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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes
drop 20-14 .
bowl game .

~

Pick 3:
793

Pick 4:
3520
Super Lotto:

19-29-30-35-42-46

Low tonl&amp;ht near 38. ~ala
chancinc to •now. Wednelllay,
llpt IIIOW. Hlp in 20s.

Kicker:

Sports on page 4

469499

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Vol.4e, N0.172
1 hctlon, 10 .....

.35-*
A Gennett Co. NenPIP•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 2, 1996

·~-:_B__,__~.....;.,.-.aV~_e_s_o_ul....--s.---:•• -:_~Highway

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projects on Ohio
~ Legislature agenda Wednesday "
.

. By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Pras Writer
COLUMBUS- The Legislature
meets Wednesday to begin the sec. ond half of a two-year session in
. which lawmakers likely will authorize hundreds of millions of dollars
· · in building projects statewide.
·' Approval of a two-year capital
· improvements budget for higher
· education, natural resources and oth; er government departments is a top
·priority for House Speaker Jo Agn
Davidson.
·
Davidson,
R-Reynoldsburg,
. pegged u the other top priority a
'.:,•t.a • suppfe"ll:ntal state budget bill that
would reflect chanps affecting Ohio
.. in a new federal budget.
. She said ·.cluinges needed in .the
two-year state budget that' took effect
· July 1 would reflect new federal
Hardy souls brave the ley water olf East End Beach Ia Portland,
policies with comparatively few
MaiDe on New Year's Day. This Is part of au uaual event to benelit the Maiue Special Olympics. About 93 people pluapd lato tlle
friald Atlantic oceau that rad 32 cleJrees. Air temperature wu 21
dep-ees. (AP)
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;AEP subsidiaries will
:share similar name
. Fn. AP, SJidf Reports
financial, rate or regulatory !'CiaCOLUMBUS- American Elec- tionships as a result of the new one'"c Power Co. has given its own company strategy, but we expect our
name to its seven operating sub- customers will see many 'benefits
silti.Oes;·
·
and .efficiencies from.this !:b1nJC io
f1le:UtlH.ty· holdihg company on the days to t ome," &amp;aid F. Darryl
Monday renamed the subsidiaries to Kidwell, manager of AEP'sSouthem
create a single companywide identi-_ . Ohio Region.
ty. The subsidiaries previously operIn a statement released this momated under separate names.
i'ng, AEP officials said .its regional
The American Electric Power . office will be in Chillicothe and will
name will appear on customer state- oversee services in all or pan of 18
ments and company vehicles.
counties. The region's district offices
· The subsidiaries, such as Colum- are in Athens, Chillicothe, Gallipobus Southem.Power and Ohio Pow- lis, Hillsboro, Ironton, Portsmouth
er, still will exist as legal entities, to · and Wt!llston.
. avoid complications with regulatory· . Kidwell, who has been with AEP
and financial institutions.
since 1970, has served in various
• American Electric serves 2.8 mil- . manl!gement positions with AEP
lion customers in Ohio, Michigan, offices in Canton, Steubenville,
·Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, West Cambridge, Newark and Chillicothe.
Virginia and Virginia.
"Our employees have worked
The Rime change is pan of a reor- under a variety of crimpany names in
g"'ization AEP announced last sum- . the past," Kidwell said. "Using AEP
.mer. The restructuring is intended to as our name throughout the compa.beuer position the company for ,ny is a sign that all of these individcompetition.
uals have joined a single team to find
--· __"We do not need to change legal, ways to serve our customers better."

Cremations are
,i ncreasing in U. S.
COLUMBUS (AP) -. The num. ber of cremations has been increasing steadily in the last quaner-century across the 'nation, and a funeral
ilirector is expecting additional
growth in the cremation rate in the
pext few years.
• William P. Rutherford of Columbus said 43 percent of the 300,700
'people who died in the five Pacific
'Coast states in 1993 were cremated.
1'hose states are Alaska, California,
Hawaii, Oregon and Washington.
: ":I'he figures are tremendously.
high in the West and Northwest," he
i aid. "The wind always blows East
~nd brings a change. Cemeteries will
' till be i!!_ business, but the Midwest.

will have a dramatic increase in cremations in coming years."
At the other extreme; according
to Rutherford, is the south-central
area including Alabama, Kentucky,
Mississippi and Tennessee. The ere·
mation rate there was 4.65 percent in
1994.
Rutherford, a funeral director for
52 years and president of Rutherford
Funeral Homes and Crematory, is a
past president of the Chicago-based
Cremation Association of North
•America.
The association gathers and distributes information on cremations
and gives Seminars for members.

1Pomeroy man victim
pf~apparent suicide

· revisions in spending levels.
Davidson said Ohio probably
. would not have to tap into its $1 billion su!plus as a result of federal law
changes, but might have to in 1997.
She acknowledged that some lawmakers might want to use pan of the
reserve money for various ot.her
programs.
"I think obviously there are some
· people .that would be looking at
that," she said.
Davidson was asked in a year-end
interview with The Associated Press
· to handicap on a pass-fail basis the
fate of several pending bills:
- A Senate bill to let Ohioans
· cmy concealed weapons: Toss-up.
- A pay raise bill for county ·
elected officials: Pass.
-Changes in a law that requires
union wages on public construction
jobs: Would not pass in any form
'

.

A comparatively routine session
was scheduled Wednesday as Jegjs.:
lators resume regular' meetings for
the first time since July.
.
The House will fill two vacancieS
in Democratic ranks that occurred
when representatives won other jobs
in the November elections.
·
Daniel Metelsky, a Lorain citj
councilman since 1984, will succeed
Joseph Koziura, who was elected
mayor of Lorain. Cleveland. Citj ·
Councilman Dan Brady, who ran for
secretary of state hist year, will succeed Madeline Cain, who won election as mayor of Lakewood.
Davidson said a vote was expecr·
ed on a conference committee report
of a bill that would let agricUlture
'industries file lawsuits over allegedly false statements about their products. The compromise would lot
judges determine the burden of proof
to win damages.

now pending.
- Raise speed limits: Overall?
Fail. In limited instances? Pass.
The session could wind up as
memorable on several fronts.
In July, the House and Senate are
to move from their temporary quarters back into the Ci.vil War-era
Statehouse that has undergone a
three-year, $110 million renovation.
All 99 members of the House and
16 of the Senate's 33 members are up
for re-election in 1996. An unusually early primary, moved to March ·19
to give Ohio a greater role in pre~i­
dcmtial politics, will interrupt the
spring legislative session.
The new year will see results of
,a Franklin County grand jury investigation into speaking fees that lobbyists paid to II present or fonner
·legislators. The legislators have
denied wrongdoing.

.needed

The Daily Sentinel presents1995 in ·r e.v iew

JANUARY
\
Jan. I - Sandra and Kenneth;
Rife sorted through what remained ·
of their f~ly heirlooms and pre- ·
cious ahtiques after a holiday f1re
gutted the couple's Rutland home .
Jan. 3 - Detailing accomplish- .
ments of 1994, economic develop- .
ment director Julia Houdashelt
Thornton talked about hopes for a
riew-yeaii ol progreas:
· ·
Jan. 4 - The first dirt on the Ravenswood connector road was ·
moved by Columbia Gas of Ohio in its relocation of gas.lines near Meigs .
High School.
Jan. S - Work on preparing the
site for a new $218,000 Bashan Road
bridge over the Sh~ River at Keno
was started. The bridge will replace
an aging one-lane structure closed .
several months ago.
1 ·
Jan. 6 - A $30,000 grant from
the Oallia-Jackson-Meigs· Vinton
Solid Waste District was awarded to
and Five Points, got underWay in late March and
HIGHWAY A '95 ffiGHLIGHT - ConstrucManley's Recycling Center in Midis scheduled for completion mld-1996. This was the
tion on the lint phase or the U.S. 3311-77 connecdleport.
scene during those early construction weeks.
tor roac\, z::zs mila portion between Rock Springs
J111. 8 - A general fund budget
of $2..S8 million was approved by the
Meigs County Board of Commis- Co. temporarily idled its two Meigs
Jan . 29 - Bids were opened for slaying' of Jeffrey L and Jeffrey S.
sioners.
Division mines due to outages at the the $153 million Reedsville hydro- Halley, had his appeal denied by the
Jan 9. - Dismantling began on James M. Gavin electrical generating electric project which will provide Ohio Supreme Court.
the fonncr Pleasei'S Restaurant on plant in Cheshire.
for transmission of electricity from
Feb. 9 - The home of the Brad
Main Street in Pomeroy to make way
Jan. 17 - Budget cutbacks in Reedsville to Rutland.
Johnson family on Ball Run Road
or construction of an auto pans ·Middleport resolved much of the vilJan. 30 - Another fi ve inches of was destroyed by fire.
.
store.
lage's fina!Jcial crisis, Mayor Dewey snow fell resulting in another MonFeb. 10 The new Bashan Road
Jan. 10- BOjll'd of County Com- Horton told counciL
day when schools in the county were bridge over the Shade River was
missioners elected .Fred Hoffman
Jan. 18 - Tuppers Plains was . closed.
.opened to traffic. The road was
president, and considered the dilem- awarded $275,000 in State Issue 2 FEBRUARY
closed for several months while the
ma of jaili~tg Jack Crisp, due to his funding for the proposed $2.6 milFeb. 2 - Su.rvey work got under- bridge replacement took . place.
physical condition. Crisp had earli- lion sewer project.
way on the Tuppers Plains sewer Ronald E. Searles, 48, died of
er been convicted on five misdeJan. 19 - A first request by project
injuries suffered in a Meigs County
meanor counts of receiving improp- defense attorneys to dismiss charges
Feb. 3 - Meigs County offici als traffic accident
'
er compensation while serving as an against Danny Zirkle and Sarah closed the book on the investigation
Feb. 12 - Action begins to save
official of the Leading Creek Con- Snouffer in the Gary Snouffer poi- into allegations that a Racine man the $120,000 in state funds awarded ·
soning case was heard by Vinton had buried infant children on his 1 to Middleport for levee and parking
servancy Di~ct.
Jan. 12 ,..- Appeals court grants County Judge Warren l Lotz. property. The investigation included ; improvements. The project was
Jack Crisp was granted a temporary · (Charges were dismissed in Decem- digging up land around the home in ; threatened by Middleport's financial
search of bodies and using dogs in
stay of sentence because of the jail's ber.)
crisis and apparent inability to come
Jan.
20
Meigs
County's
popthe
search, all without uncovering · up with the required match monies.
inability to provide for his disabilities. Rutland Village Council ulation was up 3.8 percent, accord- any evidence that a crime had been
Feb. 13 - Villages receive concommitted.
approves ~ouse numbering ordi- ing to the 1994 cc;nsus.
firmation of federal funding for
Jan. 23- Six inches of snow fell
Feb. 5 - The Meigs County
additional police officers.
nance.
Jan. 13- Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy over the weekend closing Meigs Chamber of Commerce proposes a
Feb. 14.- The home of Barbara
Combs of Pomeroy were recog- ·county schools and resulting in sev- "beil" tax to fund a tourism office. . James on Nye Ave., Pomeroy, WI$
Feb. 7 - Pomeroy businesses
nized for being the parents of Meigs eral auto accidents.
heavily damaged in a fire caused by
begin
the task of preparing for revi- an electrical short.
Jan.
25
Pomeroy
hosted
the
County's first baby of 1995. Hiring
.
policy.of Meigs LocaJ.School Board first of the Ohio Department of talization projects to begin in March.
Feb. 15 - An injunction was
Feb. 8 - William D. Lemasters, issued restricting Overbrook Cen- •
changed to require new employees to Transportation's Access Ohio meetRacine,
convicted of three charges of Iter's ·infonnation picket lines in front
ings
on
the
state's
new
transportation
have
a high school dipl~ ot GED.
0
aggravated
murder in the shotgun
Jan. 16- Southern Ohio Coal plan.
Continued on page 3

i

Public citizen group claims NAFTA not working

WASHINGTON (AP) -A group U.S.-Mexico bo~r have gotten sigthat
opposed the North American nificantly worse," said Lori Wallach,
home
at
5:40
a.m.
where
they
disPopleroy Police and Meigs CounFree
Trade
Agreement from the start head of, ~blic Citizen's Global
y Coroner Dr. Douglas Hunter are covered Davidson's body.
says
it
has
not
lived up to assertions Trade Watch and a co-author of the
·nwatigating the circumstances sur"Davidson apparently hung him·
1
fOUIICiing the ·apparent su'icide of self on the porc;h. In checking ft. by supporters that it would improve · report.
the environment along the. U.S.Supporters of the pact says it's
_:nmothy Davidson, 37, 0(_~ster scene, we ~...nndication of foul
Mexican border.
much too early to assess the envi" ~oad. Pomeroy.
'
···· "
play. The hanging has been ruled~
Public Citizen, which lobbied ronmeptal impact.
, - Authorilies found Davidson apparent suicide, and we are ~ow
furiously against NAFI'A's pusage,
Public Citizen said illegal dumphanging on· the front pof!:h of the awaiting an official ruling frol_lYthe
argued. in a report issued. Monday ing of industrial wastes in Mexico
1udy Sa)'re residence at 126' Mul- coroner," said Rought. 1 ' •
th th trad
th
used · has increased, air pollution has worsberry Avenue around 6 a.m. Monday
Davidson body was removed by
.
at
e
e
a~~n
as
ca
ino""ing. ·
According
to · Dr. Hunter and taken to-the Ewing ' new damage to an
y ovemur- · ened, and hepatitis, dysentery and
: other diseases still .exist in rates far
Pomeroy police chief Gerald Funeral home. Units responding to dened border en · nment.
" After two ye of NAFI'A, this · higher than elsewheR.i,n the United
~ought, a call was~reeeived from / the scene included the Pomeroy· ·
Sayre's daughter woo was near the Police Depart!pcnt, . coroner Dr. 1 report documents that not only have · States.
ieaidence and believed she saw 1 Douglas Hunter, and the Pomeroy lbe promises for environmental and . Ex~~tions .that NAFrA would
tomeone standing in the dark on the squad of Meigs County Emergency health improvements not occurred, : result m mdustn~ expan~10n .away
but in fact the conditions along the . from the border, tnto the mtenor of
porch. Authorities lCSponded to the Medical Services.

!•

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I)

Mexico, also have failed to materiali ze, the' Ralph Nader-founded
group said. Employment at
maquiladoras, the foreign-owned
assembly plants located just inside
the Mexican border, has increased 20
·percent to nearly 700,000 workers in
the last two years, the study ·said.
The study, which reiterates Public Citizen's call for a repeal ofNAFTA,. was based on interviews with
border officials, activists, federal
authorities and media rep'orts.
NAFrA boosters said the trade
pact's effect.on ttle border can't be
measured yet
~
"We need to be loqking at the

'

longer term," said Ralph Marquez, a·
commissioner with the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission, the state agency that oversees
environmental issues. "1bese are not'
problems that were created in two
years and we cannot solve them in
, two years.
; , NAFrA has hastened cooperation
t between the United States and ita •.
border states w ·
·
lrquez •
said.. Rec~n y bac.k ~m a trip to_
, Mex1co C1 to meet w1th Mexicaa
• environ ntal officials, Marquez
! said: "There is a Jeal COmmitment 10
1 proceed with the environmental pro.
: tections."
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Tuesday, January 2, 1998

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. OHIO

TUII~y,..Janl,lllry 2, 1JI&amp; ·;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,..._.....---Local briefs--...,.•

We&lt;~ther

VV~ay,JJUm,3

~· .The Daily Sent~I · World·;s smalles~ .·republic · is ·~ disaster area

AccuWe~

forecast for

conditions and high tempeiatures
\

WASHINGTON ~ This is a : ·-' in lhe world:
' ·
laici !;J.UO to them .'Af\er WQrld, War . raled - and life expectancy fell.
fairY tale )vithout a l)appy ending. •
Now mueh of the island has lit· ' I, the island'ftll under a Ua~.of
Nauruan culture also disappeared
It~
&amp;boot
a
Pacific
isll!lld
nation
erally
di~
c~
away
as
Nalioos_1118J!date
with
Great
Britain,
as
satellite
dishes and 1V antennas
•
wbose pcople were given a grea1 gift phOsphate expons. ·And the real Austnha lll!d N~.w Zealand·I'U!lning sprouted aC:ross the island: Native
• -bini droppings '7 that made them
'
·
sho:W. Over the. next fe~ decades, dances and myths went the way, of
GamJ.ett Co. Newtpaper
·rich Butl now it's about to ~me
An·"'lio.r.
"~eo~ tn typtcal coloma! f~~Shton, they the shipped-out phosphate.
. '
• •
the nioming .~fter, and tile once-hap.
UO' Q
mined millions of tons of phosAlso pr¢ictably, the island was
'
'PYWOPie of this tal~ are sobefjng up
·
.&lt;.' .Pbales, an.d gave little compensation stripped bare without regard to the
to a filturc made more bleijt by their ,
• jp •
•
,
,
to~ nauves.
.
environment - until only a thin treeROBERT L WINGE1T
folly.
.
~
•
Not
until
!968,
when
Nauru
lined coastal area remains. Today it
Publleher
•
· ·
·
· ••
More im~tly, ids a caution- . 1
. .
. ~ained it$ il\dependente, did the
is an ecological disaster area, a
. ary talQ.IO which the' oil-ric~ JX!Ien•, stink .is: Where has all tl)c m&lt;~ney :tsianders begm. to recetve the full moonseape of coral pinnacles. The
..
.
.
·
. value of the phosphate exports. A lack of vegetation has brought a proMARGARET LEQW ' . . tales Q( !lie world, whose resources gone?
CHARL~ HOEFLICH
are
4inlinishing,
should
pay
h~ .
It's
not·a
question
NBIII'U
governphosphate trust was set up and run by longed drought that forces the.
Coll~J:
• General M•nepr .
The country is Nauru, '\ t(ny .., mont officials like to address~ the J!:ovemment. Riches came to the islanders to import water.
•
Nor has the trust been managed
island in the vast Pacific that only ·They've not responded to a series qf 'indigenous citizens overnight, and a
•
LETI1!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They ould be less. thah 300
occupies eight square miles. pne of our trans-Pacific phone calls and welfare state was created. Nati v ~ any ~Iter. Diplomatic esliJI!J.teS put
words long. All leiters are 111bject to editing and mus
signed wilh name:" • its distinctions is thit it is the' small- . faxes . to' ·their government offices. Nauruans, numbering· only 7, 700, its value at solnewhm!' between
address and telephone number..No unsigned letters will pubtisbed. Letters :. est republic Qn the globe:
Instead, !\tis story was Ibid to our. were guarantted a per capita income $500 million and $1 billion. Some of
should be in good taste, ~sing issues, not perronalities.
l . Another distinction is its gift of associate Dale Van,Alta by. diplomats of more than .$20,000 a year, and the the irust's investments have done
; :gu'l!'o.' Ov~r millennia, .birds. of from ~11$tralil), C:l~t Britain, New. .standard of lm.ng soared.
.
well, particularly th&lt;ise in hotels and :
.jl··' manyfeathers ·liavechosentoreheve, ZealandanB·IheUrutedStates.
. The down~tde ~me evtdent real estate. But others have. gone
themselves on this isle of otherwise
"It is a classic ease·ofa profligate early on, but 11 was tgnored. When sour.
So bad have Nauru's financial
':unimpresiiv~ coral and sand: Much citizenry gone aWry,'' one senior ~auruanHbandoned fishing, and the
·
las decaying, dead dinosaw:s left 'Clinton administration· official ·. tsland's vegetatton was •stnpped troubles become that it recently
:
!posthumous oil deposits•.the e~cre- · ob~erved .
.:. . . . .
• away by the mini~g process, it defaulted tempor.arily on a loan from
; toryworkof .thebirds. ~tedf~r
11\e ~rmans first dt'ScQvered becamenecessaryto•mportallfood. the Export-Import Bank of the Unit:,
_
~Nauru one of the richesJ depos~ts of Nauru's rich pl)osphate deposits The change i.n diet. was so ~ad!c~ ed S!Jiles. A confidential letter, which
1phosphute an essenual fertthzer around the tum of the
and • !)tat cases of diabetes and obestty spt- "'e have seen, was sent to Nauru officials Oct. 26 by the Ex-Im Bank
pointing out that they had failed to ·
pay $1.42 million as promised. Nau•
•
ru
paid its bill less than one week lat; By WALTER R. MEARS
er.
' AP Special Cornspoad~nt
. ~.._.
Money troubles on the island are
WASHINGTON- By title, job description, the solemnity of the black •
so severe that voters threw out their
I robe, the authority of the gavel, judges are cast as figures a step beyond .
old president in a November elec~
:everyday behavior. But they aren't immune from job stress that can build :
lion. 'But new blood probablY. won't
.
:
• to the point of ~gry outbursts from the bench.
be enough. Although Nauru hopes to
.
: "Bench stress," the American Bar Association Journal clllls it in an :
use $107 million it recently acquired
: account suggesting a growing recognition of the problem and the need to :
in
a legal settlement with Australia to
; redres' it when it happens.
·
·
·
:.
replant
the island, chances are the
~ The marathoJI trial and acquittal of OJ. Simpson have put a focus on ·
effort'
will
be a case of too little, too
::what's happe_ning in American courtrooms. C~p~~ w~th conduct .
late.
A
more
likely scenario is that
idescribed in the ABA study, Ju.dge Lance Ito was a JUdtctal swot.
the islanders will have· to be moved
•: In the study, Plimela Coyle tells of an angry Philadelphia jodge who threw
lock, stock and barrel to another.
:)1 glass of water at a lawyer and one in Louisiana who told a witness that
Pacific island once the phosphates
in his courtroom he wils God.
run ·out later this decade.
A Long Island judge Sent unsigned letters and faxes ridiculing and at times
Nor should the Nauruans counL
threatening an attorney with whom he'd ha&lt;! political differences.
.
on
much help from their Pacific,
,. With confidence in thejudicial system shaken even before the Simpson •
neighbors,
who've been koo:wn to·
,trial, conduct described as "black robe fever" by the president of the Nationhelp small islands in the past. For
81 Judicial College in Reno, Nev... can only worsen the problem.
these Cl)untries will long remember,
· · "'ntis whole·area of demeanor is so important,' ' Judge V. Robert Payant
that Nauruans sacrificed their island•
.told Coyle. "There is a growing recognition by the judiciary that if we are
home for a few decades of high liv~oing to·lrnprove the image of justice ... one group of major players is going
ing.
,
.tQ.have to be judges."
.
(Jilek
Anderson
~~qd
Michael_
. Another may be a growing movement to watch the way judges act. apd
Blostein are columnists for lJDitecl ·
to open lines for comphiints about their conduct, with.people who are neiFeature Syndkate.)
.th!ir lawyers nor judges playing an increasing role.
. . ,, .
• While the riumber of formal complaints has been growtng, there sbll are ·
1
~latiw:ly few, in part betause lawyers and the ~le they represent are w.ary
of retaliation from the bench, Coyle reports tn the ABA Journal. She ts a
~r for the New Orleans nmes-Picayune, and was a fellow·in legal jourpalism at Yale University.
.
WhenJ was a child, I used to lismany of tile . veteran Republican first put forth by ihe House R~pub- natal nutrition programs SUGh as.
. There was a 40 percent increase in the number of complaints lodged
ten every Saturday morning IQ
members of the Ho~se. h~ created licatis, would pennit the states to set WIC (WomeitJirifant/Childie'ri prO:
aaainst federal judges between 1990 and I993, with a similar trend in the
"Let's · Pretend,"· ·a netWol'k radio
the most mean-spirited Congress in nursing home care standards, but gram) and for Medicaid prenatal
~tales . At least 90 pm;ent of the complaints,ultimately are dismissed, " '
shQw on :whicjt c~siq
tales
Americanhist~ - wiihR~shLim- would not define what those stancare."
·•
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~nfounded or due to .~ diffiCUlty of ~iffC17ntiating between cases in .w.hlch
were dramatized. TIW prog..u, is
dards should be. They would also
Well, fetuses and infants don't
the losing side is gnpmg and those tn whtch tbere really has been IDJUdt·
eliminate training requirements fqr vote.
long gone, but now I indulge my
cious conduct.
.
B
nurses and,nurses' aides. and permit
Russell Baker writes in the New .
taste for fantaSy by-listening to Rush
• With caseloads increasing while. staffs are no!, there can be extra presLimbaugh. As when he said periinspections only once every two York nmes of how "Republicans ..,
~ure on judges. The stress is heightened by the fact that they are. always on
sively the other day that there actu- baugh cheering them on for three years.now talk of 'class warfaie.' It invites
~uty, th\:ir words recorded, conduct and even moods closely observed.
ally are Americans "ungrateful for hours every day. The largely disor"These changes, which ·were not 'class warfare,' they say, to mention.
; The trappings of judgeship can add to the mixr "A few people think 'your
the greatest prosperity in this coun- ganized Democrats are also culpable sought by the nursing home industry, the obvious about tlte economy: to
honor' means them rather than their office," Payant observed.
try that the world has ever known."
for what will inevitably be a rise in were initially rejected by the Senate, wit, that while 'the rich are getting
There is a reverse ~ide to all this. "There are judges who behave impecIn my city, New York, many of the misery index of miliions of but were then restored in the House- · richer, and the poor getting poorer,
cably in .the courtroom and issue dreadful decisions," said Lynn Hecht
those ingrates are complaining that Americans.
Senate budget conference."
middle-class families now need two·
Schafran of the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund in New York.
their children in public schools are
But ·.it is the Republicans who
Without federal standards, with incomes just to stand still."
In another appraisal of courtroom conduct and confidence, an academjammed into classrooms with 35 or . actively, genuinely, have so little each state in charge of both money
I watch the dehates in Congress·
ic,Sdviser to the American Enterprise Institute sugsests that American judges
more kids, in buildings that are concern for people who do not look for nursing homes and standards of on C-SPAN as the triuD)phant'
ought to have more authority. James ~· Wilson of the Universit.Y of Califalling apart, with more budget cuts . like them, who do not live as com- care, many of those in nursing homes 1Republicans, with swaggering selffornia, Los Angeles, suggests lhe Enghsh model as an answer, saymg JUdges
coming.
fortably as they do. Thef see those will be treated as tjley were before !righteousness, take aw~y money
there have retained control over their courtrooms while many U.S. judges
According to the wit and wisdom Ameril;ans who are strangers to ~ir federal supervision -drugged with from schooling; ·from regulations
have lost it. .
__
of Limbaugh - who could easily own exJierience as inferior- 1110ral- sedatives and tranquilizers, and held jthat ensure cleaner air (do Republi-·
, English judges select jurors, often question witnesses, and sumJilarize and
take the role of Mr. Bumble in ly, intellectually, and in ~ays . immobile in physical- restraints.
Jeans function. without air to ·
~aluate evidence, Wilson said. "American judges typtcally let the lawyers
Charles Dickens' "Oliver Twist" During one floordebateAn the ~e~~nwhile, the House has passed :breathe?); fr.om regulations conahoose the jurors and do all of the talking."
·
·
the parents "of these ragamuffins on welfare reform, a Republican a bill removing h~ndreds of thou- 'cerning safety at· work; and other'
; He said American criminal trials should be simpler and less adversariclearly do not have the gumption to from Florida held up a sign familiar . sands of severely disabled childret\' ways of improving how We all live.
llJ, not "lengthy, lawyer-dominated soap operas in which the Search for truth
work hard and long enough to par· to travelers in his state: "Don't feed
from welfare benefits. And millions
Many of these Republicans go to
ha5 been subordinated to the manipulation of procedures."
take of the fruit of this greatly pros- the alligators! "
of poor children will be denied church. I wonder what god they pray'
; In contrast to the English systein in which a prosecutor in one case can
perous society and sel:eir chi!There was laughter on his side of ltl!alth insurance.
· to. He must· look like Rush Limr;present the defense in the next, high-profile American trials have become
dren to private school.
the aisle; but some poor folks interBut, "the greatest opportunity. a · baugh - a god who considers com- '
·:mortal combat" between prosecutors and defense attorneys whose roles
After the decisive Re
ican tri- viewed later by fClPOrters had the
human being can have nn·this plan- .. passion effete. A god who rewards .
do not change.
·
umph in. the 1994 congressional temerity to protest that they and !heir et," Rush Limbaugh told his huge those who already have abundant:
; "The rewards can be great," Wilson writes, "votes, money, presti~e and
elections, Rush Limbaugh was made · children are not anirllals.
constituency recently, "is to be an rewards, and who keeps tbe poor iil
llook contracts."
an honorary member of the freshman
Consider the way these RepubliAmerican."
their well -deserved·place.
Much of that was on display during and after the nine-month spectacle
By this standard, the Sacramento
class in the House of Representa· cans are enforcing their contract on
of the; Simpson trial. And it has at least ~sed the level of discussio~ and
lives. And well he should have been, America. From an article by BrookBee is decidedly unpatriotic. A recent · (Nat Hentolf is a nationaUy.
the exchange of ideas on the long-butldmg problem of confidence m the . for he is tbe most influential preach- lyn District Attorney Charles Hynes editorial pointed out that "the GOP renowned authority on the Flnt'
courts.
·
er of the Republican gospel.
in the New York Law Journal: "New
Congress is targeting ... the weak." . Amendment and the rest of the BW
(Walter R. Mean, vice pOlSident and leolumnist for The Associated
·Pras, has reported on Washington and national polities for more than
. JOyean.)
.
•

