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Ohio Lottery

Cincinnati
·defeats
.South Florida

Pick 3:
2-3-9
Pick 4:
1-5-1-6
BuckeyeS:
2-23-25-27-36

sPotuonPege4

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lloatly cloudy tonight

wllh • • • • Of thundlratorm llbly. ~-so.

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Vol.41,110• •
01117, Ohio VelleJ Pubhhlng Compeny

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2 s.ctlono,12 ....... 3 5 - .
" Gennett Co. -..,..,., '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 21, 1997

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l'n dustrial park
riets ssoo·,ooo
.in state funding

LS PKG., AWM. WHEELS, AM/FM CASS.,,'AIR,
5SPD, POWER SmRING; ANTI-LOCK B~ ·~
. AS

LOW
AS:

' The Meigs Coonty Community Improvement Corporation today was .
awarded a $SOO,O(l() Urban and Rutallnitiative Grant from the Ohio Department of bevelopnlent.
.
, Lt. Gov. Nan.cy P. Hollister I1Uide the announcement at I p.m. at the Roy41 Oak Reson near Pomeroy. She was joined in the ann&lt;iuncemenl by State
·aep.Jcihn A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston, CIC ll'iemben an~ local offiCials.
, The grant will be applied IOwan! the cost of consti'IICtion lind enaineering of a public l'olld, a wa~r main and a wasiewatcr system in the Tuppers
Plains Industrial Park. The $940,000 project will ~vide for the first CIC
industrial site in Meigs County. Release of the grant 1imc1s is pending approval
.,by the State Controllina Board. ·
.
·
• "I IIIli very pleased that the Meigs County CJC chose to utilize the Urban
and Rural Initiative· Fund program in their economic development efforts,"
Hollister announced in a press release earlier Jhis morning.
"The development of this industrial plll'k will serve to promote conlinlled
., economic growth in Meigs County and the southeastern comer of the state
well into the 21st century," ~he added.
· The Urban and Rural Initiative Fund is one of four le&amp;islative COIIIpOI!Cnts
of Jobs Bill III, the state's newest economic development stimulus pecbce
·that specifically targets Ohio's distres~ urban and rural communities;.she
explained.
.
.
Hollister is considered the chief architect of Jobs Bill Ill.
More information on today's annountement will be appear in the Sund8y
Times·Sentinel.
·

Sen. Glenn

It's .official:
Glenn won't
·run in 1998
NEW CONCORD (AP) -

Jo!m
·the astronaut wh~ gave the
:U.S. space program a much-n~ed
. boost .by orlliling the flart!l 3S years
ago, will not seek a.fifdl term in the
· U,S. Senate.
.
The 7S-ye8r-old Democrat told ari ,
audience at his alma mater, Musk;
: ingum College, that age was his only
reason for retiring.
·
"If today's politics IJICk civility,
my reaction is not to run away, but to
wort harder until we make it beuer,"
Glenn said Thursday.
. MASON, W.Va.- A MilSOn doc- . District coun to strip Wesanoreland
"But for all the advances in sci- tor hu been jndicied by a federal pf2.7acmbeownsinMasollCounence and medicine that 1 have su~r. , miid J1li'1 hi rhArleSt&lt;in.·on cha.Ws ·
ilh ciCc&amp; of trust . . . 111ore •
· ""--'.· ·· ..I.e.. ~~ '"-'·!·~·,. o!ii.' t- 'm'. de~ . ;~~l~ ·~._if •-....- ~~liM ·•
• ·· ' · .,_._:.efta DHil..--.o-~~~ ~"l/ .,... ra~·• -~ CWs ~ wr-. :o ,. L'f~]ftiyt'Pfi~ "'·· h .....
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Gl~nn,

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Area physi~ian faces
37-count ·indictment
u;-

G"n Po.·m·erov .

CONSTRUCTION- The Racine v.t.ntna Monument II axpected to be com-

ial'

'"1:p~"l
sJ ·_,.~w· ::~:,~~.!twaa~~~
iadi~
.·"' ~~~:~!b~::: ·.
U pr · ~.
mary~ :_ at his office.
. ·
·
U.S. Dnlg Enforcement Administra-

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7'

- Westmm:eland,
~~ 3rc:.!~~::~~~~:
:l:'u~;~~~:d.!'::g~~
41.
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.

· ·un.·ty-WI•de· landThebilledindictment
said WestmoreA raid was conducted on the
co
Medicaid for services that Westinoreland office June 23, 1995.
.. slated. ~ •. were
not performed. He
alleged- . Westmoreland claimed at tha£· lime
levy
ly prescri~Jt:danddisre!'seddrugsiO agents he!d ·&amp;U~ on
patie~ts, as
.
·
·
· support pauents' lddicuons.
well as his family, who was 1n .the
Accordinc
the indictment, Westmoreland home. adjoining
for May ',6.
Westmoreland illegally prescribed office. ·
.

V6, ·sSPD, ALUM. WHEELS, AIR,
L5 PKG, AM/FM CASS. . ~ .

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primary will be . ,drugs in ~r for his wife ~o profit
held in Pomeroy 10 nomin.ate .candi- from her ~smcss, Our Family Phar:
da!eSforseatsolivillag~council,and macy, which. waslocatedoncbe~
. a county-wide special election will , 'property as the Westmoreland Pam•take place to decide an addition~ tax ljy Care Center.
· ·
levy for the Carleton School and · ' The indictment does not list .tbe
Meigs Industries on May 6.
~.ount of money Westmoreland !s
Middleport, however; will not e,st1mated to have rece1ved from his
have a primary due to the lack of can- acts.
didates.
.
• ' '\, Westmorel~d is ~ha_rgec! in sev·
As of the 4 p.m. deadline Thun- .~ ~ount~ wit~ '!istnbutmg preday five Republican candidates bad scnp11on drugs w1thin 1,000 feet of a
filed for the four scats to be filled on S!'~~l. His_ office, as . we~I ~ ll!s
PomeroyVillageCouncil.
Wlfesformerpharmacybuddmg,IS
. Filing were Oeorge L. Wright, lOcated next door to Wahama High
William A. Young and John.F. Mu~s- SfhCJ&lt;!I.
cr. incumbents, and Kyle S!ark . ;;, Prosecutors for u.s. Altomey
Woods and Frederick Werry Jr. The · Rebecca Betts have asked the U.S. ·

· A Republiput

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V6,5SPo;Ai.UMl
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oLarrynlyDeW.mehocruranlgt,owfihleOwWasl.lli~:uQmn~hent
.,. ,
fall ballot.
·
lnMiddle)l(lrt,theonlytwofiling.
petitions were Sandra K Iannarelli
and Rae A. Gwiazdowsky, both
Republican incumbents. The other
two council members whose terms
expire this year, .Mick Childs and
John Neville, did not file.
.
In the special · eh:ctioil to ll!ke
place in all 28 precincts, voters ~ill
·vote on an additionaltax·of 1.8 mills
for a continuing period of time f&lt;lr
maintenance, capital cons'!Uclion and
·operation ofllte Carleton School and
Meigs lndustri~s workshop for persons with mental retarda,lion and
developmental disabilities. . .
The .validity of the pellllons filed
will be checked by the "deigs Coun·
ty Board of Elections at' a meeting on
Tuesday.

Au!hotities took patient chartS.
narcoucs records sheets, prov1ders,
papen .and a computer, Westmoreland Slid.
Westmoreland has drawn much
support from the Mason County area
~ince. the raid, with candlelight v.ig1ls .bemg beld and many leiters bemg
wntten to the local newspaper. West·
more!~ has bee" well known for
contnbuUng to youth efforts, such as
the livestock sale at the Mason Counly Fair, drug ~sistance program,
.y,outh baseball league, as well as
beinll a panner in educa!ion with ·a
local elementa,ry.school.
.
Westmoreland was unavailable
for comment on tbe charges.

G
' alll"a· a.utho'rHI"e·s se'ek' II" nk.
.
•
between
house fire; bodieS
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.

· "'MERCERVILLE - A custody • recently involved in a domestic issue.
baule took an !'Crie tum for a Ouyan
The mother of the child, Theresa
Township family on Thursday.
. Sheets, 32, had filed a domestic vio· The Guyan TOwnship Volunteer lence report against Montgomery
· Fi~pepanment was dispa\Ched to with the Gallia County . Sheriff's
thetes1dence of Roger Montgomery, Depanment on Sunday at noon. .
364Johns Creek Road, Crown City,
_The n:port read. "live-in boyfriend
at LS2 p.m.·to find tbe home (ully pulled a knife on her and, pushed a
cnJI.alfed in flames.
.
1\nife to.llcr stomach and brandished
Fjre· units located two deceased a rifle and stated he was going to kill
persons inside .the residence, a small her and her kids."
child and what was apparently a
1he Gallia Common Pleas Court
male.
· Jllveoile Division des!S!'ated Sheets
T!Je · Gallia Cou.nty ·Sheriff's as the legal custodian of the minor
Department has disclosed tllot a child, Tiffany Montgomery. on Tueshandgun 'was located near the adult day.
body. .Deputies believe that the ram·Montgomery was c~ in Galily re*iding at this location was ·
(Cantlnued on Page 3)

arb di

the

working to have the SlnK:tme Jeady
foraMemoriaiDaydedicationceremony.
·.
Work began last fall on tbe
monument, adjacent to the Racine
A~can Legion-Post 602, across
from stai Mill Park.
10 date, much of the work on
the monument bas been completed
with volunteer labor and donated
supplies.
leffen Excavating of Raci~
prepared the site and a 30:.1:!y-30foot concrete slab was poured with
concrete donated by Valley Brook
Concrete of Lakin, W.Va.

the

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vete/fans·monument looks
toward Memorial Day dedicatio.n·
Vi 1 t

his

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Raci~u~e:m;Mo::rn:! •ate

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alll~o.ydldlclltlon. Thel1n.tcturellbelngbulhllrgelythrough~
mh·~e!•.· ~ ~. :,v~!~ B. rook -~c. rete'. .·La..kin, w_.va., .pciured the·. _
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George Donovan of Syracuse ans Memorial.FuJJd, Racine .Home
finished the slab, which will hold National Bank, in care of Kelly
the stone markers bearing the .Eichinger, P.O. Box 68, Third
name, rank, branch of service and Street, Racine, O.bio'45771.
dates or service of area veterans.
• Names must be submitted ·by
. The Village of Racine supplied . March 15 to have them put on the
· ·some equipment, while the Amermonument by Memorial Day, said
ican Legion Post provided the project treasurer Tom Wol(e.
land.
Names can still be put on after that
Eventually, the monument will deadline; they just won't be put on
feature park benches and plans arc until after Memorial pay, he
being made for local garden clubs added.
to assist with landscaping.
·
"You do not have to a member
For $100, people can have a of a veteran's organization to have
veteran's name, rank, branch of ser- your name on the monument,'' he
vice and dates of service placed on said. "You just have to be
. a veter-.
the monument. Checks should be an."
.made payable to the Racine Vetcr·

Tiras h wa·t er b I•tl s ·now coming
•
• · e ·.·re.s.•~ d.ent s
m0 nth. y. f . r.RacIn
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Racine residents are now getting
th\lir trash and water bills monthly
instead of quanerly, it was explained
atMondaynight'smeetingofRacine
.Village Council.
With the installation o,f . water
meters, the bills are now being sent
out monthly, it was noted.
, The trash bills will be adjusted at
the end of the quarter io handle any.
extra ga5 the residents had·during the
qu'!flCr.
Council advise&lt;fresidents to look
attbeir water bills to see how much ·
water they are using .because water
bills at this time are based on the old
monthly rate and not on· the amount
of water being used.
.
. Curbside recyclinJ is free, it was
el(plained.
Lee Layne, a member &lt;&gt;f the
Board of Public Affain, said there
· have been incidents of residents tam-.

pering with the new water meters.
1995, in which the trailer broke off a
In the future, charges will be Hied utility pole, a handrail on steps and
against anyone twnpcring. with the street ·signs, and kept on going.
meters. Only walcrdcpanmcnl'pcrThe vehicle was stopped at the
sonnel are allowed to open the Ritchie Bridge and the driver cited to
mcten, it was explained.
county court. The .freight company, ·
Paul Evans, Greenwood Ro~d, Norih Star from Michigaa, has
approached counc1l about purchasmg ignored all communications on .
the plot of land on wh1ch h1s tra1lcr .repairing the damage.
is located.
.
·.
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· Firefighter David Neigler report·
· Mayor Scott H•!l •a•d council ed the Insurance Service Office
would-,havc to check to find out Jhe would be in later this month to sur·
size of the area and 1L' value, as. well • vey .the . fire department and water
as check to make sure thc.re IS no system for the insurance .rating. At
restriction on the deed hm1tmg the present time, rates for insurance arc
property to cemetery use only.
on a Class 7 rating.
Hill said the money could be put
· In addition, the. fire dcpanmeiu
into the endowment fund to help pay will host the county firefighters for·a
for the mowing.
.
· fighting brush fires class on March 6.
Council asked Clerk Karen Lyons
It was reported that Ruth Snod·
to sen&lt;l a letter to.the Oh10 Bureau of grass made an inquiry about the
Motor Vehicles about a semi-tractor burned trailer silting ne~t to her resand trailer accident in November
(Continued on Page 3)

Natur~ of~· FFA instructioll, .activity grows beyond agriculture.
(l!dltor'l nola: Tille - " nwkl
thl 88111 anniYerllrY of Nlllonll
FFA WM1t. Owr 400,000 I'PA IIMIIIblr8 eoro11 thl 1'11111011 IIICI 21,000 'In Ohio will Clllt.illl I'FA
w.IL)

' By PHIJP A. HAMM .
8H8 ltud1nt CorrMPOhcllnt
.
The FPA IIU c~pd over the
yean in some aspects. but not in others.
Pete Thoren of Racine:, a ·fot:mer
. filA J11Cmber, and c'urrelll Southern
c

High School FFA advisol! Aaron wanted to become farmers later iri
Sayre ot Letart Falls discussed SOlD!' life, said Thoren. EaCh student~
.of the c;llanges they witneSsed in their a project that each dealt with direct.. ·
. ly and every011e soon learned to keep
yean in Jhe FPA.
In the late 1940s and early 19S0s, .records of their· costs and cxpendithe Raclhe FPA was still fairly young, tW'CS that would help them in tbeir
Thoren ' explained. The proarams fanning careers.
were mO.tly agriculture-based in
"KecpillJ records tauJbt us about
keeping IVith FFA's mission: provid- what we had pown and whllt the cost
ina America's youna farmers a plaoe were, • he said.
to learn more· ibout agriculture.
Contests 11 that time were few;
. All .that belonaed to the FPA'had parliarnontary proc'edute, ,the runcome fro!il farms in the .arel, and all· ning of a businca~~~CCting, and pub- '
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lie speakins1"C~ available but such
contest as soil judging, forestry and
envirothons came later with the idea
of conservation.
1
The FFA biiS challJed sirJCe the 40
yean that Pete was a member.
In today's·FPA. i slana mottO is,
. "Were not just sow, eows and plows
.an)'IIIOR. we're an orpnization about

subjects that are taught to tciday's FPA
students.
In addition, penonal development
is a major key to the FFA today.
Leadership, cooperation, and probICm-solving are intepaled into the
classes 10 provide its students skills
they will need in the 21st century.
When Sl)'re sllrted •hinJ aari·
culture
at SoUibem High School iii
much 11101e." .
.
AaJic:ullunl i$ not just abotu fatm· 1916. there were only lbput 30 stuing~nymore, it's about conservation, dents in the proanm. .
"The previous yean before there
workiiiJ Yti\11
technoiOIY and, other
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had been a new teacher every year Of ,
two, and the interest .wasn't there •
bec.ause or that," he said.
. .·
The FPA has ; improved patly,
Sayre explained. .
"From 1931 to 1980, there were
only I0 or less state FPA dearee&amp; in
the Racine chapter," he said.
• . State FPA depees .,. aJYetl to ·
those members that comprlae the top , ;
IWO ~at in the stale.
'·
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"Prom 1990 to preMM, we have
(Continued on ..... I)
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Frldar, Februlry 21, 1111

·commentary

Psgl2
Frtd&amp;r,
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The Dally Sentll)el • Page 3

OHIO VVeilthcl
SMunlay, Feb. 22

,Eastern Board discusses
~tempora,Y office relocation

Accu~ ro......t ror

Peggy Riggs Anderson

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel · Patent office has been turning - profit

Pqu Ilitp Aadenon, 73, of~ . W.V.., died Friday, Feb. 21, 1997
in Holzer MediQI Qntcr.
Born Au1. 17, 1923 in M11011, daqbt.er of Norma Martine Rius of
Mason, aad the lae J - Riley RigJ. sbe wu retired from the Poole Mineral Corp.
She was also preceded in death by a sister, Patricia Riggs; and by a son. in-law, Oeorge Dean BurnaudJJer.
Surviving in dlition to her mother 8le her husband, Paul R. Anderson;
a son and daughter:-in-law, Chutes R. and Nancy L. Anderson 'of Mason;
·daughters and son-on-law, Peggy Dee Bumgardner of Reston, Va., aad Nan·
cy E. and David Eads of Point Pleasant, W.Va_; and fiv~ grandchildren and
eight grw-gratldehildrcn.
·
·
·
Servi..:es will be I p.m. Monday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
with ~ Rev. John Hart officiating. Burjal will be in the Ravenswood Cemetery. Fnends may call at. the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.

'LstMBslid in.l!U8

By..... Aftdlfbuiauttacy.
At'-!tbat'swbat.-ltoto,fEII 11993.
811111 J.n llaln
Back ia 1990, lawmabn decided
The PTO's npabW with aelfBut for IOiiiC idexplicable uaon,
WASHINGTON
·lmagi11e
a
to
make
the
Pro
entirely
self-sufti.
·
IIUfticiency
worked
becter
IIIIa
•y'
* s of Congress- and now the
111 Court St., P~, OhiO
JO-MICot
aFncy
that
operated
cient.
Some
7S
percent
of
'
the
one
had
hoped.
The
lpllCy
bepn
Clintmadministnlion-havcdecid81...,...2158 • Fa: 11112·2157
openli11g more like a successful eel ui dcnil the FrO's II\OIIICntum.
entilely free of taxpayer SllppOrt, yet
.
was stilllble to provide the public the
!Mtli-• than a govemmen1 aacncy. Lui ye~r, Congress retuned to the
kiDd of efficiency that other govern- By
As efficiency increased, more .and PTO just $61 million of the sliS milment llpllcies Ollly dream aboiJL
d
.more patents were able .to. be lion in IUfCltarie funds. They put the
.· ..
Suchanapacydoesindeedexist.
proces'ed each year. The .,eacy's other$54nii1HIIIIintothe'll-ras
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
But that's not the hardest thing to
RIVCIIIICS skyrocbt.ed, aad theiJ' bud- if it were tax revenue. This was by far
believe.
get iacrased each year. P10 ollicWJ · the 1110t11 Coq1ess had taltep from the
ROBERT L WINGETT
The U.S. Paient and Thldemark
used the money to impro&gt;e agency PTO budp since the new system
Publisher
. Office doesn't cost the federal gov- agency's budget was al~elldy funded t.echno)()gy, enlarge the work force was started six years ago.
'
ernment a dime. It's entilely ~If- by inventors applying for patents. · and enhance worker training pro. Patent offiCials wC~en't thrilled
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
funded, paid for by the fees'charged Congress decided it wasn't unrea- grams.
.about last ye~r's cuts. but II least they
o.n.rat Manager
Conllalllr
to iaventon who apply for patents. sonable to ask inven!OIS to also covWhile other govcnimcntqenclc$ .still had the president on their side But Congress -,end the Clinton er the ~est of the costs.
wm squandering money, the PrO - 1!1' so they thought
n..Senllaelli I
lldministration -- ha~n't been able to
So legislation was passed which in=ased ~evenuc and. produCtivity
~iously, Presideltts Bush and
ia.-~(30!1 .....
,..,.,.P'If 'lid.
leave well enough alone. In ~eeent added a "surcharge" to the pr&lt;icess, ciich year. This was ti ttcmettdous Clintm had always asked Congrf:ss
1; ') . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
~.,...
yean, they've cut the agency's bud- · ingfeespaid by inventors, ending the plus for the economy. MOle Amm- · to rea.m all of the·surcharge money
get
by tens of millicins of dollars a Pro's reliance on taxpayer money. can inventon beins granlfd patents to the PTO. If Congress gave blct
- . , - - . . , - .. .,.-.rlleStadael.nr--.
C"WSUOJ, Ofllo .fS1fl: Of, F',U to
• . •.
•
year, imperiling the agency and the But the~e was a curious footnote to meant mo~e new American products less then the full amount, as it dicl ' ~----~-----..,;.,;,ol;;,_~-------"" th~ands of inventors who rely on . the 1990 legislation.TitC money gen, on the market each year.
year, it was againSI the chief execuits services.
crated by the surcharge was to be seJtt · · Meanwhile, the tax money that tive's wishes.
.
.
Even the most ·seasoned Wash- directly to Congress. While certain- once was used to fund PTO operaBut Cljnton shocked (iat.ent offiington observers marvel at the sheer ly inconvenient, patent offiCials lived ti011s CPUid instead be used to fund cials earlier this month when he
stupidity and shortsightedness of with this bit of buleaucracy because other government progtalfls. VK:c called for · $92 miUion Of the .surcongressional
and administration Congress, at the president's Rljuest, President AI Oore commended the . charge money to be taken away from
consu~ers officialswho'vctakentheaxerothis
· wouldappropriatemost-ifnotall- agency when he conducted his the' PTO in 1998. Patent officials
qncc-proud
outpost
in
tftc
federal
- of the money right back to
the PTO. National Performance Review in have been reluctantto criticize ClinDear Editor,
citizens of our county. There's·!Ilk
.
.
---'
ton ,publicfy, ' though. an agency
It would be the right thing to do if that gas prices will fluctuate in .the ,.._..-.,__.;..__-,rr.-___.-,=;;;..----~--...,..--~
business owners and leaders would next few months. How wiU you alid
~"'uClll . . · ,
sjJok.eswoman told our associate
notify communities when economic I bow where to go - to be or not to
"'",••
Aaron KaQl that Clinton's proposal
and outside forces harm local con- be • filled up with expensive powo
t;Rev a...o&lt;:a.o.s ?.
was "hard to · swallow." • Inv~tor
·1 """'"'"
advoCates have blast.ed Congress and
sumers -- the bread aad butter of chips and cheap gas?
the p~esident for imposing a de-facFinally, and this is the mother of
liusiness. .
to "hidden tax"
For example, I learned .that all business errors. The~e have been
. . on inventors.
.
Oshkosh coveralls will file 7S work- two 1V shows Ibis week;. and tbe~e
The PTO has no\V put a fi1:ezc on
ers in April, with the stitchi.ng being will be an upcoming movie about
the hiring of new pateni examiners;
done in South America alld perbaps huge rocks from outer space that will
and is desperately trying to assess the ·
in pri50!1 camps in Cllina. Whal a slap damage our houses, chicken coops
damage. For starters, offiCials esti' .
in the face! Americans will pay, in the and bcidies. Not one •local business
mate that it will now .-Jte four
long run, mo~e for a 100-year-old ·· has advertised low .co5t bomb shelmonths lonaer for the Pro to process
national treasU~e, Oshkosh B'Gosh t.ers. Nor has a public emergency
patent applications.
bibs, a pair of warm aad most prac- meeting been held by the Humane
A staffer on the House Appropri,
tical wearing apparel.
·
Society advising ·us wbele to take
ations Committee said tile money is
And why didn't the Wall Street pets when the asteroid rocks bum
needed for "deficit !eduction," and
Journal give warning to farmers, through our fragile atmospbele.
that the Pro niust sacririCC like all
motorists and kids on bikes that the · If a rock can kill 2SO million
other federal agencies in these beltcost of tires WOI!Id go up, when the dinosaurs, image what it could do lo
tightening times. ~ sentiment was
GQOdyear blimp was symbolically cats, dogs, .cows, wild turkeys and
echoed by .,. administration official,
shot down, sold to foreign interes~? . earth worms. At leaSt bott.erflies and
who told us "this is a period in which
· Consider the innocent tomato in birds will survive.
we have to look for a wide range of
cruel winter weather, not a peep from
In a more moderate tone, I would
sources of savings in order to leduce
producers we would be paying high- suggest we abstain from blame, but ·
the budget deficit."
er prices for hard hot-house tomatoes. at least encourage lenders to stop
Is it not the ~esponsibility of busi~ . loans to any business that is not conJKk ~ad Jaa Moiler
riess to protect the purse of our sumer friendly.
are writen for United Future
nation's fragile tonsuq~ers? ·
Rol"r Reeb,
. .
·Sylldkate, lac:.
Racine
• Everything from,the cost of living
to candy bars; out of sight for poor

-

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••

•

INO.

