap.
·
For Southern coach Howie Cald- time.'' ...
Nelsonville is 10-0 and leads the
weli, the game was a moral, victory
1VC
Ohio division.
for the Tornadoes. Caldwell said,
SHS came out of the gille hot and
"The effort tonight was as good as
I've ever seen in 1 don't ·know how intense, Full court man and an
long here at Southern. We didn'tlose intense press yielded two quick Jesse
because of lack of effort, but playing Ma)'nard steals and a 6-0 SHS lead
hard can only gel you so far. Also, at the 6:46 inark. This prompted aNSEEKS TEAMMATE _:..... Southern'a J . .le Maynard (20) lookl for
we must not be too bad of ball club Y. time out, an act that sparked a 10- en open taa~te to whom he can paaa the ·bllllltetball while an
if Nelsonville is ranked fifth in 0 N-Y run and 10-6 lead to the 2:37 unidentified NeiiiOnvlli•York player defends on the play:durlng
Division III."
· mark of the 1st frame. Jamie Evans Tueaday night'a TVC contest et Southern High School, ~ the
Southern .is now 2-7, but sees a hit a trey and Ryna Norris canoed a vlaltlng Buckey" won .n-70.
·'
little break in its schedule as all but . pair of safeties for ari 11-10 SHS
one of the remaining games.comes lead, Eric Mitcllell went back door
man gymnasium·and the Tornadoes
against a more friendly Division IV . for a one point N-Y swing, then thefts with Maynard cashing in both
times for a 3 I-27 SHS advantage.
10 a64-S3 deficit after three rounds.
schjldule. Southern was coming off 1)oson Buckley. put SijS up 13-12.
Southern's last lead of the game
N-Y's widest margin came just priSouthern· squandered' away a
its worst defeat in over a quarter cencarne
on
Evans'
three-point
goal
with
·
or
at60-48 .
tury in a 9(). 39 loss to Chesapeake. tremendous wave of momentum at
left
in
the
first
half.
After
N-Y
1:30
Leading up to the. 3:06 mark,
the end of the frame to slip to a 15The only disappointment, Calderased Southern's 36-35 lead, Evans'
Ryan Norris turned a Buckey harvest
well cited in his club was th'at like 18 deficit.
into a 68-67 doglighl with 'eight
Getting his first-ever varsity start, two free throws sent SHS to the lockmany of its other losses this season,
er
room
trailing
39-38
in
a
hard
straight
points . Moments later, Nor· no one took charge for the Tornadoes sopomore Jerrod Mills proved to be
fought
baule.
ris exited with live fouls and Southwhen the game was on the line. a w~l.:ome spark to the stagnant TorSouthern stayed close lhe second ern's offensive llamc expired until
Southern slipped from a one-point nado offense. Mills joined a red-hot
Evans' last second trey. .
game of 68-67 at the 3:06 mark. Evans and Ryan Norris in a 10-2 half, but averaged a 4-5 point deticit
·
until
the
Buckeyes
got
hot
at
the
end
Southern
run
that
gave
the
hosts
a
Southern hit . 1·8-48 twos. and a
scoring just · one other goal the
of
the
third
frame
.
A
few
lay-ups
off
dismal
6-25 three-~ointers .while
.
rem·ainder of the ga'!'e; a last second 25.-20 advantage.
the
fast
break
and
a
major
league
canning 16-18 at the line with 30 ..
trey by Jamie Evans. Southern then · . Maynard and Billy Sheppard
.
failed to stop the clock on the Buck- whisked the ..lloor of two consecutive slam dunk by Thrapp rocked Hay.·

~ •Middleport,

s.Jem Street•

-

FDIC:

...,,

i

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••
•

•

••

'·•

�/

,. ....,....,,......., .. 1117

.? !Ill • TM Dally Sentinel

Pomlroy • Middleport, Ohio

'
In Top 25 college basketball,

.

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·

Marquette -and Dayton hand·Iowa· State &amp; Xavier. first losses

•
•lly 11111 Auoc~ Prna
-t It wun 1t a good night for unbeat·
; 1111.· It

was a great night for the all-

lime non-winner.
·
·' ' Fourth-ranked Iowa Stale and
·'No: 12 Xavier dropped from the
ranks of the unbeatens Tuesday
niBht, leaving Kansas, Wake Forest
and O..gon with that distinction.
Meanw6ile. Rutgers-Camden,
which took losing to a level no other team ever approached, finally left
the court a.winner for the first time
in almost five years, a span of 117
games.
•
Marquette beat Iowa State 67-64
and Dayton downed Xavier, Ohio
98-91 ; leavinl! them 116 games from
tying Division mRutgers-Camden's
record streak that ended with a 7772 victory over Bloomfield College.
' '" 'We're on a one-game winning
streak," freshman Dawan Boxley
'said afterthe Pioneers (1 -9) won for

thing lhll happens to you in your life,
you've sot a pretty good life. It's
only bubtball." .
In other games involving ranked
teams Tuesday aiJht. it wu No. 3
~ ue :
Kentudcy 90, Mississippi .Stile 61;
"This is not it. We hope to keep No. S Clemson 86, No. 10 l)ub 82
this going," he said. "I want to tell in overtime; and No. 23•Boston Colthe guys not to think this is all we lege 94, Syracuse 83.' ,
·
need to win."
. • No. 3 Kenblcky 90
The previous record for a losing .
Mltlb lpod s 61
S r t.
·
streak was 47 games by another . ' Derek Anderson
scored 10 of his
branch of New Jerey's state univer- 26 pgints during a 12-2 second-half
sity, Ringers-Newark, from 1983 to nin that led the Wilcl!:ats (13-1, 2-0 .
1985. The Division I record of 37 SE&lt;;) to their' 13th straight victory.
straight losses was set by The Citadel Horatio Webster had 17 points 10
from I anuary 1954 to December , lead the Bulldogs (7-8, 1-1), wbo
~~
••
h' h 31
1955.
.
Comm1' t•""'
a
~ason- 1g
,When the game with Bloomfield turnovers. Mississippi State was the •·
(5-11) ended, about I00 faris rushed_ laSt team to be&amp;t Kentucky in Rupp
the coun to celebrate with the play- Arena {Feb. 14, 1994).
Marquette 67
ers.
1
No. 4 Iowa St. 64
Bloomfield coach M1ke Mancino
told his players: "If this is the.worst
Aaron Hutchins scored'20 poiniS .
'·
the first time since biating RamaPo
College on Jan. 18. 1992.
Senior Craig Bell, 'Who had 14
points, was optimistic Rutgers-Camden's winning streak would contin-

.

left in rqulllion. ~Newton of poinl$forXavier(IO-l: 1-l), ,whi~h
(10-2), who held Iowa Slllte (10-1) the &lt;oisitina Blue DeYilt (11-3, 2-I) wasofftothe'best.startlnschool~
without 1 field aoal for 8 112 minutes was left ai!IIIC under the basket, but tory and_ mo~ed this week 10 its highdurins a 12:-2 nm that gave them a fumbled away a pass from Steve · ~~~ rankiiiJ·1n 38 years. TIM: Mus~·
Wojciechowski witb,r2.8. seconds 10 teers pulled within_~ve PQIRII- With
62-S4lead.
'
' .,,, . '
33 sec~&gt;nds relllllnmg•. but ~
Kenny Pratt, who scored nine of go.
. Wqjciechowski 0~ the overi.uJppk!n m1ssed a th~rpotn
Iowa Sta!C's final l~ _pcjniS, pulled.
1
time
with.
a
three-pointer,
b\11
the
attempt:
and H?skms made two ftu
the Cyclones within one with 'I: 16
remaining. Marquette lili~_a shot Tigers wept on an 8~ ron fDI' their t,hrows to seal it.
,
•·
on its next )l!lsseiionl.~ut Mike Bar- ninth slqight victoJj •While eriding ~
No.l3 Bostcm College 9!1
gan and Anthony l'ieper doubleDuke's six-same 'fimting streak.
. Syracuse 83 ··· .
·
teamed Dedric Willoughby and Mcintyre finished willi,1.7 pOints and
. Dany~ ~~rams had 28. po1~ts and
Pieper knocked the ball loose, was Trajan langdon had·•qreer-high 25 I~ rebounds as the Eagles (9-2, 4-1
fouled and made both free throws for Duke, but he scored ooly one B1g _Easl) held o~ a l~te rally ~
with 6:7 seconds l~ft. Willotlghby, pointo~rtjlefinal \O.minutesofthe )~ad'"!!;. bY 18 pomiS Jn '!'e-.-~
who finished witll,23 point$, missed 'game and missed l~e three'-pohlt- h8Jf.'l'asOJJ C.,polla had, a careet-hlgh
,
, ; ~~ PQints for SYf!"'ll"? (8-~·i.().;4),
ahurriedthree-pointshotjustbefore ers in the' o.venime.
the buzzer. . . ·• ~ · · ,
. .
DaytoaiS'i, • 1 '
•\ncludJOg a:l~yup ll).at ni~ •t ~S-' I
·
No. S Cfem.on'116 •, · •
•
No~.
l~XavJej{dtaJo!l(
·.
·
with I:S9"to go. B~tAbrams made
No. 10 Duke 8l
Darnell Hoskins scored a career- four free throws and And~ Bedard
The Tigers (1'3·1, ~-OACC) seta high 30 points and •:t.lr&amp;rk Ashman convened two mli~ to seal1t. '!be 0school record by matting 22 of 23 and Rodney Hortonne~h- had, 20 4 Big East. start IS a firs~ •for the
free throws. Terrell Mcintyre' ~f points for · the Flyers (6·4, 1-: 1 ~~~n, who lost at home for the
Clemson made twp free throWs to tie Atlantic I 0) . .Lenny Brown had 29 third bme th1s season.
the game 76-76 with eight seconds
' )
.
to ICIId the visiting Golden Eagles

.

.Glen-n proves unbelievers wrong· in Pats'·m~rch to. ~FC title ga111~: ,
Parcells wanted a defensive player with the seventh pick of the draft.
But the coach was overruled by team
owner Bob Kraft and draft boss Bobby Grier.
"There was a heated discussion,"
Bledsoe said, "but I think everybo.dy's perfectly happy with the way ·
things IUrned out, especially
myself."
The Jaguars already ha)&lt;e found .
out how dangerous Glenn can be.
His32-yardcatchinovenimesetup
the winning field goal in the Patriots'
28-25 win in the fourth game of ihe
season.
But Jacksonville has. the longesi
winning streak in football with seven str~ight wins. And New England
is brimming with confidence after
perhaps its most complete game of
the season.
That AFC championsh 1p game
will be "the biggest game of my
life," Glenn said, "and 1just wantto

By HOWARD ULMAN
· 1,
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)- Drew'
Bledsoe had no idea Teny Glenn
would be so sue&lt;!essful so quickly.
Bill Parcells didn't even want the
rookie wide receiver frdm Ohio
State. .
· Glenn has spent the season showing both how wrong they were.
In his first NFL game, he led New
England w1th six ,catches and a
touchdown. In h1s first playoff game,
his 53-yard reception on his team's
first offensive play started the Patritoward a 28-3 win over the Pitts·
!burg:h s:teelens on Sunday.
more win this Sunday
:;al~ai••sl Jacksonville will put Glenn.
the Super Bowl in his first season.
"I didn't know he )Was going to be
"said Bledsoe, who in his
ior., ..rl\' pro season finally has ~go-to
•~·~a; ~ ··'"The surprising thing is
quickly he's p!cked everything

.. .

college scores

.'EAsTERN CONFERENCE '

~

"~:lk~-~~lonr.t

-York........ ...li 9
Mrami .......... ..... .... ~
W111hin110n ......... J• •
Orlando ..... ......... 1~
NewJeney ............. 9
Pllillldelphia ......... 8
8011on ..... ...............1

Mid-Ohio Conr~rence

!ill

127

9 121
IS ~16
11 41~ ·
21 JOO
24 l~ .
H 2.1~

Malone 13;Cednrvdle 67
Mounl Vernon Nazarene 70. Ohio
Oominictm 68
R10 (Jrunde 80, Tiffin 76
l * ·(/rba~~6,f'mdlay71 (20T)

· 7
10 '
o:.- ~

Ohl~ Conference

U'~o
I.S'~;:

Baldwin-Wallace 76, Himm Col. 44
Carii11II02, Ouerbem ~4
_ John Carroll 72, He1U:Iberg 48
Moum Union 79. Mariena 60
Ohm Northern 72. Musk1ngum 61

c...., Ditolslon

OriCUIIO .... ......... .. 29
Oelrolt .........)..... ... 24
CLEVFJ..AND .:.:U •
Ari.Mta .... :r·········.l9
OwrloUe ..... ..... 18
Milwtwkee ............ 16
lridn1na .................. U
Toronto ... .............. 10

4 879
8 750
II 6."i6
II 6.'H
14 ~1
16 · . ~
16 484
22 ~~~

4~
7~
8~

12~
18~

lie I. ld.
8
9
19

I~

II

II

IJ'~
I 'i
I ~ '1:
19

:Dtlllns ..... ............ 10 20 .3H
S•n Antonio . . ..9 22
Denver ...... ,...........9 23
VMCouver ...•.. 6 27

or69

290

.281
.182

Akron N. 6.1. Akrnn E. 60
AlelUioder 61. W~!lb~t•n 4!'i

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Aurntu S I. Cuynhog;L Hu•. 19
Avon K~. Ohcrhn KO COT)
9tUIIYI,I M.

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•1
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c ' A:Jando l09}1uli\dnolllo 811 • ~· ~ ' ·
· ,•• •tiwoa 105· Phoeill.: 1!13 !011
'l".M
"~lwout« 86,
' 1l&lt;trok,76

•· !o ... 9~.CLEVBLAND9o
'i' ·' ·H9.U11on 104, Mil.._ 9'5
, s.'onle94.~.,.' ·•

; ben¢109, ~111006

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.S1111 Antonio at Boltun. ,7 p.m.
·
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t
7:)0 p,m, ', :'
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on at CLEVELAND11:JOp.m.

·~~

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61,

Ratl~twood 7~.
Riv~o..._,VIcw71.

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14. Rock Hill (,2
C1n. A1ken MO. Cln. T,dl 62
Cln, COOBII')' Duy 67 Summu Cmm.
try Day"'
Cln. Ekk!:r 7.1. S1. Henry 41
Clll. Hill$ Clw. Acatl (tO, N~·w Mmn11
ll ·
'
CUI Mueller 61. U.1y Ch.llllii~&lt;LtiL'·
Julie ~2
,
Ctn Ml Ht:allhy bH, Cui l\1lcr:un 6.\
Clearv1ew :'ae. M1dview 47
Col Ealllllk)l.lf ~9. Cui Nur1hhu1J ,'i.l
Col Mnriun· Fnmkhn :11(1 . Cui l.ln·
dtn-McK1nlcy ol9
'
Col. Mil'llin 92. Col 'Suu1h fi I
Col. Ready 69, C'ul. CcniL'rhllr)! -II
Col. Wmi\.'DUO 66. w.,ll.:IIIM M..·murml

St Bcn~lll'\1

Collinwc.11.ld 72. Wdluu~hl'iy S1i11U1f~,
Columhia 67. Luke RiLIJ:,L' ~J
~
Clllumhmna46. Sotlthcrn l.oc.\114:11
C(1nlarnl Ltt~view 4-1. BnK1klidd .\.1
• Cl\'lilw04'11.166. Rtl!.ll~luwn 62
Dlly N~mhnJgc 60. 'lipp Clly +a
Oay. M$aUowrJule M, I).Ly. Jctrc:nun

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60

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Wolli~S7.Fi,....... ~2

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WM!Iille !&gt;I. l:lu41ul&lt;e Nl&gt;l'th 40
Wiftoi..... 7l, Cin. Klnp 60

·: ' vv...,.
........
Ubo!ly "· !ltoiP&lt; 42
,.. 1•,v..,._ Chaney l)

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Ohio U.S. Jlrls~ "'res·
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Football

No- F"'"boiiLoq.. ' .

ARI7~&gt;HA CARDINAL.~: lOJ"'-'d K

Aile l;;1rll(n lu 11 OllL'-)'ellr cunlntCC.

Hockey

Jl.Ol, •

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Sprin11r•\!ld
~Jak

Southern Obi~ has~l fans C8ll
- ~a glimpse of history on lbunda,Y nialit if they're in. attendance tO
' watch the University of Rio Grande
lake on Ohio Dominican Coiieie.
Rio Grande head coach John
Lawhorn can pii:k up wil) number
400 of his cner if the llotlmeia can &lt;
subdue the Panthers at the Newt
Oliver Arena: np-off fot Lawhorn's
bru$h with history is .,. for 7:30p.m.
Now in his 17th seuon, Lawliom
is ihe dean ofMid~o Conference
hoop aenerals with a recOOl of 3991~5. He s~ his collegiate COICI,I·
ing career in,_l980 when he returned
to his alma mater afl!:r establishing
· a_sparkling prep coai:hing record·
Aftei: gntduating from Rio Grande
in 1%2, Lawho'm becalbe head

,,

-·-

2S-51=76
41-39=80

ntlla: Swick 9115-00-1119=26,
Jakubowski 6/7..(},11)..(W:J2, Berrier
3/4-ln.Q/1=9, Baraa 112-114-213=7,

I

'

'

.

'

112-0000:2. 'lllak: . . .2113-

1~76

Teal rc: 30-61 (49.2..,}
Rebo•adr: _42 (Swick 8,
Jakobowski 7)
Aalsto: 16 {VJCkers S, Berrier 4)
Stalst 10 (SlNick 6)
Tlancnen: 30
Fouls: 24

4113-:U/ll. .

