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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Photo man .
feels wrath
of Rodman

Super Lotto:

11-13-20-38 38 40
Kicker:
3 8. 7-3-9
Pick 3:
7-G-6
Pick 4:
9-3-7-3 .

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Vol. ~. NO. 111
., 01817, Ohio ¥Iller P • I Una Campeny

-~s,LSPKG

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Moetty cloWy tonftht
with ecattered tlurrlea.
Lowa ne1r 0. FrldiJ,
~ with ICittefld tlur......~-10.

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2 So ctlao-. 12 ,.._, 3S ..... ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Th~, January 18,·1"7
. . '

A ~IIIII Co. fllllll~

· ODOT .lays out plans
:·:for u.s..33 relocat-ion
· : By JIM FREEMAN
highway from Athens t~ Darwin.
· Sentinel News Stlllf
Approximately 300 peOple allend.
The Ohio Department of Trans- ed !he meeting at !he Ohio Universi. ponation held a public hearing in ty Inn so input could be offered on
. A!!Jens Wednesday night to ~ive two proposed routes for the. reloca: . comments on a proposed Super n tion project, accol'ding to ODOT .

spokeswoman Nancy Pedigo.
She said 260 people actually registered upon entering !he hearing, but
some did not register. .
ODOT officials and representatives of Svel'drup Assoeiaies Inc., a
Columbus·b~ consulting fi.rm.
presented two possible routes for !he
proposed highw.ay, designated alter·
native alignments A and B. ·
.
Both alternative routes are located west of the existing U.S. 33 and
have generally ·similar impacts in
most categories, but alignment A
would cost approximately $20 million less to construct than alignment
B. accorc!ing to ODOT offic.ials.
Alignment B is approximately a,
'\
half-mile longer, consists of more
curves and requires more' bridges,
, EXAMINE. ALTERNATE fH)UTES - 1Wo
Wtldnndly 'n .Attiene.
Lel.kei- of sveraccol'ding lo an ODOT brochure.
.
'ahern
...
,
r
oullll
far
ttie ~relocation of
drup
Aaeoclltn,
INning
over .~ble at left,
Presently, .alignment A is.recom'
U.S..33'fr9ftl A"""a to DelWin were pnsented
explained tha routetl to people attending the
mended as 'he preferred option, but
hearing.
afinal decision will not be made until by the Ohio ~abnam of Ti'aneportetlon
a[ler _the close of the comment peri- uled to open to traffic in late 2002.
shouldeo:s. poor sight distance, steep
The proposed. project will ultiod and· upon the review and eviluaThe proposed relocation extends grades, frequent fl~ing problems mately provide a four-lane, divided,
limited-access highway. Initially. a
tion of all comments received, from the soilthem pan of the city of and few opport~nities for passing.
according to the brochure.
Athens at U.S. SO southwal'd; approxMore than 75 percent of the curves "super" two-lane highway wil~ be
A proposed project schedule imately 13 miles to the existing four- along this j&gt;ortion of thl: highway do constructed on a fo~r-Janc right-ofshows right-of-way acquisition lane ponion of U.S. 33 at Darwin.
not meet current standal'ds; and the way. Access to the new hjghway "(ill
beginning in January 1999; con- . The e'xistlng roadw$)1. ~ing · accident rate is three times greater be allowed only from public roads.
struction is sche!luled to begin in •. ·to QDOT, is·a winding, '
' rOad -than the statewide average for two- Consultants said truck lane.• arc heing
mid-2000; and the pro~t is
~';~~til;.; iaad~\Jate or
~ rural hishways, ODOT stll~d:
(Continued on Page 31
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·, .,./oy-• ~ ;;•'•..;.. • - :.~~- ~~····.~~ ::-=--~-·-:--~-,..~·
~~~- r.~

Joe

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OPPosED TO CONSTRUCTION ~ Ohio Un!vwslty grac1u1te
atudant ct.d Kilter, left, 1nd OU aophomore Joe Fl\llhaber were
11111011g t11we It
ODOT .......ng vojclng
oppo•ltlon to the

an

't*r

Pf'DPDIId reklaatlon of U.8. 33.
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sehed':;

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of Arctti ·: c old ··
to hit region tonight
· 1

over;

·more urban

By The Altocleted Preu

;school help

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Don't be fooled by those balmy temperatures. Forecasters say another blast
. of Arctic air is headed our way.
··
By"tonight, temperatures were c•pected to be in the single digits, the
National Weather Service said; Wind-chill factors of 20.35 below 1.cro were
likl;ly.
,
.
.
Clear and crisp conditions arc forecnsl for Friday as a high pressure -system pushes the clouds out of Ohio skies.
Lake-effect snow is expected to continue·in the extreme northeast.
. ~mperatures tonight coul~ dip llS low as S below zero.
.
Frigid conditions arc cxpeclcd to·hang around for _the weekend, with highs
only' reaching in the teens for this area by Sunday. Lows are anticipated to
, be below zero Friday and Saturday, according lo the.National Weather Se,..:.
vice. Light snow or flurries will accompany the cold temperatures.

;' · COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. ,
· :George Voinovicli hasn't yet released
' all the details of his plan to help out
: Ohio '.s urban and poor school di,.
tricts, but he's already facing some
. resistance from lawmake{! from his
..own party:
"I don't mind helping our south·,: eastern Ohio SCh!IOis," Rep. Jay Hot. ,linger, R-Newark, said at a news con,: .fereqce \1\(ednesday:·..J
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"I don't mind helping urban
'schools. Bul,) have a problem when
·we continue to help certain types of
: "SChool districts rcgal'dless of what
, they're doing to .help themselves."
CHESHIRE - Two of the three
Troopers said Steven Boso .was
: Hottinger was one of a dozen
....River
Valley
High
School
students
northbound
op 7 when he attempted
. :GOP lawmakers representing suburinvolved
in
·a
two-vehicle
crasb
a
left
tum
onto
Little Kyger and col~ -ban or middle-class school districts at
Wednesday ncar the school remained lidcd with a southbound pickup truck
:. the news conference. They released
in Cabeii-Huntinglon Hospital.today driven by Will F.- Darnbro~gh: 44,
. ~study of taxes paid by every school
undergoing treatment for their 5447 SR 7" South, Gallipolk ·
. district in the state, com~d with
injuries.
·
Darnbrough was also injurCd i~ ·
: the amount·o f state aid they receive.
Sophomore Steven R. Boso, 16, the crash and was 1aken to HMC by
· : What they found was that resi.
4619PatriotRoad,Patriot,andjunior
the patrol . He was treated and
• • dents of suburban districts devote
Jeremiah
M.
Triplell,
17,
770
Patriot
released for a strained neck, accol'd.: more of their income to school-rclatRoad,
&lt;;Jallipolis,
were
airlifted
to
the
·
.
ing to the HMC spokesperson.
·
. cd taxes than Ohioans overall, and
Huntington,
W.Va
..
I)Qspital
followWith
confirmed
entrapment
.: recei'!e less state aid.
.
ing the 8:20 a:m. accident at the inter- reported, the EMS rescue team
: , "People in middle-class districts .
Wldnetdaly
In
Columbue.
Volnovlch
vlaltld
tha.
BACK
TO
SCHOOL
Gov.
George
of State Route 7 and County responded to the scene and extracted
section
; 4o a great deal to suppon school disVoi'11!VIch
fllnked
by Beck Elementary
~hool the daly lifter his State of the State
Rond
15
(Little Kyger), according to the injured from the car. Calls were.
~- tricts throughout the sUite," said Rep.
Sc:hOolltUtletntl
Terry
Ky~ 18ft, and~ McinIPIICh w!)ere hl.callad lor lnt:I'I!IMd.,.a~!dthe
Gallia-Meigs
Post of.the State put out to airlift the injured to C-H,
&lt;Jeff Jacobson, R-Vandalia.
lng for edllcatlon•.(AP) ..
·
tyre .. lhef prectlcei:l on tha achool'a coanpu1er
Highway Patrol.
· 'qd the MedFiight air ambulance
.,.: ; · Voinovich
devoted a large' porlion
.
·
·
Boso
was
in
critical
~ondition· from Wellston and West Virginia.
•· of his State of the State s~h lUes- ·•
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He also proposed . to . spend an votllfll eventually will sli!p silpporting · Legislature ~ltimalcly lo sci: tltat the today inC-H's inte~sive care unit, a · · based HealthNet responded. The heli•
. _ilay to the problems .of OhiQ 's urban
· schools. He said · the · state lrad a additional $213 million iii the next local school levies if they lie.e the · problems in the urban districts pose hospital spokesperson said. Tripkitt is copters arrived almost simuliancous., also in the ICU and is in gOod con-' · ly lind landed in a field bol'deriJJg SR ,,
'&lt; moral responsibility" to respond to two years for the stale equity fund · money being used to subsidize an economic development- as well dition.
,
7~ troopers said: . .
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~~ situation·where.only 43 percent of . tha.t· provides extra money for poor ·schools in ·areas lhat arc not paying as a prison and welfare - proplcm
Freshman James B. Boso, 14..
Both helicopterS were used in
· i'
their fair share.
' for all of Ohio.
·. students graduate, and •prisons and school districts,
also
of
4619
Patriot
Road
and,
like
transporting
· Steven Boso . agd
Rep. Michael Fox, -R-Hamilton.
House Speaker JoAnn Davidson, .
Scn~ic Minority Leader Bell Espy,
· ~~!fare rolls are filled with the sysTriplett, a passenger in the car driven Triplett.
•
noted that the state's eight largest R-Rcynoldsburg. and Senate Prcsi- D-Columbus, agreed that Republi. tern's failures.
by
Steven
Boso,
wa.•
taken
to
Holz·
Tile
crash
severely
damaaed
th!o
·.: Voinovich proposed a number of school districts get 12·1 percent of dent Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, cans will fall in line behind '!he cr Medical Center by the Gallia car dri~cn by Steven Boso llld canlled
. solutions, such as an extra $300 mil· what )hey pay in taxes back in slate JJCkRewledJCd if1!mcdj111Ciy after the Voinovich plan. But he repealed his . County EMS. He was treated and ~odcratc dam~JC to Darnbrouah's
l.ion .- iJ!CiudiiiJ $100 million for .aid, but pay only 85 percent of the speech that some lawmakers would offer to part[cipalc in a bipartisan released later Wednesday for Iaccra~ p1ckup. The accident remained under.
raise the fairness issue.
commission to examine school 'fund· Ohi9's eishl largest districts - for average. state school tax bul'den.
tions · to the face, a hospital investigation today, troopen s.jd, ·
Fox predicted that mid~le-class
But both said they expected the i~g issues.
#'
~ ~hool building improvements: ·
· spokesperson said.
,.

Two River Valley students
remain hospitalized today

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:~-PDNR. notes 'sign~ticant' de~li. n.e . in regic&gt;n's ·deer..herd· population:~ ~ .
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·. ~li~inary weight "-ta collected at se~ted check stations lh~ghoul
·, .Oh1o dunng tbe. tw~week firearnis deer season strongly suggests the con.' dition of ~ state's ~r he~ is decliftin~ in-several eastern and sOutheast·
~ em couftttes, tbe Oh1o Div1s1~ of Wildltfe reported.
· ' Deer fiwelid-dghts,]~~ ~....uredfjlcleery~ wOhi~lift:h...gellncy jn J9h82, ~nd~CificanJethed
average e rei..,.. we1 10..1 o
1n 10 s 1 country as stgnt
y
~- !*lined.
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; •. The reuon pven for this decltne 1s tllat deer abundance remams too high
.~ jn SQme of the state where avatlable food SOIIJtes eiKI quality d-habi; 111 have declined sipifiCIIIIIy.
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• The Div;tion of Wildlife gy&amp;OIIib'slleerherd haucarly quadrii,Pied since .
1982 •weisfu and,antler beam dlmle111r ilata Wel'e• coll~. 'lbe lllllO'•',
• &lt;~ haMit llld hundllf ~ )lave alto rilcn lil!lifJCandy since 1912.'
· ~_'j\IK)ut tw,r-lhirda of ~o·• clii!li' ~ ia found in the eastern and ~·

:ihe
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em counties, the division n;poned. · . . .
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AverliF field-dressed we1pts of yearling does fell from 98 pounds 1n 1982
to 94 pounds in I~· Adult doe wci~hts ~re ~~wn_ from I06 tQ I02 pounc:ls.
Among the yearhng buck populatJol) IR Ohto s htll country. avorqe field.
d]04!essed ndsWCiJAduhtsmeltbucasukred !!!_t monthdoshow~d I dec hnepoufrondsmlolll4lpoundsS
poundsto
pou .
we~,... were . ~ •f9lll 147
.
. The f?,iYision of Wildlife considen the weight ditrmnces "swiitically sia·
nificaftt.
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"Deer in the hill country are Slgnlficaftll)' smaller than they were "' 1912.
This f~et, Ilona with IOIII·III'IIl decli~ . oblerved in antler beam lliamoler
yCIIIlaa bucb in..-.. our~ ()l)k&gt; cOUII!Ies.-•trWiy

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ing·accesl i• high, .but are up significanily in areas fith :limited or no bll.ltir..
access.
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During the two-week d_cer gun season w~icb cndld Dejr. 14, ht'nt•t lllll,d
120,925 deer. The prehm1nary total of !hilt seastllll'llpl Mia 1 dnq
fll
~rceiU from last year's recol'(l_fuwms ~ I tl' • ...,... Of. tn,t'J4

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"All of 01!' data, as well as !llplll from fi':ld paiiC!IIIICI, iadic 11 d diU M
deer popullbons were ~very btt.u
or lliJiw
-.a. era IJilia ·

north'MII Ohio as poSSibly 11 few
1sollled
fiCI we ifi!OIId to put ~ ~~=~~in~Oh~io'•
or
or
COtllitlue tobe.,..a'ive ill
~- theitlllli'loi'Ohio'adew~ in,lhis~:eaion ildecliftillfo~. IQI[\r. . llidl'llriclt~••I'CIIIioio
Mike Toa~ I DlyilliQII of Wildlife rorutgiiiiC \JjoJC)Jist.
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for the l);vi&amp;ion of Wlldllle.
. Wildlife bloloiiiiiiiY tlelr ~ ia ~ ~ ~ whe~ deei .huiil- '
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:.Commentary
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.Thtndtly, ~ 18, 1897

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, JllnUIJI'Y 18,1187

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Birth
·rates
irt
America
near
all-time
low
The Daily Sentinel
OKLAHOMA CITY - For 111 lions" dlla lllllllly IUIIIIheatl of what

111 Cout18t., , _ oy, Ohio

1114-1112·21111• Fu: 11924157·

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·A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlahlr
IIARGARETUHEW

Conlrolllr

on•--"•
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"'_1_ ... __
,....,,__

-·····---·-liD:-"' . .,._ . ·--...

1110Senllntl••loo _ _ ,.,. _ _ _

1jlplol--pa'anod_.. _ , _ _ _ _ _ ............

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,...,.-~~1110 S...llatl,
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or, FAX -~~~17.

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Cooperation's the talk, · but will they do the walk?

itinenrtnt demoanpbic dabbler like
-me, alwaya 1eawmbai111 that the
plural of anecdote is data, the audience was abnosttoo good to be true.
There they were, about soo.people,
mostly students, seated in the chapel
-at Oklahoma City Ulliversity (OCU).
It's a good school. And, mid-contic
nent and Methodist, it's a good sam·
pie to assay as I ao about my quest
for my grail: trying to understand
why educated young Americans are
having so few children, what it
means, and whether there is something gentle and reasonable that
· might be done about it. .
So I conducted a poll. I asked the
, students how ..many children they
expected to have. Some said one. The
vast m11jority said two. Some said
three. A few said four or more. A few
said noi)C.
. An average of about two kids per
couple-- that's what they think. But
it likely won't happen. "Expecta-

which lead to de-population.
'that neither he nor his wife wanted 10
· ends up llllppenins. (Some people
The binb rates in America today have children - yet. Eventually, he
wbow~~~Jt tohavechildienn """"e are nell' 111 aU-time low. They have said, his wife did want to have •ftlmto have children, or unable to have been declining steadily since _1990. . ily. He wasn't hippy lbout the idea.
Whal'-uoing on?
Why not? :!Jecause his parents ha4 ·
During the question period at the been divorced and he didn't want to
.
.-:OCU session, a young womt~~~ said run the risk of inflicting that kind of
· more children af~r a first debvery.) s11e would like to have a large fllltli- difficuliy on a child of his.
I asked the st.W.nts ~~ ~I age ' ly, but everythins was so expensive
A black woman, age 24, had been
they expected to have thetr first these days, especially college tuition. married for three yean. She sai_d old;
child.~ few Slid ~Y age_2S. The over- 1 askCd her whether she would have er women came up to . her in th~
whelmmg maJOI'Ity satd at age 3Q, a large family ifl gave her a million ' supermarket, among.other places; and ·
which is quite old .as th_ese ';hi?,I!S g_o. dollars a• year. She thought for a invariably said, "wait, ~ail, to have
A key demographic ax1om IS ferul- moriieni and said yes. As a general kids," so she would wait.
ity delayed is fertility denied."
matter, 1 doubt it. The more income
Another man, age 24, came up anc1
The Total Fertility Rate of college a young family has, the fewer chil- pointed to a beeper on his belt. ''I'm
graduates in America today is .only dren that family is likely to have.
waiting for a call from my wife.
1.6children per woman, according to
A young man said that his parents We're exJMl&lt;:ting any minute."
demographer Martin O'Connell of and grandparents had.produced lots
·He was a carpenter by trade, and ,
, the U.S. C_ensus B\)reau. Rates for of children, but they had !&gt;een farm, . studY,ing finance at.OCU. He said-he
blacks are a little lower than for ers, and children were a benefit on the was uns~1fut his CII!CCf path. The
whites. In either case it's well less farm. In die city, where he lived, chil- !urn of the new year had brought a
than the 1.9 to 2.0 children per dren are an economic burden.
financial surge 10 home-building,
woman for the population as a whole,
A yo~ng man c~e up to me after and the c~ntry business was pretand al,lout at the unbelievablf lo\V the sesston. lie swd he was 30, that · ty good. "I don't know about corpolevel of current European rates, he had been married for seven years, rate life," he said. "They're not loy,
al anymore, ~ownsizing Whei)CVCr
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they feel like it. 'J'!le only JlCO!lle who
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stick with you are your f111t1ily."
The plural of anecdote is data,
And data can show a trend. ·Here's
one!

Sen Wattenberg

.

By TOM RAUM
_ .
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A..oclated PreM Writer
.
WASHINGTON -1b hear both DemOmtic and Repul)lican leaders talk,

VOIIRE

' they're just one big family now, eaaer to·get on with findina bipartisan solu- .
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tions to the nation's problems. But thatdoesn ~t mean .they can't have a famAn
ongoing
world
of lwo-child
ily feud: ·
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families
offers
each
penon,
on aver,
With the West Fnint of the Cfpitol decked out for the inauguration, and
age,
four
grandc
hildren
.
s
hared
by
bleacher seats lining the Pennsylvania Avenue parade route, a fe!flive atmoslD I'A1't;ll
four grandparents, w~o are likely 10
phere pervades the nation's capital -and harsh words seem out of place. _
be contented. An ongoing world of
But there are clear slrains.
one-child
families yields, on averaae,
A family feud simmers on the House side of the Capitol even if on the
one
grandchild
shared by four gl'll!ld.Senate side things have been relatively placid.
parents, who are likely to be less conA lot of this has to do with institutional differences between the two chamtented. One is the average. It means
bers; but ~me also reflects presidential aspirations ·and dynamics.
zero
for lots of folks, many of w~om
Vice President AI Gore -jockeying for a presidential run in 2000 and
will
feel
shortchanged by life.
• also the constitutional presiding officer of the Senate - has made a poont
We're
already facing a grandchild
• of reaching out to Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott. R·Miss.
gap, due to low birth rates among the
Lou and Gore are old friends and former congressional coll~gues.
aging
Baby 8QOmers. If their chilIn fact, Gore may feel more of a personal bond with fellow Southerner
dren,
the
fruit of the Baby Bust. con.
Lou than with Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota.
II ,
tinue
the
pattern, it wiUbe worse for
" You've got funher along with your singing than I did with my dane- ·
them.,
ing," Gore teased Lou when the vice president dropped by the Republican
leader's office the other day.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
Gore was referring to liis delillerately wooden rendition of the macarcat the American Enterprise Insti: na and to Lou's o&lt;:casional public appearances with three other singing sen·
tute, is the author of" Values Mat~
'• ators in a country-mu~ic group called the "Vocal Majority." .
ter Most" and is the bast of the
"You're going to see significantly more bipartisanship. There is a renewed
weekly publk ·teJevisiOil pi'O(Iram
; determination to have our country move in that direction," Gore said. "We
"Think 'lllnk."
_
~ don't want to jam each other or create new obstacles." Lott agreed.
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Oq the other side of the Capitol, leaders were also talking bipartisanship
·~ - but with icy overtones.
•
HquS!' Minority Leader Dick Geph,ardt, D-Mo.. to date Gore's principal
.. .
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·' presumoo rival for the Democratic nomination in year 2000.lrostily presented
One
of
the
pe"'est
entries
into
the
·
divided
inro
three
sections.
Section
,
,25.
fund
familieSwith-350
no-load li~ how .a fund i~being.managed or
·~ . House Speaker NewrGingrich with the gavel for a second term~
fund
supermarket
arena
is
a
bank
-one
lielps
pros~cj,ire
investors
to
funds
to
invest
in.
•
whlit kind. of capital gains tax expo:
"The 'speal!,er has admitted that he brought discredit 10 the House,"
•
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•. ,
Nat10nsBanc.
·
specify
their'goals
and
to
und~rstand
.
So.
for
anye¢
wanting
.to
tpl(c
the
sure
ybu are buying into don't"ever
~ beph~t said afterwards. "That alone ought to disqualify him ftom being
Last
fall,
NationsBanc
introduced
the different types of funds-- stock, !imc to do some work and reSCl!fCh, get addressed.
'' speaker of the House."