111 Cowt Btnet
Polllei'OY, Ohio

Lucy Fay Oopohue, 74, of Racine died Sunday Dec. 31, 1995 ar Marion Medical Center Hospital, Marion.
Born May I, 1921 in Ripley, W.Va., she was the daughter of the late
Ernest Clay Pick11ns and Bessie Allen Pickens.
.
She is survived by two sons: Vernon E. Donahue of Caledonia, and ·
Kerney W. Donahue of Marion;
daughters: Marilyn Harden of Marion, Sandra Burtqn of Grovepo , and Linda C. Winebrenner of
Willoughby Hills; two brothers: Oke ~icke ns and Otmer Pickens,. both
of Marion; two sisters: Elna Wickline d Frieda Moore, both of Mari-.
on; II grandchildren, and 12 great-gran hildren.
She was preceded in death by her husb d, Vem.on E. Donahue, and .
two brothers.
Services will be held Thursday, I p.m., t Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy. Burial will follow in Letart F
metery.
s will be Wednesday, from 5 to 8
Calling hours for family and
p.m. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, the family ks thar donations be made to the Amer'
ican Cancer Society.
·

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~ today' in

history

.

By The Asaoc:iated Press

·

·Today is Thesday, Jan. 2. the second day of 1996. There are 364 days
left. in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
•
·
.
. On Jan. 2, 1900, Secretary of State John Hay announced lhe "Open Door
.
Policy" to facilitate trade with China.
' , Onln tth49is2,dau::: leader of the. .last Ara.b stronghold in Spain surrendered to

Spe,nish forces loyal to King Ferdinal)d II and Queen Isabella I.
tn j 788 Geortlia bcWne the fourth state to ratify the U.S. Constitution.
'1 In. 1893. the U.S. Postai'l&gt;ervice issued its first adhesive commemoning bits that D'Amato pounced on
•
•••
and the adri
like a cat im a wounded·mouse. One
tivc
to .honcr the, ..or(d's Columbian Expedition
·
qu
•
supposedly damnt'ng· chun.. read,
'of
Chri
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b
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.centennial
It'll"urn us voyage.
.
.
"Vacuum Rose Law Files...'"' Doculn 1921, reliaioqs services were brdadcas\ on radio for the first ume as
KDK4 in pjtl,liiQrgh .aired the regular SuQday service of the citts Calvary
rnc;~ts ~ never know go out Quiet,
1
. Boi~~:~ 01¥h· : .' '' ' . ......,_ .:·
·. ;
.
,. :
. ·.., Y:·D'Amato took this to mean
· ~ In ·IO'JO thiUnitedStatesandCanllfateal:hed~mentonJOII1tacuon ' CJ' . ,5 . .1 h ·de "had .. t)Je&amp;
·-r• .
·
., '
. . + ' • mt?" evt 01' s
santto ]A 1. w N18fR Falli. .
'
. . . · .
• J.
'
· uzed' the· Rose Law files to elimiIn 1935, B!lii!O ~ ~~nt on triahn Plemt~N. ·• ~ ~!Uqes nate incriminating information.
oflidMppllll and muni.ii'
.lrittit;'illl,b mf~:Dt son pfOilrlel iJ!dMnc: Lt~.
But William Kennedy stated that
~ wa1 rqund ~.and executeCI.)
". .
. the term "vacuum" referred 10 the
' · Jn1~2,thel'llilippi.nt~of~ani~w~captiu'edby,l~f~· :·inf~on •vacuum" they faced
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........, ...,ft
c~ 08 uro.dway ilfter 2,)'77 ~onJtaiWOI.
.......
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panied by a crude drawing a kit·
ty cat; Whi,te House apologists insisted that it was aTCference to·the Clioton's famous pet.
"Then why the secrecy?" asked
a Whitewater panelist. A visibly

when-ley!rlg to.gtt answe_rs lbout the ·

~hntons ~·~lll!ater tnve~trn~nt. .

_, . .

...es

/an Shoales

sweating White House spokesman
responded that it . was ·about the
"secretive attitude" comm'on to all
felines.
Panel members have scoffed at
this: ''Whatdo you do with socks?"
one asked, · hypothetically. "You
wash them. And where do you wash
the ' A 1 ndry c ld th'15 be
m·
au
· ou
about ·a massive money-laundering
scheme? Believe me, there's more to
thi~.~;;:e:~.eye.", • ...

stampl

· c~J~nnt =~~~1 J::! Kea~y· of M-huaeftl arinounced His cA!tdlhi J • Dlmoei1&amp; !lilei\tial ~
-. ·o.r. .
.
t~~crb,l
·~
'otAI.....__
Mterblck
· IIi I
tile New. y.,.,. """' 11• - -~"J
_,.,a qu
Joe Mrd!. for a rep4!!1ed $AOO 000. ·
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Ia lt14 J'IWidollt j&amp;oa llii.:OO JepWion ~uirina
to limit hiP:

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ment;

Docurnents-neveraooutQutetly" rneani that none It the meecina
ld aJJI...l-.1...1" files had nd
:" ~the
ll f the
1992•
up tn
possession o

·'"Freeic' is ganglaltd jargoo for .
'kill;'" said a panel spokesman.
• "Who 'froz.e'Vincel'oster?"
- · ..
..
·•~ · ·.
·
. . Nonsense, lhe wwte Houae
replied. "Foster Freeze is a,futfood/ice-cream ' ~h~n We were
!'( gettln1 .
.malleds, .
· that s ~· ~ nleeungs can really .
' ...uQ: up a ihint. ,.
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" You say 'D' Amato, ' I say 'D' A- entry. They know it refers to Whitemayto'- call whole thing ott!"
. water in some way, but the lack or '
1
A threat to the chairman of the coded language leaves them unclear r
Whitewater Committee? The White as to what William' Kennedy rileant. :
House insisted that this note . was Kennedy himself said that he only :
written during a break, when those meant that the room in which they •
present were trying to remember we~ meeting was very cold, and !
lyrics to old Cole Porter songs. "He they should all put on some e~tra ,
was a homosexual, wasn't he?" said sweaters or something.
;
one ~publican . '" Nuff said."
Finally, there's this cryptic nota- l
"Dems/GOP weasels?"
lion, "Why do people in politics ever !
"This · is ari insult!" insisted a :"rite anythin~ down? I can't imag-!
Whitewater panelist. "The GOP has · me more foolhardy behavior. Look at.!
never had anything to do with the Bob Packwood. If these notes are •
illegal trafficking in imported ani- subpoenaed, they 'll be used to fur·:
mals," the White House responded. . ther somebody's political agenda no '!
"These notes only mean that our two matter what they uy."
·
political panics are composed of parSaid a panelist: "Furthering a !
tisan, viciOus, treacherous creatures ' political 'genda?·All we want is lhe •.
. who'd rip your throat out as soon. as triith, no matter how many I&gt;e'moc- !
look at you. That's all."
rats suffer. That ominous rem~ : ·
"Salmon. Caesar Salad. Hot about Bob Packwood is proof they :
dog."
were ·out to get him. There's a :
· "Where do salmon_ sptw..n?'' straj g!ttline here - Rollcrt Boric, 1
askect our an(?nymous Whitewater Ani!Jl llill, Waco, Robert Packwood;~
panelist. ,"Whitewater streams. Cae- . Whitewater -'- hey, are you falling· .•'
sar fs a synonym for king - a tipoff . asleep? Wake up! America's in dan- :
. ·
:
to Clinton's·ambitions. 'Hot dog' is ger!"
an exclamation of glee that their
:
&lt;"""
·
'
insidious cover-up might succeed."
••A · " 'd
-· •u re«lve a compllmeDtary •·
•. gwn, sw ~? anonymo~s Jan Sjloltles newsletter, call 1. _
~~.nedr ai!en4ee, Lunch, that s• 989-DU&lt;;K or write · o~··

i

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,

"Cover up/Whitewater"
Breath, 401! Bro~ St, Nevau · t
I
"'
,
ffled
b
thi
City,
c;:.llf. 95m.)
J
r ••J"
was ua
· y s ·'
.......

p. a n e

•

George S. Hobstetter, Jr.
I

S:51 a.m. Monday, Mulberry
Avenue, Tim Davidson, dead upon
arrival ;

·

7:03 a.m. Monday, Mulberry
Avenue, Judy Sayre, VMH;
3:51 p.m.. Mond~y, Mulberry
AYenue. Judy Sayre. treated at the
scene.

MIDDLEPORT
8:54 a.m. Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue, George Hobstetter, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
7:20 p.m. Sunday. Lincoln
Heights, Sarah Day, refused treat-

RACINE
6:52 p.m. Saturday. Rainbow
Ridge, Jane Radcliff, VMH;
II :28 a.m. Sunday, state Route
124, Irene Roush, VMH.

,

9: 13 p.m. Sunday, Short Fourth
Avenue, Donald Jeffers, VMH;
9:49 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department to North Second Street,
vehicle fire, James Stewart owner:
6:38 p.m. Monday, Cottage Drive, Doug 'Mowery, VMH.

RUTLAND
2:48 p.m. Saturday, volunteer
fire department and squad to .state
Route 143, motor-vehicle accident,
S•ott Nichols, ·Rudy Musser and
Curtis Bing. treated at the scene; ..
12: II p.m. Sunday, Main' Street,
•
Dolly Cleland, HMC:
OLIVE TOWNSHIP
4:42 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
7 a.m. Saturday, state Route 248, department and squad to state Route
Chester Wells, St. Joseph's Hospital ; 124, chimney fire at tbe Larry Par10:42 p.m. Saturday, Eden Ridge sons residence,. no injuries;
Road, Brianna Ayers, St. Joseph's
2:14 p.m. Monday, New Lima
Road , Kenneth Martin, !fMC;
·
Hospital;
12:52 p.m. Monday, long Bot- '
4: 15 p.m. Monday, state Route
tom, Mildred Hauber, VMH.
124, Dolly Cleland, HMC;
II : 10 p.m. Monday, state Route
POMEROY
681, Cathy Saunders, HMC:
7:38 p.m. Saturday, state Route ·
124, Nicholas Riffle. Holzer Medical SYRACUSE
Center;
8 a.m. Saturday, state Route 681,
6:32 p.m. Sunday; Rockspring!
Justin Roseberry, VMl1;
Rehabilitation Center, Edna Dewey,
7: 18 p.m. Saturday, state Route
VMH;
124, Dorothy Riffle. VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
...
····-··- 5;32 p.m. Sunday, state Route
681, Pat Perkins, O'Bieness ,MemoThe
Sentb)el · rial Hospital.

""

Wtiiie;v;t;rprns~t;s~ WYou rtu~r~w:ri;n·~ ofD~Amato
to be as controversial. Here's a sampler:
"Socks/Secret"
This scribbled note was accom-

will hold their organizational meeting Thursday, 6:30 p.m at the Rutland Fire Station.
Eagl~ auxiliary meeting
T)illf omeroy Fraternal Order of
Eagles Auxiliary will meet tonight
for a pizza party and meeting at 7:30
p.m. No potluck.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 26
calls for assistance, including two
·transfer cails, during the New Year's ~
holiday weekend. Units responding
'ncluded:

to"
en

There probably is something
under that Whitewater rock, but I'm
still not convinced it's worth our tax
dollars to pry it up, especially when
Alfonse D' Amato is in charge of the
lifting crew.
The latest lever hefted by the
Wh'
be ·
·
f
ttewater pro 15 a senes o
notes, recently made public, taken at
a 1993 meeting between then-White
House counsel William Kennedy
and various Clinton flunkies.
The notes contain some tantaliz- .

'

Trustees
to - ·Township Trustees
. The Rutland

EMS logs 26 weekend calls

HfH

~

Mattie B. Hill, 93, Catroll, died Saturday, Dec . 30, 1995, at her residence.
Daughter of the late Charles and Fannie Beaver, she was a member
of the Don:as U.B . Church in Racine.
,...-.
She is survived by four sons and three daughters-in-law, Clark and Betty-Hill of Columbus, Carl and Connie Hill of Texas, Don Hill of Texas
and Jerry and Mary Hill of Medipa; a daughter and son-in-law, Helen
Wolfe and Harold Bosler of Carroll; a daugh~r-in-law, Bonnie Hill' of
Chippewa Lake; 21 grandchildren and 41 ~at-grandchildren and 24
great-great-grandchildren.
Other survivors include.a brother, John Beaver of Pomeroy, and a sister-in-law, Gladys Hill of Columbus.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Herman Hill; a son, flarry Hill; a daughter-in-law, Bernice Hill; a son-in-law, Charles Wolfe; two
grandchildren; one great-grandchild; sisters Effie Manuel, Debbie
Gillilan, Seva Cline, Della: Gillilan and an infant sister.
Services will-be held I p.m. Wednesday at E~ing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Rev. Lawrence Bush officiating. Burial will follow in
Plants Cemetery, Racine.
~riends may call2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today at the funeral home and until
time of service Wednesday. In lieu of flowers, friends may contribute to
·Hospice of Fairfield County.

. Library board meeting
The Meigs County Library Qoard
of Trustees will hold its organizational meeting Jan. i 0 at I p.m. at the
Pomeroy library.

BoD advisory in effect
Customers on Leading Creek
Road, east of McEihanney Hill
Road, are requested by the Leading
Creek Conservancy District to boil
their water until further notice.
·A water leak on Leading Creek
1\'BS repaired by District employees
Sunday. ·
.
The advisory. according to Brent
A. Bolin, general manager, will be
cenceled once laboratory tests show
that the water is safe for human consumption. Results of testing should
be ready late Wednesday aftenloon.
Questions should be directed to the
district office, 742-2411.

Daily

(IJSPS2.,..

.....S~t"""'o....
ek!!!"''s......,!!!!!!\11

[ I'F""'!!"'"
.

- .

'
Publi1hed every ahmlbon.
NOitday ttarouah 1.. .
Friday. Ill Colin St.. PomMly, Ohio. by the I Ohio VaUcy PubliabinJ CofT1lanyiOanneu Co.,
l'&lt;lmoroy, Ollio 45769, Ph. 992·21.16. Secood
c l u l , - paid • Pomeroy, Ollio. '
~Iller: 1llt Auoclaled

Am Ele Power ........................40 318
Akzo •••••••-·..··- •·••••••"'"'"''- ·.51518
Aihland 011 ............................35 118

AT&amp;T.J1...................................67314

Plfti. and the Ohio

Baak ()he. .. ....... ... ...................37 718

.

P08'1"MAS'nR: Send add..; COiftiedons to
The Doily Seoli ..l. II I c- SL, Pomeroy,
Ohlo4S769.

Bob Evaas..- ..............................-19

'

Boq-Wamer.-......................31 711

Champion Ind ..........- .....- ...22 314
Cbarmln1 Sltop........ - ...........27/8

SU~PTION RA....
. , Olnler ... -Ro411e

City Holdi 111 .............................09...25
Fedtral MocuJ ........................19 7/8
Gannrtt ................ -.. .................61 114"
Goodyear T&amp;R ._ ..,_..,........44 118
K~IDirt ............!.........- -......... 7 ~
-L.atadl Erwl ......_ ... _.................l3 ~~

One - . ................................................. $2.()0

one
Moolh ................................................ $8.70
One v....... :........................................... $104.00
•

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.

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SINGLE COPY PRICB·
Doily .................................................... 3S Cc\111 ,

Limited .... _._ _ _ ,_....... 17llB
Peopln B~M.,:S-~-........_. ...13
Ohio Valley Baak -·---.35 1/2
Oat V.Uey ._.............._ ....,•.Jll/8

Subl&lt;:rlben ncM desirinlro 1"'11ho ~~ · •·
rtmiC in .tv.nce direct to The Dilly Sciltinel.
0\\ I ...... ai&gt;C&lt; ll mo.... blliL Cnldil will be

'!f"'

·----k. ' . '

Rockwell ...- ................,_ .......53 311
Robbins ,A: Myen...................UI Ill
Royll Dutdt/Shell ................ l4Q 718
Shtlnty'a Inc..................... - ...10 118

(

'· No lllbscri,doa by man permit1ed hl'areu !
,Where home carrier ten'k:e is ·•vail able.
lltAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

,

13 Woeb............................,.................... $27.30

1

t - Molp c.-,..

:16 -

52 -

·GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr., 79, of.Pomeroy died Sunday, Dec. 31, 1995
at Veterans Memorial Hospital , Pomeroy ..
Born March 18, 1916 in Pomeroy, he was the son of the late George
S. Hobstetter, Sr. and Bertha Williamson . He was retired vice president
of the Pomeroy Nationai ·Bank, and a retired broker with Hobstetter Realty.
He was a member of the Pomeroy Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons
of Ohio, and a member of American Legion Post #39. ·
He is survived by his wife, Maxine "Bobbie" Ebersbach Hobstetter
of Pomeroy ; two daughters: Pamela Hobstetter O'Laughlin of Dublin,
and ~Jette Jean Hobstetter Hoffman of Pomeroy ; two sisters: Margaret
Baker of Dayton, and Martha Chambers of Middleport; four grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by three brothers: Edison, William, and Virgie Hobstetter.
Services will be held Thursday, 3 p.m., at Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Robert Robinson officiating. Burial will follow
at Meigs Memory Gardens. Masonic services will be held Wednesday,
7:30p.m., at the funeral home.
Calling hours for friend s and family will be Wednesday, from 7 to 9
p.m. at the funeral home.

' Loretta M. Jones

. ...

~w~A~~~.

~. I f

Mattie B. Hill

Meigs announcements-.
•

Rus ·Limbaugh s State ·of the Uni~n, -1996
flli!'&gt;'

cent.
Extended forecast
Thursday and Friday...Cold with
a chance of flurries each day with
squalls possible northeast. Lows
thursday 10 to 15 with highs 15 to
20. Lows friday in the single digits
with highs in the.teens.
Saturday... Fair. Lows S below to
10 above. Highs in the 20s.

Southeastern Ohio
Today ... Rain. High in the lower
40s. Northeast wind 5 to IO.mph.
Tonight... Rain changing to snow.
Any snow accumulations les~ than 2
inches. Low near 30. Northeast wind
5 to IS mph shifting to northwest:
Chance of precipitation 90 percent.,
Wednesday... Light snow likely.
Thmmg colder. Temperatures falling
in the 20s. Chance of snow 70 per-

Star Bank ·-·-..........._ ._,•.20 511

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Sllldl ,epa~ II 11ft the 10:31 •.m.
quotea proYlded by Adnat o

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13 ........ ~"""'''''"'''"\''"'M''"'' ''"''""'"$29~25 !
26 ........- ................................;.............$$6.68 •. '
5 2 -...........................:.,... ; ............ $1~.72 ll ~--11!11---------~~~
I

' .

Loretta Mae Jones, 68, 1620 Chatham Ave .• Gallipolis, died Friday, Dec.
29. 1995 at her residence.
Born July 20, 1927 in Putnam County, W.Va., daughter of the late John
and Virginia L. Kerwood Simmons, she was a homemaker.
Surviving are four sisters, Rose Marie Perry of Hamlin, W.Va., Dorothy
HOdge of Houston, Tcxa.,, Ruth Woodyard of Casper, Wyo., and Nyoka L.
George of Mannington, W.Va.; a hrother, Charles Kenneth Kerwood of New·
port News, Va.; and a stepsister, Nancy Fields of Henderson, W.Va.
' She was also preceded in death l&gt;y a brother, John A. Simmons; and a
sister, Pearl Elizabeth Harvey.
Graveside services willl&gt;c II a.m. Wednesday at the Pine Street Cemetery, with the Rev. Eugene Hannon olliciating. There will be no visitation.
Arrangements are by the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
'

Katharina Walker
Katharina Walker, 74, 90 Galli a St., Crown City, died Sat~rday, Dec. 30,
1995 at her residence.
Born Nov. 19, !921 in Cologne, West Germany, daughter of the late .
Joseph and Anna lven, she w;" a homemaker.
She was also preceded in death hy her husband, Lee Walker: und a brother, Joseph lven.
·
·
Surviving are a daughter, Beatrice Cline oi'Crown City; and a grandson.
There will be no services. Burial will he later al the convenience of the
family. Friends may call at the Willis Funcrnl Home from 7-9 tonight.

----Hospital news---Sherpard, Michael Downer.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Uischaraes Dec. 31 - Dustin
· Saturday admissions - Leah
Sheets,
Mikaela Bays. Margaret
Williams, · Pomeroy; Freda Turley,
Howell .
.
Hartford, W.Va.
llischarges Jan, 1- Carla Cox,
Saturday discharges - Stanley
Mary Kcmp;r. Iva Powell.
Komoroski, Pomeroy.
(Published with permission)
Sunday admissions - Clara B.
Smith Pomeroy.
.
su&amp;iay discharges - none.
Monday admissions: - none.
Monday discha'l!cs - none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Dec.19 - Christine
Dray, Jessica Burton, Mrs. Mark
All Natural T·Lite...
Morgan and daughter, Norma HamWilli
Chromium PlcoiiMte
mond, Nicole Jones, Mrs. James
Barton and daughter, Mrs. Samuel
Egnor and daughter.
• _.
~lacharps Dec. 30 Kudie
Hatfield, Andra Holley, Maggie

LOSE : 1 LIS. ·
IN 3 DAYS

'

.

•
f

t

Edna Nora Henry, 87, of Mason, died Sunday, Dec. 31 , 199S, at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
She was a homemaker.
Born March 18, 1908, in Spencer, she was a daughter of the late Herman Mowery and Alza Mowery. She was also preceded in death by her husband, Earl E. Henry, Sr., who-died in 1967, a 'daughter, Shirley Ann Henry
Hood, sister, Flora Carpenter, and brothers, Orville and Arkie Mowery.
Surviving are a daughter, Janice Faye Buskirk of Coshocton; three sons,
Earl E. Henry, Jr. of New. Haven, Herman D. Henry of The Plains; Arthur
Joe Henry of Harrah, OK; two sisters, Ollie Taylor and Janice Lowery of
Colfax, WV; tw!;l brothers, Richard Mowery of Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Arnold
Mowery of Ariz'ona; 12 grandchildfen, and 18 great-grandchildren.
.
Services will be Wednesday, Jan. 3, 1996, I p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral Home with the Rev. Sam Hobson officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
· Friends may call ar the funeral home Tuesday, 6 to 8 p.m.

weather forecast

•

· A Pomeroy man was citeil.,fpr failure to control followina a ~ l
• car accident on state Route 143 near Hanisonville Saturday around 1
2:40 p:lll.
'
:
Rudy.R. Musser, 23, was southbound when he lost control of his •
1989 Plymouth in a curve, according to a Meigs County Sherilfs •'
Department report. The car slid into a ditch and rolled over onto its :
•:
top, sustainin.g heavy damage.
Musser and two passengers, Scott Nichols and Curtis Bing, were •
treated at the scene by Rutland squads of the Meigs County Emer- •
gency Medical Service. Al s~ responding was the Rutl and Vol~ nteer I;
Fire Department.
·
•

Edna~Henry

:L,.-------.-.-.,.o.---.----...:.------.
'o t b t
t '

To~ay's

.

