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                  <text>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•

•
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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

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AS LOW AS:·

do~~Wbile

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Israeli prime

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mini~ter. ready

to ~alk

u.s.

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

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.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- .
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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

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�CommentarY

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,.-,,:'*"-' 1.f.1..,
~

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By JACK ANOIAION IIICI

~inl!H8 .

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Gannett

l'llia•.,

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~------------~~----~·

Berry's .World
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" Flurries, highs in. the 30s
:.~ pr.
ojected
for the.. weekend
L'
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• By The Alloclllld Pra 11
. this date at the Columbus weadner
The snow will be reduced to flur- station was 68 degrees in .1918 while
riet ovet most ot Ohio by Satiuday, .the record lpw was 8 below zero in
the NationaJWeather Serviee said. , I90S. Sunset tonight will be at 6:06
SnowfaU amounts overnight .P•lll· and sunrise Satllf!lay at 7:24
ranged from 1-3 inches acros1Hiic ·. a.l!l.
· · ·
state. As usual, the ·snowbelt east of
Warlller forecast:
· . •· Cleveland received tbe heaviest
Tonight.. :Cloudy. A chance of rain
mutations.
· until mid(light ...Then a chance of
More light snow was pouible in light snow. Lows in the upper 20s.
•· nonhern Ohio tonight, ·while the rest West winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
··· of the state will get scattered flurries. precipillitlon 40 percent.
'. Lows will.be 20-25.
Satuiday...Cioudy with a chance
The record-high temperaiUre: for of flurries. Highs in the upper ;ms.

accu'

;.

By O.Orge R. Pl!lgenz

: BoatlJna sldlls eourse

Stocks
·"

George R. PlagetJ%

Dianer pluned . ·
·
. klasagn~
· inner will be held Sat·
·urday at S p.m. at the ·Syracuse
Natarene
uo'ch, with serving to
begin at 5 p. . Proceeds will go to
.the Syrac-Nazarene Caravan progtam, · whiai operates youth program.

Am Ell PoWer .......................41~

Brldg~· clo$ed

AmrTech ..:'1........................;...13:6.
Aahland 011 ............................43\
·• AT&amp;T .......................~....,........38\
88nk OM..........................,...... ~

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Hospital news ··

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morni11ff worship service,
!JOU 111Jl!f /(JwW !JOUr

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weitfi11fJ vows renewed, ·

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Caf{992-3172 if!fOU wouftf ~ to
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EMS units ·log eight cal~s ·

nrC Holison Bridge, over Leading
Creek in Middleport has been closed
' until further;,.nolice, according ·to
County Engineer Roben Eason.
Motorists ~ advised to use LeadBob l!van~ ......~ ..................... 1
ins
Creek R~ between State Route
lorg-Wemtr ...................;.••.•41
7
and
Billine~ Route 7 as a de\Our.
Cham~ '"'""""'":'"'""""~... ~., ... ,....17
Chlltlri:lila 8Mpa ................... 4\
The brid&amp;~, is approximately 70
Ctty Hoking ...............-...........311 \
years old, £asi!n said Thursday afterPederllllogul........................25\
noon. He indicated the structure was
a~ .................................
in
c!eclining condition. '
.
Qooclyelr·...............................54 A
"We have ,(ound some faults we
K-mart .....................................10\
need to evaliLI!.~.": he said. On examL.lndl !nd.............................
Umlted ••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••• 17~ . 'ination it was 11,0ted that several rivOhio VIMy Btnll: ................;•• .37
et heads have nlsted ofT. he said.
OM Velley............................. 37'1.
"We can't s~y much more al this
PeoptM .................................21'1.
time.
We have to clean it up and look
'Pretn ·Fin1 ...............................11Sf
.
at
it,"
he said, :~itig that the inspecFlockwell ...............................e7'11
tion process will likely take a miniRD-SI*Ioooooooooooooouo:ooo;,oooooo;,180~
Shottey'l ...........·...................... 7'1.
mum of one monlils and possibly as
Star link .............................. 31~
long as three months.
.
Wendv'l ................................22 :4
Eason said llle high,way departWorthlngton ..........................20~
ment has subn)lned applications for
federal
money ill? replace the bridge.
Stock report• are the 10:30
Meanwhile.
~ workers
have
a.m. quot• provided by AdWit
insialled barricades and sigps markof Galllpolla.
.
;
.
ing lhe closed bridge.
AkZo ........................................!~

preiching. Later ,;.,hen the service · the .headline, "Tn:ndy Sennons,
was over and she was shaking hllllds Vacant Pews." The book's author
With lhe minister at the door, sbe said says churchgoers have tbe feelini
"Lovely service, .pilstor." I have an lhat ministcrs in tbe mainline churchidea ~he was :::Lsincere.
es have ceued to accept lhe ·author·
FOr many
, churchgoiq is ity ,o f Scripture and n preaching ser·
a m~tter of comi~ into a spiritual · mons that simply echo secular v~W. .
atmosplierc that pes them quiet on topics li.ke AIDS.
and pcacef~l. The~ feel su_rrounded
~ author's prescriptlon for
by an Infinrte ~nee, whrch relax- rcVLVIng lhe once-dOminant mainline
e_s their. fears and andeties. Some -- churches? It is not to "IUm up y0ur
hke th1s womanJ -- may feel so hearing aids and listen." 11 is to return ·
rell!J&lt;ed ~ha.t they even fall B;Sicep. . to ~ ci8$Sic. expressions of !he
If ~1s 1s what church ts .really Christian failil that people want to
about, 11 ma:r not be necessary to pay bear and to engage in claaaic: old.
close attention to the sermon. The fashioned Chriltian ourreach
problem is. people today ,.-e not ''Knock on doon."
·
merely turning off the sermon, Iiley
G-. l'laacw 11 a I) • a' ,

Be honest now. Do you listen
. intently t.o the sennon on Sunday
morning1 Or does your mind wander
to other matters when the minister is
in the pulpit?
· When I was growing up our family auended the Lutheran Church- ty of golfers on the fairway ahead of
Missouri Synod. It seemed to me that him, he shouted "Fore!" ·
.
the minister was always talking about
Conslernation is the word for
the Babylonian captivity cir the "vic- what followed in !be church .
· arious atonement," neither of which
One man I know . turns off his
IicJd much interest for me. ·
'hearing aid just· befurc the serm~n
- So I would spend tbe:'time match- startS. He calls it "taking advantage
ing the balling averages of the Cleve.- of a natural infirmity."
land Indians that I hid memorized
nme was wben the sermon was
with the corresponding numbers in the piece de resis~ of the 'service
tbe hymnal. lb this day I can tell you in most chutcbes: The big-name
in a flash that Elr1 A~ll batted .288 preachers ·spoke for .30 minutes. A
in 1935. (You could loOt it up.) Sad consensus today would set the jdeal are~u:!'~'!"'~~w"!; :~w ::::.:..New ;aper Ea11,1rdw
to say, l!ymn No . .288 .~ slipped length of a ·sermon at 1·2 minutes. book, "The Empty Cllurch," carries .
Soa\e would be happier with no ser·
completely from memory. .
'
I once beard of a man whoploiyed. mon .. all.
.
.
.ill imqinary pme or aolf while the · A putor who announced to bis
Five years agq: American apeed slcater' Bonnie Blair won her soconc1 aokl
minisw wu preachina. He would conpepdon one Sunday morniq medal of the Albetlville Olympics, in die 1,000 meters event. The former
picture himselt makina pan or Ilia! becMII" of certain eircum1tances Soviet republic~. of Ukraine, Moldova and Azerbaijan rejected a propo111
.binliel on el'tiiY hole, wbiclr ICXounl~ . thele would be. 110 ·ICI!IJO!I that day for a unified army, sharply rebuffina Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin. ·
ed for tbe smile on his face throuih-' wu arnted with lpplause.
'
· · One year ago: ll:xas Sen. Phil (lramm boWed out of tbe rKC for tbe
outlhe
He wu a favorite of
Some woukhay it is the mood Re~~Jican presidential nomination foilowina his JlOO!' showinaa in tbe
!be pacor- until am unfortunlle inei· IbM a church service creates, rather Lou1s1ana and Iowa CIIICIIICI.
·
.
.
,
deJit occurrnd., · '
. than anythina the minill« says, that
· Today's Binthdays: TV~ Hup Downs is 76. Atttea·li• fllo.
The·minister. comin1 to !be dra- is most itnportant to churchgoers.
renee Henderson is63. Country sinaer Razzy Bailey is 58. Jounlllist c.t
IIIIIK hip,.poinl in hit MDIDD on !he • I recall a well-dreued woman in Bernstein is 53. ~Orei(lry Hines ii.Sl.·Sen.1udd Oreu. R·N.H.
devil, spoke out in aloud vqice from !he pew ahead of me one Sunday is SO. Cajun sinJI'f·muaician Michael Doucet (Beausoleil) is 46. Actor ~
the pulpit. "$hould we. be for Satan momlaa. ~be appeared to be dead to ~ahll• 41. 'Acrnia Mea 'nlly il 37. ll:nnis player Manuela Maleev•frla·
or againai him?'!
the world f!'Jrile .the c~an wu· mere 11 30.
·
·

Area man cited
,after accident

A free boating skills course spon- Dl11111rldance announced
sbred by the U.S. Coast Guard AuxA sweetheart dinner and dance
iliary will be held startin1 March 4 at ·will be held at the Scipio Township
St. .Paul Lutheran Church in Volunteer Ftre Department Saturday.
Pomeroy. Classes run from 7:30 ·IIi' Pl!rner wil~be served frOm S-1 p.m.
9:30 . p.m. and cover 13 topics, with die da'nce'th be hel4 from 8!fl
inclu~ing equipment, trailering, holll p.m.
1 I!Jndhng, ru.!es, weather al',d ,t&amp;!lios. .
"v· ·
' ·For more Jnfonnation,' ell I 'Iim . Caneer Society to meet
' Ooodrich it 949;3301 or Donna- • Th~ Meiss County unit of the
, Davis at 992-6107.
American Cancer Society will meet
'
at S p.m. Thesdlly at Veter:ans Memofl"'!!!l!!!!!!l!!"":!:ll!!!. .""":*":!'~,_""''l rial Hospital cooference room.

.

Just at th&amp;t momen!o the golfer was
driving ofT. the tee in the makebelieve game he was playing in his
head. Seeing in his mind's eye a par- ·

.

11'e. ~11!11 Repu6lic1111 Lincoln
, - Day Dnnner will be held SaiUrday, 6
. . ; P·~· _.,the Meigs HighSchool cafe. tena ~ Pomeroy. Guest speaker
' ' will be Slate Rep. Jobn Carey. 'nck. ets will be available at the door.
..

Is the sermon worth listening to?
'

·.

tinued non-stop conlnlct talks in an sengers.
leuko dystrophy.
attempt to end !he countdown toward
The airline canceled most overBani Oct. 6, 1988 in Gallipolis, be was the son of William A. and Loret- tonight's holiday weekend strike seas flights and about a dozen round·
11 Hall Barley of Rutland.
.
deadline. But with no resolution in trip domestic nights today so that airSurviving besides his parents are a sister, Kristin Barley at home: mater- ~ight, .t_he airline already was cancel- 'craft would not be stranded at airports
nal grandparents, Charles and Marlene Hall of Bedford; paternal grandmother, rng •lri&gt;lrt a dozen domeslic flights . with no room to slore them for an
Marcilain Upholz of Cleveland; paternal grandparents, Bill and Carol Bar- today. ·
extended penod.
ley of Bedford; great·grandparents,'George and Bonita IOglesofRudand; and . Airline and pilOts representatives
John Hotard, · an airline
lilree uncles, five aunts and several cousins.
and federal mediators began to talk- .spokesman, said the canceled flights
He w,u preceded in death by a brother, William E. Barley,. in 1991.
ar?u~d·the-clock Thursday night · included those to and from White
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in !be McGiougblin Cemetery With Just hours left in their scheduled Plains. N:.Y.. and Orange Co\IRty.
in Ru~. Pastor left' Smith will officiate. Friends may call at the Birch- negotiations.
. Calif. He said passengers booked on
field Funeral Home, Rutland, from 4-9 p.m. SaiUrday:Th,e family will be preBoth s~des said they were willing the canceled flights were riot!fred
sent from 7·9 p.m.
·
to .find mrddle ground, as President Thursday to rebook on other flights
Chnton urged them lo, without shut- to the same deslinalions.
ling down the airline, which handles
The airline canceled scheduled
about 20 percent of the nation's air flighiStooay' to Japan, Central and
. • South America and most of Europe.
Arthur E. "Gene" Randolph, S9, of Coolville, died Thursday. Feb. 13,1997 traffic.
"W~
have
a
long
way
to
go
and
a The only exceptions were flights to
at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Dayton.
Born Dec. I, 1937 in HOckingport, he was the son of NormaL. Randolph short Umc to do it in," the airline's San Juan, Pueno Rico, and London:
of Coolville, arid the late Kenneth E. Raadolph. He was a retired truck dri- president, Doriatd Carty, toothbrush ·
ver and a lifetime member or the VFW Post 3478 of Coolville where he held an~ sbaving kit in hand, said as he ·
the office of national aide-de-camp. He was a U.S. Air Force veteran, hav- amved at a hotel negotiating site.
By late Thursday, the Allied Pilots
ing served in the Korean War.
'
Associalion's
board of directors had
Besides his mother, he is survived by two daughters, Dora Bell and Jodi
Jones, both of Indiana; two sons, Raymond Randolph of Indiana, and Ken- not voted.to authorize union president
neth Randolph of Virginia; several grandchildren; one sister, Vivian Jim Sovich to call a slrike. But
Kennedy of Long BoiiOm; and two brothers and sisters-in-Jaw, Clyde and Sovich said he expected a vote today.
Clinton, at a news conference
Sylvia Randolph, and Roger and Teresa Randolph, all of Coolville. .
Thursday,
gave no indica1ion whether
Besides his father, he was preceded in death by a brother-in-law, Leroy
he would exercise emergency powers
"Jack" Kennedy.
to
prevent pilots from striking at
· Services will be I p.m. Sunday in the White Funeral Home, CooJ.,ille.
12:01
a.m. Saturday - a deadline
. The Rev. Seldon Johnson Will officiate and burial will be in the Stewart Cemepilots
had
set on Monday in nheir dis"·
tery in Hockingport. wbere military services will be conducted. Friends may
pule
with
the
airline over pay and job
call at the funeral home from 2-4 IUid 6-8 p.m. Saturday.
securlcy.
.
In lieu of flowers; donations may be made to the hospice unit of the VA
The president was urged to do so
Medical Center, 4100 w.. Third St., Dayton, Ohio 45428.
by the airline's chief executive officer. Robetl Crandall, and by mayors.
and some members of Congress from
areas that would be particularly hardCLEVELAND (AP) ...... 'Illere were no tickets sold naming all five num- hit by a strike.
·
bers selected in Thursday night's Buckeye 5 drnwing,the Ohio Lottery said.·
The Transponation Department
There wen: 99 Buckeye 5 tickets with four of the numbers1 and each is on Thursday estimated lhe sttike
worth $250. The 3,788 tictets showing three of the numbers are each worth •
$10, and the 42,026 tickeis showing two of the numbers are each worth $1 .
The Ohio Lottery will pay out $641,917to winners in Thursday's Pick 3
. Numbers daily game. Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled $1,319,961.
In the oCher daily game. Pick 4 Numbers players wagered $358,012 and
A 26-year-trld pomeroy man was
will share $70,700.
.
.
cited
after a on.e-vehicle crash on
Sales in Boick~ye 5 totaled $391 ,S 16. .
·
Flatwoods
Road in Chester Township
The jackpot 'for Saturday's Super Lotto drawing is $4 million.
Thursday arQund 3:'30 p.m.
.
Alfred Charles Smith was eastbound ~riving a 1991 Chevrolet S- io
pickup ttuck when .he went off the
roadway,
damaging a fence owned by ·
Units of the Meigs County EmerMIDDLEPORT
.gency Medical Service recorded eigbt
I:56 p.m., Hobson Road, Charles Joho Bailey, before going into a
creek, according to Meigs County
calls for assistance Thursday. Units R: Stewart. HMC.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby. ·
responding included: ·
·
SCIPIO TWP. VFD
He was cited on charges of oper12:22 a.m .• Mudfork Road, chim- ating a motor vehicle while under the
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6:46 a.m., High Street, Middle- ney fire at Tammy Butcher residence,
of drugs or atcohol and failpan; Jim Clatworthy. Holzer Medical no injuries, Rutland squad assisted. influence
ure to conttol, Soulsby said. He is
Center:
scheduled to appear in Meigs Coun7:57 a.m., Pag(I•:Street, Middlety Court today.
port, Shirley Wise, treated at the
ALL 'UCI:IIft IKIII'r M P ICI!O UP
scene;
Holzer Medical Center
.
(11 : 15 PI! . SA"r'UitDAYI
9:18 a.m., Liberty Lane, MiddleBACH PltUOII RICJSYBS Ill l9 . BLICU
Dllc:barps Feb. 13 - Adam
or PillA I PIPII
port, Avonclle Bas~. treated at· the Waugh, William Zerkle, Clovis DoerAND A •tU.ICNT MOYIRI 16 . 7S eech,
PICI UP IOUit 1'1Citl'll AT QALLUOLLII
seen~;
fer, Patricia Shafer, Wanda Hale.
tOll ItO' I PIIU LOCA'fiD liD'!' 'fO
SPRING YALLIY Cl.w.A 01 AT
I :21 p.m., Rocksprings Road, Daisy Boyer Griffin Boggess.
(IPIINC YALLIT CJR'-AI
Pomeroy, Harold Smith, Veterans . · (Publllh~ with permlaion)
- - - CCIUIIC' IJCJOal - - Memorial Hospital;
9:37 p.m., State Route 124,
RaciJ1e, Joan McClaine. VMH.
!fOU or !fOU /(riow of anyone
Racine squad assisted; '
I I p.m., Lincoln Heights, Jared
that lias 6et.n marrietf at Trinity
Large, tre.aled at the scene.

No Buckeye 5·winner named

:~ Meigs announc~ments
, Lmc91a lhay ~

can Airlines and its pilots union con- and could sfnnd up to 40,000 pas-

·~ Arthur E. 'Gene' Randolph

r

I;

i .

·'

•leo~umbusl34·1

W. VA.

f
!

'

··I '

,.

WIH/sm A. Rusher

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice pre~ident and colamailt
lor The AModated Prell, has reported on Washingtooi and national pol·
Ilia lor -re tlr.. 30 yean.
·

.

,,

;z

]

IND.

•

·The medical excuse ~or .· ro~~U~a.na

:i·

130" I·

"

'1

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri- would cost up to $200 milli011 a day

Chid Alex Barley, 8, of Belch Grove Road. Rudand, died Wednesday,
Feb•.l2, 199711 his ruidetnce, following an extended illness with adrenal

-

:J

•

IToledo I 32' I

'

Airline, pilots union
work to avoid strike ·

Chad Alex Barley

•

IManatleld

')

tl ·

'

AccuW~ focecast for

1M Dally S.ntlnel•,. 3

.

•

"

and
J••n ••

•-J

.

'

By Jack Anderson .

wloalliioiD.,._,__..,._;_.,..,..

