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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Eastern
defeated
by Vikings

Plck3:
6-2·7
Pick 4;
8 4 9-1

BuckeyeS:

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Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Wedneaday, Jan.,.y 22, 1887

:.t om missioners will.advertise. -Takingsha
~development diree,tor's post

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7·13-20..27-30

Sporta on Page 5

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A chence of •h-era
until midnight,

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!JY JIM FREEMAN
,i,ntlllel Newe 8Uiff
•: • Mei1i County ,Commissioners
lOOk the rmt step Monday afternoon
~\(iward piling a new county ceo' nQmic development director.
·111e baird agreed to adYertise an
Opcrilng for the position, along with
' ajob·description. The advertisement
. Will call for resumes staiing. job
; experience and salary requi~nts.
· · Commission President Janet
Howard said the office will likely be
·set up toially within the auspices of
: the Meigs County Board of Com·
·triissioners.
· •· "The way it was set up last time
~didn~ work," Howard said. "It's got
:robe· for the bettenneili of the county:or we'~~: not going to do it."
• Although the office of former

· economic development director Julia
Houdashell was physically located in
the Meigs County Chamber of Comm~e, her salary was paid by the
· county commisiioners.
Howard said the office became
"too political'' wjth the. chamber and
Counnity Improvement COfJXlf*li.on,
and said Houdashelt apparclltly forgot where her paycheck carne from.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton dis·
agreed, saying the coonty needed
cooperation from the chamber and
CJC, and called for a meeting with
chamber an~ CIC officers.
Howard said commissioners were
supposed to mc;et with them Monday
afternoon at the commissioners'
meeting, but said they canceled their
appointments.
.
Commissioners agreed to set up

another meeting with the chamber ·
and CIC to discuss how the office
could be set up. with l;loward slress·
ing that it would have to be held in
public.
· .
"J. want to do this in a public
forum," sbe said.
One thing the commissioners did
not act on Monday was funding for
the Meigs County Cham~ of Commercc's Touri1111 Off'JCC.
Althou1h all three commissioners
agreed that tourism is important to
the county, they do not yet agree on
how it should be funded or to what
extenL
Hoffman said it is his belief that
the people and companies who ben·
efit from tourism should foot the bill
far its promotion, while Thornton
said the county should fund the

tourism office by the same amount it
did last year - approximately
S7,SOO, including about $2,SOO. in
advertising CXJ¥11SCS.
Howard said she is reluctant to
fund the office with taxpayers' money, but thinks the board should continuc to pay for the advertisements
which she said benefit Meigs County. Howard also noted that the county cannot.affot'l! to fund the office at
this time.
·
"Tourism is economic developmcnt," said ·Thornton. "We ·nced to
keep moving forwards ... l'm afraicf
we'll fall bllckwards."
Hoffman said private individuals
and business owners have tOld him
that taxpayers shwld not pay to promote tourism.
(Contll\ued on Pege 3)·

~~as~e.rn building plans -.prepared·for;. b,i d
: : : The 'Eastern LoCal Board of Edu-

constrUction documents will be ready
cation may be ready in . Marcil to the first week in February ,to submit
.advertise 'for bids for constrW:tion of to the Ohio Depanment of Education
·a. new elementaiy school ind reno- for review and approval, said Super;'o!&amp;tions to the ~urrent high school.
intendcnt Deryl B.·Well.
. .
Based on an .expected three-week
, · Board members were updated on re-.:iew period, 'the district hopes to
.t~ building project at their recent bid the JlfO~CI in Marcl), llydded.
regular inccting . at Basl&lt;im ·Hiah
John Rice· arid &lt;;ircll Bailey were
Sc~l· ,
. .o .. . ",. . elec~.president and ~ce PI'Cs~nt. ..
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· · At,thfs ~late, the con,Struction doc• · nizaiional' me:cting .I"'Jile•M!l!io Mar'u!ftCnts are ~xim~ly 80 per~:ent tin was appointed to serve as the Ol)io
complete, it was reported.
School Board Association legislative
Jbe district anticipates that final liaison.

The first order of business duririg · • Set graduaiiori for May 2S.
the organiiational meeting "'BS the ,' • · Approved .~ district-wide proswearing-in of newly-hired Treuur· fessional development inserv.ice for
er Lisa Ritchie by James Smith. pres· Thursday ar2:1S p.m.
·ident pro tempore.
·• Will.host the county spelling bee
at Bastern High School on Feb. 19 at
In personnel matters, txw,d mc:m~ 7 p.m.
hers approved Nancy Scarbrouih to
• Approved a-resolution to declare
provide home tutoring for' a lliah three tardics cqtlalto one day's unexschool s~Q~nt. lll)d accc~ .J!!J!Cs ~~~sed ~ . .
,: . -. " , ,
'Haymaii •rid Darin Logan as sub~ti·
• .Set ffic thirll TueSday of each
tute teachen: .Thc board,:ltccepted Bill mon!h u 6:30 p.m. as.·lhe ~te and •
Blaine's ·resignation as )'earl!ook tii!IC'of its regular board ll'ieciing, and
advisor.
set tlic next meeting for Feb. 18 at ·
In other business, the board:
6:30p.m. in the hilh school library.

Fed chai·rnl'an rn.aintains flawed
CPI. ,inflatins;J cost-of·li~ving hikes
.
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

Reserve.
He said one of the Fed studies put
WASHINGTON - Senior citi· the upward.bias between 0.6and I.S
ZCRS may ·,be up~et and President
percentage point with I percentage ·
C~nton may be duo:king the issue, but point the best rnid·range esti!'latc,
die man who staned it all isn't giv- very cloie to the Boskin figure of 1.1
in' up.
.
percentage point.
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•. Federal Reserie Chairman Alan
The Boskin commiSSion csumat·
Greenspan still thinks a flawed Con· ed that lowering the CPI by l.l .persulner Price Index is inflating annu- centage point would produce $ Ll
al cost-of-Jiving increases.
trillion in budget savings over I 2
&lt; Greenspan used an appearance years, putting. ~ go~emment·a long
bC:Jore the Senate Budget Committee way toward achieving the 11oal•Pres·
,on Tuesday to V.oice support for the 'ident Clinton has made the ~ pri·
'findings of on advisory panel that ority of his second .term: a balanced
issu~ .a controversial report in budgtt
·
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~cember that estimated the index's ·
The savings come from trimming
upward bias at t. 1 percentagc 'points an·nual cost-of-living adjustments for
a year
"'
. the recipients of Social Security' and
· .Th~ Fed chainnlm said ,thc find· otherbencfitpr;osramsandbyrilising
inJs of the panel. headed by Stanford taxes through a smaller adjustment in
URivcrsity economist Michael tax brackets each year.
,
Baskin, w~re very much in line will\
However. the administration wilt
iwp Separate reviews conducted by not include any additional. CPI
slaff economists at the Federal adjustments in the budget the presi-

AP Economic• Writer

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dent iends Congress on Feb. 6, arguing that more study is needed by
inflation experts.
Supporter$ of a move to trim the
CPI, however, were heartened by '
Greenspan's comments on Tuesday,
saying it showed the issue was still
very much alive in this year's budget
debate.
'
Manha Phillips, executive direetor of the Concord Coalition, an anti·
defidt group, said the. support oi
respected economists like Greenspan
would keep the issue alive through·
out what could be a long negotiating
process.
"A CPI adju!!lment is more likely
to be something that will come into
play towlirds the end of the process

afterhoth~ideshavedonceverything

that is liumanly and politically possible to balance the b~dgct but are
still coming up short," Phillips said.
Fed Vice Chairman Alice Rivlin,
Clinton's former budget · director,

Mill delay dis.appoints
Mas.on County residents
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Mason County residents say they are
disappointed by a'Ncw York compn·
ny 's plan to indefinitely postpone
building a $1.1 billion pulp mill on
the Ohio River.
"Everybody talks about new
things coming. in, and it never happens," said Carolyn Wheeler, an
Alen Grwnapln
employee of the Apple Grove Market, located in the community where
said in a published interview Tuesday Parsons &amp; Whittemore said in 1989
that it made sense for budget writ~rs it would build the mill.
to adopt a temporary 0.5 percentage · Many residents of Mason County
point trim in the annual CPI cost-of- supported the project, ·which they
living adjustment while the Bureau of hoped would alleviate the area's 10
. Labor Statistics works \'n a more per· percent unemployment. But Parsons
manent fix for its inflation gauge.
&amp; Whittemore Inc. of Rye BI'()Ok,
Greenspan used a similar argu- • N.Y., said Friday it was putting the
mcnt ~fore ihe Iludgct Committee, project on hold heeause world marsaymg 11 made no sense to contmue ket conditions arc not favorable.
cla1ming there was ~o upward bias in
The privately held company is the
such areas as med1cal care s1mpiY.~arcnt firm of Apple Grove Pulp &amp;
because they could not be measured. Paper, the comJlllny that proposed to

.$1a't wa~ . not directeCI ·. :·- -,.-~---._,
:'t abortion anniversary .·
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HARFIY DUNPHY

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. Alieocl~ Mil! Wdter .

~he sakl ."with the force of less than

' .a. fir~~racker.' There was no explo- .

, lVASHINGTON -A small fus- s1on.
; illll ·device went off in a hotel
Cl!mlll said the man "had a:cou-·
clh,J.~Ib~'s· hand today and J!?licc pic specks of blood on ~Is hand ; i9ltially ,feljt'Cd.it was a bomb direct- n?' even cuts -:-that h~. w1ped Qff and
&lt; 1~:at a nearby Planned Parenthood
hiS ears were nngmg.
.• '..Ct (lie.
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The man went hom~ and heard
; ;·, Within houn. police said there ne.ws co~crage of the mc1dent. He
' Will no evidence linking the incident called ~" employer and swd .he
,'io:the abortion i:ontrovei"Y· The lrii· · m~ght .be the person seen runnmg
tia~c01'CCms were {ueled by the fact
fronfthe scene.
.,. tOday is the 24th anniversary !If the
"He C8J!IC in and has been coopSypn;me Co.un ~~ vs. Wade dec;i, eratin1 with us," said Carroll. ,
sio11 Jeaalizlng abortion.
· .&gt;
Concerns were ra.~sed because of
l :·An eniploree of the ·Ma)'ftower '' abQnlon clinic bombmgs last "'~k m
Hb!CI wir leaVJna hit shift this morn- Tu111. ()kla., and Atlania.
inJon the wt)' to the bus and saw this ,
The incident also took place near
daxice amona some: truh on the side~ Mayftpwer Hotel w~re fi~t
WJ)Ic," said April ·Carroll, spokes·
lady, Hilllll)' QiniOrt and V1ce Prest·
~an for the Treuwy's BIII'AII of deal AI Ocin' illcl his wife, Tipper,
Ah:ohQI, Tobacco and Firearms field
~ to lllchla a 1100n luncheon
office heR.
.
11J101*nC1 by dill .Nitional Abortion
, She said · the device' wu a. fu110 1t1111ta ~on
aAcn,bly for •·practice ~ and
"No born&amp; want off inside the
is : ,1101 clluified as a desttuclive bulldiq. The ataff is line and so trCi
dev~ of any kind.
·
' the patients we arc seeing," said
. : !•'lllcre i1 a pin in it and it looks Roaeann Wiaman, preaide11t of
like.the top nte!=hanirm of a pnlllle .PIMI!Id Plnalhood Wubingt~. "It
.willlo!al the botiOnl amrde cuing,'' lllew ·up Ill his hand and be ran
Ct!roll said~ It jloppad Ia l)is hand; . away,"

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operate the mill at · Apple Grove
along the Ohio River.
Environmentalists and some labor
unions oppi&gt;sed the mill. Environ'mentalists were concerned the mill's
. blcachipg process would add to pollution in the Ohio River. Labor
unions feared the company would not
employ local workers.
Troy Lcport, who worb at Ser'vice Machine Co. in Huntington, said
the mill might have enabled him to
work closer to home. His company
moved to Huntington from Mason
County several years ago, requiring
hiin to drive 30 minutes each way to
work and back .
·The mill "would've heen real
close to home and I heard they
would have paid well ," Leport said.
"I would rather work in the county
where I ltve."
Although the company released a
(Continued on p
3)

11941

. tate nearing closure
on Lucasville lawsuits
COLUMBUS · (AP) ~ . State:
prison officials say a $4.1 million set·
tlement with prison inmates nearly
brings to a close the legal wrangling
started by ·the April 1993 riot at the
Southern Ohio Correctional facility.
The state was expected to.file the
agreement today in U.S. District
Court ·in Cincinnati. JudgeS. Arthur
Spiegel would still have to approve
the deal before ittaltes effect.
"The cost of a lengthy trial and
possible appeal woulcl far exceed the
· ·cost of settlement," Reginald Wilkin·
son, director of the O~io Dcpanment
of Rehabilita!ion 'and Correction,
said Tuesday. ·
'
He added that the state was hot '
admitting to any wrongdoing in its
handling of the . ll; d!lY riot .or the
events leading up to it.
The state spent close to $2 million
on Jeatil fees defendina aaainst riot·
nlated lawsuits, Wilkinson adcled.
The family of iii¥!~ Robert Vil. l~dinjlham; who wu killed in. the
rioting, sellled its Yii'Onpul death suit
11ainst' the ·state in J99S for
, $850,000. Othel' s.uits pendin11 in the
Ohio Coun of Claims on behalf of

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• Attorney's summation
·rips ·into O.J.'s character .

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Carl Reekers_

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dleport.

Doro.hy Barsotti
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CHARLENE HOEFLICH

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-What other newspapers·
around Ohio ·are saying
By The AJIOC'iated ...._
.
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ExcerpiS of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohoo
newspapers:

- Tourism office ~osting
. to ph
.
trip
. .I.1ad.eIp h.Ia s how

Front wUI brlri'g colder
coodltl.on·a ba'c k. 't o are~ ,

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Nenloal'lllll 01 Mndl ld, Ju. 16
,
.
._ The Ohio Supreme Court will likely help ()ov. George Voinovich final,
ly keep his promise of major educational refonn in Ohio.
The high court soon will rule on the constitutionality of the school fund,
ing system iJI the state. Under the CWTent system, schools without huge tax
bases aren't getting the same financial support as those in wealthy dislricts.
When Voinovich took office, he pledged to make _education his top pri,
ority. We give the 1ovemor credit for improvements in test scores, computer
tedlnology, and even efforts to improve some physical facilities.
·
But the hean· of the problem, fair and adequate fundinJ across the stale,
remains unsolved. The Supreme Coiln will probably force the Legislature
and lhe governor to make the change.
Voinovich could have taken this bull by the horns, but opted 110110 in his
ront term. Some would arJUe that he did neil want to run any risks with a
second term banging in the bnlance:
·
But even the end ofVoinovich's second term does not make him braver :
bccaoose he bas already said he wants tonin for U.S. Senate in J.988. He won't ·
tackle this issue any harder than he has before. Our only_hope is for the high
coutl'lo force the change.

· Weather roncut:
Tonight ...A chance oC:•showers
until midnight ..The~ partly ploudy.
Lows in lhe lower and mid 30s. South
willds s 10, IS mph. shifting to lhe
west. Chlnc:e·of rain 40 percent. .
Thursday... Panly clo'udy. Higlls
from the upper 30s to the tower 40s.
Thursday niJht...Panly cloudy.
Lows in lhe mid and upJJC;r 20s.

· ;•- ' ·· '·
Brlhe AlaDII ' d PI Sll
The tl•""""""'!'y. hiP io..,_.
tunJ
.cxpocttd to .S ill Ollio
1
. toniaht. ' '
' ''· · ·.
·
. · A.cold flont will push ll:rc. the
stare, brinaina ICtlipenlliJm .in the
20$ and 30s and • chance ol snow
· flurries.
The cold air will remain IIJouJh
•the weeliend, and snow lhowai will
pmill:ln noT I Ohio.
·
· The record hip tetnpenlllre fat
.this eWe at the CoiUmbwi wmllher
stalion wu 71lld in (906, 'The record
low was ·16 in 1936. ·
• ' Su,_ tC:.y wiU be II .S:lO _*':'I'.
7 47 "
Sunrise 11!un4ay
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~=n:..!~.:~n~i.r:t~;~~d;alt~ . ·Museum
~!~·f:~by
~~Jiliu~h· ::~ri:~.:s~~':!O: ::~~
of Science aiid motorcOIIC state Division ofEnvironinental Pro:

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t of PreJ(e 's iocome
def!::nlhe
saying... j
Pllker
Ulllil biS
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rsleoP very .;....., 11 n·ahL"
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some 'things
Kina.
·
· · . b.rk thM 10m • ·· be should have d&lt;ine to
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bi 11
the
Parker, the former
1
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kell to,help tunrEIVll~~ a . ~t 7- ~-~~as 'oiaid
Stir, rOfusool
tb wriie''(loclkl.ibliul
I on
ips(y trytnJ·
. . to ...JU~
him,
u:Yin1 Jll\blilh!:n
- • dirt ' J)rD
But ... ...., was_

~-y.BGAS &lt;~:de~.j.a-n:· :.:
profitS~
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~!! .e~~- :-..,,.,;~' tllllkl . ·~:;;-~I)'

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erwho~te~aadiiC"J.'trift. ha~he!J!ed

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e(I.-&amp;Jo•s with 2,500 1nd1111 u
entries,.. I2S &lt;Vendors, free lectures,
yideos, garden del)lonstrati?n statiOIIS .
· and a foo4 COU!t- • .
, ., t is hope!! that the lrip will reiult
in tdeu for local flower tours, John,
· son· added. .
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. :The bus tour will leave from the
Meias County Chamber of Com,
merceofi'JCeinPomeroyonWednes:

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The senseless shOoting of Ennis Cosby, the only son of entenaincr Bill
Cosby, brought ~ crime .a liule bit closer to all of us.
.
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Cosby senior made a point of raising his family as normally as possible,
to the exlj:nt that lillie is known about his wife and family. •
BecaUIC Cosby's fmily was as ordinill}' as lhe one he portrayed on tete·
vision, d,lii shootina hit home with many. ·
•. ·
But u' more and more.violent "levision programs and movies are produced, we are petbiaity ·be,cominJ immune to the horror.of such crimes.. .
How Jona
this continue before we realoze that 11 os our responsobll·
ity to c:Cnior this kind of proJratnming?
· . • ·
'llllinas 1y-. cannot do what we as parents and respons,ible adults
shotlld be. doins -.. lciCJiina out' children that violence is not acceptable.

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No I!H .ran quite agice whether Bill ainton 's second tenn will he liberal, COIIICrvllive or centrist.
· ,
. .His rhetoric· ~ policies have dodged and weaved so often that even his
most ardtntsupporteis seem confused about what his re-election means for
the nation. .
.
· Some observers argue that Clinton's desire to put political victory above
prii!Ciple his meant a victory for the right.
· · Others IIJue that Clinton will revert to his liberal tendencies now that
Jte no tqnaer ~ds to campaign f~r office. Still others believe that the pres·
" idepl is forging a new era of sensoble centnsm,
·
1n all likelihood, Clinton will be as liberal as Congress will let him be.

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(Contlnuedfroml"lge 1) '
"l'dliketohelpeverybody,but6ut
main concern should be the administralion of lhe county offices and the
people we already have," said Hoffman.
In other business, the board
approved advertising for a new
ambulancetoreplaceonc&lt;iftheRutland squads..
·
The specifications call for a 4:whcel,drive ambulance due to poQr
roads and lhe size ofthe area covered
' !iy the squad. .
Thornton reponed on .his town
mccting.last woek and said he met '
with Willow Creek Road residents
ahout creek tloOding there.
Although the road is a township
road, controlled by the Salisbury
Township Board of Trustees, the
board said they would examine. the
situation.
Commissioners paid weekly bills
of $2SI,I31.47 consisting of 208
entries.
. The issue of prayer before the
w~kly mQCting entered its third
week with the Rev. Roland Wildman
of the Trinity Church in Poillllroy
opening the meeting.with prayer.
.Wildman said there is a long tra·
dilion of prayer before government
meetings.

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.Tired.
slashing
.t
b .d

Meigs County Veterans Service •
•
CommissiOn will meet at 7:30p.m. lnCI en prO 8
Monday, •1. ~Veterans Service
~ vehicles hid their tires
Office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
slashed at Tuesday night's basketball
..
_•..-,A L:._ , _ _ .
g.arne
between Southern
SouthernH'andh School
Belpte
. . . . . , ,.. '"' •. _
.
- Thwnsi¥11 Road 112{Sc!l"l Camp) high schools at .
·~
.
will be closed beainning Thursday, in Racine, according to Meogs Coun·
. from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.. for an indefi· t~ Sheriff James M: Soulsby. .
·
·oc1 h'l work II
· done b the
Slashed were llres on vehoctes·
nile .,_n W I e
Y
•
h' h sch ( Pri 'pal
Ohio Bridge Co. to-icpair 8 slip,
belongmg_to · tg
oo
net
•
. · Gordon F1sl!er and Danoel Hensler.
Wllltlowa 95 cJa.
. Anyone with information should
The Eutem High School Com, ·contact the sheriffs office, Soulsby
•

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1lit Dtolt, llit!lilol, Ill Oton

Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldf
man are suing Simpson, who wat
acquiued in 1995. If found liablet
Simpson might have to pay the fam
ilies millions of dollars.
'
· Petrocelli, · who represents Gold~•
mfll's father, twice lhrust ,a,1inge~
Simpson and accused bun, pomt
blank. of being a killer.
.
I
"There's a killer in this coun1
room," Petrocelli said, staring downo
Simpson from just a few feet. awayi .
while Simpson louted back om~
sively. "That's the man who attac
them, confronted them, · and l!(h
killed them that Sunday eveniqg i
June."
·
•
Again Petrocelli pointed at Sim~
son, this lime while discussing th~
slow·speed Bronco chase.
•
"Whether he's fleeing the police
. whether he's going to pUll the triggerl
whatever 'he's going to do, it shOws
one thing: that he's guilty_or _ki'!lin&amp;.
two people," Petrocellfi~U4~•1 ~
He ridiculed Simpson's explana'tion of the chase .as a race to commi(
'suicide and picked apan .the note the
defendant left behind.
·'
'"What kind of a ·suicide note is
that1 There's-not one word ofsorrowr
in that note expressed for Nicole:
Who signs a suicide note with a hiiJ&gt;';
· py face? Have you seen that note-.
0. J. with a smiling '0?'"
;
Simpson, according to Petrocelli.~
may also' be a "very clever guy, a
very sman guy, a very shrewd guy,".)
but he made mistakes, leaving behind!
a host of evidence: blood, hair, fibers,
gloves, a ·hat, socks. ·

0

·purer Club is hoklinaa fiw '!ealnning

H, . ltal

OSp
ft8WS
Vetentaa M•
ariltl

Tunday ldeni..-a - Maurita
Miller, Pomeroy; Woodrow .Halt,
Racine;
Mona
Pma. kine.
Tueaday
dischiiJes
- Elizabeth
culler, Pomeroy.
Helilr N •11 1eeam
21
Dlttllnltr.- , ... - WilliMI
Kennedy,Mrs.BiJb'lbrlesaaatl_,
llupM.Anlla.
(Ptl'l'
I

•

, .........,
.... •

·-

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..,

of Parsons &amp; Whittemore, said plans · '
for the mill will be re-examined whC.f ·
the permits are issued. The statement
was dated Jan. 17.
"
Drafts for the permits could .be
ready by the end of next month'
Farkas said.
.. ·
Even if the paper mill is not built, ·
it won't be long before another devel· .
oper is found for the 1,200 acre site.~
said John Musgrave, director of the''
Mason County' Development Author·.

