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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Southern
girls beat
Trimble

I~H

Super Lotto:
9-18-22-3H2-:45.
Kicker:
5·2·2-1-6-0
Pick 3:
4-9-3
Pick 4:
2-8·1-8

Sports on P•ge 4

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2 Sectlono, 12 P - , 35 cents

""'· 47, NO. 111

~117, Ohio V.lley Publlthlng Company

A Gannett Co. Nowopuper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 3, 1997

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.:GOP. lu.kewarm on._tax

:relief . plan from C'li.nton
.'

By JIM ABRAMS
Maoclated Pre.. Writer

••

·:' WASHINGTON- The·adminis~ation. ~litlined plans Sunday for
liOObdhon In tax relief over the next
six years, with almost half going to a
child tax credit Republican budget
'Wrirers, seeking a tax cut twice that
size, offered halfheaned support.
- · The taHelief propos~! is ·a part of
President Clinton's plan, being
announced Thursday, to balance the
·budget. by 2002. It envisions $46.7
billion in cuts for a $500-per-child tax
credit and cuts of $38.6 billion for
·various initiatives making higher
education easier to obtain.
. · It also expands the income level
on deductible Individual Retirement
1\ccounts, eliminates the capital gains
t~x for most home sales and reduces
· tJ:!e estate tax imposed on.the death of
). farmer or small business owner. ·
• • The $1 ,500 tax credit for the first
two years of college · and . up to
$•10,000 tax deduction for four years
mean post-high scllool education will
be free for most auending community c.olleges or state universities, White
Hbuse Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles
. said on CBS' "Face the Nation." "It
will be an enormously helpful thing
to a family," he said.
· · Republican~. sce)ling broader·
: based tax relief of close to $200 bil· liqn in their balanced-budget plan,
,praised Clinton:•. proP,Osals while
.:· ~~QnjJ!r,r4li . )!iri•Jt!l' .£\lllti.,m
_ ,.,..Sllcd"ttt·atq~~~tld-'
approaclL
1
~: ·''I'm genehilly positive ·about-

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this," House Budget Committee you should do when you have very
Chairman Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio, scarce resources to spend on tax
' said on NBC's "Meettbe Press." But cuts," Treasury Secretary Robert
he said that uncler targeted cuts "it's Rubin said on ABC's '"This Week."
a government that basically says if
The main items of, the adminis·
you jump through this hoop, we'lllet tration plan are:
you keep some of your money."
• A phased-in $500 tax credit for
Rep. William Archer, R-Texas, dependent children: $46.7 billion.
chairman of the tllx-writing Ways and ·
• HOPE scholarship lax credits of
Means Commiuee, issued a statement up.to $1,500 a year, available for the
welcomi.ng ·the. proposal's direction · . first two years of post-secondary
but said: '"I remain concerned that his education: $18.6 billion.
ta,x outs are temporary ~ile his tax
• A phased· in $10,000 tax dedt~c­
hikes arc permanent. As a result his tion for post-secondary education
total tax package may add up to and training:· $17.6 billion .
another tax increase, not tax relief."
• Tax breaks for businesses offerThe administration is looking at ing educational assistance and exclusome $80 billion in new -tax revenues, sion for forgiveness of certain siudent
mostly on businesses and renewal of loans: $2.7 billion.
.
the expired airline ticket tax. About
• Expanded income limits on
half that will come from ending deductible IRAs to $70,000
what Office of Management 'ancj ($100,000 joint): $5.5 billion.
Budget .Director Franklin Raines,
• Exclusion of $500,00Q
also on NBC, called "unwarranted ($250,000 singles) of capital gains
,corporaie subsidies:··
from selling a principal residence:
$1.5 billion.
Negotiations with Republicans on
· • Tax incentives for distressed
a final tax cut package is likely to areas: $2.4 billion.
focus on GOP demands for a far
• A new welfare-to-work credit
broader capital gains tax reduction, · through Sept. 30, 2000, to encourage
and Raines .said Jhe administration hiring of long-term welfare recipi"would be willing to talk about" a ents: $0.5 billion.
· compro)llise. The administration plan
·of $500,000 of
• Small business and !'arm estate
a couple selling a tax relief: $0.7 billion.
• Other

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FATAL WRECK- Charles W. Jernagan, 43, Pomeroy, was dead at the scene of this one-car
wreck along Main Street In Pomeroy around 1:30 a.m. today. The accident remains under investigation, according to Pomeroy Pollee Chief Gerald Rought. ·

Early morning crash .kills .
43-year-old Pomeroy man
A 43·year-old Pomeroy man
died early _this morning at the.
scene of a one-car crash along East
Main Street in Pomerpy.
Charles W. Jemagan:was westbound ncar the Kawasaki Motor·
sports Center, heading into town
when he P!ISsed another' westbound vehicle, reported Pomeroy
Chjef Gerald Rought.
Ford Cn&gt;wt

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· An auction held at the .Rutland
Civic Center Saturday was not your
otdinaty run-of-the-mill type sale.
- The sale items included some
very old, but still new and unused,
merchandise, along with some
antique lixtures, furnishings and collectibles, all from tile Rutland Dcpanment Store, established in 1858 and
OI!Cflltcd continuously since that lime.
-The.store was purchased recently
by James Birchfield, his sister and
btother-in-law, Kim and Ray Willford, all of Rutland.
•
"We're reducing the inventory.
getting rid of some of the old mc_rcl)andise and other things, so that we
can replace some things and make
some cha~ges," said Birchfield.
, ' Among the sale items frpm the
.ment StON, In oP-ratlon lor the past 140 yetlrt.
ANTIQUES AND COI.LEcnBLES- Sold at
store csU~bl_ished nearly 140 years ago
Jamee Bl~c:hflekl, above, Ia the new co-owner
·auction Sat)lrdtly werlt· hundred• of anllqlie•
by the Rathburn family - and
of the bualnesa.
and collectible Items, many new with original
fie)ievcd to be the third oldcst 'tiusi~ f!jga alllich.cl, frOm the Rutland Depart·
nw in Meigs County -were do1.cns
·oa: ledger books on the operation - cmrylng.product-and corl\panyadvcr· belt gauge for measuring fan belts, ihcre fur many years will continue to
be employed.
ma:intained · since 1907. and thou- tisemcnts, years and· years old: old and even galoshes. · ·
The store was established and
Enhancing the collector value
suRds. of sales ~•lips and paynie~t wicker baskets, wooden nail kegs,
operated
hy the Rathburn family a,,
rcl:cipts from customers right up · gas light globes, hat racks, Wagner were the original price tags on some
.thtough the '50s .
skillets and griddles. 1934 Coats &amp; Q.f the items, which had been in tbe' the Rathburn D&lt;(panmcnl Store from
IH58 to 1947, when it wa.' sold to
- -, Many of the.items put on the auc- Clark sewing books, and bottles of all store stock for years. · F.L.
"Lal'c" M~Knight, 0 .0 . Patter-·
Birchfield
said
that
the
business
is
tion block Saturday were pulled sorts.
son,
and
Mrs. Ben Beard, all of.Rutdown from the second floor of the
' some antique fixtures, like the old continuing to operat~ as the Rutland
land
.
That
was when it became the
· building where they had been stored coffee grinder u~ In the business for · Department Store, and that a video
for years, according to Birchfield. · years, display
and counters, and secticm is being added to the line of Rutland Department Store In~.
Owners since have been primari' :Among them ~ere m_any antiques other furnishings were included'along · hardware, groceries and meats hanly
the descendants of McKnight,
dled.
and collectibles - like dozens of with pitcher pumps. s1ono umbrelhi
- (Contlrlued on P1ge 3)
Glenn D~vis who has worked
'!'&lt;Xiden boxes, tin cans and sa~ks ~lands, hay hOoks, metal_ham~rs, a

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from the vehicle and was caught

between the tree and the car:.

Rought said. Rescue workers using
the Jaws of Life extracted him
from the wreckage.
The accident occurred around

I :27 a.m.

Present atlhc scene wcrc·mcm bcrs of tHe Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
f Dcpar1mcnt.

the Syracuse and Ccir-

1ral Dispmch squads of Ihe Meigs
Counly Emerge ncy Medical Servkc. and C&lt;1roncr Dr. Dpuglas
Hunter.
m~wks.

The wreck

Political falloul from the Ohio
Department of Transportation's

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH.
Stlntlnel News Staff

.

conducted.

Jernagan was panially cjcc1cd

the sl.!cond

Carey -protests ODOT
construction .ran kings

Rutland landmark

•• Y·&amp; ENQINE

water.

11

Auction kicks off
new ownership· of .

,

scatoclt' at the lime of the wrcc·k. he
said. In addiltnn. an autopsy will .hc

-~nvc_stig~~~rs -~'"e _not _dcter-__ }:!c.igs County 1ralfidmality of1hc
ll119cO- if'J~tqa!)a~ was wearing a . year.

Going •..
going ...
gorie!

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cru" came to rest against a small tree
along the river. panially in lhc

Mei gs ~tml cast\!rn Lawn::nt:c
tnuntics .comprise part of Carey's di s-

announcement of highway construe- trict.
tion project rankings has liccri qukk
Carey said QDOT's at)nounccin coming.
rncni ''repeats the same sltJry th:tt Was
Noting that the Y4th House Dis- given la.st year when we narrowed
trict was counting on its projects projects 10 50 in numtx:r. ODOT niHbeing included on the li st ' released cia is came 10 my districl and saiJ lhm
Thursday hy ODOT Director Jerry we could counlu~ that lis!. "
Wray, Stale Rep. John A. Carey, RDue to llat revenues, Wray said
Wellston , said it was lime for promis- ODOT's $1.5 hilliun hudgct for the
cs 10 be kept.
next biennium would include $280
He also suggested thotl the Legis- million for construction . Bln maim~­
laturc appropfiatc money out of the nancc of current road s ami hridgcs
stale suflliUs In shore up sagging were also Slresscd by Wray i~ the
ODOT revenues so projects nciw ahscncc of additiOJ1UI money.
delayed can get started.
Carey, who has made· transportaIn ·a lcucr suhmittcd Thursday to tion one of the priorities of his sccGov. Ge_nr~c Voinovkh. Carey· said mid term in ihe House, said in his lethe was "gr~wcly concerned uhoutthc tcr to lhc governor lhat it will he up
miscalculations made lasl year lhat to elccled oiTicials to uphold promi swc could have $1 (K) mfllion In ore cs made over miJVing th~ top '50 proeach year 10 spend on highway pro- jccls forward .
jcyls."
"This siluation is a cri sis," Carey
The list of 24 projecls geuing _the said. "Since the loss of $1CK) million
lcntalivc go-ahcucJ f(ll" t..:(Jnstructitm per year (JVcr the next hicnnium i ~ an
included just. one in southeastern unforeseen shortfall .in the tran sOhio - · improvement of U.S: 50 portation constrw.:tinn hUl.lgct,"'i t is in
l'rom Athens lo Cuolville .
order to approprialc $11 K) mil li on per
Two proj~ct .., affect ing Mt!igs . year out or the state rain y Juy fund
County, the· U.S. :1311-n conncclor while the Lc£islature looks for a
and widcnin·g·nf 13 frnrn Athcn!\ to .long-term solution.''
Darwin, arc approved h&gt;r cuntinued
Carey, tol&lt;) V&lt;i.inovich he "would
studies and dcs,ign wol'k.
apJlrcdatc hearing your Lh()ughls on
· But left olf the list is the Sta.tc this issue ."
·
Route 7 hypass Ill Chesapeake, which _ The Chesapeake hyp''"- as well a_,
supporter~ say has hccn promised len stagnatiC&gt;n on other highway projects
. more ,than :10 yc11rs .and had occn in Ihe district, occame a campaign
moved forward lor ~.:onsJderatum hy issue last year hctwecn Carey and his·
ODOT last year.
·
·ocmocralic challenger, Jell Fow'lcr.

P,hil's furry forecast: '
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spring ts soon tn coming
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PUNXSI,JTAWNEY, Pa. (AP)- Matt Douglas drove 12 hours alone to
a small central Pennsylvania town just to meet others who admire a certain
furry weather forecaster.
·
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,
•
:'I've always celebrated Groundhog Day, out it's hard when you're out •
thero in the real world.'" Douglas said. "I pulled an all-nightcr. J have nowhere ~
to stay. It's a giddy atmosphere. This is living life."
,
•
The 22-year-old from NorthaJ!lplon, Mass., was among an estimated •
20,()()().plus who watched as Punxsutawney Phil made his prediction from ;.
his hollowed-out tree stump in the .woods: spring is right around the corner.
would go to coun to ask for a 60-day that," Voinovich said of -the letter Hamilton County.
.
extension in the public comment from Carol M. Browner, head of the
Under the new ru_lcs .. Oh10 wo~ld
The country's most famous groundh()g failed to see his shadow at sun- •
period for the new standards.
EPA.
have up to 52 counuc~ tn nonattam· rise Sunday for just the 12th time in Ill years. The most recent early spring &gt;.:
forecast was in 1995.
•
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By law, th,e st:andards were supVoinovich said Ohio c_nvironmen- mcnt, .tbe g~vern_or sa1d. . It
was
a
ncar-unanimous
decision
among
groundhogs
around
ttx:
nation.
••
posed to have gone into effect by Feb. tal officials are working aliiiQSt
. Vomovlch foaJd . he conunues to
28.
around the clock to assess the sc1en- doubt whether the hea.l:~ be':::fit~_of Concurring opinions came from New York City's Staten Island Chuck; Gen. •
The Ohio governor had joined col- tific _and medical arguments beh~nd , ~e new standards wou be at Sill· Beauregard Lee of Lilburn. Ga.; Jimmy of Sun Prairie, Wis.: Wanda at the :
Milwaukee County Zoo: Buckeye Chuck ofMarlon, Ohio., and French Creek
leques (Jool other states in askins for the federal · EPA proposals, whtch ntficant.
· .
..
ail extension o( tile publi~ comment .were ~nnounced in November., .
• "~rom w~at. ":~ hav~ ~n, I'm Fteddie of ~sl Virginia.
·Even • Pfllric doggot into the act: ''cllfly sprin8" said '1:-ander Lili&gt;I'Lan' period. . .. .·.
,
· . Oh1o now ,has five count1es tn skepttcal a~t 11, ·he S81d.,
der, Wyo. '
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"I feel very, very •ood abOut nonaitalnmenl status, including
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G.overnor trumpets 'd_elay -in clear air .rules
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By PAUL BARTON
O.w..U News Service
, WASHINGTON -

Ohio Gov.

G~ Voinovich announced an initiiil victory Saturday in his battle
against ""w pro.posed~tederal clean
ai{ nales:
·
' At the National Oovemors' Assoc!ationmeeting, Vcllnovich n:leiiiC!I'a
letter from the Bnvh'Otlmental fro~on Apncy sayiqt the agency'
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�llondly, February 3, 1117

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:Commentary

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llontcl8y, ~ 3, 1117

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to act
.The Daily Sentinel Clinton wants Haitian president
tbaw.
111 ·Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl1her ·
~

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

fiNo-,_- broMI_,..,.,,..,_111_,
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of"'P'
.. llle lkhaliDuld~
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TIHo Sentinel - - ,.._ ID

Ice. _ , ,.,_ ptJO Y)lpod-

or -1 ,

fiNo -.

flrt1/1111 , _ - . " ' " " " ' · - , llwo'l ........ , . Moll to: ,._.. ,.,
TIHo Sentinel, lf1 COUll
JIIGinervy, Ohio 46111; or, FAX 10 11.ut:l4117.

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, Voinovich may preserve
food ·stamp program for
some individuals in Ohio
By JACQUI PODZIUS COOK
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND - New welfare refonn laws present Gov. George
Voinovich w11h a tough chmce: Should he allow thousands of Oh10ans to
continue geumg food. stamps because of where they live or lett hem be cut
· off April' I?
·
Under the new rules, smgle people between the ages of 18 and 50, who
do not have children, can rece1ve food stamps for only three months out of
every three years unless they worked at lcast20 hours the previous month.
The first cutoff date is March I, although assistance will conttn'!C until
Apnll
Area counties that would be eligible for continued food-stamp benefits
after April I if a waiver IS approved by Gov. George Vomovich include Gal·
ha, Hockmg, Jackson, Me1gs, Perry, P1ke, Sc1oto and Vinton:
In Ohio, about 90,000 to 100,000 people could lose the benefits. However, the state has been granted pennission to eKtend assistance in 20 coun·
tt cs and 12 c1tics that meet one of three requirements.
- They have 10 percent or h1ghcr unemployment.
- They arc designated as labor-surplus areas by the Labor Department.
meanmg that wh1le unemployment is not at 10 percent, the skills of the availahlc workers do not match the JObs available.
- They have a umquc problem or circumstance that affects employment
Vomovich has not decided whether to grant the waiver. Ron Rhodes,
deputy dJTector of the Ohm Department of Human·services, said the administration IS conSJdcnng whether 11 1s fan for some recip1ents to get extended benefits because of an address.
For c•ample. Cleveland and East Cleveland would be mcludcd m the
wa1vcr, but ncarhy Cleveland Heights would not. Others cities mcluded arc
Lorain, L•ma, Dayton, Youngstown and Canton.
"We're makmg single mothers with children work to earn their benefits.''
Rhodes sa1d. "Why should you exempt single, able-bod1ed, mamly males
from work requirements?"
Advocates for the poor have plenty of reasons why.
"There are thousands of people m thos commumly who, .in a mallcr of
WCCkS, Will fOSC thCIT baSIC SOUrce of food and nutnlion unless the gnver001 exercises the power that he holds to continue to feed them," said Eric
Fingerhut, semor pohcy analyst with the FederatiOn for Commumty Plannlllg. The nonprofit group is pan of a Cuyahoga County coaht10n that is urgmg Voinovich to approve the waiver.- ·
_
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Fingerhut said thcoe IS not enough money lor JObs and JOb-trm_nmg programs to help all the food-stamp rcc1p1ents before the deadline.
"An overwhelming number of people want to work," he said. "But what
they arc able to lind. and what they arc sk1llcd enough to do, docs not g1vc
them enough In support themselves."
Rhodes refutes the argument that no jobs arc available. He pmntcd to
Oh 1o's 5 percent jobless rate m December, which was shghtly less than the
national rate, and recent complaints m some commuOiloes that there arc not
enough workers to fill JObs.
Joseph Gauntncr, director of the Department of Employment-Entitlement
Services for Cuyahoga County, suggested the waiver·be granted for a year
so johs and JOb-traming programs can be implemented gradually.
Wothout the wa1vers, 14,600 adults in Cleveland and East Cleveland woll
lose their benclits, he smd. That amounts to a total loss of $13.5 million in
benefits a year.
"I don't thmk it's unfalf that people should be asked to go to work," he
sa 1d. "[think it's unfair to ask someone to go hungry because they can't get
..

WAS}JINGroN --Concern within the U.S. covcmment about politi·
cal killings in Haiti has now reached
to the llighest levels.
A lillie more than two years ago,
America pointed its guns at Haiti's
military ruler~ and forced them from
power in a bloodless inv~sion Las!
·fall, Voce President AI Gore praised
America's intervention as one of the
most "deft uses of doplomac~ and
milia~ force" on history.
Since the mvasion, America has
invested millions of dollars in building democracy on that ompovenshed,
strife-tom island. American taX dollars have helped to train new civilian
policemen and to disann government
thugs who terronzed the neighborhoods of Pon-au·Prince.
But there's a dark side to Haiti's
new democracy. The! old military
thugs have been replaced with a dif·
ferent cast of characters. Political
k•lhngs have dropped smce the mil- .
nary rulers were ousted. But they 're
suit a fact of life.
And the Clinton admmistration is
now gettmg womcd that Haiti's pres-

Dear Editor,
How do we judge a person's character. his sense of duty,' his dediCation
to his fellow man, his personal
actions under cKtremc stress and
,kessure with his own life at stake.
' 'fhcre have been millions of men
a~d women who have served in the •
tllilitary and tberc arc no two with the
·shine characteristics.
; Recently there was an otcm about
several military people who arc
receiving the Medal of Honor, wh1ch
theY shOuld have received 50 years
ago after World War II.
• .
I Since, in 134 years of authortzation 3,401 have received the honor

for combat valor beyond the call of
duty.
Now. there have been hundreds [of
thousands or the military who have
made the supreme sacrifice giving
their own lives'" the hnc of 'duty.
They have received posthumous·
ly the Purple Hcan and a onc-and·ahal r by three-loot slah of marhl&lt; with
their name engraved on n
Maybe you arc like me. When 1
visit the cemetery and view all of the
grave nags wavmg. it g•vcs me a
. f d p humilny 10 those vel·
sense 0 c.:
,
crans.
v· gil Walk r
or
Rl ~'
c e
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' St}pports prayer before meeting
'
Dear Editor,

1 support Jeff Thornton's
decision to have prayer pnor to the
cmwniaiotleR meetinp. IIIII thankful he is ~mod e11011JII for M~igs
Count)' to look to the one who has all
the answcn ('J1Ie Lord Jesus Christ)
for JuidMci. I pray thai Jeff will

=~.=ow-::::=~
..._ w -.11 it Ia Hil Wlft.ln !be

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1111111 of a.- II :91•AIId IMr 111110
~--lt
llep-yoa.•
•I

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. I pray each morning to God for wisdom and to guide me through each
day.
If more people would look
10 the Lord and let Him have control
of their lives, this wicked world
would be a much better plac_e t~ live
in.
SO come on Meigs County,
let's JtMd behln4111d support com·
millioaer Thornton's d.:ision.·

June Yost,
Ru!Iind

.I I

•

Jan Moiler
ktlhngs were beong investigated thoroughly. But that didn't stop Clinton
himself from firing off a letter to
Preval on Dec. 12. A copy of it was
obtained by our assoc1ate George
Clifford III.
Clinton wrote that the.government
was concerned that Haiti was draggong its feet on the investigation into
the kollings of Jacques Florival and
Antoine Leroy, right-wing opposition
leaders who were killed last August
by people linked to Preval's palace'·
security forces.
"I am writing today out of concern that the economic and political
progress you have made may now be
• jeopardized unless there is movement

a

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FDI.INDaTioN, $PiN oFF
fbJ.iT;C3L acnoH COMMiTT~
To UNDeRWRITe. ·T'I SHoW.
USJtJG ~ S'lrC&gt;ICa'Jiotl

a

iNCPMeTo...

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The

r~thless·
•

to the editor

Character

and

' STaRT a 'ntl(·e.~PT

Today in history

~ Letters

By Jack Anderson

in 'the
govem~nt's inveStiJllion int9 the murder of opposition
figons 4roY and Florivlll," Clinton
wrole.
,
Soun:tf!• tell us !hat Preval had
assured Gbre and Assistant Secretary
of Sllte Jeffrey Davidow tbat Haiti
was doing all it could to find the
killen. Gore had buttonholed the
Haitian president when.the two met
last year in Bolivia, where Gore was
atlending an environmental summit
meeting.
But those assurances weren't
enough for Clinton, who worries that
the resurgence of political violence
could sour _Republicans in Congress
on the administration's expenment in
democracy-building.
, • "It would be e~tremelylimportant
for me, in \';\e context of our ncgotiations witH ' Congress, also to have
from you a penonal assurance, which
I could cite, that this investigation
will be pr{ssed actively, and that
every effort will be made to apprehend and prosecute those rcsponsi·
ble," Clinton wrote.
A senior administration official

You·~ RiGHT. Wli!'LL

Years ogo, on a r"!110 talk show on
Madison, W1s .. I was agrccmg -- from
a non-religious point of view-- w1th
Cardinal Joseph Bernardin's "scamless garment." If you're really pro·
life, he used to say, you must be consistent and oppose cap1tal p~nish­
ment, euthanasia and government
assaults on the lives of the poor.
A woman caller was furious-- at
me and at the cardinal. She was preg·
nanl and said, "You can't know what
ll 1s to have someone inside you,
growmg larger and larger and taking
more and more of your lite. I am.
going to have an abort JOn -- m self.
defense!" She slammed down the
phone.
I remembered her v1vidly when I
read in The Chronicle of Higher Edu·
cation that Nonheastcrn Univcrs1ty
political science professor Eileen
McDonagh has wntten a hook advoajOh .
•
cating scll~dcfcnse as the strongest
legal case lin ahon10n.
McDonagh adomts that the fetus is
indeed
a human tile. hut as The
•
:ey
The ASioclatad Press
Chronicle of Higher Education
; Today IS Monday, Feb. 3, the 34th day of 1997. There arc 33 I days left explmns her p&lt;&gt;SIII&lt;Jn. "II a woman'
; in the year.
.
has the right to defend herself against
• Today's Highlight m History:
a rapjst, she also should he ahlc to usc
• On Feb. 3. 1959. a plane crash ncar Clear Lake, Iowa, claimed the lives deadly force to expel a fetus .. for VIO: of rock 'n' roll stars Buddy Holly. Ritchie ~lens and J.P. "The B1g Bop- lating her privacy if the fetus is
: per" Rictmrdson.
•
unwanted.
'
.'
No other laws -· except for those
. restricting ahorllon rights. she
emphasizes -· penni! a person to

.

ident, Rene Preval, isn't serious
enough about finding the culprils.
Preval had already given his personal usUr.nces to Gore that the

Nat Hentoff

IND.

