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Ohio Lottery
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Pick 3:

coach
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8-4-7
Plek4:

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Buckeyes:
2-&amp;-16-18-19

Moatly cl•ar tonight,
Iowa ....alna from I to 10
above. "ecJnetdlly, light
anow, hlgl\a In the lo-r
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28utlane,12 ....... 3 5 - ~
A a.nuwtt eo. rica prper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tueecley, Janwuy 14, 1887

~wliJ

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Meigs Local Board
approves spending
plan for ·new year

lead· oard
~-~f.· Gom_ mission_ers .in· '97

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· JIM FRI!I!MAN
..... tt.ff·

devel!]pment. However, no action pay scale and draft a policy 1118111181
was t.lq:n ifter Howard cautioned for all deparunents:" ~ iaid. ''To me,
- anet Howard wu named presi- that the money may be needed later this,, ls the only fair way for all
~~ of the MclJS County Board of for paying the salary.of an cconoin- Clllt11oyces at the counhouse."
\AIII~"~~~-n~-nissioners 'Moilday aflernoon.
ic •velopment dim:tor.
Hoffman puinted out that office,
.·~o\Yard, a Democrat, wai nomi"Tourism is important," Hoffman holders can set up their own policies
dWd for the P!Jiilion .by yieldinll said. ''The question is, who should · an&lt;! pay scales. ·
. ·
fund it. I ·don't thinlt the county
· r.we can't impose it," he said. · .
l!li$ident Fred Hoffman.
~ appoinunent reflects the new · should fund it.~
.
. Lentes said he could produce a
· ~itical compasiiion of the bolrll of.
But pjbno~ pointed'out \halwilh- wHey, but added none of !he office·
cbn)missioners after the election Of out fundit\1 assislallce, tlllirislil,:pfo-f h9,lde1' ;would be :obligated to abide
i:Jcmocrat Jeff Thornton .in last JKi11ents · hive to spend lheir",time bJ jt. E~n ifthe.officeholders a~d
1'14¥cmber's general election. 1be fund-raising, instead of focutfng on to the terms, 1n the filture, new
~ is now comprised• of · two their mission of promoting tourism. officeholders would nol he limited by
DliJrocms and one Republican. .
Last year, the county provided t1it policies or pay scales, he added. ·
•.Jioffman, tlie lone ltepublican·on $5,000 fortouriSD) and paid approx- /· "It all goes hick to the Ohio
tlttboard, was !hen e~ vice·pres- ilnately $2,50q for advertisetnents Revised Code - that.you are in
~nt.
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promoting MCia,i County.
Chqe of your .own office," Howard
··-Tllurllla
·~y thinkin&amp; is· we should fund
~aid.
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:'.j,{iddJepon reslcienund business- touri11111, at 'leas( for half ~ .year," '
mp'ilray aWolutlon
lliln Bob Oiirnolulked.the board to 'I'hol'htOn sai(l. ·~ are a lot of ' Hoffman presented a resolution to
cilhlinue its assistance to the tourism tl!in&amp;, develoj,inl, ~ Chesti:r Cour- 11hc boar!! supporting the proposed
~ duri~l:t997· ,.
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· th~se. ~ ~ ·,11111phithtiat6r here in ·{ improvement and xclocation of U.S.
~ ·I think the tourill!'l baud is -very
Porn~. the gi'tenhOilsesl _ '' •:33 from ~thens-' to Darwin.
i~nt," 'laid Giltnore: · .
· ' COmmissiollen did ala:ee to meet ·J) . . . 1be improvement and relocation
'"Giltnonl.'bi;~ dlti ,~-has done., .
~t intereated in,l&lt;.:ism to. •· wou~d ~an incenti~ for business
fulld,lfill!nl dunng· tile YC/11' f01111!1l..iLa fundil1a pi~ . . · ' .. ,, '&lt;" &amp;f!d tndustry to ~~e 1n southeastern
· .. · t .:R . ployft Palic;J·
, ,' '"! Ohio and would provide an important
the $1,500 made from its
~~=;~~::!!boolh~ at lhe 1tate fair.
Thcimtoli .~lC&gt; •~~ell ~ling', lint in a loilil-needed adequate high·~
IeffThonitcin said
JOlin R. Lentes to prepue a way system from the interstate sys-.
needs to IIIJI!IDrl tourism
scale and draft a policY..; tern, the 1ea0lution said.
commlatoncn transoffices. .:;·
The board approved the resolu-the tourist11 offic~ frptn
the employcesat lion. which will presented durins a
fj$~,illOOJ1alllocalted for economic
xcview ~ · public hearing at the Ohio Univel'l;i·

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By JIM FfiEEIIAN

ty Inn in Athens Wednesday from 57 p.IQ.
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"11iis, meeting is more important
than most people realize," said
Howard. "We urge everyone to go if
at an · possible. We need· to show
stronasuppon at the hearing." .
1be board met with Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer,and lrilnsferred
additional money to bi~nlra!JI ser·
vice and equipment.IICCOUlits.
· Spencer asked if offices could
sive pay raises this year and Hoffman
said the budget does not allow for a
pay raise.
Courthouse employees have got a
three to five pereent pay raise every
(Continued on hga 3)

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John Hood and Scolt Walton were named president and vice president,
respectively, of the Meigs Local Board of Education at the board's organi- .
zational meeting Monday night.
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Hood beal out Walton and the existing presideni Roger Abbott for the pres- ,
ident's job, while Walton was selected over board member Larry Rupe. Wal- :
ton ·was also renamed the dislrict's Ohio School aoard Association legisla- -.
tive lil,lison for 1997. · ·•
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In the regular meeting, which followed the organizational meeting, the ·
board adopted a budget for the year commencing July I.
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lbe.budget calls for revenues of $10,289,3~7, with the bulk of its fund- :
· ing, $8,299,479, coming from state sources. Local sources, including prop- ·
erty taxes, comprise $1,974,018.
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Predicted are total expenditures of$10,260,628, leaving an estimated end- :
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of-year balance of $28,771.
In pen;onnel matters, the board accepted the resignation of F11ye Manley· :
for retirement purposes and hired William Capehart as a bus driver on a one- ·
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year contract, effective Jan. 13, to fill Manley's vacant position.
Dave Barr, Stlzy Carpenter, Donna Wolfe and Gloria Van Reeth were hired :
as tutors for health handicapped students, while James Hayman and Darin :
.P. Logan were hired as substitute teachers.
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1be board set its reg11lar meetings for 7 p.m. on the second .and folll:th :
Mondays of each month until the second meeting in March, at which time ;
meetings
. . will be held on the second and fourth Tuesdays at the ~Central Otfoce ,·
m Pomeroy.
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1be board voted 3-2 to hold all of its meetings at the Central Office instead ;
of rotating the meetings once-a-month to dislrict .schools. Board members '
Randy Humphreys and Abbott voted against the change.
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Board members sct their salary at $80 per meeting.
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A proposal from Meigs County Emergency Services Director Rohen Byer ,
for an upgrade to the radio transmission tower, which the dislrict utilizes along ;
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. . governor·

By CHAALENI HOEFUCH
sentinel Nawa Staff

,...CHARLESTON, W.VL (AI')~- CecjiJ:JII!Ier.Nood wu· out at
7#0 .:m. today' ptilill state
Ci'Ploycci-:'1. tliey Canio to work,
.e~ thouah he didn 'cleave the inaubaltlill!i1 almost '!. a.ni, .'
'.-,,·"I w~ to Jtti!C4uainted with the
P!oJIIe who do all the wo;tcu futu
~'WI " salil Unclalwood, wliGiC Wice

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11Je Middleport Board of Pllblic
Affairs,inplaceformanyyears,was
dissolved by a vote of Middleport
Village Council Monday night and
the board's duties were transferred to
Bill Brownins, village administrator.
Jan. 1 was set as the effective date
ofthe board dissolution, with council voting unanimously on the proposa1 from Mayor Dewey Honon.
It was notC\1 by !he mayor that the
action is a pan of some ongoin1 viilase administrative restructurins.
Serving on the board were Tom
Anderson, Bru.cc Fisher .and John
Hood.
Action to dissolve tlic board followed a discussion on the issue of
ch1111ging bow water bills are colJected in !he village.
1be Board pf Pllblic Affairs in
December deci!led to make property
owners responsible for payment of
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their tenants' water bills.
1be mayor sai~ that "!he ~n
the Board of Public Affairs came up
wilh that idea was because of the
Southeas~m Ohio LeJ.il Services .·:
· and the things that they think will be
coming down the road. lbeir inten·
tion was to address somethinll which

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k' ~·You:ie ptiWiif'duln I am llld I'm

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iipl)ally pretty 1)Myt' •Mid-·Sandra .
..,_an, a· Division CJf Personnel

Jliployee. ·, ....

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~ llryan said .later,. ''We've never
1ii4 ihat done before. I've Worbd for
'~ JO~ment

for 19 yem.
":'; "I thin)!: he's ·JOinJ to he more
~11ible-to the state' workers," she

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~ ,:. ;Many ~inpl~ye~ coripatulated
'tltiderwood btl becolllina governor

"iml many SC4lmed swprlsed, even .
· '1it.iled, to see him.
·$. ;''I doli't believt: this," poe w.QIIltln
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•. ,-, :"I thiftk·it!s ·p:at.l knew he'd he
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. · :. •~ 118i!l DoniUI fi.•elda, a ~hild
. ~ 'nfon:cnieq! w~r-,
' "'~·It's Jood tP. se'e Nltn dO' ~­
' lliPg like 'tliat," said Jim Elay, 1111
(f!Jicc of Behavioral Health Services
"ji!nployce.
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·toiriovicb pla9J~j9 fo9u~- :most of ·.his

![a.ft:·:.q!.Jh,: ·~!!l~~~pe~c~-"on ;sct1ools

11f ~OLU.iBUS

(All) :... Gov.
~e ~llbvich ,was: uPI!J;ted .10
. ~ to_a fatniliir tbeJiie wheil ·he'
:~s to{ilililiar'iun'OIIndings today
J !l(his s~ ·Qf the state-tpeech. .'
y-• -voinoYicih ·will devoie· abiNt 70
';;iicent of his aeventh annAl ljleech
:education; Mikt Dawsoh, his
-ljol!.e'sman. salci Mon~~tyu the aov· ~pratt~ his deliveli)' ln •the
:Mwly renovated House chemben.
·-1}1C Statehouse will be the site of the
~h for thC firstliJlle iince 1\}93,
"'~ ·"He'll tollcll' on 11 nu,aber or
but the guts ·of it wilt be·on
icliication·- specifically, urban edli~loon." ·'
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.a.

;re.s,

. . "·I(I't!lat sense, t(le speech 1\Jesday ·
~WillJ~.:iitrJ1lllf to !ts ~ssors. _ ,
,._ Last· year, Vomov~eh .lamented"faifu~s in uiban distritts 1\Ja! ~said
,had.becn .de)&gt;astatmg to fiiJl!lbes.
; :fWay, he was expected to
annou_nee plans for a multimillion~Jar progfi'D to provide ~~ to
lietp:Ohio:s-largest school d1stncts
niiiUce their'dropout rates, imll!Ovt:
:tesi !!!:ores and solve social ills such
u -Cirilg usc and teen pre~ancy.
"·r,- A!~ expected ,to. ma.ke a ·cdmeback- tn th1s years speech: ch~
sc'!O'&gt;lst,~so know as "community
a:~l~. I~ schools would he inde·-~lident, autonomous !lnd f~ CJf

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~- Newa Sll'\1ce

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~~.. to "stake out

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ifound fOr ·

Democrats in the emerafundina dcblle, State Rep.

Shoemaker is pij)J!Oiillll that
billion in lottety funds ovtr 10
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forOhio'acrum- ·
· pro- ;
time for the
known u Ohio's

schopl fundins system.
.
~wllh the Ohio Su~me Coun diiC
to rule soon - jl0as1bly as soon as
next ·week - on a landmark school
fu~ing case seekinJ to sl_rike down
Obto:S cutrent school fundiDI system
as unconstitutionally inadequate,
Republican lcJislatiY!o ..aden have '
iRdicllled education fuildina will hi 1
cop priority.
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might create a problem in the future."
ResOlution adopted
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AI the Dec. 23 meeting of counAn appropriations resolution:
cil, three landlords were !here to adopted by council calls for a total of:
procest the policy chanse. charging $1.110,500 in expenditures for the:
that it would be "disastrous for land- village operation in 1997 .
lords."
Cterk Dennis Hockman noted that•
At that time, council · ·members -there is a carryover balance from:
denied knowing the reasoning behind . 1996 of $175,884.55 and antici,pated:
the board's action. lbey promised income of $1,166,937, making a:
some explanation before.the change total of $1,342,821 .55 available for.
went into effect; and a meeting with · 1997 operations.
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rental propeny owners.
This year's appropriation for vii-.:
· At last night's meeting, rental llige expenses is about $46,000 below:
propcny owners ag11in expressed the 1996 appropriation.
opposition to the board's action.
Anticipated expenses · included:
After a lively discussion !he may- geneml fund, $475,850; street main,;
or said that any change is being ."put tenance, $65,250; lire equipment:
on hold. until he can talk with !he law expense, $19,600; fire truck expens·'
director about the legal issues, and es, $43,9QO; refuse expenses,; ·
then council will address !he matter $76,000; water expenses, $212,000;;
again."
cemelery expenses, $19,750; sewe[· ·
He canceled a public hearing on expenses, $165,000; meter deposit;
the policy change, pending further expense, $5,000; mini-gold expen&amp;es,'
information from the village scilicitor $2,8509; recreation expenses,:
on the necessity .for making any $15,000; Cops expenses, $10,300. :
change in !he way water bill collec· Other bus'- '
tion is handled at this time. ·
In other action, council:
.
1be village now requires a $65
• Passed a resolution of support fo~
deposit from .!lew customers, hilling the proposed improvement and rel(}o:
is 'tnade directly to the consumer'by cation of U.S. 33 from Athens to Dar''
the villaJe, and any delinquent water win. Honon will attend the Wednes-;
bill payments are handled from the day public hearing in Athens, 5-7•
deposit.
. · (Continued on Page 3)
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·Athens-Darwin project
opponents to air views

ATHENS - Oppo~ents to a proposed
relocation of U.S. 33 froni
finance;.
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Athens
to Darwin will air their con. 1'he , House passed a bill tbat
cerns at Wednesday's public liearing
~o~ld lljve creat~ ~haner ~hools
hosted by the Ohio Department of
~~ns ~last lellslat•ve.sess!on, but
Transportation. ·
11 died m the Senate. Vomov~eh was
1be hearing, set for 5 p.m. at the
expected;;to propose apilol project for
Ohio University Inn, Athens, is to
To~. 11 :
gather input on an environmental
VomQrJch w~ also expected to
assessment
that considers relocating
suggest mcreas•n1 the number of
33
·to
the
west
of the existing high~ouchers available to allow lo~·
way.
1ncome Cleveland fam1lies send the1r
Qov. Volnovlch
1be IISSC!SSment considers ' three
chi~ren IP, private ~~j:hool.:
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I doii,t expect 1111yih1nl new,
neJteC:tina the most pressing prob- alternatives, two that would direct
senate Mlnori!Y Leader Ben Espy, D- . le!ft~ in education wh!le han!finl out OOOT to build the new highway, and
Columl!llfyS81d Monday.
mllhons to pel pl'OJCCis, such as a third "no action" alternative. 1be
new roadway would be devel,oped 1Espy .;accused Voinovic~ of school computers. .
112 miles (Alignment B) or 2-2112
miles (Aiisnment ~)from the cunent
33.
"It's kind.of like a shotpn wedS~m.aker said. he realizes the
Concerns have been raised by
dins whe~ the groom wants to mar- $2.50 million a ye•m loltery money landowners whose fanns and forest·ry the bride 'II loq as lhllt I"" is for 10 years will have to ,be taken land would be affected, and by local
citizens worried about tile impact a
pointed !It ~~"''" said S¥e!"aket.
~ somewhere else.
"As lana .~ the coalt~ton holds ·
In essente, thai does force the new highwa~ wou1J have on rural
that l~·aaqe everybody,!' Jolnllto extra money from t~ l~llery to be. character, according to a news xcleasc
be excited ~ut sc~o:ols, ~ ~ used.for schools and 11 Will short ~I from ~At!1en~-bued Buckeye ForreferrinJ-IO th,!: coahuon of over~ A~cone somewhere else," he said. est Cou~M:il, ·
school districts .suinJ the Mite Q\'er "Sonw;body may not .JICII' 10 bliild a
oppo.ition is rootec1 ill• wuce of
the ·fundinJ i11uc. . .
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.,11ports !iladiutn...I've been waitinJ,to taJt dollm, lou ol fCINII
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j.fl)elbldfort..,pys."

some state mandates butstill publicly

$"oea:naker suggests lottery fur:tds repair buildings·
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lane will bring'lhe type of economic
growlh that Athens and Meigs coun~
ties need.
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"The s(}ocalled improvement ·of
U.S. 33 is a $100 million boondoggle," 511id Todd Acheson' of Athens
County. "A new road is unnecessary,
hannful to !he environment, carries a
huge- price tag and will degrade the
rural character of our tommunity." '
Depending on the alignment cho.. .
sen, building a new 33 would destro~
I 83 to 366 acres of forestland~
according to the council. It woul¢
also disrupt Pratts Fork and th~ .
Shade River with 29 to 3 I crosiings;
totaling approximately three miles o(
waterways impacted.
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Dennis Hall,!laeoloJist ;.,.ith tt.Z
Ohio Department of Natura~
Resources, called the .mt aljln1 tbl
.proposed C.Cit idol'S "extremely prot~(
to erosioft ud lllldalidia1."
t
''This is a mlsplod~
eddl:lwllbyODOI"iCu:__...
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ncn dull
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Commentary

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The Dally Sentinel•,. 3·

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The Daily Sentinel Waters will r~e~,.. e. ~gize Black -C~-..cus
ri.ce.
. By O.WAYNE WICKHAM ·
o.nn.u Newl Service

111 Cowt Sl, ~. Ohio
114 112·21111 • Fax: 992·2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllhet'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
· Control'-

· 01~ M1n1111r .

WASHING'ION - Remember
the Congressional Black Caucus?
· . The 35-member organization of
African-American l.ealslators was
ghl" up for dcnd by many people
two years ago, after New Jersey Rep.
Donald Payne became its leader and
Newt Gingrich cut off its congressional subsidy.
·
Payne, whose leadership style is
so dull he makes watching grass grow
an exciting idea, slipped quickly·into
politicl\1 obs&lt;;urity and pulled the cau.. cus in behind him. His two-yeat reign
is remembered most for the loud cries
of foul that
from caucus members when the speaker announced he
was cutting . off .!he funding long
enjoyed by it and other caucuses in ·
the ,House.

came

Ugly clima~e a product
of. politicar warfare

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During the heyday of IIMI &lt;Ripll~ -for tl_!e people Ot Cllilcnia's 3'th dentill
black ICiivilll ~
li~an Revolution, the BIM~ Caucus
Distncl. And you ~~she'll . unsuccessfully to get the Clinton
often was AWOL ot: simplyopnable to quickly · put !hal _ . lenlcitv to campaip 10 mab a mUbr fiuncial
project its voice over tlteo din' that wort pwling the Bl.:k CaUcus out o'r 4 clumulluii:D~ !Q tilt.~ qainst
ls~ues like aft'iiu)jttive action and wel- ·ill stupd'.
, propooitlon ~09.' the ballot illitiativo
fare reform produCed. . t:,:
t
1hat was me.ilt to •ICuule llffirmativc
She'd better..
: Well that's about to chiiJigl.
Bill Clinton's pl~ge to ;..ort with Action proJdiiiS in California.
Shonly . befon: Gingrich wu the ,Republican-led Co~gress he! a
.
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sworn in to a s¢ond term u •sptl!k. haullling ring. So, too, does the IIIIlS ,
In ~ ~ IJI!IItCn, tile Black
er Tuesday. Maxine Watera.lliok her exOdus of Jlberals from ,.:.... and the Caucus didn't show up on the radar
place as the new chairwomal of the ascent of Southern
in scope. It'l iiOt that the group dido 't
Congressional Black Caucus. Walers, the Clinton White Houac. Blacks, ~. or individual men1beo dido 't
elected to ·a fourth '1erm from the long the most loyal constituency in speak up. The JIRlbiCII! wu ~ the
South-Central section of Los Atigc-' the Democratic party, are being: CDC could~'t manap: ~ ~e ttself
les, is just what the caucus needs to pushed ever so gently to the politic.l . heard. That s a leadership problem.
come back from its near-deatllexpto' curb.
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ricnce.
,~
Black legislators !lid lil!Je •inflll- · ~· who"~ntJ-'ofthe~­
She is ~ough. I dQn't mean that in ei)CC on the wolfare reform, bill that ,· .~anal rece~ tANtc~ uymg : .
the pandering way men ofte111laY; ·. was jlassed by Conpss last 'year,lntl" ' Ill Pt-to·~·~-ofl)le~s the. •
women are "tough." Fot sit·ye•l ew, l• on.Ciillion's;~J4illll, IO .,c;:IA~:~'~!P-tn~c:rtlllk · .
she's been a no-nonsc~se, in-your- sign the controvenial leal.sll!lion.-. In; COC~!IC tnto ~~ country~. ts adept at
face, takC"it-to-the-street ·advocate
WIUlina da~s of the· l996 presi• . 111aki111·· getttng -- auauon. Mo~
·
"
' .in\~i,. &amp;M_.~onhi)!l no~ of :
WulliagtOaa ~ cows.
.:.
, .Early last year, 'her willingness!P
bib on all •eotnera •niiiilo..,...aters )I
1ii'n1 siKit ·~n tile Mack Caucus
':. c~p.Buua .tlie group flliHilf
'itself brl' the sideli~ · of ~ majdr ·
political issue .after another in I~.
caucus•memberslirted~ng aboul
the Deed ·for "ag8resSive leader~
ship." ' " ,:
•&lt;
·r ••
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''

ltY. Y£1[ YQiaN' . ·~ , .

·,o

oc ~ ttcrrn:sr ,. ·
•

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....

·Is it Miller Time f,o r·feminlsts?-· :" . ·

.

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_.ocdl

a

Whose· grail·i·un·neth·~~:ijveh·1~·,r ··:· ....

~

.

i

.Berry's. World

~~e::~.~v~~::tE~~a~i~t~~ ~~~.~:troo~:g~;;..~y:,·&lt;?n the

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·+oda
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.

lal· s:to'.