Jack Anderson .

.. "' ..

an

Jan Moller

• IColumbus
140" I
I
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..... ____
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__

. Kathryn "Katie" L. Hill, Mansfield, formerly of Meigs (;:011nty. died Thurs·
.day, Pe.b. 20, ·1997 at the Mifflin Cm Center, Mansfield.
She was born May'S, 1933 in Tuppers Plains, daughter ofLavina Brannon of Tuppers Plains, and the late Harold Brannon. She was a sewing
machine openuor at National Seating Company for 30 years, and was a member of the Diiunond Hills Baptist Church.
She is survived by her husband of 44 years, Robert L. Hill; a daughter
and son-in· law, Linda and Tom Gloriosa of Mansfield; two grandchildren;
two brothers, Bernard "Buzz" Brannon of Mansfield, and James Brannon of
Reedsville; two sisters, ,Nina Sanders of Reedsville, and Eileen Kirkbride of
Lexington; and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in d'*th by a brother, George Lynn Brannon.
FriendS may call today from· 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the Finefrock Funeral
Home. Services will be held on Saturday, 2 p.m., at the Diamond Hills Baptist Church by the Revs. Christopher Thomas and Donald Holuapple. Burs~wers and thunderstorms· lik.e.
ly... Mainly after midnight. Windy. ial will be in the Oak. Grove Cemetery.
Lows near 50. Southwest winds 15 to
2S mph and guny. Chance of rain 60
percent.
A memorial service for Robert T. Reynard, 84, of Rutland, who died Sun· Saturday...Mostly cloudy. A day, Feb. 16, I997, will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Middleport Conchance of morning showers. Turning gregational Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses, State R~t.e 124, Midcooler with an early morning high dleport.
.
..
ncar so...Then temperatures falling
Omitted in the obituary from a listing of survivors provided by the Fishinto.the lower 40s. Chance of rain 40 er Funeral Horne was his wife of 43 years, Shirley Webster Reynard.
.
percent

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.Letters to.the·ed.itor
·Business should l'rotect

Farewell, early spring:
chilly conditions return

..

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.

sund~~= ~~:.:'~ighs

A R

Crash causes
m1n0r InJUrieS

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Hospital news

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Trash, w.ater

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Stocks .

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Glenn won't run in 1998

ReligiQn and ·sports score ·a big .one

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Treaty troubles

••Iter

Nature of·FFA instruction

Fugitive brothers indicted
:for alleged role in shootout

h

George.R•.

with rare ·nighttime landing
:1:S..

WQrd games being pl·ayed· in..Was_
hington . _ _ ,. "
W/11/.

Gallia authorities seek

wi!~~~:}~~~:~:es~~~ Astronauts return.to base

.

Dear Editor,
•· says that she his been deprived of ihe
I·
.
.
.
.
My brother, Jim Adams, left his companionship, soc[ety and consor- By William A. RU.her
saddle the GOP with mponsibility . Medican:than'he was willing to con- .cisely,. a couilt.errevoluiion ...: and
earlhly life on Feb. 8', 1997. On Feb. . ti\lm she received as the spuuscofhcr ·
"Without knowing the force of for the governmental shutdown that sider'last year.'! Even the headline eventhatgrat.esontheAmericatiear.
12, the day Jim was buried, my_ husband, prior to the accident, and words," warned Confucius, "it is followed.
rend; "President. Offers Medi~m To call it simply "a mid-course c~
flther, Earl Adams, received a sum- !hat the accident has also diminished impossible to know men." .
This year, with public pressu~e Savings."
.
~eetion" IJIIIY n!)l del-it justice, and
mons that stated he was being sued the benefits she had p~eviously
In the Washington wind-tunnel,
How do you like that? Whe~ 1ccrtainly wouldn't satisfy Republi~y Mr. Aaron Sayre and.Mrs. Shirley enjoyed as Mr. Sayre's spouse.
words cat\ acquire a velocity capable
Republicans propose them,they'~e cans with two X chromosomes, bu(Sayre for a combined $~0.000.
, It is of my opinion that a summons of killing anything they strike. '1bey
lJm • US Sf "cuts" or·even ·:&amp;las!M:s:" Whe~ Mr. - to mix my metaphors -- you catch
Mr..Aaron Sayre is suing him for for solilething that allegedly took can also be used to mask wrongdoChnton does the proposmg, they &amp;~e • more nies with honey than you do
$25,000 over an alleged automobile place nearly two years ago, Feb. 20, ing (as in President Clinton's ·pas- heavy 'on both parties to asiee on' il magically transformed .into "saY· wiih vinegar.
.
accident. that took place on Feb. 20, 1995, would not have had to have sively phrased admission that "mis- ·budget that will balance by 2002. the .. ings."
, .
But words can also help to illu- ·
1995. Mr. Sayre says he has had to been served to grieving father on the takes wm made" in his 'campaign's Republicans were looking forward to
When the RepubliCans took con- minate important concepts, and tbefe
obtain e~tensive, on-going medical day of his son's funeral, but it was.
fund-raising drive).
watching Mr. Clinton eat a little crow. trol Of Congtess ~~ November 1994, is no better example of this than the
l!i:atment for the physical injuries and
If anyone would like to check my
Let's take a look at some recent
Because such a budget will ~ey c~u!!Yhatled the ~vent as a expression "moral ·poveny." Bill
problems caused by the alleged·acci- factS, please do so. They m open examples of the use, and mis~. of inevitably ~equire ·reductions in the
~evolutton.. And that, w1th gencr- Bennett has been using it recendy,
dent: and further medical treatment record.
words in 011r national politics.
rate ofMedicm expenditum larger ous h~lp from~ media, ~emained:a with s_uperb effect. It sclrcely ~ven
will be requiled in the. future.
JacqueUne Adams McLaugbllo,
By now everybody with a pulse than be was willing to accept last favonte R~pubbcan term for the1r needs definition. Better yet, Jt has
Mrs. Shirley Sayre is also suing
Sunbury knows about the trick played by the year.
. .
takeover nght through 199S ·and ,, available to it, mutatis mutandis, the
him for another S2S,OOO because.she
Democrats and their media lapdogs
And sure enough, Mr. Clinton's 1996.
• . '
whole am'lory of concepts the.liber- ·
last year, in describing Republican proposed budget does, as 11\l boasts,
What they ~ailed to rerncm~r is als .have: constructed around f;op(oposals to redu&lt;:!l the ' rate of "go halfway". toward the level of that the Am~~1can ~ople,Bien tall nomic poverty: poverty as a,;root
inc~ease in MedicB~e expenditures as leductions advocated by the GOP. Is that fond o~ revolubons. The one caOSe, the "poveny level," etc.
"cuts'' or even "slashes.... ·
Mr. Clinton; then, at last proposing that star1ed m 1?76 was OK, but the
. Bestof~ll. it puts in a nutsl!ell the
Never
mind
that
Mr.
Clinton
him·
"cuts"
or
"slashes"
in
Medicm?
.
French
Revolut1on
of.
1789
was
at
central
problem of modeni American
By WALTER R. MEARS ·
self
proposed·
to
!educe
the
rate
of
Well,
no.
As
New
York
limes
best
a
mcssn~d
unsau_
sfactory
bus•society.
.
.
1
. AP Special Comtapondent
. To end on a lighter note, have
., WASHINGTON- A Republican legacy pushed by a Democratic White inc~ease by a figure not much small- reporter Alison Mitchell put it in the ness, and the Bolshevik Revol~t1on
er
than
the
Republicans'
.
The
presilead
paragraph
of
a
dispatch
from
.
of
1917
was
a
thoroughgomg
d1~
you
noticed how rarely General ShaHouse and now stalled in the GOP Senate, the treaty against-&lt;:hemicill
dent
insisted
that
the
Republican
Washington
on
Jan.
21,
"One
day
ter,
liltashvili
is described as the "chsir"
weapons is 11 commitment to do what the United States already 'i s-doing"cuts·
"
'
were
inexcusable,
and
swore
after
his
inauguration
President
ClinIt
seems
likely
that
the
Reptlblic119
of
the
Joint
chiefs of Staff?
get rid of them.
.
.
·
he
wOI!Id
n.
e
ver
permit.
them.
He
ton
made
a
conciliat?ry
gesture
to
rhetoric
about
the
"revolution
of
WDUIID
A. llulher 11 a Dlstln· That is only one of the ironies in the 4ispute over an agieement first nego.
ti.ted while Ronald Reagan was president, completed under George Bush firmly vetoed the Republican budget COnJRISSIOnal Republicans today.by I994.. turned off a lot Of voters - par- . gullbed Fiellow .of the c.......
lll!d signed late in his administration. A total of 161 nations have signed it that contained them, and (with the announcing that his budget .proposal ticular(y women. Besides, it wasn't a Institute fof_tbe Stady of Siuelmedia's invaluable help) managed to would contain more savings ·. in revolution anywaf. It was. more pre- manslalp and Pollticall'bllalafiiY. ·
now, and 68 hl,ve ratified.
.
.
It will go .into effect on April 29 with or, more probably, without U.S.
"ification. Russia hasn' t ratified it either, although Washington and Moscow
I
b!Mh'&amp;~e oommitted to destroying their·chemical arsenals, the world's largest
s~kpiles. · · ,
.
.
..I
~ The U.S. timetable is to be done with it by the end of 2004, beating the
.
.
.
.
. I,
1tYear d~line the treaty would set. "That destruction process is well under By George R. Plagenz
pound defensive end (and ordained · ~nd his wife went together into the bi!SCb&amp;ll season. ·
.
Willy," Defense Secretary William Cohen said in urging Senate ratif1cation.
One isn't altogether prepared minister) Reggie White might take ho9pitll chapel. .
The services would follow a sim~ There'~ a lot more to the treaty. which sets up the most extensive system
~hen a 280-pound pro football play- the opportunity to lead his team in a
.Now 86 and li_ving in Madeira pli: format. The players woidd mitt
ft)' verification, monitoring and inspections ever made part of an anns con- er, asked for his post-game reaction prayer ohhanksgiving while·millions Beach, Fla., with his wife, Waddy after breai\fast in uoom in·the hoWl
trl&gt;l agreement.
· ··
.
..
.
.
his team's come· from-behind vic.recalls sayi~g. "God, my mother .. whe.e the visiting team was • • · :
zBut opponents question whether it leally can be enforced; noting that such to
tory, !ells a national TV audience,
Pla~enz believed in you. If you .,., he~e,.l'll Thm would be a low-key devo&amp;a:.
c41Jntries· iiS Iraq, Libya, North Korea and Syria haven't signed the pact. "Praise.God from whom ajl blessings
~
make a deal with you. You do some- al message by a pest speaker and a
Cjlhen.ack~owledging thst no ~uch treaty is 100 perc~nt verifiable, said this
now."
of television viewers watched.
thing about Ann, and I' II let you do closing prayer. Waddy would baadle
oiiC woilld 1ne~ease the probabll1ty of spottmg chem1cal weapons.
At about the same time on anoth- . Hungry fo~ role models for our something about me."
the details.
·
·
·,
I "G.iven that we 8le cumntly le~ally commitied to eliminating unilater- · er network,; another player gives an youth, disgu*d with the likes of
Miraculously, Ann recovered. -Kl!l!n said OK, and -Waddy wont
the vast majOrity of our CW sioekpile; common sense.suggests that it analysis of his team's upset )Yin that Dennis Rndman, shocked and sick: without surgery.
to work. 'The first chapel pt'l!plllll
wt&gt;uld be p~eferable to secure a commitment fro10 ~ther natiop~ to do the afternoon. ·"GQd smile&lt;f on us," he ened by seeing a major-league ba&lt;eRemembering hi~ vow, Waddy put was lt(cld in April 1973 with two
· smu:." he 511id in a statement to the Semite Armed Services Committee dur- says. Then, with eyes turned skyward ball .player spit in an umpire's face, down the bottle and began attending teams pll1icipating -- ·the Mintiesota '
inp: hiil confirmation proceedings.
··
·
he adds, "'l'h.,nk you, Jesus."
you w011ld think we would .stand up church-and I'CIIding the Bible: But as TIYins aad the O.icaao Cubs. Now all : .
But
common
t~ense
doesn't
necessarily
apply
on
this
one.
It
is
embroiled
1
If ~is clashes with the view of and applaud the Reggie Whites of the ~years passed~ had
fec;l~n$ he the major-league teanis and 173 • ·
i ~politics; Senate llCtion was .put off last ~1111 when it nmd as a presidenprofesstonal football we got from ~ports world instead of thinking of, .shll owed somelh1ng on that on&amp;Jnal . min~leBiue clubs a~e in the chapel
tial c11111paign issue after Republican nommee Bob Dole came out agams.t watching the movie "North Dallas ways to keep them trom praying on .. 11romi.se. So in 1973, :16 years an~r progrun.
•
•
aJ
.
•
·40" several years qo, it is nonetbe- 1V.
ihe rmraclc of Ann, he pa1d a call on . As for Ann, the inspiration for 'this
l~nll who argue it.couldn't be fully.enforced.also coinpl~n that it less a !"'"l,ing fact thai God is aetting Sports may.indeed be in a moral . Baseball ~ssiQner BQwie KUhn. ~ !ittle Slory, she i' S6 11114 still .livins
ltae! to intrusiv~, llnwan--..ted and to~nly reporting requi~mcnts 6n some of h1s best p~ess not from· the slump and off tts pedestll, but sports He had an 1dea.
, ··
tn Detroit. She's fine.
.
U •chetmcal compan!CS.
.
, .
·
.
.
pu!pits .o f America but from Ameri- anc! ~eliaion still keep company. :nis
He wou!d coordinate .wee~ly
· .· Gccqe ..,.. • 11 ai7Ddlcated
n..;. one ofthe 'pointa raised apinst il by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.,, cas lOP lilhlet.es. ;
.
will be the 2'th year oflhc Baseball chapel se'rv~tes for the 12 map- ·
for Newq.,er EateqNiR
•
of the Senat.e Foreign Rellllions Committee, Sdting his conditions
Even more startling, bowever, i~ Chapel, which involves all28 major- league baseball teams that w~~ be AuoclatioL
-pulling the iuue to.the full Senate.
·
. that most people don't seem to . J'eague baaeball teams.
on the road e~ery Sunday dunhj the
.4ltio"Mr irony, sinc.c the cl!e!nUI industry supports treaty.~ admln• approve of this public praising of the
The story of the Baseball Chapel - - - - - - - - - - -·- - - - - - - - - - : - - - •
•
• . uys thai it woul4 1\!q~ no more tlian roubt~e reporttn1 by o~Jy Lon1. ~ newSJliiiiF that took a poll on goes back to 1957. A hard-drink.ins • Today's Birthdays: f.ashion designer H*" de divenchy ~ 70. Sinpr
.,..,. 200 COIIIpll1ies. and thai $600 million in export sales could be 11 nsk theaub~foundt!Wmorcthanhalf baseb811 writer for the Detroit News Nina Simone is 64. Actress Rue McClanahan is 63. Reconlina• e~ocutivc
M
o1 tnt1e lalrictions affecting Hlions that do 101 ralify the lmty. . objected to the God testimonials.
named Watson Spoelstra learned that David 'Geffen is S4. Actress 'Jyne Daly is''· 1\icia Nixon Cox is Sl . $ell.
• JW.-,ifso Slid 11.- ...auld be pnntccl from RuAia, and that the . lHfore, the Super Bowl .came his dlusht.er Ann, a fteshi!IBn at the Olympia J. Snowe, R-Mainc, is ~. Rock musician Jeuy Harrison (The .
baven't·lilftld the qrccment ~ld before it is rati· bot- Green Bay alld New Eng- · Univenity of Michi1an, was critical- Heads) is 48. Actor William Petersen is 44. Actor Kelsey Orammer is 42.
W • f I ',lie Mid, oiber foreip pOlicy ud t!efense measure~ ·lboul4 be lani:l in January, the New York nmea ly ill with a brain diieue.
· Cou~tr)t sinaer Mary Chapin Carpenter is 39. Actor Christopfler Aikins 'ia
.
.
.•
teported the National football
The best J!CIJ!OIUIPOII was called, 36. Rock si1,1ger Ranking Roser (Oenenl Public, Enilish Sal) is 36. ~
Ql I • a •ed.hil ptllll for .the tre1ty in bis Stare ~ the Union ~ Lcape 111111!111 wen~ wOITied thll if but he lllid that Ann's chances of .Billy Baldwin is 3'4.
.
.
. .
•
.
.
a- Bay won, !he team'l':$
(llllllnl ~ 'IWJrc slim. Wadel~

