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-Ohio Lottery

S. Carolina
beats. Ky. for
SEC title

Super Lotto:

4-13-22-25-33-35
Kicker:
2-5-4-7-6-3
Pick 3:

2-s-o

Sports on P• 4

Pick 4:

2-9-1-5

Cloudy, chenM
until midnight, laWI

301. Tuelday,

lhe

partly

cloudy, hlghlln lhe llle.

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~1117, Ohio V..ley Publlehlng eomp.ny

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;Damage thought · Services Director Roben Syer. .
·lrJore·
WldfiSpfead
. Between 250 and 300 people were
:.
,
.
evacuated in the Rutland area alone,
than llother.'s Day Byer said.
'flood In 1-5
. .·:More accurA~e ~~ures "'7 110t
.
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available at lhis t1me, Byer sa1d.
·By JIM FREEMAN
.~entlnel Nw1 Staff .
• . Hundreds· of Rutland and
'Larrgsvtlle area n:s1dents.wen: fo..:ed
from their h~~es over the_w~kend,
up to stx mc~s of ram. ~real~ _
.extreme flash flooding cond1110ns m
-~county,
.
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.
. The . ol~ say1~g g_oes. If M~h
comes m hke a bon, 11 goes out hke
a ~b: .
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,
: Th1s IS the rli'St ume he ever
~~n March come in li_ke a~· ~d
a b~n wnh a duck on Its back, sa1d
Me1gs County EmerJency Med1cal

· Between 300 and 500 ho1114;s wen:
aff~ted, Byer said. "This figure may
go ht!her when we get mto pther
are.as.
,
.RudlJ!Id firefighter, Danny Davis
sa1p some ~pi~ d1dn t get ?"I when
they .were warned •. meanmg fire·
flg,hte!S had to go 1n later ancl get
them out by ?oat·. .
.
At one po~nt, s_1x lireflghte!" were
al~ost. lost res~umg one famtly that
was warned tw1ce to leave, he sa1d.
~alem and Depot_ s~r1=ets were hit
pllf11cularly hard, S&amp;ld Dav1s, whose
own ho~ was among those Hood-

;«tet

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AS LOW AS:
- Meny -":hlntil·on Po~'il Meln Street
....,.oon movlngliMIIIfll!ndillln preparation for
Atvw, Pf*lk;tad to cn.rat 54 feet at 9 a.m. 'llleiSira Rou1h, John 11111 Jr., 1111d Donne THII8 ·of
Supply load up a tnidt. Htakas 48.6""' crl water

ed.

·
. - - - - - - - - -.- - -.-..;..- - - . ----------.;;::::----,
All but tluee houses Qll Salem
Street had between six and 10 inch·
esofwater inside, hesaid..Among the
•
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buildingsaffectedbytheHood-the
•.·
fire department
Divis said the Hood was worse
than the Mother's oay. Flood ip 1995,
although the water did not c~ up
as faSt
''I've been here for 30 ye~. It's
the wdrst.l've seen," Davis said.
One · of those evacuated, Ethel
Nicholson, was carried piggy-back
from her Salem Street residence.
"I -didn't want to leave my home,
1 didn't have no choice," the elderly
widow said
By g p.~. Sunday, she was back
home with some assistance from her
sons, who helped put the house back
in order, with the exception of the
· carpeting which was ruined. •
Among those helping out was '.he ·
mayor of Rutland, JoAnn Eads, who
· helpc;d residents gel moved out of
their liomes.
.
-According to B'yer, the majority of
evacuees went with family and
friends .• thiny pe~le were given
temporary shelter .a'. the Rutland
Civic Center, while seven were put
up in the Meigs Motel.
The American Red Cross came in
Sunday morning and did a pn:limi_nary damage aSsel!lment in the'Rutfand area. 11 found four damaged
mobile
34
hql!les·with
oth~t;t, ~.iJh

"nie water was .slill up, there are ·
a lot of places we haven't even been
to," he said. The Red Cross will be in
today processing irrimediate needs for
the families.
(Continued on Page ij

Into the liON.
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met
eMir tl!e·dal'nage

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left, and

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Jail Wll evacuated and the
Monday due to the 'lck of

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.·Mudslide '· ptom-pts shutdown
of.county·'s 'CO'u_rth.~use, jail

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crl the ·
Fire Department, said that
flrenien hid been out alnce a heavy downpour
about 1:30 a.m., watching the water risa and

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measured about tllrH feet.
Charlene Hoeflich)

Plooding
kills man
in .Galna ·

By Tha AIIOClated Press .
Southern Ohio residents brace for ·
more rain adding to the wat~r that fell
over the weekend when Hash Hoods
killed at least four people - including one in Gallia County - and 14
counties, including Meigs, were
declared in a state of emergency.
The Galli a-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported that a Kentucky man, as yet unidentified until
notification of next of kin. drowned
Sunday' night w~e~ he attempted to
drive his vehicle through high river
water on State Route 7 at Eureka.
lfoopers saiQ the driver Slopped at
the high water around 7 p.m. and then
attempted to drive through. His vehicle became disabled and submerged .
Emergency personnel from the
Gallia County EMS, sheriff's depan- .
ment, Gallipolis and Guyan Township fire dcpar.tmcnts, and a civilian
LIGHTS - The beautiful parlod Iampi lnltlllld
''diver took part in extrac,ting the dri· along the promenade as a part of Pomeroy'• revitalization project got their first touch of Ohio River flood waters Sunday. With
ver from the vehicle.
The man was taken to the Waugh· th.e water rising about five inches In hour It noon, volunteerl hu•
Halley· Wood Funeral Home in Gal- tied to disconnect the lights before they were surrounded by
water. There was .time to remove only a few before the water
moved onto · the parking lots. Pomeroy Councilman George ·
Wright, center, ,was asalsted by Dale Thoene, left, 1nd hl8 son,
Wesley.
Damage will be limited to the transformers In the baM,
The accident remains under invesWright said.
r

'fiENfo;iNG

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2 Sectlone, 12 ~. 3S.,..,.. :
A Gllnnett Co. Na•ap.per '

Pl)meroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 3, 1997

,;q.

Flash flooding d ··vastates Meigs

Severolto
·, chOose frofril·
Stop ,b y for a
.fest drive
toclayl··
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lig~~~~~c:::~~i!·:~~.oulhwestcm

pan of Ohio were preparing for the
worst Hooding in 33 years.
The National Weather Service

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By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
·
h had heard · · ..
Sinlltlll Newl Staff
,
ing could be done wilh the current ~ey . . . II~~- . . .
· A mudslide between the Meigs , pole imlilthe hiU has .settled. '
He .sa1d that ~htle tht!' Jail has ~o
l:;l)llllty Coonhousc and the jai"""".;; '
1b get clectnCIIY restored as soon damage, he he~ttales to house pns- . said a low pn:ssure system will move
ly' Sunday resulled in imm:dr.';~ as possible, the electric company set ·. oners there unul funher c_hecks_ ~e across the region today bringing
, · e\\8Cuation of prisoners and today's a tem{IQ_rary
_ pole. Sunda
. y aftemoon made bee ause of posst ble msIab1II
t y more rain, which could be heavy at
&lt; closins of·the counhouse. .
d
1
d
all
th
1
of
the
h1'll
and
clt'ffs·
beht
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the
times. With the gr.ound saturated, less
·
an . ·an 1c1pate mst mg e ran_s\
The slide occurred at 2:JO a.m. fonners today.
. building.
.. thananinchofraincouldcausemore
following heavy rains that hitthe area ·
Hoffman sai4 .the counhouse will
He pointed out din falling from Oo~~~:;,.. system dumped up to 10
over the weekend. ·
be.opeh Tuesday tf AEP gets the elec- around the shelf of the utility pole, a inches o.f rain in the region over the
· ~Utility pole holding electrical tricity restored.
.
'
boulderwhichcarnedown inb&amp;Ck.of weekend, trans. fo. rming · creeks and
tninsfonners located tin' the hillside
As the result of the shde, th~ was
ne1r the center of the slide wsC&lt;! a he~vy· damage .to the air conditioning the jail Sunday morning, and streams small riven into deadly torrepts that
t!JjQt offallinl onto one of the build- un11. wh1ch se~~s the ~ounhouse. of water gushing out of the hillside.
crumbled bridges and swept away
IRJS, 10 American Electric Power Mud ·and debris. fell agamst a sandThe shetlff said that he Onlered the cars and houses ..
employees were called in to assess stone ~all, pushtng. the stones onto prisohc!S be tnoved soon after the
The American Red Cross opeoed
the iilllltion. They cut off the elec- the urut.
.
slide occ~rred. Some, he said, were sheltets in five counties and the
. tr19ity ljld anchored the pole to di~ct ·
Hofftnan and Sheriff Jam~s Souls- taken to Gallipolis, some to Middle· Ohio Nlllional Guard WI.! cliled in to
a possible fall aW'ay from the build- by were both at th~ scene mtd-mom- pon; of the two in jail on .misde- he!P locate people cut off by Hooded
inJs.
'
.
ing Sunday to_survey the damage:
meanor chaqes, one was releu¢ a roads. Many hQmes remained .inacSou)sby sa1d that when the slide day early, and the se~ond with four cessible early today.
,
'Meip County Commissioner Fred
flqftinan said tliat process cut off all occurred, his dispatc~er heard a days to serve was sent home to repon
In Brown County, residents were
.~ electrical service to the counbouse. ·'"rumblins'n&lt;rise, ran baCk lo\he cell .back to finiih his &amp;entence later, whit~ beins rescued by bQat, the only
llc liicJ.thaiAEI!employees Ernie block ,area lnd found the pnlgljen another stayed at thojttill!U! oullide means of ICCess for most of the
Siill)n and )on Buck told him noth·,. _leaning up ~ainsl the 11m beCause the cell block•·
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Pomeroy preparing
f()r possible wQrst . ~,
flooding since 1948 ~~·'

Pomeroy reside~ts and businesses are braCing today for wliat may bet lht
biggest Ohio River. flood since 1948.
.
·
At 9 a.m. today, a Racine J..ocks and Dam report indicated the OhiO IU\ioi
er would crest.in _Pomeroy at 54 feet at 9 a.J!I. Tuesday; seven and-a-hall . .
over the 46.5-foot Hood stage.
.
·
The river is expected 10 crest at 51 feel in Racine at 7 a.m. T&gt;~,
If the Hood reaches the predicted level. it will be the laraest
April 16, 1948, when the river reached S6.5 feet.
On Jan. 21, 1996, the river ~ached S0.6 feet
Downtown Pometoy resembled a ghost town early Ibis ~ ...,.
m.any business people haying already;moved their merchaadilo .. ......
ground.
.
Village workers were able to remove some of the new ·
ta
parking lot, 'leavina some to stand lllcir clw)ccs qai~st the
the moie vulnerable parking meters \Venl'also romQVOd. . .
· Cumnlly the w11er is ralsina abQut an incH a!ld·a.:l!llf •
. iilg to the Racine Locks and Dam report.
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�Monday, .._rch 3, 1117

commentary
The Daily Sentinel

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.~1zy.
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~. Deng;s

'EitelisliJ in 1!148
111 Court St., P-..oy, Ohio
&amp;14-112-21118 • Fax: 912·2157

.2,

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droull* iD lbe Jllll have'- t:lba
• proof lbll die+&gt; • '" bid becc
conupl IDd Ud JOlt hit ~y
mancllle.
Many OtiDCIC believe, for cumpie, thlt the troubles of 1989 were
foreordained beciUSe of the natural
disuten thai preceded the nananmen Square massacre. The previous
fall, Yangtze River communities
experienced the wont flooding in 30
years. In November, an eanhquake
meuuri111 7.6 op the Richter scale
~lied 930 people in southwestern
China.
So it was no surprise lhal more
than a million people would wind up
in Beijing lllouling for an end to China's conupt aovernment. .
•
-Continued repression of the Chinese population today may also be
keeping 1 lid on political instabiliry.
Leaders in Beijhig wiii brook no dissent withoui repercussions:
. Even IS fat iway from the capital
as Xian, wbere tourists flock to see
the famed 2;200-ycar-old .JCrra cotta
figures, Bi3 Brotber wii!Ches throup

,.

,.WE HOLDTHESE

~ToBE .

By JOBI'!I MeCARTHY

;\Moclatedi'Nia Writer
,
, , COLuMBUS '-A divided Ohio Supreme Court won't allow opponents
Of the •late:s lk:hool funding formula to introdUce documents from a simi·
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1,,.- case the V~rinont Supreme Coon decided
·; JSut don't read too much into·the Ohio coon's vote on lhe matter, a lead·
lpg critic of the state formula said last week.
·
:. Otief Julllice Thomas Moyer and Justices Alice Robie Resnick, Andrew
Oouglas aiHt Evelyn Stratton voted without comment last week to exclude
the Vermont case, which !hat stale lost. Justices Francis Sweeney, Paul Pfeifer
,.00 Debonh Cook dis5ented.
·
' Is the court's close vote against lhe opponents a preview of how it will
in the Ohio case?
·
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·1;, "No, I don't think so.'! don't see.!hat," said William Phillis, executive
llireclor of the,Ohio.Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of School Funding.
"llhiilk that was a sepawe issue altogether. Their rules state they don '!'accept
anythins after oral11!1umenls."
1be Vermont court ruled unanimously on Feb. 5 that the state had to find
a. new way or payin1 for education.
· "The current system for funding public education in Vermont, with its
Sjlbslllllial dependence on local propeny taxes and resultant wide disparities in revenues ·available to.loclil school districts, deprives children of an
equal educilional opponuniry in violation of the Vermont Constitution," the
court said i.ll 1 ruling that' was signed by all five justices.
'
- Phillis' coalition, IO(hich represents most of Ohio's 611 public school distrjcts, filed a lawsuit in 1991 against the state, claiming its funding formula wu unconstitutional because it didn't guarantee all children a quality edu-

SELF· EVIDENT TKAT ·

ALL MEN ARE -

CREATED EM II

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FOUR SCORE .
AND SEVEN

.u~ 1150..~ ·
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•THe ONLY
THINS WE
· RAVE 111 FEAR
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"SHOW ME
lHE MONEY•

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Tutsdlly, Mafdl4
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television cameras moomled on a
dozen or more -

C011111'1.

A knowledJeable 1ovemment
offtcial once pointed out the hidden
cameru for us u we puled by them
durins a visit The cameras were constllltly rolling, our source warned.
He'd seen the videotapes before,lllld .
claimed the quality was good enough
to discern faces and, sometimes,
convmations taking place at the
intersecti0111.
In 1989,, the Tlananmen Square
demonsllations spre&amp;4 to other parts
of the country, including Xim. And
according to our guide, these lllne
cameras were used to identifv IW't)democracy rioters, l~n1 to their
swift conviction and the execution or
many. The cameras Ud been ~~ in.
to monitor traffic, but they had
worked even better in identifyin1· .
demonstrators.
1be tapes, this official said, were
typical of modem-day China. It is a·
society that ·appears peaceful and
calm to foreign visiwn, but it is
seething beneath the goWmnient's
jacklfoot. He used the Chinese
expression: "nei jin, wai sons:' or
"uanquility on the outside, repression
within."
·
Once identified, most political
dissidents simply disappear into Chi· 0
na's huge prison "Systeni, leaving
their families without a clue to their
whereabouts. Officiall~. the Chinese
government admits that more than I
million Chinese are being detained in
.what they call "Re-Education
Through Labor" camps. But an
American human rights group, Asia
Watch, believes the real figure could
be as high as 20 mi Ilion.
·
'American lawmakers have raised
objec;tions to. lhese camps, mainly
because of evidence indicating that
products produced in these foJ:Ced·
labor camps are ~inil expone~ho the
United States and elsewhere. Amer·ican law forbids the import of any
prodll\!1 imide bY prison labor.
Jack AadenoD and Ju MoDer
· an wrlten for Ualted Feature
Syadieate, lne. .

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By The Asaocleted Pr...
The rain will end tonight over
floo_d-ravnged southwest and southcentral Ohio, the National. Weather
Service said. But precipitatiOJi will
linger in the nonh, possibly in the
form of'snow.
Lows tonight will be 'in the mid·
to upper 30s.
·
On Thesday, lhe sun may peek
through the clouds over southern
Ohio while . more. precipitation is
likely· in lhe north. Temperatures
w.ill warm into the 50s and low 60s.
Tlie record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus wealher
station was 77 degrees in 1976 while
the record low was 3 below zero in
1943. Sunset tonight will be at 6:31

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He was crushed when a dairy case ·
fell on him. His . trailer was
untouched.
·
"The store blew · completely
away" said Gordon "Pete" Caple
Rhod~s· boss at Caple's Garage 0 ~
the south side of Little Rock. "The
funny thing - he· would have been
safer in the trjliler. 111c stonn didn't
·even touch it."
Rhodes was one ofat least 24 peopie killed as a series of tornadoes·hit
the state 'saturday· several hundred
others were injured. Toniadoes and
floods that day also were blamed for
at least 18 deaths in Kentucky, Ohio,
Tennessee and Mississippi. Two oth-

TP•C issues boil advisory

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A bml advisory has been Issued by
the Tuppers-Plains Chester Water
District for Darwin, Burlingham,
Jones Road, SR 681 east and west
from U.S. 33, Gold Ridge, and all
connc:,cting roads, and Pagev11le,
Vance Road, Horner Hill Road and
Snowvtlle.
.
. Do~ald C, Poole, general manager, said that those .areas. l)liy ~Is~ be
·without water sernce. S1nce m1dmght
Friday ·to 8 a.m. Monday, two six-·
inch mains and one two-inch main
hay~ been. ~pai~ed, Poole said,
addmg that Ills beheved that there are

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sbll several leaks under warer SCI
those areas have been shut off. ,
Poole said that water service to
high elevation areas may still be off
for.another 24 hours. He advised th~
res~dents m a boll advt'?ry area. bol!
lhe1r water for three ~mutes bef~
usmg unt1l further nouce.
He als? sa~d that because of the
ground shps m the. past ~8 hourS, .
many res1de~ts .may. e~penence low
pressure. He Sllld th1s. ts not unusual
but asked that consumers not wait
before calhng the water d1stnct
office.

