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-Ohio Lottery
Super Lotto:
14-1·22-23-28 44
Kicker:
.
8 8 0·7·2-8
Pick 3:
9-0-3
Pick 4:
2-4-4-8.

lncreeelnt cloudiMee
tonight, lowe In the uppe '

teens. Tuesnr, moetiJ

IIUII"J, lllgM .,.., 40.

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CMII7, 0t.1o ,..., l'ulllllldng con r

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Pomeroy-Middlepor"., Ohio, Monday, February 24, 1997

2llalloo..,12 ....... 3 1 - ·...
A Gannett Co. Ne•Jf 5 u ;

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·Gas prices
post 1-cent
decrease ·

SstJCI, .Power ·

St~4Wheel

'Anti-Lock
Brakes

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Elderly Palestinian gunman kills self.
following rampage at N.Y. landmar~

. OPEN
MOll Fil9-9

. NEW Y()RK (AP) - A gunman
fired into a crowd
the Empire
State ~uildina's 86th-floor observation deck, sending tourists diving for
cover and stampeding toward exits.
One person was killed and six others
injured before· the gunman fatally
slwt himself in the head.
The gunm111's passport identified
him as Ali Abu Kamal, a 69-year-old
Palestinian who came to the United
Sllles on Christmas E• from Ramal- ·
lab in the West B111k, Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani said. The man died without
reSJ.ining consciousness five hours
a(\er the shootings.
Witnesses said the man muttered
something about Egypt seconds
before he began firing at about s .p.m.
Sunday onto the panoramic, outdoor
deck that surrounds a large, windowed room.
"I heard a loud poppins noise,"
said ~Luec Will , 40, a 'French
.toprlst visiting New York with hi•
r..uty. "I thought at first it was lit·
de•cllikt playina witll . fireworks.
Mi Qne shot, then two or line
. ...,..... pnred then three sbots. pop,

on

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�Monday, FetMu.y 24, 1187

'Commentary

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, ge2

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OHIO WcJtlwr
•

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'E.st88slid i111!J48

DcJII

it mlldly. Brewe Della ....,bl ecoAfter lho MIG-led Communists
nomictefaWioiCIIiDa'ac•
• • took o-aunain 1949, Dens roae
syllebl lhea, he - oonii•ICiy rapidlY' in power. Evenao, Mao had
criticized 11 the "No. 2 capitali• mixed views about his uadcdinJ.
roader.''
For eumplc, Mao once confided
Durina that decade of Mao 111 Soviet ~mier Nikita IQinuhthev
Zedon11's insane social chaos, Dctlg duriiiJ a 1954 visit thai Dens wu the
was NIIIQved frl!m party leaillnbip 1only one orbis ~ wonb any.and l!ll'llded II'OUIId Beijin1 in ajcep lhing. One CIA report 11)'1 Mao often
with a dunce cap puUed ~ his ean calleci Dena "a man Qf extnordillary
aa the radical' Red GUII'IIS jeerecL . political illliJhl."
.
.
Imprisoned in solitary confinement
But Dcng had ideas or his own
s~u:hy at best, but we haVe pieced for two years, he wu then sent with thai often annoyed ·the chairman, and
this profile together using Chinese his fllinily to a $0Uthern province he wasn'.t afraid to air them. He
and American sources, u ·well as where, at 6S, he perfonned manual relendessly puahod Mill to liberalize
three different "Top Secret" Central labor in a tractor factory and served China's state-run economy. In a
Intelligence Agency reports.
meals in a school mess IWI.
famous 1962 IJIICCCh. DcnJ mainThe CIA, in its clwified reports, .
Dcng miaht have accepted aiach tained: "It doean't matter whelher a
saw Deng as a man with . an humil¥on had it not llso involved cat is black or while, 5Q long Iii it
unlidorned "zest fqr power," "a • his tiniily. One ~ wu jlllr&amp;ed catches mice.'' When MID heard or
strong aw!vocate of party domination fnml his PQSt .lis deputy ..-yor of · .this; he caustically replied: "Whi!:h
of the affaiR pf state," asingle-mind- Chungking. Another brother was so emperor dec;ided this?".
ed man who was "often abrasive" in hounded by the Red ~Juaids thai he
·Mao often took olfcnse 111 Dc.n1's
hi.s dealings with others, The aaency committed suicide in 1967.
habit of virtually iJnorinJ him in
added: "Dena has a well-desel:ved
And Dcng's oldest son, PUfana. public. He compllinedto friends that
reputati011 as an efficient adminislnl- was either fOiald ro· jump or wu Deng. who wu hlrd or hearins.
tor, but he does neil seem to possess pushed by Red · Gllllrds {rom his would iii far away from him during
(the late) Z!lou ~lai's ta1en1s for con- fourth-floor stl!dent dormii.OI)' win- • meetings SQ he .i:ouldn'i bear Mao~s
ciliation aaid compromise...
dow, paralyzing·him from the waist insauctions.
The CIA noted that "he was down. Later reportS claimed the· ·
"Dcng was not u ·d~erenl)ll IQ
purged and reviled in the Cultural paralysis could have been reversed Mao u 7Jiou was," one CIA profile
Revolution ( 1966-76) and still bears had he received prompl medical acknowledged, While Mao wu alive,
the political scan."_That was puttinJ lrelllllent
__ , _ foreign visiton were "surprised at
. Denrj's total lack of reference 111 him
· "" · a1 a time when Chairman M.O was
complaining that no one listened IQ
. him." Mao once bitterly charged io a ·
frie~ thai Deng treated him like,"a
dead ancestor."
Though Mao eventually brouaht ·
him back from exile in 1973, Dena
kept a low profile until 19n, when
he becanle "pmmountleader"lftcr
Mao's death• .
But witliout political refoqne to
accompany the economic changes
. that Den1 delivered, China hu
remained a backward, underdeveloped'nation thai has failed to produai
a sinsle Jl!o!lellaureate in science Qr
litenllunl.,
.
His lifclons deVQiion lo cenlnll
conttol also ~~ his legacy will be
forever stair.ed 'fith the' blood of the
protealei'S Who died in the
Square mu~ in 1989.
· One perslllent rumor, for exam- .
pie, is that the late leader of China
was playing bridge while BeijinJ was
•
burning.
.
1115 ~m 111J1; I9'P
Ja AacJe.... ud Jan Moler
• ..,... .,,_
are wrlten lor Ulllted Fealllre
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Q...AL....
•
U3-te,lae.
was a complu cltarlc1er
wbo RfuMd Ill Wfie hil OWD ·
oin. IDfomuatia. 011 hil emy life or
his non-public later li(e hM been

endJenMan.r
WASHINGTON - The dcllth of
111 Ccut St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Dcng
Xiaoping at 92 is the end of an
61~56. fu:.!KI2-2157
era for the People's Republic of Chi·
'
na.
Dcng hung on much longer than
forecast by U,S. intelligence agen·
.'
cies,
who have been pri:dictinJ hil
A Gannett Co. 'Newspaper
:•
"imminent" death in top-secret intelligence reports since 1991. But he
ROBERT L ·WINGETT
)
always was the ultimate survivor.
Publl.._
He was . pursed . three · diffeient
times in his Ions political career, sufCHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LE~EW
fering imprisoQment and internal
',, . Ga.-JIIaneger
ConlroUer
exile himself and causina hardships
. for his family. In IJjs mind, Deng didn't go through it all IQ see the party
l'lltSellllatl ll' ' ,,. 10 , _ _ - -o n • - - tllaop.
l)llocl _ _
he joined in 1924 toppled from pow- ·
.... - - (J/111- " ' _ , - , . - - " ' _ . , , _ _ .
er. So.• despite ushering in ""prece·
dented economic n~forms, he never
l'lltStllllntl, 11r- 81..
P 11 i1J1 Dlllo q7W; ~ FAIC Ill 1 1 - 1 1.
•.
. accepted political ones. .
He was a blunt and candid man,
but had a sense of humor that he pul ·
to good use in meetings with dignitaries. He often relaxed by taking
lonJ-distance· spit shots into a spittoon, swimming or -playing bridge.
.
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International bridge players ranked
think any owners of any stores down him as "world clus:· but be never
:. Deu Edilor,
~·, I lUll the piece in the paper Tues· town should he blamed for how any- played for money. In his game, the
,,.day concerning the way people were one parks regardless. And why single loser crawled under the table on all
·
·
, ,parldng in the parking lot. I've seen out one place?
fours.
There are more imponant things
people from one end to the other end
of the parkina lot back in. rve seen that ·need attention. I'd like to have
C)n the side streets car parking the water to drink and a drainage system
to hold down some of the flooding in
wrong way.
I ~ally don't think the owner of' our yards. And what about the old
,'
Jimmy's Sports Bar is responsible for Century Bar?
VlkayGani-,
this. If an officer sees them park
Pomeroy
"Wrong then give them a ticket
because they are in the wrong. I don "t

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':.Letters to the editor

·'Defends downtown establishment
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~P~nw~

COLUMBUS- Maybe crime doesn't pay. but the costs sure are begin- .
~ning to add up.
.
·
' LawmakerS have introduced inore .than 30 crime bills this year. A:tleast
' half would create longer sentences and send thousands more into the already
' oven:rowded prisons system.
.
:. The result would be more money spent on prisons and alternative sen, 'tcnCes
The get-tough-on-crime ideas include tacking more·time onto sentences
for offenders who kill victims over 65, adding two years to sentences for
ganJ·related crimes and extending the deadline for prosecuting a crime. .
One of seven crime bills propoSed by ~ep. Michael Fox, R-Hamilton,
would include a mandatory sentence for anyone who commits a violent crime
.
,
, while drUnk.
i
.. ' Fox said last week he's not worried ·about sending more people to jail.
·'•. "~y goal is to build as many cages as we.have to keep these violent peo~ple off the streets," he said. "And I'm willing to pay for that.''
·
·• · Too many legislators want tougher penalties against criminals but won't
increase the money spent on prisons, he said.
, . "I think the first order of government is to keep citizens protected from
said Fox, who added that he thlnRs mere money should be spent on
· crime prevention programs and education,
·
.
.
By Nat Hentoff
; The state's prison population has grown by SO percent since 1991-ilbo)lt
The Bays and Girls Club of Mary- ·
ll6,000 inmates are in the system. At thesame time, spending h!IS risen near- IJ11d recendy invited Justice Clarence
Thomas to be the speaker a1 a Festi- .
-!Y I SO percent to $1.16 l!illion this year.
.
. .
., . The reasons: lawmakers continue to pass tougher cnme laws thatlelid to val for YO\Ith. Outraged, the, Marymore prison time aJ!d parole boards are freeang fewer mmates.
.
land ·NAACP said. it intended to
The time served by violent felons has increased from an av~rage tame of : mount a prates$ there that would
IIClll"ly four years in 1,85 to nearly seven years in 1995.
interfere with his ialk. Thomas decid;
, And the .state parole board's release rate has dropped froll\ almost43' per· ed not to come "for the safety and
well-being of the children inwl~.;,
.
.
cent iii 1991 IQ less than 20 percenrtoday.
• · . Repnald Wilkinson, director of the state's prisons department, told lawI waited to bear what National
. ~earlierthis month that there is .a limit to how many convicts the state NAACP president, Kweisi Mfume,
ca~~lock up.
.
.
· . would say. His predecessor, Ben
• "We can not afford to·build our .way out of prison crowding-at a time Chavis, now allied with Louis Farwhen the state has limited resources to spend each year." he said.
mkhan, allowed the Texas NAACP to
_, five new prisons that are in the works will increase the correction sys- fire its counsel, Anthony Griffin, a
·••,icaJ'I capacity by 5,200 beds. There also are Jllans to expand stx commu- brilliant civil-rights lawyer. because
Griffin accepted an American Civil
nity-baed jails and to build fo~r others.
. . ·
Liberties Union invitation "to defend
•r By 2000. prison s~nding wt~l grow to about $1.2 balhon..
.
~ state also has ancreased tts use .o~ altematave sentencmg - ~ttang
the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux
· offeaden In halfway houses and local Jaals-:- to allevaate overcrowdang. . Klan there. The Te.xas Htiman Rights
Commission had gone to court, to
~ ." •Rep. E.J. naomas. R·Columbus, has introduced two crime measures-'"
·~ - ~- wo"ld Jive judges veto power over parole and another that would compel the Klan to tum over its
.fioule prisooers in inexpensive, temporary sbllctures.
.
· membership list. It had been the
national NAACP in 1958 ihat won a
· HC : ..d the 'two 10 hand-in-hand.
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p,;lng touper crime laws without accou~ting for additional prison- I.ndmark viclory in the Supreme
Court against the state of Alabama,
which was demanding· its member·
sllip list.
.
·.
--·
Griffin, a man of constitutional
principles, ·refused· to dishonor !hat
crucial
NAACP victory for free asso' .,... :A"~clllllld Pren
·
.
' 'Jbday is Monday, Feb. 24th, the 55th day of 1997. There are 3IO days cialion. But Chavis and the national
NAACP cut Griffin loose. ·
~ die Year· I
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.
In a speech this year at Johns HopTh(lay's Higbllg~ )n History:
.
kins
University on Martin Luther
· Otlfll!b. 24th, "1868, the U.S. House of Representatives impeached Pres'iohnSQn followjltJ his attempted dismissal of Secretary of War Edwin King's birthday, Kweisi Mfume
spoke to what had happened to
:..Stantoo; Johnson was later acquitted by the Senate.
i Oa this date:
.
.
"
' ~· In 1582, PQpe, Oregory Xlii·issued a pa~l bull, or edic~ outlinins his
jial_lftdar reforma. ~ OreJorian Calendar as the cale~dar an general use
I

[t;d~'Yi;hl;t~ry
·.

.

' . r:·llo~, in iii "Mari!ur?' vs: Madison" dec!si~. the. U.S. Supreme Court

' · lb!tt'it was the final tnterprelef of COI)Sil!Uilonalassues. .
... t821, Mexico de\:llred ill independen.ce from Spain.
· 'rl 1163 ArlZOIII was Q1181lized as a temtory. .
19113: the U.,n.l Stares sisned an.agreement acquiring a naval Slation ·
Ot ¥¥ .., Bay itt Cuba.
·
.Iii tm a Jlldlllnl Oecmu political p11ty held ill flnl meetinJ of impor. - l l l, IIIYIII!cll; 1&amp;,~ known as the Nul Party and its chief spokesman·

, r.

w"3t~~m ~ca•

Went on the air ¥0.. the first time.
.
·;,. " Wl945, ~,~ libented the Philippine capital ofM~pila from
.. J
COdOI duriDJ \VQrtd
D.
•
t Ia 1941. ~elect 1uan D. Peron their president
11 1!111, lucJdnalwn Pllace announCed the engqemenl. of Britain's
C)Mtel ta Lady Dial S~nc"er.
·
•
·fn 1913, a oonptional COJII!I)iuion . ~leued a repon condemninJ .the ·
a;;·~ .,r Jllpjlnw•:~l!lericant dul'j~l World War II, clllins it a "pave,

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1110: hwn Hall: f(lnncr

~llleCI'Ctary to lind Nalional

~ .· ~. w~:a;:=~~~.::==.~t,..-. : O.nl Mo«Jn,NporMd
$4.5 billi011lou for
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! Ftr~gitive ·brothef~ had few,

rves 'ot tree ~Peech

Meigs -announcements

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Clarence Thomas by an NAACP
chapter.
. "We .must never be intimidated by ·
another man's ide4s. and .we must

president for honoring the general Favored Nation status could be
resjJOnsible for the musatre of , delinked from human ri&amp;hts. That
. unatnled prO-democracy Chinese sw- se~t a signal that you can continue 111:
dents in 1989.
·
do what you want in the People's
In a 1an. 26 W~hington Poitt col- Republic, and the United Swes will
umn, "Dinner Wiih Generai"Chi,"l look the'other way."
..
·
said that Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., was
..The president's favored Jucc:essor,
never rush to silence free speech. It the only member of her puty who AI Gore, will send the S8I1IC .sign~
does not matter how we feel about publicly attaclced the president fot when he visats China later this year.
Justice Thomas, and 5Qme C)f you givins the nation's approvllto Gen.
The recenl State Dep111mcnt
know I l)av~ some very strona opin- Chi. I sbould have llso iEuded repon on hufDan rights around the
ions there. But free speech is the prin- · anotfler Democratic congre 1111111, world was ltajtlhly accurate about the
ciple by which the NAACP has chal· . Donald Payne of New Jeney,•
of · repression in China. but the presiljent
lenged injllstice for almost a century, the Congressional Black Caucus, says that "economic change" and the
and it mUJt be preserved for those we ·who also refused to waffle. ,
"impulses of society" will eventual·
love as well as those whom we · 'At a Dec. J 8 meeting of the ly let ffOedom breathe.
loathe.
Houle's subcommittee on ia\ternaLabor skales u5!'d to call this kind
. "Frcci speech in a democratic tiona! operations and hwnail rishts, of evasion or~trutal reality "pie in the
society must be fciught for, whether 'Payne said: "I think. it is yery dis- sky" !N:t!J!ic. But .the Democratic .
we like what we hear or not, because graceful that the defense minister. leadei$hap ·~ the senate and House 1
one day, someone will come to Chi, colild come here and be' given .do not publacly dispute the waffling
silence us. And then wllo will speak the red-arpet tmmnent. ·This is a per- . presaden~.
· •
for us?"
·
, son who, as we know, was·the chief · Pl:losa and Payne speak truth to the
In his boOk,""No Free Ride: From organizer of the militaly crai:"kdown· 0\lal Office, but t1te man with the .
the Mean Streets to the Mainstream" in liananmeai Square. Eve~ a penon ~iahest. popu!arity ratinJ or his pres-"
(One World/Ballantine), Mfume tells with the nickname, 'The Butcher of idency as ·not anterested. Nor are many
of his respect for Ronak! ~ - Beijing.' could ·be Ill~ tb come of his liberal loyaliSts.
with whom he often disagreed .. and have such courtesies extllitded to
A$ A.M. Rosenthal has noted in
.because ''he wasn't a man who waf- · ~im .. And 1 just ca1mot Wlcjiniand the New fork litncs: "Once libtqls
fled in the face of opinion pull what this administration i1 illlnking QIIPOsed dictatorships that conserveswings, as· so ·many ' politicians do about."
.
'1 .
tives. found con•enial. No Jon-r.
today:·
An-administratipn Withoutlbiding DciiiOCI'II$ pUb• money from ·the
When the Chinese defense minis- principfa is indeed l!ll'llto tilhom. . J!idonesian dictatonhip ud J111ioliiJ •.
ter, Gen. Chi, was feted in Washing•.Payne ¢0111inued; "I have'ilppoled ·ize the aunese."
'
ton last DCcember by the Clinton the Mcist Favored Nation status for·
Nat H,._.., ,1J11 a utlandlJ
administration, most liberal Dcmoc- .the l&gt;eojale's Republic of.Cllina. 111ao . ~ · ..llwril:y 011 tile f1nt
:tsp:..~p~·Theypref~,·n:ot":r~f:': · oppOsed the (adminis~~~
h n I 1rnt . . .., riltlllhanent a ye• or IQ . .o.~ ..... Mos, otRJalats.
. ·" . · .
·

Nat Hentofl

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The great corrip"ter-gll~c, , caper
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· be1inning of the one we 1re currenl·
ter's death, Or the mYiteriOUI c;tuh one.
By JONDh SJIII!I'
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for
enlhusiasll
who
·
ly livins in.
·
. ·
No.lhli
.,ne
is
- Witbafl the attentiootllat has been · of1WA FliaJat .SQO; odbe ,bizarre disgiven to conspiracies in the last few. appearance Of Madalyn Murray
pounded in COIIIJlirai:Y hi&amp;tOty
In the buainas warkl, ICCICk and , ·
years, I cannot amden~ why we O"Hair, or the cUITinl whJsPen that . and~ diiCUII, .u.y•. the rites of the bond records will dillpp :ar, aitinel
llav.a nan Dlumailall and Kalshts will be lfOIIndecl, banlts will , _
haven't heard more aboutoneoflhe
Templar,
llMI who know that the fed- close on presumed daadheau. Gov-•
most pernicious plQIS of the century.
. · I refer, of ceurse, to the Great.
not cra1 Reserve Bi:Jirll and cabala. of ernment ehecb ~ly made W.;
bin~ rule the world. . ·
for S500 will pay th,e ·" ' - a nick,;
OJ itCh Caper-- that nasty scheme IQ entirely . .ural;
have Ill the computen .in the coun- .
No; this plot invoha nausht blat · WeetalkiniaS6oo&amp;illiO!I bus. el. The'IRS will Hnilout ~for},
"bide 18101. Federal Mll'llllll will be•
try go into a collective convulsion a1 . monoy."lb equate it with homicide or tie, folks.
.
The
Jilt
or
it
is
this:
Since'
cOmpullins out APBs 011 BUich
the. strob of midnight on Jan. I, abductjonWQIIJdbelll:rileF.Amona
2000. We know it'sgoinJ to happen. nonle!hal coliUiions, llowtver, it is a puten of qc, JIIVIIIDI1I*S and the Sllllllanc:e Kid. The
But who did it? And .why? •
pip - and a wonhy challenge to have been Cl.prellina ~year in aU Depanmenl will be on~er~., 11p;
No one seel)ls to he in serious pur-· sgphilliCIIIed conlpincy buffl. The date refereiiCIII in the form or twO Oa'illns pqll and &amp;rteld tq% i. •
That is, unleu a ewe li t0tmt1 ror:
. sui! of answen. I can only conclude ylhoOe.woo believe lhal ZIP codes d'"'ll.lnstead oh~ritins· ...._·-." "
they write "2-26.97.7."'W.,iJ: lhe millennium bq. ·
: '
· then~ is a JitUiive and ongoin1 c;ov- and Social Security numben lie
er-up.
.
conttol devices, and .wbo repnt the you'can - what's eoinlnJ. . ·
· Aad 11*1 what? 'l1lln Is 1 - . :
I would not compare this C0111Pk- CIA. the Utilled Nlllionl, die inedl&amp;, · WhH lho ball "eK.ndl lbcM ad1. Sccna,Q( 'Cat~ Iii IN ...... t ·
acytotheinachinlllionsl)f*-wbo the A11ti-Def~ Leap=, die ~Square in two ye1n lad 10 lllintiD,-b•tx+ I ,oodtllze •
mwdmd John llld Robert Kct nly ·ACl.U, the 'lniM'IJ CotnminiOII; iliOIIIIts. the dllei in a ldlllol pro- by code Hne. k -Ia lrllla• WOit,
or ac.rtill LUther King Jr. Or to lhe ·the Cooacil oal'cleiJII ...~ lho .,... -.:e J0in1 to 1"0111 ''00/' The it will COli a lllint. •s- txpa1ts :
puzzle of Who poisoned WiUilllt Commlaee of~ and till CouiiCil of :Jfllblemil;tbtcomJJUIIrbiiC!IIQi., ·..-tile 1Jgbal ~for bul- ; .
HanliJ18'• - meat. ~ Olllcb II Tlliny u pri1111 · ~ m 10 rellia we hAW llliJpijllnlo 1 - · will be balwr,rn ~ billiait _.,.
.
I'
Dot 011 die- ~"U_ V"IIICI Pal- ' .~ would not ~ dlia OOIIIIily: k'•ION 11110 .beck 10 1111 · 1600 llilllal. .

•
I

o-w,;

o.t:-:

'im.

..a : ·

.,

·Faye Will

;· if en.y,-.scrapes with the taw

nananmen

'

.

Lenora VanMeter'

A~P, Denver-based utility

~~

The imPera

::harm."

J

!I

,.