By The Aaaoctat.ci Prnl
The springliltc weather is coming
to an end. The Njltional Weather Seroffice, and State Fire Marshal Bob
(Continued from Page 1)
vice said cold air behind a frontal sysLawless, the bodies were released to
lipolis
Municipal
Court
with
domestem will send temperatures plunging
a Gallipolis funeral home.
'
tic
violence
on
Thursday
and
set
a
.into the 20s on Saturday.
The
Gallipolis
Volunteer
Fire
~eeognizance bond ofS 1.000: A tern- .
The. rain occurring tonight could
porary prot.ection order against Mont- Deparllhent responded to the scene at
change to snow pn Saturday in parts
gomery from Sheets was also issued. 2:02 p.m. with mutual aid of two
of the state.
A neighbor on the scene, Billy trucks and 13 firefighters.
Saturday's high temperatU~e will
As of presstime, the cause of lire
Call, responded to the fire and
be recorded in the morning, foreobserved the bodies inside, but was was still undetermined. Deputies
casters said, aad then the · mercury
were unable to indicate whether the
unable to ~emove them.
will fall during the day.
·
fi~e was intentionally set or caused by
known
him
all
my
life,"
Call
"I've
.
The ~eeord-high tempera!Uie for near20.
events
at the time. The property was
said
of
seeing
the
gun
near
the
Montthis. date at the Columbus weather
descri),ed
as a complete loss.
gomery's body. "Something just
in ·
station was 69 degrees in I930 while
Deputies confirmed that further
, snapped in him to do it."
.
the record low was 8 below zero in the.upper 30s.
.
information
will be ~eleased pendin11
Following an investigation at the
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) · miles away. NASA ~eeently installed ·.
1885. Sunset tonight will be at6:'14
an
ongoing
investigation.
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:15 the mid 20s and highs in the lower - With ·a strand of diamondlike S2 halogen lights down the middle of scene by the Gallia Sheriff's Depart40s.
. a.m.
·
lights guiding the way, astronauts the IS,OOO-foot ,strip, jil astronauts' ment, the. Qallia County corqner's
Tuesday,.,Partly cloudy; Lows in ended their successful Hubble SptJCe
Weather foiecut:
to make nighttime landings
Tonisht...Mostly cloudy with ·the lower 20s and highs near 40.
Telescope make-over mi~ioft today
with a rare landing in darkness.
"Those · centerline ·. lights were
.
Space shunle Discovery streaked beautiful," Bowersox said. "The
(Continued from Page 1) .
of the major parts o( the FFA.
through the sky, leaving a golden, only problem was moon gl~~e ... man, had · 12 receive their State FFA
"It is important;" Sayre said.
ghostly .trail, and touched down on it was brii!ht COIJ!i~R in the window." degree, plus six applicants this year:
"The FFA teaches while having
the glowing runway at 3:32 a.m. An
Almost as sinking was the astro- and we have ope of the first. Amerifun . They will retain it longer," he
. almost full moon add,ed to the mag- nauts' glimpse of home- Houston can degree winners in the county,
·said.
·ic.
·
·
- as they zoomed ove'!'ead .at Stephanie ~ayre, " he said. TheAmerFor those that take all the ex peri,
WILMINGTQN (AP) - One cers with a semiautomatic handgun,
"Welcome back," Mission Con- ·10,000 mph en rou~ to Florida. D1s- ican FFA degree is given to the top 2
ences that' the FFA has to offer to
. qutstion remained following ·the · · t)le patro) said: .
trol told the ·seven-lllatl' crew. "You ·covery's thin, luminous trail -percent in the nation,
indictments of two brothers Q.n
A Wilmington police officer found mad~ those five spacewallts look leal remained in t!Jc sky long after the
"So in comparison, we have heart. they tum out to become leaders ln the community, as busine.~men
'Charges that·1bey s~olll and tried
the veliicle sbortl! afte!Ward and was,· easy."
shuttle had pt!!sed.
improved quite a bit," he noted.
or women, farmers and others, Sayre
kill police officers s,tqrday: ~ fired on by C~voe Kehoe, the pall:ol
nfe astronauts accomplished the
"Pretty gOOd view ... we almost . One change that has affectelt the said.
·
m they? ·
·
·
said.
·
·
. landing - only the ninth in darkness saw the Astrodome," Boweisox toll! Racine FFA was the addition of girls
The FFA is still-the same in many
, ' Chevie&gt;O'Brien :Kehoe, 24, and - . Richard Monon, 66, of Kenle in 82 space shutde nights- with the Mission Conttol.
to the program. In 1969, girls were aspecl&lt; too. The shop classes, the
Cheyne C. Kehoe, 20, remained at- Falls,. Wash!, who is acquainted with SIUJ!C practiced case as they did the
The S79S million mission was the allowed to become members for the
large today, the State Highway Patrol\ the brothers, said they are among the rest of the I 0-day mission to enhance second of at least four service calls first time, but not until the late 1970s emblem, and the jackeis are alike buJ
one thing that was the sam.e in i94~ .
$aid.
swelling ranks !Jf Americans with Hubble's view of the universe.
planned for Hubble, not quite and early 1980s were they a major . that is the same today is the fellow,
; A Clinton County grl!ld jury white sup~emacist and ext~eme antiDuring four spacewalks in as · hslfway through its IS-year voyage. part or the Racine chapter.
ship among FFA member&lt;.
.
indicted Chevie Kehoe on · three government views.
many nights, die astronauts equipped
The telescope was launched in
"The way we actually farm has .
Thoren summed it up: "The fel, tounts of felonious a!iSIUlt and thlec
"It's their whole life. It becomes the S2 billion telescope with two 1990 with a mirror that.was made the changed the way of the FFA, with the
i:ounis of attempted murder of a " their · ~eligion , " Morton · said. · powerful, new science instrun\cnts as. wrong way. Spacewalking astronauts last 10 years, more environmental lowship between the boys was the
'police officer. The indictments also, "1bey'~e the good guys and they can '!Jell as updated electronics, data corrected its myopia in 1993. . . problems have come up," Sayre said . best ... yo.u learned more about each
other than in any other class. You
.charge him with one count of carry- do anything - rob, steal, shoot ~eeorders and pointing equipment. ·
· Except for the unexpected ~epatrs As a result he has taught his students made friendships that lasted and that ..
~ng a concealed weapon, one count of . and it's all right, because· they're
And in a record-tying fifth space- to. Hubbl~'s ripped in~ulition, .this farming ·methods that better protect
is a major pan of the FFA that will
'possession of criminal tools, one , fighting the had government. It's a walk, they mended peeling thermal m1ss1on mvolved ma1~ly · matnte- the environment.
never change."
" .'
;pount of improper transportation of a . Robin Hood thing." ·
insulation on the telescope, the effect IIBII&lt;;e. The crew also boosted Hubble
Personal ·developme~t is another
fi~e~rm, and two counts of fleeing.
The patrol releilsed photographs of of seven\years of orbitll sunlight.
into a 38S·mlle-high orbit, the high·
.
.
' . The indictments accu·se Cheyne both men Thursday as it announced . · "!feel wonderful," NASA project
kehoc of two coun~ of attempted the indictments. Both men &amp;~e armed manager Frank Cepollina said .as he ~~~tthe.:::rn;:.raspaceshut·
murder of a polic~ officer, two counts and dangerous, troopers said.
awaited Discovery's arrival. "I've · Astronomers won't know until
They c011ld.be traveling in a white been walking on water for a week." May, following extensive checkout,
of feloni011s assault, and one count of
crowds of autograph-seekers, includ- .
. (Continued from Page 1)
carrying a coqcealed weapon:
1977 Dodge Executive motor home
Ret.uming 1.-112 hours late because whether Hubble's new infrared cam- 35 years since my orbital night, one ing children who learned about him
. :· Chevie Kehoe was the driver and with green trim. possibly bearing of low clouds that eventuslly .scat· era and two-dimensional spectro- immutable fact remains: there is still in school or from the movie "The
~jlis brother was riding with him in a Montana license plates, the patrol
Right Stuff," based on the Tom
teled, shuttle commander Kenneth graph will fulfill all their objectives. · ·no cure for the common birthday."
blue Chevrolet Suburban which said.
·
Bowersox spotted the Kennedy
The decision by the first American Wolfe book that tol&lt;l the story of
"police stopped Saturday along Ohio
' Chevie Kehoe was d.escribed as a Space Center runway from seven
to omi• the earth ended months or America's early space achievements... ·
.;n in Wilmington because the veh1- white male, S feet 10 inches tall with
But Glenn's wooden · speaking
•
. , ,
•
speculation about his political future
~ 'i:le had expired Washington . state blue eyes, weighing about 14S
and sent De.mocrats scrambling to style and failure to capitalize on the .
~icense plates. Chevie Kehoe resist- pounds. Cheyne Kehoe was Meigs EMS runs
' find a replacement for the only Ohio release of movie led lo a disastrous
~&amp;d a patdown search, fled to his vehi- . described as a white male, height· 5
Minor
injuries
·were
reported
folsenator to serve four terms.
run for the presidency in 1984. ·He
Units of the Meigs County Emer. cle and was pursued by a state troop.- feet 10 inches to 6 feet I inch, weigh- gency Medical Service recorded six lowing a two-car accident on West
Glenn was tearful after an hour- ended up $2.5 .million in debt.
Main Street in Pomeroy Thursday . long speech in which he urged stu"er and a Clinton County deputy sher- . ink'' ISO t~ 170 poum!s.
He has continued to make aviation
calls for assistance Thursday. Units
;jff, the patrol said.
!!'he patrol said it is working with responding included:
history. In December, he set a record
around 5:4S p.m. .
dents nQtto lose failh .in America.
• As he got into the Suburban and the FBI and the federal Bureau of
Clarence E. Lee, 50, Pomeroy.
. " Don'ttune out. cop out or drop by nying his twin-engine Becchcrnft ,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
~.drove away, · passenger Cheyne Alcohol, Tobacco and Fireanns
was
stopped
to
tum
into
a
parking
lot
out."
Glenn said. " Don't give in to Baron from Ohio to Washington
2:30 p.m.. Overbrook Nursing
when
his
1988
Pontiac
GrandAm
was
: Kehoe fired several rounds atthe offi- regarding
possible
links
to
other
Center, Middleport, Alice Thompson, struck from behind by a . 1989 complacency and cynicism. Don •t
..
.
,.,
Crll},lCS.
.
take America and the values reflectPleasant .Valley Hospital;
~obert· Gumm Sr. of Spokane.
by
Bridget
ed
in our fonn of government for
ChevroletCavalierdriven
5:14 p.m., West Main Street,
according to a
Wash .. said his daughter, Karena, 24. Porrteroy, Brook Bonecutter, Veterans Varney, 19, Portland,
. ..,_
rt
granted." ·
•
The Daily Sentinel has three children with Kehoe. born
Pomeroy PoIICC
v.;partment n:po ·
Glenn, first elected 10 lhe Senate
Memorial
Hospital;
. (USPS ZJ3-H0J .
between 1991 and 1995.
. Lee's car then traveled across the in 1974, became an expert on nuclear
7:SO p.m.. .Starcher Road,
parking
lot and struck a pole.
weaponfy and a dogged advocate of
,.~lilhed evety afternoon. MonNy t~rouah
Pomeroy, Edna Epperson, treated at
frldily, I I I Coun 5&lt;., Pomeroy, OhiO. by llle
Lee
and
a
passenger,
Rose
Lee,
.
non-proliferation . Former Sen.
the scene;
Ollio Wleyl'llbli ...... c.mo.nyKJon""t Co..
wc~e
trarisponed
by
squads
of
the
Howard
Mctzcnbaum, D-Ohio, said
.........,,, Obio 45769. I'll. m-2 u6, s..o.d
8:31 p.m., Page Street, Middle·
Meigs
County
Emergency
Medical
Glenn
was
respected by Democrats
olatt- plid ..
port, Nellie Carney, PVH.
Service
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hosd
R
·
bl'
'
''
'·
·
an cpu 1cans al'ke
1 .
·
POMEROY
·Arnf&amp; P.ower ............ :~...........41\
-.,ThO A...,.l....,,..., Hd doe Ohio
"He wasn •1 bpmba,tic. He didn't
~ ..................................... 721/2
New;; ~on .
8:32 a.m., Powell StRICt, Inez pital in Pomeroy, ·where they were
Amt'rech ......................... ~.63 718 · Ilene Sniper, PVH;
lleated and released. Varney was play for the headlines like some pc;oI'OSTMASTU&lt; !lend-. _.r..., to
treated at the scene.
AlhtlrMI
011
.............
-.
...........
42
711
5:47 p.m., West Main Street, .
'The belly SentiDel, ~ II Court St .. Pomeroy.
Damage to Lee's car was listed as pic," Metzcnbaum said.
ATlT
.•
;
..........
~ .....................-. .••...40.
Ol!io 41J69...
Claa:nce
Lee.·
and
Rose
Lee,
VMH,
moderate
while Varney's car soisBorn July 18, 1921, in nearby
Blink One ..........................45 718
lob Evan8 ......~.... ~.....~•••••• 13 114 · Br.idget Varney, treatedat the scene, tained heavy damage, according to Cambridge, Glenn set the first.
IUISCRtl"ttON IIATIS .
Central Dispatch assisted.
~·,.... ..... ~ ••••••.••••••••31 314
the report.
transcontinental supersonic speed
One W«J; .. :............-................................$2.00
~plort .........................1t114
Varney was cited on a charge of record from Los Angeles to New
Ono Month ....._,,._.. _,. ... .......................... $8.'!11
~I!'I!Stiopa ............. 4 t'/18
Qne Yea! ....,.........,................................$104:0C!
assured
clear distance.
. York. The 1957 night proved thatjets
Cltv·.~Jit .........................33~
co~ld endure stress when pushed to
. 'SINGLII: COPY PJUCB
.
Fedifel Mogui ••••••.-............ 2S ·718
(Cofjtlnu~
from
Plge
1)
maximum
speeds over long disDally ...............:....... :...... _.......... _........ , Ceftu
GMlWII.~ ..•.••••••••••••••• - •••••12 7/1
.
.
idence.
Hill
said
he
is
in
the
process
tances.
.
. -:t
-••••••••••••uooooOooouooosa\
Subo&lt;riben oot desltl,. ... poy tho o:aniw ""l'
1111•
of
notify
ina
U,e
property
owner
But
it
was
the
1962
spaceflight
of
mnil lo llllv¥« IIi'"'! to 11oc'tlolly SeOIIIIOI
Llln$,1nd
.........
,
•••••••••••.•••••••
regarding
the
trailer.
·
Veteraas
Memorial
·
"Friendship
7"
that
made
Glenn
a
M actne, N,. or 12 ..,_ bllia. ~~ wm be
~ 11111
Jiven c.na,..:h week.
Hill reported that Rick Miller will
Thursday admissions - Patty national hero, helping the United
0t11o Vall!ly Benk•••••••••••••••••••• 37 replace the ceiling on the porch at the Laudermilt, Pomeroy.
"
.
States catch the Soviets in the space
No ou~pjl'"' by 111111 pon;iaed In ...... • '
Orw .,.....,•• ~......................37 Sl4
·
municipal
buildina
by
the
weekend.
Thursday
discbarJes
__..
llobby
race:
--~evioebovllllblo. .
P1opllil ................:.................
,, . ' 1
l
'
Coilncll
approved
Hill's
joining
White;
Dexter.
He .still gets fan mail and attracts
,,...,~ ............................... 15*
l'lot&gt;lllllor- .... ri... ., MjoOI- llllr·
the
Ohio
Mayors'
Association
.and.
Hollier
Medical
Ceuter
Rockwell ................... ¥" •••••f!/1511
ina die MtbM:riPdon periocl Su~ nKe
..,_may 11e ;~ted b)' c:llqin1 the
adjourned until March 3.
Dischai!pl Feb. lO - Mrs.
RD-IMU ........................... 1711/4
the aubitti9don.
•
..._,...................................?\
Present t"!.e "' Hill, Lyons, Fire William Meek and daughter, Zelma
Star aenk
314
Chief John Holman, Street Commis- Adamson, Nathan Gheen, George
IMAtLSI.IIiscRIPTIONS
.2:2 1/4
sioner Glenn Rizer, Marshal Matt Duhl, Janet Jeffers, Mrs. Michael
f l -.... ~.? !.~.. $27.30
Worthlrlgton......................20 314
Richards and council rpembers · VanMeter and 4aughter, Loraine
26 ............ -........ -........................ .$13.~
'
j:J-.. ~. : ...:.................................... $105.56
Stooii report• •re thl10:30 Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz, John Francis.
Blrdi-Mr.andMn. KevinC~eIJ .................:............-..................... m.:u
provldld by Adwlt . Duddins • . Dale •Han and Henry
2d .... _ .........__...__ .. ,_........-.... $56-61
,q t Ot
II.
·
Lyqns. Absent was council member Jllcens, daughter, Gallipolis.
.n
.. ..-·--·-·--.....- .:...-..•• .n '
~ Wol~.
(NIIa~ t' wllll ~

Robert T. Reynard

;

Bad timing

Kathryn L. 'Katie' Hill

'#.VA.

The need for t.emporuy adrninis~ Ann King, Debbie Pratt, Deborah
ttative office relocation due to the :weber, Cindy Chadwell, Sheryl
upcomins building propam at East- Rou1h and Sandy N~s · 1fo'Cie
ern High School was discusSed at approved for professional growth
Tu.eaday's meetins of the Eastern programs.
Local Board of Education.
In other business, the board
It was noted that the offices of the
• changed the open enrollment
superintendent and treasurer will date from July I to April I for stu-.
'have to be moved to make way for dents wishing to participate in that
asbestos removal and some structure program;
renovation in preparation for new · • approved revising the fiscal year
adjacent building cbnstruction this '97 appropriations and certifying the
spring.
funds available for expenditure to the
Personnel decisions made during county auditor;
the meeting including. hiring Bryan .
• ~ejected a maintenance agreeDurst as junior varsity assistanfbase- · menton bus radios and the base radio
ball coach on a·onc-year supplemcn- control unit due to the district
tal contract, and Scott Wolfe as year- finances;
· book advisor for the remainder of this
• approved the concert band's ·trip
school year.
·
to Kings Island, April 19 and 20, at
The board also approved a con- no cost to the board; . ·
·
tract with Lisa Ritchie to provide fis• heard Meigs Local Superinten-. ·
cal services for the Title I program. dent Bill Buckley on that board's 'pol-::
Hiled on an &amp;S·nceded basis were . icy on public participation: ·
Maxine Thomas ·a~d Susan
. • approved registration guide for:·
· Castevens .S substitute custodians, high school.students fonhe 1997-98'
and Benjamin F. Upton Jr. as ·a sub- school year:
·
.
.
stitute b1.15 driver.
• heard a thank you from Eloise
· Nancy Larkins reported on a Boston for an app~eeiation gift on her
planned in-service progiam on tech- retirement.
,
nology in the classroom scheduled
• set the nexi meeting for March
for April. In accordance with the 19 at 6:30p.m.
teachers' agreement with the district,
An executive session was held to.
Daniel Thomas, Betsy ]ones, Lea discuss personnel and legal matters.

,,

.

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..:.·-·-

''·

.~

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Ft ....... '*'-'Y 21,.1897

I

Sports

J

In Top 25 college bllslcetlMII,

I

The Daily Sentin.!!i

·'

..

:

•

.

loses
O'regon ~psets Arizona 78-72; UC wins and louisville
.
.
Aaaocl
.

'

By The

I

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'

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1

•

1 d P1111

1be Ducks scored ·the pine'• "We know all 119na if we play teams on Thunday niaht. it was No.
Oregon was one of the surprises final eight poinlll.. six by Kenya topther u a team, we can beat any- 9 Soutb Carolina 8S, Citadel SS;
of tbe season when it opened with a Wilkins, and beat No. 13 Arizona 78- body. This is definitely how we Thxas-EIPaso71,No.IONewMex·
JO.pme winning streak. .
72 to snap a 12-game losing streak played at the beginnina of tile sea- ico 62; No. II Cincinnati 76, South
· son.''
• Florida. S6; Marquette 79, No. IS
Things changed in a hurry as lhe to lite Wildcats.
losses began to accumulate in Pac·
"This gives us tn:mendous conArizona (16-7, 8-S) scored 12 · Louisville 71; NO. 16 Xavier 82,
10 play. They changed again Thurs- . · fidence," sai~ Oregon'a ramal straiaht poin!IIO take its only lead of Duquesne 74; Iowa 80, No. 18 ·
da.y nighL
·
Lawrence, who scored 20 points. the
12·70, on Miles Simon's Michigan 7S; No. 20 Stanford 76,
three-pointer with 3;22 to play. But WashingtOn State 63; No. 22 College
the Wildcab didn't score again.
of Charleston 81, Southeastern
·"When you' re on _the road, Louisian~ 68; and No. 2S california
yi&gt;u've got 10 be mentally tougher 78, Wuhington 67.
dian what we are," Arizona coach
.No. 9 South Carolloa 85
Lute Olson said of his team that is 2·
Citlidel 55
4.in league road games.
.
Nate WilbOurne had a season"1thought the difference without high 20 paints as the visiting Gameany question was effort and desire," cncks. (20:6) won for the ISth time
Olson. said. ''I hate to say that in,l6 games and reached the 20-win
becauselthinkthat'sbeenoneofthe mark for the first time in six years.
stn:ngths of our program through lite Matt Newman 'had 14 points to lead ·
y~ars. "
the smaller Bulldo~s (12. 13), who
Oregon coach Jerry·. Green have lost 40 of lheu last 41 games
showed die team · a video of a · aglinst South Carolina.
December game asainst Fresno State
TexaS-EI Puo 71 .
to remind lite Ducks (15-$, 6-8) of
No. 10 New Me:doo 62.
how· lhey were playing when they
Kimani Jones-Young scored 21
cracked the Top 25.
points and the Miners (11-12, S-9
"The coach showed us how we
·
were and tbe mind-set we were in
and ihe defense we were playing,"
said Wilkins, who linished with IS
points. "llhink .dlat was the difference tonight. We saw and we
remembered. We went out and tried
to play like lhat team we saw :on
The Meigs Marauder wrestling
· film."
team
took part in lite 16 team War· Mike Bibby scored 16 of his 22
ren Local Classic last week at Warpaints in the second hlilf,.but had just
KNOCKS IT AWAY-'- Clnclnnatl'a Char111 Wllllama (left) knocks two. points in the last II minutes. ren Local High School. The Maraud·
ers fin ished in li.fth place in lite
the baaketbaU away from South Florlda'a Anddrlkk Frazlar during Simon finished with 19 points.
Thuraday nlght'a game In Tampa, Fla., Where Qha 111h-r~~nMd · In other sarnes involving ranked White Division.
Belpre won the White Division
Beercats won 76-58. (API
.
with 149.S pointS. Bellaire St. Iohn

gam•.

J.

j

.

.

Western Athletic Conference),took
advanl8ge of New Meltico's 33 per·
cent shootina 10 pull off the up~et.
Kenny 'lbomas had 26 points fot; the
Lobos (20-S, 9-4), who dropped to 3Son lllC road this season.

No. 11 C~d 7'
s. Florida (!ji

1

who led 63-55 with live minutes left
in regulatiOil.
No. 1' Xavier 8l .
Daq-74
Lenny Brown and Darnell
Willilms each scored 20 points for
· lite Visiting Musketeers (19-4, 10.3
Adantic 10), Who trailed by 12
·points in lite first half and finished a
woeful 2-of-17 from three-point
range, including Brown's J,of-9.
Tom Pipkins finished with 29 points
for the Dukes (8·15. 4-9),

N.CurVriaaA&amp;T71.-oo62

Basketball

67

. NJJA standings

-·Diw- '
.W L r.t.

Miunl ......... ;..........41
Now Yorlt.. ............39
Orlando ..................zs

ll
14

.774
.736

zs .soo ·

WuhinJ1011 ....•.......24, 28 .462
.288

Now-~ ........... 15 37
Phi~a .... .. :.. .. l3 39

.2SO
- . ... :................ 11 42 .2011

'43

Wint~'rop69,&lt;;081t~Caroll~61

·l

CroiaJnon ~. Wkhito So. 58
Dayt.. 71: La Salle 62
'
Iowa 80. Michipa ' '
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30

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Mi.-o .. .:......c...l~

67

S - o ............ 14 30 .444
L A. Cllppcn ......... ll

GctklenSiate .. ..... ...20

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l9

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Bainbridp
burs75(011

14

14~

16

19

'lbunday'sscora

Miaml92, NoW 1cn&lt;y 87
.PhlladelobialOI, L.AcCllppors 84

L..artl.-75, SW L.fiNisialla 12
New OrieMa 81, Ark.-Uule Rock 71
North T..u 73, Col Poi~·SLO 72
SW Teul St. 64. Texu--ArliitiOI 6:\
Teus· E'l Paso 71, New Mcxioo 62

Milwaukee' 101 , I)Wiu 99
HOiuion 101, Totonto 97
Utah 122, BortOII 105
'. New York 109. S~~CTM~ento 87

, · Far West ·
cs Nonhridr 89. w..... s.. 76

California 7 Wnshinaron 61
· CoJonido St 66. San Jo11 St. 64
Fresno St. 76, Wyomin" 68 ,
Lolli Beach 51. 89, UC Irvine 63 ·
MOIOJ!j, S1. 83, E. WlllhlnJion 6:1
N. Ari:wna $8, Socrumetit4J St. !lf
Nevada 76, Boise St 66
New Mexico Sr. 74, UC S•111 Bai·

44

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. New J~ !It Detroit, 1:30 p.m.

