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Ohio Lottery

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.Herd finishes
:12-0 at home
:with victory

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Pick 3:

6·8·5

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

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: Sports on Page 4

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lows
n
the
Wednesday, eloudy with a
chance of sho-rs. Hlgha
In tha upper 601.

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VoL 47:, NO. 202
OUI87~ Ohio V.I'-Y lhdlllahlng Complny

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Regulation change may
help stalled pulp plant

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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.
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in water.
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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
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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-

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OPBf ~

MONFRIH

SAT9-6 .
AFIER CIUtOI
.511111-5

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

•Plloe ~UdeS au rebates to dealer.

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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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·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

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meetS

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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)

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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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�T..-ay, Febtury 11, 1117

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111 Coult .... ~Ohio
.,......... P.a: 112-2117

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A Gannett Co. Newepaper
ROBI!RT L WINGE II
Publtt.·

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Gerieral Mtrtge~

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hislawyer And selec:ted WJ¥IYben.

IICH.

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The jiJdae laid if federal aenfelle.
in1 guidelines had permi!ted the problem wiih capital punishment is
death penalty in this case he would · that judps and juries have too much
h,ave imposed it, even thouch he has disciction in such cues and m«e
phil~sophical objections to · Clpital often than not use it in a racist 111111puntsbrnent. So Instead, he onlenicl . ner.thal Felipe spepd what's left of bis : But if anyone deserves to be put
life cagcallike an animal.
to dellh, it is 'those who order the
Lucky for him the death penalty dealbs of others. ·On Felipe's comdoesn't apply for whil1 be did bec•nse lll8lld, people were kiUed. One of
it was created for peQPie like him. I them wu beheaded. Felipe manapd
don't say that with any relish. In prin- this reign of terror from behind blrs.
ciple, I support the death penalty. In Like most iiiiiiiJes, he had the run of
practice, I've come to oppose it.
the prison. He could walch television,
_" Hanging · one scoundrel, jt ·make unmonitonld telephone calls,
appears, .does not deter the next," mill about with Olher inm- and pt
H.L. Mencken once said. "Well, · visi11 from his rriends.
what of it? The first one is at least disAs with nuny inmates, jail for
posed of."
Felipe was lihje mOR than' a cbanJe
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TJie 8Rti)Ga lb'Jtfe. 2.1* CeH'RRY . •·

Now.playing at the movies~ ·
hits on Clinton and Congres~

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By DONALD M, ROTHBI!RG

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Aa~PIWUWilt..-

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Fellpe'nnunlet~ cri~t~e;~Jitee.

Dear EditQI',
On Feb. 7. I did a stupid thing. I
. left my wallet in a grocery .cait at
Powell's Grocery in PlliiiCroy. I didn't think about it uoitil I wu almost
home. I called and someone had ·
already turned it in.
When I went after it, I couldn't

find out who found it. So I would like
to thank the person. There still are
honest and caring people, for all was
intact, even tbe money. Thanks again
and God bless.
·
Barbara Pierce,

Racine

un I n.g key in·education effort
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will
"be ·felt for next few days
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· By The Alloclatecl .flreu

·a.m.

" Warm ,southerly· winds will i:onWeather rorecut:
..tinue to produce springlike c&lt;inditions
·Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows in
across Ohio on Wednesday, the . the mid 40s. Southwest winds ?to I0
, NatiQII'!l Weather SerYlce. , . ·
mph.
·
., · . With a cloUII cove~ actlng.' lik~ a
Wednesday...Mostly clolllly with a
ifblanketlooiight, temperatUre~ *on 't 40 percent chance of showers. Highs
t drop !&gt;Ill of the·40s. ·· •
' in the upper 60s.
, Hig!ls, on Wednesday . will be
Wednesday
night...Scattered
showers.
Lows
near
40:
caround ,liO Qe~s. There will .be a
.chance .of scattered'showers . ." '
Extmded rorecast:
Thursday,.,Partly cloudy. Highs in
•· The record4ligh temperature ·for
,,this date at the Columbus weather the lower 60s.
Frftlay...Achance of rain. Lows in
station was65.degrees in 1948 while
the
upper 40s and highs near 70.
rthe record low.,was, 7 below zero in
Sahlrday...Chance of rain. Lows
rl936. Su.nset tonight ·will be at 6:11
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:19 near 40 and highs in the upper 40s.

William J. Hackworth

William J. Hackworth, 66, Letart Falls. died Monday, Feb. 17, 1997 at
his residence.
·
Born March 20, 1930 in Kanawha County, W.Va., son of the late Harry
and Lorene Jones Hackwonh, he was a member of the Cedar Grove Church
of God, Cedar Grove, W. Yo. ·
He is survived by two sisters, Nancy Martin and Evelyn M. Bostic, both .
of Letart l'alls;·two nephews; and two great-nephews and two great-nieces.
James Clatworthy, 79, of Middleport. died Monday, February 17, 1997 at
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Cremeens Funeral Home, the Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
.
Racine, with the Rev. Jesse Wingrove officiating. ·Buria) will follow in the
He was born September 26', 1917 in Middleport, Ohio. son of the late
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6:3().9 James
Sr. and
Yeauger Clatwonhy. He married Emma
tonight.
Kathryn Ebersbach on March 21,
1942. He was an active member of
the Heath United Methodist Church
.in ·Middleport, and served on the
Ruth Herdman. of Bellefontaine, died at her residence on Wednesday, Feb.
Administrative.Board .
.
.
12, 1997 ..
He served three years in Africa
Born on Jan. 16,.1927 at Pomeroy, she was the daughter oflbe late Vena
and Italy in World War II and is a life
·~ Auc~on rellPlts·from Wedne!!day's , $27; .'Siiindard, $35-42; commercial, and Webb Whal~y.
··
member of the Feeney' Bennett Post.
Gallipolis Producers Livestock·Asso- · $22-26; CC - nla; buRs, steady;
She is survived by her husband, Brad; a daughter; Tracie Siemens of SidAmerican Legi,on, Middleport. He is
elation:
butchers, $37.50.45. ·
ney; two grandchildren; and two sisters, Ann King of Newark, and Doris
a member of Middleport Lodge
Total bead: 464.
,
. FEEDER CATTLE ' 267; Grueser of Minersville ..
41363, F&amp;AM, a Past District' Deputy
~OG~ - .S: 'Ptices, $2, lower. · steadf~ Yearling, steers, $Sii-$6S; " Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her ·parents and two
Grand Master of the 12th Masonic
Butcher hogs, all weiglits. $4951 ! lieifersr•$50.59.50; calves- steers, sisters, MBlline Prentice and Avis Koesel. ·
Dislrict in Ohio, a member of the
sows, $!16.50-54.50; boars, $39.50; . $62-$82.50; back to the farm babies,
Services were held Saturday, Feb. I5, 1997 in the VanHorn Funeral Home.
York !l-ite Bodie$ Chaptt!r #80,
,feeder pigs. .nfa. , , ., , ,.. , •: .
$25 and down.
Boswonh Council #46, and Ohio
; CAn:J,.f:: .~50; . Steers, "sready
.SHEEP - 81 ; Aged slaughter
Valley Commandery #24, and the
:fleifers.,S6:ns-65; chqice,$63-65.10 sheep,i$35-40.
Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, ValFeeder sale Wednesday, Feb. 26,
1; Good, $~8-62,; Holstein, n/a:
ley of Columbus.
,, . COWS - I;lemand and price I p.m.' Home and.tack sale, Saturdax,
He was raised to 33rd Degree
Jrend •. ~tei(Jy to ·Sl higbetJ ~tilhy, March l,ll a.m.
.
COLUMBUS
(AP)
Indiana.
Stm:~maqofMoriday's
,
P
roducon
September
26,. 1994. He was a
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f'.i) ••:-•.,."'' ·
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Ohio direcf hog prices at selected ers Livestock o\ssoclatlon auctions
· past fraternal . relations director . in
buying 'poin~ 1\resday as provided by at Hillsboro and Creston:
Meigs County; and was a member.of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture ·
Hogs: 1.00 lower.
the Aladd,in Temple Shrine, Columbus.
Market News:
Butcher hogs: &lt;18.00-52.00.
He was commissioned n Kcn.tucky Colonel on October I R, t9R I, and a West
Barrows an&lt;! gilts: 50 cents to 1.00
Cattle: steady.
Virginia Ambassador of Goodwill on June 26, 1981 .
lower; demand and movement light
Slaughter steers: choice 61.00He wa.&lt; employed ns a salesman for Felber, Strietman . Keebler Biscuit
.\IJ
to moderate.
69.75; selecl57.00-63.00.
Company for 20. years, and later was aSsociated wilh the C~ristian· &amp; Co.
~ C&lt;)LUM~US ,(AP) Trr A bilttle · .state AUditor J.ames Petro could show
UcS. 1-2, 230.260 lbs. country
Slaughier heifers: choice 60.00- Food Brokers of Huntington, West Virginia, for 19 years before retiring.
~verwhe~r, (:epJral ~tate Uqiversi- that mllre money is needed. Repairs points 49.00-50.00, few at 48.50 and 64.50; select 57.00-6 LOO.·
. For several years, Mr. Clatworthy served as a member of Middleport Vil·IY will con!J'lue· to.~•.ve state sup- to dormitories and academic build- 50.50; plants 49.25-51..00.
·
Cows: lower to 2.00 higher; all lage Council.
port is IO!&gt;!il.i~tgj~ I~ J,egislature.
ings also could push the bills higher.
U.S. 2-3, 230.260' lbs. '43.50- cows 45.00 and down .
Five times he wa.&lt; Wonhy Patron, OES #172, Evan¥eline Chapter, an
• The. issl,lll has created a division · · Rep,ilblicnn Sen. Gene Watts said 48.50; 210-230 lbs. 39.00-43.50.
{lulls: s1eady; all bulls 53.00 and honorary member of Proctorville Lodge #550, F&amp;AM, and was a 1935 gradF.ong laWlJiaken,who: must decide last week that epough is.enough.
Sows: unevenly steady.
down. ·
. uate of Middlepon High School.
rf the state s~ould coo!IJ!ue to.oper,
·· "We can spend tha.t money much
Veal calves: strong: choice 110.00
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 40.00-42.50,
He is survived 9Y his wife, Emma l&lt;athryn Ebershach Clatworthy of Mid~~e tl)c. ~ql!!l.J=illlh: .!m!i~ICII univqrsi: 1\Cnei dn African-Americans at oth- few at ~9.00; 450.500 lbs. 44.00and down.
. dlepot1; a daughter and son ~ in- law, Twila S. and Mkk Childs of Middleport;
11· ·· .- 1 ~,k .. t:·:·~ ~~ . · ;f~.~. . . . ·
er. in.~tiKitio·ns in Ohio/' Watts, of 46.00;,500-600 lbs. 47.00-5Q.OO, few
Sheep and ,lambs: lower; choice .one grandchild, Ka,thryn Joan (Katie) Childs, Middlcpon: a brother and sis, . Gov. ;iJ"9fJC· Woinovich has pro- Galloway, said.
.
over 600 lbs. 50.50.
wools 80.00-92.50; aged sheep 50.00 .ler-in-law, Henry and. Dorothy Clatworthy, Middlepon : sisters. Virginia
pqsed ..givjog .. Centr,al,, State ·about
AOOYit 98 percent of Central
Boars: 35.00-38.00.
and down.
Neut7.1ing and Dorothy Long, Middleport, and special friends; Debbie and
$30 milllw! ,41ir,iqJ ~ llllxttwo yQ&amp;is State 's" l ,600 students arc black.
Esrimatcd receipts: 33,000.
Jamie Ellis of Middlepor!.
IP. mainlf}!l~.~~ll'Cilt ll:V(ls of'fund- Watts silld that equals about 8 percent ·
The funeral will be held on Thursday, February 20, 1997 al 2 p.m. at the
ing. But first, it must•he approved by of the ;'!blat' black population now
Heath United Methodist Church in Middlepon. The Rev. Vemagaye Sulli\h•Legislat~.~ '"' , . : •
attendingOhio'spubliccollcgcs.
van will be ofliciating and burial will be in the Ri vcrvicw Cemetery, Mid·
LaSt w~ ~,wrangle m the SenOther•· siate schools, he said;
dleport. Friends may calf al Fisher Funeral Home in ·Middlcport on Wednes·
ate over whc!her to give the state's "recruli:i'etai'n and actually graduate
Units of the Meigs County Emcrday, February 19. 1997. from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. . .
.
RUTLAND
Qnly histqrica)ly black, public uni- ih'eir. minority students flir better gency Medical Service recorded nine
Eastern Star and Masonic Rites will be held at 8 p.m.
10:53 a.m.. Jacks Road, Laura
versity I)IOney to pay ·off creditor.; thai\ docs Central State."
calls for assistance Monday. Units Dellavalle. Holzer Medical Center;
. Memorial contributions may be made to the Shrine Hospital for Crippled
gave a preview of things to com~.
He believes turning Central State . responding included:
3:t8 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, Alan . Children, m care of Steve Houchms. 366 Broadway Street, Middleport Ohio
Lawmakers appn:'ved the emergency into a two-year.school is an option.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
~.
Mills, PVH: .
m~ney - but hmted':!hll\ !19 more , . B'ut, other Republican senators
11:39 a.m .. State Route 248, Ethel
6:59 p.m., Carpenter Hill Road;
bailouts would come w~thJ!u.tn.fig~t. ; '.!lave sald{lhey would rather sec the Orr, Veterans Memorial Hospital; .
Edward Maksimczak, HMC .
The school just east ()f i?ayton school shut down.
·
12 :46 p.m., Faor
· 1ane Dri ve, Harold
SYRACUSE
·needs 1he emergency cash to remain
. Sen. Grace Drake R-Solon said Teaford, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
12:48 a.m., Elmwood Terrace
(Continued from Page 1)
cemetery, $7.301.06; cemetery
open this~pring.. .The House mlijl vote the· only;lfea.•on she' voted fo~ the
6:47 p.m., Second · Street, , Apartments, Racine, Opal Cummins,
now
owned
by
the
village.
endowment,
$38,153.24; police pen·
- Ill' the iSSue th1s wdel&lt;. ·~ reylew of. bailout was to let the current students Pomeroy, Mike Hudson, treated nt the treated at the scenC, Racine squad
In
olhcr
business,
council
:
s1on,
$2,838.15
; building fund,
&gt;~~:hoot finances ..bein&amp;•conducted by- finish· tht')iehool year and pay the scene.
a'\sistcd :
•
Appmvcd
selling
.an
old
Chevro·
1
$979.89;
insurance
retainage, $2,405;
- t~ ,.~
·"'•'-'' '".t~r •
debts. Li\Vmakers will have to take
I :52 p.m., Peachfork Road,
let
Caprice
police
cruiser
to
Carl
· recreation, $5 ,255 .54: FEMA 1
long •!ool( at whether the school
Pomeroy. Charlotte Crank, PVH;
Hysell
for
$1.505.68
;
$2,562.66; permissive tax, $3,018.06:
should survive, she warned.
· 3:46 p.m., Eagle Ridge Road,
' :it;,n ,
.
Aeccplcd
the
minutes
of
the
Feb.
•
law enforcement, $2,383 .96: COPS
Chesler, Virgil Walker, VMH.
.
·
3 meeting;
''11 .
FAST grant, $6,503.54: FEMA II,
• Met in executive session to dis- $530; downtown revitalization
A Racine area man was cited for
cuss the hiring of new personnel.
$74,035; total, $386,291.78. · '
failure to control and failure to dis- Lentea senk:es
Hysell suhmittcd the· following
Present were Vaughan and Hysell ,
play registration by the Gallii)-Meigs
Lenten worship services wilf be fin~ncial report fpr Janua'ry: general council members Young, Wehrung,
Post of the State Highway Patrol fol- held Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the St. fund . $3.2.848.48 j safety, $4,391 .29;
Am I!Jt POwlr .......................41,.
lowing a one-car accident Monday on Paul Luthe(lln Ch.urch, with the Rev. .street . $23 , 191. .77·, .state h'ighway,· Wright, Council. President John
Akzo ••••:. ••••~ ...·..........·.;....... ,;...74\
Musser, Gcri Walton and Scoit DilState RouM 338.
Robert R9binson preaching. The ser- $3,882.32: fire, $20;071.54; ccme· lon.
AmrTec~ .............:.•.....•••....••....s;t
Troopers said Paul D. Milliron, vices will be held each Thursday tery, $10,558.75; water, $55,862.80;
A•hl!'!l!,011...,........ ;..............43~
The Rev. Fr. David duPiantier of
43,51636 SR 338, was eastbound in through March 20 under sponsorship .sewer, $56,094.95 ; guaranty meter,
~T6T
:..-r~"····•··············
···:·~····40
Grace
Episcopal Church said prayer
Letart Township at 3 p.m. when the oftheMeigsMinisterialAssociation. $18.523 .75; utility, $14,9tXl.03; fire
Bar* UM·..........................,.•. 415~
be
lore
lhc
meeting.·
Bob' Ivana ............................13\ . car h~ drove w~nt left of center.
.
truck
..
no
balance;
perpetual·
care
.
Borg-waftw ~ ........................ 40'•
Milliron jerked the steering wheel Bible study oft'ered
Ct.inplon ............~ ..................17
Chermlnl Shopa ...........: ....... 4\ to the right, causing the car to slide. .. "Understanding the Endtime," a
=lcltng ..........................33\ The car .then slid off the right side of 10-sessibn Bible prophecy study
tbe road, SINck a utility pole, and · serie.!, will begin March 2 at the Hope
. . . .1........................25\
continued
Qn over an embankment Baptist Church. Middleport. The
o.Mtt
o~r .................................54\
'before coming to a stop. according to course is free. The Rev. Richard OlivK-rnart ...................................1a\
the report.
er will be tl)e instructor.
~ lnCI ...........~ .......... ~ ..... ~ar
'll!e car was severely damaged,
Llmlfed ....;d............................174o
Tnrst- to llieet
OhiO YalltY Bri .............. ~ .....37 troopers said.
OM YllltYo............................37).
The Chester Township Trustee~
~lll ·ot~ooooooooooouoouotoo"uooo27~
will hold a special meeting Tuesday
,..,~OO~JIOOOHM000UUOO;.O OOOd11~
(tonight) 7 p.m at the clerk's home.
Tum \'Otll'ltlflrt today...
'ROCkwlefl.,,,,,,,,~-•oooooooo-ooooooool7''
The
followin~
couples
were
we have a checihtll
ItO .......~; ...,.....,...........,.,.17111.
issued
marriaae
licenses
recently
in
tOi,.lflookoonoooooooooo..ooooooooooo••~
your
....., lllilllc d... ~ ..... _..................31
the Meip County Probate Court or
des tlplloa.
~
.22\ . Judge Robert Buck: Stephen Ray
Holzer MediCal Ce-ter
. Dlaclaaqa Feb. 17- Mrs. Kei·' " ' l!ll,n
. ...-......................20\ Jlysoll Jr., 17, and Kathryn Suzanne
Pullins, 19, both of Pomeroy; James th Eblin and daughter. Avonell Nor... ·::.'ii:rta ... ...._10:
Henry Smith, 3.$, Racine, and man, Mrs. Stephen Hartenblll:h and
:;:~d·d"'
:Heather DaVill Thomas, 26, MiddiC- daughter, 1Ua Nibert, Toby Fulk.
(Pab" ~·d wltla pel lr'ca)
1'011·

