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P8ae88.•.J ' ••

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'*' 21, 1887

Sund8y, ......

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Even after more than 60 years,

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Green Bay
nets Super

Packers still enjoy unique ·relationship .with fan-owners

By KIM ESTEP
GrMn Bey p,....a.zette
GREEN BAY, Wis.- With temperatures at 3 degrees and a wind
GIJ.ill at 11 below zero, Lawrence
t•lher's, fingers were beginning to
tpi!k like cherry Popsicles a half hour
before game lime at Lam beau Field.
• ; It was Sunday, the day of the NFC
&lt;!fwnpion.ship game. The Green Bay
Packers were playing host to the
ugstan Carolina Panthers.
: But Luther, an electrial contractor
frOm Cecil, had no tickets.
• He· was at . Lam beau simply
because he ·wanted to be there, plan~ing to watch from a television in the
back of his van in the stadium lot
; • Why?
''Why not?" was the response.
, Why no!, indeed.
• The crazy .things Packer fans do
~eed JIO explanation simply because
t)lese fans are crazy in love with their
9reen Bay Packers.
• These are folks who fight over
volunteer· made green and gold caps
for their newborns to wCar in the has·

pilal nursery. ·
, These are folks who choose a
green-colored .casket to eternally
rest iil.

These are folks who wear yellow
wedges of f'?am on their heads with
pride and who lalloo their bodies
with Lambeau Field. The whole
ricld.
··
These are folks in love.
And it's a passion of Harlequin
paptrback. proportions - decades
old, but still hot, showing no signs of
'?"aning:

fletfill~S

With these two events - allowing the ll!am to become communityowned and building the new stadium
- the Packers cemented their commitmenllo call Green Bay "home."
And. fans continued to embrace
the Packers as family.
As in most families , namesakes
abounded.
Bart Boyden, a 34-year-old comman," end Don Hutson.
puter software designer who lives in
She was hooked.
Green Bay. came along in July 1962
"! saw .Don Hutson go up for ·•
after the 1961 season where Hall of
pass willi live other·guys and come Fame quarterback Bart Starr led the
down with it," she. said. "That day I Packers lo lhe best record in !he NFL
!hough! they were just wonderful and (11-3).
heroic, especially him," Olson said.
ll's no wonder that fans thought
Irene Olson, at 74, still goes to of liule else during the 1960s. The
games. (She and 60,789 are among men on the field during the Glory
the lucky ones. All games are sold Years read like a Pro Football Hall of
out to season ticket holders, and a Fame table of contents. Starr, Jefr-y
wailing list extends way into the next Kramer.. Willie Wood. Ray Nitschke.
century.)
Forrest Gregg. Paul Hornung. And,
In 1950, the financially strapped of course, Coach Vince Lombardi.
Packers held a stock drive that raised
Lombardi's geHhe-job,done
$118,000. The community dollars coaching philosophy set well in this
kepi the team from folding.
blue.,collar city.ll also inspired a new ·
And in 1957, lhe new CitySladi'
legiOI\ of Packers fans, with fan clubs
urn (renamed Lambeau Field when worldwide.
Lambeau died in 1965) was buill in
Laurie Hayes, a Packers fan from
a corn field' on a southwest corner of Mosman Park, Australia, atlended
Green Bay.
this season's Monday Nigh! Football
Homes popped up ,around it, and game against the San Francisco
it was as if Lam beau had become a · 49ers. The SO-year-old technical
neighborhood park.
schoolteacher became a fan 30-odd
Doug VandeVoon, a retired iron- years ago after ,falling under Lomworker, helped on the construction of bardi's spell a half a world away. ·
the Packers' new home before build"All Muslims go to Mecca once
ing his own on Stadium Drive. The in their lifetime; I just had to go to
easl·west bordering street put him Green Bay," the Aussie told the
close . enough to hear Lombardi Green Bay Press-Gazelle that Octoholler at t~e players, he said.
ber day.

Irene Olson remembers lhe early
years.
The Packers played in City Stadium, now swallowed up by Green
Bay East High School's land on the
near east side of town.
Olson first auended a rame in
1935, ·paying 25 cents to watch
Curly Lambeau coach a rookie from
Alabama: that "southern gentle-

To say that Lambeau Field Is like '
a holy ground to spons fans is, well,
within reason. There's somethins so .
pure and non-commercial about the
stadium, with its modest sealing and
limited skyhoxes. ll's a stadium
where the grass playing field takes its
tightfultop billing, even gaining its
own mystique: the frozen tundra.
As ABC Monday ,Night Football .
commentator Dan Dierdorf told the
·Press-Gazette earlier this season, HI
grew up worshipping the game of
~rofessional football and the Packers
and Lambeau Field and everything.
I don 't want to sound corny, but
those are images from my youth thai
are just .crystal clear. They're just solid as a rock."
.
Local fans even choose to celebrate one of life's most imponanl
events al Lambeau.
· .•·
Bill Croy and Peggy Hill of Ash·
waubenon, the village southwe~l of
Green Bay, got married a few hours
before the kickoff of this season's
Monday night game between !he .
Packers aQd the Philadelphia Eagles.
· "We have a great time (here),"
Hill told the Press·Gazette earlier
that week. "And !think of Lambeau
Field as our Sunday church."
Yetlhis wouldn't be a proper love
affair without a few emotional roller
coaster rides. Fans - many of
whom .were at the famous 1967 lee
Bowl -were piuienl during the dull
70's. They watched a succession of
three coaches come and go in the
80's. Still, they waited.
'Mind you, the Packers were still ·
.a way of life in Green Bay. Teachers

into the 'lltallds and onto the streets
just in diM for the Packers 41 :ti
dance over the Denver Broncos IR
Dcccmber.
,
At the second Packer· Minnesota
meeting in December, the last game
of regular season play, two friends
dressed as Christmas trees, trimmed
with Vikings and Packers footballs,
key chains and other ornaments.
Even Santa showed his allegiance
at Marie Osmond's touring Chrislinl)s shqw held at 'the regional performing arts center in late De!:ember.
Santa, lo the delight of the audience,
offered up the pcissibility of a Super
Bowl win to the audience.
• The home-field advantage the
Packers earned during. the entire
playoffs was a Christmas gift to the
fans. Season ticket holders happily
mailed in invoices and checks for
playoff tickets. ·
J.nd, during these playoffs, ~igns
of fan suppon were everywhere and'
Packers fever se~tmed to grip every·
one. The Green and Gold .even
became a pan of local pastors' ser- .
mons.
A transplanted· Carolina couple
tried to describe to the Press-Gazelle
how they became Packers fans after
inoving here and following the Panthers their first season.
''It was the fans and it was the air.
Sandy Hoffman, and her brother,
Tim, played 'in the snow outside Sanday's Green Bay home on New '
Year's Day with Sandy's daughter,
Anna.
They buill an enormous Packers
helmet.

like Andrea Knutson of MacArthur
Elementary School were using lhe
Packers' away-game schedule lo
teaeh geography to her fifth-graders
long before this dream season. And
folks have always avoided planning
mee\ings, church-activities and special events on a game day, unless
they wanted dismal auendance.
But when the learn exploded toil
5-1 start in the 1996 season, Green
Bay became even more attentive.
Packer mania reached a new level. .
ipdeed, Lambeau rocked with
cheers ·reaching 100-plus decibiels
(140 or higher causes pain) during
the Packers-49ers Monday night
game. A reponer from the PressGazette recorded it, using a ponable
sound level mell!r.
'Ole highest reading? When Chris
Jacke kicked a f~eld goal in overtime,
leading to the Packers (23-20) victory. .
·
·
Those animals known as . tailgalers found renewed fervor, as well.
. The ~ke from 'their grills hung .
on !he .18!3dtum's shoulders before ·
each home game. Rain or shine.
Harold Froehlich of Appleton
was among those who fought lhe rain
and the cold of the Jari. 4 divisional
playoff gal)l~ against San Francisco.
"This ~· is the imponant pan
because we gel revved up for the
game," he said as rain slid off his
homemade lean-to.
The Zaniness increased' as the regular season drew lo close.
The Packilrena - Green Bay .
fans' ·take. on the popular Spanish
club song ¥acarena -made its way

a

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RabbitS ... __cc_on_ti_nu_ed_fi_ro_m_B_-7,;...1- - - - - - . - rabbits show immunities to diseases babies six months aft~r it's born,"
that have stricken other rabbits in the · said Joel Gerity, who is in charge of
region, Valissant said.
Roissy 'sinfraslructure and environ-.
Aside from the hunting forays, ment.
"If we didn't kill the rabbits, they
; "their only predator here is natural
death, and the female rabbit has would drive out all other species."

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Officials in six southeastern Ohio
~ounties hav~ : "enlh.~sia~lically .
embraced" the conclusion of a
lengthy legal.baule between the four'county waste management district
~rving the area and two of its former
partners, according to a sJ)okesman
for the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vin)on Solid Wasil! Management District.
·
"'They swed thai all parties appreCiated the need to pul this matter to
rest in order to move forward cooperativcly on the many·issues affectlng county government," said Scou
Co_pley, public relations coordinator
for the Wellston-based waste consortium.
A dismissal entry was filed Friday
In Jackson County Common Pleas.
Coun ending litigation between the
G-1-M· V waste district, and Athens

and Hocking cdunties, fonne members .o f the one-time six-county distrier, Copley said.
:
Harold
Montgomery,
president
of
1
tlie Gallia County Board. of Commissioners, .said representative.• a~d
auomeys · wlt~ the G-.J-M-V distnct
me! most of Friday afternoon , with
their counterparts from Athens and
Hocking and reached accord on'outslandin~ issues.
.
Details on the agreement were not
immediately available.
The·dismissal .led to .lhe cancellalion of a trial that had ~n scheduled
to start in Jackson Thursday and was
expected to last almost a w~k.
Montgomery said.
.
Athens and Hocking withdrew
from the six-county district in 1993
and formed a two-county waste man-

acement district. Disagreements over
·financial · rnauers between lhe two
organizations con'*ted to the split ·
later led to litigation and counter-suits
·between lite two Jl'oujls.
"The counties have historically
, cooperated on anumberofissues and
need to look forward togetheno the
new challenges facing them," Athens
· County Commissioner Gary Seeley
said after the agreement was
announced. · ·
"We have ·put our differences
behind us and are entering this year
with a new spirit of cooperation, • he
added.
·
Montgomery, who. serves on thC
local district's board of directors, said
the dismissal now allows the districts
to "focus .on the business of serving
our constituents."
·

.

congl-essmen ..ed ·
.a
Democr~t, and Dave
a
~epublican, differ sllarJ?ly on how to
k'eep the aili11J Social Security TrustFund from going broke in 2029.
· Hobson favors l!"'posals to privalizc Social Secunty but isn't supponing any particular plan to do il
right now, .said his press ~retary
Scott Milburn.
·!i "In the past, Hobson has been
suppoi'!ivc of a panial privatization,
or'idcas along those Jines, but the

care

.PLANNING HEALTH SCREENING~ Repreeentatlvee of helhti
agencies met Friday to
pllln lor a multlphaalc health 8c:reenlng clinic to taka place In early October. Some of the rep-tatlvn of the participating agec:IH were, I I tad !ram lalt, eac.lla Uale, Vetarana Memorial HotPJtal; D._ Colta, Meigs County Council on Aging; Courlney Mldldll of the hellth department, who It lito the clinic coordl1111klr and ICI'I8I1 coordlllltor; mndlng !rom left, Becky Baer, ·
Malgl County EICienllon Service; Cerol KHne and Nancy Schill, Ohio Unlvtralty Collegl of
~pathlc Mldlcl1111; and Nor1118 Torres, R.N., of the hellth dllpal1tll'Wit.

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·few months, Hobson people made bad investments?"
was tied up on the ethics case .of
To maintain the trust ftind, StrickHouse Speaker Newt Gingrich. R· . land said he is.leaning· toward one
Ga. He stepped down froni the com· proposal · mnde by a White House
miu~-~arly this month after serving adviliOI')' panel . earlier this month
six years.
looking at ways to improve Social
Strickland backs proposals to Security.
shore up the trust fund by sliiiRglh· Amon~ other options, it recomening it, but not privatizing it. ,.
mended limited, government-con"!think Social Security needs to trolled investment in the stock mar·
be preserved and that privatization · kel and a plan to require all new state
could lead to a.disintegration·Of the and local government employee$ to
overall safety net for ·older and .sick · participate in the Social Security
trust fund.
.

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New ·cabinet members
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Pomeroy-Middl8port, Ohio, MOnday, January 27, 1997

'

the world .·

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WASHINGTON (AP) -Tile two
newest members' of President Clin-·
ton's Cabinet arc promoting an
assertive foreign policy. ~aying the
United Sllles"iiiust R:mmri i\fomincnt .
both militarily anldiplomatically in
world affairs.
,
"I dojl't thin~ we have' any choice' .
but to be ensaged," William Col1cn, .
!he new defense secrelllry, said Sun·
day. "That's. the only way.in which
we can continue to he an effective ·
superpower in this world. helping to
shape and innuencc events so !hal ·
they really work to our benefit."
New Secretary of Stale Madeleine
Albright-said that specifically meant
an aciive effon to expand NATO to
Eastern European cou.ntries.
·
"We need to do for Central and
Eastern Etirope what wa.&lt; d&lt;&gt;ne rot
·Albright reiterated that the expanWestern 'Europe after the Sccon_d
sion
was no threat to Russia, which ·
World War - thai is, try to provide ·
some sense or stability, try to make has objected to !he inclusion.of such
sure .that ,ethnic conflicts and border former Warsaw Pact nations as
disP!'les don't overwhelm. and that is Poland and 1-!ungary in NATO.
Coheq, on ABC's "This Week."
what NATO expansion is about."
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-·

End of waste district
litigation wins. cheers

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ver~ very~green.
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IIYJ!""ELMIROGAN ,
~trliea l•rvtU ·.;;:. .-'~~~,···01
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Strickland, Hobson differ on how
to keep ·Soc.;al·Sec ity solvent

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Super~:

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... ~cc=o=nt=in=u•=d~~~om~B-~6~1_______________

ESPN and TNT, meanwhile, each
With ratings down as much as II
fell
about II percent- ESPN from
percent over last season for some
6.6
lo
5.9; TNT from 5.7 lo 5.1,
networks, there has been published
,
NBC's
NFL ratings fell about 2
speculation thai the NFL will have to
go begging when its TV contract percent from ll.llasl season to 10.9
comes up for bi&lt;IS again laier this this season, and ABC's Monday
nigh! games were offahout5 percent
year.
Not so, says commissioner Paul from 17.0lo 16.2, its lowest number
ever.
Tagliabue.
If Nielsen is lo be believed, pos·
"I don 'tthink we're declining at
sibl,
e culprits include a general glut
all," he said Friday in New Orleans
of
sports
on a growing·number of TV
at the site of the Super Bowl. "I
think we' ll have a very substantial channels, a few key franchise moves,
increase in television revenue .... We and the luck of the draw.
Loftus also . contends changing
have tremendous audiences."
lifestyles.
account for some of'the
Ratings numbers fell off most
decrease.
· ·
.
dramatically for Po~ and the NFL's
"People are doing things other
l~o cable panners, ESPN and TNT.
than
watching TV," he said.
•Fox's regular-season average
NBC's
SGhiavone called the condropped -from 12.5 in 1995 to 11.3
tention
ridiculous
on its face .
this year, with each point represent- .
"To believe those numP.rs. you
ing I percent oflhe estimated 97 mil·
have
to believe the nature of the
lion TV ,households in America.
American
public changed in the last
That's a decline of 10 percent.
12 months," Schiavone said.

Ohio Lottery

.

GM, strikers ·~ren't far apart'

on settling their differences

MORAINE (AP) - General
Marlow said an agreement could
Motors Corp. .00 strikinl workers at' be reached quickly once Utlks ~lume.
a lri!Ck O$sembly plant in thia DByton
"If .management calls us ...,. they .
suburb are close to settling·their' dif- broke off the· last tiel of talks - I
ferences, a. union leader said. ·
think we could set there this week,''
Thestri~ebyabout4,30Qworkers Marlow said. "We aren't that far
entened its second day today. No 1 ap;IT!."
"'
·
negoti!llions were schedUled..
· The company was ~ui'ptised that
· International Union of Electronic the .tentative contract was ,. voted
Workers Local 801 narrowly rcject- down. Spokesman Jeff Kuhlman said
ect a proposed three-year contract and the company withdrew a conlroverwenl on ttrike !II midnight Satutday. . .sial proposallimitin1 absenteeism on
The planr assembles the Olevrolet Satutday nisht. ~~ the union struck
Blazer, GMC.Jimmy and Oldsmobile anvway.
"
· Bravadlspoi1,utility vehicles.
·
Kuhlman ..W lhe strike ahotlld not
. Jim Marlow, the union's shop affect other GM plants. An 18-day
· ~haiiman, said about800 ,nevance• . sttike list year Ill two OM .brake
· and some minor iaues wm Unto- · plants in the Dayton ari:a shut down
Solved. Workersrejec!edlheconlriiCt many of the' c&lt;impany's pllqa in
by a vote of 1,99(J'Io I ,534. ·
North 1-rnerica.

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and Albright, on NBC's "Me.et the:
Press," were making their inaugural
appearances on the Sunday news programs after their unanimous con fir•
motions by the Senate last week.
· Cohel), a former senator ·from
Maine and the only Republican in the
Clinton Cabine~ stressed his suppon
for adminislnition policies, including
a compromise pi!Ill that would piu off
until at least 2000 a decision on
. deploying a nalional missile defense
system.
Republicans in ·Congress have
pressed for immediate stcps to devel·
op and deploy such a system to protect U.S. cities from' the nuclear
threats posed by such countries as
Iraq and North Korea.
Cohen also Utied· Congress to
move quickly to ratify an international convention banning chemical
weapons, noting !hat it was President
Reagan who made the decision to
unilaterally destroy. U.S. chemical
.tocks.

iRg -:,,·~'"-

c/inic slated for October
'

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Planning

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underw~y

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by several area agencies

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Aging, Veterans Memorial Hospital. Ohio University's College of
A comprehensive rnulliphasic ' Medicine, Woodland Center and
health screening clinic has been · the Meigs County Extension Serscheduled for. the first week of ·vice.
October allhe Meigs Mullipurpo:i~: .
Ali of the services
be proBuilding on Mulberry Heights.
vidcd by volunteer health care
Pomeroy.
:
professionals.
Planning for the four-day proEmpha.~is of the screening is to
gram, where an anticipaJed 300 reach residents who have not had
¥cigs cou~lians will be given an
a thorough medical examination
opponunily for a complell! health
for somc'time, said Norma Torres,
~valuation, began Friday at~ mootR.N., director of nursing, Meigs
mg of pan1c1~aung agcnc1es and
County Heallh Dcpartmeql. who
health professionals.
noted that it has been five years
Counney C. Midkiff ~f the · since the last multiphasic scrcenMclg• County Health Department · ing.
·
w.ill ~ the. coordjn_al"': of the. .
· Participants will be charged
scrce.nmg, wuh pan1_c1p~l10n from
from $5 to $30, depending on
other c~unry agenc1es, mcl~mg
income using a sliding fcc scale,
Torres reponed. She ·said that the
the Me1gs County Counc1l on
Sentlnel Newa Staff

will

charge will only panially offset !he
;,;ost of supplies and lab fees for the
.examinations.

•,

The program will he carried out
on Thursday and Friday, Oct 2 and
3, and on Monday and Tuesday,
Oct. 6 and 7.
All of the lab work wi II be handled through YMH. h will be
done a week in advance of the
screening~ with results to he given
to the participants in counseling

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sessions afrcr they have gone

through the clinic.
The services offered in the multiphasic screening will include
hlood work, urimilysis, audiometry"
nphlhalmology, podiatry, TB testing. immunization evaluation, chiropractic services, ·lung capacity
on Page 3)

Bill introduced lifting Sunday hunting ban .
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Butler ,
County lawmaker ha.~ rekindled the
debate o.ver Sunday hunting in.Ohio,
selling up a ·showdown between
groups representing the state's
hunters and farmers.
Slalc Rep. Mike Fox, R-Hamihon,
introduced !he bi II Ia.~! week· at the
request of a constituent.
"For.blue-collar folks who work
through the week, it's· an imponant
issue," he explained.
Current hunting regulations prohibit Sunday hunting except for
waterfowl, fox, coyote and ground-

hog. Those exceptions were adopted
in 1988.
, ·
· Hunting groups, · including the
Columbus-based Wildlife Lcgislativ~ fund of America, say the rcgulauons arc outdated and unfair to people who work five or six days a week.
"We don'tthink there's any rca·
son to prohihit Sunday hunting," said
Roh Sexton, a lobbyist for the
Wildlife Lcgislalive Fund. "You can
go to a ball game Qn Sundays, you

said the issue .caine up for a vote during the group's annual meeting in ·
· December.
"Our poli.cy on Sunday hunting _
did not change one hit," slic said.
"We continue to oppose Sunday ·
hunting."
Karl Gebhardt.. the federation's
director of local · affairs, said the .
group's slaff rccomm,nded several ::·
options regarding Sunday hunting,: ·
including adding one Sunday hunt ·
can go 10 bars."
each during deer-gun season and:
Jeanneue Fish.- spokeswoman for deer-archery seas'on. · ·
'
the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation,
(Contlnllld cin Page 3)
0

Car-train crash •
kills area youth .

