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Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
4-1·6
Pick 4:
~-2·2

Sports on Page 4

Buckeye 5:
.24-25-29-32-35

Mostly cloudy tonleht,
Iowa In the 301. Thul'ld8y,
moatly aunny, highs In the

501 .

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YDI.47, NO. 221
01117,

Olllo..,...,. ,.......... Ccai$1 .;

Several to
·,hoose ·froml
Stop by for -a
test drive

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2 Seatlona, 12 Pogeo, ;J5 oenl8
A Gennett Co. NeWIPII*'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 19, 1997·.

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ODOT lists preference for U.S. 33 ·relocation

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.The Ohio Department of Transpottation Tuesday afternoon announced a on April 22, 1993. with the authorization of Sverdrup to proceed with locapreferred corridor for a p~opose4 relocation of U.S. 33 from Athens to Dar' tion studies and environmental investigations for a proposed four-lane , limited access highway. ·
win in Meigs' County.
OOOT was consickring two possible corridors, both located west of the
'!Jle ultimate goal of the project was closure of a gap of the u.s. 33 corridod&gt;etween central Ohio and Interstate 77 near Ravenswood, W.Va., on
exisiing, twisting two-lane highway.
Corridor A, the westernmost route, was selected as the preferred corri· an alignment that minimized impacts to the social, economic and environmental resources within the study area, Pedigo said.
dor.
Tuesday's announcement followed two public hearings.
Accqrding to ODOT District 10 spokeswoman, OOOT selected the route
A public involvement meeting was held March 10, 1994, at an open house
based upon completion of the location studies and environmental investigations by i~ consultant, SverdrUp Inc. of Columbus, and upon public involve- at Alexander Middle School in Shade. Propetty owneis and interested resi. qents were shown the results of preliminary investigation and the basis for
ment and National Environmenlal Policy Act documentation .
selection of the two feasible alternative corridors- A and B.
·
Corridor A also provicks the least expensive route for co~struction An open house hearing was held earlier this year on Jan. 15 at the Ohio
approximately $54 million as opposed to approximately $74 million for CorUniversity Inn in Athens where more than 300 people viewed the highway
ridor B.
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The preliminacy ckvelopment ·for the relocation of U.S. 33 was initiated ' alignments developed within each of the feasible alternatives . ·

todayI

A preferred alignment was not presented at the hearing because impact~
caused by each alternatiVe were comparable, with the exception of con•
struction costs, according to Pedigo.
.
Estimates for Corridor B were abcut $20 million more than A because it
is a Jonger route and requires more bridges, she said.
A final_environmental document will be submiUcd to the Federal High·
way Adlllmtstrauon someume t'n Apnl, she said.
··
As the project developed, ODOTs funding allocation for major new.con- ·
struction prompted the decision to build a two-lane highway on a four-lane •
nght-of-way. The. two-lane highway, called a Super-2. would include eight·
foot-wide shoulders and turn lanes.
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By ojJtingfor a Super-2. a safe. modern highway could be huilt moch sooner than a four-lane, and the remaining pair of lanes could be built later·on
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existing.right-of-way, Pedigo said.
·{Continued on Page 3)_·

Budget meeting· ---First hase review--- M·urder
C'harge
holds few h9pes
for GOP leaders
lodged
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ByALANFRAM
Assoclllbld Preas Writer
WASHINGTON -· Republicans
are voicing low expectations for their
White House budget session with
President Clinton, wary of an administration they say has exhibited little
seriousness about fi'nding common
ground. ·
"I just don' t expect a lot to come
· out of it," Senaie Majority Leader
Trent Lott.· R- Miss.. said Tuesday,
!!ours after Clinton summoned congressional .budget writers to .a meetioc,t!ldJ!y...;.·1 j115t .I! ope w~ &amp;e.t 'mo.,:

lAS LOW AS:

Authorities hold
Middleport man
for fatality arising
from house fire ·

•...

Middlepott and · Meigs County

lawmen are hoping an arrest made

mill •·.te,bttn gettiJII'~''fUt-... --:·~
month,,which his been nothing."

"It's not.proposing anything that ·
.(Jasn 't ·t&gt;een going on for' the last six _
weeks," said Michele Davis, spokeswoman for House Majority Leader
Sen. Lon ·Dil:kArmey, R-Texas. "But we're all .
willing to give it a try."
• · · 'Clinton issued his invitation dur- is getting married Saturday and will
. ing a White House rews conference be on his honeymoon in Mexico·for
in which he cited evidence that the following week.
· .
Republicans are willing 19 be flexi·
"Not the pope. not the president ..
blc on tax cuts and other issues. He not Eddie Vedder will keep me from
. is scheduled to leave shott,ly after the my honeymoon. .. Kasich told ~
: . . meeting for his summit with Russian rcponer, referring 10 the lead singer
oftherockgroup'PeariJam .
.. President Boris Yeltsin in Helsinki, . Clinton's invitation' comes as
Finland.
"Now it is time to build on all this effotts to craft a COJ)lpromisc for halmomentum and make this a season of ancing the budget by 2002 have

Tuesday afternoon will help close the
book on a 2-year-old homicide.
Rohcn '_'Fat Boy " Scarberry, 29.
Middlepott. is being held in the
Meigs County Jail for the alleged
murder of Theresa Radatz on March
14, 1995.
On that date, fireli ghters responding to the Rodatz home at 567 N.
· Front St. found her hody lying crumpled hehind a television set in the liv.ing room. She left hehind two children.
Prosecuting Attomcy John R.
Lenles said the . arrest followed a
lengthy investigati on hy ihc Middlcpott'·s police and fire depattments,
and the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Investigation and ldentiOcation.
Mary Ann
of the
Preservation Office, reviewed
Scarberry was arrc~ted Tuesday
the first phase of the Cheater Courthouse renovation. project with area residents. Reeves Aid
afternoon
by Middle purl Police Chief
she was pleased with the completed work and with the plans lor continued restoration. Shown
M St
·
Bruce Swift. who said statements
are, from left, Ike ruble, Ron Elatmsn, Reeves, Mary Powell, Howard Parker and Delmar
taken from Scamc,rry and another
911UIIJ'I,
.
.
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man indicated lhcy were the last two
·
.
people to sec Rodatz alive.
While Radatz was reportedly
intoxicated inside the house. Scarberry allegedly set. fire to a bag . of
trash
on the back porch. Swift said .
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. Swift said Scarberry then went to
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- cent in 1996.
imb"alances in the economy ripple a ·nearby bar. When the fire was dis- ·
·
·
·
od
00
. sumcr pnccs mcrcas . a m crate
The rcp011 reinforces economists· into a measurable ~cclcration in covered, the bar's patrons rushed to •
O..l percent in February. with little belief that in Oat ion iso 't a problem inOation. .
offer their assistance, while Scarbersign of inOation except tor typically despite strong economic growth and ·
Food prices in February rose OJ . ry stayed inside, he added .
·
· ht 1abor markcts.
vo1alt·1c nems
sue h as vegctabl es· an·d ug
percent, erasing a 0.3 percent gain in
It was later determined that
natural ga.,.
The bond motkct was not cncour- January. Th~ price of fresh vegetables Rodat1. had died of smoke inhalation.
The seasonal 1y ad~ustcd
'
rise in lhc age'dby the fitgurcs. y·•c ld son 30-year surged· 8.9 percent, the worst in 22 ·
Rodat/ hoyfriend, Vince Stone.
1
Consumer Price lnd~x; reported . by Treasury bo nds. wh'tc h sipped
to months. That's fallout from a late was in the Meigs County Jail at the
the · Labor Depanment todav, was a 6.92 percent early today, hovered . January freeze in Florjda. Tomato
t11ne of her death and has smcc hcen
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·
note h h'1g hcr lhan many economists
aroun d 6 .96 percent a ftcr the repntt: prices J·umped 9.3 percent; fresh unrelenting in seeing the incident· hci
anticipated. However. so-called core unchanged from late Tuesday.
fruit, 1.3 percent.
solved, Lcntc,o; said .
~
price. - excluding fuel and energy
The inflation rcpott did not put
Dairy products. however. tdl 1.1 .
Scarl)crry has been charged wit~
-rose a more modest 0.2 percent.
any added pressure on Federal percent , the fourth consecutive aggravated arstm·and murder. Lcntc~ :
For the year so far, overa11 m
· na- Reserve po1·Icy-rnakers to-raiSes
· hott- monthly decline l&lt;&gt;llowin• an X.5said. Murdcr is punishable by a max; ·
·
h
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M
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tinn was running a1 a 2.3 pcrcen1 tcnn mlcrcst ralcs' all c1r arc h 25 pcrccm spun over the previous
j()ur imum prison term of life in prisun. • .
annual rate. compared with 3.3. per- meeting, but offered no guarantee months . The cost of meat, fish and
· U;ntcs said Scari&gt;crry also has ~ .
cent for all oflastycar. Corc innation that they wori't. Fed Chairman Alan eggs also fell , but prices of hakcd
advanced at a 2.2 percent rate , com- Greenspan has said the central bank goods increased.
·( Continued on Page 3)
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pared with a 31-year low of 2.6 per- would move pre-emptively before

: . · hipattisan cooJ,.ration on the bud-

groluu:~;~,~~~~;~·Ciintonrefuse~to . Latest consum~r

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endorse an idea broached by Lon for

g:;~;·~~~~n~~~d~~~ ::~::::.:,~

of majorities in both'J&gt;atties in both
houses in Congress.':
Sen. Pete Domcnici. R-N.M.-, and
Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio, who
respectively chair the Senate and
House
bud2et
committees; planned
tend the
session.
. to
.
at
Besides schedulin•0 the m~ctin•0 .
Clinton instructed his top aides to
· seck hudget compromise with con•ercssional leaders during Congress
two -week spring recess. which

beg~~~~:~~~:~:~makers having
well-laid plans for the recess, it is
undcar .how much work will be
accomplished. Kasich. for example.

~:C~~~a~o~~-~~-~:7f1 ~~;~~~s :~~

other federal programs. which many
economists say rise faSter than the
true inllation rate. Lou and many othe"' on both sides say the hundreds of
Hillions of dollars in savings the proposal could generate would he a
linchpin to any budget compromise.·
The meeting also comes a.&lt; House
Speaker Newt Gingrich: ·R-Ca .. has
run into heavy llak from his own party for suggesting Monday that
. Republicans ·should delay their cherished tax-cutting goal until after voting for bud•et·balan•·in• spendin•
~
~ e
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cut~ . .
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:·Three-car •. nte-rsectl"on
~ crash leaves 8 injured

A three-car accident at the intersection of State Route 1 and County Road
24 (Union Avenue) left eight people injured Tuesday.'the Gallia-Meigs Post
· of the State Highway Patrol reported. ·
Most of the injuries were listed as minor. troopers·said.
Mcording to the repott. Kellie A. Maurer, 16, 570 N. Second Ave .. Middlepott. was southbound on 1 at 3:27p.m. when she slowed and -stopped.
waiting for oncoming traffic, to make a left turn onto Union,
A southbound car dri'ven by Sara L. Lee, 16, 36846 SR 124, Rutland, was
.unable to stop in time and struck Maurer's vehicle in the rear.
. · Another southbound car driven by Robett J. Workman, 17. 33233 Hap:
. py Hollow Road, Middleport, was al so unable to stop and struck Lee's car
in the rear.
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This in tum forced·Lee's car io strike the Maurer vehicle.again. troopers
. ,said. Lee's car came to rest in a ditch.
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Injured were the three drivers; Emily Fackler, 16, 36714 Mount Zion Road,Rutland, Justin M. Seymour. ·17, 336 Broadway St., Middlepott, ·and Anth&lt;&gt;'
ny J. Thomas, 17, 126-1/2•Powell St., Middlepott, all passengers in the Lee
car; a~d Anthony J. Weaver. 16. 642Mill St .. Middlepott, and Christopher
Imboden. 1'4. 39503 Broadway St., Middlepon, passengers in the Workman
'car.
.
,
Tntnspotted to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS were Lee
· ·and Fackler, while Maurer, Seymour and Thomas w'cre taken to VMH by
: ··family members. Workman, Weaver 3nd Imboden sought their own treatment,
· according to tile repott.
Damase was severe to the Lee car, and moderate to the Maurer and Work·
·man vehicles, .troopers said. ·
i · . Lee was cited for assured clear distance and no seatbelt, and Workman
· · was also ticketed for assured clear distanee.
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price report backs
be l"lef' "I nfl at I" on' "Is n 't hu
· rt "In'g
· 'econ o
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·Bend Area murder suspect ·
waives extradition to W.Va.

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CRASH AFTERMATH- A car~ by Sire L Lee, '111, 36846
State Route 124, Rutland, ~ded up In I dltcll tftlr It WIS ol
thrM cars Involved In a crasll T'Ueadly lit the lnttrMctton·ol SR
7 1nd Union Avenue. Lee WISIIIIOitg light people intui'ICI in the
Cflllh, the Gallla·Melgs Post of ihl Stilts Hlghwly Patrol rwport·
ad•

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POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - A suspect in a 1995 slaying, captured over. : ·
I he weekend at a mission in Nchraska, has waived exlradition huck 10 Mason: :
County, Prosecuting Auorncy Diana Johnson said .
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Timothy William Gibhs, 38,-appcarcd in coutt in Omaha on Mmiday an~ :
waived his cKtradition back to West Virginia.
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Gibbs, ·who is facing a parole violation. wa.' indicted in January 19% 1{,; .
the Scj&gt;tcmher 1995 murder of 52·ycat-old Jack Roush in Hanford .
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After Roush's murder, Gihhs allegedly tied with his foiJilcr girlfriend. Res.::
Sayre, to Calili&gt;fnia. Sayre was aJl)lsted Juring an identity check at a Yuma,: ·
Arit .. tran sient camp: Gihbs repottedly escaped hy giving false information ··.
authorities said.
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. Say_re was extradited to Mason County, where she turned evidence against: i
Gtbbs m exchange.lor a one-year sentence for accessory after the fact to mur-:•
dcr, authorities said.
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Police arrested Gibbs after he gave three diiTcrcnt names to poiK:c when:·
they responded to a call last weekend at the Open Door Mission. He was lat-:;
er identified as a convictcdfclon wanted for murder. Gibbs 'was taken into· :
custody Sunday on suspicion of being a fugitive from justice and givingfalse: t·
informa1ion to police.
:,
•• Authorities reported that Gibbs avoided police while traveling with a dif-::
fcrcnt woman who posed as hts w1f~ and tra~clcd by u~ing the rai.ls and~ ;:
pmg tratns. FBI agents are mvcsltgaUng whether Gtbbs coultl haYC been· '
involved in crimes in other s~tes.
·
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Lt. Danny Pearson of the !"fason County Sheriff's Department ~ : l
Tuesday that offictals are trymg to arrange the detail.s on Gibbs ' -transpori't·
back to the county.
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:·: Commentary

Ptlge2
Wedn11d8y, U.rch 11, 1917

Thunday, March 20

-Local News in Brief:-

Accu We11he,.e forecast

crown City man charged after crash

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel LeBaron church -w as 'a deadly cult

