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nate ·begin· ·work on ·balanced budget a

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• ··. WASfllNOtoN (AP) .,.... The mefttprogram&amp;pd,eliminateamajor · DaschleandotberSenateDcmbc· exempllnsthelnlltfundframbudpt
· : ; ..... js moving fllfWIId on a bel· concern about the balanced budget raiS have offered their own version of c;ilculllioas would require budpt ·
: · illced budset COIIIillllicinll amend· amendment
the amendment thai would exempt writen to find hundreds of billions in
: !Mnt while House lliP,Ubli~l try to
·President Clinton, .in a letter to the Social Se&lt;;urily trust fund fram . new aavinjs Of revenues.
• ·.t*I'Y -""'ident Clinton's claim thai Senate Democratic leader Tom .budget b!ilancing calculations.
Sill Senate Republicans. in a let·
: )~put Scx!lil Security recipiei\IS Duchle, t&gt;-S.D,. relwed
Republicans have · accused tet to Clintoa Wednesday, said dull if ·
: .·ll.rilk of loaiiiJ their benefill.. ·
day, voil:ed stronJ dpposition to the DemocraiS of us ina scare ractics he wanllto exclude Social Security
-~ .: •.' The Senile Jlldici.Y Committee amendment, aayif!.l! . it "could pose similar to their election campaip ' fram the balancecl b!ldpi arDeftd.
• • i( set to 'vote today on the Republi· grave risks to the ~ial Securily sys- !l'sertion~ that RA:Jiublicans were try· ment, he IIhould reflect that in hilspe: c.n..led,aeuure; Senate Joint Rcso- tem." · ·
.
. mg to kill Med1c8JC, and say the . cifiC budget proposals. "It would bo
:: , Ju.lion
1, thai would constibl~onally budget
Clintoa wrole}{lllt in the event thai Democratic version is merely an helpful for us to know whll llldi·
~~a balanced buclgeL ·
balancinj,requiremenll can' t attempt to undercut their push for a tlonal deficit reduction initiatives
yourecommendinQfdertocovcrthe
• . ~~ In the House. members of. the · bo 'met, "dis~ment of Social constitutional amendment.
~ 1-994 RbpubUc811 freshman clan .-e Security checJ? 'could cease ·or.
Both the administration and OOP ltqer defiCit."lhey wrole.
In 1995, the OOP version pa11ecl
: IJitrod~ng ~Jialation they say will unelected judge5_F.ould redUce bone' propqsals for balancing the budget by
: plolect•the Soeial'Securily UUII fund fits to comply wlih this constitution· 2002 consider the trust fund as a the House but in the Senate failed by
:'flc!m. llein1 used fllf (ICher govern· almandate." '" .
.
· source of general revenue, and jUstonevote,ofJCI!inlthCtwo-thinls
':II,

majority neoded for constitutional
amendmcnll. 11111 ·time, bod! the
House ~ Senate voces, cxpocted in
llle Februlry, are repnled 11 1011ups.
Selllle · Republican le8den say
they have 68 v - - one more lhan
neoded - with all $5 llepublicaas,
nine Democnta who voted fw it previously and four Dernoc:ntic liCshwho pledpd
f« an
amendment during their election
campaipa. The vote could 111m on
whether those four, including Judi· ·
ciary Committee member . Son.
Robert Thrricelli, 0-NJ., t.ck the
Rcpublicanversioa.
· .
A constillltional amendment

Wednes·

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·~' withdiehi ' . pcrcentasc ·
;.~ d,urlol'llinl bridps could raise
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·:~ to~tn,-. I!ftye;asto~~ ,

. . Ari ;natilt~' Of ilie ltale's IJri!lps
rw 'l'ir-' PG!~,. .. . . rated "Pool'" .
.. or~ by '''f'!"'!D!'· A "poor"l'llt• 'l...,

:. orina..-,., .~·
is lhowi"l sipsdoliirioratioa crum·
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· : "It il ironic thai many of the coun-

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...... C&amp;lllle played, wltiJ; ......

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· musleeb aod

•f.io compl8in about !he level of fun!~·

in1 they receive from us," said Picter
• , y.'ykolf, a spokesman for1he Ohio
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(:cll:dlllnd oil pap 3

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lie llrick wldl split

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aalcl dl!tt the facllty wll p
space aua.d to ballllle the Su•

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wltlle provitllllc u oub ±taal
tltrouali ·lhe variaUI IICtltlda

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hid!J~Senate
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f
avors
bill
to
• ~~· ~ IA1islalure adopt a
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: cieen Air AcL .
· ·
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- :~~5-2 on Wcdnes: •clay, woUld ask COngress to provj!le
: ) tewled'iJ!fonnation lbout the costs ·
: of ~f9n)i~110111~ clean air stan. • dildl It(, U.S. Environmental Pro:~ ~'seney expeciS to adopt thi•

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elimtf;late medical msrijuana·use ·

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COLUMBUS'•(AP) ,- "n Ohio
Sena1e Sl!bcom.rtiilcc heard testitilony on how marij...,a helps ease the
suffering qf ~AIDS and multi·
pie sclerosis patl,nts, then recornmended approval~f a bill to drop
medical use as a \lefense for mari·
•'Jelil: '
juana use.
"
La~ and some consu~r
Several Ohjoanf julfering from a
~~fea, . tha! the new ride$ ·will · variety of ailmepl$' tP!d I!Je five;'ll!iad to 'In qxpan~!)n. of Ohio's trou- mem\ler panel on ,Wednesday thaf
·~ ~ emissions ~atins pro- smoking 91' eliti!ll marijuana helps
;p, kilown 11 "B-eheck."
their conditions. 1,:
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They bppose leaislation that
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would eliminllle a
in Ohio
·p .
on of nuclear law allowing
" of marijua:.:.,.
,· .. .. d
. Untp aftea
. na for medical
for those
·
who have a·
wri~ten reci;·: (X)tUMBUS (AP) - ·An Ohio 'am
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· COLUMBUS
. - Nation·
~ ,- ,TIMI Seniti: Bileru ~atural , wide Mutual
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is facins
:-~ 'Inc! ~vinm~nt Com- . federal .sauliny ancl , '
in at
•tiiiiteo .,.,.oved the delay Wednes· , leas! seven •._.over
that the
,'~ on l $-2 Vote.
,
company told ill
10 avoid
.:: · ~Ohio, huii&amp;I'IOdtobulldadlllllP · i~nJ l)omeQwners. in minority
•J.t abcNt 2.25 million cubicfect of ne1ahborhoods.
,
.
, ~~~ve Waste collected . .. The Justice~.
· _ It is lookl~s
~the l&amp;llel for 20 yem. No site mto whether tbe'nlllon:tlli.lh-1~
. Ja ,tJ!~ to bo opened. priw to PI~ ~ cuual~ qns'!"'r VIola!·
::IQ!l5. ...
. eel avd nJhts.laws..
.
''" 'The~mci-lllll:ktht;aelecAt 1cut ltl Nalionwicle agenll
;tiallilelfroiiiSeptem· '
they ·wereoftOid"not to 'do
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~i~1n~011 . ~Where
=~ u.J, eHcutiYI diJector of liiUIOI'IlteS ~ !lithe ,nUijbrity. ·
'lite ()hti,~,f,.em Jtadi011etive
~ ~~lll.ta A~;Cuae lhl! jna111:11r of
.. . . ~. laid tbO aelectioa . reftlsins to Write po)lc;lii oa the ·
- W.. -,red back .bec;..,.. the buis of I'll!» or' reaidence, in ~lif- ' Wll sill taC!flllu behiad income .... They ~ &lt;filed II
· t:fi ..,.._ '
Ohio ICelllllC~Pen_..ylvanla,
,·i:q ·.Thl mv..- ~ins. tho lite. Michipn,
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. ~ filt"!!oei 1iow P, to tho 1'111 Senate. . ~ticut. . ·
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"I'll tell you lhc political realities
mended the lesi~alion. !O t~·Senate · of this bill," said Sen. Jeffrey D.
Jlidiciary Committee where' another . Johnson. 0-Cievcland. "I don't think ·
heating will be held next Wed~sday. you'll be able to sell this affinnll!vc
"I believe these people 8JC beina ·defense, but I'd be willinc to look at
siJlCere. I want to l)ear from physi· · . how we can help people with a legitcians.who oppose ·this," Sen, Louis imate need for marijuana."
'
W. Blessing Jr., committee chairman
·
and sponsor o~ lhc lcsislation, said
Led by Attorney General Betty
afterward.
. ·
·
Montgon;ery,lawmakerure tryinsto
Blessing, aCini;in~ Republican, close a loophole inadvertently creal·
and other ~ubcomrnitrec members eel last year when the defense fllf
said lhcy were concerned about res· • m.ijuana usc was included in 1
ulation.
.
l,ooo.p!ua paae overhaul of Ohio's
However, because marijua,na is crimiJi.al senteMinssuidcliries.
classified by the federaiiOVemmcnt " Luceillc Fleming, director of the
as an illegal drus. it cannot be leaal· Ohio De.,..mcnt of Alcohol and
ly prescribed by physicians, so few, Drui Addi4;tion Services, te5tified fllf
if any, will ~mmcnd its use.
the mOiaure. .
.

Insurance fa~log

'lpdW.., Iowa, .Minnesota,

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fed~ral scrutiny·,.

Nationwide spokesman John
Millen said Wednesday thai company executives have met with Jua!icc
Department officials aboUt the com·
plaints for several months.
Millen said tidlininJ. is qainll
company policy. He said Nltionwide
is working on a plan to increase busi-·
ness in urban neiahbodioods. but nilt
~~ of the Justice Deplrtment
mqumes.

~lpklps_uraaceNewsServJCe,baMd .

In OldWICk NJ.
.
The Natil!nal Fair Holllill
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do a betulr job back home than we
can da in Columbus," Michlcl H.
Cochran. the associ ilion's cxccutivo
director, said Wednesday.
Cochran said bi1-eity officials
and developers ~cd reasonable

.Coc:f~An ·llllid ' ·
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HIII!IC hy ttcp.. .
vcnioa has beallt