Meigs EMS runs

Virginia Jaques

.Ll"vestock re'port

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IIMMill..., ....._.....

A

Dally ... :............. :..................................?!i Cents

Sllhltribe'rt n« dnfrinJ tO pay lhe CArrier mD)I ·
remilln advam:e direcl to The Dally Sentinel
on a 11fte11ht or 12rmndlbilll. ~~will be

..... ....x....h-.

No suhKripli!)D b)' mai I pcrmined In lretl
whm: home carrier aeMce It availible.
·

""'ris"' .. lOti"'""" .-.

Publlther .......
Ins ihe ••blcrip!loo pmod. Subl&lt;ripctoe tale
&lt;hsnsa ..1 ,.,...,........... by &lt;hsnsina ,,.
olihe Jublalpllon,

I..W.MIIIOt:-,
13 - ............,............................... .... $21.30
26 - ................................................. SJ3.11

,_W;;;o;;;;;w;·~·CM~Y'.'os.~

13 ..................................:.............$19.2$
26 Weeb .......... ,... ........................... .......S!t.61

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~~:y~ofhistrailerjustafewsteps

"While we need as much help ai
we can now, what folks n.eed to do ~
. pace their help because there's goinl
to be a process of several weeks 01
months, · not ·just days."
&lt;

Stocks .

MAILSUUC:RtmONI

.loP

LlTI'L): ROCK, Ark. .(AP) _ · ers died during th~nderstorms SunNeeding a place Jo.'f': from the day in Texas.
.
.
approaching !Drnado,
Rhodes ran . The destruc6on was so broad that
from.'lhe auto shop where he worked a quick recovery is impossible, Gov.
to 1 cinder-block grocery store Mike Huckabee sail' today.
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just the opposite. He reasons that the :·
SI8IC cannot discriminate. If one logo :
. is accepted, all must be accepted. ;
What this probably means is that the ·
sale of all vaniry 'and oqjanizational :
Yehicle license ;plai'es .will have to :
stop. Otl\erwi$e. we
5001) be ICC- •
ins IIJS ~ng the words "Ku Klux &gt;
Klan.. dldld logos' of men in white :
sheets~ Or plates representinJ Aryan ;
. •
• Nations or. Posse. Comitatua.
A couple of years ago in Ten- •
'nessee, two black teen-agers pulled :
!up behind a pickup buck flying a : ·
Confederate flag and shot to death a •
man who was riding i~ it.
What's goin11 to happen some day l
wl)en a piGkup truck pulls up behind '!
a car bearing f&gt;lates that toUt the '
Nation of Islam?
Blood on the highways, ihat's
what.
Jo.epb Speat IJ a l)'ndkat.d
writer for New.paper Enterprile
Alliodadon
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You are privileged to be living al treasury by $225,800 last year.
Along the way, well over 200
a moment of great impon in AmeriEditor
·
Christians in Meigs County to get can history, and you might want to organizations were approved for logo
iive' in a country that was behind Commi~sioner Jeff Thornton make some notes so you can describe tags and only two were rejected .. the
~
ded ·on basic moral prinoiples. . and suppod'\ h1s e~~~vor to ha.ve it to your children and grandchildren.
founding fathers from the very prayer ~fore comm1ss1on ~Hngs . .
YO!l can tell tl!ein you were here
J.
God bless you, CommiSSioner when the T~g Wars started.
·nning sought wisdbm and guidI"'
l"'"f"'
trom Ood in all their decision Thornton.
Actually, no shots have been Royal Order of Jesters; who wanted
·ng.,AJ Qhristians we muSt stand
Rev. an !I Mrs. &lt;;l:(de Henders~n exchanged yet. Only words. But it to display a naked Buddha. and a lireind our elected officials who ·
Hobson Chnsuan Fellowsh•.P wouldn't be -surprising if it came to fighters union that wanted to used the
to· 40 the sallie. We urge all
'
Church physical mayhem.
letters "FU."
Signed by 31 others
Then came the Sons of Confeder· What happened is that a federal
district judge in BaltimOIJ' ruled that ate Veterans." Bv most reports, it is
vehicle license plates are a means of one of the more enlightened groups
·od.~,y
communication,jusl)ikenewspapers that somehow find romince in the
and pamphlets and posters, and .thus. terrible horror·of the conflict IOiliC
.·
they are protected by the First · refer to euphemi.stic:ally as the Late
.f ht "-Uo.!llli d PreH .
· ·
·
.
Amtndment. You can use· them to UnJ)Ieasantness. The Sons were
Today is.Mqnday, M.llrCh 3, the 62nd da~ of 1997. There are 303 days
publisl) symbols and messages, and approved for a logo IIJ, and !hey
le in the ~~ ' ·
'·
· · ·
no one can stop you. .
chose the Confederate flag. . . · ·
TOcliy'a .liilhlii!X in History:
· ·
·
This panicular incident involved a ·
Tho bureaucrats in the Maryland
'01 Mlidtl, 1847,,the inventor of tht telephone, Alexander Graham Bell, grolip of people who want to inform Department qf Motor Vehicl~s stu·
w · bam in ,lldi8btuJh, Scotldldld.
America of their.pride In their Con• , nidly stam"-' 'the applicatio.n
011 tbil diM: '
federate forebeirs, but you c'an sure- f.lpproved,"";d soon the state's
In 184.5, fllorida '*-the 27th state.
,.
.
ly see where this is all going. If ihe black leaders were in 10 uproar. The
In 1149, the Home ,l)qwbueat, forerunner of t!Wlnterior Department, Sons of CQnfederate Vetenms have Sons' 11gs were recalled, and the
w ~ilbed.
·
· " .
.
the riahl 10 fon:e the state to publish IJ'OUP sued. That's when the federal
..
1111875 the 0eot111 Bizet opera "Carme.n" premiered tn,Paris.
. ·a lllellaJe, so does every other group judF, !JIIed that tags were speech: "If
One year qo: _Israe.l declUCC! all-out war on ~ mt!tllnt aroup Hamas
Ill 1115: the U.S. Post Office bellO ol'ferina~pC&lt;Cial delivery for flfSI~ . in the land. 'Jlle highways may soon there Is 1 bedrocli; principle lldlderly- after a bus. bomb m Jerusalem lr,illed 19 people, 1ncludmg the bomber, the
clha tllllil.
· ·
·
be hummin1 with bile,
ina the F'lfSI Amendment; it is that the · I~rd such suicide attll:l&lt; in eia!\1. !lays. .
iJn 1887 Anne Mlutield Sullivan arrived at the Alablma home or CapThe Marylldld ftacu actyall)' aoes ·soyemment may not pi-obibit the . 'Ibday'_s ~irthday~: Act~ ]IIIIICS ~is 77. ~inger Enzo Stu.-li ~172.
Jllld'~. ArlhiJ H.
tci becomulie icachor o( their blind and deaf back fD 1985, when the stale beJall expression of .. Idea simply l*N...,
Radztwtll. ~ 11 64. Stnpr Jen"!fer Warnes 1s Ac!fJr ~ Mannaa;o
6-;.-.old . . . . . .....
.
. •
lsaulnJ cQIJiizationallicense plates, soc;iery fmdl'tbe Idea ittelt otfensive , ls47. Actor-director nm ~ky ,1147. Actms Miranda Richardaol) IS
•Ia 19Jt.
sy,~ 1114._. ~tile 'Deity Clfltac-~ ~ 10 1990. whim the display of · or .disapeablo."
1311. Olympic ttaCI: dldld field fOl\imedalill J~ekit JO)'ner·K;er- 1135: I:oot·
· ~..., Run laD ~ II Wend Wllr I, (I'Iie trelly
Uaulltd l,,
wai pertnltuld. The~ cOli an
1 Ilea ·your indulgence for a '' bill player flll1chel'fllllker.ll 35 . Rlpper-~etor Tonc-Loc 11 31. Rock musi·
elltn SJ.5, and~ fattenocf the ue ... mon'l8nt.-,~lon.
·
. cian John BIIJ!Im (PI,thbone) is28. Actor: David Faustino.is 23. ·
~
b)t!dll ~Otllblr t9fl

1 __

.-:

"
I cannot understand why we insist
on picking at this scab so relentlessly, 132 years after the issues ofslav•
ery and Southern sovereignty were
setded at the cost of half a million
lives on both, sides .of the · M~n~
Dlxoh Line.•
I also cannot und~tand why
·decent white people cannot comprehend.thO pain thlt black people feel
when confronted with 1 symbol illlt
evokes nightmares of enslave~nt
and lynch mob~.
.·
·
More to the main point, I cannot
unde~tand how the individual ri.Jhl
to free speech, which I consider inviolable, translates into a ~overn"\!nt
obliJatioil to endorse or prot!)~·
m~es of any 'kind, hjl.te or 0111er·
wise. To me, license .plates arecthe
tools of admin,istrators · and law·
enfori:ement officials. They are ~ot
political bf!ll!dshcets. Why can't .lhe
state pick and choose the colqn,
word&amp; dldld symbols on them?
The judge's Joaic, 1 presume, is

day.

.Arkansas tornadoes cause·24 deaths

Bomb. threat,
J"ump report Crash cau$eS
o'und t'nvalt'd m'n
I ' or In'JU
·
by' authort"ta"es

•'

• $ Support .pray~r before meeting

-·

..

Ruling grants a ,Iicens~· ~~ 'hate

•

end &amp;gg18Yatlllf the rlak Of lloodlng. The rlwr
It U:pec:tad to CNII tit 54 tetlt tit 9 Lm. Tun- · '

Flooding...,....--_ _ _ _ _···

·LettersSto.·the
·editor
k
·f
:;j

. FLOODING SCENE·- The Ohio Rlvar cl'lpt
ovar ~·· Mlln 8traet today at MIYy
l!IM!wnd Nina conttnu.d pummeling the 1rea

