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                  <text>By The Bend

Th'e Daily

Sen~inel

Marshall
wallops
UTC 86-&amp;9 ·

Page 10
Monday, January 22,19ie •·
.

.

.

.

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.

.....

..-

--'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
i=•
·
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

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act

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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.

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;,.-Tu11day, January 23, 19M

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AccuWcather" forecast

, .•

. ,liblr,
. , a.!IJIIbt
·

Mark A.
..

~uc- would pv~ Clinton a ~~ to....- bordin1 tci GOP priorilics.
·.
deliv!l'. a "vi,ctory
~linton ~lei use
And thou~ House ~udaet Colll!llitaee_Oiail'·
, Barn~a a~ .,..·pr,IIIDfe
~b - 1tloob as tboU'Jb there won t be a bal· tbe opponumty to "contrast his goals wtth those' ID!ID John Ku1cb, R-Obio, was inlel'pleled as eay111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
anced b\Kipt deal. ~oJh Rep11bJ~ns Ind. the of .the RepublicaDS.'' . ,
. • .
in1 im "Meet the PRss" that Republic... would
814:1182-;l11S8
•
Fu:
IIN1S7
~te
House
q
ge~na
ready
to
spm
tbe
failure
The
mess11e.
he
said
in
a
press
briefina,
will
p...
i. "clean'~ debt ceilins ))ill, lidcs say .that
'.
thctr wa~, .1111~ President Clinton seems to !lave convey "his commilllient 10 a pater sense of . ~blicans ICtllllly are aoing io ai lesatlllal:h a
once a~wn gamed~ upper band.
community and puUins-tocether" as opposed to .ineasure mlrictin1 Treas~ ~Ill)'' Rob¢
White House Cbief of Staff Leon Panetta tbe Republicans' philosophy of "winner-take- Rubin's lliility'to. borrow fr6m aovernment trust
thinks that tbe Republicans' budpt stratel)' bas all."
·
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funds tO •void defaUlt. •
. · .
•
A Gan11ett Co. Newspaper
"blow.n up in their faces" and bas coipowem! · Panetta said that if no budget agreement can be
"·Wha! klad of dobt·'lilnit law do we have, if
Cli~ton to ~li~ "c?nfrontational" Siatc of the reached soon, the White Houle would propoie an tbC .;Jreaslify can simply iciiore it?'~ a· OOP aide
RONRT L. WINGETT
, Uluon mes5111c rn which be portrays. himself 'II "11xit stratel)'" consisting "either of reJiewed , said, ~ing bis side's. argument. "It's the
Publleher
negotilllions on SliD-pODding .~ot&gt;rlations bill~ ' CODJieSS 's power under !Jtc ConstitutiQn IQ ~nact
1 ~-advoc~. of a bal~ budft. while the QOP
IIISI$18 on ~ding more ·- tax cuts and or palsage of a "clean" conunutDJ reaolulion to · the laws, and we wint to make sure ~ COo·
MARGARET l$tEW
HOEFLICH
"cuts" in Medicare and Medi~aicl, ·
keep the g!h•ernmcnt operating throuJb Ocl 1. grcss's powers are not undercut."
., ·
•• ctWILEJE
Qarw8l Mllnager .
ConlrOIIer
· ~at's more, Panetta thinks that GOP plans to The White House also will propose ~c _o (a ,, A_GOP cleb! li!nit !HII also miJ~!,~n i!p!IIC
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. selecuvelr cut and fund federal proJDIIlS for the "clean" bill taisi.ng tbc federal debt ceiling.
.forin of "dowll p&amp;yiil'tnl" tliflliid&amp;~ iiDd
,.
re~ of ~~ f~ year also V.:ill baclcftre on tbc
Republicam are likely to grant neither request, · dc.ficit reductio.,, ~cordins to GOP aideS, "ll
&amp;.IIJin ID , . , . . , _ " ,., ,,.. n.., _.,,.. .0. - /1110 GOP pobucally.
an eventuality that Panetta said will also play into would be a tenible vote and tenible policy ~ply
_.....,._,. _ _ ,......., _ _ _~_...,, · ;r...•- .· If thiriJS go as Panetta anticipates, it will rep- Clinton's bands.
·
'ro I n -· the federal debt.'' one aide· said. "li
loniono
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get po .mc_s. or,
Is aconbnuaUon o 8Siflle~ of, ats ~ '"~~uld repre~_ntan abandonnw..nt.
of our ~l!Jre.n
_ _ _.,..._ _,..........~--,.;~·..,·.;;.'·-....o...____..,.__~: a full year, rt wu RCP';Jbijcans who m~· that c~~r-tbrcll:ts that bas blo~ up on the Rcpubh- .iUid oycry~ng- we;.ve.been ,~1ng. to dft, ~ ulti. ·L
.. - - ·- - ·
, -'they were,sent~ WH~Un,JIOn IQ bjllancc !he l!!ld· · ~.''·'he said. "To take this lQ the next stage; mate 10 bus1ness-as-us!!a1." ,,. _ ..~~·.~ ,.
get and tb&amp;t they d do so,ID seven xears wrth'nUJ\1· ' lflcf lhril!lts. to shut down tht: government and
So, indications are that as the game of. bud~·
ben ~etted by the Conpusiot!al Budaet Of!i~~ . ' throw tljc ilOV!lfllliiCIIt into .~fi!Uit. is pretty diffi- J!llll)' "f,hiclccn'' ~ontinucs,,more .vetoeslil;d.par.
CbntDI! spent almost. all ?f 1?!1.5· ~1sunc cult ,to justify '!I the, c(iuntry. ~d. in terms of tial shuidowns of the government are possible,