'lbtal FG: 27-S8 (46.6%)
R1bD11. .: 30 (Brown 8)
'A 1 I II: 14 (Halley 7)
St b 19 {Kolcun 7)
-.......... .,..: 23

-·-

Rio GnJide: Riley 4/S-2/S-

FDIIII:2S

,

'

squad was nnk.ed number one by the

coach at BCifast High in Hilflland
Cpunty. Ill' just two seasons. his
Belfast sqUid went31 ~9.
Lawhorn followed up that snca:ss
with even more i~~~ptaSive numbers
at East Clintoo Local. He, led East
Clinton to a,.68-;J2 record qver five
seasons, wilfninil four league title$
and two seetional crowns. Lawhorn
was voied Clinton County coach of
the year in 1%7.
His ·-next stop wu Cin::leville, .
where he · coactiecl from 1969-7S. ·
DuriiiB that span, he coached Cir·
cleville to an 84-37 record and three
league chlllllpionships. Circ:leville
fi_nishod ,22-1 in 197'!-7~ ·under
Lawhorn's pidance, WJnmng sectiona! and di5t*.t gold That 1974-7S .

the year in 1980.
APinOhioamoniJAAAschoolsand
'f!lat same year saw the Lawbom
'&gt;!las rated third by the UP!.
move back lo southern Ohio and Rio
Lawhprn earned three coach of Grande. His reoOnt as a high school
the year awards at Circleville in coach was 280-93.
1971, 73, and 7S. He coached in the
The Redmen posted a 16-1-2
North-Sooth All-Star Game.iil t 97S. record in 1980-81 and then, as if shot
Lawhorn's last stop 'at the high out of a cannon, reeled off eight con·
school level was again successful. secutive 20-plus win seasons. Six
He built a solid program at Warren . times from 1980-89, Law hornWestern Resc..Ve from 1975-80. coached Redmen teams won 25 or
·
Western Reserve's record under his moregames.
watcli was 90-21.
.
The Redmen won 31 games and
That included sectional and dis- a spot in the NAJA National Tourtrict titles in 1917 and a spot in the nament in Kansas City in 1984-85.
,,'I'J:!at was the . (irst of four trips
'regional finals in 1979.
A sterling high school eoacliing Laiiwhorn and the Redmen have made
career. was capped off when to the NAJA's big dance.
After a 15-16 record in 1"989-90,
Lawhorn was named AAA coach of
Lawhorn steered Rio Grande back on

track the folloWing season, posting a
32-S mark and returning to the
nationaltoumey.
·
Since 1989--90, the Redmen have
won 20 or more contests each season. They've reached the 2S wip
plateau four times since then.
Lawhorn has coached Rio Grande
to five Mid-Ohio Conference titles,
three District 22 crowns and one
Great Lakes Region championship.
He has been voted MOC coach of
the year on ·six occasions.
"We've had some great players
and people at Rio Grande," said
Lawbom. "My family and I ~ve
been privileged to be around some
really quality people as lon11 as
we've been in coaching. It is a real
thrill to he a.ble to have.an impact on

young people and see them develop
into 'fine human beings."
In 1996, Lawhori-1 added one
more accolade to his long list of honors when he was inducted into the
city of w-n Sporu Hall of FaJIIC.
He became just the second ~
ever to be chosen for the Warren
Sports ~I of Fame.
.
"That wu very special." he- said.
"We had 50111e great years in Warrei
and really love the people diere."
Lawhorn is a native of HighJIIIICI
County where he attended Sinkia&amp;
Spring High School. Lawhorn's
mother Marie still resides in Sinking
Spring.
Lawhorn aad his •.wife Donna
reside in Rio Grande. they have two ·
sons, Luke and Duke.

.

Against struggling Ohio OOmlnl!"n, •

Red·men seek w•nn1ng mark in MOC play

,
The u,.iversity of Rio Orande , avencing 14.7 points per game. count.
The Panthers are led, by junior
RediiiCI1 hope to top the -~ mark Crose is Rio Grande's leading
in Mid.Qhio Conference play when rebounder avengi_ng 8.4 per contest. Midtacl Dillon and senior Bryant
they host Ohio Dominican College He's amonJ the MOC's top 10 Jones. Dillon is the Panthers' top gun,
l'hllrsday nighl at the Newt Oliver rebpunders.
scoring at a 16.2 pc~ints pe~ game
Rio Grande . freshman center clip. Dillon is a threat from 3-point •
Arena.
Rio Grande· (!1-5, MOC 2·2) ~sroy Grant~s the MOC's top shot range, hitting 35.2 pereent from out, .Qpened the new year wii\J a 75-62 blocker with 27 swats. He's avc(ag- side the arc. He also averages 2. 9
~in OV\11' Slulwilee slatll last Satur- ing 1.9 tier lame.
assists per game 10 lead the team.
Ohio Dominican (3-12, MOC 0- · Jonas is averaging 16.3 PQints per
!Jiay to even their MOC record.
·
~ "The Shawnee win was a. good 4) ~ stru8iled so far this Season. · game. Jones averages 5.6 rebounds
• one for us." said Lawhorn.. "It is The Panthers opened up the 1996-97
nighl.
.
~ important f9r us to win league C&amp;111p1Jgn with a 13 poinl victory
·Another outside threat for Ohio
over Fanshawe College of Ontario, . Dominican is swinglt)an Dave
i g~. especially at hornC."
but then fell o(l ~ tiQICS, losing 10 Dissinger. He's shooting 36.4 pcn:ent
~ , ~guard Sherron'Wilkerson
•
;continues to leacl the MOC in scor- stiaigbt ball games.
from long range and is averaging 6.9
·
Ohio
DOminican
is
2•2
in iiS last poiniS per game .
· jing. Wilkerson is averag!pg 28.6
point$ per game. He'saiSo.Wcraging four games. They defeated Sheridan
Coach Ed DiGenova's hall club is
.9 reboUnds per outing. · , . ,
, Coll~ge last... Sunday by a 79-68 youthful this season with nine fresh, '
Freshman fOI'Y(atd Jason Crose is

,.

'

~n and three sophomores on the
roster. Jones is the lone senior and
Dillon the only~unior in the line-up.
Th~rsday's matchpp 'with Ohio
Dominican will be the last home
game for the R:edmen before they
take on a .rugged three game road
1rip. Rio Grande will play at Mt. Vernon Nazarene, Cedarville, and
Urbana over ·a seven day span. ·
Rio Grande BP is sponsoring
Thunsday's game at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
·
Rio Grande doesn't return home
until Saturday, Jan. '25. when the
Rcilinen face Tiffin University. That
begins a three game homcstand
which includes Rio Grande hosting
Findlay and the Collel!e &lt;If Wcsl Virginia.

PI£TUBE VOIJR PET
AMONG 'I'D~... ,
PET VAI;ENTINES·I ,,
.'
'

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Run~~n,. 1 ~0
:~ ' '

-iii·
1

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r::dmnnttNI'il t'hi'
f ;JOpinl ,
IA.1mU ,nl OullnM, H:. 0 p.m.
l·loridali1Anahcim.ID·10r.m..

,, ,

':Jiiufl!l•y'~·'IP!nles

'•

'

.

likely a back problem," says Starkey.
204.
"And as a player gets older and
- Back injuries represented 7
pereent of all injuries that occurred has more .years in the league, the ,
!DOi'e likely he is to have problems."
durinJthat period.
Game-related hack- injuries to
. - Players missed 2.787 days diiC
to hack injuries. Only knee sprains ·centers are twice as common as at
any other position, and the majority
accounted for more missed days.
- Firty-two NBA players sur- of back. injuries are to playe111 either
fered bliclc injuries in the previous taller than 7-foot or shorter than 6,
three seascins. Six unde~went 3.
An aching back is probably the
surgery; 34 were cbronic condimost difficult injury to ignore and
tions.
St!U'I&lt;ey says 45 percent of hack play through, beeause the back. is
injuries the past three seasons were involved in practically every body
caulicd jly overstretc~ing and over- mo.vcmcnt.
"Goes away or you le~ to live
loading the hack: .
· ..
witb
it," says Wa,~hingt&lt;ln BulleiS
An increased emphasis on weight ,
trainina in recent ye&amp;lli,has incren.'!Cd general manager Wes Unscld.
He knows. He hyperextended his
the risk of hack Injuries. •
In some .instantes, pl~yers ·might hack .going after a rebound when he
'
be usin(! -'the wrong technique ,or playQd·for the Bullets.
He
bad
l&lt;tsit
d
chair
for
three
days
attempting to lift too .much.
.
One of the mostcommon .ptob- . because'be couldn 'tlie down. But he
lems involves simply stretching the didn't miss any g11mes.
Lany Bird was reduced to being
hamstring.
'
. . .
a
figurehead
with the origipal Dream
"You ~·t ~tretchthe hllll)strmg
withOut stretching· the bal:k,'' says Te11111 at ihe 1992 Sum~r Olympics
Wuhington B!JIIet5 stre~Jth .and becaJJse of a bad back. It eventually
conditioning coac~ Denn1s House· ' forced nim to.rcti~.
· Cleveland's All-Star center Brad
holder.
.
.
..
Age, we•aht and the pos1~10n .on Daugherty retired before the 1996-97
athlete play~ are.aillo fac:tors mbu'ck season began after missing the two
pre~ioliS seasons following back
injuries. " ·
'
SUI'JICry.
•
. "The, heavi~ ~~layer, th~ more ·

. Heat's injured list. But Gary Grant

{herniated disk), Alonzo Mouming
m
ighl'want
to
Wiltdi,
(lower bal:k \ strain) and · Sasba
NBAplllycn
·
1
heir backs tllis seuon.
Danilovic Sal out games aver the
With l1lOrio than half the !le&amp;SOn · weekend.
·lemaining, ·12 players Jiave already
Also, liin Hardaway collapsed
·)one on the injured list with bal:k- . with hack spasms during a game
.!elated problems. There were only apinst Indiana. . He only played
IS such injuries all of last ~n·.
eiJht minutes -but was back in ·thC
: David Robinson, San Anlollio's li~up two ni_ghl$ IIIIer.
f\11-Star center, missed the first 18
"It's perplexing," says Miami
~es of the season beeause of back· coach Pat R.iley. "We work hard
tram.
,
stretchina. doing a lot of things."
Toronto
rookie
Marcus
Camby,
But the problem often is the kind
1
third ~yer piclq:ld in last sum- of movement necessary in the g&amp;ll)j'. t
Iller's drafll,missed 10 pipes with a , "The boltQIIlline is most biome"'
lJllllined' ~li· /'"1; · •, .. ,.~; ·, . · chanics don't•thirik we're supposed
.1_ "Ceitai.i. l,nJu~. Jiop up iii dif· ,· to walk !Jpright," says Dr. Chad
' t"rent yean.~ ..Y•-JndU.... ~ ; Sbuby,the athletic training Jli'OII'Ill1l
fresident ~nii:Nallll!'ilhiJ year, · dir!:clor at Northeastern University' '
t's the bl(c'k.~f ~·t identiffa ~-- ·, and a consultant to the NBA Train'-In reason luf•j,t," ·;· ,c" :
''
ers Asaociation.
·
·
1 Several'odierpla~,ha"'ll)iped ··. ·' &lt;"Combinethtlt'withtherunnirig.
playing'time~ ~lik··~ 'or. j,lmping· and t~is!ing in basketball
minot: blclf ~.;;j ::· &lt;' :wr:.;~t·~· lind dcjin(.l'- four nights a week..
"The back
~ I~ il{ ~ ~~~IS' it takes atoll. Somebody
becauao playeh. bQdjpn .OJ~\J:'O'!. Wh!)'~IJcri .low blick diSorder iso't
and Oftlclitlls allo.f\.,,nMiiitl ~] lOng·for 'the NBA."
iiiJ," ,-saxs Atll!nia H-~ ~w·~
Staikey llibulatcs injuries for ~
trainer Joe O'TOC!IC: -' ~So}l,etlllng e. ,Trai!JWI ·Aiiloeilllio~ each year. Hts
i'ilgum show~ , .
' hu to glv.c." · -.l'.' -".'~' . ·
Miami !las been h~t hllfll!ist. On!y~ · ' - Back inj!Jries were .the third
Dill Majerle (strained ,~ back) IIIOII·~n( injury during the preandTonyFannlf(~liiJ'I~-~~- v~ous ~ -~:·with a to!JI of

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UO~'TON BRUINS : ""'•11•4 R\1(
Jean V...et-KnJ' from Pmvitlftcc uf die •·
AHL.. •

1116 124

' I'Jt!!ihuiJh ~. N Y. ~M~~Idt.n :\ ,1
l'hllndclpti{n 7, 18ns!tlil :t
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l'oll~t:U'y 4, 1'nmnl4t·~ )~YfJ
l.u!! Angclt.'!i 6, Vnncffll\it:r 1
Burrulo 1. S111i Jose ll{lie&gt; '

Llelroh ui l"huenia. 'lp.hl.

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WIV~ell Hu~J .. nd s~. AUIIlnlown,A ..h ~~
,
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l&gt;
Wuren K.ennttt.ly 76~ Pym:uunina

NI:W JERSEY Nl~TS ; Aelivlllcd F
l&gt;nvid B~noil (rnm lhc injun.'d llsl

11.1 116
IOl 126
110 140

HartrnnJ Ul CaiJUQ, IJ·)() p.m
S.. l.nuis ~. San Jme. 10::10 p.m.

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(.'olfM'lilkl ill OII&amp;Wil(":J:O p.m.
Talll{lU Buy ul Ptuludelptua. 7:JU fl.hi.
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lk.'Siill:lllu n U~y cnntract ~
INDIANA I'AGl~k."i. 1\cuvatL'IlC Rik ,

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C1•k,mrJu . ........14 10 7"" S$ 144 4JK
l~.hnun1un ..: . ... Ill ~'I oW 42 141 129

Tan1pn Ba)' 111 N.Y.

Pt.-rkln&amp; 40, Nnrwnlk 2t.

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_ . ~ r.,v. W: ulk."fty Snlcn16.tj

~41

•

BOS'I'ON'C"ELTICS Wa~vNCikcu

Huncud.

Tuesday's St.'ftres

Chr. 42. Victory Otr. 31
N Ci1n lma1J, New PhilndclrJiia .~K
Newurk 5~ . GruvcJMI1 :t:ti
Nc:wl(ln 3'»'. Yellow srnng1 )6
Ori\11),.'&amp;1 t'hr :IK RCi!IRll45
,
Orrvtlle 17. W11ynetlllk! 17
Pcrry5bur~ ~. Anthony W1tynr: 47
Prehlc: ShtiWik!C 64, Twin ViiiiC)' s
'

127
liM

· ,

... IS21 1{11, ~7 , 111

'

110

122
101

li::......... . .JJ1~ j.fit $ ·~
t1Ji~:D~tJ.'. .... .'.

Ba.kethall

'' ..

N1"-1 Buktlllall A1110r&amp;lliCIIli •
A"ll.AN'rA 'HAW~S ' A\:,!vated I'
l ')'mn\: Curbin fmm lhc iti) Urcti liM~
Waived F Wil!u; UurtUit •IUitl r l&gt;arrua

, lkj!"'h ........ 20 IJ 71!1 47 ll~ K~ .
1'111.:mx........ ... 1M I \I 4 40 110 1.111
,!Jt' l:tklla: ..'.... . IM,21 4 !L441 t12 . lo&amp;l

K'i, CnVIn![lltrt }fl

t'blilj\.'(~)16t

.
; • Tn~t~MWIM)I~ IJI~ PUiu .. :z.K
r'
Union l.ocad 77. Bcllmte ~~ Juhn' s

G.ihpoNo l9, PoiniPieuaiM. W.Va.

w.,...~ H11. 71

40

Sl Cluirsvilll: 76. Burncsville M
Slt.iQbmv111t; !'1$, WellniiiC 40
Shlw 92; Akron SI:.V-S1.M 62
SmUihura 63, Lukellli'KI s~
Sti\.'Cistinro 49. Worerloo 47
Strull.:t~ 42. Nlks :t7
Swantdlt16. EVCI'Jrc&amp;."D 67
Teays .Vall 91 , Hmnt11un Twp. 36
Tcmpjct.'lv. 11. Wurld HnNc~l ~6
Tul. Ctwiathan 66, MaunM:~: Vul. ~M
·rvt Se, l:f!lhl:l• M. l"nl Srun 60

\

44

'.

+'· Cin. ~klund 41

103
92-

C.nlnolDIY-

Mu~aduru

RIV\.'rMidc: S9.

