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Pick 3:

407

Pick 4:
0813
Buckeye 5:
3-12-21-29-33

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V!IL 47, NO. 2:10
~-· Olllo v..y Pubhlllng Compllny

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Long Bottom man
is killed i·n head-on·
auto crash on CR 32
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: NEW RICHMOND, Ohio (AP)
:-" Volunteer laborers from the Men11Pni,te Disaster Service are helping
q,pair flood damage in thi~ village
:Southeast of Cincinnati, while jail
inmates clear debris elsewhere in ·
Clermont County. ·
·
:: " The Bible tells us to help others
'out, to help where it's needed," said
·Dale Aora ·ofTroy:
·:. Flora arrived Thursday with about
:~o othei people from mid-Ohio. He's
·:01d German .Baptist, one of several
·r:Ciigious denominations affiliated
with ' the disaster service, which
includes Mennonites and Amish, ·
· The craftsmen include carpcn· tcrs, electricians, plumbers, painters,
· laborers - the first wave in what
:could be a six-month to a year stay
by tbe disaster service.
· The group will create a home for
' I
The
·Ihose comong aler.
empty rooms
of an abandoned car dealership will
· . ConUnued on page 3

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2 Stcllona, ,. PlgM, 31 011118
AGannett Co. IIIWIPII*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 14,1997

Volunteers
help in flood
·_.
cleanup

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Ohio Lottery

Maryland
upset In
NCAA play

Several to
eltoose ·lroml
Stop by fora
test. drive
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Three other people injured in wreck as
Meigs County records 4th fatality of year

WRECK SCE'NE R-..-~ Dale Hen le 44
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Long Bottom, Wll killed In thla two-car crash
on County R,l?lld 32 Thursday and thi'H othll' .

A head-on collision Thursday on
County Road 32 (Eagle Ridge) killed
a Loug Bon om man and left three
other people injured?
Pronounced dead at the scene of
the 4:40 p:ni. accident was Robert
Dale Hensley, 44. 34250 Sugar Run
Road. driver of one of the clirs
. involved in the crash. Dr. bougla'
Hunler. the Meigs County coroner,
made the detennination , the GalhaMeigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol reported.
. Injured were: Larry E. Life. 3t , driver of the other car. and his passengers. Janet R. Lite. 26. and A'hley N.
LiiC. 6, all of 470'15 Eagle Ridge
Road. Racine.

people ware Injured. II Wll Melga County's
fourth auto fltallty of the year. Sentinel photo
by Dava Harris.

Larry Life and Janel Life were
transponed to Pleasant Vall.ey Hos·
rital by the Meigs EMS. while AshIcy Life was taken to PVH by iJ fumily memhcr,·atttlttllftg tn lhe patml.
All were later treated and released.
Troopers said tbe cars were travcling in opposite directions in Chester
Township wh·en · the • collision
occurred. Bolh cars were ·severely
damaged in the crash and 'it remains
under investigation today. according
to the report.
Hensley's body was laier released
to the Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy. It marked tbe fourth traffic
falality of the year in Meigs County.

Lions Club receives
·Wall Street ·welcomes latest economic news
$10,000 flood grant
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: WASHINGTON (AP) .- ·Prices change in the i.ndex .
bond market. to the highest level in . signs of inllatoon." said economist
·.paid to producers at farms and (acto- · The un'expected decline was . nearly six months. The Dow Jones Bruce Steinberg of Merrill Lynch.
· Fies last month rcgislercd the biggest another piece o(cvidencc thiu sus- average of 30 industrial stocks fell "There is literally no wholesale infla· ·
·drop in more than two years, pulled taincd robust economic growlh has- 160 points. the fifth worst decline ·lion in the U.S.·economy."
·down by declines in gasoline, beef n't yet translated into accelerating ever.
In an()ther report. the Federal
.and computers.
inflation . Nevertbeless, many econoIn the first half hour of .trading Reserve said production at the
: Wall Street. nervous about.infla- mists arc looking for the Federal today, lhe Dow quickly gained back nation's factories. mines and utilities
Reserve to nudge interest rates high- more than 40 points. The bond mar- in February ' rose 0.5 percent. the
·iion, welcomed the news. ·
· . . · The se9sonally adjusted 0.4 per· . er, as a preventative measure. after its keralso welcomed today"s price fig· strongest in three months. ~her edg. ccni decrease in tbe Producer Price next policy-making meetong on ures ,. Yields . on 30-year Treasul'JI .. il\8 down a revised 0.1 percent in Jan. -...--J~.~~JIIlrtll'i.~YJ!.!'; ,L~&lt;;&gt;r ~~:.. M,~~·2s, ....._, ... ~ ·-· ..::. _ . •. ,,_ •. .,.bondsfeJito-&lt;).93 pcrc.ent.this !'Jdrn- uary. Manufacturing outp)ll rose ll.K
!Oday. :)!'a.\~~~a~J)!;St stnC9.lll!ol - j:ea~ of h!gber r&amp;II~!J.V l~~ ..'JJi. ~9,Ci..pc1~Fr\ l&amp;lo~ursday. percent wilh ·1onj!;lastin9 consumor
tlfuntical •de&lt;!lirie m Octo'l\tr 1994. · prices plungong ; on !fli'uo'i\l:lay llna-1 · "Qilijiuc mboiSI' growth during lhe goods such ~s appliances. husin~ss ·
. . Economists had been anticipating no pushed long-term interest rates on the past two quaners'. thei-c arc simply no equipment and construction supplies
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-Ohio House---·to introduce its version of budget

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COLUMBUS (AP) - With
•pcmoo:rats back in place al\er briefly
: protcsling the pace of discussions. a
~House comm iuce resumed work
· loduy on its vision hfthe state's next
, two-year budget.·
Lawmakers have hi.'Cn refining
. Onv. denrgc Voinnvich's $36. 1 bil. Linn budget proposal since it was
: introduced last month. The House
: finance Comrniuec was hearing tcs· Limony loday from lobbyiSts for stale
:. ~gencies. school districts and others
: who stand to either lose or gain lrom

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Afterward. Sykes said Democrats
would return when they have more
dciails about what 's included in l.hc
budgel so they can offer amendmenL,.
I"We don't have any of tbe details
about where the money came from."
he said .
The substitute budget hill will
include a SIO'I million increa'e for
primary imd, sc~ondary schools. An
extra $10 million will be pledged In
hridge the gap between poorer and
richer districts.

Meigs Cnunty Senior Citizens

.
iuday.
Police
say
they
have sci1.cd the
: By DARA AKIKO TOM
: AIJOCIIIted P11111 Wrltar
. murder weapon and a wnol cap sup· · " LOS ANGELES - A Russian posedly worn by the killer. · ·
Bill C(Jshy's only snn' was sh(J1 as
: teen t~ccuscd of killing Ennis Cosby
he
changed a tire on· his $1.10.000
: chose his vi&lt;lim at random. poli.c
convertible
Jan. 16. just oil' a husy
: said. linding the 27-ycur-old student
· beside a disabled Mercedes-Benz Los 'Angeles freeway. Nn one tam~ along a darkened road.
· peo·ed with the e;~r to ilaucn 1hc tire.
~ '· " II could have been you &lt;ir I sit- Willillms said. nor.was race u factor.
" This was ~1 rnndom Slup as liar as
: ting on tlui side of the road trying tn
we
·know
nnw. " Williams said. "The
. • gel help to fix a tire." police Chief
motive w·as rubbery. He rasse&lt;l by
.: Willie Williams said Thursday.
and
Mr. Cushy was just there."
:- Mikail Markhasev. 18. was :orrcslPulice
say they 'still aren't sure
' :,d Wednesday night at his suburban
whether
Markhascv
hiiJJ&lt; &lt;lnything
; North Hollywood hnme. and he wus
; txpeclcd to be dmrgcd with murder· frnm Cosby that night. Williams
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:: 'MARIEITA (APl- Authorities
' itncarthed what were· believed to be
: Duman remains Thursday in a ccmc: ~ry . where a murder susp:ct said a
;ltody could be found.
.
:· • Broadca&lt;l reports said tbe remains
. were likely those of Lisa Burkham·
: mer. · 13. who vanished from her
· : Marieua bome 13 yea"' ago.
• . The Washington County Sheriff's
:Office clmrgcd a man 11JUrsday with
: killingth~ girl . The suspc'CI was being
•licld at 'the county jail on $2!10.000
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•tiond.
; : The exlll!l charges and 1hc sus'
:reel's idemity were not available.
•The :;heriff's office did not return
~·telephone calls seeking confirma1ion '
about 1hc arrest and the cx~avation.
· . ShcriiT's deputies and Maricua
;jlollce localcd the remains around 2
:j)'.m. in Lower Salem Cemetery, one
;l!r two places lbe suspect told offi'tials to search. The excavauon was
expected to be complel•'rl sometime
~riday. .
:• The last time 1~ girl was seen. she
Jiad ~uat washed. dishes at her family's home.
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FLOOD AID - Farmer1 -Bank 1nd s.vtnga
eomp.ny of P011111 oy, GalllpoUa and 1Upper1
Plelnl donllted $3,000 Tl)lnclly to the Melgl
County Caap111tlve Relllf Fund admlnlslllr.r
by the tcuinelllcll Melle County Mlnlllll'llll
Aalbcllltlon and the Unltld Melhodhlt Coap-

e.atlve Parleh. lllnkvlcl ~~.. d•et P,llul KIMII
1nd pruldent Paul Ated, .from '-'t,
the

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In other husiness the ·group comnicndcd people assisting and sup-

pllrting the circus held Sunday and
thanked the Eli Dennison American
Legion Post fnr ih dnnalion to lhc .

Ccn~

ond year in a row the local cluh has

received a nwl!\ relief grunt.
Ftxxl vouchers and llood relief
items wi II he distributed from 216 E.
Main St .. Pomcmy. A notice will-he
posted al that address indicating the
dates and time s that llood relief
items will he available .
FltKxl victims should check.altha!
address t&lt;&gt;tlay and Saturda_l(. it was
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10 Rev. Kanllllh Bilker end the Rev.
F..,_ wan. Hllnz. "Thll llglwn In the apir·
It thlt Melli County hu ':!:.ad 10 Ill,. lllkl
.a.M. IIIIIWind Hllnzln
they appreclltt .. the~ support the cis••• fund
IMll ......,_. llld IlkS eppllclltlone for
~ ~ CUI'I'ij•llr baing 111__,,by thl,dle~

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cluh.
Due ln the l'unding fnmi the

American Lc~iun ' and prqfits from·

t\lP~if~us .1~ yj.~,h .~!)\~ to: donate
$1.!)()() to inc Mcogs 't&lt;x&gt;peratovc
'Church Parish.
The Lions cnmmcndL'tl .thc parish
for its help in the county during il&lt;•&gt;d
and throughout the year.
The next meeting will he held
March 26 al noon at the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.

Clinton takes fall, will
undergo knee surgery

WEST PALM BEACH. Fla: (AP)
- President Clinton lore a tendon in
his knee early H&gt;day alter stumbling
on steps at the home of !!olf pro Greg
.Norman and will undergo surgery tn
n:pair the damage. his doctors said.
The damage tn his right kn"cc was
described as suhstanlial .
Clinton will arrive m Bethesda
Naval
Hospital around nmm and the
rejected repons that the .slaying may. to face with the suspect. Williams
surgery
will he p:rfonned late this
have been the work qf a Russian car said her description uf Markhasev
afternoon.
his doctnr."i suid .
theft ring or have tics to the Russian was remarkably ac&lt;umtc.
Clinton slumhiL."t.. on a step as he
mob.
·
As the chief spoke, .Markhasev's
left Norman 's home and tore his .
Markhasev (jocs have a criminal . mug shut and an artist's sketch made
C,JUadriccps tcndun. which connccls
recnrd. hut police dedincd to clahn- · from her descriptinn were disrlayed
the urpcr thigh to 'thc kneecap. He did
rate. He came tuthc United States as side by side.
.
a Russian refugee in 1989 and is nnl
The National Enquirer was the not fall .
~.' He rcmC1flhcrs his ri ghi knee
a U.S. ci1i1.en. a federal' oflicial. first l(&gt; receive the tip th&lt;ll led to
buckling
out. He heard " vert loud
speaking nn cundition nf anonymity. Markhascv's arrest. The caller
pop... said Navy Cupl. Connie Murtold The Associated Po:css.
phoned the tahloid ·slip line just days
i.ano. the rrc!-.itlcnfs personal physi·
The primary witness to the slaying after the killing. Enquirer edilor
CillO.
wa&lt; a woman Ennis Cosby arpar· . Steve Cuz said.
The surgery will repair th~.:: tendon . . The tipster, who had hnp:d ln
cntly was going In visit that nig"l.
After Coshv had the nat tire:. she went' claim the tabloid's $1 CXl.CMKl reward.
w tbe scene in her car and came face gave the Enquirer a pager numhcr.

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unearth
:human remains

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ter in Pomemy. This marks the sec-

:-.Russian teen accuse~ of killing·· Cosby's ·son

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changes made in the House.
Democrats stormed out of the
Overall. the House version is House budget hearing Thursday just
about $39 million higher than afletthe hearing began afler accusing
Voinovich 's. · with the bulk of the Republicans of rushinj?·the process.
extra spending coming from new- '
Rep. Vemqn Sykes. D-Akron, led
found money resulting from beiter- the march out of the meeting. He was
than-cKpected lax rc:cdpts and lower- angry that Republicans had not prothan -projeCted spending in lhe cur- vided commince members wfth writ•
rent budget. House -Finance Chair- ten copies of Ihe proposed changes.
man Tom Johnson. R-Ncw Concord. Those copies were made advailabli:
said Thursday.
~
today.
.
Other money will come from lin"Mr. Chairman. you arc not prekcring with the sholc ·s education fnr- pared,.. Sykes lqld Johnsbn on Thursm~la. Johnson sao d.
day.

'Fhe Pooneroy-Moddlcporl Lions
Club is receiving a $10.000 donmion
from the Lions Cluh International to
he used fnr hx:al Oood relief.
The announcement was made al
the group's meeting Wednesday at the

"It 's technic.,lly nnl that diflicuh tn
do ... said Dr. Jo!!l Cnhen ..vice prcsi·
dental SL Mary's Hnspital. "It's nnl
a m~~j(lf tlpcratilm . hut it 's nc•l a mimJr
t•nc .
" You litcmlly drill a hole in the
knee car." Cohen said. tn rcalla&gt;h the
tendon ln the kneecap. He said tbe
president suffered a 50 p:rcenttcar of
his tendon.
The president will he given an
epidural or n ltN.:al anesthetic during
the surgery and will he cnnscinus, the
dtN.:lurs suit.!.
There arc no plans tu

t~rn prcsi~

dential powers owr to Vice PJcsidenl
AI Gore.
·
.Clinton will he in. a 'leg hracc and
crutches at least two weeks and ur to
six weeks, the doctnrs said. Physical
therary will begin in three tn six
weeks and could take up tn six
months.

Red Cross assistance still
available for. Meigs residents

Residcnls of Mci~s County who · dents can meet nne on nne with a
have vcriJiahlc. disastcr~c auscd cmcr~ trained Red Cross dis~1stcr wnrkcr.
. ~:tcncy needs and w~ll haVe not yet
1l1C Red Cross Worker will ;Lij."\Css und
visited a Red Cross service ~.:ente r arc verify the. family's emergency, disasurgedlll visit the center mEMS hc.,d- lcr-caused needs and render the
quarters on Mcmorit~l Drive in appn:&gt;priatC assistailcc.
Pomeroy before noun Saturday.
Red Cross assistance is rendered··
The Red Cross reports thut as of in the fnnn of a voucher which proTuesday it had mel with as many ;os vi des the means fnr affected families ;
574 families. either at its service ccn, to purchusc needed items atlhc mer- :
tcrs or at the family 's home tn discuss chanl llf their chnice.
emergency disaster assistance. ·
·
The Red Cross issued the follow- '
The Red Cross estimates that •ing ligurc:s currcni a.~ of? p.m. Tucs- :
more than 1.600 homes were dam- day: total families affected (cstimalagcd or destroyed by the ll&lt;K&gt;d and ed), 1,621; number of families seck- ·
eKpccts more: than half of those fam- · ing Red Cross help; 638; persons ' .
ilies to cotnc to tbe Red Cin~s for sheltered (all sbchcr:S 'n'' !V clo~). ;
cmergen~)i assistance.
.
.,149: mobile. feeding units: II : n)cals-;
Families ~an visit the Meigs served. 15,KII; clean-~ . kits issued • •.
County service center from 9 a.m. to I .020. ' ·
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5p.m. at the Emergency Medical ScrAll Red Cros.• disa~ter a.1-sistance.'
vice headquarters. Anyone needing is free, 'The best Wlly fill' people to •
assisloncc aflei noon on Sliturday belp~ith o fi~i!ll contribUiion to :
should call 6 1'4-772-6309'.
the American Rod Cr;Uu Disalllcr ;
Persons visiting a Red Cross scr· Relief Fund in t:MIIIfllieir local Red ;
vice center should bring with them Cross chapler, or by caRii!J 1.80(). •
some form of proof •&gt;f address such HELP NOW. Secure credit card '
as a~alid driver's liccn!IC, o Slate iden- donations Clll be mJdc vi• lbe inlllr- :
tif!cll!ion card or a recent utility bill. n91 at hup://ww~.rOdcroiili.cq.
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111 Cowt 8t., Pa!Mroy, Ohio
t1......z-2111 • Fax: 1112·2157

. · A Gannett
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NewapajJer

AOBI!RT L. WING!lT
Publl. . ..

CHARLINI HOEFUCH

IIARGARIT LIHIW

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Clinton defense:
knew too little, too late
By WALTER A. MEARS .
AP Special Correapondent
WASHINGlON ~ In Watergate, the question that wouldn't go away
was what did the president know and when did be know it As President Clinton defends White House fund-raising habits, his own answer is not much,
and too late.
He's said he was livid to learn that the Democratic National Commiuee
was not cheeking out big money donors before taking their checks, about
$3 million now returned as Improper. He said be assumed, incorrectly: that
there was uystem in place for screening White House visitors to keep out
those who shouldn't have been there. Like the Chinese arms dealer invited
to one of lhe more than I00 White House coffees for Democratic donors.
Still, the pressure began at the top. The cut comers and strained propriety followed. It is not the first time a president has ordered results without
worrying about methods.
. The push for funds sounds now almost like a bazaar, given the lineup of
events, invitations, calls. The latest offshoot over the alleged China connection, who the FBI told, and what they were instructed to do about it, is
•
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b11.arre
msleau.
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In that situation, what the president knew was nothing, for more than si•
months after two men who were supposed to be advising him on matters
onvolving national security were briefed by the FBI on possible Chinese
attempts to gain innucnc!) wjth political contributions. That's illegal. and the
Chinese government denies it happened . .
What is. or was, in dispute is whether the FBI officials instructed the
National Security Council staffers not to tell their bosses about it. The White
House spokesman said initially that the NSC aides were adamant that's what
they had been told at the briefing last June 3. Thai produced an expaordinary public denial by·the FBI, effectively saying that the president was wrong.
A day later, qn TuesdQy. the White House said the NSC men had the
impression they weren't supposed to ~pon to their superiors. By Wednesday, everybody had backed.off to calling it a misunderstanding, with the FBI
suggestinc that the messag~ had been that the information was sensitive and
that its sources could not be ~ompr~ised.
.
All of which misses what ouaht to be the point The National Security
·Council c•ists to advise the president on security-related issues. The U.S.
Government Manual spells out the mission: "The Council advises and assists
the president in integrating all aspects of national security policy ... domestij:, foreign, military, intelligence and economic .... "
A suspected attempt by China to influent~ U.S. elections, which earlier ,·
had prompted FBI warnings to at least six members or Congress, surely fits
the NSC man.date. But the president can hardly be ,advised or assisted with
• information withheld from him, on anybody's say-so.
Clinton said he got absolutely no word on any of it, until it became pub'lic this winter. Had be known, Clinton said, be would have ordered the alleJI&amp;tions which, as he noted, have not been conclusively proved, weighed to
determine what ought to be done. "what we should be alen to. "
"So it would have provoked, atlca,tto that extent, a red nag on my pan,"
he said Monday.
Belatedly. though. A fund-raiser with Chinese husincss connections
already had arranged $366,000 in Dem01:ratic Pany donalions and was showing up at the White House frequently, 5 l visits inside .three years.
The Democrats arc giving the money hack.
Clinton, who said no one was angrier than be when he learned the Dcm&lt;icrats wcrcn 't properly checking out their donors. has S!:Cmcd oddIy tractable
about the failure of people on his own staff roster to tell him what the FBI
told them.
·
So has Anthony Lake, the fol'lliCr national security adviser and NSC chief.
now.tryingto overcome Republican resistance and win confirmation as direc·
tor of the Central Intelligence Agency. Saying at his Senate confirmation hearing that he and Clinton should have been advised, Lake nonetheless praised
. as line officers the two NSC staff members who didn 'ttell thcin. ·
Clinton said the mauer is being investigalcd. recommendations to follow.
But there's not much to he accomplished retroactively. unless it is to remind
the staff that pan of the job is to tell the boss.
Even that would have tq be done gingerly. The Justice Dcpanmcnt and
the FBI arc simultancou.,ly invcstisating Democratic an&lt;i'Whitc House fundra\!ling condFict, and Clinton can't risk anything that even looks like an inlru-

lind
lllcilllr
MEXICO CllY-- At least seven
of Mexico's 31 state governors are
believed to be COITUpt, meaning they
are taking money from illegal sources
such as drug lords, according to intel. ligence sources i'n Mexico and the
United States. .
.
.
The Me~tican sources who identifled corrupt governors spoke to our
associate Dale Van Alta on the con.dition that they not be identified for
fear of.retaliation, including murder.
The U.S. intelligence sources,
who spoke 10 us in Mexico, Texas
and Washington, asked for anonymity either because their information
involved sensitive intelligence-gathering methods, or because the government of Mexico would take
umbrage if, as U$. officials, they
spoke openly about the subject.
Most of Mexico's governors are
members of PRI (the Spanish-l~nguage acronym for the Institutional
R~volutionary Party), which .has
ruled Me•ico for seven decades. But
there are diffe~ent factions within the
party. The current administration of
President Ernesto Zedillo comes from

what is considered the reformist
wmg.
All seven governors suspected or
being corrupt, however, belong !O an

By Jack Anderson

Snd
Jan Mol/er
'

older wing, sometimes called "the
Salinistas," because of their loyalties
to former President Carlos Salinas de
Gortari. Some of the!ll were hand·
picked 'tor their positions by tbc former president, who's no'l' facing corruption charges in Mexico.
Two of the governors suspected of
links · to d~g canels are . Manlio
Fabio Beltrones Rivera, governor of
Sonora, which borders Arizona; and
Jorge Carrillo Olea, _governor or
Morelos, a state south of ·Mexico
City. · ·
A year ago, after our sources
repeatedly named them as being at
the top of the Mexican gubematori~l·
"blacklist"_maintained by U.S. drug
agents, we spent more than a morlth
trying to meet with theJll..aiKkliscuss

the alleaations: They refused to
respond.
However. they have both now
heatedly. and repeatedly, denied the
allega1ions after the •'harses were leveled in a Feb. 23 story in the New
York Times. Thai story ·spawned a
sle)ll of similar, damagins stories in
Mexican newspapers..
.
Neither .official is likely to be.
charged with any criminal activities,
however, because J!Ovemors and cabinet officials have traditionally
enjoyed immunity for official corruption.
The usual method -- when evidence becomes overwhelming .. is
for the accused to quietly resign. In
the mid-1980s, for CKample, a former
governor of Sinaloa. Anton ill Toledo
Corro, was widely and publicly
linked to drug barons by American'
and Mexican officials. But he was ·
never charg~ · with ahy cti'me, and
went off to retirement at the and of
· his six-year gu!M:rnatorial . term in
· 1987. .. ....
. , -:.-··
·
COITUption in PRJ is systemic and
endemic. So cOITUpt. is the pany that
an ·honest governor like Vicente Fox
rnust he on the lookoul for assassi-

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!EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice pmldentand columnist
tor'I'IW AaOO&amp;ted Press, hu reportec! 011 Wuhlngtoa and natioRIII pol· •
111f- for~. than 38 vears.
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A better parents·' guide-to TV
By William A. Rusher
It has been nearly three months
sin&lt;·e Jack Valenti, representing a
consonium of television industry
associations. announced the industry's proposed new television rating
system. and the cryptic symbols
hcgan appearing in the UPP$f lenhand comcr.Qf television screens on
Jan. I.
Since then, the public reaction to
the rating system has been. to put it
ge.ntly. underwhelminJ!. GroiiJlS ranging trom the National Parent-Teacher
A-.ociation and the Traditional Values Coalition to the American Psy. chialric Associaticm have criticized it.
And a poll and interviews conducted
hy the New York Times indicate that
while .H6 percent of parents ~pprovc
of such raungs and 73 percenl have
noticed them on their screens, only 37
percent have actually used them.
It's not hard to understand why.
There arc six different ratings. Two
arc for children's programs only: TVY. for programs deemed suitable for
all children. and 1V-Y7, for progr.tms
recommended for children seven and

C.heryl Alkire ·

nation attempts. Fo•, the governor of
Guanajuato. is a rare leader tJoc.use
be is from PAN. the opp&lt;)Sition party, and is widely regarded as being
abuve reproach.
But he confessed to us in an exclusive interview that honest "Mexican
leaders must be courageous, and live
with the realization thai they may one
day be kill~ because of their con·
viciions .
"When a businessman like me
decides to join politics. you better get
a life insurance (policy). you better
get confessed if you are Catholic and
go to Communion every Sunday, "
Fo• said. "You have to be ready for·
everything being on the oppositiOn
side in this country."
Fox added that he believes it is
less dangerous to be ho.nest underthe '
current administration than during the
previous one. But not hcca!Fse of anything Zedillo himselfbas done.
"It is
·
cty, not
he
I
like everybody else's -democracy, with .a republican spirit,
with fcdcr.alism, with honesty. with
tr4nsparency, with no violence.' And
that's finally where we're coming to
he."
The outspoken Fox is a rarity in
Mexico when it comes to charges of
high-level Mexican corruplion. Even
in the United States. officials arc
extremely reluctant to make such
allegations or evidence public. Consider what happened to a respected
former Drug Enforcement Adminis- •
tration official. who didn 't even mention any Mexican suspectshy name.
Ed Heath, while serving as direc. tor of the El Paso Intclligcncc Center. publicly char@cd that tranickcn;
bribe Mexican supreme counjudgcs,
federal judges; slate govern~. the
·, police.and the army. "That's why the
.drug tl'llff'1&lt;:king through Mc~ico hasn't .diminished," l\e pronounced.
"The whole system is rotten to the

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The Storyteller·... · .
Some Acocricans wh&lt;i were crossing the Atlantic · in the summer of
I 899 met in the cabin on a Sunday
night to sing hymns. As they sang the
last hymn -- '"Jesus. Lover of My
Soul'' -- one of them heard an
exceedingly rich and beautiful voice
behirid nim. .
He looked around and, although
he did not know the face . he 1hought
he knew the voi•-c. So when the
Singing was over, helurned and
asked the man if he had been in the
Civil War. _The man replied that he
had been a Confederate soldier. ·
"Were· -you at such-and-such a
place on such-and-such a niJht?"
ask~ the ·first man.
·
"Yes," replied the second man,
"and • ~Firious thing happened that
nighi, which this hy"ln has ~ailed
to
mind,
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Tonight...Colder. Partly cloudy
By The Associated Press
soc:h. Cloudy nonh. Scattered nur' Ohio forecast
·
Today... Ffeezing rain changing to ries northwest. Snow showers devel·
rain nonhwest early this morning. oping northeast. LQ'ws in the low and
.
Rain ending from west to eaSt. mid 20s.
Sat!lrday... Ciou~y with occasionChance bf snow nurries northwest
this afternoon. Highs around 60s oilth "al snow showers :iiortheasl: Panly
to the upper 40s northwest. Temper- cloudy elsewhere~ Highs Jroin 'the
upper 30s ·south tb"around 30 nonh.
atures falling this aft~moon.

Cold air
to
move
into
Ohio
,.

Saturday will be ck&gt;udy with
occasional
snow'. showers in the
Cold air will plunge into Ohio this
northeast
and
.,linty cloudy elseafternoon as the rain comes to an end,
according to the National Weather where. Highs win be in the JOs.
Record high for this date at the
Service.
Columbus
weather station was 78 in
Any left over moisture will change
1995.
The
reeor&lt;l
low was 8 m 1993.
to snow Ourries as tempera.tures drop
· Sunset today,,is at 6:37. SuQrise
throughout the day. .
Saturday
is 6:43,
Lows tonigh\ will fall in.to the lo)N
Acmss:the
nation
: to mid-20s with partly cloudy skies
More
r.ain
Wll$ faiUng this mornin the south and cloudy in the nonh.
ing
in
the
soaked
Ohio River Valley,
Scattered nurrics are possible in the
the Noritteastllad freezinl! rain
northwestern pan of Ohio.

By The Auoclatecl Press

M·eigs

the edge of a wood. It was a dllltt
ni&amp;hl and very c"ld, and I was·a litde fripned bectiiiJ!! tho enemy .was
suppOsed to be velj near.
"About midnipu, when everythina waS . still and I WaS r~ling
homesick 11nd llliserable. and weaiy,
lthoupatl would~fon my..lf~
pr•&gt;'ina :ami . sinaina a hymn~ I
i'cn'iCmbet linatna tlicse linoa from
''~, LovetofMy Soul": 'Ali my
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Stopks ·

Blink Orte ....... :.... :..••••••••••.•••,44\

~ E.van• ......... !.~·........... ~ .. ~.1 ~.
Revly~ ~fYI&lt;;~ · . · · .. . .
aorg.w.,.,.,
...... J~;............. ~··3"·
·
Youth revival serv~c~s w11l hegtn·
Champion
..........
1~
· tonight at the Calvar)/ Pilgrim ChapChanning
Shops .................... 5 ~
ter, ~.' 143, and cont[nuc thr&lt;1ugh ·'
.Holdfng .........·. .~ ...............3ar
'• Sunday. 7 . p:m. each e.ve~ing: The · Ftderill Mogul .......... ,.............25:4
services will be con&lt;lucted'hy minis·
Gannett ·····~-·::.•....~.. ~.............&amp;2?.,
Goodvear .......:...................... 53~
tcrial 'students.
'·
Krnar£.. ...................................12'4
L,nda End ..............J.............. 28'!.
Club to meet
Limited .....~ ••.•.••••..•ou............. 1!}
The Middleport Literary club will , OVB
.......................,.:·········· ... 37,'/a
meet at 2 p.m Wednesday, at the ' one Velley .............. .............. 39~
1
home or Mrs. Chester Erwin. A book
·Peoples ..........:........!...............28
e.chansc will be held after the pro- - Prem Fln1 .................................15
Rockwell ·· ···············~···•·······667~
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Beth Ann Blake, 41, NewHaven, W.Va.t~ie~ Thursday, Mll!'ch 13, 1997
in the Pleasant Valley Nursmg and Rehabduauon Center, Pomt Pleasant,
W,Ya.
:· ·
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, Born Oct, 28, 1955 in Limes.lone, Maine, daughter of George A. and Mar·
jorie Strack Blake ·of New Haven, she was a computer specialist for the
Alaskan ~~iir(!ad and the CH2~ Hill Co., Anchorage, Alaska.
. Surviving in !!dditionto her p;prenls are thre~ daughters, Sherri Patterson,
Christina Blake and Katherine Blake, all of New Haven; a son, Donald(Shannon) of Palmer, Alaska; three grandchildren; and a brother, S1eve (laura)
Blake of Palmer.
A memorial service will be held at I p.m. Saturday in the First Church
of God, New Haven; with the Rev. Glen Lam~&gt;en officiating. Arrangements
are by the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.
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Star Bahk ......................... ~••••

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_M~~gs . Elv,IS

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Subscriben not4ktirirtJIO pi)' the carrier may
remit in advtDCC direc:l 10 '1liC Daily Sendnel
on ·~·•i• or 12""""" bui&lt;'Ccedil will he
J,iwn eanier each Wed~:.

