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Plge08• .. ' .........

II

''
Sunday,Januery21 , 1ap&amp;

Pomeroy • Middleport • Geltlpolla, OH • Point PleeNnt, WV

I

High-profile partners call it quits!.
.

NEW SHOP- Tuppers P.. lna resident, Jack Gorrell, Will one
of Ruth Ann Lance•• flrat cuatomera when ahe opened her Tum
of the Century Berber Shoppe l11t Monday.

·New barber, styling shop
opens in Tuppers Plains
TUPPERS PLAINS ·- A new bar·
ber and st)'ling shop has been opened
in Tuppers Plains by Ruth Ann Lance.
Called Tum of the Century Barber
Shoppe, it is located in the old laundromat building on State Route 681
east of Route 7 and across from the
elementary school. It is decorated
with early 1900 pieces including a
circa 1900 barber chair which is
being used.
Lance is a lifelong resident ofThppers Plains. She graduated from the

Hair Experts Barber School in
Columbus in November. She will
specialize in the latest cuts for men,
women and children. Permanents
and color will be offered by appointment only.
Hours are 8 a.m.. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday, 8 a.m.. to
8 p.m. on Thursday, and 8 to I p.m.
on Saturday. The shop will be closed
on Mondays and Sundays. Wednes. day is Senior Citizens' Day.

FSA program notes
By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - Dairy Indemnity
Payment Program - producers who
had milk removed from the market
because it contained residue from
substances such as pesticides chem"
icals other than pesticides, nuclear
radiation or fallout may be eligible
for payment.
Producers are entitled to payment
if the monetary compensation they
receive from ALL 'SOurces does not
equal the fair market value of the producers normal milk marketing. .
Wool and Mohair Program - F'ebruary 29 is the final date to file for a
199S marketing year payment on
wool. mohair, and unshorn lambs
sold in 1995. Sales must have been
completed by December 31 , 1995.
Call 446-8686 for additional infor-

mation on the Dairy Indemnity or
Wool and Mohair Programs.
·
Crop Insurance Training, - Tile
week of January 22-26 the Farm Service A~ency will be short-staffed due
to training being conducted on the
1996 crop Insurance requirements.
Producers are urged to call ahead
during this time to insure that their
questions will be answered.
County Cotnmittee Meeting- Due
to crop insurance training. the regular meeting, scheduled for January 23
has been canceled. The next regular
meeting will be held on Tuesday,
February 13, at 8:30a.m. in theASA
Office. All FSA County Committee
meetings are open to the public .
Lisa Meadows is the county
executive director of the Gallla
farm Service Agency.

OVP staff writer recognized
POMEROY • Jim Freeman, staff
writer for the Daily Sentinel and Sunday Tunes Sentinel, has been nom.iuated in the journalism and photo- ·
journalism categories for two Ohio
Public Images Media Awards by the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Dis' abilities f9r his February 12, 1995
feature article, "Learning Life Skills",
published in the Sunday Times-Sentine!.
The article and accompanying
photographs describe the traini~g
and employment opportuntties available at Meigs Industries in Syracuse
for individuals with developmental
disabilities, demonstrating how each
person is abk to become productive,
responsible, and contributing members of their.comm.unity.
·
Ohio Public Images is a statewide,
non-profit communications and advo-

cacy organization working to create
a positive awareness of people who
have developmental disabilities.
· The media awards are designed to
honor individu~ls and orilanizatio~s
throughout Oh10 who, through thetr
exceptional communication efforts,
have succeeded tn creatmg a greater
understanding of people with developmental disabilities. Entries will be
judged liy professionals in the communications and developmental disabilities fields. The winning entries
will be announced in ~arly March.
Steve Beha, executive dtrector of
Carleton School and Meigs Industries, COif\mented in his nomination
letter to Ohio Public Images, "I
believe Mr. Freeman's article and
photographs have greatly contrtbuted
to our efforts in creating a better
understanding of individuals with
developmental disabilities."

executive Frank Biondi, who at age
iy RICK GLADSTONE
AP BUIIMII Editor
5 I is young enough to be Redstone's
NEW YORK - Lisa Marie and son. In explaining why, Redstone said
Michael weren't the only high-profile he could run the far-flung entenainpanners to call it quits.
ment conglomerate more aggressiveThe multibillionaire boss of the ly and effectively by himself.
But industry analysiS expressed
company that bwns Beavis and ButtHead flied his No. 2, the 35-year-old shock at the shakeup and speculated
executive at a leading maker.o f com- Redstone may·have overreached himputer chips abruptly resigned, and the self. Although Redstone was frus·
original Cosmo Girl decided it was uated with Paramount's poor record
time to rinse off the makeup.
of hits last year and impatient with
A look at the week in business:
Biondi's low-key style, he now has
I THINK I CAN: Redstone, 72, no experienced No. 2. Moreover,
Sacks Biondi, 5 I
Redstone's advancing age and autoIt was almost as if Viacom Inc. cratic ways have raised skepticism
chairman Sumner Redstone thought about his ability to run the Viacom
he was following the advice from the empire alone. Investors voted with
book, "MTV's Beavis and Butt- their feet, selling Viacom stock.
Head: "This Sucks, Change It"
Meanwhile, another inter-generaThe 72-year-old 'leader of the tional intrigue was unfolding. in the
company that owns entenainment Idaho potato fields, home to Micron
names like MTV, Paramount, Nick- Technology, one of the world's fastest
elodeon, Simon
Schuster and growing makers of sophisticated
Blockbuster axed his longtime chief computer chips known as memory

&amp;:

chips.
.
Steve Appleton, a 35-year-old
whiz kid wbo rose from a production
worker to boss in I0 years, quit in a
shakeup apparently instigated by the
company's 87-year-old chief shareholder, potato billionaire J.R. Simplot. It wasn'tclear why Simplot Wllll
unhappy. But the company's stock,
trading in the $90 range in September, more reCently has fallen to the
$30 level.
The parting was more amiable at
Hearst Corp.'s Cosmopolitan magazine, run for tHree decades by onetime secretary and publishing legend
Helen Gurley Btown. Now 73,
Brown said it was time for a younger
successor to take command of the
magazme that ptoneered the young ~
women's market with frank talk
about men, sex, ~auty advtce and
caree~. Brown Will .be replaced by
Bonnte Fuller, 39, edttor of a Cosmo
rival Marie Claire.

'

preaenwions. .
lu&amp; Mlk Is dlatrlc:t ledudeian ·

Atte""•
~nference
fOMBROY -- Dr. A. Jackson

lailea, opWmetrist, attended the 1996
' .luilerior Sepnent Conf~nce spOnI(Q4 bY the Ohio Optomelric.Asso•c:iadoi.-!11 Columbol, Jan. 12-14. .
. 1be .i.. day conference fe8tured
hllldHn wddlshops, ~linical discullionund c:ounea on primlry eye
~. COI!IKt lenJea and !be.~ept
of eye diseases. More than 400
II*GM!triatl llld optoJnel!'ic ·ulisIMII frOm Ohio aild · nelJhboriq
...... J!lloided the COIIference.
'

.

me

Separate farm bill may evolve from budget impasse
ton. Other senators are considering
several options as well.
Congress returns to work this
week after Clinton's State of the
Union speech 1\Jesday. The following Friday, a shan-term spending bill
that has kept the government in business expires.
The Senate Agriculture Commit,
tee, chaired by Republican Sen. Dick
Lugar of Indiana, is weighing possible remedies that include tacking
farm legisll!lion onto the next shortterm spending· bill it one is needed.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole,
R-Kan., says a farm bill ought to be
passed by the end of February.
The Republican presidential candidate told North Dakota farmers
Thesday he would suppon extending

.

current programs, but only as a last
option. They would have to be
stretched out two years to keep farm
policy from being mired in electioneering.
Dole said he supports the Roberts
measure despite serious misgivings
and would like to see it as separate
legislation or in the budget package.
1'\le measure reduces up to $6 billion in farm program Sjiending over
seven years but subscribes "market
.transition payments'' for farmers
based on past subsidies. The fixed
payments would deciine each year.
Government control of most fanning
decisions would end.
B~ause payments would be made
regardless of crop prices, Dole said
there would be "hundreds and hun-

OVEC promotes Eblen
CHESHIRE - Larry A. Eblen has
been promoted from Assistant Shift
Operating Engineer to Shift Operating Engineer in the Operations
Department at the Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant,
effective January I, 1996, plant manager R.E. Amburgey has announced.
Eblen joined OVEC in 1971 as a
Laborer in the Labor Department. In
1973, he transferred to the Operations
Department, where he advanced to
unit supervisor in 1985 and to assis·
tant shift operating engineer in 1991.
Eblen and his wife, Angela,. reside in
Gallipolis.

•Power Glass Sunroof
•Compad Disc Player
with Equalzer
. •nit &amp;Crllise

VINTON - Ronald Brewer, Vinton, has enrolled in the heating,' air
conditioning and refrigeration program at the Technical Institute in
Dayton.

When .&lt;::dnued rrom o-1

•Air conditioili1g ·
•1 S" Alunlintm Wheels· .
•Dual Air Bags'·

•

Vol. 48, NO. l88
1 Seollon. 10 hgee

.

By JIM FREEMAN
· and TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Waters of the flood of 1996 began
receding early this morning, leaving
some Meigs County residents with
.the grim task of cleaning up tons of
Ohio River debris from their homes :
&lt;~~~d businesses.
. The river crested at 3 a.m. at the .
Racine Locks and Dam, at a level of.
47.7 feet. Officiills at !he dam could-.
.n't put a precise time on the crest at .
Pomeroy, but said it would have
occurred near the time of the crest at :
the dam.
The crest of 50.5 feet was the
fourth highest level the Ohio had
been at Pomeroy in the past 40 years.
The river reached levels of 52.8 feet
in March 1964, and last reached the
50-foot mark on Feb. 28, 1979 when
the river crested at 51 .5 feet.
This year's flood surpassed the
Super Bowl Day flood of 1994,
which reached 49.7 feet. The New
Year's Day flood of 1991 reached
49.3 feet. ·
The Board of County Commis.sioners declared a flood emergency in
.the county, urging motorists to be

careful, said Commission President
Fred Hoffman.
Most county employees were told
to stay home. except for emergency
and law enforcement pe..Sonnel.
"I figured they didn't need all that
traffic in Pomeroy," said Hoffman. "It
would create more confusion with the
lack of parking places."
The commissioners' meeting
scheduled for today will take place,
he said.
Southern Local Schools were
closed while Meigs Local's Pomeroy.
Elementary School and Eastern's
Riverview Elementary School were
closed.
Emergency workers have encountered little trouble other than mobility problems, said Meigs County .
Emergency Services Director Raben
Byer.
Byer has requested a state damage
assessment team that was in route to
the county as of this morning.
"They'll come in and take a look,"
he said. "this is the first step in
obtaining emergency funding."
"All the counties above us have.
been declared emergency areas by the
governor," he said. "When they see

IIOMOIIEY

95 BUICK

95 BUICK

lESABRE

REGALS

'

Power aeat, power
wlndowa, aluminum
wheela, duaf air baga.

.

WHEELING. W.Va. (AP) - flooding hit hard in West Virginia's
nonhem and eastern panhandles and along the Ohio River on Sunday,
damaging thousands of homes and forcing tho~ands of people to flee
for higher ground.
.
.
.
.
At least two people died, both trytng to cross htgh water m vehicles, authorities said.
The flooding that started late last week in the state's mountains from
snow melt and about 2.S inches of rain was causing problems on three
major rivers: the Ohio, Potomac·ll!'d Shenandoah.

Loaded cara, ml.lea aa
low aa 10,000.

Ex-Pom~roy

mayor
·f iles for commission

BUICK .

For More Infonnation Contact

SINCE 1954

I

PONTIAC .
1900WRRN

wa..,

IT HAPPENS EVERY FLOOD- One daraa another to wade out
Into the
and 10meone alwaya does. Hera, Doug Starcher
of Wllkeevllle took the dare and wu later Joined by Hveral oth:
er.boya. And how Will It? "Cold," eeld Doug.

Mountain State floods
·worst since '85: officials

1

AGannett Co. Nc 11111 ir

Meigs faces cleanup
as Ohio River .recedes

'

Gurant.M
.tow.st Prfeesl ·

·-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ol'llo,·Monday, January 22,1996

36MONTHS
Automatic, A/C, CD Player. Loaded!
OFFER ENDS JAN, 31ST!

l.oW8 In mid 30e tonlgllt. ·
Cloudy. Tu .. day, cloudy. :
Hlgha In 501.

•

P010eroy, I'm sure we'll be added to
the list."
Byer praised county residents for
their composure.
"We've got a lot of good cooperation,'' he said. "Now, the cleanup
begins."
· Pomeroy business owners surveyed the flood scene early this
morning and some have already
began the task of cleaning up.
Jim Anderson, proprietor of
Anderson's Furniture &amp; Appliance,
had moved most of his merchandise
out of harm's way, leaving him with
little more than a nasty cleanup.
Various Pomeroy merchants com·
plained because wakes created by river uaffic pushed additional water into
their businesses.
Vicki Ferrell's business, Buttons
and Bows, escaped the Ohio River
almost unscathed. However, a passing barge pushed some water into the
business, she explained.
Officials at the Racine Locks and
. Dam said the river was not closed to
uaffic, but the facility had not locked
a tow through their lower chamber
since late Friday.
"We continue to lock vessels

John W. Blaettnar, Pomeroy, has on Pomeroy Village Council and as
annoilnced his intention to seek the! mayor.
Republican fany nomination for tho
Blaettnar is a past member of the
Jan. 4, 1997 sell on the Meigs Coun- Meigs Local Teachers Association, a
ty Board of Commissioners.
current member of Drew Webster
A graduate of Pomeroy High Post 39 of the American Le1ion, a
School. he earned a bachelor of sci- member of the Pomeroy Fire O.panence in business adminisuation and ment and Pomeroy ·Emeracncy
a inaster of education from Ohio Uni- Squad; servi118 as chief for two yean•
· ersity of served as chairman of the MeJgs
51ud1'ed at the Umv
versity,
and I•• a It' '""
•~
Rio Grande and did posl-master's EMS board ·o·f-'·tees,'
u...
sllldies at Ohio State University.
time membet of Trinity chiD'Ch.
He is a captain .in the U.S. Air
He is the son of Margaret BlaetFon:e Retired Reserve, was a pilot in tnlll' and the late Fred Blaettnar and
the Strategic Air Command and the :· resides at 316 Wrigllt St. in Pomeroy
Ai'·r Natlonal "'uard, was a ........... in · with his wife, Eleanor.
They have four chilc!ien, EiizM,eth
the BlaeltMr'Auto &lt;;o.. a ~~ II
Ale~ander Hiah School and Me•as · Golowenski, Mil)' ~tewlrt, Cathet, J.:lilh School, a partner in Rick's Fire inc Johnson and Rick Blaettnll'; and
' ' a: Safety Equipmen! Inc., and served nine grandchildren. '
~

~

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THE MIGHTY OHIO - This waa the scane
from the water'• edge on Lynn near the Inter·
section of East Main Street late Sunday afternoon when the water stood at 50.3 feet In
Pomeroy. The river craat can'le about 5 a.m.
through the lower chamber until we
. g~t a 49.4 reading. That is when our
. machinery gets water and we have to
.stop locking," a dam spokesman
said.

this morning at 50.5 feet Delplte nu"""""' :
road closings, Pornaroy's trafftc wu brllk SIJn.
dly as hundred• came to town to catch a
gllmpae of the flood of '96. (Sentinel photo by
Charlene Hoeflich)

Next door, the Hanwell House, a
new, renovated business, had water
on its new, treated pine floor. The
store's goods were undamaged.
Meanwhile, motorists used a par-

tion of the as-yet-uncompleted first
section of the 1-71/U.S. 33 Connector Road as a flood road. A section of
the road from Meigs High School to
Pomeroy Pike was opened to traffic.

..

'
LEASE A NEW '96 GUND AM GT COUPE

own personal logo).$2-50.00 ea.
With order of one 8" by 8" or 12'' by 12" a 4" by 8"
Brick(s) $25.00 ea.
,

'

n5620

'

12" by 12" limestone Lqgo Marker (.1· 3 lines and your

'

Sports, Page 5

by flood

$7S.ooea.

Meigs Co. Chamber of Commerce
238 West Mala Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 992-5005

0066
Super Lotto:
2-4-18-19-30-31
Kicker:

.-·victi~~iZed

4" by 8" Brick $30.00 ea.
1\vo or more 4" by 8" Bricks $25.00 ea.
Also Available:
Large 8" by 8" Cornerstone Brick (Great for Businesses!)

~

Pick 3:
522
Plck4:

Raclne

BECOME A PART OF
MEIGS COUNTY'S IDSTORY!
•
Buy a personalized brick for your family or business to
be used in the revitalization project happening in our
county seat of Pomeroy. You will receive permanent
recognition of your community support, that will last a
lifetime. Order deadline extended to February 14.

Eastern
upends
·Southern

s

To attend ITT

It's important to remember that· if
you do not roll over the entire distribution, including the 20% withheld
for the IRS, whatever portion you do
not roll over is subject to federal
income tax, To avoid taxes, you
must make up the 20% that was
withheld and add that to your IRA.
· An IRA rollover can offer immediate tax benefits as well. If you roll
over your distribution into an IRA,
you'll thank yourself come tax time
and save anywhere from $ISO to
nearly $400 in federal income taxes
for each $1,000 . you receive from
your employer, depending on your
tax bracket.
Jay Caldwell Is an Investment
for the Gallia Soli and Water Con· Broker for The Ohio Company in
servation District
its Gallipolis omee.
·

.

t

.J
'
dreds of stories" about big farme),-s
getting big payments. Still he ~up.
ports its free-market approach. . '
Agriculture Secretary Dah Olio\.
man, meanwhile, has held out lite
threat of using old farm law and l)is
broad discretion under other laws 10
make program decisions. The 1949
Agricultural Adjustment Act is the
permanent farm law that remainedj n
effect when the 1990 farm bjll
expired.
The first announcement, abOut
the rice program, will come befdte
Feb. 15. Glickman will announce
corn and wheat programs in midMarch.
Subsidies would be limited
because of allotments to individual
farms . Land that was not farmed in
the 1950s would get no money.
~

WASHINGTON (AP) - Farmstate lawmakers say it's time to
unhitch major farm prognulllegislation from attempts to i&gt;alance the
budget. •
After all, a new planting season is
approaching with no law in effect to
govern any payments and acreage
levels for major crops. Separate
action could start next week on a
farm bill to replace the expired 1990
bill.
. "We're gelling down to crunch
time," Rep. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., told
reporters last week.
Early this month, Roberts introduced just-in-case farm legislation
that outlines the same new farm program inCluded in balanced-budget
legislation vetoed by President Clin-

Gallia S&amp;WCD to hold session
011 no-till crop production on Feb. 6
By BUZMILLS
GALLIPOLIS - Two weeks ago
we had an anicle in t~ paper telling
you of some of the agronomic and ·
financial benefits of no-till crop production.
.
· Now the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District is sponsoring a
meeting covering the "how to" of notill crop production. This event will
take place in the meeting room of the
C.H. McKenzie Agricultural Center,
, Ill Jackson Pike on Tuesday Feb. 6,
'from 12- S p.m.
, '• Ray Adamski, a crop consultant
from the Knox County area for the
past.! 0 years, will be covering com
•and soybean production. A slide pre. senmtion will coincide with his talk.
Bob Hendershot Area Resource
. Conservationist with the Natural
'Resources Conservation Service will
talk on hay and pasture production.
· Other tOpics of discussion will be:
District no-till equipment rental, soil
testins. farm planning ~uirements
and COlt 'h*re programs. A question
and answer session will follow all

CORE OF THE MA1TER: Wjll
Somebody Buy That Apple?
..
While the departures of Biopdj,
Appleton and Brown were surpriljng,
many investors were more sh~
by an executive who kept his ·jqb:Apple Computer Inc. chairimut:ind
chief executive Michael Spindltt.:'
The company that gave the wood
the easy-to-u~· desktop compu!P
reported an October-December 'ICfS
of $68 million and forecast another
loss for the current quaner. It alia
announced 1,300 layoffs and otlir
restructuring steps. But industry lUlllysts foresee more erosion at Apple as
legions of customers embrace rivl l
computers based on standards crealed by IBM Corp., Microsqft Coi'J).
and Intel Corp. Many investors have
been-«cquiring Apple stock on
hunch that the company will be so1a.
But by week's end, the stock w~
heading lower.
.•
;

Ohio Lottery

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Newa Staff
About 17 village residents, seven
businesses, and the Racine Village
Water Department and Volunteer Fire •
Department fell victims to the Aood
·
of 1996 Sunday.
Another eKpected foot ·of water
could claim as many as 20 or more
downtown businesses and residents
by this morning.
Although most people were able
to get their valuables to higher ~
ground, many buildings were damaged by the high water, including
several mobile homes 'that suffered
considerable water damage.
Rescue crews from the Racine
police and fire departments helped .
evacuate many residents who were
trapped on islands of their own
homes by the quickly-rising water.
"Residents pitched in and helped
Sunday. A volunteer fire fighting crew .._. : :
VILLAGE FLOODED - Thl1 scene down
"and worlc'ed together," said Racine
Third
Street
In
Racine
shows
the
boat
ramp
to
rowed down the street to evacuate a Racine V. ·.
MayorJeff Thornton.
the right at the halght of flooding in the vll..ge
lage
resident trapped by the floodwatara. . ·::
Evacuated familie s apparently
•
•'
went with relatives or friends, according to Meigs County Emergency how the water would get and if evac· watched as Wolfe's Body Shop and see the flood waters, presenting t1 :
uation would be necessary.
National Gas &amp; Oil in lower areas of problem to people evacuating the vii•·
Services Director Raben Byer.
"Nobody asked for shelter," he
Said Ken McFann of Southern the town were consumed by the lage. Many others put in many houn
Heating &amp; Cooling and Star Supply water. Just over a foot of water stood of hard work helping neighbors and ·
added.
'
Although the flood was disastrous Hardware, "Right now, it's just wait in most of Wolfe's buildings at around businesses move to higher ground
·
9 p.m. Sunday.
for a few, most of the flooding in the and see.
For many it was a long, long day and :
Hilton Wolfe Jr. said, "We got the night.
:
"I don't want to move if I don't
Racine area was a nuisance. The bigmost
imponant
things
out
and
whathave
to,
but
the
warehouse
is
lower
ger problem will come when the mud
The river had reportedly crested iO::
from the JDUrky waters is left behind than the store," he added. "It's going ever else we could. We moved every · Racine early this morning, relieving :
to be a close call . We'll keep a close thing up off the ground, but if it gets those who had ke~t watch all Suoday::
as waters recede.
Many ·anxious homeowners and eye on it. I've heard rumors that it will . deeper than the prediction I could ntght. Another stgh of relief was. ·
voiced as a move to higher ground: :
business owners were playing a game crest at 48.5 feet and at 50.5. If it's lose a lot. "
People came from all around to was averted.
·
of roulette - a guessing game of below 50 feet we'll be OK." "•
Earlier,
McFann
and
others
waiting to the last minute to see just

Pickens tosses hat
into commission race
Patty. Goeglein Pickens, seeking
the Republican nomination for the
Jan. 4, 1997 seat on the Meigs County Board of Commissioners, filed a
petition announcing her candidacy
Friday.
Pickens, a fourth-gener,ation
Meigs County resident, said she
would like to establish an active and
open commissioners' office.
"The commissioner should be a
partner with our people, local businesses and state officials," she said.
Pickens said she feels joint efforts
:would make businesses outside the
area aware fo the county's natural
benefits, with easy access to water
Joha W. BlaettDer
. and land, as well as enthusiastic men
If elected, Blaettnar states he will and women willing to work.
~ "We need to let others see the
be a full-time commissioner.