. ' WASHINGTON (AP) - Promi- state or American politics, laid of the
nent Democrats 1re joining the call special counsel idea: "I think it's
ror an independent counsel to exam- gains IQ conae to that before it's over.
••
,.
t
ine political fund-raising practices, I think that's tile only way to clear the
IND.
and the party's new chairman new air. And I think that, ultimately, the
..
chairman says he would not object administralion will see that."
Nellie Inez Abdon Pierce, 87, of Rudand. died Saturday, Feb. 22. 1997 . Sen. Russell Feingold, 0-Wis.,
Colorado Oov. Roy Roll*, woo
at her sOli's residence in Langsville.
and former sen. Bill Bradley, D-NJ., beCame Democratic national chairShe was bam Marcli, 12. 1909 in Lima..Mich., daughter of the late Fran!&lt; used an appearance Sunday on nian last month, stopped short of
'
and Myrtle Craft Abdon, she was a store clerk for Harold Ward's General NBC's "Meet the Press" ro align endorsing an. independent investi,.
f '·
,,{i
Store, Langsville, and attended the Langsville Community Church.
.·
themselves with sen. Daniel Patrick tion now. But, he said on ABC's
W~i
She is survived by two 10ns, Clrrull F. "Rusty" Pierce of Salem Center, Moynihan of New York. wbo last "This Week:" "frankly when- if
and David Pierce of Mausfield;
daugh&amp;ers, Dolores Johoson 'o f Green week became the firs1 Democrat to - there needs to be a specill counCasde, and Sandra Newton of Waverly; a daughter-in-law, Nina J&gt;jerce of · endorse such an investigation.
· ·. sel, I'm for it l want to get everything
Columbus; two sisters, Flilrence Oentner and Elnon Wright, both of Chelsea,
Ross Perot, I he 1996 Reform Par- out on the table. We've got to c~
W. VA.
Mich.: two brothers. Robert V. Abdon·of Cbelsei and Russell Abdon of ty presidential candidate, also added this thing up' so we can get 011 ~
Altoona. Fla.; 14 grandchildren, 32 grea~-grandchildren and two great-greal- his endorsemenl of the move i&gt;n the running these two parties in die
grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews. .
sarne program.
proper way."
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Canoll R. Pien;e, to whom
"Regrettably, I think we've come
Romer urged the White House to
she was married for 61 ,years; a son, Robert E. Pierce; and a brother, Richard to the point where, under the discre- · follow up on actions last week when
Abdon.·
tionary powers of the atiOmey"gen- it removed five employees of the
Sel'\lices will be 1 p.m. Thursday in the Birchfield Funerll HOllie; Rut· eral. we probably do have to go to a Democratic National Committee
land, w,ith the Rev. Robert E. Musser officiating. Burill will be in the Miles ~pecoal co.unsel," said Feingold, who from White House jobs becalll" of
Cemetery, Rutland: Friends may call a1 the funeral home from 5-8 p.m. Wede· os a leadmg congressional proponent the b!"' image created and re.ssign
;f}
nesday. . . .
,
.
of campaign finance reform.
others as well.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Holrq MedAlthough Republicans advocating ·
"It would be better that we ~ve
jcal Center f:lospice', Meigs County Brani:b, 1110 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, the special investigation have point· no one over there on the DNC P.Yc
Ohio 45631-1563. .
). · ·
·
ed to questionable. activities by the roll," Romer said. Their presence .
Clanton Whate House in soliciting raises questions about whether they
campaign donations. Feingold said are doing government or political
.. ro·
•
.
tbe probe should involve GO~ prac- work, and "we ought to keep a bright
; By T!le AeaOc:latecl Pren
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday 817:10 a.m.
!Ices
as well for possible illegalities. line between them if we can," he '
Lenora VanMeter, 83, Mason. W.Va., died Saturday, Feb. 22. 1997 in the
l,.alte-~ffect snow could accumu-·
.... Wealher foreeut: .
Bradley, who retired from the said.
Senate last year. in dismay over the
: , latei 2-4 inches in n.Cll'lheast Ohio's , . · ~onighl ... lncreasing cloudi11ess. Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasanl, W.Va.
, . A$htabulll. i:leauaa and Lake counties Lows from the upper teens to the · Born March.30, 1913 ·ip West Colum)lia, W.Va., daughter of the late
f14ward and Carrie Bus VanMeter, she was a homemaker.
.
~- toiiigh!, the National Wealber Service lower 20s. Variable winds S to 15
Surviving are a daughter. Norma (Lowell) Greer of Vinton; a son, Jack, ~~· .:
.· , '
. , mph. .
,
Elsewhere acrciss .the st.t~e, skies
Tuesday... Mostly sunny. Highs · ie Lee (Linda) VanMeter of New Haven; W.Va.; 16 grandchildren and 22
great-grandchildren; and two br9thers, Ray Thomas Vll!Meter of Mason, and
, will clear and . temperalures will frOII)'the u~ 30s to near 40.
Harold Van Meter of Point Pleasant
·
·
' plunge ,into the ~s tonight, fore~esday night ... Moslly clear.
She
was
also
preceded
in
death
by
three
sons,
Archie
Kimes
Jr.,
Harry
LONDON (AP) _ Two u.s. regional power company to be
[ .casters slid.
.
.
Lo s from the upper teens to· the
Edward
VanMeter
and
Harley
Andre~
VanMeter;
a
daughter,
Alice
Hoschar;
po,wer
companies have agreed to bu
,
·
· Sunshioe and southerly winds will .low 20s.
bought by American investors.
1
five brothers, Charles VanMeter,Jessae R. VanMe~r. Howard H. VanMeter, a publicly held British 0
d"Y
Extended rorecait:
, warn\ things up .a bit t&gt;n Tuesday,
Yorkshire Electricity chairman
15
( when highs will ~mostly in the 30s, . Wednesday.:.Panly 'Cloudy. Highs Paul_E. VanMeter and William H. VanMeter; three sis~ra, Eunice Hallscott, tributor ror $2.4 billion, ~e':~m : Christopher Hampson said today the
Mane Barnes and Margaret Barker; and four grandchildren.
nies said toda
·
pa bid represents "a very fair price" for
•. · ;
The record·hljh temperawre for an the upper 40s.
.
Services
will
be
I
p.m.
Tuesday
in
the
FogleSjlng
Funeral
Home,
Mason,
•
American
y.Eiectric
Power
of his company.
! this date at the Columbus weaiher jursday...Showers likely. Lows
wuh the Rev. Charles HIIIJI'Ilves officiating. Burial will be in the Evergreen Columbus, Ohio and Denver-based
~ station was 72 deps in 1961 while in . upper 30s and highs near SO.
The American companies said the
Cemetery,
Letart, W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday PS Colorado offered $!4.83 a share takeove_r will h!lp Yorkshire Elec: the .rec&amp;~ low wu I below zero in
•dii):...Partly cloudy. Lows in the
; 191!1,. S~n5et tonight' will be at6:18 u ' 20saiad highs in the lower40s. · from noon u~til the time of the service.
in cnsh for Yorkshire Electricity tricity expand and diversify ahead of
Group PLC, based in •the northern the introduction of full competition in
English city of Leeds.
the British electricity market in 1998.
AEP is the holding company for
If regulators approve the deal,
Faye Will, 82, of Pomeroy, died Saturday, Feb. 22, 1997 at Veteraais pnly one of Britain's 12 regional eleC- seven electric.utililies serving seven
tricity companies, privatized in 1990, mil!ion people in Ohio, West VirMemorial Hospital.
.will
remain independent. Yorkshire ginia, Virginia,. lndiataa. Kentucky,
A housewife, she was born Oct. 3. 1914 in Pomeroy, the daughter of the
Blectricity would be the seventh Michigan and Tennessee.
~ By Th!t ~ocllad ,.... · survivalists. Most of the while . laie Henry and Clara Lehew Young.
She is sul'\lived by four sisters, Virginia Wiii,.Susie Hiii •.Kri~ Hill and
: :-. :~wob~th~c~wilhshool· su~
· isi•activity takes place. in
Betty
Butcher, all .,f Pomeroy; and several nieces and ne)lilew._ .
~ ana !I' pollee an Walmangton, Ohio, n
Idilho about 70 miles to the .
She was· llso preceded in death by her huaban« Willi$ "Red" Will. ·
have no history of major problems cas 'where the Aryan Nations group
Services will be 3 p.m.'I\aesday in the Ewing Funeral Jfonle, Polneroy,
. with the law.
.
·
.. hasi@0COmpound.
Group to 1itt1
Sorority to meet
.,. • ~t-vi~ 0 1&amp;rien ~l~Qe. 24, IIJd
Colville resident Mark Revnolds with the Rev. Lester Hayman .,fficiati~g: B'urill will follow in the Rocbprln&amp;s
.
The
Pomeroy
United
Methodist
Preceptor Beta Beta Oaapu:r, Bela
;
~ Cheyne C. 'J(eht¥..., .2.Q,, bQth. of. told..the Dispatch that the. .Kehoes - Ce!!letery. Friends may call at.the funeral home from 7-9 toniKbL·
Church :will host the Kings Way Sigma Phi Sororily, will meet Thurs~ Colville; Wash., have been· indicted always distrusted ·the government. ·
Singers, a Christian group from Ohio day, Feli. 27 , a1 the home· o( Clarice
on State charges inclqding alteropted Reynolds saidChevie Kelfoe beCame
Ill
~ Jr.
} ,,.,,
Slate University, Sunday. The con- Krautter. 6:30p.m. for"a salad supper.
, murder or a police' officer fqr shoot- moaf~ upset with the government
Y · ·• Jl
,.f
"'
'• '
cert will he a1 3 p.m. and a carry-in
• ing at police durini twO clas~ in the afte~ federal Bureau of Alcohol,
Robert Bradley Yonker, 23, of Pomeroy, died Salunlay, feb. 22; 1997 at dinner will follow. The public is invit- Garden Club meellq
· '
' city 50 miles northeast of Cincinnati. _ Tobacco and Firearms raided Del his residence.
.
ed to auend the sel'\lice presenled in
The Rutland Garden Club will
:· They also are wanted by the FBI on Knudlon's nearby house in April
A fonner U.S. Marine, he was born Feb. 3, 1974 in Honolulu, Hawaii." celebralion of the Lenten season.
meet tonight at 7 p.m. at the home ot
, federal charges of fleeing to avoid I~
·
sonofRayandRheaYonkerofPomeroy.Hewasamem~C)fme· N~
Marcia Denison, Rutland.
.,
,, prosccu~on.
Mali sa Knudson was handcuffed · Churc~ in C~st~r and ~ J!llduate of Rose Pine High SdtoQI. in J..oui~ . YouiJa league to meet .
'! Authoriti~ say they may be trav- . . !IS 30.ATF agents searched the house
He IS survaved,by a Stster. Janelle L. Yonker of p.,lllefOy; ~ patCmlllrilndThe Big Bend Youth League will Hymn sing pll\nned
.. cling_with their wives and four small for weapons but found notbing, a mother, Olga Yonker of Pomeroy; a maternal grand!llothet, ~1 -Pqoletof meet Wednesday. 6 p.m. in the meetHillside Baptist Church will have
' children in a J9n Dodge Executive repQrl' in .the Colville Statesman- Chester; and several aunts and uncles.
.
· ·• .
' ing room of Middleport Village n hymn sing on Sund&amp;y. 6 p.m. l1te
·
services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the EwiliJ Funeral Honie, PonM!roy, Council. Everyone is welcome.
• motor horne, possibly bearina Mon- Bxalltiner said.
public is invited to attend. 1
~ tana.license plates. '
·.
''ll'he)'·(the Kehoes) already had a with the Rev. Herbert Grate officiating. Burial will be in the -Mount Cheiter
:• Before the Feb. 1.5 shootout; dist'll't of the government. Now Cemetery. Friends l!lay call a1 the funeral home from 7-9 tonight. ,·
~ whic:h was·captured on vi~ and they•&lt;h•ve no bllst for the govern" b~oadC!lSt nationally, the brothers .men~/' Reynolds told The Dispatch.
·.
~ ~.
~ never had been charged with a seri- . . RoWrt Oumm. father of Chevie
Units"of the Meigs County Emer9:21 a.m . .Sunday, Liberty Lane,
ous offense. Many law officers in KehQII)s wife, Kama, said his son-in- . (Continued from Page 1)
gency ·Medical Service tecorded 10 Avanelle Bass, VMH;
·
tion.
.
..
calls
for
assistance
Salurday
and.
4:53p.m.,
Sunday,
Union
Avenue,
·
;. colville h~ never h~ard of Cheyne la"':,cilanged ~ft~ the ~d : .. .· eratioit Foundation. Off'~eial purpose:
Membea:s respond tha\ the pri" Kehoe, . whale C~~ae Kehoe w~s
If• wasn I hke he IS n~w, saad "A study tour mission to provide a valely paid-for ' trips aus"'ent Sunday. Units responding included: Pomeroy, Louise Gilmore. VMH.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
RUTLAND
.
, known qniy for has·lanks to others an Gumm, ~ho · has not seen h!s daug~- · more thorough understanding of the rese&amp;!'Ch done on taxpayer ~xpense.
4:44a.m. Saturday. Happy Hollow
5:08 a.m. Salurday. Rocksprin's
~- tro~.ble wat~ ~e ,Ia~. . . .
.
ter Qr has three grandchaldren an . government of Egypt and their views
:·1 doo:1think il's ~lble to fund Road.
-~
lfChevaeas1mvolvedantheOhao montm.
d l"t'
·
th
·
·
"R
·
Rutland,
Martha
Ki~g.
Holzer
Rehabili"tation
Center, Frank Dooitc
Of Ahe patrol's lleet of slightly abn' edpo 1 octss t!otnllede 5re3g7ao5n0. eam- all of these tri~ with lalpayer dol- · Medical Center;
: incident, he's taken a big step," one
·
'
VMH;
.
Iars," saicl Ch.,ie Boesel, press aide
". CI"ll
" l" more .,,an
·• 1000.
cos Weiss anaidetoGienn,
• .
8:46a.m. "Saturday, Liberty Lane,
2: 16 p.m., Sunday, Carpenter Hill
~dv~ e Iaw e ~ic~ent .offiacaa
, . crua~rs, aboutl.OO urs•Leonard
loDeWine.
' .
·
0
Middleport,
Avanelle
Bass,
Veterans
Road,
Ed Maksimczak, HMC.
~ tq
~ ayt9n aa y . ews an a sto- are ."11\IIPped . wath vadeo reco~ang went to China co~rtesy of the Chi"Ifs something of a Catch-22,"
. ry )ll!bhs~ Sunday.
.
eqqap~~t. saad Sgt. Brenda Collans, nese People's Institute of Foreign added Dave Schnitlger, aide to Memorial Hospital ;
. TUPPERS PLAINS
The brothers grew up m the apatrql,spokeswoman.Bachrecord- . Afli " t
f$4
w.
·
met
8:28
p.m.
Salurday,
Coal
Street.
I
:50
p.m. Sunday, volun1ecr fire
917
1
Boehner.
Middlepon,
Shannon
Scott,
&amp;realed
at
deJ?a~t and squad to Pine Tree
. ~. ~qlville area and~ the ~ldest of the . ins ul!ii!COS!S $3,87S, ~hich include~ wi~~~i~~f ~ Chin~se ~~~ign
Taxpayers would llkel:y: be reluc- .
. Dnve, bf11Sh fire, no injuries J1:port;, eaght, ~~ns, of Karby. ~hoe, Th~y a vad~- camera, a . Wireless micro- Ministry as well as ininistries deal- tant IQ fund the trips, liut a1 !hi: same the scene;
l
0:25
p.m.
Saturday.
Liberty"
ed.
'
·
• were .raa~ o~ t11e Chrtsllan Identity phone 8tt&amp;ehed to, tile ~ro,oper. and a ing with~. economic cooperation, time, "most taxpayCI"S w.,.t their rep;: del':trane, ~tch contends that the · rec~r ';'!d monitor _msade ~ car. science and technology.
·
resentatives II) he is ihfonnod as pas· Lane, Avanelle Bass, VMH;
1:48 a.m. Sunday, Flood Road,
.. white race as supn:me. The Columbus
, T!u~ 1s ·lh!l farst lime .we ~e had
Spokesmen for the various offices sible about the issues out there, •• the
Pomeroy, Tina Riffie, HMC; .
• DtS)l!ll~~ reported Sunc!ay.
. . ,a; shOjl!Jng caufht ~ the an-car said the trips were anything bul Boehner aide said.
• . (:plv~ll~, a to~n, of about A:300
~~~q.:!Jvls. CQihns .saJC!. • ,,
' ' vaciatiqns.' '
. ·
Debates over ethics in the last
•
:~ peQPie,Js hom~ to an und~aned
S!a~ Rep. Edward ·1erse, D· Glenn "only takes the trips if he Congress led (C) atiahtening of rules
· numb!:r of white supremacists and Euchd. has &lt;!rafted a "!"Jget amend- feels they are lmi\ortanl 10 Senate
for trips, elilliinatingjunkets to play
Veleraps Memorial
ment ~~Jak~ $~ malhon ov_er two business/' said Jack Sparks, a Glenn golf in charity' golf tournaments, for
Friday
admissions - Woodrow
y~ars. fi:Qm hoghway construction.and aide.
·
·
example.
,
.
.
·
.
Hall,
Racine;
Faye Will. Pomeroy;
The Daily· Sentinel gave It I!! ,the patrol to ~h~ vadeo But watchdog groups remain
.
But
speaking
to
a
Sf?UP
can
stdl
Cora
Beegle,
Racine.
.
equtplllllnt for allats cruasers. ..
· skeptical.
_
&lt;USPS ziJ.!ileJ
be ~fined u an officaal purpose,
Friday discharges - Patty Laud·
'"'
"Our view is if a trip is importanl Sc~!ff not'(d. .
.•
. ermilt, Pomeroy.
.
enough to take ... it ought to he paid
Groups generally have theor . • Saturday admissions - Ruby
for out of the ~.udget of the congres- . :mnual. mee~ing in sb~ plush ~esort Diehl. Pomeroy.
·
siOnal office, and lhe member should an Calafomaa or Flonda. Thais. the
Saturday discharges. none.
be prepared to justify that expense to w~y they get members to go.' he
·
Sunday
admissions
-none.
· .
_,_,The Auoci................ !he Ohio
Am
Powr ......~... :.........."42" constituents," said Bob Schiff of Pub_ , _ Auoclodon.
AJczo ·-\ .................................m
saad.
· Sunday discharges - Mildred
lic Citizen. a Ralph Nader organiza- ·
Amr1"ech .............- ••••.;.........14\
McDaniel, Middleport.
POS'I'MASTBis Send llddn::u cotm.'d01t1 10
AltliiM 011 ............................43~
The [)oily Senolnei, Ill Coun St., Pom""', I
Holzer Medical Center
AT&amp;T .....................................40\
Ohio 45769.
Discbaraa
Feb. ,11- Cassandra
Bini{_Qq, ...................~..........45~
Johnson, Anna '
Gillum,
Bertha
SUI8CRIPTION.IIATB8
'
'Bob ~· ......................~ .....13\