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15
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70
65
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Tumpu Day .. ...... 21 29 7· 49
H.Y·. IIIontk..,s: .... l9 2910 48

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167 139

201 167
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stt~reo,

Dallw ................. :\4 22 4
l&gt;elroil. ............... l8 19 II
St. LOuil ............ 211 26 4 7
Plloco1• ..............17 28 4

, Umlsey Wilson 9S, Wilberforce 51
.RiO ORA.NDE 10.~. Ohio Valley~)

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
-

72 179
67 IIW
63 · lR.l
58 169

. Pacific 01\olllon.
C:olorodo ........... .J61~ 8 811
fArno- .......... 2925 6 64
VINK:ouYa-·.... ,.... 27'29 Z .56
j:alpy ... ........... 24 29 7 55
............ ...... ...... 2.1 )() 6 52
S'IU1 JOie: .........,... 21 :t2 6 • '1$8
Loa An.,~s .. :.... 20 ll 8 48

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1119 174
191 198

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, either, and !hey are 6.(). 7 in the
_ ir.Jast . Brodeur stopped 2S shots, but for the Canucks. Tony Granato the stumbling Bruins. Despite the mer, gave !he Blues lhc lead. in the
,/CP,sporta Writer
. .
·~13 outin&amp;s.
· ·
: ·
needed a fonunale ·boyit~e in over· . scored San Jose's lone goal when his loss. Boston's Adam Oates extended second period. The Senators were
!
held scoreless until Radek Bonk l
· .. The New !ersey Devils shoull! . ,, "Their mi.nds were in the g11111e time to continue his streak ..
Pas$ from the comer hit Connall's his scoring streak to 20 games.
· The Bruins rallied from a J-0 scored his founh goal with a rebound i
know a good be when they see one._ · all·the way, but physically they were
Florida's Mike Housh shot what skate and caromed into the ·net.
\
·~Thi~ was.. a g~ tie," coach x~ry tired,;, Lemaire said of his could have been · a game-winning·
·, Kings 3, Mighty Dpcks 1 · ·.
· defiCit with two third-period goals -shot al 9:41 of !he lhird period.
.The game drew a season-low
Jacques l..eliJ&amp;Ire satd after lite Dev- 1lOODS Thursday night.
At lnglewo&lt;f.. Kings rookie Jell before Amonte scored while falling
goal, getting lhe puck past Brodeur. .
14.305
fans 10 the Kiel Center. ·
ils salvaged 1"2·2 ·decision aglinst •' Goalie Martin BrodeiD' made sure But it stopped 'inches shy of the red Shevalier scored twice and Roman ·to the ice to-restore .a two-~allead .
'
Lighming
5, Flyers 2
~' .
. the Flo!:jda ·Panthers on Thursday · New Jersey stretched its unbeaten line, and center Brian Rolston swal- Vop,at added a goal arid one assist in 1be Blaekhawks went on to win for
AI Tampa, Daymond Langkow
•
nighL '"lou look B! our guys and you sireak by extending his own unbeat· ted tbe puck away just to make sure a brawl-filled game featuring 118 the seventh time in nine games
can see how physically and mental- · e~, stfing to 14. games (8:0-6). The it didn't trickle in.
'penalty minutes.
while . .Boston's.. ·winless streak and Chris Grauon each had a goal
,
ly tired ~Y are."
strj:aks by both the Devils and
With the victory. the Kings reached eight games; its longest and an assis11o l~ad the Lightning to
··'Thill .was a bi&amp; play by Brian. I
victory.
:i
The Devils haven't won in three BrOdeur are franchise besls.
guess I have him to thank for my snapped a seven-game winless streak since 1984..
Dino
Ciccarelli
added
his
574th
l
games. Then asain, they haven'tlost
•.
by
beating
their
Southem
Cali[ornia
Oates,
whose
scoring
streak
is
the
streak being kept alive," Brodeur .
..
career
goal,
snapping
a
tic
with
for,
J
i
rivals
for
the
lirsttimc
in
tbree
meetNHL's longest this season. was
said.
·
mer
New
York
Islanders
forward
.
stripped of his assistant captaincy
New Jersey's Pascal Rheaume, ings.
Garry Valk scored for the MightY · before lite same because he criticized Mike Bossy for ninth place -on the .
· playing in his first NHL game,
Ducks,
· manugement for failing to field a bet- career NHL goal, scoring list.
s~ored his lirst NHL goal, while
The Lighming ran their undefeal1be brawls resulted in the eje~­ ter (cam.
teammate Ken Daneyko scored his .
ed
sireak
to dtrei and halted the Eastlions
cif
Peter
LeBoutillier,
Matt
Blues
I,
SenatOrs
I
second of the season. Rheaume was
ern
.Conference-leading
Flyers' fourAt St.. Louis, Jim Campbell
called up from Albany, the Devils' .Johnson and Anaheim's Warren
game
undefeated
siring.
scored his 21st goal, tops. am11ng
Rychcl .
·AHL aflilia1e, earl.ier in tbe day.
Roman Hamrlik and Jason
NHL rookies, as St. Louis and
·
Blackhawks
5,
Bruins
3
.Rob Niedennayer and Bill J,ind~
Wiemer
also scored for the winners,
Ottawa
skaled
10
a
lie.
Chicago,
Tony
Amonte
scored
At
say sco~ed for Florida. .
·
while
Eric
Lindros and Dino CicThe
goal
by
Campbell,
&gt;igned
as
. By JOEl- STASHENKO
. . ·.Mi~haei Coyle, !looney's lawyer,
' 'I'm disappointed !hat we didrft while being hauled down by Ray
carelli
had
goals
for Philadelphia.
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) ....., The said lie would apP,Clll McAvoy's rul- get lite two points, but you have to .Bourque, and the Blackbawks beat · a free agent by the Blues !ast sum·
federal coun jury that'awarded Mike ing. '
look at New Jersey and that they're
Tyson's fonner trainer $4.4 million
Rdoney said Thursday night that pl~ying well." Florilfl coach Doug
•
could not· legally have rtacbed that Tyson ·"stabbed m~ in the back" and Mllcl..ean said. "Brodeur made some
judgment. under ,, New Yorlc ·state he in~isled _ that he had an agreemenl great saves. 801h goalies were sollaws, a jul!ge says.
to tni1n lhe boxer thatwas binding in .id."
.- .
. U.S; District Coun Iodge Tho~ · tbe boxing warld,
. ·
Florida's Mark Fitzpatrick
"What a bad decision," Rooney . sto~d 24 of 26 sllots.
• McAvpy's ruling annu!s the award
·Kevin Rooney won ...ln. Septeml)\lr said. l\'J' had a decision by n jury of · · In other NHL games, Ottawa and.
1996 in •a breaoh-o(-i:ontract trial · my ~rs. 1'hcY helll'lllhe evidence. St. L6uls also 'tied ·I· I, while Los .
f
t
McMoy himsel~ ··preside&lt;t over in 1bey·~ecided I was his trainer for as AnljCies.downed Analoeim 3•1, Van- · ·
·Albany. ' .., ·
. . .
long _ll$ Joe foug~t_llrofes~jona,ly."
couver stopped San rose ~-I , Chica.
'
"The na1ure of. the proof offered
R09iiey .said' nc would pursue the go defeated Boston 5-3 and Tampa
at trial cannol sustain a finding thi11 · case ' 'll{l tile ~ay to the Supreme Bay beat Philadelploia 5-2.
·
the employmept ''relationshiP. .w~ Coun.'' '
.
.
Cimucks 6, Sharks I
all)'dling olhet thaJI one at-wl.ll, · · ROOI\i'y sued Tyson fot $49 mil·
At San Jose, Alex'Mogilny $1\ored
.r• Sleeting
•V-II- .
, McAvoy ~fO!c.
' · ... · · . .'non, clillnling that his firing in 1988 two ~Oals. 8rid added an assist u Van• AUnitun Fuming Bollds
·
u
Concllion
ThC jll!lgc added that if Rooney bleache!l a lifetime contraei,tltC bux- · cou.ver romped J&gt;!1S1 the Sharks, scor·
appeals McAvoy's fi!ldlne; and. if cr ~UJiiliil:cdly had with tlie tn!iner ing three times on power plays. · ·
• Lllllledl
that c~l9•ge i- u~ld bY federal dating li'Om,Tyson's days u a teen·Trevor Linden, Martin Gelirias,
'
~pe.ils~ tysOnd'cserVelll~~- , aie prodiJy under his n~~:ntor Cus · · flun Cortnall and PaveJ.Bure scored
tn.al any-way because , McAvoy s q~ Allllitb i,n llearl!y Catskill.
chalJC Jo',!bej~~tY wu faulty. . ·. · Duljnj t~ trial. Rooney could
\
McA"oy ,acknowJe.lged t~at he , not.prOd!lce a written contract wilh
. did not instfucl)urors,properly about Tyson to train the buxer. But he .
how. New ..
&amp;tale laws •define
argued th!lt the understandinJ wu ,
employrneni ,Jqt a "definite •du111- establishecl:by D'·Amato, )IIIIo died in '
HURRY LlhiiTED .TIME ONL~Il (0"! Slt!-ECTED MODELl)
tion," a ct'uciil .upecl iq .the trial ..1985. ... .
.
·.. •
over whether ~IQn Jlii!l an obligaTy$on 'i' fonner manager, Bill
lion to pay Rooney. 1 '
•.
Cayton, ~fied'tbat lot!: and partner
· . McAvoy·· r\JIJns wu klated Sat·· · Iim Jacobs! who took over ~son's
urday and ·
in Jlin~ton, affairs Jiftef D' An\ato died, contin·
'where the judge _alao matntaons a : Ued the lllftiiJement.
·•
. }\
. I .
cOiilb oom. • ,
,
·
. In its · .verdtct: tbe ~ did nil! .
Tylotl'alawyer RobeJt Hinh said determine lite duratiotf of the COli· .
~!. - -"&lt; " J
d.e r-er wall-thrilled by tbe ~i: tn~:t,bct~ lb;oney and ~son IlK!
tl
sion.
.
ruled that the tniaer llliould not Ft
'
"If· you ·~p beck: given that · ay money from 'future flsht ~·
Mib neVer bid 1 conlrilct with · But it dicl rule ·!hi! Tyaon brolie ·a
!loOneY.Iit~•li~meC9ftlriCI..:·' : 1og11 Conlr!ICt and fhad · Rooney
bel al~ ellpiC'Ied 'lo Win," Hirt!t without jllll CatiiCI.
,
·
~· tiM Ill""'we.haw jllll ,.•,1 · The 1._ award ' ~led .
-"';.

•

Mpricoo-

Taxes and title fee

..

accommodale him.
''I'm not going to sit around,"
Hendenon said. "I've worked too
hard to sit around. I can't help you
sitting around. I thinlc you got me lait
year to help you and I helped you. If .
you're not going to use me, let me
help somel!od~ else."
Yankees: Cecil Fielder dido ' t
back off his trade demand when he
arrived at cainp in Tampa, Fla., but
BARRY BONDS
softened his tone after talkins with
manager Joe Torre and general man- do something special this season. I
think'things are going to work them·
ager Bob Watson.
"We definitely went a step for- selves out one way or anolher."
ward just getting the opportunity to
Reds: Deion Sanders was lhe lirst 14'
hitter into the batting cage at Plan! &lt;
•'
explain ourselves to each olher,''
Fielder said. "It's ~ust going to be a. . City, Fla.. as he resumed his two.
,,
good situalionnowjthat we've some· span career.
Sanders still has blurted vision "
what cleared the air and got all this
from the .broken bone near his.right l
stuff out of die way."
Fielder liled a demand to be trad· eye, received in the Dallas Cowboys' ~ ·
ed by M!llclllS, a J:ight given play- i6-l1. playoff Joss · to the Carolina ~
en traded during multiyear coniJtll:tS. Panthers in January. Bu1 he didn't •
If die Yankees don't trade him and be hesitate to jump,into !he batting cage ~
doesn 't withdraw !he demand, Field· againstleft·hander Pete Schourek. , ,
"I had a good time. I'm a player. ~
er could become a free agent after the .
I
can't
stand on the outside IQOking '
deadline. But if be did that, he
through
die glass,'' ,Sanders said. "I J
would lose his $7.2 million salary
wahl to be 'a part of it. I can't sit and . &lt;
this season. ·
"Hopefully thinss are goin,g to watch others havi11g a good time." . 'J
Mariners: Dennis Maninez will •
work out and I'm going to stay
be
given a chance in spriqg training 1
here,'' Fiel!ler said, "I want to be .
to earn a job in Seattle's starting-rota- ,
here. We have another opportunity to

• . .;,;·'

filed

p.m.

- -·~···""

~-

..
1
t:

·-~
·-laU

· · Tcnnto•~~. ·7 :~. p.m.
Vancon« 11 tot A•ptes,' 10:30

\

•

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160 174
167 180
IS2 198
1~ 206

·Satunlloy'o ...-

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v_..r_•-~•,:...

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Pbomik 111·A'flllbei~ 3 p.m. .
3 p.IO. .
T~ ..10 p.m.
!'Iii J 1p1 "~ 1 P:'"·
~IISt. Lootid p.!ll•
·
H.-7p.m.

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. ..

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'

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$17·995

..

'

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'

4X4, tilt, crui!le, auto., air, PW, air.

1:

~l'

CQ.-pleted in Scoltsda1e, . Ariz. spring trainins at Fon Ll!uderdale, what his new team expects: drove a
Baseball's money seuon pushed . "'J!iere Wele IIOIIle heated feelinp. Fla., and talked for lite fust time ball over lite fence.
into lite frrst da.y offull-squad workBOth ~ides JOt some things off tfMiir about Baltimore's plan to move him
Belle's volatile temper was disouts at spring. trainins. with Birry . chestS."
' .
·
from shortstop to third base. • · cussed durins a question-and-answer
Bonds regai)ling lite top spot on the
had been unhappy sinee
.. "Maybe-some of us need a chal- session.
average sai!II'Y list.
five'playelllleapli'ogged him in l'!'er· · lenge toward the end of our careers," .
"I can't control that. I'm not worBonds agreed Thursday to a $22.9 age sallii'Y·
.
. . .
lot!: said. "I look at it in' a positive ried about that. As long as I get an·
. million, tw~yearcll!l_tractextension
J;&gt;anny ~ull, ~miria, off a way. I'm looking at. it as a new . opj)ortunity to go out and hit home
· wilh the Sin FranCisco Oianlll, a deal
$20.!1 million, five-year . ~nti'IICt, beginning.
· .runs, drive in some runs, steal -a few .
. "I've got a chance to relearn the bases, make a couple ofgreat·catch- •
that gives him lite spon's highest was ·unbappy when just iwo t~
average at _$11.4:S million.
·
mad~ offers_: 'Philadelphia ami . position .and maybe .exiend my es," Belli1 said. ''That's all I'm con~
"I have alwaya felt in my ·bean . Cincinnati. . At first . rejected- the . career.! have no problems "'ith mov- cerned about. I glless the image part
that the greatCst gift I could give II!Y · Phillies' offer as 1o0 Qow, then agreed ing to lh\fd base. Never have.''
will take care of itself."
.
hometo:wn is.a World Series cham- Thursday to a $2.3 million, one-year
lndlaas: Catcher Sandy Alomar
Aqds: . Chuck Finley, ilready
pionship. ring, and !hanks to the contract.
Jr. could'become a free agent after · picked tio start fQr Anaheim on open- '
Giants, toda.y I've been given the
"We had .olfers;•·saidTartabull, the .season, following lite teanfs ing day, will be held out of throwing
·opportunity to make that dream who will join the team next week 11 decision to decline a $3 million . drills until tbe week~nd following an
come lflJe.'' Boni;ls said.
CIC:aiwllter, Fla. ''The offers were option for 1998. .
··
. ·
examina!ion of his sore pill:hing ann.
1be32-year-.old outfie)der isdu~ · . n~ wher¢ illey·needed to.be·aceonl· .
Alomar, 30, wi~l get $2.S milliOn ·
Finley reported soreness on Tues$8.25 million this season and $8.5 , ingiO_my~sandmy~. But this season, and lndi~s general day and has beentakinganti-inflammillion next year under the $43.15 -.,this is sQIIIelhirig that you just haVe manager John Hart says ,. ..WOJ!ld matory medicatioo.
· · Padnst Rickey Hendenon, who
million, six-yeir de3l he'signed as a to iOok at it as the way it is and put like to sign Alomar to a new deal.
free agent in Decembef 1992. The it behind you."
.
·
ThC decision to decline the oPtion probably will be traded during spring
extension ~Is for $g.7 millibn in
Tlll18bull hit .2S4 for the Chicago was made in November, but became · training, arrived in camp ill Peoria,
.
J 999.and'$10.7 milliOilin 2000. . White Sox last season with 27 known only .when Alomir men- Ariz.
San Fl11nCi$CO has a $10,3 million homers and 101 RBis. ·
tioried it this week.
''I came here to spring.training to .
.oj)tioil fpr 2QOI and !"Ust pay-a$2.5
"You're puttina. a proven major
"I definitely want to stay,'' Alo- get in Jhape," Hen&amp;rson said "No
million buYout if it doesn'(ex~rcise league bat in .lite middle . of your mat said at Winter .Haven, Fla. "I matter w_here you're going to be al,
'it.
·
order, and that's what we wanted to love being with die Indians. lt'.s a you have to prepare for the season.
"Arguably, _it ~0111~ be, his la_st .. do," 11111J18ger Teny Francona said. great OJlanization."
That's what I have to do."
·cOntract. ObVI!lUSiy, It WjiS a b1g , •,"He enjoys being the .guy in lite midWWte Sox: Alben Belle worked
San Diego off.a die 38-year-old
comJIIiiiiiO!I~:.OQ. Ihe• pan ol. tht!: fran" -·-1'-dle . of the order.' The people I've . Obi with Chicago for lite first time, outfielder a job is a backup, but Hen·
chiS..~ · Giants general manager B!i· -~ talked -to say be responds to that!' . fouled off pill:hes on his first two dersoli said he would prefer a lnlde,
an •SJ!bean said after the deal was ,\;
Oriola: Cal Rip~ lllrived 'for 1 s~ings of the spans and then did · and the PadreS _Said they would

.

•

j

$1;2,995

· Cbi~j. ~on3
Onawa I, St. Louis I (lie)
Yancou• d, S... JoSe 1
Loa An.... l, Anaheim I
, '

.

Utah.
The I uz scooed 82 of their 122
poiau in the paint and outrebound·
ed the Celtics 61-31.
"That's the story of lhe same:
They were devastatins . on lite
boards," Celtics coach M.L. carr
said. "You can't get outrebounded
that badly by· a solid, veteran teltn
lhat's been toge)her for so long. It's
absolutely a killer."
109, KJap 11
At SllC11Illlento, Patrick Ewing
scored 24 points and Larry Johnson
had 22 to swpiss lite 21)-point iioait
for the thiid time this season.
"In the last couple of weeks, he's
being !DOre explosive. This c9uld
have been his best all-around game
. of lhe year," coach Ieff Van Gundy
said.
.
' . .
After a tig. ht first half, tbe Knicks
gained conuol in the third quaner by
outscoring dle·Kings 16-6 in the first
· eight minutes, stn:l£hing a five point halftime lead to 70-55.

t

Auto., air, PW, PL, till, cruise.

Thilriday •• """""'

J

•

·t

Fi(ebird

.T - Ba~ S,,PIIIIodelobla 2
Now hrwJ Florido 2(lie)

·~

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PW, PL.

IHO
OIH:aao .............. ~ 28 R 56 159 U8
Torool0 ............ ,.22 :l6 2 o46 17:1 2U

Cent St., Ohio 7?. Mounl Sl. Joseph
60

,f.

'

199• :~ev. S·1 0 Blazer .

999

$

.'

WL I lll. liE iiA

Iam

State 64, Wri•ht St. 63 ,

Non-coarereace play

. i:

'"

.·

1989 Mazda RX 7

CONFERENCE

C'"'niDI•Ioloo

~ Stotwtwire led IIlio lUpton wtth 17 points and Popeye
Jones had 16 points and 10 rebounds.
Baddey played 30 minutes ia
three quanen and rested in tbe
fourth. He's sliD recoverins from a
l11klc sprain.
"Ivery happy with our play. We
were never in danger ·of losi11g lite
lead," Barldcy said. "I'm feeling
better and gettins better, but I strug•
gled in lite frrst half, and I feel I
won't be totally back until-the end of
the montb, which is what I predictedanyway. "
Juz Ill, Cdtb 105
At Salt Lake City, 1C.ar1 Malone
had 34 points and 16 rebounds as
Ulah won its seventh straight game .
Bryon Russell finished with 18
points and Iohn Stockton and
Antoine ClifT each scored 15.
. . The only disappoinbJICnt for lhe
Jazz came before tbe game .when
Derek 'Harper of Dallas vetoed a
~ that would hav~ ·sent him to

. ..

IJ!otids

,;

9.95

1

·

.........__s............ 95

179

156 · 171

-·-

Vernon.Nuarer~C

$1~4

'

151 166

Nonlhml ............ 2228 II SS .190 2U
Ouuwil ............... 2026 1:1 SJ' - 1~~ 171
Hanford ............. 222H R 52 IM IISS
~slon ... 1............ 20 32 7 47 169 2® .

•

V6, ,Efuto., air.

va. auto,, air, all PQwer, leather, tilt,

1411

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15~ 136

Northfut Dlwllion
Burf11lo ............... ~ 1910 10 110 I~
Pillabu'rah .... ,.... JI 22 5 61 21.l 186

110

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Delta aa ·

1996

1994 '

.W i. I llldiE iiA

17 9
Ncwlmey ........ 2YI1'12
Fklrldu ...............lH 1814
N.Y. Rangers ..... 28 24 9
W"hi"'ton ........ lJ 2Y 6

At lndiaaa, C!ICh team dressed
.oaly niiiC players after they swapped
siit in a pair of afte111001&gt;de81s.
Marie Jackson. LaS~Ie Thompson
and Darvin Ham were traded to Indiana, and Vincent Askew, Jerome
Allen and Eddie Johnson went to
Denver. Only Allen.wu In uniform
and i n attendance.
" It was tough trying not to think
about it," Indiana's Antonio Davis
said of the trade., "You've been
-around these guys solong and all the
$udden they'.re jitst gone.''
Rile Smits led lite Pacers with 23
points and a career-high 16
.rebounds. He had IS points and 10
rebounds in tbe ftrst quarter alone.
. . Rockettl1t7, Rapton 97
At ·Houston. Hakeem Olajuwon
scored 2S points, Charles B~ey
_added 18 on his 34th birthday and
Kevin W'~lis came off lite bench to
score 20.
·

By T1le AIIOCI_.. Praia '·

$9I 999
.

.rrio.

·*-13 995

Atllnlic Divilion

Phi-phia ....... JJ

Micl·Ohlo CoDrerence

i

a
,..,
••

Auto., air, stereo, PL•.more, tilt, c.rulse.

V6, auto., air, PW, PL.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ila . .

,_..,z.Naaeua

.Bonds signs~ $22.~M . contract extension with ·Giants

1·9t2-8814 ·1-800 837·1014

1994 Bukk Park Ave.

'

Great Lak01 lntucollegilte

Cle~Vebnd

•7~999.or •169

Coavoy Cn:::stview !SO

NHL standin~

Ohio women's
college scores

M~?Unl

4 Dr., auto:, .ait, stereo, PL.

Hockey

78, Blamoa76

Urb:inn !15.

1

side~~ 66. Bfdford Cbanel4'

Non-conrerence play

Ashland 7:1, Gan-non 63

. On baseball's spring training scene, · · ..

n

OHIO

(DT)
•
'
. Scbrina MciOOiey 57, Mathew• 21
Sidaey Uhman $6, DeGraff River-

Midwestern Colteatate

Ocis~n

,
"

points.

By~ GREENE '

Maria Skin Marion !'i2. Uacolnview
~I,

(

ll~vil··· . and~: Panthers skatit'&lt;td' deadlock; Blues tie Senators 1-1

. FCHJ Loramte 5tl •.Botkins :\0

Ottoville

Wis.-Green B;~y 69, Wriahf St. 49

Mllw..- 8t San Anuinlo. 8:30p.m.
CLEVELAND II Phoenix. 9 p.m.
New~-~ Ill ·Stanlc. 10 p."l.
V_.V..otl.A, Laken,I&amp;.JOp.m.

~

.,

.:

Olvillon IV
Bellaire St. John'a :11 . Shadyaide-49
BriRtol61. Berll• Center W. Relervc

'.l6

Urb:ma 68, Shawnee Sl. 62

, QIWII:o 11 Wuhinjlon; 8 p.m.

.