,.

u supreme irony of the modern age that the greatest threat we
face is one of• c•vilozallon's most
ancient enemies.
I speak of anarchy. Moh rule. Primal chaos.
_ I speak of cyberspace. Nets and
Webs and impulses zipping through
the ether, canying billions of hits of
fi
'
.
' .
unre med in~ormatto~. Much of n ts
factual and onformauve and useful ,
But vast globs of it are tantamount to
handbills qnd circula~ and pamphlets and come-with a reliability
guarantee o~ zero.
The danger here is that cybemoisc
will come to be perceived as good
sense: that we will begin to assume
the counlry can and should be run by
electronic plebiscilcl that we wHI
devolve, to use a dated phrase, into a
direct democ;racy.
"Who Needs · Washington?' ~
Newsweek's Howard Fineman
recently ukcd. Thanks to the Web, be
wrote, our leaders may become
"nothing more than the 111m of our
,-J!imt 11)!1 mlllnf01111ation."
To lrillk lhe sitllltiot'l into tmi, we
are really lddre11iDJ two questionA.
IS

,,

Isthe Internet a rcliahlc int&lt;JTmation

Which brings us to the second
and cnmmuoocation tnnt·• And s~ould question. How should the feedback
il he used as a govcrnmg tool '
. be rut to usc? As advice? Or "-'
The undeniable fact is the clcc- imperative'!
There arc people of great inftu·
' ence who believe that electronic
resources -- phones, faxes and tbe
tronic highway is packed with reck· Internet-- should be used to facilitate
less drivers. D1ngbats, cnnsp1rac1sls, a process of direct government. In
hotheads abound. "Facts'' that arc other words, they argue, the great
often untrue and opinions that arc fre· issues Clf OUr lime ·- hudgct IJUCSli!lnS, '
qucntly foolish, impulSive and irre· social and' national security mauers sponsiblc careen all ovcrthe place, all ~ shpuld be posted on electronic bat-'
of it unfiltered, speeding directly lots for tbe r.coplc to dc.:idc, ~ircct­
from purveyor or generator to user. ly, without the filters now provided
Chicago Tribune columnist Mike by government leaders.
Ross Perot apparently liclicvcs
Royko says he was once hoaxed hy
this.
He fanc1cs an "electronic town
a pbon~ document and "since then.
hall"
in "'!hich be lays out the "facts"
it's ~en my policy tovtew the Internet not as an 'infonnation highway' and tbe citizens instantaneously
'but as an electronic asylum filled choose courscs .of action.
Newt Gingrich apparently
with babbling loonies."
believes·
this. He is deeply apprec•aAs a research tool, in short, tbe
live
of
"the
alternative media." and '
Net is a mixed blessing.
As a communication device, it is he wants to take it a fc\v steps funher,
clearly uns!JPISICd. It diJpense1 and with an electronic town hall which
distributea lnfonnation as instal)tl- would shift power "toward the citineously u broadCast medi~~o and zens out of the Beltway." How far
there is the added capability of feed· would Newt go? k tsn'tclllr, buttw11
of' hit favorite futurist pn111, Alvin
ha&amp;:k.
•
'

Joseph Spear

i

·-

•

•

Rain expected to pervade
;region throughout Tu~sday
•By The A. .ocllted Preu

percent.
.
.
Rain will move mlo Ohio tonight
Tuesday...~\'&amp;soonal ram and a
:W could be mixed with sleet or chapcc of thu~dersto,s . Ram may
:·snow on Thesday morning, the be heavy at tomes. ghs fro"! the
,-National Weather Service saod.
uppe~ 50s to the low r 60s. ChAnce
: 1lle rain is likely to continue most of ram near I~ percl'nt. .
.
Tuesday ntght ...Oce_as•onal ram
: of the day on Tuesday, with some
• thunderstorms possible forecasters w1th a chance of cv~nmg thunder·
1
said.
,
'
stonns. Lows in the l~wcr 40s.
; Lows tonisht will be in the 30s.
Extended rorecast:
.
• Highs on Tuesday w1ll range from
Wedncsday... Mostly c!oudywllh a
: near40inthenonhtothemiii·SOsin chance of showers. t H•ghs m the
: the extreme south.
upper 40s.
' .
Tonight. .. Rain developing. Lows
Thursday _and fr~day ... Partly
in the tower and mid 40s. Northeast cloudy. Lows m thel upper 20s and
~ winds 5to 10 mph. Chance of rain 90 highs near 50.
'

Dwight Keith "Pistol" Sayre, 73, Now Haven, W.Va., died Saturday. Feb.
I, 1997 in Sl Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
.
aom March 13, 1923 in Cottaaeville, W.Va., son of the late Rale•glt Butcher "John" and Cynthia May Wilcoxen Sayre, he was also precede_d tn de~th
by his first wife, Clara Fay Sayre. in 1957; and, by a brother, Rale1gh Blame
s~.
.
be
. He retired in 1983 from the Kaiser Aluminum Corp., and was a mem r
of the Father's House Church, Hartford, W.Va., and Steelworkers Local 5668
of Ravenswood, W.Va. A U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, he was a member of the Smith.C~han American Legion Post 140 of New Haven, and
lifetime member of Stewan-Johnson VFW Post 9926 of Mason, W.Va,
. Surviving are his wife, Sylvia Blake Sayre; three sons and daughters-onlaw, Dwight Keith ll and Karen S, Sayre of New Haven, Stephen Kurtis ~nd
Donita J. Sayre of Mason, and Dwane Kreig and Doanna ~ayre, Meadvolle.
Pa.; a daughter, Kandi L. Preston of Cheshire; seven grandchildren; two brothers, Darrell Layton Sayre of Alva, Fla., and Ralph M. Sayre of New Haven;
and three sisters, Wavic Leone Jaques of New Haven, Beryl L Lawton of
New Tazwell, Tenn., and Dora Margaret Bailey of Portland, M1ch.
. Services will~ I p.m. Thesday in the Foglesong Funerl!f Home_. Mason,
with the Rev. Mike FiMicum officiating. Burial will be on the Olterbem Cemetery. Evans, W.Va. Friends may c~II at the funeral home from 5-9 P·~· today.
Military graveside serv1ces w1ll be conducted by AI!Jcnca~ Lcg10n Post
140 and VFW Post 9926.

Today's livestock report

su-ry of last week's ProCOLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at J\Ciected ducen Livestock Association aue·
buying points Monday as provided tlon·at Hlllllboro, Eaton, Farmer·
by the U.S. Department of Agricul- stown, Lancaster, Wapakoneta,
Mount Vernon, Bucyrus, C,..,.ton
ture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to weak; aqd Bucyrus:
Hogs: steady to 3.00 h•gher.
demand moderate to light on a modJlutcber
hogs: 32.00-58 .35
. crate movement.
Callie:
ste:idy
10 2.00 lower
U.S. 1-2, 231).;!60 lbs. country
Slaughter
steers:
choice 60.00points 51.51).53.00, few at 51.00 and
•
. 53.50; plants 52.51).54.00, few at 71.00; select 56.00-65.00 .
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.00.
52.25.
.
70.50:
select 55.00-65.00.
U.S. 2·3, 231).260 lbs. 45.51).
'I
.
Cows:
2.00 lower to higher; all
51.00; 211).230 lbs. 40.51).45.50.
, ~ •. Pierce D. "P.D." McCreedy, 78, of. Gallipolis. died Satl!rday, February I,
cows
48.25
and down.
SoWs: steady to finn . ~orne 1.00
' '1997 in the Pinecrest Care Center.
Bulls:
lower
to 2.00 higher; all
higher.
•
:
Born June 1. 1918 in W~keman, Ohio, he was the son oft~e late William
and down.
u.s. 1!3 300-450 lbs, 42.00-45.00, bullsVeal50.00
: D. McCreedy and tile late Dosia Pierce McCreedy.
•
calves:
strong; chn•cc 100.00
few 41.00; 451)..500 lbs. 44.00-47 .00;
: ,
.
• ,--~ ...
Following his 1.1.936 gra~uatton 501).65().. lbs. • 48.&lt;)o-5!2:.00.-· few · at ~nd "down\ ·
~
• '
' !'-"""
"• 4 -.- ··· --, · from· Walieinan" Hl'gll Schoi)J, 1\e 52.50.
Sheep and lambs: 5.00 lower to
:
anended the Citizens Molitary Camp
2.50 higher; choice wools 90.00Boars: 38.00-39.00.'
•·
'
·
and also worked for four years for a
115.50; choice clips 98 .00-118.50·
Estimated receipts: 34.000.
funeral home. He then anended and
- was a 1941 grnduatc of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol School.
In November 1941, he- and three
REEDSVILLE
Units of the Meigs County Emerothers opened the Oalhpohs HighI ·p.m. Saturday. State Rnutc 124.
way Patrol Post. In June 1944, he gency Medical Service recorded 14 Lee Cowdery, St. Joseph's Mcmnrientered tbe U.S. Anny during World calls for assistance Saturday and al Hosp1tul .
War II and wa• wounded in the Bat- Sunday. Untts responding mcludcd:
SCIPIO TWP. VFD
CENt'RAL DISPATCH
tle of the Bulge. Aller being dis9:30 a.m. Sunday. Myers Road.
9:36a.m. Saturday, Powell Street,
charged in 1945. he returned to the
chimney
f1rc at Steve Barnell resiH•ghway Patrol. from which he Middleport. Belly Schnecmann, dence, no injuries, Rutland VFD and
retired a• a lieutenant at the Galhpo- Holzer Medical Center;
\ lll:28 p.m. Saturday, Country squad as~isted.
li~ Post.
.'
,1
TUPPERS PLAINS
He then served as dorcctor of the Mobile Home Park, Darwin, Raya.m. Saturday. SR 7, Julia
9:40
Southeastern Ohio Council of Gov- mond Martinez, O'Bieness Memori·
McCappin,
OBMH;
.
ernment. He later wa.~ head of secu- at Hosp1tal;
8:47
p.m.
Saturday,
VFD
and
3:2!) a.m. Sunday. Nelson Road,
rity at the General James M. Gavin
Dexter,
John Nelson, Pleasant Valley ..squad to Kaylor Road, brush fire, no
Pierce 0. McCI'Hdy ·
Power Plant in Cheshire lor 16 'years.
injuroes. .
He is a rormcr Gallipolis City Com- Hospital, Rutland squad assisted;
10:33 a.m. Sunday, Village Manor
:'missioncr, havmg served three .terms. He wa.' a member of tile, Faith Baptist
Apartments,
Middleport. Dallas
"Church, the Morning Dawn Ma•onic Lodge. a mcmlicr and past commander
Wctherhoh,
Veterans
Memorial Hos;;of the American Legion Lafayene Post 27. and a mcmhcr ~&gt;I thcDAV.
Holier Medieal Center
. Surviving are his w1fc. Patricia Shelton M'Crccdy. of Galhpohs; four pital:
~ Discharges Jan. 31 - Mfl\. Matt
7:35 p.m . Sunday. South Second H,asseman and daughter, Donna Pal·
•children. William Pierce McCreedy. Brent McCrc.:dy and ~lien Barry·
:.Marple, all of Gallipolis. and Diana M1lls of Amunllo, Texas; und c1ght Avenue, Middleport, William Butch- to, Mrs. Roben Roush and son, Kcycr. HMC;
, grandchihlren.
.
.
wana White, Wanda Swearingen,
I0:21 p.m. Sunday. Condor Street. Ryan· Lemaster
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday. February 5. 1997 at ~he· Fatth Baptist
!(;hureh. with the Rev. Jim Lusher onlcinting. Burial Will l(lllow in the Cen' Pomcruy, Jennifer Mankin. HMC.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. David
MIDDLEPORT
..aenar)- Cemetery Friends may call at the Waugh-Hallcy-Wood Funeral
Fife, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs
5:25 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
.. Home from 2·4 and 6-9 p m. Tuesday. Fch. 4. 1997.
Steve SP!'akman, son, Jackson ; Mr
department
atid ,!quad to Story's Run
, , The body will he in state at the church one h&lt;iur preceding the serv1c~.
and Mrs. Charles Stansberry, daugh:. Full military hbnors will be ~on~(4:tcd at the graveside by VFW Post Roau. chimney fire at C.W. Frazier ter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. William
residence, no injuries. Pomeroy VFD
4464 and American Legion Lafayetto Post 27.
Zmn, daughter, Oak Holt
assisted:
•. Members or the Ohto State Highway Patrof w1ll serve a• pallbearers.
Discharges Feb. I - Mrs
8:31 p.m. Saturday. Stonewood
Thomas
Stobart and daughter.
Apartments, Lincoln Sm1th. HMC.
Puerto Rico became a self-govBirths - Mr. and Mrs. Jason
RACINE;
The
Sentinel erning commonwealth of the United
Hall,
son, Oak Holt; Mr. and 'Mrs.
9:48 p.m. Saturday. Main Street.
States in 1952.
:
Mark Hornsby. son. Galhr.olis, Mr.
!tJSPS 213-960)
Marion Snyder. treutcd at the "ene ,
PubUt.hed evel) artetnoon. Monday 1hroQh
10:37 p.m.-Saturd3¥. Third Street. and Mrs. Rick Johnson, daughter,
•Thurman .
Ffiday. Ill Coun S1., Pomeroy. OtJio, by the
Pat Snyder. treated at the scene.
Ohio Valle) Mli~IIIIC Compunyi'Oano¢U Co .
Discharges Feb. 2- Mrs. David
Pornnvy, Ohio it,m, Ph. 99'2·'21~6. Stcalld
•
Fife
and ~on , Travis McGhee, MFS.
Am E.. Pow.M' ................!......41 'A.
dou-poidotl'oolaoy.Oh/o
Charles
Stansberry and daughter,
AkZo ......................................11'1.
, ~ The Auoclll!Od ....... ,,.. ihe 01110 ,
Mrs. William Zmn and daughter,
AmrTech ...............................51~
Me • c r ANociadol.
Aahl8nd 011 ....!.......................43
Sherry Jcnkmfo.
AT&amp;T .....................................39\
POITMAM'BR: Send addi'ftA l'Drrffilon~ to
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. JciT SkmThe Dolly SeMioel. It I COlin S1., Pomeroy.
S.,k One: ........................: .....451,4
ncr,
daughter, Rutland .
The
following
act1ons
lo
end
mar·
•
•
O!ok&gt; .,769.
Bob Evan• ............................ 13'1.
(Published
with permission)
rTage
were
tiled
recentlfin
the
office
80f'I"W8rMt' .........................31\
i
Sl/BSCRIPTION ltATBS
of Meigs County Clerk of Coons LarChampion ...............................17
1
a, c.mtr or Meier RIMe
ry Spencer:
Charming Shopl ....................4\
One-· ' .........., ............. """ .... "" $2.00
Ooe - . .............. ......................... $8.70
City tlolcllng ••••••;••••••••tr·········30\
Dissolutoons asked- James Clif·
OO.Yeor.......... ....
....... ... ". $104.00
Federal Mogul ........................23\
ford and Faye E. Clifford, bot~ or
Gannett ....- ........................... 71\
liNGLE COPY PIICI
Pomeroy. Jan. 24; Beverly K. CrabQooclyetll' ..............................15\
Doily .................................. :. .... JICen~
tree alld Kevin L. Crabtree, both of
K-mart ................................~~ •••11
Albany. Jan. 27;
Sjd ....,, "'"...,irlnalo pty die clllrior ~Y
Linda End ............................ ;21\
Nmlt in odvente direct to The Dally Senllnel
Umlted
..................................
1·
7
'4
Divorces a&lt;ked- Rced4 Wuercb,
' will be
oil 1 .-,""or 12......., baol• Credil
Ohio Valley &amp;.1k ....................38
Langsvollc .. from Richard Wucreh,
OM VJIJIY............................. 37\
G~llipolis. Jan. · 17: . Roben· F.
Peoplaa ..........;....: ................. 21"
No -pdotl by .,.,1 penillllod In oreu
Bergman,
Middleport, from Marlene
,.,... Flnl ...............................14\
. . . . ---loiYailtibl&lt;.
Grimes
Bergman.
Ada .. Pa., Jan. 29;
Rockwell .................................1,4
p 2
riahl to ldjuat,.. - Lisa A. Ellis, Shade, from Richard
AD-Sttlll
..........................
,
•..
173\
. . 1111 I J I lpdoo period. Subtoril"lan fDIC
Bf1.ol.ey'l ................................ 7~
Ellis, Prestonsburg, Ky., Jan . 28;
by m•tJns the
Stllr link •....:........................ ~?\
1 h ilpdvu.
Connie Dodson from David G. DodW.ncty'l ..................................22
son,
both of Middleport, Jan. 27; Car·
MAILIUIICRIPTIONI
Worthlngton ..........................1t'4
ol Lee Dorio from Robert Horace
'
1-MIIIJC..,.
13 ·...-............ -......................m 30
Doni, both of Pomeroy, Jan. 24; •
StOck reportl are tile 10:10
.. w..lri,..,_ .,,.,,,.,.,,M..,,.M,.,MM&gt;••••"'"''''W ,I2
a.m. CfUOIM prcmd•d bJ AMil , Divorce Jrantad - Melanie Kit·
iiliiiiiM;ii;'f"'"'j1105 .!6
of o.JIIpolil.
,f,
tie aild Linden P. Kittle, Jan. 23;
13 ·-•-· -..- . ... ·-J ............. .......J:tU!I
:~&lt;.. ,
Ronald
L. Dailey and AnJcla Dliley,
. . . . ._ .. _ ••••• _.::. .....l ........ ........... ....... l$6.61
"
,
Jan. 29.
...............................•••·n
'

rPierce D. 'P.O.' McCreedy

EMS units log 14 calls

Hospital news

child nhusc cases. ''

An enterprising social scientist
might well toutld on Prolcssor
McDonagh's work hy writmg'a hook
on the increasing necessity of
strengthening abortion rights so that
sococty can defend itself from these•
wanton fetuses.
Nat Hentofr Is a nationally
renowned authority OD the Fint ,
AmendmeDt and the rest of the Bll :
of' Rl~thts.
•

Daily

•
•

•
•

and Heidi Tnfncr, envision "direct '
eilll.cn participation in political dcci- :
'
k'mg." 0 or Ieaders arc so '•
soon-rna
indifferent to our mpul, tbey say, that:
we may have to "shift from depend- : ,
in~ on representatives to representing •
ourselves."
:
Excuse me, but this IS where tliC ;
cyberdoo gels a bit deep. We have I
remained a free nation, I believe, pre-· 1·
cisely because the Founders designed ·.
it lp be cumbersome. It is an indinx:t,
"representative" democracy. We
elect people we,pray arc dotisent and
wise to sift through tho cluucr and '
make careful judgmen\5. God forbid t
the process should be left to Net- l
heads.
!
What we will most need to remain l
a democratic people as we race toe.~- · ~
long into the new millennium arc~·
files in couratle.
We will need leaders who arc n
dauntless and astute a~ thole who,
founded the nation. leaders who have •
the fonitude to sift throt!Jh tho ;
prbap, the guts to defy the fM".,_ • I
of millions, the lnins til 11!=1 In the l :
nllional interelt.
~.

'!

-;.

Dwight K. 'Pistol' Sayre

W.VA.

t

It

• Ieo~i.mbusl52· I
.'

rrutccts the fetus as-human hfc. the
law must hold tbe fetus a&lt;;_countahle
for what It tines" as. it violates priva~
cy.
This is lethal accountability with·
out a hearing. Even the mpistJS cnt•llcd In a luwycr. But under tbe professor's design, the not yet hom
!lUman -- as defined hy the professor
- is un~hlc to defend him1sclf nr hersci f verbally or any other way. This
is how "the law protects the fet~s as
human life'"!
In 197 I, two years before Roe ~­
Wade. New York slate's lcgislatore
dccriminali1.cd ahon)on. WCBS radio'
in New York City came fonh with an:
editorial:
"Abortion 1s no longer illcgul in
New York . II is nothing to be
a.•hamcd of. nothing to fear. It IS a
sensible method nl dealing wuh sucli
pruhlcms as 'overpopulation, illegiti·
macy and possible hinh defects. It,.
,nne wuy of fightmg the nsing welfar~: ,
rolls and the in~rcasing numhcr of

Don't surrender ·to ·Netheads·

Leta R. McDaniel, 62, ofE•itl•ke, died Sunday, Feb. 2, 1997 in the Westem ReKrve Heakh Cale. Eullalte.
Born July 211, 1934 in Mason .COUnty, W.Va., daughter of the late Mani~
T. and LuJa Grey Stanley, she wu a homemaker, and a member of Amencan Legion Post 214Auxiliary, Willoughby.
.
She was also preceded in death by a granddaughler, Mochelle; and by seven sisters· and two brothers.
'
Surviving are her' husband, Thomas F. McDaaiel; a son and ~aughter: m­
law Fred and Ada McDaniel of Wickliffe; daughters and son-tn-law, Debbie ;m.s Victor Ricco of Mentor, and Cindy McDaniel of Eas~lakei one grandchild and three peit-grandchildren; and two brothers and a soster-m-law, Kenneth L. Stanley' of Mason, W.Va .• and Martin L. "Budd( and Emma Jo Stanley of Mason.
Ser¥ices will be 4 p.m. Thesday in the Fog!eson~ Funeral Home, Mason,
with the Rev. Rankin Roach officiating. ·Bunal woll follow tn the Gra~m
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 3-4 p.m. Thesday.

IToledo I 40" I

told us that after beina pushed by the
administration earlY 11151 fall to solve
the killinss. Preval's government
appeared to be makina aood
progress.
By December, however, the While
House and-Congress were told thai
the investigations were ~ain noundering. At the time, Clinton adminis- ·
tration off'tcials were working with
Republicans on Capitol Hill to harnmer out a bipartisan approach to
future Haiti policy.
"We made intensified efforts In
impress upon President Preval and
llis key advisers in this area the ncc:essily to step up the invcstisative
efforts," the off'tcial said.
The handling of political killings
will be a hot topic when National
Security ,Adviser Samuel Berger and
. Deputy Secretary of Stale Strobe 'Illlbolt visit Haiti in the coming weeks,
the offocial said. "This will be the
first such visit after the eleetion, and
it will be a gesture, really, of eonti·
nuity on tenns of the administration's
support for tbe ... reforms in Haiti,"
. the offieoal said.
We have learned that President
Clinton will soon announce a Latin
American trip, but it is unclear
whether or not it will include a.slop
m Haiti.
The administration official who
spoke to us stressed that even though
the killings continue, the situation on
Haiti remains far better than it was
bef,orc the invasion.
THE FUR FLIES -- A column we
wrote late last year has sent fur ny-'
ing in the nation's capital.
We reported in December that
Jason Alderman, a 27-ycar-old congressional staf(cr. had inserted language in an appropriations hill a.•k·
1ilg that do!! runs be huilt m on historic ~ity park in Washington. Alderman launched his personal crusad~
after he was allegedly told hy u Purk
Police &lt;ifficcrto keep his dog leashed
while in the park.
,
After our column. calls began
Ootlding the office of Rep. Sidney
Yates. D-111 .. Aldennan's hos,,, woo
helps control the Park Service's purse
strings. Yates ha• now bucked off on
building the dog runs.
. Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United !'Tatun:
Syndicate, Inc.

(:!n.emy: w-ithin----~
., ____

invade another person's body.
kidnapping ot stkvcry."
The Chront~le qf Higher EducaThe professor's the.,s. ir you
tion is a highly reputable publication grant its initial /Wcmise, is remorseand so is Oxford Umvcrsity Press, . lcssly logical. ' "This hook,'' she
writes, "cxpat~ds the concept nr
wrongful pregna,ncy to include wbat
the fcrt1li7.cd ovum docs to a woman
which has published Professor when it makes til:r pregnant w11hout
McDonagh's new and first book. her consent." 'Sclf·dc(cnse. ,there·
"Breaking the Ah&lt;lnion Deadlock: fore, is called (or
Eleanor Smeal, president or the
From Choocc to Consent." Anq,
unhkc Jonathan Swift's "A M&lt;Kicst Feminist Ma~ori\)' Foundation.
Proposal," this is not a satire. lt •is describes the !lpok as ·:a powerful,
new, women-centered fmmcwork for
deadly serious.
,
abo!lion
rights ... (it) on\irs a strong
Adding to the prestige of her doctrine of abortion as legitimate self- foundation for abortion nghts generdefense with dcndly Ioree is the ally and the government's obligation
admiring comment on the book jack- In provi&lt;lc r.jedicaid funding for
et by Patricia Ireland, president of tbe ahonions for poor women more par· .
National Organization for Women. llculnrly."
I wa~ espec ially intrigued hy a
She says that the book • "has the
potential to transform our under- statement of praise for "Brcakmg the
standing of abortion and secure not Abortion Deadlock" by New York
only the right to abortion hut also U~ivcrsity law professor Sylvia Law:
abon•on lunding. The hook should be "The most original and provocative
required reading fot anyone interest· defense of tile morality of abortion
ed in abortion rights."
that has appeared in dccadd."
hi the book, Professor McDnna~h
h may. I suppose, be an augury of
points nut that "even in u medically due process on the coming millenninonnal rrcgnancy. the l'ctus mas- um that a respected law professor so
SIVely mtrudcs on a woman's hody ell'onlcssly uses the term "morality"
and cxpropnates her hhcny. II' the to JUstify tc{fllinal violchcc against
woman docs not consent lO this mtrudcrs whp have no intention of
transfnrmalwn and usc nf her hndy. doing harm.
the fclus·s tmposllton con~IJtutcs
Howcvcr1. Profe.ssor McDonagh
injuries sufficient to justi ly the usc of t&lt;KJ is ingeniously rclcritlcss m the
deadly force to stop it"-- as in "rape. disposition of the unwanted enemy
w1thon: '"I;q the extent that the law

Leta R. McDaniel

IIICH.

$tacks

Action$ to end
marriages filed

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POPULAR - Mora than a hundred wooden boXH carrying
product and comp1ny •civartlll!m8flll were popullr with buyer~
at Saturday's auction 11 the Rutland Civic Center. The box• were
uaed years ago for 1hlpping lllm1 Into Rutland by train •nd were
found stored on the second floor of the Rutland Department Store.
Kimberly Wlllfoi'IJ, above, co-owner of the llore, arranged the box·
as before the sale.