.
••

Pomeroy man cited in wreck

'

.

,Lucy· Fay Donohue

MICH.

I

(

The Dally Sentinel

Middleport Police probe accident

The Middleport Police Deplirtment investigated one traffic acci.,. dent over the holiday weekend, according to a department spokesman.
The accident occurred Saturday at 12:27 p.m. on the Fruth Pharmacy parking lot. nna F. Searls, 32, Pomeroy, and Alexander May,
81 , Pomeroy, were both backing ft:om parking spaces when May's car
struck Searls', according to reports.
Damage to Searls' 1985 Oldsmobile and May's 1984 Datsun was
listed as light. No citations were issued.

••
•••
;
•
'
•

•,

!

Deer/car accident reported
No injuries were reported following a deer/car collision on U.S.
33 in Salisbury Township near Pomeroy Saturday around 12:30 p.m.
Paul A. Reitmire, 44, Racine, was westbound when a deer jumpt.d . I&gt;
· from the side of the road and struck his 1989 Chevrolet, causing light
damage, according to Meigs County Sheriff's Department report.
'

Athens man a"ested flter standoff
Athens County Sheriffs' Deputies took into custody a man who held
them at bay for 3 112 hours early Monday while threatening to kill
him self, Athens County Sheriff John Hicks stated Monday afternoon.
Deputies were called to the Happy Valley Trailer Court on Athens
County Rd. 10 at 4:03 a.m., where Jerry Sayre, 28, held a 12-gauge
shotgun under his chin until deputies were able to.take control of his '
weapon, officials said.
Sayre was removed from the residence by deputies and taken to
Tri-County Mental Health Center for an evaluation, without incident, '
Hicks said.

The Daily Sentinel...
Continued from page 1
of the office of Dr. Harold Brown.'
Feb. 16 - Racine Mayor Jeff
Thornton accepted an $80,000
Appalachian Regional Commission
grant to be used to upgrade the
Raci9e water system.
Feb. 17 - Salisbuty students
were selected to participate in the 177 connector project.
Feb. 19 - Arrangements were
made to sell the I ,416 guns forfeited to the county Robert D. Fife after
they were confiscated from his home
and business in July, 1993.
Feb. 21 - Appalachian Regional Commission provided a $70,000
gr.an't ·for a promenade ·along the
parking lot wall as a part 'of
Pomeroy 's revitalization project.
Feb. 22 - Meigs County game
protector Keith 0 . Wood was named
"Wildlife Officer of the Year." ·
Feb. 23 - Meigs Local approved
a budget of$12,833,982 for the 1996
fiscal year school operation .
Feb. 24 - Layoffs begin at Vet·
erans Memorial Hospital: Administrator Scott Lucas cited decreased
demand for services brought about
by the departure of five doctors over
a several month period.
Feb. 25 - Lt. Gov. Nancy Hoi·
lister challenged 140Tuppers Plains
Elementary students to get involved
in their communitie s.
·
Feb. 28 - Middleport dock
launching facility saved hy local
benefactors and another $10,000
from couniy fund s. The project cost.
has been set at about $1421000.
MARCH
Mar. I - Leading Cree k Conservancy District received a
$350,000 grant for construction of
additional water line sin Columbia,
Rutland and Scipio Townships.
Mar. 3 - Dan Beam and Charles
Neece were · awarded Carnegie
Medals. The two miners played key
roles in saving the lives of nine other miners in the 1993 shaft fl ooding.
Mar. 9 ,- Southern Board of
Education approves closing Racine
Elementary School. ·
Mar. I0 - Patty Lynn Ingram,
Reedsville, was arrested in conjunction with the Bank One robbel')l at
Coolville.
Grange to meet
Star Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 wi II meet Saturday at the
hall, County Road I. north of Salem
Center. Junior and youth baking contest will be held. Potluck supper at
6:30 p.m. foll owed by m~eting at
7:30p.m.

Mar. 13 - Steps to close the
Shade Post Office as a cost Cl!tting
measure were started by the U. S.
Postal Service.
Mar. 14 - Another request tb
restore lhe Reedsville voting precinct
went before the Meigs County BoartJ
of Elections. 1! was again later
demed.
1
Mar. 15 - A fire claimed th~ life
of 36 year old Teresa Rodatz at her
North Front Street, Middleport, res'
1
· idence.
Mar. 24 - Frank O'Brien of
Columbus, a native of Meigs Coun:
ty, contributed $412,000 to the
American Cancer Society. He came
to Meigs County to give a portion 'of
the funds, ·$20,000, to the Meigs
County unit.
· •
·
Mar. 26- Meigs Commissioners
hear from ,the Humane Society on the
need for a new animal shelter.
-.
Mar. 28 - Mar. 6- Excavation·
on the connector road to the
Ravenswood Bridge got underway '
near Meigs High School. Prosecutor
John Lentes pledges to go after:
deadbeat parents who fall behind in:
child support payments.
.
.
Mar. 30 - Jim Gilmore was hon-"
ored as Legionnaire of the Year by- \
Drew Webster Post 39, America~ .s
Legion.
'J.

The Light

To

By
Dave

Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture'-------.:~
II you're willing to admit un••'r.. l:
when you're wrong,
all nght.
wro~g

***

The best sense of humor Is
that wams you when not
laugh.

** *

Nothing is more upsetting than to
have company drop in and see
the house looking like it usually
does.

***

Garden: something most of us
prefer to tum over in our minds.

***

Men have three basic hair styles:
· parted, unparted, end departed.

�0

•

jSp·orts

The Daily.Sent~~~

t

..
:r:
'
Tuesday, January 2, ~996
~----~~~~~------------------------------------------~------------~~-------~-~

Tennessee·&amp; Fl·orida_State amo.og victors
purple. tliat," J~hnson said, (Cfe~ng
tothemterestmNort!!westerngmng
mto the Rose Bowl. No one wants
to !live us any respect. So everyone
said it's 12 o'clock midnight. Their
dream is over. Th~y had fun in '95.
It's '96, 1t's our turn now. And that's
the' only way I wanted to go out."
Florida State went out with an
·
· ',ourth quarter to beat
1mpress1ve
Notre Dame 31-26. Dan Kanell
threw two of hts four

ment at the. Rose and Orange, and
.loads of offense n~ly_everywhere.
Southern Cahforn1a_ outlasted
Northwe!tern 41-32 to wm the Rose
Bowl, dampening the Wildcats'
dream season with some big plays.
Keyshawn Johnson caught 12 passes for a Rose Bowl record 216 yards.
Al112 of his receptions were for ftrst
downs and me
· 1uded a 56-yard touch·
down catch.

New_ Years ~ay has com~ a~d
' gone w1th no nauo!lal champ1on tn
college football. .
.
That honor wtll be dec1ded at the
Fiesta Bowl tonighl, when_No. }
_· ·Nebraska Jllays No. 2 Flonda. On
: Monday, ~1th bad weather tn Texas
. ' and Flonda and poor attendance
· o ther games
: nearIy ev~ryw here, s1x
dec1ded little.
...
there was

.,, (left) &amp;eta away from Ohio State defender Kevin
·~ J~ (Sl) In the ftnt quarter of the CltnJS Bowl

•

..

passc:s in the fin_al Hfnti:......:S·and ~
Semmoles ralh_ed from a 12-pomt
defictt . for thetr lith consecuuve
bowl v1ctory. .
"We didn't want coach Bowden's
streak (11. straight howl wins) to
end," said Andre Cooper, whose
third touchdown reception put Florida State ahead to stay. "It definitely
. .
,
went through our·mmds.
Als~ Monday, ~~ was T~nnessee
20, Ohto State 14 m the ram at the
~1trus Bowl, Colorado 38, Oregon 6
· 1n ram at the Cotton; Penn State 43,
Auburn 14 m the slop at Outback;
;and Syracuse 41 , Clemson 0 m shppery conditions in the Gator Bowl.
Rose Bowl
No. 17 Southern California 41
~o. 3 Northweste~ 32
In tts first Rose Bowl smce 1949,
, Northwestern (IQ..2) got llO yards
and three touchdowns on the ground
from Darnell Autry. Steve Schnur
completed 23 of 38 p~ses ~or 3J6
yards for ~e Wildcats, mcludmg 145
yards to D Way~e Bates.
' 'Jhat wasn't enough as the Trojans
gou 53-yard fumble return by Day--'
ton McCutcheon for a score. Brad
Olton~ who usually alternates quare
ten&gt; wtth Kyle Wachholtz, played the
wholegame,gmng29-for-44for391
yards and two touchdowns.
.
"We turned the ball over tw1ce,
and we haven't done that all -year,"
Wildcats coach Gary Barnett said.
"People have conunjtted those errors '
against us, and we took advantage of
them. You're not going to win bowl
games playing this caliber of football."
Orange Bowl
No. 8 Florida S a3t e
No. 6 Notre D
1fo
At Miami, Florida Sta
meback began with a five-play, 73-yard
drive capped by Kanell's 11-yard
touchdown pass to E.G. Green with

9:47 left.
.
II was the fourth straight bowl
Th~ Seminoles (IQ-2) forced a loss for the Ducks and their worst
pun!, and ~ Feaster returned it 41 :overall defeat since 1991. They finyards to the Notre Dame 30. Coop- ..1 ·shed 9 .3 under ·first-year coach
er caught a three-yard touchdown
~fk Bellotti
1
pass, then grabbed Kanell's twoe
Ouihack Bowl
point conversion pass.
N 15 p
Stat 43
Florida State added a safety with
~0 16 ~nnb ~4
2:02 left when Notre Dame's "'om
M
u ~rn k d 1 t
:
"
ram,
more
muc an threw
os
Krug ~as called for intentional
more oreints.
Wally
Richardson
groundmg in the end zone.'
an o:ack-record four toucbdown
The Irish finished 9·3.
·passes and Bobby Engram scored
Citrus Bowl
twice , 111d finished with a game·
No.4 Tennessee 20
record Ill yards receiving at Tarn·
No. 4 Ohio State 14
pa.
Ohio State was limited to 89
yards rushing as -a steady downpour
Penn State (9-3) finished with at
in Orlando and the Volunteers
least nine victories for the 19th time
defense conspired to give the ~uck·
under coach Joe Paterno, who is col-'
eyes' their worst rushing day of the
lege football's winningest bowl· .
season. In its last four possessions, coach ai 17-8-1.
Ohio State (11-2) lost threefumbles
"It sent the seniors off with a
and threw a pass to an ineligible
good win," junior cornerback Mark
receiver.
Jay Graham carried 26 times for Tate said. "And for the guys coming~
back, it gives us something to build,
154 yards, including a 69-yard
touchdown run, for Tennessee (11-1). on for next year."
He outgained Heisman Trophy win·
ner Eddie George, who had 101
It was the Tigers' worst loss~
yards on 25 rushes.
under coach Terry Bowden, who was'
"We obviously had to stop Eddie 2()..1-1 be(ore guiding Auburn to an
George first," Vols coach Phil -8-4 record this year.
Fullmer said. " I don 't know how
many yards he got, but I know _he
didn't just run up and down the field
Gator Bowl
like' I was concerned he might."
Syrac:use41
Cotton Bowl
No. 23 Clemson 0
No. 7 Colorado 38
Donovan McNabb threw a school
No. 12 Oregon 6
record three touchdowns at JackAt Dallas, freshman Marcus sonville. Not only did the Orange
Washington had a 95-yard intercep- gain 517 yards, they held Clemson to
tion return, a Cotton Bowl· record, 159 in handing the Tigers (8-4) the
and scoreil 19 points in tbe third worst postseason loss. Syracuse (93) ran its record !O 6-0-1 in its last.
quarter on a cold, wet day.
The worst-attended Cotton Bowl seven postseason games.
Two days of rain hurt Clemson's
in a half-century had an announced
crowd of 58,214, based on ticket fan base and ·there were 22,738 no·
sales. The actual crowd of around shows in the announc~ total of
_35,000 was the lowest since 1946. · 67,940.

Scoreboard
Ohio H.S. boys' scores

7, Nonh Carohna 7.llePaul 4,1owo St. 4,

Basketba ll

Kantaa 3, Middle Tenn. 2. SW Minouri
St. 2, Indiana I, 58ll Diego S1. I, Souther•
Miu.l .

NBAslate
....,lind 11 New Ylrt. 7:30p.m.
Mllwllltee 11 ~ Ieney, 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND &amp;I WuhiDJIOD, 7:30
p.m.
SadloiiAI....., 7:30p.m.
Houlton at Mioneaoca, 8 p.m.
Ullh 11 ootu, 8:30p.m.
ladiua Ill Dmver, 9 p.m.

Akron Hoban 64, Copley 55

Archbold 71, Onawa-Glandorf 69
A.shlan&lt;l45, Wooater4l
Avon Lake 61, Crestwood 44
Beavcrcruk 64, Day. Scebbins 58
Bexley 81, Uckiog Val. SO
Big Walnut 69, W. Jcffcnon S8
Blo&amp;mfield (Ind .) Eastern 64, C1n.
Madeira60

EaSt
N. lllirxtis 51. Maine S4

Ohio men's
college scores

Philadelpbia at LA . Laken. 10:30

Botkins 64, Jackson Cenrer 6()
Brooke, W. Va 79, lDdian QCek 6)

6)

•p.m.

Wodnesday's games

p.m.

· •

Third place
Spr1ng Arbor 94, Grand Valley 89
(OT)

Hoosier Classic.ahird place
Kent 63. Appala~:hian St. 62
MVP HoBday Classtc-champlomhlp
Toledo 88. Austm Pe11y 74

Laot

2. Keftlucky .................. 9-1 1,.528
3. Mpophio(l) ......... B-0 1.425

Third

tO.Iowa .......................tl-1
11 . S~oe ........... .....11· 1
12. Wob.,_l _. ......... .1&gt;-1
1). ntinol• ................ 11 -1
14. OcorJl• .................. 9-1
IS. IJIII&gt; ........................ 11-2
16. North C.olina ........9-2
17. Miuialppi S1. .........11-1
lB. VlflinioTech .... ...... 6-1
19. Dub ........................H
20. UCLA ... ".......... . .7-J
21. Michipn ................ IIJ.J
22.Clellllon......... ... .9.()

1.047
971
9S2

24. Bo11on College
8-2
2~ . New Mt:aico~ ....... 1~

91

21. Tcxu .....................7· 2

Marietta Shrine Tournament

Champlomhlp
Blufrlon 74, MartettD69
Third place
Lake Erie 71, Oberlin 67

J

4
l

6

7. COMCCik:•ll (1) .: ...... 10.1 1.2116
B.VliiiiiiOVa .................. IIJ.I 1.184
9..Arizona ............ :.... 10.1 1.077

7

10
IJ
14
12
16
15

)I)

'

265
216
97

Pepsi Oneida Nation Clault·lhlrd piKe
Ohio 94, Coppin St 92
.

8~

StonnJ Petrel Clanit·third place
Ohio Northern 87. Oglethorpe 64
Chlllmpklmhl~

HeidelbtrJ 76. Westminster, Pa

Marion River Vnl 66, Plymouth 48
Mlll}'sville 62, JonathQn Alder 27
Massillon Wa!hln(!llon 78. Akron
Spnng. 44
Melldowbrook 74, Cambridg~ 7 I
Med1na Highland 82, Brooklyn 47
Minmt E 74, Bethell6
Middletown Mndtson 45, Yellow
Spring! :\9
Midp;u-k 69, Normandy s~
Miller61, Berne Umon48
Miller C11y 77, Ottov11le 47
Mohawk 79, Crest line 74
MI. Ver110n 52, Tol. Scott SO (OT)
N. Adanu 88, Monchalcr 72
N. Balrimore 80, Oregon Stritch 78
N. Centrul79, Mootpehcr 1t71J
N. Olms1ed 76, Akron Man~!l~r 66
Nonhm01 7~. Centerbura71
Norwalk 66, Collins Western Reserve

Wittmberc Khu.-s Holiday Clauk:

, Champlonllllp
Wtttenberg 69. W1s -Wh1tcwa1er 66
Third place
Wnbush 71. Muskingum 66

Sunday's action
•

NOIHOnrrrcnce play
No 21 Virginia Tech 62. Wnght St 46

Ohio women's
college scores

a l'ttJ..pJace volt

......

'ISO
1101
1'77

Non-eoal'trtnct play

calvin ,9, Ohio Wesleyan ~
MiiUnl (OhiO) lJ7, Cuiaius11
Mount Union 71, Oenna, Pa. 4S
Mount VmtO;n Nuarcne 66, Qellisoa

2
3
~

• 6

.7

7

4

. 7()(1

_690

'rouma111tn"

9

Rtd,..Oultllnt~

l&lt;!O
522

15
12
. !05 '• ll

10
405 16 .
404 . 19
!56' · II
!14 ' )7

Abon 61, Sr. friQcla,. h. 62

" 'M

-~ ·'·II

.Gi:

j~ ,

130
' 129

,2t

;.o

,25

15

)I

2l

• ...,,

NoD eonl1 c:ace P,lly

'

479 -..

8

'

Tri.SO. ffl. RIO QRANPJl67

8

•6!!7

)7

Aohllllld 76. UII!Ma 67

I

127
78&gt;1
719

...

Saturday's action

flli,-

l\boo67, 'st. fnlld~ 1'1. 62,
Ailllllod 76, Urbono 67
Clivi• ~·· Olllo

w....,.. ,.

,;"l

47

I

fttaoa6l

·noM••

' 1 '

',

Tri-111110
, fll· !YO~ 67 .,

' $Unob1'•11Cdo11
IIIIi,...
'
T•.--t

" Olilo So Tf. Pura.. 7Q

....... t'

rr

3
3 'I
AbDII77,QIIIalllla63
I

Olutnnay 83, Grfmdview 61
Onrano 80, Buckeye Central 66
Oreaon Clay 84, Millbury Lake: 66
Orrville 67, Canton McKialcy 53
"' Parma H11 Holy Name 69. Panna S6
Patrick Henry 69, NJP91eon !12
Penyobu•J S5. C.hna 42
PhilO 60, JobnJiown Nonhridse .53
Ricbmoltd Dale Soulbeutem 64, Wa,.,.ly :16
.
Smiltlville 83, Mansfield Chr. 70
Sp.-iaJ. Catholic: 69, Myrrle Beach.
S.C. SJ
Sori•B· Sooth 67. Ooh.wul5~
l'eayo Val. 67, Weotfall SB

Tan """' (tn&lt;l) Soulh 118. lloy. 1.!1·

· .. Milml (Oioio) 97.'CIIIIIiill 71 _
~
Mo. Uilion n, OeDcva. Pa. 4J
~ ~i' ·1 M-. VC111011 Nu.eoe 66, Delliaon F
'

M""IIIClta 18. Clyde S7 .
Marton Local 70, Day Meadowdale

5)

Third place
Denison 7:'1 , Wilmmgton 4J

pNd oa 1S poinls for a finr-placc voce

~

7~

.tOT)

Tile Top 23 1e1m1 in 1be Associalecl
Preis' WOtneD 'a collq:e balketball poll.
:With ftrlr-place Yotea in patcnlhe1e1,
rccbrdt dtrou111 Dec. 31. totlll poinfl

()1).... ~

48

TIMn Klwanl1 Holiday Cluslc

J

Top 25 women's
college poll

(Ot

·Moore 37
•
Kidron 59, Black Ri ... er 58 &lt;OTJ
Lexmg10n 83, Bellevue 72 (QT)
Limo Both81 , Maumee61
Lima Sr 71, Middletown 67
Logan Elm 65, World Harvest 52
Louis\'! lie (Ky ) Trinny 86. Omnel 1J
Madtson 42, Perry :W
Malvern 70, Sandy Val 63
Mansfield Sr. 72, Mentor68
Mansfield Sr. Peter'! 60, Col. Ready

Taylor 74. Tiffin 62
Third place
Mil:h Olrislian 89. St Vincent. Pa. 7S

OtiMr reeel~ln' 'ottt: Penn St n.
Miuouri S9, Viraima 51. MIAMI (OHIO)
52, WalhiDIIOR $1. 48. Stanford 40.
Auburn 39, Purdue 3.5, Maryland 34, MarqYette 26, Oklahoma St. 26, N. Carolina
Sl. 19, Tuas Tedl' l8, Arkansut 11 :
Lou11¥ille I!I, Calif~!n II , Tuls11 10.
Afk.•UttleRock 9. ~ 1. SantaCJnra
.s, Iowa St. 3. Vanderbll1 3, E. Michlpn
2. Cleoraia Tech 2, DePaul I, George
Wutanaton 1, Tex.as-El Puo I.

""'* •. ...,. .••.,

Kenton%, I ndian l..ak~ 46
Kettering Alter 60. Louisvi lle '( Ky)

Old For1 Bank Tournament
Chlmptonship

21
20
2J
19
24

449
44J

Cle. Mllishall 56, Chardon 38
Cle St Joseph SB, FairJiew Part 53
Clear Fork 67, S. Central 37 '
Clyde 8), Perkinl41
Col. Hartley 91. Tol. Notte Dame 62
Crestwood 70, Cte. Eur 34
Cuyohoaa Falls 51 , Wnd!worth 49
Danbuf)' Lake5ide 59, BemviUe 29
Do.y. Jefferson 74. Day. Chrisltan 68
Delphos Jeffenon 58. V1111 Wen ~8
Delpho1 St John 's 72, Ehda 70
Do\'er 46, Oan\'il~ :'18
F~mont Ross 76, Slllldulky 44
Onraway 54, Loudonville 4!'
Hubbud -'9. MtnetVn48
Kalida 62, New Bremen 44
Lalr.ewood St. Augustine 44, CbanellS
Lexington 47, Bellevue 40
Lima Cath. 10, Botkins 29
Lorain Kin~ 47. Cle. Hay 40
LoV&lt;!Iand S.• Deer Part. JB
Mansfield O!r 39, Frcmonl St. Joteph

·, ..
"-I

\
Wonbinaton 65. Dublin

SCiCMO+I
'
Tima Cal- 'IS, Gi....,bllli 81

·

Tn~•IJ N. 6!1, ..,.,.. 65
- Tri-VI"*Io 76. Artooo101 74(2 an

,

Triwoy-'.571 ·
!\"Oyii.M
71
"J~IA Vlllo]l S. 13,
Show- 54
VOlleY fGrp 61. ...... S4
VllleyV'-Ql. ....... .a
v.mwiiO
...... ,., .

V-llolll.lbakllf!&lt;-..63

Ium

Sunday's score

s :n
Winnipeg . , 16 19 3 JS
Danos .............10 18 7 27

Sl Lotus ... .~...... .16 17

Su.pr Bowl
V1rginia Tech 28, Texas 10

Monday's scores

Colorado.&lt;......... 22 II

Tennessee 20, OHIO STATE 14
Cotton Bowl
Colorado 38, Ortgon 6
Rose Bowl
Southern Cabfomu:~ 41, Nonhwt slern
Ora"'e Bowl

Florida State 31 . Noire Dame 26

Jl

Today's game

49 .ll7 109
37 125 Ill

34 1'29 132
32118 136
32 106 155
29

106 1)4

:20 110 168

Saturday's scores

Sunday's scores
Los AnJelc:s 2, Anaheim 2 (lie)
Ptuladclptna S, VancCNv~r 5 (lie)
Boston 5, Wmnipeg J
NV Islanders 5. Buffalo 2
T:amp3 8ny ], Ottawa 0
Detroit 3. Har1ford 2
Calgary:.l, N.Y. Rangers I
Olicago 5, New Jene~ 0

Hockey

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

Iwa

liY L 1 £11, !if Ia
N.Y. Rangers .....l.S JI 6 .56. 150 liS

Monday '• scores

Waslun1ton 4. Pittsbursh 2
Toronto I , Dalkw 0

IF

(01)

Mason S8. Kenenn1 Aller 29
Meadowbrook 69, Union Loc;:al46
Mcthdnicaburg ,1), Spnng 'Nodhcaatern 4:2
,
MI. Gilellll 54, Johr111own NorthridJe

You Can Complete
You're 99%

52

4'

t:\4 142
90 112

PiUabuflh 6, Aonda S
M0111rml4. OKawa I
WuliiogiOn 3, Han(oniO .
Toronto 4, St Louis l (OT)
N.Y. Rangers 8, Edmonton 3

Flonda (12 -0),

Manetta 48, Federal Hockin&amp; 47 (OT)
Marion Cn1h. 53, Col Academ~ S I

N. Canlon 47, Grcensb\q Gm:n42
N~w Pttiladelpbia 60, Claymont '4
(01)
Nordonin 6:'1. S Euclid Reaina 34
Notwayne 43, Akron E 26
On1ano 49, Wynford lO
Ottawa·Glnndorf 4,, Lima Sr. 44.
OuoviUc 6S, Miller Cit)' 48
Pandora-Gilboa 64, Leipsic
Ravenna SE 49, Mmlqatan 44
Ridgedale 67, Manon Hardina56
River Vtew So4, W. HolmcsJ4
S Charleslon Southeallern 6,, Spi.ns.
Catholic 33
Sandy Vol. 6S, Ridpwood &gt;46
S~ronpvillc .a. Elyria 41
Tec!pllleh 49, Day. Stebbin•41
1
.ififfin Coltiinbian 68, Norwalk 42

l
. LosAngeles ...... I41S 9
Vancouwr ....... 121510
Aruaheim ..... .1422 4
Edmonton ........ 13 20 6
Calsary
II 21 7
SanJosc ............... 825 4

Fltsta Bowl, Tempt Arb..
\'S .

