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                  <text>•

Gordon wins
·Daytona 500
crown
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VOL .7, NO. 201
011117, Ohio Y.llef Publlllllng c:omp.ny

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P~eroy-Middleport, Ohio, MOnday, Fe~uary 17, 1997

A Qoull'lllt Co. New ; ;

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Speaker: like ~incoln,
GO·P··m-ust have· v.ision
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By JIM FREEMAN
. Lincoln's inauguration . on 1861 Meigs, Gallia and Jackson counties
Sentinel Nfts Staff
was closely f~llowed by the C_ivil and eastern Lawrence Couoty, haS
. Meigs County Republicaps cele- . W~r. During his lint term he issued . not shared in the cun-ent economic
brated the legacy of President Abra- the Emancipation Proclamation, development u~ing thai has beneham Lincoln at Saturday evening's which oidered the freeing of slaves filed other parts of the -state like
annual Lincoln Day.Dinner at Meigs and pro¢1aimfd the fint Thanksgiv- Columbus and Cleveland.
High School.
.
·
ing Day during.his 5econd term.
, }~if! have til~ agRSsivc. No one
· · · J&lt;eynote speaker State Rep: John
Caiey, said Republicans today, from CoiUlnblls will take on the fight
A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston, fl:told t,he like Lincoln, mu~t have a vision.
· for us," he said.
s(!Jry of Lincoln starting wilh his
' Carey said his vision is to focus on
Efforts io secure economic devel~umble beginnings in a Kentucky log jobs_, highways · and education in opment in soulheastem Ohio have
cabin.
· southeastern Ohio.
been hampered by a Jack of infra·
A -self~ucated man who lost
He pointed out some of the goals structure: water, sewer, highways
more elections than he won, Lincoln of state Republican officeholders, and oilier utilities.
·
SerVed in' the lllinois Legislature includitig promoting self-sufficiency
Meanwhile, the Ohio House is
before being selected by the fledg· · through welfare reform, overhauling demonsJrating fiscally conservatism,- ·
ling, anti-slavery Republican Party as the criminal justice system and pro- controlling the growth of soate govits messenger, Carey said.
· moting ecooomic development.
emment and leading to the building_
Carey said Lincoln . stopped in
"We be)ieve in a strong, stable of a substantial rainy-day .fund.
Colll11!bus.on his way to his inaugu- economy that will help improve our
Carey pointed out three chal. ration in y.'ashington; D.C. While in schools and assist in highway devel- lenges facing the state in the .future:
Columbus, •he spoke on .the steps of opmel\t," he said.
·
electric utility deregulation, a new
t~e Ohio Statehouse. .
He said his district, CO!Rprised of
(Contlnu.d on Pqe 3).

UNCOLN
SPEAKER-:-- 511118 Rep. John
A.. C.rey of Welllton, etandlng at lfft, waa tha
apealler ·tor
Uncoln Day Dinner

Party. Seated '" right are county GOP Execu- ·
tlve Commlttea Chairman Charlie B8mllt and
·. Central Commlttea Chairman Bernard Gilkey. ·

·Rock slide.'s' aftermath·still
~ coveri· n ·g section of sR·62
By MINDY KEARNS

have been in it," she added.
tomers was restored by 9:30 p.m.,
OVP News Edhor
Following the initial · fall of the with a few minor_outages in the West
. WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va.- A boulder, the dirt,
and smaller ·Columbia ~rea until S a.m. Morlday.
bOulder "igger than a school · bus, rocks fell, which caused damage to
Errett said lines will have to.be
.along with, earth, t.rees a.nd . po!¥er American EJs«tric Ilower facilities,
rerouted after cl~an·I&amp;Jl
1~;; ...
. lifleS,A:D~_ ~~ Route 62 Jl_lortlr~~ . · ~~!!IJing:irl' iJ1 ,intenul!tiol\•tl! -J .300 ., :f:i~~~l~~t
·~~~~, IJI~I\l!liJt'l~OhJr!itioa " cuSkl!JICrs served by the!Wds~f:q)WJI- ·
todliy, •ft~r a sll~ thdi llecurred Sun- bia 's~j~tion, accordjng to Mary Kent,
n.itoiw.ltion of
day shortly after_7:30 a.ni. . ,
district manager with AEP.
..
·~oip~ews had 19 wait
; l'hil ·Mason COlunty 911 Cen":"- - ~majority of custbm~rs we~
some time until
felt the
~ceoved lhe ~II from a nearby rest- swotched to be fed from the Soom area was safe to work in, and cable
dent. and Chuck Blake, Office of station temporarily, and were back in television crews also had to wait for
Emergency Services director, as well power by 3 p.m. Appro~imately 20 the power company to work on their
.,
. a'S membil,s of the Mason and New customers were still without power at lines farst.
·
Haven fire Clepartments, responded. that time.
·
Meanwhile, di_strlct engineers
A.lth~~~b. ~~ on,c: has bee? reported
A temporary tie-line was built to from the Department of Highways in
,•
rpossong; '\ os stotl uolknown of any supply power to West Columbia sta· Charleston .were evaluating the site
'
l'ehocles are unde"'!cath the boulder tion, and power was restored to ioll this morning, along with geologists, '
.,
or dit't.
,
customers by 7 a.m. today. Once the survey crews and officials. from t~
• Betty p_oush; who loves on debris has been cleared, the ·existing state Bureau of Abandoned Mine
, . Spilllf-111! Rlj~~
- .~ o~ ?f the first to faciliti's will b1f! re~?Wit. Kent said.
Reclamation.
s~e ~~·· M~ 'cil~ 9~1,. .
Temporary shelter was set up _at
IM:al DOH officials, including
. RouS.If'slil , hilil11/as in the b•· lhe Mason fire station for those with- . Superintendent Thomas D. "1\ocker"
ROCK SLIDE SCENE - Chuck Blake, aarly Sunday. The
the Hi:k·
mcnt of her home when she.heard a out power, however, due to the sw'ifl- Mayes and Assistant Supeiin.lenden~
dlreotor of the Ma1011 County Office of Emer· ground, nearest to Blake, Ia larger than a
I!Jud noose, whoch was the huge l)oul- ness of power company officials, it Ross Roush, were at the scene Sungency Servleea, Ia ehown above •• ha sur· school bus and. Is eattmatecl to weigh
der falling. She ran upstairs and ·went unused.
day. Crews worked throughout the
veya
damage that occurred in a huge rock . approximately 150 tona. Clean-Qp Ia expectlooked out the win~ow to see dirt fly·
APJ)f!lximately 1,000 cuslomen day to set up ,road bloeks and warn:
slide along Stata Route 62 In West Columbia eel to take several days.
ong, sandstone falltng and fire .shoot- were wiihoutcable television service ing_signs at all major road\V&amp;YS that
ing.. from the elec.~c !ines.
,
Sunday, 'which was also affected by connect with SR 62.
~~~~~--~--------------~--~----~~~-~
One resident said if the road was officials with the DOH &amp;cided not to ·
Some West Columbia residents
It was scary, saod· Roush, and the slide.
A local DOH official said this
do the necessary work needed, say- ..
really w,eird." She said she didn:t s~
Lester Errett, Cable Vision morning thatthey are looking at sev- were up in arms Sunday over the fact open, traffic would not have to be ing it would cost approximately
any cats near the. area, and woth II spokesman, said the line running eral days of clean-up efforts, and state that efforts had been made to reopen rerouted during the course of the
$36,000 to repair.
• ~ •
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being Sund~y. traffic was slow.
aJong the slide was the main fiber officials are considering hiring a pri· a dirt access road through the West cleanup. .
Repair
work
was
taking
place •
.
Blake
said
efforts
had
been
made
"It was time for my son, Joe, oo get · link to all of Jackson County, W.Va., vate oontnoctor with heavy equipment . Columbia area, below the railroad
today,
however,
that
will
allow
emer.
to
have
the
road
opened,
but
district
tracks and near the. river.
home from ·working at A~erican · and Meigs, County, as well as upper to do the work.
gcncy
vehicles
only
to
usc
the
r&lt;iad
.
. A~loys.lt scared me iothink he oould ' Mason County. S~rvice to mosi cus-

Jtrees

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Tougher
prison rules
.. ~nder study

·Area twins taking th.eir
S &amp; L success story
on .the ·road with.book
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COLUMBUS (AP) - State law- ;.
want to make life behind bars •:
tougher for violen~ repeat and sex ; :
offenders.
;. ·
The free'wcights popular in prison ;:
recreation rooms arc already gone; •:
and.now proposals call for eliminat· ;,
ing smoking in prisons.
·
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Legislat(){s also want to house •:
prisonen in inexpensive, temporary :.
structures and give judges veto·pow. :~
cr over parole.
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State Rep. EJ. Thomas, R-Colum-· •~
bus, author of the proposed parole :.;
veto, said he hopes to see parole elim- : ·
inated someday.
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· HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) "The interviews brought back so
TWins Faye Hudson and Maye Smith many n)emories we had forgotten,"
are back at work after retiring as inil- Ms. Smith s~d.
. ·
Jionaires from the savings and loan
M$. Smitli was president and chief
bu~iness.
.
·
e~eciative, while Ms. Hudson' was
The two, now 73, are on a tout for, · vice preside~t and secretary. Ms.·
their book that details how they Smith generally handled the loans
a&lt;ivanced from bank tellers to exec- and Ms. Hudson handled the savings.
utives a1 the Point Pleasant Federal
Their rise, in banking began in
· Savings Bank.
' 1957, when Ms. Smith took a job as
In 1995, the two sold their 102- a teller. Her husband had died and left
· year-old thrift to Charlestlln's One het with an inf.nt son,
Valley Bancorp. Shareholders
I'
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·
received·about $17.5 million in stock
About 10 y..,-s Iller, Ms. Hudson
and cash, although the sisters . staned as :a teller and Ms. Smith was
declined to say exactly how much appointed ~asow:r. Ms. Hudson foltheir shaie totaled.
lowed Ms. S!Rilli up the little bank's.
· Harper Collins Publishen bf New , cOI'p\lflle ladder.
YO..k approached the owo with a book
Ms. Smith was apwin~ presiProJlOS.~! shonly lifter the. sisten dent apout 16 years aao. In her
tired
tenUR, she helped-assets grow'steadi·
re "We didn'tthink it was astory at ly froin $2, million in, 1_952 to $S7
· rorst," Ms. Hudson said at a recent million at the end of 1994 as other
b9ok signing.
, ·
.
savinas am! loans folded.
Their families encOIII'IIpi them to
The sistcn, who still live in Point
pUrsue the idea and they started a· Pleasan~ say their lifelons •!'Ccess
year of interviews with Leslie was accomplished tJ!rough investi(lg
Whitaker. She wrote the'' 209,p~~e cautiously, watching'every dlme and
book titled "Maye and Faye's !Juild- lfeliting customen u close friends.
ing &amp;: Loan: The Story of a Remark·
"People say the~ want to read the
.
_,....,ood,
How
Twin
Sisters
boOk
tb see how we 101 to be millble Sl
.....
,
li_
....
.n
....
," Ms..Hudsotuaid. "Things
R.!U' the Cleanest, ~ildest B~k in .
Ainerica and Did l{ight by a Whole have 'changed so milCh since diem,
'JbWtt."
though. What we did was so simple."

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make~

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"~re should be no parole -

Vtrslty. The twtna' book, "MIIye

Mel

Joayn

Bulk;llng and Loan," ...Ia their atory of going
from tallarl to 0WM11 of I banking bulfneaa
1n Point Pli8llnt, w:va. (AP)

: ·
period, end of story," Thomas said. :;
last week. "If you get nailed for I !I :'
yean.:,:ou'regonefor IOycars. That ~ ·
sends ~ ~age out." .
:
~ •
· House Bill 130 would allow :
jodges to object' in writini 1o I •
,parole approved by the Ohio Adult ' : ·
· Parole Authority. A 1111111imous vote ~ . :: " ~
of the parole bolni *ould be neces- ::, ' '
sary to overturn the Joadae's veto. . :"'
But not -.y.- ia happy t(ith 1
Ohio'spt·~"'JPiod•~ : ·
"We believe thiiJ r " as i&amp; iu11n •
now, is c!lnoplllllly -· ~lpd," :
said Dayton ' - - t Pluta Byte, : :
Ohio pr II idut ~ CitiYu U&amp;liled far ;. .
Re'IW!ilitaliotl of~~~·'
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1\mdlly, Feb. 18

.~

By J a An 11 1 an
MII ,.. ll1l1r

worried dtlt - if left UN'hecbd - the
new tect.Kllo«r could coac.minale
our fooCI supply with a fatal iUnen
usocialcd with IIUid cow clire11e.

Clarice E. Allen

MICH.

•

· Ct.rice Elolnor Allell, 80, of 35340 All_en SL, Cheater, died Sunday, Feb.
16, 1997 ll tbe Obio Stlte Univenily H01pitals in Columbus.
Born Feb. 26.1916inMeipCounty,shewutheclwiJh'erofDenJeiMace
and Mabel Ooldio Wdl OeiiDd. Sbe - alloateiubr,ll'nided the Olester
United Methodist Olurdl,llld l;elonged to tbe Olester Council, Dlugbten
of America, and the Lldiol Auxililry of the Cheiter FltC Department.
She is survived by a son llld daupter-in-law, Billy R. and Karen Allen

IToledo I 50' I

By some esmn.t.. llllknowiDJ · data from two recent s111die1 lXIIICOIIIUmen may have already pur· ducted in Athens, Ga., iadic• thai
chued u much u 400 million the unw&amp;~~tl;d nWeria1J may iDII I~

WASHJNGTON - Bone, JleUIO:
logical._ ud lllln'01¥ illl'tpounds of p:ound beef proceaed · be findillg theirwlty iiiiOpllllld beef.
111 Cowl St., PDIMroy, Ohio
people's
i~ of a perfect himburgwith
the leebnolotY.
·
She -.id wbea the ltlldicl 11111
614-1112-2156• Fax: 992·2157
' f
er. but,preliminary data compiled by
Consumer advocates we talked completed and released, the USDA
government inspectors indicates they
a·
with were adamant that accurate will usess the studies and 1J'811Pie
may- be showing ,up in the ground
labeling be required. But it's not just · with the labeling issue "on a scienbeef between your buns.
11
consumer advocales ·who are con- tific buis."
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These
unsavory
items
may
be
'
cerned
about
wllll
may
show
up
in
Webb
added,
however,
thai there
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
showing up in gro\llld beef because
Preliminary data in two soon-to- meat~ with the controVCI$Ial is no indication thai mad cow eliof how some major meat packers are be-released U.S. Departmentof:Agri- technique.
is infecting Ameri~'s food supply.
. · ROBERT L WINGETT
Some major f!!St food chains have ·"We've been looking for it. It has 1101
using a controversiat''new technolo- culture studies indicates that bone
PubII Iller
gy called bone-press advanced meat fragments, nerve . tissue and bone told their suppliers they do not want . been detected," slie told ·our auocirecovery. 'The technology is used by marrow could be finding their way meat processed with the new method.· · lie George Clifford Ill "We're just
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
meat packers to separate edible and into some·consumers' ground beef. Wholesale and retajl grocers are also not finding it."
O.!e1'81 MI!Mger
Contrall•r
non-edible parts oflivestock.
· Laws and regulations governing concerned.
·
Nevertheless, independent experts
A confidential study conducted at other mechanical processing teeh'
"ltisour!M;Iiefthatconsumersdo and consum~ groups say that the
the University ofNebraslca, a copy of niques that may leave such materials not want or expect spinal ·cord or new data mcans we may be le~vinJ
- Senllnel k t. ,... - " ' , _ _ " " " ' - .... , . - tJf..,..
.... (Sa .,. _ , liosW,.- · - ot
PI 'WI.
which we've obtained,.· says that in in ground beef require special label- bone marrow in their ground beef or ourselves wide open for a letllal dissome mechanical meat processing ing so that consumers know what pork," an iodusuy · gro~~p told the ease to start showing up 11 tr.ckyanl
. . . . . . . . . . . . . phoneiNimblr• . , . . , . . . , , . .... , • • • • • , . .
~.,.- IIi: ' - - lo
71111 Sentinel, 111 Court lit.,
techniques ~· certain components, · they 're getting.
.
USDA's Food Safety aD1f! Inspection barbecues, l)jl)l ,games af1!1111ywf1ele
Palr.IL op, DMt 46711; CN; FAX to 1144U-1117.
such as connective tissue and spinal
But because of a gap in the wa~· Service in a recent letter. "Spinal ,else that burgen 11111 served ..
cord material, show up in different those laws are enfor~ed. companies cord," tbe leiter continues, "should ' Creutzfeldt-Jaltob i i i -. a fatal
proportions than 'are found in hand- are not required to place special label- be prohibited from the meat supply." · degenerative ·ne""'logical: disorder,
trimmed lean."
' ·
ing on meat thll's processed thtough · Marg.aret Webb of tbe inspection has been linked to mad cow disease
Some experts we talked to ate the new technique. And many dim't. service confirmed that preliminary and is blamed for as m111y as
, - - - -- --'''---::-- -- - -- - -- - - -- - - - -..,-- --'--..,-----'-, recent cleatt. in Britain . .
'·
Seientisis believe the discue j•
communicated to humans wben !hey
By PAUL SOUHRADA
ingest ~pinal cotd tissue~of infected
AIIICICIIIted Prell Writer
.
animlls. And the presenCe of nerve ·f!l'
COLUMBUS - About four dozen managers at the Ohio Bureau of Workneurological tissue in meat taises the
ers' Compensation got refresher courses on the workings of state governquestion
of whether or 1101 spinll
ment when they learned that their jobs had been reci!!Ssified.
cords 11111 being processed.
.
Beginning .this week, the managers affected by a reorganization of the
Webb said that governm~qt
agency will show up for work and do exactly what they did last week, said
inspectors fo11nd that spinll cords
bureau spokesman Jim Samuel. What changed was their job descriptions.
were being removed iri ,til the f!lan~
."It's all part of the reorganization for where t~ bureau is going to be," ·
checked
during a rccentsl,ll'Vey. But
Samuel said. •
.
· she acknowledged that in some cU.
· The agency provides benefits and covers rehabilitation and retraining costs
es portions of the spinal cotd may
for worl\ers injured on the job.
remain before c1icaases · ~
Anyone currently working won't.suffer a pay cu't because ofthe changes
·
processed.
but might not receive any raises. And tbe changes guarantee that anyone takA former USDA inspector
ing the managers' jobs down the road will make less than his or her prede~
interviewed
said that frequently jlorcessor- except for three people who got bumped into a higher classifications of tbe spinal cord are left
. lion.
behind before .meat is processed. He
The changes do not apply to union workers.
believed spinal cord tissui: could bi:
Rep. Robert Corbin, R-Centerville, sponsored the bill that gave the 1
1
ending
up in consumers' hamburger ·
. bureau's administrator the authority to reorganizp management. The law, . 1 ,
meat.
which took·effect in September !995, also abolished the independent Work- •
We'd preter to have ir our way.
ers' Compensation Bo.ard and gave the governor control over the system.
Well-done, with muStard a"" onjo)J4.
" There was some thought that there might be some savings down the
Hold the spinal cord -- lllld the ·risft
line," Corbin recalled. "But the most important aspect was to give the adminof
disease. .
·
·
istrator the nexibility to put people where they could do the best job."
When the law went into effect, the bureau had roughly 4,200 employees
'
Jack.Anderson and Ju MoDer
- ·spread throughout 25 service offices around the state.
·are writen for Ulilted ' Featun ·
Today, there are fewer than 3.600- about 570 in management, Samuel
Synclkate, Inc.
said.
.
· The management shakeout likely won't be the last upheaval to hit.the
Bureau of Workers' Compensation. ·
·
· Hearings started last week on a pair of bills aimed at controlling costs in
the system. And Saturday was the deadline for businesses to pick a private
,.,
company to handle their injured employees' medical wotk '- or have a com1
pany picked for them.