its
Fun~
Solutions
program
for
the
and get a qui~k lesson in financial
~
"We've had kind of a distant relationship for lhC past two years." Gephardt
do-it-yourself
investor.
What
sets
investment, the NationsBanc Fund -· She's also concerned that the do·; said qf Gingrich. to
no-load
Dian,
Vlijovlch
NationsBanc's
approach
Solutions
program can get you start- it-yourself investor might make the
'• . A rar cry from Gore's open courtship of Lott.
fund investing apart from others is
ed . But those who need one-on-one wrong choices when the bull market
1
In .the House, there is a tradition or majorities ignoring minorities. ·
investment advice lind counseling
·
the
material
they've
created
to
help
bond
and
money
market
-along
with
'! .i)Qmocrats-now complain that Republican leaders don't consult .with them investors decide · which funds to
turns.
will have to look elsewhere.
the
risk
and
rcwartfs
of
each.·
': very much. Republicans had the same gripe under the speakerships of
"The program is a good start, but
In the second scciion, there's a · · "I applaud more people getting I think people need to work with a
•• TholfiiiS P. O'Neill of Massachusetts, Jim Wright of Te~as and Tom Foley invest in.
"The Fund Solutions material qui~ designed to deliofllline your· into the busi,ness of educating the professional ~hether it be someone ai
: of'Washington - the last three Democratic speakers before Republicans
we've created is all aimed at l!elping investor profile. After an~wering public," says Linda Lubitz, a certified the bank or another expert they've
~- seized con.uol in. 1994.
_
· .
customers
make good decisions so eight questions you'll have an idea of financial planner at Woolfe, .Lubitz . chosen," says Lubitz:
Allhough the House itself is by far the more unruly chamber, House rules
•,
that
they'
II become successful why 'you are investing' -- for current and Foldes in Miami. -~'It is.essential
· : are fill' more -strict than Senate ones. Once a piece of legislation luis picked
NationsBanc agrees. Their
that people !like chllrgc of planning
up a majority. of support, it usually can be passed quickly. House rules die- · · in~estors. Af\er that happens, hope- ihcome, balanced income, balanced thqir financial fut,ure and learning NationsSecurities division, a fulltate ljow long debates last and ~hat kind of amendments, if any, can be fully they' II want to e~tpand their rei a· growth, growth or aggressive growth. aboUt·investments. The easier it is for service brokerage finn, is availabl~
tionship with us," , says Mark Then, along with each investor profor·anyone who prefers to work with
,, offe~.
. ·
Williamson,
president 1\Ad director of file comes a su~t~esd:d asset alloca- people to dOithat, the better everyone an investment professional. And
•'
Not so in the Senate, where the minority has always had inore of an opporNationsBanc ·Advisors in Charlotte, tion outline.
·
will be. Hol"cver, I believe that doJ tunit~ to. make mischief - through filibusters, avalanches of irrelevant
it-yourself
Investing is like do-it- while their brokers don't offer Fund
N.C.
The last section shows how
amen aments and host of other time-consuming maneuvers.
Solutions, they do glve specific
Fund Solutions prograni i~ investors can 'put their plans into you,-,;elf plumbing. You can buy a investment advice.
1
·
Bipartisanship-thus has-always been more nece~ in the Senate than sortThe
book and read a manual, but that
of an at-home workbook way to action.
~ in the House to get' anything done and Senate majority leaders have always
figure out which funds you might like
Both th'e Performance · Review doesn't necessarily make you quali., had 10 reach out to the minority to cjo business.
_
to invest in. If you call NationsBanc and Perfonnance Highlights booklets fied to do y6ur own plumbi'ng."
Dian Vujovich is the author of
,,
TIJ&amp;t gives Gore, ihe president of the Senate with tie-bniailing voting pow·Investments (1-800-926-1111) and augment the planner by -offering the - Lubitz said that one of the dangers "Straight Talk . Aboul Ml!t~al
·' ers, .'l'e oppor:tunity to appear " presidential" and bipartisan, while rival ask about the program, y.ou'll be sent names of specifit funds that· meet ohhc do-it-yourself programs is that
and "StraJabt T l A~,t -'
J 'Gcphardt must wage glierilla warfare .,-l)oth 'for attention and for position. · three booklets: the Personal Fund with the asset allocatio_n suggestions J&gt;Cople tend to make their mutual - Funds"
lnvestl.ng
for Your Retu 'ment,'f
'
Of c6urse; Gingrich's ethics difficulties present a broad and easy target
Planner, the Performance Review of !he investor profile. And thetc is no fund c~oids ba&gt;cd solely on a fund's both of which are published !Jy
:! for Dpmocrats ..:.... even though Gephardt was on the receiving end of some and the Pcrfonnilnce Highlights.
shortage of funds to choose from: . past performance. Without the a:id of McGraw . HUI. Send q~ !4
' of thq sanr allegations himself two years earlier.
.
The Personal Fund Planner ·is. , The Fund Solutions program includes a professional, important questions her In care of this newspaper. . .
.,
Last week, President Cli.oiton' inade a point of placing courtesy calls to
U,;
.! congressional .leaders as the new IOSth Congress convened.
I . Tile can to Lott came when he was in Daschle's office, in fact.
.•
,"He (Ciiritl\n) laughed and said, "Well, tell TOm I called to tell you I'm
. " switc~ing ~ies," the GOP majority leader later rela~ed. ·
The New Democrat movement is cralism. '
'
service, , welfare reform, charter leaders,' Reps. Cal Dooley (Call f.)
Contrast' that _t'l- tiJe House side, where Democratic leade~ Gcphardt ·
on
a
roll
politically
and
intellectualInterestingly;
both
movements
·
schools, and federal promotion of ' and Tim Roemer (Ind.), ta translate
·
·· skipped a ceremonial phone call between House leaders and Chnton.
ly; but it remains to be seen whether claim the label "progressive." The community policing.
proposals in the DLC's boo~ into leg'·
it
can
translate
its
ideas
into
national
DLC··hcarkcns
back
to·
the
progres·
A
few"
othel']l
have
failed
to
be
islation,
partly, they say, because lhe
EDITOR'S NOTE -Thm Raum roven poUtlcl and lialional alfaln
· policy.
enacted, but achieved wide attention, DLC drafted its proposals without
for The AIIIOCiolled Preis.
President Clinton won re-electi_on
notably th~ market-oriented health Hill input .
.
•·
as a centrist and promises to govern .
.
care alternative introduced in 1994 by ·
However, Dooley and Roen:cr
1
as one. A newly formed ijouse group sivism of Woodrow Wilson and the n-Rc))\ Jim' Cooper; 0-'l'enn.
also want the NDC to exert influence
!
called the New Democratjc Coalilion Theodore Roosevelt, wliilc left-libBy and large, however, such com- in the Hoi!SC OQmocralic Caucos.
may have up to 30 members. And the erals nrc heirs to the lfeiiry Wallace pelling proposals as cui-and-invest where suspicion ru~s high towlfd
•
Democratic Leadership Council, the tradition of progressivism in the hudgctigg (reducing corporate wei- dcpanures from liberal dogma. l
.. '
l'
~ovcment 's- lead group, has acquired
1930s and 1940s.
fare to pay for job training), market- ,
DLC officials say the group's
!
new power and respect, even from
Despite their ongoing rivalry, based Medicare reforms; and job- cum:nt chairman, Sen. J&lt;le Lie~i'­
•
iI
. lilicrals who formerly reviled it as DLC staffers are being invited to par- training IRA accounts have gone man (Conn.), is forming a Hou.,.
I
"Republican-lite."
ticipate in liberal forums, and such . nowbere, partly because they were Senate study group that may sponsOr
I
The
DLC
and
its
think
tank,
the
liberals
as Scns. Dick Durbin (Ill.) ncv~r converted into bill•.
legislation. The DLC also hopes its
- '
·Progressive Policy Institute, is sched- and Tom Johnson (S.D.) used New
Meanwhile, proposals by the con: aacnda will be picked up by the Clin·
uled to releaSe a new book, "Build- 0c!Jlocrat rhetoric lo win election In servative Democratic Blqe Dog ton 'administration, but many of ~;
Ing ' tl!e Bridge," offering "ten big 1996.
0'
Coalition -- notably, liSt year's bal- ideas probably aremoretnti·bureau- ·
Ideas to transfonn America."
Signifying the new breadth of anced-budget alternative-- havc'bccn cratic than the adminillnltion coin
The book is as compelling as .,01- New Democrat clout, the DLC's widely discussed and publicized • accept.
· .
: -.
'
'
icy wonkery sets and actually con- boo!c contains an introduction from because they were introduced in
Examples ·include partial priva~tains sqme fresh approaches on work- Vice President AI Gore and back- Consress.
' '
zation of Social Security. substitution
- '· . e~ training, urban ~development, page bl11rbs-from former Sen. Sam
The Blue Dog example 'ciii!Sed of economic developm""i for social
the environment, family policy, . Nunn (Ga.), a longstandins DLC
one
!e.ader of t~ new Democratic sen/ice as. the aim of urban policy, .
Social Security and Medicare.
niember;'Sen. Bob Kcrtey (Neb.), a .Coahtoon, Rep. Jtm Moran (Va.), 10 and an environmental policy that ·
All the proposals exemplify the new DLC eonv.ert; and Senate Minorbasic New ~mocrat philosophy that ity Leadet Tom Daschle (S.D.). who . write to his colleaaues in late Novcm- drops "command and control" regll- ·
her that "to be successful and sustain lation from Washin&amp;tOn for a system
bil, bureaucratic 1ovcmment needs has told his staff to use the DLC as medi~
interest, it is imperative that that sets goals and lllows stateS,
to be replaced by "leanet, smarter" tui idea resource.
"
we haye some concrete goal or work communities, and industries to meet
sovemmenl that helps individuals
What remains 10 be seen, howev- produc1 which we are .working them as they seo fit.
•
and communities solve their own er, is whether the DLC's good ideas toward."
,
·
f
problems.
will be trlnslated into legislation, givAt the moment, the NDC anticiIn' his introduction, Gore noted~
-The DLC was formed in the, 1980s ing them a chance to be seriously
pates backjng a "fiSt track" tl'llde that some of the OLe's idea ""'
10 coupter the domliUIIion of New debated in Congress and in the media
propbsal beina adviiiCed by one ofits "sharply at bddl" with his and ~·
Deai-Orell SocietJ .llben1illn ·over lltd ICtiaally get enacted into law.
memben, Rep. Bob M.alsul (c.Jif.), admlniall'lllioll'a ph -· nOi.bly;
· the DeJiMIMic Plrly, ltld'llll!llilllo
Over the put several ye.-s, a few and a·
ll~ye bei111 dnft- uy, ~ the flllvilonment. · :·
. CO!Idalllll, with die AJII...CIO, the DLC propo~~ls have been translated ed by lllother,
Rep. John Spq~~ ·
· ' "
licolallc PDIIcy
IIIII AIMr- into law, lll'jely because ·they wete (S.C.).
&lt;Monla Knd
11 nuJ
ICIII Pniipillt ........ rep~wntiriJ entloncd by Clinton, once ~ DLC's
Hovte-,lbenl is some ta1uctanee 1M edllui fiiW c.ll. ... uw;:
bil-ao•..... ••· . .flw tnldl ~1 chalrinan . .'These include llllional on tho .put ofllle, IWO odllr NDC ..... aiCifllll-) '" _. . ~-

NOTOJ.D
6NOII6H

THE MNIN6
NEWS. ·.·

l!l.

Fund Solutions educates ·investors·
.

.

I

'

•

.

)'

j

Can

'

New Democrats make national policy·? .-~
MOrton Kondrsclce

B~~w·s .Worlq

bud_.

Lid•"

dr.

.

"

The Dally Sentinel• P-ee a

0

Criminalist recants
past O.J. testimony

OHIO \'1/(&gt;;,thPt

(

'

Eva Shoemaker Gardner

~A MONICA. c.Jif. (AP)- that it was wrong.
Eva Elizabeth Shoemaker Gardner, 73, of Gallipolis, died Wed.nesday, Jan.
Pale 8nd shaken, criminalist OQnnis
Fung said almost immedia.tcly 15, 1997 at her residence.
Fung endured his latest scrape in the afterward while in the hallway, "It
Born Feb. 14, ·1923 in Huntington, W.Va., she was the daughter of the late
OJ. Simpson CISC, this time recant- dawned on me" he had incorrectly Ralph R. and Mary E. Bryant Shoemaker. She was a homemaker and had
ing testimony about a bloody gloVe described the bloody glove.
attended the Addison Freewill Baptist Church since 1957.
• IMansfleld!12"
from just one week ago.
Fung initially said that, in a picture . She i ~ survived by a son, J111t1es W. Gardner of Middleport; three sons and
Fung, a favorite punching bag for of die glove, there appeared to be a ,daughters-in-law, William A. and Virginia Gardner, Randy M . and Timmy
IND.
Simpson's criminal and civil trial ·defect in t!te leather that wasn't pre- Gardner, and Ernie F. and Tammy Gardner, all of Gallipolis; five daughters
lawyers, on Wednesday said he blun· sent when the glove was brought into and sons-in-law, Betty L. andL&gt;elmar Clark of Gallipolis,_Tulica J. and lE.
:
dered Jan. 8 in testimony that the. .court. It was this testimony the Cremeans-of Patriot, Teresa L. arid Mike Little of Middleport, Jul,ia M. and
defense seized upon as proof oi · defense said was evidence that the Charlie James pf Gallipolis, and Denise A. and Phii Miller of Rutland; 22
''
Cohinbuslts•
police evidence tampering.
gloves had been switched.
grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren; and a sister and two brothers.
He had said he wasn't sure a glove
Brooght back into court WednesShe was also preceded in \Ieath by her husband, Marvin E. Gardner. in
found near the bodies of Nicole •day for his third ropnd of testimony April 19_81 ; and by two brothers and two sisters.
Brown Simpson an\1 Ronald Gold· in the trial, Fung, now a plaintiff
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in the Addison Freewill Baptist Church.
man
was
the
same
as
the
one
brought
rebuttal
witness,
said
he
took
a
new
The
Rev. Alfred Holley will officiate and burial will be in the Reynolds Ccme( '·
into court.
look at the picture and concluded ihe tery, Addison: Friends may call at the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, from
· "I didn'tlie, but! was mistaken," mark was actually a piece of debris. 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Friday.
(
.
W. VA.
Fung said in a quiet voice in Simp1\vo other witnesses - photograMemorial contributions may be made to Denise Miller,l33 182 New Lima
son's wrongful death trial.
. phy expert Gerald Richards and Road, Rutland, Ohio 45775 . ·
The defense also took another hit
_boss
Gregory
Mat"esori
Wednesday when the 2nd District Fu~g·s
s.aid they
reached
the same
concluCourt of Appeal refused to bar two sion. Richards testified that what looked
Oorothy S. Soileau, 82, f78 Greenbriar St., Gallipolis, died Wednesday,
Plaintiff rebuttal witnesses.
' In a loud and angry cross:exami· like a hole in the glove was an opti- Jan. 15, 1997 in Holzer Medical Center.
·
nation, defense lawyer Robert Baker cal illusion caused by the debris.
Born Feb. 26, 1914 in New Albany, Miss.; daughter of the late James Doyle
suggested police officials trying to: Matheson agreed. saying; "It 's clear- . and Nimmie Sloan Speck, she was a homemaker and had been a member of
-save face pressured Fung into chang- ly a piece of debris sitting 'on the sur- - the Gallipolis community since 1984.
ing the. testimony he gave when face caked in with a liitle bit of dirt
She was a memher of the First Presbyterian Church, Gallipolis, the
called as a defense witness. He ear- and a hair or fiber that wraps around church's Women's Association, aitd a past deac&lt;ln and member of the adult
lier testified for the plaintiffs.
Sunday School class. .
.
it."
Weather forecast:
"Was that your testimony last
They were among the plaintiff's
She married Robert Louis Soileau on Dec. 3, 1950-at Baton Rouge, La'.,
Tonight...M~tly clo~dy with. scattered flurri~. Low:near zero. West wind _week or not?" Baker boomed.
final parade of scientists called in and he pre~eded .het in death in 1975.
·
IS !O 2S mph.
.
. ·
.
.
h' h
"-That was the testimony, yes," rebuttal to challenge defense con·
Surviving are a daughter, Dotty (Clarence) Hill of Gallipolis; four grand.. Friday ...Mostly cloudy with scattered flumes; Much colder woth a og
·
children; four sisters, Jennie Sue Ausborn of Amory, Miss., Odie Rogers,
Fung conceded, but he quiCkly added tentions
~ near I0 'above.
Edith Greer an&lt;l Ozclla Speck, all of New Albany, and Jamie Latham of
Friday night .. .Scattered flurries. LowS to 10 below.
'
Macon , Miss.; and several nieces . ~nd nephews.
·
' . Extended forecast: ·
,
Memorial services will be II a.m. Friday in the First Presbyterian Church,
Saturday...Mostly
High near 10 above.
· · _. . ·
_
with the Rev. AI Earley officiating. There wili be no calling hours. Burial of
Sunday...Achance oflight snow. Low zero to S above and htgh on the orud
the remains will be in Port Hudson, La.
(Continued from Page 1)
"ODOT Juggernaut."
teens.
· -'
,
. h
Arrangements arc by the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
considered for the proposed highway. . Kinzelman listed several reasons
Monday ...Scattered snow sliowers. Low near 10 and hog ncar 20.
In lieu of flowers. memorial contributions may be made to the First PresCost of the initial two-lane is why he is opposed to the project. He
byterian Church, 51 State St., Gallipolis. Ohio 45631.
expected to range from SI 00 minion said ODOT has been unresponsove to
to $12:5 million, with the final four· public' concerns and _to studying the
lane costing from Sll6 million 'to alternative of upgradong on the cmt·
$160 million .
ing right of way:
The comment period on the proHe said the project cuts through a
Sheep and. lambs: steady;· choice
COLUMBUS .(AP) - Indianaposed routes e_nds Jan. 30, Pedigo buried petrified forest, and presented
wools:
II0.00-115.00;,feedcr lambs:
said.
·
a piece of .petrified wood found on Ohio direct hog prices at selected
Of those attending, more than 100 Fossil Rock Road in Athens County. . buying points :rh~rsday as provided ·J07.00 and down; aged sheep 59.00
~0'11e
· a·,,
were from Meigs County, said Pedi· Although the r00d is not located in by tfte U.S. Department of Agricul- and down.
go, who is also a Meigs County res· the project area, he said the pCinfie&lt;l ture Market News:
Barrows and gilti: .50 to 1.00
·d 1
forest covers the entire area.
•. . Dorothy S. Soileau, 82, of 17A Greenbriar Street, Gallipolis, died unex- 1 erocal organizations, including the
OU sophomore Joe Faulhaber, a higher- late on a weather market;
·•-pectedly Wednesday, January IS, 1997 in HoiZ:er.Medicai,Center.
Meigs ·County . Chamber of Com- member of the OU Greens, said demand moderate with a light to very
• • Born February 26, 1914 in New Albany, Mississippi, she ~as the daugh- merce and'Community Improvement ODO'r should upgrade the existing light movement with snow, icc and
-,. ter of the late James Doyle ~peck and Nimmie Sloan ~~k. She was.a 00!"e~ . Corporation. encouraged residents highway.
wind restricting movement
majcer and had been an active member of the Galhpohs commumty smce 10 tuni out in support of the highway.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
He said he is concerne~ about the
pointt
51 .50-53.00,'few 51 .00, plants
1984.
.
b . ;.,r,_ h
. .
-It is hoped that COIISiruction of the people .who have t.o deal with _the
She was an active member of the FirSt Pres ytenan Uiurc • 0 a11opo1ts; highw$y and others, including the
52.50-54.00, few at 54.25.
the Wolnen's.Association of the Fir5t-Presbyterian Chutth; and a past dea- U.S. _3311•77 Connector from Five noise, pollution and destructoon
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 44.00·
con and a member of the adult Sunday School class.
Points· 10 ,Rav!lnswood, W.Va., and caused by the highway.
Sl.OO; 210-230 lbs. ~9.50-44.50.
., , , , --She;m811'ied Robert Louis Soileau on December 3, 1950 at Baton Rouge, the Lancaster and Nelsonville · Shade residen~ Bob Sheppardsaid
Sows: mostly steady.
· death I~
· J97S·
.,
he thinks the road is a go¢ idea.
• ·Louisia~a, a'nd. he preceded her.tn
" .' ·
. ·
- bypasses will encourage CCO!IOmic
u.s. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 40.00-43.00,
, · She os surv1ved by a son and daughter-m-law, Dolly and Clarence H1ll ot development in the county.
"I think it'll be a good deal," ~e "fcw at 39.00; 450-500 lbs. 43.00Gallipolis; f6ur grandchildren, Joshua P~l f:aBello of Cplumbus, Michael
CIC President 1'aul Reed said said. "It'll be a lot better than these · 45.00; 500-650 lbs. 45.00-48.00. few
Ryan LaBello of Columbus, Rachele Elizabeth LaBello ·Of Oaii•Jl?hs, and local turnout was "excellent."
back roads."
48.50-49.00.
,_Kristin ~ Hill of .Pomeroy.
.
.
· . . .
' . _ "You can see how important this
Steve Story of Pomeroy, co-chairBoars: 37.00-38.00.
. . . Four SISters surv1ve, Jenme Sue Ausborn of Amory, Misstssoppt, and Od1e is 10 M•_igs County by the-turnout of man of the Southeast Ohio Regional
Estimated receipts: 18,000.
"' u11 o.'N ew Alb~ny, Mossossoppl, an d the residents,"
~
. 'Rog~rs , Edith Greer and Ozel I~ Spee_~.
he said. "People chal-. Council Route 33 Committee. said
Summary of Wednesday's ProJllllloe Latha'." of Macon, M1ssossoppo. _
.
•
lengcd the reports of inclement the road Is Important to all of coun· .ducen Livestock Association auc·
Several noeces and nephews also su~tve.
.
.
weather to -come out ·herc."
ties along 33 ..
lions at Gallipolis and Mount Ver·
.
Memorial services will be II a.m. F~iday, ~anua_ry_l7, '1997 in the First
Also out in force were people
"I'm very plea5cd to see such a non:
. ' Presbyterian c;hu~h, with the Rev. A~ Earl~y offic1allng. There '':'II he no opposed to the project, . including large turnout and interest in this most
Hogs: stca'd)i, to .50 higher.
, calling hours. Buroal of the_remams 'f'll be on Port Hudson~ Louosoana. . Athens envir&amp;nmcntalist Craig vital of highways. This will be an .
Butcher hogs: 44.00-51.25.
,
Arrangements are by the Cremecns·Funeral Chapel. _ '
·
Kinzelman wbo was manning a improvement to counties along the
tanlc: 1.00 rower.
In lieu 0~ flowers, memorial contributions may be made_oq J?orothy's mem· table contai~ing a banner showing the coofidor and all Ohio, " he s'id .
Slaughter steers: choice 64.00·
:; ory to the First Presbytcri~n Chl!rch, 5I State Street, Galhpohs, Ohoo 45631.
73.00; select 59.00;64.00. Slaughter
heifers: choice 63.00- 71.SO; select
59.00-64 .00.
Cows: lillie lower io 3.00 higher;
Commissloa meetlil1 poltponcd
· ·
·
all cows 42.00 and down.
The .Meigs County Board of Commissioners will meet Tuesday at 2:4S
Bulls: 1.00 higher; all bulls 42.00
p.m. in the. Meiss County Courthouse. The mecnng was move~ from Mon" and down.
"
