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Ohio
. Lottery

.Southern
advances
in ·tourney

SATN
Af1ll OIJIOI
Sill I-S
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Pick 3:
7-3-7
Pick 4:

1-0--H

Super Lotto:
7-9-12-22-38-38

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Spats on PageS

Kicker:

274984

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.leet,
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In 30t. Frld•y, drizzle,

tonight. Low

l'llln, high In 40s.

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~1117. Olllo v.u.y Pubil.t.lng Com!l•ny

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2 Secllona, 16 Pages, 3 5 A O.nMtt Co. Naw&amp;pap •

Pomeroy-Middl$c)rt, Ohlc:;, Thursday,
February
13, 1997
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Lott wantsdetail~d explanation

of ta·x, i.ncreases·

: ·. WASlflNGroN (AP) - 'While the president who will make that ate hearing and iueniorWhitc House es $98 billion in tax cuts, as well as Texas, and provide .a detailed explaCongress and the Whitc House say , call.'' Lotttold reporters. "lf 'we can adviser emphasized be had tbe full $76 billion in revenue increases.
nation of the proposals.
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they can find common ground on rax get the staff and secrewy out of the · support of Clinton.
RepubliciiJIS . have proposed rax ·· "I wanted to emphasize, once
issues tllis year, SenaiC Majority way, I think maybe we have some"Secretary Rubin is the cliief eco- cuts nearly double !hose of the Clin- again, that they have a great long list
Leader Then! Lou wants the admin- thing to agree about bere."
nomics spokesperson for the presi- ton plan. And they've been skeptical of tax increases, and some of !hem
President Clinton js proposing a dent and one of his closest and most of Clinton's revenue raisers'; which could affect capital formation" and
istration to provide a detailed expla$1.4
billion capital gains laX exemp- trusn:d aides," said Gene Sperling, include $47.3 billion in propOsed new the health of the economy, Lou said.
nation of the president's laX plan
tion for home sales, but Republicans director of the president's National fees or increases in existing fees.
before any Senate action.
·
"Before we start accepting it, we
•· Lott also suggested Wednesday want a far broader plan that would cut Economic Council. "And wben Sec·
Lot!, while emphasizing be was- .beuer at least understand' what in the
that Theasury Secretary Robert ·Rubin taxes on the sale of. stock, mutual rewy Rubin speaks on lax issues, he n't rejecting the laX package, said be wofld they're lllking about," he
and his sllilf may be the main obsll- funds and other assets from the cur- is speaking for the president."
,
wanted Rubin 10 meet with Finance said.
cle to a broader '!DP!tal-gains laX c,ul rent 28 percent to 19.8 percent. ·
Rubin testified before !he Senate Committee Chairman William Roth,
Separately, Roth suggested
Rubin declined to publicly discuss Finance Commiuee on the president's R-Oel., and House Ways and Means Republicans would look to savings
lhat Rcpublicans,are seeking. ·
capital gains
It's a broader
"Ru,bin doesn't
· Bill Archer, R- from revisions in the Consumer Price
.
. . plan at a Sen- $1.69 trillion budge~ which propos- .

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Index to pay for the estimated $170 ..
billion in laX cuts !hey intend to seek:
"Ir we're successful .in doing
something about the cost of living,.
you would have substantial funds
raised there . that would provide
income and revenue for other tax.
cuts," Roth toid reporters.
There is considerable agreement
among economists 'that the CPl •
which is used to adjust many federal
benefits and income taxes, exagger~
ates inflation. Changing lhe index
would reduce those benefits.
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·Merchants donate ·
sum to chamber for
promotion Qf tourism.

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and really support the efforts being
made," she added.
Karin Johnson, iourism director,.
A donation of $250 was made to
mel
with the merchants to discuss
,the Mejgs County Chamber ofCommerce designated fpr use in tourism several upcoming events which she
promotion wben the Pomeroy Mer- said could impact business in
chants Association met Wednesday in Pomeroy.
Contacts are being made with
the Peoples Bank conference room.
senior
citizen centers in Ohio regard"This donation is being made as a
. gesture of genuine support for lbe ing possible greenhouse tours in .
programs . handled through that Meigs County to include lunch and
office," said Susan Clark, president. shopping in Pomeroy, .along with a
· "We recognize the importance of mini-program on !he history of tbe
Continued on page 3
touriSm and economic develoPJllent

BY CHARLENE t{oEFLICH
Sentinel New• Stllff

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JOHN A. CAREY JR.

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the Information In

tiMt report could
probe Into the glrl'a
murder lalt December. (AP)

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. The American ,

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ueklngto

Mlllga

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longtlma donor Tom Hart of
under the aupervl1lon of Mirth•

. Darwin makft

w.v..

Jilcobaon, R.N.,

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BOULDER, Colo. - Prosecutors
want a judge 10 seal the autopsy
report on 6-year-old beauty queen .
JonBenet Ramsey, arguing that
releasing !he information could hamper tbe search for her killer.
The repon contains details only
investigators and the killer would
know,.such as the location and condition of the body, s~id Madeline
Mason, an assistant Boulder County
auomey.
"The most fundamental evidence
known to the killer- and what only
law enforcement knows - is what

said .during a hearing Wednesday.
JonBenel's body was found in the
basement of her family 's home De~ .
26. Authorities have · said she was
strangled, although me&lt;lia rcpons, citing unidcntifioo sources, said she wa.'
sexually assaulted and her skull was
fractured .
Under Colorado law, autopsy.
rcpons arc public documents hut they
can been ~epl se~rel to. protc~l the
public interest.
Ms. Mason asked the judge to seal
JonBcnct's autopsY results until· an
arrest is made. Police have not idcn- ,

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tified any SUSpc~lS and say no arrests
arc pending . ..
, Thomas Kelley, a lawyer rcpre-.
senting several media outlets, argued
that releasing the repon could jar
memories and lead to a'n ·arrest
"The public has a right to know if
tliere is a serial murderer out'ihcre, "
he later told reponcrs. ·
Judge Carol Glowinsky said she
would issue her ruling by Friday
night Affidavits for search warrants
executed in.lhe case in Boulder and
at the Ramsey vacation . home in .
Charlevoix, Mich ...have already been
scaled.

rejects offer to confess in exchange for millions .

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SANTAMONICA,
' .(AP)0.1. Simpson rejected an audacious
offer from Fred Goldm~ thai would
have allowed the fonnet1football star
to keep his money in exchange for a
signed; detailed confession.
"No mau~r how muel1 money I
am offered. I would nev!=f confess to
a crime .which I did not commit,''
·Simpson said in a stalef!lent issued
through his lawyer Phillip Baker.
Simpson has sworn in ~oun that
he did not slab ex-wife Nicole Brown
Simpson and hl:r friend Ronald Goldman to death on June 12, · 1994. A
criminal jury acquilled him. butjlciv-. il jury found him liable and levitd

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Cro11 Bloodmablle made Itt return to the
Center Wednalda!f. aftamoon,
1h01'18ge parUy·the I'IIIUh of strike by

81'118 Red CroM

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A.. oclated PteM Writer

was done t~ the body and !hal is precisely what would be revealed," she

By DEBQRAf1 MENDEZ

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$33.5 million in damages:
As pundits were computing how
Simpson might pay or escape such a
crushing debt, Goldman, the victim's
father. made his offer.
"If he wanted lo sign a confession
with all .the details ofhis crime and
broadcast il all over the country and
. pu~lish it all over the nation, I would
drop the judgment," Goldman told
The As.sociated Press on Wednesday.
"Alii ever wanted is justice. ll's
never been·an issue .about money," he
said.
Goldman's lawyer, Daniel Petro&lt;:.ell,i, backed up hi~ _cliel\l, even
tbough the offer meant be might have

had to give up his contingency fcc .
"Fred is right on target .. . li
would also do a great deal to heal the
wounds in this country if we could
put this to rest, " Petrocelli said.
. Goldman stands to collect at least
half of $8.5 million in compensatory .
damagcs ·and $12.5 million in puni· ·
tive damages. He has to split both
with his ex-wife, Sharon Rufo. Ms.
Simpson's estate, whose beneficiaries
are the two children she had with
Simpson, gets $12.5 million in punitive damages.
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Rufo's lawyer, Michael Brewer,
said he supported Goldman's efforts

but stopped shon of saying he would
waive his 'fees.
UCLA law professor Peter Arencl- .
Ia said Simpson would never accept
such an offer.
"He would be the greatest sociai
pariah in the world," Arcnclla said.

"There arc a substantial number of
Americans who believe he was tried
unfairly twice. They would be disgusted .. .. Think of those who sulk
pon~d him as a . symbol of lhC::
.oppressed black man in society. The)"
would be very angry." ·
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Suicide
victim·
may
be suspect in officer's killing
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}'hunday, February 13, 1117

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Commentary
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Republicans,
Demo·c rats seeking
de_
corum,- civility

Otis Kerwood Casto, 88, Long Bottom, died Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1997,

means to fight for public opinion.
On the merill, Ointon has it rip
on the amendrnclll The nllion has
prospered for 208 yean without a"'
bl\lanced budget requirement in the
Constitution. The document the
FnutiCil wrote once again has proved
adequate to the task of making politicians obev the oublic's will •• in the
present case, to eliminate massive
deficits.
Even though polls show that the
public favors a budget amendment by
70 percent or higher, Ointo~ and his
~asury Secretary, Bob Rubin, have
,11good argument on their side in say·
ing tha\ the amendment could deep-~
en recessions by requiring either
spending cuts or tax increases if the
budget were falling into deficit.
Republicans · claim ,that ·an
impending recession would be a surficienl inducement for 60 - ~nt -of
the memhet'S of both chambers of

·tes of

for balance, but · the admtnistration
correctly ·counters that recessi_o...,
often are regional and assef(i~nS -~f
eeonomic slowdowns often are dts·
puled, making it difficult to amass the
votes.
The GOP cause received a hCild
blow recently when the .Wall Street
Journal editorial page, the beacon of '
conservative opinion, · caine out
strongly against ttte amendment o\1
the grounds that goverriinent bot7
·rowing ··like COrporate bonowirig Or
a family 's mortgage-· is an engine' elf
growth, not just evidence of fisc~\
irrespocisibility.
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"Thal'll break the back of th~
amendment," cracked Rep. Bam.Y.·Frank, 0-Mass., who's fighting ft.
· "This is like the pope coming out fqr,
birth control."
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In case the Joumal
n't prov'i:: .
decisive and the amend nt passes,:
Frank said that he .anticipa raisirii
another.threat: tile prospect l li~.
era! Democrats will demanCfi
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defense cuts as their price for
ing the budget in balance. ' ·
,f'undamentally, though, the
· Republicans· major error lies
expending political energy to wiri an'·,
ideological battle important to t1W
GOP base, not the c6unuy u a whole.
Clinton, having conceded the builget issue, is moving on to new terti•
tory •• the (uture of America's middle class. That's a political winn~r1 ·
(MortOn Koachacke llaeo~lllw
eclltor of Roll q.u, tbe•Dtilip8per

Europe?~
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L~~tters to the e.d itor
·' :V/t:/OUSneSS a majOf COnCern

• IColumbus 136• I

Dear pclitor,

found ·guilty within a few months
execute them. No other country ·in the
of jof_~-:A security guard on world puts up with this kind of social
')be ~ 0 State Univenity campus
terrorism to !he·extent we do.
· ihnl and killed M nday night
For som~ Q(the lesser toughs ·:;~,:;·,ojlbliy attem~. A 1!1111 in don't send tfilllt 'loa bleeding heart
we.1 !rUJ!nia went to a place ofbt!si· hotel with threemeals a day1 exercise
neaa·
bis es-tranged wife was lot and TV. Handcuff them to a
.~
, rook her into 1 restroo111, bar~ wire fence or rail in a big
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her for·SCJ•eral ·hours and . w~house. '1llla! .off thel~ shoes and
theii ~IIOd bel'.A jl~WCC!IUUI in Wash· · pow
__t...them.
' • 'on -~~ and water for a
·ini!O!i. D.C., while sluing in his
,_
.......a' car under a l!'lP .light. was . We talk jlibly aboul huml!llily.
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.....ly lbot a'nd · killed . . High The wortd has always been cruel but
tiCIIoqll ~ die IM,IlJi' cltiel require civilization has always survivCd but
~ 10 be 4111 duty in dJe baildnot always_witliuut pain. S!mtetimes
l.. ~ JChool beun.
nidetiet have to be put aside when the
wt.&amp;-'oN c1oea it llb7 a.m- buD is loose in the Otinuhop.
111111 JIIIX Nil the 1t1or1c1, aewr have . ~ baw always beeR trav~.
... ..,_ !lrill. s- 11- it,._ Now ..., border 011 fear of gotng
ICdeil apillll ~ who placa, leaving our home or giling
ptiOIIIC or 1 into lll'lliip places. ,
.
. tWa. Wblli we lklltt-... MppeN
c.,1e Price,
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eVlviciousness.in this country is

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._...,.,bounds.

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wh.IC h he purporte d to " prove " ·h'ts financt·a· lly untt'J·he has to auc''on
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, innocence in the Brown/Goldman c hi~ last Bruno Mag)i; The punishment
murders -- in the process demon- seems especially fitting for a cutup
strating he had no more knowledge of (so 10 speak) who jokingly uked a
the law than his jurors.
pal, "BUddy, can you spare $8.5 milAt this point, he should have fad- !ion?" i.,
.
ed into insignificance. But no: The
Yet tllere is a long-standing prin·
Brown and Goldman families decjd- ciple in our law .that we do not try
ed to sue in c_ivil court, alleging he someo~, twice for the. same cri~
had murdered their children and . because ~e don't wanllo letthe gov·
demanding he payout the wazoo.
emment hound people it doesn't li~e .
A jury agreed and ordered Simp- This would even include cases, such
soil to fork over ~8 .5 million in com- · as Si11Jpson's, ·in which inept police
pe~satory damages to the Goldman
and prosecutors helped an almost cerfamily. The same jury· sdlater tainly ~uilty man walk -- depriving
assessed punitive damages for tlx; victims ' families of justice ot recsurvivors of Brown and Goldman.
ompense.
The decision slakes many AmeriIn .recent years, prosecutors and
cans' thirst for justice. When a man plaintiff's lawyers have explored a
saws his wife's head off and hacks a "loophble'~ in double jeopardy. ~y
bystander to death, we want the have begun forcing successful defenusailant to rot on earth, then in hell. dants ··especially those acquitted of
Although the courts have deprived us · violent crimes- to .face trials for viothe consolation of · itliliininl 0.1. latlng the victims' ri1hts.
s~ tohia gurllhe'maflY· .b"'~..'lleast
can Kt'n~g coopstrewtr)lot'edpooun~ct'vt'Rodl-rigneyhta
8
enviJton r
).,.. to death

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lice has adopted a similar strategy in l
a slew of cases, including Lemrick l
Nelson Jr. Now we'.have OJ. in the ~­
dock.
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The result is less justice than s,.:,..l
opera. Pmsecutors and asgrie~
f~mthes, hk~ prospectors, keep pan· I
· n~ng for goli;l. mlggets until, through
dmt of labor, bankruptcy of ~
defendant or dUmb luck in geltinj'a
friendly jury, "they manage to wrink
some money out of a malefactor 0,~~ ,
whatever . charge they could mala:
stick.
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Commentators noted after the lint~
Simpson trial thai O.J. h8d
the hest defense team money could' .
buy. His second trial shows thll
determined pllintiffs (including tho 1
government) can hobble even ~ ·
wealthiest pasha by subjecting the'
defendant to costly trials, naltx pub+ 1
licity and faustian choices: 'Theiti
money or their reputation• .. : .': .:..

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~IIOdltad Pr&amp;Q G~l

Today's .weather report••

SoutheHtttrn Ohio

fly The Auoc~ P.....

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..' Today...Partly cloudy this mom·
'llg...A mixture of snow and sleet
J~kely this afternoon. Up to 2 inches
o.f snow accumulation is possible by
~!: afternoon. High in the mid 30s.
" t wind 5 to 10' mph. Chance of
11fCCipitation 60 percent.
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Tonight:..Sleet changing to rain
and drizzle early. Little or no accumulation, Temperatores steady in the
mid 30s. Southeast wind S to I0 mph.
Cliance of precipitation 90 percent.
Friday...Drizzle and rain in the
moming;.,Then cloudy in the afternoon. High in the lower ~Os. Chance
of precipitation 60 percent.

Ontended dog leads drug task
force to stash of marijuana, cash
. ATHENS - The .Athens Police
Department seized approximately
ope pound of marijuana Tuesday
fi;om an Ohio Utliversity student
who allegedly left his dog tied to a
Nprth Cout:( Street parking meter to ·
gpard his s!&amp;Sh.
· .
. Arrested was Shawn R. Slater, age·:
and address unreported.
.. Police received a·complaint froitl
a ,resident concerned about a dog' with
a fanny pack around its neck tied to
a jlarking meter for an extende4 peri?'~ of time,. according to Southeast

Counties of Ohio (SECO) Narcotics
Task Force Ditcetor Scott King.
The resident opened the pack and
found it contained a large amount of
marijuana and cash money. He thetl
·removed the dog and contacted the
police departme~~. Killg said.
Police contacted t~e SBCO Nar·
cbtics·Task Force and agents verified ·
the pack contained about three-quar_ters · of a pound of marijuana and
$720.
Sloter then contacted police in
search of his lost dp~ .

Merchants donate•..

Gloria Jean Roush Harbour; 48,ilof Oifton,W. Va., died Thursday, February l3, 1.997, at SL Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W. Va..
.
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Born Feburary I, 1949 in Mason, she was a daughter of Lawrence I. Roush
of Mason; W. Va., and the late Lillian J. (Campbell) Roush. She was a clerk
for I.B.M. in Cincinnati. · ·
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In addition to her mother, she was also preceded in death by two sisters;
Jennifer Lynn Young and Beverly K. Roush; and a broiher, Joseph F. Roush
Sr.
Survivors include a son, Sean M. Harbour of Mount Orab; a grandson: ·
brothers and sisters-in-law,-John R. "Pete" Roush of Gallipolis, Ronald L.
and Ingrid G. Roush of Seaside, Calif; Larry B. and Sonya M. Roush of
Letart.. W. Va.; Michael L. and Mary A. Roush of Henderson, W. Va; and
Timothy R. and Tena M. Roush of Mason; si.sters and brothers-in-law, Cecil
Y. and· Dennis "Jack" Johnson of Metropolis, Ill; Betty J ..and Jack D. Fox
of Clifton, JUdy A. and Robert B. Gibbs of Clifton, Cathy S. and Ronald K.
Zerkle of New Haven, W.Va., severaJ·nieces and nephews and cousins.
Service will be Sunday, February 16, at I :30 p.m. at Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, with Rev. Terry K. Alvarez and Rev. Damon l'i. Rhodes offi- ·
ciating. Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial·Gardens.
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Friends may call at the fu11eral ho"!e Saturdlly 6 to 9 p.m.

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(IJSPS ZIHIJ)

Published every afternoon, Mortdly throuth
Fridoy, II I Court St., PomotU)'. Olilo, by I!Jc
Ohio Yattey PubHihi.. eon-yllloanoJJ Co.
........,y, Ohio 4'769, Ph. 992-21~. Scocon.l
cluJ- pold ot """*""·Ohio. .

POSTMASTIRr Send addla1 IXJI'I'eCda. to
DaHy' Senllnel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
1Ohio 45769o

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SintsciiPTION RATIS
I)' CUrler or Motor ltrcMIIe

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One~ .............................................. S2.00
One M-................................................18. 70
q.,. v.........,........:...........:................. II04.00

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SINGLE COPY niCII

llolty,.................................................. 3, Cenil
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~~tim .,. dcllri,. 10 pay lilo llllrior may

Star Bank ...............................39~

Wendy'a ................................22\
Worthlngton ............................ 20

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Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis, .
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Distric! 13 of the Daughters of the
· American Revolution will he held at
I p.m. Saturday at the Chester Lodge
Hall. All members are urged 10
altend. Practice will beheld for the
spring rally.

For that somebody special on
Valentine~- Day
Let Burgundy and Brass Help You
BACHELOR'S .BASKET
112 doz. Carnations, 112 doz. Roses,
Boxer shorts, Cologne Shower
vased, bear, negligie, ~a~.
Gel; Coffee mug with chocolates,
u~;~~(~no;n~-~olcoholic)with 2 · L.._B_a_noo...::::n &amp; Shaying kit or

limit In advuee direct to nte.DIIIy Srndllll

on aelne, alii-' or 12:rnonth bulL Credfl will be
~vq~carieteo&lt;;llweck.'

ilo oubtcrlpdon by ..UI penninod In .,...
oj.olw&gt;me.....,..,..._laawillblo.
Publllllet _ . . . me rilfloJa ~·"""" .......
101 1110 tuhacrijMioa period. SMacrlpdqn ""-·"'"ll
be~~- loy ..............
ditnJoa of d1e aubocripdao.
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MAILSVISCIIP'i'IONI
. i ..... MtlliiC.-,

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- -.............................................. SS3.12
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address...
Continued from page 1

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Shoney'a ........:....................... 7'1.

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Prem Flnl ...............................14"

M- The Anodlflld Prets, ood lho Ohio
- . _ Altoclodoa:

Roger Gilmore, Pomeroy, was eastbound on Bradbury Road near
Middleport Wednesday evening when he struck and killed a deer that
ran into the road, causing moderate damage to his 1991 Ford Aerostar
van. according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.

Rockwell ...............................&amp;7'•

DofA to bQid meeting

A round and square dance will be.
held from 8 to II p.m Saturday at the
Tuppers Plains VFW, Post 9053-,
hall. Mttsic will be provided by
"True Country.".

Deer/van collision.reported

Stocks

Meigs EMS 'log_
s 10 calls

Dance ~et .

No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle accident at the
junction of Mulberry and Union avenues in Pomeroy Tuesday around
3:40p.m.
Virginia L. Dean, 67, Pomeroy, was turning right from Union oillo
Mulberry when she struck a vehicle driven by Suzette Hicks, 29,
Pomeroy, southbound on Mulberry Avenue, according to Pomeroy
. Police Chief Gerald.Rought.
Damage to Dean's 1979 Ford F-100 was listed as light while Hicks'
1994 Honda Passport sustained moderate damage and was towed from
the scene; according to the report.
· ·
· ·
Dean was cited on a charge of failure to yield.

Today's lives.t ock report

Hospital news

',fhe ~ailyS~ntinel

Pomeroy accident probed

mayor by a 4-to-1 margin. He was
unopposed in his reelection bid for
CJ.i,f:&lt;~~
mayor in 1992. During his tenure as
mayor, he was instrumental in the TUM Jt&lt;",W
implementation of curbside recy.cling, establishing a revolving loan
fund, developing an enterprise zone
program and contributing to down·
town revitalization. He worked to
bring the city's sewers and water
plants in to environmental protection
agency compliance and to reuse a
vacant 150,000-square-foot industrl·
al facility.
He was married in June, 1994, to
Lynley Wahon, a Bundy Elementary
School teacher .and Jackson County
native. They have one son, Ju_stin 10MU"f&lt;"N
Christopher Carey.
.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- 67.00; select 55.()()..61.00.
Carey was named the 1994 Man
Slaughter
heifers:
choice
60.!JO..
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
of the Year by the Wellston Cham her
buying points Thursday as provided 67.00; select 54.()()..60.00.
of Commerce for his efforts in comCows: 1.00 to 2.00 lower; all cows munity development and leadership,
·by the U.S. Department of Agricul. 40.00 and down.
ture Market New~:
and was elected to his position in the
Barrows and gilts: steady to firm,
Ohio House for the 94th district in
instances so· cents higher; demand '
November, 1994. He. is currently
moderate on a moderate movement..
serving his sccoll!i term in office.
u_.s. 1-2, 23G-260 lbs: ~ounlry
His district includes Jackson, Galpoints 50.5G-52.00, few at 50.00 and . Am Ele Powef ............" •••••••••41'4 lia, ·Meigs and parts of Lawrence
Akzo ................,•••• .'.........:......75~
52.50; plants 51.25·5~ .00. . · 1.
AmrTtch
...............................63'1. counties. He was appointed by House
U.S. 2-3, 23G-260 lbs. 44.()()..
Speaker JoAnn Davidson to the vice- ·
Ashland 011 ............:..............43~
50.00; 21G-230 Jbs, 40.()()..44.0().
AT6T .....................................39\
chainnanship of the transportation
Sows: mQsj(y steady. · ·
Bank OM ..............................45'.4
public safety, finance and approu.s. 1-33Q0.450 lbs. 40.0Q.45.00, Bob Ev.ta ............................13'lr and
priations, and as a member of local
Borg-Warner .........................41 \
0; 4SG-SOO lbs. 44.()().46.50; 5()().650
government and townships and the
Chllrnplon ...............................17
lbs. 46.00-51.00, few at 52.00.
small
business and economic develCharming Shops ....................4'1.
Boars: 35.5G-37.00.
opment
committees. ·
City Holdlng ..........................31'1.
. Estimated' receipts:. 33,000.
Federtit Mogul ..............o....... .25\
He is also vice-chainnan of .the
Summary of Wednesday's Pro- :Gannett .................................81 ~ human services "sub-committee.
ducers Livest~k ''Association auc: · · .Qoody•r ..............................53'1.
Carey continues to make ecoK.:milrt .~ ................ ~..................11' nomic development and transporta•iions at Gallipc)lis and Mt, Vernon:
Landi End.............................28'4
Hogs: 2.00 lower.
tion issues a priority in his service as
Uinlted ................, ................. 17~
Butcher hogs: 50.75-53 .75.
state
representative. ·
Ohio Valley Ballk ....................37
Cattle: 1.00 to 2.00 lower.
One Valley.............................S7~
· The dinner starts at 6 p.m. and
Slaughter steers: choice 61.00Peoples .................................26"
tickets Yfill be available at the door.