Comm"lss' ··o·ners' w·.•·ll advertt"s'e :.

much a1 he's beitll explojted !Otlay," dent oC.advertisi~g IIIII pPI!Iicity at
COI,UMBUS (AP) _ lncliana, 51..50; plants 50.5(),52.00.
Part~ said jn 1993. · . •
tbC Lu ve~. HIIton, called Parker Ohio direct hog prices at selected
u.s. 2-3. 230,260 tbs. 44,()(),
'['homu Andrew ~~ .died ':aJepncl.y m~er.'' rr
buying'pointS Wednesday as provid· 49.00, 2Hi-231Y·!bs. 39.()().44.00.
Tuesday of complicilionl frolii -. r • \Ufe took Elvts Presley from an · ed 11y the u.s. 0e11anment of Agri~
Sows: mostly steady.
·
1
stroke. He was 87.
.
IJnknown Memphis counqy boy ~ culturi .Mllltet Ne;,j.s;
U.S. · 1-3 300-450 tbs. 38.50The rotund, rou"'"alound-the- ~world's number o~e en~ner,
Barrows ·and gilts: steady 10 .SO 42 ,00, ·450,500 lbs. 42.()().44.00;
.,.-• .figute with 11 fond.-., . for Pid:
aaid
_ B_anke, a longtl~ l_ fnend_ of hisher; dema~ ·mode
..... rate on moder· S00-650 tbs. 45.()().48.00,. few at
Cuban cigars became ~yunaner.
'",~- .
ate offerings. .
49.00.
aaor in t95S as the YOIIIII Mei)!Phis _ , Ban~e recounted P~er
kmg . U.S. 1, 2, 230. 260 lbs. counrry
Boars: 35.()().38.00.
truck driver was on the . verp of . Pres~ymtotheHiltonmthesummer poJ'nts 49.5(),SLOO, few at 49.()0.
E51ima~receipts: 35,000.
becomi a rock 'n' roJJ. senution. . of 1969. Presley played the,hotel for
. and sta;!J,iri the job until the death eight years,
attendance
• o(Tt,eKinginlvn.Aftcrthar.J&gt;.rlt- recordsthatremam~nbroken.
er 111 but retired.
·
·.~'J'!Iis ,wl!ole town o•beca~
·
.
·
. .
· ·
. .
Parker was crediiCCI with idlinll . SIYJSVIIIe ~n Presley played here,
•
'
l'l'Cslcy a $35,000 recordinj con~ Banke aaid. "~~y cn!atcd the
Units of the Meigs County Emer- · · I0:18 p.m.. Ljncoln Heights,
wilh RCA Vi~tor In the mJcl..t950s IIIJIIOIJ)heie ElVIs. dtd and •no one gency Medical Service recorded six Wendy I,.ong. VMH. Pomeroy squad
wh!:n SamPIIillipl'ofSun Recaidt in could promote htm the nway the calls for assislll!lce Tuesday. Units · assisted.
Memphla, 1\:nn .. clc:Ciiled' to sell the colonel could....
.
!~
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
contract
•
Parker $CCmed to cxerctse firm .
CENTRALDIS.PATCH ·
12:40 a.m., VQiunteer fire depart,
He 1 j50 limnpd 'Presley'i emy · contful !)ver Presley, who affection,
4:46 a.m., Eaate ' Ridge Road, ment and squad to High Street, car011
TV~, . inel~irit ~ • ately .called Parlcer ·~admiral." The · Cheste~, Vad_ Cundiff, Veterans bon .(Donoxide alarm, lla Da01)Cil,
, "TheEdSuilivanShoW'' in 195611111! "colonel" was an ~orilry totle Memonal Hospital; .
..
VMH.
1957 that helped clllaplllt the youns be~~ed on P~m:. In :1948 by
8:S3 ,a:m., Balin:" Addnoon, lUpc , • .
POMEROY .
10
PJ,IIey stardom.
,·
Lou1stana. Gov. Jlm'!'~e DaYJs. .
pers P111ns, Roy Miller, VMH~
Bran'
8:.::mp,~Die~::~ !~~;iaT~~~~
· Early in Presley's ...ner, it wu
Aft~r Presley doed, · tilt, ~ns
8:06 p.m., Page Street, Middle, pt'tal' ,·
.
,
Parker who started ~~~ Elvis · ru~ tl!&amp;' Parker hllil no lepl nghts · port, VMH; '
bracelecs and other lri.lbll ftnl or ~nterost to the Presley es,tate. He
vc Elv:. memorabilia its~ ••r sold several J&gt;resley rctjOrd•ngs
tackiness,
'. . · . '.·
" lo R,CA for $2 nu_lhon
..
. . .
. .
fuker lOok between ~S ~ lawsuits_accused htm of
tina~
.. ' .. " .'..
Cial advantaJC of Presley.
.
Membenblp'-rtlnl
.
. Windows 95 ~lass stao:ting Tuesday,
- ~ Joo,pounder whO wa$ some-- The annual membership ineeting · 6:30.8 p.m. iu the high school and
The Daily
~. lacking in .the socUil graces. of the MeiJs County Humane Soci· continuing weekly through "!~h 4.
"· ~
Parker wore wallung shons, a color, ety will he held Jllli. 29 116:30 p.m. 'Twenty,five openings are avadable
. :
IWNJJMIII
,
M shin and a ..,.ball ~ap to f&gt;Rs· · 81 the Thrift Shop in Middlepon. . on a first-come, first-served basos, · .
r 1111 1 - ; • .,;, '
ley's funeral .
,,.
,

The lroatoo n•t•lit,lan. 17

J

transponation to scheduled ~vents. tection.
·
Meals are not_included.
. ·.
"We're still proceeding with the
JQ!l•son woll escort the group.
review of the wa'fr pc;rmit, which ity.
. . "
'.
deadline :ror space resetva- was thrown out by · the Kanawha
' "11181 's one Of the better SiteS ID r
toons 1s Feb. 5 wuh the total amount County Circuit Court." Farkas ,sa!d. • the stare of West Virginia for indus, ·
due at the.time of reservation.
In a statement released Tuesday, ·ti'y," M"usgrave sao'd.
''·
.
Forreservationsj:onlll&lt;:tlheMeigs c. Kennet)IG!)ddard, vice prcsiden!
County Tourism Office at 992-2239
•
orKannJohnsonat992,6301.
.
.

~.: '
:.:.e::.~:d tell them I'm 'riot. ~-~~~.. ~~.tor Elv:s ·Toda ',S livestock
"ldon'tthiriklexploitedBivius .. 8rilce Banke~·· fomer voce preSI·
· Y.
.

'

~

selling~. da~ flow~s~wticket,~istoric.tour

.-om
. .Parliel, .,dead at"age 87
I 4 • •"
·,

~

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11!! 1VIS
,, ., 1vU;;,11
.A rnla m
''anatte
' r. Col'
., .
A::~·
,. '·

The plainliffs were expected to
~~:::a~;;~.;:~~~~~

let

"'The pllintiffs will
the WI sa~
m a rebuual, and the case could go
the jury as early u Thursday.
The relatives of victims Nico

·Mill delay disappoints

= .a.~.

"i .. .• •

~!~~llnottellthetruth ~·lroce•·

The Meigs County Chamber of day, March 5 at 8 a.m. and arrive that Petrocelli and statements from lawyer
CommOn:e'sTourism Office isspon- . evening in Philadelphia.
John Q. Kelly about domestic via:
soring a four-day, lhree-nightlrip to
On March 6, panicipants will · lence evidence.
·
the
F.Jower Show March · · take in
flower sh9w at
con·
Defense lawyers· Robert · Baket
5:8 ·
·
vention ce11ter. The following day and Roben Blasier will then sum up
trip is being held for area will consist of a tour of historic their case, spe(\ding about a day outgreenh~ fanners in addition to~ Philadelphia including Elfreth's Alley . lining the police,can't,be-trusted
general pilblie, according
Me1gs (the oldest street 1.n the
Bel- argument. Simpson, who testified for
County Tourism Director Kirin John, sy Ross:s home, the L1bel'ly Bell, 'four days during lhe civillrial, con·
son.
•
. Independence Hall, Franklin Court, tends he was at home around the time
Extew!ed lcincut:
The Philadelphia Fl~r Show 1s Olrist Oturch and Cemetery, Con, of the slayings.
·Friday.. .lncreasing clouds. A the oldest and large~! flower show in gn:ss Hall and Libraiy _Hall .. _The
chlnce of showers. Highs near .50.
the nation.
.
sroup will tour the Franklin lnstotute
' -Salwday... A ch&amp;nce of showers' ·
This year's sbow, "Tbe Great Museum of Science that afternoon.
dUring the day.. ,Then a chance o~rain EXchange: P~ople, ·Places . and
On March 8, after a free moming,
or -snow showers dllling the noght. Plll\ts," will feature llf,signers from die JCOUP will retum·to Ohio, arriv,
(Continued from Page1)
LOws 35 to 4o. Highs in the 40s.
tiX U.S., United Ki\i'gdom, Italy, ing blick in Pomeroy atiO p.m.
statement Friday saying it has
· Sunday..-.Panly ~loudy. Lows in Japan, Belgium and Holland.
· · Package prizes range from $38S to shelvect lhe project, sw~ e~viron· 17
·the 201. Hi&amp;hs in the 30s.
The sliow consist of 10 acres of · $60S per person, depending on room mental officials said Tuesday that
·
.
flower arrangemen1s, counyards and oei:upii)Cy. Included are bagpge they were not asked to halt work on
scUlpted audens: More than 60full: ' handling, holel tax andgraruities. one pollution pemliiS for the mill.
J
•
size home and_ garden
· "I'm not aware of the coinpany

'

l:l

'

M~ng · Simpson:s alibi, sneer·
ing at defense strategies, pointing his .

by

MARGARET LEHEW

__ ....._"'.._____
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'

Publlaher

. n..s.t~aol

tt: 74' Pomeroy, died. at her res•·de. nee Mon· day,

JanB:;
May I, 1922, she was lhe daughterofthe late Leroy finger at Simpson arid staring him in
and Nelli MenchiniiBarsotti; She was a local business owner for many years, the eye, the plaintiff lawyer
and aiiiCIIIher of the Sacred.Hean Catholic Church of Pomerot and Catholic unleished an angry summation in the
·
wrongful:death case. ·
. ·
Women's aub.
.
.
daugh and
The closing argument, which
She is survived her husband. Francos S,haeffer; three
ters
sons- .be an Tuel!la and cbntinues .tnday,
in-law, Zita and Kenny Shuford of Lawtey, Fla., Remalee and Myron fran&lt;:k, . g ked s· ~·s cllanoc!er sought
owialc of Middleport. and 1ina ~J. D. Story of.Pomeroy; a brother and SIS: :OU::se his ':'on~s
and sile~ces .....:
ter,in-law, Enzo and Jean BarSotti of Fresno, Caltf.; and seven grandchildren.
. hi and
tinually referred
. B~ her paients, she W!IS preceded i~ death by a brother, Carlo John ~~~:!~~·as ~nd of rl)an who
Banottt.
. .
.
.
.
.
would, and llid, kill his ex-wife and
Mus of Chrisban bunal wdl be 10:30 a.m. ~~~ ~~ lhe S~red Hean h fri d and then lried 10 cover his
~burch, l'omeroy, with lhe.Rev. Roben M~ohnt offic1atmg. Bunal will be tr::ks~n ' .
10 the Sacred Hean Cemetery, Pomeroy. Fnends may call at the F1sher Funer,
"What
· .n this courtrOOm
a1 Home, Middleport, from 2-~ and 7-9 p.m. today.
·
and heard rno::n~:O~nroom will only
A vigil.scrvjce will be held on the funeral home at 8:45 p.m. Wednesday. 1 ad
onclude that this man is
10
In lieu Of flowers, contributions may be ?Jade to the Sacred Hean Cathc;&gt;fic ~.~!~ble cfor .killing two people
~h, 161 Mulberry Ave .• Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
June l2, 1994, and is incapable of
accepiing responsibility and cannot
...

I

•!Ccllulieul!w I

2

••

ROBERT L WINGETT

'

ans!:.C~~~~ a0~~ his own

Sha~ffer

Dorothy BlliOiti Shle er,

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

r

liiD el I d Prill WI IIIII'
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
Rep *dJ~. Daniel Potrocelli uked
the cpstion: What kind 0 ( man is
OJ. Simpson?

by

.2r

•a

a, MICHAEL FUEIWI

Carl Reebn, 60, Raciae, died Tuesday, J10. 21, 1997 in Grant Medical
·C ent. Coltm'Nt.
·
·
~........ will be •mtnced later the Fisher Funeral Home, Mid-

111 Court II.,
Ohio
114412-211111• Fu: 912-2157

011111'111 111

The Deily 81 tllnel• , . . 3

siaidi.iiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~!J!~!!I~~~~~~!!~~
OPEN YOUR DOOR TO A HIGH SCHOOL
FOREIGN EXCHANGE STUDENT• .· Sever•l
countrlea to choo.. from, SC.ndlnevl•n,
Europelln, South ArneriCI!n, A81en or one of tM
..._
n•w lndtlpendent Stlltea from IM.tout.:ar Soviet
801).
Union. Auguet arrival, Cell Todeyf C.U 1

SIBLING today. Amerlcttn lr:tercultunll Student
exc--r
· -.... A nonprofit_ tu exen:._pt eel~

Thornton, who brought the issue;:
to the fore at his first meeting, noted&lt;'.
that he and Hoffman, as niayors .of
Racine and Middleport, respectively.
both had prayer before their villager
meetings . .
"We did it in Racine. I think we 1
should do il here," said. Thornton.
''I'm not perfect, I need guidance.,
Here in Mdgs County we need all the
help we can get." ·
,
"There is a lot of support in the
county for .this," he said."! think the:;.
prayer is going lo help us." ·
· Two county residents, who asked,,
not to be identified, attended the ·
beginning of the mectin~ to support;,
the prayer, SBid the Conslotuuon does
no'i prohibit religious expression, but
merely forbids establishment of one!'
official reliJion.
.
"I don't understand that just ..
because you are in a public office you ·
can not panake in' your religion," one "
said, "Somewhere somet~ing is;,
.wrong."

•

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••

!Sp.orts
•

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••

.'

Polnlrvf•lllddllport, Ohio

'f!le Daily SentW!.~

In the Au•tnJI/an Open,

Hingis~

Pierce,
Sampras &amp; Muster
head to semifinals

Wedn11dly, JII\Uit'Y 12, 1117 ~

·

:--~--~--------~~--~-~~--~------~------~~------~~~~~~

Trimble hands Meigs·65.·61 setback

I·
I

I
'

. By DAVE HARRIS
, S111t11 ... CorrHpondent
: Trimble sophomore Brady Trace
,poured in 34 poinCS. !lnd the Tom•cats took advantage of ice cold
shooting from Meigs in the third•
•period as the Tomcats posted a 65:61 wi'n over Meigs in boy's Tri-Val,ley Conference basketball action
"Tuesday evening at Trimble.
• Trace was only four of 10 from
•the floor from two point range in
game, but·he was a perfect six for six
:from the three point range. The 6foot-2 sophomore scored 21 of his
points in the first half including 15
:from long range.
.
•.
The loss was the fourth in a row
•by the Marauders, those losses have
-.:orne by a total of 12 points. Meigs
· drops to 4-9 overall and 3-5 in the
.Ohio Division of the 1VC. Coach
,'Scott Gatchell's club is now 5•1 0
overall and 5-6 in the Hocking Divi:
:sion.
, Both teams traded buckets to
.start the game, Trace gave the Tomcats a 7-S lead with a short jumper
with 4:45 left in the period. Meigs
then went on a 1+2 run and took a
19-9 lead when·Matt Williams hit a
short jumper with two seconds left.

.'S cholastic sidelight

But the Tomcats came stormi~J
back behind the shooting of Trace. ·
He hit three-three pointers in a span
of 2:42 to pull Trimble to within 2320 with S:181e.ft in the half.
· Another three pointer by Trace
· pulled the Tomcats to within 29-28
with 2: 121eft in the half. But Meigs
took a 33-30 lead into the locker
room at the half when Collin Roush·
hit a 12 footer with four seconds left
in the half.
M~igs held ll37-32lead with 6:36
left in the third period when Brad
Whitlatch hit a pair of free throws.
The Marauders hit their only shot
from the floor in the periqd when
Hannan hit a lay:.up giving Meigs a
39-35 advantage. In the period the
Maraudershjtafrigid·oneofl9from
the floor including all but two coming from three point range. Trimble
took a 44-40 lead at at the end of the
period when Dustin Jennice scored
·with 47 seconds left. · ·
' The Tomcats increased the lead to
46-40, but Meigs came back and tied
the game at 53-all when Roush hit a
10 footer along the right baseline
with 3:05 left.
The Tomcais took a 63-57 lead ,
when .Kyle Patton hit a pair of free

·

throws with 26 JCConc1s left. But rebounds, led 'by Williams witli 11.
Mejgs came back 10 cut it to 64-S9 Whidatch added 'eight llld HanMII
on 1 Josh Witherell bucket with 18 had seven. Whitlllch had three of the
seconds left.
eight Meigs wisiS, and Willi11111
Robert·Qualls then came up with had five of the IJI8!00il and aold's
a big steal on the eDd bounds play eight steals. Meiss had lllllmo\iers .
and.f~ Whitlatch who was fouled. . · Retene IICMI: Mei11 rolled 10 a
Whatla.tch missed the first free throw, S0-38 win on·the reServe g8Q:. w.y.
but Hannan came up with a bucket. Jon McKinriey led the way with 18,
off the offensive boards 10 cut it to a Grant Abbolt and J.T. Humphreys
63-61 contest with eipt seconds left. added nine each.
..
Trace hit a pair of free throws with
Tbe future: Meiss will host
seven seconds left in the. contest 10 ·Alexander on Friday, the Spartans
ice the Trimble 6S-61 victory.
dropped a 74-64 aame in the big
Trace led all scorers with his 34 showdown with Nelsonville-York
points, he was joined in double fig- on Tuesday. Meigs will travel 10 Belures by David Guthrie with H . pre on Satuiday. Trimble will travel
Trimble hit 20 of 47 from the floor to Belpre.
includins six of 12 from three poi11t · Oyemr J11111a .
rangefor43%. TheTomcatswentto Meigs
t9-t4-'7-21=61 .
the line 23 tinies hitting 19 for 83%. Trimble
· 9-21-14-21=6S
Trimble· had 2S rebounds led by
~elp:'Brad Whitlatch 6-1-3=18,
Trace with seven. Josh Limo had , Collm Roush 3-0-2=8.. Matt
three of the Tomcats II assists, and Williams 2-0-2=6, Daniel Hannan 8Trimble turned the ball over 11 1-2=21, Josh Wiiherell 4-0-0=8.
times.
,
Totab: %3-l-!1-61
·Hannan led Meigs with 21 points, · liiinble: Josh Limo 2-0-0=4,
while Whitlatch added ·18. Meigs Dustin J~nnice 1-0-0=2, Zach Miller
was 25 of 61 from the floor for 41% 1-0-5=7, Brady Trace.4-6-8=34, Josh
including tow of six from long McClelland 1-0-0=2, Kyle Patton 1range.Meigswasnineofl7fromthe· 0-3=S, David Guthhrie 4-.0-J=Ii.
line for 53%. Meigs pulled down 37 Totall: 146-19-65
.
.

.

. ·,Windon joins Kavanaugh among stars
· By The Associated Preu
Although she's jusi S-foot-2 and
, 110 pounds, Aliron Hoban's Jacki
Windon casts a large shadow.
The senior point guard averages
19 points and 5.5 steals on a team
that hopes for a repeat trip to the
state's final four in March.
An example of her worth- con' siderably greater than her staturecame Saturday against Canton
McKinley.
· ·
,: With the score tied and 20 seconds left; Windon dribbled while the
·clock ran down, then drove the lane
-where she .was met by three taller
·d~fenilers . She lofted a floater over
:their hands and was fouled, watch,
;ing the ball go in while she was flat
,on her back, 1Then she made the free
~throw to clinch the victory.
• "I don' t think size ·ma•.ters that
:much," she·said. ''It's what you're
:about while you're out there."
• Elsewhere around Ohio hoops,
,Columbus Brookhaven stretched its
:Winning streak to 40 in a row ,behind the 28 points of Toledo- ·
&lt;bound Kahli Carter and Seton Hall·
'sianec To ronda Hayes' 26 - in an .88-83 overtime victory over Colum'bus Northland; Norwalk SL Paul's
.boys have wori 10 games in a row to
'!let to 11-1 and give coach Mike
,Smith his IOOth career victory;
Newark's girls' 3.9 -game home win,ning streak .ended Satprday with a
1\5-48 .loss to Gahanna; Lees Creek
Bast Clinton's boys (1{).2) are at their
best in the fourth quarter, hiuing I 34(!f-167 free throws (80 percent).
.: Utica's boys and girlste.ams ~ach
~J~tve aset of twin.s on the roster. The
11rls team, ran~ third in Di~ision
Ill with aJ 4-0 record,.has the stanillg senior backcourt of Tiffany and
. Tr~i Vanasse. The 11oys are 7-6 With .
l:ilick and Justin Rhoads seeing time.
~· The battle for bragging ·rights in
"Wayne County has been moved. The
~owdown between fourth-ranked
Orrville and No. S Wooster Triway
~ivision II) was changed from
Orr·ville to Akron's Rhodes Arena
iaturday at 4 p.m. to ac£ommodate
&lt;Ill expected large crowd.
::: Oregon Clay's boys had superb
tft.nc management in the fourth quarter; but dug itself too big of a hole tp
a¥oid a 74-7lloss to Findlay on Satufday. The ~les . trailed by 17
points entering the final quarter but
used fouls and the transition game io
get 'as close as two points .with less
· ~n a minute to go. Clay, which
Sl!ored 36 poirits .in the first three
quarters, had 35 in the fourth period
alone. Findlay !Dade just one field
goill'in the final quarter but hit 19. of-27 foul shots to make the big lead
stand up.
Bryan's 6-8 Jason Kreger had a
triple-doYble - 21 points, 13
rebounds and 12 blocked shots - in
a 68-S4 ~ictory ov~r l:laviland
Wayne Trace. Findlay Liberty-Benton sophomore Jana .Butler also
plllled o(f the rare feai, scoring 18
~ints 10 110 with I 0 rebounds and 12
bloc;ked shots, in a S1-S2 win over
Ottawa.&lt;Jlaildorf,
Itvnton 's Kristen Kavanaugh,
averasin1 36 points over.~ l115t four
a-, set aIChool rec:ord with 43 in
one lame durin&amp; thai streak;' J(yle
Cilmltock ICOnod 30 points, hit eiJht
u,r..pOitiflln 8lld also made the
prne-wlllllill&amp; bucket in J)elaware
Blli:bye Wley'• flU? victory over
.Del- Maya; IIICf l.an Hanmla
or.r ee:a'lllr Plilfield Union hid 34 .
pdiAII ... l"*'"tlldl in I 69-66
overtline win over Ashville Teays ,

\ldley.

'

who has signed to play at Pitt next
year, had 25 points and 18 rebounds
in a 53-33 victory over Walnut
Ridge, then had 31 points, 21
rebounds and nine blocked ,shots in
a 76-52 win over Marion-Franklin.
Is there a betier 1-2 punch in the

~ IC1nort s

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HERE IT COMES! - Thtit may have been the thought (or worde) ·
of the moment for Melgl! guard BI'ICI Wllltlltch (UJIIN":,left In Wli
.
1trHY), .Who pe- the bell tq ~te Milt Wllllam• .(30) Ia Trim- i
ble'a DaVId Guthrie (22) defend• on the play during Tueadlly nlght'a
game In Glol!ster, where the ha.t Tomcats won 6H1, (Senti!MI J1f10: :
10 bV .Dhe Harris)
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the pace ill ~-8; and 4-6. The loss two); had 17 turnovers, and IS fouls.
. broke· a three-game Southern win- .
Belpre hit 19-36 for .528, was s- .
' ning streak. Belpre, once the domi· 11 on three's, and was 17-19 at the ·
nator of the 1VC, boosted itS mark line for .894, while grabbins 29
to 3-10 and 3-S.
rebounds. ( Kline 9). Belpre had 9.
Soulhein was led by Jamie Evans' steals (Rsndolph 5); 18 turnovers,
13 points, which came on four three· and 20 fouls.
·
pointers; Ryan Norris added · eight
Belpre wo.n the reserve aame 4Sand Pete Sisson six. Belpre was led 38 .ted by Brian Bartlett with 26.
by Kyle Bradford's 24, 14 from Jim Jason Allen and Josh Davis had 17
Randolph, and ten from Josh. and 10 respectively for Southern.
Strothers.
·
Ouarterlldlll
Southern took leads on::z (Evans Southern
13-9-9-·18=49
3-pointer) and 7-S, bur never .led Belpre
15-IS-17.-23:i70
again. Coach Caldwell said, "It was
.Southern: Ryan ·Norris 0-2a 'total lack of effort by our kids."
212=8, Jamie Evans 0-4-113=13, .
Belpre got the sweet tasted of sue- Jesse Maynard 0-0-4n=4, Pete Sis· cess earl)' when they took a 10-7lead son 1-0-416--6, Jarrod Mills 1.-0on a Kyl~ Bradford three pointer; 112=3, Troy Hoback 2-0=4, Michael
then ~njoyed the feeling so mcuh Ash 1-0=2. Joe Kirby l-Oo=2, Jason
they raced 10 a 15-13 advantage after . Allen 1-0-1/2=3, Tyson Buckley 1- .
one periqd.
0-214=4. Totals: 11+(15-26)=49
· Belpro then maintained a 7-8
Belpre: Jim Randolph 4-0., point margin the rest of the half until · 618;d4, Vern . Reams 2-0:;-4. Kyle
the 2: IS marie wben Southern cut the Bradford 6-3-0=24, Mark Wilcoxen ·
. lead to 27-22 on a Jesse Maynard 3-0-3/3=9, Josh Strothers ,; 2-0free throw.
6(6=10, Mike Allender 1-0=2, Zach
Bradford hit a three just before Klein 1-1-212=7. Toblla: 1,_3-(11·
half to ·push the Belpre lead to 30- 19)=70
· ·
·
' · ,
22.Belpre scored earl~ in ~he secOnd

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break. I think I can recoanize when
":"ST. LOUIS (AP) ~ ThiS'Iime it's time 10 aive the coach the break,
albund•.one-time bumollt poster boy !Uid !,think I can recognii.e when it's
Qlck Veimeil wants to tum bllck lhe time 10 Chew IOIIICO!IC's bun out. and
1think 1can recognize when it's time
\lVI&gt;tt'IC little bit.
. ·'
: Efsy to say, tough to pull .oft'.faf 10 wort lhein harder. I only did it one
·
\he St,. Louis Rams' new coach juid · way ~fore."
·
rue
his
broadcastinJ
career.
As
.ident of foocball operadons. .
': ~il kicked off the 1\leadily · a coltep football analyst for CBS
niWs eoilference to announce•he'd and ~c. Vemi.cil approached same
qJreeil to a five-year, $9 million dial SalUrdal'l ·as i( he were still coach·
·
·
.,qtJI a half-hour of·non-stop talklna ing.
"I
waa
over-prepared,"
Vermeil
·
before wins questions from · ·
tjlalliled reporters. His ~A per- uid. "I couldn't use all the infor- 1
sOnality bpnt through ap1n wben he mali!"'} hl4 if I did the .team si~ ~
,
to excess - how be weeki 1n a row.
·
"Didn't
matter.
I
gained
conlij
1111 lihanged during his 14-year
dence by knowing. Whatever Brcnt't
aJIIence lronl coaching.
.: "I lhinlc I can reropi~:e when it's (Musbetpr) threw at me, I hill it.
happlnecl on the r..Jd.. I
tlC!O to tutil the projector off," Ver- \VIIatever
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,
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Crollamon 15.6-HP, .U.;n. town 1roc1or

mower Willi Eogar.f .