1

advantages of our home," she said.
Pickens said she has already taken steps to develop this pannership
over the past four years by building
relationships through the Republican
!'any with State Rep. John Carey, Lt.
Gov. Nancy Hollister and other state ·
officials.
On a local level , she WB1}ts to pub' Iish office hou(S so that any resident
who wishes to speak with a commissioner would "find an open door and
an open mind."
For the campaign, an answering
;service has been arranged at 992·
·2716, she said.·The number is open
to anyone wishing to voice a co~rn.
ask a question or participate in the IConunittoeman Ray R. Pid aollatw;i
campaign.
i raised three dausbten, ia
~
Pickens and her husband, Central
. (Contlmlf oil ..... 3)
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eommental}"

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, Monday, January 22, 1896

Pt!ol ; ,2

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OHIO We&lt;1ther

Mon.,, JenuerY 22, , ...

1\lesclay, San. l3

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AccuW~

By Jllllk Andlt'l on
and Mlchall Bll'l!il In

111: '21511•
..,, Pomeroy,
Ohio
Fax: 992·2157

Joint Chiefs Chainnan Colin Powell
'normally have.''
promised to crush the Iraqi army:
Coot gives credit to Democrats
"First we're going to cut it off, and
for identifying potentiill candidates,
, then we're going to kilUt."
•
but notes that they arc having "a very
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Now Republicans .are refining a
. hard time gettins them down to the
corollary for a different battlefield:
,altar."
·
.
ROBERT L WINGETT
political control of the House ofRejlThclack of ground ttoops cost the
Publleher
rescntatives. One of the RepubliC411 "Con!J'IIct With America," but ~ 'Democrats in ·1982, two yean
.'
'
I
lieutenants recently SU1JIIIIed up the .talk of the Republican cloalcroom Ronald Reagan's landslide. Although
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
battle plan this way:
~ntcrs on )ong-tennjob-security.
the Democrats never lost majority
GenlrDI u-g.,
Controller
"First we beat them (House
If Republicans can focus on the control of the House, they only
Democrats), and then we take away size as opposed to the survival of their picked up 26 seats in 1982 even
their staffs, their money and the lo~ 236-197 majority, it's largely because though they had sotru: potent issues
byists.''
I
. they are winning the all-important cutting in their fa~or. sucb as the
. . . . . lo . . . . . antlmuetbeelflt»ttantllncl-· ' 'wWJd•'•e:'M•nwtRepublicans arc looking beyond grouftd war: Fund-raising, recruit- recession and Social Security. The
lllr. "" ,.,,,..., lifln . . ,. ,..,...,..,, , _ ,. In , _ ,..,.,
the mere preservation of their major- mcnt and retirements.
reason, says Cook. is that the Democi
.
ity status to a longcr-tenn effort to
"Democratshavc·aJotmoreretire-' rata "didn't have a full team on the
uproot the vestiges of the Democrat- ments (23) ihan Republicans (12) field."
.
ic power "ase. That means winning have," explains political sage Charles
.This time .around the Democrats
cl~tions, but ~lso enlails a more sub- Cook. "The Democratic open seats · not only lack a liill team but they have
terranean set of changes.
are a lot more vulnerable to Republi- ·cause to fret over the fate .of their
'The' "favot-doing ·staffs," as this can pick-ups .than the Republican leaden. Republican of(jcials, wllo
R:cpublicail ilubhed them, are not only .open seats are, alid Republicans have . have money to bum, have decided to
the intcllectuaj nuclcu.s of !he House, one of the best recruiting classes target high-profile Democrats, ev~n
but they are also situ..ed to dispense they've had-in a long time versus the those whom they have only a shm
· 'favors and. collect
catnpaign Democrais havi.ng spot~ recruitment. cbance of defeating. According to one
Lately we have _observed an il!CfCIISC in the amount of crime, some~---""'!:~------'T"
times Violent crimes,' committed by youngsters in o\Jr commtmity.
~:::~ o
Last fall, a 16-year-old Middleport boy, Thomas J~m!_e:s Ross III, shot
uother 16-year-old, Chad Wise of Middleport, in the abdomen with a .38-caliber handgun. Ross will be confined until his twenty-first birthday.
_ Monday, a i4-year~old ' Middlcport boy, Joshua CremeatiS, participated
,in the shameful robbery of the Meigs Cp~&amp;nty Salvati'!R Army. 1\vo terrified, elderly women w~ blindfolded, gagged 'and bound during this dis·sraceful, cowardly-crime: _
·
, :·
· · · ' ··
Cremeans has forfeited the rern~n~r Qf his youth for committing rob.bery, kidnapping~ and burglary. ThC) l!M.
·· " ·
· But we wonder what the robbers could have. hoped to achieve by. target'4ng the house. If they had but knocked on the door, the Salvation Army would
have offered them what ever they had to give. Over the ·years, many poor
people were given free clothing, and other assistance 'from this house. Now
it seems other arrangements will have to be made.
.
, lust this week, an as-yet-unidentified Pomeroy youth stole a pickup truck
.ud is aWaiting sentencing. Funhermore, a Racine-area minor is being ques'tioned in the theft of several cars.
'
; These are minors that commit major crimes.
. The' public has the feeling we cannot release the names of adolescent crim,inals in our community. Not true. Ii is our opiniop that juvenile delinquents·
. are toO shielded and that it js time they be exposed for their felony acts.
:~ We. understand being identifiCI) as a criminal in the newspaper can be
,embarrassing, but by shielding and pampering these junior lawbreaker.; we
!I" ~n&lt;jinglhe message that they can ge( away with anything. Even worse,
we .are telling parents and guardians they need not be embarrassed by their
· c:hililren's actions.
.
, Paten~ to know that their children's uillawfulness can and will be
~:evealed lo .the community at large -- not hidden behind a wall of anonymity as has been custom.
·
• 11ie Dally Senlinel.,se"es the rl&amp;bt lo publish the llllllles of minon .
I*J'rided Glfelonlts and sentenced in the Meigs County Juvenile Coiurt,
.
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-wllcloiO.

By Jsck Anderson
snd
Michael Blnsteln

after

-·---·I G-TIIe)I-·----Af2

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

:No.wall of.anonymitY.· .
for.youthful

offen~ers

______; ;-,

. ..

Maybe you don't beat them, but you
lmake them crazy. Then we're free to
lcl)ciry-pict others.'' .
:
1
For example, Repubhc~believe
they were the ultitl\ate victot i.n last .
year's bitter ~assachusefts Senate
race between mcumbel)t Democrat
Edward Kennedy and political iiOvice
Mitt Romney. Kc;nnedy won.the clec-lion, but only after a. difficult and
expensive ftght tbat diverted valuable
Democratic resources. One -~ubli. can says the Kennedy~ became a
"sponge" for Democratic mo~y.
which helped the Republicans gain
iground in races that were ~ highprofile. .
•
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' Republicans make ® .ecret of
·who theirtaraets are this.year: House
Minority Leader 'Richard Oe~
D-Moo~ Minorit~iWhip DaVid Bonior,
0-fyfi~h. , Demotrltic CaiJC1Ii ChAir
Vic Fazio, D-Calif., and Rep. Martin
Fro, t, D-Texi!S, who . beads the
Democrats' Congressional O.mpaign
Committee. Fazio and Frost hail from
very c,ompetiti\.~ districts 'ailll \Vould
have tough nices ~n without the
GOP pressure. ·
The Republican attack on Boni!JI'
is·as much personal as it is.political.
one month * r the 1?9.4 ~blicin
rout, Bonior began a.ciiiJICI~bombing
1
attack against House Speilcer Ne~
Gingrich, calling for an outsiiiC i,nvestigation into ethical allegations.
Bonior recently got his wish, but it
may cost him an extremely Well-funded Republican cliall~npr. · ·
'
Whether It's Bonior or Gephird't,
some Democrats are privately di~­
_cussing the consequences of an
·embattled 'leaderShip. ·
.
''I don't think they can beat theQI
(Democratic leaden) but they can
keep them in the trenches," says~
senior House Democrat.' ''There s
really no one below Gephardt wlio
can take the mantle and say, 'I'm
going to assume leadcnhlp in yodr
absehce.' We're very thin in terms of
lour bench.. w~. !Ja~e a ,lot of good sotid ball players but very few ~tars in
our ranks.11

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Jack Andenon and Michael
' Binsteln .-,e , 'Y,riten for __ U _
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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An_
·end
to·
race•b
.
as_
e
d
scholars.
h
ips?·
",
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.
Letters ·to the.editor
py Nat Hentoff

Reader recalls·experience
Peaf'llditor,
I read Dorothy Sayre's article in
The Qlily Sentinel which made me
thipJc about some flat tires I had going
from M45on · to .25 miles above; .
Chirlestoli, w.va., about 1942 or

.943:

.

( Incidentally, I had the same number of flat tires as those bikers had
(II) ilihough they only had II flat
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tires in 4,639 miles: I had II in 200
miles.
· Tires were rationed at that time. I
ho11ghttwo six-ply tires just before I
started and had the flat tires in those
tires. I finl!)ly traded them for two
new four-ply tires. Traded even:
· OpieCobb
Middleport

'

Joday .i~· history
., 1ha A'aaoclated Pi'n*

'

·: 1011ay is Monday, Jan. 22, the 22nd day of 1996. There are 344 days left

i'Rihe~.

· ··~·· Hishligb,t in ~stQry:
;r .OQ Iiin. ~ 1917, President Wilson plcailed for an end to war in Europe,
~!!IIU., -~.. ,~without victory." (By ~pril , however, Am~rica also was
lit war.)

On this date:

In 1901-. Britain's Queen Victoria died at age 82.
In I 90S, thousands of demonstrating Russian workers were fired on by
-~periaiii:Diy troop1 in St Petersburg on

what became known as "Red Sunday" or :'Bloody Sunday.'' .
.
,
: In 1922, i&gt;o/lC Benedict XV died; he was succeeded by Pius XI.
• , Jn 1938, Tl!omton Wilder's play "Our Town" was perfonned publicly
far the first time, in Princeton, NJ. .
·
I.·In 1953, the Arthur Miller dram!' "The Crucible" opened on Broadway.
,,
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·B~· rry's ·world
.

Nat Hento"

til. use financial need and/or a disad~
vant8ged background. This ,is Just
what Justice William 0 . Douglas suggested in 1974 in his dissent , in
DeFunis v. Odegaard:
· ~cisions 1/8should be made
3/8 on the basis of individual attributes, .rather than according a preference solely on .the basis of J:Ke."
Included, for instance, said Douglas,
wpuld be the quaJ,ities of "a black
applicant who pulled himself out of
the ghetto" and "a
Appalachian
white" who had overcpine other bar·
riers.
As the .Chronicle reported, Colorado State University had started last
fall -- before the attorney general's
memorandum -- "to look first ateconomic criicria thai affect all races, but
may affect ' minority greups more.
Scholarship panels look secondarily
1at race, gender and ethnicity."
And Ro.bert Shirley, president of
the University of Southenl Colorado,
says that "most of our financially disadvantaged students are minority, so
'fie are able to help them with schol;arships by using economic criCeria."
Minorities are 30 percent of that:student body.
In a well-known 1994 case, cited
by Gale Norton in her memorandum,
the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals
.s~ down a University of~aryland
schoi81ShiP prograln for which only
African-Americans were eligible.
(The rejected plaintiff, an Hispanic

poor

,

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He~~,-~

·. student; had inet all the ~ademic anci
·other reqjlirements.)
Said the Founh Circuit in Pod'beresky ,v. Kirwan: "Wbilc thll
inequities and indignities visited by
past discrimination arc undeniable,
the . use of race as a reparational
devicil .riskS peipetuating the very
rKC consciousneSs. such a 'remedy
purports to ovcn:ome.': Last May, the
Supreme Court refused to review tbal .
decision.
·
Since the Supreme .Court's 1978
Bakke dccisipn; a mqiicjlt answer til ,
that criticism of, rw;e-specific affir· n'iative action has been Justice,Hmy
Blaeltmun's statement in Bakke: "In
to get beyond racism, we mu~.
fir.Wtake account of race." ·
··
Obviously, race must be ~ intp
account whenever there is specific
· discrimination. But when aencra1
·J:Kial preferences -- intentional anCI
with government support -· discrim-·
inate against individuals who are-not
of that race, the Constitution has been•
substantially diminished. This is also
true of gender and ethnic preferences~
.-- accordin! to group identity -- tha(
:cannot justify a compelling govern~.
•ment interest.
William 0. Douglas was riabt all,
along.
.,
Niil Henlolf IS a aalloaally,
renowaed auth!lrl'1 1111 tile Flrit '
.AJD«n"-nt ud the rest Gftlle BW
!ofRipll.
·
,