'!CAYS, W.Va. (AP).:.... A Mason ~.
County teenager died Sunday when :
an Amtrak train hit his car, Putnam •:
:·
County fire officials said.
Sh~wn E.-Stone, 191 of Southside. :··
was·killed on a secondary road ncar : ·
U.S. 35, authorities said.
. . The tr~il .was '"!~ling S8 mph :
when 11 hit the car, wh1ch was try inc •
to cross the lriiCks, said Steve Connolly, a spokesman for tbe Teays Valley Volunteer Fire Department.
; Fire offi~ltls ·were alened to the
.~cident by
Jacb6nville, Fla:- :.
based dispatcher ·with CSX Trilns-portation, which owns the tracks. ·
Moments later, · a passer-by also •.
called in, Connolly said., ·
,
The train W.S canying 18 pauen- , ,
gers on Amlnlk's Cardinal lOUie frorn
Cindnnati to Wa.~gton .

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llondiy, .-.u.y rt, 1117

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By J8Cic Andll--. .
lndJen llallt
WASHJNGI'ON- An wireleued
letter sent to Interior Secretary Bruce
Babb.itt last week ciwzes that the
government had no_legal authOrity to
strike a senesof deals with major oil

from fedenl and state-Owaed Janel. 'SIII'IICd lftcr prt n wai!JIIIiedby
The state clair-' that the oil com- Maloney lild the Project on Govan1,1 Cowl St., '-oy, Ohio
paities paying "!)'allies bued on ment OveniJht. a noa-parti1111
the "posted" price, rather than on the walc:hdoi-irouP. Lut May, the late'1 1+tl2-21111• Fu:: 112-2157 ·
rior Deplutment teleued a report
allegin1 that I0 cliff'erent oil compaBy Jack Anderson. nies owe the federal government and
·the Califomiit s1111e sovernment $8.56
stems fmm a .
and
·A Gannett Co. Newspaper ·
million in unpaid royalties datin1
series of "global settlements" entered
II
back to 1978.
•
into
by
the
Interior
Deparrment's
·
_
_
.;;.,;;;a.;.,n.;.,
·
.;.;m.;..•O.;.,'.;.;''..;..'e.;..r_~
Officials in Maloney's office have
ROBERT L WINGETT
1
Minerals
Manageffi!lDI
Service.
The
calculllted
that royalty underpay0
Publllher
se.ttlcments were desigoed to c.ollec:t real market value, which wu usual- ments mly total more than $2 billion
_..
a -portion of the unpaid royalties for ly higher. The city of Long Beach if one includes the entire countty.
CHAA&amp;.ENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
oil
that was pumped on federal and successfully sued seven oil compaIn recent months, the MMS has
Genenll MIMgel'
Controller ·
slale lands.
nies to recover missing royalties, yet begun sending bills totaling nearly
Last week"s·letter- sent by Rep. · the pmclice persisted for years.
S400'million to the companies for the
.,.S...IInol
_ _ .,. _ _ _ 011 • _ _ .,..,..
Carolyt\Maloney,D-N,Y. --ismere·
The Reagan and Bush adminis- .unpaid royalties. But iwo of the
..._-- -01' - ) - . , . _ _ .........
_,JI~pa~·~--,.a!a;id_.., _ _ _ _ _ _,..,. e "
ly the latest salvo in a battle that trationsneverpaidmuchheedtoCal-- biggest I)C)Dlpanies -- Exxon and
:::
_ 01
_,.... ,....-.~·-•-•••--•·stretches back more than two ifomia's complaints, preferring 'Chevron - can't be touched. The bills
· _ . . , ' - - ' " 10 . , . - . n.. S...IIDO~ 1fl ec...t It,
decades, and in which-critics say the instead to side with the oil industry, ·that we.e sent out will almost cerP. . _ .
"af»0NofiM;etr,MXIIDf1~67.
.
'----...,""'!"~--- . . . . ; . - - - - - - - - - - - ' ·. federal treasury has been robbed to which didn't think it owed any mon- :tainly be'appealed hy the companies.
- · .. ·
the tune of nearly $2 billion.
ey. California's claims were consis- -And it seems inevitable that the
. Briefly, here's the backsround, as tently denied by officials at ,the issue will be sealed by the courts.
told to us by congressional Democ- MMS.
And that's ~here M'alon.ey 's letter
ratic sources familiar with the case: · . But all that changed in 1994, when .comes in.
·
In the mid-1970s, officills in Cal-. llli inter-aget1Cy tuk force made up of ' . As the ipter-agency tuk force
ifomia began complaining jthat oil · investi~ from Interior, Engergy· 'bellan auditinc the claims in 1994,
'companies had underpaid royalties -and Comme~ began reviewing the MM!;; olrtcials were quietly negoti. By RICHARD CARI!W
.•
ilia! they owed for crude oil pumped old_California claims. The turnabout lting ·•.:.!!_Cries of global setdements,

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,Two thorny relig-Ious
:islues await high court
~ Prwu Wlllwr

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WASHINGTON - Reliaion is back in the Supreme Court spodight,
. bllt thi11ime with a_historic ~ist. For the first time, the·nation's highest
. court does not have a l'r1llestant majoril)'.
.
.
.
·
·. · By July, the coun again will help deline Americans' religious flee, dom and tty to clarify _government's relationship with religious institu' lions.
·
··
Such responsibility falls to seven men and iwo women selected not
for their religious scholarship or ardor, but f!ll' their legal pro:wess and
polillcal connections.
·
Thill may e~plain the coon's varyins effectiveness on such questions.
Historically, the nine justices stru1Jie mishtily wilb disputes over reli·
·
·, gioil.
The same can be expected of two cases, one fiom New York and die
·, other from Texu, to be argued and decided in.the coming months.
In the New York case, the court will consider reversing_its IZ·year' old ~ision that banned public schOOl teachers from offering reniedial
· help at parochial schools.
.
. A rulins in that case could have an. impact on other church-slale disputes, such u prayer in public schools and tax breaks for paR:nts who
send their children to church-run schools.
.
The Constitullon's First Amendment bars the govemmentaf "establishment of religion." The COlin today is less likely than in the past to
. interpret that clause as requiring the strictest S!'J)aration of church and
state.
'
· The amendment's other mention or religion gWiflll!tees its "free exer0
. cise"- people have a right to .put their beliefs into practiee. The Texas
dispute will focus on the sweep of that right.
·
.
The justices will judge .the validity of a ,1993 law ainied at curbing
government interference in the spiritual lives of Americans.
· The Religious Freedom Restoration Act gives more weight to claims
that actions taken hy government sometimes imprC/I)Crly restrict reli1ious
freedom.
·
.
A church in Boerne, Texu, invoked the law after the'City IIiwarted its
attempt to build an addition. The church argued that the refusal to issue
the pennit ran afoul of the 199~ law.
City officials contended that.in passing the law, Congress unlawful·
ly usurped power from Sl8le and local governments and from the Supreme
By Nat Hentoff
· ·!
"coun itself.
1997 points out -- "Tonure of ChiThe
most
disheanening·
Oval na's detainees and prisoners continSome are wary of what the justices may say in both c8ses. ·
Office photograph I have evet seen ues ... medical treatment continues-to
·"The court never has been very sophisticated about religion," said Barshowed -- last December •• a smiling be denied to political and religious
t,ry Lynn, a United Church of Christ minister who leads Americans Unit·
presideni seated next to General Chi
~ed for Separatjon of Church and State.
Hoatian,
the Chinese defense.minisH "The justices can make mistakes because they haven't fully appreciNatHentoff
fj•ted the nation's growi~g ~ligious diversity," he ~aid. "Our cultunl large- ter.ln 1989, when Gen. Chi was chief
of staff of the People's Liberation
il ly has bee,n Judeo-Chrishan, and the court's dectstons reflect tluit."
... (Chinese) security forces
rl ·. Do past decisions also reflect the religious.scruples of justices them- Army, he was in charge of th~ mas- 'prisOners
sacre of unarmed pro-democracy stu- · in Tibet use forms of torture which
~ i selvcs?
·
.
dents in Tiananmen Square. (Some leave no marks against those sus"Certainly," answered Brent Walker of the Baptist Joint Committee
held replicas of the Statue of Liber: pected of major pro-independence
Hfor Public Affairs: "A justice's religious views are pan of the decisionty). As John Diamond had rioted in activism."
~; making process. It happens all the time. .
.
were the liberal Democrats
'l; "JII'igcs come into the process with religious conviction~ they can- The Washington Post, "hundreds, in Wbere
Congress?
"Well," Pelosi said,
perhaps thousands" were killed on
H not, and probably ought not, shed," Walker said.
"Congress
wasn't
in session when
orders of Gen. Chi.
·
~
The,coun lost its Protestant majority last year, when Clarence Thomas
While number of Republicans in Gen. Chi came." And all those other
~ told acquaintances he had left a charismatic Epi,scopal church and- after
Congress
protested the welcoming of human rights Democrats presumably
~ a 25-year hiatus -was agaiu an active Roman Catholic.
Gen.
Chi
by the leader of the free were bereft of telephones, fax
~ Justices Antonio Scalia and Anthony M'. Kennedy also are Roman
world-- with flags flying and ~annon machines and the U.S. mail ..
. Catholics. Justices Rutb Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer are Jew· Pelosi criticized Clinton "with
firing over the Potomac . -- a lone
ish. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices John Paul Stevens,
Democrat. Nancy Pelosi of Califor- great regret because I think he is.
Sandra Day O'Connor and David H. Souter belong to Protestant denomnia, publicly denounced the Clinton capable of some good things. 'I She
inations.
administration for having "given did not enumerate what those are. But
Justices rarely discuss their religion in public, but 1996 proved an
great face to the hardliners in the Chi- Clinton's policy of ptacing t~e
~ ' exceptional year. Besides Thomas, Scalia and Breyer spoke out.
.
nese regime"
·
- with China over criticism of itS
In a series of speeches, Scalia urged fellow Christians to pray for "the
I asked her reaction to that Oval abysmal human rights record has,
courqe 10 suffer the contempt of the sophisticated world...
.
Office
photograph of Clinton tind the says Pelosi, "Jed to crackdowns in
Breyer addressed a Capitol Hill gathering to commernomte the Holo_
smug
general.
"Oh, my God," she China. You would be hard put to find
, causl as "aJew, a judge, a member of the Supreme Coun" and invoked
said, "I thought I would never see the a dissident to talk to in China.
. ! seveml pusqes fi'oin the Torah.
·day. The president won't see the They' re all' in pri~on, in labor camps
,, ,They may have more to say between the lines of their opinions in the
l&gt;alai Lama, he won 'I see the pro- or in exile. Their families have been
· c.aseS: cominJ up.
·
democracy dissidents, he won't sec silenced. ll's.heanbreaking."
·'
She told me o_f a characteristic
Harry Wu, bul he did see this thug.
~· EDITOR'S NOTE- Rlcbard Cardll coven the Supreme Court
Clinton
turnaround: "A year ago, at
It's absolutely appalling."
}t and lepl..._ for The Aliloclaled Plea.
·
Why was she the only Democrat · the United Nations anniversary sesto speak out when •• as the new sion in· San Francisco, he actually
not limHuman Rights Watch WQrld Repon said in his speech, 'We

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it ourrenthusiasm for human rights Vice President AI Gore to suspend his .
just because of the almighty dollar.' spring plan to visit China in light of
'was sitting, in the box, with the deteriorating hllman riahts situaTony "-ake (the National Security tion the.e.
Adviser), and I said, 'How can he
Pelosi agrees with Human Rights
possibly ssy that?"'
Watch: until actual human rights
I 115ked her what Lake said . !lrDgress is visible. She also objects
"Nothipg," said Nancy Pelosi.
to the fonhcoming formal exchange
It is not only Clinton and his of state' visil• between Clinton and
administration that angers Pelosi. ·Chinese President Jiang Zc:min. That
She s~ks of the "huge amounts of ·exchaitge will be a funher signal to ~ .'
money" being spent to legitimize the the.Chinese government, she says,
trade-o.ver-human-rights policy. that it will not be disturbed as it keeps
"CCli'J!9I'alions allowed to do business ·filling its prisons. "I thought it would
in Chipa make presentAtions ill Wash- be different when the Dcmocmts
ington, lobby and schmooze with :came in." · .
· mcmb!:rs of C!lPsress and journalists.
When Gen. Chi came to WuhMone~ 1 is the bi11est enemy·o£ those ington to get his military honors, the
of us on the other side. All we have CIA distri.butcd his biography to
been as!Ung is that the Clinton admin- members of Congress a'nd other offiis)r&amp;!iQ!I does for human beings in cials. Nancy Pelosi made it kt1own
China ·what it does for American publicly that tbc CIA hl!CI omitted any
intellei:tual propeny rights." . · mention of the ·Tiananmen Square
A ,£0rollary· obstacle .to helpins massacre in !he biogrspl)y. She did
China's prisoners of consCience is, as not gel a thank you note from the
Pelasi put.! it, the revolvins door by White House.
which lobbyists become adminisua-·
Pelosi thinks the increasing per·
tion ppl~ make is. "Sandy Berzer," sccutions of Christians in.China may
s~ nCJ¥1&amp;; ·~was the point person at yet awaken American consciousness
· the Hogan-&amp; Hanson law finn for the about that brutal regime. In Novemtrad~ o(fice of the Chiffl:SC Jqvem- ber, in Jiangxi province, 80 CatholiCs
ment. He was a lawyer-lobbyist. were arrested without wanams, beatWhen , he went into the Clinton ;en and jailed.
.
administratiO!I he was second to
. Nat Hentotr II a aadoa.lly
· n~ny ~e. and now he ill the NationretiOWJICd aatllorlty 011 die Flnt
al Security Adviser." · ·
A~taacllbenetottlteBIJ .
I told the congresswoman that ofRlpll.
Human. ~ighiS Watch/Asia has uke~

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. W~rtoretMt: .
· Ton1ght. •. Rain ... Heavy at ttmes.
Lows in the lower 30s. Southwest
winds S to IS mph, shifting to the
northwest late in the evening. Chsnco
of rain 90 percent.
Tucsday.:.Cooler. Cloudy with a
chance of rain or snow in the lllomin1...Then pll1ly cloudy. Temperatures steady or falling into~ lower
30s. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Tuesday night...Ciear. Lows in the
upper teens.
Ealll"hd fore cut:
Wedncaday...Mostly clear. Highs
in
mid 401.
, . ·

Area·youth cited in crash
Ponlind

A
area youth was cited
for assured clear di~e by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrolfollowina a two-vehicle acoident Sunday on County . Road 26
(Flatwoods).
• Troopers said B.rianne L. Proffitt,
17, SS9S6 Slale Route 124, was easthourid 1.1 miles west of SR 1 in
Ches~r TowMhip at 6: IS p.m. when
. she was unable to stop in time and
struck the rear of a pickup truck dri·
ven by Ronald E. Snyder Jr., 31 ,
·38I80W. Shade Road Pomeroy.
S.nyder had stopped' _for. trafftc at.

Sybil McNight of~ W.Va.
· ·.
·
He wu preceded in death by his wife, E)eanor BlOwer Goodnite, who
di~ Oct. 18, 1996; five brothers, Ray moRel, Charles,John. Darrell and Ray the time of the collision, according to
Goodnite; jnd hy a sister, Merill Voller.
·
·
the repon.
Damage to l;'roffitt's car was modServices will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Miller-Huck Funeral Home, ·
McConnelsville, with Pastor Sanfonl Shon officiating. Burial with military emte and slight to Snyder's pickup,
services will follow in the Pis1ah Cemetery near McConnelsville. Friends troopers said.
may c.n at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. :ruesday.

Mildred A. 'Micky' Martin

. . Troope!S also investigated a minor: .
tnJury_ acctdenl Fnday on SR 124. · .
EatDri";r~pn ~ - ~ose, 45, ;1901 :
, on o • on an • was no treat·
ed' at the scene, accoriling to the
repon.
. Troopers said R~ was eastbound
tn Sunon Townshtp at 6:50 p.m.
when a deer entered the roadway.
Ro~ swenied the pickup he drove to
avotd the deer~ went off the rofdway
and struck a duch.
.
The pickup then continued on,
struck a park marker and then came
w rest on its side, according to the
repon.
· The pickup, owned by Rose's
Excavating &amp; Trucking, Racine, w:"'
severely damaged, and Rose WI!S ened for no seatbeh.

Bi 11 introduced lifting
a spokesman ·for the Ohio
...~~':.~e~ ~~any Lynch,
Department of Natural Resources.

Mildred A. "MiCky" Mlltin, 83, Athens, died Sunday, Jan. 26, 19JI7 at interested in any of them," Gebhardt
Lynch said the depanm~nt, which
Doctors North Hospital, Columbus.
·d
~nforces the state's hunting regulaBorn at Silver Ridgr, Meip County, daughter of the Ia~ George Willi~ sat While many fanners hunt, a l~t of tions, has discussed Sunday hunting
and Eli~ Youn1 Christy, she wu a P!lduate of Olive-Orange IDgh lhem _also want one day a week when as a way to.control Ohio's growing
School;a rneti'tber of die Cenbal Avenile United'f&gt;1ethodist Ch'un:h in Athens, they don't have to worry about deer popuhition, but is not taking a
.· and.
retired from ~ Kimes Cot!v&amp;lesoeni Center in Atheils. · ·
.
hunters on their property,'' said Jja:n · position on ~ Fox bill .
She is .lltrvived hy her husband, Cl~renee "Bill~ Martin; a son, James ·
'
EdwardMartinofNewLondon, Conn.;twograndChildren; twosl$ters,Hazel
Barnhill of Tuppers Plains, and Ada Swank of Kent; and two brothers, Orville
1.
Christy of Columbus, and Howard Christy of LexinJ!on, Ind. .
. .
ontl uec1 from p
1)
mine the cost to panicipanl,, The
She was also preceded in death by her first husband, Myron T. Maron, ~n
· (C
n
8!JI
amount
to be charged and the
1966; six brothers, James, Garrett, Vernon, Floyd, Delphia and Stanley; and · screening ~nd dental screening.
Units ofi~ Meigs cOunty Emer.
RU11.~
monthly
income to qtialify ·arc as
Other services will include
gency Medical Service reconled 19
8 p.m. Sunday,' O)NC, Middle- hy two sisters; Edith Betting and Nellie Schumacher. . ·
follows:
$5
for those with incomes
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday in the Hughes-Blower·Filne~l Home,
spinal alignment.by a local chiro,_calls for assistance· Satinday and pan, Sarah ConllO, VMH.
of
up
to
$967
a month; $10, up to
Athens. Burial' will follow in the West Union Street Cemetery. Fnends may
praetor: therapeutic massage,
, Sunday. Units responding included:
SYRACUSE
$1,295; SIS, up to $1,622; $20,
assessment and management techS: 18 p.m. Sunday, VFD and squad call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. WednC$day.
" CENTRAL DISPATCH
$1,950; $25, $2,277.50; and $SO,
niques for anger, depression, and
·•
12:06 p.m. Sat"tday. County to SR 124, Nicki BeU, VMH.'
up to $2,605.
stress, and nutritional evaluations.
, Home1 ~omeroy, Alex Simpson, VetTUPPERS P~S · ·
An announcement will be made
. ..Prostrnte screening is being
,: erans Memorial Hospitlll; · · . .
11:19 a.m. Satillday, IJ~yann
when
applications become availincluded a&lt; a plll"l of the ~linic this
3:40 p.m. Saturday, Clew Road, Bine, O'Bieneu Memorial Hospital;
able. The aetual processing of
Thomas Ray White, Sl; Gallipolis, died Saturday, Jan. 25, 1997 at his resyear, since such screening carried
,, Pomeroy, ·Charles Whittinst~,
8:47 ·p.m. Saturday, ~ _ and
applications will begin in July,
idenc::c.
·
.
out over the past several years here
. VMH;
"'
squadtoArllau8hU.pe.-fii'C,
Midkiff'said.
Born Feb: 19, 1945 in Oallipolis, son of the late Roy E. and Aldith E.
by Riverside Hospital as pan of a
5:03 p.m. Satu!day, Cross Street, Rose Peterman, St. Joseph's Hospital; Howard White, he wu themanageroftheOallipolis office of the Ohio Bureau
Another planning' session was
national
study has now been con· o; Racine,SandrsMelott, VMH,Racine __ 11:52 p.m. Saturday, ArbauJh
set for noon ~n March 3 I at the
Services.
•
·
cluded .
. ·: squad assisted;
· ·
Addition, Sharon Boyles, Camden· .of Employnieni
Senior
Citizens Center.
A U.S. Army veteran of the Vietnam War, he was a member of the Viet·
Those JTien.who took pan in the
.: _6:28 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook Clark Memori.. Hospital;:
nam Veterms of America, American Legion Lafayette .Post 27, the
study arc encouraged to use. the
' Nursing Center, Middlepon, Everett . . 4:28p.m. Sunday, VFD and.squad
AM'VSTS and the Gallia County Vc:terans Association. Ho wu a past presmultiphasic screening clinic serDelaney, Pleasant Villley Hospital;
to SR 7, possible chimney fire,
ident
of
the
Oallia
County
Veterans
Service
Comlllission,
and
a
founding
.
vices for l~is year's follow-up.
I :58 11-m. Sunday, Peach Fork Roben Craft, o.wner.
member
of
the
Tri-State
Veterans
Employment
Commission.
There will be an additional $3 for
. Road, Pomeroy, Daniel McCloud,
9:47p.m. KliiJer. Street, Michelle
Survivi~sare his wife, Mqaiet Ann Boswonh Wh~te: whom he married
the PSA . blj&gt;od work and rectal
VMH;
Guess, St. Joseph's Hospital.
June
20,
1969
in
Dobsqn, N.C.: a soit, Eric Alan (Chn~una) Whtte of Galexamtnatton.
4:06a.m . Sunday, State Route 7,
lipolis; a grandson; a brother, Robert Wood or;tanal ~inchester; and three
. TQrrcs said that the pro)lmm
" Tuppers Plains, Debo_rah Young,
wtll tnvolve about SO . volunteers
sisters,
Dorothy
Aspel
of
Bend,
Ore.,
Ruth
Caner
of
Mtddlepon,
and
Lmda
. PVH. Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
. Velernl Memo&amp;! "
includin1 the clinicians and Retired
Hensley of Gallipolis.
·
·
10:30 a.m. Sunday, Salem Street,
Friday admissions- NonnaiBakSenior Volunteers from the CounServices
will"be
I
.p.m.
Tuesday
in.
the
Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral
· · Rutland, Belinda Bailey, Grant Med.
'
Home, with lhC Rev. John Jaekson officiating. Burial will be in the Ohio Val- cil on Aging program.
ical Center via MedFiight helicopter cr. Ractne.
The clinic will be conducted on
Friday dischar&amp;es - none:
, ley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeml home from S-8 p.m.
ambulance;
both noors of the' muhipurpooc
Saturday admissions - none.
today.
.
5:24 p:m. Sunday. College Road,
building with panicipants moving
-Silurday
discJJarses
Norm•
Full
military
honors
will
be
presented
at
the
grsvestte.
Syracuse, motor vehicle .ac~ident,
through "stations" manned by
llaker, Racine.
'
Charles Rollens.l'lfu~ed treatment;
health professionals, where specifSunday admissions - llOIIe.
fl1141tltt111Mt..,
......
.
• 5:48 p.m. Sunday, U.S. 33,
ic
evaluations will take place.
_Te •••
••
&amp;HI, ••••
Sunday discha!Jes - Woodrow
Pomeroy, Chad Clark. treated at the
.
.
992-2156
· Finan~ial guidelines will deterHall, Racilie.
scene;
,
Bolar
Medical
Center
" 6:30) p.m. Sunday, motor vehicle
Dlacbara-·Jlit, l4 - Kathryn
. •ccident on Flatwoods Road, Chester
. . .
. . Township, Ronald S11yderJr. and Bri· SJIIOU!Ci• Roy Miller, Clare~ J'ree·
0No, In COII ....il» wii;IIIVIMcj Code No. 323.011111 Stele ol Olilo, do hol8by (jve nollce ol
.man, Clinton Stover, ·Kate
~ llon..ii·E. FIWik. T - I l l
In
" ·anne Proffitt; iefusecl tr~atm,cnt,
lor
.
.
Tal
V..1111-.
McConnick, Zelda Strausbaullh,
- liC • t d - tall valuellon. '
· • Cbester Volunteer' Fire' Dcpanment
Richard
Creme11111.
·.
~: assisted;
'"
·,
·
Blrdl - Mr. and Mrs." Wide
6;39 p.m. Sunday, Pi:ach Fork
Miller, son, Patriot.
·
'
. Road, Pomeroy, Daniel" McCloud,
Dllcbll'aM Jaa, 25 . - Paula
"" Holzer Medical Cenicr. ·
Brown, Dawniite 'reauJCI'; Mn: Wide
MIDDLEPORT
•... .
Miller and son.
1:03 a.m. Sunday, High Street, Irn
Blrdll .,.. Mr. anc! Mrs. Todd
: . Darnell. HMC.
.
Bachtel, son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
Cl
.
Stephen Sonders, daughter, Crown
City.
·
· Dllcbarp Jaa. 26 - Eanhc:l
Hall, Kimberly, Sickels, Mn. Todd
(tJSiiS 2'13-9(1)
• • 'It
41JMOIOJ
Bachtel and son . .
. l'lobHohed OYIIf'/ . . . . . . . . . M~ ~
Birth - · Mr. and MJ'S;' Brett
Ridlly, Ill Court 51., Pouw:aD'~.o Ohlot by
3U41111
McDaniel, daupter, Bidwell.
=:~~~~=!2~;6. ~
(Publlllted mti!Jienl~~)