.
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By ~ Hentotf
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Although it was li ~ivil trial, he has time around. . ·
.
mooing Satan to help her mwdCr
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce and . oth~ business gro~ps have been · Justice William 0 . Douglas used ·· been tried for the same crimes twice, ' Yale 'Kamisar, aprofessor ot con- Christopher Nutter. Shll arid~ !lise~ ·
waitins for decad~s to P4S~ thfough changes in a·s~~ni that G,ov. Oeorge . to say .that the history of liberty is the · and very few b6·the legal experts and stitutional law at the University of niolis associale' allegec!ly ' turned .,
Voinovich once derided as ... the silent killer of Jobs." 1 . .
.·
· · history of due process -- and its .other commen(ll(lrs seein concerned Michigan, told ttie New York Tilites: clay image into ait instrumellt of h~
But as long as Vern Riffe and the Democrats controlled'the Ohio House, abuse. For example, .he cited the prac."It's really a second crack at OJ'. 'The death.'
attempts to rework the system went nowhere. Wh~n the Republicans cap- . tice in England, during t~ reign o(
reason most people don't. mind is
'The acquittafwas wildly unpopu'· tured control oftl)e Legislature in I994,1he business groups saw their chance. the Stuarts, of frequently discharging
because most people, or most white lai' and so, in 1612, she was tried
"Ohio's workers and taxpayers are being shortchanged by the c_urrent sys- a jury "during the course of a trial if by this basic violation of due process, . people, think that O.J. did it. It's SO again, COI\Victed, and hanaed. OJ
tem," said Eric Burkland, president of 'The Ohio Manufacturers Association. the prosecution saw the proof WJIS even though it is permitted.
easy to forget about principles."
Simpson W!IS lucky..
·
"Until we eliminate wrong incentives that foster w&amp;Ste, fraud, abuse and !leficient, so that better evidence
And certaiply the huge number of
Not only Simpson has been placed · With the right of habeas corpu~
delays; we will never have the world-class workers' compensation systeiJI could be secured for a second trial." non-lawyers rejoicing 'at the second in double jeopardy by a second bite slipping away, it's not surprising thAt
that Ohioans deserVe and that the state needs· to be competitive."
Douglas considered this· form of verdict had no due process qualms. of the 'IJlllle. Among otbers have been ibis otber guarantee in the Constitli~
. Union officials don 't like much about the changes but concede there's double jeopardy "abhorrent" and They were convinced of Simpson''s the police who were ·seen beating tion is also being eroded. Habeas collittle they ctin do about the most recent efforts to overhaul the system. ·
noted it was finally condemn¢ by guilt, regardless ofthe first trial, and Rodney King and Bernhard Goetz pus goes back to ·1215 (the Magna
"We don't think organized labor will have many opportunities to change British judges in 1746. Justjce Hugo were now delighted that at last, as a (acquitted of criminal assault in the Carta), but double jeopardy has even
Black, moreover, stated with his cus- New York Daily News front-page shooting of four teen-age attaCkers on . older roots in Greek and Roman law.
the bills," said Tom Bell, director of compensation at the Ohio AFL·CIO.
the subway bui then held liable ·for Millions of Americans, however, ~
tomary vigor that "the State should headline put it, "O.J ;·Must Pay."
Asked about House sponsor Bill Thompson's comments that uni'on offiOne
of
the
few
who
broilght
up
not
be
allowed
to
make
repeated
$43 million in a civil suit). •·
so happy that O.J:'s secoitd trial has
.cials were consulted during the drafting of the legislation. Bell said.: "They
tbe
subject
of
double
jeopardy
before
attempts
to
convict
an
individual
...
In Simpson's o!Veal -- to use Jus- -- as many of them uy -· restored
listened."
·
thereby subjecting him to embar- the verdict was Bruce ' Morton, a tice Black's term -- he wllli held liable their faith in lhe justice system. .
He didn't s~y anything about Republicans giving any ground.
rassment, expense, and ordeal and political analyst for CNN: "Yes, this and punishable for these crimes even
Most Americans are not experts ill
compelling him to live in a continu- is a civil trial, not a criminal trial. It though the prosecutors in the first tri- the law and react viscerally wheil
ing state of anxiety and insecurity." takes a preponderance of evidence, al could not convince that jury he did they believe a murderer has
Yet O.J . Simpson, acquitted of not evidence beyond a reas.onable it. This isn't double jeopardy?
allowed by " tbe system" to ao free;
murder
in
a
criminal
trial,
has
now
doubt,
to
vote
(him)
'responsible'
...
What
makes
tl)esc
second
trials
all
Yet, ift!Je charge had been that SimP:' '
By The Aleoclat~ Prc?s•
Today is Monday, Feb. 17,the 48th day of 1997. There are 317 days left been held liable for the deaths of This jury can't sentence him to death the more diminishing of du~ process . son had murdered his first wife, wiJO·
Nicole Simpson and Ronald Gold- or imprisonment, but it can sentence is the fact that if the jury verdict in W!IS black, would the public and legal
in the year. This is Presidents Day.
man
in a civil trial. While there were him to being in debt for the rest of his· the first is widely !Jnpopular, it can be experts have been ihtcrested for more ··
Today's Highlight in History :
.
very difficult for juries in the second than a month? And if Sim~ had ·
One hundred years ago, on Feb. 17, 1897, the forerunner of the Nation- no state prosecutors in the second tri- life.
al. the state provided the judge and
"This is a second trial for the same Ilia! to resist the popular pressure that been acquillcd ·of that criine in a
al Y!'A, the National Congress of Mothers, was founded in Washington.
the rules of procedure: The verdict offense with real penalties ... in that they must ~ow do "justice,"' .
criminal trial, would there have been '
On this date:
does
not
send
Simpson
to
prison,
but
·
sense,
this
is·double
jeopardy."
.,
..
William 0. Douglas told ' of a a second civil trial?
In 1801 , the House of Representatives broke an electoral tie between
And because the civil trial ha5 woman in Lancashire, England, who
. Nat Hentotr Is a . nati•ully .
· 'Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr, electing Jefforson president. Burr became · it effectively-- for most ofthe nation
-- condemns him as a murderer lower standards of proof, it is obvi- ~ad been acquitted of witchcraft at renowned •utllori!J oa tile Pint ,
vice president.
.
·
despite the verdict in the first trial.
ously easier to convict ttle setond trial. Sbe PI! been charged with sum- Amendment and the rest oldie Bill
In 1817, a street in Baltimore became the first to be lighted with gas from
'
ofRJpts..
'
America's first g!IS company.
In· 1865, Columbia, S.C., burned as the Confederates evacuated and Union
forces moved in. (It's not known which side set the blaze.)
In 1904, Giacomo Puccini's opera "Madarria Butterfly " received a poor
reception at its premiere·at La Scala in Milan, Italy,
·

By Jack Anderson
nd
J ••

.!lr'

•""'

Al:cuW~ fOieCIII

•

Is
meat
processing
a
recl·
p
e
for
d'
l
saster?
Sentinel
..
The Daily
~inl!J48 .

:Gary J. Thacker

OHIO We&lt;tl 11!' 1

llenday,
,..,..,
17,
.
·..

• IColumbus I56• 1·

W.VA. ·

.

.• ·

PADDY!&gt; UTTI.E
TAX-CUT

·WoUlD Lli&lt;E AN
AllOWANCE
HIKE

SUnpson

Berryls World
.
.

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. · .6UE~$ WMA.'t' ! .
t AAP ,A #So, 000 .
C.\Jf O'F COFFEE AT
Tt\E \Nt\IT£' tlOllSE.
W~

AAP~ ..•.
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.
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.

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put it this way two years ago:
·:
"Productivity would. acceleriltej •
the in Dation rate would 1M; subtluecl :
... ·the underlying outlook would be ;
generally improved for long-temi :
eoonomic growth. Relll, incomes ..- :
would signif~eandy Improve, long'' :
term interest rates wOuld fall siJnif• :
icantly and (Americ~) would look ;
forward to their children doing bet- ·:
ter than they."
;..
But that sort of thinking is in shon .;
supply in Washington these days.- .;
.More commqn is in0111111!1810iy fool-· ;·
ishness of the sort thlllfeasury Sec- :
~tary ~oben Rubin served up in an ·'
article . recently published in the. :
Washington P~t. A balanced budget ;
amendment would so restrict 1 pres.• ,,
ident's options, Rubin saill, that he' :
may Olle day have .to stop writint :
Social Security cbecks. "
' l
Somebody want to tell this dem-• j
agngue he just struck out?
1 ·
· J-.11 Spear Ia a syndbted' f
w1tler fvr N~ Baterprile •
Aaocladoa.
·
:

'

..

'

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Actl'on-s to end' .
marriageS fll ed

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SINGLEI.'OPVPRICI

Orli1y ...... 1. . ......... : . ...................i ............ 1S Cenu

..
subocribm not dotlriOJ 10 Pl)l tbe......, -.r
:tmllin oo!m&lt;e illnd 10 The Dolly SeiKI.,.I·
00 1 - . !i&gt;&lt;'" IZ monds i&gt;UIL Credh '0111 be

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Ho -pdon by 111111 ,...,.lied In , _

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1111 diO' -!lpsion polod. s.tJocrirdOSI bo lq»loil I I by cllllfllll tbe
ofdte
lption.
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'

EMS logs 15 weekend calls

Leonard J.- 'tea· rns s·r.·

It's blldgetseason, thattime of the
year when Congress keeps us entertained until baseball startS. More than
tbat: It's the balanced budget amendment all·St!lf game, when the slickest
and most talented prevaricators, hypocrites and rabble-rousers ,on the of votes in deficit spending. There are .
planet step to the plate to take their no votes in fiscal discipline. What
whacks.
you have bere is a sad case of pur5uit ~
_ It happens every winter.
of self as opposed to pursuit of what
.'I1le balanced budgCI amendment . is in the national interest." ·
, is a simple co"'ept. It says the gov.And ·so .opponents of a balanced
eminent shall spend no more money budget amendment - doctrinaire lib. ·' in a given year than · it takes in. erals, generally -- lu!ve once more
Exceptions would~ m~de for times · sat~~ tbeir forces and are ~It- ·
of war and econ.orru~ CfiSJs; a three- mg 11 w1th every weapon mtheir arscliftlul vote ofbOtllhouses of CongresS' nal, including exaggeratioJl, b!lshwa
··a
so-called supennajqrity --would and provocative nonsense,,
· ·
1
be jequired lo borrow money:
'
The amendment, they' say, js little
' You would think that the notion of more than a gimmick that would be
livina within our means would make imenforeeable and would cheapen,the
sood 'seose to those who govern us. Constlnition. .
;
The problem is, their good sense is
We are talkini about a national
clouded by a chronic·addiction: They debt chat devours nearly a billion dolhave a compulsion to spend. In the 28 lm 1 day i'n interesJ. One-fourth of.
yean since we last had a balanced it is held by foreign investon. ~
. budJCt. goverilment spcildinJ ·has national security is at slaP Jtm,, and
·
·"
:
increased ninefold, ~ the national that renders the problem worthy of 1
' l
debt.has SO&amp;fCC[ from $370 billion to .cOJIItituti~ remedy.
· One year ago: World chess champion Garry Kasparov beat IBM super- · 1
.,.3 'trillion.
Repnlins·eAfOIIlCIIICnt, Yale I•!W computer Deep Blue, winning a lill-pmo IIIIlCh in Philadelphi1 (Kasparov .
You WOifld think rationll pieople tc;hool pr9f~ Akbil Reed Ain1t ha!Jiost tllo ·fint .pmo, "1111 the HCOnd, fifth and sixtl) 1~ and euned ·· 1
would comJPI!end that ~ Clili!IOI dJipalcbed this sophism in 1992. draWs in the tl1ird and four'th). Tidal wivea killed mole tbln 100 people iii ~d
continue lo sadd~ 1jnuni pfte!'lllionJ . ''NOI evC!:l.~viaio.o., of tbe COilIIi- Indonesia.
,
'· · .
·
·

Joseph Spear

C«EAM

tution is fully enforceable," he told
the New York Times. "Even if (an)
amendment weren't .. an easily
enforceable judicial ~:~~Ic, it might
give some moral S!atus and strength
to the ~undamental ,idea that if is
wrong for us to finaqc~ current ben·
efit.• on tbe backs of~f children and
grandchildren."
' . . ·
The ameridment,tbil skeptics say,
would grant to a minority tbe power
to control public spe~lling because a
mere two-fifth~ plus ~nc voie wopld
kill an~ measure tb&amp;i ~rcaks 1he bud·
get.'Yes it would, 1nd'that's tbe point.
The assumption of il~bt ought to be
a deliberative process and It should
be.difficult to pull btf. Not to men,
tion ' i~ fact ·that tbC same preferential IOjliC gov~ms ~lotu~ votes, the
electoral college.Wl)d jury verdicts.
Why is it that so few critics con·
sidet the possibility that rejular t,alanced budgets mig,ht mull in endur·
ing benefits that far outweigh the
short-term advantages of borrow·
ing? Fed chairman Alan Onienspan

I

:Hospital news

'

with the burden of our gluttony.
Again: Congress is not rilti!Jnal. As
.the late Sen. Paul Tsongas of Massachuseusonce put it "There are a loc
'

Jackpot to hit $8 million

Robert··T.. _R
,. eynar·d.

The battle.of ·the·budget~---·!·
!iY Joseph Spear

1

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been

..

ofOlatbe, Kan., and
glas Hunter, coroner. Howard Franlt,
(Continued frOm Pav- 1)
of Jacksontown, Racbel Burley ofZaleski, and Oney Kimes and Alice Ham'"·
·
ler, both of Avondale; a brother, Ernest McCumber of Philo; and five grand- crime bill package and education treasurer; Emmogene Hamillon,
recorder; Nancy Campbell, auditor;
reform.
ByTheAeeoclltecl Prell
Sunset tonight will be at 6:i0 p.m. childrenandeigbtgreat-grandehildren.
Carey borrowed a portion of Lin- and Patrick H. O'Brien, county court
' . Temperatures will begin to rise a and sunriie Thursday at7:20 a.m.
She was also preceded in death by three sisters.
.
coin's
Gettysburg 'Address for his judge.
.
:· bit, as a high pressure system push· Weather forecast:
Services will be 10 a.m. Tuesday :in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
County
Republican
Execuuve
closing
remark:
·
. es off·to the east and winds ·shift to
Tonigllt...Mostly clear. Lows near with Pastor Randy Barr offiC:illing. Burial will follow in the Carleton Ceme"Remember all that Lincoln did to Committee Chairman Charlie Barrett
25.
South winds S to 10 mph.d 'ld . tery. Frie.nds may call at the
. funeral home from 7' 9. tonight.
··
, lhe south . . ·
1
secure our freedom and remember all welcomed those attending the dinner,
: ·· Temperaiureswillfallintothe20s
Tuesday... Mostysunn~an ml ..
the men and wotnen who have fought followed by prayer and the Pledge of
ionight, then rise 'overnight as the Highs in the mid 60s.
.
to ensure that a 'government of the Allegiance led by Pomeroy Mayor
· sootherly winds pull warmer air up · Tuesday night.. .Mosdy clear.
from the Gulf of Mexico.
Lows near 40.
Thomas JosCph Mitchell, 78, of Pompano BeaCh, Fla., and a former Meigs people, by the peopleandforthe peo- Frank Vaughan. · .
Columbia Township Trustee Mar'· 'The warming trend will continue
Elltended forecast:
County resident. died Saturday, Feb. IS, 1997 8! the North Broward Med- ple' does not perish frorri the earth."
Republiaan
county
officeholders
~o
Jeffers introduced gues~. inchid' 'tuesday and later in tbe week as the
Wednesday... Mostly clear and ical Center, Pompano.· ·
attending
were
Fred
Hoffman,
couning former U.S. Rep. Frank Crehigh continues to dominate while it warm. Highs in the lower 70s.
Bom Jan. 4, 1919, he was the son of James Albert and Della Byro Mitchell.
llides down into the Carolinas.
Thumday...Achance of rain. Lows He·was a U.S. Army veteran of World War. D, and a past member of the Lin- ty commissioner; Fred W. Crow Ill, means. ·
common pleas court judge; Dr. Dos.i; The rc;cord-high temperature for 45 to ~and highs near 70·
den Heights United Methodist Church.
mls date at the Columbus weather
Friday... Rain likely. Lows near SO
He retired from Rockwell International u a RIIChinist.
~tion was 67 degrees in 1911, while and higl1s near 60.
He.was also prec!:ded in death by a son, Dlvid Joseph Mitchell; and a
the record low was minus 7 in 1979.
brother, Ervin David Mitchell. · ·
...
. .. ' . o~H:•J .,.
.,
surviving are his wife of 49 years, Louise; a son and daughter"in-law,
'There were 52 Supe; Lotto tickets
CLEVELAND (AP) - No one
Thomas (:rajglllld Lisa Mitcbel\ of Santa Cruz. Calif.; four daughtets and picked a11· six num!Jers selected in with five of the numbers and each is
·
. sons-in-law, Grace.and Ralph Hanawalt of Merrill Island, Fla., Donna and Saturday's Super Lotto drawjng, the worth $1,446. The 2,778 .tickets
showing (out of the numbers are each
Ohio Lottery said.
As a result, Wednesday's Super ' worth $8S .o
In the Kicker game. no tickets had
' NEW YORK (AP) _ 'The word losses. .
great-grandchildren; and a brother and sister-in-law, Jim and Laura Mitchell Lotto.prize will double to $8 million.
the
exact six·digit number, so no one
Sales for the Super Lotto game
; 11.strike" doesn't conjure . up such
Pilots at United, North~est,'Con- of Columbus.
could
claim · the top prize of
Friends may call attbe Shoemalter Punel'll Home, 2830 Cleveland Ave. totaled $2,734,953. Sales for the
·.•.-· images 10 the flying public any- tinental and USAir also are haggling
_..J
·
at Lakeview Avenue, Columbus. where services ·will he held at 10:30 a.m. Kick~ game totaled $493.684.
.$100,000.
~o~at is the prececte.nt set by Pre.s- ~c:'e~in~:cf;~tr:O~Iia~~ :!:~~~ Thursday. The Rev. Will Marling will officiate and burial.will be in.Fr~tnklin
Hills Memorial Gardens, Canal Winchester.
·
ident Clinton in ordering American i~an oegotiations.
. .
the Children' H 'tal F
' Airlines. pilots back to work within
Tile United branch of the A1r L:ne · Memorial contributions may be ·made to
. s ospt
oun. minutes after they declared a strike . Pjlo~ Association, which recently dation, 700 Children's Drive, Columbus, Ohio 43205.
·
Units of the MeiJs County Emer- · Avenue, Robert Reynard, VMH.
gency
Medical Service recorded 15 . .
POMEROY
' e'arly Saturday, avening chaotic dis- turned down a 10 percent four-rear .
5.16 p.m. Sawrd,y, Texas Road,
· calls for assistance Saturday and
t)lptions to hundreds of thousands of pay increase proposal, warned p1lots
.
~l'J.Ff$,, .., ,·..
- · . tha~ if Clinron .8°1 in t~e wa:r of an · Robert T. R.eynard, 84, of Rutland. died Sunday, Feb. i 6, 1997
, in Vet- Sunday. Units responding included: Chester, Byron W~tson, PVH; .
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
1~:06 p.m. Saturday, Lovers Lane,
.~ II pilot negotillions at four other American Airbnes stnke, It .would
A
'
• 1·
ak
- the' b
· · · 051u
erans Memorial Hospital·. '.
· · . .