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Publu...t-""' ..... ,. odjoJJI! . - dur·
tnJiho .Ubocrlpcloo porioiL Subocrlpcloo -

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MAILliiJISCIIIPTIONS
lnoiJleMolpC..,
1 3 - ................................................ m .~
26 .............................................. 153.82
!2 ~.,',',..;~ ...............- ....".... ,...... ,.....$105."

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Ootoldt
Molijl c.-J
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52 -

........:....................................156.111

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Firefighters responding to a fatal
two-car accident on Eagle Ridge
Road in Chester To)Nnship Thursday
afternoon found themsei!Ves making
an uncKpccted rescue of the bOvine
kind.
A yearling black angus calf
belonging to Charlie Ritehic appar.ently go1 inside a round bale feeding
ring and hccamc entangled on its way
out, according to Meigs County Sheriffs Deputy Ralph Trussell.
"I saw it laying beside the roundbale feeder and thougl]t i\ was dead,"

Carpenter~ Local Union 650
. . 105 .Ye~rs .in .Po$eroy
Me~rch 16, 1892-1997
.
Henry C. Peery
.:Business Representative

. ~. , 1954-1979,
Ratied
:,
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Trussell said. "Then I saw it move :i
and noticed it was tangled."
r;;
"II was laying With 11S head dow111 n
hili on the hillside and it couldn't get
up," he added.
· · ,;
As 1he other cattle watched. tire· •.::
fighters· , from the Chester and"&gt;
Ppmeroy volunteer fire dcpartmenl,ah
ended up lakinp the mund bale fCC&lt;J ...
er apart to free lhc. animal, Trus!ICII&gt;)
said.
·
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The calf wa.&lt; Ia." seen walking,:J!
around, apparently unharmed.
:u

Larry David Barr, 51, Langsville. died Wednesday. Murch 12.' J!)\17 . al''lJ
1
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Holzer Medical Center in Galhpolis.
He was born April 6. 1945. in Langsville, sun of the late Alpha Lewis
and Elvira Ann Phelps Barr. He was employed as a cement masnn with u~&lt;:al
I in Columbus.
·
He is surv1ved by his wife: Sharon Lee Thoma Barr of Langsville; a son.'"'·
Howard David Barr of Chester: a daughter. Michelle Renee Barr of Mari- !.,.
etta: one gmnddaughtcr. Kmtlynn Eh1.abeth Barr of Chester; SISters and l&gt;rmh·
ers·in-law Jean and Chester Messer of Richwood and Kay and Jerry Bullts ""
ot: West Union; a hrothet. Duane Barr or Jackson; a bnllhcr and sister-in- hli
law. Michael and Margaret Barr of Pomeroy;· and several nieces and nephews. i•"
Services will he held Sunday, 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home m Meddle- ''
port with. the Rev. Sam Basye and Rev. Dougla.' Shamblin ofticialing. B.urial win he in Gravel H111'Ccmetcry.
"a
' Friends may call Saturday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral. ~ome.
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In lieu of nowcrs dnnauims may be made to Hol1.cr Hnsp1cc.

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STATE ROUTE 7 NORTH OF POMEROY

CONGRATULATiONS·

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SlNGLB COPY PlltCB

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Firefighters rescue trapped calf

£0ME

DaFiy .......... ..................................... .... Jsc....

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SATURDAY, MARCH 15TH - 9 A.M. • 5 P.M.

Qoe-k.................................................$2.00
One MOndt.................................~.......... J.8.70
One Y-........, .........,.............,........... $1CM.OO

wl!mhomo-., ~ ~~~-- .

mvolves hauling debns out of homes
and yards of the disabled or elderly. !I
Clermont County Jail correctionS/",
officers arc supervising the woik.
Hamilton County inmates also&gt;~
arc helping with the cleanup alon~1
Cincinnati's riverfront and in othe!' .
aO'ected areas, s;tid Hamilton County sheriff's spokesman Col. Dan.,
Wolfangel.
:t
.. I'd rather be helping doing thi!l'l
than silting in jail," said David Weben 1
of Felicity, who 1s serving a 90-day: J
sentence in lhcCiermontjail forfailing to pay child suppon. ''I'm not-:
doing anybody any good in jail.'' .,
River Dow~, a race track just east
of Cincinnati, said Thur,&lt;day it ·wilh
1akc longer than expected to reopen:,
it' simulcast facility.
ii
The lower clubhouse was Ooodcd .
and will rcqu,;c another week of,,;
repairs
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~ t)ley arc n~dll, M.JFCh of the wo~

ALL NEW
'RUSTY WALLACE'S #2
UCE CAR COMING TO
TAl'S MAUTHON

44r.

The ,Dolly SOnlinel. Ill Coon ~~ .. """""'Y·
Ohio45769.

No ,.b,.rlpclon by moll """:::'

become a dormitory for about30 peopic. mosl staymg five days. ·
"They just came along and started working," said Paul Blatz.
"They' re like angels- it's incrcdible. They certainly arc ~oing the
Lord's work."
Clermont Counly Jail inmate Ocr·
ick Abshire was among ahout30 prisoners who pitched in.
"I just wanted to get out and get
some sunshine and pay back some of
the wrong I' vc d&lt;;&gt;ne personally," said .
Abshire, who is ·serving a one-year
term for a misdemeanor theft conviction.
The minimum-security inmates,
convicted of nonviolent offenses,
have tieen working since Tuesday.
Thev have been cleaninl! up in the
Chilo-Neville area. hut will move to
New· Richmond today, Sheriff Tim
Rodenberg said
.
The sheritl' said the inmates may
be helping out several weeks, as long

dred Parsons. PVH , Racine squad
assisted;
4:44 p.m., Eagle Ridge Road,
Chester Township, two-car motorvehicle accident, Robert Dale HensIcy dead-on-arrfval. Janet Life, VMH, ·
Larry Life, PVH. Pomeroy squad and
volunteer lire department, . Chester
VFD and'Syracqsc squad assisted;
II :22 p.m., Main Strcel, Rutlapd,
Rose·Stanley, Holzer Medical Center.
MIDDLEPORT
'
3:49p.m.. VFD to state Route 554
m Cheshire Township. brush f1rc .
SYRACUS£
.
9:12 p.m .. Third Street, Constance
Mescher, VMH.

UniL&lt; o'fthe Meigs C:otinty Emer. g,cncy MedicaJ!&gt;crvice ·.Ioggccl 5even
calls for assistance Thursday. Units
responding included: ·
· CENtRAL DISPATCH
. : 3:20 a.m .• Powell Street, Middle'
pon, Emmett Lightfoot, Veterads
Memorial Hospital ;
.
9:39 a.m .. Ovcrbroolt Nursing
Center, Middleport. Mervin Roach,
P.lcasanl Valley Hospi)al; • . • .:
·
I 1~ 17 a.m.; Portland Road , Mil.-

.,-$lliiiCIIIrrtON RATIS

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~elp... continuedfnrm.,..~~)

logs 7 calls ·Larry David Barr

actdm" com:ctiOfll to

R

Volunteers

· MASON, W.Va. -The trial for a patients' addictions, .and distributed
Mason doctor recently indicted by a prescription drugs within 1,000 feet
,
federal grand jury has been scheduled of a school. ·
Prosecutors for U.S. Auorney
in May, according to a representative
R~becca,Betts '))a~c asked the U.$,.
fro11,1-the lJ.S, J\tt&lt;)I'Jl!}y'~ofllce .
District
qntitt tb strip.Wcstilloreland
Dr. panny R.a Westmqtelan~ . 41 :
of2.Tacresi1e'ci'wlis
in Mason Counwill go on trial dll '¥1 harges,on May
ty
with
deeds
of
trust
totaling more
.13 in Huntington . The doctor
,answered the indictments broughl than $309,000.
The investigation leading up to.the
against him on M~rch S. •
indictment
was carried out by the
Westmoreland was indicted on
U.S.
Drug
Enforcement
Agency, the
charges of dcfraudmg the federal
Medicaid program, illegally pre.: state Medicaid. Fraud Uni1, the U.S.
scribing drugs in order for his wife to • Postal Service and the Ohio Medic·
profit from her business, prescribed aid Fraud Control Unit ..
and dispensed drugs to s4pport

M"""'n The AMOCiaced Pms. •nd lho Ohio , •
Ncw._,A-'IIion.
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Published every afternoon. Monday lhnNJh
FridllJ' Ill Cou• 5!-• ........,., Ohio, •b) lho
Ohio 'Alley Puhtilhins c.._,IO_ Co..
""""""'·Ohio 45769, Plo.'992·215CI. S..Olld
clau ~paid a1 Pomeroy. Ohio.

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·wes·tmoreland
trial
.
to ·be.gin on M~y 13

' 10:30
Stqck reports ar•'·lhe
a.m. q11otes provided by Aclveet
of GeJIIP«&lt;IIe. .
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cUSPS lU-HOI ·..

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• Robert Dale Hensley, M, Long Bottom, died Thursday, March 13. 1997.
as the" re~ult of an automobile accident near Pomeroy.
·
An elec:triojan,· he was born Dec. 8, 1952, in Marion, Ind., son of Stella
Triplett of Aori~a and the late George 0.. Hensley. He was a member ot the
Methodist church, the International Brotherhood of.Electric Workers and was
a former member of the National Guard.
·
·1n addition to his mother. he is survived by three brothers and two sisteri-in:.law, George Hensley of Tuppers Plains. John and Barb Hensley or
Thppers Plain&amp; and Henry and Beverly Hensley of Long Bollom; a son, James
Hensley of Salem Center; two daughters, Candy Hensley and spec1al fnend
Darrick McCloud of Long Douom and Jessica Hensley of Columbus; and
two·graodchildren.
·
.
. He was preceded in death by a sister, Marr Evans, and by a daughter,
, Penny Hensley.
Graveside services will be held Monday, I p.m. at Sutton Methodist
Cemetery near Racine' with the Rev. George Homer officiating. Friends may
call Sunday, 7-9 p.m.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. - State environmental coalition. asked the air
regulators and lawyers for tnviron· board to vacate or suspend the llir
mental groups were to argue today mill permit, sayinl! it is clearly a •
over whether an air pollution permil waste of the people's lax dollars. and
for the proposed Apple Grove pulp the board's and the appellent's time
mill should be thrown out because and money, to litigate the validity of '
mill developers did not renew· an · an air permit issued to a lifeless prooption to buy the land for the proJecl, .ject.
•
according to the Charleston Gazelle.
DEP officials said they will con-.
The Ohio Valley Environmental tinue to , process · the permits and
CoalitiOIJ and other environmentalists defend them before the air board •
want the mill's air permit invalidat- because Parsons &amp; Whittemore pt!id i
ed. The permit was approved by the permit fees and has nO! asked to ~th- •
state Division of Environmental Pro- draw the permit applications. Allortection's Office of Air Quality in June . ney Stephen M. Hass will defend the I
1996.
.
air permit for DEP.
. •
. l
Parsons &amp; Whinemore Inc., the
The air quality board scheiiuled a ~
parent company of the proposed hearing today to hear summary·judgmill, announced in January that the ment arguments filed by 'both DEP I
SI billion project had been put on . and environmentalists who appealed ;
hold indefinitely. Two weeks ago, the the air permit.
,
company failed to renew an option to
Becky Charles, an attorney for the
buy land in Apple Grove from Amer- board, said members would considican Electric Power.
er Huber's request at the hearing. • ·
Jason Huber, an anomey for the
·
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Robert Dale Hensley

RD-8hiH ·......:...... :...:.....;...... 176~.
,Sho"tley's ...................,~ •••~~ ········ ~
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The Daily Sentinel

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Boosters set sessioli
The Eastern Athletic Boosters will ·
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Tod·ay in history

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a~nouncements

Meeting postponed ·
meet 11 7 p.m. Thursday in the high
Monday's mce.tins of th~ Meigs school cafeteria.
County Board of Commissioners will
he gin at I :30 p.m. instead.of ~he;cus­ · Banq~tel set
,
.
tomary time of I p.m , iii tHe M~igs
· 'The.Eastern1!1nior:b0ys and girls
Colplty Counhouse.
'
involved in win~'spotts .will be honored at a banqijel, Thesday evening,
Royal Oak 'Reson. Those ·attending
Musical drama set
are to take a dessert and finger foods.
·"Watch the Lamb", a musical dra- ·- •
rna, will k performed by members of ADK to meet
the Racine United Methodist Church,
An ADK meeting. will be held
Elm Street, Racine, Sunday, March Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy
23, 7 p.m. and Good Friday, March Library. Those a1icinding arc asked 1o
28. 7 p.m. A nursery will he provld' bring items for the Meigs Coop.
ed. Refreshments will be serveq fol ·
lowing the drama. Public invited to
attend,
"
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Boanl .to ntee.t .'• · .
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.Ain ..;_p
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4·....- ower-::•• ;•.•••••.•......••• ., ..
·Th~ EaStern BOard of Education
••~•••••.• .:.......~ ••••.•••.•.••••..• 7111.1.
. will , hOld its . reg11lar mpeting, . Akzcr~
AlntTKh .......................... ~.••...61\
WoonCsdJiy, 6:30 p.m., in too high
Aehlertd on ......."r.' .............._•••4o\
school library.' · ·. ' -. ·
AT.T ..................r ..................35\

,

Georg.e R. Plagenz

I

Today's weather forecast

.,
shows ccmtairi suegcstivc sex, and · tcring neighborhood merchanK
"Summary: 'Cosby~&lt;howca.o;cs a
which violc~cc. instead of jus1 having them rated as acceptable or unac- loving marriage of many. years. Diu- . ·
ceptable for certain ages. But that Iogue IS largely free of oncnsivc lan- I
guagc. but parents should he alcned
doesn't seem to he in the cards. ·
William A. Rusher. - . Happily there is another solution. to allusions to sc.. albeit within the
lllC Media Research Council (fair context of marriage."
audiences of all ages; 1V-PG. for pro:: wammg: I sit m\ its board of diret· . And "NYPD Blue":
grams with a "limited amount'' of tors) recently pulllishccl the third · "This Emmy-winning s~ries
·sex. violence and .prolanity, suggest- edition of its ~·Family Guide to focuses on the personal and profesing that young children should view PrinJC lime Tclcvisi&lt;in... covering Jhe sional struggles of New York City
them together with their parents: 1'1.96-!9'17 season. This 48-pagc detectives.
TV-14, for programs containing lev· booklet contains a brief background
"Summary: Though its mugh lancis of sex, violence and profanity that ~scription and a thematic summary guage and occasional nudity make
many parents would deem inappro- of every cntcnainmcnt TV show cur- 'NYPD Blue' unsuitable t&lt;w lamily
priatc for children under 14; and 1V- rently appearin!l on ABC. CBS, Fox. audic~ccs. its implicit pm-pohcc,
M. which· nobody under 17 should NBC. UPN and WB -- 97 in all.
pro-law-and-order messages will
sec.
,The "Family Guide" is the end- appeal to adult viewers willing to
Under the Telecommunications pmduct of liter~lly thousands of overlcx&gt;ls the language and scx'ua.l
Aci of 1996, 1V manufactu~rs ~~st hours of contcin analysis by teams of . content."
'
beg1n cqUJppmg 1V sets wllh a v- researchers using a computerized
For jus1 $4.95. plus $2 ticr shipchip" that will enable parents ,who · lrucking syslcm. Without being undo- ping and handling. p!Ffents can learn
have made their way thrnuJ!h this rat- · ly blue-nosed, it carefully and fairly far more. about 1V shows than any
ings thic~el to block out undesirable describes each series. Thus, "COs- rating system can c'ver tell them. Just
programming. Meanwhile. they ca.n by" :
call 1-800-346-BIAS.
l.lsc their-- ahem-· parental authon"Backgruund: Recently laid oO'
WOllam A. Ruher Is a Dlstlnty.
'
·
after 3Wycars of employment, Bill llflslled Fellow &lt;II the Claremont·
All signs indicate that parents Cosby's character fills his time doing Institute for tlie Study of Staae.·
woul!l much prefer to be told which home impruve•l)Cnt projects and pes- manshlp and l'olltical PhU050phy.

don't do anything t&lt;cr his breathing. small1own in the Middle West who
he will die." It •would be easy. And had hccn getiing cx~ellcnt results in
merciful.
!he treatment nf this panicular disThen he ·rcmcmhcfCd hi.s Hippo- case. ·
cratic oath. Hc ·hcgan hlowing into ·
As Frederick Bailes tells the stpthe haby's moutt\ until the lungs wcro ry in one of his h&lt;Miks, they went
acting nunpally alld ihc'child gave IL, west. the treatment wa.' successful
"Aller ·sin~ing that. a strange 11.St cry.
'·
and the .girl was returned tci normal
peace came over me and through the
Years later the dnctor's d~ughter health.
·
night I felt no more tear."
.
and her husband we~C killed in an
The young · doctQr was lame.
"Now," said the other, "listen to auto ucci~nt. 'The dcx:tor 1&lt;x1k his 10- Could it ' he'! It was! Comparin~r
my story. I was a Union soldier 11nd year-old granddaughter to bring up. - notes,.- they found that he was the
I was in the woods that night with a
One day a mysterious malady · · deformed !Jaby into whose mciuth the
party of scouts. I saw you standing S!ruc:k the girl. li,louked like polio.
older doctor had breathed 35 ;years
sentry. although 1 did not sec you,r· , · The hcst clinics dcte.rmined it helore. Because of his own infirniity
face. My men had their rilles fncu!;Cd wa~ nol pollo hut a similar and incur- he ha!l spcciali1.cd in this crippling
upon you, waiting for my word 111 ahki ~&lt;mdit,Wn·, She would l;!c helr&gt;!c-"' disease. ·
fire:
for h(c. ·
·
,
: ~eorte Plaaenz II a 5y•dlcatecl
. "But when I heard you· .s.ing, ... Then th~·irl's grandfathet ICarncxl writer for Newspaper E•terprise
'Cover my defenseless head with·thci that there was '11 ynung d&lt;x:tor in a Assoeiatlon.
shadow of thy wing,' J.said, 'Boys,
lower your rilles. we·r~ ' going
home.'"
. (From the Christian Science Scntinel) _
'
' By~.~uoolaleJ , Pnes
·
. · .
· The SIOI')IICllcr ...
·
Today 11 Friday, March 14, the 73rd day of 1997. There are 292 days left
The young doctor who had
in the year.
·
called to delive,r a..baby inlo a poverToday's Highligbt In Hlstoty:
.
ty-str!c.ken famaly •n Montana looked
Ot).March 14, 1794. Bli Whitney received a patent for his cotton ain, an
at thc,mfanf5 cruelly deformed leg innnlion 11111 .eiiOiutionizedAmerica'scotiOII industry. ·
and list~ned to its labored breathing.
On this date:
.
The thoug~ occ~q-cd to him: Should
In 1743, the lint recorded IQWn -ana in America wu held, 11 FIJICUil
he let the baby d1e?
Hall ill B0110n. .
· .
·
·
'
·
· ,•
. "The other children will call hill'
111 ·1179, physieiat'AJbett Blltllein \VII bon in Ulm, Germi!nY- ' ·
L1mpy," 1M doc;tot thoupt to him- .
lit 1813 0ennan ~tlcll philosophllr l(lJrl Mint died in Loncloft.
,self. "Hi~. I!" Will be ml~le. If I ·
In 1900: ConiJa1 t.dliecl the 0o1c1 Sllribd Act.
·
..

Beth Ann Blake .

~

I~

older. The other lC&gt;Ur ratings. which
cover all other programs (c•cept
nc'l's and spons. which arc unrated).
arc: 1V-G, for pnlgrams approved for

trust on Thee is stayed. All my help
from Thee I bring. Cover my defenseless head with the shadow of thy
wing.'
·

.

.W. VA.

Here's some stories to remember (
By George R. Plagenz

.

• • •, ••

. )

,.

,Cheryl Parker Alkire, 70 of Worthington, formerly of the Laurel Cliff community in Meigs County, died Saturday, March 8, 1997 at Kobac:ker House
in Colum~ .' _ ~ ·
She is survived by her husband, Ivor "Gene" Alkire; a daughter and sonin-law, Kimberlee and Bruce Williams of Woodbridge; Va.; a son and daughter-in-law; Kevin and Lori Alkire of Powell; two grandchildren; a brother.
Thomas Parker of Pomeroy, a brother and sister-in-law, Cqdr1c and Helen
Parker of San Antonio, Texas: two sisters and brothers-in-law. Gayle and
Herman Kasper or Bevercreek; and Jeannine and .Harold Tally of Commerce,
Texas: and numerous nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held Wednesday at the RulherforJ·Corbin Funeral Home in Wonhirigton. Burial was in Walnut Grove Cemetery. In lieu of
nowers contributions may be made to Riverside/Gran! Hospi~e . Kobacket
House,
or the Columbll$ ·Cancer Clinic.
.
.

•

Only a few months from retirement, which wa.' supposed to he from
El Pa.,o, Heath was abruptly transferred to wa.,hington. where he sud- .•
dcnly hccamc uilavajlable for com· ' ·
ment to the media.
Jack Anderson 8lld Jan Mo!Jer
United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

'

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.,.. ..... -

AccuWeaiJiet8 ra.-t for

core!~ '

"Sf'EC:IAL tNVES1'16tirlaN; tNPePfM~ENT COUNSEi!S Of'FICE.
WE UMPE~ "ffieRe'S A C!\ICt&lt;EM 'OIAT l&lt;eePS CROSSING 'Tile~~. '1

"l~postedonsentryduty; near

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Pulp .mill' air permit
arguments set today

OHIO Weathet
Satunlay, Maid 1!1

Sentinel,·.Corruption taints some Mexican governors
By JIICk .Andtlr8on

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, llln:h 14, 1tlt7

r

AND SEE!

.

�•

•

; P8gi 4 • The D..IJ lulluel

In NCAA men's tourney set/on,

·

: Fltd.y, March 14, 1117

FrldQ, March 14,1117

Pom•OJ •llddllpcwt, Ohio

In the NBA,.

.

Bradley's show &amp; Cavs'.101-95 loss stand as leading events

Smith ties Rupp for most wins; Colorado ousts Indiana
By The Aaii0Ci81ed Preu
J
II was a memorable night for
· Dean Smitb and a forgettable one for
Bob Knight.
.
.
Smith tied Adolph Rupp as the
• winn ingest basketball coach in
NCAA histor)' Thursday night when
, North Carolina survived a scare
from Fairfield, 82-74, in the opening
round of the East Regional .
" I feel good to be a part of it,"
said North Carolina guard Ed Cola,
who had I0 assists and no turnovers.
"We're just trying to get the record
for coach Smith and let him enjoy

the day."
SirOn&amp; bid to become the first No. J6
Smith wi II go for a record-setting seed to beal 1 No. I seed.
877th vicltity,Saturday against Col·
The Staas led by seven at halftime
orado. which routed Knight's Indiana and lllayed wilh the Tar Heels (25-6)
team 80-62. It was the third straight until the final minule in fronl or a
year the Hoosiers (22-1 1) were elim- pro-North Carolina crowd in Wininated in the first round. and the 18- ston-Salem.
pointloss matched Indiana's worst in
"They were like mosquiloes out
71 NCAA tournament games.
there," N6rth Carolina forward
"When you arc soundly beaten, Anlltwn Iamison said. "They did one
there is not much you can say," of liJe aweaome jobs of the year. · ·
Knight said .
TheY were on fll'e, theycouldn'l miss
Fairfield (11 - 19), which had the . anything and once they slarled gel·
woist record in the 64-team field and ting things goin1 they goi a IOl of
no starter over 6-foot-6, made a confidence." .

c-r

Vince
led the 1ir Heel~
with 22 P!linlll, while Greg Francis
led Fairiield with 26 poinls.
In olher .East Regional ,;ames,
California edged Princ~ron ·SS-52
and Vi,llanova downed Long Island
101-91.
In the Southeast Kansas beat
Jackson s._ 78-64, Purdue defeat·
ed Rhode Island 83-76 in overtime.
College of Charleston topped Mary·
land 75-66, and Arizona defealed
South Alabama 65-57.
·
In the Midwest. Cincinnali defeated Butler 86-69,1owa Slate beatllli·

nois Swe 69-57, Xavier downed

Vanderbill 80-68, and UCLA beat
Charleston Sourhern 109· 75.
In the West, · Bostnn College
defeated Valparaiso 73-.66, St.
Joseph's doWned Pacific 75-65, Kenlucky breewl past Monrana 92,S4,
and Iowa heal Virg inia 73-60. ·
The first round concludes roday
with these pairings:
Easi : Wisconsin-Texas. ·Sourh
Carolina-Coppin !ltate. New Mexi·
co-Old Dominion. and LouisvilleMassachuscus.
Southeast: Georgia-Chattanooga.
lllinois-Soulhern Cal. MarqueueProvidence, and Duke-Murray Srare·.
Midwest; Clemson-Miami of
Ohio, Tulsa-Boston University, Mississippi· Temple, and Minnesola:
Southwest Texas State. ·
Wesl: UNC . Charloue-Georgetown, Utah-Navy, Wake Fores1-S1.
Mary's. and Stanford-Oklahoma.
Eiut '
Colorado 80, lnillana 62 ,
AI Winsron-Salem, Chauncey
Billups scored 24 points for Colorado, which was making ils first
NCAA appearance in 28 years.
California 55

Princeton 52

..

In the NIT,

Tony Gonzalez scored all live of
Cal's points in lhe final minute as lhe
Bears.snapped Princelon 's 19-gamc
winning slreak.
'
Villanova 101, LIU 91
F~shman Tim Thomas . had 28
poinrs and· IS rebounds for Villanova, which broke it open with a 19-1
·run to start the second half. Charles
Jones, the nalion 's leading scorer:
scored 37 for LIU.
Southeast
Kansu78, Jackson St. 64
AI Memphis: Scot Pollard
grabhcd.a career-high 19 rebounds,
blocked six shols and scored 12
points for Kansas:
·
Purdue 83
••
Rhode Island 76, OT
Brad Miller had a career-high 31
points for Purdue. which scored the
first •ix points in ovenime. ·
College of Charleston 75

PURSUE LOOSE BALl- Montane 9UIIrd Kenyth Henry (right)
41nd Kentucky lcirward Scott Peclgatt go lftar the looM baakelball
whome the Orlzzlln' Don Carter watchn during Thuraday nlght't
NCAA Well Regional flret-round contaat In Salt Lllklt City, .where
. the Wlldcata won 92-54. (AP)
·,

BLOCKS SHOT - Cincinnati's Bobby Brennen ·blocka the
attempted ahot by Butler'• Mike Marahall In the sac:ond ·half of
Thursday night's NCAA Mklwnt Rsglonal tlret-round game In
Aubum Hilla, Mich., where the Bearceta -n 116-69. (AP)

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Blllletbell Wrltar

Ma~flallll66

Sracy Harris scored 22 points u
the College of Charleston ex !ended
the nalion's longest winning streak 10
23 games.
·
Arizona 65, S. ~labama 57
Arizona oursc&lt;ired Sourh Alaba,
rna 22--4 in the final 7 In miliurcs to
avoid iosing in t~ firsl round for I he
fourth rime in six years.
Midwest
Ciad1111811 86, Butler 69
At A~burn Hills. Mich .. Danny
Forston scored 24 points and Darnell
Burton added 19 for· Cincinnati.
including five 3-pointcrs.
Iowa St. 69, Dllaols St. 57
Kelvin Cato had a career-high 29 '
poinrs, 12 rebounds and cig~rblocks
lo lead Iowa State.
· Xavier 80, VanclerbUt 68
James Posey and Gary Lumpkin
scored Xavier'slinal20 point• a' tl)c
Muskelccrs held · off Vanderbilt.
Posey finished with a career-high 22
poinrs and Lumpkin had 16 . .
UCLA 109
Cham.ton Southen 75
. UCI.:Aseored the firsr II poinls
of the game, and Jclany McCoy and
J.R Henderson finished .wilh 21
points api~e for lhc Bruins.
West
.
Boston College 73
Valparaiso 66
AI Sail Lake City. reserve Bevan
Thomas-scored 16 points a• ~oslon
CoUege overCRI!lC lhe long-range
. shoaling of Bryce Drew; who made
cighl 3-p&lt;iinters for Valparaiso.
St. Joseph's 75; Pac:lflc: 6S
Rashid Bey scored 22 poinls and
freshman Anhur Davis added 19 for
St. Joseph's, which was playing irs
first NCAA roi.tmamcntgarnc in II
years.
Kentucky 9l, Montana 54
Cameron Mills scored 19 points.
his third consecutive career high. as '
lhc defending national champions
roured Monlana.,
'
Iowa 73, Virginia 60
Guy Rucker scored 19 ptlinls and
Iowa coach Tom .Davis improved tn
f0-0 in firs1-m~nd games.

.

'

DaviS" .• &lt;Conrinued f~m Page 4)
But Oxford is a long way from
Overton, the rough-and-tumble Miami neighborhood he grew up in. He
nearly quir his freshman year
because he was so homesick. Bur he
srayed.
·
The fans love him .
, Davis, who just 'joined Wayne
Embry and Ron Harper as the only
play,ers in school history wilh ·1.000
career poinls arid 1,000 career
rebounds, has become as big a parr
of Miami baskelball history._, those
players.
He isn 'I as alhlelic as Harper, nor
as strong as Embry. Bur his rclenlless
. slyle •tnakes him a prospec1 U! conlinue his eaieer in lhe NBA as Harp- .