\- WASHINGTON (AP) ..:_ Nehrly Dennis Kucinich, Tom Sawyer, LOuis • day due to the Manin Luther king Jr. holiday.
, I SO House members concerned about Stokes, ·Ted Strickland and James
You Ooft't Have To Lool! Far
., - .
_
_
. ''rising (uel. costs. urged President Traficant. plus Ohio Republicans Special mee~ll slated
To Spy rhe Besr Buys In
The Southern Local Board of Education woll meet on spec tal scssoon Mon·_
· ' "Clinton Wednesday to expand a heat· Steve ·LaTourette and Robert Ney
rhe Classl(leds.
day ai 7 p.m. ~t tile high school in Racine to discuss personnel matters.
;;~ng assisiilncc program for the poor. were among the signers.
1bc program subsidizes h~ting .
•. The lawmakers, mosr of them
bills
for 5.6 million Households Hymn sing slated
·
_ .
_ .
.
ALL :rtCKETS MUST BE PICKED' lrom cold-weather states, said the $1
and
la~makers -said. , ,_ The Northeast Clust~r o( Unued Mcthodost Chu_rches woll hayc a hymn
nationwide,
UP BY 10:011 P.M. (FRI 1: SAT)
". bi_llion app'ropria'~ for lhe, Lowmari&gt;:
low•
income
families
will
have'
sin~~?at the Tuppers !'lams St. Paul· Uno ted Methodost Church, Sunday at 7
·
EACH PERSON RECEIVES
Income Home Energy ASSistance
to
choose
betwetn
payi,
Q
g
for
fuci
or
p.m.
·
·
LQ, &amp;UCES OF PIZZA~·~~~
l&gt;rogram in fiscal 1997 -will not be
MELOIBSON IN ,
A MIDNIGHT MOVIE
paying
for
food,
rent
ana
other
necesenough. They asked Clinton to make
RANSOMR
CHOICE! $6.75 EACH
Genealosical
Society
·
.
,
ONE EVENING SHOW
another $420 million available sities.
PICK
UP YOUR TICKE111 AT
The Meigs County Genealogical Society wi". meet Tuesday, Jan. 21 at
" Low-income senior citizens and
STARTING FRIDAY
through an emergency declaration.
GAWPOUS
DOMINOS PIZZA
TOM CRUISE IN
children should not be forced to go , 5:15p.m. at the Meigs Museum; weather pcnnnung.
__, &lt; Rep. Bernie Sanders, a Ve"!l?nl cold
LOCATED NEXT TO SPRING .
JERRY MAGUIRE'
in the winter," they, wrote.
·-·independent, led the letter' wnttng
VALLEY CINEMA OR AT
ONE
EVENING SHOW 7:30 _
Sanders said retail heating oil
(sPRING VAI.CEY CINEIIA)
-. campaign. Ohio Democrats Sherrod
_-Brown, Tony Hall, Marcy Kaptur, prices in the East and the Midwest
have been nearly 2S percent higher
Units of the Meigs County Emer7:54 p.m., Railroad Street. Mid·
..... '
-than 1996 levels, and propane costs gency Medical Service recorded 10 dleport, Reva Smith, VMH. Middle·
nearly SO percent higher. calls for assistance Wednesday. Units port'squad assisted;
·
·The
Daily Sentinel haveThebeen
additional money for heating · respond_!_n~ included:
_·.
9:59p.m.; Dusky Street. Syracuse,
,CEjiiTRAL DISPATCH -Samuel Williams, VMH, Syracuse
assistance woul~ -com&lt;!· from ,an
t
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emergency
contin~encv
fu'
n
d
I :36 a.m., River Heights Apart- squad assisted;
·
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Publishe(l,;every afternoon. Monday thrmiab
ments, Racine, .Carl Reekers. H,olzcr
1'1 :35 p.m.,' Lincoln Street and
Aidoy,' Ill Coun St.. PometQ)'. Ohio, by die
Oltlo Vol~y PublilhinJ c.._y/Oulldl eo..
Medical Center, Racine squad assist- Fifth Avenue, Middleport, Michael
Po....,.y, IJIUo 4~7~9. ""· m -2156. Second
ed;
· "
·
Southern, VMH.
c..,.- poid 01 Pometoy, Ohio.
L'bert
L
p
RUTLAND
9:0Sa.m., ~
AmEiePower ......" .................42
Y ~mc,Momcr~yl,
10·13 am Mco'gs Mt'nc 2
11le Auo&lt;iotcd Pma. ond llle Oltio
A
· Williams.
· -• HMC,
·
·
New I Sit Aa«iation. ·
Akzo ......................................va,.
Hvan. elle
. Bass. Veterans cmona · Clarence

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Do· rothy

s. 'Sol'lea·u_

·:.: Area -weather forecast

ODOT.Iays out plans

clear.

Today's livestock report
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Dorothy
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Meigs announcements

&lt;Lawmakers urge release
:.;of more heating tund~_ng

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Send llddrest comc:1iono 10
1bo "-Dr. Sentlnol, Ill Court St., Pomervy,
Oltlo 4Sifi. ·

SOIIICIUPTION RATES

Jrc.nteror--

One Weelt........... .....................................$2.00
OntiM........ .............................................$8.70
&lt;&gt;neYw.'.,;,, ......... :.." ... \;_, .............. -... SI04.00

SINGU!'COPY PRICE

Dllily ,.......... :......................·.................. 3~ CenU

s-.;bm ... detlrini 10 poytile canleo 1110)'
reml1

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l:iV:.:':i!""~.:"'~'',l~•:•-botl•- Oodlt w111 be

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oubot:if,.... by 111111 permil!ed lo -

units answer 10 calls

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·,Stocks

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AMiand 011 ...~ ....................... 44\

AT&amp;T ....................... ,.............38'1.
Bank One ................................ 45
Bob Ev1n1 ........................-....13"

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' OSpill.1;

, I: Ui p.m., Overbrook Nursing
'Center, Mlddlepon. Gl'tii.'C Hawley,
VMH, Middleport squad assisted;
3:22p.m., OBNC, Daisy .Brown,
VMH, MiddlepPrt
.. squad IIS~isted;
4:47p.m., Bailey Run Road. Jeff
McKinney, VM~;
. 5:23p.m., Sputh Second Avenue,
Middleport. Dorothy R,oush, HMC;

:.m. Hosp'.lt&amp;l.news

LAndi End...........:...:.............a7'1.
umbd ............" .................
Ohlo_VIIIey Bank..................38'A.
One ValleJ.............................35\
'-opiii .................................H'I.
Prem Flnl ................. ,:............ 13~

VelilnDI M 1 rW
.,
Wednesday idmissions ·- Reva
Smith, ,Middleport. .
.
Rack•l ..............................la.
Weciftelday discbarJes' - Hugh
RD-Shetl .....
~ ~ 1T4\
ferred to VMH
Sk'lled
•
~honeY• ...................................1
DaYill, trans,
,
I .
star Bank .............................32\ Nursins FICillty.
Wendr'e ...............................~1'lo _ . Hoa.t' Medical C Iii .
~orthlngton.........,................19; .,, I)Bche 1 Jl&amp; 15- ViiJ!IIil
_ ""7*-*- · ' ,,,;,.1 Pniter, Kina M'*", Cjllb Boihr.
. Stock repol18.,. •10:~ ·' .11ilnJ.-Mr. anc1Mn.lloeiOalo.
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11011, Oallipolll.
,
(Pia•ll I •• , . •
I II p)

M&amp;rrl&amp;g
• ·e ll"censes
.
The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
Prob C
f
the Meigs County
ate oun o
Judge Robert Buck:
Robert Ulysus Best, 50, and GloriaAon Mullett, 43, both of Rutland;
Jeffrey Lynn Counts, 38, and Kathy
Jean Dennis, 36, both of Pomeroy;
Robert Ray Darst, 45, and Jill Wai~urn Carpenter, 36, lloth of ~hire:
Henry David Lemley, 57, and Wtl~
Irene Lawson, 53, both ofRacmc;
Allen Lee Efster, 37, Gallipolis,
,
K
Ad
38
and Donna
ay
ams,
,
Pomeroy; 1Jmothy Dale Lawrence,
. 30, ~nd Kenda Ann Kloes, 26, both
ofLongBouom;JohnHowardSeck·
. man, 38, lllid Lovia Maie Baker Hes, J~, 31, bod! ' of ~ille; Nick
. AJK!rew King, lS, and 9enise

' ~ ~· bof.lt of Shade.

r,

'lliin#ng of 6uging a aiamoni engagemelti:
ring for your sweetheart?
Shop Acq~itions before buying anywhere!

Large Selection of
DUunond S~litaires
• Round • Pears
• Marquis • Emerald Cuts·
"'

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• OVals

Lowest Prices in the (ll'ttJ

.9Lcquisitions

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t1• 8t. •ildl•part, 9h._

f14&lt;1111...

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Sports

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· The-Daily Sent~l .

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Host W~n ppened up a 18-11

I0.2 overall.
Eastern coach Scott Wolfe said on
a positive note, "Our stats may not
have reflected ii tonight, but skillwise we're getting better and we've
got some good, raw, young talent:
Our ment81 game has to improve, our
confidence level has to come up. ilnd
our girls have to become the aggressor.
''We were defeated mentally
before we took the floor tonight, then
we let Warren's press intimidate us
early. Warren jumped on us early, but
we cut the lead to 18-11, then had
another breakdown. Against a great

lead early in the first quarter, then
waltzed away to a 27 -II first period
spread en route t6 an 89-38 nonIC&amp;aue triumph over the Eastern
,Lady Eagles Wednesday night in a
girls' varsity make-up contest.
'Ole game was postponed from
last week because of a flu epidemic
at Eastern, yet Jess Brannon, a 15.3
pointl-per-garne scorer, was again
absent from the EHS lineup.
Eastern is now 3-9 overall, but
lhree losses have been to Division.II
teams, while two others were to
Division III teams. Warren is now

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Fn:slunen ~ Chasatie Hollon
and J;lecky Davis each had five
points, Stephanie Evans had 'three,
and Angie Wolfe ihree. while Ann
Wiggins had two.
·
Warren was led by five ·girls in
double figures; . Julie Wagner with
20, Lisa Morris with 16, Jessie Morris 12, and 10 each from Bobbi Jo ·
Ohmer and Jodi Huck.
Eastern hit 10.42 overall, 2-4
three-pointers, and 16-22 free
throws. Warren hit 39-7 l'for 59 percent from the floor. Besides Eastern's
deficiencies, Warren shot ·the eyes

In Top 26 collefie bnkelbllll,

out of the~. hitting 6-121lnepointers as well. Warren was 3-9 at
the line.
Warren won the battle· of the
boards with a 37,29 ed~. led• by
Sara Nolan with 8.
Eastern had two steals (Karr), a .
whopping 2~ turnovers; fo!lf assists,
and 13 fouls, Warren had 20 steals
(Leader N/A); 14 turnovers, 20
assists (L. Mprris 5); and 17 fouls.
The fuhlre: · Eastern hosu ·.
Alexander tonight.
OgartJ;r lllflll
Eastern
1

ll-5-ll-ll=38

pail COidl Jeff , _ lllid.
.
ly1'11eA11ocl I d Po II
~.:~ 14 rebounds and ro.. blocked lhots
Wlke l'oleat- ill finll2 . . . by. poiala
for hia 22nd SlniJht double-double·and the 71 s1 of his
or more. The aecoad-IWibd . . _ Deac0111 shOIIIed
career.
dlat as long as ali-Atna ica Thn Dunclb is around, they
"Our ~live going into the aame was to let nm
can win the close OIHll, 100.
Dunc:111
pll)', let him have the game of his life," VirVil'(linia did a lle111endous job 11ain11 Wake Forest
ginia (!liard Outis Staples said. "If he was going to beat
on ~Y night, llld the Cavaliers had a S4-48leid
us, he was ~oing to have to beat us. In actuality.l1e did,
with five minutes to play. But they didn't score the mt
he
hit the two buckets toward the end that sealed iL Thai
of tile game as Duncan made two big bank shots in the
..is
why
nm Duncan is the best player in college ri.sht
final I:07 to give Wake PoreSi a 58·54 victory.
now,
because
he has the ability to do that."
The Demon Deacons (0-0, 5-0 A~antic Coast ConTony Rutland's long three-pointer with 2:58 left
fere~) wait their 25th straight home game and~ off
pulled the Demon Deacons to S4-S2, and Ricky Perto their best league start in 34 seasons. They and topa)'s tip-in on a missed free throw by Duncan 56 secranked Mnsas - tile only undefeated Division I
.
onds later tied the score 54-54. ·
teams.
'
Duncan's short bank shot wid) I :071eft gave Wake
· DuiiCIII had a season-high 28 JX?ints as Vll'ginia ( liForest the lead, and after a turnover, Duncan nailed •
S, 2-3) opted to attack on the perimeter and converged
another turnaround banker with I0 seconds left lo seal
on lhe6-fol&gt;t, JOcenteronly after he got the ball rather
it. '
'
than trying to deny it to him.
·
·
Courtney
Alexander
led
the
Cavaliers
with 18
The Slnltegy wortCed until ii was time for Duncan
points.
·
to decide the outcome.
·
·
In other games involvin·g ranked teams ori ,Wednes"There i' chance he would miss shots, there is a
day, it was No. 3 Clemson 67, No. II Maryland 63; No.
chance he would lire, there is a chance he would gel
10 Louisvllle 92, Houston 78~No. 13 Duke 87, North
into foul trouble," Wake Forest coach Dave Qdom said
Carolin!l·Greensboro
49; No. 17 Indiana 66, North' of Duncan. "I think it was good strategy, but by tile
western 63; No. 19 Boston College 81, Fairfield 79 in ·
same token, l know who he is and I know what our
ovenime; Mississippi State 75, No. 20 Mississippi 64;
team is. We've seen it time ind t~~ain."
No. 22 Noeth Carolina 59, North Carolina State 56; No. ·
. Vil'(linia was held without a point over the final five
23 'Ie~as 86,' Texas A&amp;M 76 in ovenime; and No. 25
minutes by the nilion 's No. )-ranked field goal defe-.
Texas
1'ech 67, Oklahoma 62. ·
whi&lt;:h Went 10 a: zone tO cut off tile Cavaliers' outside
· shooters. · .
.
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'' No. 3 ae-., 6, No. 11 Maryland 63 - Greg
Buckner
scored 16 points and 'Thrrell Mcintyre added
"It's hard to exprels:how badly thia one hurts,".Vir-

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Warren Local
27-19-18-2.5=89
Easlela: Becky Davis 0.1-214=5,
Stephanie Evans 0-1-0=3, Val(rie
1&lt;arr 7-o,.6/8=20. Ann Wiggins .1-00=2,. Chasatie Hollon 0-0-516=5,
Angle Wolfe 0-0-3/4=3. Totals: ~z.

llilll=3!1

Warren Local: Lisa Morris ~-2.·
&lt;WI=I6, Sara Nolan2-0-1/2=5, Jess1e
Morris 3-2-0= 12, Bobbi Jo Ohmer 22-0=10, Julie Wagner 10-0-00=20,
Tammy Spence 5-().!WJ=IO, Trisha
Alloway 2-0-0=4, Jodi Huck 3-04/4=10, Darcie Clark 1-Q-0=2.
Totals: 33-6-3.'9--39

a

In the NBA,

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Bulls beat T-wolves 112-102; Rodman kicks camerama.n
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Bubtball Writer
Even for Dennis Rodman, this
was hitting a new low.
Rodman kicked a cameraman in
the groin during the third quarter of
the Chicago Bulls' 112-102 victory .
at Minnesota on Wednesday nightthen made ,light of the incident by
.claiming lh~ cameraman overdramatized his injury.
"It's one' thing to be hurt, but ·
!Jon't pretend you're more seriously
hun than you are," Rodman said.
"He got carried off on a stretcher'! It
was a little bft dramatic to me.
Jtlaybe I'll send him some roses on .
tile floor- Love, Dennis."

Maybe the NBA will send something to Rodman, too. Namely a suspension. ·
It would be the second of the season for the league's resident bad boy, ·
whose delinquency resume also
includes head-butting a referee,
t~rowing ice at his coach; refusing to
wear his shoes on the bench, flagrant
fouls, verbal abuse incidents and oth- ·
er myriad acts of insubordination.
"I think I'll get some lawsuit
papers next time I come up to Minnesota," Rodman joked afterward.
The Chicago-Minnesota game
was tied 71-71 when Rodman stumbled out of bounds along the baseline
while suuggling with Kevin Grimett

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iJ Ohio college basketball,

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for a rebound. Rodman fell over a
still photographer, and cameraman
· Eugene Amos, sitting nearby, turned
· his camera on Rodman:
.
Still sining on the floor, Rodman
kicked out with the bottom of his
fopt and. caught Amos very high on
the inside of his left thigh. Amos
slumped over for·about seven minutes before he was canied off.
Rodman was ap~ong several Bulls
who believed Amos was feigning his
injury, although Wolves physician
Sheldon Bums said Amos was
kicked in the groin.
"It looked like he kicked him in ·
the knee, and all of a sudden he came
up with that falsetto," coach Phil

Jackson said.
Police officers went to the hoopilalto interview Alnos, butthe·depilltment would not immediately say
whether a complain_! was li!fd.
· Reached at home early today, Amos ·
said he "most definitely" would file .
charges against Rodman.
Scottie Pippen finished with 29
points, 17 of them coming in a 3310 run in 9 112 minutes after Minnesota led 75-74. Michael Jorllan
had 25 points, Jason Caffey scored
20 and Rodman had 15 rebounds. It
was Chicago's eighth straight win.
In other NBA games, Seattle
clobbered Toronto 122-78, Orlando
defeated Dallas 78-66, Detroit. beat

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Vancouver 103-79, .New York
downed San Antonio 94-77, Golden
Stat.~ beat Philadelphia 128-111,
Charlolle topped New Jersey 116104 and Indiana defeated the Los
Angeles Clippcw;' IOS-93.
SiJ~Jcs122

Ra~lon78

·At S.eattle, the SuperSonics set an
NBA record with 27 steals and Sam
Perkins tied the record for most
three-pointers wiihout a miss by
going 8-for-8.
. .
·
· Perkins made his eig~th with
5:21 left and stayed on the coun uniil
46 seconds remained, bot did not
lake another shot
"I saw them and heard them com.
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'

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ing out of Himeout saying, 'Don't
let him get it,"' Perkins said. o[ the
Raptors. "Their defense really
changed after that eighth one...
The So nics connected on 15 of 26
thre&lt;l:JlOinters to brenjc the club mark
or 14.. Toronto set a franchise record
with 32 turnovers.
· Magie 78, Maverieks 641
At Dallas. a national cable audience go11o see hOw bad things have
gotten for the Mavericks.
Dallas was held to the lowest
point tptal in franchise histo,Y as it
lost tor the fifth time in seven
games.
Penny Hardaway, in his founh
game back from his latest stay on the
injured list. scored 26 poinL•.

•

Walla~e 73-71 and Marietta ripped
Otterbein 12-5 I in other OAC games
Wednesday.
Muskingum's Travis Robertson
scored 25 points, including four of
.the Muskies' six free throws in the
closing seconds. Neal Richards led
Mount Union with 17.
Allegheny's numbers weren't ·
impressive against visiting W'?oster,
but they were enough for a 54-52 triumph. Mike House .w(th 10 points
was the only player for'lhe Gators in
double figures ancl Aliegheny was ·
just 18-for-42 from the floor for 42:9 ·
percent.
.
The big difference 1=amc at the
foul line, where Allegheny was 16·

• Victories by Muskingum in the

~io Conference and Allegheny in

IfF

North Coast Conference have
~ned up the races in both leagues.
.. Muskingum knocked Mount
ion out of first place in the OAC
· th a 67-60 victory Wednesday
n ht. The Purple Raiders fell to 5-2
i the oonference and are tied for the
I gtie lead with John Carroll. Ohio
rthern and Heidelberg, followed
~~aldwin-Wallace and Capital at
~ Heijlelherg defeated Hiram90-82,

J n Carroll rolled past Capital 927 , O(Jio Nonhern edged Baldwin-

for-25 and Wooster 8-for-12. Greg
Morris with IS.WI$ Wooster's only
other double-figure scorer.
The Scots and Wittenberg are tied
for the NCAC lead at 5-I. The Tigers
defeated Ohio Wesleyan 95-55,
extending their winning streak over
the Bishops to 32 games. Jamel King
scored 21 points, Jon S(!lfford had 17
and David Walker had 14 for Wittenberg. Andy Seddelmeyerhad 14
for Ohio Wesleyan. · ,
· Denison outscored Oberlin 93-82
in another NCA€ gariii!l'"' . .,,, ·',;&lt;JI4
qhio Slate lost 76-62 at Iowa to
drop to 7-7 overall and 2-3 in the Big
'len Conference. Aodre Woolridge,
the leadi~g scorer in the conference,

B~ OFiE0 SMrtR " ·. ' , · , ·
i~ ihe :·Big ·Ten; 'o.J.· game
Davis said his team's ' uribleni- gan State's Antonio Smith ·ror the·
· IOWA:,~ITY. Iowa: (AP) -,-The,: ~ ofMinJICIOIII (4.-1), whiCh sus- ished mark will be tough to maintain. conference lead.
' ·
"II gets harder," he said. ''We
. Bowen, a 6-foot-7 junillt' from
· Iowa Hawkeyes )tiill 80· u far u · taincd its first loss Tuesday against .
Andre )Voolridge can take them: So Illinois. .
don't sneak up oo anybody·ilnymore. Fort Madison, also added two steals
far, he's helped the Hawkeyes Slake
Iowa. which won its . eighth · Nothing's going to come easy from and a blocked shot.
an early lead in the Bis'Thn Conm- Slnight game and J3 .out of the last here on ouL"
.
"He gives us so much defensive.ence race.
·
14, also gave cQIICh .Jom Davis·his
The Buckeyes hit 25 field goals ly," Davis said.
Woolridge, the conference's lead- IOOth Bia'Thn win in )lOlling its best - 'seven more than Iowa. But the
Ayers said Bowen played for him
ing scorer, had another stron&amp; per- conference start since Davis' first Hawkeyes made up tile difference at on an overseas all-star team.
form~ce on Wednesday, scorina 27
Hawkj:yc team wehi6-0 to open tile the free throw line, sinking 35 of 43
"I don't think people appreciate .
points to pace Iowa to a 76-62 win 1986-~7 season. ·
.
attempts compared to just 8-of-14 for Bowen, I know that you people hen:
over struggling Ohio Stale.,
"If it weren't for you guys, I OSU.
,
do, but I think people elsewhere
"We kind·'" of db our .Pan and . wouldn't ·llave thought 10 even look
· ''I've never been one tooomplairi don't," Ayers said, "I loved him:Andre steps up and gc!S ·!lis 20.some '· ' it up,'' Davis said .OOutrdlching the about offi~ials,'and I'm. not going to tried to get him to llansfer, as a mat.
points and takes over.'.' saidtorwflld · centUry inark. "I'm more interested stan tonight," Ayers said. "You've · ter offact."
Ryarl Bowen~ wh~ ~ad a Pl!le·~ilh in (wjn) N~. 14. Every one gets you got to be tough enough to play
: The B~ckeyes, who dropped the~r
13 rel'o~nds and Jomed Guy Ruck• · closer to where you wanllo be at the through that."
.
SIXth .~ratght g~me ~o lowa•.haven I
er .•nd Kent McCausland with .JI end of the year." ·
.
. · Stonerook a'"! Jermain~ Thte led won •n IQ)Va City smce 1990. They
pomts.
·Ohio State coach ~y Ayers, the Buckeyes w1th IS pomts each were t1ed 34-all at.halfumc but were
"He was very aggressive with the whose team fell to 7~7 2-3, said he's while Damon Stringer scored 14 and the victims of a 10-4lowa surge that
basketball. Tonight, nobody was · always liked tile j9b.Pavis has done. Neshaun Colem111 10.
·
enabled the Hawkeyes to open a 44able to stop his penetral'ion. He's the whicll is why he .isn't surprised to
While Woolridge controlled the 38 advantage w11h 15:59to play:
. key to their offense ~nd ·rio one find Iowa at tile top of the league.
offensive end, Bowen controlled the . Woolndge, who scored 19 po.mts .
stopped him," 'aid OSU's Shailn
"I don't think this is a surprise. rebounds. He ·collared a game-high m .the final. 20 mmutes. had e1gh1
Stoneroak. "He was on tonight.'~
Totn'.s.got them playing well,'' Ayers 13 boards and is vying with Michi- pomts dunng the run,
· The flawkeyes' (14-3)'improved ~d . ."But it's sliiL•y."
•
· . "I don't really think aboutlaking.

Quest·r ·beat Glory 96-76

I'.

~ D.\YTON, Ohio (AP)-Former
Wright State basketball coach Ralph
derhill, who was fired after being
cus¢d of shoplifting vitamins, ·
p ns to file a $L7 million lawsuit

!

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~

. felgs reserves
ltand Ale)Cander
~6defeat
•

Meigs opened .up a. 21-14 half,
l'iid and went ,on lo post a 43WI" ·over Alexander in girls
rve basketball action WCdnesday