Weathc1

Homer R. Gordon

MlCH

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WASHINGTON -- The saga of tlnued after h1s 1981 death in pnson was a '"false prophet "Ervj!:hud hom thai event No one had hnked all the
the Ervil LeBaron famoly 1s a sadly On March I, h1s son Aaron was con· beaten and shot 10 death to fulfill hos murders to LeBaron before. and the
b11.arre tale of religious fanalocosm vocted m Houston of four 1988 Texas . own "prophecy" 1n 1972, accordmg auenuon caused police m several
and
guns that left a traol of death on assassmatlons carried out '"'" the to dtenstvc testimony in US and states and Mex1co to mob11izc. Van
111 Court St., P-oy, Ohio
"
both sodes of the US -Mexoco border
Ana. who located LeBaron's h1dmg
Mex1can couns.
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992•2157
LeBaron was a man of many 1oles
place 1n Mexrco and was mstrumcn·
Next,
he
trled
to
mduce
Joel's
folBy Jack Anderson
He was a devol to some, a god tooth
tal
1n bnngmg htm to JUSUce, was
lowers to JOtn htm When they d1dn"t.
ers, 3 master SWJOd)er and OlCdJOCTC
once
ordered ktlled by LeBaron,
and
LeBaron sent a heaVIly armed band
lover
woth
13
Woves.
an
orator
who
of h1s own mm1ons, tncludmg sever- though hiS followers fa1led to carry
•
Jan Mo/ler
could filibuster for hour. (some. al of hiS w1vcs, to the or commumty on out the assignment.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
limos days), or a charJSmahc charmer
In an unusual twiSt of circuma dark n1ght Chnstmas week 1974
wolh
a
bad
case
of
hahtosos
name
of
God,"
when
Aaron
'
heard"
stances
w1thout many parallels m the
They sel'one house on fire and. as the
ROBERT L. WINGETT
But
the
role
for
whoch
he
woll
God
telhng
h1m
to
order
thc•kollon
gs
resodcnts rushed OUl lO douse the United States, the murders contmued
Publisher
• remam mfamous was a~ one of Lokc hos father before hom. the sock names, Erv~l"s people opened fol'l: on after lhe elder LeBaron was convictAmenca's most lethal cult leaders son ordered deaths as of he were a them wnh sem•·automatlc weapons ed of conspiracy to murder 1n Utah CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARliARET LEHEW
headmg the Church of the Lamb of vengeful prophet out of the Old Tes- It was a m1racle only two young - and even after he d1cd of a heart
Controller
General Manager
God He cut a bloody s"' ath through- tament
MeXIcans were k11led
auack m a pnson there.
out the Amencan West and nonhern
Joel LeBaron founded a church m
Over t!Je next several years.
Texas police theortzed that
Tttt Sentinel W.tcomn ,.,.,. to the editor from ,..tl«&lt; on
of topMex1co. and ordered the murde rs ol Salt Lake Cny m 1955, wolh brother LeBaron pocked off omagmed '"ene- LeBaron had left a list ot '"enem1es"
It:•. Short ,.,.,. (300 Wc:rrcN IN ,_.) Mw fh• b..t chance ol 1Min1 ~IHidl
'
l)lpod/ottwworopowlaootlllld.Unwyi»-E..hllh&lt;&gt;uldhll:l&lt;ldu•lflnlluffl,
'more than two dozen mdovoduals
Ervol as a key heulenanl The two mies" one by one m Califomm, behmd, and conveyed them to a few
lllldtNI;-•~·-· Spoc/fyo-fflllotw'ulllawkolt,.,.
Hos body count toted up mostly on splol m 1970, and Ervol soon found- Texas and Colorado In 1977. he sent of h1s 54 children Son Aaron tned to
111ouo orticlo tw ~ II'"'!_ to: Lllfotw to floo -r, TN Sentinel, 111 Couft St.
' h 1970
1
h b h J J ed hts own church, preachmg a fire- two young woves to murder a nval
Pomwoy, Ohio f5718; or, FAX 10 ~1UII2·2157.
II e
s, me uded IS rot cr oe
keep a hold on Erv1l's dommJShmg
:\J..,...____________..;.....:•:;;..____...,:~----""' one of hrs daughters, a man and a and-bnmstone versoon of the gentler polygamiSt leader m Salt Lake City · believers through money and mtlmwoman who defected from hos group · Joel 's teac hongs
The kmdly naturopathic doctor was JdatJon
two polygamists he beheved chal
Both moved then polygamous g unned down m front ofhos palocnls
Then, on one cruel day m June
lenged hiS authonly by theor cxos- com munlloes to MeXIco's BaJa Cali
Our assocoate Dale Van Aua was 1988. Aaron's followers shot three
lence. and two Mex1can boys
tornoa, where Ervol began predoclong the first to report on the LeBaron former '"church" members dead m a
that Joel would be kolled because he fam1ly's murderous madness after synchronized manner at two s1tes m
MurdersmLcBaron·s namcconHouston and one m suburban Dallas
-- all wuhin mtnutes of each other
Also kolled out of fear she would be
a Witness agamsl the group was the
8-year-old daughter of one of the vocflms
SHE'STIIi
Dunng the Houston tnal. proseBy WALTER R. MEARS
5PITTIH' 1Mt6E
cutors saod LeBaron. the grand patriAP Specil!l Correspondent
OF \OU
WASHINGTON (AP) - llosn' l even spnng the senalor .sa od but the
arch of the Church of the Lamb of
God. dorected the kolhngs after
rose of boparusanshop clearly has wolled
rccc1vmg "a sign from God" and sent
The lhorns arc showmg
Republican Sen Gordon Smolh of Oregon was remarkmg on the mood
out has ''murderous m•ss•onancs''
after the Senate's one• vole reJection of a balanced budget amendment In
do the work
Aaron LeBaron was eonvocted of
the 14 days soncc then , the Willing has worsened
consporacy to comm11 murder for
That tends to happen when a presodent and an opposoloon Congress try
h1re, consporacy to obstruct religoous
to come to terms on spendmg taxes, federal benefits and, m lhos case, hal
beliefs, racketeering and consporacy.
anced budgets m 2002
Federal law enforcement offic~als
Clmton and the Republicans have been there before The presodenl won
probably feared the cull led by Dav1d
thai round after two government shutdowns a wmter ago George Bush
Korcsh would become like
offered hos handshake on h1partosansh1p Wolh the Democrats when he was
LeBaron's when tl.!ey bcgtln the SJcge
Inaugurated. butll came up empty over the budget and taxes
Thos was •upposed to be a sessoon wolhoul replays, Wolh botb &gt;~des comm Waco
In fact, very few of Amenca"s
milled to balancmg the budget. and, atlhe start, promosmg cooperation lo
get there Clinton wcnllO the Capotol al Republican mvolaloon. to meet wolh
small unconventional religious comleaders of both parlocs m a gesture of accord on goals
"
mumloes become voolenl -- whoch IS
It didn 't cover the means to gel there Now the delaols arc closmg m and
why the Eml LeBaron saga, thankthe famtilar lines arc drawn The Republicans say Clinton's hudgcl · ~ far
fully, 1s a rare one m Amcnca
from balanced m 2002 By GOP analySis, based on Congressoonal Budget
Jack Andenon and Jan Moller
OiiErif-~
Office forecasts, ll would be $69 bolhon '" defocol
are wrlten for United Feature
jiiM~erMeao~ CDm
So they want hom to draft another one. a demand the Whole Hduse dosSyndicate, Inc.
mosscs as no more than a stall to cover GOP faolure to produce a congressiOnal budget, whoch IS supposed to be done by Apnl 15 each year, but seldom IS and won't be now
Republicans won adoptlpn of a House resolutoon askmg Clinton for a new
budget The measure adopted Wednesday, wh1ch IS not bmdmg, seeks a new
budget based on congressiOnal cconomoc forecasts. wolh more savmgs While
Havmg gone to ground for the bet· declared, "The While House consod- month to 50 prosccuu&gt;rs around the cans as James Baker. Bush adminiS·
Clinton 1s sllllon off1cc on stead of lcavmg lhrec-quaners of them unto I 200 I ter part of sox months, beleaguered ers the FBI's statement to be m country' (halt m slate and Inca) gov- trat1on secretary of Sthtc. a'nil Tony
ernment) onlormmg them that then Blankley. press secretary to House
and 2002
•
FBI d~rector Louos Freeh re-emerged err01 ,.
Actually Clmton has produced extra budgets before In 1995 he began last month to proclaim , '"My morale
Not so long ago, the FBI was held cases may he &lt;..:ompromJscd because Speaker Newt Grn~nch .
wolh a budget proJCCllng long-term deticus, produced another to gct11 bal- IS line '
of the FBI s lah " pruhlems"'
The extremely personal f1lcs.
J),
Whitehurst
estimates
that
anced m 10 years, and later came up.-wJth a lhtrd version, cmbracmg the
the
It was a conscoou~ effort by F1 ech
culled from FBI background checks.
Joseph Perkins
numhcr of compromised cases m1ght were requested hy Crmg LIVIng·
Republican goal of balance by 2002
·
10 not only rcsUS(;Jtatc h1 s lloundcrThe political 'ellmg was different, he was readymg hts rc·elcctmn cam- rng directorship. but also to rcstme m such h1gh esteem that most Amcr· ,\ctually be dnscr to I ,000
stone. a lonncr bar bouncer wnh a
-- ll1c Olympoc hnmhmg The FBI hiStory ul drug usc. who. tor Jnexpargn, and the balanced budget promose was a popular one
the oc spcctcd rcpulalwn the FBI 1cans would have g1vcn the agency
Franklin Rames the Whole House budget dorector, saod the House rcso· cn1oyed unul recent years.
the benefit of the doubt when ns made ,1 rush to JUdgment that Atlanta plicahlc reasons. was entrusted wllh
luuon for a new budgctlhos year was only a doverSJon He saod the lime tor
So here n " a month later. and the mtcgmy was called mto qucsuon But secunly gu~rd Rochard Jewell wa.&lt; the headmg the While House personnel
FBI fond s olscll cmhrmlcd m yet not now Th.n's hccausC on Frech\ domcsltc t~rronst.respnns1hlc for set- sccunty ol hcc
stalling was'ovcr and Congress should be at work on Its own budget
The FBI accepted at lace value hiS
The Republicans dre wary oft hal they don 'l lO be odcntlllcd with polll· ~not her contro\ crsy that furth er tao- watch the FBI has proven It sell long off llje pope bnmb m Atlanta's
Olympic
Park
last
summcrthal
k11lcd
mshc
s
the
agency
s
•mage
While
unworthy
olthc
puhhc
s
unqucsuonexplanulum
that the Iiles .. wh1oh
wally distasteful cuts m popular federal ptograms unless Clmton IS l&lt;Xl They
1.mc
womun
.md
mjurcd
scvc•al
dn1.cn
conlatn
unsuhstuntlatcd
rumors. gos~
wantll1c prcsodcntlo go liN The Whole House counters that he already h.IS , Hou 'c officoals say that the FBI mg t:onfldcncc
other
folk
dchhe1 ate!) concealed mtclligcncc
sop and mnucndocs .. were needed
Th" " nnt to do,p.arage the FBI s
and the Rep)lbhcan Congress should deliver ols vcrsobn
.
Aller sox months of lrymg to na1l JUst m case a lonncr Bush olhdal
tnlnnn.lllon lrom Prc ~ildcnl Clinton 12 000 .ogen ls most of whom arc
So much for the' earlier 1dca ol a boparlosan deal on halanuqg the bud
gel. whH.:h Rcpuhl~r.:a n s had wanted done m advance ol a t.:ustomanly •gno1cd ,thoul Chmcsc (;atnpa1gn co ntl ihu - m~.: o11 upuhlc and thowughly prolcs- Jewell wllh the sensuloonal cnmc. the snw cause IH pay the Chntons a vissmn.JI But even these agents must he FBI tinall~. and grudgingly. acknowl· n.
spnng dcadlme for ,, congressoonal budget That would have shared the unns
In d"pulc is J hnchng the FBI cmh.Jn.tsscd not only hy the current edged th.n they had falsely accused
Frech acknowledged thai hos
hlame. hutllos foundenng m the details
agency unwnungly aodcd an&lt;l abeucd
'II we set .1stdc parltsanshtp and the sp1r11 of confrontation and ~.:omc gavt.: two m1dlcvcl Nauonal Sccumy dl'putc "1th the Whole House. hut the sccunty gu.1rd
Councol .ndes last June They weoc .Jis,l hy these pn:vwus FBI controMcan).Vholc. Jewell's lawyers say the Whuc House m .. c~rcgmu!\ v1o~
~ together and work 10 .1 spml of a~.:commodatJon we could get an agreement
m!onncd
that
the
Chmcsc
governthe
FBittiCd tn tnck hun onto wa1v· )allons of pnvacy, '' later addmg that
vc rslc s
·1 Mochael McCurry the Whole House press sec retary sa1d Wednesday
ment
m1ghlllJ
to
mllucnt.:c
US
clcc
ong
hos rfg hts And though FBI o!Ti- " I tell vocllm lo my lack of vogl-- The f'BI cnmc lahor,nory Fred~:
Those arc btg li s and they got h1g.gcr when Clmwn dccJdcd agatnst set! tmg up an 1ndcpcndcnl comnm.sum to adJust downward, the c.:ost of hvmg lion' The two .udcs (one ot whom ellc Whllchuost an FBI S&lt;ocnlosl and coals have not con ceded thiS clatm. lancc "
If Frech's record at the FBL-had
• lormula on wh1ch lnl: JcasCs 10 Snual Sct:unty and other hcncfns nrc O.tscd. h.1ppcncd tn he .m FBI ,,gent on .ogen l puhlld) iliSdosed that pans ol I hey arc takmg steps to 'd!sctphnc ·
lo,on
to
the
While
House
)
recall
been
marked hy only one maJor
the
agency's
wurld-rcnowncd
lah
lhc agents who mtcrrogatcd Jewell
=as arc lax brackets
hcmg
mg:cd
not
10
dl
s!'!Cmu1atc
the
blcmosh,
he m•ghl be lorg1ven But
wen: c.:O~Iamm,u~:d thai supcrv1snrs Al so the at!cm.:y contmucs an mter'~
He may do so lutc1
1nlnnn.ll1on
outs1dc
the
hnclmg
dunng hos tenure. the nallon "s lorcl ~u.:Kc d .adl.!qu,nc St.: Jcnllla; 1rmnmg, nal mvc shgallon to 1dcn1tfy whlt.:h ot
~
That w.ts a way out smcc a chanc:c would have curhcd costs and mncascd
~
room
.md th.lllah JCflOlh were mtcnuonal ~ ols pcrson!lcl nnponpcrly leaked mfor- mostlaw-cnforccmcnl agency clear·
4 revenues, hut there w.1s O(l t.:lln~cnsus .tnd the Democrats don·, want the P''lnNot to the1r NSC supcnors Not to ly ht.ascd m favm of prosc&lt;.:uiOrs
matam to the press .th.Jt Jewell was ly ha.' fallen onto d!sarray The FBI
~ 1cnl onus ot a step that would t.:urh luturc hc!lcht mcrcascs
Pu~·q
Jcnt
Clinton
h1msclf
dcsrcralely needs new lcadershop
Smc.:c.: hlowmg the whtstlc on the the pnmc suspcL:t
Sen Trent Loll the Republican leader had pressed fo1 a prcsodc nuill
F1c..:h
s
ugcnt.:y
ms1st
s
that
11
Frech ought to rcstgn.
c.:ru nc l.1h Whuchursl has hccn sus
~ l:nmmJsslon saymg that ~~ wu"' .thsolutcl y C!!i~cnltal to a hudg:ct agreement
Folco&lt;~lc The FBI hlithcly, and
· pl.u.:cd no rcstnctwn wh.llsocvcr
pcndcd fm rc,Jsons that seem mtghty nnpropcdy turned over lo the ClinJoseph Perkins Is a columnist
; But even some Rcpuhlu;ans were w.uy of the pollllcal 1mpact ol pushmg
on
the
1nlmmallon
But
Wh1tc
House
for
suspu
.
.
:
IOU~
In
the
mc.mumc
1hc
Ju
'i~
the San Diego Union-Tribune
IUn
Whuc
House
m«1rc
than
900
con~ the 1dca
,pokcsman
Mokc
McCurry
Jl,lllv
ucc
Dcp.lttmcnl
scnl
lctlcrs
last
Eventually there woll have to he a se ttlement, Rcpuhhcans sullcoed tor
fldcnua i dossocrs on such Rcpuhh- and a commentator for MSNBC.
: the shutdown~ In the last budget Impasse. somcthmg Chnton sa1d all stdcs
: should ~tgrcc won t h.tppcn .tgam Then:: s n Rcpublh.:an h1llto prc\cnt n wnh
: stopgap rcsoluuons to keep the gove rnment gomg
The Lhllcrcn~:cs th.lt arc showmg now a1c only gomg to deepen next yc~u
,\S the 1998 congrcssoonal clecuon camp.ugn lakjth"ld
su m al()nc. the Supreme Court tossed appmnl judges to drall statutes · h IS
Hence. Delay's qucsll&lt;&gt;n Whal do
ByTONYSNOW
out 150 years ol precedent hy ordcr- the rcsponSJholily ol the lcgoslauve you do to a l~wg1vcr who msJSls on
Creators Syndicate
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, .f,ce president and colum·
WASHINGTON -- Tom Delay mg: the V1rgm1a Mtlnary Insututc to brunch to slop the JUdlloary frnm lcg- bchuvmg like~ demogod!
nisi for The Associated Press, has reporteil on Washington and nation· the thord -rank•n g Repubhcan m the adm1t women and •gnorcd follr t.:cn ~ "lallng,' Delay notes "II they want
Senate Judocoary Comm1llec
al Jlllllilics for more than 30 years.
House of Representatives dcc1dcd to tunes of tradlllon by mvalidallng a to lcg1 ~lalc , let them run lnr Con- Chanman Omn Hatch says we ought
In prevent hlcgalomamacs from
have some wocked fun last"wcck He Colorado ordmancc that forbade gress,
Robert Bark, the conslllullemal hecnmmg Judges m the first place
proposed rmpeachmg uppny federal granlmg homosexuals legal pnv1- "
scholar hhcrals ln\oc to hale, agrees. But you can't loresec the luturc m a
leges other people don 't CIIJOY
Judge s,
He says the federal JUdocoary ha.&lt; Senate heanng room
Stale
and
federal
courts
also
had
Delay wants to take the " good
"Most of the JJCOple who arc
: By The Associated Press
· hchav1or '' clause of the Constlluloon the or way wolh the people They sane· become arrogant and despotic h
:
Today'' Wc.lf(lcsd,ly March 19 the 7!1th day ol 1997 There .1re 287 day s -·_oru: that pennns the .removal ol tlticd gay mamagc. decnmonahzcd glcclully frustrates the values and appointed arc not going to have a
: Iefton the yc.or:'1'1us IS the date the swallows tr.ldlllon.llly rctuon to the San JUdges who don't mmd theor p's and euthanasia, rmposed taxes lor schools customs of the American people, track record," Bork notes '"They will
1 Juan C~tpl strann MJsston m CahlnFm.l ~
q's .. and scrub out those who msJSl and pubhc works p'roJCCls, stnppcd knowtn@ that when 11 1ssucs ukases, deny up and down that they 're
1
Today s Ho ghlight m Hoslory
on creaung laws rather than mlcr· landowners of property wuhout com· the rest of us must obey Only God acuvosts " BeSides, most new JUdges
On M.orc h 19 1920 the U S Senate rctccted lorthc second tunc the Treaty preung old ones
pensaloon lcgahzcd pornograP.hy, can overrule. and he saves Hts vclo are relatively tame It takes a whole
for the pos.&lt;~hlliues ol lifellme tenure
, , ul Vcrs,ullcs hy .1 v.JIC of 49·35 talhnj shun of the lwo-llmds maJOnty needThiS rad1cal odca leaves many cnmi nalized school prayer and I nr very succ ml occasums
to
corrupt them
•
Furthcnnorc,
uur
political
system
Republicans &lt;lack-Jawed woth sur- assumed responsob1hty lor 1mpr&lt;w1ng
' cd hlf ·•r.rroval
has
few
ways
of
dealing
wnh
rogue
'
Republicans
have
pmposcd
some
On tho&lt; d,ole
·
prase~ shock, horror or a combmat10n
the manners ol lumpenproles who
lawgivers Our ConslllUIIOn estah- constuuuonal amendments to hog-toe
In 1687 Foench explore• Rohcn Cave her soeur de L.1 Salle - the first of the three ConslllUloonal scholar don 't wear black robes to work
t European to navogatc the length ol the MISSISSippi R1vcr - was 'murdered Terry Eastland expresses the prevailWorst of all, solons staned over· lishcd an mdepcndcnt JUdtctary ovcrambuwus Judges .. mak1ng fed·
Ing hands-off sentomenl "No senous turntng elections U.S DJStnct Court because the nail on "s foundcrs thought eral JUdges apply for reconfirmation
by mutineers m present-day Texas
every 12 years or lettmg Congrcs.•
student of the Impeachment provi- Judgc Theil on Henderson tried to JUdges would b&lt;; hannlcss
1
In 1H59. the opera '"Faust · by Diaries Gounod premiered m Pans
limn or overrule constitullonal mlcrThat
hasn
"t
happened.
of
course.
hi 1917, the U S Supreme Co~rl upheld the etght·hour workday for raol- SIOns can conclude that the Conslilu· overrule California's PropoSition 209
uon contemplates impeachment of .. a measure to proh1 bll quota&lt; -- with Magistrates mel'l:asmgly msmuate prctauons handed down by tbe court.&lt;.
l mad~
..
~..
i
In 1918. Congrc.- approved Dayhght Savmg T1mc
JUdges on account of theor actual deci- an opinion so weak that an appellate themselves rnto the everyday deta1ls But those won't Oy Amcneans don 't
In 193 J. Nevada lcgahzcd gambling
.r
SIOns from the bench -- theor mter· panel berated him and refused to let of our lives -- hmng and firmg poli· hke to monkey With the Consutuuon
Our system of government proIn 1\145. about 800 people were kollcd as kam1kaze planes allacked the prctations or procedural rulings."
h1m touch the ~ase agam Another coes, the proper tempcralure of rcstau·
VIdes
only one mechanism for diSCI·
US earner Franklin off 1apon. the shop, however. was saved.
But Delay dosagrees ''We can disln cr court Judge, fred ' B1ery of rant coffee. etc. --and what they say, '
1
In 1945. Adolf Holler 1ssued h1s so-called '"Nero Decree,'' ordermg the 1m peach JUdges who gel drunk," he Texas. refused to permolthe mslalla· goes Each edoct. no matter how wrsc, plinrng rogue junsL• -' Impeachment
destruction of German fac1htocs that could fall onto Allied hands
pomts out, "so why not Impeach lron of'two county-level Repubhcan frustrates democracy because 11
1 In 1976 Buckmgham Palace announced the separation of Prmcess Mar· those who get drunk w•t" power?" offocoals because m1htary ballots depnves us of the chance In settle
Write Tony Snow, Creaton Syn' gart\1 and her husband. the Earl of Snowdon, after 16 years of m0rnage
He cites a spate of optntons m handed !hem the margm of vtctory.
ISSUes through the nonnal process of dkate, 5777 West Ceatury Blwd,
:
In 1979. the us. Ho~sc of ReprosenlaiiVCS began telcvosing llS day-to- wh1ch lawgJvcr.;•for-hfe have stuck u
One may argue about the merus of debate, contemplation, compromise Suite 700, Los Aaaelu, Calif~
to
the
Amencan
people
In
us
last
ses! dof buson«s
any of these pohe1es but we don't and consent
90045.

IToledo I 48" I

Homer Ross Gordon. 7S, Charlotte. N.C .. fonnerly of the Big Bend Area,
died Monday. March 17, 1997 m the Ptesbytenan Hospual, Charloue
He was born Dee 21. 1921. son of the late Alben and Mynle Mae Schuler
Gordon, and was a U S Navy veteran of World War II He served on the
U S S. St Paul. and was discharsed wtth the rank of chief petly officer H~
was a 34- year employee of Amencan Electnc Power as a constructoon proJeCt supervosor. and was statiOned throughout the Oh10 R1ver Valley
He ts surv1ved by h1s wtfe. Eleanor P Gordon, a son and daughter-on-law,
Davtd and N1ta H. Gonion of Matthews. N C., two grand.children. and a SISter, Anne Ebersbach of New Haven, W Va
A Mass of Christian Bunal Will be held II a.m Thursday '" the St
Manhew Catholic Church. A private Interment wtll follow under duect10n
of the Wtlhams·Dcarborn Funeral Home of Matthews.
• Memortal contrlbuuons may be made to the Presbytertan Hosp1lal, Belk
Hean Unit, 200 Hawthorne Lane, Charlotte N.C. 28204

'£sttW6sfwi in 1948

IMansfltld Isao I•
IND.

•

Wayne D. Kelly
Word has been rece1ved here of the death of Wayne Delwood Kelly. 81.
of Ben Avon, Pa.• who d1ed Wednesday, Feb 26, 1997 1n Pottsburgh, Pa
He was born Dec 31, 191 S m Cornmg, Cahf, son of the late Danocl
Emmel! and Velura Ehzabeth Thompson Kelly
He was the owner of Wayne D Kelly Motorcycle Wheel Exchange, and
a test dnver for Harley-Dav1dson Motorcycle. He was a World War II vel·
eran
He ISsurv1ved by two sons, Charhe Patrick O'Hern of Seattle. ~h , and
Wayne Del wood Kelly Jr of Nevada, Texas, two daughters, Shtrley Kem1cky
of McKees Rocks, Pa , and Velura Elizabeth Kelly Wh1te of Nevada, Texas,
and I0 grandchildren
He was also preceded m death by a brother, Emmell Kelly
Bunal was held Saturday, March 15, 1997 at Gravel H11l Cemetery m
Cheshue. woth the Rev Miles Trout offic1at1ng

•brOad,.,.

H0 Pes f 0 r
bipartiSanShip
fading fast

)

Warmer conditions due
, for region .o n Thursday
By The A11oclated PreiS

WHr,

Westerly breez.:s will pull wanner
aor mlo Oh1o on Thursday, ra1smg
temperatures to near 60 degrees m
pans of the state But those same
wmds could brmg some snow show·
ers to northern Oh10 tomght.
Lows tonight w1ll be m the 30s
Generally dry weather ts forecast
for Fnday wtth hrghs 55-65. There
will be a chance of ram on Satur&lt;jay
The record-high temperalure for
th1~ date at the Columbus weather
stauon was 77 degrees m 1903 while
the record low was 8 m 188S Sunset
tonight will be at 6.43 p m and sun·
nse Thursday at 6 35 a m

'o

gj1Htij

FBI fell into disarray

u~der

Freeh

1

-

-Radical idea leaves Republicans in shock

(Today in history

'•

I
l

I

()

•

'

,,

.~

Weather forecast:
Ton1ght Mostly cloudy Lows 30
to 35 West wmds 5 to I0 mph.
Thursday . Mostly sunny Htghs
Gary R Sellers, 63. 30480 Valley Belle Road, Rae me, dted Tuesday. March
55 to 60
' 18, 1997, at h1s resodence
Thursday n1ghl . Mostly clear
Born Sept 30, 1933 m Syracuse. he was the son of DaiSy Wolfe Sellers
Lows 35to 40
of Racme. and the late John Sellers
Extended forecast:
He was ret1red from the Me1gs County H1ghway Department, and was a
Fnday . A chance of showers. Lebanon Township farmer He served m the U.S Army'" Korea as a miliH1ghs 1n the lower 60s.
tary policeman
Saturday .. Mostly cloudy and
He IS survoved by hiS w1fe. Maxme Proffitt D1ddle Sellers. a son. Gary
cooler Lows tn the mtd 40s and h1ghs Sellers Jr. , of C•rclevJIIe, a daughter. Deborah (Tim) Buechner of Lancast1n the upper 40s.
er. a stepson •. J1m (Lmda) D1ddle of Rae me, four granddaughters. one stepSunday .Partly cloudy. Lows m grandchild and two slep·great·grandchlldren, and several meces and
the upper 30s and hrghs m the m1d nephews.
40s
Bestdes hts father; he was preceded m death by aJISter. Jean Stevens, and
by another SISler who d1ed m 1nfancy
.
GraveSide serv1ces Will be II am Fnday m the Bald Knob Cemetery. wnh
Elder Wtlliam Roush o1Tie1atlng. There wdl be no calhng hours Arrangements are by the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racme.

Gary R. Sellers

Land transfers posted
The followmg land transfers were
recorded recently m the office of
Mcrgs County Recorder Emmogene
Ham) lion
R1ght or way, Dorothy Mar1e and
Dclben Jay Heasley to Ohio Power
Co,. Sutton,
R1gh1 of way, Esther L and
Rtchard M. Demoss to OPC, Salisbury;
~
Right of way. Famoly Resorts Inc
; to OPC. Chester,
,:.,. RWht qf ¥lay, Dpns and Gll)l R
• Canteibury, R1chatd and Dorothy
· Haggeny to OPC. Salem ,
.Right of way, Conme S and
Ralph Bales to OPC, Rutland,
Right of way. Ellen 1. and Guy M
Thoma, Evelyn I. and Arv1l Dean
W1bhn 10 OPC, Rutland,
Deed, Phylhs Rl!ch1e, Phyllis M
and Marvm D Glasgo to Phyllis
Glasco and Joyce Ann R1tchoc ,
Racine lots,
Deed, Southern Oh10 Coal Co to
Richard A and Dorothy Hagerty,
Salem. 6.06 acres.
Deed. SOCCO to Ronald E and
Carole A Plulhps Salem, 2 31 acres
Deed. SOCCO to Ronald E. and
• Carole A Plullips. Salem. II 72

-·

acres.

Deed, John and LISa Kmsley to
Lola I. Bnght L1v1ng Trust. Salem
parcels,
(Continued from Page 1)
Deed, Lola I Bnghl LIVIng Trust
Corndor A ts about 12 4 m1les long while Comdor B 1s about 12.9 m1les
to John and L1sa Kmsley, Salem,
long
Comdor A has 31 stream crossmgs, but many of them are small, or
Deed, Kevm Gregory, Launc,
without
water. and would requrrc the conSirucuon of culverts. not bndges.
J;lonald Bryan and Laura Betzmg and
Janelle Mane Roach to John Cary accordmg to ODOT.
Comdor B has 29 stream crossmgs, but the streams are larger and rcqu1re
Belzmg. SaliSbury parcels.
co~structlon of more, longer and higher bndges. Comdor A dtsplaces 20 res·
Deed. John W. and Anna I
Lemaster to M1ehael A. and Kelly A. 1denGes and no businesses. while Corridor B would displace 21 rcs1dences
Kmmson. Columbr~. ·24 3235 acres; and one bus mess.
Upon approval of the environmental document by the Federal H1ghway
Deed, Bruner lalid ·Co. Inc to
AdmmiSl(ahon,
OD0Tw1ll be prepared to move ahead with detailed desogn
James L. Jr. and Dentse L Lyons,
whrch innially Will mclude placement of the final ahgnment wnhon the CorColumb•a;
Deed, Home Nauonal Bank to ndor A slUdy area
ODOT has no comm1Ued no further fundmg tollowmg the dcs1gn phase
Wilbert J McClam, Lebanon,
of the proJeCt accordmg to an ODOT fundmg document released m January
R1ght of way, Bessie M Baughman and Larry 1. Taylor to Sahsbury
Township Board of Tr~slees.
Deed, Ph1lhp M and Karen L
Roberts to Thomas I and Debora Pancake breakfast
Meigs Bikers to meet
The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Barnhart, Sulton pR~Uis.
The Meigs 1Counly B1kers AssoDeed. Home Natoonal Bank "t'o . Club woll stage lls annual pancake coatoon wdl meet Sunday I p m at the
breakfast Saturday 7 II a m at the Ell Dcnoson Post of the Amencan
Bruce E. Coltnll, Syracuse lots
Deed, Claude and Eumcc Filch· Sen1or C111zcns Center. Mulberry Legion, Rutland Plans I or the
patnck 10 Russell Fnchpamck Rut- Heights Road. Pomeroy The pro- Memonal Day Run Will be diSceeds w1ll go toward Me1gs County cussed
land, 4 acres,
Deed, Steven L and Wanda R scrvtce proJects Tickets of $3 for
Jacobs to Charles T and Dol!oe F adults and $2 for chtldren arc availCunJS, SuHon parcels.
able from local R)Xfu"Y Club members
and also at ~oor. Children under Trustees to meet
The Bedford Townshop Trustees
SIXC~
will meet at I :30 p m Thursday at the
lawn hall m Darw1n The specoal scs·
squads, Pomeroy Volunteer Fore
s1on rs m regard to seekmg a1d from
Speaker announced
Dcpanmenl assosted
Op1c Cobb Wtll dehver a l~mper­ the Federal Emergency Management
6·40 p m , Pagcv1lle, Alben
Agency
Dtxon. O"Bicness Memonal Hospotal; ance message at the M1ddlepon Com8 27 p m R1 versode Apanrnents. munuy Church Sunday mght. Hos
Middleport. Charles Eakms. refused emphasrs woll be on the facts about
the hquor traffic The church IS local·
treatment
ed
next to Vaughan's parking lot on
Veterans Memorial
MIDDLEPORT
S
ycamore•
Street
Tuesday
admiSsions - none
7 p.m .. Pearl Street, Florence
Tuesday diScharges - Margoc
Richard. Holzer Med1cal Center
Bumem, Langsville.
RACINE
Holzer Medical Center
2: II p m , State Route 124. Robm Klck·ofr dance set
Discharges March 18- Pauhnc
Pridemore. VMH,
A 4-H ktck·off dance wtll be held
5.13 p m. Valley Belle Dnvc. Saturday, 7·1 0 p m . tn the Metgs Jackson, Mrs Edd1e Shepherd and
Gary Sellers, dead on arnval
H1gh School cafetena. wllh Rock1n' daughter. Verme Salmons, Mrs
RUTLAND
Regg1c. AdmiSsion rs $2 Pictures Adam Franks and son, Cathcnnc
3 23 p m . Salem Street. R1chard woll be taken, refreshments served, all Lowery, Carol Justis, Shorlcy CamGruescr. HMC
lam1ly members mvncd Sponsored bum.
Birth - Mr and Mrs Jon Clark,
by the 1997 Me1gs County 4-H Commlltcc.
so~ Mason W.Ya
(Published wilh pennission)
·..
.