'· Coallaued from patle 1
omamentfund. Upcoming expenses,
village, she.reported.
it was noted, will be the cost of the
' dohOW&gt;n also talked about plans banner-s and
brackets to go on the
f«,~t Ohio Bicycle AdventUre ne,.. _downtown lights expected to·be
whi~h will put about 3;000 cyclists in · installed by AJ1ril 30,
,
Rutland on June ·1'1. She said a·JunAsked abofn coinpl~tion ot the
~heon will be served.by the Cham~ amphitheater, Clark said there is no
of Commerce at th~ R:utland Cmc_ set date although summer seems a
Cente~ that day. ~he mvtted P011_1eroy probability.
·
.ilerchants to dtsplay small ilems
The.opening of Arthur .Treacher's
whtch can be eastly earned or worn, at Five Points was announced and a
o[ offer things which can be ordered Jetter from Child Care Resour~e Net- .
·a~d mailed out to _purchasers.
work abou1 a speaking program in VETERANS MEMORIAL
. The tounsm dtrector also talked Meigs County was read.
. Wednesday admissions --Charles
at\out the Coonhunters ev.ent to take
Next meeting was set for March Pauley, Pomeroy.
.,
pl~ce ·at the Rock. Springs· Fair- 12.
Wednesday discharges -- None.
grounds the fourth week of June. She
said that about 5,000 hunters from
~Gross the' country are expected to
ceme to the area, many accompanied
.Units of the Meigs County Emerby their families. She suggested the
gency
Medical Service recorded 10
e~ent would provide· a real sales
calls
for
assistance Wednesday. Units
opportunity for m~hants .
, Johnson talked about advertising res[ionding included:.
·in, several out-of-county publications CENTRAL DISPATCH
_5:31 a.m., Country Home Mobile
and the group voted to place a $65 ad
Park,
Darwin, Homer Gordon, Holzin-the Athens County and Area Visier
Medical
Center, Pomeroy squad
tors Guide which has both a spring
assisted;
a~d fall publication.
'
10:25 a.m., Mili Street, MiddleThe annual style show was dis.
port,
Randy Butcher, HMC;
cussed and April II was set as the
5:)1
p.in., Maples J\partments,
teptative ![atc. _Easter adv_ertising was
discussed and a group. ad will he Charles Kiser, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
plaCed in The Daily. Sentinel.
7:29p.m., Walnut Street, Racine,
• The annual membership drive is
,
Sue
Watson, HMC;
.
ngw underway )'lith the fee being $75
. 10:57 p.m., Barringer ~idge Road.
for regular memberships and $3S for
a5soci•te' memberships. Vicki Ferrell Portland, Lawrence Gluesencamp,
reported that there is $3,337.67 in the
trqasury with $1,500 in the Christmas

Is justi·ce . a matter of might or:right? · ~;

By TONY ·SNOW
Creators Syndlcste
WASHINGTON ·· Am I the only
persan in Ameriea wheY' worries the
latest O.J..Simpson·verdict smacks of
double jeopardy?
Let us review the sequence of
events. Simpson did the Freddy
Krueger to his estranged wife,
Nicole, and waiter Ronald Goldman.
He wentto trial, A jury ~~Cquitt~ him,
at which poini ex-jurors went on to
pose nude, write books, peddle stories to groce'Y.·Store tabloids and/or
admit they had no more knowledge
of the law than a well-trained gerbil.
O.J. tried to cash in on the verdict,
but nobody cared. He couldn't even
stir up followers of Louis Fanakhan;
·who remembered hiin as a guy who
never bad sh.own interest in blac~
audiences before the trial.
In desperation, the one-time foot•
ball peattook up hobbies. He signed
auht~h~. He ~~Jolf. f_ldee·ev~n
aw~w an ,em.-.... tng Vt o m

residence. ·

A retired taretaker at Porked Run State Park, he was born Aug. 4, 1908,
in Fairplain, W.Va., son of the late ~ aad Anna Kerwood Casto. He
was a ~mber of the Meip County Senior Citizens and the Public I;mploy·
ees Retirement System.
· ·He is, survived by his wife of 67 years, Telitha Jane Casto; a son and
daughter-in-law, Dwain 0. and Wilma Casto of Portland; a granddaug~ter;
four great-grandchildren; five great-great-grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
.
lie wu ~eded in death by a brother and two ~isters.
Services will be held Saturday, I p.m. .at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, .
with the Rev. Kenny Baker officiating. Burial will follow in Casto Cemetery, Fairplain.
,
. .
' Friends may call Friday,'2-4 and li-8 p.m. at the funeral home . .

.I

Congressto.suspendtl_le~uire~ent

Ben ·Wattenberg

n. ,

ll his

"

i\t

I

...---Local briefs-....,
Otis Kerwood Casto

ByTOMRAUM
Aaoclated Pre.. Wrher
WASHINGTON -With the Republican Congress and the Democratic
Clinton White House in rough political-equilibrium, both sides are trying to
stop feuding and improve their table manners.
·
·
After a contentious two years, both parties are maneuvering to see who
can be the nicest.as they grapple with making a divided government work.
· "Comity central,'' suggested Rep. David Skaggs, 0-Colo., an O..ganizer
of an upcoming bipanisan weekend retreat in Hershey, Pa. "Comity" has
become a favorite congressional synonym for. civility;
·
The March 7-9 reireat will he the first to include both House Democrats
and Republicans. They will work on relating better to each other.
"I think we're in good shape to be in good shape," said Skaggs. a former Marine known for his organizational skills.
Not only are Republicans and DemOcrats W.ing to get on the sanie track, .
many will be on the same tt:ain, taking a specta) Amtrak express to Hershey.
"If we had a Dow Jones civility index in the Congress, it would he at or
:near low,".Skaggs sajd. "Most people have their own theories on why that
has happened. I th!nk everyone is in agreement that it's time to aet !ogether to do something about-it. That's why the retreat is happening."
· Afthough recent partisan bickering is tame by historical standards, comic
ly has.heen noticeably absent during most of the past two years, a period
that f&lt;:luded a politically debilitating government shutdown and finger-point·
.ing .CJIIIIpaign charges and counter charges on Medicare. .
Lawmakers don't have to wait for Hershey for their sugar rllion. There
was ~nough sweetness Tuesday to rival the output of ,several candy ·facto·
ries.
..
.... "fie wan! to wo~ together," President Clinton s~id as 'he joined Republican and Democratic lead~rs for an hour-long meetmg - on thetr turf.
_.- They pledged·to put aside many differences and ~ork on five or six shared
:l'"orj.ties, including a balanced bu~get and educational reform.
·
, i , "'!bat'.s ihe spirit in which we enter into these discussions," said House
'iS~er Newt Gingrich, recently cl)astened by a Hou8e reprimlmd for elhc'
HU-t)._ ,._, ...:....
. ·
ieal nusdeeds.
.
.
. '
. ·'
S9n. Strom Thurmond; R-S.C., 94, called it "one of the finest meetings
·•
PARIS ., In the. latter part of the allegedly the stabilizing rudder for a drives jobs . overseas. They know · .where democracy failed -and cauSCjl;
rve '· ttended since I've been here, ia 42 ye~s, between the president and
18th century, Americans ~!itched united Europe, has a 12.2 percent (beyond theory) that if they cut wei- global tragedy.
.
the tl!emhers of Congress."
·
It l!uilds upon what has been
qinton launched his second tenn with calls for bipartisan cooperation together 13 colonies as a common unemployment rate. It is noted that fare-state goodie.•. ihey will anuigoin hif_ inaugural and State of the Union addresses and in remarks this week. ·market with a common currency, apd the rate is "the highest since· Hitler," nize voters. S.o they mostly tinker achieved. For all their statism, thf'
with small changes. which satisfy no : Europeans have wrought a miracle to'
"We need momentum to establish a track record and some confidence formed a counuy. It was not an easy
one, and -have not accomplished be proud of. When World War 11 end,
that jwe can work in a bipartisan fashion," said White House press secretary deal. Many historians t'hink that a
much •· yet, That done, or not done, ed 50 y~ars ago. Europe was thb ·
Mik1tMcCurry, citing a ~iew he said was expressed.by participants at Tues- majority of colonists would have preferred
to
remain
loyal
·to
the
English
.
.
which
reminds
you
of
more
than
you
Euro-intellectuals bleat that there is global cockpit of despair and bar·'
day's meeting at the Capitol. .
crown.
(Why
didn't
Richard
Morris
want
to
remember
about
Europe.
no "leadership" to confront the spc· barism. Thi:y buill preuy cathednils"~
. Tite House and Senate long have considered themselves temples of civil- ·
do a poll?)
.
.
Italy and France also have ab011t 12 cia! intetestSf ·It is gene~aliy recog- and slaughtered each other.
ity.
.
d . I . b
d.
When
the
Constitution
was
writ.
percent·unemployment. and Spain is nized tjlat Ge"rmany's Helmut Kohl is
That's over. There is a commoh·
"I~ is very D)aterial that order, decency an regu amy e preserve m a
ten,
a·huge
argume~i
erupted
beiween
over
20
percent.
Only
England,
at
7'
no
George
Washington.
Alexander
market,
open borders and European ·
dignified public body," Thomas Jefferson wrote long ago.
·
the
small
states
and
the
"
large
states:
percent,
is
headed
in
the
right
direcHamilton
haS
yet
to
make
an
appearlicense
plates
on the cars. Young Gel\- '
~lilt confrontation and struggle have more often been the nonn, erupting
·'
. .
mans visit France sans invasioti:· occauiorially in physical violence- fist fights, canings, even gunplay-- in Was it .fair that tiny Delaware and tion, although voter surveys show ance.
huge
Pennsylvania
would
each
have
that
incumbent
prime
minister
John
One
wayybung
adults
respond
is
With
all its current economic pro!)! :
prior'centuries and harsh words in more rct#nt times.
two
senatoi'S?
The
.issue
of
slavery
Major
is
about
to
be
'
c
anned.
(It's
not
by
not
havin!l
babies.
Western
Euro·
!ems
Western Europe is, next to
Ajfbough (onner House Speaker Thomas P. "llp" O'Neill. [)..Mass., liked.
to lxj"'t aboui his after·h~urs congenial it~ with RepubHcaris, he became the was unresolvable. It took quite a the economy, stupid! Anyway, don't pean fertility has fallen to 1.4 children America, the most prosperous place"'
.
per woman, about a third less than the in the world. .
•.
·{irsljfpeiJker in modem umes to be pubhcly rebuked tn the mtd·l980s for while until it wits said that the Unit· count on it.)
ed States IS rather than the Unitt4
The _unemployment situation rate necessary just to :keep a popula·
Will there be a "United Slates of
a pe!~nal attack.
.
.
OfNeill wagged"a finger at relative-newcomer Gingrich and accused the States ARE. In the latter part of the leaves many Euros conflicted. They tion stable over time. At that rate, Europe?" After all,-how much do the"'
. .GeorJia Republican of "the lowest thing I've seen in my 32 years in Co~- 20th century, the Buropeans•are try· know they are so wire, civilized and there may not he many Europeans 10 Swedes and the Greeks have in com: ..
ing to establish their own version of humanitarian. They care and bleed unite.
. mon besides soccer, American ·
~ss ~ "
·
a
more
perfect_
union.
Once
again,
it
forthe
common
people.
Their
welfare
It
is
hatd
to
foster
a
vigorous
movies and North African' immi'"
·
~pp.- Bob Doman, R-CaHf., yanked the tie of Rep. Thomas bowney, 0 is
no
easy
deal.
states
ooze
empathy.
They
believe
supranational
sentimcn'
in
such
sour
grants?
Will · Luxembourg have thi:;'
N.Y., Ion the House floor .in 19l!S and accused him of being "a wimp."
If one had to put a single word to that America's market-oriented sys, · surroundings. Which barricades arc same voting•power as Germ-ny? · •
' in·1995, Rep. Jim Moran, O-Va., a former amateur boxer, grappled with
Western
which is where the · tern representsDarwinianjungle h1w. . to he storm_cd? What's · the grand
Still, Buros, cheer up! The pre•··
·Rep. Randy "Duke'.' Cunningham, R,CaHf., just off the House floor after principal Europe,
quest
for
'
B
uropean
un.ion
is
·England's
Thatcherite
tendency
is
cause?The.'fonhcoming
creation
of
a
.
amble
to the American-Constitution
the 11vo exchange!~ insulis on the floor.
·
going
on.
it
would"
be
"glum.
"
Writhardly
better.
Zut
alors,
·so
much
common
currency_
the
"Euro"
••
is
wisely
talks only prospectively aboUt'..
Ll~er that same. year, Rep. Sam Gibbons, 0-Fia., engaged in a hallway
.an eye-glazer, not a pulse-pounder.
creating "a more perfeci union." Otir
· tie-pOlling, shouting match with Rep: Bill Thomas, a California RepubHcan, ing about France, Nicholas Farrell pain!
says
in
the
latest
editiori
of
the
EngThe
Euro-pols
also
know
(in
the.
Dominique
Moisi,
of
the
Pari!·
founders understood, as wise Eu~ '
after'Gibbons compared·RepubHcans with the Nazis he fought in World War ·
lish monthly The Spectator: "Lajoie ory) that a vast net of worker bene- based think tank lnstitul Francais des peans do, that building a continentiil'
Relations l~tem~tionales, says that nation is a process,. not an event. In'
A~ ~tbreak of civility is clearly what both sides want after elections thai · de vivre is no more;" he says. "La . fits and high unemployment benefits
n!tu~~ Clinton to the White. House and GOP majorities t\l both chambers." sinistrose (sinister dismalness) and Ia creates high unemployment. (Why the grand cluse should be ''enlarge- Europe, that proceis proceeds. •
morositie ambiant iencompassing hire new workers at those costs'!'Why ment." that is. the extension of the · Ben Waltellbefl, a senior fellow .
. It it's not clear how long 11 wtlllast.
.
gloom)
are the phrases now in work when unemployment benefits ·prospective BuroP.,an Union to lhe at the American Enterprile JD1t1- .
,an~ strains are_a._lreadr_apparent.
·
vogue."
almost match wages?) They know (in recently )'~rated states of Eastern tute,ls the 11uthor of "Valna Mat· :·
At the top of the Gloom Gauge is theory) that copious welfare state reg- . Europe. ·
.
ter Most" and Is the boat or ,.._ ,
. JTOli.'SNOTE-TomRaumeoverspoliticsandnationalaffail'!i ·. h" h
1
t
G
·an
1 ·
d
..
_,.
•g
unemp oymen ·
eon y, .u au on re uces compellttveness and
That is •indeed a big cause: to weekly public television 'p_- ram :
for.~ Alloeiated ~.
· ·
.
, ...
.
solidify democracy in "the,continent "Thlak Tank."
':

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,.

OHIO Weather

'

Budget amendment: more GOP overkill ·

Having•won a ~ llralegic vic· . ular) edUCIIiotl "cntllde" u a lut- cratic fresbtta Seas. Max Oellnd,
,
tory
on the future size of the foderal ing monument to his prNidlliC).
Ga.;nm Johnson, S.D., Mary 4n·
~lislid in 1948
; government, Republicans penist in
Republicans •• Senile Republi- drieu, La., and Bob TorriceiU, N.J., •
· losing poljtically beciiiSC they try to cans, anyway- have an impnsive • to hold them to campaign promises
111 Ccut St., Pomeroy, Ohio
push their advantage too far.
~o support a bal1111ced budget aniend814-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157
Their big triumph· came in June
menl
Koodrscke
1995, when President Ointon agreed
S~rces say, though. ·that Senate
· to the GOP goal of balancing the fedDemocratic Leader Tom Daschle,
. eral budget by 2002:But Republicans agen~ of their own that includes S.D., may let the freshmen off and
·'
ruinously opened themselves up to educ811on, cnme, WQrlc:place, and tax convince more senior senators to lake .
~ Gannett Co; Newspaper
· charges of extremism by shuttl.ng initi~tives, but it is obscured by their · ·the heat for changing positions on the
· down the government over the issue emphasts on ~e budget amendment. amendment, including Sens. Joe
ROBERT L WINGETT
of how to achieve balance.
The constttuttonal amendment Biden, Del., Max Baucus Mont. and
Publleher
'
'
They are about to repel! their error itself is dangerous policy overkill. Tom Harkin. Iowa.
by making a constitu.tional amend- Moreover, as matters now stand,
President. Clinion, after creating ·
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW .
ment to balance the b~dget their top Republicans will fall short of the two- doubts even among supporters about
General Manager
Controller
priority for 199? .. while Clinton sets · thirds support needed to pass it when his dedication to fighting the amend1 the nation's sights on .the emerging
the budget amendment comes uJ:l for ment,' now has decided to push hard
vistas of the 21st century.
a Senate vote at the end of February. against i~ and he does so from the
In political history, Clinton may Prospects in the House are also close. high gr1111nd of propiOsing a balanced
;go down as one of the great masters
To save the day, ·senate Republi- · budtet that will be "alive on an1val"
' iofstrategic retreat: He caves in to the cans_have fanned a task force led by on Capitol Hill.
.
"Balancing the budget ·requires
' Republicans on major questions •• Paul Coverdell, Ga., that will pres-,
.____,..._!!""~
. '!'
...•.. "'!!'
.... ..~
~-----...;.....:•:o.·- - - - ---~-~-"'--~
-- "'
- ....~f "the era of big government is ov~r" sure wavering Democratic senators only your vote atid my signature,"
•· then wins by defining the means to and get the 12 votes they need to ClintonsaidinhisStateoftheUnion
achieve the end.
·
reach two-thirds. At the moment, message. "It does not require us to
This year, Clinton continues to GOP senators admit ihey are at least rewrite our Constitution." He also
pretend that budget balance was his two votes short.
waved the bloody shirt of possible
idea all along, and he is. simul\llne. Republicans especially hqpe to Social Security cutbacks if the
ously prop&lt;ising a massive .(and pop- mobilize constituents or four Demo- amendment passes, a sure sign that he

I

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ThuNdlly, Ftbru8rJ 13, 1117
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The Daily Sentinel

I

The Dally Seudnel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I•

DISNEYS
101 DALMATIONS G
ONE EVENING SHOW
STARTING FRIDAY
JOHN TRAVOLTA IN

MICHAEL

PG

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

ALL TICKft'S ..,..,

PC11

n1 J 15 "' ·

P~

•a

PICitiiD UP

uTWDAn

UCltrnS (21 lg.SLICU
OP PillA I PIPII

..0 A •to.IGBT .a¥111 Si.75 eecb .
PICK UP YOUJ TIC&amp;ftl A1' GAI.LIPOLLI•
DmlJNO'S PiaL\ LOCATD IID'r '1'0

SPRING YALLIT CIKIMA 01 At
CSPIIIC Y~ CI•IMAJ

-----

~·-----

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•
•

•
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..

Sports

..

The Daily Se..tinel
.

In Division II girls' sectional play,

,,

Meigs-River Valley stats

Meigs ·bows out
.
. • with 47-44 loss
,, to River Valley
,,

O:ert:r 1111111

12
7
II : 12

.·

}

Meigs Marauders
"'vu
~ .
Cheryl Jewell ..................... :............. :.7·11
Tricia Davis ......................................... 3-6
Tracy l;offey ...................................... ..4-7
Carissa Ash .............................. ,.... ....... 2-3
Brandi Meadows ..................................0-1
TonyaMjiler ........................................0-0
Becky Smith .........................................0-3
Taryn Doidge .......................................0-3
ToUis
.
16-54

foul circle with 6:53 left put River
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Valley ahead 17-14.
OVP Staff Writer
The Raiders' 5-for·20 fibld-goal .
In Wednesday night's Division ll
shooting
in the period gave the
girls' sectional tournament finals at
Marauders
plenty of chances to go
the University of Rio Grande's Newt
Oliver Arena, sophomore forward ahead. This was because Meigs had
Marie Denney's layup with 20 sec- twice cut River Valley's lead to one,
onds left cracked a 44-44 tie and including in the 90 seconds on bashelped push the River Valley Raiders kets by Jew~ll and sophomore cento a 47-44 victory over the Meigs ter Tracy Coffey. But despite their
missing their last two shots of the
Marauders: ·
.
quarter,
the Raiders held the ball and
The decision gave the Raiders,
their
one-point
lead at halftime.
who had lost in the sectionals in each
of the previous four years, the upperRiver Valley exercised an aggresbracket title and their first district
siveness
on defense in the third quarThey will face New Lexington
,• -berth.
ter
that
resulted in the Marauders
the Panthers defeated Athens 57~
52 in the Logan sectional upper- taking a game-low seven shois and
~
bracket final Wednesday night- on missing five of them.
UNDER PRESSURE- Ualga ~Becky Smith (right) flnck her·
, In completing a run of eight
r
Thursday, Feb. 20 at 8 p.m. at ChillHH undttr ~aur. fram River V.lley'a Holly Huh (left) and Slr.h
unanswered points to start the periWard (behind Halh and Smith) In the third quartar o1 WedllHdly
~ icothe High School. ,
The top-seeded Raiders found od, the Gallians j~Ottwo behind-the·
nlght'a Division II HCtlonal final in Rio Granda. The Raldllra broke
themselves in an "I score, you score" . foul circle treys from Denney 30 sec- · the 44-all tla and beat Melp 47-44. ·(OVP photo by G. Spencer
Osboma)
.
·
affair in the first quarter after Meigs onds apart to~ake a 31 -221ead,their
largest
of
the
night.
But
Meigs
was
center Bran&lt;!i Meadows'turnarOljnd
jumper broke a 2-2tie with 5:361eft able to chip away at that stone and
In the next 59 secorids,Jewell had shot, Meigs got the ball into Davis'
·
River Valley's Sarah Ward, Mead- force the Raiders to settle for a six- · a foul shot (2:42), a layup (2:22) and hands. As Davis ·took one step into·
ows, the Raiders· Megan Mulford point lead at the quaner's end.
an in:the-lane .stickback jumper tQ the lane, Martin' knocked the ball
time:
River
Valley's
missPrime
and Denney· and the Marauders
cut the Raiders'lead to a 44-42 mar- away, took possession and fired it
Cheryl Jewell came through with ing five out of seven foul shots in the gin. Then with I :30 left, Meigs across the halfcourt stripe to Denney.
iead-changing baskets in four of the final quaner and Meigs' making sev· guard Tricia Davis went to the I ine Denney, who was in the foul circle
period's last five minutes. Ward's en of its·tast nine at the ch!"'ity stripe because of Hash's fourth foul .
area when she took the pass, drove
three-point shot from the right cor- proved significant factors in the
Davis made both foul shots to tie to the hoop for the uncontested
ner with I :0 I left gave the Raiders Marauders' prime-time challenge.
the game at 44.
layup.
On three occasions in ihe first
the 12·1 0 they kept at the quarter's
After Ward missed a lal!up, Marfour minutes, the Raiders led by six. tin and Jewell tangled for a loose
end.
The basket gave River Valley led
In the first minute of the second With 2:5lleft, junior guard Jennifer , ·ball. The Raiders got possession with 46-'!4 ·with 20 seconds left.
quarter, Meadows' two free throws . Manin sank River Valley's first free about a minute left
The final score was created when
and Jewell's 19-footjumpercreated throw of the quarter to give her leaJ;D
After River Valley center Holly Ward, att(le line becuase of Jewell's
ties. But Ward's trey from outside the a 44-37 lead.
Hash missed a point-blank range . only foul of the 11ight. sank the front
•;.!

I

~,

'I"
..'.

In the MAC, . .

.

.

·

.

44

IS=
12=

47

3-S
-0-0
4-4
0-3
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-2
2·2
0-0
2-2
0-0
1-4
0-1
0-1
. 0-0
U-6 · 12-18

-·-·-~

Plmr

10
8
4
2

2

.

I
0
44

lege garne j
.
But Ohio's Geno Ford defied the
naysayers and buried all 19 or his
free throws at Eastern Michigan
Wednesday night, including eight in

the game's ·fimil minutes. Ford
scored 29 points as Ohio beat the
Eagles 71-62.
"We had struggled a lot at the free
throw line earlier~ but we've

Sarah Ward ........................................6-13

Marie Denney .................... ,............... 4-10
Holly Hash ................................ :........ 4-11
AngieKeeton ............................ ........... I-S
Megan Mulford .................................... 1-3 ·
Jennifer Manin..................... :...............0-0
Amy McCoy ........................................ 0-1
Totals ·
16-43

t:[

'
I

20
. 14 .
8
2
2

2-4
0-1
0-0
.0-0
0-2
1-3
0-0
3-10

2-7
2-3
Jl-0
0-1
0-0
0-0
0-0
4-11

•I

0
47

Total FGs- 20-54 (37%)
Rebounds- 28 (Hash 10, Denney 6)
Blocked shols - I (by Denney)
Assists-9(Martin 4)
Steals- 20.(Hash 5)
Tumoven-17
Fouls-21

. · .

·

.

Bas ketball
NBA standings

Coppin St. 88, Delnwm .St. 66
Ftonda 72, Mis~i ss ippi Sl . 69
QeQrgia-77. South Carolln11. 74
Kentucky 84, LSU 48 .
N.C.-Wilmington 61, Jam:1 Mlldiaon

~

.t\

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Nordl Carolina 45. N. Car01inn St. 44
Va, Commonweahh 1.1. Eas1 Caroliiu.

Alllndt Dlwblon

ll! L &amp;1.

Idlll

Miami .................... 37 12
New York.. ............ 3!'i 14 ·
Orlando, ................. ~ 22
Wa1hinaton ............22 26

... New Jeney ............ 14 34
Phii!Jdclphia ........... ll :U
Boston.................... ll ~1

Ill .