.
Units·of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service handled 12
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday, not including numefous
water rescues Stemming from week·· Virginia Jaques, 83, of Albertville, Ala., formerly ofGall,polis; died Sun-'
end flash flooding. Units responding day, March 2, 1997 m Gadsden, Ala.
.
··
·
.
.
,.
COLuMBUS (AP) - Indiana- included:
.
Arrangements will be anoouinced by the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home' ·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
The following land transfers were · .Deed, Dion W. and Sherry L. Ohio direct hog prices at selected
Point
Pleasan~ W.Va.
·' ·
·. ·
.:
recorded recently in the office of Vance to James A. and Tammy A. buying pointS Monday as provided
5:08a.m. Saturday, State Route 7,
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Rand9lph, Olive, 2.516 acres;
by the U.S. Department of Agricul- Thppers Plains, Willie Jones, CamHamilton:
•
Deed, Judith A. and John T. ture Market News:
den-Ciarlc Memorial Hospital;
Deed, . Katherine Lemaster, Williams, Anne M. and Paul L.
BaJTOWs and giits: 50 cents to 1.00
.J2:39 p.m. Saturday, motor vehiKatherine Lawson to Douglas K Chapman to Mitchell D. Chapman, lower; demand light to moderate on cle accident on ,Nye Avenue, (Continued from Pega 1)
Sutton, .9054 aCn:s;
a moderate. movement.
Pomeroy, Charla Roach, Veterans
.Campbell, Columbia, S acres;
Deed, Carl and Pauline Gorby to · • Deed, Diana t.. Bauserman, James
U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs. country Memori!ll· Hospital, Dorothy Dailey soulhern and eastern pan of the Sunday, .he added Jackson, ~eigs;
. Monroe, Pike, Ross, Vinton, HockDaniel R. and Grace M: lewis, Rut- T. Them to Charles and Manha K. points 47.50-49.00, few to 49.50 to and Charles Salser, treated at lhe county.
"
We
have
a
lot
of
mads
thai
have
ing, Athens and Washington countias
land;
Wheeler, Pomeroy pavcel, .053 acres; 50.00; plants .48.50-50.25.
scene, Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Slipped
and
had
blacktop
rolled
up
off
to the list.
.
Deed, 1ohn L. and Dorothea A.
Deed, Ralph E. Cundiff Sr. and
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 42.00- Dcpanment assisted;
of
them,
bridg~s.destroyed,
culverts
"Until
the
water
•
g
oes
down
an&amp;
3:·30 p.m. · Saturday, Mulberry
Hageny to Foster J.. Akers •.Salem, tbls J. Cundiff to Sheridan t. IU'and . 47:50; 210-230 l~s . 37.00-42.00.
2·.06 acres; · •
.
Vicky L. Russc;:ll, Rutland, 56-112
Sows: near steady.
Avenue, Pomeroy, ·Elizabeth Vaugh· out," said Jane Cahall, director of people get back .in their homes, we ·
Brown County's Emergency Man- won't be able to do adamage assess- ·
. Deed, Robert E. and Judy M. ayres;
.
U.S. · 1-3 300-j$50 lbs. 40.00- 'an, Holzer Medical Center;
agement
Agency. "We have a large ment," Nancy Dragani, a spokesMiller to Roben B. and Jud)' M. . . · Deed; Roben M. Chambers, Troy 44.00; 450-~00 ttis. 43.00-46.00;
4:50 p.m. Satufday, West Main .
number
of
mudslides- hillsides that woman for the Ohio Emergency
M11ler, Rutland tracts;
C: Chambers, Patricia S. Mills, 500-650 lbs. 46.00-50.00, few over Street, Nina Dixon. VMH;
Management Agency, said after tour"
Deed, Morgan A. and Lois M. - ~omas M. Middleton, Marilyn G. 650 lbs. 51.00.
6:47p.m. S&amp;~UI'dl!y, CondorSirCet, have just caved in."
Rescue
workers
using
helicopters,
ing
the affected areas'. "There's cerYates to Morgan A. Yates Revocable, Middleton, David c. Middleton,
Boars:· 37.00-39.00.
Pomeroy, Betty Webster, St. Joseph's
hoats
and
dogs
located
II
people
who
minly
a lot' of water. It's difficult to
Sutton, 1.91 acres;
.
·
Mary K. Middleton, Marilyn Carey
Estimated receipts : 36,000.
Hospital;
had
been
unaccounted
for.
early
Sundetermine
if you're looking at riven
~· ~h!:lbaJ. Wiclchnc toJ~s ~uscher and Gerald J. Rauscher to ·
Hog market trend for Monday: 50 .
I :52 a.m. Sunday, U.S. 33,
.
day
in
Adams
and
Scioto
counties.
or
sti'eams.
Some st~s are 40 feet
D. W1ckhne, ~utton;
11;renda G. Swann, Middlepon; •
cents lower.
..
Charles Stotts, liolzer Medical CenSearches
have
bee11
called
off
with
no
·.wide."
.,
. Deed, DanJCIAIIen, Robert E. and
Deed Mildred C. Fultz to David
Summary of last week's Pro- ter;
The Ohio River, at the flood stage
Rolarid Eugene Will to Roland w. and Karla K. FoK, Pomeroy lots; . ducen Ll•estocl: Association IIIICII :08 a.m. Sunday, Overbrook residents reponed missing.
1\vo
people
were
killed
in
Adams
oT
50
feet today, was eKpected to crest
Eugene. Will, Rutland;
,,, Deed, Thomas and Madeline · tlons at HUlsboro, Eaton, Farmer- · Nursing Center, Middleport, Mabel
County
and
the
bodies
of
two
more
·
at
56
feet Thursday, said Teny Hem. Deed, Jft!lles M. and Tam~y S. ~cClung, to George E. Bdckles, stowa, Lancuter, .Wapakoneta, Skaggs, VMH; .
·
people
were
found
in
Brown
and
Galby,
director
of the Gallia County Dill;
Petty lo _Ymton County Nauonal P\)meroy parcels;
·Mount Vernon, Bucyrus, Crestoa,
3: Io· p.m. Sunday, Stonewood ·
·
aster Services. That doesn't take into
Bank, Me1gs parcels;
'.'Easement Mildred M. Elkins to · Caldwell and Gallipolis:
Apartmepts, Middleport, Louella lia counties.
The
Adams
County
victims
weJ:C
account any coming tain, she said. '~
Deed, Sherry A. Miller to Virgil 'I· Columbus &amp;uthcim Power, Lebanon; ·
Hogs: 2.00 higher.
•
Driggs, VMH.
.
Jason
Hall,
16,
of
Blue
Creek,
and
The creeks and small rivers crept
Miller, Olive paniels;
. · "' Easement Lawrence R. and Clara
Butcher hogs: 33.50-52.75.
·
MIDDLEPORT
Debonih
Hetterick,
34,
of
Felicity.
back
towards their hanks Su~day,
· Deed, Magnolia Mae Nitz to Nan- L;ouise Gl~esencamp to CSP. • Cattle: 1'.00 to 2.50 higher.
II: 10 a.m. Sunday, Pearl Street,
Tlie teen-ager's body was found hue spelling problems for communities
cy Jaspers. Pomeroy;
~banon ·
Slaughter steers: choice 60.00- Shirley Pauley, VMH.
Saturday
near Blue Creek, while the downstream in the southwestern cot-'
. Deed, Frederica R. Faris to.DanEase..;ent, Troy E. Ward to CSP, 71.50; select 55.00-65.50.
RACINE
woman
's
body was found Sunday ner of the Stille. The water empties
ny M. and Nancy L, Grtffith, Lebanon;
. ·
Slaughter heifers : choice 60.008 a.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
R)oming
near
Peebles.
into the Ohio River, and those coni"'
Pomeroy par:cel;
.
&lt;'' Deed, Craig Bolin to Joe M.. 69.75; select 54.00-64.50.
depanment and s&lt;luad to State Route
Bolh
were
swepl
from
vehicles
by
munities began evacuating Sunday:
Deed, Juhe K. Melrose to Dcnn1e Craig aQd Janet Bolin, Rutland
Cows: steady to 5.00 higher; all 124, motor vehicle accident, Marilyn
flood waters. Friends said Hall had night in anticipation of severe flood: ·
V. Nutter, Orange;
parcels·
cows 45.25 and down.
McFann, treated at the scene;
. Deed, Dennis V. and Tracy L. NutDeed. Brett, ::Oherrod M.. Barry ·
Bulls: steady to 3.00 higher; all
4:43 .p.m. Saturday, Elm Street, been riding an all-terrain .vehicle ing.
ter to Dennis V. and Tracy L. Nutter, anq Dennis L. Han to Monty R. Han, bulls 50.00 and down.
Virginia Cleek, Jackson General Hos- tjlat was sucked into swiding water. · Forecasters at the National Weath•
The third victim, Jason T. Copple, · cr· Service in Wilmington predicted
Orange; ·
·S~tton parcels;
·
,
Veal calves: steady 10 strong; pital.
·
24,
ofDecatur, was visiting a friend's that the Ohio River will crest at 61 .5
Deed, ·Steve R. and Rhooda L.
·''Right of way, Alan G. and Joan L. choice II 0.00 and down.
RUTLAND
.
. 2:32 p.m. Saturday, College · house near Eagle Creek in Brown feet ·early Wednesday at downtown
Dailey to Ste~e and .Rhonda L. Dai- Brown ,,to Thppets Plains RegionaL
County when he was swept away by . Cincinnati; wheJ:C flood s\3ge is 5:1·
ley, Sutton paJ:Cels;
.
. . se\i.ler bistrici, Orange:
Avenue, Ted Hatfield, HMC.
a flash flood, Sheriff Windell Craw- feet.
·
Deed. Rob•~ Mom~on, Robm
"kightofway,HomerandAimnJ .
ford said today.
, That would be the highest cresr
WagnertoJJmmyMorrtson,Mtddle- LippstoTPRSD; •
..
Gov. George Voinovich, on a trade · sine.! MaJ:Ch II, 1964, when the riv' ·
pon, .33 acre;
·
Right of way, Inez and Boyd T.
mission to the Far East, declarcil a · · cr reached 66.2 feet. It has not ·
. Deed,JamesD. Wi~klinetoShel- S£urloclctoTPRSD;
f'
r· y
state
of emergency late Saturday n:achcd 60 fcet.sincc 1967.
ba J. Wickline, Sutton, 6 acres;
T~ght of way, Tom an(! Wendy
night for Adams, Brown, Gallia,
·
Deed, Randall . and Cannen Wllfongto~RSD;
A Racine woman was slightly Lawrence and Scioto counties. On
· Deckard to Dav1d L. Grate, Chester;
Right of way, J.B. Tignor to
.
injured in a one-car accident Saturday
TPRSD;
The Pomeroy Kroger's Store was on State Route 124, the GaiJin-Meigs
ntinel
~ight
.
of
way,
Eastern
·
Local
evacuated
after a bomb lhreat at the Post of the State Highway Patrol
The Daily Se .
.' Schoo
, I District to TPRSD •'
,.
store Saturday evening, but Pomeroy reponed ·
(USPS 21!-960)
P.,lice and fire officials found no
Marilyn H. McFann, 44, Fifth
COUNTY MAPS ·
explosive
atlhe
store.
Slreet,
was
not
treated
at
the
scene.
IN
STATE iOOK
Publbhe~ every afternoon. r,fonday lh(ouah
'"
Frido:y. Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
The Pomeroy Police Dcpartn'lent
Troopers said McFann was west·
A book ...,llbllal: oil of Olalo'a 88
(:J:Iill Valley .PublldU•t Co...,UyJO•n•t Co..
~eived a call.around 8:55 p.m. that . hound in Lebanon Township ai 7:40 counl)l mapo II ovallabk. PriDM4 Oil
Pomeroy, Oh;o •l769, l'!t· 992-2156. S.CCnd
16122
....
E
.
I
Po·
41'
·
._a
clu• posmae pmid at P~y. Ohio.
f'...... e
....................... " a ·homb had been p1~ced ·at the store. a.m. when her car went off the right · · brp
paaea. alu
each cauat.y illch
hal aUcNblo
.....,.......
p.
Altzo
...................
:
....................
72
The.
store
was
evacuated
and
side
of
the
road
in
a
left-hand
curve.
The
book
-·••·•
UG
vllualillpopo.
Mtntbtr: The Aaociated Pres•, ond the Ohio
AmrTeeh ...............................83\ selll(:hed, according 10 Police Chief 1be cat struck a ditch, mailbox and . , . BudiOJt &amp;at.o'~ 16.000 llliloo of
~~~ Auacllllion.
A8ht811d·011 ...... ;....................41\ G ld R ht
handrail, and came to rest against a · roo!lo onlbnll fD dolaiL 'l'owuo ci11oo
Atar·... ~................................37'!.
era
oug ·
·
01111 ~ .,. IDdortd ucl lmttd,
POSTMASTER1·Send llddma correction~ to
..........
••' ·, Tile incident remains under inves· tree.The car was moderalely damaged,
.
I'-~·~
11e Dail)' Senlinel, Ill Coun SC.. Pomeroy,
uw••.,~0 ne ................................... "
....t there --·• d'~
~o4J1,;9.
Bob ...van• ............................ 13\
tigatio!'l. he said.
To order 0111o CGua&amp;y Mop boot!, IODII
Borg-Wirner .........................38\
Pomeroy Police also received a 'accordinJ IQ the report.
514.86 tpr1co In±"'"' ~1. VISA
SUISCRIFTION RATI!S
Chainplon
...............................
18
call
Saturday
around
9:
10
p.rn.
cona'ad M.w.cud -'*'11 Carrier or Mlfor ..... ·
One Week... ............................................. $100
CI!itrmlng ShoPt ...................4,'&amp;.
cerning an·,alleged jumper from the
Mol!a chocl!a poyoblo to
·{ )ne Month ............................................:...$8.10
~
.
tly
H
Hcoldlng
.....
::
.....................
33
.
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge,
but
dis·
c...Q&gt; Mope
One y..,. ...................................... ......... $104.00
~I Moful ....................= .211
.ssCd he
ft
.
Sere.ealai taaceled
Ul hoto Pto.
Gannett ...................... ,............78
ml . t repon a er no JUmper was
A cholesterol screeninjl scheduled
l..jdoe IkotiN. WI AN4
• SINGLE COPY PRICI

Recorder posts land transfers . .

On Jan. 8, oral arguments took Year. in 1i1e Supreme CoUJ:t," edited ish I know." ·
.' malic" excerpts.
.
pl,ace at the Supreme Coun on two by Rodney Smolla (Duke University
.·it is ind!=ed: And it ,also
But that has been happening in the
cases cl)ncerning physician-&amp;Ssisted Press~.
..
, .
impedes .th_e ~ility ofh'!ge. ,nP'!'bt!nt ~"r. sllites Ill~\~, by no,W, ha~ "\levi~
suicide. In the course of-the seSsion,
rti1~ cult of secrecy'cavaiierly dis- ·· ofi\mericans to undersililid thCir ow,t~ · hundreds of trials with no discernible
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor said: ·
' · "" ·•
·
rights and libi:nies, as
u tho~ rieptive effects, according to most of
of others. For example, by contras'l~ the judges involved.
"This is an issue every odie of us
faces, young and old, male and
a pre-trial state coun hearing in the
And even snippets will provide
female." And Justice David Souter
O.J. Simpson criminal case was tele; some sense of !low the SuPJl:me
pointed out that opponents of legal- regards the need of Americans to vised around the country. The FOIII'II\ Coun operates. At least the populace
izing doctor-assisted suicide fear it know how .this nation's coun of last Amendmeqt rights of Simpson tool&lt;' will be able 'to recognize the nine
would inexorably lead to lawful reson reaches its decisions- and who up a great deal of that hearing.
most P'?werful people in the United
euthanasia.
lhese supreme arbiters of our laws
For weeks, I was astonished·· and' States.
.
Despite the pfofound· conse- and lives are.
·
pleased -·to listen to argumeills about
1be insistence of the justices to
quences of this debate, television
I wa5 in justice William Brennan's lhe constitutional limits to 1C81'Ch II"\! · keep hiding behind, as Jefferson put
coverage of the oral arguments was chambers one morning some years 'seizure in bars, On stoops of buildings' it, "the noiseless" Supreme Coon is
i$sue.
. .
•; "We're not going to COII!ment on what the coun may or may not do," . forbidden by continuous order of lhe ago wh~n a poll came in showing on my -treet, and in my house. Many1 · indefen~ible, in· a constitutional
.i)lwson said.
Supreme Court. Those Americans . how nuiny Americans could identify of those Involved in the dis&lt;:ussi0t1~ · democracy. ..
. .
·
with access to one of the relatively the various Supreme Coun justices. knew nothing. about the Founh '
·. . . ·. ·
few newspapers that carried eKten- . Brennan, as 1 remember, wu known Amendment'befotehand.
,.
II may be time •• as IAOii Friedsive eKcerpts of the proceedings by 5 pelCent of thOSe polled. "But,"
, These intensely interestCd peopk . man, .a vigorous constitutional
JWOuldgetsomeideaofwhatwenton, he laughed, "Harry Blackm~n only .·~ere D?llawyeni,law professors ?f la,.Yer,su~gests ~-tod~':"li8tacable
,r
•
,f
I
but lhe vast majority of the populace got! percent" (Brennan wumfavor . JoUrnalists. 'nley were the people for networl(dld when ~t:levtsJOncameru
::: Ec1iiiJr
had little sense of this constitutional of television coverage of the oral whom lhe Constitution was wrincri'. ~~~~ished from the OJ,. Simpson
!)ear
·
•
fired.
controversy · that will directly affect arguments.)
They are the"""',_...,_ who arc"""· cml tnal. Take the transcnpts of the
· I challen- the mayor of Pomeroy
For the mayor to carry out what I he
II ,
·
·-• ,.....,_
•·e
...
· •t m, as we as .uture generations.
MostJ'ustices delight in their pn'· vented from hearing and seein• the oral arguments, which are public, dldld
.:•q· come forward with any proof !hat believe
to
be
a
personal
vendetta
Th
s
c
•
bbom
·
.
.
e upreme oun s stu
vacy. Four years ago, in USA Today, ultimll!e interpreters of our free;
~ign actors_~&lt;,&gt; imper.:onale the jus1
~'·"'~ .1'! town counc~nD~ a~ru.
'
!st~:eon~
by what! ~eel f~ refusal to allow cameras in itscoun~ Tony 'MI)uro:teponed that 11 a con- doms.
·
,
tta:sontelev1s_1on. Seemgact~take
1
· njeel!pg,ol the 1,7th. and 10
w- 51 b:~g 1d
rto counc• an 1h room recalls what Thomas Jefferson ference lin'li!olorado SprinJls •.retired
In addition to selfishness bei~g a their places mtght, out of vanny and
' ly sCntinc on lbe' l8th of February, pu ~can · 111 mg someone 10 t e . said in 1823 about the secJ:Ccy of lhe Justice-Byroij'White said, "I suspect ·reason for keeping us f10111 watehiDJ ~~smenl, spur the justices to
, 1?91 flll'.cernlng ~im Ingels !!nd Jim- pubhc should not ~.tolerated.
. Supreme Coun. "There is no danger as tim,e:.:soes on .:. the
. coun will be; the coun on television, there is
bring 1n the ..cameras
. . ·For example,
.
.I am of the opmlo~ that •f he 15 . I apprehend so much as the consoli·
, _,
• k Wh ·
f
D
DeV
lh
be rd
• Illy's !!pons 11!11'.
. ' ltismy fii'm belief !bat he l)as gomg to ,carry out h•s attacks he datt'on of our govern' ment by the' maucOf,~usticcs who wdl as , ' .~! contention that only snippets o
Aann&gt;;
•.to, WI a a , as
•
h ld
d
f
ffi
nd
was w?Ong with those· old guys?
.oral argument ·will he shown. 'l:;j
ntonm Scal1a.
·
..
noiseless ... instrumentality of the who resi~ted televi$1on. But White S,AN has pledJled· IQ broadcast ·diC
Nat . Heatqlf Is a nationaiiJ'
• nii•lead IIJWD c(luncjJ,IUIII deceived .· 5 ou step ow~ rom 0 rce· ~
tl!e pilblic as.he knt':l'' this. would .go handle.· this matter m anolher fashion. Supreme Coun." The quotation is added; "I am very pleased to he able entire session. but it is true Ilia( tile nnowaed aathoril)' 01i .the Flnt
: to print He has tned IQ Publicly
I do not want to hear a?,y e~cus- from Tony Mauro's "1be,Court and. to willie around, and very, ~ery sel- commercial netW9J'ks and' locals~' AIM1&gt;41WIIItandtbenitotllleBW
• Cllllbarrass and huiniliate a business es, 1 do not. want 10 hear 1 mtsun- the Cult of Secrecy" in the
. book "A dom am 1 recognized. It's very sell~ . lions will ,.,n only the more "dra· of Riptll.
. : P.,rson in Ibis community and I chal, derstood." I JUst want him to show lhe
·
•.,.

Nat He
'' ntoff

,•l~umbualso•l

Rain slated to end.tonight
'over·flood-ravaged areas .•

I

J

In lddition, the community or
Olester "'U hit with the wont flood
in memory, deeper than the flood of
1963 accordinJ to Horaoe KarT,busineu_, and lifel011g reaidenL
Byer said he visited the Olester
and Laurel Cliff areas.
•rve never seen it thai high in my
lime," he said.
"If you want to compare this to the
Mothers' Day flood in 1995, this is
,,,,,
bigger ,,, a lot bigger. It's Ol()de widespread; there's .a lot of damage we
· · h&amp;ven't even seen .yet," he said.
Chester experienced a delicate
situation when an empty 30,000-gallon propane tank at Ridenour's Gas
Service floated off its moorings adjacent a full 18,000-gallon tank, Byer
saic!. The full.tank n&gt;main~ moored.
Byer said no injuries .have .l1een
~due to the flooding, although
many firelighters and others were
placed in potentially dangerous situations.
"Everybody to my kilowledge has
been accounted for," he'said.
Bye.r said no damage estimates
have been completed for.Chester.
"Only a couple of .homes were
evacuated ' ... we couldn't 1et . near
some of them to determine what we.
had, .. he said.