ODOT lists preference

--

Meigs announcements

.

EMS units record 7 calls
Unus of the Me1gs County Emer·
gency Medocal Servtcc recorded scv·
' en &lt;ails for assistance Tuesday. Umts
,• respondmg mcluded "
'
CENTRAL DISPATCH
'
3 27 p m. Union Avenue and
1, Stale Route 7, Pomeroy. niotor veh1·
· clc acc1dent. Sara Lee, Emily Fack·
ler, Joseph Weaver. Anthony Thomas,
•• 1uslln Seymour and Chns Imboden,
, V~tcrans Mcmonal Hospttal, Robert
• Workman and Ryan Baker. refused
· treatment, Racme and Pomeroy

•

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 2t,_,.
PubiiRhed every .rttrnoon. M~y throuah
FridAy Ill Coom 51. - . . , , Ololo. by die
Ohio Volley Pubtiobi.. eo...iYIGao- Co.,
Po-.y. Ohio 45769. I'll. m;2f S6 c.... -1'0¥1 all'anionoJ. Ohio

Me'*• I 'The AUOCtated Pms. oad lhe Ohio

NewlpllpCI" AIIOCIIUOft.

POSTMASTER: Send oddm.• COI'NCbobl tQ
The Daily Sentu~l. Ill Cou'! St, Pornaay.
Ohio 45769

!

I

A Crown Coty man was Cited followmg a two-vehocle crash on West Mam
Street m Pomeroy Tuesday around 3 02 p m
Gregory K Lee, 34, Middleport, had stopped to !Urn onto a pnvate parkmg lot when h1s 1994 Toyota was struck from behmd by a 1982 Ford truck
"dnven by Ho)lston Call, 29, Crown Coly, accordmg to a Pomeroy Pollee
Department repon
Lee's veh1cle sustruned moderate damage who I&lt; Calls truck receoved Joghl
damage , accordmg to the report
Call was coled on charges of dnvmg under the mfluence, no operators
license and fa1lure to mamtain assured clear dostance

StNGLI! COPY PRICK
Dolly

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SulsKriberl not dainnt to JIQY lhe cmter may
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011 ttwee. "" Ot 12 mondt t.il. Credit will be

No

-plio• l!7 oaoll _,.... in -

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" " - . .y be m.&gt;......... ., ... -pdon

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Hospital news

Three juveniles face vandalism charges
Three Me1gs County youths are facong felony charges stemmong from the
vandahsm of Ponland Elementary School over the weekend
The Me1gs Couhty Shenffs Depanment was notified Monday mommg
that vandals had broken out lights bulbs, tore shmgles off the roof of astorage bu1ldmg. and turned off the gas to the school's furnace , Shenff James
M Soulsby saul
In add1Uon to the felony charges , the three youths Will likely be charged
wolh d1srupl10n of a servoce smce they shut off the gas to the furnace A rcpaorman h:uJ to come from Columbus lo reacuvate the system, Soulsby saod

BREC regulators hit by vandals
Two electric regulators belongong to the Buckeye Rural Electnc Cooperative were apparently used by vandals for target pracloce over the weekend
aecordong to a Me1gs County Shenffs Department repon
A BREC employee checking out three regulators ncar the JUncliOn of Vance
and Hoover Hill road s near Hamsonvolle found two of the $~ . 000 regulators leaking oil One had been shot three limes whole the ot her was shot once
In addmon, an electncal breaker valued a1 $900 was shot

Sugar poured into truck gas tanks .
1ackoe Wamsley, Wells Road, Moddleport, reported someone put sugar'"'"
the fuel tanks of two of hiS semHrucks, according to Me1gs County Shcnff
James M Soulsby
One-of the trucks encountered trouble ncar Cambndgc, whole the second
was nul dnven Tuesday due 10 ram, accordmg to the report After learnmg
aboullhe~ugar mlhe fuel, Wamsley doscovered sugar m the tank of the second truck
An mvesllgat10n IS conlmumg Soulsby saod

Archery set taken from residence
Th1eves entenng a Rutland area home Monday or Tuesday reponedly stole
archery cquopmenl, accordmg to a Meogs County Sbcnffs Department report
Jeff Hawk. New Lorna Road, reponed hos rcsodencc was entered between
Monday mommg and Tuesday afternoon, and that a H1gh Country compound
bow, arrows, ann guard, 1finger tab and change were stolen

Falsification charge made by sheriff
A Racone man was charged wolh ~also fym g statements followmg a wreck
on Mtle H1ll Road near Racme
Mochael Moms reported h1s truck had been stole n accordmg to Shenff
James M Soulsby He had wrecked the truck and 1hc State Hoghway Patrol
had utowed, he satd

Athens youth's death ruled accidental
An 8-year-old Athens youth fatally shot himself m the chcsl wolh a handgun early Tuesday evenmg
Paul J H1xson , Dutch Creek Road, was playmg upslaors alone'" hos family's home when he found a 357 Magnum revolver and accodentally shot hunself 10 1he chest, accordmg to an Athens County Shcnfl's Department press
release
Hoxson was transported to O'Bieness Memonal Hospital on Athens. ~&lt;here
he was pronounced dead by Athens County Coroner Dr Hasemcoer The death
was ruled accodental ·
•

Gallipolis man ticketed in crash
A Gallipolts man was Cited for failure to control by the Galha Mcogs Post
of the Stale Htghway Patrol followmg a lwo-v ehoclc accodcnl Tuesday 110
State Route 124 near Salem Center
Troopers sa1d Jumor J McGuire 66, 108 Locust St was westbound at
II 25 a.m when the tractor·trmlcr he drove went olt the nght Side of the road
struck a buoldmg, a sogn and a pockup truck owned by Gerald Jacks, 28554
SR 124, Langsvolle. that was parked m a dnvcway
The accodcnl caused !floderatc damage to both the n g and the pockup.
ae&lt;ordmg to the rep&lt;Jrt

Middleport man cited following raid
Accurdmg to a sl&lt;&gt;ry published m
the Jackson Times. a Gallipolis man
was arrested m a gumhlmg ru1d m the
Jackson area on Saturday.
Deputies Irom the Jack son County Shenlf"s Department and agents
from the Ohw Department ul Loquor
Control rmd~d the rcsodcnce ol Harry Crabtree. Cholhcnthc Poke .ll 10

Murder charge

rm

Crahtrcc. 0 I, w&lt;~s urrcstcd for
opcr.ltmg. ,1 g.unhhng house Illegal
s.Jic of hccr .md keeper ol \t ~l at.:c
Arrcst~.:d lor publu.: g.unhhng were
John Golld,ond, 11 ol Jackson Gary
L&lt;e. 61 ol Sh.odc, JJrry M,nhcny 69,
ol CluiiH..:othc. L~.:stc1 W1sc 02 ol
Moddlcpprt .111 d Roch,ud Johnson,
41 of Gdllopolos

(Con1lnuecl from Page 1)
pnor felony con\ Jell on lor drug traf
lickmg
He IS scheduled to make an 1n1llal
appearance today on Mcogs Count y
Court
'I vc wanted 10 sec It !,;Orne to an
end for a long umc ' said Swofl "It's
been lrmmaung Lhmktng ahout those
two kods '
'Th1s 1s one that s concerned us
the last couple of yea" because of the
lcmhlc way •he docd and the choldren
she left behond. Lcntes sa1d
Lcnlcs smd mvcstlgators would
next like to solve the May 9, 1992
shooung death of turkey hurter
Ronald E Pohl, 58, of Dayton, m
Salem Township

Stocks

Am Ele Power .......................40'4
Akzo ......................................19'/.
i ~rTech ............................... &amp;1'"A•hland 011 ...........................39\
ATAT .....................................35"
Bank 01'111 .............................. 43~.
Bob Evan a ............................ 1~~
Borg-W~rner ......................... 39'4
Champion ............................. 18'4
Charml!'ll Shopa .................. 5')•
=oldlng .......................... 33),
I Mogul ...................:.. 24\
GanMH ................... "''''''''''''8e~
Goodyear .....:..........................54

K·m•rt ...................................12~
Lands End.............................27\
Umlted ,.................................18~

Ohio Vlllty Blllk ..................37\
OM Valley .............................31l,t
PeoptH uo•n•••oooo••••••••• oh ••" ooo .21~
. prern Flni..........................,••••14'R~I ...............................III\
FID Stlelt ..............................175\
Shoney'e .................................511.t
Stllr Bink .............................. 44'Wertdv'a ................................21'1.
Worthlngton .......................... zo'l.

-·-·-

Stock report• 1rt 1ht 10:30
1.m. quotH provlcltd by Aclvt1t
of Gllllpoll•.
.

.

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"

Dr. E.S. Villanueva, M.D. regrets to inf?nn you' that 1
effective April 14, 1997, his medical practice
located at 505 .Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio
will be permanently closed. The last office day will
be April12, 1997.
Requests for transfer of medical records can be done
any time, during office hours, before April 12th.
Thereafter, requests can be made by calling his
office or personally coming to office on Thursdays
between 2:00 - 4:00 PM and Fridays between ll :00
- 12:00 AM (992-.6633) until May 16, 1997; or by
writing to this address:
E.S. ViJlanueva, M,D.
505 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Dr. ViJlanueva truly appn:ciatcs your patronage.

.

'

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:

..

lUST ARRIVED
Complete line of Cat's Meow
Village™ and Accessories

M{tJYE$S09{:S
Furniture &amp; Floor

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Wedr • •xr, D11rch 11, 1111

The Daily .Sentinel

Sports

.

Pome1 Of • Middleport, Ohio

•

In NBA aqtlon,

.
Page4
WeclnHd8y; u.rch 19, 1117

Bulls top Sorties 89-87 i·n OT;
Rockets and Pacers also win

··-·--·-·- ····-

In NIT second-round set/on, ·..

~

Notre· Dame, Connecticut, Michiga-n and Nebraska advance
ly NANCY ARMOUR

·

SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP} Notre Dame coach John MacLeod
bas been saying all season that his
team can run ..Now maybe someone
will finally take him seriously.
Texas Christian can run-and-gun
with the best of them, but it was
Notre Dame that sprinted to an 82-72
victory Tuesday night in the second
round of the NIT.
"We want to run and open the
floor up and take some pressure off
the halfcourt game," MacLeod said.
"'It's not every day you have the
opportunity to get out and make the
right connections."
Pat Garrity led Notre Dame with
20 points. Pete Miller, who was 5' of6 from three-poml runge, added 16
forthe Irish (16-13).
In other second-round games
•·
be at
Tue sd ay n·•g ht, C_onnec.tc~t
Bradley 63-47, Mtch1gan defeated
Oklahoma State 75-65 and Nebraska
downed Nevada 78-68.
.
. ~e quarterfinal matchups ~re
M1ch1gan at Notre _Dame, Flonda
State at West Vtrgmta, UNLV at
Arkansas and Nebraska at Connecticut.
. . NotreDamedidn'tgiveTCU(2213) any time to set its defense, whip·

ping passes down the court for easy
layups and dunks. TCU; meanwhile,
never got its offense out of neutral. ·
The Homed Frogs, who traded 3523 a1 the half, shot only 34.percent for
tile game. They closed to 78'72 on a
three-pointer from Prince Fowler
with nine seconds left, but it was too
late.
"'I don't think we played sound
basketball this whol~ game," TCU ·
coach Billy Tubbs satd.
The Frogs bad \O travel to Notre
Dame even though they had a bener
record than the Irish and drew a bigger crowd in the first round.
"I'd like to issue a challenge;
Anytime Notre Dame· wants to play
us, they can come ' to Fort Worth,"·
Tubbs said.
After the teams traded the lead in
the opening minutes.J6arrity broke
loose, and Notre Dame didn't trail
again . He scored six points in a lf-2
run that gave the Irish a 21-12 lead
with II :30 Ieft in the first half.
Mike Jones tried to get the Horned
Frogs back in the game with back-toback three-pointers, but they trailed
35-23;it the 'half.
"I'
· d
· h'
m surpnse we were wn m 12
at the half the way we played," Tubbs

said. "That's as bad offensively as
I' ve seen us play."
The Frogs stepped it up in the second half, as Dam ion Walker scored
all but two of his 16 points. But the
Irish had an answer for everything:
When Garrity was covered, Miller
worked himself free ..And Phil Hick·
ey added 13 points and 12 rebounds:
"We have a front line going 6-7;
6-9,6-6," Garrity said. "We're going
to be getung rebounds and thai's
_going to trigger the fast break." .
The frustration got .to 1\tbbs,'who
wa5 called for a technical with 9:19
left in the game.
. "I swear to God, 1said nothing to
that referee;" Tubbs said. "I was
walking back ·toward !he end of tJie.
bench. That was a cheap technicai.I
did not deserve that"
c onnectlcut 63; Bradley
·
47
At Storrs', Richard Hamilton .
scored 24 points for UConn (16-14)
and sparked a decisive 16-5 run
midway through the second half.
Bradley stllr Anthony Parker finished
with 25 . · b
·
the ti · Pf~nts: u.t w~ sh~t ~own for
dde~•
~mut~s . uecvm reeman
15 pomts
a
•or
onn, which
won the NIT in 1988
·

1

.

Mlchlpn 75
Oldahoma S~ 65
.
. · At·Ann ~· Loms Bullock hit
stx_ three-potnters and scored 28
potnts as Mtchtgan (21-11) beat
Okltthoma State (17-15). Bullock, a
sophomot; guard who al~ holds
M1chtgan s career tluee-point rec~Jd;
made a pan of thrce-potnters du!'tig
a 9~3 ~n that ga,ve the Wolvennes .
thetr b1ggest lead, 69-50. C~1ant1
Roberts led Oklahoma State wtth 19
points.
Nebraska 78, Nevada 68
At Reno, Mikki Moore bad 21
points and 15 rebounds as defending
champion Nebraska beat Nevada.
Tyronn ·l,ue scored 18 points and
Bernard Gamer 17 foi the Comhuskers (18-14), who never trailed
before a record crowd of ll ,275 at
the Lawlor Events Center. Paui Culbenson scored 17 points for Nevada
(2!-IO).
.·
DRIVES PAST DEFENDER·Michigan's MHrlceTaytordll.,.
pllll Oklahoma State's Alonzo
MeyH on his way to the basket
In the first half Of Tuesday
night's NIT second-round cOntell In Ann Artlor, Mich., where
the Wolverinft won 75-65. 11M')

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~-~·· . . 'M.

____

:. S.p ringfield CC, Zanesville's.
]two teams, Belpre .a nd four new
entrles to start play Thursda·y

.

·:.:_. ,

·-

On this year's Division Ill all-Ohio boys' basketball teams,

Federal H.o cking's Chapman· stands among 12 area honorees
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Dale
Thomas of powerhouse 'Cleveland
Villa Angela-St. Joseph headlines
the 1996-97 Associated Press Division ill all-Ohio boys lrigh school
basketball team announced today. ·
Thomas, a 6-foot-6 senior; aver·
aged .22.5 points, 12.2 rebounds, 3
· steals, 2 blocked shots and 2. assists
a game for VASJ, which was ranked
seventh during the regular season.
The coaches of the year are
Ontario's Joe ,Balogh and Ray Corbett of Grandview Heights. ·
Thomas and VASJ will be featured
in this week's 75th boys statetournament at St. John Arena.
VASJ (IS-6) plays unranked Belpre (14-f2) at 6:45p.m. Friday, with
No. I0 Hamler Patrick Henry (21-4)
meeting No. 5 Dayton Christian (23-

3) in the nightcap at 9:30 p.m. The

winners square off in the title game
at 9 P·tn · Saturday·
Yuanta Holland. Dayton Christian's 6-8 enforcer. also was listed on
.
Ihe fi1rst team. The semor, a transfer
f rom Dayton Jefferson, averaged
17.3 pointS·, 13.7 reboundS 5.3
bl k d h
d44 .
oc e s ots an . assiStS a game
while the
hitting
from
field.61 percent of hi~ shots
1

Thomas and Hplland were joined
0~ the first ream by: Marion Elgin's
')
(6 0 S . 19 2} p
Con ,Hamtton ·, , r., . ; emberville
Eastwood's
Aaron
. 'czak (&lt;5 S 32 8) M k
La WRJ
u- •
r.,
·
;
m--•-·ff fLee C k Eas ,... ar
YYUUUI u 0
S tee
1"'-'Jinton
(6-2, Sr., 22.7); West Salem Northwestern's Nate Gaubatz (5-11 . Sr.,
29 0)· and Chad Phillips of state poll
' ' 7 "'
K
d (
S
c hamp1on narren enne y 6-3, _r.,

16.8). ·
Hamler Patrick Henry 's Kris
.
Gerken. 8 6- 2 Junior who averages
l4 4
. points a game, headlines the second team.
Also on the •••m
are.· .Brookvt'lle's
u;oa
Josh Sagester (5' 10, Sr., 29.6); Bed·
ford Chaners· Marques EVans (6•7 ~
Sr., 18.5); Tony Dorsey ·of second·
. ranked Ontario (6-4, Sr., 17.1); Thorn·
Patete ·ofWilliamspon Westfall (6-1,
Sr., 2 1.7}; Rocky Heddleson of
Sarahsville Shenandoah (6-1 , Jr.. '
19.3)·, and Sparta Ht'ghiand's Nick
.Teny. Terry, a 7-~nior, averaged
·
'20.6. poiniS a game. . ~"_, seth.. ng 8
state record with his .3 shooling
fi
the fi ld ( 169 f
perccnlage rom
1e
~0 ~
203 ).
Balogh guided Ontario to the No.
2 spot in the rank.ingS missing out by
1

·
a basket on the· school's
second trip lond. 7./J. So . 20.6: Tooy Doney. Onlario. 6-4. S•..
to the final four in three years. Cor- 17.LMIII&lt;!"'-'E"ns.BedfootC1oand.6-7.S... 185;
Kri~ Gerken. Hamler Patrick Henry. 6-2. Jr.. 1-4.4:
bett led Grand\liew Hei~rhts to a 17- Josh Sa!esler. Brookville. ~-tO. Sr.. 29.6.
e
3 mark .despite losi_n~wo top playThird •~••: Nick Uu. Wamn Kennrdy. 5..10.
r:

.

ers •Or portions oft

season. one

Sr.. 18.5: Ryan Mount. Chcsap!:ake. 6-2. Sr.. 19.0:
JmmyThr&lt;&gt;nn.Ne
. lson,ilk:- Yod.,6-4.Sr., I8.~ : Judd
..,.."" 6-1 . .Jr.. ltl.!i; Dusbn Hand6chuLori . Caldwell.
miiCher. Bovo:rly f&lt;xl frye. 6-4. SL 200; Phil L&lt;we~rov~. Grnndview Hts .. 6-4. Jr.. 19.J: Clnrk Mal'c.
London Madison-Pinins, 6-1. Sr.. 20.0.
Playtr ol the )'Cir: Dale Thomas. Cle. Villa

with an appendectomy and the other
with a season-endin• knee ih;ury.
He!
e
'.}
' rc are the 1996~97 Associated
Press Division Ill boys . aii ~Ohio
·
base d on the recommenda- Angelo·SI)oseplo.
·
teams.
Coachesetynr:J~ Balogh. Onntrio: RnyC~-·
tions of a state media pan~l (wilh heir, Grantl\·ic w HI$.
school, height, grade and scoring
Special meniion
Andy Keo~tin!,. Germantown Valley View: Kr:iaverage):.
th Whilson. Cin. lndinn Hil_l: William Runynn, Cin.
Fino ,...,. ....
~,. ~--.,..
'""'"._. c~-·-··
..,.,._N ••
..,,11 , N. collep- Hill : Nmhan Shoup, Marion Pli!a!:ml:
AnseiA-SI. Joseph. 6-rOOI-6. Senior. 22.5 poinu per Sieve Km. Old WashinJIOn Buckeye Trail: Chris
J.ame: Con HamiiiOJI. Marion li.IJin. 6-0. St.. 19.2: Cabot. w. l..af;&lt;~yeuc: RidJOwood; Mike SciU11bioo.

Aaron Lawnicz:lk... n:T,.....,.
-......_~ 1'- r.-..~ ... "' ." . •·..
.. ,.,. ..,............._or., .x
-~2 .8: Xuanm Holland. O.y. Chrittian. 6-8. Sr.. 173:
MartWoodruffo~Leae'heekE. Clinton. 6-2. Sr.. l2.7:
Na Gaub:ltz: W_ S*m Nonbwescem. $-11. Sr..
19.0: Chad Phillips, Wanen Kennedy. 6-.l. Sr.. 16.8.
-ttom: Thorn p,..... WillillllllpOII w..,_
fali. 6-1. Sr.. 21.7; Roc:iy Heddlcson, Sanhsvillt
Shf:nandolh. 6-1, Jr., 19.l; Nick Terry, Sp111a Hi&amp;h-

Well$vilk; Joey Dem. BamesviUe: Kris Hinchcliff.
Havil;md W:.yM Trace: Zebb Schroeder. Archbokl:
Kyle Umoa. Minford: se·w: Johnson. Whec1mburJ:
Josh Ompman. Srtwan Fedeml Hockin.a : Jocob
Weclc:esser. Smilhvilk: Jeremy Vetthio. Garreusville

Glllfiold: Todd T•""'· E. Palellino: "'" ""'~"·
Ck~W"vicw; Atrrado Jackson. Bcdror.d Chane!: Phil

Jeromesville Hillsdale; Erit Gilben, Lonlin

'"'"'"· Rocty
Ri'" ""'""""
w••. ·
Honorable
mention

Ryano,.....,.a.,.,;.;Chri•Cioa• r~ld. Sprin•

N the:!.51
C
M K'
C '
,.. . ·
or
em: asey ' .nney. autuwn •am•
East: Sft31k' Driver, New P.-ls Na1ional Tr.ul: Bmd
UaJJa. VL"rsailles: Andy Stamper. Finne)1nw.:
Will ArtL..-. Johns.rown Nonhridge! Andy oa.~• ·~ --1.: ""I· B
K
"-h
....
anon c. 11•: Eric
:ury Scanlon.
rueger. Cnn:\1
, .....1 :Wlncheslt7:
Kevin Ma110n.
Bloom-Carroll:
Eri&lt; G.,.. Nowc-."""oown; Tn•i• Cboi&lt;. Cold·
well: Eric Wolfe. Gudenhuuen lodiqn Villh:y: Bill
Mak:rn~•.SUJilfC!Uk Garaway; Chad C(lync. Marlins Ft'ITy : Chi!S Call. Bcllilire; Nmhan Barker. Han-

nibolBlnirWall5.
"'"'local'
Cnldwmtt: M~rGockstener. HuMn:

J~$h Goodwin. Milan Edison : Dnn Ko.lh. But.-yrus

Wynfont;M•m o..;,_ Ontllrio;
Troy Storer. Seaman N.Adilms; Ou"" Potp.&gt;IS,
Oak Hill; Eric Shirm. Fr.ullkfort AdenOI: Ot.:n:k
""""''· Lyn&lt;h1""g·Cioy; ""'" Hmnah. Pik"""'
Thomas HMkell. Albnny A~: Brodie Merrill.