me

wu

Mu' lta·p·h8$1·c sc•eenl·.ng .

Hospital news:·

Sentl'• •l Cl•sslfletls

Rates ef 'liuaden f•r 1996

It I

•
i .
.

.
pump him full of ~zac: _and ,try to
~tamp out the haunted n:wt's ,Jyrical
tmpulses.
.
face it. nils is not' an epic 'age.
The pint .s~stil:i , offailwe ,-rates
o~ ~me, tlhferacy, poveny and illea•ttmacy ., have brightened just
enouah to 14!1 us relax a moment. ·
.· Forset alJOili calls to anns; ·Jitde
ideas rule. ln WaShington, politicians
plunge into billlllle s._s. They
cnJI'OSS themielves not in philosophicalrt~flet:tions about the riahts
of man, but, in the arid arcana of
Medicare; Soc:ial Sc!Curity, Medicaid.
1innation indexeund budpt-..anc- ,
ina stralegiel.
.;
Ironically, as serenity filii out
across the counttyside, boltilitiea
flare in lhe lllllbled halls of ConllfeSI. The Capitolloob leas 1- an
,fhlirmlii'wonieubout hilh .-Jiries? •intellectual t.ldefiekl than .a faculty
When.. ~ ~orld ~ ~Pl. Wfl Jo_unp, wheN the fiahti"' is viciQus
.don't JUSI distrull malle~ans, we because thlllalta are miall. N~- '
detest thetit.
._
thelas, an~a~onilll n fiahtina over
. H Lincoln ~alk~ t~y. a ~nk · minor dilrlDI-.
would tau him tn an tnstiiUttOn,
•
'•

~"'

I

may r- a clwp of felonious Mt•Jit
in the alleJed beatinJ.of his live-in
girlfriend Sullday.
.
Mikc Rtldson of31.566 McCumber Road is bein,-held in the Meias
County Jail pendin1 a hearing in
Mcias County Coon. He is accused
of severely beating Belinda Bailey,
age unrepor1ed.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said the
Meigs Countr Sllerjff's Depaninent
wu IIQiified of the incident hy the
Meiss County Emergency Medical
Service.
A deputy went to the couple's
McCumber Road residence and
arrested Hudson on a domestic violence cbargc, Soulsby said. The cou-

pie's two young cbildrea were:
released to a panclpaRIIL
.
"At that time we did not know theex)cnt of Bailey's injuries,• • said. ,
Bailey wa tnaspOIIed from Rut-:
land via MedFiight helicopter ambulance to Grant Medical Center in
Columbus, where she is now IistCd i~
fair condition, Soulshy said. .·
;
Soulsby said hospital official•
ind~ Bailey may face reconstruc~
tive surgery stemming from th~
alleged assaillt. ·
The incident re.riains under investigation.
•
FelonioUs usault is an aggraval ~
ed second-degree felony punishable;
by a maximum prison tenn of eight
years.

Thomas R. White

I

.

Hubert 'I t "Dynamite" Goodnite, 70, McConnelsvm~. died- Sunday, Jan.
26,1997 athil home.
.
.
Born Oct. 31; 1926 in Muon County, W.Va., son of the late Charlie ~
Rlljh Roush Gooclnite, he w~ 1 rellred superintendent for the L.E. Myers
Construction Co., and a co-owner with bis wife of the Coffee Shoppe Restaurant in Mceon)lelsville.
.
.ae w" a rellred farmer and veteran of World War U, and 1 member of
the Malta Veterans of Foreip Wan Post 4713.
He is survived by two daughien, Diane Martin of Beverly, and Angela
Capehart of Pomeroy; three soai, MIIX and Mitchell Goodnite, both' of
McConnelsville, and Michael Goodnite of Kiii8Ston, Oa.; nine grandchildren
andonegreu-grandchild;asuter,MinttieHarrisofMinersville;andanaunt,

'EMS units log 19 calls

J.U. Alldel)loa aacl Jan MoDer
are writen · for United Feature
S-"lcate
•-~ · • .
3uu
t UM;I
. ' .

-Ill

Hubert K. Goodnite

By TheAnocllllicl Pt 111 '
The precipitation will end across
. Ohio tonight 81¥1 ~unny but sub;
freezing weathet is ·oo tap for lUesday, the National Weather Setvice
said. ·
Highs on Tuesday will be in the
mid to upper 20s. ·
·
. Continued dry and slight wan'ner
. . conditions are forecast for WedJiesday, with temperatures reachinJ close
to 40 degrees.
The m:ord-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 68 degrees in 1916 while
. the record low wu 8 .below pro in
1936. Sunsettonilhl will _be .!at 5:4'!1
. p.m. 1111!1 sunrile Tuesday lit 7:4~ a.m• .

So maybe ·· just maybe --·!he voters are smaner than the pundits give
them credit for. Pelltaps more of them
would have gone to the polls had they
found a candidate they could support.
That's soniething for the pollsters to
think about before the next round of
presidential politics gets underway,
· which will be all too soon.

"
'

.....

Chance for rain or snow
good until midday Tues.day

Fisures compiled by the Committee .for the Study of the American
Electomte found that_voters in e.ight
states -- Delaware, Idaho, MusachUS"etts, Minnesota, North Carolina.
South Carolina, South Dakota and
Utah -- cast more ballots for senatorial and gubernatorial candidates than
they did for president. When it carne
time to vote for president, many of
them simply left that space blank.

.
v
.
eloquence in formal settings reminds
Rhetorical skills .aside. his inauone of Randall Jarrell's remark abQut gural tfl!dress re4ed. Oood time~
bad poets' heanrending desire to make ,for pede~trian omtory. Nil
express themselves:, "It is as it they statesm,lll !las ever delivered a stirhad sent in tlfeir ripped-out arms and rina speech in times of peace and.
legs with 'This is a poem' sc.,wled · plenty. ••
·
on them in lipstick." , ' '
The wonl series u an instrument
Every time .Clinton reaches for of_inspiJIIjqa _on9' when a friptpned
·poetty, the Muse ~all!pers awjly, tit- '· people, looki111 jnto the -"ltss, need
tering over her shoulder. l;le· Is not a. · someoflil to revive the ·noble vinue, ·
.man who speaks to history.
·
•• ~ f~. self-sacrifac:e
But put him amona people in noed . •• that'•briq forth -hope. Lincoln
and die impression cJ!anaes com- chronicled patriotic·sore. Roosevelt.
pletely. Imagine him in the prtsence perched on wobbly braces, warned
of a dying child. Watch his tear ducts apinat f-. Reqan whispered sonp
fiJI, and chin quiver. Observe u he .while intellectuals raved about
lifts the·younpter. They -trade tear- · ,nuclear winter.
.
brishtened smiles freiahted with : TheY. c~ed turbulent wate!'.
impossible hopes and iaeffilble ten- But wiio .needs John the Baptist
demess. Carneru reccinl the seeM. when pension funds are appreciating
And Americans say: S~y this mall at 20 pp:cnt a yeir and the fled

By TQNY SNOW
·Creators Syndicate
WASHINGTON -· Pundits have
brutalized President Clinton forcleliveons In inaugural address that could
have been wrinen by a junior-high
. student. Yet any close re8der of the
talk knows the presfdenl wasn't
elUICtly crazy about the speech, either.
· .After taking the oath, he turned to
2SO,OOO spectators and spoke selfconsciously :- lilie 1 man· ttyiria to
read LU law to a deal, ~ng aunt.
He avoided concrete images and
in~ hurled toa halls: "GovernmentIs not the problem. GoW.nuaent
i10ot the solution. We, the Aineric:m
people, we are the solu~on.''
He also tried to jau ap the prothe word
ceedinp by throwina
"new" an lvetiJe of onC:e per para.,
anph. Yet, he au!idy dillmlced him· JuJK!entands us.
'
-liell fnlm ~· text "' usiaJihe word. ·: · . I~ CHnton ..., a place in Amer"I" 011)' twtee.
·
• 11~ anllals, It will not be u a wordMutt Sblelds calls ~linton the '1111\ilb. but u a figure in a photo
1e11t aniculate eloq~nt ,man he has pllery •• a man enllipd hy his alrilever -n. The pres1dent'a quat for .. .flY~ &amp;chi!.;,

's •-

IND.
'•

A 23-yar-oW ~ville dian

Sllaw M.lloylll, 56, 1\tppm ...........dild St hy, J~~~o 26, 199711!1 Cisn' Clllk H-ill HI ; 't", .......... W.Va.
She- bam Sept. 23, -1940 in
d .,... of Wilma 'Nallon
Cltlindw S wi ot&amp;.loW, illd the..., .kibn N. Ouindtlr. Sbc
&lt;lftice
muq for Vilion Clre Aaoc:i-. ia ~for the Jut 21 yean.
aiMIIIIter of the AJfrecl Ullited Methodist Cut:h, I 1,. Jdd·
1111e of B*iml Hilh $cbool, a ru uw employe!~ of the Stan Brudlerll Stiire, .
and a fonner employee Gf the Dill BtudJM Stote in l'arbribtQ. ·
She is survived by her hnlband, Pbillip·"Joe" Boyles; a 11011 Md daushter-in-Jaw, Joe and 1.-i Boyles of Tuppers PlAins; 1 cJaulhler lltd son-inJaw, Bnnda and Dou1 Buell: of Belleville, W.Va.; seven pandchi~; three
~John Guitilher Jr. of Oleater, Ray Guinther of Portbad, and Jack
Guinther of~ two listers, Shirley Pelersotl of frederick. Md.. and Joyce
Ritc.U, of 1\tppen l'lains; and a stepfather; Lester Seaman. of Barlow. ·
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville,
with the Rev. Sbaroa J&amp;nsme olfic:illinJ. Bi.wial wiD be ia the~ PJUns
Christian c.m.tery. Friends may call at the funerar liome from 7-9 toniJht
and on Tuesday from 11 a.m. until the 'tUne of the service.

"*-Of·

•

Cl·i oton not exactly crazy at~:out inaugural speech

..•.

Sharon M" Boyles

IToledol22' I

...• •

~4 .. ~

••
A cOn~reSSWOman ·"~s. ClirltO·~ . .

H

w.a b - for

loiCH.

UNDER niE DOME·· lt's been
a popular putime among pundlta to
pooh· J!Ooh last November's disastrouSly low election turnout. A&amp;r all.
Bill Clinton was re-elected even tbouah jl!St 23.8 percent of all eiiai-.
ble voters cast their ballots for him.
, Analysts have blamed voter apathy for the low turnout. But not so
.ofut. A new study suggests the problem may have been the candidates
themselves.

1'M~"0

e

AccuV'c

,

which netted the JOMnment jlllt
pennies on the~· Under- Gf
. 'the qreemeats. netther the JO"Ill:nent nor the oil CGIIIpllliel _c;~~~ r~J._
reopen the c:ase OIICC the ~ "''i
is signed. ·
In the lelia aenl to Blbbitt Jut'
week. Maloney c~ the ~s never had the autholjty to neJ- tet·
dements with the oil c:ompaaiea. She
cites the Federal Claims Collectioo
Act, which holds that the held .of a
federal agency " may componuse a
claim of-the government of not more
than $100,000 (excludina inlerelt)
....'~
1 Maloney adds that the settlemenls
iwere invalid because some of them
jin\lolved claims on Indian tribal land,
'though no Indian leaders were
involved in the negotiations.

Beating allegation may
lead to filing of charge

OHIO \Ve&lt;1tilC't
.....,., Ju. 211 .

r 'ZI, 1117

The-Daily Sentinel .Oil ·company deals are called Into question

P01111roy •Ill dill part, Ohio

I

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..
The Daily Sentinel

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POSTMASTZRI

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The
DaPJ.y
Sentbi~:t
-·'
. -·· ···

'

.G·anipolis defeats
Southern 75-5.1

~.....

•

- .....

!

..

'

....

. • O.-wflf',....., -a,

1.,

Packers get past
..
Patriots 35-21.
to win Super Bo~l..

~ ~~=·"'
IIAUerina

•

. Host Gallipolis outscored South-. Heath McKinniis had 10. l!uebr
· em 30-17 in the final period Satw"~
finished the &amp;lillie with nine marltcn.
day night enroute to a 75-SI non•
Southern had two players hi douleaaue basket)lall triumph ovee ble figures, led by Evans 14 pqiats.
'JYson Buckley added 10 and Adam
Southern.
.dominance. But all that strutting By lARRY WILNER
The visiting Tornadoes, althouglt Roush nine.
NEW QRl.EANS (AP)- Vince Rison duckw,ll,~na , into the end
Gallipolis conneCted on 24 of SO
never ahead in the 32-rninute conLombardi never would have recos· zone on his S4-yard bomb, or
test. wouldn't roll over and play dea4 field goal attempts for 48 pen:enL
, nized the style. He surely would Howll'd posing Ill ~ end of his
after falling behind 8-2 and 13-4 in. From the two-point range, OAHS
kickoff return - would be fon:ign to
have been familiar with the result.
was 20 of 40. Oallia was four of 10
the first period.
The Green Qay Packers put the Lombardi.
Coach Howie Caldwell's scrap- ~m the three-point cin:le. At the
title back in ndetown "USA with I
So would the offensive eXf!losi"!'·
py quintet •.using a tight man-to-man
foul line, GAHS canned 23 of 29
35-21 victoryovertheNewEngllnd particularly throuah the wr. Hts .
defense, came roaring back in the freebies for 79.3 pen:ent. Gallipolis
Patriots on Sunday. For the fii'SI time Packers ground you down when
second stanza behind Jamie Evans ~ 13 personals, 37 !'"bounds, II by
in 29 yean, since the storied days of they had the ball, smashed you info
and Chris Randolph to narrow _the Lloyd, and committed nine
Lombardi ended with the Packers the ground whe.n you were ~nfQrtu·
deficit to four points, I 5-ll, with turnovers.
taking the lint two Super Bowls, the ' nilte enough to have it. ~ PackS:381eft in the first half. The visitors
The Blue Devils were credited
NFL's smallest city is its biggest ers scored the most points in the .
trailed 29-17 during the halftime with 20 assists, six by Rucker and
winner.
~·
feague and were 81 e~plosiVe iiS any :
intennission after Gallipolis' lsft11C four each by McKinniss and Howell.
"This trophy, it was named afler team in the Super Bowl era.
Saunders, Greg Lloyd and Rob Gallipolis llad six steals, three by
Vince 'Lombardi,'' coach Mike
"I think he would have liked it,"
Woodward scored six straight points Howell. Smith had one blocked
Holmgren told his players after they Holmgren said, " as long as we were .
. over a two-minute span.
shot. :
won a vastly entertaining Super ahead. it probabl~ would have made
LLOYD SHOOTS • Glllllpolls' Greg Lloyd pops In two of hit 13
Gallipolis never led by more than
Southern connected on 22 of SO
Bowl for the franchise's 12th league him a little nervous, that type of
polnta ~~g~~lnat Sauthem during Saturday nlghfs non-t.aue
15, or )e~s than nine points in the field goal attempts for 44 percent.
championship. ''As important as it is. . aame with big plays on bQth ~des . "
{111M on the GAH8 hal dwDOd. Defenalve players are Jerrod IIIIHs
third .period as the Tornadoes Southern was 20 of 39 from the twoto every player in the lcaaue. it's ' The biB plays began almost
(25), Adam Rouah (5) and J - Maynard (21). G~S won, 75oUtscored Gallipolis 17-16 to enter point area, and two of ll from the
more iJN!IlCIBDI to us. This is.where immediately. H~;~ward had a 32-yard
51,
the final period of play trailing the three-point range, The Tornadoes
it belongs."
.
""ni retrun ~ Favre checked off to.
Blue Devils 45-34.
·
sank five of six free throws, had 19 contest, Gallipolis defeated South- Michael Ash, ).()..()..()..2; Jbe Kirby, ·. · 'Th~:lfDphy is heading to Green a~·deep pass on' Green Bay 's secon d"•
In the final stanza, Gallipolis, rebounds, four each by Buckley and em's reserves, S3-38.
Bay becau~VP D~smond offensive play. ~n easily llc•t ~or- :
1-0..0..0 2; Jason Allen, 2..()..0..(4;
behind Dave Rucker, Andray How- Roush, 10 turnovers, and seven
The Blue Imps Jed 16-4, 26-12, . Tyson ' Buckley,
5-0,0-()..10. Howatd returned 1a k~koff 99 yards nerback Oti• Smith for. ~ 7-0 leli!J. lj
ell and Greg Lloyd, built up its assists, three by Roush. .
and 37-25 at the quanermarks.
for a touchdown late in the third
· Bledsoe then threw .his first interTOTALS l(!-:Z-5-6-St.
biggest,iead of the night, 62-41, w!th
Gallipolis will battle River Valley
Brian Sims JNI'¢d the winners
· GaiUpolls: Cody Lane, 0-J-2-2- quarter, . breaking New England's ception, to Doug EvaQS, and Chri.s
3:16 remaining. At this point, bo.th at the Uni~ersity of Rio Grande · with J5pointiCodyLaneadded ll,
S; Heath McKinniss, 2-2..()..0..10; spirit. And because Brett Favre. cor- Jacke ~e~ the break with a 37- ,
coactics began substituting freely. :-vedn~sday ma makeup game, start-.• Chris Lewis nine and Jeremy Payton Jeremy Payton, . 1-0-0-0-2; Dave rectly audibled twice tb tong' pass yard field goal.
.
Boih teams spent the remainder of mg wuh the reserve game at 6 p.m. seven. For the visitors Jason· Allen· Rucker, 1-l -4-4-9; Greg Lloyd, 6-0.. plays, getting 54- and 81-yardto~h­
Then the Patriots, who trailed
the evening at the foul line.
Frid~y, the Blue Devils travel to . was the game's top sc'orer with 20
l-l-13; Aaron Beaver, 1..()..0..0..2; down completions. And because the only Green Bay 'in scoring this sea- ,
The . victory, sixth in a row for Martella for another Southeastern markers. Russell Reiber added six.
Isaac Saunders, 1-0-2-2-4; Chris defense manaaed · five saeks l(nd son, »howed their resilience with:
Coach Jim Osborne's qews, left the . Ohio Athletic League game.'
Gallipolis improved to 7-7 overSmith, 4-0-6-6-14; Rob Woodward, four inlen:eptions of Drew Bledsoe. their own big plays.
,
~lue Devils 9-5 ·overall. Southern
And because NFC teams.always
Southern will play at Federal all. Southern dropped 10 5-9.
1-0..2-4-4; Andray Howell, 3-0..6-8'Keith Bym took a screen pass 32:
p ropped to 5-9. : ,
· win the Super Bowl; Green Bay's yards and Craig Newso111e wast
Hocking Tuesday in a TVC contest,
Soutbem: Adam Roush 4-0..1-1·
12. TOTALS· 20-4-:zl..:Z!I-75.
• Gallipolis placed four players in and journey to Trimlllc Friday for 9; Ryan Norris, 1-()..()..0..2; Jamie
victory is the 131Jl straight for the called for.pass interference in the end !
Quarter~
.
~ouble figures in scoring. led by another conferen~e g!""e. . .
conference.
Evans, 4-2·0-l-14; Jesse Maynard, · Southern
zane just tlefore Byan; caught a 1.. 4-13-17-17"?51
-lchris·Smith's 14 tallies. Greg Lloyd
Lombardi
would
undel$tand
such
In Saturday ntght s prehmtnary
l-0..2-2-4i Pete Sisson, l-0-2-2-4;
Gallipolis
· 13-16-16-30=75
. (See PACKERS on Page 5)
l
'
ndra H iihadl2 d

.·.