'Estti6Rsnti in 1.948

OHIO Wc.Jtil c r
Weda•day, JID, 24

Clinton is winnirlg ori bal'aric~d bud9et.; •-~

The·Dally s,ntinel

The Dally SentiMI • P9 3

speccf,-

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Claude M. Rupe

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...:.c'Ia.Im..In.g·

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h.e mI.·ddIe

.: f r·om
: .both.'e'.nds' of
':~·
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'Oll•.tl• cal s·cale
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:By
WALTER R. MI!ARS
:Aft Special ~

W.VA.

h·-·-

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:Colder temps to transform
, rajn into flurries Wednesday

every
clement
that of
plan.
on~
l)ud~t . ~~~·eon
It's aoniio-lnirler.'~.'
..•. :AideS
. ·/.""' sense
~jib ~v~n·
Df.this;debt
defi!!IJt:If
JOod
proposed
not aofcent
!'CalHisdefic1t
J:educti9ft,
. '1be GOP~s!
1s·bent
the Sli'alel)': lbb.ush·
won'tihe
frte~·
us from
nonsense
and force
merely a slow decline Of ~· deficit as a percent· . say !he.GOP 1elde~p is de~ ~to ·illlp9,SC · '' ~Djp101ilise1 lljly~ the ~lock llllifket.,jg:: •
~ge of the J!OSS dOmestic PtodUC!. Then be fl~t- , "~lel\tl~ ~Ilion:• ~· go~em~nt prq:. ~ + (~on Koildi'JCke It "eHcu:Uvhdftor of
ed a ,JO-yeu: bud~t plan scoi'ed by ' -~te ~. flindll!g and &amp;;funding vanous programs ....,, Call, the MWJIJ!.!IIIIr of~, ttll!~;
HQUSC, .then a seven-year plllll
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• WASHINGTON- On tour for Republican conservativism, tbc fli'St-tenn