.7!'i!'i
.714
.~22
.4~8

.292
.l."i~

.229

14h

12~

24

2~ '1:

C«ntrial Dlvlskm
ChiCDJ0··:·.······ ........4J 6 .878
Deti'OII.. ...... : ........... :\!'i , IJ .729
CLEVELAND . .... 27

22

.551

16

lndiWlll. ................... l.l 24
Milwt~ukee .............l l 26
Toronto .................. !? 31

.489
.4."i8

19'

-·-

.1~

20~
2~ :,

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwat DM1MMI

~................ Jt I~

is
.673

Ill

Mlnnesota ..............2.1
Dallns ..................... 16
Denver_. .. ,.............. :. l6
SAftAntonio ........... l2
Vancouver .......... :...10

26
29

.469·

I I'll ·

33

.327

Ill''=

4]

.189

Houllon ................. ]) 16

~~

P•dflt Dlwlllon

.3~6

.6HR

2\:-

Po.,land .................26 23

.~31

10

LA Clippcrt ......... 20 25
29
Golden Stute .......... 17 29
Phoeni.L ............... IR 32

.444
.420
.370
J60

S~K:nunento ., .......... 21

Buffalo 67, You'ng~town St . !'i9

.. North Coast Conference
!='ase Western 79. Obcrli11 62
tkni.,On ."i;"i. Wittenberg ."i 2
Ohio Wcslyn 70. E;~rlh om l 6~
Wo~s t lir 79, Alh:))l.heny 77 (QT)

O.arlone ll .l New J~ney 100
A.tlant~t 106, Toronto IU

CLEVELAND MJ, lndiann 7~
O..:tmlt 96. Orlomdo 87
L.A. Lakcn 100, Minnelota IW

Obio Conleren~e

VnnCQUver 106, Snn Anmnlo 101
· PhOenix 131. Bomm 100

I

•71

NCAA Division I
men's scores ·
Eatt

Colple 8.5, Army 80
·
Conraticut 61 , 80JtOII Collecc ;56
Flilf~eld

84. MariK 7l (OTI

Gecqftown ?S. Providence 69

Holy 0uo sa. LAIIilh 13
{au6l.M..,....62
._bland U, 93,Woaner71
Md.·Ballimore CouMy 73, Bucknell

Non·conference play
BlUffton 83, Lake &amp;ie ~9

Lathnm Weuern 62, Porumouth
Norre Dame 47
Port1mouth Clay 49, Whiteouk 4tl
Racine Snulhm160. Symme~ Vnl. J!'i

Replor-seuon play

North Coast Cimference

Amhtrll 64, FIUr'liew 29
Ashtabul11 Hlllbor 49 , Conneaut 46
Aurora ~9,.. Richmond Hts, 49

Cas~! R~serve 77. Oberlin 54
Ohio Wesleyan 79, Eo&amp;rlham 42
Wittenbcrg,q]. Denison 21
Woo~ter 65. r\ll~gl~ny ~K

~von 63,l.Grain ~IW'View

·Non-conference play
A~trlaml66. lml. · Pur.- lnllpl :~.

Uctinncc 9K, Adrian
Kenyon

9~ .

64

~7

Bluffton 67

Wilminp.ton.

O~lo

H4. Thomas Murc

52

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
•

Division II
'Val. 70, Col , Bri~f.S
ll
.
Bellefontaine Benjamin l..t)ltUn 39,
Grcc non 30
~
'
Cht:shire River Val. 47. Mi!lgs 4-a
Cin. Rng.:r B a~: un 60.1klhci-Tille :\7
Cin. Pun:cii·Marian 47, Norwood .17
Col. Hnrtlcy 91 , t;ol. ~Whcl s t onc 4J
Dover H. St Cl:unv1llc 3R
Onllipolis 46, Vinton Co. 32
Greenfield McClain 61. Wt~!ihingtun
C. H. 3~
.
lndinn Creek 4 ~. Bcnvl!l' Lot:n14~
Ktnl:&gt;n Rid_ge !i6. Urbanu !i I
Mnrion River V-ul. !'10, Whitchall46
New Con..:ord Glenn 38, Tri· Valley
26
New Lexington ~', A1ht!:n1 ~2
Pr!.letorville Fairland~~ . Rock Hill _,~ ,
S. Poiru 4;'i, Po111mou1h J6
.•

*Automatic
Transmission
* CriJise Control
* 4-Way Seat Adjuster
• Air Conditioning
* 3800 Pertormiilg Pkg:
Limited Slip ·
· . Differential
* 4 Wheel Disc Brakes
* Uplevel Steering
* 3.42 rear exle

*

Navy 74. Lata,.... 72

44

AYQfl Lib 57. Buy VillaG:e 34
D~Ut~~:l\lille 67, SNll.lyside 62
Canfield 66, Wnrrcn Howlnnd 42
. Cunton S. ~7 . Grttn 4~
Chngrln Falll :n. M~mr 43
Cbunloa 4) , OnmJ!O' 29.
Chanlun ND-Cl. ~J. Shaker His. 44
Cin. Mtldcira ~9. Cin. Indian Hi1147'
Cin. R~ng _40. Cin. Mariemont JK ·
Cit. Cntholic 4H, Clc. Hts. lkuumom

Ck'. Heij.hls-!W. Cit:..Qk:nvillc 2S

Col. Miuion Franklin K!'i , Cui. Ea~t 41
Cui. Wnllenon 34, Dublin Cnffmnn
.U
• .
Elyrin69, l..oruin Southview 12
Oarftck1 Hl5. Trinity 90, Elyrh1 Cul11.

. .

"When you lose a game like this,
it's very tough," Barnes said. "Our
kids played their hearts out and it's
hard to live with."
(See MAC on Page 'S)

Idlll

Vermilion~; Snndu ~ky .fK
W. O~wga 6M, Twinsburg ~9

Uudson _,H, Holy NuniC _,6

, 1'19 161 IlK

l.'i9 141
206 173
IH~ 110
t!'i7 17-7
1~1 161
160 I'Xt

,

Ynu. Ento~ til. Yuu. Chaney41
You, M&lt;~nncy ~2 . Wnri'Cn Hnrtiini 36
Ynu. Ro~n 69. Ytw. Wilmm 43
.

Hockey

central Dlwllion

ll! L I &amp;

ii£ liA
172

14~

IK 10 . 62 t70
St. l..oui11 ............ 26 2~ 6 ~K 171
Phocni)l ......... ,.... l.~ 27 4 S4 1~6
0\icU£0 ..............21 27 H ~ 143
, Toronto .... :.........21 :W I 43 160

129
171

Dull!15 ................. 3221 , 4

61(

~tmit ........ ,....... 26

Plldflc: Divlskm
ColttrJw.io ............JJ 14 K 74
EJmomnn ..........2K 23 ~ 61
V um; ouv~:r .........2!'i2K 2 !'i2
. I\Ji ilh4:im ............222K b ~
Culgury .......... ....22 2K b ~
San Jn!IC ............20 29 6 46
LosAn~ck!L- .... 19]1 t. 44

148
197

IK7 129
17H I~IJ
176 IKY
l~Y

172

149 I6J
143 17M

141t 191

'
••

EASTERN CONFEREN&lt;;:E
Allanlk Divhlon

Nl.!w Jcncr, 3, Hunford 2
Fkricht !1, l'umru Bt.y 2
N.Y. I5I:mlk:n ~ . Plusburi\h I
Montreal 2. Durfaln 2 (lie)

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172

\Ved.-.esdaiy's scores

NHL standings

'·

1997 NISSAN SENTRA GXE

'

a

WESTERN CONFERENCE

:r..a·· .

-

!