I
I

lot Ill' credit for thai," Hamilton said.
"They got up and contested his shot•
and rhey made it difficult for him In
get IP the ha..ket." ·.•· · ·
The Wolverines. 'scnring off rransilions and offensive tcbounds
throughout the second half. shol 6J
percent in rhe period and 60 percenl
f(~r the game. Miami shoijust 37 per&lt;enl in the second half and 39 per;
cenl in lhe game.
. .
Oklaltoma St 79, Thlane 72
At Stillwater. Okla .. Joe Adkins
and Adrian Pelcrs'on ·each scored 19
points us Oklahoma Slalc survived

1Miami

University's Davis makes ·
! impression with hair ~nd game
' By JOHN FAY
Cinclnnlitl Enquirer .
OXFORD. Ohio - -Thai's the
lusling impression Devin Davis
made ohc lasllimc Miami Universi·
played in lhe NCAA To~rnament.
Firsr, !here is lhe huir- dread· .
cks lloj\ping - hoi lhon one
noliecs Ihe guy can play. really rhty:
buvis pul up 24poinlS and pulled
I~ rehoullds lo lead the· Red- .
ihlcr Ariwna that duy.
Thul wus rtm.-.; years ugo.
Davis is u senior now. uboul u;
Miami inll&gt;'lhe NCAA Tourna·
again. thiillimc IUday 11guins1
~lclm&gt;.~&lt;in. The odds arc ~imilar. In
Minmi· was a 121lt seed and Ariwus lilih. Miamf's ·u 131h seed
. time; Cfcms11n is a fourrh seed.
, lnrgcly because or rhe guy
the hair, fow arc couilling Miaoutlhis lime. ·
·
Davis will never cscnpe the hair.
Ihe 6-fool-7 forward from lhe
· Miami (Florida), is ·!lOti oflike
~olher player whose appcaram.'C
lhe ullcniiun. but whole lanie is
Cl:iu,ally imJII'Illllivo -lliMiK Rod .. .
'

.~

·~

~~

'

In flil.'l, their ••Yic or play - all
- 'II Hllnillll'. Bolli liiC wiry •
· (Dnvio&lt;,welshl~lllld~h ·
3'50! and ~Imply beat build·
10 die ball.
"lim• ft(od-plot, '' helll!id. "l
lhe t~~ay llo I!IIY•· ~ · husllu.

hllrd·IIOIItXI. Ilney Pko his pme
''-' llllyonc choc -_:• ·
'

Mianli coach Chtlr.li!l Co!n liOcl
limiluity betwwil the rebound·

Coles st~id. " He rc&lt;~lly gets aflcr it.
He's ·got great, ~rcut hands."
Davis. one of •.&gt;nly seven players
in Miumi hisl&lt;lry 10 play in four po1s1season tourmunents, fairly willed rhis
tet~m into lhe NCAA Tournament.
The Rcdskins were in fo~rth place
and had losl five struighl road ~mnes
when he led lhc turmmound. · •
'' l,slurted carrying the lcnm the
way I'm supposed to." he ·sui d.
During the midseuson swoon,
when Miami lvst live of cighl. Davis
Wlis prelty much slymied hy the
dclcnsivc auenliun hc'J draw each
night.
" He was gelling double- and
lriple-tcumcd every night.'' Coles
said. " It Willi frqslrulin~ fur him us a
pl11yer nnd fur us us'a tcmn ."
His nunthers in lhc winning
srrcak . have · 1\cen suurig - 17.3
ptiints and I f.6 rebounds- hut nm
vvcrwhelmin~ (h~ averages 17.0
und 9.!1'for thclicu.•nn). Bur the poinr

is, lhc learn hu.• golten better. Miami 's average m~~r~~in of viclory in the
Mid-American Conference !ourna-,
mcnl&gt;¥tlll 19 poinls. .
, "We came rugcrher," Davis said.
" Bcl(trc; we were a hunch of ipdi·
~iduals. We have a lot of oll'ensivc
pluy0n;. II took us u while lo adapt.
Bullhings linnlly slarted falling inlo
place."
When )W arrived four year.•.ugo,
he wus a novchy. The dreadlocks and '
lhtce.sold 'tco;lh sci him a]JIU1 in prep·
py. tranquil Oxford:
Hcrh Scndck. then Miami's
.couch, Ltskc&lt;l him to cui his hair. II
wus u requcsl. nut an uhionarum.
Duvis chose nullo.
·
''I dun'( 11\ink on~ h11ir should be
liD is~ve," he said.
. Davis.is nut a onel)lliCt or Ro.•ta' ·
fari, Jomuicanrelil!ious and J!l&gt;lit· .
ical movement "I just like my hair
lhis way," he •aid.
(Ste DAVIS 011 Paae S) .

• ·1hose needing assistance may apply at The
Peoples Bank offices.in Mason, New Haven.
and Poirit Pleasant, .or by calling The Peoples
Bank Loan Hotline at(304) 675-2727.
·
·Collect calls Will be accepted.

POST-3.9
,, AMERICAN LEIIOI · .

The ·People~ ·Ba~lt:

·I(RIHDAY CELEIUTION
.

• ~. Member FDIC

.

.

'

. .•
'

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•

1

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.

left roday at rhe ~ffice of Steve
Snapp, Ohio State's sports informalion director.
.Alford. 32, w'~' captain of rhe
1986-87 Hoosiers team lhat won the
NCAA championship. Aller s.lints
with rhe NBA's Dallas Mavericks
and Golden Stale Warriors. he was
hired in 1991 as head coach al Manchesler College. an NCAA Division
Ill JIC hool in Indiana.
In 1995, he wo.&lt; appoinled "'' head
coach at Southwest Mi ssouri. which
i:i in Sprin~Jicld . The Bears wen: 1612 in his first sea.'«&gt;n. and aflerward

.

Alti&gt;rd created a stir by hiring his
father, Sam. as an assiStant . S~m
Allnrd cnachcJ h&gt;S son on h•gh
school_in New Cast I~. Ind .. and was
452-245 In 2'1 h•gh schtx &gt;l seasons.
Ohio ~tate athletic~ dircclor And,y ·
Gcij!er hrcd Ayers and women s
head basketball C!&gt;ach Nancy Darsch
Monday. The university has started
a national search for their replacemenls.
Ayers, 124- UlM in eight seasons.
had two ycurs remaining on his ctm·
lrnct; Dnrsch. 234-125 in 12 settsons.
had one year left.

NCAA Division I

.

·m en's tournament

Nunh C~~rlllimf&lt;::hurlnllc (21 -Mt -.s.
Ck-nqtrown (20-91. 2:42p.m.
Omh c26-J) VI: NQvr (:!Q..g), :w minutes artLT JftviqiiS. JllnJI!
Wa~I!'Forell ' (2l·61 vs. St . Mnry 't .

· East R"lional
11Minclly't finl·rwnd I&lt;'CJm

EASTERN CONFERENCE .
I-.

Califnrnaa -'~ · Princtton S2

AUanttilJhidoll
.W L fllo . Iii

NowYork .......... .. .. 47

Miami ...:................ 46

-l&gt;rlondo........
.w
Wushi!ISillll....... ...2~
New Jel'ley .. ,....... .. IM
Pllilndelphia ...... .. 16
fioslon .................. 12

17

Vill.uwva 101, Lon! ld1tnd Ulriwnl·

ly91

.7.14

17
28

JJ

Nor1h Carolinn M2. fllil1iekl74
.• Culor.tdu MO. lndi911a 61

1
•

.730.

.m

12
17
2M
JO

.468
+&amp; .290 ·
46 .2jH
U · .IHK

12 : 1~

Mill(lei!Utll ............. JI
OaUus .....,.. ,.... ;...... .ll
'

I

VcnVcr ................ ·'"

Sun Antonio ........... I·~
Vm~~:uu~ ..:.......... 11

PadfkDhiMn
S\•t~ttk: ...., .............. 44 IK
710
I..I\. 1.i!b.'fs ........... .42 l O ~77
1
'l unhmd ................ .JC"o 2K ~M
SotCnun.:nw ,.•,. ....... lK .16 .4JK
I..A . l'lif'lll:r~ ......... 2h · ,1:\ .426
Pbtw:rlil .... .............. l~ JH .)97
Gulden Stmc ,......... 24, ,lY JK I
Ji-dinchL't! phryuff Mf"lt ·

Th.,..,.

...

nf'lt-rwndltCOtft
Kurua1 7K, Jlll.:ksutl Slut..: 64
Punlqe H:t, Rh~ h;land 7~ HYI'l
C11ll~~e . ul' Chnrle~11111 7~. Muryl:md

ftrlt.,._..,....:..

AI CINirloUt CoU1tum. ChlrtoUt. N.C.

OI:IH'(liil !24-KI u . Trm~~~:~:&gt;«-Ciurt­
l.....,...&lt;ll·IU). IVUp.m.
lllinoi1 121-Yl v11. Suuthcm Culif1ltlliu
( 17-1OJ. 30 miauw1uha pn:¥iiKIS pnc:
Mlll\juetCC (22-Ml n . Pruviden"-c Cll·
II 1. 7:40p.m.
l&gt;uke (2.l·R) Yl. Murmy Slult: (20-Y),
.10 miiNic~ uftcr pn:viuVIttllfllC

. 24~~

2K

:\0'~

36

'

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- . Midwest Reglonoll

nu,...,.·s

17
17'
IIJ:',
'20'·

nnt-ruund JICOI'tll
(.'iudruuui M6, Rutkr M
•
ltiWII Sllll~ tt9, lllbt~H• Still( ~
Xovio.Y, Obiu KO, Vt11kk-rbi M
UCLA 109, (:'1wlc~um S · ud~'l'n 7~

. Thunolay's s..-nres

Todly'• Ar19:-rou

1

ToDIRht's gantl!ll

(1Ji ~ltftU Ill

••
••

-••

..••
•••

N1:w .Jcl'*:)'. 7::\() r .m. .
Minn..•sol:&amp; 111 Phthtdl.:lphlll. 7:.\() Jl.m.
·&lt;.'luwk11:tc n1 ()ri!Ukkt. '1:.\0 J•.m.
.vuncuuvt.•rut Miami. 7;JOp.m.
~nuk· 111 Adanm. 7:."\0p.m.
Ut;1h ttllttlliunu. 7:.m Jt.lll.
wa~hiiiJIUII Ill MiiWIIUkL'C. K:.\0 Jl.lll.
lln~ton 111 Still AIIIIWlill, K:.10 jl.m .
cu:VELANil Ul Pnnlllntl. 10 p.m. •
L.A. CllppCN .l ll L.A . l.nkL"JS. HUO

viuull

'
'

A.l CltftiDII Cl•k CmiC"r
Ct..-. _Hd~hl s l21 ~ .ll \' ~. 1\knm Fir~ ·
Slnlll: ( IK=-6). S:r.tun.hay. 7&lt;\() p.m.
•
AI fa&amp;~ CoUsrut.. Cotu•bwc

Ouy. Uunhttr (20--IJ \'~ . 7..afk'~~illt
IB·I). Salurdt•y. 7JOp.m.
AI Unlnnhy ol O.yaon
Cin. AiL:n (21 -~l n Sprint!• N11rth
(19-6}. Sutunlay. 7 : ~1run .

Second round

MIIIIUy. M•~ 17' .
MkhiJa~ S1 . Cl7· 111 a1 Flonda St.
111·11).7:l0p.m.
Well Virfinia 120-YI nl Ntlr1h Ctin•li·M SUII.C ( 11: 14). 7:30 fi·"'Pinsbwth (IM-141111 Arbn1111 (If!..
12). Mp:m,
. ,
·
' , H.uiH21'·1Htt UNLV 12-1• «)). 10:30
Jl.nt .

Tunda)', Maid ••

•

141. TBA
Nllvudu

1\t C11nton FieldiM.-w

Ch:. VA-SJ 117-M vs. Yuu. l.ibcny
12 1-41. ShtunJay. 7:.10 p.m ·
AI Buwllna limn Slate" Univendty
Pmrid. Henry 120-41 vs. Ontari 11 C!J1J, Si11Uf'l.lily. 7:.~11 p.m.
1\1 Ohio llnivm.:lt)'. 1\lh.-.
Bdpre I 13-121 vs. Sh.:rtttmluah (11·
21. Sat..-llity. 7:.10p.ln.
AI Unll':mll, uf Uarlun
Uti)'. Chri11im1 (22 ·.1) VIi. Ci11 .
Wymnin~ .&lt;12- I]). SmunJtl)' . .l:JO jl./11.

· Hl·r~ ''~ 1111..· :&gt;talt' ~·mil'ulal mul liuul
JHiirin~ ~ fur Ilk' 22ntl (iirl ~ Sl;~l.: llnsk.:l ·
h;lll Tuurn ; un~nl ill St . Julm
Culumhus ·

1

in

Seminnal Sl."t:»rrs
Ui•i~hm Ill
(.'lwp:rin Falls ,\ It Mi:mu
Waulll.'"" 57. Utka .n

1~

:'i1

llh·ision IV
KttliJa ohl. New R1q..'d 45.
h.n t.~•r.unil' fl2. Ucrlin Hiltuul :'10

Divi!lion IV nnals

· AI Uelventty o( Akron
Alr.nm Bud&amp;lcl I IY ·6' n . You .
Mouncy 117-K), SatunL1y ..111.111.
AI Unlnnlly oi'·Tulrdu
Cl.:. Ucntdklin~ (20-51 \' ~. Oln!SIL'Ii
Full~ tl.\-1 ). Sumrd.l1y . .\run.
AI Oh.. Unlv•rslty. Alhm~ . .
Hillshnrn IlK-~) VM ('nf_ Mit"Oin (21)..
'_
, ,_S:ttuf\la~ , J tun.
41 Wrlftbl Stlllt Unlvtl'!llh, Unlun
(.'ia. Ru8et Bu~~~~n (:!1-4) vs. k 1u nil1nn Uadin (I'IJ:·:'I), Sutunby. I 11.111.

Arcllil

AI C•nllon Fltldhou.w ·
ZancHilh: ih1 11~c ran~ !H · I) v!l.
Cuyahu~a His. ( IK--~1. l:ri.Jtly. J:.lU r .n\.
•
AI Univenhy .tTnlfdo
· Lincnlnvicw 124-01 -.~. l..ciJIIOic (22·
1J. l1'id1y. 7:30 r .m. · .
At ··airJroundll'oli!IWm, c.,aumhu!&gt;
Nurwalk S1. Pmd I23·21vs. St. Henry
l21).·h !=riday. Utlt'·m
AI Univer!Jt1 ul Uqa.n
A;um t 21--ll v~ . SJiril.l~. (.';lthnli(" til·
I .1'· Fri•lll)'. 7:."1 JUII.

I

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..... lubjecl to crldlt IPPfOYII............... ot318117111d IIUbject 10 chlnge. On_.
ti.OOCI'IDI!Ifto•ad t:lr .llltllllhl, die~ would be 5152.10,IDialllrlllnce chalgea
1471.1!), 111111 PIW-* tt,471.80 lllld ellec:dvt lpl' oii.OO%. The tinple lntiMt rale II filed
._.. t.rin af die lOin. Cunwnt f~Kpln Bri bMa . . nat -'ltllbiiiDr . . olflr.
· ·

.

'.

Simifinol &amp; nnal stoles
J)iviKktn I
W;nbwnrlh ( 24·1) vs . Pid;L'rlug_tnn
Uf,..() ),_FmJ;,y, 7p:m.
. M&gt;~s.int2 .l-2) · v,.. M•..:k)' Ri v.:r Mutt·
IJ p.m.
Fin:d : Satmd:.1y. IUO p.m.

n i li~o:olt !2~·.11.1'riday,

·

!!I -~ ~ '" Nehrn~k wUl - 14),

TBA

Sll" ~lim.. Tall
Mkhiteun 119-11 r \':4. l)klnhnthit Stntc
. (17 -14)

Ohio H.S. boys'
regional tournaments
th~ re~lnnal

Hc.-re ur.:

nnttl

p;tlrinr:~

for Ilk' 75th S1:11.: Roy~ llt15k~ tt'I!III1''Mif•

llallk!ltt:
Thu~y'•

..rnlnnalscores

Division I
M;rt m H1.1~· htd 4K, l':rnk•n S. .&amp;5
Akwul·iNllhMit: 71 . Mentor (1(1
On. 1\ ik~.: n 76, l'in. l'fiu\:t:lun 74 tl
UT I
Sj)f"inf. Nmih 7H. Thll,•rut"li.I-Mali•mt

""

i'.t~ttc.-:r~,·l llt! ~7.

t'l•l .. lnd!.,.:rnklll.-.: -16

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(."iu."'" RI!i-'L'I.' DtW.'t lft 1111. ni, WulnUI 5~
(.'k. lkn...·~llclifk' 7~ . Elitl:t M
Ctll. Mirtli11 b) , Onwr -Ut
Haruilwu H!Wiu h1. Kt·n~rillf.· Alter

~Ill._'

Salurday's pmes

Hill~bt~tt•OY. Circlc,·llil· ~6
Ulrlbit.:!.l h.JI~ ~l . llclk'IIU.: ~(CJ'I")
Yuu. fwbl~~y (lb. t,knt~ll' Lib.• ~'11111:

.

Ttwunllltll (NI&amp;kn SCt~tt•.lJUn.
t1mr1UIIIl al Phihtlklrltiu. 7J0 r .ni
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AIIUntliiU l'hi\:ilf.ll. tl:,\11 ji.IU.
Sun Antnnin olll&gt;c.-Lw.:r. Y j).m.
PulltiS nl PhUUIIilli • ., r .m.

Ohio H.S. girls'
state 'ournament

Division Ill ftnals

. • 4 taclllinl Cllais
·~Power
• Nt Canrltian
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• Power Wtldo II&amp; lllckl • Aitrnllun Wl&gt;Nis
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nrvy S·IU 4x4 Pit~.,
• 4.3 tiler V-6 Power
; Power Steering
• 5 Spoal T,.,...,_ • Cuslom Clclt.OrNe's Side Aibag
• Woll ~
• 4 'M&gt;etl Anli-I.Od&lt; Bnliln
P'li:I IICitdll OIW: Filii

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• AI.I'FM Sleroo
Ani-l.od&lt; lnkes • CUSIOITl Clalh Int. .
·~AiliegS

·S~IedWheols

• Power Door l.oclls

•Woll Eqojppod

trc.IM.

.

SHARE.OUR 111ERICA WITH THE WORLD
Hoet a High School Foreign Exchange Student! They
have their own Insurance and tpel1dlng money.
Choou hom Scandln.,lan, · European; South
American, Asian or one of the New· lndepe~nt
Statee. from the former Soviet Union. Autuat arrlvlll
For more lnforinatlon call 1.fJOO.SIBLINQ tOday. VIlli
the AISE web alte at http://www.albllng.org. American
Intercultural Student Exchange! A nonprofit exempt

N.:w Jl.!~)' ;u New Yurk, nuon ·
Hnultlon 111 Mian~l , DlKNI
.
ltkliuna nl Milwuuktc. 2:.\0p.m.
Vam:uuv~f ut Otlllllllo. J p.m1
·lk,.tun 111 Mlnfk.'MI'tln ~:.10 p.m.
S.:nllh: mlA'tn1it. 7l'·"'·
fJmtlun&amp;l n~t•. A. CliJ~'f!l.. \111.111.
llo•llm\ :11 S;~~:r;u•~nh,l . Yp.m.
'l'unmtuuti .. A. I.ab.'I'J. 9:.\0 )1.11\.

I.__,._____.....
I
I

r.m.

. Division II finals

Oklahoma Sl~t! 7Y. Tul ~llk: 72

~)

Sunday'sp,..• ·

.,

pmH

AI Kempu A;tt\11, KIMl'Ub Cily, Mo.
Ckmsun 121 "Y) v~ . Mimni. fHtin ~~I·
K). 1 2: 2~ r .nl.
.
.
Tulkn ll.l ·\tl u , Hu~lt!tt Uniwuit y
(lS-4) •.lO minute~~alk."ti'II\.'Vinus !,!llftt..'
MiuiuipJ'i 110.") \"~ . Tc.•n•I'IL• ( IY·
10), 7 : ~ t•.m.
Mlnnc~otA 121•.\) \' lri. SnuthwCMI
'l'vlltlll Slntc Oft. Ill..~1 minut"'S afM I'R"-

·

Dlvlllon I finals ·

AllJnl"vtnie)' .rTukodo ·
l.nktwood St lidward 123·1I V!t Parlllll Vnll~y FIXi!C {19 - ~l. S;uunlay . 7:.\Cl

Tclln~ Chriuhta (12·12) iil Nutrc
Uo111~ ti~~IJ). l: )Op, m.
Orndley 07-12) 111 Cunn&amp;."'.'tit·ur (1~ •.

1\rizua&amp;l (!o~ •.South ~hlttumo. ~7

Tod•)''l

~··~
14~

Y~

Thunolay's ..,,...
Mh:hipn 76. Miluni 6)

·

• · sou~st aeaional

lia

Scnnk: HIM . Minnc111Ha Y2
D11lllL~ lOY, l&amp;..utun 107
Lktn•il I02, l&gt;tnvc.'f K2
Phqcnik 111. L.A. OiJifiL'f!%
Ti:wuntu 10.~. Stll.'nunc'l!n%
Gulden SMI.' HI I. CLEVELAND
IUT)
.
.

p.m.

Soulh Carolina (24-7) YS. Coppin
Sum: (21 -8 1. ~0 minu1es .11f1er prcviut~ s
gnme
·
·
New Me.11h:o (2-4-7) '1111 . Old Dominion (22-I DJ. 7:40p.m.
LiiUitville (2)-8) "'· Mnl,nchulll!ll t ·
&lt;Jlj.J J). )0 minuliel ttflu 1~viou• ~:unt

Mldwat DI•IUun

21 .672
~1 . .!100
41 .339
45 . 2~
41 242
54 .lffl

NIT action

WiKonsll) (18-9) vs. Tuu H6· 1U.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

~ .~ -~

Sutnrortl (20-7) v1. Oklnht)nm 'O~­
iOI. :to minul~ ufh.'r rn:.-.ioo~ ~n~

AI PIIUIIorah Chk Areno, Pllllburth

J~

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Hnu•ron .. ,..........,.. .4J

Cotir.m-,t. Bl p.m:

Tod•y't ftnt·roand pmts

Ctlllral DlvWon
a.-ChiCIIJU
.. , .... !1!1 K .H7J , ,
De1roh ....... ........4ft 17· .710
lJ
. A•lanu1... ......... .....4J 20 : 611~
12
Charlouc ......... ....II 12 .6~1
14
CLE'tELAND ......W 2R - ~~
10'•,
Jndiunn .... ........ ... :...lO .12 .484
24'·.
Milwnukcc ............. l6 Jf.lo · .419 28 ~
TofonJn ....... .... ....... 2.1 40 . ~s
~2

. ::m... .. . . . .

T. .y•11 Rnt·reuNt plllt!l

At nc Mt:KitlrCrnt•t:· Tuaon. Arb.

I .

Tom Peden
Country

..

Monday · SniUnlnyi 9 om · 8 pm · Sunday: I · 8 pm

,,._,-_,_.._ .._.l'leitllld"' .._.OifiiWIIIIIiettlillllel ............

Dolllllll~lorlft......_ ''OI'I~crtii.Ncl~lal)IX9Ifll1itai""O'I.

I

l

'
I·

I

I

I

a

'IIARCH·.18; ·7 P&amp;

three-pointer with I:08 to go for a
99-951ead.
Cleveland missed siK sbols and
had rhree turnovers in the final 3:50 ofovenime.
Rapton 103, Kinp 96
Damon Sroudami ~ scored 31
points. including 14 in a 16-2 run
thai gave Toronto a 94-85 lead late
in the fourth quarter. ·
·,
11 was only the second time in two
seasons the Raprors have won three
straight games.
"We 're jusl rrying 10 gel ·wins,
peried ." coach Darrell Walker said.
" We've been playing hard all year.
Were not playing our the string. We
have a lor of young guys and they lire
!See NBA on Page 7) , .

Former Indiana star wants shot at OSU basketball post

NBA standings

j

• ·6.00% APR flood reliefloans are now being
offered by The Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant to those who have suffered losses.
Loans are available for up to $.5,000 and up
'to 36 months to qualified borrowers. ·No
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dosed the .sa · da~ ·· · ·
·

when Michie! Finley knocked lhe
ball from rookiC Antoine Walker near
midcoun and went in for an unconrested dunk with 9.8 seconds left
Bradley· then blocked a layup
auempt by Walker.
· " My goal is to make plays when
rhe. game is on the line," said
llradley, who finished with !he high· .
eSI poinl tolal ever by.a Mal(ericks
center. "I gol the big block. and
Micltael came up with !he big steal.
I wantlo bs: part of a winnidg organization."
nie Celtics had one lastshol, bur
Walker's three-point altemp.l from
rhe left wing bounced off lhe rim at

lhe buzzer.
Price scored two crucial baskeiS in
Finley added 27 poinrs and rook· overtime.
ie Erick Strickll!lli scored 16 as the
Marshall shot 11 -of-15 and added
Mavericks won their second game in
I0 rebounds, Price had 18 poiniS and
a row for only the fifth time rhis sea· Ray Owes added 13 points off the
hench. Danny Ferry 's 21 points
son.
Celtics coach M.L. Carr credited . topped Cleveland.
"He's been working his rail off in .
!he Mavericks for making tbc defensive plays that. turned lhe game practice," Warriors coach Rick Adelman sl\id of Marshall . ·' He had a
around.
"l tboughtthey made a couple of huge game for us at a lime lhal we
t:eal- aggressive defensive plays 10 · teally needed il froin him. •· ·
· win the game o;lown the stretch," Carr
After being down 95-92 when
said. "Obviously Bradley was huge Cleveland's Chris Mills hit a lhreefor rhem, bur they got some conlri· pointer with 3:50 lefl in ovenime. the
butions across the board ."
Warriors scored lhe lasl nine points
of lhe ·game.
Warrlo., 101~ Cavaliers 95
At. San lose, Marshall tied his
Price hit a lean-in jumper to put
career high with 30 points and Mark Golden State up 96-95. then made a

er and Embry did.
former Miami coach ' Darrell
Hedric, now a Cleveland Cavaliers
round of lhe Narional Invitation
· COLUMBUS, Ohio &lt;A.P&gt; seoul, said while !here are no guar- Steve
Alford, l:qaeh al Southwes) Tournament Wednesday; losing 77antees, Davis is a p~tty good bel.
Missouri Srare for the past two a;ea- 66 to Nonh Carolina Slate. Soutti· "Whtn you look a1 him, you have sons, said he'd like to ralk wilh Ohio , wesl Missouri ended ils season 24to look al his body, his toughness, the . Stille abo~ I succeeding Randy Aye111 9.
wuy he plays the game," he said. as roe Buckeyes' basketball coach.
"h's not like I'm looking. I'm
''That's.all important
Alford, a former Indiana star. very happy here," Alford said. "Bur
" He'll huvc 10 play n different
who play&lt;l4! four season_s in the as a coach, you ' ve gol to leayc y&lt;&gt;ur
position small forward bul he ca_n be
NBA, said Thursday lhat no one options open, and when somclhmg
a beller pro than a college player from Ohio Stale had conlacted him of this magnilude comes open,
because he's always bc&lt;:n foul-prone ahout the opening.
· you' ve.goi lo look at il. h 's a huge
here. In our leag~e, they let you play
''I'd be very, . very inlerested, · opportunity."
physical."
.
·
Ihough," he rold Tht Coluntb~ts Dis·
A lelephone message seeking
Cole~ agreed lhat Davis is just
patch for a story_today. •
. .comment on whether Alford is conlapping his potential .
. His Bears ·1Jowed oul of the firsl sidered a candidate for lhe job' was

Bas ketbal l

Tulane's lhn:c-jl&lt;iinl hurrage in ihc
waning moments ahd .tdvuncCcJ tn
lhc second round.
Oklahl&gt;ma Siare (17-14) led 73-61
wilh I :02 In play on Peterson\ two
free lhrows, hul Keith Harris hil a
rhn:e-poinler for lhe Green Wave;
and after lwo Oklahoma Slale free
throws, Chris Cameron followed
with anolher lhree-pointer.
After i 20-second lime out. ,
Cameron hit ycl anolhcr lhn:c-point·
er lo pull Tulane' lo u 75-72 delicil
wilh 39 seconds log&lt;&gt;. but[hc Gn:cn · ·
Wave couldn't score again.

r-1(&gt; Victi111s ()f The
Rece11t Floocliilg

The Mavericks look a two-point

Scoreboard

.

second half," Basion said. "Dunks
The loss kepi Miami ·winless (0con teally bring a team down
6~ againsl Big Ten teams and wilhemoitonally."
out a victory in a national poslseason
· Back-lo-back lhrcc-pointcrs from
.tournament game since f~3.
'
Clark
and Kevin Norris keyed an 11"We had a difficull time adjuit, ·
2 run that, cut Mi~i 's dcficillo 57inf 10 their athlericism,l• Mia,Pi
52 wilh wilh 5:55 to go. Bur Michicoach Leonard Hamihon.said. "They
gan, behind Traylor's two baskers
blocked seven sbots and forced us to
adjust a number more."
and 'a rhrce·poinr play from .Baston.
answered with a 9-0 run to regain
Michigan also gol J 8 poinrs from
control.
Louis Bullock and 14 from Robert
Traylor.
James, who averaged 14.3 poinls
Bo.•ton and Taylor, both 6·9 forfor lhc H.urricanes, wo.&lt; jusr 1-for;8
wards. led a 15-6 spurt lo 'open the
from the noor.
se.:ond half. turning Michigan's one"llhink you have 1o giv~ rhem a
point halflimc lead inlo a 48-38
advant?gc, Baston had six points ·in
the .run, includina a pair of dunk.&lt; and
a pulhack bo.&lt;kct while Thy lor added
a thrcc-poinlcr and a putback:
· "In lhe second half we wen: able
lo gel nut and run the coun." Taylor
said. "When we can run the courr.
we 're at our hesr."
. The Wolverines hir eighl of their
first I I shOis in the half, and !hey pul
hack allrhrec misses aft~r gelling -no
sccond-chapcc poinls in lhe lirsl half.
"We dunked a lol on lhem in the

bloClted a po(ential pme-tying shot

10 preterve Dalla' 109-107 viclory . lead, their first of the final quarter.

On a niahr devoid of l!Rythilll over the B011on Cehics.
compelling in the NBA, enough odd
The Cavaliers allowed 100 or
swff happened to make it at leas! a more poiniS for just the sixth time
bit interesting.
this season. but il rook the Golden
· After all, how many nighrs fealun: S._, Warriors ov~rtime to' do so in
Shawn Bradler scoring a season- a 101-95 viclory.
As for the Raptors, rhey matched
high 31 poiniS, or Donyell Marshall
scoring 30, or rhe Cleveland Cava· rhe longest winning streak ill fran liers allowing more lhan 1()() poin~ shise hislory as they won I03-96 al
· or the Toronto Raptors winning rbcPl- Sacramenlo.
• ·
third in a row?
· · · In other games, Phoenix bear lhe
ThurSday night saw all four.
Los Angeles Clippers ll2-96,
Bradley nor only had his best . 'Detroit ' beat Denver 102-82 and
offensjve night of the season, he also Seatde bea\ Minnesota I08-92.

Michi-gan downs Miami; Oklahoma State defeats Tulane
, · ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Maurice Taylor. who scored 13 .
ichigan is using ilS NIT appearance points for Michigan.
.
sa chance to show the NCAA lour·
"I don't read lhe papers much
amcnl comrniticc it was wrong tci anyway," said Travis Conlan, oiino
'ejccl the Wolverines. .
· had seven rebounds and eight assists.
Michigan took a step toward I hat "II was nice lo just play ball and nor
cdcmplion Thursday · night hy . worry aboullhe orhcr sluff. "
ulling away in lhe second half for
Coach Steve Fisher said he rricd
' 76-63 viclory over Miami in a first- lo 'keep rhc focus ()n baskclball .
i&gt;und game.
· "I think probably I wa.&lt; affected
MncCQBaslon scqrcd 16·ofhis 19 · - nfore {han anyone," Fisher said.
points in the second half for Michi- "We did whar we always dp 'and !old
gan (20-11 ). which stllys home for its our kids, 'Control what you can ....
1 next game Tuesday nighl againsl
Mi chigan , leading 33-32 al half·
• Oklahoma Slalc. which completed lime, controlled everything in rhc
l .rhe firsl round wirh a 79-72 viclory second half againsl lhe Hurricanes
overTulane.
"
(16-13).
" It was fun. " Ba.•ton &gt;'lid. "It was
Miami forward Cli_fron Clark led
• nice 10 JUS! he hack in lhc gym...
all scorers wirh 25 points, but il was
· And it mighl have heen nice. for ·nm enough for lhc Hurricanes 10
1 at lca~l a couple of hours, to forger avoid · rheir seventh loss in eighl
1 rhe adversities in a week that began games.
! with the NCAA lournament snub and
Guard Lucas Barnes added II
1 conlinucd with admissions by Michl- jl&lt;Jints and forward Alex Fraser 10
1 gan of rwo minor NCAA rules vio- for Miami. Forward Tim James. the
1 Ia lions and publhhed rcJl&lt;&gt;rls of pus- Hurricanes' leading sc&lt;&gt;rcr. had just
! sible major infractions.
four points before fouling our late in
:
"What happens off rhe .:oun ynu the game.
1 have to 1cavc off lhe court.'' said

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See us for Your ·

It you Want to expMtnce-. -..,..
phora 01 F - Keys- anondlng
h tnJCic race It •~cm~•r~ drM lhe
:10 mllat 0&lt;10 10 Key~.-· oozy

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10:30 a.m. (a&amp;lrt) and 10:30 p.m. (linieh) • ESPN
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2. ''"' Lltlontl. &amp;OS.

3. w.rtl MIIWI, 584.
. ·4. Jitft Goroon. 582.

........
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Rit:ttt Rudd. 521 .

lrlSlJI,l!'ICI"'

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CII'JEFF

__...

WARNERU
ltcWwtw AfiMY

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a. Jef1Bt11c.t. &lt;49'2.
t . 8otJ!Iy Hamllklfl, .91 .