Auction kicks off new ownership
(Continued from Page 1)
Patterson and Beard
The store has an mlcrcsfing history, whiCh included a cnlorlul CIVIl
War encounter as tofu in an article nn
June 26. 1'147 10 The Sentinel
ThC newspaper account tells nl the
"advcnturou:\ limes when Morgan
and hiS raiders made a sweep through
old Meigs."
"Morgan's men looted. among
other pluccs. Rathburn 's Department.
Store . Old pioneer reSidents now
deceased used to tell their children
and grandchildren how the M\Jrgan
men would climb on the IT horses w1th
bolts of Rathburn cahco, ribbon and
gmgham, and ride away al break-

ARC wants commitment
on hi~hway plan fulfilled
WASHINGTON (AP)- A rural
development grouf) says it will make
Congress live up to 1ts commitment
to complete 3,025 miles of roads to
the rural reaches of 13 states from
New York to Mississippi .
Jesse White, the Appalachian
Regional Comm1ssmn 's lcdcral reprcsentativc. said President Clinton
woll outline the plan 10 his fiscal 1998
budgct Thursday. White sa1d he
couldn't comment further on the
budget.
The cnmmJSsmn wants the next
highway hill to allow usc of federal
gasolinc tax dollars lilf the 23 percent
of the system - 707 miles - sUit

.
,
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,
.
,
.
,
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unhuilt . So lar the commiSsum has
had In cn\npctc for gcncrJI federal
dollars
The road-huildmg prngr.nn came
under attack last week hy an allmnce
nf liberals and conservatives procla1mmg a common goal of ruoting
out billions of dollars m "wrpomlc
welfare."
While called the attacks "ludl·
crous" and expressed conlulencc
C&lt;ingrcss wolllullill a commotment to
rural reSidents when the agency was
created m 1%5 The Appalachian
Regional Comnuss1nn vocws nnprov1ng h1!'hway access w rurul areas ;IS
key to hoosling rur,ol e'onomics.

Meigs announcements
Branch planned
A pancake brunch woll be held at the Carleton School Sunday w11h serving from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cost for a lull meal IS $3 a~ the _door, $25? for
those who purchase tiCkets m advance_. Items may ~!so be purchased ala cilfl~·
The brunch is sponsored by the Mc•gs AsS&lt;X:Jalion for Retarded CitiZens..
Information may be ohtaincd by calling 992-66H I.
Meeting canceled
•
A mcetmg of the Meigs Band Boosters will not he held Monday (!llday)
as previously announc~d. The Boosters next meetmg w•ll he on March 3.
Trustees to meet
The Scipl&lt;) Townsh•p Trustees will meet m regular scssum. 6:30p.m. Tuesday at Pagcville.
PERI meetlna set
The PERl will meet Thursday n&lt;HJn at the Scnmr CitJZcns Center. Those
planning tn have lUnch !here arc to t.:ontact the center
•
Garden club to meet
'
The Chester G,~rdcn Cluh will meet at 7:~0 p 111 Wednesday at the h&lt;lmc
of Pat Holter.
PTO to meet
The Pomeroy Elementary PTO w•llmcct at 7 ~ - m Tuesday at the school.
Guest speaker woll he Margie Sk•dmorc, R.N . olthc Mc1gs County Health
Department.

.BURGUNDY AND
FLORALS &amp; GIFTS
RACINE

3RD &amp; PEARL ST.

949-ROSE (7673)

FEATURING:
Fresh Cut Arrangements
Silks • Balloons
Specialty Gifts
Amlsh..Crafted Pie Safe
Tropical Wood Gifts from Costa Rica
Leanln' Tree Circls
Blaumont Pottery

,....___
r

neck speed unwindmg the cloth
behmd them ."
As auctmn preparations were
made Fnday, some of the workers
· handling tbe merchandise recalled the ,
"b1g fire" m 1926 that destrqycd
buildings on hnth sides of Main
Street m the department store block .
Rathburn's humcd In the ground. hut
was rchUilt the f(ollowmg year.
Some remembered that the Rathburn Bank operated' fur many years
in the same hUJid10g a.s the department store.
And many expressed thciT delight
that the bus10ess h'" hccn purchased
and w1ll conunuc to operate in Rutland.

..,...

or._

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XAY PROFFITT- KIM DAVIS

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Monday,~ 3, 1117

Sports

~. Febl'uery

0.

t\

p...-.-·-·-• • Mlckl........,.
......,.., Ohio

'

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

~lgs girls lose~ ..jumped
:(:cone~inued=~trom=.,.=:•&gt;;:;:;-:=:=-::-::::::::::::::-:-:-:~:---:-7----:
__.=----:-~----:-------.
out a 20-91e.dll the half nen with 14. Jennifer Shrimplin led
Monday and then play

"ine and Doidge with seven. The
Mantuders ltad 14 tumoven, two
iPiSIS and six ste~ls led by Davis
with two.
ln the reserve lame Belpre

3, 1887 ;

to

llld held off a Meiaa comeblck
allemptto post 1 39-32 win, it wu
only the leCXInd lois of
for
Meigs.. bchel Foraker led the win-

the,_

Meiss with ciaht, Tangy Laudennilt
and Tiffany Halfhill each added sev-

en.Mei•s will travel to "-·tern on
~
"""

Wlhama on Thursday.

host to

~--•...._,_

- BeMelpreigs .

6-13-1&amp;-4=41
19-15-25-22=81
Melp: Becky Smith 1-1-3=8.

Taryn.Doidgo 2-0-~. Cheryl Jewell 2-0-3=7, Tricia Davis 2-1· 7=14,
Bntndi Meadows 2-0-0=4, Tonya
Mtller 1..().().2, Melissa Werry 1-00=2. ToW.: 10.1-15=41
1141pre: SummcrCannichaell-0-

2=4: Kathy Coyner 9-2-3=27,
Christina Eaton 1-0-2=4, Crystal
Goin 4-2-0=14, Mandy Goin 3-0~12, Kristy Rhodes4-0-4=12,Angie Rouse 4-0-0=8. Totall: U-4·
l0=81

•

Scoreboard
MUI'I'II)" St

Baskctbilll

88. TeM .t.bftjn 6'J

Kea)'IJII72, Ohio WHieyan ~7
WOOM«,67. Oeni1on 41

N Carvli"' AAT 86, Baho...COO.·

.... as&lt;OTl

NBA standings
58

EASTERN CONPERENCE
AtloolkDI.......

r.-.
.1!
M~ .......... J4
New York .......... l2
Orlando .............. 22

Wathin.... ....... .22
New Ieney . . . 12
Plliladolphia .......... II
- · ................ 10
Ona~~o

.L lsi.

!ill

.5lA

2
10

12
14
20
2l
n
l4
J3

.739
.696

.&lt;!19
.m
.lA4
lll

II ~

21

22~

......

. 41

..... ~

I nnta

.891

j

.m
.682
.m

12
14

a..toae ...... 21 19
CLEVI?J..AND .... 14
Indiana ................. 22
Mtlwauke ........... 11
Toronro . • ... , 16

21 S33
22 .lOO
l4 .467
28 .364

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10

ANYONE OPEN? -That's the question Southern's Cynthia Celdwell (right) aaka without words as she 1ooks to the middle of the
court past Trimble's Valerie Coffman during their Hocking Division
game at Southern High School on Jan. 29, where the Tornadoes won

18
14ih

:za
32

,:149
.JI9
.261

31
40 .184

Satltle ....................ll

14 .696

"""'""' .................:15 2~ .m

Socramento ....... 20 26 .43.1
L.'A. Clippen ....... II 2~

Lady.To.rnadoes
record 60-44
win over Trimble
tty as SHS raced to a 60-44 wm.
By SCOn WOLFE
Coach lenni Roush said, "Renee
Sentinel Correspondent
Led by another twenty-plus effort had another great game, but another
from Renee Turley, the Southern reason we've enjoyed success this
Tornadoes insured a winning season year is because of our balance.
by defeatmg Trimble 60-44 in a Tri- Again tonight we had mnc people in
Valley Conference g~rls make-up the scormg column
Southern hit 25-63 lor 40 percent.
game in Charles W. Hayman gyman~
3-13three's, with 7-18 from the
nasium in Racine.
line.
Southern had 40 rebounds led
Turley led the Southern scoring
by
Horst
with 8 and Turley, Caldauack with 23 points and led her club
with seven steals and SiK assists, well. and Proffttt wtth six; had 16
while also garnering sox rebounds. steals (Turley 7, Caldwell 3); II
Flanking Turley's effort was Kim assists (Turley 6): 15turnovers, and
Sayre, who had 16 potnts and six 20 fouls. Tnmble hit 17-42 for 40
rebounds wtth a great effort as a percent, 0-3 three's, and was I 0-20
sophomore. Brianne Promu m a at the line wtth 27 rebounds. THS
return performance followmg a nasty had SIX steals, 8 assosts, 22 turnovers,
auto accident, helped open up a great I 5 fouls, and six block~.
Southern won the reserve game
insode-outsidc combination between
herself and Turley and added seven 26-16 led by Kim Ihle with II and
Stacy Lyons "'ith 8. Shifflet and Six
points und si~ rebounds.
Jenny Friend ·added fo.ur, ~tacy each had three for Tnmble.
L~ons three, wo each from Cynthia _ QIW:kr l!!lllb
16-1 0-18·1 ~60
Caldwell, Erica Amoll, and Conny Southern
J(l-11-ll : 12=44
Horst; and one from Ashlie Davis, Trimble
S~uthern:
Renee
Turley 9-1·
who is returning from a knee InJUry.
2/4=23,
Cynthia
Caldwell
1-0=2,
Southern and Trimble dueled 11 ·
out intllc first pertod to the tunc ol a Ktm Sayre 5-2-011=16, Brianne
16-10 tally as Turley established t"e Pruflitt3-0- 112= 7, Conny Horst 0-0tempo wtth a ten-point frame. Trtm· 2/4=2, Erica Arnott 1-011=2. Stacy
ble came back to outscore Southern Lyons 1-112=3, Ashll Davts 0- 112= I.
11-10 in the second go-round. and Totals: 22-3-7118=60
Trimble: Chrissy Rtchards 0pulled the hal fume score to 26-,21
112=1.
Joy Pettit 2-0-3/5=7, Sheryl
Complimented by Sayre and
Davts
5-CYI=IO,
Sherry Davis 1-0=2,
Proflill (four and five points rcspec·
tively), Turley added nmc thtrd peri- Misty Lent4-212=10, Bobbi Lcnt4·
od points to pu'sh Southern's lead to 411 0= 12, Julie Richards 1-0=2.
44-32. Tbe last frame was a fonnal- Totals: 17-0-1 0120=44

Belpre downs Lady
Marauders 81-41·
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent

'

Belpre Jumped out to an early 196 lead and went on to post an 81-41
victory over Meigs in girls Ohio
Division Tri· Valley Conference basketball action Thursday evening.
The Golden Eagles, which
' clinched the Ohio Division crown a
couple or weeks ago run their record
to 17-1 overall and 13-0 in the TVC.
The win wiiS Belpre's 62nd straight
TVC wm and their 43rd straight win
at home. The Golden Eagles were
ranked lith in the rc•"Cnt A.P. Dtvl·
sion III poll. Meigs drops to 9-5 in
the Ohio Division, good enough for
gecond place two games ahead of
third place Vinton County.
' Belpte jumped out to the early
lead behinil the scoring of Kathy
Coyner and Kristy Rhodus who each
sco~ six points in the peri,od and
five points from Crystal Goin.
Belpre increased the lead to 34-16
,al the half as Coyner scored five
• ·11101e points in the second period and
Ooin added four more. Tricia Davis
hallthe hot'hand for Meigs in peri·
od· with nine points.
, · Belpre CO!Itinued to pour it on In
tltc third period as they built up a 59·
37 lead u •Coyner and Mandy Ooin
IICOied ti• point each in the period.
llecky Smith seored five In the period for Mti1• and Chery I Jewell

., .....,foutmore.

, .

Despite the bi11ead head•ns into
the faul ~ Belpre Coach Dave
'WIIIfuliCIIIeft Ilia slll1en in and con·
die raut. Belpre OtibCored

=
.~~r=a==
Wf!P.IItl~ly left

CQillell with I :30
Jeft)llhullllell
·
~.
.... pitt ~ V«'J hlrd IIIII

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Oolden Stme.. .. .. 11 28 .378
Phoemll. ......

was a flll-in for the injured John
Elway and won the Pro Bowl's
MVPAward.
'
· Ironically, KasaY, gave Alstodt, an
investment banker in New York.
some tips on making hts one kick to
wm the "Hershey's St Million Pro
Bowl Kick! "
Alstodt. 26. who played soccer as
a youth, coolly hoomcd home hts
Drawings w~re held Sun~ay afterkick at halftime to win $1 million. noon at various.Jocations throughout .
While he went I -for-I. the all-star the Southeaster~ Ohio district for the
kickers went a combihed 3-for-8.
1997 boys sccl10nal basketball tourIn defense of Blanchard and naments in divisions one,' two, three
Kasay, however. they were. working and lour.
·
wtth new holders and new snappers,
In Division II at South Webster.
and the lack of practtc~ showed.
South Poml was seeded No. I, and
Knsay, the Carolina Panthers' Galhpolis No. 2.
kicker, missed three of four attempts......
The Sout,h Webster tourney will
but one ofthosc was a 66-yru-dcr. He begm when Rock· Hill (7-ti) Hattlcs
seemed to be out of rhythm, work- Northwest (2-16) at\): 15 p.m. on Fe h.
ing with jiCW people.
18. Wmner of that game plays South
· " We tried the best we could, hut Point ( 14-2) on Fch. 21 at6: 15 p.m.
11 dtdn't work out," he said,. "We dtd· ·Tbe winner advances to the OU disn 't get a chance to work on 11 that trict and plays ·the winner of tile
much."
Meigs-Vinton C.)unty winner at 6:15
Blanchard, of the Indianapolis p.m. on Feb 28 .. Mcigs (5-12) takes
Colts. agreed tha) uming was a on Vmton County ( 11·6) at South
problem with so little practice.
Wehster on Feb. 21 at8 p.m •
"Your rhythm really isn't there
Portsmouth 17-8) drew a lirst
because of different guys in different round bye. and wtll play the wmner
places," he said. "I just pulled of the River ';alley (3- 13) vs. Jackthrough it (his first overtime kick), sun (7-9) contest on Feb. 22 at 6:15
but the S\'COnd one was just bcauti- p.m. River Valley and Jackson clash
ful. 'f!le snap was perfect, the hold at 8 p.m. on Feb. I8 at South Wehwas perfect, and I couldn't do any- ster. The wmncr nl that bracket
advances to the OU dtStnct and takes
thing but put the ball through."
Although the kickers had their o~ the Hillsbor~-Ncw Lexmgtnn
problems, the game was an yxcittng wmncr on•March I at 7 p.m.
.
one, with Brunell and Washmgtnn'!&gt;
· Galhpohs ( 10-6), wtll battle Fatr·
Gus Freroue, both invited to the Pro land (3-11) on Feh. 22 at 8 p.m. at
Bowl only after John Elway and South Webster. ~inner of that gmnc
Troy Aikman withdrew because of will advance to the OU district tourinjuries, helping provide offensive namenl and play the winner ol the
lircworks.
Greenfield-Miami Trace game on
Brunell completed 12 of22 pass- March I at? p.m ., mAthens. Grecnes for 236 yards. including an 80- field (11-5) a~d Miami Trace (2-14)
yard pa..s play to Tim Brnwn with 44 play at Chillicothe on Feb. 21 at Ohto
seconds. left in regulation that tied it University-Chilhcothe Branch, start·
at 23.
mg at 7 p.m.
· ·
Pairings imvolving.other Division

Post-season pairings
announced fo.r boys
cage tournaments.

TVC girls'
cage staodings
Ohio Division
Dlv. Overall

Inm

- ~ · L ~I.

Bclpre ..................... l3 0 17 I
MEIGS .....................9 5 10 8
Vinton County ..........? 5 12 6
Nelsonville-York ...... 4 10 5 14
Wellston ............. ...... 3 II 6 13
HO&lt;:king Division
Alcxunder ............... l3 2 16 4
Federal Hocking .......9 5 10 9
SOUTHERN ....., ... 8 7 12 7
Trimble ........ ............ 5 · 9 5 13
EASTERN .. .. ,........... 5 10 6 12
Miller...................... .0 15 I 18
~&amp;IIIW

MEIGS at EASTERN (nonleague)
Belpre at Trimble
Ravenswood at SOUTHERN
Miller at South Galllu
Oak Hill at Wcllsto•

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BowlinJ Gn!tn 93. W. MkhiJD116?

11~

B"ler 68, Detroit SS
Cbk:qo Sl. 80, lftl. C~li~.:..- St

19

24~

11

--

Art.-Uitk Rock 70, ArknMus St. b6
Aftllfti8S 19, MtempWI 6:\ ,
Baylor 71t, otlllhomn S1. 77
lnwn Sl. 71. TclllS A&amp;M ~7
Oklahoma til TCAIIS 69
Oml Robcr1s 9$, NE IllinoiS 71
Race 62. Southern Ml'lh ~IC
SW TeJLUS Sr 72, NE lA'IItsinnu62
South ~ 6..1. Tt!IIU·Pun Anw:ri-

)

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Texas-A.rhn11un 70, Nt.:hoiiJ St 61J
Tt:JI.ns-EI Pnso 711, Bn~ham Yoon~ ol9
Teus-Sun Anton1u MIJ NW

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NewMtxk:uM7. U!-.?1
NeW Mtxk.v,SI If£ Plli.:incr76' lOT)
Purtllllld S2, ~pe '4V I '
SUJI,Oiep 7'\, s'1 ·. ,M'iry'll, ~Ill 71
Son fn*taco 72.' S..u Ciani ft-1
S1111 Jl'IIC Sl..76. Slll'l Dicp St 72
StiUthma Cal W. On:Jon 69
UCLA 74. lllqol So. 1111 •

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UNLV 110, W1"ffiRJ ~1
-lhlllh Si 71. UC 5Pnl:t Bll'tNirll63

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The 1996-97 Tri-Vallcy Conlcrencc wrestling meet will be h~ld tin
Saturduy at . Meigs High Schcx•l's
L1.1rry'lt Morrison Gymnusiupl. '
Weigh-ins will. siurt at -10 a.m..
with wrestling to start at II :3'11 a.m. :
1
Admission will be $3 li11 adults and •
$2 fitr students.
The lust time that Meigs hosted
the tournament was in 1993. and the
Marauders won the title tha( SC&lt;L'ilm.

14.·rc~tatT..'t:h

..... 1.'\-S
I~ Notre l&gt;ame ..... .. I¥-4

16. V"""""ilt ............. lol-6
17. Maeu;~ , ,........ l:'i·S
IK lllilk'NS ..
. .... l?..t
19. CI•""'"'· ..... I.J-6

20. Dulu: ......... ..... ... .....
21. St....... F. Au~ in .. I11-3

22. W. K•u.,;ky .......... l~-~
l.l WIM."tUI!Iin ........ 14-~
2-' Ml~hlJUn Sl ...., ... 16-4

II

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19
14
IH

J.l2
:lJII
261
241

166
IM

71

2.1
21

ll~

Cm . North Colleac: Hill KK. C1n
Fmneylown 15
Ctn Noohwesl-16. Rem 42

Rnet"VeSl

52

Oytk: 76. $&amp;Qtuslr,y St Mory·.z M
Cof W111.~ 77, W~hinJIIHa Chr
611
•
&lt;tokmet Cmwrord .~6. Bu~~)'C C~n4ral:'l2

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Far Wtlll

WashlnJtan \12, Aritona KK

Sotorday '• tM:IIon

M111~1Mnt Confennl.'t'

IIIIIK'!• 72. Yuttnf:!llnwn St

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Mklwflttm CuhJlatt

('lc\'\.'l•....a Sl 7&lt;1, Wrt~hl St. 71 t&lt;fl)

Grftll Lakt'll llllt'ffllll,.._llfllt'
Midn~lUI 1'L•~o:bll7 /\Nhl.mcl7~
~CautC~nnct

Satunlay'a actl•

D:nb•m 11' WtiiiStl'f ftl c&lt;Yn
Ohm WCI'k.&gt;y.m 66. Kc.'ftyun6~ (&lt;TI' t

Eool
Amt•rn.'aolJ ~. N,(., -WIIminttltlll..flJ

Wtllt.&gt;tth.'ftc 9.1 C01:oc Wc~~t..'fll79

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RmM U. 70, NunholltN ~l
BiiCkndl Kl. Colp1c 7K
Cllflnet.1a"'UI 62. $(tun Hull ~

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Lun..:. lsl:md U 104. St Frnnci~ . Pn.

Monnk'llllh. N J. K3. Manlllll~
MOUIII ~'it M,ll')'·,, Md. 67. fQ.Irktf,h
: Di~-!100 6.1
'
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i •
J'rint,.oetOII M. Co111mbil&amp; ~-~
Prov1cltrL-.: !I.~. Bet~lnn Colk:Je 71
1
PurWc 67. Ptnn S1 62
Rldert16, Wngntr6K
Rob&amp;:n Morris6.1, S1. Frurn:l•. NY~~
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Valpllr.Uw M. BuiTulu.6l
VlillliKI¥n 70, Syr~tt:WIC 60
•
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..
'
Xnvler, Ohio 87 1 Manaehuldtl lW , "
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4.30

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4.30

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Ouawa Htll ~ ~. Unt.1 h·rnpk 17
Ounv1lk 6K Ottawu Gl.mt.lnrl 'il1
P.klu:1 57, I.,Jkc C.11h ~ I
P.un-esv tll c Har vey M 1hht.thul,1
H.trNJr47
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!'lulu 62 Shcnt.l.tn ~f1
1'1 o.:ko.'rul)!lun 1h Rl.·ynn i ~M'IH!: ' 1
Pmnt l 1 lc. L~.m1 W V.t :U ~ G,llh.t ' "
Pul,aml41}. CanliciU 4U
Pun ... nmuth +t Pt.r!Mntl\tlll (.'1,1)' ,II
l'&lt; li1~11111Uib W ()M l'urtsmuullt L 1-1

•1. Oregon Slnh:h

Dny Ch:.amtfunk... Jui14.'1Utc ~7. K~:u~.:r­
inr. Aller J I

Day. Ounb•.rM. D.t)' O~t~'ium ~-'
l.kl.•warc 37. Wurtlun~lttn Chr_21.)
l&gt;cl('htl!l St John 's 60. Coldwatl&gt;'r '\2
Duvcr 76, Cu~l101;lun l7
t. Clcvd.ukl Sh,tw fi2 Mcnhlf '\-'
E Climnn M . M1111isun 111:uM :N
E Knm1

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Otr 17

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1"--pcrton l'\ l:.tkm 14
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f;lyn.l Fir~l ll&lt;tiiiUtl "''· Wrlln· HIII

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61 Croul;~ \O tlll• 'il1
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' S Ccntr.tl 'i4 New J.A&gt;ndun lK
S Clmrlc~lllll SuuthL IISIL'rn C1ll

hcr,.nxn47. rul WtKkiW:tnl42
F:nrhnm ~H . Xcma 1 I
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l'mdlay ~H . N:•r1ull'nn 12
rmnklin-Munmc :'1.:\.llmukvtllc 4J .
fn.&gt;clt.'Ocktnwn ~7 . Wynrtwd ~4
Fl lllfUtnk!tJI.St M.try~-'V ­
Gaww.ty 49, Mal\Ocrn .W
GarticlU Hts Trlnuy 64. Puu burj!h
North C;11h ~.S
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Gr...'CI\CYI~'W ]i)

S,tlcm 7K. Ntll's J()
S.1ntlu~ky 70, A~hl.mJ :'iCJ
Shdhy '10 Nnrw,1lk l 2
S~tlun 71 Twm ~tlllr)!. l7
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CA-t~tl.l 62, Glblitlflhttr)!. ~
Grnnclvtcw N!, l.~~.:ktnp: Val :'i-1
Gn.ocnlidd 51. HunUIIJ.!IUII 2\1
Hmrisnu 1-'. '1'.1lawm.U.t 50
Htlancl 60. Mtcl~cwuud \C)
Hulgntc bK, HilhuJI .n
Hutlo;nn 70. Nunun 46
Huron ~K. O.tk Hurhor 211
Indian Lake 62, Ekhjli0\111 I.Alg&lt;lll ~"i

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14

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Nul'llll',\Sil' rll h ~ luudun

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Srnn!! &amp;uuh 60. Spnul' Nonh "I
Sww 69 M.t ~S I!I,•n -12
Srlv.1m.1 Suulhii!CVi "o7 llcrryshurl!
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lilfin Cnlvcn ~li . l'n:~ tlmc 'i ~
'l1lfin Cnlumh1.111 K'i Ci.thtU I foil
lui C.tlhnltl h7 1\krun St V-SI M ~K
1 ul Scull '\I D.1y Mc.khlwll.tlc 41

Jefferson fl:l, MaLit~M11tl
Jcw-=11 -SI.:m 50. SlrW'bur~ :w
Jutullll:UI Alder :'II. H..&gt;hruu Lakcwnt'lll

lui

WtMklw.~ttl 47 I ;V\.'f~n.oen

42

In Cmmly ti 'il, Du•~· ~7
I n.Jd 71, M~'\.it .lntlshur)!. 44
lwiW!,.Mlii-M:uhstm..,7 Nnrlhlllo &gt;lll40
lrny '\'\ (i~I'I\V tlil' '2
"lttscar,,was C.11h ~1 I .tl;d.tnd lK
l'wm V.tllcy S 4K.I..lluu41

K::alilla 63. Umn Balh 41,i
Lakuta4~. HlmWtMKI ~2
K111Jti $S, Spnnr,bt•ru 4~

K:.mw

l .,tfM.'~er KO. (.' e MilrMimll n
l.un:1 Calh M l.una Slt.~WIIl'C 44
l.ux:nlnvkw 72 V:an Wen 46
l.•l!}!an ~I( (.'ul I)I;Snlcs 47
l..nudun l'l.', Sllrtlll: NnrtJ.:uMern ~9
l.ur.11n Calh 7'\ ltrckukb 4U
l'.umi11 Clcur~1cw -ll N Httl~cvllll'

Unu •muwnl ~ tt.:

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uu~:l 72 nc~ll'y 'ill
' v ,,llcy I Ofj!l' 'ill, l'k K~'llltl'dy 41
V,md.IIJ.I-BIUk. r 'il. Suhll')' 41
W Br.mdl W. C.inullh111 27

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Day. lbrist•-•7fl, Car&amp;j~h: :11
Day Pulkts\111 '67, Cl•lclwntl't :'1:'1

PaulcllnJZ 4H

REACH
OYER
18,500
.
.
.