4h I~ lt'17
44 142 16M

-·-

•

•
•
•

I

6M 173 B6

63 1'17 I~K
~~~ 142 130
~ 144 1~2

Nvr1hrast Di'Won
IJumalo .............. 29 i&lt;J 11 b7
Piu s~ur~h ......... 30 20 ."i b~
McMttreat ............ ll 27 II !'i3
Har1furd ............. 21 26 1 4!i
Ouawt~.. ...
.... 1M24 12 ~
Ou!!otlm .. ,..... ....... 20 2'J 1 41.

Gcncvn 76, Puinc•viUc HnrYCy 113 ·
Jctlerwn ~~. Ashtubuha 1:4ljp:wnW oW
John Miltsh:tll (W.Vn.) 4H, M11rlins
l'ony 42 ·
·
· K.:ntiton ~~. Solon 50
,
Kirllnnd 42, Cle. lm.k::p.:nakmce 31

»:LII!tl.iifliA

Auridu ............... 2K I~ H
Phi.latlelf'hia...... J O 16 K
N.Y. Ranatm~ ..... 2K 22 7
New Jer.;ey ........ 27 17 9
W;u:hinJtiOn ........ 21 27 6
N.Y. Islandcn .... IM 2M 10
l':amp:tBny ........ I92K 6

Weirton tW .Vn.) Mutlonna 74,
Drid,erort S I
WCiltluke ~9. Olmsted Falb 3~
Windhum !'iK. Newton Fall1 ~ I
w'oost« 7Y, Nl.&gt;W Pt)iln&amp;kijlhin ~9
Yuu. Oonnlman K:ll, Clc. CnllinwntJd
40

.

I

Southern hit 2S-S4 two's and 2-6
long pueling season. 'fW.Iey
three's
with an 8-20 stint at the line.
played just over two minutes of the
third frame as Southern instiled its Southern had 36 rebounds (Proffitt 8,
tint half tempo, then politely pulled Turley 6, Horst6); 16 steals (Turley
off the dop jusl a couple minutes 6, Proffiu 4); II assists (iurley 3,
into the frame. Wit!l a 29-pointlead. Caldwell 3); 15 turnovers; and 13
fouls. Symmes hit 16-48, 2-S and I·
SHS merely sellled for the win.
Mter Turley's exit, , Symmes, 4 with 21 rebounds. Symmes had
honors in slells and assists with six against .the press-less Tornadoes had five steals, six assists, 23 turnovers
:0:~
·and three respectively.
a cbance to set uP an offense arid and 21 total fouls.
Symmes Valley: Melissa S-. . ·
Symmes Valley was led by played even with the winners IS-IS,
Southern plays,the 8 p.m. game of
Amanda Adams' 10 points. ·
for a 54-25 tally after three rounds. · the Sectional Finals, the Alexander ders 1-2-!&gt;/0=8. Jennifer Myers 0:: •
The rampaging Tom~ scored . Thrley did not see action at all in the Lower bracket winner, while the 01/2=1. Stephanie Tredway 2,11;
over one-tbild of their points in the . fourth round as Southern held on for Crooksville·Trimble winner plays . 010--4, Kristie Wilson 1-0-0IO;o%:
first quart« 10d.left no doubt as to .me 60-3S win. Every Tornado (even the Eastern-PortSmouth East winner 'Amanda Adams 5-0/1=10, TIJIII
Owens 3-0-0/0=6, Candace SharJIJ!
the outcome of the game.leadint 22~ young reserves Patty Lawrence, at6:15 . .
0-011=2, Sliannon Taylor 1-0-Ml=:l:
2 after one frame. A linil Owens Heather Dailey, Ashli Davis, Stacy · Quarter t2t111a
22-17- l;i-6=60 Totals 14-l-V4=35 .
score was the lone VIking score.
Lyons) except injured Kim Jhle saw Southern
·southern utilized a tenacious full action and 10 hit the scoring column. ·
coun. preu that yieJckd nearly as
Southern coach Jenni Roush said,
many wmovcrs as tolal points for the "It was a good team effort and team
game. 'Had turnovers been kept by win. They played very, very hard. We
two's, the turnovers would have knew we had to set a fast tempo carplaned off a 46-35 victory. Mean- ly and had some great success. The
while, Southern turned the wmovers girls really wanted this one, It was .
into scores as Symmes Valley strug- nice to have a first half cushion. Now
gled to get the ball downcourt to sel we will get.a rematch with Green. "
up an offense.
.
·
.
Roush added, "This was the first
Renee Thrley led Soudicm in the time 'we had.. the chance to rest
fraine with nine points, while K,im Renee (Turley) this year. Plus. Green
Sayre adckd seven 10d Jenny Friend never got a good look at any of our
had four. The rcinainder of the half, · offenses. We rested Renee because
Southern took riO hostages, as they we were up 30 points and just w'antpillagect on to a ·39-10 first half ed to take advantage of the opponuadvantage. · •
nitY."
•
Proffit led the way in the second
"This win is a good win goi ng
· episode with eight points, while into the sectional finals."
Arnon. Horst, Caldwell and Thrley
The win marks the third year in a
alSo contributed.
row that Southern has reached the
. · While many asked if Turley was · Sectional Finals.
burt. she merely got her first rest of

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)
A Cavs.
good night's sleep was all Terrell
"Chris Mills ~ticked it out and I
..
was open," Ferry sllid ofthe shot "I
Brandon needed.
Worn out after playing·• hard 17 sure was happy to see it go in."
After Brandon forced Travis Best
· minutes in the AII-SIIi'r $arne Sunday,
Brandon struggled Tuesday night in to miss a tOiigh shot, the Cleveland
Cleveland's hof(le win ovtr Philadel- guard scored on a short jumper with
phia. But .a nig~t later, he finished ·44 seconds left
one assist shy of a triple-double in
"This was a great win for us. Tcrlcilding the Cavaliers to an 83-1S win rell really played great, he played
over Indiana.
·
hard," Cleveland coach Mike Frate!,
• "I was just happy to contribute. I lo said. :'!think he wanted to make
was really tired (Tuesday) night," up for (Thesday) night He had a
Brandon said of his 23-minute, 10- long weekend."
point, five-assist showing. "Bui after .
Playing well is nothing unusual
a night's sleep, I felt good,.
for Brandon, Ferry said. "We depend
"My C'nergy level was to the on Terrell a great deaL He makes
· m4x."
. .
' ,things happen and leads by. example
Bnuidon had 22 points, a car'alr·J ' ·. as much as anything." he said.
high 12 rebounds and nine assists in
Reggie Miller led Indiana with 22
43 minutes against Indiana. But, points, while Rik Smits scored 17.
t
nlost importantly, he hit a clutch Mills scored 17pointsforCieveland.
jumper in the final minute and
Clev~land lost four ofits previous
sparked Cleveland'~ swarm1ng siK games, while Indiana won four of
defense. as t()e Pacers attempted to its previous five.
fight
back in the fi~al minutes. .
The Cavali~rs outrebounded lndi•
·Brandon
said
he
wasn't
aware
of
·
ana
3S-24. The Pacers' total was one
••'I
SEEKS OPEN TEAMMATE- Gallll Acadlmy'a Alllhll Rolli (left) how close he was to .his first career better than the team's all-time low
1Mb an open~ while Vinton County's Liz illnn pr.nur• triple•double.
t .
and its worst total of the season.
her In the flm ~of Weclne•y night'• Dlvlalon II ~onal fln•l
"I didn't even know until my I · "They are a very scrappy team
on tha Unlverllty oi Rio Gl'll!nde campus. Rojas, tha daughter of 1976 teammatestold me there at the end," and they ran down
lot of
Eulem High SChool ·graduatlt Pam Mlllhone and the granddaughBrandon.
"I
didn't
really
care
about
rebounds,
"
said
Indiana's
Dale
•' . ter
.of Varnon and Helen. Mlllhone ot Tuppers Plaine, scored tour
that.
I
still
don'~·.
I'
!II
just
happy
we
Davis,
who
had
j,ust
four
rebounds.
polntlt In the alua Angels' 46-32 victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer
got a great wrn..
. ·
.
He's averaging I 0 per game.
Oabom•)
·
"I really don't think he cares at
"It's so important to rebound
all," teammate Danny Ferry said of . against them," Fratello said. " If
Brandon. "He doesn't play for that you don't block out, they'll be getkind of stuff lik~ some play~rs ~o. ling second and· third shots all
He's more worrted about wtnmng . .night."
and seu ~ng people ·up.
.
Indiana finished with just four
Parcells
resigned
following
the
"I have a lot of respect for h1m . offensive rebounds in the game.
NEW YORK (AP) - Bill Par·
S.uper
Bowl
and
last
wec;k
the
Jets
for
that reason."
also a season low.
cells' six-year deal with the New
hired
him
as
a
consultant,
part
of
the
Indiana
cut
Cleveland's
lead
to
In the tirst half, both teams used
York Jets is worth $14.4 million,
six-year
contract
signed
Friday
that
on
a
free
throw
\IY
Fred
extended
runs to come hack from
75-72
making him the highest paid coachcalled
for
him
to
take
over
as
coach·.
Hoi berg w\th .I :39 left •. but Fercy double-digit delicits.
general manager in NFL history.
allliwerep
With a three·potnter for the
After Indiana opened the game
and
general
manager
after
the
1997
according to a published report.
season
.
with
a · 12-2 spurt, lhe Cavali.crs
•'
Tht D&lt;lily News, citing unidentiscored
12 straight points
fied sources, said today that Parcells
(Continued
from
Pase
4)
'' will receive a league-record .$2.4
' million for each year he holds the
Derrick Dialled l;astern with 15 because we preparect so hard for this
: ' dual role, making the total ~ 14.4 mil• lion if he does both for the full srx points. Boykins scored 12 and James team and we should hove won," said
Kent coach Gill}' Waters.
Head added 10. '
• . years.
Bowling Green improved to 18·
The loss dropped the Eagles ( 18·
:
The newspaper also said Parcells,
6
and
while Kent dropped to 7t who officially took over the Jets .on 5, 9-:l Mid-American Conference) 14 arid10-3,
5-8.
:
Tuesday, has a $500,000 annual into second place in 'the league
Mitch
Hankins scored 24 points
behi~d
Bowling
Green.
which
beat
• · .incentive if he takes the team to the
and
Randy
Zachary added 22 as Ball
t Super Bowl coach. Parcells' deal Kent70-69 Wednesday. Ohio (14-7, . Stute downed
Centrjil Michigan 88'
surpasses Jimmy Jo~nson's four- 9-4) is one game off the le;~d.
In other MAC games Wednesday. 69.
i: year. $8 million contract as coach
"Hankins made the difference
Jay
Larranaga's four-point play with
~
and general manager of the Miami
•'' Dolphins.
.
29 ·seconds left sealed the win for inside," said Ball State coa~h Roy
1
McCallum. "He made thin~ts happen
::
Tht Daily News said ~ets presi- Bowling Green.
·
·A jumper by A.ntonio Daniels for the o(Jen.se."
,. dent Steve Gutman would not com:
Ball
State
(13-10,
6-7)
jumped
:; ment Wednesday on Pari:ells' con- with 49 seconds left and hi• a foul
shot one second later got Bowling out early in the first half and never
'· trael and that Parcells and his agent,
Green
within 69-66 and set the stage trailed in the game. Central (6-15, 3.:: Ro~ Fraley, were hot available for
for t.arranaga's four-point play. · . 10) fought back, wilh Charles
·'••• comment comment.
."This is a hard loss to take Mocon's 25 points ·::
The Jets also paid a heavy price
'• to acquire Parcells' righls. agreeing
:: Monday to' give New E~gland their
· :: first-round pick in ·IWJ; second·
:; round pick in 1998 and third- arid
'• fourlh-round picks this year. The Jets
· ~ also will make a $300,000 contribu·
.•· tion· to the Patriots• chorilable foun- ,
~ , dation.
.
The deal brokered by NFL com·
·"
~ missioner Paul Tagliabire. ended a
• controversy that plagued the league
since the Patriots' Super Bowllosno
• Green Bay. Tagliabuc had'ruled that
·, Parcells remained the property of
; New Englal)d until Feb, I, 1998,the
1 expiration date of his contract.

This contest marked the .end of
the high .school careers . of senior&gt; .
Taryn Doidge, Jewell, ~eadows and '
Ashley Roach.

l:.or:!in Mldvic:w 47. W;llinston 44
Madison 68. Ashtabuln J4
Min...ul Rid~ 44." 1..owdlvilk= :1:1
New Mmamnr.l!! F.rnnlicr 44, Valle)
Whl:tsciJ6
N. Olnwtod 63, Rucky Ri~'t' 29 .
N. Ritlr,cville 52. Volley Forj!c .fl
Oberlin 4L L:aOrnn~ Kcys1o 1~ 2:'i
·Oberlin fln:hmds 64. Lnrllin Dronltlidc .fK
J
.
Pnlllbn-Gilbo.1 60. For1 Jennings 47
~h:kerin&amp;ton 76, Dublin Scioto 39 ,
PulunU 12. Niks JU
R(IOCstown 12. Strc:t:uboro 4~
S. Runic' 7!'i. Berlin Center Wc st~ rn
Reserve 43
'
Sn\em 7:11, Oiranl JL
Tol. Libt\ey 40. 1'ul. Wnodwa&amp;rtl :1'1
Tul. S\;ull S9. To!. 81\WSher 41)
Tol. Wuhc :IIi. To I. Start 42

29

* AM·FM Compact Disc

l'intburJh 9l. Vi-.al9
St. Frono:i1. NY 74. 65

;.9

49

Friday's games

Milwaukee v1. Toronto al Maple Leaf
Gardent , 7 p.m.
New Jmc)' vs. Wnahington at Ba.ltilllOI't, 7:JO p.m.
Detroit at Omrktne. 7:30p.m.
Chic~~&amp;o "' Atlanta. 8 p.m.
Orllllldo at Minnnota. 8 p.m.
Golden Slate at San· A'Itonio, li:30
p.m.
. .
L.A. CU~ u1 Phoeni ~t. 9 p.m.
Houston at Seattle, 10 r,.m. .
~ lotton at vancouver, 0 p.m.
•

69

luhn Carroll 86, Hir:.m Col. 60
Marieua 87. Capit01l.~ I
.·
·
Mount. Union 83, Baldw ln·Wnllm:c
Ohin Norchem 81, Heidelber~ 70
Ollerbein 66. ~uskinzum 60

Philadelphia tJt New .York, 7:30p.m.
lndi:&amp;nn at Mioml, 7:JO p.m.
Oolden State at Dallu. 8:30p.m.
L.A. l..okera nt .Denver. 9 p.m.
Pontand a1 Utah, 9 p.m.
L.A. Clippert at Sacmmento, 10:30
p.m. .
'

.

•'

17'h
18 ~

DlvlslaniV
Fmnklin ·Furnace Green !'il . S. Oallitl

Mid-American Conference

Ashvilh:

. Mld·Conline.nt Conference

Wednesday's scores

I

1'1~

Ohio men's
college SCOJ'~S

14

To.nlaht'saames

·~
Ohio women's
1=ollege s1=ores

boro&lt;l6

DMslon I
Cin. Glen Este 4H. Cin. Andeuon 46
Cin. McAuley 64. Cin. Tnfl46
Cin. Mn~:y K9, Cin. Aiken 2H
Cin. Sycamore 50. Cin. Woodward 24
Cin. Wnlnm Hills :\'9, Amelia 2b
Mari.:11u 53~ Chi llicothl: Jc'i
Milford 40. Cin. Winton Wnuds ]I
O.~tford Talawnndtl· ~6. W. C.1rmlhon

Weber St. IW. ld;1hu St. 76

· J~ \

More

Tournaments

Far West

.2."i~ · '21 ~~
26~

.m

I~

Oklahoma 91 , Colorado 6fi
Tc"as 70, Baylor 67
Tt:lltl.~ T«:h MO. Tc:11as A&amp;M

16~·~

13

L, A. Laker~ ....... .... 36
Seanle ............ ........33

Southwnt
Houston 72, Memphis 6.7 (OT,

I~

Thuma~

Bowling Green 87, Kent77
Tol~ 79, Miami 42

Bull Sl. 88, Cent. Michigan 69
Bowling Gm:n 70, Kent 69
. BUffnlo 67, Young~town St. :'i9
Butler 67, III..Chic rigo 44
Chicago St. 97. M o .- KQR ~n~ City R2
Iowa S1. 87. Missouri !i9 1
K;m5&lt;U 104. Okluhon'la Sr. 72
Mlnmi, Ohio·69, ToleUo 52
Michigan St. 69. Iowa 67
Minrn:wtn 70. Purdue 67·
OHIO 71. E. Michigan 02
Troy St. 9.~ . Nl:: lllinni ~ K9
Wlscop!in 62. lllinoi! 4~
Xuvier. Ohio 7Y. Dayton ~ .l

'

7'1,
10
13h

Athantn ....,.... .. ........ J2 IS .681
Chorlolte ................ JO 20 .600

Wilmington, Ohio 80,

Midwest

.

V.im:cnl Warrtn 61, AlexaDLk:r ~8
Wash. C.H. Minmi Tr~ ~3. Hilh·

lnd.·Pur.lndpls. 87. Cent. St .• Ohio 76

67 {OTI
Vundei'bilt 66, Tennessee 53
Wnke Fares! ~S . Clemson 49

2
II ~

I

·

•
•
•
•
Symmes Valley
2-8-IS-10=33
Sotatllem: Renee · Turley ~
111=11, Cynthia Caldwell I-l-l/~
Kim Sayre 3-l-G'lc9, Brianae PrJ
fill 8-0-113= 17, Jenny Frie.ncl ~
012=4, Conny Horst 3-0=6, EricA
Arnott 1-212=4, Stacy Lyons 0-(J.
113=1, Heather Dailey 0-0-112--1',
Patty Lawrence 0-0-112=1. TOiflll

time ran out.

improved a ·lot in the ·(ast two play when parnion Washington, who
weeks.'·' said Ohio coach Larry had 10 points, hit a pair of free
Hunter. "The key was io bave. the throws after a technical foul was
called on Eastern coach Milton
ball in Ford's harids .at the end."
Ohio trailed 58-56 with 2:42 to . Barnes for m:guing a call.

'

·.

who cloimed a chmalic "-49 win
ovu Fnaldill ~ at-.
Southem WM led in scoria&amp; by
BriMac Proffitt. wbo IIC4cbecl a
pne-tqb 17 poims and a -.hisb
8 rdloundt. Despite not piayina tbc
fourth quart«, Renee 1Wiey bad .II
points, six rebounds and tc1111-biab

'

'
erid of a one-and-one with four seconds left Ward missed the second
shot, and Meadows got the rebound .
Upon crossing the halfcourt
stripe, Davis'three-point shot hit th~
~kboard and ·bounced away a.&lt;

•

-------

I'

fiL

Scoreboard
AmeriCilll tl. 67 •. RichmOnf,l66

'

••
'\
''
l:ld.

•llldclleport, Ohio

·-

Ford's free throw perfection helps Ohio· be~t EMU 71-62.

. By RON VAMPLE
Aeeoclated Press Writer
Free throws that go "swish."
Some say it's an important compo·
nentthat is missing from tC\IIay's col-

udo, the SYJIIIDC$ Valley Vlkillp lay
btlplessly behind as the Tomadoa

n:. b.
17

l:ld.

River Valley Ralde.r s

I
I
I

r: ,.

rampaged on to a 60-3S Sectional
lJCIDi..final victol)lll AJcxwler HiJb
School Wednesdl)' ~veninJ. Southenr, 14-7, advances to the Sectional
Chompionsbip pme apiut Green,

T~FGs-16-40(40%)

I·

l

By SCOTT WOLFE
i •• S 1111011 ColT II p ondenl
In the wake of a pomwling Tor-

tl .

·Rebou~- 24 (Coffey &amp; Davis 6 each)
• . Asslitl- 10 (Smith 5)
·
Steals~ 8 (Smith 3)
Tur110ven - 22
Foals-16

.·

. I
f. I
I. .i

,'....
•

(

.

Meigs (13-9)......................................... 10
River Valley (11-10) ........................... .12

'

I,

r

'

The Deily

Southern tallies 60-35 v1ctory
over
Symmes
·
V
al
ey
die·.

Page4

-----

~oy

In Dlvl~lon IV girls' sectional action, .

·:

~.

Thu...-y, FebruarY 13, 1117
--

Thuracl8y, ~ 13, 1117

••,•

--SlltUnel• ,.I

61'8 EAST MAIN ST.- POMEROY
oPeN MON.-FRI. w. ·sAT. e.a 112 • .,4 .
Mastere.rdiVINIDiaCover ·

.

•

The

SHO.EPLACE

992-5627

· · 219 N. SECOND AYE.
•

MIDDlePORT
l

•

�J

•

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

;;, Top 25 college basketball,

.

.

·

~.

Tbui'8Ciay, Febi'U.ry 13, 1187

·

In theNHL,

.

Islanders shock Penguins with 4-1 win

lllw The Aaocl

NHL&amp;QII1811 P•HI'uot hii 3W oC
Dave .AIIdRycbuli: scored with ,g,U.,.., at Joe Louis iueaa While
.1 M - ia lbe ls!eeders' vicloly. 3:,..left in the third period 11 New eliminllinJ die bel WIIIJI in 1994.
T'he New Yart W r J r will 1
" Tbir il liMp," llid Wilden Jersey extended iu seuon-high Yc;t they IR 0-11-0 in the replar
lOIII plllll ttboul• oftea • Mario' -.,Trmtar.., wllule cite '"' undefea1echtrin1to eight pmes by SCIIOIIII the uea&amp; since -m1 the
NHL as u expulSion 1eam in 1!1!1 I.
l-Ieu• IC* ICill"ll •
lirle helped to lbul dowft the Pea- winning at Hartford.
CoyciK S, StanO
a- what? Bolb happened 'pins' top ICOl'inJ liDe o( Lemielix, Denis Pederson bad the ftnttwoDarrin Sha!mon scored two goals
Wednnday night u the IJianders Francis and Jaromir Jllf.
goalaame of his career for tlic Devl!lrprised the'Piltsbufsb Penguill$ 5"We uid 1J1e other day thll we. its, who are 4-0-4 in their last eight. and Nikolai Khabibulin bounced
1 at Civic Arelll.
can' t just bell the team$ below us.
. Paul Ranheim and Andrew Cas- back from a bad outing 111ainst Dallas lilst Saturday with his third
''This Wll oDe ofthe best com- , Well, I guess ~·t no one below sels scored for Hartford.
plete te110 efforts we've had," :us, but' we can't just bell the teams
Sallra 2., Csnedle•• 2.
shutout of the season as Phoenix
IJlanders coech Rick Bowaess laid. tbllnn't in the playoffs. It's critiAt Bmr.to, backup goaltender . snapped the Stars' four-game home
"'Ibll's the·only way we'te soing to. cal we iiiiJliDe ~ other teams, Ste~ Shields stopped 43 shots 11 the winning streak.
Phoenix wasted a 4-0 'lead at
!'" 1Zi~ss~;ffyWe ·can't dd~nd .on too."
. ·
. Sabres blew a two-goal lead but still ·
Elsewhere in · the NHL, it wu managedto salvageatiewithMon- home last Saturday as Dallas pulled
J\llt ggy .... ,weneed .everyone
off a S-4 overtime win in·the biggest
to colllribute. W~ got something . Florida S, 1impa Bay 2; New Jersey treal. .
.
fnlrn everyone ton~ght.:'
· . 31 Harttml2; Buffalo 2,Montrea12;
Canadiens goalie Jocelyn .comeback in the NHL this season.
This time, the Coyotes decided to
~ b~ ~ mto Wednes- Detroit. 7, Sao Jose 1; J&gt;boenix 5, Thibault also looked impressive,
·
play
a more physical game and had
day !light s pne With a S-1 S-7 road o.tlu 0: J!4J!Ionloo 4, Boston 3· and making 32 saves for Montreal and
~ . the fewest road wins and
s, Toronto 2.
'
holding off Buffalo on a power play the Stars on their heels from the
~ tn tho 'NHL. They were fating
Put - 5, I Ia' ; 1r1a 2
.•in the final two minutes of overtime. opening shift.
Ollen 4, Brulna 3
~·~With.the~home-~
. RobertSv,eblabrol!Uiiewiththe 1
, · DonaldAudetteandJasonDawe
Rem
Mwray
scored with 4:58 left
~llllllll ~~ 1n the league. · ~fint or tine lllbd,piriocf p s for . i sco'red for Buffalo, unbeaten in its
.
in
lhe
third
period
to lead Edmonton
The IslanderS Dot only bell IIIII' florida, which too1t • the lead in last eight ( 4-0-4 ). Vladimir
Penguins. with .relative ~ the.Y · the Eastern Confeltnce:b)' beating Malakhov and Martin Rucinsky bad past visiting Jloston.
Two rookies combined on the
held Lemieux wjlhout a pmnt. It was 'visitina ~ Bay· '
goals for the Canadiens.
winning goal as Mike Grier worked
only the.ainth time in 52 ganies this
The I'IJUhen ~ed one point
Red W1Dp 7, SbarU 1
seuon thllthe NHL's scorillJ leader lhelld !If idle Philadelphia in the
Brendan Shanahan broke open a the puck deep into the Boston zone
, ,, . ..,
wu blanked. . ' ·
Adantic Division. ·
tight game with three consecutive and )ben. spotted Mwray unguarded
· ."'llw shouldn't haJ&gt;IM;n." _Pen~tea recent rash of injuries, second-period goals as ' Detroit in the slot. Murray's low wrist shot . ·-TRIPPED_ Plnab!lrgh'a stu Bllmea (14) Ia tripped by the
puns forwanl Ron fn!lcis said of the ~!hers ex.tended their unbCat- · defeated San Jose,' keeping the. was kicked away by goalie Rob Till~ York II landers' Claude L.llpolnte (13) during the first period o'f•'
llle ·loSs to the last-place Islllllden. · en lll'ellt to five pmes 111d improved : Sharl&lt;s winless in II regular-season ,las, but he gathered the rebound and Wlldnaadey nlght'a NHL -me In Plttaburgh, where the lalantlera'"
'lifted a backhander over Tall as '
.,..
"You should be ready to 'pl_ay ev~ry . · to 6-1·3 in the past I0 g81J!Cs. The games in ti)e Motor City.
1_·&lt;_A_Pl;,__ _..__....,......_ _..._,_______..,l,
.
shoulder
for
the
game-winner.
_won
__
s-_
game. '!ou can ~~ two JIOints Wtth Lightning, who have lost three
Vladimir Konstantinov had 'two
every game you wm. no matter who games in a row feR to 0-2·1 this sea· goals and Sergei fedoroy and Thmas
The Bruins tied it 3-3 midway
Mighty Dudui s
Paul Kariya each had a goal and IIJl"
you .play.. That's what ~ng a Jlfl&gt;" son 111ainst ~ir cross-state rivals.
Sandstrom also scored for the Red through the third as Ted Donllo end- .
Maple Leafs 2
assist for the Mighty Ducks, who lost
f~~SSJOnahs llbouL There s no excuse
Florida's Jolin Vanbiesbrou~k Wings. Chris Tancill scored· San ed a scramble in the goalmouth by ·
Guy Hebert stopped 39 shots as four of their previous five gamei1
for I)Ot being ready."
•· 'made 20 saves.
, Jose's only goal.
banging the puck over a sprawling ·Anaheim defeated visiting Toronto. Kariya's 25th goal gave Anaheim '·
. Jason Holland. seared his first
3, Whalen 2
Th~ Sharks . won two playoff Curtis Joseph.
Jari Kurri, Roman Oksiuta and 3-1 lead
·
.•

31Jnes.
"This game definitely puts Ken. tucky back in the hunt for the SEC

championship,'' · South Carolina's
l,lrry Davis said after his team lost
illl first league game this season.
South Carolina (17-6) is 11-1 in
~SEC, while Kentucky (23·3) is 9- .
2 ln the league. The Gamecocks play :
three of their next four games on the
rQIId, but coach Eddie Fogler isn't •
· .,..Ucking.
"Even after this loss, we are still
positioned n,icely and can accomplish a lot of things," he said.
Ray Harrison scored 23 points
and sparked a late 13-0 run that
helpCd Georgia (18-S, 7-4) snap
South Carolina's t2-gaine winning
streak.
Kentucky rolled over LSU (9-16,
2c10) behind the sharpshooting of
Anthoily Epps, who scored all of his
career-high 18 points on three-point·
ers.
"This is a .night I can cherish,"
SJid the senior, who is best known as
a··playmakcr.

snap • 14-game losing sbe.tc II ·
Mackey Arena. Sam Jacobson and
Bobby Jaclcson each scored 13 points
for Minnesota (21-2, 10-1 Big Ten),
which led by 13 poinl$ in the second
half before Purdue (13·9, 8-4) raJ.
lied.
No. !I Io- St. 87
MlaouriS!I
At .4.Jnes, Dedric Willoughby
scored 22 of his 29 points in the first
half, and Iowa State (17·4, 8-3 Jlig
12) used an 18-1 run in lhe middle
of the game. to beat Missouri.
Willoughby, who scored a career,
high 36 in a ·loss ti&gt; Kansas on Sunday, made all five of his three-poini.
shots in the first half and finished 6- .
for-8.

ln othct Top 25 games, it wu No.
I Ksr)sas 104, Oklahoma State 72;
No. 2 Wake Forest 55, No. 7 ClemSl&gt;n 49; No. 3 Minnesota 70, Purdue
67; No. 9 Iowa State 87, Missouri ·
S9; Oklal\oma 91 , No. IS Colorado
66; No. 161-forthCarolina4S, North
Carolina State 44; Pittsburgh 95, No.
18 Villanova 89; No. 19 Xavier 79,
Dayton 53; Wisconsin 62, No. 20
lllinois 4S; and No. 21 l'exas Tech
80, Texas A&amp;M 65.
No. 1 Kansas 104
()k!aboma SL 12
At Lawrence, Raef Lafrentz
keyed a 14-0 run to start the second
half as Kansas stretched its home ·
winning streak to 41 . The Jayhawks .
(24-1, 10-1 Big 12)hitsevenoftheir
firstiO shots at the start of each half
and w..., never threatened by the
outmanned Cowboys (t2-11 , 4-7).
No.2. Wake Forest 55
No. 1 ClemsOn 4!1
At Winston-Salem, Tim Duncan
had 18 points and 16 rebounds, and
Wake Forest held Clemson to one
field goal in a span of 18 minutes.
Wake (20-2, 9-2 ACC) guaranteed its
school-record fifth consecutive 20win season. aemson (19-5, 7-4) was
held to 28 percent shooting.
No. 3 Minnesota 70
Purdue 67
At West Lafayette, Minnesota
SUI'Vived a late charge by Purdue to

Oklahoma ?1

from an 11-poinl, second-Mif deficit
to bell North Carolina Stale. North
Carolina (16-6, 6-5ACC) came into
the giDIII with five straight 50 perceJU sboocilll James, but lbot less
·than 37 percent apinst the ACC's

leading defense.

·

" 8!1
No.l'ltlllnarP
18 Vlbaova
At Pittsburgh, Jason Maile scoreil

scored 22 points and Texu Tech
used a 14-2 run in the second IWf to
beat Texas A&amp;M. The Red Raiders
(IS-:6, 7-4 Big 12) got 19 points, 17
rebounds and five blocked shots
from Tony Billie. Calvin Davis
scored a c.reer-biJh 29 points and
pulled down IS rebounds for ·the
Aggies (8-13, 2-9).

scored eight points in a 21-0 secondhalf run for Wisconsin (14-7, 7-5 Big
Ten). The Badgers ha~ won five of
· silt games to move into a rlflh-place
tie with the IUini (17-7, 7-5).
No. 2.1 Texu 'llciiiO
'Itul A.tM 65
At College Station, Cory
. Cw:r.

8r KIN RAPPOPORT

AJt IIDDitiY WIIIIW

40 points, the most by a Pitt player
in 40 years, and the Panthers shot71

percent during a 60-point second half
to upset Villanova. Maile scored 28
points after halftime as Pin (13-ll,
. 7-6 Big East) went on a 21 -3 run to
take the lead. Alvin WiUiams scored
27 points for Villanova (17-7, 8-5),
which has lost four of seven.
·
No. 1!1 Xavier 7!1

No. 15 Colorado 66
At Norman, Nate Erdmann scored

DaytonS3

Anlbeu;.

.

At Cincinnati, Torraye Jlraggs
31 points to · outd.uel Chauncey scored 20 points aDd led a 16-0 spun
Billups, and Oklahoma used a strong in the fiOst half as Xavier reverSed .
.firsf half to beat Colorado. T11e one of its most stinging losses of the
Sooners (14-7, 6-5 Bigl2) won their season. Xa.vier (17-4, 8-3 Atlantic
eighth in a row over Colorado ( 17- I 0), which suffered its fust defeat of ·
6, 8-3). Billups finished with 27,. · the season.to Dayton on Jan. 7, pre~­
although he 'wasn't a factor in the sured the Musketeers (9-12, 2-9) into
fust half when Oklahoma took con- 28 turnovers this time.
Wllc:oalln 62
trol.
No.
20 111lnols 45
· No. 16 Nortb Carollaa 45
At Madison, Sam Okey scored 16
. N. Caroliaa St. 44
·
points
and Wisconsin held Illinois .
At Raleigh, freshman Ed Co.ta hit
·
without
a field goal for a 13-minute
a driving baseline shot with 4.8 secstretch
in
the second half. Okey
onds left as North Carolina rallied

New''

in other NBA action,

oe.u.

Shaq exits and Lakers def~at T-wolves

'

,)

'

By The Associated Pres•
Shaquille O'Neal and his injured
right knee looked OK. Now, his left
Jmee is tausing problems.
.· After missing two games and the
AII-Sw weekend because of his