·:w~.~n.~s~ay.!~ GPbA results

James .Clatwort.hy

Ruth
. Herdman

Today's livestock report

i

~o:rfi~ ~.~wmak~r~· wea.rv
Qf ba1l·1ng· out Uh1vers1ty
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squadS record. n1ne
• · runs

h1cide.nts at ·bar, parking

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states unless IDEA spending was
Roth expressed c~i Shared
increilsed.
\
by many Republicans thai the deeJI
He mentioned two key Clinton tax cuts propo~ by Clinton could
initiatives: spendina $S billion and have 111 unintended effect- by mlk' requiring states to spend SIS billion inj more m"ney available to parenti
more to ·repair and build public .and ~tuc!ents, CQllegos c9Uld face leU
schools, and spending millions of · pressure to hold down skyroclieting
·.
·:
dollars to belp siates JII'\)Vide schools tuition costs.
with volunteer tutors.
Roth &lt;ilso. laid that rather than'
· There ~ to be leis distance, make direct tax bl:aks to Pnats ·~
between l;lem&lt;K:rats .ana RepUbli· students, he would prefer "tlx i~n\•
cans on efforts to make colle~~e milre .tives for savings --. savinp· to bel~·
affordable,,but their proposed meth- f~milies m~t .their lll'iq~ educa-1
., .
·. .
ods diller drillnatically.
· · uonal a!llls, .
"We can prOvide tax incentives ;
"Our .'effort must be to make
post-secondary education mqre· for education - incenti~es like:
affordable for lllfin: Americans, "laid cxtendin1 education .' wistanee,:
Finance Committee · chairman · incentive&amp; that offer deductions for1
William Roth, R-Del., who will lead student
.intereJt.. inCentives for:
talks on the 'tax elementa in the ocJu. qualified state-s~ savings .-1'
·cation bill.
·
prepaid tuition proirams," Rotli laid.!
.,

...

~SprlngUke ·conditions

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One-car accident
yields citations

Announcements

·.$to~ks
..

···t..····..················-··.81 \

.·:=.· . . .'. . . . . . . . :.
,......

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·Marriage licenses

Hospital news

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(Continued trom Pate 1)
delegation, also wants protection for
Both lawmakers are standing finn Social Security. In addition, he wants
aaain in theii oppocitiouto Republi· capi~ investment func4 left out of
call he'-d budpt prvposala. .
the calculations. his office said .
"A balanced budpt unendment
But the majority of the Cincinnatito tbc constitution is 1 poor subsliture area delegation remains suongly suptoactuallyeraselrrcit We don't portive of the balanced budget
need · gimmicks,
need action," amendment
,
Glenn said.
"The liberals are using Social
"I am pleased
t the president Security as an excuse to avoid baland congressional leadership have ancing the bodset " said Rep. Stev.e
indicated they are committed to ~, Chabot R-Cincinnatf. "There is no
ancing the budget. We will eliminate bigger.. threat to SOI'ial Securily than
the deficit if we concentrate on those an unbalanced budget."
efforiS, as opposed to a balanced bud- : O!abl&gt;t.and Rep. Rob i&gt;OI')IIIan, Rget amendment." '
ICi""innati, especially favor a fonn of
Ford, as be did in 1995, says he. , the balancedbudgel amendrnenl that
will not support a balanced budget would mak_e II more difficult for Conamendment unless Spcial Security gress to raose ta~e~ on _the future .
funds are exemJ&gt;ted froin balanced
The Tax Limotanon Balanaed
budget calculations. Republican lead- Budget Amendment, ontroduced by
·ers are reluctant to take such a step. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, would
"We have an obligation to keep combone the balanced bud,get amend·.,
our word· to seniors and those in ment With a that requirement Con·
future generations to protect their gress ~hieve a two-thirds supenna'
Social Security," Ford said in a state- .. JOnty m the future to ra1se ~axes. ·
meni.
·
But both say they are willing to
"If proponents of the balanced support other versions ofthe amendbudget amendment would agree to ,me.ntas well .• as lon~ as some fonn
protect the (Social Security) Trust' !of 1.1, IS passed.
. . .
Fund, we could pass this legislation
It provides the diSCiphne w.~
with votes to spare." ·
.need to make the tough decisiOns,
. Rep. Ted Slrickland, D-Lucasville, Portman saod. . .
.
.
the newcomer to the Cincinnati-area
The de bale on Congress IS beong
·
watched with great interest

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Residents should be grsteful

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sending tbe Jlnlleader away for life,
'Martin wu right to pull the plug on
his phone privileges.
-.
"You accuse me of l::illiftl people,
1b ut you'll be killin&amp; me evay day,"
IFelipe complained to the judge wben
1 be ltelnl his sentence. No more Mr.
ToughGuy.
.
I. I often '\Yonder how J~ful we
could be iQ reducing crime if·we mar- .
ried good prevention methods with
, harsh punishment. Maybe we could
have kept Felipe from becoming a
gang~. or failing lh* 'stopped
him from ordering the deaths of oth- ·
ers. I think we could haVCJ done •loc
mo.,.to atop him, and others lite him,
frln breaking the law.
·
· Instead we coddle, people wben
they should be punished, lllid punish
them when they should be coddled.
That's a mistake that helped put
Felipe fn !Qiitary eonfi-.t for the ·
rest of his life, .and which leaves us
to worry about when someOne·· like
him will slrike again.

Letters to the editor F
. ··. d·.. · ·.
.. Happy ending to lost wallet . .

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IHO: ·~

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l~!w I•

. James Clatworthy, 79, of Middleport, a fonner Middleport vil18p counCilman, died Monday, Feb. 17, 1997 in Holzer Medical Center.
BOI'!I Sept. 26, 1917 in Middleport, he was the son of the late James clatworthy Sr. and M~r~aret Yeauger Oatworthy. He graduated from Middleport High School in 1935.
He was a member of the Heatl\ United Methodist Church in Middleport,
~ served on the Administrative Board; a veteran of World War U. and a
hfe member of Feeney,Benneu Post 128, American Legion, Middleport.
A 3:)rd Degree M~on, be was a member 9f Middleport LodJe 363,
F~. ~e as a pastd1stnct deputy~ muter of the 12th Masonic Dis~ct tn Oh1o, a member of the York Rite Bodies, Chapter 80, Bosworth Coun·
cil46, Ohio Valley Commandery 24, the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, ValIcy of Columbus, and the Aladdin Temple Shrine, Columbus. He was a past ·
fraternal relations director in Meigs County.
·
. Five times he was worthy patron, OES 172, Evangeline Chapter, and was
an honorary member of Proctorville Lodge 550, P&amp;:AM.
He was commissioned a Kentucky Colonel on Oct. 18, 1981, and a West .
VifliniaAmbassador of Goodwill on June 26, 1981.
For 20 yefU;S, be was employed as a s.alesman for Felber Strietman Keebler Biscuit Co. and later was associated with the Christian &amp;Co. Food Brokers, Huntington, W.Va., .for 19·years before retiring.
He IS sumv~ by h1s w1fe, Emma Kathryn EbCrsbach Clatworthy, a
daughter ~nd son-in-law, Twila S. and Mick Childs of Middleport; a gi-anddaushter; a brother and SJster-m-law, Henry and Dorothy Clatworthy· and
sisters, Virginia Neutzling and Dorothy Long, all of Middleport.
. '•
· Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the Heath United Methodist Church
Middleport, with the·Rev. Vemagaye Sullivan officiating. Burial will be i~
the Riverview Cemetery, Middlepon ..Friends may call at the Fisher Funeral Home, f'tiddleport, from 2' 4 and 5-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Eastern Star and. Masonic Rites will be held at 8 p.m.
Memorjal conlributions may be·rnade to the Shrine Hospital for Crippled
Children, m care of Steve Houchins, 366 Broadway St., Middleport, Ohio
45760.

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Short of capit8l ~tJudae
MartiQ'I order dispMcbiDJ felipe to
a lifeloaa stint in soli~ confine. ment is the best chuce we have that
he will not cause anyone else to· die.
I'm a liberal who plaCe~ a loc of
stock in crime preventiojl u ·the rilott
effective means of reduci!l11 criminal
behavior. I think federally · funded
youth jobs programs lind 1ilic!n1aht
·buketballleaguea are reai deterrents
to crime.
But l also believe in pwiiebme'nt.
People who · commit vjolent
crimes ousht to go to jllil - and jail
should be a reallr bad experience that
few people wmild .riak iepeatina.llt
Olllllit to be at least inon: Mftle than .
mililiry belie trainina. But for MDII
inmaies it's
: One starKIIrd of jail life - telephone· usage - . directly aided