WriiAnn: Brady Tmcc. GlouMerTrimblt:
. Greg Harri$0n. You hAl. Liberty: Jwvi$ H:lll. E.
Canton: lim Buchanan. Wanen Kt:nltedy: Troy
DuBose. Younp. Unulint: Scon Kline . Alwater
Waterloo: Rkhurd JK"bon. Sullivan Blac:k Rivn:
Josh Hardy. Aurora:
Som Voga. A"'"' Brion Pe.,.. C1e Villa
An~lo-S. . j()leph: Todd Hill, Middler~tld Cardinal:

Mark
Sk.or. C(llumbia: Zac Ja"ckson. Andover
Pvmatullilll ValleY

Scorebo ard
R~nsoa.

Bask etb all

Hoc key

NBA standings
.

lY L t&lt;l.

Miami .................. ..4·M
New YurL ............4tl
Orlll00u .................. 36
WlishlnJ.Ion ........... ;\2 ·
Nt:w ,k1111:y ............ 20

17

!ill

Ill .127

BusluA ................... 13 54

Atlantic DMiion

. 194

•-Philotlelphia .... W 21 10
• - NcwJ~r!~i!y ..... Jtl2012
Fluridu ............. 32 B 16
N.Y. R11n~_r !&gt; .. .. D 29 Y
Wa.~hinglnn ........ 2K 3~ 7
Tuni[W.t Bny ...... 27 .\~ 7
NY ; I ~IunOcu .. .24 ·' lf 10

',
12

16'~

2M
JI :
)6

Centrul Dlvllion
· f

J. -l1m:;!j!u .............. ~'i7

9

.KM

llrt:trtUI .... .. ........... A-7
1\tlanw ................... oW
l"h.lvlnnc .............. .n
CJ.EVELANO ....... l:"i
IIMiiuna . ................\1
M'ilwuuk" ............. ~?
Tummu ........., ....... 24

/K
22

.72J
.667

t/ ·

·24

.6Jb

1:"i

29
.\4
JK
42

.547
21
477 . 2:'1 ·
.41:'1
2!J
.lLW
·'3

-·-

Northtalll DI¥1Mion
.....J7 22 II g·~
Pillsbur~h _ ....... JJ ]0 7 7.'
Hartfunl . . .... 27 JJ 10 M
Mon1rcnl . ....... 2~ J2 14 M
Ouuwa ..... .......2J ]J 14 60
Ou51nn .
..... 24 Jtl 9 !17

'

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ANAHEIM MIGHTY

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120 244

f-lorida al N.Y. l~lmll.kn, 7:,\0 Jl.l\1.
New lc."nl')' ill WMhlnJihltt. 1:JO p.m.
011 Tnronh1, 7:.'tlt•.m.
BnJinn al lklnlil. 7:JO Jl.nl.
Phuttdll:ll Dnllilii, II:JO t•.m.
Su~ J~l!C 111. Cnltt~ · ~ :.10 p.m.
.
.. TnntJII\ Buy ;If Edmnncun. 'II':.'ti'Jl.nt
l.o~'M 1\np-k~ a1 Anuho.in1. IO:.lq f\.111.
Phill~lphin

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'romntu Ill Ua.1mit. 7:)0 p.m.
lnt.ll111111 ill At'-ta. Mp.m.

:

Goklm StaiC Ill Mlami. Kp.m.

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VIUll.'tHIYL"'"·itl MinltJOiil. t4 r .m.
S*"ramrnlo till L.A. Clipf'ICI'I. IO:JO

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Turc!"'t• atllill~huri!h. 7:.\tl 11.111.
Fluridu 111 tlaowu, 7:.\0 p.m
Pht"ll.'niJ. ill CbicOl!,d. H::\0 JUII.
H1111roo1 m S1. l..oui~.M:l0 1'·"'·
San ·J~~ 111 VanL'QUVfl. lbp.m.

.

Transactions

1}tunii8Y'• pmes·

04&gt;1drrt Su* 111 ~ 7:)0 p.m.
L. ~ . l.altcrs at CLEVELAN~. 7:JO

Boaeball
......-..._

NIT action

KANSAS CITY

ROYALS' Opk""~

TORONTO

. . .11IIIIIIWCMI

BLUE JIIYS: Orott... ~

mutt 10 . . . . m1itar-te.pe I.'WI"Ip.

CHICA~~fcu a s: s;.~:

' 99z.Q61 991-21!3 '14Z·l818 !76-mi

..

.
d RHP
AIIIIIIIIY T-o. RHP .
r M,... .
Mil RHP: Wire Plldona to Iowa of'dw

..

W9W, TNI\T TNING W9RK5 r/\51

Ali inter~lld parties will be given
opportunity to be heard. Further .
lnformallon may be obtained by
contaellng the Commission a1 180
Easl Broad St!llt, Columbus, Ohio

Your Full Line Dutch

Standard Dealer

*
PICKENS·
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
773:5583

Papr apeclah 3 mot. torvico and po 11 r/$69.9~ •
Never miss a call ogoiri _w ith your Motoro!o Bravo pager
' ·

...

Phono apociah hancl Jtolcl or moltllo/$29 ·oach,

• ""-

a'· .. . I"' I I ...., ..... TDO.,.,
•

Choose from Mitsubishi

AH 129 HOlld Held or Motorola' .

TVM200 Mobile Phone. Offer 'expires March 31,1997.
.,..,.

.·-

..

360° Communications

CELWlAR-··

1051 East State Street, Athens, OH
(~14) 592-4911

West

Gellpolil 1502 EaatemAw. 61it/441-0547 PotMtoy 21M
2nd St. 6141992· 7070 .I.:Uarl 364 Mllln Street 614·286-6073

--~--

... CINCINNA11 REDS : Ofotioood OF
Cllld Wouola t(l loltillltjlolit oOht
p

PI"*' tiW T"'Y
u.r-111!.

Auqo:ialtoo.
2

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

,,..._ll_l'llnD

'

' State Rep. Kim Brimer. R-Arling-~
ton, says he wan1s.· to give Cl·t,·cs a~·.
many op't1'ons· as· ·poss1·
.. ble· ·lncludo'n'..,·
tax in•• .thy ath letes and hroadcastcrs •
who bcncfl.ll.r&lt;Jm pu"l•···
" ' ·,nv"s·tment
•·
•'
·in sports arenas and_stadiums

43266.0573

from Cellulat One , OHer· expires Morch 31.• 1997.

,.ttn..

· c:..., ... hilleu....,.

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I

I•

I

•c

LEGAL NOnCE

• The Public Ulilllies Commission of
'I Ohio has sellor public ~eating Gase
No. 96·1 02·EL·EFC, to reView the
1
fuel procuremenl practlj:a and poH·
cles ol Columbus Soulltern Power
Company, the operation of !Is Electric Fuel Componenl and relalad
maHers. This heaJing Is scheduled
to begin at the Commission offices
al10:00 a.m. on Mardt 25, 1997,

'

.... -1111!•-•&lt;611)

RHP Many J-.tn 10 S)'l'lk.'UN llf 11ft lntem~~ioalll,.apc . Senl OF D.rell Whh·

11

.

an

•

I

briefs

..

I

/

Ask about our
..
Flood Assistance Program. .

c..ann,,

RHP Jim Pi111lcy 10 Omatua ur lbt: .AnwriCIII'I An~Kialjun . Releu•cd LHP Juun
AIOIIO.
. .
.
TEXAS RANGERS: AkliJ.nttl RHP
T•yoo S1urut to Oklahomn C1ty ~.r 1he
"Ameri.:M AJJ(l(illfion und RHP Jo1111Mn
~ ro 1t.t·r mi-·lela~At camp.

!

..

.

. CLEVELAND INUIANS: U11liutM:d
LHP Couey Whillin ant.~ LHP Mi~c
Mlllllww• tu Buffalo uftht An1«1..:1111 A,..·
MM.iation. AJSiJ.Iicd LHP Gn:J
111
llkir ltilll)r·ku,_lk Cllm(l.

' awaited matchup of the state's No. I· the new year. ·
·~
and No. 2-ranked teams at 6 p.m.,
"I'm not quite sure what the word
with Springtleld North ( 19-6) taking · .is to describe all of this,:· first-year
! on-Cleveland Heights (22-3} in the , 7oach Josh ~~lie sai~. "I guess
. •nightcap. .
.
mconce1vable IS best.
.
I On Friday; Rosecrans (25-1) . Some olthe aU-staters '.'n diSplay
· :meets defending champion Spring· mclude : St. Edward ~dmt guard ·
; field Catholic Central (12-13) - no, Steve Logan. Zan~sv11!~ ~ Seth Mar.. )that's nol a misprint- in a Division tm, Cleveland He•ghts The~ D•_xon
' IV semifinal at 1:16. with Norwalk" and Jamal Harns and Spnnghcld
~ St. Paul (24-2) 1ackling top- ra~kcd North's Eric Thomas In Divisio? I;
Wan Wert Lincoln view· (25-0) at 4 Buchtel 's Doylan Robmson, Badm's .
··
..;..·--:
l p.m. In Div.ision Ill. perennial pow.~erhousc Cleveland Villa Angela-St.
: Joscphi19-6) meets Belpre (14-12)
: at 6 :45, followed by Hamler Patrick
: Henry (21-4) against Dayton Chris1 tian (23-3) at 9:30p.m. ·
Saturday 's championship game
j schedule is Division II at II a.m.. .
, Division I ut 2 p.m .. Division IV at .
: 5 p.m. and Division III at 9 p.m.-.
! all ;\1 St. John Arena.
·
, The field should make for one of
: the most intriguing tournaments in
:.rCccnt years, since almost every

.,

ifs comforting
to know. .•
We're here tO
lend a helping
hand ~ --

lI

, w~aEd~~-~~al~~~~-~~~~~q- ~t~~n~s~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ry~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

are to~,

IKII 2.\J
117 2.11

mi~s~:~~~e~h~ ~:~~r~~~~:.~zf:~i

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Don't miss
a beep.

D

When·times

17.1

22 1 21:'i
20.\ 201
IYI 102

Mtmln:al :~1 N.Y. Raft~o..'fs . 7:30p.m.

Clcvrl..aat (.'lul'kttae. 7:.~ r .m.

Cbris LiPuma ofT waiven fronl N4;w J.:i~y
.
ST. LOUIS BLUES : Returned (j
Janlie McLennan II.) Worcesll:r or lhc
AHL. RecnlletJ LW.Alcll Va~ ilcvM kii from
Won:~~er.
·
T0RONTO· MAPLE LEAFS: Traded
C Kirk Muller 10 F.lorida fur RW Jason
Podoll;m. Tmd~d 0 Larry Murphy 10 ~ '
tmil for future t.:on&amp;i derati uns. Loaned
RW Zdenck N\..'dved, RW . Ju.wr~ Pudolan
und G Marcel Cou:~incau 10 S1. John '• of
lh\! AHL.
. VANa&gt;UVER CANUCKS: Clai n~t.'CI
D Sieve Smirn~ off waivers rrom Bm1on.·
Tradt.od. F Josef Ber:~Mk ·In Pinsburgh fur
fulure cun~ir.lemlionl! , und 0 Fmn1i~ek
Kuccm1o Philadelphin ror ·f'ulure conaidcrouiuns. Rt.-callcd C l..aiT)' Courville 11nd
c LOIIIIY Bnhnnos rwm SyraCu!le ()f the
AHL.
•
WASHING 'I'ON CAPITALS: Re curned LW AndreW Bruun~nc Md RW
Ridwrd Zednick tu Ponltutd ·of 1~ AHL

.

TuniJlht's a•m•s

· ~ Yotkal Phil*':lnbla. 7~.\0 p.m.

:!

~
'

Hockey

Pill5burgh !'i. Hutl:1lu .1
Cnlorndo 4. V;m..:nuwr 2

I

.• Ton!lhl·'• games

LOS ANGUES KINGS: 'l'mtJctl 1:
r:.ddic Olczyk lo Pitt$burt;h fur RW 91cn
Murr:.y . keculled RW Brad Smyth frum
Phr.ocnix ur 11-= IHI..
MONTREAL CANAOIF..NS: TrmJctJ
D Murray Oam11 und RW O.ri s Mum1y 1u
Phoeni.ll rur D Oavl! Mall ~tm . Tralk:t.l 0
Pal Jo1blnn$ki h1 Pht~cnix ror D Sjcvc
~'hcrc~:lf)'k nntl aJ~igntd ('ll(rl.'daryk 1u
Fn.'ilcncwn 11f the A HI~
,,-

MIAMI IXlLPHINS: Re-si~ ncd IJE
L&gt;a.nicl Stubbs lu n lhrtli:-yli!m o.·ummct
ST. LOUIS RAMS Rci&amp;.'IL"fCd P Scm1
Lantk.'la
SAN I&gt;U~GO CHARGERS · Ai!,rect.l
tni&amp;."I'IIIS with DT Rcubtn Duvis un u fimry..o:tr l"l!U IIi.ll.'l

, Tuesday's scores

Lhllh u1 lkMitt)n. 1 p.m.

AHL.

I.Wnilli~lrnlittn.

20

117, Philowklphin IO:'i
f'lk.-w Yurt ~tl". V;uK:o.tVL'I" 7J
HouJ.ton 97, New Ji.'f'IIC)' ·II\1
lndtana ll!i. Minr.t.wloa Y7
(."hiL:a,u 119. ~Mmllh: 117 t&lt;Hl
WoiihinJEitln MtJ.. Onllu H~
L.A. (."ll~rs 121. Ptkacnl• Ill
Punlmkl Y2. S.....:ranw.:tvu K7

.
'

•

7
l(l'.

FootbaU
Natlcm•l Foatblll l..eaJIUf
DENVER BRONCOS: "SiJntr.l OLD
· Ju11ln Dra1oo . Exurci5ed rhe option On
0T Jun1py C".ca1hcrs. Nt111k.'d D:~ve Rl •mdtl
Uil\'t.'lur uf ll.U.Inry cap 11nc.l fuu1bo11l lin;tlk.'\'

Tl~n"tnln

i'

I

I

,jNl

Tuesday's Kores

l
,
r'
i

.692
.677

N•ti.MI Bublhllll AJBOCIMkwt
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVI.!S:
Pl:i1.1:d (] Olrili Carr on lhc injured li~t .

'
NEW 'YO.RK
ISLANDERS : Ac quired C Ruben Reichel from Culgary fur
LW MIM1~ Mcinnis. GT~ Gamer and
a 1997 sixlh-ruurtd dr.Ut pi.ck. Traded LW
lk~k King to Hllftrord l"tlr P IW? filihround drarl Jlic k. R~t.:all cd LW K~u Belanger fmm Kcnlu..:ky of the: AHL.
O'rfAWA SENATORS: Traded .f
lknni5 Cha.ue, D Kevin Bolibruck and 11
1998 Jixlh- ruUnd dndi pkk In Chk a1u for
RW Mike Prokop.'L
PHOENIX COYOlT:.S : Tmdrd ' RW
Cl1ri~ · Mum\)' tu Hmlford forD Gemhl
l&gt;iduck. ft.ec"'ltd D Slevl! O'leretl111}k on
hmn from Sprintlidd uf the AHL.
PI'ITSBURGH PCNGUINS: Tmdo.~
(' Ridlill"d P11rk to Am1hcin1 fur RW Ru1\Hut Oksiulu.
,
ST. U.&gt;UIS Q).:.UE."'i : Ro.:aJiet.l G Jon
Ci!M!f from Wt•rcc stet uf lhc AHI.. A~- ,
si~1Jed (i J;,mic Mcl..cnmm to Worce~l~o'1 .
As~i&amp;ncd RW Alex Vnsiltvski lo Gntnd "
. ~RiiJl i~s 1•f lht.: IH_L.,

IKII
2.111

Pudfk lllwiMkln
....... 44 IH Y I.J7
1 ~11"1ll l1h111 ..........\2J2 7 71
Amtl"~t;in i ......... .2\1 J0 II
M
Ci1ll-&lt;1r)' .... ;... _. ...lO J4 M' frK
· V01no.:ouvcr .. .29 -.\K 4 b2
Lu1 J\1\ttc~ . .. 2:'i J7 Y :'19
SnnJo~ .......... 2.\ .\tl 1 :'i.l
-.-din..::hl..'\.1 pl&lt;~yoff 51'1.11

PaCific OMQQn

2J.l

• •• 2()4 2"
"" ''"'

12

Buketball

1~.7

217
.20tl

210
24J
19]
21!1

~-CulomtJo .

x-SI:~Ic .............. ... 4:"i· -20
J..J •.A. l.Oikcn ........ 4-l 21
~,.. twod... ..... :...... ..... l'
I. A. CliJ1111:'U ......... 2H .lt'l
S.:tant!!nlo .. ,........ 2K 3K
"'*""iJ. ............... ... 27 3\1
(iuldcn Srute ...... .... 2!'i 40
~-~·liachc:tJ playoff spol

IMI
200

Central (}i¥hkln ·

Mklwnt Division

lY L t&lt;l.

IK4
lfll

WESTERN CONFERENCE

WESI'ERN CONFERENCE

Ira

SR l:l6
HK I~K
l«l In
7!1 229
6J 179
61 IK7
. 'K 192

Buffalo...

IJ

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS :
Waive\~ RHP Sleven Bourpeois. OJI!irtnl!d
RHP Keith Fnulkc 11.,1 Phoenix ut" the PCL

lY L I fll. Iii !iA

Iwl

.738

29 5~
J4 .48~
45 JOtl
Phillkk:lptli11........... 11 4H .262

Jay Wsablcl.lli ~ l .

.

EA!ITERN'CONFERENCE

A.llantk DivWon

Iam

I
! ·

thruugh 1999. with 11 club OP.,Iion fur 2001 . ·
Pl:w.:ed INF-OF Craip ShipiC~ on rhc 60-

NHL standings

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Traded LW Jon Battaglia undo 19YK
rounh-ruuntJ dmr1 pick ru Hunl"utd for (.'
Mill"k JanSiell5.
•
BUFFALO SABRES: Trudet.l D
Cmig Millar and L.W Barrie Muon: 1o &amp;1monlon for F Miroslav Satan.
CALGARY FLAMES: Aui!n~tJ C
Ravil Yakubov 10 Ulah of ttl!: IHL. Tradal 0 Jamie Hll~rull 10 Tampa Bay ror G
Ty!er Mou. Tr.tded l&gt; Man: Hu ~~ey 111'
ClncalJ:O fi.M" LW Ravil Gu5nUIIlOV.
DETROIT RED WINGS: AnlliHIIIL'\.'d
lhc n:cin:n-.:"nt ur 0 Mi~.Ram5ey.
EDMONTON OILERS : Tnu.ll:d 0
h:rr ~Miun 1u Tamra Bay fur L&gt; l&gt;rcw
baru\tS.I.:r. A~t~iJ:M.'d .W Barrie Moore w
Hnntillon of 11-.: "AHl.
HI',I.RTFORIJ WHALERS : 'rr11dcd
II,.W Kelly ChaMc to Toruntn ftlr n llNH
~:i~thtl~·rnunU tlrnr1 pick. Luuncd D
Al.:xantk-r Gudynyuk tu Sr1rin~ficld nf chc