order

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issues and ii is on~y ~ beginninJ, . give way. . ·
· ' . technology. M'"y 'small busl~esses ~
AP Buelneu Analy~t
.. .
bec~use these and su~ular mluu:rs are
The current economic conditions with the potential to be tomorrow 's ~
NB~ YORK- While pol,11lctans . deslln&lt;:d to be the btg tssues m the of American families emit clear si&amp;· leidcn lfC lioged down in paper~ !
som~llmes· pro':'ldc a degree of campatgn debates. . :· - .
.
nals for candidates to deal with, one .work, tax paymentS llid''reguiaiions :
m~tocre entett~mme.nt they usu'!ly
Not·allis los~. While cl~caaon of die most obvious being that !Qil· that impede their ability to conJ •
l'Utn alleii\PU. to J~telltgently constd- . . has not bce\1 the re~idt, U.C debates lions of American families are r111811~ , ttibufe.
·
..
·l
. cr iss~a: 9f ~ 'P,\!cketbook. ,
~have put the econonuc ~ lllllq ll)e clally stressed. • • . .
' ''The undcrclus; 1IUidC up of schOOl ~'
.
V?'ersal~y
.have~adatasteof
,
ftontp~andthetcle~~oQ.
~
s
··
ThC
installmentcreditfi.-.,at
'&amp;!Ill economic dropopts iild Qlhers .
·.
w~t s ahead ,m..discusston about the :and so lla:vc rem.f~rcOJ! what 11 • ·tl!c highest level ever just before•lu~ !who are said to be ~vanlaglll1, is
ihe flat tax, nummum wages, welfare, already on the publte s IDind. '&lt;
. Christmu, suggest many live 011 groWing How are the "' be trana
S~ial Security, medi~al care and a . . Eventually .and.despite the mu_d- 'credit !I&gt;' necessity, notchoice.AhiJh ported &amp;om a destruc~v~ to a con~~
vanety of matters relaang to the poor, dling, the public IDiabt be able to dis- delinq110ncy level adds further evi- structivc role in ·the econo 7
the wealthy and the elderly.
· cern the ments of ~nts and the dCnce of that. Incentives IIR pared
As mallen stand 1't
be ·
Learned studies have been made 'competcnceofcsndidatesand~able ' to. ~na not savina ' .
w~lfl
. ' . pays
on
of i~siiCs in all these ~. bllt they ,to .come to conclusions about Who i ~ problem in ~me familidl
and ~.-after " 1• I
~ '', I aren't Jikely tq ' enter ·an)"'seftOUJ c~ clolestto dealina with ias~. j~y' be of lbe;t'b'M! 'makina bUt it'· ··li ~- A
~~~lap~~ ~
. ;debaies,' considering !1Jii time limits .• ·1'1101e Who ilo so, it sei?ms,\villl!le t l unll~ly iJiai· thbae families ~ ·ibj{ ' ~: ~
y ~'
;· ; : ~'d ,the prope_hsi!Y for_'p!llitiCI)I one, ' ·!"'*WhO p~tlhe s·~~~ cin ~~~born- m~ority.ltPr&lt;&gt;vokeS die ption of '
~ ~ ::,s.r~ ~ys !DOR\
_I liners or sotmd bttcs.
Jca rather \IIIII ·poh~s. and whO ,what role i• pl.ved by l~~~:ome taxes
·
J ·.• _ .
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!~ ~~ flat~ "tru!Y a ~utty i~'' u~~. ~ can ·c~theissues land comj!ulsOrY payroliOcdUcllo . - , LonJ-term, _philo~,~l con• }
[or 11 tt somethtng that mtght benefit fac1n1 fllbihes today. • "
. ' Small businesses .are stress:d :: ; - . : : *:=~ !"14aet
· individual taxpayers lmd Uncle Sam - EConomiatl Roser Brjnner and ~~ly retail outlets lhiJuuJidl
unty.and; t
'-!00? Win ahiaher nliaiDium waae .P!Ivid Wy.. of DRI/tofi:Oraw-Hill wbiclaln~-lbe~I-IIJICODto . : .
I
. -~..tiJIIIIaiCO'_t ·
. • create IJIIPCIIWnity or thwart it? Will pUt it succinctly in ~ommetibna that ~live. Will!, aupentorea..Are'
~~ u ::-~11~ ~...~ 111·
. Medicare teally be cut1 '
v "economics -.y be more imJ)ortant :siunen ~ :.bit 1s, voterS -...::! best , . ~ .o
• · ,.,_., .....-,...~~
t
Apeatdealofml;infonnation!-!
politics ill 19961han politics to .serveaby.!Jowiqthemtodieoft1 i'f"J41UCS~uaedtooblcURstm::1 1
been spread about all the economic Ccionomics;" Politics, that is. bas to
RetailinJ is in u.....,•val but so cis .P e, pnc
' C)IIITellt !llltten ' . f

.By JOHN CUNNIFF

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t:l: · t:"'1n1-- ·

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· Katie Ellen Hawkins Rawson, 97, Middleport, died Saturday, Jan. 20, 1996
. at Overbrook ~nter, Middleport.
. Born Jan. 8, 1899 in Southside, W.Va., she was a daughter of the lateAbra. ham and Sarab L. Spurlock Hawkins. She was a homemaker and a member
. of Apostolic Church of Christ in Grove City.
·
. She was also preceded in death by her husband, leslie H. Rawson; a brot&amp;
er, Vaughn Hawkins; two sisters, Laura Birchfield and Altha Roseberry; a
· daughte~, Reb~ M. Rollins; two infants; two sons-in-law; and a granddaughter.
SurviVors tnclude two daughters, Loretta R. Hutchinson of Point Pleas- ant, W.Va., and Wanda Saxton of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; two sons, the Rev.
Em~ett A. Rawson of Middleport, and Donald E. Rawson of Grove City; a
. son-m-l~w, Denver Rollins of Chillicothe; and II grandchildren, 23 greatgrandchtldren and two great-great-grandchildren .
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point
· Pleasant, with the Rev. Robert Hall officiating. Burial will be in the Lone
: Oak Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Friends may call at the funeral home from 69 p.m. Thesday.

IND.

• IColumbus 143• I

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&lt;Cold front to bring rain
.·-through region T~esday

Louise Bennett.Roush
Louise Bennett Roush. 86, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday, Jan. 21,
· 1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
.
Bom Nov. 25, 1909 in Point Pleasant, she was a daughter of the late
Charles J. and Nellie (McDaniel) Bennett.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a daughter,
Maudellcn Roush Henry; and a sister, Catherine Bennett McDaniel.
She was an employee of the Marietta Manufacturing Co. and of the West
Virginia·Ordnance Works, where she served as secretary. She was a graduate of Point Pleasant High School and of Mountain State Business College;
she attended Parkersburg C(lmmunity College, Glenville State College, and
the William Holland Lapidary School of Young Harris, Ga.
She was a charter member of the West Virginia State Farm Museum, a
charter member of the West Vtrginia Antique Steam and Gas Engine Association, a member of the Kanawha Rock and Gem Oitb, the Ohio Valley Lapidary Society; the American Society of Gem Cutters and the Oh-Kan Wanderers. She was a charter member of St. Peter's Lutheran Church of Point
Pleasant.
Surviving arc her husband of 63 years, Walden F. Roush; a son, Walden
B. Roush; and five granddaughters and seven great-grandchildren.
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the St. Peters Lutheran Church, 28th
Street and Parrish Avenue, Point Pleasant, with the Rev. George C. Weirick
and Rev. Charles S. Hupp officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkl.and Memorial Gardens, near Point Pleasant. Friends may call at the Crow-Russell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, from 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.

The Dally Sentinel• Ptlg8 3

.Broadcaster departs
commissioner race......
ATIIENS (AP) - A sportscaster
has found that the rules for IUJIIIing
. a radio station are different than the
rules for running for office.
, Leonard Eliason of Athens, who
•calls Obio University basketball
'games on the radio, is giving up his
candidacy for Athens County commissioner because his lawyers said
other candic)atcs migbt demand equal
broadcast time.
Eliason, who also is general manager of WMPO radio in MiddleportPomeroy, said he was upset about
having to pull out of the; March 19
Democratic primary. He said he
would withdraw today. .
'' You don't run for office if you
don 't want to do it," Eliason said.
"It's unfortunate as a broadcaster
you 're stuck with a different set of
standards.''·
I He said he decided to drop ou&amp;
!after attorneys advised bim that Fedieral Communications Commission
equal-time provisions would require
stations to give the other candidates
free air time.
Eliason said he asked the incumbent cornmis.sioner, Bill Theisen, to

!Waive his fi!Ual-ti~J~C. ·.-,. Hp

reftued.

1

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. Theisen told 11le Atheu MeueJi..
gcr that he would liave liked the llldi(l
'time to promote his own candidacy.
" It would h!lve been a good
·opportunity to get some free air
'time, and I wouldn't have talk~ ·
ahout basketball either," be said. ·
Eliason's games are heard on&gt;four
Athens County radio stations.
,
He said the stations would not
have allowed him to continue broa~
casting if it meant giving the othef
candidates that much air time.
;
· "I felt it was important to bon4r
i my contract," he said,
.,
I Eliason never asked the third.can-•
1didate, Bob Eichenberg, if he ~
waive his equal time rights. Eicbe~­
berg said Sunday that be would ha~
considered it. But he added ~t bC
prefers being the only ,candida~
challenging the incumbent in the p~­
mary.
" As far as I'm concerned, a two-·
way race is far beuer for me, so I'm
·not complaining about the result;.! ' he
said.
,.
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Emboldened Democrats
seek congressional seats "·

~ther foreeut!
·.. Soui.~erly winds will bring
Toniglit.. .Bccoming cloudy. A
warmer temperatures-to Ohio for the chance of rain west after midnight,
. next day or two but they will also with a chance of rain central and
By KATHERINE RizzO
The Republican who unseated
,bring moisture that eventually northeast toward daybreak. Freezing
Associated
Press
Writer
him,
Rep. Frank Crenieans, is ex~t. rain is also possible nonheast. Lows
becomes rain or snow.
WASHINGTON - 1\vo years ed to have a financial edge, thanks·to
. ' The mercury tonight will remain in the lower to middle 30s.
ago,
running for Congress seemed so more than a year of aggressive fund:'around 30 degrees,· forecasters said.
Tuesday ... Cioudy. Rain likely
difficult
that Democrats weren 't able raising among Washington political
Highs on Thesday will be mostly in nonhwest half will\ a chance of rain
talk
anyone
into trying to unseat action committees.
to
the 40s.
remainder. FreeZing rain possible in
three
Ohio
Republicans.
.
In 1994, Cremeans found the tide
· However, a cold front approaching · the morning nonheast. Highs from
This
year,
things
are
different
A
turning
in his favor after he aired
(.rom the )"'eSt will club with the the upper 30s northwest to around 50
bumper
crop
of
congressional
commercials
showing a. clip of
warm, moist air and will produce rain · southeast.
wannabes is trying to get certified for Sttickland saying "we have to mise
which will tum to snow, the NationExtended forecast:
the
March 19 primaries.
some taxes."
ill Weather Service said. Somewhere
Wednesday...A chance of rain or
Democrats
fielded
candidates
in
That sentence - a tiny part of a
!n between, freeZing rail! is possible. snow.' Lows in the 30s. ijighs from
all
19
districts,
including
multiple
long
answer during a debate - inay
William "Bill" Garnett Stover, 86, Point P)easant, W.Va., died Monday,
The record-high temperature for the middle 3Ps nonhwestto the midcandidates
in
I
0
of
the
districts.
come
back haunt the Democrat again,
Jan. 22, 1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospital, following a brief illness.
this date at the Columbus weather dle 40$ southeast
"I
think
what
this
is
is
a
testimoif
the
Cremeans campaign's Friday
He was a retired employee of the West Virginia Malleable Iron Co., where
~ration was 71 degrees in 1906 while
Thursday.. .A chance of snow.
ny
of
people's
outrage
and
frustration
news
release
is any clue. The release
he worked as a molder for 37 years. He attended the Church of Christ in Christhe recOrd low was 16 below zero in Lows in the 20s. Highs in the 30s.
at
what
the
radical
Republican
Con.
said
Cremeans
looked forward "to
1936. Sunset tonight will be at5:38
Friday... Fair. Lows in the 20s. tian Union, Point Pleasant.
Born Jtme 9, 1909 in Kanawha County, W.Va., he was a son of the late gress is trying to do to this country,.. exposing our vast differences oil
11.m. and sunrise Thesday at 7:48a.m. Highs 35 to 45.
John Albert and Martha Meadows Stover. He was also preceded in death by Ohio Democratic Party Chairman . issues such as taxation."
David Leland said as Friday's filing
Strickland said he's not worried
a daughter, Gatha Irene; and two brothers, Roy and Arthur Stover.
deadline
passed.
about
that quote hurting him again
Surviving are wife of 66 years, Mary Stutler Stover; seven daughters, Hes"At
this
point
in
their
his10ry
the
because
"I'm a little wiser candidate
ter George of Ewington, Sarah Rice and Mary Cutlip, both of Point PleasDemocratic
Party
is
so
schizophrenic
than
I,
was
last time.''
By Tilt Allilocllted PrHI
Brecksville city street.
ant, Pauline Roach and Kathleen Mick, both of Iron Station, N.C., May
thanks
to
the
leadership
of
Bill
ClinBesides,
he said, "I've got Frank
.. There 'Were only four fatal acci- SATIJRDAY
Vaughn of Barberton, and Clara Morris of Akron; three sons, John Stover
ton
that
they
need
at
least
two
candiCremeans
on
tape saying we ought to
dents in Ohio over the weekend, but
TRO.Y Driver Theodore and ·Olen Stover, both of Akron, and Owens Stover of point Pleasant; and
dates
in
every
district'
to
keep
up
with
privatize
Medicare."
'Rvcn people died in them, the State . Rogers, 17, of Covington, and pas- 36 grandchildren and 48 great-grandchildren.
Cremeans was not available fat
Hiabway ~I Said today.
senger Darin Oyler, 18, of Flora. Ind.,
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, the president's constant flip-Oopping
on
the
issues,"
said
GOP
spokesman
comment
because he was campaignOne wreck in Medina County in a one-car &amp;~:Cidcnt on a Miami Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Dennis.Weaver officiating. Burial will be in
Brett
Buerck.
ing
in
New
Hampshire with IUs
claimed three lives and another in County road.
the Creston Cemetery, Leon, W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home from
Eight
contested
congressional
prifriend,
presidential
candidate· Steve
Miami- County killed two people,
MEDINA - Driver Eric A. 7-9 p,m. Thesday.
maries
are
possible
on
the
RepubliForbes.
troopers said. Both were sinalc-car Semon, 18, of Lodi, and passengers
can side.
In, other Ohio congressional dis;
accidents on Saturday.
Whitney L. ~.oorebead, 17, and Jen"There
's
just
a
lot
of
people
out
tricts,
Republicans are promising .t4
The patrol counted fatalities from nifcr R. Stickney, 16, both of Medithere lhat wain to .be a part of the put some muscle behind former U.S.
6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
·- na, i~ a onc;car accident on a MediVirginia Irene Thomas, 67, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Jan. 20, 1996 at Vet- Republican revolution," Buerck said. Attorney Joyce George in her cam' The dead:
na County road.
erans Memorial Hospital.
The GOP may have no ·candidate paign to unseat Democratic Rep. Tom
SUNDAY
WALBRIDGE - Francisco P.
Born in Northup, she was the daughter of the late Ira and Maggie Hoff- in a handful of state Legislature dis- Sawyer.
BRECKSVILLE- Donald Stan- Ruiz. 54, of Perrysburg, driver in a man Wolfe. She was a therapeutic program worker at Gallipolis Developley, 47, hometown unknown, when two-vehicle accident on Interstate 75 mental Center ·in Gallipolis, and auended the Middleport Congregation of tricts, but it remains Ohio's dominant
political party, holding the offices of
his pickup truck crashed along a n in Wood County.
the Jehovah's Witnesses Kingdom Hall .
governor, attorney general, secretary
She is survived bY four daughters and two sons-in-law, Violet "Vi" and of slate, auditor, treasurer and U.S.
Steve Chambers of Athens, Dawn and Rick Hawley of Middleport, and Pan- senator in the last statewide election.
sy Ohlinger and Mayrene Thomas, both of Gallipolis; two sons, Timothy Republicans also have a majority of
Thomas and James Thomas, both of Pomeroy; I I grandchildren and five state House, state Senate and conA Racine man was cited for speed'
. Units of the Meigs County EmcrPOMEROY
, great-grandchildren; and two sisters, Mary Parker of Chester, and Alice Slay ;gressional seats to defend in 1996.
for
conditions by the Gallia-Meigs,
gency Medical Service recorded 17
5:18p.m. Saturday, Mill Street, of Jacksonville.
_
Ted
Strickland,
a
former
conPost of the State Highway Patrol folcalls for assistance Saturday and . Linda Boyles, Holzer Medical Ceo- · Besides her parents, she was preceded in dcalh by her husband, l'ferman
.
lowing
a one-car accident Saturday '
'
gressman,
will
be
trying
to
restore
the
Sunday, including three transfer ~Is. - tcr;
Thomas; three sisters, Lula Preston, Bessie Gillispie and Frances Wolfe; and
on
State
Route 124.
•
j
6th
District
seat
to
the
Democrats
in
Units responding included:
3:02a.m. Sunday, Union Avenue, three brothers, Fred, Dale, and Theodore Wolfe.
Troopers
said
Johnathan
L.
Bar1
what
promises
to
be
one
of
Ohio's
MIDDLEPORT
Jordan Cleland, treated at the scene.
Servi~es will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Mid- 1
ton, 24, 32105 Minersville Road, was
· 8:30 a.m. Saturday, Riverside
RACINE
dleport. Elder Ray Fowler will officiate. Burial will be in the Chester Ceme- more expensive matchups.
eastbound
in Sutton Township at 7:30
Apartments, Alice Hess, Pleasant .
7:39p.m. Saturday, Old Portland . tery. Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday from 2-4 and '1 -9 p.m.
a.m. when he drove his car through'
Valley Hospital;
Road, Lewis Smith, VMH;
·a
patch of high water.
S: II p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire :
4 a.m. Sunday, Dailey Road, Lori
Veterans
Memorial
Wh'en the car came out of 'the'
~nt and squad, motor vehicle c Haley, VMH.
Saturday
admissions
none.
·water,
Barton lost control on icy roadaccident in Cheshire, Virginia .
RUTLAND
way,
slid
off the left side of the road
Saturday
discharges
none.
'{bomas, Veterans Memorial Hospi8:28 p.m. Saturday, Back Street,
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaCows:' sleady to 3.00 lower; all
:and
struck
a fence, according to the
Sunday admissions - Paul E.
tal;
Kcthel Hatfield, VMH;
Ohio direct hog prices at selected cows 45.00 and down.
report.
·
·
Reeves, Pomeroy ; Lewis Smith, Port-. 8:49 p.m. Saturday, Stonewood
10:04 p.in. Saturday, State. Route · buying points Monday by the U.S .
Bulls: steady to 2.00 lower: all
The car was slightly damaged.
land.
~pts, Mary Durst, VMH;
124, Beulah Grate, HMC.
Department of Agriculture Market
bulls 53.00 and down .
Sunday
discharges
none.
, I 0:37p.m. Saturday, Rocksprings
TUPPERS PLAINS
' Veal calves: steady to 20.00 lowNews:
Holzer Medkal Center
R,ehabilitation Center, June Marshall,
5:49 p.m. Saturday, Bigley Ridge
Barrows and gilts: fully I .00 low- er; choice 167.00 and down.
Dis~harjes
Jan. 19 - Mary
VMH;
, · and Mount Olive roads, Annette Bar- er; demand light to moderate on a
Sheep and lambs: uneven, 7.00
Eads, Flora Humphrey, Clara Harri. 7:.57 a.m. Sunday, South Third ~. VMH.
lower to 6.00 hi~her.
moderate lo heavy supply.
son,
Gwytha Simms, Barbara MelAvenue, Christine Beegle, VMH;
i¥
U.S. 1-3, 230·260 lbs. 40.00van,
Mrs. Mark Jenkins and daugh., I :34 p.m. Sunday, Bailey Run
41.50, a few 42.00-42.25; plants
ter,
Mrs.
Shawn Taylor and daughter,
Road, WilbUr Rowley, vMH;
41 .50-43.00.
Herman
Canterbury,
Kala Brumfield.
. 6:21 p.m. Sunday, Maple Street,
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 36.00BirthMr.
and
Mrs.
David HoiJames Johnson,
Meeting canceled
40.00.
- VMH.
Am Ele Power .•.•. ~ .................42\
.
ley,
son,
Lesage,
W.Va.
A meeting of Preceptor Beta Beta
Sows : 50 cents to 1.00 lower.
Alc:zo ........... _, ..........................54
Dlscluai'Jies Jan, 20 - Mildred
·· · ~
Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
U.S.
1-3.
300-500
lbs.
26.00Aahlend 011 ...........................35'~
Rippetoe,
Mary McGhee, Sherry
AT&amp;T .......................................14\
28.00; 500-650 lhs. 28.00-31.00, a scheduled for Thursday night has Powers, Samantha Holley.
The
Sentinel
a.ntl an. ....;.........................38'Ao few 32.00.
been canceled.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Bob Ev•• ........................... ,..1f'A.
Boars:
24.00-25.00.
(USPS 313·9Ml
Willoughby,
son, Gallipolis.
~Winttr ...........................30
Garden club to meet
Estimated receipts: 44,000
Clllmplon
Incl
......................
.21\
Dlscluai'JICS
Jan, 21 - Vivian
Publiolocd every oflemooo. Moadly lllroup
The Wildwood Garden Club will McCormick, Raymond Sheatsey,
Prices from The Producers
Channing Shop ..................... 2'Friday, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, :.,y the
meet at I p.m. Wednesday at the Austin Newsome, Kyle Newberry,
Livestock Association:
Otuo V.lley Pui:IU&amp;hlna CompuyJG~~tnett Co.,
ctty Holclng ...:........................24
l'on1crv}, Cillo 45769,_Ph. 992-21S6: s-ocJ
·Cattle: 1.00 to 3.00 lower.
...... Mogal .......................18'.!.
home of Doris Grueser.
Angela Willoughby.
class posm,e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
OanMII .................................81\
Slaughter steers: choice 60.00Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Brandon
Good,_r
TIR
•..••.•••....••..•..•.
44\
M,.l&gt;m The AuociiiiOd l'ml, lllillloe Ohio
Committee meeting set
67.00; select 53.00-63.00.
Flannery, daughter, Gallipolis.
K-m.art ................... :...................&amp;
NewlftP"" Auocillion.
Slaughter heifers: choice 59.00The Eastern Local School District
L.lnda End ...........................-13\
(PubUs~ with permission)
67.50; select 52.00-62.00.
levy commiuee will meet at 7 p.m
P'OSTMA.STKa: send address correction• 10'
Umlled II'IC ............................15\
The Deily SeoliDel, Ill Court SL, PometOy,
Thursday at Eastern High School.
Peopl• a.tcorp.•••....•......•.•.23
01\lo 4S769.
Ohio V•I'-Y Bank..................38'Ao
The public is invited to attend. Child
v..~.............................32\
SUIISCIUPTION RATI!S
care will be provided and the study
lr Corrtor or MowRoc~ .............................. H'J.
·hall will be open for older students.
One \\Oek ................................................. $2.00
Robblna
a
..,.,.
.................
.27\
(Continued
from
Pap
1)
School representatives will be on
One MCNIIII ............................................... $1.10
Royal Dutchi8MII ..............138},
One Yeor ......... ,................. ,................... $104.00
hand
to answer questions.
shorwr·• ~ ...........................1:4 County. ,
Her concerns include investment
SINGLII COPY PRICK
Star ..................................51'A.
{All Brands)
Olily ............... ,..... ............................... 35 c.no.
Wendv'e
.......
~ .........................20\
in
local
education, support of local
'
Worthlngton Ind.................. .20'a
businesses and completion of the
Sul&gt;oc:dbeni!CM dooirioa 10 P11' lilt -I'DIJ' •
· Same Day Service
.remit In ldvtnee dlree110 n. Olfly Senliael .