e ni'll at Larry R. Morrison Gymn u111.
·
·
Meigs used a balanced scoring
.att;;;k 'to post !he win placing eight
pl~yers in double fig~res.
AII)Y Hysell led the way for the
w nneys with I 2 points, Bethany
B yle• added eisht, 'tangy Lauderm (tll!'d Tiffany H~fhill six points
e,.:h, Brooke Williams added four,
Jcfmiffr Shrimp( in and Ashley Rupe
· ihtce qach and Marissa Whaley one.
(N8f8lie 'Jed the SJ&gt;lll1ai1S with 19
in\:luding three-three poi~ters a~d a
pt!rfecl ciJ!hl for eight from the hne.
i CojiCh Darin Logan's ~arauders
~ 12- 1 overall and 9-.l ui the TnV4Jhiy Conference's Ohio Division.
Meigs will play Nelsonville, York at
hOme .today with action• gelling
unde~ay at 5:55. The varsit~ game
will follow.

I

against the school over breach of, bottles of vitamins at the store but
contract.
·
paid for only one, concealing the oth·
er
five as he tried to leave.
Underhill's attorney, Alfred WeisUnderhill has plc;...cd innocent to
brod, dislributed copies of the lawsuit Wednesday and answered ques- a misdemeanor c'harge of petty theft,
. tions at a news confe·rence. Underhill which carries a maximum penalty of·
six months in jail and a $1,000 fine.
attended but took no quesl'ions.
WeisbrOd said the lawsuit would His trial is scheduled for March.
Underhill told the Dayton Daily
be filed . today in Greene County
Common Pleas Coun. It alleges that News the circumstances of the inciWright State failed to pay Underhill dent will soon be revealed.
salary and benefits over the ·remain."1 still think I will be found innocent," said Underhill. ". :.And when
der of his lwo-ycar contract.
Weisbrod said he attempt~· to everything comes out, lt,hink people
resolve the matter out of coun but will understand."
thai Wright State would not cooperUnderhill's lawsuit also seeks
ate.
damages for emotional distress.
''Ralph Underhill' is entitled to be ·
The lawsuit alleges that adminis'
paid, and he is going to stand up and lnltion officials had threatened to fire
be counted," Weisbrod said. "This Underhill\if he continued to receive
isn't fair play."
technical fouls during games. And
Underhill, 55, who coached the Weisbrod said they once threatened
Raiders for 18 years, was accused of to dismiss star player Vitaly
shoplifting vitamins from a Meijer Potapenko · from the· team after
store near the university campus last Potapenko missed a class.
' November.
"Ali of these things are items we
Police said Underhill selected six believed were deliberately done to

Mefgs wrestlers
talqa third place
In IJ1vltatlonal
~ Meigs Marauder w~ling
team 'finished thir~ in the Watren
lnvi!afional held recently to Rill its
~onpo 11-5·1.
. .
•· .
MQigs defeated Northridge of
Columbus· 60-22, Caldwell ~.18,
lost , 111 Point Pleasant 54:-30 and
dcfeatCd New London 54-30. . ' ·
Poirit Pleasant took firsf In tile ·
t~nt•. the host WIIIT!In Loul
..,.. .:arne m ·second, Me !IS third,
Now London founh, Caldwell fifth,
Bente' U11ion sixth, Noeth Ridp
.ewnth and Waterford ei&amp;hth.,
· firat'plll:e finishln inc:ludeAdam
· 111ornaa 81 140, Jlllh Roberu at ~75
1114 Shlwdf~la at 130.
Jey Pialw 1illahell iii MCrJ.4 •

I;1!.111d thW ,.._ fi'i ' altw' 'r
0Cillrho..,.II12S,O.WIIIullr

~

., ••as. .·

• ffO-'at,la-.atl

. Pr~scription service at
prices. We honor
most . third .party .. prescription
plans. We .stock a complete line of
generic drugs to save you money.
Swisher
&amp;
Loh.se
Pharmacists Chuck; Ken &amp;~ Ron
are . available to answer any
questions about your medications.

We are here tor your health..

place Ralph under a great amount of
stress." said Weisbrod.
Wright State spokesman Barry
Johnson said he had not seen copies
of the lawsuit and declined to comment.
Underhi II had a 356-162 record
and a .687 winning percentage at
Wri~ht State.
.

•

On Saturday,.,February 22 at the
Rutland Civic .Center, the Meigs
Competition Kjlning Association
will sponsor the, first Go-Kart Racers Swap Meet !lfld Flea Market, an
event that hopes to become an iflnu.al event. The , event wi II feature
something for everyone frorri the
c.Sual fan to the serious racer. · . :

Reserved indoor selling ~paces
will be available at S15 per space or
hutdpor spaces are .available at $7.
General admission to lh'\, public is
$2. Dealers arc welcome.
·
Sbow time is 8 a.m. k16 p.m.
. For morc·inforquition, call Chuck
Clark at 614-992-7717 or Ja..On
Shain at 614-949-2864.
·

•

' BJskctl)ilil

•

--

stand!DP

A--

:

:'
•

Dukel7, N.C.~49
EloO Corolina65, VL Comnoonwal!h
61
•
I'

· Oeorpa Tocll71. Florida S•. 5K
l.aulmu. 92. H""""" 78
Miami 7l.l'laYi...... 69
Mini.::~~:! St 75.&lt;
101iNhllpPI 64
N. C
A.tT '16, Cappon Sc. 70

-

a..to«c ................ 21

Mil......teie ...... ....... l8

17

12
14 .

41

~ ~:

~~ ~ '

II •

l:'i '

~!t . Dd'llll4l'

viiniou.VCf ......,......:;7
I

14~:

.l'\7

•

,_

hdlleDI•W.
L.A.'Lal&lt;rn.... ,.......ll 10 .7!7

WRITE A MESSAGE TO. YOUR. SPECIAL VALENTINE
.
Remember tbat special someone this
Valentin~'s Day with a message ID •
'

~

J

'

'

---~---------~----Pwlnt ,............
. , ,•••.

•••I'
_. _. aloeg
w1.. $6.00 to: .

,,

L"

.

•m

t 20

.v•••r.H..ts

.. 11 JCooil Strett
P:o•eroy, QH 45769

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pointsto pull away.
.. :;:
Oh10 State became the. ~rsl B1g · '
Ten. team to reach.the 60-poml mark
agamstlowa, wh1~h had allowed a ":
lcague·bcst 55.25 pomt average after .":
four games.
'

PI~~

YOUR PET
TH~t••• ,
AMONG
. ..
·PET VALENT~S!
; .

'(

'

~

.

'Frluy's p"'""

Hd4olherJ 90, Hiram Kl

• Joho c..mu ~l. C""h"' 76 ·
M.-iettall. o.rtlrin ~I
M~67, Maulll UNo• flO .
'
Obio NOnbtJG lt Bakhwln-Walltt.&gt;t
' 71 '
'
•

.eollep scores

.K&lt;fti IIO.IIowllill ~"i" '1-- · ·
0111013. E. lllll&lt;hlpn 4'1
Toltdo !9, t,IIMII. Ohio 411 '41:
W. Miclli... 7J.Akroa611 ,,

.

NGrtlf&lt;=- Ceallw'

w-"
Midi...
St !I '
' ....., II• M•y't, Md. 61, M. .
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.
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Wll!~lll&lt;

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Noa.--aceplay
_,.,_,
.

-Col=l,fllrfteld 79CO'Il

LOyqlo.Md. as, s-,.

.

Dori.,. ill; Oloortlo 6.1 C2 OT)

•

51 .
' .
Cell*
"'....
""",, 79 •
Dmol51,
.
Fllrlol- DICid- 8l.lotori• 69
t... ll!l. ClewlftSc. 6.1
'-""'- tJ, 11,

•

,_DIY,_
27 10 • 61 1!14 10.1
F..drnn•ton .......... 21 21 4 46 149 136
V:n:OOVL"f' ... ...... 20 ll 2 42 B7 1-&amp;6

c.-.......... .

Anahdm ............ l7 22 ~ 311 12S 1:\4
Cai!&lt;VJI .............. 172.1 l )Y 112 IJI
l..o!l AnJ!:k-~ ....... 17 2.1 S .19 12.a 149
Sun)i•,~.. ......... l6 l2 ~ l7 112 US

WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSD~Y,
FEBRUARY 13TH IN
Also a special seelon for Ia Memory Valentine Pets.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
'
ONLY

WedOaday'• SCOI'ell

Pin11bufid1 3, Hllllltwd 0
tlulfuln 2. N, Y. l!l!IIIU."I'll I
Lus Aap:uk.'5 ,\ , Tunmtu 2
Ouuwu S. Wm;hin~on I
S1. Luuis -'· Pla)\.,.llt I
(:ulnmdu ol. Tumpu Baay 1
CultwY 2. Anuhl.•im I

$600

4. 11orida 0

Saturday '•118me

NHL AII·Siaf Game al San
(..'ali£.. K p.m.

Ju~t'c.

PER PlauRE
PRE· PAID
PI~ enclose 1111~

.

adclrened stamped
. envelope to return
)'OUr photo.

"PET'S NAME"
Owntr'a Name

· Hu"yl De11dline ··
Fridoy, Febru11y 7th 11 3 p.m.

--·--·-·--·-·-·
..
•
.VALENTINE PETS

Mld.A.n.nca.. c_,_,;..,.

lloo:koell59.

••
••

Chicaao ..............l7 22 K 42 121 127
r ....................l7 2M o l4 1311 "9

.

I

' A-c.. U. 10. Old Daroioioo 17

\

ll I. I &amp; liE WI.

.

l&gt;alhu ................. 2~ 17 3 ~ .1 I.JO Ill
llo:tM1.. ..............21 " M !10 137 101
St. Lo41il ............20 12 4 .... IJ 1 147
' Phocnix .............. l9 2J 4 42 111 1!10

Pet's Name~----------Owner's Name .......____.;...._...,._,_..;.__

I

•

Ohlow~n's

Elat
I

Iall

•

'

40'11

Ctnlral Diwllklll

SALE ENDS SAT. JAN. 25

.

.' NC.\A
'Diylslon I
;
. qn s.seons .

'

!Y 141 Ill
54 12M U.W

"FOR PETS ONLY"

WESTERN CONFERENCE

WINTER ·CARPET SALE

t

Toronto 111 Puri!Aad, 10 p.m.
CLEVELANDM·Seorllc, IOp.m.

I

£u. liE li.\

OUR SPECI~L PAGE(S)

119 1211

I.NGELS CARPET

· Olllp ConfoRM* · • ·

'

Utah at VMI:OI.Iva-, 9 R.m.

•

.

~

AI~Jheft~ ,_., Wt'M.Mitr ~~

....

~

llllonlk I l l • -

Aoritla ............... 2211 10

-·-

Oltawa :....... ....... l4.21 K

No P!1fS tooiK)II or Friday

EASTERN CONFERENCE

»: L I

Nert~. .. DI.w.n

PinsbwJh ..........2.'\: IS ~ ~~ 167 1!\ll
Bu1Tolo....:;........2.1 17 ' !I In 121
M.....L ... ....... I7 21 K 42 140 Ill
H,.,fml............. l720 7 41 IlK 144
tloMoo....... .. ..... .. l6l2 6 3M 129 161

~klhtna

NHL standings

Kenfon Dr C1114:' W~'111. PPLI.

New kney• Pbll*lpllia. 7:30p.m.
Miami VI. Wnahi•tton al Blltht'lt~.
7:!'01'· ~ _~s.
lndl.... 7•30p.m. .
MilrtaUbe a1 C'hkaao. fl :30 p.m. ,
Hnwenn 111 ~!a.. 8 :.~ p.nL
S-.:nwncncq,at 'Swt Antonio. M:lO p.m.

I

~Ut

Hockey

Wft~berJ Y$. Ollio Wtsfc)om ~$

CLEVEl-AND'" Doa,.., 9 p.m.
P.tw:w:nblll .Utllh,_9 p.m. . •
Porllaad,. L.A. Laten. ln!IO p.m.

.•

·

COTI
· •
'
Y• Mnoncy46. Yuu. Unullnt: H

Pllilodol['hia ...... .27 13 '

n

4) 121 121
.ao ·~ 1:\9
3l 113 131

DcniMWI '1.1, ot.:rlin H2

Sol.1at.e1110 Dl Hau~10n: 8:30.p.m.

~

••

'

O.lando .. " ' ' - 7;ltlp....

l

l

¢, • '

Mllmi 10llolloo, 7 p.m.

l

l'

.,

'. ' ,, Toalahl'• pma .

2

''

'

./'

Wak.~luo ~. Wucw.lridjiC J2

. Iaa

WdlillJIIIn ...... .. IY 21 ~

Tanlf'IQ8ay ........ l721 6
N.Y. Isllllklen .... l:\
9

North&lt;=- Canfennce

New York 94, S.. A-ion ·
Seoltlc 122. TOfOIIO 78
Detroit 103, VOIICCNYOI" 19
lndi""' lOll L.A. Clii'P'f' 9J

~
I

·

Wch.wilk .R Stt.'UhL"ftvilk: JS
Wildhom SJ, StMIIhcast !'I
Yt*. BCW\Iman 60. Ck:. liuiJhlll

eollege scores

tbh:ngo Ill. MinDdOI.IIo1
O.lando 78.1lolllo 66

l~u;l­

WarSaw Rin."' Vi~.:w ~iO, ~'tiW.n 4K

Ohio men's

'Gold&lt;n Sial&lt; llll.l'hiladelpllia Ill '

'

C·

N.Y. Raagers ... .. l:\ 19 6 52 161 IJl
New Jersey ........ 22 16 ~ 49 IIJ 110

·.

W. Uniun 72. N:ip~~ 24
·
Warn:•• JFK ~-'. New Wilmin~&amp;tnn

r ... w... ~

I)

22 .!19

Wednaday••...,....

;word.sl
Tile Dally·'S.tfMI •

16 .!!6
~ .421
l1 ~ Jlt9
24

CS Nonlwidae 99, Sacramaun 51. M ·
Colorado 7K. Okllhoma S1. 74 COTI
i\:ppen~Re ~. t.Dyoltt M"?nsnuftr ~2
'
S.Ma Clllll11. St. MIUJ •· Cal. 6M •
COTl
'

I
7
12

IJ&gt;arlouc 116. New Ieney 104

A.!IY411!t who would appnc,late • tbouai}tful ~ord trom you! All Valeatllle
Hearts Will be published 1n the Febmary 14th Issue at a cost qf only $6.00!
.
MUSt BE PREPAID!
·
· .
. •

the

1'1 .711

Scal!lo.:...... ·...........27
' """lall'!········ .. ....20
s..- .............16
· Golden Stlte .. .. ... 14
L.A. Ciii'P'f' ......... l4
Phomia ... ........ ......JJ

HO. ~,ill.1 4-4
ViA&amp;.-cnl Warreil H9. Ra.'tkvilh.o

cPa.J .lO

u

~·

11'\ . ,

•

•

01&lt;""""""

.19

ll .1114

.

Oral ROberts 91, MOIIIWallo ·"
Te11.111 M6, Teo. A&amp;M '76 (0T)
· Te,...Tc.;b 61,
62
, T•-Arih!JIM66.~To. . Sl. ,6 l .
\r tan.
~~

1M

:1\1 .:1,4.1

•

Solltlawait

ScronJ'villc.S2. Rtuk:s 27

.Twin~hurl'

"'fn )tl

Nc-.17, K....,~/·77COT)

12

.;1~3

.,

Miiomi COIIio) 66, T.... 49
N. IDWII 79, SW Mi-Sc. 72

3',

.4~2 ·

Wob """"' !Ill. Ylratoio !14 •

BowHnJ Greonll~. Kooo 69

Gl

lhoh ................ ...... :l4 12 .667

err

Sou1~m

c.... Mk:hi.., 81. BallS!. 61
1 - 6 6 , - -.63
.... 76. Ohio Si. 62

!

WESTERN CONtERENCE
-DIYiolon

Vtrainiq Tec:h 76, Or&lt;w&amp;l•

M~

l(t'r.:

~on ....... :.Jl ~ ~

J' .

North c.olina ,9, N. Carolina St. S6
South C.-olina 80, 'Fkltlda 79 ·
V-69.LSU62

.616 .
14 .600
16 ,!\611

-·- ...

~nillc ~-Field &lt;to

Hi-'llnd 73, Nontl Roy ~til on 6l
Wtenon !'9. eo..ut !i!i
Lor.lia~ !17. Kty11one )~
!.oni• K.. 49: II: Rkllnillo
Malison Sl. AsblalMIIaHnor J~
Midview J9. Oberlin 36
Nt.ow C01t1."01'd Olrnn 6!', Noraaq Sl
New i...c'lliiiJ.IOft ~2 W. Mu~kinprri .W
' Oberlin l-1rclands 6K. Avun 41
P..mrlfl Holy Name 70, M~ioo64
l'l'&lt;~~~• 9.1. Pik,,.. '12
Phik, ·~. Tri·Vulky.W
.
Pnlnnd 7... Niles 2'1
,
Riv~oonide 17. HarvL")' 4$
. SMIIu5ky ~I. Lurllln Sc...ehvicw ...:!

' GeorJt- '111,\Ricll.....t 86 (!11')

II

.!U4

Canron MI!Kinley SK, Akron St.-V·
Sc.M 40
Cbardoo 6.". Gtneva 4:'
Cruobrillo 71 Ma)'Ovlllo 59 ..
Fairporlll. Andrew• 22
o.ftrkl Hra. 47. Vlllley Fartte ..W

a..-67 . ..,.....6.1·

Al........................2.l
CLEVELAND .......21

Ill .&lt;486
).4 .33,1

BrunswH.-k 70. Normandy -tg

Aubon14l,Tea~"''l!

10 •

CmlroiDI....
ChiC!IjiO.......... ....... .J) 4 . .M92
t&gt;ooroiL. ................. 27 . 9 .7!10

. The QaHy Sentirlel

o~era game. I just wanuo win/' saKi
Woolridge, who also had five assists.
The closest OSU got was S0-46 .
after Stonerook buried a three-pointer with .II: 16 remaining, but the
Hawkeyes scored 10 of the ne~t 13

'

Brookside 46. Wtllifiii00'.-16

·~71A-61

16 1~
16~;
IK~:

.

Denv&lt;r........... ........ .9

\1

Soudl

~'
7~

Miami .................... 16 10 .712
. Waahing1on ............ l9 17 .~21
Odondo .................. ll IK .4lol
BONo.n......................9 2." .26.'\:
New Jmcly ... ...........9 2~ .265
P.hiblelf'blla ............. R 2R .222

MinntWII ........ ......I6 21
Dalla.:;.. ,, .... ,......... ll ll
San I\Mottio ... ......... .9 26

•

s,......n. s...o HaJI66

NBA
&amp;\S1'UN CONPDENCE
r.a·
'
ll &amp;. fllo qa
NewYort .............. 'lT 10 .7~

T""""•······"·"'·-···12
.

• Sweethearts • Moms • Dads • Grandparents • Teachers
· • Bab~itters • Friends ·

No. n North cuo~~aa 59, N. CanlliDa ~t. 56-

The Tar Heels ( IQ.4; 1-3~SC&lt;lred the game's final 10 . ;
points ~ avoid extending,their worst-ever sian in the ..:
. ACC. Antawn Jamison's lay.up with 12 seconds left .: ·
gave Noeth Carolina a 57-56 lead. C.C. Hamson had ;.,
21 points for the visiting Wolfpack (8-5, Q.4), who Jed .
56-47 with 2:35 remaining.
~!
No. 23 ~XII 86, Texas A&amp;M 76 (OT)- Reggie ·, ,
Freeman scored 30 points and the visiting Longhorns •;
(9-4, 3-1 Big 12) dominated the ovenime 14-4 for their
seventh straight victOry overtheAggies. Shanne Jones •
had 16 points for Texas A&amp;M (6-8, 0-4), which had a "
chance to win at the end of regulation, but Brian ':
Barone's last-second shot was sbon.
. ...
No.l5 TeD~ Tech 67, Oldaboma 62- Cory Carr ·:!
scored II of his 26 ·points in the final 3 112 minutes
and Tony Battie had 16 poinu and 16 rebounds for the ::i
visiting Red Raiders ( ll-3, 3-1 Big 12). Nate Erdmann :.
had 26 points for the Sooners (9-4, 1-2), who led 5449 with 3:49 to play.

•

.'

lndiana .. ,..............!.. l7

'

p0i1111 and nine rebounds for BOlton College, which led '
7S-711ate in regalation. Oteg Francis led the Stags (5-!
7) with 23 points, but was held scoo:less for the garne's · ,
final 18 minutes.
MJeeJeeiHi St. 75, No. Z8 MMP-Ippl64 - Bart
Hyche made nine of I0 free throws over the .final I : 16 ..:,
and scored 20 points as the Bulldolls· {8-9, 2-2 SECY ,·
won at Mississippi for the ')3th time in 14th years .••:.
Jason Smith had a career-high 24 points for the Rebels . ,
( 11-4, 3-2), who were playing their first game ever as ,
a ranked team. ·
·
'
.:

~

&gt;

Scoreboard

s~~s flea ma;~;;;~ February j

;CKA

u:"':O

1

·had 27 points, with three other 80, Ke~tucky State 69 and Tri"Statc and Wilmington's game at Earlham
Hawkeyes each scoring II. Jerrnaine · 73, Defiance 50. ·
·
were postponed until tonight because
Tate led the Buckeyes with 15.
Kenyon's gaine at Ca.&lt;i:.!tcscrvc of bad weather.
Cleveland State (4-10) got 15
·
;
·
pointsfromMalcolmSims.butwas
overwhelmed 98-63 by lona as Tariq
Kirksay scored 21 points and Bryan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Atlanta ( 11-16) Jicp't it clO!iC in the
Ma,t,the':' 20 f?r the G~ls.
Tonya Edwards '/COred 24 points, sccoqd, trimming the hlllflimc lead
We re trylng,to bu1ld day by day
including 12 in th~ decisive third to nine at 45-36
an~ today wasn't avery good one,.'; quancr, as the Col~mbus Quest beat
The. Glory . c~t the lead to three
swd CJ~vela~d State c~h RQihe
the Atlanta Glary 96-76 Wedn\'S(Iay. points three times in the third quar- .
Mass1mmo. We ~ere J~t out of
The Quest (24-4) is now .14-0 at tcr, the last ti
n ·u
b T~
sync. w..e w.ere du;c;ombilbulated, . ·h.;;....··a"',f 6-0
t·dlS.di.WV
''
'
..
·
.
· ~a ;,~..ard- . JIIC.B PI c~,J•. m)ll]bt.• ~.·~l)));~
Jd 't~
· - ld ., d ·bbl · • _. · .. ""'"'""~ · -r
, --~· . ~''· ~"' s. u o um us .on:va ,
cou .c!'; pass, .cou ~ ,t .n. C.JII~!' .
rcolum
.. b~s n
·~\fd i!IJ!l.·ug~· "":·p(JW,ilt&lt;Js' 12 poi!ltlllAA'Ihtl'Qiii!i. " . ~
couldn t put tbe ball m the b~kct.
out !lle. game. . ki M,cCray e~ll 69-54 going'intq the founh quirt:!' ·'
In other nonlcague.gamcs, '' wa.•
Vlilerie Still each · . four poil'l'ts in · · Columbus led by as much ·,;s 2j :
Alma 76, Bluffton 69; Central Slate a 13-0 run in the fir,st that put Colum- points, the last time at ·94-71 with :
bus up 25-11 at the end of the quar- I: 18 IQ gp .when La'Shawn Brown :

. nderhill to sue ·wsu over alleged breach of contract

13, inc:ludinatwo three-pointers in alate 10.2 run, u
the visiting Tigers (I S-1 , 4-0 ACC) W011 their II th
Slnight. Terrell Stokes hit a three-pointer to close the
Tenapins (14-2, 4-1) to6S-63, butMeil Code made two
free throw&amp; with 6.8 seconds left. Keith Booth had 16
poinll for Marylaild, which was looking to go I 5-1 for
the first time.
.
No. 10 LoulsYIIJe 9, a-ton 711- Freshmao forward Nate Johnson was 11-of-13 from the field and
· scored a !ieason-high 24 pOints to lead the Cardinals
(14-1, 3-0 Conference USA), who shot a season-high
·51 percent from the f~eld. Damon Jones scored IS
poinll for the viSiting Cougars (8-6, 0-2).
No. 13 Dllke 17, North Oarollaa-Greeaboro 49
-Jeff Capel had 19 poinu and the visiting Blue Devils (13-4) cruised after holding the Spartans without a
field goal for a seven-minute stretch midway through
the first.half. Demetrius Cherry led Greensboro (6-10)
with II points.
No. 171ndJa• 66, Nortllwatem 63- N~il Reed,
benched for the first half by Indiana coach Bob Knight,
. scored 16 of his 18 points in the final S:23 as the
· HooSiers ( IS-3, 2·2) rallied at Northwestern to avoid
their first three-game losing streak in the Big Ten .since
199Q. Jevon Johnson scored 16 points for the Wildcats
(S-10, Q.4), wbo led 56-49 before Reed took over. They
have lost seven straight overall and 16 straight to Indiana.
,
. No. 19 Boston College 81, Falrfleld 79 (OT) Antonio Granger scored on a.runner in the lane at tbe
overtime buzzer as the Eagles (12-2) avoided,the huge
upset at New Haven Coliseum.' Danya Abrams had 26

••

·woolridge'~· 27 :po.~n. ts help . ~owa beat Ohio State 76-62

Victories
by Muskingum and Allegheny tighten conference races
,.
SVnMPUET
· Alaaoclated Preas Writer

.

Wake Forest beats Virginia; Clemson &amp; Indiana also win

. Thuredlly, Jenuery18, 18it

.. .

Warren Local .girls record 89-38 victory over ,Eastern!
.
team like Warren !here isn~ too much
room for mlby breakdowns.·
'Eastern was led by a 20-point, 10rebound· performance from six-foot
sophomore center Valene ~. who
gained much praise from Warren
coach Dennis Biddinger for her p.!r·
formance.
Biddinger said, "Eastern's big
girl. (Karr) did a great job under the
basket. We've got some great post
players and she did a great job protecting the basketball. AI times we
oouldn't Slop her. Eastern has a very
good young club."

.PalMI,., •lllddllport, Ohio

Ohio H.S. prls' SCOftl

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•' - Alaoa- 67, LGOilvlllt ~

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hb 'IJ wooill71 , A ' hlla;

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Amount Encloeed: ~~- for _ _
' It $8

Plctu~ ,

tach;.;~· ----·--·--·--·--·--·--·--·--·-...

brl,.

Dtedllne Friday, February 7th It 3 p.m•
Mall or
the entry torin:

The. ,D.aily Sentinel ·
110 counSt.
ohio

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P • I • The Ddy Sentinel

Pom nor • lllldl1pcll1, Ohio

By The B·e nd ·

I).OW' chief presents·'p roposed hunting trapping season dates ·
New deer huntiag zoaes, 111
iDw r : d bq limit llld IJIIddition11 erzlekw'ingiCUOIIIR cbanJes
Meip IIFid Galli1 dller !Mmten may
aolice under pcuposed huating and
ltappina rules presented to the Ohio
Wildlife Cquncil on Jan. 9.
l'ropoled changes indudc deer
· .season regulations 'llld establishing
three new deer hunting zones that
would allow hunters in 18 southeast
Ohio counties ·(Zone 3) including
Meigs and Gallia counties to take a
limit of three deer. Additionally, the
wildlife agency is seeking to establish 1 new tluee-day anderless primjtive deer season in Zone 3.
Also proposed are changes in
how deer permits will be sold next
· fall, which in par1 will allow hunters
to purchase separately any anderless
deer permit. Previously, the special
management anderless deer permit
was sold only in combination with a
regular either-sex deer permit at a ·

cost of $40.
may be held OcL 4 to Jan. 31, 1998, unciiMied from last yew;
Rabbit - NOv. 7 to Feb. 28, 1991;
Division of Wildlife chief with the statewide firearms season
H t'-&amp;lctnpp' ......
ft
ll- Nov. 71o 1•. 3, 1998; •
Michael Dudzik presented the for deer of either sex to be held Dec. ..c.~ J11 opowd hun tins season
Quail - Nov. 7•29, 19 coulllies
Wildlife COIHICil with a draft of pro- l-6.
'
:lilly;
poled rules and dates for the 19'17·
Thestatewideprimitivcdeersea- •
Squirrel - Sept. 4 to Jan 31
Fox- N_ov. 10 to 1M. 31, 1!198;
.
. '
98 huniins and trapping season.
son (muzzleloader season) will be 1998;
Raccoon, Opouum - Nov. 10 to
Many ofthehuntingseasons pro- held Dec. 26to Ju. 3, 1998, and an
Dove -- Sept. IS (to "be Ju. 31, 1998;
posed for next fall remain little early primitive anl(erless season will announced);
.
•
Proposed trappins dates include:
changed from a year ago.
be held Oct. 30 to Nov. I in Zone 3,
Grouse: - Oct. II to Feb 28 . ' Fox, Opossuin, Skunk, Weasel -1998;
. : Nov.IOtoJan. 31,1998;
In reviewing the draft proposals under the proposed rules. ·
··
for the wildlife council on Thursday,
·Zone I consists of counties in - . Ducks, Geese - Oct. 18 (to be
Raccoon -~ Nov. 10 to Jan. 31,
the Division of Wildlife said the western and northwestern Ohio, announced in A'llgust); . ·
1998;
.
declining condition of the deer herd. · Zone 2 includes a band of counties
Young hjlnters upland season
M~ -- Nov. 15 to Feb. 28,
in' southeast Ohio has made in nee- ranging from extreme southwegtern · rblic lands only)- Oct. 2S to Nov. . 1998;
~!Omakesubstantialchangesin
Ohio, southern Ohio (including
Mink.·· Nov. IS toJu. 31 , 1!198;
deer hunhng regulations.
Scioto and Lawrence .counties)
. ~ld turkey (f"'l) -; Oct. 21}.2!1,