·
2:33 a.m.. Saturday, .Five Points, David Wolfc.Ii':C~E
· v.ftlie lljltion:&amp;biggest atnnes get to we en If argammg P on..
Born Jan. lO, 1913 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
. son of the late Charles
· t1ie brink o/ a walkout, airline chiefs - - Pilots
at
Continental
are
prepanng
ti: 22 a.m. Saturday, Yellowbush
thi
·
and Mary Cassi\ Reynard, lie was employed !IS an assistant' metallurgist lab- Joet~ Moms, Veterans Memoflal
liiKI passengers almost ~ertainly will for contract talks to ~tart s summer oratory technician with Eaton Corp., Cleveland, from 19SS until his retire- Hospital;
R0 ad Ed. . B
HMC·
4:47 a.m. S1turday, Rocksprings
:son race,
'
•
!!c looking to the Wh1te House to and hope to get a p1ece of tbe com- ment in 1978,
Rehabilitation Center, ~roy. Julia
7:32 a.m.. Sunday, Water Street,
uep the planes in the air.
pany's profits after years of endUflng
.
T Clinton made ·a hugely popular lower; pay relative 10 colleagues at
He served in the National Guard and was a Jehovah's Wibfesses minister B 1 VMH·
Syracuse, M:ldred Hubbard, PVH,
0 Y es,
•
.. ·
rth Syracuse squad assisted;
.. . l
. he th . r
for 50 years.
.
.
.
.
4ecision by euecbve y re:novtng t
o er p1r mes.
·
He is survivCd by sons and daughters-in-law, Lawrence and Kim Reynard
4:~2 p.m. Saturday, South Fou
.
Boule11 .. 19 a.m. sun day, ""rec
'ddl~ Doroth Pierce
.,
M
A:
qne !lC_Itent ne.gotiating weapon in the
All.six of the uni';ln~ at Northwest of Fernandina Beach, Fla., 'Thomas and Betty Reynard of Palmetto, Fla., R.
venue, t v""·~
Y
'
d M'ld d Carnahan treated at
Center;
var ' 1 rc
· '
A,!YlC!I:cin pilot union's arsenal. 'There Airlines are in negotJahons and look- Samuel and Kerry Reynard of San Carlos, Calif., and Charles Reynanl of Holzer Medical
· ·
the scene.
was IIU~~~ pbviqus sympathy for the ing for:higher pay while the com~a- Newburg Heights; a daughter and SOII"in-law, Marjorie and
AI Tiomm ofRut- . I 0:06 p.m. Sa~urday, Texas Road,
· SYRACUSE ·
JiilOC$, in 'f!!eir quest for more com· ny is asking for increased prod~cbv- . ·
.
Cath . I'
Chester,
Mary
Kirby.
vMH;
8
08
s rd U/ I s·-t
.,.,11·sw
' ·p. · ;, l~rgely because at ity. At USAir, managers are trymg to land; 24 grandchildren and severall!fCII-JI1llli:lchildren; SISters,
anne oss
7·12 .m Sunday 'Bradbury Road
: a.m., atu ay, na er "- ' .
""
1 d
Th
t1
of Okemos, Mich., and Mary McCarthur of Morristown, N.J.; and brothers
$120f , ''I y~r they a rea y .are . cut P•Y·
e company recen y and sisters-in-law, George and Kay of Riverton, ~.J,, and Ralph and Jean of ~iddle;;rt;Aionna' Orimm, HMC;' Mildred Hubbard, VMH.
-'no~~ thc'.JJI0.$,1 highly paid profes- offered,·pilots a 12.5 percent pay cut Parma Heights.
. .
. .
.
2:S.8 p.m. Sunday, Page Street,
. D,onljlsj ii the country.
.. .
in return for a seven-year contract
He was preceded in death by brothers, C. Cas.sil, Clarencc,Charld an.d .Middleport, Oary Thac:kcr, Pleasant
,,; But Clinton also sent a signal to all without,layoffs.
Valley Hospital;
Vetenns Memorial
airline workers. particularly pilots,
Clinton's d~ision markejl the; first Frederick Reynard; and by sisters, Ruth Kingsley, Marg11111t Hurd,·Betty KdS:23 p.m. Sunday, State Route
Saturday admissions - Emory
tbat could severely restrict their bar- . time . in 130 years that a president ly and Robena Reynard.
248, tony Hafer, HMC, Tuppers Gordon, Middleport.
Sllining power. Eneouraged by the declared an airline strike an emerA memorial service will be held 2 p.m. Sunday in the Middleport Co'1- Plains squad assisted; ·
Saturday discharges - Charles
01ronger possibility of presidential' gency arid ordered the .worker~ back greJation Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses. State Route 124, ~iddle­
. II ; II p.m. Sunday, Overbrook Pauley, Pomeroy.
il\!Cn.cntions .to prevent strikes, air- to their jobs. But he did so w1th the port, with minister Isadore Telischak officiating. Arrangements are by the NurNing Center; Mary Nichols, HMC.
Sunday admissions - Bobby ·
line bosses now have little incentive comfort 1of knowing that not too Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
'
MIDDLEPORT
·White, Dexter.
many unipn leaders were going to . In lieu of nowers, donations 111BY bC made to the World Wide Work of
10 accept union demands.
7:38 p.m. Sunday, South Fourth
Sunday discharges - none.
;· "I think it has some implications complain about it.
.
Jehovah Witnesses. 37319 State Route 124, Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Holzer Medical Center
.
Dlscharg~
Feb. 14 - Shirley
!Prtheindustrythataren'tallgood," . OneWoiteHouseaido,spea~~ng
siid.Ron Keever, an American pilot. to The Associated Press on conditiOn
Livingston, Arthur Hammond, Mary
''Manag~ent can just sit back and of anonymity, recalled th~ response
· •
Jenkins.
1¢1 the govei'Jiment step.in, instead of , from an AFL•CIO offic1a) about.the
Leonaro J. "Coots" Steams Sr.. 83, Rt. 2,l&gt;oint Pleasant, W.Va., died SatBirth - Mr. al'sd Mrs. Walter
•
· ·
--A f · h"
f es denual acuoo
~godating in gwu a1t ·
posS&gt;'b'l'
IllY, 0 pr 1
. • · urday, Feb. 15, 1997 in tbe Ple••ant
..,. Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Ccn'The following actions to end mar' Loveday, daughicr, Gallipolis.
.. American pilots haven' t been the "These aren't our guys;'' the unton ter. ·
.
,
·
riage were filed recently in the office
Discharges Feb. lS - Harold
only 0~- qying to squeeze more representative said of the .Pilots.
Bo.rn Feb. 21, 1913 m Mason Coun.ty, W.Va., son of the late Leonard~- of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar- Rowe, Jennifer Eblin, Mrs. Walter
nioney out of the U.S. airline indusUnlike the Air Lin~ Pdots;:\s.so- · and Lilly Huffman Stearns,~ was a rebrcd welder and a member of the B~d- ry Spencer:
· :Loveday and daughter.
tly, which has become healthy and ciauon, whsch 1s.affl!•ated w1th the ermakers Local fXJ7. He was a U.S. Army veteran .o f.World War II, a rec1pDissolutions asked _ David E. i Births - Mr. and . Mrs. Carl
piofitable aj ain after years of painful AFL-CIO, Amencan s pilots
a &gt;ent of the Bronze Star, and was a member of the F1rst q.urch of God, Pomt Peterson, Rutland, and Amber L. j Dray, daughter, Wellston; Mr. and
· ·
·
splinter union known as the .Alhed Pleasant.
.
.
.
,
p
R · Fb 5
1Mrs. Stephen Hartenbach, daughter,
Pilots Association.
He was also preceded 1ft death by two brothers and two SISters; two grande~7::,;;.sac~~~ C:..: Carol Bush, . Pomeroy.
·
The American pilots had even sons, Larry Lee Stearns Jr. and Todd Steams; and a great-grandson, Evan Long Bottom, from Gregory A. Bu.•h. i Discharges Feb. 16 - Mrs. Carl
The Daily Seniinel
angered some in ~1;-PA -_ by ~ar the Stearns: .
. : .
.
.
.
Galli lis, Feb. 13; G. Brent Sisson, Dray and daughter. Jada Hall.
(UiiPS 213-NO)
nation's biggest a~rhne pilot umonSurviVmgare h1s w1fe, Emogene N, Steams, two sons, Jtm StearnsofPomt
po ,
Ta
s·
N
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Keith
orom Febnya .:ssQD,
ew
Published every .n.or.-; MOtlday tbrourh ·
suggesting· ALPA members' at Amer- ·PI'easant•.and Leon ard s teams Jr. of L
. yn dora. Pa.,· •.our.daus hte, rs,·Ev~ R?b- · Pomeroy,
H
WV:
K
.
C
Eblin~
daughter, Gallipolis.
13
friday, t 1( co.n s: .. .......,.,, Ohio, by tbe
ican's
turboprop
sister
airline,
Amerbins
and
Patricia
'Thomas,
both
of
Point
Pleasan~,
Phyllss
Absh1re
~f
K1ss1mK
aven,
~
·
~·
Kn'
e;;:,~
f
(Publlsb.ed
with permission)
Ohio Yalleyl'lobUohina Co-y/GMness Co.,
0
ican
Eagle,
weren't
qualified
to
ny
.
mee,
Fla.,
and
Clara
Costa
of
Cranberry
Township,~.;
13
grandchildren
and
·
Snapp
ro~
·b
Ta
·
app,
"""""Y· Ololo4S769, ""· m ,z1s6. Second·
jets .
.
,
·
18 great-grandchildren; a brother, Leo Stearns of Ripley, W.Va.; and three
yra~usej .e · · ed
v· k K
cl!M JNKf!IP poid II PoiiiiiO)I, Ohio•
To some ex~n• Clinto~'s decision sisters Margaret Holcomb, Magdiline Cottrell and Eleia: Roach, all 'of Point
D:sso uundon Jgraffnt 0- p •ckhy ·
M - ThoA'ooociascd Pseu:and olle Ohio
· .
· "
. . . ' pt
'
·
Peckhama
erey . cc am,
Ne~~ nr 'AuOciltlon.
to lhtervene was a spectal suuat1on
easan~.
. .
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.
Feb 10· Scott Haning and Mikka
that would not necessarily apply in
Services will be I ~.m. Tue~ay ~n the ~srst Church of!3od, w:th the Rev:
a~in 'Feb 10
~·; Selld addrel• oorrecdonl to
fut'""' crises. He held in his hands the Dale Vollmar o~csabng. Bunal w11l be 1n the Forest Hills Cemetcry.J'!at H Di~~rcc Sra~ted _ Cindy Lou
1be Daily_Seodnel. Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohlo4S769.
fate of holid;ly travel plans for many Rock, W.Va. Fncnds lllay call at the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Hotne, pomt Browning and RAndall G. Browning:
families traveling with children who Ple~t, from 7- 9.tonl~ht. .
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Feb 14
SUISCRimON IUTBS
got a weeklong 'break from school.
.Msl:tary graves:de ntes will be C!lnducted by Amencan Legion Post 23,
· ·
1!1' ConWr«-- · ,
One Week............................. ..................Slljg
Making matt~ ' ~ore ominous, the Pomt Pleasant.
---~~~~~~~
Osoe ........... -.......-.........................

· • /on may sef .
.Clinton' deCI$
;ptllcedent in ·. future strikes J~:~.:.as.:J~?:~p~~b.~~r==~~~;!nO:h~.~~~~~

NatHentolf

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GOP
must.
have
a
vision
·
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Harold E. Hook of Newark; four sisters, EstberLegg ·

Thomas J·. M'l"tc·h'ell

we

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Ch:'i~fs~:::~ed by her husband, Clarence Hook; tWQ sons. Lloyd Hook

'High pressure will bring·
. '••arm•"ng
· tren·d 1"nto area
ft

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:·: ~~~=~~===

ro

Today in history

H. Allen. .
· ·
·
,
Pomeroy IOWil m 1t M•slllated
·
·
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
A tOwn meeting will be held Wednesday, 7 p.m. in the Po:tleroy Village
The Rev. Sharon· Hausman will offiCiate and burial will be in tbe Chester AuditOrium to discurs the feasibility of village contracted trash serv:ce. All
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m Tues- village residents and trash haul~ are invited t-&gt; attend. ·
day.
CCL to meet
'The Middleport Child Conservation League will ~bserve ~usband's ni~t
with a potluck dinner Wednesday at the Rock Sprmgs Umted Method:st
·
·
·
· William J. Hackworth, 66, of4tart Falls, died Monday, Feb. 17, 1997 Church;
at his residence.
.
Arrangements wiiii?C announced by the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. cOuncil Ids medina
Cbester Counci1323, Daughters of America. will meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Charter will be draped in memory of Mae McPeek with members to wear
white.
.
Opal H. Hook, 75, of Pomeroy, died Sunday, Feb. 16, 1997 at the Overbrook
Nursing
Center, Middleport..
ineet
· River Lodge will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednes.
A former
homemalter,
ahe was born July 4, 1921 in Carbondale, son of LodJelo
A special
meeting of Shade
, the late Lloyd lind Anna Susan Mark McCumber. She was a member of the day at the hall. Work willlleld in the entered apprentice degree. Refreshments.

Opal H. Hook .

..

o~J.

t
,.e,gs announcemen s

·william J. Hackworth

""*' __ ,..,.,ell_.,_,. ____
•., ....
_.,"I
m.""""'

rhe double jeopardy of

GllyJ-11tacbr, 47, ofCllesbire, died Monday, Feb. 17, 199'71ll'leuant V-'ley Hospital.
Bom Apri130, 1949 in Wayne, W.Va., he was the son of the late Mary
Pmy 'I'hal;ker and Everett Nonna~~Thackec. He wlil a former &lt;:011 cledt for
America~~ Electric Powec, llld - a manber of the ClJeshire Baptist Owdl.
He is survived by hia wife. Sue Ann Buckley Thacker; and a son, Eric
Nonna~~Thacker of Cheshire.
Services will be II a.m. Wedaesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middlepcrt. Burial will be in the Gravel HiD Cemetery. 'The Rev. Hlrold Tr.ceweU
will offiCiate It the fu~. Friellds may call at the funeral home one hour
prior to the service.
·
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of~:c:::~~::!.:::.=~::;;;deathbyherhusband,Ciayton . •

an mOirer

Workers' comp managers
feel effects of overhaul

11M Dally Sliitlnel• P8p 3

PoiMroy •lllddllport, Ohio

MoncS.y, Feblwry 17, 1117

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,..........

__....._,

MAILIUIIICIUPTJONII •
~

..... - - ... - ....... .....- ..................... $27 ..!0

................................................. 5'3.82
·*""':........-.......................... $t05.!16

t) Woolia.. .......:..... -............................... $29.25

:16 -

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·............... ,............................1'6,68
. ..M........,,,,_..........,....,......,JJOf.!Jl
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pilots had indicated repeatedly they
were planning to \',e out for at least 30

Herman· G. we·stfall

day~iinton's in~fveation

doesn ' t
Herman 0 . Westfall, 85, of Alq'on, died Saturday, Feb. 1~, 1997 in the
lilltomatically mea11 he would take the Akroh City Hospital.
. ·
·
.
.
same step if the cfloice arises again.
Born i~ Roane County, W.Va., he served in the U.S. Army ~unng Vforld
It's possible he mig~t come down on War II, earning the Bronze Star, and two B~ttle Sla!'· He retired froril the
the side of the labl)r movement that ·Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. after 31 years of SCrYICC. .and was a member
·so generously supported his re:'elec- of the American Legion.
·
.
.
lion campaign.
, •
He WiS ~in death by his parents, L. Earnest and Mary Damewood
"I don 't know that management Westfall; ahd ~. Ershel and Eryin Westflll.
. .
.
can feel so safe," sai~ ThTy Moulton.
He is survived by his wife, Edna S~umway Weatflll; a son·~ dal!lhteJ':
a partner in Airline Capital Associ- in-law, Rodney·and GloriaofStuttaut,Art.; a daughter~ son-m-1~, ~n
ates, ri consulting firm for the airline and Lawrence Brooks of UniontoWn; and si1 grandcluldnn and s11 Jrell·
. industry. "The parties can't count on grandchildrea.
·
·
·
,
·
another presidential move." ,
· Services will be 10:30&amp;.!11. TuesdaylltheH~La~Fonerai.H~,
Clinton's action also doesn t rule 457 Canton Road, Akron. with the Rev. Jon Dainty offic1111ng. BUflal wtll
out an American pilots strike in 60 bci in the Nillside Memorill Pn, w~ militlrY ritea will lie conducted.
days.
Friends m1y cldlll the tilnerallloiM .from 2·4 and ,~c9 p.m. today. .

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Downing, Childs,
· Mullen, .Muase~
111 E. Secoad SL, Pomeaoy

99~3381

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I' a rot f, ,...._,

The Daily Senti!!.~l

:Sports.·

17,/.,
...."I.....,.

son bad 13.

Norris ripped the IICb for lhree
llnialll lhree pc4 I a in die SHS

Southem took • 2-0 lead. ....
held leads of 4-2 .ud 6--', befcn "'"~-k bid.
Norrillal the $cNthcrn chirp in
•lhe Soulhem lbmadoes Ia Gress and Enateflild toot chllp.
Both
got
hot
outside
Iliad
~
ilp
a
,
the
thinl IOUIId, ,.._ he !allied 9
of Stc.m in their 1;omebaclc bid,
poillls to ..,.tc a 16-5 Soull!pft scor·naa T7.t.7 non-league, seuon shooting spree dw saw
Sou!)lem
16--'
·
goins
down_
the
ing otf-teL That run lied the game II
~Adina bout with the Ncwarlc
stn:tch
in
the
f11st
round,
lhe
score
47-47,
but Soulhem coulda'tpover
iCatholic Orccn Wave SatUrday night
20.10.
.
lhe
hump
and let l h e - slip
:at the Clwles W. Hayman GymnaIn
the
second
q~.
Soulhem
hopelesaly away. The period ended
~um in Racine.
twice c:ame to within seven points, on a 8-2 Newarlc scoring ruiJ and a
~ Soulhern was led in scoring by
but had already dug a bus hOle from Catholic lead of SS-4~.
~yan Norris, who concluded his n:gSOuthern played tia!Jt lhe fUJal
lar-scason can:cr with 22 points, . which it had to climb. Finally, after
much
hard
work,
the
frame
ended
amie Evans howed out with 14;
round and kept ' steady -.in, but
and Southern had· not gained any couldn't get the consisteocy it needNewarlc
Ca,tholic:'s
Mike
Klockn1
F with 18, Will Englefield and Joe ground. Klockner bad eight points in ed to Cllablish a serious run. After
Pn:ss each had 16. Robby Richard- lhe fQUI' and Gless seven, while Ryan

~:=.Coi:ITIIPDI dlllt
;_ Adoa;lllticehird(ji*Wnmev~p-

NC-.

f
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.....-. , - -r- _, ...

caaiq - - . , 5-5511thl5:15
..t, s. 1 • piiiWio widtia two
5-57, lllell n 1 'rt, 11ut he .,
. . . ., 62-57 Ill . . 4:15 . . .
Tine m- ,..... c:at it to ,._.
II ~ 67-63 ..cl 69-65 befcn
- fouiU. 10 aiop·lhe clock _. JRscrve hope for a -comebd: llid.
NC hit 6-9- fRe daOM J0i111
down the ~. incllldiaa 4-S
~ EaglefJeld IIIII JCiocbw•.
Soulhem hit 23-46 for SO pac:alt,
4-17 tines, and- 9-IS lllhe line.
NC bit »S2. I-I tines, . t was
14-18 at the liac. SHS h8d 26
retoo,Jndl (Norris 8, Roush S, BYIII&amp;
51; had 13 Sleals (Maynard 3, Evans

,.%:' ¥

fotds.