Welcome to .Sexual Harassment 101

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WASHINGTON -Oint Eastwood g'-s di511P1Jr0vingly 11 commuters
in die nation's capital. His eyes have lhat Diny Hlrey look, grim with out• , rage at the scandalou.s ·goin1s on II the scat of government.
.
No wonder. That woman in the blll:kground looks very dead. And isn't
that the presidential seal next to her7
,
Oh, it's only a poster adVertising Eutwood's new movie, :'Absolute Pow'· er," the latest Hollywood lake em the land of !Jig govemment.
The big movie hit during the summer heat of Jut year's presidential c""'aKc:HITeGT
paign was "lndependence Day," in which aliens destroy the White House
- drawing cheers from many audiences. During the much campier "Mars
Attacks," the aliens blew up Con&amp;ress and the cheers were just as loud.
'
Then there was "My Pellow Americans" in which JICk Lemmon and ·
Janies Garner play two former presidenis trying·to avoid a renegade White
House security officer who is out to kill them 11 the behest of the man occupying the Oval Office. all in the nanie of keeping some dirty shenanigans
under wraps.
.
· Upcoming in April is "Murder·at 1600," as in 1600 ~nnsylvania Avenue.
A body is found in the White House and the suspects include the president. .
. PolitiCal junkies will have to wait until ne11t year for the film version of
"Primary Colors," the satirical ~ovet ..OO,.t the sexual adventures of a south. em goveoior and his..:ampaign for president. Ally resemblance to a real president is clearly intended. ·
·
What's goins on here7
.
.
.
.
Have the headlines about the Paula,lones case made presidential sex a
fair topic for the movies7 Have .the disclosures about hOw both major parties raise sobs of money inspired Hollywood to portray the capital as ethically challenged? .
.
.
RobCrt Sklar, professor of cinema II New York University, blames a TV
· culture - and the way Ointon lried to use it to appeal to young voters- .By·S.ra Eckel
Twelve weeks after the Army set don'tlcnOw if it went through the sen- are they_quite simpl,Y:trTing.to make
"I am very, very disturbed about up a sexual-harassment hot line, it has ator's mind, but it certainly went the servicewomen slrves·mJIIinble?
for diminishins the dignity and aloofness of the presidency.
"You can't have a president playing'the saxophone and talking about his the pervasiveness and the systemic received 7,000 calls, 1,074 of which through mine, Maybe this. is abollt M they trying to getthCrn 10 leave7
riature of the problem. It's not.jl)st were reports deemed sufficient for more .thanjustafailureoftheAnny
ldon'thavctheans-totbat,but
underwear without some loss of dignity," said Sklar.
sexual
hamssment,
it's
abuse
of
powinvestigation.
A
1995
Defense
to
police
itself.
Maybe
solnethi~g
1
have
been very iniCresteci in the shif\
"I don't think it's just about Bill Clinton. But it's clear people find pol··• ·' that.lias recently ta1ten place in tbC
itics generally despi!:able," said Vivian. Sobchao:k, associate •dean of the . er ilnd.it's ,sexual.misconduet," said Department survey revealed.that the deeper is happeninj.
UCLA School of Theater, Film and 'Thlevision. ·
·
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R~~}ic~ .Sen. Olympi»: Snowe of ~ajority ~- 55 percent,-- , of Army · I think lbout .the women I inter- · debate over the scandals. lnllead of
· Morality at ihe White HouseC.O't ~much lowerd)lll in "AIIsoluiePOw- MBI_ne at the .recent Senate Al'med women believed that they had been viewed .last week. Jadranka Ciplj · d~ussiDI bQw ,to ,eradiea~ ~
sexually harassed the previous year; and Nusreta Sivac are two iif20,000 cnmes fmrn our Amly " - · more
• ' · er.'' Secret Service asenll kill the presidem's mistress. A cqve~p directed ·Services Committee hearinss.
Sen.
Snowe's
concerns
about
the
the minority- 47 percent -- believed Jlosnian WO!f!Cn who were riped du_r- • and' mDR people are questioning
from the Onl'Office requires eliminatin11 the only witness, a bufllar played
systemic nature of the sexual abuse that their leaders were Serious· about mg the w~ m ~~ country. ~ m . women's place in the miliWy. "In""
by Eastwood.
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~ to. their testimony, rape rs now rush for eqiialil)', t~~e· Arnl!\'ican mifWhat a change from the 1960s when, as UCLA film professor Jonathan in the U.S. Army raiSe some inter- stopping the problem. .
Kuntz noted, presidCnts were portrayed in a much mOR respeclful tone by estinl questions about just where this. · But perhaps the most clear illus- recog~um:J as .a cnme of war for the . i.-y has fi)IJotten a few thinp about
behavior is coming from.
tration of how deeply roo\ed this first t~IIIC 1n ~1story. I uked them to men, women and the diflerencos
actors like Henry Fonda.
.
.
·
For there's no doubt that it is per- problem is came to light ·early this explll!n. ~ d1.flerence between ~ between them," laid 8 cover story i~
More recently, he said, "There has been a kind of leveling of tbe presidency, it's no longer this exalted offiCe. We think of presidents 11!1 mona! vasive. According to a New York month, when it was revealed that as a CIVihan cnme and as a war cnme. the New Republic "·Let's 1101 pill
Times report, 50 women have Army Sgt. .Maj. Gene McKinney, a "One of the big dif':erences .is thattbe men and women in
situation thai
men sometimea involved in scandalous doings and selfish acts:"
Blame all those stories about John.F. Kennedy sneaking women into the chlfled 10 mal_e supervisors of sex- member of the commission chlfled rape~. t~k place..'n massiVe nu~- causes that kind of harlprnent,"
.White House. And blame. the Wateflate rapes that gave Americans a chance ual abuse that oncludes rape, forced with reviewing the Arniy's sexual- · bers: said SJVIC .. Tbey,werecarried said Republican Sen. Rick Santortml
oral s~omy, battery and the grnbl)ing har~sment policies, had faced sexu- out m a systematiC way. It was part of Pennsylvania.
'
to eavesdrop on some pretty shocking Oval Office conversations.
. 11irassment allegations himself last of a. general plllfl of.ethnic cleansing.
In other words, we ~an 'l change
. "Never in Kennedy's lifetime would he have been ponrayed as a wom- of JX1Vate pans at the Ahetifl!'c~Pro~mg Ground m Maryland. Twe.n-- allegations that Sgt. Maj. While men were k1lled, tbe W?,rnen . the men's behavior so let's pUnish me
anizer," said Kuntz:
ty-e1ght
onstructors
face
sexual
m1soster, who filed. the com, were r~ to get them to flee.. . . . women. Let's ensJI~ lllat women's .
In "Absolute !'ower," Eutwood is pursued by nefarious Secret 8erllice
ys were suppressed. ·
Obviously, what happened .m role in the military rcnwns second!
agents. A few years aso, be playca! an aaendn the film, "In the Line of Fire/' conduc~ alle~ations at Fbit Leonaro piBI
Sen. Snowe put it well. when she Bosnia cannot ~ clllllplml with class. Let's make them leave.
:'
The White House chief of staff in that movie wu played by Fred Thomp, Wood m Missouri, and two dnll
sef1eants
were
given
prison
Sen·
described
how
military
women
must
what
happened·
m
Maryland.
But
I
·
What
more
could
the
perpetratorS
son,
.
.
. .
•
This year, Thompson aaain is in dogged pursuit of the truth, this time tences for illegal sex with nine feel about these accounts. "I would think SiviC's definition of rape as w.- have uked for?
..
.
Send comments to the iuthor iii
about questionable political fund raising, including those notorious White recruits. A'nd in San Antonio, Texas, think, one: Why do 1 want to sta)' in crime is.useful. .
two sergeants weo:e jailed and five the anned forces? And two: Maybe 1
Why ~so many rruh~ supen- can: of this newapaper or send hereHouse coffees.
were disciplined · for sexual trans- should get out." ·
ors assaulung young recru1~71s !I for mail at saraeumaol.corn.
·
EDITOR'S NOTE: Doaaid M. Rothbeq hal beta coveriaaaation- · gressions wi!h trainees at Fort Sam
And perhaps that's the point. 1 a si~k thrill?:Or to feel powen~l? Or
Sara Eckllll a wrfter'tor New.:;
al 61n In Wuhhlafon forTheAaodated Pfta for IIIOft tbu 30 yean.
Houston.
paper Eaterpn.e AIIGdatlon.

·THe ··

James Clatworthy

•
IToledo! 48" I

u 'te tileaclren, 1 don't thillk the of ..sm-. And i t - Crt. his
dealb penalty is. deleimtt, liut it'll dial tbil be c:ommiald hil sure bet apinst rqat offenders. My heiiiOUI en-.

The Daily Sentinel• . , . 3.

Glenn finds balanced budget

Tueeclay,~
.
.' . . ..11,1t17
.'

The Daily Sentinel · Convict got what he deserved
By DIWAYNI WICIOWI
a.na .... 8ervloe
. WASHINGI'ON - Luil Felipe
aotolleasy.
Jbe 34-year-old Cuban immipam-lllmed-JIIIII-Ieader wu ordered
to spend the rest of his life in solitary
confinement ·for his role in a btutal
string of killinss and attempted murders. ·
Feiipe :...... who likes to be called
Blooc! Kina and headed a New York
..,City meet gang - WIS convicted last
year of conspirai:y for ordain&amp; three
murders from jail while serving time
for a lesser crime.
'
To ensure he doesn't do that
again, federalludge John Martin has
. ordenld that Felipe be held in solitary
confinement, denied telephone privileii.S and permitted visits only from

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

•

••

account-

.

�•

...•

-

Sports

.

''

(~T~U~II~d~·~y~,F~•~b~~~~-~y~1!'~1~t~l!l________________________________~P~~~m~e~:~oy~·~M~~~~~~p~~~~~Oh~~~~------------~----_2n~ne~~~~~S~tc~ld~~~:·!P~
...
~5~
.f .

The. Daily Senti,a~l .
.

Tu11twy, f*'-Y 1' 1181

-.

.
'·· '""".

LOOSE BALL • Marehall'l Derrick Wrlghi (25) lool&lt;a on with
East Tennes- State'a Ryan Wllaan (44) as Marahell'a John
Brannon (33) and El'SU's TrOy Seymour (3) and Aegg~ Todd (23)
scrambl• for a loon ball during Monday nlght'a home flllllle In
Cam Handeraon Center In Huntington. the Herd won, 80-611, to
Jlosl a perfect 12-o home season. (AP)

weekend as Marshall beat VMI and
Despile thai, Marshall has ensured
Marshal~ winner of .17 slr8ighl
'moved within striking distance of the itself at )east I tie for the league's bomie games, 'oJso avenpl I 76-64.
Southern Conference's Nonhero Northern Division title with David- loss feb. ltoEastTennes~Statein
Division title. Veney (17 points) and son. The Herd beat Davidson both Johnson City, Tem.
~
Brannen (25 points) had big roles in times the teams played this season,
"Maybe it flowed a little better
Monday's;winlhal'securedthecham- givins Marshall the edge ·for the tonight." -Brannen said. "We were
pionship.
Northern Division's No. I seed. The . crisper and took better shots. I just
' "It's a blessing," Ven~y said. . Southern Division champion. gelS want to keep winning. .J thin.k we
"I've been through a lot just with the other lop seed.
·
need to improve in areas. We've 1!01
coaches. I hope we just keep on winWhite said Marshall needs a win Ito get more of a killer iiiSiinct."
ning."
,
at Tennessee-Chattanooga on SaturCarlton Kins added 13 points for
Veney has had a different eoach day to gain momentum heading into Marshall, while Derriclc White scored
each season, inel11ding White this the Southern Conference tOurnament II .
seison and Billy Donovan in 1995And if the Herd, one of two top
Ryan Wilson led East Tennessee
96. He also had two coaches at his : seeds, can win three straight games in State with 16 pointS, Lee· Wilker
previous college, Lamar.
the league tournament and subse- added IS points and Reggie Todd had
Despite the changes, Veney is fast quently, the league title, it's on to the 14.points.
·
·
East ·Tennessee Slate coach ·lld
approaching .the Division I career NCAA tournament for the first time
record for 3-pointcrs. He has. 391 since 1986-87.
DeChellis said his team wu close to
after making three against East Ten- . But a league. tournament loss breaking through.
,
Bu~ "we couldn'tget the bis shot
· Jiessee State(7-18, 2-11). Radford's probably keeps Marshall out of the
Doug Day holds the record,'with 401 64-team f~eld, since Southern Con- when we needed It," he said. "Every
from 1990 through 1993.
ference teams seldom get at-large time we made a run, Veney or BranVener also has 112 3-pointers this benhs because of the league's low nen made a big shot. That's what
sea5on, breaking by one the Southern ranking in the rating formula consid- seniors do.... They deserved 1o go out
Conference record he setlas·t year.
ered by the NCAA.
with class;"

80-69 in MAC contest
TOLEDO (AP) - Casey Shaw Flenorland Geno Ford had 21 points
scored a game-high 25 points and apiece. Cunis Simmons came off the
Toledo took ru:[vantage of 47 trips to bench to score 18 poinis and make
the free-throw line as the Rockets five steals. Flenorl had eight
defeated Ohio 80-69 Monday night. rebounds.
.
. Three Bobcats fouled out of the
Ohio jumped .out to a 7-0 lead,
game and two others finishedwith . capped by a Foid 3-pointer with
four fouls as Toledq (22-11 ; 5-10 18:201eftinthefirsthalf. But ToleMid-American Conference).made 41 do battled back and took a 12-11 lead
free tl!rows. The Rockets hit31 of 35 at the 13:38 mllf'k on a trey by l(am·
free-throw allempts in the second stra.
half.
· TheRocketsled31 -30athalftime
: Chad Kamstra tiad 15 points for and opened the Sc:cdnd Juilfwith a 12::. Toledo, while Clayton Burch added Orun . Kamstrahad~evenpointsdur~ 13 points and Mall Gladieux scored ing the spun, which he capped with
: 12. Shaw and Roben Kizer had 10 a jumper at the 16:38 mark to give
.: rebounds each.
Toledo a 43-30 lead. The Roekets
.i' _ t:or Ohio (15-8, 10-5), Diante never trailed the rest of the game.
.

,.

:! Training·camp briefs

By DAVID KLIGMAN
A8aoclated Preea Writer
. California's first rapking this season iri ~Associated Press college
basketball poll might be an indication
that the Bears are getting primed for
next month's NCAA Tournament.
But coach Ben Braun wants no
pan of postseason forecasting.
"I don't even want to get into
that," said Braun, whose ' team is
ranked No. 25 this week. The ranking marks !he fifth straight season
thatCalif&lt;irnia(l8-6)hascrackedthe
ran kings after a 32-ye~ drought.
"I think, right now our goal is to
play. UP, to our capabilities lind just
contmuetoplaygoodbasketball,and
then the rewards will take care of
themselves," B.raun said. .
J
Braun 'is in his first year at Califomia, replaCing Todd Bozeman,
who resigned IInder pressure amid
questions about recruiting.
California has won·eight of nine,
a string that has put the team into the
thickofthePac-IOrace. Braun, who
coached Eastern Michigan last season, said California:s late-season
surge hasn't been easy.
:'I've noticed that for some reason

''

back Tiger quintet...

I •

I

in AP.cage-poll

~y SCOTT WOLFE,
~tlnel Correapon"nt

· game. Then Thrley took over in pur·
.
' suit of the 26-point game, Proffitt
. ' : Coac)l Jenni Roush's recent 'list made a couple big plays and Horst
. : lvish just came true! Colnpliinents of and Sayre e~h added two poinis en
· ; senior point guard Renee Thrley and 'route to a 30-18 halftime tally.
, Company, the Southern Tornadoes
Sot~them iced the game early in
• steamrolled to a 67-44 Sectional the third period, when they went on
· ; championship yictory over the Green a 23-12 romp that pushe dthe score
' Lady Bobcats Monday night in the
to 53-30. Sayre had e.i jht points in
1
Southeast Division IV Sectional at the campaign and Proffitt four as the
. Alexander High School.
SHS scoring was even across the
Jenni Roush said, "We've waited boanl.
along time. Green has knocked us A strong finish game Southern a
out before, so this one was especial- 67-44 tally ai the end, but it could ,
ly special. It was a good win for our have been worse had the Tornadoes
. -kids to. They've pui together a very done a little hencr at the line. Soulh'
good year arid we deserving of some em hit just 12· 30 for the night from
type of championship. We're soing the.line, leSS' than 50 percent.
~ to enjoy tonight then we're looking
After the game, Southern enjoyed
· · forward to playing Crooksville."
the ceremoniai cutting of the nets in
·
ThrleY had twelve second periOd a great .victory celebration.
Southern hit 26-67 from the field,
. ' points in leading Soutliem to it first
·Sectional Championship in at least 3-9 three's, and 12-30 free throws.
·· .•ten years. The talented shooter and SHS had 41 rebounds, Jed'by Proffitt
bali~~Jldl~! ended the night with 26
with II , Turley nine, Sayre seven and
. markers, nine rebounds, seven steals, Horst six. SHS had 16 steals (Tur·
: · and five assists. Kim Sayre came into ley 7., Amott 3 ); had i I assists (Tur.•her own with a great second half, · ley 5, Amott 2, Horst 2); eight
· pumping in two three pointers and turnovers, 15 fouls, and two blocks.
· storming to a 15 point finish, while
Green hit 17-41, 4-9three's, and
Brianne Proffitt added ten points and had 24 rebounds (Aentge 6, Besler
· eleven rebounds.
. .
·
6). Green had .five steals (DIIIow.2,
· Southern placed eight pe.ople in Gallagher 2); 1 assists; 32 tilrnover$,
.tile scoring column. Leading the rest_ .and 26 fouls .
·
; •Of the lis was Conny Horst with eight
Southern
will now meet
; ~points, Erica Amqll with four, Jenny Crooksville in ttie Distritt semi-final
•:Friend two, and one point each from at Ross-Sotitheastern at 6 p.m. Mon:Heather Dailey, and Pally Lawrence. day, February 24.
..
Green, now 8-11, was led by
Score by quarters:
1
~Counney Moore with 16, Stephanie
Southern 12 18 23 24=67·
··,Jamison with 12,andfoureachfrom
Green
7 11 12 14=44
: ;Beth Bester and Marie Gallagher.
Southern (67) ·
•: The game staned out very physi- . . Renee Turley 10-1-3/5=26. Cyn: ;cal and deliberate , keeping scoring thia Caldwell 0-0-0, Kim Sayre 2-2: ·to a minimum, however, Southern S/8= IS, Brianne Proffiu5-0-0/6= I0,
: :'brokeoyllo al2-7Je8d. A couple hill Jenriy Friend .5-0=2, Conny Horst 3; ?steals from Thrley and Proffitt of the .· ·0-213=8, Erica Amott 2-0=4,, Stil~y
.~press sparked the Tornadoes along Lyone 0-012=0. Heather Dailey 0::with a swishing three from Turley. 1/4=1, Patty Lawrence 0-112=1.
::.sayre added a three in the stretch a5 Totals 23-3-(12-30)=67• .
·:southern.built a comfonable lead.
:; The Southern press was meticu' Green (44)
. : ·lous and precise,eventually just wearStephanie JAmison 3-2-0/0=12,
.:ing down the Bobcats and. forcing an Jacki Hewey 0-214=2. Nikki Dillow
~ ncredibale 32 turnovers for the
0-212=2, Kimberly Aentge 1-0=2,
Counncy Moore S-2-0= 16, Elicia
;same. .
• In the second period, Jamison Liles 1·0=2, Beth Bester 2-0-011 =4,
~rilled a three that cut a 22-7 South- · Marie Gallagher 1-212=4. Totals 13~rn lead to 22-10. AnOiher goal cut
4-(6·9)=44.
it
lo
2l-12
and
Green
was
back
in
the
.,

