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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Kent\lcky
rips Vols,
Deacons Win

Pick 3:

001
Plck4:
0162
.Buckeye 5:
13-23-24-31-33

Sporta on Page 4

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Vol 47, NO,
..,117, Ohio V1lley Publlahlftt Cotnpllny

Rein likely
In the 408.
chance of •howera,
In upper 808 •

2 Sectlano,16 ....._ 35 conla
A Gannatt Co~ Newaprper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednead~y, February 26, 1997

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Commissi-o n rejects propos·ed contract for deputie·s

IIEW CHEVY lROIIi
WHIII DRIVE.'
COAti BY
FOR Tlsr ·
DRIVI TODAYI
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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentlnlll Nawa StaH
• Citing a lack of money, and fairness to other county employees, two
members of the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners Tllesday after·
doon rejected a proposed contract
with sheriff's department deputies.
, A mediator pn:sented a proposal to
the commissioners 1111d to· the union.
which would he a not-quite-two-year
:contract. with sheriff's dt}lartment
·employees who 'are members of the
. · Ohio Patrolman's Benevolent Asso·Ciation.
· · Now the issue will he handed over
·rna conciliator who will make a bind·
·ing decision.
· Commission President Janet
Howard and Vice·president Fred
:Soffman said they thollght the con-

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tract WaS fair, bill said the county Cllll
not afford the pay raises at this time.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton was
absent Tllesday afternoon 1111d had no
input on the decision. ·
The two also said they are unwilling to jncn:ase the pay, of sheriff's
deputies without giving a pay raise to
other·county employees.
· u.approved, the deputies would
have received an immediate 4.2 per·
cent pay increase with 1111 additional
fou~ percent effective Jan. I, 1998.
Sergellllts would have received an ..
additional five percent above the top.
rol!lf officer with lieutenants getting
an extra 3;5 Jtercent.
,
The contract would also require
. the county to contribute more toward·
employees' health insurance while
holiday, overtime and uniform poli-

cy would · have remained mostly this year for the sheriffs department
alone. If similar increases were givunchllllged.
Howard and Hoffman had a pre- · en to other courthouse employees,
pared statement indicating their there would be an additional cost of .
approximillely $35,000 or a total cost
views: ·
"We feel that the sheriff's depart- of approximately $50,000 for 1997.
"ln 1998, there would be another
ment employees, along with other
employees in · the courthouse, are a&lt;jdiiional cost of approximately
deserving of a w~e increase. How- $12.000 for ihe shenffs department
ever, . our problem is not having and approximately $50,000 addienough funds to pay for these pro- tional for other courthouse employees for a total increase in 1998 of .
posed wage increases.
. ..
"We feel that it would not he fair $62,000.
"Over a tw&lt;&gt;-year period the total
to other employees iii the courthouse '
to provide a wag~ increase for sher- cost to county taxpayers would be
·
iffs employees without providing well over $112.000.
"As
everyone
knows,
department
some additional 'compensation to
budgets were cut this year in order for
other employees of the county. .
''The recommendations of the fact the county to operate · within the .
·finlfer would cost the taxpayers of .amount of funds that have been cerMeigs Couniy a minimum of S15,000 tifled by the budget commission. To

Man said
.· in critical
condition .
.following
wreck

AS.LOW AS:

believe that additional cuts could be mal\e a decision on this." said
made to support wage increases is Howard. "I didn't sleep .a bit last
unrealistic. We can only do what we night. I'm in support of the union but
have the funds to. afford.
we have to look at (county employ"We can not. in good faith, accept ees) as a whole unit, even though the
a proposal which obligates Meigs sheriffs office takes care of the secuCounty to providing funds which we rity of the whole county. County
do not have at the present time nor do employees in general take care ofthe
we foresee having these funds·in the .everyday operations... it's a really
near future. . ·
tough decision ."
"We're open to working out a solu- . · "Nobody is denying they need to
tion before the conciliator makes a· get more money," said Hoffman.
binding decision."
"They (the deputies) risk their
· Commissioners also indicated lives every day for the people of. the
they would have liked more time.to county," Howard noted . .
considerthe contract. Commissioners ·· Hoffman ndded: "I don't think it is '
said they were obligated to respond a had recommendation. We were Impto the recommendation by 4:30 ,p.m. ing for something that would take
Tuesday and added they were not effect next year."
presented with the mediator's r~com'Howard summed up the board's
mendation until Monday afternoon. perspective: ·:we'd like to do it but we
"We had 25 and-a-half hours to can't."

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· A Pomeroy 'man was in' critically
uristable condition today in the intensive care unit of Grant Medical Cenler; Columbus, with injuries suffered
·in a~ crash Tllesday on U.S: 33
I
Pomeroy.
. .
Jr., 26, l687 Lin-

near

the scene the
by the·
MedPlight air ambulance, the Gallia- ·
· P!xMroy .! lleli- . 26, wM elrllfteci
Meigs Post of the State Highway
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· InJunc:l the Cl'llh of thl.-car..on .LhS. 33 na~~r
COtumbua; wHII lnlurlea •
In
Patrol reported.
.
' PomlrOy Tueed1y. DriWr Jackie"Ill Large Jr., p.m. accld.,n.
•
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1 Terry A. Day II, 18, 380 E. Sec- .
ond St., Pomeroy, a passenger in the
car Large drove, was also injured and
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
'SAVING ENERGY- JeH Tackett, right, vice praldent of operby the Meigs EMS. He was later
ations and sngin!Hiring at Buckeye Rural Elactrlc Cooper1tiva,
treated and released, troopers said.
demonstrated the usa of a heat pump at Tuatday'a p..aa conThe patrol said Large was eastference announcing rate reductions for BREC'I residential conrepresents about4,400 doctors, nurs- bound at 6:30 p.m. when the car he
e~ to do the job.
From AP, Staff Reports
8umera.
·At !aft Is Executive VIce Praaldent l!ld Ganeral Manag• A· state .union official said he . "You can do it for 30 to 40 percent es and other health care workers.
drove went off the right side of the
er Jim Weaver. ·
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"All those issues are. open for road, struck a ditch and continUed on.
doesn't expect more money for his less with our employees, who are a
•'forkcrs tl\an the 3 perccn1 annual hig~ly trained group of professionals negotiation. They've never been set
The car then struck a tree, a dri·
Jncn:ase negotiated for members of who can handle the work," Proctor by OCSEA," Regan 'said.
veway culvert and a utility pole
"We're going to continl,le this before coming to a stop against an
Ohio's largest public employees said. "We're looking at waste in the
government
itself."
·
process
through tlic negotiations," emb1111kment in a creek, according to
·union.
;The
SEIU
represents
approxi· Proctor added. "So far, we· ve had no the report.
·: But he said the state can help his
mately
34
employees
at
·
G
allipolis
success in addressing the issue."
The car was severely damaged
.~nion -and save money -by keepDevelopmehtal
Center.
including
The $39.6 million is what the state and the accident remains under invcs- ·
Buckeye Rural Electric Coopera- exchange of the usual utility industry
Htg down the number of contracts thoit
·agencies award to the private sector. nuriles, social wqrkers. psychologists would have saved h8d it hired full- tigation, troopers said.
'• live residential consumers will soon tactics of laying off employees and
see a 1.74 percent rate reduction, delaying maintena'nce .
• _ Dave Regan, president of Districl and dieticians. GDC is under the time doctors and others instead of
paying
more
for·
the.same
services
in
supervision
of
the
state
Department
Executive Vice President and Gener- · · Consumers made it possible to
:1199 of the Service Employees Inter·
of
Mental
Retardation.
the
private
sector.
Regan
said.
The
al Manager Jim Weaver announced further reduce rate hy listening to
·national Union, said that seven state
The
three-year
tentative
agree·
savings
would
have
come
even
if
the
radio· messages asking consumers to
Tuesday.
:agencies wasted $39.6 mil)ion
A residential consumer who uses reduce thci r usc during peak periods.
· :between . November 1995 ~nd ment reached Saturday between the agencies paid full benefits and pen·
BREC offered a dual fuel P.'D'November 1996 by giving contracts state and the 38,()()()..member Ohio sions, something it does not do for
an average of 1,000 kilowatts \lcr
most
outside
contracts,
he
said.
Civil
Service
Employees
Association
gram,
allowing electric heat loads to
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month pays approximately $92.
workerS who were not full-time
"That
$39.million
represents
work
set~
the
tone
for
other
state
contracts
tninsfcr
·ro gas at 20,~5 depccs.
·Beginning with bills received .in
·:state employees. ·
·.
that
could
have,
should
have
and
as
far
as
pay
goes,
but
.that's
all.
"· Harry Proctor, SEIU's adminisMay, the consumer will see their bill Additionally. using radio control . normally w~uld have been performed -, PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)- go doWn nearly $7. In part. the fixed switches. clcciric water heaters arc
lrative organizer for ' central . and Regan said.
When Regan's union begins nego- by members ofOistrict lt99," Regan Wood County authorities will usc change will be rolled back from $14 prevented from operating during pcaik
$outhem Ohio, hit upon the same
information from psychics to deter.
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hours .
.point during a stop in Gallipolis Tiles- . tiations for a new contract on March said.
mine
where dogs will,. search this to $10.
really
saying
to
the
gov·
"We're
6.
subcontraciing
will
be
the
major
·
In January of this .year the comhi 1996 BREC invested nearly
day; noting that subcontracted labor
weekend for a Ravenswood ·man
Contlnutd on page 3
$1.5 million on main.tcnance pro- bined efforts paid off. according to
costs .more than allowing sta\e work· issue pn the table, he said. The SEIU
missing for more than a month:
1
Kenny Parsons, 20, was last seen grams and over three million dollars Weaver.
in rebuilding and adding new lines.
"We not only averted a peak but
Jan. 22 walking on the front end of a
"BREC is sinking its roots deep- reduced our historical peak,.. said
barge where he was to attach a cord
er into the community it serves, not Weaver. '"The resultant savings are
.. to a bilge pump.
culling off its branches." Weaver stal- being given to the consumer."
. Fellow deckhands did not realize
ed.
·.
.
Percentage· wise BREC is the secParsons was missing until arriving at
He c~plained that BREC's invest- ond fastest growing cooperative in
Atlas Towing's landing on the Lillie . ments in plant and equipment is 'in ,
the·state.
· from other dtstrict or states that · the test.
Katia)llha River in Parkersburg. 'An
By JIM FREEMAN
1
• The student will have another
haven't passed the test.or haven't been
electric cord waSfol,lnd hanging over
Sentinel News StaH
in
intervention
programs,"
he
said.
chance
next
week
to
pass
that
portion
the front end of one of the harges .
. Southern's performance in ·the
"If
soflleone
comes
in
from
West
of
the
test,
Fisher
said.
Johtr Borgy, chief of tbc Wood
ninth grade proficiency test was one
Virginia,
they
haven't
taken
the
test,
In
a!ldition,the
class
of7001
will
County
Rescue Squad, called in the
of the subjects discussed at Tllesday
they
haven't
had
Ohio
h'fstoiy
or
the
have
to
pass
a
fifth
portion
of
the
les.t;
psychics
after making tittle progress
night's ineeting of the Southern Local
. using more conventional means.
ll.oard of Education at Letart Falls history of the Northwest Territory. lt S'Cience.
makes
it
very
.difficult
to
pass
the
citIn
other
business,
the
board
met
including divers.
for using the building as an adminisBy JIM FREEMAN
l:lementary School.
traiive
office for the district and a bus
izenship
portion
of
the
test
and
with
athletic
director
Howie
Caldwell
BurgY.
has
used
psychics
before.
Santlnal
Nawa
Staff
· Southern High School students
garage,
the.heating/ventilating system
throw~
more
burden
on
the
local
who
suggested
admission
be
charged
lbey
were
dispatched
in
the
search
Bradbury
.Elementary
was
saved
performed at the top, or near the top.
would
have
to physically ~parated
to attend school baseball and softhall for Willard "Pete" Burch last year in from the school ·closing chopping
of 27 school districts in southeastern schools," he said.
and not utilized for both the offices
· Foreign exchange students who g~es to d~fray the cost of the pro- · Ritchie County. Burch drowned on block Monday evening.
Ohio, depending · on grade level,
and bus garage," he explained. ·
took
thl:
test
did
not
take.
the
citizengrams.
.feb.·
8,
1996,
when
he
trie.
d
to
save
The
Meigs
Local
Board
.of
Edu·
according to Prin~ipal Gordon Ftsh·
"There would have to be fire
ship
.
portion
of
the
test.
This
is
The
board
set
admission
at
S
I
per
his'
daughter,
Aminda,
and
father,in·
voted
three-to-one
to
approve
.
·calion
Ct
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inst8lled and there is a definite
walls
reflected
on·
the
school's
overall
test
gal!le.
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law.
Paul
Mcti.
·
a proposal submitted by Superinten: Students must pass all ponions of
possibjlity
that a sprin!cler system
' ln addition Joyce 'Thoren and Jan"The psychic' told us where to dent Bill Buckley whi~h would keep
the test in order to receive a high· scores ,fisher said.
may have to be installed. At this time,
''Th~y know liule of A.m~ric1111 ice Curry met with the board and dis· look and the dogs found him there." students at the building. ·
·
sdtool diploma.
given
our financial resources, that.
history
and
nothing
of
Ohio
history,"
cussed
the
needs
o(
wheelchatr·conBurgy
said.
·
·
Earlier,
the
board
had
voted
to
· ~ The school's junior class was
would
be a hard sell to the public,~
he
said.
fined
student
the
district
\Viii
have.
Three
of
the
psychics
'live
in
the
close
the
school
to
students
and
use.
ranktd first in the region in all four
·.
ljnder
the plan :
Fisher said·tile district can not rest
_Southern Junior Hish School l'ti.n- area and have asked to remain anony- the building for maintei.ance, bus
JX,rtions of the test: writing, reading,
..
Bradbury
Elementary will
on its laurels. '
,
cipal Michaela Kucsma got perm~s- rnous untif the search is completed, maintenance and administrative pur·
math .and citizenship.
·
"We would still would like to do sian from the board to proceed w~th Burgy said.
poses. The students wen: to be divid- house Students lf'RIIeS four n five
• : "It's an ongoing f!~ing," Fisher
including spccill education students
better.
Until
you
get
to
100
'
p
ercent
a
hunter
cducatton
clan
for
JUniOr
Burgy
said
he
took
one
psychic
ed
among ~r schools.
explained. "We ~ tid~ ttme have done
from the Middleport .Eiementar}
"If
the
decision
is
to
use
Bradbury
you're never done. ~·s no worse high students. ·
.
·
out on the boat Sunday, concentratvery well, we think. . . ·
The I O..h~ur clas~ wtll be tau~ -i~g on whcle the Hocking River emp- all ·of the abo~e listed uses, the School attendance lreL The mlinie. • Fisher said one ongotng problem feelirig. thllll to hayc a stu~nt not
havepassedit.''
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hy
volunteerOhi~HunterEducattoa tics into thil Ohio River below architecturallbuildina·code considei- DUK:C shop ~ill be ~ed in the I 00.
ill ~II Meigs Coonty sc~J?ols is a hi1h ·
:
Of
m,
district's
69
seniors
sc!lcd·
Instructors
n s~udcnts who ptW the Blcnnerhusett Island. Volunteers. . lllions could become very expensive,• · plus-y..,--Oid rear se.;tion and· occu- ..
DIIIDber of students COtlllnJ from othpy three rooms.
,
·
uled to graduate, one student needs to ctlltrsc will be eligible to ~hue an · went as far as the Belleville Locks Buckley said.
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er dlstricia or stateS.
,
"In
order
to
meet
buildit)g
codes
c.da
.......
3
pus.
~
pass
:lhe
I'Cllding
portion,
nf
·
Contlallld
on
,...
3
and
Dam
.
. • ''We have~ many people move),n
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Graarn~t·::~~l ~:,e:~c:;

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Health care workers' union targets .
state .'waste' iJ'I subcontracting lab~r

lOW
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Buckeye Rural' rates
reduced 1.74 percent

Psychics join
search for
m1ss1ng man

:IP

. southe~n's

ninth .grade .students
·do .well in latest proficiency test

Bradbury school saved
from chopping blo.c k

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�Wedneeday, Februery 26, 1887

·commentary. ...------.. . .
· M·ega questions surround Mega Center funds

Pegt2

~in1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
114 112 2151• Fu: 112·2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGm
Publlat..

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CHARLENE HOIFUCH
G11 .... 118neger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

~xcerpts· ·from ·other

·o hio newspapers
By 'Ow Auoclatecl ~

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Ellccrpts of m:ent ediiOrials of slalewidc and national.inlerest from.Ohio·
newspapers:
.
Daylcla Daly News, Feb. 24
If Martin Luther King Jr.'s widow and children want a lest of the evi4Cncc and a new trial for his convicll:d assassin, James Earl Ray, fine. Do
it-out of respect for the Kina family's wishes.
This is being exceedingly senerilus to Mr. Ray.
After pleading gbilty and getting 99 .years, Mr..Ray recanted his confession, He said he was duped by a mys1erious man named "Raoul" who planted Mr. Ray's fingerprint-covered riOe at the scene. He also blamed Memphis police and the FBI.
Thus, the coun has I;Jcen asked for a new test of the weapon.
If the lest is good enough 10 prove that the bullet absolulely did not come
from the rifle ·- imagine the conlention over that - Mr. Ray has somethins 10 l11tch onto.
·
[f the lest shows the bullet did come from the riOe, Mr. Ray still has
· nowhere-to-be-found "Raoul," or, conceivably, some other name if he cares
to lldmit that he was lying &amp;bout this "Raoul. "

Aknlli Beilcoa iourul, Feb. 13
. John Gtenn sct another wonhy example. last week. He . gracefully
announced·that he would not seek a fifth term in the U.S. Senate.
·
Mind you. Gle11n would be a most. fonnidable candidate if he chose to
run in 1998. But he wisely will. not, because, as he put it, ''there is still no
cure for the common binhday."
The r:nior senator from Ohio would be 83 at the end of a fifth six-year
term. Disciplined and responsible, Glenn recognizes the time has come for
him to depan Capitol Hill. Too few of his colleagues show the same keen
judpnent.
Make no mistake, Glenn will be missed.

The Lt.a l.llew~, Fell. :Z:Z ·

Avanell l. Bass, 77, of Pomeroy, died Moaday. Feb. 24, 1997 at the Holz-

er Medical Ceater, Gallipolis.

By J-=k Arlcler'-.
andJMMoNir

finn-- COrdoba Corp.-· even though
another firm had scored much highWASHINGTON~ The contniCtor er in the competitive bidding process.
troubles at the Depanmcnt of Com- Cordoba was supposed tc usc the
merce's Minority Business Development Agency, which we detailed. in
December, tum out to be even ~ep­
ee than we first reponed.
This agency, which was launched
durins the Nixon administration as a
way of helping small, disadvantaged
firms set ofT the around, has become money to operale the so-called Mega
a haven of political patronage. Some Center, a one-stop shop in Los Angeagency money that's supposed to be les designed to help minority comhelping minbrity businesses has panics in evety_phase of their busifnsll:ad filled the pockets of a small ness, from finding Sl!Jfl-up financing
group of politically well-connected to locating expon opponunities.
individuals.
Several age~cy officials wllli,ed
To update you, last .fall we report- against giving ttle grant to Cordoba,
cd on the travel biibits of the MBDA's in pan because ·of the company's
director, Joan Parrott-Fonseca, who shaky financial history. And sure .
angered many agency officials by jet- e~ough, Cordoba bungled the cciilting ofT on overseas jaunts at a time ' tract badly, fol'j:irig Commerce ofliwhen more than half the headquaners cials to close down the Mega Center ·
staff wa5 being laid off.
a year after it w~ launched. Later, the
Later, we reponed that the agency depanment paid S141,000' to the
awarded a ·$3._2- million grant to a Internal Revenue Service to settle a
politically connected Los Angeles tax lien on Cordoba's behalf-- even

though an audit report alleged that elsewhere.
Cordoba still owed money to the govAn inlemal Commerce Depan- .
ernment.
. n.»nt review of the CFP's perforWhat 'lfe didn't repon then is that rftnce, obtained by. our associate
George Pia, the president of Corda- Kathryn Wallace, shows that O!'IY
ba, subcontracted a ponion of Mega five elieniS Obtained funding dunng
Center grant to a company called the 14-month period that was
Telacu (The East Los Angeles ~9in- .reviewed. O)lc of those ~nns, the
munity Union) Industries, which is documeniS show, was Mag1c Johnson
run by David Llzarrasa. Lizlrraga Enterprises, a development company
and his wife, Yvonne, are very'active run by basketball great_Earv!n "Magpolitically, having given $148,50010 ic" Jolms~n .. Villalo~ ~la111~s cred·
various poli.tical organizations in tt\e it for obuunmg $50 mdhon m cap•last five years. Telacu has given .an tal for John~on's company. . · .
additional $75,000 over the same
Other chents thai got consulting
time period.
.
help included Ramey and Salem, a
Once Telacu received its con- firm that did not even meet the
tract, Lizarraga turned around and agency's definition of· a minority
subcontracted the actual small-busi- business. Still, the company received
ne~ ·consulting work-- again with- 200 hours of service, the,maximum
out competi\ion ., to a finn .tall~ .' allowed, and was denied 'a reqtiest for
Capital Formation Panners. The firm even.
was headed by Alfred Vil_lalobos, a . The Commerce Depanment ·
renowned 'Republican fund-raiser review also shows that Villalobos
who's also t~e fonncr deputy mayor charged the covemmenl a $200 per
of Los Angeles. Villalobos' company hour consulting fee, "despite his .
was hired to find business capital for lack of educational .acumen." Viiminority finns that couldn't lind it lalobos also billed the government for
trips io Barbados, Hawaii and Mexico City .-- as well as a dozen trips 10
Washington.
·
·
Gavin Chen, formerly a senior
l)lanager of capital development programs
at the Commerce Depanment,
F·IG AT
said Alfred Villalobos was paid $:ZOO
20CLOCK
· per hour becau5e he claimed 10 have
entree to the llrgest capita! providen
in California.
.
. ,
"[ didn't see that the ·$200 was
warranted, and he didn't have the
access he claimed," Chen told us.
"The bulk of the co11tracl fees went'
to AI Villalobos instca4 of 10 the pro:ject."
·
Alfred Villalobos wasn't the only·
one in his family who benefited.
from the contract. His son, ·Eric, is:
listed in doc~nts as a $72,000 per
year employee of.the CFP project ...
even though ,his resume consists of
three years of military service,'no col- . ,
lege degree, 110d employment with
his father's company. ·
Reached. by telephone,, Eric Vii- ,
· · lalobos refused to answer questions;
about Telacu, Capital Formation Panners or any work he prefornied on the ;
project. Alfred .Villalo~ failed !G,
return our repel!led phone calls. .
Jack Anderson and Jan MoDer ..
L----------------:------_;_--~------;\ ------' are wrlten for United Feature
Synclkall!, Inc.

'

.IND.

· ··

aducmmaweshoutdn'thavQtocontron.t.What~houtd

Bradbury school.•

Today's weather forecast

AnnaL. Skeels

CQntract let for rock sUde cleanup

·-

·Southern's
·ninth•.~ontinucd
.
~.

Coroner's report:
Montgomery,
of guqshot wounds
daughter

·Hospital news

Middleport Court oews ·

11·---....;._-.
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The
Sentinel

Stocks

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ArilrTech ••,............................63,.

POSTMASTER: sCnd addreu correction&amp; tc
The Daily Sen1incl. IIi Court St .• Pomeroy,
""io 45769 . .

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Charming Sho~ ...................4/'a

Atihland 011 ...........................43'1.

Bob Ivane ............................ 13~
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Umfted.,,,.,,,,,,,.oH ooooooooooooonooo18\

on Q rttree, slx. or 12 mo~lh ~ia.. Credit "iill be
aiml clrrier.eoch week.

OV!Ii ...................................~ ... 37'!.

On~~.Malley ...............................39

PllbJilloer ..,..... the~
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cblflltl rmy t. i~

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-u.. ._..:...-._.. ..... ..... ..... ... ...... .. ... . :··
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·-Mftllo~
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16 ..........:...................... ................ $56.68
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Star Bank ..............................110~
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Vehicle, garage damaged in.wreck

MeigS announcements

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t'~Jtfowk~~s1n;; ~=~~~s~;! ::~~,:'::~f.