Between four and six inches of
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:05a.m. rain fell during the weekend, · not
·
Weathel'~recast:
ilfcluding the half-inch that fell this
Tonight. ..Cioudy.' chani:e ~f rain morning.
until midnight. Lows fD 40. West
Forty-three roads were closed
winds 5to 10 mph, Chance ofrain 30 . Sunday and some have since been
percent.
.
reopened, Byer said. The .Ohio
Tuesday... Panly cloudy. High in · Depanment of Transportation repon'
the lower and·mid 60s.
ed today that a mudslide has closed
· Tuesday night .. .Partly cloudy. State Route 681 on · · e west of
Low around 40.
Tuppers Plains.
· Extended forecast:
Aggravating the situation was a
Wednesday... Mostly
cloudy. land slide at West Columbia, W.Va.,
Highs in the lower 50s.
and a rising Ohio River that cut off
Thursday .. .Panly cloudy. Lows in. ambulliJICe service to some area hosthe lower 30s and highs in the mid pitals.
·
50s.
Teams will continue 'to assess the
Friday.. .Panly cloudy with a damage throughout the county, Byer
chanceofrain. Lowsinthe.upper30s said.
and highs in the lower 60s.
•
.
·~

Supreme ·c ourt vs. American people

-: The siiiC argued that it merely is a panner in education, a backstop to
onsure .that a.basic education is provided . ..
. ' Perry County Coronion Pleas Judge Linton Lewis Jr. ruled in 1994 that .
I&amp;IF Ql)jCI1sysiCJII,js uncpltstitu.tipnal because financial aid to scbool4istricts
w.S inadequate lll!d unfair. He declared education a fundamental right.
, 1be Sth Ohio District Court of Appeals in 1995 revened Lewis.
, The Supreme Coun heard oral argtiments in September an.d is'expected
to rule soon. Both sides have said whatever lhe ruling, it will be appealed
' t8 the U.S. Supreme Coun. ·
- ·
·
• Phillis said the Vermont case has similarities to Ohio's case. . ,
.
,, Both cases involve disparities in spending per pupil and local control of
s&lt;:hools, he said.
,, M.ichael Dawson, Gov. George Voinovich's press secretary, would not say
whether last week's vote.should be considered a bellwether for the larger

'

(Continued frclm fl91)

fOieCIII

.

WASHINOTON - The pu1e1t jobleunels, homeles- dldld a
favor the We Dena XiaopiDa - t - ser1ea or liAI1II'Il di•"'"'· For yen,
ly did for his succeuon was 10 die in · this floatin1 populatioa bad hovcml
win!«, not in summer. The seaonal around 50 millioo, or one i.!!_e.!.~ -~0
difference greally reduces the chance

By Jack Anderson
and
.Michael Blnsteln

Vermont records in
~chool funding case

Flash flood

OHIO We&lt;1\t1cr

winter·death Is followed
by.calm
.

of severe political insllbiliry in Chi·
n.a following the·dealh of that country's longtime dictator.
"If It were summer, we'd be
.
looking
at more serious possibilities
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
of demonstrations, riots and repressive police reaction," a Centrallntel- . Chinese.
ROBERT L WINGETT
ligence.Agency expert on China told ·
But before the Tlananmen Square
Publlther
massacre, !hat number had shot up to
us,
The aA and other experts believe more than 80 million, maybe more.
MARGARET LEHEW
this because Communist China is not . Many experts say !hat it was these
Controller
a happy place for most of its I billion drifters who helped escalate tensions
residents, who have become reStive in in ·'I'Iananmen Square •• having noth·
'llltS.nlifttlaolcaow_lll,__,__.., 1 _ _ .,..,.
thelasldecade. lbeyarcmorelilce- 'ing better to do. The number of
Ia. llhott Pfl!l"
'
_
,
.,.
"',.,
,....,.,.,_
.
ly to protest
is drifters
has been
onlatcd
the rise
'TW»&gt;t-....
- ,....
..,
......,
..
_
_
_
_
_• ..,...,._
• .,....._
hanw h.when
. • lhe ldweather
.
alongwt
'th arc
. . . ever
the
..
..,..,
...
.
,
.
_
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
_
,
_
...
,.,.
warm,t
enttsco
.
smce,
nsem
71 1
- - . , - _,., ..-w 111 ... - · l'llo S.Oiifttl, flf QUI 11r., •
. Another factor promoting instanumber of violent crimes. •
·
unt; "'· MJI·111 11~17.
· ·
•
•
bility is the number of "drifters" ChiBesides the luck of the season,
'-.------~----...:.-.:o··------.:..-----' 1 na has produced-- tens of millions of China's new government has also
young people, many of whom tend to been blessed by Motlier Nature.
drift into the capi\&lt;11 of Beijing when
Some Chinese consider natural
the weather gets warm. Most of disasters as signs of heavenly dis~esedriftershavebeensetlooseby pleasure. floods. eou:t"quakes aiKl

C0 Urt ref Uses

Pllgl2
oh 3, ;ii7

111e Deily Sentinel• Plge 3

'K
inlrt.....................................
Q!IOCIYur
.............................. 12'520:0

m
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Landi
End ............
;... ,............ 1er,
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....................
,
........ ,........
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·
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0;
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"t"'sh"!!.l .........~.....................• ~1~
R"' - .............,................. 1 72I'
Shoney'a
•~

88nk·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::3a'A.

1
•

A motOrist ..w ll·inan
Dcpanmenl'
TUesday
been canfourid.
· goinl! over ,to
be held al the
Meigs has.
County'Heallh
a rail on the bridgeruid reponed .it in ce led d. ue to Ihe floodi ng Oh'10 R'IV·
Mason, Rought. said.
',
...
no missing persons were ·repol1- · · er. The
· clinic will be rescheduled and
d he 'd
.
!hose who hadiregistered for tomore •. $Ill .
row's clinic wid be eon~ ils lo lhe
time, Norma1brres, R.N., director of
•
•
. nursiag, an
_ nounced.
1\vo couples were issued mani•-.licenses recently in the Meigs Coun- Held Start auctloo
ty •Prohate Coun of 'Jodge Robert
An auction to benefit Meigs
Buck.
· CoUIII)' Head Start will .be held hi·
Reccivinl licenses were: Orville day1 7 p.m. Jll the Carleton School in
Ray Hill Sr., 27, and Dorotlly Marie Syr~euse. Toys, tools, handmade
Older, 20, both of Middleport, and beaded baikcts.and other iiCdlls will .
Todd Wayne Hoschar, 27, and Betry be altailab~. Refteshmoats ~ Head.
&lt; Lynnet\C Kiser, 22;
botll of S;yrat;IIIC.
Slart mot~.
·
1I
·

Marriage licenses·

Star
W1ridv'1 ................................20'A.
Worttilngton ..........................zo\
''
-·-·Stock l'eportl IN tha 10:
!r~.provldad by Adveat
"~
'
'

' ·
·
nnOUnCemenfS

'

~

131 1
1111
Olhar~acololovolloblo;
~ IN,
r~~·
:-~
:•
~-~
:AR.
~~=~~;!!!~!~!~!
KY. Ml, NC, PA. SC. TN. and W'(.
·

Thle "••••• Deli

sa.r ..tal-

Two Slopp•3 J.-. 1 oz. Pocato chi- 2 oz. Royal Cake, 21 oz.
v-r

Fountain Peptd Products.
ONLY_$2~99

....,

.

~

I

Ched;k out aw Hllli .,_.,.

Chlclcln 8llllcl

liZ'S . IIIII
••U'~'~~ON &amp;··DRIVE THMI
,p n
••
st. Rt. 7 ld Five Polnta . .

J'

�•
.

.

•

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.

•

Mondlly, 't1rcll3,1817

The Daily Sen~t;l

..

Sports

Because of engine •crutlny sftsr PQJJtlsc Excitement 400~

.

•

.
.

.

South Carolina beats Kentucky 7·2-.66 to w1n SEC crown
'
'ly 1lle AuoolaiM Pine
this coming in," South Carolina
As much as Soutti Carolina . coach Eddie Fogler said. " I could rei!
cajoyed the day, ~ntucky had to that everyone believed it. The_better
bile il.
team won here today."
Thesixth-rankedGamccocksbeat
Andtheplayers don'tbelieveit's
Kentucky for the second time this over.
season ·Sundsy and the 72-66 victo"It's a stepping-stone for things
ry meut their ftrSI Southeastern that are to come. It could take us a
Conference ~de.
long way in the SEC tournament ind
For the thircl-ranlced Wildcats the the NCAA," McKie said.
loss ended a 27-gamebomewi~ng
. "It's the stalt of a dream season
---~and
the"-·
·
.
33
tha
· tJie
was
nn;t tune tn
1 1 t1iinII wt'II end m
· final
1
..,....,.
yem they lost on Senior Day.
Four," Davis said.
&amp;I McKie scored 22 points and · Kentucky coach Rick Pitino wasLany Davis added 20 for the Game·
n't around for the eod of the South
cocks (23-6, IS· I), whq were 33-of· Carolina game. He was ejected with
44 from the free throw line and held .04 · seconds left for vehemently
the Wildcats (27-4 13-3) to their arguing a non-call on. an inbounds
h · or· .~~
·
·
worst s ootmg . ~"' season, 32% play.
(23-of-71)..
..
· "They are better than us right
"I told the team that we could do now," Pitino said. "It was· not a

·
.·
\
fluke. They ue experieac:ea
than us at four positioas. They ue
just better right now." ·
,
Ron Mercer, who declued Jut
Wednesday that he is turning pro
after this season, led ·the Wildcats
with 25 points. He hit an Ill-footer
off a long tebound to bring Kentucky
within. 67-66 with 1.8 seconds left.
After bmeouts by both teams, Anlbony Epps aied todnw a charge from
Mc Ki e on the m
· bounc1s pay.
I Pi uno
·
then cbat'led out to referee Andre
Patilla when a call wasn' t made on
the play,
"if it's not a chat'le, it is a
block.~' Pitino said. "My frustration
at the end of the game was 11om the
·
·
Vanderbilt and Tennessee games.
I:m tired of certain things. I'm not
pleased with the way things have

··
At L· 1 Neb Raef ~ntz
been ~.Ill·" .
onco nints .;; lead the Ja.
McKiealld Davosbothmade two scoml 23 po
i 12 who Y
1 1
1
free throws for the.finli ~IIJin.
~w~f• ~ ~ ~nc/~.reerS::.
In other II~ onvolvm1 ranked
oy 1 tams ts b coach in his
twnSSunday, llwas: No. l Kan11111 ~ory, '!'emoste~e~. Y. a_ 1 ""ronn
~· Nebraska 6S; No. 8 North Car·
trst nme Y~:S tn ~v}ston~ 'comolt~ 91, No. 1 ~e BS: No. 14 ~k:CS(t6-lf;~ ) or
..
Xavter 81, Vit'ltnta ~ech 72; No. IS
s
' C~laa 91 ,,
~~a 103, Washtngton 82;_ Vtr·
No. 1: ..~Duke 85
gtnta 81 , No . .16 Maryland 74, and
·
. .
..
No. 21 Ulinois 70, No. 24Michigan
,A_t Chapel Hill, "!·C.. Andtawnll
Sl ·
Jam1son
hadlead33thepomts
an (21.
reho d5 10
Tar Heels
,
•
In the only conference toumaun
. .
ment championship game Sunday, ·6, li~S) 10 thetr _etghth s~ght
Tennessee·C.hanan~ga beat . Mar· Atlanttc Coast Conference vtcto.:y .
shill 71-70 tn .overti~e to wm ~ afte~ an 0-3 Jeaaue start. The Bl~
S~uthem . Conferences automattc ~viis (23·7 •.12-4), who had aln:ady
btd to the NCAA tournament
cbnched the1r 12th regular·~~
Sunday's pmea '
title, used t..J4-S run to get wtthin
N 1 JL · 85
87 83 'th-, ·SI 1 ft. h t the ··Thr
o.
·• -~·
·
e . u throW:!
Nebnsb 65
Heels made four of SIX free
..

4

9

By HANK KURZ Jr..
However, driven found IIIia&amp;
RJCEMOND, Ve. (AP) - Jt.DII)' illelli ensi- haven't belli llripped
Wlllace WUII't happy with JeffGor- ofvlaories in the put. Richard hi·
doa's hard drivinJil the end of the ty WMiilowed to keep one in· 1983,
Pontiac Excitement-400. A short time and Mark Martin retained one here
IIIIer, NASCAR wasn'l happy with in tm.
Wallace.
·
In both cUes, fines were a1wsed,
The eosine in Wallace's winning crew, members ponished and Win· ,
Ford Thunderbinl failed a cnticli stonCup points forfeited, but the dri·
post-race test, and NASCAR offi· ver; who toOk the checkered flag
cills said they were taking it for :fur· rem.lifteil Ute winner.
ther le$ling.
A points penalty against Wallace
"It was marginal on coinpn:ssion, almost c~rtainly would kill his
so they're taking it to an enviroliment . chances of a second Winston Cup
where they can check it at one of tide this year. Wallace, the 1989
NASCAR's facilities," Robin Pem- c\llmpion, stood lOth unoffic~ly in ·
herton, Wallace's crew chief, told the points after the race, ISS behind
Richmond Times-Dispatch.
· 199.5 winner Gordon.
NASCAR spokesman Kevin
Wallace also could forfeit
Thplett released few details about the $86,17S in prize money.
problem. He sait;l an announcement
.Jior Pem~rton, the penalties
probably would come today.
could be more severe. ·He was the
Last year, NASCAR limited crew chief on Martin's car when it
engines to 14.:1 compressio~ on w-' found to have an illegal part
restrictor-plate superspeedways like here-1a violation that cost Martin 46
Daytona aild Talladegi. This year. . pojni$ jn the series standinJS. He lost

·:

o- the fina139 seconds Steve Woj- •
ciechowski ICOied 18 poibts'to lead '
Dub. ·
.·
No. 14Xa\'ler 81 '
VJrab!1a Tedl 72
AtB~ Va. Lenny Brown '
scored 2.0 points to 1~ the Muske· •·
reers(22-4, 13·3Adantic !O)as they
won their sixth straight and ruined ·
the final home game of Bill Foster's '
Ja.year coaching camer '!'roy Manns •
had 30points fortheH~s (l4- lS,
·
7·9).
No. 15 Arizlma 103

W•biaBfon 82

""

· At1\tcson, Ariz., Michael Dick· ·
e!Son scored 27 points and the Wild· ·'
catS (19-7, 11-S Pac-10) avoided los·
ing three straight to the Huskies for ·

(See TOP 25 011 hae $)

Bilsketba II

~·St .

5I

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.

~llmi

Atil.lldc Dlv..._

~Ncae St. 113. Nidtulll St. 94

Memphis n . Cinci'nhati 6:1
Mi.U.sipp~71 , Auburn 63
Morp St 83. HowiU'd 80
N. C ~~rolina St. 68, Wofford 39
Oral Roberts~. NE Louisi:ma 63
S. Carolina Sc . 71. N. Carolini A4 T

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NAJA Oral Lllka Keaionollnl rotmd

·'

RIOGRANDE77 , SPoklln&amp;71 .

FRIDAY, MARCH
21
.

Nottlo C.. Conr....... chomOionoltlp
· Kenyon 6~. Ohio WealeyM 41

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Ohio CoiArtnc:e ......._..lp
CarltaJ 61 , Baktwin-Wall.:e41

ADVERTISING DEADLINE
MARCI( 1 ~13,

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V...... II , MirJiaool14
Xavtcr(C*.)II. Virp.iaTd7l

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llliloia70.Mi , .• "
KMIIIU...... 1ka6.~
M t II 16........,.67

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T-Tocll71. T-AAA166
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&gt;'

The · nmly Se~tinel

M••••er.
sebd

Mnl'-

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Sl., JtQmarpy

C•llttt-2155 DtiVe
or ...
...

'Hz..ss81
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~. :-T::..'f .- - -

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·March 13, 1997 frQm 6;00 • 7:30 P.M: at the Pomeroy
Pu_brib Library~
. .The goal of the orientation will ?e to . Introduce
.p&amp;rti9,1P811tl to 8$1f·amployrTMtnt and provide them with
thf~ulrements of the trajnlnq and roan program. The
prbjart~. being administered. by · the Meigs County
~ers through a CDBG Mlcroenterpriae Grant,
wHI offer an eight-week ~alness training clan . to
lnter..ted participants, whb lnay then apply to the'
p«&gt;Q.•m for a buainea startup or expansion loan, with.
thli· maximum amount being $10,000. Further
; ~ may be oblained by calli~ Jean Trussell, at

Omla•lon ·

ll

,,

Downing, ChUda,.

~

•

, ·'

I

Improvement Center • Air Conditioning
• House Pabiters • Building Contractors
• Interior Decorators ··Lumber • F1oot1ng• Carpeting
• Hardware • Appliances •.Furniture Stores

-c:-72,"-oty64 .

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l'E•

Ho~Ple

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•Nonlt(:arolloo91 , Doa 115

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PLACE YOUR AD
AND REACH,t3
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70, Saata Clara

Adllioo IOJ, 'f1 I lg 1 11

1997 .

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Supplement to:
.
Point Pleruiant Regist~r
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel l . •

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"I laid back on the car about a hllf
a lenp, and just about the \ime I
lhouaht (larretl) was going to pick it
up, I nailed it. It worked out perfect.
It doesn't always work out that
way."
Wallace led ,for 90 of thi: last 96
laps and seemed primed to run away
until the two late cautions. His final
SUI'Ie regained the lead he lost when
Jarrenjust heat him in the sprint followinglrvan's crash.
If Wallace's victory becomes offi·
cial, it would be his first of the sea·
. son and 47th of his career.
· Bodine passed Jlll'litt for second,
giving Fords a 1-2-3 finish, Gordon
was the top Chevrolet finisher, fol-,.
lowed by the ,Pontiac of Bobby
Hamilton.
Ricky Rudd, originally declared
the fifth-place finisher in his Ford,
and Tetty Labonte, Bobby Labonte

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,erie.

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in the Sunday Tomes-Sentinel on
Feb. 23. 1eremy Bfackslon was m!s·
tlikenly jdenlified'as Michelle Elliot
in the photo of Blks Hoop SOO.Ot
chanlpibnl. a:conliiiJ to inf~
releued by the o.JIIpolls Elks qub
to the 7iJou!..s.MMI lltaff, , .
In the Elks Hoop Shoot runnenup photo thlliPPf•oacl in till NIIJe
edilion, the three boyl ill the qtiddle
row - lemnY Rouab (11-13 ·yearold dlviti""), Kyle Burnett (10-11
year-old division) ~ Andn~w
Sanden (1·9 ~ if,ivl•ion)- •
we~ tiOlliltlcL
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Saturday a display reminiscent ..of other was Charles Austin, who the fastest by an American this ye..-. '
when she won two world outdoor · defended his high jump Iitle with a
Jud Logan, who was suspended
titles in 1983.
tC&amp;p·of7feet, 1 inches.
fo~ four years after finishing founh
.Running injury free and confident
· Allen Iobnson, the 1996 Olympic at the 1992 Olympics after testing
for the rtrSt time in years, Slaney · · gold·medalist in the 110-meter bur- positivefor clenbutetol, won his rtrSt
won the women's mile in 4 minute$, · dies, didn't get past the trials in \he ·national title since 1986, taking the
3.08 seconds, fastest in the World 60-meter hurdles, injuring his left 35-pound weight throw at 74-0 3-4, ·
since Doina Melinte of Romania set ' hamstring while going over 1he third ·the best by an American this year.
Jhe world record of 4:00.27 in 199.0. . hurdle..
:,.
The American in~oot record• •
"Jfell a pop and a sharp pain,"
Other notable men's winners were
bolder at 800 meters, 880 yards,· said Johnson, who was celebrating Lawrence Johnson in the pole- vllltlt !.
1,000 .meters, 1,500 meters ind the his 26th birthday Saturday. "I tried a1 19-2 l/4,the best by an American
· niile, Slaney bolted to the fronl and' 'to cot1tinue, but _it got progressively indoors in 10 years; Randall Evans
never was seriously challenged as wone. I'll be oul at least two wee1cs. in the 60 in 6.49, equaling the fastest
she beat runner-up Suzy Hamilton by It was very frustnlting ~ause I was . in the world this year; Todd Williams
about.40 meters.
looking forward to going 10 Paris."
in lhe 3.000 in 7:50.49, , also an 1
"My strategy was that I wanted to
Johnson won the hurdles title at American leader this year, and
go out hard," Slaney stid. "I relii~ the. last world indoors, in 1995 at Rohsaan Clriffin in the 200 in 20.SI,
that it's a national championship, but ilercelooa. Spain.
,,
·
1hc 1996 best by an American.
Randy Barnes, the Olympic gold
I think il's exciting to run fast
times."
litedalist and· the world indoor and . Among the women's winners
In the meet's biggest showdown, outdoor record-holder in the shot Put. were 1996 American leaders Cheryl
two-time Olympic 100-metercham- · firiished founh. as Olympic silver Dickey in the 60 hurdles in 7.91 ;