COLUMBl/S
(AP)
IndianaStevens,
Mrs.
Kevin
Cremeens IJl(l
Se•=ary ot lui '!'eek'• Proa,..............
Carrltr .. - ~
.
38~
Ooo ,.................. ............$2.00
et.lilt
........,..•••..;.......,.......17).
Ohio direct . hOg prices at selecled ducers Uvesloek Allocilatlon auc- dliughler, Russell Ferguson.
Ooo M..................................... , . ........... A.10
·et.rmt ~ lhope .;.................. 4\
Ooo Veir .. .,.......................................... $104.00
buying points Monday as provided tions atlllllaboro, Eatoa,"FannerDlscharaa Fell. n - Margaret·
stown, Lazcuter, Wapakoneta, Layne.
by
the
U.S.
Department
of
Agriculatv
tfo
···"-·
..
··~·
..
······"··::(
.SINtlLI COPY ,.IC&amp;
ture Markel News:
Mouat Ve--, Bucynu, Creston,
Dlscbaraa Feb. 23 - Charley
Oolly ....................................................3l c. ...
~
82\
Ca14wel
ud
Gall~ll:,
·
.
Markin, LOsan Burgess. Rita Ganctt.
Banows and Jilts: fum to mostly
~ ........................ - ...14\
·
Hogs:
50
cent!
IQ
4".1)!flower.'
·
..
, (Published with permbalon)
SO
cents
hi
alter.
demand·
moderate
on
K..n-1 ······•··.......................... ~ '\
..mlc
Suhtrlben
ioadviiiOi
... deoiri
diiOO!
....
io ~~~~1C~
...,. lf\d .............................Z7,.
Buu:her hod: 35.50-52.75 .
Oft I thlw, tb. cir. 12 moalbllllia'.
a li1ht to moderate movement.
Umllecl .1!...............................11
U.S. 1,2, 2~()..26() )bs. COuntry
Ohio
Valier
1Mt
.......
.,
•••...••...
37
points
47.5&lt;48.SO, few at 49.()().
No oubocripdM by·moll poono..,. lo ...,
One Y811try........ ;"' ..................31,.
49.SO; plants 48.2S-49.SO.
---~~pill~.......... - .................
u.s. 2-3, 23()..260 lbs. 42.SO. Hot or Cold Plua S-.,J oz. Potato chip~, l oz. Joyal C•ke,li
Prllll FIN.:~;. .....;....................... 15~
iqthe aubttrlpdol period. SubiedtdDI,..
47.SO; 210-230 lbs. 37.S0.42.SO.
Roclwell ... ~ .............................,
oZ. Fountain Pepsi Product.
·
&lt;h.tllaeo nar
by clcqjq..,.
.......~:~ ...........................178 ,. Sows: ~ steady.
· .

•lca#laa·l

CALLlOU
MCK

;Getting tough on crime
. pushing priso~s over limits

Hlny c:;an..~wroy. died Monday. Feb. .24, 1997 at 'hil residence.
~-wiD be "'-"e'e • a lala" date. Arrangements are being
c:ompleted by lho Flshet ~ Home, Middleport.
In lieu of flowcn, contributi0111 may be made to tJae Laurel Cliff Free
Methodill Church, Lalnl Cliff Road. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

.·Nellie 1: .Pierce ·

I BETTER

.

" By JOHN SEEWER

.

By Jack Anderson
' and
Jan, ·Moller

,oQ_,.,_, ___ .., _ _ .,._

·;

Harry Clark

•

ly Jecll Andll'lon

Ro·bert" B v:onker

I
·
Hosplta news .

:'Stocks ·

I

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

....
_
bel..,.._.,

,..,...............................
a.._.
... ..............

·Joday's.Jivestock report

'

Thlt Wtekt Dtll Spteltl .

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

-ofilleooboellptloo.

MAU..IIJIICJllPTI(N

-"'-~

•

~·-~~..............................?'\
~ IIMIIl :L,,,.. -·-~--••oo•ooo40

...21"

Wendr'• ·"'"'---.. ~....--...
Wortlilftllllln.-...·-·---·--...20\

.

.... thl 10:
:,m·ti:,;JION
trvld1dbyAdvHt
· ~._'!_

$3.99

U.S. 1-3 300-4SO lbs. 39,00-41.50,
ONLY
few at 38.00; 4S0.500 lbs. 42.()().
44.00; S00-6SO h. 44.oo..48.oo, few
ovu 650 lbs. 49.00.50.00.
B01n: ;35.00-37.00.
St. At. 7 .. Five Pohila
. Estimated receijlti: 31
Hoa ~trend for M011day: SO ·
cents bilfler.· .
'
..__ _..__....,

IAZ'S MIUIHOII &amp; DiM THIU

,ooo:

~

'

.EMS units record 10 .c alls

0

ii. ,. . . . . . . .

!!

on

Prl·vate grou·.ps fo' ot law·make"r.. .•

·

.; '01

•

·oemocrats joining call
for independent probe :
of fund-raising practice

••

The Daily Sentinel · Deng's way ofte·n clashed with Mao's
~

The Dilly Sentinel• P8ge 3
5

llondlly, ,....., J4,
1117
-..

'·.

~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Otilo

.,

'

•

�I

.&amp;•T'heDIIIyll!lwl

. Poml o,•EMflllpiMt,ONo

gs- Health Depa~an~nt
.notes·productive year in '96
r----:::::::'::::----;,

"CHARLENE HOEFLICH

li ...............

•

2

In Dlvlslon:.,r boys' aectlDIJIII PlfY,

WIC (Women, laflUIIs ud Chilchn)
ICIYicea- ~ 10 beallby cbiJ-

ley Vk±
1J at I p.m.
lly acOI I WOLFE
•
another senior, Jamie Evans canned
That. con1est foi)Qws the UfJI'CI' 12.
Sa 6111Connpand ol
.
Lyina Ia the wake of a powerful . bnc~ Divisioa IV cMmpionlbip in · South Galiia wu led by Rufus ·
Thniido, lbe Soulb Gallia Rebels whid) ~tan taltca on the ORen Stanley's aine points.
11\111 tl:d to Mcm:rville followins a Bolx:IQ.
The Rebels knewwblltodowith
SOIIIbem broulht u ll1llY to the the ball and ran a good offense, but
65-3711prising ~ ni~)n lbe
boy.' vanjty Division IV aectionaJ w..r-t baUie .and Clll'h· bad a they just couldn't hi~ one in a barrel
-ifinll at AleXander Hip. School. bud in the victory• .
in the first balf. Intimidated someAll
1~
'lOntadOes
bit
lbe
sccring
SoudW1I ia now 6-lS after lbe
wbat by the Southern pressw1&gt;, the
win .!llld lllvueea to the aectionaJ column. That-i:bMp wu led by Rebels even missed some Jive-me
c:lulmpionship ll&amp;lillll Symnoes v.J. R}'lll Nania with t5 points, while lay-ins that helped lead to their
•.
demise.
. Southern turned up the wick early and scoml fint on aJamie Evans
follow-.., off the &amp;1151, while South
Oallia'sJeremy Davil!ansWCftld with
alayjumper,2-2.TbeRebels' Jason
Johnson. drilled a three following a
I
· Jerrod Mills. t~~miii'OIInd jumper for
South Oallia's only lead~
1

•

By MIKE HARRIS
.ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP) Dale Jarrett had ~ dazed look of
whohadju51modepshocking discovery.
.
Jdf Gordon's expte5s1on also
c~tained more than a liint of ~ur,pose after be overtook the seemtngly invincible JIIITelt late in Sunday's
Goodwrench Service 40() and not
only beat him, but ran away with the
win.
.
Por 350 laps, Jarrett's Ford
append unbeatable. He led Ill but
27 of, tbosc laps on North Carolina .
MOIOr Speedway's 1.0 17-mile oval,
:and wu barely chlllenaed until
:Gordon was able to launch his late
offensive.

BM!I! !NE JUMPER - With South Gdll'e Chid lllcheel (40)
......... SaiJthlm'• ~ lllui:ltllf (48) ...... ehot from the
b1111Jrle .. tilt Tomedt 118' Adltm Roueh (5) llleo wa~ during
. . . . , . nigllt'l Dlvlel1111 IV ucdarwl IICilon 11 _ _ . . , High
School, wherw the TarneclolitlliOI'I
ei47.
(Scott Ylon. photo)
' . • '
r'
•
~

ebout pregnancy end Ita coneequences. With
her, from lett, are Jon Jec:Oba, ldmlnlatrtttor;
Nonne Torres, R.N., director ot nursing;· and
Edwina Bell, clerk.·
·

7. 1loko .........:.............. ll-6 1,)34
8.-Qnlial .........l9-6 1,2.14

Bnsk e tbZJI I
.

"

'

a.-.................

"--

EASTEitN CONFEIIENCII:

.~ ~ a
IS .m , 1

............... :,17 25 .519

I)~

-~ ............16 ll .196
Ploilodolpllio ...........l4 39 .264
.................. ...... 11 4! .:1114

25~
17
JO!

14 :10 .444 ·· J7K

. Cnllrll-

~......... . ..........

.

7~

6 .559
tl .m

Detn&gt;it ... ,................«&lt;
At- ............_.... .35 II .660
Olrtollt ................ M 21 ' .618
CU!VIIl.AND •.... JO 13 .~
1 -......r ....... ,.l'J 11 .471
Ml.....................25 29 .46.1
T....................... l9 ll .351

-~~~R:-..
.
.
.
.
. . . .. JJ I~ W7 "' )
l llcJuloa ................. 36 19 .6.~5
27
l4
J9
40
47

.~

191.

.Lut y_., 2,178 lii'IIIIUnlzlllona _.ldnl(nla-

th•

16 .704

Torree, Fi.N., dii'IICtar of n11ralng; and Edwina .
Bell, who·serve• ee clerk for the prclgrem.

,,

·!·'

Internet' user$ duped by story·· of dying 7-year.;o/d
~ , ·,

.

....a s.rvJCe
WASHINGTON- Tbousancb of

ceined Internet users who equid not . ' a fraud," said Pico Allen of.ACS get through to the address li$ted on the society knew it had no fund-raisInternet users touched.by the story of the computer message began con- ing project set up in the name Qf.Jes'
sic.a Mydek. And its subsequeni effort
a 7-yar-old girl dying of cancer were tacting the society.
"We
immediately
recognized
it
as
to track down Jessica failed.
duped, officials say.
· A letter that hit the Internet late
last yar said the American Cancer
Society bad .,reed to donate three
1\~PECTIO\
ceots to cuc.:er RRIII'Ch on behalf of
Jessica MydekfQr. each person who
rece'ved the plea;·
.
The ln..-net lolicitatiori said Jcs: sica wu lllfferiaa 1\'0111 . . and acute
cerdnl can:imlina lind had but six
'
IIIOiltha 10 live. And the Ctftcer SCICli:
'
·ety bad .,reed to help fulfill her
dyiql ~sb "'"' to fwtlier cancer
.-.reb.
.
Thousands of web browsen;
movcd ·by thO pte., f-.-dod J~i'
ca'l,1!1411'11f1 to .odter I n - users.
But, a 'Grete Newi Servlee eompWr .tlelrCII 01 p;tbbc: - c b con·
taininl 2 billioo ~· "'.aid no
Jeuica Mydet in the '·U:tihlld Slates.
. The ACS klle.\Y .jlolhioJ about • .
'ellica MY~Wc or ber' plpa unlil coa-

SH·AVER
REPAIR
.
.
C·LINIC

••

' ..... I

'

'

Hamilton Rou66, Cotheu

MIII.QNo CtnltNRCC

naoo. Mon116, ~ilmiftltDI 7)

n

·- !lr.f,..z •.•..,.....

_ .,_.._.

49

,.....

1..,.

·:::

.t..\ltlll.,, ...................:10-l I,

s.
21-4 . 1,431
.......CIIall...........21-6 1,:174

2

,

S
4
9

Elfi• 57.lohatlown "'lnlo .... J11

lk* 66. ~lootn-t'anoll :1.1

F.disot~61
Lakota 54, ~ 21

Huron 71, Milan

Knnsus

Ulbon 49, United LUi:al :tl

.

Rhlgetln~ 67, JohnM
lnwl' ~2

nnom

l4

W•yn;csYiiJa .,._ Oirlk.. l6

w...... 67, Mcewj Mer 30

Zanenille Roeecraas ItO, Shady1hle

44

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
.

8ruMwfct50. '~40
·
Clevel... HN. 79;
""· ]I
()II . .........,. !6.
· Hrin1
]9 .
'
. .,
.

);t

6l
:10.

MtMfield Sr. 80, nma Coltl...i..

Clo-

N. Ohnolod «1. WCIII!Ul7 '
Sl . Col. NortiiiMd 46
.... HILlloll N.., 68,

.
.,. Oll-19
~74_ W.-illo S. :19
' ~ 1!1.. fo!Noilk:alll
. Cit. u..
.
Pll I .

_.,.,

01,..,...

.... :17, Cit. Keaoed)29

. . , &lt;M,

Falla 29

.~·

. Sp&lt;ina. ~2
,
Spring. NortllweJtern ft. a........:· '
Eastern lO
'
-~
4J. Dtlla l8

Utka 76. J - Aldlo 22
Venailles Sl, ~~~~ 3S

Co-tty 62. Bwlleno0 Sl
Elyria45. N. ......... 31
Rtodla)l57. O.ft-.ll
ClhlnM 7', Col. Ellll: 26
UUwood ll, A.-. 28
LMtaw :1), Col. WllttenOII 46
M-od&lt;l Modi,.. 40. p.._ R011

t· ·

S . R11nlle :t6 , New MlchUetow•

•
Twin VaUey 5. 71, Tri-Villap 60
Whitco•l 96, Poril mouth None '

S.turda{;\~nll

·

Loudonville 62, N...-._ 46
t.~.nhernn W. ~. Elytia c.h, ~
M•8UNU•llt o.ik tl&amp;l'bcw 1$
Miami E. :'iO, Oukwood 33
'
P~"'"' &lt;~~. spon.ltl""""' fi '

0...60

·

.

Faorf,.kl Unioo 59. Col. ......, 4S

World Hlrwel1 S2, 8eriiiC Union 47
Wonlli..- Chr. 90, Cui. Wdlintlon

·

Cudionl 54. Gnood Val. 4l .
Carey 47, Emtwood 34
Cle. Cllhuli~ ~. C1ewvtn )It
0... Foo:k 66. Wl""ool 55
Colctwllla' 7:\, Um1 C.U.. ~:1

n

l6
, Wabh67,Qdanill&lt;57

..

42 .

.

Poclsmoolll Clly 79. Mllftehel1er 76
Racine Soudan M , S. O.Uia
· SidDey l.ctlma1:1 «. Me;~; banic•bur&amp;
41 1an
Symmles Val. M, lroncoa St. Joteph

-..v--61.-

....... lor • tlnt;ttlo!» - ........ poi1t for 1 2Sch-pt.ce vote. aad lut

DMalaolil , .
Akron Hoban 4~ . OrrviUe :,4
.. ,
Allen E. :'i8, ParkwiiJ M '
~ '
Amt~nda · Ci ca rc rc:ek 76, Madhoa
PIUin.s :\6
Ashland Crestview :11. Ontlrio '41t '
Brooldield 46. Bcrk ~ hinl29
. CaDII Wi"'-'bcstef 46, Li. . . ..,.._

Dale Sauthcas1ern 66,

)7

·,

Aodla) 64, 1lllhl49

You. Mooney 66. Yoo. Ubeity .t.'

DIYW...IV
A~ 71. Triad 47
Bt'albviUe S6. Bridaepon ~
DMvilte 69, Carrrbufa 61
Fisher Catfl. 6.111, Millmport Sl
Frontief 81, Bellaire Si. Jc*n'16J
UteJan&lt;~l8. Warerfonf 56
M'isaJAinawa V1l. 67, Tri·County N.

Mill OWe C flo euw

~c

•1

WhHicnbur&amp; S7, Ne:h onviii~ - York

A-ttc..r.,_.

I

N"""""" lO. Anohonl w.""' ~
Re:vcre: 37, Medina Htaftland 3$ .
Sbelby M. Witlnrd .49
S1. Marys M ~. Uma S haw~ M
TallmadJIC70, ·Fio:fd Jl
W. 8r.11'1l:h 56. Pololnd 3]
W. Holmes 49, Rl~ View 46

ll

Dl)'loe fA, M'"'+•H"ff 67

....... Ullion Molleldeibefa 43
Ot...Wn 83. HI- 64

.Holland Spnog. ~. B.,.. 49
KC1U1on 71, TwinsborJ )K
LuinJ,ton 64, urrer SMdo•kv 41
Morp 52. Pbikl44

1\&amp;icarawu Val. ~l. Sundy Val. W •

Slll!day'alldlon

.

Oyde 47, Perkins 4)
Conland Lakcv~ w 69, Cona.~~.)l
Elida 11 , Van Wen :\6

. Cianlway 64,1ndiM Vat :-.4
o.kwood6ll, Valley View 62
Rl~~;hmond

,

Calllll 1111t0. NW

'Cit. VAJSJ 10. Clwllon:r7

aon ))
£. Cli1tton 64. Prele Shaw~a 46
llofttillltGfttiB

~I ,

34

Brvolllille 57. V«taillet J4
Diy. ~ 66. Middlelown MOOI-

. O.lluco66.01iYOtl8

.

Canfield 49, Strolhm 41

Cnnton Ctuh.

::':05~::0:t·:~ ll

N• : ; ftrentt plly

Ohio-

.......,,._n_.,....._.2S

•

Dloioloftlll
Adefta65, PI..... .IO

Mato.77. Pindlay6l '
·
· Mounl Verno• Nazuene 1~ . Ohill
Dominican $8
SMw"'" Stl2, CedaMII&lt;76
llrblnA M. RIO GRANDE 611
·Wabh 14, Tim a 76

'

Zane, ...m, :n , New Pbill:ldetphia )4

Parcsmouth-61, Jacbon 4!1
Tea)'l Val. 70. Hamil. . Twp. 46
W.binJfoa CH '7Q W~ Local48

OUerkift 18, Himm t7

......,58,- Canolll6

1lle ,.. 25 ....0 io Tile Alood ...
, _. . .{........ 'W' t "~ widl
ftnt.,to!l . - lit po.w'
_.

.

tOll

ow.c rnwwc

Baldwi•Wallot:e 56. M.......um 55
Marietta 100, I""" Qnoll 96
Mount Union 69, Heidelhera 67
Ohio NOitfx:m 81. c.Ntal10

Kilbourne ~ ! . 0~ ~'

Di.. liJMn
Akron Buch1el60, Mlal"lingta. ~I .
A11on l..ake S6. FWrvicw Pd 13
Bellevue 73, Vennili&lt;ll! 43 . It-

O..blin Scioto S!'i, O~ntqy S~ (0T)
OaUipoli1 66. ProccOftille Fairtaad !IK
0reenon 76, SpnnJ. Northwalcm 69

w- n. Ohio Wealeyln o12

C*lt Ctnftnn ra
91, Mttstinpm 81
Ctpital74,
64

ln.lSmeD'I
.colieae pol .

w•-·. . . . . .

""".,.76.- w_.. 64

Ob&lt;din ~7. Earlham l6

a.Nwi~to-Wallaoe

'

HT- (2) .........
, _ , .................26-J

-c-. c.nt.n..

Al~r 7~~,.,. 64

,..... c:..t c '" J Cl
C. Watcm 6.1. DeaitOft 4~
......... 1]. Oll&lt;rii• 52
Kdyoo 54, Al.......l 4)
~ OtUO Walcyu $9, WOOSier H

-Plill...
y""
.. """'·
9 P.·lllltlllla
01 LA.
Olppm. 'IO;JO

Li......,..

\DI¥W.Jl
Bellefontaine 5«), Btniamin Lopn .n
Cin. Bacon 89, Nr:w lichmondJ9
Circleville 45, Loa• Elm 44 •
Col. DeS.Ies 63, Col. Ce1Menniol60
Col. Miftlift 11. Flirfidd Union !17
Col. Whcuca. 77, Buc~ Vlll. S4
O.y. c.ron 78, Sprina. sFU.w... 10

Mklw**••Celft:Ntl•

1

~2

Vandalia-Burk:r $l, On:envillr 3l
Zanesville !18. Tri~Vatkl:y ~7

G-r.-.1- .
M&lt;t~:)h""' 78, A~ 6f

.
76. Tol. s..ott 49
TOI. Whitmer~ Tot St.-t :to ·
1
Upper Arlintton ~2. Orovt Oify • •

w..,u...... 66, Bowli.. a- 11

l)

auo~&lt;r 75, Wriato so. 57
Ill.~ 75, Clcwillld St. 67

'
5'f. (.)eqaa
Clay

Ca1holi~:

WanhinJion

· E.
54. New Philudolpllia ll
Trotwood-Mad ison .9J , Duy. White

5alunlay.'• aetlan
MWwt*m Cmll I' tl

BIMI&lt;r 73. Oooelud St. 66

0.•.

~- (61)

52

SaiUrdiJ'I aedoD

•-•w,...,...

,_

ucv. 7l. lluk&lt;69 .
Qbiomen's
coUege scores

Sylv;mia. Soulhview

Tot

Dloioloftl
Cin. W.o odwft 62. Cin. Elder 54
Day. llo-76. O.y. Belmo,. 63
Dly. Panenon 62, Kctleriftl FaitMoel

r.-we..

,MJd.Awttrklll Cpnf'tnnct
~- Michlpn 7... OHIO 60
Tokdo 94. &amp;wliiiJ Oreta89

7::tOp.m.
S...li ot CLEVI!LAI'fl&gt;. 7:30 p.on:,
L.A. ......... HC*IIOft, 8 p.m. ,
i. a.totte" Dollu. 8:]0 p.m.
•
.
TorOato •
9 p.m.
,

48

S.turdar's touraaments

TUta.81 , Hooiooon

A-lfc...t.nftft
Mu........., 61,'DI.y;on :t:t
Rbo4e ..._. 7), Xamr 67

Tuoodar'•..-

q

44

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Ohio women's·
.tollege ~res

.

tainly gel a little ,down by the lof~i " :
es, but they'll bounce 'back:·
' '~)
··we have another ·opportunitY 011:'
W.etlnesday (against tbe Los AnJeid''
Clippers). The guys seem up, lbey're1
competing, they want to win, aftd tfC.
think the want to learn and l think ·,
they understand that if they hang in '
there defensively, they 're going '16
have many more opportunities oththis one.n
.• ' . , ,

l

Sa HowM
NewMaicoSt. 72, NoothT&lt;IMIII

wa~o~~ 89. Fildliy

s.wno•o• Nn~_. J: ;tOp.M.

.

-

TtllU T«h 72, To• 'H)

...

......

Rock· 17, Teui·.Paa

Teus.ft.rlinpon 78. Teus-SM Antollio 11
. TtKu-EI Puo 9$, Montana Tech !I$
Utah~. ! uka S.

Goldea Stile • Ada.., 7;:10 p.m.
......... CIIi..,.o.l:lOp.m.( .
~·,."-"30~

~

&lt; Ark .~ Lillle

y..,,

1 .! •

1'IIIHIII'•..Qelnlli • oifoodo. f:lO p.m.

.

4l

win ~ ~

Sylnria Nortbview S6, Tal. ~

Mldw'*'wc P I !e!t
WriJ;IM St. 67, N. lliMill :W

-67. ~ichipn58

.

Rl&lt;e68.11ri...... Y'"'a.l 44
AolM 62: Baylor ~7

OrlMdo 99, lBdiiM 90
DollaBI, -•116

I

•.

y.,.,

•

95. , . Aotoaiq ..,

.

24

S&lt; ll, u-77 (0'1')
• OOihoona 80. \)tlallcln1a Sc. 64
Prairie VIew 7J,
Soullletn 7l

·S tutday'•-

OT) ·

FBEE

:&lt;

10

14~
~~~~