••

lhfthe Nfll,. &amp; o· """'

Kinlllnd 45, Newbury 40

Mid·Obio.(;onrerence
~alone 94, Tirfin.78
RIO GRANDE 77. Ccdortillo 62

Heu_,.

l!int IIJeak to II pmes. Alonzo put the pme away.
•
In ocher NBA·pmeo, Milwube
Mounlina added 16 points and far.
. They took IIlio IIIIIIJY out of New . mer Net PJ . B,_.. hid nine.poiats edpd Dallas 101-99, l""tin• clobJlney, the doclrrn out ofo.llas and and.- biJIHyiq 17 rebounds. bered Den- 92-68, Hoe.... heat
the p 'BIIIIfllorJ out of Denver: So
TheNetshldamorellhleticloojt Toronto 107-97, Utah defeated
whit hlppened after alllhe dealing as Sam.Cusell, 1'011 Jacloon, Clris · Boston 122- IOS, New York downed
Wlli done?
•
··
Gatling and Eric M011tross made SatlllliCRIO 109·87 and Pbjladelphia
It wu the Sllllle o1d result -- Ion- their New Jeney debuts;
topped lite Los Angeles Clippers
es fcir me· Neb, Mavericks and
Kenilall Gill and Cassell had 17 101-8-4.
Nuucu. , ' :
.
.
Points apiece to lead New Jersey. .
BecU 101, Mam141"
New Jrney, blendias in four new . Kerry Kittles lllded IS, Gatling had
AI ·Dallas, 7-foot-6 Shawn
players after making a rune-man "13 and Monaou lied biueason-bigh Bltldley got as~s oVatioa Wilen
·• ~~ap 'with Dallas on Monday and, wilh ·~'points, includingtpofirstsix ~ came off the bench in lhe first
then trading Eleorje McCloud to lite of lhe 'game.·Iocloon ftmshed with qu~r. but hi~ 10 points, 10
):.aken on !lbursday, stayed with lite
five. "
rebounds and st~ biQCked shots
Miami Heat fui'.·three qUarters of a .
"16 •u_pretty good;" Gill said. . weren't enough to help tbe Maver92·871oss.
·
·
..~ ' we get pnctice' and icks get a victol'y.
. "It was a wild g_ame, son of scat- everyone knows what ~ ·are doing,
"I was like . a, lost sheep out
laed, until Tim Hardaway decided .to everjlihc will be all riJI!L BvetjbOdy there," Bl'lldley said. "I still have a
wi.n jt for us," Miami coich Pat Ri16y .. is e~ited about the trade. We kniiw' ways to eo• It'was alitt1e nCrvous in
said. ·"We were not at our best, bUI what we can do."
· · ·
the,first half, but I got sealed down."
Jlc made 'lite big plays and· the big
New Jeney cloied to 86=-81 on
Vin Baker scored 29 . points,
stoots. We would not have won it two free ilirows by MontroSs with . · includins a free ,throw and a bucket
. withOut him." '
2:33. ieft. but Mourning d,Unbd and in tbe last two minutes to help beat
Hardaway scOred 3S'•points and ~ir.tay . capped a 12-of-24 shoot- back a laic Dallas rally after the
Miami extended its team-record win- ing night with a 20-foot jumper to Mavs had trailed by as many as 16

came in second with 111 .5 poinl$. In · Saturday for tbe Division II section· ,;,
third place was Shenandoah with 99 al tournament. Roberts is the first ...
points, followed by. Caldwell (98), seed with 29·6 mulL
.. ct; ·
Meigs (82), Waterford (72.5), Fed· 1
Thomas is seeded .second in the '"
e1'31 Hocking (16.5) . and Trimble
135-pound class with a 30-11 mark.
He is seeded behind an undefeated ,; ,
(13).
.
• Point Pleasant )!lOR the Blue'Divi- ' wrestler from Maysville. · .
,1 i
Shuler is seeded third in the 152· · ·
sion with 18S.5 points. Marietta fin· ·
ished second with 180 poinls. The ·pound class wit,h a 25- 14 reco(~ . ""
b:
· host Warrion, who IOO!t third place , Jeremy Morris is seeded third in the ,0
with 162 points, were f&lt;ollowed by. . 145-poundclass with a 19-16 record. ~.;
Jacksod (I 06), Logan (I 00), Galli a · Also seeded third is MiChaels·with a ·
. Academy (54), River Valley .(35) and 22-7 mark.
. ;.;_
Athens (7).
Nine teams wUI take part in the "'
· Leading · Meigs was · Adam tournament this weekend. Taking ,,&gt;
Thomas who finished first in the . pan this weekend will he Jackson, ;:;.
135-pound class, Josh ''Tiny" River Valley, Gallia Academy, Phi· o:.
Roberts finished second in the 275; lo, Morgan, Warren Local, ~'
· pound class. Shawn Michaels lin- ;Marsville, Fe()eral , Hoc,king a~d .
ished fifth in lite 12S-pound class; ' -Me1gs. The top Jout teams w1ll '"·
David Shuler finished sixth in the advance to the district tournament in. ~ .
1Steubenville, a,long . witb ' the top ,;·
IS2·pound class.
. ·
Meigs will travel. back to Warren four individual qualifien.

W. Salem Nortllwettcrn !i6, Ak_ron
Manchelltr 48
.
You. Ursuline~ Campbell Memorial27

· Gnnnon " · Ashland 67

.Toalidlt'• pnies

.

.

AP BaallaMid Wil11r

(OTI

Great Lakes lntercoJJeciate

DcnYft' 111 orlando. ?:]()p.m.
Potttand Ill Miami, 7:30p.m.
.
.(..A: ~;lipS'" Chorlotte, _7,30 p.m.

Vol. 8), Wbeclcn-

·'

By CltRIISit!RIDAt4

!ir

Ohio men's
college scores

IDdiana ~. Denver 68

Ptllnt

.alumni hasketb.all gntne will be held
on Satilrda.y, · M~h I.
The womell•s· game will get
underway at 5:30 with the men's.
game to follow. -For m~ infonnation, call Dan Spencer at 667-3342
or Tim Baum at98S:3301.

..

-.Olio 45, Hurulial.._ 42
Belpre 67, Fedonol Hocld• 4l
Bl.rCk Ri'"' 411. Hilb- 37
a..,r;n Falls 53, Shaker Htl. l5 ·
ColiiRbin SC.!OII52. Avon S2
. Cuylltiof11 FaU( Cuy. Val. Cbr. 60,
Beachwood 2
·
.
Day. Oakwood~ Brookville 36
.. Doyleuowa ChippeWa 59, Smldlville
41
,EI....,; Wooclmoi&lt;7Z, 0ttcao 35.
Milhary Lake ~.1. Swanton 43
Mi....tRid 68. Glnoil,l8
veraillu
Twin va1. s. 4i
Warren Cbampion 44, Badaer lO .
w. Muskinaum 41. Union Local :\$

bora 6.'
.
.
Oregoa78, Aril01ll172
Oreaon 51. 71, AritoM St. 61
Poclfic 81, Cal St. · F,IIcn~ l7
San Oicso 72. Loyola M~nt 69
Sin Fnin&lt;isoo 56. Pepperdi110 46
Sfan[ord 76. WlllhinaiOit So. 6.1
UNLV87.Aii'Forct72 .
U1ah St. 69. Idaho ~8

~

9~

.

.......,..,. Pyinolllni'll Val.. 46. Wick·

I.

- Tulsa80, Bril,hlm Youna6~

2(1

helllcDI•IIIon
L..A. Lalron ............ 37 ll .711
Soatli0 .................... 36 15 .706
......... ................. 28 15 .518

J

Southwest

:: :~ 12~
.:\~
21 .491

.340
Denver .. - ....... :....•••17 37 .31$
s.n....,Di1io ........... l2 39 .m
Vlncou\'01" ............. 11 . • , .196

.

Oltnlin Arelandlt M, Rocky_ River 39 ·
Raverum 58, Wabh Jauil SO (OT)
Wnos1er TriW!IY 6S. Caalon S. 40,

1ukanw St. 86, Texas-Pan American

Iii

)J

vw.n

Marquc«e 79, Louin'ille 71 (OT)
W. llliDOis79, St. Ambrole61
.Wi1.-(imen Bay 69, Wrip St."'

·-·-

Dlliu..................... l1

Lo..llnd 58. EdJ!'Wood 56
. Mlncrn 41, .Cinlensbur&amp; On. 43 .
New LexinJIOD ~3. O.Csbin::: River

Pl...... Ill

Buller 64, N. Illinois $7

16 1~

2.1&gt;

:n

Mldwat Dlv.._

Jeffertoa Arft 83, Ashtabula EdJC·

Midwest

14~

• · WESTERN CONFERENCE

~~-~·:::::::::::::::3~

wood45

Soaoh C...llno B!!; Citadi:l 55
Term.-Martin 92, SE Miuo~ 62

WI ·

.S69 · I
' ........ ,._ ..,... ,.---·.25 . 11 All .,~ ' l) ' ''
M!lw.- .............2.1 2 .481
1~ ·
Tt:Jfonto ,............ -... 18 3S J40 28

r -.

Nieholls St. 19, Srephen P. Austin 74
South Alabama 44, Loviaiaan Tech

..Cerolnl Pl•lllon
Chi..-.:................46 6 ' . 88~
oern.t
....................3S 11 .745 ri~
AIIINa ................... :l4 17 .667
Chorkijtc ......... .'..... 32 11 .604 ' 1:~ ·

. CIJlVI!IAND .......l9

))

Samlonl96, M...., 76

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ila

Hamil!on Badin 64, Keuerina Alter

N;C,· AaheVille .74, N,C.~reensboro

Eastern.alumni
basketball twinbill
set for March 1
! Tht annual ESstem High School

.

:-Trades don't prevent 'Nets, ·Mavs and Nuggets froin l·osing -

'
•
Danny Fortsoti scored the visiting
•
llearc;alll' fJnt 15 points and finished
~
wilh 30. He also had nine rebounds
'
for Cincinnati (21-S,-9-1 CQnference
4
USA). Brian Lamb had 13 points
,.
and nine rebounds for the Bulls (7- ·
16, 1-10), who lost their founh
lcnr~~80
"
straight and 13tb of 14.
No. 18 ~ddglin 75
.. .
Marqaette 79
Andre Woolridge scored 2S :.~
No. IS Loulnille 71
poiniS and I .R Koch added 14 as the -~
Hawkeyes . (17-8, ·a-s Big Ten) ..
Sophomondarrod Lovette made
two fret throws with 14 secorids left
snapped a three-game losing streak. "
iowa led 57-41 with9:52left, but let
to send the same-into ovenif!le 'an4
tbe visiting Wolverines (17:8. 7-6) .~
finished with .career-highs of 19
back in it with poor free-throw .,
points iuod 15 rebounds for the Qolden Eagles (16-7, 7,4 Conference: shooting, as the Hawkeyes finished )
USA). SophQmore forward Alex • . IS:of. 29. L~ui~ Bullock : had 23. , :
Sanders had a career-high 21 pointS• po1nts for M1Chtgan;·w~Jcli has lost · •
for the visiting Cardinals (20-6, 7-4),
three offoior,
'

Meigs wrestlers captu·re.fifth
place in Warren Local Classic

Scoreboard

In the NBA,

Friday, ,...,.,21,1111 ~ ·

·

~ •llldcllport, Ohio

..

I"'

, •.

~··~s.~t.

..

••''
:;.

:

:

j

'

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

•

Newspaper directory is the best ticket
to.finding those help wanted ads
·
and iDclude the ~·· cin:ulatioa,
wbal COIIIIlY it's baed in, oditon'
nama, ad ra1e1 and, of coune, the
aewlfllller's address. pbooe, and fax
info.

We think starting with the local
newspaper is a good idea. We also
think Chamben of Conimerte are
good resources, and yiJu should consider writing to them when you fi!ld
c:ommunities that partiCillarly inter·

ay ANNE B. ADAMS Mel
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My
wife·and I wo.uld like to leave this
small town and oor interfering par·
enIS. We ue thinking of some place
warmer. We look at the atlas and
wish we knew more about cercain
towns in South Carolina, for
instance. Is there a daily aild/or
weekly paper published in Spartan·
burg? How can we find out the
names and address of local .newspa-•
pers? We want to start our sea11:h
with the newspapers to find' information on the town, jobs, housing,
etc. We have no children and think
this is a good time to mal(e a move.
-- PLEASE, NO NAME; PLEASE
NO TOWN, Mich.
DEAR NO NAME: Bacon's
Newspaper Directory (Bacon's
Information Inc., 1995) is just what
you're looking for. We hope this
jnfbrmation-packed resource is
available at your lbcallibrary. If it's
not .there ask about an· inter-library
loan.
''
The &lt;lirectory lists over 1,680
North American daily newspapers as ·
well as 8,600 weekly newspapers.
The listings are by state and town

r

Frkllly, ~ 21,

..

.'

have trouble removing stains. but I
wotbd hard 011 this one. I finally,
with 1111 my c:otiCOCiions, go1 the
stain to the point where 1111 you cO!Jld
see wae slisbt rings. I usually can
set dirt. oxidized wine, tar and actual rust from old hangers out of.clothing. I asked where the dress had
been •IOR:d· It had been put into a
cedar closet without a boll or tissue.
The satin had SOIIkcd up the cedar
oils ~erywhere the dress touched
the closet wall."
· FEEDBACI&lt;: ROSBS OlTf OF
DOU.AR BILLS -Rose Griffith of
QuinneSec, Mich .• was looking for a
pattern for this. Alta M. Evans. of
Vici, Okla.. sent along some
sources: Crafts Ellpress, Dept. B,
P.O. Box 349, Wicldift'e, OH .(14492. ThC booklet is "Creative Gifts
From Cash, Book ~- " For price
infonnation, write to the company.

ct .. ""-a.toll

_
By B~NNIE SHIVELEY
Devotional WrHer ·
When winter's tempemtures drop
into the teens, Smokey our border
collie and our three 'bam' cats are
allowed lo come in the basement.
Our noose dog, Angel, a llasa apso,
makes sure eveiyone know she's in
charge.
·
.
·
While I 'poke up' the embers in
the stove . .Smokey snootes on his
blanket and Miss Kitty sils on tile
stair steps one step above Tom Thrrific. He iooks at ·her. her and she
Jays b~ck her ears, crouches arid

with a "fffft' dares him to move.
- Nice her size, Tom looks at her
with sleepy eyes. "What-did I do?"
She twitches her tail and ~rs low
growls. Tom looks at me With questioning eyes -- "Is she trying to pick
a fight or just having a bad hair
day?" -Tom ignores her and she
decides to settle down on the carpet.
She stretches lazily and ·goes to
sleep with a paw over her eyes.
Did you ever ~ust look at' someone and they acted like Miss Kitty •
- they grumble while you wonder
what you did? How do you react? .

'• '

and "As charcoal
to embers ~nd as
wood -to fire, so is
a quarrelsome
man for kindlin$
strife." In other
words, 'chill out.~
Father, when I
feel like lashing
out, help .me io be patient and kind.
Amen.

FRWAY
.
, RACINE .. Inspection, J'omeroy
Racine Lodge 164. F&amp;AM, 7:30

p.m. Friday at the hall. Work in fellow craft degree. Members to take
pies.

Members to discuss water ord.inance.
TUESDAY
RACINE -- Southern Local.
School Board, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
Letart Elementary School. ·

MONDAY

POMEROY -- Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m Monday "at the Veterans Service ·
Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. . RACINE _; ·RACO, Tuesday,
6:30 potluck dinner, new members
RACINE-- Racine Board of Pub· welcome,
lie Affairs special me~ting Monday, Star.Mill Park.
10:30 a.m. at the muniCipal building.

~

......
.u

I

l·

.t

••

• ••

.

' -: RoprWoSunday Sd&gt;o!&gt;l • 9:30 o.m.
Worship - ttl-.30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
~ ,·
Wednadooy Serv,lcco - 7 p.m.

t-.,..,....'=="~--

f

..;

DllollinJ'Cii- oiCirrtol' .
Cornu of St. Rt. 124.&amp; IINiour} Rd.
· ,' ·
Mlniller: Dou&amp;Shomblia
.,
Youth Miaioter. lliU Ambe. .r
.
·.
SUDolay School· 9:30 o.m.
·;. Wonlrip . 8:00 o.ra., 10:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneldly Services ·7:00p.m.
•,·

Stmrllaa~

. p....,;, Bill Little

Sunday School - t~m.
~onllip- 11~,m., 7:30p.m.
Wednaday Servk:a- '1:30 p.m..

IJiMot) Ck-1 ltv
~

'

Rlclne, Oll

.'

Putor : Doalel Boldine
,~

Q-u~
,

.

Wonbip·9:30o.m. Sl!ndoy

~··"~:C!!Ip.111~)Vo4aeoday

Old lllitill rnt Wtl Bapcllt'CIIU'CII ·.·
'

'

28150t' Sl. RL 7; Mldd!etlott . ·
SundoySc:hool-10 Lm,
.
. E..nil&amp; •7:30 p.111: . .'
Thunday SeiVicel - 7:30

·

-

RD

· C I 't loptlot Clollrdi
St. RL 143]1111 off RL 7 .
Putor: Rev; lomeoll Aaee; Sr.
Sundof School· 10 .....
~-tlo.m.,6p.m.

W...,...y Scrvices -7 p.m.

•

Vlciao:J lapllli ~~
~25

·

N. 2ild St. Middleport
Pulor: 11111&lt;1 E. Keeoee
Worship· IOo.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service• • 7,.p.m.

Thanks to the Good Peopk of the Ohio Valley we've been able to
serve you since February 22, 1954. Come see why we've been here for
43 years!

Dependable service·
using only.quality
replacement parts!

.. .

3• 9· · Financing
.

I

on Sunfires
. . til March. 3rd.
60Months.

'

,J

·~

·Professional ·~ .
body &amp; paint
shop

*2500

).'

oiSI!Irol..- Oudl

Loadina Creek Rd., Rudlllll
. Putor: Rev. Dewey Kina

Sl!ndoy IIChool· 9:30 o.m.
Suadoy wonbip •7 p.m.
Wodneodoy pnyer meetira&amp;· 7 p.m.

l'llfGnm lllltH-QU'CII .
1/2 mile off RL 325

- a . .. O'lldl Mmley

.

Sundoy School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonllip • 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneodoy Service • 7-.30 p.m.

..
W..,_lllltH
h

CIIU'CII

1; Peor1 Sl., Middleport.

.

Pu1or: Reol.lobn Ne.illc
Clildnn'o 110rvice • 10 Lm.
. Wonbip - 7:30p.m.
W~y Service· 7:30p.m.

. H,..allaaB..... QU'CII
-Robert M..tey
Sl!ndoy School ; 9:30 o.m.
Worship • 10:45 Lm.,·7 p.m.
Thundly Service· 7:30p.m.
Loonl aurrno Milia -. Oudl

--7n:mbloy
Sl!ndoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Worship ·10:30 Lm, ud 7 p.m.
W - y Serviaa. 7:W p.m.

....... c, ....., card~
Putor: a... Roy Mc:Cirty
Suntloy School- 9:30 o.m.
=rae...ma-.7p.m.
w.
y Scrvical • 7 p.m.

L&lt;tltcr D&lt;ty Sdtnts

f

'I

bttaad l'no WIIIBopdlt
•
Solem St.
' Putor: Rev. Pout Toylor
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
E\'Oitiua · 7p.m.
W-yServices - 7p.m.

t61 Mulberry A.... Pameroy, 1192-~898
Putot: Rev. Walter B. Heinz
SoL Con. 4:45-~: !~p.m.; Muo- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45·9:15 o.m.,
'
SWI. M111 • 9:Jo Lm.
Dailey Muo- 8:30 o.m.

l'llltor: Pllllip SNrm

•

Wonhip • 9 a.m.
·ThiUidly Scrvk:ea - 6:30 p.m.

blludCIIU'CIIotiM Nuo,...
PuW: SimuelBasye ·
Sundoy School- 9:30 o.m.
Worship -10:30 o.m ., 6:30p.m.
Wednelday Services - 7 p.m.

Halla (MNdleport)
Puaor: VClRipye Sulliv111
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m.

PorduciPiniCIIU'CIIoftbe NlzonH
·
Putor: Mutt Motion
Wonbip · 10:30 p.m.
Sundoy Sdlool - 6 p.m.
W - y Services· 7 p.m.

. FanotRu
Pator: Chorl01 Neville .
Sunday Schooi·lO o.m.

Millen-rile
Pastor: Charles Neville

.- 1 .

Paaor: Robert I!&gt; RobuSandoy School- 9:1~ o.m.
Wonllip • 10:30 o.m.
Bible Study 'l'lloldly - 10 o.m.

Pine Grove

Wonltip • 9:00 o.m.
S-y Sdaool • 10:00 o.m.

OvSa...... IAIM• Cllvdl

lllrllud
Saadoy School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m:
'111undoy Scrvi.,..·- 7 p.m.

Follla Cupel Opea Bible Clian:~
923 S. Third St., Middleport

=a;

W.::l·

· s1-

f'lnl C.U'CII orGocl
Apple and Seoond Stl.
Putor: R••· Do•id RIIIICjl
Sundoy School ond Wonliip- 10 Lm.
ll..:nina Servlceo· 7:30p.m.
W - y Servicea -7:30p.m.

I

. ~ Clulrda or Cod orPnp~eCJ
•11 OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. t60
Putor: PJ. Caopmon
Sundoy School - 10 o.m.
Wonhlp·I1Lm.
w-....y s.r.~cea- ,,. ...

A1l'nd
Pastor: Sblron Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip - lll.m., 6:30p.m. .

Cltootu

Pastor: Sharon Hauunan
Wonbip • 9 o.m.
Sunday Sdiool- tO..m. ·
Thundly Servicol - 7 p.m.

Sunda~~30o.m.
Wonltip- 10:30 o.m.

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
. Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

.

Cluiollla FellowNip Ceater

· Wednesday Setvice - 7:30p.m .

Solem St., Rutlllld
PuiOr: Robert E. Musser
Sunday Sc:hool-10 o.m.
Wonltip · 11:15 o.m., 7 p.m·.
W - y Service- 7 p.m.

1IWr

Sunday S!:laool • 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 9 o.m.
Wednelday ServiCOI • 10 o.m.
' c..l
.
i ' , hitOt: Kenftith Baker
Sunday Sdtool- 9:30 o.m. ·
Wonblp • 10:45 o.m. (2nd &amp; 4th SWI)

. M-.,sc.r

Putor: Kenncth'·lllker
Sunday School - 9:4! a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 o.m,
_ThiUidly Scrviooa - 7:30p.m.

s.aoa

Putor: Kenneth Boker

. Suadoy School- 9:30 o.m.
Womhlp- 10:45 o.m. (1st &amp; 3nl Sun)

Sti..J'IVIUe Word ofl'lillt

Putor: David Dailey

Sunday School,9:30 Lm.
Evening - 7 p.m.

H-Ciorilltv FtllottUip ChU'CII
Reo!. Clyde Honderoon
Sunday oervice, 10:00 o.m., 7:30 p.m.
Youtb Fellowahip Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ~~tee, 7:30 p.m. .

ReJoklrla ure aaun:~a

.500 N. 2Dd A..:., Micldlepon

Pallor: Lawrence Foreman
Sundoy School • 10 a.m:
Wednesdoy Se.Vicea- 7 p.m.

Fllda l'lrll Goopel Cllucb

ChUftb or Jesu aarti~
Apostolic 1,'11111
1/4 mile put For1 Meigs on New Lima Rd. •
Pastor: William Van·Meter
.·
Sunday·7:00 p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00 p.m.

Long Bottom
Putor: Sieve Reed
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m.llld 7 p.m.
W...,Oidor,·7p.m.
Fridoy - felloWIII p 10rvice 7 p.m.

Tile - t t r i ' FlllotrNip M1U1rJ
New Lime Rd:, Rutland
Putor: Reo!. Morpret I. Robinoon
Servk:ea: W-y. 7:30p.m.
Sl!ndoy, 2:30p.m.

CUftoa Tobenulde Clam:~
Oifton, W.Va.

Sunday School- tO a.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Thursday Service- 7 p.m.
New Ute Viet.., Ceater
3773 Goorges Creek Rood, Oaltipofia, OH
PaSior:· Bill Staten
Sunday ServicCs ~ 10 a.m. 4 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

EoodUmeHoueor..,..,.,

.~UIIiledM-­

' Putor: Helen Kline ·
CooMIIe card~
Moin &amp; Fifth Sl.
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
· Wonbif • 9 a.m.
Tueodoy ServiCOI - 7 p.m.

Pentec ost al
PtaltcDIIII~IJ

Sl. Rl. 124, Rocine
Paslor: William Hobal;k
Sunday School- 10 a.m.·
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedncsdoy Servi&lt;OS • 7 p.m.