OOPsenatorsaldthatwbile~'sdifficulttosay 'noto'tbingspeoplewant,it
:Ms to be done to move America "back toward the middle of the road.''
: . It's an example of the way politicians usc their own tcnns to define the
'middle, Which is wbere voters tend to see themselves.
.
: That Philosophical teiritory has been called the mainstream, the middle
:way, the vital center, compassiOnate conservatism, the sensible center, or
;even the radical cen~. · .
·
: C!artina it depends upon wbo is drawing the map. Conservatives are
110w, and their dominance in the Republican Congress probably will be
lleigbtencd by the record-rate ietirements ilepleting the roster of moderates
:after this year. ·
• The people who define the debate are effectively writing the rules of the·
~s. as Ronald Reagan did when be came to the White HiiiiSe 1S years
.ago. In ibis sequence,·since the Republican takeover of Congress, President
;clinton has acccntQated the cenlrist Democratic tenets of his campaign. He
&lt;had shifted to what seemed to be old-style liberal answers earlier in his
:administration.
·
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: His four-draft iransition to a balanced budget proposal displays that tum.
: He won the White House as a New Democrat, promisiDJ a more conscr'Vativc approach than had marked the party's past. "As Bill Clinton proved
4n 1992, albeit dishonestly, m1111y-Americans are open to a progressive mes:,age that combines concern for the poor with a strong advocacy of limited,
ycsponsive, .and efficient government;'' Joel Kotkin of the Pacific Research
·Institute writes in "The American Enterprise."
·
: The emphasis is on the latter as he Seeks a Second term while accusing
~publicans of extremistl\llswers.
• They insist not. It is a tag no politician wants, none, at least, since Barry
'ooldwater defiantly declared in accepting the 1964 GOP presidential nomi-

By The Associated Prea
· The rain could become mixed
: with snow or tum to snow on
: Wednesday as a cold front moves
: across
the National Wcaiber
., __ ,. Ohio,
'd The
: - d•ICe
. daprecipitation Should
1 581
· the
10
'' en Rai
ate •-•
lee Y·
s t moved into the state
•I M dan a.w· fth
• on y, ru..,.t. 0 vemigbt tempera·
:, lures bovercd'ar\)llnd the mid-30s.
:• . Low~ again.tonight w,ill be in the
•i nud- to upper 30s, fo~rs said.
-~· temperatures won't be much warmer
,, iban ibat on W£dncsd8y.
~-. The record•hiab tem-~•ure for
' thi ·
..-) ·s date at the Columbus weather
i station was 68 delfi'!'S in 1967 while
' the record low was IS below zero in
: 1936. Sunset tonight will be at 5:39
:p.m. and sunrise Wedncsda)( at 7:47
: a.m.
"