Boats New &amp; Used
~Prqfessional Service
Guaranteed"

1. 1Wd1!1Qihl,812.
2. Ranay ~- 1102. .
3. Mltll ....,.,, 5111. '.
4. Phil P•KIM. St&amp;.
(li. Slon s.w,., 5'2.
.. ~Jones. $35.
7.,Mitll Oltlen. 514.

1. Fll!;h lk*ll. ~2. BL~~m ....,, aoo.

" -~~~~lllowllllll~lo- ' .

e. Elliot19adlll'. .wa.

v-.

,

Ford w.. dOmiN!nl
~oot~htrace.ln

lng7.48ofa~

1.121 laps mea the fll'l1
race of the year, tne

----·

won hit molt NCtnt
· rHein llplln:btr
1tt2, wMn hi won the

pooll-.

"' ...........

...........

Pal!l _N.....

Seoond s~at Teeim Y41tes

2: .!.eii·Gonton (1) ,,

1. """' ,_..bl (') . ' ,,
This ain't BGN
8. Jell Bunon (Unr11nkld)

• \ HIS power wenl out
3. Tewy Labonte (3)
Faded late in the race
4.
(5)

Dale--

ln~IVed

·

'.

8 RICOIID: 69~ alllrta,
84 - · 59 po!Oo. 214
::!':.~~ ~ , . DarHII Weltrlp cllmba lnlo hll car It Rockingham.
1n !Nmlnga.
a1 Oar11ng1on. Cele (Yart»• HOW ENCOUIIAGIIICl WAS
~
·· ·: .
rovgll) 9""'·me "'•I nome . .

5

WH'f I ·

FNSHINGTHIRDAT •
,An.AkrA7 ·u~•• big
me to atart f.4t front. II I hr,d
boon on the polO ..,ould

de.._.,,

.••.••··. · •.".·.,-.· .. ·-· •.
............, ·"'"'

·.·~
...·'.a.....
_·
.
- -~

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got 1 ~,that will' go tall, I'll

, • WHEN YOU WERE YOUNG.

go fast. If I've gola car that's

OTHER DRIY!RS CAllED

a dog, I don't do much hunt·
lng.'

YOU 'JA:WS.' WHERE DID

s 'HOT

':_lifHI)'I/10'1!

THAT COME F - ? 'I gol H

... WHO I

s

llhi'nk fhc nickmunt: 111\..-y v~
Heproi1ymuchcalledme.a
Jivcn Jeff Oonkm. "Wmuh:r·
.ecklesa drtver after 1e:ame ot1
bl.1y," li\:ally should be Dalt:'s. I
JUfn two end wrecked abOut
"woudt.rr" wll\1 he' ll blame this
ho" lho lleld. 1kllowweek~ fur his loss . I'm just wail~
come ha 111C0gf1lzed a reck·
. lnt ulMil lll.!kt wct.it kl hcnr him
tess driver at Oaftington:
1,:ry Ug:nin. l'nftmrc sttmt."lmc.
Whenhehadacannat
snmci.vhcrc. will do sumclhln¥ tu
1oiouldn't run, he was a pretty'
him lhut c;au~c.~ himlu lu~
roclllessdllvorhimooll.'
8 YOU'VE ALWAYS ENJOYED ·
again,;
As it say11 in the t:ommcNial.
"lnllfc.
the Po: arc ·pas.'il..'lli!l!l'li ami
OerlingiOn Is 'wnat Cup racing
th~tc arc driv..:n;." Muvc nv..:r.
has been artd should be all
IJah!. No wlliner!i &lt;tlltl'Wt.'d. ·
about When 1was young,
•
Jennifer Henley
Darlington was a place Where .
Ossian, Ind.
they really put on a big production .... It was quite a
r
you•n
go!
I .. . . - or 1
apeclacle." ·
. comtMnt1 write: NASCAR
· 11111- Your TUm, c/0 1111

,

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Lumber ·&amp;·
Supply Co..
555 Park St.

Middleport .

992-6611

:~a::;,A:o~~~~~:,:~ON,

Tht'Galan ~ j(jo E. Frw·
In B11!11.Biiklf~(N.,C:~ ~..'. .
The wiMer at-the hail~~ ·

say under me like It needs 10,
I'll~ up there . ... It ain't up to
rna. Irs up lO the car. If I've

WHO~

.

=.~:a~:.~
I'MI,~· --~·l; :·' :~;\

::~~~~~~...

;

at....,

TtJI ..,. In 10Q wordl
Wf'ly Danlll ~ Ia your

Valley

i:..amh;.n.h.

.

T TtiC'I

· .......,.. " '

111111-. Thomolnlhlng,
lhOugh, Is to flnlll:'l ~ lront.~
81T'.IIEI!NALOHGDIW
IPIU. DO YOU THINK

Hello,·Tedl .

.

.

hlvt bttn bthtr. I knew I '
would be c!Me, 8f1d !~knew I

1o. Ricky Cnlven (8)

In ear1y crash

lt'~u wonder hl.''s lastt..Y this
long wilhoul tilli!l¥ himself.
'
At l&gt;ot)ltona.lh: had his ~.:ar ~u~o:l ·
la""-'tl in ,ifwr tu stay in the r:u.\:.
Y~t last Wi.."\.'k ut Rut:kinghum. hL'
want&lt;d a car off the track ror ·
sprayiu1 wutcr. f , tue~s the rules
ure different when you 're l)alc

lnOwensbotO,Ky..

t.llollby l.lbonle (Urnnlllll)
Grond Prix ICO .
' •

5. RustyWIIII$1 (4)

new ~'Dcralicm 'u1vc :i4nnc sun.

lives In FrenkHn, Tenn.

ConHou!lv• lop lives

A lOp 10 ... llnllly

Jl.'~l};u~y i' a.k."IT'Ibll.' mutivalt'll'.
I bclit."Vi.\411111 in 19uics at
DAytona. if yuu huvt.'fl' t won.
ll:Uig il up, gliy. l...cl Mlinc nf !he

by Wlllr!&gt;.
8 HOMEtOWN: Born

Emil lrven'(7) ·

0U111 lhe \YOildertJoy

brnom ·IU sum~onJ: ~lsc's.

Sorlll Koielyn. 4.

·
&amp;.

,f11ult. He UU~htlo SWL'I:p hilS UWfl
fruf'!l·f'un:h !Nfvr..:.hli htk~s. a

8CAR: No. 17
Western Auto Parts
· ~ America Ctlewolel
.Monte Carta, owned

W..1y ranking. by N~SCAPI This Week writer MOrtie Dutton. Lall ~·a·

..

aJilfl.u.t's hdly, il's nevt.-r Dah:'s

Jessica Leigh, 9; and

..

1. Dale Jllmllt (2)

nnt tlnc thin~ . il'to onuthcr. hut by

·

S1evle: end daughhtfs ~ (~~;.

Salurdly, ht
!)Ot a boost lllf\en hiS

' ~ialnpa••*'"''·

g,,_

fo.ult: Or if I~ can't rind thm ..
10 ~Uy," he bl:um.-s lite car. lr it's

8AGE: 50
8PAMLY: Wile,

~t~e 1~ .

Evc..-ry time Dale Eli.ruhan.h

fOil\.'!\~ flll-'C it 'M SOIIICOII\.' \!lsc's

.-,tylng~lm­

IOU011poin1sltastrongest Chaltengtr,
particvla0y alto&lt; J8ll
Dale Jarrett
Michael Waltrip. had a
Gotdon fmhod 42nd,
ltlassia part'break wlttl ·
(that's IU1,) bGcauae of a
she laps to go. -Martin won his 291h
biO'Mllf9n8.
Busch raC8 by- 3.53 MCOO&lt;tt OYtr
· YB1n ta.nmate Ernie trvan fin·
IShed second. 1.38 seconds behind · EM:on Sawy•. He"s challn~ the
record of 31 held by JaCk Ingram.
Jarrett

' --~-·-­
..u.ol•wl.ewHt

Uear y,,~,~r Tum,
1

a.by A-ri torllllr&lt;l
p-11~-~·· more lbout ·

from a t•ra~ cralh by

Jalfll'h'l'"" .....,
.......lllcld

him to fif1t place In the

carlisle , P•.

WIMP 11M won M

riCH flOC), M btnellttd

·-

fobyMcCreory

hit ca,_ 81 Dar·
MnglooR-. .

Wollrlp:

. 614•992-65~0

up our ca.r ill~.":,ally.

on&lt;y ...,_,100 ol

FoniiiCKik live ol the lop seven
wllh c.opOurlng
tM othel' two. It W8l 1\e first I'IC»
IInce a ruin change allowriAg FotU
an extr11 eighth ol an inch
In the front air dam.
BUSCH REPOIIT:
Mattt Maltin Ills ~
good In lho lluo&lt;h Grand
Nallonal OM&amp;ion. And
lhe last two weeks, he's
alto been lucttv. Two

Oa-500.

of th~ k&gt;str driv.;~ who

.wrtek5 c"eryonc:.
' At lea51 my '
lnt!U winli r:uxs without selling

OW D.W., • he II ,,.

II. Jot Rutlmln, 259.
9. Crawltrtt. 2!7.

J . Jill Clretn. 482 .

Syra.cuse•.OH

t~.-;,b.st'! He~ JW!I ~r One

WI.-Cup-. .

5. KeNly Irwin Jr., 217.

e,e'!&lt;'ao.n·"'·
1. JaCII SplaQue, 284.

2131 Karr St.

onlf ~un two, lM&gt; w.hcf'l' do ynu
aet_...off saying thaLy:our man is

ooOoonclrl\'lntl!hotllll

4. Jknmy~.-

.

Marine S•rvlce

Slope. Dah: hal! won !ICVI:Il •
championship!!. Y~mr mnn ha,~

wilwllej gut ICtlve dfl.
. . II DlnoiiWIIIrlp,

3. ~ SluMI, 32S.

rA:w- Your Turn.
My r:~vorill.l l.lrivt.,- illl&gt;;~lc
!!;ynllardl. For unc thing_. J~)~hu01

.....Inti..

10. Tm fedBWL 4!10.

fact. he hli had lhe dominant car INa aeuan, lud-

•

-

IO. IMniRIO. Boane. 481.

fiNALLY, FIRST: Dalt! Jamltt led
253 Dlft ot a poaeitlte 3281ape
Sunday at Auanla, blowll'lg away HW
hid fOf tw1 nrst win of lht ...-..
Jilrratt's Roo.rt

-·

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W..I1011CVP

1.

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'GMIOn Gu.ette, P.O. Box
1NIJ, Qlotonlo, N.C. ji80I3 ot

NOT

..m.uJng •mumyegaet-

. ..

voze!te.com.

:•l"&lt;*!rqomon. """ ..... .
'':~.frif·

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'~'~n ~llilli wllo

..

como fronl ,.,..........
lohll*d.ot .......,IU!
.

V.• Motor Speedway ts
. a bland-new racing venue.

_Tho---·
.. __
-·

t

bul ""' city 1110111 h&lt;oling

lhll

"'"*'• 8ulch Grand

N - _ll,..i!ronva&lt;
Ill mojor·lioguo'-

...

.-g.

li'ICI&lt;.

II

,·~ .

The ~ch hlalory of
NASCAR:

D~n't look-VIII'toFULSabates' teams , : -:~:~it~
·: ··.

If IIHti Dlltln

Ciordun
$l11ML-d tint.

NASCAR ThiS, Wtlk

HAMPTON. Qa. - Ctnlliis·

Sahalcs' s..:t:-

tt::ut:y is noll h.: mark or Felix
Sab411cli' Will51uri Cup l!!am.

und Monte

Sabt.:o's lhl\:e Chcvrti~CI Mom.:
CariOli had kill&lt;} uf u unc·lllepforw11.nl. tWD-tltptl-biU muclf~
·at h:llll in qu;~lifylnJ at Atlanta
MOtor S~ay. 1. ,
R.ubby Ourckm. Sabat~· :!II~ .
y.cnt·dld &amp;oldtn bOy,' Wtin'th..! ·
pt»lt:. scuin1 tt rmCk r~cllrll with
hil\ uvcraac spL"Cd ur IM6.:101.

.~ll~k.lilllfiL'd

CarlO. piluh.."LL
by Jw Ne,tl~e-

Ttl~: p:rft.mnant.~·ufTclun

.

IMing ... 1MDI, moo1

nOiolily ~ lho. Old Oift.jlm

·.

In ttJ1MOI. bdh t=annua
One lind lncly()lr·, _ -

" ' lllmiiOII'YcltOull
'~--l&gt;tpolldng

.

cc:pjrlgttl1tl7
'

'

latit. Ncn~~:·
ctwt w011
fon;c:d totltk.:
S·
a pmvhliutlal .
the rounll ~ntl fuml un..:.lcuvlnJ
him 42nd. !iu~· thlrd.Chi!V)'.
with Wally Dall..mb!IC:h bl·hintt
thl: wbl."cl. 01~ oot qualify.