Middleport eo...utty Cllurda

515 Pout St., Middleport
l'utor: Som Andmon
Sunday School 10 o.m.
Evc:nina - 7:30p.m.
' Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

• llelllel Chll'&lt;~
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonbip- 10 a.m..
W - y Servicea- 10 o.m.
Herktoaoort Cburdl
. OrandStreet
. Sunday School-tO o.m.
Wonhlp • II o.m.
Wednelday Servicol· $p.m.
TordoClvdl
Co. Rd. 63 •
Sunday Sdlaol - 9:30 o.m.
Woilblp- 10:30 o.m.

~Rindolpll

Putor:
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 Lm.

ear...,. Bible Cb•n:b

Sunday service, 10 a.m .
Thundly service, 7 p.m.

Unit ed Mct11 odts l

Melp~tmhrtdo
N....._~

Folth Ftltowalllp ~tO&lt; Clirlll
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

- Putor Michael Pangia

(II BurlinJham church off Route 33)
Putor: Robert Vonce
1
Sunday wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday aervice. 6:30 p..m.

-CII-orCod
Putor: Rllldy Bur
Sunday School· tO o.m.
11o.m•.-6 p.m. .
y Servicol· 7 p.m.
W

PostQr: Rev .. Phillip Ridenour
Swaday Sc:hoot • 9:30 o.m.

Sunday School·· 9:U,Lm.
·Wonbip • 10 un.
Youth Fellowllllp, Sunday - 6 p.m.

RaciDt
\
P - : Brian HortneM
Sul)dly School · 10 a.m.
· Wonhip d I o.m.

MLOtm Ullhd M Off t24 behind Wilta•ill•
Putor: Rev. Rltpll Spira
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Thundoy
. Services • 7 p.m.
.

Cupel Wetleylla

LOOivillc Road

Pastor: John Hart

~- &lt;=-lrlllt)' Ckorrclt
Putor: n.eron Durham
Sunday - 9:30 o.m. llld 7 p.m.
Wednotdoy . 1 p.m.

'Mt. M- Cli- of Cod
Rlcine
l'llltor: Rn.IIUDOI Sotterfoeld
. Sl!ndoy School· 9:4$ Lm.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
W - y Services · 7 p.m.

WhHe~

Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
· Wonltip · 7:00p.m. .
Wedneodoy Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

.

-Lelol1

Chu rch of Go d

Fnedom GoopeiMialoa
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pasoor: Re&gt;. Roger Willford
· Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 7 p.m.

'I1It Celebnlloa Cnler
.
320 E. Moin St., Pomeroy
(Pomeroy Municipol Building ouditorium)
Putor: lim Codner
Wonltip oervicol: Sunday, tO a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.

..!'::."~......

Putor. Brion Hutneu
Sl!ndoy School- IO ~ .m.
~":~·9o.m.
W
y - 7p.m.

Cr t•• Ulllted Metlladllt
Wonblp- 9:30 o.m. (1st &amp; 2Dd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd A 4th Sun)
Wednadoy Service· 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sundly or Wedneodoy Nipr Servic:el

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

St.PoiiLollltnaCitU'CII
Comor Syc:ornore It Seoond St., """""'Y
Rev. Oeorae Weirick
Sundoy Sc:hoot • 9:45 o.m.
Wonhlp • 11 o.m.

Clivdl oiCIIrlolira
Hutford, W.Vo.
Putor: Rev. Do•id McMonio
Suoolay Sdlool • 11 Lm.
Wonbip • 9:30 o.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednelday Servk:eo·· 7:30p.m.

Olrletoa ]alta dex=l••tioul Q'U'dt
Kingsbury Rood
Pastor: Jeff Smith

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Clms t1 &lt;1n Un ;on
~Ualoaa

Silnr Ridge

· Pastor: Robert Barber
· Sunday School • 9 o.m.
Worship . tO a.m., 7 p.m.
"'fednetday Servi" · 1 p.m.

ADpe ure ee&amp;ter
"F\ilt-&lt;Joopel Church"
"-'lohn&amp;PonyWide
603 Secood Ave. Mllon

Sundoy School: 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip Service: 10:30 o.m.
Bible Study, Wednelday, 6:30p.m.

·-

· SouthBellteiNttrTollameat

Flirview Bible CbLetart, W,Va. Rt. I

PDI&lt;Ir:

Root. Oeorae Weiridt

FaD Goopel uptbaue
33045 Hillnd Rood, Pomeroy
PukJr: Roy Hunter
Sunday School ·- 10 o.m.
•
·Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuetdoy &amp; Thursdoy • 7:30 p.m;

m-.5017
SerYic:e time: Sunday 6:00p.m.

s.ow.ru.

St.J·~~

Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
. Wedneodoy Service - 7 p.m.

. . . 0.-o:b Mlaillrlel
Old Alliericon Legion Hal~
.Fourth Stree~ Middloport, OH
Putor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: 10 s.m. &amp; 6 p.m.

Peuttltlpet
Sunday School- 9 o.m.
Wonhip • to o.m.

-flniCii-ofdaoNon•
Putor: Scott Rooe
·
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m. •
Wonbip -10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneoday services· 7p.m.

Middleport Clatrre~ of tile Noanae
Putor: OreJOIY A. CUII!iiff

•

_Pastor: Rev. Robert B. Smith, Sr.

Oth er Churche s

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
· Wonbip • 10 o.m.

Saadoy School - 10 o.m.
. Wonhlp-9a.m.

-.

· Ulllled Flilll aa...~
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pus

Putor: Rov. Herbert Orate
Sunilly School - 9:30 o.m.
~ tla ..m.• 6 p.m.
W
y ServiCOI • 7 p.m.

Wllnut llld Henry SU., Rlveuwood, W.Vo.
latrim puton: Rev. Robert Hupp
Sundoy School • 10:00 o.m.
Womhip,- 11 o.m.

ML-Bo)lllll
Fourth &amp;-Jobin St., t.llddlepon
Putor: Re•. Gilbert Cnia.lr.
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhlp- 10:4~ o.m.
Aiotlqlllt1Bollllol
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonltlp -10:45 o.m.
Thunday Servicol· 7:30p.m. ·

ldGnmCII-

r-:Oenez-

Lawn:na:
8uJh
Sunday School
- 9:30
o.m.
Evcnina • 7 p.m.
WO&lt;Inedoy Service - 7 p.m.

a.-~ of lite Nuantie

s.JnaC..ter
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:15 o.m.
Wonhip ·tO: IS o.m.

l.uthct .111

·-=

MI. Ollt..coauraaorlly CIIU'CII

=::z

tlatw' P-r: Keilh Roder
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
· Worship · 11 L~.

.

ae •J •• Chftl o1 Cllrlll

.

Sunday School - 9:4$ o.m.
Wonbip - 11 a.m.
Wedneadoy Serv~ • 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School - 10 o.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

c..-

- y ocbool • W::fclo.m.
Wonbip • 9:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

F_. bolllplllt
Putor ;·AriUI Hurt
Sunday School • 10 o.m.
Wonbip- II o.m.

· See the all new
'97. Park Avenue
Now on Display!

Cash back on
·'96 Firebirds

R

Fllfli·BatiCiiiCIIU'CII
Raiii'Oid St., Muon
·sunda1 School - tO..m.
Wonbop . t I o.m., 6 p.m . .
Wednaday Services- 7 p.m.

Guaranteed lowest prices ·
on new Buicks an!l
Pontiacs. We beat any
out-of~town price.

-

·-~1-~30 .!Lm."'i'l;
Wonblp ·-10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m. .
WediiOidly Servico 7:30p.m. .

"".''~'·"'·..;

;if"'•'

j

·y Service - 7:30p.m.

W

' . a r~ ~ C1lorrdl

.

Eott"""'
Pastor: Keath Roder

Pa• OJ Clllll"dd.rtlle Nuarne
Putor: Re•. Tbomu McCtuna
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonbio - 10:30 o.m.llld 6 p.m.
· W - y Servi&lt;OS -7 p.m.

C..lniCI-

Flilll ~ C1lorrdl
l.onllloltom
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip -10:4h.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedncsdoy 7:30 p.m.

r

P~=~te

Twppeul'lllu St. Put
Putor: Shlron Hollllllln
Sundoy School - 9 o.m.
Wonhip - IOo.m.
1\leldoy Services - 7:30 p.m.

Suntloy School9:30 .....

~llr1ltif II o.m., 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - t0:30 o.m., 6:30p.m..
-w-....y Servk:ea - p.m.
RledotiDe l'ellowolalp
.CII-ofiMNIIZIIftM .
Putor: Mutt A. Dllpler
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m .
Wonltip • 10:45 o.m., 7 p.m.
w-....y Servicoa- 7 p.m.
'
S)a ..we Chid~ oldie NulrtM
Putor: Dill SU...
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m. .
Worship - 10:30 o.m., 6 p.m.
Wedaeldoy Servk:ea • 7 p.m.

-.ae..VIdor-

Putor: Waocl)' C.U
' Sundoy l!¥erlinl· 6-.30p.m.
'11londoy Service • 6:30 P.!D· "

~ . .)IIIII .

' "

~~·~rt

Evoe,elilllooc:ph B. lloltlao
. SundoySchool-9o.m.
Wonlrip·IOo.m., 7p.m.
W - y Services· 7 p.m. ·

Putor : JoeN. S.yre
s"""'y School-9:45 o.m.
Bvcnina· 6:30p.m.
Wc:dncodooy Services- 6:30p.m.

•

w:;nrur •

!" I ) 'HIIII Cli- ofCiirlol .

.
MLUroloeBapcllt

·'

BnAt . , Cliutl! of Cllrllt
Pulor: lob Copley
~ Sdlool- 9:30o.m.
.
Wonbip·t0:30Lm.
R••' ·d CHrdl ofQrlll
Putor: lluaerie E. Uodea wood
Sunday Sc:hoot • 9:30 o.m.
Wonltlp • t0:30 o.m,, 7 p.m.

lbdtae ..... lapllll
P -: Rev. Lawrence T. Holey
Youth Putor: Almn Yo'"'l ·
s..Dy School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:40 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneodoy Servlceo , 7!00 p.m.
·

Putor: Soot Biown
.
Wonbip Service· 9o.m.
Commuaion- 10 Lm. '
Sunday.Sc:hool - 10:15 o.m.

•

Putor: B: Llmlr O'Bryat
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:45 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedaeoday Servicol· 7:W p.m •.
flnlllllpllol 0....
Putor: Milk Morrow
6th llld l'llmer St., Middleport
Sunday Schooi-9:1S..m.
Wonltip - 10:1~ o.m., 7:(10 p.m.
Wednaday Service· 7:W p.m.

Mlddlepcir1 P.,.le&lt;ollli
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Cl11k Baker
Sunday School - tO o.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Services· 7:00p.m.

Follla Volley Toberuo:le QU'CII

lloiley RWI Rood
. Putor: Rev, 'Emmell·Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
~ursday Service • 7 p.m.

Pres byt eri an

S:rn&lt;""" Mtuloa
1411 J!riclgemon St., Syracuse
Sunday School· 10 o.m-.

Evening - 6 p.m.

,

.

Wednaday Service- 7 p.m.

u..ierc--mty Oaucb
OffRt. tZ4
Putor: Edsol Hart
Sundoy School- 9:30 o.m.
• Wcinhip. 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.

lbrrlooe.W.l'ra~~Jtedu CIIU'CII

WOI'Ihip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:45 o.m.

Middleportl'rllbytorlu
Sundoy School - ~ Lm.
Wonhip • 10 o.m.

o,.mle Corrrmorally Clon:~
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Mont Cbapel Ckun:b
Sundly school· 10 a.m.
Worship· It a.m.
Wednesday Service , 7 p.m.

SyiKUo Flnt Uarlted Preobytertu
Paslor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sundoy School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II o.m.

•

.

.

Se ven th -Day A dve nti st
Se•e•th·Dor Ad&gt;atill
Mulberry Htl.' Rd., Pomeroy
. Putor: Roy Lawinaky
S.turllly Services:
Sobboth School - 2 p.m.
Worship· 3 p.m.

Unti ed Breth re n

RACINE; PLANING MILL

'2449 .

'2314

At Pickup

· 48 Mo.@

$

oo·
Month

'•

, ,_.

110,1100 m!ln ·

30,1100 m.U .. '' . · .

'

'

~'l1J!l.M9.1

Pt'88Criptlon8

. jiLL QUICKEL .

992-2955

of Columbua, Oh.

804W. Main

11812-2318 Pameroy

'

992-5432

We FIJI Doclo!l'

Nallonwlde Ins. Co.

• ,j/

228 v;rMaln St.. Pomeroy

PHARMACY

P. J.

,.

"FIIBIIIr/ng Kentucky fried ChlckiHI'

&amp;LOHSE,

. 992-6677

. \

Crow'• Family Rutaul'llnt

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
892-5141
264 South 2nd
Middleport

·.G!MS.0uJCKa..
AGENCY INC. ·

MOnth .
;. '~ r

992-3785 PomerOy

992 ·3918

· PW' .f

I

212 E. Maln Street

SyriCU$f

00

$

''
24Mo.
0
•'

Wotk
Cahinel r,la~tnJ

At Pickup

'·

RAWLINGS·COATS ·

Mill

'

..

-a-a

oiCIIrlol
Pomo!roy, Horr'-vllle Rd. (Rt.143)

~812~~;r:• .

ll

I

Putor: liCk
Sunday School-9:30 o.m.
Wonltlp- t0:30 Lm., 6:30·p.m.
W - y Scrvicol· 6:30 p:m.

bllooodl'lnl Bapcllt card~
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonblp • 10:45 Lm.
, . _..., ....... Bapcllt
Putor: Put Sti111011
Eut Mlln S1.
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30 o.m.
Wonlllp ·10:30 a.m.

By R()BERT GREENE
AP EduC41tion Writer

,••

Claerda oiCIIrlol

Putor. La Haymon
Sunday Service - 1:30 p.m.
~School - to o.m.
. W
y Servico-7:30 p:m.

'students examine tradition of honor code
They asked whether · a system friends who break the rules - the
baSed
on trusi may foster mistrust pledge .requires that' students tum in
,
. STAuNTON, Va. (AP) -It's an because of the secrecy that marks its all violators- if that's what ii t*es
aiinosphere ·o( trust that few people working and the .absence of fixed · to be tru~ted with talic&gt;.home exams .
penalties. Students don't always · and other privileges. · · ·
experience. ··
.
know
who gets punished or what the • "I don't wani tlult privilege-taken
St~ents 8t Mary Baldwin Colaway, even if that means turning in a
lege can Jaavc books, laptop c_om- penalty is, or who gets ofT or why.
"I tumed in someone who cheat· friend," said Karen Zeliznak, 19, a
puters and other possessrons
unguarded without fear of theft. ed on a· final exam," said Su~?~nna sophomore. from Niagara ··Falls,
They can sc:hedu)e their Own teSIS Hicks, 22, a senior from lndianapo- Canada, told about 80 fellow studuring ellam week and C!ln .take lis. '"That person was back 'the next dents. She •aid aficrward she'd
·
never tuf!IC!C) in a friend, adding, "I
them without a professor watchtng. · y~. "
Polls regularly document cheat· choose my friends carefully."
No one watch~. because the
Th0111h some talked of moral
1"200 women who 11tend this liberal ing in high schools. Competition to
make
gQ9d
grades
or
get
jobs
or
be
duties,.
others argued about the duty
arts college pledge they wlll not lie,
admitted
to
graduate
school
inteasito
butt
out.
Childrel) ·who were told
cheat; steal, or pass off others' writ·
ing ·as their own. No one watches, fy the press\I[C to cheat in college. A not to .tattle are now told to mt.
"If they want to cheat, that's their
that is 'cllltept other students, who' cheating li:andal at the U.S. .Naval
Academy
in
·
1992
showed
that
proble!D
and not mine," said Hol-police 'student conduct a!id II)' their
schdols
with
honor
systems
can
fall
land
Robens,
~I, a.junior from ·
peers as, elected me111~ ,of honor
prey.
.
Charlottesville,
Va.·
·
· ·
councils.
No ono knows exactly how many
Christina Maupin, 20, a junior
Such is the honor ays,tem, a carryinatiturions
still
have
honor
sylltems,
from
Qlarlouesville, s~ys she still
oyer from the 19th ccntur)', when
it's
believed
to
be
.
l
boutlOO.
doesn't
know who once lli'Cused he~
but
elite Southcm notions of honor
"I'd
like
til
think·
that
the
cheat·
of
cheating
on a religion exam. She
· blended with effot11 to bring seJf.
perJ!Inen,t to the campwt. Students ins and things like that don 'I hilppen wis cleared· of the cllqe, .but she
in:. .;e.s, sweat shirU and even T- very ofleil here," said Honor John· remembers too well the shame and
dairta on an . unseasonably . warm - · 21., a senior from 'Niahasiee, anger.
"lfelt like I did somelhlnl wrona
'f\WMIIIay pdleled ll die white" ~ "I IU!ly don't lhiilll they llo.
BUt
I
dtlnt
1\
do.ltlppia
more
thu
and
I didn 'I,'" she .Aid. "I juat fell
COI!o!L!'d ~m(NI lo ~~ Oft
jt'a
~
....
k'•llll!l
to
tell."
·
.
~~l.
t
lded from the rest of the Mary
fill,....~·"'!~
..._,
•du
..
llid
~
turn
.la
B~com~~~unlty."
:: 1' .
.
'' . J
'
. "·
r': ~
~
• -'&gt;·
''·'·•
.
'

...........llldp Cole...,....

Aih Street, Middleport

.

%

I 5th IGd Mlin

Putor:AIIbrtooo

..._.."bma.rdl

311157 Stoto ..... 325, LaapvU.
Pulor: Dr. I.D. Youna
Sunday 1Cboo1 • 9:30 Lll.
~{
10:30 LDL &amp; 7 p.m.
· W.
y pnyonavice - 7 p.m.

111111113rd~

l'noWWJiollllltC~­

~

for no reason,"

t a.rdt efCIIrlll

Kao CIIU'CII tiCIIrlol
Worship · 9:30 o.m.
Simdly School · 10:30 o.m.
Putor-lelfrey Wllllce

)·~

Wisdom from Proverbs 3:30 .and
26:21 says, "Do _ _
not accuse a man

.M'tP

Wonbip - 9:30 o.m.
Sunday School · t0:30 o.m.
UMYF Sundly 6:30p.m. .
Filii Sunday of Month · 7:30p.m. 10rvice

it,

Hollfl('SS

Yooth Mialoler: Bill Fnzier
Suntloy School • 9:30 ....
, Wonllip- 8:15,10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
: W - y Scrvk:eo - 7 p.m. ·

'

.1·..•
.
$· '
"

---Community
calendar.;..;_
· -.
Tbe Community Calendar is
published a5 a free service to no~­
pfQfll groups wislting to unoun&lt;e
meeting and special evenls. The
cal~ndal' is not designed to pro·
mote sales or fund ralsen of any
. type. llefi!S are priated u space
permits and cannot be auaranteed
to nUl a specific number of days•.

'

~· -ySchool - 'llo.m.
o11 W~·tOI.m.,6p.18.

i

..

,,,;·'·~
....

nt:lllllde
CIIU'CII oiCIIrlol ·
\ 33
CIUdi'OII'I Homo Rd.

P 1

I

MIAMI DEAN'S LIST
Mr. and Mr5. Bill Young, Pomeroy, Ketchum, Christi Lynch, Sue Mai- ·
Janet
Holllngaworth,
Michael McKelvery, junior in and is a graduate of Southern High son, Patsy Ogdin, Patty fickens, · . GRADS teacher, ~lnatad
the event aaallted by Prlnclpre-med, and Jay McKelvey, a School. To achieve listing on the Angie Roush, Jenny Smith, Darla
.
pal Fenton Taylor, Eleanor
freshman in · systems analysis, at ·dean's list students must achieve a Staats, Sharon Stewart, Debbie
~cKelvey, and Ar11~ etvdenta.
Miami University both made the grade point average of 3.S or higher. Toundas, Geri Walton. Connie 'Dod·
dean's list for the first semester.
son, Judy Williams; Vicki Ault.
The breakfaat for the atu. They .are the sons of Marvin and
VALENTINE QUEEN
Founder's Day will be April 24 at
clenta, aome pictured ·above,
Eleanor McKelvey of Syracuse and ·
Members of Xi Gamma Epsilon the Blennerhassett Ho~l in Parkerswaa for the purpoae of
are graduaies of Southern High Chupter of Beta Sigma Phi honored · burg. The cost of the evening includ·
encouraging
academic
School .
their Valentine Queen, Patsy Ogdin, iiiJl the meal will he $19. Pasta
achievement and regular
at a dinner at the Iron Gate Restau- prima vera, grilled mai mili, chicken
attendance.
rant in Point Pleasant Feb. 13.
tlorentine, or roast beef.·de vin are
UD DEAN'S LIST
After the dinner the members the choices of entrees. ·
Rayan Elizabeth Young, a preThe next meeting will be Feb. 27
med freshman in the College of Art's opened secret sister gifts. Attending
'and Sciences at the University of the Idinner were Bernie Anderson, ai the prosecutor's office in
Dayton, made the dean's list for the - Pam Diddle, Terri Fife, Debbie Pomeroy.
fall semester. She is the daughter of Hauber, Ju!ia Houdashelt, Ronda.

.

'•w_,

W - y Services · 7 p.m.

---Society scrapbook------

..

, _ , Ncill'loodfool

As•;cmbly of God

p..,., Rov. Owlet Mub

Derdl'
326 E.~ Jr-oy.
-..,ltev.D. A. duPlulior
Holy l!ltdlulllllld .
Sundly Schooi1G-.30 un.
CoiiOe baoi lullowiooi

Sl!ndoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonltip- ttl-.30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Services - 7 p.m.

' t

. ,.,.

Eptscop.tl

P I 1*1 Cll~efCIIrtll
·212 w. Mlln St.

•

· Swday Sdlool· 10:30 o.m.
. Ewnlaa - 7:30p,m.
W,.r..doy!ervicea 7:30

Honors
breakfast

'

V..Z.. IIIII Wont lid.
l'lll!on-Mitler ·

.

est you.
The daily paper in Spartanbuq.
S.C., is the Spananburg HeraldJournal, P.O. Boll 1657, Spartanburs, sc 29304-1657. Phorie: 803582-4511 and fax: 803-S94-63SO.
DEARAlmEANDNAN: I have
a Pf9blem with hair spray, conditioner and rinse buildup. We have
very hard water, which I think contributes to this hair problem. Do you
have a recipe that I can use to treat
my hair? -- D. MILLER, Ocala, Fla.
DEAR ·D.: Our favorite hair
Harriet Carter, DepL 36, North
dresser gave lis the following recipe. Wales, PA 199455 carries a money ,
· Combine I gallon distilled water, I rose, (item B 2944), which costs
cup lemon juice (fresh or bottled) $5.98. plus shipping.
and I cup Epsom Salts. Cap the. mix•
ture and let it sit24 hours. Pour into
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
your hair and leave on about 20 min- P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
utes, then shampoo.
· Questions of general interest will
This solution will get rid of hard- appear in the column. Due to the
water buildup, hai~ spray accul!)ula- volume . of m!lil, personal ·replies
tion and will remove old-fashioned cannot be provided.
·S tudenta who made the
color rinses.
honor roll for the uc:ond
FEEDBACK:
STORING
Anne B.Adams and Nancy Nashnln•waeka grading. period
CLOTHES IN ceDAR CHBSTS Cummings are co-authors .of "Ask
and
those who achieved perORCLOSETS -- EvieatAlteratioils Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and
fect
attendance
for~ periCJC!
Unlimited in Ocala, Fla., Wr~ to "Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize
_
.
honored
at
I bnNikfltat
tell us about a customer who · :Problem-Solvers · Share Their
. held ~ntly at the achool.
brought in her mother's wedding Secrets" (Bantllm).
dress with "rust" spots on it. She
Copyrlght1997 NEWSPAPER
Pomeroy attomey Jennifer
Sheeta, right, apoke to the
writes, "Most of"the time I never ENTERPRISE ASsN.
·
ltudenta on the lmportllnce of
preparing for the future, and
how· what they do today
affacta their llvaa tomorrow.