· Beaver -- J111. 10, 1998, to Feb.
. A recent repon by the wildlife dirough central Ohio to extreme hmll one bird of either sex·
28, 1998, northeast Zline; Dec. 27 to
agency mdtcated that antler beam northeastern Ohio while Zone 3 is
Wild turkey (spring)-· Apnl 27, Feb. 28, 1998, lemainder of state.
dia_meter and ~ecreasing . body comprised of 18 c~linties in eastern 1~8, to May _16, 1998, add CuyaPablk f011F11111,..¥
wetght have conunued to define the and southeastern Ohio ..
hoga, Cbampatgn, Mahoning to list
In addition, the Division of
declining condition of deer in Ohio's
Urban deer hunting zones remain of 47 counties;
Wildlife will host an open house in
hill country as a result of Increasing
abundance and a decline in quality
habitat and food sources.
The statewide archery season
COLUMBUS - Hunters killed · primitive deer season include Jef- stalewide · primitive sea5on are by
I0,26S deer during the seven-day ferson - 3S9; Washington - 356; hunters using muzzleloaders:
During the two-week deer pn
stalewide primitive deer season held Athens ~ 339; Muskingum - 334; and
Monroe
32$.
.
·
·season
whi~h ended Dec. 14, hupten
Dec. 26 throuJb Jan. 2, according to
In Gallia County, 29S deer were killed 120,925 deer. The preliminary
the Division of Wildlife.
Thll preliminary total represents ·a checked in. closely followed by 288 . t0!41 of that season represented a
decrease of 16 percent from··Jast taken in Meigs County.
Often regarded as Ohio's muzyear's record primitive deer season.
harvest of 12,239 deer. This season's . zleloader deer season, hunters were
statewide primitive deer season was able to hunt deer ·of either sex with
.
'
·expanded from three to seven days m,uzzleloading rifles of at least .3$
caliber or larger, muzzleloading shot·
By RONALD BLUM
;ion of the other lea,&amp;Ue, one three- and began Dec. 26 instead of in ear- · guns using ·a single ball, longbows
ly
January.
- SCOTISOALE, Ariz. (AP) game series at boq1e and one on the
Counties ··reporting the highest and crussbows. More than 90 percent
Arizona and Tampa Bay stiJ.I don't · road.
number
of deer checked duril)g the of the deer taken during the
know if they finally will be assigned
to leagues by t~y.
1lte plan to put Arizona in the
N11ional League and Tampa Bay in
the American Jiit a bump Wednesday
night when AL owners rejected it
during a straw vote.
Owners voted 8-6 againsl the plan
during the AL meeting, a management source said on the condition he
not be identifi.id. Still, baseball officials remained confident the plan
would be approved today, when the
formal vote was scheduled to be taken during a joint meeting of both
leagues. The proposal needs
approval from i I of 14 teams in each
league.
.
· · ·
"I'm disappointed," Arizona Diamondbacks CljO Jerry Colangelo
said. "I was a little taken aback."
"" auiO, .., conct,
·' Under the proposal approved a
caa, tilt, ' cruiN, PS,
ni~ht earlier by the ruling executive
PW, PDt, LoiMied.
~neil, gne expansion team would
be assigned to each league in 1998,
creating two·I S•team circui.... How'
ever, the AL's first preference would
·111:, to '~' ~ )eal1!s an4 /_ts,,sec~'ld
preference wo"ld .be to get J;rizona
rathe~ than Tampa Bay.
Because Tampa Bay probably
would be assigned to the AL East,
oi:lc team would have to shift from
East to Central, and one from Ccn- tra1 to West. Kansas City, lhe team
most likely to join the West, objected to the plan, as did Texas, which
dciesn't like being in a division
whose three other teams are in the
Paeific time zone: Anaheim, Oakland and Seattle.
The entire At West voied against
t~e plan during the AL meeting, the
s.ource said, alonJ with Kansas City, .
the New York Yankees, the Chicago
White Sox and Toronto. ·
.
. ,Yankees owner George Steinbrtnncr and White Sox owner Jerry
'R¢ins(lorf·voted in. favor during the
counejl meeting Tue:iday night, the
source Sllid. . .
.
.
"It's a very complicated issue,"
Rarig~rs presidllnl Tom Schieffer
said. ' 'It's trying to get the , teams
' · a!ianed into time iones." · · . ·
:, AC4ing commissioner Bud,Selig' ·
~PP!:llflld visibly irr.itated dl,ll'ing a
h1te-nlght executive council session
tlillt ended past midniJbt MST. callina- in Ath~tics president Sandy
·Aldenon and Angels president Toriy
Tav~, and asking an aide to get
him
pbone number of Royals
CEO avid Glass, who was not at
the meeting.
Selig, appearing · wenry at the
owners' renewed fighting, thought he
bad t1f111ed around enough votes to
appro"c llie proposal. The Di~­
miJ~ks hav.e S!)heduleit hu~. .
1
pluty tonight to mark the ciecfsio'n, •
ahd tl)e Devil Rays have S:theduled ·
a celebmtion Friday morning ·jn
. Thmpl',
.
.
~ other main item for today
Wll9 the appointment of the search
com"'illee for a new commissioner.
The I~}oman executive council decid- ·
ed' it will be the selii'Ch comrnittee,
• aild Clllorado Rockies chairman Jer·
14/C, •II powr ~tslp.
ry, McMorris is likely to head the
LMtt•
s@rc.h. although a finlil decision may
not be made today.
. Beca11se of expansion teams,
~.ne!ll will have to come up with Jl
n&amp;w schedule formula. Bdlton Red
Sdk CEO John Harrington, bead of
tJje ,gbedule formal comminee, aaid ·
Iii), would !levelop a 1!198 schedu~ ­
$ calls for 15 interle-.ue pmes
~team (three against each team in
c.edivisionQfd)eotherleape), 50 • .
ilrtpdivilionpna(l2or 13,.:1111
qda rival) ud 97 ill$lldlvialaa
. . . . (nine or 10 lpillll -'r
If

.....,._,

-h of its five wildlife dillrlcts 0.:
Feb. 9 from II a.m. to 7 p,rn. In·!be:
evaat poor wcathir forces 1 cancef.:,
lalion, the open houses will be hel4o
on Feb. 16 at the same time .. ' •"'!
The District 4 open boule l"l!llleJ.
held 111 the Atbeas Recrealion ~
ter in Athens.
:1
A sta!Cwide jlub!ic hearinJ ;~
review thesjl and other propose¢
rules chaages wiU be held 1119 a.niji;
on March 21111 the Districll office&gt;
ISOO Dublin Road in Cllhnnbus...
Wildlife Council meetings ~ cur•
rendy scheduled for 7:30p.m.at tiiD'
Division's Fountain Square head •
quanen in ColumbUs on Mfrch 2Q:
and April 10. ~ meetinp
open to the public, but leltii)JI.Is li~
ited. Call ·I-800.WJLDLIFE fDf&gt;
more information.
'

an:,

.l

DOW says primitive deer kill total ·1_
6o/o lower than In 1995:. . ..;

AL owners reject
choice for Arizona

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and .Tampa Bay

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1

......

TOWN CAR

""

:OliLY '20,0·~ · MI.

.w.l);

. Hi abo will invest'..., alllll!od-

, ut,e.Uint fot.30 inltlle. . . pmea

...............
I*'

*"'P!l\ll
and a reduccioa of inienllo
to 12. Plltlar t111t bo

~

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decrease of 12 percent froml la(t
year's rec!lfd ftrearm1 deer scas41'!
harvest of 137.174 deer,
.;:
. Ohiq's archery deer Ieason
ll~ues tlwouJh Jan. 31:

•

. The Daily Sentinel .
-

phrase " fo~ life" is pretty extreme? bad woman about "superior genes." print my leuer and set her straight. I don 't want to be a whiner, bull The woman was upset because her - J.T., Westlake Village, Calif.
Dear J.T.: I'm pleased to report
feel' that the store manager is !Jc:ing sonandhis wife saidtheydidn'twant
very hard on me considering this was · to have children. The mother felt her · that several readers picked up on the
mr,first offense. I am eager to hear son had an obligation to contribute to "superior genes" reference, and like
your opinion.-- Sorry and Ashamed the " family gene pool" because the you, they didn't care for it. Happily,
Dear Sorry and Ashamed: Almost family had .produced several doctors Americans are less impressed with
all stores have a standard policy and lawyets, architects and profes- genes. They are much more interested in achievement. May it be ever ·
regarding shoplifters and price-tag sors.
Adolf Hitler had an interesting thus.
switchers. No second chances. Once
theory
ab0ut "superior genes," too.
Dear Ann Landers: You' ve print- ·
you are apprehended, you are perThat
theory
has
been
the
motive
for
ed
many
stories about seat mates who
manently barred from the store.
numerous
"ethnic
cleansing"
efforts,
met
and
married. Here 's one with a
I believe you are totally sincere,
and if it were up to me, I would trust including the recent mess in Bosnia. slight variation, and I hope you print
That snobbish, self-righteous it. ·
you. Maybe when the store manager
woman
wants to control her son's
· Driving in slow-moving urban
sees this in the paper, he will give you
·
life.
She
is
free
to
spout
drivel
about
traffic,
I was distracted by the sight
.. break. !.hope so. Let me .know.
her
fatrtily's
genes
because
the
First
of
a
very
attractive girl on the side-··
Dear Ann Landers: I am surprised
and disappointed that you didn't pick Amendment guarantees free speech. walk. While gawking, my car banged
up on the comment from ·the Carls: I do hope, ·however, that you will . into the car in front of me.

Ann
Landers

'

199.5, lJU.

Aafekt '

1lmel S)'DdiQitc and Cre-

.amS,.._,

The manager:s final comment was
" If you do the crime. you have to do
the time." Well, I am doing,the time
-- a thousand ye~rs of hell, which is
the. sentence banded down by my
own conscience.
t.l.
Thai man made me feel'il~graded
and )Vorthless, My therapjs~ and my
,priest said I did all the right•things to
clear my name. Don ' I you thin.k the
'

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AmtJassadors
sought for '97·
tri~county . ·
WalkAmerica

.

••

taking applications for. the Ambas·
· sli,dors ,• :~~f . this, yeat's Trl-County
Walk,America for the March of ·
!'
E'iima.
•. ·. Ambassadors arc living illustratipns of six:cessful March of J;&gt;imes
resi:an;h aad prosrams. The ambas·
sador sh!)Uid 'be a child aged 12 or
udder wbo was born with a binh .
~C!fect an4 is. healthy as a re;sult of
fvlan:h of Dimes-funded programs
8J!d research.
.. Applicants slicltlid'liveln Meigs, .
M,ason or Galli~ .Cpuflt)'. ,enjoy ll)eetihg ~. ple ·Ml! P.fring) t~\\ir ,piculre '
taken, and 6C a&amp;!e to attend promotional events li:ading liP. to tlje 1997
ll;i-County WalkAmerica on April 27
in Point Pleasant. One ambassador
wlll be cho5en for:C!ICh collnty, and
those wishing to apply rnay contact
Tamara Zuspan at 304-675-2763 or
LOti Wilson at 1-800.313-2911 .
.r

Unfonunately, it happened to be a
police car. Fonunately, the driver )ivas
a very understanding policewoman. I
married her. ,. Quebec
Dear Quebec : How sweet. I don't
want to detract from your romantic
story, but some sman-alec.k reader is
sure to write and say, "You'd have
been better off getting a ticket."
Is life p~sing you by? Want to
improve your social skills? Write for . :
Ann Landers' new bopklet, "How to ·
Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely." Sen"' a self-addressed, long.
business-size envelope and a check or
mQney order for $4.25 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Friends, c/o
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611 -0562: (In Canada, send
$5.15.)

•.

-Community calendar-

·.· \Vadk Anleriea.organizers arc oow

;. ~ '""

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policy for shoplifters - no second chances

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Recently, I did
SOmething very stupid. I switched a
cduple of price tags in a shop and got
OliUJbt. l was given a ticket for " misdemeanor theft by deCeption." I went
~o- coun, ~d the ticket and wrote a
letter of apology to the store. It was
my lint offef!SC, anc! I assure you, it
willlle my last.
. . Yesterday, I received a call from
~store manager telling me he hail
&lt;C£Cived my 'letter, and while 'he is
o;prry I suffer from depression, r am
fyrbidden to enter the store again ••
for life.
•
. · Ann, ~.&lt;;lift I do to convince the
s.tere people tlia(l am ashamed of
m.yself and will never do that again?

Page7

Thu~y,Jenuery11,1887

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$t~ndard

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SYRACUSE -- Meigs County
The Community Calendar is
published as a free lervk:e .to non- Board of MRIDD, 7:30p.m. Thursprofit groups wishing to announce day, Carleton School.
meeting and special events. The
IWTI..AND -- Leading Creek
calendar is.not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type. Conservancy District, organizational .
Items are printed as space permits meeting, Thursday, 5. p.m. Thursday.
and &lt;annot be guaranteed to run a followed by regul.ar meeting.
specific nu"!ber of days.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER-- Star Grange
THURSDAY
. POMEROY -- Prayer and pllin- 178, Saturday, 6:30p.m. for fun night
ning meeting for Feb. II concen of and potluck supper, followed by
"Harvest", Thursday, 10 a.m. at the third degree practice, 7:30p.m.
Pomeroy Public Library meeting
room. For more information call the SUNDAY
POMEROY ,_Annual meeting of
Rev. Peter Tremblay, 9920-4152.
the Parish of Grace Episcop,al Church "
ALFRED -- Orange Township will take place on Sunday in the ·
Board of Trus,tees annual appropria- Feiger Memorial Parish Hall of the '
tions meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m. at . church complex beginning with · a "
the home of Clerk Osie Foil rod.
potluck luncheon at II :30 a.m.
·
'
.
RACINE -- American Legion Post
POM:EROY -- Rev. Arius Hun,
602. business meeting. 6:30 p.m.; pastor of the Forest Run Baptist
, dinner to follow.
Church, will be the guest speaker at
the Naomi Baptist Church, Pomeroy,
· DARWIN -- Bedford Township Sunday, II a.m.
Trustees, organizational meeting, I
p.m. Thursday.

'•.

(;la$S has holiday party
The Adult Class of the Bradford
Cburch of Cbrist met recently at
Sl)oJ19Y.SJjn Point PJ""-&lt;IIIt for a hoJ.
· fd_By ·dlnner' i*ffY. :'"='
'
· ; · Larry 'Pi&lt;;bns h!ld prayer before
· ~lie dinner ,utd Jackie ·Rped presetiie4. P9CJIIS and . readingi ' including
"Wbaa is Cbristm..S?", '"Ibe ~iJbt
After Christmas" and "God's Perfect
Plan." Polnsetti"" were presented to
all those presen! by· Ruth and Ed
D~rot.
•
Attending. we11:1 .Jim and Jackie
Red, Ray and Mary Birchfield, Lar- '
ry arid Paula Pickens, Terry and.Tina ,
McG,.ire,,Bill;l)nd Becky A~ber~r, ·.
Rpn and O.arlotte Hanning, Everett

Better Health Club holds party

mlttena,

GIVING • Reacll the Children Mlnlstrlea, In
M!~~;::~~to: dlatrlbute toya,
e~~pa,
tc
.and toothpaste and books. Their
conjuttctlon with the Meigs County Human Ser·
mothers alao received a gift liag of food and
·v_lcee Depttrtmetit, gen 55 chlldrel1 from 23
boc*tb Chrla\lllaa onptc..14.1ftthe'-· a~ngt- l;'lctured with some&gt;of lhe.glfta - ..•
frOnt, Rilritljt80ok11 MlirY Huber, R.V. Walltlr, •
Chi.lrch l:lf ~od..Piltor R.t.Ciy Jlerr afld .
Jelinllla'CFe!ll•ns, ncond row, Betty .Kielnert .
. ca,. CloMt worura, Rava Wellcar1Betty.Klein·
. art .,Jelnnle CremUI)B, and l)elorea long " and Oelo'" Long, and back, Qlann Allen .and
Dan Wyrick. '
. cilmblnetl -'fC!rla with Reach the Children
D~or Glenn Allen end his worker• · of .

l\."u11end
1..._ •

The Rock Springs Better Health
Club held its annuill Chrisbnas. plirty
at the tl:oek Spring. United Melliodist ·
Church. ·
··
N~ncy Morris gave prayer before
the potluck dinner. Members enjoyed
a gift exchange and prepared fruit,

I

cai)dy and cookie baskets for the sick
and shutins of the community. Next "
club meeting will be held in March.
Atiending werl,' Helen Blackston,
Dorothy Jeffers, Barbara Fry, Phyllis
Skinner, . Nancy Grueser, Francis
Goeglein, and Nancy Morris.

and Gerry Lightfoot,. Ivan and EvelynWood, Ed an~ RUth 'Durst, Diane
and Eva Mtlhro~, Elizabeth
Letg.hton, Isabelle Couch, MarJone
· J?av.ts, _Charlotte Van Meter,_ Made!me Pamter and Na!'C;!t 1Moms.

Catholic wemen·
install new ·officers
•lr concl, .
P. ,,tait1no,
llnlkH, R8CI.
,
'

·'.

OIILY 1~000 Mf~'
'

· · Officers were installed at the ..
recent meeting 'o f Jhe Catholic
Y;Qmen's Club held in the Sac!M
Hean·ChUrch auditorium.
' Inst8IIed were Kris Harris, presi- ·
d~nt; Olita'Hei&amp;hton, vice president;
. Janice Curry, secretary;' . Wilma
Mansfie)d treasurer; Sue Jean fl.aub,
historian· Anna Blackwood audito~.
·and Alic~ Fieeman, reporter. " . . .
l'rl!Y~r ud ple!lge ·to ' the i'lag
opened the · meeting. The Rev. ~r. ·
Walter Heinz presented each ne~
officer with a candle symbolic of the
duties that were defined for then

respective office.
,_
·
Thank you ,notes f~r Chrisimas
remembr~nces were read.
It was announced tliat the ~ebru­
ary program will feature the "Gen- .
tlemen · F?ur" barbershop qu~tet.
~·"!~ ,w,dl be camed,.out woth a
valenllQ~ e~change.
"'
.
;' Blackwood presenulU th~ pro;
gram tev.iewing a book entitled
"Rai~d Catholic: Can You Tell" by
Ed Sttven&lt;!er. 1 . .
Refreshments were served by Ann
Colburn.' Josafina Myers. and ElSie
Sutherland.
'

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r.

State .officer to visit Pomeroy
Martin Whetstone · of New
.&lt;;at-lisle, sta.te president of the ~ons of
the American fl.evolution, will be present for the induction and lnstilllation
of'the new offieers of Ewings Chap,
ter, Son.s ofthe American Revolution.
1lte dinner mcetins will be held at
the Meigs· Historical Museum, 144
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
Elected pe\11 president was Jaines
Henry j.ochary, formerly of 114
High Schooi.P&lt;1!11eroy; nowliving in
. j\mesville. 'Other officers elected
\vere Roy L. Holter, Pomeroy, vice
. "president'; Keith D. Ashley, secretary

If you think our new bright green

and registrar;' William K. Beegle,
· Gallipolis, treasurer; Myron E. Jones,
Jr., Oak Hill. historian: and the Rev.
James aanna&gt; Oak Hill, chaplain.
John R. Kauff, of Point Rleasant.
W.Va. is the past p{esident and will .
opeiJ the ceremony.
The program will be conducted ~y
Michael Struble of Syracuse.
, Ewin~s Chapter of the Sons of the
American Revolution has l(mcmbeFship of 51 individ~als who must
prove that their ancestor served in the
American Revolution.

sign.is ~ttention-grabbing,_ take·a
·look atthis offer.

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·~~~~~~~-

:Austin
. Johnson celebrates .2nd birthday ·
A:ustil! ' Johnsal! celebrate4 hi~
. ~pnd binhday recently with a par· ·
Jy II the home of his parents, Van and
-Marlene Johnson.
;:. Others attending and prescntin!
gjfts and cands to him were Ju11ser
and Grace Johnson. Jason Liole,
Minnie YounJ, Pam Fenwick and
Sherry, Milly and Zach Kisfter ~nd
. :ousty, Mindy Risp. Travis and
:.Nikki Butcher, L~ Ann llld Jessica
.Tacksoll, Megill) Evans. David Sig·
mlfll, Debbie l!ld Zach olue.
Sendlausill$ were leidl, ICiren
· and Niclt a.le. A Winnie the. foooh ·
cake wa.• served with ice cream.

•

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,.c overage areas. For details,
call

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360° Communications

Wireless One Network is ·now 36QO Communications.
·'

105l EasrState Street • Athens, Ohi.41• (614) 59:2-49U
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Pomeloy • lllddl1port, Ohio

~Ostrich-like

bird captured

Aposse of lllimal control o~
and a abcriff's deputy set out to Cipture the flst-movin&amp; emu after a res~ job.
• Peter J. Thomas, 31, was found ident spotted it runninaloose Sllllr·
: passed out on the floor of the Jersey day in this town 80 miles northeast of
' Shore Coin Shop by police respond- Los Anaeles. .
. ing to an alllf1no Saturday morning.
"This was our ftnt emu." said
. " He was very intoxicated.'' Lt. Gary Pani Lee,.an animal control officer.
''They'~ not easy to c.atch. They're
: Schaffer said.
~ery
meljll. they' re fast and they're
Police found damaaed dOQIJ and
aggressive
animals."
·
windows on neighboring ~tores and
, believe Thomas may have been .
Officers spotted the feathered,
, thwarted breaking into them. There flightless fugitive just before sunwere bl~tains on the carpe~m down, but it disappeared into the
injuries be apparently received in the desert darkness.
Sunday morning, the group set out
break-in, police said.
Thomas was charged with bur- · for a roundup. They cornered the S; glary and attempted theft.
foot-tall bird with a picltup truciC
while animal control officer Don
HESPERIA; Calif. (AP) - Ani- Wilcox lassoed it. His 11-year old
' mal control officers squared off .son, Jeremy, looped the bird's right
against an ornery emu, lassoing and foot. The two practice tearn·roping as
·
·corralling the osuich-like bini after it a bobby.
"We
get
the
wild canle once in a
took a weekend romp.
OCEAN CITY, N.J. (AP) -

• Police say a burJIIr fell asleep on the

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MALIBU, Calif. (AP) - Robert
Downey Jr. is getting rave reviews in
• court-orllercd drug rehab program.
: The Oscar-nominated actor is ail
''enthusiastic participant" in the program, a progress report·disclosed in
~urt Wedn~y.

. · "So far, $o good. I do want to congratulateyouonyourefforts,andalso
. Jet you know it' isn't over yet,"
Municipal Court · Judge Lawrence
· Mira told Downey, who looked fit in
·a dark suit during the brief hearing. .
Downey was sentenced Nov. 6 to
'!hree years' probation for drug and
weapons charges and ordered to a
live-in drug rehab program for about
three months. .
·
.
Downey, 31, must continue to
pass periodic drug tests and allend
self-help programs as an outpatient,
'even while filming on location in
New York and Georgia in the coming
months, the judge said.
The actor received an Oscar nomination for "Chaplin" ( 1992).

,I
I

NEW YORK (AP) - If Tea
Leoni makes it after all, she may have
Mary l}oler Moore to thank.
The slar of NBC's new comedy,
"The Naked Truth," will be joined by
Ms. Moore in recurring role on the
show, the network said Wednesday.
Ms. Moore will film four episodes
·as Ms. Leoni's mother. Ms. Leoni
. plays a tabloid newspaper columnist;
George Wendt ("Cheers'') plays her
boss.
Ms. Moore, of course, is used to
the newsroom from her seven years
starring as an associate TV producer
on "The Mary l}oler Moore Show"
in tl!e 1970s.
"The Naked Truth" was cancefed
after one season on ABC. It has been
picked up and revamped by NBC,
· which is placing it in the plum
Thursday night time slot after ''Sein·
feld" at9:30 p.m.
-DAfNGERFIELD, Texas (AP) - .
Rodney Dangerfield is .finally gelling .

a

[Tali·ban overrun strategic
~ air ba$e, prQvinclal capital
.
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wu

'KABUL. AfgbaniiiU (AP) -,. ·
U.N. onvoy Norbert Holl said aeuessaid.
~Taliban soldiers said they broke
necotiations would resume next