WEI!U.: In til..:
l.l.:~piic 1wo viet uri.:~ und a
Ridtr and di1veJ
·
rrtm..:~lur ~00. Jeff Gurdtm IIL'I· fuunb-pluce fi,lish. Gordon
'
·,. ~ ~n 'Qbt .; . '
thcr wuu Ill~ he did u1l&gt;uytonn
dnlpflL"ll wdl niT the race in the . ·
~~~ &amp;Lrtrt-rw.nttv to
11
and Ruckinr,hu'm) rutr un¥cn.'ll
NASCAR JXIint~ funnul11.
•
.;:orne·Up ~'~. kX~ - ·-r
man)' nf his fdlnw cum~tium
··tl'sunfununul..:.' ' ~ai~
l; . · ~AA~·~·read- '
(as he did at Richrmm0 1•
Qqrdtlll. "and il 's lt!~lillttlo t:usl
· -.,m , · . ~· ·'· .. ,
lnl'KI.Ourlk•• didn 't have
us. Wc'l\: ~uinw lobuvc tu light ~' ~rf· . l ,, , :u~~~
tinlt:' It» du mu~o:h tlr anylhinf_. His bat.:k hartllikc w..: always'du. All
. . Mnd -~-·~ mik~*'
1
JpcJnc r~~ii~.Y artt:r onl)' SY lap!!. · you tan W 1.11 !'Utile abt,Mit it
__. '.;, ~-..,_,_. ..._,. ·• •
1
. "'~lint Pt•tJOn wil~;a IIIli!~
Thcl'\:'11 always &lt;~nntht..T day.
b ' • .you OM' hiek~ nMCi
.plbce linillh. So lunJ. putnllt:ad.
··Yuu can't cvt.'T quit Thatjusl
• • ~; The rrilkbOt- _
. "II WI.IK,IIk.: a huj~ rumbJiUJ. 'u llhOI,, yuu those IWII Win!! wKI
·~ djlt ·k~,... . . ..,.,m .
hu~\1t:Xpltniun under IIJC hOOd." tliatrfuunh ddrft ~~~~~~ ;tU)Ihinte:
., ~i ~ ;~ ~~~ HSY
· ~ail.! WorKicrboy. ·'h blt:W up:
wfL,, Mllltt:thiutt lik~o•this hap- ...... . ~~S.,:.~
1,
lUld It bh.'w ~p big."
. [li.'D~ ...
'I\ I
~your !fUnk. IIICQ-.

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·Advertise on this .page·
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At Welt Palm BeiCII, Fla., Sllat- ,
man Obaucki !Jjla two-n~~~ triple and ~
Henry · Rodripez had a two-nan :
•
homer in MOIIII'ell's four-na eilflth. •
"GreJ Maddux allowed thlee hits ;
in four shutout&lt;inninp for the :
. Braves.
·
•
••
I 1•• I, nrt. 5
.
At Port Charlotte, Fla.. Mike t:
Devereaux had thlee hits llld drove ::
in lwo runs.
~
Roclldell, BJueb 4
.~
AI Chlndler, Ariz., 11.-..ey N- f
liam's 1wo-run homer ci!JIPI'd Col- ~
orado 's six-run thin! innin~.
;:
AtiJidka 6,

c... 5

~

' At Phoenix. Scott Brosiu5 hit a :·
one-out homer in the ninth inning off }
Mel Rojas as Oakland rebounded ;:
after wasting a two-run lead in the •:
top of the inning.
::
hdres 17, Aagels 0 ·
•
AI Peoria. Ariz., Ken Caminiti, ·,
back after resting his lender. left
shoulder, wenl 3-for-3 with his first
· homer of 1he spring for San Diego.

Canadi~ns

also win

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The Peoples·
• pglntpl'ri tt 674-1000

• mason 773-5514

• newhiYen 882·2135

nk

114ANK YOU FOR YOUR HELR
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•qllw . . lllll~loli&amp;wiu.ti . . . PI 11 .............................. ..
u..a-•JIIfr .ll sa.
1 1
1• ;i"l II l, .... lllll ...... i!l~
,...II \Pries . . . . . 't r ISSMIM!Iilltlll
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• loan hotlil e 675-ASN'

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2. All Clec01lllons lit the Ollft Townthlp
Cenu1u111 . ..~be removed by IWch 21et.so
that WOi kere 1R1Y llliln IPihtg cl1ariup.
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NBA games... &lt;Continued from Pase s)

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goal. led Aorida over visiting Vancouver.
The .Canucks have yel,10 win in
March, st(ctching their ·winless
streak to 0-S-2, while Aorida won its ·
second straight for the . first lime .
since Feb. )2. ·
The Panthers, who survived a
missed penalty shot by Rob Niedermayer in their ihree-goal second
period, had scored five goals in their
previous fivi: games before matchinjl
that after 1wo periods. Radek Dvorak
assisted on aU three goals by Sheppard, who "notched his lllh cim:cr hat
uiek.

At Vero BeliCh, Fla., Eric Karras
homered twice and drove ill three
runs for Los AIIJCics.
Danny Tertlbull and Desi
Reliford homered for the Phillies.
Pinta 12, .... s.. 2
AI Fon Myers, Fla., Tony Womack, who won the Pinles' sccond
base job, had five hits and Pillsburgh
took advaJII8ae of {ow Boston emn.
' · Y••- 3, Bl• Jaya I
AI Dunedin, Fla.. Dlnyl Strawberry homered and Andy Plettitte
allowed one hit in five shuloul
inninp.
Royu s, Reda 3
AI Haines City, Fla.• Joe Vitiello
hit his fourth home iun in 19 at-bats,
connecting off John Smiley in the
third.
Dcion.Sanders went 3-for-3 and
drove in a nan for 1he Reds.
White Sox 4, llaen I
AI Sarasota. Fla.:. Wilson Alvarez
pitched six shutout innin&amp;s and Chris
Snopck hit a two-nan homer for
Chicago.

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.ganie
goal-sciH'ing
droughl
with his
Montreal won al Boston. ·Benoit
3, Lilhtniag 0
Travis Green had lwo goals and Brunei, SICphane Richer aqd Mark first of lhc sea.o;on and Stcphanc Mat- ,
teau snapped a 24-gamc dry spell , :
Tommy Salo recorded his fifth Recchi scored for the Canadiens.
Boston pul 25 shots on net in Ihe ~ with a short-handed goal a• St. 1·
shutout Qf the season for the
first two periods, including one C81:h Louis won at Los Angeles.
. Islander.;.
Breu Hull scored. his 39th goal
The win was the Islander,.' first al · from -the slol by Jo1.ef Stumpe! and
and
Chris Prongcr had a.goal and an ~
·Rob
DiMaio
in
lhe
la•l
4:28
of
the
Tampa since April 13. 1994, New
.
assist.
helping "St. Louis build a 4-0 ::
second
pcrind.
'The
shulnul
wa&lt;
York has won only two of the last 14
lead
against
Stcphanc Fiscl.lhroul!h j
meetings wilh 1hc Lightning overall Thibaull's first since Fell. 12. 1996
when Monlr~:al . beal San Jose 3-0, the opening minute of the third peri- ;
(2-11-1).
ud.
. •
The loss dropped Tampa Bay two and the fifth of his career.
With the loss, lhc .Bruins were
"Pram Fuhr made 27 saves fur the !
points behind Mon1real for the final
Blues,
who won consecutive games i
guaranlecd
their
first
losing
season
in
Eastern Conference playoff spot.
lor
lhc
tint lime since Jan. 29·30. :
30 years ..
Caaadlens 3, Bruins 0
Rob
lllakc
and Dimitri Khristich I
Blues 4, Klnp l ·
Jocelyn Thibault .made 35 saves
, Sergio Mnmcsw ended a 29- were 1he only playe" In heal Fuhr. : ·
for his first ~utoul of the season as

Bus. Phorie(304)372~73

Dave·Harris Ext." 104 or Beb AtWood ,Ext. ·105
For More Information: ·
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Call992..2155
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DENBIGII GJ\RRETI' INC.
Ripley, W&gt;/26271

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS!!
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.By KEN RAPPOPORT
only last Tl!esday.
AP Hockey Writer
"I don'l know · how visually
Make way for the new-look New impaired they are," MacLean said of
.
Gilmour and McKay. "They had bad .
Jersey Devils. ·
· The team lhal.made !he neutral- breaks having the puck hit them in
zone trap· famous has suddenly the eye. ·Doug tnade a sreatplay on
become an offe~~Ji~e po1!1crbl)llle, my goal and it's nice to see Randy
sc0rin1 six go-'s for the "SeC:ond · score like thai. He's one of the hardstraiJhl. g&amp;IJ!e in a 6-0 viclory .over est worker.; on lhc learn."
1hc Hartford Whalen on Thursday
MacLean could have said the
night.
.
·'
same for goalie Manin Brodeur, who ,
· "It can'1 be anything else but hav- made 35 saves for his sixth shutoul
ing Gilmour." Devils coach Jacques of the season and 18th of llis career.
Lemaire said of newly acquired
Steve Thomas and Bobby Holik
Doug Gilmour. "It's been four yean also scored as the Devils won for lhe
thai we hadn't gotten a lot of goals. eighth time in nine aames and
This guy comes in and everybody snapped the visiting Whalers' fourscores."
·
galne (3-0-1) unbeaten streak.·
. ~· lhi~l is, the Devils hive been
Elsewheie in the NHL, it was
, scoring even with Gilmour not in.die Florida S, Vancouver 4; New York.
lineup. An eye injury kept the ceil- Islander.; 3, Tampa Bily 0; Monb'eal
ler out for the.previous three games, 3. Boston 0; and St. Louis 4, Los
which included a 6-1 win over the Angeles 2.
Edmonton Oilers.
· F1)-en 5, Ollen 4
Overall, Gilmour's effect has
Eric Lindros. scored with 43 sec.
been- positive: S.incc the Devils onds lefl in overtime 10 lead
acquired him in a trade with Toron- Philadelphia over visiting Edmonton.
to last month, they have· seored 38
The Oilers took a 4-3 lead in lhe
goals in nine games: By comparison. 1hird period when ·Mariusz
.t~c Devils had been averagiq1 2.64 .Czerkawski beat , Garth Snow at
before the trade.
4:38. Bii1 Mikael Renberg tied lhe
The Devils, 111:-2-7 in their Jut 23 game for lhe Flyers when he scored
games: remained tWO pointsJJChilid against Curtis"''Joseph with 3:-19
firsl-pface , Pliilidelphia in the remaining in rel!ulation.
Atlantic Division wilh a Jalne in
Paul Coffey, Joei ·Otlo and John
handj The Flyers beat Edmonton S- LeClair also had goals for Philadel-·
4 .in ~enime 1biii'Sd!ly night.
phia. Rem Murray, Kelly jluchbergGih'\our sci up the Oi:vils' firsl -cr and Ryan Smyth alsq "scored for
goal,,b)!,Johl) Maclean, and Randy .. the Oilers, 3-9-2 in their last 14
McKay "lllul th~ first hat Irick of his ·· games.
•
eight-year NHL~ career. Like
Paatben 5, Canutb 4
Gilmour, McKay was sideli.ne,:l with
Ray Sheppard's lhinl hill trick this
an eye problem, returning to action· season, including his 300th career

.

-:;•

.fM GIIMOft
_,2fHm·
, POr rtltiH,., - or MitCh 12
. IN.C.,. oena....•D111rtbultcl1rY UnlwrMI "-••yndll•tl
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matched its victory total of lasl seastill playing with intensity."
son.
·
The Kings :;till hold a half-game ·
Jile Dumars added 19 points for
lead over the Clipper.; for 1()e seventh
spol in lhc Wcs1cm Conference play- the Pistons, who are :46-17 after finishing 46-36 lasl season.
\ offs.
.
"II 'sa low point in the season for
"II wa-~ his for us 10 getlo a win
our ballcluh." Kings coach Garry St. 1o1al we had all lasl year and with 19
Jean said. "h's lhc first lime all year games left lu _improve on it." Detroit
we· vc lost four in a row."
.coach Doug C::ollins said. "We
Suns 112, Cllppen !16
played ·like it meant something. We
At Los Angeles, Phoenix moved can't crank our. intensity ·level any
within 1WO gumes of lhe Clippers for higher ihan it was tonight.··
the WcstemConference's eighth and
SuperSonics 108
TI111berwolves !ll ·
final playoff spot.
"We needed this one," said
AI Minneapolis. 1he SuperSonics
Cedric Cebal)os. ,who had 26 points kept Kevin Game1t and Tom
JJnd II rebounds. "Earlier in the year. Gugliotla well in check and gol 29
we really didn't know who we were point&lt; from Gary Payton.
chasing·in .the playoff race. Now that ·
Guglioua was _just 1-of-1 from the
we kno'fll, w~ have 10 go after it. We field aftor halftime and finished wilb
feel good right nqw."
13 points. Gumcll didn ' t score in 1he
Kevin )ohnson scored"all 23 of first half and . finished wilh cighl
his points in·lhe final three pCriods poinls on 4-of: II shootiftg.
and Rex Chapman added 16 of his
"You can '1 slop great players, so
22 points in lh,c second half for the whal ;tou try · lo do is force their
I!Uards to go to somebody else,"
Suns.
,.
.
"I think we're L'OminatoJCther at Shawn Kemp said. "We pul some
the right time.'' said Johnson. whc! real pressure on them defensively
and il worked.''
ha-~ played on some very good teams
Scaule has beaten Minnesota 24
since joining the Suns nine years
ago. "We. feel good abou1 our · consecutive times.
.chances of making the playoffs and
perhaps doi.ng something when we
getlhere.''
. ·
·
Pistons 102, Nuaets 82
. At Denver;' Orilnt Hill• had ~
poi!'IS and (4 . rebO'!""s and ~~
Thorpe scored 22 fiOiniS as Delton

:. ··_;..,..polo klr the.AIIInll .

n2NrJf!

V.hlllia, who..,. he wUI becOme 1 which the hcha obllincd in Janu- business. Does he know what lrabu
free .... ill 1!191 if he is - aad- ary from the Chiba lAUe Marines of does II home?"
ed. "My day will come."
On Thursday in New York. Mets
the Japanese t...eaa~.
Boston's new-look infJCid- Mo
"I won't mention teams. but there relief pilehcr Derek Wallace UDderVeughn at first, Velentin, Tim 111: three learns thai hive strong pro- went six hours of SUfl!ery for an
Naehring II thitd base and Gareia- posals. somethina that we will seri- aneurysm in his right shoulder.
patt4- pleyocl its first aame togethously consider," San Die1o seneral
A vein from his les was grafled 10
er, and il showed. The Red Sox com- manager Kevin Towers said from the half-inch aneurysm at the base of
mined four lt10RI errors Thundly, Peoria, Ariz.
.
his throwina shoulder. The 25-yeeradding to the thlee from Wednesday
Two of those clubs are in the AL old WaUace is expected 10 resume
night.
;
ahd one's in Ihe NL.
throwing &amp;Jain after six Ylceks.
"II can happen like that. Just
lrabu's agent, Don Nomura, critIn Tbursday's spring games:
don't get too excited," manager icized New York Mets mana1er
M...u. 4, Orioles I
Jimy Winiams said. "We hive a Bobby Valentine for disputing the
At Melbourne, Fla-, Mlll'lr. Huuon
claim that il was lrabu's childhood pitched four shutout inninp and
&amp;ood infield. I really believe lhal."
The Padres, meanwhile, were dream 10 _pitch for the New York sb'engthencd his claim for a Slartin1
Yankees.
tight-lipped on the lrabu front. ·
joo with Aorida. which improved 10
Valentine managed Cfliba Lotte in IS-I.
·"It's a·non-'1' day," team president Lany · Lucc:hino · said of the 199S, and said lrabu never menCardinals 4, ladlaaa 1
Japanese rilhl-hander who has made . · tioncd 1he Yankees.
At St. ·Petersburg, Fla., Ron Gant
"I don't think Bobby speaks hit a two-run homer off Orcl Heimore 1\cadlincs this sprin1 than any
. other player. "We're not talking or Japanese. docs he'" Nomura said.
shiser in the fifth inning. Ganl has 10
"I don't know what Bobby's · RBis this spring.
f&lt;;&gt;cusing on il, we'_,e.not doilll! any·
thing with respect 10 it. It's time 10 · position is. I think he should conHershiser gave up four runs and
centrate .on. his team and the season seven hits in' 4 2/3 innings and hil an
deal wjth other mailers." .
San Diego has receiVed offer.; right now. I'm stunned with the RBI single.
from nine teams for lrabu's rights, quote from Bobby. That's none of his
Doll,en 5, Phllla 2

Devils harpoon Whalers 6·0; Flyers and

• Truck Florida Dodge Dea..,._..oo

..."'.......""'"'

By TOll WITHER8
AP Sparta Wtll
.
While Joha Vllentin took his
new position with the Boston Red
Sox, the Su Dieco Padres slated
theirs on the' Hideld lrabu affair.
· Valentin made his debul as 1 second baseman on ThurSda)' in Fon
Myers, Fla. The former shortstop.
rc&lt;:eived a loud ovllion when lie was
announced.for his firsl at-bat against
the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The 30-year-old protested
Bos1on's dec;ision IO•move him to
second base .earlier. this W~=Ck by
leaving training_camp. He came
blck a day la1er, ~eceived a $500 fine
and asked the Red Sox to consider
trading him.
But after his .first outing playing
!llongside the man who look his
place - Nomer Garciaplirra Valentin ·sounded every bil the team
· player. · ,
·
· " If the R~ Sox want me to play
center field, third base, w()atever,l'm
goin1 to do what they say," said

..In .the NHL,

a ltnch LH 'Hg81 300

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Bo.Sox·put Valentin at .second; Padres·mum about lrabu

••

See stewiiii_,D.,.

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

•

On baseball'• .,.,ng training .cene,

MUFFLER SHOP

1112·2118

Frldlly• ....,.. 14, 1117

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... Qerdo 1101111
I""_.
Mein
1

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-eiSitarwBtiiiJtQW'dl
Ladi.. a.u Rd., lllltlond
•. . .. Dewey Ki"'
Sundayldlool· 9::10 Lm.
Sunday wonllip -7 p.m.
Wodnnday JftJCf -11111· ·7 p.m.

X.. CHrdlllc.otol
Wonbip. 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 Lm.
........J&lt;ftrey Wallaao
bland lrd Sunday
A RJdet Chrdl .tDrtll
Puior: Joct Cole-

Sunday School-9:30 .....
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm, 6:30p.m.
Wednaday Servicca - 6:30p.m.

......
• •

s::z

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Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonltip • 10:30 a.m.
Flnl Soolllen lol"bt
· 41872 Porncroy Pike
Pulor: E. Lamar O'Bryan1
Sunday School- 9:30a.m. ·
Wonltlp . 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednctday Scrvicca • 7:00p.m.
..... Bo!lllll Clovcll
Putor: Mark Morrow
6ch and Palmer St., Middlepott·
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonrlllp • IO;IS Lm., 7;01) p.m,
Wednctday Scrvir;e- 7:00p.m. •

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TlooCioordiiiJ-

Pucor: ~-~~~Bater

lf_....G.... ao-

Paalor: GencZopp
, Sunday school-10:30 o.m.
Wonhip -·9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

· llelllleRmBoplbt

Kaedmlle Cbordo olQrlll
Putor: Philip Stunn·
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonltip Service: 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study, W........_y, 6:30p.m.

Hantonl Clnm:• ol Clorlallo
~Uelooo

SI.'RI. I &lt;13 j1111 off HI. 7
Putor: Rev. Jomeo II.. Acree, Sr.
SOOiday School - 10 a.m.
. Woiship • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wed d•y.Servias -7 p.m .

Hartford, W.Va.

Pulor: Rev. DIYid McMonis

Sunday School· II a.m.
Wonltip • 9:39 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednaday SeNic:ea - 7:30p.m.

Yldary llopllol ............,
'2S N. 2nd St. Middlepott
POliO&lt;: JIUI1CI E. Keeo«

Church of God
ML Mwlolr Cltoidi II God .

Wonhip - JOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wod-y S.Nices • 7 p.m.

Rlcinc

Paalor: Rev. Jameo Sauerfield
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wodneaday Servica- 7 p.m.

. , .... Bopllil Clt•n:•
IWiroad Sl., Muon ·
Sundar, School- 10 a.m.
W':!:- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wed
y Scrvlcca • 7 p.m.

........ Ctt.-a of God
Putor: Randy Barr
Sunday Sdrool • 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnaday Serv~ -1 p.m.

.,._. Ruw Blpllol
PIIIOr; Ariua.Hun
Sunday School- 10 o.m.
Worship .. 11 a.m.

MI. Morta•lllpllll
.
Fourth .t. Main St., Middleoort
Putor: Rev. Oilbert Craia, Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonllip • 10:4S Lm.
.

Sunday Sclrool · !1:30 a.m.
Wonllip- 10:45 Lm.
Thunday Scrvic:eo - 7;30 p.m.

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Second 4 i..ynn, Pomero)'
Paltor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday Khool and wonllip 10:2S

Episcopal

=~~p=

Re&lt;101: Rev. D. A. duPlantier
Holy EudurriOC and
Sunday Sdoooll0:30.a.m.
Coffee hour'followin&amp;

Churd1 of Chr ist

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a.,212 W. Malo 5I.0rt1t

. _ . . H_Cit_
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31057 Storellouu: 32S, .Lonpvlle
Putbr: Dr. J.D. Youna
Sunday Khool· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday wonltip • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wc:dncldoy prayer ocrvice • 7 p.m.

.......
. .....,/f"W....... a.diiiCiorlol
33226 Chlldn:n'l Home Rd.

Church
annoqncements
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spon8ored by these.area·
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DAVIS-QUICKEL

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Wonltlp-10:30Lm., 7 p.m.
_
_CiropoiOo.-a
S...Jodlooi·IOLm.
. Wonltlp • II Lm. ·
Wednuclay Service· 7 p.m.

...... ~Ciorudo

, Roeloel'lnl Clo_.lllhlf-nue
Paa1or: Scolt Role

c

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U-Mao-h .

.

Sy..._ Ctrordo llflh 1"••-..
l'lllor: Bill Stira
Sunday School , 9:30a.m •
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6.p.m.
Wc:dnc]ldoy Servic:ea - 7 p.m.

Tappen Plllu Sl. l'llul

r-royOolll"dloi!MN...,...
Paalor: Rev. 1"h9mu Mr:CiunJ
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. .
Wonltip- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wc:dnclday Scrvicea •·7 p.m.

'

Pastcir: Kerrh RadcT
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship. 9 a.m.
fltriPulor: Keilh Rader ·
· Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonrllip- .II a.m.

RAWUNGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
812-5141
264 South 2nd

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Sunday School· 9:30 Lm. ·
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneldly Scrvic:ea ~ 7i3o p.01.

Ertao Urtllotl. llw•lll C1or1o1
ll/2 milrl norlhof~ille
. ... - ROuli: 124
-.Rev.
1to1rert Mmley
Sunday Scboot • II a.rw.
Sunday Wonltlp • 10:00 a.m. A 7:00p.m.
Scrvlca - 7:30.p.m.
w-..y Youllr Service- 7:30p.m.

w-.,

Tlfa San Bernardino Sun
Tips from "100 Ways lo Motivale Yourself "
($15 .99; Career Press):
-Kill your television .
You can ·actually change your life by turning off
your television . Maybe jusl one. evening a week 10
slart wilh . Do you really . wanl your life and your
schedule to be ruled by whaltime a TV show is aired?
. · - Leave your friends,
.· Politely walk away from "friends" who don 'l sup: port your goal s. The people wilh whom you associ,ale
will change ,your Jife. If YOU aSSoCiale Wrlh cy mes,
. lhey ;ll puU ·you down wilh them . If you associale wilh
; plmple who support you in being happy and successful, you will have a head starl on being happy and sue· cessful.
·
·
· _ Pain I your day .
Think of y9 ur day as a blank arlisl's canv~s. If you
• go lhrough your day passively accepling wha1ever
· other people and circumslances ,spaller on your can·
• vas, you will"have a some'\'hal 1roubled mrnd when
.
,
,
.
.
_you go 10 bed.
Thinking of your day as a parnter s canvas ' wJII

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CII'IICOIIIaluf•-r ' "'e'al CHrdl
Ki~Road

. . l'laiDr: Jeff Srwllh
Su!lday Sclrool· 9:30 .....

.
Wonltrp Slnice 10:30 Lm.
No Sunday~ Wodnnday Nilltl Scrvic:ea
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Bold"""'· .. Co. Pd. 31
l'lllor. Rev• . _ Willford
Sunday Sdrool· 9--'0 a.m.
Wonltlp- 7 p.m.

Crow'a.Family

214 E. Main

992-5130 Pomeroy

SWISHER lc LOHSE

PHARMACY~
We F~l Doctors'
Prescription~

Pomeroy

POMEROY, OHIO

your,_.,.,

SECnONI

v.tnna

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ll11nort.a You don't have to look far
to spy the best buys in the
115 E. Memorlll Dr. POII\eroy'
classifiedsl

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992-2104

982-225$1
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allow you 1o be more conscious of what is happening
iq!you when you flood your mind with nothing but
office gossip, commercials on the radio, the latesl
murder trial, your spouse:s crilicism and mindless
mrJ~ic . If you'IJ allow yourself to see your canvas filljngJ!p with alllhese lhings, a certain freedom occurs.
Il'srlhe freedom to choose. · ·
+- Do somelhing badly.
's'&amp;melimes we don't do things because. we' re ~ol
surd...,e can do them well. We .feel · thai were nol rn
lhe wood" or atlhe right ene~gy I~ vel I? dothe.lask we
.ha¥lt_l0 ao, SO We pUll I off Or Wall for r.nspJraiJOn, The
~o~t.commonly kno.:vn 'example of,'hrs p~enom~non
·" what wruers call . wrrlers block . The block (or
lac~.,~f sclf-~otrvalron) occ urs not because 1he wmer
thtnlls he can I wrrle well.
.
.
The cure for wriler 's .block - and also lhe road IO
self;-J!l~IJvalron - rs srmple. The cure rs IO go ahead
a~d wnte ba41y. By lhe m~re. •.c.~ of tyr,mg , you h_ave
dt se~pow~red the pes~Jmrslrc vorce lhat . tned to
convi!J~e ,you noll_o wru.e. Now you are wr.Jttng . And
once )ipu re ·m acuo~, 11 s easy to p1ck .up lhe en.ergy
and prGI&lt;. up the qualuy.

-7011

172 Narltl9•ao.-1CIIwe. \ ·
Oh
•l

· HOBSON :. Hobson Christian ·
Fellowship Church, revival Sunday ·
lhrough March 23. Evangelist, John .
Elswick. The Unroes from Crown :
C i 1~ will sing, Sunday; Jan and ·
Cathy, March 21. Servi~es, 7 p.m . .

eac·h evening.
EASt MEIGS -- Easlem Win1er :
Sporls Banquel for boys and girls :
varsily bas kelball will ~ held Sun- :
day, I :30 p.m. a1 lhe high school. ·
PareniS are asked 10 bring a finger :
food and dessert. Table service and :
drinks will be provided .
MONDAY
RACINE·· Racine Village Coun- :
cil in recessed session, 7 p.m Mpn- :·
day althe. municipal building.

·u\11

.ADVERTISING IN THE

TV TIMES
AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND . '
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

'

t '.,
~

·~y LESLIE BOYD

TIM!:

SNOUFFER
EWING FUNERAL HOME
FIRE 6 SAFETY
"DDgnity'and s.mce A/wMys• .
SALES 6 SERVICE
Ellablllhed 11113
1108 EAST MAIN

CARPJ?NTER -- 7 J&gt;.m. Salurday
at CafJ&gt;Cnler Baptisl Church, CarJ&gt;Cnler, Bluegrass GosJ&gt;CI Singers,
The Adkins family, and lhe Summerville Family. John Elswick. pastor.

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

Soothe child before cryin~gets out of control

992-5432

I

LETART -- Lelarl Township
Truslees, Monday, 6 p.m . al lhe
office building .

SUNDAY
SATURDAY
POMEROY ·· The · Rev. Aruis
·sALEM CENTER·· Suir Grange Hurt, pastor of Foresl Run Baptist
778 and S1ar Grange 878, regular Church, guesl minisler at the Naonii
fun nighl and polluck supper, Satur- Bap1is1 Church, fl a.m. Sunday.
day, 6:30 pm al lhe hall. Meigs
County Grange Youlh Group will
meel al Slar Grange Hall at 7:45 / HOBSON ·· John Elsw ick, evangelisl , revival Sunday lhrough
' p.m. All members urged to allend.
•
March 23, Hobson Christian Fellowship Church, SR 7. Sunday Unroe
RUTLAND ·· Signups, Rutland Family of Crown City; special
Youth League '97 season Saturday, 2 singing each evening.
10 4 p.m. and March 20, 6 to 8 p.m.
a11he Rulland fire hou se.
POMEROY ·· Big Bend Sternwheel Fes1ival comminee, Sunday, 2
RACINE •· Southern Junior High p.m. all he Caf)&gt;Cnter's Hall.
all-sporls .banquet, Sal~rday, 6 p.m.
MONDAY
Each family to lake two covered
dishes, Southern High School.

tJ

-

·'

,.
CLEANING?
Reetaurartt ·
c•n out
or
'Featuring K.ntlielly Fried Chick.,'
ilfllc,with t1» help of the
228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

.

DANVILLE -- Revival services
. al lhe Danville · Holiness Church,
Langsville, will be held lhrough
Sunday. 7 p.m. each e\iening . The
Rev. Tom Reed of Chicago, evangelisl, and lhe Rev. and Mrs . Johnny
Blair, Portland Ind., song evangelisls.

ling !heir mind conlrol !heir feel- ideas you'll gel. Crealive 1hinking is wilh it a higher succes s rate.
and they know it.
The mosl importanl change is to :
only a habi1 , not a J&gt;Crsonalily trait. " ·
Out of fear, people are reluc lanl . ings," he says.
ll's never 100 old lo slan,,anq it's
-Take a walk and give yourself pic k . a goal and take steps toward •
10 know lhemselves and acknowlachicvi'ng it.
. .:
edge whal pushes !heir buuons, he important 10 begin small and work a break from informalimi overload.
"The
righl
side
of
the
brain,
or
"Most
aduhs
respond
to
.the
uni:
up
to
bigger
tasks,
Chandler
says.
says. But doing thai opens doors lhat
that's
why
they're
somis;
subconscious
mind,
never
has
a
verse
and
He gives tbese molivalioriallips:
ullimalely are more rewarding.
- Ask yourself whal you want, chance 10 gel a word in edgewise erable. They see their whole life as
So how docs it work?
One of the firsl steps is overrid- whal would you like to hapJ&gt;Cn? because you're a)ways receiving reacling 10 lhings," Chandler says.
. ing the negali~~ inlemal .v!?ice that Most people.take •.the,l:asy_.waY. out stuff,"·.he $ays. ·~ By .seuing asic)e .a ,, " The real joy in life is. to reclai!!)
Says " I can't" 6r " I don't w.ant to " by lhinking'inore about what they're half hour with no agenda. we come that feeling of making a differe'nce.
or "I don't have lhc energy now " do afraid of, ralher than using their ere· : up wilh greal ideas and figure oul For a person lo be happy, lhey have .
how 10 be more.efficient."
to turn il around and make !heir life
alivily to imagine whatlhey want.
somelhing, he says.
- Wiile down your goals. When one of crealion."
"Thai lakes us lo a higher pla"e
Acknowledge lhat.you don' l feel
like il, but tell yourself it's in your of creali vity," Chandler says. "The something's wriuen, it lakes on
besl inlerest to do lhe task , he says. more you lhink aboul lhat, lhe more more significance and usually brings
When finished , lake nole of how
good you feel .
The more you cuhivate lhe
slrong, posilive, inlernal voice, lhe
.easier it is 10 draw on, Chandler
says.
·· " The book has a lot of lillie men.tallricks on how to regain 'conlrol of
lhe mind . Mosl J&gt;CO'ple lei !heir feelings run lheir mind, inslead of lei-

r

~

..

..

"Welcome to 911. If you would
like lo reach the mayor's office,
please press I . If you wish lo com Dear Unlisted: Mad e m , s n' l
men! on Broad Streel's traffic prob- it? Thanks for sharing your agony.
lem,. please press 2. U you would All of us have been !here.
like :he daily public school lunch
'
menu, please press 3.1fyou wish lhe
Gem of lhe Day: One of lhe sad
phone numbers of our county com- incquilics of life is thai a lie can
missioners , J&gt;lease press 4 . For their travel halfway around the world
nexl meeling date·, press 5. For .. before lhe lruth can lie ils shoelac es.
infm;ma1ion on our Fourth of July
ce lebralion, press 6. If you wish 10
Send questions to Ann Landen,
report a fire, press 7. If you wish to Creators Syndi&lt;ate, ,5777 W. Cen·
report a crime. press 8. If you need .tury Blvd., Su.ite 700, Los Angeles,
medical help, press 9. Thank you. Calif. 90045
1

.

f

WWII'o Cloltrol W..,..
CoolvlO. Road
· .... Pttllllp R.......
Sclrool .• 9:30 ..... .

.

· REEDSVILLE ·· Special meeling of lhe Olive Township Trustees,
7 p.m Friday al lhe township build·
ing.

Tips on gettiqg.motivated .

. ':s'.t,"":'
"""':t;.''
·

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announ~e
meeting and special events. The
calendar is. not designed to promole sales or fund raisers of any ·
type, Items are printed as space
pei'Jillls and &lt;annot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
FRIDAY \
CHESTER
Chester
baseball/softball associalion registralion Friday, 610 8 p.m. a~d Salurday, 9 10 II :30 a.m. Chesler Elemenlary School.

~
I

Sil"!!' liMo

Pwrh,. Flnl OU'dl oltlte N•nn..
Pastor: Mark Mallon
WonhiP. • 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School - 6 p.m.
Wcdnrsdlry Scrvic:ea.• 7 p.m.

992-2955

To- Conun001lly olf CR 82

Pulor: Robeit ltuber
School· 9 o.m.
10 a.m., 7 p.m.
W
Service· ?p.m.

Rllllud c;ltordl ollhiJiwn Putor. Samuel Buye
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednuday Scrvic:ea • 7 p.m.

Brogan-Warner '
INSURANCE
SERVICES

v...... .........

Ill 01111 Qerdo

.

Sol6 lltlllii.Ntw T=d·

c - Clturcb oiiMIJionnoe
· Pastor: .... Herben Orale
· Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonrlllp : 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
WedneldroJ ScNic:ea • 7 p.m.

Unrtccl BrrtiHPn

33045 Hilarid 11.._ l'umeruy
Pulor: ROy Hunter
s.-y·Schooi-IOa.m.
· EYetlilll 7:30 p.m.•
Tuaday lr: Thunday - 7:30 p.m.

Wednt&gt;lday Services •7:30 p.m.
Eotl~

Wonltlp·IOLII! ...

hii~ :IWt•ILt

Putor: Rev. Charles ~11sh
Wonhip • 9:30 'a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF. Sunday 6:30p.m.
Firoc Sunday of Month - 1:30 p.m. ~rvice

Worship • 11 a.m.

M'!l' ...........
Sunday SdlooJ. 9 o.m.

Rt 7 on Pomr...,..Jiy.J'ut '
Pucor; .... R - E. SmKh, Sr. .
Sunday School ' 9:30 i.m.
Wonhip-ID-.JIILm., 7p.m.
Wrdnrlday strvice • 7 p.m.

ClotordaoiiMN-Paalor.MarkA.Duoler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonltlp ·10:45 o.m., i p.m.
Wodnetday Sc~~-7p.m .

Worship · 10:30 a.m.

""'

MI. Olm
Clovcll
1'1110&lt;: La.........Suriday School ' 9:30 o.m.
8YOIIilll· .7p.m.
Wodnedoy SerVice· 7 p.m.

Mlddleporl Cloon:• 111M N-n•
POliO&lt;: GtrJOIY A. Cundiff
Sunday Sdrool· 9:30a.m. •
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wc:dnclday Scrvioeo • 7 p.m.

~~.
i - 9:30a.m.

Cettlnl Cluster' ·
""""' csr,rocaM)
,Paslor: Oar cs Neville
Sunday School - 9:45 1.10.

Suncla;=!,. 9:30a.m. .
Wonhlp • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednuclay 7:30p.m.
.•

Sunday School · 9:30 Lin.
Wonrllip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednaday Scrvic:ea • 7 P·!f!·

SIOiday'

Sunday Sclloot • 9:4S Lm.

MI-lia '

.

.

By JANET ZIMMERMAN
negalive thoughls, ,t,h at prevenl ful . The San Bernardino Sun
fillmenl of goals ..u'\\lhich can range
: Motivalional speaker Sieve from weigh! loss rto financial sueChandler used lo be cynical. believ- cess.
'~.
ing tha.t life was unfair and he had no
He designed 11:te book 1o be a
c(!ntrol over his desliny.
·
user-friendly guid~ . 1o self-propelled
Tben .he read a book prom01ing personality chan~ Wilh short trips
lhe Idea 1~a1 "we be~or:11e .wl;\at we broken dowq, i"rVA IOQ s~gl!)en)s.
lhink.it"~M!.J1.lkd.o,Y:¥»li:1~,l, ~~ ., _, · . Chandler wanls eaded~lo··step land
· That .\lias Oie'liegfnlfllfg Cif'll·per- think abour•e1f~tjlan ·1ferore · g&lt;Jint
soilal,, growlh jou111ey thai· SJ&gt;llnned on to the next
nearly two decades· and was 1he
Chandler, . 52,,;says he offers
basis (or his new b,ook , " 100 Ways . somelhing thai lhe 'counlless olher
to Motivale Yourself'' ($15.99; self-improvement ~ urusdon 't.
Career PJ:css).
. "Whal separatu me from other
'"That concepl jusrhil me like a motivaliomil ~J&gt;COkers is lhat a lol of
drug. Thai thought alone gol me them say, 'This is W.hall 've done all
going on ·a whole new life," Chan- my life.' Mine is l~t opposite. I say
dler says. "I lhoughl -if this were ' This is how lhings .used lo be' and
lrue, then any huni~n being could · lhi~ is how Ihis is hl'lw 1hey are now. ·
creale who lhey wanted IO become if And lhese are 'the swps I lOOk 10 lurn
they 're willing 10 do 1he work." ·
lhings around.'" ·.. r
.
Chandler refined 1he concept and
Most.people operate at IOpercent
now leaches il 10 others. His book of. !heir potenlial .' ~handler says.
offers techniques for Jelling go of They are wasting .t!Wir capabilities

DJ•••c·
·~a-ce.
Sulldoy School - 9: a.m.

Nazilrene

_,_

.

--'""'zlwlw Clorudo
Wonltip-oa.m.

er-r

CO.Rd.63

Putor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- II a.m:, 6:30 p:m.

Sunday School • 10 o.m .
Wonltip • II a.m.

lluol c
. IIi
Olfll. 124
Pulor: Bdoel Hart ·
.Suotday ~ • 9:.30 o.pr.
Wanhip • 10:30 Lra., 7:30p.m.

Sunday School- 9-.30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

· NonlleuiCJ-..

l'ulori .... Kriaana lolririooa

• I

THE WINNERS- Receiving prlzea tor being the top candy aellers
In a Cheeter Elementary School lund releer were. from the lett,
Brldley Smith, Denlel Buckley, and Codey Gerlach. Buckley as the
top Hiler recelvlld $50; Smith, uconct place wlnner:'$25, and Gar·
'
' ·Q
l~ch, third place winner, $10,
.
· .
,,, . .
,

You have selec1ed 9. All of our per,
sonnel are busy a1 1he monienl, bu1
please hold 1he line, a nd lhe nex1
avai labl e represenlative will be wilh
you. In the meamime, enjoy 1
music ."·· Unlisled in Chicago

Feeling out
&lt;if
touch?
Here's·
how
to
get
motivated
.

-

I •

T-Ciovdl

MelD Coojrerlllve Porllll

r

s,.._ .llnt u.IIIIIPI:A:;IIilliiia

1411BridprnanSt.,S,_
Sulldoy School· 10 a.m. .
EYCtli111·6p.m.
Wc&amp; 1') Slnb: .I 7 p.tn,

Graod Sln:et
Sunday Suhool-10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
WednadaJ S.Nices - 8 p.m.

•-= ....

Paator: Sharon Hausman
Sunday SchOol - 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7:30p.m.

.,,._.....

Sa!Hiay 8vcol111 7 p.m.
ThurodaJ Service • 7 p.m.

H•&lt;" D011ChM

Olive Ualled Melloodlal
Off 124 behind Wilkenlllr
Ralph Spim
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m. .
Wonhlp • I 0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Thuraday SeNica • ~ p.m.

· 10a.aa.

~~

TOWDihip Rd., 468C
Sunr!ay School • 9 a.m.
Wonllip-IOa.m.
Wednctday Scrvir;et -10 o.m.

M~

a-.m.

'

l'lalor: .... Clott Babr

Boiloyii.001Road

ilellroiCioordl

GrobamUolledM......_
W""hip • 9::10 a.m. (tal A 2nd Sun),
7:;!0 p.m. (lrd &amp; 4th Sun)
.
WcllnelCiay Servia: - 7:30p.m.

Hot mess

Chrdlot

l'ulor: Neil Pruad(ool
Sunllrry School-'9:30 o.m.
Wonltip- 10:30 Lm, 7 p.m.
. WcdnOodoy Scr&gt;ic:ea • 7 p.m.

~

.

'II

ThildAve.

w-..
...... ,...,.To,, ."ltCioudr
.._, ....

Putor: Helen Kline
. Ceolrille Clolll"dl
Main .t. Fifllr Sl.
S...tay 5droot - 10 a.m.
Wonlli~ • 9 a.m.
Tuaday Scrvrc:ea- 7 p.m.
'

Mtll:az;cart PtJt

'"

m

CtioMII!t U~~iled M......_ , _

Wonllip·lla,m.

d•y Servicn • 1 p.m.

who thought up lhe idea of voice
mail10 get stuck calling 911 wilh a
real emergency and have 10 face
something like this:

......;.,______,:.·Com rn unity cal en dar----'---·"---

EvcninJ • 7 p.m.

Wedl

. l'lllor.SamAndoaon
Slllday SchooiJO a.m. ·
E-ma-7:30p.m.
1 Service. 7:30 p.m.

-

Rev. Oecwge Weirick '
Sunday School- 9:4.' a.m. ·

.

think he's loaded. lhe money he 10 clean up his act.
SJ&gt;Cnds cnlertai ning you ~mes out
Dear Ann Landers: Recently, I
of our children's college f d.
misdialed a long-distance number
Women like you are ho e wreck- and got someone's answering
ers. How wonderful il wo ld be if machine . It took a minute or two to
you and your 'kind told those mar· realize my mistake . When I called
ried men who make J&gt;liSSes, "You the telephone company, hoJ&gt;ing they
should be .ashamed of yourself. Go would negate the charge, I found
on home where you belong, and pay .. myself talking to another machine.
attention to your wife and family . No. I didn ·l want to add a phone or
You made a commiw.ent. Now live other services. Finally. between 1he.
up to it." --His Wife in Maryland
music and end lessly repeated
Dear Ml\fYiand: I have a lheory recordings, a live J&gt;Crson solved my
thai every person who reads Ibis col- problem in one minute. But il look
umn sees him- or herself a1 some almos1 30 minule s 10 get 10 her, and
lime or anolher. I' II bet a lol of !hose it was exhausting and fruslraling.
Other Women are going lo have a . · ' This recorded message business
hard lime looking in the mirror. I has gone too far. ll's impossible 10
hoJ&gt;C your adolescenl hu sband reads get a rea l, li ve J&gt;Crson on lhe phone
lhis and decides lhe lime has come anymore . I'd like lhe programmer

LONG BOTTOM -- Hymn sing,
Friday, 7 p.m. Failh .Full Gospel
Church, New Covenant Singe rs .
Steve Reed. paslor.
·

....
'IJ.'
St. R1. 124, Rociue
1'1110&lt;: William Hollocl&lt;
SundaJ Sdrool • 10 a.m.

'DMk&amp; 10 · .::zCitPart 51., Wi=P 11r1

':::",% ·

5I. hoi Lalhru Clooreb
Corner Sycamore .t Seeond 51., Pomeroy

Pastor: Bob Randolplr
Worship· 9:30 a.m.
.Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

Congregational
1'rblltY Cburcb

........ 11tor1 Colllol1c Curd
161 Mulberry Ave., Pcmt:roy, 992-S898
p_, Re•. Woller E. Hrini'
Sri!-Con. 4:45-5:t5p.m.; w- 5:30 p.m.
, Sun. Con . ..g,4,·9:15 a.m.,
; Son. • 9:30a.m.
Dolley • 8:30a.m.

P.....-:BrianHarltncaa
~nday Sdrool • 10 a.m.
Wonlrip·ll Lm,

Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
SUndly Sdtooland Worship:. 10 a.m.
Evcni111 Scr&gt;lceo- (:30 p.m .
Wednesday Scrvrces ·7:30p.m.

Wednctday Service• • 7 p.m.

Catl101 tc

OvSwYioorLa...... Clturcb
WalnUI and Henry Sts., RavetiSwood, W.Va.
lnUim puton: RCY. Robert Hupp
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m,

Syronool'lnl Cbun:b of God

W~ip·lla.m .

••h"" ,._ ,VIIIIlpllol
. Salem St.
PaiCor: ....,raul Taylor
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenioa·7p.m.
WedJteldoy Servica • 7 p.m.

=BriaoHarltncaa
SundaySc:hoOI - IOa.m.
9 a.m.
W
y - 7p.m .

'

Now Uli Vlftot7 Cwdor
Jm a-... Oeet:lload. Oalllpolio, oil
1'1110&lt;: Bill 5111011
Sunday Scrvica • 10 Lm. A 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday' 7 p.m. A Youdi·? p.m.

W......,y .,.ice· 6:30p.m.

Eooll.tl.-l

Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirick
:Worship· 9:00a.m.
Surlday School-10:00 a.m.

Cbnler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thurwday Services· 7 p.m.

C~arda of God of Prapll~cy
OJ. Whil&lt; Rd. off St. Rt. ltiO
Putor: PJ. Orapman
Sunday Sc:hool • 10 a.m.

.Aollqolly lltrpllal .

·-

"

!

Pcntecostill

• .. a.-11...,..
.
(at Burl...... dluldl off~ 33)
Pallor: Robort v...
s-a. wonlllp ·10 .....

Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 9-.30 Lm.
Wonbip- 10:45 o.m. (Joe .t.lrd Sun)

.

' ,_,

Rail • • c
'" Qerdo
'l1laoo
Durtwll
Sunday • 9:30 o.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednaday-7p.m. .

Sunday School· 9:45 a.m.
Wonlrip. 10:30 1.11.
Thunday Scrvica . 7:30 p.m.

s~ 1... Lalkru Ooorclr

and
Jlcv. Marplel J. RobiiiiOII '
Scrvloea: Wedoiaday, 7:.30 p.m.
. Sunday, 2:.30 p.m.
liftriJmoRd.,

-

M...... Sior

Lutheriln

·

Tlool. •••'folo1:5l......, ,,

CIIWII

Fix.

I'

· Wonltlp-7p.m.
Tlnrnclay Service - 7 p.m.

w-

.

Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wodneoday Scrvic:ea - 10 o.m .

llnJted MPthod1st

Chrrst ra n Union

HliiJrlde Bortlal Cblrtb

,_,':&lt;!!1.-

- . . . . Rccd
S...y School • 9:30 Lm.
Wonltip. !1-.30 a.m. aed 7 p.m.
.
7 -1 p.m.
Friday' followolltp .,.ice 7 p.m:

llldrorJ Hills Cloordl oiCiorlol

............ C b - Cltordl
S...tay School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip·IO:JOo.m., 7:30p.m.
Wc:dncJday Service 7:30p.m.

.

Looa-

S"!'doY Sdlooi · IO uir.

Clo- tl, _ Clortol,
A II1/4 mile Jlllll
Melp'"' New Llorur Rd. l
-=William Von~
=:-r:7:00 p.m.
W
ry-7:00p.rw.
Ftiday-7:00 p.m.

Clftea Tlltmu 11 a ell
Olflon, W.VL
Soliday Sclloot.. IO..m.

.......... ~Ciowdo

Pulor: Kcnnelh .....
SOOiday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m. (2nd A 4th Sun)

Dexler .
Pulor: Woody Call
S...tay Evarlna· 6:30p.m.
Thunday Service • 6:30p.m.

Sunday Schooi·IO a.m.
Wcdnrsdlry Scrvica • 7 p.m.

7:00p.m, !
Wodn nlay oorvice, 7:00p.m.

Sazw••
Sunday School - 10 Lm.
Wonrllip • 9 Lm.

Citrlal of Laller-DQ Selall
St. R1. ltiO, 446-6247 or 4-46-74116
Sunday SchooiiO::ZO.II Lm.
Relief Soclety/Prieochood II :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:1.5 a.m .
Homemakina -.ina. 111 Thun.- 7 p.m.

-. ...-~ .

YOIIIh~Sunday,

. Bn'' dCit-IICitrtol
Comer of Sl. Rl. 124 .t.lltalblry Rd•
Mlnialer: Doua Slwnblin . ~
YOIIIh Minialer: Iilii Ambetpr
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Worship· 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
W...,..y Service• • 7:00 p.m.

lJbenJ Cltriollu Ctntrdr

• . Old ileOirol Frft Wllllopllol Ctntrdr
• ·..
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
, •
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
llvcnina • 7:30p.m.
Thuraday Scrvicca • 7:30

-Cnoar

.

JWa' ... LIIIOtaell
500 N. 2nd Ave... MH11 ; Nl

llollooaO.I I l'lloo 1'1 Ctt.a
.... O J * I Suadoy ...ice, 10:00 ...... 7:00 ,..._

Pulor: Roe Fierce
Sunday School- 9:1S o.m.
Wonbip ··IO:IS a.m.

Sunday School • 9-.30 a.f!1. .
Sunday Evening· 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Servica • 7 p.m.

_,Ta~

CIMI &amp;-Niue: D'fC.....
SaleiaSL,II.I'IIIor. -....i B. M -·
,..., SdoOol· 10 ..... .
Wonltip • 11:1S Lm., 7 p.m.
w - y Service -7 p.m.

.......... Cltordl IIJ- Cltrlal
of Lwlltr DoJ Salrtu
Portland-Raclae Rd.
Brandl I'Roident - Midlael Duhl
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
.Wonhip'· IO:JO a.m.
Wedneldroy Servicca • 7:30p.m.

Wonltip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednctday ScNiC&lt;S • 7 p.m.

~~~=~
-"ldlaoiJ'aot&amp;jo

tldtaii.WII'dfllf'llldl
......., Dovld DoileJ
Sunday,Sc:hoOI 9:30 ..... .
EveolnJ·?p.rn.