Refrairi'lrom
accusing for no reason
..

c.-=

c.twrct1 of Chrt'.t

•

•.

)1 '

Pomeroy

Vetll'lnl

Memorial Hoapltal
115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
1192-2104

EWING

HOME

"Digrriry tmd Snvlt:t Alwtq•"

. Ellablislred 1913

992-2121

EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO
992·2259
tOIMullt •nv Ave.

MLH....... UDileciBnlltrn
II Cllrllt Clivcll
Texu Community a« CR 8:Z
Putor: Robert Senders
Sunday Sc:hoot • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip -10:30 o.m., 7~ p.m.
Wednesday Services - =1:3o p.m.

'

'

Edn U•lltd Bmllrn iD Cllrllt
Z t/2 miles north of lteedo•ille
on Stile Route I 24
· Putor: Re•. RC!bert Mori&lt;ley
.
. Sunda1 School • 11 o.m.
Sundoy Wonltop • tO:OO o.m. It 7:00. p.m.
Wednelday Servlcea ·7:30p.m. ·
Wedneodoy Youtb Service · 7:30p.m.
l

SNOUFFER
Fll! &amp; SAFETY
ut f8 &amp; SERVICE
112o707S
172 No!lh Second Ave.
Mlddepart, Ott

•t

'

"

'••"

�J
February 21,1817

J

~ocking

These child healthcare bqoks are tops,
foundation says

them ·up and throwing awray the key isn_
't the answer

Ann .
Landers

By ANN LAND!RS
Dear Ann Landen: You'v~ print·
¢ a few letters ti;om readers wJ!o
~m to think there is 100 much self·
pity in the world. ')bey suggest that
people stop whining and "get' on
with their lives."
·~ I would like to know how family
members of someone murdered in a
drive-by sbooting are supposed to
''get on with their lives." Or a child

Beat
:of the
·aend.
By BOB
,HOEFLICH
"' Meigs County Treasurer Howard
Frank is giving us a second shot on
p~i ng our real estate taxes for the
first half of 1996. ·
·
;-i Payment was due today, Feb. 21,
b~ Frank has extended the deadline
t~tMarch 4. So if you didn' get to it
yiiU have a bit of a reprieve.
A reader needs the address !if
Bimy Jo and Cub Allensworth. If
anyone out there has it will you
please give me a ring at 992-52921
'fl!anks.
' And already the grass seems to be
up" and it probably won't
be long until the lawn mowers will
·be hummin' along.
If yo.u do_n~t like to or can't mow
your lawn; I know it's a bit of a problefll in getting someone to do that so
I pass along some information as
se!'Vic'e information you might want
to know about.
A .Syracuse ·woman will be
renewing her grass cutting service
this year and is now listil\8 people
w.(lo are interested. She plans to do
the cutting duririg the week so you'll
be' able to )lave neat lawns ·on the
w~ekends. I've used. her service
before and she does a good job. If
yqu're interested just call 992-5961
and ask for Sharon.
·~enin'

FlUry,,...,_, 21,1117

Pomeroy • Mlddllport, Ohio

) . I • The D1'l)f'SIIdlnel

molested by a neipbnr - 'do you ~to ~with them.
thiDit that child'alife wiU e - be the
Wltlt lbout the other aide of the
sune?
llory1 Tbc victima' fllllily memben
What about the y01111g man · Ire .ueaced for life, llld they whose world is torn lpllt when a DOl the ones who were oa the wroag
stray bullel pien:es his brain llld he side of the Jaw. Tbc people in pri1011
is paralyzed f« tbe Jest of his life? IDIIde tbe cboiee by pidling the uigOr the·mom and dad who lose their ger, driving dnmk or aelling drugs. It
only son to drugs? Or tbe relalives of . bums me up to hear convicted felons
the family,killed on their way home o=aming about their rights. Doesfrom church by a drunk driver wbo · n' t anyone ciii'C about the victims
had seven drunk-driving ~onvic· and their rishtS? Victims don't get
bons?
·
parole or time off for good behavior.
And then, Ann, to l!iake matters Tbcir family members will NEVER
worse, you print letters from prison· come back, no matter how good
ers ~ho say beiog .iocucerated is their behavior is.'- D.K., Riverside,
unfu, unJust llld 1nhuman. They Calif.
complain about our prison system . Dear l&gt;.K.: You uk, "Doesn't
and think their civil rights 11rc being anyone care about the victims and
trampled. And a lot of your readers their rishts 1" Well, I &lt;!o, and I have

spokett out on their behalf many ·
times over the yCifS.
The iuue, however, is DOt about
''rishts.': It is about wardlousing
prisoners who, if given proper tnining and COUillelifll. could be self·
supponing, law-abidina citizens
when they ~tum to society.
. We now know tbal1imply lock·
ing people up is ,Rd. the solution. We
must try to give them tools to build a
better life, not only for their sake but
lbf the safety of society. Education
is .· the best tool I know of. While it
wil! not work fiX everyone, it \viii
~ork fiX some. and laay it certainly
IS wOith a shot. .
Dear Ann Landen: J was married
for 22 years to a min I helped pui
lhrouxh engineering school. We had

three great kids. They - all doing
well.
·
About two ye111 liD· my busband started to work 100 many
nishb to suit me. I became IUSJri· ·
cious llld hiled a piivliC clela:tive to
tail him. S111e enoup, he wu havintl
an affiir with a woman in his off'JCe.
I am now getting 1 divorce.
The problem is.complicated, and
I need your help.' We had a joint
credit card. He went hog wilil and
ruined my credit. 1 have seen a
lawyer and learned that I am respon·
-si&amp;le for whatever was charged to
our joint .account. Those ACC9Unts
have now ~~~ closed l&gt;y me. I'm
afraid, h9wever, ,thai my ~putation
hu been ruined Do you have any
suggestions?·- Blindsided in Dixie

·

·• · ··• · ... ·

·

··

·

' · ·

By Ill Sf RUIIINI!R
TbaDee llalnu Raglew
·
Por parents who have stood bewildered 'ia front or
bookstore shelves paclced with child-tending tomes
cotnes welcome help from the American Health foun.
dation.
The IIQII·pro6t research group in New York has sifted
· tlvnush 50 child health books and picked out the t 0
deemed most useful for families with children
-.....\'It's v~ ~cuh for parents, "says,M~te Bol·
lelia, a l!lllribontst With the foundation. "Piitting out a
list like this 'sbould be helpful."
· '
· Amon• ~ ~ks t)lat got the group's stamp of
approval1s .Caring for Your Sch&lt;ioi·A&amp;ed Child: Ages
~ _to 12," which was edited by Ed Schor, a pediatrician
~ho is medical ~rector ofthe lowa Depanment of.Public H~tb's farmly and cominuruty health division. Last
year II was chosen by Child Magazine as 'tile best new
.parenting ,book ~~~ the health category. . "' . ·
The books ptcked by lhe American Health Founda·
lion's Child Health Center tend to be thick and somewlult pricey ($16to $25). They are written by group col·
laborations without a sole author.
They've also met the following criteria set by the
foundation: They focus on child health and-or nutrition·
their conient is up-io-date, authoritative al)d scientifici
· ly sound; they are easy to use and easily lmderstood by
~ a range of people; their contents conform Ito tbe fougda·
· tion'sgoals.
1
·
.
' Here is a list of the top I 0, their publis11er, publication
year and a description of content by the'foundation:
- "Caring for Your Baby and Young: Cl:hild: Binh to
• Age 5" (American Academy of Pediatric~. 1994; $16.95
i soft cover, $29.95 hard ,cover) A month-by month. and
. year-by-year parenting manual covering topics from
cbildbinh preparation to choosing a pediatrician wid
.: basic child care. •
. ··
.
' Also includes a guide !0 ~ognizi g and handling
· health problem's and common medical .lmergencies.
.
t
: . ·- "The Parent's Helper: Who to C~l on H~llh and
· Family Issues'' (Castle Connolly Medic,at, 1996; $15.95
, soft cover) A guide offering more tllan a thousand
sources, available by phone or on-line, for a wide ranse
of health, social and educlitional issues.
·

)'ou miPt abo coatac~a 111alber of
the Nlliooal fouftdaricw for Colis~ Cnldit by aendiaa a Hlf.
addressed, slmlped envelope to:
Nlllional Foundation for ConCredit. 8611 Second Ave., Suite 100,
Silver Spring, Md. 2Q910, or call I·
80()..388-2227 for the neamt local
agency.
Sead'qllilllau to Allll.l .........

Craton s,..ucate, smw. c..

tory Blvd., Suite 7GO, Lai _A •1*1•,

Cdf.90&amp;15 · .

Calif. (AI')
Cheryl Fillippini already had
seven children and six grandchil·
dren, and hCr husband had line chil ·.
d~n of his own. But the couple
wanted a baby to sbare together.
They got four times what they
wished for.
·
·
Mrs. Filli)ipini, 50, had quadruplets, Thursday, gi¥inJ binh to three
girls and one boy by Caesarean sec· .
tion at Santa Badlara Cottage Hospi·
tal.
.
.
Raben.Fillippini, 49, her husband
-of lhrce years, was by her side. ·
"I'm sure there's going tQ be
days 1:11 be so exhausted I won't
know which way ·to go," he said.
"But that's OK. That's all part of it.
B~ing a father and parent iJ what I
enjoy doing."
· The quadruplets, the result of an
in vitro procedure, ranged in weight
!rom 2 pounds, 14 ounces to 3
pounds 4 ounces; They were born
about 10 wee~s·earty llld are~
Roben Charles IV, Rebekah Louise,
Amanda Louise ind Sydney Louise. ·
Fillippini •.a welder, said he aod
his wife were up .to tbe challenge
. ahead. .Mrs. Fillippini 'is a former
· nurse, and a recent graduate of the
S~ta Barbara College of Law.
"We~ II be blessed with four litdc
ones running around, instead of
one," be said; "We're four times
luckier than when we 'SWted out."

aoil

·

PUIIIIC . . .

Pubic Noll~ I

IIIII AI fl 1

.......,..- ..... La

........

I

S~A BARBARA,

··

charglac?
ANSWER: 1lake •waY his uecllt card.
The Riddle Cups, originally on supermarket shelveS" for
a few years in the 1970s then reintroduced last year, are
seeking new riddles.
So manufacturer James River Corp., which has been
malting Dixie Cups in some form since 1918, is sponsoring
a riddle contest for kids up to 12 years old. Gorshin will
judge the 20 finalists- 16 will be chosen
plaStered on
cups with the gag writers' names and hometowns. Winners
also will receive a $1,000 U.S. Savings Bond.
"We. wanted the children of the 1990s to have a chance
. to make their mark on the 'riddle cups," says Lisa Kable, of·.
James River Corp.
.
.
·
.
'
It's not. that the old rfddles aren't still funny, .Kable says.
"Innocent humor is timeless," she says. "They'~ pretty silly. But if you talk to aS- or 6-year·old, they absolutely love them. They're the type of riddles kids tell each
Qthcr..,

Cledia?

koow you 1ft DDI 1 dc~*IEI C.U
them or write a lelia' csplliai•lhal
thinp - tiJbl - bul yau iMind
to ~y your bill .. .. P111itle.

·Grandmother
give~ birth to
quadruplets

Riddle me this
what holds just about
anything and can have a punch line?

By LISA FAYE KAPLAN
·
Gannett News servtce
·
·
··
Frank Gorshin, the stand-up comedian who became
• famous~ The Riddler on 1V's "Batman," is a big fan of
Dixie Cups.
Dixie Cup dispensers dot the bathroom walls of his Los
Angeles home. In fact, he's drinking coffee from a Dixie
Cup right now, he says during i. ~lephone_ interview.
·
"It's a good. way to promote good health habits," Gor· .
,shin says of the little paper cups.
, Of course, .cutting out his fO!If·pack-a-day cigarett~ ·
habit might promote a little good heallh,.too.
But· Gorshin isn't Oogging National Smokeout Day: .
}je'.s the new pit~hman for Dixie Riddle Cups, the colorful
5-ouooe cups with such groaners as:
QUESTION: How do yoa keep a rblaoceros from

Dea' Dixie: Let yoar

The Dally Senllnel•-~

can relieve a . debtor of
I~==~ obligations and arrange a fair
aanti. Debb'l in bankruptcy ..-u I
keep •ex.empt" piOpelty lor their peraonel use.
mey Include a car, a house, clothes, and
hoc hlld goo!ls
For Information Aegaldlng Bankruptcy contact:

IIIMi

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TOiill OulotoiiCI~ l e t Mel,Chlob
1m111r
31,
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Attorney At Law

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S2.i8 FER II IN.

IIUSTBE 18YRS.
SEftV.ll- II 1e) I4U434

El.lP LOYr.lEriT
•.

SERVICES

1m.tf71-.

- "The Good Housekeeping Illustrated Book of
Pregnancy and Baby Care" (Hearst Books, 1990; $25
hard covet) This step-by-step guide offers mo~ than 800
. color photographs including a morith-by-monlh photographic diary and clear ~scription of what to expect
' during pregt!ancy and catmg for a newborn. ·

Still, even riddles have a limited sheiOife.
"Somebody atlhe top~ a brain5toon," Gorshin says.
"Instead of using the same riddles, they want originals.
And who better to write them than kids?"
·
Gorshin knows a thing or 'two ·about riddle's. As Bitman's riddling ntrnesis in lhe late 1960&amp;, Gorshiri II&lt;Mllll•
became saddled with that persona - a mixed bleuing, he .
says.
·A free cholesterol testing pro·
"I can't stand riddles," he says, only half-joking. "Kids
gdm will be carried out at the Meigs
County Health Depanment on - stop. me and ask if I've got a riddle, then they volunteer
their own."
.
March 4.
TOP RIDDLER • Frank GOI'Ihln, The Rldcller,
be judging lhe Dixie CUp Rlct.
Before
"Batman,"
Gorshin
was
a ,fairly successful die ContHt aponeored by Jamea River Corp., wtllch hlle been meklng Dixie Cupe
Only a limited number of people
comedian·imp~ssionist-actor-singer. He appearec! a dozen In eome fOrm alnce1918.
can be accepted so you have to call
·
·
times
ori
the
old
"The
Ed
Sullivan
Show."
On
the
nightclub
in :992-6626 and make an appointcircuit, he was an opening act, for such stars as Bobby
ment. Hours of the testing are 8 a.m.
cemetery?"
Darin. ·
.
'
to i 0 am. The finger stick method
Ummm,what?
After "Batman," Gorshin was catapulted to Las Vegas headliner. Sudwill be used and if.you do make an
"When you gotta go, you gotta go."
denly,
other
entenainers
opened
for
him.
·
.
appointinent you're asked to fast
· "Tiuit ~appened overnight," he says, Cfediting The Riddler role, for
frQm midnight on March 3 until the
which he earned ari Emmy nomination.
·
.
'
"
. test is done.
·
10
enter
the
Dlx~
itldcue
Cup Coatest for ~ you 1111111 be U
What
will
Gorshin
look
for
when
judging
the
Dixie
Cup
Riddle
con:conducting the tests will be staff
yean
aid
or
yOUDger.
lUddle.
shaulcl be 25 words or lea, typed or
test?
.
.
.
members of the Home Health Ser·
llelltly
printed.
.
.
· "I'm going to judge this based ·on originalitY. creativity and if it'.s
HANNAHCRI!MEANS
vi~es of Veterans M~morial liospi·
Send
:your
·orlllioal
ridclies,
your
name,
birth
elate,
telephone
aumfunny,"
he
says.
"I
have
a
riddle
I
used
to
love
and
use
in
my
nightclub
tal, the Holur Medical Center and
ber and malllq adclftu to: ·
· .
·
show."
the Oak Hill Community Medical
Dixie _Riddle Cup ~~ for Kldl, Sui" :WOO; N, Mk:blpo Ave.,
Pray tell.
Center. RSVP personnel will assist
Cblcqo,
IL 6G611.
.
.
"What's
the
similarity
between
a
trip
to
the
ba!hroom
and
a
trip
to
the
as will health depanment personnel. .
'-------- '
.
You might want to reserve the
Oarrin and Beth Cremeans of ·
evening of March 21 ·on your calen•.
Pomeroy announce the .binh of a
dar.
daushter,. Hannah Danielle, born '
'That night the Chester CounDec. 22 . .
house Preservation Committee will
The infant weighed eisht pounds,
be staging a steak dinner fund raiser
By ,.,.
""SQUALE o' IFULCO
.
was lo L.
..,., a d octor among 1epers." televisiol) works out ~Iter than pre- . do the larger movies . because they four ounces and w.S 21 inches long.
at Royal Oat_c Reson. The commmdee Biida-water (N.J.) Courler-t4ewa
Monon says. "They believed they vtous effons. Although he's won pay well, I do lhe smaller movies Maternal graridparents are Jim lind
1 year an 11
staged a stml 1arevent,ast
·In the new HBO movit. "Miss could levitate their position 'among acclaim
for
several
roles because that•s where my heart is, Mary ' Hobstetter of Langsville.
Paternal .grandp~~rcnts are Dan and
w~ quite successful. And the ~on Evers' Boys," premienng Saturday, the medical world by panicipating ("Tribeca," "Th~ .Good Police- aod television straddles the two."
Barbara Cremeans, Harrisonville.
dcx;s have atmosphere.
"eb.
22 (9 p.m·. Eastern), actor Joe m
· lh'IS presbgtous
· ·
·
·
r•
expenment.
... man"), gOod ratings have eluded
Great-grandparents
arc Elsie
State grant monies a~arded to the Monon plays a doctor who conceals 'This can do nothing but help us in him.
·
Additional playdates for "Miss
and
Raymond
Crouser
of
Langsville
project can be Used to purchase the truth "forthe greater good."
the community.' "
.
Evers' Boys" are Feb. 2S, and
and Letha Cotterill of Harris,onville. .
some 19 windows needed at the · It is not a dec1'5.1'on MOlton ht'm·
B lh
·
d
ed
•
"It really is son of a balancing March 2, 6, 8, II and 16.
Chester Counhouse but cannOt be
ut e expenment oom most
act,"
Monon
says
or
his
career.
,"!
used for the instilllation of thOse self would have made given tho: of the afflicted men to· suffer. hom-

will

.,.

Cremeans birth
announced

.......
I

Clo Paint PlHunt
Main St Pt. All ...
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For Morton, _· results don't justify intentions

windows. That's. what lhe proceeds · ch~C:rton's chari.cter in· the fact· ble.~~~· of the question Miss
from the dinner will be ~sed for.
hased film, Dr. Broadus, is an amal· Eyers poSes at the end of the movie:
• The Chester building is the oldest gam of the black doctors at the 'If these 'patients were white, would
standing couJ1hOU!O in.the State 9f ·Tuskegee Institute who, in the mid· these same things have happened?'
Ohio and lhe committee is ·dOing 111 die part of this century, withheld " Morton says, "These things hapexcellent restoration job. 'Tbc struc· , · penicillin treatments from 400 black pen for whatever reason, and some
ture has already' been reroof~ . and . ~n wjth syphilis.
.
.of the reasons are misguided, some
the exterior is presently undergoing
OQctors at lhe institute agreed to are for the greater good, -lind some
renovation.
..
go along with .the government are just fcir greed."
. lnctdentally, the dmne_r sll)rts at experiment so that they could dispel
.Monon is prood'to be pan of this
6.30:p.m. Pat Holter.can und?ubted, · the widely . held notion that blacks project because "there is such a
ly supply any other mformauon you weiC .'physical!y inferior to whites. .l&amp;rse - swath of histery that · is .·
need.
They surmised - c~ly, as was unknown by the community atlqe.
later rdemonstrated· with tragic ... We have been taught the history
' Weeks have 8one by since the results -' !hal blacks responded· to' of the .conqueror, which is not· the
murder of six-yeai'-old JoBonet the rava1es ofsyJlllilis the same way history of the black people, the
Ranisey in Boulder, Colorado, and as whites.
Asian people, the native Americans.
. as yet the parents haven't been inter·
"ll's an incredible irony that The conqueror gets to write it
viewed by the investigating officers: black peQple who· toiled and slaved because that's the way the game is
Seems to me they would have for hundreds of yell'S we~ su~ly . played. . But there are people
been anxious to do that with the considered : physically ,.veaker," involved here. This is not a football '
hope that they ~ould pus on some . Morton llliys in a t,clephone inter· game/'
· ·
information which migt. help solve view from Canada, wbele be is filmMorton •.a veteran of several John
the murder of•their beaitiful, lllent· i"' the pilot to a pew television Sayles fijms u well u "Speed" and
ea daughter. As I understand it, they shoW.
· "Terminator 2," will ~tum to tele·
legally ate not required to UndefJO
.Morton', who co-stan ·in "t.fin vision next month in ''Piince
questioning. Strange.? Uh huh, Evers' Boys" with A!fre WciOdll'd . Street. "'The! series will air in a lim·
SII'Uge
arid t..aw.nce Pislibume, says dull .ited run on NBC ill the coveted
.Elster will roll up early this y,ear· the well-pllted inlellllotll, &lt;~( the . ''ER'! time slot. If it perfonos well,
. -M.rch 30.lnmlld of lhinkina about eitp:ril'lleql wm 1101 enoup to otr•' the ahow could be picied .,P in the
the
bonnet with all the mils 10( the end mull.
. fall.
upoa ll.t , '! p, you lholild COIICOII• ' ".Underillllll ihll to be • bllck
~ oitwwlth • mufli Clll it. Do doctql' then (In dll 'i*ll 'AO&amp;)..
Pep ..uua,.

SOLID VINYL
TWI . DOWS!·!!
REP.
.$.·1.95.00

'

,

IIEQUIIT FOR PIIOI'OIAL REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
N oil co 1o "' Agtjrlgllte

..

, Notlco , to llluftllnouo
Vendara: ·
ln---WIIh307M ol1111 ONo llevl1141
Code, Haled bide will be
· -lved by ll'ie IQard of
.llelg
· Count'y
Court

\1andora:

~

In ~--IICIIon
M7M
·ol1111 01110 ReviHd
Code, · -led 111t1a will be

received by the"loord o1
Mttlll
County
COIIIIIIIOelonar•, Court

O.llio Houee, Pomeroy,. Ol)lo
until ..... ·a.m. 01'1
Monday 1.0111. 1m. The

"1'11·

..

lllcle will lflen be opened
llloud Ill 3:11 p;m.
1117 for

DUE TO THE TREMRNDOUS RESPoNsE TO OUR H;O.
AND G4RJ)EN SHOW, (FOI,t A UMITED TIME ONLY) · ·
WE~ EXTENDING OUR sp,EC~ PRICE OF $195.00
•
'
(up to
93 UDlted
IDcJie•)
.
.
...
· · (Options Alftilable at Addltlonal COat) .
Call in with yo~ wlitdcnr
for a ~ QUotE

.