S.MMiwaloot lhe 11 1e .-on
a foul lllot· widl jult 1?0 leCODdl
remainia1 J9:31. Nino o.taer bad
12 for lhe winiiCis, and'Oiril Fackler had 10. Soulhera
led by
181011 Alleti with 9, Mirchell Walker
7, Adam Cuminas 1:, and Troy
Hoblck wicb six.
• Soulhem playa in th&amp;!'bivision rv
aectional Saturday apilllt South
Oallia at Aleuoder High School. .

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Jenodl,

lsv SCOTT WOLFE

loeet

= Eastern, · now

7-14, . plays
J:rooksvil~e (11 - 10) at 6:15 Monday
In lhe secuonal final game at Alexan~r, while directly followmg that
:~~ame will be lhe Soulhem-Green
!!lame at 8 p.m. .
·
' ·Both ~ame~ will be rematches of
aast years sectoonal finals and could

~ fter

r"

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set ttJt: stage f~ a_n Easrem-Southern
berd11n th~; dtstttct.
Wednesday, the Symmes Valley
Vikings lay belplessly behind as the
Tornadoes rampllged on to a 60-35
sectional semi-final victory at
Alexander High School Wednesday
evemng. Soulhern, 14-7, advanced to
the seclional final game Jlgainst
Gn:e~, who claimed a ~atic Sl49 won over South Oalha.
Southern was ·led in scoring by
Bnanne Proffitt, who notched a

Earnhardt's v/c,orv-k/11/ng
' cr,ashJ
•1

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game-high 17 points and a ~high
8 n:hounds. Desplle not play1ng the
fourth quaner, Renee Turley bad II ·
points, ~ix n:hounds, ~ -~-hi~
honors m steals and assISIS w11h SIX
and three respeelively. Kim Sayn:
had nine, Cynthia Caldwell had six,
Conny Horsl Slx,·four each from Jenny Friend and Erica Arnott, and one
~ from Patty Lawn:~, Heather
Dailey, and Stacy Lyons.
Recently, four"'."" a~~les wen:
honon:d by the Ohio Girls Basketball Magazine based in Wesrerville,
.

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record in tbe race 10 O.for-19.
' DICK .BRINSTI!R
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
sm.hardt, his 70 can:er victories
Wh,ile Jeff Oordon and his team- notwithstanding, has lost this race in
. ~k their victory lap at the a number of ways. This time, it was
ytona SOO, Dale Earnhardt was a crash wilh fewer lhan 12laps logo.
ying lhe damage atid Bill Ellioll
Running second to Ellioll, it
. imply wanled 10 forget.
.
appeared Earnhardt got too high on
: After one ofthe mos1 bizarre run- the bank running off tum two. His
tings of what they call 'The Great car shimmed into the wall, igniting
~rican Race at the Daytona Inrer- · a melee in which Gordon, defending
Ltionai•Speedway Sunday, Oordon and two-lime Daytona winner Dale
~talking by cell ~ne to his trou- Jarrell and his Robert Ya~s Raci~g
t~ boss Rick Hendrick.
lewnmale, former. champion Em1e

wasleamwod out !here on lhe race
track then: at the end.
"I didn't think I could get by Bill,
bul I'll tcll you what, we were
working him over pretty bad. I'll bet
be was a little worried seeing those
Hendrick_ cars baek there." . .
Hendrick. under federal ondiCtmeat fOr !rn:gularities in-:olving. ~eral of h1s auto dealerships, 1!'1~
the Daytona 500 for the first bme m
13 y~. He walehed the race on
relevlslon. from Charlotle, wben: be

~n:f:-:n,;a:~~ceh;~: Irv~.~~~i;~7=:~~~rdon ~=~i~forthen:centlydiag-

;fpr a Chevrolet. Now it wa$ nothing

~thanapileofjunk.
.
And there was Elliott, who was

outnumbered.
•
..
!. "We love you," Gordo~ told
Hendrfck wl!o was back in CharIllue. N.C., hoping to heat leukeniia
alld the United States government.
';This one's for you." ,
: Eamlulrdt, the .seven-time Winsfon C!Jp champion who has won
everylhing of value in S\OCk car raeing except iiS biggest race, was tryil.g to .forget another agonizing
~feat.
.: "Oordon came up on me and the
carposhed offlhe comet," said Ea1'11M'dt, who was seriously injured in
similar crash last July at Talladega. "I got iiuo the wall,.checked up, ·
. ~ebody hit me from behind. Next
thing 1 know, we'n: on the ro&lt;lf
apin:•-;· .
Bill Elliott wanted to forget the
experience.
"Wilh three Hendrick cars behind
yO'u, you ain't got a chance," he said.
"I: was dead meat."
1bat be waS, courtesy of Oordon,
~ Labonte and Ricky Craven.
· The 25-year-old Gordon became
the youngest Daytona· 500 winner,
wliile Ea,mhardt. at 45, exlended his
c
.THE.
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a

DAYTO·NA
50'0 .

was passing Earnhardt.
"I had momentum and I got a
good run on him off tum two. What
good was 'it going 'tlo do 'fbr'Jnlf io
ride behind hiin and help him to
win?" Gordon.said when asked why
he didn't wait tq make lhC move
closer to the linilh. · · '' -' ·
Afrer Earnhardt's crash, Gordon
round himselt second to two-time
Daytona 500 champ Elliol~ and followed by defending Winston Cup
champion _Lahonle and new learnmate Craven.
. Wben tbe green !Jag waved again
on the I 94th of 20Q laps, Oordon
immediarely lrill&lt;f to get past Elliott
in the second tum, but was blocked.
As the two crossed the finish line at
the t,pd of that lap, Gordon went
almost 10 the infield grass to drive
his Chevy into the lead.
·
."1 would have gone down to the
people cooking down there in 1he
infield if that's what it took to get
past Elliot~" Oordon said. "That
was ourchance 10 win the Daytona
500. I knew it might be the only one
1 get, so I had to lake it."
. His leammates roared ~Y Ellloll
on the high side beiween turns one
and two: Then they protected Oordon ~own the backstretch.
. ·"The plan was not for me to go
to the. insijle and them to go to the
outside, I'll tell yoll that," Gordon

Du_ring the winner's inrerview,
Hendrickealledlhepressboxlocon- .
gratulareGordon-andcn:wchiefRay
. Evemham.
"Yeslerday, Jeff called me and
· told me, 'I'm going to make you
smile tomQITOw,"' Hendrick . sihd.
'"!'his'is the best medicine theGoc!d
. Lord could give me right now. This
is a gn:at day for our organization."
Just one l:ip after Gordon took the
lead, a collision in tom four between
Bobby Hamolton and Johnny Benson
Jr., slllrted a IO.car crash that kept
Ellioll from mounting any kind of
, attack.
"Whenever Jeff .and Terry and
Ricky hooked up, I was history,"
Elliott 5aid. ''I knew it. I was a sitling duck there at the end.
·
"He (Oordon) just gol a good run
on. me and I couldn't do nothing
about it."
Earnhardt was among lhe leaders
all day and appeared m good ~lll?n
to make a run for the one maJor v1ctory that has eluded him, until the ·
incident on lap 189.
After he hillhe wall, Eamhardl's
black Noc 3 bounced off Gordon's
car, was struck by Jarrell's Ford and
Hipped. While airborne, it look orr
the hood of lrvan's car. Then it
Hipped back ~nto its wheels a~d
sk1dded to the mfield grass.
Two speciators in the hnckstrctch

SIOns With her 27.5 mark.
Semcka Randall, ofTrinity High
School in Northern Ohio, pac:ed
Ohio scorers with 32.5 poi~ts per
game. Randall has afready Signed a
National Leber of lnletlt 10 play at
defending National Champion Ten- .
n~s~, a perennial "Final Four"
DIVISIOn I school.
.
Southern senior basketball star ·
Re~ .~rley, who
35 pomiS
earher m the season agu.nst Belpre.
scored the l,OOOth pomt bf ber

scored

.

W'l

.. 'The yoong Eastem Eagles, all
sophomores and. freshmen, played .
like champions Thursday night in
posting a 73-27 Division IV ·sectional semifinal victory over
Portsmoulh East at Alexander High
School.
A great learn effort was high. lighted by ·a 28-point performance
from sQphomon: Jessica Brannon, .
. who also grabbed 12 rebuunds and
hod se'(C'n steals in spearheading a
· polenl Eastern attack.
ltoe win projl!:lled Eastern into
tonight's seelional championship
game agJiinst Crooksville at Alexan-·
del\ High School.
· Easrem coach Srott Wolfe said of
Thursday's game, "We had a gn:al
game, but in reality it could hove
been much worse. We didn't want to
strip East of . their. digni1y. Those •
lhings come back to haunt you. We
just laid back in a 2-1-2 !he entire
second hillf. Still, we scored 37 second half points. The girls did a great
job in the transition."
"I guess tbe bigges!Complcmcnt
we get these days, whether we wi~
or lose is 1he fact that opposing fans
and coachesjust seem 10 shake their

weren't there. Then 1 realized we
right arm and the other ·a bruised men.'
were three wide, bui I had the
knee. ~either was hospitalized.
On MoiK\ay, Brannon a transmomentum to get past and.I just kept
Earnhardt got out of the baUered planted post," will run the EHS
going.
car without help and st¢pped inlo an offense. She is averaging 1.5.4 poiniS
"Bill didn't kpow who to block ambulance. But moments later. he per game in the 20-game regular ,;eaand that opened a lane for me."
got out of the · safety vehicle and son (allhough she played just 18 due
Gordon. the 1995 series cham pi- jumped into his car. It started and he to illness). Brannon and Valerie Karr
on, pt&gt;unded his lists on top pf the car drove it slowly to the pits, where the m~ke a great duo at lhe post wilh
in celebralion after reaching the
Ri~hard Childress learn taped some . both .averaging·· double ligures in
Victory Lone.
·
of the pieces down and sent him •both points and rebounds. Britrinon
"This .is lhe big one, the Daytona . back oot to finish .the f'\lce .. ·
is averaging just over ten .rehounds
500," G&lt;&gt;rdon said. "What-a way to
"!just wanted to get ballk in the • '· per game and Kan: 11.4; while Karr,
do .it, 1-2-3 Hendrick,andlcouldn't
race, try to make laps," Earnhardt asiX-footcenterilverages IS.2point•
have done it withoul t~ guys. That
said.
··
per game (based on 19 games),
Brannon is nank.ed at. guard by
the team's third leading scorer,
Stephanie -Evans, shootins· guard
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and good assist man. On the other
side. is one of two fn:shmen Becky
Davis, a gOPd driver and outside
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5hooler, or Chasatie. Hollon, a great
a !I-under 2~3. . .
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cup while Lonard's was only four ballhandler and.good outside shootSeekinl his fifllr viCtoty in 14 feet away.
·
Both together scOred nearly I SO
· profe11ionalstaltJ and' tryin1·to win'
After O'Malley's pull slid past !he er.
points as ' fre~!lmen this season.
·on a third: continellt tllis·year, Woods hole, Lonard sank his winner. · ·
Wolfe said of his lone f.tshmen,
a~ unable to read the ACllll at ' ·~ Lonard's health problems bega11
"They are ,.iloth dilitnonds in the '
the Huntin~ c~. li .p!Ob_lcm at tile Palm Meadows Cup !n Aul- · rouah. ·The&gt;&lt; b&amp;ve a great .thm~ yean
·l nlia ill 1992 when he was Mien by llhead."
that jleriisted all -k&gt; . • •· .
.
.
. · "My atrbke.felt ~- poci;" 1;1c I!DOiil~to clll~Yin~ the debilitating
Eastern's fifth player is post pl•ysaid, "But wllon you·~ ~~~~~~n. ot the lti&gt;ls Rtver Fever v1rus.
er Angi Wolfe, who has overcome
tin*. your speed'•
off."
For five yean he suffmd and his . several kneo injurie( and a bad Jl9ut
Lonard aDd 0'
firlislled eyesilht started to filii.
with lhe nu to have a gn:at finish this
. 16-under, 1 ·lhOI
ot Aua- , "I had·the binocular vision of a IC&amp;SOII.
Wolfe is a top rebOunder, has
. trlilw Shane Tilt lllld Wayne , ,O.year-old." Lolta,d Slid.
become
ball handlor, lpd •
Ondy.
. ·
.
N~ c:ontacl lo~~M~ ool~ the
aood assist mu..Wolfe's defisnle has
·n . twa laaLici,.l, ,.._ lhe f!wt · problenl ... "' wu apin able to alao pic:ked up u she has come up
p1ayo« bole, till IIIII. At die • Dlld, IWIII . . - . popedy. 'Then hisswina widlsoveral bii llella oir iho pnu'
lhe•,..
miaed the lllld bo ...lit. ' ' · '
·) a in the NIIOII
.
....._widiO!
fWIOfllt'iPL . B.liltllri1~1e(t~~: He
Pim .y~ pJay,r Jaekie Parker ia .

wins Australian Masters title __
sudden· death; Woods takes eighth
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MBl.Bo~· ~ia (AP)

•

...... 1bere

~ no roar in'· T11er
Wciodl' pme this ¥(~. • : · , , .:

iJiiateatl. l'eter Lollard, a 29-year-

old c:aah-1~ ·A,ustl'llian with
Sti&gt; in the bank, Clplured die Aus..,.... Mailers it\ a "otr'SUnday
for tri•
vicloly u 1 ~iQII-

r.._

11.

"Thia' is ~ lhe pnte1t day
of Ill)' life,' Lounhaid. ·
·

lk IWII, who hu lfJCIII fout years

NCI11Z '::"I

-.

rile

troplj:al dia-

COIIIIIryma . . .

O'Ntlley 0111ht IIOiliJnd extra holllli
wi.SUXI,6011.
•:
... , . 11101 • flul rauad 1-.
.......... 73 Ill fttlllll ' ln eiJtlth

........ ,.J••,...
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;I

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_...._

·= ·---····· II 43 .2CM

LA.

-

.
-61,-c..m.wSl
.......75.1'1. ........ 62

17

46

college Ieora

,1116

s.tanl8)-'oll&lt;llaa

UJalo "· Dlllloo 14
l'llrtloodiOP.-10!

' ••• •

s....n.·.......
New v...... r....;, 110

.,__. 112. .... rv · 91
· S...
IO!,a..b S...85
............ _1116
'

W.••;•

,_.C I 'C Fe
' QicaaoSt 74, YO' 1 "!'ft$1. 69

,

""

AI- o r - : 8:30p.m.

-MSoonle, IOp.m.

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

. ,. =·

..._ w-n..._o
.

KIIGS

·~

so

:H r.tN-A..nc. C nrueMe

ll:oJIIIf. 74: Akl)lll67

. 'liilmi 116. OHtO ao
'·

JG. ....................

Wi••nba'J 90. Ohio We5h:)'AII11J
Wuo51c:t 60, t:.lhoam 48

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

H.,....,••,,..,

lhiftiiM 24

Cove~ ~1.

37
PI

Ohio.H.S. boys' S!:O...;s,
..
"
.

.16

....,._pill,

Amhml 79. Foirvi&lt;w Pork~~

:led"-!!

s....,.~~.....,.,2J

Vandlli~olutltr ~

·

Fol-

:10

c-Nc~

•••

Cri 1

6.1
' 0.. 67

12. .

. .a. ......

61.DIIr--'7 .

C1e. ~- 74 Tol. l.ll!l!oy 64

64.-.. .

Oe..Uolwnil)' 691Whodi.. IW.Val
Ulllr"
·

Clnolood ""'
62
C01l Qrove 57. F,utU• Pur•aee

0...'2

.

O&gt;H I 1 61, . _ llialllwl67
Col. Da!loloo
"· Oovwt&gt;ort63,
"' Col.
· Col.
· ~edtoee
.. I' •••
.

, •• NO otilll ITIIIS All ACCIPTAII.I,,,

~Coowftftlt,\ heyrw 71

CountJ ...ycu 11 1114
P r - t-ton
,-

•

•••• 7

..

'I
.......

'Cal 1 On..we4,o.willt40
~y·····-St.""""''
., j, ,
IIIJ;.'

, CooioJ Olll(low 11. MM•••,..
..,..,.. •
.

',..,.,,"""""

'

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•

GreenviUe 4J

Wlllioushbr S. l:Z. Nlill1011 41

Woriiii01'00Ki-61.Col. WoJ.
'""Rk1FI9

•'

c-CIIb .88. Y""Lc::-7~

~~=~-~7~50SS

750 SXI

·29

W. a.e.er Lakota l:t. Talawanda ~3

Ilia v.&gt;-eo. OlenlaoiY ~ 1
,~cNecllen (W.Vo.)

Bpilotvlll067, Venoilln~
c...J Flilloo NW ;55,

26

S.rQ~~pvillc ,9, Cle. RhoW1
TiOf 43. Day. c.n.tl4.\
Upper Arlin&amp;lon (a,7, Col. lndeptn- .
deooeJO ·
V.tley Fooae10. Porma 61

llelllsvil .. ll,, ~.W.Va . ~
Beaver Eai•ern 114. Ponsm&lt;H~Ih
NoooDomc74

0.0::\T'" +:-·

.

Mitr•d 30. Cen~~rVilh: ·n
hdua 11, MMMew 48
Pkkeri'iton 68. Mt.'Yemon 16
" - Sllobr
. 68.
)!I

Anna 64. NiftMef $8
AniWa(! 57. H~... 42
~Von ll..._ Claniew 7~

li

ur•Now IN nooaas

Kot-1 Fllinnonl 60, Dlly. ""'"""'

71

Ak'?n 8"'t'el 110, Aktoo Fi ... Akioo Nwbe .., 79. J(ldwn ~l

.

a-a.

MiQI\lisbura ~.liarnillon .)9
. Mi·c·own 7~ . Trotwood·MIIdiaon

V•hlc47

.

Thanks To Kawasaki's Rebate~

Day. Cb.....iude•JIIIieaae 61, Day .
~ IUbk 3~
43, Hllllonl :lO
o.fleM Hu. 12. Cle. Eoo l6
Grow Oly 44, f:'nlllldin Htl. :W

Maple H11.60, Cle. Hoy lO •
Muon ~2. On. PrincctoD%

Safurd1y'1 ICIIDD .

....,..oak5ltWN-'Ii•~
' laley82.W. -~I

BELOW DEALER COST!

~CIIItnii-Howrr

Lanc.:11er 59, Col. WCII

~

'

'

,

Akron

Goowpon :10, Delaw... I~
Horrioqo 57, Cin. O&gt;lmin 44
Hudton 70, Akron Ellel41

'
.
A: a AI~
f:;int.'innllli ,I\ I, Hol;t110n 6..~

--ml9l . lloi&gt;!oHu. 61

.ALL NEW 1996
JET SKIS ON SALE
.

Cin. SdOn 60, Cin. Wesfna Hills41
Cin.'O.k·Hilh 64, Mercy 46
Ctn. Turpin D, On. Withrow 36
Cin. Unvlin1 49, Cin. Sy~~ 37
Cle. O&gt;IHnwood 66. How load 411
Col. NorUtlattd 49, Thomas Wor·

CnJrol St. 72. Pin·l-own 42
Do(- 104, AllliOI! 6S .
De-10. Nolllll S1. Joocph :10

\ ; _

Mt. Nolle Dllllle ~. Cin. Walnut

Hllb)l

Wallll71. Ohio Oominicaa10

J

J

.~' ' ·( 'On.

Nuamle'IJ
UdiOilo 87, N.._ :10

.,. ...... wrap; pof&gt;41r boa•

.