Founh·qu~·rter

••
·d

rally helps Bel.p re
beat Meigs 6,1 _-54

A
dlft'eaer.ce from the
free throw stripe proved to be the
determining factor in Saturday
evenin11'1 bardwood basketball con• test between cross-river rivals Eastem ai1CI Wahama, u the host Eagles
came away with a SS-44 cqo triumph over coach Lewis Hall's Bend
Area Falcons.
Eu.'llcm .attempted 21 clwity tosses and convened 13, while the White
l'alcuns m:cived only.two opportu:
nities throughout the entire contest
which accounted for the .11-point
Eagle win: Both teams connected on
an even ·number of 18 two-point
~oals and a pair of treys whic~ left
the contest dcc;ision solely on the
foul ·stripe where.the Easicm squad
gained its 11-point margin of victory.
I .
.
"I won't make excuses and lay the
blame for this loss on the official~."
Hall stated aftlir the hardcoun set·
back. "Although we only received
two chances from the line while they
got 21 is questionable, Eastern
deserves a great deal of credit
because they played well. The
Eagles defense.toOk us out of what
we were trying to atco.mplish offensively and in the end, they wanted to
win more than we did .• .
· · The White Falcons were coming
off 811 if11P!essive come-from-behiJlll
win over' Mason County rival Point
Pleasant on 1\iesday and failed in its
opportwlity to gain some momentum
as the final month of the regular seasoa approaches. The loss dropped
the Bend Area Falcons' overall slate
to S-6 on the year, as WHS con-

.:!

By DAVE HARRIS

.

Pac;f.,

lese 96, Tyla;.. 66,
63, Iowa 09,
UCLA :l6, Mllmi 12. Coli. ol O...lcotoo
29,_lllinoia 22. OeorJl• 15, Hiwnii 1~ .
Plovidcnce II, California 9, Rllode Island

9, Aoridl St. 1, Pri~ .5, CotinetfiCUI

4.

EASTEilN CONFERENCE
Atlande DMdon

ram

lit L · f&lt;l.

GA

.698
.SOO

'1.

Miami ................... .30 12
New York ............. JO J:t

Wuhing1on ...........,. 21 21

.71"

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Saturday's adl~

9

19

.Sf,Q

9

l!uo

.. ,......... ll 29
a...........................9 JO
Phi1Diphia .............9 :1:1

.27:'i

18

.211
.214

W1
21

.B'K:kncll68, Holy Cro;a~60
,,
Colpte 114, t..hiJh 71
Comoll74, ColutDI!ia ~
.CleooJ&lt; Waohlapon !16, Lo Sallo l2
Lorayone 79, llnlty 71
. Lona l•ta.d U. 68, St. Francia, NY 64 ·
Mouochonetn 71, T"""Jo 66
Md.·Ballimon: County 74, Winthrop
62
Monmoulh. N.J :7~ . F:aiririJh Did.ln·
IOQ 68
Maune Sr. Mary's, Md. 63. St. Fran·
· cis, Pa. ~9
.
Pitt.tM!rsh 89. GeorJetown 71
Pro~icknce 72. St. Jahn "s S9
Rhode 1slnnd 79. St Bonavemure 66
Rider M, Robert Morris 6.1
. St. J~ ' s68, VirJ,iniaTech~
Troy St W. Cent COOnt1.1icut.St. 57
Vermont MS. Hanford 72
·ViiiMo'l'a K-4. Bol_ton Colk.'jl: 66

Orlllodo .................. l9
~Jeney

CtnlroiDICiolc.....................l1 ' · l .881
O.roii ....... ..........:.. )p II .732
At- ................... 28 12 .700
O...looo ................ 24 18 .571
CLEVELAND ....... 23 18 ..561
Mllwouk&lt;e ............. 21 21 .SOO
lndian~ ................... 19 21
.•41S
Toronl0 ............. ,.~_ 14 27 .341

6~

8 .
ll
IJ\li
· 16
17

-·-

-

22~

WESTEilN CONFERENCE
:r..il

M-DIYJslon

lit L f&lt;l.

WI

Holdton ........ .... ..... 32 t 1 .7-M
Urlh ...................... 29 I J .690

MinncJOta .............. l9
o.n. .....................J4
Denver ..........:........ n
San Anronia ........;..ll
VllfiCOUYCI" ...............8

2~

.4S:Z
26 .J50

ll\1:

30 · .302
29 .27~

· 19
19'1

2;\

16~

36 .182 ,

Wagner II~ . Mariti 75
Yale6.~ . Brown~~

241?

· Phofnix. .................. u 21

.«10
.)90
.J:\7

14

-

1~'1.

SatunlaJ'IKOl'U

67

Sunday's S&lt;Ores
New. York 9S, Miami 89
Milwaukee 94. SDn Antonio 76

LA. l..akert·I04, Sealtle 10~

Toalpt'spmos
Phocltix. at Miami. 7JO p.m.
Vnncouver nt Gol4c:n State, IO:JO

North Carolina
·shocks Clemson;
K~nsas, Kentucky
an:d uc·also.win

ll· •

. ·

battled back to within 43-42 on a
Sentinel C. . .~ .
..
three pointer by ~yle BradfOfll(wi!JI
~ Belpre outscored Meiigsll9-ll in ~ 10 secbnds left in th~ period.' o.l'
e fourtl) period to, past a 61-"' :
A bucket by Williams at thC 6:47
ome-from:behind VICtory over t.he . mark of the period gave Meigs·1, 45lirauders .in I! TVC m~ke-up con- ' 42 advantBge. But Belpre t~ the
f!st Sawrday evening at..Belpre. ,
lead for good with 6:02left on a steal
• Meigs who was commg off wnh and lay-up by Vem()n Reams to put
;,any think was one of the biuest . the host ,on top 46-44.
,•
loins in recent ·yeirJ in Friday
Belpre quickly built the lead .to
evening's upset 'win over Alexander (our, but couldn't put Meigs ~way.
rops to S-6 ill the Olii.o Division an4 Meigs was still within 58-S4 with 53
'
I
-10 overall.
•
seco.nds left. But couldn't get ,any
1 Belpre whO bas 'been strul!&amp;ling
closer as Belpre pulled a--:ay for the By Tile Anoclatad Prns
teams on Sunday, it wa." No. I
tith the injl!_ry .bug all . seas.on~ is win.
,. .
, Oems6n arrived in .Chapell;lill Kansas 77, No. 18 Colorado 68; No.
~ingtoa,et·~.j1f,l'leJr~&gt;;Piay- . Belpre: placed ,f!llll' playc;r' 10 with i.. highest ranking ~eyer. Jbe 3.Kentucky &amp;31 Arkansall 73; l'lo. S
IIi's back ·in; tho l_lor-llfl·~~ v~_!ory ·· doubl~ ~~res led by Sti:C&gt;I~t 11 h , n1ers left for the 43rd siraaalit ume· Maryland 74;·No.· l2 Duke 70; No.
8 Cincinnati 100. Southern califorf,r B;tlPt;e ••..!hl!•r·.\~11;11; I~M'9~, a~ 17. ~I'm aaded.· 13, Kyle B~ ...fcird . with a lOili. .
· ~ses it's ~on!. to ~~3 tn the Ohto · added'12 and Reailjs ll ' Belpre!~ ' .·' It dldn 't matli:r. that Oemion nia 81; No. J7lndiano 70, Penn State .
ivision and li.l&lt;e ,tho; ~arailde(S 5- '• • blis.terinll 61% frOm the lloor htt• show.ed up at North Carolina ranked SS; No. 23'Texas 78, Missouri 74;
: overalf.
·
. ling25 of ~I. Belpre Wll seven ~flO No. 2. The 19th-ranked Tar Heels and No. 24 Marquette 61, DePaul49.
Sunday 'taction
: ·tMeigs which led for most of the (rom the hne. ·
.
held the ligen 10 a scuon-low 27.3
No. 1 Kansas 77
: test fell behind early in the same- - ·Meip hit 19 of62 ,from the 11~ shootinl percentage in SUnday's 61No. Ill Col.ondo 68
fore Daniel Hannam, ·scorcd .o{_a including slx,of21 f!om !hree P.omt ,. 48 victory and kept their home
Rai:f LaFrcntz had 21 points and
bh Witherell BSSJSI w1th I:28left tn 111nge for 31%. Me1gs went to the record ~ainst Clemson perfect.
'
1
4
rebounds as the visiting Jayhawks
t.lle period ' to put the lllllto&lt;m and -line 14ti~es_andhit 10for:71~.No
"PcOpleaskedmewhyCiemson
(20..0,
6-0 Bi'g 12) won their first
ld liP 10..9. .•
.
. ·
otller stattsttcs were avatlabl~ at has ~ · a· iOugh time bere," Tigers
Two free throws by J'O'fh Strothers press time for Meigs.
'
oDa'ch Rick Bariles said: •:t $Bid, game without injured center SCot
d q buCket by Zack_ Kle.in in,.the ~
Reierve IIOCeS: ·In the re~e .· 'On~. · e~erybody has ~ad a tough · Pollard, who is expected to miss four
na! 1:13 pf the pertod ~ave the contest Belpre t~k a 14-12 !~ad tii)IChe!e-Andifyoureallyneedlln weeks with a st.ress fracture of his
olden Eagles a 13-10 leud af!erone · iJfter one permd, but M~tgs :. explanation. I told them to l~k up foot. The Buffaloes ( 15;4, 6-1) led
rjod. ·
·
·
•.
outscOred the Golden Eagles 49-21 at the raftenJ at th~ numbers that 64-63 with 6: 19 to play when
b Meigs.fell behind ion the_second in the last three periods to_post a 61- are hanging there with those names LaFrentz keyed a 10..0 run for a 73·
)leJiod 17-12 but started tochtp away 35 win. Way! on McKmney led on them. That's why people 1\ave had 64 lead with 3:48· left. Chauni:ey
Billups had 23 points for Colorudo,
af'Belpre's lead and tied the game at . Meigs with 20 poiil~, Grant Abbott problems in here. •
~ when Josh Wilhe!'CII ,drained a added. II and Sean O'Brien ~"Guys on our team don't even - which lost its 15th straight game to
t~ree pointer •with 4:17 left t~ the. 10. Carlyle Currie led Belpre wtt~ 13 realize how pKI.a player Phil Ford tcansas.
· No. 3 Kentucky 83
. half. Collin Roush folfowll(l w_n,h a . points. ,
. .
.was. They sure don't know what
i\rkansa73
trifecta of his own less than a mmute
The future: It ~s gmg W he .a happened 43 years ago."
Nazr
Mohammed
had 18 points,
later to put Mt;igs on top 23-20.'tough week for Metgs, whtch must
That would have been a Clemson
, )'deigs incl"'lliK&lt;&lt; the lead to 27-22 travel to Vinton on Tuesday and then Joss. You don't even hove to look it six in the final four minutes, and the
Wildcats (18-2, 6- i Southcostern
with 2:09left in the half when Matt Nelso~ville-York on Frtday.
up.
·
Conference)
won lor the fin&lt;t time in
Williams added apair of free thro~s. 011!1!1'f lldell
The loss dropped the Tigers ( 16three
trips
to
Faycuevillc. Kentucky
Klein's buclu!t with pne..minute left Meigs
· 10..20,13-li=S4 3, 5-2) to seventh in the mnking9.
pulled the Gold~ri Eagles !O within Belpre
13-IS-14-19=61
The victory gave the Tar Heels (12- failed to pull away as it p1issed nine
27-26.
: ;, · ' " ' . ·
~e1111: Roherr Qualls 0-0..~=2, s, 3-4) a chance to end the firs~ half free throws over the tina! 6:06.
'· Bui .once again Withere!Hound Brad . Whitlatch 3-2-2=_)3, Colltn of the All antic Coust Conference sea- Tarik Wallace hod 16 points .li1r the
Rawrba&lt;: ks ( 10-6, 4-3 ), who cum·
. the range from three point land with Roush 2-1-3;= 10, Mall Wtlhams 2-0.. son with a .500 record.
'38 SeConds left to give Mcigs ,a ~0- 4=8, Daniel Hannan 4-1-0= II, }opsli
"You can't get too excited," mitted 25 turnovers.
No. 5 Maryland 74
26lead. Jim Randolph's lay-up wit~ Witl)c;rell 2-2-0=10. Totals: 1~-6- North Carolina coach Dean Smith
.
No. 12 Duke 70
three · seconds remaining sent to lo-54 .
said. "I'm geuing more and more
Larun
Profit scored 16 points,
teams into the locker room at the half ,
Belpre: Jim Randolph 3-0..2=11, like Jim Valvano. I would just. he
including
two
alley-oop dunks in the
with th!: MarauderS o~ top 30..28.
Vernon Reams 4;1):3= II, Kyle Brad· happy to be g.s (in theACC) and go
final
m·
i
nutcs,
and the Terrapins ( 17- .
Meigs iook thetr btggest lead of ford 3-2.0,12, Josh Strothcts 6-1 - to the NCAAtoumamcnt.
the night when Hanna~ hooked-up 2"'17, Zach·Kiem 5-1-0= 13. Totals:
"We !lllid our goal Willi to make 2. 6-1 ACC) heat Duke, at. home for
ftom long distance gtvtpg Mctgs a , ll-4-7-61
'•
the NCAA tournament. It . sull just the third time in the la.•t 13
41-35 1~ with 3:10 left. But Belpre
remains our goal because. anything games. Profit's dunks otT lob J!IISSCS
·
; can happen when you get there. from Saruna.• la.•ikcvicius tied !he
.L.
. i.
i~Vl,
.
Everybody used to laugh every year . game 66-66 with 4:07 lei\' and gave
'r:''BC118f$
U~,. ..
.,.., •••
. whenlsaidthat.Nooneik'laughing Maryland the lead for good II\ 68-66
(See TOP lS on Page 6)
1 ' 'With I:Jl. left in'thC hdlf, F~vre
'
(Continued from Page 4)
this year." .
.
Afltawn Jam iliOn scored 22 points
.ard. touchdown ,.... , Terry" Ole. nn, . capped the Pll!!,.kelil' o~ly Ions dri,ve
Y
•
~rd
for the Tar Heels, who gol off to their
made a spectacular divjng 44-yard • F4 yards) wnh a two-ya run worst conference start ever after six
reception on the nellt serl~~' a,nd around left end. Favre_. 1 ~ league games. Clemson missed II orits first
Bledsoe hit Ben Coates for a 4-yard MVP for l)lc second stratght y~ar, · 12threc-poilit aucmpts and it didn't
aeore. .
barely got the ball over the goal hnc,
The highest-scoring first quarter · extending hi• arms !leforc fallinJ out much better as the ngcrs finished 3·
.
ded 14-10
fur-24 from beyond the-Gn:.
'in Super jlow I htst&lt;lll.en
of bounds.
Ti"""'• who were icd by Grel
iii favor of the 14-pomt. undcr~og
"When 1ou're in a position like
o-·
.
Patriots.
' '
.
,
this and you're in the Super Bowl, . Buckner's 19 points, were comtng
G...._teed Safety &amp;
, "Green Bay is 100 g'ood 9f'a teJUR you llPprecia~ it," Naid. ~liv~, whQ 'off the three-point home loss to
. for you to ev~r thin.k' that f.ou have spent46 days m a'rehabdt~Uon pro- Wake Forest.
fntereat Yields
tl)cm do!"n," &amp;M~, ~t(io!s' run~r gflllfl lost year after 1)C hect1111c
"ThC,.week we'll look to is some- ,
· AvaJlable .
.,
Gurtis Martin; w
, 110 IV~ held to, 42 addi~ted to pain-killen&lt;. "You real· , t)me in Man:h wbl:n we're in lhe
yards rushing. • ()liCe 'llle score?, we
ly would~'t if you didn 't&amp;o lhnlfllh (ACC) tournament, bec~se you
••No..-.orPMt
allowed them to get riaht back m the 'the hard times."
kno~ what, in about another week
• Accu•llle or Monthly
pme. We made the mistake of,let' . The. Pitriou have known ·ilord thiaweek will be f0i1otten," 8 amei
. lnpome
ling them .~t ~he momentum nlht times since their only other super Nid. "You just go •-by-Jame. I ·
•HIJII~I
.
beck." .
,
BowiiiJIPOIPIICC in 1986. But under don't thmaklnk you ~~k anlndherctay, ,'Wei
d~~ .
• Wide Oloice of AMuitiel of
Tbat' ~ on 'the lon&amp;est play COiich Bill Parcells - who i1 got to
e a st...me.
. ··
All Klndl
•j
from ,mmtnap in any of dat 31 rurnohld 10 ·~ready to jump to the believe that. Every night you go out
Call for lnfocmadon:
Super BowJs; the 81-yardepo .AIIto- NeW Y!l'k Jell with his ~on.iracl with yelll ltavno ~ utl'rment with ·
.SCOTI' INSURANCE
, .,__111.
OftCe -.-·
·-n. ,Pavn
"'-.....ld-ttoexpt
' reattheend • theNorth
'way you
play." I.... by I• .pot' nts
niO
__ ,.,
,.,......
"'--'Ina
....,..,
614-€91 4011 (nlrd)
opotMICI
ill New Bnl-"'' o.fdlaiiiCIIIIh:....they' ve !ebounded.·
...,..,
...
"
... La yer Milloy
L-·--' back
more
widi 8:.0 to play 111111 the ng~:rs
,m~id.
-•;tY · w
Alld' (lej """""""
once
made one lut rua to pt withiit 52·
eOverinl Pnetnu.
, , r ipi• 0 . )Jay.
•
,. bu ..... Tar ......,
: AI i 1 oNo45'71D ,
: ~ll'd Wd at It • " WIOidia .Mlrdil'a 18-y.n:l t()ll(lh- 4!5 with I:S2len1 I """:"' s
• Aanultlel an 11111111 by
·New &amp;alapd 'pt!Djed. l!lootinl ~ dow, Mlllftld them to 27-21 will\ wents.of-6ftom·lhe,I'Mdvow ltne
yanla KlaetiiPiacke's :ll-yard fiC1d H1!'.ft In the third qUINt'. LOla of - oYII'Ihl fllll45aa~...,
·
IIGal ror. 2()..14 od...
In Olhar ,......tnwi.U., ......

•

Sotttt.•etl ~ .
"'-'k.-Unle Rock 79, SW Louisian~
64
~7

Idaho 68. Nonh Teus 64
J~~:kluaville 69, Texai-Pan A~

Oldllhooon 84, Notnslm 17
OklllhooonSt. !9, Baylor6J
$W Tex.111 St. 100, feUI·S:tn AntO,
nio 85
·
S111n Hous10n Sl. 80. McNectc,St 7~
Sooth 111-19, Askot""' Sl. 611
Slephen F.Auarin 8J, Nkhulls Sr. 79

~7 .