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convention, he wrote, "Lucas 's aura . In _addition t~ the hol_ypils of · ·.
·p"~ ·,. ". .
may be almost palpable, but his 1tcensmg and dl~tta1 artiStry, .there · · Blr ytte AIIDC'~ p
l
prana -- the Sanskrit word forforce must be holy gratis of.denbstry1 car:
ft, •.
.
....... ~ · '1:~'· .. • '
·
.
•: •
--is oddly blurty'behind the looming pentry; lind chicken·, farill'iJig~ '1.nd f•· .. , ,~Y ts Tuesday, Jan._l.f , ~~)."!~ ,~ay;of, I
There are 3,1 days Jeft l
.
th"lh
'd
l'k
·
h
.
o
·
.
f
mlhl!,,year.
,
···"'"
•,
,,
·•
... . •. '
fh
shad ow o IS my. .
ave no 1 ea un 1 e t e rat1 o 1es~l.l'l· · these
' T,.... , H'1 hl'gh
. H' .._ .
·• , . , ..... .,, , · r,. · ·,
1
whatthis means! How exciting! Uti- · grails can be attained by an)'llody, npt
i ""JlH 1
ltn tS~ry: · » :. .
··
·
·.
•· :
lizing post-njodern fuiziness tp the just Indiana~nes or Kinj Anlltlr.
9n Jan. 14, 1784, d!t U~tted StateS ra~ficd the petd treaty with Eng- • 1 1
max, this sentence· may have' One can actually licens4i a "Star land~_ended- theRevolu!i&lt;l!l&amp;rY .War. ·, ·•..
. "' '
• .•.
,:; 1
achie~ a peculiir perfection. I ~ish Wit'S" action figure, an'J:•thereb
Otl thts ~:
. .
'·"' . • •
. ·
..
1; ~
I'd wrinen it~~~ by'this sen- achieve a certain mcasun!' bt'
ln .-~~39, the first cOtillllillt'!l' of• ~OCCtJ!)ut ~ the "l'undametalal ~ . [
tence, I read· the rest .of the article if not inner then at least financial.
~- -was ~ed. ,.,.,. • · • ·
'
· .
·
• ·• '
with a certain amount of huh?-- the One can replace actors witli a pile of
· In J 742• Enal_tsh ~tron~Mer~ ~alloy, who ~ 11M;
Z
· Sanakrit word for, "What planet is polygons-and be showerejl\vith stock that now bears ~ts name, dt~ .l! ~Je. 8,, •
,
· ·
t
this again?" And sure enough, as if to options.
'
I~ 1858, Fn:nch ~peror ~~..m. 41sc~ an'I!U!mpt~ his life. · ~
sell the doom of the rebel cause, lay
·It's · like this: Boardwalk Is the
In l'900, ~ Puccmt ~.•.~~ retetwd a 1!1il1Cd reception It its Rome . , ,
another ~holy grail of MD'nopoly, 'hboting·the- world pmmere: "
·
.
.. •. .
:; ~
Thi1 phrase came after the writer moon is the hOly grail bf Hearts.' a
.1,~4~, , J'r~stoent ~oo~v-:1~.. ancl _Bnush Pri?Je . Mi~ister; Winston ; :
visited Industrial Light and 'Magic:' strike is the llOJy Ji'ail o1 bowling, a Chltn:hil OJI!Ine!i, 8 .~artm~, cortferenc&lt; !n ~.ISibl~a, Morocco.
. .: :
the temple itself. He asked one ofthe vetdict of "Not Oililty'' is 'the holy
..In 1952, NBC s Today show ,~m•erfdofelllunng Dave G&amp;rroWay as · · ,
resi(lenurtists,aructjtlsortoffeDow, grail of OJ. Simpson', and i book .holt. ·
.
· ... ,.. , ... , ~ ·· ·'
.
· ·
' · .;. ·
if be thouJht that the; cuirent gOal of · deal is the holy grail of the lesal sys~
19.53, J011p Broz Tito waselectedpresidcntofYupllviiiiiJ !!li eoun- ·
1
the Star Wars franchi~ wu, ineff~t..'tem:
. .
·
try 1 Plllftament. •
·

IIJ '· · • :•

· •· •'· '" """'
m.

"'•

peaci,

deltied his political comminec's
~·· c:n.iMI dmU- inYOivcmeat ia a college course he
hlliOe

In liE ' 1~ !33" I•

..... ......,illcpl . . . . . cA .....
.
a ttl
Shol11y befon: a House ethics
Hoae. S, II'• Newt Pioi&amp;ridl ~ subconuniuee IIUIOIIt'iced its findings
odtcJ ~tbl;. an I t n.
.S Gin&amp;rich's admissions, the speak• The tape - ai-ID the deJ*I- er diSC'ISscd -gy with Ropublican
lllelil MalldtiY by tilt: 1 ' - cdlics leaden in a lelephone COIIference
u
i'IM'sdlicfi'O' tl, 'Jlwo 0 •
c.lL Tlutt was the call taped by John
J. VaDer Meid, who uid die erial- and Alice Martin of Fort White, Aa.
illal m t'ptors " - ·
t 1"
The. couple, who picbd up the

Jl•• _ __,_ ..._

L

•!C'AIU!Dia!lirl

ia a...;• ., the IIDCQid' 1
The m:ordint .- 10 the
romtiti~ Moeday by Jtep. ~Mdleu-. D-'WIIIb., the D IKDtie 1awmibr . t ethics uwtMtw
. "lllelllller wlto n=ceiwd il fnllll a
Florida couple ~~tal taped the call.
Bit!. in the ll[lest·••ISIIIIIIWisl ia the
case, Van Ocr Meid wouldii'Ua:qlt
iL ·
'.
·
. ·
· Inn 1'1 Van Der Meid -fcmd

Widi,ethic:s

,.

'·

By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
•
A..acllltecl Pre11 Writer
·,l•
.•
WASHINGTON - In this eavesdropping age of cellular phones and
·intense m~ia scrutiny, the ethical climale in the nation's capital has never
)
. looked. so ugly. Or has it?
.
.
.
·
·
"
, , .
' .'&gt;•·.o:l·. \I_
to,
·I'
President Clinton's lawyers are asking the Supreme Court to delay trial ·
• ! .....
. ''
' ..
on a pote'ntially embarrassing sexual harassment suit at the same time the
'.:;.•
, Whcticthe cattCUS· me~ to elect ill
House ethics committee is in turmoil over what to·do aboutSpeaker Newt
r
"new clllir shortly after the November·
Gingrich.
_
election1. Waten beat out Louisiana
Even as carpenters drive the final nails into·the reviewing stands for ClinRep. William ·Jeffonon,•a laid-beck
ton's second inaugural, the capital buzzes with speculation over the futures
political jlllidet. Now that she has the
of the president and Gingrich.
job, w~~en:s biggest ~hallenge wiU·
What to make of all this talk about the two most powerful elected offi- .
be getting caucus membei'l to follow.
cials in aovemment? Is the nation in an age of unprecedcnt~ sleaze? Or is
where lhe·mishtlead.la thepast, difthe conduct of public officials under harsher scrutiny than ever before?
ferenceS of opinion .amona its mem,
''Generally, ,politics in America i~ cleaner than it's ever been in all of our
bers have. J!!ll'8iyzcd the Black Cauhistory," says historian Michael ~eschloss. "There are much stricter niles
cus. ' . .
,.
.•
•
of financial disclosure; our public officials are much more scrutinized than .
'.
'
·
they were earlier in history."
' Maxine.Water's.touJhest task will·
Suzanne Garment, author of "Scandal: The Culture of Mistrust in Amer~ convincirig colleagues in the Conican Politics," suggests the country is in a period of "iniense partisanship
gressional Jljl!l&lt;k ~us to .take 19
that uses these issues as a weapon of choice."
,
·, '~ ': tht: JI'Q!!p·.s -~?U~iltg~ wprdst;
Beschloss agrees, saying "ethics investigations are a modem form Of polit"W0-have no~t friends. :we..
ical warfare, as they were· not for most of American history."
' ''· llavc no pormanent.encmies. We jusl•
Just because politicians are using ethics charges as a means of political
••
" liavc pc!ril{anenr in!CrestS. n
attack does not mean the targets are innocent.
No on~ can say· definitively yet that allegations against Clinton, whether
involvinJIIand deals in Arkansas, the collection of FBI files by· the White
House o~ the sexual harassment claim by Paula Jones have' merit or not. ·
.
.
The argument before the Supreme Court is not over the merits of the sexWill feminists ever be happy?
network has, the one curtendy occu, o~· l'ox many ~ns ago. Sorty ,.tiPN tor, :is the only person 1 know w~
ual harassment allegations, but whether the case should come to trial while
·
·
It's
probably
.the
most.
coJDmon
pjed
by someone name~ Dan prTom , llll~'FOx'~&lt;iiJ'f cwnt.l't,n not pipina actually. GOES· tO four-sbQ' restalt~ ·
Clinton is president. If the court rules against him, Clinton may find himcomp)aint abQul Je"'inism , ,_, ..dll\i, o~ ~eter. S,ure.,you mtgl!!Jsc;e: s.ome- dil~1until we~·~ w,ith,a~I,W rants, and llhD iau'pitlusly•.
self giving sworn depositions about his sexual behavior.· ·• •. . ·
·.
to keep m~ posted.) ·
As for Gingrich, the House' speaker agreed to an ethics committee find- we're still fighting a battle that was . one named Cokte or Katte warmtng- . sMj al fiiYing Johnny's shoes. · ·
ing on Dec. 21 that he had violat~ House rules. He acknowledged he failed over long ago. !'quality is ~on,~l\')d1 ,
Sara ~c.La/ . n&lt;~• .M11f11 ~tncep plaYJ .oppqsite, , ,., J~y.leape eclucated first ladies
,_, Av
,Matthc\v McCOnaughey I.. aiid riOt as with sticcessfal careers don't have til·
to ~eek specifiC legal advice about the use of tax-exempt projects for parti-. fefhinists shoulil just' hang itp nlei{
his mother. Hollywood has long beeJI pretencl~ be.l)orina Reed •.•
. san purposes and approved submissions to the ethics panel that incorrectly hats and get a co'Jd brewsky.
The f~ct that many ;women still the chair on holidays and weekends. ~ng fresh-fac~ youns wom'en
-- We! ha\&gt;e a first gentleman~
· denied the involvement of his political action commiuee. GOPAC, with the
have some quibbles with the way our And once in awhile an entelprisinB with men who are, uh. ma~~~re:'Wil- Actualh. 1 think this will happen ·
, projects.
·
·
.
: · He also agreed not to orchestrate a.p~isan cou·nterattack to the charges society treats women outrages these network will allow someone nail!ed ness'Sharon Stone and Michlei'OOU: ' Sooner than most·ofthe above exam-.• against him. But a cellular phone conversatibn that was overheard, ~. critics. When will .they be satisfied? Barbara or Connie to sit beside our glas, ~ulia Roberts and Rjchard Gc~, pies. We dop't admin: our ~denta
national father figures. That doesn't Julia Onnondarid Sean Connery. Bul nearly as much ~- we admire oor nethanded over to the Democrats and leaked to The New York Times appeared they ask. Will they ever shut up? ·
It's actually a decent que~tion. count. When the network marketing . we really got a sen~ of how lllld wort anchors and late-night coniecliO.: .
to catch Gingrich discussing a: campaign to counter the charges.
.
Rep. Nancy Johnson of Connecticut, the Republican chairwoman of the Sexism will never be completely ,wonks think that America can deal thinas were when Clin( Eastwood. ans. And so long as she's a Republf. '
' ethics committee, dropped plans to spend this entire week on public hear- · eradicated from this country, but with a woman say ina "That's the who is 66, paired himself romlulti~ · .:an·•and she will be •• she'll be con-'
there should be .a day when we fem- · way it is," I'll cool my jets,
· , cally .with· Streep, 47; In "The ' sidered safe· enough. In fact, she' ..
.: ings on the complaints against Gingrich.
--I'm watching "Late Night with • Bridges of !Madison Count~." East- probably. claim llle's c&gt;:en heard of
Predictably, Rep~blicans blamed Dem~rats for the change _in plans; inists decide we've reached critical
mass.
So
inthat
spirit,
I'd
like
to
offer
Janeane
'Garofalo." It's not that. J, wOt)d wu heavily'critief~: ~ti!lc\P,; feiJ!inism. In fact, Jhe'll probablY,~
• Dl1mocrats said it was a GOP maneuver to prevent a public airing of the ailethe
top
indicators
that
it's
feminist
don'Ilove
Dave and Jay.and Conan.',· hjs detractojJ sale~. was l'ir tOO Old."'' show how macho she is by opposing ·
• galioits.
.
.
.
Miller
Time.
·
·
·
It's
not
that
I don't think "Politicalm
·•- The ,electronies-stotnmplb)ICI' any propam that benefits women. Ill
Thomas E. Mann, director of governmental studies at the Brookings lnstiI will shut up when: ;
Jy Incorrect," .\BC's post-"Night- maki~J bi~_commiui&lt;l!'r!J&gt;.&gt;'seiJittl · fact, "· . .. . • ·. . ..
•.~
. tution. describes the CIIJ'I'eDt atmosphere as reflecting not greater corruption,
-The
lead
anchor
on
the
network
line"
comedy
show
hosted
by
some1&gt;1 me , o~et'J!"C~ .111en:h8J'!di!IC and
Well,
I
guess
I'll·
save
it
for
liM&gt;•
. but higher standards.
•
Mann believes that the allegations against Gingrich as well as those that news wears pearls. When a woman one named Bill, is very funny. ·) doP' ·bogus~ttest58'~,and~ inauguratiOn.
~its
behi~d
that
desk
and
tells
Am~rBut,
perhaps
even
more
than
·the
exhauitlld
~~ier
makina
rmnimun~
·
·
Send
·
c
omments
'to
the
author
ill
•
. · f~ the resignation of House Speaker Jim Wright, D-TeJtas, in 1989 would
oca whats omponant and ~hy, I II . newsdesk,thecom~ydesksecmstel •' ~age· fQ(nngtnguptheie~, careofthisnewspapororsendhero-· ,
have gone unnoticed a generation earlier.
, . ·:~ . ,, ,., •mail at•wacumaol.com. .
Go !lack to the 19th century and Mann says it was commonplace to "have know that shutung-up umc ts draw- be an exclusively male pre~rvll: •r ts,a ~-,, . ·
mg
~car.
A?d
when,
I
say
"that
Yes,
there
was
that
woman
on.IJPN".
••
My
,friend
Mazy•
JOCS l~to,;~...
Sara Btkel· u a oynillattel-'
, members of Congress on the payrolls of private entities. Cash .flowed back
desk
I
don
t
mean
JUSt
any
news
for
a
while.
And
yes,
!here
was·aJ.I four-star restaurant and. the IIJatlte
wrlttr
for New~p~~per Enlerprlle:.
. and forth."
· . ·
.
is.• WOJIIIIJI· (Maey, ac~ ~i- "--adoL · · •
··
Beschloss·cites m~ia coverage, particularly televised House and Senate desk. I mean the throne. Theone each the. shOrt-lived "Jban 'Rivers'Sbow.?·~·
•
Ji\1. L)'!l
',..
' "\'f'
I ~l'f' I , '•
,;,
. • •
seuions, u a factor in the changed atmosphere.
"·In the 19th century, a _member of Congress could stagger onto the House
: floor ~~k and·collapse and no one would ever see, and therefore there
,.
.....
would not be public demand for punishnu;nt'," he said.
'
'
, ...}
,,.
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' '
'
'
.
'
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&lt;tr
. In his book "EthicS in Congress," Dennis F.'lbompson, professor of politLast week's New Yorker con- to replace actors 'altogether witli 4iil·. '· ,'Gcorle Lucas' Care.r' ii lhC hOly ·' my,job.-Thc·fori:e of the free market ·':
' ical philosophy at Harvard, cit~ the contrast between the public and pri- tained a story exploring the history ital models. (Given that the artifile ; 8)11j~forindepc!ndept ~ll&amp;it- is with vou.lU'IISShopper, believe me-.·.
. , vate morality of James G. Blaine and Grover Cle,vel~nd, rival candidates in and future of the ongoing · "Star , had mformcd ~e of !-ucl!'' clue1 ss com. IS the holy grail for .~tinll-up Eycn Jf I,had an epic _prequel in me, ·
9
, the I 884 presidential election.
.
·
Wars" phenomenpn, which appears method of~orkmg wrth actors.I~'IY,as . ~omtcs, heroin is the h&lt;!IY, jtail for how ~ld I pay ·for:•t? 1
··.• •
, "Blaine had cqrrupdy profited from public office but lived an impecca- · to be somewhat quasi-religious in mterested tn !he,answer.) The l!lllst Junk es, and a market share. is the
Pay10g
the
.rent
ts
my
personal
:1
1
ble priv~ life," wrote Thompson. "Cleveland had a rep11tation for public nature. In the article, an anonymous
holy' grail for start-up software com: holy grail, a neverending quest by an
' integrlt~ but had be!:n forced to acknowledge fathering an illegitimate child. "• · merchandiser even called the "Star
/an
Shoa/es
,,
.
panies.
,
·. ,~ · , ... " i~~Q@wM.n.wl!'Wpranaiubout-, 1
For the record, in that election, voters favored Cleveland. But the marWars" franchise "the holy grai~ of
Shelf s~e at Toys R 1.1~ is the: ·. ~~vtst~le ':,5,the 1:folly,w«,J!~!f .sign dur- ;
. : aln was fairly close. .
licep~ng."
·
admitted that this goal wlis "a ~91y .,. hoi~ P,l ,for action _lig_ures~ a ~I' . ,n, ~-~ ·lirt.·WhYieven c_m a clear •
'
'
.
· Mifch of.the article wits focused grail for some' digital artists." ; , . seJJ10g llclton figure 1s the hOly grail dai-" 11 s bald. to. malt.e.,Oift tts oddly :
EDITOR'S NOTE: Donald M. RotiiHI'J hal covered national afraln around a merchandising convention,
The artist himself, being setl~iblc,. for toy companies, and an\Jiherbloi:k: · blyrry shape. behind t~ lpoming :
fGr N.~laled ...._ Ia Wlllhia&amp;k)n IIJKe·l%6.
at whi~h George Lucas was the hon- went on to say that , .despite every- .buster science·fiCtion fantasy trilogy ~fdow :~ 'fflY'II):tdi.''l'lt!t's,ju,st the. •
ored gu~st. If this holy grail metaphor: thing -- actors were ' still more cost is.tho· holy· pail for Georgetucai-:: kntd of guy-I am. .. . · ·
, :
/
r-------------------------~----~--,
holds any water, that would make, effective than npres'of digital ~ists. himself. "' :. ·
· ,, c",
· ·; :· (;fo·receive a complimentary Ia~ ;
George Lucas ' · what? . Jesus? So no articulated 3-D model will he . Oh, Gecii-ge'Lucas mAy demur. In ''.· Sllllales newsletter, cii(l.s'oo-989- l
Antichrist? "The Obi-Wan of market- ' walking off with Best Actor honors, Th~ New Yorker he claims.to.!'maka ;, DII,CK or wnte Duck's Breath, 408' 1
ing? The Emperor, to whom all must not this year anyWay. • r '
mj&gt;vie~ that aren't conillle!'l:ial:O' Sor,;, : B'?ad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.) ·!
bow o~ic? Darth Vadar, the conBut I'm wondering ah!!llt this 1')1, George. but not makin«·money·if ·• Jan Shoala · • · a oylldil:ate4·· !
Oicti!d· ? reaucrat with dark magical grail business. I used to think that the
.
..
.
. ; • .Writer fer New ; aper Enterprise _,
8
powers. eats me.
Holy Grail was a u~i'l~· if IIJi,thical,
• ·
.. : • r •• , A~tloa.
• :
'Ole writer of the article seemed to uem. But tft~ts arttcle ts any tndica-.
..
"'" ·" •• · • '
" " "
•

'·

Wlllerbis-~-subthe c:qmmiaee thlt ftlbely

.·

moderates

.

Potentially illegal tape
of phone conversation
In ;nvestlgators' hands
., UMYIINWIMAK
Aieollllltl,._....
ID
WASHINGTON- Tile

\la1 '''

· "· '•'·

,.

,.'j.,

•

·"

fines.

.

.

Lany"l\rmer,theMutins'lawyer.
saidMondayatanewsconferenoein

~
dnCtion of- chair lad · ~~~~;=~a.~:=;~

.IX!D'
!I....
cri~ di~

' ... ··t or ,......
foreca
·.eonesday
• ... .

Fire levels Rutlsnd mobile home
The mobile hone of Jim and Carolyn Shuler, Swick Road, Rutland.
wa dcsaoyed by lire Monday.
ROlland fircaea weoe called to the: scene at I :21 p.m., respottdi111 with
1 squad lad IWO In IIUCks. It was n:ported that the: lrlliler was fully
ea.Wf~ whctt the limneD arrived. Cause of the rue was undelerulittcd .
Shuler wa tqiottedly It a relative's home nearby and ret~ to the
tniler lboul the time the lire started.
, All of the: f...Uly's possessions wen: destroyed and an appeal is being
made for IIISislaiace. TheY are in need of everything, said Rosemary,Snow. den Eskew, .who is headin1 up Ute appeal. She said that housChold items,
clothing and .furnishings may be left at village offices in the Civic CenICI', where Mrs. Shuler is employed. For pickup of items, contributors may
call742-2121. Mr. and Mrs. Shuler have a 14-ye;u--old daughter, it was
repmtecl.
Cans for ~ contributions are being placed "in village businesses,
Eskewsaid.
.

Driver cited following accident
A 24-year-old Rutland man was cited ori ch8J!es of failure to control
and driving under the influence after a one-vehicle crash on Union Avenue
near the junction of Hiland Road in Pomeroy Monday around 6:12 p.m.
Mike Dellavalle was the driver of a 1989 ToyQ!a pickup truck that

struck a stone embankment along the roadway, according to a Pomeroy
Police ~nt report. The truck, which sustained heavy damage to
the front and right side, was driven from the scene before officers arriv~
and had it towed to the police departJilCllt, according to the repOrt.
No injuries were report~.