Ravenswood Connector. ·
Stock reporta are lh• 10:30
on a ttne. .Ja or 12 monlh blliL Oecllt Will be 1
All Parts Extra,
She has been involved in the
QUOIM pn1V'.d1d by Adwll
...
'
Located in former
Includes; Cleaning, Oiling,
.
Chamber of Commerce Board of
of Gaftlpo)la.
No aublcrlption by moll ,..,..~ Ia .....
Adjustments, ·
Directors, Republican Women,
Locomotive bldg. on
SEORC and U.S. 33 Committee, 4Greasil'tg,
Mechanic Street,
MAILIIOIICitlPTIONI · ~ H, Eastern Band Boosters, -Girl
•
. . ·-MaltJIC.., '
Pomeroy
Scouts,
Trinity
Church,
Beta
Sigma
l3 'lilllia...........................,,;.,,,,_,., .. ,_,,,$27 .)0
TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 2:30-4:30' P.M.
Phi and many others.
:Iii .......................:........................ $53.12
Mon-Frl
3
p.m.-Midnight
52 ............................................... $105-'6
"I know I have the energy and
Sat&amp; Sun
--~0...,
enthusiasm to represent Meigs Coun13 ............... - ...............,_... ,.....$29.25
26 'IA!etl ..........................................:........... '
11 a.m. • Midnight
ty's people unlike anyone before," she
5 2 -......................................_ ..... $10P.72
said.
- J

:·By The AIIOCIDted Preu .

William G. 'Bill' Stover

:Seven die in state wrecks

Virginia I. Thomas

Economics, before politic.s~~~. '..!"!'-- - -t

'(oil J,.Q WlRI'fE-1:7,

W!T\4

.
•,
The attorney general docs note·that
'):'ears ago, waiting for a CQIJege a racial classification can be permitpresident in his office, I picked up a ted, but "only if it is narrowly tailored
copy ofThe Chronicle of Higher Edu- to promote a compelling·state. intercation. I have not missed an issue
since. This targe-size weekly often
breaks stories that reverberate far, -...-...:..=~;....;..;===:.....--~
beyond campuses.
est." However, in a mc111orandum
Recently, for instance, Pauletie bristling with Supreme Court and othWalker reportcd·that Colorado Attor- erjudicial precedents, Gale Norton
ney General Gale Norton has "told emphasizes that "the only interest
the .state's 28 public colleges they which has bee~ found to justify raceshould no longer provide race-spe- based decision making is the need to
cific scholarships, nor should they remedy the present day effects of spehelp select students to receive such cific incidents of priot' governntcnt
schOlarships from outside groups." !discrimination ... a racial classificaBut, "when a private organization ·lion cannot rest on some generalized
provides a IJICe-based scholarship" assumption that discrimination exists
and itself "selects the recipient, col- in society or on a particular campus."
lege officials may accept,the money."
Since "there are no specific findThrough the Chronicle, I have ings of Intentional racial discriminaobtained the Colorado attorney gen- . lion by any of the instituti!llls ofhig~
eral's actual memoranduin. In it she er education in Colorado," scholarexplains why she believes that race- ships that exclude all but one race are
. based scholarships violate the Con- unconstitutional. Nor, she adds, can
stitution:
.
.the goal ofa "J'I!Cially diversified stu" When a 118public 3/8 institution dent body" be considered a ct&gt;mchooses to devote some of its limit- pelling state interest. U.S. Supre-me
_ed scholarship dollars to a program Court case law i.s unde11iably clear on
which is ojJen only to certain racial tha~. despite the insistence to the con·
and ethnic groups ... the institution · . trary of the bead of the Civil Rights
excludes other applicants because of Division in the U.S. Justice Departtheir race or ethniCity."
'ment.
She cites the 1995 Supreme Court
In an interview with the Chronicle
decision (Adarand v. Pena): "The of' Higher Education, Gale Norton
Constitution · protects persons not said that instead of race-specific crigroups."
teria for scholarships, colleges ousht

•

.Katie E. _Rawson

...

.

.!lr

conditions and high temperalures

MICH.

c,onttibutions. But this year, Republi- Thole things would seem to ofliet the GOP source, the Republican Nation. .cans have built a 3-to-1 fund-raiaing natural advantage that Democrats ;al Campaign Committee goal is W
WASHINOTON - Few can f&lt;qet . advllltage over the 9emocrats. Thnn- ,would nomially have or. that the par- !"nail them (Democratic leaders)
how. coldly and concisely . former .limits may have beeR part of the lty that had just lost a landslide \,..puJd · down and keep them at home. ...

11

forecut

'

The DJrtily Sentinel Republicans loci~in'g to finish off Democrats
'Est#btisfrd in 1948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

i

.Driver ticketed
·after accident

EMS units answer 17 calls

Today's livestock report

·Stocks

.

Hospital news

Announcements

D,aily

..

'

Pickens tosses

o..

SHIVER

'

,...

--.
. ...

---~lo·-·

''
.·

•.m.

-·-·-

TEEN SCENE
Game Room

$395

FRUTH PHIRIUCY

"~

�'
'

'

Monday, Jan...ry 22, 1996

The Daily .Sentinel

Sports

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.

45(01')

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Holy 0..11, Anooy 66
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Cal Poly.SLO 102. So. l6
Cal St.-Pidlcnoo as. New Mexico so.

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OUR SPECIAL PIGE(S)
•
"POR PETS ONLY"
WILL IE PUBLISHED TUESDAY, .
•
FEBRUARY 13" IN
Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

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THE DAILY SENTINEU

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In Top 25 college basketball,

'

$600

. ~ ';: By The A111oclated Pnta

~
:
Penn State was nine seconds
·- . ; : from a big victory on the road, a win
i: ·•; tba1 would have left the No. 14 Nit:. •. tany Lions as one of only three uncle~ : :· feated teams in the country.
~ : : · However, Maurice Taylor and
~ : .: Maceo Baston had other ideas, and
~ :-: No. 20 Michigan escaped with a67., · 66 victory Sunday.
~
The loss left No. I Massachusetts
~ ' and No.3 Cincinnati as the nation's
·,.,
only undefeated teams. It also creal·•
-ed a tbrec-way tie atop the Big Ten
::
with Penn State, Michigan and Purdue.
On the winning sequence, Michi'•
~ . . gan guard Dugan Fife set a screen
:: · and Travis Conlan found Taylor
., ,alone for tbc slam with nine seconds
.,
to
~
. "Two of their players went with
~ •• Dugan," Taylor said. "I've never
~·
been so wide-open."
.,
Penn State came back up coun.
~
and Dan Earl tried a jumper from tbc
., • lane. But Baston blocbd it and the
•• •
"'\11, ' ball bounced away as time ex'"-'
.
t'"--"
·1
"For a little guy, be (Earl) took it
~ , 10 the holt a lot, but be wasn't going
~ , 10 score on me like that.'' said Bas~ r. 1011, • 6-foot-9 sophomcn. "I just
~ • followed the ball. I knew time was
~ &lt;,. running down, so be had lo put it
up."
.
~
It marked the third time this sea~
son Baston made a decisive block in
a Michigan home victory. He also
"'
did it in Dec:ember llpiDSI 00e and

PER PICTURE
PRE·PAID
Please enclose self-

addressed stamped
envelope to ~m

"PET'S NAME"

your photo.

Owner's Name

,.,,,,,...,,•.

....

r !!~!1!..!!".!~!1!!.".!!.!.1!:.!:,
VALENTINE PETS

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1Owner's Neme

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I Amount EnciOHd:
·
for
1.!'.!!,~.:.----- ...

1:
1--

------..1
plctui'M

so.

i

Deadllne ·Frlday, Februai'Y 9th at 3 p.m.
Mall or bring the entry fOrm!

1

-The Daily Sentinel
• 110 Court St•
Pomeroy, Ohio 45781

!

i. :·..-~: Mich~i·gan hands Penn State first loss

ONLY

1

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REACH FOR BOUNCE PASS -IEMIMn'alllcah Olio (right) and
an unldlliillh:d Soulh8rn pllty8r NKh tot a pill bouncact to Olio by
an unkllitlllled Elgie during Sllturdlly night'• TVC pma at South'"' High School, whlnllhl Eeglel'l7-62 win pulled lh8m- with
lhalr archrtval8 In the Hocking Dlvlalon atlncllnga.

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lol46, Caaioa McKJeler JJ
. MMSftald So.,_,., 53, lima 0o1wn
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Kldooa 0... 59. M..-,o 41
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l..eetoail14, l...onlllow• 24
Ubaty Uaioa6D, UckiOBIIb. 32
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......ville63, C... fuii'"'NW 50
Loaitvillo
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Jolio(J .... 36, Tri-Valley J3
ICaosloa 6.1, w.
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KlolnoaM. ,._..Cor. 47
Kila 74, CiL Olea Eooe"
Kinlaod 61. Poiopon Hordlaa 63 (2

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E. Knox 38, l...ucal31
Ealtwood 67, Olx&amp;o 33
~DII !1!1. Tri...CCMUIIy N. 30
f.clpnoa SS. N. c.norot 11
El)'1ia56. Clo. Hay 41
Elyria Opoa Door 44. T....,.. a.. 30
F.-. 56, Sprin1. Souill 49
Fllirfu:lcl60. Walnu1 Hilk :U
Flirlaa 47, CMtoa limkea 40
FlliMew 110, Ddiuce 49
fa)&lt;aevillo14, M - 3S
Fat.nl Hocti"'4l. W_,on! 3S
fenwickSS. Lemon Momlo:ll
Fon L«ataao 46, So. lteooy 11
FnM.Iha-Moome 57, Diaie JO
Ganway 106, Jewen-Scio 35
Oodoeld llio. 40, ......... 2.4
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Qnm.;l1e61, BerDeUIIiotl44
Gooen 55. llodiaa Hi&amp;f&gt;laad 44

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Day. Mcldowdale 51, Tipp City
Beohd40
Day, Poncnoa 67,llay. BdmoaolS
Day. -ioo65, Sidnoy........,57
DcGrall' Rivcnide 41, Indian l..ake 44
Dower 43, on.illo 40
DabJi• Coffman 48. Galloway Wei!·

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Senior Michael Barnett took it lo 36 ldvantage.
six seconds left.
"•
the bole, but was fouled. He bit the
At tbll I : 12 mart, Otto fouled,
SoutbeJn lliJI had ~"'J·
second of two for a I S-l2 (SHS) tal- sending Harmon 10 the line wbere be Maynard, E - Md -~~in
ly dial ended the qurttz. The first :bit ooe, then EHS had two more itstlnepoinUr=-~~=lllltof
.Cjllllta' wu fast and fitrious. The secfouls IDd a crucial tumov« coing a steal. Bulem,
·
Jlfaub.
.ond was brought 1o a crawl with . down the tbird ~ SlreldL South- was in a pinch. SHS calld:t a-.
many fouls, however, 1 tight score em convened those turnovers iniO Easrem lined up for die illtit ds,
kept the drama intact. Hannon scores and cut the lead 10 44-41 in tbcn SHS called time apia. '
'splllted the ICCond period assault the stretch.
At first. Easrem ahowed • ataclt
:v.ith a couple key · buckets. The
Additionally, Soutbem was just 4- inbounds play, but on the ftClU ~
return of EHS guard Brian Bowen 8 at the line in this stretch or they ment ran a tour-wide lay f~
and 111epped-up performance from could have taken the lead. Instead, in the huddle. Micah Otto roiled orr
Micllb Otto kept EHS close 8118-16. Eastern clung to a 44-41 tally at the a screen and was wide open ,. die
SHS scored the only two points buzzer.
far (EHS) end. There be ~Wid a
duriog the next two-minute span, ut
McKelvey ended the third frame baseball pass from EHS ~beck
Rizer liee throws and a Maynard with a steal and ensuing score, then Brian Bowen for tbe UJUCIIdowa.
steal and Evans lay-in gave SHS a EHS had another turnover fori:ing a ' Adding iosult 10 injury, OUo . . -.o
24-16 advantage. That was brief time out Harmon hit a layup and · fo11led and canned the 6W dtlvw
however as Otto and Hill combined was fouled by Casto who picked up with four seconds left DDtbe'cloct.
for three poinll before Evans his fifth. The bucket gave SHS a 45- ' : Eastern was led by iiili•1 '1.6
notched another goal, 24-19. East- 44 lead, but the free throw was points, while Micah Otto ~ II.
ern's defense thell' picbd up the errant Hannon got the roll in on tbl! Soutbem was led by Hlniliii'B 23
inreq,sity, going full court wilh a half next goal as SHS went up 47-44. A and Evans' IS.
.
court man-to-man. The action quick- Rizer free throw left the score 47-44.
Eastern hit 24-49 from thii floor,
ened.
Soutbern's defense bad shul down l-6lhreCs and wu 16-28 at dle'line.
Jay McKelvey canned a trey for Eastern for two-minufes plus. Hill hit Southern hit 16-42 twos, 3-9 lines
SHS for a 28-21 tally,'but Hill came the second of a two shot foul at the and was 17-37 at the line. ll•zt:m
10 life with Micah OtiD'on his coat· 5:SO mark, the Eagles' first score. . won the battle of the boMII 35-34
tails. Brother Daniel OUo got in on Eastern's defense began to spark its (Oito 9, Hill 7, Daniel Otto .S), bad
the action and scored on a lay-in to offense and Southern became impa- 12 steals (Hill4, Casto 3, Dill..t 3);
cut the score to 28-17. Two Eastern tienl. They too fouled at inappropri- 11 turnovers, II assists (Dillard 4)
turnovers and a Southern turnover ate times. Hill sank another safety, · and 31 fouls.
·
froze the scoring, but Hill canned a Ono hit a gnal, lhen after an SHS
Southern had 34 rebouoc!J Hlrjumper with 32 seconds left to give tumover Hill regained the lead for 1mon 15, Maynard 8); 17 ; steals
EHS a 29· 28 edge. Eastern bad an Easrem. S0-49. Maynard slfoked : (Maynard SO; 2S turnovers, l.lllllist.s
untimely foul with 13 seconds.
home I Qf 2 at the line for the lie: : (Evans 3) and 27 fouls.
That sent'JYson B'uckley, straight Harmon scored his second consecuReserve ~: Eastern won the
off the bench and to the foul line. He live bucket plus drew the foul on a reserve game 44-42 in a pme tbat'
fell short, allowing Daniel Otto lo three-point completion for a 55-53 went right to the wire.
capitalize with a goal at the buzzer, SHS lead.
Eastem appeared to have tbc pme
pving Eastern a 31-28 advantage. In
With .2:20 to go in the game, in the bag with 12 seconds left and
just one minute past the half, South- Evans grabbed a steal and pitched to a 44-40 lead. Eastern was whistled'
em's intensily forced two EHS Maynard for a fast break lay-in and for a technical foul, however, giving ·
turnovers and cut the score to 30-31 a S7-53 SHS lead. Then came the SHS two Billy Sheppard liee dllou:
and 32-33, forcing Deem to call part when EHS buckled down and and the ball. Southern inbounded the '
time .
maintained its composure. Caldwell ball and worked the ball inside,
Easlern
responded
with referred to lhe slfeak as Southefli'S where they missed five maigbl shots •
"Sureshot" Hill in the driver's seat. failure to "think."
i before time ran out.
In the meantime, Bo.wen and ' Sheppard led SHS with eight, and
Hill's to markers led Eastern 10 a 44Daniel Otto IBJied out, forcing Deem Troy Hoback had 6. Easrem wu led
to use sophomore Jeremy Kehl, who by 13-point effons from Rickie Hoidid a great job in a pressure situation.. lon and Steve Durst. Coach OaU
Micah Otto hit completed a three- Stout's Eagles are now 7-4 oVerall.
point play, Southern missed and
The fulllre: Easrem is 8t Y'llltDD
Barnell drove coast to coast and after County Tuesday.
being fouled, canned both ends for a Ouader l!dlll
58-57 EHS lead with 1:39 remain- Eastern........ ......... l2-l9-13-23=67
mg.
Southem... ...... ...... l5-l3-13-19=6'1.
Barnett and Eric Dillard combined
SOUTHERN- Adam ~ !for a sreal. Dillard's penetration drew 0-112=3, Ryan Nmis 140=2;J.ruc
a foul. He sank hothends of the two- Evans6-l-CW=IS,Jesse Mayilanl2shot safety, buc Adam Roush had a 0-3/&amp;o7, Spike Rizer().{)..71!3T7, Jay
break-away layup to keep it close 6(). McKelvey 0-1-113=5, John H.mon
59 Eastern near the one minute 7-l-6111=23. Totals: 17-:Z..1713'7=62
mark. Eric Dillard then launched
EASTERN- Brian Bowen t ~
what appeared to be an untimely 0=2, Eric Dillard 0-0-416=4, Josh
three. Ouo canned two more safeties Casto t-1-0IO=S, Daniel Oao'l~
with SO seconds left (63-S9) then 0=4, Eric Hill ll ~&amp;o26, Micah
SHS missed. EHS called time to Otto7~4f7=18.,MicbaciB.Mu2regroup and make final preparations. 0-417=8. Totals: 24-1·16/lll=j67
EHS failed to get the ball in
~=-----~
bounds with :3S left and bad 10 call
time again. EHS got the ball into
Kehl who drove past alfcourt and ;
dished to Dillard, who drew a foul'
with 30 seconds to go. Dillard
canned the second of two for a 64S9 Southern dvantage. McKelvey
got a steal after a SHS miss, but Otto
regained conlfol for Eastern. Kehl
was quickly fouled with 16 seconds
left, but missed both ends. SHS
tbe carom.
With no place else to go, Hannon
usually unfamiliar with thrce-poinl
EYES ON THE PRIZE- Eutllm'a Daniel Otto (25) keeps hla eyes
on the baket after getting pat Southern'• John Harmon (40) and turf, canned a desperation jumper. A 1'-'7-:--:--:-:::--:--:-:~-:-,_--.1
that appeared out &lt;;&gt;f reach was
Be A Cool (« And Cited Our 1f1t
an unlcleullllecl TOI'IIIIdo during ~ night'• Hocking Dlvl1lon game
now very much on the line with just
Sowlf.. n die ClrJsri(W SeaiiiL
r.outwt In RllCine, where the Eeglel won 67-tl2.

ways 10 lose.•
1be pme saw numerous momenCaldwell cited 1 tM:.t of defense,
tum 1willp. Southern oncc led by rushed shots, two block IUrmpts tbttt
:eigbl points io lbe first half, and East- led 10 turnovers and fouls and an
em once led by eight pofnts in tbc . inabilily 10 capitalize on the transisec:ood. Bolb
the team had tion in tba1 span, as fiiCUln in the
their leldl evaporate.
'Joss.
l!utem toiiCh Tony Deem said,
''This wu Eutera'e win and they
"This is a great win for this team and 8re deservio&amp;." Caldwell llid. '1bey
for l!urem bisketball. We've won (EHS) said they woulcl "beat SOuthIOIIID biJ pmei the last three years,
em twice this year and now tblly
but we'w always fallen shon 10 have one of thole. They wen down
SQottbent. Tooipt. we never doubt- and they found ways 10 come b1ck.
ed ourselves. The difference in the I bale 10 take uytbing away from
pme was tbat we played 8l crunch Eastern, but, this waS a Christmas
time. The boys pl1yed with great sift from the Racine-Southetn baslenal:ity"-0111' defense was relent- ketblllplayt.n."
less."
Friday night, a somber Deem
Soutbem coach Howie caldwell reflccted on wbat could be done 10
said, "EasiCI!II out played us in every spark a team whose plays have engifacet of tbll game ..;.,.. in shooting, in neered shots within five feet of the
ldloubclins, in foul shooting, taking basket.
I:IIR of the bukctball, defensively
Eutcm was within Btrildng disand in' 'tbioldq.' We didn't play taoce of 'IVC divisional leaden
•smart and Butera did at the end. Wellston and Pedenl Hocking, but
Butera deserved 10 win tonight-- according 10 the shot charts missed
14 or more shots within five feet.
the best team .•
They Deem added, "We . knew this Early Saturday, it seemed the tradiwould be tough. We would have tion had continued.
Eutem missed the fust layup of
liked to have played Southern early.
Right now, they are a good team and the game. "Big John" Harmon mushive been on a roll. Southern and cled in the game's ftnt two points,
Eastern both had big games Friday. but Eastern junior Josh Cas10 knotWe.loslatough one and shot poor- ted the score at 2-2. 1be tempo was
ly. Southern won. We had to over- set
Casto cranlced out a three, but
come Jut night's (Friday's) loss,
take away Soutbem's momentum Jamie Evans couorered with his own
and come into a lOugh game know- lrifecta, then Evans whirled and
ing we had 10 play a super game twirled the Tornadoes to an 11-7
almost perfect The kids sure came advantage. Jll!lior guard Ryan Northrough and I give them great cred- ris, coming off his biggest varsity
it We had gn:at support from our outing ever (22 poiniS) showed his
fans as well. That's what an Eastern- fonn with a short jumper after Eric ·
Hill had cut the lead to 11-9. Hill
Southern game is all about."
Caldwell said, "Our inrelligence at added another for a 13-11 tally, then
the end was not there. We were up Spike Rizer canned both ends of a
S7-S3 with 2:1S left and we absolute- bonus for a l 5-11 tally. EHS missed
ly did not think. Instead of doing and SHS had tbc ball. but turned it
things conducive of a win, we found over on a half court violation.

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Day . Chamiliadc-Ju\icnae 81, Day.
Coloae1Wioioe22
0.7. Ouiniu
Cal¥11J
42

--II,::WV11.57

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Ci1. Westu• Brow• '7.5, Cia . Ripll!y

Covinatoa 56. Bradford 36

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Cioclevillo'42. Hamikoa Twp. 37
Cle. Hei.... 63. 1:. cte..laad Shaw 50
Clo. M...... l 56. y..,, Eail 55 .
Clear Foolt 54. Bl:d Ri- 29
Col. WeiUqtoa SO, Milllli Val. :u
CohombioS6, Beachwoooi4S
Contincnca146. Lciplic 41
Copley93, Nonoo 43

I

U•CIA. 52, Coli• 43
U hloa65,..,...,Reoo.u,21

eellep ICOnS
•

Willo-Hi1143, ~Ow. 42 (OT)
Wi-71. Maplewood 23
Woodman: 71, Nw•wood 34
womaer 70, UDioaiOWD a..- 26
Woothi..... Cor. 54, Caoieobwl35
You. Moc:.ey &lt;46, Cle. VA·Sl 41
Zanesville ROICCI'Inl 60, Cot OcSakl

Pft

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Cia. WCIIern Hil)j o47, Hurilbon 46

So..,_.,

Looaia Colo. 61, - k y St

62,

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Cin. W)OII"liDJ sa. Cin.lldian Hill21

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72. Gi..._ 35

On. Tuopia 56. Cia. Taft 17

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Cia. S1. llnula 71, an. Roaer 81e011 .
62 (2011
Ca. Summio5S, Oa. S..... Hillo 17
0.. Tayt..·57, CiL MOUOi Hoalohy 49

Col. Waaenon 60, Oubtin &amp;iDeo 52
eoa..., co..Mew 19, Poot••r •s
Ooobvillo69. W. M.W.,.... 45
Clay- Vol. 0... 59, Willdhom S3
Dalroo M.
Sl
·Day. Cotooot\Vtiot Ill. Day. ldfcnoo
l2
.
Day. Oakwood 60, Tipp Ci1y Betbel
l9
llayooo Clw. 69, Volley Viow 52
Ddpboi
53. Von WCil 46
Deloa59. w.....,.50
E. K.ooa 73. M.ofid4 Clw. 4S
Easoom Pille 100, S~ Val. 59
Easl;ido.lad. 49, H•cbvillo 19
EarooiJ, NMioaal Troil60
......... 69.S..,.k&lt;d4
Edoa 96, ~licr 76
Faiof..WUaioa 17, Newiil C.Oh. 61
Friniew41.om-4l
Finneytowa 60, ladiaa HID 58
Fort Frye IDS. WillilllllfowD, W.Va.
44 .
12. Oreaon Scrik:h
60
Fl. Lmmio 53. Sidaey l.dwnan 49
Gnllam 54. Piqua J9
a.-t Vol. 71.llrio0&gt;1 Sl
Gtoavilk 69, Ulica 65
a - 5D, Uobaas 41
" " " - 63. WllilchoU 60
Hnilloll7l. Day. M~ldD Adlle 51
Hanoilioo Radio 63, Day.
.ho-39
HaRtin Nonllml 61. Alloo 6, 62
Hawkn 47, B h....t44
Hlllollooo75, WeooaaBrowa62
Houltoa 69, Milliutaawa Val. 60
ladiao Coock V7. Coohoaoa 7S

34

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PIC7DIE YOUI PEr ~

Woodw..tiS
·
Cin. Nonhwtst .58. Cin . N. Colleae
Hill32
Cin. o.k Hi IIi 58, Cin. Sycmnore 17
Cia. Purcell Marian 46, Cin. Mc:Ni·
c:holu42
Oa. Sctoa 47. C'm. Prioce1011 36
Cin. St. Bem.rd Sl, Cin. Councry Day
37

71

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girls' scores

-.w.

Cia. Wiilwow !n. Tot. Ubl&gt;oy 73
CirdeYilloll, FlollooCoiih. 76
etc. lleipa 76. E. CIMisnd Sbaa 62
etc. - · !16,
Eail55
Clc. VA-&amp;114, Clc. So. lpaiioo 61
Clear Foot 92,
49
Cli..,.Mauie sa. Mcdi.ia 49
Col. H..loy 72, Z..'lille R......,.

Plb

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WeiH-42.Ko-34

.

BBitle-scared and weary from 1
bard-fought billie, tbc renacity of tbll
game left Deem and SHS menta'
Howie Caldwell searching tbc bench