Now Jersey, 7::\0

Orlando at Wutlinlf00,7 t ~p. nt
a.rtoneariiMfiiUia. 7:30p.m. ·

Oerroil•r Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
Slaamemo at Minnesotn, 8 p.m.
LA. Lakm al Dall111, R:JO p...,.
Denver at Utnb, 9 p.m.

~&lt;lT)
Tenn .~ ChumiROUJII

ChitqOat_Vanoouva. IOp.m.
AlllftiA al LA. Ciipt'lers, IO:JO p.m.

liO

Top 2S mea,'s
oollege poll
•

BowtinaO.....B6, T-76
llntdle)l '/!). $W MiNOOOrl St. 411

n

Ohio H.S~, boys' scores
·Saturday's action

Ada 70, Cory-Rawson 69
Alexnndet ~6, Pommoudt 55
Ani'Nft}J 61, Coavoy Crn~vic:w ~
Arlinston 49, Allen E. 41
Ashl""' 78, Clyde 48
Bftsvii!C ~7.. Uaion Lo~:aH6
~edford · (M}ch.,. 90 1.' Syl'ia•la
Soulhvlcw 76
·'
,
•
Belltvut 71. PM Clildon 40
'
Bdpre61. Meigs~
Bowlias Grun 7:\, AnthOny Wayn~e
~M

Bridgepo&lt;t .liO. Codi• j() 1011

Brynn6J. Pn.Wclint,l7
Buckeye Tra.ll iS, Ridaewood ~2
Canton Hericage Chr. 63. United Lo-

cal ~'l
Cin. Sycamon: 76, Col. Hnrtle:y J9
C01l Grove 71. Jronron St. Joteph 62
Col . Briggs62. Col. Franklin Hts. 48
Col . St. Ouv·Jes 62. Bexley 60
Col. Wel4 90, Col. Wes!land 88
Coshocton ~o. Tri-Vallty &lt;IS (OT)
Day. Belmonr&amp;l , To!. Ul)bey M 1
, Day. Mcadowdale 99, Lima 90
· Dclphoa St. JoiHI6.'l, Conrlnenlol47
0o'l'et'61 , 1ndian Creek~
EaMIWoad 64, Nonflwood 61
EIJ!n 66, Nqrchmor 53
. Elida 6l, St.-Hell!}' 61
FairvieW ,,-Saryter 41
Findtay 58, Tol. Woodwll'd 4J

u..,.,..

Gno"'m 67, Spri!'f- NMhwesJem 44
Grund view 10, UIIL"B $1
OrwwiUe fN. Lit:kiAJ Val. ;'i$
Circll!ilV~ 62. Wildiin,too C.H. 4' ,
. Grc~nv1ll~ 79, Lima Sbnwnce 7S

IUTI

Hollnncl Spriftll~ 80. Oak lfDrbor o47
H_t)~w!:ll-~61.

Ncw~o~n

liO

.

Culbuo~r

pt-ll. Doltti!1 •

~72."-"lioe, l6

•. . '

Pfy1110uth 7:Z. Coj'J WeJtern R.:'·
•

Ponamo.lh Clay .64. Porti,moUih

62

.

Rid..... '70, !'o&gt;klofl Crowfoot l11
RI..,Vol. '70.-61 ·
ltoulonll9, Tol. Wlitol6
s. IWttiO.- E.ll (0T)
- l Pertioo 6.&lt;, N;&gt;rwalt liO

......
'l.i;.;'~;·~~J·,!

, .... 62. w...,. n

Tol. S..076. !loy, Plttmoa 48
Tol. St. Jolin 72.1.'1o. So . .,...; .... !10
Tol. WhibMr3..111,Sandulky6~
Upper Scioto 'fl, -~ NMhem .6 l
Vi..e W.mt. 73, WMerford 42
W, Uoiott 1~. a.o.ptown 76 (Of)
W'I'Oit-" 74, Piqoo67(0TJ
Wa)IIO Tilo:t 65, fort lto&lt;ovory 0
w.....,;1e N. IJO, Mansf~k161
. W~S..6.1,Mr. Vttnon~

·

N. Artzona78, lcbtlo Sc. !'i9
Nevada 72. Ut:lb St ~9

JNE.LOVE tiNES
A MESSAGE TO YqUR SPECIAL VALENTINE

· UNLV 72, Atr Funx ~9

Remember t~at special someone this
Valentine's pay "!fth a message In
Th~ Daily Sentinel

Utnh 7A. RK.-e 111
Wyoming K7. Ftnlk' St. 74

-·

Suoday's action ·
Bt~lnn U. 1K. Tnw10n St . 69
Cnnisiu10 69. Sr. Prt's's ~2
lkluware 70.'NorlhC'Uintl66
Drext171. ~ Ha~ 74 (2 0'1') ·
Fairfield 74. .SitnuiW
·
Hul5tn&amp; MO. M:UI't 66
lndiano110, PeM St. ~IIi
luna91 . Nii!M'II90 (2 OTJ

Loyola. Mil. 71. Manllllltllll ~~
Scto~1 Hllll U Rwpn 72 .

-·
--

Syracuse 6:'i, Con!~Cl.:tiwl f!J

M"'Y"""' 7~. llukc '70
Nurtb ,Carolina 61 , Ckrn101148
Mldwtll ,

. • Sweethearts • Moms &amp; Dads • G;nmdparents • Teaebers
· ·

'

.

·

·

·

·

·

. ..............
Print your • • • •

'

.. with $6.o0 lo:

.. "''

' w.et' • rMidna:

MUST BE PRF;PAID!

... ·-~,;,- -----,.,;JJ,;.---

M~a'fle (ll,.lli:Paut 4V

Kao"""r M l , - n
• Tcm~ 78, MiiiOUii 74 • -

• Babysitters • Friends .

Anyone wbo'would ~tpprecl•te a thoughtful word from you! AD Valelltlne
HeartS will be pubUshed In ,~ 'Febl'IUII')' ~4th Jllue at a-t ohaly $6.00! · ..

.. · '

. ..

1M Daily S,fiMti
. Valeiii•Htlrts
,
'
111 Ca•t Siraat

Pl~.roy, OH 45769

·

,·

.n ,•

s·

• •

I

Boullt

rM n·

T. h e

! .
t ~.· '

RREPAIR

w

Rh:hmold Edi1un 81. Steubenville

C..h. 6Y

Hawaii 8S, San Diqo St. 63
..... lluclo St. 89. Cui Poly-SLO 110
MOftiMIIII. Montaaa Sl. 71
New Me1j1:o6l. TtJ.UoEI Paio 49
Nnt Me1icu Sr. 68. Boi~ St ~
t'ut:ific 69,·UC Santa Bnrhara ~I
Porelurw.l 7!, LOyola M~unt 64
PooiMd Sl. 71, ·~ WIUhtDJtdn 67
Sanl!l Clara 19, San. Die(!.O 63
'
St . Mot)" a. Cal. 61 . Suo Frufk:i"-'0 60
SutnfnnJ Kl, Wll.\hi..,_nn St 61
T\llsa·7l. Bri~ Your~~~

1

Ouaw.Olanlkllf 66, CoklwiUtr ~:'i

ll.'n'C! 60

1

Val. ·

.
'
- S o. ""' 11, s. Centml )6
Olcnt-.y 6.,, J~ Alder~ I
Onloriu 7S. CtwtliOJI'"'l9
Orq,on Clny 70•. Tol. Bowllher 61

M!Jiawt"

· ' Huntl11f:lon Rou69, Pitctoa S~ &lt;On
. Jacknl 79, Wdllton 6~
·
, •!KcaiOII 47. Bc11mMRDinc 4ft
L11kew001J St. Edw11hl :\0, CIUIIon
McKinley 4:\
•
l.eiplk: S I, Kilidlo ~
Ubony Bentdll !16, Old Fort 4ll
Libmy Center 66, SWunton 56
Liberty Union 64. Lakew6od 60
Uma Caah. Jl, ¥.GD. Wen 3!
•
Uma Pwry .12. Onoville 47
Lima
Chr. 70, Ten. Em·

66,

Arizona St. 18, Orqon Sc. 7~ (f;)T)
Cal St.-Fullerton 89, VC Irvine ~7
Coalifomia 80. Wadlina• 51
Cokndo St. 80, SanJOSCI.St. 76

117. W. Camlin;a

M-

'

Fremonr $1. Joseph 81 , Sandu1ky Sc.
Mary's
~ 66.
Artina1on 61
Galllpolil r.J, Rlcint Southcnl51

FarWnt -

East' Cnmlinn

•
.
Tuluc 69, N.C. Ch.Yinn~ 61
VMI ti2. Furman 60
Va. Commonweahh 86. Richmond 71
Wake fofeiC 61 , F1oridol St. $1

.

Mllmi VII. 64, Welliftii&lt;Ht .2A
Millbutr Loke 96. Giboonbut~IIO
Mlnma 83, Cti)'IMN 76
'M J- ~. Sid"'l' Lohmon 16
Mt. Oiloooi'6S, - k l Chr. 62
NeiiODYii~Yoik 68, Alhens ~7
Now ll'. ......,...lllo 7I
New kltOlviUe 6~ . Dclpbol Jefferson
.]7
.
New ~ 73. MOMXvillt 46

ArizoM 88, 0rqon 66

~·

TUeodaJ'spmos

.

TeaGa A&amp;M 76, Kansas Sr. 67
Tex.u Chrilrinn 87, Soulltern Mech.

74

s-

~

' ~JJao ....,.62. CantonC,.h. soi

Franklin Mo~ M. H~on 60
freiiiOIII Rosa 84. Tiffi• Co1umbiu

Texas Soo1hem 81. Prairie View 76

NW lotlidann 58. Te•as·Arlio&amp;lon
53
'
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.
New Or~w70, W. K~nlucky 66
RadfOI'd 17. COIIIIII Carolinn n
S. C:arolino Sl. T1. Md.-E. Shore 6:'i
Samford 7~. Men.-er 12 (UfJ
Soulh CllfO)inn 16. Miul•iipp16J
Soulhern Miss. ~7 . Soulb F'loridu+t
Suulhem U.- 98. Ak:orn Sl. ¥0
TellllCitcc St IJO. Morebtnd St. Kl
Tc.:naesset Tech 64. 1'1!1'1n.·Mnnln 61

Poctland • Toronto, 1 p.m. .
Bolton II New York, 7:30p.m.

The I~ 2~ leiiiN in The Aa101.:ia1ed
Prat' men 1 ~llqe bukttblll poll, wi1h
fint-plmcr v01e1 in pmnthe.set, recort~a
1 lhroilah Jan. 26. IOIDI poi1111 bued on 1.,
~ ttoi• ror 11 fint-pl.:e vote throuafl one
t· poiAI for a 2$1h- pl•ce voce. aad la•t

•. Wi1.·Green Bay 6:1. Loyola. Ill. .as '
WiiCOftlin 7l,lllinois56
Wriahr St. 6.'l, Buder 62

63

Georgia 53. 1\ubum •s
~aia Southern 68. Ciladel S6
Genrgin 'l'cch ~. N. Carolina St 5~
Hrunp!oa U. 61, Morg• St. _,9
Howanl U. 8~.11cthuao-Cookmooo 82
Jmc~onville St. 7~. Ocor.li• St.10
James Madiroa !W, Oldliominl01166
Lmnnr 9Jll...oUiRiaM Ta.-11:86 {2 OT)
Ubaty 7 , a........ Southom 611.
(.()uisville 74, UCLA 71
Monhall 70. ApPalocbian St 67
MiAS. )'alley St. 6), Gmmblina St. 62
Misai11ippi Sr..60. Vandetbilr 53
Mum~y Sl. 78, Middh: Te.... 72
N. Carolina AI:T 112. Ocll:rwm S1. 74
N.C.• Asheville 68, N ~C.·Grccnsboro
N.C.-Wilml'nJtoa

p.m.

11

W..llllnoil84, V11pniao 78

.

Ala.·Dirminattnm ~I . Memphis 4R
Alabamo 1~. l..SU 66
.
Allbamo St. _,8, Jlk:boa St ~_,
Austin Petiy ,._,, E. Kemat:ky 6K
Cerilennry 118, SE Louisiana H6
Coppin Sr. 84, f1orido AAW 67
E. Te~Sr. 67. Wofford60
F'la.lntem.11ioul96, Oem. FloridD. ~_,
Aorilia S6. Tcnrasee !10
Florida Atlaneic 72. Sretson.S.IIi
(kofae Ma•~ 10, William A Mory

13~

Milwaukee 88, India• R6
OU~o II 0, Toronto 98
WuhmlfOR 113. Saaamenro 10~
Atlanta~ . Boston 90
.
CU!VEI.ANO 106. Chorlotte 11
Detroh 104. Plliladolphu.9l
o.n.. 92.- Jmer a1
Utah ID:', Hou'1to. IOO.{OTI
Por1hmd 101. Miane10ra 94 ·
Denver 8:\, Van~ver H2

CLEVELAND
p.nL .

Daytnn6'J,Rinhm1!6(0TJ
DuQuesae ?8, Xnvier, Ohio 10
It lllinoit 6t SE MiiiQtlri 61
E. Mlohipn Bl. Ball So. 7l
Ev•viUe 70, Creiahlon 6J
111.-CIIica&amp;O 6~ Clo,.land St. liO
Illinois St19, Wichita St. 71
lowq Sc. 64, Tc&amp;U TD 61
Kenc67, Aklon M
. Miami. Ohio 61, W. Mil.:hipn 49
Midlipn 74. Michipn St. 61
Minne101a91.·Purduc 68
N. llllnois6J, Oetloit ~4
N. Iowa 81, Drub 68
NE 11Hnoil76, You!IJIIOWR Sl. 10
NorthwCaler:A 78. Oh10 St 41 ·
OHIO 83, Coru: Michipn 68
S. IIIIMU 99,1tldilftl Sr. 61
St Louis "· Hou110n ~I

(Of)

6
13

,j&amp;J

.419 .

(OT)

Sooth

PaojfkDI•IMo
L.A. Lakerl ......... :.31 11 .121
SeArtle 30 .... ........... 13 .698
I
' Ponllod ................. 25 18
S.:nunento ............ l8 2.._,
LA. Ctipcten. .... - ... 16 24
GoldenSi............. J6 2l

,

Wea Virginin67, Norre Dome 66

. F•rWat
CincinM:II()O, Southern 01181
KDIUIU 71. CoJon6o (t8
.
O.al Roboru 11.
So. ll .

lhlrolo 9l, Qiclao So. 80

chided a&amp;JUClina five J*De atretcll
of away contests. Eulml imprvved
to 7-8 on the season follow in, the
win.
. WHS limited talented EMiern
point guard Eric Dillard to just five
points in the outing after Dillard had
burned Wahama for 26 point&amp; when
the two teams met earlier in the year.
However; a trio of Eagle cagers
stepped up to provide the Meip
County team with the necesury
offense to lead Tony Deem's cagm
to the 11-point win. ·
.
Daniel Otto dropped in a game
high 17 points, while Steve Durst
added 14 for the hosts. but the difference most )ikely was the play of
Josh Casto, who came off the bench
to score eight fourth,period points to
finish with 14 markers on the night.
On the Falcon side, Chad Ord netted 16 tallies to lead Wahama in ..:or- .
DRIVE·BY BASKETBALL Is what .Wehamll'l Kevin Shlelcls (32)
ing, with Kevin Sbields notching 10
Is
aGing
to en unidentified Ea.tern player during Saturday night's
and David RiJ&amp;s, 8. "Chad (Ordl
game
at
Eastern
High School, where the Eagla won ~played a very good gaine for us
tonight, and David (Rius) also
The White Falcons shot a dis- took the preliminary outing by a 42played well despite gettins into early foul trouble, but Eastern wanted. couraging 38 percent from the floor, 35 score. The Wahama N record fell
1his one more than we did and that's while Eastern canned 42 percent of to 5-4 following the loss.
John Driggs paced the winners
disappointing to me as a coach," Hall its field goal tries in the contest. Ord
with
14 markers, while the Falcons
and Riggs both hauled down 10
said.
were
l.ed offensively by Steiling
Wahama jumped out to a 12-7 rebounds for the Bend Area •team,
leud -after one period before the · with Seth Howard grabbing eight Shields with 10 points.
The White Falcons will try to get
Eagles .came back to gain n 26-22 boards to pace WHS .in ·that departback
on the winning track Tuesd'ay
lead at the half. Eastern added to its ment. Rebounding totals for Eastern
when
they host visiting Hamlin in a
lead during the·third quarter as Ono were unavailabic.
7:30p.m.
contest, with ·the Wahama
ReMrve notes: The Eagles also
and Dunn scored six points apiece to
.
Lady
Falcons
meeting the Hamlin
lead by II at '42-31, before Casto claimed the junior varsity affair as
kept Wabama from another miracle · coach Frank Capehart's charges lost girls in varsity play in the prelimi·
comeback lik~ it had against Point for the third straight time. Eastern nary tilt. at 6 p.m.
Pleasant, with his eight. point final
.
.
canto to preserve the Eagles' 55-44
triumph.

In Top 25 college basketball, .
'

Scoreboard

. mp

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CLI IC.

a"'"

der.n.e - ·

.hno.

•,
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Eastern boys beat
Wahama 55-44

~ ..

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_...,._, - '~

-·~-

,The Dellf' llntlnel• , ... fj )'.

Pomeloy • Middleport, Ohio

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~=r:w.~.=

PICTURE ·YOIJR
.P ET
.
AMONG THE•••
.PET VAIJENTINES!. ··

OUR. SPECIAL PAGE(S)

.

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''FOR PETS ONLY"
·WILL -BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 13TH IN
Also a special seclon for In ~emory ValentiDe Pets.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
ONLY

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PER PIOURE
PRE·PAID
Please enclose nlfaddreued stamped
envelope to return
your photo.

,..

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Owner's Nama

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Hu"yl Deotlline ·
Friday, February 7th at 3 p.m.

~.

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VALENTINE PETS .

Pet's Name

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iI

Owner'a Name
1
Add,... _ _ _ ___...."""-:"_ _ ___;,.__. II
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Mtll or bring the entry to~:

'T he Daily Sentinel
·

· 110 Court St.
PomerOy, ohlt,) 46769·
J

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P... I • The Ddy 81 lllnll
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River Valley girls ge~ record fourth .con~ecutive win
· By G. SPENCER

ra·

OBION•

OVP...,.WIIIIiiii
In Salunlay aip's vmity .airls'
f ket"'ll 1~~~~e ·• Ri- Valley
Hip S&lt;:hool. the holt Raiden survived their fOI!flh-qulncr foul ahooling effort and 'the Meip M-.len'

.I

erasure of most of their 11-poiatlcad
to captUre a 44-40 viciOI')' in the con·
c:lusion of the , Raiders' four,,amc
hornesWid.
The decision gave lhe Raidcnl (8·
6) a club-rcc:ord founh slraighi victory.
•
River Valley, ·which took a seven·
point lead into the second quuter,
saw lhe Marauders (9· 7) gel six
straight pciints in less lban 2 1/2 min,
utcs to cui the Raiders' lead lO 9-8.
But layups by juniors Holly Hash
and Sarah Ward in the next two min·
utcs helpl!d the Raiders lead by five
with 2:20 left in ihe frame.
Meigs, which shook otr ilS !-for·
7 showing from the field in the open·
ing period, took all bulthrec-&lt;~f i~ 13
fjeld-goal attempts in act two in the
paint or the fool circle. In ihe last
minute,junior guard Carissa Ash got
two jumpers in the foul circle 34 scc:onds apart to cut ihe Raiders' lead to.
the 17-15 margin that stood at hslf·
time.
. In the third quarter, the Raiders
got seven points from sophomore ·
forward Marie Denney that helped
push them to an 11-pointlead in the
last minute. Then Meigs center 'fnl.
· · cy Coffey sank a foul shot with 24.1
seconds left to trim that lead to the
tO-point mnrgin !hat stood at the end
of,a quarter cut short with the cQIICh·
es' permission after electricuy to the
scoreboards was temporarily disconnected.
·

.-lbe~who

. . od the liMI period ha.... Jnlde
aaly Nvett OUl of 29 field-IOAI
lllempll (tbe Rlidcn Jnlde 13 Olll ol
42 from the field aft« tine q-lcn). ouiKOiod their batt~ 10.3 ill
the fint four miaules 10 sluh the
hoell'lead to 33-28 ll the qllll'l«'l
midpoint
.
Meigs Slqed ·its 1110&amp;1 serious
threll 10 River Valley's lead when
senior guard Cheryl Jewell lot the
scc:ond-eft'ort basket to fall with
2:27left 10 cut the hosiS'Iead to 3534.
Thirteen seconds later, Denney
UICd Ward's outward-bound pass
and sank a ,three-point shot from
behind the foul circle to put the ·
Raiders ahead 38-34.
With I :071eft, Ward's founh foul
sent sophomore forward Thcia Davis ·
lO the line for the one-and-one.
Davis made both Shots, and Meigs
cut the lead-to 40-38.
River Valley saw jutiior guard
Jennifer Martin go to the line t"(ice
for
two-shot bonus in the last
minute. She missed three before
making her last .free throw of the
night with 24.9 seconds left to give
her club a 41-38 lead.
After that, the Mmuders threw
the ball in bounds, but Martin picked
. off the pass in what Raider head
cOICh David Moore described a&amp; "a
big turnover for Meigs."
Jn ihe last 14.8 seconds, Ash's
scc:ond foul sent Ward to the linefor
the two-shot bonus. Ward made both
shots, which helped the ~iders
withstand the last volley of the
Meigs rebellion -Jewell dropped in
-a layup with:nine seconds left- and

the

. Top25 hoops•••&lt;continued from Page 5&gt;