0 HI 0 Wr-:ttllf'r
S.tuaday, Feb. 15
MICH.

dae JGC:i81 ·worten - IIIII lbe WMb- 01111), or 1 lllclt of IOCial lltilll, our borlnood ailS inside a federal

iJIIIO!IIawm,alr.tn - who .. . on die new bill frankly doel1101 solve IbM ..ompowaaklnt" ZOllO, but tbe aov..
NEW YQRK -At die beiJb! of . froal !iDe&amp; oflhis IOCi.al011p10i!wL piolllem," .aya Rep. lim Mdmy, R· limment'l t&amp;x blab have done liale
111 Court St., '-ely, Ohio
die Depresaion, residents of Eu! .
Polilicilns on oppo~ilelides of !he La.. wbci helped write !he law 11 1 to aarac1 new roniii"Dw - upecial11....a.21N • Fa: 112-2157
Harlem wen: thrown out of their
member of !he illfluential House ly !he ones that pay a livina wqe.
The problems have been comhomes, peojlle hid to fight for !CI'Ipl
Ways and Means Committee. "I
pounded
in recent y_. by a lleady
to e.~. 111d chitdl:en were lbaildoned
don't realty think such a ~~rae per.
illflux
of
poor
immipants from Mex·
by parents 100 poor to~ for them.
cem.ae of East Harlem welfin ~
Thai WIS nothing compared 10 the
ieniJ WouJd be people who ll'e unable ico and ' the Dominican Republic.
A
Co. Newspaper
social dislocationlhat will be Clllsed
to hold I job; but it's very pouible." Many of these people will immedi;
,..,.,
1
by the receat welfll'e !elorm legisla•
m0
flv
'
Going by .thO numben, job ately lole !heir benefits later this yg-,
ROBERT L WINGETT
lion, social worbn predicL
proapocU for local residents don 'I wben lhe law takes eft'ecL ·
Publlaher
"The:intenllity for some people issuesay !he new law wiD either revi- · look good. Narly half of !he UO,OOQ
Rep. Chlrles Raagel, P.N.Y., who
will be worse than the Detxtssion," talize poor communi lies or IUm them ~nts receive some form of fed- .has represented the area for 26 years,
.CHAALENE HOEF.UCH
MARGARET LEHEW
said Liz Krueger, assisW~t adriliais- . into dangerous economic wastelands. enJ or state usista))Ce, and one-third blames conservatives ror lookin1 to
G1M1'11Mr...,
Conlroller
; trator of the Community Food · But what really scares local residents are on welfare.
'*"e an estimated $S4 billion in savI: Resource .Center, which runs a is that no one knows which scenario
The mariachi music blaring from inp from his constiiUen.. and people
nid "••I• 1
1HarlemsoupJdtchen. "lnlhe 1930s, will beciosertolhe'trulil.
smallsbopsalongamaincommercial elsewhere like them.
'"Sure it costs Jess money l!ld it's
!o&amp;
(lllf_,__•_ot....,pcUrr..&amp;
(poverty)
wu acroudemognphics
Em~lhemostardentsuppc;rrtenof
strip on. II 6th Street belies an eco,...,
__ ,..,,.,_,._
..
_ _ _ _ •..,.....
and
t•
•
_ _ ,...,....,..,,...,.-.._.,._,_~••••-••geography.AttbeiUmofthecen- we rare re.orm admit that the new · nomic situation lhat Jives residents cbeaper in the short term, but on lhe
.-,..-,.- ... • .,. - · 'lao S.O.IIMI, tt1 Caurf 1&amp;,
.: l)ory, it will be far more urban· law simply abandons many people linle to celebt'ale. Unemployment other end there's iOiiJI to be " hip
ti
c:viiD 4mf; ar.MX .. .,.._,~
··
•
} extreme; rural-extrenie and people- who will .cootinue to need support. has remained ~~~tat an estimat- ec price for unwanted children, IJro. .
1 .__!"""---"!"""'!"'-~.._~....;-~~--~
.~
--~~
.-~.~
. :'!'.--~ol'..· of-color-extreme." .
..
M()Jhers and chilcjren by far make up ed 17'percent, evc:n as .it has dropped ken homes, gangsten and violence/'
1
he said. "This is the priCe you pay."
;
As welfare reform prepares to iO til!: largest number of welfare recip- 10 about 5 percent nationwide.
fromthedrawingboardtotbestreets, ients. Those women who simply
Re1ail shops·account for most of Had his psrt regained control of Corn·
:_:
·
the citizens of this downtrodden cor- cannot find wotlc for one reason or the economic ilelivity, but people do gress, Rangel would have been in
''
ner of fo!ew Yorlc are bracing for the ~other will be left behind. .
not have a lot of money to spend position to rewrite the bill 11 chair·
;: By WALTER R. MEARS
. ·
worst. Our associate Andrew Conte
"Wbeliler it's a lack of intelli- since 40 percent of them Jive below man of tbe tax•writing Ways and
· l~ AP Specl!ll ConMpondent
.
recently s!ient several days talking_to gence (on the part of welfare recipi· the federal poverty line. The neigh- Means Committee.
';
WASHINGTON -In the lengthening serial over Anthony l,.ake's 1!0111·
Even thouglllhat didn't happen,
; : iriation to head the CIA, the slory line is familiar, written in oCher Senate
President Clinton and the Democnts
: · tonfmnations, some won. some Jo~l.
· • may yet havea chance to make good
It began with Republican crilics. skeptical of President Clinton's choice
•;
on their promises to restore funding.
; ; from the outset. raising questions and points that persist after more than two
Even some of the most fervent sup, : months, then adding new ones.
. ·
.
.
porters of the new Jaw say !hey are r
It includes the president's repeated expressiolrs of confidence in Lake,
;;
open to chllllges •• eventually.
.
·• his former nalional security adviser, vows to fight for approval, and calls
·
"TI)e
biggest
mistake
·
w
e
can
·
'• •,or prompt senate actJon.
.
·.;
make now would be to slart to bact
;•
And it comes with an undertone 'of Republican hints 1bat Clinton might
. out of Jhis before we aive Ibis a
; ~ be better off wilil another CIA appointee.
chance 'to worlc," said Sen. nm
;~
While those crilics may not stop Lake, !hey certainly are slowing him.
Hutchinson, R'Ark~, who pushed for
.:
Originally. his confirmation hearings wen: to have been held this week.
the new law Jut year as a member of
:•
Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama. chairman of the Intelligence Committbe House. "We need to monitor it
:: tee, postponed them, frrst bec•nse of an inquiry into inves\lllents Lake held
and watch the impact since none of
·: while at the.White House, now because of word that a National Securil}&gt;
us want to see children aet hurt. but
J
:- Council aide was at meetings with an illegal Democratic donor.
: I am oplimistic thai it will worlc."
So die hearing date has been put off until March II, and even that is ten:~
That's lillie consolinlion to activisti
;: tative.
. .
.
.
like. Krueger, who fears ber soup
;;
Lake is paying a $5,000 penalty for his failure- inadvertent, he saidkitchen will be overrun once resi;: to divest himself of energy stoCks he was advised to sell to avoid any appear- ·
dents begin to lose their benefits.
,, ance of a conHict of interest. That Justice Department settlement dealt with
"Someliling will happen," ·she
:~ one issue that had drawn GOP criticism .from the srart. Clinton knew of the
said, "bull believe a Jlrell number of
:; ·issue when he riominaied Lake, but said Lake had done nothing wrong.
people win have to 10 throuafr great
: .;
The Justice Department also said there was no evidence of 'wrongdoing
pain, crisis 'and cruelty before !be
:i in Lake's statements to Congress avoiding disclosure of- tacit administtacountry wakes up and says, 'What
•: tionaJRlCment to allow Iranian arms shipments to Bosnia.in 1994. That wasdid we let them do in 1996?"'
;~ . n'ta new matter either: Lake has said since his nomination that it was a mis·
~ take to keep the infonnation froll) Congress. Clinton agreed.
.
Write Jack Andenoa ucl J•
'i . 11W hasn't satisfied Shelby. And in this process, questions beget quesMoller, Ullited FeaturM,lOO Park
lions. Shelby said lilere are at least 25 more oil which he wants detailed
. Ave., 10Ui6
:j answen before tbe confmnation hearing. He wants infonnation on any Lake
:~ role ia tbe fund-raising meetings- something that hasn't even been sug•~ pied- and an assortment of foreign policy items stemming from his secu;• filY . il le.
.
.
:1 ~ion nominated Lake on Dec. 5, GOI' crilics queslilined whelher
._. his put u a policy adviser would affect his ability to objectively handle inlel·
· by a cheap appeal to their compas- is suffering from anything, i( hii or ational" pot-smoker can tell you.
li~~~~U facts, ~ briefing a Republican Congress ori them even when ·that By William A.. Rl!lhef.,
•
In
approving
11!1.
1
November
inision, into opening the floodgates on her "caregiver" (uJ\I!efined, and ·not What !be passagc ·ofProposition 21S
l: cr1 n'n problems for lhe administration. He's been assuring senators and inteltiatives
legalizing
the
use
of
mari.
unrestricted use of marijuana. I have limiied to a physil:ian) "recom- has done is give a valuable protective
~: Uaence officials that he can.
_ _
•
.
:~
II is not a new point. The same concern w~ raised, by Democrats, when jullll&amp; for medical purposes, the vot- no .objeetion to those who want to mends" its use. Growing marijuana i:olorati~ of medical necessity to the
for such a purpose \f legally proleel- whole process. and put the impri·
;·; President Bush named Robert Gates, a deputy national security adviser and ers of California and Arizona sigimpatience
with
puritanied.
".
naled'
llieir
mawr of a deluded public on it.
fri a CIA veteran, to ~ad the agen~y in '1991. It was Gates' second shot anhe
cal
Objeclions.io
!be
use
of
pot
to
ease
'Can
you
imagine
the
aciUal
result
. Incidentally. much of tlic money
tj job: be:'d been nommatedbut w1thdrew 1~ 1987 because of the Iron-Contra .
of !be proposition's passage? In lCCdy l(and there was plenty of it) that put
l:j ~en~ arms case. He finally was con finned by a Democrnlic Senate, the suffering of people who are genuinely ill.
legalize pat saying so, but 1 d~ stores otd;timers iii the racket are the California and Arizona initiatives
H butnt took snx monlils.
1
·
.
I
not
only
understand
that
view·
object
to them insulting our intelli- now virtuously pu,rveying pot to ·a over the top came from one man:
; i · Theodore C. Sorensen, Jimmy Carter's firsl nominee to head !be CIA,
point.
I
share
it.
If
marijuana
can
do
.
gence.
clientele · wearing 'e~rything from Qeorse Soros, a Hungarian-born bill: withdrew just as a testy confirmation hearing was to open, opponents quessomething for sick people that can't
I Jive in California. and 1 can'tes· bandanna$ to rinas' in their noses- lionaire who in recent years has
. 1 tioning wbetber he was tough enough for the role. He'd ~n a top aide to
John F. Kennedy, but had no direct foreign policy experience, and none in be dQne by ordinary prescription tify lo the lear-jerking effectiveness each ~ustomer flourishing a note been busy putting his cash behind all
drugs, there is no valid excuse for of the campaign that was waged for • from a'cooperntive'''caregiver."
sorts of projects that strike him as
i; iatelligence. work.
denying
lhem
iis
ben~
fits.
(Morthe
initiative.
We
were
lreated,
in
both
The
Arizona
iniillujve
varies
from
desirable. No doutlt he thinks these
His foes pointed .first lo the noricombatanl role when in military service.
Next, they l)lised hi.s handling of documents- some classified- from the phine, after all, is roulinely made the print and the electronic media, 10 California in c:ertaili respects, but the ICIIIIS have struck anolher blow for
. Kennedy White House, which he used in writing a book and later donated available to cancer patients.) And I sob srories about lillie old ladies net effect is the same: To sanctify the individual freedom: But marijuana is
will go further: I think the govern- enduring unbearable agonies from a . medical use of marijuana, while pro- notorious as tbe drug that introduces
~ to die 1FK libtary, taking a tax deduction.
men!
and the medical professioll bewildering array of diseases, all of viding no effective limitation on the vulnerable youngsters to far deadlier
'
But ~ ·real problem was that the intellig~nce community and its allies
have probably beth been delinquent which could easily be allayed by a drug's actual use.
subslances. If drug use among the
~ ia COngress didn't want him.
·
·
r. The hard-line conservatives don'tlike Lake. He quit as·aWhile House in not conducting rigorous scientific few. puffs of (forbidden) marijuana. · To be sure, the proponents aren't young continues to rise in the Unit·
t: aide ill protest against Richard Nixon's invasion of Cambodia in 1970. He. tests to detennine .the truth .of the some of them suffered. stoically; hoine free just yet: 'The federal iaws ed States, as it has in recent years, we .
~ remlrrted after the dead} of Alger Hiss that !be spying evidence against the claims for marijuana. Even if it is ttue others found peace by managing 10 outlawing marijuana are still in full will at least h&amp;vc the satisfaction of ·
that other drugs can do the job, mar- obtain the drug, at the price of force and effect, 8lld Altorncy Gen- knowing exacdy whom we have to
Eman was not conclusive.
··
f: Lake has been a quiet nominee but not a passive one. He has been work- ijuana advocates argue thai they are · becoming criminals 10 do so. . enl Reno has warned physicians that, thank for it.
Not one voter in a hundred real- . if they prescribe it, they are risking
WIUiam A. Rusher II a Dilda!: ing 11 the CIA and at the Senate to gei past the problem points. His critics more expensive and have undesirable
side
effects.
Suchcontenlionsdeserve
ized
what
Proposilion
2
s
actually
prosecution.
So,
for
lhat
matter.
arc
auJslleci Fellow ol tbe a..-t
1
r. keep looking for more.
· ·
.
provides. which is that marijuana can the purveyors and the ultimate coo- Jndllute for lbe Stud)' ol StataH At least he has been spared the chronic i:onfinnation problem of Clin- . serious· investigation.
But ihe fact is t6at Arizona and · legally be sold 10 anyone; of any age SU!Jiers tbemselve$. But tbe '*'ger is malllhlp and Polllkal ~.
:l ton's first term- questions about household help, their taxes and their work
· California voters were simply tricked, '(no parental consent required), who · largely theorcticali .as any "recn:·
:~ ltllUI
~
.
~ wu ihe undoing of two nominees for attorney general, dne for $ec·
: 1 mary of defense- and one for director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

JAN IKII' " '

PoiMroy •lllddltport, Ohio

.

The Daily Sentinel New York bracing for the worst after cuts

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Frldey, Flbr\wy 14, 1117

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got am1wers.•

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�SPorts

The ·oany Sentinel·
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elines ·shaq .for eight to 10 w~eks

Ptlae4

Ft1day, ~ 14, 1117
,I

In Division IV sectional action,

By JOHN MDI!L .
•
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) - ,
Sblquille O'Neal'a .-m1o lbe Lol 1
Aaaelea Llbn liDeup lilted leu

.

Eastern blasts Portsmouth East 73-27
By SCOTT WOLI'I!
E•lllm "-«1 COIIch
Ever-improving with each game
lhc last half of lhc season, dJo young
Eastern 1!aJ1es played like c:bampiOAs
· Thursday night in posting a 73-27
Division N sectional semi-final vic' tory over PortsmOUth East at Alexander High School.
.
A ~n~at team effort was highlighted by a 28-point performance from
sophomore Jessica Bfl!lnon, who
also grabbed 12 rebounds and had
seven steals in spC:aiheading a potent
Eastern attack. Every Baste seollld.
FRIShman guard Becky Davis picked
up the pace with a good drive off lhc
' fast break and a great outside scorins
assault that included lh~~~e-three
pointers in her I 3 pointeffort.
Sophomo111 Valerie Karr, who had
an off-niJhl offensively with ten
points~ dominated lhe defensive
bo&amp;!ds ( 12) with 14 total rebounds,
while Sophom0111 guard Stephanie
Evans notcbed nine IIICI. freshman
guard Chasalie Hollon added nine on
a lhrce-pointer and 4-6 night from the
line; Angi Wolfe added two points
and four assists. Sophomo111 Jackie
. Parker added a long two pointer.
East was led by Kelli Day with
eight points, Stacey Schisler with
severi, four each from Amanda
Mumion and Nancy McKinnon and
two each. from Tina Cantlllll and
Heather Odie.
East coach Jim Smith added,
"Eastern's
one of the best teams
'GI::rnNG AROUND Ohio Sbtte'e Shaun Stonerook to pesa the
we_'ve
played
'au season. They 1111
bulwlbell 18 the t8ak of the m011M111I for North-tern's Jevon Johnwho hup Stanerook'aleg while looking for an open teammate young, but they have a lot of bal·
.t..r!No Thurad8y night'• Big Ten contelt In Columbue, Ohio, where . ance ...a very well rounded club. •
ttl.lliic:lley.. wan 55-40. (AP)
·

Eastern cam~ out in a2-1-2 zone, biggest quartcr(l3 poiets) as Eastern
then quickly went man and built up rolled on to the 73-27 -win.
an 8-0 lead before East finally scored.
Eastern hit 2S-85,1)it 4- tO three's
With two minutes gone in the game, and tt -20 at lhe line with 53
Eastern utilized a fuU court piiiSS that 111boUnds (Karr ll4,. B,rannon 12).
nctled II first half steals llld led 10 EHS had 16 steals, I~ assists, four
12-14 easy points under lhe bucket. turnovers aDd 10 foul&amp;. ,
Jessica Brannon paced lhc Eagles
This is the fifth slra,isht year that
in the flllit quitter with eight points, Eastern has gone to !lie sectional
while Davis netled five and Evans, finals.
.
KarrandHolloneachhadtwo. AIIhc
Eastern, now 7-14, plays
end of lbe frame, Eastern led 19-4. Crooksville (11 -'10) at,~; IS Monday
Eastern pressed early in d!e see- in lhc sectional champjpnship game
ond quarter, lheli withdrew, but was at Alexander. Direcdy (qllowing that
lulled. into a sleep by East's lack of game wiiJ be lhc Slll'\hern-G=n
ag~n~ssion. Eastern piiiSSCd asain game at 8 p.m. Both games will be
mpmenlllrily to pick up the pace, but · 111matchcs of last year's sectional
again withdrew before lhc half. Bran- finals and could sci ~.Jif!ge, for an
non continued to spark the Eagles Eastcm-Soulhcm bcnh in the district
wilb several ~n~at offensive lllbounds Oyemr fQIIIa
.,.,, ,.
lhal she put back in for scores.
.· Eastern
19-17-15-22=73
· Brannon had live offensive car- Portsmoutl:l East
~-5:-5" 13=27
oms the first half and nine overall.
Eutem: Becky Davis 2-3Brannon paced Eastern with ten sec- 0/4=13, Stephanie E~ 4-0-112=9,
ond period points, while Davis, who Valerie Karr 4-0-2/~10. Jessica
did a great job running lhc EHS
offense, added another big three
pointer, Hollon added two and Angi
. Wolfe added two. Wolfe made several big assists and hail eight big
rebounds.
Eastern led 36-9 at the half.
Wolfe praised Davis and Hollon
for !heir best noor games of the year•.
noting that Eastern made .only four
. turnovers. . .
·
Arter three frames, Eastern led S114. Eastern had six people sco111 in
lhe final round, including Jackie
Parker who came off lhc bench and
hit a big bucket. East had !heir

thin a quaner. Now, it ...,...
. , they'D be ron-ate lo ha..: lbeir
$'120 million far the piJyofts.
· O'Neal, lbe NBA'1 lbint-leading
acorer 1111&lt;1 founh-leadifll rebounder,
sumined a aerioua injary to hillel\
· knee on Wednesday in the ope11ing
minutes ofa IQ0..84 victory at Minnesota. On Thunday, dJo 110wa was
bad- Shaq) out8:to weeb.
"Wilb or without Shlq0 I think
!bat when we play, we'"' limilar 10
a BI'OIIdway play 'Nidi Eldea being
. dJo undmludy," Labn cO.cb Del
.Harris said after a 132-117 win over
Den- on Thursday nilhL
coalinue wilb lbe systeni we've cstablisbed be1111bis yeu."
•
Elden Campbell filled in well as

"we

Sel/e. ;.

Brannon I:i-G-416=28, Jackie Parter
1-0-0=2, ChasalieHollon 1-1-41~.
Angi Wolfe 1-0-0=2. 'J'oCD: ·l!l+
1J/.Z0o073
'
Ports11111ittb East:
Slaj:ey
Schisler 0-2-t/2=7, Amll!l&lt;!a Mumion
1-0-212=4, Nancy McKinnon 2-00=4, Tma Canu-ell 1-0-0=2. Kclli Day ·.
3-!l--212=8, Heather Odie 140=2.
Tocu:'8-Z..S/6=27

hio State defeats Belle may receive
orthwester.n 55-40 one-year .probation .
for gambling
·

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.A--

...... Yod&lt; ..............36 14 .720

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$1810' .

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l997 Pet Valentloes·

YOUR #I INFORMATION SOURCE!

LA. ~ ....... .....37 13

-\e .................... ))

•

Ponlood .................26
LA. C1ippm ......... 20
....... ........ 22
· llaldooStart: .... :..... ta
Phoenla ..............:... l8

,

... ..

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4';\

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•

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•nil• of.Ter ilaoqd·for new .t•tomcrs only. You m1111 not have.had dcll..:ry
In tbe putJO days.
•'
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IF

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,_._c.-,

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.740
.618

UCLA and·.UC stand
among winner_
s

II
U

u~
17~

29 .431
29 .m
J2 .l60

10~.

,•

~

li

M-

J

Vi~

Union Ciry Miuiulnawa Val . :'i'll.

Nowtoury 311. l.orrd!lowo 26

:0.1

Bryao 88, EvCIJIIOIO!I 16
Canton Gk!nQak SC, Masaillon Perry

.

S. Central 64, Pl)'n'IOUih 49

SoulhiiiJion 76, Mapk.-wuocl 19
· Sl'flng. t..c..:nllh. t.t111hcws 4:1
St Mary '11 $7, Cclina41
Slcubtn'WiUe C&lt;~lh. :'i2, Steubenville

Cuyahop Fall• !'i3, Kent Rootevelt

•

.

Cu)'llho&amp;atlts.!II.OitRX~Ur49 ·

Danbury 47, 011aw.a Hill•24

IN-II

45

Bcllolonr.in&lt; 49. Qnolwn 3~
Bealey 58, London 28 · .
Col. DoSaln91 •.Col . c....n..iot.l9

Delphos St. John'·• S3. M.-ion"'l.ocal

·

• New Wnh. Buckeye Central !'ill,
MArJlfttiA45
.N,..,.. St. Poul41. MPillooot1 19
Orange 36, Shaker H11. lirown 22
On:p StriiL'h ~. Tol. Chris1ian 41
· O.W.Uilnond Vai.IIO. V...YII 59 .
Ot~e,o o16. Millbury Lake.43
Painenllle Riveni* S3, Chardon 46
Pcuinille 52, f.don- JK
RodrJnrd P:nkway 52. New
Knoxville ~I
·
Rocky RivCJ' l..ulberan W. :13. ~ · S1.
lOSOJOh49 .