, ang!Mior~
tlail~ ~· 317112/n .

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coach &amp; operatlo,s president

CoaiiiiiiOII ~. ~ .

t

Best Wishes To ·All Our
Meigs.CoUnty
Winter SpOrts. Programs

IIams appoint v~rmell head

159"
............

an_,, a 6-~ senior

·~ -:tv SCoTT WOLFE
had achance to tie, butj(ehl missed winner when Belgian giant-killer helped her roll Sllfely 'on the gtiiSS
•;·ientlnel Correepondent
both ends of the two-sh'\;1 foltl.
· DOminiqi!C Van Roost quit in tears .· after
Went flying over the horse's
~~ .Ou~red' l2-10 in overtime, the . VC came back for a 70-66 lead, · and pain from an abdominal muscle head. en she climbed back on and
!"Eastern Eagles fell to defeat at the then Eastern tossed the ball out-of- injury.
·
· continued.
. .
v~Jiands of the VintonCounty Vikings bounds to VC. VCrelllmed the favor
. "Her game suits me,'' HinJis said
"I wasjumpins and the horse did""1\aesday night in boys' Tri- Valley with a travel. Dillard drilled a lona of Fernandez.
n't jump, and I jumped by myself,''
" Conference basketbsll action. After two. then much 10 the dissatisfaction
The other semifinal pits No. 12 Hinsis said, explaining her faulty
~Iii great6-2 start, Eastern drops 10 6- ofcoach Brooks, Caudill lofted an Amanda Coetzer of South Africa, &lt;liming.
• :1 after. 11 five game skid. Vinton untimely three point attempt and Graf's conqueror, against 1995
~ were no such mistakes on
'Couqty moves 10 7-5.
Eastern gotthe rebou!J(I, butwent on champion Mary Pierce, unseeded key points today as Hingis iebound,;: Eastern was· led by a game-hip to miss a forced shot at the blocks.
after a dismal 1996.
.
eel frona early service' breaks by the
' ':!1-poh;at effort from Eric Dillard.
Caudill put vc up 72-68, then · · The men's 5cmifinallineup 'also eighth-seeded Spirlea in both sets.
whic:t Daniel OtiOadded 13, Josh Dillard.hit one of tWo fl!lll t!llows for includes some unfamiliar faces for ·. The Romanian hit some impressive
::~to. 11. and seven each froril Rick- a 72-69 score.Caudill eountfrcd with such · a late stage in a IJarill:oun ~inners, but in the second set had 13
~:!~ ; Hollon and Steve Durst.VinJon a·l.-2 tally; 71-69 and Dillard hit a · Onind Slam tournament.
unforced ~rrors to Hingis' one..
~~ountY, was Jed by Ryan ·Caudill three 10 pull Eastern 10 within 'one
No. S Thomas Musier, an undisKeeping. up such mll$tery ,could
·with 27 points. while Jason Kruger. (73·72) with seven seconds left.
puled niaster on clay but play ina make Hi,nais the youngest 'l"hln!r in
' ~ded 13 and·ToddBraden eipseen.' 'Easlern'~led for the ti~t did· only his second Orand Slam·semifi-. a Grand Slam tournament Stnce
. ,;;,: "This gl!rne came down 10 two , 'n~'ld !he all as time clickec!·to.l sec- nat on.anY otl)etsurface, reached that Charlotte ':Louie" Ood Captured
ci.undamentals: foul shootinJ and onds· (oric-tenth) where Caudill ·. stage by capitalizina on the errors of . Wimbledon atthe.age of IS in 1887.
:. o:bounc!ing. If we get onemote foul . fouled and hit one oftwo fot; the 74- No. 3 Ooran Ivanisevic for a 6.4, 6Van Roost was trying to become
,,$1\01 in. reJillation we win or if we · n ·finile.
.
2. 6-3 victory.
the l'irst Belgian woman to reach a
~Gome up with the rebound we.,win.
Jerty p~n 1
Ivanisevic had 16 aces, but won Grand Slain semifinal in the open
We didt)'t(exeoute , fundanentally)
·Eastern 'led 12:10 lifler'llil\ first · only;28 pel'\lent of his sec~serve eraj'; ~ upsetting No. 2 Sanchez
· •-andwe lost. We had the chancus.," a rotind, but fell to 32-30 at the half. ,. points !IS .he ttied desJjcrately fill(. Vicario and No. IS Chanda Rubin, a
"~coach Tony Deem 'SBi,jafter Eas~ fcllfroin two.,jloiiithjllftlme . 'Wif\ilj:ts ~~~ ~~~yed 54' rtforc.ea· seliJifinallit'lasryear. " '
. 'Jhe :~. .· )1 ,
deftcit 10 a 43·32 tally befpre East- errors toMuster s 14.
At S-S ·in lhe·flfllt 'et. an abdom':': ~rn had gone on a 10-3 run · em niusieied "up 1 counter. Eaitern . · Muster ndw faces No . .J Pete ina! muscle injury that had bothered
::lte .Jn the fourth quarter after trail· played fairly wellfrom there on out, Sampras, who needed five set~ to her for a week, along with hack and
· forearm pains, \flared up strongly.
:tllg SO-SS. An EricDillard drive at .the however, the Vikes outscored East:f' l4111111'k in regulation gave Eastern -ern 18-8 in the frame. ·
1osh Casto and Daniel Otto ahd
..., 60-58 lead, but at the 1:08
:=.arkEastcm fouled Ryan Caudill, big fourth qUarters as Eastem mlled
:lho after missins three earlier free to take the lead. Steve Durst also hid
· throws, canned both ends to tiethe a big bucket and Jeremy Kehl drew
'
.acore at 60-60.
a big.thlflie that negated a Viking: .flasttm turned the ball over on its bucket. The final en~ed 62:62. ·
:~(ext. OP,POrtunity, but Jeremy Kehl · Eastern hit 23-48 two's, 3-14
e ·up with n bigsteal and was three's, 17-28 at the line and had 34
ed on the play with 34 seconds rebounds (Dillard 13,0tto ~). East:Now at ten foub and a two-shot em had one block, three charges,
;;ltuatiorlat the line, Kehl missed the nine steals (Casto 3, Hollon 3); 15
::Drsi , blit made the second to put turnovers, I2assists (Dillard 4, Durst
::Z.stenl on top 61-60. VintonCoun- 4) and 17 fouls.
::J:t had a missed shot and a mined
Vinton County hit 27-61 two's'J:;vp, but Eastern rebounded and 7 three's, and 10-14 from the line
::W.issed also. Dillafll.came p with the with 35 rebound$(Caudill 10, Braden
~ ballafter the! rebound and was 9). The Vlkes had two blocks, 17
~'muled with 12 seconds left. Dillardturnovers, 14 steals (Murphy 4); 19
c:ltuld have iced the ganie, making assists(Murphy ·6, Nice S) and 24
first. but missing the seco.nd.
fouls
:
This set the stage for a. hemic
Eastern dropped the reserve
~;ISI·tO.Coast drive by 1bdd Braden gamcS4-20 led by Eric Sniit~ with
.
'
who .twisted.throughthe defense.for · ten and' Jeremy Colcmanwith six.
a~ay-up .with two seconds left. l;lilst- Jessie Reynolds had 12 for VC.
eln inbounded the ball and in the Oyertcr tatJsla
Jiioclcss ·ofcalling a time oui lost pol-' Eastcm ·
12-18-8-24-10=72
~ss(on out of bounds, setting the Vinton Cqunty 10-22-18-12-f2=74
s)llge.for one last play for VC with· ·
Eaitem: . Eric Dillard 8-2ope secilnd left on the clock. The 9/12=31, Josh Casto 5-0-1/1=11,
shot was talc and no good, sending Rickie Hollon 1-1-212=7, Di1J1iel
tile same to overtime.
.
Otto 6-0-112=13, Jeremy Kehl 1- .
:! Biaden went back door to give 1/5=3, Steve Durst 2-0-316::7. Totals
\'1:: an early lead in overtime lind Z3-3-(11·l8J=7l
Vlnloti Couaty: Matt Bethel 2,
Dillaril'tie with a pair offree throws.
jlraden hit a follow-up give-me off 0=4; Rob Murphy 1-0=2, Casey
tile glass anc! Eastern missed a pair Nice 2-0=4, Todd Braden " 8-0offree!hfows, setting the StaJ!i for a 21~=18, RyanCaudill 6-3-619=27,
tour point VC_Iend, a score eglsteted . NathanHenderson . 1-0=2, Jason
gby JIISon IGrupr. Att~,e 2;32 mar~ · Knlger4-l-212=; 13, Chad D11111ron 2..
. Dillard pulled EHS to w,ithin two 0=4. 'lbtalll6-4-(10-14)=74
pliin~ and at the 2: 19 marie Eastem'
··''·
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Fkarfdo'Conlnw:lorC&lt;IOCtstaleoriPtatl tic wal
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7
fou~C:.s:J:~i~;is
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and
bac:~':~~a:n:
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14 MIU'y' Joe Fernandez; a 7-S, 4-o
' Past gymnastics . experience 111ark. but instead fell three g~es off (Norris, Mills, Kirby, Maynllll:l each

.•Meigs Marauders
•Eastern Eagles
.•Southern Tornadoes

r. __., ....

WbMt• a tltllu'IIMI. WDI....,

~~ AFTSMAN

Belpre gets 70-49
win over Southern

:me

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beat No. 10 Albert Costa of Spain
despite losihg serve only once. Sampras ~lac;! 23 aces as he prevailed 63, 6-7 (S· 7), 6.1, 3-6, 6.2 in 2 hours,
S2 minute~ . .
"That will be a war," Sampras
said of Muster. "He's playing at a
very hiah level, beatine Ooran and
Jim Courier. But I'm playins well.
too."
' Sarnpras, abo extended to five
sets Monday aJainst Slovakil's
Dominik Hrbaly, 'is 7-0 in five-set
. matches in the ·Austmlian Open.
The American is 24-8 overall in livc$et matches, winninrtO of his last
11.
.
.
Also in thC semifinals. facinR No.
2 Michael Chsna. is No. 2S-ranked
· Carlos Maya of Spain, whole first
year of Orand·Slam tournaments in
1996 produced .two first- and two
second-rQUnd losses.
Hingis 1114 she won't do any • Southern stayed close for one half and the closest Southeql came
more ridini during the tournament\ half. but .then let the once strugglins was 32-25. A four-minute span saw
but only because there isn't time.
Belpre Eagles aain some valuable air . Southern outscored 10-4 as Belpre
. · "It wasn't·dangeious at all," she time en route to a 70-49 Tri-Valley roled to a 47-3l lead and tben'on to
said. "My mom was·there and-she ConferenceVictoryThesdaynightin the70-49finale.
was laughina. Everybody was laugh- Charles.W. Hayman gymnasium in
Southern hit 8-42 for 19 percent;
ina. Mentally, ,it just helps you some- Racine. .
hit 6-IS three's, was 15-26 at the line

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this season.
"
In a 107-79 victor} over ColumAlexander
boys
to
host
Portsmouth
SaturdaY:
bus Walnut Ridge, the 6-S Redd hit
39 points on I ,.of-25 shooting from
An earlier report in The Daily el to Portsmouth Saturday.· Actual- '
the field while King scorec,.33 pointS Sentinel indicated that Alexander, ly, Portsmouth visits Alexander on
on 14-of-23 shooting. Also last . ranked in the top IS in the state and Saturday.
;
week, Kin~ · scored 26 POints
· Coach by local Jay Rees, woll)d tmv·
·

·

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)
. ..,- If Martina Hinais beCOIMI the
youngcst Grand Slam chlmpion of
this century, she might have another
distinction too: The only titlist ever
10 fall off a horse during a major
IOumamenL
The fall during an attempted
jump Tuesday didn't stop the 16year-old Swiss star from contin11ing
her ride. Then today, Irina Spirlea
couldn't stop Hingis from lldvancina
to her second consecutive · Grand
Slam semifinal,. fallin&amp; 7-S, 6-2 to
Hingis' prCc:ise, confident strokes
under pressure.
·: · Hin&amp;is made only one unforced
error in the seeond set.
.
'
IT QOEIJ -Eaatem~S..Dum(~ . . . hls1hrHIn the first semifinal of Hinais'
out ol the - h ol VInton County s JIIOII Kruger
Grand Slam Can:er, in the U.S. Open
n-llVC game .at ~High School, · last summer, top-ranked Steffi Oraf
7._;72 1ft OVII'IIme.
•·
· proved too formidable an obstacle.
In the Aus!J'IIlian ·Open, the top
.three seeds - Graf. Aranxta
Saqchez Vicario. and Conchita Martinez- all lost before,thequai1crfinals. Dcfendin&amp; chlmpion Monica
· ·
. ·.. · . w
Seles stayed away becauac of a broken finger.
!

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GALLIPOLIS

Piallly, I lot . il soina on . .. .

COlt........

state than West's Mike Redd and
Kevin King?
While Redd, an Ohio State
signee, averages 26 points and 9.1
rebounds a game for the Cowboys
(9·2), the 6-3 King averages 23.3
points and hasn't been held below IS

By PHIL BROWN

Rely On Us For .
c·o. lete Covera Of ·Your
Favorite Sport an 1
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The Dilly .............. 7

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. In Top IS college ,_lciltball,

~ndiana

r.c..ice 'nlylor had 16 pointJ ror Ryu acored 17 points for the QuakThe&amp; t r(l6-4.).3ilqna) t.bt -.1 dillll't coa- on Ill)' of
Michipa,
while Maceo Baaton en (5-7), who have lost three
... kilt ..... of . . four
" ".. • llllid of !he fillll
added
14
IIIII
Bullock lu1d 10.
a n,iwcl 1'naat7-pahlt..,_ ........
Anilht.
a-. "l'w pttopul ..... OUiof
No. t Clerlnr s1177
• PUnlue 1111 S..dat. flaenon my lllblll be( MltD I'm quitllsure I'm
"Indiana did • JfCal jOb N.C ClwtoUe 67
..... m. "-in plli:ciu! Mondly fOiniiii ...W IIIONihla tine !IIOie . ina !heir pne pllll Wi!hout !heir best
player," Michisu ooach S!evo Fishud wuo't ia uniform 1Ueaday shots in my c:aeer."
O.Ony PortsOII scored 30 point1
niP.,
• Indiana'• lllltins !rio of guards er said. ' 'The last 10 minuleS we ud pobbed IS rebounds and Ruben
Knilht went small b): .PlaYiiiJ all came ~- Neil Reed scored played widl controlled desperation Plaenon lllldc three big plays down
dnc JUII'da. Alld whea fialmwl 20 poi!IIS. Friihman AJ. Guyton !hal allowed us to 1et back in !he !he ~~re~eb. for !he visitina Beiii:IIS
center Jason Collier on. the added IS lad Jllbbed die gsme~1 pme. But we pve !hem tOo many (1).3, 3-0 Conference USA). The
beach in !he second half because of final rebound. Freshman Michael !hinss good teams don't do."
49m (12-S, 4-2) tied !he game 6Sa combination of blck 11p111nis ud uwis added 10 points and led !he
In o!her pmes involvinJ ranlced 6S wi!h 2:03 left, then Patteribn,
foul trvuble, die Hoollen
even Hoosiers wi!h four Plists.
teams on Tuesday, it WI!S: No. 7 who had 20 points, scored inside and
smaller.
·
"Our play, our attitude, every- MIU')'Iand 103, Penn 73; No. 9 conve!led two offensive rd!ounds,
, The~ led6S-$0, butwwo thin&amp; wu totally different !han !he Cincinnati n, Nor!h Carolina Char- off missed free duo.... DeMno
oulaCOied ~7 die leal of die way. A put couple of wt:e~... Lewis said. lotte 67; No. 10 Duke 70, North Car- Johnson led !he 49ers wi!h 21 points.
Just after the pme, several
rebound -.at lllld two he dsows "We had to win !his ,_.We had olina State SS; No. I8 Colondo 74,
Baylor
70;
ud
No.-22
Boslon
ColCincinnati players 1~ into an al!erby Maceo Billion • il1' d 1111 .•
to ~y wi!h en!huslann.''
calion with some fans. Accordin,c to
,point run fill linluaiK Midlipn · Bullock sai!l !he Wolverines leae 81, Pi!tsburJh 61.
No.7 MarJiaad 103
Bearcats coach Bob Huggins, sodP
wi!hin two poi!* wilh lhW miDiiles . 4i ed to weill: down the Hooliers,
. Paa73
.
ud ice were !brown at his pl~ym as
to ao. Neither !DimiCIIIIId IIW!hal, who didn'IICOie OV« die final six
Keith Booth ud Rodney Elliott, they ran !hroullh • tunnel toward
ahhouJh bach ... plellly ofchuces. minutes.
two
Baltimore natives makina the !heir locker room. Hugains acknowlLouis BullOCk lu1d !he lasl ·of
"Wei were maltin11 !hem work a
diose ch·-· .• !hlw pointer wl!h Uule harder on offe!UC, and all of a short trip home, scored 26 and a edged that at least two of his play'!hree 'seConds left that could hive lUdden !hey ._. to s-d us becau~e career-hish 22, respectively. The · ers !hrcw basketballs at the fans in
aiven !he Wolverines lheir first lead we llarUid poundin1 !he ball down Tcnapins (16-2) used a 20-4 second- retaliation.
.No. 10 Duke 70
or !he pn1ll and, !he ' victory; but low," he said. "I think that allowed half run to take over the game
played
at
Baltimore
Arena,
about25
North~Canllllla State 55
us blck in the aame, but we just
i!lstead rimmed out.
· .. ' ,
miles from Maryland's campus. Jed
Jeff Capel had a seasori-hillh 2S
"I hid three open looliii at the ~~epped up our level of play."
poin!s - including seven owor the

'•li• - -

Pdnender A.-.
~ miuiiiJ ~ pme wi!h a

knee injury. That's Mprilifl&amp;.
·I...._ wu even Wiih Midlipn
In reboullds delpite • • • small·
er lineup due ~ i!IPPl' lad foul!rou, ble.~ss~,
·
lndiua played ·IDae defense.
That'slhockins.

n.

~1st-ranked Haosien belt

went

~o. 13 Michi11111. 72-70 ,Tuuhy

hlght' ...! all of • .00vo WQ lnle,
even die peit llbollr!he zone dl{eille,
sometluna lndiua coach Boli
Knish~ ~ man-to-mu
nrely
turns to.
"wt i)ad enoup of a cushi011 to
be able to play a zone;" Knight said.
"The i:olle helped us out a Jot, to my
amazement.
"I !hi:iupt maybe we eQUid slow
· thins•~ dov.:n in !he z&lt;,ne. 1 j~
wanted 19 see wt.t M could do with
it. It IIC'¥811Y helped us extend ow
lead. But we made some mistakes on
offense , _to let them back in the
gameti~ · .,

Punll.

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.In the NBA;

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gets past M~c~lgan; Cincinnati and Duke also win

lly De •1'faa' • d Pt 11
' lncB.a hell Midli.. clelpile

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final 2:27 - p lhc vililiiiJ Blue ·
Devils (IS_., "-2 Adllllic Coast
Conference) beM die Woll'pkk for
die 12th lime in !heir Jut 14 Ret·
inp. Damon TbOmton had I~ poi1111
for N.C. SJa!C (8-7, 0-6), which
closed within S9-S3 wi!h 3:0S to
play.
Net. 11 Calol'llllo 74
· Baylor 70
The Buffatoes (15-3, 6-0Bisl2)
won their eillh!h llnillh~ and it was
in !heir first game as a' ranked ~
in 28 years. Martice Moore, who
scomH9 pQintS, broke !he pmc's
final tie with a three-poi~ with
I: I7 left thai gave !he visilors a 71 - ·
681ead. Doug Brandt hid 19 points
and 14 rebounds for !he Bears (126, 1-5) .
No. ll Boston College 81
Pittsbuqll 61
Mickey Cwlcy ~ad 16 points and
12 rebOunds. eight' offensive, as the
Eagles(l3-3, 7-l)won!hcirseventh
straight Big East game. Boston College finished wi!h a 43-30 rebOund
advantage. Chad Varga scored 14
poin!S for.!hc visiting _Panthers (9-9,
3-4) .

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Jd.rdan's 51•polnt exhibition·helps Bulls top Knicks 88-87
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~ ~IS SHERib~

~ itto MicbaeiJordan to outdo evaynne else in !he NBA-even
on a .nialit when several players ~
games .jfw Jordan would be proud
of. ·_.:,~
·
; Jordan's !II points in the Chicaao
Bulls'·88-87 vict«y, over !he New
York Kilicks were !he most scored
TucldayiRipt as bis individual perfomiiii!Cl's were·all the rsgc.
Latrell Sprewell had. 46 poinrs,

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team'jl points- and !he motivation
behind it- as !he BullJ handed the
Knicks~ano!herlossonOoicaao's

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home' llOIIrt.
.'
•
Op,l)iesday mommJ, !he Ctlica·
go Trl~~ ru a story ~uotin1
~ic~cOrlch'Jeff~an G~y'as s'aymg ~Oidan was usms his charm to

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In the NHL,
I

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(Saws 12:-18)

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lARGE

..••.

lARGE

l•

lARGE

(Serves 18-24)

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·''31.95

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LARGE
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- ~i~~ov·stret~~ ·un,beate-n · string to·14

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'HOI WINGS

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2 i s4" 12 ''I''·
fiLl Sit.

•r( ,

FRESH

FlESH RU MADE

~·· PIZZAS

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,.

. MEDIU~

••a
,..'
1:.

(sa ues 25-30

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'IJJ5
(s.onal Mly .•·w.O
(t!!eJ,.·

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12.115.

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Beginning Fridpy, January 24th,
for three dilys only our superbowl
special will include:

•First month free access•
.
.

•No Activation Fee .
•Drawings for autographed ·
"Brett Farve'' Greenbay
Packers Hat. ·

1

YORK' ·(.4P). · ---;. Mike
' In his comeback, Tyson ' beat •
Tyson )!._,. reached into !he pasi for Peter McNeeley in 89 seconds,
his ~Y· ~ WBC heavyweishr cham· stopped Buster. Mathis Jr. in the third
j:rio~ip, light with Evander Holy- · f9Und. st\)~ Frank Bruno ~ !he .
field. . · ·
!bird, slopped BnK:e Seldon. 10 $he ·
In li bid to regain his crown:in \he lint, !hen Iosito Holyfield.
'Las . ~csas bout, Tyson will . be . ·... You don't (elfll any!hinJ from
ltained by Richie Gi&amp;Cl\elli, who jus! a kiiCICk(l!l~" Gi~ehetti said.
!rained,lhe boxer for four previou~ :.You'w aot to ...k. ·w.. it easy,
fighbi .'t ·
·
· , how did you do it, did you make it
"We1j'e aoing 10 work on sharp- ·happen' by setting him up for a
eninf' his' skills up." Giachetti said. knockou!?"'
Mathis simply was ·out~Unned,
"He· s · beci:&gt;mc a one-dimensional
fiah"r•. ·
··
·
but McNeeley, Bruno and Seldo!l
. "I JOI call last week," Giaohet-' · offere!l Tyson little oppo5ition.
ti aaid !Ji·telephone Tuclday, ''and.
· After ~son los! the undilpured
I've 11M in camp for two days."
championship when he waslcnocked
Gilcllltli replaces . Jay Bri&amp;hl; out in the IO!h round by J 'wbo b611 trained 'n'son for hi~ fivo "Buster". Doualai Feli. II, 1990,
flatU ~ace he waa releued from Oiacheui, aloaJti!lle traiaer lor lor~ D!l March 25, 199,, Gi.:hetmer champion Lirry Ho'-,
li doc'lh 't J to diiiCUit what 8rilht's rejJiacod BriJht aild lrll.cl '1).llialu. . . be in die '1}-SOD camp.
for ciay fint-nlt1811 'leU IN D¥er
Ty• ~n[llJ .';nil Iivia• ~ ., u.ty1li'-IIIIIA.Iu~nlltll[lld
prom!lil!'
.lJ'hll ~ · ·Ciur!p at, two toulh ·wfni ovw J)orlovan
ar-JI, Cilia
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"'Ruor"ltudtloc:Jt.