scored . by a mishmash of
1
cconomiits, and fi11aliy be
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~.C'" 0TA't'N.
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submitted to the basic GOP
· •
mJ I . l:;ft
terms.
,..~ . . . wr l9lf
Now, armeCJ with a CBb' .. .,
~· ' ut. · · · ·
letter stating his proposal
·· '
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achieves ·a· budcet. siuplul of •
. · •J ,
liirv.DII, ''''
preciselyi $1 biUion in .2002,
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the White Hoose iJ proclaim· · · H,
ing it is OJe' chainpion of bUd•
get balance, while the GOP is
pressing beyond ibat for tax
cuts necessitating the disman·
ding of the entitlement status
of Medicare and Medicaid.
This amounts to grand theft
of an .issue, made all the more
_lan:cnous by the fact that more
iban half of Clinton's proposed deficit reduction-- $363
"' ...
" \
billion out of a total of SS83
billion •• docs not occur until
fiscal years 2001 and 2002,
.'
when Clinton will be out ·of
office, even ifhe is re-elected.
Meantime, accordi'ng to
..•
Panetta, if no budget agRC. '' '
ment is reached by t11e State of
the Union address •• and
Panetta said he didn't think .__ _....;,..._ _ _ _ _ _~----------"'!'"-------------.;..--....1
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·IjM\ Jt:'·,j
THE AliTI· )'Jjw
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na'::!:;=~t;.:~~~n~o~!s~=t;ldcn:~~~Dem:.is.i~io~
a . g·.t·r $ ' .ave:, ·earne :. fQm·. ~"'·sa·';:'':::·;
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conjJR:Ssional dominance and they defined the middle of tbc road the liber·
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By 8111'11 Eckel ~
Cyn~a ~jkes at the Cc!!terfor PRparat~ Studies in Music at Queclis
•. Later on,llicbard Nixon said the worll,ing foimula for a Republican in a
Smart little girls have been li staple of American popular culture 'for years. College rh New.York told the N~vy Yodc Times that she riOtited the trend
. presidential bid was to cater to the right to wiil the nomination, then move Kids growing up during the .past half-decade have eXperienced Dennis the shortly after the show st'aited ''(got an influx of linle girls coJ11i!l&amp; up to
t~Uk to the center because ~·s where the voters are. In 1988, Democratic Menace's know-it-all neicbbor Margaret. Patty Dulce's straisht-arrow cousin and saying, . ~I want.~ play'~ saxbpbone becau.se Lisi Siinpson 1plays tiJc
nominee Michael Dukalcis tried to·avoid "the L won!," for liberal, alibouJb · Cathy. Charlie Brown's dweebisb friend Marcie. ·And "Father Knows ·- saxophone,'" she wd:'"I ba4·no clue whO t.iS&amp; SimpsOii was. I was relicv~
be ,fmally accepted the label.
_
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Best'"s goody-two,sboes Betty (Princess) Anderson.
to find she haoh peimanentaii over~."
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·. Those efforts to define and claim the middle echo now, with a record 13
Of course, the joke was always on ibcm. For
.
Man Groening, creator of ''The Simpsons," tolil
senate retirements and with 35 in !he House eroding the moderate to pro- despite ~ir pristine handwriting, their c:diausII!!
~lie. TilDe$ he gave Lisa ahom because he ibougbt
gressive winas of bot1t parties, particularly among GOP senators.
, lively researched tlleme papers and their State
rOt: thOSB WhO haVe ·~nt ~ idea of an 8-year-old gi~l wiib a saxophone
. . ; "The center is depleted," sBid Sen. John Chafee, the fowtl)-tenn Rhode . spelling-bee championships, we all knew whO the past SIX veiJrs *buring . W:as;fulmy. NoW ~'Rg\lllrly ~-ii ~ul from gifts
Island Republij;BII whose relativc.ly liberal philosophy once prompted the future !Rasters of the universe really were ~
·
· · r
· ' ~
. ' Usa's 11e Willi p1c!UR$' Of the1r W:otihones,
attivists on ~ riJbtlQ say .he ought to leave the party.
.
the boys with the slingshots and the untuckcd the outer gaiiJJCies, ~ISIJ Is •
61-oen}~g no doubt .though\ ' ibis .• cUlm~
• Democrat Paul Tsongas. ibe former MassacbUBetts senator ..d presidcn- shirts.
character on
Simp· ~ause a w~ playiOg the sax~: or an)'
tial candidate, bad lam~te4 a vac11um in the center of national politics. WarBut that was before Lisa Simpson, ibe braini,
. •
·
mslrUment of )BZZ for t1u1t matter, 11 such a.rare
1