Lebanon Trustees organize for year
Corben Cleek W¥ elected president of the Lebanon Township Board
ofTrustees organizational meeting Monday night. Named vice president
was Bruce McKelvey. The third trustee is Elson Dailey. Meetings were
set for the 29th of each month, with the c•ception of February,Junc and
December. 1hose meetings will he held on Feb. 28, June 30 and Dec. 31 . ·

)lrilhlbedticfoflhe Illy or in the state cciuns."
of dtC .D f bi r ,'
The New YCif!&lt;
pUblished a
. ...,.,, ,
"
,
of Justice.• the lllli!ICIIII of the ea-..:- transcripr ofthe call on Friday. The
IJy TtMt .lUll 1I d ,. U .
p.m. .OO.IUIIrise WeWWy • 7:51 lope lneludi111 the: IIdia em ttte newspaper Wei it oblait\ed a copy of
1.~· will ,IJF .~1 a.m.
·· •
. tape and the: cover leaer were hind- the tape from a Democratic con. (Continued from Page 1)
.
. .' 'M' d l'lln rt•
deli~ to the ~~ of JD-. gressman il did not identify.
.
,..,..,.,.. vnio over the neal·few da~
with the Carleton School in Syracuse, was accepted with Meigs and Carleton
' but it atill will H cold -eh 10
Toni~ ..:~Y ~- Lows SO to , lice early thiS e-i111-"
· · The Martins weni able to eaves- splitting the upgrade cost of $3,500. ·
'
.
·
1.0 ~t: .l4ht ~tad. ,.
. .
H0115C Judiciary • Commiltec drop on the call bec•nse a participant.
' ducunow and hezina rain.
The district uses the tower for two-way radios in its bus fleet.
•· Bodr lid~!'' iii "the ~ "for . Wcdlesljay•• ;C~t., up · with . Chainnan tJeary Hyde. R-DI~ lad Rep•. John BQChner. R-Ohio, was
The. board also approved a proposal from Electronic Consultants Inc. of
• Wednesday; •the&gt;' toiW I \\" M
ltghl snow. 'H ips til the ' - 30s; House _Maj6rity Whip Tom DeLay, wiing his cellular phone while vaca- Ravenswood, W.Va., for maintenance on the radio system at a rate of $2.50
Service said., tltc JNec:ipillllioa ·ia ~of~ ~pen:~.
R-Teus. had wsi- A4oney Gat- tioning in Aorida. The Mll'li.ns said a month per rndio. .
fttremc iouthem OhiO oould he liM- . Wc:dtiqd~y n•Pt:---Lilht snow era! J.el ~ t 1;.., • inwali- McDennott promised to listen to the
Also present were Superintendent Bill Buckley and Treasurer Cindy
· ilod 1D niUiiihl ori 'il'tf hy wil ltkely. ~ ta thc: mid 20s.
plioa. 8Uiulllil Mowtlay, diCie · tape.
.
Rhoncmus.
1
tittp: lioni the lllld-201 iwlhe MX1hlh, . • I~1':
110 indic•io!! the c1eo1nnw:ut Rich Galen. spokesman for the
The next mcctin~ will be Monday; Jan. 27 at 7 p.m. in the Central Office
. lfesl IO•..... il0s'ill1he sera 7
· . n.~.;.Sc:aaeoed show- .ai~ iawaliptiaa.
House Republican campaign organi- . in the Pomeroy Municipal Building.
: The -wiMry •IDil'will•~- u~ 011 en'. l!i~~10. .
,
HOllie Democratic leaden 011 zation.askc!l, "HowcantheDemottnto the ·~ fo:s- I I i said:
~":COlder Wt!i' sclllt~ .Moi.day discii$ICII wletlei MeDer- rats allow James McDermott to par' . The ~~ far 1nolf "!!•et,s. ~ lA the loWer sltottJd coati- servia&amp; an the ticipate 111y further in this case.
thts. date It the ~ • ~~ ICCIIS..IfiPfm the mid 20s.
~ Cthics tx1111mitlce. Minority Leader lutowing he is implical~ in a paten(Continued from Page 1) . reported thai Fairlanc Drive residents ·
., thestallon was 70degrees •• 1932 -~ .
~~;!._allotered snow shH~
'
Dicit G'fl ...dt. D-Mo., talbd with tial felony?"
p.m., at the OU Inn on the proposed arc having sewage backup!nto their '
·
rcc:Ofd-low·-141Jo11*..vtl en.. . ' u"' wer lteeiiS- 1••'!. McDennollot1•Moaday at:eanli•to
"Secondl what do the leaders f construction. .
.
home and asked the matter be
; 1_964. ~tid..,.~~~~!~ It S:lO neattlOC '
' . . ''; ~; House Dem~ •
w~ the
in Congress intend ~o
• Discussed employees' ..health checked. He also noted that several
.~·
spokeonlyonc:ondi_of_,_ • . · do~~theircolleague,oristhisthe insurance and council ·decided to propcny owner.; had contac(ed him in
'lit. YO
'Wt; ·
IY·
bqinntngofacover-up?"
review its options to be sun: that the opposition to the proposed water
' r~
~.
.•1/~ L ..
U
•'
;::. '! '!
'._:
1bclet&amp;erhu'bccoineasideshow
~inawrinat~t
best program is secured. .
billing change.
.• The mayor's report · showed
• Sandy lailnarcll i asked about the: .
in_ the iawali~, while the 1'0'11- nolenr~ in his hone state of Wash; ,.
•
·
· ·'
· ':
:~
111tllee's otiiSide ~ James M. iqiiJII. Wei: "I have communicated receipts of$2,723.7S and old lines of door-to-door solicit-ing for donatiuns
• WASHINGTON (AP) ~-Con- . -~ J1W1111 !II 1990. a slwp increMe Cole, JNepaes his fiul repoll, eM with the chair of the Conunittee on $997, with Horton commenting that to the Middleport' Fire Department
Mlel'priccsdimhed3.3p;;, 1tfw "lhat also reflected hiJher CMrJY 'DIIinday. Mrs. ~ Sllid die I StlrldadiofOITtciaiConduciabout more old finct are being paid because l)ftcr receiving some complaints from
t!,l of 1m,.
bigat,pitl ia'..sla c0s1s.. ·• ·
would like to bePt pulllic '-inp this maner. II is therefore 111 issue those that owe money are finding out residents. She was advised it had
~ 1eC1 by sharp ina 1 in_..
. ~iacc !hat tine, AII)ICiicans .hawe on the: case Friday or $1lttnlay, with befon: the comaiinec.· I have not "if they don't pa'y they will end up in something to do wi}h photographs
.
iJ aiid fQIMIIXIIII. O.IISide lhalli.IWO enjoyed a raMrbbiC period of U:. the House 10
011 Ginpich 's made eotitments about thC substaiiCC' . jail."
and was a project of the Firemen's
• Several transfers of funds were Auxiliary.
: .... the.uttdatying inflltion l1lle ble prices. The 2-' ~
punisloelll on 1\erday.
.
before the C:onlmittee in the past 1
approved and it -was . decided to . Atlcnding were Horton, council
. IJ!nle4.ia .ils bell·pwfor
r:e iii -M inarllr in ' " ' hail .Darted JJ1e ' · ~told the S !le l'llll· will m11kc nocommet1t now,"
change the water cletir.'s salary from members Mick Childs, Sandy
~- . ·
founh SIJailllt ·,_ dill inl1ltioa Ineell•fl•cer In today'• edi-lhll
.
1101
tolal payment out of the water-sew- Iannarelli , Beth Sti YCrs, George Hoff• ·.;_:n.e 4bar llo4*h . • , ..,rted ... belOw 1 pelll:elll. a performance ~ woltld dilqtu cllirllt he proer fund to 25 percent payment fmm man a~d John Neville, and
tqday !hat the: 1996-ad- ·i• ·the not --'led .
the: lllid-l960s.
.vicled ·the tape to The New Yort
the refuse fund.
Consumer Pria: lndel.·followed. 2.$
.....- llllllC .
.
nmes lad The AtlMIIaJcu... CowClcrklfrcasurcr Dennis Hockman.
...,cent illC(UIC in .1995, wbith had- In otherecotiOIIIIC IICW5 today, the stitutioll. sayin1 011ly he had beea
· · • ·councilman George Hoffman
• n the fCIUllh stni&amp;ht
thai the ~ D!:l*m- repoi10d that "tenacious" in
the a..
'
,
_
n:tail
sales
~
a
lfJieNhan·
.
•
rules.
IXlst of 1tvtrot·It.d beat·bclow 3 per- . v - - . 1 0.6
. ...._ ,_ mmee S
cent.
• . ., ,
· ..
e...--:tn """"'1 ~'
''11tc discuSsiol of substiRilC is
·
18
1
looking for things to sue counties
_All of ·the. accc~ ia. price . ==~ 0.2 Jlel' n.J decrease
absolutely phlbt • '~I~ •YJACKSON - Goodyear Tire &amp;
· (Continued lrCIIII 119 1)
,_,..,,...., occU&lt;red m. awA 117 ....S ·
· The 0.3'
·
.• ·
crliscusscd substiiiiCC, he llicL
a ......... Co r"ntendstosellt"tsJackson
-over."
Lcntcs said.
year for the last three yeors, Hoffman
f~ci.tside ·'those IWO volalile
· . pel~ UICI • 10 conBut he dismissed ~t I !Is by · =:i'acturlng plant. .
- Thorn'ton said that he had prayer
s~id.
.
li,las theSCKillcd·core1111erofinRa- ~pnces-llltlbya !·§JICicctll Houselb:pubiicanl 'mrotac:rimGoodyear announced late last
"I think everyone deserves a pay a.~ mayor·of Racine. and once again
,. • . ,
,
JU11!P In CIICIIf COliS. the: biJICSI one- 'tial · -·· .,,;,., f •..._ ,.,;., --'
t.... ~·JUSI. ,2.6 .JIORll!lll• tn o1996;. maio pia siace last April. . Food t . tn~.-1..--· ~ ~ -..-·1- week that a conditional letter 'of raise every year, even if it's just a cost ·notcd·that 1~ U.S. Congress ope~~ its
ll)ltchin~clhe ,l""perfOIIIIUtt_, coitSmode..utlallllicinth. ·51111
· by said he _was ~ lhe tape- i_..t'hasbcCnsignodtoselllhe.Statc of living it~~."rCa.o;c;." he said. "I would sessions with pray.cr.
Also present were Jim and Shar'l1)c best ~iq sintxl a 1-' fli'IO:Ut oRI 0 1
:ttl
·"
~to the Jusuce Depwbilcrot with- Rou1c 93 facility to Cambridge hope we could give ~vcryonc a
ry I Protllu; Jean Sexson. David Sayre
.' rile in I~ ... · • ·' ··' '
~-:~~costs- up out consultation with the full cOm- Industries, Madison Heights, Mich. • raise."
: For
mher, . oYerall -prices 8 '"'
t. ·Itt: bi .
·
mittei: or House ....,oval.
. No sale price was disclosed.
Thornton agreed that the county's and Joe Swain.
".
a
'--L
·•-'ght
0.·
3
, _ I l l , :" .pereen 1 ·
IJCIII
~IICI'CIIC
"I
don't
!mow
whether
they
folr,ostcd '""'"' - ,......
··-an 1"1 _.,.Ill ........ 1n I"""
A sales &amp;"""'meat is expected to financia.l condition docs not allow
tllj:reaK, .rcJICI;Iins a ~~ ~ 'in :-'"food ~-~ 1 oii'996 rose
lowed the rules or not." McDt:nnott be complc~--....... according to funding for a pay raise.
C11C1JY COSIS. ~ ~ide (oitthnd·· 4,j' pCR:ctlt," the biJJCsl .iiCn:asc told .~~ JI:IIICI'·
•
Goodyear.
111 other business, the board:
~·~~ore tnn.Jioa'* P I'd since aS.3petCCII!rise in 19'1C). With
. O~~grichadmtnedDcc. 21 that he
Cambridge Industries. whic~
• Set its regular meeting time for
libny0.J..pm:ati•j111111'" '''"" ., thecostpressliralcdby · ·
·
.,••• ~House rules. The speaker operates ll · plants in the, U.S. and Monday at I p.m. and reappointed
"" Analysis saiihs.long • this.'*" , for dai!Y jlroducts. port.
~p:d he sJK.Id ~ SOitPt Canada. manufactun:s sheet molded Gloria Kloes as clctir.;
'R!R hoi4J, the, Fcdetll Reserve is fruit ·
·
·
·
SJ*ifJC lepl 81lvic:e about lllilll COIIIJX1Und products for ,the autllllKi• Extended the deadline for new
·~likely .Jll,:l"ecl.;o...,:lllld to · Shirt
' '
IMIJNofd oiplrizaJions 10 IICCOIIIJIIish live industty. Founded in 1986, Cam- dog licenses to Jan. 31; .
raising intci'CSI t'aiCS II! rtghl•.infla..,, . Ellcqy cons.: whii:b had c~~oP..ut polilical lOlls ...., adntiu.ed that bridge posted revenues of $308 mil• Agreed to advertise for sal&lt;&gt; a
•
·
:tionary JftSSIRS.. ·
ooc
• " '
li1111
in
199S.
mcals-on-whCcls
truck;
.c. : Eoonom~ liave'a!Rledy belun to 1--' ~-'-ctllta 1.,._,._., ~ .,_., pe11:~1
.
.
.
· • Met with Oallia-Meigs CommuwOrry·aboutbowlonghi....... cncrn' lasJ)'CIII'.
Grate
/ nity Action Agency Exccuti·ve Direc'cOsts in n...;....Jar will ~n con- . 12.4 ~t. the ~JFS'.JUIIIII stncc ·~· ·~ .. .
·
tor Sid Edwards and State Rep. Johp
of
·ulltcd siGTI!I.iY iS SUCil"a~bi'il'ac~ • .• :36.~
IIICI'C&amp;!IC In pump .
COI.i.JMBUS' (AP) - lndi••
Hcigs: 1.00 higher.
Carey, R-Wcllston, concerning wel·. ;t~ in mamfacturisiJ .attd ~ · PA.&gt;C::11~· or'food attd ..........;,, tflcn: . Ohio d~ q priceS a1 si:lectcd
Butcher bogs: 49.00-55.25.
.
Rutland
reform.
11011 costs ·
-·-•r
buying points 1lesday tiS provided by
Callie: uneven. little lower to 2.00 fareThornton
again began the meeting
' · .For ali.:f,~~·~he 3:3 'petceat ' Wlli!'!~ of·any iniJitiott- the: ti.S. ~~ q( Agi'icu!ttR higher.'
Fmiture
with prayer in the absence of an opinfuc in the Coltstlmer'Pric:e Inde1- · aryThi:~9f medical ·
MM:ht News:
Slau!!hter steers: choice 6.5.00- ion from Lcntcs concerning if the
What's worse than a hippo
:··t·".,,' biuest
,:.. illl!', ~'. l•.l·,ttc:e
.
a~l pe;. , ;.,.. 3 pcrccfti in 1996,
Bitrrows and gilts: moslly 1.00 · 71.50:select60.00-6S.OO. Slaughter hoard should hold prayer before its
the hiccups? An elephant with a
..
•
•
•lower; dcinaad liJht to. 1111111cn1c heifers: choi&lt;:e 65.00-71.110: selet.1
meetings.
runny nose.
._____..,;·.·;...;,.....,;..__,.
... Mnual
1 'c .u.n.
a 2.8 pet'CCIII WI'th a -"""'-··
60""
""'00 ·
-..,"""""'- nOOVCUICIIL
,...,...,...
Lcntes
said
he
would
have
an
r
***
ria; ia 1~. Clothing
aclltally
U.S. 1•2, 2» 260 lhs. -.-y
Cows: 51cady to a little lnwcr; all
They say it's tenible to be an
opinion on prayer for nc&gt;t week's
fd,f:._~~::~~~": · poilltS 5().50-Sl.OO, few SO.OO and cows38.75anddown.
only child, damaging to be
meeting. ·
.
youngest, crushing to be
~~ ljl'j'9!i4:
' ~ . ~~-~· pl111ts .SI.~'l·IJI!· fc"! It do:.lls: stclldy; all hulls 41 .00 and
"There arc people that an: just
middle, and stressful to be
2-3. 2»260 lhs. '44.00Vcal'calves: strong; dtuicc 95.00
oldest. Guess you jus.l have to
be bom an adutt.
SO.OO; 210-230 lhs. 39:00-44.00. ·
and down.
Veterans
Memorial
,..
SOWS: Sleady 10 !.SO lower over
Sltccp and lambs: 2.00 to 3.00
** *
Monday admfssions -;- none,
·
higher; choice wools: 102.00 and
Inflation su~ saves time. Now
600 lhs.
Monday discharges- nOn&lt;:.
you can spend your two-week
U.S. l:3 m.-4.50 h. 40.00-44.00. down; feeder lambs: 86.111 and down:
Holzer
Medal
Cmler
vacation
budgetln24 hours.
few a1 39.00; 450-SOO lhs, 44.00, aged sheep 41..50 and down.
'Dischai'I"S Jan. 13 - Ashlcc
***
46·00; ~ .... 46.00-411.00.
McDaniel, Shelvia Adkins. Mrs.
Heard about the rooster that JloMs, 37.00-38.00.
.
so lazy, when the other rooa1en1
Harold Rose and son, Lowell Shafter.
Units the M'eigs Cwnty Emcr, - Esli~ reocipl57 34.000.
crower:l, he just nodded In
Charics Morgan.
JCIICY Medical Service answered six
.agreement.
·,
(hhllshed
willl
permission)
·
S
.,.ofT: I , .. Pt t
Clllls for assistantxl Monday. Units
***
en U1 1 • Ai1 I , 1 •• 11
tcspottdittg included:
Agood carpenter is one who c:an
.. HZ 3' 1111...IO
I •, '
CENTRAL DISPATCH
keep · a straight face while
,I
repairing _a do-it·yoursal projecL
8:49 am., Page Street; Middleport. Jean N~ll. Veterans Memorial
Hospilal·
....... liiieet
•
II :S t' a.m., ,\pplc GroVll-Dorcas
The MdPCOIIIIIy Bon ofMea- Road, Racine, Lois Wolfe, Holzer
1111 RdMiaiion .00 Deve!op&amp;witt1 Medical Ceitter, bcine squad assislDillbil. . ~~~- .._..,_ 7:30 ed;
p.m. It Cadc:lon School.
3:24p.m., LibC:rty Laae, Puue.-oy,
Avonelle Bass, VMH.
0'

nmes

\ ..

Meigs Local Board gives

..0.

Middleport Council ends

q

j\

_

,'

Democ:r!

.:..US.

Cpl 's . aOL gro·...,h·a·n 1996 .,·,
' targest tncrease..Jn' 6 .years '
..

*

tid '"*

m

Goodyea.r
may seII
a're·a la"nt

followitt•

p'

Howard will lead board

I;

';:f= -

By

~·-= -~wen:

'=

Dave

.. -r-..aay's livestock report

.l:tS:::.:

ina

costs

: ::em•

'u.s.

Hospital·news

Meigs EMS runs
or

........ ,

.

atJTLAND

MeipCouatyCa
I icurr.Jcft'
Thol- will hold • t:;I'MI • ,. .
W Jtrt 1 k), 6:30p.m. •I?Je Sellar
CitizeN c trr ia Poawail,f. ,.....
,with qt tkias ..,_ COIIIMy aovica•
11111111 orwllo "!!IIII to ha~
~a'MeipCc: nr..a.oat'
iltildatiiC
'.
.
'
·,

lP

.,

DI:J!wtnetll-.sw:ys.Hethett'"*

·, v ~t.rY .ro.i.x ~~ !n~w, rain

eomet: i

!•

N8t!cy~R-c-.,.SJuaice

•

,., • ·

--a.-

callonascancrintheirarandsblted Ulping several minuteS later, Wei
· they delivCied the tape 10 McDermou
.last Met- aftera policeman friend
· tOld them no illcgality was involved.
Despite that advice, fcdeiallaw ·
llllkesit illegal to inlelltionally intera:pr a cellular telephone eonverution
and pass on the conlents to another
party. Maximum penalties !lrt up to
six years in prison and $250,000 in

Local News in Brief: ·

..

r:

..

lhlir._

.

I

I:21 p.m., volunleer fin: depm- ·
neal and . sqUad to Swick Road,
llnJcttlre fi~. Pomeroy Vflt assist.~;

4:44 p,m.• Swick Road, Robbie
CloRch, VMH;
9:37 p...:'; Side Hill~~

. ,. ,.... JINC,

*'

. '

�''\)

•

•

.The D.~Y Se~.~l

.sports
.

~Kansas

• In the second period the Mmud· .defensive pme. Brandi Madowt
By DAVE HARR.
~ held a 8-7 scoriDJ advutqe also played • good pme oa the
8111Cinll Conupo...,..tl
Mcip slipped put Vin1011 Coun- behind Ashley Rollch's ·four points bo1n1s with 12tebounds." Meadows·
ty 38-37 in girls' Tri-Valley Conf~­ and took a 18-1 S lead Into the lock- hlld aeveil of thole tebounds in the
-~ ,
ence basketball action Monday er room lli intermission. The Zinn final _.....,,
~iJewellled the M~n
evening at Larry R. Morrison Oym- connection once again led the way,
with
12 points. Meigs hit 14 of 39
the
pair
scored
all
15
points
for
the
ntsiian. ·
from
the field. all coming from two
The win over the Lady Vikes _ Vikings in the_first half. Lit scored'
poiat
I'IIIIC for 44'1&gt;. MCip went to
avenaes an earlier 47-321oss to Vin- eight in !lie 'half and Jenny; added
the line 17 times hitting 10 for' ~.
seven.
ton CoUnty at McArthur.
The
Marauden 'pulled down 31 Meigs
held
a
29-26
lelil
after
Meigs is 8-5 overall and 8-3 in the
~led
by Meadows with 12,
three
periods,
Heather
Hayes
whO
is
·
Ohio Division. Vinton County drops .
Jewell
added
six. Meigs had 19
to 6-2 in the Ohio Division and 10- coming off an injury and scored 18
turnovers,
four
assists led by Carlsin the first trteeting came alive in the
4 overall.
•
· Even though the Marauders nev- . secnnd half and poured in l2'points sa Ash and Jewell with two each and
had five steals I~ by Roach. with
er trailed in the game, it was close to 'keep her team in the cdntes'l.
Meigs held a one p!iin\ lead aown _ three. Meip was called fOr 14 fouls.
tbe entire contest, and Meigs was
The Vikings on~ placed four
never able to build more than a live !)le stretch and die Vikings ritissed
point lead.
·
two sbots in the ~nal12 S«ondS. But players in the scoring 'c&lt;llwnn. byt
in double li&amp;'!lres. Liz
Meigs jumped aut on top after ,-sophomore Thcia Da.vis c,._~~e ·:up . three were
1
Zinn
1111d
Hayes
·scoted I iZ ' Points
one period I0-8.as Cheryl Jewell led with a big rebol!lld as time ran out to
each and Jenny Zinn added tl· 'The
the way with five points and Caris- preser-ve the Marauder win.
"It was a good team .effon," Vikings went to the line nine times
sa Ash added four. Jenny 1Uid Liz
Zinn scored all tbe Vikings poin~ in Marauder coach Ron Lo•ID said hittins four for 44... -Vinton County
the period. Jenny scored five to lead after the cotit~st. "~ine 0111 of the 10 ~as called for 17 perso._. fools. NQ ·
the way while Liz fired in a three players who played sComl, Bocky ather statistics were available-on1he
·
·'
pointer.
Smith didn't score but played a good Vikings.

