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Ohio Lottery

East wins .
AII~Star tilt
in Cleveland

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Super·Lotto:
2-9-14-21-33-40
Kicker: ·
5-0-9-6-3-9
Pick 3:
7-2-6
Pick 4:

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8-4-8-8

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:Vol. 47, NO. 181
01197, Ohio Ylolley Publlelllng Conlptny

Moatly cloudy with a

cha- of ftiii'I'IH. Lowe In

2 SectiO!Ie, 12 Piog., • - ·
A Gannett Co. ,._,, r cr '

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Monday, February 10,1997

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Congress seeks b.r oad tax overhaul .by May t
_By JIM ABRAMS
-Alaocllled Prna Writer.

The new computer "can' tcope 'with the complexities of the system," said .
Rep. William Archer, R-'Texas, chairman of the House Ways and Means Com·
WASHINGTON - . Congressional Republican leaders, citing the mittee. •
"abysmal quelily" of tbe Internal Revenue Service's management of the tax
"It's nQt just thci IRS. It's tbe system that's got to be changed, and we
, system, urged President Clinton on Sunday to come up with a broad tax over- · hope that he'll accommodate that," Archer said on CBS' "Face the Nation."
• haul by May 1.
.
.
. .
·
Archer signed the leiter along with House SJ)!'aker Newt Gingrich, House
In a letter to Clinton, the 'top Republicans said they wanted a proposal for Majority Leader Dick Armey, Senate Maj.ority Leader Trent Lou. Senate ·
tax system that would be~impler, (airer,less intrusive, pro-srowth and flex- Majority Whip Don Nickles. and Senate Finance Commiuee Chairman .
ible to technological change. . ..
·
•~
· William Roth.
Clinton has agreed that the IRS needs to manage the tax system better
: The tax code, they said, "has grown so horribly complex that-many Amerbut
ha$ l!'jected GOP proposals for a tlat tax or for replacing income tax with
. · -ic8Ds despair lliat only someone with advanced degrees can even hope to figure it out."
·
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a national sales tax,
, . , ."
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: 'lii,~Y said the IRS's ·con_tinuedtroubles with a $4 billion ~~~~ler lnild- . - Jack Kemp, Bob Dole's running male on the last fall's losing Republican
•ernization program "has_ a direct correlation to the abysn\al ,qllaljty 'of ihe ticket and a potential presidential candidate in 2000, said on NBC's "Meet
thci Press" the country should "get rid of the IRS as we know it. We need
·agencY's service to the nation's taxpayers."
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AS LOW AS:

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Concerned .about cost, fraud, Taft ~~
.suggests 'motQr
voter' changes
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finance. his b'avcls around th6 coun- ·
" I have strongly supported the
By The·Aiaoclatad Pre11
:~ Prna Wrllilr
try on behalf of Republicin candiprovisions
1hat make il easier for citOhio
Secretary
of
State
Bob
Taft
·
:- WASHINGTON . - · Declaring. dates and to "lay the anitlitecrure
i7.C
O
S
tO
regiSic'r
to Vote," Tali said.
said changes are needed in a 1993
·that be woUld love to get anothi;r ·· nationillly for the type of#inincial
federal law designed to increase vot- "But while 1hc i01ent of 1hc law is
:c;hanoe to faCe off withAl Gore, Jack' effon you've got to make) it you are
sound, the practical application has
regisb'ation.
er
: ~emp lays· be is already 'aying.the. • going ,to be ready to run."
been less than ideal in some rcspccls,
The
"mot91'·VOter"
law
should
be
:aroundwork for a possible presJdenThe fonncr New York c ngresschicny
in the atea of maintaining
cheaper, easier to carry out and less
. .tial run in 2000.
.
man and housina secretary acknowl•
susceptible to fraud, be said.
. · . accurate voter registration records."
. • Kemp, Bob Dole'~ vice presiden- ~ged that. hci 4!d,riot dow•ll in thC :'
AI of the states in lhc ·survey
The
law,
officially
known
as
the
tial running lnate on tbe Republican v1ce pre_s•denUa! debate. 11111 ·_11e
except Oklahoma reported an
National
Voter
Registration
Act,
ticket last fall, said Sunllay on NBC's:• showed antercst 1n a rema . h w1th
requires states to pemiit mail-in vot- increase in voter registration from
~·Meet the Press'.' that he enjoyed the Gore, w~ heads.the ~eld of J?OISib!C
er reaisb'ation and io allow people to 1994 'to 1996, but fewer people vot~despite the ticket's loss..
Democl'llllc pres1denhal nomaneeilua '
register while gelling a driver's ·ed in last year's presidential election
'"''My appetite is wheued. Lloved 2002. "That· would &lt;be very,
than in 1992.
·
license
'Of silnins up for public assisit. We had a are1t time/' Kemp said. in~resting. ~ ce~ly would,"
The law was passed when Democ-tance.
He said no final decition will be said.
The Nllioul Association of Sec- rats· .controlled Congress and the
. made on ,a ·presidential candidacy
On the · issues, Kemp said h_e
retaries of Stllli met durina the week- Wbite House. Taft's fellow Republi·
1111111• ihe conjleu~ cle!;tions · favored ~ampa!IJI _ finance I!Yerhaul be tabn to "mike ~ that there is end
in Washinaton. Taft was-chair- cans now control Congress and are
iii 19911, but Ailienca InUit start that would eliminate "soft money," a safely net under whil:h they should
man
of a subcommittee making tbe considered to be more likely to listen
lhlpi~a iLl visiO!I for tbe next cenru- the laraely unregulated contributions· nor be alloMII to fall."
colllpnlbCnsive review of the to. his proposals than Democrats
He said •he QPPOSed the balanced ·fii'St
ry UG "I'm lootina ' forward to from bil busiiiCSSCI and uniOIIS to the
law.
r.
woulcl' have been.
beini ·a ilia Jlll't of that 'debate."
politic•l parties.
budaet amendment promoted by
Taft said states should be allowed
'I1Ie
District
of Col11mbia and 4j
. Ke!nJJ said that by tbe end .o f !his
Re~ardi~ll tile!. ,new welfare law moat Republicans because it would
staleS
wereiiii'Veyed
concerning
the to require Social Security identjfiea·
riiOnlh biD will hliVII put !Oge~r a and .tbc! eJ•iJilnabon of benefits for force Conpess to raise taXes or """ . lnii!Or,vOICII' law. .
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JI(JIIilc:al action commitlee to . help . I . imnupts, he said StepS ,abould taxes hiah durin• ai,'IICCsajQII.
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By .ill ABRAMS ..

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~~ Gore· in. 2000 ·rac"e
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newspaper reponed:
The figures published Sunday .·in
The Columbus Dispatch were pan of.
the O~io Con ~ umer ~onfidence __
• lode~ •.;1 new itiondify feature·!Jf thi:
Buc~c,-c State Poll. The newspaper.
sponsors the poll, whioh is conducted by Ohio State University.
Fifty-three percent of Ohioans
surveyed for the poll said they
expected national economic ·condi- ,
lions to 6c good or mostly good in the next 12 mon1hs. That opinion is held
by 61 percent of Americans, the poll·
:
,said.
About 34 percent of OhioanS":.
polled prediCted !heir householl
finances will be in. better shape by
1~8. while 40 percent of Americans ::

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~t(ernp· .g~ars· tor

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American consumers as a whole, a ·

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A statewide poll _showed that Ohio •
consumers are more cautious than

'Last chance' money filled candidates'
coffers before it became illegal in 1996

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By The Aaaoclated

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his ·plan
'
year's real ·
ways to
about that and figunng out how
and Democrats
the political fallout.
.,_ -- _
·1·
"My concern is Republicans probably won't want to sintl.e out vi¢tims
with names any more than the president," said Martha Phillips; execqtive
director o(The Concord Coalition, a bipartisan anti-deficit group. "lnstea4
of preparing people for the tough choices, YllU end up with a rllutual pact to
.
.
sidestep thci tough choices and a budget that doesn't get the job do,~ . "
Little
H.llly
Englllh
and
her
big
alater,
Abby
Stewart,
of
High
Street, Pomeroy, found SaturThe political PfOblcm is particularly acute for Republicans: · -- .
day'
a
anow
,luat
right
for
making
a
anowman.
They
named
him
"Frosty.
• About -f our Inches of
Clinton has gone first. For the GOP to achieve its goals of bigger tax cuts
anow
fell
during
Saturday
morning.
(Sentinel
P,hoto
by
ChariHoeflich)
.
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. andrnore defense spending than he p..oposes, it will have to find deeper s~v­
ings than the president wants somewhere else in the buqget. ·)
That could leave the Republicans:ducking Democratic accusations that
said so.
·
they""" out to beartlesscy slash sonie badly need~ program- precisely what
In addition, 64 percent of Ohioans
lhey· spent 1996 doing when Clinton branded them as out to gut Medicare,
said now is a good time to purchase ·
,the politically sensitive health care prcgram for the elderly and disabled.
major household items, compared ..
· -.. The prdblem with this is you convince the public it's painless," Senate
wi.lh 76 percent of Americans.
·
Budget Commince Chairman Pete Domenici, R-N.M., said Friday of Clin·
The January index was 94.8, ·sigCOLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio . compliance with the law. The money gubernatorial candidate, raised
· ·ton's package .
. politicians received nearly $1 million that was received on thai day had $145,000 of his $158,075 with con- nilicantly below the 97.4 mark 'o f a
"He's clearly painted Republicans into a comer," Stanley Collender, who in "last-chance" campaig~money on been committed months earlier, and . tributions exceeding lhe $2,500 lim- national index compiled by the Unimonitors federal budget developments for the Bur,son·Marstellel public rela- March 18. Mu~h of that money was lhese contributors, like many Amcr- il. ·tle raised all of it during a three-_ versity of Michigan .
lions firm, said of th_e president.
··
The Ohio i ndcx was modeled
in the form of large dmiations which icans, procra.,linaled and didn't send day period just before the deadline.
: ·Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., !lashed some anger over his hcicame illeaal on March )9 under a their check until the last momen_ts."
State Treasurer Kenneth Black- afler the Univcrsily of Michigan •
party's predicament. He ti!ld reponers that he had telephone~ Clinton to say new state law.
She was trailed by Lee Fisher, well, a Republica~ and a possible nutionul index. Both usc 100 as a ·.
h~ had "hoped fiJr more le'adership" from his ~udge! . Translation : The presThe March 18 donations were . whom she dcfealcd in the attorney challenger to Taft. raised one-third of benchmark for very good economic
id~nt hll!l proposed fewer savlligs than Republicans need to achieye _their pri- one-fourth of the $3.6 million raised ·general's race in 1994. Fisher, a prob- his $330,528 before the deadline. times and e xtremely positive cOn. ;
nn.ttes. ~
~
·
,
. for statewide politics in 1996, 'The able Democratic candidate for gov- AboutiOperccntofhis money came sumcr sentiment.
·' . · "He understood what' I was saying," L!Jtt said. "He was maybe a little (Cleveland) Plain Dealer reponed ernor in 1998, raised $227,000 on . in on M~rch 18.
" When these numbers dip down _
bit taken aback I felt as sb'ongly as I did."
Saturday. .
Ma'rch 18: He raised $546,000 in conA ·campaign finan ce reform in the 80s, then we' ll begin 10 be con· · Later, Clinton told roporters tliat ~ was .not upset by Lou's rellllll'b and
As of March 19, no statewide or tributions that exceeded the $2,500 activist said the deluge proved ihe cerned," said Lucia Dunn, din:ctoq&gt;f' '
that the process ~as jpst beginninl.
·
"' .
economic indicators for Ohio Statc:'s :;
legislative candidate can accept more limil.
·.
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new law wa.' necessary.
.
: "We always knew we were &amp;Ding to have to work hard to reconcile the than $2,500 per election from a per' !
Third was Secretary of State Bob
"The proof !hat what wa~ put into .survey group. .
differences between us. We can do this," he .said.
' ·
The
statewide
index
was
calculat~­
son or political action committee.
Taft, the lending Republican candi- place on the 19th was necessary can
· Yet eyen is Clinton spoke, his administration has·been sounding out conOhio Attorney General Betty date 'for governor. He raised half of be found oil the 18th," said David cd based-on January telephone inter- ··
~ional Democf!lts and interest grollps such as the American Association
Montgomery had the biggest fund- his S1.1 million last year before the · Zanotti, head of the Solon-based views with 1,000 randomly selected '
qf Retired "'rsons to see whether they could accept a reduction mthe govaduhs in Ohio. The margin ·of cTTor ~
raising dsy on March 18, whcin she · deadline, including $158,119 on Ohio Roundtable.
ernment's ~~ of inflalion II$ part of a final bud&amp;et deal. . 1' •
·
took in $368,225.
March 18.
The state senate sponsor of the . will range from 3.4 percentage points -•
• That prOpOsal is a political hjlt potato that would have a more Wijlespread
MarkWeaver,aspokesmanforthe
Richard Celeslc, Ohio's former · campaign rcfonn was among state 1o 4:7 perccillagc points in either : .
c;ffect on !he pUb6c than 'anythi~g :in Clinton's budget-balancing pl~n . ·
•
attorney general. said she was i~ "fuil governor and a possible Democratic lawmakers who· raised significant direction, the newspaper said.
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New poll finds
Ohio consumers
are conservative
in financial affairs

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delight------ Cautious
with cash

, WASHINGTON (AP) ..,.. Republican~ sti)l smarti~g from 'ihe budget
wounds President Clinton inflicted on them last year have a new w,orry: Yis ·
$1.69 triltion spending plan for 1998 makes budget-balancing lQgk prility_ea5y._•
. Clinton.claims to balance ·the 'bud~ by 2002 mosdy 'by c!Jtting unspcc•
. ified defense and domestic progrlll!ls·al!d tritpming Medicare paYJ!!Cnts to
. 'hospitals .and,doctort. He &amp;150 woold raise some corporate ti!JI~~ •.ren!(W. 10
'percent' tax on aiiline tickets and auction _pans of.the broadi:Ui spec\I'Um.
· That is hardly widcspreJ¥,1 public SibiJicl! Clinton would sweete~ the pot
. by cutting taxes for many families and
students, expanding ·hcialth'care coverage to millions of children
wotkcrs. restl!rins,one•lhird
·
we1fare benefits slashed
·
ei&lt;b'a · scbools.
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~-Frosty's

tax reform in America so that working class families can get true',.'permanent tax relief and we can get this economy growing again."
· . :
Republicans also took issue Sunday with Clinton 's plans.to cut wies by
$981lillion as pan of his blueprint for balancing I he bud gel by 2002.
,
Clinton's tax cuts provide a $500-a-c hild lax relief, tax breaks for college
students and an eliminalion of capital gains taxes for most people who sell'
their homes.
..
They ','are too targeted and too small," Senate Budget Commiuee Clwir•
m~n Pete Domenici., R-N.M., said on CNN's·"Late Edition ."
·
Archer too said the president's suggestions dido 't go far enough. Repub-- . ·
licans are seeking about twice as much in tax relief, and " the bigger the num;
ber the better," Archer said. ,
·
.
· The administration's point man on the'budget. Office ofManagementandBudget director Franklin Raines, said Republicans haven't explained how
they would pay for their proposed tax cuts.

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tion for voter registration. He also ~
· would require registration fonns t~ ~
include an ~plicant'S pi ICe of birth •·
as a way of preventing illegal ~liens ,:·
from voting.
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-People born outside the United ··
States would be required to list' tbe t
date whcin they became citizeu'IJill ~·
· the_coun ·that granted them citiZen- ~·
ship.
,, ·
Taft also supported removal ·of a ~
requirement that public -......._ ; " ·
agencies keep forms ahowilll dill . •
patrons declined an offer to Nil* :
as voters._He said this proviiiOa ineffective and crealell 1 ...... ~
paperwork. .

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Juan Carlagena, a New Ylllt: ..._ : _
ney famili• .with
islation, said proposals Dll IW Oijl. ,
zeiiShip ·iiiiiC bued oa a - :
notion illlllllepl ;votlna W. wWiao
sprea4,
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Monday, '*'-Y 10, 1817

:commental}t
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Uondlly, ~ 10, 1117

614-992·2158 •

F~:

992·2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controlt.r

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

General 'Maneger
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Letters to the editor

· ate of former Haitian president Jean- refused to provide specifics, and
Bertrand Aristide, was involved in the would not be quoted by name. ·
8nd·J•nMoller
WASHINGTON - A fonner top murders of Haitian opposition polit·
The former head of the Haitian
Haitian official who's ·suspected of . ical figures.
·
. police, Tous~nt now runs a security store in a Port-au-Prince suburb, A
being involved in political murders in
June 28, l99S, letter from the FBI to
his homeland - recently detained
by immigration officials as he tried to By Jack Anderson · the Haitian· justice minister names
enter the United States.
Toussiint as someone the bureau
and
Sho'!lY . thereafter, immigration
intended to interview ·in its inyesti·
officials let him go..
galion into t)Je March 1995 killings
Jan Moller
At best. the story of how that bapof right-wing political figures
The government's assessment of MireiUe Dorocher Be!tln lll)d Eugene
pened raises questions of bureau•
Toussaint
hasn't changed, yet today · Baillergeau.
cratic bungling or a disregard for civ·
il liberties. At worst, it raises ques- .he walks free in Miami. Immigration
More recently, a State Department
tions of political meddling in the case officials say that's because neither the letter asked immigration officials to '
State Department nor any other "place Toussaint in its lookout sysof a suspected murderer.
Last August, the State Department agency would provide the evidence tem so that, should he return to the
U.S., he would he · immediately
quietly urged the Immigration and that was ·needed to detain him.
"We did what' we were asked to detained and placed in exclusion
Naturalization Set:Vic.e to keep an eye
out for Dany Toussaint, a Haitian do, and when we didn't get the evi- proceedings." ·
,Toussaint's.release is pllf\)y due to
n!Jtional who officials believed had dence, we couldn't hold him," Brian .
Jordan,
a
spokesman
for
the
INS,
told
lhe.
work of Iril Kunban, his Miamiparticipated in · :·extrajudicial
our
associate
George
Clifford
Ill.
·
killings."
·
·based·la\Yyer. Kurzban was threaten·
But a State Department ing io ask for. a hearing on whether
That's a polite 'way of saying that
· the people running our foreign poli- · spokesman says officials there did his client was·being wrongly held. As
cy thought Toussaint, a close associ- forward information. However, he a result; Toussaint was released pend·

Child must be disciplined early
Dear Editor,
, I can't see why some people .
expect their children .to obey them,
.when they have let them (the chil~ren) have their own way until they
are five or six years old. Then it is
live or six years too la1e.
I was in a home years ago when a
father asked (not told) a boy to do
·something. I don't remember what it
was now. The boy was seven years
old, and drew back bis fist and said,
"I don't have to, and you can't make
me." His dad said to me, "Opie, if it
was a hoy of yours, what would you
ito?" I said, "Nothing", He said,
:·Huh, how come?" I said "you have
let him so seven years too long." His
f~ther died about a year later. When
l~e boy .was about nine years old I
was in the home and the boy took a
belt and whipped his mother all over
the house and the mother overpowered him and took the belt from him
lihd said "don'i you ever do that
again." Of course he just laughed at

Iter. .

;:· I want to call your attention io a
l~tter I wrote to my stepmother in
1931. I was at J:ort Worth, Texas, and
n\y stepmother was in West Virginia..
J'he letter contained 128 pages. Back
whel! I was .a young man, anytime I
\Vrote · a ·letter it always contained
from 12 to 20 pages.
.
:' I have published a book namely,
l:ets Move. It has 200 pages plus 100
'pages of goodies. It is really two
·lil&gt;oks in one, I made 73 moves in my
lifetime. Thirteen in one year.
You might wonder why I moved
much (tile rent came due). No. I,
'1ollowed construction work. In 1960
Ihere wasn't . much work around

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Charleston, W.Va., where I was living at that time, so I boujJht a used
school bus and converted it into' a
TKAT~ ODD •••
mobile home. I went to Fort Wayne,
Ind., \hen to Omaha, Neb., and from
there to Cheyenne, Wyo. 'The government had 200 Minuteman missiles
C·3PO WEArE
in a loci mile radius around
~RUNO
Cheyenne. They were ahout five
IN
miles apart. We worked one day on
each. then went to another one, and
OR161NAL VER.SI(]N.
did the same thing, -we had to finish
the work, so another crew would follow, and do their job (they didn't want
anyone to know too much about how
they wen:. buill). That is the year we
moved 13 times, then headed for
Texas.
., First Sarnuel3: 13 •• In that day I
will perform against Eli_all things I
have spoken concerning· his house;
when I begin, I will also make an end.
For 1 have told him that I will judge
his house forever for the iniquity
·which he knoweth; because his sons
made themselves · ·vile. And he
restrained them not.
· ·
David failed to raise his children L--'------------~-----------------------,-_::,j.
in.the right. way, His third son, Absa···
Iom. conspired against him and tried
to wrestle the kingdom from him.
Read second S.amuel I 5-19. Then
David's fourth SOl\, Adonijah, Absa·
lorn's half-brotber,'decided he would By JaMph Spear
trayal of the sordid Flynt story: · pllint, he printed a parody of liquor
tty what Absalom had failed to
·
· He grew 'ilp a 'dll'l·pool' hillbilly ad wllich depicted the'Rev. Jerry FalLarry Flynt just flipPed the Estabaccomplish. Read,first Kings Chap- ' lishment ·another digital salute, and · , selling moonshine-iit'the hills of Ken- well having a sexual encounter with
ter I, verses 1.6. ,I'm going-to write once al!ain .the Establishment isn 't tucky. He gQI1fho"lilfl!strip-cll..b busi- his mother in an outhouse: Falwell
!
., 'f
sued and the case made its way to the
that sixth verse: And his father had getting it.
.
Supreme
Court. In a unaniJII()US decinot displeased him at any time in say'
The Hustler magazine publisher's
Spear
sion,
ihe
Court
held that in the inter·
ing, Why hast thou done so?
name has been in the lights bigtime,
Ople ,Cobb, · thanks to a major HollywoOd pro- ness in Cincinnati, started ·a gamy est of robust public debate, public fig·
· Ponddleport duction about his life. He recently newsletter for his blue-collar cus- ures must tolerate outrageous satire,
published an autobiography, "An. tol\iers, · then watched as it rapidly . · . It was yet another vivid demonUnseemly Man: My Life as .a grew into a multimillion dollar' pub- stration of the resilience ofJ!teAmer·
Pornographer, Pundit and Sociai,Out- . lishing empire. No one of rational ican tradition of free expression, of
cast." Swarms of horrified wowsers mind who has seen Hustler magazine the inescapable truth that . worthy
have taken chase; the politically cor- . would deny that it is Odious. It feac speech can never be secure unless
pby a traffic ticket, filling the coffee . reel are on his case: and such famous tures naked bodies, mutilated women, even lhe most offensive speech is
pot, privacy: all the benefits are right and'familiar eneiniesas ·oliver North, and scatological cartoon~ ..Even Lar- protected, As Flynt himself said to the
press at the !ime: "If the First
in the home. Did I forget to mention · ·Gloria Steinem and Jerry Falwell are ry Flynt agrees it is tasteless.
Along
the
way,
he
married
·one
of
·
Amendment
will protect a ~cumbag
day care? _
·
flaying him:
his
strippers,
a
pitiable
woman
named
like
me,
it
will
protect the rest of
Teleconferencing, e-mail, plane
Do you think Larry Flynt is lov·
Althea
Leasure
who
became
addictyou."
.
reservations, barge reservations, legal ing this1 My guess is he's spinning
And thereby did Larry Flynt
documents, coupons for lunch: all can wildly in his gold-plated wheelchair ed to drugs and eventually died of
AIDS,
and
their
exceedingly
unci&gt;nbecome
an _inadvertent "hero," _for
be handled over the computer. If you and cackling like a banshee. Once
ventional
relationship
turns
out
to
be
lack
of
a,
better word, of the F1rst
are taking a bath, your answering again, he has gotten their goats.
a
.moving,
,
but
no
doubt
idealized,
Amendment
wars,
machine gets the information.
Once again he has shoved his bawdy
love
story:
·
.
Last
month,
CNN talk-show host
I predict Meigs County will have antics up their elevated noses.
Also along the way, he go! arrest- Larry King brought Flynt and Falwell
hundreds of business people wanting
To hear the critics, you would
ed
several tjmes, served a number of bac:k tojJether, and the knowledgC!'~Ie
to visit this wonderful place to locate think the movie glorifies the smut and
jail
sentences, thumbed his nose at observer had ~o marvel over the wtsa hamburger stand or another chem- the peddler. It is indeed a visual lie to
prosecutors
and judges, and was per· ~om ~fth~ shibboleth abo!Jt obscen·
ictil plant.
. ··
.'
cast a svelte Woody -Harrelson as the
Did I mentiOn I will accept the porcine Flyn't. Still, I thought "The manently disabled by a my5\0rious . ny bemg ~n the eye of the beho!der.
position if you throw in the spring People vs. Larry Flynt" is a fair pc!r- · gunman bent on assassination. At one On one s1de sat Flynt, an admitted
catalog and cat fooo1
Roger Reeb,
Racine

·o -·

REMEMfiR

/fiDLI ·
SHOES TilE

-The wowsers vs.

L~r- ry

·l

Dear Editor,
.
., The only logical place for the
Meigs County Development Depart·'
l!}ent to be located is in.the house. Its
cozy, you cal) have a family, plant a
.Jatden and avoid all the impassioned
political persuasions.
, As .!_he president said, he wants a
1
micro-computer in every home and
every child on the Internet. These
..~~mputers can. store every ·known
. siness on planet' Earth, and DD
velopment director) can transmit
turel of every inch ·o f Meigs
un'ty. Every conceivable data can
transmitted.
Compared with the cost of heating
.. ' bt~ilding or moving in the court
• the lights, computer, interrup•
· ns from people asking directions to

a

Joseph

foday .in histoiy .
.

'today is Monday, Feb. 10, the 41st day of 1997. There are 324 dBys left
the year.
·
Today'sHighlight in History:
On Feb. 10, 1949, Arthur Miller's play "Death of aSalesman" opened
Broad\llay's Morosco Theater.