· ' · Atto• Fin:slonc 39, Akrvn ·Oarfield
. 30 ·
'
.•
. Ci~ Huai&gt;Cs 65. Cin. Glell E11e 44

. Mllf.Ofllo·c.m.....

I
r

JET SKf' 1100 ZXi I#Jtmnifl

· Salurd•t;~.::~mealll

RID GRANDE 016. Findlil)' S9
.Shaw,ce Sr. 97. Nounl Vernon

Ada~l.

·

Trotwood-Madison 9:t, Sidney •5

Oblqi~ ~~. MiWtteta46

.Ceraal, eracket, d•terlents,

•

Richmonll Dale Southea11ern 114.

· \·. OltloC 1fu-.ce
lloldwlft.W..... 7..1, Capliol 61
Hoi....... ~S.Ilocd!pio ~2

71

•

POf111'n0Uth Notre 0rome n

(

When it comes to riding the. waves,
·
.. _ ~
1" \ you wanl1f!Ore than JUst any
-- ...._ \
personal watercraft. You
.
·
· )
waril championship,___,
winning performance. ·
"&gt;
And with Kawao;aki's
if -- - .
JET SKI" family, you
-:"!.· - - gel it-from the awesoine
120-hor.;epower II 00 ZXi to the
. delu_xe, three-passenger II 00 STX. S~ us today and
check..out the full line. We' II help you select the perfect
. JET SKI watercraft-whether you want 10 tow a skier,
ride with the family or jusl make a few waves of your own;

IK:don

· ~~~eo-tee'''*'
lcjl~ 74. c... w"""' ~

OhriHn.4!li. llrniAOn 41

.. .•.•.. !II1m

' " · ·-

I

PaiM VIlli 59, Greenfield~~

'

I

" " ·apace
• U•o to tran•port roeydablu

N

:10

54

Hllllilole 89, Alhlwwl66

••

(NO OIL, ANTI-PRIIZI .• ·TIIANs:
· fWID ·or WIDI·IIOU'ftl COIITAINDS
.• • lutt•r·, Cottaa•· Ch"••~ •tc:.

•

M

2 ad C 'en..:t

.Y~aS..IOO.Ciria~~oSt

•·i

..

~-: ~

. Hamll1011 ll, C-•illell
Mid
J3, Muon :12.
•
W. Chetio.- Lobll71. W. c..othoo

'!; '·

Mill C

I

. ltnood Ushtly.

c_

-·-__..,,
~UIICII)''S

·

Koi1176. W. Nk:hiao 63

748 E....., Po•eroy,
.
. OH

. PowerPlayers.

Delphos Jeffmon

WlloeleniMna 61. Oalllpo~• 60
66, F!emor&gt;l St. Jooepll ~~
. Woos1er 48. Ashland 4--'
Wonhiaaron Chr. 67. ~ · Wlaec11oac

Bowlloo a .... 101. E. Nlchlpn 70

. Oiao. Ni~n.T-69

NolfiU

•

w-

6~.

•

614·992·2184 .·

Vki'ory Clw. 'It, Erie (Po.) Bclbol 37

Wayae TrD&amp;:e

MOTOR SPORTS
CEIDR

times roll

Wynrord ~3. Shtlby 51
ZaJaville 61."Cam1Nidp 34

Sundoly's Hlioa

.Ltdo off ond Dtocorded
.Rtnoed Uahtly

Let

lllka 5 9 , - Llli&lt;wood 47
Valley f:orae 92, Cle. Uneoht· Wcst

66

., '

(Clyr/Gnen)

.

Washinaton CH 76-. Jon""!•n Alder

62

MW.OW. Cr %flflft
71. Wllsh61

rwnc

OPEN MQN- SATURDAY 6 AM -12 MIDNIGHT
·1

.-Tifft• Colulllbl. 66, Folloria 4~
Tinon 72. CoiMi...al 66
To). Cidioli&lt; B. u... Cilh. 48
Tol.Sortll.lli!Wi&lt;e74 .
Tqlodo Cad!. J.!' U""' Cilh. 48 .
Tree o1 ure 84 Trilll70 ·

. . ..

Sfw.w~SI.

Ill. ' 1

.

992·7339

WIIR!n Kcancdy 61. Girard 44

Wl ......... ll4. Bhifrlon 79

. • •• THISI ITIIIS CAN Ill liCYCLID IN KIIGS COIIITY •••

~=·=·

.

.

s - . ~9. Soo!ll' Volt ss

73

.• In ·JAIIUAIIY, toaothar wo

·It · . . . .

'(W.VLlN""'-61

68

a7~ p~.tt~~~~~~:;:"~ ~
I

.Harlr.eten of Mtertall roqiUIJte clean recyclable•• apd
ve ...t cQOflY vt(h certain rulol tn the collection
proeo••· (Drop~O(f Sttoo or .Curbotdo Prosr... J
.
.~11 · r1cycle boxee ~· container a and b.tn1 are to W u1ed
for rocyclablo IU!tarlalo only... (NO IXCIPTIONS).
.
•All pl..,..tic CIPi i BDd Ullo MUST Bl RIIIOVID AND DISCAIDID
WITH Traoh,
•·

St. Rt. 1 at Five Polnta ·

14. BucteyeTriMI.Sl

Twlo Volley S. 70. Doy. Nonllriqo

·oH'

·J · s I a. . ._~
....-

~. •

"'

$4.89

· TiZ1S MAUTHOtl &amp; DRIVE IHRU

s-Ue 72. Cllylhop Vol'- Clv.
61 "
"':1
Spri ... SoiilliiO,.Yellow Spriltfl n
$1etabeaville Cal~ . 14, Weirroa

NCAA Division I

f

RICYCI p~ .

9 Inch su!1, 10 oz. potato chips, :Z oz. Royal calie, :Zl oz.
.

~flin-iew67,tfic:taville.~l .

Nooi!JU-79.-c;.n.ti6S
"'- Muski..... IS, Hh1m 6.'\
•"'

I

coytQ'Y

Sheean ~....,

· f '&gt;-

she""'

ALL

Thit Week• DeU Speelal
ONLY

SlldW.y 10!. NoRillloville 46 .
s.dinia Ellk!m 71, ~ICI' 5~

--,Ohio-.,,.

impatient. Crooksvill~'s quickncil.'
can quickly toast your prid!:." .
Wolfe praised Davis and· Hollon· 1
for their best Ooor games or the year I
Thursday, noting that Easlem made =
only four turnovers. ·
~
Wolfe added, "The: first game of
the toornament is traditionally lbe I
toughest because of the nerve factor.
No matrer what the level of the oppo- 1
nent, everyone isO.Ocominginto lhe 1
toornament and anything can hap- ;
pen. Sc:arcs arc traditionally 'low. ~ This was a good win to get under our
belL,. Crooksville struggled some- ·
what againstTrimhlc. This· YOIIJ' we o·
arc the underdogs and Cro6ksvillc, · I
the defending sectional champions :
with everyone back from last year's C
team. has !he monkey on their hack. :
I hope we can talce advantage of the I
· opportunity, but we are going to llllve
to be sharp. Most Importantly ~
though, I know the girls can &lt;lo it." I
This is the fifth straight ycar'that :
~em has gone to lbe sectional I
finals.
. ·
Eastern, ·now 7-14, plays j
Crooksville (11-10) at6:1S Monday !
in !he sectional championship game ~
at Alexander. Diicclly following .ll\al :·
1
::::::
· ping to 65-59 at the finish ,·
rclllalehes of last yeais sectional •
"It's going lo take a good game finals and could set the stilgc f&lt;lf un.
Monday, but i\ car~ be dooc.lf we ure £astcm-Southe111 berth in ~~e J?is- . ~
trict. ·
'
• NDtiCI TO

.

OMeC 111111
73, -Wolloot61
71. o.tooia77 (01')

i L .-p.a •
S a o - .. Ulolo.. p.m. .

N.Y. blllftdm; I. f'loridD0(01)

Tampa Bay 4, W-ashin&amp;~on I
New Jeney 4, MoniiOlll I
CaiJIIIfY 3 ~ ToroMo 0
Vancou-kr 4, Aalbcitn 2

FOUDtaln Pepsi products

Paior VIII. 59, G!eenr.. kl33 (0'1)
Pllrict Hawy 66, Leipsic J4
Perki.•70. Vermilion. S9
Piqua SO. TweiJy49
PI_,., 67, Nl. Cllleod S6
S. C.MOI 88, $e-. E. 5.8

-...74,01&gt;&lt;otio6l
-64,0hioW,...,..42

116
191
191

.
.
EASTERN CONFERENCE .

OUawa-Giaoitod 81, Plukli.. 29

a,

Nen~~c..tc

165

NHL staDdiDgs

(0'1)

· eo.-73 . ~70

·

IWIII•_VMCCMWr,IOp.na.

Dlllloo or LA. app.., IO:lO p.OJ.
Ml
~~·.s.:e
IOJOp.-

"

164
ltJI

Hockey

0.-U.Ri-.,71
,
O..Soo Clay 71 . Tot. Wood,.ani6S

·. · C.....IAIIIII.... 'liMa
AlllloodiO,IIIIIIiloli: 78 (01)

78 19S 13.1

Saturday'sscora

Now.I;Corh. 77. -S..diom6l

ac•'

44 164 204

Hanrord 2. Onawa I
PIUlodelphia 5. Pill ........ I
Chi"'&amp;O 2, N.Y. Rai!&amp;&lt;nO
. Colorado~ . St. l.D&amp;Ii• 2
PhoeniiL s. BostOtl .. (01)

, . , . _ 63, C...tioe 60
·
OIIOAod Falls 62. W""llke 49

... Dl• n. a.....:. 81.. 61
,.' . ...,.
.

· wei '

j

Mi . . . . . .
p.m,
NeW .leneyotCLI!VEI.ANO. Sp.OL
T....,ot._6p.IJL
.
~ .. ~7:30p.lll.

---~~~I:JOp."'

we

Ni.o::rr,

-102.LA..._.91
...
hl171.~96
llli"'I 110. ~ 19

, TOIIIIpt'a . -

kwC 7

' tc.oJ n. W. Nidoi 70
lllfiO 67.
T-Ill. C.... Nicbipo 6.'

-92.-19

.

Lat-St.-ll.a-1~

-a..

lloiSJ.64........ 57
1 !!lowli.. 0... 91, E Ni-Np 13

54 151 1'1

6 62 112
Vucouver ......... 262M 2 S4 IMt
Calpy ...............:14 211 6 54 ISS
Anaheim ............ 22 29 6 50 " '
SanJose .............20 31 · 6 46 I.e&amp;
Loa API!=ICI ....... I9. 31 I - IS4

Niotilloo a... 61.
so
-llp!lnd 10, Block Ri.., 41
Nlloo- 43, Wllllnl 39
Nmo.- Cicy 74. Ayonville SO
Mihoo-UIIion 61. Troy 66
N. Adomtl5, Whl-74
N.lbkiiDDft 56, BeamUe st
N. 01..- 6:5. Rocly RJ. . 49
Nlflole016l, Ardlldd 32
NMionll Trlil 39, Aft1Mi1 46
NeW K11011Yille 10, Non'"' Locol 54

A-H
.0.,00. .59, Vitpoio Tecll54
)Cavior 17, 0ooqe W..W-71

l

~ .......... 2824

---55.

Oblomen's

···~

)~

Colomdo ........... .J5 14 8

UmoBorb74,1kyoo61
.UftCOiaview 69. S.,.
Lanio c.th. 74. Clo. Coihollc S9
Loudoo•illc 63. &amp; - · 61
Lowellrille 76, s. ~·7
Lud!eru E. 54. --..y 44
. MaiioooPioiM86. Whl-116
oOHooJI
M :' aood77.~5e
. .loha4B
N"J'ft'!!' ll, NeW Loodoo47
Nooioo COlli. 73. Wol1d- 55

IS

lfl
161 201

-DivltiOo

.

Lewil c-,. ICy. 67. PINJW- 33
Ubeny Cllr, 17 0 FtelltOIIII Viclory
0... 62
Uckia1 CDIIIltJ Oar. 73. U~na Cbr .

-109.
Sao AJ....I9
Mi-92.-17

'

·

Kmeri•&amp; Atltt 49. HMlikH hdin

S.llliu)''a ......

New-1171, W I '
MYIIIilli,N' '· , .

awNw..,W.1G.Helllt66

· ~aMIIoi6.MlooiiT-54

I~
9\

30 .311
. ...................19 ]] .l6S

.

Toromo .............. 21

54
14~

29

21 .426

au,... ...............l.177 s

Gowl-17. '-b74

21

-~

0 .0 ..........23

a-. .........:10

.a.-Siaoe ..........l9

I

j

a good defensive player. arid stable
offensive ~ubstjtutc. Parker i~ a gOOd
shooter. and provides ·some bench
stn:nglh for the Eagles. '
Wolfe added, "Thursday we
wanted to be aggressive the second
half, but we didn't want to press. At
tbe half, I told the girls that it was a
good time to get the fast break going.
Here we did a great job in the 11'811sition. Also, we didn't.want to show
scouts too much lso we ran only one
offen,;e. Jessica (Brannon) dominated the offensive boards and Vlllerie '
(Karr) dominaied the defensive
hoards. Jessica seemed to be.
omnipotent tonight. She was all
over the Ooor, and when
the
olfensive boards, you know its'going
back in the hole."
·
Monday's game will be much diffcrcnt. Wolfe .said, "I cOinpare
Crooksville to Waterford, 'minus
Laura Goins. C-Ville has no one
dominate player, bUt is qui~k an.d
very w~ll-bahinced. They lll'll 'a lillie
more balanced than WalcrfOrd, but
don't hove the explosive ~6-point
shooter like that of Goins."-' .
Lust week, Eastern fought tooth.
and nail with Pioneer Valley Con-

$ .tie

}=D¢1

.6C7

I~

Sr. ...... ..............2126 6' 60 171 Jill
. PhoeniJ. ............. .2611 4 ~ 163 179

,

~ 64. Udlooo 33

. J'

~

10
184
214
116

li:
......~2~~~ ~ f4 .
Dctroii .. ,.............:Z7 1910 64 177 13.5

. ......

-Creet51

.-.orNewYOit,
7:30p.m.
. . . . . ,,.., 3. PJ 7·- .

•

a.y

:;--.....,........)] II

Sal

·I

_

lia

LA. .._........., ..n · 14 .m
---............. JS ., .'IQD
.. .. .....-... 211 24 .$31

scorer, and jJ33 Beth Besler, anoth- .
er veteran of Groen finals over !he :
past two years, a senior, is a great •
·n:bounder and follow-up shooter.
· Green averaaed 42 points )ll)r
game and i~ a half court pllllern oriented team, some~ing Southern· :
hopes to remedy With a full court :
press and up l~mpo lnmsil.ion gwne. I
Tonoght w1ll tell the story a.&lt; the
Thrnadoes lake the noor at 8 p.m. at
Alexander.

. f~~~~:1~ "~;e~i~;;n ~~re~~~~ ~~~d;~:n:u;.:;~i~';':~r~~~~~~~~~ ~~~·a\\\uu:~:o~~~~·:~dtx;~~~~ ~fe~~&lt;:;.s~:f~~~r:~o&lt;~~)%r:~.~~~

• JEFF GORDON
'

·

.bt.
.nl

.

=i~!:r;~~h~'l:-~~ - decent
~~i~o!:!ie::nc':e.'i::
· l·
shot, but not nored as a gn:at
7
1
ccn~:
~spoU::tsS::~~;;;.r,
bai~~:.Galla~."asoph.isa
~
capable Of the stop and pop shot, a good n:hounder, but IS an averaae

Lady Eagles draw Crooksville
,·n o,·.,,·s,·on IV sectr·onal f~,·na's
f,

I

,.,

16.1
209
116
161

Ccolnl-

•

C"
oodiO
GllalloloiW,V L ) - - 0 ! 6. .

.a m
16 n
ll .m
~ . ··~
-- -----........
...............,n
20
Sao ·---,.12 37 .zu ll~

J(u'ows has hit 98-147 for 66.7 per-

long lhree poinler, or ber ~
twisling drives to the bucket. Turley
also leads lhe ream in assists with 97,
nearly 6 per game, led the team in
rehounds with 208, in steals with
114. and had 39 blocked shots.
Nexl S~them has. Brianne Proffill who tallied 171 pomts on lhe year
for 10.7 PI?S· and ·(~·rebounds ( 10.4
avg.).Jun1or ~nlh1a Caldwell has a
3.5 average, I?r~ca 1\molla 3.2 average, Jenny Fmnd a 2.S average, and

R......-16.0 , .• •
Goooo 63, OoUf. .ar43

69
6S
5l
51

WESTERN CONFERENCE .

R.-,.~:l'i

•••...JS :111

J

ferencc: "Piayer6 of the Year w1th

A...,.llt.-c...l$1 .

-7V,Doy. ~66

r.a
....
UJalo ._,_____, __,.36
14

v

-·-

z

Jl

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

'

Onawa ............... l92612
llooloo ................. lO lO 3

J;o.ti• 7.5, New Mutiatville
(W.Va.)'¢
' •Q

WISTDN~

I

Gordon gets Daytona 500 win·, · ::::~~=~~ri~v~:~:
Llendrick's
cars
r.~ ·
,
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of Easlern was featun:d Jn the
the51JgtoflheSoutheni-Ndsoovdlc- em's third te.d1ng scon:r 1s Kim
"Young Guns" section of thepubliYork hoys basketball con~ recent- Sa)'le. who shot 32.8 percent from
cation for ·oulllanding sOjJhomon:
ly for her landmark acbievement. the f~eld for 161 points and 8.1 ptig.
athleles. Others honoml by the pubThrlcy, who now hu 1300 points · As a lellll, Soulhem scoml 1043 I
licalion wen: Southern's Renee Turoverall, is one offourtotal SoUthern points or 52.2 per game, whi~ givley, a senior guard, who at the ~me -girls to ever achieve the 1,000 point ing up 9S7 for 47.S Per game.
of publication averaged 27.S po1nts
mark. 'The awards presentation was
'The Tornadoes are coached by - ~
per game; Southern's BriiiiiiCProffill.
made by coach Jenni Roush.and alh- fifth year coach .lenni Roush. Green
a senior post player. and Jessica
~ dinoclor Howie Caldwe!l. Renee is lead by 1123 Cowtney Moore a S'7"
Brannon, a sophomore guard and
1s the daughler of Ed TUrley of freshman, whO is a good outside ;
post player f~ Easlem..
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top bon~ from a pool of more~ . accolades, Turley has "sliPP\l!l" to a ..shot, but is not n~ as a~~ ~II :
6,000 girlS basketball players ID
2S.OO scoring mark, still one' of tbe handler. The poml guard· IS Sr. ~

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~outhern girls to face . Gr_~~n in Division IV sectional finals

~CorrespOndent
. .
~ Tonight, ·Southern,. 14-7, w1ll
Gree~, 11-10, m .the lower
~kel secuonal final at Alexander.

iy Mize · and Australian veteran Cup at Royal Melbourne.
Rodtw Davis.