Coavoy Cralview M. Delphos Je(.

,VIllldalia Buller 108, BeiMORI3:'i
Mi,ddlefowa l~, Colonel While :10

·

NewReiaeJ81,SenccaE. ~8

. rmon58

01 .......

·SIIn Jtoualoa~' St 71. Tew·Arllnc'tott
7'101'1
.

Neorl a..... 48. s.. kcnry 40

t..odoa]6

T011rnrunents

Soulbwtlt

Moovoo Ccarllll 110. FrvoMK:r 52
N. Cant011 !112. Mauilk&gt;ll hlcklon :\11

Caft,y 68. Tiffin &lt;Aivm 46
Chonloo ND-CL ~2. Chiuld lO
Cle. VA..s.J 79, Vllley Fcqe 31
Col. I ' 2 udeiCC ~I. Col. Mifflin Sl
Coktw*" "'· Minater 43
Collins .Wesler• Reserve 4J, Ne'-'

Wwren 87, Athens S7

U~~e:uht·

•

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Stow 62_ Barberton .52
SyUIJilOI\: Mulaawk ?tl. hla.,illc 23
Sylvanin Northview 14, Anlhony
Wnyne JS
.
. Sylvunia Soulhview 68, Pcrrysbtlrtt

.W L I &amp; lif liA

Northalf l)iyllion
Buffnlo ............... 29 19 9 h1
Pittsburf;h .........Jo 20 :'i 6:'i
M~rcal ............ 21 ·2111 , ~J
lt.'Wifoo-,1 ...... ......21 21 7 49
Ol1:1wa ....,.......... IK 2~ q 411
· Rus~un .....L .........20' 29 1 47

-·-

UX

121&lt;
IJO
162
l;lil
lb7

16M

1~9 . 141
206 17~
IK~ 210
1.17 IKI
153 IM
'160 I'M

-

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ctntral Dlwbion

Ira

W. J. I &amp;

IJolhD ................. 32 21 4
DetruiL. ............. 26 Ul 10
St. Loui5 ... ......... 27 25 6
Phoenix .............. 2:'i 2K 4
Chic,:11o .............. 22 27 II
Toronln .... .......... ll J4 2.

lif liA

611 172 14)
62 170 129
60 176 1711
~

I~ I
44 164 201

PKilkDiwhMII
14 H 7h 190 IJI
Edmoalon ..........211 24 _, 61 IKO 161

Color.Kiu ............ :W.

Vanwu....:r ......... 2~ 211
Cala-, ..... ......... 2:\ us
Analooim .. ....... ...22 28
San Jose .............lO JO

2
6
6
6
lm Ancela ....... l9 31 . 1

52 176 IKIJ
32 132 16~
lO I!Ill 172
4;6 146 Ill~

4_, 152 195

TippCit~~u!d OwiiiiiiR 41

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· W. Holmes'S), Meadowbrook J6

C - 8 t. 87, Sio!lliqoSt. 1•

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Sar!bury Bll Wolnuo 60. Col. MarionFranklin 38
.

c - . n. o.q.. l!6

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Atlulk Ditw.n

:ram

, Loveland 32. Cia. lndion Hill 39

.

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-=~~ Wwkina Mornoo;lal ~-Col .

. llol!oS!. 83.New Mnio.-oSI. 71
· CS Notlho\4tl; 711. E Wllhio.... 7~
Col SI.·Fv- 84. UC trrioe 69

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43

E. Kno• 58, LuCIIII 35

..

Henry J4
WOoner TriWI)' 4J , Canal Fullon
NW lii(OT)
•
. You. Bcwdman 87, Auslinlown-Fih:h
4)
Waacon 76, Palri\.t

Pltiladclphim ....... JI IIJ K 70 1n
Fbiola ............... Zr&lt; 15 B 69 t~t
New Jcm.oy ........2H 17 9 1\~ .1&lt;16
N.Y. R'"l'" ..... 21&lt; 2.1 7 6J I'Ill
WaJhinJIUf1... .....22 27 ' 6 :'l() 144
N.Y-. l1dak.'n .... IH 2K 10 46 IS.
TOlJ11'la8ay ... ..... I1,12M 6 44 142

Jctrmori-46

44

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

"*'- St. 7i w.K&lt;oiu&lt;ky 6)

.

Mwlicld 47. Manlfidd Mlldi'10n 4.1
M:auHkm ~7. Akron Hobw140
. MauiHoo Tusbw H . Cwilon Timten

aroot.r.cld ... e..o.., 15

CJor. eom....~, !9, T..-ac Chi.
.
Col. Honloy 61. Col. W - ~9
Lutbmn Elll7l. Graad River 31
otMo Deat71 , Pui-I•Bay :\8

~2

Warrennille Hra. !119, CJe..

NUL standings

Ubttly Ci!lller61 . MM1pcli«4:\
Lucli CJoverlcaf 4M, Norton :t9 ·

Aboa E. :'i9, Woodridp ~
Akron Fimronc 44. Hcrii13C Chr. lfl
Allian.:t Mnrlifii.IOIII ,'ill. R;vcnna4:'i
AnhVCrp ~II . Hicksville U
AR:adia62, ftertMM Sf. JctiCph 44 ,
An:hbold Sl . Dell• 42
Atliaatve.51 , Ri~l.l
Alhland 61,l.onlil1 SoulhY~ H
Athland Crllatview 6.5, ~onrvevillc
49
.
'\
-orrd ~l. Mople H11. ~
Blumon flO. Co~mbua Ciruore -41

·Ohio H.S. boys' scores

5I!

46 . Warren

Reaulllr-- play •

Noa-coaference plaJ

NotnWo 77. N. I"'!• 69
Ollio St. ~~. NorthWestern 40
Wrishr St. 7~. Wi•.-Milwoul&lt;ce U

' AIIIMIII San Aalonio, 8:30p.m.
Dcnfflllll Milwaukee, 9 p.m.
Dalla II Umh, 9 p.m.
Hou11on 111 Poltluct. 10 p.m.

·

Wabhlauio47. K..... C... Clw. J6
Wa:nen Kennedy 10. Y011. Urnlinc

Hockey

New Madison TrJ-VIIIIlJt' !53, Day.

Utbana 100. Wiltledorce 49

N. lltillllli,a110, ~and St. 62

FarWtll

Len.i111bura

. Foirf!Oiol63, Gieoowood 2&amp;
Fayeneville ~t. Middletown Fenwick

Fnrnklio-M..-61 """"'"'411
. . .. Roodtvillc Ea!rOm 13. Port.-h E.
21

VlrJinio i&lt;ch 84. DII)'IOII64

llnoloy 7). 1lnke ~)
Cincitullti 69, St. Louis~
Dotnolr17, ~ Rl. 64
IIHaois St. l2. S. ll~ooi!17
1 - 5I. Ill. SW Mi- So. 1•

' . Tello! 110. Tow-El Puo ~7

a...,.;...... .LaBrae
,

~1~61. -47

~

31

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3H

Vu Wen Uncolnview 91 , Pmy :UI
W. Sulcm Nurthwesteni 70. HillSdale

lteftiiMI 71 . Honlio Nonflem J7
Loloyeno Allco E. 71. Ada )2
· l...akniew 61. fhbbard 43

Doy39

ri&amp;hl St 7S, Wii.· Milw~ ';1

Mldweot

Ne:w

IMwiiiM IY

AllanUc 10

SaodiA-66. l..ooow~3
Tnn.-M..ia 1.'\, E. Illinois .U
TC~t~~t:~~~ere ·Td 89. Mumy St. 62

.

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- - 3 6 . N. - 2 9
Cia. Sc~em Hill• ~. Cin. Cou ..ry

Ohio women's
coU.scores ·

S. Can&gt;lloo Sl. 7.l. ~ 71

.

HolpiO 62. n_, !HO'O
~~opeooe~~.....- 68. 01o1 ron J2
Joh•town Northrid,e 51. ~· AI·
bony40
· Kalida6.1.0naw..0-411

W011ro11 58, _.._ 41 '

(::w:holk •0. Tol. Roam 23
Nuu~ Dame ll Tol. Sl. Ursula

Wca26

•

CeolorviUc 34

. New~ !lll.l..k!oovltle62

I.A. Cli_. 98

VenaillcsoM, Spri... Noid Lie II :\6

wa,...wllc 110. Rip1oy 29
- - - - ;16, Mh1rcn1

•

--~~ - -lh·Ciu47

H;Hilol 72. Oo1wfon ~I

Tol.

Toi..W~ 52,~ l...akota
Uniontown Lake 59, Ani;~ke S7

0.. M;lh Howlo&lt;ft 68. o..-1 5(1

.,..26
69

)2

_r

N.C...on-.baro71, ltldfar467
NW l.llool!IIOI \10, Nldl&lt;&gt;l~ So. 13

'

WlllhiiJI~ .. .
~y, 7:10p.m.
Phiildtl~ Iii PiJIIIIU, 7:30p.m.

I

,

:!;%:!

T~l.

FiDIIIaJ ~.
31
Findlay Liberty Bent01160. Ldpsic 49
fGs1oria S.. WcMiin 7:\, N. l•ki~41
.

Oat Hill 6l. Cool 0..... 24
~ 7J. '-Yilk VII. 71 (0'0
Pikco~M~61. LyadoboqCJoy43
S~n~.n Federal Hockiaa 39, Well-

wt1ter11 CaUeatate c.r.

.

MiddlfTeM-12. r-so. 7l
N.C. Coftord 74. N. Calolitoll Aoi:T 7l

.,

19

s.ou......,. "· r..;ro,

- 6 4. Giloooello!J ~
·Fiirview 84, wa,_ T..., 42
Fa,.dte 61,

.

· ,_..,.,.,lia Sandy Val. !51, Well.vilh:

alsh 106. Codonillo17

F.._66,Wolford61
JIICbolviiii.Sr. II. SE ,.,_lrb-.64
M - )), Floriola 51. l7
McNeese St. 15, NE Louis\ ... 66

.J

. 24 .~:10
26 .4)!

Denoh 11 a.toue. 7:JOp.m.

I .

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In Top 25 college hoops,

E. NatiiiC 40, Cald........ ll
Eo!llab N. !O, WillooPbJ S. 47
Eo!lw&lt;ood ;16, Nanhwoiod lll
Edpnoft 46. A,....illo 43

l8

Mid-Ohio c.r.re-

Flarida AAM 16. lloww&lt;l68
FlaridaA- ~2. CwopiJdt !0

Saturday's pmea

\,

I ,,

22
17

8-57.CIIoo0ft-MIIalc:4l ,
Dty. Olltwood41, DiAte 26
Oaaway 64, Nct.c:ommiOWn 28

M-95; --51. ~1

Molanolll.ll!looioo 17 . .
Mt. Vcmon Nautenc 11, ShawMt
51. 69
.
RIO GRANDE 47. Ohio Domini'""

·~

c.-.,~Somrcnl71
.
0.1 .......... 7S. Willlhn&gt;p71
Coli. of Chwlcttoo 15. Fla. 1.....,_
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Lotoa lleadl St. 611. Cd Poly.SLO 67

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~ 85. Morpo 51. 82

p.m.
L.A.. CliPfC!JII PhocaiJl, 9 p.m. .
Houlton 11 Sellttlc, 10 p.m. .

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Orlando II MinDCIDU, 8 p.m.
Golden . Slale al San Antonio, 8:30 ,

' ADDRESS
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.

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eollege sc~res

...... 65.!oolh_,.,

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New......,. ... ..,....,....... Balli·

YES! PleUe stut my ••bscrlpdoa to Tile Dally Seatl'el for 13 "eelut for •ly SJ 1.20. u
. IOOD II Pf*llbJe.
.

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BdpR 70. Rl&lt;hmooolole SE 28

Ohio men's

=.:~:

New Yen 101. Phllllololphla 92
Mt.l 106.1-\10 ·
Gol4en- t0l.llollol99
L.A. Loken I )2. Doo- 117
ur.IIIIO, Ponlalloll6

To take advantage of this special offer, just complete the fo~ below and mail it , ...
··· . . : with your check or ~ney ordertq: ·
· . · ·
The DaUy_Sentlnel, Ill Court ~t~ PJttne~y, OH 4ST69,; :: '\ · ' '. ,.

SIIIGLE COPY PJUCE
"

I

'

of his points aad seven of his
Jebounds after O'Nealleft 1be afar .,00.
&lt;JmpbeU, 1 ~I 1, 2»pounda- in
his seventh NBA seuon, is IVfftling 12.3 points llld eight rebounds.
Campbell, 28, had career-best
aaes
of t3.9 points and 1.6 ,.,.,.,.,nc~s
•
last
.
year. .
.
O'Neal was injured wben he
·•
llnded awkwardly oa. his left leg · - - - - - - - -_
- ___...
,~
while trying to control ·a lob pus tnincr Gary Villi llhonly lbered«; "'
from NickVaa Excl with 8:261eft in .
O'Neal, wbollnl 2S
lbe.fllSt qlllda' at Minnesoca.
· played four se.,as with the Orl8n-:.
O'Neal llnded hard, but after a do Magic before siJIIinJ a
brief delay, continued to play llld · year, $120 million deal 'Nidi the Lak- ~
wound up witb 12 points and four ers last summer.
.
"'
rdJounds in a JiUle m0111 !ban eiJht
He is averaging 2S.8 points, 12.~
minuiCS.
rebounds IIICl three blocked lbots. He •.
He came out of lhc aame wilb .has made 56.3 percent of his field :
3:371eft in !be fintquaner and went goal attempts-and just 46.6 percent}
to lhc Laken' dressing room wilb_ of his foul shots.
; ''

source

l•co,.,

UCLA 66. Arizou64
Uoolo 84. Mod!. 6)

. . . . 56,: Dllt ., $2

. Thundlll''•_...

•

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16

VMCOUYer ............. 10 43

'

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~~

80

Dull~n•a.LaSallt77

. ,
7'
· 10

Mi-. .............. 2.1 26 .469
Dol0.. ,................... 16 ]() .]48
Doo...................... l6 )4 J:IO
Soo AO!IOI!io ...... .....t2 :U .255

..

'

-

• had 21 poinb IIIII niDe ,.,....,
mer,
in the , _ • Minnesclca. He had 19

By TheAII•aclatMI Ptson-high26poinlsaslbeBruins(l4-)!
~!eve Lavin is having a great
7, 9-3Pac-IO)keptpacewilbSoulh-f::
week.
em California in punuit of lbeir lhinl-0&gt;
Two days after signing a four- strailht league tide. UCLA. whic!i:
· year con~Ret as UCLA coach; bellArizonainovertimeonJan.l8t,
Lavin's 24111-ranked Bruins bell No. · also completed a sweep of lhc Wild; '"
II Arizona 66-64 Thursday niJht on • cats for lhc first time since Lute
J.R. Henderson's jumper in lhc lanC Olson became Arizona coach in
wilb 18 seconds left.
1983.
"This came down to will," said
"I .fell we needed a spark, IIICII
·
Lavin,
who
started
lhc
season
as
was
lhc one to do it," ssid O' BanEditor's note: AP Sports Writer
UCLA's
interim
coach
after
Jim
.,On,
who was 10-of-14 from tbe
Ronald Blum c0i1tributed 10 Ibis stoBanick
was
lillld.
·
faeld
.
· ·
·:&lt;1
ry.
Charles O'Bannon scored a sea(See TOP 25 oa .... 1)
,....

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' llonlwool St. 72. N. Arizooa 68 (OTI
Soo DieJo 76, Ponlud 69
Soo J... 51. Ill. Air Force 17
ScoudoeloCd72.ArUona51. 66
Suofcrd 87, Dlqoo S!. ~
.
Texu C'bristilft~2. BriP.. Yo.a

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WESTERN CONFIRJNCE .

.

Maple Lear

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-·-

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'

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.. .
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playoffs against Baltimore.
Belle, who had vowed to
IIIDOUDCC his stormy .past when be
signed with Chicago, told WJW-TV
in Clcvelllld Thursday he "never did
anything illegal dealing with or per- .
taining to betting wid) a bookie."
. Placing bets with a bookmaker is
a misdemeanor in Ohio; State law
says other forms of gambling arc
illegal only if !hey provide "a sigof income...
nifitant
"Nothing ·iias been presented to
our olfwe as far as allegations of
. trim ina! charges," Cuyahoga County prosecutor Stephanie Tubbs Jones
said.

-.., '10, w;om;01 61 ron

NCAA Division I

23

13 .729
IS .681
20 .MID
22 • -~~~

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37 .229

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Special~~ffer

.

Terry Belle. .who called lhc allegatiOIIS "a major injustice," said his
brother would have no furlber com-,
mcnL
!Jelle is lhc Indians' career leader
wilb 24.2 home runs and is lhc only
major leaguer in history 10 hit SO
homers IIICl SO doubles in a season.
He formed one of lhc most powerfill batting conibinations in history
, wilb Frank Thomas when be signed ·
with Chicago.
But be has been suspended five
times in six years for various violent
outbursts; including charging the
mound, lbrowing a ball at a fan and
berating a rcjlorter.
In his final year with ClcVc:land,
Belle balled .31 I with 48 home runs
IIICl 148 RBis. His final hit for lbe
Indians
a dramatic, nindl-inning.
tie-breaking grand slam in lhc AL

a....IZ:lOp.ta
s-toiiLA. IMon,lp.•.-

M- .............. - ..31 12 .760

BEl -·

13 WEEKS For Only

.lilt

toni.....,....,,

-. ....... Vcd.I2J0p.m.

Decroit ••· Toronro

EAStERN CONI'DBNCE
.:r.II L fJa. Ill

·i

~

The Daily Sentinel

-

.
.
- NBA~

s,m

~

' su.u,••..-

Bilskelb&lt;lil

.'.,

10

everybody work off me. I tbi,.JI: I
played the lpOl pretty Jood...
Rookie'l\-avisKni... movediato
lbe 111rtinJ lineup at fot wad llld had
13 points
ee.-.. dJo Lakers equaled lhc MBA's 1ea1011 hiah
IUied bone and a ~ lipmenl . for a reJUlation puie, act by lbc
!eM'.
NuQCts oa Jan. ·20 apinsc New Jer. No suraery will be necessP'J',Ihc sey.
101m added, but O'Neal will wear a
O'Neal injUIIId his riJbt knee late
splint for 2-3 weeks, after which he in tbe third quarter of ag1111e aaainst
will bepn lllhabilitalion.
Washinaton on Feb. 2 w)len he
Campbell, movinl over from his planlcd his foot in lhc lane, started 10
forward spot, bad 19 points, five twist for a shot and banp legs Wilb
111bounds and four blocked shots at Bullets center Ghco!Jbe lofurcsan.
Deaver.
Without O'Neal, the Lakers wer-e
"Evel)'body knew lbey had to beaten by lhc Los Anactes Clippers
pick it up. ~ · CampbeU_said. "We
106-84 at Analleim Alllna on Feb. 4,
played without him with good suc- but.wilb Campbell leading lhc way,
cess, but it's just one giiiiiC.
they 111bounded to beat lhe Bulls lhc
"I've played center before, so I following night 8t lhc Forum.
felt p111uy comfortable down lbelll. It
Campbell, who signed a scvenfelt good, being the Jo-10 JUY,Ietting yeu, $49 million contract liSt sum-

·'