R-Mainovillo, tho
have a '"leu
introduc:cd in the
Robert

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to revise

time claims for jolllcss benefits
Nationwide's urban uridc;writing inc:roued &amp;)' ·10,000 lut week, the
policicssince 1991.
.
-.d lllraiJIII jump followiiiJ the
The lf!li!P has found that people s*'*' drop in,six mmths.
in white neiahborhoods received bel·
Tile Labar Depwtn- said
ter COYer&amp;JC and' lower rates .... thll wJiclliona for uiiCinploya
homeowners in black areas. said i-totaledaaeuonallyadj
Shanna ·Srnid!, the aJilance's c•eeu- eel .3$1,000, hiJhest since 366,
live director.
diD'I"Ithe week ended Jan; 4.
.
"They wrote'OutZIPcodea ~
Now claims shot up by 20.000 to
~~~:•. lllowedSm""
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. 34111 t'P.l,!!"!.:.'r._..
_ weekhadendedex~
UOAU•-. ....
uuu
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declile lut week. Aft«
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O.V. r.mnw, llllior. •·Jft11~·-siM•W11111r.' ·""
dent for !he Allianlie of,~
Aulylll hiYI aarilluted 111!110 .
llilunra.lald illelllllllller
the \llllllllit)&gt; to ,e~orelld psoblns ·
plaina facitll J'oll;iio.wlde is ,.... atljulliq tbi dMa for I I 1 Ill Ylfi.
tlwly-IJQIIIiilaiqtlte% .rioat.Sotnealtoconlllitd'!-CIIII'IIIt Now
ny ......
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left! tellecta 1 ruhiiii-'•
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denr tha! ~ agency IS.IBvatll$411iiiJ
Nat1onw1de. News of the probe fi~ reported hast~~ b): lost

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t.klq place then, llncWlal

•&gt;' d&gt;t.UMBUS (Ar)- The Senate
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other PI'Oinm.,

larae ldkhai, two daa rooalla,

i ·t.commends.
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:;b:al fundin1 and yet they are content

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of
l!lc
The sc:hooJ Wll
whel\l P1110111 .t Whittemore
'Inc. of Rye Brook, N:Y.• w11111 to ealiolllhltlllip
build a Sl .l billioa pulp inill:
favored over
. "Yfhcn Ashton wu bu1lt, we , "It olr;lously
cxpn:s&amp;ed thai it had to do with lhc Williams said.
.. ,
pulp mill," said Shirley ,Ouc, a Jllr·
Assiltut - ~ ·Mllsr ·
cnt of a former Sunnyside student. said he did not nail tho
·"People lhoulb~ we ~en: craz&gt;: and -· Stile Drl~l.a.tJ ~· Ollb .
we could not set our hands on docu· woman ... Dit:klil- 'liild ' . .
menII to prove il.
County ac:hool olficiali i ,., W
·•we had a Pollyanna view that planned a new achooll!d9ft!.-..
everyone would always do w~'s adialolucwidiPidUipl;.~
best for the children," . she said. ·
"We fcltlhal il
hill.,._
"U1fonunucly, that'' not true."
Sunnyside Mlhool ,1o•·lklllliW
Last week, !he company said it rorthe~1:~-~=r-~:1::
was postponins indefinitely the pro- the
·jcct-Jhat. wou141 employ 600 pcoplc a1 inllln
Apple Orovc in Mason County. But
Phillips
ThcOIZCII!; .
sllite R:IUiaton said they continue to
proccpthe .:ompeny 's pollution per· Phillips tlltoulh •
rna1ion Act '-it. ·
mit IJIPI ications.

countiu haYI ~ a·$S tax.

..... .

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llins buclPtlian
!hit funds
"Under ~this=·=~~~==;
budJel
would be

the closure of a aehool near.the silO
for a pt•ipl)led pulp mill prove the
school bulklinJ authDrity is a political tool,- MalOn County resl·
. denll say.
The School BuildinJ Authority
votcclurlier lhil decade to CCIIIIOlidlte SWift11ide IIIII ~ 61emeit. achpols ipto AshliJI; llleftl!li'*!;

-·-; J!17.4 .ii)illion f~Jf bridge r~ra

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CHAIU.ES10N, W.va. (AP) - ,
Tho 1t11e development oft"JCe's role in

· :. ·ft-'

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auppon'

.Only 18 of.

..~p Ollio c(llln!ies have taken full
•. Ill~ of .'liccnse-plllle w.ing
thai eoul~ ~ae an extra

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CBmmentary

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Janu.ry 30, 1117

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Fitay, JID. 31

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G·Q p b·el·ng.less·.

bold th .IS tl•me around

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~~I for congressionallerm limiiS ~was pan of lhat. 1994 GOP
··~~ seems to have run out of SI!WJ!, even though Gtngnch h~

· .·,

Stocks

.
StOCients plead no ·contest

Gore ta·us to'· sca~e ' off ·,.~ep~hardt t~am .· ~~

·~
,l
Clinton, have a long history of asso-•.
ciation wilh the Democratic Leadci-:
ship Council, the lead group in lhC
New Democrat movemenl, Gore h¥i .
attracled support from cenlrists i~
Clinton's entourage.
· Gore llso wrote a favorable forelng anyone else fromi ·grabbing it," wOfd to the DI:.C's lalelt agenda-·
Moms 19ld me. "because Gore will book, "Building the Bridge." whiki''
llill him in the first p'ri111ary."
· being careful to point out t1!at he bas .
In his book, "Behinil the Oval serious disagreemeilts wilh'unspec:i··
Office," Morris quOtes Clinton as fled items in it, JnSUiilllbl7 ineltldina
telling him, "I just want you to know a non-bureaucratic environmenllll'·'
l will work ceaselessly, ceaselessly, to policy and mirket-driven'Mecticart'/ 1
be sure that AI Gore is lhe presidenGephardt han been modulating his
tial nominee ... without a primary if liberalism, but in a recent speecll'r:
atall possible. Ceaselessly."
befon: lhe liberal Economic POlicy&lt; :
Morris told me Clinton Iikel:v Institute, Gephardt implied thallhcn:
would do so by continuin1 tn give were limits beyond which he would''
Gore ~isible jobs he will auc:c:ecd at. not go in following lhe Clintonl'&lt;lorc
Morris said hc·e)\pected tluit Gore lead, specifiCally on Mcdic:iie, wheit'l
would continue to play a1ead role in Clinton is proposing $138 billi011 in '
U.S. relations with, Russia, aero- . ·savings over six years.
"I will oppose -- ·and will urge,
space {Xllicy affei:tillg California, his .
base environmental issue and tech- other Democ.rats to oppose ••
nology policy. • . "
proposal that violates our promise (19~
Gephardt will be discouraged protect Medicare) or the core v!llues·
from running, Monis said, because of our party," he said. "I ~omniii to
private Clinton p()lls last summer every elderly American lhat I win~·
·showed Gore wilh a $5-25 percent fight with every fiber of my beinsto;:
favorable-unfavorlble rating, com- ensure lhat Medicare as we know ii~
pared wilh 25J3o percent for . will he there for lhem when dtliy .,.!ell&gt;
Gephardt.
.
it...
.
.
. '.
It was a pretty muted decltll'llliotl,
"lfGephardtrlins, he'll drop dead
in the first primary because he's seen of war, but make no mistake: 'J'he o1a
as an old,fashioned, ultra-liberal. kinJ bas beeR .reinauprated IIIII. ·
labor-dominated Democratic . hack now. the slrjlggle for succession is
while Gore. is seen as a mode111tc, under wiy.
·
.
centrist New Deinocral. We know . : (Morton K 111&lt;1 iidw II 11 : d"t
1
how that contcstwmes out."
editor ofJtoll cd tile aeL 1p1~
Even though he does not. like ot Capitol Hll.) ·•
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ty. ~~~.will go head to head wilh the ld!ninistration over a proposal

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say they aren't scared off.
"They are trying to create an aura of abortion rishts on the anniversary
of inevitability for Gore,'' said a top, of Roe 11. Wade.
~,.,
lt\si(!e ihe Clinton camp, soilrees
aide to the House Democratic leader,
"., ~ ia ~ .of a constitutional amendment to ban abortions heard these
"liut for lhe. president or Mofris to say; Gore wielded his' intluenc!:
ciaJrl; ,·• .r,!
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. say that Gore is entitled to the presi- . again,tthat of first lady Hillary Rod, 'lben:~s·ften\Y of talk of how Clinton has dragged lhe Democratic Party dential nomiiultioil without a fipt is ham Clinton'to prevent liberal Demo~q· lhe center.!B.!Illhe bulk of the .Republican Party, in the new atmosphere
cratic ·activist Ann · Lewis from
just ridic.ulotls."
. lhat preVIIil1ln Washington, has been moving toward the center as welL
Gephardt is not declaring his can- becoming either chairwoman of the
Ginpich, a GOP firebrand in the past, han oeen his influence diminished
didacy for ibe nomination, clait:ning Democratic National Committee or
because ~ Ilia !~~hies reprimand.
that his focus is strictly on winning White House political director.
, And Lou. who .took over from Dole as majority leader of the Senate, is
Lewis is now deputy cominunicaback control 'o f the House, in '1998.
lmOWII more l'ofbls businesslike·approach !han for ideological fervor.
But friends say that he definitely &gt;tic;ms director under New DeiiiQCrat
"Bec:ause cOngressional Republican~ have been lislening to the Amerie'd
Don Baer, who plans to leave gov." wants to hprest
ent."' , .., .
can people. ,wo'n:·fell!ly willi,a~on-sense agenda shaped by your vision
ernment
Ibis spring. A new tussle
O~phardt's former top ·aide, Tom
for ihe fii!UJel'" ,I;jj(tiJilid in 1 ~~ radio lllddress.
. ·O'Donnell, has left his,Hou5e staff to may occur if.Mrs.,ctinton tries to
, ~le tbe ~bliCans h•Ve been,busy backing away·from many of lhe join a.political consulting'finri, but is install Lewis as chief of the key
issues lhey0 '41Upi~· 0!1 .in 1996l Clin!OII I!JIPC~.to,, be !Raking a point expected to use that perch to begin · WhiteHouse,"message" office.
. ofstic'l"!f to "ii c~an pftl!Kisals: '
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.• In the Gephardt camp, friends say
organizing a Gephardt candidacy.
, Alkil!llll anllastiliiOin rle'YI conference on '1\JCsday tf he had abandoned
that
the minority leader's challenge
Gore, meantime, has already start"
the piOIII' · 1 ~tal-gains'tax break for liorneownen that he mentioned in ed his 2000 campaign. Sources say will be tn retailor his traditional
his · Dla)loorltic IICCept8liC:C" speech last Ausust in Chicago, Clinton said: ·that while other Democrats were trade union liberalism to a more con"E-Y!hilll' I talked about in Chicago is in the budget."
partying in Washington over inaugu- servative era-- or hope !hat a reces•HQ -.dl lhat budaet to Capitol Hill next week.
ration weekend, Gore held strategy sion hits and makes Democrats more
. "a.illibliclins in Conaress ha~ taken a lesson from Clinton · and lhe
sessions wilh his top fund-raisers and · aware of the chronic wage stagnation
~ Congresi' first two years: It's better to sit back because who- political advisers.
and income inequalill(_lh~ !lffiicts the
ever 101di~ JC1S punished," said Bill Kristol, a conservative acti.,ist and
,.
Both sides say that Gore vs. country.
llllf!PZl• P''NJ: ' . "But,itiiii!Y be a matter of learning lhe wrong lesson." Oephardt now ·shapes up to be the
Other candidates cllnceivably
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could enter the fray, including retired
catacly~ic struggle of New DemocRailal coven 'pollda uid ndolll!ll all'alril rats vs. Old Liberals -· exccpc that · Sen. Bill Bradley (N.J.) and Sens.
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Gore will use his vice preside~tial Bqb Kerrey (Neb.}, John Kerry
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prestige and an occasional left tilt to' (Mass.), Chris Dodd (Conn.), and
peel off signifi!;lnt li.beral agd labor Dianne Feinstein (Calif.). But Morsupport lrom the Gephardt column. ris thinks tbitt other contenders -to ~!lab 1 b!IIIIICCid budget part of the Constitulion - but sponsors suggest
,tJ)eY, ~'~~a hard rime finding lhe votes ~to prevail, panicularly in the

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==·l:~~lhe 30th ;day M1997. ~re art 335 days left

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Buzzard·S circling Clinton's compound
.

Bv TONY iNOw . ·cre.tora Syndlca
- a
WASHfNOTON .. The buzzards
. Ollbla~
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hav~ begun to circle lhe Clinton comIn 1649, Bllfand's Kin1 Oiarles I wu beheaded.
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pound in Washinaton. lured by the
· Ja119J, •~"' broke·out in til!! House of (tepreaentatives in _Phi'-del- nose-Curling ~rna of decomposing
.M ill .. ........ Lyon of Veri~Joo!t ipat !n the r- of,Roger 9ns'ryld of ethics. ·
CIIIICtfMil, tr ' ,
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· ' As if~~ by a celestial.trum• ·: In 1112. ille 32nd prUiden! of !Ill United ~s. Frlnldin Delano Roo- peter; lhe adnililillniion's 'gates lulvc
~ ~ bol'lia H~ Plrt; N.Y.
·
•' ' • · . ·
started fallin1 down .in 11nison: First
"'i'jiitt33, Alkilf'Hidlr bllcanle *'*'"nor of~. 1 · · '
come Travelple and Filegate, which
Ill 1933. the &amp;•'lllisode of the "Lane Ranpr" ndio JIIVIIIMI was bnJIIII. expose the abuse of pOwer and pos11M4111 ...... WXYZ.IJr DetrcliL
•
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·sibly illegal deployment of Internal
1111162 tworwabi:i•ofthefljila·~~wile act wereltiJled · Revenue k! rice IICftiW is a seciet
.,Oiice force. ·
Nut, Wb*water, which challensuthe Clintons' claims to alttu·
thll-19
t.ad 0111he moon. ·
Ill 1
t1te Tel~ bePI a~o-nUIJi• r~ launchttd MPriJe istic lnnocenee.lndopte (or'tiPJIO'
· t ,....... ~Villf=nrpiVvlaclllc plnis
' ·•
ruction)~- vm'aJpblles wi(!l
· .. ,m, 13 .,.....t.bolk: civil rljljlt t rn ..ethotto._. by lhep,Oisibilltyt!latlhe,preaidentaucI S'*U'Im"'Hla:d nh.tlldon .._.,., .. kllilwaM "BiolidJ.BIIn- tiolllid off lllliooal ·security while
~
W.NIIiq the Cotilmerce Pepartssqp:C ts~elfnn....,.........Jillj:itWto~tow 111111t · inti! a ~inI cen!lll' fOr:
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.... JhllljltdllnPiMJce,tnreturn.! 1rot.1 ~. , · ·. ,
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30, 1~. llidlan' political and spiritual leader Mahatma Oandhi
cMawcl by a Hindu extremist. ·

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Now COme allegations that admini.stration employees violated the
Hatch Act .. a law that forbids polit·
ical activit)' by mOst federal employees -- during the 1996 presidential ·
campaign. Accordin1 to doclllilents
·released last Friday, officials in the
· While House and executive-branch ·
dep~UPftCRIS. Ktiveljr, promoted ·thC
president's ~on bid while still
. a! !heir govellllilelllJObs. Presidential
aides say lhe wOrk was leaal because
activists didn'tpromote the pm· 1~1F
• until they bad put in their 40 hooln
thai week for Uncle Sam. Criti81
stWI, IK!'illl d!e administration Jill
no recorda to llilck lhe claim:
. SCn. John McCain 'sipatocl !Jis
i~ace
.nih lhe JI'OwiRJ II~ .o f
1
temll~nts ~Y &amp;akllll, lhe
·~of Jusu~ ~~at an
!independent~ yo !lie ill.veati·
.
tan\PiiP:yell' MtiCI of tbe
,jWtiite ~ illtHIII Diu101.

i•te !he

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Wednesday's GPLA .~r,esults
Auction results from WecJnesday's $24-29; standard, $28-43; co'mmerQ~llipolis ProduCers LivestockAsso- cial, $26-37.50:•CC · $19-22; bull~.
ciation: ·
sleady; butchers, $28.~0-$46.50 .
. .,~Total .head ; N/A.
FEEDER CATTLE· $2 hi~her;
HOGS -9. Prices, steady.
Yearling. stecrli. $58-$67; het(ers,
; Butcl\er hogs, all weiptS. $43-52; . $50-$58; c~lve$, steers: $65-$75.50;
sO.Ws, nla; . boars. $33.50-$39.50; back to the fl\l'fll babtcs, $67 and
Feeder pigs,steady. $$22.50.
down.
,.,
..:· CA1TLE ·· -230; Steers. nln · SHEEP • ' Feeder lambs, 96.
hcffers, nla; choice, nla; heifers, nla; Aged slaughtcr1&amp;heep. $32-$35.
H~lstein, n/a.
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Special feed,&gt;!r sale Wcdnes~ay,
, C.OWS •,, De!lland and price .Feb. 12, 2 p.m.
tl'f!lld, Steady to $1 .higher; utility,
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F.lre,
department figures ref,ased
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The Middleport Fire Pepartment
adswen!d total of 686 calls during
t!l%. according ,' to .a report from
David Hoffman, fire chief.
''Hoflinan said that the calls induded }32 fire and rescue calls, and 554
etilergeric:,:. medical service runs.
· Dl!ring the year, the department
t&lt;Jged ll2!1'an hours in fire and !CS·
cue baining, and department mem•

a

~e Ddy Sentinel
(USPS 213-96tl

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The ~uocilled p,..~ and thO Olllo
~-ipiptll ~illioll
P081'MA8Titl: Send addreRa correctionl to
The lltiily Se.,.t..l. Ill 'Olurt St .. Pomeroy.

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·NIIional cO'Emilllie. The New York pie's reputalions, sayina. "Thil tOobl
nmes seconded lhe motion '-t Tues- bad to me, so it must be illeaat."
day In unusually fierce and pjquant
· Consider the Oreal ·coffee Scan1
terms.
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dal. Clinton bOiled more thin 8C)
This imbroglio son:ly tries riJht· f~ in.lhe Wliiic House last ye. flii~
wingers' souls. Rep(lblicans wquld
ofrk:h and innuentiaJ.Annet· • 1
love to ~t.lhe ~ideilt and his wife . ·~ans. f~nd-raise~ fOO:·Ihe Deir~ !
on a 'pohbcal sptl . ancJ ~~ them . tte ' "!allo!'ll Cl!lhmruee lltended
indefinitely. But c.onservatives have !"'!'Y of the Ghats.''fhl White Hbulf:
complained for ym abOut OUtside tnststs nobody solicited ' ~ .
prosecutors, notina lhat independent . directly and lhat hippy eoincideta
cOUIIICis measure lheir success by lhe . accounts for the f.ct lhat 'inVi'- lat-.,
Jllllllllerol'~ they send tn lhe Bi1 er eontributed tensofmillicin. of doll , ~
HouM lliher, dian the quantity of IllS to lhe ~~- .
. 1:
,onliaJ!Iemnent they ·deliver to ihe
l.et'splltlhisin
.... CJin· ~ ·l
iAmeric:an public.
ton iln't lhe first president !D
I
\ Nobpdy que1l1011s McCain 'a . open lhe Euc:uti;.oe MMsialr door~ to •
motim. But a baldly popoition of mopal1, and the DNC ian't the lfnl
the people wbo delilll!d spacial ~ OiJMiZiilon to lay an IIIIi 011 IIICii ·
ecutoi'S seera nitn conccmed will) luats. The p!Wident's iltlol ..., ~
moral ahowma!rllhip lhan monlity. have CQVered up the COIIfllle tiiJl • .
Ll~ Phlrj,.._, tMY I!'Y'to ......_ becau~e' • they wore lllepl, 'but ·:
tl)cir ltaridial by 1ully\n1 Olber J!iothey •kf·
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a.;. 457611.'

Motor.....
0.,. - ....,...:........................................ 12.00

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. . . . . . . l.l C.nb.

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a, IOitr6er or

o,.i-...............................................SS.70
otto v...............:................................. $104.00
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Nftlit lo l d - !llmi to The Dally Sentinel
0!111....., 'lilt &lt;&gt;12- IIIIi• Cootlit wilt be

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- - - tlledatn .. odjoll.-4urlbe Ill .,.......... S.blcrfpdon ....
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pltMited to ql&amp;ke it a high priority - aad the House is expected to take II · Sy .Morton Konclnscllie
· · As ~of that etron, Goie defend- . Gephard~included -· will have a dif:
uptmy!ICJII month.
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Political guru Dick Monis claims ed Medicare from GOP cuts in 199S, ficult time winning unless Gon: or .
· . l'he pbn received a 227-204 vote m the House m.1995, a m~Jonty but President
Clinton will work "cease- 'has been wooing the AfL-CIO, and · Clinton is discredited during the next
shon of lhe twO-thirds required for a propoiCd constttuttonal amendment.
lessly" to deliver the 2000 [)emoc· recently deli~red a stirring defense four years.
"We'll hl,ve io sttuggle to get III)Y more than the 227 votes," Rep. Bill
. ''Gejllwdt does~ a huge fa~or
ratic nomination to Vice President AI
· Mc:Coll-. R-Fia., a leader in lhe term-limit movement, conceded recentr Gore without a primary, but Rep. . uO_.On v . nd(..'M~a · by holding onto the liberal-labor slot
0
for the next four ye81$iand· preventDick Gephardt's, D-Mo., supporters !!!'....!!'_ ~~--!!!!!!!!

VanMeter named Sutton ttustee

Blythe J. Theiss

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Middleport Mayor's Court

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·Barbara E. Strange

weather forecast

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Meigs land transfers posted

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Ken

Ben Wattenbei]J

Newapaper ·

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Emily Barton·

oPPc-J
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The DaHy SeaUnef • P~~ge 3

Pomet oy • Middleport, 9hk

The following land transfers were Crow to Max L. and Shirley Jean
redorded ·recently in the offtee of Boring, Racine!Suuon, .198 acre;
I
1Meigs Cotmty Recorder Emmogene
Deed, Josepb A. and Rowena E.
Hamilton:
Young to Michael Allen Bineg;~r, Sci'
1 Deed, Thomas F. and Donna J. pio, 3 acres;
Baggs to Richard Lee and Glenna
Right of way, Forked Run SportsEmily Megan Barton, S,lbvcnswood, W.Va.;died Tuesday, JM. 28. 1997,
••
May Fetty, Rutland;
man's Club tO Tuppers Plains-Ches~er
at Jackson General Hospital in Ripley, W.Va .
Deed, Gelia A. Amos tn Ralph E. Water District, 35 acres;
She wu born Feb. 20, 1991, in Greensboro, N.C., d4ugbter of Troy and
and Barbara L. Bertram, Olive tracts;
)ijpt of way, Chester Wells ,to ·
Patricia Barton of Ravenswood. She was a member of the Sunshil)e Choir
Easement, Ronald G. and Loretta TPCWD, Olive, 29 acres;
at the Second Baptist Church, Ravenswood.
McDade to stale of Ohio, Olive;
Right of way, Forked Run Sports·
She .is survived by a sisler, Katie Beth Barton of lhe home; malemal grandDeed, Wendell C. and Mary E. man'sOub to TPCWD, Olive, 18.25
pareniS,
and Juanita Leedy of Ravenswood; palemal grandparents, Bill
alld Pauline Barton of Ravenswood; great-grandmothers ,Nannie Rose of Dunn to Charlene Wallbrown Suck, ' acres;
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Right of way, Forked Run SportsGritndy, Va., arid Jewel Wood of Ravenswood; great-grandparents Isaac and .Lebanon; .
.Deed, John Wilson Jr., Donna Wil· man's Club to TPCWD, Olive, 16.22
Francis Leedy of Jackson; and several aunts and uncles.
.
•lColum~sl44•
son, Kimberly Sue Wilson and Mar- acres; ·
··
Services will be held Friday, 2 p.m. at the Second Baptist Church wilh
Ia J. Wilson to Jack' and Terri MowRight of way, Carol Cline to
lhePastnr Jack Gwinn officiating. Burial will follow in Ravenswood Cemeery, Salisbury;
•
TPCWD, Olive, 78 acres;
tery, Friends may call today, 6-9 p.m. at the church' ·
.
'Deed, Jan M., Tamara Lynn and
·Right of way, Greta Brown, OreIn liell of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Heritage
Jon D. Kostivalto Jan M. and Tama- ta Suttle and Sheridan G. Brown to
Christian Academy Gym Fund, c/o Second Baptist Church, Ann and Elwood
ra Lynn Kostival, Scipio;
TPCWD, ,Olive, 67 acres;
Street$, Ravenswood WV 2.6164. Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood: is In
Deed, Wanda M. Rizer to Larry ·
Deed. Gregory Allen and Judith
charge of arrangements..
·
W.VA.
and Phyllis May, Pomeroy parcels; Carol McCarthy to Carol Gene and
Deed, David A. and Linda Acree Doliy Fa:,:e Mowery, Salisbury, I .834
10
Mike
aRd Karen Wills, Middlepoit; acres; I
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Deed, Robert and Peggy Harri~ to
Deed, Lawrence R S. and Clara
· Fun~rat services for Byron E. Hysell, 89; Chlllicolhe, will ·be' held at 10
Howard ·M. Jr. and ·Sharon E, Louise dluesencanip to Troy E.
a.m. Fnday at lhe Ewing Funeral Home in Ptimeroy. Pastor Richard Jones
Lawrence. LCbanon parcels;
Ward, Lebanon;
• will offieilit~ and burial will be in Beeth Grove Ceinelery. Friend~ may call
Deed, Clarice G. Krautter to K.
Deed, Robert L. and Kathry.n
at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday (tonight). Masonic services
Keith and Thomas Kimber Krauuer. Sanders Fortney to Tuppers Plains
will be held by Pomeroy Lodge. F&amp;AM. at 7 p.m. tonipt at the funeral
Pomeroy/Salisbury parcels;
Regional Sewer District, Olive, 2,500
home.
Deed, Joe N. and Rosalie G . square feet;
·
Sayre lo Timothy J. and Lorraine K :
Deed, Alan G. and Joan L Brown
Sayre, Columbia;
to TPRSD, Orange, 3,607.87 square
~
.Barbara E. Strange, 71, ofWe~i Columbia died Wednesday, January 29,
Judgment entry. James A. Darst to feet;
Extended fo'*aat
·: ~ By the Atloclllted Prea1
1997, at her home.
Maryrose Darst, Columbia;
Right or way, Robert L and
Friday night.'!cCioudy with a
Bolttbeutem Oblo
She was·a member of the Sand Hill Church of Christ in Point Pleasant
Deed,' Donna L Story, Eugene Kathryn Sanders Fenney to TPRSD;
Today... Variable cloudinesS. High chance of rain. Low in lhe lower 40s.
Born February 8, 1925 in Pike County, KY, she was a daughter of the · Clair Story and. Mae B. Dorsi to Don·
Deed, Linda Miller, Linda Sheets
Saturday...Panly cloudy. High in late Andrew and Maryland (Burke) Bentley.ln ad~ition to her parents, she
-iii the mid 40s. Light and variable ·
na J. Story, Ohve;
.
to Henrietta R. Cvetan, Columhia,
·,wind.
the lower SOs. _;:
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was also preceded in death by a brolher, ty;o sisters, and a grandchild.
Deed; Patty J and ~arvm Glenn I. lS: acres;
·
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Sunday.. ,Mosdy cloudy. A chance
.. ... Tonight..Cloudy...Then becomShe is survived by her husband, Robert Strange; three daugh~trs, Joyce
Massey, Mae B. Dorst to Pauy J. · Deed, Cletus Land Nan J. Hard·
'hig partly cloudy. Low near . 30. of showers during the day. Low in the Shirley of.SOI,IIIi Point, Ohio, Rita Knwp of Letart and Rhonda Boswell of Massey, Ohve; .
.
· erto Randall and Carmen Deckard,
mid 30s and high in the upper 40s.
•Soulhwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
West Columbia; a son, John Strange of Letart; a sister, Hazel Johnson of·
Deed, Fred W. HI and Cathy Chester, .31 acre. · ·
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low in Virgie, KY; a brother, William Bendey of Eubanks, KY; seven grandchil·
~ • Friday... Partly cloudy. High in the
the mid 20s and high i~ the mid 40s. 'dren and two great-grandchildren. ·
&lt;l&amp;wer 50s.
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· Funeral service will be held at II a.m. Saturday. February I, at the CrowRussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasllllt, wilh Vernon Henton, minister, offiThe Sutton Township Board of Salser Jr:, both of Racine, were
ciating.
Burial
will
follow
·in
the
Evergreen
Cemetery,
Letart.
Truslees appointed Trustee Kenny named president and vice-president,
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Visiting hours will be held at the funeral·home Friday 6 to 9 p.m.
'· • Here;s additional cases lhat were ving under court susperision, resisting
Wiggins of Minersville as township respectively.
t~solved in Mi!Jdleport Mayor's arrest, $200. running stop sign, $'15;
Meetings. will be held the first
clerk to replace Paul Moore of Racine
't!ourt of Mayor Dewey Horton Thes~ Joe Shavorins¥Y, Middleport, .$10
Monday of each month at .7:30p.m.
who resigned.
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plus costs, speed; Mary Beth
Roy Van Meter of Racine was at the Syracuse Municipal Building.
Blythe. J. Theiss, 87. Racine, died Wednesday, Jan. 29, 1997, at Grady appointed township lrustee to replace'
(i:juistophtr M. Arbogast, Rivers ville, Ohlinger, Middleport, $25 plus costs,
Va., $60, wrQng way on one way expired operalor's li~nse; Paula S. . Memorial Hospital, Del~ware.
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Wiggins.
stree't, ' and Robert W, Smith, Johnson, Middleport, $25 plUs costs,
Born.Aprill3, 1909, m the Old T&lt;;Jwn areaof~etgs ·C~unty, he was the .
At the board's ~rganizational
fS!meroy, $6o, assured clear dis- fictitious registration; Michael · R. son of lhe late Michael Edward and Elizabeth Aumtllpr Thetss. He was rebred meeting, Delbert Smith and Grover
!P.f'Ce.
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Bums, Cheshire, $25 plus costs, run- from the Tri-State Materials Corporation and was a member of the.Belhle. ~ Appearing in court were: William ning stop sign; Eric Lee Petrie, hem United Methodist Church, International Order of Odd' Fellows and lhe
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f.t. StilllU.~iddlep01'1. failure tndis- Mason, W.Va., $25 plus costs, ficti- Racine Grange,
He married lhe former Nina Louis Tripp on Dec, 12, 1937, at Pomeroy
play valid registration, $25 plus costs, tious tags; Lilly M, Kennedy, MidAm Ele Po- ....................... 42'1.
sfieed, $16; Mendy A. Spears. Vinton, dleport, SIS plus costs, speed; and she preceded him in death in December: 1982. , ·
Akzo ......... :••:.•••••.•.••••••••••••••••70\
He is survived by two daughters and sons-m-law, Avts Verdonna and Ver$J2 pl~s costs, speed; Gregory W. Edward ·M. Thacker, Middlepon,
Aahland 011 ............;................43
AT6T .....................................39~.
knapp; Middleport. $100 plus costs, $200 plus costs, driving under sus- non Harrison of Zephy~ Hills, Fla., and Nina Arlen~ and George ~allace of
Bank One ......................., ......44'~
iltsorderly after warning; Michael F. pension, $200, leaving the. scene of Delaware; three grandchildren; seven great-grlll)dcholdren; and a stster, Ethel
Bob Evens ............................13,,
Orr of Chesler.
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S'QIIIhem,.Sbade, $209 plus costs, dri- an accident.
Boig·Wamer ......................... 42'1.
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/~
He was preceded, in &lt;!ealh by t~o brolh rs, Edward and.Charles Theiss;
ChamPion .......................... u~.16~
two sisters Thelma Walch andAhce.Htll; and a granddaughter.
·
'
Charming Shops.................. 4'~.
Service~ will be Saturday, I p.m. at Crem@!'nS Funeral Home, Racine,
City Holdlng ......................:;.. 2s\•.'
•i·',
Federa.l Mogul .........................23
with the R~v. Kenny Baker officiating. Burial will follow in the Graham
Gannett ................................. 76l'.
A'IHENS (AP)-Agroupofstu-· · Nineteejl!fstud~nts ·en!ered ~he ,Ceme,\ery aq'oe)"Hilxen,.W.Va. ·,
. .
.
Goodyear
.............................. 54~
dents who.I"Cre arrested itfter a sit-in pleas Wedne'iday m Athens MuntciFriends may call at the funeral home Fnday, 6-9 p.m.
K-mart .........................; ••••••••• 11 ~
. at lhe U.S. Forest Office to protest pal Court.
In lieu· of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Dorcas
Lands End •••. ;.............,•••••••••••• 28
lo,gglng in lhe Wayne National ForThe mer~~bers of Ohio Universi- United Methodist Church, 48411 state Route 124, Racine OH 45771. .
Umlted ..................................17,_
e~t pleaded no contest to disorderly - fy's Campus Greens were each fined
Ohio Valley Bank ....................36
conduct.
' $100. '
One Valley .............................37\1

ci
dy UIC rbel.oric to divide our~ review in The Bcoaomilt: "Ful- rats. Mea of1heir white e&gt;a r
civil
rip
refoom.
Moll
n....: •• his • - · -.' ,....,.. PM- one from ...,.tw ~ tint 011 nee IJid briJht's lldniiren bad explainod ltd
111
Court
8t.,
Pon•or,
Ohio
~Oi:ton ~'(;an etld to the then Iller lhlln: - divilionl bued reconl of opposition to • J:ipu ' bript'l cw.:A~ut Jllll!l)'_ !~'» voeed
'
'
114
IIN1M
•
Fa:
11112-2117
hoscile
climate in , Wuhinaton. He on reliaion IJid&gt; ~tics, which Dillie for tllacks 11 the price be wu . agaiut . rlabb publiCly, crlqed
'
said: ''The Au:leritan peOple relllmed
. ·
required to pay for re-election. The
in private about what they did. Thai
to office a president of one PartY and
ttulh is more repuanant. Mr. Woods ·was nOI the posture taba by Ful·
a Conaress of aaOiber.· Surely !hey
blundy wens that fulbript.was a
did not do,~ !II advance the politics . it mQftl difficult for us to come racill While the lrulh is JDO!e com- bright. Over. die yean; somo few
I
A Gannett Co.
of pelt): bickering 1!ftC1 extreme parti- together."
plex. FulbriJht .certlinly found it:·· hroltc ranb wbelltvet lhey -'do
sanship they plainly deplore." The
Ignore for a moment the UJIY par- abhorrent for the Norlh to force tts includiq Sen ..L)'JIIkiil Wm!CJII, Sea.
•
.Albert Gore (Sr.), Sen. Eales KefauROBERT L V.Wi I
, line received grea1 applause, and tisan substance of the clwp. Con- racial views on the Soulh."
deservedly so. .
centrale on the words, "Beginning
The Economist's belldline called ver, IDd Sen. Ralph YarborouahPubllth.-'
lt is said,·and I believe it, IMt Bill·
Clinton also spoke about Amtri- nearly 30 yclin ago... " Ask this: What FulbriJht "an heroic dove and a·
ca's racial situation: "The challenge was Bill Clinton doing "nearly 30 racial bigot." The 1995 Los Angeles Clinton has deep and.-;~ feelCHARLI!NI HOERJCH
Q nMfll M11 gnr
of our past remains the challenge of years ago'.' ?
nmes obilllll)' of Fulbright carried a ings aboutlhe racial-situation. To llif
our future: Will we be one nation, one
In the mid-1960s he worked in headline that described him as "a~- credit. be was a neW liblral, even
•'
when he wcxbd for, and idolized, a
-.antlntl
·people, wilh one common destiny-· Wuhingtnn fortwoyearsforthe tale ed segregationist." ("Heroic" is not
(IIIIIlfle- choolool
r ·· W
or not? Will we all come ll!gether, or Sen. Bill Fulbright, ~Aile. In 1968 the word I associate wi!h Fulbript. segreJiationist..Maran~ le;k.ua dial
~~
come apart? The divide of race bas he worked in Arkllnsar for Ful- I remember him voting against the Clinton felt that On CIVIl riJI'III J;d.
4
•,\ J~"''i.'~r
~~s!::l;'tit'CO:,':; '. been America's conatant i:l!f$e. , ... bright's re-election campaian,
·Fair Housing Bill in 1968, just as he l!t:iabt was "a relic from lnolhet enl."
1'1 ,,.,cW.-.~MK•"4-illk1"·
·
(Predjudiceandcontempt)plagueus
In May of 1993, the recently was conducting his ffiiiiOUs ··and which he surely was.
It
was
a
compleA
time.
What
L.,;--~"""!!""!'~!""!'--~...;-~~--------- still."
inaug111'111ed President Clinton award- · , infamously misleading ·;,.. lelevised
·
Clinton
doesn
'I
get
is
that
it
is
still
a
·· · · · ·· ·
Very nice seniimeniS, Mr. Presi- ed his filii Medal of Freedom, Amet- fi&lt;,lringubout Vietnam.)
complex time reaanling . _ n:lations
den.t: Stop the pariisan .bickering. ica'shighestciviliandecoration.To
clinton's biographer David in America.
· ··
.
bring us together on flll:e. ·
Fulbrisbt.
Maraniss wrote lhat Clinton considClinton
played
the
race
c,ard
111he
The next day President Clinton
Fulbright was a segregationist. . ered Fulbright as "his farst political
DNC meeting. He maintai111 tbll his
spoke to lhe Democratic National
In 1995, Distinguished ProfeS$01' role model." He quoleS Clinton u
. ·
Committee. Speaking of the Repub- of History at· the University of saying ," ... Fulbright, I admired no political rival$ purposefully diviit~
lhe nation on civil rights. In doing
TOM A UM
licans. be said this: "Beginning near- ArkansaS Randall Bennett Woods end."
By
A
·
ly 30 years ago,lhey began to subtly published . his book "Fulbright: A
Now, lhe 1950s and 1960s were that he impuans lheir motives and
undermines his own intent to heal~
~G~:• ~=ued despile their congressional victory, Repub- use and then sometimes not so sub- Biography," Here is an .excerpt of its complex times for southern Dcmoc- . wounds
of race and partisanship. .
licans have retrealell from some of !heir more provocative initiatives: sweepIt was, after,all, Democnlic libina tax cuts, abolition of Cabinet departments, restructuring of lhe Internal
erals who pushed l!fJint)atiW! IIC.ti011
Revenue Service . .' . ·
.
·
.
' ·
with goals, timetables and !JUICtions
.1\epublicans retained control of both lhe House and the Senate in. last .
•• which led to race normina. nci~
year's elections. But gpne is the feistiness and combativeness wilh which
. preference and ·diversity qiiOiaJ.,Jt
. they Slli1ed·the previous Congress, giddy from !heir 1994 midterm upset vicwas ~mocratic liberals who )IUihed
,,
tory. ,
' .
•
for crisscross school busina tiO
.In many ways. Republicans remain shaken from the negative fallout from
achieve- a racial balance · -- which
last year's government shutdowns and !heir savaging by Clinton and Democ- .
wrought havoc on pllblic achocils aftj1
nrs oil Medicare spending.
.
set whileS against blacks.
'
And lhey ~m imwilling to confront Clinton in any bi1-iime way- preLet us gntnt that liberals did Ill
ferrinJ fn many instances to allow .him to go first in offering'·specific pro. this and more in an auempt to brelllt
posals to help fiptthe deficit.
.
,
~ down racial barrien. and to
Whit about the 1996 proposal to abolish tbe .~ation :,J:?epartment?
'
: America. Let us also grant thal ': 1
A.ckeci if Republicans had dropped it from their qenda, Senate Majority
pie who are now in !IPI!OiiliCJI! ~
. Leader Trent Loll said: "I guess you'd have to say we have/'
.
Clinton's
policies' believe that suj:fi
..,
Gone also is. lhe talk
ibout
abOlishing
tjle•Commen:e
()epanment,
t~
actions.
have
set up new racial blrrl''
•
r
' '
, '
:
'
fOflM .
·',•·t '
Ener,y I1epartmcnt and tHe IRS. ·
•
" · ··
· , . . .
ers that divlde America.
· . '1'
U21:11N
'
, I' It might be hard for Republicans to IIJue forcefully :for ehmtnattng or
It is a long argument, goin&amp; baCk
Nl)tQH
~wna\zina the IRS with one of tlWir own, House Speaker. Newt Gingrich,
man: than 30 y.ears. It will not. lit
ltlill under jill ethicaJ.cloud that includes allegations of misuse of a tax-exempt
solved until the president ctltll out 1t10
. foo!l:"'tri'XI: for political purposes.
·
partisan demagoguery and publici~
· ' Raacmber Bob Dole's proposal for a IS percent ~!he-board tax cut?
recoanizcis that·both sides n tryida
You'U Ilea- not a word about it in the corridors of tbe RA:publican-led Conto do the riaht lhina. .
:
flea Watlell...... a F ltr,..,..
ar Bm a LoU-sponsored $194 billion, ~~x~year !D-elli proposal- which