.HO ES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

D:laware&lt;."hr. 63. W'lflll Hnrvt.'lll"
Ut.\fpfkll Sl JoOO'• \IS.l&gt;uy M1..,.onutl

-••
••
••
••
TVTIM·ES ••
AREA TELEVISION

Humillun 67 .l.mkl Sr. 61
Huron !Ill. Pt:rktn5 :17
lndtom Cn.-..:k HI. llmnkc. W v,, 7~
lrutuno 69. Ru~sc..il. Ky 60
lnmum S1 Ju!lcph 70. Hmm:tn. W V:1

•
I

ADVERTISING IN THE

Juckii'm Cent._,. ~ft. New IJn:n'k.'n ~.l
Jnhn~tnwn Nurthndl!f.' 62 MtlllTSpurt

Lm~~:a~l ...'f N', Ct•l W :tlnUI Mltlttl! -1ft
l..1WI\:U~\.-hufj: h.U 71, H.II1'1Sl111 7U

li"IJIStt: ~1. PruJd..lln·Gtlhna 2M
Lit:klllliJ C\lUilly 01r ~7. Ment1¥" C.' hr.
'
'
Lunn R.tlh ""' Vnn Wl'rl '7
l..t~ltn '\..f. l'mrt1cld Uninn4k
L41nllnn 6(1, Olcnllmlty ~2
Lcw:un (.'ulh. 61. l-:11f!u Op:n ~~~ Jl
l..t•:un K•flll K~. at. Mh.~ll, t.:!
IA.-d.'l1nwn ~K. Ncwbqry l2
1.u:l11.,.1m W11~. lntli.•pcnclcm·l·~7
Madl~t)ft PlaiW! 6,'\, ("fM.!J~I1olW ..7

LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
.TV TIMES

'0

o.

..W.C)hM Cwlc: tiKI!

Ohio wo~nen's

I'

Satur,lay'• action

c-......

~On:tra61. W. Mldtipt~.W
({ottJ 61 • !Ill
T.9l. /Uolll ~~

'
i

MW C

I Ml.COIIItneee

, _.

;aC'zll'

v. a aall. "· w: nll•h 1~

'

1

!t

(o

college scores

l"'
.

..

...