I'
I •

this dale:
'. In '1763, France ceded Canada to England under the Treaty of Paris, which
On

i!tded the FrcncJ! and IridianWar,

·
' l In 1840, Britain's Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of Saxe-Cotiurg-

~o~~j 846, .members ofthe Chu~h of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,·the

.!~fQnllons.

began an exodus to the west from Illinois.

.1 In 1863, showman P.T, Barnum staged the wedding of General Tom

•,rumb and Men:y Lavinia Warren- both midgets- in New York City.
, In 1893, comedian Jimmy Durante was born in New York City.
·\ In 1933, the firs\ singina telegram was inuoduced by the Postal Telegram
~Yin New York.
,
:j In 1942, the former French liner Normandie capsized in New York Har!)pr 11 day after it cauJbt rtre while being refitted for thC-U.S. Navy.
, , ·\ In 1962, the Soviet Union exc~nged captured.American U'2 pilorFran·
cis,Oary Powers fOt; Rudolph Ivanovich Abel, a Soviet spy held by the Unit·
. ~Statcs. .
·
.·
.
•t Jn 1967, ·the ~th Amendment to the Constitution, dealins with·presi~iatial diaaliility and succession, went into effect.
n 1981 ,ei11lt people wen: killed, 198 injured, when fire broke out atthe
Veps Hilton hotel-casino.
, 'Ten yean 1110: Sitrgeon General C. Everet~ Koop 'old a House panel he'
.'qVOJed network television !ldvertisements for condoms because of the health
illreai ~by AIDS.
..
. ·
·' : Five years ago: Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin won the Iowa Democratic cau·
~-- BoKer Mike -TYson was convicted in Indianapolis of rapins Desiree
, .:!(~IIJIOn, a Min Btack America !)OIItcstant. Author Alex Haley died in .
· Sj:attle It aae 10.'Bonnie Blair oflhe United States won the women's S(J()..
.nleter speedsbdaa competition ld the Albertvijlc Olympics. .
..

f

.•

•

.

and unibashed an.d even proud fdth
monger, On the othe_r side sat Falwell,
the self-anointed saint who in 1994
peddled on his Oid lime Gospel
Hour a video suggesting the presidetit
of the United States is a murderer,
and who, in 198S, had this to say
about women's rights advocates: ·
"I listen to the feminists and all
these radical gals •· most of them are
failures . ... They married some Caspar Milquetoast who asked permission to g9 .to. the bathroom. These
women just need a man in the house•.
.That's all they need ... a man to teH
them what time of day it· is ind to
lead the home."
·
11ie scuz incrchant was ~!early
enjoying the irony, and two moments
told it all. One _came when Flynt
griped Ibid his antaaotiist had rqlected to call him a "spiritual dwarf," as
the cleric usually does. The other
occurred when Falwell was loudly
declaiming his hatted of pornography
and Flynt interrupted:
"Jerry, when you call me garbage,
call me Mr. G&amp;Ib8ge."
Joseph Spear II a "ndleated
writer fo.- fllewspaper Eaterprlle
Auociattoo;
·

11

track to college years ahead of ti~ been working in the pi-ogram a few
and to make them more qualified to times a w~k. (Now) dozens of them
enroll based on academic · merit, ·are taking_a MESA class every day, .
rather than the color of their skin."
and sometimes on Saturday." .
.·
Institute, which will continue, on a
The focus ought not to be only &lt;in
'The school's principal, James Taynational level, the campaign against
disildvantaged
min~rity students.
lor,
points out the importance of "just·
race and sex preferences in college
NatHentoff
Years ago: during the Boston civil exposing theln early enough 1o ge_ton
admissions, amogg other areas. In
response, Martin Luther King Ill -- pared them, during weekends and war ·• when a fe&lt;Jeral judge tried to track for the ri1ht courses in hiah
the elder son of the most compelling sumtners,. for ~ollege - with good in.tegrate nearly all-white , South school pnd tJ!e right traCk to colleae.
advocate for equal · opportunity in results. Most of those. youngsters Boston Hi_gll'School-· the press over· To make sure they are qualified, we ·
American history -- has created, have been black. but not exclusively. looked the fact that the white school. · have to start vety, very early."
had been ·~· bad as the black sc)1ools .
But in any city, there ·are nonanother new n~tional organizati~n,
In recent years, a. few colleges
from
which
the
deCiQedly
unwelcome
black
disadvantaged kids who also
Am~ncans Umted for AffirmatiVe have also gotten involved m ootreaeh
newcomers
carne.
Few
of
ihe
white
need
exposure
to get thCm on the ·
Act1~n- .
··
programs. But by a~~ large, the c.ol- .
. It IS hkely that th~ Supreme C~urt leges and univers1~es tru_mpet~ng · students, most of them from low- right.track. Frank M~lrilrola, for· ::
income families, went on to college merchancelloroftheNewYorkCity ·
~Ill e_ventually dec.•de. the constlt~.- their involvement m aff~rmau:ve
because hardly anyone encouraged public school system, once saw 1 kid '
uonahty &lt;;&gt;f Proposition ·209_. but m action have not cast their lighttoward
them
to try.. So too with the ~k stu- lounging on the -steps of· his high 1
v1ew of mcreasmg_ oppos_1110n to finding applicants in schools in poor
dents.
.
'IB
school when he should ha,ve been in
race-based affumallve actm~, n_ot neighborhoOds. Their basic c~ncern
One of Sanchez's illustrations of .cllllls. "What do you want to be?" '
only on t~e R1ght, the deba~ Will bit· has been with merely improvmg the
hOw outreach before callege becomes Macchiarohi asked. .
.
terly contmue for a long t1me, m and statisticS of black enrollinent'· with·
the
·ticket
to
new
challenges
and
sat·
"S~tation
man,"
the
younJSier
·
~ut of state legislatures.
out doing the hard. sometimes expen·
lsfactions' is MESA, a University of answered.
·
Already, h?weve~, some colleges sive wqrk, ofprtparing youngsters of
Californiii enginecering and science
"You ought to be thinkin1 about :
and umversmes •• m fear of what low-income funilies for college:
achievement 'program. "It serves," going to college,'' the chancellor said. :·
some · courts have, already dorn: •·
A nouibly impmunt arti~le on
Sanchez-writes, "more than ·13,000 The boy shook his head.
.
have dec•do;d t~ fmd a wa~ of ach1ev- wbai colleges can accoinphsh by
stUdents
statewide.
Most
of
them
are
"Dammi~"
Macchiarota
said to
tngd1verstty w11hout maki11g ~ace the goillg beyond traditional affirmative
minorities
because
officials
target
the
me,
"he
doesn't
think
he
can
make
it 1
mam factor. Last November, m Syn- action". based on racial preference·
program in minority communities. because he's Italian and in the wrona
f~x Weekly Report·· a valuable m'!&lt;'· • is Rene Sanchez's "Post Preference
but no raCe is exCluded ...
·
neighbodtood."
. .
.
pendent newsl~tter for college admm- College Recruiters Help Minority
"At PwJartin Luther King Jr. MidNat · Heatotr Is a aatlouD, ·
JS_trators ·- ed1tor !]llry Pavel a pre· Students Prepare" (Washington Post,
die School, in one of Sait Francisco's reaoWMd lllltllority oa tile J11rit ·:
. d1cted that a gro"''~.g ~e~ concept of . Dec. 28). It ought to be read by col·
affirmative action will prompt col- lege administrators and legislators . poorest neigl\botttojds. students liavc
1llll8111lllle rwtofllle •
:
or•'IN!..
lege~ to collaborate -Mth high .schools across the CO!lntty.
IP disadvantaged areas, helpmg to . The' goal now of a rising number
One year ago: President Clinton signed a $265 billi6n defense bill, but
•dent•fy-and ~101ure students of all of universities .-· uncertain as to ~he
said he would battle for repeal of'a section forcing the discharp of serville l ·
races·· even t_f m?,st of thetn may be ·future of affirmative action •• is, as
members
with the AIDS virus. A slab of mountainside ~sh~ a hiJbway 1
black .a~d Latino. ,
•
Sanchez writes, "to get many more
tunnel
on
the Japanese island of Hokkaido, killinJ 20 peoP!e.
:.
'fh•s 1s not a new 1dea. On a small disadvantaged minority swdents on a
Ward Connerly -- the father of
California's 'Proposition 209 •• has
formed the American Civil Rights

scale, various private organizations
and individuals have reached out to
middle and high school students on
the wrong side of the tracks and pre-

Ame""•

I

.Everett 'Pete' Michael

•

•

IToledo I 30" I
IND.

.

•I Columbus 13:4• I .

34"

••
'

.

.

34•

•

n(\lture preserves go·ri
mostly to salaries·

~verett "Pete" Miclllel, 78, Middleport. died Fridly, Feb. 7, 1997 at his
restdeace.
Born May 21, 1919 ill BcllfUI,' N.Y., son of the late Raymond Michael
and JIIJie Hysell Rupe, he was employed as a heavy equipment operator for
COLUMBUS (AP) - Only 20
JayMar Coal Co. and Goe1lein Brothers.
percent of the money donated to the
. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War D, and a former prisoner of state's Division ofNIIIural Areas and
w.-. ~e W&amp;l •.OICDlber ~f the Mason Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Rutland Preserves through the state income
American Lepoa and a hfe member of the Disabled American Veterans Chap- · tax checkoff program goes to pre·
ter 13.
.
· .
serves, state officials said.
' Surviving are llis wife-of S6· years;M~bel "Jackie" Morris Michael· two
Division chief Guy Denny said he
diUJhtm and soni·in-law, Patticia ~an) ~old, and Paula (Roger) Gaul. has had to dig deeper into the esti,bodl o[Pomeror; tw~ sons, Pete (fen) M1chacl of West Columbia, W.Va., mated $600,000 to $700,000 donat·
,~Jolin (Debbte) Mi&lt;:lllel of Port Charlotte, Fla.; eight grandchildren and ed annually through the program to
. et~bt JRid·pnclsons; two brotllers, Hennan Michael of Pomeroy, and Cecil pay salaries and other fixed costs.
Michael of Olean, N.Y.; a sister, Phyllis Morris of Pomeroy· a sister-in-law
As a result, little new land is being
Virginia Mi~hael of Pom_eroy; and several nieces and n~ws.
' purchased with the money and no
He was also pr¢cded 1n death by two brothers, Kenneth Michael and Clif- scenic rivers have been added to the
state system since 1984, 'The Colum' ,ford Mic)Jael, and two sisters, Beatrice Lightfoot and Tlielma Moore.
Services were held at 2 p.m. Sunday in. the Fisher Funeral Home, Mid- bus Dispatch reported Sunday. In
dleport, with Ri~k Snyder officiating. Burial will be in the M,eigs Memory fact, state officials have said they do
Gardens.-Visllatlon was held Saturday at the funerat ·home, and on Sunday not have enough money to protect the
10 rivers in the system.
one hour prior to the service.
.
.
State Sen. Rhine McLin, 0-DayIn lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to·the Hl))zer Hos- .
ton,
said the · state should provide
pice, liS E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769.
more money for the division ·or do
away with the program.
"It seems like we're duping the
public here. They don't wan1 to see
the money they donate being used as
an extra tax to fund adminisiration,"
McLin said.
Denny said state money allocated

•

to the division over the past several ;
yean hasn't come close to meeting ;
increases in personnel and operating :
costs.

:

" Whatever .money is available •
from tax checkoff that we don 't need ; ·
to keep the division door.s. ~pen goes ~
to land protection and facll1t1es devel- r
opment," Denny said of the division, ~
part of the Department of Natural :
".
Resources.
The division received about $1.89 ;
million from the state's general fund ;
in 1996, about $148,000more than in ~
1990. During the same peri~. the ·
division's annual costs increased $1.1 ;
million, partly because of heloliated j
pay increases for state emploY,CCS tlii! ·:
. Legislature approved. ~:Kit didn1t food. i
Diverting the money sllifted iit'.
1991 when proposed
c,u~ ill
division's budget threattiM!IIlayoft
. State officials say ·. they ~
.
breaking the law by using the mO!"'
ey in this way even though tblla"'
that created the program says ttl.
money is not to replace other~
that goes to lhe division.
,~, ~ "l _ ·
'

deep

'

Beyond race-based affirmative action

.

ThiANociNcl p...,.

Synd~te, IDe.

MICH.

Flynt

Department should be home-based

lj

)

I DIDN•T

ing court proceedinp on whedler he
can be barred rrom the country.
· "What happened to Dany II the .
airport was extraordinary and cer·
tainly smacked of selective prosecu·
.
tion," Kurzban ~d. ·
In Washington, the counsel to the
Haitian government, BurtQn Wtdes,
said that Toussaint had been improperly questioned by !he INS and .the
FBI.
Although the FBI dCclined COil)·
ment, sources tell us the bureau did
q~~C;Stimi Toussaint about .the killirias.
but were frustrated that he w&amp;l
rele&amp;SC!i before more ex~ensive qUes.tioning could take place.
'The most recent affair comel on
thci heels of a letter wrilleft by President Clinton in December to Haiti.n
President Rene Preval, the ,co~ o(
. which we disclosed last week. In the
letter, Clinton pressed Prevaltosolve
the i&gt;olitical murderli that_have con·
tinued to plague Haiti since the l)lil·
itary government of Gen. Raoul
Cedras was ousted in 1994.
' A senior administration official
insism, however, that althoup the
Haitian government had railed questions a~ut Toussaint's imprison·
ment, his rele• had nothing to dO
with political strinp being pulled.
, "The Haitian Einbassy expreiaed
an interest in the case, but other than .
that I don't know of any aj)prolches •
.to the government, to anybody,"
said the official, whO spoke .on the
condition of anonyn)ity. "When he
was ..detained, the White.Holise, the
State Department and others were
informed, but I don't think anyone
·expressed an opinion as to how the
case should be handled." ·
'The reason for Toussaint's trip to
Miami was not immedildely clear.
Some sources·said he ttaveled ~to
~uy equipment to sell at his security
store. The senior administration offi.
cial said, "His wife lives in Floridil.
· He used to live in Florida. He went ·
to college in. Florida, and he may
have other personal attachments. in
Florida." .
·
Jack Anclenoa IIJlcl Ju MoDer
are ~iiten for Ullited Feature ·

Checkoff for state's·~

. conditions a!l'l hip tem.,eiaures

fORCUt for

By Jack Anderson

111 Court St., Pa-roy, Ohio

'•

'

OH IO \ 'h:tlliH·I

Did
Haitian
government
pull
U.S.
strings?
The Daily Sentinel
'E.ffllb/1slid illl948

(

Pllge2

The Dally Sentinel• P11111 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

•

.'

Trustees meeting ·
The Bedford Tov.:nship Trustees
will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the town
hall.

. Accidents leave four dead ·

'-' B~ The Auoclated P.re..
..• Four people· died in traffic acci. dents in_Ohi~ o.ver the ~eekend , the
State H•ghway }&gt;atrol swd tQday.
• · The patrol counted fatalities from '
-: 6 p.m. Friday through Sunday. ·
- The dead: , . ,
·
0
SUNDAY '
GRA1';1.VILLE - William F.

Nichols. 23, of Gianvill~. and Joshua
E. Cooperider, 21. qf Newark, in a
one.-car accident on a Licking Coonty road.
· ·
FRIDAY NIG~T
_BATAVIA - Morris Lewis Jr.,
40, P.f Cincinnati, driver j,n three-car
acc1dent on ln,terstate 71' in Clinton
County.
FREMONT- Lee F. Nqwak, 32,
of Tiffin, driver, in a two,vchiclc
accident on U.S. 6 ii\.',San@sky
· County.

Conferences scheduled
Parent-teacher copfcrcnces will
he h'eld Tuesday and Thursday, 4:30
to 7:30 p.m., in the Eastern Local
. Veterans l"'!emorlal .
School Disirict.
•
.
Friday - No admissions or disValentine ~Inner
charges.
A valentine's Day 'dinner. will be
Saturday discharges - Teresa
held at the fellowship hall on Friday, . Dyer, Middleport.
6:30 p.m. at the Mount Union Bap·Sunday discharges- Ethel New.tist Church, two miles south of Car- man, Pomeroy.
Holzer Medical Center
The Daily Sentinel
Dischaf'ICS Feb. 7 - Clarence
(USPs 21:J.M)
Freeman, Debra Stapleton, Mrs.
.
I
Units of the Meigs County E'lter- Steven Amott and daughter, Rose
Published C~J~ atwnoaa, Mondly dvouJh.
Friday, Ill Coon 5!.. l'v"""'f· Ohio. by the
gency Medical Service recorded five Huston.
.
Ohio Vill~r- Publlolllns eo..,.or/Ginlllll c. ..
calls·
for
assistance
Saturday
and
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Todd
Pomettiy, Ohlb 45769, Ph. 992·21~ ~·~~~~
• .... ,..,.,. pold .. Pv""'"'7· Ohlp,
Sunday. Units respondi~g included; Hamilton, s9n, Gallipolis;- Mr. and·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
' Mrs. Mark Lowe, daughter, Athens;
Am Eli Power ••~ ............~ .......411.
M..u,..., 'l1le
Pma.nd.lhe \*"
Akzo
....
~;
........................
~
........
75\
8:56
a.tn.
Saturday,
Hiland
Road,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rife, son, Gal·,
Ncwa;rperAMod'ltion:
· \ •·
AmrTech .................~•••••••••••••~
Pomeroy, Mildred Arnold, treated at · lipolis.
Port'MAmi. ~-. conWc:d. . . .
Aahlanit 011 ...........................42\ ' the scene;
·
Dlschaf'les Feb, 8 - Annette
The !Joily ""'net; II! Court St.. ,......f,
~TAT ......................,.....~ ..•..•..38'4
l1hln &lt;1$769.
•
.•
MIDDLEPORT
.H&lt;JIIoway,
Mr.;. Yancy Easthom and
.... OM .......:........... ~ •• ~ •••••••43\
- ~··· .
10:20
p.m.
Saturday,
OverbrPOk
son,
Kisha
Canter.
Bob !vane ..................:~t~......13\
• • . SIJBSCRJPTioN RAfts . '·
\ . \ .,Carrltr•MMw~ ',
Borg-Warner ••••••.•••••.••••••••••••41~
Nursing . Center, Kathryn Varner,
Birth - Mr. and 1\-irs. James .·
!!ilq Woel!. .•:........... -·····-·····-··..............sz.oo
Cl'llinplon ......................~.....11\
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital;
Jones,
son, Wellston.
tliO ldoOdt .............................................. JI.70.
Ctlllnnlng
Shopi
.........
J,
......
4'·
3:58
p.m
..
Hudson
Street,
Greg
1
1
Dtscbal'les
Feb. 9 - Mrs. Mark !'
()iii ve.;.:/. ..._..,.....................:.........•..1104.00
Holcllftt ................·.,..·...... S1~
Knapp.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
'
•
Lof.'e
.
and
daughter,
Mrs. Todd .
....... d
.•
'
. . . . , . , . . .......':'1, • • •• '1" ....... 2411..
1and son, Kelsey Bowling,
SINGi.B COII'Y ma
RUTLAND
Hamilton
O...rtltt ..,.........................:...~. 71\
Ooiiy ···"····-·········'·-..····'········"·"'";,,.,. 'l Cna
7: 12.~a.m. Saturday, New Litna Mrs. Jo~eph Rife and son.
. ·
Goody•r .....................:•.'......51\
'
""'doilrins,. pay
,..,Y
Road,
Holzer
Medical
Center.
.
(Published
with permission)
K-mart
...........................
1o
......
1a\
mnH jn ldvaoe cHrea:to The Dcdly ScDtinel
Urldi .l!nd ................... ;:o~o:.... .2~
01 a llnel tht or J 2 111011111 Ntis. ~~. wm be
SYRACUSE
.
, - - -·- - - - - - - ,
7
Umltecl ....."""''''"''""'"""''"'"''11 .4
6:48 a.m. Sunday, College Road,
Ohio :ValleY lltnk....... ~ ..,.......31'4
John Hunnell, VMH. ·
-N.
tubocriioloo
·lo,_ molt.pennlaod
...,...
_ __
h ....lable.I a Ot1t VIlifY'......... ~ ...................37'1.
Thesday Night
~
, ~: ·
,.,. Flid.....................~ .... ~••••14)a
-....
-lhe'ri
... .,s,.....
- ... dot·
7:30
Aockteall ........... ~ ............~!........
1.. ,..
.....
period.
b lpd
,.,.
_
..yllol,.t loodby-. .. lhe
RD-IIwiJ,,.,.,.,,,.,,,.,..,,.;.. oiwio'lloo177t.
1\vo couples were issued marrilgc
dlndon Of 1M
L
J..¥,.....7\
recently in the Meigs Coun..,
aenk
...
"
.........................
m tylicenses
Probate Court of Judge Robert
MAIL~
• ..,..,•• ~..............................22\ Buck.
!3 ...........................................
~
..,.. .127.!0
Worthlrtglort.................. ~·-··1 1\
116 - .:.........................._...................$53.82
~iving licenses were: Michael
52 - ......:............................ -......... Sill!.!&lt;!
Stock rilpcllt• era I~ 10:30 • Leeffoftinan, 23, Pomeroy, and Eve' -~Mtla&gt;~
a.m. ~ Pt ovtdld by ·AlMa! lyn Marie Hein, 21. Reedsville; and
13~........................ ........... _ ...........S29.U
P~roy
:14 ...:............ ,................ :.............$56.1111
'' of
OltlllpO!II.
William
HeAry
Thorla,
48,
and
San.
'
. ,,
s2 ............:...............................stw n
dra Pebble Bell, 51, bodl of~. • L.,_ _,.__.._ __.._,
............ . .

______

...,......

•

•

-ben
....

---·-.....
I

"

I

Meigs EMS runs

Stocks

A_...

'

Hospital news

'

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•

.

the"'"""

=

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

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

-.o..,. . . . . . . . . . . ..
_.__,._

Euchre·Tournament

County Court
lllc following cases were resolved
last week in the Meigs County County of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien:
John A. Coffman Sr., Portland,
DUI. $850, plus costs. '30 days jail ·
suspended to three days, 90-day OL
suspension, one year probation, jail
and $550 suspended upon completion.
of residential treatment program; no
OL, 30 days jail s~spended ·to three
days concurrent, SI50 plus costs, one
year probation; Larry E. Laudcrmilt
Jr.. Vinton, DUI, $850 plus costs, 60
days jail suspended to 10 days, one
year OL suspension, two years probation. 90-day vehicle immobilization; failure to control; $25 plus costs;
-scat belt, $2S plus costs.

For that-somebody special on
Valentines Day
&lt;
Let Burgundy and Brass Help rou
PRINCESS BASKET
, 1/2 doz. Carnations, 112 doz.
Rose•. vascd. bear. negligie,
Chocolates, Champagne with 2
glasses, Balloon or made to order. .

BACHEWR'S BASKET
Boxer shorts, Cologne Shoo,yer
Gel, Coffee mug with chocolatesBalloon &amp; Shaving kit or '
made \o order.

CaU.or stop in about our 14 specials
for 'Valentine! Day

Marriage licenses

JIMMY

· SPORTS BAR
.

~

BURGUNDY &amp; BRASS
fLORALS &amp; ·GIFTS.

i·

�-

•

_llondlly, F..,.,_, .10, 1117

rts

The~

Daily Sentine

1op 25 hoops•..•.!::::&lt;Con:.::ti:.:::nued:..::ffom~Page~··:!..;_)._ _ _ _:..___ _ ___;__ __

......

?•

1117

·''&lt;'
!jlfi

ast ·gets 1.32~ 120
J«lctory over West

tory.

Glero Rice would pick up from
there, hitting three straight threepointers at the oiitset of the second
hllf as a 40-7 run sent the East to a
132-120 victory Sunday night.
"It was a great comeback. I've
been in these aames ,when a learn
gets down and continues to go down
and ~n loses by 40 points," said the
East's Scottie PipJien.
"We were still able to get our- .
selves back in the game. Finally, we
were able to (ind some energy to
catch up."
·
Jordan went around Mitch Richmond \6 . follow in Grant Hill's
missed free tltrow, the most spectacular pia)' in a closing 27-7 first-half
run for the East. .
·.
"We were trying to win the game
and I lhought we were off to a pret-

- K~nsas,

""
,,.
·"
'

....

13~W-Conf......,l20

••

and now Thailand. Next up for Tiger
Woods is Australia.
After beginning his weekened .
with a bout of heal exhaustion and
food poisoning, Woods earne away
from the Asia Honda Classic with a
a blowout victory, a.royal decoration
and inore than $500,000. ,
"Always keer&gt; the gaine fun ,"
Woods. said Sunda)o: i after his 10stroke victory. "Obviously golf is a
· The 'Southern reserve boys of very .seriolis pan 9f my life, but when
. Scott W"JCkline pulled away from a you stop having fun at it, that's when
.
20-19 hllftime lead to defeat Eastern it's time to ·hang it up."
Woods headed 10 Melbourne on
'1)&gt;38 Friday niaJ!t in the prelimiqary
Sunday ~ight for the Australian MasVMiity bout bi:IWeen the two rival
ters, which stans 'Thursday. He
ICiioob.
So!ittaern OuiJCOred Eastern·I 2·6 · received an embrace from his moth·
in 1M thinl ·rouild. then lflldually- er on the 18th green whiie a crowd
of some 3,000 fans chanted his
pulled •way 10 ~ S0-38 win 1
name ...
~j Mli~-.J ~ all SCOI'el'l\'lith
for the Tornadoes. He was
)n'the early days of baseball, vic, il
by '-uuell Reiber, Josh
vls, Adam CUmings, aJI(I Troy tory w~nt 'o the team that first scored
H
k eai:b with six; Scou Brinag- 21 ruqJ. · ·
ft :lllld J11011 Allen with four each;
w.Jker two, and Chris Ran· ' · •Ty Cobb received more votes,
.
222, than:Babe.Jtuth•.215, in the first,
' 'Pew Bs#'rn, Adam SancJera led Hall of Fame election.
--'
wttluown, Josh Willlnd Joe Dillon
Connie Mack, later famowi as a
Wtdl ilix each, Beau Bailey (our, Brie
manqcr, batted .24!1 in 736 major
s~ fOil', two each from Jeremy
Cajlman and Jeremy Cu10, and one league games . .