ren R~ of New Qampsbirc. aformer GOP senator, ,said that some peo- est second-graderto ever hit the $,111all screen.
sons, ;. "' F.O)C TV s .. IJ.rllflll-tlme . sight. .Inllceddt wasn \t long ago ibat.ibis was
pie now Identified witb .tbe fOnservativc wing probably ·,vill .move toward
For those wbo have spent the past six years cartoon show. 'she Is B kid ~t l!nth!~· 'IW~ty-eiJii"~car-old 'nler
the middle "~ause tbit•s.wjlere the country is.".
,. . .
,touring the outer galaxies, Lisa is a character on
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anil sonpntcr EfeanOI' McEIIvoy was je)ld"",nice
ttepubliCiils in power ihsis.t tbill despite the labeling; their versjqn of con- "The Simpsons," Fox 'IV's prime-time cartoon who.Is mockfl(l by her f:IBss~ ~~ don't play the sax~:' when ~request·
servaii.m is beaded.there np~,l · .
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show. She is ·a kid who is mocked by ber class~ mateS bfH:SUSB
reads
~~aile liS ,a ChriStmas ;~nt.·.~s~'sot. &amp;. ~n
. • When ~ t9uring QOP Sena,te freshmen held I! televi~ . forum in mates becaQ.SC sl!e leads at ~ ninth,irade level.
·
mstead.) ,And ,saxopborust MIII)Drle de. MuyiiCk
· ~xVill~ m:t ~· Se~. fred' Thompson of ~cnncssce said ib111 saying Who once handcrafted all 75 cbatacters from B ninth-grade level.
•
t9!fi the Dayton paily. ~cws that slle,wa~nitcno.to well·meamDJ people )s !he bard part of the Job. ·.:
.
. ,
'.'Oliver TWist" for~ school proj~t. And wbo has
'
ly d~outaged ~ pl~&gt;.;i~s the insiiUI!Ie\lt.of her
: "But we 'baw teaJiy gdtjen 'ciut of kilter in this couniry, and whit we are been voted most likely to be resented and mosi
.
.
cho1cc. "Th be ~~~~ p\a)' the SlliOJIIIclne,as a ·girl
•
, ;, .,_
ajlout is tr)iing to inove ,~nss .biek·toward ibe middle of the road." he said. likely to be preside~\., ·" ·· ,
was 1RJposs1ble. It.wasn't allowed," she Slld. . : ,1
• That's the inainilreMt ir)ap:Refiublicans want, and it is. neil a.pc;w one., · ' That's not.io say that she is:an apple-polishing goody-goody. In her free
One woman. Billy Tipton. concealed her gendcr'for SO years in·O(cier to
: ·~~ is·in OOt'..,Airi at home a middle way between lmtrammcle.d free• time, Lisa 1~: to unwind bY. m~ng a few prll!lk phone calls with her broib- D:Jake it as a jizz saxophdnist: Aft&amp; TIPt9.ri die4 in 1989, lite' ~ics
ll!ol .o f l)le iJ!ilivldUal aild .the:'dcm.ndl fOl..tbe ,vel fare' of the .whole. liati~n. . er, Ban, or yuckin• ii up to the mindless and violent canoons ·on the "Itchy re~ealccl her secret,-- to !~Je,,~ suipri~ pf ev~n !117 a4ppted ~.is and
Q:wl~ D. Eileiibbwer said in his first Sta~ ·of the Union address i.n 1953. and Scratchy Show."
' ·
·
wtfc. De Muyncks band, tllC B1lly 'riptpn M~orial Sallopi)9JIC Qunel.ls
•!J1ili''way,m)iit avoid aovcnimen' by. ~)' as carefully as it avoids ~utLis~ bas made he~ bi..est' impression as a sax~tionc play~r. In fact, named in her honot . · ' ' · ,' . .. .,: · , ' . , .
neJiect of·~ ~lpless.''
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she s the most Jalentcd musician to ever bit the Springfield Elemeqtar)' . Tipton would undou~)' be happy iO
sd plBRl'YOURII iirls ~nJ
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School band. Lisa~s hom playi~g is so iJ~~pired that even the pri11ish .band on their honl~ -· never.reaJjzinc the g~liiler bat:rier iJ.ey'Vci Cri.Jssed.'llc!po: mrJOR'I·NOTE ~w.n.r R. Mlliilr87v!CI 'p l'lllldent 8ftcl eolumnlll for director can't squelch her; tbougb lie certainly tries. "Miss-Simpson," he fully, these girls wdl o~ day clog the J~ cl~ .of ~wi~b'Yillap and
'fbe AII')CI..,. PI'IIN, he! reported on.W•lhlngton arid nlllonll "I-" says the day after Usa breaks into a Wild improvisation. "I hope we won't Nhomew.Orleans. , ibus assunDJ !he saxophone's ftt!W, ,~tus ~. ilie,;IJ!itlkin~Jirl.'.•
t1pt for 11101'11 ~ 30 yMrJ.
have 11jrepcat of yesterday's outburst of unbridled·creativity." .
,
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. . · ·, IfLsa's~cntbasgoncu~rcciated~withSpringticld'spowerstbatbe,
S.N~.laa~WIIIerfoi'~~.-~~.AI~D·
it hasn't with young viewers. M~c teachers~ now discovering ib&amp;t,the tlon. Send co~ to ~ . lllrthor lit cal'll· df dlle lltWIPI._ Dr..;......
J'
saxophone has become an enonnously popullll' instrument wiib little prls.
hir e-m.ll It...__.-.~.
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Blacks must be given nys teiMainstre'm ·