I

points in mote than two years.
Ohio (AP) ·-·
"It's been a long time," Davis
State was humiliated at North- said with a laugh. "I wasn't ·in a
wtltem three weeks ago, so it was zone. I just got it going in the first
~} !
.
fair that lhe Buckeyes return the half and kept it going."
By KEN BERGER
If you want to see wli.at's really hot at the home show,
"We got a heads-up !hat th~y
Davis, who had scored 15 points
CLEVELAND (AP) _ Albert were looking into il," said Hart, in
don't miss our Ho~·Spiinge Portable Spa display. You'll see
t:;mrlos Davis came off the bench in his last II games, hila lhrce·point- Belle has been compared to Babe
Winter
Haven,
Fla.,
for
spr!ng
tmin16 points -· more than he er in Ohio State's 12·0 run -to start
firsthand why Hotf$pring is the number one selling brai~d . l
in -hislast.ll games combined- the second half. Stonerook added Ruth for his power and Ty Cobb for ing. "They said they would handle
in America. And how simple it is to own one. There's a Hot
· il at their end. We didn't hear anyhis temper.
.
0~10 Slllte'shut out !he Wildcats two fiIC ld g&lt;)aIs, .me Iud'mg a d un k on
If ma;or Jeaoue baseball. deter· thing else from&gt;them." : ,
Spring for any s~jlimily, backyar4 or b1,1dget.Bo stop.by
fo~lthe first 9:52 of the second half a drive down the lane.
'
..Belle
joined
the
Chicago
White
Northwestern
(6-17,
I-ll),
which
mines
Belle
did
not
bet
on
baseball,
to a 55-40 vjctory ·Thursday
our di:;play. If yoM,)ike
. lost its fifth in a row since the vic- . he will be spared a comparison to a Sox f~oon lhe !ndians after l~.t sea·
relaxing in ·your_· own ·
·
~ftrirvi .
we embarrassed them· the tory over the Buckeyes, missed its £"'at hitter who didn't gello the Hall son, signing a $55 million, live-year
contract.
.
backyard, our home
· · 1 ~ .••-•
time, they embarrassed us - first ~ix shots from the field 'in .the of Fame - Pete Rose.
is
no
indication
thai
"There
show
disp.J..ay
will:make
.
Poftable
t~=~f~~.~" s::a~~id lame-duck North- second half and had nine turnovers.
Belle probably will get at most
Albert
bet
on
baseball
games,"
"
Ricky Byrdsong.
The Wildcats had a season-high one year's probation if major league
you feel right ath~Jlle. · w'"""" """""'"A"'"'·' T• . ""'·A~'
Wildcats r,outed Ohio State 28 turnovers. Northwestern had officials dctennine he-did not gam- White Sox chainnan Jeny Reinsdorf
ble on baseball.
on Jan. 25 in .,Evanston -the more turnovers (25) than points (23)
Basebail's security head is inves: told the Chicago Tribune. "So at the
moment, I'm not wo!fied," 1 1 .
lopsided Big Ten victory for the until back-to-bock baskets by Evan
Gambling on baseball is against
~t:~:s;i:nce beating the University Eschmeyer and Nate Pomeday at the ligating JiJelle's testimony that he
gambled
on
pro
football,
college
major league rules,. punishable by a
71-W in the 1943-44 sea- midpoint of the second half.
basketball and golf games with
one-year suspension: A player who
"That was· as poorly as ·we've friends. a high-ranking baseball ofli- bets on his.own team is subject to a
thought they heard enough played," Byrdsong said. "It's been
.
·
· Northwestern,~· Ohio State an emotional week. We played poor- cial said Thursday on the condition lifetime ban.
he
not
be
identified.
Rose, bueboll's career hilS leader,
Randy Ayers said. ''They ly in every part of the game."
Several baseball officials likened was banned from baseball for gamfrusinlttd by that game. We had
Eschmeyer finished with 17 the situation lo'lhat of Len Dykstra; bling in 1989. The l!anishmcnt made
signs up, but we didn't dwell points and Carvell Amnions added the Philadelphia outfielder who w
_ as Ro5e, who passed Cobb for the hits
10 for the Wildcats.
placed on probation for one year by lead, ineligible for induction to the •
said, "That shocked us. We
Eschmeyer said Byrdsong's firing then-commissioner Fay Vincent in Hall of Fame. ·
•
we had to get them back when wasn't to blame for the poor perfor1991 after testifying about taking
A
seulemeni
between
Rose
and
STATE•. ROUTE ft8
CIESTE~OH.
came· to our place."
'1.
mance.
part in high-stakes poker games.
, __:~~:u.." Stonerook added 10 points
"It was on everybody's mind, but
.A source close lo acting commis(See .BELLE on Page S)
985·3301
. · Slate (I 0-11 overall, 5-7 in that's not lhe reason we lost," he sioner Bud Selig.-who spoke on the ·
the i Bia Ten), which ended a two- said . "We turned the ball over way · condition he not be identified, said _ _ _..;.,_ _...;...,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,_,..._.,:•...;.·....;..,.._..
skid. The five confer- too many times and we gave up too baseball wants lo make sure Belle
"
wins matched Ohio State's many offensive rebounds in the first did not bet on his own sport. If basefor ihe last two seasons.
half. That's what cost us the game."
ball determines Belle didn't, the
wasn ' t a pretty win,". Ayers
O~io State's players wore black
sport "wouldn't impose a penalty
"B.ul you can't complain about swcalbands in memory of OSU polic
more severe tl)an probation,lhc offi' -ooinl win. Especially when il's . Officer Michael Blankenship. killed
cial said.
46-ooinl difference." ·
while in~estigating a robbery' on
Belle, lhe- game's highest-paid
lu!dn't played in lhc deba: campus Monday night. A large black
player at s11 million per season, said
. ,,
cle•lln Evanston. But he hit 6-of-9 . band wa~ also placed across lbe Ohio
u'nder oath he lost as much as
from ' the field, including his State sign at the scorer's table and a
$40,000 gambling on spqrts,-prompt'three-pointer, and was perfect moment of silence .was observed
ing baseball security head Kevin
throws to
his most before the game.
.
Hallinan to investigate.
'· r
•
The game was a marked contrast
"Major league baseball ~ill look
from Ohio State's last game, a 93-76
into the situation regard ina the
.
' . ( '
.
Ft
. .
•'
.,
loss at Indiana Saturday. ' ·'
alleged gambling of Albert Belle, as
.. ,
r
~
In that game, the Hoosiers hit 43it docs "!ith any issue," major league
.
,
•
I
I''·'
of-52 free throws ....:. bolh rct&lt;itds
spokes!'llln Rich I:.cvin said. "Any
TH.AT'S' ALMOST SOo/o OFF :{JIE·-~EWST~NI;) P~CE! .. '
against Ohio Stille. North]Nestern . mtdia 1-cport tltat characterizes what
was 3,for, 4 at the line:
.·action major, league b&amp;fcball will
THAT'S LIKE .GETTING
SIX
WEEKS
FlEE!
.
. . . '1311
·.
. ..
·.
Mickey : Manllew~ mily 19 ' take, if aioy, is completely false."
'r
•~
'
when he firs! wore a Yankee uniform
Cleveland Indians general manLocal,
National
and
World
News,
Sports;
Comics
in 1951.
ager John Hart said Thursday that :
Hallinan wami:d bim·in March 1996
and TV Times. AU this and m91'CI .
~ts~~~~~Scnt:l.address'
t»m:Ciions 10
The first major-league hit for about Belle's possible involvement
1' ·1 • ·r
. "
~
Ill Court St.,' Pomeroy,
Willie Mays was a · hom~. run off in gambling.
Warren Spahn in 195 I. ·
.
811UCIUPTION RIITI!S
LET THE.DAILY.,SENTINEL B~

lioa, X-rays and MRI testa.
The Llbn u'id O'Neal, oae of
lhe NBA's domiDaat Ilia mea 8l 7foot-lllld 300-pl.. poo!ft!'s, IIUffi:ml
a hyperexteaion injury, with dam• iJicludifll a
a frac-