.

.:=-J.,.me..
- 10.7LID.
. . ..· .

Latter-Day S&lt;Jmts

Eva"'C(iR Joocph B. Hoold"'
Sunday School - 9 a.m.'

· wonllip ~: S..,, 10 a.m. .t. 6 p.m.

, _ , ..._llockwaod
Sunday School· 9-.30 Lm.
WO!Uip 10:30 Lm, 7:30p.m •
WcdnadoyScrvia:-7:30p.m.

· W~·IOa.m.

.

caMo7- Clowdi •

· Puwaoy Plb, Co. Rd.

lloec:--

JIIJt

lilY

- . .... Fruklla Didteno
Service: Friday •.7 p.m.

:120B.MainSL,l' ' oy
,.., MITiclpaiBu!Wj'l -um)

(P

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
. Wonltip - 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

MLUaloRBopllol
Pulor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schoot-9:45 a.m.
· Evening· 6:30 p.m.
.
Wodneaday ScNices ·6:30p.m.

.

'-

POliO&lt;: Eu11J0110 E. Undetwood

Racine, OI-l
, _ : Daniel Berdine
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m. Sunday
Bible Study • 7:00p.m. Wedncldoy

Service time: s.m.y 6:00p.m.

K:ld.tt'!.r

-Pator:
cRev.mRoy
....,. ao....
McCarty

Rotlud ao.-.- orc.oto~

S11Jt&lt; R•llopllol
. Pastor: Bill Urde
Sull!loy SchOol · JOa.m.
Wonhip • II Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wc:dncmy Scrvi«Jo 7:30p.m.

~

Wonblp - IOLm.

Yourh Fellowthlp, Sunday - 6 p.m.
RPird '
SundaySc:hoOI-9:30a.m.
· Wonhip ' 10:30 LID .
ThuradiiJ Scrviow • 7 p.m.

....,~~·7:00p.a

PaiiUolow ••I ~·firOIIII

17J.!OI7

-~:
• 1'1110&lt;:
Sunday School· 9:15 a.rit.

a,.IIR•B-Cio.-a
PIIIOr: RobcrtMIOlcy
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7:30p.m.
.._.. CIUI\'I'ne Mo... ~ Clovcll
. PII!IJr. Pe!&lt;r Tremblay
Sunday School ·'9:30 Lm.
Wonbip -10:30 Lm. and 7 p.m.
Wcdnadoy Service-7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 9:Jo a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

FlniBopllal
P*«: Rev. Lawrence T..Haley
Youllr Pulor: Aaron Yoana .
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip.J0:40a.m., 7:00p.m. .
Wodnnday Servicco- 7:00p.m.

.••' .
....
,...

--AI'IayWado
603 SoCOIId A¥0. " ' -

Sunday Scllool • 9: IS ..,..
Wonltip-10:30LIIL
Bible Sludy ,.._, - 10 a.m.

1

'

·~a..ct.·

11ooCJIJa

......, • 9-.JOLIL
Wanltlp -7:00p.m.

,w

~lAc--

Mlun••
......., Charlea Neville

r
-~·
--e.-....

'

• .....,. Cit- oiCiorlol
1'1110&lt;: Jake Copley

BuiM&amp;iaSL'

'

r.ot Clropa!
Sunday Sclrool - 9 Lm.
·Wonbip · IOLm.

Pator: Rev. Jom NevUic
Qilcftn's service - 10 a.m.
Wonltip . 7:30p.m.
Wodneoday Service-7:30p.m.

laotrumcnlal .
l'ulor: Sculllrowa
Wonllip Service • 9 a.m.
Communion • 10 a.m.
Sunday School • I O:U a.m.

. ._
Flnlllopllol Cloordl
· Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S a.m.
, _ . . , Flnl Bopllal
P-. l'lul Slinaon

I)

SOndaySc:hoOI-~a.m.

.... GnnlllloR
Cio.-a
1/2 mile olf RL 32S
.... O'Dell Mln1ey
Sunday School- 9:30 .....
Wonbip-ID-.JOLOI., 7;30p:m.
Wcdnadoy Service • 7:30p.m.
~ao-

Ttlppoftl'labl Clolll"dl oiQrlll

-

--lfaol

'-!. W.Vo.ll. I

Wonltlp-10:30a.m. ·

w-,75.......
Pcatl 51., Middlepott.

11ooo ao.... 1101111
Pcmt:roy, HarrioonvBie Rd. (111.143)
Pulor: Ropr WaSunday Sdoool • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednaday Scrvica. 7 p.m. ,

... ....... a...

~Sc:ho01 -9:30o.m.

I

ltti w I

Jl'ne WID Boplill Cloordl
Alb Strur, Middlepon
1'1110&lt;: La' Ha
.
Sunday ScNico •
School · 10 a.m.
Wed
y Service-7:30p.m.

w......,., ....
-.v.,,,.c•._

'llltndoy ~ ...... 6:30 ......
-(Mil'

sleeping companion has J&gt;iobably
given you Ihe imJ&gt;rcsslon
he is
1he grealest fa1her in the """ld. Lei
me tell· you the truth. Jt~Jmisscd
1\I'HI. Ll&gt;;t; Antck•
most of lhe Liule League • • • 1his
Tlllllel' s~·· llld crell~tnSyiii.IM.-.c .
year because he was wiih ~1ou : He
missed his daughler's daJ!!:e recilal
lasl Tuesday and J&gt;llrentil' day at
ANN LANDERS
. sc hool on Thursday because he was
• Dear Ann Landers: Please prinl with you. He was with you when his
.
Olis letter for alllhe women who are son broke hiS
arm, alfd I 'd''..u
~ to lake
~aving affairs wi1h married men. the boy to the hospital ·l myself. I
· Mos1 of !hem believe they aren't can'l 1ell you 1he number 'of fami·ly ·
4loing an.y harm . They say 1hey ·are get-togelhe rs I have alleq~ed wilh·
(illing a need for some love-starved, out him because he had to ··work
~., 1 ')
fteglecled husband and no one is late."
'"=ing hurt. I would like 1o s.el 1he ·
He is never around t~~heiJ&gt; with,
~cord slraight, and I hope you will
the children's homcwor~'because he
~elp me by prinling this :
ha s lo be wilh "an important
Olher
Woman:
Your
currenl
Dear
client. " (That's you.)
you
.

Ann
Landers

Wonllip • ICI:30a.&amp;
W " I ylomoo-7p.a

Cloorlot NMIIo
~Sdoooi-IOLtL

WotUip - 11 1.01., 7:30p.m.
W.......y Scr&gt;ice ·7:30 p.m.

YOOIIII Miaiooer: Bill Fnzier
Sunday School · 9-.311 Lm.
Wonltip- B:U, 10:30 ".m., 7 p.m.
W - y Senrica ·? p.m.

..

I

-s-ay....
vidorScloool9-.30 .....

"''Dilillll·~

-

,._._ .

The Daily Sentinel• Page 'I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The
'other
w:
o
·
m
an'
takes
·
time
away
innocent
family
.
J

I

'-*r Scioool- II ...._
Wonloip . IOua., 6 ......

•

Ffi1 y, M.-tlb 14, 1117

Pomeloy •lllclclleport, Ohio

"

,,

1

. way 10 enswre your ba?y Jbn'l ,gel baby carrier. You can'l sp.oil an
Qenneit Suburban Newspapers · ' all 'worked up. _
!St
infant by holding her. You'r warmlh,
As if 1he dinner hour isn'·t , hecli~
• The fir sl c(\urse of acljgp is t.o voice and heartbeal will oflcn lull
.e.nmigh, il seems that's lhe lime of t1gure ou1 whal she needt. 1before her 10 sleep. And a ,baby carrier will
·day you 're usually cooing in'fanl she's so worked UJ&gt; can 'l calm her . leave your hands free .
chooses lo morph inlo a screamer.
down no mauer whal you lJe(
A fussy baby may also be hungry.
. · There are several 1heories aboul
Some babies. calm dllWn · if Try giving him a liule somelhing lo
the lrll!lsformatioQ, says Dr. Daniel they ' re pul into lheir.c ribs for a nap : cat, even if he ale just a lillie while
Cohen a pedia1rician practicing in· olhers)u~l ~c1 more upsc~.
ago. If he docsn'l wanl il.uy· a paci:
Oar'nerville, N.Y. No one knows for .
Your Jn!ant may be urcd afler a fier. He may jusl want lo suck on
s,\Jre why il hap)&gt;Cn s.
day of s1imula1ion, b~t he may . st ill $omelhing.
If everylhing fails. says Cohen.
. ''I don 'l know if !here's some-- wa.n1 · to be m 1hc lhrc.k ~f,c~mg~,
· lhing in lhe hiorhylhm s or whal is. says Cohen. Older chrl~rel), ,~re n 1 parents may have lo learn lo live
is,'' he says. "Even babies who lh~ only ~n es who don I wl'i~l 10 wuh _russy lime.
aren' t colicky are known 10· get mtss anylhmg.
·:some'.imes pe~plc have..10
cranky allhis lime ~f day."
• •· · "try. movement .': h~ j l ~ays. change lh~lf cxpe~lauons and f~~gcl
. Whale * ' · 1he reason, parenls "Rocking. swinging . rnovcllienls· aboul havmg a brg meal al 6 .. he
have IO'dellf·with il.
oflen calm a fussy baby. You dih put , says. " Yo.u may have lo have a hghl
~ bne (cason mighll)e 1halthe din· him in ~ swin~ ncar you. kOider . snack to \Jde you ov~r and cal a hul.e
ner,hour is 1he lime you're busies!, babJes _m1_gh1 .~nJOY a lolly .!limper laler w~~ 1he baby s asleep. Anllcrso y~u can'1 respond 10 him as kind ot lhmg. :
. +~·.
pate lh!~ ume of day a~d lry 1o work
quickly as a1 o.thcr limes durin'g the
. Bul the hoby may ?"IY w~ntJ~_be ~round .n. Th~ baby w1ll grow oul of
. ~ay.'.And quick respons~ is lhe besl p1cked up. Pul her rn a sh~pe 11 evenl)lally.

....

CAl,I.NOW •••
GALLIPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156 .

"\

-

_.

.

'r·

.,

�\

Poln.roy •lllddllport, Ohio

P 1110 •Tile D "yl1 16111

, ~~----------------------~----------~~--~~--~--------------~--~-----~s

.ct.

"We have 18.000 toilet paper dispensen. An average of 3.000 are
vandalized every year," says Lynn
Robens, director of maintenance
heirlooms. They dole them out only lll1d opentions for the los An1eles
when students ask to so to the Unified School District. How?
restroom.
"Sometimes they stlllld on them to
In some Los Angeles schools, set the ceiling on fire."
dispensers in rtstroom
In many public schools, vandals
there are
stalls. Instead, students get paper have clogged up toilets with wads of
from a main dispenser before they paper, torn ~ispensers off the walls
iao in.
· ·
and pulled stall doors off their
• 1
In those districts and others hinges.
liround the country, school officials
Joan Ominsky 's daughter, Amy,
ite taking drastic actions to combat is a sophomore at Berkeley ~gh
. vandalism that they say is straining . School in Berkeley, Calif. Ominsky
'school budgets lll1d creating unsani- says the resirooms are so disgusting
·tary conditions .. At the same .time; that Amy waiu until lunch to go to
•parents who think their children an off-campus facility.
should at least get basic services are
Ominsky and other Berkeley parIpressuring schools to clean up their ents patrolled the high school'.s

no

Ll

,

last fill and presented a says Karen Sarlo, spokeswoman
list of demands to school officials. with the Berkeley Unified School
The district hired an outside janitor- District. "Facilities issues were
ial service. cleaned up the restrooms being put on the back burner. But
lll1d repaired broken dispensers lll1d now, parents really an: focusing on
sinks. The PTA Bathroom Subcom- facilities," she says.
mittee and district offiCials held a
Schools, parents and students
follow-up meeting in one of the elsewhere are coming up with solutions, too:
school resb'Ooms.
Schools and parents realize that
- Tile San Francisco PTA made
run-down restrooms are a problem restroom cleanuP, its primar)l goal
that can be solved more quickly than . and has worked closely with the disthe thornier issues of school curricu- trict. Janitorial teams ·~power wash"
• facilities regularly. Disrrict manlum and violence.
" It's a brilliant issue," says agers now must go over a restroom
Nancy Kahn, president of the .San checklist every time they visit a
Francisco PTA. "Jt's noncontrOver· schooL The school board even creal- ·
sial because everybody wants a ed a Custodian Appreciation Week.
clean bathroom .... And it 's symbol-At Chicago's Revere School,
ic."
s!Udents'line up during class breaks
Parents' concerns used to focus to get toilet P•Pilr and soap before
mainly on curriculum and education, entering restroo~s. T)Jey must

return the rest 1&gt;f the rolls lll1d the
- A major cleanup of restr0o1n1
soap when they uit. If students need
the supplies at other times, they can now is the No. I goal of the Los
uk teachers for a basket of restroom Angeles school district's maintegoodies, which they have to return.
nance department. By the end of this
"We have to maintain discipline. year, facilities in each of the disWe have limited supplies. We have trict's 649 schools will unde!Jo a
limited repair doll an," says '!deep -desn,".. ·Robens sa)IS·. For
Rudolph Anderson, principal of the some, it 'II be the first major cleanup
elementary and middle school. in five years.
"One kid, in five minutes, can
destroy all the materials in a bathThe district is placing dispensen
room." But Anderson says students near the toP of stall doors. "If they
an: not being rationed.' "We're not do want to kick them off. they're
trying to punish them."
going to have awful long legs."
Revere School is considering
installing vandal-resistant ·dis- Dallas schools arc installing
. pensers that ~ole out one sheet at a time-delayed flushers to stop stutime. The maehines would make it dents from flushing repeatedly to
.toug_h for vandals to jam up toilets make ioilets overflow. Stall partitions now ore ll)ade of graffiti-resisbeca~ it would take them longer to
amass a large wild of paper.
tant polyfl!er plastic.

Br BARBARA HOOVER
The Detroit News
l!'s a "comeback" food.
Macaroni and cheese, that humble nunery favorite, enjoyed a "gal,
vanizing rebirth on many of the best
menus in '96," reports Food Arts, a
magazine for chefs.
The toniest version? Macaroni
and cheese · laced with truffles,
served a! london's upseale Berkeley
Hotel, says the magazine.
In California, vanguard chefauthor Hugh Carpenter, best known
for his Pacific Rim and fusion dishes, includes Macaroni with Five
· Cheeses, gussied up. with prosciutto
hani and herbs in his repertoire.
Mac and cheese is also currently
blessed nightly on the New York
stage in the ·hit "Full Gallop."
Actress Mary louise Wilson, as the
lare Diana Vreeland, fonner Vogue
editor. and style pacesetter, keeps
pushing her French secretary to
scare up 'takeout food for a dinner
party. Finally, the secretary reports
success- dinner will be "Macaroni
au Fromage."
.. Macaroni and

Second birthday

celebrated

.
MAC AND CHEESE· P11t11 with Ricotta llld Freth IMrbl, plctu,_ lbove, II one of the m1ny twlltlt
~fltlpul OJIIhl Amerlcltn f8Vortt. rnecsranl and~cMIM. It's not JUit ....:.ronl and chilli lflymofe,
not ~It I chMp lunch. Thl dllh·ln Its VM1Id formlls showtnl
top nolch "*lUI• . ·
. upon"""
.

~nd

macaroni

cheese casserole using these recipes·, imagination

Detroit Newtl
milk, nutmeg, salt and white pepper.
Several dashes cayenne or papri· 'Here are some collected maca· -!kat with a whisk until well-blend- . ka
.
and cheese rccipes ... but cooks
play with ingredients, adding
vcsctablcs in •cason and
~!~e~~cntir•g with herbs and gar-

+ MACARONI WITH FIVE

CHEESES
This concoction will still taste
~::~::: ~i~f:~you usc only one or any
4of the five cheeses.
California chef Hugh Carpcn-

1

The recipe is from his book .. "Hot
(Ten Speed Press),
·
· 8 ounces dried elbow macaroni,
rii:tme your favorite pasta. .
· 3 eggs, beaten
.
' i I and one-third cups milk
.~ one-half teaspoon IT~shly grated
.tmeg
.
: one,fOIInh to one-half teaspoon

or

. It

• one-fourth !easpoon freshly
nd white pepper
,, 6 ounces sharp ·cheddar cheese,
obted "
1!'2 ounces dry Monterey jack
sc.llaiCd (optional)
ounces Gruyere cheese, sbred-

~ 2 ou~ccs

'

.

;Regsiano Panncsan

c!!eese, g'rated
H2 9Unces goat cheese. crumbled
~ I ounce ')li'OSCiutlo ham. chopped
l:j,OIIC·founh cup chopped llirragon
~illcaves
. · .
~ Advanee preparation: Butter botand sides or a 13·by·9·inch baki pan. Bring 4 quarts of water to a
r ·d boil. Lightly sail the water.
coo~ J'B'III according to packa dirc~.1ions. When f!Allta loses its
r . tcxt~re but is still slightly firm.
~ ove fnnn he11t. drain: rin~~&lt;: under
•'tiki.water. then drain again. Trans·
f# rosta to a large howl.
In a small bowl. combine CIJIS,

'£

'f

ed, then stir liquid inio pasta. Set
2 tablespoons nonfat Parmesan
aside 2 ounces of the cheddar. then cheese
·
add all other ingredients to pasta and
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
gently stir until evenly combined.
In a food processor or blender,
Fill baking pan with pasta. Sprin· blend cream, cottage cheese, ricoua,
kle on remaining cheddar. If the dish non fat cheddar, mozarella and
is made more than I hour before tumeric about 2 minutes until
serving, refrigerate. (All advance smooth.
· preparation steps may be completed
In a large nonstick saucepan over
up to 8 hours before you he gin final medium-high heat. l)eat the milk.
cooking.)
.
. .whisk in the nour and cook. whiskFinal cooking steps~ Preheat oven ing constantly. about 2 minutes, or
to 350 degrees. Place baking pan in until mixture is thickened. Reduce
preheated oven about 4 inches heat and whisk in cheese mixlure;
· below broiler. and bake uncovered :cook, stirring, taking care not to hoil
until pasta is thoroughly .reheated the sauce, uluil hot.
and cheese sauce is bubbling. about
. In a large pot of hailing water,
30 minutes. Tum oven selling to cook macaroni with nutmeg for
"broil" and cook until top is golden, · about 12 minutes un'til almost done;
about S minutes. Serve tit once. drain.
Makes 4 main-course servings.·
To ~~&lt;:rvc immediately. place macNutritional analysis per serving: aroni in a warm serving bowl: spoon
505.5 calories; 27.1 grams total fat; sauce over pasla and toss . well.
(I 5.9 grams saturated fat); 30.8 Sprinkle with cheddar and cayenne
grams protein; 33.9 grams carbohy· and serve.
·
drates; 183 milligrams chulesterol;
For a deep-dish crispy-crust ver835 milligrams sodium.
sion, place macaroni in a 2-quart
· MACARONI AND CHEESE
ovenproof casserole. Spoon sauce
This reduced-fat version of the over macaroni. and sprinkle with
classic dish is from "Healthy lndul- sharp cheddar, Parmesan and
genccs," (by lynn Fischer, Hearst cayenne. Bake for 30 minutes. Serve
Books).
hot.
2 tablespoons heavy cream
Makes 6 servings:
one-half cup . nonfat . cottage Nutritional analysis per serving:
cheese
405.3 calories; 6.4 grams total fat:
one-half cup nnnfalricotta cheese · . (3.4 grams saturated fat); 21.3 grams
one-half cup shredded nonfat . protein; · 64.7 grams carbohydrates;
cheddar cheese
18 milligrams cholesterol: 115 mitone-half cup shredded ·nonfat ligrams··sodium.
mozzarella c:teese
MACARONI AND CHEESE
one-fourth teaspoon turmeric
SALAD
,
2 cups nonfat milk
From "Mexican Cookery/'. hy
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
Barbara Hansen (HP Books)
1. pound elbow macaroui
· I cup small elb?w macaroni.
Pinch of 2freMhly ground nutmcjl uncooked ·
.
2 tablespoons shredded sharp . - B&lt;'liling salicd watel" cheddar chec.se
I teaspoon vegetable oil

·

onc'-half cup drained canned or
cooked fresh peas
2 tablespoons finely c'hoJlPCd red
onion
I cup small-cunl cottagt, cheese
one-half cup mayonnaise
one-half cup diced cooked carrot.
drained .
·
·· nne-fourth cup diced peeled.
·· roasled., publano chilies or canned
· chopped green chilies
one-half tcasJMKin salt ·
lcuucc leaves·
· Tomato wedges·
.Cook macaroni according to
package l!ircctions in boiling"sahed
water until tender, 8 to I0 minutes.
Drain and coot: Place in a medium .·
bowl .. Toss with oil. Add peas.
onion, collage cheese, mayonnai~~&lt;:,
carrot, chilies and salt. Toss gently
but thoroughly. Chill. Line 6 s.alad
plates with lettUce leaves. Spoon
macaroni . mixture onto lettuce
leaves. Garnish with tomato wedges.
Makes 6 servings.
Nutritional analysis !Jer serviqg: .
257.3 calories; 2.8 grams total fat;
(2.8 grams saturated fat); 8.6 grams
protein: 19.2 grams carbohydrates;
14 milligrams cholesterol; 456 milligrams sodium.
PASTA WITH RICOTIA AND
Continued on page 11

IONtiE SHIVELEY
.,.DMI wrller ,

March 20 •• the fint day ofspring
w I love to see that date on the
· ndar. ·
Am I the only one tired of winI cold blaats ·and sub-zero tem·
urea? Arc you rudy for sprinJ1
chanp of ..-a never fails
J;DC (Oennil 8:22). Ootl'set the
of 1111ure when He created the
u ver.-. ind the)' have never.
. The aun comes up lll1d
down ritht on ~ehedule every
The moon failhfully follows its
c:Otlll'·· If you k'!"w .~Y or if
•

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

.

Pomeroy

HARTFORD, WV.
.

· Good 31141971hru 3131197

1993 BUICK
REGAL CUSIOM
.
.

4 spd., PS, PB, auto. l(ans., PW, PL., tilt, cruise, air cond.,
wheel covers, AM/FM ~.•60140 Split seat.
Book Prlciii937S ......;.................~.................. Prtce ~
Until

1994
TEIIPOGL ................... BoakPrictS&amp;alO YowPrlca
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SATURDAY
&amp; SUNDAY
I PM 1115 PM
SPRING AIR MATTRESS
CLOSEOUTS

. In an effort to provide our readership with current news. the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not a~cept wed-,
!lings after 60 days from the date pf
1ltc event.
·
, Weddings submitted after ·the 60day deadline·will appear durin1 .the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All'club meetings and other news ·
.;ticles in the society seclion must
be iubmitted wlthin ·60 days of'
occumnce. All birthdays must be
swbm\tted
the
. within .60 clays of,
\
oc;curtence, .
,

1-800-466-7671

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1

Jaso~ P. Ervin of Rac'ine has
made the dean's fiAt for the past session at Northweste!ll College, Lima. ·
To make the dean's list a student
niusl have a grade point average of .
atlcasi 3..5.

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•Evans named
to dean's list

1111 wlwll, power moon roof, POL, PW, custom wheell, air
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·I

FRESH HERBS

This· dish' works well with any
shon-cur pasta,; i~clyding m!!Caroni. · .
It's adapted.. from "Tastes of lhe ·, ·
Wprl_d." a . Bon Appetil magazine
cookbook (Copde Nast).
.,
· I I 5'oun~e container · low-f~t
ricotta cheese .
two-thirds cup nonfat milk
one-half cup grated Parmesan
chce~~&lt;:
·
· 2 'teaspoons olive oil
I cup chopped onion
2 garlic clo:vcs, chopped
one-half cup chopped fresh ha.•il
one-fourth cup chopped fresh
chives or green onions
one-fourth' cup chopped fresh
pamley '
'
,
12 ounces macaroni or other
shon-cui pasta, freshly COJ&gt;kCd .
Salt and pepper
Blend ricoua cheese, milk and
Parmesan il) food processor until
smooth. Heat oil in heavy large_skil·
let over medium heat.' Add onion:
saute until beginning l'l brown.
al)out 5 nlinutes.
.
Add garlic and saute 2 minutes.
Add ricotta mixture. basil. chives
and parsley io skillet: stir until hcat_cd through, about 5 minutes. Mix in
cooked macaroni. Season ·with salt
and pepper. and serve ..
· Makes 4 servings.
Nutritional an)llysis per serving:
406.9 calories: 13.9 grams total fat:
(1 .5 grams saturated fat); 2P.2 gnims
'protein; 50.4 grams- ~arbohydral~s;
42 .milligrams cholesle'j'OI: ·)l~md-

IONIA ACCORD

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COntinued fi'Qm page-10

HARTFORD AUTO SALES

I

you don't. you will find the stan always have a king on the throne and
right where t"y should be ·- obedi- today, from the line of David, King
cntto'their Creator..
, ·
Jesus ·sits on the throne Qf heaven.
. The change of ICIIIOns, lll1d nisht That's .a · f~et, a.•
8!ld day, are as aure • Clod's Word. sure as day lll1d r----:::
His Word is as sure u day and niJht. · night.
Ood aaid in Jeremiah 3·3:20, "If you
Father, how
can~ my covenant wirh the day wonderful
· to
tllld my covenant with tile night, so know we can
dill day and nip no lonaer come at trusl You com·
their appointed time. then my pletely. Thank
covenant with DavlcJ ...can · .be bro- you .for the
ken.":
promise
of
We know thai He did not breaic aprins. and for
Hi• coven111,t with O.vid. Oocl Kina Jesus whO
· promiled David hi~ fnly wduld_, . slll on the throne of my he.an. Amen.

Megan Smith recently celebrated
her sjxth ~inhday with a party given
by· her parents, Junior and Rita
Whitt;. .
A Dalmatians theme was carried
oupll the pany attended by her parcnls, ·sister, Whitney Smith; ·grandparents, Bud and Wanda Vining.
great-grandmother, Goldie Graham,
Sheri! and Christopher Darst, Terri
~d Matthew Smith, Megan Dunfee,
Ilreanne Patterson and Justin
Arnold. Seridina gif!s were lee.
~-".· "Chrissy and Adam Williams;
~JC:'l1ttterso~~ B~~·Nichotso~~ Erin ,
Krawsczyn and Rachel Ashley.
.· ·

'

easons are as sure as God's
Word
..
''

Sixth pirthday
observed ·

Macaroni...

Only

LOTS OF ODDS &amp; ENDS
IN ALL TYPES

MEGAN SMiTH

.

..

.Not $11119.95

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lan.ruptcy • Slow Credit
No Credit. ·
We .-ay be allle to helpl
· lili for.·Mr. ·Barcus
1·800·837 ·1094 or 992 ·6614

Olurdi iti Middlepon where she has
attended services since she was born
lll1d has been a member for more
than 7.5 yeaJS. She currently serves
as treasurer of the church but has
held almost every olftec available in
the church. Mn. Bowles is also !reaj
surer of the Hocking District ot the
•
Providence Baptist Associalion. and
attended cbwch functions all overthe
stale of Ohio and remains active in
the American legion Women's Auxiliary 263.
_ · '
'·
• .
A widow since 1961 and with .an
,;
"empty nest" for the past 30 yean,
L
Mrs. Bowles has spent some of her
MARGARET BOWLES
'
time traveling. She frequently visiu tion' will be served by Mrs. 'Bowles'
her children, has traveled to New church friends at Mt. Mori"', Patty
York City several times. took in the .C~aig , president of the · MissiOnOQI
World's Fair in Nashville, and saw group, lorene Goggins, also prcsithe fulfillment of dream .. a visit to · detlt of the . Legion Auxiliary. a~
the Holt Land.
Edith Ross, Becky English, Ada
.
Franklin and Helen Culmer.
The dinner at Sunday:s celebrs·
·

lion to be safe and highly effective: mal ones after the first three years.
cian, Togas Tulandi of McGill
We don 't want to unduly alarm
At highest risk: Women who had versity. Montreal, says other
women," he says. But the findings surgery before age 30 using a popu- ods are less risky and
mean ectopic pregnancies "need to 181' method, bipolar coagulation, that reversible.
be on the radar screen for women involves burning the tuhes shut.
and their physicians, even .ma~y
Symptoms Of ectopic pregna.m:]
years after sterilization ."
The technique · may have can include lmc-sidcd
The repon', based .on 10,685 improved si nee the study began in and unusual vaginal bl ~~ii~~~~:7~:~
women, shows 1 in 1,000 have an 1.978, and women may have other mon pregnancy signs.
ectopic pregnancy within 10 .years. reasons to favor il. Peterson says. , breast tenderness and nauSs•·
Ectopic pregnancies outnumber nor· But an editorial by another physi- arc absent.
·
.

DAVIS.SOFA &amp;CHAIR .

SOFA

IIEED A ·flESH STAir?

308 Main St.

Athens.
Keith said that after college. his
mother taught all subjects to pade$
one through eight in a one-room
schoolhause at the Forest Run colored school. When the mines in the
Forest Run area worked out and
many black families mo~ on, ·the
school was ~losed.
· Remaining students were sent to
the· Pomeroy Public School System
but, Keith said thai his mother "was
not given the &lt;ipporwnity to teach in
the Pomeroy system, for reasons that
even·today,.need noexplanati&lt;ins."
For the next few years she
worked in various capapjties .at
lakin State Hpspital in West Virginia. In 1935 she married the late
Ernest "Buzz" Bowles, and she
began the full time job of wife and
mother.
.. During· all those years, s~ was
active in the Mt. Moriah Baptist

Study finds sterilization surgery increases ectopic pregnancy risk . .

Greek olives and basil in a no-fat :an affected young mflll Or. danll~- ..
balsamic vinaigrette dressing.
'Brilish soldiers used lhe song' 'to
What's the secret of i1's appeal?
ridicule Americans, who then adopt~ need for comfort is intense
ed it in self-defense.)
these days, believes Plotman. who's
It wasn't until the 1850s' thai
giving macaroni and cheese, which . Americans began to branch out to ' ·
she's been offering as a special, a other pasta- mainly spaghetti, lin- .
permanent place on her menu this guine and lasagna - thanb to
week under a new "Comfort Fond" major waves of Italian immigranl&lt;
heading.
who opened restaurants. And il wa.&lt;
"People work so hard and they're just in the last 20 years that our
so stressed out, they want something tastes have grown adventurous
that reminds them of a Donna Reed enough to induce marketers to put
kind of home," Platman says.
other pasta shapes and flavors into
· Americans were eating macaroni stores, signaling the current "Age of
and cheese long before Donna Reed Pasta:· ·
·
hit TV screens, tl)ough. The concoc· .
ParadOxically,tll\l pasta proliferalion· was introduced to Colonial tion ohoved familiar old macaroni
America by.the British, then ratified . aside for a time. Now, however, .
by Thomas Jefferson, who served it those l~tle elbows l)ave cl~wed
at White House dinners.
their way back- in a big way.
(The reference to macaroni i~ the
Which brings up a sore point for
song "Yankee Doodle"- He stuc'k mac and ~heese purists.
a feather in his cap and ·called . it
Cenain people have bci:n spotted
macaroni - had n!Jttiing to do with · in cafeteria lines onlcring.mcat loaf .
the dish, however. Back then, "mac- ' and mashed polalocs with a side of
aroni" was both a generic term fot mac and·cheese.
any pasta and pcj~tive; meaning

ch~ese!" Vrec~

land gushes, in the knowledge that,
served .at tier table, il will he consid·
ered as haute as foie gras.
At Sw~et Lorraine's .in South·
field, Mich.. che(owner lorraine
Platrnan does an elabonite "adult"
version with four cheeses - fresh
ricoua, Danish !lluc, cheddar and
Parmesan - · and a splash of wine.
She then stirs sauteed radicchio into
the mixture and tops it with a salad
of plum tomatoes. sweet onion.