for healthy bodies at the finish. Five
time outs in the latter stases of be
same. provided for reconfumalion of
strarepes and cool, calm, strarepc
discussions in search of finding a
way to win. Easrem prevailed.
Vit.l statiatic.: The game had
four ties and eight lead cbanses, providing the standing room only crowd
with a lot of excirement Eastern
defeated Southern for the first time
since a 92-87 win in the ftnt meeting of 1989-90.
That year, Eastern won the SVAC
championsllip, bul later lost to
Southern 71 -62. In the 1988-89 season, Eastern won the first game by a
97-87 margin as the teams again
split Since then, it has becri IOta!
Southern dominance by Caldwell-

•r

Weolfsii67,Coi. Acaolcmyl5

Villa Maria 38

TVC.

•

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Caocoo McKloloy 46, Maosfidd Sr. 33
Qapia Falb 59, Twl~
' 41
Cll&lt;illioo Ri-Val. 61,
. io 61
. Cia. l!oolaoo
FeJicio JS
Cin. f"Niaeylowa61, Cia.
S6
On. H...... Sl. Cin. Wilhrow 1S
Cia. Lotklaad JB, LMxlnwt 0... I~
Cia. 5S. Spi-18
Cin. McAuloy69. Li&amp;a 60
Cin. Mo1n1 Notre D1me 63. Cia.

a •. s..... Hilla II, CaiYII)' 0... 31

011

•

Wartoa. W .VL 71 , c.dia45

3S

aoa.•.-a.,.. 11ama
... 51,
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Konoriaa'Atta-

~ss.walro!-41

C.
W..... 155, A-l!lnoo ~
w-13. Wayno: n- 39
Wa...ty S3, Rock HiU 49
WaY"" 43, Koneri!"Falomani 34
Wayncofield74, · - 3 1
WapaviUt61 .
· - Plaiu41

lloocbvillo66, N. Royrlloa 33
Bouol'lillo 411. Nllioaal Tllil 31
, Caatbo Cadi. 60. Triway 53
Caoom Olo.oat 52. -l'hiladelt*Ja

-..r.. 57.0a.1Wpill45

53

w....Hoo. 51. -lito. 40
Waoloia.... H. 40, l..idiN Val. 37

-... 52
Ottawa Hills n . E•erpeen
1!1
Ollo¥ille 46. Convoy Cl'htvicw 42
Paiaenille Riverside 6] , Alh.. .bula
Hlilloo 40
..........ai._61,81oorn..SI
l'lrmr 45, l'lrms Noouwl) 17
P.-mi Holy Name 41. Chardon NDCLl9
............. 38. Cle. Caoholi&lt; :0 .
l'lrmrValloyFoolo57 ............. 47
PickeriDJCOIII9, Chilticodle ~2
Poot- Clay 46. Ponomoooob Nolie
Dame42
llqjaa 54.1.aood 41
·
Riel....... 62, N. Union 42
Rivu View ~9. McQ..ll
Rocky Ri. . Map;r- 6l. Eric (Pa.)

llooldao64, Umal'aoy47

llllma61, Hole'
l!!il
- 1 0 , Wal""oillo 66
B e l -.. 59,0JiriDI.

~Ridp6I.Spri ... Nood

AIL·Binai-10. Onc:i- 61
-.95.UU17

W.Holnoa53,C I ,oioa_47
W. Morld- 52, ~to 41
W-74,-36
Wsloll-69.......... E. 13

62.-•"

Btoom Clrroll 67, Flirfielcl Uaion ~9

==~~-.;tlo42

Kalido

Ki~

Bd- SO. loba 69, c-10n Vol. 48
BellofoaW.. 46 SpriDI. Shaw,.. 29
Bdlowc58.-k50
Berila Hiland 66, Mol""" 41
llcalcy 116. Pnaldialli• J5
.

SaiUnlay'oJfttlaa

n.

•

Uliao 155, W. 51
Venoilloo 63, Sori"l C8oli&lt; 50

BCii\UUeelBI, Xeni• 9

Aboa Buclooel SB.ISC. Akron So.VSo.M50
"-74.Newlloma64

w......-.Mo.I1.R t1' 63

I

•

.r-

SL 60
Pont.d78,Sulliqo64
Sao Diooo So. 11. Air """" 69
s-ctionl7,..,.,.....16
- - Cal92. Oiqoo St. 51
UCtmao66,UNLV61
UCS.O.IIool&gt;aoaU.UiiiiSO.BO
UliJIII,
6.5
w- So. 93, ...... So.67

.sa

. . . . . 11. - 6 7

4-1!!"·~=
..,...

75, Oklsboma60

59, llalia ~ w_..

~lt. c.-32

Oonrio 63, -

Auoono 49.11n!otlya 34
A... 53, EJ)'1ia W. 50
A.a. l..ake S7. Flinn l8
Boy ViUoce Bay 53, ......... 49

c-u.

NowMWco64.T.,...EJr-60

Mios.

flioaft, .........4

-Is

-54

v....

- 6 6 . Olllaboma St. "

ua~~oo~

pllll:el Bulem IIOp the peak of I
roller c:ouler seuon tbat lelvet
them It 4-7 ownll and 3-4 in the 1ft.
Valley Conferellee's Hocking Division. SouJbem, wbicb had Willi ita
Jut three games ind fOUT of its lut
five, drops 10 4-7 and 3-4 in the:

•
"
b- . -

.... ..

61

~59.

RIOGRAHD1!66

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

- 1 0 , MiooiaslppiSc. 61

•

.w: ,.
UpJa Arllopa 61 . Wonlol....... 49
~ ~ 71, llooeyras63

.Laraia-41
01.- olb 67, Rodoy kiwor 26

Aboo So.V-SI.M 61, Slow 40

N•
'uau ...7
Ccairsl So. II, Kaoay So. 7J
Domo (0No) 51, Caolow 41

,__, .....

2l

lt. . _ . 15, CelarMo 5c. 14,
1W Nu-l So. 13, Tour AAM 10.
Sl.t.OIIIOSf.S, 1llUIDO
J,
foQ" 5. U!U 4. ....._ 4, Ne...... l Sao Dqo So. J. T - :1. Gnm. . . If. 1; llllaoia I. llldlipa So. I.

lllllli

Aboa~

W.... IS. Tdlloo ill

41

-r-ood--"·v...., ..... •

S.tur'day'uctlon

Cia. -67,0~La8ollo59

,,o:...23,-17.:.·~=:: ~~"": f::

~

O~o B.S.

Cln. Deer Park SS, On. HUll Cbr.
Ac.od. 53
.
Cia. Hamihoo 71, Day. - 51
Cia, Hrrriooo 70. 1:. Ccainl 52
Cia, - 6 2 . ~46
Cia. MeNicbolu $6, ·htc:eu MMiaa
41

13

431

Z..villo 74. Col.-

M~Coole

-17.0ydo41

Tol.s-60,Col.-~2

Triad63....... ' - 5 7

YI&gt;I. MOODOy4l.lllooldidol40

FiiCIIy91.01tioDm' "51
- 1 0 . Codonillo 67
Sb1w1ee St. 72, Mo••• Verno•
~67,

''•*'
Tot. Noaellrmc 6D. - 4 2

c..h.

S. Ollrleslon SE 60, Oreefte¥.ew 30
Sbcridan 56. Maysville 55
Sidney 62. w. Canolaon 49

:z.on. n.:. 41. w...rott39

CaoioaiiS, Onallola 69
JGiiaCarroiiSS. - 5 0
-U-61.Hinm41
Mulliapn 'IO, IId.....,. 60

"-63

•
••

Tipp0..44...,.... -.n
TotCidlolic71. C
70

w. -66-Atoniio-27

9

..

Wyofonll9,c-61
Vdlow Spri"" 51, Oroaooview 43

61. Obio Nortbera

Olillic:oihc 66. A..._ 62

14
II
12
IS
II
24
11
22
21
20
25
19

451
434

"'"*

•

57

50

s

.

Soutbem 'nlru:loes.
!
The Tri-Vllley Confemlce boys' :
varsity b11ketball tbrilleu1w Eatem nlly from I 49-4S deficit 11118 in
the pmc. ~ suatain alwd-lioted
rally from Southern~ tbllliniib. The;

•

60
11

-Ito

Loci

~- --············· ·"-·
.. ................ 13-2
1•..,...................... 14-3

.. .

Balclwi11~WIIIace

NeWCOiiD . . . . . 55, T~

41

T...-o56.-Noodoa-a43

'Mil Cct.nti= s;, S11e1bJ 41

Worlcl-10; tlooillsido Oor. 47
Won~D&amp;Ion Cbr . 14, Col . Academy

Bi&amp;W. . 69.Col.l .., 1
6.5
II, Toi-Cooaiy N. 69'
Buckeye Centrll 15, HopeweiiLoudoa55
--64.-,51
c.o... ~ 66. lllpia Opai Door
57
Cui'"' McKinley 62, You. -......,
49
C.llolo 10. Tri-vm.., S3

~(I)

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... -

C..A-Caotl.

OIMIAtt.letlc Cwtca

u.-..

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H:..-r
................
(llr.tl
:1.
14-2 929

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Soloa7e
40
s,.ta ·
53.1....
31
Spriaa.
lfol, eo-,;lle S9
49. 1" oood4l
•
56
70. Blwwlct
Tolloaiodp 5I, ll&amp;w:oe 54
TCO)I Va1.67, !AP" llloa36
11aon53.Mo __,

c:Oicbed teaml.

The protocol firmly estab- :
lisbed daya in ldviiiCCI of "11m
GAME"; but s.rurday tbll directive
wu c:anied out live belpre a pllfbd
boUK 8l Cbarles W. lhyt11111 dymnasium wbel'e Eulem bailed a red
alert call from bead menta' T1111y
Deem en roure 10 a strong finish and ,
a 67-6'1. triumph over tbll red-hot:

lcr46
Tooy45,1'1oaa30

N. atoo.- 35. w..~a~&lt;e lO
N. Ridoovillo 31,1..ooaia Souoh'liow 34
~ Albuy 62, Mil..,._ 46
NeW IC.aoxville 70. TOI. Woodwft 15
Newlni""-!1!' lS,I'IIik&gt; 40

Who.""""'z64.......a 62
WiiU ........ &amp;I. Blooo:hcoicr66
Wlllo-Hlll62. o.- Clw, 52

C.U"'Y1l

pol~,
.... lint.,... YOin i• ,..~~t~teact

--~

Local~2

AllcabeaJ 61, llaliooa 52
W-64.-50

Moopn St. J7. Florida A.tM 54
Moomoy SLIIO, T--Manin 61
N. Caouli• AU 61. Delawae So. 66
N.C. C..loi1&lt;19, Soab Ftorido 56
N.C.·Aibeville 76. Md.-Balli.ore

-•S...

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

w.,.. ,,

'c.l~tr~Mt

Gftltl.llra.....,ccl ...,.,
N. Micbipa 86. Aohlond 'if'

Ubeny II, Cbaolaioa Sooobono 75
(011
-111."-64
M........ 17.N.CalvtillliSt. 74(01')
Mc:MeeaeSo. 75,NGnloT... 63

~allcwYGil,lp.aL

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JIIWc-·

E. llliaoil17, Yoo 1 I ua 5c. 73 (OT)

·--IO,Oeoop-72

-•QJMIIANI),

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Upt&gt;CO Sciooo Val. 106. MDMwk 92
W. Ubmy-Salem 94, Foirlawn Sl
Wslolllo:ouii6J, Kcao R - 52
w.... K&lt;ailedy 74, Miaoral Ridee 67
Boa.......t 54
warne To-It, Bryul6
Wartoa (W.Va.) Mldoul69, Beaver

Mionl (Ohio) 69. C... Midlipa 47
T-114, llowliaa &lt;lnlalll

~75.~-69

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Akron 95, OHIO 13
Kall79, w.

C... flarida95,o..opaSo. "
CitldelltApp' ' ··sr. 1s
Colt. or Cllarlerooa 12, Fla. •--lioool59

v-•Mi-I:!Op.m.

'fto Top 25 -

40T
Trenton Edacwood 77. Treble
SbwiCICI $1
Tri-Volley 41, Philo 34
TIIICWIWU Val. 8), Tuslaw 12 (Of)
TWin ValleyS. 58. DiQe ~

'naiiiL4

Xavi&lt;riOD,T..... I2

(~ Caoilliaa '1i. Old Dooaillioa 67

s.-·-·
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nnon 10, PMJ.Mwa49
Tol. So. lftncis 74, Tot. s- 64
Tol. W........., 61. Ssaduoky PeRi ..
56
Toro111o 102. Steubellville Cltlt. 98,

Ohio women's
tolletle scores

-'-So, 13.~-·Sc. 72
Aloono 5c. IDS, nairio Viowl4
12. E.ltoalwcky 71
a , ...,.
Cx'mrs 65. How.nt jl

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So. 37

Mid Am

Mi.m. S6. Cannllton 52
MialonJIO, Oalt Hill Sl
MiDik:r77, Houstoa 16

T""""""69.Spriaa-""""-~anS5

Ceainl St. 75, KaiNcl&lt;y

Kaiacky 124, T-a..-10

-m.s...

Soady 11. 13 Cadiz 72
SMbr Hta. 72. Wa"~H~Yille Hts. 61
(bT)
'
Sprina. Soooh 71. T..........Modi""'
63

Walsii95.Malooo80

A~tiC

-3S,Bau34
Milfeo Cily 51. Colu....... Gn&gt;.e )6
Miaoral klqo 76,1- Mlliooo 54

:.,w.: .'t...-.t.~~-57

94.

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RIOORAND£19. nmaiO

·v-71. -c..liaa 56

.

-·01,

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Mlct-OIM Ceilflttwe
Findlay 94, - ..... So. l4
MOYDI VenoD NazlreltC
c..lonoillo93 (0'1')
Ohio DooNaica74,

B. Ta~a1ec St. 82, Mu•ball76

- 1 0 6 , W - a96
S.-lll,n&amp; 1 1' Hall
Dollot 101
, . _ ll,&lt;l.I!VELAND II

....

I

7

:t';,

l'l&gt;nrnlooolbCiay65, - E . 6 2
~~Vo1 . 82,1 =•51
RidaedaJe 5. 5 H i
44
s. ca...t69,
11151

11oonwMon.93.Bislll. . l9

DUe "· Florido 5c. 65

~97.-96

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Oll:wiii,Dinil96

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- 7 1 . LriJiP65

s . , ,,.......
T-97.-95

63

Jla:tlrn:iea' a.f9.FM "l6
llledlar67,Ciowoleaf43
•
...... Caob. 69,
Codo. 34
Mlrmiolooq19,r. ooo46J
Midd...... Paowick 55..........M,...
noell
·

.......illo61, 6 - 4 6
........ 70, Soriao. Local44
.............,16, Violoo Co. 11 (011

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s...
m.-uo
V-M.IIcwYGiliO
a.IVII.AND93. LA. ....... 12
llulol06, LA. Cippon 12

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12.5

Oololllo SoileiiD, a..-. 102
_,.,_11

~"I

Collop 91, Sc.ldla'o 11

-

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6.5
1-'
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II

.fll!oy I O l , - Jl (OT)

-

46. etc. So. !Goqlh 33
Mayfidd45, -....43
McCioia 54, Rio:Jmoood lloJo SE 31
-

-79.-....65
Hoiolo*" 71. Marioo Riwor Vol. 61
Onvillol1, Al:roo 41
Onaw..0,_,6l, Coldw-. S3
f'llricklleori 54, Cooli..... ll

Ohio Norther• 67. B•hlwin·W•Ilace

· OWo 16. 5c. Yrlo62.""""'56.
· -62

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V - .............1 lO .211

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Cat&gt;ilol84. Onc:sl&gt;cia 7J
Hiram 66, htonl u-. S4
Marieaa 71, W. c.roll !16
MUiUDiutn 92, lleidcillera 75

7

WIS'IDN CONnllENCE

•.. .,
......

47

Newiil56. 11oonwW-51
Newwaa110n 96. Jcwd..&amp;:io S7

OW.........,

NCAA Divisioo I
men's scores

21

T ---------11 21 .212

...

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· - · · · -. . . . .

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,
14
................21 17
aJIVI!I.Aim-. ....21 17
- -- - - -19 II
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18a I ---... 15 22

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..

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Miafunl75. S. W-61 •
Mi-69. - ) 9
-GilcadiO,N. U-61
._., v..- 10. llillload 42
New K.IM.wille 64, u. hay 44

.

Eastern. survives Southern rallies to win
By SCOTT WOLFE
S1ntlnel Cou•po."'ldeltt

Scoreboard

...••
t f,. I

&lt;1; '

...-...

Monday, Januar;y 22, 199e.

JEW.

.

Page4

The o.lly S11dlnel• Pllge I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~

~

•
~

,,

~

••
•

•

WashiJIIIOD.

"He's sot a knack for doing
tblt, " ' said Michigan coach Sreve
FiJber. "Earl peneb'lled and Maceo
did wbat be did against w.bington

~. ~"- . ~ Dub.

He had another great

· cons nearly 30 points below their
block today."
Baston scored 13 points and had offensive average.
Mcintyre finished with a careerfour blocks- all in the second half
fOI' Michigan (14-4, 4-1). Glenn high 20 points as tbe Tigers ( 12-2, 3Sekunda scored 16 points to lead 2 Ad antic Coast Conference) put an
end to the Demon Deacons' ninePenn State (14-1, 4-1).
·
Elsewhere Sunday, it was: No. S game winning streak.
Tim
Duncan,
the
conference
Conneclicut79, No. 12 Syracuse 70;
No. 19 Clem.soo SS, No.6 Wake for. leader in rebounding and blocks, had
est 41, and No. 23 AubiDft 95, LSU 20 points for Wake Forest (12-2, 487. Cincinnati visitcid Alabama- l ).
No. '1.3 Aubum 95, LSU In
Binningbam in a night game .
At
AubiDft, Ala., Wes Flanigan
In games Saturday, it was: No. I
scored
21 points, and the Tigers ralMasSIChusetts 93, Duquesne ·89;
No. 2 Kentucky 124, Texas Christ- lied from a 14-poinl deficit to beat
ian 80; No. 4 Kansas 80, Colo!lldo foul-prone LSU.
Auburn (15-3, 3-2 Soutbeasrein
78; No.7 Villanova 76, No. 10 North
Conference)
led by as many as 14
Carolina 56; No. 8 Georgetown 82,
points
with
53-percent
shooting in
SeiOn Hall 62; Marquette S9, No. 9
the
second
half.
LSU
(9-7,
2-3) led
Me...,Ns SS; No: 18 Arizona 88, No.
52-40
at
halftime
after
Auburn
shot
13 UCLA 79; No. IS Utah 88,
Wyoming 65; Michigan State 62, just 36 percent in the first 20 minNo. 16 Iowa ~; Dlinois 71, No. 17 utes.
Purdue67;Arkansas80,No. 21 Mis- · • Ronnie Henderson sc~ 30
points and grabbed l 0 rebounds for
s~ppi State 68: TeMessee 67, No.
22 Georgia 62; No. 24 Boston Col- LSU, which lost four players to
lege 91, St John's 78; and No. 2S fouls .
•
Saturday's actloa
Texas Tech 9S, Houston 76.
No 1. Muaachusetts 93
Seec!ay 's lldioD
Duqueme89
No. 5 Conp•dicnt 79
At Piqaburgh, Cannelo Tnlvieso
No. 1l Syracuse 70
At Hanford, Conn., Connecticut scored 2S of his 33 points in the first
won its !Sih straight game. Ray eight minutes, IDd UMw (16-0)
Allen led the way for the Huskies ·won its third in a row without Mar(16-1), who ran their Big East reconl cus Camby. He might return Tues10 8-0, with 22 of his 27 points in the , day, nine days after his mysterious
collapse.
second half.
No.:ZKentucky124
John Wallac:e scored 28 points for
1'WII a.rtstlan 80
-syn~:usc (13-4, 4-3), wliich has lost
At
LexingiOn,
Ky., Kentucky
four of its last six games.
sank
a
season-high
IS
tbrce-pointers
No. 1' Cletuoo 55,
-led
by
Tony
Delk's
scholll-rec:ord
No.6 Wake Foreii•U
nine
in
its
141h
,
s
traight
victory.
At Clemson, S.C., Terrell Mcln'tyre had IS poiniS·in tbc second half, • Delk scored 27 points.
and lbe 11pn held the Demon Dea-

No. 4 Klnsas 80
Colorado 78
At Boulder, Colo., center Scot
Pollard. playing with four fouls,
scored four of the final six points of
the game for Kansas ( 14-1 ). Pollard
had 18 points as the Jayhawks
spoiled the debut of Colo!lldo coach
Ri~do Patton.
No. 7 VU!anova 76
No. 10 North CaroliDa 56
At Philadelphia, Ketry Kittles
;cored 23 as the Wilde~ (14-3) beat
the Tar Heels ( 13-4) for the second
time this season. The game at the
Spectrum drew 18,524, the largest
basketball crowd in the city's history.

No. 8 Georptown 82
Setoo Hall 62
At East Rutherford, N.J., Allen
Iverson scored 24 points as the
Hoyas (16-2. 6-1 Big East) won their
tbinl straight and 13th in 14 games.
Marquette 59
No. 9 Memphis 55
AI Milwaukee, Amal McCaskill
had 19 points as the Eagles beat the
Tigers ( 12-3) for the seventh straight
ti~athmme.
.

No. 18 Arllou 18
No. 13 UCLA 79
At Tucson. Ariz., Michael Dick-ICIDII 14 of his 16 points in
die .-d half as the Wildcats ( 133) ended a 10-same wioning streak
by the Bruins (12-4) .
No. 15 Utah 88

w,..-..65

At s.tt 1.ake City. Keith Van Hom
acnnd 18 points IDd Michael Doleac:
ldded a IICISOII-hiah 14 for the Utes
(14-3).

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c.,. ...

l
'· !'

':
)

..lb

�~ 6 • The Dally

Senthiel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

!Nit!J 33 points from Pullins &amp; Abbott,

~eigs

I

•

.

.

..,

OVP Corrupoildent
• Thd old adage that the best
offense is a gOod defense was never
lnore evident than when the Meigs
J-f8111Uders visited Wabama Saturday
night. Coach Rick Ash's cagers
~ied a tenilcious defensive effort
tgalnst the White Falcons and as a
(esull the Marauders dominated
lhroughout the contest. Wahama was
Landed a 64-49 setback before a
large turnout that braved the rising
flood waters.
: Meigs County pressured coach
Lewis Hall's Be!ld Area Falcons into
~everal early turnovers which led to
a number of easy baskets as .the
Marauders broke the game open with
4 19-3 scoring burst during wsevenl)linute first-half stretch.
• Senior guard Paul Pullins and
litnior center Travis Abbott paced the
Meigs offensive thrust · as the
¥arauders scored II unanswered
points to close out first pertod acbon
and 8 of the first II points to begin
ilecond quaner play.
• "Our key was to control them
defensively and keep their guards in
c'beck," Meigs assistant coach Rick
A,sh stated following the win.
· Meigs shot a blistering 55 percent
from the floor by converting 2S of 45
and enjoyed a commanding 39-21
edge in rebounding which offset a
disturbing 25 turnovers committed
by the Marauders.
Cass Cleland and Paul Pullins
grabbed seven rebounds each while
Abbott and Brad Whitlatch hauled in
five apiece for Meigs.
Wahama overcame a disastrous
beginning and played the Marauders
even except for that seven-minute
stretch during first-half play when
Meigs turned an 8-8 tie into a 27-11
advantage;
"Meigs was a lot more physical
than we were and that really hurt us,"

Falcon mentor Lewis Hall said. "I
was pleased that we kept our composure' after falling behind early in
the game. Meigs has a good team
1
and we could have thrown in the
towel but we kept battling and
played them even throughout the
remainder of the contest."
WHS settled down to finish with
a 35 percent shooting night (17 of
48) ~¥ith 21 rebounds and 17
turnovers.
The contest saw three ties and just
two lead changes with a breakaway
bucket by Pullins giving Meigs the
lead for good at 10.8 with 3:53 to
play in the first canto. Meigs went on
to increase its advantage to 16Jlt 2913 midway through the second stanza before Wahama whittled the
deficit to eight with a 7-0 run that
spanned the last I :37 of the first half
and first :53 of the third quarter.
Meigs answered the Falcon threat
by scoring the next eight points to
regain its comfortable mru:gin en
route to the 15-point victory. ·
Pullins. who led all scorers with
17 points on the night was followed
by Abbott's 16.
W(lhama failed to place anyone in
double digits but had a balanced
effort offensively. Seth Howard
paced the White Falcon attack in
both scoring and rebounding with ·
eight points, followed by David
Riggs and Jeremy Tucker with seven points each while James See,
Kevin Shields and Chad Ord added
six apiece.
.
Reserve notes: In the junior varsity contest Meigs plilled away in the
second half to hand the Little Falcons a 65-52 setback. Daniel Hannan
scored 19 and Matt Williams had 13 .
for the Marauders.
Keith Cundiff notched I 0 to pace
. Waharnll.
~future: Wahama (4-7) will
try and retJound from its third loss in

In Big Ten hoops,

its last four games when the Bend
Area team travels to Ha!lllin on
Tuesday before hpsting Eastern on
Saturday. Meigs (6-5) will host
Trimble on Tuesday and Miller .en
Saturday with an away date at

Alexander sCheduled for Friday.
212=7; See 2-0-212=6; Shiefds 0.1Ouartcr .llllak
3/4&lt;:6; Ord 3..().()(2=6; Scott r-tMeigs,................... 19-12-IS-18--64 00=5; King 1-0-112=3; Young 0.0.
"Wahama.................. S-12-11 -111=49 ·114=1. ToCIIII: 14-3-12/22z49
WAHAMA - Howard 3-0MEIGS ~ Pullins 4-2-314=17;
212=8; Riggs 3-0.112=7; Tucker 1-1- Abbott 8-0-0!1=16; Cleland 3-0.

Woodforde tops Philippoussis in Australian Open action
In )Voodforde, Australian fans Sampras." He added, "He's such a
had one of their native sons in ·the · great player.that I thin~ you should ·
quarterfinals, but not the one many all just forget abbut this match and .
thought had the weapons to become · look forward to him playing much
the first Australian winner at the bettertennis." ·
·
Open since Mark Edmondson in
1976.
·
·
This was the first time .Woodforde, 30, one of the world's top doubles players, had reached the singles
quarterfinals of a Grand Slam tournamenl.
The 19-year-old Philippoussis,
'
PAYING TAXES
who served·29 aces against Sampras,
had 12 against Woodforde - and
ONYOUR .
they were nearly offset by eight douACCUMULATING
blc faults.
,.. ' .
INTEREST!
Woodforde blocked back some of
'
Elin bJch Interest &amp; defer
his opponent's fastest serves,
oa
laterest. eanlnp with ~II.IPI!:I
retrieved other tough shots, hit low
slices that Philippoussis couldn't
hilb-yleldlna
return hard, and set him back with
ANNUITIFS.
high topspin~.
·.
,
· • Actwnujllte or M01,1thiy Inc'om&lt;! I
"It was very hafd for me, after
• Hlp ~e'ty!
beating Sarnpras, to come ~k." · •NoLoadsorF~
Philippoussis ,said. "I t)lin~ maybe l
Call for Information:
··
was a bit too relaxed .... When things
SCOTI'
INSURANCE
didn't go too well at the start. I
614-698-4qll (colleCt)
couldn 'I pump myself up, (even
32ll Swtu1 Rd.
though) it was a big occasion for me,
AlbUy, Oh 457iO .
one of the biggest matches of my
life, to get into the quarterfinals .of
• AnnuHies a~a Issued by1 ·~:;:1
·
and
~
the Australian Open."
Woodforde agreed that "he wasn't the same ,Player who played Pete

STOP

1

- - " ' -- -..,.-...-._,...- _•.• _., .... .--

Openlnga for 2.
Chri.Uan
atrnoephere for
elderly care In a
• non-amoklng home.

•'Iachen

But the East WI!S helped by 'lhe
West's inability to capi"li~ on four
drives deep into East territory. One
wound up with a failed field goal
attempt, another ended with a loss of
downs and two on interceptions. ·

The West ~o~ on _anjt-yard

pass from Damon Huard of Washington to Michigan State's Mushin
Ml'flammad and a record 48-yard
field goal by Marshall Young of
TexasJll Paso. The kick bettered the
47-yarder by Washington's Jeff
Jaeger in the 1987 game.

-··-·-

•Babydtten
•Frle•da

Anyone wlio would appreciate a thoushtfulword from you1
All Valentine Hearts will be publislicd In the F:ebruary 14th
at a cost of only SUO!

issue
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MUST BE PRii:PAIDI · .

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from now. (Ullman's first seasbn of twentysomething black friends.
"Tracey Ullm\1" Tlikes On .. ," begins
- ''Another Shot, "a comedy
Wednesday at I0:30 p.m. ET!PT.)
about an alcoholic. "It is the stories
Until then, five sitcom pilot~ are in that you will never see on the "The
the pipeline but none has been sched- (John) Larroquette Show," says
uled: ·
Albrecht. referring to the NBC sitcom
__:A bll!Ck and white series about that lightened its approach to &amp;leothe 1950s, "The High Life," pro- holism.
,
duced by David Letterman's produc·
HBO is also ordering 13 new