. Woodl, wllo by to llooba
"It Ill dq: en* on ' - my llady'a
lat welk iD 'Jlrai(. . ., said be ia feelina.'' he ..... "k'l • ~u~~~•
if be willrebU'II 10 Auaualia from tone. But I've bad a
apia before llext y-·s Presidents this week."

laow r f lhnlup the crowd

Newark Catho1ic·records ·77-67 victoly- over Southern
lly SCOTT WOLFE

.The Dilly II 1111 II• rt.g.s

(

IOOZXI

Live ••••• E1cll hy ••k 101 .·
SPECW HOURS:
Fri. 9 till I; S.t. 91111 6; S••· J2 11116 ·
. ......y 22, 23 &amp; 24

. Free warehoualng for up to. EveryWhere you look
10 daya In our new - Fri., Sat., Sun, you'll
warebouH, Huge
... prices 10 low '~
Selection, Huge Supply.
won't believe It &amp;~ntll
Specl1l hOuralnd dlyl

(Fri. N; Sit. N; Sun. 1M.)

750 STS Jet Ski

you s19n u,e fNiperL

. Thla~kl ··

· AppreclaiiOA .· ..
Event ends Feb; at.~
1817, Don't ml• ~on
. these Incredible pr'.c 11.

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SSA to ·pay for names of

~o-

kidding: ~his asteroid·
did kill' off the dinosaurs

ly PAUL RICER

impiiCt.
Just above this is a layer with
· WASHINOTON - Ocean core small pen stus pebbles,~ 10
...., lea CO!!Iein "prvof positive" of be ocean boctom nwerial instantly
1 -'w IIICIOid collictills with the ·melted by the massive enersY ~lease
Banh M million yean ago and ttig- of the impact
Jering a global extinction that probNext was a rusty brown layer
ably ldlled off the dinosaurs, scien- which Norris said is lhoujlht to be
lists JqKXI.
from the '"vaporized remains of the
: Ricbanl D. Norris, leader of the asteroid itself."
international ocean drilling expedi·
The beat of tbe impact would have
lion, said Sunday thai three drill sam- been so intense, said Norris, that the
pies have the unmistakable'signatu~ stony ~~Steroid' would have instantly
of an asteroid impact, including a been reduced to vapor and dtrown
brownish clay that he called the high intO the sky, .some of it perhaps
"fi~hall layer" because it seems to even ~bing .outer space. It then
contain bits of the asteroid itself.
snowed down, like a fine powder, all
"We've got the smoking gun,'.' over the globe. ·
said Norris in a telephone interview.
Norris said brown deposits, like
"These neat layers of sediment that in the core sample, have been
bncketing the impact have never found elsewhe~ Bnd they have a high
been found in the sea before. It is content of iridium, a chemical si~naproof positive of the impact."
lure of asteroids.
.
. A team of international scientists.
Just above the brown layer: are'
working on the drill ship Joides Res- two inches of gray clay with strong
olution, spe~t five weeks.off the east evidence of a nearly dead world.
colst of Florida collecting cores from .
"It was 'not a completely dead
the oceaD ·floor in about 8,500 feet of ocean, but m0$1 of the species that are
water. They drilled up to 300 feet seen before (early in the core sample)
beneath the sea bed, collecting sedi- are gone," said Norris. "There are
ments laid down at the time of the just some very minute fossils. These
dinosaur extinction, ,
were the survivors in tbe ocean." .
. Noms said the deepest layers
This dead zone lasted aboilt5,000
contain fossil ~mains of many ani- years, said the scientist, and then the
mals and came from a healthy. "hap-· core samples showed evidence of
~y-go-lucky ocean'' just befo~ the ·renewed life. '.'It is amazin~ how

AJt 8cllnDI Willi!

••

qilicldy the new stiecies appeired,"
Norris said.
Robert w. Co!eU. Ulitlmt direc·
tor for.GeOiclences of the National
. Science Foundation, called the core
samples the strongest evidence ~~
that an asteroid impact caused the
dinosaurs' extinction.
.
"In my view; this is the most significant discovery in geosci~nces in
20 years," he said. "This gives us the
facts of what h6ppen to life back then.
I would certainly call it the smoking
gun."
·
Although the impact with the
asteroid occurred in the southern Gulf
of Mexico, Norris went to the
Atlamic Oceim, near the edge of the
continental shelf in his search to document it. He sunnised that llie ·violence of the impact, followed by huge
waves, roiled the Gulf of Mexico so
muc() that the area was unlikely to
have clear sediment layers dating to
the dinosaur era. ' '
Norris theorized dlat waves from
the impact would have washed completely across Florida, depositing
debris in the Adantic. That is where
he found it.
The ship bearing the core samples ·
returned to pon on Friday and tbe
NSF announced the findings Sunday,
just hours before NBC was airing a
movie abouca fictional asteroid hitting the Earth and ca!lsing wide-

8y Eel Ptlllhi~ mragu
~ lloaWIICI!Jitt 0111ca

incan:eration bep March 1997 and
later.
, The Soc1al Security Administra- Social Security pber Name. Date
~on (S_SA) has launched a prograr!J of of binh ~ate ot'!onfipemenl. 1114:&gt;&amp;r1ncen11ve payments to state coneo;- . CC{ation Other jikntifying informstlonal and mental health authorities lion about tltG_ confinement as
that repon the names of newly insti- required by thel;ommissioner.
tulionalized Supplemental Security
~ntive -~nts will _be_ paid
lncome (SSI) beneficiaries.
for mformall01l·rece1ved wtthln 90
· The move is aimed· at ensuring days of 1111' coilftnement date.
t~at persons in ~orrectional and cerThe funds saved should more
tain mental health institutions do not . than equal ·any incentive payments
wrongfully continue to ~ceive SSI that may be payable."
~nefits.
·
- Qo and As
· The new law permits incentive
Q.'Does Medicare pay for care in
payments from SSI prognim funds to
correctional or certain mental health
.institutions for providing infonnation
to SSA that results in the suspension
of S3nefits to people whose con"
finem I begins March 1997 or later. Stat 'institutions that want to participate in the incentive payment
provision must sign an agreement
with the Commissioner of Social
Seciirity to provide monthly the fot:
lowing-information aalbo~~ut~a~ll~~~
Whose
'of ~

from • ttye w.ek expedition. Tiley~

-

..,..,_ that • nwtacwl... llammld Into
"rlh 85 mUllon .,.., 1!90· lladlng to the
extinction ot thl dlnaaallt'l and many other anJ.
· mall. (AP)
.I
.·
spread destroction.
"The impact of the asteroid fea·
tured in tonight's NBC-TV show is
peanuts compared to the real thing
faced by the world 65 million years
ago," said Corell . .
Geologist Walter Alvmz of the

•

•'"•

But in t989, scientists found evi-.
University of California, Berkeley,
dence
of a huge impact crater north'
first proposed in 1980 that the
of
Chicxulub,
on Mexico's Yucatan;
dinosaurs disappeared from . fossil
Peninsula.
Later
studies found ''evic•
history suddenly because of a massive asteroid hit. At lint, the theory · dence of debris washed out of the,
Gulf by waves that went inland as far.:
had few supponers.
as what is now Arkansas.

implementation of· health reform law not expected ~ t~ be easy
By ELIZABETH NEUS
Q...,.U New. Service

eral law, said Wisconsin insurance bly do it for their workers·, he said; tificate; the consumer should ask for
commissioner Josephine Musser.
insurance companies probably should one if he needs it to get coverage.
· , WAS.HINGTON -· Even simple
And when even i'nsurers and do it for small companies.
· through a new health plan.
.l)ealth ~~form isn't going to be employers m itncenain about what
Susan Nestor, executive director
She said many plans don't yet
,easy.
HIPAA does and what their own of policy for the Blue Cross and Blue have the capability to keep ttack of
, That was the messace sent to a responsibilities will be, ·"the con- Shield Association, said that neither coverage for nonworkers.,... spouses
·Senate committee recently as feder- sumers will be very ~onfused," said sltould automatically issue the cer- and children - although they are
... and state regulatOrs and insurance Chris Peterson, vice president of the
,experts updated senators on the sta- Health Insurance Association of
tus of a Jaw that will allow people to America.
~eep ill'surance coverage as they
One piece of gond news for conchange jobs - even if they have a. sumers: '!'he , administrator of the . ·
,chronic Jlledical condition.
agency responsible for part of the law
. Imp~111entation of the law - the .wants to get rid of the prQvision that
:llealth ·•Insurance Portability · and would make it a , crime to transfer
.Acci&gt;unlability Act, HIPAA ..:.... is assets in order to qualify for Medic,joing.relatively smoothly, regulators . aid. This provision has spooked many
·told'·dll:: Senate Labor and Human 'seniors wondering how they can pay
. ~urces Committee.
for nursing home care and not go to
. - But they also gave strong clue~ jail.
that'the miDions of Americans who
''Wewill ce,iainly not be p~ssing
thjnk lliis new law is clear-cut and states to enforce that pllrticular proeasy.-and whohope,it wilt liberate . vision at the moment;'' Bruce
tJiem from jobs they have been hang- Vla4eck, administrator of the Health
ill,l bitto only for insurance benefits Care·Financing Administration, told
~· are in for a few surprises:
sUrprised senators. "Sometime dur• Although the law will go into ing the course of the (congressional)
effect July I, only ,about 10 percent session, we might need to repeal
of 'people insured through large- lhat.'c
employers will be affected at first.
IDPAA - pronounced hip-uh,
Most won't feel the law's impact for and once known as the Kassebaumilt least another six months or more Kennedy bill for its chief congres- .
- depending on when .their compa- , sional spoosors - is expected to help
ny's insurance plan year ends.
.up to 2S million Americans who fear _
· •·At first, consumers wdl have to they will lose he81th insurance ifthey
provide their own documentation to · change jobs . because they have a
prove they have had continu?us chronic - pre-existing - medical
insurance coverage- a key requ1re- condition.
lnei'it fcir getting covered for preUnder HIPAA, employers and
exi•ling conditions. Not all insurance · insurers cannot deny coverage for a
cOI!'Ipanies and employers are set up chronic medical condition so long as
to.provide that proof yet, especially the sufferer already had continuous
when it .comes to spouse~ and chit- insurance cove{age for between 12
~ co~ered by a workers employ- and 18 months before the new poli_er. "
.
'
.
cy takes effect.
~- And befuddled consumers w1ll
The law also guarantees people
nQt;, have a central place · .t-o get · who buy insurance on their own•
lli(Vien. Three federal agenc1es and not dtrough an employer - will have' ·
24
MONTif LUBE
ail ~o~tates have a say inhow the law 'more chances to buy coverage, ·
·y.iU· w~ and the details may change although th~ law docs not necessariFirst Mo. ,...
$2$9
l
frO!i) state to state.
.
ly make that coverage affordable.
several senators are concerned
States are supposed to decide by
~ · . : .-bout'the possibility of :annoying mil- April how to provide better access for
,,
Jjpa) wJto have quesuons b~t who that individual market, and most
PER . TotaiM at
.
finiL themselves bounced from have a mechanism such as a risk pool
MO
I1Ciptlol** ....................
·tO agency - and still can't in mind already, said Mus~r, who
p _answers:
.
heads the National Association of
' Current. msurance law prov1des Insurance Commissioners.
One:;unsettling example of what can • Employer groups and insurance
~ when HIPAA goes into e~ect companies were · more concerned •
" ·, About half the complatnts about the law's potentially paper'reeetved by the Wisconsin state .insur- work-heavy requi~mept, that a per·
ance department are about .health . son be able to prove he had insurance
)~ governed under a federal law covera~~:e for I) sll'aip;ht months.
• • cllfed ERISA, which covers compa- · Peterson said regulators must
' :ji~ . that pay their own insu1811Ce decide who is in charge of issuing .
'i:tailld; State.s 1!4ve no authority over certificates p~oviding proof of covIUcb plllls and the complaining cus- erage -the msurel'$ or t.he employ, ~· ne~r hav~ tleant of the fed· ers. L8rge companies should proba- '/

19,97 -WINDSTAR GL

Newsweek cla.ims O.J.
·· · ~ill leave Los Angele$
• NEw YORK (AP)- OJ.l!il!lP- , · :·nus is the first I've heard of it,
laD 'is ~ninjlto leave Los Anleles · but it wouldn' t surprise me," SimpMil 4b.itlllatl0ritey iJ! hi1 civil tti- son ·auorney Raben Blasier said of
if is off !he euc, Newsweek inaga· Balter's ~deParture. "The tri,• zifti,reponed,
;
•at's over and 11 was understood that
SlniPm is heedl~~J the advice of . the. appeal would be · handled by

:=t;;:d[pj~
.:::'/:
wail untiLdlc
fiJI. ....... • nl...nin 10

someone else ''

·

Payne named
semifinalist in
national event

The Labor Department has a
booklet called "Questions and
Answers: Recent Changes in Health
Care Law."

· Lauro Payne has been named a
~erni-finalist in the National Library
'o f Poetry Contest
' : Her pi&gt;em, "Yesterday" will be
published in the Library's forthcoming book, "Through Sun and Show:er" which is slated for publication in
·september 1997.
· · Laura has written numero.us short
:stories and poems, but this will be her
first published work. She is a fresh:man at Meigs High School and is the
:t,:~~:~lll~o~f Homer and Julia Payne,

Eastern High School senior Maria
. D. Frecker has been awaided an Ohio
Ffrst Scholarship by the University of
Rio Grande.
An Ohio First' Scholarship pays
four years of tuition for 1997 high
·school valedictorians and salutatorians o,yho attend.col!ege there.
Maria, daughter of Charles Vf. and ·
Marsha N. Frecker, plans to major in
business management at Rio Grande.
To continue the Ohio First Scholarship program past their' freshman
year, scholarship recipients must
maintain a 3.0 GPA each aca.tdelnic;,l
.year.

1997 RANGER XLT

997 EXPLORER.XL:

24 MONTif LEASE

00
PER

MO

.........

Appreciation
dinner planried
: The

·1997 CONTOUR.GL

s.199qRo, $2999-'L. .$239'2Ao-

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.

Rock Springs United
Women met recently to
finalize plans for an appreciation·dinner honoring those workerS who
lielped with the cleanup of the church
fpllowing last year's flooding. , ' ·
Rita Radford cp~ducted the,meeting which opened with the Lord's
P.rayer in unison and scripture readipg from I Cor. 12. Members gave the
purpose and officers' reported were
given,
..
• · An article was read from the
Response magazine about the UMW
which is celebmting its 25th anniversary: Lenora Leifheit led in prayer for
those with' concerns, and the card
~Port was given by Pandora Collins'. '
Fund raisers to provide help fi&gt;r
missions was discussed. Sue to family illness, Sharon Folmer resigned as
president elect and Dorothy Jeffers
wis Voted in to replace her. Frances
Qoeglein was. named secretary.
: Devotions were given by Dorothy
Jeffers, and Thelma Jeffers had. the
program titled "Kinds of Hearts." It
11\cluded an unscrambling of words
IIJ.entioned in the Bi~le penaining to
the heart ..
. Virginia Wears had the closing ·
prayer and Thelma and Dorothy Jeffers used a valentine theme in refresh' mcnts. Next meeting will be March .
II at ti1e church. . ·
lt'f~thodist

.

E!lriicr thl~ month',' a iUrY .found
~wilt
~~:hoot SimpsonlilblefortheJune 12,1994,
~--.• the ....... Mid,' tili!lg killi~ of Nicole Brown Simpson
. ...,..:~it did~ !d-ttf7:.. , _ . ~d Ronald Ooldman. SimpiiO~ was
, ' IJ1WNPOrtlltn bN..74.11Jue, acquitted of the killinp in 199.5.
due';il •wUCillllk tilondiy.
'Baker hu 10111 said .that he would
abo Aid that ·lead . not handle the appeals process,
~ B11r;er 111111 hill ion,
althouJh Ito was e~pected to seek a
•
.. leawi!JI s~ llpl aew trial IIIII•- a jildp to redac:e
•...._ateif••·· s~mp~oa~ thedunapaWinl.
0.iq~ Will l.iUjle the ..,.j
Munwhile, SiJIWOft hu unlit
qJ JJU
•Ia .,. awlrd midweek 10 post $50 million in col~
t1e11b ._, I• · 1 liloral- I0 pon:ent in CMb - if Ito

.

1997 ESCORT-LX.

have been covered in CaSe yoU ·
change jobs. ·
·

:Frecker ·awarded
.· scholarship by URG

SZ!M.

alcncy

LAURA~AYNE

MARIA D. FRECKER

00 ::.~:,_KmnmUUM~

f. . .

'

working on that
Meantime, Petenon said, people
should keep pay stubs that · show
insurance payments, old insurance
cards, 'explanllions of benefits, documents given wben you sign up for
a plan -anything that can prove you

••

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. .:.. ... ,.,_.
__

The Dally SenUnel•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 17, 1987

·.

......... . -·

benefici~ries

a psychiatriC hospital?
A. Yes. Medicare Part A hospital
ins111'811Ce helps pay for up t_o . 190
daya of iapMient care in a pw:tJc1patiliJ psychilllric hospital during a benellc:Urislifetii!IC. However, psychiattic care in seneral hospitals, rather
than in_free standins psychiatric hos. p1tals, IS not subject to this J9(}.day
limit Inpatient psychiattic care in a
general hospital is treated the same as.
other Medicare inp~tient hospital
care. If you are a patient in a psychiattic hospital on the first day of your
entitlement to Medicare, there are
additioll8llirnitations on the number
of hospital days that Medicare will

pay for.
What i.s the '7tirementage for
S~1!'l ~un_ty? Is 11 troe the age for ..
reunng ts betng tnc~ased? .
A. The usual reurement age for
people retiring now is age 65. Social
Security calls this "full retirement
age," and the benefit amount that is
payable ts conSidered the full rememenI benefit. Because of.longer hfe
expectanCies, the full retirement age
will be increased in gradual steps
beginning in ~003 until it reaches age
67 in 2027. It affects people born_in·
1938 and later. There is no change in
the early retirement age of 62.
Q. I'm the sole provider for my

q.

in institution~ ~

wife and two small children. Ifl were
become disabl~. would they be
eh~lbte tor any SOCial secunty nenefits?
. .
A. If you become ehgtble for
Social Security disability benefits,
yQUr wife and children may also qualify for benefits on you~ record. Your
wife would be ehg1ble tf she IS 62 or
older, or if she is caring for ach1ld of
yours who is under 16 or disabled and
also receiving benefits. Your children
would be eligible if they are.under 18
or under 19 if in high school full time.
For more information, call Social
Security at t-800-772-1213 and
request th,e publication "Disability::
10

-·
Page 1;,·

Q. Does Soc1al Secunty have any.,
info"!'ation about Sup~l~mental
Secu!ltY Income for nonctllze~s of.
an~ tnforma11on . about becomtng !
Umted States c1llzen?
•.
A. There's a new fact sheet called
"SSI For Noncitizens" !hat you ';"at
request by calhng Soc1al Secunty'•
toll-free number, . 1-800-772-121 :t
You can get more tnform_atlon a~ .
becomtng a Ctllze~ by wnllng or VI";:
iting a. locall~mtgratiOn and Natu.-·
. rahzat10n Serv1ce (INS) .office. YoO;
may request an Apphcauon for N_a~ .
)lralization (Ponn N-400) b7 callmf
the INS Fonns Request Lme at :
800-870-3676.

�'.

.
1be Dally

The Daily Sentinel
,,...

By'fheBend

.

'

· Flw.-1 ,, ,...,..., 1'1, 1117 .

I

A~Mloolzed MA

with my classmates.on-line. It's eas- 1110 on-line ICnicel to do remrr'!a oa
ier and more fun than writing letters. pncaiOJY, make travel reserv81ions,
I've heard from several Brown pals keep tq) on race-car results and check
. • who surf the Internet. and they are all out my company's home page.