62

D11)' Mumu Vodley M. ( 'm. O~rbtiun
36
·"
DelawnR!' 01r. 69. Uberty Clu. ~
Dov~ 66. W HlllnlCI .\6
Dublin Cufrman ~~. Thumus WorlhtnJIOn J7
' .
O..blhi Scioto 46, Wnler\'ille S. 4ll •
E. Pakltint: 1~ . Usbnn 57
&amp;u1en1 Brown ~. North Adams ~
Eos1wood 82. &lt;Jihtanburg .'16
Fllirklwn 6:\. Bodldna60 {OT)
Foehf 7S, WoodridFlO
' Fioher Catb, SO. Now Albany 40
I. ~klin ~11 ~.Col. Ccnecnnill ~3 ·

Mm~ll'f

W
Mudi!tOO 42
S Gullia 101, Sb;awll!:l.l (.,ar 4-1
~~~~uiky K6. N. R!df.tville 67
SebrinJ 5!1, CNJ!IVJ&amp;:W 41
SholkL-r His '.14, Pawmu $7
,
Suuehview 60. Clc. Kcm~~:dy aiO
S)lriiiJburtl 6l, Cin. N«woOO l6

Che~aptnkC

..

lie J. I bi. GJ:: 1i.1

WESTERN CONPERENCE

McnlorChr 41, CrosJrutttl!i )I
Milan F.di~on tl7. Clyde ~6

~ •
MuMkingum~7

Atbmflc Di•IMnn

Mun1reui .....1.. .... I6IK . M1hW 136 I~
BIIMkiiJ ..... .... ... : I~ IIJ frl( 36 116 l&lt;l:t '
Oltawa ... ...:...... l220 1 31 107 119
- · - ~t . ,·

ila~c Chr 56

Hllnotl SK

Tiffin
Rio &lt;lrande -

WI.oo:6, VJCken' 1124'1~.
Grubb 112-00-010=2. MoldeaMuer

314=17, Wi-. 5111.00.2/6KI2.
Brown 3.'6-111-212-11. ·"nnat'M1
4/5-0r'0-212-10. Halley 217..00.
.,4:8, Kale. 317-Cr 1-2/okll, Tlllot
112-113-212-1, Hopper 1/14'1111'"'1, C1noi1 W14'1-213=2. F...,.
cis OIO.Qil-2/3o:2. 1b41111: %Jfe.

:Rio·'s Lawfiorn.seeks . 400tt1 .coach1ng victorv in 17th _season

y ROSCOE NANCE
SA TodW
•

Norlhntlt Dl,ii£Pittdturgh ...... 22 1$ 4 ,\l.tM l;llil 110
Bulrulo.............. ll I~ S ! 147 Ill 107
Hanton.l ...... 17 lb 1 41 122 01

Kalhlll 70, Unt.'tlhiVicw 5!'1 · ·
· Kcnl Rmucvcll 53. Alrr.rnn ,{1et' l. ·
Huwt:r 50
·
.
l.nndun 51 . Mary;willc 49 ,
Luuu•vilh: Aqu.10:1s 60, Cuya1hu~u
Vnl Clar .W
Llnherun Wt.'ll 'I. Cuyahc.lJA H11.•14
• Mntlison R9, Gulian142
. MnJ1Ic Hts. !ill. BL'ilrt~N 4~
Mnutllon Jaeklun 4K. Glen Oak if:\
M:uo!lillnn NrrY 7(). Unht•own l.nke
47
Mnylield ~. Nurdlmin ~I
McJ1n11 l 1nt Dupl 62. Canlim ftcr-

37
Reven: 6H, Monro~: Centntl ~M
Rcyoukl~burJ, 66, Onlli~ovlhc ~9
Rl~.:hiiMincl Ed1,on 7M, Tornnln 72
Rit.:hmund tl1, 77. Kirtland 69 lOT)

.

l1hii,MJclphiu .... .'.l6 12 4 $6 140
Pluril1;1 . . '.......2 1 10 , II ! Sl J IK
NY. Run11crs .....22 16 · 6 !'iO 1~3
New .k.-rscy ......21 IS :t~ 1 45 10!
WMhiR~Ioo ....... 17 20 4 11 :\M 1()9
'TumpuDuy ...... 1420 5 11 11.1
N.Y.Isl;ullk,-s .. 1120 R • 32102

1-l

1111 fllflll ·

lAiier 317.oo.oo-.6, Ohman 317-

ack troub_l~ .h itting NBA players hard
Iwll

Gmndvicw ~$. John!llown 43
H1ckJvllle 61.1!dun 47
Hnbun 611, Akron N 52
Hl'lleWCU-L.lpdoo. !i!li New Ricllt.'l !'i2
f..lt1m11 6.'\, Pun Climna 2.1
Jonulhan Alder !iK. C.:ul. Ct:ntcnniql

'

Redw011110nSI -39intheMCOIIdhalf
of play. The defeal ....... the n...• •
ons 10 5-9 overall ';;rO-S i';~
MOC
Rio Orude now pepaes to lnlV·
el to ML Vernon Naznne College
Saturday in quest of 1 fourth strailflt
MOC victory. .

·:In Reclmen's g-.me sillflr.st ohio Dominican Thursday, -

'

EASTERN CONFERENCE

)'I

P!!.:kerinatun !li~ . WOflhinJion Kll-

Transacti on s

.NHL standin~ . '· ·

~6. Willuo~thby S. , ~l

nowte.lllhi=MOCilucorinl.•-- Xolcun with-ofherown. liflliaJ 20.7 poilJII per pme.
fin wu helclto ..... 2S """'1$ before
MeJIII WilllllfJ followal Rilfy, the bleat.
'""' .....,.
COIIIributiaa 12 poillts to the vk:to"The first 34 mlmitiU( the pme
ry.
· we really played well." said Rio
Shannon Blown ClllliiiiiiiDB off Onndc COICh David Smalley. "But
the bench banaing with her II · that's not goin1 10 be enoulfl. We
poilJII and eigM- mbounds.
have to play strong for 40 minutes
Sophomore transfer Shawna evay pme. We just played not to
Dau,herty rounded out the double lose, we need 1o be playing to win. •
fipre scoring_with 10 poinll.
nffin's Tonya Swick led all seor,
The Redw&lt;imen defense wu ers of the night with 26 pointl and
IIIODg forci'!&amp; 3ll nma IU(DO'I~. six -steals. Teammate Kellic
NineteenoftholetumovcrsCIIIlll'off Jakubowski added 12 to the Tiffin
of Rio Grande steals led by Mcshan score lioard. 'Iiffin OUIICORd the

'*'

...\

Fn.'dc:nekmwn 47. Nonbmor 46
Fremonl R(IMi Jt,J, Nilp(I(L'(m 12
Galm111111 62. H111iurt1 !'4
Graham 61 Srringfwld Nmhwu,wm

tt\lllfliC

.

• Genoa lol

Fuirpon 46. Lau~l ~K
Fire101uoc 46, T1mb!n 11

Pa.of'lk... 61 : Lynchburg Cbay
Philo $2, Tri·Vall.:y 4:\

Ol,lfllnll76, ~llfi7U

Denver, f p.m. ·
,.
' , Utah ut Milwa- ~:lll P-"' 1 '
Miami Ill PMIIVIII. lu p.M.
,
, Cliotlolle,. L.A. Lalton,- JO:)O~.m.
Vancoowr 81 GolknltlfC', 10:-~0
lie 11

• d

reh~11y

BctlllsvJilc 77. Fmt frye 70
lkllollre 42. Du~key~: Loml 34 ·
f'lk:IJ!rc 71. Fetlcntl Hockm~ b4
Bcnjamlll Ln~tun !'il. RldjtC111llld 4iJ
Bctiii.'I-Tmc 11 Gc...'targelnwn71 (OT'
Blmtdlt!~ler 67, Wllllollll!lhurll b4
BI(I!.IIU·CIIrwll M Cirdevillf ~~
Brco.:bv1lle !1.2. Buy 414
Brooklyn 77. NLlfll\ltndy 12
Dry,ml !'i'.l. lkfilUIL'C"
·
Buckeye Trml ~K , ~adowhrook .12
Cntl1z 49, Bntlgepor147
Caltlwell67. rnmliL'f' ~7
Ciiii&lt;LI Fullon NurlhWI!Iil 71-: Marl•n,:lon 5$
. '
Can:\1 Wmchc!IIL'f 60. L4~p.an Elm ~J
Can10n S. (19, Wt.&gt;sl Bmnch ~I
Cenlervilk 112, Franklin -10
Cemml Bap1i111 71.' Rldttevilhl Chr 74

I

·• · New

17, C-umu:01uf

IlL

RusaS~ ~:t

EdlJ;I!ftt'n 7.), Hilhnp :10
EIJ&gt;,m 70, Plc.u:.mt ~
Elulll 66, Tiflin Culumbhm 60
Elyrir1 Cnth 49. L..'1kc Ridge JH

Mogutlon: 64, Windham 62
Moaudon: F'acld 7~. Woodridge ~
N Bolllmon! 72, Vanlue fJO
•
Nc:l&amp;onvillc·Ynrk 77, R;~e:ane South·
L'f'O 70
New Richmond ~9~ Clermont ~2
Newbury SJ'. l.tll,emont47
Newt.:omLnlown 71, Jcwcn·Sciu 56
Nnrlhwood 67. Gent,. ~4
OlmstN fpJia6S. Slmngsvalle ~2
Oranar Ht Mnytteld ~2
Clrunge Chr. KI, Lullet.T.tn Euril 77
(li5CJO 'J9, Elmwood 49
0.1uwn Hilla !li1, Tol. EmiiUluel Bup·
1!5147 .
Padua 71. John Manhull71
Pmtttsville Harvey~. ARhlubulu S6
Paillllllllilk.RiveBid&amp;: S9, M:Kii~n 4l

'

'

TTio' Uillveility of Rio OnDda
R e d - baNiy held oe 10 knock
, all 'Mill Ulli1!11'1dJ in Mid-Obio.
.eoara fUelicllt Tuellday nilhL
1hc Redwo- pa 111111 d • 2S_
point lead with aix millutes to play,
' but luld to bUlle lo hold off the lAdy
· Drqons 110-76. The viciory boolts
1
the Reel- record 10 10-6 o-·
· till and 4-3 in tile MOC.
The Redwomen victory
be
called a team eff01t with all playen
putting points on the &gt;'bolnl. Rio
iOrande scoriiJI was led by ~ior
$11cy 'Riley with 17 poiiltl. Riley

't

Tnl NOirt Dame 69, Tyj, Seort ll
Tree or Uk 61, Col.~atool (or 01rls

Triway !16, M.edina Hi&amp;hlanc.l It I
Tuscnn.wlll YaJ(36, Pi'irku 11
UrP-or Arlington 72, (infw Cily.47
Upper Sandulk)' 6J ,;Murton River
V11ll. 3M •
·~k
~
Vnn WC1160, 1 Puulcllnf~l • ....
Wc~~o1ervilll: N, 16~ Wt:$lland 47
WcliiL.,.illl: 5. 4~ . l&gt;ubl n St:~1tu4J

t:.atnn .W, Mlhun-Unin11 .liJ

&lt;OTI

61

~
· I • ! , 5 .......
-"~'!h. ~4\:1.Jt
~rot',

I

Etl~cwmJd

i:.&amp;L'Riukc N

Miacrvu 110. Akron 'Sprincneld 711

AD1hCI'lii7J. Vcmululll46
Annn 76. HoQIIhm 60
Archhultl...,, S1ryker 41

48

un.frnnklin ~7
'
Cui. Suulh $1, C11l Bt.-cc:hcrurt49
C,ll Wulnut R1dl!e 64. Cui. Whetstone. 2 tOT)
Coldwa1er 'il, Ccl!~~;~42
Columbiu 61. Rlt.flmomJ Ht~. 24
~'~ Cnrk·y 69, Bh!l'"wick :t9
~ cnvc:aury 69, Tusl:1w :t2
Crollntc 47. Onlanll 4~
1&gt;1mbury Lnkcside 62. Old Fon 4K
l&gt;mlto'llit! 69, l.ucns .llJ
l)ay Oukwuotl 60, An:anum 4J
lJcl:!w:.rc JH, Uu~kcyc V;1ll .lU
~~•ho5 .JeUerson6S, Pnrkway 42
L&gt;ubhu Cullnmn 47. Th11ntOIS Worlhillglmtl"i
...
1!. Um1hm !'i7, Akron M;anche.~lcr 47

OTI

Amn,nda-CJear\:rcc:k 7 .\, Fuirrichl
Union 6N (OT)
'

h&lt;lftcDMIIOn
L.A. Lukers .......... 2~ 10 .714
Seattle . .... .... .24 ' II .686
l
Pottland ............ ... 19 I~ .~19
~h
L:A.C'hppen ...... 14 19 .424
10
Sacr"~Ur~enln ....... . 14 21
.400
II
OoldcnSiute ..... .... ll 19 JB7 • II
~~ ..... " """ .10 2J .:103
14•

Akron Ellc:t "'· Akmn Kenroorc ~I
Akmn Fart:1111ne 71. Akrnn Garlidd

a·

lklk.'C "
Cal. Uilden-Mckinlll:y 62, Gul Mari- '

Maumee60. Tol Wn11t.JJ
Muyaville 69, New Le11inp.1on !'il
McDonald 66. Derliu Wt-slc:rn Rc:!IC'r¥eH
ML-chalUcsburg 60, lndmn Lake ., I
M~na 70. Uncoln·WL'11169
Menlllf %, Shnw K3
Miam1sburtc :til, l~r1111n1 44
M1tldlc1own Fenw1ck 57. Carl1sle !'i6
Milrunl O.rislmn $4, Culvnry Oir 41
Millbury Utke 92. Kan~tJ lukllfa 61
Millcrspon 61, Ben~;~: Union~~~ 12

Adm1rnl King 6.1. Elynn 4S
Akron Bu~htel MR. 1\krnn Cent·H(Iw-

!ill

7'1R
.719
424

the play worked.
.:
''ThC first play ofll)c gqme you're
not expecting a :JO. CSJlCcially from
the PatrioiS," he said. ~·we b;Jven ~t
tcally thrown too mun:;.,. gocs all
year." ·.
.
1• · •
. Curt1s Martm SC&lt;Irc.d PI! ,a twoY.al-d ron on the next play, tile first of
his three touchdowns, .and .th\l. rout
"'~ pn . . · ..·
,;
~
T·_

Paokers' 35-14 wiri over the 49ers.
sage lefl.i1t the tea.m's ,San FrancisPolice want to tall( to r:lcBanoto: co office was not returned. "' ·· ·
Orcen Bay police Capt. Bruce' . · DCBanolo did not rctllm 'tclcHamilton said.
'
phone messages left Tuesday at his
Heenan lold the newspaper ~e Young~10Wf1, Ohio, office. .
saw the incident as !Kilwas leaving ' '!Wo tnen ·tOld police they were·
the stadium at a gated 'area near the hit, but could not Jdcntify who struck
49ers buses.
' ' ·
· them, Hamilton said. ·
'
When contacted by The Assoei:
"We have people Claiming it •wus
ated Press on Tucsltay, Heenan hitn, but they don't know him,"
declined further comM¢nt. A nies- Hamillon said"earlier. '·

sure" he saw DeBartolo punch the ,
fan, knocking him backward over
garbage can.
A large man with DeBartolo
head-butted another fan, Heenan
said.
Police in Green Bay said Tuesday
they are inv.estigating the incident
and could not contirm repons by
several fans that DeBanolo was
involved in the · incident after the

44, Brooklyn 4:t
D-:numqnt 49, Hathaway Browa18
Bellbrook 73, SJWinsburo 61
BI:U:k Rivt!r .:n , Hillsdale :16
Bu~:keye Cenlrul ~I, Min(on14:t
Cun:y 90, ML'Comb ,6
,Carlisle !'t6, Clinlon · M~~it lt7
Clc: Independence: ~!i. Galn10ur ~ ·
CnJ. Franklin Hts. 6S, Cui. lfu.lep:1..

5CVCII60

Ohio U.S. boys' scores

Mfdwttl Dlvhllon

cornerback Rod Woodson said Indianapc~lis rookie receiver Marvin Harrison was faster,
, .'
"It kind of made 'll'i:mad,'''(llenn
said. "The first play ,o f tile game I
lcnew it was a go(pat!~). and I just
·wanted to show h1m q~ .ourcoac1)ing staff that we coul~ complete t~is
pass."
·
. .,.
Glenn sai~ he w~'t surprised ·
·

Be~K:bwood

lnduin Cn:ek 87, Maruns Ferry 11
Jackson Cen1cr 78. Rus~;ia 77
Jacbon,Millon ~. Mu1nnl Rn.lgc 49
John Glenn 62, Crooksville !'i:t
Keys1one 8."i, Brpcklidc !'i6
l..oke Calhohc: !'i6, Brush 46
La~st:wood 66, Ch:velumJ Hit. 46
~sbura Fwrfield 67, Whlleook 'ifi
l.eeloniu 85, Umlo.J l.Ocul !'i8
.t
U~CI!Rier ;B.~ItaltJ ,
~·
Uberty Un1on 81. Gmnville 7$ (01')
Uc:kina Hts. 76, He111h ~'
.•
Uma Cnth. 80, Spl!tlet:rvilk 42
Lillie Miami 6fl. Hamillon Ros11 ~2
L.Onun Admiral 6~ . Elynn. 4!'i
Lon!sJown 61 , Bloomfield 4$
lou11ville 62. Carrollton 42
MDnSfield TclnJIIc 71. World HlltVest
Mrnruha Chr 62, Welhn,rnn 54
Ma5on !'i:t. Oosht:n 41
Mnssillon Wnshlngton 77. Kent Roo-

Wulsh 84. Notre Dame, Oh10 $6

1.1

.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Houstntl ..
.. '· .. 2'i
U1nb:.................... 2J
Minnesot11 .....
14

l6

Non-coorerence play

IOh

-·-

tum

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -An
off-duty sheriff's deputy is among
those saying they saw San Francisco 49ers owner Edward DeBanolo
Jr. punch a fan B1 Lambeau Field
after Saturday's playoff loss to the
Green Bay Packers.
·
Sgt. Michael Heenan of the OutQgamie County sheriff's department
told The Post-Crescent'in Appleton
on Tuesday that he was ·"l 00 percent

Ohio women's

'

to former college ~C&amp;mm~ Eddte
George in the NFL offensive rookie
of the year balloting:
"As long as he's the one," Glenn
said, he's not upset that someone
.beat him out. "Now if it had been
somebody else on a ~1fferent team,
t~en I probably would have ~n a
little upset."
He w~sn'ltoo -happ~ last week
when he heard that Pittsburgh star

Off.- d uty .uepu
., ty says .he saw 49
h jBn. .
. ers ' . O~IJer
PU":C
~ \'1'

GeorJelown, Ky. 89, Fiadlay 83
IUPU-lndnpls 78, Cen1'. S1.. Ohio 69

Basketba ll
NBA ~~-:..lli
~~~~ ~

take it head on and attack Jackson ville.
"I don't think. the team can realIy focus on that (first meeting)
because Jacksonville is playing bet·
1er ball and we're playing better
ball," he added. "They've got a lot
of rookies and people making plays
for them.:·
'Few rookies have made better
plays than Glenn. He finished secorid

.

-Rio Grande .women reCord 80-76 trumPh over Tiffin

•

If

•

'

,.