at the AtDertcaa Eateaprlle ~
~ a SSOO-a-child tax credit pushed last year by lepublicans - is being
lute, II the autllor oi"Va!HI ~
piwbayed
cosdy by some det;ii:lt-sensiiive Republicans. including Senter M~" ud II lite 11a1t .t lie
B~ ~mmittee Chairman Pe1e Don)enici.
· ·,
weekly pu. . . ....,.. prop"!'!
•, . , ~,that view to the $270 billion tax cut passed by the GOP Con......_,_._ "'--L "
f i..'rt ' tI
' T •
J. . . . .a ••DIM
'
.,
..,. JutiiCIIion. or the $354 billion tax ciUt oripnally passed by the House
...., Oiiapb !!ailed the "crqwnjel!{el" qf the 00~11 ."Contract W:ilh Amer· By len

'/

AccuWc~ forecast for daytillle conditions and hi&amp;h

e Dally Sentinel Bill Clinton and Biii .Fulbright
•

•

""'.l.ot , • l;l.a '.

.,...~

MAJL~IPI'IONI

•.

,,~::.~.~.~.......,.rnJO

2t........t .....:.t ..................:................ l53.12
»~··'t' .... ;. ..., ......~.\ ...................110$-'6

_OtoiiNt,..... c-,

13-..,... :_......,...................... 7...;....129.~

261MIIIat........-·~··; ....;..&amp;.......................... SS6.61

1

52 ---·-···""'-"'"'"''"""'""Sltlf.n

,,

'

'

Mei.
g
s
EMS
logs
7
calls
·
·

·Units of the Meigs County Emer- MIDDLEPORT
6:42 p.m., volunteer fire departgency Medical Service recorded sev1mcnt
and squad to Vine Street, gas
en calls for assistance Wednesday.
·
odor.
Pomeroy
VFD assisted.
·
Units responding included:
POMEROY
·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:05 p.m., VFD and squad to state
2:07 a.m., Mt. Union Road, CarRoute
7 and U.S. 33, motor-vehiCle
penter, Clarence Owensby; O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital, Rutland squad . accident, Lincoln Smith, treated at the ·
scene, Jean Seidenable, VMH.
assisted;
4:0S p.m., state Route 7 and U.S . REEDSVILLE
10:07 a.m:, state Route lj81,
33, Pomeroy; motor-vehicle accident, Paul Smith, Veterans Memori- Gertrude Bass, VMH;
12:02 p.m.. Arbaugh Addition,
al Hospital;
Tuppers
l&gt;lains, Donald Sprague, St.
4:56 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Joseph's
Memorial H~spital.
Center, Middleport, Cash Bahr, Holzer Medical Center.
.

Peoples .................................26~
Pretn Flnl ................................14'/.

Rockwell ...............................64\1
RO.Shell .•...,........................173\

Shoney'e ................................ 7~.
Star Bank ..................... ,....... ;34.~
Wendy's ................................ 21 ~
Worthlngton ........................ ,.19'1.

• •
---

•

· Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotee provided by Adve1t
of Galllpolle. ·

Voters resist..

_con_·._;·~~_e~~_rro..;...m_pa-ge_•_ _
bers logged 8~ li\an hours 'in main:
tenance on cqutp"'ent.
.
.
Josephine Milgate, who works in
Fire cnlls included 15 for struc- Department of Transportation. ·
the
Medina license bureau, said lhe
CQunties blame the· under-utilizatures with 269.69 ·man hours and a
people
she encounters question how.
dollar loss of $171J100: vehicle fires, tion of the license-plate fcc onicsiswell
the
taxes ·they already pay ·are
10, with 62. 12 man,hours, with a loss lancc· to tax im;rcases.
"The political climalc has not being spent, with potholes going
of $19,350; brush 11nd trash fires, 4,
with 20 man houtl11false alanns, 5, been favorable .for that," Portage unfilled and bridges in disrepair.
"Most people complain about the
with 16.97 man liours; hazardous County Engineer Michael Marozzi
tax,'' she said.
.
condidons, 14 with 59.65 man hours; said.
..
Steve Stolte, engineer of Union
mutual aid, 23 caJis• .J97.94 man
A $5 tax Portage officials ad~ed to
hours; rescue, .40, '!'j)~ 211.61 man the plates ·was removed by voters County, northwest of Columbus, said
. hours, and servic~·, !'Ins, 21. with shortly after it was enacted. Although he faces similar problems.
lnAprill995. Union County com74.62 man hours.
15.2 percent of the bridges in Portage
missioners
passed a $10 license tax,
The' report showcd .thattotal miles County arc rated "poor" or worse by
driven during the year were 14,502. in~pectors, Marozzi · said it was but voters defeated the tax seven
Hoffman prcsentc,&lt;l,to Middleport unlikely that he would seek a. tax months later.
Village Council · Mo,nday night a increase anytime soon.
copy of:his letter to the Public Protection Department in Syracuse, N.Y. ·
outlining various ilpprovcments
made·since the village'• last insurance
ratings ,inspection in 1983.
. .
In his letter he ask«! that the vtl·
lage be inspected and CtOnsidered for
a lower fire suppression, rating.
He detailed the depart.ment's
3RD &amp; PEARL ST.
method and improvements. in receiv949-ROSE (7673)
ing and handling fire :al~s, the
equipment in operntwn o~l~dmg the
FEATURIN~:
.
ladder'lrUCk put m serv!~e tQ 1992.
and the automatic respo}lse agreeFresh Cut Arrangements .
ment which is.now in effect with the
Silks · ·Balloons
Pomeroy Fire Dep8rtment.·
.'
Hoffman also discussed the water .
SpecialtY
Gift$
·
supply which includes 1111 additional
Amlsh..Crafted Pie Safe
200 000 gallon waler storage tank
ad~ to · suppletnent the .. existing ,
Wood Gifts from
125.000 gallon. tank, the lncw eight
inch water main which was added to
Laanln' Tree C•ds
l'fOvide a loop fee to theu\'illage's
Blaumont Pottery
business district; lhe inctellle in· the
number of fire hydllnts by'&gt;40 perKAY PROFRIT- KIM DAVIS
cent, and the twi~ a year l*llins of
lhe hydrants by the department and
l• nconlinl
llydranl preasslea and
flows.
·
.

.o/a[entine Specia{
. Heart Shape Diamond
. Pendants
.

.

Tropical

Costa Rica

175
.112 ct tw Reg. $s99 Sale $299
.

'

Heart Shape
Diamond Earrings
.
'

l/4 ct tw . Sale

-

$139.

· Heart,~ha~ Diamond Ring
l/4 ct tw Reg. $350 Sale

$17S

5tcquisitions
•l.ly-.y

•FIMnciN

or

,,

$

1/4 ct tw aeg. $3!i0 Sale

BURGUNDY AND

FLOULS &amp;GIFTS

..

)

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~. Jll'luery 30, 1117

Sports

:In the.NBA,

In Top 25 college basketball,

Meigs girls post
.4.4-33 v~ctory over
Point Pleasant
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Corr. .pondent
Meigs defeated Point Pleasant4433 in girls' non-conference basket- ·
ball action Wednesday evening at
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium . .
The Lady Knights with the lo~s
drops to 7-7, wllile the Marauders
raise their record to 1~7. The win
avenges a 55-44 loss to Point Pleas- ·
ant on Dec. I8. The Marauders
played without the services of senior
Ashley Roach, who is out for the
season with a lcnee injury suffered
last Satuiday at River Valley.
The Marauders jumped out to an
early I2-4 lead, only to have Point
Pleasant bailie baclc to take a 16-14
lead behind Tracie Drain who scored
eight points in the second periods.
But the Marauders refused to fold
and carne storming back to take a 22· .
18 lead into the Jock~r room at the
half.
In the third period, Amy Doss had ·
the hot hand for Point Pleasant with
eight points as the Lady Knights
pulled to within 30-29 after three
periods. Cheryl Jewell scored six for
'
Meigs in the period.
But the Marauders outscored
Point Pleasant 11 -8 in the fourth
period to post the victory. Meigs iced
the game at the foul line in the period hilling 10 of 17 from the stripe.
Tricia Davis was a perfect five for
five from the line in the period and
scored .seven point to pace Meigs.
"W~ played well defensovely
· especially on the defensive boards,"
. Marauder coach Ron Logan said
after the game. "Eight people scored
for us, so we had good bench play." .
Cheryl Jewell led a balanced
allai:k wit)l I I points, Davis added

nine and Carissa Ash chipped in with
eight. Meigs hi: 15 of 37 from the ·
floor for 41% all from two point
range. The Marauders went to the
line 31. times hitting I 4 for a cool
4S%. Meigs pulled down 28
rettounds, 25 off the defensive
boards, Tanya Miller Jed the way
with eight. Meigs had 13 turnovers,
12 assists led by· Becky Smith with
five. Meigs had 10 steals with Jewell gelling four.
Amy Doss had 12 points for Point
Pleasant and Trac ie.Drain added 10.
Point Pieasanl hit 14 of 51 from the
noor including one of 12 from three
point range for 28%. The Knights
went to the line I0 times and hit four
for 40%. Point Pleasant pulled down
30 rebound s led by Oliver with 10
and Doss with eight, had si x assists
with Doss gelling three and seven·
steals with Doss having three. The
Lady Knights turned the ball over 13
times.
Reserve notes: Meigs won the ·
reserve game·43:24. Tangy Laudcrmilt led the winner with 13. Missy
Roese led Point with nine.
·
Ouarte~ .ll!ll!ll

Point Pleasant
6-12- 11-&lt;\:33
Meigs
12-10-8- 14=44
Point Pleasant: Mitzi Mallo~ 1.0-(};2,.Amy Doss 4-1-1=12, Tracie
Drain 4-0-2=10. Amber Oliver 3-01=7, Vicky Grady 1-0-0=2. Totals:
13-1-4=33
Meigs: Becky Smith 1-0-();2,
Carissa Ash 4-0·0=8, Cheryl Jewell
4-0-3= II, Tricia Davis 2-0·5=9,
Brandi Meadows . 1-0- 1=3, Taryn
Doidge 2-0-(};4,.Tony a Miller 0-05=5, Melissa Werry 1-0-0=2. Totals:
15·0-14=44 ,

·. Negotiations to get Rodman
• back into Bull.s' lineup begin

~

CHICAGO (AP) - Although
The Sun -Times said Jackson
the Rev. Jesse Jacksondidn'tmeet as called off his meeting with Stem
~ planned wtth NBA commtssooner
when Jackson learned that hos father,
Dlivid Stem to urge the rein&gt;tatement Noah Robinson Sr., died in South
of suspended forwarp Dennis Rod- Carolina on Monday night. But
man, negotiations to return him to NBA spokesman Brian Mcintyre
t~ Chicago Bulls have started.
said no meeting was ever s.cheduled.
Rodman's agent, Dwight Manley,
Manley said Rodman was never
said he mel Wednesday with league given his day in court to e~plain to
officials .·and representatives of the the NBA his side of the kicking inciNBA players union.
_ ~ent. The agent has· also said Rod. "I can only say that talks are man was willing to'do everything he
under way," Manley told the Chica- cion to return 'to action, . including
· ~ go Sun-1im.d. "I .cannot give any
agreeing to donating his salary to
details whatsoever .of the content. charity.
~ But I am encouraged, and I fell very
Stem has insisted that before
~ confident. that this matter will be
Rodman is reinstated, he must undcrp resolved amicably."
go psychiatric counseling and assure
c Rodm11n was suspended I I games the league. that he wi II adhere to
~ - and lost· the equivalent of more
acceptable standards of behavior.
R than $1.1 million in pay- for kickJackson told the Sun, Times he
~ ing co~rtsi~e camera man Eugene
gave Rodman counselin_g in Los
" Amos on Mtnneapohs on Jan. 15.1;Je Angeles on Monday and would
i has missed six games so far.
plead his case to the NBA. Last
~
The players' union has said 'the week, President Clinton said in
~ punish~nl was too severe and ~aid
televised intervi~w that Rodman
.. ~ somethmg should be.done to hmtt should admit he was wrong and
· ~ courts ide cameras and photogra- shape up.
·
" phers at games.

~

a

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•

,,

·Knicks ~eat Cavaliers 75-65; Lakers.and"Pacers also win

.

.

The Dally S•ntlnel • hgel .

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Kan.sas remains
unbeaten; Wake
Forest and UK win ,
sec uti ve double-double games
stopped at 27 as he fitlished with 10
points and five rebouqds in just 24
minutes as the Demoni&gt;eac:ons (171) won their second nonconference
game in as many nights.
Duncan, the 6-foot-JOAII-America center, also had his string of
games with at least one blocked shot
stopped at 114. Ricky Peral had 12
points for Wake Forest, which played
its starters for limited minutes. Seth
Chadwick had 24 points'fcir the visiting Terriers (5- 13).
·
No. 3 Kentucky 92
Florida 65
um.
Ron . Mercer · and
Nazr ·
"We lost our poise in the first
Mohammed·
each
had
I
8
poin\s
for
half," Kansas coach Roy Williams
the
'visiting
Wildcats
(19-2,
71·
said of the 47-~3 deficit. " We got
Southeastern
Conference),
.
while
some help off the bench in the second, we were more active on defense Anihony Epps had I6 points, five
rebounds and four assists.
aod we got a few turnovers."
Eddie Shannon had I 3 points for
.- Kansas managed its first lead of
FACES RESISTANCE- The Meigs Mareudere' Tonya Miller (31) the game when five turnoverS by the the Gators ( 10-10, 3-5), who fell
gets defenelve realatance from Point Ple11ant centllr Amber Ollv· Red Raiders (13-S, 5-3) Jed to I() behind 36-15 after 12 minutes.
er (40) as the Marauctera' Cheryl Jewell Wlltejlaa at left during
Florida St. 74
Wednesday night's game at Meigs High School. The Merauden won straight points and a 64-63 lead with •.
No.
S Marylimd70'
· 44-33 to earn a .season aeries·apllt. (Sentinel. photo by Dave Herrle) · 8:30 to play. That was Kansas' first
Sophomore
Randell Jackson
lead of the 'game.
'
.
scored
a
career-high
20 points and
"I think there was a point where
·. we thought it was gelling away," freshman Ron Hale added 17 as the
said Texas Tech center Tony Battie, Seminoles ( 12-5, 3-S Atlantic Coast
who had 29 poinis, I0 rebounds and Conference) beat a ranked team for
five blocks. "Some turnovers down the second time in a week.
Kerry Thompson's three-pointer
the stretch killed us." ·
· So did the Jayhawks' free· throw with I : I 3 left gave Florida Stale a
shooting as they made 16 of 18 down 68-65 lead, and it went 6-of-10
from the foul line in the final minute.
the stretch.
.
I With Pollard out -. he's expect- Keith Booth had 16 of his 20 points
ed to miss I0 more games for a total in the second half for the· visiting
j
of. 12 - Raef LaFrentz was. tefl to · Terrapins ( 17-3, 6-2).
No.
11
Iowa
St.
77
battle Battie inside. LaFrentz .finNebraska 67
,
ished with 21 points and two
. Dcdric Willoughby scored 2 ~
rebounds.
"They carne out and kind of points and the Cyclones (14-3, 5-a
kicked our bulls in the first half," ·Big 12) made II of 12 free throws
LaFreritz ·said. "We just started in the final three minutes forthc roa&lt;l
working harder and playing a lillie victory~ ·
Nebraska (11-8, 3-4)closcd to 61;
beller defense (in the second halt),
51
when Willoughby. who is rccov;
and things began to tum our way."
ering
from a hamstring injury, hit hi~ ·
Kansas, ·which had to play the .
sixth
three-pointer of the game:
first 10 games of the season without
injured point guard Jacque Vaughn, 'JYronn Lue had 17 points for tho
'
put the game away wiih an 8-1 run liuskcrs.
No.
ll
Diake
11!1
that gave it an 80-7·1 lead with I:'15
No. 19 North Carolina 73
left. That spurt finally dashed the
Trojan Langdon scored a career;
hopes of 8,174 frenzied Texas Tech
high 28 points, and his seventh
fans.
·
ln other games involving ranked three-pointer with 41 seconds lcll
teams on Wednesday, it was No. 2 scaled the win for the Blue Dcvil1
Wake Forest 68, Wofford 5 I; No. 3 (I ~5, 5-3 ACC), breaking their scv·
Kentucky 92, Florida 65; I'Jorida en-game losing streak to their nrchri:
•
. PASS BLOCKINQ 11111'1 merely phenorMnon confined to the State 74, No. 5 Maryland 70; No. II val .
.
The Tar Heels (I 2-6, 3-5) closed
football field, as Point Ptea..nt'e Amber Oliver blocka from behind Iowa State 77, Nebraska 67; No. 12
a Pll!l attempt by an unidentified Meigs front-liner during Wedn81· . ·Duke 80, No. 19 North Carolina 73; · to 72-70on a jumper by li'cshman Ed
day nlght'a.conteat at Rock Sprlnga, whn the Marauden'11-polnl California 70, No. 15 Stanford 64; Cola with ·1:33 remaining. After :l
victory forced the vleltlng Lady Knights to settle fore .500 recOrd. · No. 18 Colorado 69, Kansas State . jump ball · possession that went t&lt;l
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
60; and No. 25 South Carolina 65, Duke and a timeout, Langdon nailed
his career-best seventh 3. Serge
Vanderbilt 64.'
Zwikker led the visiting Tar Heel~
The Bernard Baruch Handicap at
No. l Wake Forest 68
with 14 J)oints, while ACC SC01rin~
Wofford 51
Saratoga is named for the famed
Tim DunCan had his string of conpark-bench philosopher.
(See TOP lS on Page S)
. ·...
By The Aaaocillted Pres•
Kansas was down· I 4 points at
· halftime in one · of the toughest
pJac:es to play in the country. Stan·
ing center Scot Pollard was on the
bench; his left foot in a cast. All that
was left was for the top-ranked Jay·
hawks to show why they are the only
unbeaten team in Division I.
They did.
•.
Pa\11 Pierce scored all 16 of his
points in tbe second half as the Jayhawks (21-0, 7-0 Big 12) rall.ied for
an 86-77 victory over No. 22 Texas.
Tech at Lubbock Municipal Colise-

a

Buck Willians ~
t
ldded 13 poinll.
•
Angeles' to victory at San Antonio.
AP Baabtbell Writer
Cleveland shot a shade below 36
Trailing 74-67 entering the fourth
Tenell Brandon, who t.d three of
In a season of low-scori111 pmes, ~t, scened only 14 poinll in the &lt;;leveJand•a four field aoaJs in the quarter, the Laken rallied behind
something Jowly WjiS bound to hlp- second period and then fiiiMI"C!juSt fourth period, finished with 24 Jones and Bryant. The two combined
pen to the Cleveland Cavaliers nine in the fourth quarter.
'
points. The Cavs, who held New Jer- for I I poinll u Los Angeles went on
the team that likes to play "How low
"It was fnlstratin1," CaVI for- sey to a -francbise-low 62' points a 19-8 run for an 86-82 lead, and
can you go."
ward Ouis Mills said." "It huits when Thcaday, were 4-for-19 from tbe , ~ryant con~ted on a three-point
Sure enough, the Cavs managed . you only score that many poiqts in · field in the fourth quarter. .
shot with 3:07 left to give Los
only 6S points Wednesday night.
the fourth quarter. Even though that
"This doesn't go down as an ugly Angeles a 91 -84 edge. Jones then
It was the lowest output in fran. happened, w~ were still right there. game," said Buck Wdliarns, whO had gave the !.akers their largest lead ot
chise histciry for a team that had We had a good shot at it .."
I 2 points fillin1 in for Ewing at cen- the game, 96-88, on two free throws
·plenty of forgettable moments (two
John Starks sco[ed 24 points for . tcr. "This goes down as a victory for with.I :09 to play.
•
Jones connected on five free
.; IS-win seasons, the disastrous own- the Knicks, who played their first the New York Knicks. We don't realthrows in the last minute to help the
' ership of Ted Stepien) before taking game of the season without All-Star ly care,if it's ugly."
Lakcrs
sweep a three-game road trip
on its current persona of being as center Patrick Ewing (pulled groin).
In other NBA games, the Los
'"··· exciting as coach ·Mike Fratello is .
It was the second-lowest point Angeles . Lakers rallied past San to Seattle, Dallas and San Antonio.
Pistons 99, TraB ~!Qers 89
. tall .
total ever against the Knicks, who Aritonio 99-92, Detroit defeated
Visiting Portland hit I I of its first
The CaYS, the trendsetters for the held the Jndiana Pacers to 64 on Dec. Portland 99-89, Miami downed
.cunent milk-the-clock, slow-down I 10, t98S. Cleveland's . previous Boston 103-83, Orlando beat 12 shots to take a 24-6 lead. But
•style that consistently prOduces record for f~west points was 67, last Phoenix 112- lOS, Seattle crushed . Detroi\ dido 't give up and ·used a 17· scores in the sub-90 range, had nev- · . reached in 1995 against Boston.
Golden State I It -86, Philadelphia 4 run to take a 55-50 lead at halftime.
Detroit opened the second half
"To limit them to nine points in nipped Toronto 101-99 a~td Indiana
; cr been as bad offensively as they
with an ll -2,runtogoaheadby 14,
· .· wen! Wednesday night in a 75-~ the fourth quarter shows our charac- di:fCIIted Charlotte 106-95.1
and the Pistons had no problems the .
.Laken 99, Spun 9l
loss to the New York Knicks.
ter," Starks said. "We'.re.on the road, ·
. "When I looked ·at the score we' re tired, but we still got after ·
Eddie. Jqnes scored I 9 of his 23 rest of the way.
"Our guys didn't panic. They
pOints in the second half and Kobe
(Cavs 34, Knicks 29) after the first them." .
Charles Oakley had I 3 points and ' Bryant, making his second start of kepttheir composure, and got themhalf, I thought it ,was a high school
· basketball game," Knicks forward tl rebounds, and Llury Johnson the season, scored I9 to lead Los selves back into the game. That's the

By CHRIS SHERIDAN

In the NHL,

,By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
· The BuffaiQ Sabres just won't go
, away. The Piitsburgh Penguins are
·taking notice.
1 0~ of the biggest surprises in the
· NHL this season, the Sabres moved
: within two points of the Northettst
Division leaders with a 3- I victory
over the 'Penguins on Wednesday
night.
.
; "They have a lot of skilled play' ers," Jaromir Jagr said of the Sabres.
'.'They're not big starS, but they're
pretty good ·players, arid they play
1

•

Srnehlik's empty-net goal with 27
seconds sealed the outcome for the
Sabres.
Dominik Hasek made 2 I saves,
and he robbed .Mario Lemieux in
front of the net with 5:50 remaining
with Buffalo hangi,ng on to a onegoal lead.
With the victory, the Sabres
avoided their first three-game losing
streak this season while handing the
Penguins their first road Joss in eight
gaines (6-1-1).
"We were totally [\nprepared,"
Penguins forward Slu Barnes said.

.

Rookie Jay Pandolfo sconed mid"We know how they come out of the
Rod Brind'Amour and Dainius
gate. We' II try and Jearn a lesson Zubrus scored for the Ayers, 8-0-4 way through the third period to give
on the road · since Nov. 27. The . ·New Jersey a tic with visiting
from this."
Elsewhere, it was Philadelphia 2, longest unbeaten road streak in fran- Ottawa.
Shaun Van Allen got Ottawa's
Washington I; Ottawa 'J, New Jersey chise history is 16 ·games by the
.
goal
and Damian Rhodes sropped JS ·
I; St. Louis~. Toronto 0; Phoenix 3,
1979-80 team.
Detroit O: Dallas 3, Anaheim I; Col·
The Ayers' latest road Win came · shots as the Senators stretched their
orado 6, Los Angeles 3; and Edmon· against a team they hadn't beaten all unbeaten to three , gnmes ( 1-0-2),
ton 3, San Jose I.
seasPn and in an arena where they which ties their season high.
Martin Brodeur, who shut out
· Flyers 2; Capitals 1
were 0-3-1 since April 1995.
Ron Hextall stopped 29 shots as • Philadelphia had two losses and a tie Ottawa l-Oon Jan. 3 in the last game
between the teams, had 23 saves.
Philadelphia extended its unbeaten against Washington this season.
(See NIIL Oil Pice 6)
road streak to 12. '
Senators 1, Devils l

Top 25 hoops.. ~ ~cc;::.on:::,:tin:::ue:::.d~fro:::,:m..:.:Pa~ge:..::4l~---------..,..
. leader Antilwn Jamison was held to
· a season-low 10 points.
California 70
No. 15 Stanford 64
Ed Gray scored 27 points, includ-

Oarfield Ht1 . .53, Lyndhunt Bmh l4
Garfteld Hll. Trimly 71 , Panna Hu.
HolyName44

St. Aonaventure 12, Fordham 11
St. Pete,.'s 61. Siena Sl
West VltJinia 89, 8Mton Cone,_e 76

Bas ketball

ing four free throws In the linal46
seconds, and the. Bears ·(15-5, 6·3
Pac 10) won their fifth straight overall and 15th straight at home.
Brevi.n Knight had 15 points to

lead the Cardinal (13-4, 6-3 ), who
were held to a season.-low point total
and shot 36.2 percent, .their se~ond­
wQrst outing of the ·sc;ason .

Oarreusville 76, Waterloo 41

A-klli¥IIa
'
J. bJ,
t.tlamL ................. J2 12 .727

w

lill
,

I ~ .711
(l
21 . ~12 · 9~
· 20 · . ~
10
30 261
19~
JJ .m . 21 \
32 .220 ll '

C-Di¥-

Chi''l!'""""""""")8
Detro..................... l2 ·
Atlaota .-................. 29
Ow1onc ................ Z.'i

$
II
12
19

CLEVELAND .... ...24

19

S.t Caroiinn 18. Old Dominion 63
Fklrida St. 74, M~~rYiand 10
Geaoaia6), Te....-lO
Jamcs Madiaon12, American U. 60
Kentucky 92. Aorida 6.5
Miuissippi 71 , Arkanau 52
Miuluippi St. 68, LSU 60
.N.C. Ctlwloue 711, Hou11on 611
. N.C..-.Wilmina:ton 6~. Willinm &amp;
MW)'63

6
8

.~

13~

t.tldwttl DI¥IRoo

II
Ulah .......................30 I 3
Minnesota .. :........... l9 24
Dallu ..................... l4 27
"Dcnvcr ..-......: ........ .. 13 Jl
San Antonioli ..... ,.Jo .268
YIUlcouvtr .... :.......... 8 38

ra.
.744

wa71
'
Wake Fomt 68. Wofford ~I

Mldweot

Ala.-BirminJham 62. S1. l..oui ~ 45
Colorado 69, KMIWII St . 60-.
IOwa 82. lllinoi1 6!'i
Iowa St. n. NehraW:I67
Purdue 12, hli~hiJIVI St. 62
WiiCOilSin M, Northwesrtm !0

17~

23

lill

Ark.-Pine Bluff Kl . Ak:orr. St RO
KM~ 86, TCitl&amp;ll T~h 77
Om1Roberts71, Oldtlhomu S1 . 60

2!1'1:

Far West

Padftt Diwllien
L.A. Lolten.'.,. ........ JJ · 11 .7JJ
Seattle ......... .'.......... JI 13 .70!1
Ponlond ............:.... 2.~ 10 .ll6
sacr:smento ... ......... l9 2~ .432
Ool6enState .......... l7 26 · .39!1
L.A. Clippcn ......... l6 2l .390
Pbuenix. .................. l5 29 ,)41

TOOL

.

·VALENTINE LOVE LINES

t5
15

'

.. x-

ra. w

Satari!Ay'• pmes
··
w. Mkliiaan » Bowllna 0n1&lt;o

'Akron 111 Toledo

Non-conf!f!rence play

Auron~

·

.

men's scores•
.

Faldelp Didtl_, l9, Man• 56
M _ 6 l, Fool1fleld49
Moual St . Mary's, Md . .59, Mon·
-lUll
N.c..o-otroro st. Md.·Baklmore

. c.....,.n
'

NIY11.l .. Holy Croll 7'
Pi-18, NotN Dome 64

Prov~ 62. Cot
tlcut 47
Rut~ -49, St. .lohn'l-47
•

•

!19. Middlt.!li~ILI Cnrilinal M~

Burton 8cfk5hin: 6.'\, tlu~Jrin Full• ~..J ·

Cin. D.'tf P;vk 57. Cln. Taykir ~2
Cia. lnclian Hi11 ·92. Cin. Wyomin:J I'l l
Ci•. tttllliemont 44. Cin, Madelm 29
Ci1, Rcllling 5K. Cin. Finncytown ~I
Clc. H11ye:t 73. Ck. Health Careen 6,11ij
Clc Kin&amp; 67. Cle. Sl.i)onl nf Ani M
Euclkl76, Eutlakc N. :15
Gallipolis 52, Qclliire River Val. 43
Kcllcrins At,lter 67, Cin. McNkbnla~~

~·

Findby Ubtny-Bemoo 43. Pandora·
c;-4o (OTI
Usbun Jk;twr 110. Ouk Glen. W.V-:1 . .
66
Yurt.'"'slArthur 'v1n10n 9ft, N~lsonvillt:· ·

scores

Akron Sprlni:. 6:1. Cunollton ~8

NCAA Division I
Army B.,, lloocto&lt;ll 71
Co~Ja85,Wa-71

boys' scores

Ohio H.S. girls'

E. Mtctipn 111 Cent. MidliJM

Eut

Pickerinl!lnn '.11, GmvC Chy 34
Pu1und 52. Girnnl 39
Pumeroy M11ig~ .... . Poinii W.Va.)
l'le~nnt X'
R1u.:in.: Soud\em 60, Trimble .W

••

Sulcm .5K. Srru1hen .SO .
Sllndusky 46. N. Ridatvillc 4)
Sidney ~ Gm:nvllh: JO
St. Cluinvill.: .52. Steubenville C111h.
Tol. Clllholic K9, Tol. SIDI'I 27

,•

At!K!n~10. Jacklon ~
Avol Lake 6~. l..akcwood l6
Bea-k 96, SprinJ. Nonll )6
8m&gt; 75, t.odi OowrlooDI
Brecbvinc 58. Midput ~
c..roo S. 50. c...oFul... NW 43
Ceolavllle 6,~. SprioJ. Sooolh 63
Chardon 62. Paine1ville Harvey ~ 2
Cle. ~11holh: 38, Clc. St . AuJultinc
)5
•
Col. Hanley 74, Col. O.S.Iel 66
Col. Ready 61. NewJWk Cath . .t9

c...... •7l, Geneva .18

Day. llu- )9, O.y. WhiiO )6
Day. ......... 96, ....... ltll'f"' ~'
Dover !7. ~· , w.bouot 40
~· 12. Lorain Kl"'l9
fairllonlll, Illy. w.,,..lO

- ! I, Xooiaol6

"

01499]
Bro)'hm. : : :~. .
.
.

.

Tnl. Noue l.&gt;anl: MI. Tol. Ubbcy ~
Tul. RnJ~'n 4~. Tol. \1/uile J6
Tol. Si:Oit KO. Tt~ . WoNWilfl.I2S
Tul. Sl. Umlla.5K. Tnl. &amp;w~"
TfOIWOOl.I - Madi~oa59. PilfUII 32

35" color TV .

Tmy .5K. [);1)". Nonhmont 43
V~ia8Uikr69. W. Carrollton ~2
W. 8I'UIM:h -~. ~atlin.lon 26 •·
W. Mwdlinpm )7.1Philo lH
Wurrcn HardinJ 56. You. Eut32

!i\)f)

.• Acho.t••• t'til Yidtoct
'-'.ttWJ;MIII'III )W'.II,II'"

Tri-Vullc~

Windh'n.m 66, Morllllorc Fiekl ~6
Zl.•ncntlk: Ro•rans SO, Col. Wr~tt~­

.n

Swupei'l
Allow AI

..

• Luc.r

$89
~,...

M~klwuW 5d. Lonbtuwn J7

E. Mi"chi~:an 79, Aluvn 76
Kt'ni 8~. Ctnt. Michipn 83
W. MK:hljan62. Toledo 53

.

.11

Hockey

St. lOSc!J,.. A, Pu, 76. Oayton 71

Ohio H.S.

·

Pah1~kala Wrukins M~morinl 42 .
Whill!hall ~6
P~:ninsulu Wuvtlri~!(.: 42. Rt)OI-'Iown

J6

Pury"41. Oatts Mills Huwb'tl .W
pt;ain Cily Alder 74. Triad46
Snlathlnpon 77, Bllxwnficl\1-16
npp Cloy Kl, Sldoty·Lelom.'" l9 ·
W, Chester I..U:OIQ 71t Uma Sr. !19
Wickliffe 76. ~inklnd ~6

Bow lint Oreen 72. OHIO 59

KenoaoMiaml

P11rmu Vol. Fora.: 6S, Pnrm11 Nor·

Kent HI, C('nl. Michi1nn b~
Miumi. Ohia b7. Bnll St 61
OHIO 6~. Odwling Green ~1.1

OYnall
J. Ea.

' Wednesday's IICOI'el

Ball So. '" OHIO

2K

Tukdn liM, W. ~ichip.nn 47

·] ! J.
E. MichiJOn ... 6 I .8~7 15 3 .KJ\
. BGSU ............ 7 2 .777 ll l .ll&lt;l
t.thun1 ............ 6 2 .7l0 II l .611~
Ohio .............. 4, ·4 .~00 9 7 . ~3
Atron .........."...t !I .444 ~ II . J~.\
Bnll St. ......... .4 $ .444 II R . ~79
W. Mh:hipn .4 .S .444 8 ~ .411 ~
Kent .............. ..t 5 .444 6 I r J~3
To)cdo ....·....... 2 1 .22l 9 8 . ~29 '
C. Michigan .. 2 7 .222 ~ '12 .294

•

Omn~ " · Rtainu 40
:t I
Puincsvillt: Rivcnidt 74, Allh1abuln

Wnunw River View .. II.

Mid·AmerlCIIn Conference

MAC standings
Conf.",·

HcKiclbetJ 90. Hiram Col. 6M
John CIIITOII 91 . Cllj\ital
Mllriel1a 64 .. 0ucrt.:in 61
Moum tJninn .!13, Mu~kiiiJUm4l
Ohio Nonhern K2. ~ah1win · Walh11.-c:

college scores

Frlday'saames

.

Ouovil~ :'i:t, t..eirsic

Ohio wo!Den'$

Port1onclot Solton, 1 f .m.
Orlaado 111 Philadclptua.. 7:.10 p.m.
Milw:wtec at CharCotte, 7:30p.m.
Houlton ac lndiD.na. lt p.m.
Minnesota 111 Son Antonio. 8:30 p,m.
WAJbinJIOfl at Sc:Dttlo. !Op.m.
Atlanln n1 Vm.wver, 10 p.m.
. Otlc~~&amp;o at Gohkn S~att, 10::\0 p.m.

Anyone who would appreciate a thouahttul word f'rum you! All Valentine
Hearts will be pubUshed In the February 14th !$sui! at a cost or only $6.00!
MUST BE PREPAID!
.

Medina Buckeye. 43. Olm1tcd Falls
JS .
.
Minerva 1M. I:.ot!isville 41
MOJadort 87, Strecuborn 26
N. Olmsted 67, Parmll ~K
N. Royollton 4:'1 , Suonasvillc 42
Ntw Lexinlltln ~I , Joha Gttnn 40
Norwu.lk~l. V!!nnilion47
Oberlin ~5. Avon oil
Oberlin Fin.iMI.b ."i3, Wellintuon 22

Non-conference play

Oth:qoal Slletamento. 10:3(} p.m.

• Sweethearts • Moms &amp; l)ads • Grandparents • Teachers·
•·Babysitters • Friends

Mf4jno 6.1.. Brunawh!k 49

Rutland Furniture's
Winter Sale

Ravenna Souda:ut :U, Cn:stwood 26

Oblo Conference

p.m.

The.Daily Sentinel

-&lt;&gt;.,.

May•vllle 11; Morann ss

. Wilmio[lton~ Ollio H9. Ohio Wc1lyn
7911 UTI

Denver nt . Hou~~ton. l'l :.lOp. n\.
.
Allanl11 Ill Utah. 9 p.m.
.
Vaftcouvllr Ul L.A. Clippen, 10:30

.

43

college scores

..

Ph_oenill. mNe!W Jcrlt!)'.' 7:JO p.m.
M'"ne~l'l m l&gt;ulli!s. Kjo p.m.

'

~

MMiiJOft 46, Aslltlbul11 Edlf:Wood 40
Rocky River Ma1nificat 59, Cle .
Heights S2
M~t~nolia. W,Vg. ~6 . Monroe c.ntruJ

S.l'uint 1«1. Gh:nwood 27
S. Webtlet 6:'1. Wc:atem Llllhnm ~I

n

. 'ronltlhl's games

.

l.orain Clearvicw 61 . Lomin Midview

#

Ohio men's

171:

Orlando 112. Phoeni• 10~ ·
Mi411li !OJ, Bos1on 8~
lndiNIII 106. Ch.-lolto 9~
New York"· CLEVELAND M
~troit 98. PortiDnd 89
L.A. Lakm 99. Snn Anlonio 92
Seatt~-,111 . Golden ~uteiUJ

.,

A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember that special someone thls
Valentine's Dar·with a message in

Califnmim 70, Sumronl64
Punland St. 6S. S. O~Jon S I
Weber St 72, Montnm• 6M

W~nesctay's S&lt;Orts

•

.

·~8
13':

Philadclphio J(U . Toronlo 99

\

'

Souihwest

19~"

IIOIIC-42

m:.UKJy ~

:....
2
IJ
17

.6911
.441
.l"l

.29~
20
.174

.

Va. Commonwenhh· W. Gco!JC: Mn-

. 14
17

-·-

Hnu11on ................. J2

•

· Sou'lh Carolina 6.1, Vnntlerttllr64
Tenn.-ChllltanOI,)Ja 13. E. Tcn~J~:sace

WESTERN CONFERENCE
l! t

,

So. 53

.884
.7#
.7VJ

.ll8
Milwaukcc .............ll 22 .418
(ncfiMD ... , ..... ..... ... .. lO 22 .476.
TntOOio ............ :..... ll 28 J49 ·

liB

Lorain Broobide 53, l..nGmnF Key.

Duke 80, North CArolina 73

EASTERN CONFERENCE
NewYork " ............ 32
WuhinJton ............22
Odaado ......... :........20
New Jerscf ............ II
Philadelpllio ........... IO
.... : ........ . .0......9

Jeffaaon 6l, Alhtlbula Harbor :n

Soulb

NBA standings

AHANDY

llte Dally Stllflllll
Valentine Hearti
111 'Court Street
P011aroy, 9" 45769

.

3-1 to trim Pittsburgh's division lead

Scoreboard

MAKE IT ARUlE•••
USE WANT ADS. ,, :

•

well together. They play physical,
· and they play aggressive."
The Sabres Weren' I given much
of a chance after scoring leader Pill ·
LaFontaine was knocked out by a
concussion early this season. But
· with 57 points, the Sabres (26-19-5)
are tied for the sixth-best n:cord in
the NHL.
.
The Sabres dominated Pittsburgh
for two periods and hung on after
'Jagr's goal in the third, his leagueleading 42nd.
Rob Ray and Mike Peca scored In .
the first period before Richard

.

I

.

/,·

Penguin~

·Sabres .beat

that I felt tlw way."
kind of commitment to winning this
Orlando rebounded from a 20team has made," PisJOns coach Doug
point loss at Washington the prtvi·
Collins said.
ous night to climb back to .500 (20Heat 103, Celtlcl8l
20) and extend the Suns' losing
At Miami, Alonzo Mourning had
sueak
to .four games. ·
24 points, 15 rebouads and five
SuperSonics 111
blocked shots. He also had seven
Warrlon86
dunks, giving him 13 in his last two
Seattle scored the first 10 points
games against Boston.
of the game, had an I 8-point margin
Backup center Isaac Austin had
by the end of the first quarter and led
14 points and 10 rebo~ni:ls , Voshon
by as many as 36 paints in the fourth
Lenard scored 20 and Tim Hardaway
period at Golden State.
added 15.
Gary Payton had 26 points,
Boston, which l,ost its seventh
including six three-pointers,. and
straight, was playing with six healthy
three teainmates- Detlef Schrempf,
players and a gimpy Alton Lister.
Hersey
Hawkins and Craig EhloMagic 112, Suns lOS·
At Orlandp, Penny Hardaway scored 14 each.
Pacers 106, Hornets 95
had 32'points and eight assists, both
season highs, as the Magic won for . · Reggie Miller scored a :.Casonhigh 40 points and Indiana snapped
the eighth time in t 0 games.
a
three-game skid by winning at
"When my leg was injured, I
Miller's performance
Charlotte.
couldn'tdoanyofthosethings - go
·to' the basket and finish .. : Tonight helped the Pacers bounce back from
was the complete game, " Hardaway a 98-97 Joss to the Hornets one nigh\ ·
said. "I had everything going for me earlier in IndianapOlis.
Glen Rice led the Hornets wl\h 34 ·
and had all the confidence. This is
points,J
he lOth time in 16 games he ·
the first time since I've been back
has broken the 30-point mark.

~'fr:f.

.

-

• Ntow M.OH Ml·nu ~~ ·1n

EASTERN CONFERENCE
~tt.ntltDMMn

.

!« L I &amp; ·lif !iA

Philadillphiu ....... 21J, 14 1 "6.1 I~V
Aoridu ...............25 14 10 60 14.~
N.Y. Rung~...-s .....2!120 7 57 17M
New J.:-nc)' ....... .24 17 6 5-I 122
W:L•hinJIUn ........ l02!1 !I 4!1 1;\1
TuJTlflil Buy ....... IM 2J 6 ~42 1J6
N.Y.·blandcn ... 1624 ~ ~I 1J6

Nol1helld DM11M .
'·Piustlurt=.h ..........27 1K !I . !IV IK4
Uuffu1u ... ....... ,.. .26 I\.I 5 !17 144
HnAii.•d ........... ..20ll 1 41 14tl
Montrcu1 ........... . 1K l."i M 4ol I~M
Boltou ............... . IKl.. A 42 140
OIIUW3 .. ..... ........ 1!1lll0
4() · J2M

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122
I 1.a

14.5
11 b
13~

J.(9

146
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O..llns ................. l917 4 62 U,\

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8
0

48 09 I!17
44 I~ 1~9
~ ~ 149 IKO

Onawa I. New Jtney I (lit,
Philadclphi•l. Wuhlnaton I
St. Loui• 4, Toron!o 0
Phoeni• .1, Derrolr 0
Oall• 3. An*im I
Coknllo 6, Loo Aot&lt;lel 3
-.J.s.nJ-1

Toallllt'•_.-

I !19

SL........ a1lilrawa. 7;30 p.m.
- . f . - l a y, 7"1Q p.m.

'Yidl..., 'ir,\trtll
Cinlt&lt;IDn
·~·"'­

!moo~·

• 1 Vtar, Sf wont TirnN
• Aulmldtif Hl••d Ot-111\N"

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lttriU. . .&gt;Ij-Vidlott
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• A~.~~ in whit.. ur alrm"..l

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'

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151
160
147

ll) 14.1
1.\4 17!1
124 I~

W~nesdoy's scores
Buffak1 .t Pinsblqh I

• 4-ltt.vl flJ IIOOblf&gt;Nimulh

IJM

'J
4

176
163
U!l
IJR

.

¥14115

170

120
.5J 144 Ill

l'ldlkllklColondo ............ )l 12 M 10
Edmonton .......... 2422 S :U
Valll:ouver ......... l.~ 23 2 41
l\nnhoim ............ 19l4 6 44
. Cai~MY .............. I8ll 6 42
Los Anatles ....... l7 27 6 «J
SunJMe ............. l726 ~ J9

..,......,.,.,_.inA

IJ2
1!12
I K2

WESTERN CONJ:ERENCE
-l.ktroil .. ............. .ll 17
StLouis .......... ..l.t 2J
Pbornix .............. 22 24
Chi11DJo.. :.......... . l826
Toronto .......,..... . l9 32

(.onu,.,. I'Kitttt' 1"11IR·

• 'Poltial Lttlloii11JiltM! N-11) .
1\Udiu &gt;;ywt·m ·

NHL standings
lull

lt~Kh

MAIN STREET • RUTLAND, OH

742·2211 • t-800·837-8217
Hours: Mon.·Sat. 8:30 am•S:OO pm
Thurs. 8:30 am-12 noon

Servi cP Hotl1ne 742-2212
'

·;

�.

.::In the MAC,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

TIMndey, JM:wy 30, 1187 .

~: EMU gets

AIIUI I II PIMa Wtllw
Eallcm Michigan coach Milton
Bli'nes says Lady Luck sometimes
hu to be on yoW' side to pull out a
1'01111 victOI}' in the Mid~American
• Conference.
. "We're very hippy to walk out of
hen: with a win. In fact, very lucky
to win," Barnes said Wednesday
nigllt
. Derrick Dial scored 23 points,
. ;..; including two l'ree throws for the
: · lead with ·29 seconds to play, asthe
·· tint place Eagles beat Akron 79-76.
.••. In other MAC games, Western

Meigs County Council

by Akron '79~76; Bowling Green ·~eats Oh.i o
Pallcs

lly AON VAMPLE

Michigan defealed ' Tole&amp;j 6?·S3, t
Head ' got ·the rebound for
Kent edg~ Central Michigan 8S-83 Eastern and Phillips immediately
and Bowling Green f toPPFd Obi~ f foulcdr~. •
•
72-59.
,
·;
. Head 01adehotb free lhrows ll!ld
. "All we needed was one stop/' Phillips missed a game-tying 3·
~~~ Akron coach .Dan Hipsher. • poiM shOl at the buzzer. Phillips led
Doal made some; bog ~s down Akron with 24 points.
the ~ttelch. He madesome big plays.
At Western Michigan {8·9, 4·5),
We J~t never got them stopped. '•
Saddi Washington scored 23 points
. Woth Eastern (IS·3, 6:'- Mft:C) as, the Broncos finished the game
leadong :15-74, George Pholhps hot a woth a 10-2 run to bcatToledo.
layul.' With SO seconds to play to give
"We played with good purpose
AJcr?n the lead..
.
. . tonight and got the ball in the right
Jon_omal ~all, who finoshed woth people's hands. That and completing
. IS poonts, mossed a shot for the Zips free throws down the sttetch . was
(6-11 , 4-S) with seven seconds left, paramount," said Western coach