Hundreds of heavily armed Tal ~
: through the front line north of . month.
ibln soldiers roamad the dusty streets

•

we can to ban it." ·,
How the city might halt the match,
planned for Manhattan, wasn't clear.
In October, New York Gov. George
Pataki reluctantly signed a !?ill legalizing "combative spons" and placine
them under state regulation.

=11•111
'-•au

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SNOW
REMOVAL

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: . SEOUL. South Korea (AP) -:-liouth Korea's governing party apotngized today' for railroading .&amp;labor
;bill thro~gh Parliament, b~t stopped
)lhofl of'promi~ing to rewrite .it, as
&lt;;trikers demand.
: The apology marked a step baCk

Dangerfield will serve as grand
marshal of the parade and receive a
key to the city. Produeers decided to
premiere Dangerfield's new movie in
Daingerfield because of the similarity ~tween the names. '
·

racism, it was decide!!.
of a family member in Alabama
The camp voted to purch~ a where a 'amp is. named for him.
canopy tol!$sist in holding· its second Members voted to pay fot copies of
annual Memorial Day commemora· ·the picture to be made.
.
iion at the Meigs County Courthouse. · A report on the progress on the
, It was reported that the ~amp !las Chester Courthouse restoration was
.receh&gt;ed a .veteran's monument. to •iven by Ron 'Eastman. .
·
place. in Bald Knobs Cemetery for
Myron Jone$qoted that there is no•
· Pvt. Keyes. ·
· ·, •; . mar~~ to ~omm~moratc Camp Ota·The camp passed several resolu- · moniltn; J~kson: both~ War of 1812
lions one of which calls for Ohio's a~d a CIVIl Wit tnductton camp. He
preparation to participate in the funer- . noted that the lo;x:al. citizenry were
al services of Daisy Anderson, the un~ware of'the Ioc:at.ton .of thts camp
last surviving Union soldiers' widow. unlllllo.w and a dtseuss10n. was held
She is about95 years old lind lives in on plactng a commemorative markColorado.
·
er .there.
,
·
The commander talked about
The speaker for the c:;cnirig was .
Middleport's plans to celebrate the Ed Nu~r of Little Hocking: • Civil
town's 200th anniversary. Participa· · War. reenactor. and sculcr, and a laY
tlC)ll will be decided on as plans are mmtster ~~ reenactm~nts. He pre·
finalized by the village.
sented a shde presentation on the Bat· It W'!S reP.orted that the camp has tl~ o~ Kessl~r s Cros~ Lanes m West
located an original picture: of Col. . Vtrgmta.
. . · ..
,.
Emerson P. Brooks in his Civil War · Refreshments were provtde(\ by
uniform. The picture is in the hands . Alan Holter. The next mcctmg will be
on March 10.

'Wood' opens. Friday at Dairy Barn in Athens
The 'ollection of artists proves when it WliS dcc.idCd " to 'hangc the
"Wood", acollUliunity gallery f~·
the
diversity in woodwor~ng the · focus to local wO(Id· vtists," says
turing 13 Athens County artists opens
·Friday at the Dairy Bain Southeast· Dairy Barn visitor will experience Aaron Fine, program dinlctor at the
· em Ohio Cultural Ans Center on W!len they walk tht'ough the door. Dairy Bam. Pine &amp;tddi, " The Dairy
according to Urano.
· ·'
Barn is so,mindrul of the communiQairy Lane in Athens. ·
. :
"There
is
everything
from
David
ty
when planning ellhibit&amp; I!KI eduOne oftbe unique features.of
cxhibi' is all the artists arc ~~ lfostetler's nationally known figura- · cational programs that showcasin1
Athens County. Susan Urano, the live sculptute to functional boat&amp; that local artists·was just one more way to
executive director of the Dairy Bam are cJQieltl)' crafted with fine .historic give back to the comm1111i1Y." ·
say&amp;, • The commuail)' pllery is Our deiail by Da~id Callahan and David · "Wood" will be on exhibit tllrouJft
M~r~:h 2. The Dairy' Bn is open
chance to allow off the local talent or WalcefiCid:" '
Eihibits thlr showcase wood have Tuesday through Sullday II ~.m.- .5
Which ihere is .plellty." Urano lldds
a
hiiiOI)'
at the Dliry Blm thai is Over_ p.m. Admission is $3 for ldult&amp;.
there J. also a lot of intemt in local
a
decide
old. llqinning in 198.5, S2.50foriiUdenllud-iorcitizens.
..po.so a" wood show for the c:otn·
America~~
Ccin"""DPP'•Y Works in Dairy Bam memben_ll't ldmlued
munlty by
comm~ mdc perWood, ·a jurlld Gbibitioli of, c:on- .tw or cluqe.
,
l'eclleiiiC."
temponry
woodworkia&amp;
wu
on
"Wood"
is
lpOIIIOfed
by
Nicole
. The lr1ilts participlliq in WOCJII
-show Connlh ODS, S.. and David u,a•.
~ Ora Andenon, Tom Bennett, exhibit Ill. the
Mn Burhans, David Callahan, follo-.tin · 191hlll989.~ clricbr,Huwtbrdwln,ObioArta
CoUneil, Fecplu Balik, DwiJhl IJ.
Hlrold EdWinla,, David ·Holletler, Coli1111tpotlll' Warb hi ~

me

.,_.TIIia

rea.

. Sleven ltnlp(; Bob Lachnlln. John
t

lillll. MuiCI'IO n~ Mlc:hael
V._~, David ~ IIIII

...

,

J:r.o. . . .

ttnil wood lllilla hal Ill over t1t1 Rttlhetford r - . Whl•'• MiD,
country 1101 . . dte Aflpllldtlla Woloh111 Lwilber ' IIIII HOllie

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Analllilllliiifl"dlltlddl(•

ln+o•l!llcnl Ceatc .

jj
949 3 7

Apology m~rks step back
from l(im's hard-liiJIJ stand

respect."

Grim·installs '97 officers of groof}

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!hi'

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

me

' ~

.
sal&lt;l Kwon Young-gil. head of 811 ille·
gal labor federation spearheading
protest strikes. .
j
· "As the· head of state, President
Kim must 'think about saving the
economy, not his faee," he said. .
· Union leaders held protest rallies

·

hers anci supporters were arrested.
~~1":.il:'w1:': ~Tci· a~
'In the southern indusuil!l city of 40411 4ure1 CIIH Road,
Ulsan,' 15,000 suikers rallied, butlat- . Pomenly, Ohio, to ..u for
oaeh the following
er dispersed peacefully. Eight. thou- cotla1eNI:
•·
sand more sinkers prote,sted tn two
1113 FORO RANGEA
other cities, but no violence was
1FTBRto•IDU11337113
reported . ·
.•
.
Tha Farmer• Bank and

K
.
,

enly thatJ he law could be changed reach the Roman Catholic''Myongtater ifand when problems arise in its. dong Cathedral, _where the union
implement~tion.
.
. leaders have set up headquarters.
•
: "It is n.ot even worth consideration- • Pol.ice fired seve..t volleys of tear
.,..
41 all. We are prepared for a pro- gas 10 d)spersc the demonstrators,
but
longed struggle and we are confident the confrontation vJas· niilder. than
th
. at public-opinion is on our side," . Wed....,sday's, when JSOun.ion mem- .
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U.S.D.A. CHOI(f

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steW BeeF
':orCUbe
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Pound

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strikes later snowballed into the
largest labor protest in South Korea's
history.
.
The government e~timates the
h
'k
· he ' 22 d d
stn \IS, now m t tr n ay, ave
costan already ailing economy about
$2.9 .billion in lost production and
export earnings.
'·

..NATO se~ks. relat.iOnfbip with
·Rus:
sia 'as soon ~$. poss·ible' · ·
.
'

VIENNA, Austria (AP) - With
·NATO looking-to expand into {onner
Warsaw Pact countries, the alliance's
secretary-general ..said today that it
Seeks strmfg ties with Russia "as
soon as 'possible, but~ profound as
possib)e."
.·
·
• Jal'i~r Solana will open negotiations in Moscow on Monda&gt;: to,lry .to
tonvince Russia -that it has ·m'ore to
gain by coopellting with the Atlantic
allianceothanby resisting its eastward
,~:xpansion. ' · ·
. ··
·
Speak.ing 1\l, reporters today.
Solana refused to giv~ details on how
a NATO-Russia, relationship 111ight
work . He said sue !ies woold be
· g. ·
•WI'de-rangm
" We want to construct a bilateral
. relationship with Russia as solid as

possible." Solana said. "It'-s good for
us; good for Russia, we t~ink . lfs

pro~ouncemcnts as well as calls for

compromise.
In Moseow 'today,· Defense Min·
good .for Europe."
Sol~na, ·on the first visit of a iS!Cr Igor Rodionov said Russia is not
NATO chief to neutral Austria. said likely to repeat Cold :War-era tit-for.
.
he would like to hiivc :fNATO-Rus- tat diplomacy by ~ormmg
a new mt1·
sia relationship "on track" ~y July, ii•"' alliance in response to NATO
-J
. wh'cn the 16-'llation military alliance growth.
.
. meets· in Madrid.
"We probably won't establish a
NATO intcrids to start n~ing pro- new defensive union to counter
posed new members in July and • NATO," he said; "Otherwise, we will
admit 'hem bf 1999: Hungary, the recreate somethins that for decades
C1.cch Rcpubhc and Poland 11rc seen had tortured and threatened not just
Europe but the entire· world."
as the most likely initial candidates.
Russia's political and . military
Two mpnths ago, Rodionov had
,leaders oppose NATO expansion, suggest·A Russia might respond by
warning it would upset · Europe's ~rcaJing""its Ollfn military alliance;
·militaov
·, balance, but have been · ignoring treaties on nuclear weapons'
.unccrlain about bow to respond.
reduction and even pointing its m\s·
siles at Eastern European counuics
Russian officials have issued harsh

Pub·11., ...._Ice
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lourou Over/Under louroeo
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-Sun11t Heme

::::: Pubi~Notice
~o!?r.E5.:~~~ ~~l~~~~::

. from President .Kim Young-sam •$ in four cities attended by tens of thou.
· The new law makes it easier. for .
hard-line $tand and followed violent. saltds of - workers demanding tbe employers to lay off workers, adJUSt
&lt;:lashes Wednesday between police · law's repeal. ·
·
.
work hours and hife substitutes for
itnd 40,0()0 workers and students in
· The group said 269,000 workers strikers, while'delaying for up to five
:&gt;eoul.
'
were on. strike; the · Labor Ministry years key labor ·bene.fits, including
• "It is veov iegrenable that the revi· said the figure was only 81 ,SOO.
the right to form trade unions.
'J
.
'
.
hParl'
sion of the law wS notsmooth .. . for ·
About .10,000 workers rallied
lt'was rammed throug
tament
t;hichi am very sorry," Lee Hong· today· at a downtown park in Seoul: on Dec. 26 in a secret pre-dawn ses. j(oo, chairman ofthe.gover:ning New Joinin~ the p~test for the first time . ,;iQn attended only by governing par·
orea Partv, ""ld . ~.t a. n~w• ,coofer." ....... ~ .JO.u.mahsts ftom JJ· nauonal · iy.members. · .
•
' .,...
' "'
-.....
w·IIh'm hours,' ·wo"'
re ·walk
ence.
newspapers. A .brief pushing match
...ers we
•
: Lee ruled out the possibility of resulted when demonstrators tried to ing off their jobs in some of the coun·
.ewriting the law "for now." Hi: said .shove·through a police barricade to try 's key eKpOrt industries, and the

CHICAGO (AP) - Millionaire Branson, whose own global balloon ing; Fossen may need 'to cross Russ"
adventurer Steve Fossett swept attempt failed earlier this month, ian airspace after flying over China.
toward the North African coasttoday wrote to Libyan lellder Moammar
Russian officials have balked at
in his quest to be the first balloonist Oadhafi to ask permission for Fossell tbe flyover because they were wor- ·
.to fly around the earth without stop- to fly over the North African nation. ried that .Fossen might interfere with
·ping.
,
•
·
.
"We are doing everything we can air. traffic.
,
.
"He's humming along at 125. to avoid Libya now," Keni!ier said:
In .1995, two American balloonists
mph." said BQ Kemper, manager of "But as soon as we knew that we were.ltilled when the Belarus military
were going to take this soutl)erly shot them dpwn as they entered the
the Solo Spirit balloon project.
Fossett was 12.5 miles south- track, I contacted Richard Jiran5on.'' country's airspace without permissoutheast of the Azores islands this
Branson, he said, received per· sion during an international race. ·
morning, Kemper said from project mission from the Ubyan I~ for an
Fosseu is .unable to steer the halheadquarters at Loyola University in_ J)vertl.ight and now has t&amp;k!:n up the loon but can sometimeS change direc- '
Chicago. Posseu was expected to cau!d: for Fossett. .
. don by adjusting his altiiUde.
cross the Strait of Gibraltar later
F'osscn's current flight-path would
The balloon has been flying at
. today.
.
take him over Moroeco, 'Algeria. nearly ~.000 feet, which dropped the
: temperature outside the capsule to .as
· . The 52-year-old Chicago securi- · Nige~, Chad, Sudan and Egypt,
ties trader lifted off from St. Louis on
Possell had planned to fly across low as 30 degrees below zero. Project
Monday.
western Russia, which has not grant- · staff say Fossett was not liother'ed by ·
As he neared the African coast, .cd permission, but changed his course the cold, even though .tile 'capsule's ..
Fossen got diplomatic help from one llihen the-wind shifted. Kemper said two heaters had been operatingerrat-·',
.. of his.rivals. British 'ty~oon Richard lalks. with the Russians are ~onlinu- iC:ally.

,·

. "No Job Too Large or Too Small"

11

. NEW YORK (AP) -· Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani hopes to KO an
"extreme" fighting match scheduled
forMarch.
· .
"I think extreme fighting is dis- .
gusting, it's !torrlble," Giuliani said
Wednesday. "We will do everything

Balloonist nears North Africa coast

Robert ' Grim. past Ohio Department commander, installed tbe 1997
officers, Keith Ashley ascomm.? ·
and Tad Cucklcr of Shade, when;
Brooks-Grant Camp 7, Sons ofUnion ;
Veterans of the Civil War, met in regular session.
During the meetint conducted by·
Ashley, it was n01ed that the U.S.
Corps of Engineers ·is planning to
hold. hearings ori the proposed loading facility on the site of the Battle of
Bullington Island. A leuer was read
. from Rep. John Carey sharing the
· camp's opposition to the facility.
The recent turmoil in Mary.land
over the use of the Confederate flag
on vanity license plates was discussed and Ashley pointed out that
tbe official position of ·the Sons of
Union Veterans is that the Confeder·
ate flag is an historical symbol1nd
has legitimate use as su~h. 11)e S&lt;;llll ·.
. of Confederate Veterans arc using it
· appropriately- not as·. a symbol of

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Stepe • Stalra, Railings. Patio Fum~ure, Areplac8
~ems. Plent~ Hangers, Trellises &amp; Iota of other lltuflll

1i Trl
0p, m,
Removal

· Afghanistan's capital today, overrunMunaqi wamed they ""ill fail of Chari.• searching the homes of
: ningaSiralegicmilitarybttseandcap- unless the anti-Taliban alliance rormergovernmentcommanders for
•
&amp;
! turi!J8 a provincial capital. .
accepts the 'faliban's stri~ "ersion of ·collaborators and weapons.
~
• Taiibal\ soldierS in tanks and Islamic ru~. somethina it bas so fit
M~ was forced to flee Kab- Stump Grinding
; ~orcd personnel carriers rumbled ref~ t~,ltoban
.
hi·,; . · ~,lastbanSepterilber when advancing
Ownei':
: into 1~ air f&lt;irce base 111 Baghrarn,
• '"' out
contro1roug , two- uui . soldiers swept into the capi- - Ronnie JOIIIII.,
: about 30 miles north of Kabul, then tbinls of Afghanistan, while the tal. For several weeks Massood and
; pressed noith. another $ix miles and alliance rules the northern one-thinl, his troops were trapped in tbe Pan. capturC&lt;ICharikar, the capital of Par·
The loss o' Baahrarn is more a • jshit Valley, 90 miles north of Kab: wan province.
. ' psycllological blow to
anti-Thl- 1!1. .
:' ReporterS and Witnesses returning iban alliaoc:e than a big s~gic 1~.
They eventually pushed the Tal- ·
Before 1t fell, Baahram was bemg iban back toward the capital and for
' from the front line said the Tall ban
-. A711RYAN PLACE
::force me~ only mild resislince from • defended bY M~sood's soldicn. nearly two months the front line
IIIDOI.EPOIIT
:former. govemrilent soldi~ defend· However, fi~w Jets .once depl~yed retiiatned unchanged.
.·
11!2.zr72
•
: •ng the two sites. ·
at :Paahram atrport have lonJ !IInce
In recent we~lts the Taliban have
1:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
~: . The 'lliliban Said it decided to been moved north to saf~.· made significant gains, pushina for:,aunch tbe offensive because U.N.In recent days, fighter .jets· mer government soldiers further
Wll••ws
: 'Sponsored peace talks this Week in believed to bel?ng to Dostum have. a'!Ia)' ·from Kabul.
. ·
AbOut two weeks aso the 1llliban
. :fleighboriqg ~istan llppe&amp;rcd to be .bombarde&lt;l tbe capital, but ~y flew
• ~oing nowhere.
~ .
.
out.of ~orthem Mazar-e-Sharif, about launched a surprise a.•sault on Mas·
:0 "When we understood that the 300 mtles away.
.
sood's forces, pushing them out of
;,e~ negotiations were not workins.
. The Thliban troops said they car Qarabaq, a strategic town on the road
·.we staried our offensive," lnforma- .tured at least 100 enemy soldters tn · to Baabram.
.
:)ion Mi~ister Amir Khan Muttaqi told 'today's offensive: It .'!!'asn',t dear
The fighting sbbsided as the·U.N.
how many ca_sualnes et~ stele suf. tried to cobble together a peace
:reporters atthe front line.
:• During .three days of· talks that fercd, but wttne~scs ~d they saw meeting.
·)&gt;egan Monday, Taliban represen!B· several dead bodi~s on the road from
. Today, the Taliban were seen
':tives sat across the negotiating table Baahrarn to Chankar.:
moving fresh troops to the new front
eOrlveways
} rom their rivals- an alliance led by · . In Chartkar, residents stayed line 36 miles north of Kabul. At least
-!ousted rnil.itary . ~hief Ahmed Shah . indoors and ~hopswerlshunered, but 18 pickut&gt; true"' and 20 buses lo~
•Parking Lota
. ::Massood, and no.rthern :wa~lord there was ltttle fightr~g. as former with soldiers were IJeading toward .
•Etc•
;i'R~hid Dostum - but accomphshed g?vernment ' troop.s ~ac~ated ,.the Charikar. .
Call An.....me
_
f itde.
·
.
.
cny before the Talt~. ~ve&lt;!. wtt· .

a

some respect.
The bug-eyed comedian was due
in East Texas for tonight's world pre·
miere of his latest movie, "Meet Wally Sparks," and the townspeople are
going bonkers.
.
"It's gelling kind of wild around
· here," said Debbie Poe, organizing a
parade that will snake around town
and down newly christened Radney
Dangerfield Boulevard.
·
.
"\\fe're tickled about him com.ing." she said of the 2,655 residents
of this town hidden in the hilly pine
forests 130 miles east of Dallas.
City Manager Kevin Carruth said:
"Maybe we'll both get some

The Deily Sentinel• hge t

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

· ~----~~----~--~--------~--------------------------------------~------~~~--------------------------------------~----------~--

'-·-

while but the emu· is really out
lhcre," Wilc;ox siid.
·
Officera said the binllried to bite
and kick as it
restrained.
The owner claimed the bird on
Tuesday. When asked if the wayward
emu had a name, Ms. Lee replied:
"Well, we bad few names for him '
that day...

·Judge tells Downey it's not over yet

}

_Thuraday, J•u.y 18, 1117

Thureday, Jtlnu81'Y 11, 1117

614-992-3470

na

Pick up dlie.iled
oppllanen, batteries,
· many metals • ·
motor blockL
814-992-4025 8 ....

obeVII set forth.

Sentinel
Reference Deed: Volume
Public Notkie
240, page 959, Melga
Classified a
r.te1at County Sheriff
County Deed Recordo .
Being the same reel
W...nF:Sheeta,
992-2156
eetete deaerlbed In deed
Attorrll\' for Pllllntlffl
from Ohll! Valtev Laundry, (119,16,233tc .
•
Inc. to G. Bruce Teoford of
ANNOUNCEf,1UH S
Public Notice
·record In Votu,e 314, Jllll"
203, Deed Records olllleifta
c
Ohl0
•
NOTICE TO VEHICLE
005
PeraOIIIIB
ounty,
•
·
Porcet No. 11Hl23DEALERS
lOUR
Propirty Addreu: 216
Seoted II Ide lor' the
SWEE114EAAr
Eo at Second Street, purellue of a mo11111 meate
AS CLOSE AS
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
delivery IJIM vehicle will be
~RPIIOIIE
PROPERTY APPRAISED received by t~e Melga .
cou...
_._, comm tee1onore ol
1:900·158· net
AT $20,000 AND CANNOT
Ell. 822!1
BE SOLD .FOR LESS THAN · their oHice, Court~ouee,
"
TWO· THIRDS OF THE Second Street, Pomeroy,
$2.99 pe1 min.
APPRAISED VALUE.
~!o 417M ~~1D~ ~hm.,
Uuatbe t8yra.
3
TEAMS OF SALE
-ruary • -• •
tn
Seov·U (619)&amp;15-8434
. Y.he
aucceaalul ot 1:00 p.m. at ..ld oHice,
purcha-. 10
hlo opened and raid aloud for 40
Glvei\Viy
bid
be the following:
on the ·"lfot Shot•, or opproved 3 Froo -ll!ono. lwlcl Old. 2 ·
cnh or by 1 .C1 u~eleiit; defiYIIov V8hlcle blocko. 1 blocklgroy, 2407 Mon·
poyoblo 10 t ·
of ''hnlng rot Avenue, anytime before '
I:GOJ&gt;m: llol&gt;lr collr s.n-;
d
10% of the
on oven
of auch accepted
Con1011 TV'a far parll, S1Mftia
&amp;GE.304-81J2.2741.
.
but In no event Ina
$1,000, The betence of
Me!gt Cow dog .&amp; 5 puppMoo, good
ahell be
on Aging, woll:h dog. 814-2!6-.1041.
pa·~•obtcta•y~o ~": Inc., (It•) 182•21ft. Dog To Good Homo: 5 .,.,. Old '
lptclfloatlono moy be Aollloalian Ul•ad. Nice Nttdt
obtolned from· the Melge
•••·2•5-5135.
thlrcll
(213) Southwllt
of Lot No. _One 1 :;,~uiThlrid
purehaahalt bll
"'"'the
dill.
or
confirmation
of
County
Commlaalonara
Ful
blooclod
otw malt R o Hundred l'lventy·four 11241 .,
to pay lnlefeat on
of ·• •kl VII'- ol Pomeroy,,
unpol~ llalance 11110%
:E~;c=:;: ~~~: 11 110oc1 horrurly, eo•-8112-4~3. .
being thlrtv-ihl'lll,ail~ on..
onnum from the dille ol
. (1141 ee2-21es. 0ronae co1 MW~ng o ·' ¥ car..
muatlile tholr own C.n lot locoltd by coiUIItl (114)' ·
lhlnf(33-1/$1 feel on llioond confirmation of.t~e uleto
ltrllt of uld Vlllago and the ctate u0:
· llde 1~11 )le'
1
extending ot thit width
marked 11 "ipld Part CI10W Plft Gororioft Sliolll•d
toward Front (llllnlltrllt
~- mfrede wt.'th'!_ elgofht
Ve~lcle" and PIIP91K (11141-311oll11
.
: to • dllltanoe of eighty-live
v.ya om ne _,.
melted or
to
the
1851fML
llotgo Commlaalonera To Gl.. owoy AKC Retlllerod
·
·
office by the oforeukl date Claw ~· 11 .. ~ · ·
CASE NO. 86 cv 041
In purauanca to an orctar
of
directed to me In the
. above entitled ectlon, I will
offer for aale ot public
aucllori at the front door of
lha Cowlhouae In Pomefov,
"
Ohlci, In the obove nomed
oounty, on ·Frlctay, the 14th
"'•y
of February, 1""'7,
.,., 11
10:00 o.m. the following
deacrlbed .reol 111111 •
eltuated In the VIH•II" of
Pomwoy, County of Melga
and &amp;q~e of Ohio: ·
·
Tho Weet one-third (113l
ol Lot No, One Hundred
twenty Five 11281 o·nd the
~~~eM-third 11131 of Lot
No. One Hundred twenty
Four (1241• and bll Ing In •II
thirty th- ond one-third
133.'tllll f"t on Second
$trfti; ' being the eame
or=~•• convoyed by
E
EbeNblch .and wn.
to Cherlae Ebertbec~, 11
Truatee, by dood doted
Jon¥ory 10, 1838 , and
reoorded In Volu1111 142,
=-510, of, the AHOnle of
of Melgl Co~nty,