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Health .Call'.e
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:w11

=irtlldaY-=

•

UniiS of the Meip County Emer- ment and squid, motor-vehicle ~~:ci­
·gency Medical Service JeCordcd nine dent oo Nonh Second Avenue
caJb for wisunce Tueiday. UniiS Charles D. Jeffers tralllpOI1ICl ·
respoadi.nc included:
VMH by Central DiiJNIICb squad.
CENTilAL DISPATCH
POMDOY
7:35 a.m., stare Route 7, Middle6:26 p.m., vblunteer frrc dcpan
pon, Frank Jarvis, Holzer Medical mcnt and squad to U.S.- 33 at Enter
Cenll:r, Middlepon squad assisted;
prise. motor-vehicle accident, 1i
11:34 a.m., Mulberry Heights, Day, VMH, Jackie Large, VM
Pomeroy, Louise Hines, Velerans pending transfer to Grant Mcdi
Memorial Hospital;
Center via MedFiight helicopte
7:23 p.m., Carmel' Road, Racine, . ambulance. Cathy VanMeter an
Ray Deem; treated at the scene;
Leroy O'Brien, treated at the scene·
I 0: 16 p.m., Country Mobile Middlepon and Central Dispatc
Home Park, Dexter, Byron Watson, ·squads assisted .
VMH.
RUTLAND
CHESTER VFD
10:20 a.m.. Sanford"Davis Road
I :09 p.m., Chester, brush lire on Larry Barr, HMC.
Ken Browning propeny, no injuries SYRACUSE
reponed.
4:41 p.m., state Route 124, Ellaj
MIDDLEPORT
Williamson, VMH.
,1 i
6:14 p.m., volunleer fire depan-'

Mary Hughes Haggcny, 72, Middleport, died '['uesday, Feb. 25, 1997, at
Riverside H~pital in Columbus. ·
·
. She was born May 19, 1924,,in Newark, daughter of the late Roy and
W.VA.
.
I
Lola Davis Nesbit. She was a cook at former local restaurants and at the Guiding Hand Sc.boul in Cheshire. She was a member of the Cheshire Baptist
~tlll•ed from page:
Church.
·
•
•
She is survived by sons and daughters-in-law, Edward Lee and Georgia
-- Harrisonvi'lle Elementary will graders will be housed at Meigs;
Hughes of Cheshire and· John Wesley and Susan Hughes of Woodville; a house students kinderganen through Junior High School with sixth graders!
-daughter and son-in-law, Carol Lucille and Charles Moody of Cheshire: nine grade five. Special education students occupying-the newly renovated Cen-'
grandchi((lren; three great-grandchildren; a brother and sister-in-law, · from the Harrisonville area will con- tral Building segregated from seventh
William and Barbara Nesbit of Navarre; a sister and brother-in-law, Ruth linue to. anend Rolland Elementary and eighth graders.
and Max Wright of Newark; several nieces and nephews.
School.
. ·
Board members Scott Walton,
She was preceded in death by her first husband. Anhur Hughes, in 1968,
-- Middlepon Elementary . will Roger Abbott and John Hood sup· and by her second husband, James K. Haggerty, in 1979, and by one grand- consist of students kindergarten poned the proposed utilization plan
son.
'through grade three including special while hoard member Randy
Services will be held Friday, 1 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middle- education students from the Middle- Humphreys voted against the move.
Extended forecast
By Thfl Aesoclated Preas
. pon with the Rev. William L. Uber ofliciating.·Burial will be in Riverview pon attendance !lfCa.
In personnel matters, the board
Southeastern Ohio
~
Friday.. .Showers likely. Continued Cemetery in Middlcpon.
-- Pomeroy Elementary will house hired Jamie Deem as a tutor for a
· Tonight, light rain likc!y until wann. High in upper 60s. Contin- ,.,-Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday, 7-9 p.m.
students
kindergarten through grade health handicapped student .and hired
. midnight. Temperatures sleady, rising ued warm. High in the upper 60s.
.five
including
special education stu- Dale Harrison as girls'.varsity softball
cloudy with
into the mid 50s. Southwest winds 5 Saturday.. ,Mostly
dents
from
the
Pomeroy and Salis- coach .for the 1997 season.
to IS miles per hour. Chance of rain chance of showers. Low in' the mid
bury
allendancc
area. Pomeroy .Ele- · · . The board also appro~ed a list of
.60 percent. Thursday, cloudy. Chance 40s and high in the lower 60~. SunAnna L. Skeels, 65, of Coolville, died tuesday; Feb. 25, 1997 at Arcamentary also houses the countywide new or revised policies including the
;Of showers, breezy. High in the mid day, mostly cloqdy, low in upper 40s, dia Nursing Center, Cool~ille. .
·
·
preschool himdicapped and multi-~ keeping of board meeting minutes,
·
and .upper 60s. Chance of rain 50 per- high in upper 50s.
She was born in Belpre, a'daughter of the late Waller and Delphia Acre handicapped stullents.
. adding drug paraphernalia to a list of
cent.
Cornett. She was a hQmemaker, a member of Coolville Senior Citizens, and
Elementary
will
house
bannedilems -in drug-free workplace
--Rutland
· · 'attended ·the Fellowship Church of the Nazarene in Reedsville.
grades kindergarten through five and drug prevention policies, and a
Surviving are two sisters, Shirley Wolfe of Lancaster and R.uth ~eck of including special educa.tion students , pOlicy to insure that people calling
Canal Winchester, and three nephews. She was preceded in death by her hus- from the HamsonvJIIe ·and Salem the schools during regular business
',
'
band, Francis Skeels; one sisler, Carolyn Cornett, and a brother, Harry Cor- Center areas.
.
hours are answered by a person and
WEST CO!fUMBIA, W.Va. tel!lporary tie-in 10 supply electric t6 nett.
-Salem
Center
Elementary
w11)
not
by an answering machine or autoKanawha Stone Co., Nitro, was the~. Wcst Columbiua station. Power
Funeral services will be held at II a.m. Friday at the White Funeral Home, consist of g111des kinderganen mall:d voice mail.
awarded a $274,220 contrilct Friday was restored to all customers the Cqolvillc. Pastor Mark Dupler will officiale and burial will he in the Coolville
through five. Kindergartners that
Graduation was set for Sunday,
for the cleanup of a rock slide that morning after the slide.
cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home 2to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thurs- nonnally attend Rutland Elementary · May 18.
.
occurted feb. 16 along State Route
. Once debris is cleared from the day.
School
may
be
housed
at
Salem
Cen.
Board
members
then
met
in
a
twO:.
62. . ' I . · . .
.
scene, the existing facilitieS must he
hour-long executive session to .dis·, A spc)kesmim for Kailawha Stone rebllill. said AEP ·District Manager
rwom page • ter.-- Salisbury Elemenlaly will house•, . cuss
personnel matters before
said the ccimpaity will bring in heavy. M~. Kent.
· . · . ·
.
grades
kindergarten
through
five.
adjou!'"ing.
·Ohio
hunting
license.
.
·
ment
program;
equipinent this week to remove the
~e same holds true with cable
.All ·sixth, seventh and eighth
The cla5s is designed .to teach stu. --Approved Terry Congo's bid of
150-loa boulder. earth and debiis that · ~tevision, which was also affected by
dents
the
basic
offireann
and
hont'
$310.25
for
a
·guued
1979
lnternacovered ·the roadway on both lanes the slide.
Contiaued from (iage I
·
followinll' ~ $lidc.
·
, CableVision spokesman Lester ing safety, wildlife ¢onservation and tional bus;
:. Rejected bids on a step van and
He added tliat company tepresen- Erreu said ahout 7,000 customers management and hunting ethics and
responsibiliiy.
motor
indicating they were !6o low; emor. we're on the program with you. ers -especially ·doctors and physi-·
talives were on the scene Monday to were without cable serviae-911 the day
The b!&gt;ard also agreed to suppon
-· Noted the Southern Local'Aca- but the real means of saving money cal therapists -'- to work on the
evaluate the slide.
of the slide.
is to look at the subcontracting issue," state's schedule.
.J'he slide destroyed the main fiber Rita Slavin in her effort to conduc! a demic Banquet will be held April 17 .Proctor added.
The estimall:d date of completion
"Physical therapists are willing to
is Tuesday, Maich 18:
link to all of Jackson County, W.Va., Meigs County town meeting con- at the high school ;
The Department of Administrative go out to provide services on a sub--Met in executive session to dis· :The'ilide cove..S an area of road Meigs County and upper Mason cerning the condition of local Services.
which is responsible for contracting basis, where they would
cuss personnel matters. " ·
abOut 150 yards long, and it was Courrty. Service to most customers schools.
contract
negotiations,
had not seeO have more control over their schedIn other business, the board:
. Present wer~ Superintendent
respo~sible for · power outages to
was .restored that night. Errett said
the
union's
study
and
could
not com- ule," Ms. Hull said.
. 1_,300 Americ!!" ,;tectric, ~~Y(.er ~us-"' ;-li~~W :.l"Jl,, have_.. to .lie P:fll!lanent!y . · .-· Hired Scgt! Wickli~e as reserve ·James . L~)Orence,. Trea~;.ure Dennie ment, spokeswoman Gretchen Hull
State Budget Director Gregory
· .· boys basebatr.Coach and Alan Crisp Hill, school · board members Bob ·
tomers/'We('P?~r com~ ·liuilt,_~ . rer~~d a~ler the slide:~leanup.
said.
.
Browning'this
month described Gciv.
as reserve girls softbl\11 cdach;
· ·Collins, David 'Kucsma, Doug Little,
But
the
state
generally
finds
il
difGeorge
Voinovich's
$36.14 billion
.. Set graduation for Sunday, May C.T. Chapman and Many Morarity.
ficult
to
hire
some
health
care
workspending
plan
18 .at 8 p.ril.;
· ·
The next meeting :.will be held at
Bol~
-- Recommended advenising for Portland Elementary School on
~ied
one new school bus with money from March 24, 7:30 p.m.
A vehicle and a garage it struck Jeffers to Veterans Memorial Hospi· the stale tninsponation reimburseThe report read. "live-in boyfriend
An autopsy repon received Monwere heavily damaged in an accident · tal where he was treall:d and released. ·
day from the Oallia County Sheriff's pull«! a knife on her and. pushed a
Tuesday on North Second Street in
He was cited for failure to control.
Department stated that Roger Mont- knife to her stomach and brandished
Middlepon.
gomery and his 22-month-old daugh' a riOe and stated he was going to kill CHOICE to meet
Rev. Peter J. Trembley, 992-4152.
Middlepon police reported that
1
ter, Tiffany,_died of gunshot w.ounds her and her kids." .
CHOICE home educators will
Charles D. Jeffers, 49,.of Pomeroy
in last 'Week's fatal incident in Merlost control of his 1994 Chevy van as
lhe Gallia County Common Pleas · hold a meeting Tuesday. 10 a.m. at Oflice.movlng
cerville.
The · Syracuse-Racine 'Regional · he traveled north on Nonh Second.
Court Juvenile Division· designated the Pomeroy Library conference.
A release issued Monday after- Sh~ts as the legal custodian of the room:Takc sack lunch, coffee will be Sewer District Board will move its The· van went off the left side of the
noon by the sheriff's depanment mi"or child, Tiffany, on Feh. 18.
served. For more infonnation, contact · offices to the Racine municipal build· roadway and ran into the side o,f a
ing on March L
·
·
reads: ''Coroner's report was
Tammy Jones. 992,6743,
garage owned by Helen Boyd. The
received: both victims died of gun.Montgomery appeared to answer
accident occurred at 6: 10 p.m.
· Dance to be held
shot. Investigation is still ongoing." the. domestic violence charge last Retreat pl1111ned
It .was reponed that Jeffers ·told
A round and square dance will be police he blacked out. . ·
. A case investigalor·Iater indicated Thursday in GaUipOiis Municipal
"Indoor Camp Meeting '97" will
the gunshot wound sustained by Court, which sci a recognizance bond he held March 3-8 at 7 p.m. •nd held at the Tuppers Plains VFW
· A unit of the Meigs County EmerMontgomery, 49, wlls self-inOicted. of $1 ,000. A temporary restraining March 9 at 6 p.m. at·the Middlepon building Saturday, 8 to I I p.m. "Out . gency Medical Service transponed
· The Guyan Township · Volunteer or~~r against Montgomery was also Nazarene Church. Song evangelists; of the Blue" will provide the music,
. Fire Department was dispatched · to iss~Fd· .
Jan and Cathy, and Jim Davis. Evan- and Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
. the residence at 3~ Johns Creek
gelist Bishop Clyde Van Valin, retired
Following an investigation at· the Bishop of the Free Methodist Church. Youth Leagile to meet
Veterans Memorial
'
Road, Crown City, at I :52 p.m. last
Rutland Youth League will have a
Tnesday
Thursday only to find the home ful- scene by the sheriff's department, the Public invited to services sponsored
Admil!ed: Ella Williams, Racine.
ly engulfed In flaines.
. Gallia County coroner's office, and by the Meigs Area Holiness Associ- meeting on Sunday at 4 ·p.m.' at the ·
. Discharged: Earl Lockett, MidFire units located two deceased State Fire Marshal Bob Lawless, the ation. For more infonnation contact Rutland firehouse.
per~pns inside the residence - a bodies were sent to Colum.bus for
dlepon.
small child and a male ..
forensic exam.ination.
The mother of the child, Tressia
The cause of fire has yet to he
Sheets, 32, had filed a domestic vioForfeiting honds .on charges of
Four were fined and seven others
lence repon against Montgomery detellmin~d. pending final rulings by forfeited bonds in 'the coun of Mid- speeding were Marilyn J. ,Lewis,
with the sheriff's department on Feb. Lawless. Deputies were uriablc to dleport Mayor Dewey Hortori Tues- Gallipolis, $47; 11:rry Michael Henindioate whether the fire was inten- day night.
16.
ry, II, Mason, W. Va., $43; Lori Jo
tionally set or caused l)y a chain of
Fined were Michelle Price. Rut- Raffel!, Gallipolis, 549; Scott A.
events that took place at the lime. The land, $10 · and coots. expired tags; 1\'enhower, Dexter, $51 ; Stephanie A.
propeny was ~cscribed as a complete DonaldJ. Steinmetz, .Pomeroy, $100 Sayre, New Haven, W.Va., . $50;
Daily
loss.
and costs, open container; Roger D. Catheri.nc L: Han, Mason, W.Va.,
IIJSPS li:J-960)
.,
McPherson. Pomeroy, $25 and costs, $49 .
Publiahcd every afternoon. Mondny WouJh
Penny B. Dewhurst,'Rutland, forfictitious tags; Roben L. Dowell,
Pri,day. Ill Court Sl., Pomc.roy, Ohio, by tbe
feited
a $60 bond on a charge of runCheshire, $200 and costs. driving
Ohio Valley Publlahina Coll1*ly1Qa~nett Co.,
ning
a
~ed light.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. S&lt;eond
·
"'me'POwer .......................41\ under FRA suspension.
Aln
clus pD4t1p paid at. Pomeroy. Ohio. "
. .
,&amp; hA
'
75'
~

Today ln hisfory ·

•

'''

Mary Hughe~ H.aggerty

·c·. l•lnto· n _flo·at.-$·· -n· en· 1•8, I'S dl•.f.' ty -W· ·ate·r··

Better lc:,-ans from bank than car dealer

Born on Feb. 26, 1919 in Lawrence County, she was the dauaJuer of the
late Frank ll11,d Barbara Canter Garey. She was a homemaker and aiiiCmber
· of the Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church, Middlepon.
She is survived by several nieces and nephews.
Preceding her in death in addition to her parents were her h11sband, Pete
I;Jass; her foster mother, Edith McKenzie, and a foster brother, Thurston
SlOne, Sr.
Graveside services will be held at II a.m. on Thursday at the Howell Hill
. Cemetery. The Rev. Ralph A. Butcher will officiate. Arrangements are being
handled by Fisher Funeral Home, Middlepon.

• IColul"(lbus lao• ·I

""",....,.,cam

. Jll!'n who have already served thl:iqJriaon time?
.·d·
we: Americaisracing
do with danp:ro~~s
J,.awrence Sin~ton admitted to stabbing a prostitute to death this week .
in Florida.1be 69-ycar-old predator was released from pri~n after a mere ·
eisht y'eara for raping a teen-~~Ser, culling ofT her arms and leaving her as By Joseph Perkins
including one occasion, according to activities conducted on the •White Avenue. Come on!"
dciod by the 'side of the road.
_
The White Himse is in denial. Time, when he traipsed around with House grounds (which would ~a
Ickes left out Harry. Truman.~
Anolher cue has brought this issue to national attention: Leroy Hendricks, livery fresh~ revelation of unseemly, iwo six-packs of beer and the chair- violation of the law)? Did ccnain Mayhe because he recognizes that
the pedophile who wams·that he may strike again, now that he ~as com- if not downright illegal, campaign man of a Chinese beer company in · While House officials cover-up their 'Truman ·was a stand-up president.
pie~ liis·IO-year tenn in a Kansas prison. The U.S. Supreme Coun is confund raisi~g by high-ranking Clinton
knowledge .of illegal fund raising Instead of defending ·the scil-out .or.
sidering whether·statc dfficials can keep him incarcerated to protect the pub- administration officials -- up to and .
(which would amount to an obstruc- the White House. for campaign dona-:
lic.
··
including both the president and vice ,
lion of justice)? Were Clinton adf1'!in- tions, Truman would have owned up;
While there are no easy answers to America's violent crime problem,.there. president -- is met with one anful tow.
istration ·policy decisions inOucnced that the buck slOpped with him.
is no great dilemma. Americans simply must find ways to ke~p violent crim- dodge after an.other.
.
. NO LAWS WERE BROKEN by foreign donations? ,
.
.1' M · FOR
CAMPAIGN,
inals locked up longer. For one thing.judges,juries and parole boards should
Here is a catalog of the dodges for (BUT WE PROMISE NOT.TO DO
EVERYONE ELSE HAS DONE FINANCE RI;FORM (i!UT I'M .
exercise their (X!Wers to ensure that m.ore killers spend 'their remaining days those of you keeping score at home: ' IT AGAIN). The president nptes that IT (SO WHY SHOULDN'T WE?). GOING TO CONtiNUE BUCKI DIDN'T KNOW ANYTHING , "less than 2 percent" of the donations President Clinton . hain 't' said this RAKING AS USUAL). In ()is State .
behind bars.
(BUT I'M GOING TO APOLO- raised by theDNCwasretumed.~nd publicly, but his former deputy chief of lhe Union message earlier this .
Warma 'l'rtllune Chroaide,.Fell. 19
GIZE ANYWAY). This has become while some of it was returned of staff, Harold Ickes, has. "I have no nionth, President ~linton UIJed the ,
. Huing should be banned from the military' once and fOr- all.
Clinton's latest defense, wl)ich he because it came from· questionable · apologies for lhe amount of money Republican-controlled Congress to ~
Recent exposure ·of brutal acts against female cadets at The Citadel, . tried out in New York last week at a sources (like impoverished Buddhist w.e raised," he told USA Today. "I passtheMcCain-Feingoldcampaign
charges of npe from Army trainees and the revelation of Marines pinning fund;raiser for the Democratic Sen- monks, who cut :the Democrats give no apologies for how il' Was finance reform bill, which, among ,. .
$5,000 checks, or middle-class raised."
paaachllll: winss on graduates' bare chests show the brutaliiy is aimed at hoth ate Campaign Committee. •
'
other things, would ban unregulated :.
"For reasons I cannot explain," Indonesian landscapers, . who hapIckes, who came up with the idea "soft money" donations.
women and men, and exists throughout our armed forces. :
.Acts like thll breed hate, 'fear and resentment, not discipline and loyal- said the president,. "or defend, our pened to hav~ an extra several hun- of holding Wltite House coffee
. But the president's sincerity is cast ··
·ty -qualities military training is supposed to instill.
,
pany did not check all the contribo- dred ihousand dollars -to proffer to the . klatches for potential donors (which in doubt by his appearance at the ,; •
The leaders in our armed forces must take a strong stand and.then back tions.' ' He conceded that, "It was pany of Clinton). much of it was included, among others, a Chinese. DSCC dinner, which raised $1.2 mil- ; '
it up by punishins those who continue to engage in hazing. sexual miscon- wrong not to check those C'ontribu' 'returned. the president says, "because anns dealer and a COJivicted drug traf- lion, a third of which came in the , ·
lions'," adding that "it was ev~ry- they raised questions, even though Iicker), insists that Clinton was no form of the very soft money conlri~ ' I
dut:l and other acts of horror.
..
.
body:s responsibility, from me down,' they- were clearly lawful." .
more ,\lbsessed with building a .fC· butions thai Clinton claims he wants
who didn't know ahout it and should
. The president's implic·ation is that election war· chest than previ9,us · to ban.
. •1
have."
all the controverSy about the Democ- presidents.
.
'
Even non-Rcpublicans .werc call- "·
But the W)llte House knew more rats: fund raising is much ado about
"Nixon wasn't obsessed With the ing Clinton a hypocrite. "To con! inBy The Auoclatecl PceQ
about these suspicious contributions; a paltry million dollars or so (out of next election?" asked Ickes, san!lis· ue raising m(!ncy harid over.fist at a ' :
Today is :Wednes4By. ·Feb. 26th. the 57th day of 1997. There are 308 days than the president lets on. Indeed, the more than $40 million that was
tically. "Ronald Reagan wasn't?No, time when his fund-raising practices · :
left in the year.
.
Feb. 24 issue of Time magazine raised dpring the past election). But no, no, they didn't give a. thought from the last campaign are under,. '
· Today's Highlicht in HisiOry:
reports that Clinton was warned by the i~sue is not the amount of contri- about the next election. George scrutiny is almost beyond descrip- · ,
On Feb. 26th, 1919, Congress established Grand Canyon National Park hi~ own Na)ional Security Council
butions that were raised, legally or Bush? Lyndon Johnson? I bet Lyndon tion," said Ellen Miller of Public
in Arizona. ·
that one prominent Democratic illegally. It's whether high-ranki.ng Johnson didn't even think 'about. !lie Campaign.
On this date:
donor, Johnny Chung, was a "hus- officials at t~e White House and · next election.
_But .;:linton really ~ocsn't care •
{p 1802, French literary giant Victor l:iugo was born in Besancon.
tier."
DNC knowingly violated the law in
"JimiT)y
Caner
never
gav~ it a what Mill~r or anyone else thinks of
ln 1815; Napoleon Bonapanc escaped from the Island of Elba to begin
But the president apparently was soli~iting campaign donations.
thought. Dwight Eisenhower, he went ~is past or present fuad-ralsing prac- :·
his .econd conquest of France.
swayed more by Chung's $366,000 in
Did they solicit illegal donations to sleep up there in the Li~coln' bed- ,t1ces. No matter the charge, he's got : :
In 1846. frontiersman-turned-showman William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody _contributions 10 the 'Democratic from foreign nalionals (or from
· '
'
born in $c~t County, Iowa.
·
.
· . Nalional Committee than advice froll'\ American c'itizcns or legal immi- room arid never mel a contributor'! ln a ready dodge. · .
fact,
if
somebOdy
gave
him
a
contriJoseph
Perldns
Is
a
colalllJIIIt
·,
~
·. In 1870, New York City's first Jln.eumaiic-powered subway line was his NSC. So Chung was allowed to grants fronting for deep-pocket forbution.
hc.tooktheJll
out
and
beat
the
for
tile
S1111-Diego
Vnioa•Tribtine
'
l
· pjieiiCCI ta the.public.
·
·
·
; · make 49 visits to the White House, eign nationals)'/ Were fund -raising
s--- out of the111· on Pennsylvania ancltheauthoro("RIIbt~Me" · :
.
· '. · [n 1929, President Coolidge signed a measure establishing Grand Teton
(Union-Tribune Pablllblng).
.l
Nat;o,.al P~. ·
.
.
. ·
·
· Ill, 1940, the U:S. Air Defense Command was created. ·
1
';
.
- In 1951, the 22nd'Amcndmcntto the Cc;&gt;nstitution was ratified, limiting
a tiresident 10 lyio lernis of office.
I
[n 19,1, J'rimc Minisler Winston Churchill announced thai Britain had
!
ljevel~ts own atomic bomb.
.
.
DEAR BRUCE: We were
If I didn't expect the check to too~for_yOIJiftheydon'tgetitor j
By Bnice Williams
'[n 1979, a local solar eclipse cast.a moving shadow 175 miles )"ide from
·' 'f
DEAR BRUCE: My wife and I referred to you py our local television arrive on time, I would have walked post tt on lime.
. Oreson 10 Npnh Dak~ be~on; movi!'l! into Canada.
.
Channel
8.
My
husband
and
station,
it
over
to
the
store.
I
hove
an
excelIf
you
will
send
me
more
specifics
'·I
just bought a car and borrowed
In 1986, Pulitzer Pti:r.e-wmnmg poet and author Roben Penn Wam:n was $17,0,00 from the car dealer to I •are involved in a dispute with a lent credit rating, and ldon't want to about your situation, I will be very .!
·named lhe tim poet ~te of the United Slales j!y Librarian of Co~gress finiiiiCC it. I W~
see it destroyed.
· happy to bring it 10 thebank's atten- ·
. WOiondering
W.
if we'd he finance company.
OMiel J. Boonlin.
.
.
·
We purchased furniture on a six- . [ have filed complaints with the lion and to my reade~' and listeners' 1
belll:r ofT takln~ money out of my
ln 199J,Inilql President Sad!fkm Hussein announced on Baghdad Radio SIP plan and paying back the loari. - . month no-interest plan. The 'bill was Better Business Burea,li and Con- attention_. It's this kilid of abuse by : ~­
tl*'hi iiad ~his forces to witl)draw from Kuwait. . ·
.
due by May I or interest would·kick sumer Affairs. -- S. &amp;: R.K., Lutz. Fla. the ·cred1t-grantmg community that , ·
-G.B.
·Ia 1993. ai!Oinllexploded in the 1arase of New York's Worlljl'tade CenDEARS. &amp;: R.K.: You have out- showshowmuchwenccdMcHu'gh's . ;
DEAR O.ll.: The unknown factors in. I mailed the check April 27, but
t«. killlni llix people and injuring more lhitn I,000 others.
\ ~
here are I) what inlercst are you pay- they didn't post it until May 2, so I lined, once again, the. necessity for a bill or some similar legislation.
. 1M yan 110: ~ Tower Commission, which probed the Iran-Contra ing on the car loan, and 2) how much t:eeeived a finance chl!l!e.
_bill such as the one that New .York
lnteresled in buying or selling a ~
Atr.ir iPutd ill tePOn;. wlilch rebuked Presid~nt Rcl!gan fot failing to con- is the SIP plan ceneratin1?
[ spoke to several people both at Congressman John McHugh intro- ~?Let Bruce Williams' "House ', ~
the
furniture store and the bank, and duced in the Jast session ofConzress Sman" be your suide. Price: $14.95, ~
11'01 his tiad-' sec;urily •!Iff· ·
If your credit allows, you would
five yan 110: 1be U.S. Supreme Coun ruled unanimously that scxu- probably be far better off borrowing they'said that while it might be true and-hopefully will reintroduce under plus shipping aod handling. Call: ·'
~)'
11 ~ illlldenll may J!UC 10 collec:t IIIOliCIIry damages from their the money from your bank, rather thai I mailed it on the 27th of April, HR 1963.
.
(800) 994-6733.
.
·
idiOOJI &amp;!Ill ldlool ~JCials. The S11premc Court of Ireland cleared the way · than from the dealer. Dealerships OIQ- it's not paid until they post it. The
The purpose of McHugh's pro(Send your questions to: Sman
far a 14-r•--old airl to leave t,he cOuntry fot liD allortion. .
IOmarily only finance people who store manage~ agrees that it's ridicu· posed legislition is to ensure that If Money, P.O. .Box S03, Elfers, FL _ !
a.·,_ litO= PN #Mit Ointon moved 10 step up ecOIIOIIIic 1111Ctio!l5 could,
'lous to make me pay the inlerest, but a letter is,postrnarked on time, thCJi 3468~. E-mail to: bethlilgte.net. . ·:
not otherwise JCI credit. .
But · the problem must be I still gct _calls from the finance com- creditors have to accept it as ·being Questions of Jenera! interest will be , :
011 OM ~'!ft FJt 10 CUba '1 cloWnlnt of IWo unarmed airpianel btlongiltt 10 . . Qlllin-Amrrican exile poup Brotllen to thC Rescue.
.
paid on time. It's absurd.that creditm · answered in futllrc colu!"ns. Owins . l
IJIPI~ by havins all the dab that pany. The store says they arc work,\ckll' Mao!!~ it 78. Actor Tony R•nd•ll it 77• . [ have detcribed in pii!CC. The answer ing on it, but nothins seems to hap- cantakctlleposiiiOnthatc~thouJ,h _ to~ volume of m&amp;~ldlersonal l -~
pen.
you mail your pay'b!el]t on time, It's rcplteS cannot~ provided.)
then lhou(jl be obvi.ous.
1-)

Avaneiii.Bass

MICH.

Joseph Perkins

I

•

AJ:cuWeathe... forecast

By Jack Anderson
and ·
'Jan Moller

.!lr

'I

Meigs Ef\IIS logs 9 calls

Tbul'lllay, Feb. 27

~~1!1!11!!!!!!!!!~~----..-..--....--

The Daily Sentinel

.

OH IO Weather

·. W~y, FebrUMy 28, ~-

The Dally s.ntlnel • ,... 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,.. ........
Frldlly, Feb; 28

Worthlngto11.......................... 20'

-·-·-are

To Oltl'r ,.....1:

Stocll report1
tiM 10:30
a~=- provldld by Aclvnl
or
II.

)

'

-.

,

.

'
•

•

0

d

�February 26, 1987

f

Sports

.

Basketball
55

Atllntlc Dlwlsion
Ium
.II' L l&lt;l.
M1nm1 .....
.42 I J .764
New York ..
40 16 .114
Orlando ......
.28 2.'1 . ~28
Washmgton . ..... 2."\ 30 .455
New Jersey
17
Ph1ladelphm ...... 14

18
40

]09
l.i9

Bo!ton........ ....... . II

43

204

!ill

48

6
14

.89J
.141

18

667

Ctw l~&gt;tre

22

614

CLEVELAND ....... JO 24

556
.463
463
364

... J!'i

..

.lndltma ................ 2.~ · 29

Milwaukee ......... ~~ :t 29
Toron~o .... .... ...... N
35

-·-

·~

llh
15
18\lr

23~

(OT)

23 '1.
29

61 -

Tol. Rocen 71, Sylvani p Southview
Tol St Francis 69, Tot Scott 45
To\ Waite 69, Tol. Bowsher 67
Tol. Whitmer 78, Tol. Libbey 74
Wesccrvillc S. 75, Delaware 38

WESTERN CONFERENCE
lam

Utah ..... . . ....
Houst on .. ..

.II' L

... .39
... 37

15
19

Minnesota ............ 27 27

l&gt;allas .............. I !I 34
Denver ...... . .. 17, 40
SanAnuulio..... Ll 41

VarK:ouvcr ............. II

1!&lt;1.
.122
.661

!ill

.SOO

12

19'h
2) 1/,
26

190

30

Pacific Diwl-..
Seanle ... . ...... .39 I~ 722
L.A. Lak.m .......... .38 17 .691
Port\aod ..... ....... 29
LA. Clippers ... . 2)

27
29.