. SAN DIEGO PADRES: E•tolllkdth&lt;
.:untruct or Bruct Bochy; ma•u•acr.

~~~·~·!~go~pp~:~~~~r~:n·~~~~~~

\

··1 had to stand tl1ere and wati:lt
it," Cheaney said. " I said. 'Please
don'tlet irgo down.' I've seem thar
play happen in the pros before, bu~
not in a while. I didn't want it to·
happen to me .''
Pacers US
Timberwolv.. 97
· At Indianapolis. Reggie Miller
scored 27 poinos. Dale Davis had 23: .
points and 13 rebounds and Rik·
Smits added 21 points for the Pacers,
who shot 57 percent from the field
and outrcboundcd the Timberwolve~
41 -26.
Smits scored 17 of the Pacers' 38
points in lhc decisive third quarter,-.
when Indiana went 14-for- 19 from
the field and 8-for-9 from the fou~ .
line 10 huild a ·n -point lead. indiana:
extended the margin to 22 on Travis · ·
Besl's three-poi nter with 7:271eft in
the founh quarter.
i
The Timberwolves have lost four..
of seven ganies to slip below .500 10..~·
the forst time since Feti. 19.
•·
Knicks 98, Grizzlies 73
At New York, 1he Knicks held thCJ
Grizzlies scoreless for the tinal \1:05:_
and extended Vancouver's losi.ng"
streak 10 t4 games - the longest in·
the NBA this season.
The Grizzlies ( 11 -57) were with-;
out one of their best players as center Bryant Reeves sat out with thC!
llu. Thai allowed Patrick Ewing. It~
lace oil against the likes nl Erid
Lcckner, Roy Rogers and Aaronl
Williams, and he sho1 11 -lor-21
from the lield while scoring 22
points. Starks added 16 points andCharles Oakley had 10 points and r5
rebounds.
Raptors 117, 76ers lOS
At Toronto. Marcus Camhyi
scored a ·carecr-high 36 poi nts and
Damon Stoudamire had 30 pmnts!12 assists and 10 rehounds .
Stoudamirc, who had 15 points ii1&gt;Lhc third quarter. picked up hi,, sec·&lt;
ond triple-douhlc of 1hc season and
third of his career.
· Derrick Coleman had 25 . p;oinls •
and a season-high. 16 rchnunds li)r
the 71&gt;Crs. who lost for 1hc scvcntJ·(
tirilc in their lasl nine games. Cole-r
man sat for the entire founh quarter
despite being Philadelp hia's mos1 '·
col'tsislcnt player.
..-

· points of tlie game. blew the lead and
AP Beslrotbell Wr!W
The ref blew his whi~tle and then led by nine midway through the
raised his fist. sending Michael Jqr- . fourth before Mitch Richmond led
dan to the foul line to score the win- Sacramento back. A four-point play
' ning points with three seconds left in by Richmond cut Portland's lcilll to
two points, but the Blazers held on
overtime. ·
asMitchell Butler made one free
~fterward, the Seattle $uperSonthrow
and Kenny Anderson added
ics called it a bogus call.
two
from
the line.
"' Everybody in the world knows
s.:ored all 22 of his ·
Anderson
there's a double standard here."
Seattle coach George Karl said after points in the second half.
Rotkets 97, Nets 89
the Sonics dropped an 89-87 deciAt
East Rutherford. Sedale
sion to tbc Chicago Bulls on TuesThreatt
and Eddie Johnson. both
day nigh(. " But that's pan of it.
signed by Houston earlier this
LADY EAGLES GET HONORS -These five AWird), Valerie Karr (Best Free Throw Percent;
You've got to win a championship. month, scored II points each in the
EestembelketbeHpleyera-.~forthelr age end~~ Rebounds), Becky Davia 1110%
lt'stheoldclicheofknockingouqhe .fourth quarter as the Rockets carne
darts In the 1996-117
et Sunday'• awards Hustle Award) and Stephanie Evana (Most
world champion in boxing...
from behind in the final period for
banquet; From left to rtght are Cha ..tle Hollon Improved).
in a rematch of last season's NBA
(Beet Defen1ive Award), Angl Wolfa (~'s
finalists, the disputed call came with the 17th time this sea.•on.
Clyde Drex.ler, playing only his
,
the score tied &amp;7-all.
second
game since returning from a .
:1
'
h
· b
Jordan, guarded by Gary Payton,
hamstring
injury. led the Rockets
:•n the 1St boys' state basket all tournament,.
seemed to bobble the ball as he was
with- n points and . 12 assists.
Hakeem Olajuwon added 14 points
free throws and Hersey Hawkins and 15 rebounds: .
Kendall Gill and Jimmy Jackson
0
scored 20 points each to ·lead New
·
anybody," Payton said. " We did a Jer:icy, which was coming otT wins
over Chicago and New York. Eric
1
greatjobandplayedgreatdefense. Montross tied his career high with 18
1
,
.
·
It's heartbreaking for us and I hope
.
·
we get a chance to play them again.'' rebounds.
Clippers 121, Suns IJI
:ay RUSTY MILLER .
team is saddled with . a :question Mark Pater, Mitllin's Aaron Turner ·
Jordan disputed the double stan•
Rodney
Rogers scored II uf his
' COL.UMBUS. Ohio (AP) -At . mark.
.
and Benedictine's Rashon Brown in
dard claim.
21 poinis in the fourth quarter, and
one time or another this week, the
In the big-school divisi6n, for II; Divi sio~ 111 player of the year
"Tha(s garbage," he said.
population of Columbus figures to instance, Zanesville's only loss was Dale Thomas ofVASJ, Patrick HenIn other NBA games. Portland Los Angeles moved into seventh
swell by 26.778 _ that 's every man, to a team that it could meet in the · ry's Kris Gerken and Dayton Chris· , topped Sacramento 92-87, Houston place in the. Western Conference
woman and child in Zanesville.
title game, -Cleveland Heights :· tian 's Yuanta Holland; and in Dividefeated New Jersey 97-89, the Los playoff race by winning at Phoenix.
The Suns are I 1/2 games behind
"This is one of the biggest things Cleveland Heights has made it to sion IV, Rosecrans' Chris Garber,
Angeles Clippers beat Phoenix 121 •
1o hit Zanesville," Mayor Jack Fen· Columbus in four ot the last five Norwalk St. Paul's Chad Stein and
Ill, Washington edged Dallas 86- Sacramento for tbe eighth and final
ton said.
years, but has only millie it to. one Lincolnview's Brandon Pardon and
85, Indiana trounced Minnesota 115· spot in the West.
Darrick Martin had 20 points for
With Zanesville High School and final- losing to Zanesville in 1995. Wes Dudgeon.
97, New York defeated Vancouver
the
Clippers. who lost seven of their
Rosecrans High School 'both panic· Springfield North led Cleveland
For the first time in five years, the
98-73 aJld Toronto beat Philadelphia
previous
nine games. Loy Vaught
ipating in this week's 75th annual Heights by 17 points with 2:21 left games will not be televised by
117-105.
boys state tournament, it's under· in the third quarter of its semifinal SportsChanneL The Ohio High
Jordan played 50 minutes, scores! had 14 points and 18 rebOunds.
Kevin Johnson had it seasonstandablc that there will be a lot of matchup that same .yeiu-, yet ended School Athletic Association •.which
32 points and matched a career high
high
·37 points and .J0 assistsfor the
traffic co~gestion on westbound up losing 69-61 in ovenime. And St. sponsors the tournament, could not
with 18 rebounds.
Suns,
who were denied their fourth
Interstate 70.
Edward played· one of its worst reach an agreement with the net·
Payton finished with 14 points, 12
straight victory.
Parades al" being planned, SijlnS games last season in losi.ng to even- work.
rebounds and .14 assists.
Bullets 86, Mavericks&lt; 8S
areupoilmostbusinesscsandit'sthe tual champion Cincinnati LaSalle -Sports briefs--Chicago's Scottie Pippen and
CalbenChcaney's
layup with 1.5
talk of the town .
60-54 in the semifinal.s,
, .
BasketbaU
.Seattle's Shawn Kemp both ll)issed
seconds
left
gave
Washington
its
' "It's basketball mania," Fenton
Four schools are ·making their
NEW YORK (AP) _ Authorities
ovenimc afterfouling ou1 in the closfilth
straight'
road
victory.
said.
first appearance ever at the final four . raided a $160-million-a-year gaming seconds of regulation.
Derek Harper then bounced an
In other words , it's a typical ·-NorwalkSt.Paui, AkronBuchtel , · bling operation in New York and
TheButls,whonotchedtheir25th
March weekend in small towns and Cleveland Benedictine and Dayton Philadelphia and uOTestcd 2.5 people.
straight home victory, also beat the. inbounds pass off the . hip of
big cities around· Ohio.
Christian.
· the -sweep to cmnct
· ·de wu· h
Son,·cs ·,n an c· arl1'er regular-season Cheaney, picked up the ball and shot
timmg
a 30-footer that rolled around the rim
The tournament gets under way
Belpre is back for the second time bcavy betting on the NCAA touma- . meeting at Seattle.
"We defended. our homecourt twice before falling away at the
Thursday at noon with Akton Buch· in four years despite going 8-12 dur- ment.
·
•
te) (20-5) meeting Hamilton Badin . ing the regular season.
The raids targeted "the . mob's
and we proved we can win there. buzzer.
(20-5) in a Division 11 semifinal. folThen there is Springfield _Catholic· cash cow, illegal sports betting,"
They didn't prove they can win --------•Sports
lowed at 3 p.m. by Columbus Mif· Central,_ a ~aeon of hope_lor_every_, B kl o·151 .,tAt
Cb
I
here/' Jordan said .
. .
~ flin (11·3) against Cleveland Bene- !~am. lmagm~ a tea!'Ll!lstng ns top . roo yn , ·. " 0 tom~Y. · ares · ;. TrailSiazers 9l, Kinp 87 ·
Lepslatl~n
'
"d
.
.
x
players
.
n
·I
dtng
7
I!
M•
Bas
J.
Hynes
saJd
..
Some
of
th&amp;se
artest·
.
DALLAS
AP
. • icune (21-5).
·
.
, · 51
-I c u
. · • ,. : •
d S "•
bel' · dJ0 'At Portland, ..ll;tC,: Bil\,zers upped
· · ( ). - -Playing ·pro
~s·'!lt. llo.('-2-t'
leve .,• ,..cjln·
• • k· t I0 -ga ' · the spans· 1n
· 1i·ex as CLJU ld ct-.·t at hictes· up
'
· · ·l ),whieh'W(lllthe····.'"·.ketball, .Jason Colli"
""..·~ , atid ,·,s •' e ·· .'llijr..,.y·)Yefe:
r ' · :
he
·
·
·
t'
t or wmmng s rea o
mes..
•.•
·nectcd to the Gambino en me ,aim·
•o'and 1·s a two.t
·
· h 1
d . to $5,000 per game under a state
1ongcstcurrcntoneJnteeagueun
title two Years· a•
· 1·me coach l'r.om a c··hampt'onsht' p team · 1
·dch · ' h Bl . kH
'
y, ·sat
riS!OP er an • ynes
1
· ssoc1·ated Press Dt' v1·, 1·0 n Then_,_wtth no player talier_thun 6-2.
s propos·alto ra,·sc· ntoney
•' del'endt' ngA
chief of or•anize~ crime inves_·ti•a·.
the fou nh· Iongest ·m I'ranc h.tsc h.IS· awmak•r'.
•
I 1p,oll champion. then takes on Lake·
opemng the season w1th s1x ~tra1gh t
o
•
•
lor arenas.

••son

' .. ····~. •

:&amp; r

The Blazers scored the first 15

By CHRIS SHERIDAN

.

•

.)

,,,

·•

�'

Porn a f71• Mlddlsport. Ohio

WMII Udty,lllerch 11, 1117

Wednesay, 'l11ch 11, 1117

Bald-face :lying is a sign of having ·irlSecurities
I'"

Some of the stories Trisha tells
about her Wnily could ruin us for

Ann
Landers

By ANN

LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing
to you in. desperation. Our IS-yearold daughter. "Trisha," is a habiiUal
liar. We have tried everything to help
her. Counseling· didn.'t work because
·she doesri't tell the truth at the sessions. Tri•ha ha.&lt; no friends. She can
make friends easily, but as soon as
th.::y find out what a liar she is, they
want nothing more to do -with her.

face lying. Perbaps another coonselor can twn this unfortunale girl
life. She hU two sisters who are per- ll'OIIIId. ·
fectly nonnal, but Trisha is a handDear Ann Landers: So many peoful. The 'girl does not respond to dis- pte I know seem to believe if you
cipline. We've tried everything.
can ''pay later," you can afford it.
Can you think of how we can The following may help explain
help her srraighten out? .• Beside why our parents had happier and
Ourselves in Upstate N.Y. .
less stressful lives.-- T.L.G., OceanDear Upstate: Try another coun- side, N.Y.
. '
selor, one who hopefully can get
Dear T.L.G.: Thanks for a
through Trisha'&gt; skull that she must. provocative letter. As one armchair
change her ways or she will ' be philosopher said recently, "It's nice
friendless and her life will be lonely. to be civilized, but I think perhaps
Habitual liars often have other prob- we've overdone it." Here's your list
terns -- mainly insecurity. They are of how our parents managed with
colilssal exaggerators because they less:
don 't trust the truth to be sufficientThey had .no charge · cards, no
ly impressive. The next step is bald- VCRs, no cable bill, no computers

'

llld DO on-tine cfwaes.
cost a ye8r'a pay, and everyone had
The house only h.t one TV.
a wonderful time.
o.t was not ashamed to bring
Dear AM r .ancJers: It looks like .
lunch to work.
you w~ right about the Internet. I
Mom was the family barber llld just read an article in the Toronto
cleaning lady.
'
Globe and Mail that I hope you will
Binhdays were celebrated in· the print. Keep up the good work . -back yard.
E.G. in Santa: Monica, Calif.
Piua and Chinese were treats,
Dear E.G.: I will resist the tempnot staples.
tation lo say, "I told you so,"
They always drove a used car.
·because I waan 't the only one to.see
The house had one phone . .
the possibilities for trouble. Thanks
Basements were where the fur-· for the backup. Here's the anicle :
nace was, not rec rooms knee-deep .
in toys, exercise equipment and pin "The Canadian Medical Associaball machines.
tion Jounial reports that 'Internet
Vacations were a two-hour ride to addiction disorder' (lAD) has
the country.
entered tlio; medical lexicon and
A daughter's wedding did not quotes University of Pittsburgh

Kimberly Young as saying lAD is as real as alcoholism.
Young describes the social problems
that parallel other addictions including loss of control, cravings llld
withdrawal symptoms, social -isola.tion, marital discord, academic failure, excessive financial debt and job
termination."
~her

By DOUG LEVY '

Family
Medicine

USA TODAY
ANAHEIM, Calif. - 9rape
juice may prevent dangerous blood
clots better than aspirin, preliminary
studies suggest.
·
·
New studies in both humans and
John C. Wolf, D.O.
monkeys demonstrate how comAssociate Professor
pounds known as " flavonoids " in
of Family Medicine
purple grape juice reduce the activity of ·platelets, the blood cells that
dump together to fonn clots.
Earlier research /indicated that
Question: I have a rather person- which have been on the increase flavon. 01-ds are at least panly respon-.
al question I've never seen addressed since the artificial sweetener was .
In . your column. The. last several introduced. I drink two or three cans '. sible for the apparently positive-

wine. Now, reseJin:hers are narrowing down how and why this is.
"!think (flavonoidS) are going to
be .a significant part of heart disease
prevention," says bean researcher
John Folts, University of Wisconsin, ·
Madison. " We have to determine
which ones and how much."
He demonstrated grape juice's
effects in two studies, one with five ·
h'umans and another with five mookeys. In both, he. found that drinking
a glass of purple grape juice each
d
red
1 1
· ki
b
ay
uces Pate et SIJC ness Y
around 40 percent. Folts says he

Garrett Colton Daniel Hall, son
of Daniel and Tracy. l!llis Hall, celebrated his second birthday recently
with ramily and friends . He is the
· A reminder.
grandson of Bob and Peggy Ellis of
•
· The Women's Auxiliary at Veter- Middlepon, and Carl and Paula Hall
ans Memorial Hospital is awarding . ~f Pomeroy; and the great- gr~ndson.
two S 1.000 scholarships this spring of Katheryn Hall of Pomeroy, Dale
to students entering medical related and the late Grace Ellis of Rutland ,
fields of study.
·
and Ruby Frick of Pomeroy ~nd the
Deadline for filing applications , late Anna Welch of Mid~lepon .
which may be picked up at the auxiliary .counter in the hospital lobby,
is April l--and that's approaching
fast.
·
And here's the latest on Joan
MfLain, ~cine area resident.
loaJ1, as you may .know has been
. ,, ~aving numerous health problems.
She has been confined to the Ho.lzer
· Medical Center and to University
Hospital in Columbus. She is now a
resident of the Holzer Senior Care
Center in Gallipolis.
Undoubtedly, Joan could stand
some encouragement at this point in
time. Will she be hearing from you?
· Bob and · Dorothy Oliver have
their first grandchild, a s.on born to
th'eir daughter, Lynn and husband,
on March 9: Caelan Qliv~r Houl~
was •arrived' thre~ weeks ahead of
schedule.
Dorothy left Columbus where
she is employed this week for
Budapest--now that's a trip--where
she will do her grandmother thing
for,l 0 days or so.

~~~~-~~of~~~~~~~~h~~-~-ili~e~ffi~e_c_ts=o-f~gr=~~-j~~~~~M=d=r=e=d=w_oo_l_d_e_x~pe-c_t_~_~_i_~_ro_n_~_n_p~fr-om----~---~==~=~:v:~:t:b:lo:od=c:lo:I:L=;=~=;
·
been a
"blood" color to my ·Is this safe?
d~rk

semen.. There has been no pain or
Answer: I also saw the presenta- -•--nvollll'-22.1117.
·
·
_ _ .,.._ ... ··
change in sensation. I have no idea tion. My reaction was one of
1..._'~
whether this is serious or not. What reneweddisappointmentwithbrOad-~~y ~ ~Y· . SA~Y ='-:="::..,.,•-~;...-•-.
do you think?
cast journalism. You see, health top- ·
·
·
·
Answer: As you know, semen is ics get the attention of most adults.
..
usually a thick, yellowish-white Therefore, it is in the TV network's
~
fluid . The presence of a "blood" best interest to produce flashy and
color · indicates a problem that controversialtopies that draw a large
should be checked out. However. in share of the viewing audience. There
most cases, 'this condition
is rarely a11 attempt to explain comhematospermia in doctor jargon - is plex issues in an evenhanded Cashnot associated with a serious prob- · ion -- except on PBS - because being .
tern . .
·
reasonable isn't paiticularly excitWhen you go to the doctor, he or ing.
~ will conduct a thorough examiI've reviewed the research on
nation of your penis, prostate and 'a spaname; the -chemical name for
·testicle$. If your family doctor finds NutraSweet, and believe that a link
anything suspicious, you may be between use &lt;)f the product and brain
referred to a urologist, a doctor who cancer has not been proven. A most
specializes in urinary and reproduc- revealing finding was that before
tive system problems.
NutraSweet's introduction, 53 indi·
The reason I suggest that you viduals out of every million develsee~ medical advice for this problem
oped tumors of the central nervous
.is that there are so .many, possible .. system comw.ed to 48 ~r mil}io~.
ways blood can gel mto "'e semen, beforehand. Many social, healthand some of them can be· quite seri- care, and environmenlal factcirs, as
ous. You see, the ,prostate &amp;land pro- well as statistical anomalies, could
duces most of the' volume of seminal cause this small·difference. It·doe!ln't ·
fluid. but the testicles. seminal vesi- show there is a problem with this
cles and bulbourethral areas also - v~ry common product. What. it. does
make a contribuiion.
show is that it would be .wise to.
Injury to any of these structures study this issue funher. , .
·
that produce pan of the seminal
So where does that leave you and
fluid or injury to connecting du.;ts me-- the consumers ofNutraSweet?·
can cause the bloody color you I'm sure that· the decreased sugar
noted . Infection. trauma -- even intake and its resultant reduction in
minor trauma .. and tumors arc all obesity and diabetes has s.avcd many
possible causes for your bleeding. lives. That should be considered as
Usually, though, doctors cannot pin- one decides whether In consume the ·
point 1hc exact cause, and the · artificial sweetener while more
hcmatospcrmia is chalked up to accurate studic~ arc done to deter.

I

I

I

I

;,...,_

I'm encouraged.
The Los Angeles police have
made an arrest in the shooting of ·
· Ennis Cosby. I'll feel even more ·
encouraged when action takes place ·
in the death qf *-year-old JonBone! Ramsey in Boulder, Colo.
Seems like the Cosby death would
have bc!en much llloie bS~-ffiing than
.the R.Aisey murder since toe latter
appears to have been "so confined':.

...

~--------

.A render sent along a poem enti·
tied "Beatitudes for Friends of the
Aged".. Let me pass it along:
•
''BI~ssed are they who understand ,
"My faltering step and palsied
hand.
. ,
. "Bie"Ssed· are thOy who know my ,·
ears today
·
"Must strain to catch the things
they say.
"Blessed are they who seem to
know
'
. "That my eyes. are dim and my
wits are slow.
'
.·
."Blessed , are they who . looked
away
"When coffee spilled at the table .
today.
"Blessed are they with a cheery
smile
"Who stop to chat for a little
while.
'
"Blessed are they _who know the
ways
"To bring back memories of yesterdays.
·
"Blessed are they who make it
known .
"That l'm loved. respected and
not alone.
"Blessed are they who know rm
at a loss
·
"To find the strength to carry ' the
'
Cross. .
r "Blessed are they who ease the
days
''On my journey home in loving
ways."
I hope . that you, indeed, are
among the "blessed".
_____,___

DIET COKE, SPRITE,
COKEOR
.

·Colli'

some unidentified, minor

inflamma~

mine if any risk of brain cancer is

tion.
:as~ociated with its usc: I'm still
Question: A few weeks ago. "60 using NutraSwcet. and I suggest that
Minutes" did an expose on the artifi- it is OK for you to use the product
cial sweetener NutraSweet. They sensibly. Its benefits outweigh its
. had interviews with several scien- potential risks,
tists and doctors who felt that the
... Family Medicine" is a weekly
government relied on shoddy column. To submit questions,
research when· they approved write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
NutraSweet. Many of the people Univenity CoUege of Osteopathic
Interviewed seemed convinced that Medicine, ·Grosvenor
Hall,
c,!'lutraSwcet caused brain tumors, Athens, Ohio 45701.
'

sweet

ILS.D.A. 0/tJCf 112-M-tl. AIC)

lfllole .·

'1.

.
King reCeives scholarship

Liherty A. King. daughter of
timothy and Edith' King . 39054
Srudbury Rd.. Middlepon. has
rj:~cived an $18,000 Presidential
'scholarship from· Ohio Northern
'University for the 1997-98 acudem'
ic year.
; She planno. enroll in the College
of Business Administration with a
major in international business and

economics.

i,

. FRESH SKINLESS

01

.

Chicken Bte11st

And the Ohio Legislature is outlawing marijuana for medical purposes. Seems like they should be
mbre concerned with its avaJiabJhty
on the streets. Wonder wh~t they're
going 10 do abou.t that.

cd in 1871. is celebrilting its 12.5th
anniversary this academic year. The
university, related to the United.
Methodist Church. enrolls
lhan
2,900 students in colleJes of alts and
. sciences, busineu - administration, ·
engincerins, pllannacy and law.

more

) I In an elTon to provide our ~nhip with current news, the Sunday
1imcs-Sentipel will ntlt accepl wclldinp alter 60 days from the dale of·the
event.
,
,·.
~
,
..
' Wecidinp subtniued after the fi():day dcalline. wilt appear durinB the
' fjlek in ~ D•ily Selllinelllld ·the Oallipoli• Dlily Tribtnte.
.
"\:J ub -tinp 111111 Oilier news ll'licla in d.IDCictJ -=tion _ . be
&lt;
within 60 dayJ Of ocC.n-:e. ,All ~ - . be llllimiltld
•
1llllthill
4a)'1 of l i t e -·,
.
t '
.
(
l,
'
'

'

,

·

And if April showers bring May
flowers then ·what do March show.ers · bring? Could the answer be
floods? Do keep smiling.

News policy-..,.-----,--.......;

.

· Pomeroy resident Harold Will
apparently is aware that su~mg the
televisiOn at our house doesn I get us
the best programs. Wbenever Harold
encounters a show that he thmks
we'll like--especially the mus1cal
ones--he phones to get us on the
righr channel. We'd miss a lot _of
goOd music if he did~'t do that.

Pork"""

iro-12-!B. AVG.J '

Boneless

.

• At Meigs High School. King has
.) ,.;,rvcd a• vice. president .of student
· &lt;-Ouncil, captain . of the Quiz Team
a'nd treasurer of t~ French Club.
!!he has also been aclive in National
Honor Society. French Honor Soc:i-.
'oty. regional scholars, prom committee. science fair and volleyball.
' The highly competitive, annually
~ncwablc ONU scholarships are
a-warded to outstanding students
who excel in academics. One ocholllfl'hip is offered for students
enrolled each year in the four under-,}aduatc colleges at Ohio Northern.
Over 2~0 top scholars competed for
tile 11wants during a day of.testjng on
t*ftpuS.
·
.
,I Ohio Northern University, found · ..

I

LARGE 12 SIZE

•

.....
"'To

--Community calendar--ne Community Calendar is
puiJIIIW • a free servk:e to non·
proftt IJ'OUJIS wlohing to anuounce
meetlnc and special events, ne
calendar is not designed to promote salea or fund raisen any
type. Items are printed aa space
permllll and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Board
of. Education, 6:30 p.m. regular
meeting. high school library.

Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday.
home of-Mrs. Chester Erwin. Book
c•change to be held .

Better Health Club, I p.m. Thursday,
home of Helen Black ston.

PORTLAND -- Lebanon Township Trustees, 7 p.m. Wednesday aJ
the t.ownship building.

FRIDAY
CARPENTER-- The Messengers
of Weli&gt;ton, 6:30p.m. Sunday at the
Mt. Union Baptist Church ,south of
Carpenter.

MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport

POMEROY -- The Rock Springs

or

HOEFLICH

Send queationsto Ann Lander$,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cell·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, LOs An.eles,
Calif. 90045
-

any kirid of pure grape juice but not
In other research presented here
"grape drink," which is not 100 per- at the American College· of Cardioicent juice.
ogy meeting , Anhur Klatsky and
His research was funded by colleagues at Kaiser Permanente,
Nutricia ~arch Foundation of the Oakland, Calif., found beer, wine
Netherlands, the Rennebohm Foun- and liquor ·consumed in moderation
dation of Wisconsin and 'Welch have comparahle protective effects
Foods Inc.
.
against hean disease. .
Ultimately, Folts believes a ·drug
for preventfng heart attacks could be
" It really appeared there were no
manufac\urcd from grapes. .
major dillcrenccs" among the types
Unlike aspirin, Oavonoids appar- of alcohol, saY,s Klatsky, who studently do not boost adrenalin levels, a ied 3.931 hed&lt;~
. disease patients.
r
th 1· ·
.. · « ·
AI
1
L
.actor at 1m1ts asp1nn s euecuvecoho! increas · cvcls of HD , or
ness.in heart attack prevention.
. "good chol.cstero ." and helP,. prc-

Hall marks
second
·birthday

By BOB

And now this is Ann talking. If
you sec yourself in any of the above,
get some professional help to f~
yourself of this addiction.

Grape juice unleashes ·its wrath on blood clots

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Beat
of the
Bend

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • !lddleport, Ohio

COLTON

HAL~

THURSDAY
POMEROY
Xi Gamma
Epsilon, Beta Sigma Phi, annual ritual of jewels tea home of Dr. R. R.
Pickens, ,6 :30 Thursday.
·

•
•

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER-- Star•Grange
778. soup supper. Friday, 4 to 7 p.m.
open to public . Donations accepted.
Program at 7 p.m.

'•

''

17-Tif

LIMIT
2

~""~ Sale! R.C. Diet Rite
.··•

OlE SlOP COIVEIIEICE
We Sell Money Or~ers
We Wire Money ·
Postage Stamps . .
Film Developing .
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rlfltals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

·-·

Al'll"

AFree 12 Piece Box of Cl.kkt

. Miri"isters
On Sunday, Mardt 23, IWZ

(except Buckeye) '
AEPEI~rlc

M

oQhlo Valley Bank ·
"Superbank" Services
•Greeting Cards
•Floral Sales
"
"
•We accept credit cards

up from 11 a.DL In 3 p.m.

We_welcome all active an,d retired ministers to try our fried chicken jn
appreciation of your service to t11e oommunily. Just stop by .,.., Deli Dept. this
week aile~ 24 hours in advance of Sunday, March 23, register the name at
your church and you'll get our delicious deli fried chicl&lt;an absolutely free . (Far
fairness to all, we aak that ministers or ministers' wives only plcl&lt; up 1he chicken
. on March 23 from 11 a.m. ta 3 p.m. No congregation members pledse.)

·

W. Apprwc..,. Our Arw• Jflnlstn$
(A y, SIIHI Cake will tie aubStlluted e t - _,.

FOODUND

FRESH, LEAN

White Bread Ground ·Beef

I• unaovatllhie.)

~'

111.
LOAF

' Apple ~ulce
layl,ltell .

c

c
LB.

-·p-a...,EE

BREADED POATI&lt;JNS.e OZ. PKG.
CRUNCHY STICKS-5.1 OZ. PKG.

Mrs. Paul's
Fish
Bay I, Gel I

.

U.S.Q.A. C!101CE

·)~ .Boneless .
English. Roasts
Buy' I, Gall
111

.