pion Gail Devers beat Olympic medlisl John Godina won at 67·8 3- . Amy Rudolph in the 3,000 in
9:01 .27, and Valeyta Altliou5C in lhe
bronze medalist Gwen·. Tomnce by 4.
shot'putat61
· 10 1-2.
·
about two meters i~ the 60-met~~
Another Olympic gold medalist,
·
Dawn
Ellerbe
set
a
meet
record
in
dashm 7.00, fastestm the world th1s triple jumper Kenny Harrison, w~ a .
year.
.
late withdrawal, without explanabon. lhe women's 20-pound weighllhrow
.· Thetoptwofinishersineacheven
In a nice family touch, Jootta at 70-0 1-4, and Dawn Burrell, sisqualified for the U.S. team for the Clark, 34, won.her founh title in her .tcr of former I00-meter world
world indoors, ,btit Torrence has said 20th appearance in the cham~i- record-holder Leroy Burrell, won the
she is not going. ,
.
· onships. taking the women's 800 m long jump with a personal-hest21-4
.
Devers was one 'of two Olympic 2:00.86, and her sislcr-in-law, Jearl .3-4.
But Slaney wa5 the story.
gold medalists to win.Saturday. The Mile5-Ciark, won the 400 in 51 .31 ,

!

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111111 ..,....

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thellllilr ....
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NASCAR's IDle pemilll ,.._,\
in the final 2S lips.
~
Wallace, embmaaled by tu. P
sixth-place showina here lui S.,. ''
tember, won by .441 sec:oad• et a ;
record speed of 108.499 mph. The
.late Davey Allison held the old
mark of 107.709, set in this race in'~11
1993.
'
·
Jarrett, who led 172 laps to Wel- l!.
•
lace's 135, failed to win for the ICC:.,
ond straight week after domina!ina. ~
He's now led for 323 of the 993 lip ' ,
IDn in three races, but remains win·
less.
., 1;
Gordon, the 2S-year-old defend; 1
ing race champion, still leads ~ .~
points standings with 525. He is 63 ''
ahead of Hendrick Motorsporu ·.I
teamma1e Terry Labonte, the c!efend: , ,
ing series chainpion; 76 ahead of Iar· •P
rell and 77 ahead of Rudd.
.01
Earnhardt tht se~en-time
w
champion, was not a factor. He fin- ,,
ished 25th to occupy 24th in the +' •
standings as he pursues an unprece·

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l'ltlltiwal' ~1. ,...... 63

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.... elllftYtlme.
JZ) 24,
13) 3,1 ~

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!11ft DIOJo 64. &lt;Jonup 59
Sau Fr~~~~~:illcil 71. PortiMd 66
S.. Mloy'o, Col. 55, ~.. 69

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nalrw• the right to bid .. :
euctlon or ID , . _ .
MJ or 10 lteme from thtl ...

the

"I

o.....,.... 67, """""- S6

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Public Notice

Cod. of t'hork1ton Rl Aa. lntema-

Loyota

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Findluy 7~. Mouoc .Vernon N'iWU'cne
62 .
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Shawnee St 62. W:1lsh SK

By BERT ROSijNTHAL ,
ATLANTA (AP) -· Mary Slaney,
queen of Americait dista~ rmini~g.
made her first appearance in 23 years
in the· U.S. lndoor Championships

:n '·

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MOCINAIA Dhllion II Toumammt

"The~'~" told me to get the lila
cleaned oft' real good." Wallace said.

Slaney ends .hiatu_s .-with win in women's mile ,.

. t~ first time in 13 years. Marl( San: " their o_nly leagu_e __1,oss . .. 'J{e.nny
Tulane 83
·
fodJ had 28 JX!ints·and nine rebou~ds Thom!ll had 18 J!Oints fi!~.1JleLohos
No. 11 L~#VIIe
for: Washington {16-9, 9·1):' :
; (22·6, 11-S).
• . ,.,
,
At New drteans, Ray shard Allen
·
VJ,..mtll8J
,.
Florida St. 59
had 24 points and !erald Ho~eycull
' · No. 16 Marjlud 74
No. 5 Wake Fona 55
hid 23 to lead the Green Wave (20.At Charlo~ille, Va:, Harold ·.::. ::7'1. Tallah~see , Fla. , .Kerry 9, 11-3 Conference USA}. Dam ion
Deane had 18 poinls aDd. the Cava- Tllbmpson scored 1 career•h1gh 21 Dantzler hail I 5 poinls for the Car·
lieJ:S (18-1.1 , 7-9) ralii~ from a .IO- pojots fot: the Seminoles (·16-10! 6- .dinlis (l2·7, 9-S).
• ...'
point deficit in the second ~ft9 get · 10,1\CC). TimDilrican had 20po1n18
· No. 18 VWano1ia 84 :
the win they needed so badly after 11111117 rel:!ounds for die Demo.n Dea-.
Rutgen 74
losing six of 5even. Laron Profit · colts (22-S. 11 -S):
·At Piscataway, N.I., senior Alvin
matched his career high with 24
, ,.'
Memphis 75'
Williams had a career•high '32 points
points for the .Terrapins (20-9, 9-7},
,o;; No.9 Clnc:lnnall63 .
and the Wildcats (21·8, 12-6) earned
who have lost seven of 10.
· At Memphis, Tenn., Cildric Hen- the lop seed for the Big Easttouma·
· No. :n IDinoll 70.
. detson scoted 24 points and the ment.
.
No. ;14 Mlcblpll 51
Tigers (16- 13, 10-4 Conference
No. 19 Colondo83
At Champaign, Ill., Kivlane Oar· ' U~M won fcit: coach Larry Finch in
· 'hxM 60
ris Scored 29 poil)ts and~ Illini (20- ·his final home game. Danny Fonson
~t B~l~r, Colo., Fred Edmonds
8, 10-6 Big 'n!n) overcame a 12· hall; l9 poipts fop~ Bearcats (24· had21 pomtsand 12reboundsasthe
point second-half c!eficit. Bnndun 6,•1l-2).
Buffalots .(21 ·8, 11·5 Big 12)
Hughes had 17 points for the
No.10 UCLA:74
matched the 1968-69 team for the ·
Wolverines (17-11, 7-9), .who have
Orecon 67
most wins in school history.
lost five strai~ht and six of seven.
~1\t Los Angeles, Charles O' Ban.·
CoiL or ~- ·
tenn..Cbettanoop 71
non.!jad 23 points and nine rebounds
Florida International 73
.
Manba1170 (01')
in his final hOII)e game as lhe BID·
At Greensbow. N.C., Chris · ins (19-7, 13·3 Pac-10) rallied from
Ai Cbarl~ston, S.C.. lhe Cougars
Mims' .follow s~ with three sec- a '16-P.,int deficit for their seventh (28·2) earned their second NCAA
ondlleft in overtime pve tbe Mocs straight victory .and the conference's tournament berth by winning the
(22-10) lhei,r fourth conference title , autbmatic NCAA to~manient berth. Trans America Athletic Conference
in five years and 11ieir eiahth NCAA
., No.. 11 ae[IIIOD 55
. tournament and extended the
tournament bid. Mims, who sent the
. · GeoraJa Tec!J53
nation's longest winning streak to 22
game into ovenime With a layup with
·At Atlan!&amp;, Te~KII Mcintyre had games. Thaddeus Delaney had 20
14 sec:onds :leO in regulation, fin- 18 j,oints ti, the Tigers (21-8, 9-7 · points for the Cougars. who played
ished . with 16 points and I0 . ACC) ended a three-game losing the tournament at home.
reliounds. Keith Veney scored 27 stieak and finished· withetheir first
No. z3 St. J-.pb's 6l l
points for the Th.undering Herd (20- . win,nina league record since 1989·
La Salle 5!1
9), who haven t been to the NCAA 90. 1
. ·
At Philadelphia, Rashid Bey hita .
tournament since 1987. , .
•u
Oklahoma St. 67
. three-pointer at lhe buzzer ·and the
Saturday's pmes
No. 131owa St. 63 ,
· visiting -Hawks (21-6, 13·3), who
No.2 Mlan 11 ota 75
At Stillwaterm, Okla., freshman have won 18 of their last 21, clinched
No. 22lndlua 72
Joe Mkins sco~cl'nine of his career- firsl place in the Atlantic 10 East.
At ~inneapolis, Courtney James . hiall' 12 points in the final ~ :OS as the
· ·!'If/. 25 Stanford 73
had: .. l4 points f9r the Ool~e,n,,.' CP;-!'hoys 05·13,' 7-~ Big 12) beat
AtttAnt~~rt,:!~inKniaht · .
Gojlhers (26-2; :IS-I), who,wOii \hetr tilt qydones (19· 7, 10-6) for th~
,
12tli straight. A.J. Guyton scored 12 · ninth straighttime.at home.
:had .five Pliints, I~ assist~ and nine
of his 14 points in the first6:33 of the
rebounds for tJie Cardinal ( 18·7,
·
second half as the Ho05i~ (22-8, 8- '
8) almost rallied from a IS-point ,
halftime deficit.
.
No. 5 Utah 78
BUSINESS LOAN FUND ORIENTATION RESOIEDUliD
No. 11 New Mexico 58
The Meigs County Microenterprtse "'evolving_ Loan
At Salt Lake q1y, Keith V.n Hom
Fund and Technical Assistance program orientation
scored 29 points in his fin1l home
originally scheduled . for Tuesday, March 4, at the
game as lite Utes (23-3, IS-t·.West·
chamber office has been re-scheduled to Thursday,
em Athletic Conferenc~) ~venged

Division II ·

I' ,,.._..HIIIIScM.I
Glrl1eW Hts. Tlinily (11.2) vs. Cnp.
ley (21·2), Tocoday, 6:15p.m.

K~:n1 % . E, Michiga n 79
Miami lB. Akron 64
OHIO H . W . M icbip.n4~
Ti.!ledu S9. 8;~11 St. n
'
Mldwestem Colleliale ·c onltRnct
O.:troil Men:y 9Y, WnJhl St 60

Caltttrnin USA IJ•rtcrfiMis
. Loui sville 84. Cincinllllti '67

'"(think I'm a.player who has to
be inspired. I think it's everything,
the attnosphere, the golf course,
everythina,'' Faldo said, responding ·
to a question aboul his short list of
U$. victories.

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.., Tm .....nflnola
MichiJID St. 85, Ohio St. 79

. o( them.

U.S.

J;Op 25 ,/JOJ!PS~ •."~&lt;C: : :on: : :tin~: : :. :. : :f:, m: :,.:.:P! J_eE;. !. 4·)- :

Pi..:ter-

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NCI!ved no 'Jeter then 1:00 s.turday, Merch I, 1tt7, ·
e.m. llerch 17, 1117. It 10:00 e.m. the HOIH
llelem
T-"'tt Ptcp_cI ale will be opaneclet Natlolllll J!enk wll otler lor
1'l'WIMI, lleltla County_.. 1:001.11. llerch '17,1tt7 et .... It pullllo •DIIDI) on lie
receive bide tor the the lelem Townehlp FIN llenk Plrldng lot It 118elne,
.
totklwlng: AI~ moN or lloule Loclted 01&gt;IA 1241t C)hlo, ... fOllOWing: .
. ,... Chevrolet Sprint,
.Ieee of fence line to be ...... c-r.
.
oonetruoted to the · -l!nvelop.. ehould be SeMI
lllllrkld lid.
t.IG1MROIII3GKQ4147
TDWMIIIPII·IIfiiiOIIIoltlorle.
1e1em Townihlp Trua1110 PontillO Oiend ·Am, .
Speolllcltlon• mey be
.,_MIYH
the
riGht
to
accept
iettet
:
oiJUtlned by oontMUng tile
Townohlp Cte;t! It i1,....._ ID Njeot enj enc1 or en bide. 11Q2HEI4Ua.C21~
lonnie leoti, Clerk
Tile MnM of 1M . . -1.
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61

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lltJion(lA-0).
,6~ 1:1p.m.
VaDdalla Buller (21 .3) v1. tOO AN
(14-ti). - .. Kp,m.
'
Fiftlll: Friday, Bo·p.m. ·

NO'IlCI! TO BIDDER8

Trt• o\tntrlct Atltlttk
Cwftta Ukt rhMip Ia dlilp

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(2~ - 1) 111.

. G_ahanaa 'nc a

Public

Saturday's tournaments

SU. Btll COIJffl'mce qutrttrftnal1
Art.-Unlc R«k 6ll. W. Kcncucky 62
l.Quil illftll Ta:h t.4, LarNr 62 .
~ Orle;m• 7fl, Jockto.ville 6)
Sou!h Alabmna 66, SW Louisiana :19

19

... ,...,................ ..... 20-9
IIJ.I 0

.. Vttllllllllll ............

..

A•:m'§m

Colqo

AIW

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IIIOU8d. A lapped .:.llhould aot.try
to dictate what happens 11 the end of
the ntee. We Ill earned what w~
had."
Gordon finished fourth. He
blamed the other drivers for not letling him get to his pghtful spot in
line for two late-race restarts.
"I really thouahtl could win the
ntee if we JO.I our lap hack and the
caution came out," he ·said. "And
that's exactly .what happened." ·
Gordon said he would have
regained the lap by beating'Yiil!",
Dale Iarrett and Geoff Bodine m a
four-wide sprint to the start-finish
line, except that he had to dod11e
Jrvan's car after it bounced 0ffthe
wall.
Jrvan's wreck brouaht out the second caution of the last 19 laps with
six to go. Wallace then blew by Jarrett when the race went hack ,to p-een
with three II!JlS left. for his six~
career victory at Richmond. He s
now been in the top 10 in 17qf the

(24-l),litadly, R p.m.

Nun-c:onl'tre.M t piiJ
Ot:liurn:e 114. BlufTion 52
,
' Mount St &gt;Joseph 90. Wilbetfon.c S9

~uckneiiiW.

49) ' ll

Final: ~;:~:..

Mason (21-2) vs. Day. Cbamiaatk!·
..lic!ftne 424-0). TMI!Illay, 6:15p.m.
w. Chester lllt&lt;O (21· 21 Yl . BeaYet-

~~

·' "'

hlrilll Lnpe:ftnt .......
Uhiah ~4
CoiJate 104. ARDJ 79
L.1fii)'L~Ue 70: ~oly C~u 6~
Sodlhtm Conftu~Kt ....,nail ,
MARSHALL 84. AppnloL:hian St. 71l
Tenn.:Chauanoop 77, [)Qvidsun .70

~

Baa (21-1) n. Tol. C¢ntral Catholi..:
&lt;22·21. ...-,.. • p.m.

reaular·season action

OIUo V.UtJ Cenf'ereMe du ' I ip
' MUirn)' Sl. HR. Ausrin Peny ll, (OT)

4

p,rfl,

Saturday's

·4,

Mluutui V•lhy
Conftmtn qur1trflfttlt
Br.dl:y 66, Drake 47
lllinoi1 St. 12, lndilano. St. SH .
N. Iowa 7J, Ev:msville 65
~W Mil!louri St. 77. CrriJhlon ,~8

.w.L:I lll.ltYidi

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college scores

Conrtreme quar1erllftlll
DUIII=I' 48, Wi11.-Milw:nlkce 3.
Cleveland Sl. 67. Dclruit63
111 . -0\i~go 76. N. lllinoia65
Wla.· Oreen B:.y 51 . LoYOla. Ill. 41

' · ~~~ 01e ~~~~ for a

• ranlllna:

Obio women's

· Mklwnttm c.ltailll'

...... women'• collep lm•kelball poll.
fti. fi,ll·place VOifl in parelllhOifl,
' record• tiMouah March 2, total pof~;at•

kftei'Ward, a twinkle in his eye. " I
just hope I'm ceiling close .0 being
mechanical and boring again."
. Flldo, who won his third Masters
with a dramatic final day at Ausus·
U! Na.tionallast year, then didn'qvin

Mki-AmeriQn Conftrenc:t
C~:nl . Michisan 7:1, Bowlina Grrca

Cnni.\hu &amp;4. Sil!nn....
Fairfield 1\0. £oM 71
Ninsarn ~3 . Loyc.Wt. Md. 43
St . Peter'~ ~I. Mnnhaum 4K

.

At WllloniHipM•rteld MadiiOn (17-61 d. Ro..:ky
Riva Mapifil:at (21 · :1), T.ueaaluy', 6: I$

~'ft!ldr.

to Dale Earnb1n1t.
Before the enaine question arose,
Wallace said he w 11 annoyed 11 how
Gordon drove ll the end of the ntee.
Gordon, a lap down to the lead· .
en, jockeyed to get ahead of them in
case another caution came out That
would have put him fifth in line for
the JCJUltin&amp; restart, sivin&amp; him a
chance to win an unprecedented
thlrd straight event at the stalt of a
WiMI9ft Cup season.
"He thought he had a chance to
win being a hop down with five to
go?." Wallace scoffed. "l don't
know. That's pretly JQugh to do.
You've gotts be Houdini, although
that kid's pretty good. I don't know."
Ernie lrvan said Gordon ran over
the left front of his car, sending him
into the wall on the fourth tum with
se¥en laps to go. He was fourth at the
time: finished 36th and promised to.
remember in a future race.
"That is pretty bad when sonie·
bOdy takes it away from you," Ir:van

-

another · tournament until now,
"I'm not one who can just roll up father, Earl, was released from the .
Earl Woods, 64, had bean bypass that could have been just a little bit
believes he has putsome trying per- and play.l need something to get 'me hospitai&lt;'Saturdsy.
surgery at UCLA Medical Center better.
.
sonal times behind . him and is going. '!ftd I guess that's why they've
"He's home in Orange County," eight dsys before .the tournament
· "He (t;'aldo) drove the ball well.
focused on golf again.
been few and far between."
Woods said. "Why do you think I'm began.
·
He made one poor drive, at II ... and
• " I ha\1 a lot of things to take care
His'jnspiration at Riviera, ·Faldo smiling today? ...
.Woods won't play at Dora! this made a birdie."
of in my personal life, just a mauer said, was the storied course itself.
"It was awfully hard to gel a real week, instead· staying behind to · Scott Hoch finished third, oni:
.of getting things sorted out. Now
'"l''Mis notjustanolherwin. Riv- deep focus on the golf course spend time with his fatherand ~Roth· ·shot behind Stadler, with a 69, Scott
&lt;life's gOO!:(" said Faldo.• who septi· . iera has a great history and 1 know ;~
because. I'm obviously thinking of cr. Asked when he wQuld return to . McCarron, tied with Stadler in secrated from his wife last year.
. . was &amp;,favorite of Ben Hogan's," he
lher thmgs.l undorstaitd what I had the tour, he said, " I'm jusl going to ond starting the last round, had a 73
11ie victory was only Faldo's· said. "This is the kind of course'
·go through, and I'm very happy see how I feel aboul evervthin~ and to drop into a tie for sixth with
sixth in the'United S.w es, although where 1 was meant to win, and I with the way I shot. I'm glad to get make a decision on that. "
Roman Freeman and Omar Uresti.
three of those came in the Masters.
played exactly how I wanted to." . out of here in one piece and (for) my
Although Stadler was in good
Fred Couples, twice a winner in
Last year, he came from six shots
Faldo finished 12-under, while . father to be in absolute perfect position to make a run at Faldo, .he the toumamenl and a three-time
behind Greg Norman on the final Stadler,' whobeganthedayoneshol health.
couldn't get his game working on runner-up in the 1990s, lied for
. day, with his 67 givin1 him a five- behind him, had a 70 lo go 9-under.
"~y dad's actually recovered
and around the greens.
ninth at S-under. Also in that group
1
shot victory as Norman ballooned to
Tiaer Woods. who shot a 69 thai pretty good. You have to understand
"I came-up short all day," he said. were Mark O'Meara, a two-time
a 78.
left him tied for 20th, still considered that he's a former Green Beret. He's · "I was short on my irons, shon on winner this year. and Payne Stewart.
Faldo's otherU.S. victories came .it a. gOQd weekend, noting that his a pretty tough guy."
my putts. I hjt a lot ~f decent shots .
·
in 1984 at Sea Pines and .1995 at
·1
'
0ora1.
.In
Indoor Champlon$hlps,
··
..
·
.
.

...;~~=~-:~.~~~!~ '6::~ha:io:. three-time .British

Final: Frida;. 7:34) p.ll;

flllls ~3. La:8rae 4~

Public Notlcit

N. t22·

.......... .................. ..................................,'I

ColoaWAIWollc

i,··:~ Top 2S ~~in The, A~~~~~

.r... .., -

Nolth e-n .eonre..,.. mamplonlhlp
Woo~~ I. Wlnenberg 44
. ,·

U.lolloo--

Melro Atllntlc Alhld&amp;r ConiiH"nKr

po

'

&lt;»!~ eonrertntt dalmpkNashlP

LA.'Libri • Dallu,I:;\O.'I).m.
Nft Jcney If Portland. 10 p.m.

' ,.._. 011 l j ,poinrs

q .....,.....

Cleveland St. 67. Detroit 63

Mounr Union 71, Ohio Nonhem !16

James Madlron 69. Eu1 CIVtllinn t.7
(2 0'1)
N.C.-WilmiD&amp;toa ~ •.Arr~Cfbn U. SO
Old Dominion 69, Richmo_. ~ · ·
William&amp;. Mnr)' 71. Vu. Common·
weahhM

.

Mklwatem COittpte Centtren«!

Oiarleslon Southern 64. Ubcny S4

M l - 11 New Yort.7J Op.m . .
, "W~~iDIIOn II Plailadelphia, 7:)0
p.ot.
s-A-. II! a..-. 7:JOp.m.
a.J!VELAND at,., ...... 7:]1J p.m.
.,._. • Detroil. 7;:10 p.m.
........ ,~ ?:30p.m.
- ' " L.A. Cl1ppen, 7J Op.m.
·()rla/odo at Seattle. 8 p.m.

WOJIH!n's
u .

.1.

consistency 11 · Riviera;
including a 3-under-par ~8 on the
final day, carried him 10 a three-shot
victory 'over defendinll champion
craig stadter.

· Jl. Tucoday. KP'"'

PUBLIC NINOII'IIfi'ICICE:E

Urbuna 112. Ml: VernQn Nozartne
IOJ(OT)
Walsh 86, Malone 74

llll!loulbc.nr.................lp

Tueaday'ap.- ·

·:t:

--

(ZO.J~ T-y. 6:15p.m.
WOOIIcf (2.1-0) vs. Eaalla~

.

Mld.otalo C....tntK&lt;INAIA 01¥.11

Hllllfooi70, Vennont41

''

Public Notice

.Saturday's tournamenlll

A*'rkl Kilt Conftrtnct qurttrftn.ll
80IIOn U. 67, Maine 49
Delawwe 86. Hofalm 73
OrekCI71. T~St. 7~

"II"""

61, Cam• Heritap

Wl.-48 ·

.

Chippewa ~7. Akroft Hoban 4'1
C-S2. ......... W. 4S
Kanw Lakota 41 , Carey :n
. P•l•a••na.S5.Huron42
Mlnml Ridp 7~. s...... ~~
Oak Hill 60, Peebles 57
Ridpdole61, PleaoaniS6(0T)
UtK:.67. EIJ,in 41

,. 59. lndertendencZ ~6

70

Saturday's tour...,..nta

· Bclltii:la • Toronto, 4·p.m.
MiiWolllru at &lt;llicap, 8:30p.m.
Goklen s..... 10,30 p.m.
,.
' · New Jeraey at Sacramenro, 10:30,

S4

Cu~p H~.

~n