:'10

Cot R~acly 90, Berne Unmn 40
Col Wts166. Col. WMIL'fiOn ~6
Cnlumbia 42. Oberlin 40
Conunental ~I P.tuldtng W
Cl'•plcy 7'i, Tnlhn:•c .tel
Cuyahog:t Ht'i ~t Elyna Open l.&gt;uur

~~~~ ll&lt;. RIO (lR~Nillo 7'1

41 ....10

•

Welltn~lon

· Sunday'siiCtlon

*A• cWC-'tnnc1

4t.111112

•cu1 Walnut Htlls 40, Cin. Mount

V11lley Cbr. 69 , Khlmn

WIIMi11Jini11U2.J.Uana-bc..~190

a.- SJ. 14.....,...,; Ill. 6;1

I'

3~

Non conlcnnn

!!II SJ. 84, 01110 1~

.142211

liu

Admntrft-Ciearcreek ft+. ... l,ilk!r&amp; y
Union ~r. Anlw..-rp ;'17. &lt;;unyuy ('r\.'111\llt:w !'r•
A~hliind C~!IIVIC. ttl. 'Ce~UtM Wcsl•
em Rt:scrv~ 27
Asblahuln G.lp.-w1Mtd 47. Gt.'Oevn -'2
Avm1 l~. i.A)('.til'l Suulll\IICW"
AV&lt;lfl Lnke :'ll Antht."r.il 2~
B:~y ~It F-.umcw P.JL: .o
Rc:wcrcra:k j(,, Kt.-tlen••t~ EuruM!Itl

Allonlk tt
Sti ~UIII'J)h'J. Pa. 61. X~vtcr ~

•
.........

QI.:Cf\lilk! ~~ •

Mnnrpther ~I Suyker 4:'1
N Balnmm: 7.\, Tol Clm~u.m 70
N. Canton Hoov er 5-7 Cant1J11
GlenOak Sl
N Olmsted,~ . Olmsted Fall ~ \6
Na111mal Tro~tl 74 , Valley V1e~ 'i7
New U:ltnj!tun 511. Tn-V .1II.:y -II
New Rte~el bK V ~ n Burl!n 4X
·
Ncwarl5H. Oubl1n CoiTmmi ~I
Norwillk St P.aul ~7. Plymnulh 40
Nnrw.aync HJ Htllsdalc 4'.1
Oluo Damf \:l llhnots Ocnl l2

Clydt: ~2. Pukiru; ~
Col. MariOn - Frankhn 6~ . Col

Salorday's action

cw Phjl.tdciJihU&amp; :ltt

Mn.:rvu J7. Canal Fulhlll NW n
Mu15ler 1:\ , Vers;.ullCJ-46
MtutsSin ~wa Val C'i"i. Tn-V111.1g.: J2

Cin WtniQn Woods 4't Fnlr1lehl40
Ctn Wyomin! S9, Cin Sy~.:;ttl'KJI'Y 29
Clc. Cathoh~.: S6. 014101!1 :W
Cle. H~t&amp;IUt 54, Lakewood 22

Ohio H.S. girls' scon!s

AIIL'ft E. 6~..
Alliar~~.-e 40,:

Mulpark 5:'1, Sirongmlk 1'i
Millrrs~ 4~ Milll!r -14

Ctn. Princeton ~7. Umn Sr ~9
Cin Sa!10n SO. Cm. Qnk Hllls40
Cin. St. lkl11aard "'· Cm lndum Hill

lle.lthy·:t•

Molmwk :'1~
Urh.ma 2M

Akron Covcnlry 3.', Akron Ellel ~
Akron Hobala ~Q, Wabh Jt:JUIIIil '
Akron Spri~~Q. Cuman S 46

2~

Cin. Cilen Erile 70, Fdtctly-Fraat.hn

E.milwt~Jd ~)I Ohc~u

W.vr .."ltl.Aii:al 72. Uclpn: :'lb
Wa:~bmp.1oo CN :'i7, Ltcktnp '¥.11 4\
W.lll.'l'fllf\1 ~II . NcwLum.:uruwu ~-&amp;
WooSt.'\111 ~2. FllycUe +4
W.tyl'M: Trw.:~: 61 tm:hhi:•ILI +.J
Welling1on !W. BIKCk Rt\er 'il
Welldon KO. Nd5tmvilll'-York "-'
_. Wheek:nburg 71-! Wuvcrly 76 {{}1')
' W1cUtiTc 7H. Hawken 47
Wootlmorc SK. NunhWt'lkl ~I
Wutthitlglon Killoumc ~- Whtlf.•h.:tll
~7 tOT)
,
WynfortJ 69 Fredi.'ficktuwn 41
Yt:llow Srnng,:; lib, Dny Whth: K-f
You Easl ~7 Ck Kcn1tt.'tly ~~
l.arM!svllle K~ M.mon HW'tllnt 41
Zanes\Oil~ Rn..'i4.'1;r.IIIS .S7. Triway ~!'i

Medtna 76, N R11)'0IIton 44
Medina Htf.hhtnd 40, Rev ~:rc 21J
Mu.ldletown Fenw1~k 5:'1. Duy_. Curm\1

Cin Sr Unul.a 61. Cln Roger Bacon

W MTerson 61 , Ulll'll:'l~

f.:tke 1~.7~. 0cli;M~~,:C fH
l'l:nq S: -lk"'H"L•ud 1h ()h.-rim 110
'lltonlZ'i Mrll\' 9J. Dlufl'lon Ml

'·

.01122t

V :mrblt&lt;~·Bullcr fW

,, ~·

·: K6

~~

63

MaJ'kwoud ~ 1\ ~~~fllfteld ~ I
M:tt)U6.'tlu ~2, Pun Clintoo \fa
Murtm&amp; EIFi• S~. Mnriun Ri¥L'I' Vul

'

49

llnmmown luke 611. N \u1nnn
U~r S.mdu~l;y ~H.

Marhn,toD tJI. Canton Tin1~11 11
Marysv1 llc 70, Franklin H1s '\I
Mawn 7'1. Unle Mmmt 12
Mnysvtlle M . John GLenn b2
Meadowbrook :'1~ Tu s~·amw ,l s Val

Cent
J 76. Newark Cath tJ7
CentterVdle M. Huber H11 W.tyne ~2
OWdon :'12. Kenston 49
Chardon NI).CL 411, Elym ~h :U
Ch:shirc Rivtr Val 4:'1, Fairland 40
Cin Cou111ry tkty :'17. Cin l..undmark

Tol Woot.lwurll flO. Sunclusk)' 7~
Troy 7~ . Ta.:un'ISo."h tJ6 ..,w...._ ~
Tus.:ar.tw:u Val 69. ~.ultly Val .W
Hoov~r

(0TJ

c~~ton u Noohmor 38

(Mtch ) Piohl.'t."l' ~

Kc111.'fln~ Ah-:r 51 l&gt;.•y Ch:mlinadc
Juh"•nnt: 2K
Ktrtl.uJd :'17 1\:rry-ki
Lakcwuud St t ~dwurd 71 , C.ullicl\1

Oamnuuth ~2 . Brown :\I
Fonlh;.tm 60. l&gt;t&amp;JlK.'Irtc ~~~ ,
Geur~l.l Woubmgh.IR 7K, lot Sull.: 77

•

Tol Ubbey ~~. Mansli~ld Sr 4~
Tol S1 Johns MI. Ann H,arhur

Sol

Con1C'II61, r\!nn ~.l

4.30

42

'-'U.~I"'fll.fll

college scOres
W

Srnng South 69. Xcnm ttl ·
St Henry RJ. Frnnklln-Monroe 7M
Slow 71, Wnm:n HardinJ 6!'i
Swunt,on 6!'i, Anlhony Wayne ~2
Tinorn 68, Stryker ~9
Ttl'fl Chy 70. Umo. Shnwm:c ~~
Tol Cmhohc' :'1~. Mandielcl M:Jiumn

~2

Canton McKti\Jtoy..&amp;7. Boardn\Dn -16

)9

Gret:ttfidd 62, Rlchmnnd IJulc Snulh-

Ohio men's

W:t.~hinttllm

" Gt!ol'gctown 71, S1 Jtlh•'ll68
Hnn(oni7K. Mal• 62- ,' '
tbvlll'll n, Yate :19
L1f:tyt:IIC MO. l.t."htlh 70
•

1

Way-

Seneca E 7~ . Manon Ca1h tJ7 iOTl
ShLU"un U'a I K~:mtcdy tbrtsltan 61
Campbtll :'11
Shenandoah 9~ . Wht."'!hn~ CW Va 1
Unsly !!I
Suu1hmp,1on n . Pymatumng Val 60
Srt.~rta Hij!hland n Buckeye Vul 66
Spnng C'mhoh~.: :'10. Stdncy Lelm~;m

Dl~tic 16. 'J;n.Cnunly H ~~
E KnoJt 92. Lw:as 61
E. Ljvc.PKII Kl. Cui, Sc~t~lh ~1
Eulun 77. Twin Valky S 72
FJyria I 1rsr 8tlflmt71 , WJIIu-HUI..W
Evl'fF~n 71t Hillwr 74
Faufteld 72, W OM.'lill'f l.ukn1116l
FalriiiWn fH. Draclfonl tJI
f!Urleu ~- TuJIIuw 41.)
f-isher Ca~h . 71 Cui llcS:llt.'5 6H
Ftl&amp;!Ona 46, Old FVrt 4 I
Graliam 87, Day. Nurtluidttc ~
Granclv..:w 42. HchMt LakcWtll~ 11

H . E111ut'"tllc 1\2
lllmms 7H: Indiana 14
StiUihl.'fn Mu;~ S.l, St I.A~t~ill 4\1

NCAA Division I
men'sscom

•
•1

'

Con~•nent11151. HuiJIUI! 39 .
Coshr.JCIDIII 66, Caldwell49'
Cn:11:111111: ~ Manslield Chr. ;'ill
Cmli.'hvtlh: ~'dry ~7. Fl Jennlnp &lt;12
Cuyaho!n f ,IIIS 119. Canton Timkcn
,

lkflan~..-.: ~6.

.'. CPior,ltJo St I IMta I

I

1

~I .

~ville !,()

r

Clo:. VA/SJ Kl. Bedfont5•
Cknr Ftd 4:'11 Loudon~ille :\9
Clinton-MU5Ble' .2. ~~hddletUwn thr

Bi&amp; Wulnur47. WnshUIJ,IOII CH 46
Bn=l:ksvtlle 70. Cluwrtr-af .\I
Buc:kc~ Ccnlml :'15, Cnlo~~el Cmw!Ord .\5
Calvary Or ~ . Cin Sewn Hill s ~2
(Of)
Cambrid,e :'12. Claymont 46•

JO

Cle Het1bts 72. Clc S1 lanat•u~ ~6
Cit: Umvcrsll)' ~9. Hudson W~s1crn

...
South
Dulw 70. Gt.•ur):la '1\.'\'h 61

Nonhmor ~9. M1 Gilelld 4~
Nonvalt. 51.1 Paul R7, Collins Wes~an
Rnen"e 74
Olm1~ Falls 49. Rocky River 40
Ontano 77. Rivrrdale SS
' hrm:a 67, N Royal! on :'14
Piqua 47. St Marys 46
Pleuant 100, N Union 62
Plymou1h 70. Monroeville 61
Porlsmoulh Clay 82. Lucrumlle Vul·
ley68
Portunoulh E M MandttSicr :'12
~malunins Vnl 11. SrMnhill!-1011 60
Rtc:h!llVnli Inti 61 Nur1hmont ~2
Rtom Vu:w 67, W Hohra ~2
Rock H1ll6l . Fr.mkhn r-umiii."C Gn.•cn

7K

Cu~ahOJII

14. Lltuinillc b,
Norlhwe~tlcrn 6. Umb 6, l'ultunn ;'i ,
Art!WIIs Sl ;'i, TOLEDO .t M"~'~"l"ri

,

Cin
Cm
Ck
Ck

PriiiCCIOO 55. Mllfon144
Seven Hills 62. Fehchy-Fmnkhn
.
SycllmCn' 70. Middktown .as
Tul'(lin 41 , Norwood .J6
Ben~t.hl.'lint: 63, Tol BuwJht.-r :'II
East Tecb 8:\, G~mbur~Gr~n

Olr. ftK - '
•
l)nnbury Ute•i"c Itt FLmurm St
W&lt;ndclift 72
Oay Carrull6l. Mu.lt.llt1nwn 1\!nwu;k

30. DcPnull9. S~an Frtuk.i!k.'tll!l, Portland

I

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~D

· Othrrs noceivlna t'utr•: N~:hrud;.u
60. Mqrylanll 5J, 'Tufm~ 47, Southcrn Cui
4~. Memph1~ .W, Auburn .\3. C1•lora~•'

o1

Canton McKinley 66. Mentor 61
Cnrduaal K6. Berkshire 67
Cunhnarun ~6. R1dgedalc J9
On A~n 51, Ctn. Marlemont.49
On CoiCnala 66. Cin Win1on Woods

·'

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11
ll
211
2..
16

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19.1

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Wa41illlt011 Sl. 74, Anz.oo;1 S1

Ill.~

491

Big Wnlnul 76 JOMihan Atder :'IIJ
Blulflun 66, ~nt.-ttvtlle '\I
80(kms ,7, MuL~Icr S.J
Bryo~n 69, Sho:rwOUIJ Futf'\llCW 54
Calv;vy Chr 6J XetUtt Ou 4H
Cnnal Fulton NW 76 Ouppewa67
Canl~n Gl~nO a k 69. Wunsler 65

Wdlcr Sr 72. S..'f'Mtenln S&amp;. 67

l. C.-ctlcln (37!,, . 20-0 1.021
I
2. Oltl tlontinion (l) .ti'J.I 9112'
2
l.s..lonl(ll ........... .lt-1 '""'
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4. Loub~!fet:IL .. ... IY..2 '• Kif
4 ·
~ - North c;:'oroltna . 19-1 • 11~3
1 fl
6 Geortda. .. _
16-4 H21
17
1, Alnbama...... ... . 17-"' 69ol '
~
lt. Texas' , ............... IS.;\ 6¥1
10
9. TII.W'ICPtt .... ... .. 16- 7 616 '
9
10. VifJIIIIQ .
15-4 660
K
II. 4U ............ IK· I 619 I 14
12. Km\lill.'i ................ 16-.1 :'itl6
12
1). Aoritht .... ....... 16-:'1 !l.'l
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!19

N&lt;- 9'1. Cll P.&gt;ly·SLo ..

1\ts&lt;od"""

•
:•

8Aiav•ll71. Be1hei-Tate ~~~
Berne Union 76. Tree or Life 71 12

Cin

F•rWN

New LondoR 42, Nhlwnd Crnlvtcw
:14

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()lo

BoiM= St. K6. Cal Sr .4 ~ullrrl!"' M
Columiiu Sa. 71, Air Fun.-c 61
Frrsoo &amp; MO. tbwOUI 74
•
Gonup 77. Loyola Marymount 7'\ ·
Idaho ~7 . UC lntne ..0
•
Montuaa St. IlK. hlahn St. 7o4
N A"""" 74. CS N&lt;lllltri~JIC 6.'

'lltti,T.., 2.1;;..,. ln11te
l4cll' wvmen't ,'vllp basketball poll, ,
f witb liJJI•p)KC VOICI ui &lt;p.reltlbcJel,
~ lhrwlh Feb. 1. lotld poems baled
' on 2.i pniQIJ r... fiJM~,~(Ite lhrouah
one poiM ror a 2.-.,a.ue 901e and last
...... nlriki-c;

•

19, Tiffin Columbian ~I
Auturo 79, O.Oiinn Falls ~2
A\Oon Lake 17 , Fatrvtew Park 14

TuiA IJ6. Tcli.US Clwb;_tiiW 79

or-.

I

oiva, do henlby jjva -

Trv)' St. B7. Mn.-K11n1111 City Ill
Tulane $4, MU~q~~ttte S3
W Illinois 72. 'i011np10Wn S. ~

New Jersey. 7 ~p.m. ·
7:30 p.m
Millllnlll:a • a.rtone, 7::\0 p m
-MI'IewYork.8p.m
l
•
CLEVELAND a' Mllw11ukee, 1!30
"' pm
,
'
- · O a l l u . 8:l0pm.
l'loi"''" • ""'"""'· 10 p.m.
L.A.I.oli&lt;n •¥1. L.A. C~,.... . II A...
helm. Calif, IO:i!O ~~
,
Atlttllit•OoldotiSt4JO:JOp.m.
...
"! 1 ~- •
. '

· tollege 'poll ·

Ameho 7:'1. Wcslerrt Brown 58
An1herst 74. Bay 66
Ansonia61, Venwlles60
Anlwerp 51, Delphos J~ff~oon ~ -'

Berea S7. Brunswick 42

N. Olmsted 40, W~lake 3~
New Bolton n. s Wdmer 74 (OTJ
. Nt:w K110-.ville 81. Uf'Ptr 5( toto Val

S. Central 71 . Mapk:lun 41
S. Chrul~slon Soot I~~ ern

Lorwn Ktng 60, Ck E.1st J:'l
l:..uth.:'rnn W 42, Lalu~ woOO St Auguume Itt
Mamflelcl M;Kiison47, Orrvtll~ J:'l
M:mslitkl Sl Pt'l~r s 61 , L.uc:\S 10
Map~on 50 MonmeviUe 4'i COTJ
M.tr.~~~alha 0• 66. DclnwW"C Ou. 27
M.llp.arctla b4, Mtl:tn &amp;.hson :'il
M.uionCath 61 , Col A~:d.!my411
Manon lAJ&amp;:al6ot. Amunia 19
Mnnon RI VI:I Val M ' Bu~.:ke yc v oil.

Be:Ucvuc 62. Bu~;yr u s 57

H. Central Sf, Monlpelier 43

m~:'l6

Toledo 6'1. AU.. 6.1

V~Wf a1

s

7~. TcnnL"SS(C

L.auuiD~~a'64

,·,

Ada ~8 . Hardrn Northern ~~ !OT)
Adrna81 . S. Gallia ~4
Akron FirestOI"'li' 96, Orr-'lille 711
Akron Mnnd~eSicr'9~. Covtllfry K7
Akron Spring :'19, B~rlln Cen1er
Wcs~em RCietW 4a
Alliance ~0. Mus1llon Perry 49101')
Amanda-Ciean:reek 74, Col At::adt:·

A~hllllld

S1. 7:'1
SW MlsSOIIIri S. 82, llkJi;ut1 S!: M
SE Mtssoun

Tuo.t~.y•• . . -

'

Saturday's adlon

N.lowa 511, Wu:hitn St. !;&amp;
Ohio 'SI. 60. Wucon~in .u
Ohio 79, Bull S1 58
S. IIJinoit 80. Dnakc 62

.~ .a '1)110nlo, 1 p m
S&amp;-ramenro a1 Saa ANoDio. lt:JO p m
Wlllhi•.... at U1ah, 9 p.m

JJ•~""•
t
f
;a-vp ~ w~n

CJnLinn.Mi 90, Ot.PIIul ~3
Clovelond St 14. WriJht Sl. 71 ((IT)
E. Mu;higuiOO. Ccnl. M1chtpn 9-4
Ill ·Oucqo 60, Wis ·Gn:tn. B,ty ~K
llhnois St 69, Bradley 67
Kansas 82. Ndornslto 'n IO'TI
Loyo~Q. Ill. 78, Wia.-Mdwaukec 60
Munl, ONo 7~. Kenl 60
Mtchl&amp;llll8~, Michil4f! SC 6:'1
Mlnae10111 7.S, Nanhwes1ern'S6

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Bellaire Sl John'• 96, ConatiOn Val
93(201')
BcllerOMaioe ~. Urbliau 21

Mdford Ow 77, H.wllon Otr. ~

Ala.· BirminJh;lm 68. Cin..:iM!IIi 64

MlNQUri 85. Kansu Sl 6J

Toni&amp;bt'i ca-

!

Stale o1

16~

18\l

L.A.t......,l%9. w.....11•• 99

• · 25 N CorolinuSt., . 14-"

In ~nee with llWised Code No. 323.08 of
centa oleKII
,
dollaJs tax

14
14)..

Sdnday'IICOftl

i

TVC wrestling
meet slat~
fo~ Saturday.

:WO

16 31

2

'~

Owrlone 99, New York 93
Orlando 101, HouJton 90
lndiiU\1192. New Jmcy 90
ChtCDJo91. Statde 84
Mtnnc101a 103, Panland 101
Moami KO. CIJ!VELAND 16
Vnn..-ouvcr IOl Boston 91
Pboemx 106, Dtlroil fl? · ,
Denver II~. Atlwa 104

17. Genrgc

~

-~

••

t

S6,.

-••

!

Warren Local ( 13-3) drew a first
round bye and will play the winner of
the Sheridan-wa.,hington CH game at I
Chtllicothc on' Feb. Is' al 8 p.m.
In Division I, Manetta,·I0-6, will:
play Athens 5-11, on Feh. 21 at6:15:
ut Lancaster. Logan, Ill-7. will hattie t
Chillicothe on Feb. 21 , at K p.m. at i
Lanca.,ter.
;
In Dtvision IV play at Alcxand~r,
Green (9-6) drew a first round bye,)
and wtll play the wtnner nl the 0
Miller (6-10) and Eastern (7- 10)!
game nn Feh. 26. M!llcr and Eastern
collide on Fch. 21 at.?·p.m.
•
Symmes Valley (8-K) will hattie:
Ironton St. Jnc (6, 12) at 6:15 p:m. J
and South Gallia (4-.11) will' hattld
Smlthem (5-11) at K p.m.nh Fe h. 22. t
Winners nf th~ second and tlurd :
hmckcts clash nn Fch. 26 at 8 p.m.l
Two winners wtll advance tnthe dislncl lnurnamcnt

r. , .. ,

----

Cont'trenct USA

WilmlnJIOn II . Maryville. Tenn 72

MltiAulfi• hay 86. E lllinoia 76

~turday'• IICOl'eS
Detroit 90,- lmoy 1~.
Toronto II 0, PhoetaiJL 86
M11mi 71 , CLEVELAND 66
Dallas 100. Utah 'II
Philldelphin 109, MllwMik« 100
Socmmtn~o 113. Denvu 101
LA. Chppen 110, Golden St• 9K

•

••
II Southeastern Ohio 'League teams. I'

Bates of 'IBxatlon -for 1996

In punwance of law. I. Howard E. F~ T....,rw Of Meigt
R- of Taxation tor the Tu Year ol1998.

wtth a lot of intensity," Marauder
coach Ron Logan Sllld after the
gumc. "ThiS was one of the most
TOWNSHIPS
phystcal girls haskethall games that
I have seen in I \).ears of coachmg SCHOOL DISTRICTS
the girls. I don't know why some
coaches have to try and wm ball
games by 40-50 points. We played
13 players, and tl;cy played seven.
·Coyner scored 10 of her 27 pomts m
the founh period and came out olthe
game with I : ~0 left." Logan then
renccted back to th~ 1985-87 seasons when several Urnes the Marauders had 25-3Q point leads against
Wilcoxen's Belpre teams at halltime
and the Maruuders starters played
only the hrst couple mi.nutcs in the
second hall'. "11'1 knew then ( 19!15LETART .
87), whut I know now, we would
' worse."
'
have done it to' them, only
OUYI
Coyner, who is headed to \he Unt·
versily. of Massachusetts on. ;o hasketbnll scholar-hip led all scorers
with 'P pomt.s. Crystal Qoiii added
14 and Mandy Goin and Kristy
Rhodes added 12 points each .
Belpre hit 30 of 70 from ihe field
including four of 165 from three
poii11 'range foi 43%. Belpre went to '
the line 20 times and hit17 for 85%.
Belpre lind 43 rebounds led by
Mandy Goin with l3 and Crystal
Rhodes added 10. Coyner had nine
of Belpre's 20 alsists'. B~lprc had I~
steal• led by Rhodes with six, I 2
tumo\;en and 16 fouls .
Meig&amp; placed one girl in double
fiJures sophomore Tricia Davis led
the way with 14, Meip hit 12 of 61
from' the floor • for a cool 20%,
incllldina two of three from three
poinl : Moip went to the line
, 271imes hall hit IHor
Meip
tilid JlllboUnda.Jed by Davia with
~
\
' • &lt;!Jte MEIGS oa P8a&gt;e 8) '

.

.419

BitTon
Minnesota 66. Ohto S1 64

S9

10

:'19

Atl1ntlt 10
Dayton 81 , Ttmplt 65

Vira•pia Tech $9, Dayton $1
W. kcntucky68. Lou&amp;siaiWI Tet,:h 61
Wnk.r Fotelt 74, Maryland 69
WuMhrop H. Md.·Ba.llirntll'f Count~

~

~·ti~.:h

Sunday's actlop

Vlrclnn&amp; 73, Florida St 60

"~

hdlkDIYL.A. Won ......... 34 12 .139

-....,....,..
Cenlr.al Sl 83. Wayne.

Vanclrrbill74, Floridn 6)

24

'

Shawnee S1 Ill . RIO GRANDE 61
U~81 . TaffinS6
Wabh 61 . Cedarville 42

VL Commonweal1h 17, William&amp;.
Mory 50

16~

1

61)-44.

'

14 .696
I. .'19
24 .411

61

57

14

.

~-

Findlay 61, Ohio Domtnu.:an 61
Mounl Vemoo Naz.areot 62, Malone

n, P0111mou&amp;b W

Mumt E :16, Cov•naton 31
Mll1111 Edi10n 73, Oak Harbor 61

~1

Mltl~c.nr..-,

T......... 60, Wolford 41
Te~~Qe~~Ce Tech U , E keM~teky 75
Tc11.u SOIIIhcm 77. AlabamD S1. 72
(Ofl
Tn..a.-oop 70, Appolll.~iao St

WES1DN CONFERENCE
Ita
ll .L fill. til

........ ............... 32
• IIIah ................. ll"
Mo-o ............. 22
Dallas ................ ·~
DenYa" ...... . .. IS
S.. Antonio ......... II
v........ ............. 9'

New Ot1eMs 100, SW l..ouiuMD7r.
Nofth Cwoti• 99, Middle Tnn &lt;19
Old Doooi .... 63, Ricll....t Sl
s. c:.woa s.. n Florida AAM 6S
SEt...JoiliMo14.-SI
Samford 83, Fla. I - - 81
Saudt Corolloa 80, UU 6S
South Flonda 63. Ala.·Birmiqham

McOerinoll NW

56

'*"~
Baklwi•Wallacf 77, Heidelbet&amp;45
Capital 66, Muskinaum 62
'"'"' Cluroll74, Ohio Nonhero 69
· Manetta 69, Hnam ~9
Mbunt Union 86. Otterbein 58

60

22~

c...r.tDtv-

~rat ................ JJ

N C...111a St :18, a.-!4
N C. Cllllrione 75. JD.ma MJdiJOn ~~
H.C.~66. Coacal Carol&amp;lllll

....

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CAI,l.NOW •••

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GALLIPOLIS

PT: t;tLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
'

992-2156

f

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:,

II

,,

"

�I

\

""""

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The Daily Sentht.e l

Pomeroy • Mlddlaport, Ohlq

Page 8 • The o.lly Santlnel

Conciliatory tone masks looming budget
. By ALAN FRAil

ble Whitewater indictments. hearings into questionable cmnpaign conlribulions ot- other ethical issues sour putisan rellllions.
"The president's budget will be taken seriously. we will examine it, we
will consider it a legitimate point of departure from which to move toward
a final product," House Majority' Leader Diclc Amiey, R-Thus, said man
. interview Thursday in which he repeatedly sounded conciliatory thelpcs.
.Antley said Republicans would n01 renew theireffot-ts 10 abolish the Education Oepartmcnt or "rein the excesses" of the Environrncntall'rolection
Agency, thanks to Democrats' political ability to tum sueh efforts against the
GOP.
Republicans' goals, hc;&gt;wever, have nc;&gt;t·changed from the shrink-the-gov·emment agenda they tried muscling through Congress in 1995 and 1996 with
limited success. Rather, the shift is a strategic one because GOP lawmakers
now believe they will retain congressional majorities for several years and
can slow their pace.
·
"We've got time," Armey said, adding: ··one of the things I've learned
from the la5ttwo years is don't overreach."
Butthat stillleavesa face-offhetween familiar foes who know each other's goals and wealmesses. GOP lawmakers sense Clinton badly wants a balanced-budget deal to ~ement his legacy. The president realizes the Republicans are gun-shy after his attacks on them over spending on Medicare, Med-.
icaid, educatic;&gt;n and the envimnment.
Clinton's budget will seek nearly SI00 billion in tax cuts over five years,
about half what Republicans want in si~ ·years. ·
.Republican~ are focused on slashing the capital gains laX. rate on property sales and granting $500 laX credits to many children. Clinton ·envisions

Aa~CII'IIIid

11

PrMa Wr(ter
WASHINGTON- I'Rsidenl Clinton and congressional Republicans ~Y
it is lime to cooperate over balancing the budget and other issues. But wliile
their tone is decidedly wann and fuzzy, make no mistake: Their conHicting
qcndas and evenly matched power bases presage battles to come.
Republicans JliQmise they wiU not slap the time-honored "dead on arrival"
lagon Clinton's ne\vest btidget-bala~ing package when he unwra~ his fiscal 1998 spending blueprint Thursday. Clinton said last week that both sides
mus~ "meet each &lt;;&gt;!her in good faith" as they try to ~trike a compmmise.
But even as they
that vc;&gt;ters want them to work together, Clinton
and Republicans cling to competing views of what government should do
- and each can use votes or vetoes to derail the other.
. Both sides say they want a balanced budget by 2002: But ~linton wants
more spending for Medicare and education, smaller tax cuts and a more
..activist government than Republicans prefer. . .
·
"They still have cc;&gt;nflicting visic;&gt;ns about the way things ought to be,"
says Charles 0. Jones, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin whc;&gt;
has written more than a dozen boOks on national politics.
Jc;&gt;nes, though, is amc;&gt;ng many people who believe the time is ripe fc;&gt;r the
grand budget compromise that eluded Clinton and the OOP last year.
Why? Both sides crave a major legislative accomplishment to tout. In addi~ion, Republicans want to prove they arc nQI the e~tremists that Democrats
have portrayed them. and many Democrats want the balanced-budget mon·
key off their backs.
.
Each desires quick action while the economy is su_ong and !'efore possi-

assen

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battle~

Page7 •

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Wife who sits at home while husband runs around is a jerk

•
moe mOdel! venions ofbolh proposals plus laX breaks for college educa·;
tionllldjob tnining.
_
On Medicare, Clinton's ~eCCht piopouiiO saveS 138 billion over six years
cdpl him towud last year's GOP fiJUR of $158 billion. But the two sides.
Jlill bavc biJ policy differences.
.
.:
The pteSident's savinJS COIM 1IIOilly from ft!lluced payments to hosJH-:
w 1, doctors aad.health maintenance orpnizalioas. Republicans also want
to prod the elderly to shift to managed-care plans.
'
Clinton will propose extra money for schools. a restoration of $16 billi01t
to the recently !rimmed welfare program and expandeil health insurance cov~
erage for children and many jobless workers. RepubliC8\IS are m·c;&gt;re inter-.
ested in creating vouchers 10 help families afford private schools, making il
easier for wc;&gt;rkers to gel ·time off instead of overtimt pay and building an;
anti-missile defense system.
.
•
Chastened by their political defeats over the past two years, Republicans
no longer threaten federal shutdowns to attain their budget priorities and dd
not speak of revolution. Instead, their ge.ntler rhetoric highlights improving:
Americans' quality of life.
•
"We won the revolution," said Sin. Connie Mack, R·Fia., noting Clinton's remark last year that the era of big gc;&gt;vemment has ended. "The rev •.
olution is over."
But even amid harmonious sounds fmm both sides, compromise is
'guaranteed because each must simultarieously strive to distinguish itself
the competition. .
"The American pec;&gt;ple want us to find ways to work together, but
stand up for our principles," said Se~ate Minority L.eader Tom Daschle,

,,
; Dear A11n Landers:. I am writing in
response to the woman who signed
herself "Nil! Dumb in Missouri.'' She
Landers
is married to a cheating husband, but
1996. l...ol l AlliCic:l
(he's absolutely certain he will nev11-.a S)'nd01e W Crc.JlOtl SyndiCMe.·,_.
. ~r leave her. People wc;&gt;nder why so
many wives put :up with husbands
who cheat: Well, I can tell them
regarding that letter. Keep reading for
because I'm c;&gt;ne of those wives:
,
We have three children under 12 more:
From Atlanta: I love m)\ 1h!JSband
years of age. Even though "JQC" 'Is
in spite of the fact that he has been
~Ill much of a husband, he's a wonderful father. Of course, my priile is . seeing a divorcee for 10 years. He
hurt, "ut I am determined to stay in will never leave me (c;&gt;r her because
Ibis marriage until our last child is out she bas no interest in rem&amp;rfYing. Her
of high school. I owe them that. Sign alimony payments are hugj:, and she
wants tc;&gt; keep on collectiqs. forever.
Hanging Tough in Tampa
·: Dear Tampa: I was surprised atthe . We live well. I have his·, ~ame and
t~riety of responses I received SQCiat slllius, and our child,l'en have an

Ann

1

me --

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Ohio Gov.
George Voinovich warned Saturday
that pending White House proposals
to cap federal funding c;&gt;n health'care
for the poor would cause financial
catastrophe for the states.
Voinovich issued his warning' as
the National Governors' Association
began a four-day winter meeting.
Voinovich, a Republican and
NGA vice chairman, led the charge in
assailing an idea noatcd by the Clinton administration to cap federal
Medicaid spending to help balance
the federal budget.
' " It would be one of the largest
unfunded mandates ever imposed c;&gt;n
·states in this country,-'' the governor

said.
In Obi&lt;;&gt;, he said, "It wc;&gt;uld ·be
dcv'astating to c;&gt;ur state budget."

Medicaid is a health insurance
program for the .JlOOr and disabled
that is funded jointly by .the states and
the federal government.
On average, Medicaid consumes
20 'percent of state budgets but in
some states, including Ohio, the fig,
ure is more than 30 percent, limiting
the amount .of funds. available for
' education and other needs.
Governors said they are worried
that if the federal share is capped, the '
program wi II consume even larger
shares of state budgets in the years
ahead.
Medicaid costs. reflecting increasing health care costs generally, as
well as requirements for covering
• more individuals have been one of
the most rapidly escalating parts of
slate budgets over the past decade.
The administratic;&gt;n is considering
including the cap idea in the 1998

budget that President Clinton will ingly larger numbers of their welfare
unveil Thursday.
.
recipients into jobs.
..
· Nevada Gov. Bob Miller, a DemoAlthough the NGA is yet to c(\me
era! and NGA chairman, said states to an official position. many goverare for balancing the federal budget nors want changes in the law to allow
but the Medicaid cap proposal is war- for welfare coverage of legal immirisome.
grants and to increase child can;
"We think it is achievable without funds for poor mothers who are
placl'ng such undue burdens on the forced to go to work.
states and some of these social pro"If yc;&gt;u don ' t put adequate fuudgrams." Miller saill of a balanced ing into the welfare provisions. you
budget.
will not be able I&lt;;&gt; sustain the
He added: ".We are opposed to per lorigtcrm gool c;&gt;f taking pec;&gt;ple off
capita caps. If there is going to ·be public assistance and placing them in
consideration of per capita caps then the work force," Miller said.
Many Republicans on Capitol
the Congress and the White House
nee.d to take a look at the whole pro- Hill. however. are reluctant to reopen
gram."
. the wetr~aw.
Voinovich said whatever changes
Another maj()f issue for the governors is the landmark 1996 welfare are needed. including pqssihlc
. reform law passed by Congress that changes· in the immigration proviwill require states to more increas- sion~, involve only "tweaking'~ the

•

Your partn~r tnprot«lkln

Southern Local
: · RACINE
OAPSE 453. Monday, 6:30 p.m. at
the bus garage. Election of officers.

Downing, Childs,
Mullen, Musser
Ill E. Second St., Pomeroy

,.

' 992-3381 .

..

·Peruvian security force maneuvers

around the amhassador's residence .
in one incidcm. commandos made
ohsccne gestures at the compound,
&lt;Jrawing rebel ghnfire.
Fujimori llcw to Washington after
ihc meeting, and spoke Sunday at an
international small·business confer.9ncc there. Today. he was to mect
with U.S. Secretary· of State
Madeleine Albright and give a news
conference.
• About 20 Tupac Amaru rebels
sciz.cd the compound Dec. 17 in a
daring raid on a gala cocktail party.
\1cmanding the release of hundreds of
their jailed comrades. The rebels
seized . mor~ than 500 guests as
bo~lages, ))ut have released most of
them.
Fujimori has admitted that recent

as

nc~.:cssary.

Fujimori remains adamant that he
will not free the rebels already in
prison. saying Peru docs not want to
·return to · the past .after gaining the
upper hand in a 17-ycar war against
the.rebels.

• . A:11.ANTA- Fewer people contid~red air bags and other safety
equipment important when choosing
car last year, according to a survey
teleased Sunday.
'· Fifty-seven percent of respon.~ents co~si4ered air bags an impor.
iimt factor in their decision. The
'Polu:ing&lt;:o. said it\ iis ann.ual survey.
'A: year ago. tbe number was 8l perjent. ~ number who said air bass
weN 1101 important at ~II inctease(lto
';4 ~ra:nl from 6 percent.
·
:• 1J1e survey also said 88 perc.ent of
j!etpondenll were at least somewhat
•influ!:nced by news reports about
·_,-ehlc:le safety. Nearly everyone who
wa. ukcd ~ 96 percent- said they
i.d heard such reporiS about tile
~tial dlnprs of air bqs.
~ • Air bals. which ,in Rate at speeds
• :-p • 2C)O mph, are oredited with sav:Qia :t.7!1g ljpa in IUJh-IJield cruh-

a

. Mc;&gt;st of the odulis who d.icd were
smaller women, and about one-third ·
were elderly. Most of ihc victims
were not wearing scat belts: air hags
arc intended to save lives in conjunction with scat ·hclts.
The survey showed some consumers have major mio;conceptions
about the extent llf the threat
"They're talking about decapitation, suffocation ... it's ju~t un)&gt;elityable/' Kinney said.
' Tlte su~ey questioned j,eople

lool!jn1 tO buy a new or used car .froin
a new car dealership. Federal law
re9uires new cars to have standud
d~ver- and ~-Side a1r b~ by
this year, followed ti11998 by alll•ght
· trucb. ·
. .
This wu t~ first time si~ce the .
aurvey be1an m 199~ that the 1mpor· .
· ~ of tafety !'jllpmellt dt;c:hnod
for COM I ...... Ki!IIOY•aaid. And it
are also blamed for the wa 1101 Just air belli .- ihe impor- ·
f/ 3 cltlldrellllld 20 lduJta ill &amp;-.of llltlo)Oak liiku llld .-:dOD
~ IVhere the vic- . conaoiiiiOaAiiol4-~thedrql

·='

M
. ..rwlle. wot~ld llaYeawvjvod;
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POMEROY -- An internet users
meeting will be held at the Pomeroy
Library, Tuesdli)'. 6:'30 p.m. for any·one interested in learning mc;&gt;re or
sharing information alibut the Inter·
ilet.
. k
.
' I

MIDDLEPORT · -• 1 Middleport
Masonic LQdge 363, F&amp;AM, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m Mas(fllic Temple.
Refreshments.
L

EAST MEIGS -- Special meeting ·
ALFRED -- The Orange Towwof Eastern Local Board of Education, ship Trustees. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
7:30p.m. Monday night in the school home of clerk, Osie FollrQd.
library. To be considered, certified ..
1'.1
and non-certified emplc;&gt;yee conlfllets, WEDNESDAY
contract document from the architects
RACINE · ·-· Pomeroy-Racine
regarding new cc;&gt;nstru~tion, and res- Lodge 164'. at the RaCine Lodge hall.
olution on pmfit:iency testing.
. Refresh"!ents.
MIDDLEPORT __ The Middleport
Literary Club will meet 2 p.m.
Wednesday .. home of Mrs.,. James
Dtehl.

. • RAClNE -- Racine Chapter 134,
POMEROY -- The Book Shelfers
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30 Mc;&gt;n- Writing Gm~p . Wednesday, 7 p.m. at
day at the lodge hall. School c;&gt;f the Pomemy Public Ubrary.
instruc.tioli informalic;&gt;n will he
-- l'riends of the
Library, 7 p.m. Monday· at the
Pomeroy Library. Everyone wet-

of
Wednesday, 6:30
garage.

Litter may pe P
record .for Dalmatians
'

.

'

'
, WEST PALM B&amp;ACH.
Fla. (AP) both from the eastert\_Qregon city of
...._ It wasn't 10 I Dalmatians, but for IPendleton, were driving along a desa while it seemed . like 2-year-old olate road late Friday when their car
Princess Diana would reach that · 'began to float. They bailed out and
made their way to opposite stdes of
mark.
· Her firstborn arrived 4 p.m. Fri- the flooding dit~h.
day: Four hours later. ·a secc;&gt;nd. one
followed., and another after that every
15 minutes until past midnight. In the
end, Diana was surrounded by 17
~ppies.

1996RANGER
· SUPERCAB, 4X2 ·
Spcl.
M1n.
Transrillulon, Slul Bsw Al-ton
floor · corwqt!tlte, AC, elec AM/I'M
st.reo/ca•stclk, 1uper · •lngtne
handling pec:kage, rnr jump ..It,
10/40 lpllt benCh IHt
1-4

· Engine,

5

MSRP BEFORE DIS(OIJIIIS $15,112

1997 ESCORT LX

4 Qoor, A/C, driver'• door remc? emn.
rear window tlefrolttlr, 2.0L tngtr/t, IS
manual tr101 IItie, ·lloor milt, front
...-r, AMJI'M etereo c-. rldlo

ISRP •FOIE DISCOUNIS Sll;SOO

1997 EXPLORER 4x4
2-DRSPORT

Capt chall'll, aport trim, rlldlo elec
w/caas/clock, 5 lpd m•nllll 0/D ...n.. _
4.0 Ut.r VI engine, 1'231 Owl All··t.nraln
urea. floor mtrta, tliggage rKk

MS1P IEFORE DISCOUIIIS $24,525 .

B~ Ed Petei;'SOD, manager
Social Security Athen5 Office

.

These latter numbers are within
the range of everyday.e~perience. But
In 1995 Sc;&gt;Cial Security trust funds once the numbers get into seven dig,
paid out $317 billion to nearly 43 its--the millic;&gt;n plus range-.everymillion beneficiaries ...and the Social thing begins to get a little fuzzy
Security system enjoyed a surplus c;&gt;f . around the edges.
about $58 billion.
The Social Security trust funds are
The problem with large•numbers ' a gqQd example. Discussic;&gt;ns of a
is that they have no .connection I&lt;;&gt; wmker's. future retirement plans in
everyday life. Talking. about millions which yearly benefits of $5,000,
of dollars or millions c;&gt;f people is $10,000 or $15,000 are mi~ed with
very differe,nt from talking alxiui a · discussions c;&gt;f eventual trust fund
family of five . . .Of a classroom with .. reserves of more than $10 trillion.
Yet. .
30 ·students . . .or a sala'{' of $50,000.

'Star Wars' blasts com petition
LOS ANGELES -The power of
the force propelled "Star Wars" to the .
top of the oox office, leaving all other cpmpetition in the dark side of the
galaxy.
The second opening of the refurbished film was the top-selling January weekend release ever, figures
released Sunday showed.
· "Star Wars" collected an estimated $36.2 million over the weekend,
dwarfing the nation's No. 2 film,
" Jerry Maguire;" which toek in $5.6
· million.
The movie, with enhanced special
effects and a few new scenes, had the
ninth-highest three-day OtJ!lning ever,
accmiling to estimates from Exhibitor
Relaiions Co. Inc.
·
The epic about a motley band of
heroes fighting an evil
empire'
time
in a
far
forin for a generation.
.
Americans still captivated by "the
ultimate s!Qry c;&gt;f good and evil" .
flocked tc;&gt; theaters to see it again on
the big screen, and many brought
their children, said Tom Sherak,
chairman of 20th Century Fo~
Domestic Film Group.
"It's part of our culture," he said.
"It's one of those rare instances
where a movie becomes our best
friend."
Adam Gordon, · 26, and brother
· Eric. -23. bc;&gt;th of Los Angeles, said
they had seen the film a total 'of 83 .
times. On Sunday, they stood in. lin~

to see it again in Shennan Oaks.
An afternoon showing at the theater enchanted Lizy Destin. 13. of
Beverly Hills. She had never seen the

.someaway.

.

.

1997 VILLAGER GS WAGON

Rear window cleho.t, T·p•llnger ltlltlng, epeed IXIIIIrol,
power group, ·· eu.t . pow11 mirrors, power wllldclwi/IOCtl
prtvecy gtua, 111111'1' reck, 1ntl-lock lnltn, keyt11a entry, llr COIIII/hntlr.

MSRP IEFORE DISCOUNT $26,510

•

:$20 56250

.1997 G~AND MARQUIS GS

l'ronf a 111r C.,... floor ~. lfl'ld control, rlld~l epolke
..... - · · · power lock group, tuumlnllled IDtly lyalem,
engine, IIIIo 0!1) n., lleyleM IDtly lyitem.

• MSRP IEFOIE DISCOUNT·$24,210

$2023950

•

each year. Th•• surpluSts mvested'"

AMONG THE•••

"It was excellent." she said. 'I
loved Harrison Ford. I hope he gets
Princess Leia."
"The graphics are better and so is
the sound," said 11-year-old B~ndan
Gibson of Van Nuys, an old video
hand.
· In iis 1977 release, " Star Wars"
grossed $323 million in North America - then a record and still fourth
on the all-time list. The re·release i•
sure to push "Star Wars" higher on
that list, Sberak said .
The secopd and third chapters of
"The Empire Strikes
the ·
aDd "Return of the .
1QR1\; ,,I~ will be re-released
~~-

.

PET VALENTINES%

......ot

'
'the
new release
in the
top 10,
.
'd,'' starring Tim
Roth and the late Tupac Shakur.
opened at No: 9 by CQIIecting $2.8
million. .
Twc;&gt; other debuts with big-name·
stars opened outside the tc;&gt;p I0.
"Meet Wally Sparks." ·a comedy
with RQdney Dangerfield as asleazy
:rv talk·show host, took in $2.2 million.
"The Shadow Conspiracy," a
political thriller starring Charlie
Sheen as a White House aide who
learns of a plot against the president.
drew $1.4 million in ticket sales.

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(Sl

"FOR PETS ONLY"
WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 13TH IN
Als!&gt; a special secion fQr In Memory Valentine Pets.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

VALENTINE LOVE LINES

PENDLETON, Ore. (AP) · Sheriff Jobn Trumbo used an c;&gt;ld· Tashioned melhQd - his lassO'- to
- I):SCIJCl I! rna~ stranded by . a flash
flOOd.
'
•. · ':I'm not acowboy, butl've done

•
:·· ·: : ~ome ,ropin&amp;ofcows,"Trumbo~id. ,
:
' • Jon White •nd Mike McAllister.

..PER PICTURE

A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE

Remember .that "pedal someorte tbJs
Valentine's Day :With a message In

PRE~PAID

The Daily Sentinel
• Sweethearts • Moms &amp; Dads • GrandtJarents • Teachers
• Babysitters • Friends

1

: CLEVELAND (AP) - G'day,
mate! How aboljl some shrimp on the
· barbie?
·
.
. · An Australian man is .offering his
..oice to read that line- or any oth·
· .er - with an authentic accent from
. J)own Under. To drum up business,
Rick Feldman has placed a classified
· ',.ad promoting it.
· ~ "People seem so taken by the
. ; voi~. loving the accent, so I thought,
:'Why not put. an ad in nnd see what
· •llajlpens1' " said l"eldman, 28, of
. •Melbourne. "They 4o tend to over, pronounce the aeceilt in the com. ' mercials. We don'tall talk like that.:•

pies are wh•• is imponant.

PICTURE YOUR PET

movie, even on video.

• With the hype from the. Disney
· ;.ovie "I 0 I Dalmatians," Martine ·
. expects the otherS ·tO sell quickly at
: $300 a female and $250 a male .
.

The large numbers associated with U.S. Government , Treasury bonds
the Social Security trust funds are and earns interest. The surplus--or
critical to each worker and his m her reserve funds--will be used to help
depe!'(lents .. And .it is the financing pay for the benefits of the large baby
principles behind the numbers th~t boom generation when they begm to
are really important. and more east- retire arol\nd 20 10.
ly understoc;&gt;d.
•·
Current and future public discusSc;&gt;Cial Security ·trust funds are sions about trust fund size and sotaccumulated from the Social Sec uri- vency will need wide, informed party ta~es that you ~nd your employer · ticipation by everyone affected by the
pay, Most ofthatts then patd out to Social Secutity system .
Social Security beneficianes. But . . So don't be immobilized by .t he
the money system IS currently sheer size of the numbers inv'o)ved.
~nanced so that there .is. a surplus Remeillber that tile financing princi-

·

· "I said.- 'Maybe I'd get lucky and
get a bake&lt;:s dozen,"' said Diana's
owner, John Martine. "I got a baker's
dozen and then some.''
Martine thinks the litter, which
included one stillborn, may he a