mildly sprained right knee, O' Neal
got off to a slammin' start Wednesdlly night when he dunked an alleyOiip pass only six seconds in the Los
.&amp;lngeles Lakers' game at Minnesota:
' · I But he strained his left knee a few
minutes later when he got tangled
wilh Minnesota's Dean Garren on
another lob and landed awkwardly.
Following four more dunks, O'Neal
loft lhe game. for good late in the first
quarter.
• O'Neal will be re-evaluated
before tonight's game in Denver. 1
"It doesn 'tlook too bad, ".Lake..S
coach Del Harris said. "We just didn't want to take any chances."
The Atlanta Hawks, meanwhile,
had no tr~nible against Toronto.
Jon Barry hit three three-pointers
during a 25-0 run in the fourth quar~er, leading the Hawks to a 106-84
victory and their 20th straight home-

On Ohio-'s high school scene,

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.With 10 days left before figure skating comeback,

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officO. in Oregon City on .Wednesday
POR'ILAND, Ore. (AP) - Just night providing information for a
10 days before Tanya Harding plans composite sketch Of the suspect.
The sketch showed a white male
to make a figure skating comeback,
with
a round face and a thin musshe finds herself in the news as a vic· 1
tache.
tim.
As she entered the sheriff's office,
Clackamas County sheriff's
Harding
said she was scared.
deputies say they're taking serious"I
just
hope that he gets caught,"
ly her repOrt that a bushy-haired R,!Bn
she
said,
"There
are so many women
abduc'ted her at. knifepoint early
Wednesday froiJI outside her subur- that go through this, and now I know
how they feel."
·
ban home. , '
As
Harding
left
the
sheriff's
Sou~ding hysterical, Harding
Jalked to a 911 dispatcher after she · office, she was asked what she felt
-•pCd by' running her truck into a about people who don't believe her.
"Th~y're idiots," she said. "I
~. then eluding the man in a foot
mean, come on, look at the society
ohlse.
.
. . ·"I dpn't know. The guy hit me and the tliings that happen today."
Sheriff's spokesman Damon
.c:ve.l)ll times. I don't know, I c~n't
. see," she said when the dispatcher Coates said Harding was "kind of
·
esked her if she needed med_ical shook up."
"She appears to be traumatized,"
11tcntion. "I left him the in the
woods, wherever I was. I don't be said, "what you'd expect her
"'member where I was." ·
appearance to be after listenilig to
· HaRling, looking pale and shak· th~t 911 tape.,"
. .
.
en, spent 2 112 hours at the sheriff's
Deputies had responded to Hard-

ing's calls for help before, and said
they were taking this one seriously.
Coates said there were two
rep6rts of car break-ins along the
street where Harding lives.
. "We're not ruling out that they
c.ould be relat~d'' to Harding's
alleged abduction, he said.
· Harding said She went out to her
pickup truck to get her cigarettes

·wobds trails Parsons
'in Australian Masters
MElBOURNE,

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utes south to the Mulino area as the some brush before darting back to
man pressed a knife to her face. She her truck. ·
kept her eyes looking forward, as she
Once back within cell"phone
was instructed. At one point, he range, she called'her boyfrien&lt;J, who
slappedhetface··whensheofferedto · called police at 1:51 a.m. The 911
stop and let him out.
·
operator then called Harding, and
She said the man told her to stop told her to meet· police in a ntarhy
on a dirt road. Instead, she bumped restaurant parking lot.
th~ tree, grabbed tbe keys and ran. As
Aside frqm a slap mark on her
the man ran be~ind her, she hid in · face, Harding was unharmed.

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came up with a novel way of perpetuating it.
"
Lakota's Thunderbirds nicknamen
will become Thunderhawks for ono j
school and Firebirds for the othcs;i;
:The current school colors of ·redl i
black and white will become red and',
black with white trim for one and ·
black and white wiih red trim for th~::
other.
"You can't divide trophies. so i~.
was decided they would be kept in ~
the freshman building," said Lakota,!
athletics director. Stuart Everso~ u
"Then kids from three junior high
schools can see thst Lakota doe~ :l
have a rich athletic trad.ition."
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·
Wallace started second today in
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) the second ·race because he had the
-The audience boced by the single- fourth-fastest car in qualifying Sat.file procession thst masqueraded as urd!ay. He was the pnly driver in the
t)le Busch Clash. might be in for a Clash who easily passed anyone:
Like lrvan and Wallaco. Rudd is
surprise in the Daytona 500 qualifY"
ing races.
.
. hoping the races willlle interesting. ·
Wiih spirited passing the order·of Ke thinks most of the passina will be
business Wednesday, 52 cars com- done by cars {Unning nose to tail
pleted preparations for two 125-mile . rather than individually.
races thst will set the bulk of the field
He says the usual ·routine of
foriheopcninseventoftheWinston · drafting up tp 'a cm:'and then going
Cup season. II was anything but around is not psrt of the 'Daytona
pla:id - ~n sl!lrl&lt; contrast to the ~n- 54;enario this year because of manpoinu spr1dt race for 1996 pole wm- dated changes in the clui!sis setups.
ners three days earlier.
Oetting very close to a ear during a
"There i• ·a lot or wild passi.ng passing maneuver has a tendency to
going on on the race track right . slow. that car. .
·. .
.now, •• said Ricky Rudd, who started
"I th.ink you will~ a I~ of rublOth in his Ford today in the fitstSO. · blng ·JOIDII on, 1191 wtth ~ mtent.to
· Iipper, "If it doesn't calm d!)Wii for try •to wreck somebod)', but to kill
Thursday's ra:e and the SOO, I d!ink their ·momentum," Rudd ~d .. "If
you will
some pilcup~~." ·
you can squeeze up really Ught ... .
. ; There wta one minor mishap · · it ·carries you forwllrd all of a sud·
V(edneaday involving five cars. but . den."
.
ojlly the Chevrolet pqoe Nemechek . . Rudd ~hev~ s~h rn~uvers
sustained m(1811ingful damage. He w11l resultm acc1dcnu. But he hopes
w.. forced JCi IIIC a INlckup l:ar in the most of the damage will be limited
first nee, . .
t9 .blackened nice cars and .minor
· "It's just 11 wild as wt~'ve eyer · sheet metal damage .
seen it out there in practice," said
"You might not be able to reud
1991 Daytona SOO chanlp,i&lt;ln Jlm~ whose number is on 'the car by the
lriran whose Ford received sli1ht ~nd of the race," he said. "When
d!lmaie In the sklrmilh on the hiJh• someone. rubs me, I don 't ihink this
bAnked first tum of .die 2' 112-milci ~ •~Y if tryiiiJ to take me aut of here.
blytona International SPeedway:·
"I undontand Whal he is trying to
"ThosafesiPtacc we've•JOlii In the. dQ. Hopefully,everyone understandi
•
· iund
flare."
...... "
.
- . --don't
-''Y."""
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lrvan believed pusina .would be
nd. problem tpclay. .
.: '
·. "I r.t liko I C4ll shuffle uaund
and dO' W-Yer I Q!le(i to do," he

(CAPE), Bobby Lowery, Colin Irish After combining with Warren Haroand Kart Morris (Cathedral Latin) ing at the start of the t 990 seholasand Browner brothers Ross, Keith, tic year; the new and enlarged WarJoey and Jim (Warren Western ren Harding won the state title, beatReserve). Mingo Junction once was · ing.Princeton lll!ain, 28-ZI .
coached by a man named Woody
Lakota High School, just outside
Cincinnati in West Chester, is windHayes.
Gone also is .the home school of . ing up its final year of existence. This
the famous "Waterloo Wonders"- fall, the school splitS into Lakota East
and Lakota West, esch with a brand
Ohio's version of "Hoosiers" who beat the odds to win the 1934 new high school building. The curaass B state tide 111ainst much big- rent Lakota high school building will ·
be used tor fres~n. ·.
ger schools and players.
.
Since Lakota's athletic success Wainm Western Reserve won the
inCluding
a 1992 boys' state big·
inaugural state football playoff title
school
championship
- couldn't .
in 1976, beating Cincinnati Prince·
.toh 37-6, in its first
ofexistence. also be split, school administrators

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By DICK BRINSTER .

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Columbus school administrators
will decidc·which schools will close
on March 18 after public hearings.
Centennial won the 011s AA
state golf·championship in 1978.
"I remember that state touma·
inent so well," .said I!180 graduate
Dick Spybey•. now the head golf
coach at Alabama. "It was freezing
cold and we w..., this young school
har91y anybody kne~."
· .
Now Spybey's alma mater will go
the way of the schools that spawned
Jimmy Jackson · (Macomber),
Lawrence . Funderburke (Wehrle),
Keith Byars (Roth}, ·carlos Snow .

Pileup forecast may .
come··true in.Daytona
500 qualifyi.n-g races

By ED SCHUYLER Jr.
Tokyo. He lost the title on third- . rieeded," Douglas said. •:1 was.a litRyan led with a good left hook in
NEW YORK (AP) - James round knockout to Holyfield ()n Oct. · tie winded in the·middle rounds, but the second round and wobbled Dou"Buster" Douglas is talking about 25, 1990 and then went into a retire- 1was able to recover. I'm working to glas late in the third round with
beating Mike TYson again.
ment that lasted until he stopped get the title back."
all'Other hook. But he spent most of
·· Douglas easily won his third · Tony La Rosa in the third round on
·Douglas waJ; justtoo experienced : the fight catching a variety of punch- ·
comeback fight Wednesday night, J un~ 22, 1996.
. and strong for the 29-year-old Ryan, es ·from the former champion and
but he looked like a man who is
Douglas returned to the gym, he 226, who had a 40-2 record with 33 · had to take a standing 8-count in the
beyond reclaiming past glories.
said, to get back into shape afier knockouts, but also eight no-deci· sixth round.
Douglas, who will be. 37 on April going into a diabetic coma in 1994. sions. Most of those fights for the
Two judges scored the fight 997, dominated Dickie Ryan for 10 His weight ballooned to 400 pounds .native of Omaha were in Nebraska 90, and the third had it 9.7·92 for
rounds in The Theater at Madison during his layoff.
and Indiana.
Douglas, who is 33-S-1 with 21
Square Garden. But beating Ryan .is
knockouts.
·
"It was the excellent workout I
a lot di·fferent from beating TYson or
,.
Evander Holyfield, who Douglas
also wants to fight .
"I'll do what. I have to do to get
back the title," Douglas said.
It looks like Douglas, of Col urn·
bus, Ohio, needs a lot of work and
. ·. The Ohio University Medical Center Inc. Managed Care Organization
ntore thii!J a lillie luck to get anoth·
• er shot at becoming champion.
(MCIJMCO) is dedicated to Southeastern Ohio.
·
The 255-po'und Douglas' victory
over the outgunned Ryan came 7
· years and 2 days after he won the
• Extensive Provider Network
undisputed ·title with. 'a shocking
• Committed to the e,ducation of oUJ: partners
TOtli-round lglockou't "oVer TYson in

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If, drivers don't change habits,

·Douglas defeats Ryan; seeks chance with Tyson

Australia · (AP) experimented too much and did not
-TigcrWoods said he was mental- do what I do best."
Jy drained today after straining to
Woods, seeking his.fifth victory
lillY in touch with Australia's Lucas in 14 professional starts, said he was
Panona in the first I'QUnd of the Aus- not surprised to see Parsons leading
lnlian Masters.
· the tournament.
· "If wasn't easy today," said
"What a lot of people don't
Woods, who' was four strokes behind · understand is that any pro is capable
Panons .tier a S-under-par 68 on the of doing it on any given day and he
demanding Kuntingdale course. "As did it·today," Woods said.
overyOM; knows, this golf course
Woods, coming off a hectic wee~
• requilu a lot o[conc;cntiation. Obe in Thailand thll ended with a 10millakc with a tee shol and you're stroke victory in the Asian Honda
· lookinallt bogey or worse.
·
Classic, saved pi!f,on No. 18 with a
"I grinded my way around..Today tO-foot putt. The 21-year-old Amer~
'I'll very tiring. Physically, I'm fine, . ican star used his driver only once on
but it is just a mental grind on a golf the tight 6,993-yanl course- setting
coune diM requires so much accu- up ~ birdie on the plr-S IOt!J.
r,cy off the tee."
.
Australia's Peter o:Malley w.u 1!
1'1111ops, wJi!&gt; lqst his POA ,Tour s~c ~k II 65.• Whl~ ~ad1ans
lllrd Jut. season ·afier ean,ina ·only , . Mtke We1r and Rick 01bson 'OI!".ned
Sll 233 hi 2.4 starts, malched the with 67a. Former O.S. Masten
. ; . record with a 9-under 64. He: c.pion Larry Mir,e joined Wpodl
lloled hiJ .-J·II!ot oli tho psr-4 in a aix·playerpoup at 68.
J3Ch f'or llle,atle.
. ·
'
.. "It's not a worlck:lus field, but .
wl .,.. 'tbinp Ilea. now, I'm thete III'C a lot o( .JOod yaunJ Aus' jiOUolwdonnlyaclf,"ilidPusons. tralirithebele ~Uop.WMhai.ve.~d heard
· 111110 .M ' ._.., uven birdies: "I of, but y WI , ze 881 •

·' lt1Julc:Ult~yell'ill.~l

when she saw a man tinkering under
the hoocl of one of the cars parked at
her house.
She said the man brandished a
knife and told her, "You're going to
lake me where I need to go," and
forced her to go inside to get her
keys. He waited for her in the doorway.
Th~p she droye for about 30 min-

.

Eastmoor, w~re two-time Heis- , good memories fioni there."

AP &amp;porta Writer_
.
. man winiiCI' Archie Griffin played, is
Chuck Kemper coached 10 years on it&amp; dellhbed because of econom·
at Wehrle High School in Columbus, : ic cutbacks. It willjoin a gro)llinglist
and the Wolv~nes made .it to the of legendary Ohio high school P.fOsta~ .iournament 5even limes.
grams.
.
Now the school !hit dominated
· Devi.lbiss and Macomber in Tole·
Ohio's smallest division in bOys' bas- do; Wehrle ·and N&lt;it:tb in Columbus.;
!tetball still has bells reverberating Roosevelt, Stivers and !loth in Daylhrough its halls. But there are no .ton; Lincoln and Lehman in Canton; ·
kids rushing to class, no bas(letballs CAPE in Cincinnati; John Adams,
pounding the gym floor, no buses Cathedral Latin and West Tech in
waiting ouuide.
Cleveland; Taft .and Garfield in
'':The school is the people," said Hamilton; Warren Western Reserve
Kemper, now a junior high assistant and the pciwen such as Mingo Jlincprincipal in Pickerington, "but the lion, Chauncey-Dover, Bellpoini and
building is wh4! bonds the people Watedoo.among many, many others
toaether. lt's the meeting plice. You . are all gone.
lose. the ·facility and 'you 1960 thst
Some w..., casualties of budget
common ground.
.
limitatjons, some:c\:.JISOiidated "(ith
"I go back there now and I see other sehools and SQII\C died because
that :it's a ftre cleparunent training · ' of dwiildling enro!Jt!lenu: Most are ·
station. It kills you."
·.
·
stiii "'membered cJcarly and dearly
Wehtle closed a short arne after by those who worked flit or attend11\e team lost in the 1.991 state semi• - ed the schools.
· ·
· .
finals. A winner.offour state cham"I'll tell you what, it makes me ·
pionships in a span of five years, it feel kind of sad," laid Griffin, a for- ·
exi'Sts only in memories nnw.
mer Ohio St8;e il8r and cilrrent OSU
The Columbus· Board of Educa- ' associate · athletics · director. "It's
lion announce4 Tuesday thst it was been a big part o(my· family's life. .
recommending that Eastmoor and All but my two oldest brothers
Centennial bigh schools be closed at. attended Eastmoor. I have· a lot ·of
the end of the current academic year. ..

.

lly AM)' CORNEUl!SSEN

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By RUSTY MILlER

Harding seeks police-help following ·knifepoint abduction
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Columbus
board seeks to close Centennial and Eastmoor
.

win.
Los Angeles never trailed after last-place teams.
Johnson finished with 22 points,
"I had a talk with Michael Jordai. Robert Horry hit O'Neal for the
a t the All-Star game," said Dikem- alley-oop dunk in the opening sec17 assists and II rebounds in only 34
be.Mutombo, who ha4 22 points and onds.
·
minutes. Wesley Person hit 13 of 14
II rebounds for the Hawks. "And ·
Elden Campbell scored 21 points shots and scored a career-high 33
the Bulls definitely respect us. and Eddie Jones 19 for the Lakers, . points for the host Suns.
Michael said they don't worry about and Horry had II points and 10
The Celtics, with just 10 healthy
New York. They worry about rebounds. Los Angeles won for the players, lost their fourth in a row.
Atlanta." ·
· eighth time in nine games.
They trailed 106-66 with 1:30 left in
The Hawks moved . within two
Stephon Marbury returned to the the third quari~and were in (janger
victories of the longest home win- Timberwolves' starting lineup ~r of surjlllssing their most-lopsided
ning streak in team history. On Fri- missing eight games because of a loss ever- by 44 points at Portland
day night, Jordan and Chicago visit thigh bruise. He had 13 points and in 1977- until the Suns cleared the
Atlanta.
eight assists.
bench.
'
.
his three-point sh,ots for the host and fouled out.
"The streak aside, we just want to
Hawks 106, Raptc!n 84
Grizzlies 106, Spun 101 .
Homels
113,
Nels
100
Spurs and becar115,11Je fifth player in
prove to Chicago that we can beat
Toronto, which lost its fifth in a
Vancouver won a season series · NBA history to' hit I ,000 career • Vlade Divac blocked a teamthem again," said Christian Laettner, row on the road, led 64-63 with 2:45 . for the first time in its two-year his· three-pointers.
1record 12 shots as Charloite stopped
who had 19 points and 12 rebounds. · left in the third · period. Atlanta tory, led by Bryant Reeves' 31
visiting New Jersey.
· . :
Pistons 96, Magic 87
"We want to make a statement. It's responded with a 33-4 burst, includ- points.
·
,
Divac set a ~r-high for blocks.
Grant Hill posted his fifth triplegoing to take a really big game to do ing the 25-0 run led by Mookie BlayThe· Grizzlies have the worst double of the se(ISOn, including four He also had 18 points and ni~~C
it again."
lock's seven points
.
·
record in the league at 10-43, but in the last month, and helped Delroit · rebounds.
. In other NBA games, Phoenix
Blaylock had 19 points, II assists ·have won three of four against San down visiting Orlando. ·
Olen Rice scorecl27 points for the •
beat Boston 131-100, Vancouver and' eight r,ebounds. The Hawks Antonio this season. Earlier ,in the
J1ill had· 31' P\1i.nts, I 0 rebounds. Hornets an&lt;fMuggsy B!I&amp;I\(IS,ha4 :II&gt;,
stopped San Antonio 1'06· 101, i.mprovCII to 7-0 overall against · :day, the injury-depleted Spurs found and 10 assists: Ht' had consecutive ·points and a season-high IS assi ~ts. ·
Detroit defeated Orlando.96-87 and Toronto, 3-0 this season. ·
out that two-time All-Star Sean three-point pfays:'Highlighting a 13Shawn Bradley, the 7-fp6t-~ ~ell· .
Charlotte topped New Jersey 113Suns 131, Celtks 100
Elliott ~ight miss the rest of the sea- 2 run in the third quarter as the Pis- ter for the Nets; blocked one sho.t and
100.
Kevin Johnson had a triple:dou- . son because of chronic tendinitis in tons overcame a 54-50 deficit.
increased his league-leading total to
ble
by halftime and Phoenix routed his right knee,
•
Laken 100
Penny Hardaway scQred 16 points
151 . Charlotte began the game with
short-handed Boston in a meeting of
Vernon
Maxwell
made
all
five
of
Timberwolves 84
for
the
Magic,
but
shot
just
3-fo[-15.
a total of 190blocks.
'.·
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. P~~g~ ~"'
The Dally Sullnel•

Poa•oy •llkldllp ort, Ohio .

t&lt;entucky beats LSU 84-48 to gain ground in SEC title· race
I d Prea
;"n. ra:e for the Southeastern ·
~title just goc a lot tighter.
!: No. 12 SoudJ Carolina's 77-74
lclllto Gecqia and No. 4,Kentucky's ·
814-4 victory over LSU on Wednes- .
dl:ynight narrowed the Gamecocks' · ·
111111 over the Wildcats io I 112 ,

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·~, ~ 13, 1117

Pomlroy •llldcllport, Ohio

According to •ttomey,

·

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By ICIN BERGER
Albert
Belle•. whoae pllt:e IIDOilg hueball's elite sluuen has been threat·
eoed by violent oud:ttnls and repeal·
ed suspensions, bu admiRed under
oath that he recently !ost as much as
$40,000 gambling on sports
Belle, who sisned a S5S million;
fiv~·year contract with the Chicago
White Sox in November, said 1\Jesday he bet on pro football, college
basketball lind golf games with
friends.
, He also revealed a domestic violence-i'elaled assault conviction
stemming from an incident in 1988
-one year after he was drafted by
the aeveland Indians.
Belle, 30. answered questions
ahoUt his past durins a six-hour
deposition in a civil lawsuit related
to a confrontation he.had with Halloween prankstet'S in 1995.
'Belle's lawyer, Jose Feliciano,
said Wednesday his clien~ did not
gamble on baseball games. Such bets
are grounds for suspeasion- for life
if a player wagers on his own team.
' "None of this stuff had to do with
baseball," Feliciano said. "Absolutely none of it."
Belle's agent, Am Tellem, pointed out that many of the owners who
pay athletes and the journalists who
cover them bet on sports, too.
"Albert's done nothifll wrong or
illegal," Teltem said. "Albert Belle
has never bet on.a baseball game."
t.awyer'Richard Lillie, who ques. tioned Belle, represenu the guardian
of a teen-ager who contends Belle
injured him with his truck after the
player's house was egged in a Halloween prank on &lt;let '31, 1995,
Lillie said Wednesday that Belle
admitted $40,000 in gambling debts
and "acknowledged purchasing
mopey orders in amounts under
CLEVELAND (AP) -

$10,000 10 pay those debb."
Major league baseblllwpokcsDII'I
Rich Levin said officials were awvc
of Belle '.s testimony. ~ "'ultington
PoJI reported today that major
league baseball's leaders plan to
· place Belle on probation.
Kevin Hallinan, baseball's security tiead, is investigating to deter·
mine whether Belle violated any of
baseball's rules, according to a highranking major league official who
spoke on the condition he not be
identified.
Belle also revealed in the deposilion that he was fined $1,000 and
· sentenced to one year probation on
a 1992 assault conviction, Lillie
· said. Court records show Belle was
. convicted of domestic violencc-relat'ed assault stemmiilg front an incident
that took place in 1\Jcs!)n, Ariz., on ,
July 5, 1988.
Details were not available
because the case is 5o old; the file has
been destroyed; a clerk at the Pima
. County attorney's office said.
·The teen-ager who is sui rig Belle
gave his deposition Wednesday at
Feliciano's offi~e . .
"This is someone trying to use
collateral issues to help his lawsuit,"
said Feliciano, who characterized the
gambling matter as "silly and petty"
and "no big deaL"
A prelrial.hearirig in the civil case ,
.was scheduled for March S with
Cuyahoga County Judge James
Sweeney. Belle will be at spring
trainingwjth the White Sox. in Sarasola, Fla., and will not be required to
· attend.
Ron Schueler, senior vice president of baseball operations for the
White Sox, declined comment
Wednesday from the team's spring
trainigg pOst
"We do not have any information
at this time, so we are not iti a posi-

.

l' Moroccan shatters

ln' 1991, Philadelphia oulfielder
lion 10 comment," Schueler said.
White Sox chainnan Jerry RA:ins- Len Dykslra was placed on p1lblllion
for one year by then-commissidorf pro(essed support for Belle.
"There is no indication that Fay Vincent after testifyinJ about
Albert bet on baseball SllRCS.'' lie taking pan in · high-stakes poker
told the Chicago Tribun~. "So at the games.
Belle became the first major leamoment, rm not worried."
Gambling is a misdemeanor in guer 10 hit 50 home runs and 50 douOhio, but it was unclear if Belle bles in a season in 1995, leading the
would face criminal charges as a Indians to their first American
result of his testimony. Cuyahosa Lea8ue pe!IIWlt in 41 years. He is the
County proSecutor Stephanie Tubbs Indians' career leader. with 242 home
Jones did not reium a telephone mes· runs and finished second in AL
MVP voting in 1995 and thlrd in
sage.Wednesday. ·
.
Pete Rose, baseball's ~r hits 1996.
He
has
been
suspended five times
leader, was suspended frpm baseball
in six-plus seasons and received the
in ·1989 for gambling and has been
ineligible for induction to the Hall of largest line in major league history,
Fame because of it Rose insisted he · $50,000 for .bersting a television
reporter'
· ·
bet ori sports other than baseball.

.
. .
'fJHENT, Belgium (AP) - The
month of Ramadan fasting might
have cost Hicham el Guerrouj some
of his strength. It dill~'t cJst him .a
chince to set world records.
·After running his first-ever mile
Wednesday, the Moroccan QOW has
twp world records in IOdays, and he
toC;Jk away the oldest indoor mark in
· the books, held by Eamonn Coghlan.
· 'In Germany on Feb. 2, el Guer- _
rmij still lived within the limi~ of I~
Muslim ,Ramadan, but thnved on
healed competition with Ethiopia's
Haile Gebreselassie as he smashed
the· I,SOO indoor world record,
· ' At the Flanders Indoor meet, the
Raftladan fast was a thing of the past,
but he had to struggle the final two
tajil as a lonesome figure against the
. clock. .
lie finished in Q time of 3 min·
utQ.; ~~ .4S seconds, beating~ previ~~ record by I ,33 seconds, After
hi~ictory ' lap, he was wmpp¢ in
thi:M8roccan flag, exhaustion final·
ly laiipg effect.
.
;:'Tije race has tired me too much.
A~r Ramadan, you lose a lot of
enWJy,'' el Guerrouj said of t,he
mqptll of daily fastong from sunnse
to 'llilnset.
.
~111 ever since the Atlanta
Olimpics, he .has been running to
relmlm himself.
1f~ thought the day of the Atlanta
J.silo final was his ~ he was su!ll·
ing' jl)onsside favorite Noreddme
Morceli with a lap to go.
"Yet he stumbled, and his dreams

crU!ted.

m~~tcle croam IIOid for

in central indiana haS developed
a special cream that relieves
arthnlls pam. on mo.nutes, ev~n
chrome arthnus pam-de~p on
the JOmts. The product whoch os
called PAIN BUST•RJI, os one
of the fastest-actong theral'!'uloc
formulas. ever devet.oped on the
fight agaonst art_hnus.
, ..
. lmmedoately upon apphcat!"n
ot goes to work by penetratmg
deep to th~ !lf"l.' most affectcd:-the JOmts themselves,
bnngmg fast rehcf where rchef
is needed most
Men and
women who have , suffered
arthritis pain for ' years arc
reporting tncrcdiblc results With
. thts ' product. Even a single
apP.Iication seems . to work
remarkably well in relieving

pain. and bringing comfort to
cramp&lt;:d knotted joints.
•PAIN BUST•RII was . researched and. formulated to be
absorbed directly into lhe joints
and muscles-where the pain
originates. Long,time · arthritis
sufferers will be glad to know · ·
that this formula will help put
an end to agoni.zing · days and
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recQmmended by users who
have resumed daily activities
and are enjoying life again. ·

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Recently, Houck took what