~~~

·At CaN.ta CMc'Ctnltr
"'
Wmdsworlh (22-1) v11 . Breck.nill¢

Brootfoold,2,~39

Non co "'~ . ,
Findlay 19, Cedarville 6S
' RIO GRANDE 94, Mich.-Oearborn

TelW·EI Puo 81 , BriJham Youna "1'6
UCLA 741 Oreaon 67
Utlh 78, New Me:dco 58 •
WuhiRJIOO St. 74, Arizooa St. 10
W,.omina 68. Air Fon.:e ~

1TODI&amp;bt's games

,_,2,

Vandalia-Butler 38, Cin. MI. Notre

Dl•laioftlll
B:naville 57, Galawa)' !'12

'
.llti.laioftiV
&amp;. Loramie41 •

S.turdlly's
replar·aeaaon actloa

Nev.-

o.-t 109lL.A. CIIJ&gt;pen 107 (0'1}
.............. J'ltiladelpllla 95

LaBrae ~l. Mttt.wa46.
Madison P11ins 55. Col Acllllmly ~:\
You. Ubeny 6.1, Newton Fall• 44

Ohio men's

Monlana 65, Moatau St. 47
N. Ari10f1!199, Sam.nento.St. 62
New MelicO St. 76.
66
- . CaiB.l, ~on St. 62
st.. rord 73. c.airorrua 6:\

··- 7 9, SaoAIIIOOion
Qorlooe 108, Ml-96
Dettolt 12. A-75
New Yort 90. CI.£VI!LAND 82
- 1 0 9 , Dollu 108(0'1)

HIJin 58, &lt;lnart1lle 49
Cllnwoy5:J.--52
&lt;Jrandriew II, s;.ta Hit.hlmd ~
lohutow• Northridp sf. PleuGnt H

St. Mary· a, C1l. 80, Loyola Mary·
mount62

. college scores

1

''*

Dlrilion 1.

:'l:.::...

.

Hen n 1bc rcJionll aemififtal .,.....
inti for the· 22nd Jirl•'
bukdtMIII

·~:

Tol. C.holic 52. Syl¥anio South-

Clo. VAJSJ
JI ·
Col. Haatley57. 11oxley .4 9 ·
·
Copk=J57. Avo111-*4!i
Eltda ,.I , St. MlrJ• S5
Olltfield H11 . 1rinity 8~ . 'ChaJrin
Falls 52
.·
·
LninJiot67. Bellewe_.9
·
Minerva 3S. Canton Cath. 34
Tea)'l Val. 41, WattiM Memorial44
W. Branc:h·S6, ·Ypu. MOOfti!Y-46

ChWew• 68. w. s.m Nonhwe.~-

a-49
.
0:. YAISJ 75, 8 hood41
E. Caa:on JO. Norwayne .W

,I

W. ClleowLakota61, SW..,46
WlldsWMit 4S, Stow J4
Woouer n . Canton McKinley 53
(0'&lt;1

-Ill

eo.. c.rerenec lnllill..a.
San FIMCi100 M , San Dieao 61

.. 51. Findlay 43
M-lO. c;._•.....,.. 21 .
Piekeriaa- 62, I •• t= 14
Rocky Riw:r t.tapfiCII 57, N. Olm-

OD.rM )~

-.16.-ll

Wat

Colorado St."· UNLV 58
Fmoo St. IOJ. Son Diqo St. 9"l
Hawaii 8), San Jwe SC. 76
ldoho St.7J. CS l'lordlridp 67 "
LoAJ Beacb St. 19, Pacific 75

aJ!VELAND99,8ostonll ·
1$, Dallu 80

l.ouisiama Ted! S9, New Orleans 53
South Alabam~~71 . Ark.-l.itUe Rock

!2

FarWtll
Cal Poly·Sl.O 8&lt;1, UC Irvine 18 .
Cal St. -Ful~on 74, UC SaDia Barboni 60
.
Cok:Jndo 83, Tuaa 60

19\

S.tunlar'• .......
Waobl- 118, Golden Stllel08

',...

s.n Belt Conference...._..

Ohio u.s. girls'
regional pairings

.....

46

New Brcl'ndl SJ

Wincllarn 38. KiniMkl 33

a--63. c.•.- J I

•1.

w•

.... c.nttnoce71
. . - Tenn.-CblltiiiPOOIA
. MARSHALL
70 (0'1)
.

M••~ ~.

New Ri.l ~3. ~1-Loudt~n 49

.Mwdeld w.~

Cot Mifllia7l, TCil)'l Val. $9
· Dublin Scioto19, Col. DoStoloo !16
Fol- 61 , Lotlla¥111&lt; 42
Field ,7; Garfield Hn. Triolty 41
Oalllpolil 46, Omenlleld 3) .
l'l........y96. ....... 71
PetTy 68, Cllaoloo ND-CL
Jeowlt79. Akrool'l. 54

' Ptlriot Leq• -illllllls
Buc:bc-1171, Cola;lllc 5'
Navy 96. Lafaycue 37

S1aW:n F.Auarin 7.2, Te1.u-San An·tonio 51
·
· Teus a.i1rian 85, Rice 19
Tei.II· Arlia,ton 73, NW Loui1ianu
6.1
Tulsa 76, Southern Meth. 55
Utah Sl. 72. North Te11u 53

-··

,

.

OmtaiNrJ fil. Orand~w Ht1. S_2
0.0•111&lt; !16. Faitbanks 211
tl C1111oti 41. Lorain Cnth. 40COT)
HlW..SO, ~vii~ Rosccmns 34
' K_idkla 54, Ottoville 3K
Ukny Ccnlrr 62, Ayt:nvillc: SO

·Bea'ltf'Cff.Ck
61 , On. McAuley 47
.
Baa &gt;49, P--. Hill. Holy NDme 45
s.ct•~l.lo74. Soha 46
· Day. Ch.aminade-J•Iienne 42. Cin
Saon29
.
EMdakc N. 91, Mayridd HIJ. 76

Cin:lnillc ~. WIBhiAJIDII CH 43
Oe. Ba htlne 81,1b.._ SE 42

Mlllouri Valley Conference . .111...a.
lllinoi1 St. 69, N. Iowa 65
SW Miuouri S1. 6Q, Bradley 3~

· Oil- 12, ~aylo&lt; 61
Otw.on.Sr. 67, lowaSt. tU
s.m H0111ron Sr. 11, SW Te1.as Sr. 69

21 ~

LA. CIIpt&gt;rn ......... 2S 30 .455

..

E. Mio:hipo 73, Kent S9
low. ... ....... 62
K - St. 76, Minouri 60
Milmi (Oitio) 66, " ' - S2
MichiJIII St. 68, Wisconsin 49
.Mianesota 75, Indiana 72
51. Louia68, DePMJI .~
W. Michi&amp;nD 82. OHIO 7)

J\

Selltlr .................... &lt;CI 16 .719
LA. Llbn ............ 39 19 .672
......... ................ oJI 28 .52!

1 ••

c.nr...... . . -

Butler 57, Wit.-Green Bay 52 (0'1)
lli.-Chic-ao 64. Cleveland St. 42

B.:keye Cntrul •U, Colonel Craw-

f...,42

Saturday's tournaments

'-P«·

~ KEN PETERS
. LOS ANGELES (AP)- Call his .
golf gam~ mechanical and boring.
· Please.
Nick Faldo made four trips
:iround Riviera Country Club in typical ~raftsman·like fashion, with
only four bogeys and a double bogey.
The other 67 holes, he either birdied .
.
0 ~ paired.
And at the end of the Nissan Open
on Sunday, the 39-year-old English·
man did a little celebratory bop, skip
andjumpasbewalkedontothe 18th

., ·

BWnon 61 . An:adia 4tJ
Bristo143; SoulhiiiJI• 37

Ohio U.S. girls' scores

onw-tt
Aahtaboola - 1 6 , W. a-p 64
c-. Cllh. 63, o...rn. 61

Midw'*•••~e

Bowliaa Green 99, Cc•. Miehiau

22
25

.719
.65S
.SO!I
.339
.305
.228
.180

-

Dl-1
llarl&gt;enooi9.AbonE.lO
Brcd&lt;orillo 62. Cle. Sl.lanoduo56
8"""63. womn......,.:IO ..
Cia. PriiCI!:Con $6. Cin. Syamore S:l
Manhiol171.- 62
o.
1. . - . 611. v-a-Bodet ~·
Fairf'teld !I), Hamihon 41
Lalcewood '~· N. Olllllled 31
Musillon Pen} 42, Ma~~lllon JDC:k·
... J9(0'1)
'
.
MeiiiOI' 11, Kent Rt!OieYtk ~1
SlOW 4~ . H4Hboo) I
Trotwood-Madl.O. 62. Dly.

OWW..IY

'
DI-ll
Hamilton Badi11 59. Sprinaboro ~6
(0'1)
· tceuerina Aller 4. Uule Miami n

Saturday'• tournamenll

-~8

W. 111inoia 66. Younp~own Sc. 64

Ball St. 7J, Toledo71 (01')

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MWnltiHYW.
r..
:W L bl. llil
llalh ............... ........41
._.., ........ ......... J8
Ml-0 ........ .... :.29
o.IIM ..................... I9
u.... ,\,,...............18
S.A................. IJ
V~'lft .... .'.. ...... 11

Mki,C...CI d &lt;:nen..: ftnt .......
BuiTaJn Ill . O.icaso St. 58
NE llli.ois 7~. Mo.-Kansas Cily 48
Valpwuiso 97. Cent. Conneak:ut St.

7J

Sunday'• tournallltllla

ae.

- A - l e A-le
C~rnet ..... nall
Cuni1ius 78, Niaiar'u 59
Fa.irf.eld 73, Sr. Perer 'a61

T•lane 13, Loui•..;Ue 71
Van*tbilt79. Florida 12
Wat Vqinia 82, Miami (Fla.)~ .

COionl-

~ .................lO

C-1 Adllotk "-clodon - JAJntt Madi1011 60. N.C.· Wilmin11on
S7
.
Old Dominion 70. -wmiam A Mary ·
- 62

FIDrick Sc. 59, Wab FOrese 3~
Gearaia 69. Tenn~S~ee SS
Hlfi1Jion 84, Dcllwlli: S1. .69
LSU66. - 6 4

WauKOn 61 . Coktwaalr 42

OhioH.S. boys' scores

PkJrida A&amp;.M 66. Bethuae-Cookman

NBA standings
J'Jila

Bos1on U. 69, Delaw..: 65
llr&lt;,.17S, Honto.d 67

!0. Md.-E. S'- 62

••

}~/d;~:;s;;;;:;7,;~~~;~;;-~~;d~~,;;;;~;;?n·~~:~;~~,~~;~..-]

Scoreboard
Clooooa 5S, Gooqio Tecb SJ

.

NASCAR offlclals put Wallace's close victory in jeopardy

Mondly,l'nrch 3, 1181

1n Top 25 nslcend coll8gs basketball action,

Pomlloy • Middleport, Ohio

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·,
Monday, March 3; 1997

By The Bend

The Dally SenUnel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentin,!l.