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54 seconds later. Roshown McLeod B.J. Flynn scored 16 JlOints, includ·
Jed the Blue Devils (15-5, 4-3) with ing the go-aheadthrec-pointer with
22 points and II rebounds. .
37 seconds left. for the Cardinals
·
No.8 Clnelnnad 100
(16-2).
. ,
Southern Cal 81
·No. 10 Arizona 88
. Darnell Burton and Ruben Pat·
·
· Oreaon 66
·
. terson had career highs.of 31 and 27
At Tucson, Ariz ..• Michael Dick·
points, respectively, for the Bearcats erson scored 18 of his 20 points in
( 14-3), who have won 12 of 13. Bur-· the second hslffor the Wildcats (12·
ton had sixthree-pointers and became 4, 5-2 Pac-10).
·
·the school's career leader with 262
· No. lllowa St. 64
threes.Jaha Wilson had 22 points for
No. 2l Texas fich 61
the Trojans (9·7), who losttbeir sec·
At Ames, Iowa, Kelvin Cato
'ond straight home game after win·
scored 18 points and blocked eight
ning their first seven.
shots for the Cyclones (13-3, 4-2 Big
No. 17 Iadlana 70 , . •
12). Cory Carr led the Red Raiders
_ Penn SL 55
( 13-4, S-2), who shot a seasoncJow
A.l, Guyton scomheven straight ' 34 ptrccilf. ·' ' .. 1. ·
•
points in a.26·2o run for the yisitiilg
No. 13 New Mexico 61
Hoosiers (17·4, 4-3 Big Ten), who .
TelUII·El Puo 49
.
held Penn State without a field goal
At Albuquerque, Charles Smtth
for more than II minutes in the first
scored 17 points as the Lobes (I 5-3.
half. Jarrett Stephens scored IS -;- 4-2 W!&gt;Cl extended their home win·
points for the Nittany Lions (8-8, I·
ning streak to 21 games.
6). .
·
No. 14 VjllaDova 84
No. l3 Texas 78
Boston Collqe 66
Mlssouri74
AI Newton, Mass., Alvin
Reggie Freeman scored 17 points Williams scored 23 points, including
and AI Coleman added 16 for the threethree-pointers i.n a 22·7 first·
Longhorns (11·5. 5-1 Big 12), who ha.lfrun, for the Wildcats (15-4. 6-3
forced 26 turnovers in beating Mis- Big East). Danya Abrams had 12
souri forthe firsttime in five games. points for the Eagles (13-4, 7-2),
·Corey Tate had a career-hish 22 who have lost II straight games to
points for the visiting Tigers (10.9, ranked opponents and fallen out of
2-5), who closed within 72· 70 only the TopN25o.· Stanford
81
15
to have Texas make six free throws
·over the final 27 scc:onds.
WUhlngton SL 61
No. 24 Manjuette 61
At Stanford, Calif., Tim Young
DePaul49
scored 19 points and Brevin Knight
Chris crawford scored 22 points • added I~ points and seven steals for
for the visiting Golden Eagles (13- . the ' Card~nal (13-3, 6-2 Pac-10).
3,. 4-1 Conference USA), who
No. 16 Mlchlpn 74
opened the second half with a 12-4
Mlchlpn SL 61
run for a·42·22 lead. Charles Gelatt . At East Lansing, Mich., Maurice
'bad 1s points for the Blue Demons Taylor scored 18 points for. Michigan
(3·14, J-5). who shot25 percent ( 1.8· (14-5) in a nOfiCOnference meeting
of· 71) from the field.
because of a Big Ten scheduling
Saturday~s atUon
quirk.
No. 1 Waite Fonst61
' Duquesne 78·
1\(orida St. 58
No. ZO Xavier, Ohio 70
At Winston-Salem, N.C., Tim
At •Cincinnati, Tom Pipkins tied
Duncan scored 22 points for the . his career high with 30 points,
Demon Deacons (IS-I. 7-1 ACC), . including 10 in thcJjnal four min·
who traile4 by 13 points in the first
utes, for the Dukes (6-·10, 2-4
Atlantic I0), who recQvered after
blowing a 14-point, scc:ond·halflead
.half. ·No.4 Utah 78, Rice 58
At Salt Lake City, Keith Van
to tlie Musketeers ( 13-3, 4-2).
Hom WWI 10-of- 15 from the field
No.ll Tulia 7l
and had 23 points for the Utes (13At Pr~~O::!S:.:ats had
. 2, 5-0 Western Athletic Conference).
13 poi nil oil just 3-of-t S shoOting to
91
•
No. ~.::ees:
lead the Golden Hurricane ( 15-4, SAt Minneapolis, Bobby Jackson
0 WAC).~.,
had 20 points and eight rebounds for
' · No. ~ Soutll Carolbla 86
·
Mlllllllppl63 '
2
7
the Golden Gophers (18· • ·I).
At Columbia. S.C., BJ McKie had
No. 9UCLA
LciulsvWe
·· l6 potnts.
· and .11 -rebounda. as the
71 74
·
· ·
uard
Gamecocks (13·5, 7-0 SEC) won
At LouoSVIIIc, Ky ..' reserve g
. ~ir elllhih.straight.

$ampras beatt~ Moya .
·to ·win Australian -Open
1.

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. . ,.iy PHIL BROWN

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Rebound Ace colitis~ simpm )von ·
lhe AustraliM Open by beating •
Spain's CarlOs Moya, a rising ll,lmlt
who honed his strokes on cia~. 6-2,
6-3, 6-3 in 111 87-minute ·nnat·Sun·
day.
In the semifmals, Sampru beat
..._ "Kina of Clay,'' 1bonlll Muster, ·
6-1, 7-6 (7-3), 6-3.
''Th heat IMu IUYI in !fleH condidOO.. 1.1'1!81!y smpriled myself a

MELBOURNE. Aultrllia (AP)
Pete Sampru fell u if he were
•JoUina throuJh clay - the wont
swfice for his pme. The heavy balls
sloWed his .ene. The heat alowod
hit foet.
But after he trouneod two OfiPO'
nen11 upeoted to tlvive in such eondiliolu. proiJIOC'• wm lookinl up
for hiiD 10 c11p11n lheone lllljor Iitle
that ~ eludeld him.- the Prencb ~c.,; he said. ·
'
.
()pell, 111e Cltlly OnJid Slll!llournllHe kept b!ith uft!ler preiiiii'C with ·
111111 pta)'lid 011 clay, . · . , • , hil . ~ .~ yolley, pmc . . .
On rubber}'. mec!ium·Jpeecl
, :· ·

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finish the holfte ..... ..... 'd.
Tile • 1 a: MoltofDeeiC&gt;)J'I
pme-hiJb 17 points- from 7for-14 field.pl lhoaeina. Tinefourdw of Jel'CII's team-hip 16
points Cline from 6-for-14 field..pl ·

sboolina. •
·
The Mnuden' fourth-quarter
challenae waupawned from the following:
··
• Meigs llillde eight out of 14
fiold-goaliW!mplS, inCI!ICfing six out
of sevan aUemp!S witl!in sill feet of
the basket. That cluster wu mainly
the product of layup~, thouch' Corfey's baby hook Shot with I:29 left
was but another salvo in lhe Marauden' rebellion.
·
·
• 1lle Marauders didn't miss at
the chlrity stripe in four attempts. '"
• The Raiders missed seven out of
10 r~eld-goal al!Cmpts.
• River Valley, "after missed 16
out of 22 prime-time foul shots.
R-nl! 110te1: Meigs defeated
.River Valley 40-29 in the ptcc:eding
reserve contest.
Brooke WiUiiUns led the Maraud·
ers with 19. poinlS. Dee Dee Swish·.
er led the Raiders with II.
The future: This week's agenda
has the.Raiders starting a three-stop

•
tpilllt Athens. 6)
continuin1 the IOIIf witli a'l'hndly
All. . 13(M.uact Mulfold4
IIIPOiatment witb l'oilll Pleml' ud ad!)
endina it Salurday with the Fairtud
Drqons. The Mnudm will hoA
Puint P1cuant Wed~y IIIII play
• Belpre
- 0 fJO!i:r 1111111
~tgs
·
2-13:-5-20:;:&gt;40 •
River :Valley
9-8-13•14oo44
Melp: Jewe116-Q.4/~16, ~ 4~8. Co~ey 2..0.3/4=7, Dav1s I·
0-212=4, Sm•th 2..Q.IW=4, Meadows
.0.0.112= L Totall: 15/lt.Q/...
11t113oo40
Total FG: IS-43 (34.9%)
Rellouadll: 21 (SmithS; Davis&amp;:
Jewell 4 each)
Alallb: 8
Steib: S
Thrnoven: 23 .
Fouls: 23
~·River V.Uey: Denney S-2·
. 112= 17, Hash 3..0.3112=9, Ward 2-11314=7, Cornelius 2..().(ll4=4, l\llw:tin
1-0-2/9=4, Mulford 1-0-0/(1=2,
.Cloak 0.0.112= 1. Totals: 14148211l-1111J3-=44 . .
Total FG: 16-S2 (30.8%)
Reboudl: 28 (Hash 12, Mulford

I'OIId tour

lolliJht

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-J Monday, Feb. •JO, at 6:1S·
p.m.I:Horthwest takes on ~eigs in
New!!bliver Arena. In the nightciiJl,
OalliJilllis will battiC Jac~_SOII at 8_
p.m . ./.i .
. .·,
.
_01\,'l'eb. 12, River Valley will take

Peo le should mind their own business
dl opped by unexpectedly .lf!d caught

Ann
Landers
' j'
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,,

her "Uncle Ed" in a chillin housecoat and hish heels. She -.s totally
freaked out, but I had the ~nee of
mind· to manufacture a ~ about
Uncle Ed practicing for 'Part iiJ a
play.
· We are both jn coullllliling now,
and I hive accepted
that he
will never chsngo. Our
life has
always been good and sti is. Is this
guy ~inky? Of course, but my counselor explained it this way: "He docsq 't drink, do drugs or ciJatl on you.
He's a good husband a/j· a great
faiher. His harmless devilltion isn't
worth breaking up a hoiJIC~. Over·
look it." ·
.~
·
! -took ihe counselor's ~ice and

.,

the!

Dew A.nn Llliden: 0.. of the
niost vabulble .upec15 ol your: column
is that it lets lrollbled people knllw

.

they aren't alone. I felt a knot in my
stomach when I ~ the letter from
·the woman whose fiance, a successful anorncy, confided that he loved to
¥o'e&amp;r wilmen 's underwear and frilly
gowns. ·
My hllsbandis also a 'transvestite,
on!y it was Ollf. young niece who

am now :. At Peace in Rochester,
·Minn.
Dear Rochester: Some people
might think "Uncle Ed" has a bit of
strudel in the noodle, but yoW' coun·
selor put the prQblem in the proper
perspective. I applaud you for your
ability to accep1 .it.
· · Dear -Ann i..antlcrs: My husband
and I are friendly with a couple who
;ue living together. I will call them
"George" and "Patsy." Patsy and
George were fooling around while
George was married to "Priscilla,"
which is the reason they divorced.
My husbaad recently. told me that
George bas been sleeping with
Priscilla again. .
.
Since we spend time with George

·

H
on .~ Ji~est-~eiJ!l winn~ ~J

6:151 and .•!1 'the noglitcap1 Ytnt~~-;
Cot.ilty ~oil b•de lhe · Oalllpol!sq
J.;~ )"Inner. Thc.two brae~!~! l
~ .w~h advance to the Chllllc"''~·
dostrtct.
.
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. NEW OFFICERS INSTALLED - J1mei .
Loclllry, cent1r b8clt, Wll• lnslllllld pre~ldlnt
of Ewlnga Chllptlt Son1 of thl Atnlt'ICIIn ftev.
olutlon In cerwnonlll cCIIIdUCIIcl Thurwdlly ·
night Ill the Melge"MuHUm by Mmln Whet·
etone, Ohio Soc'-ty S.A.R J)rllldent, left, .

..

Ull-.ct by .Tifi'Y Wllellkll•, Ohio Soclllty
. S.A.R. HCI•IIiry. Other olflctrll llltld front· Roy Holllr, viCe (ll'tlklent; Bill ...,.., ·tnllaurer; Myron Jonn, hlltorl8n; thl Rev. Jemee
Hlnns, ct..plaln, •nd Keith Alb..y, ucrellryreglatnlr.

-James Lochary installed president
·
·
otero,. of American heritage. The
Smithsonian has permitted sections .
the
· Star Spangled Banner

POMEROY - James Lochlry of
of Pomeroy,
. Ames.ville,
was installed
of Ewinss

I

.I

•SIGIIAJUit SOHS•, va engine, llecbonlc auto 0/0 tr•ne,
===~ .,...e tire, lut?ler ..Ung IUrtac.. IIICirtCiblne J18lnt

,

1

badly distorted. It was so grotesque.
1 could not d1splay 11 wnh my _other
cards. Will you please pnnl thos le~­
ter so other mothers-to-be won t
make the same mistake. •• Post Hoi~
iday Trauma Out East
Dear P.H.T.: Your friend was prob- .
ably so thrilled with the prospect of .
molherbood. that she co~ldn't resist
lhe temptation to let the world know.
My advice to all prospective mothers
is this: Please restrain yourself until
after the baby is born to send pict~res .
Embryos are not very photogemc.
Send ques~on5 to Ann Landera,
Syndirate, 5777 W. Cen·
tory Blvd., Sultl 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045
.

1Creaton

1997 FORD F~1SO PICKUP

Reg. cab, va •nglne, s 'fld malllllll OlD trent, 81r CO!Idlllonlng,

AM/PM elect~ ptllntacl ,.., III!IP !IUmJI8!'.
~SIP IEFOIE DISCOliNT $16,355
,,

.

$14

,

• Meigs Museum
.
Lochary accepted
posmon
: from John Kautr of Pt Plea5ant who
· has been ..president for the past five
years.
Installing the new officers was
Mirtin Whetstone, president of the
Ohio Society S.A.R. of New Carlisle.
In addition to . Lochary, others
installed were Roy Holter, vice pres··
ident; Keith Ashley, secretary-regis·
trar; William Beegle, Gallipolis, trea·
surer; Myron Jones, Oak Hill, historian; and the Rev. James Hanna, Oak
Hill, chaplain. Assisting·in the instal·
lation was Terry Whetstone, secretary .
of the Ohio Society S.A.R., also of
New Carlisle.
The chapter reviewed a letter
received from the U.S. Corps of
Engineers regarding lhe Corps' intentions to set up a hearing regarding a
permit for a loading dock at Portland
. where the Battle of Buffington Island
·. occurred.
Ashley reported on the current
' concern over actions by the Smith·
sonian Institution. though this insti·
\Ution is charged with po:eservation of

·

hapter lhe
ted '
·
c
nwas presen a ~B?W
on ihe archilccture of the buddmgs
from the .now defunct U.S. lock and
dam IQV nd Mei Goi!I!N' IW .Jocal

Yost named chairman

Charles yost was elected chairm_an
of the Meigs Soil and Water Conser·
vation District Board of Supervisors
at its recent 1997 reorganizational
meeting.'
Other officerS elected were Joe
Bolin, vice-chairman, and Marco
Jeffers, secretary-treasurer.
Regular ·monthly meetings were
· set for the fourth Thursday of each
month~~ g p.m. at the Meigs SWCD
office, 33101 Hiland Road, Ppmeroy.
Th
al
k
,
e lll!nu wor p1an .or 1997
.
w,~'lJiltro~!l!i with ~~~~!'lg
named the number one pnol'llY fo!·
. towed by flood control, water quailty and erosion control. .
The 1996 annual report was also

·:"'~i~~~~~ :C Jr.1.¥',·~~~~~·siifl6i!~~H'&lt;;.,
·;- ,:
1
0

•m:_
p. . .
•
·The next meetin wlil be "ebru
mossmg
may have dostntegrated. ,
..
I
'
ary
due to lack •of care. The_re 1s .~lso a . 27·
move by personnel to eliminate ref·
·erences to military history.-These'
problems follow last year's attempt.-------.,---.:._---"::=========
by the Smithsonian to refuse lO show
the WWII plane, the Enola Gay, in its
proper historical context.
'•·
Schools are being contaciW for
the annual participation in the 'D. 0.
High' Historical Oration COJ!test for
high school
students.
Any $ppho•
•
•
more, JUntor, or sen1or may pre~ent a
five to six minute speech on ·some
aspect of t!le American Rev~Jution
and show its relevance to today. Any
interested student may call 99 -7874
for more information. ·
. Dale Colburn, S.A.R. representative to ihe Chester Counhouse Committee, reJ!Dited on the completion of
Phase I of the repair. He announced
the need for donations for purchase
of land around the building to allow
!. - ;
parking. Work has begun on electric
line installation.
"'
The chapter noted the'i.62nd
anniversary celebration of Drennan
Goldsberry and wife of A!hens. The

'

MONDAY
. POMERoy:.MeigsLoeil_Board
. CHESTER •· Meigs County lkes · of Educatio.n regular me~ting Mon·
(formerly lzaac Walton League) will day, 7 p.m. at the central ollie~ on the
hold regular and organizational meet· second floor of the PomeroyJMunic·
. ings Monday, 7 p.m. at the clubhouse iplil Building.
·
~;'
on ·Scout Camp Road. Members will
· discuss any ch1111ges or ad&lt;;litions to . TUESDAY
. ""
· be made in new by-la)VS. .
RACINE •• RACO, TheS&lt;[fy, 6:30
p.m. Star Mill Park.
2.1,
POMEROY·· Meigs County Vet·
: erans' Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
ATHENS ·· Support grQup for
· Monday at the Veterans ~ervice those with fibtomyalgia, first meet·
; Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. . ing, 6:30 p.m. Grosvenor· Hall East
Room Ill, 0. U. campus. ' · .
.. , RUTI..AND •• Leading Creek
: Conservancy District, special meet·
MIDDLEPOKr' •· :Scottish Rite
• ing, Monday, 5 p.m.
. members meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. in
the basement of the Mi~dleport
, ATHENS .• Support group for Lodge. AIIS&lt;:ollish .Rite Masons are
· people with lupus, Monday, 6:30 to to attend.
·
. 8 p.m. Grosvenor Hall West Room

--Military news--

Marice ·m1 Hoffman celebrated
her third birthday Jan. 14 with a
• approved.
Barbie party at the home her
It was decided to purchase a new
Stoltzfus lime spreader to rent to local parents, David and Kathie Hoffman ·
land users.
of Middleport.
'
The multinora rose control proHelping her celebrate were her
gram was discussed and signup will sister, Lian, grandparents, Fred and
be held March I thro~gh March 20. Pauline Hoffman and Nick and
Mike Dub!, district conservation- Ruth Wright, Jon, Tami, Trevor and
ist, reported he has submitted a list of Jordan Buck, Beverly and Nathan
21 engineering prac.tiCes to the area Rothgeb, Mike and Vicki Hoffman,
engineerfor work during the coming Addie Buck, Nikki Roe, Kim and
year. '
David Duncan and Brenton
Attending "(ere supervisors• . Barnette.
Those sending giftS but unable to
l'bomas Theiss, ,Yosl, Bolin, Jeffe~s
·and John Rice, and employ~esJams attend were Todd Rothgeb,
Carnahan, QpalJ?yer, Blaor Wmdon .Manning Roe and Randy Wright.
and Mike Duhl.
,

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If you think our new bright green
sign is attention-grabbing, take a
look
at
this
offer~
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:Navy basic training at Recruit Train·
• Navy Seaman Recruit Terry A. ing Command, Great Lakes, Ill :,
He is a 1996 graduate !If Meigs
'Stobart son 'of Terry W. Stoblu1 of
:Pome.,;y, rcc:ently completed U.S. High School.

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Birthday observed

calendar

Tile CommUQity · Calendar Is · · Ill, Ohio University. Joan t.a1wso•n,
: published as a free service to non· social worker and ·counselor, to 'I"'•• I
_profit groups wlshill&amp; to announce on copins skiHs for dealing
• meeting and spedal events. The chronic disease,
calendar Is not dealped to pi'OIIIOie
. sales or fund ralsen. of any type.
RACINE •. Southern Local Board
lleml are printed-as space permits of Education regular meeting Mon·
. ~ caanot be au•ranteed to run a day,. 7:30 p.m. in the high sthool
speclfk: number of days.
. ., cafeteria.
·
.!
~'j', ·

•

MARLEE HOFFMAtl

f~

· ~community

'

1997 EXPLORER 4x4
2-DR SPORT ·

communications and advocacy organization working to create a positive
awareness of people with developmental disabilities. 1lle awards ate to
h·onor people and organizations
throughout Ohio who have succeeded in creating a greater understand·
ing of people with developmental dis·
abilities.
,
·
Steve Beha, executive director··of
the Meigs County Board ofMRIDD,
stated The-Daily Sentinel has con·
sistently beel! helpful in creating
positixe insights into the area of
developmental disabilicies and added
that he is pleased to nominate Hunter
for this statewide recognition .

tal Retardation and Developmental
·Disabilities has nominated Tom
Hunter, formerly of The Daily Sen. tinct; for an Ohio PUblic Images
. Award.
Hunter was nominated for a print
journalism ~t~edia award for his Oct.
13, 1996; feature article "Seeing
What's Out There" and accompany·
ing photographs.
The article highlighted the panic·
· ipation of Carleton &amp;:hoot studen~ in
eommunity outings, which provide
an opportunity for students to devel·
op and apply skills necessary for
everyday life.
Ohio Public Images is a statewide

..