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son's Western Conference final,
dominated the first period.

I

Tyi.on to reclalm~Giachettl
fl.s :iralner ..foli · Jiolyfleld flg~t

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· ·. Houlder's scteeiled'stiC\t flllnfthe ' 'hoiiie un.n strdk to'six games.
rillht point eluded Roy for !he pme- ·
Bad blood betw.:en Roy and Dino
winner, which extended 18mpa's Ciccarelli, datins back to last sea-

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1RAY

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Mqic 93, BuUds 88
At Orlando, Rony Seikaly scored
26 points and Penny Hardaway had
a clutch three-pointer and layup
. down the stretch.
Orlando &gt;flint 10-for- 11 from the
foul line in !he founh quarter and
ift¥ovcd !o 6-2 since Hardaway and
Nick AndClSOn returned from the
injured lilt two weeks ago. The Magic have climbed wi!hin two games of
Washington for !he eighth playoff
spOt in' the Eas!em Conference.
Heat 94, Hawks 91
At Miami, Miami sank 13 of 19
!hrce-point al'cmpts,. "Including a
pair by lim Hardaway in the linal ·
two IJiinutes, to snilp !he Hawks· I0game winning streak. ·
Hardaway made 6-of-9 thrccpoinlen and scored 24 points. He
. hid I I assists and ~o turnovers,
Voshon Lenard went 6-for-8' from
three-point ranae · and scored 19
poin!s.

and we're passing the savings on to

SMAll .

SMAll

line. 'Drexler was 13-for-19 and 9for-9 . Rice's SCQOn-high point!otal
included 19 founh-quarter points.
Dell Curry finished with n
poin~~Anthony Mason added 19
points and nine rebounds for !he ·
Hornets. Hakeem Olajuwon scored
26 for Houston, which played wi!hout Charles . Barkley (SP,r&amp;ined
ankle).
Rapton 116
11mberwolves 108
At Toronto, Williams tied a club
record wi!h six !hree-pointcrs and
shot 12-of-20 from the -field. The .
Raptors sho! a season-high SS.1 percent from !he field alid made I2 of
20 !hree-point attempts.
Carlos Roaers scored 24 points
off !he bench on 9-of-13 shootins.
Man:us Camby chipped in 23 poinL•,
Damon Suiudamire had a seasonhigh 17 assists and 12 points ud
Doug Chrislie had 17 points, nine
reboUnds and seven assists.

It's Stiperbowl Weekend
at Cellular One••••

J

E·

:•

, .....

qme

~r=a ~Del···
. · Balcedl1aln,
Beef,
Wllkn1si1 ~ ~.m. Old
\\bid $!Ass,
Oleese,
.... Mle_IWx lithe a:allb:

•'•'

i

ed !he LosAnseles Clippers IOS-93.
. WIIITion 105, Mavericb 93
At San Jose, Calif.,· Sprewell
backed his can:er-h.ish point total
wi!h 10 assists, sil rebounds and five
steals. ·
!'It was the best game l'oe seen
him play," said Chris Mullin, who
scored 18 points for !he Warriors.
"He dominaied !he game from start
to finish. ·
"I see the old Spre, like when he
was a rookie," said Dallas' Chris
Gatling, a former Warrior. "He looks
. like he is on his way to being like he
was when he went on thai first-year
tear, an All-S!ar. He has proven thai,
and he did tonight."
H.....a ll4, Rocke1a 101
AI Charlotte, it was prac!ically a
one-on-one battle between Rice and
Drexler as !he Hornets snapped the
Rockets' four-same winning streak.
~ice shot 13-of-25 from !he floor
and 14-of-16 from the fiee throw

·'

P11 11
nwi SteW: 'chiasson. f&lt;' ut~¥"'~' · ·, ,· M~ ilieUJhlninar'alliecl to
~;2~~~~·fnt=~ streaks were "1 don't know !he extent:of it," win der !lailina 2-:0 heatlin1 into !he
cxtcndOd in
NHL. while another PiUsburJh coach llddie Johnston !hint period.
one
to an end.
,,
.
said. "Hopefully he'll be ready .to ao
Pittsburah st~!Ched ltl streak to- b_n Th_.y (apnst Colorado)."
14 1anies will! a 4'-2 victor)' over
ThePeRJUins.-eona]242roll;
Calsary'on Tuesday night. Penguins ~bile Lalilile improved to 1442.
rookie ,Patrick Lalime stopped 49
Ji'lten 3, Stan 3 (OT)
shotsiclincreasehis~ unbeat'
At Philadelphia, Bcnoii.Hogue's
en string to 16. · .
first goal in more !han · a month ·
· ''You just go Ollt thici'e' 8ild )'ou helped 0.1111 de the FIY.rs. Hogue,
don:_Fiql,ow ho"! it's goins _to go," who hadn't ~ since l)ec. 18•
sa•d· l,allme, off to !he besi career also had an BSSist for the Stars.
Jere Leh!inen ~Mike Modano
start (If any· goalie since !he NHL
ex~ ·in 1967. "It's .just sreat . had the other aoala •for the Stm,'
while while Dale Hawerchuk,
· what'• happening now."
ColOrado hid ill franchise-fC\!01(1 Milu!el RenberJ and John LeClair ·
12-gii!JIC unbeaten streak snapped in scored for the Flyers .
Paul Coffey usjsted on J'hiladel·
a 3-2 overtime loss a11ltnipa Bay.
Bill' Houlder scored the pme- phia's ·first .ao&amp;l, movins him -past '
wiN,~Cr with 2:S8 !eft in overtime,
Gordie Howe into second place on
dropping Avalanche goalie ~ck ~ NHL .career 'assisll list wilh
Roy,'$ 'II clime record at Tampa to 0- I,OSO.
6: ·, · ' l
· · .
Ollets 4, Ranaitn 4 (OT) .
'' I! l,was !he bigserit goal in my
At - New York,. Mark Messier
career so far," Houlder said. "I've . ~red with I:411eft in regulation to
scored 1J11C or two in !he playoffs, but give !he Ransers a tic .
Messier look a feed from rookie
I !hink this was the billies! one for
me. ~~ .
. , •'.
Vladimir Vorobiev 8ild beat Curtis
~~~where, Edmon!on. tied the
JOieph with a slap shot for his 26th
New.Xork Ransers 4-4, Philadelphia gOI!I of•the season. Brian Leetch (two
!i•d·Dallas 3-3, and New Jersey beat goals, two assists) and Vorobicv
LosAI)Jeles 4-1.
. ,
. (one -aoal •. !h~ assists) eath had
· ~ ·renpins 4, Flames:!
four points for the Ransers;
. At Pl\!sburgh, Mario Lemieux left
Ryan Smyth scored twice for the
the lllme' with back spilsnls in the Oilers, who_ also g91 goals from
lirs\'pcijnd and didn't return. He was Andrei Kovalenko and Miroslav
injuteil !nidway .through the,,(!Criod , Satan.
_
when he crashed ·into the mit after
'
l..lahtnlnJ3
A,..lanche :! (OT)
settinj tied up with Calgary defe~se-

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f

MEAT &amp;CHEESE ·
1RAIS

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'" nguins··,b.ea~;.:

J

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"Some choice wOrds," Jordan
· said. "I sueu I didn't make any ·
.. friends out there tonilht." ·.
.
. After !hat. !he Knicb pt threepoin!et'S from Allan Houston and
Olris&lt;;hilds,butitwasn'tenouJhto
set !hem their -first road victory
aaainst alonlan-led-Biills team since
1992.
"It was probably a tactical mislike by the coach of !he Knicks to
altack Michael in the p!'CSS.I !houghl
.he went out and played with a

Bulls
times where !lUngs were &gt;JOing ·so
1ordan's SJ points were the most
MlleverytbinJ~tcifliaslow . iCorecl,inanNBAgame'thisseaSon.
motion. I didn't I'Uih. I jult ..Cia~ed He set !he old mark of SOon Nov. 6.
·. and played."
:P, ·
' In other pmes, Golden Sraie beat
His .crowning mom• came DaliP 105-93, Chuiotte downed
":henheburiedal!l-fooi, ~~to ~on· 114'-108, Toronto defeated
IIJVe !he ..lills an 88-BLIAd w1!h .- · Min~ 116-108, OrlaJMlo t~
. 26.7 sec:onds left. 'He turMd to the Wul:iinaton 93-88, Miami edpd
ICnicb bene!' and $aid -..!hing to Ail1111ta 94-91, lndiua beal Mil·
Van Gundy.
·
,. 'II''!'IUicee 92-89 and Ponland defeat-

Bu!thci bi111est story was J~n
accou~tibg for SS pcrcen_t of his

~~

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~~;:~~c::':.~~:~:t~~ =~me~:::.~~ · :.:~ilaJ:..t~l~"

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con players from other teams into
!hinlcing he is !heir ft:iend. .
.
"His way is to bernet!~~' theM,
soften !hem \IP. try to niaire~' feel
he i:an:s about them," vq; Gundy
said. "Then he goes out ~~!ere and
tries to destroy them. T)le ftrsr step .
u a player is to realize !hal and don't
ao for it."
Jordan read !he story, !hen took
out his anaer on !he Bulls' an:hrivals.
"I was prepared to d!&gt; whatever it
tOok to win," said Jordan, who

AP ~II Wllllr

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Vuit any of our retllillocations to "catch".this
.super deaL ...better hurry, of/lr'expires
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. Sunday, ]tmUIUJ 26th. (Just ill tim• for kicko/1!)
Some mtrictioQ.. apply. "Maxilllllltl amount not to eim d $24.95.
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CELLULAR
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~ Pllge I • The O.lly 81 6111

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Scoreboard

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NBA staDd1np

•

..........

EASTEllN CONJ'DI:IIICE
~

.. Ilia.

fll

~ Yooi&lt; .............. ll 11 .700
Wahin,ron ...•.••.....:zo lO -'00
Oriltldo :................. l7 19
Newhney ............ IO 17 .170

.. I
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Phlladolpma .............a

211~

X..

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NlunL. .................29

II

.725

.•11

Balron ...................... 9 21
~I

C.nrroiJM5 .175
a 10 :m
Aclanla ................... l6 ll .614
Owlrlotte ...............23 IT .Sf!
CI.EVELAND .......:D 17 .564
lodl-................... 19 19 .500
Nitwaulret: ........ :.... l9 10 .C7

,•

15

~~ ~

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J¥ It13 .67!
W6

12 ~
16~
19~

,., .... ,',,',..,;&amp; 33

Va~UYef

.19!11

23

Padftc Dtvlllon
Seanle ... ,................19 II . .72.1
LA. Laten ............29

11
11
. Golden SUIIe ........ ,-16 2J
Pon~nd

.................1.1

.707

.m

,
,

·

6

.410

12~

Sacramcn1o ...... :..... l6 24 .400
Phoenili .................,IS 25 J75

13
14
14

L.A. Clippers .........l4 24

-~

Torontu H 8, Minnnota 106
Orland0'9J, Wuhinfton 88
' Miami 1)4, Atlnnta 9
Charlolle 114, Houston 108

Tonight's gameo

Oil

Cath. 06

Vanoouv.:r at Denver; 9 p.m.

· Bellaire M, Sreubenville Clllh. 61
Belpn! 70. Racine Southern 49
Berlin Hiland 70. New,omenlown '2
kihei· Tille (&gt;j, Bluc:heller St
Bloom-Conoll 69, Heath 46
Bm:klville 73. Berea46
Brillol7l. Southiaalon 65
Brookfieki64J Warren Champion 56
Bruntwiek 6.~. Cloverleaf •1
· Bunon Berbhire ~~. Perry j4
CWil-6:1. Uniun Lo!.:lll S~
,
.Cambrid&amp;e 48, Indian VII. 4ot
.
Caaal Fulton NW n. Cuyaho&amp;a Val.
Chr. AcAdemy 62
Caaton Heritop 0... tw, Uberty Chr.
60
Canfield 80. Wamn HowiMd 60
C:moll 6.'\, EdaewoOd ~9
CecWviUe 71. ·o..y. Oakwood 66
Central Bapli11 66, NOJWood Baptill
60
Che~ake 11. Hunrinaton 76
Cl\e1hire River Val. 67, Fairland 6ot
Cin. Anderson 17, New Richmond~
.Cin. Elder 68, Cin. Wa&amp;em Hill1 6~
,Claymont 62, CantonS. ~
Cl&lt;. Eooo Tech 83. Cle. Hay 70
Cle. Olenville 67, Cle. Collinwood 62
Cle. Untoln-Weiii9, 'Cic. Kennedy

Utllh 31 Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Portland at Seaulc, 10 p.m.

Thunday's gameo
Miami at Toronto, 1 p.m.
Milwaukee at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
ChicUJo 111 CLEVELAND. 7 : ~0 p.m.
New York at lndianu, 7:30p.m.
New Jersf)' at Houston, 8:30p.m
Minnesota ni Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Seanle VI. L.A. Clipper• at Anaheim.
Calif.• 1();30 p.m.
10: ~0

p.m. .

NCAA Division I .
men's scores
•
East

.

801tcio College 81, PitttbufJh 61
Bolton U. ~9. Northenlrem 48
Colpte 74, Cornell ~9

Drncl77, Delaw!IR 73
OeorJ:ctown 62, St. John 't S1
Ho(ltrD 66, Towson St. 62
lo.na 78, St Peu~r ' s67
Mlll')'llllKIIO~. Penn 7l

Muaaohu~elll 64, Rhode hiW'to

~-

· ~4 •i&gt;vke'JTO, N. Clfi:lina Sr . .5.~ '

·
James Madison 59, Ensr Clltolina ~~
Southern Miu. 56, OePau141

MJd,.est .

.

,

· ..

~-.

lnd.iona 72. MichiJD.n70

Southwert

aide 11

Colorodo 74. Bayltw 70
Texu-Arlinaron 69, Te~UP·S"" AntGo
nio61

Ooyton 1~. Xavier, Ohio 64
Findlay ~4. T.iriln •3
GRANDE U , Ohio Dominican

•

Shawnee Sr. 80, Cedatville 12

Urbal'u:l ~9. Mt. VerftQn Nnz.utene: ~
Wnlah
Mnlonl! 71

17.

Ohio.Conference
Baldwln·Wnlluce 62. John Carmi!~
t.plto1116. H•l&lt;lelboofJ 60 ·
,Moonr Union 100, H_irnm Col. ~I
Mu•kinaum IW. Mnncuu S4

'

OiJiU\166,

OTI

&amp;
I·Tol. ,Sf. Pnmc:i1 (9, 12·1 .:., ................ 17-i
, z.,.ttviUt(l0)11- 1......... :............ 17•
.l.O.IIow•y We•l,... (J) 10-l ............. lJM

"-Trotw~ M.adiron()) 13·1 ...............226
~-E. Uwi)'OOI (2) 9·1 ......................... .190

6-l..akcWood St. Edwttrd (6) 9-1........... 1,..
7-e..lld 10.1 ...... :................................ 1~1
8.Cin. Whhrow (1) ,_I ........................ 141
9-Cic:. Htipu 10.1 .............. :..................9.1
10-Catt!on McKin~y 10.2....:................~1

J9

McArchvr Vinton Co .. 74. Rffi11vilt.:
Eaaomt 71 (Ofl
Nt:Dottlld 71 ,
Mihon"
1 · M«h•uttura·70. Benjlrpt• Lopn ·

nm,.-.u ... ~ P...1
11 -NI.,Iabto&lt;J 11. fl·Dtmon Duobar 2K.
Olltfr~

'"'kt...

I).Cic. Ol&lt;tt.,lle 17. l ..tol. C.,. C.Oh:
1~. U·$prin·a . North ll. 16-Maulllo"
Wallhift&amp;lon l l 11-WestervjUr S~nh 14.
11-ShMHII. I.t
•

62

•Mldi,.a!KJ. Stronpvillf 71

--···-.....
I

-(1) 11·1 ...... ............. .40

'I I · - ;M, I:I-IIIMio 11!1M )I. 1:1wAU1N UlCA.f. (j) 21, I'401/TH

I'OIIIT Zl. IS.Niiiii'W ~ Jl. t•
W- a~- .VIew 17. 17-CIIoil liM••• 16, 11-l..loy IS. l9oC~to~Qoo
loollltof. ~lllrlltOC..I3.
•
'

.

• .Me!ilina B~tt:key!! 69. Key110ne 6:\

Ntdina Flnt Bnpt. '92, Moaadurt
Chr. 74
. .
Mlami•burJ 78, Odortl Talawndu

Jt

IG-4)1

'

64

, ,

.

'

Nltld....,.o Chr. 69, New Mloml 16
• (Of)
.
.
Nltld-o Fowlo:k 57, Fnatklio 47

M........ M..t.iaoa 62. N..ioaal

Towll"

.

MUINY Lob tw.'Eimwootl ~I

Nln(OIII "· W....S,"
1 tfWd77,0...UvHII51

Mal
-

Uulo ltliMiiO. Ooolooo! 63

-1!1·
.
= "'·-·
MI. Olit

w- '""'" f), Clot·

le-Yod&lt;74,JII

I

......... Old ....., ..........

-Oitoott"
.,,...
' . ..
Ntow._
...
. """Cuotiolll_,_ . . . . .

.,. ,

I'

,)

69

$499;

12 oz. 1.2 pk cans.

BOSTON RED SOX : Aare~d 10

-

\:ONrll.'t.
~ • DETROIT

TIOERS : tfamed Alan
Tmmmrlllllliat• 10 baleb.lf operulou
Aareed to termt with RHP WHlie Blair.
RHP Jobl Roacaann, RHP Todd Jone1
and C M~t~l Walbrck on QM· )'tar con·

tram.

99¢

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

~

•

• 11.10- Coupooi

Win A

,m.l!
1en11

d

ThlaWee~

.

loi.\IUNERS: N....l. Or·

-lloori·--.

-l.ioe\o!.
.....
.... Giry Whoelot:k

f!ilclti•• - h

fOr-n(tltoM.,_ U....
'I1!'X,U ltANOEIS: Aped
witlt RHP Roaer Pavlik on a ••·year

--

I

l l Bi'lnl Oaln an a onc ·ye~W

Judo•Oon.1 lniAIJH 1nd Sieve Ptck
piiOIII.. IDY B-t af tho Nanlt-

to....,,

~._

.

CINCINNATI fiEiltl;- DonoR

!lotflon_..
-Soyloo
· Jttry
Plowon ltOOI. 1oltl
Nartoo
Md

....HOVST~
v.... ""'"'""
- · Aarood
. to. .
AITROI:
'"""' lrith 3.• -

....,., -

'

•

~IIDifU~IJ'@~~

'

OAKLAND A11!LETICS: Apoed to

"

Bennie J. Hall
.
Anny Pvt. Bennie 1. Hall has
graduated from ~asic military train·
ing al Fort Leonard Wood, Way·
nesville, Mo. ·

PoweU's Super
Value
.

ssoo
.

'

. FI'HC.ahl
Stop In Til• Store
For Detalla

saturday,
,.

·'.

11,11e7

COKE, SPRITE,

~FFEINE FREE

12-PiJck 12-oz. ·cans

14-oz.

I

· , POMEROY-··Meigs County Pub-, ·
":.' POMEROY •• Alzhel!l)ers Dis- ·. lie ~ibrary •Boa~d of Trustees, I p.m.
case/Related Disorders 'support Thursday at the Library,
iroup, .1 to 2:30p.m., Meigs Multipurpose S~nior Center. Susan Elliott,
Soviet cosmonaut Svetlana Savit!(N., to ipeak on the new partial hos· skayi became the fiist wotnan to
. pltalizat' on program of Veterans walk in SPace wben she ste~ from
, t!lemorial Hospital, and also on expe· a Soyuz T-12 space capsule jn 1984.
· dences with Alzheimers patients,,

'

.In the development of a .new
. :: POMEROY •• Prayer and planmaierial,
a decade usully elapses
' ni_ni meeting, in preparation for Feb. .
"'iween
the
te~t iube and the 111ar·
ll concert With t~e nationally known.
ketplace.
~nfFm()!IIWY Chris~ian musk group,
'

l

·

, &lt;

.

79

"Harvest" Wednesday, 7 p.m at the
Pomeroy Public Library meeting
room .. Pastor, lay people, everyone .
invited. For more infonnation, call
Rev. Peter Tremblay, 992-4152.

THURSDAY'

..

,..

Lay's
llilalfPotato Chips

MIDDLEPORT ·- Mei1s County
Churches of Christ Women's Fel·
lowship, Thursday, 7 p;ln. at the
' ,
Bradbury Church o.f Christ. Speaker, '
Debbie Adkins. volunteefcoordina·
. \tEDNESDAY ·
: MiDDLEPOI;tT -· Middleport !,.it: tor for H9s(lital Hospice, speaking on
•erary Club, 2 p.m ..Wednesday at the liow to talk and be with people who
have cancer and· tenninal illnesses.
borne of Mrs. Rithard Owen.
. Zion Church ·will have devotions.
· ~ ~ POMEROY •• College Financial
POMEROY -· Preceptor Beta
Aid workshop for seoiors and their
piirents, Meigs High School cafeteria, Beta Chapter, Beta Signui Phi Sar&lt;,lr• Wednesday, 7 p.m. Representatives ity, 6:30 p.m Thursday, Episcopal
(rotn Hocking College financial aid Parish House, soup supper.
Qffice will speak. Topics to be covREEDSVILLE-· Riverview Garered include applyi"g for fo:Peral stu·
.il¢nt aid, work study, and student den . Club, 7:30 p.m Thursday ai the
home of Gladys 1'homas. Pro8ram by
loans;
• .
'
Ella
Osborne.
·
'

' ' ..

I

Limit Two 12.Packs Pet: customer At This Price Please

, and cannot be paranteed to run a
. speclftc number of clays.
.

00

2/$

•

·)IWCGnrrta.

• The Community · Calendar It
p!Jbllsbed u a free Hrvlt:e to noa·
. pruftt 1roups wllhlnc to announce
nieellnc and 1peclal events. The
qlendar Is not deslped to promote
.'!Ia or lUnd ralsen or any type.
llems are printed u space permits

Dorltos
Potato Chip,s .

MILWAVKEE BREW,ERS: Aaree~
10 tamt with RHP Cll Ehlnrd on a 1tu.·
~ar ~onlr!Ktt and 9F MM\ Mlc•ke on u ·
· ·

Cub bison is the son of Wayne H.
and Marie A. Cubbison of 385 I Ire·
land Road, Coolville.

During 1he training, students
received instruction in drill and cer·
emonies, weapons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, military jus·
tice, first aid, and Anny history and
traditions.
·
Hall is the son of Bennie L, Hall
of Kansas City, Mo.
His wife, Dawn, is the daughter of
Wilburt Church of Little Kyger Road.
Cheshire .

uarte

·community . cal~naa~

or 14~5 oz~

KANSAS CITY ROYALS: A&amp;IO&lt;d to
temu with 18 Bob'.tt&amp;unrlm on a uM•)CIII"
dOnt!liCI ~

·'---·

Joseph W. Cubbison
Anny Reserve Pvt. Joseph W.
Cubbison h8s graduated from the
interior electrician course at Fort
Leonard Wood Waynesville, Mo.
Students learned to install, repair
and maintain electric systems. Basic
combat engineer training was also
included. · ·
· ·

•

Lay's 14 oz.

IWih)'t.'llf "-'DIIITIIeli.

term• with 18 Jcrr Fry.: on 11 one-yclir

.

news ___.___

daught~r

: • Stanley and Tally a Holter of
Racine announce the birth of a
daughter, Caitlyn Celes\ll. Dec. 10, at
St. Joseph Hospital in 'Parkersburg,
W.Va. ·
: The infant weighed seven pounds, ·
t~ve ounces and was 19 inches long,
She has a•brother, Christopher and a
sister: Chelsea.
: Maternal grandparents are Glenn
and Marie Young, and paternal pnd·
pirents an: Bill and Linda Holter.
Nathan Pickens is a paternal great· ·
grandfather.

$ 79
16oz~

Lguess, Ann, the findings report·
ed in thlll news article are further
p100fthat parentS are (lretty much the
same all over the world. ·· N.Y. Read·
er
Dear N.Y.: Thanks for sending on
the anicle. The study underscores the
importance of providing financial
support and job training for mothers.
Your assessment rcgafding the similarity of peopie all over the world is
correct. The article also spotlights the
fact that single mothers are more
stressed than single .fathers nQt
because they are women but because
of financial problem,. .Thank you
again. ·
' .

-··~----· .......___. Military

Announce birth of

RC
Products

" . . - ....I"'
..
;1,NAHEJM' ANGELS: A11rucd 111
. tcrm1 Yfilh LHP Allen Wnllon ml n ont•
yeur c:'onnftl.:t IUid OF Bletnuttkl Brito nn 11
minur·lrugui: ~;ontrnct. Rc·· IIJ~l.l Tun{ .
koh:hmun 111801 •• , ror ituuc of the
Nonhwell Lnauc.
·
BAL'f1MORE ORIOLES: A&amp;"""' tn
l!!rm• with .lt.HP Terry Muthcw1, RHP
Al11n Mllll.and LHP Atth11r Rhode• on

;

' ..

¢

¢

· llue'-11

~in

Dlvlllon I

,

Crackers

Tri!nsi'lctions

.:rn6.1

. ' .

.

Mitxwell ·Hause
Master Blend Coffee

,.m.

ton .

Llpn 62, Vincenl Wn~n ~CJ
Cuth. 61. Avan 411 ·
Lnmin Southvi.:w 67. Elyria 50
Lowellville ~tl. MitWral Ri..Jp! 42
~~~~ 10, Johnltown :'I
Lut:uvlllt Val. 76, &amp;:IOicl NW .~9
M.WIDII ~~. Oenrva "''
Malvern 51.1cwt~t-&amp;:io ~~
Mlnfu11 Cre11wood ~. ~tw.lurc ~l
Marion Ptealant49. Academy 41
M~rtlm Ferry 61. Btnr~vllle :\9
Muon ~~. R011 ;t;J ·
Mtllli iloorChr. 61, Cl&lt;. ll&lt;rilllll •1
ManiUon ~n')l ~. Cnntna GknOak

.