Bob Donewald.
was.
t
Toledo {9-8, 2·7) used a 10-4
Centtal {5·12, 2·7) opened a S2spun. t? close to S2-~1 with 5:28 471ad ~)'in the sec6nd hllf. but
n:m111nmg, but made JUSt one more Kent (6-11, 4-~) used a 9-0 run to
basket the rest of the way as the take the lead. Neither team led by
Rockets lost for the seventh time in more than fclllr poi.nts the rest of the
eight games.
way.
·~
•
"We seem to be snake bitten right
.'.'Central played hard but we
?Ow," said Toledo coach Stan Joplin. were able to hit some big shots.to
'We can't m~ke a play when we stop CMU runs:" said Kent coach
have to. We JUSt keep coming up Gary Waters. "We held Central to 42
short and that's disturbing."
percent from the field and managed
At Central Michigan, Brook 10 stick with thtmo on the boards."
Bnght scored 16 points . \"ld Kent Both teams had .40 rebounds.
made S of 8 free throws in the final
"We did not• rebound down the
2: 13 to hangnon to beat the Chippe- stretch and it hu~ us. We could have ·

Multlpurpoae Senior Center, ·1at Floor
(614) 992·2161 'FAX (614) 992·
. ·.
.
112 East Memorial Drive, P.O.. Box 722, Po111eroy, Ohio·457&amp;9·.

sealod the game with rebounds," said
Centtal coach Leonard Drab.
~ M~on led Cenlral with
20 po1nts while NaJe Huffman had
18.
.
.
In Bowling Green, Tony ~cod
came off the bench to score II pomts
to lead the Falcons over Ohio. .
Antonio Daniel.s led Bowling
~n~IS·5,7-2)woth 15poontsand
sox ass.osiS, and ·Antbpn¥ Stacey. had
14 pomts. DeM!If Moore had II
points and.~y'Lari'anaga ad~ 10.
·For O~oo {9·7·,11!;4), Geno Ford
had 18 potnts and liVe steals, and~
Scars scored

I

:: ;&amp;y HOWARD ULMAN

season~.

. · any offer the Jets make. forcing Par-

: • FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)-;- Boll
::Parcells, who wants to rebuold the.
• •Ne-t. York Jets th.e way he dod the
· New England Palnots, miaht have to
; :start out a couple of draft choices
-,short.
.
.
·
Z: That could be the cost to the Jets
: .f~r Patrio!S owner. Ro~rt Kraft to
: .atve up hos exclustve nghts to Par• :CCIIs for next season.
; : The teams wen: expecled tq di..
; ~uss a compensatiOn deal after com• )nissioner Paul Tagliabue ruled
~:Wednesday that ParceUs can work
• for another NFL team next season
~:Only if the Patriots agree. · ·
~ Parcells, who wanted more con! 1J'OI of New England's football opert «ion, lost control of his own future
t lust three days after taking the team
'!-)O the Super Bowl. Kraft can reject

J~ts

He can challenge the rul!11g. in · Bowl in fdur
The
were
cells to stay another Season or leave court, although the NFLconstotutoon 1·15 last year, the worst record in the
the NFL until Jan. 3'1, 1998, when and bylaws say the commissioner NFL, and !l.ic" Kotite announced
the Patriots' hold on him. ends.
has the final say.
.
Dec. 20 he would not return as
ESPN reponed that the Jets were
Kraft has praised.Parcells' coach- coach.
putting together an offer for Parcells. ing skills, but the two do not have a
The Jets would not consider giv- ·
They o:efused comment "until the warm relationship; which could ing up the top pick in the draft,
. entire process is completed," team make Kraft willing to let him go. although cash and current New York
president Steve Gutman said. . .
Kraft left Foxboro Stadium without pl.ayers could be part of a compenIf Parcells goes. San Franc1sco commenung about 45 monutes sation package.
defensive coordinator Pete Carroll, before t~e decision was released at
For.weeks before the Patriots 3Sthe Jets' coach in 1994, looms as a about S:45 p.m.
·
21 Super Bowlloss.to the Green Bay
frontrunner to replace him.
The Patriots then issued a state- Packers last Sunday, reports circu- .
''We're starting to put a list · ment saying they were pleased with lated that the Jets wanted Parcells,
together" of possible successors, the ruling and adding, "Bill Parcells although Kraft has not suggested .
Patriots ·player personnel director has been an important part of the they tampered with his coach.
Bobby Grier said Wednesday. success of this organization. It is now
Parcells made it clear he wanted
"We're prepared. It's a short list."
time for the Patriots 10 move ahead no part of the Patriots after this sea·
Parcell~' law firm in Boston said · and build on !he success of the 1996- son when he asked Tagliabue to
. he was considering his options and 97 season."
'onterpret his contract. Kraft then
"wHI .make a statement as soon as
Parcells took over a team that \lias .made a similar ~quest.
possoble."
2-14 on 1992 and led otto the Super
The commiss 1oner held a confer-

on Parcells' services if he decided to
coach next season:
He can work.,utside the NFLas a collegecoac~ or broadcaster, for
example- wittujut the Patriots' permission.
'
Tagliabue said Parcells' interpre~&amp;lion of his contract would make the
key part of the revision "meaningless and of no effect" and would.be
"contrary to common sense, as well
·as to Massachuseus law."
"Mr. Parcells not only promised
to ~oach the Patriots in 1996, but also
gave the Patriots a co~ditional option
to extend the contract through the
1991 season," Tagliabue wrote,
The controversy intensified on .
Jan. 20, the day after the Patriots
arrived in New Orleans for the
Super Bowl. when a Boston G_lobe
article saod 11 would be Parcells last

"SERVICES a: PROGRAMS'
FOR SENIORS AT
.. THE · MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER

'11:

·

· tf
·
\f. ._ u· ARY FOSTER
'
{._r
.
t( NEW O~EANS (AP) -. Judg-

._4nl by the I!Cket office, you. d never
~o~ the New Orleans Samts fi~3,,13 _last seaso~ and haven t
a
wtn~tng
season on four. years.
~.• 1bo Satnts had to bnng tn per.-

t'•hed·
-.l'ed

· '

·

Patriot~

game as
coach.
. n
· Two days .later. Kraft '!rie·. Y·
shared the pndoum lit Parcells .d,aoly
news con~erence tn an atteQJpted ·
show of unot~ to defuse the o~sue. Yet
doubts n:mamed. , ,
'• . .
If the oss~ dodn 1 dostract Patnots·
· players, ol sh1fted the focus frot]Hhe
tea~'s, success.
.
' . ,
Its hard to .e"J?Y the season
when you have thos kmd of prol&gt;ler:n
or spectre lingedng over the organozation," saod Gner, w~~ has the power over personnel decos10ns that Par·
cellswanted:."Bill and I bad ~.great
relat1onshop.
. . , .
· Gner w~s standong IR the ·dark
and cold woth about 50 othe_rs as .the
Foxboro Stadoum admonntf!lloon
buoldmg was evacuated at a~t 5 .
p.m. Wednesday after a ~aller sa1d ~
bomb would go off at S.l5.

~·~~n~oy

.

s..... C.rlda, DUtrict Dlroctor

.~nr.;........ ~,; &amp;rial
i

'·

'

i

H-liermea,~t~a ~· ¥lcea
lletir.oland Senior Volunteer l'rotrUl

'

'

W'eDneu ancl Health Prevention ~P'aDII

.an

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
Nlu.--------~~--~~

'

JolfFowler Suah McGrew R.N., P.S.N,
.
Dick w.....,. oad Mlrhele Cillo,Xnpr ~
llowou• '• Kodieol Supply
B.orh eua...._, P-ror N..... A .......

AwM~------------------

' .

!

.'

ONS

Elaii..U...
V'aoldo BooO

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

'

a

•·•·=

Vlrpoloo E. Hoy1

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

B.otty Speaeer
John Shoi•

llildn\l c.w...l

Laolooa. '
Ulla·a .;.

Jane Teaford .

OtloCuto .

•

,,

Elolo CI'OIIoer

ceo.,. Koodr

WILL BE PUBLISHE·DTHURSDAY, '
FE.RUARY 13TH IN

TolltllaCooto

Aaoberl.ob

ldoCowderi

Kathoryalletqer

Also a special seclon for In Memory Vale,nllne Pets.

DorothyDonlo .

o.... a 1.o1o w ·

RoY. w•. llldo!Jetwarth·

IWioooo .t Ponoite Boker

Moi'J Mardnko
Mania .t Mai'J Murplly

UuEYIDa

'
!

'·

-.

U.hFnc:br
Arotto Flint

zl

ia

address~ s~amped

.envelope to return
your photo.

I

'·

'

,,

!

·

,r
Amount enclosed:
I at $6 each.
·

for

DoYidDeLa•ol

l.ewiiKealledy
Kania Kricler
llai'J Lyoa

J•h• A llilllho O.Uia1 ·
Wolter a
E¥Onl

Ropr,Leaon.~A

l

llleltoel LeiAoil
Vi.,pl McElroy ·
llo..IParton

J

Burdell .t Elf'oo Jll.ck
a-Bailey

Frod ,. Poullae ~-•
DoYid A Delorio H......

lia.,.Balebor

Naolli ~ooehoor
Ted A Xethel Hotrleld

JlaftelloCioo....

I

'llatrtloo Ch-bero
Ora Coney

AJPiuo 8oiloy

IM..belh ca....a

Law....,.. C.rpet~~er

a-ioc-lo

.llhoor..,... Colior
liuiCoa ••

~~--~~--------~-------------~
Deadline
,, Friday, February 7th at 3 p.m.

...... CJeliDd

...,.Darot
l .. o-.-

.

.

._..F......U
Fro- Ct ,.....,

Betty O.lebor

~Aa~oelleom

'I

Kat..,..

Edaa F'ober
Baby Friclt

Myrtle CroAdo H-

I
·I.·1

piQturee
·
.. I

· Mall or bring the entry form: .

AIIIDil

,...
....
....
..,.., .......
llelowtD

I IJ

I.M,n.hoor

Chorloo Hf"'

llellie•Hotfleld ·
Robert H -

....... J.....

&amp;buo Slu,her

s.,.....

•

.,

·

EdDoS..._Ieh

•

Mabel Waddell
Bel"" YIU.rd ·
Clodyo Welker
Coral Wrillon
~Mitch

Fruth Phai'Oilocy
. Pomeroy Flower Shop·
~r

R &amp; G Feed Store
J'• Sen;.., Station
Pamida
. McClure '• Reotaurant

.

Marilyn Powell
IIIW....t Peri'J .

Jooepbino Ritehie
Mo.,. Rinehon
Cornet Rouoh
· ·. Peorlll~ .
· Joe .t Myrtle Silloa

Dorothy S_.,r

...s.....

Carroll A lilldreol J......• ftyllla Ski-"
Chorloo A .....y Jtalol
To• S1abort
Leoler .t.rr.- 'lteotoa
ltillbetlo s.• rl' r
~.·
Clara Krider
Alioo StnoWe
llitaUwtt
HoloaSa•...
~llaotla
.
-Jioa
a Jlioaor11oosfio
. VIr II I llcCl * ..
V.._Winloacl
lloboot .t N - 'WIIooot
Cullllllor
lloaoldW..~
NoiJio Po.kor
lllo Wlllia.
San•Nelttlor
........ LMIIIo Pua•
FnokY-

.......

·-·Dade

Joan Corder
Ola Hyoell .

GiodyolliDoa

c.,UeBraan

Bobhi Pauley

ii:'J!':i:ohelt
Str•••

LaunCo11rt
Lee Lee
Aouoa Ro. Filch
Doo and llettr Mou,.r
Doi'Oihy Hmdriclio

Ev~~

Jo Hillel

=Rohoorlo
J-t.i:.
MarpntKunJ
ElloeaJ..~
Ueyd lllaeboed
DerW. P '••

~Zodlo

a.nc-.,

•

lllai'J Rinehart
Helen Flohor

RuthShuler-

Eloioorlli-oado
. CoroiWriotGa

fnaci• F1oriot
Poo•perecl Pawo Pet Groooaina
Moip Form Market
r
f.,.;JyDoUar
, ChiiiM'ef'• i'!liJd Mart
Suhway

Heri..p;H~

•

Dooaino 'a Piua

DairrQaeen
Jukebox PUss

.,

Aeopiaitioao

AB&amp;TAuto
Joe '• Country Markel .
Mick Davenport ~ Bis Bend Heohh &amp; FiiDeoo
Gallia-Jacboot-lleip llearcl ol Ale..... Drus
Addiction a: Mental Health Servieeo
Aliee Ho'wthome • L.S.1V. •
'
O'Bie-lleaoOrial Hoapital
Woodland C..tcn. lac.
B.....olaRuthR.N. -b.U. C....
'
Holaer Hoapice ol Melp CauntJ
MoUy Varaer- Noble C...ty Heahh Dept.
Offiee Serviee &amp; Supply ·
B.....,.,...amer lnaunaee Co.
Swi.oher Lohoe Phanoo:aey .

Fare Wilde,.ulh

Mary DoYidooD

E.. Kiolt

Rilll Aid

. Sweet Greetinp
O'DeU Luonber
Riwe~ide Food Mart
,.
PoweD'o Super Valu Store
Lindo((;"'· OSU Exlemoion, Melp·' •
County
RldeDOur Supply
Bau• True V!due Lumber &amp; Hardware
Aaron Wolfe'• J&gt;i.oduce
Rutland 1lre Salta &amp; Set •lee ,
Hi~top Grocery
Star SuppiJ ·

Woopei-Hardware
CloeoterQuikStop

..

Eloet'e Statio.
Jelf'l'hornton!a Produce

a

Graee Price
Ethel Bento
:lv• ne..-.uer

'
Paullae ilideaour
. J_,JWoe Sooith
J-Tealord
Chtrl.etKiler
Doaaa Willi-Mm
L•7Br•u.•
Ce:aeviete Barde:tte

• l

ll.D. W'alaou- Sol!,l ~ Co, .·
Ande.-'oFumitoueand,£-:""•.·
·~~ .•• J
Store
.~'
:•
·'
'.

People'• Bank

. I)ONATIONS .

IMM"+..

jwJ .....

·-UI'llllt

TREE OF LIGHTS .

C..rp Moore
. Joan Neo,.

.I

...

s...·.cJub

Apes Stc¥C~

EIIom Ju~lio

, I

.

Brown Food 9errice .
Midclleport Trophieo and Tee•
·Hobart Soleo &amp;: Servi""

J - .t Ado Tlbu
CrottoThOIOOO .

,·~ 1

ICity,

n..,...

~ lo
Coliiao
r ' - lr. 1
·
B.oooJoll (4olllor·
Syhou A Dollie Cleload
ll.otty Coney

TwltiJ'•

Joluuoa'o Variety Store
Adolph'• Dairy Valley
· PiaaHut
Clark'• Jewelr)'
Weet..,Aulo
K a: C Jewelen
ADuri!ac Scento
Ohio Ri•er Bear c-p.n,.
Crooo Waid So111' Store
Baer'oMarkot
Mill St..- Boob
MitcbeD Meadowo
Rlee'o Creea Houoe
Rutland Fumiture
PiU&amp;Daou ·
J.D. Drilli•s Co.

K;"''• Hardware

~Dison

'a

I Addrese,
I
· ;• t

.'no...!.

·

Doro1hy Roller
Doroohy Roberto
Nlu RabinAOa
c.o,..., Skinner
Bemice Sworta
Moonle Swoupr
DouoS.Oih

ElwiaJ•-

;

· .. : ..

Sor.. Coldwoll
'Dorodo Clan
Cin:lo

lnae Parker
Dorolhy Reibel

f

· . VALENTINE PETS ·. '.. :; 1

IPet's Name
IIOwner'sName
.

A. . . . . . .
EJ.er Jiowio.
Manley A Malinda Chrioty

t

r~---~-----~--~--------~----,

1.

GoWi.B *1r

DAV
Quality Print Shop
Anwar Cataraet Center
Lioo Koch, lnbeoriq
Dr. H..Ward Green
Meip Ceunty Muoeu,.
United Way o£ Muoldnpno,
·Perry a: Morpn Countieo
0Hft Or~np Memorial_Poet 9053
Tile Meip Fair Boord
Ho.;er Medical Center
Continuity of Core
VMH Home Health
Car tare Dqeton
Leiae Dental Clinic
Dr. Dowid Foro
Ve...... Me•oria1 Hoepital
'
ACCESS
Vaupan'oiGA
G a: M·Fuel Company
I

Geraldloae c.J ....... lo Katloloea
Dam

i

. · Hurry! De11dline
,Frid11y, Febru~~ry lth 111 3 P·"'· "

Aamy Ouro ·

Mildred
Patricia S...ia

rj '

l

......

.'-.J... W.¥oJ .

Fntlo Hoed
Heleallood
Donllhy HaolriHlldoHarrio
LaiiHa•ptoa

••

"PET'S NAME" ·
Owner's Name ·

Fo1" Will
Don .t Lee Youq

p.. .,.,..,...

c.-tEnino ·

"The Cobra"

' •

'l'lllle Dam 1 '

llliclrod Had-

Please enclose self·

loa Tedord .
Dorothy Woodard '
Gwinniti Waite .
E..lya Wotror&lt;l

J.....

Rar-oid Coueril

PER PICTURE
PRE-PAID

Helea Sworta

:: eiu.iloo «;.:..
c........ ~

E.,..StC.rr

F1oooie Hyoell

I

,.~

... p !t.

•

Ewelyn Stowe
Rlljlh .t Maxiooe s•ala

f .

Edoe1M. H.......

I

G...a.ctb

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N.........
Enallaellll .

Mpi=Gi

. 5399
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ORGANIZATIONS &amp; BUSINESSES

Fr-Roboru
Robort .t Jeaa R B.otty Sayre
·MiaaS,rioher
Lyle Showalter

Joeldo Hlldobroad .

..............
WaltcrCreea

Enjoy Wall-Saver- convenience with
sman traditional styling. In a carefree
. tabnc with big bUIIOn·tufled pillow back
and extra thick pillow seat

............. (

~

Bonolee Ballo7
'h••nB- 1

THE DAILY SENTINE-L

•

You may etOp ~ at the 1Senior Ceater o~
yoar melllberebip to: lleip County
lhldJ111111018 Sellior Center, P.O; Box 722,
P-ooy, o•io 45769. If pouible, pleaae
include a ttamped,. eelf-oid4reue4, ~~
envelope, Thank you for yotar eupport. · .•

Breroda Roaoh, Loo'o Cnilo A Tra..J
Beelty Boer
Bob SoaitJdie

R.opile Care (uoi.olance , for lamilieo
who are earilo1 for an · elderly family
menober in tbeir home) ·

\

•

home

Perooonal Care

.a
'

(minor

L-Home Aaeeament

CUrlee DaleJ
SlhyiBorr

:Cadet"
This uhra-ccimloltllbte pedOVer chaioe
wll satlafy all ol your raxation needs.
W"h att its ·padding"and lumbltr mu·
eage you will never want to gel up.

Home Maintenance
repain) ·

lneuraneelaudleal· foraa and 01weriq
. beneftt.cpe.-.): i .,
' .

•

d••

· Home DeliYered Meals

Support Aeeie.._ (for example,lillinfl out

I

,.

5599

Ch..:., Semce (de...:U..-i.undry) ..

I,

"FOR PETS ONLY"

·

"

P~ft~Lepl. ~-

per indiwidual. lnal io your $3.00 - d
for? The dollan railed throup the ltlfeip
llnldpurpcile Sebior Center Meaben.ip
.t'aiMJNiip wiD be .-.1 10 pay for the COil of
priatiq and aailin1 the newolettor elx ·
tiaa per year aud u loeal match do~n
for ~home Ml'YicM. ,
. · .

SI.oroa S..W.rt
BolltMeoo
Jeu'lftuooll
lop. J.U Corey, Jr.
Dr. J.Bn, lloAdoa
Dr. Niek Bob-.
Dr. Edwonlllloek
.VBI Secuity
.
Jolm '-!a .... Stair- Ceuio D-d
lllike ltleCieoi'J, R- Proolaeto
lob c.....,., Snoufrer'o F1n A Solety
U. 'nptoa, 0. T.,llal.er 1•e•'1c
Jioo Soaloby
Sue Feldaeyer. AAA LapJ Ser••n

IN THE HOME

.~

f

liem Heart Anodelioll
a...lyOiiftri
Dehllie Ellio

SERVICES&amp;:
PROGRAMSFOll
SENIORS

'·

j
. d

· tOml beck up.

Tile CMt ol _.,nbip for 1997 il 13.00

.a:

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S) ·

~~0,1 rallnawerealsabuy.
~·IIIII' ~At Ji!alt~ Wert
Monday, , 111d ~ tilt '11urnbci' .,·
~~ on Tuelclay when Ditka .
"'". '1 bec..-ne c:oech.
.
ll'•p newt far tile ~aints, who
-ticket lalU dip to
lali yioar, clole loa team low.
0r1eana 101d s3.ooo season
Jtt J9181fter ill firit winning.
firlt lrip to the playoffs.
fclllllhlt ... had only fi~~

... - . ••• .

PROGRAM PRESENTERS

'

PET V1\.LENTINESI ·.

C...eil oa Apq, Inc. il a -u11re of
...,..rt for the Multipoi,..- Senier Center
....1 for the ..aay eenieol it pro'l'iclo8. Eloeh
paid aei.hen•ip receind verifiee to .
repoaal, etate and national fundins ·
1 rim that doe Senior Center is providiJos ·
urrW p........... to older adulu.

lliiLIWJnaoh Plw+w llaowl

I

.

Y- peW -.benhip 10 the Mei&amp;l County

Ju La-.d11r oMiloodoy lleD..W

fe

clllieh

· BUYA
1997 MEMBERSHIP

u

c....._

Lulie ClaJ .
LoUoc-t
E...,.Ciart

Slllea on Saints gear fell ofT so
1y in the wake of the latest los·
-that the Black And Gold
recfuced evety!hing 25 percent,.
llllid. BIISin.- has been so brisk .
Diib becanle
that prices

a

Seai.Sw'

..I T._,'ra,.

Maple LeSrs backup goalie Marcel assist as Phrienix won at Detroit.
Cousineau with all their goals in the
Datrin Shannon · and Keith. ·
first two periods. Former Maple Tkachuk also scored for the Coyotes.
Leaf Grant Fuhr stopped 29 shots for
Detroit, whic/o wasn't shut out all .
his second shutout of the season.
last season. was blanked for the third
Coyotes 3, Red Wings 0
time this season. The Red Wings arc
Nikolai Kh!lbibulin made 28 winless in their last six home games
saves for his fourth career shutout, (0·4·2) and 2-6-3 overall in their last
and.Bob Corkum had a goal and an . II games.

tf• I

' , WCWr

Bo1wl) Addao
llillyiMIM·\, .............
11oo
r-e 1w 'o; Qoo.-

~.

·Sawka is one of more than SO
tJ!eople in the Chicago area wbo
t!"_ught Saints season tickets o~
. ~o.~ord I~ out that Ditka was to be
Hhe new coach in New Orleans. Huntilreds of others have called inquiring .
l:tbout them.
!· Chicaso businesses are getting
•order forms to pass around to
~mploy~. individuals are calling
sind people are switching team alle~iance to stick with their coach.
"&gt; "They tore out our beans and
4ouls whCI) they tired coach Ditka,"
:,.id nave Gomez, 45, a lifelong
;Bears fan who bought four season
:dcket,s. "For a lot of people, I know,
~ew Or.leans is• now Chicago• th"
..IOU
•
•; 1bQ Saints did not sell out a sinhoqle gatne last year. Coming o.ff 1,
·~it second-worst record ever, they
•
10 be a hard sell ag•in this
J!it7. Then Ditka clime t6 to~n.
• •'()ur local calls have inci'CBSI.'ll
_
ly, bul we were linazed .
the calls that have been coming
fni'm Chicago," said Jasen feytir· •i ·
, of the Saints ticket .office.'
lWrltwrir' •ve been asking for tlckt~t.
fionns ancHor Saints T-shina, ., ·
all kind of team goods." , ; .
't ~· that even Chicaao flips .•.
~ifiotl't be heading down .jhQ·~
·Alaipjli River for Saints games
ithtdll ,sponins ~lack and . ,old
10111· the ,Windy Cny.
.
••i•\lc mailed out 12 Saints' cRIIf.
a to· Chicalo this mornin1:.¥ .
in We.t of lloe Black and Oold
, which specializes in Saints
, said )VedneSda). "One g~y
Chicago ordered a Saints jack·
T·illirt liat, everything he could
He said he wanted to be the first ·
••
,.• in ' Chicago to wear Sain)s
.