100 102

Paeilk Di~lsien

Outback Bowl
Perut Stnle 4J, Aubum 14
Gator Bowl
Syracuse 41, Clemson 0
CilrU!Bowl

NebraskA ( I I-0)
8:30p.m !CBS)

l n 91 122
I 17 18 147

Ctntnl Dl•ldon
11 L 1 I'll. Ill Ia
Detroit ..... .. .27 7 2 S6 IJ8 7S
Toronto ......... 20 D 6 -46 123 109
Lbica,go .. ..... 19 12 8 46 'IJ2 Ill

Puch Hewl

Virglnio 34, Georgia27

wlclr.JO

Cuyahoga Falls 63, Hudson 61 (OT)
Danbury Laketidc 77, Monroeville 58
Dixie 64, Millon-Union ~8 E. Canton 75. Rootstown 62
Edgenon .59. Amwerp 42
El~ n 62, Upper Sctoto Val 45
Frurbanb 81, N Umon 75 (OT)
Federal Hocking 74, Trimble 49

ll 183 I I?
2 40 110 Ill
J 3~ 113 12.1
l 3-' 124 126
)

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Nonh Carolina 20, Ark nnw I0

J2

2410

Montreal ...... 19 16
16 19
Buffalo
Boston ..... . ... ,, 14
Hartford .. . .. II 21
Otrawa ............... 8 28

Ubort, Bowl
Ens! Carolina 19, St:Word 13
Carqunt Bowl

.

CIUTOIIton 28, Tusc:uawas Vnl. 26
C.nicrl&gt;urc 80. Ucki111 Hts. J2
Champion 48, Cnnfield 4;\
Cin MI. Notre Dame 69. Glen Bare 40
Cin Readma 54, Norwood 1.5
Cin Wyomtng 40, Mtddletown Fen-

Grahnm 64, W Libcrty·Si!lem 61
Htc:ksvtlle 67, Edon 66
Hillsdale 60. Ashland Crt:MVII!w 'i7
Howland 66, Cortland Laken:w 58
Johnstown 74, Heath 72

Mki·Michlgan Rotary Classic
.
Third plat&lt;
Baldwin-Wallau- 87. Alma 77

11
17

620

51

Frontier 89, Cnmeron. W Yo 'i2
Ft Lorrurue .SJ, New Knoxville 40

Manhaii'Optl,.lsC Toumammt
Champiotuhip
Alb1on U , Cap11:ll 71

8

9

790
726
717
697

48

piiiC~

Wtlham &amp; Mary 64. Air Force l50

2

4. Kwu ......... :............7-1 1.:1112
~- CINCINNATI (1) ......8-0 1.366
6. &lt;k«Je!own ............. 11-1 1.217

dwouJb OM r.Dinl
' JlilitliuC
.

Cin. Tof110, Parkersbura. W.Va. ]9
Cin Walnut Hills 70, Cin. PurceiiManan 66
Cie Benedtcnne 88, l...extng1on (Ky.)
Clay 64
Cle Cathollc 62. Lornin CntJ/ 49
Cle. St. Ignatius 49, Rocky Rtver 46
Clear fprk. 68. E Kno"- S2
Col. Bnggs 77, Tree of Life S4
Coventry 72, Rittman 67
Covington (Ky.) Cath. S6, Col. Harney

~2

100
9l
120
101
141

Northeul Dhision
Pins burgh

Saturday's scores

Saturday's action

60

'

College bowls

As.hlancl S6, Dublin Scioto 48
A1htabula'Edgewood 42, Perry 36
BarberfOn 45, Akron Hoban 16
Belpre 63, Warrea Local 48
BiJ Walnut73, Grand\'iew 71
Boordmlln 67, Mentor 34
Buckeye Central62, Crestline 44
Bucyrua49, Galion ~$Cadiz SS, Jewen-Scio 39
Canron Cat It 51,l.akewood 53
Canton McKinley 41,l.ouisvllle J9
Cardtnal O'Hara. P:t ~7 . Pickerinaron

.

Aorida ..... ........ 2S I0 2 l2 134
'iO 141
Philadelphia .. .22 II
Wuhln~ton........ l9 IS J 41 106
Tampa ay ...... .I61S 6 )8 109
New Jertc)' ....... 15 19 4 )4 96
N.Y. lslanden ..... .9 22 6 24 lOS

SundaJ, Jan. 7

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Chillicolhe 6). Logan 56
Cin Elder 85. Tipp Cll)' 69
On. Moeller 57. Tol Catholic: 46
Cin. Mount Het~hhy 7S. Cin. Princeton

Geneva, P11. 83. Rndlay 79

Iaa
~ fii,Jblr.
t ..MollochUI&lt;I11(62) .. 1~ 1,622
I

Canal Fullon NW 70, Canton,GienOat

lOT)

Champ.,..~lp

1be top 25 1eam1 in Th~ Auociatcd
Pral' college balkelball poll, with finlplace voles in parcntbeaes, rccord1
throu&amp;b Dec. 31, tocal points 1baled on 25
poittta for a firat-plaee vOle through one
poitl for ll 2.5ftt-place VOle, Wid pl'tVJOOI
rankina:

Philadclpt.im arDallas, 12:JO p m.
IOOY,nnpolil at ICnnsas City, 4 p.m.

Carding1on 68, Westerv1Ue N. SS
Carrollton 58. Tuscaraw'as Val .5.5

f1ndl1y Inn Holiday Toumamenl

:.

Weinon (W Vo..) Madonna 66, Conot·
lon \/.al 61
Wes1erv1lle S. 80, Porlsmoulh 40
White Ri..,er Vnlley.lnd 17. Cin
Country Day S8
Wu:ldiffc 62. M01yf~eld 43
Wynford 72, Ridgedale 61
You. Unuhoc 69, Campbell Mcmori01l
66

51

South 43

Tournaments

Top25 men's
college poll

Wahama. W.Va. 67, Whitcoak66
Walsh Jesutt 80, Lake Carh 74
Waynesf~eld-Ooshcn 75, New Btcmcn

Saturday
Buffalo nt Pittsburgh. 12·10 p m
Green Bay at San Franc1sco, 4 p.m.

Canfield 83, Parkersburg (W Va.)

Non-&lt;onftHnct play
Ctncinnali 103, McNeese S1 69
Cumberland, Ky. 78. Cedanr1lle 67
· Miamt (Ohio) 79, Day1on !16
Murray St 81. Aahland ~8
Xn\'ier 78, Morgan St S9 •
Youna11own St. 69, Nio.garn 60

8

Divisional playoffs

Canal Wiochester 55, Millenpon 45

Saturday's a&lt;li&lt;ln

Portland at Bolton, 7:30p.m.
Toromo 11 Orlando, 7;:\0 p.m.
Hoo- II Chi"''!•· 8 p.m.
Detroit at Milwaukee. 8:'\0 p.m
Utah at San Antonio, 8:30 m
Indiana • LA. Clippers. I :30 p m
Philadelphia al Golden Stale, 10·30

W. tbesterl..akota64, W.lrcde31, N.C

42

Saturday's action
l'.kron E. 69. Tallmadp SS

NCAA Division I
men's scores

TOIIIgbt's games

The Dally Sentinel • ~ I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

In the NFL playoffs.

1

Souther~ ·cal,

~By The ~lated Press

Tuesday. January 2, 1996

Oturrent
OLast3
ocopyOf

!,,...y-46. Day. Carroii4S

• ' 'fullaw 46, Rittman 1'
' • lt
ViUey View 4,, Mi&amp;lletowa Madison

,!'f . Von a.... 61. Fosollrio 31
; Vi Ilion Cou111y 37, The Dallel:, Ore. 36
·. W. - 6 6 . Salem4t
{
W. a..- tAbor. S7. Middlolown 31
ll

W. O..Up 57, 1'1nn1 Sl
W Libaiy-Satem ~1. Benjamin Lopn
L

'

woynodalo37,Ki-Chr 29
Woynaville 5l, Corlille so
wellsville ... E. u...pool 23
Weotfall57, loJII Elm 34
WiotHire-4&lt;4. Ciodinol 43 (01) .
Willaol S2, Sbolby 46

K:kttd items and
Accepted.

Wit....., s.60, -d.!9

Football

NFL playoffs
Salitrday'• wliikard ..,.. 31, Mlllllli 22
l'llllodolflli• ~. Oolroil 37
'

~·· wlhkllrdiCORI

GneO Bay 37. ~~- 20
• ''tt' I U1 35, S. DieJo lO

'.

Eagles, Packers, Colt~ _ &amp; Bills ea~n· s~cond-rQund---berths
By BARRY WILNER
weekend, the Eagles romped~
league's holiest team, then
AP Football Writer
,
The last time they met, the Dal- for the warm weather in Vero B
la,s Cowboys bung!~ their way to a Fla. Coach Ray Rhodes decided to
piJlposterous loss to the Philadelphia , 'lake them to Dodgertown for prac- .
Eagles. On Sunday, Barry Switzer tice this week.
"Going to Florida is n .a vacaand his players get a chance to atone
for that defeat and move within a tion tiine," defensive en William
~uller said. "This is the t me when
step of a Super Bowl trip .
For the Eagles, it's a chance to we 've got to have each d every
re. We 've
confirm their home victory on Dec. person commit even
got
a
great
opportunity
here."
I0 was not a fluke, not just a game
'Added wide \eceiver Fred Bar·
handed to them by the blundering
nett, "The veterans and leaders on
Cowboys.
this team should go to the young
Philadelphia.set up its third meetplayers and let them know this is a
ing with Dallas this season by routbusiness trip. We are there to pracing Detroit58-37. ln the other NFC
tice. We still have a goal we haven't
game, San Francisco is at home Saturday to Green Bay, which heat reached yet."
To reach that goal, the Eagles
Atlanta 37-20 in the opening round.
.The AFC playoffs begin Saturday need a defensive effort similar to the
at Pittsburgh, where the Steelers play one at home three weeks ago. They
Buffalo, which advanced with a 37- held Dallas to 47 yards in the second
22 victory over Miami. On Sunday, half of a 2()..17 win. Twice on fourth·
Kansas City is home for Indianapo- and-inches from the Dallas 29, the
lis, a 35-20 winner at San Diego in Cowboys went for it and were
the first round.
stopped. The ftrst time didn't count
While the Cowboys mended last because of the two-minute warning.

'

'

;

,,'

.'

No matter - Phil""elphia stopped get the opportumly to co)ltributo,"
Can they contribute enough to
Emmitt Smith's run again.
Although the Eagl~s barely won halt the delending champiOII 49crs?
their next game and lost their season
"We're going to w.in it ail,:' he
finale, t~y had no trouble in the said' after the win over Adanta.
wild-ca4 game against Detroit, " Why not?"
· ·
which carried a seven-game winning
Buffalo also is riding a high after
streak into the playoffs.
dismantling Miami with an imposing
Rhodes doesn 't want them getting running game. The-Bills set an AFC
carried away with that victory.
record with 341 yards on the ground,
"After a win like that, you know with Tim Tindale, the No. 4 running
there's going to be some things said back, gaining 68 yards on four carthat could probably swell some peo- ries, including a 44-yard TD.
ple 's heads," said Rhodes, the 1995
" Until it really happens, you
Coach of the Year. "And I think if we don't know realize how much of a
go down there, we don't have to read thrill it would be to contribute," Tinthat. We' II get an isolated situation dale said. "It's obviously the bigh·
and I think that will help us out a lit- light of my career so far."
tle bit more."
Zack Crockett had several highGreen Bay brings league MVP lights against San Diego. The Colts
Brett Favre and a hot auack to San . rookie. taking over for injured MarFrancisco. Coach Mike Holmgren, a shall Faulk, gained 147 yards and
former assistant with the 49ers, has scored twice, catapulting lndianapo·
ple(lly of confidence in this team.
lis to its game at Kansas City.
"This is the most unselfish group
"I felt I could perform in tbe
I've ever been around," Holmgren
NFL. but to have this type of game
said. "Everyone on our team con·
at this point was more than I anticitributes ·and they are all excited, pated,'' he said.
because they know they are going to

Capitals and Maple Leafs latest victors
Before Monday, Washington was
By DAVID GINSBURG
LANDOVER, Md. (AP)- First, 1-12-0 when trailing after two peri'
Washington caught Pittsburgh with- ods.
"The
biggest
thing
is that we
out flu-ridden superstar Mario
came
from
behind
in
the
thir~ peri·
Lemieux. Then the Capitals caught
the Penguins from behind, rallying in od. It's not an easy thing to do in the
n.-..JUJ.JUJ\.onSd)iu~- Indianapolis quiuterback Jim Harbaugh ' the third period for three goals.
National Hockey League," coach
(4) trots into the end zone from three yards CMJt p115t teammate Jason
Calle Johansson, Stefan Ustorf Jim Schoenfeld said. "To do it
Mathews and an unidentified San Diego defende_r In the fourth quarand Peter Bonllra scored in the final against a team like that and a fine
ter or Sunday's AFC wild-card playoff game in San Diego, Calif., where period Monday as Wasl\ington goalie like Tom Barrasso, that's just
the Colts won 35-20. (AP)
·
stretched its winning streak to four icing on the cake."
The
Capitals
won
despite
going
·
games with a 4-2 victory.
without
a
power-play
opportunity
In the only other NHL game,
until the final two minutes. Their
Toronto blanked Dallas 1·0.
The Penguins are now 1-3-1 with- horne streak is three wins short of the
out Lemieux, but the Capitals team record set in 1989.
Jaromir Jagr tied Lemieux for the
weren't about to put an astefisk by
NHL lead with his 34th goal and
their sixth straight home victory.
. "Without Lemieux they still have Barrasso stopped 33 shots for the
one Division I otTer.
· . By ARNIE STAPLETON
a lot of offensive. talent and they're Penguins, who had won three
But he started as a 17-year-old
. · GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)
still one of the top teams in the straight and 12 of 16.
Believe it or not, Brett Favre isn't freshman at Southern Mississippi
The Penguins and coach Ed John·
league," said Washington's Steve
cocky. only candid. He may talk bold after ~ginning the season as the sevston
blamed the loss more on the
Konowalchuk,
who
had
a
goal
and
and he may he brash, but he's no enth-string quarterback.
third-period
collapse than the
an
assist.
He led the Golden Eagles to 29
braggart.
absence
of
Lemieux,
the league's
Down
2-1,
the
Capitals
carne
"My personality, even though I victories and two bowl triumphs
leading
scorer.
back
by
outshooting
Pittsburgh
12don't say many things, is that· I from 1987·90 a~d engineered mem"We were the better team for two
1 in the opening seven minutes of the
believe I can win the MVP. I believe orable upsets over Florida State and
and then we let it go in the
periods,
final
period.
Johansson
tied
it
with
I can be the quarterback in the Super Auburn. His senior year, he returned
last
period,"
center Petr Nedved said
19:291eft
and
Ustorf
gave
WashingBowl and in the Hall of Fame one from a car wreck and abdominal ton its first lead with 13:48 remain"The
turning
point in the game
. day," Favre said. "I believe all surgery to lead an upset over Alabawas the first shift in the third period
ing.
those things. I think if I didn't I ma and was named the MVP of the
when we gave up that goal," JohnBondra
extended
his
point-scorEast-West Shrine Game even though
wouldn't be sittmg here today."
ston
said. ""Ole sign of a good club
ing
streak
to
six
games
with
bis
21st
One down and two to go for the he lost.
is
when
it gets ahead and stays
goal,
an
empty-netter
with
28
sec·
Still, nobody projected stardom in
overwhelming choice for the 1995
onds
to
go.
ahead."
· NFL Most Valuable Player award in the NFL.
Atlanta selectelf him 33rd overall
balloting conducted by The Associ"in
the
1991 draft and made him their
ated Press and announced Monday.
third-stringer.
He threw just five
"I can't say enough about how
passes
that
yeartwo were intermuch this award means fdt me and
for my team,''-said Favre. who last cepted and the three others were mismonth rubbed some the wrong way fires. Given more to nocturnal cus·
by repeating what everybody else toms that study habits,_ Favre even
seemed to he saying - that he missed the team photo after a night
By JIM O'CONNELL
Big Eight
of partying.
deserved the award.
AP
Basketball
Writer
Kansas
had
the one stumble
With Chris Miller coming off a
"I think people understand what
The made-for-TV, inter-confer- against Temple in a good start, one
· I mean to this team,'' Favre said. "I Pro Bowl playoff season. the Falcons
ence
glamour matchups are almost less than fading Missouri had in the
: just shou)dn't have said it. 1 can't say wanted to draft a defensive back, so
all
in
the books. The next two last week at the Rainbow Classic,
: this show runs only by me. I didn 't they tmded Favre to.Green Bay in
months
will he filled with giiJileS Oklahoma State, Iowa State, Nebras·
. mean it that way. And the guys 1992.
between
teams familiar with each ka and Kansas State all have good
· understood. they kind of laughed
Showing he WJIS worth the first·
the
games that decide who records and a lot of tough league
other;
: about 11. A lot of people outside the round pick general manager Ron
makes
it
into
the NCAA tournament: road games ahead.
· organization took it 1hc wrong way." Wolf parted with, Favre soared from
As New Year's Day signals the
Big Ten
But Favre backed up those dec - backup to Pro Bowler in three
end
of
the
college
football
season,
it
It's
hard
to
believe the one unde·
larations even as he backed off months and guided Green Bay to a
also means conference play begins in feated team as the new year starts is
them, and there was no denying his 9"7 finish, its best in 20 years.
college basketball.
Penn State. Illinois and ·Iowa each
Then, he had to establish that he
sensational season.
thousand
words
can't
say
it
any
have one loss and figure to be in a
A
Favre, who set an NFC record wasn't a one-year wonder.
North
Carolina
at
Duke
fight for the title with Michigan and
better
than
with 38 touchdown passes and threw
Favre responded superbly- as a
or
Missouri
at
Kansas
or
An
zona
at
Purdue.
Indiana is 7-5 and hasn 't
for an NFL-best 4,4 13 yards, guid- passer. a runner when necessary, and
UCLA
or
Michigan
at
Indiana
or
been
ranked
since losing two of three
ed the Packers to an 11 -5 record and as a motivator. He took the Packers
Georgetown
at
Syracuse.
in
the
season-opening
Great Alaska
their fr.st NFC Central title in 23 to I he playoffs the neKt two seasons.
It's conference records that Shootout.
years. It was their first It-victory Green Bay's first consecutive postdecide
which schools get those 34 atConference USA
season since 19&amp;6. when Bart Starr season berths since the Vince Lornlarge berths in the field of 64. And
The first-year league has unbeatwas MVP. They also beat the Atlanta bardi era.
in the power conferences, it better be ens Memphis and Cincinnati in the
His toughness lured All-Pro
Falcons 37-20 in the opening round
.500
or better.
top five and eight other solid schools
of the playoffs t.o advance to Satur- defensive end Reggie White to
In
the
lower-level
leagues,
teams
including Louisville, Marquette,
day 's game at San Francisco.
Green Bay in 1993.
·
can't
afford
more
than
a
loss
or
two
DePaul and Saint Louis. There's no
Favre earned 69 votes from a
Lasr year, Favre had to prove he
. 10 case things don't go as planned in
automatic
bid, so the thrc;e-div1sion
nationwide panel of 88 sports writ· was worth the five-year. $19 million
the post-season conference tourna" conference could be chasing the
ers and broadcasters. San Francisco's contract he'd signed. He showed he
men!.
record of siK at-large NCAA berths.
star receiver, Jerry Rice, was neKt was worth every penny. throwing 33
With conference play set to start
Pac:·IO
with 10 votes.
touchdowns with just 14 intercepin earnest this week, here's a quick
Arizona rose from unranked in
. "He does everything ypu can ask lions.
look at each of the top leagues:
the preseason to No. 4, beating
But this season Favre faced his
: from a quarterback, and he's still
Adantic Coast Conference
Georgetown and losing to Syracuse.
. young" and learning," coach Mike stiffest test, having 10 prove he
Wake Forest is stilllhe·favorite as UCLA has recovered from a bad.
Holmgren satd.
could win without perennial AU-Pro
long as Tim Duncan's in the middle. stan in the Maui Invitational. CaliFavre said he couldn't have won
Sterling Sharpe, who was released
Duke's a little better than people fomia has been up and down but
ihe award on statistics alone.
..,followmg heck ~urgery.
expected and .North Carolina is Tremaine Fowlkes, lasr season's
: "The numbers 1 put up definiteThat he d1d tn a b1g way. In the
much better than previously thought freshman of the year, becomes eli. (y raised some eyebrO'\'S. But to put· Packers' 37-20 victory over Atlanta
Clemson
and North Carolina State gible on Jan. 25. Everyone else but
n Sunday, Favre hit nine receivers m
: ap the numbers and be ·tt-5 proba·
have
gaudy
records they' ll need to Oregon State should he in a fight to
: bly won it," Favre said . "As I've the first half alone.
back
up
with
league victories. Geor- round out the first division.
· 5aid all along, when 1 play bad, we
"That'sjustthe nature of me, just
gia Tech will have.to go at least 12Southeastern Conference
·probably will lose. It's a proven fact.
to beat the odds," said the 26-ye..-4
in
the
league
to
offset
a
disap.
Kentuc_
ky couldn't improve on a
. When I play good, w,.won 't always old q~arterback who said he Jxrlieves
pointing 6-7 start.
weseason No. I ranking and lost
win, but we have a shot to win right
he can throw so touchdowns il1. a
Adantic 10
only to UMass. First-year coach
down to the end."
season.
Massachusetts
has
been
tops
Thbby Smith has led a veteran Gear• Favre said he will have to win the
"This award is mce," Favre said,
against a brutal schedule. Virginia gia team past Mississippi State in the
·~uper Bowl before he's considered
"but the Super Bowl ring is what I
Tecl! is still a solid second-besJ with rankings. Auburn is 12 I Without a
tl!e best quarterback in the league. really. want.' '
George Washington not that far
big·time win. Arkans . has shown
l:le feels up to the task because he
behind. Rhode Island has been a surits youth all season
1s sbll scary.
has spent a career proving himself. --Spo~ briefs- prise and no one can figure out Tern·
There has been much 'mprovement
II started when he was a wildpie, which is 3-6 with wins over at South Carolina. V: derbilt and
-~·
eyed S&lt;;&gt;uthern hoy in K.iln;· Miss.,
Hockey
then-No. I Kansas and then-No. 2 Tennessee.
breaking his father's windows with
AMHERST, Mass. (AP) - Swe·
Villanova.
Westem Athie
on&amp;rence
qrant heaves of a tattered foot~all den beat the United States 3·0 to
Big East M;;;r.,.....,..:----:~~~~~~~ the seven-game
that was eventually gobbl e'd by the advance to the semifinals of the
Syracuse started II
o OS·
suspension of Brandon Jessie and
:alligators in Rotten Bayou like some World Junior Championship.
ing to UMass and joi Georgerown,
lost only to Kansas and Wake Foro'f the family's dogs.
Per Ragnar Bergkvist made 24 Connecticut and Vi lanova ·in the
est New Mexico Willi its first I0, but
=~ After losing somethin~ call¢ the
saves and .Nils Ekman, Johan Molin
it wasn't an impressive list of wins.
league's elite group. ostein College
¥.Jullett Bowl in the ninth grade and ~han Davidsson sebred aoals
is bouncing back o a horrible year "1Cxas-EI Paso's only loss was atArii · lough 8-6 lo!S ,that he still can't for
eden, which will face ·the
with a nation
king. The rest.of
zona. The league's' moSt famous
tiihom - Favre was unable to lead Czech epublic on Wednesday. Rus- the 13 te could be on the outside rookie coach, Jerry Tttrkanian, is 6fincock (Miss.) North Central Hiah sia beat Finland 6-2 to advance to a
in March nless they find a way to
4 at Fresno State.
SChOol to a ~tate title, and he got just ~emifinal against Canada.
win 12 or more·teague games.

.Favre captur~s
NFL's MVP award '

Conference action
to start this week

••

'J

-~

A victory would ha'&lt;e been inspirational for the Penguins, who have
struggled without Lemieux in the
lineup over the past three years.
"A win would hav~ given us a lit·
tie shot in the arm , especially our
younger guys," Johnston said. "It
would let them know that without 66
we can win some hockey games."
Lemieux will be back in the
Pittsburgh lineup before right wing
Glen Murray, who is expected to
miss at least two weeks after he separated his shoulder in a first-period
collision.
,
The Capitals, meanwhile, lost
two defensemen. Mike Eagles will
miss three weeks with a broken right
index finger and Jim Johnson will be
out 14 days with a left shoulder
strain.
Washington took control almost
immediately after the puck dropped
to start the third period. Johansson
made it 2-2 with a slap shot from the
right side that got by a screened Barrasso.
Ustorf then got the go-ahead goal
by tapping in the rebound of a shot
by Johnson, who had broken into,the
Pittsburgh zone alone after taking a
lead pass from :;ergei Gonchar.
Jim Carey bad 23 saves for the
Capitals in his fifth straight victory.
Jagr gave the Penguins ;1 1·0 lead

a 4:35 of the fi rst period, beating
Carey on the glove side with a wrist
shot from the lop of the left circle.
The score ended Carey's string of
seven straight scoreless periods at
home.
The Capitals got even at 12:59,
less than a minute after Pittsburgh
failed to score during a 62-second,
two-man advantage. Konowalchuk
left the penalty box, took a lead pass
from Ustorf and skated in alone
before deking Barrasso and scoring
from the left side of lhe net.
The Penguins took a 2-1 lead on
Tomas Sandstrom's power-play goal
at II :50 of the second period.
Maple Leafs 1, Stan 0
At Dallas, Felix Potvin stoP.Jlilll
33 shots for his first shutout of~
- .
season and penally-killer Ma·
Sundin s'cored the gal!'e 's only go .
Potvin survived a 19-shot fi
period that included five · Dalhf
power plays and went on to registclr
his sixth career shutout.
'
Dallas is winless-with just one t&amp;.
in its last 12 games.
· The only goal of the game was ~
shorthanded one by Sundin at 2: 5~
of the second period, his 13th of tit
season. It was the lith shorthan~
goal Dallas has given up this seasol
after surrendenng just seven last se~
son.
&lt;

1

T

I

Youngstown State's Tressel !
'
examines Marshall
job
offer
!
...
. ·-'

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Youngstown State coach Jim Tressel
is examining an offer from Marshall
to become the Thundering Herd's
head coach, his agent said.
John Geletka, of Youngstown,
Ohio, said Monday he will meet with
Tressel to go over the offer. He was
not sure when a decision will be
made.
. Details of the offer were not
available. Marshall athletics director
. Lee Moon did not return a message
seeking comment Monday.
Marshall president J. Wade Gilley
has denied that Tressel was offered
the job and has said the uniVersity
probllbty would take two weeks to
hire a coach.
Georgia hired Marshall coach
Jim Donnan on Dec . 25 to replace
Ray Goff.
Tressel told a Charleston telcvi·
sion station over the weekend that he
was interested in the Marshall job.
"It's a matter of probably at this
point firming up numbers and firm ing up some of the things Jim is concerned about with the program, "
Gcletka said.
Geletka has sa1d T sci w nts
Marshall to incrca · sa aries for
assistant coaches. As ur cia to
the hiring process has said 1' sscl
also wants Marshall S1adium
changed from artificial lurf to grass
and wants more academic counselors
available for players.
Marshall's head coach receives
$70.000 to $80,000 a year, with
incentives thai can push the ligurc to
about $100.000, G1llcy said.
Tressel, 42, is 87-4 I-2 at
Youngstown_State with Div1sion J.