.• Lt. ·.,
MilT

Almond D.~-r\a · Rhode,l.sla,nd
itt-'

~

•

I

~

'

es -Pats'-new:home

scfklus

cou-•

=:~,: ~inie ~~·~f., ~;::..~~ his ·efforts in Massa-

FlEE HEARrvwiNG TESTS

. AJijitind P!J0Mc1 Pilriou ·owne(·lf&gt;

,,, ''If il's oeiJnomically feasible in
Ro~Jirl·Knfl on TUelday to offer the .. ,' lny: way tQ bring~ NFL team into
Illite I!BII!c ~ible site of the new' ., Rliodt !~land. I thmk we should be
stldium kraft desires. No specifics very,mlich'inte~Jied," Kelly said.
0t1 COif or loeation were discussed
Kraft. Wlio,ili\11'01 retum ·I phoJie
The cali'iimply was to wu~ Kraft C:allst.ekinlf~t119R'tlle~iscu-..
that if options for a new sladium in . si911·~~~~. has said Foxboro
M••achuselll fall llwoUP, Rhode StadiiPil if llW!a~. and ha neecb •
lllalld, olfic:ials woilld be lead
, y 'to mndcm ftil:llilJ 19 compete ~th
Calk. Aliliond said.
l'
· dtber te6ml. ~ liU proposed bUild-·
· ·"M)I ,doot hal alWJY' llid wt1l ini an open-lir $200 ·'lllillion,

coltdlwe,.~o~oy:::r'!f:
~.=:..;:::'s:tb•a=:
Olill !UIIIIIIOJIOII
ty,
''
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.
'
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F

ftOO.IIooi

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: ,c.l.,.,_ t..IIM 526Sfw•'
••••d.. •••·
I. .H •••..aus
1

All local · ...,.J!ii:al leadeil and · •

•lllw

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•

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•

..

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w8Jcl=d!cillan·

..
'

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.

I

ONLY~'

"FOR PETS

WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 13TH IN
Also a special seelon for Ia Memory Valelltlae Pets.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
.
.

~

ONLY

$600~,~

•I
I

•
•••

••

PER PlaURE··
PRE-PAID

I
I

•

•

:

•

Plea•• encloae aelf.

"PET'S NAME'~.

acldreued 111m~
envelope to mu~
your photo• .

r
____ ; . _.; .___., !·
VALENTINE PETS
I:
I!

Friday, February 1tlt at~ p.•,. ·

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

I
IPet's Name

.,

lo,mer's Name
I
!Address
• · I
• II City.
.

•

• ,

,
for

IAinount Enclosed:

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Ducllln• Friday•.Febru•ry 7th u 3 p.m. 1•. "
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r~· ·r I I &amp; : • - • • -•
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• Boitoa uyor ,'fhoitlas Menino , •AnwOnawho ... ~hlu'JtgorllldltiiLidlngconwl8lllal'llllnvtltdto II
\'l~'lldlli'llilob.~IWIIIll oppooo the idel; ho-, as do
a FRI!El ~-~~~-~- problam 0111 beM!pld. 8dng lhll•
, thi .Nnr ..,..~ 1 r..rioll10 *Y in ; 'dJIIIY ~ ~ ,_ ~ 011
·coupon wlfl you tot You!' ..... HEMING TEST, • moo 1111ua.
,•
New fin~. ·B.ob knqwa , tllll !biJitw1ys 011 ...... ' daY•· Oov. :
ARIICO,UAW,ANDAU.OTHIR
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lhoul4 hia lttioleit' focua, &lt;Ill Rhodel: -~
I•UMNC;IPROWIIRI
biNd fliti~lha...ty'IOdllw.ia a liadllltll in Provi• -.,'
•
' WIK-WC'CIMI
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cal~
with him."
' ·"'IdeiJce - ' ' ·••
in 1991 ,by · • • • · ~ • • • • • • a .I . • • • • • ...Ill • • • • • • lilt
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... tbJili' .ibdium in· our .....,.. ·

OUR·SPECI~L PAGE(S)

Hurryl,.,..,.

'·. :' , ~ . ' State seriate majority leader Paul · then-state economic development ed the idea of a 'domed facility next
to Interstate 9S.' .
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PJt6VU)ENCB. R.l..(o\P),J Till · • Kelly vol~ to be part of any · dinlc'tOr Jdscpb'~lino,, who floatRhode blaftd PatrioU? Probably·lot IICigotillliofts With Kraft ulcing as the
·
but Oov. LiJ1Coln AIJIIOftd WOI!Jdl'l ,,, OWII.Cf is
~1. ~~~g at
• • • ·• • • • • • • • •
mindbavig~Ncw!3tlJlandPiilri· ' Rhode IsJaric! - ~. not ' Ustlll II 'as
·•

fir FRANK BAKER

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Mall or bring the entry lui m:
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·The -~ally

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Sentine.l ~

110 Court St.
, PomerOy,.ohio~-

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The DaHy
Sentinel)'
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(~) - It's mlde of that,l~year-old Jeffrey_Parks sot for
and fils in lhe ~of a OJ. Chris!ftlas got him kicked out of
iit:ion flaure. but the bttle toy sun school.

usings of a good father on a bad day':
.

-=~
=·-.poW.
up. quite&amp;
nwriedhindand
d
They wen:

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' to nlise, but they IUmed out put.
I have a fond m:ollcction of a colprirltcd a f~w yeus back
of having kids. Our
tf.•, olcbt ctlildren now have kids of
own, and I think they would
a good l111gh. Will, you
run that column again? - ·
in 011)'; Ind.
·
Dear Reader: It's one of my allfavorites, too. Thank you for
_.lL·, __ Musings of aGood Father on

around 'swimmint pools in Florida pline. They riuss all the fun of "doing
and California, sunlanned and mis- without" for lhe child's sake. It's a
era!Jie on lhe decks 9f boats, lrotting pathetic sisht.
off to enjoy Europe like lonesome · Everyone should have children.
... No one should be allowed to escape
· ~~~e wonderful experiences attached to
each stase in the development of the
. Landers . youna:fhe happy memories of those
early years -- saturated mattresses,
I .... .... .......
waitins flir sitters who don't show,
1-S~-Oo­
midnight asthma 11taelcs, rushins to
lhe emef8ency room of lhe howital
......
fools - with inoney to spend. umc 10 to setlhe kid's head stitched up.
Then comes lhe payoff- when the
enjoy themselves and nothing to
child paws from a little acorn into a
worry about
Childless couples become so self-. rUt nut. What
equal the warm
·ish and wrilpped ilp in their own con· smile of a small lad with the Sl!n slitcems lhat you feel sonY for lhem. terins on $t,SOO wortlj' of braCes -·
They don 'tfight owr the kids·.disci- . ruined b'y peanut bridle -:.Or lhe .frol·

Ano-

_.,......_

can

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icking, can:me voices of 20 hysiericalsavases runnios amok 11 a birthday party?
How sad not to have children to
brishten your cocktail ·parties -massaaina potato chips into the rugillld
wrestlin1 wilh gues1s for the olives in
!heir martinjs.
.
How empty is lhe home without
challenging problems that make .for
a well-rounded life - and an early
breakdown; lhe end-of-day report
from Mother, relaled like strategically placed blows to !he telnple; lhe
tender, thoughtful discussions when
lhe report card reveals lhat your
senior son is-a moron.
Children lire worth every moment
of anxiety, every sacrifice. You know

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· An.AN'I'A (AP) - · Richanl Jew' I see it, every time I see a n:poncr. it
" If my mom and I had,something sound-detecting equipiJM'~I," Wood
. ";
.
elf said in an NBC interview today ·· all starts again." .
we wanted to talk about that we did- said. .
Jewell, meanwhile, was wOrried •
~ be fears he Will always be known
Jewell, 34, found ' the knapsack .n't want anyone to hear, we wrote it
as tJie man once suspected of planti· lhat contained the pipe bomb just on pieces of paper," Jewell told Van- that he would he sentenced to' Cle8lh
ng a deadly bomb dUring the Summer befoll: lhe explosion ihat killed one ity Fair magazine in an interview after being falsely accused ~f the .
hombins.
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Olympics in Atlanta. ·
persoo and injured more than 100 in published in its February edition.
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,
kepi
thinkins
...
this
was
lhc
'
"What I hear all the time is, 'Well, Atlanta's Centennial Olympic Parle.
"When she left to so to work lhe
John C. Wolf, D.O.
.
'
that's
lhe
·ex-suspect,
!hat's
'
l
he
ooe
.
The
beefy
security
gwird
wa5
inin&lt;:xt
day, she would take it wilh her, ·biggest case in the nation a"4 I~
· ·Associate Professor
tltey thought did it,"' Jewell said on tially lauded for;alertins police and tear it up, and put it in the trash,'' he wo~d. If they could pin it on Ill!;. they .
of Family Medicine
were going to put' me in 'the clC~1ric '
. lhe "Today" show. "ldon'teverhear, helping clear people a\Oily. But his said. ·
·
·
chair,"
Jewell told the m~inc, ·.•
~U....J.---------------,.; 'That's lhe one tbat did his job and, name was soon leaked as a suspect
Jewell said he suspected his tetewho~February
edition goes Oil sale ·
ill doing so, possibly saved lives,"' and he became a vinual prisoner as phones were tapped, alth!lush the
Jewell, his molher and' two.of his federal. agents and reporters staked U.S. auorncy in .Atlanta has main- today in New York and. Jan, IS
"~
lawyers were in New Yorlc for lhe 18- out his apartment. He was cleared in rained lhcre were no wiretap warrants nation\VidcL
t
,,
.
Another Jewell attorney,' Jack
minute interview· with host Katie October.
in the case. ,
'coliric. Last monlh, NBC and Jew·
Jewell said he's now trying to lose
Jewell slid he noticed white pow-· · Manin, told Vanity Fair that tlic FBI
ell reached a settlement over com- some weight so he ·can return to a . der on the telephone table in his spent weeks examining the theory
ments anchor Tom Brokaw made on career in law enforcement. He has lawyer's conference room, which he that Jewell was an "enraged homoJOHN C. WOLF, D.O.
. 1be nelit ~~ comm011 skin can- lhe aif after Jewell was named a pos- turned down at least one job offer believed came from a ceiling tile lift- sexual cop-hater" who wa.• aided in
==~ profenor of F811111y cer - .,.._ous -ceil -- will affect sib!e_suspect in the July 27 blast. The from a radio station in Atlanta.
ed by the FBI during a wiretap oper- the bombing by his lover. . ''
Jcwell .supposcdly wa.• ."mad at..
100,000 people !llis
predomi- Wall 'Street Journal reponed the set"I hope !here's someone out there ation,
the
cops and wanted to · kill .othct
Unlverelty .College of nantly 'djose over 60.'These.gtowths dement was wonh $SOO,OOO.
. .. (who) wants somebody who's a
Jewell's lawyer, Lin Wood, said
.
'
.,!~~~~tiM:~edlclne
are reddish or pink and appear as
"Idon'tthinklhatRichardwould hardworkerandgive\ JJOperceiltin that for 10 days. a van with tinted. cops." Man in said.
FBI spokesman Jay Spadafore
I have a spot on raised, iiTegutarly shaped,' scaly or ·have put his mom and the rest of his . their job," he said. "'There's some- bubble-shaped windows remained in
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my tower arm that could · ulcerated nodules. Often ·found on family lhrough this incredible hell for body out there. I've just got to go find a parking sarage facing the copfer- declined to comment on the anicle
l'u4:l&lt;day, except to say that the~ were
&lt;:ancer, bUt I'm unable to affonl · areas iilce .1¥ lips, face, mouth, hands any amount of money;" said attorney lhem.·~
. ence room windows.of l:ljs office. .
to lhe doctor right now...Can . and ~ars. thtey•may appear as a new Watson Bryant Jr.
Jewell and his mother ·also
"For sure tllat van. had laser no win:taps used in the iovestiption
of Jewell.
.
'·'
·u give me ,any tips on how to arowth Or inside l!f .an existing preJewell said lhe. settlement ~ill appeared on ABC's "Good Momins
ide if Ibis is a can~?
cancerous skin .lesion. Old si:ars or never make up forh1s lost n:put1~t10n America" today.
·
Answer: Non-cancerous skin areas. of chl'oni¢ skin infection are and lhe 88-day mghtmare he hved
In an interview wilh Vanity Fair, G~ effect
The burning of fossil fuel' conwths ·are far more c:Ommon than · also comm&lt;lli sites. Left untreated, lhr'?.u~h. .
Jewell revealed that he and his mothSEATil..B' (AP) -l&gt;Janting trees tributes to lhe greenhouse .effect,
n cancers. That means from a sta- squamous celt cancer cin spread to
I JiiSt w1sh I could set my name er were caieful not to $ay anylhins near your house will '!Eip ease .lhe which is caused by hip ilmost~iical point of view, it i~ most like- otber parts ~of the .body - a process back," he .said. "I don't know ;;· . they didn't want the outside world to sreenhouse effect at w~ll as reduce pheric levels of carbon dioxide lhat
If, lhat you have ti non-cancerous called metastasis -· and can &lt;:ause money can t buy yo~r nam~ back.
hear while secluded m the1nwo-hed- your enersy needs.
~ heat and increase surface ternICJOWih. However, since skin cancers new canc~rous growth in other
Barbara Jewell sa1d the n1gh!man: room apartment during his ordeal.
Three mature shade trees nextto peratures. .
.
. -:c:tll be deadly. I stronBIY recommend orsans or tissues.
.
· .. hasn't ended for het. Watchmg a
He said he was con~ince~ that the every U.S. home c.ould save enoulh
Trees, ho\vever. absorb .~
tiat any skin lesion lhat worries you;
111ese two types of skin c.ancer are replay. ~f her ~ugust news conference hordes of medta outs.tde ~ts .ho.mc utility-generated enersy to decrease dioxide.to Procluce.carilohycmites f~
lfe'cvalllllted by a _Physic~.
very curable l!ld recovery IS almost at which she pleaded for President could hear everythmg sa1d m the carbon dioxide emissions by to l8 nourishment durins phot~yilthes.ts ,
H f you can't atl'Qid iJie e!!l{ilildiy,"_.~n~ ;if . . . .fll is be,Un ~ber\J ., ·Ciinto? to &lt;:lear. her~ ~rs~.bf9"e ·smajl·apanmenttby.usins ·&amp;aund dilll1-•.c:ro:~~~:;:::~:~ ~!lfiriiS IQ.- ~J!!'I\I-Iclo!~~~,,~[~W1~~~~~·~. ,_;,,-:;,.,•!.~'
4ptain this to thecloctorbjlfoi'Cihand.· thi:., p .wth ~ l!l'liall. How~~r, fa~lurc down 1~ tears and srud, Every ume _ es. ·
}
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•• , .
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Itlost are quitewillint to Sfllll·a pay,..:. to ·.Jreat ~ ·~mmon skt~ cancers . ,.'--'-----,--..,...-------------,.,,--.:1---~·.:..·
&gt;;
tfent plan lhat fits your ~: l!llil Jead.tasetious problems. In fact,
' .
. , , A visual inspection and .a c~ful about 2,000 people w1)l d1e of·
~~~~:-~;·,:~~~ are often sufficient for untreated .biul or squamous cell
"
i1
physician to make a cancers Ibis year.
~~:~·::~; It is frequently necessary,
The deadliest of all skin &lt;:ancers is
Jj
to remove at least a portion melanoma. While: it is still !he rarest
to obtain a specimen that type. il ~ ~- increasingly
be studied under !he iniCI'O'- common betluse ofiht; jiopularity of
f'rom this .study, your doctor , lhe "sun-tairie!!t IO!Jk. :Ellposure to
~~~~=~·,·~·t. precisely the .type ~f ~ sun is,~,tlnf.!wn .~,q~tor. , · · .
"
aiid If further treaJmenl IS
A melanolnl;.liltis eUJy SIIIIJCS, IS
'it,alrran•ted.
a multicolored srowtb with a cobOno important clue in telling ' blestone-li)te ·surface th~ may be
aspot - wlu!t we doctors call a confused with a common mole. It is
.. might need funher study is usually mukicolored including black,
hist.OfY. That is, how it developed brQwn, .blue, red. or eve11 wilh areas
hD\'1! it has chanSed overt~ last ' ,of almdlt ~ piJI'IICI,II ~JH!Ifhe bor:
months. Most non-cancerous , :dcr betw¥·toiOJ;s is ijl~l}y indi~
have a smoolh border where . tine~\ ~
qi~Olllll c'\l&amp;rgcs, 11
normal .
skin end:.., becoln\ll ra1sed ~ve tht.siarface of
·
···
'., lhe skiii. At lhe.-51111\e .. time; it pcne- ,
....
..
lies16n~
·
·~
·t
;)
.'
iiii:PDSS it
· 1, ~'u.F, ~ply -intdthe skin, at\d'

..·....

Family .
Medicine

·

estion'al skin spot should
pt quick trip to·.doctor
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:e,,~,:~·~~F;;;; ~~~:-~lhtl,'Melanoma
.. IJ"'te sef!OUS
Jhal'. penetrates
.. . .
less.
' ·1"- 111m (aboqi;' 1132 of an inch)
"~:~~;:;:/
ii.u;.llp;u;;illly Cured by~ simple .n:moval.
p
·
groWth -often iodicates· that'

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~...,, 1 . ~ , ~il has occulTed, and a cure

is.
·; ljlu ~l.ikel'~ Yes, l'"oplc resut'!'IY die
fn!n1 ~melanoma! So 1f your
.,1kin' lftiOII has any of the features of
.-, metilnorlia. please so-see your fami- .
aa' · )~doctor or adennatoJnaist immcdi-·
~·
&lt;"..Jj
....
ately. "''"' .
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1 ' "F.IIWJ Medicine" Is a weekly ·
· rr • ?''lb~badt.IJ~wrlte.·
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£.,.Walf.D.O., Ohio Unl· ·

ve~l7 ~!!I"!~' ,t;~ Os~op,thlc

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anniversary:
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an&lt;! telepbons."'~"'~r.
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.'A celebratiOn will rake pi&amp;CC!!atlhe
annual meeting, April 18-f9 at the
Radi11011 Hotel il) Huntington, W. Va.
·lbat will kick off series of reunions
for &lt;:unent and (ormer sirl scout
memben and volunteers throushout
the Council. ·
...
"We invite Girl. Scout alums to
Identify themselves,'' commented
SUSIIn Thompson, executive director.
"'ntrod~ ~o~lf and let us ,hOw
you how e&gt;tcitins · !he Plot• lin is
today," lhe Sllid.