researchers hc&gt;pe will be the first
,slep in slow~ng the .tisease. He
~arne the second person to try ,an
experimental drug called GDNF - .
.glial derived neurotrophic factor.
: The drug was injected directly
·;~to his brain. through an. "access
port"iand catheter imP,lanted during
sitrgt!fy at the -University of
hester Medical Center.
n iests on animals, Uae drug has
~ted nerve. growth and has ·
' ~~in mice the · progressio!' of

the drug's 5afety and effectiveness,
Thornton said.
:
.
The braitf-catbe~er' method is
being used beCause it is the only way
die medication can get past the .
body's "blood-brain barrier," he
said. The barrier is a protective
mechanism in which. braiti will
not. ait:cept large .molwtes like lhe
drug GDNF, he explatned.
·
·· The only visible sign of the apparatus is a bump on the tqp of
Hoock's skull surrounded by a Cshaped scar. The catheter runs from
the access port, down through the
skull into a venlricle of the brain.
· Once inside · the .1ventricle. the
drug mi'xes with thQ ,spinal fluid,
which bathes the b* and spinal
cord.
•
Once implanted in the brain, lhe
catheter will remain - whethei' the
drug works o( not - because it.
would be too dangerou&gt; to remove
it, Thornton said.
.
"The idea of having a neurosur·
gical procedure·to give a treatment
is a new one, and l wasn't sure how
people would react," said Thornton.
"Bu•l've talked to a lot of putienu.
and their general reaction is if that's
what it tak~s to getldie medication
going, they're in favol."
Houck said his only reservation
carne when he learned some of the
patients would be given a placebo
- an inert substance - so the test
would be scientifte. ~e!sults from

UR research team:
·
Durins th~ national test, the drug
will be injecied into 24 ALS pati~·tlts
at six medical centers, once a month ·
for nin'e months. If it is deemed safe
to use in humans, a ~nd, larger
study will begin, to learn more about

ho, t&lt;rsee if tlie drug1¥tually works.
· ' "I think as' se~ this disease
is, ·they ,should for~o the ·placebo,"
he said . . "But hetng the second
patient to gel the
maybe my
odds are better."
Th&lt;lf!I!On said all : • tients in the

lljeathe.

test will be given the
real drug after nine
months. The teSt is
being financed by
the drug's manufacturer, Amgen.
A similar treatment also involving
an ·
ilJiplanted
catheter is being
uied on patienu
witb Parkinson's
disease,' but they
· have been "less
eOtbUsiastic," ·
'Thornton said. That
probably is because
that .disease pro·
gresses much more
slowly than ALS
and Is treatable, he
said.
Houck, a. retired
Navy man who
worked on submarine~
. for 21
years,
'to quit his
job at C ' bury Beverages .
in
Williamson, N.Y., in
July because he was
"continuing to .lose
strength m his
hands.
Now, he takes
care of the family's
'EXPERIMENTING FOR UFE • Jay 'Houck was dlegnoHd with Lou Gehrig's Dl-• In 1993. Fleceritly, Houck took
home 35 miles 'east whet re-chel's hope will be \he first step In slowing the diReR. He becl!fl&amp; the IICond peqon to try en expertof Rochester and his mental drug call,ld GQNF- glial derived neurotrophlcfee10r.
.

:t·

pi\er, 20, are on their'own. "I'm now
Mr. Mom," Houck said. :
. .
He still gets around well but the .
disease is beginning to weaken his
knees 'and tess~ Houck said. and has
caused a slight slurring of his
speech,

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Gracie Scott of ~field spent around the world
the past week here wiJ j!er·parents,
· Jeremy, son of Bill ·and Twila
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil ' ·ng. She. is BQckley of 42557 Lovers Lane,
recuperating · from surgery .and Pomeroy, is majoring ih .animal scireiurned home with her husband, ence.
John, on Sunday.
OU PROGRAM
Four Me.igs High School students
· : · Alice Whaley, Lancaster; Mar·
, garet Kastival, Athens, visited Sun- have registered to participate in the
· day afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Feb. 2!) engineering and technology
Bob Aikire.
, )t
student for a day program at Ohio
. Word has been relil!ived of the University's Russ College of Engi·
death of·Bill Knopp bf Dayton; a neering and Technology, Athens.
former area resident .~ . '
The participaiing junior students
, Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. from Meigs are Davis Anderson in
·Bob Mahr were Bud, Mullins of civil engineering; Adam Thomas
West Virginia and Richard Unkerton and A. I. Vaughn, computer science,
. of Kentucky.
and Scott Dodson, industrial tech.
HONOR SOCIETY
nology. Each of the students will be ·
Jeremy W.. Buckley of Pomeroy paired with OU-'I!NT studentS in the
was recently initiated into the Ohio appropriate major.
'
Chapter of Gamma Sigma Delta, the
1be students were recommended
FOSTER BIRTH ,
honor society of agriculture, at cere- . for participation by Cliff Kennedy,
·Ryan and Rhonda Spaun Foster monies conducted at the Ohio State guidance counselor at Meigs .
an~ounce t~e' birth of their first University; College of Food, Agri·.BmLE PROPHCY SERIES
cltifd, a son, Mf.tthew Charles, hom .. cultural and Environmen!il1 Scienc4:S . "Understanding the Endtime" is a
iran. I L ,.,·
. and School of Natural R-urces:'·
10 se~siori Bible proptiecy study
: The infant w~i~hed 6 lbs., 4 oz. ·
Gamina Sigma Delta recognizes series. being offered at the Hope ·
ahd was 20 onc~es long. ,
· ·, senior students in agriculture and Baptist Cburch, 570 Grant Street,
Grandparents are Roger and natural resources who are academi- Middleport. ·
·
Sharon Spaun,,and Bob an.d Linda cally in the top IS peroebt of their
The first session will be held at7
Fos~er. ., (}rel!l·8,randparents · are class Jlitd who display leadership p.m on Sunday, March 2 and thereJuntor an~ MBrle Sp~un, Ralph and potential . ·
after will be held weekly on S~nR~Jse Hall; .Betty:' DtU and Bertha
At the initiatory cel\lmony, 97 . days at the church.
Foster. 1 1
·, · initiates were received into memberPastor· Richard Oliver wilf con· .
, DEAN'S L~T
· sliip . by! Ohio Chapter President duct the study course which is
· Mason 'Fisher, son of Gordo~ and' Wesley Budke.
·
offered free of ·charge. For further
Linda Fisher of. Syracuse: , w!IS .
Gamma Sigma Delta is' an inter- information, residents may contact
named to the fall quarter deans Its~· national society with 46 chapters Oliver at 992-5334.
at Miami University, O~ford. He ts.a
, 11 ~, , ,
.·
sophomore majoring on pre:medocine. .
·
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· · HARRISONVILLE NEWS

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News policy
: In $n effort to provide our readership with cuirent news, the Sun.day
Times-Sentinel will not acce!)l .weddings after 60 days from the date of
tl{c. event. ·
.
• Weddings submitted after the 60day deadline will appear durins the
wl:ek in The Daily Sentinel and the
G)lllipolis r;&gt;aily Tri~une.
.
· •All club meetings-and other news
aiticles in the society section must
b¢ submitted within· 60 day,s. of
occurrence. All birthdays ·must be
subniitted' within 60 days of . the
oecuirence,
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1996 GEO
TRACKER

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and the Sunday
n,s.StJntin~l value the conlributiOIIJiheir rwlcrs make.to the"spons .
sectiona of these papers, and they
wilt eontiooe to be published.
~owever. certain deadlines for
submillions will be observed. ·
!Jbedeadlinc for1Jhot9s andrelll·
· ed irdcles for football and other fall
spilni ·is lhe Saturday before lhe
Suile!'!Jowl..
.
deadhnc for p110101 and re!at·
ed ::Jmi:les for buketball (summer
. ~~ and related c11nps fall
lhe summer sporu deadline)
· OlhF winterspons is the last day
of
NJ;IA finals.
,
'the·deadliae for submi11ions of
Joclil liueball· and softball-related
phliiol 'and related articlu, from Tbllf,ID the ~. as well as, other
~~ ~ SUIIIIIICII: lpOIU. is the day
oft=!:' pme of thll. World Series.
·
de-.tli- n in pllce ID
·~~~ contribu!On die lime they
. . to ICijiiR tbeir pJuMas fiom lhl
~Y lllldloldevelojJer of

By SUSAN J. SMITH
lloctJnu Democrat .,d Chronicle
· , · In 1993, when Jay Houck (irst
noticed he was losing strength in his
1Jands, he thought it might be a
i'Cpeiitive stress injury. So did his
.doctor.
· Two years later, a neurologist
101d Houck it was something mucb
·· worse - amyotrophic lateral sclerasis - ALS. Houck, of North Rose,
·N.)'., did not know what ALS was,
.except. that it is ' also ~ailed Lou
_Gebrig's disease, in IIICIIlPry of the
New York Yankees great whose life
it qlaimed. ·
So Houck and his wife, Jane, a
.high school English teacher, did
'orne research. The results were
chilling: Mos,t ALS patients die in
tl!ree to live years, after their musties and nerves de~enerate to the
pilint they no longer can swallow or
,,.

and the two records m.ake him a rising star of middle distance running,
poised to peak in the August world
championships in Athens.
But his first wish now is to rest.
"After two world recOrds like
that, t · am totally exhausted," el
GuerrouJ· ·said after the rae~.
annou~cms hewould,not def~nd hts
1,500 mdoor world totle dunng the
Mar. 7-9 world championships in
Paris.

·~,

first steps being~aken to
slow.·Lou ·Gehrig's disease ·

SEYEUL Ill 'STOCK

. S~rta deadlines
';jbe Gallipolis Daily . Tribun~.
Tllf. Daily

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•

·1996 F,ORD
TAURUS

for arthritis
IKillliDI; 1110111

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The Daily S1allnel• Pege 8

works. -- Sun City, Calif.
sically. Before he was 5. Kevin had response was simply, "Oh." Kevin
Dear Sun: What a beautiful letter! had seven SUfJeries by three dilfer· is now 14, well adjusted and happy.
That goodnight kiss from your ent doctors. '!Jie later leuned his Recently, he was elected studentfriend's ·mom changed your life. problem was a rare syndrome that is body president of his junior high
What a brave (and wise) little girl not CO&lt;Tectable.
school. ··Vancouver, Wash.
you ·were to foree kisses on your
After angrily responding 10 peamother when you didn't set any · pie who a5ked, "What's WI'Qng with
Dear Vancouver: Kevin must be
from her.
lhe hoy's eye?"! realized a different quite a guy. He learned early that if
Many readers have written to say approach W'!S necessary. I explained life hands you a lemon, you can tuni
they have learned a lot from my ool- to Kevin .that these peqple weren't sour or you can make lemonlMje.
umn, and this pleases me. Your letter being mean, they were just inquisitoday will teach a life-enhancing live, and I asked how he wailled ·tO
Gem of lhe Day: Life doesn't
lesson. Thank you.
·
. reply. .I gave him three choices: I) co111e with an instruction book:
Dear Ann Landers: After ~ading tell them to mind their own b\Jsini:ss, That's why we h;lve parents.
the leiter about ihe child with the 2) say ''I don't want to talk about
port-wine birthmark. I felt com- it," or 3) say "I was born that way."
pelted .to write.
He decided on No. 3.
'
Send questloDs to ADD l.aaden,
Our son, "Kevin," was born with
While in lhe ~rst grade, Kevin Creaton Syadkate, 5777 W. Ceo•
one eyelid that drooped noticeably. learned that when he told his little tury Blvd., SI!Jte 700, Lets ADa.;
We tried \O correct )he problem sur- 'friends, "I was born that way," the Calif_ 90045

Ann

"'
Special" cream

world indoor mile record
following religious fast

B~RAF CASEAT

never showed any affection and dren before I was 20. I kissed them
nev«IO!d them they were loved. So, until their little ~heeks were red.
of course, this explains why they When I talked to my mother on the
Landers
didn ·~ know how to give affection or telephone, I would say, "I love you,
express it in words.
Mom." After a while, she finally
My life changed arqe 9 when I said, "I love you, too." I'd never
stayed overnight at a cirlfiien&lt;l's - heard her say that before.
house. Her mother kissed us both . Aftera few weeks, when 'I'd go to
By ANN LANDERS
goodnight and tucked us in. That did see Mom, she would say, "Where's
Dear Ann Landen: This .is for il I was so moved by that loving my kiss?'' When it .was tiirie for me
~· Feel,ing Guilty in Woodbridge, gesture I eouldn't sleq~. I thought, to leave, she'd say, "I love you. You
. , Va." She said her adult "hildren "This is the way it is supposed to know that, don't you?" I'm so glad I
wouldn't forgive her for the lack of he." When I left, I was angry at my was able io change things because
affection they experienced growing · own parenis for a while but I could- my precious mpther passed away
up. When I read that letter, I said to , n't hold it against Mom !thd Dad for not long ago. I cherish the many let·
myself, "That's,me."
the way they were. •t
ters from her saying, "I love you."
My father worked six days a
This is what I did tS reverse the
So ID that person in Woodbridge
week, and my mother was always proeess: 1 began kissing my mother who feels guilty, I say, I hope your
cleaning, cooking and doing laun- so often that I got her to laugh about children read this, It's never too late
.dry. They both came from undemon- il I married at 17 and had two chit- ' to change, and I promise you, it
strative fantilies with parenu- who

·.

.
•until now. moa anbiitil creMJU blve beea

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

..._ __..-

One kiss reverses ·unlOving cycle· io family

·

· ·Belle's gambling didn't involve· baseball
,

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•·

...._.., 204 W..t 2nd Street 614/992-7070 01Npall 15~2 Ealllrn Avenue 614/441-1547
A~Mna 1100 Eall Slalo.Street 61~/594 -4800 .lllck- 384 Main Slrwol614{286-6073

. Includes soup; salad &amp; dessert bar.

..... NsLIISSIIours6 • ·I pta
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MOM'S SMORGASBORD
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~.February
13, 1997
#£

Porraoy • Middleport, Ohio

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199.7 Pet Valentines

Time Out for Tips on eating the right fqQPS
By BECKY BAER
M
Coun

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Mainlain or improve your weight. Being overwci_glit increases your
lip
ty Exlenllon 1 gant
chances' of heart disease, stroke, high blood preS!Iure, diabetes, cenain can•
Femily Mel Conaulllll' ~~ncell Community O.V.Iopment
ccrs and other diseases. Being underweight can aisa caule pioblcms, such as
We hear 1 lot about nutl'lbon these days and how it affects our health. osteoporosis and a grea~r risk for early death. ·
··
.
Normllly 18 this country wt do not have to worry about being mabtourished,
Choose a diet with plenty of grain products, vegetables, and fruits. By
~owcvcr, there mar still be ~ems because we do not eat enough of the choosing most of your foods from the bottom or the Food 'Guide Pyramid;
nght foods or ovenndulgc wnh othcn. In order to address this situation, the you will he getting complex carbohydrates, dietaiy fiber and essential vita·
Department _of Health and Human Services and the United States Depart- mins and minerals, without much fat. Foods from these three food groups
ment of Al!flculture have established lhc Dietary Guidelines for Americans may reduce your risk for some types of cancers. . .
10
help .us make better food choices.
Choose a diet low in fat, saturated rat, and cholesterol. Fat has been ass&lt;&gt;Eat a vlll'icty of foods. We all need over 40 different nutrients to be · ciated with)leart disease, cancer and obesity.
~th~. These inclu.de P.roteins for building and repairing body tissues and
Diets low in fat can help reduce the chances of contracting these diseases.
supplymg energy; vttamms and minerals-for regulating body functions; car- Choosing foods low in fat will allow you to get the nutrients you need withbohydrates for the most efficient and least costly fonn of e~rgy; and some out extra calories. Fat has over twice the amount of calories as pro~ins and
fats for supplymg energy and the transporting of the fat-soluble vitamins A carbohydrates (vitamins and minerals do not 'contain calories).
D, E and K throughout the body. ·
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A diet low in saturated rat and cholesterol can hi:lp'kccp your cholesteroi
N_o one particular food' can givio. us all or tlie different nutrients that we level in check. The American Heart Association recommends that we eat less
reqwrc, thercrorc, we ~ust eat an assortment offoods. Choosing foods from . than 300 mg of cholesterol every daY, The USDA and Department of Health
.the Food Gutde Pyranud can help us eat the right. amounts of the different · and Human Services, suggest that less than 30 percent or our daily calories
null'lents.
.
, come from fat, with; no·more thim 10 percent being saturiled·fat. Saturated
Each day we should have 6-11 servings from lhc br~ads, cereals, rice, fat comes from animals in the fonn of butter, lard, ercatn, fat in meat, etc.
and pasta group; l-5 servings of vegelables; 2-4 servings of fruits; 2-3 serv- Packaged foods will have a Nutrition Facts Label that will show the amounts
m~s from the drury group; and 2-.l servings from the meat, fi sh, poultry, of fat and cholesterol that one serving·of that rood contains. Children under
dried beans, eggs, and nuts group. You should only cat fats, sw~ts, and oils the age of two should not rollow this guideline. They need fat to grow and
sparmgly. Thes~ roods supply a lot of calories, but they do not provide many develop properly.
nutl'lents. That 1s why they ar.e called "empty calorie' roods.
Choose a diet moderate in sugars. Too much sugar can lead to obesity and

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A. Tribute to these pets who
p;rovide much .enjoyment ·
to their owners.·

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Owner: RuttrJot.-.on

nGGER .
OwMr: Bonnie &amp; Ralph S..rl8

SASHA

MACTAVISH ·
· Owner: Terl Roullh

Owner: Joyce Medley

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tOOih decay. Many times roods that have a lot of su,p~:
caloric roods where lhc number of calories far outweilghs.]he
nutrients.
Choose a diet moderate in salt and sodium: Sodiurn chloride or rable salt !las been linked to high
blood press.ure. The Natioga) Academy uf ~ciences
suggests that sodium tie ·liptiJed to 2400 mg each'
day. A teasPQOn of salt has 1000 mg of sodium. Soy
sauces, ketchup, luncheon meats,. olives. pickles,
~d· processed lind canne~ foOds are notorious for
their sodium contestt. Read the Nutrition · Facts
Label to aeteimine amounts of sOdi um that may be
hidden in roods.
'

Ir you drink alcoholic beverag~. d_o so in mod·
.
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eration. Alcoholic beverages are another.type of empty ~al~rie food,_They
· sup~ly almoS\ twice as many calories as carbohydraies and proteins, bUt no
nutl'lents.
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. Some people should never drink. These include children and adolescents;
those people who ca~not restrict their drinking; people who plan to drive or
P!'rticipate in ·an activ!ty. that requires attention and skill; those people who
are under medication_; and women who are pregnant or·trying to con_ceive.
. Binh defects, includi~g fetal-alcohol syndrome which is assodated"with
severe defects, behavioral problems, and learning di sabilities, have been
·connected to heavy;drin.!UAg while .the mother was preg nant

Mother of dead sailor warns against hazing .hysteriB.

•

TOM TINKER JOHNSON

. 1ba Dally~ Sentinel• P9 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ElySTEVENKOr.tAROW
.
ncwscol)fcrencc. "Oursondiedasa camp to the most elite units. One Hazing is " a way of separating·
USA TODAY
result of the hazin&amp; investigation."
reason: It is almost always secret, yourself from the 'mainstream," he
; When Navy fireman Dennis
Caught in his ship's crackqown and complaints are rarely made.
says.
·
&lt;?'Brien received his dolphin.pin, an on hazing, O'Bri~n refused to ideoMost rituals are not , deadly:
The public should separat{cereaward for an accomplished sub- tify his buddies. Under pressure to forced ingestion of foul liquids, for mony frorn abuse, says Army Capt.
~ner, he proudly submitted to the do so, he shot himself, invl'stigators example.
.
Kevin Hayes of Toledo; Ohio. Three
ritual of "tacking on." · .
·
said.
,
But there have been - suicides, times he had the pins behind parai In secret, a dozen of his males · The death tragically illustrates drownings and accidental deaths. .chutists "wings" tapped into his
aboard the USS Los Angeles how hard it is to change tradition The play and film "A Few Good chest, in a less viqlcnt A'n)ly version
'1hacked · the ,badge pinned ,to his and how commanders struggle to · Me11" were based on the near-fatal · of the Marines' ceremony.
sllin, leaving his chest bruised.
refine boundaries ~tween cama- beating of a Marine by his comrades
"Blood wings mark the recipient
: Five days later, on Oct. 18, 1995, raderie ·and hazing. "It's pretty dog- at Guantailamo Bay, Cuba: in 1986. as a member of a very special breed
l¢ wits dead.
gone tough· to figure out where that
Professor Charles . Moskos, a of people: people who stand ready to
: O'Brien didn' t die from the line is," says Adm. Joseph Prucher, Northwestern University sociologist exit an aircraft while in flight, defeat
punching. And his ceremony was the U.S. Pacific commander and for· specializing in the military. hesitates an enemy in the face of extreme
nbthing like the Marines' videotaped ·mer superintendent of the Naval to criticize hazing harshly. He sees adv~rsity and ... defend the freedoms
pinnings seen recently on TV news. Academy.
value in experiences that foster unity that we all enjoy."
Despite years of crackdowns, and loyalty. Studies show that comAttorney Eugene Fidell, who
"Our son did not die as the result
of hazing," Mary O'Brien of Media, hazing goes on .at academies rrom bat heroes take risks less fof _God handles milital')l hazing cases, is less
Pa., said Tuesday at a Washington
West Point to Annapolis, -from boot and country ' than
for their bu4dies. tolerant.
The militaiy is. " not .5epa.
.
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BRUTUS
Owner: steve &amp; Debbie Call

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rated by an impermeable barrier
from the rest of society," he said.
"There are military ceremonies that
are permissible 11nd laudable, and
there are military ceremonies that .
are illegal ."
Army Gen. Henry Shelton. com·
mander in chief of the Special
Forces Command, backs the current ·
"zero tolerance" polic'y. He underwent the "Prop Blast" ritual while
in Vietnam.
· Forced to answ~r questions on
military matters, for every mistake..
"you were required to do something
. to make it up." That ranged from
push-ups 10 drinking ·a noxious li~, .
uid . The ritual v.:as capped by a leap
into a half-sunk rubber .boat. If not
done right, " you had to get up and

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go do it again." , .
·
Brig.· Gen. Clifford St~nley,
Marine Corps spokesman, says a
new emphasis on val.ues and tougher
boot camp mean "we've got ritual
enough. " . · ·
. .~
And Adm . Jay --Johnson, · the
Navy's chief, 'has. started a ·training
program for commanders aim~d. in·
part, at preventing another O'B.rien
case.
_
Mary O'Brien says military culture must change. Senior-- leaders
glorify their indocu·inations and ·
"these kids want to be like thero.;,
In. the meantime, she says; the
services need guidelines to protect
others like her son. What they don't
need is to oveneact, or "some other
parent is going to lose a child."

.

Tasty smoked-turkey -recipe .- is in the ·bag ·
I

DEBIT MUFFLEY .
Owner: Georgelle (Odie) llullley

EMMA LEE DAWN
Owner: Doc; &amp; Wanda Dailey

PUNKIN
Ownltl': Kathy Willie

MAGGIE .ANN
Owner: Ben Harrla Jr.

By ANNE B. ADAMS and .
NANCY NASH.CUMMINGS
.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My daughter has a recipe for smoked turkey
that she cO!)ks in a brown grocery bag. It is the best I have ever eaten. Since
the bags arc now re-cycled they arc not supposed to be used for cooking, and
she is almost out of the·old bags. I would like to know if there is anyplace
yoq can find bags that have not been re-cycled. Browning bags do not work
as well. ·· MARGARET.CLJI.BERTSON, Union, S.C.
DEAR MARGARET: We hate to tell you this, but ,grocery .bags ·•
wh\llller re-cycled or not -: really ~hould oot !&gt;.e used for cookine.
..
. Tile cheinii:afs, glues and dyes used in their manufaetu~· are,. to put it
mildly, not fit for human consumption, and the tur~y. -.yhile it is cooking in
thi: bag, will inevitably absorb some of them during the cooking process. .
: The turkey cooked in the browning.bag may not taste a5 good, but believe
us, it's a lot better for you. (Isn't that'll ways ,!he way!)
.
:DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I have three 'leflon-coated frying pans with
t"' Teflon coating still in good shape. They have some slight scratches, but
nqt bad ones. My problein is that rood sticks to them. Is there a way to treat
these so that the surface will not be damaged, but the food will no longer
.
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COPPER
Owner: Pew Pa~l Marr

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MOLLY
Owner: Marcia HoudallheH

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BETSY
Owner: Andrea Long

COOLIE '
Owner: Bernard Lavalley

PEPI "CUGO"
Owner: Bernice L. Lavalley

,_BEANS
Owner: lhlvld • GerllciM Singer

.

l997

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BODDY
Owner: Cathy J. ,._.

LIBERTY'S DAWN (UBBV)
Owner: Suzanne Evans

TUFFY
Owner: Ople &amp; Mary Cobb

tunately!"

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It does sound deliCious -- and easy. Can anyone help Gail (and us)?
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" atP.O. Box 240, Hanland, VT05048. Questions ·of gencr!ll interest will appear in the column. Due to the volume of
· mail, person.al replies cannot be provided.
Anne B. Adams and Nancy Nash-Cummings arc co-authors of "Ask
Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and "Dear Anne and Nan; Two Prize ProblemSolvers Share Their Secrets" (Banta111).
·
Copyrightl997 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . .'

et .Valentines

A.J.

Owner:. WCIOdy Call, Jr.
.

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TRIXIE .
Ownar: R- Mary Paterman

cuit lovers.
For a copy of the catalog. write to
"The Aavour of Britain," 1601 Con- ·
cord Pike, Ste. 1-3,' Wilminglon, DE
19803 (302-658-9975).
. STUMPED: Gail Koppers of Val"
paraiso, Ind., is looking for. ''the best homemade fudgt;evetl'There are
·two ingredients; butter-pecan ice cream and c.hocolaie candy bars. It's a
microwave recipe that I heard over the radio and 'never wrote down, unfor·

A Tribute to these pets who
provide much enjoy~ent
· to·their owners.
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SASSY
Owner: Sua Malaon·