aerry'S world

' By D\tWAYNE WICKHAM

er with · many neglected children Walter WI1Ua!1is or 'Il:tbn!M Sbw~ll.
. Gen.,..""" Service
born of many fors~n women," she
But they're wrooa
· , WASHINGTC?N - It's eas.y to wrote. "He. lives ,iri his mother's
.~bra Dickerson ~ ~~se..Vam~s· Debra Dickerson for a nght- basement. w.r~ furniture rented at an tiv~' She's not one of tbo&amp;e. mailu:
w~nger.
.
,
astronomiclill.nterest rate, ihe exact fll:tiued Nccrocs who bas been rei·
. All )'OU neec;t d~ ~~!he won- . IUOOUIII of wl)icb .~ ~ notPo\i/. c~ ill'tbeimagcof•""·l.uk;,--aa ·
. dcrfully ~~rue pcce she.wrote fill; Jie has ~ car ~. ·ao ~ monibly . •~ of ncial • ""~'if.'··~
1 ~ of The N~w.Repu~ cable bill and cvcry.J!Oisablc phoiiC she , bas bCcn mist~~
·. ,. ~
J~.
1
.
slich
be to ~urn~ to that conclusion. ·
feature but no saVJnp. He steals
· · · t ho }'tile ~iaJid·
l
In It, Dickerson wails plaintively Social Security ' numben' from .~,vc.s JUS
w I u.~. . IJig
. about the brutish thug wborpumped unsu~J 'relatives and · ak~
lte ~nservatr~ havllr;Df :black
:abulletintotbebackofber 16-y~u- tbeir idimtides to icquire luP ·rV fol~..
· -:~
,1
.ol~ nejlhcw last sumntcr for. ~ sets for Which ~ will ncv« pay. On Di
JUSt ·anm: abiJ ~~·
:ullpllfdOnable sin of wavinc ·the tbe slim chance that be is brousht to . .c pi · ~ ~: the _Qtbcr ~?
: ~II c.ar. The bullc,t Mtck the , justicc,hcwillbavea!!olol:fulcri.hl·' :hte~ I"!!lliODCJ ~ ...~. I
bOy s lpiiiC and left him paralyzed inal history and no coherent expla- ~~~·t ·(:' w~v~..,...~~
. \ below,lbewaiit.
•."·
nationtoOft'er''for'whlthedld.
cbafrto '~a 'th'l w11~~
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. · If it'stiue,.as some .llay, ~the '
·
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·
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my , . ~· .
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~ tbe editoriJil ,OOOd flouse.. . " Alld ~ aboU~ lbe cJe~,tlption of

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her ~lie ·1111ic:le for ibe ~~e~~l

aserwbolhOther~leWii .no~
real ,0.. ~-fek '*••ulle ~
for JIIOI'e &lt;'j llopllilli (i) bop ~

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,,
. Jqvu ,bonHJf '~bclth&lt;lftgc· .lftd
-~ ··~

. and. raised in an enviroruitent ..,.._
be' 'kneiiL,i)e' was outside.tile .
stream and . wbele lie knew
nobody C8fe&lt;1 ab91il !tiJn," ~ .~
'~Tbere's no job for: him; No ~
edueaiion for him 'lllefc'li no bllii
subsistence for bj.i/."
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' enon - . • who 1MemaliZed :&lt;her .litked DickersOn ~ JIVe.. them· ~· ;
ons. • M~ than ·lliyibinj· eW 1 ·
~ nephew'• ,_..tM .suff~l ;Tbey Pill! to~\ililb a loop pece · r.Iil)','"ille . . . "I tblrik' the Odds' rel)ec11 thbdulllty ofbli'·Wie · ,•

'UkeJr.: c:Nidldw·,tor

con,yCnion;~ · on..the_.__~. ~~c- ~ • 4 ..-e ~ JOOd 1. ~~thil-&amp;uy Litten iti wbat t i 5ayi •about bet
To many, Dickeiloiueems to be ~·. ~t ... Solile,~P.r'beCoJile
' ihiNJbta
iben-unkno~ Jll!l" the rami, o( bieecb:·· • H~- I eli~ ~- they ~ bile...
.
, ' man the IIIOIIICI!It ,$Jie· J(!t ~ of tiained, lllack Coluerv~ve . ·~ . · Bill it wU environment ·and. lack
· wllat ~Nd: 1,
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anti-lillcialialn li toOtlcl ! n· ibe 'kind of'~ty. nOt race, lhe quickly'"
', .
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m.ny ~. !lUi ~ ihe blacl lurunan
, ..... or-~;jna)(-~...
~ ~ bl;illili ~~~~. piillibeiJiller. "'. .
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h1lldet on crime...-~. ' ' ' ;c
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Clinton will make a pitch
for bipartisan solutions ·