'J\eAt
~· b.n.tA

M.-JoaaB'' •
IWolaD.IIut

NHL games

Blues 4, Maple Leafs 0 .
~ wer the telephones Wednesday. Pierre Turgeon and Brei! Hull
er ai~ they hired Mike Ditka on each had 8 goal and an assist ali St.
~ay, ticket , sales have been . Louis won at Torontp. ·
The loss was the third in 'a row for
any .o f the buyers are going to the Maple Leafs, who have won just
~ 8 long trip for home games. two of their last 12 games.
~· "We plan to make every game,"
AI Macinnis and Joe Murphy also
~!!ike
Sawka, 27.kof Chbecicago. "If scored for the Blues, who victimized
alouiooa tw.o seaso~ toe ets ause o
to•
Dilka. He may be wearing
'Ill$ colors, but to .me he'll always
11'Chicago8ear and I'll always be

fan...

·~ ~

ownerJamesorthwein,anowedhirn
to leave before the final year by
·
ing $1.2 million, one year's salary.
· ·
·
· •
.
h dl'
l'k M'k
k .
lbat contract was amended IIISt
wonnong seasons on 30 yean;. promiSea oner .' e o e ma es ot a 1ot January after Parcells asked that the
ong that next season w1ll get better eas1er.'o gtve people a reaso~.to.be final year, 1997, be cut from the con"·
get~ harder every year. .
.
opt1'!'1stoc about the. season, voc.e · lract, which expires Saturday. Tagli- ·
'Obv1ously, l!oarketong w1th a pr~s1dent of marketong Greg Suot abue ruled that the revised agreement
.
said.
.
gave the Patriots an exclusive option
(Continued
from
Page
5)
.
• • • .;_.._. -..:.....:.....:.....;...::.......;.._ _ _ _ _ _...,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...._

~nel fnltn Olber dejlartments'just to

'"II·

Parcells contended that hos orogonal five-year contract. with fanner

SUPPORT YOUR
SENIOR CENTER

•

I

to·1tka's h1·r·1ng ·a·s coa·c·h. c·a··uses :~~~~:!~d:~~.~~:.hs~~~i~i~o~;~r. PICTIJRE YOUR PET '
f:
·
·
. .
i'"II.Cket·sales boom fo·r s·al·nts . .
pay~
l'
AMONG THE•••
.

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~Parcells can· coa~h another.NFL team if Patr~~ots· agree

•·

on Aging, Inc.
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Morp..,tS..... .
Marpnt Doalllioo

CHURCH DONATIONS
Raciae United Methodiat Women
Mt. Moriloh Chureh of God Ladies Aux.
Racine Baptiot S.S. Claaolt4
Roeluprinp UJ.ilecl Methodiat1Vomen
l'ooneroy Unilecl Methodlat Chure•
Raeine Uniled ·Mothodiet MIMI'a Prayer Breald'all
Mt. Uaion Baptiet Church
'
.
laat • r t United Methodiat 1Vo-ft
Tuppers Plaine Chureh of Chriit
Aatiquity Baptiat Church
POUH4Vy~tBaptiltCbareh

E•ei~Ciork ·

......:;.c.w.. .
Carol Louoorord
Domh1 Dowaie

Fa,..S.holu
P•J'Mo ad Sarah Sp•. air
MllolrodH..t.ow
KuioJ oad !LJ!Ma Chrioe,
Hoj oad ILI'J StoiJort
II•
• llliller .
II•I'J G - CowderJ

..... .._.

.Donia ... Wilooo eo.
Jill ... 1-J WhMI I '

=:-.:··

SPECIAL THANKS

...... Ceimty c-aiuiown a:
UaoiiState
I' udOfiWu
~~e~pc••.,aaioh.,~·
Tile 1W1J Sntdtnl

..._.c.
....c

ttBMS _

)'I\ ttl 0

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WMPORacllo
MeipTBOIIIee
Meip Couaty Extectuioa
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Pomeroy • .. tUirp art, Ol*

Community is reborn· by~
goin~ back to its roots ·, .

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By AN~~·· •
USA TOOA~ 1

1 en t .
,
'5o doN Blbe Delli Diw, the
, f~~ -loaThis .firot ..w business 10 n:locMe by the

.....

P*'

· . S~S':JNde
City, 1n11 011\ o ..,_ 1111 's ·
IIUJCII natural *«1111111, J. lon1
"II WM a ,pmblc," 11ys owner
lured mipatary birdl, salmlll) and Babe Cw1eu, 64, of her bold move
. ..
SIWJeon.
to the lheft-deserled wll«front. But
.. . .
Only people sllycd away.
lhe city offered a rwonably priced
They considered lhe city, midway lot, helped with fiuncinJ, waived
'
between San Francisco and Sacra- ·develop111ent fees and offoreddesip
..
mento, a swamp of crime, pollution help. .
·
,. ...
and decay.
- Main Street The train ftation at
:' .
"It was filthy. A total dump," lhe head of Main .§all(. built in
says Donna Bland. who used ID be · 1910, has been re~ve a
embarrassed to tell people lhe lived dozen other his~ buildinp 81 the
:
there.
heart of .Suisun. An old landmark.
•
Today,
Suisun
(pronounced
suhthe
Lawler House built in ISSS, is
' ....
SOON)
is
a
model
of
urban
R!Villl'
now
an otrJCe complex. The old post
•·
i~on. a city that took the bold step . office iJ a trendy. brewpub. And the
-of leveling ill moribund downtown Bank of Suisun, built in .1876, is
..
and slarting from scra1ch. .
now a pnnet coffee shop run by
'
..
A
few
years
ago;
totting
ware·Bland.
..
houses, oil-storage tanks and an
Still,. empty slORis u wen u a
. abandoned sewaae treatment plant trailer park remain on the .street.
lined silted-up Suisun Channel ' 'The city has not been able to at1ract
lhrouah a marsh that connccll the specialty stms," Blud says; ·
..,.,,,,Annuli Brlttlny'e Prom'ltyl. R.VIaw will be hald 2 p.m., Sundaj, Fab.~ atlha
city with the Sacramento River.
; •; Arl;il TIJulla. p.ac111111n11 ~ - . arltlanr'a, Mini Dulgnere, lmltl91llary, StowMain Strcel was a rundown row of
, aw,y ~ WMQQ
~lln Glllpolle, Plt'a Poale Patch In~ •nd Laudyina businesses ud vacant store·~ NN\Limoualna llervlce; ,
· • Modale will be ltudanta from Point Pllllilnt,'.tlaJt•,
fronll. Crime was-so prevalenl in the
: ~ • I ltlm, louJh Galla Rlvw'
· ·and Ollila Aclldemy Hl,tt Schoola. Area Pligairtl wlnnera
drug-infested Crescent neishbor·
·7. wllllllllle
Door prl--wlll ba given -Y- nck8ta Will be IYIIIInble at lha
hood, the first a visitor would
;·: doOr. All procaa da will be donlliid 10 tha Ariel Thaltre. PlcJured ara modll8 from E1111m High
encounrer enterina town, that some
-~. lolloOI wflh, blck ld, Klly Hardway owner ot Brlltalny'a and Cindy SIJtton ownar of Mana
talked of eiectins a wall between the
D11lgnara.
waterfront slum and downiOWn. Six
square blocks of the Cresccnl .,.,.
consumed 40 percent of police li!IIC .
Yet like the rest of Solano County, this ethnically divcnc becbOOill
community was among lhe f8Sielt·
. ..
growina areas in CaliforniL Sprawl- .
· ~ "-' GWm;nlt)' Cal det'iiC \tathry. Everyone invited. Rev. offk;e building.
ing subdivisions were aoina up
11ll ' ' hufnuenlce ID _ : ' ·Peter Treniblay fot 'more inform&amp;~ ·
'' · '
beyond
Old Town, tho hillDric alta
P ,tQI wlllllat l D - lion.
.
EAST MEIGS -- Special meeting
adjacent
to downtowo. increuia1
::n:·~·...s 1pd•l •• b Tbe
of Eastern Local Board of Educa. tion, 7:30p.m. Monday nighl in the the need for cit)' services. But '!rilh1':' I t II liGt d •4 wHI a., pro- SATUilDAY .
. . . . . . . . Oi' limd ....._. fll,.. .)'
· HARRISONVILLE
Har" . school library. To be considered, out businesses, Suisun lacked lhe tax
.. _ le-a an prfllted IJI;·.paite rison.ville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM.. Sat- certified and non-certified employee base 10 provide lhoie sorvic:cs.
In 1989, the San . Franciscp
...... .,... '*!not be patuleed urday, 7:30 p.m. at I~ Masonic contracts, contract document from
ilf!"'' a'.. eclllc nmber ~ ..,._ · Temple: Refreslul)ents.
the archilects resarding · new con- Chronicle l'llllked Suisun the wont
· ~ ..
.
struction, and resolution on profi- plaee 10 live in the Bay Area. That
11
was the last Tlrlw. M8yor Jim Sper'tRVRSDAY
SUNDAY
•
ciency testina.
ina
and other .community leaden
. •5\'RA~SE -- Meigs Coun~ .:., • POMEROY .: Big Bend Sternllllrd df.Menw Relatdation and · • wheel Festival committee, Sunday, 2
SYRACUSE. -- Sutton Township vowed. to live Sui•un by tearin1 il
De.¥elopillenlal Disab.ilities, Thun- p.m at the Cat:penters Hall.
B·oard of Trustees regular meeting down and startina o-.
Seven years lnd SOO dcmolilhed
diy, a p.m. Culeton School, special ·
·
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
structures
·later, this 3.:5-square-mile
mileling,,
MIDDLEPORT - Evangelist Joe Municipal Building.
city
has
been
mlesiJIIad, nclovol·: ~
, "
·
Gwinn will be the guest speaker at
oped and rejuvcnaled. l'lunlc!l from
·~ PoMEROY -- Prayer and plan· · Hobson · Christian Fellowship TUEsDAY
as
far as Poland and Japan flock here
. _ ll*li,ng for upcomiaa .fel). 1 Church
7 p.m, All we)come.
J'&lt;IMEROY - Choice home eduto
learn how Suilun did it. ·
·
.c;diicerl '!rith Contemporary tliiist·
c~tors, . 10 a.m. Tuesday at the
·
1be an~wer they act: 0up110 a
Pomeroy Library .~nforence room.
le·Millie poup, "Harvest" .
·'!ll!and Civic Center. Prayer incel- - Letart Township For ,_ mo~-.. in(.
i9jl contact ~ion and: skeptifal .velopeq•.
Suisun tiiOk conlrol of ill own .de&amp;'"- to- 1ie at the Pomeroy Public
p.m. Monday at the 'Tammy .Jones, m;:m-.or
'
tiny.
.

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&amp;~m',!J'.!!..!&gt;•••

WASnamuun - · ScroftJiy
ftljocliiiJ Ill)' !14&amp; !tal of CllliW. . .
Rtired Ocn. N - SchwauJpf
iays he - totllly
of.,_
lible . OlljiOIIIIIII&gt;: ~ . Irlqi dlelnicll .
duriiiJ 1116 OuU'W..
• SchW1171opf, inn 1inlllftY befote
Ole Se- ....._. Afflin ComQiinee Wedwclay, uld 111M. i'llhcr
·· NO I!VIDENCE THERE - Ralltiid Gan. Norman Schwarzkopf
' than .chcmie.J ...... he thouJht a
told aCCif'+ III'Do'liiCOIIIIIIIllll WiidntldiJtlltthare.la noevl. tlombillllionofe!'lenlll ,._., IUCh
dUICI U.S.Ireloplwre lllpOIId to charnlctll Wllpona during tha
.. PQIIutanll ud Yaccil!el, could be ...;:Gulf~,;;·,;;•;;.·!;.(AP;;.):.....---~-....;._,._ _ _ _ _ __
behind the m - al'lllclins lhou"We inrend to geuo the bottom of officers at Kamisiyah didn't malce
sa.ndaofOulfW•·•IIPIJ
"Sollie-.
·
"said"· ·- R-Pa ·• moreof peuorttoascenatn
"'
· whether
...,n. Arlen Spee~..
lhi_........__..,'-llllllollllnllick." It,
. ... -•~&gt;
the committee chainnan.
the weapons they were .destroying
• Sc:hwiRkopf lllid It 'nlli'l 1111111
Sen. •1im Huu:hinson, R-Ark., were cllemical$.
·.~t year lhal he I . •lll!ilhll ~ produced a November 1995 memo in
''They eitl~er didn't . recognize
:
"'rrpons P'i 1111 •
which J&gt;enlaaon officials are !old to them or see them at the time,"
.Kamiaiyah weapiw .... iiiiGUlh- naa declassified documents that Schwarzkopf said, noting that the
~~~~ Iraq blown
by ~ "seemtoconfinntheuseordeleclion Americans were under pressure to
'trilopllhorlly after
ll'fl -·The . of nuclear, chemical or biological wilhdtaw quickly- from the area in .
_Peqon, whichf ....
......,
denied
·-•II" or u"--•
•Mid "emb81T8SS"the . southern Iraq.
_
· -.-·
.... ~
·
1be Americans knew lhe Iraqis
lny evidence 0 ~iclll COII!Iml- so~mmenl or Pentagon.
.~ation,nowsay•..,IDlO,!JOOAmer- ··
"It seems to support the . had chemical weapons in front-line
'ican1 may have .,._ cxpaMd to low Jl'OUII(Iswell of theOries that there .bas positions in Kuwait and Iraq, bul not
=~
chamical toaina at been a deliberale effort to filler and the exact locations, he said. It was "a
Y ,
control information regarding cliem- vel)' real possibility" that .allied air·
.....~..·~~-~ ical ~ biol~ical exposures to our craft bombed Iraqi bunkers where
...._ ..........--n
troops, he wd.
chemicals were stored, he said.
~ ranking De~ on lilt);
1llte fQ!:US!lfinvestigations now is
cornmtnee,_~en. Jay K~feller df,r whether there is any link to possible
~est Vi ...!nta, also wil he ~ lo~-level exposure to'chemicaltoxshocked
by Schwa~kopf s ins and health problems.
acknowledgment that he didn t know
.Medical studies have found no
that an anti-nerve 11as lablet admin- conerete evidence thai low-level
istered to the troops was not ~~ed exposure causes chronic ailments, bul
by the Food and Drug Admmtstra- Bernard Rostker, the Pentagon point
lion. Some stc~ veterans. hav~ s~- man on Gulf War illnesses, told the
ulated that the drug, pyndo~ttgmme • hearing that the Defense Department .
brorntde, contnbu~ to thetr health has bud,cted $1 S, million 10 study
problems.
long-tenn effects· of chemical and '
,.',..lAp Dl~~.
Rockefeller also asked why fteld other hazard0!'5 exposures ..

·•w•t

at your GalllpC?IIs &amp; . .

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. . . Krog•r .stores
..

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· "· ,,,... , •
lhe man who identified himself as at. tn' aI.-......
"Robert
when he rented the
McVeigh's lfial.is to begin Man;h
truck.
the
31 in Denver and will be followed by
co-defendant Terry Nichols' triat
McVeigh and Nichols could face
the death penalty if convicted on fed·
when
era! conspiracy and murder c.harges
wors1111,11.ofterrorillll..,.
the man he deS&lt;;ribed as John in the bombing, which killed 168 and
No. 2 was with McVeiah. pros- injured more than SOO.
. Two months after the April 1!1.
·•. On
ecutors said.
·
·ton
in lhe •• Prosecutors relied on ~essinger's 1995, bombins. Justice Department
:..nclely
accu- descriplion of a talloo below officials.. said they had found John
'- allY 111
... Buntiri11's sl~ve and a baseball cap Doe No. 2 and concluded after interrn the
featuring a ziszag pattern in the viewtilg him lhat he was not
involved. Bul they did not identify
.-: · In •
front to establish his .identity.
.€outt ·in
uid
KessinJer remains sun: that Buntins by name.
..tYt. To\I!I.B~N Rl!ledalnlek • • McVeiah is "Kling," prosecutors Although fedeml authorities who
·JJ~Kt.ion City, KM., body shop the said,andtwootherworkerswhorent- spoke on condition 'of anonymity
:~ Iller.SUtPOCt Timadly McVelah ed 'the truck to "Kling" arc sure identified· John Doe No. 2 then as
.:ientlldthcbllekbelievcdtohavcbeen another man was with him.
Bunlinf, it wasn'l until Wednesday
~: ~in the IIPnlbinJ.
•·
But McVeigh's lawyer, Stephen that the Justice Department official·
·.:· - • A body shop mecllllllc i1 ."confi- Jones, offered the mistake in idehli· ly did so.
:~nt he had 'lb!ld Bulllinl in .mind f)'inJ John Ooe No. 2 as evidence ' Bunting, who was stationed at
~: #ea,he provided the description ~or lhal eyewitness identifiqtions should Fort Riley, Kan;~ declared his inno- ·
;1 ihe JCJhn Doe 2 compo~ite, "the brief be thniwn out, including the idenli- cenco lifter- his·name surfaced as the
£:(llid. "·•
. fiCilion of McVeigh.
.
person probably depicted as John
:' . PioUCiltOfl say they lllill-looltJones is askinJ for a hearing 10 Doe No.2.
' Ina fqranother ~who ...,. have tUppnlll the identifications as evi·
"I just want people to know I did
liecn with McVeiJh when lie~ . de~e. In their brief, proseculors not have anything to do with lhis." he
.!Jie truck.
·
'
.
opposed a hearing. saying witness sail) then. "I guess i! wa5 the wrong
· ~ .mechanic, Totn KeuinJW. identifications should he challenged place at the wrons time, .prelty'
laid McVcish wu Joh1 Doo No. !.
much."

.

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up I

LIMA. , _ (AI') ..-; , . rebil.
, leader .ltfiJIIIiiiJ for his IMI~IIIIIilll
.'.:;-- and his wife. The Jl., I I at ~
fiJhlinl for his cnldibl.lit)'- llld his
tirOcher. The secwity f - lip roJ. '

·

•

. ,,
·· ·

;

~

ed 'hypertension. Aboui i month qo, I sgddcnly went
Piftially blind in iny left eye. My ,IJilbl{l&amp;lmologisl callecl
k ;&amp; ."vitreous.hemonbage"ands&amp;idit'willclearup_over
111110. H~ver,l still cannot see and am afraid my other
. eYe! may,bleed, too.
·
·
. , : bEAR REAO!lR: The eyeball is filled wilh a clear
pt called tile vitreous. Ita.blood vessel Wilhin the eye
niptures; blood may spilt iilto the vitredus. causing visu·at lfifficultios. \
,., ·
·
' • :with 'time, this bloo.d will be re-absorbed and sighl
· lllllally 'returns. 1be process may take months, so I
'-'-Jieve u,..
''"-· your ..,..
n..t.~ist is comic!,
""'
.. ~l!\ Be patient·,
. YIN should recover.
. . .. . .
~;~:. · .
.·. · However, you must . · '(;!• ~ 'attenlion to your hyper' IOI!Iion. One ofthe complications of high blood pressure
: lihcmolrhage; when arterial pressure is too high. small
~ blc)od vessels can burst. This can happen in the eye-- as
· It· did in.your case -· or in the brain, causing a hemor•
: rllcaic stroke.
: Tbc:refore, it's vital that your blood pressure be main: ~Red i~ a itonnal range. Perhaps you are undermedicat· ed or neCd achanse in your prescription drug.
, You .OO..Id be examined by your family physici~n.
: Who cim monitor your blood pressure and make the nee: ql8ry aijerations 10 your ther~y .~~~~~ !'- recurrenc.e
~ oflhe eye problem or a polenbally mort' senous comph; ~on . .,_nd, of course, please follow. up with your oph. : dlalmoloaist as well.
• .
.
. : • 'l'o aive you more i!'fonnation, I am sending you a
, cejly of my Health Report "Hypertensiun." Other read;cit who jWo..ld·like .a copy should send $2 plus a long,
! •·addtessed, swnped envelope to P.O. Box 2017,
~ ~UmY. Hill Station, New Yorlc, NY 10156. Be sure to

• ·,. ·

•

Llm.lt &amp;:·.coupons"
•

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:-~- !hey~~ all die~ ' _..__~-,.;-..·
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:. _:For Meip County residents who
Then: are already more than 150
Dr. Mansfield also cautioned
: ~WI rc10lved lo improve clheir eat- products bearing the Heart-Check against dismissi.ng a product
~ lla habl11' this year, the American symbol on the shelves of stores because it does not carry the Heart' (felrt AMociation sugges~&lt; that lhey~..across. the counlry, 11nd (;()mpariies.•• Chec~ mark. "If a product doesn't,
]I(Ja'k fat ,Jhe . Heart-Check the ncJCf ..submit more prnduc; for revi.e~ , hav~&gt;a. Heart-Check mark on .i!s
tilDe~ vistl the supermarket
· everyday. Thete·IS a cost for parttct- packagmg, that does not mean ns
·,·Any ~uct packaging featuring paling in tlie ceflification program, unhealthy. ll just means thai il has
• lbl ftdrt-eheck mark iq red has hut it is nominal by fal industry' nol been reviewed by the AHA for
''lllelt certified by'the AHA. meaning standards and designe.N'nly to ciff- · certif.Ciition," She said. "The Heart· diitt its ·meets AHA dicta!)' liuidc- set the AHA's cost -of administering Check mark is just one -vay in which
•·liaot and eo be part of a halaoccd the program.
. . .
, . the AHA has tned ·to make eattng .
•cUet. · ~~ .
'.'Paying a . ybmts sto~ f~~ . fl!!'! · smart easter for consumers, .!h•
·~ developed its food revtcw under 1be food cf;iltfi!;@ltoK,~, . 1fflaHo fought for the n~tntton
, c:dtification program and the Heart- progmm d_oes not ~uar...!ce ~l)a~ il: ·1"ilil itling law. which re_quired. _food
. q.eck mark in response 10 requests' product wtll be grani!:Jl.Jllrnusston prQdUcts ~o dtsclose baste nutnbonal,
'·flolll all ov- the country for m~re '• to .use the ~eart-CI~'llfiPlls ,pack- mfo"!"auon , s~ch .•s . fat con1en1, .
. information about which producls aJing," ·said . Dr. Mansfield. Only calortes and vuamtns. Become an
up to AHA dietary JUide- , prod~cls which ~~ AHA dietary ~vid label reader_ if you·~ ~ingto
said Or. Wilm• . Mansfield• . standards 8(e certtfied, .so shoppers tmprove your eaung habits.
J!Iiuideilt of 1~ Meias. County · knbw·whel' they purchase a producl
~ ·Heart Association. "The featurina tho Heart-Check, they are
Residents of Meigs Counly with
·.fublic 'conlidors the AHA a primary makins a ~althy choice." ·. . ques1ions about AHA dielary guide....,.. of ·accurare information on
In addttson .to products dtstrtb- lines should call 1800-22-0291.
!lllillll. ·and many consumers uted through retail outlets, the AHA Also, brochures on the AHA diet and
,Jhe AHA to ·usist tlttm in . iecenlly appfOYed its first mail-order how to n~ad food nutrition labels are
~lllealthy foods. •
products for certification.
available for free.
' \

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-u-l-.·iNd

.·.-...th
Tad

• f

Ofticialsformcda~velopment

=~:'mi~·::!o!~~.c:s:;

declared the whole city a redevelop·
ment zone. That 'made it eliaible for
-.mention the title.
state and federal funds.
· DEAR DR.
DR. OOTT
A San Francisco an:hilectural
GOTI: My mothfinn was hired to create a master
. er and grand•
.
plan and desisn a traditional downmother lost much
PETER
town around Suisun's historic old
of lheir hair after
GOTT, M.D.
port on the channei, oncc-lhe gate·
menopause. At
way 10 Gold Rush country.
42, I haven't yet
The city sold SSO million in
entered
I he
municipal banda to buy waterfront
change of life, buc .
land, dredge the channel, demolilh
I don' i want to go
buildings, relocate businesses ·and
bald in 10 years.
•
build seawalls, streets and utilily
Is there any preventiv~ therapy '!hall could e~ploy?
lin.es. It also leveled 470 houlina
1
h,~•.
rh·-, •·
units in the Crescent peiJhbilr
........
· . DEAR READER: Some hair ld!JS' in 'women is com- Their 2,000 residenll were offered
mon after menopause, probably due to lhe nonnal deple- rent subsidies for four years if they ·
lion of female horinone in middle age. Moreover, some relocated in the region.
fonns of female baldness are clearly genetically deterFrom plans 10 beJinning of conmined.
struction took a mere 18 monlha.
.
.
A symbolic first step
.
I don't know 'of anything you could do lo reverse a Mayot Spcring fint built a new city
genetic pattem: The use of supplemental honnones afte~ hall to replace cramped trailell used·
menopause may help retard hair loss, but I wouldn'l for 13 years. He located it near the
consider this option unlil you cease having your periods. Crescent slum ~jacentto the warer·
Finally, products -- such .as Rogaine. now available front.
without a prescription ~' can enc"'!l'llge 11ew hair to grow
"People thought 1 was null,"
and are often a boon to women wtlh ha~r-loss problems. Sperina says, "but the city had 10
.
,
show confidence in the waterfront"
In short, I don't beheve thai there s much to be done · Today Suisun echoes with halunless rou begin to lose significant amounts of hair. ~~ yards cl.;,ldng on sailboat masll in
that pomt, you should he examtned b~ a dennat~logtst lhe new marina. The aroma of coffee
who may recommend the treatment options I menttoned. and corned beef hash wafts from the
waterside Dabs Della Diner. A boy
Copyrlpt 1997 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE clutchina a fishing rod pedals his
ASSN.
bike P!ISI "comins soon" sians

:,·itl
..' a.ur'e healthy ChOiCeS With heart-check

.I

•••

.

~A.m;ericah Heart Association helps shoppers

.leftillperr!R•.._,,._...._..of.

II . .

,

·.DEAR DR. G01T: I'm a6'2-year-old mu with treat-

'• i"

or Ill a•iiiiiM

j

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.t ransform• into personal battle

I

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' ~

.,
·:
.B
..· lood "~... . r~.-ss.ure needs attention

' '.

••

thcm- a risky strategy.
1wo children.
" On Monday, dozens of police
Cerpa's menlor, 'fupac Amaru
commandos provoked rebel gunfire chief Victor Polay. also is a prisoner.
by circ:linJthe diplomatic compound
The slandofT has deeply embarand lallnti" the rebels. Japan warned rassed lhc police, anncd forces and .
......ilf '!'den - lid a.¥1 I fat . Fujimori aaainst risking a bloodbalh, intelligence services, which had takreveilp.
. - . ·•
and Fujimorj li~tened - . apparently en credit for near!&gt;' eX~Cnninatins the
, Six -"t after • .... IIMIII
lmn&amp;inl a meetin11 lhc Japan's Tupac Amaru and Maoist Shining
'. prime !nlnillerthis w~kend. · . Path guerrillas. .
:'iunball~or·s rUideHce, Penl'• · Pqjimoo is .unlikely to risk the.
Adding sling to the embarrass'T,~~~CIUII:
· ~·
t. a 11~ wlatile li- of his c:tptive younger brother, ment Several lop generals are among
:.111
pettanll Iiiii hiii 1.1 ·~· ' iirldro, iJr his trusled foreign minister, the hoStages. Rumors abound that the
fnnciKo l\ldela; ina chancy r~.scuc military and pcilice are eaaer to
mission.
.
.
. ~Wenge thcir·humiliatiQD, even if it
Rebellc. . NestOr Cerpa. how- means sacrificing their'captive comc.- . is rilldna ,his life - and lht manders.
'
'
ftittm: of lhe IS-year-old Tupac
"lfyourcommandclistala:npriiAmaru Revoll:llonary Movement.
oner, you jUI! fOfl~l yout
. .
...._ Die. . '· The h!lrllp·!l!'ina is a desperate . commander. What's i
1111 is the
. ·
'IIIli. for Cerpa's rebels, whole ranks · institution," Obando laid.
Allllo Pldl qri, who, ~ d'!ri~ from 1;000 to fewer
ADiid lhecontlictinipressureson
dleliftlll .... • llll M :ZOO .JWIIle ftJIUn· all sidca, there are efforta al media• ;'
I) . . _
. ''Since Cerpa ' - 18bn personal lion. 1&gt; coinmission IJUidt Uli of rep'
'.-.al\d of die ~ It's ·an · n~ICRtalives of lhe Red Cross, ·lhe
llillllll..... s=:&amp;~:t' '*'l"iott.''said. Rbmlin't:lilholic chut'i:h ud fQIIiler
. . Blflclue
. • . . . ..ill IMM:u-' ~'illd C4itadiU ambuslilor
llr ·rll) illuel.
.
·
Anillllliy''Yincenr is read)' •.to begin
.. . . . "If- ....... !,hey diJIIIp • W&amp;t.'' .·' .• .
.
.
,,.. . . . "' Tlll* 'llilil!ri¢alh' an '''A:[ilil:lfor'wkihasbeellchoscn,

··community calendar--

"-the

.

...

As hosta,g·~s languish, standoff

guilt...,.,..,.-.

:

i('

role in attack

¥'

~ .~I: .,

·t

. ~ J:Iomblng suspect in 'John ·Doe'

:·:•ketch played

.
...
...
..
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Mnnufud ut t't ',

·'

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CONTOUR GL

4 cyl, auto, llr ooncl, N,
PI, PW, PDL, oruiH,
AM/PII oaea.
.110M

MUCH

1995 MERCURY
TRACER

~~~:~.!~~tl96t::t: .

lntenlale .80 bypassed Suisun two ·
mileswestofhere. Shoppinamalls,
a huse brewel)' and a jelly bean facal
.....
lory began poppmg up 011J ·u"'
Interstate, tan181izinJIY close buljUI!
beyond Suisun. Sales and (X1111Crty
laxes tlowed out of town to the hlp .
o

way.