we're everybody's rival," he said. top 10 ranking since the Gamecocks Arizona State on the road last week,
"It's a compliment, but it .makes life were No. S during the 1974-75 sea- had the.week's bigges~ jump in the
poll, moving from 24th to 17th, the
tough,"
son.
Elsewhere in the poll, Kansas
Cincinnati dropped three spots to Bruins' highest ranking since · the
. remained Jhe No: Iteam forthe 12th No. II and was followed by Nonh third week- of the regular season .
street week .. The Jayhawks (26-1 ), Carolina, Arizona, · Maryland, UCLA, which was No. 5 in-the pre· who beat Oklahoma State 104-72 and Louisville, Xavier, UCLA, Michigan, season poll, returned to the rankings
last week after falling out for a sevColorado 114-74 last week, were Villanova and Stanford.
.
again the runaway choice of the
Colorado, College of Charleston, en-week stretch.
The week's biggest fall was Colnational media panel, receiving 68 !llinois and newcomers Indiana and
orado's drop from 15th to 21st.
first-place votes and 1,748 points. · California rounded out the Top 25.
Minnesota '(22-2),, which moved ·
UCLA, which beat Arizona and
up one spot in the ran.ldngs, had the
other two No. I votes and 1,649
_ _ _ __
· points, 27 more than Kentucky (243), which also moved up'one place.
· Wake Forest (20-3), which lost to BASKETBALL
games.this season, Horry is averagNonb Carolina State on a buzzerLOS ANGELES ~AP) - Los ing 7.9 points, 4.2 rebounds and 2.0
beating 3-pointer that replays showed Angeles Lakers starting forward assists.
should have been wonh only two Roben Horri will join center
· Horry, 26, was injured in Sunday's
points, dropped from seco.nd to Shaquille O'Neal on the sidelines . 102-911oss to 'Seallle when ~mate
founb, matching the Demon Dea- until at least the beginning of April · Jerome Kersey fell backward and into
cons' lowest ranking of the season. with a medial ·collateral ligament his left leg.
Utah and Duke held fifth ' and sprain in his left knee.
NEW YORK (AP) - Miami's
sixth, respectively, and were fol-·
Horry. acquired by the .Lakers Alon·zo Mourning, who averaged
lowed by Iowa State, Oemson, South from Phoenix last month, will miss at 27.3 points, 11.3 rebounds, 4.0 blocks
Carolina and New Mexico.
•
le.ast six weeks. His knee will be and shOI .763 in leading the Heat to
South Carolina, which rebounded .placed in a .brace and he will stan a 3-0 reeord, was chosen NBA playfrorn a toss io Georgia with .an physic~! therapy immediately. In 44 er of the week.
· impressive win at Cincinnati on Sat'
.urday, jumped three places to its first

-----Spo' rt·s· brl•efS .

1

By The A"oclated Preas
just a lillie sore."
·
· "It's like staning over for !ll!l," the
Eckersley appeared in 60 games
; · Terry Steinbach liked what he saw left-bander said al Haines City, Fla.
during his first day in a Minnesota "1' v.c,._gol to earn a spot, and I'm last season, and saved 30 games. He
: Twins unifonn.
.
excile~"ahout it. "
·
is in his 22nd year in the majors and
\ Steinbach, who turned down more . . Williams was released . from a his second with the Cardinals.
r money from Oakl'"d to s1gn as a free mmor-Jeague deal by the Ph1lhes last
Second baseman M1ke Gallego
I agent with the club from his home · August. The Royals signed him to a was invited to camp as a no'n-J;Oster
state, worked out with the rest of his minor-league contract last month.
invitee. Gallego, 36, played in S I
, new teammates Monday in Fort Athletics
.
games with St. Louis last year and hit
: Myers, Fla.
When he played for Oakhind the .210 in an injury-plagued ·season.
I ·:coming home was a liig thing first time, Jose Canseco would occa- Reds
for me, but playing for T.K. (manag- sionally come late to training camp.
Cincinnati went through the forer Tom Kelly) was just as big a fac- Now that he's back, there's no reason mality of pulling pitcher Jose Rijo on
1 tor," Steinbach said.
to change.
the 60,day disabled list.
·
Canseco, traded back to the A's
Rijo, at one time the ace of the
· ; "All the years 5 played against
' him made a big impression on me. this winter after four seasons with Reds' staff, _has not pitched since July
1 His teams always played hard for
Texas and Boston, told the team he' ll 18, 1995. He underwent elbow
: nine innings, regardless of the score, repon_to spring training on Friday surgery that August, and since then
and they are well organiz~d . He also and panicipate in his first workout on has had surgery twice- last April to
gives Minnesota a Jot of stabilily, Saturday.
.
remove calcification, a hone forma' which I like."
The full squad will have its first lion and scar tissue, and in NovemSteinbach, who turns 35 next workout Thursday, . though the ber to repair ruptured flexor tendon
month, set career highs of 35 home . mandatory reponing date for players mass. ·
·
runs and 100 RBis last year. He also is not until the end of this month.
Rijo ' is i~ Birmingham, Ala·.,
feels he can help the' pitching staff.
. "He said that he may have some working with a physical therapist.
"I want to do the best! can to see son of charity golf tournament," gen- Yankees
that those guys have long, healthy era) manager Sandy Alderson said at
David Wells' first year with New
careers ... Steinbach said.
Phoenix. "I would have been sur- York keeps gelling worse. First, the
"I am hoping to find the pitches prised if he had been here on the 20th. . hefty lefty broke his left hand in a bar
that work for these guys and to help That's just not his style."
fight. Now, what originally was
them with their confidence, then you
Manager Art Howe said he is not thought ro be turf toe might be gout.
just build from that. I've seen some at all concerned that Canscco. who he
"He came in real sore," Yankees
nice young arms and a 101 of potcn- hopes will be a team leader, won't manager Joe Torre said .at Tampa. Aa,
·tial."
join the rest of the squad on·Thurs- ' 'He insisL' it's a toe problem, like
Royal ~
day. ·
turf toe." '
.
No surprise if bauers are a bit
"No problem. as long as he's
·Although the problem has kept
jumpy early in Kansas City's camp ready to play," Howe said .
Wells from throwing offthe mound,
- Wild Thing is trying another Cardinals
.
hc .has taken part in ()ther drills. On
comeback.
Dennis Eckersley left St. Louis' · Monday, Wells was walking with a
Mitch Williams, releas~d by the workout early on Monday to have his pronounced limp because of the sore
Astros in J994,. thc Angels in 1995 sore right elbow examined. Eckers- left big to" and did riot practice.
and the Phillies in 1996, is trying for ley, 42, repor.ted the soreness after
Wells' medical exam included a
a job in the bullpen. Four years Sunday's workout. He und~rwenun blood test.
removed from giving up Joe Caner's MRI exam.
_ :'J'hey ' re trying 'to rule out ·
World Series-winning homer,
"lt'sjust precautionary," Eckers- things," Torre said.· "'That's . why
Williams is only 32.
ley said at St: Petersburg, Aa. "It's they took blood."

l
I.

·i

I

I

/

No. t Kansa$ pays back Missouri .
'LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP)- No. . coach Roy. Williams said.'. "I'm sure
. I Karisas was relieved just to get a t!Jeir staff wishes they'd play agains1
1plil from tbe Missouri 11gen, who some other teams the way they play
llave struggled to a .SOD record.
against us.
.
1'be only team. to beat the Jay, . · ''Of course, that old sucker down
hawks this season. the Tigers never on ihe other bench knows how to·
djcl actli~e the-22-point un(jerdogs ·make the most of those match-ups."
!hey were supposed 1o be.
'
That old sucker- Missouri coach
Not until Raef LaFrentz hita ~ Norm S~- kept finding a way
of free thtQws with 2:00 left for a 10- for TYronn Lee Or Derek Grimm lo
point lead wu the citpal:iry croWd thwart every run the Jayhawks tried
anured of seeing the Jayhawks (26- to ·make. Lee wound .up . with a·
1 ovmll. 12, I Big •2&gt; notA:h their career-best 20 points for, the Tigers
43rd straisht home victory; the (13-13, 5-8), who bea! tcansas 96-94
tonaeit current ICiellt ill Di~ion I. ' in dopble ovenime on Feb. 4. ,
1
"Miuouri pmen'ts some rell ,
'11 ~· IJlOiher ,qu~nJ '*II"
lllllc!HIP .,.,.,. fclr ua,'' JCqtu. , Jaine," Mid S~-~ W!i!djhg down
(

t

England Corsair Living Room Suite

iHigh school boys scores

Stop &amp; see our

(Mondly's Raul'. ·
'
Byeoville MeadowbrOok 52. tnd[on Voll.
~ 49
.
'
Della 70. Monlpelier S I
'
Berlin Hiland 67. Jewen.SCio 63
':
KalidA ~. Upper Scioto Volt. 12
• Tol. Cluillian ~3 •.Cordinal Sttir~h ~2
~
Victory Chr. 71 . Tallmod&amp;e Chr. 50 .
• , Wayneslicld-Goahcn 6~ . Ridgemont ~8
ITOUJINAMENT
Division I
Day. llelmoot 82, Nonhmont 65
1t
) . Dublin Coffman 53. Thornoo Wofthlngton

Jl .

Cannon Ball Bedroom Sulie

·.&gt;

.J8

Prime
Star ·
Satellite

.

.

.

Kelltrini Folrmont49. Dny. Mcndowdale

.

Wonhin~ton

Kilbourne 52. Col . NorJhlond

J6
Dhlsh~n

II
.
Bdlbrook 8.1. L!mon-Monroe 60
Cin. Ro~r Ba\:on ~7 , Cin . Pura:II-Mari·

:m4S
Hamilton

Ros.~

.56. Wc:stcm Brown 4J ·

Trenton Ed,gewood 62 . Kings Mills 46
Dlvlsiuri Ill'
.
Brookville !'i!'i. Clin1on-Massi.: 4~
Coldwell 56. Buckc)'c Troil 4~
Crookflvillc 7~ . Wellston 6.J •
Day. Oakwood ~0. Carlislc 43
lro,nton 7M, Minford~ . ·
Ponsmoulh W. 6l. Umoto 5~
Williwns:pon Westfall~ - Painl Vall. 4::!
Division IV
·
Day. Minmi Vall . JS. Middletown Chr. 21

Sports
transactions
BASEBALL
Nolilllllll . _ .
CINCINNATI JUli)5-Pia&lt;cd RHP Jose
Rijo on Jhe 60-&lt;lay disabled list.
,
COLOII:Abo ROCKIE$-A1reed to

gOI a little anxious, ll!d did not let up
in an offense. The &lt;!xperlence t.ctor
came in here. You lolta know wllen
to hold 'em and know whea lo fold
'em. We didn't know wben to hold
'em. if we bust hang on to the basketball its a four point game m the
hal f. Instead, its a 54-point same and
our job just got tougher."
C-ville Jed 36-22 at the half.
Eastern played prelly much. even
the second half, twice cutting thl: lead
to II points, only to have Toeller
came down on the next possession to
drill consecutive three's and take the
wind out of the EHS sails.
Eastern made a gallant founh
quaner bid. with six points from
Karr, ten from Evans, and five from
Hollon, but a fresh C-ville line-up
rose to the lop. Had Eastern made its
'free throws it wouJd have been a
three point game, not counting the
missed second shots they didn't
allempl on the bonus situations.
After tllree, C-ville led 50-31 ,
thenb marched on to the 70-52 win.
Eastern hit 17-66 overall with 3.10 three's and a 15-30 night at the
line.
EHS had· 42 rebounds (Karr 13,
Brannon 13, Wolfe 7); had 8 steals
(Brannon 6); and ·59 turnovers with
ten assists (Brannon three, Evans 3).
C-Ville hit22-58, 2-6 ttiree's, and was
24-33 at the line, with 50 rebounds,
I0 .turnovers, 13 assists, and 28
fouls.
Score by quarters :
Crooksville 58 18 14- 20=70
Ea&lt;tern 9 13 9 21=52
·
Box Score:
Eastern (52)
Becky Davis 1-4/6=6, Stephanie
Evans 2-2-214=12, Valerie Karr 5-0317,;, 13, Jessica Brannon 5-0-.
5110=15, Jackie Parker 0-0-0,
Chasatie Holl9n J. J.J/3=6, Angie
Wolfe 0-0-0. Totals 14-3-(15-30)-SZ.
CrooksviUe 1701

Regina Hinkle 0-314=3, Kristen
Caton 0-1 -212=5, Ash lee Toeller 4-1. 314=14, Libby Nelso~ 3-0-3/6=9,
Jenna Savage 3-3/4=9, Amy Holcomb 2-213=6, Milissa Reed 4618= 14, Erin Alloway ~-0=4, Hilary
Nelson 1-212=4, Angie Spencer 10=2. Total$ 20-2-(24-33)=70.

O'Dell's

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TRU~TEST

terms wichLHP Robbie Beckett on 11 one-year
·COnlrad.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Agreed to
terms ~ilh RHP Manny Aybar, RHP Curtis
King. RHP Brody Ragio, RHP Blake ~tein.
C Eli M......,, C Mike Difelice, INF Mike
Gulan and INF luis -()rdaz. on one-yeilt con·
uaas. ·
BASKETBALL
Nalional Basketball Association
BOSTON CELTICS-5igried G Michtlcl
Hawkins to a second I0-day contract
DALLAS MAVERICKS- AclivaJcd .F
S41Nlkl Walker from the injured list.
MINNESOTA
TIMBERWOLVESReleascd F Virginius Pr.u.kevicius.
NEW JERSEY NETs-Traded C Shawn
Bradley, FEdO'BIIIUion. G Khalid Reeves and
G Robell Pock .to Jhc Dallas Mavericks for C
Eric Mo11ross. 0 Jim Jackson, F-C ChriS
Galling. f.() GCOIJO McClo~d and G Sam
Cassell. PIBC:ed F Reggie . Williams on the
iniun:d list Released F Jac.:k Haley.

••%

· Stop by O'Dell Lumber in
Pomeroy or'Gallipolis to get your
free ticket to Thursday nights
game-vs-Cedarville. While they last.
Thursda~Feb.20,1997.