"

prised at the number. of people who
believe it is their "duty" io tell
friends and family members what is
going on behind tbeir baeks. This
world would be a better place if more
people minded their own businesS.
As for divorced couples sleeping
together, I'm sure some do and some·
times they even remarry. Since each
· situation is diffe~nt , I'm not making
any blanket slatements.
Dear Ann Landers: Last Christ·
mas, I received many photo greeting
cards from ·friends and family. One
friend who was pregnan\ sent a pic-·
lure of the ultrasound of her unborn
baby.
Ann, the black and white original,
'when duplicated. turned red and was

The Meigs County Board of Men-

·•

with a 9-7 overall mark, while
Atdon begins on Feb. I0 at 6: IS (1-.IS) qainstSymrnes Valley (5-9). •
Southern (9-7) -earned the secoad p.m.~ Trimble (4-!1) meets That winner squares off against
seed. Defending lower-bracket Iron~. St. Joseph Cential (1-10). Southern, Feb. 12 at 6: IS p.m..
Eastern faces Portsmouth Bout ({).,
champion Green (7-8) ea(ned the The ~inner of lhat game meelS
third seed, while Eastern (5-10), the . Cdville, Feb. 13 at 6:15. The 8 It) at 8 p.m. Feb. 13. In the night· _.
t99S champion.-earned founh seed. p.m.'J810e Feb. 10 matches ~iller · cap on Feb. 12. Green faces South',
Gallia (6-8). ·
, i·
. .. . '
111
'

1997 LINCOLN TOWN CAR .

and Patsy, it has become extremely
diffic'!lt for me to pretend I don't.
know about it. This situation does not
seem to bother my 'husband. He said
a lot of di~orced couples sleep
togelher. Well, I don't agree with him,
3nd it is very disturbing to me.
I need to know ifl should tell Patsy what is going on, in the name of
friendship, or if I should keep quiet
and. continue to feet · guilty. Also, I
would like to know from your readers. if many divorced couples do
indeed sleep together. I am appalled
that my husband is not outraged
about this. I think it is totally immoral
and indecent What do you think? ••
No City, Just Florida .
Dear Florida: I am always sur-

Hunter nomin'ated for
public imag·es award

S· ·announced

Division IV girls' tourney pairln

Page

Monday, Jenu.y 27, 199?

Thundal.

Drawings were held Sunday for Meig., 9-7. Meigs is seeded fourth.
.the Division II girls Sec:t.ional tourIn the bottom •brackct; ' Vinto.n
narnent to .be held at the University County is seeded second'wJth ~ 11-S
ofRio Grande Feb. tO and t.2. · ! mark. Gallipolis is seed~ _tllinl wi)h
(n the top brae~ River Valley, g. an 8·7 _record. Jackson IS}n ~ ;l'ot· ;
6, was top-seeded. The Raiders are tom bracket wilh a 2-13 iilarlc:. •
paired with Northwest; 7-8, and

The Daily Sentinel

..

••

,, • 17 (ManiD 5, JWI4)
Twwcwa:.12
Ywk: 18

Drawing·s held for girls $ectional play

Two Meigs County teams earned
lop seeds in the Division IV girls'
Southeast Sectional Tournament to
bC held at Alexander High School
from Feb. 10 thru Feb. 17.
Crooksville, the upper bracket
defending champioll earned tOp seed

rZ7,1117: ·1
•

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•

'

.\olwll&lt;, Ohio • (614) 592-4911
'

�IIDildlliJ,........, ~. 1117

PomeiOt • Mld:dl1port, Ohio

•

.

.

fitt says new mov1e, 'Devils Own,' is a·disaster
•

NEW YORK (AP) - Brad Pitt
"This scripc that I had loved wu JOUen a buzz cut," he says in the
sone.
I peu people just had differ- Mmch issue of Spin masiZine.
lllllhillg good 10 say about lhe
w film " Devil's Own," eveD ent visions and you can 'tupe with
A disitally enhanced. 20th
llloup be's the lilt. ·
thai. But then I wanted out and the anniversary edition of the "Star
; The movie is a dillllller, Pin says studio head said, 'All right, we'II let Wars" is openins in theaieJ:s on Friin the Feb. 3 issue of Newsweek. He you out. But it'll be $63 million for day. More "Star Wars" movies, "presAid he fiaished filmina only because starters."'
quels" to the original trilogy, arc
aiColwnbia Pictures executive ttnu·
expected to open in 1999.
NEW YORK (AP) -Luke Skyefled to sue him if he quit
• " It was lhe most inesponsible bit walker may have bee'n a box office
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Calling
· ot filmmaking - if you can even call superstar and an intergalactic hero, all bald men and fresh-faced teens
it that - that I've ever seen. I could- but his hair ... well, that was les$than
n't believe it" Pin said. The soon-to- stellar.
So says Mark Hamill who played
be-released thriller stars Pin as. an
IRA gun runner who befriends an the towheaded Jedi warrior in "Star
Irish-American New York cop played Wars, " "The Empire Slrikes Back"
NEW YORK (AP)- Super Bowl
and "Return of the Jedi."
by Hamson Ford.
advertisers
came up with some nov"I always wanted Luke's hair to
The original scrip! was tossed and
el
plot
twists
to try to make their comthe rev11111ped version was a mess, change. When he became a Jedi he mcrcials the most memorable 'on
should have lost'the floppy look and
Pin said.
t~levision's highest-priced program.
But more often than not, they
resorted to celebrities to make their
message stand out during' Sunday's
Haynes
has
a
bachelor's
degree
in
Super
Bowl XXXI as Green Bay
POISNT PLEASANT, W. Va. ·
Keith M. Darling, general manager of education from Ohio University and
AEP River Transportation Division,
lC(:endy announced the promotion of
DonCorbinjoinedAEPin J9nas
two employees. Paul A. "Sonny"
·Haynes, operations . supervisor, has a dispatcher in the operations dcpanLO$ ANGELES (AP) - Early
lieen promoted to the position of riv- ment. He became a senior dispatch- Super Bowl weekend estimates in the
~ traffac manager. Donald L. Corbin,
er in .l986 and has been performing box office derby showed ·:Jerry
senior dispatcher, was promoted to management and business suppon Maguire," "Beverly Hills Ninja"
functions since 1991.
and"ln Love and War" in a three'usiness systems supervisor. ,
; Sonny Haynes joined O.F. ShearCorbin has bachelor's dcsrees in · way tie for first place.
.
qr &amp; Sons as a deckhand: in 1973. education and mathem'atics from
"It's a very tight weekend," said
When AEP .bought the assets of the Miami University, and a master's Ed Russell, executive vice president
$hearer company later that year, degree in business administnition of publicity for Columbia triStar·
~aynes remained with !he division
from Ohio University. In 1996 he Motion Picture Cos.
and was promoied to dispatcher. In completed the AEP Managemei11
The three films were projected to
i976 he was named crew coordina- Development Prosram at The Ohio bring in $S.9 million each, although
tor and became operations superVisor State University.
Sunday's televised National Football

with hair you. ,

Kevin Costner wants

" Tbeni will be a lillie extta com-

tic thriller.
Filmina is set to begin in a few
weeks and location casting director
Sally Jackson says about I ,O!J() extras
arc needed. Costner is looking· fOr'
bald men, teen-agers and people in
their early 20s who can ride horses, '

...........,. bu.uum bY ro-aw'lbny·

PI'"...,. .... thole wbo will llla\le lloblnl, n. ~York Poet IIIII dw

eo.tner is ca&amp;ing exau for his their bcedl," MI. Jacklon said.

new film " The Postman," a futuris-

SlOW
IIIIOYIL

l'ilmllll ia expec:IOd to Jut about
two 10 ...,. -a, she aaid.

o.ily Newalllicl Sllllllay. The

-Drlvci:Mya
..,. ktng Lola

~

NjKiilldly Ia • , ;., • lictout •Ill
die lbow'a -erdw.ludiCIRU, Julie
Andiews, ncuma from Vll:alion.

" Victor1VIctoria"

-etc.
Cell Anytime

spokesllllll

NEw :\'QRK (AP) - There are Peter Cronlllty denied lhe itDry, ..y.
n:pllltf ofiouble backstage at Broad- Ina then wu ao trouble on the ~~et
way 's "VictorNICIOria. "
·, Mise:• by Uza Minnelli led to i

94t-3127
591·1H7

·andtbalilob.m-lrUiy ill wilh lbc
flu. .
·· '

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

AEP promotes Haynes, Corbin

&lt;ms~ip.

Holiday Inn may have had the
most surprising commercial of·the
night: A woman who draws admirins
looks as she strides into a class
reunion is recosnized as having been
male when she went to school.
,

~::.~~!~~~~t~~~::.age- . Three~w..a_
y t.~~;,··, ie ·in

. 1.
.
" It's .wzinathe chanp you &lt;:an
make for a few thousand dollars." the
niJTlltor says after licking off what it
cost for a new nose, lips and cheat.
The hotal.~hain is promoling ita own
$1 billiotrenovation prosram. ·
The rcj§aJ food taster made a surprising Cbmeback in an ad for ·thc
National Pqrk Producers Council. He
·
'

·

·fell over beckwarda after he tasted
I "the Qther white meat" for the kina
' and his cohorts. But after the 1'00111
clears, he bounces back reedy to
savor the full meal himself.
Celebrities were seldom more
, than a commercial mea...eaway on
·a nisht when spon'sors paid a record
$40,000 per second for ad time. .
'

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COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTW. ·.
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Sunday Calls)

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SUPI!RIOR RATING - 'fh. 'lllalga loll and
Wltlr COII.IIrvllkwl Dlltrlct I'ICihid a eupW".or HrYioe ull'd fllln~ at 1M·ru1nt
mullng or the Ohio Jeclllalltin of ,Soli and

'

814

W ... Con11rualkwl · Dlltrloli. 1111111 IWCD
VIol oltalnnan Joe Bolin,
NGdtld the ·

Zt ca.y 111ut.

.,.,_1

$3,66S, $733 above "Ninja'' and
1. "Jerry Masuire," $S.9 million. ;
.sm oVIlt' "Maauirc! '·
'I , "In Love and .War," $5.9 mil- j
Also openin&amp; in the ,top 10 were lion.
·
"FierceCrealurea," a reunion of the
1. "Beverly Hill• Nir\ia," $.5.9
cast fron\."A Fish Called Wanda" in .million:
a nonseqool comedy ibout a zoo, and ., 4. "Metro," ·$S.6 million.
"Zeus &amp;nil Roxanne," an animal pal
.5, "E~ita;" $S.5 million.
'
story alloul a.®g and ll dolphin.
6. "SCream,'' $4.4 million.
··
, 1J!e ,top , IO films and' tlieir'esti· ..
7. ."The RPJic," $4. 1~ million. · .
mared .ro.ues for Friday throush ·
8. "Fien:e:Creatures "$4 million.
Sllnday"{linal figures were due out
·9 .. ''Michael;" s3.7 :nillion.
·
Monday): '
'
·
·10. "Zeus and Roxanne," $2.9 :
'"'
mi)lioil.
·

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'Gal'lgiS • RtpiiCtmlnt Wlndowl

t

01.

IPIOLSTIIY

.weekerl'd b.ox-office.. .·derby

(,ague championship made it difficu11 to project audience sizes.
.' 'Jerry Maauirc" stars Tom Cruise.
asasportsasent; "lnl,.oveandWar," ·
the story of a young Ernest. Hemingwa:(s love affair with a nurse, stars
Silhdra llull&lt;;&gt;ck and Chris O'Donnell;
"B~verly Hills NinJa'' is a Ctuis Far. ley,.endup ofmarllal arts mov1es; ·
In 1ts first weekend of w1de
rel'ease, "In Love and War" had the
best per-screen average of the lrio at
·

New Homes • VlnfiSidlng Nlw

,~

Surprise, celebrities fiii .Supei·eowl comme.f.cials
dclcntcd New England, 35-21, for tlic
· National· Football League cham pi-

BISSEll

•••ZZ02

•••d fnlm f1d11allon Pm .

ROIERT IISSELl

co11mucno11

M·eigs svyco earns superior . rating

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NOTICE OF SALE

Seated blda will be
•-lvect by the Board of
Education of tile Southern
.Loaat · SchOOl Dtatrtct of
Aaalna, Ohio, 11 the
~'I ollloe until 1:00
p.m. on Frklly, February 7, .
11t7, and ill !hal time
opanect by thtl. T-urer of

..

Potatoes

Sugar

· 10 LB.
Umlt 2 Please

PubtlcWIICame

.

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULABON
D71AYAN PLACE

.

MIDDLEPORT
11112-2772

'

..... Wtlols

Products
(2) 12 pk
s·
99
12'·oz cans

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sind
985 4~22
Cheater, Ohio

Naw Construction l

•.

RemocleUng
Kitchen Ceblneta
•

VInyl Siding - Roofl
DeckJ' • 011'1011

.

Free ElffmafU

Cat Food.

$

·',

,......

LIMit 10
•.

5.5 oz..

14.5

1/l... tooo.

Sweet Sue

d.
"

ANNOUNCU.H N TS

-; Chicken:·Broth
..
$ '09

PUbil!l Nalloe

..

005
Ptrlonlll
Do Yll&lt;i HO¥e Hord Cholcoalll

'· PUILIC ,.OTICI

Tllk With ..,...... -IR 1-100287•1111 E11. IIIII ta.ll Per
Min. Mlo11 Bo 11 Yro. Sttv·U 1111Uill:lll

loll

,. '

.UmJIIPiaiN .

....
298 SECO.
. ND SifREET.
?. POMEROY.' OH'
IO .
,.
~

.. ~ I

.

.

.

.n

f:OR ATQTAl OF
$7.00 PER pAy.

..

.

:~CE8 EFFECT1VE JANUARY . . ~~ 9N.LY,

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE

• i· '

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~

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.•

II'

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.••·.

.----·........··
R.l. HOLLON

614-742-3411

31bag ·

Umlt 2,,Please

Under,_.......-,

Sun11t He111e
Ctllfruetlen

"

·9 Liv.es .

·Onions

RC Cola

11i

$' 79

Limit 2
Please

.......
'.

---~-

Doors Open 4:30
Gatlle starte 11:411
l'ay out Ia -.ling to
number of~.

"

. •'1"

·' .

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t

~'I·
.,

!1
aalciBoard far ... following
!)
...,. that the a-d wlahM
to Mil: 1 1111 "-nattonal ...._-~--.....:·=-=-=""~
,·
. !"~
"'li

•• j

· · ~·

Prwlclent

Public Notice

1J

Domino

lflll'old H.- Bfat:h1t11n '

(1) 27, 31, (2) :u to

II./

US ##1 Russet

..
.

.

1.

$ 79

''••

The Tupper• Ptalnaa:oo a.m.-:1:30 p.m. ·
Cheeter Water . Olatrlct
reeama tile right to waive =1111111 Wlltltws
any lnlormalttlea or .
~·
lrNgulwltM .. tile Bidding.
:
•StnDoan&amp;
By arcler of tile TIIPPIN
Plalna-·c heater w... ~ Wlt••ws

Tony's .Italian ,~ ·
·•

BINGO
RACINf, OHIO
AMERICAN
lEGIOtl
..
EVERY SUNDAY

"

.,,

.'•

POST602

•'

I

Lb.

nn

•

Carnation·Evaporated

Potato. Chi s . l

:

~1~-~P~om~•~roy~~~~----------~M~•=•;~~·~wv~·~
":· ~;

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

Mr. Bee ·

·

W,e will wortc within your budget, ·
Ph. n~9173
.
FAX 773-Rit ..

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

.,

~

;:
...

"No Job Too Lsrge or Too Small~

·,

l'.

"·

l

�•

•

10. The Dilly 8entiMI

...

1187

•

1

- --~·

PHILLIP
ALDBR

r•

'

11-17·17
•liKit~ ·

•

• II t
tAQJ
Fr,qr,1 , ,; 1
~. I I v! 'T'

Of3

a.. gte mix puppin· aome 4
.,_., and some 3 months. 814·

,

(

11
~

Call now ro schedule your Tup1J4rware Par ty. Earn free ~ro·
ducts. Stars &amp; Sulpas. 1-800"81·1782 s.c 2779.

-ilct

Mutt Hll 5 diaplay model

·

.

blawlde, 3br, ~ bath, S1 ,8•t
down, $27"11'10, lree delivery l

Lost and Found

7136,

-· ~

,

•

....

·

2bdrm. aplt., total ilacuie, ap~
pllances furnished, laundry room
faciUtiet, cloM tO IChool ln toWn.
Verr nice 1D&amp;S 1~x70 with 2 .Appllcations available at: VIllaGe
baths. large Island klrchen wtrh GrMn Apls .. 1-49 or call 614·992·
patio - · Call 01&lt;-385-U821 Ilk 3711 . EOH.

Mt·up. Only ,at Oakwood Homes,
. Ni110 Wll304·755-6885.

Found: Female Brown -&amp; White
Brin&amp;ny Spaniel, .Vicinity : Rt 775,

81 ..._11476.

Still l011 : 2 Female Beagltl,
McClintic area; 1-11 -97 Please

YIH1RipleyHomot

Yard 5ale

INT

Advance.

DEADLI~E :

2:00p.m.

Monday editton - 10:00 a.m. Sat·

urdlr.

Pomeroy,

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

Advanca. Deadline: 1:·oopm the
day before the ad is ro run, Sun·
day &amp; Monday edilion- 1:Ocipm

Friday.

.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Lerftle.,·s Auction Service, Leslie

Lemley, Auc:I!Oneer. Household ,
Eatate, Farm &amp;Ilea. Call 6U·4.S·
82!'11, 614-388-Q-443.
Rick Pearson Auc~on Compan.,,
full lime auct1oneer, complete
auction
service.
Licensed
He,Ohio &amp; Wett Virginia, 304·

773-5785 Or 304-773-5«7.

Wanted lo Buy

90

Ab1olu1• Top Dollar : All U.S. Silver And· Gpld Coirls, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

Rims
, Pre~ 1&amp;3o
Sl ,

u.s. currency.

', Etc. Acqulsi~il Jewelry

· M.T. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Allenle, GaKipoli' 81 ....48-2842.
Clean Lale . Model Cart Or

Tr11Ckt. 1~110 Models Or Newer,
Smllh Buick Pontiac. 1UOO Ea11- .
1m
Gllllpolil.
J I D's AulD Parts. Buylna sal·
vaue Yltlitleo. Selling 1)8r11. 304· .

""""e.

773:~.

Tap dollar· antiques,

glau,

f~o~miture,

china, clocka, gold, silver,

coins, ·wak:hes. estalB&amp;, aid siOne
jars, old blue &amp; while dishes, ol~
wood bO les, milk bonles, Meigs
County AdVerlitement, Osby

Martin, ' "·1192·7...1.
Wanted To Buy: A.n1ique's · Fur-

nilure,6•4·446·7612.
Wanted To Buy; Driving Horses
Standard Brndl Prtferred. Dan
Herlh~rgar, •788 Patriot Road,

Corner pt 141 I · Panlot Road, In
Cadmuo,

MANAoEMENTTAAINEE
GREAT CAREER oppORTUNI:

Apprcwea Ta Finance, The·fi(lt
SB.OOOTaMoiL ;I00-738-72U5.

UU Rental Kino Continues To
Grow And Wan11 Qualified, Ambl·

AM,_...._ ~tidliif In

the,....... Flllllr t-bllirVAct

Going bUiiness far Mil·. Second

Retail

of 1111 whk:h malcll•ltlgll

5851.

!1111

I'IIWI""* 11 . _ . . ,

Experience. Excellent 9enelitl

And Bonua Po1tnt1at Moil 1Fox
Rosumo To: Rents! King. PO Box
703, Massillon, OH 44848. ATTN:
Human RHources. FalC: 330·8333764.
'

, ,.,..pat

'

,.

..... Neftll' . . .
. "...._ ~NT
ADpau

Needed 10 Lad lea To Sell Avon,
Coil614-4~-3358.

llbllelnlll.....,. or
origin, or
make
PiOioiiiiCt,
• ~
••
•otcwa•nillltioii.•

2.81 Acres on Rt 2 in Ganiool~
Feny. ~571H150.

Which l a i n - Ollhe
. law. 0..,...,. .. heNby
lions in your area, need driver a
h1f01nlicltl'tat all~•*•
for flat bed division, must have
actv.'tiud In U. nea 1 1
Class A-COL license &amp; 1 year
.,. aYIIIIble 611 an eqUal
over the road B~!P•rtance . Top
~ bMII. '
sranlng pay, direet deposit, sat- ~~~~~~~1111!!!!!!!!!!!~
ell lie communications , 401 K
,company, psld ranremenl, BCIBS
medical, dental &amp; vtalon, Rydlir
program ' &amp; motel Call1 ·800·220·
2421 foranappoirnmont
_ua~ for "•le

310 nvnRnt

ENOINEER$
LOCAL 18 APPRENTICESHIP
IN c-UCTION'
~ '"
Men And Wqmen, ~gel t&amp; And .
ova
.
r, Learn To Opora1e And Ropelr Earlh Moving Machlnu And
Cra'nea. Appllcalton Oatea:· Ft~
ttruary 10, 11. 12 And Febtuar.,
20,.21, &amp; 22, -11187. Time : 8:00

:t:oo

A.M. To

P.M. Apptica1ion

Fee : S10.0b Calh Contact Oh10

Operating Enginetrl Triining
Cen.ar 814-385-2587 E.O.E.
Sates clerk tor local retail atore.
We will tra in the right peraon.
Send resume C/o The Daily Senti-

nel, f'O. Box 728-39, 1, 1 Court

·saeer. Ponwoy. OH 45769.