--

AA championships in 1991, 199~
and 1994.
1
Marshall moves up to NCAA
Divis1on 1-A in 1997.
·;
Donnan was 64-21 at Marshaq
and took the Herd to four l-AA 11110.
games, mcludmg three againsi
Youngstown State. Marshall beat th~
Penguins for the tille in 1992 and
tothern in 1991 and 1993, then
to Montana State in the 1995
game .

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--Sports briefsFootball
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Twenty-six of the NFL's 30 teams
spent m'ore than the $37. 1 million
salary cap in 1995, according to
NFL Players Association figures
reported by the San Francisco

Chronicle.
The teams evaded the cap by
•paying large bonuses, but pro-rating
them over the length of the players'
contracts, the newspa~r said.
Dallas spent the most money,
more than $62.2 million, or 67 per·
cent above the cap. According to the
'union's figures, the Cowboys paid
ialmost $40:5 million in . signing
:bonuses, inl:hiding ·$13 million to
:Deion Sanders.

2,4 EAST MAIN

-·PoMEROY
112RI7
vlule O
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.

.P . 6 • The Dally ~Se..n.tltlnef

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Janllllry

The Dally Sl .n tlnel • Page 'I

_!_()I'Mroy •, Middleport. Ohio

2, 1996

o.lleges stlould
cut -out ·- frills, get back to·basies
.
'

Ann·
Landers
"1115.Loo ........

,........$S\'1 ·CrMIDfl

7

•

I

•• By ANN LANDERS

:
Dear Ann Landers: I read the let: ter from " Old Prof" who sa¥s col: leges aie more interested in the bot• tom line than in education. If anyone
: doubts "Old Prof," tell him or her to
; contact a few emplqyment managers
' and examine the applications filled
: out by the applicants, not the canned
' -resumes.
., • I used to do the hiring for my
I

wmpany before l retiNd aeverll
yean qo. [ di5cirdid .about 80 petcent of the applications because of
poor spelling or incorrect or missing
answen. 'The incorrect or missing
answen appeared to occur because
the IIPPlicants could 'lot comprehend
the question, although ['m sure .others felt it was not important to
answer the questions.
Nobody knows what our colleges are turning out better than the
employment managers. Juf!.t ask
them. -John in Petersburg, Ky.
Dear John ~ I don't need to ask
them. I see the sentence construction
'and spelling of-today's college graduates in my mail every day and it's
depressing. In my opinion, educators

.

.

items in the-booklet are very low. In idea what could have been troubling
should cut out some of the frills and
addition, "tic" includes several arti- him. To all Ofltward appearances be
get back to basi¢s. .
•
Dear AnnJLanders: A few years cles answering many of the questions was the modcil youth who had everything - looks, brains, person~ity
survivors most often ask.
ag&lt;~, when I was reco&gt;-erin11 from mv
The booklet will be mailed only and was wc!fl-liked by his peers.
mastectomies, .I had absolutely no
My IS-year-old son was very
idea of where to tum for the neces- to medical professionals 'and women
sary "equipment." to help ·me feel who request it If your ~rs would much like that young man. When I
comfortable and whole again. I did- like a copy, please tell them to call knew be was going through a diffin't kJ)ow which·stores, if any, carried 1-800- 850.9445, or write "tic," cult time, I asked repeatedly what he
was so unhappy about and got the
prosthes'l:s or attractive head gear to Hanover, Pa., 17333-0080.
typical,
"N01hing," answer. One
cover my hair loss.
·
Thanks for helping so many
day,
I
followed
him to his room and
The American Cancer Society women across the country. -A SurI asked him once more to please tell
has just launched a first-time'FU!Jii- vivor in Chicago
• Dear Chicago: You're the one me what was troubling him. Again
cation called "tlc"to help breast cancer survivors and those undergoing . who is helping. I'm glad you wrote. · he responded, "Nothing. Just leave
Dear Ann Landers: I read the col- me alone. I don't want to talk about
treatment. This ltoklet offers produmn
about the IS-year-old "All it!" Instead of persisting, I gave him
ucts and information to women who
do not know about or are not near AmeriCan' Boy" who committed sui- a hug. As soon as my arms were
helpful resources. The pnces of the cide. His family and friends had no around' him and his head rested on

.

l Gunett
By ELIZABETH NEUS
News Service
~

• WASHINGTON-'- Some adults
·who think they 're finished with vac.
,cinations might now be perfect can;didates for protective shots against
•hepatitis A, chicken pox and typhoid.
Each disease is now preventable
by a vaccine introduced in the Unit1
•.ed States this year, but those immui,nizations haven't yet been fonnally
; added 'to the schedule followed by
;doctors. A new repon, published in
~Monday's edition of the Annals of
; Internal
Medicine,
offer a few guide,1hnes.
.
.
I "We · ~ant to try . to introduce
. Ithese vaccmes to ,prov1ders of health
1cate for adults," said Dr. Pierce
;Gardner, the American College of
•Physicians' representative tq the fed:eral-Advisory Committee on Immu:nization PraCtices (ACIP) and lead
tauthor of the report. "Traditionally,
~immunization efforts have not been
1targeted to adults."
I
Here's a look at each vaccine:.
·I -Hepatitis A. The infectious Iiv:
:er disease- this versipn spread by
:people who fflil to wash their hands
~fter using the bathroom - strikes
~tween 75,000 and 125,000 people
ra year in the United States. While
t hildren are the usual carriers, adults
·, et mu.cb sicker.
.
,
, While there are known nsk facJars ..,... international travel, contact
.)riith a sick person, a child. in daycare
.:.. 42 percent of those who get
~patitis A have no risk factor, the
~nnals report said.
·', The best candidates for the
liavrix vaccine are, according to the
~ort: people, including militarypersonhel, who work in or travel to
·Fountries, where hepatitis A is common; homosexual men; . users of
Illegal drugs;. people with chronic
liver disease; and people who might
Gatch it at work, such as lab employees.
l 1lle report says other people with
~cupational risk, such as food han~lers and daycare workers, can be
~accinated if they want.
; -Chicken pox. The primary target of the Varivax vaccine is· chi!dren, and the ACIP recently recoml).ended that they receive the vaccine
t;:tween 15 and 13 months·of age,
about the time they get their
riaeasles-mumps-rubella shots.
: But chicken pox can be a more
stvere 'disease in adults, and the

j

Annals repon suggests that adults
an~ adolescents :who_
b~ve not had
ch1cken pox be 1mmumzed. While
infants and young children only
need one shot, older recipients need
two, the second four to eight weeks
after the first
'
1lle report lists, in order, the most
susceptible groups of adults·and adolescents: health care workers; people
who live with those who have damaged immune systems; people who
W'!fk in places where chicken pox . ,
spreads e115ily, such as schools or ' I
daycare centers; young . adults in
"~lased" populations, such as colleges or the military; non-pregnant
women of child-besting age: international travelers; and anyone else
who's never had the pox.
·
· The use of Vsrivax does raise ·
questions, however. Experts still
aren't sure if young children will.
need boosters later, and worry that
once infants and toddlers are
immune, most cases will appear in
adults.
"We won't know the answers to
these questions for IS to 20 ye;lfs,
after the children get full immunity,"
Gardner said.
- 'JYpboid. Not that this is a
common disease in the United
States, but about 500 Americans a
yell£ come down with this food
and/or water-borne disease after visiting countries where it is. Most of .
those countries don't require vac• cines for visitors, but the Annals
report suggests that people traveling
to countries with typhoid be immunized. ·
'
Gardner. also makes a plug for
- incr~ased use of vaccines against
pneumococcal pneumonia, a leading
cause of death ,ap10ng the elde~ly.
Only one-quarter of those at nsk
have received the vaccine, the report
said, but among those people, about
S,OOO fewer of them die each year as
a result.
"There are a large . number of
people under ~ge 65 for which these
vaccines ;u-e indicated,'' he said.
"That's where we do poorly."
In the Annals report, he points out
that the American College of Physicians' Task Force for·Adult Immu· n.ization .recommends SO as an age
where people should evaluate all
their preventative health measures
with· their doctors. About one-third
of those between SO and 64 are good
candidates for the pneumococcal

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Press Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) With a puppet frog at the helm
.and kids' dreams as the theme, the
annual · Tournament of Roses
parade got under way unscathed
yesterday despite o'l!l)oighl wind
that buffeted the thouSands who
waited along the parade route.
The wind, gusting to SO mph,
died at d~wn and none Qf the 55
flowery floats was damaged.
Kermit the Frog, with puppeteer Steve Whitmire crouched
in back of a 1948 Lincoln convertible, was grand marshal of the
I07th edition of the granddaddy
of parades. Kermit was the 6rst
nonhuman to lead the parade
solo.
. .
Kids' Laughter &amp; Dreams was
the parade theme, and entries
included a giant slot car game, a
huge teddy bear and a )lousesized elephant. Bozo the Clown,
a k a Larry Harmon, rode on a
float in honor of Bozo's 50th
birthday.
"Just keep laughing!" Bozo
shouted to wide-eyed kids.
Twenty-two float entries won
trophies.
Florists' Transworld Delivery
won the trophy for most beautiful
commercial entry with "Tea With
Friends," an Alice in Wopderland :
theme, while the prize for most
btautiful noncommercial entry
went to Costa Rica's "Dreams of
Paradise" featuring two giant
macaws in a rainforest
TOURNAMENT Of ROSES PARADE • La Canada Flintridge
"This is so much fun, I can't ·
Tournament
of Roses Association "Sea Drums" float rolls dowa tbe
believe it," said a giggling Rose
·
lO?tb
Tournament
of Roses Parade route Monday in Pasadena, ~allf.
Queen, Keli Hutchins, 17.
The "Sea Dteanw" Ooat won the "Animation Award" for best use of
It was a Chamber of Comanimation and motion. (AP Photo)
merce picture on TV: Blue sky,
sunshine and balmy temperatures
about 65 .degrees at 8 am. with
apart from that, the crowd estishal.
the towering San Gabriel Mounmated at .more than I million was
Kermit's car had the back seat
tains as a backdrop. It hasn't
peaceful.
removed to provide space ·ror
rained on a Rose Parade since
Gone were the controversies
Whitmire, and video cameras
l9SS .
that sullied past parades. The
installed so the puppeteer, hidden
People lined up for choice
steering committee included
under a canopy, could follow
viewing spots a day in advance,
women and minorities for the secparade e~ents on a TV monit"!'.
giving the S.S- mile parade route
ond straight year, putting an end
He provides Kermit's voice via
the look of a giant slumber party
to boycotts and protests. Touma- '
loudspeaker.
overnight.
·
ment dollars were distributed out"It was fun at about midnight,
side the city's white business
Only two other non-humans
but now it's a little slow and I'm
• elite.
have served as grand . marshills,
a little tired," said Anthony
That left parade organip:rs to
and they had •to share the spotworry only about the business of
light. Charlie McCarthy rode with
Nance, 18, who had been at his
spot since 3 p.m. Sunday.
ventriloquist Edgar Bergen in
parading - .and the slippery
issue of bow to feature a frog,
There were 87 mostly·alcohol1940 and Mickey Mouse accomrelated misdemeanor arrests;
even a famous one, as grand marpanied Walt Disney in 1965.

the high school classroom teacher
with the tools to teach Social Secuf Many thousands of Internet users rity to young people about to enter
ccess t~e Social Security Admin is- the workforce. Teachers can downation Internet server, Social Secu- load and print the kit for their classty Online. each week io find one of . es iJI virtually the same format as the
. he larg~t collections of infonnation printed original, which teachers can
. serv1ces
·
"' ed by a govern- al•o
:pnd
ouer
• order.
·tnent agency.
.
Besides these new offerings,
1
New docume'nts and services 'are Internet users can access a wide
~ded regularly to Spcial Security
variety of Social Security informapnline. Internet users can now find: lion products, including:
·
: • Sixty years of Social Security
• Public statements by Social
pistory, with text and phOios. (Pres.- Security Commissioner Shirley
~nt Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Chater. . .
. .
.
the original law August 1'4, 1935.)
• Pubhcauons descnbl!'8 Social
1 , A new Social SecUrity Teachers• Secunty retirement, sumvors and
t, a comjlre~ensive package pf disability ms~rance, and Suppleacllihg niateriills designed 10 equip mental S.ecunty Income for low-

i
~

I•'

.

•. ' . '

'

..

'

•

income aged, blind or disabled peopie. Some are in Spanish as well as
English.
• Statistical tables about these
programs.
• Newsletters and other periodicals, including the Social Security
c ouner.
·
, Legislati-.i ·updates and press
releases.
• Actuarial reports on the status of
the Social Security trust funds.
• Frequently asked questions and
answers.
• Popular fonns, such as the
application for a Social Security card
(SS-5) ·and the request form for a
Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statement (7004)
• Asoftware program, ANYPIA,

that lets you estimate your future
Social Security benefits.
. Users are free to copy and print
material from Social Security Online
and redistribute it to others. Because
these are U.S. go'(emment publications, there are no copyright restrict'10ns.
Internet users can access Social
Security Online through their "web
browser," a graphical interface that
presents photos and iext in magazinc-style format. The Internet
address is http://www:ssa.gov.
When they do, they reach the
.''home page" of Social Security
Online. This is a "welcome" page
that contains a "quick index" ·Of subjects and serves as the starting point
for "point and click" navigation to

' ~fiCO.~~W coUld heJp unravel genetics of perso.mllity
. ~MALdmM ~R

,

.Schs~i Wrlili'

·

tffiW·YORI.(~-Impulsive?
' Ide? Qilick'*"" ~? !t could be
~~ your·Jtllll. , ' '
.~ Scienti•,. djily've .t lbn a step

a

vidual pf1CS that affect particular
traits, it might opi:n the d90r to ideotifying people at risk for such prob!ems as 'drug abuse and .counseling
them on bow to lower their risk, said
reaearc~ Richard Ebstein.

second study repwdU&lt;;ed Ebstein 's
•results in a different population.
"This is ~jor news,'' said PsYcbologist Brian Gladue, who studies
the biology of behavior at the Institute f"!' Policy Re~h at the Uni-

sage by binding to receptors on the.
surface of receiving cells.
•
The gene identified in the study
tells cells how to make one kind of
dopamine receptor.

~·~::J:;t~:! :· iss~ n:f~-=il~~~: ':n! v~~~~:!;~ti~n
ldJ nfluellllC q
pxcitable · about a .Jier-sOn's gem:tic ~u~.. ,

The studies found that,' on averup a Whole age, people :with a partlc\llar version
· new field (If molecular penonalily · of the gc;ne scote about 10 pmeJ!t
· sesearch, '1, he said.
. , ,
higher on penonallty tests for a~~
· The discovery ptovidel"theifli'st scit:ntists call ''novelty 'Seeking."
nilning link 'I between genes and
pe~ b~ iin~.. a ~culll" coiiUDunicalion: aystem 1n the ~ People who are abOve average on
briin, Gladue~- · . ,
. novelty-seekinll·•are impulsive, flckIn 1hat• eomanullicllion sylllOJII, ' le, uciuble, qui~k-tempered and
· brain celll tipal each other with 1 ' extrlvaaant. while those scoring

An , u~urance company wght
· ""'diecO~ ·- )nllde ill·~o , waht to know th•t . "p~ally
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~~ bet~n a jumping out of lmlt!DCS •in a ,slty
ancr 1 "normaf ~ ., , divina chit, and tHing riaks in &amp;en•
.,.aUty 11i1L , , •' .
' .ere!," ..wd ~in; d~Qr of
~
)lave shown ren i:Jillt ibe.Sl!nh lkmll Memo... ..-~ iJuit Fnea infloence rial Holpjtal,in. ~,
Mll;#')J,
a penoo's life · · ~~ladle-,";!_~~- chemical
messea1ei~re~led · -~~~~.!;~~:a:~~'::~~
. ..._ '-·-~N~~~.'I'....:. G.=
4~
ul ~-_ ~ _ _.·-.a;
ll,:!! , ~:!~ine~~nedeli~
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the wide range of infonnatiori and.
services listed above.
Text-only versions of the same
information are available to Internet
users of the '.'gopher" and "FI'P'' protocols.
· ·
. Users can post questions .about
Social Security informational products and can leave messages suggesting improvements in Social
Security Online. The address is webmaster@ssa.gov. Questions about
Social Security benefits should be
telephoned !O the agency's toll-free
nu01ber, J-800.772-1213.

·S

'

-~--~·--llECTIOlYSIS
__,_~.
...
1000 ~ CentriiAftnUe,""" 1, Vllnlil, w.,., 8115 211 tl'al
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~I'IIINf-.nd C.lllll1il by ftleA,IItlcen !llctulojy 4iJDCIIIeJi
'
•
1ft,.,.._... On FINt Ollie» VIII
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Cataplexy -linked to emotiQnal states

1!
I

.,
.,

terns and show a characteristic
By PETER IL GO'IT, M.D.
abnonnality,
consisting of sudden
DEAR DR. GOTT: I have been
diagnosed with cataplexy and am bursts of rapid-eye movement
unable., find any information on the .,(REM) sleep.
' Ordinarily, occasional cataplectic
s•bject, Why roe? Is there any cure
aitd what•should I do or not do to attacks can be ignored. More severe
forms are treated with stimulant
c~ntrol this situation?
drugs,
such as Dexedrine. Patients
: DE~RREADER' Cataplexy is a
with
such
sleep disorders should be
peculiar neurological affliction, of
under
the
care
of"neurolo&amp;ists.
ur known ~ause, marked by momen-To
give
you
more information, I
1&lt;9'Y paralysis that occurs in association with sudden emotional reac- am sending you a free ,copy of my
Heajth Report "Sleep/Wake Disorti~ns, such as anger, fear or joy. This
w.eakness, which is brought on by ders." Other readers iYbo would
sljrprise. may be confined to the like a copy should send $2 plus a
liinbs or can affect the entiR: body, long, self-addressed, stamped envel~ing to temporary collapae. The lope to P.O. Box 2017. Murray Hill
milst conimon illustrations of ~ata­ Station, New York, NY 10156: Be ·
pfj:xy
I) people who. e~~ence . sure to meRtio~title .
DEAR Dlt GOTT: Our high
!rfDsient weakness while laugruilg or
erring, or 2).._.the fisherman who" school.biology class js studying resuncontrollably drops hif rod when ., pitl¥ion. We have ·learned that the
body takes in oxylien and lets out
fith strikes.
.
· ·
carban
diOJiide. Our question is, if ·
' Many ~thorities believe that tatyou
JiVe-artifwi,J
..respiration tO•
.,lJexy itl form ofnarcolepsy, a"Simperson
who
needs
oxyeen. are 'you
ilir llCI!fOlogical .condition marked
b~· unexpected, recurrent attacks of giving him oxygen or are y.o u giving '
slfep that occur at inappropriate ·him carbon dioxide? If you are siving ~n diollide, why doesn't he
tiiiiCi.
, ·
·~ 1lle disorders are diagnOsed dur- suffer brain damage?
'DEAR
RBADER:
The
difference
ing studies of~ patients' sleep Ptl·

are:

,!

.,
l

- J.D. Drilling Company

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

••:::.eel

a--

' {

''

DR.GOTT
PETER

HAULING
(Specllla In driveway
lp1111ding)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

GOIT, M.D.

'

C•/Heavy TriCk
Repair
(114) 992-6643
23- Coftllge Drive
llllddllport, Oh. 45760

' ;':::::::::::':--::':-~
..
ENDYOUR
I \4 \\ \11\L
LONELINESS NOWIII
There Is someone for .
Bulldozln1, Backhoe,
• everyone. Whatever
Services.
· your preference
Home Sites, Lind
Nationwide or Right NeJCt
Door. Don't Waste
dearlna, Sep&amp;
Anoiher Minute
Systems " Drl-11Cllll Nowlll
Trucklng·Umestooe,
1-100-2!15-5454 .

;

614'-949-25 12'
Free Edimalel
QUality Worlc
B . D. CONSTIIUCTfON

Sit#ng, Porche•·
Declra , Horru~
Improvement•, .
RemodefinB', .
Add.-On ~. Roofing.
Saailfoctwn
Guaranteed
BiUDoerfer
(614) 992-2979 •

UCIIE
FIRE DIPI.
GUNSHOOIS .

SIT., 6:30 P.&amp;, .
;

12h.. l '
Factory (lloka 0.11 .
I .
.........1....
11127/IISitf

WATKINS ~

'

'

PRODUCTS~

(Stock up on your '
holiday baking .
supplies)

614·949·3021':
11121t'1111 mo.

-be

_ Ext. 4375

18 yr8.
Touch-1ono Phone Requlfwd
strv.IJ (8111) 645-8434

_,.... Gmtl,

T•

Septic Sysltllt,
&amp; H011se Sites.

Reas••"l• Rates
.lotN.Sayn

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

MIDDLEPORT U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE .
HOME
Openings for 2
Christian
atmosphere for
elderly care in a

non-smoking home.

614·992-3200
1121961 ~. pd.

NEFF REMODBING
SERVICE
House Rtlpllr l
Aemodlllng

•·

Kitchin a Btlth
Aemodlllng

Room Addltlonl
Siding, Roofing, Pltloe
Flwnonabll

ln•u,.... Experleneecl
Call Weyne Neff 882·
4405
For F,.. ElltfmltM

'":w5

F.actory CIIokt 'o.~y

'•

$2.911 po• mln.

.)..

'

l• ,

RACINE
GUN CLUB
Gun Shoots
. Sun 1 pm
.
. 12 gauge ~

Wrecker Service

'

1!11\\\lil l

between the oxygen
air' and that of exJ1aled air is only a
few percentage points per breath.
Therefore, when givi_ng single-breath
mouth-to-mouth resusci)ation, the
rescuer is really supplying ~ relatively rich oxygen concentration to
the victim.
This is ·not, of course, ideal; a
breathing device that supplies room
air is superior. Nevertheless, in an
.~mergency situation, assisted venti,.
lation (without an apparatus) is
preferable-to no .Yentilation a! all.
The issue of carbon dioxide
becomes less important than the
need to get some oxygen - any oxygen- into the victim 's lungs. Thus,
mouth-to-rnoilth resuscitation is a
temporary_ but life-savin.g !echnique

'~~

614-992-3470

&gt;

Step Complete Auta Ba4y Repair

_,_11M

. ~.

,

~

.

llelel•-

,•

·•'

a

:

•.
;·

·;~

..._-._...:;:.:::.:::u.::::..:::::.:::::.;=:!%!=:.,....::::::J

all

'

·11

Water
Treat. .nt
Equipment

Laurel Limousine Service

I

!' ·

' I

.. ...,.... __.., _ ..

· ~

----------..1

Round
.
'•
Bales of :
Hay for
Sale.
Call

211-

'*'*

:

: I I

.

.I

t1

..

'

614·992·7643

1

- . ... ... - ..

J
I

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

bt. 1140

a

l&lt;

·.~
'

~ -~

..