·-·

Skim
Milk

s
Gallon

•a.aa

. f 6 OZ. PKG.

Flavorlte
··BrOccoli Cuts
Bay 1,·11111 I

.

FREE

1
. :!;c r:~L

BROUGHTON

·-

FREE
,

'..Y..'-' •...,

' '•r--'

'

Ill

'

•,
I

'

'·
I

. ... ., ......,·

,

6 Ct. Pkg. , §etacted v.riatill

Betty Crocker
Squeezit

.., .......

28 OZ. FRESH BAKED

Lattice Top

Apple Pie
&amp;rape lol~

Buy I, Get I

• . FREE. .. r~·=
... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

a.:

.
2

VALLEY BELL

Orange
Juice
~GALLON

BROUGHTON · .

2 ,·

·Cottage _For
Cheese 24 oz. c,.

IUMITONEOfEOOALORI.I'SSERIIIUJEFREEWITHCOUPON. GOOOONLYATFOOOI.ANO ..J!,.i'!~~'!."!!~~~~:!l:'.l~.!i!!-~~.:l'~i!"JI----"'"!"------------------...11

ASSJ. F~YOU I CT.

. §r:«&lt;I
'

YOU GET·
. ALL THIS!
&lt;i'/&amp;x10
4 Sx7
4 3x5
48 Wallets

Nab1sco ·
Toastettes

RC Products

s:.. ggc
Up

Coca•Cola
Products

2Utera

PURE SWEET.

410LL PIG.

.Angel Soft
Bath Tissue

c

Sugar~~-

'

.,

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

W.eGtee-tey,llarch 11,1887

Bald-face lying
is
a
sign
of
having
iriSecuritieS
...
.

\

Ann
Landers
IM. 1M M!Jdet:
SyMcw. W CreIWIJJS,·J!Ma.t.
T~

By ANN 1LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing
to you in desperation. Our IS-yearold daughter; "Trisha," is a habitual
liar. We have tried everything to help
her. Counseling didn't work because
she doesn 't tell the ·truth at the sessions. Trisha has no friends. She can
make friends easily. but as soon as
!hey find out what a liar she is, they
want nothing more to do with her. ·

Some of the st&lt;Jries Trisha tells face lying. Perftaps another coun~~ her family could ruin us for selor can tum this unfonunate girl
life. She has two sisters who are per- 1r011nd.
fectly normal, but Trisha is a handDear Ann Landers: So many peoful. ~girl does not respond to dis- pic I know seem to believe if you
ciplinc. We've tried everything.
can "pay later," you can afford it.
Can you think of how we can The following may help explain
help her straighten out? -- Beside why our parents had happier and
Ourselves in Upstate N.Y.
less stressful lives.-- T.L.G., OceanDear 'Upstate: Try another coun- side, N.Y.
selor, one who hopefully can get
Dear T.L.G.: Thanks for a
through Trisha'&gt; skull that she must provocative letter. As one armchair
change her ways or she will be philosopher said recently, "It's nice
friendless and her life will be lonely. · to be civilized, but I think perhaps
Habitual liars often have other prob- ·we've overdone it." Here's your list
lems -- mainly insecurity. They are ,of how our parents managed with
colossal exaggerators because they less:
don't trust the truth to be sufficientThey had no ·charge cards, no
.Jy impressive. The ne.t step is bald- VCRs, no cable bill, no computers

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

and no on-line clwJes.
cost a yea..·, pay, and everyone had
11le house mly had one TV.
a wonderful time.
D.cl was 1not ashamed to bring
Dele Ann Llnders: It looks like
lunch to wlllt.
·
you wen; ripu about the lniernet. 1
Mom was the family barber and just read u anicle in the Toronto
cleaninslady.
Globe and Mail !hat I hope you will
Birthdays were celebrated in tbe , print. Keep up the good work. __·
back Y,ard.
'
E.G. in Santa Monica, Calif.
Pizza and Chinese were treats,
Dear E.G.: I will resist the tempnot staples..
·
tation to ·say, "I told you so,"
They always drove a used c~r.
llecause I wasn 't the only one to .see .
The house had .one phone.
tbe possibilities for trouble. Thanks
Basements were where tbe fur- for the backup. Here's the article:
nace was, not rec rooms knee-deep .
in toys, exercise equipment and pin"The Canadian Medical Associaball machines.
tipn Journal reports that 'Internet
.Vacations were a twO-hour ride to . addiction disorder' (lAD) has ·
the counb'y.
·
entered 1~ medical lexicon and
A daughter's wedding .did not quotes University of Pimburgh

.
researcher Kimberly Young as saying lAD is as RaJ as alcoholism.
Young describes the social problems
IMt parallel other addictions includinJ loss of conuol, cravings and
withdrawal symptoms, social ·isola.tion, marital discord. academic failure, excessive financial debt and job
termination."
And now this is Ann talking: !f
you see yourself in any of the above,
get some professional llelp to free
yourself of this addiction.
Send questions to Ann Lande..,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cell·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los An~,
Calif. 90045

Grape juice unfeashesits wrath on blood clots

By DOUG. LEVY '
USA TODAY ··
ANAHEIM, ·Calif. - Grape
juice may prevent dangerous blood
.
. .
clots bcuer
than aspmn,
preliminary
studies suggest.
.
New
studies
·in
both
humans
and
John C. Wolf, D.O.
monkeys demonstrate how com-Associate Professor
pounds known as " flavonoids" in
· of Family Medicine
purple grape juice reduce the activily of platelets, the blood cells that
clump together to form clots.
Question: 1 have a rather person- which have been on the increase
Earlier research !indicated that
. al questiQIII've never seen addressed since the artificial sweetener was . flavonoids are at 'least partly respon- ·
in your column. The last several introduced. I drink two or three cans ·. sible for the apparently positive

Family

Medicine

wine. Now, researchers arc narrowing down how and why this is.
"I th ink (flavonoids) are going to
be ,a significant part of heart disease
•
" I
prevention,
says hcart researc her
John Folts, University of Wisconsin,
Madison. "We have · to determine
which ones arid how much."
He demonstrated grape juice's
effects in two studies, one with five
humans and another with five monkeys. In both, he found that drinking
a glass of purpl.e grape juice each
day reduces platelet stickiness by
around 40 percent. Folts. says he

any ki~d of pure grape juice but not
In other research presented here
"grape drink," which is not 100 per- at the American College of Cardiolcent juice,
ogy meeting, ·Arthur Klatsky ariil
His research . was funded by . colleagues at . K~iser Pennanente,
Nutricia ReSearch Foundation of the Oakland, Calif., found beer, wine
Jlletherlands, the Rennebohm Foun- ·and liquor·consumed in moderation ·
dation of Wisconsin and Welch have comparable protective effects
Foods Inc.
.
against heart disease.
Ultimately, Folts believes a'drug
for preventing heart attacks could be
"II really appeared there were no
manufactured fromgrapes.
major difTcre'nces" among the types
Unlike aspirin, flavonoids appar- of alcohol. says Kla!Sky, who studently do not boost adrenalin levels, a ied 3.931 heart disease patient~ . .
factor that limits aspirin's effective- Alcohol increases levels of HDL, or
ness in heart attack prevention.
. . "good cholesterol," and helps pre- .

~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~h:e:~:~:e:U:e:c:ts:
. o:f:~:a:pe=j=~~~~an=d=re=d=~w-oo~l-d~e-x_pe_c_t_~_~_i_~_r_fi_•nd-in_g~s-fr~o-m--~-~~--===:==v:e:n:t:~:oo:d=cl:o:m;.~;===~
been a ·dark '"blood" color to my Is this safe?
_

semen. There has been no pain or
Answer: I also saw the prcsenta- lt.miiPI'tceiGood1llnlulhlollrdl22.1tt7.
_,,..,.,_.,.,
change in sensation. I have no idea tion. My reacrion was one of IWEiAiCSiio\
.
¥ 'IHIJIISM¥ ~'I . ISA'J'!!D"Y ......
. ,,.:-'"
. ..
whether this is serious or not. What renewed disappointment with broad- .
.
.
....
.
·~
19
20
1
1
1
do you think?
cast journalism. You see, health topAnswer: As you know, semen is ics get the attention of most adults. ·
usually a thick. yellowish-white Therefore, it is in the TV network's
~
fluid. The presence of a "blood" best interest to produ~ flashy and
color indicates a problem that controversial topics that draw a large
shou·Jd be checked out. However. in · share of the viewing audience. There
most cases. 'this condition - is rarely an attempt to e.plain comhc11111lospermia in doctor jargon ' is plex issues in an e.venhanded fash'
not associat~ with a serious. prob- ion -- except on PBS - because being
· lem.
reasonable isn't particularly excitWhen you go t&lt;i the doctor, he or ·ing.
she will .conduct a thorough exami- , , I've reviewed the research on
nation of your penis, prostale and · aspaname. the chemical name for
tes ticle$. I( your family doctor finds NutraSweet, and believe that a link ·
anything suspicious, you may be between use of the product and brain
referred to a urologist, doctor who cancer has .not been proven. A mos!
special'iies in urinary and reproduce revealing finding was that before
tivc system problems. '
NutraSweet's introduction, 53 indiIJIET
The reason I suggest rhat you viduals out of every million develscek medical advice for this problem oped tumors of the ,central nervous
COKE OR
is that there are so many. possible , system COil\parelj to 48 per mi!liojl
ways blood can get into ttie semen, beforehand. Many social, heaith- ·
:ind some of them can be quite seri- care, and environmental factors, as ·
ous. You.see, the ,prostate !lland pro- well as statistical anomalies, could
duces most of the' volume (If. seminal ·cause this small~ifferenct. It llocsn't
fklid, but the testicles, seminal vcsi- show there is a problem with .this
cles and bulbourethral areas also - v~ry common product. Wfiat it does
make a contribution.
show is that it would· be .wise to
Injury to any of these structures study this issue further.
that produce part of the seminal · So where does that leave you and
fluid or injury to connecting ducts me,- the consumers of NutraSwcet?
can cause the bloody color you I'm sure that · the decreased · sugar
noted. Infection. trauma -- even intake and its resultant reduction in
minor trauma -- and tumors arc all obesity and diabetes has saved many
possible causes for your bleeding. ,lives. That should be considered as
Usually. though, doctors cannot pin- one deeides whether to consume the
point the exact cause. and the artificial sweetener while more
hcmatospcnnia is chalked ·up to accuralc studies arc done to detersome unidentified. minor inflamma- mine if any risk of brain ca11ccr is
iion.
· as&amp;ociated with its use. I'm still
· ·Question: A few weeks ago. "60 using NutraSwcet, and I suggest that
Minutes" did an oxpose on the artili- it is OK for you to usc the product
cia! sweetener NutraSwecl. They sensibly. ,Its benefits . outweigh its.
' LARGE 12 SIZE
had interviews with several scien- potential risks.
tists and doctors who fell that the
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
Bovernmcnt relied on shoddy column. To submit questions,
research. when · they approved write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
NutraSwcct. Many of the people Univenity College of Osteopathic
Grosvenor
Hall,
Interviewed seemed convinced that Medicine,
NutraSwcet caused brain tumors. Athens, Ohio 45701. ·

W'

·,..:=-'=--

21

•
,

sweet

.

King receives scholarship
' Liberty A. King. daughter of
fimorhy and Edith King. 39054
Sradbury Rd.. Middleport. has
received an $18,000 Presidential
·Scholarship from. Ohio Northern
University for the 1997-98 acadcm. ic year.
: She plans to cnreill in the College
of Busines ~ 'Administration with a
oi&gt;ajor in .inlcrnationaf business and
econom1cs.

-rcutrJIIIIIBriSHIH:TJ

Or

; At Meigs Hi~h School, King has
served a.&lt; vice. president of student
J..Ouncil. captain of the Quiz Team
a'nd treasurer of the- French Club.
She has als·o been acth:t in National
Honor Society. Frcncb Honor Socillly, regional scholars, prom committee. science fair and volleyball.
,
' The highly competitive, annually
~ncwable ONU scholarships are
..Warded to outstanding .students
who excel in academics. One scho;&gt;l"-ship is · off~rcd for students
Cllrolled each year in !he four underia&lt;JuaJe colleges at Ohio Northern.
Over 250 top scholars competed for
tbe awards during a day of testing on
cempui. ·
·
·
Ohio Northern University, found-

••
~

News

(10.1MB. AVG.}

·

Boneless flfJrlt &amp;eln

.

A reminder.
.The
Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospital is. awarding
two SI ,000 scholarships this spring
lO students entering m(ldical related
fields of study.
·
Deadline for liling applications,
which may be picked up at the auxiliary counter in the hospital lobby.
is April l--and that's approaching
fast.
·

PInil

,-

.
We Sell Money Or~ers
We Wire MO!l'Y
Postage Stamps
Film O.Veloplng _
Pre-paid Phone Clrds
Foodlaild GHt Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rlfltals
Columbia Gas Pajinents
Lottery Tickets "·

.

LIMIT
2

Diet Rite
· .·· I

·-·

.ro:nu.

'

AFree 12 Rece Box of CbKkn

· Mfuisters

On Swxlay, Mardt23, lWl .

:&amp;*up &amp;m 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

AEP Electric

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

We weicome all active and retired mlnist~r$ 10 try ~r flied chicken in

111.

appreciation of your IIOIVice to the eommunily. Just stop by 011' Dell Dept. this
week at least 24 hours in advance ,of Sunday. March 23, register the name of

•Ohio Valley Bank ,

"Supemank" Services

LOAF

· your church and you'H get our delicious deli fried chicken absolutely free. (For
falmess lo all, we ask that ministers or ministers' wives only pick up the chicken
. on Maroh 23 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. No congregation members please.)

•Greeting Cards
•Fiofal Sales ·

FOODLAND

W. A . .rcc..te Our AN• Jlllti......s

eubatltutad

•We accept crldit C8rds

(A Y. Sheet Cab wiH be
It chlckan II 111181jallable.)

c

10 Lb. Bag. u.s. 111

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WIMtm~bt
, Russe,t
·-·
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· &lt; .. Apple Juice

-~.

laking Potatoes

Bayi, ...

Ji

Skim
Milk

· U.S.D,A CHC)ICE

Bo
English. Roasts

l.

Flavorlte
·Broccoli Cuts

,., I, Gat 1·

FREE
r1 .~ ·.

.

..,
......
-r-a-sE

· '

:~

.

Orange

'

. .

Betty Crocker
Squeezit

28! OZ. FRESH-BAKED

lay I, lltl "

Lattice Top

I

11--------------~~BROUGHTON 2.

--J~-·
Grape Jellf

I. _ . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

..,
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FREE

Y, GALLON

ASSI. F'!VOIS I Cl.

Nall•scp ·
Toastettes

~

'
YOU GET
. ALL THIS I

·::; Cottage_

.
2
s.';••••_ ggc
Up

loli
I UMIToNEOf!OUAlORLfSSER\IIUJEFREEWITHCOVPON.GOOOOri.YATFOOOI.ANO ..J:.:o=i~~.:.,"'i!,l:l:'.~~~.lflllil!llf::;:l,i~~j

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Cheese

4 5x7
4 3x5
48 Wallets

Angel Soft
Bath Tissue

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Cotta..
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c•••se-.
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24oz.cu

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. 410LL PIG.

Coca·Cola ·
Products

Your

For

, _ _ _ _"!""_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

·RC Products

&lt;i} 8x10

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FREE

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8 Ct ..Pkg., Selacled V8rietlea

.Apple Pie
._Byy I, Oat I

VALLEY BELL

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.

'

OODLAND SPECIAL COUP

·

Gallon

. 160Z. PKG.

You Pay Only

,.;

LB.

BROUGHTON

And if April showers bring May
·flowers then what do March show·
ers bring? Could the answer be
floods? Do keep smiling.
.;,

,,,

c

-r-a-sE

I.

.'

FRESH, LEAN

White Bread Ground Beef

whera

ood Thru J :2 9 7

And the Ohio Legislature is outlawing marijuana for medical pur.poses. Seems like they should .be
more concerned with its avaol~bohty
on the streets. Wonder what they're ·
going to do about that.
·

policy~...;......._-----

.

ale.

(exCept B~) ;,

--.-i----

cd in 1871. is celebrating ils I 25th
anniversary this academic year. The
university, related to the United
Methodist Church, enrolls more than ·
2, 900 studenls in colleges of arts aad
sciences, business administration, '
·engineering, pharmacy and law.

•

17 ~TB

.~-------

~ In an effort to provide our ~hip' with ~utrenl neWs, i))e Sunday
'nmes-Sentinel will not !ICCept wcddinp afte.r 60 daya from die; date of .the
~enl.
'
·
' .·
Weddings submitted after the 60-day deadline. will appear dWing the
~ in The D~ily Sentinel and ~ GalliP!)Ii• Oaily Tribulle. .
.
; AJtelub lllll!tinp'and Ill¥ news articles in .the society ~tiila m~t be
llllriiiW y.oithon 60 days of OCOII!tenc:c. All ~YJ mllll be lldrmitted
~tl'itdaysofthe~:·
·• ·
' ,
,

•

Gamtt Colton Daniel Hall, son
of Daniel and Tracy Ellis Hall, celebrated his second birthday recently
with family and friends. He is the
grandson of Bob and Peggy Ellis of
Middleport, and Carl and Paula Hall
of Pomeroy; and the great-~andson,
of Katheryn Hall of Pomeroy, Dale
and the late Grace Ellis of Rutland,
and R~by Frick of Pomeroy and. the
late Anna Welch·of Middleport,

· Bob and Dorothy Oliver have ·
their first grandchild, a son born to
their daughter, Lynn and husband,
on March 9: Caelan Oliver Houle
was arrived three weekS ahead of
schedule.
Dorothy left Columbus ·where
she is employ.ed thi.s week for
Budapest--now that's a trip--where
she will do her grandmother thing
.for,IO days or.so.

Pomeroy resident Harold Will
apparently is aware t~at surfing the
television at our house doesn't get us
the best programs. Whenever Harold
encounters a show that he thinks
we'll like--especially the musical
ones--he phones to get us on . the
right channel. We'd 111iss a lot of
good music if he didn'l do that.

Shrimp.

Tile Community Caleadar is Literary Club, 2 p.m Wednesday. Beuer He~th Club, I p.m. Thursday,
puW1r•1! as a r,.. senice to - - home of Mrs. Chester Erwin. Book horne of Helen Blackston.
prollt 1roups wilhinc to..,_, exchange to be held,
m••tlac and special evtBb. The
FRIDAY
caletodar is not d..igned to proPORTLAND -- Lebanon TownCARPENTER --The Messengers
mote lalc:s or fund raisers of any ship Trustees, 7 p.m. Wednesday at of Wellston, 6:30p.m. Sunday at the
type. Items aft printed as space , tbe township building.
Mt. Union Baptist Church south of
permlb and cannot be guaranleell
Carpenter.
to run a spedroc number of days.
THURSDAY
"WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
Xi Gamma SATURDAY
EAST ME;IGS -- Eastern Board Epsilon, Beta Sigma Phi, annual ritSALEM CENTER-- Star Grange
of Education, 6:30 p.m. regular ual of jewels tea home of Dr. R. R. 778. soup supper. Friday. 4 to 7 p,. m.
meel[ng, high school.library. ·
Pickens, 6:30 Thursday.
. _ open to public. Donations accepted. ·
Prog ram at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
POMEROY-- The Rock Springs

And here's the latest on Joan
McLain, Racine area resident.
Joan, as you may know has been
having nUJllerous health problems.
She has been confined to the Holzer
fl,{edical Center and io University
Hospital in Columbus. She is now a ·
resident of the Holzer Senior Care
Center in Gallipolis.
Undoubtedly,· Joan · could stand
some encouragement at this point in
time. Will she be bearing from you 1

A reader sent along a poem entitled "Beatitudes for Friends of Jhe
Aged". Let me pass it 'along:
"Blessed are they who understand ,
·
"My faltering step and palsied
hand.
,'
" , 1
· . "Bie'Ssed. aie t&amp;y who know my -'
ears today
"Must strain 'to catch the things
tl)ey say.
"Blessed are they who seem to
know .
"That my eyes are dim and my
wiis are slow.
·
. ·
. .
"Bie~sed are they who looked
away
"When coffee spi lied at the table .
today.
"Blessed are they with a cheery
smile
"Who stop to chat for a little
while.
"Blessed are they who know the
ways
"To bring back memories of yesterdays.
"Blessed are they wl10 make it
known .
·
"That I'm loved; respected and
not alone.
"Blessed are they who know I'm
at a loss
·
"To find the strength to carry the
Cross.
·"Blessed are they who ease the
days
.
"On my journey home' in loving
ways."
1 hope tliat you, indeed, are
among0 the
"blessed".
•

'C Olli:

'
"

By BOB
HOEFUCH

'

COKE, SPRITE,

--Community calendar---

b

I'm encouraged.
The Los Angeles police have
made an arrest in the. shooting of·
Ennis Cosby. I'll feel even more
encouraged when action takes place .
in .·the death of six-year-old JonBone! R11111sey in Boulder, Colo.
Seeins like the Cosby death would ·
have lien much more baffling than
the Rabtsey murder since the latter·
appears to have been "so confinld·:. ·

a

I

Hall marks
-second
·birthday

Beat
of the
Bend

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

PomerDy • Middleport, Ohio

~·

·Sugar

s

~~·

'

�I

·. hsle 8 • ~Daily Sullnel

Sentinel• P9 I

. Ponwoy • Middleport, Ohio

,.

Pomaroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedt

uay, llllrah 11, 1...,

.

•

•

...

P 0 WELL'S

..

- ,..,.., Auction
luU ~.,. auc-. CO'"""'"

aucdon Mtvlce. LJcenaed
....ONo • Vlfll ..... ., •. .

. ~·

•••
-•
•••
••

.

~-

STORE HOURS
Mondaythru
Sunday

'.

~

Coca Cola
Products

{

c.-.

•
.
...

•

Cutom Homea

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
"FACI'ORY DIRECI'
PRICES"

•

•

.•

$195.00 INSTALLED

BAM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.

I

Dlolnondo.

,•

'

Antiquea. furniture, glaaa, china.

coina, taya, lamps, gUns, toola,
estates ; alta appral ..ll, O.by
: Miflin, 81-2·7.. 1.
Antiques, lap prlcH paid, Rl~­
i ne Antique&amp;, Pc.meroy, Otllo,
Ru11 Moore owner, 114· 11225211.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU MARCH 22, 1997.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Clean lata Model Cara Or
TfUtkl, 1D90 Mod~&amp; Or Nfttr, •

RC Cola
Products

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY- SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

Smilh Buick Pontiac, 1000 Eai~­

em-Gallipok
;;r~ciH. S.lll~ parta. 304·
Wanted to buy chip wood. 304773,5080 Oayo, 8 U ·ll2·8025
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Beef Fillets .....L~~-

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WICKS

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AVON I All Areas I Sl'lltley
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Sentinel
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156
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Able

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Cabins • Bow Riders • Bass
Boats • Sea Ark John Boats
.• Johnsc;m Outboard

Gnwel, Llnieetontt, .

1Soz.

EMPLOYME NT
SE RVICES

CHRim'S PETS

12 oz.

•

·99¢

WANTED : 1857 Point Plo0 oant/
High School Yealbaok. Don Ruaae11 e Woodbine Road, Siltl·
bumo,VT05482.
.

Maxwell
House Instant
Coffee

.

&lt;
· LB
Bre.asts ................
~.

.FOREST BROOK

'

a O'a AulD Po•ll. Buying 'ul·

J

12 pk. 12' oZ. . . .

PORKBUTT .

Gold

SlorllnD. EIC. . .~~~- ~
• IH.S. COin Sllop. 151 S.C:Ond
- · GdipOIII, ......... - . .

Accepts Credit Cards

'.
··'
-

Anllquo _ , _

Rlntll, Pre-11. U.S. CU!fon&lt;y,

"Build Yo.u r Dream"

Call)

. .

- • ' " Top Ootlot: All U.S. Sil·
ver Antd Gokt Colne, Proo'-ta,

.,.IS

(up to 93 United lncbes)
{OpdoM ........... 4ddM'

....

Ramodlllng

77H7WOI-17U40.
10 W.illd to ~

..

·

Bush's Lt.
·.Red Kidney
Beans

LB .