·

former commissioner A. Bartlett totiding $40,000.
Giainalli didn't make 1 determina- ·
Belle questioned dJo figwe and
lion lliat lbe grCat !iitler bet on base- said be did not bet'on his own sport.
ball. Rose to !his day i~ists be did· He lidded !bat aamblina is tommon
h't, but Giamalti said lbe day lbe deal among llhlefeS and "money chlnges
was announced that be :was con- · hands iri lbe locker room."
vinccd Rose did.
"We bel on everylbina," Belle
The spqrt's most inf1111011s gam- told USA 'lbday. '.'Basketballaames.
bling scaJ1!1a1 lqvolwd . ihe White football games, horse racing, auto
Sox. ~Ill memben of the 101m, racing. It's no diffcn)nllhln anyone
including Shoeleu Joe Jackson, . else's oft-.cc pool."
~~~~ eivcn lifetime bans fq.. conBelle's brother, Terry, an accounspirina to fix the 1919 World Series. 11111 in·Missi~; saidThunday his
BeDe, a ~setting hitter with brothef ,did nOt.blllak lhc Jaw or any
a history of diilcipli1181)' probl""'s. ·· baseball t\JIC&amp;.
adlhit!eCf .his .-roblina losses iti a
· . "A lot JlCJlllle arc looking Bl a
. deposfban 1\jcsday. Lawyer Ric:hard JI!ISSible speck of a speck of a spctk
Lilljc,n~pn~sentina a 1ecn-ap-,who .in my bnilhcr's eye when they have
is ·suing lhc player over a Hal- aloe in their own eyes," Terry Belle
Jowccn confrontation in 199~, said · said, paraphrasing lhe Bible. "He
_Belle lleknowledgcd gamblin1 dcbls has never bet on bueballllld never
will."

:•

RUSTY MILLER

IIIII oa Feb. 5, be b..t a care«-biah
34 poillllllld 14 ........m, in a 1()6:.
90 will- the Chicaao Bulk.
Butbowbe'Dr.oudlilybMia
inbii1'11DlDfordlel..abrJ, who
have the beat record in lbe Western
Conference.
·
"The play JOCS on, IIICl evel)'· body knows their own roles, IIICl it
fits in really . well," lflrris said.
·. "We've done that the last 11uee
games without Shaq."
· • .
The injary' iiccilmd u O'Neal
was retumina for fint lime since
· injuring hil riJbt knee 10 days ear. li«. He miued two games as well as
last Sunday'• All-Stu game in
Cleveland.
O'Neal's injury wlis diagnoSed by
1ea111 doclor Stephen Lombardo of
lbe Kerl111-Jobe Medical Group in
lfl8lewood following an eumina-

rro~ Pase 4)

(Continued

I

Absent evidence of baseball betting,

aa undenludy.lpinst tbe Nugeu,

..
'I

CJ

.

�..

-.. )

Frklly, FebruMy 14, .. ..,

Page I • 1be Dlllv &amp;11....,..

Ponu roye llldJII~port, Ohio

_

,

_ Frldrly, Fa~ 14, 1"1

Top 25 hoops •.• u.&lt;Co~11u1111·nued~fro~m::.:Paa~e

Out of - a n-asty -holiday, a time for lovers was born
D.e..:bant iD the Bronx or a pectin&amp;
en Ienius iD New York? None of

Ann
Landers

By ANN LAND!RS
Dear Rcldets: Today is Valentine's Day. Sweetbeans ue expected
to come duwgh.with some kind of
sift. Florists ev~where will he
doing .a huge business.. Husbands
and boyfriends who "forget" will he
rushing into candy shops like
lunatics. This will he a big day for
,
·
jewelers, too.
Who dreamed up this scheme to
stimulate the economy? Some savvy

ring.

"'How I hale its scolding IOIIC.
the Mlove.
Your cJ.pper is the cune of home."
A few yem 110.· a reader uted
Another valentine message, ·
the same question, and I checl&lt;ed meaner still, was this one:
with Sally Hopkins, then director of
"'I'll treat you with scorn, whenHallmart's Historical Collection iD ever we pass.
Kansas Oty, Mo. She told me that
"'You deceitful , oily-tongued
Valentine's · Day fint appeued in snake in the grass."
England around the time of Queen
In the early 1800s, the Chicago
· Vactoria. Valentines then were called Post Office refused to deliver 20,000
"'Penny Dreadfuls" and "RudC anil of those cards on the groutlds that
Crudes."
they were "vicious tiJid obscene." I
These valentines were not mes- -wonder ·what the civil libertarians
sages of love. They were insulting. would say today about such abridgOne pic:IUR:d an ugly female wear- !ftC'nt of free speech.
ing a bell-like hat. She had a clapper
Meanwhile, for those of you who
sticking out of. her mouth. The prefer. to celebrate Valentine's Day
valentine message read:
in ~ 20th century manner, here's a
" Your tongue is ever on the letter that will warm your heart:
swing, and has a harsh, discordant
Dear Ann Landers: I am 74 ·years

youn1,111d I've·heen married for 52
years to the most wonderful w0111111
iD tbe world.
· The 10QC1 Lord Nesaed me when
he lilt Ma-y Lou next to me on the
sueet car that rainy day in April. We
lived in New OrJe.ns then, and the
sa- car ran on St. Chades Street.
Muy Lou was a student Ill Sophie
Newcombe women's colleJC, and I
was a senior at Tulane. I asl&lt;ed her if
she'd like to share my umbrella.
We · were married on her 22nd
birthday. One year llllei', she.presented me with a son. The next year, we
had twins •• a hoy tiJid a girl :- both
healthy and beautiful.
We have had a wonderful life
together, tiJid our children all turned
out well - a doctor, a lawyer _and a
clergyman.

I would love to Jive her the Hope
Diamood fOJ Valentine's Day, but I
can't afford iL "-print this letter
on Feb. 14. k would he the best Jift
ever. - Cbmie
Dear Olartie: Here it is. Happy
Valentine's Day.
I would also like to say Happy
Valentine's Day to our veterans in
VA hospitals around· the country.
And a special thanks 10 all my readers who took the time to send them
valentinC!I this year. ··
Dear Ann Landers: It~s })een ·said
· that a man tiJid his dog begin to look
alike after they've been IOJether for
a number of years. If that's true, per· haps the wild animals !hat live
around us reflect our personalities,
also:
Your basic, everyday barn owl

s::L.&gt;- - - - - - - - . - - - - - - : - - - . . . . ; ; . , __ _

1-

rebounds as U•J defested Southern
At College Park. Keith Booth
Methodist. ~ng 41-29 at half- scored 17 points tiJid Maryland used
time, Utah (1!1-3, 10-1 WAC) opened a 21-2 first-half run to beat Florida
the second half with an 11-2 r~n to State. Obinna El&lt;ezie _had IS PQints
break the game open. Keith Van and II rebounds for the Terrapins
Horn added 18 points for Utah, while (19-S, 8-4 ACC), who had lost three
Jay Poerner led SMU (13-9, 5-7) of their previous four games.
with 15.
No. 13 New MQko 81, Rice 64
No. 8 Clncbuui-' 69
At Albuquerque, Charles Smith
S.U.t Looia 5(j
scored 19 poi~ts as New Mexico
At Cincinnati, Darnell Burton ( 19-4, 8-3 WAC) increased its home .
scored 2!' points and the Bearcats winning streak to 24. Clayton
overearne a sluggish start and foul Shields added 17 ·points for the .
problems to wiv their fifth straight. Lobos, while Shaun-lgo led Rice ( Il Cincinnati (19:.4, 7-1 Conference l 0, 5-6) with 26 points.
USA) outsco(Cd Saint Louis 16-3 in
No. 22 Stanford 87
Oregon'SL 54
the final five minutes. Cincinnati star
Danny. Fortson was held to nine
At Stanford, Kris Weems scored
points, 13 below his average. ·
15 of his 17 points in the second half
No. 10 Marylud 73
as the Cardinal snapped a three-game
losing streak. Arthur Lee added 13
F1~St.S7

Miles SiiDon scored 24 poinlll for
Arizona (15-6, 7-4), which lost
despite forcins UCLA into 28
turnovers.
"To force them into 28 turnovers
and not win the pme is ineredible,"
Olson Yid. "Defensively, they real·
ly did a good job."
In OlherTop 2S games, it was No.
.5 Vtah 84, SMU 63; No. 8 Cincinnati 69, Saint Louis 56; No. 10
Maryland 73, Florida State 51; No.
13 New Mexico 81, Rice64; No. 22
. Stanford 87, Oregon State 54; Alabama-Birmingham 64, No. 23 Tuhme
61; and No. 2S College of Charleston ,
RS, Florida International 81.

l

says, uWhooo, wbooo.''
,
An EnJiilb profasor's owl mighj
say. "Whom., whom!'
,
. A newotic penon's owl mighj
say, "Why? Why?"
. !
Sipnund Freud's owl mip hl¥4
said, "Why DOC? Why noc7"
·I
A New Ycirlt City C8b driver'~
owl might say, "Same to yo11j
bllddy!" - Max · GoldberJ, Boisel ·
Idaho
.
:
Dear Max: 'I1W New York cab&lt; ·
bic 's owl might also say. "Thanll
you." They ue a lot inore pol itO ·
these days. .
!
•' '
..
8eM ••_lldoM to A. LIIDclenl
Cr_n t ' " SJIII''"'te, 57'77 W. Ceat
tary Blvd., Suite 780, Los Alltllleit
Calif. 90045
..
•

No. S Utah 84, SMU 63
AI Salt Lake City, Michael
Doleae · had 19 points and nine

''

By PETER

H:GOTT, II.D.

physical abnormality that should he Report "HyPI'rtension." Other readaddre~sed. F~r example, a "silent" · ers whO would like a copy should
(non-painful) kidney stone could send $2 plus a long, self-addressed,
elevate your blood pressure. ·
stamped envelope to P.O. Box 2017,
In your case, your doctor should Murray Hill Sta,tion, ~ew York:, NY
closely monitor your blood pressure .10156. Be sure to mention the title.
without increasing the dose of med- .
DEAR DR. GOTI: What causes
icine. If the blood pressure remains a leg ulcer and what can he done to
high for a week or two, you need get rid of it?
special X-rays and blood tests to disDEAR READER: Ulcers on the
cover the cause, which -- if correct-· skin of the l~g often result from defied •. will allow yout blood pressure .cient arterial or venous circulation.
to return to normal.
In the first instance, not enough
To give you more information, I blood reaches the skin, because of
am sending you a copy of my Health arterial blockage •• usually due to

· DEAR DR. GOTf: What would
cause a sudden elevation i~ blood..
pressure? At 73, my reading has
been around 114174. Suddenly, it's
changed to JW105. My doctOr put
me on lnedication for control, but .I
want to know what has caused· the
increase since I'v~ had no change in
diet tiJid no stress in my life.
DEAR READER: A sudden and ·
unexplained increase .in blood pressure is always a "red flBJ" to physicians. This. could reflect a problem
with kidney function or rome other

.

~

aging. Consequently, minor scrapes'
and abrasions fail to heal, become
infected and enlarge. .The di&amp;Jnosis
of arterial insufficiency can he made
by a series of tests, including
Doppler ultrasound . . Treatment
includes special dressings, antibiotics ·• and, possibly, surgery to .
unclog the artery.
Venous ulcers are more common.
In the presence of varicose veins or
edema (swelling), stale blood .pools
in the legs, preventing o~ygen and
nutrient-rich blood from reaching
the tissues. Again, healing is

delayed, minot triuuna can become
infec~d and ulcers will form.
By and. large, venous l!isease of.
the lower extremities has a characteristic appearance: buiJing veins
plus thin and fragile skin. Such
ulcers usually respond to elevation,
special dressings, diuretics (to
reduce edema), elastic wrapping,
and other non-surgical techniques.
Sometimes, operative procedures
such as vein stripping or laser
surgery may he necessary.
.Your family p~ysi.cian can advise

GOTT

'

.

.SALEM CENTER- Star Grange
778, fun night and potluck super,
Saturday; 6:30 .p.m. at the grange
hall. Third degree practice for the
contest.

Tile · Community Calendar II
~blllhed • a free service to nonproftt II'CIIIJII wllhiDc to announce
merdn1 and special events. The

,

c•hadar II not desipecl to promole ll1lles or luDd nisen 61. uy
CHESTER -District 13, Daughtype. Itea. we printed u SJNICe
pei'!Dits luld cannot he paranteecl . ters of the American Revolution, I
p.m Saturday at the Chester Lodge
to nan • spedftc aumber or days.
Hall. Practice will he held for spring
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM •• Hymn sing, rally.
1·p.m Friday at the Fai~ Full &lt;?ospel
MIDDLEpORT - A free basic
Church. The Clark fanuly to smg.
fly-tying demonstration and mini:
seminar will be held Saturday, 3
SATURDAY

p.m. at the Riverhend Arts Council
in Middleport between Locker 219
and the Ohio River Bear Company.
For more ·information contact Gene
Wise at 992-267~.
SUNJ)AY
MIDDLEPORT - John Elswick
to speak at Hobsoa Christian Fellowship, Sunday, 7 p.m.. Special
singing.
'
POMEROY -- The Meigs High
School class of 1972, Meigs Vet
Clinic, Sunday, 2 p.m. to plan 25th

Beauty _in

~ature

By BONNIE SHIVELY

l"
I

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I

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At the Feb. ,3 meeting, Katie
She gave a variety of suggestions
Moore
was the KOPS · best loser.
including walking the corridors of
January
KOPS best loser was Helen
your work place, turning on the
radio and dancing, taking the stairs Trout.
A TOPS program titled ."One
instead of the escalator, walking to
the mailbox or exercising while or Potato, Two Potato" was presented
by Mary Martin, Middleport.
between tasks. ·
"If ever a food had an liildcA verse titled "Song of Yesterday" was read, by Helen Trout. The servedly .Iiad· reputation it was the
hraml new year contest was won by potato." said Martin. the potato. As
Katie Moore, Syracuse, and Helen recently as the t.960s, Western culTrout, Cheshire. · Each teceived a ture looked nose down at the potato
· as a starch thai should never darken
lOPS charm.
KOPS best loser of the week was a dieter's plate, she said, noting that
Helen Trout. Best losers of the week potaloes provide excellent nutrition
receive a gift from the gift box and a and are great for the weight-conscious if they are nol smothered in
certificate of recognition.

~

PETER
GO'lT, M.D.

Devodonal Writer
' When-llooked out the front door,
the suri was about to riSe, making the
horiwn golden.
·
·The' ·frozen pond was thawing,
Bl)d t~e water over ice ~ade it
appear_as a mirror. The reflecuo~s of
the trees.on the pond were heauuful.
The spruce trees, young maples, old
ash trees. walnut, hickory, oak, pine,
and ce(Jar were perfect reflections .
Above the hOrizon were heavy gray
clouds, broken and swiftly moving
across the sky. There was one
. b1g,

reftects that of the ·Creator _.·.

bright star. The dawn of the new day light ·shining in a dark place, until
held me captive.
the day dawns
·
. The Creator's bc'auty in ·nature is and the morning· . - - .
exquisite. Jesus is the Light of the star rises in your
World, the Living Water, and the hearts."
bright Morning Star. We are to
Father,' thank
reflect His beauty. Our lives change you for the
as quickly .as the early morning . beauty of dawn.
light. We need a Savior moment by May the Mommoment, when dark clouds roll into ing Star rise in
our lives, He is there to guide and our hearts and
protect if we win but accept Him. · may we reflect
The Bible says in 2 Peter I: 19 and share your
(NIV), "We have the word of the beauty today. Amen.
prophe~ made more ccnain ... as to a

./)

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• Always love you.: ·

To my Gran(ldaughter,
Misty
: 'Happy Valentine's Day.
:
. · I love you.
_,. .
. MaMa Haye

RACINE -- Racine Village Council, recessed session, Monday, 7
p.m. at the municipal building.

•~ppytValentine:.

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....

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high-fat toppings. ·
Members weigh-in on Mondays
from 8:30 to 9:45 a.m. The meeting
is from 10 to -tla.m: Formore information on TOPS. call 367-0274,
!

•

_10_4 .

1v1ammaw &amp; Pappaw\
.•
Happy Valentine's •

e

Day
We love you .
'Chelsea&amp;

••victori~•

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candy ta awae1

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Aln'tlhatnaal?
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Papal &amp; Mo

Make a love

bay Irene &amp;
Jenmfer •

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Love,
..._)Paul

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/red, .

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.ood

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Thanks for taking such •
care of me and myJ
a mommy. You're the e
4t._ BEST Daddy. , /.
.-,. I love you,
•
mmyW' . .

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Happy. Valentine_'s
Day, Hun.

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very
·much! ·

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Valentine's Day to
•Jacob Allen Hatfie 1d
4t,. :~'&lt;!"~ Mommy, Daddy,
~randrna &amp; Grandpa
· ..
~amro~/ - -

7

to spend the rest 0

•

. 4Lmy life with you

·

Love,
Kyle &amp; Dillon

I

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We than_k Jesus every •.

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A Valentine thought •
of l9ve and friendship •
Forever and always •

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Jhink of th_is,

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I love you very
much! Have a
•
. .Happy Valentine's

•

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Bob:
Please tie a string from•
• my heart to yours - so*
~ou can feel the tug#
*- my love. •

v:t •*•

day for giving us such •
*~nderful parents.
love you dearly.
_ . Cl}'!llal &amp; : •
- . Tracy . •

~-.,..·

.

...

. ToMommy,
• We love you very much•
· '
Happy Valentine's Day:

Tickle Me Elmo:
llov~ you. I do wan

•

I love you

•

- ~ -

•

:

;.;p.••, , . . . . .-·v·~
ir Bob,and Nancy, . - ._
~ To Someone Special

"-'~appy First

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con ne·cti·on.

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To:

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Scott &amp; Tori .
•
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Brenda V.
•
love you both with all
Happy Valentine's
my heartl Happy .·
.· •
•
·
· 1•
* Day. We love you.a
.. . Valentine's Dayl~
··
~reg, ~ennifer, _'Ambjf
· •
Love always
Tara (Mommy)

•Jay, .
i 6 years ago you were
4lin my life, . Now you're•
my heart to staYfl'
'Ia lloveyou ill

•~cathy•fl

Kathy_-

~·-~- c ~y-. .:

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To my husband Jeff anC:
our son Ethan. I love fl
•
you both very much! •
~appy Valentine's Da-1
•·
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. Michael,
You're lovable and sweet,
•
Desirable and true, .
• You sweep me off my tee.a
~ and that's why
• I love you . . •
·~Amber . .

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*

Quality Window Systems
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Happy

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any other phone in stock .

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.

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Happy yalentine's Day.:
honey! Just ~anted yo~
to know that you meane~ everything to me.
• · I love youll
' T a r a MJ.

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past year.
. . Love. . .

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~Indy•

e

.

~nna

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Elmo,
..., ·
Marie,._,
H .·
I t' ,
God gave us something
Sweetie and Goob,
• . appy 8 en lne S. •
. special when He blessed us .
Happy Valentine,·s
t5 • · I love you very •
wtth yout
•
Day to my guy~ •
·~
much
~·
•
1-jawv Valentine's Day: .~
·
•
•
· Sweathaanl
. ·
Love,
.
.
•Love, . ~•
'
Love, Mom &amp; sml·i
a
Mom .,_.•
·
• . Dotti~·
•
Dad &amp; Pam • · ·:

·v

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!f
•
•

tdmyJife
arrq besflriend, .
Moveyou.
Happv Valentine's.

1.'Johnny
Day
I
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.-·ttl'

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Shelba,
.
tour. plans and dream
•
are about to come
'-true, amflhe wqrtd
....
awaits us.
·
love youiJ"
.
•a_JI~-

•.I
•

4J

•
'

Miss V.B.

Albert Parker our Hero,
tum the big seven-zero.
Always remember.• • Happy Valenline's Day
l_will always
~and a Big Birthday Wlshl

_. , &gt;Ill.

..

'

...••

love'you.

~

···/·

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J-

· ' • Mr. V.B. ·. •

••

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You are the two best
things that h·a ve ever .
• happened in my li~;;e.
~H~ppy Valentine's .
•
· . Day
•aove, Aprf6t•
••
...

'•
"

l

.• •E• •

Happy Valentine's Da\.
•
to my' three speciai'Yj
•
Valentines!
•
. . Jessi, Jenni and
· 41!
Amanda · tt
I love you, • •
,_Mom.-

'

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'.''

me

..

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••

a

~ MichaelfK~shia,

.

'•

'

•

I

4la

,#Todd,
"
God blessed
with a*
wonderful husband;
• You're my True Love of*
~a lifetime. Happy
•'tfalentine's Day• ·
• . Love, . •

••
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.
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.
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.,.• ·

·-~eat~·

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• . Day,

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)

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Day.
Love,

•.;
.

1

I

;r-

Mary,
. 4.
Thanks for the best
· • years. Who says Fnda
· ' e 13th is unlucky? •
. Love, Jim
"

lr' .

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Dad&amp;Mom~
ust wanted to wish.yo
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know, we love you.

·. ·

MONDAY
LE:I:AIU' •.... Letart Township ·
Trustee~ •. 6 -p.m. Monday, office
building.

.

~

---'' -~--t

CHESTER -- Northeast Ouster
sponsored hymn sing Chester United Methodist Church, 7 p.m. ~un­
day.

,.

.

0

reunion.

'

No. 231\due 61
At New Orleans, Damon Cobb hit
a three-pointer with IS seconds
remaining and Carlos Williams
scored 22 of his 30,points in the second half
· No. 25 CoDeae·
of Chuleston 8S
F1a: Intematio.W 81
At Miami, Sedric Webber, Rodney . Conner, Thaddeous Delaney
and Ant!)ony Johnson scored 14
points each

I

TOPS hear about how to shed those ·extra. pounds
. Emogene Johnson, Point Pleasant, W.Va., presented a lOPS (Take
Off Pounds Sensibly) program titled
"Getting Active: Every Little Bit
H~lps" when lOPS #01;1 13~3.
·. Cheshire, met Monday at Cheshire
United Methodi~l Church.- ·
Many people would like to he ·
morc physically active, but they feel
they just don't have the ·time. Yet "you don~ need huge chunks of time
to fit more activity into your day,"
said Johnson •. a ·representative of
TOPS. "Every Little Bit Helps," she
said, so"if you can find five minutes
here and there, you can squeeze in
several quick bursts of activity."

Abibaaui-Bin;;iepom 64

MeLBOURNE, Australia (AP) hit maybe once. The secood time you
-While Tiger Woods closed meek- are going to pay.
ly with a pair of bogeys, Australians
"I've found that u il is letUot
Peter O'Malley and Lucas Parsons hotter tiJid drier, the ball is Slartilll to
raced to a seven-stroke advantage 'run into the rough. They are ltarling
over the American star in the Aus- to bounce and roll. Thai means you
tralian Masters.
have to be even more ~ise."
O'Malley, who said the publicity
Woods, .coming off a hectic week
surrounding Woods "fired everyone in Thailand that ended with a 10up," shot a 7-under-par 66 today, stroke victory in the Asian Honda .
while Parsoos had a 67 for 15-under Classic, is seeking his fifth victory in
131 totals on t_he demanding Hunt- 14 professional starts and trying to
ingdale layout. Woods finished with win on a third continent this year.
a 70. ·
"The greens are very hard to
"You must drive the ball in the read," Woods said. "I was talking to ·
fairway," Woods said. "Most golf Brett Ogle out there today pnd he
courses you can get away with miss· was telling nie that it takes years to
es. Here you'd _get away with a inis- understand these greens.

D• .

_. ·---------:-·----'---.---:-. -·Community calendar___;_'.;...__~-

1

points for Stanford (14-6: 7-S Pac10), which remained ooheaten in
seven home games this season.
Corey Benjamin had 16 points for
Oregon State (6-15, 2-10), which lost
its 17th straight road game.

O'Malley holds slim lead
in Australian Masters

~

High blood pressure is a 'red flag' for some kind otphysical abnormali!Y ,)
'

The Dally SeaUnel• Pege 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

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lndlani

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,..., ;. '*'*' 14, 1117 :

Pomel'oJ • •1111' I port, Ohio

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Valentine's.Qay TrN special reminds Business Services
. ... ..
us mismatches n b~ great fun

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'

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. .......... CltlnllaiCitohl
3322601!
:S..,Scioool-111.11.
WGIIWp·l-,6 ......
W - y - · 7JLI!L
I

I

Hvllll'",-,

....... ...

••n·

I Cltlnll ofCitohl
I 5d! llld Main
Pallor: AI~
y- Miniater. BiD Fnzia
Sunday Scbool· !1-.30 .....
w~ 8: IS, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
w..-y Servioes. 7 ,......

.,~ .;
J

~

II

IJ

,•

•

.'

~

Pallor:.La Haym~~~

..• · !J:=

• JJ • '
~

Sunday Serviee • 7:30p.m.
Sehool· 10 a.m.
W
y Serviee--7:30 p.m.

·'.

'

••'

..
~

Pt

•

•

'
'I·

.

I

~

.;•.
•,•

c
.... ..
••

....,.,
..
~

.

....

'
'

.

;

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Jllnl Bopdat

l'ulor: Paul Sclnaon
Eul. Main Sc.

Sunday School· 9:3oa.m.
· Wombip • 1o-.30 a.m.
Jilnl Sowl.... ~
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pular: E. Lamu O'lkyanl .
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-· 10:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
W........,y Services· 7:00p.m.
Jilnllqllal Cloiii'C.
.&amp;h llld Palmer Sc., Middlepon
Sunday Sehool - 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:1S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.
Raclllel'lnlllapCIIC
· Pallor: Rev. Lowtence T. Haley
Youth Putor: Aaron Youns
Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
W........,y Servias- 7:00p.m.

.. ..

'

I ~..,

•'

.

.•

.,

,.

......

' .. "

'

"'
•••

Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Wonhip ; 9;30 a.m. Sunday
Bible Study • 7:00 p.m. Wednesday
Old lltdtel FnO Will loptlsl Cloordt
. 281i01 Sl. R1. 7, Middlepod
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening .. 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30

...- .
;·

,..
.....'

. Sl. Rl. 143 just off Rt. 7
Palor: Rev. Jamea R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worsllip ·11a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service&amp; -7 p.m . .

ClortoiiOo u-

Han!..d, W.Va.
• Putor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School • II Lm.
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m., 7;39 p.m.
Wednesday_ Services. 7:30p.m;

Cilurcll of Go d
ML Mor!U Cloardt of God
Racine
Put..: Rov. James Sanerfreld
Sunday Sehool • 9:4S a.m.
.
. E~ning- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Fallll Bopllll Cb....
Railroad St., Muon
Sundar School· 10 a.m.

r r:,

::::·lla.m.,6p.m.

W

y Services • 7 p.m.

-

:

·-· .
":If '

,,.

.. , II" )
~""'

o.·r~

Apple llld Second Sb.
Poator: Rev: David R-11
Sunday School and Wonhip-10 o.m.
Evenina Services- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicca ·7:30p.m.
Clo.... of God al Propllecy
OJ. Whire Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pulor: PJ . Chapman
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
. Wo11hip • II a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