Southern
JVs -defeat -

-e.ite'rn·

· F.'.

'I
...,.._n_.

.

!IOSU Ped.eral

Holtltll and SoutJiem aoes to

Miller. '••

..,.,

.

.

•

The legendary manNer. John

McGra!V. had a blltiiiJ aveta,e pf
.334 N a pia~. '

7:30p,,._
Philadelphia at CLEVELAND, 7:30
p.m.
Detroit It Milmi, 8 p.m.
.
ao;._, 1:30 p....
Torooto II MUwaQee, 8:JO p.m.
SID. AIMODio ar o.tlu, l :lOp.a.
VUIC:Of.IWlf II lbll-. 8:30p.m.

.'

•

"

..

'

tOT)

Portland. 10 p.m.
Denver-Ill Seattle, 10 p.m.

perimet~r. They pu,l ~ on him after
he got going. but it was about four

"I think that's one of our biggest
strengths, our confidence."
The Cyclones cut the lead to 5453 on Shawn Bankhead's putback
with 5:25 left, but they scored only
one point over the next4:24, turning
the ball over five times Blld missing
three shots.
T.J. Pugh hit a follow shot to end
Kansas' field goal drought with 2:13
left for a 58-53 lead. Kansas then
made 10 free throws over the final
I:32, six by LaFrentz, to offset two
. late three-pointers by Willoughby.
"We .had .a hard time scoring
down the stretcli," Floyd said. "At
times; we were our own worst enemy. · We had a couple key of
turnovers. But give them credit for
great defensive pressure."
.
In other games involving ranked
teams Sunday, it was: No. 2 Wake
For.est 73, Missouri 65; No .' 4 Kentucky 93, No. 18 Villanova 56; No.
II Arizona 81 , No. 23 '!'it lane 61 ; ·

..
Utah held fifth in the pollaAd was
followed by Duke, Clemson, Cincinna!i, Iowa State and Marylah!i.
Arizona moved Lip three spots to
lead the Second Ten and was fatlowed by South Carolina, New Mexico, Michigan, Colorado, North Car·
olina, Louisville, Villanova, Xavier
and Illinois.
The last five .ranked teams were
Texas Tech, Stanford, Tulane, UCLA
and College of Charleston. :
The last time the.top three teams
all lost in the same week was Jan. 28, 1995, when North Carolina.

-·

With no competition down the
stretch, Woods was smiling and
doffing his cap the last few holes, the
first time he could enjoy such a luxury since he turned professional last
year.
Woods ~los'ed wit~ 4-undcr-pn.r
68 for a. total of 20-under 268. He
earned $48,000 for the victory plus
a $480,000 appearance fee:
"I knew my swing wasn' t working well," said Woods, whose every
move drew applause. "I made some
.bad shots out there, but I made some
'key putts and thut's wh3t wins golf
tournanlents."
·
Kuhida Woods, the golfer's mother who was bonl in Thailand, hugged
her 21-year-old son after he parred
the final hole while
the gallery ·broke
•,

a

Ty Cobb's batting average for
3,033 games was .367, tops for all
p!ayersc
Babe Ruth's pitching record,
mostly for the Red Sox, was 92-44.
·
The great pitchCr, Christy Mathewson, once set a college re&lt;;onl in
football for field goals.
The Hall· of ·Fame shonstop,
Hopua WIJIIOr, wa.s nicknamed the
"Plying'Duteluiwl." ·

into a chant of "TI-GUH, Ti-GUH."
The week did not begin v;ith silch
promise for ,Woods. He quit on the
13th .hole of Wednesday's pf&lt;J·am
with what tour~ament organill1rs
said was heat exhaustion and food
poisonin)(. The 20-hour tlighi from
California and the sapping; beat J,efl
him weak with jet Jag and fatigue .
By the end of the week, that was
long gone. Woods, whose closest
rival was Mo Joong-kyung of Sou.tll
Korea at 278, had five birdies.during
the final round and nearly eagled the
fourth hole. He had a bogey'on the
17th hole wl)en~ driVe slice&lt;! into the

,;t;.J

14~
I?~

r»:' .. ra.
y-Cokndo ...... .......2.l 13 ,639

Iii

19 .472
Seanle .................... l6 20 .....
Pm'-1 ~................ 12 24 .m
•-c::lft&amp;:bDd I»DfCRIIR tillc

6

s.. Jo.e ................. l7

•

~vcland

0'11

UCLA and Arkansas ill! fell but held
their positions in the next poll.
The three ranked teams that lost
two games last week all stayed in the
poll. Louisville (18-S) lost to Saint
Louis and Memphis-to increase their
losing streak to three games, and the .
Cardinals fell from I lth to !.8th.
Stanford lost at Southern California
and UCLA and dropped from I ilth to
22nd. Tulane fell from 21st to 23rd
after losing on the road to Cincinnati
and·Arizona.
· Illinois (17-6) entered at No. 20
~flcr Sunday's victory over Iowa, the

The lop 2S ...,. iD , . Auocalled
"""' collqc llutelball poll, flnrplace vote• Ia p~renlllleaet , record•
dwouJb Feb. 9, 101al poiat1 buld on l5
points for a fint-pii!Ct vote throuah oae
point for a 23tb·place vote, ·aad 1111
~··~· ~"': ' ~ ' . ' , '
~ ~ ·II"

water.
Woods was prescn,cd with the
royal decoration by Prime Minister
Chawlit Yongc~aiyudh at a reception Sunday night.
With his mother at his side,
Woods accepted the honor for help. ing promote Thailand's image and·'•
credited ltiS 'parcri!S for his achieve,·
mcnts. He s.ai~ his father, Earl, did.
Jl!ll·come to Thailand because he was ·
preparing ior' hean surgery.'. ~
''Papa: I love_ you,'' he said ..'
"Tonight is special. It sho~s w~t ·
l}appens when · two loving people
really care and share with a child.
Without their teaching, without tlfeir

.

a.a-...................

I

All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to belleard. Further
Information .may be obtained by
contacting the Oom.mlsSiOn.at 180
East Broad Slriet, Cofumbus.'Ohlo
43266-D573 .
. . .
I

I
I·

2
4
3

s

14
19

9

~I

m.

lOO
:146
171
. 153
144
141

O!Opm93, Wuloi-SI. JI2
S...wwutoSC. 97,B. WIIIPIIontl
s. DieJo 74. Sao Fnocio:o 61
5oodocnCal93, CaU(onoia"
Sc. Mary' •· Cal. 73, Loyola Mary-nr68
UC S.a B.t.r. 60, Boise St. 57
UCLA 87,.Sioolord61
tlNLV 78, San Dieao So. 71
Uoah 82. Colondo ~.. 61
Wlllhinatoo 87, Orcp St. 78
Wyomi11112. BriJiulm Youna 60

1

901
730
723
1106
4S4

(0'1')

8
10
12
6

946

,13

15
20
II
16
17

Sunday's actloa•}

. 1\
Botton Colleae 81. St. John'• 80

. (0'1')
.
I
Orw:l13, BotiOil

Mldwnl
IIHaoi1 66, Iowa !II
Kula 69. Iowa St. 62
Wlkeforest73, Miuouri6S ·· 1 .

FtrWeat
· AriWf\181. Tulane 62
Pacitl~ 63, Nevadn 60
Sanlil Clnra 6.5, ~ppenli~ '3

-

Saturday's action

love, quite honestly, l wouldn't'be'
here."
~liaring . \IJird pl~M;e,at279Jit

ril 66

.

Na•y 109, Lehtalo73

Pin•blorJh 19, SO.oo H~lll

"""'ard

Pri...... 7~.
~I
Rl~ !D3. t.onal•huwt u . 91
• ·St. Bona\'elllvre 70,Doyron 69
St. fl'ai'K:il, Po.. 64, MuriN 5S .

M011nt Union 711, Ohio Nocthem 70
MUJkinpm 70, HeidelbetJ,.69

Mld-Olllo cont.......

V-19. Delaware 87
·
VioJjllia Teo:h 50. Fordhln 32

Wql'let 81, Moun! 51. MQI')''I , Md.
69 .
.
Weit Virainia 90, Providence 78
10'11

-

,. Atcotoo
. . . :alnaiSl

'

findlay 103, \JI'bnna. 88
Maloae a2, 'otio Dominican Sl
RIO GRANDE 60. Shawnee Sl. ~1
Tiffin 7,, Cednrville 61
.
Wal5h 82, MI. Vernon Nazwene 76
Nun :wltoal« play

71 , 0.....1.16

~~. Joe...,. So . ~2

APCII!il;blan Sl. 68. W. Clrvlina 66
Aio&amp;on 76.1$U 12
Allllia Pay 92. Teon.-MIU1in 73 ,
Bedoooe-&lt;;ookmaol 89, Florida AAM
S4 . .. I
c..i.pben &amp;2. c.u. florid~:~ 76 ton
. 0\ldeaton Souther.79. N.C..Oreen•·

Blvmon 7'1: Wilminalot~66
Ken1uCky St. 72. Central St. 67 ~ ...
Pilt-Greensbur&amp;12.
Lake Erie 66
.

.
Ohio women's
college scores

Saturday'• action'

"boioll

Ciladel81, VMI74
M01ylarod 68

c
-.ao.
Coll. of~62.SieUDft44
'

Downing, Childs, •
.'
Mullen, Musser
.U1 E. Second St, Potnerof

992-3381 · .

A.dantk ID c.nr.rt'n:e

.

·

Coooin Sf. 12. ........ SO. 68
DIVId.on 79, F~~~m~~~68
llubo 10, N. CoroliM St . ~·
,
E. Kcnlwi:ky 12. E. Illinois Jl
•
E ~ Te•neuee St. 70, Tenn.·Chal._,69(0'11
.
• F1a. lDIIrMdOnal 73, F1oriclo AtlantiC
61
'
Ocorsia 36, MiNiqlppl
S&lt;. Sl
Ocorsi• St 74, Ceoleft"'l' 61
· H_..RI.-68
iao:klon•llle 71 . Ta•·Poo Amorio:all
64 '
~ Madlooo 67, o-., MMOO 6.l
, IJMt)'66, Wlodorup 63

,.

••

Ololo Coofemo&lt;e
Mtwiena 46
Hiramlf,Capltal17 , ~
Joba CarroJII}l, Ol1trbcin 80

s,..,....n Oeorpcown74.

o....-a&lt; 78. Doycon 64

LoSolie52. X.vlerll

Mid A• ott-c.r.rence
Bowtill Green SS,•Akron .~otl ·

Ken114. OHIO 69
Miaonlll . c... Mlchipn '7
To~ 92. E. Mlo:hipo 63

.

~c.t~nnce

Troy St. st. YounJIIOWft St . IO
.

Mld•c•m ~tt

Clevelaod St 78. W. llhnolotl.~

p.- LooUs looarcoJJo&amp;iall

(Wclond,

..

s-

'

Coldwlltr 53. Uma Slulw.e 43
Coooncooo Val.'7911iooidy Val. Sl
Coati- 41. Ayei1Yille
38
Criderl\l'ille Perry •U, Columbut

_
... ,

()nwe-3$

.

.

CUyabOJI Valley Chr. B . .Elyri a
()pea Door23
Danville 62, Lucas 24
Day. Cbamjnade-Julienne 7J, Day.

.

Woodmui. 12. Millbu'l' Loke '7

Yellow Sprill&amp;l 74, Day. Oakwood 68
.You. Calvawy 81 , YoU. 0\iney 70
Y~ Rayen 68. Aboa Si.V-Sr.M j6
laDe T..:e .5J, HunlinJion 52 .

Carroll32
.
Day. Oakwood 57, Day. Chrislian 42
Day. While ~2. Day. M~wdale 34
OeGrafl" Rivmide 67, Benjamin Lo-

Zaaetville 10. Col . Sooth 44

.

pn~3

..

-

47
Fairbanks 60. Ridaemont 46

Fairless 63, l.oui•vllle Aquinru~ 50
Foycne 47, HUkop 40 .
Fclichy·Fnutldin 87. Ripley, Ind. 29
Ft. l..oramie 34, Sidney 51
'
_ Gallipolia !a. Proctorville Fahlod ~2
• G...way 82. Ncwcomentowa 29
Gaf~eld Hts. 67, Shaker Ht1. 49
Garte1t1ville 50, Mogadore 44
Goshen .59, Springbcwo ~8
Grudview 56. Washington CH 46
GR:cn J I, Revere: 30
Greeoemw 51 . Madison Plains J9

J-

Gieenf.eld JS, Vinron Crt 34

ar......sl, Sprins. Nooh-45
tt.nillon Balm Sl, Talawanda 21
Hcalh !'iO, Uberty Union ~5
Hicbville 84, N. CenoraiSO
Hiland 58, Lokelond 17
~olplc 53, Soryloo 21
. .,
Hvbcr Ht1. Wayae 7.5, Spring. SOuth

=:!67o~=~~~IIJ5

. Botlcint66, New Knoxville 54
Booctmllc 71 , tf. Royoloan 37

·6~

Bri1110! 72. Maplewood 2.1
.
Brooke, W.Va. .50, B~~ekeye LOcal 37
Brookfteld llO, Hubbard 37
Brunswick S~ . Srronpville Sl
Boeke,.. C.rilnol50, Wynfonl 3'
CalVary Ov. 48, Cia. &lt;luilliaa 4.1
Canal Fuho• NW S7 , C1n1on
Canton McKinley 69. Wanen Hard·
•iDJ40
~

Ch.::tmpioa ·S9, Alh1abula Edpood
. '
ao..Joo N[g15J, Cle. C6&gt;lic 26
Chillicolhe 58, Worthinaton Kil-

bounoeSl(O'Il

Cin. ArDelia 47, Cin. Woodw.-d A4

(0'1')

Cin. Hill• Chrialian .58, New Richnwwf4l

..••.
lJ

Sencu E 69, New London 4!'i
Shcoandooh 47, RidAOWood 45
Sherwood FairYiew 82, Br.yu S7 ,.•
Solon 64, O.•don 28
Soulhinglon 67, Fairport Harbor 38
Sputa Hiahlnnd 44, Mt. Vemon 42

Hudlon 66, Medina HiJhlnnd SS
llldlan I..A1z 60; Mcct.i~•bura 42
lltdian Val. 52, Clnymont 29

(01)

Spring. Shawnee 69, TecvmKh 42
St Clairsville 62. Cotbor.:ton 61 &lt;
an
Sylvania North'liew 52, Rossford 44 ..

.ii

Tallmadge M; Norton JS
Tiffin Calven 6.1, Fostoria :B
Tiffin Columbian 64, A1hland 39
Tinona .SO, fA&amp;cnon 29
Tol. Catholic 6.5. ColdwD.Ier 59
Tol. Notre Dame' 64, Marprena S8
. Tol. Roaen 43, Tot. Waite 35
Tri-Villnge Sl , Greenville~

Late Rid&amp;&lt; 38. Anomn 28
.
LeMnaton 60, Shelby 5.5
4 .. 6.1, St. .....,. 36
u .. Cacb. 7~. Crldm&gt;'ille Prory 30
Loodoo39, w. .lefrenoro~8
l..oninCIIh.61, AVDIO ..
Maditon 51 , Vamilion 32
Malvern 42, Jeweu-Scio J9
Mllllfldd Madison .57, Vermilion 3~
MllrioaCa&amp;h. 57, Trc~eofUfe 4.5 ,
Mll'li~&amp;IOR 74, LOuisville 53

.

"l

Green 38

Kalida 75, leipsic )9
K.etutoa 70, W. Cic:Qup 43
. ,
Kenerina Alter !'i2. Day. Dunbar Sl
KcnaiOJ·fairmonl49, Centerville 38
Kinp46, Rou 39
Kinlandf/1, Cardinal 64

Glen0ok49

39

E. Kno1 46. John.town N011hrid&amp;e 49
1J, MayfiC:Id .53
Everpeen S2, Tol . .Emmanuel Baplis1

Akron Spring. 63, Cnrmll1on 47
AllilliiQC! 45, Ca.ton Timken 3P
Amhersl49, R010~y River 41
Arcadia 52, Fostoria St. Wendelin J I
Ashland Creslview 68. Mansfield
Or. 28
Avon Luke 10, OlrNNd Fall I 46
Balavia 64. Williamabuf145
Beavercreek 62, Fairborn J2
Bedford 38. Bnuh ll
Belleromiline S3, SprinJ. Nohheast·
eml6
BelleYUe 6~. Sarwbky 49
Bcmc 66, Midp.t 28
'
Betbel S5. Dly. StcbbiRI41
(l&lt;x~y 58,
Aide&lt; 30
Bit w.nn 31, Gnavillc 40

c..ey 10, Ilardi• Norohcm 43
Qqrin f.alh 74, Hawlcen 47

Oovcr45, W. Branch 33
E Cle\IC:Iand Shaw 47, Valley Forge
Eastlake~-

Salurday'saciloa

TriDd 65. W. liberty -Salem 41
Tuscarowas Coth. 41 , StrnsblJrg 37
Twinsbura 58. Orange 49
.
Uniontown Lnke 80, Massillon 60
Upper Sandusky 57, Mohawk 4S
U~na 72, _Ke.mon Ridge !'i8
UIICI 53. Licking Val 43
Van Wert 61, AnlwetP 5t

..;

,,

"'
.li
.' {

',,

"l )

r---~--------~------------------~---.

Cuyaho1a Valley Chr. 60. Akroa
••

j

Mlch. l4. .......... 73

'G

;.&gt;
•

..

.
•

.

Day. Olri11iaa a~. Oay. Nonhridp:

10
• Day. Dun._ 68, Cin. We1teia HUll
63
Dixie 74, Deibel-Tale 55
.
Dover !'i~. New Philadelphia S2 ·
Dublin Scio1o 11 . Mlrylvllle Sl
- E Cleveland Shaw 64, Elidl 62
Eulwood 12, Old Fori Sl
El&amp;in69, N. Union61 '
Flrwtlay !'i8, Mlrion Hanfins 48
Fl. JmninJI 67, Dclpflol Jeffenon .SI
Ft Loramie !'il. Botti11 35
Fl. Recovery 79, Aoumoia 43
Gallon 6S, nmn Columbian.62
Oibso8rg6S, Oeaoa .s6 ·
Onuadview 82,. Fairbankl S1
Hllllard70, Uberty Oor. 49
Hillsboro64, Orcenfidd 48
Hilllop M, Ma.apeller SS
· Holland
,9, Della 4Q
Howland 70, Ginard !'i8
Hud1on We1tern Reserve 83, Mercmbuq, Pa. 80
Ironton 49, Ceredo-Kenov11. W. VL
46
Ironton St. Joseph 69, Portsmouth
Notre Dame !'il
'
Jefferson 85, Conneaut 67
l(.lftW Lolm1a80, Elmwood !'i3
Kettering Aller 46, Cin. B~a~.'OO 44 '
Kidron Olr. 76, Canton Hcri!age 71
Lokewood. Sl. Edw'nrd 85, Cle.
Catholio46
.
· Lenawec, Mich. 78, Tol. Christi11n !'i.S
Liberty Cenler 61 , Stryker "48
Licking His. 69, Heldh ~7
limn Sr. S9. Tol . ROgers 48
Lin&amp;:utnview 81 . New Knoxville 65
Lorain'Cicarview 69, New Loftdon48
Mai:lison Phairu 58, E. Cliruon 51'
Mansfield Chr. 87 . Fremont St.
, ...... ,73
M~~Ufield T~le 76, WeltinJion 40

~5

Baldwi~·WallM '48,

, St Josepb 's79, Xavier, Ohio6.1
St. f"er'• ~7. ~ 44
,

5~

47

Akron Ceo-Hower 64, Akron .B,d&lt;:hlel

.

~

1

••
~t

..,

-:.s

Make a love
-c onnection.

...
. t!t
. ' I

•
·d .

.

,,

·"

',.

.. 1

,.

uva-poc;160

Mt!rion Cath. 64, Col. Academy S8
Marioa River Val. 73, ~ucbye Vnl.

Nvrllll Cout Cont~nnce '
AUeaheny 7!'i , Ohio Wesleynn ~!'i ,
. Ca1e Wes~m~B7, DeNton 79
Keoyon 61. Eorlhum 6~
.
Wi~bef167, WooSter61

61

Bedford 112, PmnD 78
Bellevue 65, B.ucyrv~. 51
BiJ Walnu177, Col. Eutmoor68
Bi1hop Bronarl, Ky . .sa, Cin.
•Mlriemonl 48
Black Rivet 70, MT:.':..U
BJoom.c.rnll ~2.
Lakewood
37
Blufllon 49, Ubelly·BeRI&lt;io 3)
,
BowliiiJ Greeli ,3, Onaw..Oiancbf
50
Bncdford 38. Miomi Val. 52 (2 (11')
Brush 61, Hudson '7
Buckeye Cemral 83, Lucu .SO
Camon McKin)cy 44. Winslon 41
c.nli,..on 75, Northmor 62
Cedarville 60, Wayne,.ille j')
Chardon N().CL 61. Elyria Calh. 54
• Cin. Ll Sane 65. On. st. X•vicr 57
Cia. McNicbolu 69, Cin. Twpill5.5
On. Northwat 61, Cia. Coblill46
Cln. 00 Hjlll 39, On. PriDCCfoa S7
Cin. s~ 54. Cia. Moeller !MJ
-.Cie, BaoediciUoeiO, Tol. Ubbeytl.l
Cle. VAJSJ 93, Tuoc:arawu c.h. 66
Col. Rcady67,1-Aidor38
, -eq1. w......... ~B.
Hlpl_.

· Marietta62. E

Gral Lakalnt~rta~Rt~tte .,

Oakland 81, A1hlnnd 79

Maine ~1. New Hamplhire:"~3
.... . -.... 64, Rhode blood 61
M""""""". NJ. 81, St. "-1•• N.Y. .

·'

•

Salurday's~etlon
Mki-Contlnent Conlennn
.·.Troy S1. 10. Younastown St. ~

H.1ford 81, To!"'!' St. 78 [(11')
' Holy C,...ll, Coli* 6$

the

Thai country Club were Mexico's ·'
Carlos I;spinosa, · Taiwan's Chang •
Tse-pcng and .C~nada1s Jim Rutledge. Rutledge closed \l(ith a 63, '
br;caking the course n;cot'd Woods set
two days earlier by one stroke. ·,

.

CorneD 60. Yale .!6
Donmoudo 74, l'enll70
Fairlei&amp;h DicklMOn 'M. R~ Mor-

•'

··

Ohio men's
college scores

Brown 63, Columbia 56
Bucknell71, Wa- j')

- "f

Col. WancnonS4.1.ancaler44

'J

Sori"'·

Swth
.
Atk.-Unle Rock 80, W. Kennu:ky,77
Flarida St 64, Oeorpn Tech 62
Kellluiky .93, Villanova 56
•
Memphil19. Loui1ville S9
Souibcri'l Min. H, Sou1h Aorida SO

Coutal Carolin11 SS, Md.-Bihimore

'

u.42

llohora8'7.-oemfll
•. !0111 98, Loyola. Md. 88
T'""83, ~'"' 68

NCAA Division I
men's scores·

C..Oiy46

.

-

23
II
21
-

Olllen nctl•lna wotn: Tulat 129.
St Joieph't 10'2. lowt 83, Teus79, Cali·
fornia 7,, GeofJi• 75, Provi~e 68,
St&gt;ulbeno c.J ~9. Plo:ifoc 5,, lodi.llla ~I.
8011on Collep: 41 Marquette 21, New
OrleMo 21, HawaillO, Miami lB. T~le
18; Printe~on 10. FmDo St. 1. ·IJiioois 51.
/1, Mi....n 5. Virpola :1. W"' Vi~ola S,
N. luizooa 4, N.C. ~ 4, E. lehi· •
&amp;an 3, Mistilllppl ·.], OreJon 3, Oral
Roberta J.
.

.

•

N.Ar1 ..... 72,M...... 69 '
. Now Moaico So. 81. UC lni• 47
Norlb 1Wo 81 , Cal SI.·Fulienon 7~

Cllllisiu•91, Fairfldd 4~

LEOALNDnCE
The PJJblic Utilities Commission of·
O~io h~ set for public hearing Case '
No. 96·101-EL-EFC. to review the
'tueiQ!Jlcu~e.nt practices ~nd poll·
cies of Ohio Power Company, the·'
operation ol its Electric FueJ.Com•·
parent and related mallets. This
. .hearing is scheduled to begin at ihe
·Commission offices at 10:00 a.m.
on March 1t, 1997.

Cal Poly-SLO 72, ~·
· Colondo 77. Ta• AAM ftC
Freoocl SO. 82. Rice :14
Gooza&amp;a 76, J)oft)lnd 59.V l 1
Hawaif87, Air Force 63
ldoho'Sc. ~. Ponlud SI.W '
L0"1-SI.71, UlahSI. 58
M_,. so. B3,.CS NM11rid.. 79

r.l!:lo:I ltl;:l!Jil
I. KaloAo (67) .............. 23-1 1.170
I

I·

lllini's third straight after a two-game
losing strcak.lllinois wa~ ranked for
two weeks earlier in the season but_
fell out after losihg two of three.
UCLA (13-7) was fifth iri the preseason poll, ,but the firing or coach
Jim Harrick got the scison off to a
rocky beginning and the Bruins were
out'ofthc Top 25 fiv~ weeks into th~
season after a 3-3 start. ,-.,y re-enter
the ran kings having lost three of their
last fi vc gaQleS.
,
The College of Charleston (21-2)
ha~ the nation's longest current winning streak, I 5 games.

-....-

Lomar69,New0rleouu61
. Miu. Valley S1. 93, Teus Southern
10
.
N.C. Ooarlo4tel02. HouooOo '11
St&gt;ulbenoMedl. 64, Tea.,_EI...,.55
Tew 90, 00....., St. 73
Teua a.tsn. 80, New Mclllieo ~
TewTedo87, Nelnob74

Top25 men's
college poll

J;669
1,621
I ,591
l,4ll
l.l87
1,32J
I,UI
1,168
1,1;17
1,016

~~

On-.. St. 81, Prairie VIew 80

TuadaY'• pme
Rkhmond II Atlanta. 7:30p.m.