Divl.don II
Akron St.V-St.M 6S , Akr~.Jn Hoban

J

.358
.298.
.241

47

518
442

Sacrn!T'Iento ........... 24 31 .436
Golden State ......... 20 33 .371
PboeOilt .
., ... 20 36
351

II

Bay Village Bay 49, Brooksuk 44
Bellevue 54, Norwdlk 39 ·
Bucyrus 64, Willard 55
, · Cambridge 49, Steubenv11le 37
CDJey 64, Knns.a.o: Lnkottl 52
Clyde 65, Port Clin1oo 62
&amp;.ly. Carroll 76, BcllefonuUnc 35
Frurv,ew 63, Medma Buckeye~
Fremonr St. Joseph 76, Elmwood 61
Hamihon BOOm 68, Wilnungton 40
Hubbard .50. You. Olaney 38
Jeffenon Area 85, Geneva 64
t,ibeny Center 45, Archbold 42
Louisville 26. W. Brunch 24 (OT)
'Medma H•ghland 61, Kenston 66
. Minerva 71, Salem 68 (Q'O
Napolron 83; Oak Hnrtw 62
Richfield Revere~. Tnllmndge 40
Shelby 43, Folitoria 37
Springboro 74, Day. Chammade-Juli·
enne 41
St Mary's Memorial6l'Paulding 50
lipp Oty 63. Greenon 56
Wanen Howland 60, N1let McKmley
48
Whirehouse Wayne 62. Bryan 53
' Wrptersville Indian Cm:k 79, MeurJ.
owbrook 65

l 'h
II
15

15 ~
1 8~

20

Tuesday's scores
New Jersey 91, Sa.;:rwncnlo 90
WuhingiOrl 108, lndiana87
Seanlc 72, CL.EVELAND 66
tlouston 100, l A L.akers 96 .
Utnh IIO, NcwYork99
Dallas 86, ChuriDtte 84
Toronto 124, Denver 122 (OT)
L.A. Clippers 98, Ptul!ldelphiu 93

Toni(lht's games
Sncramcnto at 80510n. 1 p.m.
Miami 111 Orlando, 1.30 p.m.
Golden State at Detroit, 7·30 p m
Seanlt: at Indiana, 8 p.m
AtiMta at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m
Minnesota a1 San Antomo, 8:JO p.m.
Philadelphia at Phoem~t , 9 p m
New York 111 Ponland, 10 p m
L.A. Clippers at Vanwuvcr, 10.30
p.m.
J.

.I

Cle. EU$1 57, Mayfield 42
Cuyahoga Falla 49, Akron Kenmore

kent Rooseveh :tt Easi:lake N. 52
Lakewood 611, N. R1dgev•lle 45
LimaSr 61 . Defiance41
Manllield Sr. 6S, A~h land 45
Nusillon Jackson 45. You. Board·
man 2.Ci
'
N, Canlon Hoover 64, Wooster .SS
Nordonia 59, Solon 52
Pi~kerinaton 38, MCIUllt Vernon 47
Spnng. North 53, Beavcn;rcck 45
Spnna. South 76, Sidney 67
StrongsviUe 77, Mtdview 69
Tiffin Columbian 74, Sandusky 11

. Ctnlral DiwlsiOn

ChictlJO .............. 49
Detroit ........ .. J. ••• •40
Arlnnta .
. .... .36

Cm. Oat Hills 71, C.n. Moeller 50
Cin . Winron Woods :'il , Cin. St

Xav~48

EASTERN CONFERENCE

,
Db·illon Ill
.
• Albany Alexander 66, We&amp;tfnll47
Ashland Crestview 64, New London
49
Aurora 70, United Locu.l41
Belpre 92. N. Adams 61
Caldwel\62. W. Muakingum 50
Cwnpbe\164, Spring. l..oail 46
Col. Acodemy41, BloomCnrroll37
Coldwlller ~8 . Kenron ·31
Creston Norwnyne 40, Wayncdale 35
Ornndv1cw 56, Canal Winchester 39
MadiSon Plains 84, Jonathan Alder 58
Manon Elgin SS, Frednlcktown :lj
Mdt~mom Evergreen 74, Genoa S9
Middl efield Cardinal 6:\, Painesville
Hwvoy J2
Milnn Eduon 72, Collins Western Re·

· Thursday's games
L.A. Laken at Wuhmgton, 7.30 p.m
Chicago at CLEVELAND, 7·30 p m

Minnesota at Dallu, 8:30 p m
Chnrlone nt Houscon, 8:30p.m
at Utah. 9 p.m.

1'oro~to

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Regular-season play
Eut

serve 58

lllinoii!i 87, Penn St. 65
Pittsburgh 77, Connedicut74
St. Josept(s 78, Massachusetts 6J

.

MiliOOry Lake 6J, Oregon Smtch 45
Newcomerstown 59. iuscW'awas Val.

~4

South
Kemu~ky' 74. Tennessee 64
McNeese St. 103; Southern U. 95
V~rginin 58, Virginia Tech 57
Wnke PDreal71 , Georgia Tech SS

"

56

J7

Midwest

Cmcinnat1 63, Southern Miu. 49
Mnrquetre 56, St. Louis !14 '
Notre Dame 69, Miami 60
Texu Tech 84, M1ssouri 73

46

So)lthwest
Te~ 68, TeAas A&amp;M S7

5J

N Robmson Crawford 47, Seneca E.
Nonhridge 68. A.manda-Ciearcreek
Penuuula Woodridge 57. Mapleton
Sherwood Fairview 87, Delta 5J
Sparta Hishlalid 61, Northmor 4-f
Sullivan 81ncl\ River 69, Brooklyn ~.S
ur.~r S1111dusky ~S. Clear Fork 53
V enna Mnthews 70, Miaeral R1dge

Tournaments

Ohio Valley Conterente
·,

Flf'lt ........

AuStin Peay I06, Morehcud St. 83
Middle Tenn. H9, SE Missouri 74
Murray St. 76, Tennessee St 63
Tennessee Tech 83, E lllinQis 81

Ohio men's
college scores
Tournaments
North Cout C.nlerenn
Fil'll round
Allegheny 8l Case Reserve 17

'Ohio women's
college scores
Tournaments
All•ntk 10 Conrerence
Fir1t round
Fordham 68, Dayton 65
Mki.Ohlo Cohtel't!nce

.

Flm....,..

,

Findlay 87, Malone Sl
Mount Vernon Nauuene 55, Urbana
Shawncc St . 78, Tiffin $9
Wallh 75, Otuo Dommlcnn 59

M1 Dlanc!)ard Riverdale 48, Hurflin
Nonhero 43 .
N. Balhmore 12, Arlm~n 49
New Reigel 57, Fostona St Wende liD
56(0Tl
.
Norwalk S1. Paul 70, Sandusky St.
Mary's 40 .
Orange Chr 42, open Door 37
Pandora-Gilboa 61, Miller City 59
Plymouth 65, Muufield St. Peter's 47
Russia76, DeGraff Riverside 5~
Southington SO, Bloomfield 42
Spencerv1Ue 67, Limn Temple Chr
62
Tiffin Calvert 74, Beusville 12
Tol. Emmanuel Bapl 72. Tol.
Maumee Val. 66
Vnn·Buren 61, Vnnlue 53
Windham 75. Ashtabula St. John 46

North c..t Confen:Mf

flm.Caae ReJCrYe 66, Wooster 47
Ke9JOD 7~ . Oberlin $1
'
Ohio Wesleyan 70, Alleaheny 49

MTD .
LAWN
MOWERS

~ittl:!nbera68. Earlhwn 43

' , , Of* COnftrtna·quarte,rfln...
,

9aldwin-Walk~87,

Ouerbcln !'i9

.. ·' Coj&gt;ltol 79. John Carroll 61
.' • Moun I Union 68. Oblo Northern 56
Muakingum 47, HeidelberJ: 4!1

Qhio H.~. boys' scores
Touraaments
'
Dl.tslonl"Akron E. 6l. Alton Ellet .S~

'

18". 20" &amp; 22"

3Y,. 4 hp

.......

.,.... &amp; • .,.....
I

d ~I 1\

t '

f JOI ',

h 11 'll 1111111 '1 ~ .r , t ', ()ll

PICKENS
HARDWARE

Turn 'YOUI'Idf In today...
1ft liM a ctleckhii

aaxKI1tyour
IIJ141orL
dn

EASTERN CONFERENCE

MASON, W. VA.
773·5583
'

.II' L I I1!11.
PhiladeJphiD .... 35 17 gi 79
Flonda .............. 28 19 15 71
NewJersey .......291812 10
N.Y Rllngers 28 26 9 65
Tnmp;l Bay .. .. 24 29 7 .5:'i
Wo.shlng10n ........ 2.130 7 .53
N.Y. blandcn .... 2030 10 50

GI llA
198 152
112 145

1.56 139

204 176
168 185
I~

171

162 177

Northeast Dlvlslon
Buffalo .
.32 19.10 74 180 J5l
Piusbur&amp;h .
31 24 S 61 216 195
Montreal ........... 23 29 II 57 195 222
Hlltlford ......... 24 28 8

S6 112 190

Otlawa
..... 20 27 13
Bosron .............. 2033 8

53 168 175
48 17J 217

-·-

WESTI'!RN CONFERENCE
~lral

lam

.II' 1.
Dl•llus ............. 37 22
Detroit ..
..29 19
Sr Loois .... 28 28
Phoeni.o; ............. '1.7 30
Chicaso
2.&lt;1i 29
Toronto .... 23 36
. .• 38 I~
2927
Co\gory ........... 25JO
Vancouver ......... 273.2
Anaham ............ 2.Ci JO
Los An11:elea .... 22 31
San lose ...... 21 33
ColorOOo

Edmomon .....

Divilkln

I 1!11. GI llA

4 78 190 153
12 70~ ~91 143
8
4
8
2

64 190 196

58 174 · 189
58 164 161
48 180 216

•Paelfle Division
8 84 207 144
6 64 193 184
7 l7 167 \8\
2 56 1515 211
6 56 176 184
8 ~2 166 207
7 49 157 204

Tuesd•y's scores
Tampa Day 3, St Lou1s 2
S;:.n Jose 2, Aoridn 2 (tte)
Dallas \, Chicago 0 "
Montreal 4, Vancouver 2
Lo! An$eles 3, C.olomdo I

Tonight's games

Tim Duncan played his final college home game in front of his family,lhe governor of his native Virgin
Islands and thousands of adoring
Wake Forest fans.
To. make the night his jersey was
retired even more special was. the
fact thai Duncan's Demon Deacon 1
teammates helped him shoulder the
offensive load in a 71 -55 victory
' .
over Georgia Tech.
The 6-foot-10 senior had 10
points, 12 rebounds a~d nine assists
as the second-ranked Demon Deacons moved within one-half game of
first-place Duke in the Atlantic Coasl
Conference standings.
After lhe game, his No. 21 jersey
was raised to the rafters, and Duncan
addressed .the crowd one last lime,
with his father, William, two sisters
and coach Dave Odom by his side.
" This is probably the firsllime in
my life that I'm uncomfonable on
lhe coun," said Duncan, an allAmerica last season who decided to
return to Wake Foresl for his senior
season. " This has been a lot of fun
· for me. I don't know what to say."
Duncan got his 24th double-dou-

I

ble this season and lhe 8 I st in I ~3
career games, bul four teammales
scored in double ·figures and several were factors in the deciding 18-4
run that gave Wake Forest a 63-43
lead with 4 1/2 minutes 10 play.
"In the last four, five, si~ minules
lhat was the best ball movemenl we
had had in the . last two .or three
weeks ," Odom said. "I thought we
passed the ball with a purpose, very
unselfishly. Everybody gola piece of
it.
'
" I think that again, like Saturday
in Virginia, il was a small step for us,
but a very important one (offensively)."
Tony Jtutland led the Demon
Deacons (22-4, II -4) ll'ith 16 poinls,
including four in the big run during
which Ricky Peral had two threepointers.
"We tri'ed to double-learn (Duncan) a bit, but he made some nice
skip passes and guys like Peral and
Jerry Braswell hit some big shols,"
Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins
said of the run. "That's what they're
· going lo have lo do if they want to
win ilall."
Matt Harpring had 20 points and

II rebounds for Georgia Tech (9-16; '
3-12). which lost its fifth straight.'
game and fell to 0-10 against ranked'
teams one season afler winning the
ACC regular-season title.
In other games involving rankedteams on Tuesday night, it was No.
3 Kentucky 74, Tennessee 64; No. 9
Cincinnati 63, Southern Mississippi
49; No. 21 Illinois 87, Penn State 6Si
and No. 23 St. Joseph's 78, Massa-'
chusetts 63.
No. 3 Kentucky 74
·•
Te~U~eSSet
.

64

J

~

I

Scott Padgeti'Scored 24 points
and sophomore Ron Mercer, who'
was scheduled to hold a news conference today to 'announce his deci-' '
sion to apply for the NBA draft, had:·
19 as the visiting Wildcals (27-3. 13-•
2 Southeastern Conference) tied a
school record for regular-season vic-:
lories. C.l Black had 22 points for
the Volunteers (11-14, 4-11), who,
closed wilhin three points twice late!
in the second half, but killed lhem- •
selves with 33 turnovers.
No. 9 Cindnwiti 63 ·
Southern Mlssisoippl49
Ruben Patterson-scored 20 points ·

Transactions
Baseball
,
American LeaJue .
,
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Agreed to
term• wilh RHP Archie Corbin, RHP
Julio Moreno, RHP Frane~sco Sancau.o;,
LHP R1 ch Knvda, OF Wady Almonte,
INF Juan Bautista and INF Scott McClain
on one·yenr contrnct&amp;.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Named
Dan l..nrre;:a lrnvehn&amp; secretary Agreed to
rerms with RHP Steve Sparks . INF An·
tone Williamson, OF Todd Dunn and INF
BriM Banks on one-year contmct's.
National League

ATLANTA BRAVES : Agreed to
terms with LHP Terrell Wade on a one-

ycorcolllract.
CINCINNATI REDS · Aareed to
rerms with OF Steve Gibmher on a one·
year oontmtt.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS. Agrml
to ferms with RHP Chan Ho Park on a
one-year contmcl

Boyles, Julie Spaun, BI'Ooke WIUiams, Tangy
Leudermllt and Marlesa Whaley. In the back row _
are coach Darin Loilan, Jessica Johneon, Tlffllny' •
HaHhlll, Jennifer Shrlmplln, Amy Hynll and
Rania Bennett.
••

·:

Football

'.
I .

:'

110115.

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS· .\greed
10 Ierma with RB Gary Brown.

, I

'.

H&lt;&gt;&lt;key
N11tlonal Hockey LeaJUI!i
NHL. Fmcd Vancouver Canucks f
Donald Brns heat $1 ,000 nnd suspended
' him four gntTtCJ for pun ching Los Angeles
Kings C ran Lnpenicre in a Feb. 22 game

)

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. : SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) -A fan
IJnhappy that Albert Belle left lhe
Cleveland Indians gained aecess to
11\e Chicago White Sox's spring
(raining complex, · confronted the
~utfiel~er and was later arrested.
Dav1d E. Henry, · 38, of Nonh
Ridgeville, Ohio, was charsed with
tliisdemeanor loilering and prowling,
ai\d felony burglaty and is being held
iii: the ~arasota County Jail, police
!lftid Wednesday.
; ' Police say Henry was upset about ·
Belle leaving the Indians. Belle
s'lient eight seasons in Clevel!'nd
before signing a five-,year, $55'millio~ con~ct lasl November to join
1fle rival White Sox.
~ Henry scaled a an eight-foot-high
cJJain-link fence at Ed Smith S!adill!lllast Friday and confronted Belle
near the stadium's press room, just

(Continued from Page 4)
18' offset Danny Fortson'.s season-low - '
four as lhe Bearcats (23-5, 11-1)
clinched at least a share of the Conference USA regular-season championship and lhe top seeding in the _
league tournament, George_ Scott
had 15 points for the visiting Golden· Eagles (12-13, 6-7), who lost to
No. 17 Louisville in overtime last
Saturday.
No. 21 Dllnoil 87
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GETTING A GRIP on the basketball Ia the task of the moment fof ;
the Clevelllnd Cavaliers' Vltaly Potapenko (111ft) and Danny Ferry durIng Tuesday night's NBA contest against the visiting Seattle Supat·
Sonlcs, who won 72-66. (AP)

..

· Kiwane Garris had '27 points for
the visiling Fighting Dlini (19-8, 9. , 6 Big Ten), who handed lhe Nittany
Libns (9-16, 2-14) their secondwOrst loss of the season. Jarrett
SJFphens had 18 points lead Penn ·
Slate. which committed 16tunrovers
in falling behind by as many 21
p()ints in the first half.
:
No. :13 St. J01eph 's 78
Musachusetll 63
. ;
c Rashid Bey scored 18 poinls and
~Hawks (20-6, .12-3 Allantic 10)
won jn their first game as a ranked
team ip 24 years. St. Joseph's, which
cljnched at. least a first-place tie in
league's East Division, held the
vf.lting Minutemen (17-12, 10-5)
wdhout a field goal for more than, II
· J11inutes late in the second half. Lari
~,tner ~nd 19 points for Massachusetts, which was swe~t by lhe Hawks
for the first time since 1989.

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yards from the clubhouse door. Belle early today.
had just finished holding a news con"Albert didn't recognize ,him or
ference outside the building, and the just shrugged il off. Albert never
encounter was a brief one.
really had to deal with il, and we did"Somewhere afuir the workout,
n't really m~ch either," said Schuelhe got ,in and wandered inlo the press er.
room and Albert was going through.
Schueler said security ,personnel
1be guy just yelled his name: 'Alben
escorted the man out and police were
do you remember me, I'm from
Cleveland?"' general manager Ron · called in afler !he man "gol a little
testy .. near the 'fronl gate.
Schueler told The Associated Press

PU~LIC
The Meigs County F11ir Housing Office has completed t~e ·
creation and dlstributicm of a Housing Aesourc~ . Booklet
and Teriant-Landiord .Brochures through a grant to the
Meigsl\f,inton ·Fair' Hp~~ng Coalition from the Office ot
Housing ·and CommunitY Partnerships (ODQD). This
information has be~ plaCed throughout Meigs County in
'amJus county offices·, banks, libraries, service .agencies,
l:dll1tge offi~s. and other locaiio_ns for the convenience of
·the p!Jt&gt;llp. · . •
Th&amp; : 'l:iEl~ourci.e Bo,o.~et contains useful housing
informatlon;.~ubllt aa&lt;1 ~ocia! ser.vlces available, financial
institutions
it\-Jhe county, ~ibriarles, health ' and safety
.
.
services, schO(IIS, local governments, and other general
lntormatlon. Also, throughout this booklet, ttie public will be
provided Information about Fair Housing Laws that define
discriminatory activities in the purchase, sale, rental, and
advertising of housing.
The Tenant - Landlord Facts Brochure pro11ides
information, according )o the Ohio Tenant-Landlord Bill: that
defines the landlord's and the tenant's responsibilities as
pertains to . rental agreements and evictions. This
information should prove t,.tSeful to both the l'"dlord and the
tenant.
. It is the goal of this program to educate the public as to
their Fair Housing .rights I The public is encouraged to
obtain these materials from the Fair Housing Displays at
the v4rtous sites. The Meigs County Fair Hoi,ISing Office is
available at 992-7908. (out ot'Area Toll Free 1-888·767-

NOTICE TO THE

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Brandon scored .II points in his . mother when he returned.
ball, eye~ wide, head slightly tilled,
firs I All-Star game. Two weekends
To fulfill a goal of bringing jobs lips tense and tucked into his mouth .
ago in Cleveland, •Brandon ·had 1.0 to the Portland neighborhood where The self-conscious look, a look of
poinls and eight assists in 17 minutes he grew up , Brandon started a busi- . uncenainty, melts away when the.ball
in his second All-Star performance, ness called Tee Bee Enlerprises. A goes in.
his parents and the NBA's greatest comple.x is opening this month that
A leader on the court, Brandon
living players sitting in the stands.
includes sporiSwear stores, a barber stays to himself away from it.
"Qne of 1he reasons it makes me shop and a basketball court.
"Especially on road trips, he kind
so proud, il's becau&amp;e 'Terrell has
"God is going lo bless people who of stayed in his room a lot," said
worked for everything he's got," said give and don't ask for anything in Price, now -with lhe Golden State
his molher, Charlotle. "People are return, " Brandon said. "I know that. "
Warriors:
just getting to know, 'Who is lhis kid,
Brandon feels blessed jusl to be
Brandon still calls home after
Terrell Brandon?'"
.
able to walk. He was born ~it.h feel every game, the phone ringing in the
Brandon's mother may be more turned mward, the toes pomtmg al old house on North Beech Streel in
famous than he is. After 1he 1996 All- each other. Charlotte_ and her .hus- Portland that Brandon's great-grandStar game, Charlotte Brandon start- band, Charl:-:s, an ass1s~anl pastor at mother bought nearly 50 years ago.
·ed Mothers of Professional Basket- the· fam1ly s church m Portland,
"He's taking the time 10 separate
ball playem, a support group thai does would not let doctors break h1s. feet.
things rather than have so much
charity work and prepares families Brandon had to wear correcllve shoes going on it's a circus-type atmos,
for life in the NBA. It now includes until he was three. . .
_ .
pbere," Cleveland coach Mike Frate(about 60 moms, including Charles
Now those feet lift h1m high m the Io said. "It's like, 'My job is what has
Barkley's and Shaquille O'Neal's.
· air for a jump shot. He.releases the led me to achieve all these other
"What I think is so unique about
me doing this is, nobody knew who I
-I was," Charlotte Brandon said.;
"Nobody knew Terrell until here late· I
'
Iy."
Like his mother, Brandon is
known for doing charity work. Last
year, he gave a free liasketball clinic
for kids· in a roulh part of Cleveland
. called Luke Ea*r Pari\, a, place no .,
pro athlete had been before. He was
struck by the poverty he encountered
while running a similar camp in
Tokyo during his college days at Oregon.
"I will never again be unhappy
aboul what I eat," Brandon told his

things m life.' It's a credit to him
he does pull himself away from the
templations."
The fans in Cleveland are just get-'
ting to know him . If the Cavaliers are
to match or exceed the teams led by•
Price in the late 1980s and early -.., 1•- -•
they must re-sign Brandon, whose
contract was extended lhrough the
1998.99 season with a balloon ~"''- "'
ment of $7 million - more than
original six-year deal was wonh.
" I . think ~:ve been loy~(
orgamzat10n, Brandon sa1d. I ve
been here six years. That's uncommo~ these days. .
,
.
I hope they lhmk I ve played the
game_ With some Oar~. but also sD?'e ·
mtelhgence. And off the coun, I ve ,
maintained respe~tabilily. I haven't•
embarrassed the team off the court.
Or my family." ·

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r-,--"":':!',...-----..-,---,...,...--'-----------::------....----;':r'

Police arrest fan after he confronts Belle

Top
.. 25 hoops.•. _

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"If I ever thought I was that good,

CLEVELAND (AP) ....,. Terrell that would stop the humbleness,"
,Brandon is lost in the crowd even in Brandon says, his soft, deep voice a ·
his own loclcer room.
murmur in the AII-S1ar locker room.
He is sitting alone in his usual spol "I wouldn't be as hungry about playc
I nside Qund Arena, an . hour before ing the game."
·
taking the cou1t'in his second'straight · Suggestions that Brandon could
All-Star game. Mos1 of the visitors be the best point ~uard in 1he NBA
are here to~ everyone but him.
are not just hype. In his sixth season
He is sitting between Chris Web- in Cleveland and second as a starter,
ber and Grant Hill. Scottie Pippen is Brandon is in the top 20 in the league
across the room with Alonzo Mourn- in points (20.2) assists (6.3) sleals
~ng and Tim Hardaway-- the only (1.82) and lhr~e-point perdentage '
r,&gt;int~intheNBAwhohasout- (.399). He is shooting 89 percent
played Brandon co,nsistently this sea· from the free throw tine, fourth in the
son.
.
league.
.
. If not for his CI~veland C~val1ers
And ·yet when his predecessor at
Jersey, .Brandon m1ght be m1staken point guard, Mark Price,' returns to
for a locker room attendant.
Cleveland in a visitor:s unifonn, he
gets louder applause than Brandon.
· And he wo~ldn't mind a bit.
"My style ,IS not to be, I don't
"I am a big believer that 'everyknow. a media guru," said Brlindon. body has their time," said Price, trad·
~·1 feel I can play the game, really, . cd in 1995 'to make room for Branand do my talking on the t1oor."
don, his backup for four seasons.
!"lki~g is· noi .Bm!'don's game. ,
"I think probably the thing lhat
Ne1ther IS s~owmans!Hp or bravado. stopped him from getting recognition
When talk turns to his status as one was that he wasn't able lo step nght
of the ~A's top guards, Brandon into the league and start playing right
squirms, looks away, gets .nervous off the bat," said Toronto Raptors
creases in his 26-ye~-old face. The ·point guard Damon Sloudamire,
ll!l@'eli(W~!'~out aiqf Br~on has Brimdon's childhood ~ilmd from
.rehe8rSeil It on the . many n1shts he Porijand. "He had to wwt. "
h~ dreamed ofputti.ng·~s fortune to
ln part, it is Brandon's lendency to
8.00d us_e and not bnngmg shame on shy away from publicity that. makes
his famtly.
.
him a relativ~ unknown in an other- He nods, looks stratght ahead.
wise brash league, It also is his size.
. "''m no supel1tar," lte said. "I'm Like Stoudamire, Brandon is alleast
j'!SI a decent player."
an inch shorter than he is listed, real; Decent?
.
ly about 5-10 on his tip-toes.

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By KEN BERGER

(S\"' TOP 25 OD Page 5)

Nallonal Football Leape
ARIZONA CARDINALS : Signed C
Mike Devlin to a two-year contract
, ATLANTA FALCONS: Signed CB
Ray Buchanan 10 an offer sheer.
CAROLINA PANTHERS: Rc-s1gned
CD Rod Sm1th and WR Ralhib lsmwl.
DENVER BRONCOS : Signed S
Dedrick Dodge and RB Anrhony Lynn.
Waived WR-KR Todd Kin~;hcn.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS·
Named Dobby Grier vice president of
player peuonnel and Don Lowery VICe
presidenl of public and community reh1·

tie's Detlef Schrempf said. "I don ' t the field in the second half.
points and had a learn-record nine
know how y'all stand it."
Bullets 108, Pacen tr1
steals for the Raptors, wbo shot 57
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
At Landover. Juwan Howard · percent from the field and forced 22
New Jersey 97. Sacramento 90; scored 20ofhis 28 poinls in the first
lumovers. Denver 's LaPhonso Ellis
Washington 108, Indiana 87; Hous- half as Washington built a 21-poinl scored 32 points, including eight in
ton 100, Los Angeles Lakers 96; lead and cruised past Indiana to end
lhe extra period.
Utah 110, New York 99; Dallas 86, a three-game losing slreak. Howard
Jazz 110, Knicks 99
Charlotte 84; Toronto 124, Denver also had II rebounds and nine
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone
122 in ovenime; and Los Angeles assists, barely missing the first triple- scored 33 points for Ul~h. including
Clippers 98, Philadelphia 93. .
double of his NBA career. Reggie four in a row late in the fourth quarRockets 100, Laken 96
Miller and Rik Smits had 14 points ler after he was whistled for 1he
At. Houston, 'Hakeem Olajuwon apiece for Indiana, bullhey were a game's ninth technical foul . Malone,
sc~red eight straight points in ·the combined 9-of-25 from the field.
who pulled his hamstring in the first
final4:08 for the Rockets, who lost
Mavericks 86, Hornets 84
quarter and was Oatlened by a CharBrent Price for the season with a
AtDallas,rookieErickStrickland lie Ward pick in the lhird quarter,
knee injury. Price, who missed the . scored a career-high . 17 points, helped Utah win for the 26th time in .
first 27 games with~ broken elbow, including two free throws with 3.9 29 home games. l'alrick Ewing I~
tore the anterior cruciate ligament ill seconds left. as the Mavericks
the Knicks wilh 28 points.
his right knee in the second quarter. snapped Charlotte's fi,ve-game winCllppen !18, 76en 93
Charles Barkley led the Rockets with ning streak. \he Hornets had a
A! Los Angeles, Loy Vaught had
26 points and 17 rebounds, while chance to win , . but Vlade Divac
20 points ~nd nine rebounds for the
Olajuwon scored 25.
missed a three-p&lt;iinter with one secClippers, who never trailed in winNets 97, Klnp 90
ond lOft Glen Rice led the Hornets
ning their second straight. The ClipAt East Rutherford, Sam Cassell . with 29 poinls, while Anlhony
pers reversed a 101 -84 loss at
had two baskets and" two assists in a Mason had 16 points and 22
Philadelphia Iasl Thursday and
key fourth-quarter run .and New Jer- rebounds.
moved into seventh place in the
sey held Sacramento scoreless in the
Rapton 12.4, Nuaets. lll
Western Conference, a half-game
final4:46. Kendall Gill led the Nets
AI Denver, Damon Stoudamire
ahead of Sacramento. The top eight
with 28 points and 10 rebOunds, and scored nine of his c~er-high '35
teams make lhe playoffs, somelhing
Cassell added 23 points, including a points in overtime as Toronto blew
the Clippers have done only twice
clinching ~e-pointer with 29 sec- a lead in the Iast48 seconds of regsince 1976. Derrick Coleman led the
ondslefi.MitchRichmondscored32 'ulation before rallying to beat the
76ers with 22 · poinls · and 13
for the Kings, but was 3-of-15 from Nuggets. Doug Christie added 27
rebounds. .