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Jeffrey took the JUn to John does not break policy," Paries said. .

Rodge~s Elem~ntary School and

HeidfFieiss ~entenced to 37 months in prison

Jewell says·'money can't buy yqur name bacll( ·

Ohio University ·
.
College of Osteopathic Medicine

WADESBORO, N.C. (AP) _ It the bag lhat the kids counted today."
wasn't over until the last chocolate
Smith said the children erred by
pulled It out With SOIIICI classmates
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) -A 9- chip was counted.
trying to count the chocolate chips
around, KIR0-1V reported Tuei- y~ar-old boy learned the hard way
Students at Wades,boro Central from the outside of lhe cookies.
day.
. .
.
that Dalmatians - the spotted box- Elementll)' School felt cheated when
.
·
. Students compl11ned and lhe pnn- ·, office sensations - come with a ~hey found just 680 chocolate chips
TALLAHASSEE, Aa. (AP) . 0
Ctpal expelled_ ~ IM:'Y u~r lhe Seat- sharp $Cit of teeth.
m a bag of Chips Ahoy! So they fired Getting bitten in the face by a Rot·
_ _
•
·
tie Sc~J Di~trtct s stnct nc_rtolerJustin Page and his cousin were off~ leuer to Nabisco, questioning tweiler was bad enough for state Sen.
ance.pohcy on suns of an_y ktnd.
playing outside with a Dalmatian the COJ11pany's claim of 1,000 chips ~ario Diaz-Balart. The jokes,
• .
Std ,Parks told the stat1on that he named Spot during a holiday visit to per bag.
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. though, have been lhe worst part ofI
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home of Maxine Whitehead for several sick friends and a card couldn ~ beheve when the .school relatives.
Eager to prove its case, New Jer- the ordeal.
· ,,,
setting forthe.[!l1nua1Christ- was signed for Theda Hoskins.
cal!~ tlim ,to c?me.p•c.k up hiss~ ,
· "My cousin was hitting him on sey-based Nabisco dispatched cook·~obviously the dos didn't'like
of lhe Riverview Gard~n
A candle lighting ceremony, h ';:,no way 15 thts ~•ece of plast!.c lhe back while I was petting him," ie technician JessicaAronofsky to the Cuban (ood. One bite and that's all it
"Lishts Alons tilt: Way", was pre~ lor .W.gerous, Par~ srud. I Justin said. "Then he just bit me:"
school on Tuesday to see just how the . wanted," the Cuban-American Jesis¥ntcd
by
Mrs.
Putman,
Mrs.
Grossd~n
I
e-:en
lhmk
another
child
.~ould
Justin
ran
into
!he
house,
where
cookies crumbled.
. lator said. "I've heard '!hem aiL"
'borne was extensively deco-,
. his mother and falher were stunned to
She showed the 130 third-grad~rs
One legislator visited him after lhe
the holidays and sifts for an niclde, and Mrs.· :t\'liitehead. There thmk lhls could _be dangerous.
~ut school_distnct spokeswoman see be was·missing about half of his how to count the chips by putting a pre-Christmas dog bite to drop off a ·•
· were
beneath the was singins of C.llristmas carols .
.
,
bag of Cookies in a colander and run- box of milk bones. Diaz-Balart, a
tr;ee.
lhe party accompanied. ·at ' the piano by Mrs. Dorolhy _Dubla ~fend';" the expul- ear.
Whitehead,
and
,.Marilyn
Hannum
Slon,
no~ns
the
district
s
zero-toler·
.
The
p1ece
of
ear
was
found
on
the
n!ng
cold water over tl!e!'l. Within .Miami Republican, put his own face
Marsave prayer.
.
ance pol~cy,on suns- real or toys, , side!"alk where the boys had been e1ght to 10 minutes, the cookie dough on the box.
Frank presided at lhe
Mil)' Alice Bise received the door ~arge or uny- to make 5~ students playms. The family too~ Justin and washed away, leaving behind nothing
The dog belongs to a friend lhat he
ilu•wh,W.opened with members prize. Favors rna~~ by Mrs. Gross· ee~.safe.
. ,
the piece ~fear to the hospital. .
but.~he chocolate chips.
declined to identify. He said tliey are , .
~~~n'~ to roll call ·by ...Wing nickle \Vere given to eaeh one attend. I understa~ pohcles, but someA plasbc suf8eon reatta.ched the
The count 1s over. The challenge still friends . In fact, he's still fri.ends
to Santa. A thank you note · ins. Refreshments were served to ~y has to ~ mtelhgent en~ugh to ¢ar during a four-hour operation. ' is over," Nabisco spokeswoman Ann . . with.Mack lhe Rolt,.eiler, although
fro111 Betty Boggs for acac- those named and Nancy "Wachter.' · ookat a one-inch toy and reahze lhat
Smith, "There were 1.1.81 chips in lie's being much more careful now.
she received when she was Ruth Anne Balderson, · Gladys
Osborn~ extendelflhanks for Thomas, Janet Connolly, Nola
dliriog her husband's 1 Young, and sues~. Lillian Pickens
s&amp; .. C::JniCi! '"eber
· and Sue Wachter. The January meet.
.
. ins will be wlth madys Thomas.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Before abuse prosram.
.
• eral coun in August 1995 on eight and a $1.6 million Beverly. Hills ·
she was sentenced to 37 months in
The dtfense had asked for a 2 tn- counts of conspiracy, income· tax Oitate once owned by actor Michael
'f&gt;ouglas.
prison, Heidi Fleiss tearfully told a year sentence. Ms. Fleiss will be giv- evasion and money laundering.
In Decell)ber I 994, Ms. FJeiss was · · Models-turned-prostitutes had
federal judse she was remorseful for en credit for about four to five
cheatins on her taxes, laundering months she has already served .at a cqnvicted on state pandering charges recounted being sent around the
Communlty Calendar IS residents may contact Kim Hupp, call-girl profits and conspiring to hide drug rehabilitation center, her auor- ·and sentenced to three years in globe to service Ms. Fleiss clients,
.. a free service to aon· 949-319.8.
her crimes.
neys said.
pnson. But l~st May, the conviction sometimes earning $10,000 for a sin·
"When you are released from cus- was ovenurned by a state appeals gle assignment
·
"I wish I had lhe.words to tell you
gl'Qiips wlshJna to aanounce
Several .clients cbcribed how they
aad tpeelal heats. The .. CHESTER-- Shade-River Lodge, · . how-very sorry .I am," Ms. Fleiss siud tody, hopefully you'll do many of the court on grounds ofJuror misconduct·
Ms. Fleiss' attorney Anthony would call Ms. Fteiss to arranse for
Is~ doslpl!ell·to promOte ' F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m.•Thursday. Refresh· Thesday, sobbins. "I'm so sorry. I'm things you've·dreamed about," Marshall
told
Ms.
Fleiss.
''I
believe
Brookliertold
lhe Los Angeles Times sex, ~o111etimes specifYing what type
men!$.
.
a
different
person
now.
I
was
young.
fuid ·ri~Jst~ o.',fll/.Y type.
you'll
be
a
positive
role
model
for
that
there
is
a
"high
likelihood" that of woman they wanted. Among those
·
· 1paee permits
,
•. ·
. ' I made ' terrible choices and mis;·other young women just by the expe- his client will agree .next week to a men was actor Charlie Sheen, who
POMBROY •- Preceptor Beta lakes."
'
' tonma .
plea bargain in the state case. The spent $53,000 in 1992.
Beta Chapter of Beta Sisma Phi
U.S. District Judge Consuela Mar- riences you've had."
Ms. Fleiss wept again as the sen- deal would allow Ms. Fleiss to serve
Ms. Fleiss had been free on bail
Sorority, 6;30 p.m. Thursday at t.he shall. also ordered Ms. Fleiss to pay
tence
was
read.
Her
falher,
who
·her
state
and
federal
sentences
.
c
onwhile
awaiting sentencins on lhe fed·
~iscopaJ'Parish House, Pomeroy.
a $400 fine and an undisclosed
served
one
day
in
prison
'and
paid
a
currently.
eral
charges.
But she was ordered to
am011n1 on taxes, forfeit more than
.. TiJPPBRS PI;AINS : _ Thppers $5SO,OOO from the sale of her Bev- $50,000 fine for helping hide the callProsecutors had claimed Ms. undergo 90 days of drug treatment
Plains VFW P~ 9053, 7:30 p.m. erly Hi its home, serve' three years girl profits, put his 8rm around a fam- ·• Fleiss laundered at least $300 000 in . Oct. I, I 996, after she admitted vioincome from her sex b~siness · lating her bail by taking metham·
Thursday at the·llaJI. Special anniver- probation and .300 hours of commu- i!y member.
Ms.
Fleiss
was
convicted
in
fed·
through
her family's bank accounts phetall)ines.
. sary dinqer, 6:30p.m.
·
nity service, and attend a substaooe .
.

·arden c·lUl) h0, Ids
hrl Stm as Party

it the first time you take your son
The chiidless ~ liYei in • :
hunting. He didn't mean to shoot you vacuum. They try to filllbeir '-lY ;
in the leg. Remember how he cried? . liv"' with dinner dates, lheltef, coJf, '
How sorry he wu? So disappointed tennis, swimming. civic ·affaiJi .and ;
you weren't a deer. Those are the tripull over lhe world.
, .
memories a man treasures.
The emptiness of life wiihout :
· Think liack to tli8t ltil!M of roman- children i' indescribable.
,
tic adventure; when your budd ins.
See what lhe years have doriC. He :
beautiful daughter eloped with the . looks boyish, unlined and rested. She ·
village idiot.. What childless couple is slim, well-poomed l!lld youthful: :
ever shares in such
wonderful , It isn't natural. If lhey. had ki!Ss, ;
growing experience? Could a woman lhey'd loa~!- like the rest of us- tired- :
"!ithout children equal lhe strength · py. wriRkled and baggard.lr! qthet :
and heroism of your wife when she words, normal.
tried to fling herself out of the bed·
·:
room window? Only 11 father could . Send qaestlou to Ann Jri(len, :
have the eourase to stand by --ready Creaton Syndicate, 5771 W. t:e.- •
to jump after her.
tory Blvd., Suite 700, Loll ~1 ''11, ;
Calif.
l
:

,...5

and ends

e area youth . expell~d from school for pulling toy gun on classmates

~~------_...:--~--.....:....~-~-~..;_--~--~~~~~1!!!!111:

~:fl..,.. ktn Landen: I haw four

The Dally SentiMI• Pllge

I

.munity ca·lend~r-

.

.

...

LONG I!OITOM .. A hym~ sing
will·be held at 7 •p.m ·Friday at the
Faith Full Gospel Church at Long ~ '
·Bottom.·Deliverilnce will be the fea- • NEW YO~ (AP) - · Fire swept
tured sinsers. Steve Reed, pastor, throush Lionel Hampton· s 281h-flix&gt;r
invite' the public.
Manhattan ·apartment after a lamp
tipped over, injuring 27 people and
SATURDAY
des(royins priceless personal memenPOMEROY ...,Burlingham Mod, tos of the jw great's seven·dec!Kie
ef!~ Woodmen,"~ supper, Satunhjy, career.
6:30p.m. at lhe hall. Those attendins
1l!!: 83-year,old mUsician, Who
to take a desscn. Guests welcome.
uses a wheelchair, was l'Cscued by
....

Fire in·Lionel Hamptoh's .New York apartment ·injures 27

·- Jewe1 Home Scliooi
Group, 7 p.m. Thursday at
NaZan:ne Chl!ich. Topic
Hupp and his daughter,
will be "Courtship versus
.~=~-~;~\Foi
ildditional
infonnation,,';.1.
.
.~

~.

....

'

~

two attendants 'workiiiS in his apartc
ment Hampton was not injured in lhe ·
blaze Thesday and still plans to visit
the White House on 'Thursday to
accept a National Medal of Arts
award.
Fifteen civilians, II firefighters
and one medical worker were injured
in lhe fire, which sent smoiCe billow-

.

ing through the' 42-story skyscraper
across from Lincoln Center. None of
the injuries was life threatening,
authorities said.
Two women trapped ·in a nelghborins apartment were saved when a
firefighter was lowered dowri from
lhe 29th floor and slipped each of
them an oxygen mask: The women

were taken down after the flames
were extinguished.
· •
The .fire created massive traffic
tie-ups on surroundins streets for lhe
two hours it took firelighters to put
out the blaze.
Investigators were checkins to see
if smoke ~larms were working at !he
time of lhe fire. ·

�•

Wedl II ffty,......, I, '1117

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
.

-.

•

1l1e Dally SenUnel • Page 11

PDmf'OY • Middleport, Ohio

-

'The King' would h~ve turned 62 years old today·
MEMPHis, Tenn. (AP) - Fan
c!ltlb h hi gllhered for Elvis Presley's 62ad binhday today still love
bim ·teader. They want their hero
remembered for his generosity, not

ed for a binhday banquet tonight.
And though it seems unlikely the
world is about to forget Presley any
time soon. the fan clubs say they're
working hard to keep his me~ry
his • • - ·
alive.
.
"He liked to share. He was known
"There are some days I might
ftx that," said Gigi Ballester of ·. spend eight to 10 hours typing and
flushina. N.Y.
answering mail, especially when'l'm
.
She and leaders of more than 80 working on a newsletter,." said
other Elvis fan clubs are in Memphis Priscilla Parker, president oftbe "We
to celebrate the binhday of the man Remember Elvis" club of Pittsburgh.
who changed pop music and gave a · "It's just hean warming to keep all
legion of American youngsters their this going." · •
.
·
first taste of rebelliousness.
While in Memphis; the fan club

..

officers meet with Graceland 's si41T bcrs in 47 states and abrOad, collects other excesses.
to diiCuss the IlleSt doinas in the several thousand doll1n 1 yell for 1
Despite his nickname, The Kina
world of thinp Elvis and plan club hospital bum unit in Pennsylvania of rock 'n' roll didn't invent tile
events for the coming year, J*!icu- and a trauma center in Memphis.
aenre. Still, he was fOCII point forthe
larly fund rai~rs for charity.
"If we didn't do it for Elvis. we'd emergence of rock 'n' roll culture.
Presley'_s reputation for supporting probably be doing it for some!hing .. Many of his reco~ings, inclUjlina
Memphis. charities is a favorite topic else, but Elvis' generosity shows us . Love Me Tender m 19S6 and
for the clubs. •
the way," said Parker, wh~ first "J.ailhou.se Rock" the (ollowinnear.
Ballester helped organize the name,'by coincid~nce, is the same as are _semmat And ~ndreds ~f pro"Teddy Bear Projcict,'' which collects · ·Presley's ex-wife's.
.
fesstO~al1m1tators. still pay tr~bute to·
money from Presley fan clubs to buy_
Presley was born in Tupelo, Miss., '· the ~ng by curling tbe1r hps. and
teddy bears, clothes and other items on Jan. 8, 1935, and Jived most of his slumng the1r ~otds, even donnmg a
for a Memphis sbelter for women and life in Memphis. He died of heart dis- . pom~?ur.
.
. .
children.
case at age 42 in 1977)-lis health was
Elv1s home, Grace land, 1s stdl
Parker's club, with 1,000 mem- weakened by years of drug abuse and something of a national shrine, draw-

PEPSI &amp;
MT.. DEW.
PRODUOS
I

ing mon: dwi700.01K\vililon a yar,
wilh the 1...- aowda inAupst on
the death anniversary.
But Jan_,- is up~~~:i.tlime,too,
for the Elvia flilhllll.,panicul.ty for
. fan club leaders.
'·. ~ ., 1• •
· Patsy Andersen, Graeelallel s lill·
son for Elvis fans. said cl!ib off"*'
from Ena:land;· Japan, Fnnce -~
~ lioll~ were ex~ted to take part 1n
the btrthda~ gathenn~.
WorldwJde, 'Eivts fans ·have
f~ more than~ c~ubs. .
_
We sot our first one m Oule Jut
·yell," Andersen said.

..

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More than 400"fans wore expect:·r

Names in
the new·s. ··

U

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Don't
expect .to see '"Moesha" out on the
town with .a hot date during her first
.. month as a freshman at Pepperdine
University.
·
BrandyNorwood,whostarsinthe
UPN sircom and is also a popular
singer, starts college next week.
Sbe lives with her parents and says
she won't stan io formally date until
her 18th birthday on Feb. II .
Last year, she went with 18-year·
old Los AnFles Lakers rookie Kobe
Bryant to his high . school
io
suburban PhiiQdelphia, but Bra~tdv· l
' says she doesn't co.osider that an .
cial date. . ·
If he wants one, though, she's
ready.
. ··
"If Kobe asked me out when I was
18, I couldn't say no;" she says.

~1ieve

in angels
doo't
'have to
mJk~ them fly !Ill film.
., ,
J~t ask the sister. team of Nora I
JUNt·getia Ephron. Their ''Michael"
SI4IS John Travolta as il smoltins.
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'11¥ fillll has been a hit with audi··l

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"Aosels are the ltind of·maaic
can h~ve in movies but, .
il's nqtthe ~hid ofthing
to believe in," says Delia
who ~lped write the film.
love iJ if it were true."
,

LAYS

SAVINGS

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP)
-Hugh Grant- known fcir playing
the ever-polite Englishman on the big
screen - lost his British cool with
Brazilian photographers.
The star of "Nine Months" and
"Four Weddings and a Funeral"
became irate at the photographers
during ·a visit to Rio's Modem An
Museum .
" I hope your children die of cancer," ·were Grant's words for the
. · Brazilian press, tbe Rio de Janeiro I
newsRBpCr 0 Dia reported.Tue•iday.
Grant, who arrived Saturday
fiancee Elizabeth Hurley, complained
that constant harassment from photographers w.S preventing him from
enjoying the city.
'
Gr;tnt and Ms: Hurley are on
. Latin American tour to promote