MIICUM&amp;SON
BUILDING
ofntertor I Exterior
R111todellng
•Rnlden,tlal I

16oz.

3$

Coinmerelal
oGeneral Carpentry
SM1Ifng t i N - trN
0..,15)'1'&amp;

'

00

MlkeW.MM:um
ChHtw, Ohio

985-4141

~S

#11DAHO .

.

..

Potatoes .......·.. ~~ Lb..

$169

Pepsi
Products

1
·
r
v
·
.
o·
..
79¢
1nners-: •••••••••.•
.Tomato Juice .~:z-... 79¢ .
¢
.
.
,
$
349
. ream •• .,............
.
Sliced Peaches......99 Ice. C
STOKELY

.t .·:

. UB_~YS .FRUIT COCKT~tL ~R29-30 oz.

campbells Chicken
. . Noodle or . ·
Tomato SOup
'
. . 10.75 oz.

'

2!$1 09

.. . .

·. Carnation
'
Evaporated Milk ·

.

8.5 ·10 oz.

UNITED

5qt.pell

Armour
Treet
12 oz. • ·Umlt 2 please

992-6342 (.,..)
"""7275 (~!!_

or......

Domino Sugar ·
5 lb. • Limit 2 Please

-Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985 44737/22Jtfn

IIIGS'

CARPENTER SEIVIa

Win A

ofloom Addlllona

oNew(laragM .

o£leelrtcal a Plumbing
ofloollng .

~@[ft)~[J@~~

ofnlilrlor a Exmlor
~alnllng

Alao Cof'IICICfti...
lle W0111

This Weak

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Y.C. YOUNG IH

812 8215
"-n!y, Ohio

Powell's
Super

HOIIIIIIprOVIIIIIIIIfS
3351 Happy Hollow Roacl
Middleport. Ohio 45760
New Homea, Addhlono,
jlldlng, Pole Bema,
Decks, Painting,
Gor~gea, Porchn.
Call Ul For A F,..

Esllmate
614-74M!Jg0
614-742-3324
614-742-3078

2yrs old, likes 1o Hair S iylill Wanted Rent YoU,

~ii!~~co:ll:•·~·~·~·:•h:•:in•:·
:;
60 Lost and Found

70

GallipoliS

nwnym.t.lal

Value ·

PUIIUC NCmCE
TIM OlrHior of the Ohio
lnvlronMoiltal Protecllon
,_..,,
u,on
duo
.Onalderltl•n. 11 IMreiJy
•••ntlrig
a alnelo
,.rlllaalon

$200

ror ::;on•
Mlllllll or....,.
-

Free Cash!

111 llelp Co!IIIIIY I• open

_.. ............ 13,1111
...... . . . - 11; 1111 """
lie ral Lilli I I loll DIll:

Stop In The

, Store

a»OtiiY••=·
.....
........
"" .........
urulla, iNMI atrteuHwal
........ . . .line~ In OAC
111!181741o1M1, I .....
the hlllwUI•I'a ;ro,.rty

...
.,..........-;
-,r, '••••n•

"

•

''
'•

I·.
'

'

or

. It

Yard sa

&amp; Vlclnttu

appll-•, btlltan.,

motor bh)c;b,
et4-812-402ss..n.e

"7

ALL Yard Salta Muat Ia P1ld

In Adwonco. DEADLINE : 2:00
_..... tho dor -..tho "" 1o to
ruo. lundor odMion • 2:00 p.m.
FrWOJ•. -dOJ eltlon • 1.0 :00

......

-..,.POmeroy;

MlclcllepOrt
&amp; VICinity

Um11toM &amp; Gnwel
S•pticS~a

rran.r&amp;

HouMS.
~,.....

. Joe N. a-yr. . '

Co.

$~6
tn.+

Own Station, Or Maka $10 ·To
An Hour, Call Carol King,

~22.

·:

Now hiring Sal• D•ivo&lt;~. DootC ,.
no'a Plna, Pt Plaaeant . 30~ .

675-5858.

Pick up dl-dood
Public~

I

Hair Stylist Wanted: ADPiV AI ...
Found: Part ~ &amp; Part Blue Hlghllghls, 453 State Aoult '14
Heaftc, Black Dpa With White GalllpoNs. s 1 ~ 4 597,
• .,
Chest, Cota VIcinity. 614-379 2854.
~cOonald'i 01 Gallipolis· Nq;f
lOST: 1 112yr Cream colored, Accepting Applications.
~1 ·
black nose &amp; around tiH, Gtr- Nfe(lad 10 Ladies To Sell Av$i
man SMphard on Oshel Rd. Cail can 614-446-3358.
~.
»H7H4ill.
-

nn

M1rch 22, 1ii7

'

•New Homes

_..........__· :=~~

r-

For Details
•Satur,dav,.

Un'lltt

~...--

.

homeorbuel-. ·
RHIOneble Rilla

.

Orange Ju•ce •• :!~~
MORTON.

HOlliS!, Dependllble
and Truatwortl)y llldlel
ntlldy to clun your

¢

PARKAY JUMBO

3lb.

Done? ·

211ter

·.

d
:
$149
.
Sprea ......••••••.•• ~ · .
~IN UTE . MAIO ·. • .
. .· ,, $ .
89 .

Nnil Aliy Type ' IOIIRT BISSELL
of Cleaning ·
CONSTRUCTION

All Yard Saloa Uull Bo Pakl In
AIM-. Deodllno: 1:oopm tho
*I' _,. h ad II 10 Ml, SundoF I Monday eltlon- 1:OOpm

.

.' "

1'1!11 Or Fui Tlmo Loou Land Fol
Gao I Oil O.iiNo!l Helpful K Fomll!
ia. With Fa•m Londo, Coli Mf.
NlcO, 814.az:H.I24.

PHI'SICAI.liiEIW'ISJ
IPHYSICAL liiERAPI8T

:•

:;

~

�Pomeroy • M~leport, Ohio

10 • Tht o.lly _Sentlnel

March 18, 1917

Ohio

Sentinel•

........
"'"'
·---

NEA Crossword P(lzzle
PHU.r.IP

ALDER

ACAOSS
1 -litO!-*

-...,.
I

320 Mobile ttomel
tor Sill

Han•• .

420 llollll
lor Rlnt

1888 Ponriac Flreblrd

OBO 814· 448·4051, 614-4.tl·

·-nPII11,

Arnlllloon Ealflmo Pupplto. Batuifu~ Aulty and E..-amtly ~-

PC u••,. needed. $45,000 ln-

. ·come -tlal. Call 1·10G-S1S.

-Ext8-11381.
Loclll Butlnoaa looldna For S.CMIIrY. ~II be ~1011141110 b'e'ln

' GlnlriJ BDa:\IIIIJlh"'o

~

Taa Knowledge Holptul Contact
114-24~555 or Send RoMime:
All bOlt Trollora Stalli AlluiO 850
"'"' 110 Qallpolls,Otio 451131
PDatal Joba 3 PDaltlona Avail·

POSTAL JOBS
Sian •tU811Y, pluo bonotltL For
oppllcaUon and ·exam Into, Call
1-100-2!511-71011, txt·WY127, 7

•

Wl.lli.FEICOdERVATKlN
JOBS
,- hlltne o.... WttGtnt. Socvrt1J, ~••Plitt Rtng.,., No experltnot nootaaory.
For opptlctldon ond Into ooll 1·
100-211·2470, . txt WVt3!5o.

110 Wlnlld To Do

a.,,.., PDililllll Sawmll, dDn"t
loge . . . ml )ult ooll

~11117.

Eltraa 4.8 lltro, Coli 114·44t·
1&amp;74 If No An-r loavo MoooageOn ...IA.-..
·

118a Cavalier: 1188 Bertlta,
1110 Cavalier StaUon Wagon:

1110 Escort LX 4 Doors, All

For8illll:byCitTtdel:n

Btaglo Pupploo, Out Ot Gbad
Hunting Stook S25 Each, 814·
258-1051 Afltr5P.II.

Have Auto Trona; AIC, Cloth
lluckat Soata, Cook MoiOro, 814·
441-0103.

1-1a88 Ford F-150 Econollnt
Yin. 136,0011mi.
'
1-19&amp;1 GMC Safari van. 147,000

~

191111 .ouruo, 80,000

lnst"'menq ·

_ . , ond EldOitor flnl ...... oo~
pentry, ftropl- reftnlahlng, oddlllona. porch•' deck•, h•ve
..... , 304-175-t01a

- h o DJC-2t prolesolo~al kll'·
1MIIIrdlolntl1tliztr, full alzo lwyo,
llland, $240. 81 .....1·

..-,bag,

PIGitloional Troo 8or¥lot, s.....,

~n:mi:J:no:f:'

1884 M•c Gra11d MarclS Loadod, PW, Dual""""' Seat' Liialhor, ABS 22,000 Mlloo, $15,400,

814 416 6491 .

013&amp;.

~7---:::---:--:-..._-..,.,1 1995 Dodge Noon 4 Doora, ,\utO,
for Sale
AC. 18,500 Mllto, $7,950 080
orltade
814-25116340,814-256-8467.

Aomo¥11, Froo Eadmottal lnMiranct, - · Ohio. 114-381-.11-7-MtO.-

·5 90

1

• 2

at4-ttiJ•.

Wll holp ...,. tor 1ho aldtrty. bay
-llniJI Good oxpertonoo ond
.

&amp;outla · Wut Norlll
1 NT
Pall 3 NT

REFILLS

mol until yau tan [nvtotlgeted

1ho oflorlna-

E-Iad Cuo.., Frame Shop
For) SOle, Strtouo fnqu~ltl Onl1,

1995 Honda CBR 90!)-RR motor-

11~1111.

Attooll Fobrlo I Notion Outlot.
:104-875-71111.
Small Doll • Grocerr. 1)4·448·
$110.

I . 1on1I
P108111

230

Slrvlce!l

~THE BORN LOSER
·r

.

..,

~ r.--u.:~T, ~-~,l£TS

•· 5T,i,Jqi--Jill\Y~~~~-·
•_,

Mercurl, lull mooring
11,500~ · 304·

·.,.,.nt-.

- · 814-949-2368 afllr 5!1m.

111811 S-10 Good Shope_. 5 Spood,
Cloon, $2,400, 61U48-4948.

... F-Fo~Houolnll At!
ot 11188
n llltgll
.. - - "fl'll prof.......
••At 1 1ordle&lt;&gt;lmlllltlon

""*"' . -

::.:::"-==
origin, or_llff;., illoi 1 to

cllctln*'8d0n.·
-"proterenco.
••

t

....

198! GMC Full Size, 4.. ·350
Auto. Cruiaa. Tilt, AC, 53,300
Milol$11 ,000 614·448-8118

WANTED: In M...., Co. 1D rant at
ltaoo (arm tand w/Withovt buHdlngs. NHda to have 10 or
tillable acraa lor cropland. 114·

446-2565.

r.1ERCHANDI SE

510

Household

Good

Spring Spoc:lol: Now Soplil: Tank
Atration Motatl, $319 Plua Tax,
lnlation$35, 814-446-4782,

s _.
Appllanooo:
Rooandltloned S~mlna 50-function multi-Q~m
Walhtro. Dryoro, Ranges, Rofrl· Including aerobic atepper with
grotoro, 80 Da1 Guarantee!
~"'
Stove, &amp; Refri~tar, All Electric, · French City Maytag, 814·.t48· ' llec.tronlc monitor. Paid $400·
asking $125. Four "''d truck
1895 Cla•ton t4.SB, 2••, 1 ba'", Nice Countrl Setting Roforoncn 7795.
•
~••
&amp; Depoli' Call614-256-1044.
~.;;_-------- tirto 30.5xt5. sso. Phone 304·
like now ·cond. $14,000. Call
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 17!&gt;20011.
·3()4.875-3)00.
14»e85 Central Air &amp; Hill $300/ Willhara, dryara, rafrlgerato,.,
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
1~98 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath, CA, Mo. Pluo Utllltltl, $2110 DlltiOII~ rangto. Skogge Appllonooa, 78 Vprlgt'lt, Ron Evan&amp; EnterpriHI,
1
Will Tllct Poy on, Will Glvo $500 . ~!·t~aUon In K-ugo; 8 4- Vlno Street, Coli 814-441·73&amp;8, Jtdiaon, Ol'io, 1.aDII-537-1528.
To Move, 814·388·0301, 814· 1.;..:.;_.:.:.;,;_______ , !U~OO~t811~3~t~IIG!:__ _ __
Thrill Shop 'Is now
36813111.
14x70, 3,bedroom, Uoo ptr Maytag waohtr, drjtr ond GE The Pomeroy
AU wlntir clothes half ott,
Naw-111G7 14 Wlda-1 botl1, $8991 month, 114-742-27t4.
oltotrlc otove, $50oach. Aloo
like to
largo outol~o
down, 1131/ma, with appnwad 2 &amp;
bedroom mobile hamel bookcaia watttbtd, llkt new.
aodlColt-eoo-&amp;81-em.
-···-.Ill $280-$300, - · wa- S125.304-875-380tafllr4pm.
Toohil&gt;a 120 Sottlllto rooolvei &amp;
111G7 toM -mour both, loll
trash lncludad, 814-912- Sale On Roam Slzt Carpota In 8' meah dlah, t350 oornpltte or
Gf 111r11, central air. 304-075!:.'7~~11ohan Carp•~•· eu- wllooparote. 814-441-0135.
·
3017.
2 bt!fn&gt;om , oloolllc tao~ 2 milo&amp;
out of Ruiland on u.. Rd., Sofa chair 1250. Bunk bedo WI ,Two beautiful prOm droaau- (·t)
1U7 14l70 2 or 3 Bedroom, 8t4-742-2803., 814-742-2421 • . · manren. ·Cedar chest Curlp. blao~ &amp; laot I (11 wino colored,
SUS down, $1g51mo. Only at
Bedroom suite. Plaarer and con- ~-7:614-742-2301.
2 Bedroom Var'l Clean Carport, crell ltema. Country Furnh•r•
Homll, Nlro. wv.7155.5
Hoot Pump,&lt;No Pail, Airier Aroo, 3Q4·175·882fl. Rt 2 N Pt Pltao· Yamaha Eiootronlo Kt~bo.ard
With Bonoh, Ex-.tltnt Condition,
81~1100.
.._ Cloood MondiYL
1187 1.4 xl0 3 or 4 'Bedroom,
814-441-8253.
St ,359 down, S22Wmo. Froo olr,
Building
aklrtJna, I dollvary. Only at Oali550

!!:~~~~~--~- .!

wood ~fomta Nitro.WV. 304-751-

5685.

·''

SUppllel

-

Block, brick, atw.r pipta, wind·

111G7 14XIO Gltmaur Both, .17111
Mo., FrH Delivery And Sot Up,
Call304-738-7216.
.

lff,l 1', 1 /-'E

Llv.atock

630

RENTAL S

awa, llnlela, oto. ClaUdt Wlnttra.
Rio Grandt, OH Call 814:245·
5121.

2 Heifers. One Do To Fresh
Shard)- And 1 Col, 614-258-6306.

4782.
1994 Chevrolet S · 10 39,000

miles, exc cond. 304-e75-4484,

814-245-5087, 814-4411-11711.

1~~5 Ford Ranger ttuc&lt;. 39,000

APHA Breeding Stook Yearling
Stud, Ba1 With Star One White
Foot $650: Small Yearling Pqnj

miles, left front damage, white w/
gray lnlarlor, $3750.00, 614-949·
2311 , dayt or' 6U -94D -2644
evenings.
·

• t--

PIC.TIONAR't'.,
•

640

.Hay·,- Grain

!

Home
Improvements
· •

·
WATEf¥'ROOFIN&lt;l . •
11i84 Plymou.th Voyag~r Van, Unconditional lifedme guaranrM.:
runs good, bo.dy orear. $1,600 Local reforonooo furnished. Ea-!1
may trade on camper. 304-576·- tabllshed 1875. Call (tl-14) ...,••_
0670 Or 1-800-287-0576. Roger
2753.
waterproofing.
·
. .
.
.
I
'18Q8 Dakota 4~4 Auto, AC, AskIng $5,800, 814-4411-1!272.
.
A.ppliance Parts And Service: Anl

~kina orderti for tobacco wa'ter

bod planta. Call 304-195-3954

leave me11age, . Dannr De..
whurot

,

TRANSPORTATION

Aut01 tor Sale
1854 Chev Baialr 2 Doora. Good
Condition. $3.900. 814-:145-5781.

15188 Ford lull size 'Conversion

van, extras, raised roof, chestnut
color, 351 engine, dual gao tanka,
hOlt. and air, 33,000 miles, very
nlct, 18500 or trade, 0111 614·
742·2887.

------~ILI~~~M=e~rr~-----".

Name Brands Over' 25 Yea" Ex-

perience ~II Work Guar1n11td:
7795.
C&amp;C

'.

1.

General , Hoine

•

Main·

ttnonot- Painting, vinyl •ldlng,

Clfptfltr:y, doort, windowM. blthl,
mobile homo retillr and more. For
kM ntimate "" ChtL 614-18211323.

agree· _

DRYWALl •
Han.9- llnilh, ropolr.

Cei11nga ttktured, plaater repair.
.Call Tom 304-875-4168.
yooro •

,

g •:f:'r;•~n,,....,._

experlet'lct,

~lindw Man

1 112

zo.

'1

' ·Wife, Carpentry,

Homo Ropolro, Painting &amp; Pr. .
oure Wos~lng, Rtferoi)Coo UP.On
RoQutot. Froo Elli......_ Call Bob
Or Ann.114-3711-2645.

.... , ., •
.,. , ....... Pt.
PIN-. IIIII Nil tn lind can-

-.ttl-

840 . Eltctrle81Jnd'.

Rllrtgeratlon

Truck XLT Exttndtd
11,800 M"••· 18
24,000 Mlltt loft On
Of EXirtll Price:
Pl)onO A. . 4 P.M:

HJI'I:Ilaldll

".

'

· where to look lor ·ro,.,.nce and you'll find ViRGO .foug. 23·Sopt. 22) You may
h. The Aslrb-Graph Mal!'hmaker instantly · have some succe.ss in your financial ·
reveals whk;h tlignlora r - l l y per- affairs today. Your gains, however, might
I~ .tor you. Mail $2.75 to Mat~ maker. naJ be ~s larqe as yOII ex~. Be grateful
BERNICE
c/o this newspape ~. P.O . Box 1758, you're ahead.
.
Murray
Hill
Station,
New
YOlk,
NY
10158.
~Bf!A
(llepl23-0ct.
23)
Binding
BEDEOSOL
ARIES (Morch 21·Apill 11) you have ,ments ·ahould not be signed In haste
good lliaders~ip qualities, bul you might today . Do nol be il)lpulsive in mailers
not use them effectively today. You must with legal ·overtones; make sure to gel
set proper example of "what it is that good adVic. first.
·
YOil want others to do.
SCOA!'IO (Ocj. 24-Nov. ~2) Today, h's
•
TAURUS (April 20.May' 20)1f you let not how fast you do something, it's how
aa&amp;Ociates think ·for you today, yOit may well you do II thai counts. Do not despair
nol achieve desirable resui\S. You will b&lt;i if you have to worl&lt; harder than usual to
beller-equipped to-call tho shots.
achievlt your objectives.
GEMINI (May 21-.Juno 20) The O&gt;qlOCfq- ·sAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 21) A
lions ygu have for lhe day might be too muiUal liking has developed bet,veen you
much tor ollwlnl to anempl. That' is ·their and someone you recently mellhal could
problem : be dedicated and positive in ' tum inl-\ a very deti_rable rolalionslllp.
.
The otuonceo of IUCC818 wUI be In Y9U' oriler 10 succeed.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon. 111) You
t.-ln t11o yoor a.-. npecially in situ- CANCER (Juno 21-July 221 Today's might not get off to a running start today,
aliot\a you personally m.anage. Your rachleoements c:ould be extremely signifi- but don'tlit lhis upset you, becau~e
pottntlal for doln9 som·athing big Is cant o.11no your objtlc!iYes as cleariy as you'll piet&lt;-up speed. What counts Is who
pramillnO.
'
poeslble, Ilion follow your blueprint
Cf()S$88 the f1ni8h llno.
fiiCII (Ftil. 20 MarchiO) What you'ra · LI!O (Juiy 21--Aug. 221 Treat serious • AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 11) Grit and .
Jmoo1trM illooukl
_
IYOfi!UIIIy ~eat~ to mate- manera with (lie ,teopec:t Ihey deserve determination are l'f'O of your 111011 otfecrtet galno, but t11oy won1.111 f1al1dld to IO(Iay, but dorl't Itt thlngll gat eo ~rave tiw l8HI8 today. Y011 Wll not~ expe·
you CJ!i ,o a)lwr planer. n wi_l tmlllllilh · V..tlt takes the joy out ot life. This too . rience faifuro onco you haw cfarltied yoiJr
your ••lf·eet~em ,fo earn lflem. Know · shall pus.
Intentions.
·
•

A$TRO-ORAPR

French Cn~ Mly!ag, 114·448·

~~~~~~~~ '
RSESCERffEDDEAWI
-•
LAWRENCE EHTEII'RISES "
Haat Pumpo, Air Condl~onlng, H'~
'lbu Don1 Ctl Ua We Beth laatl ~
Frao Eatimotoa, 1-100·211-CIOH.
11U4tl.i3111,W.V002945.
· !';:
~ti81 Or CII:Hft'Mictal .,...... ~~
new MtWioe or rt1p111n. Matter l).. \i ,

conse~ olocttlolon. ljldonoyr ·.
Eitotrtcal, WV000308, 304-875- •.,
1788.
1'~

•

)

1

'
ot

••

t••

.•

. . ''

UXLET - ,

.

-

I~.'

I

0

,. · I.

.

.

I? ·I . PI· Y I

.

.

_

.

IQ
.

.Comclete

qu~led

lh;

&lt;hu&lt;klo
by f1lhng '" the mi~smg words
vou develop from s.rep No. 3 belo'w.'

r r 1 r 1 I'

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES
_

•

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER '
•

I

1

1

r 1·

lllf ·lll

Bolero - Knock - Yodel· Turbot - BROKE
Whtle standii)Q in the unemployment line I overheartl
one fellow say that ·" II a person isn't working he's probably BROKE."
'
.

SERVICES

Good llllee for Alt. Ira chtapor
than hay and cow• lova 'IU 814·
912-21123.

I

.

,

... .

0.
.0
~

'·'
. ~'

''

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

;

~

1984 Chevy custom· van, 8.2 dfa181, $4,500. 304-8115-3921.

DO ME. A 'FAVOR .. 60 ASK
. PI6PEN'Wi-l'f l-IE OOE5N'T
WEA~ A 8.ME8ALI. CAP..

son Streel, Midddleporl, OhiO"

Btrnod haj, ntvorMt. ,304·882·
2077.
'

·r

'" I,

I

"\

sleeps six, oilll 814-992-4103 ol'
.

'

J

WE A R A
After many mistakes the
5
.L,__.Lj_- .J. _
bJss told his new employee
L
,..---.---------···...., that, "You will never improve if
M L E
you use yourseltas an •••• - - . I" .

condition, 5000 wall generalor·'

~~~~~~~~J4 810

.'

·~

.I......J,L-...t,__

4841

45760.

Call 814-441-1116 leave Meoaogo

·- !

-"

•

Ford .engma, 18,000 mu... A-one1

~

!

fashion

' 1

SC:AASBLE?

D01s&lt;Or 614-388·V78V Ahor 5:00
P.M.
.
.

Simoa Banal RaCing Sacile, $250

. a.J~ ' Iwn-ooLMgeF111!1-

.

i'IONOPOL'( ~ ·

eo, T.V. And Much More ti.SOOt
Can Be Seen At 12Jt0 Eastern•
Avenue. Phone: 114·448·8260!'

46.000 Mllea, $5,900 KC Auto
Sales, 614-446-8172. 61• ·256·
8251.

...:':llilatl
·- -i,.run ,alf...._,
..uoo.
11&amp;

ue:l

--~------------'
1995 5-10 5 Speed, 4 Cjlinder,

til ftllhllnd Ave. Ill Rom. 2

I

1985 Wilderness 28' camper,'

Eyeo, $250 814-2!111·8309 L..ve

MOUOJie-

~

52 Patlllng

"

mediately played a spade.to his king.
·. When it woa'lhe .trick, he claimed nine~
trlcta: bne •pade, live diamonds and
·tbree clubs. Here, it wu much harder
for Eaat to go in witb the spade ICe as.
he! lmew so mucb leu about the lay of
the land.
If you need to sneak a trick while
wide open in another suit, try to sneak
it immediately.