Eggs ... !~'!'!!~..... ~~ ...

Roridllal Bo11on. 7 : ~0 p.m.
Colorodo .:11 PinsburJh. 1:l0 p.m.
Vanc01.1w:r at S1. Loui1, 8:;tO p.m.
Anaheim at Phoenill.. 9

Ldmnan 71 . ~mon Monn-.c- ;\6
U~~e~t ~2.lordliotown 47
Lln1u Burh 6~. Lim:• Cmlt 64
Uui Tttnlple Chr. 7~. 1-lnnk.-n North-

.

GRADE A LAR~E

Thursday's pmes

~4

&lt;.

29-30 oz.

Florida 111 Hartronl. 7 p.m.
Montreal a1 Buffalo, 7:30p.m.
Boston Ill Ottawa, -7:30p.m.
Edmonton AI N.Y. lsl:mdcrs, 7JO p.m.'
. CGIJary m: Toromo, 7:;\0 p.m.
N.Y. ~•nai:u "' ~ashinauuft . 7::\0
p.m.
Philadclphi1111t Defruit, '7:~0 p.m. ·
Vancouver at ChicllJO. H : ~ p.m. ·
Los Anaek!s• San Jo~e ,' 10:)0 p.m.
New Jmcy at Anaheim. 10:~ p.m,

flllld64

How a 1tnte pnnel or 1pon1 wrhen
and brol'llkalleu rate• Ohio hiah 110hool
"bO)'II;mket!'lrlltcum• In rhe third wt&lt;!kly
rel•l•t-~eu~un poll of 1996-97 ror Tbt
Attoeiftled Prcu (b)' Ohto HiJh &amp;hool
'Aihlelit Au(klimion divitimq, won-lnat
record thrquaH Jftmtt ol" Jun. 19·(hllt·
pl1t1o't votct in ptJrtftlbelll!l):

t:r

o

.... ..
1 , s·~:'

Fruit Cocktail

34.Soz. .

Tonlpt'1pmes

Hullnnd SprinJ!.. 7S. Muunlc!t ~'-'
Ktnllt)n 70. Rll\ll!nlt:l ~4
.
KirdanJ ~. MilokJMickl Cov..Jina1 $2
LuBrue 6~ . NeWlun F1~ls ~
lAktwooo.J lO, E. Cleveland Shaw 17
LMcustc:r .ax. Duhlia1 (l)ffmun 47
Latham·Wc•tcrn 67. l..a:sburJ Fnir·

Ohio H.S. boys' poll

Dl•lilon II
f:!.\"..,~~(17) I:Z.O ............
:Z.Cio. ...... l1&lt;on (2)10.1 ...............Ul
~- K-nJIIIttf{l)l().l ................... ,lJI
Wmillc ()) 10.1................................ 213
l-W-TriWIIy 111-1.. ...................... 173
6-0...10.1 ........................................ 146
7-Cittlloll 11-1 ..........................,......... 142
~--~~
•oed 11-1..................7.
9-Cio. t
no &lt;h 11-L .................61

Tampa BAy ;\, COlorado 2 (OT)
Nt!w Jersey 4, LoJ Anaeles I

SINII~n ~4

Ha110vtrtvn Uaili!d 6~. LiMbon

160 108

Tuad1y'oocoreo

Grnnvillc 62. Mill~r~lft ~n

Nen·conference play·

64

Pill5bur&amp;h 4, Calpy 2
Edmonton 4, N.Y. RDn&amp;cr~ 4 (lie)
Dull.u ), Philadelphiu ;\(tit)

Oretncm 112. SprinJ. ~nrt_hwc!5t~rn ~9
Hannil'ltl River 6~. Shndy!lidl! 61 (2

Bhdfron 64, Andmon ~R
'Thoma&amp; .Man: 1~. Dcni.oo 37

8

Edmonton ..........2121 ~ 471.~~ 140
Vancouver .........21 21 2 4&lt;4 14.l 147
Anuhcim ............ l722 3 39 12~ ll4
Culat~y ....... ,...... l72~ ~ ~9 114 1~5
Loollnpl&lt;s ....... l714 ~ 19 12l 153
SanJose ............. l623 3 ~1 IU 141

Dublin St.:ioln ~6. Pickt:rinaton 4!1
E. Canlon 79. Tu~I:W"IIWIIM Vul. ~I
E. Liverpool 72 . Oak Olen (W.Vu.)

~ Not1hcrn '78. Otkrbrin 70

:r..

Ptcllk Dlv'hlon

rairpon Kl. OrWell Grund Vul. 6.&amp;
Fon Frye MI. Cllldwtll ~-'
fil~toria 61. Olqun Strildt ~'
FrunliLT Kl. Monruc Ccnlnd ~
Ft. LA.w111ni~ .W. Houston 41
Gurawny 69. StnllibUrJ 62 ·
GuPili!IJ Ht!l. 6-1. Punmr Ntwmandy 6;1
. G11h:11 Milia Hawk..:u 40. CIH111rin
fnll• J9
Gt•111'11 N . Knns.u!l·l.nlwtn 60
~~rttctuwn 6l Pclichy 4R

. ~IQ

-7 d t~I . J~t~
6 :11 Ul 164
8 ~6 119 12R

Pagel .

Dear Ann Landers: I can identify lots of real estate between ··Geneva"
with "Geneva," the son with the and his mother. Some mothers w1ll
impOssible mother. For the past 20 never Corgi ve the woman who tak~s
years, my mother has accused my her son away.•. Only Son in Cah·
wife of _sneakin~ into her residence fornia
.
·
.
and takmg pots and pans, sheets,
Dear California: Your mother IS
beddinJI arid metjicine. This began mentally ill. I'm not a psychiatrbt,
early in my marriage and will con· but it sounds like she is a paranmd
tinue as long as my mother lives:
schizophrenic. Please speak 10 a
My molher 1s very ach ve and l1ves menUII health protessional aboul your
alone. She believes that my wife is mother and you will be less jodg·
the ONLY person in the world who mental and more sympathetic.
·would invade her privacy. Nothing
Gem of the ·Day: Anyone can
can stop this latally irrational non, become rich if he can guess exactly
sense. We've given ilp trying.
when a piece uf junk becomes an
My wife has not been inside my antique.
mother's home for 10 years. The two
of them very seldom speak because
Send questions to Ann Landers,
we refuse to listen to my mother's Cnators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenfoolishness .
,
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Ann, you are right about keeping Calif. 90045

Diet Coke or
Cola Cia

.

~

Peaches.e:,-r

8 ·.W 1~3 1~8

-·-

Colonodt! ............1811

$ 89
.
..
L"b'by ' ·..
··
·

',1": •'

CHiral Dl't'W.
·Iaa
~Lilla.~ GA
Daii:P.................1ll7 4 50 IJ. .' 110
Oetroir. ...............ll 16 8 SO Ul lOS
St. Louis .............21 22 4 46 U7 1:11
Pltoeni• .............. I92J 4 41 11.1 llO
ChiCRJO.............. I7 2~ 8 41 Ill 129
TOronto .............. l7 29 0 ~4 1~9 162

7.

Mld·Ohlo Conference ·

.~

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Ea.twuod 52. Woodmon: 47
Elt~ln 7~ . UJiflCf Soodulk)' 62
Elyriu C11h. 61. N. Ridgeville Lnkt."
RidF 39
Evcr,.reen 76. Tol. Emm~mu,•l Bnpt.

Atlantic 10

~J.:I:&amp;IilGA

.

Montreal ............ 18 21
Harrroid ............. Jil0
Bolton ............... .l62:\
OtlawG ........ ....... I411

Columbia 70, Elyria Open QoQr .17
Columbian!~ 6J. Berli~ Center West·

~

AtlolllkDI•-

·PlttoburJit ..........16 ll ~ l7 171 1~8
Buffalo ...............lO 17 l lJ llJ Ill

Bupl. ~C)
Dnvt!r 6~ . Louillvilli! Aquinu~ 44
Ore !Ide II Tri·-Valley 64. ShL"I'idnn 61

St. 62, Wilberfon:e 61 ,

12 Pk.
12 o~. cans

~~, Nti-'' I I JI;DiwltiH

{

Day. Ch11minad~:-Julii!nnc ~I. 'cln.

Ohio women's
college scores

79

74,t;ql. Nonhland•~

PurceU-M1wian 4~
DeGruff Rivcn;ide 61. lndiun Ll1ke ~2
Dclawur~ Chr. 62, Urbanu Oru!O\l

Non-conference play

Pro(Jucts

Phllttdelphlo .......17 IJ 6 60 1!10 110
Florida .............. .22 IJ 10 .50 IJO 108
N.Y. Ranam ..... 2, l.9 7 . 5~ 165 .u.~
New l&lt;nCi' ,....... 23 16 ., .. Sl 117' Cll I
Vlul\inJIOO ........ lO 21 5 ~ 114. IU
T - Bay ........ 1811 6 •2 Ill 141
N.Y.I~andm .... IJl) 9 . )5117 137

Conneaut 70. AlhU,buiA 64
Cnnlllftd Mu,ltwood ~9. Ni!whury ~2
CO!hoc:ton 41 W, Hnlna-40
Cruuk•ville 61 . Riv\!f View ~S

Mld·Ohlo Conference

··coca Cola

EASTERN CONFERENCE

emRe~CMS:l

Urham1 71, Cc~viUC ~7 ·

o ogna .................

NHL standings
Iua

(

who actively so)lght responsibility for
their children were strongly motivat·
ed to meel the challenges." .

We're Your

$119

Hockey

1•.

. Ohio Q'len 's ·
college scores

lb.

Truil6~

COt IMt!pcftdiftcr 76, Cpl~iWial'nlll . '
Ridie 69 ·
·
Col. St. Ch•les 69, Col. DeSulet 6~
Cui. Wonenon
Col. ReDdy 52
Col. Weat 8_,, Col. Eastmoor 64
Col. Wndand84. Thonw Wonhina·
1\Ht-!11
.
Col. Whetstone 67. Cal. Centcnninl
''t\o

EBckrlclh .

You. Rayen 17, You. Wl110n 36
You. Unulinc 63, Wamn Hardina 61
(OTJ
Z11n1!1Yille Ro~ecran• 80, Buc.:keye

.

Col . ~~

31b~ .

49

Col. Beecltcloft ~Col. UntletoJ9
Col. &amp;,laa ,3, C!ti.Sooih '2 . ·
. Col. B"r001huven 70. Col. Mifflin ~9

••

Arkaruas91. Milliuipri St. 64

Sh~twnee

.Wickliffe 61, Aurora 60
Wooarcr !'t5, New Philldelpbia 48
Worthinaton Olr. 7~. Danville 62
You. CalvarY 6~.l..eefonia. ~6
,
Yoll. Chaney !13, You. Eiar ~
You. Ubmy SO. Cortland Lnkeview

• .;.Cie.·M -I·tto, Cle. Rhoties 7~

South

Cinqjnmui 77, N.. .C. Charlolrc 67

•

WhUehoulr Wayne 68, SylvAn in

Clc. Lulhrmn West 'PI, Lomin Brook-

St..JOseph'a 82.'Duquesne 74
"'vtthiorif7l: DwttnOuth66 '

·

NOMh~iew 62

64

New Hompshirt 68, HB11f0fd 67

St. Bonaventure 88, Niqnm n

•

Steu-.ville 60

.

paper quoted the stllle-run institute as
sayins in a report.
.
"'Mothers have far more conflict
witt. their children and are quicker to
hit or p_unish their children.' the
report sa1d.
"Jl!e paper quoted researcher
Mogens Nygaard as saymg women
were not genetically more irritable
than men but were under greater eca·
nomic pressure, being more likely to
be jobless or, if employed, generally.
lower paid than male workers.
"Women also perceived society as
having a more favorable attitude to
men caring for their children alone
than for single mothers.
"Nygaard added that. only 6 per;
cent ., of' all single-parent children
aged 3 10 S lived with their fathers,
· implying ihlllthe re\lllively few men

Robert E. Kimes
..
-: I don't know if you picked up on despite the f~ct that the state song is
Robert E. Kimes, sen of Mr. ·and
it.or not but the two young people all about it
Mrs. Thomas M. Kimes of Racine
1njured in ari auto accident last
As lest we forget, Jennifer is the and .a graduate of Southern High
Wednesday morning on Route 7 in daughter of Elizabeth and Harold School, was promoted to the rank of
Qallia County are grandsons of Ann Lohse of Pomeroy.
·
Spe.cialist 4 earlier this month.
.· ~oso, Ponland.
.•
Qn Jan. 10 her re-enlisted for
They are Steve Boso.l6. and J. R.
With Valentine's Day approaching, another four year tour with t,he U. S.
-Boso, 14, bolh of whom attended it might be a good time f11r me to Anny. He is now stationed at Fort
:school in tiKI Soiit~ern Local School mention that 'Gerald and Mildred Riley, Kansas where he is an abrams
District last year.·They're now resid- Shuster, ·Lincoln ~eights, ,Pbmeroy, . tank driver. · ·
ing at Patriot :111d were on their .way · will be observing the.ir 6Stb ~edding
10 the River Valley School which they anniversary on Feb, 14, which is, of
&lt;row attend when. the . accident course, the dp.y of hearts and flowers.
bccurred.
·
'Long time! Big Congratulations!
J. R. suffered severe facial 'lacerations but has now been returned
The word is that Newt Gingrich
home. Steve received more serious might use campaign funds to pay the
;i.njuries and as of Monday was still in $300,000 fine levied against him for
·intensive care at Cabeii-Huntingon ethics violations. · .
Hospital in Hunting!on, W. Va.
How's 'that for accepting personal ·
· Ann reports t~t ihe prayers and responSibility and won't his.campaign
good wishes of people in the area contributors be delighted tp' put the
have been overwhelming_and the money to such a worthy cause?
·
:family appreciates )Ita!. . She hopes '
those prayers will continue on Steve's
Would you like to· be in one of
·behalf.
'
those outdoor musicals? . .
·
· As if Ann didn't have enough on
If so, you might be interested in
tier mind, a pipe in an upstairs hath· · auditions l!ein1 held for singers,
room burst in the middle of the night actors .and dancers for The Stephen
during th~ c9ld, cold weather and had Foster StO!Y. I have a list of the audiflooded the downstairs kitchen before tion sites and dates sp if you're interAnn discovered the problem. How- esled give
call. Auditions will
~ver, she's coping.
·
be held in
and none of the
audition sites are
. · ",Congratulati.ons to Jennifer
The unusual thing,
Sheets, Pornerox . anorney who has
-is
. \lien n med -prorclellt ,of: til!' Slate
School Board. · ·
· It's noi only a fealher ~n Jennifer's
·hat but in Meigs County's as well. ·
·Jennif~r will lei them know about
. .
!
Meigs·County as she moves along iit
.,Hope you enjoyed the i auauratlie position. Who kno;.s? Maybe tion. Cost of the event was over ·42
some of her associates will even ven: mill~on 'and over 12 milllol\ of that
ture down to Meigs County to see the · was in your taxpayer dollars. Oh
"Beautiful Ohio". I wonder how well, i(s only money. Do keep smil·
. many Ohioans haven't ~een· the river ing.

·Jumbo
Spread
Parkay

1•.

BJ~~Dvia

.

by Bob Hoeflich

.a.w-

~own Lake 70,
60
Upper Arlinatoa 61, Worthi•aloa
Kl-56
. Uilco 74, E. I(IIOl("
VleMot Mathew• 71, Badpr 45
W. Canvllion 60, BeU-k !16
W. r0ffenoo70, Hamihoo '!;wp. "
Wtm:nsvllle H11. 70, ~'irma M
w.,..loo 49. Woodrid.. 47
Waynnr~eld 11. Triad--,9
·
Weirton (W.Va.) Madonna
Welllvlle·7l (01')
"
.WelliiOD 81, Fcdml Hockina 71
Wftlervllle S. 68. Qillicodtc «;
w.,.rlll79, s. Oallia •l
W"' Unity Hilliop 45, Atdtllold ..
1 11. Port.....mw. 51
Whttlina (W.Vu. ) Park "·

78, Williamsburg 70
Bett,...,...,k )8. Sprlns- Nonh 88
. Bedford Chane) 69. Mentor tnkc

Detroit at Sacnunenlo, 8 ~ . m .
New Jersey ut San AnlotiO, 8:30p.m.

Dctrvll nt Golden Stme.

R....,.h64

Akron kenmore 61, ,Akroa N. :1~
· Amanda·Cicar~o:rcek 67, Libeny
Union ~il
Anna 62, 8odkins41 ,
AMOn~a !tO, Miuissinnwn Val. 4.1
'Aulfinlown·Fitl:b_5!, You. Mooney

Philndelphiaat Boston, 7 p.m.

.

Sorin&amp;ba&lt;o'72. Wljntlotp0ft51
Tolltaodp Clv. 71 M.- Chr. 59
Tiffia C.hert 100. Tot Orilliao 70
T o l . - 51. A-y 19
T..- 79,11ea.., Local69
Trlmble65, Mdp61
Tn&gt;rii.Doy. Nur-74
Tuolaw 8~ Akroo M - 6 9
Twi111bura Chamberltln 66, Kear

Hower60t0T)

Chic:ngo 88, New York 87
· Indiana 92. Milwaukee 89
Ponlnnd 100, L.A. Clippers 82
Ooldcn State I0!1; Dallas 93 ·

·seat of the Bend
..
.

. Solon 69, Mayfield ..

Akron 8uduel83. Akron Ellr~ 1•
Akron Covenrry·67, Sandy .Val. 61
Akron Firatone 9.5. Aktoa E. ~
Akron Ciarrield 63, Akron Cut.•

d

10 ct.

Salem NW 73, CuyahOJa ·Val. Chr.
61 Sarablville Shenandoah 85, Waterford 56
Sardlrila Eu1ern Brown 5:', Patel·
te:Ville '0
.

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Tumay'siiCOI'es

·

Roooford 69, BowUoa Ot-eeo '7
Ru•• 86. Flirlawa ll

9·New Knoxville 8-1 ............................. 76
10-CW!nlton-Uncoln 10.2 ..................&lt;10
Othtrs receMnall • JDOrt I)Oints:
11-Jac:ksor~ Center 13. 11-FRAI'il'kll!"{
FURNACE GREEN 11. 13-Bowentun
Cononon Valley 10. 14-L.c:Csbura F11ir·
fl&amp;'ld 19. I!J ·we&gt;-McOonald, Worthington
Ouilrian 18.

19

l

Carnation
Hot.cocoa
Mix

Rooutow1161. S.allboeg6:\

.

w8dne•day, January 22, 1111

~

Dear Ann Landers: While travel.ing in Den mart recently, I picked up
Ann .
an English-languaae newspaper ind
~ad a Reuters story ·1 thousht might
~n ers
i~lerest you:
.
,,.., Loi ..,,,.. ·
"Denmark's Social Research · .
'~~moo s;.o•.. I"' oO.
lnstitut. says sinJic fathers. are
...,.,,..._
·
·calmer and less likely to punish their
child~en than lone mothers, who arc ers were far more stressed .and
often dogg~b money problems.
depressed than the men.
"The da' Berlingske Tidende
'"The single mothers have more
sai&lt;,l yeste ay a study of 1.200 chil· . psychiatric problems than fatbers.
·dren aged iween 3 and S, half liv· Their self-confidence is )ower, and
·;~g with a single mother and half with they suffer more from ni&amp;hlmares,
only a father, showed that the moth· insomnia .aad anxiety attiC~.' the

79

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7-Ztttte.R-(1) 11·1..................132
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Dallu ..................... ll 2' .l42
Denver .............. ..... !! 29 .27~
Sad Antonio ............ IO . 11 .210

12 oz. cans

POMEROY, Otf.

'

Parents pretty nluch the same an over the world

WE RESERVE
RIGHT TO LIMIT aw,NTIIT
PRICES GOOD THRU JANUARY 25, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

~Wen U1100lnYiew (28) 12.0 .....11

Iii

UUth ..........,...........:17

.

..

cube24 pk,

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Monday thru Sunday
8AM·10PM
288 SECOND ST.

DIYIIIoniV

20),

WFSI'ERN CONFERENCE

~oo ....,..

·Pepsi Cola
Products

Aeoepta CI'9CIR
Card8
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ton.-·

11~

.159

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Bloom-Carroll (1.) J6. 1.. . d Otanol
(1) )I. IS-Sonlu.;U. ~- hh16. 161.-omenille HillldUe 2.1. 17-AUI"CC'' 21.
II (tie)·B•cyru• Wyaford, CHILLI·
CO'IIIE ZANE 'lltACE II. 10 (do)-(let.
man1own Valley View, WHEELERS·
BVRO 17. 12 {lie~UO. Creek Eat Clin·
Hiahlaod 16. ~ Py,
11111\1nlna Valliey 15.- 25-Nrvrcomemown ·
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OtMn •1.
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9-CIIE.'I...-n (I) 11·1 ....................61

ID

L'S

POWE

111....,m

The Daily Sentiriel

By The .Beild

~. Mlddlellort, Ohio

..•

,,

y .
Wings

FRESH IN·STORE MADE

Party
Trays

�..
•

~ • Middleport,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·
,

John C. Wolf, D.O.
· ·Auodote Profesmr
of Fom!ly MediCine
,......~~~~~--~,.......,;.;....,..._
,
:·
, Question: I have. brown spots on treat
except for cosmetic
tile lop of my hands and also on my reasons,
they do not usually
{ace. Some of my friends call these develop cancer within them. Howev"lie spots" while others call them cr.~cancerousandnoncancerous
"liver spots." One friend says that lestons that also occur on sun-damt h spots start on the liver, and aged skin can ~ con.fused with
medicine is necessary to get them off them. Therefore, I d advtse that you
· the liver first. Then, lhey will come bring your "liver spots" to your docMif the skin. Are liver spots also on tor's attention to be sure they aren't
: !he liver, and do theY do any harm to something more sinister. If they are
: 11?
·
simply lentigines, then there are two
I
Answer: "Liver spots" are a skin treatments tha~ can improve tbe
problem primarily affecting Cau- appearance of your skin that you may
cuians, although not unknown in want to consider.
= people of other races. These spots .
Lentigines can be lightened in col·
• or lesions as.we doctors prefer to call or by . the regular application of
: them • feature a dark area of pig· hydroqujnone. This mediCation is
: 1pentation which is not raised or scaly sold as a non-prescription dtlia
I"" occurs in other skin conditions. . Luers can be used to treaiieritig~
The lesion differs frOm a common ines quite effectively. One or two
freckle in that the "liver spot" de vel- treatments typically makes the lesion
· t ops later in life and is generally largvanish. It takes considerable expertise
: er. Freckles also fade after decreased to wield these "hightech' tools of
l ·sun exposure, such as over the win- medicine effectively, so you will
I ~er, while "liver spots" do not.
need to .see a dermatologist or plas"Liver spots" are purely a skin tic surgeon if you choose this type of
fondition and have nothing at all to treatment.
·
"Family Medicine" 1s a weeldy
· lo with the liver. I assume the name
derived from the !act that these · colunm. To sublllft questio111, write
,
•, • sions are about the same color as to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Ual·
' ·raw 1tver. 1n part because doctors pre- verslty Collece or Osteopathic
~ fer fancy terms and also because it Medi~lne,G~enor· H-",Atbe
' _
• .
.
~
·-•
""
-.
"votds confusion, we- use the term ·ohio 45701. ·
:lentigo" to refer to these spots.
Lentigines • the plural of lentigo, ·
•• for those of youling to brush up
.
: f~ your Latin • caused by darn' age from sun ex
re. Therefore, as
1
t:;:ou
would expe t, · they ar~ most

LOS ANGI!l.ES (AP) - The
"Jeabel of Juz" is on the mend.
Singer Anita 0' Day remained
bospitafiu.d for lreatment of a bacterial
. in.f'ection
.
•but bet
b condition was
unprovmg, Slid pu licist Alan Eichler.
·. Ms. O' Day, 77, was off of a resptrator and breathina on her own ·
Tuesday, although she remained in
guarded condition in intensive care at
Hollywood hospital, Eichler said.
Ms. O'Da~developedpneumonia ·
and blood poisoning after she was
hospitalized Dec. 18 for lrealment of
a broken arm, be said.

a

Considered one of the gral jazz
stylisls, Ms. O'Day began het lii!linl
career in 1941 as the lead vocalist l'or
Gene Krupa's band.
Ms. 0' Day was dubbed the
"Jezebel of Jazz" for her heroinrelated antics, including two drug
possession convicti~ns in the . late
1940s and early 19SOs.