•11

.r:::.• .

30

:r;:n:,.:,::

•

au-.

:

..a.-

· ·

e"""""

and tlml.

To good home· imau malt

Any contract aworded
Uftllar thlt lnvltetlon lor
bide Ia upacted to be
funded by 'I grant from ~
Ohio Department or
Devalopment Community
Oevelopmenl lllook Grant
llftilllm. Neither the United
8tli11 nor any of ' Ita
Dlparlmenll, llgenolea, or
am;toyeee II. or will be, •
llllrt of thte tnvlllllqn for ,
.,ldo . or any reeulllng

ilourodotl, - ··
llld ,.
houoo·l•olnod, lli•9 111111 lida' •-

8••·!185-3357.

'
' :
Two 1 Wttk Old Beoelo I'Upo, 1 : ··-

Milt.

Melee

·

1Fomoit. 114·•·

.

,

A ..

•
Found: molo tOI;toatr.a ·;'
cot, golelon .,... Wllllo on olleav' ~ '
fool, Sprint """""' """""" vi· "

""*"·
·•1..,..1*.. · ......,,•t
FOUitO· Srnel ,...
_._ ·-

.....

County ,

.. 111 Letar~
.. .

,

rflhl to ....,a • ,._ _, a ruat wllllue colar. V,..,.. ol

all 1111111 fM1W any po;t
thelwlor ....... thabell

121 '-

· 4

....... C••IIlf

. ·

. - . \1

.

..

.

fill

12,

.. ·

' Cau::lulti .,_ ...

I,

i

•

•
· ':"
,
1.111 ...,.. !
104· ~-

t_. _·lllteiHiell
·LIOiT: -~· ...._
_
--.1. cottar."'-rd.
Chrlll!UIIW; Clllll . .

f1~~1('·14;11J:

•

Rayburn Rd I AI 2, 110'\-4'1:1· •

0t

.1.\.·

.

.. •
;

LOST: OoiiiFtMft ~ncNr, ~

Cemmlllll,..,. rtt&amp;JW the

illltl f.,
purpn-.

! ·

........
60 LOit ..• .., F-

GOtibiCL
T~e

T

'

.

,J; .

~ '

a·~~~·e~P: ·.)if

I.

. . ...

&lt;..

.

irlot ~- ~ ' ldl
.,.: ~· .
;~:z-:m. 11N4·1•"· ti~- I• ·
~h
,I

�...

-------··- ..

·-~-··--

-----~---

··-~-~~- ~-

.

~

-- _______ _ ---·---........

....... -.... ... - ....

~

•

1117

a.ntlnel•

ACRDU

PHILLIP .

=~­

~-== ·. &amp; .....
I~,.,.- ·--a.ra.

ALDER

t:a .....
s ,, n

• food
c.r.'iii•••iii

14 ... - 11 turn ...

• Rcasra'toOII .

tUI

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

.. Dlltllllliany

11 A 1

.

t4oll ~
. Wldo ~ EIIC·
. 814.

• J 2

r1c. 10:\;,m ..., ~Aitor5 .II.

"" . . . . .--IQ

.._,. r

1

• 7.

Advance. DEADliNE : 2:00 p.m.
1M . , before lhe ad 11 to run.

llrlndiF odilion • 2:00 p.m. Frldor.
.....,. edition·- 10:00 a .m. Sal·

origin, or 1111' irlllltloo •10
make 8l'lf' IUCh-........ 101,

......

llmblon twdllcf.mll·.·

Pomeroy,
Mldd~

TNt new pspr 'Mil ~

• VIcinity

--ltllorraol-

'""""'ogly ICC8III

-~~~ln-oltl1e

411101

2074.

Ntfllmlodtllltal~ lllfll
~in this •• ., plpl" .

_......, __

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

u..-..

AKC
~PIO Fomor, 1 112
"teart Houaebrokan, In Seaaon

Boat.-

410 Houses r0r Rent .

-In

Helping your friend

2--IOOifl, ....... Ntw Haven, single prage, lull
ba-~ front pareto, 1'8ot
pump, driveway and carport

'By PltiUip ·At•er
3 Bedroom, Hie&amp; Yard &amp; Garden,

·
201 Pllril D.rlve·Two 1tory, 3 bedrooma, full baoornont &amp; gorage,

Drugs Or Sm~klng Ae,lerences

OWnonds, Antique
Gok:i Seeking outgoing Individual for
1, Pre-,130 u .s . Currency, part-tim. AaalsWnl Activities

~

Ell:. Acquisitions .JewRy Aide, 20hours or len weekly.
• M.T. Cain Shop, 151 Sec:ond Hour~ wrv according to need 10
~. Gal.,_.s.. 1!114-..S.~2.
Include evening and weekenct

or304-87S-3d1 (JeanCauo)

equip~d kitchen;

3•4 bedroom house, FAGF.
equipP-ed kitchen, 11, conditionon. bi•• lot In PO&gt;mo- r l!oo·~
pitaland school , referenc .. r•

o;•· big l1oo1n l'ameroy nw hoo-

Furnished Efficiency Apartment
In Gallipolio S205rllo., All Ul~liea

quiref. Bo•72. Pomatow; OH.

By ownlf, 3br modular, , _ roof,

new oak cabinels, MW carpel,

new hut pump, front I rear
decks, laroe .lot, loW down par-

em A¥en.~e, GaMipol11.

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. ·Buying· aalyqe vehicles. Selling parts. 304773-5003. .
'
;..;.;..::.=.:,;_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Hon-Worll:inq Washers.~. Oryer.a,

SIDna, Relrageralora, t-reezera,
Air Condltlonera, Color T. V. 't,

IICR'o, Aloo Ju'* Cltl, 614·258·

12311.

Tcip dollar- anriquea, furniture,
gllltt, china, clocka, gold, titver,
coint. walthtt. earates. okl siDne
-)Ira. old bluo &amp; while dilhoo, old

wood boXtl, milk boltltl. Meigs
Otb)t
lllrtin.114·U92·7441 .

Counly AdverliHmtnl,

W.nred To Buy: .22 Semi A~­
lornaUc BroiNnlng AIDe, Made ·In

llltgium. 614-448..051
Wanted To Buy: Antlqufl - Fur-

nilura, 814-446-1!112.
wanood To Buy: Llnlo Tykoo
Kltehon Sot. Workahop, Playhouoo, Pooolblo Any Other l illie
Tytoo Toyo. Ploaae CaN 614·245·
5887.
Wanted To Buy : W8 Buy ·Aula's
Any Condition, 814·388·9062, Or
St4-448·1Wn'.
.
'

'ATTN: Po. Pleoaano• Poaoal po·
sitlons. Cletkl and sorters. No
experience required . BeneUta.

For 01am. aolary, and 1111ing Informollon call 1·1830) 906·5570
Old. 31170 --Bt&gt;m
=:=::.::.:.:.:::::::.._
____
AVON 1 All Aroao I Shirley
~- 30'-0JS. t 429.
Able

Avon

Representatives

' needed. Earn money Jor Chriet·
rnias bill ar homWat WOtk. 1·800.

· 882-8358 or 304-8a2.· 28•5. lnd:
Rap.
Alaaka Jobat

Earn

Up

To

130.000 In Three Monthl Fishing

Salmon. Alto Con11rucnon. C::::anMrlot. OM Fitlda And More. CoU
7 Dora 407-•75-2022

Ext.

O!I2IA02
ARE 'IQU TIRED. BORED. !lEST·
LESS?
" rou
... any
·hWI
can l1fiP.
Ira your
dnw"'...
pul
10
work il1111tphone aalea. PART-

TioiE WORK. Coli 81'4-882:7055.

Avon II ·IU tHr, No
Order, No Door -To -Doer,
--'rr, t -100-738-0188 indlalat

.... .

:~~~~~~t,~~-~
21!02- -,= -- -- badroom
,
::.:::·
P tal and achoot, reterencea re- lncluded,61..,388-1708.
qulrod, Boo 72; Pomoooy, OH.
. 1 and 2 ·~·oom
·
5 roomt &amp; bath. 2112 Uncaln ~ -~~!:;:~~~~
Manot and
Ave. $2501mo . Deposit &amp; rt ler·
in Middle·

encn. 304-e75-1385.
e room houN with bath, kicchtn,

living room, baaemenc,. gas h•t.

can

hO~fl. $20k to
~:Me-7188 X! lOB

Deadline

For

A~tplying,

January

,._. mlg.•aeclloNI home, 1.t75

sq. lt., great room, 3br, 2balhs.
c;aak teabltHtlt..·hllat pump, poff:h
&amp; ditckt, la'rcte landscaped lot
The Gallia County Board 01 MRI Meadowhllla
Sub-division.
DO lo An Equal ()ppjlrlunlty Em-

31 . !1197

Frwnd1 City Homoo, lOt:. 814·448·
pl-.
8340 or 304-675-0013. ·
vacanc~ far 1 elderly female, in Slc:lionll home. 3btdt!)DI'n. 2 full
privaiOI!omt. 31M-67H!tt:l.
batho. 41Cift, lloln Rd. Flatradl.
304-875-5880.

180 Weilted

:ro Do

Any odd joba, painting, guuera
cleaned. 814·Z.t5· 5879 or 304·

875-7112.

Fui- Tlnw,

Pori·Timo T..,.,.....o

DHIIfl Wtnotd Sot Your .OWn
........ Col I And I 814448.4110.

5 Piece BaJ:ocwn Suitt Wllh M..,
1 Bo• Sptlngo, Groet Condillon. 1121. 114-441 ·1M.
1

!8a5 Foril Allnger'Wirh Topper ,I
'
·
4x~ V-6, -Ut Auto TranornloCollle FuM lloodod, a MoL Old, o1on ~nd Top 112 01 llo10r, Now
Malo, Neutarod, Sablo &amp; Wliito, Point Jail $2,IIGO firm, 814-2158·
HouiObrokon, Doa ttou•. tncfoor 8100.
.

~~e0&amp;55E~.

.

,.

~~:e. Call After 8 P.M. 814·44a· 730

Haul Molt Any!hlngl CaN Anytime, L - lito·

Haul

s.MGe: Will

Two bed'room house. carpeted

Hie with otorogo building. Wilt

sell

on land

contract, 114· D02·

151158.

320 · Mobile Homes
for Sale

~111

and

----------1
Mobile Homes
tor Rent

....,_ Cllfl-"'"'--

at 245 Onion ~ Plfnol"'' II
now accepting application• lar
one bedtoom aparlments. Conleer management at 1M oHica

Monday through Frklar. lam·
5pn.

wo_,

Threo oocl!oGm apartmon~ Iorge
kitchen and living room,
dryer hooloup. $28&amp;nno. pluo utili~•• and $100 dopoll~ one bod·
room apanmen1, UIIOtmo. ptua
utlioloo: Tlrlrd s - Rioclrio, 011.
814-247-42112.

T-. ,_

lWin Rlvorl
·,cmoolino
oppllcatlonolor 1br. HUD-Ioibllcf.
lzed opt.""
71 hindi·

cepptt~. EOH

=:r

COncreto 1 Piaotk: Saplc Tanka,
SOO Thru 2,000 · G•llono Ron
Elflnl Entetprl•t. Jac:klo!'l: OH
1-800-537-9528.
F l -. !lnaoned oak, cut and
opll!. Ooil-od locally. 304-6 753408-Spm .

For Silo: 150 SalOl 01 tilt( Lorge
Woodburner With Blowor, Commercial ' Hobatt Mtat Saw, 1
GraYtwOn MOunt Hill," 814·448·
43«.

For

Sale: Timbe'rllne

Wood I

COal Suwe Fire Brh:k Oauble
Door 24" .......114-448·4!504 AI·
tor5:30 P.ll.

FARr,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equl~

630

Livestock

DAN'S~ING

Ac¢essor~

t233.

tbe N«&lt;ddn~
.
Jt Ia fiDe! South bu • clear oae-notrump opening delpite the IIJIIIW'ded
.dub 111it. And North should go for the
lline-trlck game rather than 1et hill
lilbll on·!he cluba. 11011 of the time .
1!e will be tablbll- trlcb, uldq
·South to 111111 only hio more.

'-ri~;..~

· ,a,eu&gt;OFc.offre
Rllt. ~!

.

~11-16

JOOQT

..

Thlnklnll be c:ou1d claim, South led a
dub. HIIINYIIr, Weat dlaclrdld ... weD,
what?
.
.
If be threw the apacle ihree, Ea81
-'d sureJ,y 'fin thll trick and return
1 diamond. How would be bow that
Weot'1 lllit wun't' bea ileJ by tbe ace-

,

0

'!

:

NQPQDIOP :
'' . •

UTOHDL

VGWK

•

I

.

DY ' T

''

WKX

·~··· '

.·.'

•

....
......
...••.
0~

UKGIH . '

s

PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "The rtght to be hHRI ~ 1101 ~ Include
Cite~ to be 1lkln Mriouoly.' - ~H. ~... ·
..

'

"

I

DYOTDI

I·

II

12 I I

R I WL S

I'B 0I L IY NI

5
I

........

.....·,

...-··
• .. 1

1=_:;:,' .

A philosophy professor told

the class that a disagreement ·
is the shortest 'distance be· .

. 1-,_,_.,.;l;~j. :E. y.~ ,;_.:;~. :l:.,l. . . l ;~~~;.; ~;~~~~~q=t.

1---'-....L......IL--...L..,...I......I I'OU dtv.lop from 11op No. 3 below.

kop~non-..-. 3!M-I~!IICI,

l~ts

!888 l'llntlac Flroblrti; V-8 IU• ---..l&amp;\4-SE"'•..,..~NT~...:.;:..
, '"
·~~R~~

IOITIIItiC. lltat:k with I•"'"- $3100
080, 814-742.zl57.

-•• ..........-n~
,
.:::::.;:.:..:..::::=::.:.----·1IJI1eondltlonol
Mfttimo guaran1ee.
~OCII rt~ri!OCel lurmthod. El·
· ~~tll!iottod 11175. Call ' (814) 448·
0170 Or 1·100·287-057~ . .Rogoro

-PI~~.,.

Full bed &amp; mattrooo S5~. Crib
•10. Bullntil $5. ShHII ot•,fimlnooo4d-304-882·2741•

King alz,e walarbed,, c1nopy

tension Plus 11: Gen11i1 11 ,811 ,

Go'!'eo, 4 Sago CD Gomo•. 2
Conrrolltri. $300. Call 30&lt;-e7fi.
3742.
.

w.

mlrtofl, f:lhlll , dre•••· 2 liatt
oiolldo. 11111co offer. 304-llfS:

.

,
.t-

. ·•

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'~

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Saga Gonotil with Sage c!j' Eo·

GOOD USED ~PPLI~NC.ES
w..her•. dryera, relrlgeratorl,
rang,a. Skagoa Appliances, 7~ Sharp 27' color TV, UOO hlco.
Vine Slreo~ Can I! 4· 448·7311. 304-SJS-4108.
.
'
1-lf00-488-34111.'

&amp;teO.

1889 Uncoln-llir1o Vli-LSC ..... H:n-"1~~;"~;_.;.,;
ol, ooeollonl cond!Hon, garage 810 . / ~

...

ITHURSDAY

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Dolvor. et•-.&amp;«• .

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SCIAM-LirS ANSWRs

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Crown VIctoria, toldtcl,
nono'gOIIII. 304-875-73.tll.,

I
And Gauranleedl $100 And

~

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House !\Old
Goods

. ,.
•. J,f,

ve auto w/od. ·ssoti. ~O~·S75·
2q74.

510

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MERCIII\N DISL

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gqiHI wor1r car.

., .,

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1883 Ford LTD;

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· :: ·: : : : : : : : : : , : : _

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. 8U)'Iolbld .

••

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HXACPPR .

.too, making the .ullng heart awllcll

I

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.· ' .

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'

Aa West tn~ South had the dfa,
· llltllld ace, be diacvded the dlaDHfll'l
'queenl Thll put ltut in the picture

l

.

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UITCHX

lOT

,

.

•, ·t.:;~~-~.~ ~:'::hn~ri t::.

'·'

Color T.V.,
..... 814·2158-!.a:l8-

-

JI'Int, thoqb, what do yau lhlnlt of

814-2158-123:1. '
: '!
188p ,Chrysler·. 2.2 Automatic •• •
Tranomilllon, 1100, 114·2541·

Freezer,

I10mo

.

,'

IDTG 'NX

Plti!-

.

~Ntr ~y 6E-1TIN6

.,

wo ··'.PGOS

,made.u•,ey; 100d dl•card to 1l11tr · &gt;,~. ow.·'XtGDL ·
partner c!OWD:the WiDDIDI defeulve

••
1881 2.0 Berinta, 11o1or• .S\15. · ~

wv:

NiCe twtolllliroom -

,.

.

KX·:oa=: cond• ..
304-578-8807.
I

'160 · Auto Parts &amp;

.. • . l;

'
to find the~ lhat:I!!D'blm ~be ,,f. •Q ·t 'YQPK
. ."· . ' '
!leed• llf; tno'!'l In•lhl• ileal, ;'lre•t

•
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Sel of 3"1il"10.50x15 Goocty•at
Wrangler mucl terral~ ..r.lr11 o~
ForO opoN4 wllMII.t7f. Cllromo
Diulll guard $ 7 5 . - -

~!~

•

01, fo.t.ID '1'00 ~

a••·

S••

.

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'

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TliOmN'I'IL?
OON'\'-fro AAVE
•

304-678-27112.

Furniture. 304-875-8820.
emlloo. Pi Plooaon~
M, lk.W11 j.fl.

In Ulclclloper~ no Pt11, a 14-882·

'!')

·11!-

rm&gt;WU.

Enoerpriaoa, Jacbon. 1-800-537· ·

tape dedi. oupor n!cai100: i:oll

French Cl1y llaytag, au-ua~ 7795.
.
'

Nlco 2 llodroomo. f225111o .. 8
111101 Down 21a, Nlco, Roloranc·
..-;&gt; Oopooll RIG\Iliod: 814·441·
lj72. 01+28Mal. .
-

et•·

!88! Ford Explorar Ed&lt;lt Bouor
••4 Eoeoilont Co~dltl011. Illite
!0!,851 $8.850,81.....7~21. •

~ 814·288-

'

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THE BORN WSER

gr~t.

high m11oo. utdncr•uoo.
441.0135.

j

35 Yeoro E1,..-, In Ctldmuo 11h Toyollo Pfok·up Feur .•
an
Rou• '"· 4788 Pmot WtoHI Drive 28.ooo Ulloa
Road.·(On Cornor 01 Plolol Rood 441-0247
&amp; Stolo Rou• ,~1).

'

Applianc••:
Recondlllo~ed
Washers, Oryera, Ranges, Alfri·
gra1ors, DO Oar Guar~nteel

OpportunHy

1881 Oodgo Caravan LE. verr

nice eond., loadod, runo

~::-~30U;;:;::7::,S-;:;7-I2::.:;1·~--·--I3000 Hours Clean, Under W.r .::
ranr,., 127,000 Firm, Ron Evana

FurniShed
Rooms

578~·-

·Bullniss

..

'

I

Hr,draullc 011112.10-Sgal pall.
S dero Equl,.,..nt, Hondoraen, !8li2 Ford S~C 4o4 Bocklloo

Park, Deposit &amp; References Required, Phone814-448·1104,

F :NA N CII\L

210

•
I ' :•.

dl"lv&amp;. new al uminum wheala,

2 Bedroom Trailer In Small Trailer

Will 111!1 coro of tldorly In your
homo. midnight ohlft only, call
Lito. 114-742-2710.

....

33x! 250 liroo, ......,. condilion,
$7,800, 614-885-4473.

2 BR llobilo Home. Jackson P~e.
-814-2511-!007.
Deposit &amp; Reference Requtted.
1 HolM lntornot Tutoring, E·lloll, 1Diin· 14X80 WIGiamour balh. 18141·448-8847
Nowo Groupo, Roolllmo Volco, $119/mo. FI'H delivery 1 Ht· up, 3 Bedroom House. T11iler For
VIdeO C1'8~ For More lntormallon only ~;t ·Oak Wood Homea. Nllro Ren1, In Rio Grande, llepo11~ RelCol 81H4Hl248.
erencea Requ.red, No Pe11 AI·
wv.304-755-5885.
lowed lnoide, 614-379-2720 AF•
UDS Electronics T.V. Repair, 2 Ac,. Houlttrailer NIW Buifding. TEA I P.M.
VCR R81111r, SoBINio Replir. We Shed. Deck 1 I'O&gt;rch. 814· 388·
MNHomoCoi8!4-441-GCI71 .
:1184::·::5:..
. ---~---~ 3 Bedroom Mobile Home 1 112
Batha ; Fi,.ool••~·- ~ewlr
Nood a tlood, dopondeblo bo· 3Ttallero lor aalo. 304-aJS-1078.
- d Aporo•.
i
lwolllort Fonc:od In rard, 1 112
State Routt 7, can &amp;14 -258·1
ni1101 from SR 338 on Mlnutl Rd. BUV IN JANUAAV. No payment . Bo._,91&lt;M.&amp; 7~1.1 .
=tlented, ............. oil April 1997. E·Z financing. Call ==:.:.:=::.:.:..:.::::____
onytimo. 814-247-30111.
tne "nanceline 1-800-251 ~5070. 3 Bedroom Mobile Home Nur
All homes on ule. Free d.. lvery Vinton Available Now 614· 388·
0456.
.

·-.

·.

,gag Dodg• 314 1on 4 wheel ; ·,

2 Bed·room Oepaait And Refar·
encaa Required No lnlide Pets 1 Rooms for rent · wtek or monf\.
112 Mile Outaide Rio Grande Soarting at $!201mo. GoHia Hotol.
Ar• 81~· 245-9885
8 ... 448-95110.
2 8edtoom localed an 8rOed RLJn Sle.-plng raoms with cooking.
Ad In New Haven, $280 per Alao trailer 1pace on river. Alt
month deposit a utilities. 304· hook' upo. Colt alter 2:00 p.m:.
77:l-588t:
304·773-1585!,11uaioWV.
2· Bedroom MotKte Home On Me·
Corni&lt;:kRoed. 8t.4-448·tf809.

erences. In Henderson WV. 3Q_..

:

Ac:j:eolorles, $500, 814· 40e· 111811 Bronco XLT 4 W0 814-4.. .. · •

·

While on!)' one penon can be the
wOrid'a beal &lt;aad J11U wouldn't ahrayw
. . tmllorm agreement u to wbo that
player Is), everyone can mate part·
ner'a life more pleaMnt and euler at .
the table. '1'1111 can be dolle by bebav·
1111 perfectiJ; never crillclle partner
and .....,. ltritle to get blm to play at
. bia belt. ·H(IWii!f, cme sllouJd.allo ley;

'
l

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8325.
_____ I 31583. .