Public Notice
11141Dweflny IIOIId (T-2511)altueted tboron, !oceted et
~
. ..... Eatale Appnll- et: Doren AOid, R!IC!ne, Ohio
GUIJIIS
..
$27,500.00. The rut ..45771. A complete leg•l
$300
·
cennot.,. ao~c~ror .... 111M deacrlptlon of the r•••
up
•·
two-third• the •ppreleed nta.. •net mobile home 11
Leaaona on
Vllue.
u followto:
•
Diltributed by
.
. Thank$ to all my
TMm• or a.te: caeh on · · 111e t.oltowlng rut 11tate
Plano,
TRI·STAn WAnR SYSnMS, INC. .
Customers &amp; Friends for
~~~,.. !f of dMCL
eltuat• In the County of
Guitar &amp; Drums
The wata'r treatment company cordially Invites you 10 .
J
II.
Soutllby
r.teltll,
In
the
S
of
Ohio,
69
N.
Locuat
St.
participate In a free no Obil""tlo
h 1
t
the gifts &amp; cards received
llh«&lt;ff of Mllgl County lnd- In the Townehlp of
.
... n, compre ens ve wa or
(1)2, 9, 18, 18883tc
·Letart, bounded and
ChMhlre,Oh.
analysis. WE WILL TEST FOATHE FOLLOWING:
..
for Christmas
deecrlbed 11 followe:
614-387-11302
TDS, Mlnere! HmiiiHe, Iron, PH.
&amp;mice Durst
Beginning at the SouthwMI
Roger Walker
PIIMe cell RainSoftlt 992-4472 or 1-60CHI06-3313
_....;:;..::.=.:::..:;:~~-- · comer of 100 Acre Lot No.
11124111111 mo.
to 111
r free water a 1111 1 ale. 1....,
NOTICE OF SALE ~
214 end running due E"t
_o,;,.;.
_ ;;.;..;~
By virtue of en Order \1 on Itt. South liM to • etone
Bela
t..ued · out the within •lght rode to the
NMJ a Plwtograpfur for
Public Notice .
Public NOUce
J.E. DIDDLE OWNER
8411-2512
Common Pleae Court of South..•t corner of the
JOW
SJ*Itll
0«111ion?
llelp
.County',
Ohio,
In
the
Weet
...
H
of
nld
lot;
theriCI
NOncE TO BIDDERS
end ·Saving• Comp•ny,:
of TJie Farme,. Blink North to the North line of
• Weddings/Receptions
ST~TE OF OHIO
Pl•lntlff, ve. Jemee A: DEPARTIIENT OF
Duncan, .t •1., Dwleo. .ll, and Bnlnge Company, uld 100 Acre Lot No. 214;
• Couples
. TRANIIPORTATION
upon • Judfiment therein· Ptelntlfl, ve. · Henry L. tbenc. W•t on nkl North
(llnpae1110111 Pi&lt;:twe.)
Columbua, Ohio
renclerlcl, btllng C111e No. ,......,, et at., Dlfandanta, line to 1 poat It L.¥1 Cline'•
•
Reunions
OffiCI of CDIIb!IOtl
81-C'NIIO In 111d Court, I upon 1 Judgment tberlri Northuet corner 20 rode
• Anniversaries
being
Call
No.
eaet
of
the
Northweet
renderld,
~I Copy-Number 8&amp;028 will o11er for 1111 It Itt. front ,
• Groups
UliiiT PRICE CONTRACT door of the courthouH In · IIII-CY-G20 In 111d Court, t corner of Hid lot; thence
• Family
Mllllna'Dw.-12f'IMIII
Pomeooy, Melge' County, wHI offw for Hie at the front South 16 rode; thence Wnt
cJ41or
of
1M
Courtllouee
In
20
rod
a
at
Cline••
ll11l.cl ·propoe•l• will be Ohio, on the 5th dar or'
Reasonable prices
accepte~
from
ell. Februery, 18M, · et 10:00· "-eey, llelge counl!f, South-It corner on the
Cal1992-7747
prequ•IHiecl ~ et tbe •.m., the .following l•nd8 . Ohio, on· the lith dey of Welt line of eald w..t end
Ollie. of Conlrlcll, Room encl te1111mente, 1-ted at "*-Y, 11118, It 10:00 ofnld 100Aor1Lot;thenol after 4 pm during weekdays
{Anytime on weekends)
118 of the Ohio Dwp.-nt 39510 Gold Aldlltl _Road, ! e.m.,, th• following, lend• 8ciuth on nld Wilt end 111111
oI ·
T ~. "-oy, Ohio 417&amp;g. A and tenemenll, looalld 11 et Itt. South-' -n• of
Columbul, Ohio, untl10:00 complete lepl delcrlptlon • 805 W••t IIIIo Street, eeld lot at the place of
•.m. Wednwdlly; January of the reel eatatl I• •• "-or. Ohio 457Q. A· beginning, cotltlllnlng Jorth.
10, 11t8 for lmprov_,.. lol'-:
cOmplete legal dllcrlptlon light - · · more or ltn, It
In:
· The followlll!ll dlaerlblcl of tbe rail 11tel* Ia •• being In Town Two, of
Rent~t~ llnlve of the Ohio
A 1 A I
Melga County, Ohio for rut ....... 11tulllld In Itt. fo!lowl:
Sltuat.ct In the County of Cornpe~ Pure'-8C ne mer can
Improving Hetlana MEO· County of llelga, Townlhlp
"Ride in Chariot of Luxury"
NO 22 ecru
Legion f602
Bn-0.000; VIN-888-2.441, of Beclford, State of Ohio, llllgl, In the State-of Ohio, . EXC
lnd In the City of PollllrO!f .. IOid to lllcky J, llofrle lnd
St•t•. Route 888,
to-wit:
·
For your Special Occasions
end
In the Horton end Cindy Morrie, by deed
Starting
reaurfeclng wltb ·•e,phl•it.l Situate In Bedford
SUnday, ~. 3rd
concretl.
Townahlp; Me!p County, Dabney Addition, more r~corded In Volume .261,
Proms, Weddings, Anniversaries, Birthdays
~Ntrtlcutarly
bounded
and
.
P111
925,
llelge
County
"The · dltt 111 for Stall of Ohio end btlni In
.Doors Open
completion of thll wortc Fnletlon 24, Town.3 North, delctt.I IH Hlol'-: Being Deed RMWda.
-•~~o~~o~~~e Night Out on the Town owi&gt;oct •
EXCEPTING 5 1 - IO!d
4:30 P.M.
1111111 be u tit forth In the A•llge 13 Wnt of the Ohio ell of that portion of Lot No.
. wtth
l)pe&lt;IIOd by
Brt lid fo F
"-rd
blddl~g propoul." Plana Compllll'f'i PurchiH •nd 101, wlllch JIH -t-ol the to Mettle Bell, by d"d
ng
r 1M ...
and epeolflcatlone lfl on 118111!11 delcrllllcl • fol'-: 10 loot No. 7 ICH ·Right of r~corded In Volume 285, "
WilY·
setd.
tot
85
IMt
P111
41
e,
·llelge
County
Phone
848-2044
. file In ·the o.partment of Beginning at 1 point In the
1148-2685
TI'IIMPilt tllllo.-..
centerline .of County Roed on whit- loriNI1!f llaln Deed RacDodl.
33058 SR 33 * Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
tM~-.
J!;IUIY WRAY
130 (Gold AldgiiiOIICI), uld Slrelt •'Jd ellllnda et 111M • EXCEPTING 1.08 lOIII ~==;;::===~~=!·
DIRECTOR OF
point being Watt ebaul wJdlh to the 10 1901 No. 7 eold to John VenMeter lncl ·j
TRANSPORTATION
2270 felt end North -- ~ JCH Right ol Way; lind 1llo Betty V1nlletor, by dHd
(12) 281112 2TC
1120 feet frpm thal 10 feet off of the eouthorly recorded In Yolumi 285,
Ot~'
aide of Lot t02; end eteo .P111 533, llelge County
Southlllt Corn•r of tiW portion of Lot 104, Deed RM«dd.
.
'
·
...,"bile N......... •.
Frletlon 24, 111d point . - · whteh liM 1Ht of the 80
ReleNnce
Deed:
VOIUIM
.,.._
being Nortll se· oo· oo•
"':
Pick-Up dlacarded
Watt 18.00 felt from the foot No. 7 ICH Right of Way. 285, Pege 408, lnd VOlume
washers, dry.,., hot
NOTtcE TO BIDDEIIS
Iouth I Iet C.., of T1111m11 IWd lot 11M,_ 381111 on 250, P1g1 727., llalge
Chuck Stotts .
. . 614-992-6223
What
w••
formerly
.
l
laln
County
Deed
Reot11
ell.
l'wtlhlt'. tanka, ato-.
STATE OF OHIO
t11nk1 7:88 ICIII ••
S1Net
lind
eldMICk
wull
l!f
SubJet:~t
to
accrued
111115
.. DIPARTIIENT OF
delerlblcl In lltlga Counl!f
,
Free Estimates
furnaces, and any
TRANSPORTATION
' Dtld A-ell: Volume 231, to lhe 10 fciot No. 7 ICH reel-.. till...
The •bove delcrlbtd rul
Insurance Work Welcome
-· Co!uinboia, Ohio
Plile 013; thtnae North·31" Right of w.y.
metal material.
Dlldl: Vol..,. •tate 'hll been 111lgllld
Ollie» of Coilb- .
34' 55" E11t 228.82 1e1t to
Call 992-4025 .
a.-1 c#y N..,..,..ll-027 en Iron·rod, Pllllll!llln,Iron . 280, 1'11111 879; Volume 248, Auditor'• Parcel Number 08State Rl33
Pigl
Ill;
end
Volume
244,
00713.
between 8 am • 8
U'NIT PRICE CONTRACT
rod at 30 fell fOr rtlerlnae;
Along with 11873 Uberty
Milling Dlte 12/11111111
thenc• North 58' 57' 17" P1111. 121, Melga County
Darwin, Ohio .
Mon thru Sat.
Menul•ctured Home,
S.aled propoa•t• .will be Welt 185.19 fell to en Iron Deed "-de.
8ekl
been Mlnufaeturer'a
Sari•J
10121/IMIIfn
UCipt•4j frpm Ill rod; thlnCI South 33" 03'
prequ.IHied blddarl It the . 12" Welt 218.83 IHt to 1 a~~- Audltor'e Perce! Number LL6014 28FD AA,
1&amp;42141.
with Certlflclllllf Title No.
Ofllce of Comr.cta, Room point In the c.nterllne of N
'
Pro~Ntrty Addre11: 805
530248498, which I•
111 of 1M Olllo Dwp.-nt uld Coulll!f Roed 130,
Weal
Mlln
Slrelt,
P"omoroy,
currently
Joceted
on
the
oI
. T reolljiOitllkwl, p•••Jng en Iron rod •t
llbove dncrlbecl ,..1 - ·
Colu-., Ohio, untll10:00 204.22 felt for rer.r1noe: ' Ohio 487111.
REG. HOURS
Aiel Eataa A~ At
Said mobile home Ia
•. m. Wed~ ndly, January thenc. South 11' at• 12"
P.O. Box 587
Racine, Oh, 45n1
The rMI aubjac:t to trailer 11111 to
Mon.·Wed. 1G-4:30
10, 1... lor lmprov-• E11t 110.52 flit ,Ilona ·llld 122,700.00.
cannot
...
aokl
for
._.
t1w1
11195
which
ere
due
and
James E. Diddle
In:
ro1d to a point; tllence
Fri.-Sal1 G-4:30
the epprlleed paYt~ble to the llelge
AtMill, Hocking, Melae, South 51" 01' 05" E•et two-thlrde
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Cl.,_,
County T,...u.., within 30
VInton Countlel, Ohio for 111.35 IHt along uld I'Oid value.
firma
of
Sale:
Caah
on
dlye
of
dale
011111.
Further
Jmproylf!glllltionl Ant-aao to tbe point of beginning,
Thurs. a Sun.
Jackhammer; Available 24 Hrs; ·
dii'-Y of dMCL
lnl-etlon ,18111rdlng 11ld
..0.000 •nd vMIOIII, State containing 1.00 - · moN
102EutMaln
, _ M. 8oulaby IIXH can Ill obtained from
We dig basements, put lp septic
Route 32 enjl verloue, or ,• .., excepting •II lepl
Sheriff
of
111tge
COunty
the
llllp
Counl!f
Treuurer.
Pomeroy
Vlll•g• of Albany, b!f rlahtl of ny.
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
Propertr
Acklrela:
JMW)ng.
"'The bearings In the •bove (112,8, 11,:Stc
992·7686
Locatecl on the Ent ekll of
"The d•t• eet lor dt~crlptlon are bleecl on
•.
For Free estimate call949·2512
Dorc.. Road (CR-281, -;=::=====~
complttl'on · ot thla work the rtlerlnee dllcl: VoiUIDI
Public Notice
Recine, Ohio, with roeda 1
••UONAI".LU'U
-..
ahlll btl •• HI forth In the 231, Page 0$3.
immedi•tely
to
the
North,
N011CE
OF
SALE
bidding Prct'"'lll.". Pl•n•
Rer.rence Deed: VoJUIDI
By vlrlue 01 1n Ordlr of South, E11t and Welt ••
end Spiec"lca11one ere on 323, Pag• •99, 1111ge
Sale leeued out . of the follows: Welt· Apple Grovefile in tht o.partment of Countr Deed~
MODERN SANITATION
TrlnlpOrtl1tlon
Slid ,.., .......... bien Common PIHI Court of Dorc81 f!oad (CR-28); South
- State Route 338; North POMEROY, OHIO
JERRY WAAV
Aucltor'a Perc.t Melge County, Ohio, In the Townehip Road 103; end
DIRECTOR OF
Nu
01 .OQ559.00. ·
·
Portable
Trash removal - Commercial or residential.
- 01 Home Nlltlona! Bank
TRANSPORTATION
Property Addrele: 38510 ve. '--renee B. Vance, •• Eut· Stall Roull338.
Septic lanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Reel
Eetete
end
Mobile
Bandsaw Mill
(12128 (1) 2 .2TC
Gold Ridge Road, Pomeroy, el., Def•ndanta, upon • Home Appreleed et:
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
.;_;.__ _ _,...-_......_.Ohio
with
ro'ldl Ju~g~:ilnt therein reudltld,
h'·1 'd .Happy HoHow Rd.
$13,700.00.
The
r•t
eetate
.. PubliC Notice
· lmml8dletely to the North, being CaM No. 85-Cv.ootln
Middleport, Ohio 45760
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
_;_:...::::.:.:::..:.;=~-- . South, Eeet end Weet •• llld County; I will offer lor 1nd mobile home will be
eotd
together
end
cannot
be
Danny
&amp;
Peggy
Brickles
NOnCE OF SALE .
followe: Welt· Gold Ridge ...... the front lloor of the
Llm.tone, Sand, Grevel, Coli &amp; Water
By vlrtuei of en Orcler of AOiid (T·130); Iouth· Gold Courthoull In Pomeror, eold for Jue thin two-thlrdo
of
!he
•pprellld
v
..
ue.
614-742-2193
, Sale leeua,d out of th• Ridge AOIICI (T·1301;· North- llllge County, Ohio on the
\'IE HAVE A- I TOP SO I L FOR SALE
Term• of Sate: C11h on
Commqq Pie•• Court of' State Route 881 end 7th dly' of Februery, 11116 II dlll...-yol-.
llelga County, Ohio, In the Burlingham Road (C-40); 10:00 A.lll., the following
J-M.Soullby
CIH of The Ferme,. Bank end E11t • Stall Routl 811
992· 3954 or 985·3418
mobile home
Sheriff oiMelga County',
(LIIIt Stone Low Alltl)
Ohio

1'1
•1

Pfllllrollltll,. .

·,

.

•
'

Public Notice

. By DEEANN GLAMSER ·,
USA TODAY
SEATil..E, Wash. - The killer
whale star of ''Free Willy" movies
is getting a new home and lllliybe his
freedom .
On Sunday, Keiko will be (lo)lln
from his decade-long home · in a
Mexico City amusement park to a,
ne--: .$7 million outdoor pool at !he'
Oregon Coast Aquarium in New-"
port, Ore. .
·
··
;
Keiko (pronounced KAY-koe).'
starred in a 1993 movie depicting a
boy's effort to free the whale. ·After •
the movie, an intematimial 'drive ·
tried to get the 17-year-old whale ouf.
of a cramped pool at the park where ·
his SCCf1CS were filmed. Robots and .
wild whales were used for. oceall '
scenes in the original film and a :
l99S sequel.
·
· The amusement park, Reino ·
Aventura, is donating the whale to·:
the Free Willy-Keiko Foundation. •
The foundation hopes to eventually ;'
set Keiko loose in the ocean.
.:
But first, Keiko. must recover ;
from a skin ailment and add a ton to •.
his 3 Jn-ton, 21-foot body.
-:
His dorsal fin bas fallen and his.:
Ieeth are worn from chewing on his .
concrete pool.
Researchers must then identify
Keiko's family pod. A killer whale
--;- ofte\) called an prcit- ~ ~~etual­
ly the largest member of the ddlphin
family. Researchers say that only his
family pod will accept him.
Keiko was captured in Iceland in
1978 at age 2.'Researchers will have ·
· Keiko li!llen to unlllerwater recordings oflcelandic whales t.o see if he ,.
responds to aqy family's call.
~··
"It'll be a real-life 'pllone home,' ~ '
- " says Howard Garrett of the Cen- ·'
ter for Whale Resellrch in Washing- .
ton state. If Keiko Jespoqds; DNA · •
tests could confil!" his family.
;
"It's going to take a minimum of ',
a year to figure out if his health.sta-,•·
bilizes," says Free Willy Foundation .•·
president David Phillips. "Our goal '·
is to show it can be done."
:,
Keiko would be the first long- ·.
captive killer whale returned to the •
ocean. About 25 killer whales are in
U.S. aquariums and theme parks.
· Marilee Keefe, executive director ·
of the Alliance of Marine Mafumal ·
Parks and Aquariums, doubts that :
Keiko could survive in the wild.
'
"These animals are not endan- '
gered or threatened,'' says Keefe. '.:
"Why put them back and jeopaliiize , .
their lives?"
Free 'Willy Foundation board
member Robert Stewart of ~.attle
says m~ne parks fear new demands
to free other mammals. "The orc&amp;S, ''
are the stars and the big money- ·:
.. he says. .
;.
rna kers1
,
1
The foundation's cooperative
effort with the Oregon aquarium
goes beyond Keiko. The pool will be •
a rehabilitation-and-release center ·~
for other marine mammals.
I
Keiko will live in a 25-foot-deep
pool measuring I SO feet by 75 feet.
Water currents will alter direction
' for exercise,

Electrolysis is.the prdel;ss of removing hair permanently by
destroying the hair growing cells in the deep par,t of the hair
follicle. Electrolysis treatments Is- the only' way to get rid of
unwanled'halr permanently..
. ·
' · .
· lf you are tweezing or waxing your hair, this only rips part of
the hair follicle wall and will cause the follicle to reb'uild to
produce lllOre courser, darker: Ingrown hair which may cause
scarring. . •
.
Don't be fooled,by all the devices you can buy on tl'le market
for hair removal. Are they safe or sterilized? 10% of .the wonl8n
In the U.S. are affected by abnormal hair growth. If you have a
hair prpblem get profe&amp;sional help of electrolysis. Halr
permanently removed lor men and women.

~

• Room Addlliol11
• New Garagea
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
·
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Pllntlng
AlaC Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOU~G 1H
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

. IP.IMIII
SPOil'S

!--...,._..,,..._.,._.._...

.

...

CUfDI&amp; •IVICI

•Additions

.• New Garages
• Remoclellng
• Siding
• Roofing
•Palntlftg
FREE EBnMATES
(814) 88HI35
14

Serul ql'tstions to Ann l.IJnJers;
Crt!ators Syndicatt, 5777 W. Century Blvd, Suite 700, Los Angeles:
Calif. 90045

PERMANENT HAIR REMOY~'
.

to•l'i

' Cut•• lllldiAI A•••odell•l
•New Homes

whale
Oregon
:bound

~Ore Social ·s;~~rity information available on the Internet
ED PETERSON .
'By
ililoclal Security maa.ger Athens

SIITWS
,, COIISllucnoll

-'Willy' the-

:.Adults who think
Rose Parade challenge: lvaccinations are for
Propping up the grand marshal
1kids, should think ~ain
1

my shoulder, he becan to cry and.
more imponll!lt,_he began to talk.
And that was ~beginning of hi~
healing. If they know You care, they
will eventually open up.
Ann, please tell your readers that
our children are too preci0111 to stop
trying. Thank you for reminding us,
- M.P., Plano, Tex.
Dear Plano: Not all children are
alike. Some need to be left alon~ ..If
you, dear Readers, aren't sure.about
your teenager, talk to a counselor f"!'
guidance.

'IIEE 1'11MMIII6
INDIEMOVIL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed

Mlac.Jot* .

e111 Slack . .
992·2269.

.....- '

'~----...
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTioN

•Newflome.

....

~ ·~ .

j : • Complete
Flemocleling .

'

II

~op&amp;~,.. .-

FR~I! E~TIMA~$ •~ 1 .

885 4473 .

-~ .

"""-·""':"""'!'"~··;;;;k·;~··' .~

�-

·PomerOy • Middleport, Ohio
..
. ·-

31=.011141-

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

18~ Chi'IY •x4 short bod, 305

, auto, new parts, sharp, .13,800.
~ 773-5840

Gracious living. 1 and 2 badroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Ri ~eraldo

NORTH

1986 S·t O' • •• · 2.8 Ve, Sopd, pe,
pb, snort bed, t•.eoo. 30•· 773·

5840.

tK 9 3
aKI0 /}743
EAST

11182 rat111"1 XLT, 4ctl., lilpd, air,

Apartmanll in Middle-

876-4848.

garage, water fJJrni ahed,

17 Ford trt.itk llatbad, 302, 3
lpMd
et•·992-oltt7.

available, curtains and some fur·
niture. Ten miles to Gavin Power
Plant and 17 miles to Au-..na. No
smoking and no· pets_ Deposit
and reforences 'requ ired, S-400
per month plus utifiues, 814-742-

3033.

Newly redecorated . nice clean
2bedtoorn ground ~-. wid hook·

up.

ReferencH. Deposit

WEST
aK Q t
8K J 10 3

AM·FW cassette, .td.OOGmi .• ~WUI
take 4-whlller on ttadl in. 304-

New two bedroom, two bath In 1 port. From $232-1355 . Call 814Harrisorwille, large living room, 992·506•. Equal Hou ~ng Oppor·
huoe diningllamil.y room , nice runitiea.

kitchen with bll', utility room

.

No polo.

11 GMC extend cab, auto. AJC,
cr uise. 80,000 miles. neW lire&amp;,

87 4 2

*"

~uck

lA 9 2
tA Q J 8
aA 6 2

814-882-5275.

BARNEY
DOC PRilCHART'S

BULL'S·

OADBURN SHOT II

EYI,·.

NOT 61VIN' Mf If

Furnished
Rooms

DO~

II

By Phillip

fa&lt;--

c 10 Hire EIIP- &amp; irMIIIp.

2 Bedrooms WaP To Wall Carpet,
Natural Gas Furnace, Vary Nice.
61~·-21103, 814-448·14011.'

Clanclldo!H
.Po1111ona
As OTR Drivers

,. l

Tuition ·Free Training

Far OtJa~lied Applicants

:ALL Yard Sol eo Mu II Be Paid In
Advanoo. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lhe day Htore the ad is to
Sunday edition - ~'Oil p.m.
Mondoy edition · tO:OO a.m.
urday.

$250 IPER WK. BONUS
Obllilllble For Co-lion
Of Each Slllge Of 3 Wit
lr) -House Trairing
(Aelllrk:lionsllay Apply!

PomerOy, ·

Be Our GuHI At:

Mlddlepon
l VlclnKy

THE HOLIDAY INN
5:17SLRL 7N
Gllipolis
1UES., JAN2
3&amp;6P.M.

All reilestate (ldvlrUslng In
tnls II8MPII)8r 18 IUI)ject to
the Federal Fair Houalng Act
of
Wllletl makea tt 111ega1
to adlle11118 •any pref8f811C8,
limitation ordloct1mlnallon
blltld on race, coiof, rallglon,
I8X famiMI statui 0&lt; national
origin. "' any'lntenllon 10
make any tiUCh preferance,
llmltallon"' _tton_•

tees

If ln10181led, 1M Unable

To -AIIBnd, Clall:
VICTORY EXPRESS, INC.
- 1-1100-543-5033.

for""" -

advltlloernonta
wlliCh Ia In vlolallon of the law.

_,.r
ora ·
· -on
Ill dwolllngo

advlrtlaedln lf1ll

an oqual

opportunlly bolla.

90

~MIOOre,l ..

u,.

Reljliratury Therapist
Home Care. A National Pro'

O.f Respiratory Services To
Care Facilities Have

• GalllpoFacility • Athens.

• Coo~Uie, Ohk&gt;.

U1~on~::~o~r~~Eiiglble In

tr

In Con·

R.t~

piece or com.,.ete
Matdn, 6t&lt;4'812·744t.
wanted To Buy: Junk Autoo 1
Or Without Motor&amp;. Call larry
LiVely. 81~ II!JD3.

Wanted To. lilly: Uttlo Tlkn Toyo,
814-245-!51187.

rr.1Pt ovr.tuH
:,E HVICLS
'·

etc . Mue1 be friendly &amp; enjoy
dealing with customera. Apply :

Hardman'o, 308 Third St., Pt
Pleuant EOE.

180 wanted To Do
Have Opening For 1, Eldarly Or
~ndlce.pped

Person In Licensed
Private Home 814-«t-GOOO.

Blown Insulation, Insurance, E•-

'perince, Reftifencet, Reaooneble

~~:?~~~~;~I
.,.•t-:-..,:.2'15,_5_756.
_ _ _.....,=-_
~;
Chrlotlan CNA Will Care For El·
derly In Their Non-Smoking
Homo, Doys. Clilt14-448&gt;&lt;452S

Rep• . .

-.

3-4bedroom, atorv &amp; 112, wJbaN·
onent &amp; garage, klrced air furnar.e,
central air, nice ne ighborhood,
walking distance 10 grocery store,
$29,500. 304--882~52.

Nine room house- lour bedrooms,
newly remodeled. kitchen and
bath, new carpeting, large corner

lot, $28,000, 614-992-6173 or
614·902·2015 after 5pm.
Smlll House On Route 7# South
7th Hauoe Out 01 Gllllpalis, Large

Three bedro9m heme in country.

Saleoperaon with knowledge In

General ·M&amp;Inlenance, Painting,
Yard Work Wlndoon Waahod
Gulleri Clean~ Light Hauling,
Commarical, Residential, Steve:
814 381 0429.
Georg81 Portable Sawmill,
haul jour .logo to the mill juat
~4-e75-1,957 .
..

Nurae Akle Private

caFe

In Your

Home,· References, &amp;14· 245-

0810.

304·8'75-81184.
Glenwood, t4x70, 3br, 2 bath ,'
1ac. land, city water, v•ry nice, :
304-562·5840. .
rilobile home in

Asking $28,000, 614-«1·0431 .
.Whiteo Hill Rd., Rudand, one bath,
In-wound pool, 614-992-5067.

PB, AC, 5 speed, power seats

and locko. "Groat Car," $6500
neg.; &amp;14-982-7478 or 8t•-8•a·
28711.

otortlng at $2~0-$300,
sewer, water and trash Included,
8t4-1192·2167.

Iota of new pant,
limo.

1118.2 Bk&gt;MI'IIIII 3!i() di-1, !lice

~s
torRent

1978 14x70 Schultz Uannchester
With 12x28 Factory Add ·On

Room 814-446-8034.
1981 Governor 14156 2 Bed rooms, 1 Bath, Gas Heat, Central

Aw. S7,500, 614-388-9996.

Oakwood Homes. Nitro WV. 304·
755-5685.

3SO Lots &amp; Acreage
acrea.

aerator.

near

Riclno,$18,000 can flnance with
half down, 6t ~ll025. .
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove.
beoutllu I 2ac loti, public 10ater,
.piyc!e
Jt., 304;571-2338.

a:--

1DQI3 Ch~y van , fully leaded_.
take over payment s. 304 -875•

1137.

.lj

NOSOI&gt;Y ~NOv/S Ttff nouBL.~
~'Vt S~tN •· TtfeY ICffP
Er&gt;61NG AwAY
. ltFO#l~ l
fiNIStf . TtLL.ING

E•"'"
01 4·4-41.0777 \

750

f

.. • o~

Sale

;

7347 or 81•-94~·2879 .

pendable car, $2,500. 304·882-

,TtfEM.

'BOltS &amp; Motors

111115 Chevy Monte Carlo, Body In
Good Cond!tiort. Runs Good, 614·

pa, pb, ac, good condition, de-

BORN LOSER

Musl Sell : 1989 24 Ft. 4rriva
Speed &amp; Ski Boat.
limo Mk&gt;·

•s.

tor, With Bravo 1 OtJldr~. Power

The F'r!!nch North-South pair stopped
: in three clubs, winning II tricks when
· the de'c larer guessed the trump suit
• ootTeetly.
·
Hamman's one no-trump showed 13·
17 points: either a normal strong no. tnimp or a weak. no-trump;th four or
· five clubs and no other fo._Ul ·C&amp;rd or
. longer suit. !This is part of- e Blue
: Club system thai Hamman and Wolff
play.) Wolff's three-club response was
: invitational. Hamman, with the strong
; variety and a good club fi~ was happy to
' try three no-trump.
The defenders began with four
rounds of hearts ending in East. He
switched to the diamond 10.
Hamman won in hand and cashed the
club ace, East dropping the jack
The a prinri odds favor playing a club
to dummy's nine next. But Hamman
doesn 't rely totally on percentages.
Before commilling himself, Hamman
· cashed his other three diamond tricks,
learning that Easl had started with only
a doubleton . Judging that East was
more likely to be 2·2 than 2·1 in the minors, Hamman played a club to dum. my's king and c;laimed his contract
when the queen appeared.
Use the ~tage tables for direction, not as dogma.

Rack &amp; Penion Sleerina, Thru
Trapaom Exhaust, Tandem TraiP

Aut

992-7806.

I bedroom apartment, furnished ,
utiiiPos paid, 3 112 miles south ol

t990 Pontiac Grand Am, $2,500.
304-875-5091 .

2bdrm. apt1., to[&amp;l electric, appl!ancea ~rnilhed. laundry room
lacilitlea. Close to school in town.
Appllcallons available at: Village
Green Apta. 149 or ctill 614-9922bedroam, aiJ electric, carpeted,
appliances, furnished, V!IBier I
1rash paid, on -sile management,
close to stotes and schools. lau-

Washer, Dryer, Chest Fr.eezar,
Car Bane ties, Color T.V. 814 -

rolond At&gt;artmetlts, Bth &amp; George
St, Now Haven. 304·882-3]16 or
TTD·TTV· t-800'·962-8771 Equal

520

258-t238.

Opporlunity.Housing. t

Sporting
Goods

Full set women·s golf clubs, tour

owa. lintits, etc. Clau e Wintefl,

Iinder, 2 Doora. Auto, Fully load-

Rio Granda, OH Call 8t4·2•5·

ed, Burgundy, Noeda Some Work,

5121 .

American General Finance. 814-

448-4113.
AEPO BUILDfNGS

· Stylo· Bulldln'gt For fmmodlatt
Sail, ( 1) -40a80. Novor Erected.
Antique Victorlan ,'tlllll ,.., clio- 'Willakio
Balonca Owed. CaH Bil :
val mirror, 'Acellenl c:ondltion ,
1-B00-5at-51M3
.

560

Pets lor Sale

Buy or aell. Riverine Antiques,

Groom Shop -Pal G..Omlng._Feeon At. 124, turing Hydro Bath. Julie Webb.
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 catl6 .-..446-0231
14
.... m. 10 81)0 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to .
~~~
~i~~·~·~~i~
8:00 ~m. 614-1192-25211.
AKC Rog . Dalmatian
shoti &amp; - · $7S...
Miscellaneous
9t22.
Merchandise
1
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
·--------------~
AKC Rogloterod Black Lab
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive 1986 Ford Taurua, fullr. loaded, pita, ~dy ,t/81116, Excellont
$228 to $291 . Walli"to ohbp VB, $1,200. 1984 Pontac Fiero, . t II Shots, 614-446-11555.'
movies. Call ,614·44$- 2568.
pw, 4CYL 411&gt;d, runa -~ St ,OliQ. ·
Registered
Equol Housing Oppor!IJnlty.
304-875-'4:498.
· puppies,
and
Beech St., Middleport, 2br. fur- 2 Cemetery l .oll .Ohio Valley , xcallant bloodline,
nished apt., utUideo paid, dep. &amp; Memory Gardena, $300 E1ch, 2t28.
rei. 304·882·2588.
814-2.5-S....
AKC Regiotared I
Country Side Apartn'!ent, large 1 2 Ladn Sz. l. Coati $30 Each; 1
Badroom, $280/Mo. Oepoait. 513· Brown Leather (Short! Ot~or
922'0294.
Brown Fringe (Short) 814·4483188. .
!
1124 E. Main