By the . 1980s, the "bia ~x"
stores alonal-80 had tumcd ·SUJIIln
inlo 1 dead end. 1'here wu nowhctc
for the city 10 physically expand.
So Suisun resolved 10 10 back to
its roots. It would become, once
aaain, a city.
The new utbanism
With just 200 acres, downtown
Suisun had always' been pedc~ap- .
friendly. But then: were few ..,.....,
lions I'! entice people back to the
original center. TOO.y, !here ~ICY·
eral: .
.
1 ..
_The Waterfront. The qly warehouses that hid the warer from view
are rone, and lhe once-unnavipblc
Suisun Channel has been 4re .. ~.
widened and cleaned. A new~~~~
atlracts boaters from San fnncisco.
Concerts, festivals and boat
hrina ~row!ls co lhe town plaza lid

""*

1995 MERCURY
MYSTIQUE
4 ovt ,' 1111, tlr 111•, AIJFI
Clll, 1111, Clllll, PI, PI,
ltrt, OIILY ti,IOt 11~11

- Vtctarila Hidlcr. ,._~-

IU

houses hav. n- Ia 1111 .W.O..
CCIII nei..~. ~ , J'z' , I •
lyhoutel.unimiilllala-JlfiJc!llf;r
midclle·income fMiililt Ml .....
llll10W 11111111. Dell ~til bll'
let on allcyl li... willl•
u
and whi10 pleat,.._,,;· ... \
; i~
"In lhe IURimct, '*'li . .
IWd out in lhe aiiiT)' lid . ... ,_ ·
houn," says HoiiY'Gflf
moved in wid! hlir H i } ......
children in 19113.
·'
1
The city'a llllll&amp;li- plait ·.•
,_
more neiJhbclhoodiiiU·OIIifiil''.,
u well u a thiallr, halel ... terence. COIIIIDr - ' a CICIIIIiq;:it I1
. gamblinarivedlolllhll:~.,
in two public N(ere~ :·t1at
many here II)' what Sl~llill&gt;needs now In ntaltiothC ~'-Spcrina. "We've . ... ; II)(~
ready. Now we need~- . . ·
· it."
;:,{:l~·,.
·. :-;e,.;,, '

g! •
a·

t•Jt}..._

�'

P910•TiwD IJII ......

'fhlndar, ~ 10, 1117 .

Pom1roy •llllklllport, Ohio

Ann
Landers

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ailn Landen: I must talc:e
issue with the statemenl...-ibuted to
the Funeral liiCI Memorial Societies
of America about the value of gold
Ieeth. They said, "Dental gold has
very linle commercial value." That
statement is unliUe.
' ,Most dental gold is 18-caral pute
gold. If the average mouJ.h has five
BOld fdlings and a BOld &lt;:rown, that
would be wMh hundteds of dollars

,--.-rar ·

or~~~!a:~=:lbae :~~~w~~~O::~t~~ ~::":!.::;Calif.:

==-~==-~~~~ ~~=::..:w..::~

----~News

Wound up about white teeth?
Put the bite on whiteners ·

c-

In

·' '!Jte

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an effort to providC Our lcadenhip with·current news, ,the Gallipolis

...........
..,
......
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•••••••• c...........

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te ···~ ...
41111. . .
fti-JIN'
.

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February 4th
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Mens &amp; Womens

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Complete Stock

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'

Rea. $9.99

•
Babe·Rpth pard hits .home ·run for retiree .·Vl•'t.amiDS
30o/o
Oil·
All Brands
'

T.ha 0.. Mol.- Register
~ Hu your vocabulary fallen on hard times?
Do you rely on the same expletive for an arguOoent, a monient of romantic ecstasy or a -slip on the ·
llathroom rug? 1
.
: Is there some6ne you want to impress wiJ.h verbal
tin"osity but don't quite lalow how? ·
.:: It the answer is yes to any of )hese q~,~estions, consj.der investing in a new boOk. .. There's A Word For
(f - ~. Grandiloquent Guide to Life," by Charles
9arrinl\i)n' Bfslet' (Scribner, $22J.
. ·
·: A M!f-hol.r with this book will amuse, educate
41&lt;1 anti you. After all, there's nothing quite like a 50~t wbrd to stun an opponent, woo a sweethean or
impress a colleague.
·
·
: Havjng an argument wiJ.h a co-worker? Instead
$ying)···You idiot," try' "You philodox." (Some&lt;&gt;nel
iplove with his or'her own opinions).
. ·
t Tired of being criticized? Thll those crit:icwste1-s; .I
(third-rate, mean-spirited, contemptible critics) to
&lt;jff your back.
· Looking for J.he right word to describe
('!iend's· live-in lover? Significant other seems s~'
+kward; How about amari_(a sexual .partner to
+om )orie Is not inmied)? Odf you're teady
.
ttow tGe lout out for shan\eful extraeulricular acilvites, you may have a bedswerver (llfl unfaiJ.hful
~use or plrtner) on your hands. .
.
f Where have all these w~rds been hiding? In J.he
&lt;epJ.hs of unabridged dictionaries, says Elster, a
.fiiter who lives in San Diego. Describing himself as
·.tlogomaniac (a person obsessed with words), Elster
'ows that words ~an be a lot of fun, a pleasure in !if~
t English ·teachers often forget 10 let their st!ldents
.
1 on. ·
To that end, he offers a muliitudeJ&gt;f unusual aniJ,
·usually useful words. AIJ.hough somemay·.seem a
esoteric for common use, he maintains that tne)l'_\l
r directly on your life. After all, were you in a
lippitude (~aving sore or bleary eyes) on ·New1
. ar's Day, or have you ever fallen victim to gigma(an ob~~sive preoccupation with ac_h_ieving or I-...:::....;::;;...;=.;;:,_.;;:,_,;;;;.,..;;;.,..;;;:....:;;.....;.;;
.
.
nJjlintaining smug, middle-class respectabohly)?
THE RIGHT WORD • Is exprasalng yourteH In just the right way becoming a 1'111
~ But why write a book about words that hardly chore? Then you might want to pick up a copy of "There's A Word For It -A Grandllo.
. .
.
·~uent Guide to Life," by Charles Harrington Elster.
aayone uses or understands?
; "My 'SOle and sincere desire,' gentle reader, IS to tt
.
.
·•
bfoaden .your lexical horizons and give you an inim- ·
· der and Joy and Renew My Faith i~ the Limitless Possibility of Language to
~achable excuse to jo!n me in going completely gega over words," he Express Everything Anyone Can Imagine - and More."
e~plains.
.' .
~In this auspicious category, he places resistentialism (seemingly spiteful
• He claims his book has the largest collectoon of phoboa words ever asscm- behavior manifested by inanimate objects) as a candidate for the top of the
lliecl. And he may be right. He has hundRds of entries, inCluding such,. list. lie loves J.his word, by the way. for its jocoseriosily (combination of
· oLscure phobias as gephyrophibia (fear· of crossing bndges), soceraph~bia humor and seriousness).
.
.
(.ar of.parents-in-law) and arachibutyrophobaa (fear of·~anut buller suck• '
He explains: Consider just a few of the manifestahons or this insi~ious
iaSg to the roof or the mouth).
.
.
fqrce, which every day attempts to undermine the fragile order or our lives:
• And if you're interested in ·precision, there are a nqmber of mterestmg
_Screen doors that snap back at you and smash your nose.
~rds for specific things, ct&gt;ndi!ions or actions: Longani'inity is the ability to
- Rugs.that quietly curl up so they can snag ·your toe.
· s~Sffet piotienqy (or the ability of apatient to suffer), while mentimutation. is
_ Microwave ovens that sabotage your food so the first bite is lukewarm
a change of mind or act of changing one~s mind. Then tlfere are J.hose of us and the next scalds your tongue .
~o engage in onycbophagy (the habit of biting one's fin8emails.)
'
_Elevator or train doors that try to crush .you in their grip.
:In a few cases (actually too few cases). Elster gives us the origin of J.he
See? You may have more use than you could have. imagined for resi~tcnrd. Onych~hagy, f~r example, comes.fro_m co~biriingcJhe Greek qnyx or Pial ism.
0 ychos,-meanmg a naol or claw, and phag~on, whoch mears to e_at. . .
.
. But the words cover quite a range of human thought and activity. There
a$ ~hapters on food and drink,lovc and sex, politics and-business, academia:
aajl! everyday' objects.
·
1Elster aiso seFS aside a chapter for insults. The advaptage of using obS&gt;Ure·
wbrds, he notes, is you can insult someone whp may not know enough to·
.-·. g· e you a punch in the nose. H~re are a few, S!J you can test his theory. Clodp is a GOmbinjllit:~n of a'clod and .a blockhead. Callet .is a drab, untidy
w ,.man. ~nd grod is a s!O"ppy fellow. ,
•,
Or try hnddypeak (ali egtegious blockhead), Iooby (an awkward, ignorant
· n), balatron (a babbling buffoon), dizzard (a thick-headed person, a
n . bskull) or grobiB!I (a rude, &lt;:lownish, blundering oat). '
~Elster. enligh.tens those of us who saw 1~ !f10Vie "Forrest Gump," but ·
di11n't kno~ ·gump l)leiii1S a complete nllwtt. ~ust goes to show that ·
moviemaker5 may !&gt;e smlrler. than yl)u thought.
:SomcrQf the 'pYOrds.on Elster's hit parade are amphigory (a poclb that on
fia';t reading appears 10 be profound but that on funher inspccJion turns out
to be complete nonlCnse), demitoilet (fairly elaborate but not'1tntirely formal
d~ss) and dystopUi (ihe opposite of utopia; a society or situation in which
cooditions are dteadful, peop~ are miserable-and everything has gone awry).
:pnce ,you tead ,this'b!lok, you may ium Into a veibivorc (a person who
:leyouts;. ~s).~A'nd' then; no one will accuse you of banolagy (tiresome .
:et:M:tltion and idle talk).
,
.
·
1 )'lister hils~ special place- in his heart for "Words That Fill Me With Won·

.

~Price

PAIN BUST• Rll

CarletOn

Training with an ·altitude

r

·Heard about

M

'

BY MELINDA voss

·.·

~

+-Society scrapboo.k :: .

NEW OFFICERS

•n orsaniiational meeting in prepa-

·
'New officers were elected at at ration for the year's program
- Officers elected .~er~ Jessica
"*nt meeting of the Scipio Town·
Janey, president/secreta'); Mauhew
ship Volunteer Fire Depanmenl. The officers are · Harold Norris, 'Smitli, vice president; Sljldy Smith,
chi~f; Dale Brickles. assistant &lt;:hief; treasu~r and Whitney ~rr. news
'
· Andy White, first captain; Joe D'Au· reporter.
Places
·to
go,
this
su'll
er were
gu1tino, second qap(Ain; Dan Lan·
taz, ptesident; 081)1 Kerr, vace presa- discussed and J.he group 'dfcided to
.dent; Jean Norris, secretary; and sell food containers for·a fuhd raiser.
Project books were selected. AdviAnJic Brickles. treasurer.
sors
lW J.,isa Smith, 1 Cindy
·
4-H CLUB NEWS
.
The Young Riders 4-H Club met Koblentz, and Brenda OieQuasie.
Sunday at the .(':Omeroy Library for Next meetina will be Feb. 23. ,

~

ASK ANlU • NAJI

stick? - RICHARD HARRIS, Wabash, Ind.
•
cuit lovers.
DE.I).R RICHARD: The Taylor Gift catalog carries a non-stick spNy that
For a copy of the catalog, write to
purportedly adds extra life to damaged cookw~re. You spray it on and heat "The Flavour of Britain," 1601 Conthe pot, pan Of what h_ave you in the oven for a few minutes. The description cord ~ke, Ste. I -3, Wilmington, DE
reads: "Thrn any pan into non-stick! ScratChes disappear, coats metal. glass 19803 (302-658-9975).
and PQICClain cookware surfaces."
·
S'TIJMPED: Gail Koptiers or ValA 6-ounce aerosol_can costs $9.98, plus shipping and handling; the cat&amp;- paraiso, Ind., is looking for "the best homem'!de fudge ever! Thete are only
log pumber is 7683. !To order, call 1-8()().829-1133 or write to Taylor Gifts, two ingredients: butter-pecan ice eteam and chocolate candy bars. It's a
600 Cedar Hollow Rd .. Paoli, PA 1930 I.
·
microwave recipe that I heard over J.he radio and never wrote down, unforHINI' OF THE DAY: Kipp Stone of West Chester, Pa., writes: "Here's a tunately!"
wonderful technique for removing fruit stsins from fine linens without damIt does sound delicious .. and easy. Can anyone help Gail (and us)?
aging them. Make a paste of com starch, apply to the stain and let sit
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048. Quesovernight, then wash. Unlike salt, this works even after the fruit stain has lions of general intetest will appear in the column. Due Jo the volume of
dried;" . ·
_ mail, personal replies·cannot be provided.
Kipp also sent ·us a catalog called "lli!o Flavour of Britain:" We were
.
.
intrigued to find that it offers, ·among,oJ.her J.hlngs, many British foodstuffs
Anne B. Adams and Nancy Nash-Cummings are co-authors of "Ask
difficult · · and sometimes impossible·· to find in J.he United States. .
Anile &amp; Nan" '(Whetstone) and "Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize ProblemAmong some of their offerings are mushy peas, treacle, fish paste and Solvers Share Their Secrets" (Bantam).
martl)ite. They also carry a full line of Cadbury products f9r sweets and bis· Gopyrightl997 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
.
.

.Read this book
to:improve your
verbal virtuosity,
~~dq sparkle to
~ohversation · ..

poliCY-------+·

Daif¥ lpbune and The Daily Sentinel will not accep1.weddings atw 60 da:v.s
from the date of the event.
·
·
·
All ~!uti meetings and other news 1rticles in the societ)' section niust ~
submitted within 30 days o( oceumnce.
. . _
. '
· . •
All birthdays must be submilled within 42 days of the o&lt;:c~. , .
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.
•
'

.

-NANCY ~SH CUU.NGS
'
.
,. DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My dauprer ~a m:ipe for snioked turtey·
'1hat she coob in a brown groceay big. It is tbe best I .have e - elllen. Since
die~ are now re-cycled they are not supposed 10 he used fOfcOokinJ, and
she ts almost oot of the old bap. I would like to lalow if IlleR is anyplace
you can find bap that have not been te-cyclec!, Browning biJI do not work
-is well. - MARGAREJ' CULBEIUSON, Uruon, S.C.
·-- DE&gt;\R MARGARET: We hale to tell you this, but pocery bags ••
:"'hether re-cycled or not - teally should not be used for cooking.
·' ' The chemicals, slues and dyes 'used in their manufacture' are, to put it
·111ildly, not fit for human consUIIiption, and the lllllcey, while it is cooking in
1he bag, will inevitsbly absorb some of them during the cooking process.
tUFtey cooked in the browning begmay not taste as good, but beiieve
us, at's a IQI better for you. (Isn't that always the way!)
'
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: l have three Thnon-coated frying pans wiJ.h
the Thnon coaiing still in good shape. They have some slight scratches, but
dot bad ones. 'My problem is that food sticks to litem. Is the.C a way to treat
these so J.hat the surface will not be damaged, bUt the food will no longer

a. . J• Jlllll1idM, dlole dolt.. caa lnn!ep Jkd, D.D.S., a;. 111 ,
naUy .W -..
·
'
.
.,
De.- R"""': And now, 1 wont · So.dearrl It a,_you..._ii,
from my dentilt:
,
IIDi&amp;bt from tbe IIIOUihl ill lll7le
. De.- Anq Landen: Your readen who lhould .know. If dlcle'a ~ in
ue cOl Feet when ·they say old ao1c1 thdm · !bar mQiart you've- had
fillinp Clil have a subatantial value. "'exlriCied, make 111111 die ..Uat
reimlluriel you fOf it. If .. (« llhe)
A gold restOfltion may weip ·. doOa't offer, it'a petfectly 01t to
from one-fif!.h to one-fourth of an .,..,_ it.
ounce and contain anywhere from
SO percen.t to 78 percent of fiUi1'
gold. If. an ind,ividuallW five imall
gold inlays liiCI a gold crown, the
value of the actual . gold coatenl

•

•

1ly ANI. 8. ADAMS end

• ' ai~MIJ -IIEif' s I, .._ cas ' I) GIIIAt • a

uoOIIwidlaiOidllllletla-.dl
llala ss,..r $20, 'ttl f ' .,.

DelltU
is nothina to stop an Mlbitioua mOf- acrcc that if a person had only one gold scnp doel illdeed bave valuetician from sellina deall1 1old and small gold inlay, it wouldn't make at least here in Califonlia. My oial
malcinJ a handsome profit. Moat sensetoternoveitfromthemouthof ·surgeon oll'lnld to send my dental ,;
morti(;ians would not stoop to this a cadaver. But if a ~cian collect- scrap to a company that paid me fOf
le~l. but thete 1te always a few · ed a quantity of gold, he woulcl have
it. I netted $17.
.
·
greedy people in every profession. no problem disposing of it and mak·
Venice Beach, Calif. : Oil: the
Please set the m:onl straiJht, Ann. • ing a nice profit.
.
same day your cOlumn about de/lcai
-· Hank Friedman, Mill Valley, Calif.
Arcadia, Calif.: My .husltand, a gold append, my newspaper had
Dear Hank Friedman: You did, practicing dentist, says that stale· an anicle about m:ycling gold teeth.
and ~ did many~. Please keep · ment about dental gold havinaliltle The article said 1 cold recycling
reading:
commercial value is si111ply not true. firm has opened • deQtal _bnnc.h to
from Pasadena, Calif.: I am a Gold is gold, and cilrrenily, it is accept and buy Jold teeth throus.h
n:ti~ dentist with 47 years of expe- wonh about $400 an ounce. · It is the mail. All people have 10 do is ask
rience. Moat dentsl gold is 18 cant. more common J.han you think foi- the dentist 10 return the scrap whe\1
The present price of pute 24-carat morticians to remove dental gold. he or she has finished wOfking on

After 17 days. she 'couldn't sec
much difference. (The -instructions say that most users will see
results in one to t"!O weeks, but
J.hai it can take pp to six weeks.)
Our tester also teported her qieth
became ·painfully sensitive to.
cold water and to brushing after
using the . Pe.-fecl Smile system.
AcconlinJ to the' insiniCtions,
the sensitivity disappean after
you stop using the product. but
our tester said she was ·still experiencing sensitivity . one month
l'ter.
,. ·
I tested the Nite White system
myself. It is very similar to Perfect Smile except the trays ate
custom-made by a dentist fr9m a
mold. You can choose to wear
the trays for I few hours each
night·(this will make .the process
tske longer) or .wear them while
you sleep. Despite harboring
strong ·reservations
about
whether I would ever he able t(l
.fall asleep wiJ.h the trays in, I
chose the second option.
The first night, I ftetted the
entire time ·I was pulling the
mouJ.h gu!llds in ..then promptly
fell asleep. The second night. l
fell asleep ,before I could talc:e
notes on how weird it felt sleepBAIGHTIR
- W.nt to whbn up your c:hotnpe.-.? Hntng your tHth. ciHn.clllt the dentllit'a inB with the trays in. And.so on.
' otlloe, c.n '~ a~ by.removlng bli~pa of plaque a!ld ~r lind pollehlng off aurface ·l!tlttOI, .but It The gel:that goesinsiile the trays
prilllitbly WDn t:IIIRI your pearly whltM .,.arty whlte.· IJOIIn. For that, you'll need 1 tooth·whltaner.
c~mes m t":o navors: pepper.
mmt cream and wald cheny. I
8y MARY 'CHALLENDER
$180.
·
The results after IWC) 'weeks of 'chose peppermint cteam, which
Thl 0.. ~ Regletltr
, . Five volunteers agreed to use using Plus White were also disap- tasted, for better or WOfse, exactly
. It's oot (air:
.
:- U1e (?roducts as directed on the pointing. At first, our tester said he like my toothpaste. .
· You brush aJijl f19,1S until your piiCbge for .a period of two weeks thought his ·teeth were getting
So the taste wasn't really a probtoothbrush bflt!!* IKICkle and your and keep a record of their observa- whiter, but at the end of two weeks, !em, I did find my·teeth becoming
.awns•WC:"!' .!' hiJI.1and )I!'Jiat do you tlons1. For the most pa~t. their he concluded there really was no very ~ensi_tive, ~owever, ~ the
have 10 ShoW· fOf ;YOIIr effort~? Yel- - ~ weten't very nauenng.
· change.
bleachmg mgredaent used m the
low teeth.
•·.
Rembrandt and Pearl Drops
The rounh product we tested, Nile White system, a substance
Don't blame it oti ybur. tooth- were the simplest to use. All y9u Perfect Smile (the ··as-seen-on- called carbamide peroxide.
. The sensitivity was severe
paste. A lifetime of colas, coffees, have to do is brush with them twice TV" product with a picture of
teas, tobacco and antibiotics have ·a. ·day. Still, our users weren' t Vanna White on .the package), enough that I had to alternate two
left -tl.e teeth pf most adults stained impressed. The consisteqcy of the requires the user boJ.h to brush with niBhls on. one night off, while
.10 lome degtee. These substsnces - ~embrandt toothpaste was 'thick
whitening toothpaste and wear usi·ng tll!l syst~m . My teeth also
seemed more sensitive than usual
' tend 10 be absorbed by the porous and .hard to work with, our tester plastic mouthguard-typc plates enamel of yol!f teeth like Kool-Aid said. And it did not leave her with the company, ironically enough, to cold.
into a sponae. And once the stains ·the fresh, clean feeling most of us refers to them as ··comfort trays "
The good news is that Nite
have permellled the enamel; all the want our or a toothpaste.
- filled with.whitening gel.
White actually worked. By the end
· brushing· in the world won't erase
Our Pearl Drops volunteer was
The first step is to "custom-fit ofl4daysofuse,pcoplehadbegun
,the damag~ - and it could injure even less -enthusiastic about his your.comron tray." To do this, you to compliment me on how white
·your 111ms. . .
' .r
. 'experjerict, saying thai while the wave the tray in hot water for four
my teeth were.
· U.vin~ryour teeJ.h eleiiiiCjl at J.he taste was "barely adequate," it was seconds before putting it in your
If you arc considering · having
dentist's offiee ~=&amp;n help I bit by the foam J.hat really got to him.
mouth, biting down and pressing your teeth whitened, there _arc a
temovin~ buildups of pllaque and
"You put a little bit. on your your tongue against your teeth couple of things you should keep in
tanar and polishing of{ surface toothbrush- not very much, mind while sucking out air and water.
mind.
"I gagged," our tester stated
First, unless you're really good
stains, but it probably won't make yoo - and start brushing, and in a
at bteat.hing J.hrough yoor nose, you
your pearly whites pearly white couple seconds it's like somebody succinctly.
again. FOf that, you'll rieed a-tQOth· · injected your mouth full of soap."
Trimming the trays helped may want to stay away from any
whitener.
·.
· he cpmplained. "It doesn't matter improve the fit some, she noted. system with a one-piece mouJ.h- ·
.· Go to any store that sells dental how much you spit; you can't Next, you fill the trays -top and piece for the top and bouom teeth.
items these days, and'' you'll entirely rid yourself of J.he stuff."
bonom - with "Perfect Smile
Second, J.he bleach will not work
find a dozen 01 IIIORO diffm:nt prod· .
Even more imponant, neither Tooth Whitening Gel" then put J.he on bonding (the stuff dentists use to
· ucll that pledae to whiten stained tester felt their teeth were notice- trays in your mouth. The instruc- repair damaged 'eeJ.h), so you may
teeth. Some lW basically jUst fancy ably·whiter after two weeks of use, Pion book says, "The comfon tray have to have J.he bonding replaced
toothpasl~; ·~ rest re111ure som¢ _ although the. Rembrandt u~r. did can be worn in J.he privacy of your if your teeth end up significantly
sort pf .bklal:hina inJiedieni, aui:h' repon Jetting a compliment of home from a minimum of one hour lighter.
as hydrogen peroxide.
· : , .1 ,- soils.
.
.
. up to a maximum of 18 hours a
,
·· Do any ot'thein .dually Worii?
Her .sister, who was out of,town day."
And finally, unless you give up
To find out, we purchased five: for a few days, ·asked, "Have your
Our test~r · said she usually pili all J.he stuff that caused your teeJ.h
Rembrandt Oriainal whitefling Ieeth gotten bigger?"
J.hem in right befote bed and would to tum yellow in the first place, the
~. Pearl DrQps WhiteninJR
•Plus White. didn't exactly win take them o~' whenever she woke , stains will besin to reappear in a
Toothpaste
Exln . Strenath, rave reviews ,either. A gel-like sub- up. The res~lts: Well, Vanna would few months, and you will need to
PlusWhite One! 'S'"P ~ide Oel SlliiM;e with a very light medicinal · have been disaP(lOinted.
. rebleach them. ·
Whitener,, Pcrfeot , S.m il, Too!h wte, Plus White must be applied to
Our "Per~ect ,Smile" Fester's
W.hitenina Sylteft\ and 'Nite ,White ·. the teeth twice a day with a cotlon teeth were noi thai badly stained to
·usually. a few nights of treatTooth bleadlina Jyltmi.
, .
swab. 'J'hat in itself was a bit lime- . begin with, but she was hoping to mentis all it takes to get thCm white
The first four are sold over·the· " consuminJ, the teSter notes. But the erase the slig!II yellow Pint that has again: The Nile , White system
c;ounlef lind ,range in price from '(o'orst ptQ'l, he said, was letting the her fondness for dark coffee, red includes enoush gel for a few foiS3.49toSI0.97; The fiftlt ~~ Sll'ff temaifl on your teeth for five wine and Dickinson's seedless low-up treatments·, but if you run
, Ni" , W)tite, i.l al.ailable ' on!)- 10i'~u\es' wit.h.'tace frozen in a mon- 61ack: raspberry preserves had . out you can purchase touch-up kits
. through a ._Jist and c~ ·iroliild .key grin.
caused.
. for around $2S.
·

-'l Ill llal• r r SitS . . Sl7S. If

llleir ...._ ~ 10 ... *"l;le,

Just a few ,_. .., a pmnl r ·
L.A. moo•
Ilea
dental aold CnJm ill clilata. They

-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Jasty smoked-tUrkey recipe is in the bag

·Morti.cians can make a mint ·with ·gold-capped teeth.
10 1 &amp;old smella. I once owned and aold is $380 an ouno;e, so Olie ounce
operllod such 1 busillels, and 1 ofdeiiiiiiOklilwonbljJjiiOAim$·
bouaflt .a lot of denial cold - some 1y $285. One luJe aold CJVWD can

"~·
.1-.itry 30, 1187
•

'

'By GENE SLOAN .
.
USA TQDAY
.
.
,
,.
· NEW YORK - A trendy Manhattan' hea!J.h club thinks· it has the answer
for vacationers who suffer from altitude sickness on ski trips.
Crunch Fitness has installed what it says is the world's first "hypoxic"
workout room, which simulates the air at 9,000 feet so skiers can slowly
adjust to mouniain altitude over several weeks before they go.
· The chain will open a second hypoxic room in Los Angeles in March and
is considering them for gyms planned in Chicago and San Francisco:
The concept is simple. The vinyl-enclosed, 8-by-8-foot room, outfitted
with a treadmill and bicycle, is pumped full of air containing 15 percent oxygen, compared with 21 percent at sea le~\· That's about J.he Same as in
Aspen, Colo.
.
·
Altitude sickness. which results in headache, dizziness. nausea and shon. ness or breath; is caused by low·oxygen levels at high altitudes. It strikes up
to half the people who travel rapidly from sea level to elevations above,
8.000 feet
·
Crunch vice president Sarah Dent said skiers _,;ould need to work out in
the rool)t abQut every other day for three·weeks to prepare for a mountain,
trip. .
.
Working out in the hypoxic room will help people .use oxygen more effi-·
ciently, sai.d Nicholas Ohotin, vice prcsidont of 6-mpnth-old maker Hypox-'
ico Inc. of New York City. which lias a patent pending on the $24,000 system.
"It's like being on the moon when you're finished. You just noal," said
Tolomy Erpf, a 28-year-old stock analyst who has used Crunch's New York
room for sevenjl weeks.

'97 Bonm~villes
"6" in stock

J'12" on our lot

$1,000

$750.

Rebate

Rebate

'97 Sunfires
2 dr &amp; 4 drs

'96 Regal Customs

3.9% 60mo.
.

$2,500

'97 LeSabres

"3" in stock

.

Rebate ·

Financing

''

'97 Grand Ams

'96 Park

Avenues

sa,ooo Unde~

"7!' in stock

''
''

l

1

•

$1,000

Invoice Cost!

Rebate

"96" GRAN SPORTS 5AVE·s4,000 OFF UST
'96
.
Bonneville

'96
Luminas

• Alumlniim Wheel•.

"2"1n Stock

Power Seat • Spoiler

.$16,900
'95
Grand Prix

'96
Regals ·
FullWamnty

•13 900 •13,900
'95
.centurys

'95
Trans Sport

25K· Loadld

v-e,cauett•

28K • 7 .P...enger

•11,900

•9,900

$14,900

'94
Cadillac

'92
LeSabre

'94
Camal'o

Sedan Deville

1o-r

T·Tope-co Player

•17,900

sg,9oo

"Nurse
Driven"

'91
Regal
38,000

LowMIIea

We Sold New

Bonneville SLE
Lltat"er Interior

We Sold New
A-1 CondHion

'92 Dodge
GrandC.rrntn
Loclll1 Owner

J

sggoo

,j

&gt;

'

~
I

�.

. , . 12 •The o.lly Sentinel

.

.