Game Time 7:30 p.m.
NOW AT SOTt-1

TRU-TEST
(,1\

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1'\l'o..,;T\

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Owners and
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Our statistics show that malure
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.~igh school girl_
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'' Mondly'l Raub~
~

w...., Kennedy 52, Bldp:r 47

Wickliffe 70. Onln,C 41
•TOVRNAMII'IT
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his 30th year as Missouri's-coach.
"The last one was a lillie bell!'J'."
Hanj·fought all the way, the game
nearly turned irtto a brawl. Wi~ 31
sec.onds left, Grimm hit LaFrentz
with a foreann, knocking the 6-fO\)t·
II junior to the floor. No punchea
were thrown, but players from both
sides rushed ioward each other as
officials and coaches pulled them
away.
Grinim.and Missouri guard Jason
Sutherland both drew fouls on the
play; . •
·
.
. "It wu a very physiCIIJame, and
.that's· ~ kind of Jltl)e you expect
Coedallllll on pqe 5
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PROFFITT SHOOTS • SoUthern'• Brlanne Proffitt (32) flrea a
Jump ahot agetnac G..., In MondaY'• 67_.. aecttonel COUI'NIIMIIt
victory - t h e Cilia.
·

·· southern ousts Green
67-44 in tournament ,

·j·steinbach likes new scenery in Minnesota·
.1

said, "This wu a really bis win for
us_ We play much bisgen schools oil

No. ·1 Kansas pays .

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.-C alifornia moves to 25th

T~ledo stops OU five

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pounds East.Tennessee State

HUN11NGTON, W.Va. (AP)When .regulars John Brown and
Frank Lee were declared academi·
~Jy ineligible earlier this year, Marshall coach Greg White began privately hedsing on his goal of a perfect home Rc:Ord.
But Marshall (!S:.7, 20-3 Southem) reached that goal Monday with
an 80-69 win over East Tennessee
State. The Thundering Herd has finished unbeaten at home only two other times in the past 56 seasons. Mar·
shall was IS-0 in both 1983-84 and
1987-88, and 12-0 this season.
"I never thought we could have
gone undefeated at home aftcor losing
John and Frank," White said. "We
cover up a lol of things by.shooting
well on the perimeter. Those three
seniors are three of the best ever to
play at Marshal):"
The three seniors are John Brannen, Keith Veney and Sidney Coles.
All transfenred into Marshall to begin
their careers with the Herd last year.
Coles hit a buzzer beater over th~

each from Libby Nelson 8nd Jenna
ll1d 8oott Wolfe,
Savage, five from Kristen Caton, and
81. ANI Cori'upondenta
year long in our league, but we did- . four eac.h from Erin Alloway and
Defendillg Seetiollol and District n't really know how our cirls would Nilary Nelson.
.
Ouunpion Crooksville pulled away react when Erica (Fleming) sot hun
Eastern placed five of its S!'Ven in
from leads of 22-17 and 26-22 in the last Thursday. We normally play I 0- the scoring column, led by Jessica
fust half, en route to posting a 70-S2 12 people. so we thought we'd be all Brannon with I 5 points and 13
Southeast Seetonol Division IV righ~ but we also knew we played flat .rebounds, Valerie Karr with 13 points
Championship win over the young against Trimble; and we knew East- and 13 rebounds, and Stephanie
Eastern EaJles Monday night a1 em had some good young talent. It's Evans 22 points. Freshmen Becky
~xander High School. Crooksville · a relief to plot this one behind us."
Davis and Chasatie Hollon each had
(12-IO)advancestotheDistrictsemiCrooksville went ten deep and six points apiece.
final at Ross-Southeastern Monday placed ten people in the scoring colEastern coach Scott Wolfe said,
night for a game with Lower brack- umn,_Jed by Melissa Reed .and Ash- "This is where 11 bi~2e r bench would
et 'winner Southern, now 15-7.
lee Toeller each with 14 points, nine have come In handy. I think the men·
Crooksville Coach Craig Caton
tal pan of the game really wore us
down physically, plus we got in early foul trouble. Crooksville plays 32
minutes of full coun pressure and
they play physical. it would have
taken a great game to win tonight and
for much of the first half we played
some great ball. We got tired and a
Contiailed fi'OIIII page 4
" Their inside game won the Jiule impatient and Crooksville capfrom Mi~souri, " said LaFrentz, who game," Sutherland . said . . " Raef italized."
·marched his career high with 3 2 LaFrentz produced. Kansas executed
The game staned out on an even
points,. topping 20 for the eighth vety well. They do all the litde things keel, then a string of Eastern
game in arow. "I'm not going to say right." ·
.
·turnovers and misSed shots allow~d
that it was a cheap shot, but it was ·8
With 3:47 left, Billy Thomas made· C-ville to surge from a tight 9·5 talhard, sharp blow. I'm no Arnold two free throws to make it 69-61, Jy to 17-5 aq&gt;ne point. Eastern called
Swanzennegger, but I can hold my then Grimm worked inside for a bas- time out to regroup, then cut he sCOJ:C
own."
ket that made it 69-63.
to a more tolerable 18-9 at the end of
"I don't know what that was at the
Kansas, which surpassed 200 the first quarter. Eastern was already
end of the game," Stewan sAid. points in clobbering Oklahoma.State taking a physical beating inside, but
''That was just the kids. 1'111 glad no and Colorado in their two previous did not capitalize on the foul line
one got hun. I think they seUied that games, was stymied much of the when it went 1-8 in the first period.
pretty maturely."
night by Missouri's tough man-toWolfe said, "Free throw shooting
In the only Olher game involving man defense.
killed us the first quaner. We coulda ranked team, No. 15 Louis:ville
')erod Haase, Kansas' 3-pointspe- n't buy a bucket. If we make our fJ;CC
defeated South Florida 75-64.
cialist, had a miserab.le night, miss- throws its a two point game." ·
. ~Je Williams had been do':"n- . ilig his first four shots and going 10
Refreshed from .the first period
pl~y•ng _th~ revenge angle a~amst the bench with his founh foul with break, Eastern went on an 8-4 run to
Missoun.• h1s players admJUedll was . 9:32 left. But he hit three free throws cut the 1ead to· 22-17, then. cut the
be ·· in the final minutes, ending with sev- · score to 26-22. Ironically, Eastern
a f~Thetor.
th
• Y W~fC e on 1Y team .~o at en points.
made much of its comeback on the
us th1s Y~· LaFn:nt~ sa1d. _There No. IS Louisville 75, SOuth Florida line with additional goals from Bran·
was defimtely a b1tter taste m· my 64
.
non and Davis . . Still, Eastern was
mouth about that first game. We have
Nate Johnson's dunk off an alley" just 7-11 at the line, including two
better_- tal~nt and we have bener oop pass from DeJuan Wheat staned missed bonus situations.
coa:~mg.
. .
. a 55- I burst in the second half that let
Eastern had cut the score to 26-22,
I ve been_thmking about th•.~ Louisville pull away at home.
then went on a drought of 3:42 min·
re~atch ever_smce we lost to the~,
. The Cardinals (20-5, 7-3 Confer- utes to end the half. Five times East:
saJ~ Paul Pierce, who scored 22 ericeUSA)ledjust4S-44with 13: 16. em had held Crooksville without a
pomts for the Jayhaw~ .
left. But Johnson's slam staned the score, but got impatient,· made some
_Kelly Thames, commg off a 25- decisive run, wliich included seven turnovers and some bad shots and
poml,- 57-rebound performance . foul shots.
Crooksville then went on a 10-0 run
ag~mst _Qidahom~, sco~d 16 for
Wheat scored 59 points, and John- to end the frame.
·
Missoun, whose v~ctory m February son had 12. South Aorida (7-15, I·
'Wolfe cited, "This was the key to
I~ was~~ last lime~ VJSJtor man- 9) has lost 12 of its last 13 games.
the game. Five times we Came down,
aged·to wm m Allen F•eldhouse.
· ·

By 0.. H8rrla

Herd finishes 12-o st home

Marsh~ll

t

Eastern eliminated by Crooksville five

.. Dlrilloo I
Eastllllo! N. 58. W'""" Hanliftl 34

Pai.~lle Rivenide 6S , Mentor 47 .

' M•nllon WostUIIJion ~7. Atlsriotown·
·,·Pitch 40 ·~ ·'
· ·
:
' UnioltiOWIII.IIke 36. ~on 'OienOok 34
· •·Dirilliln U
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:
CMIII Fukon NW 60, ~ N. 44
,, Poland 70, Youit11 1\ayon 53
Salcrp 13; VfliiRJ. Eul-45
~
R._ V""' ~1. CanJbridae 53
•, W. Bllillclo 74, Niles Mcltioley J3
~
w- Ttiwoy 51, P - ~ OT
.,Dirilllll Dl

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Akmn M""'hcolor $1, Tllllaw 33
...,...,..,.47. Naliooal Troil4l, OT

ClillpbdiMemQriol4l.Jackloa-Miirlln l8
r.iiam; 1!. .69. ~34

NuitloJI't
EJ-INoodonon 76, E•crp- 2

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Gamlllvillc 61, W - 41
Ginnl ill, Columbl.,. Cmlvicw 51
,., A.' 2 11m Indian VIII. 55, 1'ulclrawa
·Voll. .3

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Newroo Falls ]8 Auroro 22
Smilhville 34, Woyne&lt;lale 29
Swnnton 55. O.:noa ~I
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 56. Steubenville
Coth. 46 DivilloiiiV
Bedford Ch:lncl 44, Clc. Lwhcr.m E. 29
Berlin Center Western Reserve 44, Ast.abuta St . John 6
'
Cin . Hills Chr. A.;:ad. S6. Cin. Summit ·
·· counll}' Dny 37
·
· Cin . Seven Hill• 40, Cin. LocklAnd 30
.· Cimvoy Cre5tvicw ll, !'on knnio1s 48
· Crooksville 70. Reedsville EasJem 52 ·
£. Canton 77. WoOdridJC H
Franklio-Moriroe 43. Brodford .27
· Ocoqctown 65, Cin. Chriaian 22
1.ce1burJ Ftifficld J4, Beaver Eoste111 29
Maria Stein Marion 46. Antwerp 37
. Mopdorc 51 , Kidron Chr. 4S
Newbwy l5. Oilmour 28
Ports-" clay 4 7 , - Lalham 34
R~~&lt;:lnc SoulliCIII 67. fllnklin Furnace

Oc&lt;eo ,14

Sprinlftold Cllllr. l:t ~mi VIII. IS
~Mathews SO, CoiJJmbi- •t

6.99aALLON

Vllue"' L11U \VII l'llnt is
a high-hiding , washable
Jinish.

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..t......o-.r.I............
. Life Home Car Busltiasa

n.,.. ..4.1t&amp;or.

O~DELL
VINE STREET AT THIRD AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH

614 446~1276
MON . FRI7AM · 6:30PM, SAT 8 11M ·

LUMBER.
OPEN SUNDAY
10- 4

834 EAST MAIN STitEE't
POMEROY, OHIO

614 992-5500
'

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Pegel• The D•IJ s.inllnel
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Tt?lldlf, ,....,_., 1a, 1117

Pomeroj • Mlddlepo....., Ohio

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'*-111,1.-r

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nSpeed·leads to a long path of .destruction for teen
Ann
Landers

---Coo--

. ,. .... Aqdn

ByANN~DERS

Dear Ann Landers: I'm a San

Jose bigh school student, a decent
kid from a good family. I have been
using melhampbetamines for three
years. Speed (or meth) is big with
teen-agers · everywhere, and I
thought someone should tell you
about it.
.
'
l Anybody is a target. -- jocks,
, cheerleaders, bookworms, anybody.
I I've met 16-year-old cheerleaders

r

r·

who use it to lose weiP., College
kids like it beciiiSe it helps them
stay up all night to Sllldy for elWIIS,
. lltd the next day, they 1re still wimi
so they ore able to catch up on
homework. II is also big with restaurant employees and other people
who worlc long houn. Bikers use it a
lot. It is plentiful at truck stops for
late-night hauls.
Speed is the most damaging drug
a person can take. II is made up of
· deadly chemicals you might find'
under your mom's sinlc. And it is so ·
easy to buy, it's frightening. It's all
over the schools and on the streets,
On top of that, it's lfut cheap and
very potent. The longer you use it,
the more you need to get high the
next time because tolerance builds

en coo
'

l

up fast. After one or two sh :pless apart bee"!SC of Ibis junk. 1bey try help. PI- · lelld a '-Je · ~elf­
nights, you lose your judpnent.l've to quit, ud IMa they JO beck. This ~. Jtampod •vetope to
seen friends stay awake eight days is what's h"PP""na to mo riPt now. Nateotic:a ~~ World S.·
straight. By that timo, they don't I know what speed does to me, but vice Office, P.O. Box 9999, V.
lcnow who I am, where they are or I'm still usiag. I'm not Slupid. The Nuys, CaJj(, .91409. Oooclluct ud
anything else. All they lcnow is they wont thins about thil lousy drug is God bless.
·
want more speed.
the lddiclion. I always crave it. I'm
Dear Ann I anden: I jlllt took
You don't eat very much when hooked. Once I stopped (Of six your sex quiz for teens; even though
you're bigh. You have no appetite, months, but the cr~~vina got me, l!fld · I'm not a teen-ager IDJIIIOR'. 1 am
and nothing tastes good. It's easy to J went baclc. I'm not a weak person, SS, have had three wives, nised 14
go three days on a couple of muffins Ann, but this drug is so seductive, kids lltd had several girlfrieads. 1
and ~orne fruit jUice. II also malces YQU wouldn't believe it.
toolc the sex quiz twice - once
you jumpy and nervous. And then . . Ifanyone .whoreadsthisistbink- . recallingwhatlwasdoingataaet6;
there's th.e scratching, twitching, mg about trying~- f?" whatever and the second time, imalininJ
picking your skin and imagining you reason -- partymg, quiCk energy, beiog 16 today.
have bugs crawling all over your weight loss or finals --forget it. It's
lbefirsttime,lhadascoreofll·
body. You become paranoid. You get bad. news. -- Scared in San. Jose, .· I mu~ !'&amp;ve been a good id!I..The
the idea that everyone is oilt to get · Calif.
.
se~ond trme around, ·I scored 64. I
you.
•
Oear 'San Jose: Addictions are g!Jess it means I'm condemned.
I've seen my friends' Iives fall almost impossible to kick without &amp;fore 19S9, there were no dross--

or ent, t

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By LENITA POWERS

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&amp;'behavior. •

- Semiftn!e, Fla.
DCir Srrirle: You'" llblolute·
ly riPt- Tbelcalr ~ yo11n must
read Jib ICi II :11 fiction, buliiiiiiiR
yO.. dill the biJh ICbooL boy wbo
wro1e is Dot a nrity, nor was lie
exaapnilinJ.
.
.
My hope is Iiiii the teaeben will
become beuer in~ about drug
abuse lltd• when they recognize, a
URI' in the ct.uvom. they will Sfll'
that he or she pts help. Kicki~g
tbcm out of sc:hool is no ,otudon, .
. Seal qv thO' to Aad
Crre'HIS) •r .... 571'rW. Celt·
tuy BI..L, s-Ite
1M ADtd~,
c.lll.·90045 •

.,.a:'&gt;

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The Community Calendar is
published .. a free serrice to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting 8lld special events. The
calendar " not designed to promote ules or fund raisers of any
type. Items are .Printed as space
~nnlts and cannot be guaranteed
to run a speclf'~e number of days.
TUESDAY

EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local
POMEROY -- Free skin testing
Board of Education, regular session,. clinic to be conducted by Connie
6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Eastern High .Karschnik, R.N., Meigs County
Schoollibrary.
,
tuberculosis nurse, Tuesday, 4:30 to
. 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
POMEROY-- Meigs County unit Fire Department. Residents remindof the American Cancer Society, ed that all individuals in food serTuesday, 5 p.m., VMH conference .vice .are required to obtain ye~rly
room. Board · members urged to skin tests.
auend.
POMEROY
Meigs County