tion company, WorldWid~ Pants.
episodes of "Tales From the Crypt"
- "She," about a New York .and may combine them with new
advertising executive whose alter episodes of "The Strangers," its
ego, an animated character, pops into steamy adult anthology, for a Fnday
her mind and on screen in the same bloi:k beginning in April. Talks are
way old movie clips popped into the ongoing with the Thies makers, led by
mind of Martin Tupper on "Dream Oscar winner Robert Zemeckis, toOn." The pilot i~ produced by the develop a new antHology series.
DreamWorks SKG studio.
Elsewhere on the original pro-A series that Albrecht describes gramming front. look for 15 original
as "Larry Sanders" set i111he world movies this year, up from the usual
of a'big-time sports agent."
eight or nine.
., "TheCiliner," about a group of ·

&lt;lhe ~~ame "

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"And no one is more surprised
By BOB THOMAS
"I want to thank the amazing
Aaeoclated Preae Wrfter
Woody Allen for giving me this than me. OK' " Stone said. "OK, it's
LOS ANGELES - Instead of role," Sorvino said as her tearful a miracle."
The warmest part of the evening
sweeps, this year's Gold~.n Globe father, actor Paul· Sorvino, proudly
awards were a divergent mix, from looked on from the blac!C-tie audi- came wben the Cecil B. DeMille
award for career achievement went to
the 19th century style of "Sense and ence.
Sensibility" as best dramatic pictu!ll
Pitt was a surprise - and sur- Sean Connery, the first of the silver
screen's James Bonds.
to the talking pig tale "Babe" as best prised- winner, too:
cQmedy.
· "Oh no!" he exclaimed. In the
After a thunderous ovation, he
Nicolas Cage, the death-wish alco- stress of what he called "this moment gave his philosophy about filmmak- • - - - - - - - holic of "Leavil)g Las Vegas," and of absolute terror,'' he add,ed: "I'd ·ing:
Happy Ad
"Truthfully, it's the stu.ff in
Sharon Stone, the treacherous wife in like to thank the members of- actu"~asino, " won best.i:lramatic acting ally, the makers of Kaopectate . between the punches, the shootings
atards. .
'
They've done a great service fortheir and the car crashes that really counts.
the scenes between the man and the
· Mel Gibson won best director fellow man."
honors for his Scottish independence
Tbe award to Stone for "Casino" .woman that try to say something
epic "Braveheart" and John Travol- proved another surprise, since 'Biisa- about ht)w we really behave, how we
ta and Nicole Kidman won Globes for beth Shu~ in "J.,eaving Las Vegas" really feel. That ultimately is what
acting in acomedy or musical.
aild Thompson in "Sense and Sensi- moves people."
The only 1995 filnl to score more bility" had been highly touted.
·
than one award Sunday nig~~ was , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
· "Sense and Sensibility," which was
also selected fot Emma Thompson's
screenplay adapted from the Jane
Lordy,Lordy
Austen novel of manners. ·
By The Associated Press
"Babe" prpducer. George Mil.ler
Winners of the Golden Globes awards of the Hollywood Foreign
Janet's way past 40!
donned a toy pig snout a~ thanked
Press Association, presented Sunday night:
But she's nifly
the animal cast and 400 crew memMotion Picture~~
·
1e1&gt;en though she.'s 50!
bers for the best comedy or musical
DRAMA: "Sense and Sensibility"
award. "A lot of people helped bring
She may be nifly but
MUSICAL OR COMIIDY: "Babe"
this little pig to life," he said.
ACTOR. DRAMA: Nicolas Cage, "Leaving Las Vegas"
least we're not 50.
Travolta, who ended a long career
lt.CTRESS, DRAMA: Sharon Stbne, "Casino"
.
drought last year with "Pulp Fiction':
ACTOR, MUSICAL OR COMEDY: John fravolta, "Get Shorty"
alid won this year for his role as a
ACTRESS, MUSICAL OR COMEOY: Nicole Kidman, "To Die
H)&gt;llywood gangster in "Get Shorty,"
For"
co)11mented, "I don't know exactly
FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM : "Les Miserables"
what I've done to deserve the good
SUPPORTING ACfOR: Brad Pitt. " 12 Monkeys"
will."
SUPPORTING ACfRESS: Mira Sorvino, "Mighty Aphrodite"
Kidman won for her role in &lt;the
DIRECTOR: Mel Gibson,·"Bravelleilrt"
dark farce "To Die For" about being
SCREENPLAY: "Sense and Sensibility"
·famous and murderous. She thanked
ORIGINAL SCORE: "A Walk in the Clouds"
"everyone who has ever been nice to
ORIOINAL SONG: "Colors of the Wind" from "Pocahontas"
me" anjl paid tribute to her husband
Tdevlsion
Tom Cru'ise "for such tenderness,
· TELEVISION SERIES: "Party of Five:•
love and b8ppiness, and this would be
ActoR, DRAMA: iimmy Smits, "NYPD Blue" .
. .
nothing without him."
ACTRESS. DRAMA: Jane Seym11ur. "Dr. Qumn, Medicme
Woman''
~
•
.In accepting the director's award, •
SERIES MUSICAL OR COMEDY: ."Cybill"
Gibson said: "I didn't expect to get
When we rhink of
ACTOR• MUSICAL OR COMEl&gt;Y: Kelsey Grammer, "Frasier"
this."
'
We draw
ACJ'RESS MUSICAL OR COMEDY: Cybill Shepbet;d, "Cybill"
Many in the audiellql were alic)
III&lt;E!Br&lt;!r
to
God
above,
M~SERrnS OR MOYIE MADE FOil. TEL~VIS!ON: "Indictsurprised because of an el~ted
only God in Hia
ment: The McMartin Trial"
. .
,·
.
·
swell of sup}lOrt for Ron Howard of
f8r-earo~u
could
· ACToR, MINISERIES OR MOVIE MADE FOR TELEVISION:
. "Apollo I~·· llld Ang Lee of ~·~e~ie
dal-y Sinise; "Trumiq"
·,
. ..
•
a
and Sen$ibility," who were consid- ,
ACTRESS,
MINISERIES
PR
MOVIE
MADE
FOR
TELEVJThanlc1
for
ered favorites .
•
SION:
Jessica
Lange,
"A
Streetcar
NamedDcs~"
·
How~·s ~film U " well as Rob
the great dirmel'l!
· SUPPORTING ACTOR SERIES, MINISE!bES OR MOTION .
Rei tier's "The American Preside!ll,"
Happy Birthday
which· aarlleied five nominations, . • PICTIJRE MADE FOR tELEVISION: Donald Sutherland, "Citizen
J:u
.
Barbara Eblin
were shut. out:
,: SUPPOR'J'ING ACTRESS, SERIES, MINISERIES OR MOVIE
suppOriing awlrds went to Mira
Witlt Looe from aU
MADE F~R TELE'VISION: Shirley, ~ight. ''Indictment: The
Sorvino,:,!l\¢ til~ hooker,)~ .;'Mighty
your
McMartin Trial"
Aphrodite," and Brad Pitt. the mental patient in "p Mon~eys."

·1995 Gp/den Globe winners

•Sweethearts
•Moms &amp; Dids
-Gn8dpanall ·

n't control him. He was the key reason we couldn't get our running
game going until Oliver's run."
In the West locker room, Corso
conceded Oliver's run made the difference , but he added a caveat.
"Except for that great run, it was
an even game," he said.

noc1s

•Nn Horn.. '

'Sense and Sensibility,' Nicolas Cage,
and Sharon Stone win Golden Globes

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE.
Remember that special someone this
Valentine's Day with a mellsage in
'The Dally Sentinel

tJSast:
'
t
eam
to .17-10 win over West
GORDoN

Cuolom IUdlng I ROIIICidollng

110

laid

.H&amp;!~ Mexico'~. Ol~ver helps push

Perhaps, btit the East struggled on
offense. In the first quarter, it went
three-and-out on three of four possessions - Oliver's score was tfie
only drive - and, in its four possessions in the third quarter, it was
three-and-out again.

BY ALAN BASH
USA TODAY
PASADENA, Calif. - HBO is
developing five sitcoms in hopes of
breathing new life into its signature
Wednesday-night comedy hour. And
it's adding other original series blocks
throughout the week.
J'he premium ca~le servi~e is
about to lose some ileiUll Wednesdays
at 10 p.m. ET/P,T: :'Dream On."
"':hich premiete,d in, July ,1990, will
end its run this·sprinJ, and "The Larrj Sanders Show" will have no origillal episodes during 1996 while star
Garry Shandling makes a lilm. · .
HBO president of original pro- ·
gramrning Chris ,Albrecht says he
hOpes that ~'II'~~~~· J't1J!11 in 1997,.
afong with a second season of Tracey
Ullman's new sketch show, will. make
HBO's Wednesdays strong a yw '

UP·TD-DITI
SPOUS
FIIINU

•Addlllonl

MINI .STORAGE

Happy Ad

SMitH'S
CONnRUCTIOI

HBb looking to rejuvt3nate' .
comedy on Wednesday nights

HOTLY CONTESTED- Melge forward Brent Han10n (40) and an
MINE! ,;... Malga guard Paul Pulllne (21) graba a rebound In traffic
unidentified Wahama player fight to see If the allot will re'ach M. ells· . during Saturd8y nlght'a .gaina agalnet Wahama In lbleori, W.Va.,
tinatlon during Saturday nlght'e conteet on the White Falcone' court. where ltMI,MII'IIUden won 114-49ln part becauH of his t71)01nt illffort. •
(Sentinel photo by Dave Herrle)
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harrla)
·

.

'.
if.,_...;._~-..... -

HOllE

I

In the Hula Bowl,

.

-·

.·

'

.

U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE

I'm a guy who knew you 6 year~ .ago
high school. I would like for you to call me.
really ·, need to tell you I'm sorry for
something 1 !nlld to you back then. C&amp;A· me
anymonth, between lOth through the 19d\
every month. My phone number is 992-4531.
If yQu would rather write send your letter to
P.O, Box 86. It would mean alottci me·,
. · Your Friend
Helit'y BuCIIlanallll

a

. ., .
6

MIDDUPoRT

I

.

.By,
SAKAMOTO
second score, in the third period, put
fiONOLULU (AP) - Winslow thC East out of reach.
•011'11{ ball ill ~ne-track . sense of , In between, Neil Voskeritchian of
t!,lrection: IO"'fiu'd the end zone. And Colorado .kicked a 24-yard field
lie h,ail !)lily ~ eoal in mind at the goal.
'
'~Ia ~: i~ss the NFL scouts.
On his game-winning seore, Oliv:· A&amp;houall II1C S-foot-8, 175-polind er said, "I was looking outside, but
lunnliiJ liaclc from New Mexico was they had it covered. A small crease
put,.otl' \'tlie East squad, he was in the cente~ opened and I took it."
jiiiJP:sll~e .S· be scored two touchMike Gottfried, who coached the
;{(own's...!. one on a reeord 53-yard East, said ,Oliver's MYP award was
'; liiUq( ~in leading the East to a 17- · well-deserved.
riO victory over the West.
' "When he made that run in the
. •'After the game, .Oliver made it end, that was the ball game rlght
dear. that he wasn't planning on there beciiUse we were struggling
'wutiiiJ the trip just to frolic in the offensively," said the ESPN football
un and surf.
commentator who bested fellow col. "I'll Jell you straisht out: All I lege football host Lee Corso for the
.wantecl' to do was come here and second straight year.
'play· footblll," he said •after being
Another player wi!O ~ad the same
nlliled IIJe· East's most valuable game philosophy as Oliver was
IpJayer. "It didn't matter who I Regan Upshaw, a )ubi~ defensive
' 1pJeyed for, I just wanted to play aild lme!'lan frOm Cahforn•a who has
lhow ~one what I could do. It filed for the cjraft.
• 'enclec(Up pert:ect.:.' . • '•
' 1
~'I was really serious about comi (, He~. !JI!wi~~~~~ 10 ing ~ , anch.howi~J ~hat I could
;:Mttr~:lciaioucbdP't!ln.nm :~ A-o.~· YM~ u~~~~~aw• .Who .w~ yoted
ifta•lbe milt of 49 yards set by , the ~·s _ MVP. "A lot of people
iniOil .Joiica df MKihiaan Sta!f l9 · come ~ juat to have fun, bull ~t
)elll'l 110.
.
, "
in my room and tried to be real sen11ie ~ qific:kly discovered . •us •bout what I 'Was here for.''
·Pli•'alkllls as he acOOied around·
Upahaw didp't have .to convince
tlabt liDd 11om 10 yards.\IUI•for a ~ 1f!i!&gt; said: "We just could- ·
joUi Ilion in the first quar1er. 'u;.•'• n'! rue IJUhsl him. '{e just could-

2--:

P/1=6; Haning 0.0.4/4=4; Mirtin
0.112=5; Hanson 2-0.0!1=4; Whit-·..
latch 0.0.212=2; Pierce I-O-&lt;W=2; .:·
Yost 1-0-112=3; Wilherelll-0-1/4=3; "~
Totals: 23-2·12121=64

Dear "Renee Young"

-Teen-age sensatio~ Mark. Philippo"ssis, the conqueror of Pete Sampras, was ousted from the Australian
Open today by the slici,ng and softbalhng of veteran Mark Woodforde.
PhilipJX1Ussis, who lieverdropped
servic.e in knocking Sampras out of
the No. I ranking Saturday, was broken seven ti'!'JeS in his 6-2, 6-2, 6-2
loss.
· . .
It also was a bad day for another
power server, women's No. II Brenda Schultz-McCarthy. She lost 6-1,
6-4 to the tournament's youngest
player, 15-year-old Martina Hingis
. of Switzerland.
Hingis prqvj~ a ligl,ll mol"ent,
' after serving a blistering 100 .mph
ace while leading 5-1 in the first set.
After the two women joked. over
that, and Schultz-McCarth~ ·backed
up to receive the next serve, Hingis
tried an underhand ~erve.
.
She lost tha:t· potnt, but made 11
~lfficult for the Dutch player by givtng her only four unforced errors.
Schultz-McCarthy had 34.
Of the underhand se~. Schultz·
McCarthy, who served ~~ sj:&gt;eeds up
to 12~ m~.h- a rec~ ~or a woman
- _sa1d: For her: II s JUSt a game,
wht~h ~s great,! ~Junk. I w1sh I could
see II hke that. I m 25. You fight for
every point, and then this little girl
just hits an underhand serve."

~

-,.-

.~

By PHIL BROWN
.
MELBOURNE. Australia (AP)

The Dally Sentinel• Page

-·"

'

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

--

I ' ·,•

Garris, who missed the past three
At Evanston, Ill., Gena Carlisle
By· Tilt AHoclatecl Presa
Michigan's one-point victory games with a bruised shoulder, made six 3-nninters
and scored 26
.,over Penn State was the Nittany . scored with 38 seconds to go. After pomts Saturday as Northwestern
Lions' firSt loss of the season and Chad Austin missed two shots, ended a 14-game Big Ten losing
brought the Big Ten race into a three- including a short jumper from the streak by beating Wisconsin.
)IIJle, Garris rebounded and was
way tie for first place.
Maceo Baston stuffed in tbe fouled, scoring the final two points
The Wildcats (6-8, 1-4) took a
~idin11 bal;ket, then snuffed out No. from the foul line with five seconds seven-poini haiftime· "tea-d behind
i4 Penn State's last chance Sunday .remaining to lift the Illini past the Carlisle's long-rang scoring and held
No. 17 Boilermakers.
witiJ a blocked shot.
Garris finished with nine points. off the cold-shooting Badgers ( 11-7,
The 20th-ranked Wolverines held
3-3). It was Northwestern's second
on for 67-66 victory and a share in Hester led the Illini wiih 13. Austin Big Ten victory in its last 22 conferthe league lead ~ith Penn State and led Purdue with 13.
The victory at West Lafayelle ence games. The Wildcats were 1-17
"urdue.
in league play a year ago.
Penn State (13-1 overall, 4-1 in snapped a five-game losing streak
the Big Ten)'had taken a 66-65 lead for the Illini, the worst start in Big
on a short jumper by Donovan Ten play in Lou Henson's 21 years
Evan Eschmeyer added a careerWilliams with 24 seconds remaining. as coach, and ended the Boilermak- high 15 points for Northwestern.
Michigan (14-4, 4-1) inbounded ers' conference winning streak at 12
In Minnesota's win over Ohi11
with 16 seconds left. and Travis Con- games and their overall win streak State, Sam Jacobson scored 15
lan found Basion alone under the this season at 10.
points and the Gophers made their
In East Lansing, Mich., Quinton last eight free throws to end a threebasket for the slam that put the
Wolverines·on top with nine ~onds Brooks tipped in Ray . Weathers' game losing skid.
miss with 5.6 seconds remaining and
to go.
Michigan
State rode a solid reboundThe Gophers (10-7, 2-3) pulled
Penn' State's Dan Earl tried a
jumper from inside the lane. But ing advantage to its win over No. 16 , away from a tie at 41 with six.minutes remaining to win at ·St. John
Baston blocked it and the ball Iowa.
Arena
for only the second time in 13
Brooks
led
the
Spartans
(9-8,
3bounced away as time expired.
Saturday in the Big Ten, Illinois 2) with 18 points and 10 rebounds. years.
Minnesota ended up 18 of 27 at
beat ~ue 71-67, Michigan State Thomas Kelley came off the bench
the
line, including II of 14 in the
to
score
a
career-high
13
points
and
· edged visiting Iowa 62-60. Northstretch
drive.
··westcm had a 62-52 home-court will added seven assists.
Chris Kingsbury's three-point
over Wisconsin, and Minnesota won
with 41.1 , seconds to. go
basket
No other Gopher scored in dou56-!10 it bhio State.
·
pulled
Iowa
(
14-4,
3.3)
into
a
60-60
Kiw~ ,Garris. playing for the
ble ligures, but Courtney James had
'.lint tiJnC in four games, provided the tie. Kingsbury and Andre Wool- 13 rebounds and Jacobson had I0.
!~·minute heroics as 111inois manridge, who miss~ a short jumper
Shaun Stonerook scored a career&amp;Jcid its first Big Ten victory of the with two seconds remaining, led the high 18 points for Ohio State (8-6, 1.
Hawkeyes with 14 points apiece.
4).
lellfOn.

I

/

'

Monday, .,.nuary 22,18M

---·
YOUR
MESSAGE
-----. CAN BE SE!:N HERE
---=
-FOR. A TOTAL
o ·F
.
=
--I I PER I
------=
:i i Ill i lllllilllii iii Iii iIi IIIII i iII tllllilttllitllll ill IIi Ittl f:

Purdue loses &amp; shares lead;
Minnesota beats Ohio State

"'

.

notches 64-49 vtctory over Wahama

tly GARY CLARK

.

Monday, .,.nuary 22, 1991

108 Pomeroy

.i

ru

1

s....Mt a

St. Mason, WV

A-&lt; unun
CONSTRUCTION CO.
Overhead &amp;

underground

..

utilities &amp; lighting ,
'Bucket, Digger
Truck Services
Service Pole
$2.50 per ft.

1·614-378-9801

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
.New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

J.D. Drilling Con1pany
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.

dig basements, put In septic
.systems, lay lines, undergro)lnd bores.
We

For Free estimate call949·2512
Jli.UONAII I UfU
Need a l'l•olopoploor for
your Spt!t:ial Occntiora?

•Wtddlrigl/lleeeptlona

•Coupona

(Engagement Plcturee)
•Reunion•

•AnnlwraariH
-Groupe
•FamHy
AnaonR!ePrlcH
Call812-n47
Atltr4pm
During WHkdaya
1111 on WH!tllldl

.... ....

, _ .11"-ta
~

I. D. CONSTRUOION
Siding, Porche•,
Dack,e,
Hom•lmprOftfllenta,
AemO«MIIng,
Add-On'l, Roofing
~

OwtnlnfHd
Bill Dotrfir
(61..) 912·2171

lllllfn

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
Hou.. Repelr I

Remodeling
Kitchen I Bath
Remodeling
Room Addlllona
Siding, Roofing, Polloi
Ruaonabla

lneurera - Experienced
Clll W1yne Neff
892-4405
For Fro Eatlmotae

Art Yo• IHdy
For Love?

C•ll NowUII
1·900..255·2700
lxt. 9402

$2.99 per niln.
MwtiNI1B ,...
Touo~ toM 11"-

requlrtd.

Serv-U 811 ItS 1434

J&amp;L INSULAnoH
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
Office Hours: Mon.•Frl.
8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

VInyl a Alum. Skiing,
VInyl Repllcement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Wlr\dowa, G•ragea.
Free Estlmatea

...•
I

·'
1NMtn

.

•:

o.v.

•Softeners •Fibra

:Raveru 011110a1a
1104Sl

ROBERT IISSEU
CONS1RUCnON
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop a Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

..
7

�..

I
~

. Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

•

--··

Monday, January 22, 1196.
/.

•

.;·Monday, January 22, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

OOP

BIUDGI

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER
I
BEA1TIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

AtW OU rJ U Ll d &lt;T S

1882 Ford E100rt Wogan. PS. PB.
cruloe. dll, air, tow miiHOt, ·~­
cond. 304-175-11151. .

bedroom, elec:lrlc baH board · 2 Badn&gt;oma Wall To Wilt carpo~
hea1 , above ground pool , 155 . Natur~~l Gas Furnace, y.,~ Nice.
Pearl SlrHI. Call 11•·882·8881 !&amp;1+448-2003 81•"•10011

ahor5pm.

.

·

Garogo. Flroploca Heat Pump.
HugeDtd&lt;,814--7.

1
,: ·. --~~~~~~~~-AMERICA'S •1 DATELINE

~

·

sr.·,' $285/Mo
2 Bedroom•. 1 Bot~. Goo Hn~
.. Include• Wotor, Gar·

l.oYely New Home 30 Aan,
•
• lo
Balli 2 112
c1ous 1nter r, 2
1,
ar

:: iaoi\i:A:;;n;;:no;;,IMl:;;;ce;;;m;;~e~;;;~,;;;ts;-·]

•

bl.e_e, No Pets ~ Relerenc01 Aiquinld ei~78

•

.

1-900-3SS-11200 OJCL 9130. 18

• yru. $2.99/lrin. Procal 1!02-&amp;S..

31 B•11bell'1

1 Group of two
5 Soulflweawn

41 HIIIUI
42 eom.dlln

-

.. :::::ly

StreiNnd

5I

1 Common

------for Rent
Home tor oale In .Middleport· two • _ _ _ _..;.;..;.;.;;.;..;.;__ _

NORTH

01·12-tl

•A 10 6

?•

WH-'I'T ·~

11' L I 1&lt;-_.

ou1' 1"111J~• ':

7.20.

•u 1

.EEK&amp;MEEK

""" 1.oona. Dealer will . . _ l ·

nanclng even If you ha"'e been
turned down el aewhere. Upton

t8 7

s

WEST

101111.

•J
I 9J

6

: •AJ95

1881 Dodgo Shadow, 5 Spo811.
AC, Tilt, AlliFMCoaaotto, Ri)or
~lor 81,000 Milot, $3,50D,
$14-2511-81(\e.
.

IWJT
62
•KQJ0852

B 7 3

•to a 1

oK

10 4 2
.6 3
SOU'111
6K Q 9 54
•A 3
•Q 3

•A J 9 2

•

.:BARNEY

A..-r to PwedaUI Puall

expene~

12 11Ued ledy
--~~~~~~
.
13 Pontltl
41
King of biiW
14 Above (pi!M.) 53 Cutting tool
15 Whlll gypaum 54 Relocetlon
17 -lin lin
to •IOI!Ier
18 llettlrl
movie

4

•K Q 54

Equipmont Used Caro. 304-•!i'·

......

ACROSS

........,,

KIT 'N''CAJlLYlD by

.420 - Mobile Homes

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

::::'!l..t

57 Lotion

1t Pollc. WMpOII
~ .... illelll
(2 WCS..)
5I HOaldlb .,_
21 ...
_
5I GJoMny
23G...... _
80 Dl8pelch

24 Mr. Zlegleld

81 ...... -

27 K8mel

2t liMing
ctwnber

DOWN
1 WWII_,

32 Lobe

6 Move

2 Harvard'• riVII
3 --lor All

34 Kindle
311 L.ong-h.olrecl
C8l

un11HC11ty

7 Sm .. l sword
a Glacllllc.
t Perdonlng
1G star Wero

SHliOM
4 ObllgalloM .
5 - lftll. dlllllfta.

37Chlllleron
31 Do farm work

PIISI
3.
PIISI ,

Z•
PIISI
PIISI

30 LIIIIIIUrner
31 Tide ,.,.
33 Strldeo

. qulckly35-plg
40 Porltend'l
at.ta .
43 T11e Th'"
Mulketlwa

··. v/f
..

1
Ptabhotpe, who lived in the 24th
century B.C., said, "Teach him what · lz:,,-t-t--&lt;
411 Milke angry '
has been said in the past; then he will
50set a good example to the children of
Lollobrlgklll
' the magiatratea, and judgment and all
51 PilCH
exactitude shall enter into him. Speak
52 City In
to him, for there is none born wise.•
Oklohome
Not bad for that long ago - or do
55 Danger color
we overestimate our own intelligence?
Moat bridge playen stick to the perby Luis Campos
centage tables , but some, like
CelllbritV Cipher CfVPiogrllrTII are cr. .TIKI trom quotalions by tamou!l J)lq)le, pul and Pf'"8f'll
Canadian Joey Silver, prefer to beck
Each letter in the cipher stands lor anolhel'. Today'• clue: F «11J81t U
· their own judgment. Silver p~ this
deal during last year's world bridge
·c XC U I G WI SINSXI, G WI G H XU,
championships in Beijing.
East's two-heart opening showed a
I MIA
G WI
ZCAAIJV .
c XNMI
good six-card suit and some 6-10 high·
. card points.
IMIJPGWCAK
HLNFG
WNYUIP
West led tbe beali jack, Eaat over·
ITYISG
G WI
KHRIV .'
taking with the queen. Knowing that
!;ast had a six-card suit, Silver ducked
(KNHXGIAZIJ)
K X I A A
W H X X.
tbe first trick. He wanted to see what
East would do next. Back came the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Most directors don'llil&lt;e to go to films very much . 1go
heart king, which declarer won with
to see If I can steal something lhat's good."- George Roy Hill.

UJ4 l.~A~&amp;.TON
ttESTON 61Vf TJ4f TE/'1
~,A

(.AN

i

tb~:~percentage play in spades is

(.OMMANl&gt;MtNTS ON :;; clear: Caah the king, unblocking dum.; LIA u 11:1 1 ., 0
1
my's 10, and cross to the ace, picking
"'ro ,.. N f, ~ 71 ,.., ,
m
up jack-fourth in the East hand. Here,
~~~~~:~~~ B~EAt::
JOAN l.OL.'-IN$
it's true
aftertohishave
opening
TLIII:M ON
til~ bid,
was that
mostEast,
unlikely
four
l"'li
~
spades. Yet cashing two top bonon is
(._~AN Nf~ fOUif.
~ Jl. . still the normal way to go.