:
.......~. whOle Rll il Mic- pllll 10 many Apjl6.
... l'lpp, -ordered 10 serve the rest
At a bearinf'J)Ielda)', 1 Sellile
of • p r ! D I - for violatine pro. Budget Commitlee 'Cbalnnllt Pele
Ntion 011 a marij~ 1r111ictinJ con- Domenici, R·N.M.,, noced thu
viction. The se~tence it up in June. Greenspan hid "re0endy invelled in
Papp viollled his proliation when diamonds and .you will ~ly
be left Olllo.
$0011 ~ inves~ng in &amp;Old;'';.. ._ •
The l'aJiking DamoCrM, S..l'l'lllk • .
Ohio ..lhorities began seMdung
for the 2!1-ye.v-old Papp, who was Lautenber,s of New J~y.. $u~­
iiiSti
,! !!1c8iiJed
living in San Francisco, after Spotting ed that til avoirlr,ag' old
.
~,·
.r.,~
.~- ..
. XENIA, Ohio(AP) - Manny the him · on the Letterman show. He presllllllbly liy trive'stors -"T:"~oa
to'
Hippie must remain behind bars.
returned 10 to the state in September read · finiutc_ial ''ad'Vic~· '· 'ilf_ttl
Judge T)tomas Rose on 'litesday and sum:ridered. ·
Q~n5pan•s ~~ !!.!J'tlle C:tntl'al!
denied probation to Manny, who
gained fame reviewing movies for the· · WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal
"Late Show
David Leiterman." Reserve Chainrian Alan Oreensp1111
And Sen. Kif Sond, Ri~b:! #·
· hlill hid to end~R some goOd-naturecl ing fun at Greeniipt,.'s' ~l41ion for.
very: .
' ribbing llboul his penon:il investmenJ obfuscation/ told
proud
...
·you
were
able
w
'
c
Ollie
to a
· in lbe diamond market the eniiP' .
l
menJ riOI be bought his fianqle. '. clear-cut. and 1comprehenslble'·~jues,. '~ 1 . ·
1·:··, '
Greenspan, 70, llld Nlc News tion.'' ' '!:··
' Cotltilnierd oil pqe 11
correipondent Andrea Mitchell, SO.
!
'

DON a·:res CO
'
·
·
"
MPI,ITER .- Peoples Bank, a pirtn« In eclucatlon wl1h the Middleport Elementary School, hire donated a comuter to the hoof f
P
sc:
or 11Udent UM. Here Shawna Armatrong, a
lhlrd gl'llder, checkl out lha new conlputer as Nan Devlund c....
Itt KJng,...,raM!dlng Paoplae Bank of Mlddl....- look on.

·a

.i Contributions
.

.

il

I .•· 1

:f

TABLE

..

: 1Candymaker M&amp;M-Mars is hop-

Wg, in an ad debuting during the
per Bowl pregame show Sunday,
breatbe new life into an old myth
green-coated M&amp;Ms hold the
wc:rs of an aphrodi.siac.
'We have all grown up with the:
around green, so'obviously we
.
we eould have some (un with it," .
Pat D'Amato. spo~eswoman fdr
Hac)ettsiQWn, N.J.-based busi. ; :.f~~~ is thai we have a ,

ter.

·

king green M&amp;M with mucaraed
'eluhes. sensuous lips and white
10 .boots. Similat' adt ,U.vc fca. animated bl~ red IIDil yellow. ·
Jel, ,
~.
'\t
4.
. .In a sp:tt'endlled "MYJ!t," come~,._illerub "Cireen": "Is
true wha! they ny lbout Jreen

. ' '
•
.
, "Wtiat hllvo yo~ heard?" sbe
,)

'

'

1111-u. "Tlw ltupid rumor? Thai

1 ThiJ i1- hlrutment and I .
't have IO'IiU it, Miller."

Pepsi Cola Pro~ucts

S3s far tW'O' lie~rire~ 'Tieli!is.ey;d'o&lt;li''
prllf$ can also be secured at the sites.

•

For more'ihfonfiatlori cir'tp purchase

ticJcem·l-esi&lt;Jeilt~'thi'fcall s9:J-~37S. ,.
,· •.' O.l'J

,.··. ~··-

••

;I.. ,.

I

•

'

.'

.24 packs

·

24Ct. 'Cua·

BI·Bite

Paper ·Towels Boll-.49"

•

f

Umlt1 wl1h
additional P,UIC"-

'.
'

BI·Bte

Saltines 1 ... llox ......-59"
BI-Blte

·.

'\llenna Sausage s

_: . .

.:--

r · •.
'{.l:l! .,.

'"'..:.

....
lD

"'";,

f"!

·.'

.' l

I•

~ats 18 oz.........

:t ..~----:awlftiC.ti
Ill"
.
.
'-'om
15 oz .......

Anyone who would IIPPndate a .thoughtful word from you! All Valentine.
Hearts.will be published In the Febl'll8fY 14th isinae.at a cost of qsdy $6.00!
•.
MUST BE l'REPAID!

-

39"

' I

1'

,

• :. If

"•

~~

lays
Potato
1

Chips ~-

n S VALUABLE COUPON
FP F(-:TIVF 1 lG TO 1 25 97

~. 1 ,,f~IJCf:..Cl 1 JnE

$4
,.,
'

'

1~1 100
I R\10100 ,
CBH

32 Oz Jar, Free Nonlal Oresal!1g,
AegulaiOrlight

~ Kraft

...Pretiels

Miracle

SJ49

·LOVE liNES
,• Swetthearts • Mo,ns &amp; Dads • Grandparents • Teachers
·
• Babysitters • Friends ·

.

i . . . . . . . . . . . ..

••

•JJ

·.99
A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE .
~
Remember that' special someone this
Valentine's Day with a message in
·.Th~ Daily Senti~el

Sa"

i

1• ~~ '~.l

011 ' ..

••=with $6.00 to:,

49"

''

~!

.

Print.YJNW message In
the 1 ~ .a along

oz~

"' __.., llli

SCORE A FREE PEPSI ..
P.O. BOX 7031
YOUNG AMERICA, MN 55573·7031

,,

~

~-4-

1

'!The character is an animated,

SUPERMARKETS

MODE~L;TV;;'•~~~oFR~E~E~SEl~~~p

NEWAII.K, N.J. (AP)- Dim the

hts, put on the soft m,sic, pour the
flll~tj: and break out the green

•

·. (For'Those Who QuaiHy)
$399 Minimum
ofREE DEUVEJ:IY

ib

~

'

-

'FREE

.S'ing. S~~-a~peal .
sell M&amp;Ms ·

1 ,.

.! ;.

qulek

MONTHS·
;
.

'u_.
_

c

'

FINANCING

f

.

'

'

'

I

.tt-1•·

·~

•

BI·Bite
.

12'
...

J

.!

plan a vacation out here for the summer," Ms. Russell said;
Maripo5a County is planning special advertisi~g efforts 10 let people
know about special activities and

~

SAL~
DISH :
WASHERS.

day, we interview from eight to 20
-people," Batbara ]toyer said. Sh~
ing.
·
Meanwhile, the owner of a local said on Jan. 9 there were 53 inter;
employment asency said there are a VICWS.
J
"It was very, very disheartening,''•
lot of people out of work.
.J
"Typically on an open interview she said.
·
.
,

the park is closed now, they won't regional recreation, such as river 01ft·

CUJSBOVT
·.
.

AFTER
INVENTORY

i

,
.

f

GALLIPOLIS

= Contri~uti~ns were made to sev-

l

t

;

.

• iral organtzatJons when Lewis-Manlly Auxiliary, Unit 263, Americali
egion, met recently at Dale's
estaurant in Gallipolis.
Receiving contributions fi'Qill !he
tit
were the Hean Fund, USO, · ·
1
• · v.enant House, American Relief
ouncil, Veterans Of Foreign Wars,
~ tood for the Poor, CARE and Mis- .
~~4onaries of Africa.
Helen Culmer wliS hostess for the
Cling which was opened in ritual: tic form by Lorene Goggins. pres.
•• iillont.
r·
. ·
'tLouella Patterson, · education
:
'nnan. made a report on a visit to
I
Middleport Elementary School
·
·ng Edtication Week in November,
.
·ng apples to the reachers and staff.
rs. Goggins report on the Christmas
nner held at the Mt. Moriah Baptist
o urch in Middleport, Dec. 9.
Lula Hampton, national security
; hairman stated that the phases of .
; ationa! security are crime preven'lion, emergency preparedness, POW- ·
:t-fiA, U.S. Savings bunds, USO and
:tlood donor programs. She said
. ational security is llle responsibili' . of every Americ.. Citizen. Prayer
y Mrs. Culmer, chaplain, closed the
ceting.
, , .• ·
·
·

aJ weeks 'from now, !heR is no guarantoe tourists will be heading baek,
she said.
"We JCl an awM lot of business
from overseas. They make their plans
way altead of time. If they know that

ferenl chocolate 'ileths, donaled by:
individuals' arid'irea businesses, will
be serv~ . ~bitg With,C~am(!Rgn~.'
champagne punch aii&lt;l'iton,alcobohc .
beverages. ' · . ~ ·· ·
·' ;
Event ~cllets al'e·now av&amp;ilable a1
all PPSEO he&amp;lth . services sites in 1
Athens; .Galll~lis,' Jackson;, l:ogan'
and Olillico~ fot·S20'#.. · ·• ·· nor; ·

'

:~uxiliary

y-.

" It warreally too late to act on i
this · year," council spokcswom~
Joanne GOldy said, because sale
. were staning Jan. 10. The counci
governs II ,000 scouts in six southe
New Jersey counties.
t

Merchants·fear
Yosemite closure could doom businesses.
.

D

7BDRIIAY - niDAl ~ Ill URDAY

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Planned ~nthood of Southeast
Ohi 0 , of~!tich Meigs Coilnt)'. is
part, will host its I Oth alinual ChocO'
late and Champagne Affaire Feb. 8,
610 9 p.rn;'il the Ohio UniYe~Sity IMi'
Athens. ' l'lie event will be' the ·kick~
oft' to P~'s Major Gift CliiipafB'!
to• fund client
services ancl.1 .COI)Imu-,:.
• !I
mty progilrns. . ·
·
- ~·
The~~ features a del~m111~
array of,liocolate desSerts, ~ie• •
and nove!iies whi~h guests. may S8lll'i
pie alid ef9c,y. No fewer ihan:1S dif~

+

r--111111!----...--,.111111!..

\

November when community coordi·
J111 Snyder said bet troops
weren't satisfted with the SO cents
,they received per $3 box sold- even
though that was up from 40 ceniS last

·nilor

Planned Parefitf:iood :.
plans 1oth flnnuat.event;·

f

•

..,;!t::"'

thai It all any place in the counll;y,"
'Marianne Daw, spokeswoman for
the Girt. Scouts of the United Stales
of America, said Tuesday.
The trouble in Mount Laurel, a
middle-class city of 31 ,000, began in

•

1:

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1a1es by the 2.S million--her
orpaizltioa. whida IIOid 174 miUion
bollaof~andolhlr- in
the Unilod Slllel and its territories
last year.
" I'm not aware of(anythins like)

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•

Family
Medicine

1

Girl Sceuts sloW cookie sales in Protest oVer profits

Singer Anita O'Day's condition··imprevi"~·\·'""'·

Ohio Univcralty

ColfeF of Osteopathic Medicine

Ohio

3 . ..._

IREAST TINDER$

YEUOW ONIONS

BUY ON.E lET ONE

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Plljji12 • 1be DaiiJ Sentinel

PolnMfl'l•lllddllport, Ohio

overnmen.t b.u ilding security ·

JERRY CITY- The police chief bu been suspended without pay after
he w111 clwpd with sexually abulinJ a IS-year-old girL
James Craft, 46, of Jerry City,. WIIS charged with one count of sexual
batlery. He wu being held in the Wood County jail.
He was scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday in Bowling Green Municipal Coun.
.
·.
"It really was a surprise," Mayoc Gerald Heinze said about Craft's
arreSt. "He's always been there for us and done a good job."
.
. . Craft is one of the village's three pan-time police officers. As ch1ef,
Cnlftmade about $100 a month. He works full-time for Whirlpool in _f indlay.
Jerry City is a village of 300 residents about 25 miles south or Tole·
do.
Wood County Sheriff John Kohl ~Craft called his office on Jan. 11
aJtd told one of his deputies that he had molested a girl on Jan ..9.
Kohl said the victim and her mother claim Craft had sexually abused
the teen-apr on other occasions.·

•

PAUL SOUHRADA
IOCIIIted P,... Wrlllr
COLUMBUS -Ohio needs a security plan for sovernmcnt offices that
also takes public access into consideration, ll)'ll .committcc appointed by
Gov. George Voinovich' af~ last year's hostaBe situation 111 the Bureau of
Workers' Compensation.
·
·
.
"Although state facilities. an: relatively safe and free from violent inci·
dents, the trend of increased violent activity in today"s society is a eonccrn
that needs to ~ addresstA by the public sector," the committee wroo: in a
report released Tuesday.
"The current formula for balancing security of employees and public
accessibility to government offices may have to be adjusted."
Voinovich set up the commillec in November alter a Washinston Court
House man allegedly took three state employees hostages because he was
frustrated with the way his disability claim wu beins httndled. ·
James L. Dailey, tbe man accused of lakin&amp; the hostages, was freed &lt;in
bond after pleading innocent by reason of insanity to an eighJ-Count indict·
ment that includes charges of kidnapping and carrying a concCaJed weapon.
·The committee, which represented vari0111 state departments and emp)oy·
ee groups, reported that the state has four separate building owners and oper·1
ators -. each with its own security policies llild procedures. • ·
"No one person or agency is in charsc of building security for the entire·

Outdoor theater planned by gro£1p
FREMONT - Plans are underway to build a $3 million outdoor the. a~r that would feature a play about deaf German woodcarver and his
carouseL
·
The Take This Dream Outdooc Drama Association will announce plans
Wednesday for the' thea~. ·
··
·
.
The J;fioo.scat theater would be used to stage one or more plays each
summer for family JIUdiences, said Ernst Hillenbrand, the association's
, president.
·
·
·
. ~of them would be "Take This Dream," a musical abouta Hess ville
man believed to have built America's first merry-go-round, Hessville is
a Sandusky County' village .about 35 miles' southeast ofToledo.
. Audiences an. expec~ to come 200 miles or more, according to an
association study. They primarily· would be vacationers e1ther drawn by
the' play or s'opping on their way to other area attractions, such as Cedar
Point, Hillenbrand said.
Hillenbrand said officials would prefer the theater to be near Hess ville.
but much will depend on where ·the association can buy land and ~t what
price. Fund-raising is expec~ to bl!gin soon. . .
. .
·
Officilils said the ti\Ciler could generate $3;5 m1lbon a year for the area.
To break even. thi theater would have to average an audience of about
1,000 six times a week during an 11-week summer season. Tickets would
sell for $1S·to $20.
CLEVELAND - A man the FBI believes is a member of a bank-robbery gang has been sentenced to nearly 10 years in federal prison.
Nathaniel Hunt was sentenced Tuesday toSS months for bank robbery
and being a felon in possession of a gun and another 60 months, to ~
served after the first sentence is completed, for using a gun in a violent
crime.
·
The gang allegedly has netted more than $200,000 in 13 h9ldups in
Summit and Portage counties.
•
Authorities believe that Hunt, 26, of Akron, is one of four memhers
· of the gang behind bars, although he is the only one to have been charged
in any of the 13 robberies attributed to the group since May 1995.
· Before he was sentenced Tuesday; Hunt told U.S.. District Judge Donald C. Nugept in Cleveland that .he is innocent.
·
"I didn 'I do the crime. I feel railroaded," Hunt said.
Hunt disparaged the testimony of eyewimesses and told Nugent that
he thinks the jury would have found him innocent if his lawyer, Lawrence
Whitney, had allowed him to testify.
"I know ifl would have taken the stand, I never would have been convicted," Hunt said.
Charles Colitre, agent in charge of the FBI's Akron office, said agents
are continuing to investigate the bank robberies.
There have been no robberies l:inked to the gang since the Sept. 26
holdup at tJ!e Buckeye State Credit Jlniciii in Akron. · . . .

"No Job Too L..M&lt;p or Too sm.n•
We wll WOIII wllhln your budget.

, Ph. 773-t173

SlOW
IEMOVAL
Call Anytime

t4t-JI27.

Bradftrd

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YJ . EMPIREiS INVENTORY OF FURNITURI
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011 PURCHASES OF .
$399 OR MORE

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REACH OVER 18,500
HO. . SWIIH
YOUR. ES.SAGE!

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ADVERTISlNG IN THE
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IN THE
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tlten 111\lraenoy orcloroll:;
tht IOOUIIIOI, 1101111 ,

IIICid~
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of
llolll.... permlll,
.......

eNo Job Too SJnall
·•Any and All of Your

•Decks

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lnvlronntlntll
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GAJ&gt;l.IPOLIS
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446•2342·
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MASON, W.VA.
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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

'992'-215•6

VInyl Siding. Roote
Decks.
FrH E.,.,_

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614-742-3411

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HAULING
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Notfc1t
Public
Notice
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Ronnie Jot~"....,..

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reopeot lo tile loouann, 4t147 lt. 111. 331, Aoclno, lnformollon . Education
dental, modlfloatlon, Ohio, foollllY Deocrtpllon: 18chat•::r.t-..·-- MD

.Gravel, Sand, ·
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

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614-992-3470

•

IOIEIT IISSELL
COIRIUCTIOII'
' .

... . li'Oallloft, or NIWWII ol8 Air, Applcallon No 011014.

Plfthl.llca-. er-'-'a• lj:gragltl Pa:Ctlt'...
Written 00111111ent1 and (1J 22;1TC
;;~~ for a .public ,. :..:.....;.______
re,a'rlltna •
Public Notice
Htten lillY bo
w1111111 30 • • It ......!~.~wDII•IE,:ICT.
notice of the prepo••• ~...
aollon, An •dJudlaelton· · COUNYY OF liii!IGI
1101r1ng ruy 11o 11o1c1 on a
tilt nMIII or NM!plo,
: pn~pilled 1011on lh ,_.,. dllllu-11111 clllngu
l::::r.~d o;,,obJ:;u:,n ~: lnbat•;::::::ll8cal ·
'wllllln • c1eye of IMUinot
Dn1111i11rJ1,1•
of lhe propotlod action. 111111111 Pund
Wiltllut 10.....,.., aaea 11111 Rnal$ltt·
for public IMollnga, olld 'llllloo
adJudication heartna GrMm:
nqunle muet bo 11111110: Locat~...,......o
Hearing Clerk, Ohio s-GoUiriiiiWII .......... o
·Envlronmonlal Proteollon /IIA cllw ................14,411
·AIIIIGYo P.O. lox 1041, Tolll lltlll~11 ......... 14,411
COtumllul, Ohio 4321f.104e DllbU-01111:
~tepllop~ 114-144-2121).
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of lilt dlrMtor which 1ro
141uiP 11111............. 18,111
~uponlll-ora
Coull olo:ll.;.tro... 1,721
'elated eHeotln dete. lnf1r111at1on E"ucetlon
Iflu-ant to Ohio AeviHd ~ al.,...lpe) ........... 1,551
Ctldo leOIIon 3741.04, 1 'hvll..,..l ronoH.•.;...
'fin II eotlen 1111y Ill
..- ....,.............._ ..... 3,231
appuled
to · the Adn1'1'1lng..,.. Prliltllll..
environmental llo•rd of .........~...................... 47
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who ••• a perly to 1 1btal Dllburoe-........
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lllellnll action. JltnuoniiO .1blel oilier llnonolna
Ohio Aevloed Code 1oot1o9 -••• «-l
·
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luulng,
denying, lourau (._, ....= -......... 0 ·
nted11ylng, nvoktng, or (llllllol) Dleb, •nd OlhOr
nnewfnt a· permit, lloenM, U.. ....:.._ ................(10,031)
varlonoe which 11 nol Pund Coell lolance,
lly o propoeed ,.,_, 1, 1.............11,2t3
be appe811 d to
'unci Ceeh Balance,
filing an appul Deleis • ., 31, , _ _ .._..
of tuua1101 lpnlll l'!iftd
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Tolal of Roc, elld Olllor
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(llndll) · Dloll. IIIII ~
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Jenuaiy 1,1..._,_.11,411
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NEW YORK (AP) - They can (9.3 raiing and IS share).
• Scinfcld saying he won't do the
tli).lter with the parts, but there·~ no
"Seinfeld" had a 24.4 rating and show without them.
"I think next season will be the
derailing NBC's Thursday mg~t 39 share and was narrowiy beaten by
machine.
. "ER" as the week's most-watched last," Seinfcld told the Daily News on
:·~The network's five prime-time
show, Nielsen said. It matchCII "Se.in· rfucsday, although he has said that
T1Iursday night programs gave NBC feld'~" hisbcst-ever rating; .on Feb. before.
.
th!i highe.st rating for any single ' 10, 1994. .
NBC's Thursday night shows
The timing couldn't be better for
\~lli.ilg of telev'isjoil thiS se~~· and
Jerry Seinfeld and his three support· were the top five in-Nielsen's ratings.
lf:~~ .tlie network tq an easy wrMn the
ing players. They' ve opened negoti-. Even the least-watched of those pro- ·
'!!O~'s llJinss race, Nielsen Media
ations
f&lt;ir. a new season with cast grams, "Single Guy," had nearly 3
ll~h $aid 1\icsday.
";;NBC
II. 7
and 19 members Michael Richards, Julin million more vieweri tl\an the sixth.show. ABC's "Home
s'llile
CBS Louis-Orcyfus and Jason Alexander
.
ABC · askin1 for $1 million. an
and

..