·as coach

By HARRY ATKINS
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Bobby Ross was. hired as coach of the
Detroit Lions today, succeeding ·
Wayne Fontes and insisting this
team has the talent to win.
Soun:cs told The Associated Press
that Ross =eived a 'five-year cooBOBBY ROSS
tract wonh $7.5 million.
Ross is expected to have the final got Bobby in the cross hairs and he
say in all persomiel moves involving was our target. He looked like he
· trades, · f'ree ·agency and tbe draft. was exactly the person that we were
1
Detroit has the fifth pick in tbe NFL trying to get, Jllld luckily, we got
(
·
him."
~
.
'
The Lions said they targeted Ross
Among candidaies
·the' L tons
as soon as he quit as coach of the San reportedly were considering were
Diego Chargers on Jan. 3.
Northwestern . coach Gary Barnett
Ross agreed over the weekend to and defensive coordinators Pete Carbecome the Lions • coach. He takes roll of the Sl\0 Francisco 49ers and
~over a team that went 5-11, leading Emmiu Thomas of the Philadelphia
·
to Fontes' dismissal on Dec. 26.
Eagles.
"You have some good players
Ross plans to bring some of his
·here," Ross said at a news confer· slaff from San Diego to Detroit. He
•en&lt;:e. l will be thoroughly evaluating said he alsQ will talk to others at the
every!)ling. But certain things jump Senior Bowl in Alabama and any
out at you from the beginning."
members of Fontes' staff who want
· The Federal Hocking Lancers
Like running back Barry Sanders. to stay.
. "Barry is in a class by himself,"
Ross said be wants quiu1eif?ack . held red-hot Southern scorer Renee
Ross said. "It's going to be a thrill ~cou Mill:hell, who became a free - Turley tojust II points and ~lied to
·45-35. win over ihe Tornadoes
f for me to work with someone like agentat·season's end, to remain with aMonday
night at Racine.
~ that."
Detroit.
Federal got. three double-digit
Ross, who also talked l&lt;) St.
The opportunity to have total con· scorersinLindseyHartandGretchen
;
,_
Louis
and
Atlanta
about
'
t
heir
coach·
trol
apparently was the key for Ross, Linscott whO notched 12 each, while
'
. : ing vacancies, said the Lions have a 60, who spent five seasons as coach Debbie Buck pitched in II. South1 chance at success with the players of the Chargers:
em's Kim Sayre led all scorers with
1 they already have. He said he was
During his stay, the Chargers had
a gaine·high 15 points.
~.. impressed .with team owner William
records of 11-5, 8-8, 11-5, 9-'7 and 8Southem (9-5) hit 12-35 from the
Ciay Ford Sr. and others in the orga- 8. They won·the AFC title in 1994,
floor for 23.S pen:ent and hit 4-11
• nization.
losing 49-26 to the 49ers in the Super
three-pointers for 36.4 percent whle
f "It's not so much where you Bowl.
worll: ... as the people that you work
He left San,' Diego with year
: with and -the people ihal you .work remaining on his contract because of
for," he said, calling Detroit "as fine differences with general manager
an organization as there .is in the Bobby Beathard. Beathard wanted
National Football League."
. Ross to fire some assistant coaches,
Trimble raced to a 13-8 first peri·
Despite the faet that Detroit has and Ross refused.
never pl~yed in a Super Bowl game,
Since his first college coaching od lead, then staved off an Eastern
job at The Ciladel, Ross has had a rally to claim a S8~SO Tri-Valley
0 the Lions' job is considered one of
: the NFL's plums, mainly because of winning record - e~rywhere be has _Conference victory over tbe Eagles
: the team owner.·And Ross says his been. He was 39-19-1 at Maryland, Monday night in Hocking Dvision
1 aim now is to get Detroit a champi- 31-26-1 at Georgia Tech and S0-36, action at Trimble.Eastern was led by a game-high
1onShip.
·
including the playoffs, with the
24
points from Valerie Karr, while
L "When you're not playing atthis Chargers.
Jessica
Brannon tossed in 14.
'time ·ofthe year, it eats away at you;
His 1984 Maryland team made
Sheryl
Davis tossCd in 17 points
,I mean, it really does," be said.
NCAA Division I-A history by cornfor 1\imble while Bobbi Lent'hld '16 . ,. Ford said Detroit •began a wide- . ing from a 31-0 halftime deficit to
• 'Jailging sean:h to replace Fontes a upset Miami 42·40. And his 1990 and,' Misty Lent added 13. ··.•
• Trimble took a, 13-.8 -first period
l ,:f"-•Weeks ago.
Georgia Tech team defeated Nebraslead
as Eastern had eighttumoven,
#!'.""When Bobby became a"i'ilable, ka .45-21 in the Citrus Bowl. That
-qur wide angle changed to a .~ery earned the Yel.low Jackets a share of - At the snnua/.NCAA
· narrow-focused lens," he satd. We- the nat tonal IItie wtth Colorado.

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g,,mildlla
Vinton Coonty '
8-7-i i-11=37
Meig_s · ·
• IG-8! I) ·9=~8
· · Villtob County: ·Healller Hayes
3-f-3:12,Amy Jewetll ~ll-0=2, Uz
_Zipn. ~-2-0=\2. Jenny Zinn 5-0J,O,JI. ~: 124-4=37 '
·I_' Mj(p:'Cariss'a' Alii •'2:0-0:4. .
AShley'ROach 2:u:o=4. MeUssa ~r. ry 1~2; 'q)eryJ 1,~w~113:Q-6= 1i,
:1\jcia_O.vis 2,Q--I:S,.IIran4i Mea4·
ows J-0-3=5, Taryn Doidge 1-0-0=2,
Becky Smith 1-0-0=2. Tonya Miller_
J-0-(),.2, ~~eY : t;0-0=2.
T....U: t.c;e.lo;a&amp;. ..; »,:,.. _

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connecting on 7-14 at the liitc. ~'
oral hit 18-46 for 39.1 percel)t, ~
0-1 011 three-pointers, and was 9" 14
overall. .
·
,
·,
Southern -had 26 rebounds (*30)
led by Proffitt's eigl)t, J)arl~y·s sev·
en and Sayre's four. The Tornadoes
collected II steals (Turley-Cal4well-Proffitt three), eighf assists
(Turley three) 19 tumovers ,and, II
fouls.
Federal Hocking had 30 rebounds
(Linscott 8, Buck 7), 13 steals (Russell-Buck 3) II assists (Russell3). 20 ·

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tumo.vers and 16 fouls.
. _ ng,...,,_
lldlla.,_ "' ·• · ,,.
Southern took an 3-4 first pertod - Sot~them l ; · · ·••' , ' 8·4..S.. 15:311•
lead, then fell to IS- I~ 8\ lhe half. llederpi·Mocktig."' •&lt;hl .~,-16-14=4fi
Federal·erupted for 16lh'rd qullfter . .f.raiiJockil!l: Carrie Russell
points.to ~a 31-20 lea&lt;! after three 2-Q- l/2:S,JlRU:hen Williamson &amp;rounds
.
.
0-3/4=3, Lindsey Hart 5-0-2/3=1_2,
R-ne pates: Southern wnn Debbie :·Buclo 5-&amp;-1-13=11, Beth
the reserve ~game 36-35. ~ed by Sta- Eluky S-(),2.12&lt;;;12. •Gretchen Lhicy Lyons wtih 17 and Ki',ll lhle mne. SCOIIJ--0t0=2. Tutall: ls-o..tll.....S
Susie Bond led fH.. with 10 and
Soutllel'll: ·' Rell'ee Turley 3-0AmandaCastle had mne. .
5n=ll, Kim Sayre 1,4-ln:IS,JenThe future: Sout!Jem Will host ny Friend 0-0-1/4=1 -Bpanne ProfTrimble Thursday. Fedeml will.~t fill 3-0-0/j,.tl; ~~Amott .:O.O..f.
Miller.
'Totals: IJ-4.7/1~ ....
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but Eastern clime back to 25-24 at
the half. Karr and Brinnon each had
si• in ihe drive, while Davis and
Evans added two big buckets.
. Eastern again squandered JiCOring
opportunities in the third · round,
ending the night with 29 turnovers ·
overall.
The seore stood 38-30 after three
rounds, then bothclubsplayedeven
in tbe finale. Karr hit 8-8 froltl the
line and had 8-191icld goals.
Eastern liit16-48twos, 1-4 threepointers, was .15-21 at il!e line wiih;:

convention,

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By DOUG TUCKER .
have part-time jobs during the schoOl one of our goals of this committee tion," Niland said. ''W'e tookJ
NASHVILLE, Thnn. (AP)- So year. It won't earn them much mon- ever since I came on,'.' said Nilaqd, major step today. Whelhlir we'll '
now athletes can _have part-time ey- a ~ouple of thousand d(111ars a
secrind-yearlaw student. "A lot of
another
stl!p tomorjobs, just like any other college kid? year at mOst. It could be a lint step, us have had'friends that were partial , row: l'don't know:·Fot the' NCAA td
And partial qualifiers who get a and it's something that never even .•qualifiers. had a friend whQ, was.'ii' make the chang~ it did todiiJ;',I thin!!
degree in four year$ can have four came close to p~ge before.
I·· partial q~_aliljet who cam,e'.An'.'i'!itll theNCAAalsb needs"to be!_applaud;
seasons of eligibility, just like any
Then, while Niland .and her fel-' me at ihc Unlversity of Buffalo. HI!·, ed."
,,_ "
·
·'
:' By RONALD BLUM
.
the AL East. .The only trouble, it other athlete? low students were still quietly exult-. didn't get the Oppo,rtunity to pia~ his
The 'conventiQ!I·'Wiis expected t6
:
NEW YORK (AP) -This week, seems, is that such a shift will force What in the wide world of sports ing over that victory, they pulled o~ fifth year ard I d1d. I never really adjourn today after taking up • lonf
the Arizona Diamondbacks and some realignment in the AL, which is"tho conservative, slow-to-change another.
, ., understood why."
·
;' list , o_f other measure~i; includintf
NCAA coming to'?
·.
Some partial qualifiers c•n have-&lt;
Letting athletes work pa11-time it , revoktng uodetgtaduat*·rtlhl toga
Tampa Bay Devil Rays will find out could cause problems.
- Possibly nothitrg less than a , that fourt~ year of eligibili!Y th,ey'_v~. the most revolutionary legislation the into tbe NBA'~ft without losinf .
, for sure where ihey'll be once they
The assigning of the e•pnRsion
1start playing in i998.
·
teams, plus appointing a search com· wholonewrclationshipbetweenath- beenseekingeversiace 1986w~~ NCAAhlisadoptcdinyears.
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:
k seems almost certain that the mittec for a pennanent commis- lctic administrators and the athletes · Pr&lt;:&gt;position 48 fre$man . acl!dem_itf
"This i~ a l)lajor shift in concept_
' Diamondbacks will be put in the NL sioner. are the big items on the agen- they govern.
y.
requirements first tool\ effect. &lt;J\~ · for this organization,"· Smiih said..1
We
· ......
Judging . by the swadl Bridgit coursc,thcy _ha-.:e to ,Jet t!leir deorce. "For years we've said we will n11,1
·D
'
'H·' • ' -'~
~~ WeM
~ sOt1C
_nd hthaOt 'IinaompraSBay will join da for the owners' meeting that
starts 'tnday in Scoll~dale. Ariz. ·
Niland a'nd her student-athlete odvi-, in fourye;lli'lj,_ somelbin). which~ pro.vide any additional f~nding in
Vetl, . Cll-· '· ·
When owners llpproved the sory commillee cut Monday through students, inch,•di!ll n,!lll~at~l~l•~!'l" an~ way· ffOI'!I any sourc~." . '
·
·'
' Bishop and Rio
expansion on March 9, 1995, they the NCAA convention, you'd think don't do. But again', it.'s' a
,Jt w~ ·.Niland who :k""' jumpint'
,._
they
were
staging
an
anncd
coup.
And
whilo.conventton-goers
·
to
the
)fncrojibone
to
~~dress
the.
:
-~.set a deadline of January 1997 for the
I' Grande's Riley '
league assignments.
.
"Tho NCAA _is trying to move argue over·which Y(as the mOte- · , enormous convention (\1!11 every time
"My position has always heen toward a recogmtton that students nificant, they represent, -taken togcth- · somebody mounted the ' old argu~ ·
0JifHrl S~lfll
CEDARVILLE, Ohio (AP) that in the best interests in baseball, play a larger role than they' ve had cr. one of the iJFst days aihlelts ewr mentS againsl the work lllle.'c.
. .
s~
'"!
University of Findlay guard Marc we belong in the National League," the last several years,:' Washington had in an NCAA conventipn;
"Consider the welfare'dfthe stli- _.
UWI
Bishop and (tio Grande guard Stacy Diamondbacks CEO Jerry Cnlange- State president Sam Smith said Moo"The students need to be dent-athlete. Look at this lcgisl.ltjon,
'--..- 1! ~ ~
Riley have been selected as the play- lo said-. "We're in a market that's day at the end of a truly historic day applauded forth~ i,~fl'!encc that !l!cY _ on tbe principle of hOnesty and., ~=-=
ers of the week·· in tl)e Mid-Ohio been outspoken, where 65 percent of during the NCAA convention. .
had," said Smith, chainnan of1t!'e trust, not few: ofabuse,'' NilaM ~d:
l-'-r A._. _ - . k--,
1 -r-~~ '.;;::Gl". .-• 1..
Conference.
its fans ~rein the ('lalional Lepguo."
"We made some progress today President Commission. "lhey ~re "Give us the opportunity to work.1' •
. : ; : : "'"'
listened to." _
•. ,
In other actions Monday, after _ "''"" age groupe. ,... ,.,."'V
)ishop, a · 6-foot-.1 sophomore
The Devil Rays appear happy that into where we ncc4 to be." ·
from
Elida,
averaged
26.S
points
as
they.'
re
going
to
the
ALand
already
With
Niland,
a
track
athlete
.
Without
·the
student-odvisory
giving
almost unllllimous apptov.al to
to,, ~ .. Y91! - - ..JOI: ,.your
1
Ithe Oilers split_lW!J games. He had are planning a celebration Friday in answering every argument on tho conimillec,' a non-voting group that the finishin~ touches of 11 .sw~j~J ~::r'· !1181/,. ~r, ~ lnd
f29 points in an 89-831oss ai'George- Florida. ·
·
convention fl~r. delegate_s approved was fanned in 19&amp;9. -there would new govemms structlln;. delef~!Cs
~ .. us afld ~ .~ !1101'8ltown, Ky.• and added 24 in a~ 84-79 .
"We're going to have a breakfast two revolutionary me~ures that have been no chanj!es of the. i)art- approved a m~asurc letting ·aillletes·
~ our ~ .
fvictory over · Tiffin. He shot .593 for a significant number pf people in . were repeatedly rejected in previous time job rule, Smiih s~id. _" ", · .•do such tbingi_as appear.In tllms or
dleoounls. -; •!
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"(. don'.l think it woUf'd've write.for pul)liciltion. They Cl\0.'1 yet ,
~
lfrom"'thc field, .428 on three-point- our area, both el""ted officials and conventions.
First, after a debate of more than occurred withput them beii)l pdsen!- ge! ·paid filr,such activity. But again, '
lera ••d .750 at the lioe. ;
prominent sponsors," Devil Rays
an hour )hat tan from bitter to com· · They played a big role for being so it's a first ~tep. '
.·
·
I Riley, a 5-S sen!or from Meehan- CEO Vincent Nai'!'o!i said.
"Pieasekeepinmind,theNCAA ,
jicsburg, averaged 18 points, 1.5
While tbe Diamondbacks are a icalto obsu&lt;4, Division I narrowly persuasive,'' Smith said. ·_. •' ·.
"The partial_.qu,lifier h~j 1 bccn i~ a very conservative, OJ&amp;aniza- ~
:~bounds and 4.5 steals in two vic·
natuml fit in t~ NL West, placing approved the measure to let.athletes
ltories. She had 19 pomts, I0 . the Devil Rays in the AL East may
,, J••
In the Australian Open,
· · ' .
· lreboundl and .five steals in a 71-59 · force Detroit to shift to the Centml
win -at Mount Vernon_Nazarene.
and Kansas City to move to the West
L.
·
-a swilCh the Royals do·not favor.
. 't!WboStei"'S Sprang
AL owners are expected to
C
hll
appoint a committee to study the
•
S OUg n
. matter. With IS-team leagues, own·
.· ke ·NCAC honors ers also must tome up with a new
By PHIL BROWN
· 40 minutes in the 90-de~ heat as . But, nervous and tentati~; she
•
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schedule format for 19!J8. · ·
• ~•
As for a c'omtiliiliorier, some
MEI:BO~E.: Australia (AP) be P'lli!C\' a.6-2, 6-4, ~~ vi~C.ver committed ~ unforced eiTOI'S andl
CLEVEL""'D (AP) - Woost· owners IIR apin ,pressins acting -Jenmfer Caprtatt stumbled in ber Rqmanian qultfiiHir Dinu
a.· .
(See OPEN on p 81e $)'
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'• M.I-Spranl ail(j Me1an Cousll· commissioner. Bud Selig to accept · comeback today witlra tearful early
No.
!I
seed-Jim
Courierrtlle
1992
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In of Ohio' Wesleyan have been
!:..Diii:IA~'
the p1 en of the week the job pennanen~y. Selig, h~wev- exit in the Australian open, the tour- amll993 w(""'f, .ltJ·a 5-2&lt;,1!1ad slip
nament where her lite 1t111ed skid- awJY in the flnal110t befa,w prevail"" ~~~ cOU:~rerence.
or, keeps ~emnc t!lem he's not'ln~dins
downhill four yean qo.
in16-1 (7;4). 6-3,4-6, 6-!1~-6 ov~
. . from • '"L- 'I'·
ested.
....... vt "'•
It appealed IIIII the executive ,·
• a JUDiot
No.' l Mut_in~ HiiiJil. at ~6 lhe Sjeng Schalk~t\ of the Jl!e~IU\(Is.
his ..,.,... .... with 17
.
. ..... be - . ....
he same aae Capriatt WUID her IMt viJ.'
Np. 3 Ooran . lvaniSeVIC, sull
n 69-65 victory over Deni- . ·council mt,..:t
II(JPO•~- u, t
it Down Under, overcitae a display · aeekin1"hia f)nt Gnind Siam lourna7-of-IO
tram
111e
fiold.
SCIIdl
COIIIII)ittOO.
but
Seha
won
t
be
1
of temper Qn her "'ay to winnina a rnent title, belt Aulttalia's Ben Ell·
, _ ,1 1ed thlit widt J1 mole
the~~ of thue~h.
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boilllll~";; 87-17 win 'iml'
I ve dolle lbll too maay tnnes first-round. match, but ·aave an woOd 6-~ 7-~. 6:-l.
upbellt~~~es~ment: "I'm ltill.yoona.
~ ;eachad "'- final of the
-R--ve
1 alreldy.llllci 1already have too many
I aiill ha~e. ti_ine to ,et hl&amp;her and Sydllcy lnlertlalionlfllilt week and
1 eouihu~ a fremmild from · olhet thinp to ilo," said Selia, who
.
, lookecfuifll!e-liad ~ llif penon- I
~umbus,
beck-Jo-1** .lli- . h 1n'tted the aearchea dtat ret:OIII· hiaftet." , , ·
Pete S~~J~~JifU, the 1~ Ails; .II praiJiema, inchttlinJIIIIITelt for .
ill atS-61
inllian Open, champi9n '""' top- lhOpliftlnl- itnd· . , ;'¢, II. .
lief:•.fiJ-" .;a
.,~
iiQTJNQ
_ . ..,_ S), . nuded thia year, spent onl~ an hour, , -~ili~,'bchit!d ..-.. ·
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Capriati exits in·first r~ouod; .;·
Hingis ancj ~a~p~~ ·- a~vanc~ . ·F

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uid. "We usually make up for that 6:26 remaining and the Cyclones aot and 10 reboulldl for the Blue Devils
"(It llfected me) enou&amp;h to make me by 10tting cheap bukets at the free wilhin nine points in the final minute ( 12-4), who held the visiting Camels
miss a d\lnk in_the first ha)f. Enough throw line, and -didn't aet any of bef&lt;n losing for the 1Stb straight (5-8) to one field goal over the fust
to ~me not as explosive as lean those tonight We only had one foul time at Kansas.
II minutes. Duke, comins off lossbe." , ,
against them in the first half and ihat
Shawn Bankliead led Iowa State -es to No. 2 Wake forest and No. 3
Willoughby had three.3-pointers hurt .us. Credit their defense for with 15 points.
·
Clemson,led 16-2 and cruised from
1'We're a ptetty good team." said - there as II players ~ at least
in the lir$t half for nine potnls, but that." ·
did not ,appear in the second .half
Kansas had a 17·4 run to finish · Vaughn, who needs one assisuo tie four points. Jim Fitzpatrick had 19
afier 'ag'gravating ~ injury he sur: ihe first half and held o{f the the school _and Big Eight career points to lead Cam~ll. which is 1fered about a month ago. Cyclones CyclonesasRaefLaFrentzscored 10 noconls. "WehavetheNo.l tankinJ. · 18againstAdanticCoasiConference
coach Tim Floyd said the severity of of his 16 points In the second half.
We feel we deserve it and we feel opponents.
the injury would not be kqown until
Cato made Iowa State's first free like we have to play ihat way."
No. 19 Boltoa Collep 81
today, but be seemed·concerned thai throw with less than a minute gone
The Big Bight record book is
GeorJetown 74
it was a tom hamstring.
in the ~ond half to get the Cyclones being kept open by mutual agreeAntonio Granger scored 19 points
- He tpok Willoughby out ~ausc within 40-31.
ment of the teams of the new Big 12 to lead the Eagles (II ~2. 6-1) to their
he~ not keep up with Vaughn on
But Cato,lowa State's 7-foot shot for senior ployers like VauJhn wbo fifth straight victory and best-ever
defepsp.
_ blacker, picked up his fourth foul on have a chance at,m:ords.
Big East start. Duane Woodward
lowa State prides itself on beating the next trip down the court and wu
In ather g~s involving ranlced added 15 points, including t1uee
its opponents at the free throw line, out of the game until tbe 7:27 mark. teams Monday night, it wu: No. 13 free throws in the final minute, for.
but it never got there in the first half
Kansas led 40-30 after the· 17-4 Duke 84, Campbell 59, and No. 19 · Boston College, which led' by 19
on , ,,night in. which boih teams . run that included a streak of 10 Boston Coll~ge !II, Georgetown 74. points in the first half. Victor Page
played stiff defense.
. · straight points. Pollard had .si~ points
No. 13 Duke 84
had 19 points for the l:loras (10.5, 3."They kept getting cheaP baskets in that stre&amp;k.
Campbell 59
. 4), who have their w.otst conference
of!; 1 ,~e~o!ld·chance shqts,'' FIQyd
'111e Jay~wks led 70,53 with
Roshown McLeod liad 12 points mad&lt; ever after seven games
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to· get- s1xth consecutive w1n
.

Tied at 69 after three quarters, ihe
Hawks seemed headed for yet anolh·
er overtime game. Christian Laettner,
who had 25 points, dismissed 'that
notion by swishins a high·arcing
three-pointer to start an 0 -2 run at

the besinning of the fourth quarter.
"It feels great not to have overtime," said Laettner, averaging 24.6
points in a torrid 11-game stretch.
·"The guys have been playing a lot of
minutes.''.