Brandon's hard work quietly places him among NBA elites

Thursday's games

OUTSTANDING SEASON The Meigs
Marsuder glrla basklitball tesm recently finished
the season with an 17-2 record. The Little
Merauders finished In sacond place In the Ohio
· Division, one game bahlnd division champion
Belpre. In front are (L·R) Ashley Rupe, Bethany

Aaa.o clllted Press
.ow low can they go 1n the low~ng NBA1
.
ery low, mdecd.
l ~ ~atCtle S~perSomcs beat the
C. eve .an
avohers 72-661\ae'"!"Y'
Right 1~ one of the low~st-sconng
games 111 modem ~BA h1story.
!!ow ugly .w~ 11?
. _
A couple of limes I looked 111 the
slands and I was amazed people
were ~till ~re," Seattle's Hersey
ijawkins satd.
.
.
· The 138 combnle&lt;! po111ts were
the ~vent,h fewest s.111ce the shot
c;Iock was tn~uced m the 1954-55
season. ~u111 wasn ' t even· the l?wes.t-sconng game the defens1vemmded Cavs have been mvolved 111
th1.s ~onth. On Feb. I, they lost to
·M 1 ~ 1 71-66.
.
.
.I feel hke we Just won a reg10na! h1gh school tournament," Sonic~
coach George K~l ••!d. "Hey, a
!hree-pomt lead.. m lh1s one was
msurmountable.
.
So~1cs set season lows With
. lhe.1r 72 pomts and 35 percent shootmg ~m ~field. But tJ:ley managed
to wm thetr seventh straJght game by
.outscoring the Cavs by 14 points at
the free-throw hne.
"That was ug1y basketball," Seal·

:ne

Tampa Bay at Boston, 7:30p.m.
Buffalo 111 New Jersey, 7:30p.m
Sr. Louis 111 Florida, 7:30p.m
Pinsburgh 111 Detroit, 7:30p.m.
DallllS ut Colorudo, 9 p.m.
Phocni,; at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Edmonton at Los, An,&amp;cles, 10:30 p.m.

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ChiCliJO 111 Hurtford. 7.30 p.m
Philadelphia at Ollnwa, 7JO p.m.
.New Jersey at N.Y \slanden, 7 30
pm.
Washington al Toronto, 1:30 p.m.
Phoeni.o; at Calgary, 9:30p.m.
Edmonton 111 Anaheim, 10':30 p m.

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By The Associated Press

Allanlk DlvWon

lam

Basketball

&lt;on

Denison 78, Kenyon 61
. Wittenberg 89, ~rhn $7
Woo!ler 70, Oh10 Weslyn 4~

NHL standings

Natktnal Bukttball Auodatt.
CHARLOTTE HORNETS: Acrivllfed
F Mall Geiger from the injured list
Placed F Tom Chambers on ltte mjured
list.
SEAITLE SUPERSONICS· 'Acuvnt·
ed G Greg Graham from rhe tnjurcd list
Placed G· F Dav1d Wingate on the injured
list. ·
·

Division IV
Adn 60, Ridgemom 35
Antwerp 54, Montpelier 44
Aycrsv11le 58, Fayette 54
Cin. Lnndmnrk 72. Cin. lockland S l
Cin. Summit Cg_1,m1ry Day 81, Cm.
Hillcrest 54
, Continental 54, Columbus Grove 35
Convoy Crestview 80, Ottoville 32
Cory·Rawson 13. Allen E. 68
·
Cte'lthne ~4. Lucas 30
F..don 63, Hicksville 62'
Elyria First Baf:!C. 59, Lake Rtdge 46 '
Fdi'l Jennings .59, Delphos Jeffeuon
53
Fon Recovery .5~. New Bremen 45
GibSonburg 81 , Tol ,Chnst1o.n 62
Holgnre 43, Stryker l7
Hopewell-Loudon 79. Monroeville 50
Jack.son Center 66, Huuston 4~
M11tia Stein Manon 5~. Minster 51

59

Hockey

You Ubeny 76. Warren Champion

S. Urnh 16, UC Irvine 65
Northeul Cpnterenre
Flnt round
Mnriat 62, WaP-Cr 60
St. Francia, N.Y. 62, Robert Morns

..Sonics tally 72-66 win over Cavaliers

Page4

Wake· Forest, Kentucky and
Cincinnati stand as victors

W. Salem NOrthwestern :'i.S, Hill §dale

)9

Far West

Jn theNBA,

In Top 25 college basketball,

BedfO&lt;d 711. Maple HI&gt;. 67
Celi111.SO. 8owlin1 Green 49
Cin. Nonhwesr S7. Cin. Mt. Healthy

The Dally Sentinel• Pllge 5!

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~

· Wednee:rtey, February 28, 1187_

Scoreboard
NBA standings

The D-aily ·Seritin.el

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WediU Idly, Februlry 21, 1..,

Pomeroy •Middleport. Ohio

-on baseball's spring training scene,

.

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Bonds injures hip; Guiterrez&amp;

By The lane' ' d P• n

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All, the sounds of ljlrinJ ... Ouc:b I

Ice J*b and MJUs were the rule
Tuesday u injuries popped up at

'

'nininJ camps in Arizona and f'lori·
'da.
· Bany Bonds wu the most prominent player hurt, and perhnps the
most serious.

.

, WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Clinton will allen~ the April 15
ceremonies marliillg the 50th
anniversary of Jackie Robinson's
' major-league debut. .
Clinton.will speak from the field
during the fifth inning of the Los
Angeles Dodgers' game against the
New York Mets at Shea Stadium,
_ baseball officials said; Robinson,
who "played for the Brooklyn ·
Dodgers ITom 1947-56, broke the
major leagues. color barrier when he
played his fJrst game on April 15,
1947 against the Boston Braves at
Ebbi:ts Field in Brooklyn.
.
· , ·"On the evening of April 15th,
t)le president of the United States
will attend the Mets,versus Dodgers
game up at Shea Stadium, which will
. honor Jackie Robinson on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of his
first appearance in the big show,"
White House spokesman Mike
McCurry said. "Mrs. Robinson and
other members of the Robinson famay are going to be there ...
Robinson. who died in 1972, will
· be honored in many ceremonies
. . around the major leagues. Acting·
commissioner Bud Selig and Rachel
Robin.s on- Jackie's widow- will
hold a ·news conference in New York
today to announce !he plans.
Teams will wear patches this sea. son to commemorate the breakthrough, and they will use special
balls with a Robinson logo during
their home openers in April.
" Major league'baseball is elated
that ihe president has accepted its
invitation to celebrate.the legacy of
Jackie Robinson," Selig said. "It is
an important day for the game, as
well as the nation, as it signifies the
breaking down of·one . of·our society's most significant barriers."
· ESPN is expected to broadcast
the game nationally, several baseball
officials said . . Network spokeswoinan Diane Lamb said that whi.lc
the network is interested, it had not
~ade a final deCision.

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1997. CONTOUR GL 4 DR
AUTO, AIR, AII/FII CASS, FLOOR MATS, REAR DEFIIOSTER,
POWER DOOR LOCKS, CRUISE CONTROL, LOADED
MSRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS
. $17,490.00 .

~13,988°0*

'27,$88

• .

••'
J

t
IISRP BEFoRe DISCOUNTS

.'

;!

1997 F150 XLT, 4x4, AUTO, VB, OFF ROAD PKG, CRUISE,
TILT, CD, FULL POWER EQUIP, 6,000 MILES

I

$20.,988~

'23,98SOO

~

&gt;

..
.n
. ..

1996 BRONCO, 4114, EDDIE BAUER, VB, AUTOMATIC,
TRAILER TOWING, FULL POWER EQUIPMENT, LOADED

I

.

"

.~

,• .

.~

..
l

$15,98800

...
'I

)·

1994 RANGER XL, 4x4, STEREO, BRIGHT RED

•

1997 THUNDERBIRD ·LX"VB"
·.AUTO, AIR, FULL POWER EQUIPMENT, CRUISE, llLT, AM/FM
CASS, KEYLESS ENTRY, SPOILER, TRACllON LOCK AXLE,
LOADED
IISRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$21,420.00

$17,988°0*

·

sg,988oo
1994 UNCOLN TOWN CAR, SIGNATURE SERIES,
!. LEATHER, LOADED, SUPER CLEAN

'15,98800

· 1997 TAURUS GL SEDAN

'I

AUTO, AIR, cRuiSE, liLT, ·POWER WINDOWS, POWER SEAt
· . AWII. WH.EELS. CASS, VI, FLOOR ~TS, ~D ·. I
.. IISRP BEFORE DISC()UNTS
~ ,
$21,175.00

1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER, AUTO, AIR, STEREO

'6,988

00

. .P

1995 EXPLORER EDDIE BAUER, LEATHER, AUTO, 4 DR,
CD PLAYER, LOADED WITH OPTIONS

s_!f~:'l · 1·

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''23,9Br

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1994 MUSTANG LX CONVERnBLE. AUTO, AIR; POWER
EQUIPMENT, READY
FOR SUNSHINE
··,

'12,988

00

.

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ON

•..•.'

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1996 ESCORT .LX. SPORT PKG, AlJTO; ·AlR, AMJFM CASS,
LOW MILES, SPOILER, ALUMINUM WHEELS

sg,gaaoo

1997 RANGER 4x4
AIR CONDITION, V6 ENGINE, MANUAL HUBS, FOG
LAMPS, AII/FII STEREO, AWIIINUM WHEELS, AND

IIORE

IISRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS
.

1997 WINDSTAR WAGON

1987 FORD E350CONVERSION VAN, 460 ENGINE, FULL
POWER,
. ONE OWNER, LOW. MILES

;1

DEFROST1HIGH CAPAC, WGGAGE RACK, LOADED
wmt-oJITJONS

S5,98800

'

' $18,035.00 '

•••

.

SZS,225

S,jg'988.00*

S14 98800*

'

AJ11'0, AIR; CRUiSE, 11LT, POWER EQUPIIENT, REAR

.. :

'~' IISIIP BEFORE: DISCOUNTS

"'

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It w-'&amp; Uke today with the b•s·
IIP,ints. unions, biJ· .
~ ConlriJCts, endoncments.

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•

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i

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Doctors . said _it wtis remarkable that the hoswho trcallllljocb)' Bill ShoemiUr .Jiilel, which doesn't ~ly handk;
~rtoratralf~c:CJ!IIhknewofhispar. traumacases,wasabletoaascmble
11y~ing inju~ .and did 1nollling.l9 , ·!he team that ''saved Mr. Shtiemikiiggravite' them, ' defense lltomeys er's life.
.
.
sajd~
"This was a man who was literAttorneys for several of the doc- -ally OJ!IhC verge of death. on probton said durins their openina state- ably rour occasions, before he went
meats Tuesday thai the phy~io;ians . to ~rgery that niJht," Vah Sicklcn
acted •pplcipriately. The laW)'ers . said. ·
.
said Shoemaker's paralyii• was
· Van Sicklen and three otheranorcaused by.the ~~:cident, not his med· ocys rcprc&amp;entinJ docn0111 made their
ical treitmenl.
·
openins remarks late Monday and
Shoemaker's attorney said durins Thesday.
.
an opening statement Monday that . · Shoemaker'uttorney, Neil Papihis client wasaquadri~Jic because ano, alleged that Shoemaker's paralor improper care he received rrom ysis went undlaJnosed ror eight
doctors at Glendora ·Colilniunity hours wtd -.yas made wonc during
Hospita,l following an AprilS, 1991, that ti~~~e. Papiano said Shoemaker's
clll$h near San Dimas.
paralysis would not have been as
The.Hall of Fame jockey filed the · cxlellsive had he received different
lawsuit hi Los Angeles Superior meilical treatment.
Court against the hospitalalld seven _ Shoemaker, 6S, rolled his Ford
doctors in 1992. .
BIOIICo II on Statc Road 30 after
Derense auoniey . Steve Van playing aolf and supposedly having
ficltlen, whose client is a surgeon, drinks with ~~· ~end. 'Itsts indicated

'

• Recchi had IWO goals and M
Elsewhere in the NHL; it was , scored power-play goals ror the
Sharks.
.
assiSI
for Montreal.
'
Tampa
Bay
3,
·
St
Louis
2;
San
Jose
the Blac:khawb• zone, but fanned.
. Alexander Mosilny and Martir(
In the ovcnime, San Jose's ~ie
l:larvey gained control of the puck in · 2, Florida 2; Montreal 4, Vancouver
Nicholls was called for a match Gelinas scored Vancouver's soaJs. ;
the riJht faccolf ~ircle and zipped a 2; and Los Angeles 3, Colorado I.
Klnp J. A¥111aac:lle 1
L!ptniJic3,Bl-2
penally following an alteJCation·with
quiet Wrist shot past Olica.Ro goalie
At
Inglewood, Romari Vopat,
Dino
Ciccarelli
scoml
his
·tcaniflorida
defenseman
Ed
Jovanovski
Jeff Hackett.
scored
the
game-winner for the sec"I didn't even look a1 the net. I leading 2Sth goal as Tampa Bay won . at f:58. But the Panthers we~
ond
time·
in threC pmcs 'as Los' · .
just shot i~" Harvey said. "We. were its fourth.straiJht 'same and ended a· to take advantaae against Hrudey.
si1-game homestand unbeaten (54
Florida is 0.5-1. in its last six Angeles ended eotorado's six-game
lucky to set acood bounce."
·'
1).
.
games,
.the Panthers'lonpsl winless winninJ streak. lj
lrbc took over after that, record-.
Stephane
Fiset,
who
spenl
IU!·
Brett
Hull
scored
his
36th
and
streak this season.
ins his second shutout this season
·37th goals' ror St. Louis, which had
season wilh the derelidinc Stanley,
, Camtlieas 4, e-ta l
af!d lOth of his career.
Defenseman Jassen Cullimore Cup champions u Patrick Roy's
He stopped Craven, who was its seven-game road unbeaten striria
.
scored a rare goal against his former backup, oulduclcd CUITCIIt Avalanche
alone in l'ront after stealing Sergei e~.
Sllarkl 2, l'a!ltllen l
team, liftinJ Montreal to only its backup Craig Billington with 32'
. Zul!ov's ..... with 3:20 left. Two
·
At
Miami,
Kelly
Hrudcy
stopped
saves as the Kings won their thinf
ninth road win this season.
.minute$ i'.i;, he· ended Amonte's
Slrai&amp;ht
to equal their longest win31
shots
and
San
Jose
held
off
a
·
Cullimore gave the Canadiens a.
breakaway threat with an arm ave. ,
ning
streak
this season.
•
"It makes me feel important to Florida power play over the final 3-1 lead just 39 seconds into the !flird
·
Vladimir
Tsyplakov
got
his
thint
period with his second goal this seathis team," said lrbc, who is Andy 3:02 of overtime.
go~l in 19 games for the Kings.
,
Jeff'
Friesen
and
OWen
Nolan
son.
Moog's backup. "That's my jobto~ sayes when the team needs
me.
.

unable

Southern Conference names
:
Marshall's White .year's top·coach ..

,

•

ASHEVILLE. N.C. (AP)-· Marshall first-year coach Oreg White has
been named the Southern Conference coach or the year.
White led the Thundcrins Herd to
the top seed in the North Division
· this season with an 18-8 oVc!all.
record and 10-41cague mark.
. The former Marshall player and
assistant coach replaccid Billy Donovan as the Herd's coach after Donovan took the head job at Georgia.

his blood-alcohol level wu 0.13 percent. The legal limit qow is 0.()8.
Papiano .did n.ol mention the
drillka durinJ his opel.ing re~.
.
The doctOI'I' !lltolneys insist the
Glendora sllff was aware or Shoe·
maker's ~ible spinal damqe and
treated him accordinaly.
·
"At no time did they sec any purposeful movement of any of the
extremities or the patien~" suid
· attorney Loren Leibl, who represents
a radiologist
·.
Shoemaker and his ex·wife, Cynthia, also sued Ford Motor Co., ·
. which agreed to' a settlement short- .
ly after the complaint wu brought
. .The automaker h8s settled for $1
million and will pay Shoemaker up . •
. to S1.5 million more, reduced by any
amount paid by Olher defendants
· when the CIISC is resolved.
Shoemaker quil riding to. train
horses a yeAr before the accident and
has returned to ho.rse training.

edged Tennessee-Chattanooga coach Mack McCarthy by
two points for the top. coaching
award.
Meanwhile, Tennessee-Chattanooga's Johnny Taylor, who ranks
in the top I0 in tho Southern Conference in six individual categories,
Will named the lca&amp;ue's 1996-97
player or the year Tqi:sday.
The 6-fooc-8 Taylor received 26
of a possible SO votes ca5i by members of the Southern Conrerence
W~i1e

.

REACH OVER 18,500
HO ES ITH·
YOUR ES GE!

'

today. general .manager Oerry Hun: throwing fastballs and changc~ps. day and had the pre~autionary test
sicker said, addint( Outlcrrcz likely He ..did not pitch after Sept. II last later that day. ·
"I think I tried to do too much too
will be sidelined ror 6-8 weeks.
year because or tenderness in a lis·
early," said Painter, who hild surgery
"It hurts pretty bad," he said. ament in his right elbow.
.
"We'll just sec. how it goes from
Mets: Payton hurt his right on his left shoulder lasl season. "I
he~." ·
·
(throwins) elbow durinc a workout . didn't know if it was relalcd to what
Yanlt-s· O'Neill's left hamstring Tuesday and will travel to New York happened last year or not. It's a big
· doesn't seem to be ·pltiRJI any bet· · ror ad MRI under the supervision of weight ofT my shoulders lo find out
Dr. David Altchcick at the Hospital that it's ncgqlive."
ter.
. Right-hander Bllldy Raggio, who
The ouifielder is slowed by the ror Spccull Surgery.
was
9-10 with a 3.22 ERA at Cla..s
same injury that blithered him al the . , Payton, 24, started lut season at
tnd of last season and limited ·.his Class A St. Lucie, then moved to AA Arkansas last season, will start
11
'(!laying time in the postseason. He Double-A Bingh;unton and wound asainst the Yankees In the first exhi.still ha$n'ttested his leJ by Nnning up at.Triple-A Nilrf.olk~h. itting .307 bition game. Mark Petkovsek. Tom
(ull speed in workouts. ·
witli six homers and 2o RBis in SS · McOrow and Rich Batchelor also
\Viii see action. .
· "!still know i~s there," O'Neill . PlllW ' ·
.
·. · · ·
Pilching coach Dave Duncan said ·
said of the ipjury."It doesn't hurt, · lndla111: In his first outing Under
Andy
Benes will stall ihc home exhibut I'll feel bettet once 1play a same game conditions this spring, lose
·bition
opener at AI 4ng Stadium on
and it doesn't bother me:"
. Mesa gave up two home runs and a
Sunday
against the Reds.
· O'Neill has been participating in single to his first three batters in an
Blue Jays: Toronto might shill iL•
battin.R pracd~e and outf~eld ses- intmqllll!l game at Winter Haven,
s!!fing
training site from Dunedin,
sions. He also took part in on-f.eld Fla. ..,,' '
Fla
..
to
SaraSota next yciii'.
·
conditioning Monday ror the first
MCili gave up a home run to.Par
The
move
would
follow
the
.
Borders, .a· sinJie to Kevin .Seitzer,
ttme.
"I'm conc:emed alld curious if·it· and a home run to Omar Vizquel ChiciiJO White Sox leaving Florida
will ·jet any better by whal ~·s· before recording his first out. Thill for Tucson, possibly leading to Baldoing right now," Yankeci mliiiiJCr offensiVe outburst led a team man· . tirnore moving its base from fon
Joe Torre said. "We'll hive 10 see aged by coach Jeff Newman to a 6- Lauderdale to Dunedin.
"It's not like We're movinsto the
w,hat the first few baiiJ~S brin{ 3 win over a ~Cam managed by coach
us."
Johnny' Ooryl in the four-inninc other cout or the middle, or out or' ·
Roy*: Appier Ills 11\(11ne&amp;S i~ intruquad J&amp;mjl.
. · . ' thC SUite." Blue J11ys president Paul
0
the upper part of jlis ript Inn, and . , Julio Franco had two hits and BeeSion said. "Sariasota JI!OVides us
Dous Linton had elbow lliffiiCII and Chad Cwtis had an RBI triple to lead what we wanted. everythins togcth,
.
will hive an MRI:· ·
Newman's a,am. Indians maaagcr ce:r."
, AJ!pier, who missed rime.last July Mike Hargrove was not concerned · Red Sox: RobinliOil Checo. who
• with sorellCII in his11111 and lholll- by the perfQn!IIIICe 91 Mesa IIi' any- pilched in Jlplll the 1111 five-s.
dRw frorn a mound ror lhe lint time
der, did not have his normal veloci- ·one elaa..
.
.
since
he hurt hiin.el( nine days ear·
~·Tho wont thins we can do is .
. ' .
ty. "Some of it is from normal re•hnythiRJ spriallliiO thele lint licr.
QIIICO
il
one of many candidata
. • a ld.fi'Mia M·. see i n' fe'"'
" u-w:lllid.
tbroWIIIJ
~ -~
•.-rv
for
the
fifth
1t11ter or middle reliof ·
lprinllllllliiiJ," lhiner NickSwlltZ'
Caa 'I h. Rauha of a MRI on
in
lollcin.
He
al_, could beain the
· ofthiRdyals'pl'llti!lbleopeniRJ the lei\ elbow of Sl.l.llllil pill:hor
. y ....-.
.
1..ance Painter did not 111111 .-y IJIIri.. _ , . • Pawtuc~ in Cl• J.!.A.
.
~·led
to- be
was ....
_, ••
. ·-·
..... Dllillhnents. Pai11tei felt -tktlitm ill ', He is • lcalc a - k aqy from
• L,...,..
to411y• .,.... hi mnjted to his .elbow While tlwowi11 oa Mo!1-- pill;hinJ 1ft

Af)VERTISING IN THE

A

••
••
••

TV -TIMES. v
.

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

•••

·GAIJ.IPOLIS
.
'

'

PT. PLEASANT, WV

'

446-2342

.

.l.

'

675-1333

POMERO~IDDDLEPORT
'

a.-.. '

•'

.

/ ·992-2156

J

Sports Media Association for S7 ,
points to easily outdistance Mar·
shall's John Brannen, who got 33 ,
points.
,
Taylor ranks fourth in scoring,
(16.3), third in rebOunding (7.S). fifth,,
in field goal peJCentagc (.486). and,
lOth id free throw percentage (.683), ;
blocked shots (0.9) and steals ( 1.4).
Taylor has led the Moccasins to '
an 11-3 mark in the league and a'top .
seed in this week's Southern Con- •
terence tournament in·Greensblxo. "

Spring training~
.. .:.:.c ~.:.":~".:=lnued: . :.:.:r om: . :P.: ag•.:. :6.:_&gt;- - . - - - - - - .

•

.

able to play becnnr of uorulboW. · tryinl to send a clearing pass out of

didn'.t worsen paralyzing injuries

I

1997 F150 XLT, 4114, CAUlS!;, TILT, AM/FM CA&amp;~. POWER.
1
•
· Wlf'IDOW$/l~c~s.: o~Lv a;ooo Mlta ... , ..... ;. ·

•

a

)

.

'19,98800 . '

'

According to opening statement of court case,

~

...

1997 F150 SUPERCAB FLARESIDE 4x4, XLT, VS, AUTO, CD
PLAYER, FULL POWER EQUIPMENT, ONLY 6700 MILES
00

•.

'

-~

S1.9,98r'.

.

IDoctors attending Shoemaker

t .

1992 EXPLORER
SPORT, AUTO, lEATHER, CRUIE,
TILT,
.
.
1
FULL POWER, LOADED ONLY 30,000 MILES

......_
_
.,.
\lllll.,.._tod&amp;y,butiheir
my. be biJpr
~ . . .a!ler," she said.
'
'
.

'

· The injuries are mounting for the · He joined cniJ LudwiJ, Richard
Dallas Stars. Swprisingly, so arc the Matvich!lk. CJres Adami' and Jere
victories.
Lehtinen a injtnd ~.
·
Dallas lied a fian!:hise record with
"We exl!mdo4 our depth 10 the ·
its 19th road winThesdaynight,al- . ultimate level,"Hitdlcock iaid.
1'ut the Stan are rcachiRJ new
· 0 decision over lhe Chicago Bl~~:k.
haWics.
·
·
heiahts anyway.
~· Ooalie Anurs lrbc had 12 or his
· At 37-22-4. the Stan are IS
24 saves in the third period. includ- ,-s over .SOO ror the fust time in
C ing stellar stops on Ml!ll'ay Craven · 14 yean. Dallas also tied the learn
and Tony Amonte in !he linal3 112 mlllltformostpolntsafta-63games,
minutes.
78, set in 1982-83.
Todd Harvey scored the game's
"Dallas is a JOOC( teim. That's
only soat. taltiRJadvant~Fo(a~ why ihey're • ~they're at,"
blundu by defensemift. Keith Car- anc.so coach 011iJ Hartsburg said.
ney, as Dallas iilc:rcased its NHL "But the lint two periods, we didn't
Centq( Division~ over .IICOCOnd- ,play nearly well enoush. We didn't
place Detroit to eight points.
put enough pressUre on."
·
:
Before the game, Dallas learnd
.Harvey's goal, M7:52 of the secthat wing Benoit Hosue.wouldn'l be · ond pmod, came when Cameyw~

$1S,IJ3Cj,OO

' J

.

"Cal pl1yiCI for the itory of the
IJIIIIII· There -loyalty to the r~s.

•• "wyen.

'

By ·The·Allil clalad PrMa

AIR , liLT Tlllli AIIIFil CASS, FLOOR CONSOLE, CAST
AWMINUII.LS, SUDIIIG REAR WIIDOW, I.OA!JED;. :
I
IMSRP BEFORE DI$COUNTS

AIR , XLT TAll, 4.0 ENGINE, 265l1RES, UIIITED SUP, SAW,
AII/FM cAss, ~UII WHEELS, LOADED
MSRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS

fi opc:wl e'Y«'f ,_. llilll:e die i) II
,... voted OUI after the 1991
a,
1111( it Ills yet IIi) be apprVved.
/uly poposal the COill!dilioo
. commiuee adopts would . need
IJI(II'Oval by 23 of 30 teams TO *,
effect. meaninJ only eight have to oppose it.
·
_ ,.
. Also, the Houston Oilcn IOOii
their fint step towlld moving to 'Jm.
aessee a year early when the Narris '
Counry . ~missioners approved
their SS.2S million buY.out offiCI". ,
The Oilcn will be free to leave
·should they also reach an air-Dent
with the cily and their Jease..holdci
Aslrodome USA.
· "We're more than hippy TO Ialli
with the Oilers if they want to call us
and lll=pt to work IIOJ!ICihi~ 0111,·:
Aslrodome USA president Mike
Puryear said. "There arc two ~.
thaJ we need to resolve, af!d I think
· they arc aware of what issues."

•

·Stars bl'a nk Blackhawk~
1-0;Lightning and Sharks .also win
.

.

1·77
rJ)en6igfi(iarrett
1·800·964·3673
Exit·
132
Rt.
2l
.(304) '372·3673 FORD-MERCURY
~:ltipl·ev,
·r WV .
, (FORD)
~ · ~~~!~~~~~i.:.;....~~~~~...-'~ji;.-4~;;.;;;..,~~~!'1111'-~~-~;;....,:~~~·";'·•:::=::.:=:=-==~~~~=~
,.

weleo-welmed.

q-- ·

In the NHL,

.

'23,98800

a ,ur. ..

·

liiiiiiiCr·aad same of his wmm•tes
Sun Devil Staditan, said he
libel what he saw.
11
.
"I dtiDk clelrly be is I YOUIIJwho Ills the poten!ial be • winniDa
National Foothall I eaaue
back, and that's whll everybody in
the league is looking for," Schottenheimer told Phoenix TV s.-.on
KPNX. "It's a long way from the
NCAA to the NFL, but at this point
! 'l think he's soc the all the qualities
~ that you're lOoking for."
I .Grbac, a free apnt from San
f'~ visited the auers on Monday, alimg with fiee-apnt wjJie

•

$23,120.00

t

to... ..