. . Mlomi95. Doo... l6

Gennett

~ '

.

CLBVE!-'ND9.1, V - 1 4
Scoltlt 89. Ullll87 tOll .
New York 117; L.A. Lolc&lt;t1 Ill (1

"

~l

,

Dotnllt Bl. Woohl-19
New Jenoy 109, """"""
,.
LA. CJj""""' 99, Mi....... It

•

.20

Boll St. 107. E. MidUP" 89
BowH... 0....92, T.-19
Bnollt)69,llllooia St. 64
lloilor7.1, Wri... St57 ·
' C i - i Bl, Jlollaol54
' Detioit 11. N.llli .... 43
E lllliiOia 'l SE 1\ii.-i 69
' £-villa n, S. IIU.... ~
111.· 0 . -"'· Clinelood Sc. 67
......
M.-"-"49
,..,..,. St'JO, CRi&amp;IM&lt;m 67
""'' 6'1, Ohio Sc. l6
K-.18. K-. Sc. 5I
Lo1olactn. 71, Wia.·Mi-$6
Nionli, Olio !6. w,MicbiP"ll
.,...,...... ... 71.PnnSI. l7
~~~- 67.111iolois 66
N, loWll 76. Drab ll
• NIIWIIOis94, Chicoao Sc. 61
-...., 74.1owa Sr. 69 (OT)
Noire Doulel6. Pra¥1dcoce 74 (OTI
' OHIO 100, Ceoo. Miohi10ftl2
SW MIIIDMri St 70•. Wh.ili11· 51. 62

··-•J '
· ·" ';\rl&lt;uuo

!

T-99, Dolloo92

-

IIIII

MWwlll

_.._

.
~I:IO,a-.Stloe87

tared. ~clrklng with her in
program are,
from · ..rt~ Jon Jacobs, edmlnlatriltor; Nonne

. 18

w•

~

Pill........ 97. ........ 10
a.-tl. " -n

Plltty

626
564
.,
247
181
142
Ill

said Grizzlies interim · coach · Stu
Jackson, who is 3-12 since laking
over following Brian Winters' dismissal.
Asked how many more learning
experiences his team will bave to
suffer through, Jackson said: "We'll
go through as many as it talces unlil
we learn tlie lesson .... l don't think
tbat they're discouraged, 1bey tier-

0.-69.-....67

a-._.

16
13.
14
15
19
21 .

_v.-ao 90. Mo.·K""" Cit) 63
W. ltliloi111, Troy St. 73
· Xovlif, Ollio 79,l,a Saito 1!.7

S.IUnlay'IICOftl

IMMUNIZATION ACTION · PLAN -

~

a

~

LA. Cllppon .........:ll 29 AJI
O.W.Ikioe ..........:IO l1 .ll!l
• ••,......,•. ,..... :10 36 .m

Gibb8, lllndlna, work1 with the Health o.p.t•
ment under en lmmun~ .Actlon Plln grant
to inc,.... Child lmmun~ In the c'ounty.

1

.190

...,...,. ................. 29 26 .m
Saw~me~to ............l4 ~ .4U

etllildlng, EUzalMidl·a.m.; Carol Little, ac~.mn:
latmlve a~&amp;latant; Zane Beegle, ·unitarian;
Edwlne Bell, deputy reglltrlr; end Purl Scott,
vital atatiatice,

877
Bl3
716

...... 16.0oorJiaSt, 74
SOodl- Bf. W. Ka01I&lt;I&lt;J 59
-Caloliu69.T-:II
·
~r.....
92, NARSHAU..
72
,
··· W. C.OUn~&amp;7, QeoraiaSowchcrft49
Fccest 66, Viral-'• 60

' (01)·

n~

.w

.PMiftc DftoW.

LA . ............ .. :.... .38

17
10

II ~

.346
.304

.• s.onto.,................ :,]8 . .,, .711 ·

,

212--9, Steve Queen 2-0-2/4:.6,'Kent~ '
Butler 0.1 -~'· J.R. Boothe 0-IJ.. tol·
112=1 , Jason Johnson 2-l-112-S,I;s
Jeremy Davis 1-0.0:l,GresMon&amp;-. ~.:
gomery 2-0-0=4, Justin Cook I -'0'
0=2. Totals: lll-3-lf13::i37 · ·
0") • ·
,
:~

u

The Grizzlies, who have now
been outscored by .336 points in the
second half this season, were
·outscored 30.15 in the fourth quarter as they missed IS of 18 field
goals attempts.
· ·"I thought what showed is that
Cleveland is used to playiog in
games like that. We are still learning
how to pl•Y in possession,games,"

·swLoo;i.... 89, New~ 19

Putdoe :10. N.C. Clladone 11, Pravidinoo
27. Teau 11, New OrluDI II. Mat- ,
~Kbuettt 16, HaWIIii IS. M..-te 12,
hcific II. Temple 9, Miulllippi S, Tu1Me S, lllinob S.t 4, Sou1h Alahan&amp;D -4.
l'teoao Sr. 2. OtJ*mo 2. 5o1otbm1 Cal2.
BOWUNG GREEN I, l.oq bland U. I.
Onl Roberti I. OR:aon I, "SW Miuouri
so. r.v..-kl .

:0
29

.-•- ·

Dailey conteads !hat's unfair
But melt fioin 34 countries.
including MOllico qd CuMia because state ;.lpCClionl lito ·lftiiSI
Which iiiiOI USDA~ - c:111 •meet or exc;eed ~ . . . . . ,
"This is nota feocr~· ·~ ·
bo 10lcl 111y~ ia N United
Stites if it Will m.pecllld IOlWidjng to Dailey said 111 a neW1 eonfeteate,
1 1tan~s at le8.c . . . to l,ISDA ··It'IID ill!* o( bit ~ 1111111; tor.:
eian venua domeitic. •·
··
~IRIIIents.
. ·,.

S!luth Gtllll: Rufus Stanley 2-1 ~~

The difference was thai Gordon him. He had us covered on the hot- ~rove to a 2.43-sec~. win ...,. beat-~:
sudd!:nly found be was able to drive tom groove."·
. mg Jamtt to the finish li~ by ~ ~-, "
· his Hendrick Motorsports Olevrolet
Gordon, who bod not been able to ter of a straightaway.
0.
in the' higb poove on the banked lead earlier in the race, was out front
"It may· have looked lilte 'we bad ~
track, which Gordon used to set up for the last 43 laps, beating Jarrett by
it planned like that bul, trust·~ we~
his win.nins pass of Jamuwith 43 · 2.43-seconds-aboutaquarterofa didn't," Gorilon said~ •'I wai figbt&lt;q
laps to go.
straiptaway.
·
,
ing every lap tog~ to Dale ~· see'd
1
"He wu so strong in the low ·
The 25-year-old phenom bas now what we had for him.
,, ·
groove all day, l needed to find a won the first two races of 1997 and
"If anybody was trying to play, i~
groove where l could c_arry momen- five of the last nine NASCAR Win- seemed to me like he was. Eve,Yirl•
tum. into the comer,'' Gordon ston Cup events.
lime I started .to ~ clqse' to bim,
· explained. "I had to use a lot of ·
Qn lap 3S I, Gordon, using the he' d push the button and take off.',' ·"li
brake and abuse the right front (tire) hiP. lane on the banked oval, caucht
Jarrett bas now ftllilhed second ~l
wben I ciiTicd the Cll' low into the Jarrett coming off the fourth tum, Rockingham in three straight Win~
turns. Then I'd abuse the rigbt rear ducked low for an inside JI!BSS then ston Cup events tind two Buscflll1!
coming off the turns.
returned to his line and besan to pull Gran&lt;! NatiOnal fllCCII in a row.
1:1!_
"It was either run behind Dale · away. The Kid, who now has 21
"We've got second covered,'.,..)
Jarrett and finish second or move career victories in just over four full the downcast Jarrett said. "We just~
somewhere el~ and try to ~et by seasons of Winston Cup racing, can't get to Victory Lane.
~' .

014 Demi-lll.
Georp
MRi&lt;llmood77.1
_
__
11 62

II

996
9ll

m

VANCOUVER, British Columbia
(AP) - If learning experiences
counted for something, the Vancouver Grizzlies ·would be leading the
NBA.
.
.
Tbe Grizzlies got another lesson
in how not to bold a second-half lead
wberi they blew a 10-point edge on.
the watto a 91-84loss to the aeveland Cavalier.; Sunday ~. '

6
12

- . . nal•l• "'"" Oeo&lt;aia 17,
ca-a
76. IQ!Oo·74. Tobo 62. Prince·
1011 49, Wisconl:in 48, Teu1 Tech ;\3,

11~
14~
17~
22~

WESTERN CONF£RENCE

Ml-a .........•".. Z7
Dollu..................:.tl
..........................17
.S..\alooio,.: .....,.. l]
.v-..r ............. ll

9; lllNCINNAn......:... l2·5 1.2011

IO.!JCU, ................... .\7·7 .
•il.llew~co ......... 21·S
t:t.
20-7 ·
ll. lowd. ................... IU
14. XI&lt;VIER (OHIO) .. :10-4
15. Ari- .................. 17-7
16. !'1-7""" ............... 20-7
11. l..ouiavillt .............. ll-6
11. VIIIMova ................:I0-7
19: t::oloo!odo ................ lll-7
. lO. Gllt.ofa..r.-l'J.2
. 2l . l~lnoil .................•. .l!l-ll
22.1adl... ...................11 ·1
• . 23. St.I'*P''o ........... .f9-6
2•4.'Nidlipn ......,..:...... 27•9
. 2l.SIInfonl ................
.16,7
.

NBA staQdlap

w.....,.... . . ...

. . IIII"'J, \

8/ll=tiS

· ·r=ourth~quarter rally helps Cavs get past Grizzlies 91-84·.~

,-

. . . . . ))l!MII

Southern
20-16-17- JWJ'I
South Gallia
7- 7-10-I,.J7i•
Seu«hem1Adam Roush~·
Ryan Norris 6-1-0=I S, Jamie Bv..'i
3-2-0=1 2, Jessc Maynard 0-0-1/~~
Pete Sisson 2-0-0=4,Jerrod MiHt1-"'
0-0=4, Troy Hoback I ·IH/2-~,-.
Michael Ash 1-0-0=2, Billy Shop- ,..
pard 1-1-0/1=5, Joe Kirby O.()..al
111:=2, Jason Allen 2-0=112=5. ~1011
Buckley 3-0-111 =7. Tolals 21-l-::W

Late push past J~rrett helps Gordon

• bwbnent. OtMra ~ In the progtam
Phyllll a.m., ...... right, - · ·
h1111h -tlchnlclln; Mel etandlng, Cerol LJt.
tie, lldmlnlatrdw eullfant; Jon JIICobl,
•m:rtn, R.N..,tt lid 11ft, -.I!Mitidtlw Well . lldmlnlatieb, end Noen11 Torres, R.N., helllh
~
Chi 111111 tt.llh a.t Clinic, which had 250 I8I'YicM con10111um.dMII111an.
'r'":"
chllclren In forphy81cel ~~Mel Cllh-.

Cllt:.D AND FAJa.Y tEALTH SERVICeS ...:..
Comlt ....... R.N., II 1 d CIIIM, r.pclltld tMt
tl8 prlgiWII provided wllti ......
vlceeln tile preclatll clinic In 1988. Uncia v.n-

l :..............J~
. NewY.... ..............«&lt;

..SIIIII

Norris led a ·6-0 charge that round, Southern led S3-24. South
pushed SHS back on top 10-S, Iben Oallia came alive late in the game
Montgomery canned a lay-in and and actually outscored the Southwu fouled bul miSsed the free emers 13-12, but die damage was
throw,Tbatsparked a 12-4Soulbem done and the game ended 65-37.
run, that saw Southern pressing full · Southern hit24-S7 two-pointers,
court, and runnin1 and gunnins on 4-81bree-pointers, and hit 8- ll at the
the fast break like in days of old,
line with 37 rebounds (Mills 9):
Buckleydrilledfourpointsinthe
Southern had 10 steals (Ash 3;
rampage, and Sheppard, Norris, and Evans 2, Sheppard 2); 13 turnovers,
Evans each drilled th!ee in pushing S assiSts, and 15 fouls. South Gallia
thescoreoutofracbearlyat:i6-tl. bit 10-47 two-pointers, 2-15 tmee·
Southern continued on in similar · pointers, and was 8-13 at the line
fashioo, getting steals from Michael with 21 rebounds (Stanley S). The
Ash, Evans and Sheppard along the Rebels bod four steals, 23 turnovers,
way. As that uio shoveled bard to and 13 fouls.
fuelthe ·fii'C, the other Tornadoes
Southern plays Wednesday at 8 '
climbed aboard the victory expess. p.m. at Alexander.
Southern led 36-14 at the half.
Ogeitrr &amp;IIJIIa
After a 17-10 spot in the third

•

In GO(Xhvrench Service 400,

YOUTH SERVICES ..._ Mlrgll Skidmore,
R.N., - d fra,lllft, II tilt youth MrVIclla
coordlnltor hired under • $30,000 grant to the
MMt• County F1111lly 1U1C1 Children First CouncH to go Into tbe IChoole end llduCita teena

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

.

SQuthern records 65-37 victory over South Gallia

dla.
1996 W.S a procb:ti"Ye y-for die
' Last ye~r 2,01S- ud i:bilWeip Couaty Helllb Department in .
dren WCR ccrlified filr scrvicea. DdltDnns of pevenlive bealth care serbie Babbitt, R.N., ditects the operaYbs, ueatment programs and nutrition while Janet Bolland, R.D.LD.,
tion education.
provides individual and puup nutriHundreds of children and adulls
tional counseling aiOiis .with Pam
nccived immunizations against disSharp, BS. Home Ecobomic:s, and
· participated in diagnostic clinLinda King, nuuition educator, who
ics and screenings, learned about pmhelps throu&amp;b the auspices of the
atal and early childhood healtb
Meigs County Extension Senic:e.
~. and be'IC'fited from safe food
Othets on the WIC staff are
handling inspections. . ..
Dortha Riffle, ADP Coordinator;
It was a year of ouueacb and ~
calion.
··
Becki Ball, assistant ADP Coordiutor; Torres; and Eliine Matheny,
Teenagers were given a lesson in
breast feeding c:onsultant
responsibility through the BabySusie Heines serves as coordinaThink-It-Over program, taught in
tor of 1be ~cigs CQUnty Health
jllnior and senior high schools where
Department's evening and speech
pregnancy rates are among lhe highDr.
Margie
a.awand hearing clinics. Ill 1996, a total
ell in the state.
tt.llh Commlnloner
of 423 clients were seeo with diagWomen learned about the impornoses and referrals made tO an approIIDCe of being regularly c:bec:bd for
In addition, 66 Head Start children priate source for trealinent .
~Mast and cervical cancers, men the
Ell'rln+• •at.l
·
aeed for prostate screening, and were screened through the Health
Depabuent.
·
Seniees
·npcclant moms the necessity for
Jn· the Well Child and Health
Keith Unle, environmental bealth
pxl(l prenatal care.
Last year, the department initiat- Chek Clinic, ZS0 childreo were giv- director, n:pons 220 inspections were
ed free breast screening and diag- en physit:aJ. examin8tions and treat- conducted at 100 licensed food ser'
nostic services for women over 51), ment as required in 1996. Local doc- vice operations in 1996, and thal23
llld free cervical screenings.for tbosc tors Douglas Hunter, M.D., and pennits 10 install private water sysover 40. A total of 128 women took James Witherell, M.D., worked with terns and IS4 permits to install prjthe clinic, which was held hi-month- vate sewage disposal systems were
advantage of the new programs.
ly.
Other professionals involved weie issued. .
A total of lOS men went throop.
Margie
Lawson, D.D.S., Maureen
. LiUie reports that inspections are
prostate screenings, and 127 cbildren
Hennessy,
speech
and
language
.
conducted
on a regular basis at all
were cbecbd for lead. Patty Gibbs,
Immunizations Action Plan nurse, pathologist, and Julie Rice, dental landfill areas, mobile home pam, .
campi; and schools.
reported that 2,178 children were hygienist.
Home
visits
were
made
during
the
, A total of 60 anitital bites, mosdy
immunized.
year
to
homes
where
there
are
chi!from
dogs, were invesligaled, with S9
Flu vaccines were again popular,
particularly with senior cilizens, and dren with medical handicaps, a ~ of lbose requiring medical attention.
gram of the Bureau for Children with
Other personnel working in envi1,614 shots were given last fall.
ttledical
Handicaps
{liCMH).
This
ronmental
services are Jon Jacobi,
Coming to Meigs County with
program,
carried
out
by
Ervin
and
R.S:/Adminislrator,
and Zane Beegle,
mobile units to wort on projects with
Norma
Torres,
R.N.,
directors
of
R.S.
the Health Depamnent were The
Penoeael
Ohio University ColleKC of Osteo- nursing, includes assistance to families
with
medical
bills
once
a
child
is
~
Lawson,
D.D.S., is the
pllhic Medicine, childhood imiJiufound
to
.ltave
a
handicap
and
finanbellth
commiss~;
.
a
nd Jon Jacobs,
nizalions, and Ohio State University
cial
need'is
established.
deputy
health
commissioner.
and Riverside Hospitals, mammogPreuat.l ud WIC
Besides 1bose who head up spe~.
ln
1996,
98
pegnant
women
were
cific
programs already mentioned,
Cldlclmt'i Health
provided
services
through
the
prena.,
ancillary
personnel include Caro!
Tbe specialty clinics coordinated
Little, administralive/assistaniiHcalth
by T.C. I!Mn, R.N., assistant nursing tal clinic at the Health Depanment.
Women, up to 26 week$ pregnanl, Cbelt clerk; . Edwina Bell, ·nwsing
· director, and Linda Vanlnwagen,
R.N., Well Child and Health Check are seen locally by Dr. Wilma Mans- clerk, receplionisl, deputy coordina(:linic coordinllllll', served the fol- field, and all the lab screerungs and tor. and Pwl ~ registrar and vital
counseling are done locally. Referrals stt.!stician.
. _
lowing:
are than mode to delivery doctors and Faye Schultz, a Green Thumb
• 20 in cardiac clinic
.facilities are designed by the woman. employee, works al the depanment
• 1S in eye clinic
Connie Little, R.N., ·is .the penatal througb a federally-funded program
• 13 in plastic surgery clinic
'
director,
and Phyllis Beams, the that taps the numerous talents .of
• S3 in ear i:linic.
Children under the ase of 21 in women's health care technician for senior citizens. RSVP ,vQiunteers of
are ~ned, assess";&lt;', · the propm;
: thC.
C::ountj Cou.Wil on :'~~~
Whilethe
Prenatal
program
i1
·us.
r
st
personnel regular,
tmlle4 by~ w!Jo
in those
·
gearedr, lb. a
t.he ' ly at.JIIie .

1111
' c:onsdllldon' by . favC!rifta foderaliy '
lild f~p-in.,. led
. . . OOillpllliea, '

·

�.

.,.•'•

-.
•

•

Pomea oy • Mldcllepof't, OHIO

* Top 25 C(J/Iege hoops, ..

P~~g~ 7 • The O.lly ~nUnel

llloncMy, Februwy 24, 1.117.

·

Florida SIIIO defeated No.8 Clem- ennaken(IS-10,10-~ Big Ten), who can had 21 poinll. 23 reOO.Jtllb IIIII hllf.
11
for the eiablh lime ill JO - ·
w t s a7 75
Confereace toumaments are right son 67-6S, Purdue beat No. '18 sent the Wolverines (17-9, 7-7) to three bloclc.s for the Demon De aCOilS
No. U Clan I '113
No.JI"
,
~ lbe comer, but Sunday's
Micbipn 67-S8, and No. 19 Vii· their fOW'th loss in five games.
(21-4, I 0-4). Dutlcln pauecl Ra!ph
Dehal54
lanova downed Connecticut65-S8.
No. 19 VJIIuoq 65
~liner was a non-c:onference
At s-\e, Todd MacCulloch
At Chi~. D'Juu B.tcer IICOied
Sampson IS the ACC's shot·
OIISIIW'day,it wasNo. IKansu · •
ConaJIIktat58
~between Top 25 te~R~S.
blocking leader by raisin&amp; his tncal to a cueer-hiah 19 points IS the Komi 24 points, iacludina the lira
78, Klnsas Swe 58; No. 2 Min·
At Philadelphia, Alvin Williams 665. The Cavaliers (16-11 , 6-9) have B..-c:ats (22-S, 10-1 Conference eip of lbe second htllf, u lbe
: J.R. Henderson. !!Cored the go"lbeed liukel with 40 seconds left,
nesota 67. No. 23 Illinois 66; No.3 scored 16 points as Villanova (20-7, lost five of six.
· USA) 101 4S points from re$er\'es. Huskies (15-8, 8-61'1e-10) beat lbe ·
Kentucky
82,
Vanderbilt
79;
No.
4
11-S)
moved
into
first
place
in
the
1nd Toby Bailey hii two free throws
No. S Utala 56, 1'llln 54
The Blue IlGpwns (3-21. 1-12) have Cardinal ( 16-7, 9-6) for only the sec: with IS seconds remaining as No. 17 Wake Forest 66, V'll'ginia 60; No. s Big East Six. Richard Hamilton
Ond lime in lbeir last eight meetings.
At Tulsa, Okla., Andre Miller lllSt 11 straight.
:Uo..A edpl No. 6 Duke 73-69 at Utah 56, ThlsaS4;Nebraska74,No. scored 22 for Connecticut (14-li ,. ·made a long jumper with four-tenths
. No. 21 Cjllondo ·84 ,
No. ll Nortla CuDIIaa
Mta.ri7S
No.
14
Maeylud
11
.
;Pauley Pavilion.
ofa
second
left
as
lbe
Utes
(20-3,
127 Iowa State 69 in overtime; No. 9 10-6).
•
At
Boulder,
· Colo., Chaul)..y
~ The Bruins (17-7) snapped
1
WAC)
beat
the
Golden
Hurricane·
AI -College Parle, Md, Alpwn
South Carolina 69, Tennessee 58;
· Saturday'sJCOres
:Duke's seven-game winning aacak No. 10 New Mexico 119. Hawaii 69; ·
Billups
scored
31
pointa, and ~.
(20-8, I 0-4). despite their lowest Jamison scored 29 points and·~
No. 1 Ke•u 78
!_end gave Srevelavin his biggest vic- No. 11 Cincinnati 83, DePaul S4;
point total this season.
Zwikker added a career-high l24 as Buffaloes (19-7, 10-4 Bic12) aof26
JC•MM St. 58
'lory since becoming UCLA's coach No. 12 Nonh Carolina 93, No. 14
Nebruka74
lbe Tar Heels (19-~. 9-S ACC).won of their last 31 points on free
At lawrence, Kln.,'the Jayhawks
.!just before the season staned.
No. 7 Iowa SL 69 (01)
their seventh straight. The Te~ins against 1he ncers (t3-14, S-9) Maryland 81; No. 13 Arizona 74, (27-1, 13-1 Big 12) trailed at half,
; "This game is huge. It does-a lot Oregon State 64; No 15 Umisvi!le time.for the flfSt time this season but
~ho lost the regu'lar-~ serle$ for.
At Ames, Iowa; Tyronn Lue (20-7. 9-5) haVe lost·five ofei~t.
the
first lime since 19~- 73.
.;for us as a team and our conference," 15, Soulbern Mississippi 72 in.over- came back to win their 44th straight scored 21 of his 30 points after half·
No. 13 Arlsoaa 74
No. U Co1Jecoe
•Bailey said after the Pac-10 leaders . time; No. 16 Xavier of Ohio 79,la home game. Raef LaFrentz scored lime for lbe Cornhuslcers (I 5-12. 6Qreaoo st. 64
of Clwtelloe ,.
:beat lbe ACC's firsi-place team. Salle 67; Washington 75, No. 20 the first 10 points in a 24-4 run that 8 Big 12), who trailed by five in the
At Corvallis, Ore., Michael Dick. Cea.-y73
:"When you work hard, you deserve Stanford 61; No. 21 ColOII!do 84, made it 61-42 with 7:06left against final minute of regulation but tied the erson scored 29 points as the WildAt'
Charleston,
S.C.-, Thaddeous
•tn win games like this at horne. We Missouri 75; No. 22 College of the Wildclll$ (9-15, 2-12).
.
cats
(17·
7,
9-S
Pac-10)
beatl
the
!!COre on Bernard Garner's three:did a lot of gooc!loday." · . Charleston 94, Centenary 73; No, 24
pointer with 24 seconds left. The Beavers (7•17, 3-12) for ihe ' ljth Delaney had 30 points and.. 10
No. l Mbmesota 67
rebounds as tlio Cougars (25-2, 16:: Henderson rebounded his own Indiana 64, Northwestern 49; and
·
~~
Cyclones
(18-6, 9-S) lost their sec· consecutive lime.
No. l3 Dlllloi$ Ci6
\)Trans·America&gt; extended Division
•Miss
and scored to give put UCLA Washington Stille 89, No. 25 CaliNC!o
15
Loal,.,ri!ie
75
·
·
At Minneapolis, John Thomas ond stralghi.
• 71-69. After Bailey's free throws
•
·
l's
longest winning strcalc to 19
:Jlp
· fornia 87.
S. ~luiAippl72 (Ot)
No. 9 SOuth Carolbia 69
sank two free throws with 4.7 secgame5.
They.play the~~~ (9-17, 6~ve the BNins a four-point cushion,
At Hattiesburg, Miss., Alvin
·
'Jenaessee 58
SaDday'a action
onds left for the Golden Gophers ·
}Duke (22-6) had a final chance. But
At Knox ville, Tenn., Lany Davis Si!Ds' liuket with iO ·aeconds,.left 10) again Thursday in'lbe first round
(24-2. 13-1 ), who cliiK:hed at least a.
Florida SL 67
~cky Price's shol was blocked by
No. 8 Cle..._ 65
share of the Big Ten title by beating scored 19 points as the Gamecocks sent lhe game·tn overtime, and hi&amp; of lbe conference toumllllj:nl
!'thartes O'Bannon. and Roshown
(2i.:6, \3-l SBC)beatlbe:Volunteers two free throws gave lbe Cardinals
At Clemson, S.C., Kerry Thomp- the lllini (18-8, 8-6).
alumni·
:McLeod missed a lhree-pointer.
(11-13, 4-10) and won for the third (21-6, 8-4 Conference USA) their
son banked in a 12-foot follow shot
No. 'J Kentucky 8l
• Henderson scored 16 of his 18 as lime expired to give AOI'ida State
fifth win in six overtime ~ames this basketball
lime in five days . .
Vanderbilt 79
•poiniS in 1he second half to lead (lS-9, S-9 ACC) the upset victory.
seas·on.
,
No. 10 New Mexico 89
AI Nashville, Tenn .. Ron Mercer
::UCLA. wh1ch won iiS fifth straight. 1bc win kept Aorida State's slim scored 17 of his 23 polniSin an 8 112- "
.
No.
16
Xa'rier,
0..0
79
.,
Haw.U jill
: Price led Duke with 17.
The annual Eastern High SchOol
At Albuquerque, N.M., Charles
LaSalle~'
•
NCAA tournament hopes alive. minute span ofthe second half as the ·
• Unranked Princeton (21-3, 11-0 Clemson (20-7, 8-6) lost for the third Wildcats (26-3, 12-2 SEC) overcame Smith scored a can;er-high 37 points
At Cincinnati, Gary .Lumpkin alumni baaketball pme will be held
&gt;Ivy) became the first te&amp;ll\ to clinch time in its Iast four games.
· -''
f
·scored
a carcer-hiah 28 points, 22 in on Saturday.
and
,
Kenny
Thomas
had
20
in
lhe
a 22-point deficit against the CQm: ~ j'lCAA 1oumamen1 berth when it .
The
WC)men's
game
Will'
'11e1
the
first
half,
~
ihe
Mus~teers
(2~
second half as the Lohos (21-S, 10Purdue 67
· modores (19-9, 8-6). .
.; beat Danmouth 60-53 Saturday for
..4 WAq overclmc a 37-31 deficit . 4, 11-3At,lail,lic 10) beat the Explor- 'underway at 5:30· with .lbe' men's
No. 18 Michigan 58
No.4 Wake Forest Ci6
&gt;'its second straight conference title.
against the Rainbows (19-5, 11-3) ~ (9;1S, 4-10) for their lith COD· game to follow, .FO( more infonna~ .
AI West lafayette, lm!.; Chad
Virginia 60
:•_ In other Top 25 games Sunday, Austin sco]'l:d 25 points for the BoilAI Charloltesville, Va., Tim Dun- with a 23-S run to start the second secutive lime and reached 20 wjns lion, call Din Spencer at 667-3342
,,
or Tim Baum at 98S-3301 .
~-

,..,1 '

:

'

'lr,

throw•

HONORED • "Belnfelcl" cut rnemben,.from 1.tt, Jerry Selnfeld, J110n AIIXIRder, ~lchaal Rlchard-.'and Julia LoUII-Dfly·
fua an Hen at the Bhrilltl Auclhorlum t.n 1loe Angeiae attar they

. won outetanding performanCII by 111 Eln11111ble In 1 Comedy
· . Ber1H at the Screen Actore Guild Awardlehow Saturday night.
. (AP)

USDA Choice·Boneles·s Beef

t

•
•
•

Chuck Roas._t.

&lt;

,,

'

"
.

•

Lim~~.:

Ll•lt I

•

Lb.
.

·H.

·Macarpnt.,.~ ·
.7.25 Oz.

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·Golden Wheat

Plillt
6.5 Oz•

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RC Cola