After shooting 2-for-7 from the
field in the first half, Laettner went
6-for-7 in the second half. He hit a
jumper fading toward the right baseline to give Adanta on 84-7S lead
with 4:46 left.

r~--~~~~~~~v~~;;;~;~~pii8i~¥iq?f~?~---l
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lost her serve five strai1ht times in - -A liJ of "'lnoyancc cost Hingi_s ·_ f~ur straight gam~s. Rittner broke to .
the first two sets on ber way 1o a 6- four straight games and a warnina . ·· tte 5-5 a~d, trailing 6-5, led 40-0
2 3-6 6-4 loss -to Jolene W~nabe' , for throwing Iter racket in the second ,~, before fallmato _some tough $hots by
a' feii~W' 'Amolica.
ia .rankeli \ set befqte ihe-recovered for a 6·1, 1-f i' ' Hingis.
·. · . . .
.
78th in the world. Capriati, No. 24, S victory over Gennan Bat:bara Rit. "If sbe keeps goms hke th1s, I
·saved two ma~h points on Watan- tner.
ihmk sbe could be No. liD a couple
abe's serve in the finaiJ~~fore
"(·lost concentration a little bit," . Qf y~IIIS.~' R~tt"!'r s~id.
.
bOwing out with a netted beckhand. Hingis saicl. "I am very happy I
· Rittner sait;l Hmg~s playus tfshc
~ · Sbe \mike down in tears lflet ~ found it aaain."
.had the expenence of a ~~year-old,
. match ~d aaain soon afterward . The Swiss teen, ber sights set on - and the racket-throwmg •• the only
'When asked whether she wu aware No. 1 cnasted ihrough the first sel point where you can really see she's
6f the hopes and support of Iter f!IIIS. and ~ke Rittner to start the oecond. IIi!I ~ 6.':
·
.
.
"Yeah, just being out there, 1
But then u she chased .Rittner . Hmgts acknowledged wtth a ann
heard the cries ... ,'' she said as wrs around the court in the ne~t aa~. , ihat ::it wu my .~oal not .to get o
welled in her eyes. With a forlorn t"e German stretched Wide an.d w,anung th1s year, but s~ for
!D.II~II!I.Jie~ f~. ~ rub!J.t;d ~ ~ ~ipped a bac~~ e.ro~sc:?"rt .P~ only o~ tournament, in S~d~ey last
(way. with her hand for a moment,
shot by HtDJIS. Hmgts shpped - wJICk when she beat c;:apnat• •n ihe
but coulcjn 't go on.
into a series of errors, including two finjlll. • . · ··. · · _ . .
• Just before that, the 20-year-old missed overheads, and found herself
· f!tngts has · been idv1sCd )lot to
liad said, "I'm nr.t goinc to let this trailing 4-1. .
_
sh?w ~r emotio~s on court. btl! "I
discourage me, let this get me down,
"Sbe made JUSt a great JM~l!Sing thmk the people hke !ftC as I am out
let me think to myself that I can't shot. I thousht I had ihis. poi~t onthecourl:lcans~tl~,lcanihrow
really play any more, or think aiBBdy.... Somehow I lost a httle bn ~ my racket. but that s JUSt my per'What's happening?' or whatever. I'll - oTconcentration," Hingis said. .
sonahty."
Then it was HinRis' turn to w1n .
just try to think positive still and go
for tbe next one."
:•
That wasn't the case in 1993
y.-hen sl)e left crying after~ quarter,
final loss. I
... 1
'jl·
·. Watanabe sent a seri~ of.lobs 81111
iopspin shots up into' tbe' whipping
winds
... . and waitecl, for Capriati to

who

'

!Baseball owners-- . - Athletes_receive_right to part-ti,me-wor.f&lt;·_;. ~
:a
'ready _filr
major
to decide h_omes . ·
J
l for expans1on clubs
----

l.t,

)Australian Open .. ,.

•

31 rebounds. Karr led with 13 car- hOst Alelcaooer 'Tifursday. · '·· 1 '
oms, Brannon had eight and 'Evans O.ptkr &amp;iillli · ' · · "' ,,
·"
foor. Eastern collected 16 stellls £llstetri • · •' ";·8! ~fl+20=s0
(Karr five, Brannoo 3); had 29 Trimble
·· · 13-12-n-20:511
turnovers, three assists (Hollon two) . • Eutem: Bee~ 'Davis ·J-1-0=$,
and 17 fouls.
Stephanie Evans '2-0::2/i.6, Valeri~
Trimble hit 21 -42 for 50 percent Karr.8-&amp;-8/S:24, Jessica Br.hnon 3&lt;
an.d was 1-4 from three point range 0-417=14, Ann Wiggins o4'1n:l~
wit)J a 13-26 night'at the line. TIIS Totllb: t4i-l•l!lll=!O
' .. · ·
had 36 rebounds, 1.2 steals, to
'Irlinllle: Joy Pettit 0.0-1/2:1~
lllmovers and 20 fouls.
Sheryl Davis 64518= 17, ' Rbbertl
There was no reserve game.
W.Shington 2'-0-012=4, Sherry Dav~
_.": The future: Eastern will go~o 2·0.3/4:7, Misty 4nt 64Jtl=1'3,
Warren Local Wednesday and wtll Bobbi ·Lent·5-'1•3n=l6..T~: :n,
j
•
•
l •l3126a58 ' ·,
.
'·
..

\•'

Pouanl. who finish¢ with I0 Points..

...-cl Jacque
VIUihn said of Pvllard. "It rully
•showed his confidence. It showed us
bowhereallycsresllboutthis team."
Pollud sprained his ankle Saturday at Baylor and could not practice
Sitnday night Coach R!ly Williams
· pointed to a blue tableclot~ to
describe the discoloration in the
ankle.
·"He could go straight ahead, but
he couldn't really cut off it,"
Williams said "I ihink his toughness
w.S important to our team. He is one
tough kid."
Pollard, who took three treatments on the ankle during the day
and then icCd it at home after class~.had told Williams al! day t!utt he
wanted topfay, although the decision
was made at the last minute.
. ;,Had I not been able to play,
everyor\e e'se would have come
tl)getl)cr, and compensat~," said
that," Kansu point

By KI!N BERGER
for ~r 12th victory in 15 games.
They could wily achieve their goal
CLEVELAND (AP) - Checll
Atlanta stsrlellthe season with a o_f,30 first-half victories before Jan. out whioh team is the hottest in the '9-7 reeord' and a bleak outlook uary is over.
·
NBA: The underappreciated, under- despite signina Dikem!le Mutombo.
Despite Atlanta's success, the
team's downtown arena has been
~.llllden'lted-Adanta Hawks. The Hawks IIR now 22-11 and in
Wiih a six-game willnillg sll:l!ak, third place in the Central Division.
known to have more empty seats
;the· Hawb -are il!Cttlally tied ror the ·
"We said we were JQing to try to 11\a~ full ones when tbe Hawks are in
· (longest c11110nt streak-in the league . ·win 3() glllliCs by tbe AII·Star game,"
.. Atlanta
' siarts
a four-game
!)'- with the OUeago B'ulls, wbli,let's sai!l Mlitombo, who Overwhelmed town
homestand
tonight
against
the Min·
·
,
&gt;be bones!: ale in a leaglie of their : (:lcveltmd's-smaller lin~up with 16 'nesota Timberwolves.
.Own.
·
points and 14 rebounds. "I'm ·glad
"It's a tough ihing to fisure out, ·
it. But look out for the Atlanta. The we've just lot eight to:go."
bi:cause we play so well there," said
.H&amp;wb 1• coming oft' three straiJht
Now, the Hawks bead home, ·Jon Barry, who played his i:&lt;illege
(.evertime .victories, beat the Oeve- where they have won 13 straight .' ball at Georgia Tech. " It's really dis' .
•
..
Jand Cavaliers 93-79 Monday night since losing the opener in the Omni. 1appomhng.

'•
..

~tr.1 t~;

'I!

Ii

.

"lfaWks beat- CavaUers

·Trimble g.irl~ get sa-so ·w in · ove~ ~a·~ferni
•

.

~1,.;/

·;r.ncy,;

Federal Hocking -~eats Sout·her.n;45-35:
,'

By CRAIG HORST LAWRENCE. Kan. (Al')- Top';"IMked Kansll took run adVIIIIqe or
'~o. 8 Iowa State miuin1 two key
.:,playen tQ run·its wiQI!ing su:eak to
.P pmes.
• The Jayhawb hlld been the team
"'thinking it would be missinc .a top
.,planr ~ center, sc~ . Pollard wos
-•pons~ SO-SO eirlier Montlay
~
~ ..anse of a badly sprained ankle.
- But it wu the Cyclones who had
the problems 15 center Kelvin Cato
sat on \lie bench most of the game in
' foul -trouble and top sc&lt;nr Dedric
"WillouJhby missed the second half
''becau~ of a reeiDTinJ hBmStrins
&lt;'njury.
_
1
•• Kansas (17-0, 4-0 Big 12) kept
the Cyclones (11-2, 2-1) off the~
- ~h(ow line' for the entire first hair in
)he lio.67'victoly Monday ni1ht.
,~ "He's 1 a strong man to be Ollt
_.~ wi~ ,hi~ anlf;le lookjng ' Jike

· milt chipped in with e_isi\J. Tiffally
Halfhill conttollecj the ~ wifh
13 rebounds.
·
·
tbc' 1\dure: Meij~g wili bost No!lsonviiJO.. Yorlc_on 'niiinday'_eveniok,
while Vlilfud Coilnty will hOst Weti'Stoll:

I

beats Iowa S~te 80-67.to win 17th straight 'game

.

R-l'ft · :·Meigs ~on the
I'CHrve- aame 37-25 behind A1Ji,y
Hy~ell's 10 JIOints, Jennifer shrilli-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~

r

In Top 25 college bB•Icetball,

Meigs girl-s get by Vinton county·3.8-37

Lions
' hire Ross

'annry14,.1187 '

=

TUII ..,, ........., 1~, 1117

.-

.
1

'

· :&amp;-u •• i,.

\

6Months
Same as Cash!
0~ Interest -

'"I

I,DISS.

Table w/4 Side
I
Chairs

'299
Broyhill

..

;. "It was the perfect opportunity lo
lt,eal her aft~ her. big wins last
~eek,'' WJII.IIIabe said. "Sbe fll&amp;Y be
a little tired physically and· mental'!.¥· The conditioos definitely favored
re w_ith the wind. '
' l "EveryOne loses. And ifsbe lets,
J botlltr her. sbe'nloonted."
: Hingis, however, stated linnly·
.flat "you never' want to lose to a!
4&gt;wer-ran~ed player at a Grand Slam
10umament."
'

.,•

(See Store lor tktM/s)

'

.

:pwners'
_'ln~tlng, ..
• (Continued from Page 4)
.:

efi.

Wtlh 'the

• S91DC in baseball hllv~ IUJJCSied tltat AL.prC.iderit Gene BudiJ and
HJ. prclidcnt ten Coleman lead tbe
s4arch. Fled Wilpon of the N.WYork
~. ~ ~ of~~ executiVe
c4uncil(~ hlll _been mentioned as
a j)ouibilliy. ~ ' '
·
·
: Ill ~nil ilie"oxpln.iion decision,
awnet? . k!av~ . tht!tnselves open to
III¥;Kher ,fillll'wjdt tl!e 'pla~n· usoci..ion. ~y .c~ina two .1!-team
~s. i»Wnen need in~IIC

plt~':r~t~sc~~ ~

. ., has·l'"'visions for interJeltCiie
p!ay only 1n 1997 and 1998.Another ipement would be neceiAI)' 10
extend interleague play to lilture SOlis.

•:" I'd like toihillk we' lie puuome
of these thi~.. to bed withcollecti"'
· bargainillf,flCoiU,eloAid. "lihi!lk ·
. it'• hilpoiWit
IM!Ieball ttJ have i
plati in place 10 lbal M don 'I COIIti- to pia)! tllis aame of.leverqe.
k lhq!lldtl'fbe that way."

;

j

•

MSRP .·:l•••••••••••••••••••••• $17,780
National Reb&amp;te .............·• 750

•

E

'599

:'lbp•299

•

~; it is a huge job."
.
- ~ After. Selig wu voted actina
~mission~r in September 1992,
nta ' Brav~s ~hainnlll) . Bill
olomay wu picked io hCad the
h cotll'mittee. He narrowed the
f".l:ld to Harvey Schiller of tbe .U.S.
dlympic Committee and· Arnold ,
WCber of Nonhwes~m. ond•neither :'
g~red much suppo11amona own·
In Ja,ntimy I~,they decided to
sf!p tht aean:h unit I after a ne~ labor·