I

_

I

2. WU.Foral ............. .l9-2
3. MI-(4) ........ :20-2
4. Keolueky .................22-3
~ - UIOh .................... .... .ll-l
6. 1lubo ................... ..... Jfl.~
1.
J\).4
8. CINCINNATI ..........Il-4
9. lowaSI................. ..... Ir.-4
IO. M")''arod .......... ..... IR-5
II . AriZI&gt;NI ................. .I!-~
ll. SoulhCarolina ....... I7-S
13. New Mcaico ......... .18-4
14. Miclolpn ................ l?-6
.,. Colon6&gt; ................17-5
16. NOfthCaroliM ... :... IS--6
17. t.oubvllle .............. .l8-'
18. Viii100Y1 •••.....•...... 17-6
19. XAVIERtOHI0) .. 16-4
'20. 111inois ................ ~~·· l7..6
21 . TmsT"h .. .......... i4-6
22. Stanford ............. :.. IJ-6
2.1. Tun .................... JR-7
24. UCLA .................... J)-7
2H:OII. ofOooirleston 21-2

Amhtrit 62, N. Olm11td 2.l
~n!Wnp 71 , Edoft ~5
Archbold 47, Tinora 42
~1hlilltd .56. Loudonville J4
Beaver Eastena 80, Lucasville Valley

•

No pmes toiqb.t

I·

14

ValpMiliao 102, NE llllnois.84
W. Illinois 79, Chicaao St 70
W. Michipn 76, BaU St. 66
Wilconaln 56. North~aem 44
WriJh&lt; St. 71, .N. Ullnoi• 73

Newllqlood86,AIU.66 '
Pon....,-~. Seanlc 76

••

Adn 75, S~ncerviUe 46
,
Akron Hobu 92. Clc. Uncol• Weat

N. Iowa 7j, lndianaSt. 66
Nacre Dome 11 , Connc&lt;ric,. 6l (0'1')
OHIO 19, Keno l9
P\lnllk 77, Michipn St 62
S. Illinois 6..'\, Drake 60

Rido...... 83,Ad-19,
COLUMBUS 91, New Elotlaad78
Colondo 69, ... , ... '~ .

.....,,,_

Saturday's action

St. S6. Wia.-~ilwauiee ~4 ·

Deuvil 64. 1)1.-011- '3
E. Mi&lt;hi1.. 83, Toledo 6.1
E-v...m• 6"(, SW Miuouri St 64
llliaai&amp; Sl. 62. Wlcbirl Sr. 53
Indiana 93. Ohio St 76
Kooooo St. 67,
11.1
Micbi
81, Penn SO. 64
Mo.-~s Ch)' 8.5, Buffalo 1-t (2

oo-.

1
11

. s.a...,,,_

'

Ohio H.S. boys' scores ·

Cle. Heiatns 46, Mentor 38 ·
Cle. St. foiCph 72, Walsh Jesuit 46
Col. BroothaYCn 6.5, Col. West 56
Col. Ready 62. Bloom-Cmoll 40
CoJ.mbul Grove 61, Paulding.Q
Om:ntry 66, Suody Val. ~I
Cu)'lhoaa Hts. 53, Cle. Sl. Auausrine

46

IIJTen
. Michipn St. 72, Ohio St 64
'
t h

O(ICIMMi 91, Marquene 70

y-dodled playoff,...

24tumovers'for the visitors,.includ~ minutes of the game.
. .
in~ . ll by ··point . guard .Alvin
No. Z5 lllinois 66;Iowa 51'
Wlllu~rns. Chuck Kornegay scored
Kiwane Garris scored 15 of his 21
12 ,()!lints for VillanQva (fJ-6).
· points on three-ppintcrs and had 10
:,t No. 11 ~na 81
llSsists for the Illini ( 17-6, 7-4 Big
. ·No, 231\dane 62
·Ten), who opened "the second half
Miles ·Simon, wbo was sidelined with a 17-6 run for a S0-30 lead. Guy
by academic problems for the first 11 ~uckor had 16 points for the visiting
games of the season,' ·had career Hawkeyes (16-6, 7-3), who shot 33
highs ofi30 points and· tO.assists for percent and dropped out of the Top
the Wildcats ( 15-5), wltile A.J. 25: ·
·
·
Bramlett had 14 points and 10
Saturday's game&gt;l
rebounds. Law['Cnce Nelson Jed the
No. S Uta~ 82 .
Green.Wave ( 16-7). with 15 points in
Colorado St. 67
the game played in Phoenix'. · .
At Fort Collins, Colo., f&lt;eith·Vari
· · Mo"'phis 79
Horn stof!=d 33 points to lead the
No. 17 LOuisville 59
Utes ( 17-3, 9- 1 WAC), who blew the
Cedric Henderson sc-ored 27 game open with a 20-5 run in ·the
points and the Tigers (12-11, 6-3 second half.
C?nfcrence USA) started the game
No. 6 Duke 80
With a 16-0 run as the visitors missed
Nonh Carolina St. 51
their first 10. shots from the field.
At Durham, N.C.', Trojan LangDcJuan Wheat had 22 points for the don scored 18 points and Duke (19Cardinals (18-S, S-3), who also had .· 5, 8-3 ACC) made a school-record
five turnovers in the opening 6 ·112
· (Set HOOPS on Pqe S)

_

'

J4

Upper Sondaky 77, Willonl 60
Valley View 83. An:uum 78
Vermilion 62. Midview 49 .
Vmaillel ~8. Covinaron JJ
W. lellcnon "· Licki"' Val. 64
Walkina Mcmori1161, NewiO Calh.

Obio H.S. girls' scores

Sunday's act!un

.
MWwM:
.
Bowlio&amp; o..on IOl, Akron 78
Bnodley 61, Cooisfoloo ~~
But)ei 62, Loyola, Ill. S6' 1
Ceor. Micbi1an 86, Miami, Qlol~ 1~

. '10·

WESTERN DIVISION

minutes too late."

I

Memphis 79, No. 17 Louisville 59,
ahd No. 20 Illinois 66, Iowa 5 I.
No. 2 Wake Forest '73
Missouri 65
Tim Duncan had I 8 pOints and 20
rebounds as. the visiting Demon
Deacons ( 19-2) rebounded from their
loss to Duke and kept the'Tigers (I 2II) from beating the Nos. I and 2
teams in consecutive game&amp;. Wake
Forest staned the second half with a
20-2 run and Missouri stayed within strking distance by making a
school-recot:d ·15 three-pointers, seven by Jason Sutherland, who finished
with 23 points.
,
No. 4 Kentucky 93
No. 18 Villanova 56
RonMereerhad23pointsand II
rebounds and Kentucky (22-3) shot
55 percent from the field, including
8-of-19 from three-point range. They
also finished with a 42-17 rebound
advantage and foreed a s.eason-high

.811
.SII
.417

V""*'bilt 87, Arklnlu 8.1 (OT)
w1mam ~ M"'l' 57, Ri&lt;h~ 50'
Wofford 86, Anny 72

...

EASTERN DIVISION
r-lit .. ra. . Iii

·a-COLUMBUS ... ,.30 • ·1
Rlclllooond .............. 20 17
All- ................... 1~ 21
_ New Eaaland ..•..•...ll 24

the West.
"Rice is . such a hard guy to
defend when he's posted up or on the

61

A8L standings

I•

'

Troy S.. 70, YovnpiDWIJ St. 64
Va. Comrilonweohh 72, American U.

Boston ar LA. ~.IO: lO p.m.
Ullh 1!1 Sact.menlo. IO:lO p.m. .

'~

.r
Nen e..rlftiKe ,..,
Central St. 17, Kcnlutky St. (i2
~fianec 85, Alma 77
Notrr. Dame, Ohio SS. Penn St .·
llelftod ~3
Oberlin 61, Lake Eri~ !'i3
Thonw More 80, Wilberforce 62

' -r.........Teololl, M~T...,. 68

Shawa~ee

WllllrJIJn 13, SyiYMil Soulhview 72
Wliyac 1'lw:c 78, Dly. Jcllenon 6~
Wilminaton 69, Miami Tl'll:t 51
Wood COu.ay C'ltr. 73. Mauilkvt Ow.

Findlay 63, Urbani 5.5 ·
Milone 73, Cedarvine 69
Ohio Dominican 70, Mount Vernon
Naznrene 61
'
RIO GRANDE 12, nfl'mlO
Shawnee St 89, Wakh 63

.

Cia. Maricmonr 4J, Omnon1 NE 32
Cia. M:Hicholu 45. Cin. Bacon 38
Cin. W1lnut Hills 5!'i, Cin. Withrow

46

43

Ma.on 19, Wilniapoa.30
Mauilloo Clor. 4S, Wood~ Oir.'
31
...
MM&amp;mee Val . ~. Uma Ta.plc 41
Medina12, a...Jcof 4l
Miami TnDt: 63, Hamikoo Twp. 29
Miami Val. ' 1. Bradfotd!ll
'
Milford4! , Um1Sr. lS
Minford 66, Wheelenbuq S1
Mins1cr .60. ~·r.tonroe ~
.: Morgan 60, Pbilo 38
·
N. Canton 66, New Pbiladelphi• 43
N. Olmsted 65, Fairview r.t 26
Nupoleon 37, An:hbold J6
•
Notional Trail48, Twin Valley S. ll ~
·New Albany !13. Col. Welllr!Jioa 41
New ~yn 45, MIUIChqier 42
New Bremen 56, Speocaville !'iO
New Lexing1on .5S. Croobvllle S2
Newbury ~8 . Lcd&amp;emonl 23
Norwood 72, Linle Miami $3
Ohio Deaf 48, Kearuck~r,;:w
Olenlanl)' !'i 9. Hebron
ood 41 r.
. Onlouio 46. Crestline 38
. -t
Orqon Slritch .57, Tol. Ouistian 43
Orrville 46, Tuslaw 29
Ottawa Hills 4.5, Noothwood ~
Padua 60, Cbanel 31'
·
PainesviUe Rivenide 64, Euclid 62
Panna 49. Lakewood 4S (01)
Parma Hu . Holy Name 64, Lake
Cath. 4~
P3trick Henry 51 , Montpelier 39
Peny JS, ~hire 34 ,
Poland !'i2. S!nnben 46
Preble·Shawnee 47, Ffllllklia 45
Pynwunins Val. 67,l..«ddtown 23
Ravenna SE 6!'i, Cresrwood otl~
River View S4, May1ville 53
Rocky River M.,.Uficat 70, Fremont .
Rost 4.5
RooiJScown 53, Woodridp: 43
S. Cbarle1COA Southeastern 83,
Cedanille' 39
S. Webller 79, Franklin Furnace

Cia. Loctland 43, Cia. Summit JS

Troy 73, Onnville 62

M~eo.r......

SELouiliMa84,Meft&lt;r71
South c.otlna 76, Florida.-,.
Sqodoorn U. 102. A-.,11, 92
T-6$.A-.,61
Tenaeuee St. 84, M.,.,.y St. 68

Pboeni~ It

I'··,
.':.:.&gt; ;

'

)

Twin Valley 'S. 72, Preble

Ololo .:;..or......
8aldwift..Wallaoe 62, Marienn j6
a.Mtallo8. Hiram :fS ,
· MUikiDI\Im 70. Heidclbefl. 46 ·
Ohio.Nonhero 76, Mount lJnion 68
Ottetbein 6:', John Carroll 56

N01tb C.Olina 81 , ViraJaii '7
~ -87, )'I.C.-AolleYIIJ, ~
s. Cu'OiiDI St. 70, Md..lt Shore 64

a.-"

'"

')

1Unday'spmes

.

NewleneyM

Woods'.1o-stroke lead gives him Asia HQnda Classic'crown
BANGNA, Thailand (AP) Hh conq~ the United States,

101

NcwYon.arw=
· 011,7:30p.• .

changes in the rankings after a week received 67 first-place votes and
that saw 17 ranked teams lose a total I, 770 points from the national media
of 20 game•.
panel to easily hold off Wake Forest
Tulsa, Indiana and Iowa all ( 19-2) by 101 points.
dropped out of the Top 25. They
The Demon _Deacons did what
were replaced by IJlinois and UCLA, Kansas couldn't by winning at Misboth of whom were ranked.earlier in souri, but that followed the home
the season, and the · College of loss to Duke.
'charles\()n, which is making' its first
Minnesota (20-2) was No. I on
ever "lJlearance in the Top 25.
· four ballots and had 1,621points, 23
Klinsas (23-1) is on top of the poll mDFe than Kentucky (22-3), which
for tl\e II th straight week after the followed the Joss at South Carolina
Jayhawks rebounded from the ilou- with easy non·conference home wins
'ble-oveHime Joss at Missouri with a ·over Western Carolin,a and Villanorood win over _Iowa State, They va.

IY ROI{ERT HORN

Coaf~qce

'Nu pma toalpt .

Wake Forest and Kentucky stand among._wi_
nners·

By JIM O'CONNELL
AP Sports Writer
, 1be top three teams in theAPcolleJe basketball poll lose last week,
11!11 only one of them isn't iri the
same place · in the latest voting
released today.
_
.
~ Kansas and Wake Forest held on
II) No. I arid No. 2 despiie losses last
- y.,e~ to·Missouri and Dulce, respec· U;¥Ciy, while Kentucky, which Jostto
· SOiJih Carolina, dropped one place to ·
~· with Minnesota, moving up
ojle spot to third.
;n.ere were, plenty · of other

--:-:-~-::-7":"·

66 percent in the first half. The'Mus- avenged a 48-point loss to Stanford
keteers(16-4, 7-3) trailedby at least la.st month. The BruiJis (13-7, 8-3 •
16 points in the second hllfuntil the Pac-10) share firat ~ in the
final minute.
leap with Southern Cal. The C.No.ll Teus'IKIIII7
dinal (1~. 6-5) to. their fourtll
Nelll'lllka 7A
straightCODfaence ro.t pme.
At Lubbock, Texas, Cory Carr
No. 25C I I
scored 33 points and freshman Ray olOmrlut • 62
ford Young had nine points and eight
s.•• .U
assists in his f'lfSt start for the Red
· ·At Clwiestoll, S.C., Thaddnoos. ·.
Raiders (14-6, 6-4 Big 12).
Delaney had 18 points and 13
. No.l4 UCLA 87
• rebounds as the Cougars (21_-2, 12thNo. 22 Stanford 68
0 Trans America) won the.- ~ 5. ·
At Los Angeles, Charles &lt;'l' Ban- straight game, the longest current
non scored 23 points and UCLA streak in the nation ..

Tno.e of Life 10. Miller 67
Triway 75, Cant011 Timha S6

AlleJheay 61. Ohio Wesleyan 57
c.e Raave 67, Dcbi.on J9
Kenyon 7), EarthJ,m ~9
WI""'*"' 63, W....,.. ~'

a

Sunday'ooeore

·Kansas and Wake .Forest keep top 'spots despite.defeats

~y. , Bulern

Basketball

AII.SW' Game: Eutern

· ·

In this week's AP Top 25·basketbal# poll,

faloes (I7-S, 8-2 Big 12), who took
the lead for good withan8-0runearJy in the second half. .
No. 16 Nortll C...OU.. 81
VIJo&amp;lnU57
At Chapel Hill, N.C.. Shammond
WJJJiarnsandAntawnJMilisonkeyed
an early second-half spun as the Tar
Heels (IS-6, S-S ACC) beat Virginia
at home for the 16th straight time.
St. Joeepb's 79
No. 19 Xavier 65·
At Philadelphia, Rashid Bey had.
17 points and nine assists and the
Hawks (IS-S, 6-2 Atl111ttic 10) shot

- c . . c...t.n.ce .

Loui.-T.... 7:S.,_J&lt;, 61
MARSHALL II , o-110 Jl6albero
68
.
McNecoc Stl1, Sf! Taoio 10
M&amp; ,J, ....,. 50
Morebe.sSI. IJ.SEMi.....IIO .
N. Cwoliaa AAT 17, Odlwn St. 66
N.C.-WIImiaaro• 1~. Old Dominion
7J
NE LouiliiM 81 , Slm HOu•lon 51. 60
NW Louititnt. 69, Slephen F.AuJtid
63
Nicholl Sr. 108, 1'eua-$ait' Anronio

NBAslate

"I'm not going to cry about it. It's
just something that happened. It
doesn't mean anything. Michael
came out and sparked them . But I
think Glen did most df the damage,"
said Seattle's Gary Payton, who had
17 points and 10 ~ssists .
''There really wasn't any strate- ·
gy, period," the East's Grant Hill
said. "There wasn't any strategy
before the game, during the game or
"You know, they got Michael Jor- everybody else got into the game,"
after the game. We just started play- 'dan and he kind of took overlhe sec- explained the Lakers' Eddie Jones,
ing, I guess."
ond quaner. Once he got going, . play.ing in his first All-Star game for

'

.

..

n!t,

By The Aaaoclated Press
They did a great job of turning it over
It's finally known how Kimsas an&lt;!' not fouling. I guess that's why
· would react to a loss. The Jay hawks · they"re' good,"
.
.
won.
. . Raef LaFrentz scored '21 points
• Top-ranked Kansas lost for the for Kansas (23- I , 9- I Big 12), which
first time this season last Tuesday in . withstood ·Dedric Willougliby ' s
double. overtime at Missouri. On career-higli 36 points for Iowa State
Sunday, the Jayhawks used some" -(16-4, 7-3), ·Which had won five
impressive second-half defense to straight. ..-; . . .
"Qur defensive philosophy i's
beat No. 9 Iowa Staie 69-62 to avoid
·losing consecutive games for the first that one man can 't~~ you," Kansas
time since February 1994.
point guard Jacque.Vayghn said. "He
"!think we tried to do too much almost did."
the first half," Kansas coach Roy
Willoughby set a school record
•Williams said. "So then we con- with qine three-pointers, and he fintrolled our emotions and went out ishcd ll -for-19"from the field while
and played good·defense."
the rest of his ieam!llates were 9-for1be Cyclones hnd just one field 33.
goal qver the first eight minutes of _ _ Vaughn had 18 points, while Paul
the second half.
Piera had 17 points apd I 0
"We played a team tha\ was bet- rebounds.
tcr defensively" than we were," said
"If we do what we have to do, if
Iowa State coach Tim Floyd, whose we. do what Coach asks us to do.
. team shot ortly 29 percent in the sec- we're going to win," LaFrentz said.·
ond half. "They foreed 23 turnovers.

Frogs ·(I S-8, 4-6 WAC) posted its
fmt win over a Top·JO team in 14
years. Charles Smith led the Lobos
(18-4, 7-3) with 23 points.
No. 14MlclllpD81
~St. 64
AtAMArbor, Mich.,JerodWird
matched his career high with 19
points as the Wolverines (17-6, 7-4
Big Ten) polled away in lhe second
half.
· No. IS ColonUlo 77 · .
Texu A&amp;M 64
At Boulder, Colo., t;:hauncey
Billups scored 19 points for the Buf-

_ _ _ ____.__ _

Scoreboard

'

bY loey Weeks:

naen

• ft"

ty good start," Richmond said. "We
were in a pretty good situation in the
second quarter. They got on li roll
and after that it was their ball game."
· Jordan, who finished with I 4.
points, I I assists and I I · rebounds,
said: " I was just having a little chat
with Mitch, trying to time the move
ao1d my opponunity to go in and see
if I could catch the rebound. I
haven' t done it so long. Felt like a
great time to do it."
The East then trailed only 60-57 ..
at the half. Rice, who has averaged
31 points in his last 20 games, then
· scored 20 points in the third quaner,
another All-Star record.
Now the West, which had built its
, lead with a fast-break basketball and
accurate three-point shooting, was
forced to play catchup. And itcould-

.In Top 25 _
college basketball,

15 th:ee poia\fln.
.
.
big perfonnaJIC)C since a one-pme
No. 70
•
bcnchin1 byCOIICh Bob Hu~.
No. 18 Maa)' " ' "
· No. U s..ell
A1 Clemsm, S.C., 'l'lnell Melli....... "
lyre ICXlnd II poinll of his 21
AlCollatlbia,S.c.; hlbnllnHa-poinll ia a l~lleCCIII&amp;hllfrun for belt Davis ICXRCiallofhisl2 poinls
die
(19-4, 7-3 ACC). Keitli iD the secolld half IIIII the OameBOOib 1CXRC1 I!I poinll for the Ter- cocks (7-S, 11-0 SEC) tied uchool
rapiDs _(18-S, 7-4), who have lOIII record with their 12thstrailht vidothree of four.
ry.
No.'8 dDciaaatl '1
.
TCU 88
·'
Marquette 70
NO.: 13 New M~,S'
At Cincinnati, Danny Fortson
At Fort Wonh, Texas', Saipele
scbred21 pointsfortheBearcats(l7- Thialii and Malcolm J9hn•on C~~Ch ·
4, 6-1 Conference USA), his secoild · scored 18 poinlf! ai the ,Horned

c.reu..a"

AII-Sisr Game,

.,.RICK OANO
.
Cl.EVELAND (AP) - Trailing'
SlclO, could lhe East be saved? The
=.,"Pff"ared too greaa, even in an
.
,18me where defense gener. , takes the day off and points
, 00111e ·quickly and easily.
t. But when Michael Jordan· took
ofrtoslam in a missed tree throw, he
lpited his teammates on a histone
ni&amp;ht that would see him finish with
die first triple-double in All-Star his-

Pometoy • Middleport, Ohio

Ma~sillon 72. Maulllon
Men~or79, Euclid .16

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Miami E. 83, Fnirlnwn 45.
Middletown Feii.wick 78, Middtetown
Oor. 66
Mkldlr:town Maditon 77, Cin. Chrie.
tiaft 62 . '
Mldpoolt 71, N. Rid8'Yillc 61
Miller Cily 42. Convoy Cmt~icw 40
Minerva 82. TU~twawu Val. 70
Monroe (lad.) Adam• Cen~r•l 68,
Partway 67 (2 OT)
Mt. Vernon 49, .PickerlnJ10!p :W
N. Ballimorc 56. VMiue ~
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Ne:w Alb•y_68. J....,.own 43
Ohio Deal ~. Ker11vcky Oaf 4!1
Oreson O.y 61. ADthony Wayne~~
Onawa HUts 67, Umn Teptple64
Padua 6~, GJU'ftek1 Hts. Trinily 41
Panick Henry 46, Holalllle 3 I
Paaklins47, Allen' E. ·43
Peninille 62, Hlcb ville 48
Piketon 47, WestfaJI 44
Piqua 80, w. c........ 67
PleDsant 54, Ridaedllc .so
·
Portsmouth .50, Aleunder 47
•
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. 47
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Riverdale 6S. Upper Scioto Val. 60
Rock Hill 61 , Buffalo, W.V•· !'i3
RUssia 77, Sidney Lehman62 ·
S. tbnrlelton Soulhcust~rn 81 , Cll•
~QD-Musie !'il
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S. Rang,e H . New Middle1own
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II~,~ 10,1117

ByT

New.evidence raises.old
&lt;questions about ~heppard

The. ~aily Sentinel

Bend

I

~y,FebnaWy10,1111

'

By III.R. KROPKO
"It's not some back-alley murder,
AaiOCIIIIMI "'-a Wrtt.r
This is a case that has reached the
CLEVELAND ·- Their memo- height of legal jurisprudence in lhis
ries are terrifying and tenacious. A country," Sam Reese Sheppard said.
42-112-year murder mystery lingers
Lawyer Terty Gilbert, believes
with the Rev. Alan Davis and Sam evidence uncovered in ON A tests on .
Reese Sheppard.
blood froln the crime scene will pin
It's as if Dr. Sam Sheppard, 27 the crime on convicled killer Richard
years after his dealh, is haunting his Ei)erling, 67, serving lime for murclosest friend and his son, urging dering an elderly widow in 1984.
them to erase any suspicion he killed
Eberling, a handyman and a winbis wife.
dow washer, was working in the
Newly disclosed forensic tests, house in the days before Mrs. ShepDavis says, mark "a very significant · pard died.
"I didn't do iL I know I didn't,"
development"
On July 4, 1954, Marilyn Shep- he said last week from Orient Corpard, 31 and four months pregnant, rectionallnstitutio.n near Columbus. ,
was beaten to dealh in the Shepplllds'
DNA fining Eberling's profile
home in Bay Village, an upscale was found ih tests conducted by spe·Cleveland suburb along the Lake Erie cialisl Dr. Mohammad Tahir of Indishoreline. Police charged her bus- anJ!.polis at the behest of 'Sam Reese
,band, a 30-year-old surgeon. , ·
Sheppard and die county prosecutor's
The investigation and the sensa- ·office. Tahir tesled two bloodstained
tiona! triallhat ended in Sheppard's -items taken form the crime scene - ·
conviction captured the nation's a wood chip frorr. a basement step
attention and helped inspire the tele- and a swatch from Sheppard's pants.
vision series "The Fugitive." He
Also tested were two vaginal
eventilally was acquitted, but, the swabs from the victim's autopsy;
crime remained unsolved.
Taltir found evidence of semen fitting
The' Sheppards' son, now 49 and Eberling's,genetic profile. ,
· li ving in Oakland, Calif., hopes new
Tahir said the tests in some cases
evidence he pursued with legal and showed DNA " mixture," which
technical help will persuarle a judge could mean that more than one perto declare his father innocent and the son's DNA was present or that the
county prosecutor to reopen the case.· .evidence was contaminated.

a

Gilbert said there was no valid
DNA SUJJple from Sbeppard.
The findings will be presenled lhis
month to Iudac Ronald Suster of
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Court. If Suster declares Sheppard
innocent. the son can seck an Ohio
Court of Claims awllld of$25,000 for
each of the 10 years his father was in
prison, plus compensation for financiallosses.
Davis, 71, pastor at Bedford
Christian Church in suburban Clove!arid, is executor of tile Sheppllld
estate. He met Dr. Sheppard when · ·
both were boys growing up in Cloveland Heights.
,"We actually were more like
brolhers. I spent about as much lime
at his house as he did at mine," Davis
recalls.
_
After Mrs. Sheppard was slain,
Sam Sheppard did not grieve in publie. But he grieved with Davis.
"He was either a great actor or he
CRIME STILl UNSOLVED - Dr. S... Sh4itthat inclaclln Sheppard'• conviction. The trial
pard Ia shown with hla NCond wife In thJ811i11
was really grieving. Sol have been,
, .captured the lllllton'a aa.ntton 111d helped
IMplre the llllevlslon ...... "The Fug!Uwe.•
from the beginning of all this, confifile photo. $heppard'i - · Sem R.... Sheppard, hopes n- DNA evidence wiii..-.H q
-dent that Dr. Sam is not guilty,"
Sheppard . . . ~ acqulttld, but the
suspicion hia father wu reaponalble for !he
crlma Nmalned unao
(AP)
·
Davis said.
1954 deeth of hla first wife MarilYn - a cMa
·. Sheppard had steadfastly denied
I .
he killed his wife. It was a ·"bushyTen
years
later,
a
federal
appeals
,
upheld
the·ruling
in 1966. Later lhat ty first assistant ~utor, ~.oesn 't ·
haired intruder," he said, who killed
ordered
anew
trial,
saying
sencourt
year, lawyer F. Lee Bailey won Shep- believe· Sheppard can be ruled out .
her, lhen attacked Sheppard, leaving
. sational media coverage denied him pard's acqui~ at a new trial.
unless his DNA profile is cbmpared
him unconscious.
, Carmen Marino, Cuyahoga Coun. to crime scene evidence.
Sheppllld was convicted in 1954. a fair trial. The U.S. Supreme Court

Woman consid ring suicide needs professional help
Ann
Landers

I have a good job, and I
py face. To all outside
life is neat and tidy. W.

of my suicide is going to be a • · mendous
.l..............
shock to everyone..If y ,knew me,
... s,.-.
you would say I was ~list woman
in the world wbo would take ber ow9,
life.
Sbould I do nolhing ilnd let famBy ANN LANDERS
ily and friends deal with it in their
Deu Ana Landers: No lectures, own way, or should I leave a letter?
please. lust your traditional· sound . If leaving a letter woulll help lhem,
advice. I'll be commi!ling suicide as what should I say? Should I suggest
soon as I get some lhings settled, phone numbers of people they can
which should take a few weeks. call for counseling? Shoald I tell my
Don 'I tty to lalk me oul of it. My family members how much I love
mind is m~ up.
·
'
t..
...,...:.?
... .
. , I am writing to ask how I can
Obviously, I cannot tJilk to anyone
inalce it easier for my husband, fam-· about Ibis, but I. do need to know how
ily and co-workers. My heallh is fine, to make it less painful . Thank you for

---c.