record for Dalmatians, besting a lit.ter of 16 born in Ohio last year. He
. plans ·to. contact the Guinness Book
of Records and the American Kennel
Club.
·
Guinness lists the largest known
litter ~~ny type of dog at 23 pu~.
. a recc;&gt;r ·ed three times. .
'
. ' Th~ pu ics - I 0 males and six
· females - re all white, with those
trademark spots expected to show in
)bout three weeks. Martine plans to
give a pup tc;&gt; the breeder Qf the dog
that sired the pups, and
. also gtve

$21 861

1212

.

his wife and me. I love him but don' t waiting for him to clean up his act.;
want to b&lt;eak up his marriage for fear (Why should he?) If she thinks the ;
of anc;&gt;ther disaster. He is a friend I other woman is dying to marry her·
can talk to at odd hours and is respon- gem of a husband. she should think :
sive I&lt;;&gt; my physical needs -· whether again. Why wMid any senstb)e sm- ;
a back rub or se&lt;ual. In return, he is gle woman want to be stuck with a ;
less lonely and can talk to me about cheating jerk like that?
Dear Oceanside: That single.:
things he cannot discuss with his
wife. His children are grown. I know woman does not see him as a "cheat- ;
this relationship will ~ot _ he perm a: ingjerk." He's her escape from bore- :
nent, but for now, he s JUSt what I . dom or loneliness and fills a void in •
·nee&amp;
her life. While this certainly does not :
Oceanside, Calif.: I've never writ- · justify what the other woman is :
ten to you bef~re , but when lreud the doing, it ~)lay help yc;&gt;u understand •
.Jetter from Not Dumb m M1s- why she is doing it.
sc;&gt;uri ," I just had to speak my p1ece.
A wife who sits at home while her
Send questions to Ann Landers,
husband runs around is very dumb Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenindeed, She should leave !he alley cal tury Blvd., Sui.le 700, Los Angeles,
and g~t a life" of her own instead of Calif. 90045
.
.

h·

TUESDAY
PoMEROY ·- Chc;&gt;ice orne edu:
cators, 10 ~.m. Tuesday at the
Pomewy Library cc;&gt;nference room.
For more infonnation corilact Tammy
Jones, 992-6743.
.;

SYRACUSE -- Sulton Township
Board of Trustees regular meeting
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

Air bag threat ·impacts
on consumers' choices

" BRIAN S. AKRE
By
~P Auto .Writer

•

come.

0

police maneuvers outside the. residence could have worsened the
hc;&gt;stage crisis.
He said police who made the gestures would be pu~ished. He also said
his security forces would avoid
provocative aclic;&gt;n but would remain
deployed in strength around the compound. He said Peru would n~t stonn
the residence unless rebels harmed
the hostages.
· Japanese government spokesman
Seiroku Kajiyama said !&lt;;&gt;day that
Fujimori was sending the rebels "a
signal"that police would only attack
if the hostages were harmed. "It is
aimed at curbing a rash act on the part
of the rebels." Kajiyama said.
Fujimori also pledged to initiate a .
"prelimil1ary" dialogue with the .
rebels tc;&gt; try and end the seven-week
crisis.
He has said he might allow the
rebels to leave Peru if a third country grants them asylum. Cuba, Costa .
Rica and Guulemnla arc possibilities.
Canada's ambassador to Peru.
Anthony Vincent. wa.&lt; qu&lt;llcd Sun~ay
hy the Tomnto Star us saying.
Tupuc A!llaru rebel leader Ncst!)f
Cerpa. speaking to journalists on Saturday from the residence viatwo.way
radio. warned the government it was
not prepared 111 dn\p its main·dcmond
for the release of fellow guerrilla.&lt;.
He also said his rebelswcrc prepared to prolong the standoff us long

'

RACINE -- Racine Council, 7
p.m. Monday, at municipal building.
LETART ·- Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday at the ofljce
building.

Peruvian police honor
non-provocation order
LIMA, Peru (AP) -They drove
an armored troop carrier past the
Japanese ambassador'.s residence,
and they blasted sirens 10 dwwn out
revolutionary chants. from guerrillas
hOlding 72 hostages inside. ·· For the most part, though, police
honored ·the pledge of President·
Alberto Fujimori that they woold not
provoke the rebels. The moO!! Sunday outside the walled compound
was c;&gt;ne of restraint, with none of the actions that in earlier weeks drew
gunfire from rebels. and 'criticism
from Japan.
President Alberto Fujimori made
the pledge Saturday during a meeting
in Canada with Japanese Prime~i~i~ter Ryutaro Hashimoto . . Several
Japanese businessmen and the tountry 's ambassador are. among the
~ostages, in additi(\n to Peruvian offiCials.
Hashimoto had questioned recent

.

The Community Calendar is
published u a
service ·to DOD·
profit gnupa wjshiDa to IIDIIOUDCe
ineetiD&amp; 110d special eveDII. The
caleBclar Is- dirip to pi'OIIIOte
·sales or fulld ralsen of IIDY type.
Items are prillted u space permits
and canDOt be guart111teed to run a
·specific Dumber of days.
MONDAY ·

r..ee·

bill.
"In no case should we go back
and reopen that · argumcn 1 from
scratch," Voinovich said of the weifaro law.
Other'issues the governors plan to
address:
• Workcr-ltaining programs. ThC
federal governm~nl currently funds
more than 160 such programs. The
governors want them consolidated
into three or four block grants with
mc;&gt;re control given to the states over
how to run them.
• Superfund program1 States want
more control over the cleanup c;&gt;f tc;&gt;Xic waste sites.
• Transportation. Many states want
a.greater share of the gas tax money
that is sent to sent to Washington and
then distributed back to them by fed- '
· er~l highway officials..·

disease in the book by having sex
with her unfaithful husband. Why
does she have sc;&gt; little respect for herself! That woman needs to see a
shrink.
.
No Name, No City: I hope you
will print an&lt;llher slant on affairs. I'm
a police. ·dispatcher and a single
mother of twc;&gt;. I am also the "c;&gt;ther
woman." Varying shifts, weekend
duty and my small childre" make it
impossible for me to have a normal
social life. Most of my co-workers
are single, divorced or in (c;&gt;usy marriages. !threw out·my e&lt; because he
was doing his own shift with a
neighbor in our bed.
The man I am involved with is
stable, kind and considerate to both

•
•

.·Community calendar Understanding SociafSecuritytrust funds

Voinovich warns· against health care _funding cap
By PAUL BARTON

attentive father. Is this a perfect.
arrangement? No. Bill I see very few
perfect marriages these days, so I' m
not complaining.
Houston: This is for ."Nil! Oumb
in Missouri.'; I've had a long-term
relationship with a married man. I am·
treated royally while his wife is at
home doing laundry. I accc;&gt;ml\any my
"M.M." on business trips to exclu·
sive resorts while the wife is wiping
runny noses and sleeping alone. I was
mice the wife of a cheating man, and
it was nc;&gt; fun . It's my tum now, and
I can tell· you that being the mistress
is a lot mc;&gt;re pleasant
__ ~ .
Albany, N.Y.: "Not Dumb" is
really dumb beyond belief. She is at
risk for every sexually transmitted

•

.

.

s~

Monday, February 3,1997
.

Please ~nclose selfaddressed stamped
envelope to return .
your photo.

"PET'S NAME"
Owner's Name

..

Hurry! Deadline
·. Friday, February 7th at 3 p.m•
r--------------------~------,
I . ·VALENTI~E PETS .
IPet's Name _ _ _ __:.__ _ _ _ _ _ __
loviner's Name ____________

The Daily Sentinel
Valentine Hearts ·
111 Court Str.eet
rU181'oy, OH 4576t

-----------·-·--·-

I

IAdd~ss

__________~~---------

ICity,_ _ _ _ ___._ _ _~--IAmQunt Enclosed:
I at $6 each.
·

' .
for
·

plctu~e~ .
.

. . _.•

~----------~---------------Deadline Friday, February 7th at 3 p.m •
Mall or bring the entry form:

The Daily Se11tinel
110 court St.
Pomeroy, ohio 4$709

�.,

~~onc~ey, ~a,

....

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

"'

P8ge 8 e The Dally SenUnel

.II!MMY, February 3, 1187

1111

Pomeloy. Mlddllport, Ohio

-. ~Discouraged

·b y
;Pakistanis
trickle
•
•

...... the polls

to-

•

~

pti~~ '.·

Northwest Frontier PJoviace. where
vOOnleXIellded
lidltJII forlhe
first time. Before, only trillll chiefs
could vote.
.
Conservative Muslim leaders had
threatened to punish women who ·
tried to elt!'reise their new right, howe~er, 1111d the crowds at polling sta,
tions in the province were male' only.
The army provided security fnr 1be
election, deploying 150.000 S&lt;tldicro
to polls acroSs ihc country.
· In the first report nf elect inn vinroads "
lence, a militant ethnic puny said 10
Bhutto benelf was one oftbe first cif its poll workel'll were ;tl)ductcd
fPakistanis who voted early' in an elec- today, one of whom was beaten tn
; tioo marked by apathy. Sbe left the . ~ath. , The Mohajir Qaumi Mnvc.!polls repeating accusations that ber ment blamed one of iL•. breakaway
~ent;mies had rigged the yote against factions. However, policl( could not
·•her party.
.
· conQmi the violence. . .
··: The .former prime minister apparThe 'party said six wcM.crs were
~eqil)l was setting the stage for a legal · , still missing, hours afte~ a ~up of
, j Challeng~ of ber anticipated defeat. men snatched them from a ·~&lt;;~rachi
·.She sail! local administrators in her polling station.
,.,.
. ~hpme · district of Lar~ana 'today
Voters are believed ttR.!'&lt;' discour[impoun4ed cars in which he.r Pak- aged because there are 110 new choic,
:istan People's Pany had planned to · · es among 'the candid~s - . an~
;take voters to the polls.
· · because they've seen thft:e govern; "I'm concerned about the low ments dismissed on .~. coiTUption
[turnout," she said. "But basically it charges since democrady replaced a
•is because of the adminlstnition's atti- military dictall)rship in 1985.
.
rtude. ';!'he odds are heavily biased
Presideni Farooq Leghari, who
:against us."
fired B.hutto three months ago, had
, Apathy was Str\)ng enough before pleaded with Pakistanis to .vote in a
the vote that PQIIs predicted turnout national ad~ress Sunday.. §till. he
would be as low as 20 percent, down acknowledged that some of the canfrom 40 percent during the last elec- didates were tainted. 'i'
!ion ~n. 1.993.'J:fearl{60 milliC!n PakMs. _Bhu[to. i~ challfnged by f~r·•stams are regtstered to vote.
..mer Prime Mtntster ljlawaz Shanf,
Thmout picked up in the aftemilim · whose government wa~ dismissed in
before polls closed at 4 p.m., ~lee- 1993 amid eharges.o'f ~shonesty, and
tions . commission deputy director by former cricket star lmran Khan, ·
Khawaja Alta Hussein said. ·
who campaigned on .ap anti-corrupDcspite apathy almost everywhere tion platform.
else, balloting was greeted enthusiSharif is expected• to edge out
• astically in the trib.al. areas of the
LAHORE, Pakis1,11n (AP) - Pak~ Wanis clisc:duhpl by political SCIUI•
• dal VOICd loday for legislaton to ·
: replace the . ousle4 government of
, Benazir Bhuuo - the third regime
•dismissed on corruption charges
: Iince tile country became a democ: !'ICY in 1985. ·
; "I don't give a damn about vo(• ing," said Mohammed Abdul. ·wtio
lives near Lahore ..Politicians "get
, elei:ted, they make promises about
roads, . then they never build the

The Red Cross Bloodmobile celebrated its 45th Anniversary recently at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center. The followlag people were presented
·
·
·
certificates for multi-gallo_n donations.

i

!

Left, Henry Bllhr and ri&amp;bt. El• Myers.

Left, WOllam Rad_ford and rlgltt, VIrgil Wind911,

William Hoback, Carolyn Charles and Sarah Fowler. (Above)

Others receiving certificates, but not in attendance were: Richard andMacel Barton, Harlan Ballard and Howard Logan. Keep up tbe good work!

.

.

'

"' MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

Meigs Senior Center
:February Activities

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

4

3

The Meigs County Council on
Thursday, February 6 - the Lark
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
String Quartet, Ohio University,
lhrough Friday from 8:00 to . 0. will present a lunchtime concer1.·
:Regularly scheduled actiw' es are
You'll be aiJiazed that J:lassical
quilling, sewing, card , games, music could be played with such
paol. Weekly activities are Chorus spiril. The concert is sponsored by
Practice on . Tuesday at 11:00, the Meigs County ·· council on
.:Knining Circle on Wednesday from Aging and the Riverbend Arts
·10 to 12. Physical Fitness is held on t=:ouncil. Plan to attend the pi-ogram
!fuesdays and Thursdays at 11:30 to beginnigg at 11:00 and stay for
keep participants "fit and limber".
dinner.
: Line Dancing class will be held
Wednesday, February 12 - the
un Mondays at 1:00 with Pa.ulelle Stroke Survivors Support Group
·:t-farrison, Instructor. You do not will meet from 1:00 to 2:30, with
:Oeed a partner, plus the dancing and Lia Tipton, Occull!'lional Therapist,
·movement are a good form of- Holzer Rehabilitation Center,
e xercise . · New persons are Coordinator.
encouraged to attend - current
Thursday, February 13 - a
. ~ancers will help new members in Valentine party will be held with
learning of the steps. New dances games beginning at 11:00.
are learned slowly over a 2-3 week
Thursday, February 20 - the
period. There - will be ~ $1.00 monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
charge for each class atlend!:d.
be held from 9:30 to 1i :00.
' The "Over 50" Exercise Clao;s wit
Friday, Februar-y · 21 - The
continue on Mondays and ArthritiS Support Group meets from
Wednesdays at 3:30p.m. through 10:30 to noon . The Arthritis
March 26. New meml;lers are Support Group is made possible
welcome to attend this class for · through funds from the . Ohio
bending and stretching exercises _Department of Health and Ohio
and low impact aerobics for University.
.
· j:ardiovascular strengthening. There
Thursday, February 27 , the
is a $.50 fee for each session
monthly birthday party will be
attended.
A representative from the Athens held. Seniors having birthdays in
Social Security Office will be at the fhe month will be recognized. The
' Center on Wednesdays, February Center will host the Tri-County
12 and U. from 10 to 11 a.m. '
monthly bingo beginning at 11:00.
' Tuesday, February 4 - a program
Thursday, February 27 - the
for National Heart Association Alzheimer!&amp; Support Group will
Month will be presented at-11:00 meet from I to 3 p.m. Guest
by Lenora Leifheit, R.N., with a speaker for the meeting will be Dr.
' video on Congestive Heart Failure James Witherell or Dr. Wilma
' ~hown and a question and answer Mansfield speaking on Heart
Disease.
' period following.

FEBRUARY MENUS

THURSDAY

•
Chicken ' and Noodles
Broccoli/Carrots
and Cauliflower
Bread
Applesauce

FRI.DAY
7

Chicken Nuggets
Augratin Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts
Bread
Peaches -.1 th
Orange Sauce

Mushroom Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Corn
Bread
Blushing Pears

Oven Baked Pish
Oven Roast Po1~a toe•sl
Carrots
Bread
· Tropical Mixed
Fr111t

Navy Beans and Ham
Cole Slaw
Cornbread'
Apple
Rocky Road Pudding

Baked Steak
llashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Peas
Bread
Peach Slices

18
Macaroni &amp; ·Cheese
Creamed Tomatoes
Green B!!ans
Bread
Pear Halves

19
Vegetable ·Beef Soup Oven Baked Chicken
Pimentel Cheese
· llashed Pot a toes
with Gravy
Sa11dwi~h
Crackers
Harvard Beets
Peachy Creamy
Bread
Pudding
Banl!&gt;na

17
CENTER ·
CLOSED
PRESIDENT'S DAY
24

Liver &amp; Onions
Mas bed Pot a toes
and Gravy
Peas &amp; Carrots
Bread ·.
Fruit Salad

25
Beef BBQ on Bun
Skin On Potato
· Wedges
Baked Beans
Haney Bee Ambrosia

Apple Cherry Crisp
Balla in
Gravy on Noodles
·l,l'oased Salad
'Jilread
llan.d arian . Oranges

..

26 .
· Beef Stew
Cole Slaw
Biscuit
',.
Pineapple and '
. Cottage Che.e se

2'l
Scalloped Chicken
B~ occoli &amp; Cheese

..~weet ,Pota~~es

read
Apricots

·

Chili
Cole Slaw
Crackers
lltxed Fruit
Brownie

28
Salisbury Steak
Scalloped Potatoes
Lima Beans
. .,

' . ·lare&amp;ci' · ' ·•
Pears in ' Reel Gelati
•• • •• • •

Uses for your
holiday cards
What to do with those Holiday
·Cards? St. Jude's Ranch for
Children, a non-profit facility for
the care of abused, abandoned and
neglected children, 'accepts old
cards. The children recycle the card·
fronts to make new cards. RSVP
will' accept cards for this project
and will mail them periodically to
St. Jude's as they accumulate.
Gather up your old cards and bring
them in to Diana Coates at the
Center or call 992-2161 for more
information.

The Senior Center has scheduled
\he following trips for 1997: ·
Saturday, April 19 to the Spring
Spectacular Show. at the restored
Palace' Theater, Canton, with an
,, Eish Dinner at the Amish Doors
... estaurant and shopping at the
• illage shops, cost is $60.00 for
torcoach, dinner and concert. .
.: • Thursday, June 12 to Veterans

Memorial, Columbus, for a Statlers and Walmarts, Parkersburg, anll
Brothers concert, with shopping at Wednesday, April 23, the tri'p will
the JC Penny Outlet, cost is $45.00 be to Ripley, shoppi,ng at Walmarts,
for motorcoach and concert, lunch dinner at ponderosa, stop at the flea
and dinner on your.own.
market a:nd craft store . Cost for
Monthly shopping trips have these trips is •$5.00, with dinner on
been scheduled, using the Center your own.
v;,ns. Wednesday, March 19, the . Call Alice Wamsley, 992-2161,
trup will be to Grand Central Mall for reservation or information.

;

.
,.
.
.
Some of the Swinging Seniors are plctared dliada&amp; .at the New Years Eve day party at the Senior
Center. The Swinging Seniors .Is a 1roup o~al~ fnND tlae line daadn11 cl~~~es with Instructor
Paulette Harrison. The dance aroup bas perfQnned at several Ceater eve~~ts, lhe Pt. Pleasant Senior
tenter, -Veterans Memorial Extended Care, H!,lzer Re...blllll~ Unit and marched In lhe Pomeroy
Christmas parade. The groap will·be dancing 11t Roeksprlags Rehabilitation and Overbrook Center !aFebruary. Line Dandn11 classes are held on Mondays at 1.:00. Ne':' penons are Invited to attencl for , ,
sociaiiZitJlon lllld
'

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) · morning after rim pohce. smashed
Thousands of students marched through ;' ~rowd of thousands and
! through Belgrade today, defying the then chased protesters jill nvcr down.,
! gover:nment a day after riot police town Bel grad~.
! used tear gas, water cannons and
At least ~tght pol!~em~n were
!clubs 10 crush pro-democracy among the InJUred as poycc hrcd tear
: tests. . .
gas and water cannons :md swu.ng
: proSunday's bloody a~sault, which . lmton~ and ~rntestcrs f~spondcd by
~ left at ledst 80 people inJured, was the throwmg rods. .
,.
.
~ bi est show'of police fon:e in 2 112
Witnesses tnld mdcn,cndcnt radto
!~ths 'or dc11Jonstrations. It could stauons that SC\trcs ol p~~tcstcrs had
; ~i nal that President Slobodan Mil()" hccn arrested. 'Ther~ wat}no v:ord on
ic wa.' 3·rowiog ifitpaticnt and arrests lrum authontJcs lilday.
:. 1:0ned to crack down ·hard on .tbe
An Assoctatcd Press ~pone~ wa.'
' prot sts that 'have shaken his gov- duhhcd on the hack. and camcmmen
I ~fll~~nt. ·
•
for Associate_d Press Tclcvtswn.
. ' - A strike today by cab dri~crs Reuters Tclcv"wn and .f. NN also
a4ded 10 the tension. Though the cab- were beaten. . ·
· .. .
bic,.deni'ed their walkout wa's linked . . Two peopl~ were IJ4tiptla!•zed
t&lt;i ~ pmtcsts, the action snarled traf- wnh hrokcn lnnbs; nl~r ID!u.rcd .
fie .jn the nervous capital.
·
. people w_erc treated al t~p clm.'cs.
, CllllihCs that began at midday Slobodan lvanovtc ·ol Anluvc _chmc
. SIInM~ continued in.to early this · satd sevcral ·pcoplc were scnously

!_

•J

(L.Inlelkw•

Authorized AGA Dlslrlbutor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial G - • Machine Shop
SeMces • Steel Sales &amp; Fabficalion • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, Al!ilings, Palia Fumilure, Fireplace
Hems, Planter Hangers; Trellises &amp; lots of other stutill

WICKS .
HAULING
.

At2l.ocltlonl
Rutllncl, Oh.
814-742-211118

11

Oh.

2202

BISSElL BUILDERS, INC.

•

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

AMERICAN LEGION
POST 602
.MRYSUNDAY
Doors Open 4:30

Game Sllr111:41 .
Par outla aceordlna to
numtt.r Dl
Under n- 111.1n•ment.
Public Wotc0111o

pt.,..,..

Public Notice ·

. WE HONOR

Bnada Petrie (rf&amp;bt) of the Meigs Bikers
~. ~~UepU toys from Su1111n OUver (left)
Execadn Director of the Melp Muhlpurpose
SeaJol. enter. De toys were donated by alllf at.
111e settlar
to help make Cbrl8tma1 a little

en•
llflillter ror

-area clllldrea.

We would like to welcome James Gruner to lhe
RSVP l"rop'aaa. Jim bad his lint volunteer
Ulipmeiat In December belpJaaae the Red Cross
Blooclllloblle villi. Here be helps . Dr. Wilma
Mallllleld lato the dtala1 ~m after she donited

....

.

....

Metct.dll
Nat lndtldld

tJ

·'t'

l
f

If

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~

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_ r. q

Every Weanesr:tay Storewide Savings

15% off everything in our store.

• I

'

GOLDEN BUCKEY~!~

crOIIed are~:
.
Ill!! Ai;afat's lippearance before a

DAY

'

.-.

.,

.,~~··'~&lt;

blood~

We.d nesdays
Senior Citizens tDay
·Storewide .
sA\j'A

Enjoy All The
Activities At Your.
Senior Center ·

,. .

15o/o off

FINDING

..

'

YIIAT Fn coaumn

slob&amp;l gathering of government and
buSiness l~rs was a catalog Of
coinplaints rlllher than optimism.
-.,Is this a jull peace?" asked
Arat:at, citing restrictions on Palestinians who want to work in lsl'liCI
t'- COil them $7 million a day. "Si~·
ty•five ~rcenJ of Palestinian fami!~
Jiw below the poveny li~. " · ·
N~~.tau, who spoke ~r
Nifltlllt WOrl,d &amp;oriomic.Filill(n,
• id '.. ' lit ' have Slflr•red ' .from
• '~

'

l

&gt;

•

r.

ana

'I·

•New Homes ·

•Remodeling
-Garages

•Decks

Free Estimates

992·5535

Re L. HOLLON
. TRUCKING

•New HornBs

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

•Garages
•Complete
.Remodeling

Umes~one

• Gravel

Dirt· Sand

Stop &amp; Compare
985 4473
7122/11n

1.............

SNOW
REMOVAL

Body work, car, truck
•

Sunset H11111
Censtruetl111

-Driveways
•Parking Lots
•Etc.
Call Anytime ·

7110/lfn

1111111711 -

KIT 'N' CARLYl.F. .® by Larry WriJ!ht

wm be ......vee~ by
T,...._
Dillie F!alain81
Or.- Dl Eaglea 2171, 224

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling ·
Kitchen Cabinets
Vinyl Siding • Roots

Decks ~ Garages
Free

949·3J27
591·1197

Long St., RuUand, Oh.
742-2135, Aile for Kip

Estlm~Ds

614-742-3411
1111

. .

Biela

111trm' 1 ntO. pd.

Public Notice
Merletto, Vltligeo o• .'
Clerlngton and Belle Yalley,
by herblctclol apreylng.
"The dolt ..r tor ·
completion of thll work
ahelt be •• all forth In tho
blddtna ptOpoait •
.
(&gt;lono lind Spiclllcillono
ere on tile et the
of Trenepol1itlon.
JERRVWRAY
OIRECTOAOF
TRANSPORTATION
(2) 3, 10; 2TC

&amp;at lllln Streot, Pomeroy,
OH. unUt Fall. 28, 1197. For
remoldllng of the Socii!
R!),Ofl1.

ROBERT IISSEU
CONSTRUCTION

. ·FREE
ESTIMATEES

985 4422
Chnter, Ohio

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

minor mtchanlcal
repair.
Tune-uptl, Oil Chlntie,
WIX, Bulflng .

992·2753
l-1ma.

ALL OHIO

• trUck painting,

oNo Job Too Smell
•Any and All of Your
Home Repair Needs
· -can Today for Your

the

.

Plane moy be vi-ed or
picked up ·ol the Freternel
Order ol E1g1t• Aerie 2171,
224 Eaet Moln ' Street,
Poft!IFOY, OH. on Feb. 10
11, Fall. 17, 18, Fib. 24, ·2$
from 8:110 AM tUI11:00 AM.
Any
controeto.r
aubmlnlng 1 bid for thla
rolect hereby certlflea,
ndleatea
end
lcknowtodgli !hot hllaho
1tu • llcen.. and meets all
the quallllcltlona required
by tho ahltuteo ot lito Shlts
of Ohio and aubdlvlalon In
which the wo,rk Ia to
trf0 rmed certlllcltt of
r.naurence
..r In the •munt
of $1,000,000.00 medo
I!IYallll to th1 trulteel of
Aorle :1'171, eartlflcete of
worllent comp. In tho Stste
of Ohio, must preform
quollty work ond hove
qualified workere, 111110r
contractor muat preform
injured. including a student who had 70% of all wor'k,
his front teeth broken.
iUbeonlriCIOrl mutt be
Tl)e protesters demand that_ · the · approved by 1111 building
muet eubmll a
government ho~or op~sl!lon v_tcto- committee,
preformece bond In tho
neun ~ov. 17 mumctpal elecuons. 11110unt ol bid.
.
MiloscvtC:s government has ~fu~d
Building oommlll11 of
to acknowledge opposttton. VICl?~es Aorle 2171 have lite right to
m Belgrade and other maJor cutes, re~eet eny orid all bldll.
(213, 52te
·
even though they were confirmed by
mtcmattonal obSQrvcrs.
,Gcnnany· dem_anded_ today that
Mtlosevtc order hts pohcc not to usc
violcnc9 again against protesters.
"Yesterday's vi.olent action by
Serb secunly fon:es agamst peaceful
demonstraton; in Belgrade is a serious bl~~w to democracy and non_v•_plcnc.e, satd German Foretgn Mmtstcr Klaus Kmkcl.
Protest leaders scheduled a downtown rally for this afternoon, after ibe
separate student man:h concludes.

Palestinian !error anacks.
pleased. said their hour-long session
"Peace with&lt;lut security, cannot . - their first face-to-face meeting in ·
1
last. .. Nclanyahu said.
~
six months- had been "very good."
The Israeli leader said. '~owevcr. - ,;We sec cyc-to·cyi:-on the need
that his talks with Arafat an4 ~gypt- for the expansion of peace and ceoian President Hosni Mul&gt;aru~ m the nomic relations." Netanyahu said .
Swiss Alpine resort of Davo~ helped
He said he had accepted an invi- .
create "a new attitude. mayb.l: a new tation from Mubarak to visit Egypt
beginning...
~.
and would probably go there in two ·
lsrac;l und the Palestinians'rcsum~ months with "a very iarge business
talks Thursday at the Ere7. crossing . delegation." ·
between Israel and the Gaza Strip
with '·a gn;at feeling of ~~pc" of , After meeting Arafat he cited "a ·
~regress toward a wider Millfl!it set- great feeling of hope."
' tlement, Netanyahu said.
"- ·
''Hope ditcsn 't mean that there
Netanyahu also said hq wllllloolt- aren't any problem," he said. But.
ing for away to aet Syrian President "I'm confident'as a result of today's
Hafez Assad !Q resume talks Wtlh meetings and for other reasons a•
-Israel. Talks broke down a yeiU' OJO well that we will overcome thC obsta·
afl!:r bombin1s -in Israel by Islamic . cles and indeed IChieve peace."
mititants.
.
,
. "I c_110not fi.nd one Jtnale !Ofl roaMullarak said he told Nctanyahu
son Why Syoa IIIII Israel !!!'not lliat ~racli ne,otlatloni' wllh Syria ·
reiUme ~neaqtiii\Dnf," ~.~ , ·and LebanOn ''mull be reaamecl
Nat.Jyllna anti t.{ubarak. _ .... fwithout ~lilY" onJ' ......f or llnll
.
. -. .
aide by aide
fookilll !CleX Nlll ,forpeace.·,

"V...., New Ownersllip"

·-=

.,_rtn.lt

0
0

r

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Tho VIllage of Pomeroy
dealrtl lo r•celv• . •••l•d

Need extra cash?.
Use the
ads!

'

1

'

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, 1:111 Dirt
614-992-3470 .

We will work within your budget.
Ph. 773-11173
FAX 773-5811
101 Pomeroy Strwt .
Mason, WV

Israel
and Palestinians ready for new talks
.

DAVOS, ·Switzerland (AP) . Israel and the Palestinians will
resume talks this week with "a great
feeling ·of hope" toward a wider
Mideast scttlemen.t that could involve
Syria, Israeli ' Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday. ..
. PileSt_hiian len.der Y11sser Aru(at
signaled. ~ willingness 10 compr.o'
Qi'i5e, . sayil'g he would accept an
•ilntem~ibnal presence" to control
g~
'vi'ng in Palestinian·con·

Low"-)

"No Job Too urge or Too Sm•ll"

ernment Nvv. 5. twn yeW'Ji hcfore her
tcmt expired. He accused 1\cr nf driving Pakislun toward economic ruin,
slcalin~ hilli&lt;ms from the national
trc.JSury ;ind using police (n the
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
southern city nf Karachi to quash a
rival pol itit·~l movement.
Garages • Replacement Windows
Ms: Bhuttn says the interim govRoom Additions • Roofing
ernment . 'planned lo rig' ballots in
favor of Sharif, and threatened to
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
'reject the results if she wins fewer
Fj:IEE ESTIMATES
than 90 . seats in the 217-mcmber
National Assembly. Her Pakistan
614-992-7643
People's Party bOO 86seats in the previous parliament, while Sharif's Pak-.
.istan Muslim League had 72.
Hundreds of observers monitored
the voting. lnere were no repons of
serious irrcgularitie$.
Easy Pay Auto
About 7,000 candidates vied for
INSURANCE
537 BRYAN PLACE
effaces in today's elections, which for
IIIOOLEPORT
Any C;:n
the first time com6ine provincial and
112-2772
federal voting as a cost-saving move.
Any Dnvcr
8:00 Lm.-J:liD p.111.
Seats in Pakistan's four provincial
DUI &amp; SR -22
eR•u•llt WWows
le~islatures were contested along
&gt; Di scounts ,
with scats in the National .Assembly... •hlllhllll
Computer Q uotes ,.
the lower house of Parliament, Three eS... Dolri&amp;
National Assembly rilces were post(614) 992-6677
Wiltlows
poned after candidates died. · ·
. .... , ••,loa
P ome roy
The head of the Rarty that wins
control of the National Assembly, ' . . - - - - - - - - ,
alone or with coalition partners, will
BINGO
be prime minister arid expected to
RACINE, OHIO
serve a' five-~ear term.

jQermany cans.for end to violence in Belgrade

----:-------TRIPS _ _ _ ___;_,__

......_IY

rnW~rs tndi~miss Ms. Bhuun•s gov-

· MOSCOW (AP)- Buoyed after speech to parliament. Ycl~&gt;;in's aides
The leaders' main topic of discus,
•' hisfirstmeetingwithaforeignleader have said the speech will focus on sion was NATO's planned eastward
• since contracting pneumonia, Boris ·domestic problem~~ but have not c~pansion, according to Yeltsin
Yeltsin was working .today on a released any details,
spokesman Sergei Yastrzhembsky.
speech to parliament that aides have
AI an airport news ~onference · Ycltsin reiterated Russia's opposition
· billed as his comeback address to the Sunday, Chirac seemed angry when to admitiing fonner WafSaw Pact
nation.
. a repOrter asked if ¥eltsin had trou- nations·into the alliance. Yastrt.hcm. Yeltsin met for three hours Sunday ble walking,lalking'or understanding bsky said.
'with.' French President Jacques the discussions. which focused on
Russia sees NATO growth as a
· Chii'IC, who said he was impressed NATO expansion.
threat to Its securit~. Chirac has said
·· with Yeltsin's recovery .fr-Jm hCart
"I found nothin'~ ~f this in Presi, NATO must not "humiliate" Russia
'·surgery and pneumonia.
.
dent Yeltsin's beliavior. Nothing," b,y admining new members withour
.· "It's natural it is taking so!QC time Chirac snapped. ;'.',t.was very much · consultation.
•
· fbr him to ,gei back inio ' shape," inipress.ed by the sjteed of his rccov· Chirac' spoke by telephone _;,ith ·
' Chime said after the tw.o discussed ery."
President Clinton pbout NATO and
~NATO expansion atYehsin's retreat ·
Yeltsin did not meet with othct ·issues last week. Clinton is
!outside Moseow. ''I was very much reporters. 'The Kremlin released a few expected to meet with Ycltsin this
;impre$sejl. I found the same Boris_ l!linutes of video (footage showing spring .
;Nikolaye~ich I always knew."
him greeting Chinii:, and of the two
The French le~dcr said· he would
I
After a quintuple bean bypass leaders sittiftg in1 1ow-slung easy · return to Moscow for a f~II-Ocdgcd
!operation Nov. 5, Yeltsin returned to chairs.
.
summit Sept. 25-27.
!the Kremlin in December pro{!lising
The Russian president, who has
Yeltsin has been seen only in Oeet,!011rong aotion to deal with Russia's lost a lot of weight, spoke very slow- ing appearances on ·television news.
!many serious prohlcms. But he was ly and distinctly, as,he sat. slightly and there arc still questions about his
! hiiC~ in.tbe hospital two weeks later hunched, in front of lhc Oags of both health. On Saturday. he turned 66,
!wiih pneumonia.
. . . ,
nations.
spe~ding the day quietly with faiJli! 'This time, Yehsin '.s aides arc tak"This is a meeting of two prcsi- · ly:
•ing·a more cautious approach, saymg dents, two European Jcadcrs. lricnds
Yeltsin's last previous meeting
: the p~~ident will remain at his coun- and panners who arc linked hy st~atc· with a Western leader WIL' Jim. 4
: try'tctrcat and work on his speech for gic and.priNileged relations. '' Ycltsin when he held discussions with Ger: nlost of t~is week. ·
said.
man Chancellor Helmut Kohl in
No· da\C has been set (o~ the
Moscow.

lleatloaf
Parslied B,oiled
Potatoes
Spinach
Bread
Applesauce

J.

fi'QQt-l'lllldeiS u thieves IIIII ICt:URd
the president of p1Main1 to fix the
voting to pill Sharif back in power.
The constitution requires elections within 90 days oHhe fall of a
~ovcmmcnt. and l:.cghari said the
interim gnvcrnment he appointed to
nvcrsc'C tl)c vole did not have,enough
time tn climiniuc corrupt candidates.
l:.cghari used his c&lt;lnstitutional

·Russian presiden-t prepares .
.- comeback $peec1J to parliament

BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Broccoli
Bre&amp;d
Pineapple Chunks

#~4- !ld«ll

BhuUD. Khln has denounced the two

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
· Otllce Dl ContriCII
Legot Copy Numbor 11'·1 01
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Moltllltll Dote.1/24117
Seated propoaolli will be
occopted from ott prequalified blddert 11 lhe
Ottlce of Controcla, Room
o111
I of the Olll_o~,.;o.,iict"ll1rtmelltktnnt
T.,
1 ,f
Columbu•, Ohio, until
Lm.

bid• lor the fottowlng
vehicle which the Vlltege
wlohoo to dlopenoo. A 1191
Chevrolet Coprlco crulaer.
All a.eoled blda thilt bt
rocolvod In the Clerk'o
otllce ot 320 Eoot M1tn
Street, Pomeroy, .Ohio on or
before February 17, 1197 ot
11 :00 am. Tho Pomeroy
Council reoervoa the right
to occopt or reject eny or ell ·
bldi.
Kolhy Hyoett, Cterk
Vlllege of Pornt~ror
{t) 27, (2) 3, 10 3 tc
Ad

.!.l(umor lias

I've 6een
to!if
j.IJJ. Story ·

Migftty Oft/
W¥PPy

Wodneidar. Febru•ry 11,
1197tor llllpro-ln:
· Goltto, Hocking, Melgo,
Monroe, Noble, VInton •nd
wuhlngton Count111, OhiO
for lmprovtna -rJona GAL·
7•2.201 ond VlrlOUI, Sa.te
Routt 7 ond Ylrloui, In tlie
Cillo• of lelpro ond

tJJI!l{'IJl1J.91.')"!
j.'D.

Happy Ad

Happy Ad

.

Valentine Specials

COUNTRY
TANN
34480 Rocksprings Ad,
(Co. Rd. 20)
Pomeroy, Oh

992-5756
Call for special prices.
Sweetheart Dance
February 14 9 pm • 1. am
$2/Single $3/Dou!&gt;le
American Legion Poet 128
Mk;lclleport

''

age,
Jeremy, a moped
wiU do. Now 16,

It!. car~ and fat
girl&amp; for you.
Happy Birtlulay

w,rav, Lontv our
nurse turned 40.
Happy Birthday
E,laine Parsan~
fmmallof "'

••'J

••

•
l

•
'• '
•

.

�•

,

,.... 10. The peuy 8enllnel

•

1817

Ohio

Sentinel•

NEA Crouword Puzzle

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

,..,......

PHILLIP
ALDER

·-~

........
I .- . , _ . . . . , 42111111
43 -IIUIY
...........
llpaOIIIIr

MmOUrKl r.1ENTS
ASSISTANT IIANAGEAI SR.
CUSlOMER SEIMC'E REPIIE·
SENTATIVE

PlrlclnaiS

005

c-.
-And Ctown

Will Do HouMCieanlng Uoe

Own

llr

City ......

Jwallalllli. ~S,.1qell.

Cal-.S14-25H8111.

no

Will do In·""- oOidady cora, 5-4
daya per week, hna ei~=:
experience and manr ra
have had NIA nlnlno. $5.00 ...,

11188 C"-'J -

• KI

2... .

hour, 814-9411-2329• .

:534:;::5.:1.::311:.::A..:II:.;..l;;o:.;5.::00::.:.P..:
.II:.:.._ _ !

Will Work In Your Home Caring
For Elderly Person 7 Data. 24

11ia7 Dodge Ram !Ill 5 Sj&gt;ood.
PS, PI!, T... 114-2501-1ol87.

•
eo&amp;
• Q 10. 2
• Q 2

• . 9. 5

'·

•76

5

C-lilll\!

....,.••

large p:rolit potential from Steel
Bldg Bul,ntU Natn. Co. award.ing dea)trship In open market.
Sales or consuuction. (303, 751--

6f&gt;m.

3200 En 51150.

LAZT

dildO&lt;!, 614-9411-2510.

60

Lost and Found

Found: ring, Sunday, Januar~ 22
11 SHS, call to 10. 614-949 -2611
or814--94t-25A4.

LOST:

rna~

black Labrador

tnever with blue .c ollar. Foreit
Run W:lrity, 114-11&lt;111-3403.

Full-tiine Advertising Sates Rep

t

••

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

sume to : Advertising Resume
P.O. Box 10. Ravenswood, WV
215184.
·

1=;;=..::..::..:=..::..:.===---

Full-Time, Pan-Time Tupperware

done, · lree estimates, IUelime
guarantee. 10yrs .on job experience. 304-675-2145.

Dealers Needed, Call Between t
And 5614-446-4530.

,.
'

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Lemley's Aucrion Seryice, leSlie
Lemley, Aucllaneer. Household,
Ellale, Farm Sales. Call 614-446·
' 6241,614-388-9443.
Rick· P4trsan Auction Co~pany,
tuU t1me auctioneer. complete
•uction
serv1ce.
Licensed
I88,0h10 &amp; Well Virginia. 30.C·

773-57811 Or 30H73-S447,

90

37114.
Medical -8 illif1g Clerk. Expert·

wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar · All U.S. Sit·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
biamonds. Antl(lue Jewelry, Gold
Rings Pre -1 930 U.S. Currency.
Sterlin9, Etc. AcquiSI110ns Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coi!'1 Shop, 151 Second
Averl.le, Gallipo~&amp;. 614-446·2842. ·

once p•elorred . Comprere benetits. Salary commensurate w1ex·
penence. send tesume to Boll G·
1, %Pt PI Reg1ster. 2oo Matn Sl..

small ono BIG. WV-o2l206

Sullo. M1lk Tank Sunset Or Mueller
• To 500 Gallons In Good Condi·
t10n, e14·96S.1922.

640
Gerth Brooks Tickets For Sale
February 13th. Grear Valentilles
Glfllllellt Offer; 801 .. 67-4119.

Umilatlon or tliScriminatlon

· based on race. color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or anv lmeritlon to
make any such prefereACe,

Grubb's Piaoo- luning &amp; repairs.

limitatton or discriml~tion."

IBM Compu1er wtpnnter $100.
Call 304·895-3563 alter .. pm.
(Aik lor TriMs)

Pfoh'tms? N~ Tuned? Call the
piano Dr. 614-446-4525

Thls n~ wil not
knowingly accept
adVertisements for real estal&amp;

Hay &amp; Grain

19V1 ~,.., Astro Eot.·Mini
&amp;3,500
Milea.
Cu1tornlz•
$10.500 EX&lt;Oient Condition, Alllrl

volt

' 8,151.C...o4&lt;18-41).t1 ,

614 · 4~ · 1104,

Retail JGwelry Sates Part And Full
Wanled To Buy ; We B~y Jun~ · Time Po·tllions,· Apply AcquislCan 014-448· 7278. Or 614·388· llons Fme Jewe1ty, 151 Second
11012.
Avenue. Galhpolis, No Phone

.'l

TRANSPORTATION

IT~ '(()J'Ve,

(.,I,INE;D
WE-161-lT...

Motorcjcles

740

71 o · Autos tor Sate ·

which is in violation of thf

1187 Honda 125 4 WhHie(.'
Goad. .11.200 11t'

Run1 t lo9k1
. :t67.Q5114 .

law. Our readers are henJby
lnlormed lhat all -lings
advertised In this newspaper

.

"""'!!'

1917 KX·eG·tcawo-. uc
304-57e.art07.

are av11ilable on an equal
opportunity basis.

''

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessorleli ·

760

·}
Ir

'

REAL ESTATE

1198 US CargO c:,r lraller, 22"~

-lcnow?

1-

Thinking • , .
the' ng
. ht fiVu
..m.t
.
~~~·~
.