Board of Commissioners regular
meeting Tuesday, 2:45 p.m. at the
Meigs County Courthouse. Meeting
postponed from Monday due to
Presidents' Oay holiday .
CHESTER -·- Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Charter. will be.
draped in memory of Mae McPeek.
WEDNESDAY

good grain bread. This recipe for New England clam chowder normal· .
ly calls for minced lean bacon, but you cllil omit the baj:on for a nieat•
le5s meal. For variety, you can add corn. Or use tomatOes in their juice
in place ofrnjllc and cream to make Manhattan clam cllowder.
.NEW ENGLAND CLAM CHOWDER .
.
(With meat): 4 to 6 slices lean bacOn, minced · ·
(Without meat): Substitute I to 2 teaspOons olive oil)
I cup minced onion
2 cups peeled and chopped potatoes
2 tablespoons flour
.
.
2 cups fish stock or clam juice (You can find bottled clam juice in
most supermarkets in the section where canned tuna is sold: or subStitute chicken broth), augJ!lented with as much juice as you can salvage
from clams .
Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
I cup milk
I cup half-and-half
.
.
24 hard-shell clams, shucked (Hold clam with iiS "hinge" facing
your hand. Wiggle a knife between the two shells and use it to open the
clam. Scrape out the clam meat) Cut clam meat in half or quarters if
very large.
·
·
I tablespoon buner
Minced fresh parsley for garnish
.
If including bacon, fry bacon in a 2-&lt;Juart heavy pot until crisp,
remov~ with sloned spoon and let drain. Set aside. Over medium.heat,
cook onions and potatoes in bacon fat until onions soften. Sprinkle .
with the flour and stir. Slowly ldd stock and then coolc about 10 minutes. until the potatoes are almost cooked tlvough.
. Season with salt and pepper and add m\lk and cream; bring to .a simmer and add clams. Float the buuer on top of the chowder. By tire time ·
it ·melts, the clams will be ready. Garnish and serve.
Makes 4 servings
Nutrilional analysis per serving,: (lnl:ludes bacon option) 243.4 calories; 13.6 grams total fat; (7 .3 grams satiQ'8ted fat); 13.4 grams protein; ,
Continued on P11f18 7
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MIDDLEPORT -- The Middle- CCL. Wednesday, husband's nigh~Jo
port Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednes- he obseryed with potluck din1111r.
day, Middleport . Presbyterian . 6:30p.m.
·
·
Church.
CHESTER -- Shade River
POMEROY -- Town meetingt
LQdgc, 7:30 p.ni. W~dnesday night -village auditOrium Wednesday, 7
at the hall. Work to be held in p.m. to discuSs feasibility of village·
entered apprentice degree. Rcf~~:sh­ COnlr4CICd trash service. All J'll4imcnls.
dcnls welcome.

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ROCK SPRINGS -- Middlepon

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·Have you read any good ·food .dietary labels lately? The Light

By J~CKIE STARCHER, coor· drome- a condition. wher~ people
1, dlnator . and LINDA KING, mdulg~ m fat-free.treats wh1le at the
. ualatant coordinator Meljl• same umc forg~tllng .'hat they have
County H1181th Depat btNint
Fatm the Amer1can d1et has dropped
Preventlv, Health Services
·from 40 percent of da1ly cal ones m
. Dietary habits play a !llajO.r role 1978 to 34 perc~nt iri 1990.
tn the development of hean d1sease But.. ...... More Amencans are over-'
risk f~~ors. The Americ.an Hean wetght than ever before.
As~oallo~ advocates a d1et that IS
About one m three adults are
low m fat; espectally saturated . fat considered overweight. Fat-free
. and cholesterol, . for all ·· healthy treats are a healthy alternative to
Americans two years of age and their· high-fa! counterparts .. But ·we
. older. .
. .
.
still ~eed to focus on a balanced diet
Readmg foOd labels IS one strate- ~f hogh-nutnent foods and moderagy that conJumers can use to choose . tton.
.l!eart ',heal!jly ·foods . .In case you
Most Americans could achieve a
haven 1 nottl:ed, food labels are look- low-cholesterol ~nd low-fat dtet (30
ing differe~t. They are now packed per cent of calones from fat) Qy cutwith inf~miation you. can use_ to help ling back on ~asl food, high-fat
you eat ng~t. New laws rtqutre food snack .foods, h1gh fat meats and
producers to follow specific guide- poultry and by switching from
line for se~ing size, nutrient infor- whole-milk dairy prodUC\S and
mation and' aescriptive phrases like cheeses to skim and lower-fat vari"fat free" Of ."low sodium." This will eties.
:. :
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make 11 ea&amp;~er for you to compare Good nutnuon.•s very tmportant but
similat '~ooi!s and then p!clc the most physical activity is just as important
healthful cJ,oice:
to mamtam or keep us healthy.
. Fot ex~~~nple, mayonnaise. is a . H~re are. ~orne tips for m~king
Jood place where you can cut the fat phys1cal acuvny a part of your hfe at
in recipes. j:.ook for the mayonnaise . home, work and play.
prod\lfl thai says :·reduced fat" "low While at home•
fat" or "f~t- free or compare ~~~ . What are the advan,tages ofw~knumber of fat .grams per servmg m mg out a home? Its convement,
each mayonnaise product. Select the comfortable and safe. It allows your
one with thf lowest 81110unt.
chtldren to sec .you being active,
The new !~bel law can help if you which sets a good example for them.
are already ·keeping traelc of your fat You can comb)ne exercise with
8f81J1' intakt. Nearly all foods have . other activities such as watching 1V.
to carry a li'-t of amounlll ~ se~ing Do. hpusework yourself i~stead of
of many nutrients, including fat and hmng someone else to do 11.
saturated fai. The nutrient iaformaWork in the garden or mow the
lion for raw fruits, .·vegetables and grass. Using a riding mower ~sn't
IJICIIS should be posted ln most count.Go 0!11 for ashort walk before
&amp;~ores.
,
.
breakfast or both. Stan with S-10
Fat-free treats are American's, minutes and work up to 30 minutes.
newest craze. They ate mysterio!lsly Wa!k or bike to the Cl)mer store
disappearing at · alarminJ rates. instead &lt;X driving. .
Some people seem to thillk that a
Whel\ wslkirig, pick up the pace
box &lt;X cookies is 1 linale Nrvina. from le!lurely .to brillk. ·choose a
and all AmeriCa c111 say is, •But hilly I'QUie. While watehiltJ T V.
they're FAt..FRBE!" Bxpertl are spend a few rninlllel pedUiiiJ your
e&amp;~linJ this Fll..,._ ~ . sya- lllllio!Wy bjlce. Walt the dot- M

f~rther away at the shopping mall
2 packages (10 o~. each) frozen into' bottom of 8-inch spring form
and walk .the ,.extra distance. Wear chopped spinach, thawed and well pan. ·Bake in. 350! oven for 10 minyour walking shoes and sneak in an drained
utes. In blender or food jlrocessor,
extra lap or two around .the mall.
. I container (IS oz.) pan-skim blend cottage cheese on high speed
Stretch to reach 11ems m hogh places ncolta cheese
for, 2 minutes or until smooth. Add
andsquatorbendtolookatitems.on
I cup shredded part-skim moz- yogurt, cre~m cheese, sugar, orange
the floor level. Keep exerc1se equ1p- zarella cheese
peel and vanilla; blend until smooth.
ment repaired and use it.
9 lasagna nondies, cooked 7 min- Add egg whites; blend until well .
At the Office: ·
utes and drained.
mixed. Pour into prepared pan. Bake
Most of us have sedenlaty jobs. .
In a large skillet, heat com oil in 350! oven for 35 minutes. Tum
Work takes up a significant part of · over medium heat. Add onion. red .of! oven. Leave cheesecake in oven
the day. What can you do to increase pepper and garlic; saute 4 to S min- with door ajar for 30 minutes. Cool
physical activity during the work utes. Jn a small bowl, stir cornstarch, on wire rack. Refrigerate · ~vcral
day? .
.
milk, water, oregano and salt until hours or overnight. If desired, .serve
Bramstorm project ideas with co- blended. Add to skille.t with bullion with orange slices. Makes 10 servworkers ~hile taking a walk. Stand cu?e. Stirring ~onstantly,. bring to a 1 • i~gs .. Eac~ .. serving provides: 180
while talkmg on the telephone. Walk botl over medtum heat and hotl I calortes, 8 g. protein, 18 g. carbohydown the hall to speak with soine- minute. Stir in I cup grated·Parme- ·drale, 9 g. total fat, I g. polyunsatuone rather than using the telephone. san. Remove from heat. Reserve 2 rated fat, 4 g. saturated fat, 25 mg.
Take the statrS mstead of th~ eleva- 112 cups sauce. To remaining sauce, cholesterol, 280 mg. sodium.
tor, or get off a few floors early and add spinach and ricoua cheese.
·
like the stairS the remainder of the •'Spoon I cup reserved sauce 'into 13
way. Walk around your building for X 9'inch baking pan. Layer with 113
~ break during the work day or dur- of the noodles and I the spinach mix·
Nlcklols 1... Leonard
mg 'unch.
lure. Rbpeal layers, ending with
Navy
Chief Peuy Officer NickAt Play:
. remaining 113 ·or noodles. Sprinkle
Play and recreation are.importanl with mozzarella cheese and remain- lois 1:.. ·Leonard. son of Eleanor E.
for good beal.th. Look for opportuni- ing I cup Parmesan. Bake in 37S · and Nicklois L. Leonard Sr. of
ues to be .active and have fun at the degree Fahrenheit oven for 30 min- Pomeroy, recently ~~:ceived a leuer
. same time. Plan family outings and ui.es or until lightly browned and . · of commendation while assigned at
vac;ations. that inchnfe. phys~cal bubbly. Makes 10 ser:vings. Each Naval Submarine School, Orotoil,
· ac_tmty (h1kmg, back(1ackmg, sw1m- serving provides: 260 calories, ·IS g. Conn. '
He was recognized for his superimmg, etc.) Take dancmg lessons.
protein, '31 II· carbohydrates. 9 g.
or
performance of duty. Displaying
---------------- ·
total fat, 2 g. p()lyunsaturated fat, 4
remarkable
dedication llild initiative;
' Since February is Heart Month, g. saturated fat, '20 mg. cholesterol
he
consistently
'performed his
here are some hean healthy recipes and 340 mg. sodium .
demanding dutie.oi in ari exemplary
for your to try..
---------·"··
and highly professional manner, the
ORANGE CLOUD CHEESE·
letter read.
.
VEGETABLE LASAGNA
'·
CAKE
A
.19.
8
2
grac!uatc
of
East~rn
High
2 tablespoons COm oil
314 cup graham cracker crumbs .
School; he joined the Navy in .Octo- ·
I large onion, chopped
2 tablespoons margarine, melted
ber, 1985.
I red peppct, finely clioppcd
I
cup
.loW
fat
cottage
~hecse
.
Jeanette M. Myen
3 cloves garlic, minced
I container (8 oz.) plain nonfat
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Clus
3 tablesJI'lons c~,m starch
yogurt
. . . Jeanette M. Myers, daushter of .
2 cup$ low fatlnilk '
I package (8 oz.) lig.ht cream cheese Manha L. Mri:mney Of Leon,
· · 1 cup :wa.ter ·
'
112 cup sugar
W.Va., recently reported for duty ·
112 teaspoon oregano
2
teaspoons
grated
orange
peel
with the Naval Security Group
· • 114 teaspoon sal.t ;
Activity, Sugar Orov~. W.Va.
.
I vegetable flavored ·ot beef 2 teaspoons vanilla
2 ega whites
The
1992
griaduate
of
bouillon cubl::
.
314 Cup grllled l'lrmesan c~; In a small bowl, combine gra!lam Ravenswood High School joined lbe
divided·
cracker crumbs l!nd muprine. Pat Navy in August, 1992.

To........,.;_

,,

'

.

'

f'·

~

d .. Bl Pri
..
•
" ~·, ncess . are females
H 1th .bl~sh.,~n ~obage ,that proruce bright red hemes. lbey grow 8
fO ~~.feet taU tml~ss J!l\l,lled. .
,_ Boulev~d .~alse ~Y.press
. tCb~aecy.pans p1s1fe~a Bouleani ) 15 stlv~ry-,greel\m ~ sumr and gray1sh-blue 1n wtnter. It
~

pows .to 10 feet tall with a aanow ble bushes, not - .. Their ileedles
~ llllpe, e-.tly 2to 3 feet are 2 inches long 111111 ate carried in
wide.
.
· Some
_ Rhododendron are
.
purs.
. mugos are. more dwarf
their beautiful spn' fladmired jor ~theothers, when buymg a muJo,
.
ng · owm. ut as..
nursery operator about size.
the~r. glossy, dark green leaves are Try the dwarf varieties called
stnking year-round. (Although there "Gnom" atid "Mops .. But all are
~ ~vergreen ~~Z~~Ieas, an azalea is slow-growing and f~ s~
sltmp y a rbododeh
"
ndron that loses its mounds of rich~ dark-green foliage
eaves cac yeat)
Ca t'100 . All
·
· ·
·
u ·. mugos are suscep11ble
~n temperatures drop belo.w to ~le mfestabons: Sjny in early .
freeztng, ~odendron fohage wtll spnng with a dormant oil spray
becom~ thin tu.bes resembling cig- . which you can pu~~:hase at any gar:
ars. lbe. colder II gets, the more they den center.
curl. By exposing as linle tissue as Oregon Grape (Mah · ·
'bl
ld
·
.
on11
1
~ . e ~co • ~mg Winds, the aquifolium) is a show stopper. It has
p ant IS· a e to survive. As soon as fragrant bright yellow flowers in
the temperatures warm the 1
earl
· D ·
·bee
fl .
.
•
eaves
Y spnng. unng the winter, the
. o~ r:at agam. Rhododendrons plant produces silvery bl be ..
need moisture-retentive but well- and its leather foliag;
b~~S
dnined soil ~n d onI'Y pan1·a1 sun •m . purple or bronze. Oregon Grapethe .summer. 11ake certain soil is slowly forms a clump of stems 3 to
•ao1d1c;. !llways mcorporate as much 4 feet tall that can be
ned to suit
Canadllln spahgnum peat (at least a 'ts' I .
pru
1 ocauon.
bushel, premoistened) into the .soil · - American Arborvitae (Tiiuja .
:~;~j~an.t a rbododenddroron and ~identalis) is a native conifer.that
. e unng s11111mer
ughts. 1s used often· as a hedge or as foun· "ScinJill;uion" (pink flowers) dation plantings. Try some of the
and "Boule de Neige" (white) are new cuhivars such as "Emerald "
superb cultivars. Rhododendrons are wbich form n:.CCOw columns of s~ft
slow-grow1~g. Over a 10-year peri- green foliage. "Nigra" and "Techod, uncler 1deal soil conditions, a ny" are broader, conical trees with
plain may grow only 3 to 4 feet bigh darker green foliage And there are
and wide. .
. ·
several cultivars with gold folia e:
- Mugo Pmes (Pinus mugo) resem- Check with a nursery.
. · g

By
··Dave
Grate

of
Rutland

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC:
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Ph. 773-9173