PUior. Rev. Rolllld Wildmon
Sunday tcboolllld - i p 10:23

• ., I

- ...
.....

~

Ep1scopal

~ Mall- 9:30-a.m.
Dalley Mau • 8:30a.m.

"=d

;fill

., a.- orCiortll

212.W. Main Sc.
.
, _, Neil l'nludfOOI

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4$ o.m., 7 p.m.
Wedrieaday Services • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Re•. Chulea Mash
Worship. 9:30 o.m.
Sunday Sehool· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF S~nday 6:30p.m.
Firat Sunday of Month· 7:30p.m. Krvi«

Caatnla.....
Albeey (Sy-l
Pwor: Charlea Neville
S•nday Schooi·_9,4S a.m.

Suildi,Sehool·9:30o_.m.
'!l'onhrp- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
, Wt* d•y Servk:a :· 7 p.m.

-811:-.. .
Slnloy Seovleeo -10 a.m. .t 7 p.m.
Pcntcc o st :ll
..
,
'l.t.
p-4
H

· Sunday School-JOa.m.

Evenina-7p.m. ·
Wednesday Servicca. 7 p.m.

(2) 14, 21 ZTC

s~..-. .

you.
lt'a the dey I ellow

CLASSIFIIED ADS .

: • supermarket

~

WBGSAM ..."'

Mor-. CltlpeiCioardt
SUft!liy adlool • lO o.m.
"
Wonhip· 11a.m.
W........,y Service· 7 p.m.

(

F!REAUPITY
1'1 1 iAIIIMcE
...7071
111 Nor111•1 i a• •
IIIIJPalt, Cillo
f

·''

'

. FISHER
FUNEAAL'.HOME
. 992-5141
2M Iouth 2nd.

auch e llnllll token
of felth.
.
It hardly ltellll fair;
that 1 can't 11.1w you
more when . you've
beerl.ao lmpqrtent In

Sabbatb School· 2 ,_,;,,
Wonllip. 3 p.m.

.n, :lfe.

Untte cl BrettlrCtl

for me lo do alnce

y(lu've .,_ ll!lne .eo
long.

time.

I

.......

· M1881ng my Best
Friend, Chrll

Hendrlclc8
' 211111177-1112!1181111

'

Scott

Sunday Sd!llol· 10 a.m.
Evenina7:30 p.m.
Tuesday .t Thii/oda, • 7:30 p_...

.

.

The family of
Hany (Hook) n•
Th0111811
would IIIIa
61.--a..
H'lll

to

u--

Feb.15,1993
Wemluyou

somuch. ,
Daughters,
Carll • Ki:sl
Sister, Connie •

evwyone.

wtio hllp,ed$Ding

the lllnlss and~
of ow father and· .

PIPL
•:
Those who eent ,,'
flowers, food, I I .
csrcll, br, Walker •·,
111d staff of Ollila, .
· County Hospice. -'
Jan, Dena,.Fran snd,

RIDENOUR
•
SUPPLY
I .

l,•~

r

Robert lhonlpaon,
the mualcli:n: end .
8VIIJ'Yon&amp; for their
·prayers and all
thoU who helped .

lo lilY Wily, your

I

.

Pomeroy

..

"Diplty

Established 1913

112-2121

.

Pomeroy

HOME ~
v.tw8118 ·
~ lllmorlal Hatptlll

EWING .
I

214 E. Main

892-5130

'

108. Mill~ Ave,
.

. _Pomeroy

~

115 E. ,Memorial Or.

9t2·2104

ldncfneu did .not
unnotlcecl,and

paver be forgotteri.

.

..

I

I

nilll you all the lime
.
. .
~night
. .. ,.
We mill kll8lng V014·
And telllllf JOU gDDdi\Jtht
We M)oyed thlllme WI hid With you
I Mtfjtllng, plllylllf JolrM, IIIII )llet ltfVInl fun.
Bu.t fiO!II' you're M 111111 •IIIMM till sUn.
Wllalow yoll'1'1! wilt .......
l.aDtdllf
llllplna•ln tiMIIIPIOIIIWIIY •
.... you
cld . .
Yfl,fllfl, Ulldl SI&amp;ICI Wflr you had iDII!I
tut ..OW wellnOw you're not llolt,at ¥ourhonll.

doWII......

••w-

t

Wu,. ~
Long St., AUUind, Oh.
7~, Aak·far Kip
.

992-5535

992·2753

(614) 367-0266
1·800-950-3359
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

SNOW'...

REMOVAL
·- .

-Driveways ·.
•Parkll1g Lots
•Et~.

Call Anytime
949·3327
591·1197

,,,,., ,,.,...
'

vwre. or 22 or 3,

-~·L-onl, thy will be done."
Por .. a.. joy thy.Ohllcl"'- brlna.
1118 rllk of pt Wl'll run.
'
We wllllhiiW 111m .with l8ndlt~ Ill
wt IIIII lcM 111111 whlli WI 7111Yt
•
And for lilt hlpplruu • hiYe 11nown

our
beloved husband/famemory of

ther the . family 9f
.Meyford Harris would
like to expreli their .

hnrtftlt epprecl:llon
and thenke to all the

many fimlly members·
1nd friends for ell

!hair 1upport, pralfiiS,
end sympllhy. He will
be gnllllly mlaed. ·
L..-....;..;;.;;.;..;..,;,.;...----s__

~kYou.

AIHlOU IJC [ l.l E IJTS

STAR BURST

Ior h!m,

WI wll bml 1111 blllir_grllf . .
OOiillllnd "Y to uncllnlll_lcl. .

ANNOUI&lt;Cf r.li: rJ 1:-,

Are You An E1clilnt R....,d~?
11-~.

Easy Pay Auto

~10 MEET 'IOU

II'IOUijNEA
1·110C1-44S-57811

INSURANCE

EXT: 1811
12.811 PER MIN.
Must' BE IBYRS.

Any Car
Any Driver

SEFIY-11- (810) ecua·

"'ttpi.. Yitt ,,

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

•• •• Ylttr

SIIODGUSS'

UPIOUTEilY
At 2 Location;
RutiiFnd, Oh.
814-742-21196
Racine, Oh.
814 •••2202

Installed

(614) 992-3838

mo.

2111/1

..

'•

'

I

.

DUI &amp; SR-22
. IIUTLOCAL- D
Call Nowl1·000-443·5780 Ell.
&gt; Discounts &lt;
41110. 12.1111 /Min . 11+ SorY·U,
Computer Quotes .- 8111 045 8434.
PLEASEIE(6 14) 992-6677
1·1100-825-7910 Ell. 3111, t2.111
Pomeroy
Par Min. lluat Be II YrL Serv·U,

Complete House
and Trailer Site
Work, Bulldozing,
Backhoe, Trackhoe.
· Septic Systems
·

•

GUYS AND GALS

61Hc~.

·

Slngloal Tired OF Blind D11tea?
Call 1-IIOO·CC3·5710 E11. 2692,
S2.99 /Min. 11 Yro Strv·U 1111·
IIC!HI43C.

40

Glvenwny

1 I 112 ton lump c:a.at In ball·
ment. you remoft and hlul, 81+
742-2755.

1 112 Yllr Old Male Bonier eo;.
lle,814-446-1151.

2 Adult Cata Female One NeU· ·
18t8d,614-t4842 Black Pupplaa, I Weeka Old ·
Both Female, Molitor RoglaCI&gt;M, 81....a-tl47.

monlhs old, very playlul. :104-

Re Le HOLLON
TRUCKING

WICKS
HAULING

DUMP TRUCK

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

Umeston8 • Gravel

SI!RVICE
Dirt • Sand
985 4422
Chester, Ohio

614-992-3470

10/2........

•

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa
ofloom Addldona

.

-New Ger8gft
.
•Eiec:lrlcel &amp; Plumbing

oRoollng
otnterlor • Ellt8rlor ·
Palnllng
Al8o eonc:..ta Work
(FREE ESTIMATES) I
V.C. YOUNG Ill
~5

·-

Pomeroy, Ohio

7

1537 BRYAN PLACE
IIIDDL£PORT

-1112·2772
· · -1:00 8.m.-3:30 p.m.

. •R••••nt Windows

. eNdG••1es
•Snhors&amp;

875-5126.

Call now to achadule rour Tupperware P,.rty. Earn free produels. Stars &amp; Strlpea. HIOO·
-·1182 S.C. 2779.

Female Medium Size Lontt HolNd

Dog Housebroken ·Good With
ChHdro~

81HC8-1450.

Fiberglall Satellite Dlah, 8142C5-0022.
Metal kitchen catine'l WI alngle

&amp;ink.

IIUCIII

induded. 304..e·75-

3188.

Puppies, 6wkl Old. 304·875·
1726.

Small Propane Gas H•rar, Rattbill!lac:l&lt;&amp; Wh&lt;ta, 81----11290. .
To . A Good Home 2 Year Old
Miniature Dachshund And .T8f'rier

Ml1od; Good Plil For Child,

Uood DuctWork. 114-HI 1100. _

60 LOSIII'Id Founcl
Found: Spoiled Brown &amp; White
Female Dog No Collar Or T11ga
·814-446-3012 For Morelritorma-

tion.

· Windows

FOUND: u - Pt Plaaan~ wl'rlta

· oR-Millions

31M.·B75-1182.

male Bichon. 30.C-87S.281h!i pr

Loll: C Monlh Old Bo1ar Puppy
Brindle IWhltt With BFock Maak
Answers To Tho N.,..· Palo;, Yl·

cinity: Graham Seltoo7 Road. 814- .
44'1..Q868.

10

...
...
BEECHGROVE

vn Sale
GallipOlis
l Vlclnlly

All Yard Salea Mull Be Pale! ill
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lha dlf. baFore the od Ia 1a tun.
SUnday edition • 2:00 p.m. ~­
- y edition • ·10:00 •.m. ..~

ROAD

-

.....,_

.o-oe
l1'ont 2111, 2117th,

OPEN HOUSE

.., llt14, -~
71oulh Te
211 Thon On Krlnar Ad, Folli!W .
Stona. Toola, GluiWiil.iii,
Clolhtl, AlblimJ, Craht. lilvtll
Mcnl

2:00 ,. • 5:00 pill
.Satwtlay, felnilry 15th.

Flemodel8ct 1 112· ltoly ll1u118d on · two lola.
Mlllllllng 100' x 80'. One 0#11 aHachad garege, full
blllrnenl, pl1cl hll been drutlcaly nrduced.
Many eltllrlllncluded.

JimNifty, Nifty
LoOic W7ao. 501
Happy Belated

814-

448-2655.

s,e

Come
ll• .tt
103 N. 3fd 8bMt,II)IIOft, WY
,,.•• hlwd by

·WEDGE REALTY, BROKER

• mill rou 10 7IIIIOhi
. DBcl (l(tllny), Qlnnll,

WI
'

Personals

005

ALL OHIO

$1400.00
$50.00 or 1101'1

Q

lluoiiiOOIJW thin WI hiVe pllnllld,

614·992-4025 8 lm-1

. 742-2094

Driveway Limestone

rn

h""
l,__lhlt I hllrd IMm My,

llld..,•.

'

Alllll'
(eglon Annex
. . Slreet, llldclleport
Wndal1 $5.00, 8' Talllea
Cll Ru81 Mmengo

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Low Riles)

• ....rfells.

8ul wit you until I call hl!n blck,
TID eara of him for me?
HI,! bring hie chlnile to atglalHiddlt....,n.you,
And ai!Oukl hie dey be brief,
You~~=- !1.11! I~ lllBI!Iorille
"'
for yow grllf.
..
: cannot prwnlll he wlllltly,
Slnaeell from llrth return,
8Uttlln 111911 IC.WIItughl clown ihlrer
I Wlnl 11118 chUd to IHrn•

......

Pick up diiiCBrdlcl
appiiiFicel, betl8rlle, .·,
many mel81e a ·
motor I:IJ!)cb.

l'Mnl=nnett Poet 128

-Garages
_-complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985 4473

(UmeStone-

POST 467·
MON.&amp; WED.
6:30P.M.

lend you

..__
...,.
lut lhoulclllll ..... IIIII

MD

--

FRII

FLUIIDKn ·
Fri..,, March 7
10AM•9 PM .

-New Homes

card of Thanks

·No!' ......1M when 1-lo 0111
To llilt
lllcllepl!l?"

.

. · Ins. owner:

.20 Yrt.

.

BINGO

c.,.,

n may 1!1 In llx or -

MMin

I'WIIoollld thle wide -.Ill In my - h for lllohln lrul
And from the 7hranga that crown llle'e ._.,
1hiVe eelealld you,
Now, IIIII you give 111m 111 r-!a¥1,
Nor think 1111 ...,orvlln. . •

l

I .

,..,.,,,

CJarfstopiNr

A child of mine," he Uld.
"For you to ~ lilt while he IIYM, ·
And 11*P when he II dllcl.

FLOYD (Red) WAFmf
Who Paaaed Away Jen, a. 1te7

·

Of

FuMn:l Home, Rev•.

In Loving Memory Of

I

lnM•...,

and -" of Fllher

In IIIII!OfY

·IIIII II

).

iiiiii~~======~----_.,

· JuciY,'Bruce, Jim '"

Grlnclchlldren

'

.

Jan. 19, 1944-

Gr:andi:hlklrl!'l

. ~~
........

oCall Today for Your

·

Border Collie I Lib mix, 1

SMITH

('iodBieslyousiL

&amp;IWIDWARE
0

.::kJrul wJI/&amp; the buys
· you 1lfind in ihe
clas-ified-.
J,

Cerd of Thanks .

Children

. ,... - i \

Body work, car, truck
• truck pilntlng,
minor mechanical

1/IMJ/Imo.lld

DOmEL.

'

'·

YGU-a beJL&gt;oting .m ~

llddftpott

.

But · 10met1mee · It
ne1111 llka only
yeatenlay...
Oh, how 1 wllh you
_,.here egilln 10 -l
could NY Hippy
Birthday 1881

Pu~or:Ro,.Hunrer

'(•

•

But It's' ell 't!Mit .. left

· 33045 Hiland ~ Pomeroy

~.

my
.

hard for me to
exp'* . myself_wll!l

MLOI!nC- aal11CJi....
Putor: Llwtenee Bush ·

~_.

from

lt'a

S ev e nth - Day A ri•Jcnltst
ltv 7 a.,.uo ••
Mlllbe'l)' H10. Rd., I' uoy
Putor: Roy uwilllty
Salunlay Servieea:

. Lona !loltom
Sunday sdiool • 9:30 I.IJ',
Wonhip • I 0:4$ a.m .. 7:30p.m.
. .Wednesday7:30p.m.

Prucrlptton.AAWLINQ8 ·COATS

.

' )'

." . ·

W. FIH Dockn'

992·2955

INOUfF!R

feelings
heart.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE ·
.... . PHARM.ACY
.

•.· for everything .

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

-~
s.:tiOO!la.m.
Wonhlp·10a.m.

much you meen

A couple of flowere
end e few amallll'ftl,
but 1ii08tly many

'

In·Memory Of

lome.

Worsllip • • a.m.
•.Sway School- 9:4S a.m:

804W. Main

,.,.. ,..,.,•..

how

,.. i'lu!r{lot ... Cltar4

Jere

•Decks

,_ .,.

Free Estimates

ROIEIT IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION .

-GRUESER'S
GARAGE ·

In

... . . -... .far

IW1

•No Job Too Small
•Any and All of Your
Home Repair 01ae*.

1-IIOQ-.4.&lt;3.5780 En 0212. $2:11
· Pat Min. Mulllo 11 Yra. Serv.U,

.._lm.

, St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pallor. William lfoljocl!

Oretlt·

992·2318 Pomeroy

' -

LEGAL NOncE
The. Rutllnd T-hlp
TruetHe ara offering, for
aale a 1174 Caae 5808
tractor and
Biela
will be accepted until 6
p.m., TUMilay, March 4,
19t7 at which drne they wlU
be opened.
Fof' more
Information on the
equipment call "2·2095.
-The Tl'll8teee ·- reaerve the
right to reject any or illl
bide. Submit 111Fttd bide
to:
Rutland Townahlp
Truetue, P.O. ·ao~ 326,
Rutland, OH 41171 and
mark on· the outelde
''Tractorllllowtrlm Bid."

·Wednesday Servi«a • 7 p.m'

Na1ionwlde
ins.Oh.
Co.
of Cqlt.imbus,

Pullllc Notice

Notice

W.,....y • 7 jt.m. .t Youlb 7 p.m.

'

ffY1t-

·'·

Public NotiCe

~ ~'1:.~? f;.;...

141 I J1ric1aeman Sl:, SyriCIIIC
Sunday Scl!ooi·IO o.m.
Evenina·6p.m.
W........,y ServiCe· 7 p.m.

(614) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio
Appointments in Gallipolis by arrangement.

TuiiHIPI,.OII Change,

Bailey Run lipid
Putor: Rev. l!nnt!tt Rawoon

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

.

'

Morning worship is held at 10
a.m. and the midweek service is at 7
p.m. on Thursday. Youth ministers at
the church are Randy and Jessica
Jewel, and Teresa Davis oversees
the_ Sunday · school department
wh;(:h has classes for all ages. ·

rat.. v...,._Cio...,.

....

,__,yCio.... alllle N.......,
Putor: Rev. Thomu Meauna
Suildly School· 9:3oa.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

.

as pastor

·

Putor: Rev. !Idled B. Smith, S..
Sunday School • 9:30 .....
Wombip·I0:30a.m .• ?p.m.
Wedneadly Service ·1 p.m.

P-: Bill Scireo .
Sunday Schnol· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
. Woclnelday Seovi«a. 7 p.m.

•·

New IJI'e'ViciGr)' Caafot-·

Rt.u--~
7'"' Pcorouuy By-

s,_ Cllardt ofllle NlllrHt

Tappen Phlu SL hal
Pltllor: Sharon Houaman
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
- Woiship-IOa.m.
Tuesday Seovicea. 7:30p.m.

Gnee ~II
a-da
326 E. ain ., Pomeroy
Reclor: Rev. D. A. duPianlier
Holy Eud!arill and
Sunday School10:30 o.m.
Cartee hour followina

C: lnncl1 o f C l1r1 s t

r

Rotdlo•

Trtllltyo.rdl
Seeond .t Lynn. Pomeroy

Sun. Con. ..g:4S-9.1S a.m.•

P-: Mark -A. Dupler

q,

•.

Sunday 'School· 9:30a.m. ·
· Evenina· ·7 p.m.
. Wednedoy Service • 7 p.m.

RetdaYIIIt.Ftllowal!lp
Clo
.... ., ... _ _

Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.

1dla..dt

Jm 0oo1pa Cnot Road, Oallipqtil. OH·

r.a~CJo-

MicldbpHt Cit.... of doe N . PUIOC 010pry A. CUndiff
. SUft!~iT School • 9:30a.m . .
Wonlup • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.-

be~: installed

Rev. Richard Vennillion will be moving to tbe area in March.
installed as pastor of the Faith
Vennillidn will be the ~hun:h's
Chapel Open Bible Church, 935 first full-tiiiJe pastor. Established
South Third Street, .Middle~n. on about 18 "months ago, Pastor
Sunday, Feb. 23 at 10 a.m.
Michael PanJio has been overseeing
· ~e ~d his wife, Donna who_now ·. the_ church.!lll'd serving the congre·
res;de tn Morgjllltown, W.Va. wtll be gauon.
q
·

Cifton, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonllip ·7·p.l8.
Thunday Servi« • 7 p.m.

Mldd!lftltCCltorrdt
1
S1S PW1 St.,k 1 oil ·
' . Pallor: Sam. A.ndenOn "'1 - · l t' .•
· Sunday School!O a.m.
Evenina • 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service·· 7:30p.m.

miiiiJ Cltardl
Sunday School ·-!l:lO a.m.
Wonllip • 10:30 ':m., 7 P:m-

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes • 7 p.m.

'"

Vermillion to

•

~T.. t

FetJtlwH-orrn,...

0,-C

._Pintp_,SeollRoae
Cloardt ofllle N -

Pao101: =ndolph
Wo11hip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool· 10:30 a.m.

r •

OffRr. 124
PUior: J:dlel Han
Sunday SebooJ. 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp-10:30a.ll!., 7:30p.m.

N azarene

Cl!taWr
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worsllip • 9 a.m.
Sunday Sehool • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7'p.m.

Co n g rc g&lt;Jti o nil I

161 Mllllrony Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pallor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz

111 1'' .( (

Paolor: Sharon Houaman
Sunday School- 9:30 a,m.
Worship· 11_a.m .• 6:l0 p.m.

' I

. Cloardt,..._ Cl!rtlt,
A ;• t'alllt .
1/4 mile put .,;.. Melp oe New Uma lid:
Pallor: William Van Meier
Sunday·7:00 p.m.
W-y-7:00 p.m.
Friday·7:00p.m.

-c-uiiJCitudi

Sunday School·10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednelday Serviceo • 8 p.m.
TardtCio....
Co.Rd.63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 o.m. .

Sunda~~30a.m.

C&lt;ttllOI IC
...... Htut Calllalc Clow4

CHrdl
· Putor:
Dwlllm
Sunday • 9:30 a.m.,al.d 7 p.m.
W-y-7_p.m .

Attorney William Safranek

SundaY School -- 10 a.m.
W-.loy Servicca • 7 p.m.

=

. Gl'lltd Street

~~!utft' ,

\

.New Lime IW.• RU!lllld
l'lllot: Rev. Marpret 1. Rabinaon
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Horc!daQwl Cit....

Moly:. Cooptr•IIYII'IIrlall

s,..._ Flnl CJo...,. or'God

MLMorla.Ba,ilal
Pounh .t Main-St., Mlddlepoll
,_,Rev. Gilben Cilia. Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:4S Lm.
Aa11 A llapllal
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Thurlday Servioes • 7:30 p.m.
••had FnO Will Baplllt
Salem Sc.
PaoiOr: Rev. Paul Taylo1
Sunday School-10 a.m.
•
.Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wedneadly Services • 7 p.m.

+

. Off'l24 behind Wilkeaville
Plllor: Rev. Ralph Spirea
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Pulor: Randy Barr
Sunday Scl!ool· 10 a.m.
W-::r.· II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wed
y Seovi«s • 7 p.m. ·

··: ·, $al. Coo. 4:45·5:1~-m.; ~-5:30p.m.

•

ML OH••·UaiUd Motllodlll

'
......., a......
alGod·

, ..... Ru llapllil
Paotor : Ari"' Hun
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

.,- .

G-UalledM&lt;IIIadll
Wonhlp ·9:30a.m. (Ill &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p.m. (Jrd .t. 4lb Sun)
Wednesday Servi«. 7:30p.m.

iWJictaa Lll'a 0 -

'

oNew Homes
•Remodeling
""arages
"""

1

-·

~N. 2ndAve.,Middlepoit
Pular: towrcnee Foreman . ·

=

.-.

Caol:rllloU- MltMdlot hria7l
Pua:llelen Kline
Caol•• C.wdl
Main .t Fiftll Sl.
S-y Schooi·IO a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
_Tuesclay Sel\'ices • 7 p.m.
l!od!tiCioardl
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday Scl!ool· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servicca ·10 a.m.

Unit ed Methodtst

, _ , David Dailey
SuDday ~9:30a.m.
Evenina·7p.m.

n.o ....... a· r•• •ID Mllrhlr)'

y·7p.m.

P-..Briaot Hullneu
· Sunday Schooi·IOo.m.
Wonhlp. 1.1 a.m.

.

....... w............

(at Burllnpun ehurd! o l f - 33)
Paator. Robed Vanee
!tr,~l womblp. IOa.m.
W
y aervi« • 6:30p.m.

~-9o.m.

W.

Comer Sycamore .t Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Oeo!JO Weirick
Sunday School ' 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

- - Clo.... alCioltalla

ViciOI)' Boplloll.......adul
S23 N. 2nd Sc. Middlepon
Pwor: James E. Keesee
Woiship • IOa.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

St. Pard Lolllt,.. Cbilr&lt;•

s.u..i

Putor: Brian Hullneu
Sunday Scl!ool· 10 a.m.

lntrim pastor~: Rev. Robert Hupp
Sunday School , 10:00 a.m.
· Worship· 11 o.m.
·

.

Sunday Sc:hool-11:30 a.m.
. Wonbip ·9:30a.m: and 1 p.m. ·
w-y-7p.m.
Friday • fellowalup aervice 7 p.m.

"-"--c-.-..,
n.on

Eestl.ola1

Oar Sariollr Lolllena Cb...,.
Walnut•nd Henry Sts., Ravenaw~ 0 W.Va.

Cilnst 1il n Union

. HIUIIde Boplllt Cbor&lt;b

blpQU'dl
Rev.Cyde·
Sunday aervice, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m .
. Y- Fellowahip ~J, 7:00p.m.
W.......y.....,., 7:30p.m._

Kennelb Baker
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worihip • 10:4S a.m. (111&amp; 3rd Sun)

...,_a.....

Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneldayServiee· 7:30p.m.

, Hollloa~Ftlow

..... .... ~a..a
~. Pua:
Scevo Reod

Pulor. Kenoelh Baker
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Services • 7:30p.m.

SI.Job
Pine Grove
Rev. Georp Weiriclt
Wonhip • 9:00a.m.
.
Sunday Sehool· 10:00 a.m.

Rzallt. a.ri olD~
Putor: Philip Scunn
Sunday Sehool: 9:30a.m.
WOiibip Seovice: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludjl, Wedneadiy, 6:30p.m.

;

u

...,Rev. • lwood
Sundly' School·· 9:30a.m.

..,J.

0

MoimqStar .

~'aM«:

l'omeroy Pike, Co.

Cltal the... 7p c Salem Sl., Rlt1and
Pallor: Rolten II. M,_r
~J School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II:IS ~m., 7 p.m.
W - y ServiCe· 7 p.m.

C....t
Putor: Kennelh Bakel
Sunday Scl!ool • 9:30 a.m.
W~p • 10:4S a.m, (2nd .t.4rh Sun)

Luthcrun

H..JoekGrcmCio....
Poator:GeneZ.W
.
Sunday oohool • 10::10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 Llll., 7 p.m.

Racine. OJ-I

I

•

CaloarJ .... Ox_..

, 923 S. 'lbini!JL. MiM
t
...;,.,. Mid...t
leiVilz, 10 Lm. '
y...tce,7p.m.

-a:::t-..

Cllrill or Lou.o.o, Salall
Sr. Rr. 160, 446-6247 or 446-74116
Sunday Sehool10:20-11a.m.
Relief Soeieoy/PrleatMod 11:0S-t2:00 ~n
Sa&lt;nmenl Service 9-IO:ts a.m.
· Hornemakinc meelina.lat1b~r~ . . 7 p.m.

Suildly Sehool • 9:30 Lm.
Worship -·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi« 7:30 p.m,

Service: Friday, 7 p.m .. '

..... Cltailol Opoa- Cltard!

A.--la.La"

u

V.....- aiiD .,..,_,._P

,_

•·

Pular: Rav. Fru*bo Dic:bila

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
•
Wonhip-9a....
W........,y Sel\'icca -10 a.m.

n..c....~urJ- .

Luprillo C1uillha Clo....

·. .
'
......... 7.I en.Ja
. lllrCIIJW

=

., ..., .._

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC:

k'

.

.

. Sunday Scl!ool· 10 a.m.
' Worsllip • h .m.

Sunday School· 9:30 LDI,
'Wonhip ·10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Serviceo · 7:30p.m.

....,..

Putor:JollaHan
Sunclly School· 9:30a.m.
·
Wclcahip • (:00 p.m.
W-y11ible Study • 7:00p.m.

s.ow.w.

Liltt cr- Dily Sil lllts

. Dexter

BeDJe~~eai Baptlst

.

'

BrandlPreaidont·
Michael
ReF. Duhl

· Putor. Woody Call
Sunday Evenina ·6:30p.m.
Thund*y Serviee • 6:30 p.m.

• ML Ullloa Ba,ilol
Putor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Sebooi·9:4S a.m.
Evening· 6:30 p.m1
Wednesday Servieeo ·6:30p.m.

•117 Clo....
Rev. Roy McCar!y

...

LlbertJ~ Clo-

- Putor:Ru
BillBa_P.Jal
Utile
Sunday Sehool · IOa.m.
Wonhip • lla.m., 7:30p.m.
· W&lt;dnetdAy S&lt;rvic&lt;O- 7:30p.m . .

Ref'

Sunday Scl!ool· 9:30a.m.
~r.-nc-7p.m .
W
y Servieea • 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip. 10 a.m., 7 p.m. ·
W - y Servicca. 7 p.m.

Swa.,t.!./1 .

~W.Va.RLl

~

call 992 · 2156

WO.:.. . .____________1::1221::117:.:,:t""':::.l:::.l

............ a. ..

- Sunda7 School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m.
Tbunday Servicca : 7 p.m.
SalomCntar
Pallor. Ron y.....,
Sunday School • 9: IS lo.m.
Wonhip • IO:U a.m.

. . . . -CHrdlotJ-Ciorial .
ofl.altor Dayll*ll

111ckorJ Hilla a..u,:ll afCitrht
Ev...,tisl Joseph B. 7loltlllo

..
t\ I II ClOI)III HF '
llalci!C8ob,.., Co. u 31
Pua:Rev. Ropi-WU~ 9:30 ....
lp-7p.m.
Coolvlllobad
Pallor:Rev, PI!illlpJa I I
-Y School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m.
WedneldaySOivice • 7 P'"'·

.
lonhip-IOa.m.
·. Youdl Fellowahlp, Sunday • 6 p.M.

-Co
Pular:

ran · , . 01n11 .,.._ M'-..-•
Pallor: Mark"'Wanllip • 10:3Q p.m.
. W. %
11]ySdoooJ.
6 p.m.
SorVIeeo. 7 p.m.

K.eid!Rader
~~·9:15a.m.

·

Pua: Peter Tremblay
Sunday Scl!ool· 9:30 a.ni .
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm. and 7 p.m.
WOI7neadar Service • 7:00p.m.

llncll'1lrd Clo.... ofCIIrlol
Comer of St. Rt. 124 .t llilldbury ReF.
Minister. Doua Shamblin
Ydulh Minilter: Bill Amberler
Sunday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·.8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m. .
Wednesday Serv"* ·7:00p.m.

Pular: M~ Morrow-

Sunday Schaol· P-.30 a.m.
Wonhlp ·1D-.JO a.m, 6!30 P·•·
·•w-....7 Servicca • 1 p.m.

r-tCioapol
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip · 10a.m. .

.....

Authorized AGA Distributor
The tbeaJer worlt helps. Onstage, ~y CM ftex fion:c ' \ ~ SUpplllle • lndllllrial ~ • Machine Shop
emocionl.
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
IIPPnlJlllate.
'
"We work through so much," Wallach says. "You , · 'Alumlnuml.Sialnlllea • TooL Dressing • Ornamental
What We dOI\'1 expect is this:
,, kill the other penon; you gel killed. ll all happens U(l i St~ • StaifJI, Railings, Patio Fumfture, FirepiiiC8
- Eli Wallach and Anne Jacbon met. to do a play. there."
·
Items, t'lanter Hangens, Trelllaes &amp; lots of other stuffll
"She thought I was too old for the role," he says. ,. '
OlfsJaie, they also let loose.
· "No Job Too 1.11~ or Too Small"
. - Ruby Wax and Edwlll'd Bye met in a 'IV stu4jo.
"We're vocal," Jackson ilays. "Emotions that come · .
We will work within your budget
"She initially tried to get me flri:d," be says.
·' x
to the surface are easier to deal with. It's the ones that
. Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-S881
Both couples are now married, In fact, Wallach il\d never come out that cause a problem."
108 Pamii'Oy 8trHt
~~·
Jackson are nearing their 49th anniversary; they're inW·
Still, they remain opposites.
.
viewed at .9 p.m., Friday on AmeriCM Movie Classic¥n · That starts with the look. That strikes people inslant·
....
. .
a special called. ''Isn't It Romantic?"
:.( . ly.
Both provide a Valentine remirlder. Mismatcbes.tare
Wallach is rough-hewn. He had the las\ third of the [·
great fun.
•
·
title role in "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly."
Bye is your ·classic, understalecl Englialunan. "~y
. Jackson, by comparison, had a baby face jllld reddish Ilwill never complain," Wax gtOIIIS. "Everything ~. feal\lreS. "I played her father many times," says Wal.New Homes ~ Vinyl Siding New
'Sorry, sorry ..."'
lach, now 81.
. ·Garages • Replacement Windows
Wax is your overstated American. When sbe mot ed
. Their backgrounds might also seem different. Hers
•'
to England and did a show ca1led 'Girls on Top,'" i1Je go back to Ireland and Croatia; his to Poland.
Room Additions ~ Roofing
couple instantly cfaslied.
. ..
,t
· All of that vanishes ins1an1lx, Jackson says. ''When
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL !
"She d:ought j didn't know anything about duect· we cnFcr a relationship, the dift'erences - ethnic and
FREE ESTIMATES
ing," he says, "which was probably u-ue."
: &gt;
social.:.:. didn't matter."
·
· '
Now they're married and WaX. plans.to bring some of
Their own differences are about simpler things. He
614-992-7643 .
her British shows to the Fox network. She provideS a points to an Ogden .Nash ptiem tl)at says there are two !
.
limited enlloilement of Englishmen: ·"Their ~tJi are . kinds of people in the world, the ones who are early and
(No'Sunday Calls)
.•..
..
.
bad, but the rest of them works."
.;.
the ones who tarry. .
·
· ·
. ..
In the same way, . Wallach and Jackson seem like
' 'I'm possessed by time," Wallach says .
~~~~~--------~
opposites. They'r:e proliled Friday, alongside two n)o;e
"I'm not;" Jackson adds. _
.
.BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
·splendid mismatches- Hal Holbrook and Dixie Oii;ter;
If someone says 8 o'clock, he says, he'll be there at
financial . obligallons and arrange a . lair
Charlton and Lydia Heston.
.'
8:-"Ten to 8," she corrects.·
. Wallach and Jackson first met doing Tennessee
After 49 years, the gap is nowhere near being closed. diStribution of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may
Williams' ."This Property is Condemned.'' At first,1~
"The other night," Jackson says, "Eli said we had to keep "exempr property for their p$rsonal use.
says, he seemed all wrong.
.·.,
be at this pany at 7. f suggested we could just get there This ma:y include a car, a house, clothes, and
"I was playin~ a 13-year-old: Eli '!as wearing tlni· at 9. ,
·
·
househOld gobds. ·
fonn; he looked like a grownup." · .
, ,
"We got there· at 7:30. Of course, we were the firs;
For lriforinatlon Regarding Bankruptcy contact:
Then Wallach, who had just returned from Worl4~ar people there."
II, sbcd the unifonn and iot
into the character.
.
'
cia!.
.
H.-ps would be nice. Plowen and ftutlen would be