450

3 Bedroom, 2. full betho, S315i
mo. 1200/dopooit. No peto. Rol-

' V8ns &amp; 4-WIJs .

bebavlor - orboth?

Cra1e, feeder, S"eptic Tank, All

Reymoncl.

posit requintd, oa pets. Call 814 D92·2381 Monday thru Friday,
8~ •n:t to 4:00 prn.

J

CFA f11melayen,Killtnt, 8 Wttko :::::.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _

be'"" at 324 Condor St.,

-FL32817
Full-Time Babyolttor W11111od,
WoolodOro. Roforenett Roquirod,
llull Bo Ablo To Drlvo 2 Chllr·
.,on, 1 Child Hondieappocl.
3117-o:l14 Allor 4 P.M.

*

Computor Cetor lloniiOf
1850, OBO, 814·48·3844, 614·

$275 por monltl plus $275 clopooi~ inquire 11 814-882·5500 aoto far

Two 1 bedroom apartment&amp; for

Now-!887 •• Wlcl•1 bath. 18891
GoarD!'• Paroable SawmiN, don't down. $139/mo, with approved
t.ul JOUI' logs ta 1M mil jUII caH
credit Coil 1-1100-191-6 777.
30U7fi.le&amp;7.

$50kryr 1-

forn 1000'1 wooldy l!ulllng on-~~ at home. Bo your boll.
ltort now. No expor,lonco. F{ot
oupplloo Info. · no obljgatlon .
Sand S.A.S.E. to Nugget Unit
314-8, 10151 Unlveroltr llvd. Or·

?-12,21132.

1.:..:::::=::.._------

Houoirltl Oppor-' -

Computer Users Needed. War~

own

30pHan pswater hM.ter,

• Call 814-

Cedar Siding Secdonal, 3
Pomeror- .tlll'o ~bedroom, HUO,
rooms, 2 Full Bad\1, Pool,
1toveJ relr1gerator, no pets, ...
building, Close to School
~urity depoail, &amp;141-i82-6886· ahar
calion• For The Follow1ng Posi · Grocery, Partef Area, EYenlng . 5:30.
·
tion In The Gallco Workshop: 614·388·8008 or Doy 814·4~8· 1.,---.....:.-----l~~~or8d Service, Adult Servce 3&amp;13$57,000
Small 2boclroom toomo. Gas hoe~
laun.d ry room, baument. Quiet
House Sale: 1 Mile To GoHipalio, nalgtoborl!ood. No pell.·$250/mo.
Outlet Include: Allitting Ph.,sl- 3 Bedroom' Dining. Ulilll)', Porch. • utilitiHcSIOO dopooio. 304-675cally And Mentally Challenged 314 Acie, Firtj11aee, 1 112 Boltls. 4558 af!lf &lt;Pm.
ln~lvldualo. 32.5 Hours Per $45,000, Coi8!H46-2881.
Thret bedroom in Middleport.
- . $7.58/Hour
Ll'lllo ~ Por-.lly Flrilhltl 2 "'"'· S400 per monlll. clopolio ,.
Applications Can Be Obtained AI SIOry Homo On Approolmollty 2. 7 quirod, no peoo; rh(eo bedroom in
The .Gollia County Board OIIIRI Acru, OutlluBdlnQii. Rural loca- Pomeroy, $300 per mcnoh, cloposDO located At 8323 North Slate ion Setlert Trana., Our La• Your It requ~red. n!J pets; twa bedraom
Goiniiii.IIIO, 814-371-21311. •
i~ Pomeroy, 1275 pe• monltl, do·
Rou• 7, Cllellloe, OloicJ 45620

References Available Upon Re· 1082 n.10 Mobile Home On 1;I
quHI 20 Years Exper1ence Call Acres, Parches, $15,DOO, 513·
81~·387-0529
574-2539.
.

Help\Wanted

Baron Barela)'. Bridge Suppllel Ia
prlntell: "Tbe most Important single
lldllq biidge player c.n ptlllell Ia
to be I good pll'tner." Bllt what lllitlles
a good partDer? Great play or perfect

The Gallia County Board 01 MRI
DO Ia Currently Accepting Appli·

Babysitllng in my home, in the
BidweN area. Children of all ages.

EMPLOYME NT
SERV ICES

110

mark·Muhiclfe Facilily. EOE. ,

J18111ellla. On tbe lnlicle of those from

Furrillhed Effic~ncy Aparlmlnt,
Central Hut I N:., All Ulilidft ln-

eluded Prlvaot Parking, 8!4-448·

l!oura. ~ Pt Ploaaont NUtllng mono. lloodowllllls Sub-dlvlolon.
Cloan L11t llodol C)aro Or &amp; Rololbllirdon c-r. Sr Rt 62. .t'renolo City Homoo, Inc. 814-148·
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer, PI Pltallnl WV 25550. A Glen- 9340 ... 304-675-3:113.
Smith Bu1ck Ponliac. 1900 East·

CoJmatlon Carda ·are \lied in lour·

Depoli~ ReqjJorod, 8t4'24S-5084..

now roo~ aiding
wlndowo. Call
Somervlllo
Realty&amp; 304-1175-3030

All U.S. SiiPtoofaets,

In C~urnty, No Pets, Alcohol

I 1'!1)1111 In

Opelllng lead: • 5

310 Homes tar Sale

Must sell. 304..a&amp;2-2312. .

4 1'11111

Weot Nerlll ' Eai&amp;
Pau 3 NT
All pau

l NT

-$75, 814-l!!!e AKC • Min! Dochohund Puppy
llale 511011, Wormed, .1..,, .. ...
251 eGQ.4.
. ...

,..on~~

:a...... ., .....
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,... ·=
·==

• • 72

AAC CNf~Uihul l'ur&gt;lw. 7 --~~~~~;;;i;~;-;;;~;
Okl', Shoto. Wormta; 6 1 ~ · 381'~
0402.
.
.
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........

1 .,_. ~,.,..

11 Cltlnlt

:aa 0' 1 ll

• Kf S
t A It f

Foarurlng Hydro Bath. Don
S~oro. 373 Goorgeo COHk Rd.
114-4411-0231.

RENTAL S

.

•Ait81

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming_•

....

DOWN

.•·VIII- .....

..... •Qaa

3old.AKC--,.,..
1 4yr old, 120018. 30W7fi.
lola For SM, Cali!-M18n I I I
P.ll.1!4-245-1788.
•

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.DD 1 'TiM'

• Q II t
•QIDtl

low. au-- -r..t&gt;Y

. arell\i It

:a

EM&amp;

Glolllpollo Forrr-Bulkllng loto or Beech 51., Middleport. 2br furmobile homo oltu. City W11tor &amp; nished a~rtment, ulllltiH P.,id.
Doposll &amp; RoferencH. 304-882....... gel, 100'&gt;1348' ...,.. 2588.
•
C~l Som4rv1Uo Roelty 304-1175·
3030 .. 304-875-3431.

................... .
• WooellllrNI
11 n 'Jne

....
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In

-----

ALL Yard Sales Yuat Be Paid tn

=:=....:...

11 ~ mtlaldl

•AKJ10151

"'1111!11-- .....
to lldvlnlll "'nY p;,..enoe,
llrr....,.iardw:du•.U•
-on '"""· color. rolgiOtl,

IG ~- .lulllo
11 llllglnGwF7?

t1Dip

;.105U'
.,
u J

•• 5

•U~~~Uto
t11e F - Fill' Houolna ~

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

.IIDLIM

'l1ttlwn

1
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~STRO·O·AP8

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.
•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Marlcet r Foist · Ocean- Florid- COOKIES
·~e tro~ble with kids today. 'the elderly woman told · ·
· her friend, Is that they think oatmeal is only found in
COOKIES." .
·

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·xavier, uc
record
losses

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
3-9-6
Pick 4: ·
1·3-2·3

Buckeyes:
5-6-:11-19·22

Sporta on Page 5

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; : llbL 47; NO. , .
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: · ~817, CMi ,_,"' li~al:il'l ~any

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'

:: By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
sentinel Newt Staff . .
Pomeroy attorney Jennifer Sheets
iqls bi:en elected president of tile State

Board of Educalion.
. · Sheets, appointed to the board in
: August 199!1, '!las elected for a two.·. year term, ~eplacing Virginia Purdy,
· ; • \'l'ho was ineligible 16 seek re-election
: .to the board.' Martha W: Wise of Avon
• was named vicll president.
Corilmentfng oti her · election,
. Sheets said, "I'm really excited about
. ' • being involved at•this.particular time
· . because if is such a critical time for
·edilcatibn hi
state of Ohio."
She spoke of the Perry County
· : equity funding case which will be
•• cll'miitg out of the Supreme County
i : S!lOfl and said that "fi..lly attention
; is being focused on the need for equi:, ty in.furiding schools i~ . the State of
• · Ohio."
: · She said that offers a challenge in
: : her leadership to the bOard; "'hich
.l . will be working with all interllsted
· : · parties in co!Jiin(! LlP with education
• w!Jich will be·equitable.
.
Sheets said that the S(llte board is
hoping to complete its work for new
• stant;lards in schools, which will add
: . to last ~s ac.tion to 111ove 'teachers

me

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AS:

Ohio, Friday, January 17, 1997

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CBO projections don't
_bod~*· well for MecJicare

By LAURA MECKLER .
· Aaaoclated Presa Wrlt8r
froo; being certified to be licensed.
WASHJNG10N- Balancing the
''The need to raise standards, a
federal budget just got easier becliuse
pt:ocess which staned wiih profithe Congressional Budget Office said
. ciency , tesling. · is one of several ·
Medicare and Medicaid will grow
i!llportant issues to be addressed this
more slowly than expected.
year," said the new president.
The nonpartisan Congressional
She also spoke about facilities, the
Budget Office sent lawmakers updatcommittee she chllired ·last year;. as
ed figures Thursday sh9wing that
being a critical isslie to be addressed
· over the next five years, projected
spending for Medicare will be $56
thi' year.
.
.
billion less than CBO .es~imated a
· "Facilities go along w.ith furding,"
year ago.
said Sheets, who talked about Gov.
.More dramatically, Medicaid
doorge Voinovich's State of the State
. spending will be. nearly 580 billion
.message and the proposal for pulling
·an additional $300 million in facili- .,...--------~-- lower than projected, .the budget
iies, $200 fuillion into uaditional tal F~&gt;undation Board, the Meigs . office said.
bui)ding assistance , programs. and County Council on Aging Board of . Rep. Bill Thomas, ~-Calif., chair$100 million into urban si:hool dis' Trustees, is treasurer of the · Meigs man of the House Ways and Means,
tricts, all in low wealth school dis- · ~ty Community Improvement Commillee's :, health subcommillee,
Corporation, secretary/treasurer of said he was disappointed that
tricts.
Sheeis served on.the Meigs Local the Meigs County Bar Association, Medicare spending projections were
. Boant ot Education, from 1975. to , and a member of the Middleport- not rosier.
Only about $15 billion of the sav. 1978. She is a Pom~rpy High School PoinerQY..ROtary Club arid the Meigs
· ings is expected to come from the
graduate, received,, her bachelor's Cou~ty Ownber of Commerce.
nle family resides on a farm near trust fund that finances hospital care,
and master's degrees in hqme eco.Harrisonville.
Sheets' husband, Jim, which is still projected to go bankrupt
nomics from Ohio State University,
arid her law-degree from Capi.tal Uni- is a teacher at Meigs High School, by 2001, Thomas noted.
"It underscores the need for Con.versity. She is .currently practicing and ibey have thre~ sons. Jared and
law in the firm of tittle, Sheets and ,Aaron are both enrolled in the OSU gress and the pt:esident to forge a
. School of Medicine. Their youngest bipa&lt;tisan ·agreement to save
Warner.
Active in community affairs, she son, Adam, 'is a student.at Ohio Uni- Medicare, without resorting to
· '
·I accounting gimmicks or tax increasserves. on the Pleasant Valley .Hospi.- ve..Sity.

~· CQunsel· reR:orted·ly· recommend•

.,
J. tJ

.
AS
LOW .

~roy-Middieport,

; Sheets is na
;: president of State .
B-oard\" Of Education

'LS·PKG
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;·,,,.,~,~~~~o:r-ai:~u'i•h~~ietati•li~.
.~· \VAsRINOTON' ,(AP) ·- The .:. 1Jecau5e me!Tibers of the ~ommittec ·
• HOI!SC etllics commiuee's special- '"'-- foor i{epublicans, fourDcm~_rats

cQ\Insel is n:commcnding that Speak·
erNI;~iJ!grich pay a stifffine and
be teprimanded by hts colleagues for
: ethiCal wrongdoing, a House ~urce
.
: : said iO!Iay. · ' . · · .
. ( · Spej;lal counsel James M. Cole
. was presentinjl t!'e recommendations
' tocjay as pan of a lensthY report after
~ a y...-llingiriv'estigation. The source
, • spok~ only on·condition of anonymi·
: '; ty:
·
·. The House is set to ·vote 1\tesday
: oil a puni.s~nt for Gi~grich. A rep·: rim~ for,:bringing discredit upon
. ~ the House wOifld allow the' Georgia
: .. Republican, who has admitted vio·
.. lating House rules. to retain his pow· .. crftil p&lt;)St. A
Serious censure
.: · would' make' hini ineligible to serve
· · as speaker tinder Republican caucus
·
··
1 : rules. · · ·
.. " · The ethics committee planned a
' · public proceeding today to h&lt;\ar from
' Cole and a lawyer for Gingrich. The
; .' panel also ·ptanncd to ni~ke public
• Cole'~ ~port. .
: , Thi: ~ommlt'ce first had to accept
" the {hiallanguage of Cole's report Bl
: . a private session this morning.

more

·
,

.

·

~~·Pair of .blasts· in 'Atlanta building

posal , p811 of a plan 10 balance the
es," he said in a statement.
federal
budget by 2002, does not
. The budget office now expects
include
such
savings in its projection,
Medicare · spending from 1998
the
official
said.
·
through '2002 to total $1.35 trillion,
Women could get free mamma- .
compared with $1 .4 trillion last May.
The new five-year projection for grams every tWO years, an3
Medicaid is $618 billion, down from Alzheimer's disease .victims would
qualify for 24-hour home care .while ·
$697 billion in May. ·
The Clinton administration plans . their families take a break from cur10 offer Medicare savings of$1.00 bil- ing' for them, the official said . .
The administration also wants
lion over five years, most of it from
more
nioney for rural counties, which
cutting fees paid to hospitals, doctors
have
complained t~ey ,arc shonand health' maintenance organiza.tions, an administration official said ·changed un&lt;ier current funding formulas. ·
,
Thursday.
· · .
.In
Medicaid.
the health care pro- ·
About $20 billion of savings in
gram
for
the
poor,
President Clinton
Medicare would come from .culling
payments to HMOs. The federal has proposed culling projected spendgovernment now pays HMOs 95 ing by more than $20 billion over five
percent of the cost of treating an aver- years. But that plan also calls for new
age beneficiary. The administrati'on spending, meaning actual savings
plans to cut that lo 90 percent, said will equal only $7. billion to $9 bilthe official, who spoke on the condi- 'lion, the official said. ·
New spending proposals will
tion of anonymity.
.
include
help for legal immigrants hurt
· But the Clinton administration
also plans to offer Medicare recipi- by last year's welfare refonn effort, ·
ents new benefits; including free . as well as an aid package for the Dismammograms, . respite care for trict of Columbia and assistance to
Al2hcimer's patients and screenings Puert.o Rico, he said.
The bud gel office predicte(j Medfor diabetes and 'colon cancer, the
icaid spen,ding would drop largely
official said.
The preventive care measures bccausc.morc recipients arc required
should save money in the future by to gel their care through managed
catching diseases early. But the pro.- care plans.

Arctic blast does t&gt;est
·. EliSrupf~ lit€1·n ·Ohi'o .·

when asked by rep(jrters if he would
appe~ althe hearing.
· ·
- have waged consta11t pantsan
Throughout Thursday evening.
warfare, ther~ was no guarant.ee the Cole ·worked on his report as law'
acceptance would be;a formahty.
makers on the eight-member com· "Nancy's goal is ~o provide full mittce met. with hiin and ·read draft ·
public disclosure of every ast)&lt;:cl of lanj!uage.
·
this case," said an aide 1~ committee
The counsel has gathered inforChairwoman Na~cy . J~hnson, .~- . mation about Gingrich's usc of taxConn. The. commlllec w1ll meet (m exempt activities to further political
closed session).... 1\.tl!lat point it will · goals and .about . misleading state-·
resolve details regarding a ·public mcniS given the commiuec under the
Jalll88 Cola
hearing." Tile aide asked noi to be speaker's name.
_ _..;.._;;.;;;_______
identified. .
·
Gingrich confessed Dec. 21 to
political dynamics, changed radicalRep. Benjamin L. Cardin, D-Md.. violating the rules,. admilling he
·
I
y.
adding a touch o( un,ertainty, said, · should have sought specific legal
Dcmlici'\IIS on the ethics commit·
"We don't•know what:S going to hap- advice about financing his college tee demanded at a news conference
pen" at the public session.
course and a town hall television prO:. · last week that next Tuesday's H0usc
Sometime after these sessions, · jcct with tax-exempt donations. H11 vote be postponed. At the time, under
the commi11ee would deliberate on took responsibility for inaccurate a. unanimous committee agreement,
punishment for the spca~cr and make a.•scrtions that his former political ·Cole's report was .duc by Fe~ .. 4 .,.a recommendation ·to t~e House.
organi1.ation - GOPAC - ha.d no · and Democrats argued thatlawmak'
Gingrich.was not exP.,cted to tcs- role in the college cou,rse.
crs shOuld read it. before voting on
tify at the televised public hearing- · Just a week ago it appeared .that punishment.
and has not decided whc\her to· the .ethics committee would he
Mrs. Johnson and the other
addrcs.• the House on Tuesday, said engaged this week in dramatic tclc- Republican' members then had their
a Republican. who comn;tetited only vised hearings, during which Cole own news conference. She unilatcron condition of anony11Jity.
·w&lt;iuld air his findings before the pan- ally postponed the hearings •. gave
."W~'rc going to do whatever el made its recommendations on Cole .the deadline of Thur~day and
we're risked to do and we arc going punishment to the House. .
·
said shorter hearings would follow:
to try to be hclpf~l ." Gingrich said . :rhc committee's plans, I and the

BY The A11ociatec:1 Preaa

ncar the Sandusky .Bay Bridg~ . ~bout
Billerly .cold Arctic air has swept 60 mtles casI of Toledo. The acc1den1
across th.e sUite; turning roads ·into was allributcd to the weather. .
sheets of i.ce and forcing some school
Troopers sa1d the : acc1dent
districts to cancel classes today.
occurred whcn . tractor-tra~ler dnvcr
. Temperaturc.s across the state are Eugene Hackel, 38, of ~ingslon, .
arourid zero with winds of IS to 25 }Jich., rammed a pickup dnven by
.miles per hour producing wind-'chill ·vernon Tcwers, 50. of Huro~, as
readings of from 20 to 40•dcgrces Towers slowed hiS truck dun~g a .
below zero.
whiteout. Winds were whislling at45
Wind-chill warnings and advi- mph when the crash occurred.
sories are in effect across the slate
.
. today.
.
Troopers closed Route 2's west· "ll's gqingto be stinking cold," bound lanes for several hours. Crews
said ~en Reeves, a forecaster with · , had to clean up 60 _gallons of' diege J
AccuWeathcr Inc., a private weather fuel that spilled from one of the
service based in Stale College, Pa.
tru.cks.
·
. Meanwhile, the cold ·air Oowing
Several hours later, three other
across Lake Eric is bringing lake- accidents in the same vicinity dam,
cffcci snow to shoreline areas in aged 15 vehicles and slightly injured
northeastern Ohio. .Overnight accu-' three people. They were treated in
mulalions range up to si.x inches..
Sandusky area hospitals, troopers
The&lt;old weather is doing its best said.
•·
to disrupt. life in the stale. Cars
Jim Schortgcn, a..sislant Sl!pcrinwould not stan. Blowing and drifting lcndenl for the Ohio Department·of
snow limited visibility and closed Transportation's Fulton Cou_nty
sOII]c rural roads. Schools canceled garage in Wauseon. said bl.owing
classed and activities.'
snow and icy pavement have made
The State Highway Patrol on driving trcachcr()us. The deep freeze
Thursday reported a 16-~ chicle pile- has reduced the effectiveness of iccup on State Route 2 in Eric County melting chemicals, h'c' said.

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

.~~ destroys .a bortiorf:cunic,· ~urts 6
"

.

ATLANTA (AP) - Standing ·APJ)e;lredto be minor.
,
arriv~d 'jusJ after the first blast. "I
t ·. amid debris and shattered ·glass,
A crowd of investigators, police, proha~ly will never work ,at an aborRobert Sttldler assufe4 his sobbing jpumalists and bystandc,rs who had tion \l'inic again in Atlanta."
~ ; wife that their twin inf~t dughters gathered outside after the first explo.The ini1ial bla.~t apparently took
: - we~e unhurt · by ·the !Jiast. that sion heard aloud boom. and felt the place. ~t the back of the clinic a~ay
; ~ destt'oyed lin abortion cli11ic. .
conc~s,im They could see a bright froni IN only two .workers there at
:
Then came the second explosio" · nash and Oying debris..
·
the tinlc. No patients were Scheduled
: less than 100 feet away. .
. . "At first it was just panic. It felt . Thu.~~ay at'the clinic, on the ground
··
"She was u~t already and we · like you were too ciiJSil to a I! reworks ilotir of the building 11\ij{ also houses .
·; · ~icallyhadtimetohugaJK!thenihe . display; ... You really feel it in the lawyers, dentists and other profcs&gt;·second blast went off," said 'Stadler, chest. It was like that but greater," s'onals.
: : who arrived after thC: first explosion . said Stadler, news director at J\tlanta
. .
station WSTR, FM. .
In 1984. tlie same clinic, located
· ,. · to' pick up his daughte~, .
' • . The twins were being watched · Two bombs, strategically timed · a 'few miles. away Bl the time, was
'.' Thulsday momin• by wor~rs in and plllced in a manner de$jgncd to fircbom~d. Later that same week, a
· · - Christine Stadler's law offi~. inside hurt law enforcement officers and Planned ParenthoQd offiCe in nearby
: · the three·story building that also , re5eue workeri, are common tactics C,:obb County also was firebombed.
· · housed 1he c1101c.
· ·
·
·
·
used by .terronsts.
- No one.. was hurt in either. bombing,
fh
..
The first bomb. which eqilodcd · Although the 'clinic
the appar- and no one was ever conv1cted o I e
. :.around 9:30 a.m., left the Adanta ent target, inve$tigators would not ·crimes.
. had
· ~side Family Planning ~rvices rule out domestic terrorism ind said
Workers say the cliluc
• ·clinic in ruins and blew out wtndows it was .too early to say if tlkt blasts received no recentlhreats or protests.
··• ' 1!fcross street. The second bo10b were linked to the pipe bomb·Bl Cen-'
year, tbCre were seven bomb.t : .,vent off about an hollr later near a tennial Olympic Park six months ago. ingsLast
or
arsons
at abortion clinics, the
· lraih bin in !ll&amp;l parkin1 tot.
Followi~s the second lilut,.invesJustice
Department
said. In 1993,
. ( No one wu injured ill the first tigators combed the area to mike sure
· ·. blast. liul·atl,clst six people were hun. tl)ere wa5n't a third bomb. Police three people were shot to death out·
!; ip tbe seeond, includins ~~ and ·. tishtened security at all other clinics si~ atrooion .clinics in Florida. A
year l~r, loiWO receptionists were
-~ , 'ureau of ·Alcohol, Tobacco 1nd in the city.
.
\
, : ' Pi~' !lSCnts, ·workers apd
"It was scary u hell," said Cli~ic killed at abortiQn Clinics in Brobkline1
·•ill ·'TV
camerain1n, All of the injuries co'unselor Geralyn
Thompson,".who
MiSs,
.•
'
.
.
;.

was

me

t.

I

I '
I "

l.
• It
I

•

.

Moatty .clear tonight,
Iowa zero to 5 above.
Saturday, moatly aunny, .
. hlgha.-20.

.,

80118 PROBE BEGINS ..:.. U.S. A~y
Ktnt All_.., left. and ~TF Spacial Agent
John Kllarln apolle lO r.portwa Thuraclay dur·
lng e news .cootfarat'tca to dlacuaa the double
.
· 'at an Atlanta madl011l building that

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