•

theThe
84-year
prison term
he faces.
with the~~~\:~~~;~~::~~:~
McDougals,
along
with fore partners
The development
mer Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker, was transferred to a
were convicted last May of traud and owned solely by the McDougals,
conspiracy charges growing out of, The New Yorker said Susan McDouWhitewater independent counsel gal took the lead role in~•:~~~t:~j~~
Kenneth Starr's investigation.
sell and market the lots in a
The charges did ' nol involve the · called Larrance Heights.
.
Whitewater land deal. directly, but
Clinton has testified, via video-!
· rather other business activities of the tape, lhat not only did he not pressure.
McDougals, Tucker and others.
Hale to 'make the loan to ·
Both Jim McDougal and Clinton McDougal, but that he ~id not know
testified under oath at last year's tri- about the loan and did not know
al that Clinton did not know about a about Larrance Heights,
$,300,000 loan to Susan McDougal
The New Yorl&lt;er article, written by
and was not present at a 1986 meet- - 'Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter James
ing where it was discussed, as alleged B. Stewart, said Starr's office
by David Hale, the "!an who issued obtained telephone records showio1~
• the loon.
' nu!l)erous calls between Clinlon 's
Hale haS said CJinton, lhen gov- office and the Lorrance
ernor of Arkansas. pressured him for development !)ffice at the time
the loari on two occasions, including McDougal was working on it.
at a 1986 .meeting where McDougal
Stewart reported that
was present.•
McDougal told himjn previous
The New Yorker said McDougal vtews that Chnton was .on the
declined to·give specifics of what he ~hone ~e.arly every day during
was telling Starr's investigators but t1me, gt~mg her much-needed
confirmed thai he was now backing tiona! support.
Hale's ·version of events.
Investigators are eager to know
Hale is serving a federal prison what Susan McDougal and Clinton
term after pleading guilty to charges were talking about, wHat their rei astemming from his role in making the tionship was at the time and whether
loan which was backed by the Small Clinton had reason to know of the
Busi'ness Adminis,tration and never loJlll and, how it was used, the story
repaid. ·
said.
.
~?avid Ke~dall, a la:-vyer repro.The program under which the loan
was g1,1aranieed by lhe federal _gov- sentt_ng the Chntons declined to
emment is intended to helo busmess menl on assertiOns made m the
run or being started by economical- cle, as did representatives of s,.,.,. ••,
ly disadvantaged minorities. Susan office, Stewart reported.
McDougal showed a net worlh in th~ · ; Likewise, White_H'ouse spolkes-·

page article on a recent hour-long
interview wilh Susan McDougal at a
jail near Los Angeles. She is serving
an 18-month contcmpt-~f-court sentence for refusing to testify before a
Whitewater grand jury

•

~··

Blackwood relates history
of Rotary to memb

PER

MO

.

Despite allegations, Army·
drill instructo_r still on job

•,

Wlledlef .Ciulal hlrJssment or som&amp;-

thing else affecting their duties,
immediately" because of their
~lationship with male and female
trainees, West said.
· Asked whether high-ranking soldiers such as McKinney also should
be, suspended, West said: "We've
considered it, and we. will undoubtedly consi~r it again."
In · a separate program segment,
Ms. Hoster complained about
she said was ' the Army 's unem'"l
treatment of McKinney and the
sergeants:
"I just want everything to be
fairly," she said, noting the im~nedli­
ate suspensions of dtill sergeants
the Aberdeen Proving Ground
Maryland. "The way I see it
now, there's different slaln~anl$.
"It seems like people
position and at a different
exempt from lhose kinds of
because the sergeant major of
Army ii stiU pet;forming his "P"'"'•
Ms. Hoster continued. "I
understand why he gets a diffc•rent
system of justice."
Two members of the
ArmCid Sorvices Committee, Sens.
Rick Santorum, R-Pa., lllld Olympia
Snowe, R-Maine, said the
should punish !hose accused of
same crimes equally.
·
"Certainly, e-rbody&lt;should ·
treated lhe - . " Ms. sn&lt;nvc said
"If they'" facing chuges, they
should be plaCed under 1usp1111ion."

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Ali "paid a price, emotional, ner but isn't worried about weeding
financial and professional,'' Poitier out contenders who lined the block at
said. "But isn't that what cgurage is a recent open casting call.
all about?"
"The secret of the whole thing is
The ESPYs were created in 1993 that I'm not going to find them,
by ·ESPN to honor the ,best perfor- .They 'II find me," he said.
mances and mos~ memorable
moments from lhe previous year in
NEW. YORK (AP) -. Neve
Campbell . isn't missing the party
sports. .
when it comes to script offers.
One of lhe . characters of Fox's
NEW YORK (AP) - Tommy
"Party
of Five," Ms. Campbell is
'7!~p~~OI~-~~~-~e~r-w;·as~ ~10;Jf;;tciA~Ii~a:~the~_•.. ;.~~~king for a new best bud. mv'ahor'torriiiicXIit{O'n
Ili&gt;llywood
·in a string of movies involving mar- afterstarring in two surprise-film hits
black
player to win Wimbledon. Ashe died ijuana smoking until the duo split in of the last yea(, " The Craft" and
1985. Marin continued his acting "Scream.'.'
of AIDS in 1993:
'Tm being cautious with my
Ali struggles wilh Parkinson's career, lately working in CBS's
disease, which has robbed him of his "Nash Bridges" and in the golf choices," she says in the Feb. 14
issue of Entertainment Weekly. " All
vigor and impaired his speech. But movie "Tin 'Cup."
of
a sudden, when you' re thrown all
'asked Sunday which moment had . Chong kept a lower profile but has ·
these
scripts, you say, 'Wow, I could
tested his courage most, the 55-year- wrillen a: film called "Best Buds."
old former champion said: "Resisting "It's about pot," he deadpans in the really jump at anything- or I could
.
VielnliJll.'' He was stripped of his Feb. 14 issue of Entertainment Week: actually thin,k about this."'
· Her latest venture was as host of
heavyweight title for refusing to ly magazine.
serve in the Vietnam War.
He's also looking for a new part- "Saturday Night Live" on Feb. 8.
NEW YORK (AP) - Sidney
Poitier says that when he first met
Muhammad Ali lhree decarles ago,
the boxer's star qqality so overwhelmed him lhal he considered
changing carecirs.
,
"I was the actor - or so I
thought. And then he walked in,"
Poitier said Sunday while rehearsing
for tonight's fifth annual ESPY
Awards on ESPN.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - For the
second consecutive year, David Hyde
Pierce was honored with an Ameri-.
can Comedy Award for his role as lhe.
pompous psychiatrist brolher of. the
title character on TV's "Frasier:"
, Pieree, who plays Niles, was
named funniest supporting male performer in a television series on Sunday. Ht received the same awllld last
year.
, Rosie O'Donnell was named funniest leading· female performer in a ,
television series; while John Lilhgow
'from "3rd Rock from the Sun;" was
· named funniest leading male.
The II th Annual American Comedy Awards were presented at the
Shrine .Auditorium in Los Angeles.
The show will be broa4cast on ABC
on Feb, 17.

More than 4,000 producers, direc. tors, writer, agents, bookers, executives and olhers nominated the performers. final selections were made
by 1,000 comedy performers.
Veterans Carol Burnett and Mel

'

..

LOS ANGELES (AP) '- Patker
Posey, a veteran of more lhan a dozen
American independent films, isn't
worried about overex-posure. . .
"It's my business to work,' ' she
said. "Besides, even though !.did five
movies last ye~. nothing ca:n compare to the drama'of my personal life,
which has escalated to outrageous ·
levels."
·
She cited "nervous oproblems,"
losing two grandparents and breaking,
up with a longtime boyfriend, "I
won't get into it further because I'm
not paying you $125 an hour," she
says in the Feb. 17 issue of Time
magazine.

From:

The Daily Sentinel
.13 WEEKS For Only

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THAT'S ALMOST 50% OFF THE NEWSTAND PRICE!
THAT'S LIKE GETTING SIX WEEKS FREE!

Susan Elli 0n, R.N. 10 talk on VMH
_day treatment program:

WEDNESDAY '
meetlna and spedal events. The
POMEROY ~- Stoke Su..Vivors
allmd•• Is not desipJed to 'promote
POMEROY-- Big Bend Farm and
Support
Group, Wednesday, I p.m.,
, uleo' cir fund nollers of any type. Antiques -Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Meigs Senior Center. 'fransportation
iie1111 are printed u space permits · Meigs High School Library.
free
for Meigs County residents. for
Cld cannot be p~~ranteed to nm a
more
information call Lia Tipton,
spec~ number of days.
TUESDAY
..Y
Holzer
Medical ·c enter Rehab Unit,
• MO"''J)AY
,
SYRACUSE -- Meigs· County
446-5070.
, • CARPENTER- Free skin testing · Bollld of Mental Retardation and
clinic, 6 to 7 p.m 'Monday at the Developmen\ Disabilities,. speCial
POMEROY -- Ash Wednesday
.Columbia Township Fire Depart- meeting, Tuesday, 8 p.m. al the Carbreakfast
and quiet hollr, Wednesday,
Jilent. Connie Karschnik, R. N., leton School.
7:45
a.m.
at Trinity Congregational
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse to
Church.
Everyone
welcome. Contact
be the~ .
EAST MEIGS -· PareqJ:teaclter
Peggy
Harris
at
992·
7569 .or Diane
conferences in the Eastern Local
, CHESTER ~' Chester Courthouse School District, Tuesday and Hawley, &lt;192-27.22.
"Restoration meeting, Monday 7 p.m. Wednesday, 4:30 to 7:30 p.m.
LONG BOTTOM
JoM
illlhe firehouse. Anyone interested
Elswick
will
,
b
e
speaker
at
the
Mt.
RUTLAND -- Contemporary
•invited to attend.
Olive
Community
ChuJCh,
Long
BotChristian Music Group "Harvest" to
' MIDQLEP.ORT •• DAV me.eting, be at the Rutland,Civic Center for -a tom, Wednesday, 7 p.m. Public jnvit·
Monday, 6:30 p.m, also Auxiliary, concer(. 7 p.m. Tuesday. No admis- . ed.
sion charge;' free will offering will be
DAY hall, Route 7. Refreshments.
THURSDAY
taken.
RACINE -- JEWELL Home
POMEROY -- Salisbury TownPOMEROY -- Meigs County School Support meeting, Thursday, 7
1hip Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the
Chamber of Commerce luncheon, p.m. at the home of Brian and Kim
township garage. ,
Tuesday, noon, Carlet&lt;!n School. Hupp, 949-311 ~ .

Frances McDormand was honored
as the funniest leading actress in a
motion picture for her role in "Fargo," while Nalhan Lane held lhe honor .as funniest leading actor for his
role in "The Birdcage."

Brooks also -won awards for their
guest appearances on TV's " Mad
About You."
Lifetime achievement awards
went to Walter Matthau·and Debbie
Reynolds:

Special Offer

o:a lendar--

,RACINE -- Racine Board QfPubCommunity Calendar Is .
publlalled as a free aervlce to noa- lic Affairs , 10:30 ,a.m. Monday,
·
proflllroupr wishlnc to announce municipal building.

It's uncertain whelher the 23-:
year-old Canadian actress will get to:
continue, "Par:ty'ofFive" for a fourth:
season. The show struggles wilh low·
ratings despite a strong core audience:
and a Golden Globe award in Janu-:
ary for best drama. Fox executives-'
will decide the show's fate in April. :

.'Frasier' earns second straight award for supporting actor ·

Local, National and World News, Sports, Comics
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•

' 't'

•

'

Fifth annual ESPY awards scheduled tonight

Ill last weelfs meetiJtg
club.
Founded by Paul Harris, an ·attorney in Chicago in 1905, BlackwOod
said lhat the emphasis of the group is
lo provide an avenue for business
learlers lo serve their C&lt;!JIURUpilies.
, By 1909 five clubs ha4 been
foundCid in Chicago, San Francisco,
Oaldand, Seattle, and Los Angeles. At
the Rotary convention in 1921 in Los
Angeles, Rotary changed it's name to
Rotary International as lhe first over- Lloyd Blecltwoocl, pall preal-·
seas club was founded.
dent of the Middleport·
In 1950 two mottoes were adopt- , Pomeroy Rotary Club, gave
ed: "Service above Self' and "He the hlltory of Rotary, InternePrOfits Mpst Who Serves Best." Four tlonallt lalt week's mHtlng.
avenues of servict were established . .
These were Club Service, Vocation- goals in their lives. In community sera! Service, Community Setvice, and vice Rotary International sponsors
International Service. Today I 55 infant immunizations, adult literacy
countiics are represented in Rotary teaching, deals in conversation and
International. broken into 5 18 dis· endangered species issues, and organ
!riels comprised o{28,1:34 clqbs with donor programs. In international ser1,206,112 members.
vice Row-Y sponsors the Polio Plus
Today's Rqtary clubs, Blackwood program, which has been instrumensaid, -provide service in many areas. tal in eladicating polio throughoill the
· Rotary spbnsors inbound and out- world. Rbtary also sponsors OpciabounJ exchange students, sending tion Smile, sending'doctQrs to areas
local high school students to live ·in in underdeveloped and poorer nations
other countrienround the world, and to provide free operations to individreceiving stu~nts from overseas to uals suffering from facial disorders
live in the US. Rotary teaches that such as cleft palate.
:ethical conduct in people's business· · ·BlackWood conduded his remarks
and personal lives is imponant. by saying lhat Rotary I'ntemational
Rotary sponsors career seminars to does make a difference iiT lhe comhelp young people create positive · munity and our world. J•
·
.
.
...

~-co·mmunity

,.

ments on her record if you are age 62 can get benefits if (I) you are not cur·~
or if you are any age and have a child rently married', you are 60 years old ·
in your care who is under age 16 oi (or 50 and disabled) and your mar~:
disabled before age 22.
riage lasted at least 10 years, or (2}.:
If your wife is deceased, you can you are any age, unmarried, and have,
get benefits on her record at age 60, a child in your care who is under 16:,
at age 50 if you are disabled, or at any or disabled.
,
age if you care for her child who is
If you think you or someone y&lt;Yti
under age 16 oi disabled before age know rriay qualify for benefits, if you~
22.
·
just want more information, cal•
Even if you are divorced, you may Social Security's toll free number, I ~
qualify for-benefits on your ,ex-wife's S00-772-1213, weekdays from 7 a.m:
record if she receives Social Securi- · "until 7 p.m. The lines are busiest ear~
ty retirement or disability benefits. ly in lhe week and month, so if yoW'
You must be at least62 years old, not business can wait, it's best to call at
be remarried, and your marriage other times. Social Security infor-:
must have lasted at least 10 years.
mation is also available on the InterIf your ex-wife is de,eased, you net at http://www. ssa.~ov.

71

Rrst Mo.
DoWI Pymt--,.·-- '2000
Rtf sec. Dap •••;••---··-- ~
Total dut ot
lllceptJol•• .................... ~

·..

r

HONORED ON RETlREMENT...; EloiH Eloaton,111 employee of
· lhe Ea.t.m Local School Dlatrlct for over 22 yean, haa
raalgnad.ln llpplaclatlon of her HI'Yice to lhe dllltrk:t u treuurer
•tnce ,1975, •tt- wu praalllt.d 1 clock on blhalf of the.dlatrlct
by Jim Smith, 1M .E altlm Local School Dltltrlct Board preaJ.
clint. It waa not.d that •• trusurer In 1975 811e hllldlecl $1.1 mil, lion In light dlffarant fundi, willie In 18fl8111e waa In cllllrge of
$5.1 miHion In ~ dlffannt funds.
·

I

lily DARLENE SUPERVILLE
Aaaoclated.PrMa Writer ,
WASHINGTON -Army Secretary TogQ West said Sunday the pol·
icy .!llat left ~Army 's senior noncommissioi!Cd officer on the job
despite allegati~ns of sexual misconduct !'lldoubtedly will be reconsidered.
•West said il was Army·policy that
'relieved drill insuuctors of duty at a
base in' MJ!l'Yland after they were
accused of sexual harassment- but
left on the job Ar,ny Sgt. Maj. Gene ,
McKinhey, who now .is under similar fire. ·, · ·
,,
,
It is "a policy we do not have with
· respect to olhet ~ommanders or leaders of the armed forces," West said on ·
ABC's ''This Week.''
·n.c woman who accused him, an
Anily sergeant major who worked
wilit McKinney, descrihed the policy
as' "it diffef!'Dt system of justice."
McKinney,~ Army's top enlist·
ed aoldier, hu deniCid sexual assault
aiJelations by retired Sgt. Maj. Brenda Hoster, who said his actions
fon;ed her 10 leave the service after
22yem.
He appun in an Army video in ·
which leaden declare war on sexual
lwulmenl but has · stepped down
l'rolll • puel scudying sex _abuse in
the.\miy.
.
.
., · "We u allllllltlr
of policy suspend
· drill jnaauc:IOI'I 1'0{ any allec•lion,

book would be effecli ve shock therapy for such arrogance. I recommend
it. -- R.C. in Louisa, Va.
Dear R.C.: You have written a let·
ter that will, he cheered by individu- :·
alists and freethinkers and scorned by
traditionalists. The retailing industry, '
however, would love 10 offer a wider ·
variety of clothing IIJlil should send
you a dozen roses.
Gem oflhe Day: Sign in the win-":
dow of a veterinarillll who is aJ.so a ~
taxidermist: Either way, you get your •
dog back.
'
•
Send questions 10 Ann Laaden, -·
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cea· ~
lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Ancel&lt;o. :
Calif. 90045

-

Security to qualify, and he is not entiBYED PETERSON.
tled' to a higher benefit on his own.
Social Security
Social Security record.
Manager, Athens offiCe
Fewer men than women receive
If you are a working l)lan, you
these
spouse benefits because they
probably know lhat you .can get
Social Security benefits based oil are more likely to be working and
your work when you .-.;tire or if you earning over the annual earnings
become disabled. You may also know limits for Social Security beneficia. lhat your survivors could get benefits ries (In 1997, the limit is $8,640 for
on your Social Security record if you beneficiaries under 65, $13,500 for
beneficiaries 65-69, and does not
died.
But if you are married and your apply to beneficiaries 70 0r older.)
' wjk works, did you know lhat _you However, lhe protection is !here for
may be able to get benefits on her those who need to take advantage of
record under certain circumstances? it. .
If your wife receives Social Secu- ,
Social Security can pay benefits to a
man on his wife's record when she -rity benefits beCause she is retired or
retires, becomes disabled, pr dies, as disabled, you can qualify for pay- ·
long as she has paid enough Social

&lt;

·\
Jim McDoUgal's
word alone and
that Susan' McDougal remains
adamant in · her refusal to testify
under oath 'about whether Clinton
know aboutlhe $300,000 loan.
Stewart based much of, his II- .

men Barry Toiv lllld Lanny Davis sentencing until the summer on
said Sunday night lhey would have grounds that new and valuable evino comment.
dence he has provided would require
· The independent counsel. was in time to pursue.
court'in Little Rock last 'week· seekStewart writes lhat Starr is unlikeing post,ponement of McDougal's ly to niove against Clinton based on

Some experts wbo know a great went out with the mobsters in the
dealmore about the subject than I do '305.
•
·say j'leople kill themselves because
The color black, which many
they are in too much pain to go on. people consider ''smart." is in fact
Obviously, Ibis is your situation. dour, ordinary, boring and dated,
Please see a professional who can Black reflects the triumph ofconfor. give you some medication to stop the · mity and the death of individuality. It
pain. I promise you lhat in' a matter is one more example of the dumbing
of weeks you will he glad you did. ·down of a society that once celebratDear Ann Landers: It pleased me ed 'its diversity and independence.
to learn from your column that
How depressing to see today '.s
, women ,are saying no to unflattering · male fashion world controlled by a
styles and tet:fible 'fabrics. I would handful ofrobotnnd idiots, It would
like to weigh in with ·a man '&lt; per- )'e refreshing and healthy to see
spective.
American men revolt against the
What is it with the never-ending style master's edict that a monotoparade of black suits accompanied by nous, drab, unflattering uniform will
ugly neckties? I lhought men's black, he the only apparel available to the·
pinstriped; double-breasted suits .. peasants. A good jolt in the pocket-

providing answers to my questions.
•• Somewhere in California
Dear California: You say your
mind is made up and you are going
to commit suicide. You ask that I not
try to talk you out of it. OK, f won't.
You want to know if you should
leave a letter. Sorry, I can't advise
you on that because I have no idea
whit you would say in that letter. You
tell me your health .is fine, you have
a good job and there is no sign of
trouble in your life. Frankly, I'm baffled ..
You ask how to make yo\lf dealh
less painful to those who love you. I
don't have a clue. The pain a suicide
innicts on !hose who are left to
mourn is excruciating, and it never
goes away. ',

SociaJ ·Security benefits for husbands, dads

Whitewater figures allege Clinton kn~w aboUt' loan
WASHINGTON (AP)- Chang- millions of dollars at _the time.
ing his story, one of President ClinThe $300,000 loan in question
ton's Whitewater partners is telling was a major element of last May's trifederal prosecutors that Clinton knew al where the McDougals and Tucker
about an illegal loan issued to Susan were convicted by a fc;deral jury in
McDougal in 1986, according to Little Rock, Ark.
'The New Yorker magazine.
Some of the money from lhe loan
ABC News reported Sunday night · was used to purchase land for a real
that Jim McDougal has told it the estate development near Little Rock
same thing and Susan McDougal was that originally was purchased for the
quoted last week as saying her former Whitewater Corp .. in which Bill and
husband planned to lie to try to avoid Hillary Rodham Clinton were equal

P. . 7

··-

�•

llondly, Februrt 10, 1817

llondly, ,...,_, 10, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
.