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stick? -- RICHARD HARRIS, Wabash; Ind.
.
DEAR RICHARD: The Taylor Gift catalog carries a non-stick spray that
purponedly adds extra life to damaged cookware. You spray it on and heat
the pot, pan or what have you in the oven for a few minu~s. The description
reads: "Tum any pan into non-stick! Scratches disappear, coats metal, glass
and porcelain cookware surfaces."
A 6-ounce aerosol can costs $9,98, plus shipping and handling; tbe catalog numbet is 7683. To order, call 1-800-829-1133 or write to Taylor Gifts,
600 Cedar Hollow Rd., Paoli, PA 19301 .
JiiNTOFTiiRDAY: Kipp,Stonc of West Chester, Pa.,writcs: "Here's a
wonderful technique 'for removing fruit slains from fine linens without damaging .!hem: Make a paste of com .starch, apply to the stain and let sit
overnight, then wash. Unlike salt, this works even aJter the fruit stain has
dried."
. Kipp also sent us a catalog called "lbci Flavour of Britain." We were
intrigued to find that it offers, among other things, many British foodstuffs
difficult - ·and sometimes impossible·· to find in the United States. ·
Amoog some of their offerings are mushy peas, treacle, fish paste and
mannitc. They also carry_a full line of Cadbury products f~r sweets and bis-

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JOEY
Ownar: Elm11 &amp; Dottle Pierce

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Owner: Hazel Sprque ·

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Owner: Duala Burton

CASSANOVA
Owner: Daaale Burton

.. . .MO"Y OF MUNCHY

iN MlfiORY 01' PAJrt' .
o.n.r, Ill Cat'IWIII

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In Memory of

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Owner: Iitty.Glllley

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MOLLY

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Owner: Dave Judy Elldna

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·pets who gave many
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to their owners

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IN MEIIOfl\' 01' BUTTONS
'hrryWolfe
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Connie Wlllcln

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REBA LYNN- CHEYENNE
Owner: Ron &amp; J1,1dy Cliuk

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Page 12 • The o.Hy Sentinel

Is there.a pageant problem·? Mothers,
...
•• kids and.the quest for a crown
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By CRAIG WILSON
USA TODAY
DOTHAN, Ala. - Brooklin
Mock is an old pro at beauty
pageants. She has been in one every
month of her life. Well. almost. She
missed the first. Stie 's now 6
monlhs old.
"She does ·real good," said
motl)er LiSa McCranie of Enter·
prise, Ala. "Sometimes she gets a
little cranky, but usually when we
get her up lhere she enjoys it."
Brooklin's charms 1\ave already
won her the Little Miss Sunburst
title.
This winter lhe spatlight has
been focused on such children's
pageants ever since 6-year-old
beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey
was killed in Colora4o five weeks
ago. Pageant promoters spent January combating ' negative publicity
spawned by photos of JonBenet
strutting around in Las Vegas
show girl outfits and senior prom
hairdos.
"They do get a bad rap. and it's
undeserved. The .ltids love it," said
Lauren Chapin, a child star as
Kathy Anderson on "Falher Knows
Best" and a judge at the Soulh
Alabama Mini-State America's
DarlingiLii' Darling Pageant. held
at a Holiday Inn here over the .
w.cekend. She said ·panicipants
come away with self-assurance,
conlidence, poise. No more harmful than Little League.
Detractors say it's just shon of
child abuse. A stage mother's
dream. A reluctant child's night·
mare.
This is peak pageant season.·
From now through spring, hundreds of such pageants are weekly
.events, with young contestants
preening for the right to compete at
dozens of national finals this summer.
· About 50 children, from the bald
to the beautiful' to lhe absolutely
bewil~ered, paraded across · a
makeshift stase here all afternoon,
some dragging away trophies three
times their size, not quite compre·
bending what they had won. It cost
$45 a child to compete.
A small area behind the folding
door dividing the hotel's banquet
· rooms served as the dressing area.
It wdash a mdenagebrie of ~ry ing babies
an t e1r 1aper ags, Itt e girls and
their ,crinolined gowns, and determined mothers sporting· makeup
cases of blusli and lip gloss, some
refusing photos until their child's
. beaut~ treatment was .compl~te.
Th1s was. C1ara Taylors firstpageant. Shes I4 months old, from
Troy, Ala., and she sat on the floor
untying people's shoelaces while
wanmg to compete. She was wearing a heavily beaded sea-foam
gre~n d~ss.
. She ~at an age where I thought
11 wouldn t be very competitive, but
I realized how compebuve It was

1 1

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Thuradly, FebrUary 13, 1917

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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The

'c.Jeoclar 11
(llllllllbed • a free Ienke to aoaprolt IJ'OUP' ...~a~q t o _ . . ud special eYetlts. Tile
ealeDdar .. aot dellptd to promote llllel or l'aad nllen of uy
type. Ia- are printed • sp..:e
permllll ud CIUUl&lt;lt be paraateed
to nm a~peellk number of days.
THURSDAY
·
POMEROY -·Regional Plannins
Commission meeting, 3 p.m. Thursday at lhe ·EMS building. Reorganizational meeting wilh election of
officers.

.

The Ohio University School of
'Music will host its fifth annual Presl:tdents' Day Music Festival. Monday,'
W a.m. to 5 p.m.
__ The two clinicians will he con. ductor. Donald Schleicher from the
~ ;Uni.versity of Illinoi~ and jazz artist
;JIBob Thompson. Htgh school stu·
.Udents will. have the opponunity to
•.work with John Climer, director of
bands at OU and interact with Ohio

land Fire House, 7 p.m. Tony Vernell
will be there.
POMEROY
Community
Lenten Services at Once Epi.,;;opal
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Grace Episcopal Church. The Rev.
Fr. Walier Heinz will opctk. Meigs
Ministerial Association spqnsored.
FRIDAY
. LONO BOTTOM .. Hymn sjng,
7 p.m Friday at lhe Failh Full Gospel
Church. The Clark family to sing.
Public invited.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER-- Star Grange
778, f~n night and potluck super,
Saturday; 6:30 p.m. at lhe grange
hall. Third .degree practice for lhc
contest.
..

POMEROY .. Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror-.
ity, 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT .. John Elswick
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
to speak .at Hobson Christian FeiPOMEROY .. Meigs County .Jowship, Sunday, 7 p.m.. Special
Library Bpard of 1iustees, special singing.
. meeting, I p.m. Thursday at the
POMEROY .. The Meigs 'High .
Pomeroy Library.
School class of 1972, Meigs Vel
· CHESTER, •• Shade River Lodge Clinic, Sunday, 2 p.m. to plan 2Sih
1
453 F&amp;AM, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at reunion.
lodge hall.
CHESTER .. Norlheast Cluster
TUPPERS PLAINS . .. Tuppers sposnored hymn sing at the Chester
Plains VFW 9o53 and Auxiliary to United Methodist Church, 7 p.m.
meet Thursday . with ·Auxiliary io Sunday. Everyone welcome.
serve dinner to members, wives, and
others at 7 p.m.
MONDAY
LETART ·-. Letan· Township
RUTLAND ., Meigs Local · . Trustees. 6 p.m. Monday, office
OAPSE, Local 17, Thursday, Rut- building.

., By !u..EN HALE .
· G.nn.tt Newt Service

ed into the knee to~ the problem- .-armed
each year.
.,.. •.

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SAN FRANCISCO- When you get down on your
~ . lomorro~ to pledse everlasting love to your

valentine, coastder lhe consequences:
No pan of tf\e body gets more abuse lhan the knees
JIIOII_IPtiag 6 million people a year in this counuy 10
medical
~ lhe 1
. .
care
or
argestjomts
body. according
to a b' n01·a)
be 1 asedinh lhe Th
survey to re e
ere ursday.
.
census of 17,561 orthopedic surgeons in the
United States shows that nearly 5 mi:lion people head to
the orthopedic surgeon every year because of knee probI~ while anolher 1.4 million limp into emergency
rooms for.heip.
Th~ census, released' at lhe annual meeting of the
Amencan Academy 0 { Orthopedic Surgeons, also shows
that the number of sursical repairs done on knees has
increased from 234,000 in 1990 to 311,000 in 1994, the ·
year for which the latest statistics are available. Knee
replacements, nearly all on patients 65 years and older,
· increased from 129,000 in 1990 to 209,000 in 1994.
· In fact knees are big business, comprising one-fourth
of cases of orthopedic surgeons. About halflhe problems
are due to injury, and·the rest to arthritis and other joint
and bone disorders. There are 1.3 million anhroscopie5
-procedures in which a tiny fiber-optic scope is insert'

seek

n:

PAGEANT PRESSURE· Winners at the South Alabama Mlnl-5tate "Amerlca'a Lit' Darling Pageant:•
were Amanda Rice, 5, from Ashford Ala., "Tiny Mlas Quaen," Bridgett Bacon; 3, from Panama City,
Fla., "Wae Miss Queen" and Michaela Tillery, 33 m·o ntha, from Dothan, Ala., "Pee Wae Queen."

Meigs County Qepublican
Liricoln Day Dinner
Feb. 15, 6-? PM ·
Mei8s Hi8h '&amp;hool

. when 1 staned Jqoking at the dress- and so'on.
es," said mother Vivian Taylor, her"Now, I know you're
self a pageant contestant in her not going to cry!" Kelli
youth. Ciara 's dress sells for $389. DePriest of Panama
"But I rented it for $100," Tay- City, Fla., tells her 2lo~ whispers, so Ciara's father can't year-old daughter, Brit·
hear. "Can you hear me? $100!"
tanee, before going
Little did she know · then that onstage. A veteran of 15
Ciara would compete with tears
Continued on page
streaming down her cheeks because
13
·she couldn't get onstage when she
wanted to.
And little did Lisa McCrani~
PREPPING • Thla
know that Brooklin'' would spit up Is peak pageant auas she was being displayed to the son. ·From 'now
·judges.
.
through spring, hun"Oh , she just threw up!" drada
of
such
exclaimed a woman in the crowd pageants are waekly
covering her own mouth . "Oh: events, with young
bless her little heart!"
contestants praenlng
The babies were carried out for the right to comfirst, followed by . the toddfers, pete at . dozens of .
prodded on by their mothers. Then · national finals this
the Pee Wee girls (2). the Wee summer, such as the
Misses (3-4), the Tiny Mi~s (5•6), little girl at the right.

C~feteria .

University School of music faculty
throughout the day.
Donald Schleicher is director of
orchestras at the University of Illinois where he conducts the University Symphony Orchestra. He is a
versatile conductor, working in
orchestral and wind settings. He is in
demand as a clinic:ian and is influential in the trainilfg of music teachers.
Bob Thompson is presently a

Rufus Putnam . Visiting Professor,
and is known internationally as a
jazz pianist. He has recorded both
solo and and as a collaborative artist
for more than 30 years, and a number of his recordings have reached
the top of the jazz charts. 'fl\ompson
is an active teacher and clinician and
has presented sessions at universities and public schools in the U.S.
and abroad.

$10.00 Donation
·· Baked Steak, Green Beans, Mashed
Potatoes, Slaw; Rolls, Dessert, e.Verage

"14 K ·Gold Diamond Hearts"
SPECIALLY PRICED
FOR YOIJR VALENTINE!
BEST PRICEt ·

1/4&amp;\at

$130

Schleicher will offer clinics to
.area music directors on "Conducting
Revisited" and will conduct open
rehearsals with the OU Symphony
Orchestra and Wind Ensemble.
Thompson will offer a clinic on
"Preparation for Improvisation."
Residents may call the School of
Music at 593-4244 for more in for·
ination.

·Reg. '425

1eaw

$499
50%

tO 70%•

·

.

From·Manutactures sug. retail,price

FRI.-SAT.~SUN. •,FEB~ t4~15·16
Love to enh.ance your home's
beaUty &amp;energy efficiency? ·
·.. Is your thumb Mgreenw?
Interested in what's new oil the market?
This show is for .YOU!
And b8St of all ...tt·~·free fami~ fun at
University Mall.
•

True, tamoxifen is associated
DEAR DR. GOTI: I was diag- with a wide variety of side effects ..
nosed with breast cancer and had including hot flashes, vomiting,
pan of my breast removed, followed liver inflammation, blood clots, and
~y ;ix
of radi:ti~ ~erap~ othe~, ':"hich d~:oo:iag~sed by
o una e y, none o I
ymp
exammatton an
tes .
npdcs under my ann contained canHowever, such reactions are not
cer cells. Now, my oncologist wants common, and I believe that the bento prescribe tamoxifen. However, I efits of tamoxifen far outweigh lhe
am reluctant to take it because of the disadvantages. Uterine cancer ha5
risk of olher cancer or blood clots. been reported in women on tamoxYour opinion, please.
ifen but, if you're willing to undergo
· DEAR READER: Depending on · periodic gynecological examinawhelher a breast cancer is sensitive lions, this should· not he · a conto estrogen as determined by special traindication.
tests on the biopsied specimen, most
In shon, follow your oncologist's
specialists urge women with this dis- advice.
•
• ease to take tamoxifen, an anti-estroTo 'give you more information, I
: · gen drug. This is 'standard proce- am sending yoli a copy of my Health
: dpre, and I encourage you to heed . Report "Breast Cancer and Disor:: your oncologist's recommendations. ders." Other readers who would like
You had a seri'ous disease that, a copy shou Id send S2 plus a long,
happily, did not spread t~ lhe lymph self-addressed, stamped envelope to
glands. You should be cured, after P.O. .Box 2017, Murray Hill Station,
· ' surgery and radiation. Nonetheless, New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
I ,
You are at increased.risk for another mention the title.
breast cancer. The purpose of ·
DEAR EJR. GOTI:·I suffer from
I
. I tamoxifen is to prevent this by Peyronie's disease. ·Is there any
'! blocking lhe effects ofestrogen. (As cure?
II
; you know, many breast cancers are
DEAR READER: Someiimes, as
worsened by estrogen stimulation.)
men age, lhe erectile portions of the

'

Reg. 'l29

'

.

YOUNG'S

R. LHOLLON
TRUCKING

CARPENTER SERVIa

..,._ Addltiona
.,._ O..g•
•a.ctrlcai&amp;Piumblng
'!RCIOIIng

.GOTT, M.D.

DUMP TRUCK

ofnt.rlor • Exterior

Painting
Aleo Concnte Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-8215
. Pomeroy, Ohio
· 1-.·
~::;;;;;:;;:::;;;:;;;;;~~·

·
. penis ~orne scarred and don't
work . properly, leading 10 crooked
· erections lhat may make intercourse
. difficult or impossible. The cause of
Ibis common affliction is unknown.
If the degree of deformity is
.
9
I' h1
rts
d .
s tg • many expe recommen vtt·
11
aminE pills (about 600 to 800 units
537 BRYAN PLACE
a day). In a few cases, this harmless
IIIDDLEPORT ·•
therapy may improve the situation.
912-2772
In men with more pronounced
. . 1:00 1.m.-3:30 p.m..
. erectile prob\ems, urologists often ......... Windows
resort to.cortisone injections into the oll8tl C
. scarred areas. Serious deformity :
Glragis
may recjuire corrective surgery. ·
· •Stw. Doors &amp;
•
:
WI..J-ws
Although Peyronie's disease is,
,._
by present metl\ods, incurable, lhere : •R... Atltltlons
various treatments available. See , :=====~=~
· a urologist for specific advice.
.
Copyright 1997 NEWSPAPER
. ENTERPRISE ASSN•

SERVICE
Limestone • G.ravel

Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10/25190mn

J&amp;l SIDING &amp;
INSUU ION

..

are

. GRUESER'S
. GAUGE

Bodyworll,car,truck
&amp; truck painting,
minor inechanlcsl ,repair. ·
r
Tuna-upa,.()ll Change,
Wax, Buffing
Lon St. Rutl d Oh
II • Alkan
742·2935,
for.•Kip•

(UmeStonaLow Rates)

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

614-992-3470 .

·ra11

COUNTRY
TAN

Reg. '299
Reg. '749

.

'69
'179
'499

·f

'J.

Public Notice

lly tho L..dlng Creek
C-rvancy Dl1trlcl lith•
Dlotrtot Olflco :14411' Corn
HolloW Rolil RuU1nd, Ohio
unUI 1:00 p.m. LOCI1 t•""'
01•:10-17
lnd
than
II
U ld
offt
ubi'-! 0 ptned d
~y
In
The
CONTRACT
DOCUIIINTS mly h
exomlned
·It
lhl
ConHIYIIIOY Dletrlot whoM

main office 11 "liooatld on
IIIII lloute 124, 1.1 .....
ofllutllncl. ·
Copl11 of~ CONTRAc:r
DOCUMENTS
an".,
SPECI-"':OONS
:
.
•
II~
rov...
obtained
II· the
. of
TRIPL&amp;n INGINIIRING
SIRVICEI co. IOcllecl It
110 IIACHANIC STIIIIT,
0
POMEf!OY, OHI
upon
payment of tlfi.OO for - h

....r.:.....

Public

Notlct

i1i, whloh will not · llo
Nlllndlll. • Till lnglllltlr'l eatlmlto

tor

tho

ProJoot

11

.170,247.10
01-aN7
.
...... ,.._TaylOr

· !'fw.IMtllntiC"*

(1)

~--r Dl.o!rlot,
,ll...,cl of Dlrt~Dfl

». (ll) .. 1~; m:

:! ~. ·:]Pi~i!bl~~lc~.No~IJII~ct~::·i.~~Pub~~~~lc~Notl~ct~·=t::.1Publ~·~,~0~No~tl~ctE:t::1Publ~lo~No~...~=
!

.Acqulsltlons
· ~lne t1'
lle111eltu-, ·
1WO Locmlona: &amp;r

•• P11NUallt to 0111!1 Coal

•
•

:MIIIInt . and RHIIntlllon

· Gallipolis

Co., Zix......
4111,

•111*1101:1Wo04. lcl'llltwm

;Oitlo Colli

•111111 "'· •• '· •

•'"""""
•
\

/'A

'

Ohio 4f701 ......

herlllr ·-k a ver~~noa to
pttllllt 1 mine ventilation
111811 within 100 teot of
Molgl county, . Columlllo
Townehlp Roecl 11 end
tt.tl ltoltll ... llellnnlng
at tho Jnterolotlon of
Colulllllll TDW1tohlp Road
11 11141 11a1o Route • In
rraotlon aa, Columlll•
"'IIWWIIII!P• Molll County,
Ohio. The prOPC111d
41aveloplllont . ot th1

•••

vonllll!lion •h•tt olte wtn
hiVI no lftlot 11ft till I'OM.
Tile only dlaturlllnoe to· Ill
oonduDtld w1t1t1n 1GO toll ol
Townllllp Road 11 end
ttltl 11o1n . . w11 -.till
oonotruotlon or.tfll 1aan1
roM off of T0111nehlp ltoecl
11 lind 11M oonllt u•tkln of
tile lllllt end n-aary
appurteMoe. Dllturlllnot
of tho . ~roo will ·Ill
oonduotad to ·~~~e llloo. of

till.roecl IUff1IOe ol
Townlhlp Roa41 11.
lnt1111ted portl1&amp; may •
oOMIIIont at • oC::::Io ·
IMDflllll of till C
II
"'llwneltlp Tru1to11 on ·
lloll*fo 11aro11 a. 1111' It
7:00 p.lll. to Ill IIIN ll till
Cofumllll Townllllp 1'11'1
~~Oitlo.R~ 141,
·-• ~-.
(I) I, 11; In:
·-

.

0. J. BRADY

HOWARD

EXCAVATING CO.
Driveway Limestone
Complete Housa
and Trailer Site
Work, Bulldozing,
Backhoe, Trackhoe.
Septic Systems ·
Inata lied

(614) 992-3838
-

Happy Hr. 5-7
7·9 Pool Toumamenl, 2 Tables
7·10 Karaoke, $25.00 Best Singer
Every Thursday
10.2, O.J. tidies, No Cover
Wet T·Shlrl Contest Starts 11 pm

...

Fri., O.J., 9:00-2:00
Bikini Contest 11 :00 pm

...

Sat., O.J. 9:00-2:00
Daisy Oulcea Contest
·11:00 pm

...

101M·9PM
.....,., I•• lilt Poll121
Amatlcan L.oglcln Annlll
IIIII Strwt, Mktdilpolt
Vendarll5.00, 8' Tablle

Cell RIM IICUilfiO

742·2094

SNOW
REMOVAL
•Driveways
•Parking Lots
.•Etc.
Call Anytime

949·3327
591·1197

111111711 mo.

PUBUCBIO
ADVERTISEMENT
Sealed bldo will be
received by the VIllage of
Syracuae, 2581 Thlid St.,
P.O. Box 266, SyracuH,
Ohio 45779, at Ita office
until 12 noon on 'rhuraday,

SIODIUSS'

UPIOU1111
At2L.ocatlciM

Rlllllnd, Oh. ·
114-142·21111

March 6, 1997, and ·lhen

opened and read aloud, for . ·
furnishing all labor,
Alclni,Oh.
materials and equipment
.
114111141
2202
. necessary to complete the
..:.;.;.:!.i.-.1 construction within ahcty
(60) days of the contract
signing, weather permllltng,
of a 24 ft. x 36 ft. Pole Bam
R9BERT BISSELL
Building on villa!!" owned
CONSTRUCTION
property,
Plena and specifications •New ~-tomes .
can be obtained at the
•Garages
Syracuse Municipal
Building or from Mayor •Complete
George G. Connolly . at · Remodeling
$25.00 per oat, which
Stop&amp;Compare ·
money will be refunded' to
the unsuccallfut bidders
FREE
upon the return· of the.

complete set no mare than
ten (10) days alter the bid .
opening date. Checks shall
be made payable to the
Vtllaga of Syracuse.
Each bidder Ia requlrad to
furnish with Its proposal, a

ESTIMATEES
985-4473

7/2211111
A N NOUN Ct:f.11: tJ T S

latter of credit In an omciuntof 1DO% of the bid amount 005
Pwlonall
with surety satlafactory to
the aforesaid VIllage of Aro You An Excldng RomondcT
1·000-«3-57ao en 8212, a.oe
Syracuse.
Blda stlatl be seated and I'Wr llln. Mull Be 18 YIL Sotv-U,
marked as Bid For Pole 81-5-3434.
Barn Project, VIllage of
GUYS AND GALS
Syracuse.
WAITING lO MEET 'IOU
ljYQUR/IIEA
Attention of blddero II
1·800-«3-5710 .
called to the requlremt~nla
EXT: 1818
!hal the pro(ecl Ia subject to
•
U.lltl PER 1111.
the Federal . Labor
MUST BE 18YRS.
Standard• Provisions and
SERV-U- (118) 84WG4
Dnlo·Bac6n
Wages,
varloua
Insurance
requirements and varloua

Equot

Opportunity

provllion•.

No bidder IJIIY withdraw
hla bid within sixty (60)
ilaya olter tho actuol date of
the opening thereof. The
VIllage of Syracuu
ra1arve1 the ri!Jht to waive
any lnformatltlea or reJect
any or all btda. .
Janice Zwilling
Clerk·Trauurer
(2) t3, 20, 27 3TC

MEET LOCAL •101 a

:

Clll Nowl 1·10G·443·571G Ea~
4180, U.tJ /Min. 11+ Soi'I-U,

81-5-8434.

..

IEETNIW PI!OPUliii-

WAVlOIIAY.

1·800-«3-1710 Eat 1111
U.lltl ""' ............ bo 11,...
s.y.u (111)e1S tt~

Slnaleol Tlrotl or Blind Daten
Call .1·100-443·1710 Ell!. aetz.
12.1111 lllln. te VII a.rv-u 111,

~·~~

145 1194.

40 .

GJvuway

1 1/2 Yaar Old

Malo -

lo,61 ........ ltll.

.

c&lt;it·

2 Adult Co10 Fomoto One NeoT-'

Public Notice

CITY LIMITS

. FLUM.411U .
· Frlay, llllrdl·7

:111111 mo.

·

Sat. Night
POO BAH &amp; SWITCH-ON

Guys, Gals
Cash Prizes Every Nile

'"'l!!:•'•t

Public Notice

Pick up discarded
appllances,batterlas,
many metals .&amp;
motor blocks.
614·992-4025 8 am-8

o'

..
•·

151 2nd Avt.
. tt Mill St.

1122107 1 mo.

PETER

PUblic Notice

Owner:Ronnle-

99.2-2753

;:
Ccin1lnued from page 12
It didn't always work. like her competition in the America's Dar; pageants, Brittanee was Little Miss wish to have girls wear just Sunday ling/Lil' Darling preliminaries:
.
'" 121orida last year.
School dresses.
•
-.. ·
; •.,,.~:As the line-Qr·conteslints contin·
l· ·' "Someone just told me :when she
"Oh, molhers. If they want to do ued to march across lhe stage, par·. was born that we sh.ould put her in it, they' II do it," Foreman said. "But . e~ts, grandparents and friends stood
· ·c1ges and d'd
1 most any·
; pag~ants, and she got second out of we try.' '
behin d 1he JU
29 babies· at the mall the first time..
Kim Tillery, motherof33-month· thing to get their child's attention.
'7/10/lln
:; out," DePriest said. There was no old Michaela. who won the Pee Wee They 'held fingers to lhe comers of 1------,;:o;;;;;;;;a.
•: looking back, although there was a Girls division, was happy with the their mouths for a smile. They held
: • brief period when Brittanee didn't little-if-any makeup ruling. "We lheir arms down straight, their hands
:: want 10 wear dresses, putting a don't like the glitzier pageants."
. thrust oot at the wrist to mimic a.
·: damper on the pageants for a while.
But Tillery acknowledges her proper pageant stance. The most
:;
Other regional legends arrived. daughter is hooked.
common look.they got in return was
;• Payton Holley, 19 months, from
"I was tircd.,Ready to quit," she that of a deer in the headlights.
•: Hartford. Ala.. has been in 70 .said. "But when the pageant materi· ·. Often mothers knelt behind their
:: pageants and boasts a room of tro· als come in the mail. they 're like daug_hters 9nstagc, prompting them
:• phies. Cherisa Lowery. also .almost Christmas cards to her. All she wants through clenched teeth. The lh~
:: 2, from Ozark. Ala., has 16 trophies to do is walk out there. She'd sing if ~judges held up inflatable toys, espe- ·
; ; from her eight competitions. She t.hey'd let her." There is . ~o talent . cial)y ~!_!h·'thelittlest cont~stants.
·: addCd another one Saturday as wm: • ncr of the Little Toddler category.
:! . And coming on strong was 8,: month-old Maclylan Clayton ~f
'l Dothan, who has already won three James R. Sarrett, Et AI
• of her last .five pageants.
.
:J1 "I like to dress her up," said ·Plaintiffs
: f· mother Melanie, showing off her
" daughter's $180 dress as Madylan
G; Bruce Teaford, Et AI
~~ crawls .away to play with the electric
I'
Case No: 96-CV-48 ·
:'! light socket. "She's really good. Defendants
34480 Rocksprings Rd.
,: She'll wear rollers in her hair. and
:: everything."
.
(Co. Rd.20)
.
Tllls sale scheduled for Friday, 14th February,
· • Madylan already has a portfolio.
Pomeroy, Oh.
·: "Wc'rc.trying to get her into model·
1997, at 10:00 a.m. has been ·cancelled for the
· ~ ing," her mother said. Madylan had
992-5756 ·
reason the property addrees set forth In the public
' • on some ligl\t .blush but no eye
notice of Sheriff's Sale
Real Eetate was
.•• makeup.
· .
.
Adclyn 'Foreman, nat•onai d1rcc•
Incorrect.
·: tor for America's Darling, wh1~h IS. a
This case shall be re-advertlse
for sale with the
:: nonprofit organization, a ranty m
'
'· · the multimillion-dollar pageant . correct property address.
:: world, issued a statement urging all
James M. Soulsby
:': parents when theY registered to "not
Sheriff of Mei$Jt County
:• make up your c~ildren as a teen. or ·
:: adult .... Blush and a little lip gloss is
. '
.. :sufficient. No Eye Makeup!""
Mlddtaport, Oh.
Tonight &amp; Friday Night

~lilT
· I'CIR 1108
CNak
!
l.nll!ng .
·• · ......
ConnNWIOYDIIIrlat
1 Com,
II ..II - •-·•
8
&lt;• _
"""
•.
..._..
Ohio
·
•
.,.._,
_,.,_
• llplra'- .alld tiDI for
~ tho oon1truotlon of
orii ......TRtCK
. ROA'D
IWAftRUNI IXI ...ION
PROoiiCT wtl.l 111. r,..llwd

Set In 14. K Gold

.1/4 C8.J'8l
1/2 carat

·

;fks

•

1110 car.a t

'992-5535

D •• OOTT

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.

·-----:_..!P..:u: :bl: :lc;.:.Notl;:,:; ct;,;__

•
M

"11..., New Ownership"

: ..;~------r-_J==~i=====t=====

C11mpah. AcqW.ido114 Pric• Be/o.nl You 'Buy Anywhere•

.

COISftlUC!IOI

Drug ·therapy is worth the discomfort

'

Gold chains and bracelets •
10Kand 14K
'

•

•

:!

Reg. '799

""""" .......

, \ Welding Supplies • lnduatrisl &lt;&gt;- • MachiM Shop ;
·l SeMces. Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication. Repllr Welding
'1 • Alumlnum/Stalnlns • TooL OresslnO • Ornamental
·
Fi.._._
'' · Steps • Slalr.s. Railings, Pallo FumitUre,
•.....~~ Item~. Planter ,Hangars, Trellises &amp; Iota of other stunll

1

vs

$299

1

1

Valentine Specials

1/2 ecv..at

AI,'~&amp; !(da6

. ........._. ·AQA Diltrtbulor

'

JOint replacements. fust performed in 1968, and :,
·Garages • Replacement Windows
arthroscopies have changed lhe face of knee repair. ..
Room Additions , Roofing
However, a controvers•'al new therapy. cell reimplanta- ,
lion, could radically change !he way many knee injuries :
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
are treated.
·
~
FREE ESTIMATES
..
"No Job Too urge or Too SnMII"
Short o'f rem·ovt'ns damaged c·•'lage, ... __ has been
...
..... ~
614-992·7643. .
'we will work within your budget. ·
no effective treatment for people who tear lhe cushion- 1
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-8181
ing material in·the joint Its removal can cause lons·.tetm "·
•·
(No Sunday Calls)
.,............ .J 101 Pomeroy S1rHl ·
~~Man..
.
~
problems, leading to swellins. inflammation, knee lock- . ;;~---~-~-----~-....;,_ _....;;.;;;;;;•
ing and even arthritis,_onhope&lt;lic surgeons said•
Now, a handful of doctors around the counuy are
repairing damage!~ cartilage through a procedure lhat