The Deily SafltiMI• Ptp11

Bowie~ to mark 90th birthday with reception

Mqaret L. Bowles of Middle- in infancy in 1949.
port, a lifelong resident of Meigs
Others expected 10 Jltend are
County. will be honored on her 90th memben of churches in the 1~birthday 111 plhering of family lll1d year-old Providence Baptist Associfriends Sunday at the American alion, a croup of predominately
Lepon Hall in Middleport. About black churches located throughout
17.5 guests are expected to attend the Soutlieastem Ohio. The churches
celebration.
include Mt. ·Moriah of which Mrs.
· InCluded in the group -.iill be all Bowles is a member. Forest Run and
nine of her living children lll1d their Naomi Baptist in .Pomeroy; Tridefamilies, along with her only surviv- strone and Paint Creek in Gallipolis;
ing sister, former Pomeroy resident, Mt. Carmel, Bidwell, and First BaP.
Mary F. Baumgardner.
·
tist Churches in both Glouster and
Returning for 'the celebration will Rendville
behersonsanddaughters,ArleneE.
Mrs owles' ancestors lived in
MEGAN HEATER
King of Tile Bronx, N.Y.; Barbara A. Meig and surrounding counties for
Setzer of Columbus; James F. . mo lhan 125 years.
Bowles of. Point· PleU.ant, W.Va.;
· She graduated from Pomeroy
Ernest W. Bowles of .Columbus, E. High School in 192.5 and was the
Olivia Lockett and Keith Bowles, only "colored persod" in the entire
both of Shaker Heights, Jeanne. high school 81 that time, according
Megan· Brooke Heater, daughter Gross of Columbus, Anita Bawles to her sop, Keith Bowles. She later
of Jim and Shirley Heater, celebrat.. and' Marsha 'Martinez, both qf atJended Wil~rforcc' College in
ed her second binhday Feb. 26 at her Cleveland. A &lt;laughter; Frar~eis, died Xenia and Ohio University in
home in Pomeroy.
A ·~winnie the Pooh... theme was
carried out for the pany. Attending
years after ·surgery to cut or block
By KIM PAINTER
wen: 18 friends and relatives.
fallopian tubes. The new report
USA TODAY
Millions of U.S.· women who've shows a third of the pregnancies are
had sterilization surgery face a high- ectopic - lodged outside the womb,
er,than-expected risk of a dangerous usually in a tubf.
type of pregnancy, a s!udy shows..
Such pregnancies can cause inter-·
The siUdy, in Thursday's New na) bleeding and are occasionally.
England Journ,al of Medicine, fol- . fatal, says Herbert Peterson of the
lows a previous report that women federal Centers for Disease Control
: faced a surprisi~ly high 1.8 percent i and Prevention. Atlanta. ·
overall risk of presnancy in the 10 . "We still consid~r tubal steriliza-

Macaroni and cheese: The rebirth of the nation's .favorite comfort food

•

Pometot • Middleport, Ohio

Fltdllt1 Dlr oh 14, 1117

arents ten schools it's time to wash up_the washrooms

lr HAYA EL NASSER
USA TODAY
TeacheR in one cruc.,o ichool
tlllld toilet. paper rolls, piper towels
inc! soap as if they were prec:i0115

,

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Frfdly,llltch 14,1117

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,; ,...12 • The Dally Senllnef

Pon)eroy•lilldclllport, Ohio

F~ll8tch 14,1117 .

··

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Senti~. p~ ~3

.~--~~~~------~------~~~~~=-----~~~~~~~~

·Albanians,flee country ·
By JUDITH INGRAM

Auocllllild PrHii Writer
TIRANA, Albania (AP&gt;,- Alba·
nia's defense miniSier and his fami ly today fled the anarchy that luL~
.
' I
engulfed thts Balkan country. wh1le
other lop leaders met an inte.rnatiOIIa1 medi.ator on board· an ltahan warship sheltering 500 evacuated foreigncrs.
Gunmen with. heavy weapons appare~tly antt·81rcraft guns- fired
from hills outstde Tirana 10 .the. dtrec!ton of U.~ ,, helicopters P"kmg up
"mertcans for evacuauon.
~n: was no return fire , ~ut
Assoctated Press reponers watchmg
from a Tirana hotel saw. the heh·
copters drop a
to mark the site
'
and then ,circle around.
'(
Gray Marine Chinook helicopters
d
beari~g the marking "SFOR." which
delineates thei'{ATO-Ied peace force
in nearby Bosnia, banked. hard over
the compound and head to a ship i~
the Adriatic Sea. !hey were guarded
by .two attack hcltcoptcrs,
.
•
Alb~nia,n Dcf~nsc Minister Safct
Zhulah, · his wtfe · and 14-ycar-old
.,•
d~ughter were ~mong some 40Aibomans .aboard 11 boat that arnved t,n
ALBANIANS FLEE COUNTRY • Two Alban- day. Many Albanian• are flMing the anarchy
Bnndtst, Italy, today. The president s
Ian men use a rope to get aboard a boat leav- that haa angulfad the Balkan countiy. (AP)
children fled Thursday.
Ing for Italy In the Albanian port of Durres FrlState television reponed that mobs
had burned ma~y st~tc offices Thurs·
day and ovemtght, mc!ushng a state
savtngs bank. '
, ,Albania's new prem~cr. Bashkim
1 · BElT SHEMESH, Israel (AP) . problems and Jordanian . military mome~t when his ~mmunition clip
Ftno, met former Austnan Chancel·
Weepiqg and crying out the names of police found tranquilizers in his pos· finished. ·•
··
·
~or franzVranttzky. toda~ on an lt~lYelling, "Madnian, llllidman,'' oth· .
:)he dead, ·thousands ~!tended the se~sion . Maqadseh's father. Mousa.
tan warshtp off the ~I bam an. pon ctty
~unerals of seven lsraeh schoolg~rls satd today.
.
er Jordaman soldters ·overpowered
of Durres, the Italtan .Foretgn Mtn·
shot and killed by a Jordanian soldier
"He was always secluded and he the gunman. ·
· istry said,
pn their field trip to Jordan 's "Island looked always sad and lonely, " the
Israeli witnesses said the Jordan·
Vranit~y' beads a tctUTI from the
of Peace."
·
elder Maqadseh said.
ian troops initially,barred Israeli res·
Org~ntzallon for Security and CoopMinister
Benjamin . Jordanian authorities initially cue teams and soldiers from enterin~
' Prime
eration in Europe, which has taken a
Nctanyahu told mourners that. the 1dcn11fied the gunman as Lance Cpl. the island.
lead role in diplomatic cffons, No
Seven girls, including some who
massacre would not frighten Israel Ahmed Youscf Mustafa, 22, but his
details of the talks were relca.&lt;ed.
into casing control of war-won land famtly corrected the name and age were critically wounded, were put on
Five hundred foreign nationals
-defying a warning by King Hus· tnday. .
·
a Jordanian . bus for a bumpy IS·
who fled the chaos were aboard the
sein of Jordan just days before the
· A htgh school dropout from the minute ride to Shuna H~pital in Jarmassacre that such a stand could village of lbdir, the gu~man was dan. Five girls were dejl(! on arrival
bring violence.
. .
.
drafted 12 years ago, hiS family said. at the hospital. Outside, huqdl'lids of
.
.
"If someone thinks that the mur- A driver for the army, he is a father Jordanians gathered to dclnate bloOd,
.&lt;Jcr of little gtrls will defeat this peo· .with two sons ·a nd a daught~r. .
Israeli leaders · indirectly had
TEHRAN&lt;Iron (APJ. --; Sci.n:hCrs
On Thursday morning , Maqadseh , blamed Jordan's King Hussein for
hunted ioday for aJl Iranian mililaty
:pic he doesn' t know (us&gt;,," Nctanyahu
·declared at a cemetery 10 the central sat 10 an army Jeep at an outpost on creating the climale. that made such C-130 that cr:!ihed in northeastern
'Israeli town of Bcit Shcmcsh, site of Naharayim, a manmade ·island that violence possible with his criticism of Iran. Atlc:!il 80 people were aboard.
and all were believlld dead . state-run
jmc of tbe funeral s held within,hours Israel returned to Jordan under their Nctanyahu,
of Thursday's killings.
. I994 peace treaty and is .a popular
"Words arid a difftcult atmosphere . news media said.
.; " If someone thinks he will break tourist spot for Israelis. A sign at the can also lead to violence,.,. Dcfen&lt;e
The pl~ne's crew broke off contact
'1&gt;ur spirit and that we will give up, , entrance r.eads "Island of Peace ."
Minister Yitzhak Mordechai said.
with the control tower at Ma.&lt;hhad
hur holy land and our eter~al capital, , Sometime aft~r II a.m., an Israeli
Earlier this week, ·Hussein sent
airp(&gt;n 011 Thursday evening, more
.he doesn't know the great strength In schqol bus filled with eighth-grade Netanyahu a harshly worded letter
than an hour after taking ofT from
·every person around me here."
girls from Beit Shcmesh' s Feirst accusing the prime minister of cndan·
Dczful in westcm .Ah~a7-pr'Ovince for
. · Wailing, mourners !'laced pebbles School pulled up on the grassy hill, gering Mi~ast peace with his tough
Masshad in the 1nonhcast.
,I

'

narc

'

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I

.}sra.e lis mourn seven slain schoolgirls

ship.
At least 12 people . _ rq&gt;OI1cd
Pressure was. buildin~: 011 Presi- . killed lhrou1hout the eounlry Thun·
dent s.Ii Berish&amp; to leave office- day. many' of them by 11ny bulleu.
the one movethal might help restore Citizens illcrcuinJIY have beCn ta·
order. ,
inJ arms from looled armories.
Bensha has ackno~lcdged he no
·•We don't know who is apiled
l~nger c,ontrols Albania, an opposi·
and who is n01." Gjinushi said. "Do
uon lealler reponed after rnceung they want to fighl, or fire 1n the air?
with him 'Thursday.' "He has no Or what arc their demal!i:iit?"
army, no police. Tirana is in total
The threat of,connict grew Thurs·
anarchy:" said Sk~nder Gjinushi .or day with the J'ormallbn of several
the Soctal Democrats. .
.
shady pro-gove'T'ment orsanlzations
pre~1d~nt and h!s w1fe , were apparently willin, tQ light.
beheved sttll m Alban1a: Ben~ha ' s . State TV cut tnto chi.ldren's pro25-year-old son and 18-year-old graming to announce tha! 200 "citi·
daughter~ along with five other relazcns" had volunteered to help ppllcc
uv~s and fivC' armed bodyguards, restore order in Tirana. It !'llid tiJCy
arnved tn the southern Ita han ctty of warned 1irana residents .to obey the
Bari . late Thursday aboard a ferry . law, or they would open fire. ·
from Dum:s.
In a statement broadcast later, a
Up to .2,000 U.S. citizens are in so-called Commiuec·.orNational Sal·
Albania and the operation could take vation announced its creation' and
days, State Dcpanment spokesman urged the ;,dark forces inside and out·
Nicholas Bums said in Wa.~hington. side Albania" to come to reasOn .
The U:S. ambassador ·and core staff
The committee did not rc~cal its
~ould remain in the capital for the
composition but said it ~up)IOncd the
ttme bemg.
..
government "and all of its cfl'bt1s to
The weeks: long uprisi~g ":as C&gt;1ablish order, stop violence and tersparked by the&gt;collapse of: h~gh-nsk ror. ·~ It called on all milil!lry olliccrs
mv~stmcnt schemes. dratm~g the
io .return to duty, addipj!: "Every
savmgs of thousands of Alhantans. It ofl'e~si~e br Bf!OOd rcsistan~e against
qutckly grew tnto anll·governmcnt us wtll be punt shed ac&gt;oi'dtnSto the
protests.
laws of war, "
· ·
Be~isha had .named Fino, of the :
State radio said Bcrislia and oppoopposllton Soc)ahst Pany, .as the sition political parties appeidcd tn the
~ew pnmc mtn1stcr earhcr thts week. Western J;:uro~an Union, the pnliti·
tn an attempt to prevent the revolt cal arm of NATO fnr military help
f~om pushin~ up from southcm ...lba· NATO's top policy bolird·. mct ·i~
~ta. The prestdent also agreed to elcc· emergency session in B111sscls;' Bc.l·
. uons by June and a multtparty go~· . gitim, later issuing
statement•
ernmenl, but the· steps have done Itt· expressing il• "deep coneem." · ~
N.
tie to calm thts pOQI' cpuntry of J .3
y, &gt;: he
. u N·.•
million people. _
·
.
, · 1n , ew . or~, ) ' , . [he ~u~n~.
. Unrest has spread to almost every Counctl convened ~~~ UJ'I!C t .tnt.er.•
community of signili~ant sit.c. Much . nuuonal .com~.~n~ty to lrQ~Id~ .
of the violence of the past days has h~dmu~ltarA:::" ~ststancrke an ~ a ,
beCn random. with the oovcmment Sl Cs tn . an,. to wo togct cr to
·
•
ca.&lt;e tcns10ns
and tbe army not prepared to fi~htthe
D' 1 · j · ·d
· 1 1 there
1 0
rebel movement that began · in the
P
t
l
mt~
s
sat
l~tv~c
y "iven
11
0
south.
·
'
whas ht c . eyh cou
lW, •
,
·
t e c aos tn t c ~ountry.
.

:::::;::;:;:-~·:-":.=~-:..:::.

It

The ·program will NqUlN

l'nterlm

oonatruotlon

h profMIIonll·eer-liall Of lnapectlona; over•••
a~ epealelllt to colftplllnot wtth Rl.. dlntlel

prtiYJtle tile fllllo..tng acopa : 'l'lellabllltation ltandarcla;
oh110ilc11:
undartab final JnapnUona
Prelllillnary lnapectlon · 1ftd paymant approvala;
and preparation of ' and J1fD111c1e w011tono ,..,.,..
·rahablllta!lon
work i of .all lnapactlona to tha
apeclllcatlona
of · coullly.
.
approxlllllllely 40-41 aln~ , faa propoaala ahouid
l~tnlly hoonea: and coat.' a tate
qu1llflca,tlona,
wllonalea lor euch -'&lt; on lnolilcllrtg all .tUt8d ar.tiilng
•IIC!I unit . .The l""lall" : for the proJect uilvltr.:
will alao aaallt In tha p"vloua •xperlence n
co~r bidding procen CDBQ/HOIIIE
Houalng
1nd review o1 all bide; . .programe; 10ope of
attendun 11 pra• _..,toM JII'CIVk*t,lllll
conatrucllon '""tlng: amount of cornpaneotton

..... County CouotllcRM
P~, Ohio 45'181'
. ' (114) IIIIH8Itl
:
TO · ALL INTERESTED
PER80N8, AGENCIES. AND
GROUPS.
·-The . Melga County
COIIItnlealoJiera, propo)lla
to~ lila 8IMI of 01tJo
10 ral•ll Flldlral lunda
undar S.ctlon 104 (g)· of
Tilt. I of-the Houalllfl end
Community DavalllpOMnt
Aot of 1174, • l1lillldad·:
s.ot1on 288 of Tltla a of tile
er-ton Gonulal NalloMI
"lfordabl• Houalng Act
{NAHA), •• amand•d:
end/or Title IV ol the
Stewart B. JlloKinnay
.H-Iau A l i i - Act,
.. lriiand4id; to be uead lor
"e
loltowlnll
Tuppera
'Plain,pritJioct(e):
Reglon11
· s-r DlalrJct: CDBQ w·end Slnltary. !)ewer
facllltleol Progr1111 for lh•
oonetruotlon of • IMIIIIlry
. . . . .,..,.., Single yProJact,,
lor
the
unl~ a0111mun1ty
of Tuppare Plalna, Ohio,
~ · County. Eatlmatad
(:oat · of tto. ProJaot:

·~··

~.~lnraga"l
to thla raqueat -Y IHi
llld__, to Mn 'huaealt.
.

It···..:

'

olanltHow:'~,.~

Commit~ '

·

(3)1rt,ta.at:3TC
,

I

·-

~~; ~MiilheW I· Oatra: •
·
, cortllllnption llcohb\ an
1 ~..dticle, S200 ~~~~~~ totU,

'

Umet1Qne,

·· Gravei~ Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

B. llloKinney
Aaalatanca Act,
11
.-.did; toM ueacllor tile
jtroJiol(a) dlaltrlbad - ·
The Mala• County

c:oonitll--. It Dlrllfrtnl

to 1111 s- of 0111o, t1t1t
. .,,, County and Janat
In hlllhlr olllolll
•• Prllldant,
Co u .n t y
to '

of
.. lOtion

li~~~;=~~n~··enforo•
flililon

FRIDAY.' MARCH 21
.

.

.

.

.

(614) 592·5025

....,

of ·CIN•Int

'

Honelt, Dlpendlbll
and Tnlllwortl)y ......

,_,to bu......._

ct.n your

_,.CILL.

WD.LBIDL. 992·7074 .

home or

Gmittl, umea-,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Send, Refuae.

Reaeonable~

ca--...

.

Ret--·

,. . · . .. -. ·- ,.

AD ,
, PlACE .YOUR
.
-~ AND 1lEACH'3 COUNTIES! ·
'

'

.

!

.,

'

I

•toov•' -·•

'

'

'

• Home lniprovement Center • Air Conditioning
• House Painters • Building ContractOrs
·.
~ Interior Decontors • Lumber • Flooring e Carpeting
· • Hardware • Appliances • Furniture Stores ·

R. Le.HOLLON :

. JRUCIIIG

.,..,1tnO.

FLOOit VICTIM.PIAIIOS

•

''
'1

Iunde oJted -•- and/or
ptn!On, ...·- .,..,
.
groupe, who h1ve I!IY
ooriimenll rtllrdloig the·
anvlrjlntnltnt or who
. cl...... l!llth thltllnclliltf of
No ·• IJ.nlfloent ltnpeot
datllaion, 1ra 'lnvllld to
wrltlln COIIIIIIIIIII
to the
oounty

It

I:::Ja~~ ~~~··

b..ln •t , •• oo .• .•. on
b• .
Thuraclly, Ajlrll10, 1.-r,
ltr' tiOIItllctlng tile
.thl otfl••• of the .....
t
1
11 en..
Conltnlllloll, t 10 •••, ...,...uAte' n..
fiubllo lllllllla
1roec1 ltrMt, ColulllbUI,
coont\ r1a1on 01 Ohio
........ .. ,1 b llllltacl ••.-...
... I...._...,
- · ... no~
.... fly: ...ry · - · - ·
will II!' llwt! .. opportunity
lecowllry
to 111 heard. furthar 131 14; 1TC

•'

,. '
' I

··,.

'nte . .Daily S~ntinel
c-.11 992·21•5 D•ve or loll

'

1P.

,_...ce.....,

II

,.

na

' Plckupd~

appiiMCM; ........

a.tlts, Grooming,
Kennel Care

manynwtat••

. motor blocka.

~Love

814-1112-4025 8

Mon., lUll., Wad.,

. Ti'lur.., Fri. 1N~
Sit. 1M; Slln. 12-4
271 North 2ltcl
Mldclleport. Ohio

.m.a

A rH JO Ut JCE-r.1 EtJT S

182-4514

EMPI 0Yt.1ENT
SERVICES

-

sr:

::~:.~~·~ .:~::~:
1
·-

.

'

~

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

~Warll

a

'

.

Athens, Ohio

--Alliin
IPORliFUNl

ROIEit IISSELL
COIRRUCIIOI
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete .
Remodeling
Stop a Compa,.
FREE

,

.

ESniiATEES
985 4473 '

~;».'
Hns

-life

TRAIIEE~

.1

·.

.TO

•

01'

" -.
'.
l

'

C(;l~fU!!IIMtlCMIB)
•
'

.SPRINQCLE'I.IQ

Got Your Sjlolng Ct.. nlng o ..r.

:F

serv.u ce•o&gt;

1.•

e••-041-

.....

o

Eo~abllat..d Cullom Ffllllll! Silo~
For Salo, Soriour lnqulrln Onlr;,

e1.-.111s

Dlilrlbu!OIIIIIp
- ForFor
Pfo.
lerotonalo
Andltuunta.
14

102 E. Main .
lir J' J,l,lrJ( 1 ~.lf

·

' Open New Doore, lnd•pendent

992·7696

-..-n.Publlclr Tllldtc1 Pfo.

vontadvo !\Mithcaro c~r:
High lr-'lt Po-l. Pori·Timit
Dt Fui-Tlme. Frtt rr.Jntng, Coli

r.r :l

, . . . l14-m.22:M,

Happy

BINGO

Birthday
Love.

POST467
·MON.&amp;
WED.
6:30·P.M.
STAR BURST

Michael

$1-500.00

Holly! ·

,

. CableVIalon II IHklng a lelf· Wllh Now I Spend ~ur 5urqmo&lt;
In Lolture. C.ill Now To Get 'IDu•
moUvalld, -vetlc,
FIWICI,lnclwidual kt lraln 11 an 6nl&amp;dar. Sp&lt;lr~~~ FIVor Ctunlr~~~ Dtocound
~2ft,51M Ey . . . . U.llll lluol bo '
~
.. - - · I l l 114-1113011.
nul•. Mu11 Be
Yfl. public and co-worbrL ·Prior u114~.
·
perlanc:a a plua but not a ne- Will Do Babylining In Mr H cotlity.
Muel hove ftlld dnvoro Cioae To City S.hoola,
W~NTED: To correopond wloh
llcenie. The auCce11lul appllc- 31o08,
mem1H111 clllt ol 1957, PPHS.
Dan Ruaoell, 8 Woodbine Rood, IIIWillbo-"d.,_llll'l'
omptoriMnt.drug ICtHni"'t 1011 WJM llaul Junk or tralll - · f351
Sllellllumt, vr. o5482.
onct o boclcgrounct checll will IH1 plclwp lo1iCl. 304~75-5035.
conducted. Excellon1 IHlntllt
40. · Giveaway
FINANCIAl
pickage IVIIItbll oi!Or comple3 Pupplor To Good Home, 114· tion ol pabo!IOIII'J portod, '
Submll ruume to: C.ibltVlllon,
1410 Jtllt110n Bl~d .. P.O. Box 21
Business
I moutllo Old Port Btot~lt Port I 08,..:::::~ PlttOMt WV 25510.
OppOrtunity
CIJII PIHM. EOE. Ill
lui Doa; Boogie HOiol1l and Buill · Na
Moll\' Will•. Batuttlutty Morluocl, F, Dru1t frM WOtlq;l ce,
. IIIOTICEI ·
,
GIMo with Kldo, WI! G•o
OHIO V~LLEV PUBliSHING CO,
DEUViiiTEL~ IOOKI
IM111ng 0oo. Ill 41101 II
recommend• rhat rou do bual·
nan with people rou know. and
EARN
EX1RA
_
.
,
Bloclc &amp; White Femolo Co~ Vorr
NOT ., moner lh&lt;auah tile
NoEIII*IooiCI
~11.UI3S51.
mall undl rou hove tnYtolfgoiod
llolloli-•MI• SWt.Mid Milch
1he Dn.rirtg.
'
firewood. You cut &amp; you haul.
301.&amp;3256.
OeaiorwNp Avolloblt Steol builciJ
lng saltt Booming 81; Proftl Po·
tontlol lrom Still ond tor Co~­
ttruotlon. Coli lor avolllltlt Mor- 1303~ 758-4135 ExLUOO '

IIOIIOIICOPIIl

a

·. MARCH 13, 1997 .
'

tlon.

'

CHRISn'SPm

IHIIAaylyp

.....gluiii

·ADVERTISING DEADLINE

Dull•• lnc;IUde Routine Floor
Thonopy, ~BG tlrhio, Mallltor Of
Non-lnva1iva /lnva1lve Vanllll.-

a

I

.

or

IIULIJII I
IICIJiftll ·

==•

,.

SOMC Hao lmmoclllto Openlft111
For 3 Conlinoonl RM!IIr&amp;~ 1'11&gt;litlonL Mutflle RRTICRTT flett.
lltry Etltlbl&amp; DoliN ~ JRcRtE Ac:cnlcl\ld.Poapn.

JmJI7trno.

Or

TTt;;

Suppl"ment to:
Point Pleasant Register

-lORY~

Attomey AI Law

.' SERVICE

Gallif,olis Daily Tribune .
The Daily Senth.~t

•

Attorney William Safraoek

614-992-3470

TRANSPORTAnON
u...:nns1ma

Ja.i!

'IIPOII tompletion of, ~niJalllelll•

HAULING

H.O.M.M.

Meigs County.Court neWs·
Helen M. Barker. Pomeroy. passThe following cases were resolved three days jail suspended. nne year
l'Cccntly i.n t~c Meigs County Coun probation: Karen Lamb. Middlepon.: ing blld checks. 13 counts;.$25 plus
'passing bad check•. $25 plus costs. ~osts on each, restitution; Yanuy D.
~&gt;U~dgc Patrick H:O'Bricn.
I Pined ware: Jessica A. Reiber. restitution; Dale W: Treadway. · Ea.&lt;thom. Racine. OUt.- $K50 plus
Racine, ~peed. $30 pl~s costs: April Coolville, passing· bad checks, $25 costs, 10 days jail sus~rided to three
M. ~cilmircc Middleport. scat hclt. ,plus costs. restitution: Karla S. With· days. 90-day OL suspension, one·
$15 plus ~qsts; Justine McKnabh, crspoon , Pomeroy. passing bad year probation. jail and $5!\0 sus)he Plains. passing bud checks. four checks, $25 plus costs. rcstitutioh pendcd upon completi&lt;m of residen· ·
·
tial treatment program: Nancy A.
counts. $25 plus costs on each. rcsti· ordered :
Darrin Gainer. Coolv.illc. pa.&lt;Sing Davis. Langsville. failure to control,
\Uti()ll : Rohen O, Ellis. Middleport.
driving undqr Jinancial responsihili- bad checks. $25 plus costs, rcs.titu· $100 suspended. costs, one year pro·
\Y action suspin~ion . $200 plus costs. tion; Tanya S. Hess. Pom·eroy,'p~ss· bation, three days .residential treat·
.
one year pro hatton. 30 days Jatl sus- ing bad ~hccks . costs. restitution: mcnt progmm;
Gordon B. Teaford, Pomeroy,
ttcnded to five days: speed , $27 plus Paul Qualls. Gallipolis. passing bad
coslj&lt;; William J Durst. Pomeroy. drt· checks. $25 plus costs. restitution; DUI. $550 plus costs, one year pro· ·.
vins under tflc inliucncc', $850 plus Elizabeth · ~oush. Racine. passing bation. 90-day rOL suspension. 10
cos!~. ~0 days jail suspcndC&lt;•to 10 bad checks. $25 suspended. costs: daysjn)l suspended to three day,. jail
days, one year o))llrator's. liccns~ s~s­ .Roy L. Rcc'll Jr.. Tuppers Plains. pa.&lt;&gt;· and $550 suspended 'upon cqinplction·
pi:nsion, two y~ars prqbatmn; dnv10g ing bad checks. 15·counts. $25. plus of residential·· ·treatment· proJtain;
under financial responsibility action costs on each. restitution. 30 days jail Kevin' 13ailcy, Rutland, importuning,
suspension, costs, -;10 days j~il s~s­ suspended upon payment ilf restitu· costs, nne year pmhation; Bitbhy J .
:V.nded tQ I 0 days concurrent wtth tion; Cynthia A. Klein. Pomeroy. Barnette. Charleston: W:'Va .. speed.
,, plus. c·o•ts·
, , K'mbc
t. 1• rIy A . G rccn.
DUI;
. Passinu• bad checks.. three counts. $25 $'0
· Ricky A Priddy. Middleport. dn- plus costs on each. restitution. :&gt;.0 · Shade. scat belt $15 jl!us costs;
;yins u'nder the influcilc..:. $1150 plus days jail suspended upon payment nf C'cr&lt;iy- O'Bcyan Ill, Ra(.inc. a.~surcd
\:osts, 30 days jail suspended to 10 restitution; ;,.;;;";;;;j;tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii . dear dlsta~c-e
$20 plus
days. one y~ar OL sus~n~ion; two
years proflption; , )(~"!h. · Hetzer.
RCCjisviUe.1 11ix!lalt~pc!tltllon, co;&lt;lk
69 ·~ay5
suipo~t 1w~ ye~rs ,
p-o~atlon, . tjitratjnng qrd~r 1ssucd;
Donn R. Ppil\jla, RaCine. assured
' clear diita~. 520 •plUS co$ts: Sam ..
Fclgoppllll!l, Middlepon, selll belt,
$20 plus co•ls; William D. Howard • .
Rutland, s(JC!!d. $30 plus c~ts; Paula
Kay Dillon, Racine, speed. $30 plus,
costs; Myrtle L, Holter, ·Ra~;lne, ;
, i~. $30 .plus coils; · 1 ' 1 1 l •
, Wesley Barton. Oroyepan; DU •
S~ plus ~0111. I0 day• jail 1111•
• pentled 10 111ree days, ~y QLJUI·
• ~nlion; jail' and , S550 , ~idpended ·

614-992-7643 '

can relieve s debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a fair
dist.ribution of assets. Debtors In bankruptcy may
keep "exempr property for their personal use.
This mjly Include a car, a house, ,Clothes, and
.household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

•--w •

Colnl?' . tic..-..
. l
CourltiDifll; Pon.a,. OhiO

992·2753

BANkRUPTCY

WICKS

a_..,: ·

1114/Dr lnlnlnt '

lo

·Garag.. • Replacement Windows
"oom Additions • Roofing
.COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
. FREE E$TIMATES

, -tno. CIWntr. - -

(Uml stoniLowAitta)

•n

•rtm. .ttona ahould b•
llllached ID IIIII praJI ul. ,
,.. ,,.,..... lllily ~
oulleil or tlaiiVIIred to ~
lllelga
Coun.ty·

tll2o7101.