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. TRUCKING

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985-4422
Chester, Ohio

a..latlve llatentng devfea,
oilier) dutt to a d ... blllty,
pte- 09m.ct Olor18 Kloel,
Cl8rtc,
prior to Mtmh 3, 11117
Community 81 814-112--.
In onl., to
YOUNG'S
Improvement
emMa lhet ynut will
CARPENTER SERVIa
be accommadeted. The
ofloom
Additions
lletga County ·eourtha... ·
oHaw
Garagaa
.
.Ia handlcappacl-llbll.
oEt.ctrical 1 Plumbing
WriHon cammonta wth e
oflooflng
accepted until 1:00 p.m.,
March 3, 11117, llld may be
ofnt.rlor I Exterior
matted ta lila lletge County
Painting
Commlaalonere, Melt•
Al80 Conc:rete Work·
County Courthou .. ,
'
(FaEE
ESTIMATES).
Pomaroy, Ohio &gt;15m.
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Janet HOWM"d. Pr11ld1nt

recipes .. --:--._ _ _ _ __

ContjnuecHrom page 6

FAX '773-5861

H.O.M.M. .
TRANSPORTADON

Pick up diiCI ded

When Moses ~ed. the Red Sea (or ·more correctly,
.eed Sea) around 1250 B.C., his wildest dreams could't envision· that some day, more than 3,000 years later,
ople would be learning about him and the·Bible on
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·
· • . •
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1ble o1nd~llvare.' Sales of such programs Jui\le soared
4 percent 1n ihe lilst year a5 Bible students, religious
rs itnd families find new ways to study the most
. ular book in history.. · , ;
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One' such program is Compton's Interactive Bible - .
New ·International Version by the Leatning Co.
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nn ·

JOEL SMITH

. ,1

ROIERr BISSELL

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. Detroit Newa

~Lepten

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MIDDLEPORT , --t----._

1- ,.,,.,, ,,,,,.
llf"t

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Using lht Cltmifitds

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO•

•

AID

Nutritional analysis per serving:
CORN TACOS
Is as Easy as ....
Fl~AMIRIEr
332.3
calories; 14.6 grams total .fat;
Driveway Limestone
-iJ.J.g grams ' Carbohydrates; S1 milFilling, garnish and sauce:
Friday, •rcll 7
2 cups fresh ·com kernels (or 1-----...:....______!;;::
Complete House
ligrams cholesterol; 369 milligrams. (8.4 grams saturated fat); 20.5 grams
protein; 29.8 grams carbohydrates; · frozen corn, thawed)
· ·
.
sodium.
and Trailer Site
10QI·9 PM
114
milligrams
cholesterol;
791
milI
cup
(about
4
ounces)
shredded
Looking for a Pet? C'-lllede...,.-r al
GREEN AND RED LASAGNA
"-ne~ Po81128
Work, Bulldozing,
ligrams sodium.
·
· jalapeno jack cheese
home ............. een~er.
American Legion Annex
6 qlln~~;sJ~~~~Pll'noodiJ;5.
Backhoe, Trackhoe.
servi'
4
to
6.'
.
MDI ~. Mljlcllepo.1
12 flour .tonillas
·
Flnd
-~~
bu
I cup, part.skim ricotta cheese ·
Shop
.
.
.,.
&gt;''
oa
pea.,
Septic
System1
1
Vtndon
$5.00, 8' Tllllee
SPA~HEITI ARRABBIATA
2Cfg$ \
i
\
\.
I medium-size jar of salsa
petacoeuorleto, lllid
Call
Ruaa
MDziH~go
lnatalllld
I 11ound uncooked thin spaghetti ·
·
Thin avocado slices (optional)
the
leniee..
1 I cup tliinty sliced onion '
Ohve-otl flavored cooking spray
(614) 992·3838
I and . one; ~alf ou~ces grated
Cilantro sprigs for
CUISSIFIEDS CaD ror compl... "'·-•Js
211111
4
cloy.
e
s
garlic.,
minced
(optional)
..... """"
. armesano chee~c '
'
I red hell pepper, cut into thin
Savory Black Beans:·
on placina
I 2 cloves-g&lt;~rlic, minoed
strips
.
and
one-half
tablespoons
olive
ads
lo
sell for }'(iu.
I
1 2 le3$ppops, balsamic vinegar
005 . Personall
.
I
yellt;&gt;w
bel)
pepper,
cut
int\)
thin
1 threc-founlis teaspoon dried
or salad oil
r.::::::-:::::-::-:-=:-:-=~:-::-:--:-------=--.
stnps
.1
medium-sized
onion,
coarsely
KIT
'N'
CARLYLE
~by
Larry
Wright
gano
... ·
Are You An Ercltlng Rom1ntlc?
1·900·«~5780 En 9212 S2 911
I greeq beU pepper, cut into thin chopped
One-half teas.,OOn ~~~:stity' ground
Per Min. Muat Be 18 Yra. Stn.'-u
strips
.
.
I clove garlic, minced
ackpepper
.
119.&amp;~!&gt;8434:
•
one-half
yellow
squash,
thinly
2 cans (15 ounces each) black
one-fll\Jnh teaspoon salt.( option·
AnENllON
In MemorY
,
. beons
,I ; . :;
' . .• sliced
Has Your Marriage Or Ralatlon2 cup~ broccol!. florets only
lhlp Gal Up &amp; Wert, Smp In PrlnI tablespoon distilled white vine.1 one;e1ghth teaspoon re&lt;1- pepper
c:eu Video And R8nt One or Our
I cup pmshrooms, sliced
.
In Memory of
gar
Ices
; Adult Videos. 1300 Eastem Aveone-half cup Yarmesan cheese
.Richard Junior Jacks · ~· nue, Gallipolis, Or Call 814-448Preheat Savory Black Bean~. ·
! I cup no-salt-added 'tcimltto sauce
11922. '
·
· ' Heat oil in wide frying pan over
who paaelld ._Y
, one-h~lf .cup canned. crushed freshly grated
Fresh basil leaves (optional gar- medium heat. Add onion aod garlic.
·Feb. 18, 1987.
C o l i - 8poclol
matqe~ ,
1-ICO
1&amp;1 7711 Ell. 19111
nish)
.
·
Aa
time
unloldl
.
another
Cook,
stirring
often,
until
onion
is
l and one-half ounc,s' part-skim
12.911 por·mtn. beiiWreyear
soft and lightly browned (eight to I0
ozzarella cheese, ~hredded
S.V.u-(819-645 ltM~
Memories keep you very
I Chopped parsley for garnish
Dressing: ·
mi~utes). Reserving half-cup liquid,
DATES!
r Preheat :o,cn tq · 350 de$11:es.
S tablespoons olive oil
dram canned black beaks. Add beans
GUYS60Al.S
Silent thoughts of time"
ROM ANCEl
. !pray 'an 1'1-iqsh by. 7-inch balcina
one-fo~nh cup raspberry or tar: to onion mixture with the reserved
tc;sUNt
' -9oo-esg.g550 f,r 20M t2.w
liquid am;f vinegar. Coars ely mash
i.sh with pons~~' ~ooking sp~:ay. ragon .vo~egar
·
llolda the memoria that Per Minute. Must Be 18 Yra.
Setv·U (619164!&gt;8434.
beans with a spoon. Spoo11 beans
~k !)le \asa$na noodle~ ip ~ farge
2 cloves garlic, minced
wlllaltloram.
, of .J!9iling water. until done (8
l tablespoon fresh lemon juice
into a large ovenproof platter,
Wile Freda, children and
GUYS AND GAl.S
WAITINGTO MEETWlU
inutes to IO.minutes or according
Dash ofWorcestershire sauce
spreading into about a 10-inch oval.
ndchlldran.
INWlURAREA
package directions). Drain noo.I teaspoon fresh parsley, chopped Top with layer of com and layer of
1·90Jl-«3.5780
les in· a colander and rinse gently · , I teaspoon fresh tarragon, cheese, Bake' in 400-degree oven'
EXT:1818
· JnMemory
$2.99 PER MIN.
until heated through (about 10 minnder cold ruiu\ing water to ptevenl choppo:d · '
MUST BE 18YR&amp;
les froin sticking together. Set
one·founh teaspoon fresh thyme, utes). Meanwhile, wrap tortillas in
SER\LI.I-. (819) 645-&amp;434
In Memory Of
foil and hcnt in oven until.hot (about
i~. ,
.. '
.
chopped
HEY GUYS!'
five
to
eight
minutes.)
: hi a me'&lt;1iu111 bowl, beat the ricotone-half teaspoon white pepper
WILLIAM L. ·
LONELY?
Remove tortillas ·and bean mixLIVE 01111.111
I cheeSe 81J4. eggs until blended. . I teaspoon Dijon mustard
..
(Wink)
CALL Howl
ir. in .onions, Parmesan; garlic.' Spaghettini: Put a large pol of.wat~ llll'e .ftom oven. Oarnisb.beans with
'·I"Hawa
PATTERSON
r~gar; ~~·f'IO,.i~per,, salt (jf on stove 10 boil for spaghellini. avocado ond cilantro. Spoon into
E¥1 pu
,
.$3.88 Per Mlnut8 Mull 8e 11 Vro.
who dl'ecl1 year
1red 'JI!l:'l red peppcr ,flakes.
, , Cook .according tci package direc- tortillas. Serve With salsa.
s.rv.u (8tp)841&gt;8434.
Serves 4 to 6.
: In a;llf!#JII\Pt ~Mas'ilriilJ ~up or: tio~ tdeanwhile, spray a larsc skilago,' Feb. 18, 1996.
LIVE Plii'CMIC$1
~iu~ ~~!,. stir . ~!l~}l)er tomato let with oliv,e-oiJ,flavored vegetable Nutritional analysis per serving:
~Ll 'lOUR '•
W.
do
not
forg81
you
~ce;. llid) crus~ tomatoe&amp;. Pour spray and saute garlic, peppers and 1.001.1 calories: 29.0 grams total
FIJ'NAEI ·
nor do '"' Intwnd,
00 ·21 7·MM fJt iru ta •
-thisJI,of tht;.toma!o mixture into squash for about five minutes. Add fat; (7.9 grams saturated fat); 44.7
;.!
We think of you often
i Min. Mua1 Be 11 Yra. 5ot¥-u
1 , boti8til cif~'Jjal(ing dlsh. Eyen- broccoli and mushrooms and saute grams protein; 146.S ·grams carbo(1111) 645 80~. .
ll1d will tHI the and,
hydrates; 21 milli.grams cholesterol;
I !spread JW~#.,t!Jt ~ljcotta ~heese · until tender, about 10 minutes.
IIEEHOCAL~
.
Gone llld fotgottwt
1xture over tbe ·tomato mixture. ,Dressing: Mix all ingredients in a 692 mil!igrams sodium. ·
Call Nowl 1 -800·443-57~.Ert.
by-youmay
'xt, laxc&gt;'wlllt~ half.tlie- lasagna blender until smooth. Place pasta in
4110, $2.88 /Min. 1a. iet¥-u ·
8111-e45.8434.
. '
•
be,
'
n . les, . tf!en follow ,ll(ith another large bowl and top with .vegetables.
1 ird of• ~itlt; ' 'tbnialiP sauce, tbe Toss well. Sprinkle with Parmesan
llut, dear, to our
PLEAIIaEIIIIIi
In an ,effort to provide our reader1·900.a2S.7070 En a 11 IZ.II
aini!ll li~a ~ . mixture, cheese, aarnish with basil leaves and
' IIIIMnOrJ you 1
ship with current. news, tbe Sunday
Per Mlf!. Mull Be
Vra. S...u
1 . resf:or ~ 'l!!&gt;i!&lt;Jies §nd • fipal , serve immediately.
Will be.
ltl-1145.8434.
. '
limes-Sentinel will not accept wedI er. ot, ;NUCC• 1qp willl tljredded .
M:akes
6 serving~.
We
will
.tways
love
Slnt~ltll Tittel 01 Blind Dtt!H?
mrellii: ~' I '
N~tniiOnal analysts per serving dings after 60 days from the date of
YOUR MESSAGE
you.
CaU 1-I00-443-5710 Elll 2112,
the
event.
·
Balle MMM.f.Qt' ,3S,IIIi'"'~s, ·11r (includina dre$sing): 448.2 calories;
/Min. 11 vro sorv-u 111•
Slldly mlllld by . •u•
CAN BE SEEN
HERE
14&amp; 1434
,I'
'
.
.
u tit;bll iild~llill6lyJ11JM,\Uiid for .' 14.8 grams tottl fat; (3.0 grams satwife,
Wanda;
Weddinss
submilled
after
tbe
60FOR A TOTAL OF
1 min~."· befe.rc,.., Qut!iqJ into · Ul'lllod fat); ,14:6 grams protein; 65.1
ChlldNn, 8tne,
day
deadline
will
appell'
durina
the
~;- . ~~e,~ wlll{pjnJey, ''if .grams clrbolly~~; S milli8!llllls
$7.00
PER
DAY
.
.
.
Angle, Joe;
desired, and serve.
, cholesterol; lSI mtlltsramssodium. week in The Daily Seatinellltd the
.Gallipolis Daily ni.bune.
Grw4:ih1Utw.,
BLACK BEAN AND PUSH

.r

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1

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I

M•"ll'tary news·

'

,~""'
en.Joy your properl\y y- .~ plant evergreens. By
&lt;~ombiriing everateens in different
""colors (ilot aJJ ·are
),
sizes lltd sh . green textures,
Hivisually sati
y~ can create a
~L For the n~vi'!8 ~:~ne.
:; green ·, tree or '~~-ub ·~·an .·•udever•
.
ou
nc
s
~orufers, with needles or Scalelike
~qeaves, and broadleaf tr
·
shrubs· 'Iii broad, fl leaees and
•"Jiersist·tfi%..... the . at
ves that
.6'~
wmter.
·n
......._M~st hardy evergreens are slow·-5'uWIDg and prefer a Sheltered J
near a building with half-shadp ac~.
...well ._,,.. 'idi.
., . thee an
•. . .... .........ac c sol m
S!lm0 mer. If~ can pro·vKle these cond'1_
. ,
.
.
llon~.,y JUWj,ll be abJe;t(/ tfOWi ~me
spectacu
·Here ·ar trees
lookand shrubs ·
1
•
" a . . at some popular
FVergreen VOf!~ . , .. · · ,.
Blue Hollies (llex X meserveae
·cvs) The " BI Pri .. ·
,; Md
u~ nee IS male,

I xcel~nt~==:. ~: .:O"!e~

,._ ·ouette Journ11l
Chowder makes a hearty Lenten meat when teatned With a salad and a

:------'-~----~-------'· Co'mmunity ·calendar----·-·Hc _,·_------·-· --"-:
I

~ Clti ~
lt. If.....,, ,_: to ~ ' *
1

r

By LENITA POWERS .

year - and the lean days of 'Lent
begin.
.
Lent, for the atheists and agnostics in the crowd, has nothing to do
with past tense of the verb . "to
lend." It has to do with the Christian religious observance thst begins
on Ash Wednesday, and culminates
on Easter Sunday.
The term "Lent" comes from the
Old English word "lencten," which
meant springtime. .
For many years, Cbristians
observed Lent with 36 days of fasting and acts of piety and penitence .
in spiritual preparation for Easter
and in reverence for the suffering,
death and the Resurrection of Jesus.
Christ.
Then, in about A.D. .800 during
the reign of Charlemagne, the ante
was upped and four days were
added to Lent The extra days might
· have been tacked on so that the 40day Lenten observance (Sundays .
aren't include(l in the count) would
correspond to the 40 days Christ
spent fasting in the wilderness,
· Today, many Christians still
LENTEN MENU· Pictured la ·a bowl of New England Clam Chowder parfect for a Llnten maal. Dur·
observe d'~ys of fasting, give up lng lent many Christiana observe days of fasting, give up favorite foods or activities and libataln from
favorite foods or activities and . eating meat on certain days.
abstain from eating meat on certain abstain from eating meat on Ash day dinner of ham and hot cross .vinegar and red pepper flakes.
days during Lent.
'
·.
Wednesday and on all Fridays dur- buns. .
That accounts for the profusion ing Lent.
Or try creamy clam chowder,
of tuna noodle casseroles around
Don't look so down . Meatless spagheui with fresh herbs and
.So for all those Fridays between
this time of year. .
I then and Easter, try some meatless doesn't mean tasteless. Lovato's · sauteed vegetables and flour tacos
Lenten regulations ·equire recipes to · tide you over until you Green . &amp; , Red Lasagna has zing stuffed with black beans a~d fresh
Catholics who are 14 and older to can sink teeth into that Easter Sun- from the bite of garlic, balsamic com.