SALES. Career Oppof.tunity As A
local Representarive For One Of
The Nation's Largest Insurance
Companies. No Prwioue Experi·
ence Nece.saary, Complete Training Program. Earn While You-

..,.

•~
3 llodroom, 1 Balh, Klll:hen ...,.~

pliance1, Attractive ln18rlor. Full
Unlini~hed Ba1eman1. 1 Car Ga-

sale with uoraga building. Will
sell on land con1ract, 114·892·
S858.

320 Mobile Hamel
12xSO Trailer 2 Bedroai'na 1'000
i982 1•1110 ~able

·

Honil On 1.1

Acres. Porches, $15,1100, 513·

304 -428·82,68 Equal Opportunil"

cessorias lnc:luaed, musl be

Kltc~en Set. Workshop, Pla1·
house, possible Ani Olher llnle
Tyke T,l. PIHse Cell 814·245·
5e87.

movod814 .... 1-1710

1gg2 Ford 555·C 414 Bockh~l
3000 Houra Clean, Undor WI,..
1,11111', 127,000 Firm. Ron.EVIM

.

~BAUNEALANO
11 ...77&amp;-ttn

l"'

MEIGS CO.:
Than Lot Renl
f, 'Your Own In e Yral Ftve .Acrtl
te,SOO · 11,000· Qown + $103.:75
A Month.
·

1114 Silvorido Ex1ended C..plckup, 4X~; •ulOmtliC, lo•~·
lloo -under
- trarreruy,
lr\d ..~ tow
11111
114·8 •
8512. '
· ..

OALLIA CO.:· Halrway'To Hunl·
ingtOn, Frilf'ldly Rldgt •• I + kr·
"$7,500. ONLY S1,000 Down &amp;
$107.92 Mo. For 1 Yra. Alao In
Same Area, Ex-Large Doub11111idt
On 5 Acros $47,500 . SS.ODD
Down &amp; Wt Finact Balance.
Toono Run Ref •• Throe, 10 Aero
Parctts. 110,000 + Up. c - ..
Rd., Vory Nice 11 At.rea S1t,•ao.

'

410 Houses 'tor Rent
2 Bedroom In Eureka 814-256·

8&gt;108.

.

3 Bodro0n1 houM klr rtfl1 on Hl·

==

amoad, leavln&amp; Zla aeediag a S·S

1988 Volk-IWirOf't\ Ext4!118nt CO"·
CIUIOn 81 ,000 rtu/•1 S1 .SIS;
Escort -3g5 , , 1g91 · z~•; Cooj.• .

.,gee

Moiirs 81~.-co103

•

1G.ia' ~~o..,.a al·Rod SiH1""''· zi·1·~~~~~;;~;H

.IT I'

Y Z X,

'
TWin ~ivers .Tower. 'no;w .accepttng
apphcanons for lbr. HUO subsid-

T..,ing bed 1o&lt; sale, $1500, 814912·1039.

7473.

izect.ap1. lo• elderly and handi ·

.3t~ Wezoal 3 Bedt"ooms, Pbmer!
oy Area, 1350/Mo., Deposit Re quwud•.513-574-2530.
'

capped. EOH 304-675-6679.

lis City School 01slric1. 814-', 46-

TWO bedroom aparlment, 131t But·

550

' '

....
lAMS

I·

_Stnly the~- -~

play. At trlek lbne, be celled

'

---ODe

·f
.

Rtc:ondltioneci

.

graton, eo D•y·

. no pels; two bedroom
, 1275 per monlh, de-

.

no p111. Call 8U·
thru Friday,

Washers, Dryers. Ranees. Rttrl~

Guai'anteel

French City Ma111g, '814' 448·
7795.
.

Tues-Sat9-6, SUn 11·5.

referencea, e .t 4 · DtD-2•. . after

Freezer. WattJer, Dryer, VCR.
Relrlgaratora, MICrowave, 11•·

Bflm.

•

.

,._.no inside-pars.
roquirad, 614·1192-30111).

. ond

'
depos~

..

.

420 llloblle Holrles,
·

,. '· .for f:lent

·

.

.

.

.

•

1

•

GIOWth • Dress'•.Pansy ·Beggar PROGRESS
· · The mom finished c:leening the carpet. She told her
· husband that chewing gum was movement withoul
PROGRESS
·
.
·

11195 Dodge N- 4 Ooor, Aula,
AC, CruiM 30,1500 Milot ~~lno
t7.350 oeo &amp;1 ... 258-6340, s1•·
25e-8407.
!i

2 Ford TiuCk F,.mis. ·~a Lona IS
.Short, Cab &amp; Body Palls For
Same Private ,OWner, 114·!118·
ti81L-MeauueAnylirno.
BO Modle Ford, 308 Cyl . S11nderd. t5 Murcury VB. Au1o: Can
anyame anor 800 P.M. (B14~..,._

JANUARY27I

!'MONDAY

SERV ICES
~·

8,0

. Home

lmprov~ts

t:

1•
•:

1~;~~~r=~~:~

Is Outs ICC!

P1ul lri ordti
Dayl 614-9V2·

ChrialfsPe~
27,1 N. Second Avenu.

Mlddi0p0r1, Oh

.

614-992-4514
.

what to do to llllke the relalionll1ip - required today. Do not mike binding
CDI!IAI•U Olllly In QrW piiiCIIIonpr
·'
Mill $a.75 10 1ota10111naker. ll{o . . '
'
·p1p1r, P.O. Box 1751, Murr1y~ HUI ~~ lhould.
·,
YIIIIGO
!AMI·
Q.l4ipt;
D)
ConciHiolia
Sllllon, Nlw YOlk, Pi'f 10151.
·
I
'
i
fi.CU
(M.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
A
...
lilian wl be rtpe fOr ........... your .......
BERNICE - . lfnb.Uiid 1wtltl ft,IJF%e ouadoa• ~be
HNiay. If you
· · ~111111111111
ch~ to favor you tcdy. Sollllll&gt;'e ·OI!Uid - ' !IIOIIIY. "' you, give •
0....111811 Yll!l wl118 ......... 10 lOa.
.\
AIIID ........
I., 8GM~·10 ..-,. (llpl. ;tl Oai. D) YaU w11 you cannot .do .on your own c~~ be IXCIIient manlgerlol Okilll IOdly ,.10
IChie~ll! today. II you IIHic altilltl- ·lland yout ground ,llller making a dee!·
., · I1J)m a third pany. You havw WOIIIIC! will !lklft. Do not ba:k off Off bl1ck down wyou
.... you .,. tight.
.
lhll pnan'*-· .
TAUIIIUI (Aptll »lily 101 Mike 1n ICOitPIO (Oet. 14-Nov. 21) Unusual
I
llfoiiiO go liboYW and beyOnd~ ·* f/1 d•&lt;CI ,. - • may occw todtly. You may
but you'l to
·~
dUly II - ' t IOdly. You w11 be r1puadld need to help
lniiM 1hll pnan foel I I f ... II helping
~
Jl1n. 28,19117
&amp;11hll-lat-'tWIIIdas\l.
•
~ lmbillana wll ~be,.._ GilliN Cllllr 11-.1- 101 HIPI'f lUI· you.
lliii1TARIUI (New. II 010 11) Sornl~ln.. . ,... . . .
PI!Mt COUld 118 In far you todtly. "
thin.g
oignllcent COUld .....n H you gat
Olialy 11111 with deleel , you might you .,. - - . - -.gil 10 a-1 an lrMIIIiogather today wlll1 • ,.,_, wllo ,..
. . . , apposlunlly and it
.
liOn. 10 • plloe ..... you - doUI• . . . , _ A1C! ................
Ill More . . . . . ~ wraur Mt and go.
AOU.-IIIUI (Jan.
1111- "Ill • t11A1 11111111 ~ 118 CANCIP ·(JUM 11-Julr II) lloigllo•10 gDDd oonMadole now.
....... I'WQU ;I'Iilpe 10
t;MiiJ whit · ..... IN
eiiOuld pooiMo CAF!UCOIUI (OM. ...... 1i) /lA 11111
,oil dllhtllllil'. Oo natii811R11d 10 111111 flnllliOIIII r... ~ro u : Cohollvely, rou • • ,all . . In I .01 ... ,1111 IIlLI
I ,6alc!ta'lid tilll. Trrtnllil,_. ,_ .. _,.
JLJ' hiiWI.,.. .. . . you rHI~ 11 '1!111'11• Allftlln alert,

Country Furniture. 304-175-t820.
Rt 2 N, Smiles. Pt PMsant. WV.

Two bedroom hOne GJ1 lincoln

Hill, 1250/mo..ptul doposl1alld

I

· If we think we know our
friends, you'll find vacationing
,.-~~~:--..,~--. with them will teach • • • • •
r.

, 5 weeks,• old,

Hotlsehold
GoOds
Appliance• :

..

-ri:-V...;;Orl;;....r,.E·....;Nr-1'
..,'
~ 1 , . ·.1 -"N

111, ........ 4

quired. no pets: thriloe bedroom in

Pomeroy, S300 per monlh, depas-

I'· I I'

.

1

MERCHANDISE

Three bedroom ··n Middlepoft,

ntce. S400 l)et' monrn, depalil re-

R&amp; ~ 0

SCIAM UTS ANSWERS

A Groom Shop •Pet GrOoming.
Featuring Hydro Barh . Dan
Sheete. 373 Georgee Creek Rd.

'

Z,loiHIIlPII

:::~-:-~~~~~-:-,.

•

I

.tTl'

II'LI'IPP.

S AV t L E

3243

5:30.

ZI

Building

814, «8.0231 .

Pomeroy - two ba'droom, HUO,
Slave/ relrit;er.ateir, no pets, st·
curiry depostt, 814·092-1886 shit

c, y y.

EIZN.IIIINI'

::.=;~::::.-,,.....,...,..,----

Pets tor sa~e

-. . ._

Ill
Ill

GWIIAZIIG,

te(nut , Pomero~. very clean.

450

XI'PI',

i PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There. II music i~ the air." -'- Edward Elgar.
· "'!1118111!!1ic _,, do. There'&amp; .,at enough sarcasm in H." - Sam Goldwyn.

S2751mo. plus utilities, HUD ap·
P'OVod, 614-687-8205 . .

Houle To Snare Or Rent, 814·
441.0150.

"" JHIIII
KL:Y

ZillA

0;.::

3 Bedrooma In Kanauga Gallipo·

- . . . _____T--E-1'
QM

"Nic8 two, bedroom apartment in :S;:Ido"-:ll';;:y::S;;;ide~R:-of7'r:-iger-a-:10.,.
i ::Br-own-,
"""'"'"'·no pers, 814·1192·~. , : HoavY Duty G. E. Wisher, Heevr
One bedroom apartment fur· .
Kenmore Dryer. 814·371nished, extra nlee &amp; clean. No 2
AFTEfll P.M. . ·
pets Phono394·875-131l6.
SJORAGE TAN~S 3,poo Gallon
one bedroom apartment tn Pl . . Upright, Ro.n Ewins EnterpriHs,

JsiGkson,"Ohio. HI00·53l-j1528.

CEt EBRII YCIPHER

•

IIJ ... C
--- z::r --.,____ _

Suddealy Zil &amp;potted the perfect
ror dums
mt• dilmoDd CJUMD. UWeot took this
trick, Zla bad those nine tricks. Yet
when West duelled, Zla played four
rouncb of sp1dea, getting home via
four spades, one be1rt, three dla·
dub.
Do you think someone will ever
Wille a c:Gmpuler JI'OIIrUI lbet Cllllld
IIDd l,hla aputBac liDe?
.

' " '•

Ooore, Englnt &amp; Tranamiuion.
151(14,200 513-574-2531 .•

Pieasanl. e14 .gge. 5658.

\l&amp;n He4gi'IIS In Ntw Haven. 304~

882·2187.

EldOIIy Person Has 3 Bedroom

!

t

'smE qSOL'

2!'10-1238.
GOOD- USED APPliANCES

waahers, drtera, (tlrlgeraaota,

ranges. SkiOII Apj&gt;Uancea, 78.
Vine 51rH1, ,Cali'614·446·7388.
1·800-4UU•3411.

Pall Plut, •liver 'ilrldgt PiaU.
• .

8 -k· old, rn111ed. I'
-

(molhll Is

....

.

--,au.,....

i.ais. aullkltdols.304-t7wa .

11....14'770.

at,_.

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

ell-•

1011-·.

fRill labrador .,.., puppies,
7wlte old: moth~&lt; it R"lolllret
T

,.

I. Here, Weal wauld dudl the third ell·

ROYAL ~ILLY Wi1h Sibor~o~. 1811 Beran• OT white wired
''""· high miles •3.opo. 3o• ~
Nict, 2 bedroom apartment in Pt. OinHng SO'Ciplulea, 1~. Call 875--4825 or 304·t75-5327 •her
114
1
1
4pm.
·+ee..a308, -8QO..f. .o088·
PleaSant. Canstrucrton wa'rkers
County, Scipio TaWn1hip. SR lt2 · wek:ame ~4.75-2174.
Sitllllte,
Spe•ti.era,
Tre"dmll~
~~~off SR 1"~~
1990 Grand Prill LE , V·l IU·
~,. """........_·
~ llna~.Hvo
....... ,..
.
_
Electronic Equl)ment l T.'i'.'s
500 per acre. Call for good
N•ce ,rudia apanmenr, eab!e &amp; Computer Monitor, Mlac. Oltlera .1omauc, iOI:dtd,' power ~roof,
ftllp.l1•583-854$.
: water free, you pay eleclrtc &amp; To Be Looked At 080 tl14~448· ~ strutl, vety cte•n. :-·14·742·
ron~ $185/mo, $185 deposit Call : G70t Aok For Allen. Lea.. Met· 2979. 6 14·992·3394.
RENTALS
304-875-2815 or leave messigo.
~-

SERVICES

(,

,.~~u~
~ •u.,Y.folf..DOW~.•

llkt new. t1g.ooo. 30..

1985 otdo ae Regency PW, POL,
~90K At1u.al Miles. 814,-245-

·

,1PLOYMENT

'~'

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oBI!lllllon dollan!. lt ~ thu)IOIIII'III ,tf*m' ., . . ......,
lhdi ofollter~·
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ae-a~,..n
Zil Ms•=a ad bet
be coUld beat...,. ........ It ........
'ftlt'a the bil dell Ia tlllt, ~ JOU
~Ala~? Well, lar the bet lllllld tile
PI+~.. _.. ach bad to pat ap oae
mllllo11 po1111cb lalerllna&gt; - wlaaer
l1ke 111. Not aurprlalacly, to d1te ·.
there have beea no t•kera. There

a plu Ia three no-trump after Wetit
leadl the heart 10: four, three, ldJll. '
At lint; Zll. after decHIDs be bad to
IIDd belriii4-S, Dill H. tbousbt he bad
· nlae euy lrieu: three spades, one
' heart, four dilmGDds llld ODe elub. So,
be sllrted with • c!l.oJ!MIIId to clumm.J'•
jlek. When the linea.. Willi, ~~~ wu
ju1t lllloqt to continue with dwluDT•
c!l.omond ace wileD be *'*olz " whit
wauld lilppen If the ""'".... IJPIII4-

1885 Ch,., 11/4 1on 4x4, 35g,
lit, """"'u peckage, 12,000

•

in Clillon, $3001
ma + ulilitiea, gas Milt 30•· 7739181 .

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Tell 10111' blta arul'llyta.by £ol'llliDI

..11121,
n..pr~aos.
Jocklon.1.-!13•
114-W-581!11.
..
I

e· Room house

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s+

for Sale

Cal 814-448--3228

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'1.

~-willbe.
H~ is perbapa the belt teclullell
~-play Zileverl!llde. ·

parae..

198&lt;4 Nashua Ux70 3 hdroom
Ellcellent Condition 112,000 Ac·

Employ...

lao-• N"f.

11.8 Acree Walnut Townlhlp,
Cltillla Co. PDulblo Building 51101,

...,,soo.

For Advancemenl. Call American
'Genaral ,Life .&amp; Accident In-

'

1U85 SUboru Turbo 4X4 Rebu..
Mo.,r, " - ' · 72,000 MIIH, ()j
Robulll New Tires,
lMdlcii01., ue8873."
,

N
1 1 Sldl 1 H
Golllpolls, ·2 Mil.. Ou1 Neighbor·
rage. • · Y rwy
ng
eal hoad Rd., 1D Act• 11"71000\..0r
Pump. City Schools. (8141·441· 22 •"'-·iM~ ~""~
0951
~- .,....~N
ThrH bedroom, rwo
Call To~y For Free Maps &amp;
wide on 6 112 acrea,
Owner Financing lnlo. Take 10%
~·x,&amp;'lbove grou~ pool,
Off tilted Prlcaa On Caah Pur·
ter, 10111 electr"" ftr.....,.t, Darwin· I chaoosl
•.
.... .,....
1
I :;rea;='.:6;.14-1192
;_
. :.:..:.·.:5;.14.:2.:._
. --'--S.Wral 5-•re
Two 1 b'adroom apartmenra lor remote, beaulifwl land; Meigs

Learn. Bonall11 Pkg., Opportunity 574-2539.
suranc8· Co. A.t 814 -&lt;448· 2273,

lots &amp; Acreege

135,0000BOB1,..370-21171.

Now Opport~nilyl Cardinal Frejghl
Carrier Inc. 11 e~epandtng opera-

OHIO OPERATING

Street. Rl 33 in Mason, 30,..773-

ki'IOWlnlill' 1QC!1111
-lorrul-

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Thlsneo-.,.not

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Buildings

lo . . . , . ·any ..........
llmbdon or
£111 '
bMed on,.., color, rellgkln,

dla•••
nlliDiill
any-.,
111!socl1

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340 · Business anc1

tloua Candidate&amp; To Join Ou'
Compeny In A Pltnnod Major Ex·
pans.l on In -The Gallipolis Aree.
College Degree Or 4 + Yeara Of

Wan1ed To Buy: Little Tykes

~

10' taalu.
(llillr.)

. B) ..-mlf Alder

Wh)' Retu? lrrimaculat• '2 Bea.roome, 1__,B
. ,t.th, Banks ~pr&amp;iaed

IRearaur~nt /Management
E~eperience Req~ired . High Enet·
gy lwet And Good Interpersonal
Skills A Mua1. Salary Baled On

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

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•Ka7•s

.

H7 Ed1138 ~372-3400

lhe day before the ad 'is to r.u n.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m. F.riday.

".Iran

• ,, SlOi

Openinlleld: uo

Now. UNII, Corimorlcal, Mod

All .Varcl Sales Must Be Paid In

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brMioe.

C.l304-788-!ie87.

Gl!lllpolls ..
&amp; VIcinity

t

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

1 bedroom, up1talr1, Nlddlepon,

755-5815. .
now carper, peJr\t &amp; 1Mndowl, "'''
.
clean, .1250. p1o0 util~n &amp; depos.TIX Refu~d Sptal•ll1h7 Oou- . It, Mil!lbte Immediately, tS1ot-99~­

Mixed- puppies to give aWay.

• AS 2

• Qt
• KI 5
tUt75._
• Q J 10
.

blewidot. SSISAVEISS Free 111·
up I delivery, fr8e cenrral air.
Oakwood Homei Nhro, WV. 304-

EMt
• J II I 2

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deliooryi101-Up.~~71g1.

Free To A LovinQ Home Male a
~onthl Old German Shepherd
_ &amp;o...uMix, S1+MB·11311.
·

70

6 I 4 2

NEWI aank RePo•a, Owner nnoncing mi«blel 1111/mo. Free

F4Wnat&amp; Chow &amp; 5 Pupa, .To Giveaway. Good Watch Dog, Good
Wilh ~ldl. 614·256·1048, • (

60

Wn&amp;

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• Q 10 I 7
t K I J 2

1m S-10 V· B, Auto, e\ .a
lliiet, 18110 S-10 Spou 15,0
111112 S-15 Sonome 71 ,000.
11o1i101. fdl k1 E. . . Condi1J0~ 1
CoOk-114-....0101 ; •

NS-&lt;116.

304-178-2582.

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, ... OO&lt;ICit D-2!0 v.. Au-~­
lc, Tlr0s, Good Condldo~.
aOODt'tt 1 ~tel•
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• '•• II)~ G!l4lllf lilt • •.,.. Mftfll opjiOrtllllltlle could
, .~er et~n 11e1p you undlrttentl. YOII!' ,rnMIIi ~ ph)ll~'~~llllfW wll be •• I' ' 1111 tz . ••..,..
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