ror

RiverSide

·'97 BUICK·

•

~~~t ~~ ~

-Sofas

1

:C'IUIIIa
oCrula Conbol
.POMI' Wlndolra

Ohio Rebate .....".............. • 500
.
•100,0110 llilelluftllr .
:Extended ut. .llpltrlc
_Plugs, l!nglne coollnt.
Jllll'f
.......

15,930

· · '95 SIY~RI

DANS

21N STOCK~ YOUR CHOICE.
Red or white, Factory Program Cars \Vitll balance of New Car

-

.·

_

·

19 700. P«

S

OILY , -

No llloMy Down. Ollly . . . Ta Extra

lllon111

•

'96 SIYLA•K 4 D..

FacllliY "Demo' - Only 1sOo miles. Reel wHh taupe clotl't•

-

. .

Maytag

5 Piece
Bedroom SUite

Undercount8r

.

-_

OILJ S12,888

_'96 SKYLARK 2 DL COUPE
Medium Jad8stOI1e • taupe Interior. Beautilbl cart Only ;l500
mlle8. "Demo"

OILY

*12,450

DlshWUher.

Six Foot
Ughted

Curto_

Gibson .
15 Cu. ft.
Refrigerator

'499

'788

'I

~~

Warranty!

Singer

England/Corsair
SactloMI
wlltl 2 Recliners

La-Z-Boy
Recliners

··249

'1099

Imperial

Zenith

Gibson

Platfoi Iii Rocker,

Washer and

many colors

4 tlaadVCR
wlltl Remota

'189

'219

'749

.,.,.,

·co.
MAIN STREET • RUTLAND, OH
. 742-2211 •1-&amp;0o-&amp;37-8217
•

\

\

•

�.,..

..•

••

'·

'

!

•fJn other NBA •ctlon,
'

iS

.

'

'If

iBy~heBend
.
... .

-·

·..:

;·

J-teat outlast Bullets 98-95.; Hornets and Suns also-.win · -- . ~
q d Pnll
• As each of his first six 'shoes
ltroPped lhrou&amp;h Juwan Howard
,.ve Miami He~t fans a painful
.-eminder of what ·could have been.
: But by game's end, it was
Jtoward and the Washington Bullets
~ho were wondering the same thing.
~ Alonzo Mourning . scored 37
:points Monday night and the Heat
;.wit~stood a furious fourth-quarter
411Uy to beat the Washington Bullets
:!18-95 . ·
; It ;.,as the first South Florida
'appearance this season for the Bul~ets anll Howard, who spumed the
:Jieat last summer.
: Booed throughout the game,
&gt;Howard scored 23 pointS ~nd helped
:0.. BulleiS rally from a 22-point
l«Jeficit with 9 112 minutes left. But
!they failed to catch Miami, with
:Chtis Webber and Tracy Murray
!missing three-point attempts in the
10 seconds.

, . The Aeaacl

.

'

"We stayed stronJ," Howardsaid. "Even though we lost. it feels
like a win."
Howard's appe8'rance was his
first at Miami Arena since July 17,
when he auended a news conference
to announce his signing with the
Heat. Less than three weeks later, the
NBA voided the seven-year, $101
million d~al. Ratherthanjoining the
Heat to appeal ~he lea~c ruling,
Howard then re-stgned wtth the Bul·
Jets.
"That's history. Let's just put itto
bed," Miami coach Pat Riley said.
"He's a great player, and we all
know he's a great player." ·
Howard was booed every time he
touched the ball, but jeers didn't
faze him as he made his first six
shots. When he finally missed, tbe
crowd hardly noticed.
"I wish they had kept booing,"
Webber said. "He PfObably would
have scored more."

me

"I dou't have to prove myself to
a11yone," Ho~ said. "I'm not one
or those guys who starts folding up
through pressure • and a hostile
crowd: Some guys ~~ away. I'm
not goong to do that.
.
Howard scored seven potnts during Washinl[!lon's · fourth-quarter
co!"e~~k. Hts final bask~ttn':"m.:d
Mtamt s lead to 95·92 wnh 1.17 to
~o, and We_bbar's three-pmntermade
tl 97-95 "':lth 3~ seconds left. . .
Mournmg m1ssed a shot. gtvmg
.Washington possession with 10 sec·
onds to go. But Webber badlr mtssed
· athree-pointtryoverMoummg, who
grabbed the rebound and was fouled
with one second left.
Elsewhere in the NBA•. it was:
Charlotte 102, Denver 100m over·time; Phoenix 10S,Dallas~8; Utah
97, Philadelphia 96 in overtime; and
Orlando 114, New Jersey I II.
Homell 103
Nuaeu 100 (OT)

At Denver, Tony 3'aj~~~~~p~t Phoenix.
•
~ ., fl'f the J~. J"h\1,- j*' l·for·!
with I:29 left in overti
wu the
1'1111 Suns blew a 26-point third.. flum lhe ~i~
.
__ ;
only basket scored in
extra sea- ~lead but recovered to beat the'• · • Karl Mil&lt;* W.28 pemiS ~
sion.
. Mavericks for the ninth straight time
nine rebound~ to "!CCP Utah end ''!
B~ scoring only IW.O points in fll Reunion Arena. •
four-11~ ~~~ng ~~·
._;;
overttme, the clubs set 1,1in NBA
Ceballos, ~ began his NBA
Maik ~v·~ ~~ .a career-hi~
record. for the fewest potpts com- career In Phoemx, was tnJded back , with 24 ~IllS ~~the 76ers, ~
bined 1ft an overti'!Je. The previous to the SUfiS last week by the ~ ;. ha.~~ lost. 1111111 Slh!/Jht and 19 of~
~ord of four potn!S wall,,,accom· ~ngeles Lakers. . .
. .
, ;
. ,,
.
,
::
phshed twtce, most recentll by San
After Dallas ralhed to ue tt95.·9S
,.
j'dqle ~~4, Nef!l .lU
•;
Antonio and New York on PeC· 10, \'"former Sun Michael Finley's free ·
, At East, ~uthelfQIII, l!lJ., . Ron~1995.
.
ihrow wtth 2:061eft, the Suns closed
SeiQJy 54;ored Bof IIi~ 29 poinll in:
Charlotte made only l ,df~9 shoiS, · the game with a 10.3 run.
. the fourth quarter when Orlandcl:
in ove!'lime while Denver nlis.ed all
. Kevin Johnson. and D_anny Man· . wiped,out.a 1().point defiCit.
:• .
10 or tts allempts.
.
. .
mng scored 22 pomts aptece for the
~nnis Scott 111l11Ched hi, season; ·
Glen Rice led theChl!rlot!e wnh Suns.
.
,
high with 27.. poin!S ~ Ho~
2S pmnts.
.
· · .
Cht:is Gatling scored 22 to pace
Glllllt added a .~o!J·high 26 .,
LaPhonso Eilts scored I~ of h1s the Mavs.
Orlando won •for .the lhird time I~
23 points in the third qwu:te~ ~. the .
JJUZ 97, 76ers 96 (On
four games since Penny Hardaway
Nug1ets, whO have lost stx Straight
At Philadelphia, Utah made just
and Nick l,.nderson rewmed from '
at homse.
""- __._, __ 1• · one field goal in overtime but endinj\lris;s.
.
..
. ..
DDS lOS, ....,.,C&lt;KAII 98
ed an eight-game road losing streak.
. jeenqall Gill.lta!l a c~·high ~'
At Dallas, Cedric Ceballos sCored · John Stockton and John Hornacek
points and Rolier(Pack-IJ!Id 33 IIIII!
26 points in his,first game baCk with each scored three points in ovenime
18assists for New Jersey.
·

The _Daily Sentinel~

,(

P8ge7;
Tllil-ley, ....._, 14,118'7

,..,....

P :l:ass is something"real - you can't fake it
....... ,

0

•

~------. strUgglinl .to make ends

.-':. 'o..r Ann t..ndcn: Your column

.:&amp;is giva\'Jjle •~ot or insilht and a-t

:Af~ over~ Jut 23 yean. A.
~hile back, yoo tmnted your definl··11oo of class. I would like to share it
·.with a sitecitil frlelid. Would you
,'llilldly print it i&amp;lln11 promiJe to clip
'\flout this time. P.S.: Who cornJIO'ed
~~1- VaJ\cobver Fan •
.
&gt;..., . Oelr Vmcouver: Get Olllthe sets·
~·~, H~Ri it is. P.S!: You asked :who
'l!bmposed it 1,did. O~s
·.;~ · Class 'never •runs scam!. It is
' ~-r~ and tonftdent, and it can
'tlandle whatever CQII1CS alonJ. ·
Oass 'luis &amp;·tense .of .humor. II
-~ows that a Jood lau11h ts the best
. :l~bricant for oilinJ ~·mai:hinery of
relations.
·
1 ~manIJ/,

Ann
landers

·

r.·':

J(

~~ ·

'

11*1

are

loaded with 11..
ctasm real. You can't fake it.
. Class' is comfortable in its own
skin. It ~ver puts on airs.
Class,never tries to build itself up
by tearing others down. Ous_ is
already, 1'1' and need not attempt to
look ~per by makina others look
worse.
.
· Ctas, l;liJ1 "walk with kings and
keep its virtue and lllk with .crowlls
and kljep the common touch." Everyone is c,omfortable with the person
who ~ class because he is comfortable with himself.
If fOU have clus, .you've llot it
m~ •.• Jf you don't have class, no
maller what else you ·have, it won't

'"'· ..., ~ .,. o.
CIIISS never makes excuses. II
takes its lumps and learns from past
mistakes.
Class tmows that &amp;ood manners
are nothing more than a series of
small sacrifices and minor lft\:onve·
niences.
Class bespeaks an arisiOC!'JICY
unrelated to ancestors or money.
Some extremely wealthy people Jiave
no class at all, while others who IJ'C

~

make up for it.
•
Oelr Ann Landers: YI!U recently
wrote, "Hello, dear readers. This is ·
Ann weijhing in. I'm on my trusted '
old IBM typewriter ... "
I am a male secretary and have
worked in state government for 21
yeais. I have seen computers move in
and mess up or complicate just about
everything. I'm always amazed when
three or four people work on a compuler for an hour trying to print out
something thai I could have typed in
10 minutes Rat.
· ·
, I have an IBM Selectric at home
for typing correspondence and documents ... no beeps, no glitches, no
crashing drives or faulty. disks. All I
have to do is turn it on and feed in a

sheet of paper, and everything comes
out exactly as I want it. This paSt winter, I typed two book manuscripts on
it, and the}rlook great.
. .
In this technology-crazy genera·
lion, it's good to hear of another typewriterenthusiastwhoalsoprefersthe
bestli!Jie invention of this century. •
- S.M., Montpelier, Vt.
Dear S.M.: Thanks for the back·
up. One correction, however. J!.e!fl·
ington put the first typewriter on the
nwket,in 1873, making it the best littie invention or the LAST century.
Unless, of course, you are teferring
to the electric typewriter, which came
out in the 1920s.
Dear Ann Landers: If you can
stand one more comment defending

bald-headed men, here' s one I heard
on Indianapolis TV:
'
"All men have the same amount
of hormones. If you wantto use you"
growing hair, that's your business."
-- Indiana Reader
,
OemoftheDay(CreditRuthGordon): The best impromp,tu speeche•
are those wriuen well in advance. '
What's the truth about por,
cocaine, LSD, PCP. crack, speed and
downers? "The Lowdown on Dope'!
has up-to-the-minute information OJi
drugs. Send a self-addtessed, long;
business-size enveltipe and a check or
money·order for S3.7S (this includes
postage and handling) to: Lowdown;
. c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box II 562,
·Chicago, 111. 60611-0.562. (In Cana·
da, send $4:55.)

·. tJ9()'invites students.to experience college for .a year
Bi.ls ketb a ll

A--

NBA stalidinp

Mki·Conllnent eonrMo.·Kan~a~

EASTERN CONFERENCE

...

.74J

- Y m .............. 26
Mlarni ...... :.. :.......... 26
Waahlqt011 ........... .19
0.1..... ...... ............ 14
New Ieney .............. 9

9
10
16
18
24
........ ..................... 8 2!
Philadelphia ............ 8 27

.m
.

10~

.211
.242

16
11

.229

18

ee.niDiw..._
Chi"''lo................. JI 4 .1186
Det ... L. ................. 26 8 .76!
Atlanll ... ................ 22 II .667
. CLEVELANO ....... ll 1.. .600
O.lone ................20- 16 -~!16
Milw•be ............. u 11 ..n•
· -.................. .16 11 .415
ToroMO I................ .I:Z 2l ,)fJ

SliPf"CC'Y RI.'M.:k 76, Lnkc Eric 68
WOJ!i. &amp;. Jeff. 79, Oberlin ~I

II~

9
12
19
21
2:ii
27

.750
.667
.437
.J64
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VMCGUver ....••.•......7 29

. 194

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12

12

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.296

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12
14
19

4
.

Rid! ...... 99, COLUMBUS.89

No plilel tonlpt

•

AIIMMI II COLUMBUS 7:30p.m.

EMt

..

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.. ,. ..

.

·· Ubaty~.Mcl.·llalti .... C.Untyll
Nl"'' ?4, Wlllla. Mo1y .U
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South

Dlvl•lon II
lll.

64

.

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( 1• 8.0 ...................... ......... 2H~
:1-ALBANY ALEXANDER lt-1 .......... 189 .
4-E. Pnlelline 8-1 ......................... .~ ...... 186
:'i·Dn)1on Olrlninn (2) 9-1 ........... ........ 1~1
6-Hnmler Pat Henry 8-2 .......- ............. 112 ·
7-NELSONVILLE-YOMK 8·1 ............ 104
H.CHE.~APEAKEII) 1~ .................... 7~
9-SeomooN . Adoml9·2 ........................ 09

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you aee them, rem~rwe~re th. "t:ellular coptpany that&amp; built aroundyou:-from technology
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calf:t~ll-free 1·888·CALL·3&amp;0. ~60°
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ule a visit, contact Thac! Welch.
Admissions Coordinator, College o!
Food, Ag~icultural, and , Envir~n-.
mental Sctences, 100 Ag A{lmm,
2120 Fyffe Road, Columbus, O~ui
43210.1067, 614-688-4144. Regtstration forms are also available on the
World Wide Web at http://hortwww2 . a g . o ·h i o ;.
state.edulfaeslfeastlccfd.htl!ll and om
most high schQOI guid~«: coun ,
selors, agncultural edu~atton mstructorS and OSU Extension offices. ~

PI£TUBEY

PET
.AMONG THF.•••
PET VALENTINES!

Chester; is an honorary member of
the Alpha Lamba Delta arid Phi Beta
s·tgma. and belon'"'
the Marching
o• 10
Band Servite Fratemity, Kappa Psi,
and serves as editor of published
materials; and the Gold Key Nation: .
al Honor Society, which is the top IS
percent of juaior and senior classes.
He is majoring in music perfor-

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

:~~~:' :;:u~:..:~n~~n~

the OSU Orchestra.

Dpiley is ihe,daughter of Charles
and 'Theda Dolley
,... of Reedsville. She
is majoring in music education, and
is a member of the Music Fraternity,
Sigma Alpha Iota.

.

I pho ho r The
to use !~ te ~ ne . tJne . .. •
addreJs ts. Soctal Secunty Admtnts
tration, Office of Inspector General,
P.O. Box 17768,. Baltimore, MD
21235.
Social Security's OIG already handies a large number or complaints. In
the month of September the office
received 269 allegations of fraud.
Also, 26 convictions were obtained.
The Social Security Administration's
Office ·of Inspector General, the
Immigration and.Naturalizaiion Service,andtheUnitedStateslt.ttomey's
offices
plan to continue
investigations.
The OIG cooperative
also works
.
wtth other federa_l ll!'d state law
enforcement organtzattons.
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Eastern

pital spokesm~ said.
.
'th
·
Sinatra is alen and chats l"l vts·,
·ttors,
· C--'·-st·JUU·
'· al Center
.....,..
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spokesman Ron Wise. said Monday.'

Community calendar___,;__ __

F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
hall. Work in entered apprentice
degree.
·

POMEROY -- Regular luncheon
meeting
of the Meigs County Cham·
Rib ar r...l nlnn vl1111y type.
Commerce
Tuesday, noon at
her
of
prlllted. tlplft pea mils
;W\1"• ot lie ........... to 1'11111 the Trinity Church in Pomeroy. Guest
speaker ,will · be Connie Freeman,
~ •eller fJI. days.
·director of procurement_ at the
Lawrence County EconomiC Devel·
' EAST MEIGS'..:
Local ·opment Corporation's Outreach Ccn·
of Education organizational . ter. .
Tuesday, 6 p.m. at the hijlh
POMEROY .. Meias County
rnmin1 will follow
Board of .Elections, Tuesday, 9 a.m.
. resulll'~tina.
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CommunJcatJons . ';, ·
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palace spok~woman ~atd .. · .
,
A~dy Wolf and CharleJte Dailey
The mamage~ of the queen s graduaiei.ofEutem High School
"'11.
eldest sons. Pnnce Charles t.\ t'. .
Oh' S
U .
.
· Thirty-seven years after she lot a PriDcess Diana. and Prince ~ .a,. JUDtors at . 10 tate ntvers1ty,
Hollywood Walk of Fame star for the fOJ1\Ier Sarah Fe~l!. el!ded ;~.attended the RQIC ~wl as members
lins, the actress was enshrined in the divorce last year, Her only daughte(,lt of the OSU MarcltiiiJ Band.
1'atnous sidewalk for such stage cred- Princess Anne, got divorced in 1992. theBoth arch' secbandond yeard me~~patedof
.:lis as "Irene" 0973 ) and "Woman of
.
marc mg .
an partiet
. .
;~Year (1983).
..
.NEW YORK (AP)- It may be . there at~ Dtsney Land and Unt..,..._· More .than 300 fans, i&lt;w:ludinJ' what 'mllde .her famous, bitt Mllfion ~versal S~o performances as well as
daJJghter. Carrie Fisher and .:-Mother~ Ro5s says playing Mrs. Cunninlham
~hmg m the Rose Bo~l ~·
kstar Albert Brooks, watchCd Mon- on television's "Happy Days" was no
embers.marched over ~IX miles 10
• ':.1-".. •s unveiling of the walk's 2,08lst great'challense.
• o hours a~d .five mtnutes and
?""star
· outside the Hollywood Enter"It was 'Oh, Howard' or 'Richie, played the_enure ~me, Wo~freJIO!led.
•or
"i iotnment Museum.
you.'te not eating!'" Ross said o.fher Th
. e band spe
, nt SIX daYs In Calt '' •
r.·:
, ·.: ."I want to thank,tJIJert B~ fqr lines on thell970s-'80s sitcom, " , nu),.:.. . . fd .. and Pat Wolf f
0
l!e'ing courageous eltou§!l to put me;
·But Ross finally found a juicy p8rt. \
':-- Y; son
ary ·
Jil:. film after'27 y01r5t! •sa)ci tho~· · as Aurora Greenaway's loni~suffer- 'J -· ,
.
year-old Reynolds, who is nominal- ing housekeeper, Rosie, in the current
i
. . for a Golden Globe f&lt;ir her role.. film '"Evening Star, .. the sequel to .
·the mother of Brooks' character in the "Thrms ofEndearlnent" (1983). She
fll)n.
·
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. '
is nomilljlted for a Golden GlObe for , ·
..,
.
.. ..
-: The first Reynci')Cli:$J"'w"u dea'l~' P. best siippbning actress. -~
~~&gt;e·~t.a -~;;;,
. \j)lted about fou " tltocll:s'·aw'ay in
"11Je w~~le movie, in' iny1 es, is \jiP
1:;J ~ '
;:.1960•
,.,. ..,
·
a Jove affBJr between · R · and
"'.:st "-1
.
- .. :·Reynolds' other films include Aurora," Ross .says in the Jan. 17
u!'fictals rec~ntly .~ut .the n~n
~The Unsinkable Molly Brown" and issue.ofEntertamment Weekly. "She openmg the Soctal security Admtq·
iiollSingin' in ttie Rain."
only. lives . to make Auror~ happy. . is~
· ·•'on's. Offtee of.l.nspect
. or Ge
. ne.r:
, '' She's Jive~;! her whole life lhf9Uilt · • al , JG) fra~ ~hne..
&lt;
.
::; LONQON (AP)- HerchiJdre11's. AprO{JI. I ~an just hardlr,:,bear i~
hot!tne, ts ~vadablc for hvc
'marriages didn'tlast, but hers (id- touebes,me so." .
&gt;..
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tor asst~e froiq lOR.m: to 4
)md Queen Elizabeth ·u is invitinJ
p. EST Monday ~ugh. Fnday.
•·
R rded
mce 1s avBJI
=""r long-married.couples to a SOth
NEW ORLEANS (AI')- Luther . eco
messase se
•
W~nivetsary bash.
;.,.
1.
Vandross will welcome football fans able and a person can leave a mes' ':: The qi!CCn on Mori(!ily jnvitecl O!h- l!l !he Super Bowl with his smooth, sage 24,hours .a day. ~ Otru:e. of
~·.couples married in:_.1947 to BPPI". soulful rendition of "The Star-&lt;!""'~,' l_,n.~_or General .w1J,I be .hi~ns
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1 100
ti b
~filr the 4,000 inYitatiogs IP,•her July gl~ ·Banner. :•
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IIJ!P. ttmateorky .. neffiw mves gad theve
;;);5 party in the palace gafdens. Appli- ·
·
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• ' agen ,. o w . :•n o tees aroun
,...._,ions_ accompanied by a mar- . Vandro.
.
S~J_bmsDtanaRoss,B_arry . counry ~andh~g the many fraud
Mam1ow, B. I 11y . 1oe1 and Whttney re ~erra1s I t ~etves .
~e certifi~ate- must be in by Feb.
..._ .
··1:4
·
Houston on the list of performers
The hothne telephone ~".'"""' ts
~t:~ .'TJie• ueen then 21" par-old· who Jiave sung the natioaal ifttheift; .l.r800-2()9·0f7.1. In addmon, an
,.;.,
qEI' he.th
· 7~G k
··1. ""''
-•~'t wait to. be..,;.,
of such ·a ··ddre~
· "'js available _for.eportina_ sus.l.rincess tza
, mamea· ree r-•
''~
ch ·
;~Prince Philip, a desce'ndaAc of mem'orlble ex~nence," : said Van- ;", peel ~ud for tllose oostng not
!Danish,GreekandRussianioyalty,at d'?ss, a three-ume.G~~y,Award
~~stminster Abbey on Nov 20
wtnner known for htts hke Power.of
.
~~7.
. · • LOve," "He'!; ~nd No:w" and "Your
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Frank
"• -' "Long marrtages
·
•
f
Secret
Love.
. makmg
. . good progress m
.
1
are a tea ure o
The G
B Pack
th Sinatra IS
1
~tks or l't'e and .... •arden nor.
.reen ayPatriots
. ers Patay thee h1s
·. teCQVIjry ',rom a mt'ld heart
;..&gt;:;~ -.· · ·
"
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.,.. New England
. attac k
ty :Wtll gtvc .the queen and the duke Lo . . S
Do
· J.
and couhY.Bo home by Friday, a hos·
,.-II;
ilpp!1rtuntty to meet people from . utstana uper me on an. 26. . . .
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"FOR PETS ONLY"
·WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 13TH IN
a

Also apeelalsedon for In Memory Valentine Pets.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

PER PlaURE
PRE-PAID
PleiM enciOM ..If.
Md,.llldatlmped
enwlope to ...wm

•r

Board of Trustees annual appropriaWEDNESDAY
A'O:IJ:l,NS .. An open house pub- tions meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
lic hearing on the proposed Athens- -the home of Clerk Osie Follrod.
Darwin highway project will be held
RACINE .. American Legion Post
Wednesda)!, S-7 p.m. at the Ohio University lnn,'ltichlandAvenue, Athens . 602, business meeting, 6:30 p.m.;
Written and oral. comments will be dinner to follow.
accepted. Officials will present inforDARWIN - Bedford Township
mation reJarding two feas,ble routes
Trustees. organizational meetins. I
for the pl'DJ1911ed highway~
p,m. Thursday.
·
THVRSDit.Y
.
·
POMEROY .. Prayer and"J!)an-. .
ning meetinal'or-Fe6. II concert of SUNDAY
POMEROY •• Annual meetina of
"Harvest", Thursday, 10 •·!"· at the
the
l'lrish of Grace Episcopal Church
· Pomeroy Public Library . meetins
will
take place on Sunday in Jhe
room. For more information call the
foipr
Memorial Parish H•ll 11f the ·
Rev. ~Th:III~Y· 992&lt;4u2.
c"-h cOII!pJeit · beginnlna with a
. ALFRI:I:&gt; .. Onltfe 1Pirr I ~ pt~tluck I~ a1 II :lO a.m.

"PET'S NAME"

OWner's Name

your phOto.

·Hurry/ DeadHne
Friday, Fe6m111y 1~11 !II 3 p.m.

Sinatra to go home later thiS week

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the best of both wort~ thrpugh the weekdays, are currently being schedCollege of Food, Agncultural, and uled durins winter and spring quarEnviro~men~ Sciences;. .
·ters. Winter quarter dates are now
. ~tcally htBh school sentors ~ throuJh February 28, 1997. Spring
JUntors ~e advantage of the VISit quarter 'dates are April 7, 1996
opportunity; however, sophomores through May 23, 1997. Reservations
and freshmen IJ'C also welcome. 11Je are requested two weeks in advance
day long visit includes allendins of the desired visit date. Guests are
classeswithacurrentlyenrolledltost typicallyaskedtoarriveby8:30a.m.
student, touring ·facilities, .eatinJ and will depart no later than 4 p.m.
lu~ in the commons, chec:ldng ~ AI~Cma:Jive ti~~ ~ be ananged
restdence halls, and meetmg wtth dependtng on tndt•tdual needs.
ColleJe faculty and administrators •
For more information or to sched• all ~nan individualized and ~
sonahzed bast~. F~ulty appo.mtments cover s~ tht'!g~ as curncu·
~~~· ~r opb~s. arid ~ob o~untues whtle admlntstrallve appointme~~ focus on fi~i~ ai~ ~­
IUnt';!CI,, scholmhip avatlallihty and .
admts.~ron~ ~res.. ·
Pu:eqts are mv1ted and are strongly encounpct to lllteild as well.
They -:e· welcome to a1tend classes
and tour facilities and will also meet
with College fieqlty and administra·
tors with their child Parents are also
invited t'! ~lunch guests of a College idmmtstrator.
.
Visits, which are .~ged on

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ARlinda Cletucrodo 110. Lopo Elm·

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. ., VMI7:.• 0ot!&lt;11a Southenl61

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I-Van Wen Uncolnvi~ (29) 9-0 .......374
2-S. ClwlatonSEI2) 12-1 .................2911
l-Dt!rbo! Stlolm'o (419-1 ........ ........28!
&lt;J.Kalt&gt;119-1 ................... ,,,,.................211 .
5-Wa)'Aellield.oo.ben 4MJ ...:...... ........209
6-l..eiplic 8-0 ...... .:. ............................... I'lO
7-St. H.noy 7-2... ...................., ..... ....... 12!
8-New Knonillc (I) S-1 ..................... .'.. 96
.. C..Un.....u...ln 12)9-1 ................ 67
IO.Zane. Rooec,_ 0) 10.1............... ,.. 48
OtiNn .......... ~ ... - - ....... .
11 -~sHrJ Fairfield 40. tl-Mcbontdd
34. I :\-Wonhin~ Ori11ian (I) 29. 14-BuwentOw'n (;(•aouon Valley l2. I!I·
Annall. lb-Brillolvillc Brialol 18, 17Jockoon Ce- 16. II·FRANKLIN R!R·
NACE GREEH 1$.
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Aulfin Pel)' 64, Tenn.· Miffin 'l
Bcthutle-Cuoll•n 69, Md.·E. SOOre

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II ·CHILLIC0111E'ZANE TRACE !4.
ll·Onlurio (I) ;18. 13-l.ecs Creek Ea11
Cli111011 (I) :17. 14-Murion Elgin ;14. I~
·(tie)·Bedford Chllnel (2). Bucrru• Wy•
ford 32. 17-Andover pYmatun1n1 Vbltey
:11 . I8· Bioon1-CqrroiHil 29. 19-New.
comemown 2l 20 (rie)-ED81 Cnnton,
Sarahnjlle S~enandoah 22. 22Jcromaville Hilkdllk 20. 2.1-Cin. hM.Ii.n
Hilll9.l4-0mnant~n· v ~ney v~w 18.
l."i-Srulnn Hiah~ 1_6. 26-0id ~nshing­
IOrlliuclteye Tr~~~IJ.J. 27-You. Ubmy 14.

men's KOres

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Olhtn ......

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Moudll)''• .......,

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11-Cie. ll&lt;nedlclloe (I) ll. 12-Jhlnilton
Bldin ~. I~· Bellevue 46. 14-0im•red
Folk Ull~. 1!-SOIJTII POINT 26. 16VINCENT WARREN (I) 2!. 17-S..obul}'
Bil Walnur 19. li-Canton South 17. 19
(lle)·Canml Ful~on. NW, Zan"1ville
May1ville I~. 21 (tie)·Bex.ley, ·Dublin
Scioto, Stnnha-s 12.,
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. Colcndo ............... .l9
s.,.Ja.e ................. Jl
Scalllc .................... 12
Portland .................. 7

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'

I-Ottawa.Oiandorft2:1) 11-0 ............. 362
· 2.Qmille (8) Hl-1.. ........................... 2116 '
J.Cin. Rop Bacon (1) 9-2 ................. 244
· 4-Ketlerina Aller (I) 9-2 ......................22J
S.AIIIfabula EdJewood 11·1 ................ 182
6-WoosterTriwoy 9-1 ........ ,................. 136
7-Do\'er 9.1 ., .........................:.............. 1~I
S.Wanaw River View 7•3 ... :................. 72
9-Canftcld 10-1 ...................................... ~~
IO.Whilchoulf Anlhony Way.c 1·1 ..... ~4 -

ABt standlnp
Ml&lt;hooOnd .............. l~

1-Tol. St. Frarw:ia{ll) 10-1 ..................301
2-E.
s.1 .............. ............ 247
J.'frot....... Modi,.. (I) 11·1 ............ .129
•- 4!7Mils•ute 16l'lo! t... ... ,. .,h ..'........... m
$-&lt;lalloway Weatland ('7) 0,0 ............. 202
. 6-Eudld II) 9·1... ............................... 118
7-Qn. Withrow (1)6--1 ........................ 149
S.l.iliwooct·St Edwatd (6) 7-1 .......... .121
, ..}t:Cantqn ~1Cin~8~2?~.·..................84
·...fb.Cie. H11. 8-1 .......... .:. ..........................6:\
Olllen ncft•hlc 12 or 1110re pelnll:

. X..

lllllianalll LA. Clippen, l0:30p.nt

4

·H91t

Nettle• DivW...

. ,

.

.11: L fa.

Oak HUII06, Portsmoudt W. :\I
PadenCity!lo; Fn&gt;nti&lt;rJS
Padoo ~7. Elmo Cllh. )l

. .

II · Miuni ...... OH4. 1Z·Daylon llunbor
:,19. 13-Tol. CeDI. Calh . 37/ 14-Cic .
Oltnville 24. 1:' (lid-Lebanon, Spring .
South lJ . 17-Fairfield 22 . 18-Spring.
North (I) '20. 19-We•,ervlllt Somh 17 .
. 20-Shll~r H11. 13.
'

-laiO)'•a..n-. l :Jllp.m.

--

lll.

u...,...,m

.Ooldl:tl
w..
llllllo'• ....
s... •~'~~~.......,..., 7:30p.m.

COLIJI&gt;IBUS .........23

·' ·

Wha* :
-,. u· ld'. 'A , , ,_., ,.
5h0
know·
about
the n~w signs "' .•.
at Wir.eless·One· ·:
st · .o-· ~: f···a. •·· Be· s·- l·d~··.e. ·s: .,.:_· ,~
.. ·
the. fact that . : "
.they're round and:.:.:. :.
·v. .er~··v··· e·. y·.:g. r··e.e.n. ·..•:·. :'· · · -

Dh&gt;llllqn I

X..

Golden St• • llollctl, 1 p.m.
,..nnotall Alllnla..7:.10p.m.
. New Yorkallbl~lp.m.
............
WMIIIoaton o1 Clu-. I:Jllp.m.
~~eo..... •. 9p....
Detn* • PoniMd, 10 p.m.
'
VMI:OIIVm'•LA.. LHcn, IO:lOp.m.
• - • ~-··
IO:lOp.m. .
.

X..·

144 109

•

, How • ll~le panel of sports wrilers
and broadcultn rates Ohio hia.h achool
boy• bul:etblll~~eam~ in lhe aecOnd weekly ~e~••ICMUII poll of 1996-97 for The
As101.:lllted Pm1 Cby Ohio Hiah School
Alhlelic Auoclation divisiont, won-lost
record lhrDUJh aames of Jan. 12-firslplocc ·-In .....lbooa):
.

1'0111ifihP... ...-'"'.

'

~1

"•

Ohio H.S. boys' poll

IJ~

.

5

,.

No~WU~~fere~~&lt;epla;&lt;

,.oo

o.oat.v......,,top....