-

p ... .,
Putor: Roben E. Robiaaoa
Sunday School· 9: U a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.
Bible !itudy'l'ueaday. tO a.m.

1.-.1 Clllrfne Mllllollol Clo-

Eut:!.

'O.SofAoN

"
" All or a sudden, be staned pai1!4 younaer and
O.IMit Nlwe 8ervtc 1
~
younaer," she says. "I fell ia love wilh him, tw...rw he
When couplelfll'lt meet. we expect IOIIIelhinJ sp'e. could ICt."
i

Ml1 . . .
Putor: Cborlea Neville
Sunday School • 9 o.m.
Wonllip·IOLm.

.. .

Pua:lldledManley
Sunday School • 9:30 .....
Wonhip ·10:45-Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service • 7:30p.m.

a..-CJo.... ofCiorial
Putor:
Uoderwood
Sunday
·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

'

1

__ ...,.

Nm"'~ Raall

If IIIK! HUGHEs

w.tlo'o,Cltatrol •

..,... ... iJ •• 'M Cltardl

P11110r. Jake Copley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 o.m.

--

placcan'od

'

Otilc r Cn u r r il r·s

Wpnhip • 7:30p.m:
Wedneaday Seovi« ·7:30p.m.

- . y Cloardt otCiorlll

...

Sunday Schooi·IO Lm.
· Wonhip-9a.m.
Thlindoy Semcea ·6:30p.m.

Waolly10 BlbloH..... Cltorrdt
. 7H'eul Sc.; Middlopor..
Pallor: Rev. Jplul Neville
Olikhn'l •rvice • 10 a.m.

·-·tal

1

rutor. Ollrlea Neville

.

.

, . _, Seol Brown
Wonhlp Serviee • 9 a.m .
Commuaion - 10 1.m.
Sunday School· IO:I.l .a.m. _

Sunday School· 9-.30 a.m.
Wombip • 10:4$ a.m•.

,_

1'1111 Gmoa IIIIo B 1' I CHrdl
Ill mile olf RL 323
PaoiOr: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Tw;; tn ..... O..U oiOrllt

Rallluid l'lnl11opdat CHrdl

~

.....

Pallor: K.eidl Rider
Sunday Schooi · IO a.m.
Wonhip·11Lm.

1w ofSUna B M 1 Cltorrdt
l..eadini Creel: Rd., Rudand
Pallor: Rev. Dewey Kiq
Sunday aehool· 9-JO a.m.
·
. Sunday WOllbip . 7 p.m.
Wednesday pnyes .-;.,. 7 p.m.

Zhll &lt;::INra ofCitrllt
Pomeroy, H.-riooavilleiW. (Rt.143)
hswr. R....- Wa- ·
Sunclly School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodneadly' Servicca • 7 p.m.

Alb Sttee~ Middlepo11

'

II;

R I

llanioonville Road
Rev-Viclcr Roualt
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonl!ip • 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service· 7:30p.m.

,_ ..... llldp ~ ofCitrht
Pallor. Jad! Coleo!ove
S...y Scbool-9:!0 ......
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
.wed!-,. Servioes. 6:30p.m.

FnOWIIJiopdot~

•t..-7:30,:..

lly

I'

CahWJI'Iptaaa-.1

a....."

.......... O.S(S ..-1
Pua: Ridoonl Oliver
510 Gran~ Sl., Mlddlepon ·
Sunday odlool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m. llld 1 p.m.
w..me.cs,y Service • 7 .p, m.

1

w•. ••1;,
,........,
......'

;";ohip ·

!C-.
Cltrhl
Wanlrip • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Sdiaol- lo-.30 a.m.
Paalor-Jellioy Walllco
111111111 3nl SuDday

..

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a...
310S7--325,1 PC tlh
-Dr.J.D. Y ....,."""" • P-.30 ....
~
ID-.30 a.m. .t 7 p.m.
W
·y ·pnyes_liOfY!co ·1 p.m.

or 77

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.

PHILLIP
ALDBR

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ft:!t::::} 411 ...
Wlzllt
_

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

• ~4&lt;-nd

lwenuo; lllddloport·
~ ToOio. 1111'0. houoohqld, 010.

Ne1 ruponelblt for accldenta.

I

.
Tt~i-- l t r •ttof otlo.

,

I
'

I

!pial!: liiiC'ImN

~ M dot ....,. 8:oopm. 2112

I

I

, ..848-21112.

eo.Mv•••rt-

como.

I

I

,

Rld&lt; -.on Auction Company,
. fult um, auctlonHr, c;omplttt
aucdan
urvlce. Licensed
He,Ohio &amp; WHt Virginia, 30._
77U7850r:J04..7J3.5447.

WMtecl to Buy

90

110111 nPIITI.
11011-111 SL In Nw Ha;::;; lei
PC uura needed. $41,000 In- 170dDO; . . . . 1 ; W .
u
como -dol. Clfi1-IDO· I18- fo 11&amp;,000. Call -lngo 10411281-lilm
EIIL 8-03111.
lltdlclf Aalfillnt • llusl ba PIO- By awn.r. wa 1tavo z bMulllvl
fiolontlnalaraa'lofmodloaf• 3br hamH ·IDaatMI In II
aiatlng end phlebolam,. Grear Subdlvtllon. Applelt. ana hill
benefll plan. Eaperience pre- acre loti. ThoH homoa lartM. Send ,....,. 1D Boo CW. available lor t-alota - •·
1 f. "~'~ Ploaoanl Reailllt, 200 - -•aaiiCaltorappolntmanL French CIIY Homoo,
lllfn SL, PI PI
• W'l ~
Inc. 614-441·gll-40 or 104·175Mld-lovol Practl~onor poaftion $313.
avallabla at Pfoawn 'Vallay
Nospl.-1. Sond rosumo 10 Par· HoaH lor llle In Rolland, 61410nnel ll Plu..ant \fallet' Holpital, 2520 Volfoy Dr., PI Pleaaant
Soctlonat Sbr, 2 luH batha, dr.
WII2WO. ~OE
halt- 4 - Flatrock.H-.. 10 Ladlot To Soli Avon, 175--.

4111!1i11J11 . . .

- 7.

Cll 814 HB 3351

~tiques, furnlillro,

glial, china,

coln1, tor•. lamp•, gu,., tocill,
·e ttatea; also appt'lllnlt, Otb;
. . - . 81 ....2·7&lt;141.

570
,-

· " ·

a- Fn&gt;m

rm Hunting Tho Dloc
Formula :1.114 448 04Zl

J &amp; o·o AUlD Porta. Buying tial·
liohlcleo. Soling porta. :J04..
'713olill33.

.

2 Bedroom Houao Refrtgaroior
s- Fumloltod, Wuhar. Orrtt

=

ri.

Wesl
Lare• warm Morning heater,
11,500 btu, excellent ~tlon,

-

lift~.

"''·' 'OWATONNA 7ft. hay lllna,
t2A-trono110r1 dlac, all In good

••u•ss• .

Elletrlc Wt1111Ch!lltl,
Stair Lillo, 'Vin Lillo, Scoolors,
NM IUHCI, Baeumln'a I kin
a;
11-7213.

1111--~­
Ina lnaur~~nce,
Medicare and

3•

Hofland . . - mlolr. lnllr·

Pan
Pan
Pan
PaBS

~----­

iOo'xl. aik-273-4215.

II3Q

..

po•••••

celvable. Muat
gaod
comnNnlcatJon akllla. Uedhech

·. .FRANK &amp;: EARNEST

Ad: for...,.,. . .,,.,_. ..

THE BORN LOSER
[)t)-.l'r &lt;..E.T UfC .

IIIII Cllov)' C3D Dudloy'454 Cu.
ln. '(' Barrell 4 Spatd, 2 Wh.el

C£T YOJ CO\o.l"';·

~.-... 11~711-0101.

HBipWMtecl

.

toii: 'Dodgo Coli. doeln't run.
1300. 304 882ll847.

AVON I All Areas I Shlrloy
s,... 3DUJ5.to121.

~ ...

'll-1£'( :;...'(
~~t-..UffiT
~TI£61Def'

11-\E.'l\Jt.l~!

tDDPofftiiOf-1

',,

11w Frlondo For ur. Whllo Pro·
modng Gloltol Harmony. Btcomo
And lnt«n~~tional Exc:hano• Corrdlnator (IEC) Wllh EF Found.ti·
tlon For Forolgn .Study, A Non·
Profit High School Foreign E•·

chana- Organization Dedk:ated
To Furthering Cultural Aware·

noaa. Holp To Place tOO Stud·

en11 From Around Th• World

PB. PS. AC. AIIIFII 12,950 814·

....a:.6181.

· SHARE.

Avon

,,

RtprtHntativea

l

8

112·8351 or 304-882· 2845, Ind.
Rap.
.

I

I

FINAN CIAL

,.., bill at honWar work. 1-800-

Accounta Parable proceasora.

t lliiD llodol Sub8ru "-1 4 WD,
88,000 llfln. f4,250, 080 8t425e-t252. 114-256-1818.

210 .

Muat H accurate and able to

l

'fi'Otk-at a fnl p~~ce. Computer
enlry aiJIIItlll helpful, SOnd II•
.,.,. 111 Boo 11-tS, %PI Pleasant
-Raglsllf, 2DD llaln SL, PI Pfoll·

I

amwv~.

I

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I

7$78. '

.
i =''
l

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AVON

1

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Jo~-· II ·115 !Hr. No.

Door Tt Door, •Bonuan• Fun &amp;
1.~·127·4140 fnd/SIII
ila!!ril
ML
1n111

t aeg tlonda SOD 4-whaotor. iii:;
oond. Will tiki hand oun 11

ing side.

Crofllman. 304-743-t 100.

1998 Cl1oVy Comto l-28 LT·t, I
sp., Bose c/d ployor, ate, 111~
crul••· 37,000 mil••· It 5,000
080, 114-i82-7SI2.

Give plano leuana in my home,
toach chording &amp; llanapos·
If lnloroatod coli 814·002·

1111111 Dodga ~ ES. 4 Cyiln·
dor, Aulo•. Air, Moral 57,000
11u... Alklno 14.7eo oao, ''"'

Furniture reftniahlng, miGration,
repair 1nd Upholatery. Su~rlar

work. Buy and Solll A Country

.-

27.

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21 Pod

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pronann r~ •
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48

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50 And not

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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B I·G D J.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Sox appeal illn yoor heart anti head. 1'1 t:e sexy no ;,i:
maner now old or how my body changes.• - Sonia Braga.
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If I refused to make an apol1 I I' I
ogy. my Granny would tell me
· · · ·
.that it was better lose a little
2

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IT FEELS LIKE
IT MI6HT RAIN ..

•

PIINT NUMHI!fi) lfTTEIS IN
THE5f SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMIILE AIOYE InTEl$
TO GET ANSWft

l'rl'rrl .•......
..
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KfAM LllS ANSWUS
Dreamy· Whisk .Catch • ~a1111r • WASHED my CAR
. I asked why my husband was washing the car twice
rn one day .. He sighed, "Because 1118 birds know precisely when I've WASHED 1nY CAR."
. .

040, 11+2SH487.

~t:

r:r\oodtd In our hotM.

11 ll4wa
20
22 LOMI
23 Oral-

,.____...;___ pride !han your.- -- -.

1902 white Okfa R - N i Ill
power, like new, 81,200 ·actull
mllu, aaklng •10,500. 304-8752188.

Apply Today. Start Tomorrow. If
You'ro 'Nollllklng $8.50 /Hour
Call 'l1ttl Toll F.... AI 148-432·

Olympiltd.
.
The Chlneae bid badly to reach only
three nO-trump, wbieb w8a made with

-on a weak hand in the middle of an
auction unless you are confident that
either you will derail tbe opponents'
bidding or you will become the declar-

tilt,CIYyllar ~ 1'5. PB, II
wh,.l, crulao, ollmato control,
mltnory pawar -IS, IHihll lntelj,or, UHI no oil, 13150, 11401!~-4141.
.

OHIO

Aaliltallt~E IIEI

Avon U -ItS /Hr, No Minimum
Ordlr, llo Door ·To -Door, No ln. ~ntorr t-sot1·738-D188 lndlalll

Paaa

-up?

;.~

7 Aug. hours
I Foil

21 IHIIIIII d

Pan
Pan
Pan
Pan

Kalkerup'a mind. · .
You shouldn't make a deocriptlve bid

GT Red SUnroof, 2 -ln.~
Door•. EngiM I Tranlft1inlon.
t!SK-~ 513-574-2531.
tQCI3 Handl 300 udiiiJ' • wt l1r.
t:\200. 30• 112 2417.
.
t 9911; Balolai GTZ Rulli Grold In
Gooa Condition, 814·245-0022. rgN SOD EX 4 Whlalar, EICC:ol·
81 ........7101.
font Condition, Uka "-&lt; 13.3011,
OBO, Collin Ev.tlngo, 614-441t liD Euro Lumlno AC, Tilt, ltDD:
ColiN. PW. POi.. To Sell Or T....
OllorPl)mantl, lt ..25W3t4. '
750 Boatl • I!IOtora

171·2526 Or 513·87~ · 7548. Or
Cal EFFoundation At 1·800·&lt;14·

nHded. Earn moner for Chritt

•

19811 .-

buraed. For More Information
Contact CJ,Ihy Brud&lt;ort AI 1-800·

Able

&amp;•

.

• lloulll ...... ' ::
10 .. ~ •
IQ ,;,
11~
'"

! ..

Pasa
Pasa

an overtrick. The Danes stretched Ill
the way to leftn clubs.
. After 'winning the first trick with
dummy's diamond ace, Bettina
Kalkerup decided to belil!~e West's
weakJ'ump.
overcall. At trick two in a
·
·' '
'
gran
slam,
abe ran dummy's club
Tli£ UUHn.T ti'E.OO"' nine! Now came
a spade to the ace fol·
CE "'-Y ruw:.l. ~
lowed by the club ace, revealina the
bad break. Declarer continued with
OOT "- C...OIICilll"£k;,O!
)he spade king and dummy's three top
hearts, discarding the diamond jack
from hand. A beart ruff ia band was
(1!llowed iiY a spade to dummy's queen.
. it was trick 11; the lead W.s in the
dummy, and declarer badJeft the K·Q10 :of clubs. A. card was led and
'Kalbrup overnilted Eut to wrap up
Iter pud slam. .
"Thant: you, W~sl" (Or whatever it is
In Danlahl probably weal throuah

t988 Oldo Cofols Quad ~ Cruloo,

With Famlllaa In Southorn And
· Cantral Ohio. Work' With Ex·
chango Silldents, HIGh Schools,
And Hosl Famllloo. Tille Position
fa Not Paid, ExptnHO ~~ Rolm·
,,

59

~=
lp •ncllhrtft.

Rtght - you cash tHe. top honorli.
Tbe textbook tells 111 that everything
wiU be -Y 52 pereent of the time. But
that is only when you 8l:'e silting in an ~
.isolation lank, away from the real
world of the bridge table.
This deal occurred during tbe
women's match belween Chiaa and
Denmark Ia latl year's World Team

~.

180 W..teciTo Do

f

••

4 Cruel

s;:.:'.(ILI

~+

Eut

. ton nine opposite A·K-Q-10-8-3. How do
· you pla)'the suit for no loaer? , ·

IDI2.

1

Nlllilt
I•
Dbl.

.You haw a trump suit of the lingle·

,c""'

110

.

1 FwnlLBI.'

By Pllllllp Alder

Wanlod To Buy:.Wo Buy Junk
814-4411·7271, Or 8t4-388-

f

34
- ...
. """'
lunahiiMi
35 l'e • fling otorr

DOWN

In a grand slam too

01-

•xparlonce prolorrtd. Bond ,..
sumo to l'loraonnof DopL Pfou·
ani V.l~olpllltf, 2520 Vlfloy
~OE Pt p
aanl,wv 25550. AN

1141 Civil Wet

Opening lead: • K

LW•IIOCk

Mawfna s.ll; F•riture, 'PpU.IIte11, IITIC. e.. rrthlng llull. Gol
.,...., . - . 81-t-11115.'

aervlcea and accounts r•

:M : . . . .