~
M~les

o .... ., ..... "' \\-\AvE.) 1-·22

'l'HE BORN -LU:;t;Jt, .

FARr.l SIJI'I'L IES
&amp; LI VESTOCK

~

~

.

WE.It-liEflliU')" AA (};!!;f'RE.I.l.l~
~~~TIOI-I •.

_____ .

1993 201 Pro XL, 20' s ·trutos
bass boa t. 200 XPHP, 6 , 4·687 - :
Ford 3000 Tractor $3,9Q5 ; 85

Maney Ferouaon Oieael Ae·

,.,,ad, $4,350; UN Ford Rtatored
$1 ,8115:814--522.
Haybine $4,000 .

830

3 Holstein Hollon Weighing Appro•. 500 Pda. Each, $300 A
Ptoce,a1..-sa

EMPLOY MENT
SERV ICE S

I

FIN ANCIAL

AGENT: AVON SELLS ITSELF
Need Man
Need CASH f'ar Winter Bills? Nationwi&lt;e Cam"""'"•
~JWamen To Assemble Producta
Earn 18 -$15/Hr. At Work ·!icme
At Homo. Earn $252 To $820
1·800-742-47311

210

Weekly. E•perience Unneces-

AVAilABLE: POSITION FOR sary. s1tart Immediately. Call 1448-3358.

•"! nii.Mf
~~
.....~ry
1.,.....,, ,.._.,.,_

• Paid'llic:otiono

~

New Antique &amp; Crall Mall reody 10
;1§~;~~~~~~~~~~~
open. Needed a:re vendors of an- ·

$SDanc•••" Top pay,
hours, no a~eperlence
1B·or older, Soulhfork
3(W-87S-5156.

Investment Property In Gallipolis,

410 Houses for Rent

Some Financlng, Ca ii 614-7974345 After 6 P.M.

Mo., leaae &amp; Deposit Required,

Owner May Be Able To HOip With

: s300PerWeek'
To Those Who Qualify. Interviews By Appointment Only. Call

lOW INVESTMENT
ROUcE SAlES /SERVICE ,
Snacks To Taverna IC -Storas.

.

Fumllhld
Rooms

:.

built, All Typos, Accoulblo To

Over 10,000 Trantmllllon, NtW
Clutch Kilo. New P,.uure Platao. ,

Motor Homes

BIG NATE
AFTEfl.

THEI'I W"$
IN • Tt-IE
NUTT'(
PROFE$5011."'

'WE GET

OOR

GAAOE .

The Treo1ure
SovlnfS You'll Find In 1he

"

'

Closslfltd Section.

I MONDAY

Roomo for rent • woil&lt; or monlh.
·S!*rllng at. $120/mO. Golllo Hotal.

Alto traller apace on river. All
·hook-ups. Call after 2:00p.m.,
. 304-773-5651,11uon wv.

••--------"'1
1-800-589-8912

Sta))!ptd Envelope: Expreso To $900 Weekly /Potential
Refunds,

... 0!!05HII4.

-Posiliona,

~eply

All real ostatoldvorttatng In ·
1111s nowspoper Is sl.t&gt;(ect to .
lho Federal

Fair Hou&amp;lng Ad
of 19fl8 which mektl ft Uloglll
to advertise "any preference,
llmlliotion or dlacrlmlnotion
based en race, colo&lt;, religion,

aox familial status or no~
ortgtn. or any lntonllon .,
make any auch prlleronce.
limitation or dlocr1mlnatton. •

In Peraon To :

Fundme Vidoo, 2230 Stall Route
"'-AAA ,$(), Conual Ohio Hu An 141, Golllpolla, No PtloQO Collo
irriiiMidlato Pooldon Available For
A Morltberlilllp Saln AoPfllln·
IIIIYI, Full Or f'art Tlmo, Genlt'OUI .commlaalon And 'Bonus
~- cont1t:t Tid G_,, 710

T h i s - wiN not
tcnowflngly occopl
tldVerttaemonla for .... _

-In

Wl1lt:ltll i t -

Woller 51., Polltfi10Uih, OH
FOF

of"'

law.

Our,.,.,. ... hlllby

tnfonnecJ thlt II dUi. .U{II .
IItts nowtpoper

ate available on an equal
opportunlly bells.

head-on.
LI!O (July- 23-Aug. 221 Today you may
lleCOme Involved In something lhat could
be defined as a side endeavor.
Fortunalely, this new hobby may yield a
great deal ol profit.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) You may
have to negotiate a delicate matter today
wllh a Parton who Is dllficun to please.
' Try making a few minor concessions .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 231 Today you
; may have IO clean up after an associate's
. sloppy work . Fortunately. yo·u will not
: mind llelping.tills fllend .
., required.
,
(Oct. 24-Mo¥. 221 An arrange·
•
.. ,
TAIIRUII (Apltl ao uaj :lO) An old friend ment you I)II10I1IIIy organize lodoy may
~ Jar\. 23 11111ii
· you've neglected lately should not
euooeed. Potential prospects may place a
· ·. '
'
. • . 1 Ignored again today. ·Teke ~- to let this · ~~deal of latth in your plans.
In tilt ytar ahaa~ you might become peipl~ 1ioW lmporiant.hl 01' 111111 · IACJITTARIUS (Nov. ZS.O.C. 211 II you
extremely lrlandl~ will) aavtral n~w , it your life. . '--· _
.
,- ~ -~ yout'Mif today, you will hal!lllhe
llienCJI, EliCit of you will go OUI oUill or, '. CU!UINI (May 21.JUM 201 Aa 110011 as 1 -lbiJitr.lo talcalhln¥' otherl diocard and ,
hai',wey 16 Clo favO!,IIOr lhe·othlnl·
• you C.ll ..,otivfle yourseir to ac~leve j •1110rm them IntO IIOr118llllng uaefulll1d
AQUJIIIIUII ..-. . . . . . 18) Commar· · impoo•lt fP!11 todlly, ~be boll! ~ · _....._
c:laltrwoll;•n••lhouldWO!tiOUI_.IOr ' nioualindplnlt lt. You . . •ICOMCI. tt CAPRICORN (Dto. 21-Jan.1II·The .
~ IOdoy, ...-!dY Hy'ou hied,~ ~ CUICII' (,._ 21~ II) :1'011 1111 be . =you'.,... todlly wl ~ YIJU',,

bet

~llllll!liJia UII 'CJII!"Ylnlidalnfiil•

Yllilllif . . . . . If) . . .

iJiftcul.,

y..,·~- ~ of
ron-? The~~ -·~ lhlni_
l - . . . . ···~~
"

1

-

· can help yatj understand whal lo do to
ASTRb-OitAPH
make lhe relationship won.. Mai $2 .751o
Malchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P .0.
Bote 1758. Murray Hill Stalion, New York.
NY 10156.
PIIC~S (Fab. 20-Marpll 201 You may
BERNICE
have been hesitant to paos some con·
BEDEOSOL structlve.advtce on to a close friend
reeet1!'Y · An ~lng "'JWtt present itaeH
loday.
- - - - - - - ARII!S (March 21·April 111) ·YOU wHI not
ta~e dutle1 or reaponalbllltlea lightly
lodoy. Once you comml youraell.' you'll
.follow tllrctiVI regardllll of 11M lltCI'ificee

mation. trying !O patch up a broke~ ~ menla ~.,.,

'

_S........._L~0-=F~S__,,_:N"',,.

r

I

•'

_.._
_ _..
_ __._....._.....__--L---1.

Complete th.. chuckle quoted
b"t filling in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below .

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES

I' .

SCUM LETS ANSWERS

Free Info. Send Self-Addre11ed No Experience Nece11aryl
i

t

ONE OF

duelS Sell,
No Gl&lt;mllcks.
$125
Stanup
Needed, Our Pro-

BttG., S\11111411-3&gt;15, ~edar Park
715-2300,
TX.78818. ,,
a20Q ·•SOO 'WkiJ. AoHmble Pro- No Experience Necessary! $500
. duCt~; }fo,SiJing. Paid lllroc~ F~· To $900 Weekly IPotontlal Pro11 Guorantead. No Exp. Neceo- cessing Mortgage Alfunde, OWn
oity. ' 7 Days 407-875-~022 HOUri, Call (11091 715-2300, EX!.
, · ·=Ext:::U=~H04;___~~-:-:­ 782, (2• Houra).
$200·1500 wookly. Auomblo Now Taking Applica~ona, Retail ·
prtjduota. No lOlling. Paid direct Experlon~ Helpful, Pari·Timo I
Funy guarantatd. No experlenc:e Full· Tlmo, t1anoa1, Dlpondoblo, ·
...,..-..,. 1 doyo. •07-875-2022 Reliable Transportation, Salary

I
I I

XF

WJ.\ICJ.\

A5K ME

tique&amp;, quality craft&amp;, &amp; collectabtes. No Fleas pleasel Serious ll
$1:000 Weakly Processing Mail lnquirl8lon~. 304-6 75- 782•·
Oapt.131, 100 East Whitestone

I' I

A
V

2 Bedroom In Gallipolis, $3151 81.-4-111-9580.
Sleeping rooms with cooking.

614~2957.

be-

N 0 MU D

L

UMd iRe- •'

Campers&amp;

U NL I

""'

1--.,~7~,~....;.,,;;8~;..~...;...,.1~ Q

Acce'ssorles
.

790

low to form lour wordo.

I

760 . Auto Pans &amp;
Budget Tranomlulona,

Ofour
Rearrange lottera of
ocramblecl wordt

r r

v.e '

old

2 Six Month Old Hailers,

~WIU.OC

Pomeroy, OH 45769.

NEEDED IMMEIDATELY
NOT to aend money
!ha
RENTA LS
local Factory Outlel Haa 6 Prwi-. mail until you have 1'i nvestlg!ilediJ
ous Polilions Available.
tho altering.
-:--:-:-:--...:...-:------

614 .441 •1975

Twin Rivers T-. now accepting
applicotions for 11tr. HUD auboltl'
ized apt. tor elderly and handi· .
---' EOH 304-&amp;75-ee78

Wanted to buy- one ·atory 3 bed- , ......,........
room ~ome in Meigs County with

recommends that you do business with people you
and

Pika, Gallipolis, =n~~: Tuesday Or Wednes-

OH

0BusinessIt
pportun y

Real
!:state
Wlll'lted

separate dining room and ample . 450
INortcEI
yard apace. Send roaponses Cia
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO. Dally Sentinel, P.O. Box 729·19.

COMPUTER SERVICES SUP· 520· 7114-232•. Ext 4667·
PORT SPECIALIST. Primary re· Need Sladios To ~I Avon, 614sponsibilitie!l include manage-

es, ·90

360

k.L LOCN.- ftfLIC.

HOVteVer, Silver felt that if East had
a minor-suit singleton, be would have
switched to that suit at trick two. So, if
East bad at least two cards in each
minor, he was more likely to be short
in spades . Backing his judgment,
Silver cashed the spade king and
played a spade to dummy's 10 .
Success! And nol surprisingly, Silver
was the only declarer to make four
spades.

_'_::_~~-~-~'__;,S_cr:..:.!~~~~!ftrs·

WOlD
lAM I

6
One old timer to another "It
_ 1
_ _
really does surprise me how
. . - - - - - - - - . . , many young fools have lived to
MAS L 0 T
become---·----"

Starting S-10'sl88.85, 814·379," 1
~'
1tobf pig&amp; for oolo, 2935.
614·U.~. II no an-leove ;-:N-:-itw--g_a_a7ta-n7k-o,_o_n_o_l_on-lr-u"C
k· ;
" -· ·
-~ radiU&gt;ra. 1toor mall, etc. . ;
Rlglotorad Anguo Catde: 2 Bulls, D &amp; R Alt.,, llploy, WV. 30._372- ;
,, :
1 f'IYI Yilt Old, 1 Twa YHr Old, 3833 or 1-1100·273-1329.
., !
1 Cow Willi Holler Cllf, 1 VOonlng
Eight -

ment of a 100 mode Novell Nel·
work and support of end users of
Windows and DOS programs. Experience with Netware ia required.·
Xbase proorammifl9 &amp;KPfrience a.
pluS. Position requ~res Bachelors
degree in Computer Sclenc&amp;tRelared field (or c:omparable work
elCperienc:e) plus IWO years &amp;lC·
perKtnce in the field. Send resume .
to t1o1Jet Clinic Human Resourc-

Llveltock

Litar$9,000, 61 •. . - 1.

-

10~~~!

7347 or 614-949-2879.
1983 Mirada 18Ft. Open Bow. •
Extra Canvas A Covers, 4.3

,.. .

CUl5Et&gt; 'lW\( ~

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author

45 Ry1n'o
doughier
46 Aal., counlry
47 Author Forber

CELEBRITY CIPHER

)

740

ow. INick

wey

By Phillip Alder

T~E SCORE IS TIED!
T~REE SECONDS TO Pf.A'(!

22

21 nnr ln-.ct

Backing
one's judgment

PEANUTS

20 .._In
Europe

2SIIIahwlr
. diVIalon
2S Arrenged In
en Ol'dertJ

Opening lead: • J

FIRST·· YOU
START WITH A
WASil TUB

=···
..._..

24 t::'l

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
Weit Nortla Ell&amp;
Pall
Pall

11

•11 Sour mall

,.

IICOIIPIO

1 •'

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•

'I!C!JdHI,. beciUII thl)' kilO'! .

~·· 1111 n !II • 11, pilriJUI, .- .

.

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• tile lnill\ 11 ,
•

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Frisky · ·Rough • Juice · Jurist . GRIEFS

Mom taught us the true value of friendship . She be·
lieved that friendship would always embrace pleasures
and divide GRIEFS.

JANUARY 221

�By The Bend

Th'e Daily

Sen~inel

Marshall
wallops
UTC 86-&amp;9 ·

Page 10
Monday, January 22,19ie •·
.

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Ann
Landers

I

only thing Hank ·wears when he
Dear Truly: I don't believe Hank
mows the gra.ss is a pair of tennis nccdsa head doctor, but be doc.~ ncod
shoes and socks. I have wid him scv- to have limits set. The man's judgeraltimcs that this could be danger- mcnt in this area is lc.~s 'than sound.
nus, hut he says, "I know it, hut 1
Swimming nude is OK if he has
enjoy the freedom."
complete privacy. But for hygiene
Hunk swims lind sunhathcs in the and safety reasons, your husband
nude, which is OK with me, and he should wear shorts while in th'e
docs dress for meals becausc1 insist house.
on it. He ha.s told me several times
Remind Hank that others will he
that he'd love to dine unclothed, hut sitting on the chairs in the family
I refuse to allow it.
· nKtm, and he should be considerate
Do other husbands do .this '/ Do I of tbem.
need c•tunseling? Doqs Hank'!
Should I he content that fhavc a husSend queslioM to Ana LUcien.
hund who IJ&gt;ves me and takes g&lt;Kld Creaton Synd~ate, 5T77 W: Cen·
care of me'! I am -- Truly Perplexed tury Blvd., Suite 700, Loll Anti••
in Lafayette, Ind.
eaur. 90045

-Community calendar- Holiday events by. group includes visit to infirmary
'fhc &lt;.:ommunity Calendar is TUESUAY
.
published as a rnoe service lo non•
HARRISONVII.Lio
Harpmfil ~:roups wishin~ Ill announce risnnvillc Senior Citizens Club, TuesDKoeting and special event~. The day, 10 In II :JO a.m. followed hy
calendar i• nul &lt;kosigned to pmm;,te dumcr. Bl ood prcs.twrc c.:lini&lt;.: lndud~
sales 11r rund rai...,,.,. or any tyjle. cd.
Items '"" printtod as space permit'
1{1\('INE -- RACO meeting. 6:30
11nd &lt;:annol be ~:uaranl&lt;oed to run " Tuesday, Racine Star Milll'ark .
~pecific numJ..,r of days.
WEUNESUAY
MONIMY
. IHJTI.AND •. Leading Creek
RACINL ·· Southern Local School Ccmscrvanc..:y IJislrict hoard meeting,
District Hoard of Educalinn, Monday, 5 p.m Wednesday.
.
.
7 p.m. adl the hi~h schcxrl.

Holiday events of Ohio Eta Phi ty were Tammy Bachner and son,
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi included Brandon, Paige Cleek and daughters.
a vi sit In the Meigs County Jnlinnary Hannah and Olivia, Becky Edwards,
and a dinner party at the horne ol Cheryl l'acemyer, Cindy Facemyer,
Charlene Hocllich,' sponsor.
Betsy Jones and daughter Emily.
AI the infirmary visit, residents Dehhic Lowery and Becky Triplett.
At the sorority's Chrislma.' pany,
were prcscnlcd gifts. Pizza WiiS
served and the group gathered around rnemhers enjoyed a carry-in dinner
the pitmo tn sing f avoritc Christmas followed hy a ciMtkie and ornament
«.:urols. ·
exchange, und an exchange of gifts
Going to the infirmary J'nr the par.' hy sccrcl sisters. Paige Cleek, heist -

css Ji&gt;r the pany, gave favors to
everyone aUending and the winner of
the Ohio River Dear used fur fund
raisi ng was won hy Dchhic Lowery.
Becky lidwards presided al the
hricf husiness mccling which included a discussion on huying ornamcnl'i
for the Bank Onc/Canc'Cr Society
Christmas tree. It was decided w·pl!r·
~.:husc ornaments fur everyone in the
group who had a family memher"'

friend allectcd hy cancer.
. Bride-elect Lesley Carr was presented a wedding gift. Attending
wen: Jane Ann Aancstad, Tammy
Bachner, Mary Butcher, Sundy
Butcher, Lc.'ley Carr, Cberyl Faccmyer, Cindy Facemycr, Julie Huhhard, Karin Johnson, Betsy Jones,
Theresa Kennedy, Dchbie Lowery,
Misty Ring, Sue Simpson, Becky
Triplett, .Edwards and Cleek.

·4-H trai~ing to be offered at OSU on Saturday, March 2
/\dulls who work with young
people as livest&lt;&gt;&lt;k volumecrs have
'the chance to sl!arpen thci~ skills at
the Ohio 4-H Livest&lt;ick Vnlunlccr
'l'raining.
The training will be nllcrcd on
~aturday, March 2 from Y a.m. In 5
p.m. al the Ohio State University in
the ' Agricultural Administration
Building in Columbus.
It is fur County btensiun prolcssilmals; vclluntccrs, middle managers.
inslruclors of vocational ugrif..:ulturc
and cluh i.ldvi ."toho~. Session topics

include: E•tra Lahcl Drug usc;
Clicntll'aticnt Relationship; What
docs the Livcslnd Show Rcl&lt;•rm Act
mean to 4· H members; Ci.lring for
Animab, Quality A~'urance and Ethical De~,;isions ; "How to Usc Live·
.'itock Learning L.ahoratory Kits and
4-H J&gt;rujecl !looks to Enhance your
Cluh Meetings"; How to Prepare
Youth for Skillathons at the Ohio
Stale Fair and Uow to Coach· Your
Couoty Judging Team.
It offers the rcsoun:es to allow

.:dulls to teach young people indus-

try issues, animal hu~handry skills
and modern evaluation me.thnds.
Tllcre is no preregistration. How·

ever, a panicipation lee of $1 () will hC
due the morning of the event. This lee
of $10 include.s lunch, refreshments,
resource materials, Li vcstock Learn·
ing Laboratory Kit Resource B&lt;Ktklcts and numerous educational door
pnt.es.
For more in formation, residents

may cont~cl Chip Haggeny, 4-H
Agent, M ~ igs County Extension
Oflicc, at 614-YY2-66'10.

Volleyball
clinic being offered to local participants
.
.
.
The 1\lhcn.s Vollcyhall Program
(AVI') will sp&lt;insm a players' clinic
for gids in grades 7 thruugh 12 on
Jun. 21, 2K, and Fch. 4, fruin &lt;J- 11

says the clinic will consist nl skill
instruction, drilling and competitive
games.
Tryouts for the Athens Vollcyhall
;uu.
l)rogram which is entering its tCJurth ·
(iirls in grades 7, K, and 9 will he year will he held in Fehruary with the
al Athens High ·School and girls in time :~nd location will he announced
·•.radcs 10, II, and 12 will he ut the " illlh~ clinic.
Cnnv•x;atinn Center.
AVP will he nwdc up of at least
'l'hc c.:linic ctll'il!-1 $511, and iS ctm· lltree learns: tme 14 and udder; cmc 16
dueled hy The Ohio University and under; and one IX and under. Ten
Women\ Volleyhall Staff. OU Bead tn 12 gtrls will be chosen lor each
Vnlleyhall Coach !:lien Dempsey l•omn. The teams will practice once or

twice a week am.l travel to regional

vollcyhall tournaments on the weekends.
Those who arc inlcFcslcd in trying
oul arc not required to allcnd the din·
ic, and those ancnding the clinic will
not be eommilted to trying out for the
cluh.
For more informution ahuul lhc

clinic or the prognun, students may
call Ellen Ucmpsey at 591-11 H'l or
Denise l.a Monte al 5'1J-H243.

Social Security's role in financial planning
lly EU I'En:RSON
So4:ial Se4:uirlty
Munu11cr, Athcn.'
You may not w;mt lo hear thi,, hut
it is lime to hegin thinking ahnut how
tl1Uch money you'll need ·when you
rclire itnd where the mnncy will

144H and :~sk for a Personal Earnings
and llenclit Estimate Statement. This
l&lt;trm will advise you uhnut your
Social Security henelits lirr ynu and
your family J(rr nnw and in the
future. The statement :~nd estimates
that :~rc included arc has~d on your
cnmc front Part of the money will he dale of birth and your ~.:urnings frnm
your Scx;ial Security retirement hcn - l:~hor covered hy Sn~i:~l Security.
cfits which replace ;1hout 42% of the Once you have your Social Security
earnings of a person w1th average earnings record · information you'll
earnings. Sociul Security is not, und find il easier to indudc Sot:ial Set:u·
oever has hecn, intended to he the rity 1n your financial planning packsole source of 1.1 pcrsun ... retirement age.
income. You'll also need In hitve addi tiunal inctnuc frt1m savin~s ••r in~cst ·
Two wo.1gc earners mean douhlc
I.JieUIS that }1(10 11 make t)VCr the ycurs.
protection under Social Security.
What happens In your liunily if
More und more families arc
· you hecmnc disabled ur die belitrc depending on two wuge earners. This
(ctircmen!'!
mcuns they have two soun.:cs of hcnMost of us think thai we will elits for the family. 11.· either p:ll'enl
always he healthy, right up to the time retires, dies, or hecumes disahled, the
we retire. llul the h1ct is, ahoul 40'~, spouse and children could be cligihle
l) f men und 2WY,I of women will he
htr Social Securily hcnerits. The