I
.

fer~N~Ceia-,

Recipes for Lenten meals

The pany is over on Fat Tuesday
or ("Mardi Gras") - Feb. II this

=
a
J

.. . . . . clida't ~ lbOUI ..y, and
dllt's . . . ._ lllllile Mil a Ilia dif-

ese

j , Reno Gazette-Journal

.Ev~rgre~_ns .:prqv·ide co or·,:~
~!~ot just green) ·au year long

'

News policy

1.

.

ILl

I 1 'A
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_F1h11

t 11.1117

Pomeroy •Ill ~lp art, Ohio

OOP.

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... .......
ACRal I

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1917 . . . .
•

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Mil

12 ,..., "' -

• ilsselllllp

11 ~ tMii
Dllilla
1..... ...........

=
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11illllit...,. 1ft

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.

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.. .. f , .... 1111ridga ilf 1111

AI(C -

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...~ ........ 11-.rnl

LIM-

• Q I 7
• • 71
I A J IS

'up.

l:~QNP
.....

21
. 23

.AQI

mix
llalo Gr•r Cat Llttor BoiOd

'llalnod, Vory Ftlondly, 114-2•5-

I I

• KJ I

"'"'*'""' .

N~

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Pump Equl~, Located On
Rental . Lot AI 'JYcoon . Lako,

51

-114-:al&amp;841'8. •

Sodonol and 10 ..,....LA, FP,
I B I OiNt ... 2 IIdia. f.IS.OOO.OO. .BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
114-211H'/04orl14-21111112
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Vlfy nlco 11185 14170 with 2 ESTATES, 52 Woo-d DriH
~ .. t330.w.tk•lllato
b&amp;tfiL . . _ llland kitchen with .....
a movloa.
Call 11•· «1·2511.
C~pporV~tr.
c.~ 11 ..•11121 . .

Ct.:"·

N.IOIIOIIale~ln

Hair Styllat Wanted Rent Yllur
Station. Or llakl tto -'lb t1s
An Hour, Call Carol Kino. •••·

awn
148

PC uaera needed. 145,000 in-;.

0GEootB-11381.

.

lmmodla• Fui1·Tlmo Faallion For

A Custodian /HouukHper. A•

aume To Phillip Armatrong, Hu-

man Reaourcea, Ohio Valley
Bank. -120 Tlilrd oloonuo, Galilpola. Ohio ol5831 . Equal ()ppomnlty
E~:

PubliC Sale
end
' Auction
.

80

.

con:oo potontlal. Callt-100·513-

All Yarcl Salol Muat Ba Paid In
Advllnco. Doaclllno: 1:OOpm tho
day _ , . tho od II 10 run, SUndar &amp; llonday edldon- 1:oopm

frtdor.

.22.

HOllE JYPitiS.

&amp;Yiclnlly

Laborora noodod In . Pomoro.r
area. Mull haVe IIIII toe bootl.

Lomllfl Auction StrviCo. loalll · 3114-273-:M53.
Lomloy, Auctlo...,, Houaohold..
Elllla, l1lrm SolaL Colll1.........,
124,1, 114-8143

E--• ...........

-·-·

330 F111111 fOr Slit

r:==--~---:--:--:o:::-~
- - ...... ......
cut hoatlh, trlplo- Dlpo and
-. . . .
1111H1112.
.

-_..,,.,,.,..,,1._
30'

baoedon race. c:otor. ~.

Elllalancr. Now pain~ carpet,
otc. Reloroncoa. Dopoall. No

sex 1amllialltlllul or hldonll

.....
.e_ .:

This nen f"'l• wll not

k.-iogly IICOOP1
- l o r lOll-·In ¥iolatlon o1 tho
law.
tontoy

o....-. ...

Informed hlllll dl

••nos

advertltedlnt'roisnowaaoe ~~~-on ., oquol
. ' . opportunity bull:

...........
IOc.t .
·'
21 AuiCI " - --:

I'IU

. , lltl'al ' :

... . .
I

340 Ptlllnllllrlll
.
Bulldlngl

pat1.30UJS.SI12

Going 11u11nou IDr 101· locond

qulrld, 11...-1518.

11151.

Gradoua tMng. 1 ond 2 bodioom
apar1rn0n11 at Vlltago ond
- - Aportmenll In llkldloporL Ftom .211-QU • Clll 11 ..
11112-50iol. Equll Houalng Oppor-

s-. Rt 33 In lluon, 104-773350 Lots &amp;·ACIIIge
1 1/2 Acre loti Cota 1111 Road
""'21551811
50

lOiort, 3br opt., 8mlloo

11om RAC,

REA L ESTATE

.;

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~llCW\T

ITRlt.Mf
SOWXLD '
tiN£-~

wlltliCI to euy

.
.
Wil-Y...
l IW.JEN'T :£EN
r.~or

""

COIIC.t!
t Brnd limousine Hltlaara, 1

Rsol1torod Buil, 8 llllod &amp;.-.

.....

Due Around May. 1160 Oliver,

.151
.,..__21o12.

NH Hay , fl«~~. JD !jalot, 7 Fl
Buahh'oo .•Corn and Hiy. 81•·
141-3574.

Antlquoa, lurnltuia, glau. chlnL
· colna, tor-•. Iampi, ~~"'· toola,

., '

.

~

llir*\114,08f.7.a1 .

by Lule C8mpaa

&amp;ahflilllf_. .................. TCICIIPCIW:H .._.F
~----·----

• I.A R R W I'

E!CF

Cloan lato llod•l Cora 0•
Truck1, 1810 llodoll Or Nower,
Smith Buick Pontiac; 11100 Ea1t·

ZT

ELR

TWR

ZTT

LFZ.'-

ZIIF

ZT

f

X y·

ZENF

ZT

••

J T X

KMF l

CXPM _ X y -

•'

HCELNWAL

Y.

• lura• ~ 61 fl.
..... onbiod . . . loolow ·10-"""'
,_ ....

Tnle, Gitelmaa was gmm a bump in ·
· the right direction by Eut's debitable

double, but he still Hlleaed, watched, ·

· 301·

·'

I
J ·11'111

.'
,,

THOBRE

\,

2

;.

I I ·PI I
....,~wvr.o,.L_-;;,L--1_1~;,
5
l.
I." 1. ~ •I _

moody aDd blue.

J .&amp; D'1 ,..., f'ltrtl. Buying 1ol·

JTXLO

..-

.....
...,

IM\I1riCt.

- - GolllpoliL

T B B X C I!

E 0 F

ZTT

OTW H .

• club liD- in au 8bortiYe allot at 111

lillY &amp; Griln

.,--........

CELEBRITY CIPHER

. Suc:eeql
• .
.
Gltelmlll ndred dulamy'a lut heart, •
. : . and cubed the spade ja, lllcarclng
::l.;,...,......~-'-----' dummy'• club two. Finally be tried the

One ynr ·old stud cott. TenneaMOWioloor,I14-7.Z-2151.

. eatatea: alao appral~la, Oaby

.

..

_..._....... ,17..._..

but be won and .tried to cub tbe beut
. king. Declarer ruffed, cubed the diamond king, and played a trump to
dummy's jack. Now came a spade to.
tbe ldng, Welt dropping tbe 10. BadE to
dwilmy with a trump, Gltelmaa called
for tbe spade eipt ud underplaYed
billlilt wbea Eut coatrtbuled tile lift.

,&amp;, TKIW:o!

ICJuglr

' 12 Aucillfldu ·
11 0 7

four-plus trump&amp;. (A l~'PP to
three dlaiiiOildlll pre-emptlw.: a - "
hand wiD! long dlam.•d•.&gt; Tbia Ia a
• popullr method in expert clrclea.
.
After wlmilng tbe ftrat tridl: with tbe
~ • heart ace, Gitelmaa Immediately led
bis loweat apade to dummy's queea.
Perbapl Eut llbould have dlictecUbla,

. . . ..

-·-

(2wtla,).

... o.d ....

and Ulldentanding their llg-

wit~

804'8115-3754.

~lute Top Doll11: All u.s. 511·
.., And Gold Colna, Proolaota,
o....-L Antiquo .-ry; Gold
RtmP,.teao u.s. curr•ncr.
Sllr
Etc. llcqullitlona J-'ry
• M.T. Coin Shop,
.Socond

..-+-;--t

_.a

,_ contral hHt &amp; air. •2110/mo.

n

·• JsaiiHI
11 _
_

Hlht

......_

~

·Ancl~--­

.

aillcanee.
.
In thil deal irom tbe World Team.
Olympiad, the Can~dian Fred Gltelmaa landed billhla 1M dla!!M!!Mh
·
After Gllelmaa's
opening bid,
. North, Gearp lll!telman, iaade wbat
II called an Inverted i'aile. Two dlaIIIOildlllbond at
Hmlt nile In
diamonds: a good 10 polata. or more

Furnished 8 Room1 I Bath, No
Pots. Rolw.... And Dat&gt;ooh flo.

1 I.

=,~
....,..1-t-'i ........
- -1-+--1 . dh r

to uadentaad me.• Tbilla
applicable to bridce· ~ - waiting
for.J.~~aet or ap opponent to be

..

~

·.

27 111171

someoae

rAHI.l SUPPIII:c;
.~ I i'lt ., T:)''~

- ilm-ordtocrl..-

make any such pehsreta,
ilmllillon or cltlct1mlnallon.'

I'Ma

··'

. ,,

•~ecnt

the Hue "Watching and 'WaiUa&amp; ror ..,rf--1-

to - l t e 'any pofaletiC8,

ong;n, .. anr lntlt1tlonto

.....

~

21 ...... , . "'
time
.. ~ ¥
M Oldlr 'a l
.-:_:
wt 7 j ' ,ol' ' ....•.l l'~
• Tlwt5ia--.,_

7

The Moody Bluel, WI'IJte a 111111 called -!
. "Watching and Waltiag" tbat Included '

eo

1

!

.
•.

1

.

Sign in Doctors office: "If
You Treat a Sick Child Like An
Adult And a Sick Adult like a
Things Usually - - • -

'

.~, .=N:=.U=R~O:£~_=-K~, ~-h~~·
. I I - I 17 . 8 Complete ihothechuckle quoood
worch
I
L--L-.L-..&amp;.-L-....L.--'· 'yov ~lap from np No. 3 bolo..

Wanted To Bur: 4'11' 2 Man
"Bontom• Boat FolrPrlcod, et•·
Baying: Antiquo Furniture • Col·
loctlllliH. - · ·
Oullll,7112.
&amp; Old
81 ........

_.ling_,

Wanted To Buy: Wo Buy Junk

:

by filling in

"

•.

•-

milling

I T~INK 11VE DISCCWERED
T~E ~ECRET TO_LIFE ..

C,.a11H.a-1278, Or 114-~

aoea,

' l.lrLOYI.11'N1
C,l HviCf S

110

II

Jllllin ~-ud Re,y 'l'homAo, of

U1l\E

--·

·=-~

10 Ru't=
11 w ch811d
11

. By ftllllp Aldir

77W7850i'S0+773-S..07.

.
-773-110!8.
- -·
Selling -

40 .... K.e "'

-Door-- -.....

.

......

421.urw

Rick f'ltaraon Auction Company,
full dme t~ucdonur, campltlt
1uCdan Mrvlca. • Llcan&amp;ed
-.Ohio· &amp; Wut Vlrglrio, 304·

- . Gllipolll,

I Gnlooie
I S.ll I I
7 PCII55c

22FGM'

OpeiiiDg lead: • 2

thiO -per II iUjoct to
tile Fedora! Fol&lt; Houalng M.
ol1988 w1o1c1o makol k iilogll

lllcldlePorl

IIDI

2D .,,, 1

8autll . Wea&amp; Nortll .B at .
I I ·· . .Pau 21
Dbl. '
I'IU
z6 . .Pau . • •
Sl
Pau s.
I'IU

1M7 Olio aad 1..71
lladnJoml, 1Wo Bathraoml, HMI

' Aimlroy,

:=:•
.--.-un

c.oi.dan

I Wall I

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: SOuth

Six puppiOI, I WHkl old, 3·1
month1 old, 111-1185-3111 morn-

lntllor

·,.=::

' • Au7110r
Anile-

I X 10 I 4 2
• I 5 I

-Oidl1 .....2111

1 _...,.._
2C*MI-

.IIssial*,l-l·

• A

Pllpplol Ia Good Homo, Plrt Lab
and Gorman Shophord Vatlor, 7

DOWN

• Oluauwnllil

;17 !..¥a,.1.:

• K J I 2

. 01525.

.

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(allilr.)

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10 I .
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10 a 7·•

II

SCIAMUIS ANSWIIS

Volume - Spicy- Notch - Crafty -IMPORtANT
Grandpa always said that getting ah_ead in business
is like owning an old car- pushing is 1he most IMPOR·

H11p Wlllttd

AIION 1 All Araaa· I Shirley

Span, 104-175-1 ..a

TANT thing)

.Allie

Ayon Roproaentad ..l
n.dod. Earn monoy lor Chrlll·
mu lith • homa'al-"- , . 1112..ue l&gt;r 30._112-~5. Ind.

·~

.!'TUESDAY

.....;

~.;t

810

RVJCF S

,.

Homl!

-~lil~!pt~,OV~Im:IM~I~IS~· -t
• -BAIIEMENT
._ERMUOFING
..
1JnccNIIIional Nlollnw - - ·
. ...... - C O l lurnllhod.
·tablllhod 11~5. Call (11~~:: .
0170 Or '1-too-2117-0571.
i
Wldli:p;b:l. f
'
'

e• .

,. "

'

,...,._ "-'11 And !;arviCo; Alt.:.:
Any odd Joba, galntlng, guttora
ciHned. lt•-2•5-5179 or 301·

Homo Brandl Ovor 25 'IMrs Ex· .
parlonca All Worlr Gu111ntHd,
French City llaytag, IH-a.a-

175-7112.

rniS..

LEO (July :IJ.Aug, 22) In Order to expedill a maner with tomeOna today, you
could take to hNit lllge promlm madli
to yeu by lnOIIter. Unfonalnalely, H may
be juat inlecufll ..... ~e~c.
VIRGO (Aul. IUePt 22) You will be
1 w•~~ecuoclly wyou expecllhingtl to
come toci euly. Only wor1r ond eonelo-

.•

-

.

•

BERNICE .
BEDEOSOL

·iwncy ... Ill'. . . - - .
.
LIMA (llpt.lao4ct. 23) Enjoy ~
toclly. bul lly to' dO Ill • lncl!rpeneMIIy .
II pclll!ble. You· havto llrong W18lllul
.
ICDIII'Io (GilL Nolo. II) h II IIIII lodir ... you do. ""' ..._ CIWCIIt 'lOt
• ~ ctblw havtl adtlll*l. H you do, K
.could be expa11d In an ambarraaalng

.utgllthM- be • •...,.

a•

m.••·

~AJ~Ui(Nov. ~.21)You
... ....., . . ltlrtd of pnon wi10 INnlca
lhlngltltluugh bafora going Into action.

Today, hOna ... r, you

IIIII¥ try to get air-

bome,wtl!tOIU PI 1J1 5 .
CA,fiiCOIIN (Die, 11-JM. 11) Com_ . .. ~ wNoll havtl.,...
~ II1IOOIIIr lhue fw !ltlgltl lllka I
. lllgli ........ ...., ..... Walall . .

,........... allc ,.,_,.,,.
'

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