41 . DrMH:ellecl
organism

BJ: a,JIUp Aller

41 T ol TV
47 Actor

So

441n Hdltion
45-

_.a,

-~

'

Novwllo
4IGtMHI

~Dit the: ~ table. if );au

ll* lhiDt Of the c:urrect ca-tion. you

51 Author

SMehy

2 Ford T•ucl&lt; Framoo, 92 lal'!l
Short; Cab r. Body Pai11 Fa~ .
Same Privale Owner, 11•·318~ f
9181 L-l.teuaga.,._

Several $-acre ~rcell
remote, beau1ilul land: Meigs
Couflty, Scip1o Township, SR 692
(just oU ~ 143). Ownet' financll'lg.
S 1500 per acre •• Call lor good
map. 614·593-8545.

the comica

53 Noah'•
0011

Budget Price Tran1~1aio~
·'
Slaning at $99.00 IIlii U\1: U
Rebuilt , AH Types, Over. 10,0
Transmassions. Clutchea Fl :·
wneels. Overhual Kits . 814·245--"""1

RENTA LS

5677

41 o Houses tor Rent

~----------------~
a

firewood . 304·675·.3406 ~her ·1987 Mercury Cougar . XR-7,

$45110 OBO, 614-992·2209.

.

790

:

,&lt;:)J
"

1

1

any11me.

810.
BASEMENT

·•

Wf&lt;TERPAOOFING

""

0870 Or 1·800·287·0571.

ro t

Unconditionallifelime .Ouatantee ~
Local reference~: fumfahed.' E~
labllslled 1975. Call 181~.!~- t

Appliance P.JtiS And

.

,t

l .'

A

t..'.i

1

l

Sefvite: AI-

Nnme Bral')ds Over 25 .,..,. EX• '

Pftrter'lce AU Wort~. Gua.ntee{l
fronch Ctly Majfag , lh~ ••e • .;

derly lady i .~ New Haven area .
Room &amp; board with wage. CaH
30.C· 615· 2144 . Must have reference&amp;. Senoue enQuires only .

'

-·

nI

1795.

C&amp;C General Home ~ltn..::·
te'nence- Painring, 'ltlinyi liding:
t;~rpeprry, dqora, .,..,.,_, bllhl,

fllQbHe home repair 1nCI more. For

lr~e esti~lt can Ct'!tt., \14-~:h-:'\1· ~. ~l-;.. " &gt;

S'lyliat needed, call The Added

8323.

, .Touch, eu-992·5768.

DRYWAL~

&gt;

'•'t-

I

.,

I.

Heal Pumps, Air Cqndl1lanlnO, ~
Don'l Call-Us Wi Bollllti.il ·
Estima~to, 1·100:2111·001(
W'o/OOSd ...
ResidenUal or commtt.$..1wJtlng.
new Mt'\IICI or repairt. Mtacer U·
ctl'lltd •lectrlcian. Ridenou~1
Elto~lcal , WYOOO:JOI, •304&gt;175&lt;••••

w..,•

~~.

1788.

Computtr Ult!t .ll,tdJid .
OWn Houri. 20K To tllOK tyr. 1

Comm.,clal Wlr~
New Strv1ce Of Rept~ira . Ll ~lS
cented Electrlciln. Wel1h Elec-•AA
tfiC 61~ · 4o4e ·. gal0 , G1IHpolia.• "t
Realdllntlal Or

ino.

-w.n• • ms.

::r,.•W!rkl
f'lili) AI·
l'rlill- ........ Call
E~NII""I

\&lt;'"

Ohio.

. TOll Fru 1-M0-417·.... I liT.
1~"11.

1150 General Hauling

::;o:~

'\'!!

Truck tor hi~ . Uavlt'J!_,...u,_ ~
- ,. Coi:ID• - IIIII
.,illq\

'
\1

.•

"..

Clepl. u.oct•. 23) H your matt
Uf11Ntrlhl en ·ItaiM tod8y lhal hU ~YI
been • bone of contenlion, tum a deaf
Hr: Without en ei,denQt, thll me111ge
UBRA

f&lt;SES CEi!J'IFIED DEA~R
Lf&lt;WRENCE ENTERPRi9iiS

'·

f.ocua on rour ,.oirarda r~ll)er then on
=-=!r",Aioj .~r-~ctn .&gt;·

you.

Rifrlgerat!Oi'l

houri. l20k 10 15011/rr

· LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You will be more
motiVIIed to perform beltof todey H you

V1100 (~ ......... til ~· llflllllr Ill•
Wt!IOI&gt; you cen - l l y.' man,Ge aully
could " r11011 annpylnglt&gt;an us,u •l
• . • you ooncitn~raii:
root be*i

(

840 Electrical ~d

Camput• U..... N.....,.

ML:I;J

Y y'c M L Z 0 . '

canntop •tinu peanuls.' - 0r1on Welles.

XFBBJ

hate ~ as much as

.

·

peanuts. But I
·

S@~cl\~-l&amp;t.trs·

_ _ _ _..;_...;; ltll1otl toy ClAY I. POlLAN

0

cvz

L F M

(PCAK ,BVFNIII.I

PYVVCV .

.. IlLII

NMO •fWZ

T- AYJZON

P Y V' M

,

U F N W

0 K S S Z 0

PREVIOUS "SOLUTION: ·~I hate television. I

ntATNilY

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

.

::::

__;~-----

iott&lt;tl'l of tho
favr ICI'Gmblad -ds 1Mlow 10 1..,., four wards·
Roort'Gng&amp;

Noticed during holid&lt;
rush- those with a fierce hL'
,.L_-_-_L_-_-_L_-___L_-_.J_~--..J_N....., ing instinct and those who pc.,
T Ap EK
to .--- -. their ~-- - ·

·c

...,,.?W,~"-,.,8!::.-. .!;1...,!;""1.--1 Q
I~..
.
...
.L.-...1."-....L.-.L.-...1.\ ..11
I

quoted

Complete the chuckle
by filling in the missing word$
vou d6v6lop ftom step No. J below. '

•

\

SCIIAM-UTS ANSWERS
Yankee·- Clark· Avert' Pastor - uiST YEAR
"One thing I know for sure," the guy told his friend,
"and that is the best time to buy something is LAST
YEARI"
.

FEB

SERVICES

.

RLZV

..

d i110n, $8500. call 614·982·2N0 •

·waterproofing.

LCPWZJ

1

sleeps s1x, cooler, very ~ con- ·t
dition, S1200;.. tG85"Wtldtrnlul

tor sate

M· L Y M

:''

•
:

28' camper, sleept aile. great cart-

L Y 0 U·

y

'TKPW:

.•'

' 'r

•t
t986 Palammo pop up camper, •
•

...

'

f

: Campers &amp;
"Motor ttome.s

56..,.,..

SSMIIp-.

by LuiS Campos
,_.,~--...--.
Eachfeltef-intnecv-st&amp;ndltoranocher. Today'sdw: l.! C~~QUMO

,.

!'few gil lanka, 1 ton~ lruck ,
,Wheela
radiatora. 0 &amp; R Auiq ~
Ripley, ViV. 304·372·3933 or ,;_:_

800·273-8329.
.

--

CELEBRITY CIPHER

''

:'!

.

52 'Min Ken ol

t•

lerior, $4800,614-9411-2217. .

ttowwas-

37

spade stopper.
'
It is l!ll excellent practice to count
declarer's band during the biddins.