=~.,

Vwme~:North~u~
Dealer: North

Buying: .Antique FurnHure - Col. loclllbl11, Racarda, Qullll, &amp; Old
.... fltomo, 8t..-.18t2.

..

.. J7542

·~KQI063

lliln
'RIYont-.
·
appiiCIIIOM
tor 1br.HUO
~~~ E011
lor =~nd hand~
71.

111 - palol
22 .lfuml.elon

padlal C2wlll.)
30 11181eri11 .' -31 r.latto-

• 9

6AKB

R-

Er.1PLOYr,1EN r
SERV ICES

• 6 54

• 7 3
•.J 8

trnr

-=. . 07=..
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·-- 24-Qrnel:::r -.
=
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Eat
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N- I bolt 1111 bonom
WANTID:
timing """"' lor .. It cr. 8ALE8PEA80N
at ..fllll!.atilll.
Mual Be Experienced In All
PhUu Of Relfdontlal
Want To Buy: Uaod Pizza Oven, Ing.
lllnlmum Of 5 Yro..Exporl·
,,. •• 0080, Alkfor~
1.,.. ,Required. Slfary And ComWanltd To Buy UHd Mobllo mission. Excellent Op"rtuniiY.
Homos. Call: 81 4·448·0175 Or Quollflad Apptlc:anll 11aJ cau For
Appolnqn1n1 AI 114·441·4114,
-]15.!11185.
II·F. g A.ll. To 4 P.ll. - -·
Wanted To Buy: 4'x8' 2 Man 11 And Rolloblo Vlhlclo R1·
"Binllm' Boat Flfr Priced; 814· r'~ Blnlll PlckiQI /fl 1lnMe.
HI2'Sc.

I

••

• B

PfHIInl Vlfloy Hosphal II - ·
lng lor a Billing Suparvlaor with
throo yoaus uparlonc:a In llotpl-

IDIMI'

....

a•

Ryan
.
114 ~Clift
88 I' I 7 Ill I
. IOUIIdl

- ? ."

• A 53 2

' .9 J7 510 9 I
• K Q 10 7 6 4 .

Cloan · La to llodol Cars Or llodlclfd. Provloua managomant
Trucks, 1880 Model• Or N...,, ollpalilnce roqulred. Wlll ba ,..
Smith B_uld&lt; Ponllac, 1100 Eu~ spon1lbto lor suparvllfon and
ltolnlng of otaH In billing, ousGallpoh

om"'-

11Kina'•~

11 Unllloo. rolling

• A K Q•2

.......
lnltrUinenll

410 Houlll tor Rent

at2w...,a

- Ell:. kqul-ns .r-rry

S

abelel••

52 Pull

pltmlnt .

114 ••~MD.

• II.T. Coin Shop, 151 Socond
- . . . Gollpolo. 81..-21142.

411Citanu
411 111111-.
411~ I If Ill

~.;~..

--Up, 1l0t 112 a-t. Qal.
"""'" 1210111o., $150 Depolll~

Al&gt;tolull Top Oofllr: All U.S. Slf.
.., And Gold Coins. ProofHII,
~' -~tlquo .~Mo~ty, Gold
R:.tts,Pr•1g30 U.S. Curronc:y,

_

1111111111 IIIII
17 ~U,.

• Q 10 9 2

'

aca
cC..0 I

11-PMio
' 1:1*w..

14-...,.

$

I

HVIC[

-~

II'H. Must have own

lion. Houro vary. . Alkla&lt;- ·

...• •

· 'Notdtd In Ch.. hlro
Chlldlena, 4 YHII lo 1
f!day -Friday Call814·
Allar 1:311 P.U.

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ASTRO·ORAPB
,All""" - 1 ~ngln
lhlt.,_.I&gt;II&gt;Or Ia oub!ect ID
tho F - Fair HoullngAcl

ollllllwhlcn-"lllgal

.._.. ~4fflP.'*'·~·
·ilm-'"
or lliiCt~ttllcotor,

---

·

beNd~ riCe,

ortgin. or 11r1 ~ Aw; iduo"t to
make .,.,.,. IUCh p ......
llmttdOn Ol'dilcftlllilllkMi.·

- -.......

Thll ,....,...,~not '
knowingly ..,.,.

"'*"ow-.,. f'6WIIr

low.

Ia In -

'I

onMeQUII

-"""Y-·

I I ,

t

411 ~ Wltl Color1150, 080, 114·41·31144, 614-

4•••re.....

MI-:i0h
·1---·-14 .

.... ...,

BERNiCE .
BEDEOSOL

I'll A~

5 Plooo Tool Valour Bocllonal
Wllf1 Raollntt Ent11 1250 OBO:
L1.,1 Colorod SoU- Couch,
u.....t And Chlfr llDD 080;
Vlnrt -Bar With I
Padlfetl Bar ltll!lfl 171 OBO,
114245-l.

...,....
~

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ollhe '

itftlnllod ...... dill ...
. . I.¥' fn lfW ••llP'fW"
na• t

Chrlolr'll'llll

271N.Socond-

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SI\UnlltY. Ftb. 15. 1007
In ttW ,y .ar ilhtad, ~ laoltlllke you wjfl

'U

.....,. '-&lt;! ID jOin. Once )'IIU',.Inolde,
rou 'II aee 11'1 even better lhan you

.,.
••...

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150 En- A111dentW Or Cornn.ralal wtr- ' ~"'~
Nw

~.'::'e~r~:..~~-

l!o
lrtl 114-~10. 111111...11, r.l
ChiD.
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,AOUAittUI (JaR. lo.hll. ~I) ,ff you
~ . ID appiV rotnefl !Day, )'1111 , _
tihl ability ,to batelwm .,.. gllnl IIIIo
~ more aubetantlel. If you•,.
lfdler•" ttawuwr_ 11 .._ • Off. 9111 ,

a jutflp on .. !111M.idoi-d• N
tl

~

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'

�A Gannett Co. Newspaper
~

.

.

·'

WHEEL DRIVII

.

\.

'

sion..

., to modify public part:icipation s.tirs
. ·fHJtween Gallipolis city commissioners

COME BY·
EORJITEST·
DRIVE TODJJYI.

BY·=dYitiiU.!..,
_ . ~-·

ation
department theagendaa· week.~ !Odays .
sought answers on the before the nieeting, or to dis"'
S - A
program's operation. cuss the problem first with
: rcvirioa -of the
City
Discussion and the city manager.
·
. ommiQion'a
of the
'referral of some ques"The rationale is to give
fl~ . ;:- ' · ·
tioils to Recreation the city manager as well as .
Director Shannon the commissioners the
S~yer lasted for near- oppanuriity to be prepared to w..-.::1=
ly ati hour. · · · answenome·questions," O'Rourke explained.
Because commis- ·
"If we knew in advance what someline's concerns
s~:~~~~~:~~~;respand to all of the questions and con- are, we might be able to ·do some research and come
cems,
said having some knowledge of the closer to having some answers," she said.
public's
concern
before
the meeting would be helpful in
Cqmmissioners agreed to bring suggeJtions to their
of tbC'
next meeting on Tuesday.
,
frOm
panicl' attempting to answer them.
Among suggestions initially raised. at the commis- .
But' Commissioner Dow Saunders said there is no
wiJen parents of
the rinkya
Jlftlltarn. s~d by the city's icc,. sion's last meeting was ti&gt; have people request to be on need to transform privilege bf floor or have the public
ti~- - ·

•

.

--·...

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•

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•

AS LOW AS:·

-·...."".

'Haves' and 'have nots'

w

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--·
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•

Medicare formula ·

creates unequal

playing field
for befleficiaries

..
,..,.,
0

•
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•

.. Nat•.Avg.

*" Servk:e,

O.nnett

nma• Santilli Rapo!U

WASHINOTON - hi Dade
Ft.:'; seniors ciln join
~lroe-u~·ed health fuainte-

:· .~

422.19

·10%

275.21 . 143~ 418;58

·10%

Athens 288.75

135.~

·21%

•

259.67

are

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130.11

But in Iowa, there are no
·15%
Medicare HM0s and no free perks,
VInton 273.03 . 123.11 396.14
only traditiOnal fee-for-service
arrangementl'llwith high out-of-15%
Muon Co., WV ·262.72 133.34 396.06
packet exjleniiCS, cosdy Medigap
insunuic:e premiums and confusins
A !annuli tile,_... .,..,.:-. _
_to Cllcu!Me per ctpltll relminiurance claiins.
~to
hellltl
~
argMtutlont
tMt •roll ......,..
Created in •f96S, Medicare was
llenlflcllriH 11M CIWIId ., unequll plitytng field. The ...ult: AmeriCM
suppOsed· to give older Americans
Mlllorl'ln bla cftlw heve KCIII IO "gold pllted" llellth C.. plane !hill
a,ccess to maililtream medical care,
.,. vlrtulllly free, while rwtt.... e1....n.. 1111 by wltll much lell et 1111"
nlftceljt aut-of.pocket expenae.
. ·
·
.
·
·
no matler wl\at their health or
·
The
cMrl
above
lncludel
a
regl-1
cwnty-by-eounty
k
n
to
income status 'and no ·matter where
allOW What Medic.. wll pay hellth maintenance organization• per bonthey lived. tl• · .
eflelary, per month In 11111. The number 11 IIC:hnlcally known •• tha
'
What has evolved is a network
"AdJueted Avw.ge Per Cepltll ~.· or AAPCC. Tllllll PIYIMIItl are
of "gold-plate41' health care plans
!llvldH Into two columnt:
oflert A: For holplta~ lldlled nuralng lllcHtty end home hllllth cera ur·
concentrated in a·few states, while
vi~
.
.
recipients elsewhere get fewer benoflert 8: For phr-lclan and othat , . . _ oulp8tlent urvlcee.
efits' at more cost.
A ~ comp8rlson of HCh of .the county'• total Mlldlcat11
'. '
AAPCC to tile !Ill' Mllcnl awragala tncludlld. ·
.
"It is an issue of fairness," said
The
.
.
.
.
_
lncludel
only
tha
Madleara
population
over oge 65. 11
. i&lt;eti Rud¢dge, p~identof the Orenotlnctude
clllllbled
benellc!MH
or
tlloH with !;nd Stege Renal
gon Association of Hospitals and
Health Syste11111•, "If you paid the
same into Medicare and retired in
Oregori, there is no re~011 why you
for signing up $437.97. Lawrence County has the
should get signi(icandy fewer ben- reimburses
highest payinent per beneficiary; at
efits thin. sollllione who is rclired Medicare beneficiaries.
·$367.91,
Jackson County is the
For example, Medicare will pay
and living in Miami." ·
lowest.
·
Unliko: Iowa, Oregon has · an HMO $728 per lllOnth, per ben·
AAPCC payments in other
Medicare HMOs,.but lheir benefits eficiary in BronK, N.Y. But in
paekajes are ,leaner and they Chippewa, Minn., a Medicare regional counties include Athens,
charp benefi~arics more than patient is wonh just $227 per $422.19; Gallia, $418.~8; Meigs,
$389.78; Scioto, $_408; Vinton,
month.
plans elsewhere.
In southeastern Ohio, AAPCC $396.13; and Mason County,
, Fllelillg this illequity is a federal
Continued on page A2
flinding formula"- · the Adjusted ,payments can vary by as much as

''

'

'

··RgJ p ~. mUl·.protesters consider civ i1 disobed ien ce
· · E Cl VE W:¥ ( ·
· APPL _ . RO , . a.. Ap~ -. An env_i~.·me
. !'tll ·~up _opJIIll!~ .to. p ~ Sl.l,btlh~
MISiln .~ty pulp msll !JIIf t,rtuned membersJn
:.civiflll~icncetactii:s. , . ·.
Thil oii)oJlnvi~~tai &lt;;:otjlition has waled
·.other battles apinst w~t it ~\led as dangerous·poltution, apjnst Clllllp"!!iea from the ll'gion.
·But ~ tithe, the ~tiqn is in .outsider, mill
developer Parsc_ms ~ . ~t!Cmor;e Inc. of Rye
Br!)Ok, ,N,Y.,.s&amp;Jd coalition ~llll!zer, Laura Forman ·sat~.
.
.
Withqut roots in the t"ommlioity, .Parsons &amp;
Wliitremore is a bet\Cr t~Vgel f«:l!' civil disobedi·

'M
· 'd
· ·
en_ce.•, I. Forman su ·
'"f{e've never ~nina situation where membera \Jave wantedJo do $0mething like this,"Ms.
Foi1J1iaRsaid. · .
· ·
·.
"PoOpie are angry," she said. "People aren't
·&amp;eal1d 'of this company. There's a different attitude !here." ·
·
.
·
· c&amp;lstrw:tion pllllls for the mill in Apple Grove
have been indefinitely po!!lponed, with Parsons &amp;
Whiqemorc citing market conditions for pulp.
But the coalition is staying active in case.environ, mentfl permits, which remain under i:onsidera·
tion, aie granted.
.
.

Vol. 32, No.1
meet with the city manaP,L
before coming to the commii-

,rivilege of·the floor!

\.

JILL ·IIEW CHIVY fRONt
~

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • February 16, 1997

.

He feels prOpOSed chan~
will limit the public's contact
with the commission.
"Being in my third term 011 .
· the commission, we have nof
experienced a · problem with '
privilege of the floor," he said.
''Privilege of the floor is a bell::
efit to the people coming IQ.
the commission and to tile•
commission."
. Parliamentary procedure
outlined in Rliben's Rules cif
Orders, the long-accepted
method for conducting publiC. ·
meetings, would handle an'
problems assOciated with priv• .
liege of the floor, Saunders added.
·
.~
· ··we don't need' to structure this," Saunders ·Said. "It
is·a democratic process and I feel that setting this kind 0(
precedent will remove the spontaneity from the proce-

as

dure.11

Allowing the public to speak openly before commi.;,.
Continued on page A2

Meigs co·unty calling~:

Toll-free phone service to ·;
Mason, W.Va., now in effec(
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlm..·Sentlnel Staff

POMEROY -GTE customers in' all
· five Meigs County viilages can now call
toll-(ree to Mason, W.Va.; but residents
in MilSon are still awaiting the same
privilege.
·
. Information about the extended area
service calling for Ohio customers came
with little fanfare from GTE 'Nonh .
Incorporated: it was included in the
. rii~i.., fll~~iii &lt;teleph&lt;!ne billing whi4,h
indic«ttl~ 1the t service went into elfegt·.
earlier this month.
·
Meigs County telephone customers
in Middlepon. Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland or Syracuse areas wanting to call ·
Mason from the 992, 742, 949
exchanges must still dial 1-304-773 followed by the four-digit local Mason
number.
·
The imponant thing to remember is to make the call just as if they were
calling long distance, a GTE SpOkeswoman explained.
•.
While the move comes as good news to some Meigs County residen~
Public .Utilities Commission of Ohio records show Mason County resi!lents
would have the most to gainfrom local phone servi~e to Meigs County. •-,·
• Mason residents make an average of 17.4 calls per access line to ~ ..
Pomeroy exchange while Pomeroy residents mllke an average of 1.01 calls
per month to the Mason exchange, according to the PUCO. Local catlina
would also be of added value to Mason-area computer usets, allowing the•
local Internet access.
GTE serves ap,proximately 6,481 cus10mers in its Pomeroy exchange
while Bell Atlantic serves about 922 in its Mason exchange.
'
'We are waiting on Bell Atlantic of West Virginia to get permission from
the FCC to provide inter-LATA service," said Danny Walker, acting manag· ·
er of telecommunications systems for the West Virginia Public Service Commission, the West Virginia counterpan to PUCO. ,.
..
Bell 'Atlantic hopes to.get that authority by, Ay.gust of.lbis year, Walker
said, adding that it could still be later.
·
"We don't know when it is going to be," he said. "We are helping all we
can."
·
Howe~er, as of March 31, residents of Ne;. Haven, W.Va., will have toll~
free access to .the Pomeroy area. New Haven is served by Citizens Telecom
instead of Bell Atlantic.
·
· ·
·
"
New Haven is in a different situation, Walke~ said.
Meanwhile, GTE is considering the passibility of implementing toll-free .
service from the three Meigs County exchanges ·to the New .Haven
exchange, a GTE spokeswoman. said.
''
The move came as a surprise after PUCO officials said in December that ·
implementation of the Federal Telecommunications Act of 1996 had created

~~~~hii~ ~fv~~~!~~~~~:::. of extended area service calling between ~

Th oa1·1110
·
d
· · fi
th ·n
PUCO spokes!Jian Dick Kimmins said last week· that the extended ansa
.
ec
n conte~ s errussmn~ .rom e rru
service at that time was awaiting certification by the Federal Communicawould damage forests m West Vtrgmla, Kentucky tions Commission.
.
and Ohio.
·
. As a resuit of the legislation passed by Congress and signed into law.on
Opponents also argue the plant's chlorine Feb. 8, 1996, by· President Clinton, ah decisions on waivers to establisl)
dioxide bleaching process would release toxic inter-local ilecess trruispon area (LATA) service are now being handled &amp;y
dioxin into the Ohio River. The federal Environ· the Federal Communications Comlllission.
·
.
mental Protection Agency has linked. dioxin, a
Effons to establish· local telephone service between the Pomeroy
known carcinogen, to human reproductive and exchange and the Mason, W.Va. exchange began in November, 1994, when
immune.system problems. ·
the- PUCO held a public hearing in Pomeroy attended by about 100 Meip
n.e,coatition has yet to decide what form fif ami Mason County residents supporting the plan.
civil disobedience it would consider except to
The many who testified at the hearing said the issue wu important
rule ()Ut violence, Ms. Forman said. "And that ~Sj: the Mason and Pomeroy-Middlepon areas are cl~ly linked both
includes damage to propeny," she said. .
· ··~onomically and socially.
· ·.
' •

.."yP8i1ie$ tjplore land 'swap' in Buffington Island.Battlefield disput'

CHAJIILINI HOEFLICH ' · ·
, ',
Inc. of Racine wbi&lt;:h is planning a gravel mining opera· · preferably no mOOl than to miles oway, on tbe Ohio side Society suppOrting the site's preservation and opposinc
TtiliN' a ' 11till 'Staff
·
,
·
lion on land it owns at Portland on or near the site where . and down-ri.ver if possible.
the gravel mining operation.
11 1
· Poi\'IEROY ~ Sw~ing 1~ a 1111 optioa iow~ ·• Union and Confederate soldiers cl~hed in July,, 1863.
., Part~r said the ne~l step is to locate land to be con·
He _also presen~ a letW: fro!~" Oov. ~ V.
resolving the developmenl and .historical preaervilllll!l . AI a result of I~ week's !Mctm~, Parker s11d M~ . sttlercd m an e~cha_n~e. She ~ked that land owpers or Vomov1ch calhng for a ~~ontinuatJotl of the ~nt o(i
illuea involyed in J!1e B.ulfineton Island Battlefield pro- Sbelly ~ ·mat ~f ~temauve tan~ can be found. the anyone with suggesuons or 1deas on locatmn contract cooperJIIton and comprorruse that ~ placed ~ U.
ject ia pnder discussion. !..
,
·
.
.compaay will be wtlbng to look at 11 for content value, her at 992-38.10.
busmess leader among other states while IJIPR'CIIIIIJI ~
Laat WednOiday Marg~t Padter and David Glueck· and to fut1her conl)der a land exchapge.
.
. While that option is being explored, the Meigs County need to pr~t its hisJOricalsitca for future, atnenliGu;R
ncr, of th• Meigs County Historical SoCiety, and Amos \ A basic description of land needed for an exchange. Htstoricol Society and the company ~reed. to do more
"We remain optimistic ~~!lout this paervatioa pnt;
•Loveday lad Pnnco Ruffini; .director and asiistant of \oould be SQO to 600 acres, river frontile for dock con- . reaearch on the current 111e:, Parker satd tbkt Shelly h~ jecl," ~aid Parker, w~o. streaed that cantillued auppcq
the Ohll&gt;HiatOrical PreservpliOb office, met in c;otUI!I· ' iltrul:tiOI). an4 Wtil and ara~el !content, 114'C0Cding to · ~ toh1re an archaeologist Ill study the
froQl the public is euential. She 11ala liked that lelllb '
bus \vi"' .Mark Shelly and Pilul R~o oflhe Shelly Com- ,•Parker.
'
•
·
..
· To emphasi:te public concern ~ut Ohiols only Civil . of ,iupport be sent to Loveday at the Ohio Historlqll.
. pan~ lo di~~:UNihll pO&amp;tlbility,
"
,
' She Hid the company would requi~ the aame quili· War battlefield, Parker said Lo~eday called attention to Pn:tervation Offi~. 567 Eut Hu&lt;lson Street.~
sbe\ly ~~· Jhe
complllly of Rlchlil'da 111d :Ions, _. ,ty o'f' ll&amp;lld and grlvel.foutld in the ,Portland bOttoms, theJIIIJe v&lt;,llume of mail recei~e~ by the Ohio Historical ' . 43211•1030,

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