;·

met

.QUALITY)

.

REWARD $100.00
Clll 143-6187 Or
. 841 &amp;324
Anytime,
Or

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'J.;)t

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OliO
.1 CIM) 291-IIM.tr (6·14) H2-4119

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-----------------Public NotiCe

iiSTIIIID

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PubliC Notice

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Fr;ld 1v Flttn11ry 21, 1817

Ponu roy • bldlllp ort, Ohio

.

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NBA Cro11word Puzzle

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SSOIATIOPEJ•JU

a.. full.lima Real•- N11110
- A n d 0.. f'vi.Timo Floti-

Lo- N.,. !'Dillion 1w .a.
.. Tho Ooll Hill Communi!J

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Loc.l TruckklO

THUNDER IS
IT FER?··

Openlnt For Dlopelchlr NHd
~ In 11U FliEd, ca. 1·
-7-8318.

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Pia t.
Pia
Pia Pia

31111embM'oll
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Biblical group •

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~metal

5.

3S Tramp
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'17 lauH - Marte "
42 RoW1I&lt;Mt .
II
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43 Ending lor

:.-=

convention

ol pants

.

~ A:"Joyca ro

.Are you ready?

Carol-

,.,

4llndla'o-

· beHd on 0108. color, Nllglon,
I8IC tamiAiat . . . . or nll&amp;ion8l
origin. or ony lnle&lt;tlon to
make~ IUCh poaf&amp;lace,
· Linila11on or diiCrimlnatlon.'

Gandhi

52 Flrot-nte
UMd Fumla.n ...

a.,

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f.':-' ;.:
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And Sal . _ Furnl•n•
.11•·..e,.782 Hro. 10-4 Chock
Uoo..l

TNa new !*II*" wUI not ,'
kl_...aceept
oaal ootate
whi:h Ia
of tho
law.
readers areiiOrot&gt;y
k1furmed that alll:ilh'!j..IQI
act-.wtiMd in thiS Ma•raper
n 8\T'nt.le on an aqual

520

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4 Fllllle rocll

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IDadventle "any twet&amp;61ce,

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Operiinglead: • :,

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Companr

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Pleue~Wfln-OrSind

ALL nllll__

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uncommon

1 lledllll plclln

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. Deller: Ealt

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A-:- . .,.

DOWN

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done, fr~ eaMmaiM, H.. llrM
guoran- 1Ciyra an job oxporl·
804-e1!1-f141.

Retumo Ti.:Cl.. HiU Comlnllnl[y
_.Conti&lt;,
llcKonzle.
Chorlolle - - ·
Ook ... a350
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•AKQ7
.KQU '
tAQ7

MIHIIWUit ,.,..,.

lltdk:al Cenlefo llod /Surgery
DoPa _ .. - Wll \lory_ Olio
~ Aoqulrtd.
UdiiZI Nuralnt PIOCHI While
Paculclug C... Dlreci#Guide Palient And Fomllr T-hing. And
Funcllon Wllhln The Scope Of
The .,........... Expectdonl. '

Ill loch-

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prDGflnt.

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Sporting

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

llognom. t225. 11•·

by Luis Cllmpa

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Clilbltlv~or:;;•••
a...cllromQI 'II •brllmouaJ*IPie,,_.Md~
&amp;m
In IW . . . . . . . for.,.._, Todly'J &lt;*.If: J eQUIIIt B

opporlunl1y - ·

.

REAl ESTATE

WL

IOWSVOIIU

'DXTWU· H .

X

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JGCSWUH

wu

WULYXSSIIV

SWEll

KG 8 O·

JOXWU. '

F B 8 I.

·F X 0 Y W U

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Jazz will endure just as long u people hear It
lhrlluglllllelr leet i-.1 01 t1w1r ·• - John Phliip SOusa.
· ·

....
lAIII

~·-·"-1

3-4 btdrOOm IIOUH, holt

pump.

In I'DmerDJ, 11 4-112·3111 or

44 ...... 18711 14110 - · fill
flU. IWO lloctrlc &amp; _.., hook·

• ,. la28151.

N - 10 ladiH To Sell A&gt;on, 3111cfroomo, 2 balhl. baNmont.
Cll114 t4G ~51
lomlr
...... -""'
In
breezeway,
double Oltage.
12.114_31144,.._
Now ....,unt -umao lor 1111
[M!IItlon ol Dent.~ Ex· Sbf Home wlb111ment. 7th Sl .
,ertence ~t.rrecl but not r• Hoven, wlnyllldlnt, central
qu~Nd.
Rl
.,
I
Mail
olr,
lorve.
""""'· SprinG SpeciaL,
_
.. Den..
II,P.O.

*· - -

=ld.

;gr~ncu

Included. 1441,000.
-3772.

Bo1123, """ p L Oho11710.
......... Appllclllono At Dom1110'1 Pizzo In the Colllpollo and
-

U'tc•ran~-.

-

Pl;t Full Tlma Help NHdod In
· UphollliiY Shop. 8eoMg Eapari·
trtee Nec-ry.lariOUI lnqUI•

,For...~..... ............

Pootol Jo~o 3 Pooldonl Anll·
ablt. No Exporlance NICHoarr.

For Information, Call1-e1•7t4LLG11 Ext. 22115.

170 llllctlllnloUI

----CII!Me . . .
'

......... WUllllaar. .

~ lhi.Grool For a.nn.
ExoOIIorl COncll*&gt;n 0.. 0...

c.ll:l14 3112140ort14-314-

2323·

-

upo, Cold Alqt, llelaa achool
IM,OOO, 114-lii2·H21

cllllrlc~

5 0 - ·2lflrinlo,pond, "'tllll4 DouLMwido, 311r, 2
bolho, 1 oR IlL 2 In Gallipo-

OolloCI.:C'

EIIICIIIIC)'. New pain~ carpet,

•

etc. R*enceo. DepoafL No
...... :ILIM7W112.

COULD I TR~ niAT
O~E TME(E'?

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"

~SCRAMei.E

GET ANSWU

LETTERS TO

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:~~E~~~E~EnERS

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I follow the advice of a Pro5
1~- 1 I 1·
.fessor I had in college. He said ·
':~====::.::.,that, 'Those who are willing to
,. C E J T E R compromise wm usually •• , • I:
1-...,...;1,;,.;:....,.;:,rl. ....:1;.,7.:.:.1..-1 8 Complere tho chuckle --.1
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by f;U;nv ;n .tho m;lling -d•
you ~8\l'elop\ from ftp No. 3 below.

~,2..._0Ut

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11.-1...-!:. ....I.L-..1.-..1.'--'1

.

121,1100. JUII 011 S.A. 21_1,
NEW NAVIN-171 .AIIendolo "*"11 Ridge • I+ M.OOO
CourL 81-LIMI 111 Lg corner lo~ OnlY t1,000 Dawn &amp; t101.2211o.
LR, FA. 4 Lg BR. 180,1100. 904- For I Yro. Or I+ AorH.I7,5DO.
r..... 11un Rd.• 131 10 ACta l'llr·
112
clio, t10,000 .:Citamlllra Ad,
La11· Oriel verr Nl.ce 1t ADrea •
Nlct Brick Home, 3 !leclroomo, Ra 1 , .11,1001
'
' Hall Llllll Living Room l
Dining Room llioemant Central llolgo Co• Bock On Tile lllrllll.
Air, Goa HHt Carport l Sl1tr1tge 5 Actio 17.1100 • I1J)OO Down +
Room, F11101 In Bacll Ytrd, Lo- t107.V~ A llo .. You Own En 7
cattd In Su- Drlva, In G~Lipo- 'llartl

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SCIAM-LEYS ANSWIIS
Haunch Motif , Focal- Prying COUNT on HIM

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lnqultw 01-2573.

THEFSl

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t3110/llo., 81···48·2205, .. ...
US"N
.

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.:=1===~1:~-, '

lncludecl. We Ply Wallr And

Corbet•· Yaq Cltan. No
.. No Pill. 1300 Dtpoalt,

New Conltructlon, AHrdatn 'Nelghborlloo&lt;l Ad.,' 10 Acreo
117,000 Or 22 Aot11 With I'Dnd
.._llldl!ill.~ .

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lis Ferry. Mull ... • .,.fll icale.

314-875-71:111.

Hou11 for ule In Rudlnd, 814·

112-50117.

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Danll Lot '11111 0.. 8llp . , , , _
One lllcl,.,., Wllh loll 01 Ex·
tnto. WU.. Dry•. SIDVe, Frlg

Ldlehon
'o pplllnctt,
- - ··
car
goroge,
lull buanlen~
nice1
lol, d - ., hoopllal and - • ·

..

Qlecirronge lottert ol tho
· four tcromblod words bo·•
IQ form laur ..:O.cls.

I

I

One acquaintana~ kl anolher,"He's so Irresponsible
that !Jle only thing he is reliable for is not kl COUNT on
~~
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.

I FRIDAY

.

' can · Today For FrH llapa l
Ownor Flnanclnt EniD. Tlluo 111%
Olf Llated Prl&lt;ll On C01h Pur-

FEBRUARY 21

I

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rilmanC1I?·The AIIIO-Grlpll

can help yiJu underlllnd -~ 1o do 10
rn11ot ... nalaliotllltip - "· Mall $2.7510
Ma1cllmaker, c/O lhll newtpeper, P.O.
BOx 17e8, ~nity . . Station, New Yorlc.

ASTRO·ORAPH

--

ilrjl;iuHf , OII.12.110·iP~ peH.

f:.!t,. HelidarNn,.

IIHI=I
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Ml ct1 1tl l uor~' $OI Iel l!n_gl~-5: =...~kits.:~~i]~iiJ

eidedtodly Wyou lnillll"" hflllng evarytbiti~JciOOIYoiKWIY· · • _
,
NY 10118. · .
UIRA (llilpl. as.o.t. Dl YoU may·be
BERNiCE .
ARiaS (lllWch at~Aprll tl) l'leiiPOn· lnvojvld IOdly witt 11011180118 Who IIWiod
BEDE OSO.L : . tlbllllleo ol dutiea you potlpone or you poorty in ... put. DalnQ ~
~ IOditl' w11 nat liiiPIII.,. wllh _...._ . ou1 ol eplte al lhla lale date wiLl make
In lacl. lWN!IIIIWIIpl undir ... rug CoUld ft!IIIM ~· .
·
.,._lolgoirJ)l\'llllpml.,.
· . . ,SCORPIO (Oaf.I4-Nov. IZ) Forgo mak·
TA.,.....·(AI!rll aa - I I ) Move o.u- lng -hltty judgrnerila In your flnanclll
IIIII ~ laced ..... loc!IY·. Do nol cooootll yowMI[to
lloully ~o!i~J in wllh apac1.....,. ••• G. lie .,... your . anything tltat could 1M up your future
. ......... _.., ol ~ """ and dan1 '.........
.
.
· li!oladaller.IOIIInadlrne.
·
~QITTARIUS '(Nov. 13-Deo.l~l UH
GIMINI (lltlr 11-JjiM 10) A volatile loglciil plliOidiWM llld 11telhodo IOdly W
11111 11M l*illd clllruptiani In your you want to at:lllrie your objecllveo.
ho\111 hOld m1q1t1 llil lqaldng loi' aoiOIIIIr ll*'flln cllllcUI ehaugh w1110ut pulling
cnlul ilboUt hoW "*'Y .'"""you pul Oppoftuo)lty 10 ~ lotlq, dOn't "' • [ll'l[lled iii*!lOdtiO... ....
;.
In 1M tn at
liM lhll Y"!· Your . cOnlt1il you.
,
CAJIIIICORN (IM........ tt) Guetd
dWICe ol II C1II look&amp; (111011, powliltd c,viC P (. . . lt.Jtllr II) ~ agalnll -.ylng about lllingl IIIII may
Y..., cion'i llkl on more 1111n you can won'l Ieite k""!!f t_o your crltLcaL ~ ,_,. hlppell todly. Negallwe thlnldotg
ge.
·
menlllodly. speak only II you have wl..._.your...,.andyourlllorlo.
fiiiCII(M.•IIill.ll•ell•llm.IOilil .10111411hlng1hll I.GIIftUint IIIII compll- AOUAIIIUij;ea,t........ 11)
...... and upeiillllildld.,wMII clea,llnCil ;- -·· 10 ..,, ~~ '
' '.
you ... -~~~- .. ...... do not Will a pa1111n you don1 kftDW toilll todly. '. a.» ~ • ftt'!ll II) r• 11ft •
o~m•~tl, bulln"-' pereoftl to your
·Y011 n a
YUinefltti'- and lOll• Gill -todly 10 pa1eC1 your p
' I ... . INt\dl tclclty. II etrf ol your pall oM a
. ........ IOIGIIM1ftWtltrr 10
lip 1 Clllly lhOee you lcMp In your - · . I lull dllll,lhey'llttillj.! !QU_.......

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VIRGO (Aull- aa S ; l Z2) ComplicatioNI
could artie with flmly .,..,.,.,. and oul· .

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lo patcll up a
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OPEN
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AFIEit OUOI .
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Skills
survival .

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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Distance learning makes impact
on edu·cafion in southern Ohio

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By KEVIN KELLY
Tlme..Sentlnel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Long distance learning~ little seen outside· of the· state's metropolitan centers, is beginning to make its
--pres,ence felt in southern Ohio. ·
Three fully-funded programs are planning
10
the proc'ess of transmitting class·

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' HISTORiAN JAMES 8AtrtDI
deicrlbea the role Ollila·
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'tnt'ci!J of'lhe !Jrldeillloolncl FllliI'OIId betiiiMn 1144 and 1110.
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position and research
paper courses from
the classroom "stu·
dio." in Wood Hall. to
students at RVHS and
Ike career , cente,r.
Some instruction is
also, beamed fr\)m
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ar~a-higb ·-cRVHS,
Rapol said:·:
till; next few
In the ·course of a
1 'lubamu,e
years.
year, students at each teachtr . In thl .
. City
The Soulhern· Ohio Telecommunications site have earned the SchODll, lnapei:tad the controll oil
.Network Consortium looks to fonnulate the equivalent of is col- the Interactive Instruction lltchnQio. availability of interactive television instruc· . lege credit hours with gy the Unlve,.lly Df RID Grandelion to high schools within an 11-county the Ria Grande to beam videO Instruction to Rlv1r,
district, while the Appalachian Center for courses, Bapst said. CValley HCelgh School end BuckeYe Hilla
Higher.'Education is working on a feasibili,
Of
immediate a-r nter.
ty study initially aimed at offering instruc· interest to the local operation is the SOTNC's plans to create
tiona! services among the 10. regional col- long di~tance learning in the counties represented by the Ohio
leges and universities representing a 28· Valley Regional Development Commission, the Waverly.IJased~
county area.
agency assisting local government and schools in devel~pment·
MAGIC NET (Medical arid Government efforts.
OVRDC oversaw the planning phase, completed· last year,. ·
Internet Coalition Network) looks to provide, at first, medical instruction to a num- and turned the operation over to the consonium, with Rio
ber. of regional sites. including the Grande serving as the, fiscal agent. A $50,000 grant from the
SEOEMS headquafters near Gallipolis. ARC has allowed the consortium to hire a coordinator to start
Instruction (rom the Ohio University Col· ' establishing links with area high schools about interactive
lege of Osteopathic Medicine will be a sig- instruction.
nlficant _pan of the system's educational
The coordinator is expected to be hired by mid·March,
content.
Bapst said. The position is funded for a year and by then the
"It's a way to spread the curriculum around consonium hopes to have at least a dozen .schools ready to par·
to the schools," said Jake Bapst, director of· ticipate, he added,.
instructional media at the University of Rio
The consortium has been in development since 1990 and
· Grande/Rio Grande Community College, now counts 34 schools, hospitals and libraries among its memwho has helped oversee an interactive edu· bers, Bapst said.
cation program in Gallia County-· one of
The Appalachian Center's program looks to operate mostly
the first in the state.
between the colleges and universities. although in the future it
'Technology will never replace the class· may -reach out .to the high schools, he noted.
room teacher," Bapstcontinued. "Technolo·
"Theoretically,jnabout three years, they look to llave class,.
gy serves as a suppleanent, and the system es at River Valley, and in Adams and Jackson counties, being
becomes so transparent after awhile that taught at the same time," Bapst said.
. · .:
teaching at one site to another location
Four new high schools are being planned in Adams County'··
miles away makes no difference."
and instruction in one subject, such as a language, coul~ , be
Locilllong l!istance learning was first pro· offered over the system to all four,
·
wsed by the Galli a County Local Schools
Rio Grande may tap .into the offerings from MAGIC' NET,.
in 1987 and, armed with ,grants from the targeted for completion in September. Bapst said.
. . .~
Appalachian Regional , Commission and
"Everything together will· add immeasurably to the cali!Jer,;
partnerships with. Rio Grande and Buckeye of education in the area," Bapst said. "Entering the 21st ceniu-·
Hills Career Center. was in operation three ry, it should .bring the area closer together,
• CINPY . .MAN, a •acbtr at J~lcHn High SchOOl, leltlllld to opera• the yeThars later. .
. .
. fibe
.
"lnste.ad of traveling the roa4s, we'll be traveling on ph~··.
oontrola Oftfhelm.ractlri ltlrnlng hookUp trom·the UnlveraiiY. of Fllo Grande . e program, transmatted ~a a a. r optics, lines," he added.
• · '"
dilrlng a dejnoi)atratlon laet ww11. JIIU Bapal, the demonlltretlon'alnatructor, sun o~rates betweo:n the unaversaty, BHCC .
"I think when the public sees what this offers 1111d tlu!l it,
II vlalble oll,lhe monitor tn the.bllckground, giving lnatructlonllrom River Val- and Raver.Valley Hagh Sch.ool. ~ao Grande nearly eliminates the distance factor, it .will llopefully
ley, Hig~ _ ScFI. ,. ,
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faculty have lllught comtnunacataons, com· things up." . , ·
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"If we have the tools.in Meigs County, we're going to "mlinities, she explained.
·
·
·
be successful. We're going to get the jobs and peopll: off
"The old rule was that you couldn't get help· like this
: • POMEROY - Ohio Lieutenant ·Governor Nancy of welfare," he said.
·
unless someone was going to' move in," she said. . ·
Next Reed introduced Hollister, who.first began her
"This is a regional effort," she said. "As you develop
. Hollister presented the Meigs County Community .
!mprovement Corporati&lt;ll! a large, 'symbolic check Fri- political career 17 years ago a.s a Miuietta council· that s!te it benefits nc_&gt;t only M~ig~ County, but Athens,
day afternoon representmg a large amount of real woman. Later she became ll)ayor of Miuietta before Washmgton and Morgan counttes .
tooney.
.
being appointed di~tor of tl\e( Oovemor's Office of
"Think of yourselves not only as Meigs Countians,
·..'!'h~ CIC was awarded a ~500,000 Urban and Rural Appalachia and then ultimately lieutenant governor.
but as residents of southeast Ohio," she said.
lmuauve Grant frolfllhe Ohto Departmeqt of Develop- · Efforts to locate a Meigs County industrial site began
Reed then recogmzed . numerous others who have
mentto further construction of \he future·Tuppers Plains · on March 25. 1993, Hollister said.
contributed in the effort to secure the industrial site
. hidustrial Park:
.
·
. · ·
One problem W;IS that no site was ready for develop- including former Meigs County Economic Development
• The money will go toward engineering and construe- merit, she explained. Companies need to go inti) sites director Julia Houdashelt, who prepared the grant for the
lion of a road into the site, a water main and -a waste· that are ready for them, she added.
.
··. ·
CIC, and the Meigs County Boanl"of Commissioners.
water treatment system, aecording to HoUister. ··: ,
.· . Hollister said she spear!leaded Ohio Jobs Bill [[[ with,
Also recognized were Dan Neff, director of the Gov.·
.
. . ·, . , ,
· • ' . emor~s Office of Appalachia; Elizabeth Schaail, gover'
· , Meigs CIC President Paul Reed first iqtrili!uced State .. lissJstance fiom Garey.
Representative John A. Carey Jr. (R·Wcllston) who. said! '• ·. '-~ I:Jman.·and 'Rwil lnitiative.Pubd is one of four . • por's regionill representative with the Ohio Department
Meigs Coun_ty has won·an important battl'e_towanl ceo.! :. legislative components of. Jobs · Bill Ill which
of Development and fonner Meigs County Economic
nomic progress.
designed to target Ohio's distre~ urban and rural com· Contln.IMII on page A2·

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Vol. 32, No. 2

ElY JIM FREEMAN ·

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Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Plea sant • February 23, 1997

'l!mw-SentJMI $tltff

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:Meigs CIC welcomes $500,000 industrial grant

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City expl~ores Vtays to 'put things right' at- Pi·ne Street Cem
GALLIPOLIS - In the wake of
· a rampage through Gallipolis' Pine
Street Cemetery that sa~ more than
70 headstones .destroyed or damaged, city officials are investigating
ways of "putting.things right," Interim City Manager Bob Condee said.
City cotinnissioners learned last
week that the insurance the city has .
for the Cemetery only cO"Ve(S liobi,li·
ty and does not pay repairs for head, ·
'stones. That responsibili'y lies with
the families, commissioners discovered.
At the commission's request:
Condee is now trying to contact the
· ·families - including those who no
longer live in the area - and .work
with local monument companaes to
see if some of the headstones can be
restored to their original condition.
Vandals struck the . cemetery in
No\!ember 1996, with most qf the

Roa:h said he will continu~ to
work o~ the matter with officials.
Since the meeting, ·Condee ,and
·.Ed Wagoner, the sexton for Pine
Street and Mound Hill cemeteries,
have begun expl~ng repair options.
"This is a humanitarian issue for
the city," Condee said. "We want to
get the names and make everr effon
to contact the families. The critical
thing is, when you're dealing with
..:..;:.;:;..:l:.::;:.;;.;=~...:.-.-=-:-..;....;.. people's gravesiles, you oove to be
damage done in its older section. exact.
The inci~nt remains under investi"We're quite concerned about this
galion by p&lt;ilice,
and doing our besttpward putting it
Questions about the extent of the right again," he added.
city's responsibility in correcting the
damage were addressed at last.Tuesday's commission' meeting by Gary
Roach of The Wiseman Agency,
who said prese.nt cQverage for tbe ·
~emetery doesn't extend to property
damage.

Coridee said lie's currently meeting with four to five monument
companies to see if they will partie·
ipate in a project to restore head·
stones that can be repaired .
"Hopefully, we'll have all of them
worl&lt;;ing"on it and the i:ity will help
in any way we can," he said.
· The vandalism is considered by
offacers as' the worstt.o a city-opernt·
ed cemetery in neiii"IY 20 years.
Desecration of a grave is a felony .
offense, and Police Chief Roger
Brandeberry said any information in
helping solve the case would be wei·
cotne.

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