film· "Extreme Measures," whiclh,l
opens here Friday. . •. ' '
'
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•

Prge 12 • The Dally Sentinel

~Kate'
Peruvian
president
stays firm
.·on standoff

Simpson attorney Rohen Baker Ainelle, and othen.
defense in the civil trial.
willless for the defense, testirled durPlaintiffs' IIIOmCY Daniel PecroAtsociMicl , ..... Writer
During a hearing Tuesday, Supe- ing the criminal trial thai there wu said he planned to conclude his case
SANTA MONICA, Calif. - For- rior Coun Judge Hiroshi Fujisak.i "something wrong" with evidence in by noon Monday. He said his witness celli said his rebuttal case would talu:
me, house guest Briim "Karo" Kaelin asked attorneys for a timetable on the lhe case.
.
list for today include'! Kaelin, crim· "three days tops" and focus on·
malkes his founh counroom appear· remainder of the trial.
Fuji saki didn't immediately rule . inalist Dennis Fung, police Officer authentication of photos of SimJIIOII
alice 'in the OJ. Simpson case as the
Fujisaki then predicted the case on plaintiff objections to tile testi- Steve Merren and perhaps Simpson wearing Bruno Magli shoes and
. , wrongful dealh trial appears headed would go to the jury in less than lhree mo~y, but took the arguments under friends AI Cowlings and Cora Pis· blood evidence.
Petrocelli asked to present his
. for the jury before the monlh is our. weeks - Jan. 23.
adv&amp;sement.
chman.
·
Kaelin, who testified in the pre~
· Simpson was aCqUitted in October · Lee's deposition will takc1 all day final argument on Jarf." 21 a{ter a,
Tuesday's hearing was called !O
.liminary hearing, as a hostile witness determine what ponions of Dr. Hen- • 1995ofkillingex. wifeNicole Brown. Th~y and Simpson will fake the rece~ for the Marrin Lulher. King
By JAMES ANDERSON
for lhe prosecution during lhe crimi- ry Lee's videotaped testimony jurors Simpson and her friend Ronald . stand Friday. The defense's case will O:ay holiday. Baker would tben lflliC
A•aoclated ,,.., Writer
nal trial and for the plaintiffs in the will hear on =Thursday. Lee, director Goldman on June 12, ·1994. The faro- wrap up Monday morning wilh brief on Jan. 22, and the case would go to
LIMA, Peru -Trying to sci~
wrongful death trial in November, is Of the Connecticut State Police ilies of the victims ani suing to hold testimony from Simpson's daughter, lhe jury Jan. 23.
the public relations initiative from
scheduled to be recalled today by lhe Forensic Science Laboratory and star Simpson responsible for the killings.
'
rebels holding 74 hostages, Peru's
president broke his silence on the
crisis and toured a prison where
other Tupac Amaru rebels are
being held.
Looking relaxed in spon jacket
request from The Associated Press Miss West Virginia crown in 1977, favorite song, a tune from '"Gypsy" you know if a day is real?' " Jonand open-collar shin, Albeno FujiBy JULIA PRODIS
for an interview. Their only media volunteers at the elementary school, - a movie about a motber obsessed Benet would ask.
lllOri visited a Lima prison Tuesday
AIIOCIMid Prell Writer
"Well, you just know because you
is a member of the Junior League and with making her daughter a star.
that ho11sed hundreds of jailed
BOULDER, Colo. ·- JonBenet interview has been with CNN.
Ramsey, father of three children funded beauty pageant scholarships.
"Wherever we go, whatever we · can smell the Rowers and see the
guerrillas - including members of
Ramsey, just 6, wore a sparkling
For lhe past year, she trotted Jon- do, we're gonna get through it togeth- clouds," Mrs. Ramsey. told her, she
the movement that seized the
crown and a fancy beauty pageant from a previous marriagc·that ended
in
divorce,
moved
from
Atlanta
to
·
Benet
(pronounced zhawn-ben-AY) er, ". lhey would sing, a minister told 'recounted in the CNN interview.
hostages three ·weeks ago.
gown when she was buried.
On Christmas Day,JoriBenet rode
Her mother, .a former beauty Boulder in 1991 with his young wife around lhe pageant circuit. The beau-. moumen at JonBenet's funeral.
The Tupac Amaru rebels
Tbe Sunday before Chnstm'!', her new bicycle and played with her
stormed lhe Japaneso:ambassador's
queen herself, wept at the footof.the and two little children to· become tiful child wilh moussed blond hair
residence Dec. 17 and have
little maple coffin, a long black veil president of Access Graphics, a bil- ·and red lipstick-sang and danced and JonBenet and her 9-y~ar; old brother, little white dog, a Bichon Prise
lion-doilar computer company.
· · charmed judges into awarding her the B11~ke, perfonmed in .the St. John's · named Jacques. That nisht, she went
demanded the release of about
obscuring her face . .
Ramsey,
53,
fit
into
Boulder's
titles of Little Miss Colorado, Little Ep•scopal Church Chnstmas pageant. to sleep in lier pink ·bedroom, sur- ·
300 jailed comrades. Fujimori
Around her father's neck hung a
again rejected that demand Tuesmedal that his precocious child had emlironmentally friendly lifestyle, Miss Charlevoix (Mich.), Colorado B.urke donned.burlap for hos shepherd rounded ~y the Barbie dolls she had
·
come to resemble.
·
day, vowing lhat he wouldn't "give
won by Haunting her very best smile. encouraging his employ~es to ride State All-Star KidsCover'Giri,Amer· role.
JonBenet; more accustomed to
At abo11t 5:30 the next momin,g
in to the blackmail of·terrorists.''
JonBcnet, who reigned as Nation- their bikes or take the bus to the ican Royal Miss and National Tiny
Miss Beauty.
seq.uins and satin,, wore a . ~imple on her way to make coffee, Mrs:
" I hope, like everyone, for a
al Tiny ·Miss Beauty and captured ' a downtown office.
:·He's a big alternative-modes
_Pageantry was a family tradition: · whote smock and a tonsel halo hke lhe Ramsey said she found a three-page
peaceful solution," said Fujimori, ·list of olher tiny tot pageant.titles; had
kindofguy,"says.ChamberofCom- - Mrs. Ramsey's sister had also won other angels. Despo.te .lhe go:-wns ~nd : note spread across a back stairway.
who spoke with reporters and
been strangled.
.
m~eup, she was st.oll JUSt~ httle go~l .
· ·: we hav'e your daughter," the
drove his own spon utility vehicle
\\!hat started with a ransom note merce President Tom Clark. "He's a the Miss West Virginia crown.
During the travels of molher and
Mommy, what s the.dtfference,on neatly handwritten note read.
t.o 'lhe maximum-security prison.
found before 'suntise the day after pretty straig~t up, unaffected guy."
Mrs. Ramsey, 39, who wOn the daughter, they . would sing their a day and a daydreilm and how do
For the first three weeks of the
Christmas ended eight · hours .later
hostage drama, Fujimori managed
with the discovery of JonBenet's
the crisis from the shadows, ·rcrusbody in 'tl)e cellar of the family's
ing to show his hand. But he was
expensive Boulder home. Tape cov'·
angered by an impromptu interered her mouth .
view the rebels granted journalists
Denver newspapers, citing
who . approached the compound
unidentified sources, &lt;Cponed that a
Dec. 31 .
cord was around her neck and that
The rebels, armed with assault
she appeared to have been sexually
rifles and grenade launchers, have
molested.
denounced the government for
In the two weeks since, her death
•
•
everything from failing to alleviate
remains a mystery. Police in this
poverty to refusing to bargain in ' pi!ICid college town nestled at the foot
•
I'
good faith. Japan _ which has
of the Rocky Mountains have made
i
close ties to Fujimori's government no arrests and :are tight-lipped about
evidence and suspects. But one thing
'
- criticized the forum given the
appears clear: The killer knew the
'
guerrillas.
.
house and the family's habits well .
•
Fujimori on Tuesday acknowl"That would indicate it's not a
Always Good, Always Fr~.
edged the public relations blow
random act," Mayor Leslie Durgin
•
Alwavs Kroger.
suffered by his administration,
says .. "People in Boulder ·have no
•
which had declared victory in a need to think someone has been
•
~o.sRnl 6 Coupons
vicious war against leftist gu~rrilwalking the streets of Boulder lookS.c
fclrdetaiJ:
las in the mid-1990s. He said he
ing for someo~e 10 attack."
hoped to convince journalists "not
Police haven't had a formal interCAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE, DIET COKE, OR
to transmit the image that Peru is
view with the Ramseys: police
living in b situation of terrorism."
spokeswoman Leslie · Aaholm . said
Police detained a reponer 'for Tu sd
r
· ld peak 10 he
Japan's TV Asahi and an inter.. a.,';;rg;t~~~e~ou s
t m
preter after they spent two hours
inside the ambassador's compound
JonBenet's death was the only
AU vN!fTifs
Tuesday. The two, identified by
homicide last year in this. town of
.2-Liter
'
Japan's Kyodo news service as
96,000- a community full of~k·'
reponer Tsuyoshi Hitomi and Peru- ;-- !!Ores and espresso bars, where pohce
vi an interpreter Victor Borja, were
ride 11tcycles and·anglers Ry fish in a
being questioned by 'nil-terrorist , stream running alongside-city hall.
police, a police official said on conPolice spent 10 days gathering
'''
dition of anonymity. .
evidence in the Ramseys' Tudor
Cabinet chief Alberto Pandolfi. home just up the street from lhe Unisaid the ·pai•'s visit to the comversity of Colorado and fraternity and
pound damaged lhe "flow of'con·
sorority row. Detectives also went to
vcrsations (with the rebels), and
Atlanta, where JonBenei was buriejj,
1110re importantly, put the Jives of and interviewed thC Ramscys' friends
the· hostages and the journalists
and relatives and searched the famithemsclves at risk." •
ly's sommer home in Michigan:
· There have been ·few signs of
There was no sign of forced entry
TYSON/HOLLY FARMS REGULAR OR STUFFED
progress for more than a week. at the Boulder home and investigators
Government negotiator Domingo
found a notepad in lhe house that
Palcnmo has visiled the compound
appeared to match the ransom note
only once. · · '
paper, benver newspapers reponed,
· Before dawn Tuesday, one of citing unidentified sources.
th~:'rebels fired into the air, but no
John and Patricia Ramsey have
'
one was injured and the reason, for
hired lawyers. a media consultant ·and
POUnd
the ' shooting wasn't known, Red
their ow~ detectives to inv~stigatc
Cross worker Jean Pierre Schaerer their ·daughter's' death. They are
said..
offering a $50,000 reward.
111c guerrillas seized about 500 · The Ramseys did not respond tq a
hostages when they burst into a
.'
cocktail party at the Japanese
ambassador's residence. Most captives have been let go.
F11jimori dropped out of sight
after the raid, appearing briefly last
we~k to tell reporters he was
BOULDER, Colo. (AP)- Pan of
re~uming normal affairs of state.
a "practice" ransom note was dis'i'hose close to Fujimori say he
covered by police in the home of the
feels his position is stronger if his
6-year-old beauty queen found stranadvcrsaries- be lhey guerrillas or
gled in her basement, according to
ALL PURPOSE
politicians- know as little as posnewspaper repons.
sible, ,'.
.
·
The Rocky Mountain News and
~'Silence has always been one
'11te Denver Post, citing ·unnamed
·of ·Jhi: hallmarks of his .presiden·
sources, also reporte~ today that the •.
cy, '' said Hernando de Soto, a forauthor of the actual thrce' page handmer _fi:OhOIIIic adviser to Fujimori.
written ransom note - which
f'ujimori's Cabinet, meanwhile,
demanded $118,000 in exchange for
.,I!S-&amp;b. - ·
declared its opposition Tuesday to' JonBenet Ramsey - .appeared to try
any: .ttempt by the rebels to to disguise the handwriting at first.
~ ransoms for the hostages.
But as the note goes on, . the ,
· ' The troitag'es include se~eral · buthor appears to abandon any ·
attempts to disguise his or her pen- decutivea of Japanese corpora·
and
manship, the so.urces said.
tion1,
a Japan~ '!Cwspaper
The practice and actual notes
reported that the suemllas have
were both written on paper taken
demanded millions of dollars in
from a 1e11l. pad found ' within the
ransom from leadlns Japanese cor.
Tuelda de ied
hOIJlC, aucording to the repons. The
•
~~Japan on
Y n'
sources did n9t provide more infor;:-r-· ·
.,
I · •mation about the practice note, pan
Uruguay has been accused of
of which police discovered somewinainl the relcuc of i" ambu- · where in the home.
1111or by melnstwo Tupac Amaru
JonBenet's body was found Dec.
relleb jailed ' in that country.
26 in the basement of her famllfs
UNIJIN!Y den.ies ~"I• deal.
expensive home about eight hours
· '·' ·
,·,
.
·
after· her .mother, Patricia R!~Jnsey, ,
BOlivian Forelp minister Anto- · say~ she discovered lhe ransom note
nio Aranlbar said his sovernment
in the house and summoned pOlice.
• had ruled out &amp;anerin1 for its
The bloncl former Little Mi11.Col- "
to Peru. IOIJe GutllubradO had , been strangled and her
....... -·-·..
......... the •-e•
"""··-sand.-..
..,_
skull ft'IIC.Iured. JonBenet's killer
iJ t.,li&amp;!vcd 10 be , in Jl09I' heallh: plaeed 'due't tape QVer her mouth, a
l'Gtli'flll*: ~~Is~ jailed· whi• cOrd 1r011nd her nect IIICIMK·
''
ii!IJOilvia. '
. .
'
uall~ ......~ her, oen- newspapen haw Np(lrted, ..
By MICHAEL FLHMAN

.'

Pla~id communlfy copes

This

vyith 6:year.;.old's murder

~eek

Only! .· up

manufacturer$"

...

Your Total Value
Leader.

a:

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coca cola·
Classic

SOft Drinks

·Sfs1

Boneless
Chicken Breasts

'Practice' ransom
note found In slain
girl'S residen.Ce

'

f

~'

Russet

. · · potatot~s·,··

•.

''

Government reports drop
in manufacturing output

to make second a·ppea.rance in O.J.· trial

't
•

.

•· By JOHN D. McCLAIN
• "'--aald PI 811 Writer
WASHINGTON Factory
. onlenslipped 0.4 percent in Novem· ber,lhe finot drop in three months, u
·• demand for electronic equipment
" eased after sur1ing the previous
· month, ·
Orden for both durable and nondu~le ioods JOtaled a seasonally
adjusted $320.5 billion, doWn froin
$321.9 billion in October, the Commerce Department said Tuesday.
The drop wu the firstsince ordets
fell 2.1 percent in AugUst. Oi'den arc
considered 1 key gauge of the
' nation's manufacturing . strength.
Continued declines could result in
., decreased production and fewer jobs.
..
~nalysts had expected a I percent
·: deehne after the sovemment report:
ed last week a drop in demand for
'-. durable goods- irems suc:h as appli" .ances and automobiles expected to
' ·last more lhan three years.
.
Indeed, the 1.1 percent jump in
orders in October was due ·largely to
a huge 17.2 percent jump for electronic and olher'. electrical equip• mcnt:
. , That component, which includes
·· telephones and computer chips,
slipped 9.I pen:ent in November.
;, Analysts had said the big October
.
' gain could not be ·sustained.

The drop in orden contrasted posted smaller increases: primary
with ocher rocent economic dill&amp; sus- metals up 0.4 percent and industrial
gestinsthe economy picked up speed machinery and' equipment, which
in the founh qurter after a moderate includes computers, up 0.1 percent.
2.1. pen:ent performance frorl) July
Orders for nondlllllble goods, such
lhroush September.
as food and clolhlng, rose 0.8 percent,
Constructioo spendinJ, housing . just half of the 1.6 percent advance in
starts and sale. of new and existins October. Still, it was the founh
·hoE all rose in November. Con- increase in five months.
su
spending, two-lhirds of the
"Orders for nonmilitary capital
nat (lit's economic activity, also goods excluding aircraft slipped 1.9
rebounded and consumer confidence percent, riearly erasing a 2 percent
- in December was It the highest lev- · gain a monlh earlier. J'hese orders
elsince 1989.
' often arc a barometer of business
Allhough factorY orders fell in · plans to expliod and mOdernize and
November, 1 closely watched survey have been a major iource of ecoof pun:has!na manag~rs indicat~ nomic st~ngth .durins the current
manufactunng had bouneed back •n expansion.
December to lhe highest level since
Orders for military gOQIIs, anoth, J~ne .
.
. ervolatilc category, shot up 60:5 per·
Durable goods orders fell a cent on top of Ociober's 2.3 pen:ent
revised .1.5 pen:ent in November, b~t increase. Excluding defense, enders
analysts said theie was anecdotal ev•· were down I .5 percent. .
·
dencc that some electronic equipment
Tht backlog of unfilled onders
began to rebound in December. The · increased 0.4 pen:ent, the sixth
government initially ·estimated last increase in seven months. Often, a