il)lplants cells from a heallhy part of lhe knee into the
defective part. San Franci.,;;o orthopedic' surgeon James
Garrick has now performed lhe procedure on a handful
oNew Homes
•No Job Too Small
(614) 367-0266
of patients but says it is too eatly to de~ne their suc•Remodeling · •Any and All of Your
cess.
1-800-950-3359
-Garages
·. Home Repair Needs
Swedish researchers, who pioneered the process lhree
•Decu
~all Today for Your
• Top • Trim • Re'moval
years ago, will repon on their latest findings at the meet·
Free Estimates
ing:
• Stump Grinding

NOTICE

Reg. '199

SAVE

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

;, PageantS.·.._______________

Guest ~peaker . - John Carey

BEST QUALITY!

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC:

Elsewhere in the body, spioe-relllled problems ·
accolint for t8 percent of the docton' ~ and the bip, .'
t5 percent.

..

University·hosts President's Qay·music festival

l·

c-umty

RACINE •• JEWELL Home
School Support meeting, Thur¢ay,
7 p.m. at the hOme of Brian and Kim
Hupp. 949-3119.

·

K;nees are th~ weak joint, surgeons say

-Community calendar-

. . IU111 1811.

NOTICE TO tiDDIIII
RIQUEST FOR .
QUAUI'ICATIONt
The Gonerol J111111 M.
Gavin Plant, 1 dlvlolon of
Amertou -rto ~. lo
uo~lng
w:rlt11n
quollflcattono from
prhpoctlvl flrm1 who
41111,. to Ill conetde!ed tor
1 ana yell' 111111 mowing
and brulll hoO _,.,101 o1
111out 30 ecrao II tiM Gavin
Pllllll. Prlnelpoll .,. lnvltad
10 11ncl t!talr rHpeollva
.,allllolllon1, In wtltlna, lly ·
1111' to: Qeti.

,._ry ..

. . _ •• Gavin Plant, (11,0.

2 Black Puppleo, • Weeki Of!!
Bath - · llalher lloatn•'"
ct-. ' 1.....1847'
14 'iMr OW Port No-lin El•
Hound Goed Femlr Plot, ll1 Good ~
Home. 11 ._...110.
1 ~·
llocl&lt; I Whllo ,_Co\ Vljy ·
~114UI:&amp;1.

' :.

a- 111!1 Ublhlll C.hoW. molt

'If., ~ &amp; DOOd wt!h chi

~

•

Clll. molt &amp; ......, 1 ,.. •

:
• .::

7117.

' .' ; '

.............. ' - . ,

•••Ill No llllop~ oallo • 111111
'

II) 1t, '" 14;

m

I

.

'
•

""'Til ·•i•

'""' "
m
.
Call now to oei!Hute
pe-r• I'Wrty. Eorn ,_
,_ell. Stare l Slflpeo. 1 ·
·- 17111.C.277tl.

•

eoa 171, Chllhlnl, Ohio , _ . IIM!lnl !lot 11M
QfH, Attention: L. 1'. t~t&lt;~Mn· Fet1lllf Wlll1l cat:

.....

·

c.._

.,. •••••

Cat. Llllt iiiii~:
'

......~~~~~~, 11

'-

�•

•

•

...

PomirOY • lldclleport, Ohio

.,_...,_
17. IW'I IIIII

PHU.JJP
ALDER

,..... =

.I

41 A 118'1 •

pert

...,_

.

a

• Cllul*
44 ....... llllrlo12 WGol:l ,.... on 41 AcCOunllng

:!:ott=

47

=-'•

13 a-lclll - ·
(2 wdl.) .
14
41 Alrcmt

a...-

=
·=---

maneuvw

15 Wtllld

Iota·cllalr t210: BuM btdl w/

N

.monro11. Ctdor ci!At Curio.
llodroom IUI1t. Pillltl and can·crtlllllft'IL Country FurnH•r•
30W75-11120. Rt 2 N Pt PIN•

a

111·1»7

A K'6 5

•• s

Weat

Eul

• J.
• s

.. 7 2

•J87842
• K J 10 2

Sheota. 373 Goorgeo C - Ad.

81~1 .

MIIIPI*Y

or-

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DOWN

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21 Sgt., e.g.
31 Hoopl grp.
32 Short atMp
32Chtnl'fl

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1o Q IU 8 4

.. 7.

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22 FMMCI

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A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Fe1turlng f-iydro Bath . Don.

21 eo.~aCutUe

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" 10 9

-~lotolidljL

17
18 .

51 F1t111 light
52 Hobgoblin
53~ r-'la

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• A K Q 5

5 Rlqul18

8 Calli. airport '
9 Whlpl
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7 lllnage
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34~

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Vulnerable: North-South

..--1--+-+--~

Dealer: North

South
INT! .
2NT
4.

North

Weot

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animal .

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31 Jim~!~)'

}JY Phillip Alder
Fr~nce

5PAGe LAB
tiOUSf

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1111. 2117111, Route 7 SOulh To
111 Then On Krlntr Rd, Follow
l!aftt, Toolt, GIIIIIW&amp;r111,
Olithlt, Albums, Cralt1, Much

au

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.

:~se::::.:4e~·~l. 30~-

1e111 Dodae Car11van LE. o&lt;Nt
cond., loaded, 1111)11 - · NADA
book value ,7,100, aoklng1 "
$8,200, make olfor. 814·441· 1

One 12 String Gullllr La.,a

This nowspaper will not
knowing!)' ICCIIpl
adYertlsemerils fer real estate
wt1~h IS In v-lon Of tha
law. OUr readers aro henJby
Informed that llil&lt;lwolllnga
advertiJad In this ne\wpaper
are a!Jallable on an equal
. oppo&lt;tunlly basis.

Unilar 'War·

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.

GiiC Jlm!111' 4 Door 4l4
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1884 Sllvorado E•ttndod Cab)'
pickup. •••· automlllk:, Joedecf;'J

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cb:ed, 114-IIU512.
:

RENTA L S

610 Feim Equl~

410 HoUIISIOr Rtnl

Hr.draullc Oil 112.10-Sgaf ptlli. t883 ·Honda 300 utility. 4Wtlilllr,
S dorl Equtpmont, Honderaon, t3,200.
311488224117.
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18M 300 EX 4 W.hHII&lt;. Eacal·l
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080, Collin Ewnlngo, 11+448- 1
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any such preference,
• lmbllon or dlsorlmlnaflon."

3000 Hour•

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o!-1968 wtrlch makea .K illllgol
10 advertise "any 1)18fore0ce,
llmnatlon or discrimination
basedon race,.c:olof, religion,
sex familial status or national
'origin, or any ln!enlloo 10

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BORN LoSER
,.00·, I'AJW~! '.OOL.D YOU &amp;IVE .,.

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Instruments

40 L.eaVI 011 ,;,;
41 Buddy•.
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42 lmpnea.,lll!

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November. In an unexciting final,
Prance defeatt)d Indonesia by 358 to
palnltr
· ~"
·269. The winning team was Marc
45 Useaametat
laatBompis, Alain Levy, Christian Mari,
48 Doff, e.g:
Herve Mouiel, Frank Mutton and · ~....-~.._­
50 JFK eight
Henri Szwarc, with Jean-Louis Stoppa
. the nonpiaying captain. Only Levy and
J~
Mouiei ~ained from the team that
won four years .earlier In Salsomag"'
liore, llaly; but Marl and $zwarc were
,·~
0,1
victorious in 1980 in Valkenburg,
•••
Holl8nd.
·. .
In the semifinal; France was bebind
• 0 I( s
U
M
J
T
WVVKWZ
FO
FB
Taiwan after 84 the K deals. This
was board as.
. .
WBY
CKWTP
c KW Y- F' Z Z AK
In the Qpen ~m. the Taiwanese
had an eight,rotlnd auction to six
C M E " MZ Y
MT
, NWPPKT
OKSU
· hearts! 'l'he last bid was intendt!d as.a
grand-slam try in spades, but was misAMY U .
HCWBDKO. '
CME
N U
,understood. This inelegant contract
finislied five clown: 500 to France.
F w·
A l w D w.
~
· · ,In the Closed Room, the French
0 II B
...
[ ~'::; ::O... wa.L. ~'llUYCU.,. were doubly lucky. First, B.omP.is · ,
.
·~
N7
'
opened
one
oo-trump
out
of
tum
and
PREVIOUS
·soLUTION:
"If
I
were
lwo-laced,
would
I
be W..aring this orrer - Ji;
....,._ ~ Nf.\oJ Vlo{J.JJ/o\ ~ ·1 no one noticed! ·(If someone had noAbraham Uncoln.
·
· : ~i
!iced, North would have had to pass
·throughout. Probably South would
-.::
haveopenedthreeno-trumpandwon
I'UTNJI.Y Ci~'O ,i\,.1:
1)-t:::. ~Q.e WOit
12 tricks: a heart to the nine, the club
PIIZIII \:)\!;:! J.'-QU ~t. - ·q, P&lt;t• ~
IAMI · .. .;;::
ace and a club toward declarer's jack.&gt;
_____...;._...;; lllllotl .., CLAY L POUAH _.;;....;.·- - - In response to Stayman, two no-tr-ump
llhowed both. mliJO!'S. Four diamonds
r::~mb\:7!;.,~1 :::
. . .... '
was a trtnsfer to spadee. Then Marl
low .to f~"" four -dl. .
~J
. bid what he hoped his partner could
•
:!:!
.' J
The Daily Bulletin claimed, "There
. . • AI.
. • El. R..•
make.
,,
were no problems in the play, of .
""
1
•;J
course." IM it seems to me lhllt a dia·
.;
mond lead would defeat the slam .
S WI K H
However, West chose his singleton
.....
club. Bompfs won wi!h dummy's king, ·
~
~~
·~
drew trumps and conceded a club
• .
.
_ _ _
~
trick. In moment. South ndl'ed dum-

FRANK &amp; EAJlNEST
~": - . lluat Be Plld In
;OEADLIIE: 2:00 p.m. ·
lbo .IIIIJ t.lore 1111 ad It 10 run.
......, - . 2:1111 p.m.~
........ lillian • .10:00 Lm. sat·

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car.··
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hamlllawn

succeadully defended its ..

' World Open Team Olympiad tiUe last

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34 Rum•drlnl&lt; ,.
35 Playwright ....

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quoted •
by tilling· In the miuing words

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you develop from step No. 3 below.

IT'S IN BLACK

SEE7 I WROTE /4. LITTLE
POEM, AND THEN I D~EW .

· AND W~ITE ..

I[I I II

SOME loiEARTS AROUND IT••

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'

SCIAM-LITS ANSWERS.
Unlike • Prone - Heron • Jovial • OPINION
The most remarkable thing about pollsters is how they
find so manv people Witho!Jt an OPINION.

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LEO (Jufy. 23-A~g. 221 Tills ·•• a goadyou today pullfy on lmpullt. .kaap tractc dey io flnalozelegal mann, such u conof lhelr favore, becau~ later II will be lracta an~ agreements. The odds are
your tum lo rec~. K~ ~" lo now In your tailor and thla co~ld add
look for romance and you II
11. The 1111181gh11o your pcieition.• .
.
Aatro-Graph Malchmaker • lntlanlly · Y1AQO (Au;. zs.8opi. 221 You are still in
-~~ wl!ich llgnt Ira romanlicllfly J*· a 1~ ..~eva.. oo contin111ct lor you, Mlllf S2.75 10 Mllchrnaker, 118 locuaing on meaningful ~and
·

AI1RO·ORAPH

· are likely

to do n1ct !hlnga for

"nd

•

· BERNICE
BEUEOSOL

1113 EIICOIILX 4 Door1, L - ,

Now Tlrot, Vory Cloan, 4t,qoo
............ 1+211-1.

I1'0fWIE TANK' a..ooo Gollon

1--537-

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UIIIIII' :r'*Mar: Ill HteV, Duty 3
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Tlreo, S..lot Llghll, 114·245-.

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loaded, 11,000 miiH, IIIII undof
........... 1:1,100, 814112 331U .

114 Chovrolo1 CI¥1Ner, 14,000
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.
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c/o thil newepaper, P.O. Bo~ 17&amp;8, befie~~eln your ablllly to analn lhtnt . .
Muri11y lfil sr.tlbn, New York, NY 101118. UIR~ (lopl. 23-0ct. 23) Whel8var you
AAII!I •llarcli 21·Aprtl 11) You hav, m8Q an appeara'nc!t today, you wiH be
iwo big tJCIIU going lot you IO'IIIy&gt; your W.ri raceiVId. Thla could be "peclai!Y
•~ io 10nn 11n!CIIIII ~ and · .true with peraone !Yith whom you sl!are
'• your relallariihlp )With Lldv Ll,ldt. Both .,.claalntallllll.
.
.
wiN full!l1 naedl,'
.
, "
ICOI'IPIO (Ool. 24-Mo¥. 22) There mlghl
, .TAIIU (Apn!IG llai lO) ~ . b. two '" your . . today, IIICh
opportllnlllea .,. hollering •Q!Ind you · w111r a pot of ga1c1 of Its - · Do not put
IOdO¥. bo1h tapglbly arid Intangibly. · any limit on yoilr ercpeclallonllnd pl&lt;lba·
14 11187
•
. · Braaka could be generatld·ln, aacll of bllltiee.
l!ignllicanl tong-range plana you've . -..,.,.._
.IAGITTAIIIUI (Nov. 21-0.C. 21) Tilt
already arartld to lmplerHnt could be 01!~1 ...., 11..,..,. 211) Today yool· klrnly autplcea qf othtra co.~ld bring
Imp II He W:.oltllln lbo I'M' ahlld. Do could be IUcldar
UIUij wherf ealau- 'goaclthlngl. Tha ,_. you got out and .
n6t. ._ 'fl YIJII' illi!lllol•- PMIOI'f lllld rillta .,.·coo-rwd. bu1 nOI In fiNo. . almllatw. lhe more you are likely to ll(1d

•fe!!·

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llooll, lltlcll, -

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11n1111. ... Cllludo Wlnllrl.
Rio Grande, OH CaH t1 4-2451121.

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AQUAJIIIUI (.11,..
11) II yau
. . . . M .On your tar.nt and knovr!l.Hoe. not an othere about Wh9m rou ·
~lilt.~ the flrit 11'111 put. ~.,._
ill,.,....._ohuccUI.
flllel8:..... " lfl . , , . . _ ~·~.
,:;
ill,

loul ,gamblil.

TheN". deflnllt.CIIfl.r.
' .

.nc. bet\laan lbo two.

uniqueopparturilll.e. .
OAPIIICOAN (OM. 11-.lln. 11) Wyou
hava -lllng good going lor you 81
- ardlanllwaya can be found IOday
lo e~panoj or Improve upon thli baee.

CA'IC"II I"- 11.Jujy II) A alllnge
inlflltl ~
today.' ,.,....,., It _,, be becljlll ~f
any tpl!liil tffarll on ~· part, M'l hlp- , EieYIIIY~U•"P'!C!atl6r•.
peft ollll _, Wtllon.
'•
1:
.
rou ll!rva been hoping lor

0

,,

•

,,__

il

··-

�Ohio Lottery

I

Northwestern
falfsto OSU
by 15 points

Pick 3:
• 9-2-7
Plck4: ·
8-9-8-3
-tsuckeye 5:
1~ 5-26-28-33

Sporta on Pege 4

Cloudy tonight, cfllnc.
of r•ln, then t u =
light - · .,....
Lows In the 201.
•
fluriiee. Highs In the 30e•

•
•

VoL 47, NO. 200
'01117, CJhlo 'IIIIer p. Uo his. Ccwl$111!1

2 Secllona, 12 ....... 3 5 -

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 14, 1997

A o.m- ca. Na•olltll)lr

Legislators eye .new try at workers' comp reform
. .
.
· Cupp said his bill- and a companion introduced in tbe House - would for up to 200 weeks. The legislation would ~ut that to S2 weeks.
help eliminate wasle, fraud, abuse and delays lhat hurt both injured workers
· Cupp said the changes will benefit truly injured workers by freeing ~p
COLUMBUS - Conipliiniag lhat recent Ohio Supreme Court decisions with legitimale claims and tbe companies who pay tbe bills.
money now lost to waste and fraud. Another provision would allow workhave undermined previous reform efforts. House and Senale Republicans say
Union leaders don' t see it tbat way. They see the legislationu a payback ers to begin reCeiving benefits immediately after their injuries.
tbey're going to take an~ .sbot at ov~ling tbe state's worlr.ers' com- for the GOP's backers in the business community to the detriment of work- . The legislation is the la1es1 altempt to overhaul !he workers' comp, syspensation system. .
·
ers.·
tem - which Gov. George Voinovich used to describe as "tlie silent killer
"Since tbe 1980s, tbere bas been significant improvements to tbe work"We see this as an unfair workers' compensation bill," said Tom Bell, . of jobs in Ohio."
·
ers' compensation system," Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Lima. said Thwsday before direclor of compensation for tbe Ohio AFL-CIO.
A law that t(/Ok effecl in September l99S abolished the independent Workintroducing legislation aimed at feneting out abuse and speeding claims pro"It's intended 10 cause hann to injured workers and tbeir families."
ers'
Compensation Board and gave the governor control over the system.
-cessing.
Among the changes contained in the legislation: a !eduction in·the maxSince the,., tbe bureau has cut its wor~ force from 4,200 to about 3,600
• "However, a fundamental problem still remains."
.
imul)llength of a claim from 10 years to three, an end 10 multiple payments and begun moving claims into a managed care system.
·
. ·
r Cupp said a &amp;cries of Supreme Court rulings have expanded tbe defini- on the same claim, and a cap preventing injured workers from making more
Business groups praise the changes made already, but say more muSI be
•tion of occupational injury and built incentives into tbe system lhat encour- money on disability retirement than they earned on 1he job. . .
.
age workers to stay home and collect benefits instead of retoming to work.
The legislation also would reduce the length of time tbe state will pay benwe've made sleps in the right direclion with increnlental adjuslHe bluned "judiciallqislatidg" for adding costs to the workers' com- ' efits to Ohioans who are able to return to work bul unable to find a job. Cur- ment and administrative changes, it's now time to finish the job with real
·pensation program lhat never were anticipated by the Legislature.
rently, tbe system pays lhe injured workers two-thirds of their fonner wage · reform," said Andrew Doebrei, president of lhe Ohio Chamber of Commerce.

By I»AUL ao.....RADA
A..aclllld Preu Writer

.

"

.

AS LOW AS:·

do~~Wbile

'

Israeli prime

.

mini~ter. ready

to ~alk

u.s.

Netanyahu's ·
visit reveals hope
to pursue peace
with Syrlantl

.-.

.

\

.

. '·

'I

..
.!

• '·.t

.Renewed planning
commission looking
to revise regulations

By JIM FREEMAN
lion may have to be included on 1be
By J,VIRY SCHWEID
Sentinel News Staff
deed," he said.
·
AP D~ Wrllllr
A resurrected Meigs County
Lentes said several out-of-coumy
WASHINGTON Israeli
Regional Planning c;;ommission met developers arc buying propcny·i111he
· Prime
Minister
Benjamin
Thursday afternoon '1o discuss its county. taking advantage of lax subNetanyabu said today he is ready
fulure plans. . , ·
division regulations.
10 '1leCt "yesterday" with President
In lhe past, lhe planning commisLentes appointed a subcommittee
H~cz Assad of Sypa for Mideast
sion tackled tasks concerning indus- consisting of himself, Health Departpeace negotiations without any ·
trial development, tourism, strategic ment Director Jon Jacobs, Engineer
' preconditions.
.
planning and others, tasks which have Robert Eason and county audilor's
· "The question is what does
assu111ed by · ?ther agencies .a~d office employee Denver Warner to .
President Assad want," said
groups, •ncludmg the . Commumty review the subdivision regulations.
~:. ...JM\I!II~ahu, who is in Wa5hi~n
,_ Improvement Corpor'IIJOn, lhe eco- • .l.entes said copies of the ·R!tiJii· to ·mcer wilh l"i'C'Sidi:nt ..Cilt1ioi."'1&lt;
n&lt;li'N« d~velol&gt;ment office and the lions need to be submilled to banks
· . , ·: It ' ought .\O ,be that (Assad)
Meigs Coun1y Chamber of Com- realiors. the economic !levelopmeni ·
· .sbqild be inlei'CS~ in tbe peace of
merce. ·
. officer and others.
· Syria's cbildren and . the future....
"We need 10 lei people know (lhe
. However, lhe planning commis:
generlltions' destiny as· I am for
s1on ~nU controls placemenl of new regulations) are out there," be said.
Israel's children and our future;.•
subdiVISIOns ~nd development w1thCurrenlly, the existing officers
the Israeli leader said on the NBC .
IJI.Ihe county s flood plams. .
will serve as the nominating com· "Today" show. "You'll have to
Piannmg CommiSsion Prcsidenl mittee for new officers once lhe
inlerview him and ask him 'Why
John R: Lentes saiq the new ~o.m - Meigs Counly Board of Commisdon,'t you just come to the peace
miSSJon s first task should be rev1s1on -sioners appoints new members.
table?'"
of us daled subdiVISion regulat1~ns
Curren! officers include: John
Netanyabu declined to spell out
- mos1 .notably those_conccrmng Lcntes, presidenl; Jon Jacobs, firsl
the.details of a "creative formula"
construction .m floodplams..
vice president; Tuppers Plains- .
'
'
.
he sl!id he suppons for peace talks.
. U,ntes sa1d some planmng .com- Chester Water District Manager Don
HOI'E~: RENEWED - ,President Clinton looked on aa 1. . .11 Prime Mlnlater Benjamin
Asked when he would meet with
miSSIOn members have mel mfo~- Poole, second vice · president; and
,..._nyahuanawerecf
a reporter's question during alolnt news COIIr.re.lce Thul'lclay at the White ·
Assad, he replied, "Yeslerday."
mally in the last year and a half to. County Treasurer Howard Frank
HouM. Tl'le president ..ld the rec:ent laraeii-Paleatlnlan agi'HIIIant had crNtecj "a renewed
look at proposed·subdivisions. .
secretary/treasurer. .
'
''I'd rather not engage in the
sanM of'promiMin the Middle Eilll" (AP)
,
·
.
. polemics of . preconditions,'' . he
"A
lot
of
people
arc
building
anyPresent
were
Frank
Poole
Eason
'
.
said. "In point of practice, .I don't
how in the floodplains," Lcntcs said. 1ourism director Kari~ John~on and
"We need IO let develope~s know Counly Auditor Nancy Campbell.
. think we can gel prelty far if (anti- ·was not interested in just the
ton ·said during a joint news con- 'an agreement with the Palestinian
that
~hey need to let buyers know lhey
Lcntcs said the group would meet
Israeli) terrorism continues after ll)echanics of peacemaking; "we
ference with Netanyahu iri which
Authority that relinquished Israel's
arc
m
the
floodplam.
Th1s
mformaagain
in a few weeks to reorganize.
; we start the negotiations. But I'm . are inlerested jq,results."
the two leaders heaped Pl'llise on
conll'Ol over most of the West Bank
· ~ not in the business of puuing up
Clinton shjed away from
each Oilier. "I am hopeful we can ' town of Hebron and some rural ·
· · preconditions."
divulging ·tbe overtures Netanyahu
get the Syrian track going again."
areas of the West Bank.
' Based on Netanyahu's undisauthorized the United States to
According to the Israeli news- , · • At the same time. the prime .
closed proposals, Clinton said he is relay to President Hafez Assad in
paper Yediol Ahronot, Ne1anyahu
minisler has slressed his main aim
encouraged peace talks with Syria Damascus. Any disclosure could
told bcith Clinton and Secretary of
is to assure the security of ihe
can be ~vived .
·
undermine pr&lt;WJecl&lt; for success,
State Ma4eleine Albright thai "you
Israeli people in pursuing agree·
"Both . nations want to con- 'Clinton said. '!•
must make it clear 10 Assad 1ha1 he
ments with Arab neighbors. ·
Sleel-co~ered roadways caused Tuppers Plains~
elude a peace agreement, and tl!e
Diplomalic'fsources stressed
m11st think of other oplions- the ·
That leaves the door open toter·little
chaos Thursday evening, with
United States will work with both
Nelanyahu ha~·nffered a resum~
Shirley Buckner, Pomeroy, lost
option of a Iota! withdrawal from . ritorial compromise on the Syrian
only
several
wcalhcr-rclatcd
accicontrol of her 1989 Oldsmobile on .
nations to try 10 achieve that goal," , . tion of the ncgQtiations that broke
the Golan docs not exist from our
front
dents reported.
the icc-covered road. Her car went off
Clinton said Thursday after meet- down a year al,(l without preconpoinl of vi~w. ''
.
Picking up on lhat theme, Oin'
Eastern
Local
Schools
were
on
a
the
left ;ide of the road and struck a
ing wilh Netanyabu at the White
dilions. Thai i icates he may. be
• Nela,nyahu and his Likud polilloJi said he. sbared the prime mindelay
this
morning
while
two-hour
dilch,
receiving lighl damage. the
HOilse,
prepared to rei uish pan of t.he
ical coalition won conll'OI of lhe
ister's interest in "peace and secuMeigs
and
SoUihein
schools
operatrepon
staled
~
Netanyahu, speaking at a dinner
Golan Hoighl ' n an agreemenl
Israeli government last May on an
rity" and emerged from their ial ks
1
ed
on
normal
schedules.
Thursday nighl at the Israeli · with Syria.
An01hcr accident on Forest Run .
'elec1ion pla1form thai questioned
"wilh renewed confidence to proSeveral accidcnls were .reponed Road. Minersville. remains un~cr
Embassy, was similarly upbeat. "I,
Otberwise,·tl!e sources declined
ceed on that road."
swapping land for peace in deals
overnight in the counly ·by Meigs inv.cs;tigatioil.
too, am confident we can reach our to ~Iabonte.
with the Arabs,
Earlier, al ljlair House, Albright
County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
A 1979 AMC four-door owned by
soal." he said.
"I do feel ~noouraged lhat tbere
Afler
some . hesitation,
pledged to make a Slrong personal ·
The
first
accident
occurred
around
Shawn
Price, Racine, slid o(fthc right
The 'pri111e minister said Israel
are thinss working through," Clin-· Netanyahu . last month concluded effort to further peacemaking
7:,30 p.m . on Slate Route 681 :
side of the roadway, coming to rest
· Crystal R. 11ppie, 16. Shade, was againsl a fence owned by Don .
eastl&gt;ound driving a 1988 Chevrolet Grucscr. The owner or driver has not
and lost control on lhc icy road, going been contacted, according to the
off lhe left side of the road and strik- report.
ing a ditch, according 10 a sherifrs
Several. olher rcpons of vehicles
depanmcnt report. Modcralc damage sliding off the roadway with no dam- ·
was reponed.
age were received.
BOULDER. Colo. (AP) - A experts including handwriti~g anaThe Second accident happened
No accidents were ~poncd In
around 8:09 p.m. on SR 7 south of Middlcpon or Pomeroy.
•proseculor expressed confidence that lysts and a former FBI profiler.
the killer of 6-year-old beauty queen
Instead, he said he was addressing
JonBenet Ramsey will I.e caught and those who have accu~ investigalors
urged people to be patient while of making mis1akes reminiscen1 of ·
wHee compile cvidellj:c.
.
the OJ. Simpson case.
Boulder District Attorney Alex
Amo~g the criticisms are that
Hunter who bas enlisted the help of police have still not formally inter~
two
members of OJ. Simpson's . viewed the parent$, didn't searchthe
WASHINGTON (AP) - Prices the extremes of a recession and stasdefense teain, said Thursday that the home for eight hours afler JonBenet
p!lid to producers fell 0.3 percent in nant growth but you also avoid art
list of suspects is mirrowina.
. . was reported kidnapped, and serit the
January,
the bigges1 drop in n: jre overheated econOmy that sendS infla. · , "You will.pay for what you d1d, girl's father, 8 potential suspect, 1o
lhan two years, helped by declines in tion noticeably bi&amp;llcr," said Richard
·aild we have no doubt th" will hap- search for clues.
.
heating oil, meat and passenger cars. G. Hoffman, chiefeconomistofPNC
pen," Hu!lter said, directing his state·
Henry 'Lee, a forensic scientist
A separate repon showed American Bank Corp. in PittsbiJrah.
ment to the "person or persons that . who heads the Connecticut State
industrial
production cooling.
A worse-than-anticipated report
took this baby trom us." .
. Poli~e crime laboratory, and DNA
Today's price report from the ·could
. have roiled 1be stock market
Hunter cautioned residents II expert Barry Scheck will help BoulLabor
Department
wu
welcome
.wh!ere
the belief that inflation is concould talce months to solve the slay- !let investigators on DNA, crime
news
for
financial
markets,
compared
:
tained
helped the Dow Jones indusing 11111 said prosecutors ~ve girded scene analysis and other matters,
to"the worrisome o.6pe(Cenljump in trial avelqe break 7,000 for the first
for a "David vs. Goliath" legal bet· Hunter said.
·
SUSPECT LIST NARROWS- BOulder (COlo.) DllblctAlloti..y
~bcr, and much better than the lime Thursday, just four fi\Oflths af1Cr
Lee and Scheck ~ere expens on
tie. ·
AJu Hunter, rtghl, uld the ...spei:lu.t In the Jonl•net RemMy . inodest rise analysts expected. ·
pushina past 6,000. 'rhe bii!C .chip
He later said hewun't~ferringto Simpson·~ hiJih·priced l~gal team. , 1'-YIIIO lnve41tlgatton Iii nat10Wiilt dultng I , _ . COIIIIrii!Ct
.
"It
s11ggests
we
can
have
a
wcllaverage
call!led down 1oday, chang- .·
"We know where we're headed,
the girl's parents, John and Patricia
~day. .At right ._ Boulder Pollee Chief TQIII. Koby. (AP)
.
balariced
economy
where
you
avoid
·
ing
!itt~
in early trading. . .
Ramsey, who have ~ired a learn of

Wintry mix gets blame
for several accidents

·o.A. ·calls for patience

.until Ramsey probe ends

Wholesale price decline
cheers financial markets

key

.

'
' .;

,...

!

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