231'1trtol-

11

lllbrfc
2411118 ,-

owe - whirl

9 fertlltl airline
(2 wds.)

1

AMIFM Casseiie, L~mbir s&amp;ats:
- r Window• &amp; Powor Locka
Sliding Back alliss 55,000 llilea:
81.·3.79-2724.
Hf84 Olds Cutlata Supreme SL,
13.000mi.. 3.1 V6. 304-578.2886.

eulllx

. WHAT

AM I

~I'PO!&gt;EP

10 DO I c;,o IN THERE

. WITH A NOTEBOOK
t\NP \ollt,tTE ~TUFf

oo.IN?

I

OF ~E NOT!

DON'T EXPECT 'IOU
lO C.O IN THER.E
WI~ A I'IOTE8001t ~

\\

Adam

31WIId.._
40 Wight IOICf

C.prt

dlec•tt ...

411 Sl

-.
wlll:'.
•.
·;
sowwn- .,
52 Oppoellt cit .
poll
~
53 Actor Crulail

,,

.'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptowrams-.. CJValed hom quotatU. by e.mou.
E ldl leftwln ttw~ standlfor anothef .

• p,

GLS ' Z

ZFRRW .

VYMVFII
X S N Z

YDZFM

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yu

NSZPR

XSLG

f

MLIXSF,

y

L S

HF

KYHF

GJFS,

G J T

peep.. p~~sl•nd prw«~
~ c

Tadi)"'S ct.: l

•
,,

HLSUYT. '

"

YWXFU

R L W Z . '

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In front of,.a camera, I have to tie careful what I
- it all 'shows ." - Shirley MacLalna.
·· ...

.r

15 1

I

r.l,.--r,-r,-1 G ~Y

_Hr-1~:~.....:

I

r r r r ·1• r 1• 1
•

. -. . ..a.. ·for "'·lit
uu.....

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·•tial
RSESC'E~FIED DEALER
LAWRENCEENTERPRISES

-"
11

':"::'::'"~---::':':""'':-~-::-::~ ·
Pumps. Air Condldonlng
)1171 Chi'IY P.U. 8 Cyll~dor, . \bu llonl Call Ua We 8oth Loiiot ,.
$850; _
1!1113 Corolca Auto, A1r, V· . Froo Eotlmate~ 1-800-217·8308 •
8, 6t4-379-2310.
.
814 448 83Dfl,

1992 Ford F-150

~c 6 Cylinder,

T

rir commOtCiol.,;rlng·. ,{

u:

/IJC llitdllnOt: Good Condition, ·now ilonrice 0.. ropaira. Muitr
Pea~ 8 channel AI oy;~:l.:l52,500 Mllu •to,ooo, 11 ~441 · ·conlld •loctrlcian. Aldtnour
~2 _.._.. 1795.00.

:est.

-·

1417.

~

.Eitctrlcal. WVOQ0308, 304·t71-

.

t788.

'

,,
I

••

..

.'

JANUARY 2l

make i
I make K for you .
CAI~CE: A (June 21-July 221 Use com·

1

avoid

,

••

·

predictions for the year ahead by maiing
mon sense when voluntee ri n g to help
$2 and SASE to Astro-Graph. c/o thie ot~rs today. Someone might try to dump
- - - - - - - - -.. ne.,8paper, P,O. Box 1758, f',lurray HiM something very undesirable in your lap
.• ~ SIAilion, New York; NV 10156. Make sure ~ that·he or she has been ~ng.
' · 10 111118 your zOdiac sign. ·
·.
· LEO (July ~3-Aug . 22) For the sake of
(Jan. »Feef, 11 11 voU \IY everyone concerned, 11)' to · keep your
"
; too' hard to enjoy yoursell today , you
friendship and business lnterdsts sepamight discard your sense of moderation rate loday. If you don't, you might lose
and overindulge In way s you shouldn't
something from each.
· Try 1o monuor yourself.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) The people
PISCI!S (Feb; 20- llarch 20) Today you'll deal wifh today might view your
make M your responsibility 'to do all you behavior with critical ey&amp;s. Make sure
can to bring peace and unity to a_I8JIY thel your actions enhance, not tarnish,
arrangement ,You. can helP
a h85·
raputafion.
ale. .
.

Jan.

_

SCI•M LETS ANSWEIS

'

day you might be difficult to please .
Waclntsdlly
However, you will mellow out in the
3, 1898,
eveaing, and everyone Will think of you
In the year ahead, you might become as a delightful companion.
i nvolved In an exciU11g· enterprise with TAUAUS (Aprii20-IIIY 20) For the sake
great ~tlat. ThiS opporfutlty may-orlg· of your buagel. don'.t gel lnvolvid In
IRate in your vicinity, but could a11o apilf something with friends K your share Of
over to other veooes.
.
lha coila is undeterrnonec;t When 111818b
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jen. 11) This arrives, you may be lfoored.
cou~ _b e a YefY productive day for you, 1 ~EIIINI (llay 21 -June 20) It will _be
providild you dk&gt; thing~ In an ~ lUll- tmportant to discern be-n asseltrve·
ton. W11hout a f!'aafble ay8tem, chaos. ness and aggressiveness today . if you

..,

filling in the missing words
you de•elop irom step No. 3 below.

---

BERNICE I AGI.IA,IIU
BEDE OSOL

••

Complete the chuckle · quoted

~

..,.

.. "

.,.

(6t41 ••e-ouo Or (6141 237- •
·0488 Rogoro Waterprooling. Eo· . ~
· · - t975.
"

~!!~~~~~~~~§!~~ bifthdlty gift.
ffcai&gt;rli:Oim.
tritatv&lt;:&gt;urstili to a ·
Send fO&lt; your Astro-Gra'ph

•~

.

-SEMENT

:;

.:•-

thlnl&lt;:··

....••••

TIIAT IIARY
PIIILII

AS-.:.R v·ORAPH

•720

UYHF

·S L Z II F

•

nos.

.,

1

HT

DA

RCA Teil'lltlon,
I Aaklng $250, 814·

..,

~:

fllh

46 Auletant 47 South Afrian
of OuiCh '1

lmprouNtmltlnta

French City Maytag, 814-«e: ~

wor"*

~'(

..

!TUESDAY

parlance All Work Guarant•e9 · ·

I

...

44=:.......·"'

Embody • Jiffy - Prior- Martyr - FROM the TOP
After reading the paper about our local governments
problems my husband mu!;ed, "A government is the only
known vessel to leak FROM the TOP•"

_:

~

41 Sloullndlan
42 Chlld'l pmtt
43E-In ·-'

ii1ii--""j:k;;;;;;:-':"""810
Home

-::--:--:-:--

.........

....-~

SERVICES

~:":s~n':r:tA!~2~ E~~

•

33 Homl ol :..

I HAVE

HERE A
51'\ALL
lt,EC:ORI&gt;I NC.
DEVIC.E ..

New gas tanks , one ten tru c k

:-:-::--

•

318aquance~

•
PIINT NUIAII'RED lfnfRS
, .tNTHESfSQUARES
____

wheels, raO:ators, ftoor .rr.ta. etc. '
D &amp; R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304-372-

furnilhed. Call

e::,
and.~!
nwue..-. •:

21 Feminine ..,

1--.L.-..1.---'-'--·'---'-·__,

BIG NATE

,I

27.1na-lld

28

t--r~-r.l6'.

199-4 United 24 Foot EnciO-,r~....
Trailer Tool Box, Winch, HitCrl~

.Local reterencas

·· '
•

2511- -

20 Po~

1992 Ford Flairside, Electric Red
~ATER1.1'?0f1NG
~
Gray Cloth tnt AJC Tilt CruiM Unconditional hfetdT'Ie guarantee. ,

S~eet,

54b

, 3 Hlltorlcal time

31133 or 1-800-273-9320.

rything, weld, 1hree ~s. ·tires.
Neal pldala, fuel cell, on board
fire syllem, rolling ·chassis. $5800
n~t~ . Call Scott Wolle. &amp;1•·9492879. 614-949-2045 "' 614-9926193,

must see, $275, call evenings,

614-94&amp;-2957.

1986 Cheo.(etle parts1 1 llat hand
1
front &amp; rear bumpers. rear ~'1)
bOth rront fenders. 304-675'~ "''t-~

1991 Aodcet Chassis rac'8 car, all
new in '91 , Wilwaod, best of eve-

Facto!J H•a 2 All Steef QuanMt

530

s

SUP,PI

modal, $125.304-675-8986.

21 Loallld
.,
22 Clnglng ....

,

. My elderly aunt was always
very genUe with me when Iwas
I I
a kid . She believed that chil·
r--=--:-:--:--:-:--:-.......,dren should have ITIQre mod·
T W 1 R R E els than ·- - • • • -.

1990 Toyota Camry, -~atoon ;
. ... ·~
Door. Auto, AJC, Now Tires, E• $5,!110, 61~~1368.
hauat. Battery, Staioo; 97K, Er ~ Chevrolet 5 Inch Railey WI!MtO.;
-c-~ · Rei'
•·
-ont
~~-.
IOble,
814·446-80t3
Leave Mei
_ ..._500 · 111s: 1 Set 01 Smell Blodl c~~o~ry ;
400 C.I. Cylinder. Heado $100,
d1H41 ·105:l
'
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
G
E
Tanathomo.BuyDIRECTand
1991 rand Am, l Fully Loeded.
$6.5119.
614-258-1206
.
.
B.la.ck tonnea c'\ver for longb~d
SA:VE I CoIINiiiidiL' Home unlls
from St!III.OO. low......nlypoy100t OIGs cuno" Supreme Ma- Chevy truck, used only ' 8wks ..
montl. FREE colot calllog. Coil . !Don Fon .. 4 Dr., PW, POL, PMR, $150. 304-875-!!889.
_ _!11~()!;!0A~'If~1!:-&amp;00-84~~2~·1~306~.-- AC Tilt, CR, AMIFM Ca10., Exc. Budget Transmissions.. Used IRe- ·
550
Building·
Cond., 814-379-2043.
buill, All Types. Access ible To '
1991 Pontiac Sunblrd • Cylinder, Over 10,000 Transmission,
4 Door, Auto, PS PB, Air, Burgun- Clutches . P,essiJre Plales, 81'4Biock. brick, oowor p ot, wind- dy; t 1188 Pontiac Grand Am • Cy- 379·2935,
Two lola in Moigl..,., Gar·
-tl!flll, plaque and
care includod. $4800 value- Mlf
1ng 1112000 a both. Call4t7• 881).4874-

St7, 814·367-081 1.

11 Oceena

12Swlmllllf

8.....,

. -.T_oi-C-..-N

•
Accessories
new paint, :":::~~~------~~~

like new, run• great . 304·6752778

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron EVIIna-Enterprl-.
Jaclcaon,ONo, t-80().537-852fl.

7

. France.

er, With Braus, Too Many Extru
To Listl $15,000 OBO, 814·441 1g88 Cougar Blue Max Edition, . 1975. 614·258-8389.
,_ tirn, k&gt;aded, good condlti~n. 760
Pan &amp;
$3200,8t4-9.0·2203. .
0
11188 T-bird, ·3.8L, Vs,

5
8

Alder

3852.

1 bedroom apartment In Middleport, available _December 1, al l
utilities paid, t250 per month,
$100 ~epoalt, Bam to 5pm S14·

9H

/

.

1993 201 Pro XL. 20' Stru to s~ ~
ban boat, 200 XPHP, Bt 4·86 7·

1987 Pondac SUnbird, Sspd, 2dr,

902-221f.

1986 Grandville 14X70 2 Bedl .HOUSES • 1261 Jackson Pikerooms, Fireplace, Total Gas Un- Across From Cinema. S295JL4o.,
derpinning,
16x12
Deck . Oop. For Ron101 Applications Call
$1 t,500, 814~7-0420.
614-448·0957 . 814-446-0006 .
814· 441 · 1818 Or Write: P.O. Box
1995 Breezewood, 3br.. electric, 994, Gallipolis,
45831 .
underpinning, already hooked up,
St8,000. 304·675-5379.
4 112 Uiles From Gallipolis, Ntce
2 Bedrooms, Stove, Refrigerator &amp;
' Limited Ollerl t988 'doublowldo, Water Furnished. No Pets, $2501
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $2751 Mo. E14-446.ao38.
month. Free delivery &amp; selup.
Only at Oakwood Homea, Nitro 456 112 Second Ave. 2 BR , AC
appliances. $400. month. Utilities
'ftV. 304-755-5885.
paid. $200 deposit Referen ces.
Price Sus1er1 New 14X70. 2 or 614-446-2129.
3br. Only t995 down, $t951month. '
Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

$17,500,614-379-9361,

there, blown head casket, $550
tilil part out, 814-948·28n.

...e-2251 , 81~.

t end 2 bedroom _.,.,IS, fur·
nlahe&lt;l and unfurnished, security
depoalt required, no pets, 814·

35 WEST · 2 BR.BRICK TOWN-

·

1993 Chevy Silverado 112 Ton
4x4 Long Bacl , 350, AutomlltiCI
44,000 Miles. Excellent Conditionj

bodr. 1100!1 dr... ,2 .~u.Mt•.-•H • .

'

Middlopor~

and

good, 1500, 814·&amp;43·53•8 any·

Wanted To ·Re_nt: Mobile Homo .

.Wo

looks

·FRANK &amp; ERNEST

68 Pi~mouth Grand VoyegoC
runs , AuiO, Air, ve,
Cond. s. . soo~

1878 Ford Granada. 250 8 cyl ..

Two bedroom trailer for rent, call
814-902·21179 aftor 6j&gt;m.

AND ~EV NEED A
COMFORTIN6 ..

OWNING A 006 IS A 616
RESPONSIIJILIW, RERUN.:T'WEV
NEED LOTS OF CARE ..

and door locka, $6000, 8t 4-&amp;43,
5450.

· '811 thUndofl&gt;lrG .SC. two door, 3.8

3711 . EOH.

320 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

Five

Hay &amp; Grain

710 Autoe for Sale

. Fumlohed Elllciency, 607 Second,
3 Bedrooms· &amp; Bath, Garage &amp;' 2 Gelipolla, Sharo .Bath, $185/IJdli·
Acreo Olland, SA 218, 614-4411· ties Paid 814·448·4418 After
7pm.

Or

·nates, Call For Free Esttm1tes

Able Avon Reprasentatlvea
needed. Earn money lor Chilli·
moo bill at hOml/lt ~ t-8009a2·8351 or 304·882-2845, Ind.

'
310 Homes lor Sale

Lot Run1 From Rt. 711 To River

plumbing!, electrical, hardware,

640

Bank Fl nancl~g A~ llabla, Call
Bennetts Mobile Homo HTQ &amp; 300 rounct &amp; 3300 •quare balei
t990 Dodge Ram Van B-250 :
CLG At 814·~•6·9•18 or 1·800- of 90'r. a1ta11a hoy, 614-388-11190
·72,000 Miles, $8,000, Can B872-5867.
Large round bales hay, StO... Seen At: GaJNpobs Dolly Tribune;
304-675-t 365.
825 Thi t'd AvenUe, Gallipoli,.
Ohio.
-,
)
· Round Bale.s Of Hay, 614·448·
15t4.
t991 Niuan 4r4 XE Loadad, l.cM'
Milas. $9,500 Or Will Take In Oli
Trade For Encloled Cal Houle&lt;, •
f liANSPORTATION
Wheele r Or Dually Truck. f!iu .
445-3t00.

2bedrpom mobile. home. Depoa!t 1
&amp; references required. No pats.·
$250/mo. Water &amp; sewer paid.

032•.

4406 Tullar Road
Columbus. Ohk&gt; 430t7
Fox: 6t•~923S

Usec1 lurnllure·

1----------1 otStock.
Largo Olotributtf Buy Out
Now Mobile Ho"" Furnacoo.

Lot Prelerrably In Tycoon Lake
Ot Rio Grande Area, et•·387·

REA L ESTATE

Wilh Tranoportotlon To . Clean
Hou$e, Batween 5"&amp; 9 P.M. 61&lt;4·

LIVestock

dogo,

three bedroom mobile

Our raadora ara hon!by

Mature, Reaponalble Women

lnlertherm &amp; Millar Mobtte Home
Furnaces. Gill, Oil I Electr ic In

I ~OU6HT MA'&lt;6E I'D
6ET A D06 FOR CJ.IRISTMAS,
IWT 1 DIDN'T ..

1987 Chevy S-t·o Blazer 4W01
2.8 fuel injected, automatic wttft
ovetdrive, black exterior, red clolh
inlerlor, new,motor and trantmil"'
slon, very clean, power wi~

litre, V-8, elite model turbo, PS,

This 1'18\\,PIC lftf' wll nol:
knowtlr9Y accept

Informed~~

630

r.1ERCiiAND ISF

PEANUTS

1982 Ford F 1.50 •••· 300 e ely..
4 sp., new el utch, runs. Qaod,
k&gt;ou good. chrome mags, $2,400
080, 614·992-3018.
I

Mobile Home Lot For Rent Muat
Have Good Reference 11,4-448·

FAEE.~NAA

3
4

ed from the Bermuda Bowl. I hope no
one got the. idea that this means Nick
· Nickell, Dick Freeman, Bob Hamman, 1hrr-1-- +--+Bobby Wolff, .Jell Meckstroth and Eric ·
. Rodwell are always lucky. You don't win lb+-1-+-+-+as jnuch as this team unless you play
better than everyone else. Here is a
good example, from the semifinal of the
Marlboro Bermuda' Bowl against

610 Farm Equipment

0175. '

2

.

rT Uncoln'a
nickname
' 30 Gained
: a2 Egg dlah
34 COIIIeh
: 35 llouae, e.g.
, 36 Spenloh aunt
!_
37 Annapolll grad

Yesterday, I showed how close the
U.S. ~ of '115 came to being eliminat-

460 Space tor Rent

VICTORY EXPRESS. tiC.
· loHa ·. A

(fQOdl

H'e oil to
work -,;_
Dllllcuh
Mild Ollh
Lawdag.
AciO&lt; Glbeon
- Aviv
Tlnleat

·They play ~ell too

12x55 1t011er lrllmo, tongua, uiol,
tiroo, $250 080, 614-902-3018.

HIRtiG E'iENTI

,_.......,

23 In what plac.?
211 Conaumed

Opening lead: • J

fARr.1 SUP PLIES
;; Li'JESfOCK

Rooms fQr rant • week or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia Hotel.
614-448·9560.

~
.
completely
42 - 1111 nftht ...
6 Bird call
45 Rlel8d In
10 Predatory~
• Cllafro
12 Sewing
46 Ar.., gantMn1
tnatrumanl
4t Or-1111
14 Actrall
band
Betty 51 Choice
15 Sour malt
54 Mirth
be..rage
55 Wore IWIY
16 strange
56 El -, r....
17 River lo1and
57 Manlcwlat'a
19 Aclreu board
W1rd
20 Aggreslllve
DOWN

Vulner able: East-West
Dealer: South
West North East
Soulb
Pass 3 a
Pass
INT
Pass
Pass
Pass
3NT

"'"''"'" "

4!10

aQ J
SOUTH

lrcl

5858,

8A Q 8 6
• 10 4

topper Wlatldgioll. 304-67s.e141 .

8h. lluminum

Nioe One bedroom ipartment lor
ram in Pt. Pleasan t, 814-992-

81087~ 5

• 7 6 5 2
88 5

saoo.

304-675-5162

01-02-96

aJ 3
89 5

40-tol

1 E~II

that
not in immediate
proximity to you could still negatively
anact your plans today. Prepare to make
a 1an&amp;&gt;&lt;:hange or even a detour.
SCORPIO (001. 24-Nov. 221 Do not
.· ~xpect more than you're ent1tled to from a
. )oinlllrtdeavor today. Make sure to shOw
grlllilude K you are lnvlted to partiCipate.
IAGITTAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21111 ,.;11.
, be Imperative to recognize your strong
· ba~lhing posftion today. 11 yo~ negotl·
ate from a wea~ ~tandpoint you mlghi
make unnace&amp;Nry conceaaio~s.

I

I

,,

.

.'
·. ,.-

.....
"'-'
. ....
..,.
·~·
...

�'·
..... 10 • The Dally Sentinel

.

..

Tuesday, January 2, 1916

Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio

.~ ~ diet rather than thinkinz jwt about adding sugar at ackung salt.~ . ~r 1han allowing some add~ pounds with age, and they should shed

.