•

llondly,lllich 3, 1117

u!re

More views: Should m·arijuana ·be legalized?
Dear Readers: The pros and cons
ofwhelbcrmarijWIIUlshould be legalized roar oti. I will state my position
after today's contributors have had
their say. Meanwhile, here are more
vie10s:
.
.
Lompoc:. Calif.: I am a drill
insuuctor at a 'federal boot-camp
prison. A high percentage of inmates
here have used marijuana. I have never met a marijuana smoker who can
keep up 10ith me. They are OUt of
shape and can't concentrate.
Santa Fe, N.M.: Chuck Thomas of
the Marijuana Policy Project estimates that 37,000 marijuana users are
in jail. At $30,000 apiece, over a billion tax dollars are spent annually to
incarcerate them. Meanwhile, the

before they start to smoke poe? AleC:.
hoi is the REAL gateway drug.
Ann
Legalize and tax marijuana just like
Landers
liquor and cigarettes. Arrest anyone
19!16, Lol Meek~
stoned in public, the sam~ as drunks,
n-s,.,.... .... o..
Slidell, La:.: I'm a !'6-year-old girl
11011 SyM!c~~e .
who has friends in jail for possession,
lise, distribution and .other involvereal problem drugs, like alcohol and ment with pot. One of _my friends
tobacco, are legal and profitable. sold weed regularly to sonleone's lit'
Wake up and smell the campaign tie brother, who was 8 years old.
contributors.
Keizer. Ore.: If marijuana were
Marion, S.D.: Tell Chuck he needs legal, cancer patients would have a
to get involved in a new subject. Evi· choice between anti-nausea pills at
dendy the squirrels did not gather an · $40 apiece and marijuana they could
the nuts in Washington this yeai.
grow in tbei~ack yards.
Parc)lmu, Miss.: If marijuana
La Orange, Ill.: Chuck Tho '!las'
leads to other drugs, "!hy not ban idea of releasing marijuana prisoners
alcohol, since most people drink is great, but he doesn't go far enough.
Let's release all of the mUrdere~, too.

That will clew out countless jail cells.

Free the rapistS. Then, put all the
child molesters back on the slnets.
The jail overcrowding problem ..m
be completely solved in no time a1 all.
Dear Ann Landers: As chairman
of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations
Western Hemisphere SubcommittCe.
which has a major focus on international nlir~otics control, I take great
issue with the suggestion th8t legal·
'izing marijuana IOOuld resolve the
crisis of overcrowding in our jails. It
would .only create .more dangerous,
drug-addicted criminals on .our
streets.
·
Marij~ana is a gateway drug. "y
legalizing marijuana, 10e 10ould
increase the number of cocaine and
heroin addicts as well. In some cities,

AdVISOry group rejects notiOn· that
.

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soc.IaI .secu rlty
. WI"II.. n.o, .be 'there
.

nation should address this challenge
By~D PETERSON
in
the near tenn. The -sooner we agree
SOcial Security
upon
those changes that are necesmanger, Atlltma
·
sary,
the
less difficult those chariges
People who ·have been concerned ,
about the futw-e of Social Security 10ill be and the more time Americans
shoulil note that the Social Security 10ill have to adapt to the reforms and .
Advisory . Council has expressly adjust their personal financing plans
·
rejected the proposition tliat Social accordingly.
Security will not be there for future
generations.
1be Advisory Council's report, Soc:lal Security Overpayment ·
pt:Qduced aftet 2-112 years of study, Deduedb(e from Refunds
presents three options for assuring the
Benefifiaries who owe a past-due
lorig-range financial stability of the debt to Social Security because they
program.
'
received an overpayment of benefits
All three plans in the Council's should .kno10 the Internal Revenue
report seek to achieve more advan~e Service is authorized to reduce or
funding of Social Security's long- withhold their federal tax refund to
term obligations and a higher level of collect the delinquent debt. They may
national savins for retirement. In find their tax refund decreased as a
3ddition, all three involv.e investment result.
in the stock market, 10ould revise the
Approximately 132,000 persons
taxation of benefits provision, and received, notices last July and August
would cover state and local, govern- stating that any federal tax refund
metU employees newly hired after they may expect to receive this year
1997.
will be subject to be withheld for their
. Ultimately, however, as the Coun- delinquent debt. The . notice was
dl indicates, "...each involves a very designed to give them an oppurtunidifferent vision for the future evolu- ty to repay the debt tluough other
tion.ofthe U.S. retirement system ." means. .
Social Security overpayments
' As the Advisory Council (and ,
Sbcial Security's own actuaries) occur change -in their circumstances
repoited, Social. Security's revenues that benefits. Examples are a mother
ahd trust fund reserves will pem\it the or father 10bose young child is no
payment of full benefits for more· when ben7fici~ies fail tO report .a
than 3()· tears •• until 2029. After a~ects thetr enutleme_nt to longer m
2029, tax revenues 10ould continue to_ ~IS or her care; or a d1sabled worker
. .support 77 percent of the expected 10ho returns t? work. In. both cases
benefits. This means we h~ve time to · they mayconunue to rece~ve
·
make 'prudent and can:fuHdecisions. to which they are no longer entitled,
'But we should not delay. We as a and may accrue an overpayment.

If you receive a letter from Social
Security about money you owe, yqu
can review your records with a Social
Security representative. You have 60
days to object to the collection of the
overpayment or .to repay the debt. If
you don't 010e the money, your record
will be corrected. But, if you do owe
money, you can repay the amount in
full or in installment payments-whichever is most convenient for
you. In some instances, the collection
of the debt · may be waived completely .if you can show severe hardship and that the overpayment was

over 80 percent of child abuse
killings are related to the use of
cocaine. The U.S. Department of Juslice reports that criminals commit six
time~ as many,homicides, four times
as many assaults and almost one-and·
a-halftimes as many robberies when
under the influence of drugs.
Experiments with legalization in
Europe hive proven unsuccessful,
leading to higher crime rates, higher
addiction fft!CS . and higher health
cost.s.
Our nation is f~eing a drug epi~mic. Itlstead of legalization, we
.need to help our kids resist the temptation of these deadly substances.
Legalization would ,be the path of
least resistance and would lead to a.
devastating future for mill_ions of
· America's children: •• Sen. PaUl· D.

Dear Sen. Coverdell: I CID aild
liodtinJtO your statement except my
thanks for saying it so well. Longtenn prevention, education and treatment programs are the 10ay to com'bat the.drug problem in this country.
I've given this matter~ gre8t deal
of tho\lght. While not all pot·users go
on to lwder drugs, the vut ·majority ·
of hard-drug usen start with rllllri·
juana.l do feel that marijuana should
be made available for inedical needs,
since this serves a humane purpose.
However, while legalization might
help reduce the crime associated
with marijuana, it would almost certainly incn:ase the number of users.

.coverdellofOeOrgta

c.JW. 9GOO

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.,
30,1996

Send questloas to ADD Landen,
Creaton Syndicate, m? w. Cen·
tury Blvd., Slllte 700, Las A111eles,

.

. AJ.!~~~!l~E!.W,!.~~~OM
~:t.B~:er~e~r~i=i~:~: w.~:. !~~n.:og!s:'~~~~~:~

not your fault.
To avoid problems with future tax
refunds, contact Social Security if
you have an outstanding overpaymeni. You can contact your local
office or call Social Security's toll·
free number 1-800-:?72-121.3.
Because the lines l!fC busiest early in
the month, call later in the week and
later in the.month.
Named to UC dean's list
Jason Taylor of Pomeroy was
named to the 1996 Autumn quarter at
the Univetsity of Cincinnati.

Spring, Ky.
&lt;;:harlolle and Warren VanMeter
report that their daughter, Sandra
Marcinko· of Cloudcroft, ~.M ., is
making a good recovery following
jaw surgery. · .
·
. Nina Robinson visited her son and
wife, Bob and Janet Robinson, in
Belpre.
·
Tonya, Kevin, Hallie, Aaron and
Heather Brooks, Chester, were Sun. day dinner guests of Ruth and Lloyd
Brooks.
Recent. guests of Mattie Pullins
10ere Wilbur and Mary Pullins, Mari·
etta;·Bob, Janice and Roberta Pullins,

Keaton.
Debbie Bather, coach of the Pow·
erThmbling Team. accompanied her
team · to Winchester, Ky., for the
regional meei. Ariel Brinker, team
member, tied in points 10ith a nation·
al competitor. Eleven members
scored in the top 10. ·
·
Visitcirs of Marie and Charles
· Sargent were Ruth Enoch and Vir· '
ginia Lodwick and husband, 'Parkersburg; Denny and Alice Sargent,
Belpre; Leonard Amos, local.
Sargents'. granddaughter, Karen
Spencer, reeendy returned to Ohio
from Pensacola; Fla.

This Year
Augusr 29, 1996

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· Now is·the time to join more and more of yoor neighbors by ~ubscribing to
' '

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This ~tate-;af-the·i!ft system delivers crystal-clear video
and
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·IJI!bV.•eit •

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a free servia to non·
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, : , ,, ,jill(! suggestions .for toptcs you
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· CHESTBR ~- 'l'bt ~r PTO
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will' meet Monday, 7 p.m. at !he
·TUPPEitS . PLAINS
sc:~~go~. Alll*entund f.elll;hers ~1- Township Trustees, Thesday,
CCIIIII!·
p.m at the ftome of Oerk Osie

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TUESDAY
POMEROY
CHOICE
educators meeting, Tuesday, 10
at the Racine Chapter 134, Order
the Eastern Star, Monday, 7:30
Pomeroy Library. conference
Take sack lunch. ·Contact ~~='{_
Jones. 992-6743 for more in
.tion.

'

.

'

OES, Monday, 7;30 p.m. at the hall.

. ~JnJ. Moliday, S P·"!· m the _h~~h
schoOl librarY to approve adverttstng . POMEROY :. Eagles AUltlllalrv.
b"lis 'fcir:new oonsuuctlon ilnd re~­ Tuesday, .7:30p.m. at the hall.
oviUon. · .
zJ
MIDDLEPORT -- Midodlepoort
Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, will meet
SYRACUSE •• Sutton To10nship
day
at
7:30p.m.
at the t~mple .
~. ~oliday, 7:30 p.m. Syra·
cuse munibipal building. .
PO~EROY •• Free boating
course.
sponsored by U. "S.
LETART •• Letart Township
Guard
,Auxiliary,
starting .Tuo:sdlty,
TrullleC8;Monday. 6 p.m at !he office
7:30 to 9:30p.m.
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I!ilst Councilors Cl11b of Chester from the family of Mae McPeek. It
C0111iCil 323, Daughters of America, was reported that Alta Ballard- is ·
met recently at the lodge hall with home from the hospital.
ln~y Newell and Ethel Orr as host- · Etma Cleland re~d "Calorie
. Co~ter Prayer", games were con·
es~..-y Jo Barrringer president ducied ·by Esther Smith and Ruth
the meeting by reading scrip- Smith, and door prizes won by Erma
tUR•:wttich was followed by the Cleland and Esther Smith. Others
Lorci•1:Pntyer and the flag pledge. For attending were Margaret Amberger,
rojltnelDbers told of things they had Goldie Frederick, Thelma White,
clolie' for someone else that week. Marcia Keller. Opal Eichi~ger,
Rq~
given by Laura Mae Pauline Ridenour, Mary . K. Holter,
tfiCII• secretary; and Opal Hollon, Elizabeth Hayes, and· lnzy Newell.
trauurer.
A thank you. card 10as read
.1--

'

t While Th
On VA ur Programming,

TO-Cut

Past Councilors D of A meets

r

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.

•

1

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�The DillY 81 liMa I• PliJia I'~

Pege I • The Dalty·Santlnel
Public Naloe

-·-"
·····- ..
It·
HOWAlD .

EIUYA1'116 CO.

Dill

~eigs . Senior ·Center
~

·.

'

0

MONDAY

•

March Activities··
.(

lfhe Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
t~gh Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
R~gularly scheduled activitiea are
quiltfng, sewing, can!s, games,
p.!,jol. Weekly activities are Chorus
Practice on Tuesday at 11:00,
KPitting C,iri:)e on Wednesday from
19 to 12. Ptiysital riiDess is held on
Thesdays and Thursdayut 11:30 to
~p psrticlpsnts "fiiind limber".
'Une Dancing tlass will be held.
on Mondays at 1:00 with Paulette
Htniscin, Instructor. You do not
a psrtner, plus the daacing and
· ntevement are a good fonn of
eltercise . New peraons · are
cacouraged to attend • current
dancers will help new members in
lc!iming of the steps. New dances
learned slowly over a 2·3 wee\
~rind . There will be a $1.00
charge for esch class attended.
The "Over 50" ExerciM; Oass wit
continue on . Mon!lays and
Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. through
March• 26. New members are
welcome to attend this class for
bending and stretching exercises
and -low impact aerobics for
caidiovascular strengthening. Jbere
is· a $.50 fee for each session

, nfd

are

a~.

.

with ~eniors celebrating birthdays
in the month honored. Junior and ·
Rita White will play old time
' favorite 1011gs at 11:00.
Friday, Man:h 21 • The Arthritis
Support Group meeiS from 10:30 to
nocin. The Arthritis Support Group
.is made po&amp;sible through funds
from the Ohio Department of
1
Health and Ohio University.
Tuesday, Match 25 • Kenny
Wiggins, Meigs County Litter
Control, will speak atll :OO about
recycling.
Thursday, March 27 • the anaual
Euler dinner will be served at
noon. Jan Lavendar and Kathy
McDaniel will sing atll:IS.
Thursday, March ·27 . • · the
Alzbei~'s Support Group· will
meet from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Guest
speaker for the meeting will be Dr.
Edward Black . discussing
depltSsion. •
The evening dinners will begin
April 1. The Senior Nutrition
Program will be serving an evening ·
meal at 4:30 on Tuesdays and
Thursdays lhrough April and May.
The suggested donation for the
evening meal will be $4.00 wilh the
public invited 10 attend.

.

3
BILked Pork Steak
llashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Carrots
Bread
Prunes
10 .
llusbroom Stea.k
llasbed Pot~~s
with GravY\ ·
Buttered Corn
Bread
' Blullhin Pears

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY
&amp;

Beef in Gravy
over !laahed
Potatoes
Buttered Peas
Bread
Ap le Slices and

Turket IDd Dreaain1
llashad Potatoes
·G reen Beans
Bananas and
Oran1es

11
Chicken . and Noodles
Broccoli/Carrots
· Cauliflower
Biscuit
Apple Cherry Crisp .

12
Cbili
Cole Slaw
Crackers
llixed Fruit
Brownie

•

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Spa1llet t1 with
lleat Sauce
To. .ed Salad
Garlic Bread
Grapes

~

(814) 992 3831

· burpr on Bun
roccoli-BDII
Broccoli Soup-Site
anp Juice o
Bread Puddin1

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13
Chicken Ku11ets
Au1ratin Potatoes
Bruaael .Sprouts
·Bread
·
Peaches with
Oraa
Sauce

18
Navy Beans and Bam
Oven Baked Fish
Oven Roast Potatoes Cole Slaw
•Cornbread
Carrots
Apple
Bread
Rocky
Road Puddinl
Tropical Mixed Frui

24

26
25
Veptable Beef Soup Meatloaf
Parslied Boiled
Pimento Cheese
Potatoes ·
on Bread
Spinach
Crackers
.Bread ·
Cookie
· Appleaauce
Banaria

Ileat Balls in
Brown Gravy
Noodles
Tossed Salad
Bread
llaadarian Oranpa in

27
BILked Baa
of
Scalloped Potatoes
Califoraia llixed
Veptablea .
Bread _ Baater B11
Creamy Fruit Sal:ad

28

.
. - ....
The Luk Qall'ltt, 01110 UalvenltJ, par1r1ted 1 -ert firtH pel'!iiM at die Ceater Ia. Febnllry. Tile
IIJMI·!IIOM by die Sralor CeS!teruddle RmmradArta

JM'lDIRs

•

211.,

Won11&lt;1 To· Bur Uoed Mobil .
H -. Coli: 114 440 0175 Qo' ·

·Cn 014-4411-7211. Or 01.._,
110112.

n

t.l 10 UtiCE r.1E tiT S

~75-!1105.

ttl I CJJ.

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W.nltd To Bur: We Bur Juntr.

Fr.IPLOYI.II r,l
SE RVICF •

· Ph. 773-8173
StsWt

101

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CAIPEiild SERVKE

oRciallng .
~ •.,Ex~
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~ Conc:nll Work

(I'RII!.ESTI~TE8)
V.C. YOUNG Ul

ttl'l!:l ,.,
Mlddleawaltll
hell) IIIII Wlllllam Kea1a,
l'nlllnm Manaaer fer
Reconr)' Senkel, I~ recnatlr plt!ll...tiH BABES paopam to tile
third llflldt shideDta 1t Haniloa'fllle ElematUy Sdteol. 1'lle YOiaattraa "llpelk" to tile dlllllfta will
puppeta conceml•ll pollllwe Uvlaa ildlla aad &amp;l•e tlae• t!ae abllly c.illelter udentud llow to ~
.lhemHivea from alcohol IIIII dna&amp; depel!deiiC)'. Gdrp Wrlallll at. 11.,.-ater will tile prilp'aDL

Sayre Trlekiig (o.

I. LHOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt •Sand

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·Dolle? ·

The Senior Center bas ac!leduled the following trips for 1997:
Saturday, April 19 to the Spring Spectacylar Show anhe restored
Palace Theater, C.nton, with an ' Amisll Dianer at the Amish Doors
Restaurant aad shopping at the village shops, cost is $60.00 for
motorcoach, dinner and concert. '·
·
Thursday, June 12 to Veterans Memorial, Columbus, fora Statlers
Brolhers concert, with shopping at the JC Penny Outlet, cost is $45.00 ,
for motorcoach and concert, lunch and dinner on your own.
· Persons . having rCM;rvations fill' the above trips, need to make a
$10.00 deposit by March 15 to 'hoid their reservations. Final psyment is
due two weeks prior to the deJ1111Ure !late.
'
A trip. to C.mbridge for the ~tdoor drama "The Uving Word" and a
· behind the scenes tour is scheduled· for Thursday, July 17. Also •
iacluded in the $40.00 cost II a viait to the C.mbridgc Glass Museum·
·'
_..d shopping at ,the downtown aria &amp;: crafts and antiques shops.
Monlhly shopping trips h&amp;ve'been IChedulcd, using the Center vans.
. Friday, Marc~ 2i, the trip will b¢ to Grand Central Mall and Walmart,·
Parkersburg, and Wednesday, April 1.~, the trip will ~ to Ripley,
shopping at .Walmart, dinner at·Pondef011!, stop at the flea market lind ·
craft store. Wednesday, May 121 to University ·Mail, Athens; and
Wedn~ay, June 18 to K-Mart''~nd Hills Plaza, Gallipolis. ·Cost fo1
these trips is $5.00, with dinner on your own.
· '
Cell Alice Wamaley, 992-2161 1 for reservation or information.

.. ... -·- ..
WE HONOR

JoeN.Sayre

6::·: ww•••

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Cookie Jars
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Bingo 7:00 pm

Every Wednesday Storewide Savings
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tto.pll8t
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etc.
, Phone 614-t92-3013

Fu: 814-IJII2.3053
Pager 1-4100 M2-2327
Pln2149

ALL PRIMAIW UTlUTIEI MID

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have psid into these pension plans.
Most attorneys or investment
counselors cin tell you .how to
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really do have money eoming.

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Volunteer opportunities available
through Meigs Hospice Program

,Save 15% off everything in our store.

Alhens, Ohio

. ~oom Additions • Roofing

31
Liver· and Ooioas
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Peas and Carrots
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

'income Tax assistance will he
available for senior citizens at the
Multipurpose Senior Center on
\Vednesday · .and Friday only,
Shl!lll Brookl, RN, a1Jrd111 fninl the left, Debbie Murny, RN;
through April lSih." The tax service
is' deaigned to. help taxpayers (age . Velma , Rue, RSVP Voluateer; Debbie Adldas, Volaateer
Coordinator. ·
60 and over) with !heir income tax
preparation. Darla Hawley will ·
answer your questions or assist in
fillins out your tax forms. The
program is specifically geared to
older tnpayers with low or
rqoderate income.
Holzer Hospice of Meigs County and
c I e ani n g.
Volunteer
~~~~~ using the tax .service r~~~;~y became a new volunteer . opportunities arc available through
sllli'uld ·&amp;ling copies of their last · !~
with RSVP. The Hospice Hospice
which
include
yw'a,'federal and state tax returns,
is located adjacent to companionship, assisting with
ia)l forllls for the cu.n ent year and
Memorial Hospital. There errands, telephone contact . and
approximately 20 employees in homemaking tasks. If :xou would
. olhei' relevant materials showi~g
inc!ome fOr the year.
· .
Gallia and Jackson counties. like more . information, contact
Call Darla Hawley at 992-21611o
visit area homes per physician Debbie Adkins•Cox at 992~7463 or

Senior Citisem Day
,. Storewide ·

(614) 592-5025

815 4473

Attomey AI Law

-Garages • Replacement Windows

Tax assistance

~~''!'appointment.

•

Nlw tiomlt ~VinYl Siding N.w

;:::.:~;:;.::=-'!'""---==========-­
=/&gt;:uriJ'd~':y;,il~':!'~ r ' You may have money comin~
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Attorney William Safranek

-IISSELL

A representative from the Athens

and 26, from 10 to 11 a.m.
If you are one of lhe marty Meigs
Wedricsday, Ma.rch · 12 • the County seniors that workfd for a ,
Stroke Survivors SupJ!Ort Group co.mpany that paid into your
'' will meet from 1:00 to 2:30, with pension plan, and that company
ui nptoa, Oc:cupational Therapist, went out of business ·or closed the ·
Holzer Rehabilitation . Center, plant, you might have some money
aiordinator.
coming·to you. ·
· Thursday, March 13 • Dr. · The Pension Benefit Guaranty
Melanie Weese, Racine.Optometric Corp. and the U.S. Department of .
.Clinic: will conduct" a free vision Labor are looking for nearly 3,000
screening from 10 to 12. No people who are owed more than
appointment is necessary for the
screening.
Tuesday, March 18 · Becky Baer,
Meigs Couniy _Extension Agent,
wiil speak at 11 :00 for National
Nutritioa Month about "What's
, Nrif in'Niitrition".
Wednesday, March I 9 • the
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
· be held from 9:30 to 11 :00.
'fhursday, March · 20 • the
montblybirlhday psrty will be held

:-Campi ala
Remodeling
Stopa Compare
FREE
•
ESTIIIATEES

1

14
Bam Loaf
.
Sweet Potatoes
GreeD Beans
Bread
Applesauce

Baked· Stea.k
llaahed Potatoes
with Gravy '
Buttered Peas
·Bread
Peach Slices

keep •exampr property for their pereonaJ uee .
This may include a car; a house, clolhea, and
household goods.
o
·
·
For lnfonnalion Regarding Ban.kruplcy contact:

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dialrllution of n ria. DebtOI8 In berlkru!*Y may

.... Homll

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17
'
BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Broccoli
Bread
Pineapple ·

Oven Baked Chicken
liaabed Potato•• .
wit.h Gravy
Harvard Beets
Bread
Pe c

· FRIDAY

'tHuRSDAY'

relieve a debtor

obligations and arrange a fair

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Ca 041 II Houu
.udlli RuU. '
Wostl. Blsld
Pacw-, lliiCidiOL

MARCJ-1 MENUS

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

BANKRUPTCY can

1-614 992"17022
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LETTERS IN SQUARES

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SCI,.tM LETS ANSwas

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Lacuna • Swish • Thigh • Junket - WATCHING
"It's a fact of life.' Granny said, 'thatmany people set
a good example only when ottiers are WATCHING •

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�Ohio Lottery
Bulls hand
Milwaukee
1-08-90 loss

PICk 3:
4-6-9
Pick 4:
1·2·3-3 .
Buckeyes:
2-6-16-30.31

Sports on Page 5

.

*~~~2

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Stop by lor G
test
todayI

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUeeday, March 4, 1997 .

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.Commiss.ioners ·approve

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·1 Section, 10 Peges, 35 cenl8
A Gannett Co. ,..,...,_

I

Olllt, 0111o V.lleJ Publllhlng Compeny

of showers toward dawn.
Lows near 50. WedrwadiJ,
aho-s. Hlgha In the 508•

•

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.•

Partly cloudy tonight,

the!\ cloudy with a clwlce

'

emergency decl-a ration
Step n~ssary
to begin process
for assistance
from FEMA

"

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Commlaalomirs Fred HoHman and Janat
~rd, above, examine the rising Ohio Rlftr
at Pomeroy'• Linn Sb.,._
..

.ASLOWAS:. .
'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Start .
Meigs County Commissioners
Monday ,aftemool) passed a procla'
mation declaring Meigs County to be
in aswe of emergency dU. to con·
ditions reSulting from flash and river·flooding.
Passing such a proclamation is
required, according to Commissioner Fred Hoffman, before the county
can apply to the Federal pmergency
Management' Agency (FEMA) for
financial assistance.
The proclamation re~:
"Whereas, Meigs Co\Jnty, Ohio,
has·been or is immedialdy threatened
by a natural disaster of flash flooding
and river flooding and:
"Whereas, as of .(March 2 at I
a.m.) declare a flood and/or weathe'r
emergency and l hazaidous mlllerials
emergency until such time the flash
flooding and river flooding subsides,
all roads and bridges are sl!fe and
passable, and all hi!Zardous materials
acc011nted for and or secured, and the
citiiens of and homes and buildings
of this county we safe.
·~ "Now ~refore, we the Meigs
t-il\lnty .. BoilnL..Of" dnumissiQners,
declare '1hat 11 JWC C?f emergency

exists' in the county and that we here·
by invoke and declare those portions
of the Ohio Revised Code which are
applicable .to the conditiofts and have
caused the i~suance of this proclamation to he in full force and effect
in the county for the exercise of 'all .
necessary emergency auth9rity for
protection of lives and property of the
people of Meigs County and the
restoratio'! of local government with
a minimum of interruption.
· "All public offices and employ!"'s
of Meigs County are here"y direct~
to exercise the utmost diligence in the
discharge of duties required of them
for the duration of the emergency and
in the execution of emergency laws,
regulations, and directives both state
and local.
"All citizens are called upon and
directed .to comply with necessary
emergency measures, to cooperate
with public·officials and emergency
management forces in executing ·
· emergency operations plans, and to
obey and comply with the lawful
direct! on&amp; of prope,rly identified officers.
•
"Ail .operating forces will direct
their communications and 'requests
.. for assistance and operations to the
emergency operations center."
In other business Monday. the
commissioners accepted the bid from
. Southeast Equipljlent of Gallipolis
for a used--Grada\1 excavator for
$66,400, a bid from Stowe Truck &amp;

'.

Equipment of. Marietta for a new tafi.
dem-axle dump truck for $75,444.
and a bid from the McLean Co. of
Columbus for a used chip spreader
for $54,500 for the county hiJhway ·
department.
..
· The · single bids on each of the
tbree pieces of equipment had been
opened earlier and tabled pending
review by the highway department.
The commissioners alsO approved
borrowing $150,000 from Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Co. at a rate of 4.89
percent interest rate to be applied to
the cos~ of the equipment. Farmers
offered the lowest rate, with Peoples
Bank offering 6 percent, and Home
National Bank, 6.7 percenl
The single bid from Burgess
Hearse &amp; Ambulance Sales for.
$85,532. for a new four-wlieel-drive
ambulance for the Rutland squad of
the Meigs County Emergency Med·
ical Service was also accepted by the
con\missioners OIJ recommendation
of the EMS Board of T.rusteils.
A discussion was held on the mud.
slide between the courthouse and.the
jail, and it was reported that electric·
icy has been restored aDd offices wilf
l)e open Tuesday.

I

Bills totaling $117,718.59 were
approved for payment. Attending
were Commissioners Janet Howard
and Fred Hoffman, along with Dave
Spencer and·Manning Roush of the
county-highwl'j~aii4Jlif.n
Lenles, prosecutor.

Flooding
catches
Pomeroy
by surprise

floods
diminish
iy JIM FREEMAN

!'~:!t":r!':.'!illeresidents
continued the ·.arduous
~onday

~ss of cleaning up following a
weekend flash flood, while Pomeroy
braced for an Ohio Ri~er flooil.
· • All county schools remained
. · ~lased for the second consecutive
(lay, while the Meiss County Court·
J.1ousc reopened'today.
• In Rutland Monday afternoon,
ihe view was of homes with soaked.
(lluddy carpet and waterlogged furnishinss stacked outside. Debris from
flooded homes Jllld businesses, some
'' ·
hundreds of yards away from their
.
source; littered yards and fields,
A muddy ring .around the affected
homes .shows just high the flood
~ST·MINUTE MOVING - Soma Pomeroy merchants were
'l'(ater lljivanced.
. •
. buey with laat,inliluta moving •rly MondiJ. AboVe, people moved
Several propane tanks broke
merehandiH from Hartwell H!»UH, followed by the rising, Ohio
1(/0se, prompting Ruiland Mayor
River. .
JoAnn Grady to exclaim that people
, ~hould be required to secure the supplied rescue workers with food
Meanwhile, county highway offi·
, lanks. The tanks caused temporary during the ordeal.
·
.
cials we in the process of assessing
·concern for emergency officials who
In nearby Langsville, workers the damage to counly roads.·
•(eared the tanks could explode if were busy cleaning out the By The
''We have some infrastructure
l~ng gas was ignited.
Way Stole and Langsville Post Office damage," explained County Engineer
I Rullind Councilman Danny building. A man used a tractor with a Robert Eason.
O.xis, who was in town dropping off blade to stmighten()ut the parking lot,
Workers are examining slips,
~leailing kits donated by the Red while others worked inside the siore washed out bridge approache.s and
Cross, jlointed oiit homes that were or cleaned the heavy muck from out · .abutments and washed out road
flooded, ihcluding his own on Salem l'ront.
'
bases.
.
Street.
,
.
One man explained that the mud
A rough ballpark estimate places
; , The cleaning .kits con~ist of le~t over was heavy and did not push damage around $1 million, Eason
brooms, a mop and other cleaning easily with a broom.
said.
supplies, including an . iristrilction
At the same time, members of the · . No one 'problem stands over the
booklet. .
. Salell! Township Volunteer Fire others, Eason explained, citing a slip
.; Grady pointed out that six clean- ·Department kept a close eye on sev- on Burlingham .Road in Bedford
ing kits would not ge"far, but said-she eral propane tanks visible floating . TownshiP that would cost about
ipprecia!ed any assistance. She also I!Jllong the trees on the olher side of .· $50,000 to repair, plus a similar slip
cOIDmended village residents who the roadway.
(Conttnuad on Paga 3)

By JIM FREEMAN .
Sentinel Nlwl Staff
The ongoing . Ohio River flood
- ~aught Pomeroy village officials and
workers by surprise over the weekend, councilnien indicated at Monday
night's meeting of Pomeroy Village
Council.
Due to high water, the meeting
was held at the Trinity Ghurch on
Second Street Access to the Pomeroy .
Municipal Building is limited during
. times of high water.
Like last year, many of the downtown parking meters were left to
stand the flood, but this titne they had
company -the lamp posts installed
last yeW- along the promenade.
Councihnan George Wright with
the aid of several volunteers removed
some of the lamp posts Sunday
. morning, but were unable to get them
all.
Councilman Scott Dillon commended Wright's efforts.
Said Council President John
Musser, "It carne up ·so quickly." .
"Aboul as· faSt as I've ever seen,"
noted Mayor Frank Vaughan.
•
Wright aclcnowledged some of the
poles have since been lcnock~ down
by the flood, but said they may be
ELECTRICIT'( RES:TORED - Electricity waa l'litored to the
able to be repaired- if they are still
Melga ·County Courthbuae Monday evening. Powar waa cut off
there.
·
Councilman Bill Young said the . aarly ·sunday inornlng when the utility pole holding the tranavillage needs·to have a 5lalldar!i oper- . formera bacame unatable and had to be anchored to evold a possible fall on to buildings. A new pole w.. locatad outside the allele
ating p_rocedure to use during floods.
araa Sunday afternoon, and yeaterday the tianlformera were
"We ought to have a standardized
.
moved Into place. The courthoual was closed MondiJ but II open ·
lisl of things that need done ...
today.
.
.
(Contlnuad ·on Pege 3)

Option expirat.ion on pulp mill. land prompt~- AEP to look elsewhere
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:ay NANCY NUSSBAUM
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·:Ae.oclatMI Prell Writer
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: CH.l\RLESTON, W.Va. - Amcncan Eleclnc Po'!fer Co. will seek olh~r
·investOrs for '1,200 acres along, the Ohio ~iver because \Ill option has expired
:for a pulp mill developer to buy the site, a spqkeswoman said.Sunday..
: .... It's good piece ofland," spokesWOI!_llll11eri Matheny said oflhe Colum-·
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;bus, Ohio-~
company,
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• Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc.. of Rye Brook, N.Y., had proposed buddtng a
:sl billion pulp mill in Apple Grove, but in Januarj an~~unced 1t was post:poning the project indefinitely because of market condtllons.
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• The company had extended its option on the property four times since an
:original agreement in April 1989. The option expired Saturday without Par:sons &amp; Whittemore exercising or extending the option.
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: "I'm not sure if that brings finality to it or. not. It obviously appears fhat
•it does" said Rolland Phillips, the West Vtrgmt~ De~elopment Office's pnme
:liaison' with Parsons &amp; Whittemore. ·
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• "If thc:rc •s any· remote hope that they wo~ld want to advance ihe project
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we certainly..would support ii," he said,
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which ha4 opposed the mill, said he .was not ready to declare the project dead.
A woman ansWering the tcl!!Phone at the Stamford, Conn., home of Par"There'll be no champagne popping yet,'' he said . ."It will lake a long . .
sons &amp; Wbittemore Vice President C. Kenneth Goddard said he was notavail- time for me to believe this .."
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able to comment. She refused tQ t&amp;ke a message.
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· Stee~str~ also ,said the state needs to look for another company to ~tO::, ,,
· Phillips said the state needs to look' elsewhere for a company to occupy py the stte.
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the prime piece of property, which I• out of the flood plain and would require
"This is the first time that I will ever ag~e with Mr, Phillips," he said.
.little site work, he said.
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·adding the state had put "all its eggs in one basket."
"That Is the best industrial site in the state and I have no doubt that there
"It would he so much. better to putting all those resources into other comwill he considerable interest," he said. "We've had large projects over the panics," he said. "I hope the economic vision of West Virginia becomes ·b s
lasl eight years where that site would have been a prime consideration for smokestacky."
other investment."
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Opponelfts of tl)e pulp mill said it would release dioxin into the river. '11111
He said he did not have any specifiC companies in mind, but would hoJlC ' •federal Environmental Protection Agency has linked dioxin, a carci~
to pxpand the state's poly~r industry. ·
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. byproduct pf paper bleaching, to human reproductive and immune ayllem
1)te pr~rty is in an ar~a du~ by ~onner Gov. Gaston Capert~n as the problems.
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Polymer Alltance Zone. Slate -offictals say the area has the )VOrld s largest.
"I'd ljlte to see five or six diverse plants that are cleaner anilp-peW,1' •'·
concentration of polymer plastics plants.
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Sleenstra said.
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Norm Steenstra, lobbyist for the West Virginia Environmental Council_,
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