WasJUa- "'"'• tb1t W'llllld
plays. . . . .
Rtdslci• hive wi ·w a ,.....,

lpply

7

1\adajaft7.:

'
AUTO, AIR , 4 CY1,. DRIVERS REII01! ENTRv, , 'AUTO, AM, CRUISE, TL~ PW, POL, KmE~
iH1R'f, ALAIII, REAR DEFROST, 1r WHE~,
AM/FII CASS, REAR DEFROST AND IIORE.
IIACH 410 SOUIID SYSTEM '
.
'
IISRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS
IISIIP BEFORE IIISCOUif1S

•The Cob dcrip ~ &amp; (wwo - 'sleCOI'Id pme. The iajury forc::ed
RCCiven Aldrc Haatinp of Pia.Ismail, who spe'nl rour
•
burJh 111111 &lt;J-Iry lsmlil of Min· • all "tOO. player, aivilttlba 1be him to mia line paw
witb Qatlllll( afta- his co!leJi'M'
Ji&amp;lllli) llllldl aae otr. of -r - .
lin N:ker Peppel Jam- is rt caeer al Noire Dame. was ecquired
neaa&amp;a .dlilw • •· nay Wooden
orSaaie.
As·a b "bu. pt.ycr, ""
is to sip a two-~ cxwnct to play for by Camliaa in a · trade with tbe
t' 1be a-.,e 19!16 aai.y
0
'lw -tnded by HO'IIIIln authe New York IIlii. The deal, expect· Raiders for a 1997 fiftiHvuBd draft
to AIM&amp; 011 Monday afta- llltiq of the leape's 10 ~-pUll e«· ed to become official today, reunites choice.
with the Cltie&amp; !lot week, IIIII Shuler nedllcb. That fipre is $2.787 mil- Johnson with COIICh BiD Parcells and
Smith wiu the Panthen' fmt
. '
assistant head coach Bill Belidtict. selection in the 199S e•psnsion draft
also Ills visited the - - Shuler lion iD 1997.
wants out of WashiiiJ(oa now that
The Colts hive seven daYs to · Johnson, a . 12-year veteran, and played· in all 16 games in the
marcl1 any offer above the paranliee. played with b; New York Giants team's inaul'"l season. He joined
Gus Flctott.ds che ~­
Other NFL tam~ also were busy Jiving the team unlil next Tuesday to from 1986-92'and wu .,.;· Parcells' Minnesota last ye• as an unrestrict·
1Uciday a they continued to tinker . J1lllk:h the Falcons• offer.
two · Super Bowl championship ·ed fR:e agenl, bul was released in
Buchanan met with the Falcons teams.
October and rejoined the Panthers.
with their 1997 rosters.
.
. RunniDJ back· Gary BroWD ovei the ~ efta, fii'St visitinJ
The Denver Broncos siJRed two
Johnson $penl last season with
llfeCd to a ono-year coiaact with with che Piusbwgh Steelers. He wu Detroit. playiaa in IS JBRJeS and . former San Francisco 49ers, safety
the San Dieao CharJen, Who .mnked also reportedly intamed in visitinJ recordins 92 tackles. After he was Dedrick Dodse ilnd runnin1 back
29th ia Nlhin1 in dtc NFL 1111t-- wid! the San Francisco 49ers.
Wlived by lhe Giants, he siJ!Iled with Anthony Lynn, and waived receiverMI
wouldn't
mind
playing
for
the
son.
Cleveland and played for Belic:hick murner Todd Kinchen.
In other NFL news, the leque's
BIOWII, a free qent, did not play Colts next year, but I owe it to mysetr · from 1992-95.
competition
comminee, meeting in
fOQihall in 1996, bul wai with the to fiDel out what my martel value
The Carolina Panthers have .
Tampa.
Fla.,
is
studying the results of
is,"
Buchanan
tole!
The
Indianapolis
Houstoll Oilen from 1991-9S. 1ft
· agreed to terms with wide receiver
Star
berore
making
the
trip.
theiRSiant~ayexperimentduring
1993. he rushed for 1,002 yanll.
Raghib Ismail and re-siJRed ccmerBuchanan, 2S, started 36 c:Onsec· back Rod Smith. ·
the exhibition season lasl year: That
The Falcons hive submitted a
utive
regular-season
and
postseason
.
experiment
applied only to out or
four-year contract proposal for Ray
Ismail gained 394 yanls on 12
Buchanan of the Indianapolis Colts, games at left comer for the Colts catJ:hes, eight rushes and five kick- . bouncls and scoiing piays.
The committee is also studying a
one C!r the NFL's .lop-raled corner· before sustaining a thigh injury off returns last year with the Pan11ainst
lheNew
Yorldets
in
last
sea·
broader
proposal submined by the
thers.
~~7

~

.....,. ALL VEHICLES.._
'LISTED ARE
BRAND .NEW!

1m

l

By Tile ANa I 7 d 1'1111
' The K=a Oty "'i!!&amp;, aftr:r
~ • 1!1- Oris ?
....

1996 MUSTANG GT .:

.I

.

, MIAMI (APJ -'Cal Abrams, an
clttfielder whose biggest play may
l'lave been getting thrown out at
tt&gt;me plate while with the Brooklyn
Jlodgers in 1950, is dead.
' Surrounded by his wife and chit. kn Abrams died Thesday night at
l'torth Ridge Medical Center in Fort
I::auderdale of complications that
flillow~ a heart attack Feb. 20, said
his wir~, May Abrams. He would
. hjlve been 73 on March. 2.
· • Abrams batted .269 with 32 home
runs and 138 RBJs as a pan-time
· player in the majors from 1949 to
I9S6 with Brooklyn, CJncmnatt,
Pittsbur~h. Baltimore and the Chica·
go White Sox. ~~ also _pla~cd m
1956 with the ongmal M1am1 Marlins,
,
Perllapl he is ,best rcJliCl!lbered
with the Qodgers when he was
thi'oWII ~~ at the plate·by Phi!adel·
phia~• Richie Ashbuin 11 ,he ~r!ed to
s~ from.econd 01! DUke Sn1der's .
. hitjn 11)1 j,pu""oflliC· nint~ of their
filial
in. 19~. . . '·
.Kid he' .Cored, . the Dodgers
would have won , the game and
fopd a plliyoff with the J'hil!ies for
the National Leaaue pennant.
Instead. Dick Sisler hit a tllree·run
· oo.neriO:tlictoporthe l!lth, wiMiJlg
the game and the ~nniiQt for
Philadelphia.. .' •
•·
;
•
;..brams tobk the tum or events in
stride and always remained pi"Qud to
have been ~ r. ~i~ ~r~ raid.'
'''He pw in Brookfyn,' 'Mrs ..
' Atifams said. · 'His. dad wo~ld get
· hodte, arid irthere ~as any ~ayl~ght
left: he would ta(cc Cal out and p1tch
for him. We bolh pw up loving the
DoclJen. So it was a thrilling
moment fot both of us when he put
ori lhatOod;etuniform in 1949. We

I

;
Gulien'ez fractured a DouJ Linton ue sore.
Aanl:
In
kissimmee,
Fla
..
thumb and will be out 1' 112-2
Gutierrez
Will
IIICIIIptinJ
to
mUe
I
months, the Yankees worried
whcthct risht f.elder P.d O'Neill's divinJ calch of 1ft iofldd choppei
injured haJm!ring will be '-led by when he fracturcJJ his thumb by~
opening day, the Mets sent out(.eld mins it into the turf.
1
lfe was scheduled for undergo
prospect Jay Payton back to New
York for tests, and the Royali'found arthroscopic surpry in Housto~
out that pilcher Kevin Appier lllld (See SPRING TJlAINING oa 7) ·

.

• yTOMWELLS

1

Chiefs scour college campu~es in se~rch of quarterback

•I

inf~elder Ricky

·1997.ESCORT LX 4 DR

PomiiOf • Uldcl1port. Ohio

On the NFL oft......o~J .cene,

see(openers

' .

.Ex-Dodger
~brams
(lies at 12 ·.

I

inconclusive. Doctors planned to
cQntinue stuclying the results in
hopes of having . a more definitive
diagnosis 'today.
The i~~Cident comes just days
after Bonds signed a record $22.9
million, two-year contract extension.
Me~nwhile, Houston Astros

•

to

.

'

Bonds, · a three-time NL MVP.
tumbled down 7-8 carpeted s~.
and still was experiencing some
soreness, even after a chiropractic
session.
. "It just seems like something's
pinching a nerve in my hip every
time I lean forward," he said.
The Giants said an MRI was

The San ·Francisco outfielder
injured his risht hip after slipping on
a marble floor and falling down a
flight of stairs in his rented Scottsdale, Ariz., home.
"I just slipped down the Sleps. I
just fell and hit the marble floor."
Bonds said. "I hit the floor with my
hip and went straight down."

.President
to attend
Robinson's
.
.
MLBdebut
anniversary
.
ceremon1es

O'Neill · m~y . not

...... lldiJ,,...., . . 1117 .

•

�.~

.

- --- - - - -- .. ..... ...... - ..
....

...

.... ...

.

•

·w-.:tnllday, February 26,1997

The Deily Sentinel• Paget

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

.

Skip. painting the house in heat or cold
By ANNE B. ADAMS end

Hundreds

Of Dollars
In Coupon

Savings!

March 2nd through
Ma'rch 29th

&amp;.. Drug
CAFFEINE MEE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW

Save-...--.___.

at 1east
$3.10

"D iet PePsi or
Pepsi Cola.
24:-Pack, 12-0z.

cans

tiANCY NASH·CUMMINGS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I've
~ard that you shquldn't paint a
house in the sun. Why? ••
~CHOLAS DAVID, Ocala, Fla.
: : DEAR NICHOLAS: If you paint
"'!hen tt's too hot, the paint' dries too
fast and will probabcy peel. Ir it's 90
1":grees or wanner, don't paint even
10 the shade.
: • Conversely, if you paint when it's
~oo cold, below 55 degrees, for sev~ral days the paint will probably fail
because it will dry and cure at different rates. The painters we know
'
.

Harten bach
honored at
·shower

. . After the honoree. assisted by
Anna Marie Hartenbach, opened her
gifts, refreshmenis .was served fro111
a' table decorated in the shower colors with a hobby horse and a white
Jree with' assorted baby items tied
with ribbon to the branehes
r

. Cake, punch,mints, and nuts was
served by the hostesses, Kelly
Shearer, Jo Imboden, and Marty
S,truble.

Red

Grapes

,.

NY 11803 (1-800-537-2118).
The second is NS LSS and S
Group, Inc., P.O. Box 673, Northbrook, IL 60065 (1 -800-468-4789).
FEEDBACK: HAND SIGNAL
FOR IRRITATED MOTORISTS -Helen Freitag of Ocala, Fla., has
come up with an mventive solution
for this · problem. She writes,
"Another reader was looking for a
hand signal for those times when we
irritate a fellow motorist. Sometimes
we can't move to the right-hand lane
fast enough for the, impatient youngster behind us, who has 50 more
years to reach his destination than

Presenting gifts \vere Beth
May~r. Sarah Gibbs, pianrie Hawley, Ruth Spaun. Julie Spaun, Edna
Davis, Shawna Davis, Kim Davis,
Gay Perrin, Elsie Hines, ·c arol
Kennedy, Peggy Harris, Wanda
Imboden, Anna Hartenbach, Steve
Hartenbach, Roger Imboden, Annie
~ight, Ellie Bleattnar, Judy Jewell,
Lauren Wolfe, Whitney Riffle, Jody
Gum, Mina Swisher, Barbara Riggs,
Linda Mayer, Dottie Sheets, Lois
Burt and Joanne Wildman.
. · Shannon Kom, Erin Kom, Mary
Byer, Bernice Riffle, Wilma Davidson, Barbara Murray, Edna Slush)!r,
Mary_Rqssell, Bob an4 Donna Byer, ·
Pat Holter, Peggy · J:.~wis, · Cindy
Lewis, Penny Cox, Minnie Johnson,
Viola Harten bach, · Debi Grueser,
Andrea Grueser, Jessica Grueser,
Angie Mayer, Christy Blaettnar,
Alice Globokar, Marge Leonard,
Pauline Mayer, Marie Houck,
Donna Carr, Mary Grueser, Clarice
Krautter, Carolyn Thomas, Lucretia
S!"ith a~d Sue Imboden .

Includes: Round trip air fare, Hotel
admission into Walt Disney World.

We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
.,
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets (except Buckeye)
AEP Electric Pavtmenl

Prozen

Quart

Blnk "Superbllnk" Servlcet
• Ohio
• GI;HIItlg Clfdl
• Floral Sales

2/$

: Carl Wilson and Bridget Council
announce the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Halley Wilson,
bprn on Jan. 17.
.
• The infant weighed eight pounds,
six ounces and was 21 inches long.
' Grandparents are Carl and Becky
Wilson and Alicia ana James Council. Great-grandparents are Richard
and Doris Snowden and Betty Witsen. John and Priscilla Schuler and
J(&gt;anna Council. Great-great grandparents are Fay Swanson and Vivian
Coy.
·

News policy
In an effort to provide our reader- .
s~ip with current news. the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept wed~ings after 60 days from tl:te date of
the event.
· Weddings submitted after the 60~•Y deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily ·Sentinel and the
Qallipolis Daily Tribune.
,. All club meetings and other news
articles in the· society section ·must
·h!l submitted within 60 days of
accurrente. All birthdays must be
submitted within 60 days of the
oecurrence.
•
. '
c~tion
subjectstlbmitled
to editing.for
'·
All·1s
material
\•

.

Large Eggs .

Bacon

10 Lb. Bag

Boward County
·Fresh £hleken Thigh

$. 19

~,.

.,.

Dozen

Oz. Pkg.

Raisin Bran 20 Oz., Froot Loops 15 Oz.,
Rice Krlsples 13.5 Oz, or Honey Crunch
Corn Flakes 21.3 Oz. Box

Diet or Reg.

£ereal

.

99
12 Pack 12 Oz. cane

4 Roll Pkg

·Northern
Bath Tissue
.

92 Oz. Pkg. 42 Load • Free/Reg
103 Oz. Pkg 33load with Bleach

Dde

.

United Valley Bell

Fresh Orange Juice
Plastic Gallion

Golden ~I"!

.

Chiquita Bananas

.$

· Diet or Reg

Pepsi
Prodnets
2

Lb.

BIG BEND

Uter

Flavorlte
Real
C::hoeolate
'
(;hips

12 Oz.

.
We
Prto.
Tllrllllt. lllen:h 1, 11117 • USDA Food Stllmpe end WlC
publi-l..;::.::~=;~~~=~==~=;!==~=~~=!:,~:!;;.!:=~=~:!::==~==:!=:=::::::~==::~~;;:~~==~~~~l~

.,
•

Ohio Valley· Open'24 Hou,.
Cloae Mid. Sal ·Sun 8-10
Buckeye· Mon..et 7·11; Sun 8-10;
Big Bend· Mon...t. 11-10
TWin Rivers· Open 24 Hours.
Close Mid. Set; Sun. 8-10
'-'~alllpo•lla· Mon·Sat. 7·11; Sun. ,._,,n . .

Foodland

Sliced

• Wt accept credit cards

Plastic Gallon ·

Wil-son birth
announced

&amp;lglltruna
. 6-oz.

$ 99

Thorn Apple Valley

Pound
HALLEY WILSON

---.;.-~==.::.::---·---·-..1

wberri

14.75 Oz. Can

_ry · sreas~

~ODLAND ·

Red Ripe

·Pink
SalJDon

(4-7-LB. AVG.}

VACATION ENTRY BLANK

••,...,\J, A•ddreEIS
package value: $2,500. Must be 18 v.
-------.r
I L
or older to register. Foodland and
City, State-----~-SuperValu employees not eligible.
Phone-----.,.---~--

W. Sill Money Orders

.

_
C hunk

voh;me of mail, personal replie~
cannot be provided.
Anne B. Adams and Nancy NashCummmgs are co-authors of "Ask
Anne 8i Nan" (Whetstone) arid
"Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize
Problem-Solvers Share Their
Secrets" (Bantam).
Copyrighl19~7 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN. ·

~me restrictions apply. Vacation

Whitney's

IN WATER KROGER

we do.
"Well, for some time now as they
pass me mouthing expletives and
poking their index finger to the
heavens, I have thrown them a kiss
followed by a sincere smile. It totally disarms them. They ~mile and
wave. One carload cheered and
shouted, 'Way to go, Grandma:·rm
not sure how they would react to a
gentleman but it sure helps the
ladies."
Write to "Ask Anne II&lt; Nan" at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 0~048 .
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to the

Vacatio
SWEEPSTAKES fa mil

A layette shOwer was held at the
Trinity Congregational Church
social rooms recently for Pam
Hartenbach.

.

SUGAR SWEET

-

up," one or two, we shall be very
grateful. -- ELIZABETH RAYMOND, Lawrence, Kan.
DEAR ELIZABE1ll: We have
no idea where to find the discontinued talking typewrite( that you're
seeking. If any of our readers do
know, they'll be in touch.
Thanks to Sue Troxel of Circleville, Kan., we've learned about
two fine catalogs that specialize in
products for heari~ anq visually
impaired people. We think they
could be a great resource to you.
The first is Independent Living
Aids, Inc., 21 E. Mall, Plainview,

•

. Ouest tables were covered wtth
pjnk cloths and featured pink, yellow, and aqua streamers, bottles of
pink rosebuds, and helium balloons
The balloons also provided a backdrop for a bassinet.

One case Pf!' customer
at this price p~ase

follow the sun around the house
when they 're painting the exterior.
DEAR ANNE AND · NAN: My
husband, who has Parkinson's disease, cannot speak and is nearly
blind. We found in a Toy Liquidator
Store a talking typewriter on which
he . spells out words. It is our communication lifeline, and I worryJhat
it may wear out or somehow become
unusable. I have tried stores and
even \he company's representative
. in New York City, who said these
' toys are no longer available in the
United States. If you can give us a
local lead on how to obtain a "back-

.

ASK AJOn:: • RAif

"w'
·I

�••

~ 10• The D~ 8tt6wl

"

•"I .••.

J

'llleC

'Pa81111~p•''"

'nte

\t' 1•11-ddirdtopro-

_.,._ ...__an

.,... . - . or full nlun oluy
prt.fad • ..-e.
.... b: ......, ... lie .......teed
· to ru up e:Uk I!IUIW ol dayL

'

•

STORE HOURS ·

John C. Wolf, D.O.
AssoCiate Professor
of Family MediCine ·.

Motday tin s••., .
IAM·lOPM

· Question: My wife compl!lins ounce cups of regular coffee, six 12that I drink too much coffee. I drink ounce colas, or four cups of re~ular
W~ESDAY
about 10 cups a day, which I think is tea. Despite !llany research siudies
, MIDDLEPORT~ The Big Bend fine . . Is this amount . of caffeine designed to find possibiC health
Youth Leaauc. Wednesday, 6 p.m. in harmful to my health? ·
risks associated wilh lhis level of
.l!ICCiina room of Middlepon CounAnswer: Caffeine is a ubiquitous use, none have been found. I gucso:
.cil.
. .
.
substance. It has a chemical formlil~ this makes 200 mg per day a rea.'unof C8HioN402 and is fCJund in able definition of "modes!" &lt;On·
TlnJRSDAY
.
many foods derived from plants, sumption.
POMEROY ·· Ewings Chapter, panicularly coffee beans, lea,
So, do you drink too much cof- ·
Sons of the American Revolution, chocolate and most nuts. It is also an fee '? Probably. · For must peopie,
Thursday, with Paul Reed to give a imponanl component of many soft ingesting a·large amount of ~affeine
slide presentation on the history of drinks and pain medicarions, as well in a short period oftime, such._, 400
Meiils County.
as NoDoz and similar stimulant mg in O!le hour, causes the symp·.
. preparalions.
toms from excess consump_tion I·
Caffeine, a strong slimulanl of desi:ribed earlier. A constant intake,
• .POMEROY •• Meigs County
Ubnry Board meeting. Thursday. . the central nervous system • is the such as I 00 mg every hour for 10,
most commonly used psychoactive . hoursQtwo cups of coffee 10 gel
4:30p.m. at Pomeroy Library.
drug in the world. This drug is gen• going in the morning followed by .
)•
. POMEROY •• 1997 Big Bend erally safe and useful as a stimulant, one each hour until work is over ·
Towas and Country Expo reorgani- and in facl, it is usually consumed prQduces more subtle symptoms.
f.lllional meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs' principally lo gel that caffeine Nonetheless, I 0 cups . of coffee
"buzz," which some .think of as a mel\lls you are ·ingesling quite a sig~y Ill the senior fair board office,
ROck Springs Fairgrounds. All inter· "pick-me-up" or increase-in mental , nificant amount of this slimulanl
alertness. Heavy consump.tion can drug. I'd suggest culling back by a
elled citizens welcome to attend.
·1
cause
nervousness.
anxiety, . rate of one cup each day until you
headaches,
muscle
rwirching,
sleep- gel 10 no more than 400 mg of caf·
.,. 11.1PPERS PLAINS .. Thppers
Plains VFW, Post 9053, Thursday. lessness, diarrhea, stomach irrita- feine each day ·and preferably 200
-lion, palpilations, fast. he~ rare and mg. Gradually culling back like this
'7:30p.m.
·
r;
irregular heanbeats. And withdrawal avoids the headache, drowsiness,
~ RACINE .. Special service, Mt. usually causes headache and drowsi, and grouchy disposition that go with
'Olive Community Church, Wednes- ness . .. Yes, it is a . powerful drug! acute withdrawal from the drug.
day, 7 p.m., Evangelist David Cor· Most who consume a modest · The following is a brief list of ll!e
~II, speaker.
. amount ... aboul 200 milligrams caffeine levels in common products.
· ,.
(mg) of caffeine ajiayQonly experi- Use _it to help judge your daily conPOMEROY
Community _ence the mild stimulant effect and sumption.
avoid the more severe symptoms.
8 oz. regular coffee· 110--135 mg
:Lenten services sponsored by the
Regardless of the food, drink or
8 oz. gourmet coffee · 250 mg
'Meigs County Ministerial Associamedication that delivers it to the
8 oz. decaf coffee • 10 mg
lioil will be held Thursday at 1:30 digeslive system, caffeine is rapi~Jy .
one bag tea · 50 mg
m : at the Laurel Cliff Free
absorbed. The mosl intense period
green tea or instant " 30 mg
ethodist. Church. The Rev. Bill of stimulation occurs ahou.t one hour
I oz. expresso · 35 mg
1
aback will speak.
later,
but
the
chemical
fasts
in
the
12
oz. cola · 35 !118
.
I
,
·~
.
'
body a much longer. time. It takes
8 oz. hot chocoiate • S tng
; POMEROY .. Preceptor Beta · four to six holA's for the body to use
I oz:"dark chocolate • 20 mg
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror- up half of the amount thai is
I oz. milk chocolate • 5 mg
Ity, Thursday, 6:30 for salad supper.
absorbed into the blood from that
'
iit the home o Clarice Krautter. .
.first cup of coffee, and most of a day
"FamUy Medldne" is a w~kly
· ·'
to e'liminate the rest of it, assuming column. To submit questions,
!l REEDSVILLE .. Riverview Gar- that one doesn't con.sume more.
:write 10 John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
: '. ~n Club, -Thursday, 7:30p.m. HickThe average American adult con- Unlvenlty CoUege or Osteopathic
.pry Hills Church of Christ Take fin· sumes about 200 mg of caffeine a Medicine, · Grosvenor · Hall,
IJCI' foods. fruit r.-.r fruit baskets. . day. Thai is equal to about two eight· Athens, Ohio 45701.
.

·'

- 298 SECOND ST,

s

WE RESERVE THE IIGIT TO LIMn QUAIITITIES
PRICES GOOD THIU SATURDAY, IIAICH 1, 1997

t

..._·-.,eo.-

!
1

•

PRINGLES

99c
,
••••••••

PASSJO. N. FOR FASHION· l.oYell Haya ~ Ott aomtt of ttM. fabuloua YHtlllhal have become
. her
arllallc outlet. 8ha made lip a vaat p,llllem lhal'a adapteblt for-varloua halghle and body
typ11a. The veal pattam ·Ja almpla, but Haya ap1111da houra on 1M ambttlllatlmanta.

By CAROL McGARVEY
"It's longer than some pat·
The 0.1 Moines Rl!lllatar .
lllms," Hays says, "because that's
. . )Vhen life llands· YO¥ ICn)ons, moni Oattering for ·many women: ·
Lovell Hays will tell you, it's time.
~; y~l..p,4!Uero _is ,simpl~~b~tt
to make J~monade ~ Of vests.
", Hays spends ~o11rs on the embell'
Hays 9f fohnston, Iowa, a regis-- ishments. ·
·
tered nurse mostly in the obstetrics ·
For her hoiiday vests, she added
,'!l'id 11!YDCC(&gt;IOI!) area for 40 yeats, tho11s8nds of sequins and feslive
ilov~l.to throw pottery as.an IJU(let - braids_ and trims. Shimmery gold
anistic energy. She luis a , trqes, detailed &lt;;:hrislmas ba!ls, carpottery wheel and lhree Jcilns.
_ olers and family ~g11res- 1n fireBut her chronic bad back, which place scenes were stitched by hand.
has required major surgery; got the_' Filigree-looking snowflakes. show
best of her, and it became !OO hard off a navy Reece vest.
to stand 'at work and to tbiow pol· ·
"I Jove 10 add sparkle,': she
tery.
.
·
explains.
. But, "I go crazy when I don 't . ~Despite the glirz, Hays, 65, says
have something 10 do, .. sbe says.
'the vests are versatile. " I have
So Hays, a lifelong sewer, shift- worn the fanciest ones with every·
ed gear&lt; and stancd makins vests. thing from jeans to eleJ!anl long
. ·. ''Ve~ are very 'in' .right now, blllCk velvet skins."
.
and I thought it would be fun to
\She has also made vests w11h
· add personality to them." She stan- autumn and Halloween lhemes.
ed ta~ing classes and became a AQd she's made vests for Valcn_"fabtihoJic," with bags of Oeece, li.fe's and St. Patrick's days. F_or
fell, wool - and yards of trims- 'chi'Jdren 's vests, she has made
for-future projecls.
d~igns from cookie cullers.
She -made · up a vest · pattern
~Because of the derail. her vests
that's adaptable for various heights sell for $100 or more.
and body types.
'lier next project is making her

- I.

STOKELY'TOMATO JUICE
460Z.

•

4pl.

$4''

434.5
OZ,

........

.... BaWl ol Letirrt.' W.Va .• • ·

ot ...,._ ·nc1

a....,.
a
Jill ollAun.

· Orv¥o

oqan IIIII ,au forli'U JIRIE lEMING TEST, I t7~.00--.
...... •
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AFIFI:a ....... ~OIICR
.
Clf .tbe Col. •
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'

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· :
.
f
··~······················
··
.

•
-·

•• &lt;

LIBBY
TOMATOES
...
14,5 OZ,

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN ··
NOODLE or TOMATO squp·.
10.150Z2

$1·.·
,

., .

• LIMIT&amp;

·-!

WlnA

' .

PLEASE

·I

$200 ..
'

.

Free Cash1
Stop In 11'1• Stort

14.711 oz.

'

ForDetalla ·

~.

Merch 1, , .

-

I

-

'

own boiled wool for garments. She
has directions and the fabric and is
ready to try, knowing thai it Ulkes
.. lhtec:,lj,II\Cs .lht-.nOflllal amount of
· FabriC to allow for shrinkage from
the boifang.
"You just can't get bored wilh
sewing," says the enthusiast. .
Her husband,. Bob, Johnston
city manager, :encour~ged her . to
purchase a Vikmg sewmg machme
a~ a last Christmas g1f1 from her
mother, who died last fait Now
she's havmg great fun, leammg rhc
embroidery slilches on it. Bob
helps create some of her fabnc
designs on their home computer.
The Hays house IS enhanced ~y
many pottery _mugs. bowls , and
plates and pa1011ngs - her own
and ~lions fro~ other anists she
adm1res . Hqr wh•ms1cal IOPch IS
d1splayed 10 the pottery cen1erp1ece
she has on her dining room rablea taco pizza!

..