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212 pk_. ·. &lt;_ $
99
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Limit 6 Please
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~ Pizzas

$

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U•lt 2' .'

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$

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2% Milk

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.-1'· 1

. LOS ANGELES (AP)- "The nesses ~ WhiteHou~emurderhad$9
·Empire Strikes Back" conquered the million in ticket sales in its second
·weekend box office with an·estimat- week.
ed $22.3 million .in ticket sales, esti_"The English Patient" was lOth
mates show.
with S
!,8million. The film captured
The sequel's big brother, "Star a leadiil!l2 Academy Award nomi- ·
.Wars," ·saw its ticlcet, sales drop 49 nation~'ihis month.
.
percent butstill grOssed $11 million, · "Sll\e;• which like "The English
for a total of nearly $116 million in Palienl" is up .for best picture, finonly four weeks of re-release. "Star ished Qllt of the top 10 but had a ·
Wa:rS" had grossed $35.9 million in resJICClal?le gross of $2.21 million. .
its opening weelcend.
The · ~~ie tells the story of emo. Together, the first two install- lionally troubled pianist David Helf·meniS of George Lucas' space trilo- gott.
·
gy have pulled in nearly $684 million
Finat)Weekend hox office figures
. \lomeslically in their releases and re- were toi}le released today.
releases, accol'ding to estimates from
The top 10 films from Friday
· .Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc.
through Sunday:
·
1. ·~ Empire Strikes Back,"
· • The films were released ill 1977
1111d 1989.· respectively. Like "Star • $22.35 Ilion. ·
2. "
Wars," $11 million. ·
Wars," the re-release'd "Empire"
was.upgtaded with special effects and
3. " · solute Power," $9 million.
ll sprinldi~g C?f new scenes.
4. ''Dbte's Peak," $1 million.
: It had little opposition. The only
5. "~as Vacation," $6.6 million.
, other film to debut in wide release for
6. "l:!ilols Rush In," $5.6 million.
• tl!e weekend was · "Rosewood," ·
7. "~t Darn Cat," $3.6 million.
· which came in eighth.
8. "Rosewood," $3.2 million.
Third place at the nation's box
9. "Jerry Maguire," $3.1 million:
office wenl to the new Clint East10. "the English Patient," $2.8
: ~ood thriller "Absolute Power." millionc 1..
; :rhe movie aboui a thief who wit-

. .

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Domino

Grade·J.·,. Michael's Farm

. S~gar

Lat;;ge Eggs
79
..

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PRICES ~C'nVE FEBRUARY 21, 1187 ONL'( ,.

,,

'

'

: : ATI,ANTA (AP) -· ~n exarninalast m.Qnth, two bombs exploded
:lion of the homb$ that e,~tplcil)ed at a . an hour . apan ouiSide the Atlanta
· gay and lesbian nightclub Friday and No.rlhside ..Planning Services clinic,
:at an abortion clinic last month has injuring seven people..Those devices
' revealed some similari'ties, officials also were filled with large nails.
., said. ' ·
.
Both 'Spadafore • and Bobby
· · FBI spolcesman Jay Spadafore Browning, spokesma!l for the Bureau
·:cautioned, however, that aathorities of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
· have not yet concluded that i1)e same denied an ~BC News report.Sunday
· individual or individuals committed that inve ators had concluded lbe
~ hath bombings.
clinic and\ \ihlclub bombings were
: "Two weeks from now, we might linked.
· i.ave a much better idea if lbese
The n ork said a number of
:&amp;ombs ate made 'by the same per· componen in the nightclub and
: son," Spadafore said Sunday. "More abQnion clinic bombs- s~ifical­
: elues arc left behind each . time a ly lbe wiring, timing and dynamite·-aevice is discovered or detonated." . were so similar that officials believe
• Federal agents were back at the they we~ made by the same person
;nightclub today, combing the area for or group .
tiniest bits of evidence.
Browning said the devices do
· . 'Five people were injured when the · have some ;E''larilies, "but there arc
: J!ail-packed device exploded late fri.
diffe
es, too,"
: ~ay in a rear pa~o area of 'The, Oth·
"We are certain!)' expioring the
~ erside Lqunge, m a wealthy J,ICI~h- • possibility thai they were made by 1)\e
!)orhood north of downtown. Pohce · same penon'6r gtOUp, but we arc not
: found a ;;ceo~ bomb 11earby and det· ignoring the possibility that they
: tmllled It w1th a remote-controlled . were not," Browning said.
·tobot.
.

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.298 SECOND STREET
. POMEROY, O'HJO ' ..
'

first Mo. Pylllt*.;~~·-$269
Down PJIII··--··-.- -.......... 0
Ref ste. Dtp ...........~-- '275
PER TotaiM ot ·
MO

00

;Officials st~~Y m.or~ clues
in latest Atlanta bombing

c

zDoz..

Ill E. Second St., Pomeroy

992,3381

1997 FORD CONTOUR GL

•

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$

. Mullen, Musser

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Limit a
.Please

Downing, Childs~

~ars.'

Sbtwboat

Beef

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. Your partrwr tnprot«tiDft

'Empire.' and :Star
top weekend box otflce

P--_11111iiiiia....,_ _ _...

Ground .

toldhimlhechildwasnothis-and played for a fool until Oct. 18 _ 2
not his wife's.
In weeks afler his ex-wife was
"My son is a big, easygoing guy, charged with first-degree murder in
but not lhat bright," his father, Ralph Theresa Lund's death.
Hardy, said at the time.
,
. 0~ that ~ay, wilh Smith's permisRobert Hardy was Kimmi Hardy's s1on, Investigators look shovels and
third husband - and apparently the backhoes to whal he though! was the
second she had fooled with a con- grave of his stillborn son. They dug
cocted slory of pregnancy. Wendell up a crumbling cardboru:d box, but it
Smith had been through it before.
held only a baby quilt, a Ieddy bear
In 1993, she told Smith she was and packing material . No cremated
pregnant. What she had never told remains.
,
him was thai she'd had a tuballiga"!really feel like an idiot, burylion nine years before, after the birth ing a cardboard box," Smith said.
of her third child to her first husband, · Authorities had anticipaied find:
making pregn_ancy vinually impossi- ing no remains: They knew Mrs.
ble.
.
·
Hardy had had her tubes lied. And ·
Like Robert Aardy, Smith they knew no hospilal or stale record
believed her.
listed any birth, death or slillbom
. " She had . all the symptoms of .delivery of a Zachary' W. Smith . .
·being pregnant; sick in the morning,
Police had been loolting into Mrs.
big belly," he said later.
Hardy's backgro~ntl since getting a
. ln. Octobe1 1993, lhey drove to tip from a guest at a baby sj10wer
Iowa City, where his wife had a doc- · - Mrs. Hardy threw for herself and her
tor's appointment at University Hos- .' new son, whom·she'd namerl"'Dusty
pitals and Clinics.
Eugene Hardy.
About 45 minutes after she had
· The guest realized the boy, who
gone in for an exam, Smith gol a would have been more than 6 weeks
phone call in the wailing room. The old by then, was much older than a
female caller told him Kinimi had newborn. Police made the connection
delivered a Slillbom baby boy, then with the still-open missing persons
hung up. Soon after,'his weeping wife report on Theresa Lund and her
entered the waiting room.
baby.
She &amp;rraflged to have the body ere- · T!leY arrested Kimmi and Roben
. Hardy on. Sept: 18.
' 1brough footprint
mated; a cardboard .box of remams
. ilrrived at the home a few' days laler rei:ords, they discovered their infant
and they buried it a1 Keokuk's was actually Paul Lund, born July 16.
Nahonal Cem~tery.
.
. · Mrs. Hardy initially told police
Some 30 fnends and family mem- she'd houghtthe child from someone
bers attended the funeral. for little out of state, paying $3,000.
Zachary Smith. There were tears.
But Hardy eventually told police
There was a priest. A notice of the his wife had shot Ms. Lund and that
child's death was put in the Keokuk he had found the body.laterthatday.
Daily Gate City.
On Sept. 27, he led authorities to the
Smith didn't learn he'd been body.
·

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'Fargo' honored
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clothes.
Shetried
utbaby
names.
,
point,'oshe
struck
up an
. At some
acquaintance with another expectant
mother, Theresa Lund, 34, whose
fifth child was due in July.
·
l•
On Aug. 28, police say, Mrs.
Gy SCOTT LINDLAW
wake him from a dream.
. Hardy lured Ms. Lund with her baby
lbiiOCIIIted Prell Writer
''To all of you guys, to be in your to her home and shot her twice in the ·
LOS ANGELES ·- Jerry Sein- company, I can't quite express what head with a .38-caliber handgun. She
feld offered a confession when he that means," he said. ·
hid the body in a basement crawl
· 'accepted a Screen Actors 'Guild
Frarices McDonnand won best ·space.
llward for best ensemble in a TV . actrtss:for her perfonilance in "FarWhen Hardy arrived, she told
. fomedy: "My n81J1e is Jerry Seinfeld go." ·I' ·
him labor had come on suddenly, that
arid I am a.bad actor."
"1\vo·of my goals as an actor arc · she'd had ·no time to get to a hospi, With "Seinfeld" cast mates toconfou\l(lexpeclationsalidtogain tal and so delivered the baby in the
·!Sehind him laughing, he added, "B\It the respect of my peers," McDor- bathtub. He believed her.
l think I have proven convincingly mand ·'§aid. " And if that's what
A few weeks later, when police
'lhat you can do very well in our busi- · you're telling me tonight, thank you catne to lalce the bo;Y, Hardy fiercely
ness if you arc sman enough to sur- very much, l'.m very grateful."
defended his wife and son, holding
round yourself with these spectacular
Dennis Franz of "NYPD Blue" officers off with a ste~l pipe and get. talents that I have here beside.me." took home the best actor award in lbe ling arrcstec;l for the trOuble. Police
·: "Seinfeld"led the television fJCld TV drama caregory. GiUian Anderson
:Jlt the actors' union awards show Sat- of "The X-Files" was named best
' urday, with Julia Louis-Dreyfus als.o actress in a drama.
being named 'best actress in a comeAnthony Edwards accepted the
· Jly. But in the best-actor category for award for outstanding cas1 in a dra.a ·TV comedy, CQ·stilrs Michael rna series on behalf of the. "ER"
· Richards and Jason Alexander.lost to . actors ,.
.
'John Uthgow of "3rd Rock from the
Cq8; Gooding Jr. received .a sup: Sun."
portin~.actor award for his role in
. • ·The SAG named Geoff'ri:y Rush "Jerry~aguire, "lauren Bacall won
· its best motion picture actor. last best sl!llJXlrling actress for her per:
]nonth, Rush won a Golden Globe for fonnance in "The Minur Has Two
· his role in "Shine," tlie true story of Faces" ' and the actors froin "The
'troubled Australian pianist David Birdcage" were named best film
Helfgott.
cast. "'
. ·
. Both awards presentations ·arc
~ third annual SAG awards
. ~onsidered harbingers of the Acade- were dtetermi~ed by a vote of the
Awards a month from ~~Y· -,,,,:-$crcen Act~ Guild's
,
1"1' ,,
· · •
· ~Rush told.lhe SAG audJ~.~ thlil, flUs.
he felt as if someone was about Jo \ · ·
.
·

-

WH ILE SUPPLIES
LA T

.

KEOKUK, Iowa (AP) - Robert
Hardy came home from work last
August to be told hll had a new son,
born urgently th,at day in the bathtub.
A few blocks away, at lbe police
station, an anxious Velva Green was
filling out forms; her daughter and 6-.
week-old grandson were missing.
Later, hath learned the trulh.
Green's daughter, Theresa Lynn
Lund, was dead. Her grandson was in
the care of Rohen and Kimmi Lynn
Hardy. Prosecutors say Mrs. Hardy
faked pregnancy for months, lured
Ms. Lund to her home, then ldlled the
woman to claim her child as her own.·
Mrs. Hardy's trial for first-degree
murder begins Thesday;jailed on $2
million · bond, she has pleaded not
guilty by reason of insanity.
Last spring, Mrs. Hardy told husband, family and friends l'h this Mississippi River town Qf 13,500that she
;was pregnant. She wore maternity

I

twlnblll
.set for Sa.urday

NO RAINCHECKS

. .

'Actors·fro
· m .'Se.··n
'. f'e,ld,'

Eastern

·•

Monday, February 24, 1117 ;;
•

Woman goes on trial for
1
killing mother of stolen child ~.

j

.. CLA beats Duke 73-69; Purd.u e upsets Michigan 67-58
•
-:lity
The Atea tiiiW Pt

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

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1991 LINCOLN TOWN CAR
24 MONTH LEASE

00
PER

MO

-----·sm

first Mo.l'yllr'
DoWII Pylll_,_... 12500
Rtf He. Dip ...._ ..__, ... '500

Total Mot

IIICtpllo!J•• .....- ............ 'm!

First Mo. Py~tt• ....... ~...... $199
Down Py~tt .................. $145~
Ref Sl(. Dep •••·................. s200
Total due at ·
·
Inception...................... 100

$

I

�..
•

By The Bend

The Daily ·Sen~inel
I

.

•

.

Pagel

.

llot".dry. flrlm rryM.1117

."

;Overweight females want decent clothes
.

Ann
Landers

_,_

•

19H.t..-

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·•
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By ANN LANDERS
Dear Aim Landen: "Fruslnled

Conslllllet" is on to sOIMtbing. She
is absolulely correct about pUina the
. mcssap IICIOU to ciQthing manufactureR that ovcrweilht females want
" decent, afroolal!lc clothes.
• ~ , Pull..fipnd Woolen - sick of
. " lqe tlor~ deiipa ljJid bold prints.

·,An~one Willi

of coDunon
women avoid

.

'selisc

'.

.them like the pique. And tell clothing desicners to stf)jl makin1 everylhing in clinJY knit materials. We do
not need a fabric that hugs every
- bulge.
.
I have read sellcral surveys that
say more lhan half of the female population in the United States is overweight. So, please, Ann;· tell the
manufacturers they are missing a big
market by concentrating on thin
women only. - Mad in Missouri
Dear Missouri:'You !Old them, and
millions of readers are applauding.
Keep reading for more comments on
today's styles:
From Evans Mills, N.Y.: I couldn't agree more wilh "Frustraicd Consmner." Here's anolhcr pet peeve of

w-

.

mine to add to hers: W1iy do sboe need pockets. We still carry byslllld tO decline 111011111 die "e~" do wonder lllel-decliaiq.
RicluiiOIId, VL: 'NI
wbo
manufacturers expect us to jam ow lipstick. Also, billy 'boomers will he 1101 recognize !hat older peOple have
money·
io
spend.
J
am
a
60-ycar-old
worlc
in
oftbl
it
i.s
polldl;ally
iDcor·
hillins
~
10011,
ud
they
will
develtoes into pointy shoes lllld cripple our
feet7 Until !hey stan to offer dress · op knee, hip and blek p:obleua. Let's working woman who hu beellloolt- rect t o - . . _ l!loumllld'J!::"
·
shoes wilh rounded toes, they won't get the retailers to put chairs in every ing fllf a decent suit .for two yean. · ins neckline.. 'l'bily IoGk lib
scctiOD of lhe deplrtment llorc so we I've found beautiful jacbli,'but the en.
·
.
Jet a dime from me.
Hackensack. NJ.: What do you
Colfax. La.: There seem to be 110 can · sit down. Many of us want to skirts ue too short. And I don't wi!Ch
our
11J10U1C1
and
children
ay
on
clotl\es in the stores for older people.
lrOUiers. Retail mercblntll~n fO!llilh think~ a - wbo -~~~~~ oilly
I'm 79 and have lrOUble finding a clothing. This·year, I did more cata- to ipore wOtnel'i over 60 beca11re a ~ bra but a Pdle Wilb buiJt,.
dress in size 14.'Thcy all look like . log shopping bec•ne I can't stand up lliillions of ua tnllyle consciouslllld in "dub" io pve her 1 ~ ICliY
tip?
·
· ·
somelhing a high school girl would Ions enoush to walk around a store. we have scri\lUi·money to spend. ·
Detroit:
I
worlc
in
a
clolhing
store
Bethesda,
Md.:
May
I
add
some.
Dear
Bact:
The
add-ons
IIIII)'
wear. What happened to the pretty
for
men,
ll_
o
ve
to
see
a
wi(e
come
in
. thin1 to "frustrated Consumer's" help her clothes fit better, but somo
classics?
·
Jackson, Miss.: Big haii- killed the wilh her husband. Women know bet- comments lbout the decline in cloth- guy is going to be very dluppointed.
women's millinery business. Too ter lhan men whal looks sharp l!ftd in1.-Jes.? A lot sportswear is now
made in China, Korea .and olhcr
bad. ·A stunning hat can make any how a garment should fil
Dallas: I'd like to add my two coun~ wilh low libor i:o$15. The
womalllook elegant.
Three Rive15, Md.: We need cloth- •cents' worlh to "Frustrated Con- sarmentl are poorly made and poor·
ing that doesn' t need irOninJ,Illld we sumer." Clothing sales will contiilue ly finished, and tbey look cheap. No

.HIV beneficiaries
should know work-rules
..
.mit cash benefits and Medicare or efi!S decrease as earnings increase. In
Socllll Security
Medicaid to continue, provide help 1997, a person c;an earn 11 much as
lllllllllgel', Athena
wilh work expenses, and help in find- SI,OS3 a month before all benefits arc
The disco•cry of new drugs that · ing a new line of work.
.
eliminated. ·
lessen lhe effect of AIDs and pnimis- · The rules are diffe~ht betWeen
Under bolh ~.deductions
es a cu~ has brought hope to lhe lives Social Security ·an4 Supplemental . are made for work-related expenses.
of many who had become rcSi&amp;ned to Security Income (SSO, but liOtiJ pro- Medicare continues fllf 36 monlhs
impending duth. However, some srarns are run by Social Security •nd following as~ lrial work periare now wondering how lhe'r Social· designed to accomplish the same od, and Medicaid may continue as
Security ·or Supplemental Security ends: to help lhe beneficiary return to IQng as SSI benefits continue.
Income (SSI) payments may be . the workplace and once more become
· The result is that disablel:l bencfiaffccted.
financially independenl
ciaries who anempt to work will find
Social Security disability benefits
Under Social Security a person it easier to do .so. The ri~ of losins
are paid to people who have a phys- can work for at least 12 ~ths while their income and medical help is
~cal or mental condition so se_vcrc that . receiving full benefits. This includes ·arcady diminished. For many, !hat
II prevents them from working b a a "trial work period" of nine monlhs will make lhe difference between
~ear Of more or is ex(ICCted to result ·and three additional monlhs durinJ success and failure in !heir efforts to
m dcalh. Persons walh full-blown which lhe al!ility to worlc is evaluat- ~!urn to the wcirlcplacc.
AID~ ~ncral~y qual.ify because !heir ed before benefits are stopped. If the
For more information, you should ·
condition typically IS so severe lhat penon is still unable to do substin- call Social Security's toll-free numthey are unable to work. People wllh tial work benefits continue.
bcr, 1-800-77').-1213, and ask for the.
HIV infection who do_not hav~ fu~l· Eami~gs of SSOO a ·monlh .or bOoklet, "Ir You Become Disabledblown AIDS may qual1fy for dasabll- more . arc considered evidence of How We Can Help."
ity benefits if their condition prevents substantial work. ·
.·, , .
_!hem fro~ -:vorkins. · .
·
Even if benefits stop becaure of a Questiou IIIICI uswen
. While 11 •s ~ lhat !he new dru~s . · successful trial worb period, the
Q. I've frequently hcald ~le
do not yet consbtule a c~ of the dis- Social Security disabilitybcneficiary talk about lhe Social Security earnease, many _HJV be~fic1ancs have. receives an "extended period of eli- ings limit. '\Yhll's that all about?
w":"'hcd lhe•r hcallh Improve to lhe gibility"-36 monlhs durins which . · A. If a pqson receive~ Social
pomt where they feel !hey can do benefits may be reinstated for any Security retirclncnt or IUI'Vivlits bensome w?rk- They f~ ~~ •.~tum to monlh eamin1s fall below $500. No 1efits and continues to work, h~
work will affect lhe;r disability ben- new application or waiting period is benefits are reduced if !hey~¥" over
efits. .
.
. , . . . necessary for benefits to stan again certain limits. This insures thai ben~ocJai .S~cunty has· s~1al ~J_es durinJihis period.
efits are·paid 10 people who are actuWil!ch pennlt people to work _while
Under SSI, where .benefits are ally retired, or who are dcpe1ndent on
lhe•r ben~fits ~ P.ro,tected qn!d they pliid on the l:tas\S of need, !he eaa:niags the \!Oi'ker:S rePlaced earrunas IIIII
c;an work regullfly•.These ruleS' per- liMits are built IntO the program-Jx:n- the Social Sccurity survivors bencflls

PRESENfS .YEAR PIN- Dlvld W. Fox, dlllrlct deputy gnmd .

11111.- of .die 12th Muonlc Dlltrlct, J.tt, prwMnted e · 65-yeer
Mlllonlc

mice pin to Milford Harden of McArthur. A luncheon

wu hilld Ill lils honor. Among thoH attending_. WUIIIm Scoa

Dlvl8, WOrlhlpful me.-, Bilek Diamond Lodge 531, Wellston;
BNI
Nlillcy Gorauch; G. Eleinard end Bllrbera McKinnlll, Ben
Sc:hloallr&gt; Alblny; Steve end Yeste Werthmen, Felrbom; VIcky
and Mltiit· lch~. Al)any; Jim end Sally Woodylrd, Columbus;
anci John Jarvis, Bill Cempbell, Sr~ Paul Cecil, Jr. end Veme RJM.
hert, D11111t Lodge 207, McArlh'-''· ·

a

Sorority·to contribute ·
toys for sick .children

•,

..,

rcprcsenl The 1991 carninp limits
are SI3,SOO fllf beneficilries age 6S
and over (benefits decrcaiC Sl fllf
every S3 of caniinp over t!le limit)
and $8,640 fllf beneficiaries under6S
(benefits decrease SI for every $2 of
earnings above the limit). For more
information, call Social Sccurity's
toll-free number, i-soo: ni-1213,
·and ask for lhe Jeid!et "How Work
Affects Your Benefits" (SSA Publication No. 0$- I 00 69).
Q. I have a plililication called, .
"Social Sccuritj. .. Underslalldina the
Benefits," but it has figures for 1996.
How can I get an updaled 1997 edition?
A. Just call Social Security's tollfree number, 1-800-772-1213, lllld
ask for lhe 1991 edition ..
· Q. I don'i hear well over .lhe lclephone. Can my daughter call Soeial
Security ahout my Social Security
business?·
·
. · A. Generally, we will dii!CUSS
your personal business only With you..
We.qccdyourpermissionifyouwant •
-someone else to help wilh )lour
Social Security business. If you ask
11 family member, such as your
dauahlcr, to call Social Security, you
need to be-wilh her when she calls so
we will know thll you want her to
help. The Social Sccurily representative v.:m ask your .permission to disCU$1 your. Social 8ecurity ~ilKlSS
wilh your daughter.

Actress Blair Brown ·has that lead~r quality

.Clown makes children laugh, Wall Street Journal says AT&amp;T steps up fight for local markets
:= but police are ·not amused
NEWYORK(AP)-AT&amp;Tplansto development for the last lhrcc yean • service would aimed II millions of plan told lhe newspaper that AT&amp;T
didn't have a ride home, so he stole, besin testing a sophisticated ~Icc­
a car," La Foun~ne said.
tronic box that would directly tic
I, caller rej!orted lhc .break-in. home telephones to lhe company's
Police said they found Gutierrez in . wireless network, The Wall Street
the car wearing a costume described Journal reported today.
as "of lhe Bozo variety:"
The plan, which is expected to be
Outicmz lhen sped away, scre8tn- disclosed !his week, has been Iinder
ing lllld wavins. television cameras .
'T.
as he circled soinc streets more than
11
once, ' poli~e iai~: He . was arrested
.
·
when he stopped at his girlfriend'$

LOS ANGet.ES (AP) - The
clqwa IMY have made lhe children
, IIUih, but the police were not
11011sed.

Juan Gutierrez, 22, allegedly stole
a car lllld led police on a 35-minute,
hil!rspecd chase throu&amp;h city streets.
•· He WM arrested for investigation of
,iiUto 'tberi. Uid·81'· B~nt La Foim-

...

' ..-r! ,

.J