.... : Loo excited at the ~&gt;rospecl of a miniRochester•.N.Y.:.People who stay
=:'s~ ..ac.
reunion.
up all nigbton their computers don't
c
Roanoke, Va.: You can findweath- :have an Internet problem. They have
;;;;;;;;;;.,_ _,__ __, · er for any city in the world, .maps,
an addiction problem, and it's lite
From Monistown, T~nn.: I've met · movie reviews, recipes, political · Internet they're hooked on. I was.
alot of folks on lite jntemet, and they CO.IIIIIII'Dtary, employment Opportq- '109· lltlyed up all niJht fiJI' months'
are normal, decent people wi\h jObs nitics, video clips. niusic, photos and It almost cost me my marriqe.
and families. Of course, lltere an: more research informatioo than you · Please tell your readers wllo are
some slobs and head cases. too, but could find in your li!Jrary. All this ,in !lddicted to get professional help and
you don't ha;;e to hook up with them lite comfort of your'own home. The then pray that lite "professional"
any more than you would if you met Internet is a modern-day miracle.
knows how to deal with it I suggest
them at a church social.
· Akron, Ohio: Of course, there's a 12-step program patttrned after
Providence, R.I.: I am a graduate sex smut on lite Internet. butlltere'• Alcoholics Anllnymous..It works.
of Brown University, and I keep up also·a f&lt;int of valuable infonnation. I
Now, dear readers, this is Ann

talkina. What you - lbout to read
is taken from a neW. siOiy by the ·
Associated Press:
.Sharon Lopatka, a married
woman, age 3!1, lived in Hampstead,
Md. She wu well-lita:,l by her neiah·
bon and considered "friendly." But
Sharon·led a secret life 'on lite Internet. She made it known ift chat rooms
that she was interested in torture and
bondage. In some of her e-mail let·
ttrs. she asked to be tortured to death.
Most correspondents stopped writina
when they realized she was serious.
Sharon eventually met a man on the
Internet. His name was Rllbert Glass,
age 4S, a member of llte'Rotary Club
and "into C&lt;ilJiputers." ftis cyber-

Beat of the Bend ...

~ • ~. Rlillnge, Patio Furnllln. ~
hlml, ~ ~. TreiiiMa &amp; k* ol OCher llullll

.'"No Job Too Lllrp or Too Smd'"

1. .....
~

We will work within YQUr ~

Ph. 112 1173

is

;.blilbed u a free service to non·
proftt llroupll willbln11 to annouJK:e
-daa and specllll events. The

0J1111dar II not deslped to promote
..aa or fllncl ralsen ·or any type.
ilans are printed as •P.ce permits
IUid eannot be guaranteed to run a
lipeelfte number of days.
'

lliiVro. e.p..

MONDAY
LETART
Letart Township
1fllstees, 6 p.m. Monday, office
l!Uilding.
., RACINE -- Racine Village Coun-

· Salisb!II'Y; Joshua King, winner;
Christopher HaninJ. runner-lip, both
sixth gradcn.
Meigs Junilll' Higb: Ian Story,
;winner; Brandy Smith, runner-lljl;
iboth eighth graders.
·
' Sauthem Local School Diltliet
Letart: Nicki Tucker, winner;
Brooke Kiser, runner-up, both fourth

HOWARD

~ Elizabeth Taylor -cele.brates 65th IDrlv~...Y:::
~birthday at AlPS fund-raiser
, w-:.~
"' LOS ANGELES (AP)- It was
1-Eiizabeth Taylor's night, though tile
h,legendary actiess didn't see it that
" way. ·

graders.

Portland: Lisa . Deem, winner, ·
sixth grader. Sara Camlllllllllll. run- ·
ner-up, fourth grade,
Syracuse: Curt· Crouch, winner;
Crystal Courill, runner-up. both sixd)
,graders.
.
Southern Junior High: Shauna
Manuel, winner: Joshua Larsen, runner-up, both eighth graders.

cil, recessed session, Monday, 7 p.m.
,. , the municipal building.
TVESDAY
·•
, EAST MEIGS -- Eastern l.oc4l
Board of Education, regular session,

•

,,,Michael Jackson, Pani LaBelle and
~ others during a star-studded celebra"'tion Sunday night marking· ~r65th
...binhday.
.
.
Inside Hollywood's Pantages
_ Thi:.; alre, the audience was also reminded
,;,of the actress' colorful life, her love
. ".of diamonds and her seven husbands
:~ with videotaped footage spanning a
··career thafbcpn at age 9 and 'gar'"neniil two Academy Awards.
, , ,Madoilrui ev~n gushed when
spealting about how she used to
i";,w,atch·t.;li~ l'aylor's movies. ,espe• cially "A Ill~ in lite Sun." . ·
". "l was so.absolutely knocked out
'~·by h~ty," Madonna said. "I
••don't know what it is. I think.rJjt's this
wondrous light that radiates from her
, ,, and it always talces my breath away.
,, "Elizabeth Taylor has stopped
;, ,rrtaking fihns but her life continues to
,.. shine in a rpuch ll\Ore wondrpus P~
_ sion.''- · •! • •
•
·
That passton IS AIDS, and the
~1:-:.k-tie event raised more than $1
ml_lllon for the Elizabeth Taylor AIDS..

-Rev. Vermillion .
to be installed as
.church pastor
Rev. Richanl Vennillioli will be
histalled as pastor of lite Faith
Chapel Open Bible Church, 93!1
South Third Street, MiddlepOrt; ·on
·Sunday, Feb.-23 at 10 a.m.
·He and his wife, Donna who now
reside in Morjantowri, W.Va. will be ·
moving to the area in March.
Vennillion will be the church's
first full-time ' pastor. Established
about 18,IIIOIIIbs ago, Pastor Michal:I
··· Pangia has been ovc.-.inl the
~hun:h and serving ihe COiigreption.
Morning worship is held at · I0
. a.in. and the midweek serviCe is at 7
p.m. on Thursda)-. Youth ministers llt
lite church are Randy and Jessica
Jewel, and Teresa Davis ovenees the
· Sunday school dcplrtment which has
classes for all agh.

HAILEY ROUSH

Missionary .
society meets

''

The Benha M. Sayre Missionary
Society of Racine met Tuesday at the
, home of Mllljorie Grimm to .roll ban·
· dage; which will be seiit to Ziire . .
At the work session were Lillian
·Hayman, Emma Adams, Martha Lou
Bee1le, Geraldin~ Cleland, Barbara
Gheen, Mjldred JI111J Linda Grimm.
'Naomi Stoblrt.'lnd tile Hostess. ·
A tlaaM you letter' was. lead from
Holzer ,Hospital for ChriSimas tray
favors JIIII(IQ !JY qleJIIJIII and liven by
the ~riha M. Sayre Miuionary
Soc:iety'. · , '
,.
·,
Beegle hail !lie lo!!eJif\ prosr-m
using "Helpl•i HindS, Helpins Ochen" u the themi.A love gift was iak, en and will be sent to Carrie Bell

Scout food . pic~up planned . :.z.Wn.andprayerwas,;~nbyllee•
.
.
·de.-; aed ~Ill S~y ' Will ~
~ aed JIICic lip tbe f~ cootn·
bUbOAI. They ~ lhll, Jelidenll put
lito blat 01'111"!' their liont_do9r
befo(e 9 Lm.

..

Foundationfrornaudiencemembers
who bought tickets at SSOO and
$1,000cacb.
· The foundation distributes money

victimi' of the deadly disease.
ta and Rosie O'Donnell appcared.via
MiA. Taylor, who along with Jack- videotaped messages for the evcnL It
son watched the tribute from chairs willeira,u two-bour.ABCspecialon
at lite •ide of lite stage, said she did· Feb. 24, thr'ee days-before her ac!IW
n'I auind the event to celebrate her birthday.
birthday, but rather lite cause she has
Outside lite theater, a bl ocleiong
dcVOifil her life to fiJI' lite past 12 streich o~Hollywood BC!"Ic~aid was
years: '
,
temporanly renamed Blrzabeth.Tay'J.t';' here to celebrate all of the lor Way in honor of lite woman wlio
•. ard s
~
in the-world with AIDS," she .won best actress Acade.my n.w
said.~'Because of you and your gen- for ."Butterfield 8" and "Who'•
erosiiy and your llig heart, it has Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"
enabhld ETAF to go all o.ver the
Miss Taylor needs an operatiori to
wortii ... and because of you lltey will remove a benign brain tum!ll: H~
be tjched, they will be fed, they will . surgery wtiS ori&amp;inally planned fill'
be il\lrtured . with your love. And I today but was postponed for somethank you 80 much for that."
time this week because of lingering
Jackson, who-escorted Miss Tay- flu symptoms. No date has been set,
lor along a violet ·carpet into the the· her publicist Maria Pignataro said
ater1 earlier sang a song "Eliza- Sunday night.
betl;t." which he wrote especially for
'fhl: tumor on lite ''linin&amp; of her
w ;,vent ll!ld for the ~~~~~~ ~~ • left frontal lobe" ~~ delec~, rothiW~b!:!ql sqn.
, .-., .,,c. -, .•.,.. , 4owmg an Mli.J;Ij'ftj!l S'c4ildurina her.
"!NI£1izaheth, I love' you, ·you're annual physical examination earlier
.than justa starto me," Jackson this month, Her doctor elq!CC!td a full
croo.tl~·
.
·
recovery without complications, Pig- RfJscanne! Carol Burnett, Hugh nataro said.

more

~In

a church wedded to tradition,
~:ca· tnolic activists seek .change .
.•-:.

. .
•
• ,. NEW YO~ (AP) ~While the
~fiithful ~ed $Crvicis inside Saint

The group will purchase toys for
Veterans Memorial Hospital Auxil·
ilf)' to 1•ve to ctiildren beina treated
there. Beeale and Grimm will purcbiNihotoyilllll.pvuoLibbyPilber, ..Wlilry member.

A

ADVERTISING IN THE

TV TIMES

••
••
••
v
.
'
.,.

·FEATURESEVERY WEEK
IN
THE
.
.
•
'

CAI.I.NOW •••

GAIJ,JPOLIS

446-2342'.

992·2753

n . 0wnor: - -

"9: ~~~

I ....., .

.

.

Leaders of the fairfax. Va.-based

~

wedded to tradition: The group:s

We~ Church h?pe to ~eta ~1lllon .members want the Vaucan to appro~e

•Patrick's Cathedral dissident Roman Amencan Cathohcsto s1gn the1r ref-.
Catholics were o~ the front steps erend-. for change, said ~ister Maufetn -~dler, the group s nanonal
, ,.;'lUmping for change.
.
:
: • Members of lite liberal ·group We coordrtiltor. .
:~ue Church passed around petitions
"Je~s was _open to d1alogue. w1th
: . in New Yorlc and nationwide Sunday. ·anyone, ·~cludm~ people ~1th _wh~
: ~lling on the church to relax. i!s he v~hef!len.t,ly d•s~ed, srud S~s- .
• stanCe on lite ordination of women, ter Ftedler. If our filth commun1ty
: :pelihacy for clergy. homosexuality is going 'io be true to that kind of
: :.and other issues.
church that .Jesus left us. we ?ave to
: ": "The majority of American he open ~o d1a~gue as ~ell.'
Organlfers 1n Austna and _Ger: -catholics are moving ahead regard• less of what the Pope' ~ys," said many haVfgathered about2.3 mrlhon.
: ,.Marg~t Dubbins, of Los ~ngeles, ' signat~re.~ :. and the movement is
.who signed the group's petition on spreadmg, lp se~eral other western
"her way into Mass. "There's a silent- European·countne~, she _sa1d.
"'majority ;.ithin the churcl) that is
We Ate Church 1s calling for drasdoing 'this anyway."
. ·
tic chang&lt;lf in · an institution long
'
·
, ·
·

the ord1nat1on of women, drop 1ts
requirementthat priests remain _celi·
ba\e and reco•mze _the human nghts
of gays and lesb1an~.
Thefre also calhng 0':1 the Roman
Catholic_l~ership to g~ve lay JICDpie a voll'e m _the selection. of b•sh·
ops and.pastors, and to allow them to
exercise their _own judgment on
issues such as birth control.
The church has long resisted s~ch .
pleas. Pope John Paul IT appo_mts
b1shops and has refused to cons1der
ordaining · women, arguing Christ
was_male aod chose only male. aposties. The church ~mands celibacy of
all pnests, cons1ders homosexual
activity si~ful and opposes artificial
contracepllon.

• . .,

.

'·

.

.

I

)

..

LbS A!IIGEI)!S (AP) - John . · NEWYORK(AP)-Thesedays, .
Travolta's corile I. .long way from Kenny Rogen; says he's recognized
RENO. Nev. (AP) - Victor
Broolclyn'i 1.9705 di~o scene. ·
~ mw;~ for h,is chicken as ljc i~ for Edward Willis', the original lead
Travolta and hii wife, attress Kel· h1s smgmg.
· smger ofthe Village People. bas been
ty Preston, recendy paid $3.7 million
The country' star says in thE Feb. jailed on robbery and druJ c'*ses.
(Of a Sprnish·sl)lle home in this 22 'issue of TV Quide that he o¢1)ed . Willis; 4S, of San Francisco, "(U
city's e~clusive Bten.twood ·JII'C&amp;. the Kenny Rogel'S Roasters restallfllnts as · arrested Saturday in his Flamiqgo .
Los Angeles Times reported Sunday. an investment.
Hilton room, where officen said
The couple had been leuing the . Now his pifture is seen in the theY. ·found about 45 pams of rock
s,SOO-square-filot .homo, lite Times chicken restaurants all over · the cocaine.
SJ.id, citipg ~nide,ntified sources.
world.
. !"
. Willis, who lists his current OCCU'
, The halnco built in the 1940s, has · "I recently "'illked into a Kenny pation ils writer, wiS still in tbe
six bedr&lt;;)dm1, riino baths, six fire- .Roaers Roasteri \ri Alltens,'.' Ragen Washoe County Jail Sunday; uriab"
paecl. 1 lfm;.tibrary·study,.bar an~ . said, "The guy who was ringing me to post $!16,600 bail. He wu arrut,
tr:Mis coun.
·
up looked at me, ahd then he looked ed for inveltiJatioo of robbery, potThe coliple' illso owns a 22-room at the pictures oo the walls, and he sessi011 of a controlled substance and.
ctlale in Maine. ·
.
was11't 5ure wbethi'he should chqe traffickin&amp; in a controlled subltlnee.
. Travoltai whoso.fint starrin&amp; role me or not."
, ..
Willis Was with the Villaae People
was t,1 an aspiring dancer in. 1977's . ' . Roaers' hiis inelude "The Gam· from 1977 to 1979, wheti it recorded
"Satunlay 'Nilhl Fever," is C:unept· bier" "Lucille" and "Coward ofthe such · hils . u "Macho Man,"
coun'. ty,','
·,
'
uv.M.C.A."
and "In the
_ N
_ IV", •."
.
'1y atarritig in the film "MichacI...
,,

IIUESER'S
lAillE

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Body-"; car, truck
tnrck pllnttng,
minor rnechllnlc81 ~
rwpllr.
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Tune-upe,DII Chlnge,

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1M ·IIOMI M' " " - M'

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y

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TRUCKING

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WAITI«llO MEET 'IOU

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MON.&amp; WED.
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Tlle-ollhe ....... :
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11 rrr• the right 10 lllld at
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Hao Your lillriaoe Or Rotationohlp Got Up 6 WOrt, Slop In P'fi&gt;.
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Adull Vldoao. 1310 Eutom nuo, Galllpollo, Or Calll14-.._ ·
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AND

TV TIM~S ·.

Bacld!oe, Tlac:lthM.

:~~oh,n: .Travolta pas come .a

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS

Orant,EiizabethHurley.l..ilyTomlin,
Chtr an"d Arsenio Hall also paid !libutetoMissTaylor,wboshunnedher
traditional purple outfit for a green

(814) ., 2
w
Miss this
'Il!ylor,
facing brain
~S research
and treatment.
and coat.
.
r=J~~~~~=
v.surgery
week,who's
was serenaded
l!Y ·for
focuses'lll8inly
on day-to-day
carebut
for gown
Whoopi~ Goldbe1'J, John Travol-

POMEROY-- Meigs Councy unit
of the American Cancer ·Society,
Tuesday, 5 p.m., VMH conference
room, Board members urged to
attend.

Randy_and Missy Roush of Syracuse announce the birth of a daughter, Hailey Morgan, born Nov. :30.
The infant weighed seven puns, 14
ounces and was 21 inches long.
Maternal. grandparents are David
and Edith Brickles, Pomeroy, and
David.imd Margaret Leach. Pomeroy. .
Paternal grandp.arents are Sarah
Roush, Syracuse, and the late Milton
Roush.
•. · ·

-Remodeling

both sixth gradcn.

:

Announce birth
of daughter

•N9 Job Too Small
•Any a~d All of Your
Home Repair Neede
oCall Today for Your
Free Estlmatea

oNew tfoiiiH

Free

6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Eastern High
School library.

POMEROY -- Free skin testing
clinic to be conducl!'d by Connie
Karschnik, R.N., Meigs County
tuberculosis nurse, Tuesday. 4:30 to
6:30 p:m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Fi're Department. Res.idents reminded that all individuals in food service
are required to obtain yearly skin
tests.
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Board of Commissioners regular
meeting Tuesday, 2:45 p.m . at the
Meigs County Courthouse.

Calls)

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

Community calendar
.. The Community Calendar

,

..,.., Ntu1 Ownership"

P-----------~----------------------~-.

. '•

1

614-992-7643 '

'

FAX 7'73-1111

(614) 367-0 266
1-800-950-3359

.
Eastern Local ~bool Dis· Jimmy Smith, runner-up, both sixtb
graders.
·
trlct
Chester: Carrie Crow. ·winner;
Harrisonville: Macgan Elizabeth
Erin Taylor, runner-up. both sixth Dodson, winner, fifth lflldcr; Jessica
graders.
Marie Preast, sixth grader;
Riverview: Heather Smith, win- ·
Middleport: Katie Re~. winner; '
ner; Brittany Tolliver, runner-up, Megan Tribbetts, runner-up; both
both sixth lflldcrs.
fourth graders.
"
Tuppers Plains: I.e Ann Marcinko,
Pomeroy: Robyn FreeD1811, win. winner; Tyler Simmons, runner-up, . ner, sixtjl grader; Jaynee Davis, run- ·
both sixth graders.
ner-up, fifth lflldcr.
Eastern Junior High: Joshua
Rudand: Sarah Wilkes, winner,
Clark; winner, Chris/Lyons, runner· fourth grader; .Jenni Priddy, runner·
up.
up, sixth grader.
Meigs Local School Distri:t
Salem Center.: Lindsay Bolin,
. Bradbury: Emily Story, winner;
Asl1ley "Colwell,
-.

School spelling bee winners.will
togellter at 7 p.m. at Eastern
High SchoOl Wednesday for the
by Bob Hoeflich
annual contest where a county chain·
pion and runner-up will be selected
for lite district competition.
There is apparendy a tad or con- of P~~~~:~s
,
,
The top two spellers will be eligion just when lite next board
And
went hke th1s:
ble to participate in tbe Herald Disof the Meigs Division of the
Verse: ·
. . patch/Cent\lry Cable Tri-State
Heart Association is to be
.Grandma took a little &lt;. Spelling Bee to.he held in April at the
. . .
. Huntington Civic Center in HuntingRhonda Dailey,·an 9fficer with lite
porch, her hands lay in ·ton, W. Va.