For more information on •h•
handmade vests, write 10 Lovell
Hays at 8187 NW Beaver, John·
ston, Iowa 50131

.New members initiated ·into grange
Two members were' initiated into · for a family in Dexter. Janel Morris,
membership atrhe recent meeling of women's activirics chairperson
/&gt;tar Grange H77g _
asked members to be thinking about '
Master Patty Dyer conducted the the soup supper scheduled . for .
meering with tlie founh degree March 21.
obligalion being rcrformed fo• tbe Deaf Chairperson Janis Macomber
two candidates . The third degree read 14 /lips for recognizing hearing
was performed in full form by the problem. · .
·
·
degree team in practice for the ritu·
Eldon Barrows, legislative chairalistic contest to be held soon.
man. reponed on a pos~ible dump
Janis Macomber reported on site for radioactive materials in the
community service work completed slate, and cautioned members io be

aware of information on site. He
also. discussed bridges in. the area,
and lhe Good Sam'!fitan·Law. . ~
. Lecrurer Vicki Smith asked members to do something •special fdr
someone whb lfves alone for Valerirines Day.
I , ;

Seventy-eight members, guests
andjuniors enjoyed a potluck supper
preceding the-meeting.

. I997 . SP'-'.'-'-"~
!• .

wi~e~ being Mr. . and Mrs. Joe
SWEETHEAR1- BANQUET
Hillside Bapcisl Church recently i-hi~phrey and Angi~ ~ones. Jessica
Grileser . and Josh~a Jones were
;:.&lt;~r,eld its seventh annual .sweethean
cro{\.ned king and queen .
banquet.
Sandy King donaled all of the
decorations and was assist~d in dec-~~
FRI~NDLY ~IRCLE .
orating th~ hall by Heat~cr Hood, . ~vents bemg held m celebrau?n
Rachd Hood and Angie Jones."BaJ- · _ of the I50th ann1v~rsary of Tr1011y
loons ,.,v~re hung from the ceiling, Church ~ere d1scu_ssed when
were decorated 10 red and . Fnendly Crn:le of · Trimly. Church
white, candles were placed on all the met recenrly at th~ church. ·
tables and · hearts were used
Alice Globokar pres1ded al tbe
throuJihoutthe hall.
·
mcetl~g with Linda Mayer giving
Belinda . Dean 'OJilde Arrange- devo\1ons and lhe program. Several
ments for the buffet dinner. Mr. and than~ you notes were read for rhe
Mrs. Da~ HOOd sang "Jesus. Me and cookies given to rhe ·elderly mem·
You" and "Let 'the Firsl One be . hers _o f the church al Chtrstmas..
Me.'; Jamie Humphrey sang titled . A discussion was held on honor·
"Walk With Me." Paslor James il)81he church women _o f lhe pa..r as
Acree gave a sem10 nene on Jove.
a pari of lhe J50rh anniVersary ccleMr and Mrs. Henry Hoppe and· bralion of the church this year.
a~d Mrs. Dan Hood pres~nled a
Adiscussion was also lield on rhe
"The Asking;" Amber Johnson reception given for.the couples mar·
charge of, the games, with rhe ried in the church who renewed thelf

wedding vows during a special ser·
Vice.
,.
Marie Hauck and Pauline Mayer
were ~ostes'ses. The next meeting
Will be at rhe church March 18 with
Alice Globokar and Dianne Hawley
as hostesses.

Supplement to:'
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel · ·

BEEKEEPING CLASS
.

A three pan beekeeping class will

be held on conseculive Mondays,
March 3 through 17 from 6 lo 8:30
p.m. at 98 Columbus Ro~d in
Athens.
- ;'Beekeeping" is sponsored by
· Community Food lnitiarives, a non. profit organization. The instruclor,
Lars Luuon, is -a local beekeeper
who has laughr beekeeping for sevem I )'cars. Cosrs are - S35 for the
series ·with an optional visit to a
working hive at no e.rra charge.
Call Porter al 592-3854 lo register.
.

FRIDAY, MARCII21
ADVERTISING DEADLINE
MARCH 13, .1997

PlACE YOUR AD .
AND REACH 3 COUNTIES!
,
.,
..,,

,p

Bankroll
-·This Week
Powell's Super',
Value

PINK BEAUTY
.PINK SALMON

,

By LAURA BERMAN
observes that "any responsible ho5t tidying the area on Fridays.
The Detroit News
,
or hostess is equally concerned with . The men "didn't grumble" about
and CATHERINE SAUVAIN
lhe success of their pany."
the nc.w system says Kearney.
Gannett News Service
"ll's nota man-woman thing; it's "They·re good at it;" she adds. · ·
It was a typical office pany: a an individual thing," says Dubois.
Kearney suggests thai the praglazed ham. platters of pasta salad, a To what degree a client becomes gressive corporate cnvironinenl oi
buwl of succotash. a sausage-and· involved in the event, he adds, her workplace causes "the cleanint
.
.
rice casserole, and home-baked pies depends on "the pride they take in 1ssue
to get more spread out, ,
and cookies. II was typical in anoth- what they do, not their sex.''
among men and women so that both
. er way, too: The women in the office
Neither are the details that con- · genders lake cleani~g responsibiliplanned and cooked; most of lhe · cern his clients gender specific says ties.
·
1
men kicked in a few dollars and Dubois. "There '!fC romantic men
Within her company, which is
s~owe.d up hungry. . .
(who take mood into consideration predominantly staffed by people in
when planning a menu) and theRl their 30s _and 40s, Kearney says
Psychologisr Elyse Sutherland is - are straight-forWard . business " there's no structure thai sayf
hardly surprised by the scenario. women who don 'I care about the wOmen·are only set.Tetaries. n
)
"Women are the people who pay mood."
Brinda Rao, a visiting professqr
close allention to relationships with
Likewise, Dubois says food pref· of sociology ai the University of
others," she says. "And they are erences depend on individual tastes California, Berkelef, points to genalso the most likely to be responsi- ... and lifestyles rather than ~ender. der-sensitivity trainihg within bus~
ble for coolcing al home. When you "To say that men like hamburgers nesscs and institutions as eviden"f
bring thos_e rhings together, as at an and .women want chicken-breast of cllangc.
office pany, who do you think is sandwiches - \hal's ridiculous," he
going to wirid up doing the work?"
says.
.
..
. . While tasks-that come under
Sutherland. a vice-president at
Yet, it seems that' some differ- ~·nurturing" category still Often fafl ·
Personnel Decisions' Jnternational 1 'n ences in the roles adopted by meil into the hands of women, Rao cooTroy, Mich., ought to know. She's and women may emerge after the tends that society has begun to
hosted office parties ai her own Pai!Y i.s.over. ·
actively counter the unexaminejl
house, and with March being
Jonelle Kearney, a technical asSumptions that perpetuate thesl:
.
'
Women's History Month, she says writer at Boeckler Instruments in nonns.
kitchen duties still. llllract some Tucson, Ariz., believes that both
'
women more than men.
genders are "equally inlerested in
Rtio sees the division of labor
AI her latest bash, several women cooking," but she adds that meil into gendered areas as an outgrowth
volunteered lo bring dessen or other seem lo show Jess -zeal in sharing of the socializalion process. The dis'·
· dishes. "That was nice, but I told clean--up chores .
proportionate number of women
them 'I wasn't going to cook-·and
One of her female co-workers who occupy "nlirturer role" careeri,
they shouldn't either," she says, used to shoulder the burden of ·such as nursing, results from social"We had everything catered."
cleaning _the common eating area, izin~ children with false cultural
Bill Dubois, director of home and remembers Kearney, until the premises, says Rao. "Men can be
$Orporate-.ales ai-Ridgewell's cater- ··"(omen initiated a rotating schedule cqu~lly nunuring," She Says.
I
ing service in Be.thesda, Md., where each person lakes a tum at

·.-· . ~:.. .· . .--Soci~ty scrapboo·k ---

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a.

15.5 oz.

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lqmmra • Anplt who hM lnlllble.t.t•'ll or !llldli~ldlng CIIIMf'AIIIOn lllnvjled 10 •
l\lld (lei-• ·
PNE hi I 1nt • 10 - ,If ""' p c•li m can be hllped. Bring lhla w

JOAN OF ARC
R~D OR (Hiil
BEANS

UMJT ONE PLEASE WJ:TH $10 Pun: haM

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.CHARMIN
TOILElTISSUE

•Jt&amp; liEARIIIG AID CENTER •
frhiiJ, , ....... ; 21~ 1997
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MAXWELL\,HOUSE ·
MASTER BLEND COFFEE

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Fashion: What to do when life
throws you.a vested interest

PILLSBURY·

co;-

~

JIFF.PEANUT
·aunER

....

y~

births in the last decade Thl\llks 10 dren in leu than two
..And why the other cr.y. a ..,;...... sr"111"'4 me
new fenility dru&amp;s, the binhs of in the; world would you think my sex llld said in a pit)'inl !OK, "God
triplets and quads are more~n life is any of your b11sioess? Does bless you!" My reply w11 "He
than ever.
the fact thai my lriplets resulted alreldy 1111." - Lafayette. Ind.
1
I am the mother of 2-year-old from in vitro fertilization make you
De. Lafayeirc: Your 1et1er is sur\
triplets and a 6--month--old baby. To feel safer?
.
to brillf in a vwiety Of cumnead.
see me approaching with a stroller
My husband and I feel as if we MCIIllwlu1e, I &lt;rint 10 thank you r«
built for four mull be quite a jolt. have hit the baby lottery. We love enclosing a phorograph or your
But it is il.ill amazing to me how our children more than l can express children. They m simply IOtJCOUI·
many stupid. rude and unbelievably in words. But I will admit it' has net You have been tnlly blessCd.
J
impertinent comments are .made by been easy. I had an extremely diffiGem of the Day:
peth:ct sttangers.
. i quit pregnancy and three premature
"To do is to be." .. Descartes •
Here is my advice to those who '1 babies. not 10 mention that two
"To be is to do:" - Sanre ·
find my family so interesting: We hours of sleep a night can be
"Do be do be do.~·- Frank Sinaare not an eXhibit at the zoo, so exhaustins. Four children in 18 Ira
~
~
please don ' I videotape us. And months has drained us financially
Send ques1iolrll toAaa Landed,
please don't tell me how sorry you and physically, but I would not Craton Syndltate, sm W. CeD'
feel for me. Actually, I feel 'very for- · change a thing about my life.
tary Blvd., Salle 700, Los A.celes, .
lunate (o have had four healthy chil- ,
While I was out with mychildren Calif. 90045
f

Women .can't ·.escape .
.~
kitchen even _at office partie·s,

3oz,

lEE HEARING TES-TS

I• Dr. I.
..-lies' Office
224 . . . . ..., ,,••,.,

·

ROLL

·- 31. Help your child si~n up for
a library card.

',

·

BOUNTY:'
TOWELS

•••.••••••••••
COIPON
.

·

why would a mother be like this?
How sbould l haadle 1't?
Hun
Feelings in San Diego
·_ ..
De1r Hun: Your mother may
have a fear of flying. Is there perhapuomeone who could ttavel with
her? Explore all the options ·: bus,
train, car .. with other famii;mem· bcrs. I hope it can be worked out. To
live long en911gb to sec a grandchild
many is a special blessing. It would
be .a shame to miss it.
Dear Ann Landers: You have
educated millions of people on various topics over lhe years. Please.
continue n:i do so by printing my letter.
.
.
As you undoublelily know. there
has been an explosion of multiple

6-UOL ·

·'Boosting-parenting· skills will
~~:~s ~~:~:. ~~~-n·~~~~ help ·with chi.ld's s~lf~esteem

.

.

,.
.__..
Dear Ann Landers: For the last 30
• years, lilY family has lived I ,SOO
miles from Illy mother. She lives .
alone and seems to like it that way. I
vis~t h~r whenever I can afford it,
whrch •IS every two or ~ ye~.
and I call of~n. She has VISited my •
~usband 'ancUamily twice .. the last .
lime was 28 years ago.
· ·
Mom 'is. in good health, and we 10."

tuctionwillbeheld.
1 POMEROY .. Meigs ·counry

I '

DEAS

...

'

)eta

child aroupd .the house.
. - 9. Designate a special day to
spend with jus.t your child.
'- 10. Acknowledge your child's
feelings..
·
- II. Make a chore chan and lei
your child keep track of his accomplished tasks.
- 12. Hang your child's anwork
around the house.
.
. ·-· 13. Buy your child a warch
and teach her.how to rell time.
- 14. Encourage your child to
··talk about her day.
- 15. Tell your child "I love
you" every day.
·
,
- 16. Designarc a quiet place foi
your child to study.
- 17. Write a leuer to a relarive
rogethcr.
- - 18. Play games and work puzzles logether.
- 19. Make a list together of all
the reasons your child is special and
post it.
- 20. Praise your chMd.
- 21. Be a coach, school volun~ leer or Scout leader.
- 22. Plan and prepare _a meal
togelhcr and eat lhe meal w1th your
child.
- 23. Encourage your _child to
have a hobby or stan a colleclion.
- 24. Make a family .tree.
- 25. Teach your child good
manners.
:.
- 26. Talk ro your child about
his cultu~al heritage.
.
- 27. Read io your child and let
your child read to you.
.- 28. Play a spon together.
. - 29. Let your child plan an
evening ou.l.
- 30. Let your child s_clecl the
clothes he'll wear today.

- --

get along floe. Every time I talk to '
her, I invite her 10 come see us, but
sbc always says sbc has no in~eres~
in viaitin1 us here.
OUr daughter is gettin&amp; married
soon. I wrote Mother, tellins her
how much it would mean to us if sbc
would, attend the wedding. Our
daughter has also called her grandmother about .this. I have olfmd to
pay for the trip, even though she can
afford it. Mom has no problem Jeaving her house for a few days or
going places involving long drives.
She never actually ~ponded to the
invitation, but she did tell a relative
tha\she isn'tplanningt() come to the
wedding because she "doesn't want

POTATO CHIPS

~

Pomeroy Church of Christ Brad· By R'UBY L. BAILEY
llwy· Church will have &lt;levollons. The Detroit Newa
Jennifer Grover · Hicks will be the ·
Your 4-year-old won 'I wea~ what
~aker.
. ~ you s~ggest. Your 6-year-old thinks
1
he knows everything and' proceeds
,..• J'OMEROY .. Alzheimers .and to tell you that you don '1. ·
Reiii\Cd Disorders Suppon Group,
You don't remember Mom warnThursday, I to 2:30 p.m. ar _the ing you there'd \le days lik.e this.
Meijs Senior Citizens Center. Barb •
Besides, she· probably lives too·
:JNakllll_ishi_, dietitian -will ~peak . on far away to help you wirh•the daily
.;'Nutrition and Your Hean._
~hallenges of parentl'rig.
Add the problems of dru~s. teen
!ltiDAY
.
pregnancy and high school dropout
, ' ·PORTI.AND .. Lebanon Town· rates, and parents today need on
- ·llhip 'nwtees, Friday, 7 p.m.• town· increasing amount ofsuppotl.
ship IJ!iilding.
Boosting parenting skills is the
best way to help prevent problems·,
says Ellen Thomerson, coordinator
·Grange 778 and SUir Junior . of the Oakland County. (Mich.)
878 will meel in regular ses- Health Division office of substance
lri4:Jii ·i~lli~rd•y with a potluck suppef · abuse' prevention.
.
6:30 p.m. followed by a regular .
"We're become increasingly
Jneoting at 8 p.m. Hemlock Grange convinced that the way ro help kids
10
All members urged to keep from · gelling involved in sub~1rid,
&lt;lance abuse is to do thai at the car·
liest age possible." she says, "One
way to do thai is to educate parents
on how to raise children lobe happy·
and.productive."
With thai goal -in _si@hl, hero are
31 ways to build vour child-'s selfesteem', one (or every day in March.
- I. Volunteer with your child.
Hillside · J;laplisl
·-2. Go for a wa.lk and learn lhe
hymn sing, Sunday, 6 p.m.
. neighborhood. Find your city o.n a
, - .
.
Kings Way map:
3.
Paint
your
child's
bedroom.
.
Christian singers. 3
followed by cany-in Let her.pick the color.
-4. Make a growth c)lan.
- S. Teach your child safety procedures.
.
- 6. Plan to allend school
eve~ts: field trips, open hOuses, con•
ferenees.
·.
.
·
- 7. Pla11t a seed Mnd watch it
grow. Let your child be responsible
for care.
- -8.
phCotograpiiS of your

'"'· Lor _..,

~ a· v A'NN I

79

POMEROY~ .otL .

Ann
landers

~

12 P1.120Z.

of flyir:1g may deprive grandmother of special momeRt

.,
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·
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Medicine

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1:Fear

RC COlA
PRODUCTS

Family

tree ........ _

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

&gt;

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic: Medicine

'trC' ' v i i

t" • '

Ponaroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ponwoy • Middleport,·Ohio

Community
, calendar

•

.• '.

smokin.' line of sportswear rolls into town
ERIC HENRICKSON

Paid in Full, Crack Team, .SO&lt;:rates, Red Cloud, Speckled Trout and Bully.
Looking (or something special to wear to the bumi·
The designs are rc-c~a1ed from_ compa~y founder
•, ,.
'
· Jake Rosenfi~ld 's extensive collecuon of crgar s1gns.
• . Reading positive smoke signals from a renewed p{&gt;sters and labels with various ,themes - patriolis'!',
~ interest in cigars, the Five Cent Cigar Comp~y lnc.,_has women, sports, history, animals (Bully features a frog m
~ introduced a line of sponswear based on his~onc ~1gar a ruxedo) and literature.
ten. It ,includes ! -shins, denim shins, golf slj1rtS, n!ght·
Prices in the Five Cent calalog range from $18.95 for
•shins, hal$ and J&amp;ekel~. .
.
a baseball cap 10 $299 for a wool and leather jacket with
:.- The sbiriS c!ime in tum-of-the--century reproduetton the Five Cenl Cigar Company logo. T-sh1rts go for
"cigar bOxes and are accompanied by booklets that $22.95.
texplain· the histOry of cigar an. Thcno are 12 colorful
You can order lhrou"'" the company's cahlog (I 8QO-.
tjmqes and brand IIIIDCS available: ~up ~fender,
&amp;"
:Buzzer, ,Judac Best, .Ftec Cuba. J)a~ s, While Ash, 81-5CENT) or online at www.fivecenlcom

. Detroit Newa

•t·

·•

lo:

,,

.

.

.•

-

I· -

, I , •.

· • Home Improvement Center • Air Conditioning
·
• House Painters • Building Contractors
• Interior Decorators • Lumber • Flooring ~ Carpeting ..,
• Hardware • Appliances • Furniture Stores

The .Daily Sentinel
C•ll992·2155 hve ot ~lolt

�..
: f'llga12 • The Dllty 81
.

'~"I

•'; Wednllde,, '*'-Y 21,1117

Wedt!IIMJ,,.....,. 21,1117

Pomeroy •lllcldllpolt. Ohio

.

,"

- ~Band

39th Annual Grammy Awards ·shows fresh face
.

By EDNA GUNDERSEN

the font time. The casts oi "Bring ia
1USA TODAY
da Noite, Bring ill cia Funk" at
t NEW YORK -Though creep: "Riverdancc" will do SCC11CS from
_ing towlld middle qe, the 39th the nominaled productions.
Grammy Awards Sbow has a liesh
-A hu&amp;~ U-sbapcd ~with
• fta&gt; Ibis y-. The tbree-bQur broad- four performance aras will reduce
. cast, hosted by Ellen Dc&lt;icncKs, chicchat formerly requited for SCI·
· will break new ground when it airs ups between musical numbers ..
~on CBS tonight II 8 ET (live )I 8PT
WiniiCfS in 89 Cllegoriu will be
. (delayed):
announced during tbc show, beamed
. . - For tbe first time, tbc shqw is to I.S billion viewers in 170 ~­
being atagcd in an arena, Madison , uies. While naminees swell tbc
· Square Garden.
envelope conlcnts, spcctalors tune in
r -The l~st Grammy,audience for tbc live performances, which
. ever (12,000) will include 1,500 often dramitically' boost record .
. conlcst winners, tbc first "civilians" sales. This year's lineup leaps from
--admitted.
ska-pop band No Doubl's "Spider~
- Eric Clapton and Babyface webs" and classical violin virtuoso
, will perfonn their first live duet of Gil Shaham to Tracy Chapman,
· " Change tbc World", up for best Beck, Celine Dion, the Fugecs,
. song and record.
Vince Gill. and Patty Lovelus.
~- Savion Glover and Colin ' The SmaShing Pumpkins plan a
Dunne, tbe stars of tii(O hit Broad" lavish production of "1979'' with
· way musicals, perform together for guest musicians. ~itney Houston,

~ UIA TODAY

Try the Grammy CD

By DAVE MATHER
Gannett News Service
Beware! If New Year's resolutions to diet remain unbroken, this
cookbook may put an end to mem
once and for all. But rest assured, it
will be a sweet defeat.
The desserts in this ·cookboo
range from the simple, such as 1lm·
gerine Ice or Rustic Apple Tart to
desserts elegant enough to be
served in the fincst restaurants. All
would provide a Rlorious end to
dinner for family, friends or tbc
boss you want to impress. And a
good cook's reputation can be goldplalcd if d)ese dessens are present·
eel at potluck dinners or family
reunions.
Ryan Brothers observed his flfSt
· Several of the recipes are
birthday 1an. 23 with a pllf!Y given
accompanied by full-page -color
:by his mother, Amy Brothers, and
·photographs that will . start the·
grandparents, Mark ' and Candy
mouth' watering and the stomach
Tillis, at the Rutland American
growling in anticipatioh. None of
.Legion hall.
' Theme was Mickey Mouse. · the recipes include a nutritional
analysis, so dessert i:an be blissfulGuests were served cake, chips, pop
ly enjoyed, unencumbered by
'and coffee.
thoughts of calories.
Those atlcnding with his mother
Recipes include Orange Mar·~~nd grandparents were Sandy Smith, ·
malade Cake with three layers of
Jeff, i:&gt;ebbi~ and Casey Tillis, We_s,
orange-flavored cake separated by
Jodi and Tori Young, Dan and
orange mannalade and finished off
Donna Laudcnnilt, Dennis and
with a thin layer of cho\;olalc glau:;
McKinney, Ruthann Riffle,
Caramc!l . Almond Tartlets with
Cheryl, Action and Seoul Facemyer.
Wann Blueberries made even better
_Cindy .and Paschel Faccmyer, Janie
when topped with a dollop of
Tu¢ker. Brice Clark, Adria and
_whipped cream; and Coconut
Maria Frecker, Joanna Kristophcr
Cream Pie with Mango and Blackand Amanda Gibbs.
berry Sauces, a surprising blend of
' Those sending gifts but unable to
flavors.
attend were Kathleen Tillis, George
· Some of the recipes sound diffiand Gladys Brother, Darlene Laudcult to make, but are deceptively
ermilt, Ro~er and Jenny Barrett,
simple, such as Chocolate-Filled
Mike Brothers and Connie and
Filo Triangles. Gennan Chocolate
Margie Wisecup.
Parfait,
and Apricot Custard Tan.
.--'
Although at first glance some of
the dess~rts may awear to require
the services of a trained chef, a
cook with moderate skills should
have no problem preparing any of
the recipes in Ibis_cookbook.
The bottom line: Many cookbooks cover the basics such as
white cake, apple pie or brownies.

:First birthday
celebrated

. 'MarY

.USATODAY ·

. .

.

JQAQna Nicole Jeffers celebrated
,iM!rJDIIith binhday Jan. 13 at the
I home of Iter parents, Don and J~n­
nifer King. t-au~ermilt, New Lima
Rqad. Hlrn•l!"vdle.
· ·
, A'tendin8 were Iter parents, her
·lfsiers, 1amiO and Amber, maternal
snndmothcr, Joan King, also of
New Lima Road. her paternal grandparcnl!l, Dtinnie_and Donna Laudermilt, Middlcpon; Julie King. Shawn
Reeves, and Dave Reeves of

gevilie.

Cake. iCF Qteam and chips were
pcrved. JoA:1111a is the granddaughter
1&gt;f 1M late J~~Ct King, Sr. ·
.

~News policy~
, In an effot110 provide o'ur readerlltip witJi. ~umnt . news, the su.nday
.timea-Scnttncl wtll not accept wed•
dings after 60 days from the date of
tbl! event.
.
. ·
' Weddinp111bmi.tted af\er the .60day clea!llinc will appelr durin&amp; the
wlek ill The Daily Sentinel 1111d tbc
a.Jilpolis DlilyTribune.
Aft c:lub meetinpllld oCher news ·
IWdclel In the society soction flll!ll
111 lllbllli&amp;fed Wicjlin 60 days of
.. Cl
.... All lllkthtllya must, be

=:::~

.....