disahled or die heli&gt;rc retirement 'll1is monthly fmnily maximum Could be'"
is another reason you should he much as I50% of the worker's bene
thinking ahoul your linanci:d future . lit.
Call I-KIKI-772- J21J or hl4-5'J2
For more inh&gt;nnation ahout hen1

FIXED RATE
FINANCING

cl'its J&lt;&gt;r families witb young children
who have a deceased or disahlcd parent, cull Social Security's loll free
numher 1-KtHl-712-121J und ask litr
the li&gt;llnwing p~hlications: Survivors,
Disuhilily, nr the fact sheet Social
' ,
Security llcnefits for Children.
Young worker!&lt;i need less work for
Society Security llenclits.
'l11e younger the worker, the less
work he/she needs h&gt; he eligihle for
Social Security disability or survivors benefits. 'l11e amounl of work
needed runpcs !'rom a. . lillie as a year
and u half in the past three years li1r
wnrkcrs whn hecnmc disahlcd heforc
age 24, up In rive years in the pa't 10
years litr workers who bec&lt;imc disahled after age 31 .

Many people nnw receive Scx;iety
Security survivors henclits_
Approxinwtely 7.4 million Americans, including nearly 2 million children, arc receiving Social Security
survivors henefits·each month.

•TRACER
• MYSTIQUE
• SABLE .

Celebrates -first
birthday recently

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 23, 1996

;M aking
the list

AGennettCo. New p ; I

Committee will
study Internet .
access for Meigs

.Meigs joins 4
other counties
:declared to be
emergencies
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newt Staff
. Meigs County has become the .
.fifth county. added to the stale of
,Ohio's list of disaster declared counlies, Gov. George V. Voinovich
-announced late Monday afternoon.
• The emergency proclamation
. authorizes state agencies lo take
•whatever action is necessary to assist
local govemmenl5 in protecting the
citizens of Ohio.
Teams from the Ohio Eme!Jency
·Management Agency were in the
.county Monday evaluating flood ·
. ~amage with Meigs Director of
·Emergency Management Bob Byer
.'and Sheriff James Soulsby.
·
. 1be governor's decision came
after officials toured much of down·
'town Pomeroy and issued reports to
Columbus, according to Byer.
"We're still in the process of sur·
veying damage in the townships and
across the county. We are trying 10
.ascertain•if the towushipi and villages
need extra equipmel'l for cleanup
and/or repairs in the ereas. One of the
hill· COIICems now is to dciCrmine
exactly how many people have suslllined damai" 10 their residences,
which we are woddng on al this
time," said Dyer.
Damage assessment 1eams have
been requested and will be in the
county by the end of the week 10
begin assessing propeny damage to
residences, Byer said.
·
1be declaration by Voinovich
allows local officials to, freely use
resources from state agencies in aiding with the large cleanup eft'on £rom
'the flood.
"If the tOwnships and
deem ..
3)

~

WINDSTAR
• ECONOUNE RV
•COUGAR
•RANGER
• GRAND MARQUIS •CLUB WAGON
• VILLAGER

Lon In 40e tqnlght. 1111n.
Wedneed•Y, r•ln. ltlghe In

·Watson files
· as candidate

RIVER YEW- Melge County wu Included
Mondl!y In a lilt of countlft declaNd - genclet-by Gov. Geolge Yolnovlch. Shown hire
Is the county - t of Pon.oy u vt.w.d tram

M11on, W. V•. Many buslneeMs along M1ln .
Street reopened todl!y with othen axpecNd to
open !Iter thla -k.

.....

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--'11

...!:Tt~~:!;,Thy:,:-~
-·
tllllzatlan Project, wfthltood the brunt ol toni

ol debrla wuhed up by the Flood ol1916; Offl.·
cilia h8d worried that the giHbo, •• yet
uncornpletlld, might not wlthatllnd the flood.

.,

By JIM FREEMAN
!here the world is at your fingertips,
Sentinel Newa Staff
Walton pointed out.
Cyberspace carne a little closer to
"This is something that can help
Meigs (.:ounty Monday after the Meigs County," he said.
Meigs County Board or Commis- ·
Commissioners agreed.
sioners approved formation of a
"This would be like opening a
Technology Development Office and · door for Meigs County," said Com·
.board to examine the )lossibility of missionVicePresidentJanetHoward.
developing an Internet gateway for "I would like us to be the ones who
t.IJeigs,
open that door."
The move comes at no cosuo the
"We'd like to be at the beginning
county.
of this thing instead of coming in at
Scott Walton of Pomeroy, a mem- the tail end like we alwa~s seem 10
ber of the Meigs Local Board ofEdu- do," said Commission PreSident Fred
cation, approached commissioners Hoffman .
with the idea, saying local Internet
Hoffman said he wouid like the
availability would be of benefit to group to offer a certain number of
students, economic development and free hours of access to subscribers for
emeiJency services personnel.
about $10 a month .
It would also provide world-wide
The invesbnenl by the county
electronic mail and be of service to would be minimal compared to whal
the general community, he added.
we would get out of it, Walton said.
Meigs countians have access to
C.ommissioners appointed a Techthe Internet, but it is prohibitively nology Develop!J1Cnl Board consist·
expensive due to long-distance tele- ing of Walton; Allen Harris of
phone access fees.
Pomeroy; Edie King of Middlepon;
"This is a window 10 the worllt," Olita Heighton of Middleport; and
he said. "Our kids are missing out ... Paul Lamben of Middleport.
their parents can't afford the long-disAfterwards, the board met with
lance calls."
Michael Warren, a representative of ,
The technology development EmergiTech, Reynoldsburg.
office would do the work toward
Warren asked the board if it was
establishing~~~~ service, Walton said. still interested in putsuing a 911 sysThe commissioners' blessing will tern for the county.
give the fledgling group added cred- .
Although no action was tiaken,
ibility in dealing with equipment and Howard and Hoffman indicated they
service suppliers, he added.
. remain interested in establishing a
"We know how to put it alltogeth- 911 system for the county.
er," said Walton.
·
County Engineer Robert Eason
Walton also gave a brief history of and highway garage office manager
the Internet, saying it was created by Dave Spencer told the board lhlt
the government in the 1960s. Uni- COL license training for highway
versities and other groups latched on department and township drivers will
lhe Internet later, he said.
be Feb. 6, 2:30p.m. at the highwiy
The Internet hit mainstream department garage. Supuvisor trainAmerica last year, he said.
ing is scheduled for 6 p.m. that day.
Access requires a computer and an
Commissioners also authorized a
inexpensive software package. From
(Continued oa Pwae 3) .

Southern Board eyes
videotape promoting
bond issue campaign
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Stefl
The Southern Local Board of
Education took a short break from
handling more routine academic mat·
ters Monday night to watch a brief
videotape promoting the disuicl's
on-going levy Cllli1Paign.
The nine-minute videotape, entitled "Move Ahead Into the 21st Century," examines the eJumaes, bolh and
social and technical, that have taken
place since 1929, 1932, 1937, 1951
and I961 when Syracuse Elementary,
Southern Junior High, l..etan Elementary, Portland Elemenwy and the
high school were first opened.'
Also shown are scenes from the
' existing schools, coupled with shol5
of a new elemental} school, similar
to the one proposed by the Southern.

Local Building Committee.
The videotape is part of the
o.group's strategy in promoting a
March 19, 6.1-mill bond issue for
construction of a new K-8 elementary
school in the disuict. 1be new stateof-the-art elementary school would
be built adjacent the high school. '
The videotape debuted Saturday
nighl at the Southern/Eastern boys
basketball game •.where it was played
continuously fpr those getting
refreshments in the cafeteria.
1be tape was commissioned by
the building commillee to be shown
at school happenings, including
sporting events, and to parents and
other groups in the community.
In personnel matters, the board
approved Angela Rigsby and llse K.
Bunis as substitute teachers and

WATCHING VIDEO - The Southern Local
Board ol Education Mond1y evening watched
a short vldeotepe promoting iha district's
ongoing levy cempelgn. The tllpe, entitled
Juanila Frederick as a substitute aide
for lhe remainder of the school year.
1be board also approved a day without pay for Suzanne Wolfe on Feb.
20.
Board members agreed to hold
two evening parentlteacher conferences, with one being Feb. IS. The

'Move Aheecl Into the 21st Century,• wa1 commllaioned by the Southern Local Building
Committee to promota a 6.1-mlll bond tuue.

Feb. 16 conference day will be used
as a makeup day in anticipation of
more severe weather.
In other bllsiness , the board
approved membership in the Ohio
.Coalition for Equity arid Adequacy in
School Funding for $423 and
appointed board member C.T. Chap-

·

man as Ohio School Board Associa·
lion legislative liaison.
Present were Superintendent Jim
Lawrence, board members Susie
Grueser, Bob Collins, Dave Kucsma.
Chapman and Marty Morarity, and
Treasurer Dennie Hi II .

•. : ,Alfred area resident Debbie Wat-

.

'i

Yol. 4e, NO. 117
~ Beotlon, 10 ......

·for recorder .

.' LOS ANGELES ( AI'J - Brian Nicole .Drnwn Simpson and Ronald
· •· Katit"!(aclin is hack where he start- Goldman, Kaelin was johless and ·
lived renl·frce at Simpson's house.
~d: He's' unemployed.
Simpson was ucquincd of the dnuKaelin parlayed his celehrity i'rnm
testil)'inll al the O.J. Simpson murder hle slaylngs in Octnher.
!rial into a juh as a talk show host em
KLSX-FM, hul nuw ·his agent says
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)- BonTIFFANY McCANN
be's quit t&lt;rpursuc acting offers.
. nie Riiitt wants tu give kids sn~ething
• "A window opened up us lit~ as In talk uhout. Nurncly, music.
K11t1t'•s cuntruct with KLSX ilnd we'
She und Murty Stuan, Richie
llccklcd 111 t.a~c advantage 'nf it /' said Sumhoro and Kim Wilson perliwmcd
~sent Ru~ Bcrk•l· "This heing . ulan auction and henefil conccn Sut·.cllol '!4ia•vn,, ~c wanted to llH&gt;Ii at the urday, raising more than $140,000 for . Tilli•!"Y Maikesa McCann, du.ugh~:v ant,l lifn'!-dpJinrt,unities- he was a .charity_.numcd_anor Raitt.
,
tcr uf MuJ~ :!!ld D!;hnrotb McCann,
(ltl'llllll In tum down hecau!IC of the
Auctiulle1!! niT w~re Fender guitnrs Belpre, celchratcd her Jirst birthday
~icl !Qtw,"
., .
signed bY, The Rblling Stones, ·Bnh ·Dec. 31 with a puny ul her home. The
. l ~ . K*Un sicnlll(a_onc·ycar cniJ!ract · Pylun, Eric &lt;71~Jll&lt;~ and Bon Jov!.
cclchralion featured a Ieddy hear und
' a....'I)Oilc'!k ~n tiM! air in Augti!l\. The aunn19 Rant Bctys and Otrls rocking hor.;c tbeme. 1'i1Tany is the
~IICCUIIV~s ut · KI..SX did nlll ret.urn CluM program was created 1~!-•1 YC:U: g~andd~~~hter of R•!hen and Carol
Jlhl-cnll~·sccking cmmnenl. · . ' ,((! gtve you~g_.~o~lc. -parttcularly Crnll .ol !uppers Plums and C~arlcs
. Belon: the func 1'!94 mlii'der~tf•J&gt;MitrJ'ilofll""'" ..
lllrl t'IIWI• rtu ,.,itnlhllu•ua-.M&lt;·j;j;(.,a ·~111"'-t..W..
&lt; .
•·
_
·
•and education.
, ·
Va.
.
·

.,,11

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•AEROSTAR

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•

·,

CHOOSE FROM THE FOLLOWING:
• ESCORT
• PROBE
•CONTOUR
• T-BIRD
•TAURUS

.'

5-14-20.23-32

OR
$600 CASH BACK
SELEO '96 MODELS

Names in the news

Brian 'Kato' Kaelin
.unemployed

Pick 3:
617
Plck4:
7847
BuckeyeS:

.Sports, Page 4

A doctor, by definition, is one vvho :takes care of .a sick·:person
medication whatsoever. Also, I have viable suhstilute for an M.D.
By ANN LANDERS.
never l~lt hettcr in my life. A chiroIf you have a stilT neck or a hackDear Ann Landers: A while hack, 1
practor did for me in six months what ache, a chiropractor can be cxtremeyou printed a letter fmm the wife of '
"real" doctors could not do in several .ly helpful. Bu't for persistent cough·
a veterinarian. She said she and her I
years.
ing or stomach problems, skin erup"'t • • \.01 ll.tlgtiM
hushand were often asked why he
For all those people who arc tions or a lump in the breast, I would
Twna S~• lltld
t.hdn't hccornc &amp;~ "real" doctor.
CreMOI't Syndlelllle'
under the impression thai chiropr.oc- urge you to see an M.D.
I am currently in a n:lationship
tors arc not " real " doctors , hy defiDear Ann Landers: Ever since our
with a man who is a chiropractor, and a lot of money on a variety of tests nition , a doctor is a person whose
youngest
son went off to college last
he, l&lt;x&gt;, has heen asked the same only tu he told, "There is nothing profession is to take care of sick peo- .
Septemher,
my husband has spent
quc.slion many times. That question wrong with you'' or '"N&lt;Jihing can he ~ pic. It isn't written anywhere that in
irritates him aml sends me right up done to help your type of pruhlem ." order lo he a dcx;tor yuu must pJ&lt;.~ almost al l his time around the house
stark naked. "Hank" will sit for hours
the wall.
Between lbe high-tech equipment and : scrihe medicine.-- Carol in llr&lt;x&gt;klyn without a stitch of clothing on, n:adI have l&gt;ccn to many so-called the insuran&lt;-.: company gohhledy- 1
Dear Carol : Chiropractic medicine ing or looking at TV in the family
"real" dcx;tors who prcscrih"d med- gook, a person can go crazy.
. 1 dues have value. Many peuple who room. The garage is attached In our
ication that cost a fonunc and · did
Two years ago, I hecame a chiru- have had chiropractic lrc&lt;tlments
more harm than good. I also have tak- practic patient, and since that time, I swear hy them. But, my dear, please hou~c. and when Hank is working on
his car, he is naked a.• a jaybird. Our
en several days oil of work and spent .hi.IVC nol had tn u.~tc any prcsc..:riplion
he aware that a chiropractor is not a backyard has an H-foot fence, and the

Ohio Lottery

I

ORDERED UNITS
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OR ORDER All FOlD, UICOUI, OIMEICIIY 10
NO EXTRA CHARGE YOUR SPECIICIIIOIS 1110 EDU CIIIHEI
liT AllY 11-'sTocl Ul 01 TIICIII 149

·_l}':c:::~~:~t":C~;="CJu~~
Recorder Emmogene Hamilton in

Another,M.idd,leport council rna. n tenders his resignation-·

ibe Much Republican primary.

·
Watson said that her decision 10 By TOM 'HUNTER
t"D'UC the office came abou~ becauSe Stn~nel Ntwa. Btllff
,
"'f her greallnterest in public lffain
Mtddlepon Vtllage Council has
-iild her desire Ill confidently sene the • been n:duced from five to four mem·
. people of Meigs County in 1 public ben ror the second time ia a month,
capacity.
.
after the ntiiJnition of Couneilman
• She has been very active in. area Steve Dunfee was announced at
.~outh and communil}' activities, cur- · Mot'lday night's regul~ meeting.
&lt;tcntly servina as secretary i)f the . The Rev. John Neville w~ swom
:Meip t;:ounly Aaricultural Soclel)' mMonday to fill the·unexpired term
and treasunir of the Meigs County of Councilman Dr. Nick Robinson,
:Fair ShO'I!C tlild Sale Committee.
wllo resianed in December. This
Watloq is an executive assistalit ippOinlmont brought the cOuncil back
II:COUlltiqaupervisor with the tQ a full .fi!L!Qcmbcrs, until Dut!fee
.OaJllpotis-bltiotl income tax j,repara- · annOunc:ed his resignation Iller ip the
(loa firm: of Din~ Inc..
meetins.
•. She and her husband, Orange
DUilfee cited personal time con·
Thwtt~llip Tnlltee ·]IIIIIC$ Walaon, flicta for his decision to leave coun:a'eajde neat AJfrecL lbey have one ciJ.Hedynkedcouhcilmembors.the
J!lll.~whoilajunioratMeigs mayor~ the community for the
Jlilh Sc:hool.
oppo11Ua1Jy 10 serve and ellprelscd

1•

.;

act

...

hope that he could once again serve
on council at a later date.
Neville, a Zanesville native, has
been a Midd.)eport resident for two
years and is the pastor of the Middlcport Holiness Church on Pearl
Street.
"I feel Rev. Neville will be an
excellent addition to council and we
look very forward toward working
with him," said Mayor Dewey Horton.
Council approved a 1996 budget,
which_tial!tens the village's fiiiiiiCial
bell for whal could be one of the final
notc:hes in eliminating Middleport's
101111 debts.
"The repayment on lilt; revolving
101111 has decRased considenbly,"
Council President Bob Gilmore

'
explained. "I think this year is going street maintenance, $69,SOO; law
to really tum our finances around so enforcement,
$4,237;
water,
we can do some things next year that $202, 100; sewer, S166,240; meter
we haven't been able to do in sever- deposit, $6, 700; economic developal years.
ment, SS,I 00; swimming pool,
"Council is still cautiously $24, 700; CHIP program, $3,099; fn
approaching expenditures through equipment, $S, 100; fire truck,
the rest ot llus year, and hopefully $45,800; tree planting, SI, 760; mini
we'll have most of the loan repayment golf, SO; cemetery, $18,300; u.d
complete hy the end of 1996," he COPS, $6,000.
added.
In other action, council:
This year, the village expects to
• H~on said the boat laun~h pro.spend a total of $1.15 million, with ject is s~ll on sc~ule, and bids for
IS466,79S set aside for the genenl •
~eel_ an: betnll Jli'CJ)II'ed for
fund. . Total appmpriations of iidveftileiiieilt. Horton added tha the
'$1 IS6 231 are down £rom over $1.3 pool project is still being delayed by
lniilion' in 199S.
the Slate, and hopes the siwation will
Funds appropriations estimates be taken care of very soo~.
ifor 1996 are: 1eneral, $466,79S;
'.Discussed real!oc~llon of the
revolvingl.oan,SO;refuse,SIIB.OOO: !IW'Inaprqlen)', whichts 'nowclose

the

to beina completed, according to
Hono11. 1be land will be used for
recreational purposes only.
• Gilmore discussed complaiall
from merchants on the failare 10
enforce two-hour parlting in lbe
downtown business district .
'
• Heard from resident 0.. Dodson concerning a sinlt bole proltl111t
caused by heavy ':"fuse tniCltJ .....
cU~Rntly servicing the vllllfli Dod- ~
son also comme~ . llle Yll~:'
. police depllnnent for lllei, fiMj wtllk.
• Heard from reside~~~~
.'
who requesiecflliiit a ibm .u....~&lt;rc
behind IIIII' home off of Fifth~":'!'\ '.
·closed oft'. · ~
,
~ • ScWaJi.d d.e nexa a 1 11
Monday, Peb. 5 11 1:30 p.a .. ~
;Ja,c OOI!IICil cJwnbm.

.

..._..

ar.,

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