(614) 367 -0266
1-800-950-33 59

raviiWa, ·
end
. 992-6342 (Diane)
ectlon: 1nd
the••
992·7275 (B....mt
reapo-ulblll·llal
· .,.... •n,
.......
The llpl elleot of lh•
01r111JoetJon le tlllt Ullflll hi .
· YOIIIG'S
IJIPI'IIVIII, tile illllgl C011nty
CotnmllaloMra may ~~&amp;•
CAIPENIER SEIVKI
tile Faclaral lunda, an tile
ofloom
Addltlona
~
ltata of Ololo will have
...... GlrttgM
' II h11
,ilaterml~ ·ll8tlllllcJ hi .....-.lblllllll
Umeatone Gravel
that 1uch 1 Requeet for undar tile National ''
. 8epUc &amp;yamS
~··Plumbing
oRoollng
ReiNu , of FUndi will "" lowlro-1 PoiiOJ Aot Ill
'· fhlller 1o : '
110n111ltute ,.n action· 111ft,
'oJMirlor Al5xtlltor'
alpHiolntly llfleotlng alia . Tile .1 1- 01 Olllo WIH
· Houee·lllel · ·
· qu11lly of th• humin ecpept 1n obllotlon to b
,__,.
anvlronrnant and eDoonllng IPPfOWII of tfla NIMaa of
Joe N.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
th.a , Melli•
County . lunda end
of
_,,.
V.C. Y!)UNO Ill
Commfa•Jonara .haa lila ..aJfiOidJon
II
r ..yrt.1ii....I.LU. (o
88Mail
,«J.altlad not to prafiiN.. oM of tile tw·oo ~:'J;: · · I oJIII
PotMray,
Ohio
Envlronmant1l Impact bn)ll: (II) lh• "!
814-742-2138
Statalliant under the not, In
axeoUIId .__ _ _ __
llatlon•l Environmental by lhl County· of hlp
PoiiPY Aot of 1•1, •• chief axaout!WI om- or
ltnanclld..
othar olltc. Of tile Cowty
Envlronmantal Revlaw of illllga aJJrovad by lha
~a)) (ER Ill lor llich of IIIMI ol Olilci; or (b) tlllt lila
1M Profactl(a) llltld abow anvlronmental review
._.ltalft concluolad by 1111 racord for tha · proJect ·
U.S. Dapertment of lndlc1taa omlnlon of a :
"SSrtoultuoWural
NqUlred daclalon, Hridlng,
Davalopment (USDA/AD). or IIIP appllclt&amp;le ,to the
TM ERR(I) d!M!II~ntl t... proJect In tile anvlronmantat
environmental revlewe of review pro 0111.
..
(he profaol(a) end mora fully
Wrlltan obfiCtlona mull
eata·lorth th• ruaona why M prepared llncllilbol~tl8d
aui:h · at1ta111ent 11 not In aoaord1naa with the
raqulracl. Th1 Eflfl(a) are NqUintd ~ (24 CFR
fn H.le Md avallaiM lor tile Pen 18), and muat b•
~·· 'exemlnetlon and 1ddraaaed to: Stell of
1 g, upon reque'!_l_t Ohio; · Ertvlronmarttll
· thli houra of t:uu Oflloar;
CommunUr
4:00 . p.m. Monday .~OpOMBt Dlvlalon; P.O.
1hrol . Friday (excapt Box 1001; Columbu,Oioto
~lldaya) 11 the omcetJ of 432el 0101.
fl• u;s. Department
ObJeotlona to lila Rolllta
·~sjrtcuttuNiflul'll
of Funda on . . . oth1r
. l'l'ttnaporlltlon for
. ave 1o p 111 en t,
3 4 8 than tlloal atet8CI abovt1 will
lncllvkluata uat111
·
Ulillngum Drhlll, Mat~.. o\ot bl COOl~ by the .
DUMP TRUCK
lo 4571J0.1435. ·
Stale ·of Ohio.
No
-hllra. llledlcald •
:-loire eeoepled.
Th1 ·following · nagatlve obJeeltono NceiVIId eftll'
' . Doctor 'altlelta,
(mpactil heve bean April 21, 19t1, (Which Ia 15
.. looapltal vlalta, etc.
. f!llntlllld •• w•ll •• tlla cllya Iller II II ontlclflltacl
Phone 814-192-3053
~· to . ml~lgall their :=u'!:t
W::t:C:elv•o~"
.
FIX 814-11112-3053.
.USDA/AD hla furtola), will M conaltlared
PIIJIII'1-8CIM82-2327.
••aa•a•d. the potentlel by llillllll of Olllo.
·
,
Pln2841
environmental Imp- of The lddrtlll of tha chief
lila proJact end lou axacutlva ctlllcW II: .
cf-llrlllinad the proJect will Jaroatltu••d. Ptuldanl
direCtly ltnfllol .8 acre of
.;.ttand. Six hundred lee!
01 I' Jlft!VIty _ . , llna will -.Jga County CourthouM
c'roal 1 watlend. Thla P-"Y, Ohlo 45'181 · ·
watl1nd ltnpaat will ba (3) 14; 17, 1.1 3TC
Free E1tl. . . . Md Dlacounta wiH be giVen
mltlgal8d
the .:J~~:!~~=
1.111•
~oull by
to returning
Ita original
· Public ·
on an ~ dlfllllg8!t P*-· No ohlrgM fOI'
contour ualng II'CIVIIId
t(opeoll ior blokfllllng the
. LEGAL NOTiCE
· '
pJ4:k·up and tt,~~. ·
. ,
tOD II• Inch• oflhl - ' i - The Public Utllltlll
lrl . oddltlon, no granular eomnllnton ··of Ohio haa
, ~erial will ~ Uled to aat lui' aub11o lo!llrlnfr CUI
Main 0111ce R!lflulhlng Plant
baokfiU Ilia triiiCII.
No. ti-III·GA-GCll, to
.,._ oflallulll oUald oftelalll
No lurthar lflvlronllllntll I ~=:r tht · aaa ooat
24
Walhlnglon
Avwiu, 1 Huntlnglan, WV 211701
ravlaw of auoh proJect II 1r.oovtlry ra!ft of Nllllonal
1-IDN7&amp;-47118
Local 521-!'W
, projiOIId toM cone!~, Qu otl Corporation, tile
prior to tlla requftt for opooallon· 01 1t1 PurcliUad
ral I I of Fadlral fundi,
Gil · :Ao!Jultlnent CIIU!II,
Tha lllalga Coun!y 1nc1 rallta!l tMtllnl. Tille
Happy Ad
Public Notice
Commla•lonare plan to h•rlnt Jti ·uhad!llad to

·· ,

;:;c::;;1",;:.•;,;:;IW::;;IIc;;;;ol;;;,;ta~~­

-to~r.w-.
, Colli~

. N·ew Homt1 ~ vi.,yt Siding New

c::=:..=.

rliqulrad lor the abov•
aarvloaa. All ral01tecl

QNnla :Aolmlnl*-

992·5535

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.II$SELL IUILDERS,

lll( ENVIAONIIINT
(fON8I) COIIIIINI!D
NOTICE
llll'olo .... 11117

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' ~I
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quaiJfiHtJOn

~Ohio

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.

1-111C1411.JIIOJI

PUauc

.

PUblic Notice

.

...,

oNo Job Too Small
•Artr and All of Your
Home Repair Needs
tCall Today for Your
Free Eatlinatea

eDecu

1 ·NCmcl! TO
OF NO
IIQMFICAIIT IMPACT ON

b:)c:..ro=f

' PUblic Notice

110 Court IL
1112-4111

~

, • Stump Grinding

Tehran R;tdio said the pilot had ' By noon\nday. the wreck~ stUt
reponed what it described as a tech- •htid not been. found ,·IRNA said. · · ,
nical problem.
·
It did not say whether the pjL&lt;SCn~
. The plane went down about 15 gcro weri: scrvi&lt;.i:m'cn or dvilians. :
miles from MIL&lt;hhad. 'the Islamic
IRNA put t!J.f. number of people
Republic News Agency said, Ma.&lt;h- aboard at 80, wH1Ie Tehran R:tdin said·
had. 435 miles nolthea.&lt;t of Tehran, is 86.
'
:
a city holy tn Shiite Muslims.
Iron's ulr force is a mix of Russ.
IRNA quoted the @ltVernor of ian, American and Chinese aircralll
Mashhad. Vakili Pour, as ~aying that The U.S. models in put1ic1lar nt\c~
rescue units were ~arching for the have suflcrcd. from a lack of spate'
wreckage in molintains near the. cily. panS: and .less than half arc believed

'PubHc ~ce

Quality Window Systems

20Yra.

1

r-=:;:¢';·:·;·~=·===·T-'=;::=.::=::;:·:;·;-·~··:.c:·a={m~,

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• Top • Trim • Removal

$.:. ·'

'

· $195..00 INSTALLED ·

Extra Copies of .the 1997
Flood Tab are available
at the front.desk .of The
Daily Sentinel, 25¢ each.

a.

.
lr$nlan military plane crashes with at le~st 80 on aboard ..

on the fresh g•nvcs of four. eighth- .and about40 girls filed out 'lo.take in policies IO'I/!I,rd thC. Paleslini!Uis, and· ':·:
:J
.graders:
.
the sweeping view of tho Jordan R'iv- suggestin)!' they :ifilglidellct to vio: "Kcron, where are'you'!" thcfam- cr valley.lencc. ,
'
·
PubUci Notice
ily o( junior high student Keren
Withoui warn~ng, Maqadsch
Israeli news media then reponed .
grabbed an assault nne from a fellow that officials close to the prime min·
Cohen shouted.
PUeUC NOTICE
REQUEIT FOR I'EE
.' "Ad I, the beautiful." others cried. soldier in th~ Jeep. (1c ran toward the ister had'suggested the king was cmoPROPOIALI
'calling out for a bright-eyed. red· girls, shooting as he approached. · tiomilly unstable; Netanyahu 's office
.The lllelga County
checked child. , .
·
. -Israeli- rcpons said oitc of the Jor· deni~~ the reports ThurSday. ·
Cotntnlaalonara will be
_ A rabbi said the prayer for the dan10n soldiers tried to di!f1b' off the
Speaking from Spain, ·Hussein ilp-lylrtg tor f'Y t1 CDBQ
dead. while grieving mothers and tower to stqp the shooter. hut fell and bristled at suggestions that he was Cornmunn, Houelng and ·
Jathcrs leaned heavily on relatives .
injured llimself.
somehow responsible for the shool· . Improvement Prooram
ond w1n IICOipt llil
; A:t tlie funeral of Sari Gedayev in
"We all pa,nickcd, " said Oranit , ing. which he said was also "aimed lundlfll
propoaala
for
!erusalcm, her sobbing father leaned Burgauker; 13, who was shol in the at me, my cHildren, the people of Jor· . fi!HMIUT...noN . :
CONSULl;INQ IEfiVICES to
over the open grave, averting his eyes shoulder. " We were on .the hill, and dan. "
·
'ltnd unable to look inside.
everyone started running dQwn.
After returning to Jordan Thurs. lmpllmanl'the program, If
fundod, unUIII-" 31, t.-r
. The shooting .on the island of Everyone lay down so they ,w ouldn't day riight, Hussein said that he called It 1.0:00 a.on. f• proponla
Naharayim. 55 miles northeast of Tel he hit."
Netanyahu aod o.&lt;kcd to visit the ram- will lhlfl M conllklerad
Aviv, came at n time of crisis between
The gunman cha~ed the screaming ilies of the victims.
1:00 p.m. during "" r&amp;gullr
commlaelonara
lsracl,nnd Jordan overthe impasse in girls down a grassy embankment, fir·
"I cannot oflcr enough condo- countJ
__....
.
Israel s peace process Wl!h the Pales· mg I rom hiS assault nne.
lcnccs or express enough personal
tinians .
.
"He came very dose l&lt;1 us. face- sorrows to the mothers. fathers and
. The gunman , Ahmed Mousa to-Ji1ce." said teacher Rosa Cherny. brothers of these children who fell
Muqadseh. 28. had psychologtcal " He cnptinued to 11re. cxcep\ at the today," he said.
'
.

&amp;.RIBBBQ
SUNDAY 11:00
POM,EROY
FIRE STA~ION

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(Opo_loMA- II A - Cool)

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"FACfORY DlltECT
PRICI.S"
· ' (up to 93 Uiilted loodoea)

ALL'IMI . . . IIuollt-111
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lhe Mr -..,.. lhe 14111 It ru11. llcOonol&lt;l't Of GIIN,otlo -

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ADS Carp.

Tomtd Do011oilc Roblllt, •••,.._illla, . '

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230

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CondiHon, 114,15l10, 114·251·
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'
18111 3 Btdroomo t ·aath, CA.
Will TU. "-r 011. WIH Glvt .500 7 AcrH on 100117 HaMan TriCII
To llo¥1, 114· 388-0301 • .,.,.. Ad. t milt out Gl_.od, con.,.... ctriVe. untlnlohed ao·
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P... Pluo, Sllv.r Bridge Plaza.
814-441.0710.

570

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ProoQ A lot ol road Iron~, a

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Polishing In paces

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Jood&lt;oon, Ohio 45840, Clearance
,Solo, Up To 41"1i OHI It 4·211·

roado aA 1htou1h the proplfty.
Allq 130.000. 30+175-15115.

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Hummingbird

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BfPitiUip Alder

51111.

'r'lmaha DX·2t 'P!'Oituional

key·

baan!laynlheolzel, lull liz• liep,

podol, bag, lllnd, 1240. 814-441·
Dual axle trllllf. t8' !old d9wn 013&amp;.
ramp, factory i!Oflt, Ill modal,
11,500, 814·140·2311 dayo or
114-1140'2B44"""'noa.
FARr.1 S UPP LI ES
r. LIVl-STOCK
Farm Lul!lbar app&lt;OL eo.Oit pcor
One btdroom apartment in Pt. bundlt. 1120 a bundlt, ,.nd9m
-lenotli &amp; ,......, wldlh. 304-719PlauM!, IIOPIII.II4oiiUIIY.
IIOIOor.Uoo· ~te ~

One badroom lurnlohtd 'aport· For ...... bOwling ........ loi:oiad
mtnll, two badroom turnlahtd
,.,..., barlln Alhlno. llaldng
ftou11: In Middleport, 114·112· .'"
aoOct monay. ClcQCIIun bu!llntoo.
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ld111 far 1 ,_r10n,· na pet1, no

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hall out, acrooo from Ptnlle
Church. Some ol fllo boat -

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eo ACro•l Mlloo out Sandhill
Ad. tum on SUialr11 Ad. 1 t/2

llolgo Co.: Hlttli I Dry 10 Acrto
18,000 • lt,o® Down + 1106 A
4 Acroo With 11111 llo· llo., Or 5 Acrtl 17,500, Nice
On Raccoon Road, 11oino! 11181, AlhtnoTo Ruc:oon Creek,
Call Todll)' For Frao · llapo &amp;
DwiMtr Flnlnclng Into. To~
011 Uettd 'Prien On Caoh Pw .

• • 71 4
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25~ OFF EVERI'THING iN

S100£

lt=........ :ta'-

erilo~ro. reference•
~76-21151 .

&amp; ,dapoolt.

'84 Hondo Aaponcacla, one....,..

Do you feel your no-trump play

LOOCIICII •• loaded, 135110.614-742-1200.

.-able

coidd do with some work? If 10, a na-

place to llart .. "Step.b)'-Siep:
Card Play Ia No-'l'Z'fiiDPI" by Robert
Berlbe and Norbert Lebely. It waa
oriaiaallY publilbed In 1110 In P'nllce,
azul an En.Uah edition a~ Ute
next year. Now It lw beaD republllbed

1987 Honda 50 Vary Good Conllllon, 1550• ., 4-367-011:12-

. by Balafonl.

.
'
After givlnayou the dummy and
deelarer's band, the aulbon ak tbe
key queltioal to help you find a way
home through tlie minefield of bad
brealls aud loaing ~.
. This deal front the book will giw! you
a sense of whal to expect. A{lainat
three no-trump, the defenders begin
with a heart to East's ldng, a heart
back to Wefi'a - . aud a third heut,
oa wltlo:h Eat dlacanla a low spade.

1114 Hcncli Sha- V-800 motorcrclt, 3200 mlttt. teel color,

·v.ry "!"'" t2100.00, 81 ....148.
2311 •~· or 814·14V·ri-44
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.

1114 Suzulol GS 500, 400 mllto,
Nlit - · 12800, 81 ....102-5571

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no. badroom apar-nt In Mlct-

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clopart, ........ 814-lltiMIIil.

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Mo., All uaatiH Paid. e-tnao:
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CELEBRrrY CIPHER

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·ldng. Hotiever, whe~~ Eat playa. low,
you !Rut win with tbe dlam011d ue.
Can lhia I!IIIY eo.t )'0111" eontract?

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.BERNICE
BJ!;DE OSOL

" 0 OJ C

LA

No,~youneeclitliijl1qnmore .

diamond lrida,-npt lbiae. HeN, West
dropJ tbe king lnd llidea his clWr 118\'•
eral yards back from tbe table. You

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We all would like to vote 'for

the besl people for the
office,biJI they usually do nol
become a .... .... ·. ...... -! .
.

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you devtlo!&gt; lrom

Compti.te the ciMtckle quoted
by fi,lling in tha; mining ~rds
&gt;lep No. 3 below . .

I' I' r r 1 I' I' I' I' I
FORI· I I· I I I I I I I

9

PRINT NUM.fRED
LETTERS

•

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

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low to , _ ~· -.Is.

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SERVICES

OSZIV.I'C

OSZIV.I'C

L....L,.-L-L--.J-....1~
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HATES ME!

X D LX

'::~::.' sa:\\dllA~&amp;-e.~s·.
_,;;p..;..;;.....;._..; ...... ., c;&amp;AY L POIWI

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Firat, c:ount. your top tric:lla. You · ·w z v z ·1· c 1
MH H
.
. ' - BIOYH.IBH
have HYell: three spades, oae heart,
one diamond aud two c:lulill. Where will BIHLSJM. ,
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the atra tric:b come frum! ·
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
~AIIal AI -~...,.,lite aoul'a out of tune.• - ,
Ob\lloull)r, from dlamondl. Ia there
Mil1""' dll c-ttea.
.
.
. .. 1
daqer Jut arot111d the comer? If 10,

end wl\11 a~ overtrick. .
The book is IWillable for $19.511 post·
paid l'rom The Brldae World, 31 West
Nib Street, New
Ymt, NY 1111125-7124.
'
.

HOf 601HiTO
TilE TEACMEINIATES
IIAfES ME,TIIE
'fi.IE S~MOOL

A

.

.Wtldt?
.
If West pilla the lead, be c:m cab
two heart wimlll'l .to defeat the COD•
trael Yliu lboulcl c:nt111 to ~ wltb
a lpllde aud leld the diamond jade to
~ l!lut ill etMrlf be fill the

'

.. KMI!a'•

5

SCIAMUYS ANSWIIS
Unlike .. Gulch .. Begot· .Joiner· NOTHING . .
Gramps always told me that it's better to be a nobody
who accomplishes somelhing t!lan a sQmebody who accomplishes NOTHING'

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�Nu-trl'tlo" ancl
'"Caln'tal" )ng a
.h•al'tltfl lll'••t:fll•,.

•,..,.,_on,.,.

NCAA tournament first
round action to conclude

President won't ·
let

today

C1

Brief stag:

5111'
"
"
slow
hbtt down

Details on
pageA2

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"

••

tmes
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eve oper t.o ld to aet ·on la.n d option )

From AP, Staff Reports
· ·
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -The state air quality board has ruleil it will
revoke a New York developer's permit for a proposed Mason County. pulp
mlll unless the company buys ~ propeny or _renews its option by April I .
Parsons &amp;Whittemore Inc. in January indefinitely postponed thC SI bil·
lion projec( in Apple Grove because of market conditions. On March I, it
let an opti&lt;111 expire on the 1,200-acre site.
. .
The board on1ered the company to prove whether it has control ofthe )li'OJ&gt;eny, said Becky Charles, the board's attorney. If Parsons &amp; Whittemore does
not buy the site or renew the option , the board will revoke the company's
permit, she said Friday. ·
. The company extended its option on the propeny fOur times since entering into an original agreement in April 1989,
.
.
Parsons &amp; Whittemore Vice President Kenneth \Goddaril did not inime.
diately return a telephone message to his Rye Brook, N.Y., qffice Friday.
Opponents say the pulp. mill would release dioxin into the Ollie River.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has linked dioxin:.a carcinogeni~

LS.
'.

byproduct of paper bleaching, .to human ~productive and immune system
problems. .
·· Critics of the mill, which would be the largest pulp facility in North America, are hailing the ruling as a victory.
·
.
Appearing before the Air Quality Board, appellanls Ohio Valley En vironmental Coalition (OVEC), tf!e Buckeye Forest Council and others presented oral arguments supporting motions to suspend the mill's air permit
The motions carne in respoose to seveml new developments, most recently the expi~ation of the con:'pany's o~tion to purchase the&gt; land where the proposed factbty would be built, accorchng to a Buckeye Forest Council telease.
The board listened to arguments from the four appellants and the appellee,
counsel for lhe office of Air Quality, which issued the air permit fn June 1996.
. The permit has been under appeal since July of that year..The Buckeye
Forest Council's appeal is based on the failure of the OAQ to consider the
effects of the mill's emissions on forest health.
The mill would emit sulfur and nitrogen oxides, which contribute to acid
min, as well as volatile organic compounds (VOCs), a precursor to ground·

level ozone. Ozone is a threat to P.,th human and ecological health, with :
effect_s on the human respi~t~ry system as well as on plant photosynthesis, :
contnbutmg to tree mortahty )n the nonheast U.S.. the forest council release:
neted. ·
·
·
·
·
After deliberating for over an hour, the board ;etumed with a decision to:
.continue the proceedings until April I in order to allow the appellees or the : ·
butlders ofth"'mill sufficient time to submit "tangible evidence" that they :
· ·
·
are tndeed intending to build the. milL
~~ "?ard wjll then rule on whether to vacate the permit based on a lack
of tnntat1ve from the project's proponents, or to continue with an eviden- · .
tiary hearing on the validity of the permit itself. Tbe hearing is tentatively :
.
scheduled for mid-May.
'This is just one more nail in .the coffin for the·mill," said M~u Peters o(
· the Buckeye Forest CounciL "Today 's ruling is a good sign that this pul~
mtllthreat may soon be behind us." .

,-·Perform.i ng ·their stated ·m ission Hollister to address
•

·National Guard
puts Its training
Into practice

•

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··

'60th annual meeting
of Gallia Chamber

By JIM FREEMAN
.
TIR,Iei..S.ntlnel Staff
· "ROCK SPRINGS The
Meigs County Fairgrounds resemble&lt;! an Anny post ·Thursday as
members of Ohio Ann;,&lt; N.ational
Guard Task Force 16 prepared to
begin emergency engineering operations.
About 65 soldiers qf COI!Ipanies
A, B and C of the 112th Engineering Battalion and the I 45th Medic
detachment moved onto the fair;
grounds with-lheiF·HumYees, srilall
'~:i~~~e:~x;~ca~vators (SEEs; .
If
backhoes 1111d
five,ton duJllptrucks,

•

·ll

GALLIPOLIS - Lt. Gov. Nancy,
P. Hollister will be the featured
speaker at the 60th annua! meeting
and banquet ,of the Galli~ County
Chamber of Commerce, set for 7 p.m.
Thursday. Ajxil 17 in .the Student
Annex at the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Gmndc Community College. •
Hollister was elected to her present position in November 1994.
She.began her career in public service over 17 years ~go. After serving
on the Marietta City Council and as
the city's mayor, she wa.' appointed
Gov.
'Voinovich as the

..

man-

~~.. ··141· ~~;

was ha_stlly

board of(ic,c. .

1

clie soldiers ·
were busy rew;senlblittg the equip- ·.
COLVERT RDAIR - Sgt. Mark Blt•lk clrec:wd
Brl8n Hlldebnlnclt, who !Will opet8t·
me~t they would
to perform
lng • SEE (IIMII empl~ axcevltOr) Oil LAke
. Rold In Chelter Townlblp. The two
their mi~sion: emergency road · !'rm'f. Nlltlan•l Gu.rd soldier• from ~111 .,.
the ~lo Army Neliofllll Guard.Taalc FOI'ce
repair.
18, whlctt Ia concjuctfng ~margency I'OICI....-Irs In Melgli County.
· While members of the Nati.on. ' ;
••!
'
· al Guard .were in the county last
ing their second week away from
"The road washed away and the
ducti ng projects i.n Vinton County
· week, their mission was to assist
their l honics and civilian jobs,
culvert disconnected," Blasik
and stayed in a building on the fair·
Barker:B!Iid. They arc being housed
exP,Iained.
gr&lt;lunds there.
residents in immediate cleanup
effons.
at · lhe Ohio Valley Christian
The engineers reconnected the·
He said the soldiers .appreciate
the beds and showers at the C!JrisThe current mission is to inakc
Assembly in Bedford Township,
end of the culvert, surrounded the
tian academy after the spartan
sure lite roads are passable, accordwhile the equipment and operawashed out section with' large rock
ing to Capt. 'Rick Barker, the offitions are.based atthe Meigs Coun- 1 and filled in the remainder with · accommodations in Vinton County.
cer in charge of Task Porce 16.
iy Fairgrounds. ~·
smaller stone.
Blasik noted that the projects
Soldiers will be hauling stone
Friday afternoon, Sgt. Mark
Blasik was called to duty on
are similar to those the engineers
and covering up washed out cuiBlasik, of Lori an, a"member of B
March 2, two weeks ago.
may he asked to perform in
verts to prevent farther damage to
Compiiity, 112th lijiginccrs. was
"God only knows when we'll go
wartime.
vulnerable gravel roads, · he
directingaculvenRj&gt;airprojecton · home," he said.
·
Lake Wood RQad in ChesterTown· BFfore coming to Meigs Coun- ·
ty, Blasik and others were conof the

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Deregulation's eff~ct Ukely to divide state
·a y PAI,tEL.A ·BROGAN
lating electricity is likely to divide the
.On Capitol Hill, Congress has Ohio ~ith relatively. high rates· nctuGannett News Sarvlca
·· industrial nonhem pan of the state. · introduced legislation to deregulate ally~ the rates go down? Will areas
' :WA.SH!NG'f()N - Every time which sQme say wpuld •benc(it from electricity ,arid requinnlle states to let with cheap power sources stici!JI,'
northern Ohioans flip on a light de~guhition, from the )ess wealthy cons~mers pick their own electric southern Ohio sec ;rates stay the
switch, they can expect, on average. south, which perhaps wauld11ot ben- COJllpany, called "retail wheeling ." same- 'oi' perhaps.go up?
to pay twice as much for electricity · efit
. '11
1lte House bill calls for deregulation
Many Ohioans, including Repubas southern Ohioans.
·
"Any bill which will raise my by 2000, the Senate version by 2003. lican Gov. George Voillovich and othSupporters say - more .consumer ers with a stake in the state's $11 bil. In nonhern Ohio, electricity plant• constituents .rate.s in thC'.south. I'm
rely more on expenSive nuclear pow• " not going co suppon," •1\id Rep..Ted choice, instead ofregula~ monop- lion electric industry - including
er. wh'ilc southern Ohio plants get Strickland, !).Lucasville', Whose CQII· olies, will translate into cheaper util- U\ilitics, consumers, . leglslat!&gt;rs.
power primarily from cheaper ·coni- stitucnts already have cheap electric ity bills, but skeptics want to know · school onicials,. and regulators arc ·
.fired plants. so prices vary widely rates. "Southern Ohio is always get- . who will benefit most, consumers or now weighing in on the debate.
~ithin the stale.
.. ·
· ·· ., · tins the short•end of the ~tick and it's· big in&lt;lustri~l .~!lCis? And, they "(ant
. "The governor understands that
In Ohio, the debate ' over dCrvgu- , not going to happen again."
to 'know: Will area. such as nonhCm deregulation is coming and believes
·
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It will be good fQr busines.&lt; and con -

Youth leag.ue looks to community ~~~::;·K~~:~:~~ . ~~~q~~~~
.
help in restoring damaged ~acilities
(Continued
on
-'2)
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Commission to again take
·up shopping center request
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis Planning Commission has rescheduled a meeting for Tuesday, March 25 at 6 p.m. in the Gallipolis Municir,al courtroom to discuss a proposed major shopping center lo he constructed at 2145 Eastern Ave.
·
lay Hall Jr. and Marlene Hall of Cheshire, and JON Development Co.,
Atlanta, Ga., arc seeking a conditional usc permit from the commission
to construct.the shop.ping centci .The commission postponed action on the
request on Feb. 18.
.
Plans currently on lilc at the Gallipolis City Building show the struc·
ture will cover 4·1/2 acres on 20.506 acres of land that formerly contained
the K &amp; K Mohilc Home Park.
In ordcrto conform to regulations pertaining to the I ()().year Oood plain,
the area for the structure will have to he raised I 0 feet pi us. with the till
dirt coming from 'two detention ponds that will be dug at the rear of the
property. The ponds will pro•idc the required clean din on which to build
the new structure·and also enable surface water In drain off the property.
Units in the new center have not yet hecn named.
·
·

By KEVIN KELLY
village 011 May 4, [996, also prompt· d31"agcd ·fields arc only part of the
Tlmn-Sentlnel Staff
i~g ·a • repair effort .borrio;; by the, !!'OS!Iic of deva.&lt;tation that struck Vin- ,
·' VINTON- One legacy of tltC , leagu~'smetrihership.
ton. bul n ed the VYL"and what it .
~ooding that swept through Vmton
"After whitt happened list ye·ar, . has prov· ed for 'the community's
~ill be felt the most by some of the VIC thought this ~ woul~ be a pat· . childre as become li source of pride .
community's children.
.
sy." Murphy noted. . '
io its m bers.
.
.
.
Floodwat~r.s from the Raccoon · The league, which also plays on
"Last
, we got all the kids new
Creek turned the ·village's Commu- two other fields behitid Vinton Ele- · uniforms,'
said. ~·we put them on
nity Park, site of three Qf lhe ~inton mcntary. attracted 9S children ·last a float in the Fourth of July paiade in
Youth League's three baseball fields, season and Murphy anticipates the Gallipolis and they just looked great
jnto a·lake.for sever.al days. aod left number to grow to about HO ·this Even the announcer reviewing· the
the du&amp;out, a !'eat-rum. , · ·.
.
year - pl'!lvided all fi~ 'fields .~ parade said, 'Gosh, look at those kids
: For the self-supporting and con- opetlltionat. · ·
·
from Vinton.' ·
tribution-driven VYL, putting the , '1'hi:re's no dough around ·and
'That's the reason you want to do
pelds and facilities back to _intQ ~- we're sttapped for money," Murphy this, ·for · them," Murphy said, and
flood cOI!llition .will depend on the explained.. "The money was com- ihen added with a grin, "because the
area's geneFOSil)',
·
milled ,10 uniforms, baieballs and pay is lousy.''
•.
. .
· , ·'"The men of our community put bats. Its probably a $,,000 1~.
Volunteer help conhnues to come
-d.ei~ - time-in10.J1. pd.donalCILthc.__• ':Ynlcn the COIIIIIIUf!I!J ~s _intoJ.i~t~, •ntl ~urph_y not~ that.
materials," saicl Bob Murphy, the throuaho, we'!'" ~uCk," he ~·
~ ibC Fne~ Disasler Servtce ldt:VYL Fide tit wh014 J1111ric!childtell · · The snuatiOI\ts tqeat •anee prac• Fnday, I0 Aamsh volunleers carne tn
. ore active in.the league. "It's enou1h 'lice bcains in early April ~pte~· ~d ~ompleted cleanup on the Hunt. 10 make you cry."
· son IOUinamonli are alallld loqnicl- lnJio,n. Grange Hall, of wh.tch Mur·
. : The fieldut the plllk also sufftlred May.
phy IS a member. The Fnends are
~ in the tortllll;lo lhat slnle~ the'
t,~utphy acknowtqed lhat 1!he schedulecj to return at the end of the

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ages economic
· funding
and -policy issues for 29 southca.,tcrn
rural·counties:
lohnathan and his wife, Lanic, JereAs part of her duties; Hollister my, Justin, Emily and Kate. ·
chairs the State and Local Govern'The chamber and the commuitimcnt Commission, eo-chairs the ty arc m()s( fortunate 10 have Lt. Gov.
Governor's ijuman Resources Invest·
mcnt Council an.d co-chairs the Fann- Hollister come as our special guest,..
land Prcscrvatioh Ta.&lt;k Force.
Chamber President Gary Roach said.
As lieutenant governor. Hollister . "Nu one is more knowlcdgcahlc:
manages stale efforts to restructure .. about the .southeastern Ohio Valley"
Ohio's workforce development sys- than she is. with her roots in Mariet-·
tern and o,vcrsccs the Ohio School-to- ta." Roach continued. "She is dedi -· _
Wurk Initiative. She is also the chief catcd to prom·ming ecm\omic-dcvclarchitcct of lobs Bill Ill, the state's opmcnt, she ha.' a cuncem lor the rurnewcst economic development slim- alarea, she rccognit.cs the importance;
ulus package that specir.cally targets of generating johs, and particularly,
Ohio's distressed urban and rural training young people for the work-:
communities.
.
force .
:,
Hollister and her husband .Or 26
"She will have an imponant mcs.-,: .
years, Jeff, continue 10 reside in Muri- sage for us at our 60th annual cham-: .
ctta.. lbcre arc six members in the ber meeting," he said. .
.
immediate
Hollister
family :

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Today's C'-ti-..Smftut.l
14 Sections • J.d Pages

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Comics
Editorials
Obi!Uadp

lpyrt

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~J.uM-k.aAIIIIIJel!!
. u'MD-i:--'Aitl4t__ ,

Boi!W'!
Dprptby Sjm

. !leeW!ren

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DJ.7

Columns

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ctwifleds

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month.

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