~~~:.

I,
.

.

. OutierreJ hid just perf:onned at a

l !&lt;:hililren's ~SaturdaY nisht.

"After the party he realized he

·

home.

'

.,

and could give AT&amp;T Corp. 11nothcr
powerful option for offering local
phone services.nl!lionwide, lhe newspaper said. .
Using new wireless lei:hnoloJY
recently patented by lhe CompiRy,'lhe

·-. b
Ll'nco·In's 0-m
is desecrated
by vandals

·.

.

· ·~

..-.:-tr..............
.....
.. .... _ ...
.

C81eadariJ

, ;atl'+d-efnueay~to-·
. ,_
,
lill ? '

The

•

c;l " t::~toprmde

· .. . . or
I.._ en

fill; _,

..rt b1 d•

uy.type.

.,.a.permits

a·.·~, etlltlp.
"""·----lei
run a
'

.,,~,
ud

.1. ·•

MONDAY'
.
.
POMBilDY- . . . . County Vel.... ServiceC...tl kdon, 7:30p.m
MO!Idly '11 .._ l1ur ans Sefvicc
Oflic:e, Mel; I) ~ U?!e, Poiateaoy.

-.

.

·

''

f!· :t: =~~w.~mof_:

.......

'

.'

In .Spiftl(ltlld, .wllere II!) pl'lllitnd
belo!e lea\rioa for the WiDte

n·

.H.OIIK..

~.~.,

.

'

,)-

.

.

'

'

'

I'

I

8010 North State floute 7, Cheahh,., Ohio
. . . Third Avena-., Galllpolll .
a3,1q5 Hllll'!d Road, Pomtn)y, Ohio

'

Wlmlillon Dt 111 Prelpplicltllon doel not~""*""' ct fl.rldlng.

_

l~~~....;~...;·~· _;a~..
~·~~~~~~lga:,~c~.t,a~,!ll~a:n.:IICII:!:.-:lli~c~,!:~o~olll.l1~~-~~y:en~~~~~il:a~yw~"""'!"'.~..;......__!"'!"-J.

•'

~I

),

Cll

'

Ill . . IIIIUrll d

tD-...111111 Iilii. Oft
..... 10, 1117 to . . .
IZWII
MCitopaow. .

'

1

'

•New Hom11

oNo Job Too Sm.rl

llftemodlllng
·.

•Any and All of Your
HomeRe.,_.r Neect.
.Ca!l Today for Your

eDecb

-li.,

.....~

TRANSPORTATION

AI Alllll.lm SIIIICI
Traneporlltlon lor
lndlvldulll Ullng

,meetclultra. Madtcalcl a
.

Medlcl:rt acnpled.

Doctor'• vtelta,

hoopltal vi81ta, e1c: .
Phone 114-11112-3053
Fa 114-11112-3053
P.....-1.8CJD .182-2327
Pln211411

....,.1. ...

IUDaJ 1

..Ira and oHigne, kHP
OJIIII. ill time!
me Ohio 111- ~ 01
·
to the· Hid Mil~ I.
.
.
,
~

.

~

.

II

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

HOWARD
EXCAVADNG CO.

GRUESEI'S
GARAGE

And Withdraw Property FrOm
Sale Pllor To Sale. T1m11 01 CASH OR CERI'IFIEO CI£Cil

Drlvewly Umeetone
Complete Houae
and Trailer Site
Work, Bulldozing,
Backhoe, Trackhoe.
Septic Systems ·

Body worll, cer, truck
painting,
I
minor IIMChlnlcll ~
repllr.
.
..
'
'
i . ' .. truck

lllne-upt.tOII Chllnge,
WIX,.Bulllng
Long Sl, Rutlend, 011.
7~·2835, Ask for Kip

lnstell.ed

(614) 992~838

lf.S. Currencr,

El&lt;. Aoqullllio,.-,.
• Coin Shop, 151 Soooncl
Golipoll, 81......___

211111 mo.

7/ICM~n

An endol8d factor~ ..,_. cargo
trailer up to Sal' 1lze, 814·802·
5188.

aforeeetd llelll'l County
Commleelonere or by
certified check, eoohlera
chock, or tellor of credH
upon o 101- llenk In the
amou"'· of .not teie lhon'
1"0% at the bid amount In
- o f ... lllotluld Ueltl• .

Antiques, furniture, glass.

china.

coins, toys, lamps, guns. toola, •
eatatea; also appraiula, Oib{'
Mat11n, 814-1MI2-7..1.

Caro Or •

OrN-r,
1800 East-

.1 ~rdu••',,.,:c;~o~:mmleelonero.
llld
ehall be
oecom,anled by Prool of
Authority of the otnclet or

...... olgnlng ... bond.
Bid' lhlll be llliltl mubd 11 Bkllol' Pomeroy

Radio Telemetry Syelem
Project ond malted or

deUveNcl to:

Metgo

,

,-··!!:•'•t

Co11nty

CommfiiiDMrt.

Cour111ouH, ,_or.- Ohio
..,..,
Attention ol biddeN It
'

FLUIURIEl
.......,, . .". 7
10111~9 , .

called to oil ol the
requlramente contained In
lhte bid packet, pertlcullfly
ao .the Federal Lebar
· ilarld1rde Provlolano oriel
Davie·BICOI!
WIJIIII,
vorloue
lneuronce
nqulre~m..

,...,. ....... Poet 121
Amarlcan LagiGMI,A-ItrMt,~#ipOft

V..ldorl 15.00, •• Tlbtel

v.._. equal

C&amp;IH lluR UCIIIIIJIO

oppolluntty prDIIIelane,the requirement lor a
poymerll bonel and

742·201M

petfoi-1101 bond lor 1~
of the WllbiiCI prloe.
No bidder may wllhdraw
hie bid w!lilln thirty (30)
dayo o1tt1t lheooluol date of
... opentna lhlraof. 111111

County Commloetonere
raeerva the rlthl to wolve .
any tntormollllee or 1D N)ect
ony or ott blclo.
(2) 20, 24, Z1 STC

1 ..;_-:-~--....:.

In Memory

Loving Memory
of
q..AmEC.
BOSO
Wh~ passed away
7.years ago today.
· Sadly 'inissed
Wife, Chilclren, 1

*

tl..,
-

.GIUipole
•
t. VICii'tlly
ALL Yord SaiM Mull Be- Ill
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:10 P.IIL
lhtl da1 -~~ lho od II 10 lUlL
Pomlfoy,

. Public Notice

~

ond fill IIIOIIIIry ID
abtetn 1 llcenH lor the
- · ell e~ulpMtnl
Tfie cu.G,. New
.-..~n~~ lit the eollelllile;·
Fall • HOUIIng ' pr~m Ill wlrlnt 'and. onolltary
provlciM fu ...nt 10· ,I ••ulpllent, · hardwlrt,
gov,rnmenta '
. 0 eollw•r·e ,
· I lid
llflrm•tlyely further fl&amp;lr ap;ul'IOMnoee n•tled lor

Y.-cl Sill

•••a.

"'poovat

~

70

Public Sill
andAuclfon
61~992-7643
Aucllon • fiM lleielllr~
20 Yro. Exp. • lno. Owner: Jones
dloo;' For Solo a, Tho Sldcl. 114- ·
;
Calls)
Free·
. . . . . . ~~~1~~~~~~~~
....,_...,
_
_
_
_
...,
.,_;.,;;.;;o:50-.;,....;,-.....;,,.,.;,;,;
_
_
_
_
..;,_;,_
Ltmllfo Aucllon IIMce, IMie
,
·J
Lem101. Aucllo-. Hou-ld,
101111 IISSILL
AI_.;,,/ -d_ ~~.. ~- d_
E11111, Form Cllll14-+ll/f/-.,MR trf"'""IG
6241,114
.COISTIUmOII
Authorized AGA Distributor
:Ohio va~1., Bank wn1 011or For
2
•New Holllft
\Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases· Machine Shop ' ~1::: :M~~ 1~,.;2;1~
-Garages
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication. Repair Welding 1aae lntornallonal TIVclt, Yin#,
2HSFBG2R8KC021111 Willi A
C
plet
·• om
8
• Aluminum/Stainless • TooL.Dresstng • Omamental
1911 . Fruohaur Trailer, Yin#
Rem!)delln~~
~ ~ Stalr:s, .Rall!nga, Pallo Fumtture, Fireplace
1H4P04537GF11CIIOI a A 11115
...
· _.
Llber(1 Wexiofll 2 Br 1 - lieStop .6 Co!llpere
. items. l"ianter Hangers, Treliille$ &amp; lots of otber stuff!! bile Home, sorlal 110 1u 1717.
. FREE
.
."No Job TQO Lllrg• or Too Sinllll"
Public.Aucllon Will- Hold AI
. The OVB An,.11, 1., 1J11n1 M.,
ESTIMATEES
We wi!! work within your budget.
· Galllpoi' OH On :wur AI 10:00
'"8173
eav 17" """1
A.M. They WIU Be Sold To 11..,_,
Ph
77
985 4473
• or
,-,..,. ........,
011 Bidder • Ao lo' Wllhout ~~7.
StrHt ·
to
WV
presaed Or Implied W•rNtttr.
T~ May Be Saen t1r Celli f 4i
. Keith Johnaon AI 81....,.1-GIIO.
OVB Reserves The Rl(llol To Ac'
cept Or Reject Ant And Allllldo.
H.OJI.M.

!lank

=·= : :;:;: , •II'=. . . :.:

Alhens, Ohio

-.-.r,
on m••c•*'"·''.......
3Diii.

MldcllepDI't
&amp;VICinity

New HomH • VinYl Siding New
·Garages • Rtplac:8mtnt Windows
.Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and REStOENTIAL
FREE E$TIMATES

raqulra an oteotrlcet arid
¥8dated end reo!lr.d•d ••
Public Notice
dlll1tnllonoiiUbrnttlllliiCI •
above oet forth. ,
·
llot of oomporobte
G. .,__ 9_._... - 11
. ~~ ••
Rer.e.- DMII':' Volume NOTICE 'fO CONTRACroiiS tnetellotlone lourtHn (14)
CASE NO. 98 cv 048
240, page 958, Melgo
S.ailtl PfOP08all for tho prior to lhe bid ond obtotn
. In purauenoe 10 . , Oldlr c-ty Deed llecO(III.
Pomeroy Rodlo fetometry wrhlon approval .from .the
CJiute diNclld to nie'ln...
Being lhe:_ ·~~· root Syetemo Project will ·be -ltlng tngl- cntptelt
.-,ove.entllled oollon, I witt Hille cleecrt~MC~ ,ln. dHd received by the llelgo · Engineering Servloee,
offer lor . ute 11 J:::ilc lrom Ohio VelteY"'~·~II~• County Commlulonere, II Uoc:hanlc Straet, Pomeroy,
'auilllon et ... front
of tno:, to G. B&lt;JIC8 _ , ol th.elr ofltce at the Ohio 41'18t) Ia bid. The 11et
ihe Courlh...,..ln p_,y, record·ln Yo"'-)114, pogo CoulthouH, Pomeroy, Ohio aholl Include namee· and
-ohio; in tile obove nllllllld 2113, llMcl Recorde of Meigl 45719 unlit 1o:oo a.m., ,.,_ - numbere, of both
;ounty, on FrldiiY, the 4th County, Ohio.
llerch 10, 1817 end then II Owner and Coneulllng
~ of April, 1197, II 10:00
Pwoel No. •8,1!n3St 000 1:00 p.m. ot 811d office Engllieer lor proJecle ol
-...t~.llle following .--Jbed
Proper!J Add,_; 215- opened ond Ned aloud lor elm!ilr aln ond complexity.
The conoulllng engineer
rut eetele, eltllllled In the 217 Second il"Street, ... following:
be ... tole Judge U10
•VIllage of Pom«oy, County. ~:0 45'N8.
Provide - Independent lhltl
whether
lhe elternote
f' llelp .,..t S.. of Ohio:
Al!l!fiAISED operotlng . rodto control
· The Wllit one-ihlrcl (113) AT $20000 00 AND CANNOT loope tor o Suporvleory lfllllflllllllll• conlldlrad on
equll.
.PI Ln~ FNivo·e·o11n2e51 H1unndd&lt;H
~:,~?:-~~~: L?f" ";': Con,rol .nil Data approved
of
on
ollernalo
eyelem by
1111
·awe .,
Acqutolllon ayetam
· ~one-third (113) ol Lot APPIIAISED.VALUI
. (liCADA) ond one PQrllble the llllllnelr will not"''"'
· .llo. One Hundred ,_,ty
TERMS OF SALE:
O.ta UnH (PDUI lhll 111H1 the tliernalt eyelem of
foUr .(124), and llllngln all
T hi
n c ce ul u I or exoeed the following olrlct odherailce t41 theN
lillraty lhr" ond one-lhlrd purdlo11r, •• •~ • hie orlterle ond addltlonot epecHiclliqno. The control
133·1/3) , .., oni ·~oond bld'·le eOCepled,1 hall. lle crtterte 1 ehoWII on pla111, .,...m ond l'e
Street; btlllfi thi eamt required to dtiJIIM I on lil'e d ra w 1n g 1 ·,
a n d ahall comply with all
premloee conveyed by day ol aate, In - h or by epectllcettono provided In oppllceble requtrementa of
dworcl Ebefellech and wile !llitlliltl oheck JMYable to lila 110 Pockol ond on lite the following: Etoctrtcel
o ChllriH EberabHh, ee lhll Sheriff, 1~·A•I the with the Pomeroy Vlllge Codt (natton•l ond LooeQ,
ruetea, b.y deed clottid amount of' aueh flllaepllel Admlntatrator ot hlo office UL Compliance, I!EMA
ti!I!E
~onliary 10, 1938, and bid but ln'' no evlillt le11 at 320 E. Man Str..t, Compllence,
Compliance,
EIA
lfeeorad ·tn .VOlume 142, IMIIti,OOO.OO. The '"'I ...t -oy,Ohi041711.
ond
FCC
Compttonce,
; , . JIO, CJI ... RI90rd ol of the purcheee prloe ehllll
The work to bt
Compllon-.
.
'llftd.• ol Malge .County, lle due aild
to the accompllohed under lhle
Speclllcetlone, liiCI
:Dhlo.
llhertll within 30 •
lrom eeotlon ehott conalat ol bidPllna,
forma _, lle aecum
• Atao, lhe llclllu-1 lhe date of con~n ol lurnlahlng ond otarllng up
ihlrcll (213) of Lot No. Clf1e Hie. The putehllli\o -ahoU ol the vortoua equipment ol the olflct of IICelge
l!ndred twen!f.fow
.. (124) lle requlracl to ,.., .ln-1 _ _., for a complete County C~laatonera. A
of aald Vtlllgl of POIMI'Of, on utd unpeld ~ et oontrat aptam to function clepoaH of o dollofl will lle
being thlrty-lh,.. oriel 10% per annum frlim lila 11 opeellted hlraln and aa required lor 11ch HI ol
',lh.1rc1 (33-1/i) IMt on8eco11d dliui of C!ltllhiiletlon,oo lila ahown on the drawl-a• plane ond epeollloallone.
•ll1rHI ol eald Vlllge · •
to lhe dill ol tiiiiJmlnt The' manulocaurar .Mil The lull amount Wilt lle
:eXtending at ,thot
llilla.noe unleM tile lurl)loh end Jnotall o ratumtd wll~ln thirty (30)
~r !'IOilpt o bklo.
.. •- r d Front (Main) Strael
· aha!l · lle made I.::!'!~~~~ Integrated eolld daye
loch bid
•to a dletanoe of elghly.flw
(I) daye from ·p
radio telemetry
. .. muat ·
:n~tlr..t.·
.....
If ehall be the ICDOIIIplniltl by lllhet I
'bond In an omaunt
·.'-I!XCEPTING, hoi-, tile
· · JAMES U. SOUI,IIIIY,
'right of ·woy acro11 lht
· =:"~=
to eupj)ly o oil lilt bid amount
!South- eight oriel W
.f. ,
wiH !nt.r!ICI eurlly oallllf-ry to
·llllrd (8-1131·1Mt CJI uld Lol
Attomev lor
wltli eldettng
:No. One Hundred 1Mntr (2)24, :17 (3)e 3TC
and- any
·Four (124) on Smnd ..,_
thtt may be
·and- olilndlng II Iilii wkllh
Public NOtlct
"
othera •• pert
:Df eight ·and on•lllircl
The
·113) feet o dlatanoe of
NOTICI! OF PUIIut
IIYtlem thall be
:etgllty.ftvl (15) loet IOWIItll
HEAAING 1u
In ate !led and
·Front (lleln) Straet « uld . The Mtllle County
by the tilemetry
Commla,IOII- wttl "old oyolem minulecturer to .
'VIttage 111 Pomeroy, •
mer¥ed In t.lie dlld · tha ftr~l ol two .P.ll.bllo tnou,. a lingle eauree ol
·~ 1!....,......,.. ~to hearlnge at the lfllge ...,...tblllly. .·
;~
t:harteeDebliilber
Elllilblch, ~ County· Commleelonere
'Till 11011p1 of·lhla ~
211, 1137, Olllae,
Cciurthoull, _ , . il lltdto 1'illeoMtry
lind recorded In Volume f1o!not11Y. OhiO on Jlleroh 10. comftll eyolem to lftolucte
'42; p1g1 171, of the 18117 1 t· 1:11 P.lll• ~ "'" rawer .,. level '""'oteo, .
llecOrda 01 Deed~ If llllge p•-•• 01 provldl"" Ill booeter PUri!IP elltton
~Ohio.
puiiiiO Information" Jnd ,.mote•, ~nil field pump
, ALSO, the right end raoatv!ng' 001-nta lit' to otau.n ,.Motel Mid PDU
~vltege to connect wllh the avllllblllty or grant liiOIIIIDr. 'Till auooeewl
Nh: - on LOI8 Nwnber funde from the Ohio lllcNer ahall "'""ati ehOp

01-t•r:::.:
.ttu'Ill:tc.Ohio
n::&gt;,:"'.:
c'
r
.»
~
River, arid fNI New lkirtnn Flit 110Uiilllg
¥••
ol Hid • - ·. !he Protr,.. gra11t lulllla ct
.,......., 11111r
aora, Metal Coilnll
,

Law

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC:

Eberabllcll, rru.t.by ......

&lt;•

Attdmey At
(614) 59;!-5025

~~-.. 1110 _ . ,
IIIII
fawn celofli- ...,,

Sunclo1 - 2:110 ..... ,....
Mondo1
·
- 10:00 o.m.. utdly.

fill,_·

.

Attorney William Safranek

992·2753

rlllfVII ... r~gt~t• to bid II
heirs the euctlon or 10 ramove.
ESTATE
Md -tgni. any or Ill !11111 from the -llanulecturor:
eom... tnc., Overland
In tM Caurt CJ1 CooliiNAI
llleingllle · pnm!Me .... II 811J 111111•
~of Mllgl County, Ohio conveyed I!J ·Mary E. (2) 24, H (3) 3, 5 lTC
KS- 2 ~...- Equol.
·• . . _ A. s.r.tt, et el · 11181-ure·lll8jol'to Charlee
All other eyeleme will

Blllnbaulr

household goods.
~or Information Regarding Bankruptcy coritact:

Free Estimates

The tarmo CJithe ule are
Ollh. HOIIMI . . - !

can relieve a debtor of
obtlgatlona · and arrange • lair
dlslri)utJon of uaets. Debtors In bllnkruptcy may
keep •exempr property for their pe1801181 use.
may Include a car, a house, clolhes, and

. ...., N• O.rllnldf"

l

. _.· Publ~

a-

BANKRUPTCY

'

Can to see if you may qualify at 614-361-7342 Ext. 11A or 61.4·992-6629·
Ext. 11 A. Preappllcatlone may be obtained at any of the following GMCAA·
.
'
JTPA locations: ·
·
.
·

"'hlld ~Y • 7:30p.m. auhe ·
Ltinl cur.-~ Clucb. in=~=~=.life

La! · 1'bf JIIY.IIII HOIJIICk Mil ....

'

\

Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency- JTPA has a limited amount of
funds available at this time. This program Is not Income basec:i.
Cooper~ting ,educational facilities Jncl.~-~e: UniversitY of ~io Grande,
B,uckeye Hills Career. Center, HOcking College, .Tri-County JVS, Ohio
University,' W•hing~ori ·State Commun~ College, and ·Shawnee State·
University:
. ·
·
·.
·
·
.· · .·

10:• ..,..tjdllw•hb :•~· ..me. ~
.
by the Meijl
If 11 rs • I
: ..,.,...... Caul&amp;y Mini.-ial Aaoeiatlqo will '11lomU. The fourlh son, Robert lies

··

ser-

If you are attending vocational training O(:college or plan to attend Spring
. Quarter, you may be eligible for classroonnralnlng funds.

1Zh

POMBROY --Community Lenten

.

.

•llhllt..,. und• , ' n . . .