Newton Falb 53, LDBrae 45
Ook Glen (W.Va.) 6l. E. U"'rpool 1·

40

.11: L I lll. liE liA

9 ll 124 96
6 . ~l 161 llZ
l 47 109 loB
Wllltiftaton ....... .l9 20 5 43 120 -116
T.... Boy ....... .l720 6 40 126 Ill
N.Y. bi............ IJ2I 9 ll 112 129 •.

..... 2.,

Oberlin 6$, Lake Erie ~I

IO~

NcWY...... SonAIIIoolo,S;lOp.M.

New .fhi1Aolel,...l7,C~41

Fot1 Frye $7, Bealla~lle40

·

Phit.de!phia ....... 26 U
FiorillO ....... : ..... 2211
N.Y ..Rliftten ..... 2J 19
Ieney ........21 16

n IUI1

Cle,. ...... St BJ. Lo)'&lt;lll

Now-

Tofonto•s-tte, IOp.m.

X..

,,

AllontJc..DJo-.

Mldwatem ColePte c....r.

MOIIda)"IIICOftll

otlo 8 p.m.
~MIJollu.Sp.m .

· EASTERN CONFERENCE

,,

59

Orlando 114,
Ill
Utlh 'f7; Pill......• 96 (at'j · -~ Mlooni 91, W-on 9~
AI- 9), CLEVet.IIND 19,
. · Phoeoi• Ul'l, Dllllu 98
.
~ 102, o.....
(Of)

Oklao .. 'lia:c

MIJml Val. 4~. c..iOJIOO Latin 28
' Miamllbu:rl 7J W. CIWI"'hon 44
Mopdofc~. W-ool7

· ~1··

Collep-bound studenis interested
in an individualized and personalized
took, It colle1e life are invited to
Experience College for a Day
(ECFD) u guests of the College of
Food, ·Airicultural, and Environmental Sciences at The Ohio State
University.
·
ThroughtheECFDprogtllttlligh
school and 1ransfcr studen~ can
explore careers in the food. Jllric~-.
tural and natural resources indUSinel
such.as ediiCition food science and
~hQOlop. busi.;.ss, communications, animal sciences; crop and hor·
ticultural sciences, engineering,
forestry, recreation attd tourism, ftsh·
. erieslwildlifelsustainable reiiOUJ'CC
management, environmeltt'al educalion, communication and inte!JRt&amp;pon, and environmental sciences to
.·
· ·. · .
·
·.
·
,l)jtme a few.
,
·
i ·' '' ;'·
,.·;' · "
.-i; · '" ·~·, Experiencin1 collep throujlh this
·~~ · REYNOLDS;tDIJis'~WITH ITM •
iild ttml ·,, l ype of visit gives pospective stu·:---teb ... Debble,... t;nal• PDT II With'- - . c l IIW 011 ... HoJ.
dents an inside view of the 111111111,
w.Jk afF~ Manclty
HOI~ wood 11 etlan.
wllm and' friendly llllllCisphcR on the
., .;AngeiM. Reynoldl lal nt film It lloiiM, which Gp«&lt;T
,
,agricultural and natural. resources
· .. ~ thlamanllt. (AP)
·
· ·
.
"l:ampus .iJ\'!'Ich i.s J~ated )us.t steps
0
from a maJor un1vers1ty w1th mcred!?ley~~·
,_iblelesoun:es. Studen~are offered

NHL standings

. Youna11own St 79, Mo.-ICaMM Ciry

14
19

hdlk:DI•W.
LA&lt; Llltm ............ 27 10 .7Jll
Seanle .................... 26 II .703
, ........................ .19 16 .~l
S.:fllmllll:o ...•.•...... IJ 12 .&lt;IM
LA. Clippon ......... l4 21 .4W
OoklenSIIIe .......... l;\ ll .ll2
.......... ................ .12 24 .lll

Hoc key

.''

Lopnl6, ....11....._1W.VL)~2 •.
lorain Cath. '2. Lorain Soulhview 41
Mllridta 40, Jldton ~2
''i
M.,;., Ferry 66, Briclseponll
McDonald 40. M.._, )1 •
Meip ~8, Vint01 Co. )7

Mid-Continent Conferouce

u

.11: L fa.

H...- ................. 27
Utllh .......................24
MIAMIOII ............. .I6
Oollu .................... .l2
San Anton6o .............9
Den~ .....................9

1,

JJ

~I

Bow,ins &lt;ilm194, Akron 7'
Kent K7, Ohio 17 (Of)

WESTERN CONFERENCE
X..

Duy. Oaari'linade·Jolienne 67, SpriiiJ·
boto29
.
Day. Oakwood 46, Bellbruokl4
Day. Pattenon 86. kffmon M
,
Dct'ia:e 62, OUaW.OIMdorf ~9
DtlphoJ Jeffenoo 6~, Uma I'm)' 22
' E. Ciinlun~) . MianWTilll.'e.W
·
Edi1011 $:\, Buckeye Local :'i I CO'f)
Folrlqod !~; Cheoopeoke ~2
Fedeml Hockina 4~. Racint Sou,rher_n

GarmtaYille 96, St.,Ct1boro 3'
- h !16. New Albany 38 . ·
John Marshall (W.Va .) 63, Indian
Cnok J.7
Kanns LakOI• 46, Elmore Wood·

Mid-American Canference

8
10

__

·•

Ohio women's
college scores

4~

.. -·-

·

Non-conference play

7

.4)8

St.

Coltcae of W.Va. 91 . Shilwnee S1. 7~ .

~

- ~~

Younp~own

Ciry 7),

1110T)

Iii

.11: L fa.

. X..

Lakeview 6J, You ... Ubaty
u ... Catlt. 4), St. ....., 29

, Day. Bclmon1'47. YelloW :Sprinp 31 ·

Ohio men's
coUexe scores

.-·-·--·-·--·-·--·-·--·--·--VALENTINE PETS

Pet's Name _____________

Owner's N a m • - - - - - - - - - - -

_______.__________

c~

Amount EncloHd: - - - for _ _ plctUI'H
at .. uch.
Deedllne F~ay, February 7th at 3 p.m.

Mall or bring the entry form:

·The, l)aily

�•

•

)

'

.

•

•••

-·

..
P 1 I•:I'MD 'lfllllh_.

•

•

Study: Long-term ·stress more than dou
Pm'SBUROH (AP) - Kiu and
maJce up if you - t o Slay heahby.
A aew ally showJ 10111-tam
IIRsres like dwonic COIIflictJ wilb
frieads and family can IIKft than
double your risk of CIIIChinJlbe common cold
Sheldon Cohen, a Carnegie Mel·
loa University psychologist, said
Monday that acute stress, or .short
bursts of negative experiences, did
not aft'ect his subjectS' susceptibility
to colds.
"That distinction is exttaonlinarily clear," Cohen said.
Cohen, who was lbe first to link
sllesS with lbe risk of setting a cold,
said chronic s~ss is defined as pre-

dominant bad times that continue
lonaer than a monlh. His study
showed it increases the risk of cllebing a cold by 2 In times.
His findings will be presented
February atlbe annual meeting of lbe
American Association for the
Advancement of Science in Seattle.
The study has not yet been published.
· Cohen and his colleagues recruited 276 healthy volunteers from April
1993 to April 1995. ~h group of
about 40 was ihfected wilb a strain.o f
virus, lben quarantined in a hotel for
about a week.
Doctors squeezed a saline solution
up each subject's nose daily unlillbey
·snorted mucous into a plastic cup for

testing, said Dr. William Doyle, an
ell', nose and throat specialist • Children's Hospital in PitUburgh who
helped Cohen wilh lbe study.
They also weighed bags of used
tissues to measure the mucous each
subject expelled each day.
"It correlates very well wilb how
ill you are," Doyle said.
.
Wilen considering all streSs fac·
tors and physical symptoms,
researchers cnncluded lbat short'term stress didn 't affect how sick the
subjects becap~e , but chrOnic stress
made lbem more likely to get sick.
Typical chronic stress factors wae
enduring conflicts with friends or
family, ur~etllJPI()y ~~· or underem-

.Simpson
gives final
denial to
murder

.........
1••••••••-•••

ploymeat. be Mid.
" We certainly lalow ._ ahtoltic
saeu iaaaieat.+ ctW Dizm
•
so that's not completely s~illg."
said Janice Kiec:Oh-Giaser,&amp;ectOr of
the heallh psychology d~Y\fion in
Ohio State University's CQI!ep of
Medicine.
.
: !Jut uneJC;pected were the findinss
lbat acute s~ss had no effect on lbe
risk of getting sicl&lt;, Kiecolt-Glaser
said.
Kiecolt-Glaser's own studies have
shown short-term stress does, in fact.
weaken lbe immune system. She
guessed lbat Cohen's results may be
particular to colds ·for some reason.
noted lbat
SlfCSS

1111w co: t 122111on a
n adrl.
. KJ •• , Clibll...

*" .....

Root.
Dr 't·O Qti
INt!.lh II

-·--

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.• Nt• Hom11

oQaregll

-con.us:

Remodeling
Stop. &amp; Compare\
FRE~

New Homes • VInyl Slclng New ·
Gnges • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rooting
COMJ,IIERCIAl and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

ESTIIIATEES
885 4473

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Ill

·.

. . . . . tkt

'

''

..

'•

CHARLESTON, S.C. t~ The 9 tldel's prealdent JIIOIIlbed
sevet:e punishment for IDJ!OIII;

,

'

-r

IIIII t

Cith
•

tlt4WI

,a.

.. . Ctlln
.....SIIIpl

n 111; awn

Ar1y C&lt;tr

Any Dr rver

.J&amp;LSIDIMII
I.ULAnOI ·
117 WIN ~'LACE
. JWn.aiORT

=a ,.

II Chi

...

. fiMIIcif,..._..,,
'

"'

4.

IECCIND:rRY-1 t s Jr .. IS: II • ....
Cc I ••trftllllt;. .
n .lolo .. l lr.•U.
JMIPB• tD '-tin Nl 1 I lid " II. . II 811

r•••8td_

.

.
.. . . . . . feJ

·a Ind..
Bilnhll lll•lniLim*

1111:1 111. .·p.&amp; (AP)

.
&amp; .............

I tWUlWS

eSt . . . . &amp;

11 J WI

...... lr

.

DEER CUI

jnsbers

OIJI &amp; SR 22

. DISCOU&lt;ltS &lt;

Ccmpulcr Quotes
161 4) 992·6677
Pomeroy

L L'HOlLON

TRUCIIIG
DUMPTRlJCK
SERVICE

II

·:· , ociety sc,rapb·o.ok ·

..

'

'· '

'

.

f

'

Jont"""'
•

Authorized AGA Dislrlbutor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Ser.icel• Sleet Sales &amp; Fabrication ' Repair Welding

• Aluminum/Stainless 'Tool Dr~~SSing • Ornamental
Steps' Stairv, Railings, Patio Fum~ure, F...._
items, Plantar Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuilll

"No Job Too Large or Too_Small"
. We will work within your budget.

Ph. 773-8173
101 JlllmWOf Street

SIIITII'S
COISTIUCTION
C... ...... IA

-:a•A 21U1!4..

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FAX ~1
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LowRatnJ

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HAULING
Limestone, -

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Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

DAVIS

949·2734

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KIT 'N' CARLYLE fJ by u...ft.y Wrl&amp;ht
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•New eon~
·Deckt '

•VInyl Skiing
•lntui'IC!

BINGO
RACINf, OHIO
AMERICAN liGIOII
POST602
EVERY SUNDAY
Doors Open 4:30
Game Startl 1:45
Poy out looe-dlngto
number

of....,.._

F,.. E U,..,..

Under IMIW . . . . . . . . . - ,

992-6711

Public Wale a ...

SAVE
50%·75%
hM'S CUSTOM
CARPET '
Juat off Bnilbury Rd.
~forelgna)

llllddi1pol1, OH
114-21112-6379 .

Dly A E-lirig Hra.

CUSTOM BUILDING
&amp; REMODIUNG
· NewHoma,
Addltlono,

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Roonng,

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Painting, a.m.,

eonc.-

Garagea,
FreeEatlmatea

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We fuc il • • if if ..,,. ow
ONln home or b...U.....

Aak lor ·
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or Dollp (614) Ml-3031
lUI-

12NII1 MD.

GIUESER'S
GAUGE
Body work, Cll', truck

• truck painting,

Peyton Nicole
Rkbudson of Blue
Spr!ncs, Mo, reeeatly visited ber

minor mechlnlcal
repair.

Tune-upe, Oil Cll8nge,

wu

'MIIng,
.
Long St., RutiMid, 011.

·pat~.

742-2935, Aak fOr Kip

Glean• Fruth of
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1,_,,.,. ... 11111111'.

ter of Leslie Lyons,
formerly . or . the
. Rock Sprinp -~·1

Pick up clle&amp;rdecl

.,:ranees; bll1111iee,
m1ny IMillil &amp;
motor blocb. •
· &amp;14-912-oio25 1111-8'

......

a

PeytOn · and CUol Latta also spent
- - time~ Fruth of Pt.
rll r ........ w. ncmdy bo8pltalized,

• •

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.... \elrt'.il i[lalaltllil

' .;l"t.wftlt Slr.OO to:.' -

1.,... .Daly Sa11llel

·Vlle•thle H.ts
:. 11lCell1 Strtti :
,Pa•aroy, OH 45769

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
.FOR A TOTAL OF
, $7.00 PE.R DAY.

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1111

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Stump Grinding

FREE ES1111Ates

rre'

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Removal &amp;

(814) 11!2-65:15
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r~=:r~~~!f!:'.t.:;:

The.Dally Se._tinel "

·Top, Trim,

......4-. . p.a

Fvmll\a.•.-,
1 · ,._a 1t•a.; 1111s1 oil." - . .

.- t

JONES'
TREE SERVICE
ZO Yefii'S E"perienee •

ALL OHIO

INSURANCE

any

'Relic' debuts in top
·spot, 'Evita' No. 2

S

Easy Pay Auto

they

.PhoeniX. Gazette ·to cease publication ·. · · tT.':~':~· usti~pu~;;~~~h

........
...d.,
...
..
... ..........
..............
.
.........
,....
.,••••77HJJJ
......
...
iii····n

lOllYuill

were

J

814-74241141
· Briar Proof
HIMillt'lg Clotlw

JIIR

Jt •••

plei( terins pouible lbal·the quiclceit .

'Na)'.autoflhii~BIIl'«•yonels .
to .in
wi,'W!Illw in'., i~ '
accusedofhazingor ·~QIIli·: ~~,"Pijolesaid.
' ,
camplli. 4yiriJ be was COIIIIIIitMd Ill&lt;' • · l')et~. · tbe milit.ry colle~~C
irilprov~ life for lbe two relniininf · invati- 111111 .law 911icers were .
. women Clidets.
'
~ in onlY if'the llqOt 'uited
. " We ha\oe made mistalcel, h to Pursue· Crlmlllll ~JWFs. we(
appears \ve ~~!ave missed :1\c miiat: • Bryant · BUllet, the · hiJI*i·flll~lnr ·,. ·
times. We will cortec! t1!&amp;o emn:i, •; Clidel 'officer.
'
~ · .' , • ·
iilteririi.President Oifton' Poole wd . ' , ·. E~vfl!l malp ~face discijlli- '.
Monday at a.news c11nference.
naey actio!~ ~m1njl fi'Om the aile. : .
Any•cadet accused of hazing wiJI ·aatipns, TWo.
suspetided from
be kicbd off campus and lbe ·g se school, and lbe rest were moved out turned over to local.Jaw asencies, of the barracks where
can no
said Poole, who also met privately lonpr have contaclYiith lbe women
with the-1,800 cadets.
~
A day earlier, Jeanie Mentavlos of
The four women wete lbe first
· Char!Qtte, N.C., and Kim Messer of ldmitted to lbe 153-yec-old school
t: Clover annQt.lnced lbey would not • following a u.s.:Sopreine Court rul·
" • return for lbe spring seams~......,._ in&amp; lut yew lllaRil simi!• Ill,male., .
m· of sexual.harassment and hazing.1be ., policy-III ·.Virgiai&amp;.Milililly Institute
m women said male cadets setttbei~ •·wu uncoidtitutiiMial.
clothes on fire and washed out their ' After years of coun battles, Shan- ·
~ouths. wi\11 cleanser. ·. , ,
" ~Ftul~inAu&amp;U$t 199S'became ·
Ji '"We cannot have
rtiis~biv- ~, ilie fillt ,woman . to elioll .at , _
ior toward female cadeu, and l hav~ . Cilidel . but dropped out after less
. } )lbld
of lbe COrps jn lbe ~iJn. ·~ ).111¥1 'u iliek &lt;u., ~,' , , ,,
·•

.....

I

·181UIID.II
SU,..YCO.
RUTlAND, OliO

..,........
.,.. ,.
Ml''
5

Citadel tQ send all ..·
l}azing rep9rts to . l.fll[ ·
enfotcem~nt agencies
.
.