'4ivision, reports 'that the next board
Both the county champion and the
'*-•ion will be Tuesday--that's tomorrosebus)l at the gate, runner-up will·be presented trophies
'*&gt;,•--l'eb. 18, at noon. An earlier
Feeling •v"'"Y· sighing at my fate; following Wednesday night's bee.
iinr10U1nceme1nt gave Wednesday as
Grandma
said, shaking her
The school
are as follows:
iltle meeting day. The meeting will be gray head,
~ld in lite conference room at Vet'Prudence, n/y dear, this thing
·erans Memorial Hospital.
we'll not discuss,
It is plain yoiJ're tooyoung .to go ·
7: How many times does the mule with Gus'
' Mave to kick ya?
I thought of this when a car came
_. ' I'm amazed at the number of peo- into view,
pie who are still being cited to coun
Stopped by the gate and a· voice
.(or seat belt. violations. You may called 'Prue',
,
·Gbject to wearing your seat belt, ·but
And there was Gus in a jitney
- ~nfortunately it ·is the law and the bus,"
; gfficers will get you if you don't
And forthechorus, the IY.rics say:.
watch out.
"I rode with Gus in the jitney bus,
·- There was a time when you could·
My curls all in a muss,
n't be stopped for..that particular'Vio- .
The chauffer was deaf and dumb ·
lalion. However, that's·been changed and btind,
sg you can now be stopped and
For he never looked behind,
checked out. ·
He spoke no. word yet he must
A word to the wise.
have heard,
u
Why we both sang like a bird,
' Does Pomeroy's claim to fame·lie
When we returned how my checks
in a big comeback by' the song, burn'd,
.
"When I Rode With Gus in a Jitney
When I rode with Gus in that jit:
Bus"?
, .
, .
' ney-bus" . , 1
..
I doubt 1f the song 1n 1ts heyday,
You're right. You're probably not
·
A checll for.$5,es&amp;
.copyrighted in 1915, was the rage of . going to .get the Gus song mixed up
presented to tile· Coolville Volunfill"'·Jin'
Depl.rbnent by Relph C..HenderiOII, right, HCthe nation so logically it's not gonna with any of the Irving Berlin music.
retliry, Modem Woodmen of Arnericll, Camp
.ay today.
-------·
10900, Coolville, during • rec:en1 victorY P'lriY
. Rodney Pullins of.Pomeroy sent .- You never miss the water 'til the
marking the culmination ole matching fund drime a copy of the song and it does well runs dry and you nevllr miss the
ve.
Plc1ured left to right It the pnatntatlon pro- ,
have local interest. Florence L. M. television until the cable goes down.
Pratt wrote the lyrics IQ the song with I had a hard time trying to think of
Mitchell Stanford writing the rnusic.. things we did heforc television. In
The sheet music was published by fact, it was so difficult that I just
ihe Mellinger Music Publishing Co.,' napped a lot. What ·did you do? I
in St. Lollis, Mo., and Pral\o a resident hope you kept smiling.
£Ollie

-Garages • "eplacemtnt Wlnctow.
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

• ~ • TooLDo tllng • Or.-..nllll

ume "Siowhand."
.
Sharon went to Baltimcn to mee1
. Glau after they had exchanaed 900
J18F5ofaH p WhenShnarepcxtecl mi..U.I, the hual was on.
Her body was dug up 75 feel fNm
Glass' front door. He has been
charpd with her murdw. Rev.
Clarence Widener, who oflicialed • ·
Glasa' wedding 15 years ..,;, uid,
·"He was a very nice fellow. I don 'I
· know what could have lwj•; ca~d to
hiin."
·

Meigs County Sp·elling Bee Set for Wednesday
'

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

I:JIIIrtiMor'

\~al•ijj 8uPflht •1ndu111111 0..~ti1Chine Shop
s.vtce. • a...l 8lltl &amp; Flbricltllon • Replir ~'tltlng

'

Ann
Landers

LL IUILDEIS,.IIC: :

1/;,J,/,

rts the Internet a modern-day miracle?·Read on.
• Dear Ann I .enders: In a recent colrumn, you made some disparaging
:remarks about lite Internet. In my
;opinion, it was a bum rap. Have you
•watched any daytime TV or primc:timc, made-for-TV movies lately? If
. :you have, you are aware that almost
;all the families shown are dysfunc&lt;ilonal, and physical and sexual abuse
.. life commonplace. Sensationalism
~lis. and we are going to see a lot
~re of it. so get ready, The Intern&lt;;t
if no worse than anything else. It's
jUst lite newest kid on the block. -. ~oVina. Calif.
l Dear Covina: What you have
lhimn is true. Keep reading for additlonal takes on lite lntei'Jlel.

Sentinel•,..

.

PT. PLEASANT, WV
67.5~13.33

POMEROY-IDDDL~PORT

t;Jayton students get day off for ~ot mi~sing any c~asses • TRoTwOOD· (AP) - TUchen •tan4a for 1'pert0ct attendance" and
·' this 0a on suburb bave foun4 a , "paid abacnce." accordins to teaeher
way~ att.atudcnll ~ lliend . Bobbie' Eaa14•.who dreamed up the
lc;hool: Oivotbeilladay-otr. ,
. idea.
·
.
1\venty·five ltlldctlllll 1\'otwQOd·
"lt'a payina them, off for havina
, ICIIIOII Junior Hipi School with attended sc!tool," Mt.,Baale said. "I
~ attenclarice f« lhe·llllest nine· thin!\ that il 'three-fourthrl of the
Week term ,cuuelly JM.t
aamc- aetting them bele. lf they're
. Thiy caetwl ill a JlA 'day, which here, we can llo f()lllllthinl about
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Studenllarerequired~IJ:*x.latletlat
. half~ tho day ·~ a ~1te rn the c~niuruty. SlriCI ~linea Md UI'ID".

~ntuelated to thelraxperierice are

l~d out, and pare~ r!llilt IITIIII•
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Found: Spoiled Broiwn I White ,.
F-Ie Dog No Collar Or Tqa

lt4-4te-1012 For llln
tlan.
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UNSCRAMBlE Foj

ANSWER

HI refused to make an apolOgy. rrrt Granny wOt# till
me that it was better to lo$e a little pride than ,-our
HONOR

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.Herd finishes
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6·8·5

Pick 4:
7-1-3-7
Buckeye 5:
17·23-24-30-31

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: Sports on Page 4

•

lows
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Wednesday, eloudy with a
chance of sho-rs. Hlgha
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Regulation change may
help stalled pulp plant

"

1 Section, 10 Pagao, 35 cen11
A Gannett Co. NewiJ!IIP8&lt;

POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 18, 1997

·- Deterioration

APPLE GROVE, W.Va. ·
A
According to the Gazette, some' measuring dioxin problems, · this
dtange in state water regulations highly toxic chemicals, such as diox· could be a difficult task, according to ·
being pushed by the West Virginia in, exist and are very dangerous in the Gazette.
Manufacturers Association would extremely tiny amounts. Even levels
At.the same time, the state Envibelp pave the way for permitting the that are thought tO' cause heallh prob- ronmental Quidily Board is .exarninproposed Apple Grove Pulp &amp; Paper terns
sometimes not be measured · ing ways to more accurately use fish
mill.
· .
..
in water.
.
tissue datil in regulatory decisions,
• According to the Charleston
.In these cases, regulators measure the story said.
Gazette, the association has indicat- the.amount of the chemicals present
According to the Oazette, the
ed in its legislative agenda a "zero- . ;n soil, sediment, or fish tissue to board is also looking into new water
detect bill," which would eliminate determine whelher regulatory limits sampling techniques proposed by
some restrictions on toxic chemical'S are violated, ~story said. ·
the Ohio River Valley Water Sanita·thal exist and are dangerous in very
The Gazette said in some ways, lion Commission that might be able
small amounts. .
·
: these measurements can be a better to detect tiny amounrs of dioxin in the
"The scienliflc reality bill" is what gauge of potential human health river.
the industry lobbyists call the pro- impacts. Dioxin, foJ example, is norThe manufacturers ·association
posal on a flier they have.distributed. mally taken in by humans by eating hired a consultant that is serving on
- "Simply stated, the bill says that if · contaminated plants or animals, not a committee appointed by the board
qualified laboratories, using best by drinking contaminated water or 10 examine the fish tissue data.
a,vailable technoiogy, cannot detect, br~alhing contiuninated air.
Karen Price, a lobbyist for the
with . any validity, a chemical in a · ' In tbe, case of the proposed pulp association, told theG8zette lhe zerowaicr sample, this non-detection · mill, tbe·Gazette said fish tissue sam- detect bill isn't specifically aimed at
.means water jlermit standards for that ' pies have been particularly i1J!portani. .lhe pulp mill. She, however, could
· particular chemical will be deemed to · Fish tissue samples from the Ohio not think of anY other companies in
be legally met," lhe flier says.
River consist~ntly show levels of lhe state that have a permitti"g pi'ob"This bill does not :ask lhat state dioxin that viQiate state water quali- .lem relaled to this issue.
~:nvironmental regulators set higher ty standards, according to thC story.
"I think lhere is concern out there
levels of chemicals for compliance Because of this, Kanawha. County by comjlanies, by a tot of our meinwith permits," according to the flier. Circuit Judge Tod Kauflnan in Octo- bers," Price told the Gazette'. "I lhink
"Simply, tbe bill requires that we tee- ber threw out a permit for the facili- this ·is an issue that we're looking at
ognize scientific reality."
ly which was approved by lhe West for the future."
· ''With current 'best available tech· Virginia Division of Environmental
Affiliated Construction Trades
oology,' we'cannot measure detection Pl:otection..
Founda~on Director Steve White
limits.in contaminated, swirling riv·.
·DEP officials are currently trying told the; Gazette the bill should be
er wale~ ;i:onsi~n!IY and ~urately ' . l&lt;i ~ ~ut how te.lNrite.a perrni! for . ~,ailed ~e ~~!l'ntific voodoo bill." .
IQ tl)~ ~jttl· per bi111on or tnlhon lev• ·the mftl.pven t!Je·high.1evels·of d!Oll- · · "An".l ~~.lf·l, ~ attempt at• ·
, el.'' ifiC flier says. "In la\!Oratory · in, the ~~aid.~·: ' ·
·
fprcing•.~~!IOIIIU ,of a pulp mill on
apalysis work; there is not 'l.ero,' there
Bill.:~ long as state regulations West VirtJnja," White. told the
is only a levet· at which no valid allow for' the use of fish tissue sam- Gazette; · "It1s'·;got everything to do
detection can occur."
· P,les ~ ~tjust water samples -in with the pulp mill."

clos~s

bridge___,

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rebat8s
to dealer.
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,!

By JIM FREEMAN
. ·.
sentinel Newe Staff
. .
. Down!l'wn area concerns were the
.fix:us of mostly roulipe meeting of
:Pomeroy Village Council Monday
' night:
•
In his report to council, Mayor
.Frank Vaughan said Jimmy's Sports
Bar on Main Stnet had hited an offcJuty police officer to help maintain
order, but had since disconlinued the
practice.
.
He said it appeared the owner had
· cooperated with the ·villa'ge just long
enough for the bar's liquor license to
be renewed.
.
The police depari1Dent is documenting incidents surrounding the
bar, Vaughan said. nle incidents can
be taken into consideraiion when the
bar's license is next up for renewal,
he added.
• Vaughan also said moloris.S parking in the parking lol will be ticketed for backing into the parking
places.
.
He said signs stating front-in park-

.

OPBf ~

MONFRIH

SAT9-6 .
AFIER CIUtOI
.511111-5

'

Incidents at bar, parking~ issues
eyed by Pomeroy Village Council
a

•Plloe ~UdeS au rebates to dealer.

.

•

lng only.ha~e becnlinslalled along the

make
money than th~y cost.
Cleric Kathy Hysell remarked that.
VIllage officialS arc concemea . the w~ter department has been
that drivers backing · i~to parking · installing new meters and has ordered
places will knock down or damage . additional ones. She also said the
new ligl!t pbles installed along the water department has been getting
promenade. .
parts together for the new water well .
Vaughan also noted the village .
It is hoped the new well will
rece•vet.!' a $7,500 grant from the improve the village's waler supply.
Ohio office of Criminal Justice Ser"The water situation is terrible,''
vices. The village paid $841 IO Vaughan confirmed.
receive the grant
Councilman George Wright ideoDqring open discussion, Council- tified a parking area along Lincoln
man Bill Young targeted lwo areas Hill that n~s stone. He also noted
along Spring Avenue near the corpo- that people have been complaining to
ration limil thai need rock to support . him aboul the increase in cable tetea collapsing roadside.
·
vision rates.
. Councilman Larry Wehrung pointHe asked if the village could get
ed out drainage problems on Legion some additional help to .sweep the
Terrace and B.rown Alley lhat need downtown area. Vaughan said · he
additional work. He also noted that would check with the department' of ·
several residents in the Monkey 'Run · human services 10 see if any worlcers
area have complained about receiving . 'ilre available.
•
excessive water bills.
He also remarked that the village
Wehrung noted that dead water needs to repair the roof on the old
meters need replaced, adding that junior high school building, which is
· accurate .waler meters would likely
(Continued on Page 3)

.river. side of the parking lot

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f!

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·By I&lt;EVIN GALVIN
promise to commit resourCes and
AIIOCiafed Prell Writer
staff to (eetuitrnenl.
The federation on Monday
; LOSANGELES-TheAFL-CIO ·
is unveiling a broad stralegy to bot- unveiled three-pronged campaign to
liter labor's ranks by encouraging draw m&lt;&gt;re wOI)ICii h:uo unions. Karen
unions to .coordinate strategies and Nussbaum, director of the AFL-CIO
~edicate more resources to recruit- ·Working Women's Department, said
ment drives, particularly to attract the federation would survey hun~
. working women.
.
of thousands of women about whai
.. With steadily declining numbers needs lobe changed in the workplace
over the past few declll!es. tabor's and how union.s can help. ·
.strenith as as.ocial and political force
In a(lditi6n lo a mail-in question·
bas·wa11ed. Recruitment is a focus as naire, Nussbaum said fedef11,i0!' olfi·
·the fedCrition's executiVe council · ci•ls· will tnec'i face-to-face ·with
la Los Angeles this~~· .. :women in ·~eir '.homes:' II Worl\.and
• "America needs a raise, and one 1n commumty centers 111 20 clhel io
qf thi: most effective solutions is a · ·cull infqmi~lion.
· ··
·
bigger and stronger tabor movement,
A national "Ask a Worlcing
Gne capable of acting as a counter- Woman" conference .is scheduled ·
weight to the corporate f~rces now ' for Se~~!ember 10 ~ashmgton, ~here
dominating our economy, AFL-CIO a working women s agenda w1ll be
llresident John Sweeney said.
developed based on the survey and
, In tl)e past, the federation left organizing slrategies will be adopted. ·
With the ~-CIO's help, the
qrganizing 1o its affiliates.. But ·
~weenefs insurgent campaign for · I~ movement has ~ked up.
1he . presi~ency wils billed on a rnl)or organizing ~ictones among

a

meetS

-- .. 'l1

Glenn finds balanced budget amendment
'poor substitute' in deficit reduction fight
Gannett Naws Service
WASHING10N -· When lhe balanced budget amendment last came
close to passage in Congress, Sens.
John Glenn of Ohio and Wendell
Ford of Kentucky helped to defeat it.
Now they Sta!Jd ready to do so·
again.
Votes arc expecled in both houses of Congress by early March. Senate debate is already under way. ·
Looking on are state and local ·
officials in Ohio and Kentucky and

across the country, many of whom
are ·anxious to see the. federal govemment"finally balance its books . .
Others, however1 are worried that

it will result in even more costs being
shifted to lhe Slates.
Atihough various forms of the
amendment will be considered; the
underlying idea is to constitutionally
require thai Congress make sure
every year dial federal outlays hot
exceed federal receipt~.
It's been 28 years since the feder-

al government balanced .its books,
and the balanced budget amendment
has been a topic of national debate
since 1982.
In 1995, the amendment passed
the House and came within two
votes of passing the· Senate , and
being sent to .the states.
,
• Conceivably, those votes could
have been Fotd's and Glenn's. They ·
were the only two Cincinnati-area
lawmakers to oppose it.
(Continued on Page 3)

•

AF·L-CIO targets recruitment~
.fund-raisi.ng ·to bolster·ranks
.

Sand pilae and signa inark
the tlobaon Bridge over
Laadlng Creek In Mldcll.7 :rt,
,-ibari;wbleh~qa.' IIIJ.L
W..k by Counw Engineer
Robert !!&amp;•on. Motorl1teh11ve
been detouring to State
Routa 7 vie Leading Creek
Road. Shown at right 11 some
of the deterioration which led
to the bridge closing, accordIng· to Eaaon. Eason said
lnepectlng the bridge will !Jkely ...ka 1 minimum of one
~r~onth and posslb)y ae long
•• three months . .The counw
hlgh-y department has submitted appllcatlone for federal money to replace the
bridge.

slate workers in Maryland and hotel
workemn Las Vegas.in the past year.
Richard Bensinger, the federation's organizing director, said the
fedemtion would conducl ' recruitment seminars in 12 cilies next year
and encourage unions - many. of
which have let organizing virtually
disappear from their budgeiS - to
dedicate .at least 30 percent of their
resources to attracting new members . .
Bensinger lauded the Hotel
Employees and Restaurant Employ- .
ces local in Las Vegas that has dedicated 41 percent of its 'budgel to organizing and last year signed up 8,000
new members.
"If every union in ttie country did
that we'd nol only hav~ a radically
different lobor movement," he ·said,
"we;d · have a radically different
collntry.':
The fede'!l'ion is a driving force
behind an effort to Of'lanize 20,000
California strawberry pickers, who
labor officials say suffer difficull

Bombing suspect's attorney seeks
suppression of eyew!tness testimony
DENVER (AP) - Defense lawyers want a federal judge to suppress tes•
limony from eyewitnesses in the Oklahoma City bombing case be~ause of
the widespread publi'city surrounding the arrest of Timothy McVeigh.
McVeigh lawyer Stephen Jones said media auenlion may have tainted eyewitness testimony by suggesting that his client was the person they sa\v or
dealt with days, weeks or months before the bombing.
"It does n'l gp 10 the question of whelher their identily is mistaken ... nor
. does it go to their motives ... or their ~ redibility," he said.
The' lawyers planned to challenge, the eyewitnesses' testimony during a
lwo-day hearing set to begin today. '·
·
Prosecutors have not said which eyewitnesses they plan to .c all, but they
recently dropped two people from the potential list, including the only person whO said he mighl have seen McVeigh in Oklahoma City tbe day of the
bombing.
·
Justice Depanment.spokeswoman Leesa Brown declined comment Monday, referring to a judge's order that restricts patticipanrs in the case from
speaking outside the courlroom.
•
John sweeney
· QU
ATiffiNS (AP) _;_ Union leaders have given a IQ-day strike no.tice lo Ohio
:Working conditions,low pay and sub- Universily officials.
.
.
standard housing.
.Local 1699 of tl)e American Federation of State, County a~d Municipal
By bringing other unions in to Employees said it will go on strike March I if a contracl agreement isn'l
support the United Farm Workers, the re'ached.
federation hopes to convince growers
The 600 employees include maintenance, custodial and food service workthat a nickel increase in the cost of a ers, The workers earn $9.54 to $16.02 per hour.
pinl of strawberries could be used .to
Projected increases in health care cosls are one of the.issues.
pay workers a living wage.
Terry Conry, OU's assistant director of employees and labor relllllons, said
~ negotiations were proceeding.
'
· '
\_·
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__.;....===:.;;,;;=:....-.....-

Uri ion WOrkers i$SUe Strike rlQtice

...

,

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