'

Erin H.,uon. Kwynn Leib.
HltlenbiCh, Man Imboden. Brinney Rm'LAND ELEMENTARY
Jacks. Kylen Kil!l. Amber McKown, Jo
Grade I - Jacob Barnes. Emily Davis, Josh Lyach, Josh Nllpplr, Mindy O'DIII,
Beth Rodehavor. Charissa Stanley. Cory Andrew Denny, Kalie Ooczi. Bclhany Krystall'enlillllllll. Milly l'llt:ltlll.ltdlly
Gibbs. !..any Hess. Undsey Hower. Jesae Puckett. leltnlfer ....._ Mellua llidlannounced·
.
Shea Melia Whan, Sarah Davis.
· Studenls llllkilll a pile ol "B" or
Grade 4 - Brondoa Bell. ,Mepn · Mullins. Kori Priddy, Cusady Willford. mond, Michelle RltJie, Jeuica ......
lbove in11l oflheirsubjects wbkh qual- Mayes. Michelle ~ Sara Ohliver, aD A's; Jotlllhaft Allbluah. Headier lbw· Leslie Runyoo, Joe Rupe. Mary Sc11u11z,
ifies them to be listed on the honor roll K11ie Reed. Anna Sayre:'Brooke Venoy, ley, Setlt Johnson, Tiffany M~Donald. Stacia Sims, Jacob Smith, Rellecca
Smith, Amber Snowden, Allison Story,
were u follows;
Don Whan, Cusic Windsor, NIIISha Joshua Stan:her. Keith WiUi110s.
BllADBURY ELEMENTARY '
Wise, Jordan Rawson.
Grade 2 ·- Andrea BArtrilm, Ali&amp;ha Shauna White, Thra Wyaa.
Fifth Grade -- Kenny Carsey, Ryan
Terry Bell, Lee Bryan, Brandon Cor- Compson, Keilah Jacks, Bethany King,
Grade 8 -- Whitney Albley, Adam
Stobart, alll\s; David Boyd, Katie Childs, . penter, Lisa Gheen, Ashley Litchfield, aliA's; Adam Lambert, Amanda Miller, Barnett,
Chasidi Bigs, Jl&gt;ey Bluer, DerJessica Curfman, Tyler French, Heidi Carrie. Michael, Amber Shane, Ashlee Timmy Spires, Morgan Wolfe.'
rick Bolin. Zack Bolin, Jennifer Brickles,
Grade 3 -- Valerie Diddle, /\dam Marc Browni111,1\dam BullinatOD, ThadGilmore J"!'3than Larlcins, Sheena King, Smilh, Kasi Sm~th. Daniel Thornton,
HUmphreys,
Sarah bawn Jenkins, all A's;
Erica Poole, Ashley Payne, and Heather ~egan Tibbetts, Chet Wigal .lll, 'sara
deus Bumgardner, Reatba Bush, Keadn
Carita
Gardner,
'~')-son George, Brinany
Young.
Bush.
.
.
Cleland,
Sarah Clitrord. Jucin Cullditr.
Hysell, 'llirida Ratcliff, Maggielj.upe.
Sixth Grade - Carrie Darst, Abram POMEROY ELEMENTARY
Andrew Davis, Gary Davis, Mlcllael
Grade 4 -- Evans: Renee Bailey, Day. Tiffany Day, ,-\lan ·wp· Dodson,
Sayre, Emily Stoiy, all 1\'s, Leigha
Kindergltlen .. Chad Sonnen, Dean· Btyant, Rachel Chapman, Tirzah Dodson, na Cundiff. Ryan Curtis. Henry Ooerfer. ·Madison King,/\dam'· Snowden, all A's; Chris Dodson, Jennifer Fife, Anty FteeltCaiey Dunfee, Zach Gilkey, U.cy How- . Daniel duPiantier. Emily Fiel(ls. Ashley
Ashley Baylor, and second class, Justin cr, 5anc!!a Gilkey, Ty Gonzalez, BIWidy
erton, 1\ndy Hysell; Will Kauff, Angel Freeman, Sarah Hubbard. Doug Jenkins, Coleman. Sarah Wilkes, aliA's; Miranda Graham, Michael Hammoa, Alhley H...
·
Stone, Randall Saylors, Stephanie Storj- Jessica Jewell, MeRan Johnson, Thomas Simpkins.
,.ails, Cunis Hlllltine, Abby Harris l!rin
Grade 5 -- Tyler Barnes, Chrissy Harris, Alison Haya. Melina Hower.
Schwab, Hannah Woolard and Beth Wil- · Klein. Kevin Laudennilt, Valerie Lilley,
fong.
.
,
BraniganLong.l'.aronOiiphant,Aiexan- Miller, all A's; Randy Hodson, famela Sara!( Houser, ..Derek Johnson, 8. J.
Kindergarten ·: Lyndscy Casey, J.T. dria Pauerson, Erin . Perkins, Calee Rupc, Miranda Stewan.
Grade 6 •- Mallory King. all A's; Kennedy, Grace Kitchen, AIIOa Ktlutler,
Evans, /\manda Gilkey, Shawn Hawley, Reeves, Randall Reeves, Kelsey Sauters,
Stephanie Barr, Ashley BltlrUm, Brook Michael Lambert, Slephanie Lcigb. ClrMorgan Kennedy, Ashley Mayes, Devan Soulsby Cat'tl1'n Swanz
rie LightfOOI, Jessica MIIIC!Im, Joaalhan
•,... ndrew O'B~ant
J
Pull' K .
•
. .
.' ~ es~ . Ins, em
Grade I -- John Bakes, Lisa Blanken- Bolin, Melissa Cremeans, Hollie Ferrell, Maue, Caison Midkiff, l;&gt;erric:k Miller,
· Vanreelh, ·and Chnst1 Will, hsted as sat- ship, Cl1elsea Hicks, DaiUclle Hopper, Crystal Jacks, Jessica Justice, ienni Prid- Bea Morgan, Melissa Pauley, Owis Pickisfactory.
"
Casey Hubbard, /\lex· JohiiSon, .Bradley dy, Allison Williamson. ·
DH-Primary-- Shade Caldwell, Bryce ens. Jessica Puwell, ShiMon Price,
HARRISONviLLE ELEMENTARY
Jones, Jesse Klein, Josh LUnsford, Ken.nffany PriddY•.Adain Shank, Michael
· Grade I -- Natausha /\dams, Taiisha ny Lunsford, Cass1111dra Panerson. Jerry Laudenmilt, Nicholas McKnight.
Beha, Nicole Hill, Chelsey·Noel, Carrie Pullins, Jcssicz Sheen. Jordan Smith,
LD-Primary -- Bamara Jones, all/\ 's; Sta~ey,/\lben S.eams, Jan Story, Rachel
Taylor, Palricia Walker, Stephanie Wlpl.
·
Phelps,. Brittany Preast, .Daniel ~nyon. Molly Smith, Steven Stewltl, Caitlyn Emily Pickens
Connie
Willett.
·
LD-Intenmedille - 'Bruce Glover,
Ashley Wervcy, Anthony Werv«:j, Han- Thomas, Cody Vincent.
nab Williams, all A's; Jonathan Black.
Michael Ball. Mauhew Billinss. Eri- Rebecca Houser,/\licia Pickens.
Cory Gates, Candy Lamben. Dustin ka Bush. Makayla Curtis, Travis Eblin. SALEM CENTER ELEMENTARY • MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL ·
Ollerdlsse, Janetta Slover.
Kelsey Fife. Jessica Lilley, /\~~drew Long,
Grade 1 -- Dusty Adkins, Ryan BarGrade 9 _, Sieve Beha, Stacey BrewGrade 2 -- Daniel Bookman. ~shley Lindsay McKinney. Jesse Mowery, Ore- · rett, Joshua Bumem, Corinna Cross, cr. Beverly Burdette, Matjorie Halar
Browning. A.J. Haning. Sarah ee, Cayla gory Musser, ·orant Phillips, Morgan Nathaniel D~vis, Oonald\ Neal, Jamie Dwayile Madison, Kyle Smicldie; Jere,.
• miah Smith, Joshua Sorden, James StanMell, Celeste Taylor, all A's; Cory D Powell, Brianna Riffle. Travis Roseber- Stites. Lance White
Hellher Kerns, Sean Phelps. Jomlthan ry,/\morctte Salser, Felicia See', Kaylene
Grade 2 · -- Anthony Davis, Rene ley, Wesley Thoene, . Amanda Uptoii,
Preast, Joshua Williams.
Slater, Kaylyn Spradling. ·
Edmonds, T.J. Light, Cain McKinney, Michael WilliJimson, Shawn WOltman.
Grade 3 -- Miranda Beha, all A's; · MH class -- Gene Buckley, Jamie J!rand)l Nottingham, Raymond Reyriolds,
,
Jatnie Wallace. ·
Grade I0 -- Hollie Amott, Lacy
Rachel Gardner, William Taylor, King.
. .
Grade 3 --Nllhan Argabright, Kelly Banks. Melissa Oainell, Tricia Da~ls,
Kayleigh Ward
·
Grade 2 -- Britnee BrewCF, Angela ·
Napper,
John 'Nicinsky, Zachary Weber. • Dan1el Hannan. Mel1s!ijl Holman,•Jess~ca ·
Grade 4 -- Peggy Duff; all/\'&amp;; Jodi · Caner. Mark Cozan, Ashley 'DeMoss,
Grade 4 '· Jeffrey Baughman, Eric Johnson, Becky · !ohnson: · Kr:isllna .
Donohue, Cassie Lee, Carl Noel
Heather Elam, Kayla Grover, Samantha
Grade S: Kevin Butcher, Maegan Dod- Shontz, Stephen Will, '/\dam Wilson, · Burnem, Zachary Bush Julia Cross · Kennedy, Timothy Kmg,.Came Lambert,
Rohett .Cioss; .Randy Han. Kayla lcen: Sarah Larkins. ~elli LiBfltfoot. Thra Norson, Jason Drumm, Holly Williams.
Jerod Wyatt, Tiffany Zornes.
Grade 6: Ben Bookman, Wesley Call, · R1indy Collins, Cecilia Core, Evan bower, Aaron lhle, Glena Jarvis, Aman- man, Tamra 0 Dell. Alyson Pattenon,
Jessica Preast.
Dunn, Heather Fink, Jessica Fisher, Naki- da Johnson, Joshua Johnson. Samantha Stefani Pickens. F~o Romuno. Tiffany
MIDDLEPORT ELEMENTARY
ta Fitzpatrick, Counncy Haggy, Sarah Jef- Pie~ Kim ReynoldS, Carrie Rife, Cur- · Savage, B.J. Smuh. Rebekah Sm1th,
·
/\dam Sorrell. Jeremy Thomas. Joel
Oradt I -- Austin Dunfee, Katie fers, Daylon Jenkins, Dru Reed. Casey tis Varian. . .
Grade
5
-Joanna
Bowersock,
Rosie
Tremblay,
Bridget Vaughan. Tava Y~ng.
Evans, Kayla Jacks,Zack Konkle, Catlin . Richardson. ·
Lesley, Tyler Little, Ashley Liitleton,
Grade 3-- Weston Fife, Cody Hysell. Eggers. (&lt;ub~ K~,. Brinany Powers,
Grade II -- Melissa llarrett, Mary
Rebecca Oliver, Lesley Preece, Michael Amanda Jeffers, Jordan Shank, Abby Josh Ray, Jess1ca S11111h.
Barrett Michelle Bissell Eli Cline Sara
Sellers. Tiffany Simpson, Casey Smith, Stewan, Whitney Thoene. Jacoh Venoy,
· Grade 6 - Lindsay 8oli~, /\shley Col- · Craig, Kelly Dalton, ~ Davis, Maria
Lacey Stoban,/\lexa Venoy, Pani Vining, Joshua Venoy, Alison Woods.
well, Megan Haefner, Knstal Johnson. De Nardo, Emily Fowler; . Daniello
Holly White. ·
·
Wes Ault, Nathan Jeffers, · Jake Kelly Johnston.
. .
Grucscr, Conney'Haley, Michaclf,.eifheit,
Joshua Eaklrs. Kayla Gheen. Chris Kennedy, Josh Kennedy. Lacey Kennedy. SALISBURY ELEMENTARY
. L;vTy Ogdin, Melissa Reeves, Amy SCe,
Goode, Sarah Hollen, Natasha. Knapp; /\dam l'ines, Miranda Young.
Grade I -- Amy Barr,_Kyle Boll!!'· Matt Scllers,/\manda Smith,/\my Smith,
Brenna Mitchell, Trevor Nichols, Doug
L.D. --Adam Wise. ,
Heather Graham, Jared Onggs_. Reheeca Sascha Sperling, Adam Thomas, AOdl"w
Noel, Jessica Smith, Frankie Stewart. .
Grade 4 -- Hope Boring, James Cre- Hanstme, Kayle:" Kenned~. K1rk Logar, Vance. Nancy W,haley, Matt Willillfts,
.Grade 2 -- Ryan Barnett, .1\shley means, Justine Dowler, Eddie Fife. Trenton McClintock, Michelle Scar- Melissa Williatns. Jessica Wright, Sandra
Crislip, Timmy Dextl'f, Sarah Engle, Rochelle Gloeckner, Brandon Grover. brough, Joseph Scheimann. and Valerie Young.
·
Beth Hysell, Jenny Khuhn, Errine Jesse Haggy, /\manda Hoyt, Randy lee, . Schoeppner.
Kennedy, Joel Lynch, Chalsie Manley, Maggie Molden, Regan Shuler, Zachary
Grade 2 -- Shauna Clark, Charlie
Grade ·12-- Scott 1\utherson. He11her
Danille Phillips, Katie Rodehaver, lor- Shuler, Clare Sisson; Kelli Tattc""" len- .. Eblin, 1\ndy Games, Andy· McAngus, Barney, Lillian Barnhart, Adam Barrett,
dann Thomas, Michelle Weaver, Cassie ni Young,Jilli Young. Willie Zah~.
Brandon Pearson· Bradley Ratnsburg, and Riki Barringer, Sherry Burke. AIIICI
Whan.
Jerri Bentley. Justin ·DeMoss. Trevor Jennifer Smith.
Caner, Amy Clonch, Eva Crabtree. Robin
Kelli Brewer. Valerie Carpenter. ·Depoy, Matt Krawsczyn.
Grade 3 -- Travis Butcher, Matthew Oonollue, Paul Epperson, Jennifer Garey;
Angela Casci, Cody Davidson, Bily Fink,
Grade S -- Kara Buffington, Zach Meadows, · B~e O'Bryan.t, Christo- Scott George, Cindy Hawkins, Aaron
Brittanyu Haning. Steven Hudson. Madtt Comer, Thurien Caner, Xantha Smith, pher VanReeth ,_ahd Amber Will.
Hockman, Ricky Hoover. Joshuo·
Landers, Eric Littleton, Christy Miller. Jordan Williams, An~ela Wilson.
Grade 4-- Or~nt /\mold, Emily Ash- Howard, Julie King. Liberty Kini. Erin
Danny Morrison, David Poole,/\manda . Jaynee Davis, Michael Davis, /\ira ley, Justin Warner, and Ross Well;
Krawsczyn. Christopher .Lambert, JessiSchartiger. Whitney Smith. Dustin Van- Little, Brandi Thomas, Paul Will.
Grade 5 -- nonegrade five -none.
ca McElroy, Teresa McGrath. HeaahOr
lnwagen. Kasey Winter.
Grade 6.: Andrea Burdette, Jassilinc
Grade 6 -- Marc Barr, Juley Eblin, McLain, Brandi Meadows, Patrick
Grade 3 --.Matt Boyd, Samatha Cole, Carter, Misty Clay, Kayle Davis, Maria Ashley Fields. Jon Halar, •'C. J. Haye, Mullen. Leslie Parker, Michelle Price;
Jamie Ellis. Kayla Feny. Amber Fisher. Drenner, Michelle Drenner, Candice Fet- Meghan Haynes, and Jennifer Walker.
Robert Qualls, Stacie Reed, .Ashley
Laura Hollen, Josh Kimes, Tara lee, ty, Heather Hysell, Katie Jeffers, Jason MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH'
Roach; Christopher Roush, Cynthia
Meghan Leslie, Kayla McCarthy. Eddie Murdock; Brandon Ratnsburg, Jeremy
·Grade 7 -- .Carrie Abbott, Joeline Sandy, Jodie Sisson, Zinnia Spean, Janel
Neece, Bobby Stone. Eric GVVan Meter. Roush. Michele Runyon.
Allen. Andrew.Boker, Teitj Brewer, Erin Spencer, Stephanie Stewart, Beyerly
Tyler Wayland.
. Cossie Braun, Amanda Fetty, Rohyn . Bush Zach Davis, Oelana Eichinger. Stewan, Angie Walters, Jamie :
Nathan Becker, Justin Bell, Michael Freeman, Ben See, Jennifer Zielinski:
1\mhcr Ellis, Zach Glaze, Tasha Green. Willlanyon. Max Wilson.
Durst, Afhley Engle, Aaron Fife, Anna
Corrie Hoover.. Greg King. J. W. Lee,

Honer rolls for the Second nineweeks lfll'lilll period for schools in the
Meip Local Sdlool Dilllrict have been

l

l

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- In a
: dMit cau 100 feet below the surf~
• of the Pacific, hidden in the tissue of
: a rare sea creature, scientists" found
: one of the mOst ·powerful cancer_.
• fichtingcompoundsthey'deverseen.
: They have not been able to fi11d it
.
, agam.
• , · The discoverer, William Fenical of
the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, has returned repeatedly to the
Philippine island of Siquijor in a-vain
. search for more of the chemical.
"We' ve been looking for years,
and still have never found it again,"
he says. "We find some Cl'eii!IGs that
·look a lot' like it, but none of the animals there had lhe right compound."
Re~j:archers don't even know if
the creature itself. produced me com- ·
,pound, or ifit was a byproduct of
some symbiotic fungus or bacteria.
But the st~ry. reminiscent of the
1992 fictional movie "Medicine

'

Man.". in which Sean Connery finds
- and then loses - a cure for cancer in the ~n. may have a hap·
·
py ending.
Researchers at the University of
California-Santa Cruz saved some of
the sample. and say within a few
years they expeel to synthesize the
compound called d'
'de A
F . :
tazonmru
·
. emcal s learn, .. work1ng on a
Nabonal Cance~ lnsbtute gnmt, made
. thetr discovery 1n 1991 .
They colleeled sa,nlples of a rare
creature called Diazona chinensis, a
jellylike animal related to the sea
squirt, which aluiches itself to rocks
. •~ ~"
and tilI ters Its IVUU from the &lt;!CeaD·
The creature had been studied two
thn:e decad
I' b . h eel
or
.
es ear ler, Ul s ow
no prorruse.
This time, laboratory tests turned
up something new. .
. "Much to our surprise and sbock,
Continued on page 9
·

·o d you get you r·.
I.

~·.

.

ta m.t" ns tod a.y?

V.;

By RAY WEISS
Jlennelt .....,._ Noia..,..,..a ·
Almost everyone takes them. Fe"'
consider what they do. .
•
: Vitamin and mineral supplements
·simply have become an extension ot
most people's diets.
• . Hen: 's a list of vitamins. what they
;do and when: they are naturally
!found:
·
~; Needed for normal growth-vision,
[healthy teeth, nails, bones, glands.
found in fish liver oils, dairy pr~­
IUCts, dark green and yellow vegetables. ·
·
·
Jleta ·Carotene: Converted into vila;min A only as the body needs it.
'Found in yellow and orange fruits
~nd vegetables.

B-1 (Thiamine): Needed for healthy
nervous system, muscle tone, normal
digestion, energy. Found in brewer's
yeast, wheat germ, liver, whole-grain
cereals, nuts, pork. beef.
· Green peppers are a good source
of. vitamin C.
B-2 (Riboflavin): Necessary for gOod
vision, skin, nails, hair. Found in
brewer's yeast, liver. leafy vegetables. whole-grain breads, mille.
Niacin: Helps release energy, neces'
sary for l)ealthy ·nervous-digestive·
systems. Found in lean meats, poultry, fish, peanuts.
.
B-5 (Pantothenic acid: Important for
healthy skin-nerves, to release energy, maintain healthy digestive tract.

Abdul-jabbar wants book to
ipspire young African-Americans .

·ijy MAR~ CURNliTTE

.
h Cincinnati Enquirer .
"' Former slave Bass Reeves was
G!Pointed the first U.~. marshal wesi
litihe Missiasippi in 188S and quick·lj' es~blished himself as one of the
il:Catestlawmen of the Indian Terri~..
, .
,
·" In 32 years on the job, Reeves
!9ade some 3.000 arrestS but kilied -:
ly 14 men because ofhis abilitY to
ng them in alive. He spbke five
ative American languaJes, was
adept at disguising himself and is
c;onsidered in the company of Wyatt
~·
.
. : So writes basketball great-turned
liistorian Kareem Abdui-Jal)bar in
·:Biack Profiles in Courage: A Legacy of African-American Achieve· Jjent" (William Morrow; .$22). Alan
Sieiilberg is co-author.
:· Reeves' is one of · II profiles
' nkled through the book, which
bdui-Jabbar wrote, he Says, "to
ustrate that African-American contribulion helped make this the great
c.l.untry thai it is;"
·
history is filled with significailt black people whose: achievell(ents have been overlooked by
t¥instream history, Abdui-Jabbar
i;4ys in an il!lerview from the Los
Ailgeles .office of Kareem Produc- .
li~ns.
·
·· ·
He says that after he retired from
, ,. Los Angeles La~rs in 1.989, he
s~nt a great deal ofttme talking with
'YfUnl Jli'OPie, especially young

!

ru.s.

J

. He asked who they admired, ;.,ho
they considered hero material. AbdlllJabbar - who majored in history at
UCLA- wasn't surprised that most
looked .•P to high-profile athletes and
entertamers.
"Vinually none I spoke ·to knew
anything aboutAI'ncan-Americans of
other eras or the history of our peopie i~ this country," he says. "I fell
compelled to write a book about
heroic, significant Afriean-Americans, if for no other reason than to
make important information available
to these kinds of kids."
In addition to Reeves, in "Black
Profiles" Abdui-Jabbar profiles Rosa
Parks, inventor Lewis Latimer, abolitionis!S Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass, explorer Estevanico
and black heroes of the Revolutionary War - Crispus Attucks. Peter
Salem and ' James Armistead
Lafayette. ·
Abdui-Jabbar hopes the stories
inspire young Afri~an-Americans .
"They ha.ve the potential to do
anything with regard to excellence,
regardless of the field," he says.
"Everyone can qualify for greatness."
He also thinks th~i if white Americans became more schooled in black
history that racism mig hi be reduced.
~·We are part of a great mix," he
says. "Our contribution goes beyond
manual labor. This nation would not
be the great nat1on 11 ts w1thout the
contributions of African-Americans."

lvLYNNILBIR
,..lnllrlltlniMnt Wt1W
LOS ANGELeS- "Star Wars"

"That was the girl for me: I've hnd
her for 80 years, soon to be 81," said
Couron, who is I00. "I got the
woman I wanted .,, ·
"I got the man I wanted," his 97year-old wife ndded.
·
In 1916, Couron first saw his
soon-to-be wife on the sidewalk after.
moving to Fort Dodge, Iowa. He
brushed off attempts by his sisters to
set him up.on a blind date because he

kept thinking about ~'thai girl on the
sidewalk." ·
When he finally did meet Gay'nel,
at a cami val, ·She turned oulto be the
one his sistcits tried to match him
with. When they met again; he boldly said, "I'm taking you home
tonight" and lltcy were soon married.
Founeen children. 43 grandchildren, 75 grcat-gnmdchildren and at
least 30 great-great-grandchildren
.
.

Likas

Study.
finds
.

'

.. I

later, Couron is surprised as anyone ..
al his long life and his marriage. """
"I could say we behaved ourselves, but that just wouldn 'I gq down
very well witli some,"people," he said.
· The couple lived independently
until a few months ago. Although
they arc in n:hitivcly good health,
Mrs. Couron suffered a mild stroke in
Dccc:mber and one of their dauglllers
stays at their home.

Publf9 Nod~.. ·

N.,-r~CSt'/li.!_TOOl'·IJIDDIRSOIItO
""
DIPAIITMINT OfF

·~o::"

-

.·

........

G.l . II
lit?

41.11'1 ...

I

if! :al

P'••· wdl ,Mftj!r•

to

~

....,.. .vlty.

• -1,

•

Public Notice

'
RECEIPT$
............ 48,208.96

RECEIPT8 ..........3P7,742.48
EXPENDITURE
1·
•
DISeURSEMENJS
Genenal
GOftRiment-........51,080.56
Publi!: Sllety ....... 33,241.37
PubllO Worlll .... 167,1131.72

rorAL:'EiPENi:iiTU~....

.....~ .................- ... 47,811.91
Total llecll!* OvlrAJI!dlr ·
Dtlbli!'ll01111nle......1,397.05
OTHI!R FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
other Flnanctilg
Sour'hl .................."....6.87

.

Total

·ao..-

~...,.-and qthlt

U............,.............. I,IIIH
FW~d ca.~~· Ballnoa,
Ja..-y ,; 118&amp;•• 20,230.18
FunclllllltiCIII Afllr
Ac1Jua11Mnti1.,...... 20,230M
PWid ~ Ballnoa, Die.
~'· 118&amp;....._ ..... 27,014.12
TOTAL (III!MO ONLY)
REVINUa RECEIPTS
.

T.-..." ....._ ..... 131,110.11
LIOII'IIIIl ...11thaencl

,....,~..............1.001.15

1..........
==l; h:.-111

•

111.114.75

.......t...; ..............s,.-..
Oll)er~---7,4SI.74

TOTAL RMNUI!
h

.

'

"V..., New Ownership"

HAULING

RemOdeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FfiiEE
ESTIMATEES
. 985-4473

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
.Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

BINGO
· RACINE, OHIO
.. AMERICAN LEGION
- POST 602 .
EVERY SUNDAY

Pick up dlacarded
eppll-. battarlea,
11111ny metlll •
motor bloclta •.

a.rn-a

Public NotiC. ·
PUIUC NOTICE

.
The VIllage of Pom•roy
d•alrea to receive Haled
bldo lor tho following
vehlclo which the VIII...
wloh• to dll...nH. ~ 1111 ·
C........,..t ClpriCII CNiaer.
All •••led bldo ohall bo
rec,lved In the Clerk'o
oHico ot 320 Eaet Main
9-., P6meroy, Ohio on or
...,_ Febtuary 17, 1117 Ill
11 :00 am. Tha Po-roy
Council roHrvea lhl right
to -sat or nJaol•ny or all
bldt.

.,__ .

.• .

'

tc.lhy HyHI, Clorll
Vlllagl Of Pom.roy

(11 27, (2) 3,10 3 te

•

In Memory
In Loving Memory or
Walter C. Wt!ars
who .,....tJ away,
February 10, 1996
Saclly misaed by Wife,
children &amp; grandchildren

•••ews•

•

j

..

..

'

.

.

I~. .', tA

rc.

IPIOUTERY

101M·9PM

At 2l.acallons

Feene,..a.nllllt . . . 128.

Rullind; Oh.

American

.

Lealon Annex •

Mill Stnet, Mldcllaport
Vendon-$5.00, •• ~
Call Run lloDngo

814-742·21188

Rltclrie,·Qh.:

81~

742·2094

·-

na_-..
814-112~

,.,••!!:•'•t

......,,...

Doore Open 4:30
Oeme Starta 8:46
Pay out lo occordlng to
number of playera.
Under now man110111M111.
Public Wolcomo

SNOW
REMOVAL

2/9/28

2124190

In Memory of .
Clair C. Boso
on his birthday,
February 9th.