Tonisht ...Occasional rain. Lows
from tbc middle 30s northwest to
around 40 southeast.
Wedn~sday
... Rain changing to
w.·•""'
. "HINGTON (AP) _With a
•
snow in the morning north
. and west, year of polr't1'cal combat ag 81·n·t
•
then cloudy with scattered flumes in Rcpublr'cans behind him and a year of
the afternoon. Rain endin"" in the tough campw'.,..
,.. 1·ng ...,
·"ead, Prcs1'dent
'mornins elsewhere with some flurries Clinton says he'll include a pitch for
in the afternoon. Early bigbs from the bipartisan solutions to tbc nation's
middle 30s northwest to the lower problems in toniJbt's State of the
40s southeast.
Union address.
'Extended forecast:
"We have differences, but we
Thursday.. ,Panly cloudy. Lows should attempt to resolve those dif15 to 25. Hifth. in the 30s.
·
"'~
ferenccs and we should attempt,
Fridity... A chance of rain or snow. where we can't resolve them, to set
Lo~ ilt.the 20s. Hisbs in the middle . them aside and do what we can do,"
30s to. ,~~-:r&gt;wer 40s.
·
Ctm·ton told re'portcrs Monday. "The
Sattlrilay... A chance of rain or state of the union is strong, but it can
snow. LOws IS to 20. Highs in the . be stronger."
30s.
"It'll probably be a signal that the

· out of 10 surveyed said Clinton
sox
· to fimd a so1uuon
· to
was rea11 y trymg
ibe budgetstandoff,w b'l
1
1eony 4· out
f
10
·d
R
bl'
· congress
o
sw epu 1cans m
were really trvin".
_, be" says is just anoth"Whatever
er perfonnance by Bill Clinton,"
House Maiority Whip· Tom DeLay,
' reporters. "The presiR-Texas, told
dent has
h
·
·
proven e can say everyibing and do nothing."
Clinton steps before the members
of the House and Senate - and a
· · au d'1ence at 9
na11·onw1'de te ICVISIOn
p.m. EST_ with yet another poten·
tiat political struggle brewing.
Several federal ·agencies will ru~