Motor Homes

1994 r~ Montano, 2V lao~

I

'

AI lhe other tabl!l, Eisenberg won

'

verp nice • c:laan, mL!st

Indian

51 Printer's

meeeures

Ca~4

can be sean anwtim&amp; at 38 Hud·

.110 Homnlal' Sale

=

49 ,.,__Initials ·
SODaltoll . :

t

1994 Soadoo Jel Ski witl1 hllw &amp;I
1992 Ford F-150 Plck·Up Au- ........... kept, call anytlmt 814-1
IDmatic, PS, PB, ·Toppel', Plus Ex· 992-2790·, price nag., package!
dealtor__
J
trail $1,800, 614-448-21101.
1~3 Four Windt 30Ft. El1Ctiltnt 1
1992 Nlsaan Pick -Up 5 Speed, ~~~~------~·
AMIFM Sporty, $3 , ~00 614 -446- Condition; AJC, tiliuowawt. Sler·:

2 Year Old Jttnny Broke To Ride,

Bar With White Blaze &amp; Blue

790

-ondlhe
King ot Slam,

48-on(bo
1
overly fond) '

New ·gao tanka, 1 ton truo~
whaolo 1 radiatDro. D 1 R Auto
RIPIIJ. WV. 304~72-31133 or 11 .

111811 SChultz - l e Hamt-31w, 2
bath, 8x20 txpando, cothredal 420 Mobile Holl'llll
coiling, Island In kitchen, altting ·
for Rent
on 3 lOrge Iota, with gerage, nice ...,..==..;.;:.:..~:;;_'""'='='
~~~o~~22d, C_
all alter &amp;pm. 14~ 2 Bedroomo.With AI• WID

111.1011-~in
.......,.., Ia aUbject to

•s

. the lint Irick in .the dummy and im-

5HOJLD .WE DO?
PLAY A GAME?

IK)0..273-9329.

-~

hetf

26 Crazy bird
21 Silly perscln
31 Type ot drtve
or ludga
o
37 Tonont
39 Llmltod
41 Wlitand43 Luxurious hit
44 FriGidly
'
Folls-p :

5677

S
_ ol

0111
"Hn•, "1·
baument 1:::=~.11Ut SchuiiZ Unlimited, two frN•IIeatlmattl,
torre on jOb
rOOft1, one bath, rec8ntly com~
-:104-8711-2145.
pialaly roplumbod, •12,000 nogo.

E*t
All pass

aptlde and four bearta.

~AT

Rebull~ All Typeo, OYer 10,00~
Trantmlnlons, Accen Transfer
Cuea &amp; Rear Endl, IIS;14-2'.t5-

12•50, livaablo Condition, NIMir
Floodod, Goa Hoo~ StaVe &amp; Wa·
tor H••· Price Nogodable,
I
OrTrodo,814-3118-i111 Anylmo.

HARTS MfoSONABY • Bllj,Ok,
lwlcll-1 atano -"'- 3Q yoora ••ptr1tnee, roooonoblo retea. 3Q4• •31111 """' 8:DOprn, no Job to 1&amp;70 12JdiO 2 Bodroomo, All
..... oriDBIG. W\IGI!t:IDB
Eloorlc, $2,500, 814-446-8112.
Ll¥lngoton'l bOatmtnt
8t4-25H251.
.
'

Gulnnta8
21 Epocllo
22 Emerakilalt
23 Nuloance
25·Call n-26--tlmo .,
(never)
27 Tlmo--

.

8ud9et Price Transmlulon•,'
Storq at $91.00 and Up, Uaod/

~8t~4~u~~g~340~-:._:---~

II Actor

FaD Nalionala in San Frlnclsco. Hcnr
CELEBRITY CIPHER
would you plan tbe play in three nih
·
by Luis Campos
trump after West leads the club nille?
c.wny
Cipherat"*+••wareCJMIIid
110m qttC! =•bttwnous peopla. pU IIOd ~
When Chilcote was East and
Eat.ll....., In 8W elf:'* stMdl tot anolher Todty'J ~: W «JUM Y
Jabbour West, th~ declarer won the
first trick with chunmy'a ling. Then he!
caehed the .queen. and jack of diaC Y A
AIR
IS
mondl before c:aWni: for 1 low spade. 'EIYXV
Cbil~ l!riew exactly what to do. The
II II K W
C Y K . II M· K Y .K ·,
opening lead had niarked South w!tb . D Y K C A K H ~
. .the ,ueen and jac- til clubs, ·givlnt
bini hree tricka lhere. When West
H T. V D I B K Y K H - '
AI
LK
. discarded on the second diamond,
Sotith was laiown to have liloe tricb in KHECY. H' · KOJCY.
that suit So, if he! wu allowlid 'lo win I! · PREVI()IJS SOLUTION: "Whoever Would understand the hean and mind
spade Irick, he would run for home . . Ameitca had balter' learn baseban.•..:. (Historian) Jacques Barz~n.
There was. only one chance. Chilcote
went iri witb the spade ace and c:aaiM!d
her two lop hearte. After tbe queen
dropped, Chilcote continueti'tbe suit,
giving the defenc!e~:~t five tricks: one

.

Acceuorles

"Slit" 98 Dloptoy Modll 2Bx44 3
Br 2 Bttl1a. Dlx. Corpot ·Roducod
To $2&amp;,100 lnol. Del. I Sot.
Fronoh City Honllo, GalllpoNO. OH

.

Senior KDoclrout Team~ at lui~~

160 AuJo Plirtl &amp;
"Salt" 1998 Dloptoy llodtt 28x48
3 BR 2 Btt11o, Groot Roorn ,Wit11
F~tplaoo Muat Soil, $33.500 Dol
I Sot Incl. Frtnch City Homoa,
Gollpollo, otUt4 4419340
.

5 .Cllomlotl oulllx

8 Ptllorpeach

ing into the main highway. But as
mentioned Monday, ulllally this .isn't
right. Today's d6al helped Mary
Chilcote, .Zeke Jabbour, Billy
Eisenberg, Fred Hamilton, Tommy
Sanders and Ruaa Arnold win tbe

814-912-682Q.

tential from SoiH and l!&gt;r Conlllrilellon. CoM tor ovtlloblo Mar·
1t1t1 (311:1~ 7511-4136 E l l -

•ufff•

12 Clr'cult
.
l;ttelker
17 Alf'oomoniS ,

~7

..-. s,......, Olllo.

[)oalorahlp AvaiiOIM Stotl buiiO:
~ ..... Booming lllg Profit Po-

t1 t..o'ngu~

3 Aboolutely
' Mooring post

lbe lu~ two 4Dys, ,OU b&amp;ve teeD
. that occasionally a side-road trick or three - must be taken before mew-

Boat Solt Going On l(ow·-AQuttron Booto -Cuttt Cablna -llow
RldtrJ ·-Boos. BOa II ·Sta Ark
John Baata -Johnoan Outbo•rd
Motara. lllarlha Ser\llc•, Karr

rHGmmenda th•t you do bull~
nooa witll peopto you - · and
NOT to otnd_maooy through t11o

1 Sfngir
Franlt2 Mora unuouol

ID

tag5 Strata&amp; 285 PROIXlJDC
Bess Boat 175 HP ·E - LIM
.
E- .~~~~,114-

-IHOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Carot-

30P-outlho
cardt
32 LAitaro ol the
alphabet
33Currontty
34 llu..:lt pnoleln
315 Flood

Chest your cards
.
By Pllllllp Al.er

AN' NO

1985 Specuum Pontoon 8oat

Buslnell '
Opportunity

-·hair

THAT'S

$t.oo,

4511-1721 or:ll4·71H121 .

210

52Toboo

17 Small montcoy 53 ...... lrralion81
18-1\811
54 Corti lslonclo
19 Pelntlngo
55 PIKe In
20VIot-.
24Con-lcut
58 -dtclmal
· uniVMStty
syaltm
26 Eaglo'o home
27 Suponnodtl '
DOWN

Opef11ng lead; • 9

cycle. s.ooo - . tawinG " " $3650.00, 614-919-2311 ...,. Or

cover, like new..

*'

41Proe: ...
48 Drogon
COl 111 Hntll:an
49 CIIY In
c.Mcanll

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer. South

evenings.

70h~

• 53

• KJ 2
•·Q$
• AK7e3
• Q J 10

1994 Suzuki GS rioo, 400 mile&amp;,
llko new, $2800, 614-992·5578

24ft

f iNAtJCIAL

s

8oatlt

,.

614-M-:11144 -'"VI.

• A K J
• - 9. a 4

• • a 1 s· 4

mi.

aveninga.

~
..... 4 3

Wee&amp;
• Q. 7
• 10 8 7 •

'M. UlllWITE. .
HGH·A!ER 1:51''

1H5 Honda Accord LXA, Aula,
auto motor gauge, B&amp;M rally AIC, PS, PW, PM, Caooatto. 11198 Suzuki 800 ftatano motor·
whoola wltl1 ntw tlr.._ 304-f75- 23,000 Mlltl, $14,900, 114-441- cycle, 107 miln, front •mage
$3,000.00, 614-IUII-2311 dill&amp; or
2714 or 304-175-1577.
14111.
614-9411,:11144 ...w-.ga_
11181 Salwn Sporta Coupo, wNII
wldt tan Interior, &amp; apHd, gteat 750 &amp;oats , Motors
FAHM SUP PLIE S
tor aalo
or lalla
"""' for Sale
·
&amp; LIVE STOCK
montl1),
814·g-s7,
:&amp;14-DD:!-8114 or 1-800-137- 1974 15' Bonita Fl•hlhg Boal;
MIIIa-..._)
1&amp;68 15 HP Evlrwuda Motor; Foot
Con~oiled Trolling Motor $1,200,
·614-245-S7811Ahor5j)()P.M. . '
.
I
1987 18ft Pontoon Bon Buggy,
foot oontrolled trolley mo"*, '
top,. aaklng $4,500 OBRO. 30467!HI710.
1880 Camara new 327 auto bl'll,

-Ct.EA- -

Got Your Spring Cioanlng Ovor
Wlfl I Slland Your SUrMw
111 Ltlaora. Coli -To Get Your
llllrtng F - Clollnlng Dllcouml

:~M-~75-5413.

i-

I

.,...

......

OltiB.

·

a-tt-17

• 10. 5
•• 4 2
• Q J 10 5
• AK2

Ari lo-No warranty. NO tttopliono
. 271-N.StCDndAwlnue
fr,ont damage, very
call. Sealed bidt an1110 be ra1
M-.,ort. 011814-992-4514
dark lllut wlour, light biUt
ceivod by Maroh 24, 1$87. V.hl·
~~-·--"-- _........_
or, $1750.00,814-8411-2311
cia&amp; may bO aetn In parking lot
~-···• -·-..,.,.....
or6t4-11411-:11144_,.,.
behind Cablevlalan at 1411 L•·
~;1't;t
1Ht Goo Storm GSI, 5aj,d, •is Sl Pt fll•oan~ WV.
8V,OOOml., $5.500. 304-773-&amp;199.'
740 Motorc:ycltl
2iiii&gt;OFF~INGIN
1111 lumina APV Van 87,000 1~67 Honda 50 Very Gb"'l ConMlleo, Full Power, V-8, 7 Seater dition, $550. 614-387-(1632.
u.ooan•I'QnlthTingappolnt- · Great Condition •7,800 OBO;
mtntlln inontuf April
1&amp;89 LeBarron Convortable 1088 Kawaaakl .'recate • laur
Maltoan-"&gt;_tmenl
· loaded 40,000 Miloo On Motor whotlor, - englno, n"' pluti&amp;:,
Groat Shape $4,700 080: 1Q&amp;a tirto and moro. muot alii, $2300
Thank you C1&gt;111)&gt;
Colebrltr Stadan Wagon Good 080. 614-992-8458.
CondiUon, With AC $3,000 Firm,
1g&amp;2 KaW!IIIkl 220 B'IOU 4
DalmoUan puppleo, AKC Regia- 114-448·11188, 614 388 81137.
whH&amp;er, good col\dlllan, $1400
tared, ''50 to $250. 304-8372128.
·
1a&amp;t Plymouth Sundance 4 Cylin- firm, 614-1192-6955.
~;;~~~;;:F;;;jj~;;i;d; dtr, 5 $"peed, Nlot Cor, Loaded 1912 Suzuki 800 Kaaana motor~
QalmaUon Puppitl, FuU Bloadad, · :'=2.:..:100:::..:080=.:81:..;4.;4~41:..:-ll::584=.·-- oyct., a.ooo mil"· 1e~ olcto' - .
$50, 8 Woaka Old, 3 Maloa, lt4- 1H2 Pontlao Grand-Am SE 4dr, $2500.00, 614·1Ui·2311 cllya or
258 9333 CoiAfllr 5 P.M.
dark wino ooror, 8~.000 mllta. 814-0&lt;49-2644 evening&amp;.
Ptto ·Piuo, Silver Bridge Plaza. 81.900.304-773-53711.
1994 Honda ShadoW V·&amp;OO.mo.
11 .....1-0770.
1194 Ford Muotar\g GT Low torcycle, 3200 mllet. teal color,
Mlloago, Rod Wltl1 l.eot11or lnt0!1- ·very Nloe· S21JOO.OO, 814·94g.
Muilcal
570
2311 daya. ·or 814·948·2844
or,l14'256-1044.

For lntarmaUon, Coli 1-8111-7848011 Ell M13.

..... -

.

e.- Coli
Auto. Low Mll11, H11 Warran~.
1997 F-150 Loria'

$50 taoh, No Paptrl. Wormed.
81-7-7728 . .

Ctr11Vo pota

able, Na Experience Necessary,

•

s•,ooo

lllln Exc:eilont Condldon, $5,900

41 Looltll

42 A--apple

•

14-current
11 Nat ......
11 v.rlaay ol

ABA rttfattM Amorltan Bull 1IS7 C...., Cavatfor Ci, II(;, 1111 lliaaan 4114 lpart 78,30o
Dog pupploa, llkt "Chonoo• In , Au•, Cnlloo, 11ow Tloot, .. llllaa: 191\ Cowlltr High MHoo:"
movlt ,ion o ard Bound", liking Struta, $1,200, 080 114-245- 1117 Flttillrd I Sooter g4 ,~
dapolill. wNI .,. raodi 11 flil . . 1:1110,
·
12th, 114-11!-teaA,..,.._
....;--::---.,--,----- -~814-256-1517.

N&lt;C Labf'lopplta.ill4 195 3431.

40c:..~

• Chll

12 Alldlo
9 'w
1aMo 1q11

"'-•lilllllli!•!flll• .

'

.,

a

• •

t

•

~
[~-

~

�•

.
•

•

Ohio Lottery ·

•

Mountaineers
·lose
In NIT
'
quarterflna·l s
•

Super Lotto:

6-9-12-13·33-41
Kicker: ·
'3·2·7-9+0
Pick 3:
9-3-0
Pick 4:
9-1-6-4

Sports on Page 4

oatly clear -tonight,
Iowa In the 30s. Friday,
mostly sunny, then
Increasing cloudiness.
tilghs In the eoa .

•
Ylql. 47, NO. 224
.'
..,• • Ohio "-~ler ~iahlng eomp.ny

Murder suspect
-p~t ·o n $500,000
-~ond by court b
.

LS

·P ulp mill
.t ax data·
withheld ,
by judge

.·

'

' ' CHARLES1UN, W.Va. (AP) 'A Kanawha County judge has refused
to release records of tax credits avail·
, abl~ f~r a proposed Mason 'co~nty. . 'II~.,.,
~
,.
• ·~~· ' ·7
pu'1p-.mr
~· ·-· '! ; •
!In arulingtfiled _this wliek , ·
Juclgc Herman' G. Canady Jr. denied
a· request by The Charleston Gaze tic
for ·five documents withheld by the
~e Development Office. ·
.
Canady said the documents arc l;lX
records that state officials must keep
confidential.
·Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc. of Rye
Brook, N.Y., had planned to build the
$1.1 billion mill in Applc'Orovc. but
it announced in January that the prn. jcct was in.definitcly on hold because
of.nrarkct conditions. An option for
the ·company io huy the propei!y
along the Ohio River expired this
month.
·
· ·The state ha.' said. the company
must renew its option or buy the
property by April I or it will lose a
pcrinil issued hy the stale air quality
hoard for the project.
Patrick C. McGinley. a West Virginia University law professor. and
Gazelle auorney S~tzanne M. Weise
subd the Development Ofllce in May
1995, after the agency refused to
reica.•c dozens of records concerning
its:CCforts to lure the mill-loWest Vir-

_, .

'

+ ·"' • ..,

•

-.

,,&lt;

.

- •••
.

'

Emergency agency asks
for help frorn l;nglneers

.

· : Bond~ WaS set late Wednesday
'morning for a Middleport man ·
· ,accused of murder in 'the death of a
Middleport woman two years ago.
' -: Meigs County Court Judge Paaick
'H: O'Brien set bond at $500,000 for
. ~ 2~-year-old _ Robert "Fat Boy_" Sea~:;
lleny, who ts accused of setttng fire
'to.the Theresa Radatz home in Mid•dJ~pon on March 14, 1995.
,
' Firefighters ·responding · to. the
blaze found Radatz's body lying
crumpled 'behind a television set in
·th~ living room. II WaS later deter' mined she had died of smoke inhala·
tidn.
. .' • Scarhcny was arrested early Tues-

......,_per

2 Becllons. 12 Pl!ges, 35 cen11
A Gannett Co.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ThU'rsday, March 20, 1997

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SM!tinel News Staff

day afternoon by Middleport Police
Chief Bruce Swift.
The half-million dollar hand was
requested by Prosecuting Auorncy
John R. Lentes who ssid he believes
Scarbeny presents a threat to tilt
commuAity. He also said Scarbeny
has no job or other significant tie to
(he community and poses a !light
threat. ;
.
Scarberry requested a public
in prison.
defender be appointed to represent ries a lesser m1•xii:num
him.
-to-15 years in prison.
- Scarbeny is charged with murder
Scarbeny was returned to the
and aggravated arson. If found guilty Meigs County Jail after the hearing.
of the murder charge, he faces a mWlA preiiminary heari:ng was set tor
imum possible penalty o_f 25 years-to-- Thursday, March 27 at 10 a.m.
.
.
.

An appeal to the U.S.Army Corps
()f Engineers to dredge and clear out
Leading Creek and its tributaries in
an effort to reduce severe flooding in
the Rutland-Langsville area has been
made by the Meigs County Emergency Management/Emcrgcocy Services Ascncy.
In a letter 10 the corps, Bob Byer.
Meigs director or emergency ~an·
agement, cited the March I and 2
fl!l04ing in that 11rea - the fourth
time since May' 14. 1995 - and
asked for assistance in removing the
sediment and brush deposited in
streams rrom prior stonns and year's

of run-off sediment from unrrclaimed
strip mine areas.

He said that much of the ~edimcnt
is from ,strip mine areas extending
back into the 1950s. The brush and
trees in the streams, he said. arc from
flooding over the years.
Byer pointed out that about 35
years ago the streams were dredged
and cleared, resulting in minimal
flooding over the next 2Q yc11rs. Now,
he said, everything is filled up again
and needs to he dredged and cleaned
out to alleviate the problems.
"There arc still several areas of
strip mine land t_hat have not been
reclaimed and il is a known fact that
millions of dollars have been paid by
coal companies to handle this type
reclamation," said Bycr.
"Does this county have to experience the deaths of its citizens and res-

cuers before someone will take action
to prevent the immediate threat of life
and property?" asked Bycr in the letter.

Forty,one known water rescues
were made by volunteer lire and
emergency rescue teams from ·4:07
p.m. on March I until 7:45 a.m. on
M11rch 2, according tn lhe emergency
management

dirc~.:tor.

,;Most of these were made in the
night; which jeopardized the lives of
the resc uers as well as th~ persilns
needing rescued." said Bycr.
He said that il just seems· more
practical to clear streams to prevent
llooding than In move ~omes and
buildings leaving the areas 10 flood
and isolating other pla(.;cs.
(Continued on Page 3)

ng has sprung Senators Two new programs
-approve on tap to_provide ·_
additional ·disaster assistance
flo_
od aid .
COLliMBUS (APl
When
tloodwaters surged through southern
dhio earlier this month. New Boston
M~yor Jim Warren dido 't hesitate to
send out help - no matter what the

..

'

~~t.J ·;:_--:7

•

,.'

. ,'!.
' ..:··

\'·

~

.•

.
,.

-

. ..;-.,

·&gt;·

SP~~INIG. AT LASt 7' Afavorite warm weather activity of All·_
son Woods and Abby st-art of Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, Ia chalk
drawing. The )wo spent hours Wednesday afternoon cnaetlng decorations on a
lot.

.. ,

.,.-~··-t·~···'~ ,;.•

r .~ -

" "I didn't ·know ~oW · we - ere
going to pay for it all," he said. But
Warren added that the cost ·of the
emergency aid and cleanup was secondary. · . .
He was relieved to learn Wednesday that Senate lawmakers approved
spending $40 millioq to pa~ for the
local govcrnments'.sharc of cleanup
coSis. The money was included in the
slate's' $4.6 billion transportation
budget. which will go toward high·
wlly repair and ctmstructitm.
"This takes a tremendous amount
of pressure on· us,.. Warren said. "We
can gel people's lives back togeiher
now.
The village of 3.200 residents sits
. along the Ohio River ncar
Portsmouth and wa.&lt; hit hard by the
' llooding. Warren su_id the damage
was at least "a couple nl' million dol . Iars."
Stale officials estimate that the
llooding along the Ohio River caused
at least ''sl80 million in damage.
Without the state's help, mdny small
towns would have hecn forced to 'pay
thousands of dcillars for the cleanup.
'Tm thrilled to dealh." .said Ken-

Two new disaster assistance programs arc n&lt;lW being offered lo eligible flood victims in Meigs County. acc_"'-l1iilg to Michael·!.,. Swisher. director of the Meigs County Depanmcnl nf Human Services.
. Swisher reported that due In the lloocl devastation in 17 Qhio counties. additional funding from the state is heing authorized ..., supplement
existing sources of assistance and to cover those emergent needs that arc
not covered hy that assistance.
... ··effectively iromcdi~tcly. Jhe..IIQ.w..p£"!!""'1'·.F".R!il~ Disastcr.Assist.ance'hllil Adulr-Disastcr Assistance. arc available In Meigs CoUnty tlood ·.
victims." Swisher said.
Under the Family Disaster Assistance. funds have hecn made. avail-.
able to provide a one-lime $500 cash payment lo needy families whose
dwellings have been damaged by the llood. explained Swisher. He said
the family must contain a child under the age of I 8 Ill up ICl age 19 if
attending secondary school. Only nne $501! payment may he made per
dwelling, il was reported. ·
-The Adult Disaster Assistance makes fund s available to provide a onelime $500 cash payment to a needy individual whose dwelling ha.' heeOOI
damaged hy the lloocl.
_
· Only one $500 Adult Disaster Assistance or Family Disaster Assis'
lance payment may be made per dwelling. Swisher said.
The director encouraged victims of the recent ll&lt;•xl to conutcl I he DHS
lo dctCnninc if they arc cligihlc fur assistance under the new programs.

ncth Martin, the village administrator
m Ripley. "Bcing ·a small town, we
operate oil a small budget. We would
have hcen stretched pretty thin if we
would 've had to pay.''
Water from the Ohio covered
much of the village's dc)wntown and
damaged dozeos of homes. Village
ofticials estimate the damage was
well ovor $1 miltinn.
The slate will cover 2·5 percent of
the entire dcanup tab while the fed eral government will pick up 1hc r~st.
Normally. ·lol:al ·govcrnmcllls' arc

•

responsible for paying 12.5 percent of
jhc costs:
President Clinton on Wednesday
asked Congress for an cxtrJ $'(~8
million In help Ohio and other flcwldravagcd states.
Seventeen counties in southern

Ohio · were declared disa.,ter areas
after heavy rains cOhtrihutt!d to wide-

spread ilcmding during the fir.&lt;! week
of March Fovc people were k'illcd
and about ' 5.700 homes were damaged .

. I

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