week that durable goods orders fell irowing backlog SUj!gests business1.6 percent in November.
es may have to increase production
Tbe often-volatile !plnsponation facilities and manpower ·to meet
orders rose I. I pen:ent as large demand.'
·
increases in shipbuilding and railroad - Shipments, a ·measllre of current
equipment offset a decline in aircraft. activity, were up 0.9 percent. the fifth
Excluding transponation, orders were straight advance.
down 0.7 percent.
·
Inventories rose 0.4 percent, also
other durable goods ~ategories tbe fifth consecutive advance.
I

,

~ Presi:dentia·l panel finds no·single
~ cause for Gulf War vets' .illnesses
'

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TRUCKING

•'
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- . entists concluded•. They cited World and Prevention. A similar number
DUMP TRUCK
: dent Clinton wants to give Gulf War .,...J¥ar 11 troops who came home with claimed exposure to petrochemicals
: veterans wilh undiagilosed '!lilmen~the same range of symptoms as tbe or infectious agents, !IJid S percent
SERVICE
: more time to submit disability claims. 1991 Gulf veterans; . ..
claimed they were exposed to chemPubliC NotiCI .
Umeltone • Gravel
1 Undercurrent rul~s. vetenns who
"My concern 1s th~t n~other the ical"weapons.
·
Dirt • Sand ~
1 believe they are dis~bl~ 'from such vcter~ns ~~ t_he pubhc t~on.k wh~ \
The study was not based on medPUBLIC NOTlCE
't ailtt)ents ·mustprovelhatthcirsymp- we're saymg &amp;s lhat th•s .os m theu ical records, merely soldiers' own . NQDC£1•'*-bJ'glvllnthlll
985-4422
toms started
.
wilhin !WO years of their minds," emphasized panel member repons.
on S.turdiJ, Januery 11,
Chelter, Ohio ·
depanure from the gulf area.
Elaine Larson. dean of Georg~town
The presidential .panel did blast
1:,'!'=';j·2~f=·
Clinton has instnicted Veterans l!niversi'ty's nursing school. "It i_s a the Pentagon for denying until las\ Seopnd Str!HI. Pomeroy,
1
r Affairs SC'cretary Jesse Brown to sub- serious probl~m and ot os somethong June mounting evidence lhat troops Ohio, to "'' lor caeh the
Public Notice
: · mita propOsal wilhin 60 days "wilh related to the biologic aspects of were exposed to chemical weapons lollowlnaJ:OJ--.t:
when an .Iraqi weapons depot was.
1':'~
: a view toward eKtending" lhe two~ s~ss." .
bide iubmltled.
Furthtr, the above .colla!·
' year limit. · ·
•
· · A separ~te government studx destroyed.
·
tP3XP""ICXNN148129
eral
will be eotd In the
He made the.comment Tuesday as · unveiled TuesCiay found more than
The military acknowledges it Thii F1r111111 B1nk and
condition
In, with no
. he accepted a presidential panel's ·one in three Gulf veterans repon suf- should have investigated. Oulf-relat- Bavlnp CompanJ, · Pom• e•pr••• orIt' 11Implied
w•r·report lhat there is no single cause o( feriniJ six' illnesses at statistically ed illnesses sooner, but "thel-e has not .roy, Olllo, Nlll'\'81 the right ,..nliH given.
themyriadillnessestensofthousands higher ra.tes than soldiers who been a cover up," said .Deputy
.:,~ 'c':,~t! For further lnlormllllon;
of Gulf veterans reJI!l(t .,,_
• 1 • wcre1.1:1 s)uppell to the ~iddle ~t: Defense Secretary John Wh_ote.
.,.1 prior to Mil. Further, contact OelliM II 814-812·
2138.
Butthe .nerve sas many ve~ti!J!L musculoskelatal problems, ~~gmuve . . The Scn~te Veterans ~ffa1rs Com- The F1rmare 81nk •nd (1)
•• 8, 10, 3te
blame is highly unlikely to hav~ sick- dysfunction, depression, asthma, mottee ·begons new he!l"ngs on the Bavlnp ~ny ,..,,..
ened them, said the Presidential . bronchitis 8nd chronic fatigue.
Gulf ~ saga Thursday: and one the right 10·~ lilY or .111
Advisory Committee on Gulf War
When asked about potential haz- f~us woll be Pentagon moscondliCt, BEATilE BI.;VD.® by Bruee Beattie
Veterans' Illnesses.
·
ards they faced, 80 pen:ent ~f the ~~td Cha.orman Arle_n S""c.ter, R-Pa.
· The physical toll of COIIIbat s~ss- Gulf veterans reponed stress, S8ld the
There ·~. substantial mdocatlon of
may prove a more likely explanatiqn, survey of 4,000 Iowa veterans fund- cover-up, he saod,
the 12 independent doctors and ~i- ed.by the Centers for Disease Control

I

:J::n:::::

Supre~e

Court tackles states' right
to ban intentional killing of patients
.

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WJ1ite HOU$8 chang•s tune ~n medi~inal
.r:n~rljuana, to fun~ researc_
h 1nto its usage
clans in California and Arizona who
take advantage of those states' newly tel axed restrictions on~ medi~al
.use ~f some Illegal drup, lncludtniJ
mariJUana.
, .
.
Those same activos~ 9ues1Jonad
on Tue~y the credibility of any
study~ by the ~te HOUle.
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·
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The adminillrltion wu QiticizOd this research is like puttinJ Nixon in
by A)DS ~~:tlvists last ~k whe_n chaqe o.f ,the Waterpte file.," said
oflltials lhreatened to sanction phySI· Steve Mochael.
l!'

·

(Ume Stein~Low Rtrlel)

.

By -~A 101•RAJ
motlth for a,comprehensive review by.
All ·
1....... •IIW
the Institute of Medicine at the
.
SHll'lG'fOI'l _ • One week National Academy of Scienc:e•· ,
after · nounel. the medical use of
"A Jot of ~ople hove S81d ~ re
ntaft a, "" White Jf&lt;iUSe ~ , .not interested in the facts on this 7,
the vMninenr will spend and I think this shows that we are.
~p to . ~ miiiCt
1 1ciondfJC said Bob Weiner, a spokmnan for the
e¥1~ on its 41~vneu as 1 mod- c1ru1 policy office, which is headed

Owner:

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

·! ·

.
WASHINGTON (AP)' - The are not open to television and rndio granted review in today'scases...: he
Supreme Court is confronting .pro- . coverage.
,
said giving people the right to comfound issues of life and death in
·"These cases could really change mit suicide was not a question the
deciding whether ttnninally ill peo- the Jace of the doctor-patient rei a- Supreme .Coun should decide.
pie have the constitution"' right to tionship," said Seattle ancsthesiolo-,
The coun first recognized a con-.
doctor-assisted suicide. ·
gist Gail Van Noonan, who arrived stitutional right to die in 1990 when
In today's oral argument, the jus- outside the Supretne Coun building it ruled that terminally ill people can
tices were being asked to welgh 4:30 p:m. EST Tuesday to be first in refuse life-sustaining medical treatstates' efforts to prevent intentional line.
·
· menr.
{)
killing against paiicnts' right to avoid
~ob Castagna, .executive director
llut in 1995, the justices rejected
intolerable pain.
·
· of lhe Oregon Catholic Conference, a challenge by Dr. Jack Kevorkian to
"ThC state has an interest of the arrived five hours later to become Michigan's ban on assisted suicide.
higliestorderinprohibitingit~physi- second in line. "This is an issue of Kevorkian, who has helped more
cians from assistina in the purpose-' critical imponanee to our country than 40 people kill theinsclvcs, is not
ful taking of another person's life," and, I think. to the world because of · involved in the cases being argued
the Clinton ndministration said in the United States' !eadership in law today.
·
coun papers supporting state laws in and medicine," he said.
In the New York case, the 2nd
New York and Washington that
FourUniversityofPittsburghstu- U.S. Circuli Court of Appeals ruled
banned assisted suicide. .
dents li~d up behind Castagna. One that. it was discriminatory to refuse to
But doctors who penuaded lower"' of them, Melissa Hancock, snid the let tenminally ill patients end · tbeir
couns to invalidate !hose laws insist court had not handled a case so lives with medication while allowing
, that mentally competent, terminally important to lhe nation since it legal- other dying patients I\) refuse medical
illpatientsmustbeallowcdtodecidc izedabortionin 1973. "ThisisaRoc treatment.
·
··
for themselves wben to die.
vs. .Wade kind of case," she said. · ·
The Washington law was thrown
"The person wh'? is dying.in intolTbe two appeals an: perhaps the . out by the ·9th U.s: Circuit Coun of
· erable pain or torment faces sufferiniJ most closely watched Supreme Coun . Appeals, which said that state's ban
that is too intimate and penonal for cases since 1992, when the high coun on doctor-assisted suicide violated
the state 10 insist that she mulll bear, reaffirmed lhc constitutional right to due-process rights.
.it " Harvard law Professor Laurence abortion. They iuise similar questions
H11ndreds of groups and individThibe wrote in coun papers in the aboutanindividual'srighttocontrol uals have filed ' friend-of-thc-coun
New York case.
~is or her own body.
briefs. Those supponing the state
Most states halie.lians on assisted
Terminal illness is an is~ue that .bans on assisted suici'de i'nclude the
· suicide similar to those in New Yo~k potentially affects everyone. Chief American Medical Association, the
and Washington. By July. the justiqes Justice William H. Rchnquist con- · American Hospital Association and
will decide whether to uphold such fronted it himself .when his )Nife, the U.S. Catholic Conference.. ·
"'. wsl(f de.: litre doctor-assisted sui· Natal_ic. died in 1991 .after a·long hat- ·
Among those arguina for.a righuo
cide If constitutional rlsht. · ·
. · lie woth ovarian cancer. ·
. ~&lt;~sisted suicide were tAll Ameri~
B1f sunrise today, scores of people
~ustice Anton in Scalia has repeat- Civil Libenics Union. the American
braved frisid weaeher \o claim a place ~dly said he. fi~s no "right to d.ie" Medical Student AssOciation a11d
in line for admittance 10 the a!Jument . 1n the C~nsu!utoon. Last year- on a . Americans for Death With Dignity.
session. Supreme Coun arguments speec~ 11ven monlhs before the court

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CMts
..

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
GII'IIQtl • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COM.ERCIAL end RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

IIIIDLEPOIIT

tSt-b.is&amp;

Cull992 -2156

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.-

131' IRYAN PUCE

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To pluce on ad

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att.-llllabiiORII'ItqUII

Haura, Coil 1 And 5 81444&amp;--1530.
'
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Helplullmmedla'- Oponlngo, Ap- ,

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dollar- at.tlquet, furniture,

gtaM, china, c:lodts, gold, tllver,
ooino, Wltcheo, Hlallt, old 110M
jara, old blue 1 whi.. cliohoo, old
wood boxtl. inilk bollltl, Meigs
Coun.ly . Ad'lleriisement, Oaby

Monln, 814-992-7.. 1.

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Dealer: South

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3 Bed100m, 2 bath, lomi!J
• lull baumen~ clou to hooplilll,
;;=.~n__;,.lla;.;;,Cou_nl_y_n-_• •-••
:;'~!,kelt I 10 forth. Somerville
- -~
~IJ 304·875-3030 or 30-H75needed lor ,...,.h Ok&gt;upo
3141
90 Wanted to Buy
-nun SS to ta Dollara en
Hour BOO IIIII 27111 Coli Today
Abeoluta Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
O""'po Sllrl January lith, lOIII
v• And Gold Colnl. Prooltell,
&amp;oo~ ... en.._Diamond' Antique .18elry, Gold
RinGO. Pr•1030 U.S. Currency,
Staillng; Etc. Acquloidono J-'ry HOME COMPUTER USERS
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, t5t Second NEEDED. $45,000. Incoma po- ·
- · Glllipolis, 114-44&amp;-2842. · tenllal. 1·BD0 ·513·d•3 Ext. B·
9368 Cal For DetaiL
Clean late "'odel Cart Or
Trucko, 11110 Modllo Or Newer, Live In To Care For Elderly Lody
Sml., Bu~k Pondec, 1900 .Eall· In Gallipolis, Salary, Days 011,
am _ . , GollpoiiL .
614-e43-2287.
J &amp; D'o Auto Parto. Buying oal· Nabisco Biacuil Company II
~cln- Selling porto. 304· Lookint~ For A Dependable Part·
Avenue, Gallipolis, No Phone

Top

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1 Bedroom A!Mir...,.t, Ul 112
Soeond .. GaMIPC!IIo, t1501
Mo., WOttr Paid, DtPC!il~ R&lt;lltr·
~., ......35.'13.
. •""
2bd'rm. opto;, total
lurnllhed,
ciiiUtl. Clolt to
town.
Appllc&amp;tlont available at: Village
GrHn Apto. 140 or call 814·192·
3711.EOH.

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2--40-&amp;14170
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for Rent

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22 Nlftr' • ...__
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Weollly Stulllng Envetopu At Home. Slllrt Now. No
EXI*Ionc:e. FrH Suppllta, lnlo.
No Obligation. Send LSASE To:
ACE, O.,Ot 1351, Box 5137, Dlo11'0r1d Boor, CA Ot 711&amp;

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420 Mobile~
for Rent

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thlo _
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tho F - Folr Houlina Aa
of 111118 wl1lch IJiikeo • ilegol

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Don't Let Thll One Sip a,~ One Bedroom With Loll 01 Ex·
"""' WOiher, DrYer,
Frill
Included. We Pay ·Warer Anil
Garbage. Vel')' Clean. Ne
Smoker' No Pall. PliO Dtpoel~
l3501Mo.. 814•441·2205; 114·
,..... 0515.
. I

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Time Merchandittr . Who Can
Work Between 20 ·25 Hours Per
Week . Duties Include Shelf

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Stocking, Rotation, And Display
Building. Please Sen~ Resume•
Or Record Of Experience To:
2400 First AYtnue,· Huntington,

. Wanted To Buy : Ll.nle Tykes Now Taking Appllcadono At Doll!Ki1chen Sal, Workshop, Plaw· lno's Pizza, a.Jipolls &amp; """"""~'·
haute, Ponible Any Other Little Part time bli.by slttlr, lnqu ire at
Tyke Toyo, Plaaeo Call 814·245· 614-992-5995. •
5887.

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FiNWOod lar ule. Locuat fence

&amp; hondlcapp ~ dloallled, 114·

1192-91155 •

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Fl,_ For Sola, Goo&lt;! Curtd
Firewood. UO ,us. 114·2511·
11071, 814-258-1147.- .

¢rool
,._, oola a ..,ch~chal ood
formal Pointe
S IVlllago
D - Aparlmanro,
Apor- _,,
.
r, g
, _ ::ltng crrllcoloni lor~ oorlillor~ It 50, 11
5644.

El,lPLOYM ENT
SERV ICE S

.

Ftre- lor oale. 304-1175-79371 Fl:if9Ai:E:'1iiiiiiiii:E~:NO;;: ·111114 5-10 LS Corw. 1&lt;114.3 V-1, 5
or 304-175-5013.
StiHd. Air, Slwp, tt-7-1025.

\

P'!ll, 8ft. lopg-5' on . . .u and.
l.toderen 1 Bedroom Downtown· 304'773-58211. · ,
Carpeted, C~l'(lpleta Kl~hen. ,Ali', Good eltclllc :dry•l~ 'i!H'con'o
Elec:lrlc,11~1311,
.
-;814-742-teoo.- ·'" ',
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' H~diaullc 011 $12.50-&amp;galpall.
S:,,. Equlpmenl, Henderton,
WV. 304-175-7«11. · I

1-100-750-0750,

Help Wonted
Paper
Collier; Foo Rent loloblle Home &amp;
Mobile Home Space, 114·448·
1810.
F.u&lt;nllhld 3 Roomo &amp; Bath, No
Pall, R o - And Dtpolit Ro- ' '
qulrad, e1-.151g,
. Furnlslwl~1

w...,

1215/Mo.,
Patti
qnd ~enue, QolllpOIII, 814-44f'
Large Woodburner Flohtr Trpo
-AIIor8P.M.
.'
Stove; Two P21'5·85R15 Tires
Furnlohed Elftcloncy Aponmtn~ Goad Ytor Eoolt, MS. Fit Com·
Central Hoar &amp; AC, All Ut1i11H lr&gt; ~ 114-258-1_.. Evonlnp.
cludad PrNot• Parking, ........ Lilt Cholro, Elecu~ WhHichili,.,
21102.
S111ilr lltls, Van' ltflk,· Scoo1~f1,
Furnlo~ Effichtncr Aportmont -1\Joad, Bowman's Homocoro,
.
In Oolllpollo . - . . All UtllidM 814-448-7283.
-.8,..__1708.

Graclouo living. 1 and 2 badraom
apartmonta at Vlllago ~~- and
Rlveraldo Apertmento In Mlddlepprt From t232·$355 , Call 814·
ag2-~- Equal Housing Opportur11iel.

TRANSF'Ofl TA flO~~

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BH

1983

r, I I I lc .I

c...... 11,200; 1883 Cadi~

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s_.
.,
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dtpolil &amp; reloronceo. 304·112·
AVON Saito. $8 -$ t 5 /Hr. No
Door To Door, •Bonu•es'" Fun &amp;
Eaoyl 1·800 -827-4840 lnd/Sio/
Alp

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8UCKIYE HOME HEALTH '
111o1go County on1oo

~nd

trlloh I

Stove and · Water Furnlahed.

2 Bedroom ktcatlld on Broad Run

258-1884or it4-'lllll-112a8

81 _
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IWO Hdroom
aptlrtmtnl

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2 -oamo, a- Schoolo, Pri- 1\Nin Rlvaro
vate Lot. Garage, $325/Mo., 0.- appllcadono
lor tbr. HUD ·oubokf.
potiL Rtlt""t- 11+441.g14, . lzed opt lor elderly end hofldl·
COippecl. EOH 304-175-IIN. '
3 Bedroom Houu Trailtr' For
llonL In Rio Grande, Dopoolt, Rol• Unfulfliohtd duplex, 3br, bath &amp;
erances Required, Na Peta AI· ·112, $300/mo. pluo ulllilleo. Rtl·