' . 'T'hurldly, Janu.ry 30, 1tt7

Pomeroy • lllcldllport, Ohio

•

The roc:lcy cliffs of WISConsin's
Ni~g~n esc:arpment are home to a
tiny snail that has m~~~ased to survive 10.000 years of poloaical Mtd
climatiC shifts, but now may f~~t:e the
challenge of its life.
For centuries, the land snail -so
small that more than a dozen can sit
on a penny wilhout covering Abra·
ham Lincoln's face -has made its .
home along the scenic escarpment in
spots that mimic Ice Age conditions.
But the' bluffs overlooking tile bay from Green Bay to northern·
Door Co unty are fast becoming
home. to buyers willing to pay top
dollars for a majestic waterfrol)i
vtew.
The resull is an up-close •~ample
of the continuing clash between
. endangered species and the rights of
privl\t~f"operty owners.
"Everyone talks about the tropical rain forest ·when your own back
yard can have amazing things," said
University of Wisconsin-Green
Bay's Jeffrey Nekola, a plant biolagist who discovered the snail along
the escarpment and on campus.
"What's great is they're right .
here ... that they don't require that
much, just a little piece of forest;"
he said. "The problem is keeping
the little piece of forest."
Since beginnil)g his research in
1994, Nekola and Tamara Smith,
then a UWGB student, have found
10 new species of land snails In ·
northeastern Wisconsin believed to

have been extinct in the region since much of the snails' native habitat
the Jut Ice Age. Two of the species along the escarpment.
are considered endanger~ and , "That's the problem with norththreatened.
east Wisconsin. We've sold off the
The snails have ·survived because escarpment," he said. "We're lucky
of the unique ability of the area's if there are 30 places left along it
rocks to stay cool througbout much that are. in relatively native condiof the year.
tion, that are not totally blitzed.
Nekola speculated that wate'r Northern Door (County) is nearly all
seeps into cracks in the rocks, then gone."
freezes. Cool air from the bay and
Helen Kitchel, of the state
Lake Michigan probably maintains · Department of Natural Resources'
the ice until the fissures finally thaw Bureau of Endangered Species, said
in early July.
·
the development to date alons lhe
But something else occurs that escarpment was allowed before lhe
causes the snails to confine them. · snails were known to inhabit lhe
selves to the base of the cliff, hang- area.
ing in a narrow band that ranges ·
Now that · the fragile creatures
from 3 to 165 feet wide. That ingre· have been found there, Kitchel said
dient remains a mystery.
DNR officials will work with devel"This is where I' ve got so !llany opers to survey project sites thai
questions, I don 't.even know where might harbor the snails.
to stan," Nekola said. ·:what we do
"The problem is we often have a
know is there's some weird stuff lot of private land holdings that we
going on out there."
just plain don't know 'if there are,
Two of the glacial relic snail endangered species there." she said.
species - the pinhead·size midwest "If dley get in there and destroy it
pleistocene vertigo and the larger befo(e we even 'know it's there,
cherrystone drop snail - were there's not a whole lot We can do
already on the ·state's endangered after the fact."
and threatened species lists, respec-.
Mike Dockry, ·owner of the Edgelively.
water Bluffs Villa ·condominiums
The snails were discovered years atop tht escarpment in the town of
ago in southwestern Wisconsin, but Green Bay, wasn't aware endanweren't known to inhabit the Nia- gered snails might be on the site
gara escarpment, the steep limestone when he secured permits for the proridge visible from Fond du Lac jecttwo years ago.
County to northern Door County in .
"I'm as environmentally consci·
northeastmost Wisconsin.
entious as the next guy," he said. "If
Unfortunaiely, . Nekola said, the : there were ~omething environmen·
discovery has come too late to save .·tally endangered there, believe me,

•

By MELINDA VOSS
• ·
The Des Moines Register

quality. Locally produced food tern goes for production. The other
almost always tastes better, if only 90 percent is spent on packaging,
Unlike many Americans who b\lcause it's fresher, they say. And transportation and marketing.
stroll grocery store aisles each week because it is usually free of pesti·
The couple says it doesn't make
for the latest convenience food, Sue cides, it is also more healthful, they . sense that 90 percent of all fresh
Jarnagin and Rick Exner of Ames, add.
vegetables consumed in the United
Iowa, eschew such products.
Cost is often le!IS than that of States are grown in the San Joaquin
' In (act. they 'don't buy much at a food produced by industrial agricul- Valley ofCal!forni~ when Iowa and
resular supermarket.
.
ture, particularly · with home-grown .many other ~tates have fannable
During the dark days of winter, " food. A 10-cent packet of lettuce land and an adequate growing sea,
Jarnagin and Exner still. enjoy the seeds produced a summer's worth of son.
bounty ,or summer. They draw from lettuce. Jarnagin n~tes . And
Jarnagin and Exner also believe
two f'reezers full of home-grown although organic .foods sometimes . that they- even as only two indiproduce and locally pr-oCessed meat: . cost more at the co-op, they're still · vidual consumers - must do their
They have shel~es of home-canned worth it, the couple says.
. bit to make sure agricultural meth·
tomatoes and squash. They keep
·But underneath gustatory plea- Q\ls do as little harm as possible to ·
potatoes, s~eet potatoes, apples and sures and practical considerations lie . the environment. That's why they
Brussels sprouts in cold storage. some deep-seed~d philosophical pay auenlion·to farming practices.
And they have pots of fresh herbs beliefs - ideas Jarnagin and Exner
By supporting local producers
· flourishing in the cozy sun room of don 'tjust ihink about, but feel ·oblig· who 11se sustainable farming meth· their home.
ed tO' act on.
ods. they can be sure how their food
Js this couple's lifestyle unusual?
They beli~ve, for example, that is being produced. Impersonal conyes.
\
;
relying on · California and. foreign ·glomenltes, on the other hand, tend
' 1s it unique? Hardly.
countries for food that can be grown to go for high profits at the expense
Jarnagin and Exner are among a in Iowa is a costly and unnecessary of the land and their workers, they
small but .growing number of con- use of resources. A U.S. Department sa~.
1
sumers opting out of the high-tech, of Defens~ report shows why.
And because they believe farmers
industrial food ~ystein. Besides ..: _ Accordmg to the report, conduct- . are shortchanged iri the industrial
growing much of their own food, Cil by· the Stanford Research . lnsl1- agriculture system, they like helping
they purchase a fair share directly tute, the average food ncm m _the . local farmers. "Buying locally
from local producers and a food United States travels I ,300 mtles means the farmer gets more money
cooperative. They and others make before .being eaten. And The Practi· and the consumer pays less at the
this choice consciously and careful-· cal Farmer, a newslcucr, reported in same time," Exner says.
·Jy for several reasons.
1994'that only 10 percent of the fos For rof&gt;ds not grown in Iowa,
Near the top of the list is taste and sil fuel used in the world's food sys~ they make .careful selections. "We

lei,.

Pood Md Wine11111azine' .-at· ·trw. 111411111 like doitort:
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IPIMI' lllllCLN111r74
Tho ,.,..,,. led ancl
In Memory
lovlngo
Compony,
'-or, Ohio, r•••rno
'!!" Jtthl to blcl ·at thlo .....
In II amory Of
end to wllhdrow !he ·a~~ovo
LUCY CHESSER
collateral
prior to eale,
Who P..atd Awey
l"urlher, The Farmwa lank
January 30, 1817
and lavina•. C:ompeny
II w.. could build s rONMI the right. to N)ect '
any or allltlda oullmtftocl•
....l'WIIY
,......,, tho abovo
And IIIIIIICirtM build a
cot-rat ,wtll lie IOid In tho
cond111on M Ia In, with no
1 -uld walk , all the exprooe or lmpllod
wey to Hellven
.
wernllllloe ghlon.
To bring you home
Por lvrthor tnfonnatton,

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Jetry at --7430.
end mluecl, (1) 28, 30, 31: 3TC:
Your 81...,, Miry

Lowe~

JEREMY LEE
ATKINS

On Hit 19th

Blrthclly,

Jan.30,1997
If

WW... RHlly Did

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:n..,. You'd

Be Herw
1l'llh u, Today
8111 lf'e Do Nol' See
fow Slllllbw Ftu:e
No llllllt•r H&lt;M Hmd

. .... Pray.
lf'e

Feel

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11'11e11 .Ltned One• OW

Ow Heam, n.., F•fll
s..,r. Pllln ·
For AIJMUBf• Y.,..'ra
Bound For He...,.n
lf'e I.ooe(f . One• Jll.,l

Reniala.

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At lf'e CioN Our £yet

And 'l'hlnll 9/ YO.. .
On Thlt, Yo.,. S,...:Mil
Day
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According to Freeman, tht ICI
·release is just th~ latest threat to an
already stressed ecosystem.

WOI'TY."

TOPS members hear about heart health
I

.

1

•

Helen Trou( presented a TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) program
tl\led "Heart Health Starts With Selfllove" when TOPS . IIOH 1383,
&lt;:heshire met last week at the
&lt;!heshire United Meth'odist Church;
' She suggested that as Valentine's
Bay approaches, members include
tiemselves in the list of those to be
timembered . She spoke of the need
10 "love yourself enough to think
about the imponancc of good health
for your heart."
·
: Trout offered thrc.e tips for being
heart healthy •. eating right, exercising arid reducing .strcss.
: She spoke of swi.tching to lower;
f4t products ·· such as skim milk,
avoiding saturated fats, broil or bake
fOOds rather than frying, and learn to
n!ad labels to discover the relative
f4t content of foods you buy, ·
· As ftir·excrcisc, she recommended a regular program of moderate
· dercise tQ strengthen the heart for
tlje demands of daily life. She sug- ·
gested a daily 20-minute walk.
: For reducing stress, examine
your prioriti~s and eliminaJe
nlmessential activities, said Trout.
Phyllis Drehel and Mary Martin
le,d the~pledgcs, members discussed
f&lt;iod facts and fables, and Trout rend
a verse titled "Tomorrow." ·
' TOPS best loser of the week was
Oeri Gibson and Trout was KOPS
(~eep Off Pounds ·Sensibly) best ·
loser. They receive,d certificates of

.

IIIQUIIT i'OII .JIIIICIIIOIAL'
Notloa to lqulpmtnt
Dallere: .
Ill IOoO,r deno• with
. eutlon lstl7M
tile .Qhto
Revloed Code, IOiletl lllde
will N reoelvitd lly . tho
loerd of llelto County
Celltmllol,nora, Cot1rt
Hou••• Potllerey, · Ohio
1111'11, Ulllll 1:00 A.M. on
'llleiHIIY. ro•ruery' 11th,

of

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recognitidn and a gift from the gift
Trout and Janet Thomas received
box.
a perfect attendance charm and cerCatherine Little received a cer- ·tificate, Emogene Johnson receiving
tificate and a ToPS chann as the a chann and certificate for tHe TOPS
winner of the hike and bike conteS\. 'for-all· seasons contest and Katie
Awards are presented to 'members Moore was KOPS best loser at the
who walk and/or ride a bike ·100 Dec. 23 meeting.
TOPS Miss Wint~rtimc contest
miles.
Trout was KOPS best loser on was won by Oeri Gibson. with EmoJan. 6. At that meting she rehd "I gene Johnson as KOPS winner. Each
Will Press On" and "A Model For received a charm and a certificate.
Living." Members discussed weight
It was announced that TOPS
loss techniques and welcomed Club, Inc.. has a new cyber-solution
for baitling the bulge
Eleanor South as a new member.
The Dec. 30 KOPS licstloser was · TOPS announced tbe launch of
Katie Moore. Oeri Gibson was rec- . the official "We're Here For You'
ognized for weight and presented ·a web site (www.tops.org).
TOPS certificate and a TOPS charm
for each contest. Winner of the lost·
Browsers can learn about TOPS.
over-Christmas co.ntesl wa.• Katie lite benefits of being a member of
Moore. She received a cash prize · ihe weight loss group, and the phiand a certificate. · ·
losophy of change from within
Moore was .also the winner of the which it promotes.
following contests: Happy Holidays.
Meetings are held on Mondays at
Pumpkin, Be Proud It's Allowed and
New Year's Resolution. She was pre- 10 a.m. with weight in time from
sented a TOPS charm and certificate 8:30 to 9:45 a.m. For more information on TOPS, call 367-0274.
for each contest.

·savdlma and.
Maney•••

•••

Public Notice

'~

,.

followl•l

ATKINS

-·••

~~------~----,------------------~
·-i,-:.

In Loving Memory

tho

a'tal:
.
,.., Pl!moUih ......n'ltd'-1111110111

JEREMY LEE

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Pro)eot

I, tte7, at 10:00 Ltll., e
lie llolol M
Ill Weal h01nd llrMI,
Pa•oro Ohio, to ... fer

)IIUIIIIe aall d

In Loving~

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992-2156

up ot the Motgo

County Ellll-'a Offloe or

111 ao; 121•: nc

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NOTICil ..

· lnllemory

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lid apeclfloatlono IMY 11e

pto~od

IIIQUIIT 1'011 PROPOSAL
lfoiiH to Truott .,....,.,

"

PT. PLEASANT, WV

the

Public Notice

·'

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Dump Truck wtth Dump

lody Mel ¥-Box..,.._,,

(1) ao; (2) .. II; m:

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675~1333
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

446-2342
.
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Tho loard of llolgo
County Conlmleotonoro
mer ecc.pt th• • - • lltd,

foHa uvtng purchut:
One -1117 Tandem

I.J. l'enlon Taylor or ootoct the Mot llkl for tho
P-.laaliJIIC:-k
c-..-. Dlatrtot,
In
lloenf Ill DltiCforl

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the Oflloo of lllo Motgo
Nfllnded.
The Englnoor'o ·oottntoto County Commtoolo-..

ADVERTISING IN THE

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... ... rMelviHI ... 1M 111111/of any Jl8ll lin re.f Md
..."'
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County
Co•tllleelonera,
Court lltddlr wlllcll .. In lhl lllet
"•-· PoMeroy, Ohio k.... wt Ill ..... c..ty.
41711, until 1!011 ..... ...
Cllorll KINe, ca...
Tnnd;{;. february lath,
lloWII of ..... County
IA17.
llldo wll tt.. lie
ColntnlaJion-.

DOCUM.NTI
and
IPICifllCA'IlONI mor ,Ito
eltUinH at lllo Oflloe of
TRIPLETT EIIOIIIIERINO
·IIJMCI!I c:o. tocetecl ot
110 IIAC:HANIC STREET,
POIIIliiOY, OHIO UP,On
peytMnt of IIJO,OO for eech
oet, whtoh will not Ito
1

'

Elegant eateries are sweet on _doughnuts
·
And. at New York's Maloney &amp;.
Po.rcelh, pastry chef .. George
Frttzsche, has created drunken .
doughnuts."
.
1
"I make three types of yeast,
raised doughnuts spiced with cinna.
mon. nutm~g and cloves. I shape
them into different sizes, some oval,
some like old-fashioned . twisted
crullers. Then I dust them wilh pow·
dered sU,ar." Each order is served
wid! .alcohol-spiked jams such aa .
oranae marmalade . with Orand

c..-.,

sys~em

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURES ·EVERY WEEK IN THE·
.
TV TIMES

In e01ordan11 with tntondoct purpeoo, eild

II I . . . 'IfM Gillie Olllo '"Ill'\. . tile tight to ....,.
...lltU Code, IOOIM llldo flfll/w ..... ...,. Clf . . lillie

......... IM,I.Illlllltt
.... Ill "' • MI.
tile CON1'IIACT 1p1Md and reed aloud It

bUy organic coffee from Mexico preparing food, they don't consider
Toeatstrawberriesoutofseason,
because the growers are preserving it a hardship. They relish sard!:ning. Bell says, is to distance yourself
the ecosystems that provide habitaiS He works a 3,000-square-foot plol from the rhythms of the earth. "AU
for birds,'' Jarnagin says. Non- near his parents' home in .vnes. She things need to be in balance. The
organic coffee, on the other hand, is handles a I,OOO-square·f90t area in other thing is whtn you buy produ~
produced on a plantation, she says.
their back yard.
in season, it tutes better."
"When I think of my ancestors
Besides raising the typical fruits · But eating locally grown food
and how .f~w choices they ,had, I and vegetables, Jarnagin harve_sts ,shouldn't be eq~ated. with a de~ire
realize I sull have a lot of cho1ces. In and calli commo~ garden weeds hke for everyone.to hve hke the Am1sh,
the Yucatan, many people can't pigweed, lamb's quarters and purse- he adds. "Eating ·local food is about
afford beans to go with their corn lane. "They're delicious cooked like nature and about people. It provides
tortillas."
wilted spin~eh."
,
a sense .of connection with others
Exner and Jarnagin came to their
During the winter, the couple_ and the natural world."
food ~hilosophy .because of~rsonaJ ~nds ~sun room stuffed with plants,
. . .
. f
.
:·
expenences, her food allergtes and mcludmg some herbs •nd a papaya
Bell beheves thiS connectton IS
th~ir life's work. An agr~nomist tree tha111~ueed four papayas last important ~cause · !I" !'!"reasi~gly
":tth the Iowa State Extenston Ser- year.
.
fragmented and competitive IOCI~ty
vtce, Exner helps farmers figure out
Take Mtke Bell, an Iowa State has I~ to a loss of communtl)'.
how to grow food in a profitable, yet sociologist, .and Diane Ma~erfeld, "You can regain a sense of commlh
sustamable way. .
an agronomy researcher wtth the ntly through the purchases you
Jarnagin has a bachelor's degree university's extension service. Bell make,'' he notes.
. in sociology and a master's degree raises vegetables in the back yard,
in agro~o~y , S~ tea~hes at Iowa and Mayerfeld serves Qll the board
At the same time, Bell would.not
State·and IS workmg on a doctorate of Whtatsfield, an Ames food coop· like to see a society that favors eatf
in ":'ral ~ociology. In the '70s, she erative..
' ing only local food. "Iowa's econO'
studted tn Japan and traveled the
Relymg on loc~lly produced my is based on export agriculture,'!
world. In the '90s . .she helped c~n- food_s often means stmply not con- he says. "But it seems silly with all
duct .an agn~ultural research project summg foods many other consumers this farmland that we're growing so
tn rural Mextco.
,
take for ~ranted. ~ey tend to eat little of our own food. Why is it that
As for the_hours ·and hours they strawbemes only m season, for Iowa feeds the world but doesn't
spend growmg, preservmg and example.
feed it5clf1"
·. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·

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TV TIMES ••
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By MELINDA VOSS
The Des Moines Register

ly called doughnuts the new "haute
USA TODAY.
,
junk food."
;.
·
.
·
Suddenly, doughnuts are i,n a hole
At New 'Yorks trendy Osten a del
new class.
· Circo, you can order bombolonctnt
&amp;,.ong considered the Volkswqen (literally "little doughnut"), Italianof pllllries, they ·now have BMW . style jelfy paatries fille~ with vanilsialus at some of the finest restau· Ia,, chocolate .and rasp!lerr)l. At the
~.
· popular Tavern on the Oreen,
"There's
a tread .in lhi1 doughnuts sbow up olltht weekend
country to
~ek to old-fuhioned · brunc~ menu.
.
.. ·
lhinp · with 111 elepnt twist, like
At The French Laundry tn Cah· '
moN · im.Paatlve presentation, ' 1 'fornia's N'!lP&amp; Valley, 'Qiomas Keller
says Midllel Blllelbetry, editor of offers "coffee. and doua~nuu,': ci~FOod' Arts ft!~~Uine. Perfect eum- niiDOn-supnd confecuons served
)lie: Jllllrll* doupllll.
wit~ c~ino, semifreddo. a

The
CONTRACT
DOCUM.NTS

it wollldn't have been done."
he~tlelllltgn~ln- ...
rnmk:
CCII db..
.
Still, awan:neA isn't everythinJ.
l
Nekola' Slid development has been
allowed on or near local snail blbi).
tats in the Jeeenl put, sudt u consuuction of a JU swion·near a snail
colony on the UWOB CIIDpus. That
.I
and other projects CIUIO him to
•
qliCStion the etftc~ey of the slate's
Endangered Species Law.
Species preservation can come
down to a queition of time and
money, Kitchel said.
"Whether· the law is sufficient
enough really comes down to
whether we have cnouah time to get
Lllke .
out there when these permits are
MJch#Qan
, given to tromp lt'Ound on the land
and look for what's there," she said.
"That's a real factot." .
~
,,
The DNR also runs into the ·
sticky issue of private property
rights. The agency must obtain a
property owner's pennission to . 1· .....................
inspect a site, unless it can show
"'
:·
strong suspicion that an endangered
.. ' '
'
laM. . '/
\ ·.~ ..
species lives there.
·
Fond dtl ·utj:~-"'
,,·. t ." , Jnd,
If a landowner refu5es to cooper·
. ate, Kitchel said the DNR can with'hold environmental pennits for the
project. More often, however, she said, money is an issue.
a1ainst time
· development.
said, there are ways to work with
hopes to continue
·
landowners that enables them · to
Funds from the Nature Conser- colonies of the species, while leamdevelop their property without vancy enabled Nekola; who donates ing everything he can about wh~
·harming a protected species.
·
his time, to h;a, a research assistant keeps the tiny land snail licking. ,
Meanwhile, the more that can be in the past and"will pay some of his
·
;_;ft
learned about the ancient snails !lnd expenses this year. He said he would
"They've been. there 10,~
the conditions they need to survive, like to have enough tQ hire several years. They've ~rsisted where iiJe
the better their chances.
assistants ro help with field wor.k.
mastodons, ·and saber-toothed tige~
haven't," he said.
As with most research, Nekola
Nekola sees his research as a race
,

Big ·.food changes for consumers
with the ubiquitous microwave to eat what you grow. It's not a' sacoven, the food industry is rushing to rificc. That was a revelation to me.
The food that the average Amen- fill them with microsnacks, TV din- Now, I think: 'My God, why would
can c.onsumcs has changed dramati- ners and one-handed food products I live any other way. I don't want to
cally over the years, says Joan Dye designed for busy people, she says.
cat rnspberncs shtppcd ac':"ss the
Gussow, a nutrition education pro·
Smce most of these products country. .I know how fragtle they ·
fcssor emeritus in New York.
have little visible connection to the are ."'
· At the end of World War II, a typ- soil, younger Americans can be for-.
Through her ,gardening efforts,
icai supermarket offered about I;000 given if they know lillie, and care she has discovered some indigenous
items, mostly fresh. cured and less, about bow their food gels to foods that have been largely neglectcanned commodities, she says in her supermarkets or restaurants, she ed because no one has tried to grow
· book "Chicken Lillie, Tornato says.
them commercially. In recent years,
sauce and ·Agriculture - Who Will
"These indl vidualized prod.ucts . Gussow has tried ground cherries,
Produce Tomorrow's Food" (Boot- are almost inevitably heavily pack- cape gooseberries and paw paws.
strap Press). .
~ged and the~efore astonishingly
But 'sh~ isn't a purist. ll's not as
But new food processing ·tech- resource_,mtcnSive tn relatiOn to the 'though she never cats oranges
nologies,.television advertising and actual food value they contribute to · because they don't ·grow in New
demand from suburbs full of.hoUse· 'the diet." One. notable e~ample was England. But she maintains that ·we
bound women changed that. "We all Campbell's Souper Combo, which would make bener use of our
fell under the spell of the global provided a purchaser with 11.9 resources if most of what we eat was
supermarket," she says. "We were ounces of edible material in six lay- . locally grown.
told it was a tremendous leap for· ers of diSposable wrapptng, she
Although l~rge-scale prOduction
ward that we could get iceberg Jet-, 1 says. , .
.
agriculture
offers seemingly ·cheap
A .hfettme of studymg food contuce from California year-round.
food,
tbe
true
cost is much higher,
And now we have this absolutely sumpt10n has led Gussow to · conshe
says.
Local
farm economies
. tasteless hard white stuff."
elude that instead of promoting the
By the late 1980s, 33 new prod· high-tech diet fostered by a global . have been ruined. Big companies
ucts or variations were 'btroduccd fOOd system, we should develop sus- undercut local farmers by producing·
the most food in the cheapest way
every day. Increasingly, these prod· lainable regional food systems.
and
often where environmental. laws
ucts conlain substances that boggle
She.walks her talk. Gussow and
the mind. Tomato paste ·may be · berhusbandgrowmuch.orthcirown are most lax.·
extended with colored starch·. Moz- food, relymg on a freezer and a root
zarella cheese may be made of veg- cellar to carry them through the win- .
"The sntem has rewarded those.
'etable oil. And what's called pepper· ter months and early spnng. She . who have behaved the most badly
onl may be textured soy protein.
readily admits _that most people 'l..nd _gotten the highest profits. But
At home, Americans increasingly wouldn't opt for 11. Yet, she says:
the price is .the destruction of the
heat rather than cook their food. And .
"It's amazing how. satisfying it is globe ultimately," she _says. ·

.........

Ettdll~g~~td_..dlllng 1-* 10,000y.ngo

Public tlalu

Public Noloe

• • "' Md-41Mn at .....

RE CH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR ESSAGE-!

The Dally Sentinel• P8ge13

Publlo Nollol

............t, ., .........

Niagara escarpment

Consumers are optin.g out-of high-tech, industrial food

By CATHY HAINER

Pomeroy •lllddllpoit, Ohio

•

.

Can small snail survive development?

By SUSAN CAMPBELL
QrMn Bly Pill I Oi n.

•

Public~·

c:ountJ CDIM\IItl01tlf8 N1V Hollu, Po,.oroy, Olllo
isoatpt till toweet llld, or
HIHI tile llftt bkl for ""

Intended p::=eo, and
UIIAMthl .

toaooept

eMJor Njeat anv • .u llklo
aftd.lor lilY perlllle,..f and
wtll.....cl • oo:abMI ~ thlt
•lddlr whiCh 11 ln 1M Mil

of=·~

41711, until 1:00 A.M. on
1\IHdlv; l'ebru1ry 11th,
1117. ,.. bide will " - Ill
opaneci ancl I'HII lloud at
3:30 p.RI. on · Tu11t1ar.
FJbrUiry IIIII, 1117 for lhl
following
, .,... o r One UNCI
..........llyd,.ullo

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Ilxecu&amp;tor~ not to' • 111 1d
llolnl of ..... County '
houre.
Comntlatlanen
ltd tpiOIIIoatlonl may Ill
;117. ,.. llldl wttllhln ...
ptokiHI up at thl Melga ·
opellld ancl ,.... aloud at (I) 311; (2) I; 2TC
County
IJiglnoar'a Ofllcl or
·a:ll p.m. on TuiJedaV,
1111 Offlo• ol tha Melga
l'ellruot;' IIIII, 1117 for the
Public Notice
Countr Cllfttflnl a...,..
followlnil ,........
.
Th• Ieard ot Melga
Oneuaidl-~wl Uo
Coufttr
CommiiiiDMIW.....,
RIQUEIT
FOR
PI'Of'08AL
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lllfopropa..- ohtp
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1111 lowMI ltld, llf
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the
111at llkl for tho
opst.UittllolnDeellrt:
lntondetl
p~~"· end
In
aooordaaoe
with
lld IP I olfloatiOM may M
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1M
....
1
...
..,
....
1M OtiiH of .... lleltl
c.utiiV i:oa•lrr&gt;.l"rd ot 111111 Co11mr ......, Wllllll .. Ia ... Met
TIIo. litard . ef Mllll
.

C•••laalollra,

Cour~

.... •••ratlntl

.. _.. ............
.

:n....

hllllltwt of ..... eountv..
' . . Clltlrta KINe, Ctetk
lloWII of ..... County

Co •• tellonera ·

(1) 30; (I) I; ltC

THURS. 7:30 SHARP!
COURT STREET GRILL
POMEROY; OH.

tho,Pt1. Not a

River Front Photography
Preeer:ve your wedding day with
· prolesslonal &amp;.. affordable
· portraits. Senior Portra~
packages starting a1 $49.95. By
appointment. 304-578-3181

minute of the.day
goes by you're
not tho!J6ht of.
We, love you ~~ery
much, Bub.
Love, Mom, Misty,
Billy, Anthony,

Nannle, Pa Pa,
.Aunt Sherry &amp;
Sherry &amp; Family,
AuntShauna&amp;

AU Wonlt

Family and

Business Services
SNOW
REMOVAL
•Driveways
•Parking Lots ·

. Call Anytime

949·3327
591·1197
' 111111711 -

"laltlae tM Tt
ltJI-fMI ·

·-···at·

SNODGUSS'.
UPHOLSTERY
At 2 Locatlcint
RIJilend, Oh.

814-742·29116

(UmeStoneLow Rlttl)

l o plo&lt;1· "''"" cull 99 22 156

·. BINGO
RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION ·

WI CIS
HAULING
Umestone,

Grivel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

· POST.602

-Etc.

814o91t8-22o2

.Public Notice

You are goTUJ
never forgotten.
You are oltmys ira
our hearts and

m. ,_.,

Recine, Oh. ·

'•

EUCHRE
TOURNAMENT

EVERY SUNDAY

614-992-3470

Doorl Open 4:30

ANN OUN CEMENTS

Game Sterte8:45
Pay out to eccordlngto
number ol players.
Under n- ....,n...,,.nt.
Public Welcomo

005

· Personals

#,eM~ #eta/,
Al,l!horized AGA Dislribulor
Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machin~ Shop
Services • Steel Sai8s &amp; Fabrrcation • Repair Welding
· • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
· · Staps • Stairs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
. Items, Planter Hangars, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuflll
~

"No Job Too Lllrge or Too Small"
We wiH work within your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861 .
108 Pomero Street .
Ma-, WY

· Border Collie and ani tri-cOlored

eou1e., ~r. 814-74l!-1DI&amp;

Call now to schedule your Tup- ·

perwart Partr. Earn lree pro·
ducts. S1ar1 &amp; Slrlpea . 1·800·

414·1'182S.C.2779.

.

Ftve very cure mixed puppies
nHd 1 home wll11 chlld&lt;on 10

. .... """'· 614-742·21153.
Five year old lemale Rouweiler,
. black and mahogany, 8U-742-

318e.
Free puppies,. pan Auslralian
Shepherd, long I aharl ·na.,ea.

INSULATION
1137 IilYAN PI.ACe
MIDDLEPORT
lltii!·2T12
1:00 l.nt.-3:311 p.m.

~=~i:=~Wit·DWI
&amp;

304-e75-7445.

"V• NtW Ownlrship" .
oNew Homea
oRa~llng

oNo Job Too Small
.•Any and All of Your
Home Rapalr Nelda
-call Today for Your

•Decks ·

FraeEstlmates

992-5535

Public Notloe

992·2753

.

Mar• Wood To Glveaway, Cur In

Ltnglho 2 I 3Ft. Long ·&amp;14·388·
6472.
Nine yur old AKC Reg. male
Basllln Terrier, ••cellent et;ampan·
ion, goad with cllildrerl,
loon, .. goad-. 81-2·5053,

"'"'1011""

Pan BoXI&lt;, port Golden Ra!tiowor,
7 monrhs Old, hu hid ahots.

~304'"--41-"70..:5-;.,;I,;;IIO"'t,'-~~-- ; .

80 Lost snd Found
Found: Blue &amp; White Tom tar Yi·

R. L HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMPTRUC~

SERVICE
.UlriHtonl• Gmel
l)lrt • Sind

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIC~
New Homn • VInyl Siding.New
· ·Garage• • RepiiCtmtnt Windows
Room Addltlona • Roofing
and RESIDENTIAL
. COMMERCIAL
.
.
FREE ESTIMATES .
.

.,

614-992·7643
(No Sunday cal..)

cinlly Golllo Acodomr High
School, 81•·••e-teil0 AllOr s
P.M.
Found:' Unlo WM~ PuppP/Dog.
Ylcinltr: Rood, Stole Aou•
tiO, Colt Allor S P.M. e,......

'*·
Still Loat: 2 Fomato lhtigJoa,
McClintic
OJH;
t' 11·87
Col
IDol-_
_.,_

PIHot

· Still' Loet: Loroo Malo a,•.,, '
ll&lt;own Wllh Black Foco Whlll ·•
c
...~1!1-rtno
Catlal wt
•
sMI. Hill, ~ Hoictllll
-·••· Generoua !loWtrd, !u.
.175-177. AIICI 114·441·i)SS1

&amp;...... .

,

�........., •. ,..,

~

'

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

IlEA c..o...ord ......