., , ~·of d!e

•·

BISSiLL BUILDERS, INC:
New

tfte,€o4- tffeta&amp;

~~~~~~~

more

~··

MACADAMIA NUT
BRI'ITLE

.. ... . . . .
_

.

' :

three-fourth lcaspoon baking
soda
one~ighth lcaspoon salt
one-half cup light com syrup
I cup (4 ounces) madadamia
nuts, coarsely chopped
one-half teaspoon vanilla
extract
4 tablespoons (6ne-half
stick) unsalted butter, softened
Coat an 11-by-17-inch baking tray with butter.
In a small bowl, mix togeth_er the balcing soda and salt. Set
aside.
In a 2-and-one-half-quart
heavy bottomed saucepan, combine tbc com syrup and the
sugar. Bring the mixture to a
boil over mcdium-!tigh heat and
cook to 2S5 degrees on the
candy thennometer. Carefully
stir in the macadamia nuts and
continue to cook the mixture,
stirring constantly, to 300
degreecs · on · the candy thermometer. ·
Remove the saucepan from
the heat and stir In the reserved
baking soda and salt: ..
Stir in the vanilla extract and
'the butter, mixing until the butter is completely incorporalcd.
Pour the brittle across the buttered baking tray. Tilt and rotate
the.pan, letting the brittle .spread
as thinly as possible over the
baking tray.
.
Let the brittle cool' to room
temperature and then crack it
into small pieces. Makes about
I pound.

ALL OHIO

"'"'*

-Attorney

Safranek

.

Pumpkins'
Grammynods

EMILY LUCHETTI.
author of S111n Desserts

,,,••!!:"'•t

'

'

y,

.

.
i

13 WEEKS For Only
$18.20
I

THAT'S ALMOSTSOo/o OFFTHE,NEWSTAND PRICE!
.THAT'S LIKE
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YES! Pleue atart my aabsertptloa to Tile Dally Sentinel for 13 weeks for only SJ8.lO, IS
IOOD II poulble.
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· Happy

by M1rch 3, 11117.
t ; """" of A+ ... .....,, . Ft~ll-tlme polltlon with beneflta. (Sallry comn..n.ur.ti wllh ~).
.
••••••• to til
In tilt . . of . Mutt 11M Ohio clrlvw'allcense and r.lllb..

Birthday

•'not Willi of ll'tl • I"

Francell

Olllo ......... IIIVI M A.

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J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULI:r.ION

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GRUESER'S GARAGE

......

NOTE: This brittle will keep
for at least a week. Store in an
SWEETEST OF SWEETS • The Four Star DHaerta cookbook lnc!Uct.. recipes auch as 0111nge Mar·
airtight Cl)ntainer at room temmalade
Clke, Caramel Almond .Tartlet1 and Coconut Creem Pie with Mango and Blacltt.rry S.ucee, a
perature.
'
1urprlalng blent;l of flavors.

From:

~

WICKS
.HAULING

..

By FIONA SOLTES

Fourth birthday
observed

oC:'r:co.

II!- .

When stocking up on staples, it
pays 'o know their life expectancy

;10AfliNA NICOLE

·

":~~·

Fans who believe music should be heard and not _ . may prefer the
CD to tbc 1V spectacle. Tonight's Grammy telccul has a tJOUndlniCk,
"1997 Grammy Nominees," !8llked No. 42 in its first week ill "Billboard" with initial sales of~ 1,000.
The third annual album of tunes by Grammy nominees includes all
contenders for record of tbc year: Tracy Chapman's "Give Me One Rcason," Eric Clapton's "Change the World;" Celiac Dioa's "Because You
Loved Me," Alanis Morissette's "(ronic" and Smashing Pumpkins'
"1979."
Songs by tbc but new anist nomineu include Garbqe's "Stupid
Girl," Jewel's "Who Will Save Your Soul," No Doubl's "Spiderwebs,"
the Tony Rich Project's "Nobody Knows" and LeAnn Rimes' "My
Baby."
· ·
· '
The CD also showcases female pop vocal performanoes by Toni
Braxton. Shawn Colvin, Gloria Estefan and Jewel.

This cookbook is a good choice
for cooks who want to take the
an of dessen to a higher level.
Here is a sample recipe from
the cookbook. If unsalted
macadamia nuts cannot be
found, omit the salt. in the
recipe.

months unopened; 5-7 days opened
The Naahville Tenneuean
if refrig~rated.
Been checking out your dates Baking soda: 18 ·months
lately?
unopened; 6 months opened.
Actually. we mean the dates in ·- Baking . powder: 6 months
your kitche~ -the ones on the food unopened; 3 months opened.
you've been storing in your fridge
Cornstarch:
18 nionths
and pantry.
· unopened; 18 months opened.
With some foods, · it's .easy .. _ Dry pasta made without eggs; 2
enough to tell when they're spoiled . .years unopened; I year after opened.
With others, you' ve got a handy, - Dry egg noodl~s : 2 years
stamped•on qate to go by. .
unopened; 1-2 months opened.
But what about those staples like - Salitd dressing: 10- 12 months
·flour? Or sugar? Or even honey? unopened; 3 months opened if
You may not know how long some refrigerated.
.
items have been in the store, but -- Low-acid canned items like soup,
here's a list of sujlgested, general .' meats, gravy, vcl!etabl~s: 2-5 years
shelf lives for common items frum unopened; 3-4 days opened if refrigthe Food Marketing. Institute in eruted.
Washington, D.C.
·~ Honey : I year; whether or not
- Flour: 6-12 months unopened; 6· opened.
8 months opened.
. - Worcestershire sauce: I ye~r.
- Whole wheat nour: I month whether or not opened ....
unopened ; 6-8 months opened if -- Ground, canned coffee: 2 years
refrigerated.
unopened; 2 weeks opened if refrig..,.. Sugar: 2 years unopened; sugars crated ...
do not spoil but eventually may - Instant coffl~e . in jars or tins: 12
change flavor. ·
. months ·unopened; 2-3 months
.
Brown sugar: 4 month's openod.
unopened. .
Bo1tlcd . w.ater: 1-2 yeats
- Confectioners' sugar: 18 months unoJ)ened; 3 months opened. ··
unopened.
. - Pudding mixes; I yeat unopened;
- Solid s~ort'ening: 8 months 3-4 months opened .
unopened; 3 months opened.
- Jams, jellies and presenies: I
- Cocoa: indefinitely unopened; I year unopened; 6 months opened if
year opened.
refrigerated.
- Whole spices: 2-4 yean total, :.... Peanut butter: 6-9 months
whether or not opened.
. unopenedi 2-3 months ope•ec:l.
- Ground · spices: 2-3 years total, ~ Kecchup; I year unopened; 6
Whether or not opened.
· , months opened if refrigera,ted, I
- Plprika, red pepper or chili pow- month if not.
dcr; 2· yeen lOW; Uep' in fridle, ·
...Otte more thing: Have YO\I ever
- Hilf!·ecld CIIIIICII i~ lilre fruit, tbou&amp;ht ttllout mukini the items you
ju~e, ~~~~ tomato IO!Ip and buy, with tl\e dates they were bouihl
"''"''' i• llmeflt ·sau~os; '12-18 so you can better lleep up?

*

... .,...........____......,______.....,

..-~~----

Tral•

By EDNA GUNDEAQN

CookboQk revie.w: Indulge in sweet temptation
Cookbook review
"F011r-Star Desserts," by
Emily Luchetti (HarperCollins
PublisherS, $32.50)

shuns 'tragic' label

IUburlJin aaui
~ fnlllm.. IUit.s-blu-dnrm .roc:k format,"
tiOA fed tlw. IIOiioe, • did widely Corpn says. "We're in our life 201;
,
NEW YORK- Delpite a beck- • publicized iN'i+ftiSol.--al tw· we've done our rock 'n' roll thin1.
om••,, Urn 1 • .,.,.
Honlel• Vlnrt Siding New
~ Joi of ..,_;DJ acbievctFIOIII, ~ moil .ad bind iafi.......
We waat to be illllovaMn..alld stay
Culiiij~lde Howe
·Garagn • Replacement Windows
)' Smubms bmptins c•'t escape
The capper wu the nisfltmarish oa the vanguard. Tlult's why the
anc1
Site
Room Additions • Roofing
: aOlllriety • rock's dy1functional druJ scandal on tbc eve or lbc bind was formed, to always be out
;, posta" children, mariaatias in mis- Plunpkins' two sold-out shows in front on a daoFrous cdce. Iakins
Work, Bullclozlnt,
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
:..,cry IIICI cJoaed by misfortune. For Madison Square Garden. In the chances."
FREE ESTIMAliES
;·, rock mytbolo&amp;ists who equate pmtawn houn of July 12. Melvoln
That stance has risked fan loyal~-lraJed&gt;: with trendiacss•• the lllltd's was, found dead ofa heroin overdose ty. CorgiiiJ says he feels indeblcd to
lnsfalled
614-992·7643
• reputabon may ~ desirable, even after he and Clwnbcrlin, a chronic longtime fans who fueled his confi(614) 992~~.
•
(No Sunday Calls)
~· ~trivoc!. That's not bow tbc Putnp- drug aOc! alcoiKA abuSCI', had injcct- dence, but be owu his public only
P' kins sec tl
ed a potent strain called Red Rum. integrity and quality, not nostalgia
. . ..... - ... . ' •
!•• "'!'e are a succ:es! story," s~ ' qtam~ia was anated for heroin and comforting redundancy.
,,.cs Btlly Cot]an, srpptng hot tea w1th possession and later fired, a decision
"I've definitely tested their
~ :his girlfriend at tbc ~llliaa Pink tbc band 1crmed ."devastating" but patience, but that's the ide11." he
BISSELL
.ROBERT
CONSIRUCnON
~ -Pony downtown. "We succeeded on
unavoidable.
says. "If you're not offending someAuthorized AGA Distributor
f our own terms despite tragedy. Yet
"We fired tbc guy to save his one, you're malcing a mistake."
.•New Homes
\ Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
I·• while we were on tour, the headline life," Corgan says. " We could not
The boredom and pain Corgan 1
•Garages
Services • Steel Sales &amp; F~rlcation • Repair Welding
~ "in every city was: 'Tragedy-filled continue thinkins. 'Hmmm, maybe· funnels into songs like "Zero"
•Complete
. • Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamental
· Pumpkins roll into town.' I constant· he' ll get better.' We were criticized ("Intoxicated with the madness/ I'm
.St. . • Stah:s, Railings, Patio Fumiture, Fireplace
Remodeling
; ly meet fans wbo are puzzled by tbc for being intolcntnt and not helping in love with my sadness'') and
Items,
JSianter
Hangers,
Trellises
&amp;
lots
ol
other
slulffl
Stop &amp; Compare
Jimmy when be needed us most. "Mu12le" ("I fear that I am ordi; .way tbc band is portrayed."
"No Job Too Large or Too Small,;
' " The sin&amp;crisongwriter, 29, in~y Believe me, the guy couldn't have nary") clearly stir Gen-X listeners,
. FREE
'·
We will work whhin your budget.
:~be mercurial; controlling, cocky and luid any
chances. He used up even those who wonder what a rich
ESTIMATEES
Ph. 773-9173
.
FAX n3-5861
. ,-dangerously candid, but be's no tor- all his chances plus five. For every, rock star has.to complain 'about.
985-4473
:• tured slacker; in spilc of setbacks. one's safety aad mental health sta•
"Money doesn't hold my hand
101 Pom•roy SlrHI
M-n. WV
,,.,The lalcsl "'as tbc 1996 ftring of bility, we had to pan company."
when someone passes away,'' s.ays
•.;drummer Jimmy Chamberlin after a
.Chamberlin, who pleaded guilty Corgan. distraught over his mother's
:.• heroin anal and the drug death of Oct. 8 to a reduced charge of disor- death recently. "Success has nothing
FREE 3 min.
~' guest
keyboardist
Jonathan derly conduct, completed drug rehab to do with my opinions as a human
Psychic
· "'tofelvoin. The Pumpkins Cllllcclcd in December and .began playing in being. We connect because we're
reading for
r- shows but soon resumed a !~ate the Last Hard Men with the Breed- not writing from some mount. We're
J "tour with inlcrim replacements.
ers' Kelley Deal and Skid Row's .not in some whiskey daze. We're
*Love *Money
from the suburbs, OK?"
f' Corgllll and his baud mates, Sebastian Bach.
. (614) 367-0266
•career *Health
Weaned on '70s bands like Cheap
:.:bassist D'Arcy and guitarist James
Jimmy "worked hard apd just
•
1 ·800-950-3359
. : . lh!l. feel uiumphanr, not defeated, u blew it all," Corgan says.. " He was Trick and the Cars, Corgan admits
18+
•
. : .·they head to the 39th Grammy the only drummer we ever played he's' less excited about music than he
1-800·992-4170
• Top • Trim • Removal
FNJtCa.IQUIII
i'
:·:Awards, 8 p.m. ,Jn'/PT Wednesday with. He knew what tbc band meant was in his garage-band lcCns.
1-AM-!52§-51'! Ell J"CC .,.. ·
visa/me
• Stump Grinding ·
"The kiddie rush is not the same,
· · night on CBS. Their seven nomiita· anti.should have knq\vn what he w!IS
Par Mlnuto. Mull' II&amp; 11 Yr4 . .
'.
20Yrs.
~.g()Q-567-3727
•
Sarv-lJ (810)145 14S.
:..tions arc tbc culmination of a steady, toying-with and sacrificing. He did- . but my respect for the music is ten'_
. _ _. . You Con Find Yaur Spaclot
%,.detennined climb since the 1995 n't make a gracious exit, and he fold," he says. ''Wisdom replaced
$3.88 min• ...., - ·
Someone N..,llt1-.778"4NII
" release o( "Mellon Collie and' the opened, our lives to more scrutiny. nilivelc. Do I believe rock 'n' roll
ElL 4125 t2,80 flW Min. - ..
will
.save'
the
world?
Absolutely
. ·• lnfinilc Sadness." -The 28-track set He did ·a great disservice to us and
18 Yro Old SorY· U (118) 14.
not.n
BANKRUPTCY
can
relieve
a
debtor
of
\:' fstill' on Billboard's chart after 69 tbc fans.
841.
'
Yet his devotion to music borders financial obligations and arrange a fair
, ·,weeks) yielded five hit singles and
'"But that's an angry reaction,"
Easy Pay Auto
;; ·sold more than 8 million copies, . he adds wearily. He and Chamberlin on religious zeal. He has completed · distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
INSURANCE 2 Black Fonioto PuppiN, Ut
e·With a fraction of the hype and mar- have not spoken since July. "It demos for the "Batman" soundtrack keep "exempt' property lor their personal use.
. Chow, 112 GOfman Sheplllt4,
Any Ca r
:· keting clout, it easily eclipsed would be pointless. The· only thing and recorded' eight song$ for two
' 814-446-1$47.
'.
Include
a
car,
a
house,
clothes,
and
This
may
· Michael Jackson's "HJStory" to ~~ mailers is that Jonathan died albums the band ,will construct
Any Dr iver
Free For Hauling ,Awfl/ litda It
household goods.
'!~become the best-selling double and Jimmy almost died. Thank God simuliancously: one acoustic, tbe
Slclo .Uprlght
FllkltrMW
DUI
&amp; SR-22
other electronic-charged 'rock. He's For Information Regarding Bankruptcy conlact:
w... Ice - 814-31t-827t. • .
•:"album of.tbc '90s.
be's alive.''
&gt; Discounts &lt;
~:· Little wonder that tbe· l'limpkins
.Melvoin's death reignited debate also planning a side project with
FrM Pupplll: 7 Old, Cll-'
Willl~m
Computer Quotes · tie 11'111 O.rman Sllophlld, nl;
~~ were dubbed l996'a anist of the about how to combat drugs in tbe Marilyn Manson and former Nine
4*3103.
•
Attorney At Law
r-y. . by Rolling Stone and best band rock world. The tr8ditionally apolit- Inch· Nails drummer Chris Vreitna.
(614) 992-6677
Athens, Ohio
' by Spin. Last fall, tbcy captured ical Pumpkins declined to take a And he'll produce records by friends (614) 592-5025
Pomeroy
. , . . 14" - · ........•
2121117 1 mo.
Ric Ocasek ·· and. Stevie Nicks.
·~· se~n MTV awards and sold out the. position. '
Pupplal To Glva-. 814·2••
~" initial shipment (200,000) of ''The
"Drug use. is not a rock ' n' roll Already carving their place in lhe
1258.
In
Memory
•
: ,~ Aeroplane Flies High," a boxed set
pr9blem," Corgan says. "It's an next millennium, rhe l!umpkins are
KINGS'
H.O.M.M.
To A Good Homo I FonMde
:·:'of 33 sinslcs, covers and B-sides. Aqlcrican problem, like bomeless- plotting four albums over five years.
Mountain FIHt Dot• Gaod
Ko•
l11proYente11ls
"I
don't
think
I've
ever
been
this
In
Memory
Of
": Do these sound like tbc t~CComplish- ness and AIDS."
TRANSPORTATION
Squirrel~
lluot
Ghn
rfl}
3351 Happy Hollow Road
tlnou tn· amity 81oj.241-S ;
' ments of fashionably depressed misThe Pumpkins enlisted Filter busy," Corgan says. "Music is
U IIIIULITTI SliMCI eiH-45-5711.
BEULAH GRATE
.
!
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Trlna~nlor
·! fits?·
.
drummer Matt Walker to complete 99(PC) of my life. But I know I need
Aprll2,
1921"
New
Homos,
Additions,
Individuate
ualng
·~· "I don't sec bow a dysfunctional tbc tour but~ undecided about hir- a break. Besidu, if you give people
To GrJe:iiiJii)' To A ~ ....... '
Feb.26,1996
Siding, Pole Barna, ·
whoetchalra.
Medicaid
6 . v.r Old Femlle F~o~l n t ca....
too
much,
they
start
to
not
want
it.
";band could release 80 sonas in five ing him, or anyone, pennancnlly. .
•
Mldlcareecceplld.
Decks, Painting,
--:IOU~
·'
God saw you getting
.pyears," Corg1111 says, adding slyly,
·~Man is a gC/(lll fit, probably bet- We need to res!fain ourselves."
Doctor's vlatts,
Garagea,
Porches.
60
Lost
111d
Found
Indeed,
!
nstoppable
success
tired
l'(Fm; a6-foot-3 guy,with nqhlir.nd -~ . our .old drum~,". Corgan
hoapltal visits, etc.
· . Cell Us For A fras
h ·whiny voice, I've done all right." · says. "We're just very cautious. We might puncture the Pumpkins' dark When a cure was not to
Black Lob wlpMr~e calll!r, .....
Phone 614-992-3053
Esllll'lllte
REWAROI Trot Circle a~
be,
.
. "Mellon Collie". impressed crit· wan( to be sure we know what we're myth. Tragic, isn't it?
Fax 814-9112-3053
614-742-3090
30«75«1!111
or304-e7$-2151. *'
So He cfosed His arms
Pager 1-81J0.9112·2327
•• ies with its sprawlins omate pup. doing, and he knows what he's get614-742-3324
around you
FouiiC[: Modlum Slzo Black Pit!
:: balladry, stinging rock and .lush ting into. Joining the Pumpkins is a
Pln2849
....
614-742-3076
And
whispered
come
to
2111117 1 mo. • a-. 81-7-7123.
:~ symphonies, overlaid by Corgan's - life-changing decision."
me.
LOST: Gold Nocli Chit~
'•eonfessionallyrics.
•· And ever-changing. The band
• - r - . . . r.
I
'(Ume StoneYou didn't deser.ve what
~! · "Even people who think the band ended its recent tour in New Orleans
30«75-3227.
•
.
.you went through,
' : is full ofitsclf or that Billy is a little lly retiring signature tunes like "DisLow Rates)
Young Goldon Retrol..r ·rounil
- Beat record: "1979."
And
so He gave you a
":'brauy have to acknowledge that the arm" 1111d "Today" because time has
Forest
Run Rd area, 11 4-MI·
- Deal album: "Mellon
· rest
. 3012.
• :smashing Pumpkins 1\now bow to diminished their emotional punch.
Collie and the Infinite .Sad·
Body work, em:, truck
God's garden must be
: •wrilc a song and take chances," says It's another brave shift for a band
70
Yard Sale
ness."
&amp; truck plllntlng,
beatj!Hul,
· !:J.Pitiladetphia Inquirer music critic whose unpredictability has thrilled
-. Pop Instrumental per·
He only takes the best.
minor mec:hanlcal
Tom Moon, who compares the and vexed fans.
c
. GIHipolla
formance: "Mellon Collie"
rap~ Jr.
In tears we saw you
After fonning in 1988, the ChicaPumpkins' recent creative outpuur''
.
Umestone,
&amp; VIcinity
title track.
Tune-ups, ,on Chang•, '
sinking,
•
itig to Stevie Wonder's flowering in · go-based Pumpkins emerged with
All Vol&lt;f Solor lluot 10 "-td til
Gravel, Sand,
We. watched you lade
Wax,.BI!fflng
" e early '70s. "Billy1 generated a the crude somc textures of 1991
AdVance. DEADLINE: 2:00 11-m.'
- Rock duolgrotJp perfor- ·
away
(, !on of music on 'Mellon Collie,' and .'debut "Gish,'' \hen radically
Long St, Rutland, Oh. tnt dly btlort.tilt ICI II IIIUf!i
Top
Soli,
Fill
Dirt
mance: "197!1."
Our hearts were
odlllon .• 2:~-c:rn.
i
:_ the outtakes (in "Aeroplane") arc detoured into quirky pop on 1993's·
742-2935, Aek fOr Kip Sunday
_ , odltton - 10. a.m. 101-'
·
broken,
. 614-992·3470
:, every bit as strong. ·
.
"Siamese Dream." The sweeping
7110/lln
1
- Hai-d rock perforqoance:
You fought so hard to
~'1. "But he's always looking ahead. " Mellon Collie" visited several gcnWith
Butterfty
''Bulle.t
stay.
' :In his mind, he's moved on. He's . res 1111d hinted at a fresh direction in
Wlnp." .
But when we saw you
":expressed interest in ' Be_ck, collage the simmering "1979." New song
Type
sleeping
""stuff and dance rhythms, music not "Eye," the radio-favored track on
- Alt,mative muaic per· of
So peacelully free from
'organized by chordal guitar play- · the "Lost Highway" soundtrack,
Colli~."
formance:
"Mellon
all the,pain,
' ing."
·
signals the Pumpkins' move toward
We
didn'-t have the
FUIIUIKD
;,; If there is a black cloud hovering electronica.
·
Honest, Dep11ndable
- ·Short music video:
heart
lo
ask
you
to
· ~:averhead it's their image as jinxed ,
"The idea- is to reconfigure the
·
Frld•y;
...
rch
7
"Tonight, Tonight." . ·
end Trustworthy ladles
slay, ·
·: ·victims. Corg1111~s brooding songs of focus and get away from the classic
Not to wish you back to
Publlc!llle
ready to clean your
10111·9 PM
suffer
the
pain
again.
and
Auction
home or business.
F-.nay·lllnnatt POll 128
t·'l h
.t/~1..·"
AAIII'Icln
Legion
A11111!X
Reesonable Rates
. ·Until we meet again,
1111 Slreat, Middleport
We Love You.
992-6342 (Diane)
Vlliclora-$5.00, 8' Tlblee
·
Husband,
..·~!::::::::::::::~r=~~::~~::==~r===~~~;.:~==~~===;~~~;:~==
,,
·call 11uu uo.ngo
.... Lemler'• Auction SoMce, I.Hh
or 992·7275 (Brenda)
Herman Grate
·7;
'Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
742-2094
lorntoy, Aucllonaor. HoullhDIII,
Children:
Form SaltL Colt 114-441&gt;
~
.....
or
r•j•ct
anu
..
d
all
Paye
lint $:loo far uch and OIIIQ, to tell lor catll the
John &amp; Gloria Grate,
,;., lllturdlly,· March I, t ... ,
•
(
lol,_,_ colteteral:
~
r--~~~--6241,1111+M8143.
.
""
. no 1111
--·..
.
Vicki &amp; T. J. F11rrell
·. - ~
· 0 :,.,.
a.m. the Home quolll one or lo raqueat
... avery
d d - 1 accident
. D•da; Shadow
'FRII
Ohio
Vatlov &amp;.nk WHt 011or Fer
1
t ......
•-~ wtH ..-r lor fulln llkl quotatlont It ,.. H UCUI
'",
Grandchildren:
.....
-·
p~ 1113CII48K1J 1011i
e. o
Solo A 1082 MOfcury Tra-,1
: .... atpulitlo-..otlonontho· diiCI'IIIon.
....,,.... oundlc:--par
The Fariera lan• and
Aaron
&amp;
Tamara
Grate,
PICk
up
dlecardtd
VIM
3MAPM10JINRI11UI A
.. ....,. Pllldnt lot at Raclnl,
Anr bidder wlahtng to , ~par Ina
lor Routine Sa'v lnga
Companv,
applllncea,
banarlel,
usa
lnt,rnattonal Truck, vlnl
Heather &amp; Hollie
•lllllo, tho follOWing:
.
aubnllt ....,_ quoWUona. Pllratcala, Gynacologlcal Pomtl'll'•, Ohio, reaarva'a
manv melala &amp;
2HSFBG2RtKC021351 Willi A
..
1
rlnt
to
IlioN
which.,.
apeclllld
·
and
Pap
Taatlng,
Well.
Care
"
Rerrell
,
IDBI Fruehauf Traitor, VIM !
' 1MI Cllavr91•• P '
.
I h f II and Child Immunization a the right to bkl at thla Hie,
DUMP TRUCK
motor block&amp;.
1H4P04537GF11011111 I A111il
,..,...
may do • 0 w 1
u (No ciiCiuctlbl )
and to wtthdriW tho above
. 614-992-4025 8 ..&amp;
Liberty Wolford 2 Br UdO ....
lt.IG1Mniii''IOK7Z4747
aliJIIanatiOn of .th• opttona. tenn'Uie ~~~a:...0.,11,aao col!ttaral prior to tala.
SERVICE
bile Homo, Serial 101l317471;
&lt;, 1110 Pontile Gralllf Ani, Poll Dill muat have 1 ......_ , ......... "·-, ...........
Furlhar, The Farmare Bank
•lertll
guarem,ad rate lor at ••••· ,_,. ........ ""'" ..,..,......
~~~~~-=-=-=-. Public Auction Will Be Hal&lt;! A'1
',.tGIHU4UaLCa171a .
1weJve montllec
,
.
C&amp;re, ahd' CC!nvaiiiCtlll and Sevlnga COJIIPiny
Limestone • Gravel
r
Tho ova Anno1, 1&lt;13 Third ~
· 111e
SPECIFICATIONS: ·
Faalllly
·
raaervae the rtght'to l'l!ect
Dirt· Sand
~~~r!,':"oa.S.::~:....,,
•· Tile of tho
.,. a lncllvlclqe~ family, Spinal MaiiiiiUiallont and .,Y or all bldt aublniHICI.
icallh. HoiH llatlonal 11111• 150 _.
· d~ ...... ~..
..~,uaFurther, · tha above
111 Bidder "Ao lo" Wtlllout Ia·,
985 4422
. .,...,..._ 1M rlt!ll to bid at Clll nur YM' __..,.
Rate QU1111111H
colllltaral win be 1101d In the
~··rod
Implied
l.[,
Tl1oy ..., or
Be sBy
'
ltJM
aucUon or to " - : ==",':~=~on Mall·ln Praacrlptlona, 10 condHion It Ia In, With no
Cheater, ~
53711RYAN PLACE
Kotlh Johnaon A1114o+l1
;J..
IIIIIY o('all Htmt frO!II t
ttaytupp~r • .._OO
exprtat or lmpllod
MIDDLEPORT
~:= ~.e.r.J~
.. .... at!",.U...
oill~a (2) 18, 28; PI 2; 3TC
...,.nlloo gtvon.
• i lTC
eti2·27T2
And WlthdiiW '""'fllrtr
.
14,- '"'1""
·
Vltlta (No dldu~bla)
For further. Jnlormallon,
'· · 1:00 •.m.-3:30 p.m.