~ng, black exrerior. carpeted In- •

8Jpetlente.

~W-71ie •IIIII.

ootiT "ffiiNK Of

!

Han~, linlsl\replir. . •·, ';· ' ...
CeiltnQS IBIIUrect/ plaster rtpli ,
Call Tom 30ii-67S41 lie. 20 ., .. ,.

own

,

:

•ifl1

SOmeone 10 live 1n &amp; care lor el·

.

.YOU c:o.-IN!

...

1995 ••• Wranal•r Je•p•. newt.
tires, JVC rodlo,
jo/llgh~
·brown top. '10,500 cash. 30•·\
862-351170IIIrlpnl;_.~
·. .

256·6003.

Streel, Pomeroy, 9H 45769.

7378.

31 Pivot

· 32 Exam
!orr-+-+-~ . 34 Aroma

AcJiaaHhree.na-lrumJI, Weal led
tile apade two. East won wilb the ace
and returned his partner's suit.
' Happily, South grabbed the trick with
the king and cashed his nine minorsuit '!inners to coiled an overtridL
Wben Eaal saw the single!on heart
ldng litllnaln South's band. he uked.
~How could I know? It must be right
tp return your suit, partner.•
Well, how could East know?
•By building up a picture of declar·
er's•band from Jbe bidding ancl ogeningleacL From Jhe bidding, South is
known to -llav.e five dilmonda and lour
clubs. From ·Weil's opening lead,
which shows exacitly a four-card suit.
South is also known to have three
spades. Therefore, unless he started
with 14 ~ South has precisel11 0t1e
heart.
.
.
This poinls the way to the killing' defense: After' winning Jhe f~r~l trick
with lhe s~ ace, East should cash
the heart ace! When South's kil)g
drops, East continues wi!h a bear! to
partner's queen. Another heart
' .through dummy's J0·8 gives the de·
C..nders Jhe first five tricks.
Could South have. 3-2-H shape? No,
becaUJe he would· have opened or l'llbid Ia no-trump, given thai he bas a

Enterprises. Jackaon. 1-800-537-'

9528, 6, 4-288-5830.

Show Wes1ern Saddle for sate,
Call Anyume After 1 P.M. 614·

' Sales clerk for local reta11 store.
We w111 tracn the 11gh1 person .
send resume t;Jo The Daily· Senli·
nel. P.O. Box 729·39, 111 Court

A GtHI c)pportuMy Cfleck this
OUII tr Your Nat Making At1ea1t
SUO 1flr. 'lbu Owe h To Yo"urlell
Ta C.ll Ktm Toll Free 1· 881-432·

U:.T IT&amp;ET

I

'JOn

614-44&amp;-1130,

Calls Please.

EMPLOYME NT
SERVICES

tEY.COO'T

1992 Ford 555 -C h4 Backhoe~
3000 Hours Clean, Under War-,
ranty, $27,000 Firm,
E•n•~

Mixod Hay For Sale Alpha &amp;
Orchard Grass And Gass Hay

Pt Pleasant WV 25550.

5887.

ex clam Ilion

30 Wanes

· 0\lerlook?

livingston' s b.,errienl water·
proofing, all basement repairs

Needed 10 ladies To Sell Avon, 31 0 Homes fO[ Sale
CaU6U-446-33S8.
1~-:-:~-::,---:,.-..,..~,--1
St. '" New Haven, lot
New ·opportunity! Cardinal Fr,plgtn 170•200, needs t.epa1red. Sell as
Clean Late Uod~t Can ·Or Carriet' Inc. is e11panding opera- is $13,000. Call evenings 304·
Trucks, 1990 ·Models Or N1iQ¥er, lions in your area, need drlvets 882-3358 aftar Spm.
SiTuth Buick Pontiac, 1900 Ea~t· lor !!at bed div1sion •.must have
ern Avenue, Gal~polis.
Class A-COL l1cense &amp; 1 year 2 Bedroom, $69,000. 30.C-675::::.:.::=:::..;:::.::::..:.~--:~- -1 over rtle road expenence . ToP 2722.
Wanted to buy · lurnirure , baby starring pay, d1rec1 depos11. satitems. ~II ~14-992·3125. Pomet· ellite communications. 401 K FOR SALE OR RENT : 2·3 bed·
oy Thrill Shoo. 220 East Ma1n company, paid retirement, BC1BS room br!clt house tn N8V11 Haven.
Street :
medical, dental &amp; vision, Ryder Full basemeru ,.garage, new heat
program &amp; morel Call 1·800·220· pump wllutnace back-up, new
2421 tor an apPaintmenl
fron t porch, new side carport &amp;
2nd dnveway, back covered paJ &amp; O't Auto Par1s. Buying sal Ot·UO.OPERATINO
lio.den, great room, gas fireplatft,
Vage-vehicles. Selling parts . 30.C·
ENGINEERS
r&amp;cenrly .remqdeled kitchen &amp;
773-5033.
LOCAL 18 APPRENTtceSHIP
bf\lh, hew car Del. Priced to 1e11.
Top dQIIar- antiques, furniture.
.
IN CONSTRUCTION
304·882·2312.
glass, cthina, clocks, gold_, silvef. Men And Women, Ages 16 And
coins. warches, estates, old s1one Over, Learn To Operare Ar.d Re- House for sale in Rutland, 6~ • ·
jars, old blue &amp; white dishes, old pair Earth Mov•ng Machines And 992-5067.
wood, boa:al, milk bonles, UeiQa Cranes . 'AppliCalion Dates : FeCounty Adverusement. , Osby bruary 10, 1l, "1'2 And February Ma,p~e Ave- Meadowbrook. nice
T
3br wflu ll basement, c:arporl,
Marlin. 814·992·7441 .
20. 21 · &amp; 22. 1997. ime : 9 :00 · large lot. Call Somerville Realty
A.U. To 3 :00 P.M, Apphcauon
Buying : Antique Furniture· · Col· Fee: $10.00 Cash Contact: Ohio 304-675·30~or304·fi7S.3431.
I.Ctabf••· Records. Quilts, &amp; Old Operating Engmeors training Two
1 bettroom apartments' lor
~•sing kerns. 614·44&amp;-7812.
Cenrer 614-385·2567 E.O.E.
sale w1th storage building . WHI
Wanled To Buy : little Tykes Postal JObS 3 _POSitiOns Ava i l· sell on lifl'd conh'act, 614·.992·
Kitchen Set, Worlcal'lop, Play · able, No E;~penence Necessary, 5858.
house, Poniblt Any Other linle For lnlormation. Call 1·818 · 764 ·
320 Mobile Homes
Tylte Toy1. PIUie Call 614·245· 9016Exl. 1015
'"'

ground floor

27 Mild

. will realile lhllt the . . . , . .. the 110luUoD to tbe deal. Rowner, ff you
don't bave tbe rigbt tb~lbt, you
. 1iiOD't IIDd tile wiMjng play. ToUy's
deal is lib lhal Wllidl·elut did EMt

AH real estale advertising in
this newspaper is subjeCIIO
the Federal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 whlcn makes It illegal
ro advenlse ~any preterenca,
IIl1 Rental ing Continues To
GfciW And Wants OualiiJed, Ambl··
rious Candida!&amp;&amp; To Jocn Our
Company In A Plaooed MaJOr Ea:·
pansion tn The Gallipolis Area.
College Degree Or ~ + Years Of
Retail /ReslauraniiManagement
E•perienca Required. High Ener·
OY level And Good Interpersonal
Skills A Must. Salary Based On
E11per~ence . Excellent Benelits
And Bonus PotentiaL Mail /Fax
Resume To: Rental King, PO Box
703, Maisillon, OH 44648. AITN:
Human Resources. Fax: 330·833-

26 --the

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Sout,b

.

Professional
Services
1
brick &amp; stone work, 30 ywra ••·
oerlenee, reasonable rates. 304895-3591 ahet 6:00pm, no job 10

monkey

OlwgT, ....

aborigint
40 Business

!IAN' S

P.oaillon available 35hrslweak .
E•per1ence helplut Quark or McIntosh skill a plus. Reliable
.transportatton il !pUSI. Send fl•

25 Smell

7 lll1lllt ..

AC.:

Torooa

DAEAII. Few Houri • Big SS.
WiN Sel Cheap. 1-800-820-jj782.

TWo rabbits' 10 giveaway, cage in·

.24 Sluff

31Jepe ....

8200.
VENOINO :

:~;:=·
~
, tool

abbr.

·

\

Ex~t$7,000614-448-88Q7.

Building Salea &amp; Conat.
Profit Potential Uanutactur·
Dealer In ·Available

·~-1
I Ontlulty

Al23 ComputBr

3NT

Pick-Up AT.
Tcumeau Ccwer Only 20K Uilait

199•

19lilluoiclan

.a Al:tlng _ . .

a-,.,otr

•K343 .

1992 lsuzu p.ickup, 4 cylinder, S
speed, 72.000 mileo. good oudi;'
f1ice: 14250. e 1•·992·2584 after~

lhe offering.

.
.
.
.
.
===-.. .,...............
1 Bow "' .......
2 Dtplnd

25Evan-

• K
t AQJ. 42 .

•

DOWN

220fvlvld
lmegn

• KJ 5

1092 'DDdue Dakota pick -Up. IOWP'
mileage. t091 Chevy. S.10 Die~!.
up. 304-11115-3319.

that rou do buli·
ness with people you 'know, and
.NOT to· send money thrpuah the
m~~il unlll you nave irwetlfQated
re~;omme·naa

21"--''
l1ultby

&amp;

s....

......

fom.ly
&amp;2ActJJU•

20a..-..-a~.-..r

•.952

.
I
1991 S· IO TahOe Air Coiwl1ttontf"
ing. Speed. Excel...
304-675-0749. ~ -5111-l!t:ll.
•r

!NOTICE I
OHIO VAllEY PUBliSHING CO.

..,...__

•

1987 S· 10 Extend•d ~~~~~ a~ ·•
tohlaltc, PS, PB, au,
coY~ ·
and inef, S3200. 614·9Q2-R2.. • i

· Business
Opportunity

Albright

....

A Q ~ 10
EM&amp;

s

Air.:

o-.

210

51-

11 CooMonpoiWy

.
A 9 I 3
• AJ 9 I
• 10 7 3

1187 Ford RanG« XLT Y.&amp; AuOI.'
$2.500 114.-379·2521.
"' :

FINANCIAL

54
-57Piedgt

516ah
K8n 10 J.ocaJ19n
tl Goad IUdiiiN"'I1 Formarty,

• 7 4
• , •• 7 54

V·l, AutOfNitiC, High Mil•a~.~
Contact Haruld ~ .,.,_..._,

Houra A 01)' AI NHdtd; IU·
31111-9713, Or 11.......e748.

llcl!nlre
13s-(--..
15lV-

1

5-10 4,.

48Sgl.,o.g.
541 IEnlnllll

14 Clue

.r

ll'ucks tor S.Je

11 ..........

lamol

Up10n Ulllld Cars RL &amp;2-3 ~
South ot L.on, WV. Ftnanaulf"

&amp; Kilby Sooaopot,

4DUnctt(8p.l

williaM Ill ImpOrtanCe.
ICORPIO Coat.' 24-NoY. 221 You may
. _ a dW1ct 10 demouattale your mer· .
l!allrtg lllt&lt;lltV IOdly wNn you lry lo . .
Ill lite clllle't opinion about oometlting
doM
10 dQ.

"'*
not,_
SAGmARMI CNov.

2$oD1c 111 H you

..... toO hlnl, you 'migltlf't9lllflt what

you WMI,IOdly. You ..... lui- younilfl ·
....
d1Mf1!11 PlY 10 " """'·
C.FJEUtlljDII. II -11) A am11t
and a lilltd, wan1 . . .._. 1111n Itt do
'fl/l/lltllllllnO - · CarMJIIfW, .......
detnandlnlli Jacllca oould avolte an
11,11 I'll,...., ...
'

'

"

''

�Ohio Lottery

Herd hands
Davidson
70 defeat

Pick 3:

2-8-1
Pick 4:
5-6-0-1'

•

Ocullonel ehowers

Buckeye 5:

$porta on Page 4

7-22-25·34-37

tonight, chance of thundertorme. Lowe In the 301.
Wednndey, cloudy, highs

neer40.

. '

••

a

..
•

1 Section, 10 Pogn, 35 centto

1tol. 47, NO. 112
01117, Ohio 'IIIIey Publlelllng eolriplftf

· A Gannen Co. New~per •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 4, 1997

.Commis~i.on.~rs tack~e development ..job stalemate
·ElY JIM FREEMAN

.

.

'

"I guess we're at a loss ... I thought we were eiuering into a splrit of coopSentinel Newe 8'-ff
,.
eration," Said Reect
·
.
.
· • County business lind government leaders sat down for the first time this
Reecl said the chamber members were "confused and hurt" .by comments
~ Monday afternoon in an effort to end an ongoing stalemate over the made by Commission President Janet Howard at the Jan. ·zocommission ·
Vjlcant county economic development director's position.
·
meeting.
· • Members of the Meigs COunty Chamber of Commerce, the county toulism
At that meeting, Howard said the economic development job became too
bOard and the Pomeroy Men:hants Association opened dialogue with coun- political with the chamber and Community Improvement Corporation, and
ly commissioners durins their regular weekly meeting in the Meigs County sai_d the offi~e has "got to he for the betterment of the ·county or we're not
Courthouse.
g01ng to do 1!."
.
· . Among the topics discussed- a proposal from the chamber for housing
...We have heeri acting in the best interest of the coun\Y.'' Reed said.
tlie future direciOr in the chaaiher office. '
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. "We may share the common goal ... but we differ on how to get there."
. • Opening &lt;liscusslon was Chamber Treasurer Paul Reed, who Said the group
Commissioners agreed earlieno advertise for a new econo"\ic _develop, iJ!ld the cOmmission differ on h(!W to arrive at a commQR goal: promoting ment. d1rector to rel'lace former d1rector Juha Houdashelt, who res1gned the
ll~~th in t!Je county. ·
-·~·.
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post m Pecemher.

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Question unresolved
But the quest.ion still remains: where will the new director be housed?
Chamber officers and County Commissioner Jeff Thornton said the direc~
tor should continue to be housed in the chamber office on Main Street in
Pomeroy, while Commission PI'esident Janet Ho,.ard maintairie'd the new
director should he located in the commissioners' office in the courthouse.
Thornton Said several times that commissioners and the chamber could
work together.
Commissioners have appropriated $40,000 toward economic development
funding this year and spent abOut $50,000 last year toward economic development, including tourism.
·
"I foresee more revenue in the future, but for now we just don't have it,"
he said, declining to explain from where the additional future revenue would
·
(Continued on Page 3)

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Rio Grande
president
raps 2-year
budget plan .

Voin·
.
. ovich unveils
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bare-bones state
budge~
.prop9sal
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lie recomineOded spendiqg $IS.8
• COLUMBUS - Gov. George billion on education and child-relat·
Voinovich has laid but hisagenda for ed health and', other services in the
tlic final two years ot his·· term in next iwo yeai/i .. He also proposed
off'ICe.
spending aboi'M $8.6 billion on priNow it's the Leaislature's turn to mary and sectiij'dary educati9n during
like a crack at putting together a bud-. the period - :,..ith increases of 4 perg'e·.t.for the two years beginning July cent lind 4.9 percent a year.
•
I
Altogether, spending on primary
• Vqinovich released a proposal and secondary education will eat up
Monday ror a blre-hones, $36.14 bil- 23.7· percent of the budget. The
lion state operatin8 budaet that .
ch~nk, 30.5 percent, will go
educa- .

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jJy PAUL SQUHAADA
Aleocllted P.re11

By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbus Bureau
The University of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College
could be forced to reduce its cours~
offerings for students, if the higher
education portion of the state's next
·two-year budget remains unchanged.
"What generally happens is that
the number of classes decline (in .
tight budgetary times) which tends to

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it i

: Over the nc.xt four months,_lawm.urs- often at lhe behest of key
supporters -wiiLdissect Voinovich's
plan, adding money here and deleting
proarams there.
,· Ovetall, Voinovich proposed gen~al revenue fund spending increas· es of 4.4 percent in lf\e y~ beginning July I, and another 5 percent the

increase the time a student must

arid

would get $1.1 billion
in the first year of the budget, an
increase of ~$ percent over the current budget~. and $1.2 billion in
the following,)i,ear, an increase of9.7
percent.
·~;
.. "This is reality budgeting,"
Browning s.Ja; putting the blame on
the state's gro,yting prison population
and new antf1;rime policies pushed
by a get,tougM.egislature.

"This is . not Gov. George
Voinov[ch with a proactive agenda lo
spend more lllQney on prisons than

'

President
will push
education
.In address

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• Y·&amp; ENGINE
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spend at the school depending Ofl
what class needs they have," said
URGIRGCC President Barry M.
Dorsey.
The community college was
~~-.···~ia~~~ -only. a ~ percent incre_ase Jn.
over the fiscal years ·199&amp;
"It makes it very difficult·
to offer access - meaning keeping
tuition low- and always he able to
ensure quality," he said.
•
Dorsey said that the flat funding
level is primarily enrollment-driven.
the •propoHd budget Monday In Columbus.
"We' ve had a small decline in
Gov. George Volnovlch propoaecl the two-year,
$38.1 billion spending plan with education ••
enrollment, but the fact remains that .
e top prlorlly. (AP)
.
we're still 41 st in the nation in fund. ing higher education," said Dorsey,
public colleges and universities, who referring to 1996 numbers which
we spend on education."
Sure to weigh in with their Iaw- were told to count on incre.ases of 3.4 show Ohio lags in 41st place in the ·
maliers are the presidents of Ohio's percent and 3.8 percent.
nation in higher educdtion funding
- some $700 below the national
average in slate suppqrt per higher
education student.
Dorsey's comments were in.
response to Gov. George Voinovich's
"low-growth" $36.14 billion twpyear budget unveiled Monday at a
GALLIPOLIS -A vital piece of this open case.
Columbus
press conference by slate
Sowdeli was believed tO he travevidence in the alleged murder of a
Tennessee man may have turned up eling with a string of county faits and budget director.
The budget, which · features an
was residing at the Quail Creek
Monday - his body.
growth rate of just 4.5 peroverall
In an ongoing search to locate the Trailer Park with acquaintances.
cent
(or
$2.167 billion) in 1998 and
A van, belonging to Sowders,
body of Troy Sowders, 56, Gallia
County s~eriff's, deputies set out was found abandoned in Bodimer's a 3.9 percent (or $2.248 billion) in
Monday in boats .on the Raccoon parking lot at Rodney. DCputies sus- 1999, includes o nl Y a modest
Creek, their fourth attempt since pected foul play due to evidence increase in the higher education
budget of3 .4 percent in 1998 and 3.8
Sowders' was reported missing in found at -the scene.
Richard Hubman, 29, has been j)Crcent in 1999.
October by his family.
Funding at that level means that
A body was discovered in the charged with· Sowders' alleged mur$254.2
million has been lopped from
creek-caught up in a,pile of rubbish der and is being held in the Gallia
.
the
amount
proposed by the state
at ~: 15 p.m. near the Raccoon Creek County Jail on a $250,000 bOnd. . .
AI Hubman's preliminary hearing, Board of Regents in their budget proCounty Park.
"We feel that it's Troy 's body," a second suspect connected to the posal, explained Regents Chancellor·
Chief Pepuly Pennis Salisbury said case, Brett Pelfrey, testified that he Elaine Hairston.
'.'Today 's proposed budget .is
this morning. "We know of no other . saw Hubman enter Sowders' van on
missing persons in this or the adjoin- Oct. I and later return with a bloody lodged in the past, not bui It for the
future," s,he said . "While our proknife.
ing coun~es."
The body will he transported to · Pelfrey, 25, 383 Quail Creek posed plan and builgel did indeed
the Franklin County morgue for pos- Road, has pleaded guilty to a bill of prepare our campuses to perform for'
itive identification. Peputies hope information charge of complicity to the future, the budget released today
that an autopsy will provide a cause robbery 'in the Gallia County Com- iraps our colleges and universities in
the past."
.
of death that coincides with details of mon Plerui Court.
Dorsey agreed with that assessment.
"It's too low. It's a maner of pri- · ·
orities and unfortunately higher education is not a top priority," he said.'
"Somehow we )lave to convince peo.
WASHINGTON (AP)-Americans' incomes rose 0.8 percent in Decem- pie ·to fund higher education at a
her, the best showing since June, but a second repo" on the eve of an imporhigher rate."
tant interest-rate meeting showed manufilcturing moderating last month.. .
.
And, with the governor's budget
Financial markets rebounded on Monday's rep&lt;irt by the National Asso- ·
still several monthS· of debate and,
ciatio~ of Purehasing ~anage!l'ent indicating the industtial sector had slo~ed
revision away from clearing .the
after months of surpnsmg strength.
·. ·
·
Ohio
House and Senate, more mon.
. ~ association, whi~h conducts a widely followed ·survey of ~orporate
ey may still be found for expanain;
ex«:utives, said its index fell to 52 percent last month from a ~v1sed 53.8 higher education funding.
,. ,.
percent in December.
.
·
. ·
Budget
Director
Greg
Browain&amp;
·'llederal Reserve policy-111akers me&lt;;l today and Wednesday to conSider
whether interest rates should he raised to keep the economy frQm overhe_at- said Monday 'that excess tax rpv.ing and sparking a-new round of inflatioil. Evidence of slower growth could enues would he split evenly bethigher education 1111d K-12 wlloot
•
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penuade the Fed to· stand pat, 1111alysts said.
1
funding
pools.'
'
By midday Monday, the' Dow Jones indusbial averase WIIS down 1'1 pomts,
Dorsey
said
he
"''OUid
'like
to ....
recovering nearly all of earlier losses. Bond traders were encduraged by the
report that the pace of IJianufacturing had slowed, suuesting inflation would the state. ' legislature tonsider lhe
staie's rainy day tund whltll sill ia1
remain tinder contro,I.
·
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In its report on inc9mes, the Commerce Pepartrnenl said that despitt!: tile the $110() million ranse.
to
say
$800
mllltoe,
~
•
"Who's
increase in earnings, spending n:ise just 0.5 percent during the all-important
more
~ssary than $500 mil~
'' '
hbliday'shopping season. •.,' '
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·Body found could be
alleged murder victim
·'

: WASHINGTON (AP) - Plesident Clinton stands before a Repub- ·
lican-led Conpss 1onight, decjaring
tliis • "profoundly new era" that
qemands bipartisan action to llalance
the nation's budget and save its trou:
. pled schools.
· · In his fourth State of the Union
-~.Clinton will.deliver a workmanlike blueprint of his secondtinn:tax cuts, spending cuts, colleJe
· I' ald and higher school ~tandards, ·
tiJong with welfare, health care and ·
campaign finance reform.
• Few · new initiatives were
promised in the ad~ress, which is a .
~~tickaged version o~ his 1996 cam)l!Ugn stump speech. If nothins else,
llle annual report on the country's
PRESIDENTIAL GREE11NG- P,..ldent CHnton gettured to the
hi:alth ·was . upbeat. "Th~ nation is
crowd Moray ee he •dcltltltd the DemoCratic GoVernors Anocllltlon· In Weahlngton. The preeldent' deiiVIn the $tnl of the
strOng," Clinton said Monday. "We
are at Pf~· We have extraordinary Union eddrlll tonight. (AP) .
pro5peqty...
; He was scheduled 10 ·address a college lo8Jls, is ~ cornerstone of tonight, but his bal~nccd budgei plan
· would raise taxes by $80 biMibn joint session of the House and Sen- his education packaSe.
Though critics fear tuition will on corporations and airline travelers.
ate at ·9 p.m. EST.,Aides Said the
The details behind his rhetoric will
increQC in line with the tax breaks,
$peech could run an hour or so.
be'
unveiled Thursday, when he sub. ; Previewing the speech for the Clinton hails the proJram as away to
mits
his 1998 budget plan to Conftl\ion's governors, the presidelll said, "open the doors" of colleges and unigress.
Clinton will meet .with con·
''As we staild on the.edge of this new versities.
Qe also was olin.nouncing that gressional leaders soon after tonight's
cent~? an4 this profoundly ne"' era,
we ha~ a unique opport~nity and a school districts willing to issue stan- address ·.to reinforce his call for no
.
cpmmon responsibility, which is to . dardized tests :wOuld ,aet more feder- more "petty bickering.'.'
.
To
the
natjon,
Clinton
is
urgh\g
!Ike action tolcther and try to ptcpowe al money to pay for eumi rating stu· spirit of volunteerism. And he isa
tfiis country not just for the next four dents. against international an4
p,leading for Americans to dism1111tle
nationil standards.
y~. but fQI' the IICXt SO years."
racial
and ethnic barriers.
ThC educaiion WJ. credits are part
: His top priority: bnpfl)ve luneri·
House
Newt Gingrich, Rca's schools with $50 .billion in new of a Clinton's $I()()( billion tax-cui Ga.• and Speaker
Senate
Majority Leader
packqe. He also is proposing a
federal speqding through 2002.
Trent Lou, R-Miss., Said in a letter to
With the nation wlk:hina. Clinton $500 tall credit to low- and middle- Clinton they were ready to work with
I!U promoting his plan to give income parents for eil:h child under the White House. "We believ~ there
$1,500 tax crodits or $10,000 ~ 13.
.Republicans .are proposina their is. enough common ground tel find
diductions for hiaher educ~~n and
reasonable solutions to these probjiib-ttlining. .The ·$39 billioil plan, owil $1~3 )»Ilion tax-c~t proposal. ''Iems,'' the letter said.
.
The ~sidenl won't mention. it
~liich also makes it easier IQ I'CJI8Y
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Aeports say personal income up,
but factory output vexes Wall St.

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