~

Iota! residential and bushiess phone may.ch1J1C as little -as $10 a.mon"customcrs now serVed by Of!ter c~ · as a Oat fee to lOla UIICI' of its new
panies, the repon.said. r •
· vice ll!ake unlimited local Pbo.nll
When ready, lhc new win:lcss ser- calls from home
·
vice could lead to a major rcstrucCompany officials declined til
turinj in industry competition if-it discuss the plan.
takes hold. People flmili~ wit!lthe
:1 It
I ' ....
'
: ' I
' ' .

STILL UNEMPLOYED??? READ ON....

SPRINGAELD, 01. (AP) - For
the third time in a decade, vandals
have desecrated the Lincoln Tomb,
·,
'
!his time spray-painting the memorRACINE-- RACO, Thesday, 6:30 ial with swastikas and obscenities.
po;luck dinner, new :members wei- . - 'The walls oft~ 0~ation deck
'come, Star Mill P;ut.
and lhe base of the Lincoln bust that ·
greets visitors at lhe entl'ancc to lhe
MIDDLEPORt -- The Auxiliary • tomb were spray·painted. Human
of Drew Wcbs1er Posi39,American cxc;rement and a T-shirt were found
LeJion, will meet at .the Dow nina on lhe de!;lc.
.
.
.
House in Middleport, Tllesday, 2 p.m.
Staff members discovered the
damage early.~unday. Black plastic
·THURSDAY
will qovcr .!he paint until 'ir can be
!'(&gt;MEROY -- 1997 BiJ Bend removed l)y hiah-prcssure spray,
. '
;rowns and C9Untry &amp;"" ROIJani- police iaid.
ZllliOIIalll*ling, 7:30p.m. Thursday
"We are considcrin1 it strictly a
• tbe 11nior fair board offH:e, Rock e11e of random and mindle11 vanSr,tng&amp; faiiJI'OUnds. All interested · dalism," said Lt. Mike Oei er.
Lincoln, lhe nation'•
praie~iizens welcome Ill attend.
; .
'
denl, ·is buried in the tomb wilh his ·

RACNil-'i.ci.,ao.dofl'ubJ1c A61n lfllial ms diJ Mo!nd~Y1 • '

'

PAST OR PRESENT
·. UNEMPLOYMENT CONP~NSAnON RECIP.IENTS
,·' ..
...
'
'

...........

hou111111 In 1ddhlon to

-,.oo-

~.

..!.Community calendar.

~·

Public Notkle,

NEW YORK (AP)- Scie11tiau brie clolled ad adult pulotto lnptlt OR Vll'fiUI
wlltell .., lle
mammal ror lhe first time, producina allaib named Dol- ooll•llln
... dl I 1ln IIIIa .....,_ ...
ly lllld an unsettling $ipal that sci-fi aotions of clirnina
N a p•11DI;ont witt Mid
people might just be possible.
. •lllllllarr lido Clnlllpo 1111,
. The lamb was cloned from a 6-ycar-old ewe, using brattled or taped matort.l,
_.....,. llotenlng device,
·' ~ssuc taken from the ewe's udder.
. ,.,
. ot!Jer) .due to • dlubtJIIY,
} . ·Thai made the feat even more astonishin1: SCientists piMM con*~ Gtorll KJoee,
,hadn't thot!Jht a whole mam.mal ~ould be rept~erated Clerk, prior to Morell 10,
. fr':"" mature body cclls·that were speyializcd for somc- 1197 et 114-192-2111$ In
ctder to ene~~n~ lilat your
lhmg other than reproduction.
,:
nuda
wilt
bt
.• .The scientific landmark opens the door to .cloning . •==atm~i!Dd•d. Tile 11e1a1
,pnzcd farm animals such as cattle, and shouldJmake it ! County Cau"houee To
••much eas~r to add or modify genes in livestock, experts : hiiMII 5 PldMCI 'b'¢,
said.
.
•
.
• I , Wrttt.n 0011111111111 wiU be
accepted unlit 1:00 p.m.,
. While the research suggests that cloning-humans March 10,1817, IIICI.nieJ be
· .. !'"ght be possibl~ •.gene experts said it would be unctl\to ... llelp County
Commleol~nere, Melgo
~ ~to~
•••
~
"There is no clinical reason why you would do this. County · Courthouu,
Why would you make another_human beiosJ." said P~Ohlo41711.
Janet How•d, Praoldent
~~searcher Jan Willl!ut, one of the scientists re(l!!lting the
Mllge Couqty
' 1sheep cl!&gt;ning..
. · -. &gt;
.
. Commlallol*l
, , "':'Ne think it would be ethically unacceptablo_andccr- (2) 24, 28 (3) 5 3TC
tamly wol!ld not want to be involved·in that prQjcct."
Public .Notice.
Caf1 Feldbaum, president of the BiotechnoiOJY
.. Industry Organization, which represents about700 companics and research centers in lhe Unitec! ~fates and
.!broad, agreed.
·
.
"The biotechnoloJY industry exists to usc genetic
.'linformation to cure disease and improve agriculture."
J.he said Sunday. "We opposed human ciQ~int when it
" was a lhcory. Now that it may be possible, we'Urge lhat
. ·lit be prohibited by law."
' A rcpon of lhe sheep cloning will be putitishcd in
''Thursday's issue of lhe journal Na1ure by wnmut and
'colleagues·at the Roslin Institute ncar EdinbWih, Scot'land, liricJ 0!/lcrll.
' · · . · .·~ .
(. Dolly, 11om last July. is perfectly healthy, Wlliliut said.
·She got her name ~ause she carne from tile sheep
'equivalentofbreast tissllc, and "the people looking after
,her couldn't think of a more impressive~ gland
"than (singer) Dolly Panon's," he said.
''
·
·,. B'eforc the new work, scientists had been able to take
~tissue from adult frogs and create geneticall9:identical
'tadfropoles. But the tadpoles never developed:,fully into
gs.
.
' To do lhc sheep cloning, scientists took cells from the
'ewe's udder ti~sue and cultivated lhem i.n a laff, using a
· _treatment !hat made the cells essentially 'doint~l They
. also topk unfertilized sheep eggs and ren\oved'the eg11s'
'nucleus, the .~ontrol room !hat contains the geffes.
·
' Then they put .lhe ewe's cells together wilh the egg
...cells and used an electric current to make them fuse. The
·eg~. now equipped with a nucleus, grew into embryos
'as ifthey'd been fertilized. The embryos wen!'put into '
Public Notice
~ewes ·to develop.
.
"' ·
; The process was horrendously inefficient!: Of 277
fused eggs, only one led to a lamb.
,.
" Wilmut said he expects the efficiency td"improve.
:someday a dairy farmer, for example, might li)ake a few
:cl~nes r! c_ows ~hat are especially good at P.tooucing
· milk, res1suna disease and reproducing, he wd.
'• A farmer wouldn '1 want en lire herds of idei!tical ani-'
mals because populations need a diverse· genetic make··up~'~ \oKI }- ·
· ........ ···' ·:· ' . "H· '!-.!...,':· ' '

StmttFF'8 SALI! .OF REAL

me

be

Scientists clone no
adult·mammal
·ior.first time

Public Notlf::e

NEW YORK (AP) - Blair which ran from 1987 to 1991.
said they expected a full recovery. . to need me, as she had fllf so many ·
of Love" and it is scheduled for ~rown plays a tough prosecutor on a
Ms. Brown sAid she WI!S drawn to
Miss Taylor was movl.d from years," writes Wachller, who was
Thursday, April 24, a1 the Bien ncr, new CBS series, !hough she'd have the idea of playing a powerful pros- intensive care to a private room Sat- once considered a possible U.S.
hassell Hotel in Parkersburg. Mem- a hard time·identifying some of the ecutor·in lhe series, set to air March urday' and visi~ wllh family and Supreme Court nominee.
bers arc to dress in period costume net\york's other stars in a lineup.
S. ."But what I like about her is !hat friends at Cedars-Sinai Medical Ceo- _ "Wouldn't that have been,prcfcrfrom the Victbrian era to present.
· "I don't know who these people she's not a neurotic, driven careerist ter, the publicist said.
ilble to .prccipitatii(J the Cllaclysmjc
Members wishing to attend should arc," she whispered at a recent CBS like most successful women on 'IV iJr
· Miss T1ylor, anAcll!lcmY,Award, publicity that-.WQUid bring ruinalion
call in their reservations to Plltty party. "I have to watch rno{e 'IV." ·in movies;"
winning actress for "Butterfield 8" in . to me and unhappiness to her?"
· His book, "After the Madness·: A
.Pickens or Debbie Toundas, ho!h of
"Feds" co-executive producer
1960 and "Who's Afraid ofY.Il!inia
JC;i Gamma Epsilon, before April 20. · Anhur Forney said Ms. Brown had
LOS ANGELES (AP) - ·Eliza- . Woolf1" in 1966, liwncd: of the. Judae's Own Prisoo Memoir," was
Ann · Rupe and Norma Custer no problem nailing her cllara~ter as belli Taylor is steadily rccuperati!lg tumor ·during heJ: annual :physical quoted Sunday in lhe Daily News IIIII
lhe New York Post. WacMicr received
served cake, tea and coffee to other a tough chief prosecutor.
from brain su'llery and could be exam earlier !his monlh. ,
' a si~-figure fcc for the memoir to be
attending members Carolyn Grucser, ·
"Blair has that leader quality," ~leased from the! hospital by the end
Jane Walton; Ruth Ann Riffle, Joan Forney told Enten~inment Weekly ·of the week.
.
NEW YORK (AP) - Former published in April, lhe newspape!S
Corder aild Charloue Elberfeld.
for its Feb. 21128 double issue. "She · "She's up, she's joking around as New York judge Sol Wachtler says said.
The next mee!ihg will be a salad can walk on a se~ do nolhing and take always and she's in great spirits," her the ex-lover he stalked rormoro lhan
Wachtler, a mlirriecl ntan, wu
supper on Thursday, 6:30p.m., at lhe control."
publicist, Shirine Ann Coburn, said a year should have called him to stop state's top judge when he was lri'CIIohome of Clarice Krautter. Members
. The role is !IOihing like Ms. Sunday night.
the harassment.
cd in 1992 for lw'assinal\.fs. Silvcrare to bring a salad of their choice.
Brown's best-known performance, as' · On Thursday, doctors removed a .
"Why didn't Joy (Silverman) call man. At one point. he said he would
lhe charming title character on "The 2-inch benign tumor from the left me instead of the FBI? That's all 1 kidnap her 14-year-old dauahter
J;lays and Nights of Molly Dodd," lobe of the actress' bfllin. Doctors really wanted -for her to call me, unless · she paid him $20,000.

ParticiJl41ion in the toy1 for tots
prosram at Veterans Memorial Hospita! was approved when Pteceptor
Bell! Bets Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, met recenlly at the Pomeroy
Methodist Church. ·
·
Members voted to send a check to
the hospital volunteer association to ·
purchase toys.
·
Carolyn Grueser, president,
reported on the Beta Sipna Phi West
Virginia Sll!te Convenuon to be held
in Charleston. More information will
be forthcoming for intereslcd mcm.hers. .
· A Jcuer was read by Orueser from
Patty Pickens in Xi Gamma Epsilon
Chlipter which will host Founder's
'Day !his year. Theme is "ReOei:tions

The o.Ry Stnlillel• ' • I ·

.,.,tecl

of

By ED PETERSON

Monday, f*'-Y 24, 1817

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN H,::RE
FOR A TOTAL OF
.$7.00 PER DAY.

na

Pick up diKarclecl
•ppllencae, llellerlll,
11111ny metals a
motor b!oclca.
S1+ell2-4025 8 am-8
~ · . ·-··· ...........

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;.
. ; · INSULABON
- 137 IIRYAH PLACE

MIDDLEPORT
192-2772

' - · 1:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.

.....
,••••'
Wl•••ws
;:' •St..
...a.o.
•••
liMn &amp; .
: WillloWI

: ..._Uitioaa
liNGS'

llotltlllpnv••••••

3351 Happr Hollow ROIICI
Mid rlh~ art, Ohio 457tO
New ttam., Addlllona,
Siding. Palelllma,
Dlob, ,... •• ~~~.
Geng ,Porllhea.
Cill! Ul Fct A F-

lail IIMI .
614-74NDIO
114-70~

114-74ND71

A rJt 10 UNCI' 1.1E NTS

005

P'enlonlls

A:i lENnON
Haa ~r llarrll~ Or Relallon·
1llllp Go! Up I Wont Slap In f&gt;rln.
Vkloo Ancl Ronl One or OUr
Aclull V!Hoo. 1380 Eaotem Avo·
nuo, Galllpollo, Or Call -814·448·
8822.

•

EMPLO YMCNT
SER VICES

1-----,__..,__
11 D Help Wmled
'wOiiTiiif";;:;;;;:-iShi'H:w
I~
I Atl Areaa· I
304-875-142ll.

�z,Fsb

!14.1117

1

.. N•A Crouworci
1

AI rMI-10-.gln
tt1ta na pspr II aubtiCl ta

EXPIIIIINCID fUIIIIITIIRII
ITIIIfJPIII I IIIFINitNIII
w..,... Mull haUe Ill clr, ound
In Woodworking. Pert-T me er
FuR·!me -~-. Slarl - .
dlalaiJ. Call114-440·4514 11-F,
1 ·1 or drop on Appllcotlon at

t&lt;IOS--

a. F-.r Falf HculillgAct
ortlllwhlch-.tlagll
t o - 'lny l)ltiOiOIICO,
COlOr. rotlglon,
ueutlon to.

origin,
,_..,....,., l)laiOoM.._ .

=..·...-:r.?~~
Ohio-.,._

rtf'/

own 8llillon,

ar-••o liltll

can Corol Kine. 114-

HELP WANTED • I1,.,._W
RMiono, O.rpentorL Minimum
01 5 YMrl Experl..... Truck I
Hand Tooll IRallrenCII A MusL
Appllcatlona Aro Anllallle 'At
14113
Gil) R 0H.
Mon ·Fri. e A.M. To 5 ~M. (tt4)
-14.

e-n-·

-on-·
---..oror..,
lnJ' :1 iotdllulu•.,.•

TlMt Rio Grande Pollet Daporl•
mant Wll It Aootplfflil /WIIca

Heir 8trllat Wanled Rent '!bur

Fon12100 M HP 2-100 Hre; FMI
SltO FWD 41 HP 7410 Loader
1800 Hrt JD 4230 100 HP -

-

t rt;&amp; Mil: 2 Aloma And 111ft
Antle!•• Drop Loll Tallie And 4
No .KIIohan. laG I 'Mo., AI ChUo, Andque 3 Diww a-t,
,..,_ Dapoalt Ra .. ~ad, 114-441- · Glrll White Challor D - And
2An.
· Twin Headboard I Frame UO
I iota (100diOI • (11011121) 'IIStapa to 1br bnlhld 1p1. a. Couch And Choir U5, 114-2411!1111.
SI,IOO. Call ICM-I71-Ii101 OOiit I rolerenceo. :104-112·
4pn)tlt~ibii 1 ..
.
25111.
Boo11 Br Redwlno. Chi,C·
liO llncad- 2 ....... 11 8 .,..... ~ Roekr. Tonr LlmtL Gut pond, 'M'til84 DauloliwldO, .... 2 114 ue ,..,.._
At Shoe .Colt, Gallllfll, 1 milt off Rt 2 In GalllpoUo ForTi llull- to _ . . .
Clr----ln304475-7138.
lnd, ••tetlor. For Mthnale cal,
ltol-742-2081.

upo, Gold Rldg4l, IHIO• ..,...
dlotrlc~ tii.DDO. II4:112-2Ut

IOD 141 11•11a.

~,.

II You Aro A Stole APP!WH

NurN Aida And Would like To
W11r11 In ATop Notch ..... Term

.,., .... -Round llallano - IIAin · ll10 JD 410; JD 37.1
S..eral UNd Haybinao 2 -JD
1200 Drllll; JO JOclO :Ill' No Tm.,coultMO: 3 Good UMtl
Sman ...,.,. SptMdero Prlo;ed
RiehL Carmlchatl'l Form And
lawn .,...._2412, t.aoo-su1111. •

:::."'Priolo

0

••1111101• or c:lllcrtn'linll.'

•

UNd 26+4 Cllt Trencher. 114·

-784l

111115 Ford R1n00&lt; o&lt;tsnded Cll&gt;. .
2 ...... drive, 28,000 mlloo,
· tto,ooo, c111 5pm, 814-8112·

2470.

1084 CJ-7 he• hard top, ·exc
30oHI75- t584.

Drlvor'l [1.

......

vans &amp; 4-WDS

HIT

TRAI'JSPOR TA TIQrJ

HF-rJTtd (--;

Col: 111 •• 21140 or 11,._
Z!23

... ,.,....,, =-

Uft'Citalll, Et.ctrlc ~ 710 Auloe for S.le.
Stair lifts, Van Llfta, Scoaterl,
New .\111111. aa.nwta ~kM• 1 c••· t$78 Buick Eloct,. 225, teoo,
Kintl Motol lonll RIIOI In et...:..e.71!11a
114:742-21 •••
Town, Nowlr Remodeled, HBO.
ClnemiK, ~~-lin• a Diener. MIIH F l - , 130 A Pick Up,
w.ly - . Ot .....,., Fla... 1100 Pw Dump Truck lold O.
114 ue ·~ 11+441-li11T,
llverr Avolloblo. Houllng lima
SIDnl and GrMI. 814-3118-111171. .
Roomo lor • """ or monlt.
- d.. at 1 1 - 011111 Holol. CUII,.,.IIIIhtubt. 011111110181.
Coloro, 114:37e-2720 AFTER I
Sleeping roQml with cilaklng.

Alto trlllllr apace on river. All
hook-upo. Cllf ofler 2:00 p.m..
304-7'7&amp;WI; Muon WI!

-

-

2 Bedi'DOml

tn ·eureka. 11•211-

-

With 0.11 T·'lilpt, PIW, Tlit 1100,
-5P.Il•t ........1305.

~ Thrift smp: - burlna
trailer lilt, .............. chlldttn'a tummer clolhea-ana

do Trim, 125,000 Hwy Mllea, 4

dly ......

I

ble 304 IRZ77.:

J-"""

cHrome. - .

llnor, Rallo. Book 't4,250, lt2,100, Callet4-44&amp;8221 Allor
IP.Il

. ..."' of anv 1lze, dfe11erahte·

2323
A... 211adroom,
lor ram, up chalfl. playpens, welk~rt. etc.
partial blltmart~ gora1• 1275/. lloblt. 10 11110'0.
rnorttl\ · 11~725.
mo +dopoliL 30oHI7S3812.
....
, and 115
traahper
Included,
114~
112·2117.
QuMn Wotor Bad With 8 Draw·
aro. intuiiiOd - n Shacleo For
II FL Wldt Wlndowo, Drapel,
1.1~ RCHMWISt:
et ........ tl31.

--

t$84 Chaur 4X4, 51pd, Y·S, lied
llnar, now tlros. C~il 304·17~·

~-ism BORN LOSER:
,::~I E'oU. TIC.KfDAT M.YOOUNE"

ii •
ii

. ...: 60T ~ "tl05)~J.;~

....

w

231 t dar•. 814·11411·2844 .....
logo.
•

t"SI'IIIarlo
~r,amblor 400jll4
7.~~~~~~~~~;~ 113,100.
304-882·2482.
. •

.,u....,,

allorlipm. 8t4-112-2470.

750. Bciats &amp; MotPrs
·
rorSale

E-

',

..

•

D•

•

"

ROYAL JELLY Wltll Slborlan
Glnaeng 10 Ctpouln, 120. Coli

IPic*aiPiiilii

bailftratMPric-.e1~1-0091

8111118318,1-800-281.oootl.

•D•P• ...a ·
'

•

·

0

Auto Parts &amp;

760

• •
••

•

Acctsaortea·

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gillon
Uprl81i1. Ron EVIftl E'nterpriHo,
,Mciclon. OhiO, 1.-&amp;3NI528.

All p8lll

•
stone Pltillips a news reporter in
••~ . Yorll: City.

New'
r ""-..
l0- 0I-R-.IH-C--.
I ..
.

1 Year •75; Bear Cal Scanner

:_·
11188 Ford FeotlnlX
5apd, ale, em-fm co.-,tto,
Ice gllttl(, tinted wl.-o, &amp;Kcal·

Wurlltz8r Spinet Piano ExceUenl

lenl' cond!tlon, Great gas mile·
304-a75-71711.

Condition, 1880; Buoett Soli
Bad llaaudlul $450; Old Fuhlon
School Daak 175; G. E. Relrigera·
tor $75, Maple Study Desk $45;

1990 Modal Sulllru loyol 4 WD,
88,000 MUtt, $4,250, OBO 81426tH252. 8t+258-18t&amp;

Soma An~ 81~7.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wooher•"·dryari, rolrlgerotoro,
,.ngeL .Halll.l Appllanc•. 71
Vine StrHt, Cai1114-441·TJIIB,
t.a -:1411.

Block, brick, -

Rio Granda, .OH
5121.

New gaa lanka, 1 ton lfuck

whatla &amp; ,.diotoro. D I R Au)D,
~lor. wv. ·304-372-3933 or 1·
-2la-8328.

tampers &amp;

p:r.·1, wind·

• Winlefl,

.

.

, . . _ Ohio; G...... Oriented
lndlwlduol _ . . , To Mana1•
0111U ........ and EdUcotional
SMYrOeo For 1,DOO Plut Client
Load. Ptovlcle OU-..ch, ln!Oka,
........IQIY And .........Up Sanl·
ieee To FemaiM Md Maltt:
Sch&lt;HI!&lt;It And 8.11 P11111cl•n
C •~•' Mull lie ~t Como.. atl'f.Kauai ts• Of

,:;.irw,

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=,...,.,..-or-..t
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Haura· To aell•pac!H

1M n. Edflltrmtfll R I • oo-

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~ Pfl,..., Parar\IIIOOd ()I
- - • 1 Olllo, Ill Rlclllllnd
A¥&amp; Alhant: Ohio 41701. 37.5
Haui Poi Waalt With Banefilt.

Furniture rtllnllhlflil, rntoration,
repair and uphol..,rr. Suparlor
work. Bur and Still A countrr
c , . - . 304:743-ttoo.

'372·5301.

560

Pets ror Sale

SERV ICES

810

· Home .
Jmpmvementa ·

~ · ·
WATER
lNG
Unconditional lifetime 'uarentM.
local references rurn1ah1d, Eatabljahopd fD7s:·call (8141 441. •
0870 '011· 806·287·0578. Rogera
wa"""oofing. .
. . ·

HARTS MASONARY • Block,
brick
' · rUIDnabll
- work, 1111181M.
,..,.30+
...
perlenc;e,
8011-3611 ofloii:OQrlirt, no job II&gt;
lntdoriiBIO. Wll-021~ .

............,.
- ~~=:

HINE AIIIIIRI.IIICUIEIDI t

,ASTRb·ORAPH

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By lhe lime you get enough

1

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expenence to watch your
step you usually aren't going

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UNSCRAMBlE FOR
ANSWER

II

chuckle quored
by lilling in tho "'illlng wordt

vou de~elop trom lteD Na. 3 below.

r r 1· 1 r I' r I
5

1·'1 I I I I I ·I

SCIAM UTS ANSW1U
Fetish ·
·Pudgy· Reject· SUCCEED
I follow the lldvice Clf a Professor I had in college. He.
said lhll~ ·n.ose who ant wiiUng !o compromise will usu- ·'

Henee

Callll4·2~5·

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ouppllea lut Monr coloro. ZO,r
nrronty. Cell RC Roofing 304·
UmiiOd Offtrl t 117 doublowlde,
3br, 2balh; tt711 down, 12711
month. Fr.. dellvarr 1 ootup.
Onlr at oakwood Home•. Nitro
W'l. 304-7511-511115.