a. Prior To Sate. TtnM 01 ~
tncludae: X-raye, Lab
Public Notice
cOntact Jerry altl2·7430.
•Rtlllsu•llfYfiMiws CASHORCERTFEDCHEQil
Public NOtice
Work, and .. Dlagnoatlc
.(2) 21, 27, 21; 3TC
PUILIC NOTICE
· ..... G.nrps . . Rlcll ,...,..., """lion
I'U8Lie NOTICE
TMUnt
h
NOnCE le heraiiY given
01
&amp;
' full
time auction-. c
1111 Ill.... ollllddlapOII :=nlly •• anr
tr that on Saturday, March 1,
.,...auc:tlon service. ·uc
.•SI- "--s
ahee to ncllvt _._
· rt_.,_ rd (to 111l7 It 10:00 .,m,, a publiC
· .Wittlews
-.ohio
&amp; Wo•• vtrQiftlll. ....~
Ide lor lio::.~•ll~etlon f',OO praiO ,......., 011
. Hll will be held It 211 Waat
77H7110r31)4.~7.
!lA
~U..-. All
llhall be, be UMCiat pha,.cy)
lecond Street, Pomeroy,
·I•III!!IIIM~A~Mt!!lol!!s!,__.J
90 Wlrrted tO .....
, I~
".
...,_,
OIIV_,I In, 1nd bltl
.• .ni,Oatlonl ·alllf • lilt of
110
Abooluta lop i!OIIar:
. - - - - - - - - vor And Got• Coins,
'
'
111)11101 ...
ld trom 1111
YOUNG'S '
D~ .."".. ~
u,~
·cu
1,
tulllttl.t D7
CARPENTER 5ERVICE ·
Eo:.. ~oqullllona
·. •
M"tlrpurt, Qhlo. All
""-t~Acktlllontl
· II.T. Coin Shop, 111
~
B.S.N; tnd 111n y..-. experience PI elemld.
eall muet Ill
ofMW o.;ag.l
.loonut,Q lliiJCILI1 .
'
iUINilltlttl llr.1:00 p.m. on Send reiUIIIt to:
.
...... 311,1117.
.
•Electrtcal a. Plumbing
AnUquH, rur.......; .,.... ...,.C
C.F.H.S. Program
.
.
.
&lt;Roofing
CQ!na, toya,
~
o Tile I M - COIIIplll1
.
.
P,O. Box831, Pomlroy, Ohio 45769
olnterlor
a
Extarlor
....
,..,aiM
-.Ja,
0111Lh
•uet be lloelleld to do
YOUR MESSAGE
, By IIINA CIUNDIPI&amp;EN

mys into two ! ' I ' - TV specials to
suit dciJIOIIiphic pvups. "If tbc
iliJ to Exhale." Tributes to Ella Gl"'llllllys e - move away from
Fitzgerald and Bob Marley will also being that diversified window on all
take advantage of tbc spacious SlqC. forms of music, it will be 1 critiW
"The challenge is to not let the mistake," be says. "It might be eassc:ope of tbc producti011 get in tbc icr to get high ratings with a big pop
way of the emotional connection music e~nl, but that would betray
between the anists IIICI .the llldi- the whole reason the Grammys
enoe," says Michael' Greene, presi· exisL"
dent of the National Academy of
The show's 12,000 tickets sold
Recording · Ans &amp; Sciences out in record time, but none went to
(N~). "We want to make it a tbc public. Most were grabbed by
very elepnt experience as opposed the NARAS membership, which has
to some hockey game."
·tripkid to 13,000 in seven years;
Thcalcr ~. some fined . with · 9,000 Vole to decide Grammy wintiny speakers to offset bad ICOUStics, ncrs.
were i'nstalled on the arena floor.
The parade of presenters includes
About 165,000 pounds of lights IIICI Tony Bennett, Sheryl Crow, Stin11,
gear will be suspended over the SI Bonnie Rain, Glorii Esti:fan, Aretha
million SCI.
.
Franklin, LeAnn Rimes, Quincy
Promising a wildly varied pro- Jones, Diana Ross, CliJtt Black,
gram, Greene says NARAS no Elvis Coslcllo, Jewel, U. .COOl J,
longer ponders splitting tbc Gram- Jessye Norman and TQJJy'Rich.
Brudy, CeCc WiUM IIICI Mary J.
Blip: will do a medley from "Wait-

Pomeroy • Mlddlepoi"'., Ohio

·v

40th

CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

Pllntlng

.

. ...... .,. . . .7441.

Allo Concre11 Work

(FAEIE~TD)

.

V.C. YOUNG lU
111M2 II
PoiMroy, Ohio

-

•

�11·

Pomeroy ellldclhp art, ONo

...... _·-......
·---.

PHILLIP
ALDER

t

n

••

.....
- ==:-n:...

•

. . . . . . Ul

crrtm

j

AQHA •

=

:104-471.ti25.

- . ... 114-11112-41472.

a ... ,.• •••

Wontod To Bliy: We Buy' Jun41
11-.·7278&lt;Or,,.._ :;':"".:. V::n':'::':t.:;:.";;
ol-ftllon ~~- A dla&lt;M
In lntorfttion Syatomt or oqulv·
Er.H'I (·Yf.11:11 f
lltnt•-'..,.. It
Experience wtlli Modlwcih Hallpllll
~f n·. ICf ·,
lnlarmatlon Sfllem preferred.
Send reaume ta : ., _r•nnel at
-~--------1 Plouont Valley Hoopl!ll, 2520
110 Help Wlftttd
VoHoy Drive. Pt. Pltonnt, WV.
~
2!5650.MIEOE.
A.~ I All Areoo
Shirley
application and •xam Info, Call
1·800· 258-710-. eai-WV121, 7

AIIIORLST WAHTED

ARE 'IOU WANTING lO RE· .
LQCIO'E? w. ... looiOng lor.,
e ~ 1 llncool "-M:-Ior
H!?bilttool, OUIII!y.TIM C...

--"PEOPLE"-

onctup-...- - r v ot

goo--·

pay thl minimum WIQI. PIHII

and ,..uma to the Middleport

.Churdt of Chrlot Filth onct Main,
M~ OH 45li!O.
Tha Ria Grande- Pollee

realestale

which Is in vioballon of !he
law. Ot.K readers are hereby
1

millions. Extremelr High Cue. tomer Demand, ·No Overnight
Trani. · lmfnedla1e Openlnga.

C -... MUll Bt AYIIilble To
Stort PlldTrUIIng " ' - CALL MilL lOLLFME

1-tJ2.73TI

S00-289-2470.
7
ctayL

Homo wlbooemonL 7th SL
Haven, vinyl Biding, conull
air, large rooms. Spring Special,

appliance• Included. -,,.I,DOO.
:104-882-3772.

nme
Hct. Excet1en1

Organizational

Sklllt Pannorod Wllh EKctllenr
Communication Skills • Mull.
Comp&lt;ll• Know!ldge Preflrabla,
nol Required . Send RHume to:

PO Bax ooe. Clolllpollo,
45e31
Domino's Ptzlli·ftow hiring dliv-

·for Sale

1882 14x70 Mobile Home 0n 1.8

Acres. Porchoo, $!5,800, 513·
:5;_:74-2538:.::::::.·- , - - . , - - - 180 wanted TO Do
1890 Sunohlno 14x70 2
Botho. COYirtd Porch, Sro11go
Any odd jobli, palnling, guuoro Bulldl~. AC, 0ccU"" l~loto1Hnt d· ""14 •245-587"• or 304 - "' 81 uee
·~
" ,,,_
c815-7112.
O&gt;MIO. ·
,,.
.:.:,::.:.;_;:;:._ _ _ _ _.,.
. . ~.- 1985 Cirylon 14158, 21&gt;r, t both,
OeorgH 'Portable Sawmill. don't llko now- cond_ Call 304·875hlul your IOgt 10 1he mil Ju•t call 3000
304-875-11157.
=::-::·-::--:--:-::::---:-=-:-:--:111841 totonolon Villa 14•70 3 Bod·
Homo frplll• clocumonll, lptold
1 Balli, o- WI d c•
1heeta, resume, term papere, rooms,
1 · ...., n f1W, "'
81
boQkkHp\ng, tranocription. Roa· : :.:4-38B-030:.:::..::::::.-,-,-.,.--,-sanabla rates, call Cannie 814- N..,..10Q7 14 Wl-..'1 bath, S60Q1
~-12~. '.
~own ; 't31Jmo, with •pprov•d
~-~a·'"'-~ lireo
c:ro!lt Caii1-80D-88t-8m. ·
Oil

West

I

·~..,

ouronc:e, - - ,
volopn At lfome. ran Now. No 0141, 814-307-7010.
Experience- FrM SuppUoo. Into. ~:::..;:.:..;_::,:.:.:..;_.:;._ _ __
No Obllgodon. Sand LSASE To: want 10 TID eare of Elderly PorACE, Dept 1351, Bol5137, Ola- oon 24 Hour Care. In Prlvlle
J'll'ld lilt, CA 117115.
Home 11+441-ooDO

2 Bedroom Houae Refrigerator
Stove Furnlthld, Walher, Dr)'tf
--lit&gt;, 1701 112 Chtlrnu~ Gal-

llpollo, •250/Mo., ''50 Oepooll.
614-446-0427.
2 Badrooms In Euro!Ot. ti14-25811408.
2323 Jefferson Ava. 2Bedroom,
partial baaemant, aarage 12751

mo «&lt;epcoot ~75-31112.

.

2BR, newly remodeled In Hen·

deroon, $300/mo. Depoolr &amp; reforono.. 304-875-1972 alror llpm.

460 Splice tor.Rent ·

1403-M.

litOfllri1'41.

l Heel Carpet I 112
Belhs, Stove, Relrlgerator, Dllh'
wuher Furnlohed, $3751Mo., &amp;
llopooi\ 304-675-7873. .

-.. Golllpolll. OH.

.....t~.~

.

HELP WANTED

,..,..._ _ .. _ _e..
poo::~!'·*"...,~~!',!":
GPII'ii1DI ~ ...- -

~ Cllll~tNio-'1111

EXt

DIOII4 '
. fi!IIE'nPIITI,
·
pc udtl ,.odod. '45,000 Income pcilolltlol: Call 1-800-5134143EII.JI.IliiN, .
. '
·

875-51112.

Three bedroom houM In ~mer­

oy, new carpe\ rocendy pelnlod
lnlllrlor, dHn•.t375/mo.; 814-742·
Z!67.

I ::-::-::-~--..,.-,-,...,..,.---..,.-.,..

LOSER
Two bedroom hDUit, carpeted

and dean. no lnoldt pels, clepoolt
roq~rad.l14-882-3090.
·

. '

~ 1-\0W YOU ~"fCHI~m:&gt;~

001\,..'

1 :co.~· 7~'

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile hoh"tes
llarting al $260-$3(10, S8W11Jf, WI·

l&amp;r ond trash irdudool. 014-8922187.

1MIIli7F14K800GIIII mourAn8edlli.Se$1U191
o.. r11 • very
1 p,
Clll:tll4-T.L8·7295.

Moral rocling, ovorstockod, In·
vonrory oale. Save 30% whllo
supplies taat. Manw colors. 20wr
warranty. Call RC Roofing 304-

18D7 lbiO 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
,1,325/down, $210/ma, ~eo oldr!·
111[1, wllli JOpprvvod creqlt. 1·100·

..

560

1997~ 1 .. x80

.
. ...
---------

{ :['1'1

IM~N&amp;

...
'

1THESE e.t-I!E$ WITH :
1 THI!: 'GRJPI'LNI'o TALE 1

372-5308.

881-en1.

Frn

~

. Dx101t.~ I ~"r · .
I

==--·e.r
Zlilll 7 ~

41
...
43 ·- OCIIIII

~

1"$101' Sale

t·Of:

~ t«i~oR·DeATH

--

•, EXPiRIENCE!
....
~-

-, '-.. -... ,
\

,'

,. ~

411.... . -

47:~'it~ .
:
,._lit_

·-.......

51 L&amp;t-(1 1111 ,
...

H80231.

j

........ .

v

5 1 -·

57~·~

CELEBRITY CIPHER.
~~ylulaca...-

c.e.twtrOprwr cru:t ••• 1rt _..,fnlm ql

1 II w !'JWnoul
PMt Md .,_..
in.,_ cipher ...... lor ......
T_.,.M: V fQIIIIIf F
.
.

Ed

• K'

Z K J A

XCE
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.
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NC

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pil(llllll.

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YOLKJJ.
PFIEVIOUS SOlUTION: 'We ltllllle aplrll here, we 818
allllal We poychiC ,_mel kill HCit oilier cell by cell."- Norman Meller.

"-'*

'

....

•
'

...
..

'::~~~, S@\\41~.-Jtt.~se •••• '
lolllotl lop CLAY I. POlLAN-~---Reorronge looten ol the
0 four
ICrombled words be-

J

"

low to farm four words.

n

I

LORTEPL

I I" 1 I I

.;

.,
•

ASYSA

••

5

~==:::::

r

..

-.

....,,:::E:...Q~E:..,.:U:....:;N,.....J
. I-.!,.
.. .
7
.I'

I_

I_

1_

••

l:ve concluded that an ex- ·
pert knows all the right answers when you ask the right .

. ;O~ . :!:. . ;~ T~I. . - Il 0 ~;~;./~~ ;~ho~h:!Q:

Slletll. 373 Georges Creek Rd.

eu

I

.

53 Vet lair 011

::===::=~:,

A Groom Shop -Pel Grooming.

·

".,

.....,.(;.;..:Nrl

'"I""a

L...l.-.1-...l.-.l--1--l
•

Delivery!

yov

develop lrom step No. 3 below.

2
I' 1
Is I' 1• I' I' I'

PRINT NUM8fliED
lETTERS
•

. . UNSCRAMBlE
W ANSWER

Around $2001
Till
111l171
I Tho

FORI

•

rI

''

I I I I ·I I I I ·I

' SCIAM LITS ANSWIIS

,
•

. -:

-

l'

Invoke -Feint • Milky· TricJcy • FIT INTO

.,
•I

·wouldn't you know ill' I proclaimed . "When I finaltycculd afford a snazzy new sports car I couldn't FIT INTO ·

':?

it!'

.•

I WEONESDAY

Leaf Tibia And 4
.3 D.-rc~·~

Oro- And

I Frarilo $50

S25. 814-245·

Services
=-..,....-.;..,..,.,..;.....
_ _,.._
Furnltura rafinienlng, restoration,
~r~~:~~o:_ Counlry
MASONARY • Block,
work. 30 yMrs ex·ru10nable rain. 304after e:OOprn, no jol&gt; Ia

WV-0212118
'

HAVE ADVEATI8INO NEEDI t

===

8Jtlnworblno.IOWIN7VZ

~

IIGno/lann. . .

VoloJdoCitaplllca

Anr., :_;uPF'tl£
&amp;

11\'f c-&gt;lOCK

~1

.

,

••
'

II"'"

'

"'·''

UpiOn UHd C411 Rt. 82-3
SOuth .al leon, WV. Financing
-~~.. 30,4-458-10ea:'

IN;::~

720 1luc:kl
for I$111
'

Ha-NO' N.. dod For Ho1118
II Vou Would U.. To Earn
Loll 01 FHe .leniry Pluo Hove Llvlngtton•o boumenr waterA Fun Fllltd E..nlna Call 814- proollng, all baHmont ropalro

ABTRO·GRAPB

don•, free tsUmatea, lifttlmt

- - '·

guar•ntH. 10yra .on job txperl~1 Trullidng Compony Hro onc:e.304-875-21•
()paning hr ·Diopetcher Ntod
Eapinir oOtcl In Tlllo Fllld, Call. I11fAI ! STf,Tt

IDNI7"!11. _',

. 'ZT...,._WIJII?
-~

repair and uphoiatery. Superior

lltitWifMn•n$480-tdy
.. titlliiQdtciultboardlltleo-

1m·--

2S • • tqiiYI

!-+...,-+...,

North's two apadea showed, by
agreement, a strong red two-suiter.
Huweoer, I think two apadea lllould be
natural. With lengtb in· lbe two unbid
aulta, North should jump to·two notrump: the Unusual No-Trump.
AI the table;Eaatsaved in ae•ea
clubs ower aix hearts. Tbl.s was dau·
bled arid we~t lour down, givinl
Narth-Soutb 850 pointa &lt;800 minus 150
lor bonon). Tbta was reasonable buai. ·neaa if IIIey were malting aix hearll .
·But were they?
West lead• the spade iin1. After
wiDnlng with dummy's ace, dec:larer
.cuhea du/nmy's heart ace. Now the
. ~gbt fallj oo EIIIL Presumably he
passed over six hearts because be
could see the potential lor two defensive tricb: the heart ldng and a bladl:ault trick. However, if Eut plays bi1
heart
the contract makes.
with another
truiJip, ·
East in. Having no
spade to return, East mUll wateli declarer discard all four of his spade
!olen oo dummy's di•!!IO!IIja.
· East should see Ibis comin1 and
oacrifice the heart ibig under dummy'a ace. Thea, when declarer perforce c:Ontinuel with • second trump, .
West wlna and cashes the apade
queerr. But 'jrOUld Eut have bad lbe
courage 10 make.the play?

'Nice 2br, basement, garage, raforenc:eo &amp; cllpoli~ No Paral 304-

HELP WANTED • Eaperloncod
Reo..... Carponttre. Minimum Small Doll I .Grocery, 814·441101 5 YMrli Experlonco. Truck I :33::1::0·~------­
tt.ntl TOIIo IRellrencM A MulL
AtiDIIcadont Are Avallol&gt;lo AI 230 PrpfHSional

"""'-f!l; I A.M. To 5 P.M. l6t•l

atstt'

!""'lll""'ml'.,...,==

Today'1 deal Ia the 1111ithesia of this.
It otCUJTed at the TGR club in Landon
and wu reported by IIAiberl Sbeebln ·
In The Times.
. '-

Houllltold·
Goods·

510

312 Wezgll 3 Badroomo, Pornoror ArH, $3501Mo.. Dopoolt Roqund, 51:.-&amp;74-25311.

Halt Styllo! Wanood Rant Your Lorrie Prollt Poltndal From Sllal
OM1 - . Or 11oM •10 To 111 Biela Buolnon Notn_ Co. AwardAn Hour, C1ll Carol King, 11•- ina btalershlp In Open Market.
.~ 11122&lt;
•
Sileo Or Conotnrctlon. 303-758-

1G -

·

place."

r.1ERCHANDI SE

ant CA

...

111.£11 . . . . .

112 $II . . . .

3 Bodioom House In Point Pleas-

Oroc:ery SIOIII Work Friday. Sol·
WV. 304-755-5885.
urday, Sunday, Fle•lblo Scltedul· W!ll heul junk or traah ...,. f351
1ng, 1-7LIU2411 Ellt !51.
plcilup load. ~75-5Q36.
111Timo Buyortl E.Z Financing.
2 or 311tdn&gt;om. lniUIIII S3lO/mo.
Exporloncod ·coohllfl, waltora I
FrH ott-up I dollver)'IToadal
oilltl,_o wonted. Send ,...,..
Wolcome. NOt Rlymon! ~II May
If: Bal G-20 c/o Point Ploooant _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:., l.:.111l1::.:.7·: __ _ _ _ _ _ __
Roll- 200 Main SL Pl. Plleo- 210
,BWIIneU
...WV 211i0
.
E·Z Financing 2

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r-mmenda rhot you. do buoinon wllli people you know, and
NOT to Hnd moneylliroullh the
moU until you hove lnvostfootod

31¥ -pert·

g
==t
of1lclll

'13 Malrkllf ·

1~ ;c"'on

Joba Osborne, the British playwrllht, wrote, "The whole point ol ·a
uerillc:e Ia that you 11M up something
you never really wanted,In the first

Featuring Hydra Ba1h. Don

Opponunlty

7 - - I l l 1M .
olllce

11

BJ Pllllllp Alder .

ifoUH lrlillr lilt, -'udool area,
dtr oor. · 304-882-:!ln.
Mol&gt;llo homo ope.., for rant. up
.. t 81110'0, 185 par monlli, won,
sewer and trash lncludad, 1141182·2117.

w/Giamour bath.
~At-~ 614- . Sl711/mo. Freo delivery l sot-up,
245-5323.
only at Oak Wood Homes, Nitro

IXPIRIENCED FURNITURE
ITRtPPER I REFINISHER
Wonlod. Muet hen Beckaround
In Wood-king. Pert·Tfme or
Fu\1-Ume avollobla. Srart lmm•
dllloly. Coli 814·448·4614 M·F,
t-5 or d;op· ofl Application II

I ....... IMCira
w7
1 Qadlnool

Sacrifice whatyou
hold most dear

Promott Producto Hand Out

samples &amp; Cou pont In loc11

SDec.hUr
4WWIII.._...for_
II Tlllaapert

Nordl

Opening lead: •

SIHplng roomo wllh cooking.
Aiao trallar spac• an river. All
hook-upa. Call att•r 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-!ie&amp;t, __
wv.

1 AKC Block Lab, femalo, 8
-k• old, 111 ohots l wormed.
304-875-2151 or~lS-83511.

PtofHsional Or Per10nal Oocu-

. 34 Glil'llid. In
hlrllllly
31Pigeon:f7 City In Utili .

2 11le
...!llllrN' ....

31 Godt . .

M!AN

Eooy Woirkl Excellent Payl AI- WOnUng To Beily.ltln My Homo
oemble Productilot Homo; Call Reteroncn Upon Roqu111, 8f4· ls:ii~.Tdliio:ublowldo 11445 down.Toll Frat I ·IOD-•87-5588 EXT. 250-1118.
.
Free deliver)' l HIUp.
12170.'
.
HI00-88HI7n.
Will Do Compulor Typlnt For .:,:::::-;::.:.~~:::---:-~
Enthualasdc P.aple Needed To

....... """ ..... .
31~ ....

KNow

WHOYOO

814-4411-8588.

WVI35c,

.....,
Pot
ill.4!10101'1--·~
no - Earn II,OOO·WNk~ Stu..._ En-' Rtmovrl;,,~ll

,._

1-ol

Vulnerable: Notth-South
Dealer: East

410 HouaHIOr Rsnt

Pklolllpoli~

curlty, Maln11nance, Park Aana-

341718U11i118.
Comi!Utor Uoon Naodool. Work
Own Houro. 20K To tSOK /Yr. 1·
100-341-·7188 X I I 73.
CuiiOmll S.rv Ice Repr..
enaaA-M . •~~atnt. Modvated, '--'Orlen!ld F'ortori. Sought For Ful•
Pooltlon, In Fall Poco Of-

REriTALS

ro:::t

31111d1ng .......

• J ·a
• AKQJ 10171

·.

DOWN

""""'

2S 1n!f10118111 time

24

• , -. 7 8
. • 14 .
• 5.

GaraJ• 1. Storage, $350/Ma ••

Beneftti. Tr11lnng Provfdool. Sind NL
Rooume To: P.O. Bo• eo•. Jockoon, OH 45840; ATTN: Cocllla.
'L...Dndllne For Appllcon!l: 3/4187. Three Bedroom Brick In Tara
,Applloallone Are Available lo Equal OpportUnl~ Employer.
Sul&gt;divlolon. Two Full Ceramic
Tho Polka An&lt;l RocrHtlon Of·
Bolito, Two Car Garage, 172.000,
lice. 111 Stcond Avenue, For
814-387-7454.
1111'11 lnfortlllltlon Pill... Con·
'loci 114-441·1022. Dtodtlno
...... 1.
Now hiring Game Wardena. Sa· 320 Mobile Homes

1D0

...

8oadl

2 Badroom Houoe On RouiO 141,

Air, Gu Heat Carport &amp; StaraeEJCperlence Required. Salary: Room, Fence In Back Yard, lo.• 5.50 IHr, To Slort. Vocollon /Sick caled In SunMt Drive, In GaNipo:

1r1. No experience nece11ary.
For application and Info call 1·

.

.=::.

• K4

t 73 I
•• 3 z

oppor!Unlly bas~ .

GOV'T FORECLOSED ·Homto
For Ponnlto On f1 Dollnquent
WANTED: Pori-Time Pool!lon Tax, Ropo"o, REO't, Your Area.
AvrHoble At A Communltr Group ToH FrH Ill IOD-218-8000 EKL
Home For Persona With MRIOD H-2114 For Cummt lJsllnsiL
In Golllpollo. Hours: 1I P.M. - 8:30 HouM lor aale In Rutland, 114A.M .• Th: !0:30 P.M. - 1:30 A.M., 1192-50Q7.
Frl; 7 P.M. Sir • 8 A.M. Sun: 2 •
Hoorr WHkly S!a" Milling; Or AI
Sill By Ooornor:
Olherwloo Scheduled. High Nice Brick Homo, 3 Btdroomo,
School Dog'"; .valid DriYor'o u - Bait&gt; I Half lorVt Uvlng Room '
cense, Gooct Driving Record, And Dining Roam Baaement Central

Compullf U1et1 Needed. Work
own houri. l20k 10 $SOkiyr 1-

•

•"" Me •
"GOld
ltllllll...
....

1 ,.

are available on an equal

Throe Yeara Llcenaed Driving

.......... ,... ......."

s

Informed thai all-lings
adYertlsed lo this newspaper

-~-... a IMtlloil flo.

CAlLE TV ORDER TAKERS
Earn 115 ..11 f'llr Hour. • Com-

s2

Eat
Q 10 53

[? . . . .

111!••

6J,I7Z

icroowkVY accept

~lor

• K
• Q

-20n.

'

,.. ---

wea

TRMJ',POfiTATIOtl

This newspaper will 1101

Depart-

ment Wll Be Acc~~pting AppHcotJo,.. Mondar, FeOrulry 24, Ttwu
lllmO To: llld Ololo Troe SeMce'
Friday, Fobruary 21, For T-o·
u--.
Ololo rorr Pan Time Help..Tho APL&gt;IIc·
43130' 11H87-5408.
rnt Muot Have Ohio·Be ole Aioc:e
AVON Saito. II -tis /Hr. No Offlcofl Training. Appllcadono
Doar Ta Door, •aanu ..a• Fun &amp; May Bo Picked Up AI Tho Rio
Eooyl 1-IOo-an-4840 lnd/5111 Gr11ndo Municipal Building BotAlp.
'
_ , 8:30A.M. To 4:00P.M.·

.

11'4

11Colnl ....
17 ....

t A K Q 10 I I

ttey-1&amp; Gnlln

root--

based on race. oolor, rBflglon,
sex famtllalstatiM or AIIUOnal
origin, or any Intention to
moka any such Pf8fe&lt;ence,
limitation or discrimination."

- . S12.88hlr, l*r• bonlllta. For

• " J 10

Roun&lt;l bolla, -;l;~hay. undlr

Nmllallon or discrimination

.

The Mlddl-1 Church.ob Clwlll
will be IC&lt;I[IIIng _ , _ tor llio
poli~on ot (onllor. Tho politlon will
conalll of 40 houro per onct

bnllla; 1171
·11~5171.

Utfo 8poaod
\4oor0klllote
814-461171.

840

!lila l'oOWipaper .. · - 10
llio F-.J Fair Housing N;.
Of 1868 WI&gt;ICh mokas I HleQII .
to lldvartise •any prefttietiC8,

..;:.;c.;.:.;===-=--..,..
_.,ALJCIIS

..

AI raal- lldvottlslng In

-lrod.

59wo,~75-1o121.

f.tOO....

c:en!IM Fund,

Etectric WhaakMife.
van Lillo, Scootort,

dono lor STNA'I. F,. ,..,. lnlor·

.".

...q, 11116 ,..,. old. ln-

'w

::r-

' 14 Ca!lul '
'n 1F1nnol

.-alo...~;;..;....
;;~c~oo;,...~t;n~ll;d;ll~"'';,;~~~
ru..,lna condldon, tor •ot&lt; oor. Oltto to now occepdlif oppltco-

•

a&amp;:1(1'

,11 A I .... ,.

IJMcf . . _ or Blaur, In

••

~

~.·

DIWWAJ.L

llnilh. ropoir, •

'

.

BERN.ICE

.

Ctllfngo ltdurod, Plaoler .ropoolf.
Coil Tom 304-t75-4tll. 20 ,.,.

BEDEOSOL

r- .....

In 1111
you IIIII)' be itdltlld 10
, .n.ake aom' rlgnHicant ohontl"'l that
• • COuld NLiull In .,..._ mllsilltl -"Y·
1e pallenl; - 1 you'N dNire will trkt

340 Bullneu and

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

BuildingS
Ottkweod Apl. t .Br E~~'
Flit,._. Or Unlur-.
'otn. CoOMnlenl t.oet!lon. Quiet
NaltlldiDol. 1tlall For 8lnlir fiN.
loettonll. lecur!IJ Ottblllll. No

. . ,,....., .Pt.ia Ullllt. 0111

11~···--~ -

..
PIICII (...b. 10....,_..

101 Y.our
..., a• end yow'vMd 111 J ...,., OM

.

-_,..lot

Er• ..,....

~IIOICH

=~~=,~=•,
'
.

~

fOil~- ""*"' your-

.., In porjM ~and p!O. -.11 ID 11M adW I II.' al yaur appartu~ CMU iUI"P on 7a by wA-111II

!rig
year

Sand k!r yaw .foMiO-Gt'aPh
pr•diCIIOIII.•Iodi!Y by melllng 12 11nd
SASE 10 ,_,.. ~; 9111 lhll nrnr-~. f!,O. -ac,. 1751, ~ H1J! ll?lllon,

_at

noqultlmei1ta loday. You

ltelpi!IQ- fOil 0111.

1!'011~ r.gns~
.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 22) Complex
mental chore.-lhat require your total
lltentton will bt managed._wnh alacrity
=~~01511. ~-~~~·lite, loday. Your vte!OO. locua rnd expectallqn
willie aynchronized.
AAIII (Mintll 11-Aprtl ttj Yau ....... I.IIRA (llpl. »()oL ~~ Your chancll
• ly 10 be rnqN pel lll!liJve ln jlourC)OjtMLIOt• o1 aCiding to your reaourcea today are
cllll . . . . lodtly. II fOilliiiW• Ylry encouraging. You will. however,
aflectlyeJr, lllbttMIIel .,.._,.. i1aJn Ia '-111 pur1t ..... lhrn ueuai!O 1)11 M.
PDI?Ibtt. &gt;
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. HI Ilia very
TA~(,.U. IOII.. .IOI A~ l!lttiY you' no going 111 be,cloHIY, tcrull·
lnd foroeiUIIIIY • illY aOC!CI INI9 an nlzod today; be sure 10 make a good
.yaur be111b1110dt?y. He or lllit 1r an POll- · lmpt ulan with yilur Dtha\ll!lt, rppear;
lrntrpaf th awoitrlto'l~,_pclll­ anoalnd~.
llan - I " lfiiV.
.
• IACifrTANUI (Nav.ll Dee 211 SIQnlGIIIINI (lila, 21 .....M 101 Tulia IIIII llaMI · ·1 a- CM be ac:111edd IOd?ty
mlgllt ,.,. lleln 1110 lOUgh IDr: fOil yel- Ill' -.w1111 .a~lll llllnk your ltleu
lad?ty c.n be-ltw I ltillll rlllllvi- WiiW I!IIWntd by """'· Tilly will bt
loday. In fiLet,
c:hala,.. they o11er Wiljlllti?IIW • they forlllrMMd.
.
wlllln -yow aplltudu .
. .. CAPRICORN (Dec. U.Jan. Ill Two
CAIIC IR (.lillli 1:1..-. II) Yau rhaltld doN lriendr mlghl depend on you ~
hive te:cwll* fr
wlh m••ibela ol \.ltlan urulllod?ty. ~poi{ 'ICIID iltOUIb C41r ; • _,., OM WIW""'i*ll d l r - rl . ..cblll.
In jlll"'" - COUld hllp lullltef I llgnlft- AGIIANI .. lo'I!L a Fl&amp; 1., Todlty fOil
oanl:ii. .¥01.
... ... capable al running,. .........
LIO (July IS-Aug. HI The nHCit 01
yaur appal . . . . Do nol - ShOll lor .whO"' you are LWrpOn.ible . I yo~Hintl younorll tlnoMI INO .a oiloo........ be """"" jlrloltly Mi' yow per~~~r.. 11011.

op;

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•
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OPBI
'110111119-:9

•
•

SAT9-6
MIIICIIIOI

•r

-1-5

•

.s everal to
chooSe frOm!
Stop by fora
test drive ·
·t oday!

'

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.

AS LOW AS:

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,

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'

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Supplement to:
Gallipolis
Daily Tribune,
Pt. Pleasant Register,
The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday • ·
Februarv 26 1997
•

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• '

1 t • '•· ~ t f • ' ' t

I

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