,,.,.... :......
.........

tl 1V.Ij

w....-

1* . . I

Cilia

• ......_
=== ,:,,
·A---

!!Ji!!'!'tl~·

S

=rr
11...

t4xl0, 2 or· 3 bldroom. with
. gllmou r 1&gt;1111, S1791m0. 304-7$55588.
New lank Repo'e l Only 3 ltiL
owner financ ing available. 304·

755-71g1.

2 Bedroom Brick Townhou111
Acrou From Cinema Theater
With Wuher I Dryer Hook-Up,
Stove, RetrlgtraiOr Furnished,
Waler, Sewer, Traah Included,

close 10 school in town.
availible a t Village
" "'"-· 149 or call 614·992·

O.kwood Hornet Nitro. WV. 304755-5885.

" Green Hou•• Bow•· 30 Ft
Wide, Heavy Oauae, E.C. eu.
418-4530.

Baby bed, atroller, a.wing, ;.car

·Pet• P.l ul, Silver Bridge Plaza.
61•-&lt;W1-G770..

ipoll~

::--:----:-:-:-:-----:,
-- - ,Whitt
-Rogi&amp;tlfld Wt&amp;l Hlgt)llllld
Terrier 10 bred. 30H7~811 M- 1992 Dodge' ~ 'pick-up, lqw
rimt.
mlloage. 1991 Chovr S-10 ~­
up. 304,88s-33UI.
570
Musical

-~ -:IO&lt;H75-4841.
Boota Br Redwlng. Chlppowo,
Rocky, Tony lama . Guaranteed
'-11 Pric:ea At Shoo Colo, Gol-

Very nlco t9.-&amp; t4x7o with 2
lor Mike.
HOME COMPUTER USERS
NEEDED. $45,000 Income po·
- 1 Riolo!' H0mt1
·
tonllat. t·I00-513-4343 E•t. B- ·steel BulldlnQ Salaa I Contt.
Now, Ulld. Commerical, I.Jod
HUQt Profi1 Po"""lol Manuloctur11381 Cal For Dalai~
~n Exlt38 304-372-3400
•r Selecllng Deater In Avalllble
M - 303-758-4t35EIL &amp;200.
LPN NEEDED
For In AHome
care.
Gallipolis,
2 Days
Wee~
To
SllrrL Rlpiy To: ClA 403, c/0 Gal- 230
llpolia Dally Tribune, 825 Third
- . . GaftlpoHa, OH 45831 .

tE~~~~~;~~~~

3431 .

4 Bedrooms ~ 2 Batht, Ca!'ltral

_
Instruments

Concrote 8 Ploalic Stpuc Tonka,
300 T~ru 2,000 Gallon• Ron

11182

IR~u

1-487-4119.

A4

•Jtllll

w-. .

. . . . . . In

~::::;;;1:

-~

,_

.

s..111 w..a
2•

PUa

Pua
- ~.
Pal ~ , .Pill

.=:.
·~
.......,
----t-t-1 ': :::r:.up

N..u. 11:111t
Pua
Pua
Pua
IIIII.
••
Dill.

3t ...,.llld.

...

PMI

91-ina IUd: •

-~
...,

A .

40 Huron llld

··=

1-------=--'f-

Ooillllo

41 CIP?dn

-+-+--1 ... tloll. . llul

•:r ~llllp A,lder,
'

• M.T. Coin Sllop. lSI Second GREAT CAREER oppQAIUN!.

n.u

Rental King Con1inues To
- · o.tilpolll. 814-448-2842:
Grow And Wanta Qualified, Ambi;
Clean Lite Modet ca,. Or tiout Candldattl To Join Our
Truckl, 1810 Models Or Newer,
In A Planned Major E•-

.__
~

I

71t'!IOG3.

~-

TRANSPORTATION

All real estate advertising In

this newspaper is subjeCt 10
the F~ral Fair Hauslng Act
of t968 wnk:h makes It Mtegal
703, Massillon, OH
Resources. falll: 330-833-

.

H~man

3784.
Needed 10 ladies To Sell Avon.

Call 614-446·3358.

In ill laatut 1118tdlptillt ..-, •
the neme lmpllea, you Jeam your
acore immediagJy. At 1be end of eeeh
deal, you refer to a chert which dilplay8 all possible 8corea and their
alcbpoint awards.
.
Laat September It, the American
Contract .Bridle League held ita annuli inltant maldlpoint pme. The blpest sc:ore ol7f.58 pefCellt U'l90 out or
2400&gt; wu obtained by~ and RmiY
Joyce, fJ;om Raleigh, N.C. They Korecl
Yll)' well on this·deal
South opened with a weak IWO-bid,
flOW Rlc.t-1 ?' . &amp;bowing a decent llix-ard lluil and • .
11 higb-eard pointa. E..a, ltu4Y. produced an .--~ve bllandnrl doUble.
Ae Key, TijlDg her bud, eue-ltid. 1be1 .,
were about to play in lour beull maybe aucceaafully, maybe not when North bid four apadea. WITh no
shortage, no spade honor and pod
recl-lllit c:arda, lbla wu awfuL RmiY ·
wu delilltred to,double.
-·
The defenders bepn with the club
ace, a dub to The Jdn&amp;'a club ndf, Ucl
the heart 10 to The jack IJid ace. Now
Randy, knowing bia partner didn'T
·baw a trump left, awitclled to a dlaIIIOIId, Kay winning wiTh the ace and
retumlng a diamond
' South should haw worked out the
'lrllmp poeition, bul be -mecl Eut
had Jllllde !ID .IITUI'- He pllvwd out Ida
top .,..., llnllbiJIIIbne·clollll: mJ.
nua 500. Tbla pve the winaera t7
ouloliOO•.

lifl.

IUanagement

o·,vihlcltl.
Auto Parla. Buying salSelling parts. 30&lt;!-

to advertise ~any ~nca.
limitation or dtscrlrnin&amp;Uori
based on race, color, relglon,
.sex f,amtlial status or nallonat
origin, or any lnteri:ion to
make any such preference.
- Umltation or discriinlnatlon:
This newspaper wilt not

Mixed Firewood, $30 A Pick Up,
$100 Per Dump Truck Load De·

liYory A'"llaille, 614-31111-8871.

New Coat Iron Ballltubo, Different
Colora, 8t4·37e-2720 AFTER 8
P.M.
~partment,

RENTALS

.iY.T·ID: JJORN LOSER

New Couch &amp; Lave Seal Burgun-'
Hun1er Green &amp; Tope Camel
Back Block Piuern, e1 .. -245-

d~.

· ~va..rro.oe. M.NtiTM.:

557S.

410 Houses for Rent

,

~

•

BLI~lO&amp;.

· knowingly ac:cepl
advert~ents for real eState

.c-"7 • ·

I(:JQ\

?

, wNCh Is in viOlation of the

taw. Our readers are hereby
Informed lhal aJI dwellingl
advertised In this fl8W&amp;:paper

are avallabte on an equal
opporl... lly

-

-

bas~ .

REAL ESTAlE

[l.li'LOYMENT

110

tar

kK:at retail ltOre.
W• will train the .rlg~t person.
Send r..,nw CIO Thl OaNy Sendnel, P.O. Box 72848, 111 Court

SIIH Cfetk

:Of:KVICE S

Help Wanted

AVON I An Artll I Shirley .s-t.~.OH451811.
31)4'175-1429. ·'
IALES. C.... Opportunlly AI A
local R....,..UV. For One OJ
A GrMt Opponunlty Chock Thia The
'Natlon' a Lart;~ell ln1urance
OUtl If Your Not ·Maklng AIIOIII Companies.
No PI'WIDUI Elllperl·
18.50 IHr. You Owe k To Yourself enc. N~ry.
Complete TrainTo Clll Kim Toll Fru 1-888-432-. ,lng Pragr11m.' Earn
~hilt You

s--o.

.

~71.

Able

Avon

.

Represantativtt

-dod. Earn money lor ChriOI-

Learn. Benelill Pkg .• Oppqrtunhy
Far Advancement. Call Ameri:an
G•n•r•l Ufe &amp; Accldaf'lt Inaurarlce Co . At 814-440-2273,

,.., bill 11 homeiat wo.rk. 1-IOQ882-8358 or 304-882-2845, lnd 304-128.82811 Equal Oppor..,lity
~~Rtp.
Are You Ene,ge1 1c, MD11YilG!d. Someo11e ~ INeln &amp; ca,.lar etUpbeat a Poti tive Jn AUlrude, d•rty "4Y In New Haven area.
Sincere And Caring? Scenic Hilla Jloom &amp; 'board with wogt. Call
· -4-87&amp;,"144.
Muat hhit rtftt·
Nut tin, Ctnler 11 Looking For .c
•
0
11..
encat. Serloua inquire• onl".
Individuals With Tt'!eae ualt .. a ~'~~~-...._
.
.
'
Who A11 Stale Tetted CNA"a Or~~~~:::.-:---:--:--.:-:::-:-:-:-:
Would Like To lnlerview FDf Februorr CNA Cluaeo. PI•••• Stytlll nHded, caH.Tho Added
come In w FiR Out An Applca- T"'*" 81+9112-4788.
tlon At 311 Buckridge Rood, Pld- Volley Bioo~ Concrete &amp; Supplp
....1. 0H M-F 8 A.M. -4 P.M. Unill Jno. 11 In MOd ola 8ook-kt1Pif,
February 5111. Duo T9 The Nature RecipliPnilt at our. Millwood, WV.
Of Tht Candidlllll We Are Seek- ·locttlon. Thll 11 a port-dme poollno, We Are Unable To Accep.t lion to ltiJt, wilt! tull·time poten·
C.Ha For Employment.
· · tial. Reaponolblllllu Include:
ASiti.TANT IIAIMGERI SR.
Accounta ·p•yable, account• rt·
·
ceivable, typing, filing, and
CUSTOMER SIRVICI! REPREachtdullng by 'j&gt;Hone: Ex~riSENTATNE
ence . -... bul not nilc:HUry,
A local Consumer Financial will train tho right lndlvldu~ltri
Stf'¥1Cel oHh;e of I fortune sao join our growl~· company. Appllclnll miy IPoiY In peraon at
coinpanv hal an tmmedia1e ca· our
Millwood, WV. localion· from
- - l l r i l ¥:
lom-4pm tht - k of 2-3-97 No
AI
of fae branch -.m phono CIIIIPitMa.
Cllllilllllttcl to 11101 and oarvlce,
lie IIIUII d indiYidUII il rnpon- valley Brook Concreto • Sjrppfy
alllltt ·lor ·""lno rHI eo toto ond Inc. Ia In MOd of 2 fuii-Umt do,.,...., 1o1na. lnauranco pro- livery drivers. Mutr be de~d­
••••· m1klng crtdlt doclolona allltt, hardw!)rking, and cou,_l
wtlhln oredll authority, rec:om· to our cuetomera. Appllcantl
IMifC!Ing IIOiutlonl to delinquent mult paue11 a Cllta B COL No

n~~~~=~~~~~

3 Bedroom, 1 ~alh, Kitchen Ap·
pliancel', Attractive lnterloJ. Full
Unfinished Baument. 1 C'ar Garage. New vinyl Siding 8 Heat

19&amp;.? Pontiac Grand-Am ps, pb,
air~iiew draa. $1,400. 304· 675·
38•~.

0951

St J OO; 11190 Chevy Cavalier 4
· D~!tl. $2,500; 'Phone 8&lt;4·4488217 Aklf 5 ~M.

Pump. City Schools. 1614)-441 -

1988 Chevy C1vatiet 4 Door.

-

FOR SALE OR RENT : 2-3 bed·
room .brick house in New Haven.
Full ~semel)t , garage, new hear'

19811 Ben!!IB GT Rid.Sunroof, 2

q!~ra. Engine &amp; Transmission,

pump w'fu.rnaco back-up, new
fronl pore~. new side carport &amp;
2nd driveway, back covered pa ·
t!o,d8n, great room, gas ftreptace,
recently remodeled kitchen &amp;

,.,. $4,200 513-574-2539.

,&amp;,II

balh, naw carpel. Priced lo loll.

304-882-2312.

~to

Parts&amp;

992·608.7.

''
•
1998 us Cargo car trailer, 2''
Accessories .

~581

·

Block, brick, sewer pipes, windDWI, linlels, etc. Claude Win11ra.·

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Rio Grande, OH Call 61•·245-

5121.

560

,.,.OJ,

Ohli 41711.!

tON

~

h. .

'

1990 Grand Prb LE, V-8 IU·
tOmatic,. loaded, power moonroor.
(lew atru1s, very clean. 614· 742·

21119, 814-lle2-3394,

Pels for Sale

campers&amp; 1
Motor Hon'les

. Point Ptea,ant. 304-876-

2 Seta of Golf Clubs, right ~and,
1 set $150 ather set S100. 304-

875--

180 Wantld to Do

Remington HOO, 12 gauQe &amp; 10
gauge IDi' sale. 814-247-4193.

Bad Credit And Bankruptcy Buye&lt;o, Call Diane 614-¢4&amp;-8172.

.

.

ChriltYI POll
' '.
271 N. 5acond Avor&lt;it "
Mlcldeport. Oh
814-882·451'4

.',,

rM AGRANDMA II

Babnlttthg in my home, In the
aroo. Chlldlon ol all agea,
Relet&gt;enctl AvaUa~e Upan A•

h'l I boy

'

:•
,

CARS FOR 11001 Trucb. bolta,
4-whHiera. moiOJ homu, lur(M-~
'ure, etecttontca., camputMI elll.
by FBI, IRS, OEA. .~!rail hJo ,....,

orea now. Call t -100-51S·4:t'S
'En $-9388

li·,,

Grooming it&gt;ecllll- ,., ~

Anli91nda, Or\lr·SI 0; tor cariiill,

qun1.21 Y•are ,Experlenee Call
• - 1....,.,..
81 -.:-.~...... ..'
· ·
CJea(gH Plr18blt &amp;aWmi!l, don'l

Trto 'Stfvlct, Sluii!P
Eadmolnl InOhio. _814-381-

range Financing Even II You
Heve Baen Turned Down Belore.
Loans Avaita~e For No Credit,

GoOds'

nogoliii&gt;It. Clll14-ell~7484. '

Col304-~57tl8.

Auto Loans: Auto Dealtr Will Ar·

sporting

W.rud- someone to ptav the « ·
o••
or plano II
Flrol Bapdat
Ctwrcn. Pomeroy, Ohio. Salary

I

aDPLIICa. ~

AIICII

PI

-L D X F Z Z K D ' X

-·
'•

cxaao'D~

PAEV10U8 801.tiTION; "You 0111'1 _. him io do ~ "*'a fllle.
. . . . ID 1111 own WIIIIMI•.··- N Aldin Robi110u, an KtMn eo...

NON~III

·

·t

I I Lr 1 I _
2

I•III-I
L

u R' R E

only $10;11111 clpping~ ' ftD:
blllll, ItO; lleo dlfiPing, SID; jlGn- •
dlilor\lng or·ollrea~m~nta. St a.

Hl.lr.ctippiflQ or ICiuor a.tl&amp;

btdrOO,_T,i, lll. tltctric, IWO
Olllof......, on Now Llmi
814; 742· 2803 or 814·742·

Co~ toial goOrrir~ ...
oboiit, $39.99. Clll br., 11p: .,

p o l - i!lday. ~ I"IM ki(
long term care.
'"
Thori&lt; you, Chriary.

. Apartments ·

''. for Rent

I'

E•jllrn 2128197

;:aj);ij7i::

I Pupa·
Fltkl CH &amp; Muter Huntil\a Trail
Black Lib, OFA 'IIC£RT.
304-738.0000.

1

720 'lhlc:ka. Salt
1988 Ford ~• .....,. - .

4cyl, Sapd. llhort wheal baao.
S1,800. 31J&lt;H_
_
:11187 Dodge Ram !!0 5 Speed, Nt,
•PS. PB. Tlt. 114-258-1487.
Ford F-250 14,500. Ntgo.:
1112 Ford Atroalar XL
304-17&amp;-17U.

FREEl Labrador crau puppiea,
7wks old, mother it Regittered
oulllda dogl. 304-871i:S353.

..

y

t

ICIAM LDS ANSWEIIS

Gusher· Tongs· Watch· RcxJenl· DUST RAG
I worll in a large~ and surmised that some work~~ ttil_come out on the short end of the OUST .
.
.

lank apt up spec•als. Fiatt
&amp; Pal Shop, 2413 Jackson

520

-;•;;;:u;~~;;~;: Lady
. Work
.....dor~
of~
Plf•
C
aon. Tw11
.LC.
or nlghto.

ltl· IICW·

AX NEG

•'

•••

814--0231.

ol 2-3-97. No pl.- calla plaalo. •'

houl '"'" ioOI 10 lht mil juOI call
304-llt'1111'/'.
.

Yli

XVIICF

Leave mellaQe, witt return

A Groom SM.op · Pet GroominQ .
Featuring H~dro Bath. Don
S:_n&amp;els. 373 Georges CrHk Rd.

Anr odd jobl, painting, glllttrl
cleanad. 814-245-5178 or.304-

'·

'tlXA · AXPGIICJtll

,,
I

cill.

!he

Dolr ..,.• ..._ P,o. .... 728-40.

~

run1 &amp; looks good. Call 304-&amp;75-

WV. location frO!'" 8·4 the week

w...... • ......,...••••._,. tnd
•••"•••~•..,.....
PIHtt
torwarll rtouM~··
to: Tht

by Lule CIPiipca:
_..,qi!lf*='
- - ......,_£_L
., ____ _.
- ..-_____

a Socks, maroon, linted windowt,

.

Two 1 be-droom apart~nls tor
1 ·"
b 'ld'
W'll
sa e Wltn l!orage ut 1ng. t
sell on tand conuact, 814-092·

ltCC•unll, aerwlclng accoun11, tlllperlence nacalllf'y, will ~rain
ooalollna tho branch rnaMger In !he right p~~~ple to join our - Malo liuelnaee development, ing compeny. ~ppllcantl may
Jrrarlch admlrilakatlon and train- apply in perRn at .out Millwood.

-1

CEI EBRITY CIPHER

•

an•••

875-7112.

..........+-+-+-'-1 .

18~ Nissan 2&lt;tOSX 5 speed, ac.
a\1)· fm casstllt, power windawa

House ·for i,leln Rulland, 614·

5858

760

Boreita GT whllt wired
fi;fpe, high mllol $3,000. 304- long, black eJterior, carpeted In875·4825 or 304·875·5327 after terior, .
t114f-94.9-22'17. ,
4p._m ·

Plio"'

-

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:VIII. 47, NO. 110

, 01..,, 011Jo V.U., Publllhlng Canp IPJ

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\I t's offi.cial·: · .~· ,

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.Cepartme"' ot 1Rln~o\iof\

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Pto)ec,ed ~uno1ng S\'Ortla\1

highway•· jobs
i. n··~ area' spared

,, :...

Studies, design work to proceed
~~~ U.S. -3~ relocation, conne,:ctor
.
.
will continue- with a later re-eval.'Sentfl:lel News St.ff
uation to detel'mirie if funher devel·
· ·. Alihough local and regional high- opment wili occur. ·'
' _way projects were apparendy spared
The document notes that Tier n
. i'roin the monetary chopping block, projects will be evaluated at least
, oon't'. expect construction anytime annually to determine if they merit
' )loon.
advancement to the next stage of
, .. , ~o rDepanment of Transpona- development.
The proposed Nelsonville and
- bon Di~tor Jerry Wray re~ the
, .forst draft of a document Thunday Lancaster bypasses ·.scored ~igh on
. !hat prioritizc:s highway projects the second tier.
· based on projections thai revenue will
. Earlier this month, the projects
, remain fiat on both ·state and •federal were reported on .the "chopping
levels.
·
·
, block" according to · ~ anicle pub;
· · The draft dOcument places pro- . lished in the Columbus Dispatch.
, posed construction projects into three
Two projects to widen U.S. 35 to
categories: ner I - consbuction in four lanes in Fayette and Greene .
· fiscal years 1998-2001; Tier ll ..l. counties were also reportedly on the
: continuation thnlugh the current list to be cut~ but were instead com;
. $tage of development; and ner lll-· mitted for consbuction. The projects
ho funher.development.
wUI.result in a new fOIIr-lane highway
: · The proposed Athens to Darwin from Xenia to the Fayette County
: bighway relocation project and U.S. line.
~311-77
·
Road were both

. ·By JIM FREEMAN

97 5·10 2·WHEEL IMII•
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2 5ectlona, 12 Pages, :15 cenl8

POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 31, 1997

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AO.nnett Co. Newspaper

Balanced
budgetary
plan .nears .
.final vote

WASHINGTON (AP}- A Senate committee's endorsement moved
the balanced ·budget amendment to
j •
the Senate floor, but without the
changes Del)locrats said were need·
&gt;,'f.
ed (o protect Social Security.
· Debate on · the ·constitutional
•. ·, • 1
~mendment requiring a balanced
budget is to stan in the full Senate
'/ ·' ' ·
next week. Democratic opponent• arc
. determined to defeat it unless Social
•
·
Security is removed from budget calii1J1
culations. .
..
On Thursday, tbe Senate Judicia·ry Committee voted 13-5 in fuvor of
·' ·
the Republican-crafted plan. Several
Democrats who joined the .RcpubliHIGHWAY PAIORmES _j Ohio Departnient
mandllled planning document prioritizing $5
cans in sending the amendment to the
of Tren8fiOI'blllon Dlntctor Jerry Wray 8IOOd by
billion In proposed Ohio roed project' in
full Senate made clear they had not
• .gr•phlc twtu~lng the caparlrnent'.t.cltnlly·
Columbu8 Thut.day. (AP)
·
. made up their minds on the final vote.
....;;:;:::.;.!:::.;:;.:.:=::::.::::!!..:.:::.:::t;:::.::::::.::.::.::=::::I...-...::::::::.::::::..:.:::::.::::.:~~:::J'-------- · ··constitutional amendments must
project
been moved back to fis- been. The numbers may · have reflects the amount of revenue the be approved by two-thirds majorities ·
cal year 2000, instead of 1999..
changed butthe commitment to the agency is expected to have in the in both chambers .and ratified by
Projects.arc given points based on work remains the same.
future .
·
three-fo~~nhs of state legislatures.·
.factors like traffic accident rates, traf"And when it comes time to revise
"11\ey revised . it because they Two years ago, an amendment passed
fJC volume, average daily buck traf- the list again, plan availability will have the reflect the true picture," said the House but fell one vote shon iri
fie and economic development poten- always play a key role in the process. District I 0 spokeswoman Nancy the Senate.
tial. The points determine ,.,hat tier a If our design plans are ready and -Pedigo. "They have $100 million less
Supponers argue that a constituproject is placed in.
waiting, our projects will move ahead than they thought they would."
tional amendment is the only way to
"In other words," sai4 ODOT of a project without plans. Whatever
"ODOT has a project list that adds ensure fiscal discipline in governDistrici'IO Planning and Prognlm· constniction money is available to us, up to more t~an $5 billion . SQme of ment. "The time has come," said
·
.Tom 'Hed~k, 1J!Iiii ,IIJ'!~Y.i !lc: s~nt," h~ added. :. . these
Senate Judiciary Committee Chair.__..."'' ., h~e. 1 .;,..0P.Q;l~.llffi.~:~.the....l•u,,._,._.
l:llj~~~~~'!:·h!i"·~~"::-•;~!'I~Otrin Hatch; R•Utah, '' to ~nee ""
'
·
·
b!lllic charter \.Q rein in
·-~
allus(oct ninver ot the.purse, as has
been done n similar siluations in our
·· . : .
history since Magna Cana."
But Democratic opponents said
the amendment is unnecessary now
that both the White House and Congress are committed to real plans to
balance the budget by 2002, and it
could seriously handcuff Congress
wben it encounters future economic
crises. President Clinton has opposed
the amendment.
"Frankly, the vote today was a
victory of bumper-sticker politics
over good economic sense," said Sen.
'I
Patrick Leahy of Veo:mont, the rank.
ing Democrat on the committee.
At a news conference, Democrats
introduced a statement signed by
I,060 economists, including II
Nobel laureates in econ9mics, warn·
ing that the balanced budget amend·
mcnt was "unsound and unneces-

has

sary."
'
,
NEW' LOOK,.... A8mode!lng ·of lhll Plaple8
: · Bank In .Middleport 18 compleiH
an open
:; hou~ I• lillng pllnMd .tor the •prlng. The

C.Pture

eldtlrlor ollhll building ch8ngid to
·~ of thl 11rly 19008 dHign of the orlgiMI

•nd·

·,

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·But Senate Democrats also
acknowledged
that the amendment
NEW TELLER COUNTER -A nawly-de•lgned 't eller counter,
"
would
ge(
70
or
80 votes, well above
completely computerized, h88 been installlld at Peoples Bank in
the 67 needed, if the Social Security
Middleport. Nan D1vla 1 front, Wltlted on customer Carolyn
trust fund were excluded from future
DeMoekey. ·
·
budget c,alculations.
The Republican majority on the
committee defeated three Democrat·
ic amendments that would have protected Social Security. The RepubliThe newly designed teller counter, to look over their possessions.
can argued that the trust fund was in
totally computeri1.ed,. is positioned
A foyer has been added and there ·no danger of being robbed to balance
diagoqally in the !obby. It is more are two conference omces in the lob· the budget and that putting it off-budsecure in that entrance can be gained by area.
get would make it much harder to
only through the back' after going
Matched carpeting "•s been used bring the budget in balance.
through a locked door into the bank in other rooms in the bank including
The trust fund , now running a sur.safe area.
the large meeting room at the rear of plus, is included in general budget
Adjacent to that area is a small but · the building which still features an considerations and both Clinton ·and
·
comfortable room where customers · outside entrance.
Congress include it in their propos- :
with safety deposit boxes can retreat
als to balance the budget by 20Q2.

unveils
remodeling
results
\~lddleport's.
Peoglest~:lank
.
,,
ISJ CHARLENE HOEFLicH
Sentlilll News Staff

•

·:. • V.e.ENQINE
.,

"

· Peoples Bank in Middleport has
· : taken on a new look.
1be first floor exterior of the
l!uilding has been redesigned to capture ~ flavor of the original early
1.9005 structure.
·
: lncorporatid into the design ljave
b_een side pillars with ¢itcular tops
.'
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the new two-lane drive -through.
which now features a tube and drawer system for convenient access by
customers.
The lobhy of tl)e bank has been
completely remodeled with ceramic
and carpeting on the floor, and coordinating wall coverings. The featured
· gray tones show some color accent of
·. natural, mauve and blue:

jury·deliberations focus on·minute details .
·

. SAI'iTAMONICA, Calif. (AP)·· Asmetliodicalasthescientistswhosc;
· ~ is appBrel)dy at issue, OJ.
Simpson ttial jurors immeJSed themselves in tbe minutiae of DNA testiog,' and focused on whether blood
eyidence could have ~n contaniinated or pla!)ted.
. ,. Appearing 'relaxed and cheerfUl,
Jlipelists',:leliberaiin1 in the wrong-,
illl-deadtclllllwenriniOcourtThursday to tehear the testimony from a
s~te crilile ItJb scientist .and watch
vjdei&gt;tapes of investigaton at work.
Lawyen ea., til see whit lhe jury
. was up to raced to the cCIIIrllll!ule on
. a few lftOIIICIIIS' nocioe. RepilitieJS
~ ouflide and 10questered in a
hOtel the street also filed intO
W counroont, studyinJ the jurors'
f.- fOf ~-·
1 • LeJal expcru iofe4 1hal the jury
' ' ~ 10 bC llkinJ pain' 10 lie'
dtlll'olll~ • it '*'ides whet!IU to
'

around each of the ~dows and
doors on the first floor. j:lie toP markings, in light color con~ting to the,
brick facade, were cop1ed from thi:
· second story window design for integregation into the original structure
style',
The accent WM carried out on.both
the front and side of the building,
Nonh Second and Race,.&amp;s Well 'as on

..

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I 1

•

hold ·Simpson liable for the killings · cal from the back pte of'the condo. help with the media after the trial. It
·of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson Thcdropcon~inedSimpson'sDNA was signed by Brenda Moran and
and her friend Ronald Goldman. type.
included Gina Rosborough's name.
Deliberations ~nter their fourth day
The defense claims that Simpson's The women were members of the
today.
'
•
blood was planted on evidence, criminal trial jury that acquitted
"I think they wantto be!osure of includinl the back sate.
Simpson in October 1995.
the verilict when they face the pubThe jury requests began shortly .
Relatives ·of Ms. Simpson and
lie that they want ro cross ·every t and after The Associated Press ~on firmed Goldman are suing Simpson: If found ·
dol,every i,'' ~aid Laurie t.Cvenson, lho jiB'Ors had chosen as their fore- liable for the June 12, 1994, knife
. assoe..te dean of tbe Loyol~ Univer- · man ·the most meti~uloUJ no~er , . slayings, he COuld be ordered to pay
sity,law~hool.
'·
unona them, a pohce officers son millions.
·
Ell1ier. l'(hile behind closed doors, whO s.ld during jurj selection that he
Aift(lng the ev.idence the jury
jurorl asked for photo boal'ds ii!U!- admired Simpson but believed he asked to see ,again were two vldeolratiliJ some key pi~s of disputed . was probably 1uilty.
lapCs showiog criminalist Dennis
ev~. illcludlnr blood on the rear
~ man, ~n his late 50s or earl,y Fung and his assistant Andrea Mazgate 111Ch•alkway at Ms. S.h!lpson 's 60s .wtth a white handlebar mustache zola handlins crit~al evidence oolido, . . die area in back of Simp- and beard, is a retired Jlllllhic anisL Simpson's blood sample and • bag
. son's boule W11t!fe ~tecti c Mark
While jurors concentrated on the containins the bloody glove' Fw.m.ri
Fultnnu Aid he found a bloody complex case, shenff's deputies ' said he found.
alove.
Another Video WIS Shot in Simp1 investigated I letter .II least twO
Thef lfllollked 10 seC bJQWUfll of . il!fCX' JOI. bef&lt;!fC CIOSiliJ UJUntCnts , son's bedroom, where police said
DNA ·!lilt fillips tlled by .tile state . eiided. ·
they found bloody socks at the foot
critt!IIJ~b• to w!yze q~eCi~c blood
1be Jettet·UIJOd juron tO COPIA!tt Of the bed, The llpe, ho~ever, does
dropi,IIIIOIIJ dtlm IUJ!Jle drop lift- . ~F~;~t Bud Stewlrl for profeui!"'.al not shnw ;IRY soc~.
•

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