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NBCis Thursd~y night schedule sweeps to ratings win

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frhlly, ........, 24, 19t7
•• Dr. I. Jlcb•• ........ Office

·

continuing to access vital services. chairs the Reach to Recovery prothrough local board members. and the gram that helps breast cancer patients
-~'-!J~e,. officen for the Meigs Counnew toll-free number, (8&amp;8) 227- meet the emotional, physical, and
Unit of the American Cancer 6446. The area office hu also pro- · cosmetic needs related to their. disf,}.;,.ovh"''p been olec~ and plans · vided assistance to patients in need, ease and treatment.
mn,vin" forwlll:ll to establish a he said, reminding residents that the
Reeves said that while much has
*"•inurlftY Cancer lnfocmation Cen- ·American Cancer Society's n:sources been accomplished in the first (our
in the county:
' are ~jilst a phone call away.".
months of the organization's fiscal
~\f:mnan Moore, former eKecutive
. "We are. actively looking for new year, there is 111uch more to come and
or the l'deigs unit, has been bf;lard members.to fill core chairs in there is a need for more volunteers.
'Jim Thornu, vice 5evetal ~.including breast cancer,
Fund raisers coming up include
Lenora Leifheit, secre- income development, ·volunteer ihe a community crusade in March
the Rev. William Mid· development, comprehensive sehool and April. the annual celebrity dinner
dliiSwarth, treasurer.
. .
health education, and community in February or March with . Jack
,.j Michatel.Reeves, director, of the cancer .infomwion," said the area Slavin, Syracuse. chairman; daffodil
~~!ral .Ohio Regional office in · director, who went on to emphasize days in March with Dottie \'.fusser,
. Poctsmouih, met with the local unit thi.t "local volunteers ensure the sue- cbairman;·tobacco and sm'oking edu~sday night a,t Veterans Memorial cess of the American Cane,er Soci- cation with Carson Crow, chairman; ·
dqspital to discuss plans for this · . ety.~·
the annual golf tournament in the
y,Cp's_progratl). .
. .
. "We are qui~e proud.to ~v~. one_ sprina.andthe~ian~ureeven~ Relay
,.,trhe Cancer Society's ~~"'' '"•fll die most active med1eal~1SOrS, '' roi £ffe, itflate May or early June.
ti!JI!al plans last summer put Mei.gs am~ng all' Ohip American , Cancer
At last ni&amp;ht's· meeting the direc;wrlh four other ~ounues, G,alha, Soctety boards.. Norma Torres, RN. torannouncedafour-countyplanmng
bawrence, Jackson and Scioto, rn the ' works diligently in the area of-cancer session for the Relay for Life prodl_slri.ctheadqll8!'ered in ~mouth. ' prevention .attd e~ly de~tion. She gram to be tield Feb. 13 at the' Holz·
ltievrously Mergs Count1ans were represents the Oh10 Breast and Cer- er Medical Center, 6:30p.m.
s,'i;i:viced through the Galha County ,..vical Cancer Project which offer5
Regular meetings for t11e MeigS
qfflce.
medical services, such as mamma- unit have been scheduled for the third
, ,.!According to Reeves, plans call grams and cervical exams, it no cost Tuesday of each month at Veterans
for esfl!blishing a Community Cancer to eligible women. Ad~itionally, Ms. Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy, 7
lnfonnation Center in ·each county. T~s a strong leader in the Jig/It .::p.in.&gt; · ·
~center proposed for Me1gs Coun- ag&amp;Jnst teen tobacco usc," Reeves · '· Besides the officers and program.
t'f will selile as a pick-up site for continued.
· chairinen named, other members of
padenis, educators, or the general
He repo~ that the Meigs Cown· the board are Pat Carson, Cheshire
poblic who .wish to receive li~rature, ty Unit is continually working in the area; Susan Clark, Barb Crow, Scott
vjjleos, and cancer information. Vol· fight against breast cancer. During · Dillon, Jim Huff, Clarice Krautter.
unteers an: needed to ht;ad up the~ Breast Cancer Awareness Month in . Dr. Wilma Mansfield, Ellen and 1erj~t. be ~oted. J:le said .that ~ow ht· Octobel:, board members di~uib~ted ry Rought, Gene Triplett; Dolly War. ersture IS aVailable ID both the prevenuon and early d~tect1on htcr· den, Vicki Cummins and Joan Wolfe.
Pomeroy and Middleport ·Libraries. ature to local women, he reported.
Racine; Jean Moore, Middleport;
... Reeves said thnt local citizens are
He commended Velma Rue who Dianna Lawson. Syracuse.
·

~ ' 'J

..............., ..... C..tlel.,
- i. , I

·

• ACTIONI" lnolude lilt

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

'"
i,,:r

Gas

•

.

LMt Woell.

...lllaatolpllteron, IIICidllloatton, or.

inthlltll Newl Staff

'

IJISTINGS'AND . ,
··FEATURES - .

' '

Hot -Wafer
Heaters ·

J~

,dillwMh, trM.urer, ltlndlng right. PictUred
with lhl cpfflcers II Mlch•l ~ dlteelor, of
the
Cenlnl O!ilo Reglonll office In
Portlmouth. Jim ThOnuta, not pictured, II lhl
.naw vice pt'ftldlnt.

ore to head cancer society group

.,.. ;

FREE HEARING TESTS
.

·ra L8Httelt, aecretary,llldlhl Rttv. Wlllllm MJd.

• i

i~

'

oilll tile fel...,lna draft,
111101 ......,,
wtire 11041011, lly lite Ohio
111¥1~1 Proteotl011

~

'

AREA TELEVISION

·White

....... HEIRIIIG AID ·cENTER

IPIIIDitiiM ....,_ Wlftlecl

. ·~

Waste hauler flies for bankruptcy

••••••••••••
COUPOI ·.

-

_,.
...... ,.,..,...
,,, ...... or

OFFICEJIS - Fermlri Moore, 111tec1
patt IUI!!illw diNCtor ollhlllllp unit
Amerlc8n Clnclr_Socltly, hll ~
· ·
pnalcllnt of.N locll unit.. Oltltlis off!.
cera eJIDtecllt 1\t11d*y'1 tnlltlngft\'e LenD-

WOitt.J)lllilllnO.
- · truck
.llody
• truck

S••••t
H•••
Ct.llfrlltl••

IIUIUC IIOTICII
Tho
followlna

AIMwY (OIM)

IRUESER'S
IIUGE

742-2131, Alit for

•

•
••

. Milan, WV

1.onC1 St., Rulllftd, Oh.

614-9$2-7643

591·1197

#;

(For TII~M Who' QNIIty)

G.-ages • Replacenwnt Wlndowl
Room Addition• • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

-Etc.

County restricts .
·sexually-oriented
establishments

_.

New Hom11 • VInyl Siding New

•Parking Lola

Pl·ll·:~

.

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIIC.

-orlvewaya .

·

FAX 77WII1

81rell

101

fBIIIIIY•.·

. ... .~ .,.e. ·rr ~12 IIONIHS~·

11

Fit.,..,.

3

Studtmt publication seeks records

~

•

offer if the international union would . "They have a right 10 vote! .
local .presidents were. unanimous in:~
AIIOCiated PrH1 Wrltw
· ailow them to cast votes.
, John S!tun~rs. president of Local reJecting the cOinpany s proposal. He:
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. ..:_ The . ' ••·:·The:~y:sbou::~ld~v:~~."~I~a:B~ow:,:s81
:·:d·~·~.l~23~8:.:in~M:artJ:·n~siFieirry~-·-~Oihii':o,~s81~·d~"..;;·~:ug:g:e~~_!.ed:·;;;'~L:!B~o~w~b~ut:t~ou:t_ _..,. '
chairman of Wheeling-Pittsburgh
.. · .... ·
Steel Corp.'s piQ'Cnt company said he
·
would not be surprised if a strike by
4,500 steel workers ~ontinues for
altother y~ar.
'
A spokesman fot the . Uniied
Steelworkers of Ameri~a described
Rein LaBow's remark as i~~ponsi·
ble.
"That sounds to me like a vety
reckless statement if he's concerned
about the well-being of his company
or the communities that support his
steel plants," Charles Robideau said.
LaBow, chairman ofWHX Corp.,
described workers Tuesday as "sac·
rificial l~mbs" for an international
union that doesn't care abo111 them ..
He also said he believes rank-and·
file workers would 'accejlt the Wheel·
ing-based company's latest pension

IT LEAST
..

Co ii992·21Sb

AultiOi tz.d w OllrtiUOr
11 •lnduttrill GMM • ftjl'iedttlillt.... Shop
SeMeN • StNI S111ee &amp; Fabr'' 'Cill• Aa~ W I •11
• Alumlnum,IStalnleu • Tool 01 Illig • Om-*'
Step~ • Slaiis, Rlllflllll, PMio Fumttur,,
lterM, f'llntlr Heltge~W. Trr'l rr &amp; lola or ollwr'etutlll

• VI 1•11 8uPJ1

state," the commit~e noted. Nor is thete a sys~matic ~h for atlel~
ing and dealing with security risks.
·
·•
Both o~ those issues- along with the balance between safety~ ICCII ~
. sibility and staff training- should be the focus of another committee ua~
the direction of the Department of Public Safety, the governor's eomml-,::
recommended.
.
·
. f.
The committee ajso suggested some s~~ that could 'be tak~n immedij:
ately, including expanding the ~urrent photo identification system 10 all state&gt;.
employees and putting State Highway Pa~rol Capitol Square Pojice offi&lt;:4nrt
in more sta~ buildings.
·
· ·
;'
The firsi step will be to hire a full-time staffer to handle security isa~
.for the state, said Leo Skinner, spokesman for the public safety depl\riJDCnt..'
"I think there are a lot of good ideas there, but I don't know l)ow much! ~
we can 4o until that person is in.place," Skinner said.
..
:•
· An official with the Ohio Civil Service Etnployees Association ur.Jed qui\:~ ·
. •:
1action on the report's recommendations.
; "I believ.e this n:pbrt provides a framework for addressing the funda-: :
·mentals of building security .am! the safety or'front-line state employees, whO:
.ani often the targets of public resentment over the policies and procedi!I'Cs:.
' !of goverl)ment ilgenciq," Paul Goldberg, the union's executive director, sai!f• '
;in a pews release..
·
·
·
· ··
~
·
.
:,

.

l&gt;t pin&lt;!' nn nd

!VMU!f,W,

By'DAVID SHARP

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) New sexually-oriented. businesses
face strict regulations under an ordi. nance passed by the Cabell County
Commission. ·
Tuesday's V(!~ me.@ll~ ne)ll . ~'!lf
entertainment busines~ in the county cannot locate within 1,000 feet of
schools, churches, residential areas,
day:care.centers or each other.
COLUMBUS. Miami University has a duty to release records of stu·
It covers businesses such as strip
dent disciplinary cases under the state's open records law, a lawyer for
bars and adult bookstores:
the student newspaper told the OhiQ.S.!Jpreme Court.
.
.
New adult businesses will have to
"We want to know whether the university is consistently enforcing its
pay
a $500 annual license fee and
own rules and policies," Marc Mezibov of Cincinnati said in artuments
submit
to inspections from regulatoTuesday before the court.
·
.
ry agencies. They also will be restrictMezibov represents ihe Miami Student, which sued the university 'in
ed from using lights. multiple colors
, July io force it to release records of the University Disciplinary Board.
or artwork on signs or the outside of
The bOard hears cases of students involved in crimes as serious as rape
buildings.
and arson. The newspaper wan'ts to create a computer database t~ track
"It is noi the intent or effect to
the dates and location of incidents, and the type or discipline handed out.
restrict m: deny access by adults' to
' · But Gerald Draper, a Columbus lawyer representin8. the university. said
sexually
oriented materials protected ·
the school .could lose $40 million _in federal funding if it releases confi·
by
the
FirstAmendmcnt,"
the ordi·
·
· dential student information. ·
&lt;
nance
states.
·
Draper said the information is protected by the fe\leral Family Edu·
But Frank Masiarczyk, co-owner
cationa) Rights and l&gt;rivacy Act, and the state open rccprds law provides
of Lady Godiva's nude bar in Bar·
an ex~mption for records prohibited from release by other federal and state
boursvillc. said he will consider legal
laws. ·
.
·
'
action to have the ordinance over·
The newspaper asked for the board's .records in 1'!9S while invcsti·
turned.
gating.student crime trends on Miami's main campus in Oxford in south·
"All these so-called laws are not
western Ohio.
.
fooling
anyone," he said. · "This is
In April, the university provided some records. But it blacked out the
nothing
more
than selective prosccu·
names and Social Security numbers, along with the se• and age pf each
tion.
If
a
guy
wants
to have beer and
defendant; dates, times and locations of incidenL~ ; and disCiplinary pro·
•look
at
a
good·lllOking
lady, that's his
ceedings.
.
·
·
right."
Draper said·that information could be used ·to id~ntify the students.
The ordinance was first suggested
The court did not say when il would rule. but Justice.Andrew Douglas
by
the Cabell County (:hristian Coali·
told Draper that• he. wa.~ prepared to order the university to rclea_se the
lion.
records.
"The government's job is to pa~s
"You're seeking to shroud all this in secrecy," Douglas told Draper.
laws that protect the citizc11s and
But Justice Deborah Cook q~~Cstioned whether releasing the in formarestrict immorality," said Stephen
would make the campus any safer, noting that some federal campus
Gracey,
coalition chairman. "We
1.. c·rin•e statistics already arc repol'\cd.
respect their First.Amendment rights.
but we also want to sec moral prin·
CANAL WINCHESTER -Waste hauler Mid-American Waste Sysciples supported through legisla·
lion."
·
,terns Inc. has filed for Chapter II bankruptcy protection and agreed to .
sell all its assets to USA Waste Syslems Inc., according tcr court papers.
' The purchase price of $180 million includes cash, stock and assumed
debt.
· ·
•
·
·
The deal is $ubject to the approval of U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmin'gton. Del.,; where the papers were fi_ledTuesda~.' A hearing was scheduled for March 7.
·
.
, The Cana) Winchester-based company listed assets of $61.4 million
· Jiabilities ·of$371.8 miliion. The company said the sale will result in
minimal, if any, value to its stockhol4ers.
·

'
•
II

Busines Ser ices

•

·chairman's comment 'i rks.stee' firm ·strikers

Alleged bank robber gets prison term

The o.Hy a.nt!MI• P 1 11

considers adjusting ~

lo News in Brief·.- Committee

Po/lce chief ch•ftJ8d with abuse

•

••
W1dn11 ar, J.,...y 12. 1117.

.

... ••lnlr•

.•

..
•

.~-~~!!~~~~~~--....~......·..~·...........~--~~~~~~----·! ·

SOFAlCHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $995

• ITOCKPIQKWII.. ll":"
;II• Ill It 1111 Mlddilp art lilmlllllq
~
In lhllfllllllllloolt
u,;ntofPIDplll link. Towtnlhl
~..,.c .. d five eiOclcl whlctt IChle¥ld m~tntllll"

'

LANE MOTION ·SETS .
. SOFA &amp; RECLINER

:ht=omlhl parlocl, Ocl1 tl1rouF
!J1.
ollllll In the .... .UioitmiY••wtc~ltll
lpl In tldulldon with Plapl11
,..-tklpMed lntht aamrwt&gt;~Aohlol1

a
.

$1195
IIWIIMN.

. . . ,_
pntll tlld . . .~ Lal ..
~miter, lilt, by c.r~~· ~ lllllllftt IIWIII

.
•..
.....

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�PHILLIP

ACROSS
10.........,

ALDER

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........ Plca·Poo 4 YNro Old;

.... Plci:Poo II lolonllll Old; 2

17-

IH&lt;mCel

....... MI .... 5 - Old Call

OHIO VALLEY PU81.ISHIHG CO.
recommend• that rou do buti·
Ml~ with people you know, and
NOT 10 Hnd . . _ -~~~~ ...

~·~... All .... lot ........

il you
att moving or tor 1torege. To

undl you

~~~~-

10

oflorlng.

• •a

440

l!a•• lnvntfgatM

·.

• Q 11 . ,

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• It J 10

182-2211, .

• Q

6JIOII&amp;
•75431
Salllll
• A K Q J 10 I

1'h Pllt ·)

•K

';. L I ~·l ~ f()LK

• • 1•

•AQ

Uust Mil- 19D7 ,4)170 thrH beef!

10011\, includll e ""'""" FREE loo
- - Only $165.57""' .,.,., ...,

PIII&lt;ERTON SECURITY

tG05 -

Now Acctopdne Appicatiano br
lh&amp; Galll,PDiit AfH..

All-

• 'Cari'IJOiitlveHowlrWagn

-.to
n g In
thlo _
_
.. l
IUIIjeCI"'
tno l i - Folr Houolng Act
·of 1988 which ....... •~~~~go~
I O - 'lllf'/ priolorence,

'Ful 01' I'Wrlllnwl'ollrk
·~ldVI&lt;alona

Ylfd Sale

·~Ito,

and Aeeiclonl!d 0..111 and

Dilmtmbermentlnsu,.nce
'01&gt;&lt; Danoolllllo llledcal

GallipoliS
&amp; Vlcl~lty

To ou.Hiy Appllc:anta mull

•a. 11VHrs ot AgitorOtdtr

Slot·
:::
:=l~-~men;Y."':"'__;,~
Mlddlel)9rt
. &amp; Vlcl lty

n

s..... ·

I

T h i S - wll not
kno.,;ngly IICCOPI
adwlrtlsementllor real ntate
wt11ch Is In v101111on oftno

'Be ebleto 'provldeJiAIIUIIIIJ
employment h111ory for ~ht

-r

piill 10 yurs whh complete

nii!IOI,,a ddre-, and 1oCo·

.

law. Our rnd!n .. hjo8by
lntormecllhllllll-.go
advartiMd In thlo

phOne numbe,.,

'Pftlvldo I llol ol thooo poraon- ·

':'::'~~~~:':':"::-:":~~~-1• nftrencea who 11'11 nat rill·
U"&lt;~ll with lheir comp-..•
namM. add,....., and tel•

--ononfCIUII.

phone numiM!W 11 wall.

opportunity -

;..;.;;=----~-~-' 1Appliclnt1 will be accepted lor

80

Public Slle'
lnCI Aut:IIOn
A:;;;;;;;;;:'ii

7:00pm. Rt. 2 south of Raven·
IWDDct on8 and 112 miles. New
1hln1, pants, m1sc ., new
furniture, silver dollars. Harold
AuCfiOn ••70-

soc:••·

-ty.

!he Glllipoh. .IOOOn thuNday,
January 23 ao 9 All mat ohe
Pt Plaosan~ Lowes Mooor Inn.

EOEIMIPIOIV

..,,e,•..aea.aA3.

REAL FSTATE

310 Homes lor Sale

--=--=---."--:-:--

;;r!

Tap dol(f!r- lntlquet, furnuure,
gla11, cl)ina, clocks, 110ld, oil..,,
...,.; •IChei. uootot old atone

ll!r&amp;, oki

bluo 1 while dlsllesl 'old
Wood bo~es, milk botlltl, Meigs .
CoUnty Ac:lvert111,ntn1, Osby
Manir!, 614-992-7&lt;14 1

Wanlt&lt;l To Buy . An1 1aues .· F1.1r ·
ntlufO. G1!i,446-761.2.

W1nted To au·y: l•trle Tyket
Kirchen Set. Workshop, Play·
t\OUP, Rossible Any Other Little
=
·-Tayl 1 Please Call 81 ... 2.. 5·

Hou.l~~~~~~~~~~~
1~

1991, ,992. ,993. and 19M
day Barbl~: s For Sale ~1-4 ·379·
9075

bediOOm, IWO both,
Any odd jobs. pa1n1.ng , guners
one H2 acres. satellile dish,
cleaned. 614 · 245 -.5879 or 304- •"a18' above ground pool, TP wa·
67}-7112.
181", toll.! etoaric, fireplace. Darwin

...... 814·992·5t42.

Babysitting 1n my nome, in the
Bidwell area. Children or all tiges. Two 1 bedroom apanmeniS lor
Reference&amp; Available Uoon Re- sale with ttoraoe bu•lcling . Wilt
quelt 28 Years Experience Call 1111 on land con1rae1, 814-092·

814·367-0529

ii;.;;g;;p;,t,;bi;5s:;;;aw;.m~ii :l .dd;;;on~··
iu" call

5858.

I320

Mobile Homes

for Sale

1882 14x70 Mobile Home Qn 1.6
Acru, Por*hu, St s,goo, 513·

SE RVICES

Abl•

I

Shirley

~von · Representat~ves

Haul St,rvice: WMI Haul MOat An·
ythingt Call Anytime. Leave MM·
&amp;age, 614·256-1037.

Home tnrernet Tutoring, E·'UIII.
News Groups, Rtaltimt Voice,
Yidoo Chi~ FOI Mot• ln.. rmallon
C.H 814-4•1 ·02&gt;48.

574•2531,

,

I

1988 Schult! Mobile Home·3bt, 2
bath , 8x2D expando. cathrttdal
ceiling, i1land in kitchen , sitting
on 3 farge lots, with garage. nice
neighborhood, Call · at1er Spm .
30&lt;1-662-3502.

nMCIIC;I. Earn money tor Chn&amp;t·.
wei bill It hotnlllat WOf!ll.. 1·800· lnleriar and ExlllrkH finishas car- · 989 Clay1on Sunnybrook 1 4.t60
HZ~~ 'or 30•·882-2845. Ind . pentry, fireplace refinishing. ad- 2 Bedroom• 1 112 Baths. Central
dition•, porchet, decks, have A1r &amp; Htll All EleCtriC, Oecll &amp;
filii,\
Porch Witl"' 24x36 Garagt Ancl 11
304-175'1013.
2 Acre ltvel Lot, ~ppr• •••d
S24,500, Wil Sol For 123,300 For
Appointmtnt D14·3B8·87DQ, Or

81 ...41-31140:

.

So"""'llle 11eolry 2t2·5th SL

.....

1123111.

Comput.,- Us.e rt Needed. 'Yorll
..., 'ftotlro . UOk to tJOkiyr ; -1117181111508.

I

Retiuj
,

·~

blewide. 3br. 2 bath, S1 ,14G
down, SQ79fmo, tfte delivery &amp;
Ml-up. Onl, al Oakwood Hornet,
Nilnl WV. 30&lt;1 -·755-5885.

....

se.ooo

. 'l'B'E' BORN LOSER

Business and
Buildings

r- : . · ·~

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
2.81 Acru on Rt. 2 in Galllpotit

FMy. 304·578-31 50.

.

11M on land conrfact. Call 304675-6108, any"time far. more' In for·
ma~ort

·

Severai5-Krt pareett
temote , beautiful lana ; Me•gl
Counly, Sc1p•o Townsn1p. SR 882

.,

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W1-\tN l
~ow~

'

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OUC.f-1! DIOO'T YOU C£,T ~
~f-Ie F'IZOt-\ TAA.T 7

ThlJ(:.f\T

TIJ,E, Ptoo:

Furntshed efliciencw- apanment,
utili ti es paid, localed in Middle Gracious liVing, 1 and 2 bedroom
apanmemS at Village tanar' and
Riverside Aparrmems in Mid"le1&gt;011. F10m $232·$355 . Call 614·
992-5064. Eaual Housing 0Dpor·
tooirie~.
·

-

long..-.-:

Nice twO bec:troom apartment tn
R&gt;meror, no pel~. 614;992-5151.

RENTALS

lor Rent

3 Bedroom -Home Wl.th Wood·
burn•ng Fireplace $400/Mo., Plua
Otposil Located In Centtnary On
Rout&amp; 141, 61. 4-446~6556.
· 312 Wezgal irBodrooms, Pomer-

6 Room .ho~,Ase in Clifton, $3001
mo • utilities, gas neal. 304·773·

9181 .

.

)

.

IIE:=t.
.
31
F1t to
I........

,, "

40 Dteh
.
41 llledrld .....
·42T1f
i\r4----!-!~ : ~ ..

sumec

......

50Hen(Fr~l

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull CMpoa.

,

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Irs no! -her you win or 1oH but
blame.·- (Dallas Cowboya lineman) Blaine Nye.
, '

who gels

_-_
.....~_;:_.'_;,S_&lt;a..;;.!'!l~L-JL£~S·

Che:

....-...

QRoo'!l'........,.. ol the
four ~c:rambt.d wordi

'low to 1onoo ..... -do-

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,

Pomeroy. 107 Pleasant Ridge, 3
bedroom . 1-112 bath. J315 ptua
depoSit. call evenings 614·888·

8002.
Pamtir,oy· two bedroom, HUO,
s1ove1 refrigerator, no pets, te·
curny deposiJ. 614; 992-6886 -eller

.,

caPI&gt;Od. EOH 30&lt;H75a111.

UNSCRAMIILE fO.
ANSWER

·

Two bedloom aparunent, 1311 Bur-

SCUM.IJTS ANSw.IU

ternut, Pom.,or, very cl. . n,
1275/mo. plu1; utililtea, HUD a~

......... 614-117-11205. .

450 ·

Furnished

.

Rooms

-

Tt'iree bedroom '" Mlddlepon,
n.ce. $400 per month, dtPQSII rt·
qutre&lt;l. no pets: three bedroom 1n
Pomeroy, S300 per month, .depos•Ltequlred. no pets: IWD bedroom
m Pomeroy, $275 per month, de·
pos1t requ tred. no pets. Call 814·
992 -2 381 Monaay thru Friday,

Rooms ' lor rent - week or month.
Starting at 1120/nio. Gallia HDIII.

8:Xlam 10 4:00pm

460 Space tor Rent

Two bedroom l'laust. carpeted
and clean. no .ns1de pe\s, ClePOSil
18qUI1ed, 614·992-3090.
'

Mobile home spjcts tor rtnt..up Sptc tal
10 18ll80't, sas per month, nttt, · Motors
&amp;ewer and· tr. .h includtcl. ,, ... ·$35.00 Plus
992·2167.
4782:

WEDNESDAY

$leaping rooms with cooking.
Also ualltt space on river. All
hook-ups. C•ll alter 2:00 p.m ..
30&lt;1-773-5151, lolatonWV. ·

Unfurnished 3. Bedroom House
On 40 Acres Near Tycoon laklt,
Mobile Home ipacet Far ~nt,
Available Febtuary 111. $3001Mo.. . 2C's Par~. Ca~nlay, 114·
614-245-5078
441·1221,30&gt;1-f
7.
'
MERCHAtW IS~

Household
.Goocls··

, Reconditioned

lllciltl 11011110n11 you like -v much. 0o noc
1111 lbla 1*19'1 C6... YQIIJO doubl yotjr

Cal ~75-8821 .

inlo

Ia

eoqjrghl
.
'
'
L?8RA (...... H-Olt. 13) A 1111111' miglll
occur In COIIIPIIftY polltlcl loday, lltd It
COUld hew ~ effecla. You may
be. aiilignaG -llling 1hll your lelow

FINAN CIAL

'

ButlniU

FOr

hewt,Mn 'dociiJI! • ·
ICO?i 70 (Ool:M !leu. tal Luck mlghl
~ • , . ill ,_ ...... IOC!IIr. bullhl
~ CIUid llll?mllad. You •

- ..........

Ren.t ," M~~~~' Hom. 3 Bed·

raomJo, In Ctntneary, Depoait
1210: $2501110., Waoar lncludecl,

,..,._..814....,82e2:
Nitt 2 IIHroomo, S22111Mo ..
lllltt Down 218.

a

IACIITTAIItu&amp; (IIW.

N• ... ~-·

1112,114-~1.'

-

AKC Ytllow Lii&gt; Pups,

'

l!oo IIA·

251 ~3110 Allar- P.M. _.
.
Pelt Plus, Sllv•r Bridia Plaza.

NiOa- ,...,.,,. ...... -

lnllldcl-no 'pela,l14-ltl·

114-441·0770.