Cenlfruetien
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling

-Driveways
.Parking Lots .

Kitchen Cabinet•

-Etc.

VInyl Siding • ROofi -

Decka - Garag11 ·

Call Anytime

Free Eetltn~~t8• -. .

949·3327
591·1197 .·
1/111117/1 -

Happy
In Memory

Sun11t Heme '

.614-742-.3411
1fUW1 t mo. pd. .

ad

•

Ad

Nifty, Nifty
Chas is 50!

Happy ··
•

Birthday
Your Wife

Loved &amp; Missed by
Ann, children &amp;
grand!=blldren

.

.

,.

Happy Ad

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVKE :1

(juess wfw's 30

-Room AddlUona

totfag!

Public Notice

=··-·. . .

CDISftiUCftOI

&lt;NewG. .gea

-Eieclrlcai • Plumbing
-Roofing
oJn..rlor • Elllerlor
Painting
Alao Concreta Worlt
(FREE ESTIMATES) 1
V.C. YOUNG Ill
.
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

·-

HNtth ...................33,454.26 .
Capilli! Outt.y......14,017.16

TOTAL EXPENOITURE
DISBURSEMENTS............. .

9Vu usetf to see ftim

···•·••••••· ...••..•••••: .••299.491.87

aressetf so cute, nmvl
he is a{ways tfirty.
.']Jut he's rwt reaag
to 6e recgdetfyet
he's onfg tliirty!!

SWEETHEART DANCE
_Februal)' 14,9 pm-1 am
. $2/Single, $31Double , · _
American Legion Post 128

. Middleport . :

;.::::::============-=======~
If you are a Gallia or Meigs County resident attending vocational
training or college or plaR to attend Spring Quarter and need financial
assistance please read this information. Gallia-Meigs .Community
. Action Ager"CJ has a limited amount ·of JTPA classroom training hmds
available. These
'
. funds can assist with tuition, textbooks, and certain
othercosts. If you are one or mqre of the following:
low income
a dislocated worker (laid off)
ail older wo'rker (55 or older)

GRUESER'S . ..
GAUGE

Love, MlltiJIU.~,1
Cfllllrie, 'Brian, !M'm11

Body worlc, car, truck
l;:.truck Plllntlng,.
minor m~ehanlcat ·
rep!llr.
TuiiiHips, .on Chsnge,
Wsx, BUffing
Long St, Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Ask tor Kip

,.___.,. ._. .,: '1 1,;.: 1 1 1n:.: : .+ ~
... ,.,

005

Get111eman Seeking Cornpanloll!l·.l
ship F"'m Nlco For Tiller.,:.
Walko &amp; Frlondohlp. Stnd R,.•"

pUeo To: CLA 30D, C/o GoiMpotil
Dally Tribune, 825 Third Aw,..,._ ,, 1
Galllpoi~ OH •!5e:l1.
-,~ j

·-~EXT: 1111 .

GMCAACentral Office GMCAA JTPA Office GMCAA JTPA Office
~1 0 North State Route 7 859 Third Avenue
33105 Hiland Road
.Cheshire
Gallipolis
Pom,eroy

.,

ANNOUNCEr.1UJTS

GUYS ANO GALS
WAITWG 10 MEET 'OJ
IN 'lOUR ARf;A

adisplaced homemaker
long tenn unemployed .

you are encouraged to apply. You can obtain an PreappJieation at:

SIJ1!=8 Fllaht Center. in Huntsville,
Ala., wJ.. he !MChellltnJnltUIIIO
1111111 Hlbble equipmollt while they
. . wiHw pd II 1 pool IIIII .aimq-

.

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

e1

· Reed aiJo worb at the Mlt(shall

.... w pill' ..... '** bllo tia
.
. ..... a , ltli7 Plinliowlt HIP

"My own inten:slwas in the fascjnating structure of the molecule
itself," Konopelski says.
But when he tried to build a model of the molecule using plastic balls
to represent its 99 atoms, it wouldn 't
work.
"The pieces don't fit- you have
to jam then( in." Konopelski. said.

Total RICIIlpll Overlllndlr .
Dllbui'Htlleftta ...... 8,250.61 .
TOT~OTHE~FINANCING . OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
Colul"buo,,Qhlo, ul!ll 10:00 ~gr.1:c~~:.,~~~
~.:r~~~!:kii;;tl:67 Othlf
Flnonolng· .
Soutf)el.•.••••••••••••••••••••••6.87
~;.:."·: ·. ~ 'ir.a.~ 11, Tollll Rlcllple end
lou~ OYwiUnltar . TOTAL
OTHER FINANCING
~117 lor lntpro-nta In: · Sou.- a-/Under
Qlabui'HIIIInle and, Ohtlr ·
• Gaitle, l!.ooltlng, ll•lgs, Dllbur•ullnta end Other
uo........................ :1,403.82 SOURCES (\ISESJ ........6.87
lilo-.- Ncibll, 1/lntGn and (U-)...........;.......23,1137.32 Fund Caah BalanCII,
. Total of Rae. lnd Other
Wllthfnglon'C•u·llle, Ohio • Fund C..h Ba-Jin.1,
Jan..-v1, IISIS.....6,204-18 Soureee OYw/UDIIbu........ nta "¥,Other
ior lmproillllll • eD11on1 GAL· F!ll7'und ·;::::;:-;;:jj;;;!'~-22 Fund a.- ~
'7-Z;JOI',.and ·••"-· State .
........ .,_
Adlua-..........~204.16 u-..;...................a,257.48
Fund C..h ealanCII,
~ 7 a;ld v~ , ln 1M Adjualml!lta-... 39,982.22
Fund Cllh Batanoe,
January 1,1116 ... 26,434.72
t:ltllil · of lalpre and 'Fund Cnh llllancel2-31·
Die. 31, 1118 ........ 7,608.08
Fund Ballnce After
;Merl.tta, Vtt,ze of 88;................:........113,499.54
5!\ECIAL REVENUE
Acljue-nta ........ 26,434.72
· ===lllld
YIIIYo·l Depoeltory·
. REVE'!UE RECEIPTS
...,
.-Bata-................68,374.73 Tun.-...........~.102,447.74 Funcj caeh Bellnee,
Deoember 31, 1998 .............
"Ttl I dat• , 111 for Outstlndtng
l.lee.,..; Pennltl..............................34,692.20
.O.mmp
oo lett"!' of 1hle wo... Ch...U ... .;.~..........4,175.111 ·. F-........- .....~ ......8,001.15 Fund
C..h lllllnee, ·
111411 b1
tlllforttt In th; TObll Sala-.....63,419.54
i
o.-n1114!f1181 ·
bltldlng pro:l!uaL •
· SumrnlrY of lndebteclne•a
140,477.83 Januery 1, 1116 ..:.. 4,628.52
Plalt8 aiMt lpaolflcatlon• Outatandlng
'
lniii'Hl................. _.544.99 Fund Ballnce·After
Aclluttmenta .......... 3,&amp;21.52
.,.cinllleltU..Qipartnlant Jen.1; 1818.......... 22,710.81
Fund CUlt Ballnee,
.,~
. ~ .......- ...- ... 8,244.81
DeCember 31, 1918 .............
· .
··
,JII'IIn'W!IAV Outallndtng Dec. 3t, fiBS.
;_••••••....••.•..•••.:•••••••4,629.52
· Dif.IECIOfti OF ...........:........ ~....;.~~11.538.~~
Thla
lo an · unaudn.d
. . . TIIAN8JIORTA110H Thla Ia ~ .. UIIIIIIIIWU
ftnanallletalllnlnL
(21·3. 1.o; ·rrc
financial--.
(2)10 1 te •
I Clll1lfJ the prewbd , . , .
.b.lie ..,_.._
to "" COI'NOt and true; to
Pu
,__
the blat of my~.
0111 FOtlrod.
c....;
PUblic Notice

;\ land.

co--*vel~ !JY

"Otlce

Public
Pubtlo Worlll.:.....82,155.5t
capilli Oulllty ....-.2,000.00
Note Principii Payment. •.;..

0111c1 01 Collb all
DIUURSEIIII:NTS..........-.,
....... COpy Nuntb!lr 17-101 ...:........................131,708.84,
UliT PRltl ~
Tollll Rlcllpta Ovw/Under
: ' 111att1nt Dl1li 1/tA/17
Dllb-nta ....22,384.14 .
• Sealed ptOpO,aale wtll b1 OTHER FINANCING
hoaptod from all pre· SOURCES (USES)
~~allfled , jllddere at .tho
Oparatlng Tranolera
Dfllee of Cllftlraota, Room Out ....................;...,,-1113.12
•11 ollhe'Ohlo DlprtrtrnMII . other Financing Sour-..
of
. Tronapt;talkNI, ................" ............. 1,335.50

""'*"*'·-

•

Coatinued from paae 8 ·

.,

monitor the devices throughout the
shuttle mission.
As a child in Fairmount, Reed .
· used to order loy motors and gyroscopes. His mother. Nancy Reed;
says the only difference these days is
he's playing with bigger toys. ·
"All of our children were taught·
that you can keep learning until you
die," said Mrs. Reed, now of Muncie.
"Growing up, ihc:n: were· people
who told liim he couldn't do this,"
she said. "l!ut we always encouraged
our children, and my · husband
(Joseph Sr.) always told them thai
doing the impossible just takes a Iiide longer and they all live by that
.... "
ru..,.
After hich school gra!luation. Joe ·
Reed attended Ball State University
for a y..-, then enlisted in the Navy.
fk worked nine years in electronici
llld'lalei' became a computet expen
w-ionll
iiiiiPJ
..cOit
111111'11 than
$100 million .piece and petty officer fint clus. He srad- ·
llllln esch the size of 1 tolephonc uaied 1iotn abe University of Miry-

.....-..-.Bill Corp.• WID I!Jo,w

.

determined by clini~~l . trials, and
then: were enormous amounts of this-' .many _times such compounds prove
new molecule, and the·molecule had too toxic for medical use. But the lab
lhe ability to kill human colon can- · tests were exciting.
.
l;et eel's with very high profi~iency,"
Diazonomide A was alSo exotic
fenicaJ says. "It was very potent at ·. structurally, with an unusually' rigid,
~ery smaU doses."
compact form that inter~sted
• He
· that such test tube . chemists. Fenical sent !f01De to chem5uccess
mean the-compounll
Joseph ·Konopelski at
&amp;works in
·

'

inslnlmelll,

WICKS .

R~~e~-rcl1ers tind chemical to fight... .:'

'

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

·-

.

. ....

-~

INSULATION

CHICAGO (AP) .. - A person tried nicotine patches, which resem- the program. or suJipJ.ernenting it with
wearing a.Qlcotit)e patch who smokes. bles' a band~e ~ontaining varying stronger medication and counseling,
on his jxedetermtned "quit day" is 10 strengths of ntcoune.
Westman said.
times moie likely to Jose the battle to . . Twenty-five percent of the smokThe study supports previous findquit, NOrth Caroliori re!!tarche~ say. ers had ~uit after six months. tlic ings, said Dr. Michael Fiore, director
Smokers using the patch · who .study satd. Of those, only 3 had qf the Center for Tobacco Research
take even a singl~ puff of a cigarette Slt1oke4 on .the first d~y. However, and Intervention at the University of
on their ftrst day of trying to quit will 10(\ pf 173 people 1"1)!1 had returned Wisconsin Medical School in Midiprobably bC smoking in six months, to sinoking had smoked t~ir first day son, Wis.
the researchers say. · ,
ott the patch, the study satd.
. .
"Few studies have 'been· done to ·. "Untonunately. ,tQbacco addicPeople who can't gi11e up ciga-..
rettes for.one day have an exlreiJle . determine which smo~ers. are more ti?n by its nature m~dates t~at for
craving for nicotine that won't be sat- likely 10 benefit from mcoune patch- · v1rtually aU people trytng to qmt, y~u .
isfied with a nicotine patch alone, . es," said Dr. Eric Westman, the need to treat 11 ilie way an alcoholtc
according to the study, which :wpears study's lead author. ''This is i.mpor- • treats booze, and that .is not even a
in Monday's edition of the Chicago- tant because a failed quit attempt cl'n single puff," he said.
·
·
based Archives.of Internal Me&lt;licine. be demorali~ing and discourage ·
Nicotine skin patches double the
Researchers at Duke University many people from trying again ."
chances of I!Jng-term success. but
Medical Center and the Durham Vet. Knowing what will woik early only about one in four smokers who
erans Affairs Medical Center-studied will lei smokers avoid unnecessary use the patch is smoke-free after six
:ioo smokers who wanted IQ quit and expense and frustration by quitting months, previous studies have said.

I iJ.

Jt!UNCIE.Ind. (AP)- When Joe
.
waa a child 81!4 101d his friends
that someday he W&lt;lulcL $011' into
·sp~e on a NASA · rocket, they
laughed, callinJ · him a hopeless
d~amer.
'··
·
'&gt;~Though he has~ 't made it into
orbit, Reed's presenc:e will soon be
fell there- albeir indirectly.
Reed, 48, is a senior llaff epgineer
for Lockheed Martin ll the Goddlrd
Sjiace Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Mtd·· and one of two men testinl! abe
hardware and software JOing into
o~it Tuesday on the IIPI" shuUie
Discovery.
;tbe shuttle's astronauts are scl)edultd to install lwo· new ·scientific
instruments and lllhef equipment oo .
!hi: Hubble apace telescope.
·
The two new instruments - a
IICI(-infrared camera and 1 two-

booth.
Scienti8b hopi abe

It;.'

01...,. .

I

BISSELL BUILDERS, Ill(;

'

theircbildreniOseeit,llidToatSherAuthoriZed AOA Distributor
U. chaiimu of 20ih Century Fox
New HomH • VInyl Sldl"" New
\
Welding
Suppfiel
• lndualrial Gases • Machine Shop .Domestic Film Group.
.,..
"There's something about the
-Garages • Replacement Windows . Services • Steel Salel &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding · .
movie 11\al touches you," he said.
Room Additions • Roofing · · : 1 • • AluminurnJStalnl- • Tool. Dressing • Ornamental ·
'
Slaps' • Stal~s. Railings. Patio Furniture, Fireplace
"They want their kids to see. it
COMMERCIAL d R S DE TIAL
'
·
Items,
Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lois of othar stullll
because they've gotte~ .somethtRg
an E I N
from it."
·
FREE ES:riMATES
"No Job TooLs~ or Too Sm•ll"
. The release of "St~ Wars" and
We will work within your budget
"Dante's Peak" an: funher proof that
·614-992·7643
Ph. 773-9173
fAX 773-5881
the ,-old Hollyw~. syste~ of ~~·_:'·~·:._~(~N~o~~~!t~~L..-.....!::=d 101 PomlfOY StrMI
M - , WV
- .•..
spnal releases event films m .ll
~·
sumin~r and smaller, niore thought- h·~"""""
ful films in the winter doldrums -. is
&amp;
over. · ·
Final weekend box office figures
were 10 be released Monday.'
The lop 10 films -at the box office
•No Job Too Small
-New Homes
DUMP TRUCK .
from Friday through Sunday:
•Any and All of Your
•Remodeling
· 1. "Star Wars," $22.7 million.
SERVICE
2. "Dante's Peak;'' $18.6 million.
Home Repair Needs
oGaragea
Um11tone • Gravel
3. "The Beautician and The
oCall Today for Your
•Deckll
Dirt• Sand
Beast," $4 million.
.
Free Estimates
4. "Jenj Maguire," $3.6 million.
. 985-4422
S..."Scream," $3.S million.
992·2753
992·5535
Chester, Ohio .
6. "Evita," $3 million.
7. "Metro," $2.4 million.
8. "The Englisb Patient," $2-2
(UmeSton•
·
mt'II'ton.
. ·
IOIERT
BISSELL
........ YMTt
9. "Beverly Hills Ninja,'' $2.1
Low
Rltet)
CONSTRUCTION
million. '
lamhntl.: .
•NawH()mea ·
10. "In Love and War,'' $1.9 mil.FLEIMIIID
lion.
-GarJgea
. Frldlf, . . 7 ·
•Complete

Likelihood ·of ·nicotine-patch . . .
success can' 'be. . determined early

·rt;·;~;n~ative help~

·
develop
· Hardware for space telescope

biaCtbusten

while Sylvesllr
Stallotle's "Daylight" l.t dis.P.,
were

a

Love ·at first sight blossoms into. SO.;.year marriage
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) For George and Gayne.l Couron, love
at first sight has laSted nearly 81
years.
.
The couple, who celebrate their
8lst anniversary April 10, has the
nation's longest-lasting marriage,
according 10 Worldwide Marriage
Encounter, a group offering. programs to improve communicatiQn
between spouses.
·

'

poiDling JIDSSeS.
'
blasted away the competition again,
"The Beautician and The Beast,"
earnin1 more than tbe volcano disas- a new comedy stairing "The Nanny"
·terfilm "Dante'sPeak"toplaceftnl TV star Fran Drescher." opened in
at tbe weekend b.ox office.with $22.7 !bird place with $4 million, accordmillion In ticket sales.
i11g 10 projecliOt)S by Exhibitor RelaBOlli films, the new, and the·old, ·dons Co. Inc.
achieved remarkable earnings.
. . The only; other debut,.as for "The
" Dant;e's Peak," stan;in~ Pien:e l'~sl,"
comedy statrin&amp; John
Brostl•n and Linda Hamilton, Lejuizamo that finished· out of the
grOssed $18.6 million, according to top 10.
inaustry estimates released Sunday. , · "Star wars," a 20-year-old space
"Dante's P~" had the best Feb- epic burnished by upgraded effects
ruary opening ever, beating and a few new scenes, continued 10
"Wayne's World," which took in captivate audiences. Its .projected
$1~.1 million over the four-day Pres- gross was down 37 pen:ent in iu secidents Day holiday in 1992.
. ond week but such dips are typical for
The film features Brosnan as a sci- even the •most adroitly hyped new
enlist and Hamihon as the mayor of film. ·
.
, ·a SIJlalltown tbn:attned by a volcano.
With a total gross of pearly $392
It got to tbe screen .·ahead of the million, "Star Wars" is )llithin strikupcom,ing "Volcano.'' starring Tom. ing distance of becoming the all-time
my Lee Jones and set in Los Ange- dqqaestic best-seller..The curn:n1 title
les.
holder is 1982's "E.T. The Extra-TerThe.movie, which reportedly cost restrial'' with $399.8 million.
$100 million-plus, is the latest in ;it : · The second pan of the George
string of simple-minded thrill . rides
trilogy, "The Empire Strikes
·that some critics blame the (uccess of · Bac,k," comes out Feb. 21.
"Siar W~". for !Qaki~g fashionable.
Packing the audiences are parents
' But b1g-budge1 acuon films·have who loved "Star Wars" when it first
been a mixed bag latel~. Last year's opened in 1977 and now are taking
"Twiste.r " and "Independence Day"
·

· •.

The Dally 84Krtlnel• .,.....

Pomeroy • Middleport, .Ohio

'Star Wars'·retai.ns box off.ice
crown, edges 'IDante's P~ak'

find . Meigs honor announced roll for second nine weeks
Jolll.._,
.:bhemical to fight
lcancer, then lose it
~Researchers

•

12.88 PER Mil.
MUST liE 11 'IRS.
SEfN.U. Cl1t) ••• ~at
IIDT'tDCAL•na
Coli Nowl
41DD, U .DD

81H4H434.

',
l. I

...

'

t

....'"I'·.
J:l...t

llllit.

Or you can have a Preapplication mailed to you by calling 614-3677342 ext. 11A or 614-992-6629 ext. 11A.
t

l

Submission of a Pre$Pplication ~oes not gu~rantee enrollment or
funding.
2 I'Hr Old Flllllle

Shoph.,d Pu~

; .;-; ·: ;;,_----..ottat

�Pomeroy •lllddleport, Ohio

Benllnel•

Ohio

NBA Cro. .or~ Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

BuiMII

210

Opportunity
IHOI"ICEI

6 A J IT
9A '

.

OHIO VAllEY PUBliSHING CO.
recommonda that rou do butl•

, "pr,1

neaa ..tlh P4!0plo you know, oncl
HOT fD Mnd mOney tlwouah lhe
maH undl yau ....., lnvealfgotod