.

PRINT NUMBERED
'11;11' lETTERS IN SQUARES

Metal roofing, onratocked, inven1orr sale. Save GO% while

Proteaslonll
For Prhlote Non-Prolll Famnr ____Se:.
·:.n,;v_lc;.:el:.;,_ __
Plannlne s.rvtca• llaood In 1

.

A

Building
SUpplies

owa. Mnlela, ek::. Clau

.

6

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G.N. 125 Transmlaalon 111•ii
Modol$75, 814-446.051~.

790

.

5

L......L.-li,J....,L,J

SliO;etol-245-5323
Used 2200 Ditch Witch Trencher
8t-7142. .

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-=.·

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Super Nlntanclt No Glm11, t75:
Twin Bad M.Uruo &amp; Box Sprlngo

550

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' ·Tltole four wmta are lint 111111ea 111
mea!
JuneJoneswuthe
coach..Ra7al
II( the
AUanta
Falcons laat aeaaon
Nonnan Ia a TV reporter in AtlaDta.
Storm Field Is a weatherman and

t8115 Strotoo 285 PRO/XUOC
- - 175 HP
- Manr Ell..o, Mull Sot, lliol
IJn.

But

· w::~:~' s~\\clllA-l&amp;t-~s· ....

·· ~~NLI~~~

sne-. veoo. 3200
mlloo, 1111 color, $21100, atol-84

-•1

Nonlt
3 NT

'

1911 Yamaha Banshee 4 wheel·
.,, 350 twin
14,500: ca11

Will Do Computer Trpinl For
Profeulonol Or
Dacu·
- . At Raa- Pr1cao, lt4~SI23.

iS·

"" !6.\IICE! ~Ttl&gt;'£
~ mEl&gt; 10 LOC:&gt; a.IJR~

Motorcycles

tll4 -

AI O.k .Hill Comnur\11)' M~l 211U111.

Weol
Pua

..

i

11113 Hond.ti 300 4· Tru 12,800.
3110 EX 12,800. IIIMh
tllll3 In.., goad c:ond. 304-8112-2487.

biOI and chalra. bob¥ llltlo. IGh

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: Wbal do June, Royal. Storm and
· Slone have in common?
;'
' It is true that today' a deal ,was -+--+played last June, after a very 100d ·u.,...+~~
· db)Der,.lllld center. 011the loealioD Ill
a royal card. bullhat llll1the IIIIIWI!f. ' ~...-4-....o.II-­
How abould ~ play proceed in three
no-tramp? .
.
· l:wm If South'• llplllliJII blclabowed .
onlf 15:17 pc\lnta in the modem ·~ .
' North lhOuJd atill jump to pme. Tbe
CELEBRITY CIPHER .
good Jtve.eard lull with a lide ICe ud
bylulaCam~
~ llinl Jllde lhla hand ilbllQia' lbu 111·
ClliiiMIJCipMror::;•••-CNIIIIdi!Qmq
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nine ltl&amp;h-Q!'d poinll Jlli&amp;llt
II
.West led the 1p1de HVen: tbree,
: ' II E
IISFJYUI
VII
II
LNH
Tf'k
jack, kla1. Declarer atarted wltb a
clab to dummy's qaeen and a clab
TIISXFJU
II
EKSQJ . PMAJ-UAN .
· ~ lo bla lt:ing. ·Eut, who had had a
couple of slaues of wine too many,
R' k k S W II I I
L II A J
II E ,P
PKJUE'I 0'
.dllcanled the heaJt two with a tPgle.
·After winninl '!llh the.club ace. West .
XIIG.I TFK TV E U. •
switched to tbe diamond eisht, ·
PTYLFS
p •,
Happily, Sollth ctauned u lrlc:b: one
spade, three.heJrta, tbree dlamondl · . JVUJEFKTJG.
aad four clubl. ·
·
.
PF.IEYIPUS SOLUTION: ' Having children ia like having a bowllng ·anay
: "Why didn't you eontlnue spad..?"
inl!alled
In your brain." - Martin MUI.
·
utedEut.
· "Becauae 1 lhtllllht South aliU bPI
· the IU8ftled queen,".atonned West..•lf
you ,reren't. atoned, you would have
...
:diacarded the apad~ queen. : You·
lAIII
abould have uaed the Rille Ill Eleven. I
.
Hlto4 loy Qo\Y· 1.- POllAN
.-led the seven. Tl!at 111e11111 there are
.four 11J18dea hleher lbu the aeven in ·
Reorronao ~s of. the
0 lour
ocroiltbled _.ts bo·
· ··tbe -other three baadl, ud 7011 have ·~
low
to
form
four wOrds.
aeet1 them iU:' Ihe nine Ia the~. ·
JIIUI' ·IJIIftn·J~ aad declarer'a Jdnl. '
So, y011 llnow our lqiadel an nmnlq • . . h-...,..:.W~H_A~· ,...:v~H:....::E..,...~
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. ~umbled In apolol)', tbea
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till Ford F150 414 XLT,'toaded
pluo aktnlo, 1-400 millo, 123,1100,
1183 Cornaro Z·28 •305 Auto · 11.._..154.

460 Space tor Rent

301!81

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1982 Chev 4&lt;4, Shor-. Blue,
5 - nllue, Auto, Cruilo, SINor~·
-lirel, 1.o11 or

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1~80 Chwr 112 Ton 4x4, '11ioq_
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350, 5 Speed; Tinted Wln~owl.
110,000 080. 8)..25H270.

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111111 Dakota 414 'Auto, lte, Alk·
lng te. tOO. '14, 11882.12.

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' Dealer: South

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Truck, High Mlloajjo, Alklno
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AI,IIFII Sporty, 13,300 et 4-440·

'114-148-2311 dar•. 014·841·

... A t - - c.. Cenllr, 4nr odd jobo, pelnlin1, gunoro
81U4111101.
oiMned. It 4:2411-5871 or :104·
875-7112.
S"FN.ATE 0111......
one Full·Time C.rdllld Nuraa•o
'PIIrllblt 5awm!M; dOn't
II&gt; lha nil ]ull call
AldoIn TlMt
0111 1111 ~-cantofl ~':::r .cera o.part·
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: High Have Good Mac:hlnea, Will Do
School Dlplamo Or Equl•lent Hou.......,illg, CIIJIII Cloaning.
And Comlllollon 01 A Formal t15 "-' ~ + Ill"-'
Nurw'o Afcle Couroo. -pcino~ --"*'11.114-211U1ll0.
bllldoo Include: Beale Nurolng
Care And Functlonlna In - . . Home trPIII· doou,..ll, • - d
donco To len Govomln~ NAa thHJt, resume, term p1per1,
.,.. D•r •••• e,.. mllorw. 1 boo-.,rng. D'lftlcripdon. R...
lnterMIIcl, Plaua APf'lr 1n Pw· - - ratoo, call Connlo et4oon Or llarid Reoumoo To: Oek 112-e244.
Hill CommUni!)' Mocllclll Cantor, Pnlltuionll Troo Sllvlcl, Slimp
Allllntlon: 8Nnda Mc~Wnzle, 250 Atmonl, Free Eatlmateal In·
'Cherlollll A-ue. O.ok HHI, 011 ........
llldwtll, OhiO. 114:381455511.
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want to Tw c.. or Eldlrty "-&lt;·
ns CUll OIIEI•IQ
aon 24 Hour Care. In Private

dono Include: H)gh SChool Dfpla, . Or Equlvlt.nL Reopon~HtiH Include: Giving Bulc Nurtillg c... l'orlom!lna Soci-'"1 '
Aiceptlonlat DuUtt, And Maintaining Charto. PI•••• Apr&gt;lr In
PerHn At Oak Hill Communltr
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Olllcar'1 Training. Appllcadono
tiiJ· . . Piclled U~ At. The RIO
Grande Municipal Bullllflil Bat·
- "110 A.M. 1114:00 P.M.
WAIITID: Part· Time Pooltlon
' ' "a At A Community Graul&gt;
Home For "-'-• With MR/00
In' 'en .-:11 P.M. ·UO
A.M., Th; 10:111 P.M. • 1:111 A.M.,
Frl; 1 P.M. S.t • I A.M. &amp;In; 2 •

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clemaged but repairable, 13750,

ear. ~ Contoct OMen 1'1111- 180 Wanladlb Do

c:.ntor. -

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c.now

- . . For Appilcontl: 314187.

HoataiMI ....dttd For Hotne
HYou WOuld Uka To &amp;m
Late 01 FrM . - . . , l'tuoA Fun Filled E-lne Call 8t4812.al.

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14111

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UII0-11 HP ~- Colt-·
005 Hro Wh~o 2 ;111 FWD 2200
Hro
MF 221 11qo1ore Bll-

TllrH YHroDrMng
Ucenoed
Orlvlna
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Expari- Requlrod. Salorr:
11.• Mr, To Start. -/Sick
......... Tralnng Provlcletl. Send
Raauma 'Ill: P.O. Bo~ 1104, Jack·
Ibn, OH 4&amp;140; ATTN: C.c&lt;lllo.

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rrroo 4 Pootlllllopy "Nice".JD

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!!&lt;p!! l)pporl&amp;oR~ Emi&gt;loror•
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PC u1er1 no-. 145,DOO Incom. ooromlal. Coli I ~·StS· '170 Mllcellaneoue

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PHILLIP
ALDER

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. ally SUCCEED."

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Ohio Lottery

.

:No. 1 Kansas
edges Okla~

Pick 3:

7-3-6

pol~t&amp; ·

by two

Plck4:
6-3-5-4
Buckeye 5:

$porta on Page 4

6-21·23-29-32

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Vol. 47, .NO, @7
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01117, Ohio V.lley Publr.hlnil Company

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1 Sectlon,10PagM,35- ·
A Gannen Co.--~·

•Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday,
February.25,
1997
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Middleport studies bridg~ closing problems
By CH
. ARLENE HO
' E'"LICH .
Sentinel Newe Staff I"

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· . bo th.
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bon a ut e.over con IliOn o the, structure, whether repair is feasible,
She proposed reducing the speed limit and coming up with additional sfii:
or repll\(:ement will be necessary, B~owning said.
'
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nage to alert motorists.
·
·, .
• An u""·•·
on
the
status
.
ofthe
Hobson
Bridge,
closed
to
traffic
two.
weeks
""'e're·
at
the
mercy
of
the
eng1'neers
now
but
th
thi'
len
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B
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"'
,
e one ng we ow IS
rowmng e.xp ained that part of the road is within the village limitS, whjle•
and l'lisulting problems as traffic moves across County Road 3 to State that.if th~ bridge isn't safe, we don't want anyone crossing,it," he added.
the other part 1s a county road and the two have different speed limits,
• oute 7, wu given at Middlepon Village.Council Monday night.
· · .
He srud th~t right now the only thi~g to d,? is.to wait ~or th~ ~nginee!'S'
He agreed the speed limit needs reduced and other safety steps need to
Village Administrator Bill Browning reponed he is in touch with Meigs reco"!"!endall~ns . He reiOlnd~ council that wh1le the bndge 1s !n the vii-. . : be taken to avert acq\lents. He said he will meet with county officials to come
f;ounty Engineer Robert Eason, who is working with the Ohio Department lage, 11 IS not village propeny.
·
up wnh towered speed hmits on the bypass road .
Browning said the average number of vehicles crossing the bridge daily
In other business:
· ·· .
,
pfTransportation DistriCt 10 erigil)eers to determine whether the 70-year-old
bridge CBI) be repaired or needs to be replaced. '
·
· ·
.·
was 3,920,. whBe the average us.e ·of CR 3 was 1,8001 according to figures
• Council approved the purchase of a new cruiser at a cost of about $18,000
:. Browning said Eason (91d him Monday thai ODOTengineers are "crunch. P':'JVI~ed h1m ~y the county engmeer..
. .
. at !he request of Police Chief Bruce Swift;
ing" numbers to de~l)e the cost of either repairing or replacing the bridge. . W1t!' tbe bndge closed, traffi~ 1s directed over CR 3 at Ho~son to SR 7.
\ voted tohire Randy Might as a part time laborer;
as a first step tow¥&lt;~ applying for.funding.
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Council member Sandy Iannarelh exp~ssed concern about~ 1nqre~ traf· :
• met with representatives of General Refuse, the company contracted to
· State bridge inspectors have been in .and there seems to be· some·ques-' fie
on
that
narrow
road,
the
speed
hm1t
m
effect,
and
the·
bhnd
ex1t
onto
7.
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(C onnueonage3)
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Co'n."~ract&lt;?r·s get flrst
~t TP ·sewer ·creation

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·visit.-· :~__..._.

look ,_ ··
plans

.~ JIM FREEM~N

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.The seco~d ~on tract. will be set ject manager Douglas Uhren.
Sentinel New1 Staff
as1de for Mmonty Busmess Enter·
"We're excited to be part of it" he
.' Construetion .plansfortheTuppers prise. contractors. and includes the added.
.'
l'lains Regional Sewer District were installatio~ of .13 grinder pump staThe system is expected to be a
!!fCsented tO COntracto~ fO! .the first tmns, SeedI~~ and Other .work. .
boon for economic development in
time Monday afternoon.
· · Construcbonshould be done With- . eastem Meigs County, according to
·• Members of the 1PRSD board and · in Q(le year a(ter the project is bid.
ProsecutingAttomey Johl! R. Lentes,
-engineers froin URS Greinc:r of
The most innovative portion of the who said that several retailers and
Colum~us met with about a dozen project is the ilrip · irrigation field ot.her bu'sinesses have expressed
interested contractors arid material · which will dispose of 50,000 gallons · interest in locating in Tuppers Piains
·.suppliers at the Tuppers Plains Fire· of water daily. from the sewage once the system is in place.
house to discuss bid speclfi'cations.
lagoons.
In addition to the new sewer, the
. . Funding for the $2,695,400 pro"The drip irrigation system is an Thppers Plains area has alsO been tarji:ct will come from a combination of · alternative to land application of geted for hpusing and economic
·loans and public grants ff(lm ·the waste' effluent," · e'xplained URS . dev.elopment, having received an
· J)nited . States Department of Agri· Greiner engineer Jim Stumpp. )' You influx ofntojtey recently in the form
.~ult~'s . ~ Qevelopment .Pro· will .see more of this in the futlire." . of grants including a $500,000 slljte
..wn. (~qn,ne.rly the Farrn~rs: H~e . 'The Tuppers Plains drip irrigation ~rant for developme11t of a proposed
:A
...d\\!ill.ll!~atratiOI\), . .Appa·l·achi.an fteld, the f~ of i•• kind in Obi.·o, will industrial plirk
·
• ·. ·
· :ltelJ~ !CbJbrillsston,~ De~lil'tnJel!t ''1e1ilo'Ve'llquid ~asle tiolltihC sewaie . '.. ~tlieitt.\\t·litiF~~~~­
Qf:'~'ei9PJIIent: Water: .~nd· ¥~!"' lagoon and distribtlte it'liniler an &amp;dja- fii!Y.~hillll'~:·! tild6l:ated near . ,
Corilpetiuve ,program· (CD(iG) anjl cent field.
Thpper5 Plains o tAte Route 7.
the Obio Public Works Commission ·
Pfoject specifications call for the
Member$
1PRSD bOard
(Issue 11),. ,
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main contractor to subcontract instal- attending ·were Lindsey Lfons,
&gt; , 'Jlae .proJCC! WI!II!e broken into tation of the drip irrigation field to the Hollier. Cole, Sue .Maison; Marvin ·
tw~ con~ts. w1t1! . the first and Atfanta-based Waste Water Systems Keebaugh and Joe Boyles.
largest contract covering the in.stal· . Inc~ . ·
·
..,
Bids on the project will be opened
lation of sewer lines, pump stations,
!'This will be looked on as ·a show- Tuesday, March II at 3 p.m. at the
sewag~. lagoons and a drip irrigation casg ... a p~ssor of other systems Thppers l'lains-Otester Water District
~ystem.
m (!le state,' srud URS Gremer pro- . ofli.ce near Thppers Plains.

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:Health carewo.rkers' union argue
i•ga.inst state s.ubcontracti.ng·.... practice

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COLUMBUS (AP) - A state , set~· the tone for other state contracts
:union ofli.cial said he doesn't expect as far as pay goes, but that's all,
:m6remoney. for his workers than the . Regan said. .
· .
•3 percent annual increase negotiated
When Regan'sunion begins nego·
·{or members of Ohio's largest public tiali,ons for .a n~w co.ntract on Mru:ch
employees umon.
6, subcontracung Will be the maJor
But he said the state can help his 1ssue on the table, he said. The SEIU
ul)ion- and save money· by k~p- r~presents about 4,400 doctors, nurs-.
ittg down the number of contracts that es and other health care workers.
~~ogencies award to the private sector.
· "All those issues are open fpr
·Dave Regan, presi"ent of District negotiation. They've never been set
1199 of the Service Employees Inter· by OCSEA," Regafl sai\1.
national .. Union, said Monday that . · The $39,6 million is what the state
seven state agencies wasted $3~.6 ~ould have saved had it ~ired full- ·
million between Novel!l'ler 1995, and tJm~ : do~tors and others !nst~ad ~f
. ·~ovember 1996 by giving contracts paym~ more for the same semces 10
to workers who were' not full-time the private sector, Regan said. The
state employees.
· savinl!s would have come even if the
' Tile three-year tentative agree- agencies' paid full benefits and penment reached Sarurday1between the . sions, something it dOes not do for
state and ·the 38,000-member Ohio . most 'outside contracts, he said,
(::ivil Service Employees Association · "That $39 million repreSents worlc
,

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Meigs County Commissioners
thai could have,.should have and not· . will meet tbis afternoon to decide a
mally would have been perforined by labor contract with Meigs County
members of District 1199;" Regan Sheriff's Department deputies.
said.
Commissioners met in executive
The Department ofAdminis~tive · session Monday with a mediator
Serviees, which is responsible for who presented a recommendation to
contract negotiations, had noi seen the board.
the union's study and could not com- .
Commissioners came out of execment, spokeswoman Gretchen Hull utive session and agreed ,to recess the
s&amp;i~.
mfeethtinguntilsed2:45 p.m. today. Terms
o · e propo
contract have not
But the state generally finds it dif· been made public.
ticult to hire some health care workSheriff's deputies voted last s(Jmers- especially doctors and physi- mer to join the Ohio Patrolman's
cal therapistS _ to work on the . Benevolent Association union.
state's schedule.
Today is the deadline for the
commissioners i&lt;raccept or reject the
. "Physical therapists are willing to proposed agreement. If commissiongo out to,provide services on a sub- ers do not reject t!le agreement·today,
contracting basis, where they would · it will automaticall~ go into effect,
have more control over their sched- according io Commission Vice Presule," Ms. Hull said.
· ident Fred Hoffman .
In. other business, commissioners

met with members . of the
Chester/Shade Historical Association concerning the group's upcoming
fundraiser.
The group will hold a . dinner
March 21 at the Royal Oak Resort.
In addition; commissioners dis·
cussed installing a light bn a pole
behind the buildin~;
Denver Curtis, ·Ripresenting the
Disabled American Veterans, asked
commissioners if any grants were
available to assist in repairing the
·roof of the DAY building on ·State
Route 7 below Middleport.
Commissioners said they would
see ~~ the building qualified for a
Community Development Blm;k
Grant, but added that even if the
building did qualify, a grant would
not ·be available any time soon ..
Commission President Janet
Howard said she would assist the.
group in locating a contractor for the
roofing project.
.The old Sugar Run School build-

Angry not, offers · possibl~
cause ·to landmark rampage

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Commissioners to decide on new
deputies' •contract this afternoon

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;, NEW YORK (AJ') -· An angry, with ahead wound; the rest ,_;ere in
· rliJJ)b)ing not" lbund in the pocket of serious but stable condition . ·
the Empire State Building gunm31! .
The shQOting prompted ·tougher
iccitses' the United States of using security at the art deco landmark,
ISniel as "an instrument" against · .long a• ·symbol of romance arid
(!alestinians, a. high-ranking PQlice tourismr and raised . questions over
source said. ·
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how Abu Kamal was able to buy the
' The letter; ~tten in English and weapon illegally at .a Florida gun
•Arabic, suggests that Ali Ha5san sbop.
·
· .·
Abu Kamal had a political motive in
New •York Police Commissioner
.o,pening tire Sunday ni~ht on the Howard Satir called Abu Kamal
86th-floor observation · deck. But · "one deranged-individual working 'on ·
palice said Abu ,Kamal apparently · his own"· and said there was "zero"
acted alone, and his relatives said he evidence so far'that he was linked to
wu. upset·after losing his life savings. any terrorist group.
: Abl! Kamal's note also expre~ses
In .Abu Kamal's hometown of
-'"" inimosity•toward' France and Eng- . G~City, relatives said he had been
·lflld and indicates. that he planned to .distraught over losing more titan
\oenj his anger in an attack at the .$300,000 and bad no ties to Palesll!lll9us skyscraper, the police source tinian radical groups. It was not
said Monday night on condition on immediately 'clear how he lost the
'anonymity.
m9ney, .•
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·, Tho 'fi!l-year-otd· Palestinian
Abu Kamal called home on Sun·teacber, who hllll rep&lt;~n~ly visited day and said lie had fin~mcial prob-,
·tlic building the day ~fore the attack, terns and could not send tuition monkilled a Danish tourist and·wounded · ey to one of hif sons, who is study~ X other sightseen before commit· ing ~ivil engineering in Russia. a sOII•Il'ng suicide w.ith a.shot in his1head. irt·l~w said.
,Olio touriSt was iri qrit!cfl cqftdition
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'.,.

ing and the Pomeroy Masonic Build"
ing were also discussed with Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes, who ·
recommended that the county reimbUrse people who have donated to
restore the Sugar Run SchooL
'
The building, located in Pomeroy,
was the subject of a restoration drive
several years ago, but has since fall. en into hopeless disrepair with crum,
bling walls ~nd a collapsed ceiling.
Lentes suggested that commis.
sioners examine the Masonic build~
ing · and determine if it can be
repaired. The building, which one
time housed the county board of elections, is currently suffering from
neglect.
Present were Heffinan . and
· Howard.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton was
out of the county attending a Coun~
, ty Commi~sioners Association of
Ohio training . session , Howar'&lt;l
explained.
&lt;:

Drug testing &gt;

causes. area ::~ ·
prison· t'o be ·:
locked ·down .
CHILLICOTHE (AP) -· thi
2, 700 inmates at the Ross Corre~·
tionallnstitution l'limained locked in'
their cells today while the entire'pop:..' '
ulation ·was tested for dfu~. . •
Corrections officials srud the sur- •
prise tests were ordeq:d after'months .
of random tests indicated a high inci- •
dence of drug use BJ11ong ifimates. :
A~out IS ~rcent tes~ J1(1$itivej'
· compared wnh the 24 perce!'l typi··~
cal at most prisons.
::
inrpate testing positive ·wii.J:
face
action within ~

'. :

·TRAILER DESTROYeD - Th• tnrller home ' . when In ~I lemp tiPPid over. The treller we~
9f the Alln WIIIOII fi!IIIJY, Fro,rt Street. Racine,
fullY engulr.d when tiJen,en arriVed. 1'hel-. _ .
- gutNd by fire Jutt lfllllr noqn.~f. 8qott
no lnf1!11.... Five truckll .in&lt;l 11 firefighterS ·
HIH, anletant chtilt, Aeclne·Fire .Depl.rlufttilt,
reeponcled end _.. jill tht acene Jor llbollt twO
reported ftlat Wllhn tokl 111m the fire .ltllrted
hou~a. (PIIoto by Dennie Wolfe) ·
. .
,,

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