SANTA MONICA. Calif. (AP)After more than four days of testimony during lbe last six weeks, O.J.
Simpson had one final opportunity to
deny for a jury lbat he was a killer.
" Mr. Simpson," asked his lawyer
Robert Baker, "did you, wilb your
·children in the house, upstairs in ihe
bedroom, asleep, murder your ... exwife and leave ber body lbere for the
·kids to find it?"
'
· "No;" Simpson answered emphatically.- "Absolutely not."
And that was lbat, the long-awailed testimony by Simpson in his
·wrongful death trial was over, just
before1he end of lbe court day Mon•day.
A few hours earlier, Simpson was
shown an angry letter ftom Nicole
Brown Simpson in which she wrote
that Simpson· "beat lbe holy hell out
·of me," lben lied about it atlbe hos·
pital, calling it a bicycle accident..She
wrote that she was so mad at him she ·
•l
'
•
~?
• "' !-"'"•,)
'· '' g '
.. a1
ii ·;"'·' :..1 . , ' '
•
,was tempted to sleep with "every
guy, including some that you know."
, The undated letter to Simpson,
offered by lbe plaintiffs at the last
Cox on den's list
vice will) candles bei~g liJhted bY,
minute, incited some of the angriest .
BJbbie
Cox,
daughter
qf
Mr.
and
Kathly, ,lohn110n. The group sanj.
arguments of recent days between
~snFii!s
Mrs. RObert White, 44107 Carr Rd., "Slle!lt,llligJtt" to.CQIICII!de the service;
plaintiff and defense lawyers.
·I
IN
CASE • L08 AngeCoolville, is among lbe 995 Harding and !'at Arnold hat! prayer.
. .
Plaintiff.au0 mey Daniel Petmcellea
pollee
offl.cer
Thompeon,
right,
Ia
University
stUdents
included
on
lite
·
Ann1.ambenJailedevotionsenti:·
,li quoted di~y from the eight-page
MCOI1ed away from Loa A~a County Supest hool's' Dean's List for .grades II~ "Imrriaquel 0~ is Willi•Us" and'
,letter only twice - one infl(lCuous
.rlor
Court
In
S•nta
Monica
Monday
by
a
fellow
·
,
a~iev~ during the fall semes.!f&gt;r at theie were prityer:s for the Joan Conpassage about when it was -wrinen
.81111 the words: "I've never loved you
since or been the same." .
·
semester by Dr. Neale Pryer, vice . · Ginon had the opening prayer for the:
· But Petrocelli did question SimpPHOENIX (AP) - The Phoenix
"While we all feel nostalgic about After it reached about 110,000 in the president of academic affairs, honor- meeting.
·
'
son about g~neraltopics in the letter Gazette announced today it would the Gazette, the marketplace is telling mid-1980s, it dropped to about iitg lbose who have achieved high .
It' was decided lhatlbe men and '
111)(1 jurors will have the entire letter · cease publication Saturday, ending us there is only a limited appeal for 39,0()0 today. .
scholarship. T&lt;;&gt;·be eligible. a stude.nt wqmen will not' have meeting~ ·
tore~ later. .
·
116 years of operation.
an afternoon newspaper," Oppedahl . The Republic's average circula· must be carrymg 12 or more hours together any• more, ~lthouah th.:
. Sunpson tesllfi~ ~ ~ver saw ~
The end of the afternoon newspa· · said.
tion is . about 380,000 daily and and have an .~-:erage scholii'Ship lev· , women may invite lbe meeting to
letter until~ was ID.JBII after ~mg- per will mean the loss of about 55
PNI also publishes The Arizona 580,000 on Sundays.
el of 3.50 m1mmum.
·
· '· attend·a meting. .
·
ch~ed w11h murder. He wd he jobs, said John F. Oppe,dahl .. pubo Republic, a morning newspaper.
Cox is a sen'or
atlbe
n'
'ty
N
m·
·n
1
New~room layoffs will be com.
. 1. .
u IVerst •
· ew 0 . tcers ,wl Pan program~
belteved lbe letter was wntten at the lisher and chief executive officer of ' 'The Gazelle 's circulation had
10
declined steadily in recent years. • pleted no later than Frida~. said PBIJI , andSshehe' •s maJOI'Ing accounun~.
fqr lbe year pri91' to the nelit meeting ;
behest ~f Ms. Si'!'pson's la~yers in P~oenix Newspapers Inc .
Johnson,
executive
editor
of
The
IS
a
graduate
.of
Eastern
'
H
I,gh
on
lf'll: 23 · ~t Brl!llbury. Charldine .
lbe months leadmg to thell' 1992
Republic.
·In
addition
to
the
55
jobs
.,
~~hoot.
,
Alkire
·~stalled the 11ew officers. in 1
divorce, and was intended to force .
will
be
cut
about
30
other
posi·
lp
candlehgh
, I Ce{emony. DonatiOns .
that
· him to tear·up their prenuptial agree•
.
''
Candlel
t
..-vice
·
·
·'-"'
• ,a money
"
:ions will be eliminated through attri. .
.
'":ero m...., .or
·tree to lx)· . ,
ment. '
tion and production changes. .
'
Acandlehght ~mce was a fea~ . giVen to · Ben ,Kel\er, tllissionlll'i. · :
The letter makes reference to a
Th
.
,
b'rth
on
Oct
'
of
a . recent meetmg of'tJ!e Me1gs speakerattheMiddl~portChurchof .
28
0
11
September 1986 incident, alluded to
e azc e 5 !
: •:, County.Chun:hcs of Christ Women's Christ .
·
·-:
at lbe criminal trial, in which Ms.
1880, was humble. Its first publisher Fellowship '"'-ld at ?L- Zion Ch -h
R . 'h ). ' .
.' .
"''
u"'
. u•• ·
e s ments were served by the: · .
t
Simpson went to hospital with an
once
wro
e.
I'
Bonnie
Arnold
narrated
the
ser·
'
h
h"""h
abrasion on the back of her head.
LOS ANGELES (AP)- The car5. "Jerry Maguir:e," Sony, $7 mii.
OSlC
.
. "'" ,
"You bCat lbe holy hell out of me nivorous-monstcr thriller "The Rei- lion, 2,450 locations, $2,862 average,
&amp;. we lied at lbe X-ray lab &amp;. said 1 ic" debuted in first place at the box $93.3 million; live weeks. '
• 11 off a.b'k
officewi.th$9.1 million, followed by
· 6. "Jackie
.e
1 e... Remem he~~~"
r... ;L.
~"'
$ Chan's First Strike,"
letter said.
_
"Evita," which spent its first w.eek· New Line, 5.8 million, 1,344 locations, $4,300 .average, $5.8 million,
ln another portion, Ms. S.impson end in wide release.
"Evita," starring Madonna, one week.
·
recounted arguments lly the oftenbattlins couple,
earned $8.4 million and jumped from
7. "The People vs. Larry Flynt," '
"OJ.,lthink I have to put this all 22 to 104 locations in its third week Sony, $5.3 million, 1,233 locations,
in • letter,,'' Ms. Simpson wrote.
of release, according to 'Exhibitor · .. $4,311 average, $7.4 million, three
"'I'd !ike you to keep this letter if Relations Co. Inc:, which tracks weeks.
we split, so that you'll always know movie grosses.
8. "Turbulence," MGM, $4.5 mil·.
why we'll)llill'd also like you to keep
The movie based on the Andrew lion, 2,094locations, $2, 132 average,
it if we Silly togelber, as' a reminder." Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice stage musi· $4.5 million, one week.
She 1110 wrote about "the New cal about Argentina's co~troversial
9. "One Fine Day," Fox, S3.4 mil·
YCIII''s E¥e beat-up;" a reference to a first lady p!lSted an impressive per- lion, I ,858locations, $I ,856 average,
A,MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL
VALENTINE
1989 fi. . tJvo! brought police to screen average of $11 ,905.
$37.3 million, four weeks.
'
~
\ .
Simpson's estate and led to his plead·
"The People vs. Larry Flynt," also
I0. "10 I Dalmatians," Disney,
..R~mem~r that special ~this ,. ·
··
inJ no-contest to spousal battery,
moved into wide release over the $3.! million, 2,024locations; $1.545
. Valentine's Day With
a me uri~. j In · ·
"I called lbe cops to save my life weekend, earning seventh place with average, $126 million. seven weeks.
.
whether you believe it or not,'.' Ms: $5.3 miUion in ticket sales. The
II. "Beavis and Butt-head Do
Simpson wrote.
movie, starring Woody H8m:lson as America," Paramount, $2.9 million,
Jt was Simpson's second day o.n the Hustler magazine publisher, 1,984 locations, $1.465 average,
the
,· stand, with, his lawyer trying to moved flom 16 screens to 1,233.
$58.7 million, four weeks.
• Swe~theaits • MolD$ &amp;: Dads • Grand~tS.~ ::teacJten ·
undO lbe damage caused when he
"It's not the easiest sell in the
q. "Ghosts of Mississippi.''
,~; ·
• Baby$ltters • Frie~ds
-~~.
. · ,j
'1\'U questioned by the plaintiffs' . South and Midwest," Sony,Pictures Sony, $2.3 million, 2,268 locations,
'
-~
'
.
.
..
~)1.
·._•t '~"
. '
side in November.
,
Releasing President Jeff Blake told $1 ,816 average, $9.4 111illion, four
Anyone who ·WOUld appreclilte 8 tbouptfal wo~....., you! AD 'VIIeliti. ' ·
Simps&lt;in's defense was expected Daily Variety, adding wor~-of- mouth weeks;
to rest tOday af1er calling two more and possible Oscar bids next month
13. "The Preacher's Wife.·• BucHearts will ri published In the February l4tli a.-u • CG1t ~ Oslly 'SlOOI
witneSKS: a police officer who hand- 'could•persuade moviegoers to give it na Vista, $2.2 'million,. 1,58 I toe aMUST BE PR,EPAIDI
., ..
cuffed Simpson, and Simpson 's a try.
tions, $1,378 average, $42 million,
eldest daulhter, Arnelle, wlio dealt
Other weekend debuts were five weeks.
'ft'ith police the morning after lbe · "JaciJe Chan's First Strike," staning
14. "The English Palieqt," MiraPIWJ-~S
killi"'•·
.
the martial-arts star, which took sixth max, $2 million, 561 locations,
Simpson; .who wu acquitted in Place Wl'th $S ·8 m•'lll'on •· and "Tur- ·u
"' ,606 average, . $31 .million, nine
October 1995, is beina sued bv the bulence," an airplane disaster film weeks.
.
'
·-; 51
. '
'. ' '
s'elllliV. of Ms. Simpson and Ronald . that earned $4.5. million to finish
I 5. "Moll\er," Paramount, $1.4
Ooadnlafl. ·Simpson's ex,wife and , eighlb.
million, 159l~atiollS, $9,010 averllerfricnfJ·were slashed to death on . The 16p 20 movies at Norlh Amer- age, $2 million, thr~ weeks.
June 12, t994. ·
. 1can theaters Fn~ay through Sunday,. 16. " My Fell.Pw Americans,"
· 111e pllintiffs intended to beaina followed by ~!UdiO; g~ss, number of Warner Bros., $1.2 million, 1,220
~ n:butlal elise~ cllling for- !beater locauons, rece1p~ per loca-· locations, $968 average, $20.1 mil·
- Dl photcl anllyst Jeny Ricblids ~on. total,groSs an4 .number of ~~ks , lion, fbur weeks. ,
. ltl'lllihn'rwa"'l0111Jtophot'Simft. tn re~, u comp11ed by Exhibitor,
17. ".Shine," Fine Line, $l.l 'mil·
·""
.•.,. RelauoDI'
lion, 207 locations, $5,406 a\rcrage,
JIUQIOitedly Warina lbe same
·
k
IIICIIIII.tloes
Mlbe killer - a photo
t. "The· Relic,~ Paramount, •$9.!' $8."f million, ~1ght
wee s.
.
Sia-hlsl!t-1-daf~.
million.~lontionJ,$4,327aver, IS. "Mars Attacks!" Warner
1
--.,.
$91 'Ilion
·--~L
Bros., $1.005 million, 1.~2 toea• ....--By die end of lbe defenM cue, qe, , nu
• one """"·
·
$
5 s 'II'
lh-- will haw ctlled '39 wit2. "Bvka," ·Buena Vista, $8.4 lions, 984 average, 53 . ml 10n,
,..,.....,
7041ocati
$
five weeks.
•••· includiBI himNif, in a pre- million,
ons. 11,9,!)Sayer·
19. "Ransom," Disney, SJ .OOl
2
_,..IUtllliltjllltQVC~aiiiCJillb,, lfD• $11. milljon, three Week4.
'II'
I "34 i
" $970
Milt tile ptrhari"' 1 1/2- .
3. "¥l:Uil," New l;ine; $8.3 m1 •on. •'! , QCi!.lons,
averelM. Ifill •indlidld 66 q, million;2.276locat,ions.$3,640aver- ap,SI30.7mtllion 1 10wee~s.
! .
..,. M3.711)illion, three Mob. .
• 20. "'11\0 Evening, S!M.;\ Pill!'
•• ·:~"Minunax,$7.-tmil- . mount, S818,700,&gt;!.2U locations,
UO..IJHIOai:loni. ~,MSaveriJe, $676 av~rage, $11 .7 million, lhree ' .
M . .l!J, .............
. weeks.

a

IISSELL BUILDERS, 'INC•

Sentinel
Classifiede
'

156

�""

•

PoiMni'i •llddleport, Ohio
.NBA Crouword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER
.· 'lfi0\J'ICfr.1ErJTS

' 005
lOUII

'.

IWEII. .ART

'

.UCLDIIIAI
'lOUR PHONE ·

1-IIOG-858-7111
~Xl 8221
12.89po&lt;mi\_

'
..... bo18yrs.
' · --_;s..~..U::!!j{!!,81!!8~)1!!;45!;1~1~34~.....;

i 40

Glveeway

C - TY'o lor porto, Sylvanlo
&amp;OE.:IQIIG2741.

en

'

clog &amp; 5 pupploa, good
•11:11 dog. 810.258-ICMI.

Dog T• Good Homo: 5 Yottrs 01c1
-..llraNon Ml~od, Nice Noeda
. Ouloldo. 814-245-5135.

F u l - - malo Rattwoilor
IDOOodhOma~

814-8112-4213.

To Oiv•away AKC Regit terad
a- · ~

80

814-245-11121 .

l:ost and Found

N
~

~o;on :sa ·$15 /Hr, No Minimum

Eorn et,Ooo Wooldy S-.HinQ En·
welopu A1 Hom.. Start Now. No
Exporionco. Froo Supplies, lnlo.
No Obligation. Sond LSASE To:
ACE, Dlpt: 1351, Box 5137, Dia·
mond Bar, CA 81715.

thil. MWIPII* il ~to

Commorclol -co lor ron~ 5th
St In Now H...,., WV. 3Q.4·112·

tile- Folr-.g Act

211111.

ot 1088 wl1lch ...
toact.wtile"Mrpa. . . ..

Oolng b&lt;rllnooo lor 1011· Second
Slroot. Rt 33 In lluan, 304·17S·

Earn 1000's• weekly stuffing anvelopea at home. Be your b(lu.

baiod on._,CIIIC:rlmlnotiO
color, nollglon,

~uggtl

Unit

364-8, 10151 Un!Vtt'!lity Blvd. Or·

,. .... _

Full·Timit Bab)'iilltr Wanted,
Weekdlyl, Referenc11 RequirH,
Mutt Be Able To Drive 2 Chilr-

dron, .1 Child Handicapped,
387-1!314 A.... 4 P.M. ·

BH~

LOST: lefnalo Black lab wiWhlto

448-4530.

-""""' In

-or

!ilt51 .

AI&lt;C Ro U od Enalilh Springe&lt;
Sponloll'uppleo, All Shoto, Fa·
maloo 1150: MoiH t$00, Coli
Bo-.n I &amp; ·t P.M. 814·218·

Furnithed 3 Rooma &amp; Bath, No
Polo, Roleronco And Dopoolt Roo

'

quinod, 814-448-1519.

12:!4.

• • 54
• A 7 Z

•

•K

sex famtNaJ ltiiUI at nattonal
origin, or any lrlhlnJon Ia .

,......_...., ..·f, ':'n

=-..........
-=·

• ~

lililllll-

11,......
111111,..-- :ac.... • .._
14 ...-ltiaDir will
.. fAll ""!1'1
11 ,. , _ pert
.. Clllllf!r .
11 ~...... 117 Pulled ·

~==(Fr.)
.,.....,_

DOWN.

:rr.:r.

1

~ ·Avldlr

I Yortwl.ertiw

311 c:o.;;i....
~
........

All Yard Salet Uuat Be Paic:l In

. Advan~e. Oaacfline: 1 :OOp~ the
day Debe lhe ad Ia to run, Suril
c:lay &amp; Mand•r edillon- 1:OOpm
Fridoy.
.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Lerntey'a Auction ·Service, Lealia
lemllf, Auctioneer. Hous,hold,
Es•te. Farm Satea. Cal 814-«88241, 114-318-11443.

olllle

lufolhled thll Ill d" all: '01

81Mtttiwdln'*ne•f .-..~
are l'l'lttlbtl on an...-

•

.-. .

llaldlr

17Colllld ...

tOW.

40 Ending tar

ca; '

ilof

• IIJii!IW unll

OpeniJig lead: • 2

HrtHAL S

-'"""Y-·

The polite way

410 Houses for Rent
REAL ESTATE

.....,.,,...,toiL

'

·2 Bedroom Houae On Bulavllle

By PhUIIp Alder

Melga County Fali' will be lcceptlng appllcanona for Electrician.
Mail resume to :- 42455 Woods
Rd., Coolville, OH 45723 by Janu•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula c.mpoe

,I

1997.

ClllllfllrapiWCMW*C . . . . . . . . . . .

Now Taking AppUcaUona AI Domlno'o Pizza, Gallpolia &amp; """""""·

4bp . . . . .

pllllllll.-lnd..-

~lilltlnl\lellf*~"?f . . . .. T~CIW: V ...... 8

OUT OF WORK?
I ne:ed 4 people who are nor
81rald Of good Jla,rd work In IBIH
relatec:l opporlunity. No experl·
ence necessary, training period
poovidod. Coll814·992·4472 or I ·
800-606·3313 to schedule an in-

f I\Hr1

II :)
C. LIVE Sl OCK

0 K 8 L H8 7

'

ZXK

Pll

•. 'YI' IRK8G

~· Uf'f &gt; t

'

IIW18KU

'

WIOIWPZG
KRKC

0 8 H O.K 8 A G

ZH

XIA L

'

UKIZX.'

.ZH

YXKc
H8 I 8

19r'Ylew.

~BIUAKG.

P'lrl·llme lllea clerk needed ior
c:lowntoWn Pt Pleaunt Send
tume 10 BoiC CW-1, %Pt Pleaslnt Regllltr. 200 Main S1 .• Pt

r•

PREVIOUS s0J.UTION: "lqt II "*'&lt;I owr.mallll&lt;. lia long • J11U don, ntlnd.
K®n,,maiiii&lt;." ~ ~AII.

-WV2S660.

·.

WOII

Grocery, Porter Artl, Even1n1

814·388·8009 or Dey 014·441·
3843 $57,000
' .

inJorfTiltion.

low

314 Acre, Firepii]Ce, I 112 Balttl,

$45,000, Col814 448 21111.

.

om -.ue, Galhpoi&amp;.

ln -

·

.·r-+K...;O;,.P;..,.n.E...;E;......!

large, - · Plttlolly Flnlohod 2
Srory Homa On Approxinotoly 2.7
Acroo, Dulbulldlngo, Rural loCI· 2. Bedroom Dopooit And Reier·
~
0ur 1.o11 -,..,.,.,
· oncoo
Roqui.-d No lnoido Polo 1
· Sol'-·
tion
- • ,rans.,
112 Milt Oa~taide Rio· Grande
Golnl$&amp;5,000, 614-37f.21311.
~ 814-24H8115
New mfg. aectional home, 1475
aq. tt., great room. 3br, 21MUht,
oak cabinets, hHt pUmp, porch
&amp; dackt, large landtcaped lot.
M&amp;ac:lowhllls
Sub-dtvialon.

French City Homao. Inc. 014-«8·

2 Oodroom Mtrlllle 11ome On Me·
Cormick Rood.·814·4-le-.

Newly b&lt;rilt hOma an opproxnt•
ly 3 111 acroo, 3 bodrooma, 2

baih, apocloul living room, torve
kitchen, 3 mlnutoa oR or SR 33,
seo,ooo. 814-882·4254 can .....
7:30pm or 814-892·2880.

. I' I' I' I

2 BediGIIIn tocated an &amp;mad Run
Rd In New Hl.ven, , 280 per
month deipoalt &amp; utilities. 30'1173-5181.

9340 Ot 304-075-3313.

1
.

~1ERCIIANDISE

l.:.:...b::...;;::...;;=.:.:...::...;;:..:::=;:._ 51 0 ·
odroom trailer lor ralu, Tup·
pora Plaino, UOO o month ptua
utllitioo &amp; dopoolt, 614-1167-34117.
2 Boclooom T,.iler In Smail T,.ilof
Park, Depoolt &amp; Rolorencoo Ro·
qWrod.- . ,.... , 101.

Household ·

Good,s

11183 Ford LTO, good "''!!k car,
'i: r·~ oirtod: ssoo. 3114·875·
Wood fOf S.lo, US ~ood Will
Dllhllli6..., 114-31Ht&amp;o.

o,.,..,,

Full bed &amp; mlttron.,SSO. Crib
S10. Be901nel SS. ShOOto ollam'-

1982 .t4i:70 Mobl• Hlwne On 1.8
ACrea, Porches, 111,800 , 513·
I

-

Now· 1997 14 Wide- 1 bath, .. IIIII

·

. '

S~ial Septic Tank Aeratton
MPtlin 1399.00 lnttallotion
U5.00 Plua Matorlol. 8)4· 448-'

·~ ··

4. .

Uprigh~ Ron Ewno EotO&lt;priHo,
~Olio, 1·800-537o8528.

Will do babysitting tn mt home,
Mol")day through Fridl!r, c:lay or
ntghl shih, S 1.50 per hour, It 4·

.

.

.•.

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tOBr lincoln To•~· dr. :
oquiP,.oci, ' 79,0GOmi ,. good

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Baro"" OT. Rod· s..,rool, 2 .

Ooora; Engine &amp; Tranamisalon,

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1881 ·, Oldt C uti* II Suprame,
Loaded. New Mich. Tlr~e. HI·
Mil•'· Excoii~~F&gt;i , Condit!,~.
$5,900,
81"'4411 3334 .
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1992 Mercury Cou..r {Rod) pw,
P&lt;ll .... ll $7,000.304-875-• .

"

1993 GEO Soorm GSI, 32,000ml,
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.......,
,.._
-

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..,....._._. . . .t YIIIoiO
~ o\p!L 140 or 101 114. .}·

17!1!EOii.

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;n::::o: -c:~k~: ~~

Sordid- Elect- m,oop·- OUtwit- WISH you WERE
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985-4360.

f INAN CIAI

OHIO

'

~ B:. .:I;. I

Say w.hat you will .about
trouble,· one gossip said 10 another, 'It always gives you

SCIAMUR ANSWIIS

1110 Mittubithi Piec:tl, two door,
5 speed, afc, runs perfect, no
rust. neW lires and bl.nery, 87,000
miltl. Don't· nn. Dull S26so, e1 4-

992-7957.

210

,.,.

.

by filling in tho missing words
L-l.-.l.-.J.L......J.L...,...J.L--...1 you, dr.olop
from llep No. 3 below.

19~ Nlsaon, autinnalic, PS; PB,
air, n-.M good wortt CIN', 814·8D2·

tDH

STDRAOE TANKS 3,000 Oollon

dOW!l, S f391mo, with llppnw8d
credit Coilt-900-80t.em.

r r.1PLOYMENT

4x8130eo. 3o4·882·2741.

USED

•

,.HG.'•'

H
A F T I' ,_":,'
_
5 .· I.:. l1 I

1. . . .

. r .-ftlf:...;U;..I,.:..P

1

Appliances: , Recqnc:litlontd ~lrlatra!Orl, St0¥01, WolhO&lt;O 21181.
All R-ndltlonod
Wlohoro, Dtyera, Rongoa, Rolrl· · And
grarott, eo Dar GuarentHt And Olutan-lltQO And Up. 111114 c-. V~IOfiO..high mnoo.
. · oxcoNont condlil!ln. '"rogo kept
French Cily N.l ytag, 114·4.41· WI ~.11 4 • lt41.
77V5. •~.
.
price reasonable. c11t 814·812·
ROYAL JILLY With 'Siborion '2012.
Glnaong
10
Copauloo,
UO.
Coli
Country FurrNture. 3o.t-875-0820.
Rt 2 N, 8mllft, PI Ploaaont, WV. 814-448 .... 1-III0-211t.QOIIII.,.
lOiS Cr~n Vlc1orlo, loado,d,
...,.
0004 30!1..7.5-!341.
r ...Sot o-e. sun '·•·f.
Solo! 0..11 Collection Solo! Anir
Fre•iir, Washer, Dryer, VCR,' llal
More 1'hon , 145 Modo· •eas'Oido oe RoeoncY PW, POL,
COlor T.v.. Micr-o. Rolrigora· f!t8 Altandera, Olc:l Dot11, Grow PS. toK Actual Mllu 814·245·
..... 814-258-12311.
Hoi~ Mony, Meny Morel 814-

•eo

574·2639 . . .•

-.rs.

IOtftl lour olmplo

2

Hull bath, 2hoH balha, lull baao-

24 Hour Coro 4 Eldorit "-&lt;oono
Smith Buick Pontloc, 1900 Eat!· I n - Homa, 814 .... 1.oooa.

l
1I I I P

10

MASLOT

Sorry. not ooldl Pricod 1D aoll olbr,

180 Wanted To Do

,

...

8 lour
hottonoo !oilers of tho
ocromblod -.Is be-

Houoo Solo: 1 Milt To OoDipolll, ·
3 Bodroomo, Dlnlna. Uillty, Porch,
Someone to live In wlelc:lerly
woman to help ovenee houte·
tald. Rlont lroo. 00.:882·3323 lor

·

....

Codor Siding SocltOnol,' S Bod·
raoma, 2 Full Botho, Pool, Du~
bulldlrtG, CIOIO to School And

1118,0hlo l Well Virginia, 304·
713-5785 Or 304· 713-544 7.

SE RVICES

12lilrMIIIn ....
11-Qunaa

I lol C&amp;l P

.. ,..

--11ooob\1

wlllch loin -

..... 0..

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
1uelion
service.
Licensed

Clean late Moc:lel Cars Or
Truckt, tHO Models 0. Newer,

·-·.:::lAt .. .....

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--

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71 .. .

1111,1141

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31 W'oldowperl

ary 22, 1997.
ALL Yard Salei Uuat Be Paid In· Needed; A Bab)'Sitler In Uy
Aclvonco. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. Home, tO Uinuraa Fmm Ga•ipolia
the dar be-fore lhe ad Ia to run. For A 2 Yoor Old Chilcl . Send ReSU...., oclllan • 2:00 p.m. Frlcloy. aume Anc:l Leuera Of Recom·
Mondoy odlllan · 10:00 a.m. Sol· mondllion To P.O. Box 805, Goli·
urdoy.
pols, Ollo, 45831. By. January 17.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

2 Paet

new.,....

Lott : McCIInti$ area; 2 fttmale
BIJIUI.il. Cal304-788-5887.

Pomeroy,

t a.IIIIIMII

. . . . . . 1,001
:14-ftiiiN

Dealer:Eut

wtll not
k-klglyliCCOpl
'
- l a r n o o l eo1010
T11tl

7

Vulaenbkl: Neither

make In/ SUCh i)lffM'eiiCI,
llmllallon or dlmlmlnatlon.'

landofL, 32817

Chtlll, no collar. Reward. 304· IIN&gt;OOt2.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

• At I I 54
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• A.
•KI72
•AQJIS
•• s
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own hours. $20k 10 SSOk/yr 1-'
IIDQ.3ol8. 711811 508.

Send S.A.S .E . to

ti-IM'I

Weo&amp;

Computer Uaara Needed. Work

Start now. No e11perience. Free
supplies info, no obllgarion .

.
J 54

• 10
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venrory, 1·800- 738·0188 tnd/1111
NP

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HourL Coli Botwoon 1 And 5 814-

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ftC

~

ARE 'IOU TIRED, BORED, REST.
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con holp. lro ""'' timo. .. put ~ to
work In tolophono aoleo . PoiiRT·
TIME WORK. Coli 81.4.QQ2· 7055.

Loll: 2 Wol.._. coon houndl, SR
554, Slorya Run &amp; 1.-.g Crook
All. -ty, nomo on ol both
.dogo,-. 814.7&lt;2·2858.

. 70

~

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