·.:

~~~~~~~:~~~~~~i-~~r~:~~t~~~~::.~~~~~ ''"'"""...
DUr

,

1 p~

•KJJI6Z
• A II

II

Ealt ..

('~l')•k

• 4 2

-·

home.

304-17&amp;-

dog. flrot 11118.

.3
Q 10'

wu. I'Dilllll
LOIIE
-!-~~~~~~~~~··~·'•=d=•=d·.lacmuo
up fD liO poundl,
·lfO DAY MONEY BACK GUAIWITEEI .Natunol,

1e A GOod H - 1 112 y.., Old

t112,Ftwe........... .
DociDr - - ·

114-441- ,·=~~~~~~:::

No-H-.,_

enced Service Man. Send Re·
""""' To; 726 Third A.....a. Galilpollo, {lliil&amp;131.

Pomeroy,

Mlclclllpon
&amp; Vlclnlly

too_mo..;.':":Ha-llilh':":'"'::llopo~·.,.._~-::01:-Qak::-7

,'-t

HHI CO""""I!IIY Medical CeniBr Ia
· All Yard Salea Mull Bo Paid In Now Recruiting Home Health
. Advance. D•dllno: 1:oopm the Atdao. Formal Vocational T"'ln·
*t bo1ore lhe ad Ia fD run, Sun- Ina Requlrod. Flollble Sclladule.

dey a Monday oditlon- 1:OOpm Apply At OHCMC'o Human Ra.
"·
aourcot Office, 8:00·4:00, Mon·

=

.:EOE.:.:,==,.-----

Auction &amp; Flea llarko!Mtrc:hanr. ~-•· By- Skid 814"'' ...,.
"~
·
1
.
.·
2711.

Jftelrr. Approl. 5 Hra /Month.
17.50 /Hr. No Mileage. Gal.polll
Aroti Pteaae Cal Jane At ·1·800228-8504 On Monday 2110 Bot·
full .dme, auatlonHr, complete WIP.
." ...
. " · 1o,A.M:.And Noon Or 2~4
·•wcdon
aervlce.
Llceriaed
~·

Nlot 1817

~

141711 Throa
llodroomo. ,..., Bethroomo. Heat
Pump Equipped, ·tooaltd on
Rental Lot At Tycoon Loki,
Phont014-2-78..

UH··WE

.J

-

a D'o AulD Porta. Buying 181·

.C'=:."'·c.n ~1..-~ a•

.

poolt
2566.

WN-. Bolting .peril. 304-

~

~::
11

==

Ulod Pizza oven,
Alk Far o.y.
.
.wanted To Buy Ulod Mobllo
Homto. Call: 814·44I·Ot75 Or
--5.
wenled To

Bur: .t·.a· .2

Man

"llentam' Boat Fair Priced, 814·
Ill

I

parltnco.

·
Bri•lllarr: S23,008,llll. ~tar
houro and 11111:01ant bonofiiL
Reaume mu!it conll.ln rtlerencH
tnd will be occeptod through F•
brulry 21, 1887.

::!r:f.itndqut Furniture • Col·
Atcordl, Quito, &amp; Old
~ 111rn1. 814-4441-11112.·

Send re.Ume c/~: .Tho Doily SOndn81, P.Q. Box 728·41, Pomeroy,
OH li57BII.

Wanted To Buy; Little Tykeo
Kitchen Sa~ Workollop, Play11ouae, Paollblo Anr Olhtr Little

AN EQUAL OPPORllJNIIY Ell·
PLOVER

-·
--

a

.rereranceo. 304-882·
'
.

ottC:trtc;

.I

'

lnfDrmod lhai all~

Newly · - 2111. ..
appUam:e1 furnllbed, on lltt

Ult Chair&amp;, Electric -allalro.
Stair Llfta. Van Llftt, SCOoltfO.

advaftiSidln thllnawspopor
818
equal
opportunity bUll.

HUD voucher• accepted/EHO.
otd Aah Village 8111 a George St

/Uitd, - · - .
814-4441-72111.

--on an

manegamen~

Now-.

lau'hdry facility,

WV~-3711.

Nice 2 8edrciam · Fun11Jhed,

REAl ESTATE

IOtchen, All Eloctrlc, N01r Spring
Yaney No Peta, WatBr &amp; Garbage

MOVINGt Mull ltll olllurlltturo
and houllhold gpoda. CaN·i04518-3285.

-

Cool Iron Belhtube, Dl._..,.

310 Homes.for Sail

Pild, .$355/Mo., Plua Dopoalt, COlora, 114·379-2720 AFTI!R I
PtuaRolorenollt,814-44U157.

P.ll.

1105· 5th St In New Haven, lot
170x200. ·nuda repaired. Safl aa
11 $13,000. Call evening• 304882-3358 alter Spn.

One bedroom 'apartment, . fur·
nlahed, extra nice &amp; clean. No

New lntertharm 2· 112 To" l;teat
Purilp, All Acca11orla.•, 5 Year
IYanarAy Allar 5, 814-258-10311.'

poll. phone 304-875-1388.

.~

. '

t oa&amp; Manto &lt;;~or!o' ss S4,zoo.

304-875o3t 18 Aflar.4pin. •

1087 Ford Eacort 2 Do oro, ,4
Speed, AM/FM Caoaette, Very

Nica Inside lOut Ruu Greall

1850. 814-370-2605.

.

cha-t

remote, beaudful land; Melga

450

Furnished
Rooms

(jilt oW SR 143). Owner flnont:lng.

t1500 per aero. Call far good
mtp,814--

RHHALS

410 ~-·for Rent ..
2 &amp; 3 bldloo(n llouae In """-· ·
rent $275, plua $300 dopoolt required, no poll, day B14·99.2-

LtlTLE 8tT CiF
.. \tilSHFUL
THIII!IaiiC':o 1ltERE, .

ZI81.

3 To 4 Bodroom Houae, Cholhtre
Areo, 1400/Mo.. Heat Included
sale with storage building. Will Depaoli 1 Raftroncai Required,

Two 1 bedroom apartment&amp; lai
sell on .land contract, 814-992-

5858.

.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sail

=

12l&lt;85 1174, -

I.R and hall ....

pet, lncltutea tippllance1, very

condldon, 17500. 814·-

1982 14170 Moble Home On 1.1
Acroo, Parcheo, $15,800; 613·
574-2539.

. ; EH, l).lo.D ~

814-317-711113.

MERCHANDISE

312 Wezgel 3 -om&amp;, Pamer·
oy Area, I35DJMD., ·Dopoalt Ro·
qulrod, 513-574-2538.

••

•• .

All Jllll

EMt
It

Pau

I

.

.

.

women

. --... . ...-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

·
. by Lull Cempoa
~e&lt;pooo.--.--e.:h litllif in h c:iptw _ . . . anoll'ler. Toeii)'W dut: I .,._,. L
' RP

OFV

PRIIKC '

KIRX
PFII

UH

0 FV' X

-lnld.

I

. .

.

,.

'."

2 Botlroorn Mobile Homo Addllon
School Olotrict $225/llo .. + Do·

movie. -OnwShalff.
."'Il -a, that's The Method."....: Jlit:lc Nicholtlon.

.

.

'

-

' M
.;.

··~

·.

..

;,
lo

FOm' TO N011:11N6, TWEN"T:'r'
NOTI-IIN6, I=IFTI(-TIIREE T()
NOll-IIN6,
51~ TO N01liiN6
.
. . ..

..

I DON 1T

;)4

TI-!1\T.•

t

'"
''!

R~M8ER

scUM.Lm' ANswas
.

.

'

'•

' .

~tmJody- Hutch -Idiot- Greedy· YQU into DEBT. '

lt:Jr.:.~~~li!¥5Li.i~&lt;i~g: ~:z:

up. t
ownere

fDlul If II'!• oall ""*• Yt!ll'
'of lrto aklrting or lmo. !rae IDI
r.en1 O· park of ytur chalet. No.

.·wf.at. . ., . '..wqrk:..

~~,!!~~~~~~==~
!1,1
•
...:,.~

In

your lrM opplloadon for pra\op""""' fD 101-473,1l!13: II ho ,I Ii·
·'nellll·
nwd11!11.
" ' and oombor, on

nq

1I'Ucb for Slle
1113 ford 10&lt;1llc!lliod. '{-1; 4

lnd rtfritltralol, 1310; Otll247-42112. •
,;',,

•·
175.00
114-14t-.

'

J)IOIIllaiiiQn • .

•}

Tueoc!ay, F~. 11. 1997 .
lrilpreulve lltutliphi Could be In -lOt
You lhll
bOth IOCiaiiY tll1d wrwoiar·
ciatiy. Do not deviate from your game

w-.

·Pupa. Ful·

•

-,

,.,

•

'

LIIRA (Sept. 23·0ct. ·za),ll)hera is
aomathing aignlllt;ant you can!t do on
yoUr oWn todly, you may be able 10 gat
scomeone to do It lor you . 9• sure to •
NP8Y !MrS and fiiMIOIIIr later. .
ICO.I!PIO (Oct. l.._~v. 21) lmpldl·

'

menta .where your carMr II

tabor·•avlng con~ yo.u've rtl:ently

yau

und6ialllnct

conce'rnecl ·

might be elimk1ated today lllllllq\a very
come up iltth. The '"' willl!rov, their .111.•1111 cheln olevenll.. ·

-"·
·,
'
;..n, and conllriue to jnclucM P.mina . CIIIIINI (llay 21-Junt tO) You ~Y
wtio llal1ld with )11)11.'
• •
, . • ..C.tve an lnvMatiOII for an lnterealihg
A:8i!AIIIU8 (Jan . n-fell. 11) Your Mnllrorti ..,......,. yau "'-only cau........... frame ol .inind to4aY ~ ally. Don1 ~ M- -Could be bGito q,
. . . thai Could ..... "*'I and proriiiM. andllolollnallv.. .
.
. T!J...., ojll, _ . 11 C!b1J1 dan~ under- . c•Nc: 1ft (.ll!!lle
II) Allllliaclll· .
llind thllr potanllat, 'rrylng 10 pMCh up a · u&amp;lloft !hat COUld be ~ to yau
llro-e~ · rom•~·~ Tl!• Aatro-Oraph· ~ rnlj(III _IUdtlltlly...., lodtllo- Be
MilctNnaltar
can help
.

"

t~(J

TAUIIUI lAPrll 'zo-llaJ 211) This 11' a
liOOd.day Ill put tnlo fii*!IICe ~ o1 the

••.Jutr

•

;

'ARtiS 111en:11 t1-Airi ·, .,"" ~
W dllllitMd With you ,.g~nlnfj' i Cltll•· Ciil ilaue 11ri1 al' looltld Into 'hil'·or her
p(llltlonuyou~lf10uaht. fllhaihyout:

apoed, looko ond runo good.
f875: \'Uck oampor. Willi furnect.

1g7&amp; ChOuy 1: Ton WtoCiter\Yitll
WhiiiUtltl+-14.

.

to i10 ·'!? rnakel!le reta~
LEO (~ 2S-Au(j. 22) You mlght makl.
• Mill $2.7510 Mall&gt;l)maller, oJo lhll ~- . a audder change . 1~ 'dlr~tion today .
_ _....;._ _........,.:_... •.pape~,, f&gt; .O. Boli 1758, Mu,ray ·Hifl regarding an .objecllve ~ve bean pur·
. ·• · Statlon,NewYortc,NY10i58 . .. :, '
.JUI&lt;IQ. Yournaw~~bemore~·
•
PIS&lt;;I!IIIfell- JO.MWett 20) A 'unique atlci8tand I'IIWI!Idi"U·
·
BERNICE
· arrange"""' 'l'&amp;Y develop today that VIRGD (Aug. 23·8ept. 22) The ocldo .
. BEDE OSOL could ~nl you wiltl malaria!.!!dvlln• · appear to be ~tng w!lh you inoleetl o1 · .
., tag~a- It mu~l be handled. akllltully, a. g~lnst you 1n cbeommfl~!c~?eallnga
because eventually othe_rs mar · gat todly. ...... 10r , . ~ • .,.......... you
ft!vo~Ved.
.
•·• .
lhOukl btl able to get whtlt you OOinl.

\JI)fDn UMCt Cart RL 12·3 Mlltt
SO~Ih ot Loon, WV. Financing'
-304-4S.ttllll.

. '

.

,,

~ .-

. .. .. . ~
My hus!Jand says there are all ~inds of credit cards '-'· ...."'.· :::,~.·~~
!Jut they all have one thing in common, they tun YOU . , ,., ·:· :·
1nto DEBT..
·
.
·
. g• ·: .

3 Bodroom Trailer 2 Bollia, 814·
44H722 Call Alter 5 P.M.

Phon~~

'~

:~

•

··.•

258-1337• .

application rafitudll

(

PJIEV~OUS SOLUTION: "I'd rather be playing bridge than maki."'l a 118!1

'";•'/,

2 Bodroom trailer for ran~ $260/

..&gt;

.

'·

"

RoU1t

.

,, '
.

for Rent

218, UOOIMo., ~100 Depool(tn"
dudtl Wll•r 81,..258-8711g, 814·

~

GHCH

420 Mobile Homes .

,;:=~Hoe·~~~~

·-.

.,

11~2-3llll0.

.mo + dopoalt• Galllpolla Forry

.. J

~~

MFKH •

,·

07_$-lltlS.
. :
.
.
Gaorgu ·P,rttblo SeWihll, don't
haul .,.... toaa 111 , . tril Ju•t can
:J04.875..115J. ': .

CFF.'-

.'

,.

lncludla Water . and
Tralh, 11211&amp; Dopoolt 441.0000.

Evening tutoring. •15/hr. 304·

it ii 'it • .

DHYIIK,

CJHSCO
VBID

H

~t·

2 Bedroom Mob11o Home, $285

f '.IPLOYI.l'cNf
',l'R·;IU S

U y.K H K

RSCF

·

,•

Two bedroom hou1e. carPet8d
lind ctoan, no lnlldl peta, dlpoa~

Month

Wanrod To Buy: We Buy Junk
Carllt-7278, Or 814-3111-

7 ExploeMt lnlta.
·~

·~

poolt, 114-3117-oe32.

-,yka Toro. P I - Can 814-245-

5Poundf*l

Lalt.Nov~mber, the United Stales ·
won the World Women's Team
Olympiad, which wa• beld on the
Greek island of Rhadel. The United
States defeated China by 2t8 to 118 in
the final. CongratuJatio!ts to the team=
Jill Blanchard, Juanita Chambers,
Lynn Deas, Gall Greenberg &lt;Dian·
chard's motberl, Irina' Levlllna and
Shawn Quiml; and to Eddie Wold, the
nonplaying captain.. It wu a third vic:
lory for Greenbera in Ibis evelll. For
J
Levltiila, it was her fourth w.orld
~
championship, having won three at
IS
chees for the SOviet Union. ·
• I • • :j
One-third of the way llu'ougb the Illboard ~. China led by 20. This deal,
number 33, started the U.S. charge for
gold. The auction ·was essentially
idenUcal in both rooms - no one went
to Rhodes to pass!
When Cbamben was in four spades ·
doubled, West led the heart ldng. At
. trlclt two, declarer eaU.ed for the dia. lilond jack, East winning with the
. . .queen and swltchlnglo a !ftlmp: Now,
· though, Chamber&amp; played a low dia. I!IOnd toward l!er eicht. East won with
the 10 and returned her secottd spade,
but Chlllllbera won in the dlllliiiiY and
led the diamond king, rufflng away
East's aee and establlabing dummy's
. nine·!IS bet 10th trick: pluaHO.. .
· illalll!liatd fuuDd ·• ·JDDCII ·IN!uer at·
tack: a lruJnp. immediately, declarer
· erred: She won in hand aaid led the diamond eight. (Leading the four permila the establishment o( a diamond .
tric;l&lt; along the linea just deseribed.l
. THESE AIOtNG
Blancbartl ·defended brilliantly: She
HIPPIES JUST DOII'T
ruffed this trick alld switched to a ·
N'PR.ECIATE .
IP,PIItC. Hut'\0~ .
club. Then, when Levitina won the
next diamond Irick, she could return
her remaining trump, leaving declarer·
ao
s~ort: plus 100 to the United

•

'1087Montt c.~. ss. 305 ho,
fully loadod, rune • look&amp; good.
-173-!iOlll.
.
.

Call Today For fret M89t .a
owner Financing Info, Take 111%
OH Llaltd Pric•• Dn Caah Pur· .

.County, Scipio Townahlp. SR eg2

l\1~

·viCtorious

Mldd_., 1br iuinllhed llp1. (le.

home .,.._tlllnlugll uaeaa-

mont ond managed }lome care
H&lt;Victl lilr quellitd tldero. Requiltrnfnll Include lllhlr a RN or
Ohio LSW and at IIIII one y..,
ol gerillrlCI .Of home hoolth ...

.. Solllecl

lead: 63

Vory nlco ll85 14x7ti with 2
balht. Large loiand kltclliln ..tth

__,__

Wet4
DbJ.

builneu lor .MR· s.cond
RL 33 In IIUan, 1104-773-

.e;ohlo &amp; Watt VIrginia, 304· '"o"-....,-br~a~ok~c.~n~t.-r'-:h~a~o~po~o-:lt7t 0""',;
Bed;oom, se,ooo. 304·875773-51850r -773-6447.
open 10r tulf~ 3-11pm ~ Su: . 2
2722.
' •
ftft ~
wanted to Buy
pervteor. 2+,..,. lonG-181m care
I'V'
' · txptrlonco prtft,ed. Vendlator 3 bedroom houoe In Middleport
- 1 It li p Do•-· All U S. Sit elporilnce I pluo. Stop bJ to till for 181t, can &amp;1;c.88l!-3l1D.
.., A~ ~ld c;i, Proolaat.: out apptlcedo" or moil reaume Ito
llfM!IOIICiao AntiQuo_,,, Gold 333 ..... s...~ Mkldlapor~ OH House tor 11le in Rutland, 814·
Pr•1g31l U.S. Cu,oncy, .;o45;.;7110._;.;-:=-:-:-:-:':---.,- 111!.2·5087.
.iiC: AoqullilloN ~
R.N -~ LS.W
Sectional 3br. 2 rUn bathl, dr,
11, 'toln Shop, 151 Stcond .
.~N
•
heat put111\ 4 ocrae Filtrodl. 304....... ~B 1 4-44&amp;-!Iill42.
Full·Ume clinical otaff jloaitlon 875-5890.
~ fumhu,., giau, china. l'llillllio .lor Ragl&amp;ltred Nurto or
t01n1, IDyl, la~p·a, aunt, ·tQ_OII, licensed SOCial Worker In tht Sl1 room&amp; and bath, 2 112
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which could prave beneficial. Don t let
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�Obio Lottery

Marshall·
upset by
Appy State

Pick 3:
' 9-1·5
Pick 4:
6·7-5-6
Buckeye 5:
19-21·31·34·36

Sporta on Page 4

P1rtly cloudy tonight,
Iowa
In
the
20s.
Wednesday, ch1nce of
light snow. Highs In the

upper30s .

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VoL lil, NO. 117
01117, Ofllo Yllley Publishing eornp.ny

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By JIM·f!:IEEMAN

. inchiding the salaries of the tourism director and chamber secretary.
·,S.nUnel New8 Stiff
.
Doth sides' proposals call for a panel of six, consisting of the three com' Ec'Ooomlc development matters once again cornered conversation during . missioners and three chamber members, to select tbe new economic develMonday afternoon's meeting of the Meigs County Board of Commissioners. opment director.
·
Commissioners ~t wilh Meigs County Chamber of Commerce Treasurer
In addition io getting county government out of the economic developPaul Reed and offered to c:Ontract wilh lhe chamber to provide economic ment business for the most part, the move likely insures the new economic
'development services.
·
development director will be housed in the chamber office ~ not in the cour- •
. · Under the )lropOSed agreement, the county would enter into a two-year thouse, as many chamber members feared.
contract wilh lhe chamber to provide economic development services for the
While Monday's offer apparendy exceeds the chamber's request of a week
county.
·
. ago, contracting economic development services to the chamber means the
The chamber would be paid $50,000 a year- up from the $40,000 allo- . new hire will not be added to the county payroll, saving county money in
,cared e~lier -for the economic development services in two'se"!i-annual benefits including insurance, retirement and travel expenses·.
installments of$25,000. . .
·
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'lleavy thought'
.
.. IIi return, the chamber would be completely responsible fot the economCommission Vice President Fred Hoffman said commissi01iers have been
ic c:leveloproent director's salary and benefits; exP.,nses and office housing. .giving the position "a lot of heavy thought." .
.
..
. rttemove follows a proposill from chamber membe~ last wiiek·in which
"We're sure you have too," he said, addressing Reed.
they' slaggested coJ!IIIIissioners pay the economic development mrector's Salary
Hoffman read from a prepared statement:
and yearly rent of $3,600, while ·the chamber would pay all
expenses, ..
"Active pursuit of economiC dev.elopment activities is one of the most

'

Jury rules,
.but can
O•J
. c. pay.?
ASLQW.AS:

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN

. SANtA MONICA, Caljf. - So,
:this is ·how 11 ends: a jury wilh -no
· ·regrets,aformerfootball star with no
;money, and two families with little
:joy.
.
.

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.: wJ~~r~~~SintpS~m
:IIIIli he woul~ never be a crllsli pl'llf-

.
:iteer, Oir' Mo~y, they decided he .
· sbould pay $25 million in punitive
:damages to the beirs of ex-wife
:Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald
. Goldman, on top of the $8., million
·in compensatory damages meted ~~
:Feb. 4 for Goldman's parents.
Even by tbe 'plaintiffs' .own evi·dence, that's more than double what
.Simpson is worth. And SimpsOn says
· :be dqesn't have the money to pay,
PLAINTIFF .
..
- Fred Gol-n. right,. stocid With his
· The verdicts - on liability, ·com- llttomey, Daniel ~Ill. during a
confenn!=41 Monclly In
pensation, punishment - resonated
S.nta Monica, C.llfJ; att.r th• Jury awarded the OOic!mln and
wilh confidence.
Brown f1mlllu uch.&lt;$12.5 million In the punitive dllnlllill phaae
At post-verdict news conference,
of the O.J. Sbnpaowc:lvll t,rlal. (API
.
t,.
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six jurors and two alternates spoke of
decisions 'made carefully wilh logic dispensed with any notion that Simp- · reach l! verdict .in the compensatory
· and compassion during 17 hours of son got nailed because 1.1/e civil trial phase last week because they
.deliberations over five days for both jury used tbe preponde1111ce of evi- painstakingly went through the eviphases. The criminal trial jury took dence standard, rather than the dence. They didn't take ' their first
·just four hours in October 199.5 10 beyond-a reasonable dO!Ibl standard vote until the very end - and found
out tben they were unanimous in their
· acquit Simpson in the killings of Ms. used at the criminal trial. ·
"What
I
needed
to
~able
to
walk
feeling
that Simpson was a killer.
. Simpson and her friend.
.
out
of
that
room
was
not·
just
a
rea·
"We
had to break down every"Finding O.J. Simpson liable of
the murders and.acting with oppres- sonable doubt, but beyoilcl' a shadow thing .and examine everything and
. sion ~d malice was one of the easi- of a doubt and I was wilting to stay have a clear conscience," said
est decisions I have ever had· to there for a morith if that's~rhat ittook Stephen 1. Strati, 35, who acted as
· make,". said juror Laura Fast-Khaz- to answer all o~ those q\!Cstions for foreman in the punitive phase.
myself," she SBid.
(
The mostly white jury, in contrast
21.
Jurors said they too~;p hours to
(Conthiued on Page 3)
Juror Deena Lynn Mullen, 40,

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on the motion to amend the 1997 in writing within 30 days of gaining
'full-time status."
wage ordinance. ·
Council again discussed the purIt was voted down J-1 .
Sandy Iannarelli voted in favor of Chase of a new cruiser, with no action
the amendment, while Stivers, Rae being taken. Police Chief Bruce
Gwiazdowski and George Hoffman Swift advised council that a vehicle
voted against · amending the. ordi- could be purchased for about $18,000
naoce. Council members Mick Childs and that Clerk/Treasurer Dennis
and John Neville were not at the Hockman had told him the money
had been appropriated.
meeting.
(Continued 'on Page 3)
It was pointed out by the mayor

Personnel matters· occupy school board
·The Meigs l.ocaf Board of Edu- · sity softball coach and appointed
cation acted upon a handful of per- Dale Harrison as his replacement:
sonnel matters at Monday night's reg- pending posting of the position with
ular board meeting.
the Meigs Local Teachers' Associa· In · personnel matters, the board tion.
accepted the resignation of Peggy
Catarina Jo Ruchti was hired as a
Carpenter as a substitute cook, effec- substitute teacher for the remainder of
tive immedi·ately due to .-other the school year to be used on an asemployment, and the resignation of. needed basis, and David .Ramey and
Greg Vining as girls' junior high bas- Todd Johnson were hired as tutors for
ketball coach effective Jan: 25. health-handicapped students.
Heather Hudson was bit'ed to replace · In other business, Superintendent
Vining for the remainder of the sea- Bill Buckley discussed proposed
. revisions to board policies, including
son.
The board also accepted (he res- the keeping of board meeting minignation of John Amott as girl's.val'- utes, adding drug paraphernalia to a

said Patrick and some fellow student
"I think if you had to have a test
ti&gt;unsts.
before you graduated a lot of kids
.APE~IonWrlter
"We have this American studies would work a lot harder,"' Patrick
WASHINGTON - High school
·
: students say higher standards would team honors class," said Jill Cope, said.
Even !hough .the visiting students
. make them work harder, but 'that 16, a junior from Shreveport, La. ·
· · (loesn 't mean many of them want to ",You get the same .grade point for lOok more challenging· courses, the
·"take on calculus, advanced scienl"' or (l!king that as you would taking just survey found little ~ppetite for them .
enriched.·" ·
,
Less than half the I,300 studen.ts
. Shakespeare..
The same reasoning dflves some surveyed in November thought it so
·•.. The youngsiers are talking about
lhe three R's -reading, 'riting and students to stick with algebra and important to take biology, chemistry ·
or physics, advanced mat)l such as
. 'rithmetic -according to a nation- shun calculus, Patrick sajd"
.
calculus,
American history and
Then
there
are
other
attractions,
. wide poll rel~ased Monday. They
want to learn values such as hard . such as sports. Six o.f I 0 ~d they A!nerican geography. Shakespeare
· work, honesty and tolerance. And would 'do better, but would have to was·buried rather than praised at 23
. they want real-world job skills, give up too many things they enjoy percent. The bell tolled for Hemingway and other modem American
including computer knowledge.
• doing.
authors,
18 percent.
·
· ·
"At
my
school,
there's
more
and
All the same, a gap exists between
"We certainly didn't see in this
what t)le students say they want and more kids, juniors and se~ors, they
· the effort putting into it, according to take ·multiple gym clasltf. maybe stucly any kind pf widespread belief
Publi' Agenda, a .public policy four gym classes of day, a¥ then one among these youngsters .that these
research group financed by several hour of English, one hour of math academic topics are 'important to the
foundations. Kids have antennae for and one hour of science and even future," sh~ said in a telephon~ - inter• ,
·
:'intuiting the least they can do to get then they're low-level -classes of view.
• The students jlut greater, Stress·on
English and science," s&amp;MJ' William
by," said researcher Jean Johnson .
Even some high-achieving stu- Delfs, 16, of Spring lslke Park, learningother !'1ings, some by examdents agree•
· Minh., a swim-team member who ple rathcr.than through course work.
Nearly nine of I0 students found
·· "I know kids that just coast by to takes his sbare of advanced courses.
More than seven in I0 students it "extremely important" 'lo learn
. get lhrough school," said PAtrick Bur·
· land, 16, a junior from Boothwyn, . said higher standards would make · good work habits such as beinp;
: Pa., on a-study tour of Washinston . them pay attention and learn more. A responsible, on lime and disciplined
; "Some of my friends are like that." larger proportion said they would by lhe time they finish high school.
learo more if schools Cl\forced being Eight of 10 found it extremely imporAnd why not? " .
Gnde pressure m&amp;kes it .easier to on time and finishing homework.;
tant to learn the value of hard work .
i ll I
honesty and tolerance o( othe1'9.
: bypasi .the more cha)lcnaing course,

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The vill~ge pays 100 percent of
.the cost of single ilnd family· health
insurance for employees.
For those who elect not to enroll
in the insurance program, the village
pays full-time employees $160 a
month in addition to their regular.
salary, and~-time employees $1 an
hour for up to 40 hours a week in
addition ·to their hourly rate.
The 1997 wage ordinance deletes

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list of banned items in drug·ffCF
workplace an~ drug prevention policies, and a policy to insure that peOpie calling the schools during regtitar business hours are answered by~
person -and not by an answerin~ .
machine or automated voice mail. .
Board members then met in exe&lt;::utive session to consider the hiring of .
personnel and discuss contract negotiations. No action followed.
Present were Buckley, Treasurer
Cindy Rhonemus, board President
John Hood and board members tarry RuP.,, Randy Humphreys, Scott
Walton and Roger Abbott.

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

. By AOIIERT GflEENE

,1••

0 •

~~~:~·~~i\~~~-'l~~~~
-•~ij£\9~.~~~~~U~Il_l!)~C
th~f!llfk!$&lt;_
Se!
aware o(the!fefecfion

:survey reveals st~dents want ·
:higher .standards .....~·~ . well, sort of

.·-·

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
' ,.th.e extra compe~sation to employees that everything will be th6 same for
Santlnei.NIIWS Staff
who dechne ·the: group health care current employees - that they .wiD
The 1997 wage ordinance, spe(:if- · insurance. . ,
.
. . continueto receive extra pay· fo~ nol
kally as it pertains to payment fot
A_t last n!ght s. meettng, Counctl ·enrolling in the health insurance prO"
group employee health insurance Prestdent Beth Silvers pr.,.ented an gram.
coverage, and compensation for those amendment to the current ordinance
The current ordinance, however,
who elect not to enroll, was the top-, to reinstate the empl~yee compensa- only provides for the village to offer
ic of a lengthy discussio.n by Mid- lion for not enrolling m the msurance the insuram;e.
dleport Village Council Monday program.
It reads, "each full-time employ~
night
.
After some discussion, council ee and their family shall be offered
The discussion' centered around moved into executive session with group insurance, ,which the village
provisions of the prior wage ordi- Mayor Dewey Horton, noting that the pays I00 percent of the cost If the
that provided supplemental executive session was in order village's group insurance is not electna&gt;•m••nt&lt; to
not enrolled because
personnel issues were ed the full-time employee, then tbe

Aleoclatad Pre.. Writer

i

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important 'issues facing the residents and officials of Meigs County today. ;
"Both the commissioners and the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
are definitely committed to working toward the providing of additionai
employment activities for our residents. and increasing our tax base so thai
funds will be available in the future for necessary services and improvemen~
in our .area.
"We must all work together in a spirit of cooperation to see that these goals
are attained. Even though there may be some disagreement as to the meth'
ods to attain lhese goals; we all certainly want great things to happen in our
county.
"We need to get on with the work, which needs to be done and quit bick;
ering over details as .to how it should be done.'' .
·
"I'm speechless .. ..This is wonderful," said Reed.
:
. Reed said the chamber's board of directors would have to apprQve. the
agreement, but predicted little objection.
'
"I expect everybody .will be ecstatic," he said.
Last week. Commissioner Jeff Thornton moved that the board accept th~
· (Continued on Page 3)'
.,

Middleport C~uncU votes
d()wn ordinance ·change

Goldman, Brown
heirs award«&lt; ·
punitive damages
totaling $25 million

•

l.eatltei ·In

A Gannett Co. N--per

Chamber given development director proposal

•''1

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AS.LOWAS:

·a s.Ctlona, 12 Ptogea, 35 centa'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 11, 1997

CALL FOR STANDARDS - Pr8eldent Clfn.
ton reniWH hla cat• for nat1on11 lduCitlon
lllndlrda Mon48y W!fhlle lcldntsalng the Miry- ·
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