;APr- Writer~

' WASHING10N (AP)-:-- For a better 1996, try to get a hillf-hour of exer: cise each day, eat a wi!le varie~ of foods in moderation and don1't be afraid
. to tab a drop of wme at mealllme. •
.
: .~'s ~ ~ fl'om the IJOvemmen~. whtch '?'Ia~ released the. fa~
:eclilion of N~tnllon andY~ Health: Dtetary Gutdehnes for Amencans..
"These gwdelines cut through the confuston of messag~~· ~d the chums
:and counte~!atms that we hear every day about o~ foods, satd He~th and
Human Scrvtces Secretary Donna Shalala, who tssued 1he report 10 con) unction with the Agriculture 0e1,'81111lent. .
. ,
.~baste message.o~ '!'oderabo~ .and vanety carnes over from the 1990
gwdehnes, used-by diellUans. numllomsts and other food and health professionals, and by the goven\ment to set standards for school lunches.
: Bul this time around, more stress is placed on exercise. The guidelines
:say ~veryone should gel 30 minutes or more of moderate activity on most
,days of the week, preferably all. Bri~k walki~g. calisthenics, house work,
.gardemng, moderate sports 1111d dancmg ~I Wtll do.
.
· The guideli~es sa~ to choose a diet wtth vienty of gram products, veg·.etables and frutts, whtle low m fat, saturated fat and cholesterol. They 'urged
a diet with "~oderate" salt, sodiumJIJld sugar.
.

your food," says Nancy Schwartz., director·of the National Center for Nutri·
tion and Dietetics at the American Dietetic Association.
~e report.preserves the recommendation that no man: than 30.percent
&lt;!f daily calones .come from fat: and I 0 percent froJJ? s~ted fat. .
,
For the first ttme, the gmdeh~es say people can_ bve. wnhout eallng antmal ~ucts. But those vegetarians should take vttamm B-12, found only
·~ ammal foods. They also should find,good sources of vttanun D and calctum.
. ,
..
,.
.
.
· The gmdeb~es also suggest ratsmg a glass: If you drink alcoholic beverages, do so in mod~ra~.on , with meals and when consumptton does not
put you or others at. nsk.
, .
.
_
It dropped wording that alcohol c011sumptton "' gen~r)ll.'s not recommended, and also took out a statement from the 1990 gmdelines that alcohoi consumption has no health benefits, since some health benefits of modcrate drinking have been documented.
!~ fact, the guidelines mention that eating shoul~ be a P!easllre.
.
Consumers should look to the bounty of Amencan agnc~l~, ~n m
grocery .stores and markets across~~ country•. for help planmng numllous,
economtcal and good-tastmg meals, says Agrtculture Secn:13IY
Dan Ghck·
1
man.
.
.
. .
.
•
•

. excess.pouads gradually.
,
And tjlose looking to lose a few pounds after the holidays should avoid
· .crash diets. Instead, take off one-half pound to a pound per week, combiping exercise aod healthy food choices. Don't allow yourself extra pounds
just hl:cause you're getting up in years. .
·
The report did not impre~. everyone, however.
The advi&amp;ory committee's recommendations were characterized as tab
mild to be useful, taking far too kind a took at salt, sugar, cholesterol and
fat, accordinll to the Center for Science in tl)e Public Interest, a private food
_ watchdog group.
"I think everyone thinks th;it they are consuming a variety of {pods ih
' t ; teration .already," said Michael Jacobson, the center's executive direqt r.
t
.
,
,
. The guidelines in bulletin fonn are available to the public starting today.
To order a single ~opy, send ybur ~arne, address and '5o·cents to c 011 sum~
Information·~nter, Deplrtment 378-C, Puebio, CO 81009. ·
:
Also available from the home page of the USDA Center for Nutrition Po!icy and Promotion at http:/fwww.usda.fusdalfcslcnpp or HHS Home Page
at http:l/www.os.dhhs.gov.

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Calvin and Hobbes have sledded
'down the hill and into the sunset
. ·after nine years on the comics page.
., The terrible tyke and his wideeyed tiger companion on Sunday
made ihcir last appearance carrying
:a toboggan onto a field ofnewly fallen snow.
" It's a magical world, Hobbes,
· ol' buddy. Let's go exploring," .the
,perpetual 6-yc&amp;I'· Oid said as they
sailed downhill and out of sight.
· Their creator, Bill Watterson, said
:in November that he had done all he
,could within the daily comic format.
"I think Bill is ready to move on '
'and explore some new possibilities
in his life," said fan Lucy Caswell,
curator of the cartoon research
·library at Ohio State University. "I
thought the strip (Sunday) was beautifully written, saying that, you
know, he's going io start a new
world."
Watterson, who never gives inter:

t

.

•

v1ews about his work, has not satd
what he will do now. In the letter announcing the end of the strip, lie
said he would continue to work with
his distributor, Universal Press Syndicate,·but neither he nor syndicate
officials said what fonn that might
take.
Caswell said the strip was so popular because readers could identify
with Calvin and remember their
own childhoods.
"He was able to enter into the
mind of a child, I think, and the sjJecial relationship many children hav~
·with a toy or some other object," she ·
said. "I think that's one of the real
appeals of that strip. Many of us had .
that same 'ah, ha' recognition lots of
times when we read it."
"Calvin and Hobbes" hit .the
comic pages in 1986 and was distributed internationally to nearly
2,400 newspapers. More than 23
million copies of hooks based on the
clirtoon are in print.

'

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club meeting 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public Library wjth Mrs.
Dwight Wallace. hostess. Mrs. James
Diehl will review Ladder of Years by
Anne 'Jyler.

POMEROY - Meigs County
•Library Board of Trustees meeting
Wednesday, I0 a.m. at the Pomeroy
TUESDAY
REEDSVILlE - Eastern Ath- library with art:hitects for the Racine
letic Boosters meeting, 7:30p.m., at Branch Library.
Eastern High School.
-_ THURSDAY
. RACINE - Southern Local
WEDNESDAY ·
Building
Committee meeting ThursMIDDLEPORT
Pomeroy
Masonic Lodge 164 ReguliU' Meet- day, 7 p.m. in the high caf~teria.
ing, 7:30p.m., at Middlepon.

•

Vol 46, NO. 173
,2 Sections, 12 Pages

ary.
Ill and shu!) ·in members were

The Rivm: '\(alley Herbalists held
their annual Christmas pany Dec. 5
, at the Blennerhassctt·Hotel in Pari, ersburg, W.Va.
The 13 members and guest,
Masci Gibson, had a full-course
meal as well as the annual ornament .
and gift exchange.
.
11te steering committee will meet .
.Jan. 8 at 7 p;m. at the Ravenswood,
_W.Va., !jenillf Citizens Center. Reg. ular meeting will resume in Febru-

remembered with poinsettias and
herb hooks were donated to . tbe
. Rav~nswood library in :memory ·of
two members' fathell *.ho died in
1995.

Fireworks light up Bostqu Harbor and FmevU Hall, In the foreground, early on Monday. Tbe dlaplay r11)mlnated lloltoe's 20th Flm
Night celebration, wbicb drew an eothnated 1.5 million people to per·
formances, concerts.and art exhibits throuchout the city. (AP J'ho.
to)

NEWYOitK (AP)- Five major
U.S. cigarette makers have united to ·
argue that the Food and Drug .
Administration exceeded its author·
ity with a proposal to restrict minors'
access to tobacco products, The
· Wall Street Journal reported today. ·
The FDA'~ proposed rule, issued .
last summer,declares that cigarettes
are a drug'i4.elivery device, and
therefore subject to FDA jurisdic·
tion.
The pro)iosal would require
$150
tobacco companies to
million·annUal advertising Campaign
to warn children of the health dan·
gers of smoking. It also waul~ ban
cigarette sales from vending
machines
restriclions on

Cutf!:

ancUmpose

•

'

RETURNS FROM VISIT
P~uline Kennedy, a resident at
The Maples, Pomeroy, recently
returned from visiting her diwghter,
Barbara Loftis, and granddaughters
Katie and Kelly of St. Peters, Mo.

In a jointly submitted response,
the cig~tte makers said they will
argue the FDA's proposal would viD' ·
late U.S.law and even the U.S. con·
stitution. The i!ldustry claims the
. FDA does not 'have federal statuto- ·
ry authority to regulate cigarettes, the
Journal said.
.I

In their 2,000-word response, the
· companies said they will also argu~
that nicotine docs not fit the legal
· definitioti of a drug and that its
e~ts do not fit the legal definition
of addiction.

A man lea..Sinto a driving $nowstorm as he walks through down·

town Colum~Thesclay. Twotofourlnehellspftd!ctedforthatarea

.

rlf
·&amp;I ·r
d ma~•or IIUln•e
·:~ snows· to rm hl•ts o· hl·o

;~ M

~

• The Nation al Weather Se rvice
·;reported blizzard conditions at J ay. break in northern Ohio. Lillie change
,:was predicted through the day. The
.:weather service said another 3 to 5
:inches of snow was CJII!~d across
;:much of northern ·ohio'through the
·fternoon .
•.
"' C(!Jvcland Hopkins International
:-Airpon was. .closed for about two
ours while crWs worked to clear
!6.8 inches of snow from runways.
':fwo runways were reopened at 6:30

nonhern Ohio closed for the day or
delayed ope ning by an hour or 1wo
Across the state, trafric was
snarled and minor accidems were
reported shortly after the ~torm
began early Tuesday and continued
through the night.
By Thesday afternoon, the Piqua
post of the State Highway Patrol
already had reported up to 4 inc.hcs
of drifting snow and at least 10 au'tomobile accidents in Miami County.
"You go ou tside the city li mits
and
bung-o'"
said
Ted
Peacoc k,assistant Miami Coun ty
road supenntendent
Snow dnftcd back onto many rural roarls Tuesday as soon as plows
had passed by scattering salt.
"Then, even though it's treated,
you 're still driving on ice," Peacock
said.
·

o

-

.

to AEP. American .Eiectr,l c

its

It's the same cOmpany you've come to know, with a nevi name. And a reneWed Commitment to serving
.oUr cu.tomers
more efflciently'and more ~actively. AEP; Sam&amp; company. New name. Even brighter future.
,,
~

..

•.
•

-

•·:

~·

,.
' '

I I

/

''

..'
I

Creek Conservancy District, $7,146.
Meigs County. Emergency Services director Roben Byer pointed
out that he has not received official
confirmation from the state concerning the .funding, but added that
he has been contacted by Carey.
"(Carey) stayed on top of it. We
get information from him faster than
from Columbus," Byer said.
"We are expecting the check in
mid February," Byer added.
The county has received emergency funding from the Ohio Public
Works Commission and from the
Natural Resources Conservation Service's Emergency Watershed Protecti on Program administered
'

through the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District.
\
"These incidents go to show what
we are capable of if we stick together," Byer commented.
,
In recent years, the county has
received almost $250,000 in emer·.
gency relief foll owing two blizzards
and the' May flood, Byer said.
The funds released by the controlling board will be used to suP:
plement the cost of the damages
caused by· the storms. Many areas
experienced extreme damages to'
public roads, facilities and communications systems.
•
1
Gallia County wi ll receive
$169,631.
.
.

lance program and the state Department of Education was determined
by financial need and valuation fig-

ures in each district, according to
State Board of Education official ·
Jack Hunter

•

tWO

by the
"

So~thern 'Local was awarded
$3', 190,800 by the state which will
aid in construction of anew K-8 , 650
studenf"educational facility and renovations and .additions at the existing high school building. ·
Eastern Local was awarded
$7,136,000 by the !l,!at~ which will
aidinconstruction of a new K-8, 650
student educational facility and renovation s and additi ons at lhe cxisling high sc hool building.
Easu,rn and Southern Local
Schools officials attended the m eet~
ing, along with State Represe ntati ve
John Carey (R-Wellston).

The issues would approve 23year bonds to fin ance the construction Of new buildings 10 house the K8 st udents, and maj or renovati ons
and addition s to lhe existing 'high
school buildin·gs in each district.
The amount of state funding
released by the State Building Assis-

Sen. Long t'o seek·j.Ud'ne
::1
• p IC"away
• 1, · County
pos f In
COLUMBUS (AP)- Term limits will not force officeholilen
out until 2000, but the restriction already has inHuenced some
Statehouse career decisions. A term limits advocate said Tuesday:
That's great.
At least 23 members of the I 21st General Assembly have
""'~ti~_,jllan \0. d~ so, ~,xp~t to S"i'k el~ction to other. ofl'14:ea,-~ .
were niitl~g such moves in advance of a Jan. 19 candidate tiling
del!dline.)i
.
' ·
Topping the list or retirees as the Legislature prepared to begin
the second half of its two-year session Wednesday: Senate Presl·
dent Stanley Aronoff, R·Clncinnati, and Senate Minority Leader
Robert.Boggs, D-Rock Creek.
Both said last week they would not run for re-election thl&gt;year.
, Aronoff will leave elective office, while Boggs expects to run for
the Ashtabl!la County Commissioners,
Sen. Jan Michael Long, D·Cirdeville, said Tuesday he would
run for .the post of Pickaway County Probate/Ju veniie Court
Judge. Long was in the middle of his third term in the Se nate and
was not up for re-eleetion this year.
House Assistant Minority Leader Jane Campbell, D·Cieveland,
w~o will give up her House seat to run for Cuyahoga (;:ounty CommiSSioner, traced the legislative musical chairs to term limits vot·
ers adopted in 1992.

Flooding.highlights news in May
APRIL
April 2- Jail construction alternatives were explored by Sheriff .
James Soulsby, a comractor, and the
Meigs County Commissioners.
April 3 - Funding for lhe
Appalachian Arts Initiative pilot project was presented in a meeting of
the Riverbend Ans Council with
Ohio Arts Council representatives.
April 4- Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Cemer puts $800,000
addi!l&amp;n under '!Oilslruction.
April 9 - Commissioners hear
from Howard Frank, treasurer, that
investments are producing revenue
and the county's financial health is
go od. '
April 10 - ·The Pomeroy Merchants Association staged its lOth
annual successful fashion revue.
April II - Middleport Village .
Council bought six )ms to be encompassed into a parking lot for boaters
near the Middleport levy.
April 12 - Rutland Council
applies for a paving grant and brush
fires J}laqu(lthe county.
April l3 _Judge ordered Jack
Crisp to jail to begin serving his time
for the five misdemeanors of which
he was convicted.' County road 25
was closed as work continued on the
2 .25 mile portion of higllway
. between Rock Springs and Five

operation were aired.
April 21 - Ground breaking on
the $153 million hydro-electric project of 1hc American Mun icipal Etectric Puwcr.
April 24- Courtney Roush was
crowned Racine Festival flower
queen .
April 28 - Seventy-one Southem Local School District students
were recogni zed for academic
ac hievement at a banquet where a

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rcpresenlative of lhc Ohio Depart- Vaughan as their um:untcsted candi·::·
ment of Education was the speaker. date for mayor in the November gen&lt;"
MAY
cral eleclion .
·,
May 1- Judgc Fred W Crow Il l
May 5 - ODOT officials rcpon '
rejects a ple a agreement and sen · constructJOn un th~ connector project
tcnces confessed poacher Michael R. is "on schedule."
Barker of Charleston, W.Va., 10 I~
May 6 - Selling the mood for :
months in prison on a charge of . the 19% Congressional elections, ;
felony fleeing.
former Democratic Congressman.:
May 2 - In the counl y's onl y Ted Strickland infom1s Meigs Couti- :
contested mayoral primary, Pomeroy ty Democ rats of his plan to run for:
Republicans se lected Frank A.
Continut'll on page ,3 ,
·,

Major east-west roads were the
hardest hit by the snow drifts. A
.!: The Ohio Turnpike was open but number of vehicles traveling 9n icy
'"'travel remained hazardou s early
Interstate 70 near the Indiana border
:;'tOday.
ended up in the median strip.
::· Elsewhere, snoMall ranged from
'i-II inches in Van Wert in northwest- , . In Dayton, more than a dozen
.;m Ohio to 8 inches in Warren in the "'· htgh school basketball games were
:.nonheast. In Cleveland. traffic was
postponed Tuesday mght. In central
·~lowed by 2-foot snow drifts blown Ohto, shppery .ro_~ds were blamed
t.or numerous lender-benders,. cars
'y 50 mph winds.
.,..
shppmg mto d1tches and a Jack: · In Columbus .•~bout 300 passen- knifed ~emitrailer in Madison Coun'IJ:ers were stranded at the Greyhound
ty west of Columbus.
: bus . station downtown. Customer
Police around Cincinnati. in
""'ervt.ce representative Elyse Henson
southwestern Ohto reported shck,
:Said Snow emergencies and impassice- or snpw-covered roads and
':Able, ice-coven:d roads, especially in advised motorists to stay home
outhem Ohio, kept many buses Tuesday nigh.t except for emergenrom running.
cies. 1be snow, however, did not
"" "We have passengers all over the hamper air traffic there.
Poi~~ril ·14 ~ Rutland Fire bepan-;,lace," she ~aid. "We can't move
The . Cincinnati/Northern Kenment got a new pumper truck. •
nythinj! ouLofhcre."
. ..
tucky lntema!i~Airpo~remained
A .1 17
A"
'II"
1:: 1be American Red Cross hrought open Tuesday ntght, but fltghts were involving
pn
pup mt case
Sharori Durham, the Meigs
.n snacks and drinks fQrt!,.~sen running ur to an hour ·Iate,
C
H
S ·
d h
...ers and many wereru lQwed to spokesman Ted Bu.'}lelman said.
ounty umane octety, an t e
•
1
prosecutor's office was re~olved .
a~:i:~~en!f:Jo~n buses in the ot
StatetroQ~rs~ported kseriesrf
.
Aprill9-Testdrillingfor a new
:::l Sheriff's ' dep~r tmen t s , from cars skidding off Interstates 71 nn
water well for Pomeroy took place at
;l&gt;auiding County j n the north to
90.-but-there were-no injuries.
the Sy..,acusesite~The-site was later 1
~onlgrimery County in scuthwest
. Tuesday's storm followed a bliz- abando.~.
.
, .
hio d...&gt;clared snow emergencies,
zard last month that dumped more
April 20- Mtddleport Village s
le~tricting the usc of highways to
than 6 inches of snow· in parts of cost of sabsidizing the taxi service
'l!mergency travel. .
Ohio and left. thousands of people and ;ways.tQ reduce the cost and keep
~ M!lnY bus!IIOsses in central. and
without power.
the public transponation service in
... .m.

will

.

st'orm ;.aII area sc h00 Is open

The Associated Press
;: Blindin~; wind: whipped s now
: made dii&lt;•ing dangerous, and closed
:sc~ls and'at least one major airport
~lp Ohio today.
::, The Meigs County area escaped
: most of the stotm. No schools were
__ reporte&lt;! closed in the county, and the
. ! Oallia-Meigs Post, State Highway
,:patrol reported no accidents as of this
~morning. 'The weather bureau is for ·:casting an'inch or less accumulation
-:.in the area.

. We

,.

'•gs .Count y area
·
escapes b run t

~·: By

L..~~""""!-;"'-------.,.--:F:O:o':"r=:=!

,, ,

I I

.: . ' 81

by Bob Hoeflich

COillic ~~:tor MusiiJI() Troisi &lt;!ied 12 , Miramax Films saiil Monday the
-: ,licJin ~filming the Jut see"' of movie
qpcn on 2SO' screens Fri"'''W ~,"bat~ may be 011 · day. That s~sos;the 180 sereen.s
11w wqe o( het•nlq a,1tlr in the that the 1993 SpantSii-language htt
·• Uli.ftil4 s-,
"Like Water for Chocolate" - the
~ ~ _ . , "D Pollino"' in .Ital- ~· biggest-~ing forelgti-lariguage
. 1M; .._ 1 ·1 r I t fet tbe- widest film in U.S. history"- played in its •
• • 1 eww llfr a ,_.p Janpage ' wicleat relca;se.
·
' .

1

· , ·

"This funding reaffirms the state's
COfl\fllilment to making education a
number one priority," Carey said. "It
is important to provide our children
with facilities that will enable them
to learn to the best of their abilities."
The state funding is only the first
steptoward seei ng the building pro·
jects come to fruition Voters in both
districts must pass bond issues to pay
fo r the local share of co nstruction
costs. in order for dirt to begin moving on new construction.
Southern Local will place a 6.10
·bQ~4~;is.$u~_. b;.fur.e..,li.Q~.. jp. ..
Ma~rcn tlriinance thEw locaJlshare of
$4.2 million for the district building
project .
Eastern Local will place a a 4.5
mill bond iss ue before voters in
March to fipancc their local share of
$1.5 million for the dimict building
project.

B,y TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
F~nding totaling $10.3 million
has been released to two Me i g~
County school di stricts to help the
costs of constructing two proposed
• K-8 schools and renovating two
county high schools .
The Eastern and Southern Local
School Districts were awarded fund·
ing by the stale Controlling Board
during their regular
· Tuesday
in Columbus. The
.carne

~~~~!:~~an~i=n~ch~o~r~J~~s~o~f~a:cc:u:.m:u:.l:a=tl:o:n~g~ex~~:·:'~ed~.~~~.,J.\~fr~om~;a~f~

!.;

,. .

Ohio Power is changing .

derstonns, high winds, flooding and
tornadoes. There are ~ti II many areas
.that have not fully recovered from
these disasters," Carey said.
"I want to make sure that every
co mmunity is returned to pre-disaster conditions as soon as possible,"
he added.
·
The funding breakdown is as fol.lows: Lebanqn Township, $8,748;
Olive Township. $8,837; Pomeroy
Village, $7,247; Salem Township,
$15,358; Salisbury Township,
$5, 180; Scipio Jownship, $2,59 1;
Rutland Township, $13,326; Emergency ~anagement Assoc iation ,
$1 ,623; Coupty Highway Depanment, $44,098, and the Leading

State .funding released for school building projects

I

.

Meigs County receives
$114,115 in flo'o d relief

.

advertising tobacco products in areas
deemed accessible to minors.

Beat of the Bend ...

film.

snow.~.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Several Meigs County communities and agencies will divide
$114,115 in state assistance for natural disaster relief following a flood ·
in May, 1995, State Representative
John Carey (R-Wellston ) announced
this morning.
The money was released by the
state Controlling Board Emergency
PufPose Fund with the funding
request coming 11\rough the Ohio
Depanment of Public Safety, according to Carey.
"This spring, many area in southeastern Ohio were faced with severe
weather conditions including thun-

lr-t.nlnt
·

auill of ·
arrived on schedule just the "down-sizing'' taking place
· Well,
as we suspected. Some of us wen: across the nation. How come it took
in a condition to recognize you and so many peo.pl,~ to do these jobs and
some of us weren't. Your arrival now all of a sudden businesses are
always brings a reason to celebrate. laying off workers by the thousands?
Perhaps, it's because you give us a Time was when there was some
chance to wipe the slate clean and degree of job security. However.
take another shot at doing better. . with buyouts, down-sizing and mod· .
~~nlo~ a..Joroe, lighted \'?'ern tedmolo~rY,job~l}' seemato
~all in Nl~ 'Yilif Clcy{w1 also get '~ have gone d~wn·IJi~ ·ffi~. 1'em•. ·
our salsa there) to mark your arrival you brought along a solution-if so
and there was entertainment if you pull it out of your magic hat as soon
want to use the tenn lig~tly. Time as possible.
Locally; I hope you brought along ,
was when we had Guy Lombardo on
hand to give your predecessors a some wands for the company that is
royal welcome through the magic of working on Pomet"oy's Main St,
television. However, the world is a with the new water line. The conl ittle shan on Guy Lombardos right struction must have been disaster for
now and that's unfortunate for you-'- merchants of hoth Pomeroy and
and at least some of us.
'
Middleport and in between during
You really look good at this point the holiday season. J realize that this
in time-so very young, so innocent, is probably progress and progress
so enthusiastic. However, I have a · has itS inconveniences. However, I,
• feeling that you, too, have a bag of even in the name of progress,.think
tricks and kicks that you'll be hand- the Main St., situation has been a triing us in the next 360 days or so. fle too much-if you've sat in a long
But you're going to have to go some .• .line of traffic trying to get back and
to beat la5t year's ,bequests. I mean, · forth over the past weeks I'm sure
we're just about shockproof after you know what I'm saying. And I
ha~ing undergone so mucll in the
do hope our vehicles can hold
put, can you really top ttM: O~la- together in spite of the deep ~ts
• · homa bombing, the 0. J. Stmpson . · which have developed at the stte.
trial, ,Pri~\lllSS P,i. and .her. "tell all" So, •Babe, if yDu'"c ~ot the wands
· ~· auitode, Bosnia and clostng down · don't waste aootller mtnute m getttng
· government opcrations:-'ltot only them into. the proper hands.
, once but twice. If you &lt;:an top this
Oh, by the way, I understan~ you,
stuff then we're really in for some , brought along the magic .to make our
, jolts. ·
,
·
winter in Meigs County just like sun•
• , On tile sunny side of your arrival ny Florida this year. Work .your
.J hope yOu .brought alont! I10I11C solu- magic 1\nd watch us keep stniling.
'tion,,IQ J!ri11!1ems that plaque us. ·
. __

35AGannett Co. N-opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 3, 1996

...

RIVERVALLEYHERBALISTS

...

!-').S ANGELEs' (AP) ,-' :lwi,n

e

(

Walking .in the

Cloudy with a chance of fight
snow tonight, lows in the teens.
Thursday, cloudy. High near 30.

,.

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•
•
•

·~

1

Pick 4:
1986
Buckeye 5:
4-6-18-19-27

Sports on Pag~ 6

•

'~· of'

~~·· ~Names· ih·..the· news-" -

336

.Maj()f U.S. tobacco
: c9mpar~ies: set to
challenge FDA proposal

-Community calendar· The Community Calendar is
pubUSbed 1111 a free service to non·
profit JII'OIIIII wlsbing to announce
illeetbll and special events. The
ealeallar Ia' not cleslped to promote . . - or rund nlaen of any
type. Items are priDted' as space
permlttl and camtOt he paranteed
to 11111 a speclllc number ol days.

Pick 3:

•

:c~~i~~~~tH~bb~·~~··· -~~~;;;:~~·;;;....... oo~~~~~,~;;;;~~~~oo·t:
:leave comics page

Ohio Lottery

Meigs drops
cag~. tilt to
River- ·Valley

:eovernmen' e·ating guide1ines ·extoll variety, moderation and a·xercise
''By·ROBERT GREENE '...._\

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