- d lnolde, 814·371-2720 ,.,. irancoo.304-t75-2485ollor5pm, 1 SHII Uprlgnt FrHZ1&lt; '17
1EIIIPM.
.
Futnlahecl
~ Frott Fret 1" . -2257•
3 Bedtoom for ram In Apple
Rooms
,.._..,.Flreo.voad wm Deliver
grove arH· In WV. Call aher
Night &amp; Dey~t4-2!8-I033. ,
8:00pm. 30+11711-28110.
Roomo for rent - or month. &amp;man Air ComprtaiOf For Sale,
.,
3 Badroam, 2 lull bttho, 13751 Staring art1201mo. OoiHa mo. t2001dapooit. No P''-· Rol· 814...,.-01180.
trtncto. In Htncltrton WV. 304·

mlnent vltltt aa client's homes.

" " Y -·

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SlHV ICF S

810 • Home ~
· · · lrnprovementl

5~211.

f lrJ/\NC IAL

210

Buslnell
Opportunity
MERCIIANlWol

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BERNICE
BEDEOSOJ.
' .
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chuc··

bedroom furnlehed apart~

The dlooen appllcent will act 11
o .... ·manager In mulll-dloclpll·

.. •

,

Rubber· Toteh • Yucca Ctvlae • TEACHER
Sign hanging il'! dallroom: "Thi Object OfTeaching
Children Ia To Enable Them To Get Along Without The·

menlln Mlddoporr, Cldll14_....
30e1, 814·192-2171 or 114-iDZ5304 or 814·192·11231,

llolad quallficoDonl IU!d ·have tho
abttllr to provide juofoulonol
nurolng - a while making lnler-

,...

•

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RN CASE MANAOERS

....

•

SCIAM UTs' ANSWBI .

I

cancildaiia muol /nett the below

...

•

l2e&amp;.OO month : No Peril 114·

Due to out growinG patient de·
mend Buciooye Homo Haolth, a division of Beth•ada Hospital. Is

...l&lt;lng qualllled indlvlduatou
FIN Coo• Managero and Ll·
c.naed Practical Nurua in the
Mtlgt County Office. Appllcatlono
· - boing·accaplad lor:

•

Nice 2BR apt 4-112 mllto from
Galpollo; Centonory. Rolrlgorator,

2117.
Rd in Now Haven, 1210 I*
deposit &amp; uilllilto. 304·

m

by filling In the .....,.. _ .
L....L....J-,I,;,..I.~L...;J you dovelop from ,..P
3 below.
•

25ed,

2. 3
era_nlng at

c;;ranny says that _lhe runny

thing about humility, is just lhe
·I• ~!__ minute
· I .I:
__ I
• I
.
you think you have it
....~------· you've-c-. - -!

1071 Chry., ltir Newpt!rt 1400;
lac $500, All Auno Ooodl
'441-0870.
'

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B 0 Y

JANUARYB I

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Buckeyes

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SI'N' .
Aflll CllllCII

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Obi~ Lottery

l

•

Super Lotto;
2-4-21-33-35-37

beat Penn

••

Kicker:

State 70.82

••

o-a-3-4-2-3
Pick 3:

6-6-7
Pick 4:

'

&amp;porta on Page 4

•

9-8-5-3

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28ecllona, 12 hgM. 3 5 A O.nnett Co. Neweplper

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, 11Jul'8day, January 9, .1997

•'

:_ OD()T offiCi~l: Athens-Darwin job not in peril

: : ~y JIM FRI!EMAN · ·
. Sentinel Nlwa Staff ·
~·

,
,
':

~.

.:
'
'·

cut when the state's. :construction . Wykoff ~stimated tliat'only 40 ~f
budget is released later lhis month.
76 major projC()ts .outlined in an 8_ In addition to the S4S million year cons~uction plan las_t year
w,den.tng of-U.S. 33_from ~thens to . remmn sohdly funded, the Dispatch
Darwm, other proJect• hsted as reported.
endan~ include lhe proposed
Paul C. Mifsud, Oov. Geot'lle
U.l). :H bypaSs ~nJ!Lancaster and Voinovic~'s then-chief of, staff, said··
two proJectsto w1den U.S. 3S to four . onreleastn&amp; the plan ~~tit assu~
lanes m Fayette and Gre~ne counues. an mcrease of$100 mllhon a year m
The art1cle reported OD9! highway fundins- funding that
spokesman Pieter Wykoff as saytng never materialized.
that problems could worsen ifOhio:s ' "I don't know where they got those
share of federal.highway money IS projC()ts," Dowler said.
reduced .as,Congress works to bal·
Even if the funding is not availance the national budget.
ab\e, the project_ is not doomed,

A Jll:lblic ~~~~will be·beld IIC~t
week tn A;lhens on, the proposed
Super D h1ghway fl'om Athens to
Datwin.
. .
.
.~~~le,;~o peparJment of
~sportalion District .10: Deputy
()iri:Ctor Iohn Dowler discounted a
story published in The Columbus
Dispatch Wednesday that said the ,
project is "on the chopping block."' ·
The Dispatch re~ lhat hun·
dreds of millions · of dollars in
promised .highway .projects may be

son ville u.S. 33 Bypass.
"The need (for the projC()ts) is
demonstrated," Dowler ~d. "They're
good projects."
,
The Atheni-Datwin project and
the U.S. 3311-17- Connector Road ·
would be good for Meigs County, lie
added.
ODOT .announced lhis morning .
thatthepublichearingontheAthensto-Darwin highway will be held
Wednesday from 5-7 p.m. in the Cutler/PutnamBallroomattbeOhioUniversity Inn in. Athens . •
The public hearing is one o~ the

last requirements before des.ign can
begin on the proposed Super II highway.
' Officials from ODOT District I 0
and the consulting finn Sverdrup &amp;
Associates, Columbus, will present
information regarding two feasible
alignments which have been selected
for the proposed highway.
An open boose fonnat will be followed for the hearing, meaning that
interested residents may stop by anytime during the two hours to look at ·
exhibits and ask· questions. Written
.

price hike
ups inflation
WASHINGTON(AP)- Wholeside prices shot up o·.5 percent in
December, the steepest advance in a
year, and helped pushed the rate for
1996 to the highest' level in six
years.
The Labor Department said today
the 2.8 percent increase in ils Pro:
ducer Price Index last year was the
biggest since a 5.7 percent advancc in
1990. The ·December advance was
the largest since a 0.6 percent gain in
December 1995.
The PPhneasurcs inllation before
it reaches the consumer. The department will report on consumer inllation Tuesday.
While IOJlJPin~ the 2.2 percent rate

J

committee will be on cooperating .

·:
Progress on revitalization pro- KrouPS to bring in spe()ial programs
:. jects',and. olher programs geared to · by bolh ~fessional and non-profes1 • eJihanc~ the village's appeal to visi- slonal perfonners.•
.
j tors were disc~ at Wednesday's
Possib.iJities for enticing tour ·
:. meeting of lhe ?onleroy Merchants groups into the community were
. AssQciation held in the Peoples Billlk also discussed 8J'l(! one proposal dealt
-: conference room.
with seniorcitizens·from other com·
It was re~ed that work is pro- munities. '
'
gressing nic~ on .the amphitheater.
Assistance wilh the cost of paintA question·on how it will be used ing a historical mural on lhe side of .
was raised by Annie Chapman, wllh . lhe Sweet Greetings building facing .
Susan Clark, · president, explaining the People$ Aute Bank on Linn
\ ·~ use will bo ,gover:ned by the vii- ' ~Dreet WIIS:apjlwved'by the-associa. lage_ ~g~ ~ ~mmlltee .cQII'Iposejl;
'
·•

1'19!!...,
1'll,
1 f~~?·j:~~.f'~~i~%1~;
a major

~t:~i.·~t

ft

. {"' ·~;; .tt\t ~ft(ait~· non~prilfit

'

ibrary work progresses____, Wholesale
.

. wilh other southeastern Ohio art

• o£.repi _?; i~Jr:fro~~- ar.de.,..
· . :O~~nlv ..· ~ pedple ill ~lfe ;~;~;~~';i,~g\;t;;;

. .

(Contlnued on Page 3)
'

Pomeroy merph~nts
::study revitali~ation
·. progress in vlllage
· · '' • By CHA,RLENE HOEFLICH
: Sentinel' New8 St.tr

Do.wler said.
At worst, the project would be
delayed, he eltp\ained.,
"If no additio~l money comes, it
will make lhe 8-year list into a 1(}.
year list," he said.
· . 111at would meim the Athens·
bar,win project would be completed
in 2002 or 2()()j instead of 2000 or
200l,DoWiersaid.
Projects nO! included in the Dispatch'articlc were the remaining sec.'
tions of the U.S. 3311-77 Connector
Road from Five Points to
Ravenswood, W.Va:, and the Nel·

aceelemtion
inuch of last
year's advance was due to volatile
food and energy. prices,
Energy costs jumped 12 percent in
1996 and food prices rose 3.4 percent. But when food and energy arc
excluded, the so-called core index
rose just 0.6 percent compared with
a 2.6 percent ;ill vance in 1995.
.. Analysts had said there was liulc
sign of inllation in the -cconqmy,
Aldridge, 24, Misty Cron, 21, and which has slowed to less than halt the .
Shelby .Cron, 3, all of Coal Grove; sizzling 4.7 percent growt~ rate durCandy Lee, 31, hometown unknown; ing the April-June quarter.
Although the report showed the
and Kathlene Wilks, 71 , Proctorville.
cost
of raw materials ·in December
The 'defendants arc B.J. Allen
was
up 4.2 percent and prices for
Co., of Youngstown; Bruce·and Rori
zOidan, of Boardman; Ayilig 'Drag- intcnncdiate goods up 0.4 percent,
on Inc., 0/B/A Ohio River Fireworks both rell(:Ctcd sharply higher energy
Co., Youngstown; Blue Angel Inc ., · prices.
There also has been little evidence
Youngstown; Phantom . Fireworks
Co .. Columbiana; David Pruiu, Scot- of price pressures from labor costs,
town; and the Ohio State Pyrotech- which typically represent two-thirds
of a product's price.
nics Association. Boardman.

arti~&lt;tk aJ!iUty, do
llloUps us1n1 the amplutheater, and mural wblil\·they come 1n A'ugust for
the types, of entertainment to be pre-- a family reunion.
sente4 lhere, will be regulated by lhe
Clark presented information 011
committee. she reported.
· . the Ohio Vl(omcn's Business ConferChirk said that an emphasis of the
(~nued on Pllsa- 3)
·l

: Families .o f fir~works fire victims file $40 million suit
' · CINCINNATI (AP)- The fami; . ties of four of the nine people who
: ·died in a fireworks store fine last sum; : 1ner filed a $40 in1Rion lawsuit in fed.
., : eral coon.
· : · The fire July 3 at Ohio River Fire• works in Scottown also injured II

.. . . . ..t.

.,

. \
! '

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; people.

-.·.
Nancy Tolliver of Branchland ~
·.; W.Va., who lo$1 her husband and
~ · daughter . in the fine and suffered
~·; bums, i~ among_th~ plaintiffs, The
~: suit, tiled on Wednesday. alleges

...
.. ,

negligence by the ~fendants, includ·
in'~ ow~rs oft~. fi':ll~orks store.
· It asks .~IS million 1n ~o':"pe~s.at~ damages and $20 m1lhon 1n .
.punmv~ damages on behalf of those
who died,J ~nd $2 million in .co~pensatocy damages and $3 million 1n
punitive damages on behalf of some
'plaintiffs w.ho survived.
·
They :~. D.istri~t Court clerk's
office 1mllally assigned the case ,
Wednesday'to Ju~ge Susan Dlott, but
th~n transferred It to Judge Herman
Weber bccabse Ms. Dlott's husband

is a l•wyer representing 1he plaintiffs. age in a 1987 skateboarding accident,
Ms. Olott said today that federal has been ruled incompetent to stand
law b~ llf:r from handling any case • trial and is being held at the Central
that would jnvolve the la\1' firm of her . Ohio Psychiatric Hospital in Columhusband, Clincinnati lawyer Stanley bus.
Chesley:
Plaintiffs in the suit include the
No trial date has been set.
families or estates of Matthew San'Rldd Hall, 24, of Proctorville, was som, 14, of Wayne, W.Va.; Jason
indicted on nine counts of involun- w.aac,,
11 e 9 Hunt1'ngton , WVa
· a·'"
. .,nu
taryinanslaughterandthrcecountsof FtoydTolliver, 34,and0naJeanTolaggravated arson in connection with liver, 8, of Branchland, W.Va. ~
the •fire.'
·
·Others who died in the fire but
· ·But Hall. wlto suffered brain dam- were not named in the suit are Ryan

~~ Ethics . panel "'!i.ll.air ·
:~fi~dings
Gi:ngrich

By AARON MARSHALL
GMnett Newa Se1'11ice
COLUMBUS - Barring a last-·.
minute entry, the horse race for the
17th district Ohio Senate district
·appointment from Senate Democrats
this month appears to be shaping up
into a two;stecd affair.
Former State Rep. Mark Malone
of South Point confirmed Monday
that 1¥: has formally applied for the
17th District Senate scat, joining .
longtime 91 st District State Rep . .
Michacl Shoemaker, D-Boumevillc.
as the only de~ larcd candidates for
the scat.
"I have formally sent them a let·
tcr indicating l)'IY interest," said l'tlalone from his Lawrence County borne.
The scat, which will ope~ up offi.
dolly when Sen: Jan Michael Long,
D-Circlcvillc, steps down to be a
Juvenile Coun judge· in Pickaway
County, is available to anyone who
applies from the sprawling sevencounty southern Ohio district.
Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy,
0-Columbus, hils set a deadline of

WASHINGTON (AP) - After an elttraordinlll')l 14-hour .session, the
, · House ethics committee allotted all next week tor • public airing of Speak·"''
. : er Newt Gingrich's elhical misdeeds and recommendations for his punish. ; mcnt.
·
·
;. ' Gingrich's triumphant re-election Tuesday may quickly, tum to cmbar-• rassment, when committee special oounsel James M.'C9le presents his findings and sanction recommendations begi.nninl! Monday.
.
· The commitiee announced the schedule at I :45 a.'in. today, suggesting the
. 10 memb!=rs had a difficult time reaching agreement. The timetable calls for
:· Cole's; final repOrt to.be finished by Feb: 4 - tw.o weeks after the House
will vote on !)Cnalties.
.
.
.' · · Re\t. Nancy Johnson, R-Conn., chairwoman of the committee, pledged.
:· the HouSe would·llavc.all the information necessary to inake a decision on
; · penalt;.s - in a vOle thai likely will be Jan ..21 .
·.,
"We made provisions for a follow-on report thai' will simply be ~tylisti·
. cally better, more inte81'l!ted," she told reporters. "They'll know evcrylhing
· ; · befcire (then)."
.
'
I
;, · Ar1eut one cbmmittee member raised the possibility that witnesses would .
~ ~called to testify at nc;_ltt week's hearinss, which will ·be open to the pub, . ·he.
.
' ~: "Iflhe committee agrees to have witnesses, there's time for it," Rep. Ben(jamin Cardin, 0-Md., said today.
·
·1 • The most likely punishment for Gingrich would. be a VOle.to reprimand
·' f'lingrich for his ailmitted misconduct, although Olher sancbons could be
~ added. A mote serio~ cens11re would make him ineligible to serve as speak."er under Republican ~ucus !'Illes. .
;•
_
·
:' Gingrkh on Dec. 21 admitted he violated House ~lea by fllilin1 to seck
~ Jpeclfii: legal' advice about the use of tax-exCIJipl projeo::ts for partisan p~~r­
: 'poseJ and I?Y approving ~bmissions to the ethics pine! thft iiiWiteqly denied
t lhe involvement
of his political action committee,
OOPAC,
willi the talt·
·•
. .
.
.
r ..
".:c~empt

!

•.

pitch
for .Long's Senate seat .

on

•

'

Malon~· making

'

pro.JCC:ls.

•. ·

.

. .., •

~ 'becomina the first Republican speaker to succeed hiRJ~elf in 68 years.
: L Cole apparentfy will have 11!1 pltpanslve role in the;holrifip. He will pre·
: :S.nt hit finding~, his punisluni:nt nocommendllions and,will answer uy quea~ ·li0111 from committee members. Gingrich's attorney abo pnsents arpments

.

.

'

•

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., 4

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on

An elderly Coolville area couple died late Thuraday i!l a Sll'l!clune fi~J&gt;
Y~rboof Ridgt, according to initial.teports from l.ihens County author;·

Illes.
· · Further inf!Jflllation wu unavailable before ~ime .OO.y. 1'110 ~ 1
~ns \\llun'-1'1"' ~ wa'l called to~~ 10 lend 1111111111 jfjd
to Coolville firefi~ at II :26 p.m ~ IICCOI'dln110 ihe Mei;l COUII!y J!inet.
aency M1~ $ervices.
.
,
·
·
. .

l· . Surtia1 Tuesday, eadt IIIClllber of the investipti0111' IUIJcomrniltee ~
: 'whii:h .,... a~ investiiJilllil ihe speaker- wiH bo.lble to .,Jd ut)"'ddi·
,.liotllil blt'armalion.

will

Coolville area couple
killed in strlJcture fire

He 1p0logtzed to1the tlouse on Tuesday, 1n h•• accepwtee .,eech after

; .on MO!Idly.

Jan. 10, for all prospective candidates .
to contact Espy by Jeuc_r and ind icatc
their interest in the scat.
The entire 12-man DcmQCratic
Senate caucus
conduct interviews with the.prospective candidates
the week of Jan. 20, Espy said. ·
A' final caucus vote is anticipated
for.the same week as lhc interviews.
As in past selections, Espy indicated
that the opinions of the incumbent
Senator and the district's Democratic
chairmen will be considered by the
caucus. Tliat seems to give an edge _
to Shoemaker, who Long has indi-.
cated he Will suppon for the scat.
Malone, who·served six terms in
thC Ohio House from 1982-1994, said
he thinks he should be selected
because of' his name recognition
across the district.
,_ "I've run in almoSt all ofthe oounties and I feel that I already have the
contacts," ,he said.
Malone said diat'because he waited longer to let his intentions to run
known he had some legwork to do to
match Shoemaker's ~fforts. ·

-

.'·•
..

~--\0-

---

'

.

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