~~~am,......
_

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

,, l
t

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

~

'

~ tllld of .....
t11

1111 ...,._
I

IIIUIIIIIIMin ....... I ,ou n ...,.., In
a 111111na" dati t~~~ttr. ~ ,ou 1at , _
aii!Ot~nt lntartarl, you llllgllt IOU

mOnar·

..

11)

CAI'fUCOftN (Dee....,.,.. 1t) YOu

.

'

---~~~·" ·

U·llee~

tl!lhlllllillll...., .. Nil~

""woong..,ran....
tM1Id
llldlt'dlllllll

n: O..,O&amp;ifJI.,.uor.ol, •••·•••~

'

Wretch· A/One • Irish ·Mingle· HIS LAWN
"The guy wlio 181d that WOI'!t well dOne never needS
to be done over," sighed my exhausted friend, ·never
raked 'HfS LAWN:•·I,
,
. .
.
'
..

l

l

,.

r.:-:::::7':'=.:::::::-:-:-::-------------...::....~---------·

814-&lt;141-05110 . .

lnc..,_fion to tak6 1118ignmenll pr aetivi·

'

34--lhe

Tw•n R•vttt Towtr, npw accepting
appiiCIIIOM for 1br. HUO subaldized apt. tor eldef'ly and handl-

1;. 1hl1 shoUld be plftlurable and tum
th,m
ledioua Iaska. Llle loug~

All . . . _ on ia,.. Fr111 a!ivary

-=
...........
....... . .

=:a=:,

Opening leld: • J

1ac1
Monday
Spot

lrllncl.
.
· VIRGO (A... 23-llpl. 221 Subdut lhe

m. ·-IIIII ! ·100-211-1070,

!Or plclclng

'

do ho~•e cleaning In Pt.
PIHaant I Galllpollo Dhlc&gt; orirl.
Have ttferenCit.· available an,.

&amp;,z

Paaa

now
one

Will

IU¥ IN JANIIAII\'. No PIYmtrll
til AprH IH7.
financing. Call

'

23 Gloomy · .\ •
25 IIIOet ...,

2 Bedroom In Eureka 6 t 4·258-

Wooht•i. Dryora, Ron,.,, Rofrl·
gratorl, 10 Day ·ouaranteat
Fronc~ Citr llartag, 814·448·
7'115.
'

74 IWO .,.Qroam, c•n ltlvt ·1n
M-...rr or ,.,.., mull Nil im·
mll'llily, 13.llllO.,Ot ..lt2-713&amp; .

toOl
.
.
20 Houlton'•

8408..

Taking . ord•r• for hand·mt'd t
bOOkcaleo, poutto Dina, ocL Wll
also do lnaidt carpentry work.

21 o '

,,_
...,.

tUiilhecl heart aeven.
Tbe fatalleld? Right - a dllmond
&lt;not the trump that North claimal.
The boot is available for $19.50,
postpaid, from The Bridge World, 38
Weal Mth Street, New York, NY 10025·
7124.

'
mi... ~ ~
buU\11 e.ce111nt mlinlll•;a ··- t
ntsiOfy ana 1111 ¥1fY
l
~f&amp;. Will loll b' current NAOA 1 _::
ban'dlut. B1. .-41111 lvtn- • •

$1500 per acre . Call for good
miD. 614--583-8545.

Appliance•:

'

.

e&gt;YEN!.!

Furnished 3 Room1 &amp; Bath, Ni:t
Pets, Referenc:e And [)epostt R•
quired, 814-448,1519. 1
•

(IUS! oil SR 1431. Ow,.., financing.

410 Houses

..

-roo fit.,'( NOT NE£D L~~
-ro Pti.Ym

port, Ohio, 614-992·5949.

5 loll, slclo bJ aide, $8,500. May

7 IIIOet
'
IMI8IIc
• stldcy IIUif
I Entwlnt •
ft--1--+-l--1' 10 v.ndOr . ,,.

&lt;S.tarordl by
Nartb. In &amp;e
. ;pau rueive a
riJht·llaad
wMII the problem.-'I'IIMI
to see
full layout 11d anawer.
Elldt dell bu • tiiJe U..t .... ,oil •
hint bull? illl'l gi1len above tbe problem. Only by looking in the table of
contents. tir by taking a quick peek at
tile top of the answer p!lge, can you
get tbillidbit olaasi1118J!ee,
This deal ia typical of the book's
contel)t. Seeing only Ill" North-South
hands, you ate in six spades. West
leads the club jack. Whal is your plan?
This exuberant auction was proba- ·
b!y the only way North - the author,
not the dummy! - could think or
reachin1 this debatable sl4m. .
You could hope for a 2-2 diamond
brull 141 pen:entl, but It is better to
play for hearts 4-3 and trumps 3·2 or 41 &lt;eo percenu. ·
After winning with dummy's club
king. play a heart to the king and overtake your spade eight with dummy's
Dille. Discard I dl.,omi oo the heart
-.ee,'tnlihp-a heirt In hand, 11111 the
club ace in the dummy .and trump another heart. Draw the irumps, play a
diamond to dummy's ace, and pitch
your penultimate diamond on the es-

Tlx Aeh•nd Sp.ecllll 1197 Oou-

5151 .

drink

. ~~ dlltllli't a misprint in the.bead-.
llnedf ~ WO!IId ?lire to
in·
~te declal:er-pll.y .
buy "Bridge; The Vital

....

675-3030 (OIIoco) 304-875·3431
(Join Casto, AQI!Ill)

Going busi ntta for sell· Second
StrHI. Rt 33 in Mason. 304·773·

1 ldnglll?p •

" BJ PitiDip Alder

- •
18M hlco. XLT 4 WO .,....,.;
3!m

yowr property. Thank You 1304·

'· laokmo~
· 11e

I'IIIIO!Y= houri pt&lt; - $5.751
"'· _ . , 11 Meies CounJY LibrllJ

'

.

..-dill~~ ..

· we Are In Need Of Listings·
PleaM oive us a eatl or SlOP by
ouf ofllc• il •riterested In Hlling

510

'*•nee

To- I

18•5 Solbaru Turllo 4~4
MoiDr, " - •· 72.000: ......
R•toulll llew Tlroa, Looko N

755:511115.

lor Rent

anvei · mUst havi
r A COL. aqod dr iv1hg
· record. ·
W•th lap heavy
toads a ptut. IJ'tlflaD-Ie driving

With

I

11800

420 Mobile Homes ·

ctall B

Ford Rio-

414. V·l, Rebulll AulD T - '
oian And Top 112 01 ·Paint Job 12.1100 Flirn, el•--.. •

Socrillca
Mull ·sell 5 dilptay model Dou·
-Ide&amp;. SHSAVESSS FrH ut¥P I delivery. free central. air.
Olkwood H-• N~IO, wv. 304-

5::jll.

Eio,PLOYMENT

AVON !! All 'At~as
- - " ' 3DH75-IA2!1

1815

oy Area, S350JMo., Oapos1t Required. 513-574·2539

180 Wanted To Do

1o 1110 mill

110 , · Help Wanted

_ , ' Ml·ui&gt;- 304-755-7181 .

340

!z'.l:~ ol

4 JFl( sight
, JFeriiiiMr

2 Comblnod
I .,._led

DOWN

.The ideal testboOk

NEWt .Bank Aepo't, 011fner ri·
nlntlnQ .avaiabltl $1?1/mo. Fr"

By owner, 3br modular, new root,

wantild 10 Buy

.-

~ur balh, ~179/mo. 304, 755·

Whj Rant?- lmmaculalt 2 Be&lt;l·
rooms •. 1 Bath, Banks .APpraised
Approvtd To Finance. The Fi,.t
TakeS II. 304·738-7295.

Secretary Receptlonitt "!laded,
Established down town bus1ness ·
AO General Type Otl iee Exper• ence Requir~d . Send Resume
CLA 402- c1o Gathpolts Oa1ly
Tnbupe. 825 Th1rd Aile , Gall•pohs,
on. 45831

~ · u

New 1..110. 2 Of 3 bedroom, wtlh

3 Bedroom, 1 Batt; Kitchen · Ap-plilnces, Anractive Interior. Full
Unfinish'd Basement. 1 Car.Garage. New vinyl Siding &amp; l:ttlt
Pump. Cily SchoolS:. (fiU)-4•U 0951

new oak cabinels, new carpet:
new neal pump, lrorit &amp; rear
Riel! Pt1r10n Auction Coml)any,
4eckl, large lot, tow down pay lull 11me auctioneer, complelt
ment Meadowhills Sub-dMalon.
auction
ltrvice.
licensed
French Ciry Homtl, Inc. 014-448·
JIO,Oh10 &amp; Wtst V1rgin1a , 304· =:.:::::--~---- 9340 or 3()4-675-3313.
773-5716 Of: :JD4.173·5441.
The Meigs C ounl~ Counc1 l_on · :..:..:..:...::.:..:.:.:.::::.:__ __
Aging, Inc . IS accepuri'g appllca- Cedar Sldi.ng Sectiol)al, 3 B~tionl tor tne position of fletirad rooms. 2 Full Bathl, Pool , Out and Senior Volunteer Proor.am bui_lding, Close to . School Arti:t
Ablolul• •Top Oollah All U.S. Sll· fASVP) Coordina.ror. Appllcatlona GrOcery, Porter Area , E'14pnlnp
ver And Gold Col~,_ P~ofaelt. and a positio-n description can be 814 - 388 - 800~ or ·Oay 61• ·448Diollland&amp;. AnllqU4 _.11y, Gold : obtai ned lrom Dalla Hawley, Ad- 36A3 $57,000
·
mlnlstrative Assistant , al rhe
Ringe, Pr•1930 U.S. Currency,
Swrling, Etc. Acquilitlonl .kM9Ir)'
Meigs Mulllpurpose Senior Can- GOV'T FO~ECLOSEO Homes
.. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1S1 Second ..,., 112 East Memorial Drive. Po- For Penntes On $1 Oelinquenl
A¥1nue, GaHipolis, l141-ot48-2842.
meroy, OH. Deadline for appHca- l'ax, Repo's, REO's. Your Area.
CIHn Late Model Can Or tion aubmission Is February 3, TQII F"ree (1) 800-218·9000 Ext
TrucMI, lggo Modal&amp; Or Nowor,
~199:::7;,..
H-281&lt; For Currant Llslingl.
Smiu-. Buick Pontiac, 1900 Ea11WLOLIFE/CONSERVATION
House Sale: 1 Mila To Gallipolil,
etn ,.,.,.,.;e, Gallipotll.
JOBS
3 Bedrooms. Oin1ng, Ulility, Porch,
314 Acre. Fireplace, 1 112 Baths,
J &amp; D's t\u!o PaHI . Buying 111- Now hmng Game Wardens, Se· $45,000, Csll614.....,2991 .
vehicles. Setting parts. 304·
curuy, Maintenance. Park Rano"5033:
ers. No e•per1once necessary.
1
1 home, 1-475
For applicarlcin and into call 1room, 3t;r, 2batht,
Non~Worlrlin~ Washers, DrJen.
SlDYI!I, ~efrtgeratora, FtMZert, · 800·299·2470, ext WV13Sc. Bart)· ~iii: c~bin~ll heat pump, JK»rch
londacape&lt;l lot
Air Qon~hl~•••a. Color T.V.'&amp;,
:gpm::::·~7,:da~r:;•·-~----Sub· divislon.
VCA'a, ~ao Junk Call, II 4:211·
170
.
Miscellaneous
1nc. • , .. 4&gt;41·
12:11.
.
.

90

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

•-

::..:..::=.:POS.::..::.....-J-0-BS---

..,.,..

II -lltfll'i

JoMne-

21 !IlioN lfOt?c
.:II Soep
31

;:=.f.
..e?WI
.

..._. a,. .....

ter • yeart, fret • t·up I deliY·
flY. 304-755:51115.

,22 Highlai'WI Ave, 3Bedroom, 2
bath, breed lit Qll fur~Wet, cen-tral air, full ltaMment. ·145.500.
SOAJ·875-.1120.

5I

:II Act-.

18 Agrlcui!UI81'

·west · Nerda Ea&amp; ·

Postal Jobs 3 PoSitions Avail·
able, No Experience Necesury,
Far Information, Call 1-818·784·
9018 En 8015.

Crown Clty Auction Friday A:t 6 · Sllrt 112.68/tlr, plui benellta. For
P.M. Latge Load 'Of Name Brand appllcalion and .e.11am info, Call
Taala.
1·800-256· 7608, ext-WV127,
8am-9pm 7 dBys.

Es•te. Farm Sales. CaU 61'-446·

,

·

==.

a

mtntt &amp; mo¥t·in, ·no payment af· ·

Very nica 1985 14170 wllh 2
baths. L•rae ltland lliitchen with
pilio door. CaM 614·385-8821 utt
for Mike.

1

Lemley'l Auctidn ~ice. Leslie
Lemllf, Auclioneer. Household.

,_to

,....lllotulet-

orlglnl 01 ttl&gt;/

maJoe any audt ~.
limtla1iori Of diletlmklatlon...

"HUt A Clean Pol~ Rtco~
•Moat be able to Paa a Dru9

tht CS.y before tht ad it to rwn.

&amp;undor edition - 2:00 p.m. Friclar.

IID-y .olltiOn • 10:00 a.m.

-

meet thelotlowlno :

Yanl Sal•• Mull Bt Pllld In
AcMinco..OEADliNE : 2:00 p.m.
AU

--

. .-.religion.

-~o n oaoa,

Insurance

.

.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

-Call 1·80CHI37·3238.

New 1 4x80 ,- Only make 2 pay·

. Bonolita lndudo;

41PNI~fot-

47Croobd
411 S.C....,P
51Abouncl
112
. , . _ Eul

.
53~
21 High - I n 54 - o f Noril

EM&amp;
• 71 4

•• z

'

-""
1tF......,

•K

ea.

I lnd 2 -OCIIOII-ITIInll, ,.,.
nilhM and unfurnishH, 1KUrity
Cltpolil recaulrtd, nO H11. lt4·

rt,f·r.~

-11 Onll7ll

•A7$4J
• A I 8 52 -

'

Aplnments

for Rent

Lost 1nc1 Found

10

41 ......
43Home ...
44 MoN!oxy '

I

••

JANUARY22

· .1
'•, t

._, '

.'
I

�Ohio Lottery

College
basketball
roundup
•'

Super Lotto:
3-6-12-13·38 47
Klcar:
1-4,0-0-7-8
Pick 3:
9-8-5
Pick 4:
1·5-6·1

Sporta on Page 5

Partly cloudy tonltlht,
lows In the 20.. frhfsy,
lncreaalng cloudlnell,

chlncti of ilt.Oifili a. Hlglla
nMr50.

•

•

..
••
VIII. 47, ~-114

'
~117. Olilo v.l'-r Pllbl•hll!t Con:

•r

Pome~Middlepor"., Ohio, Tliu~:SC~ay,
'

28r Uane,t2 ........ 1 5 -

January 23,. 1997

Aa.nit1Co. Nt:WIPI~

' '

Ciinton, GOP lflarrow gap over Medicare plan
to shifr payments for fast-growing hol)le heahh care from the hospital ~st.'
fund, which will is on the verge of bankruptcy, to the Part B program, whtch
p&lt;ilicies that lie beneath them. But most Republicans are withholdingjudgIn reality, many say, there wasn't much difference in the two sides' fiqal pays for doc tor costs' and is 'financed mostly with general tax revenue.
ment until they see the fine print.
.
positions.
·
'
Republicans call the shift a gimmick to save 'the trust fund.
.
. . Still, the tone is in stark contrast to last year's bloody battle ove~ the pro;
With the Medicare ball in his coun, the president proposed a plan TuesOther than that, there are many ideas in Clinton's plan that .Repub!tcans
• 'gram that se~es nearly 38 million elderly Ameri~an,.~~ ~e&lt;!icare, is .. ~Y that split the diffcren~ between last year's fi~al offen. ~ost Republi- have supported, at least in concept, in the past. Among them:
'
• Beneficiaries would continue paying 2S percent of the cost of the Pan
: .~uch a huge prece of the federal budget.and ~~- lb. ~~nding ,rs tocr~- • qanr( ~~ wltil~~;~~rvjng· final'jl!dB!De.nt. lliltil·~):,~ ,the ~tails.
·tng much faster than other areas, restratmng rlS ~W:l(,. ~lltJ:a) to batanc. And the details are not likely to make for anotlier u&amp;IY battle, said a Repub- B program . The current premium, $43 .80 per month, would slowly_ increaie
. ing the overall budget.
' '
' '.
lican congressional aide who helps shape health policy.
.. .
to $61.90 by 2002 . Republicans have suggested even hogher prcmtums.
· : · In 199S, Republicans handed Clillton a loey campaign issue when they pro"Our niembers· have no intention of having that kind of conflict over
• Reducing payments to hospitals and doctors.
-posed c~~tting $270 billion from future spending by reducing pay~en~ to Medicare again," . ~. aid said, talking al;&gt;olll his bosses on condition· of ·
• Changing the way hospitals are reimbursed for training medic~) s!IJC!ents.
: .providers and allowing premiums to rise. .
anonymity. "There are policy differences, bl,it these are all the kind of things
• Allowing hospitills and doctors to set up thcor own, comJietrbvc man. ': ' ''lbe 'l~$t Clinton proposal woold cut future Spending by $1 ()() bmiOI) over . that would l!el worked out in li nol'lllal course. of budget negotiations... ' aged care plans. This was a GOP pro,posallasHimc.
five years{,$138 !"illion over·six years.
Just cine difference has enle!J~ so far. Republicans protest Clinton's plan
WASHING'J'()N (AP)- President Clinton's Medi~irc plan appean to
· The two sides came closet to a11 agreement by early 1996, but with a pres))e close to Republican approach - not just in budget numbers.but in the · idential election on the horizon, no deal was done.
..
·

;Ch-ri·s• tlan
•
. mus1c1an,

Shade man ·i ndicted on 16
coun-s linked to youth abuse

·

•

•
•

97 5·1 0 2·WHEEL.

~: group

'

VE·

I

'"
'

"

.

set

A 42-year-old Shade man was
indicted last week by a Meigs Coun·
ty grand jury on 16 counts including
rape. sexual battery and felonious
sexual penetration. i
Darrell Barney, 40097 State Route
681, faces four counts of rape, eight
counts of sexual battery and . four
counts of felonious sexual penetration.
The indictment was filed Tuesday
in 'the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by ·the prosecuting attorney's
office. ·
The . alleged crimes took place

!:concert at
:·Rutla·nd
::Appearance
.; .hosted by local .
·ministerial
::lssoclatlons

from 1993 to 1996 and involved a
minor. according. ro the indictment.
R~ and felonious sexual pe~e­
tration are aggravated felonies of the
first degree, punishable by a maxi,mum prison term of I 0 to 25 years.
Sexual battery is a felony of the
third degree punishable by fo11r tp I0
years in prison.
If found guilty of all counts. Bar·
ney could f~ce between 112 and 280
years·if sentenced consecutively.
"We consider this as serious a

. He addressed ttoc impact that adult
sexual predators have on their young
victims.
, "The problem with this ·kind of

crime, as opposed to an assault, is that
it sticks with the kids forever. They've
lost their childhood," he said.
Barney is being held in the Meigs
County Jail awaiting arraignment in .
the Common Pleas C6un. He is repreS:ente.d by Pomeroy attorney Steve
Story.
.
· A trial is'tentatively scheduled for
crime as we've come against," said March 25, according to Coon Admin· Prosecuting Attorney John R. l.cntes. istrator Paul Gerard.

Jerry
•

•
97 5·10 4•WHEEL D

·&lt;

{.

Navy · ship strength .below 346 vessels, including II activc .carriers and
one in reserve, or cutting the 20
~tivc and reserve lighter wings.
" I anticipate coming back to this
commi)lec. to sec~ support for the
tough but necessary decisions I will
make," Cohen said.
Cohen, 56, who retired from the
Senate at the end of his ihird term this
month,' iaid his selection by President
Clinton signaled a com!llitment to
bipartisanship, He said he
speak
his mind within the administration
but did not expect to. win every
debate.
1
On broad issues. Cohen followed
almost(o the word that his predeccs•
sqr, William Perry, a man Cohen

.

.

will

• ;;,.·y;.&amp; ENGINE ·
'

• I

:~ ~

•

~

'

1

\'

praised effusively.
.
"We are not and cannot become
· the world's policeman, neither can we
become a pfisoner of'world events;
isolated and tucked safely away in a
contincntill cocoon," Cohen said.
The hearing began cordially.
Needing no introduction, one was
provided anyway by Sens. Olympia
Snowe and Susan Collins, both RMaine, and Sen. John McCain, R. Ariz., a committee member and long. time friend of Cohen.
·
"I am·sure Senator Cohen knows
all the ansWers to the questions he
will hear today," 1'8id Sen. Strom
Thurmond, R-S.C., the committee
chairman . "He has probably asked
some of them in similar hearings in
the past."
Cohen drew a guffaw by pulling
the microphone up close and assuring Thurmond, 94, he would speak
directly "into the machine," a phrase
the chairman uses when urging witnesses to speak up;'
Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan,
. ranking committee Democrat, asked
Cohen if he 'still advocates seeking
congressiOnal approval before
deploying troops.
Cohen said he did but added that
a president could·seck "consultation
or approval" from Congress for sending troops into the field .
Cohen also defended the administration's intent to develop a national missile defense plan by 2000 and
delay until then a decision on whether
to build and deploy the system.

Voinovich plans to study
state's lottery operation

-=..a

8
Wt* Jillr TNI W., nuU.
.....,
lllp a ""' 'MIIqlll- d . I I .
'1 TIS . . . . . . illoll . . . . . . . . . . . . .
'

'

\;,___.'

By PAUL SOUHRADA
son said.
Associated Press Writer
"It's just to lay out the fai:ts."
COLUMBUS - Gov. George
It's a waste of money, countered
.Voinovich plans to set aside $1 mil- state·Rep. Ron Mottl.
lion in his budget proposal for a study
Mottl. D-Parma, was one of the
of the Ohio Lottery, his spokesman driving forces behind the ballot is1110
said Wednesday.
that c~ated the state lottery in 197'3,
"It's intended to rake an honest
"The lottery is very successful,';
look at the lottery - who's playing, Mottl said, noting that it raised $723
the costs .... " Mike Dawson million last year for Ohio schools.
explained. " It was a question that · ,'"Instead of spending SI. .million ·
came u,p during the casino issue." · · on ..~r stU!Iy that we'll look at
Dawson. who first publicly raised and the~ ihi-ow '!way, they shoilld ptjl
the study issue at a meeting of an that mpney into education." ·
·
anti-casino group in Harrisburg, Pa., .
'
. · .
said details of the study were still
If Vtlinclvich did try to dump the
being worked out.
· tottery, il would lead to his defeat in
Voinovich led a similar group last his ph~:~ 1998, U.S. Senate run,
year and helped defeat a ballot ini- · M~ttl :""- Dtcd. for one thinjl,
tiative that would have allowed river- Vqmovicll -ld have 10 COille up
boat casino gambling .in Ohio.
· with a way 10 lillke up the _lost rev· .
And while Voinovich has ml\(le no . enue, and thilicould- hi•het 1111·
secret of his dislike of all gambling .es.
·
- incltldlnt the lol.ry, the proposed
"I j~l can't
study is no( ... 1111 ij'l 10' pnerate astute jrolitici~ ....
' · atlrmunitioll for itu11J J •titiil, Daw- 'smhethlia so~
,"
. .

illrlllllll.rJ!•ao .

'

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