race is on. He'll probably bring out outofmoncyFridayatmidniJbt,and
his campaign agenda for '96, be my Republicans are expected to demand
suess," said Senate Majority Leader elimination of a dozen or more pro' 1be following cases were reaolved plus costs;
Bob Dole, the front•runner for the grams as aconditio.n of restoration of
: last week in the Meigs County Coun
David D. Foraker, Rushville, seat GOP nomination to replace Clinton funding for the rest of the govern: of Judge Patrick H. O'IJ.rien.
belt, $25 plus costs; Mary K. Etch- in the White House.
ment.
: Fined were: Bryan Gibbs, berger, Murrysville, Penn., speed,
"I assume he'll put the best spin
Dole said these terminations are
: Reedsville, bunting Without wearing $30 plus costs; Max E. Hill Jr., on it he can," said Dole, who will "not going to be that controversial,"
• bunters orange, $30 plus costs; Nali· Racine, speed, $30 plus 4:0Sts; Dana deliver the official Republican and other key Repoblicans have
: cy Holsinger, Racine, assault, costs, R. Williams, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 response to the address.
shown little inclination for sparking
' -10 days jail suspended, two years plus costs; Keith 0. Jones, HuntingSenate Democratic leader Tom a third partial federal shutdown.
probation, restraining order issued; ton, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Daschlc of South Dakota today urged · Top Republicans hoped for conKatharine L. 2il;k~!Wmewy. filii• - JW!dy ~Mills, Syract~Je, &amp;e4t belt, ... C}i~tton to .SU'Css '',lhe need f!'f more gressiopal pas§ag~ · as early. ..as
urc to conttot:$25 plwd!osts; Bmblni S25 plus'" eosts; Pamel~ ·B·. Coffey, · brpartisanship as we address the · Wednesday of legislation keeping
Richards, Reedsville, making false McCpnncllsville, speed, $30 plus many issue we have." Among the · programs functioning for perhaps
. alarms, $25 plus costs; Jennifer R. costs;
unfinished business the president another month. In addition, House
; Chasteen, Potttetoy, speed, $27 plus . _ . Brian K. Diehl, Racine, scat belt, should talk about are campaign Republican leaders want to add to the
~costs; ·
SIS plus costs; James R. Lodwick, finance refonn, welfare and health legislation aS 125 per child tax c'ied•· Jillian.~.$11!itbson,Letart, W.Va., · Pomeroy, seat belt, SIS plus costs; care refonn, raising the minimum il, payable this year only 1o many
, Wroncful entrustment, $SO plus costs, Rudy R. Musser, Pomeroy, failure to wage and the farm bill, Daschle said. families with children below age 18.
' 'JO days jail suspended, two years control, $20 plus costs; James R.
An ABC News-Washington Post
Theproposaltoincludethctaxcut
,probation; Chandra S. Van Meter, Oil!en, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus poll released Monday put Clinton's got a cool initial reaction from Dole.
.~ong Bottom, no operator's license, costs; Steven Perry, Lancaster, seat ovcndl job approval at S I percent and He said in a brief interview that he
$100 plus costs, 10 days jail sus- belt, $25 plus costs; DawnS..Gomall, showed bim defeating Republican hadn't yet seen the plan, but added,
~c:ndcd, , IW!! years probation; seat Canal Winchester, speed, $30 plus Bob Dole 52-38 percent in a hypo- "That would probably cause about a
· It, $25 plus costs; Palma A. Wiles, costs; . &lt;;:bristopher G. Lagos, thetical election. A separate poll by two-week debate over here." That
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Moundsville, W.Va., speed, $30 plus 1be New York Times and CBS News was a reference to the Senate's rules
"George V. Riffle, Circleville, buntina costs.
bad Clinton leading Dole 51-40 per- 11 ·
· 11
:_without Jandowncr permission, s30
~ent.
a owmg vtrtua y unlimited delays
~
on controversial legislation.
The Times-CBS News poll found
That credit was to be a first
the budget deficit the top concern. installment of the $500 per child
After years of ranking the economy credil included in the massive GOP
or crime as Pic most important issue budget-balancing and tax cui bill
facing the nation, 19 percent of those Clinton vetoed last year.
surveyed cited the deficit as the most
The first two federal shutdowns
important problem, up from only 8 were triggered as pan of the GOP's
CINCINNATI (AP) - Hamilton
Buckeye Extravaganza Inc., a percent in October.
attempt to force Clinton into balanc·County voters were almost evenly Cleveland-based group, hopes.to colThe Times-CBS survey found that ing the budget on their 1enns
·split on a proposed ballot measllre to lect at least 33S,OOO signatures to
lesalizc riverboat gambling in Ohio, place the riverboat gamblinJ propos"a poll showed.
·
al on the Nov. S ballot. Ohioans
Forty-eight percent supported the would be asked to vote on a state conproposal while 43 percent were stitutional amendment authorizing&gt;
against it, ~~:cording to ibe poll for eight casinos sta\Cwide, including
The Cincinnati Post and WCPO-TY. three in the Cincinnati area.
The casinos would . be based on
The remaining 9 percent were undeOMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Min- were Minnesota (12), Iowa (seven),
moored Hverboats and could open by nesota's loss of 12 stores heads the Illinois and Wyoming (five each) and
cided.
· The poll, released Monday, was late 1997.
Wisconsin (four).
.
The poll found ibat support for state-by-state hit list of a 40-store clobased on telephone interviews consure announced by Omaba-based
The closures will not affect 14
ducted Jan. 8-11 among 525 ran· riverboat casinos was strongest Pamida, the discount retailer stores in Nebraska, 10 iri Ohio, sevdomly selected registered voters. The 81DODJ males, young adults, blacks, announced.
en in Montana or three in Kentucky,
'inargin of cl1'0r was plus or minus 4,4 Democr~ and relatively new counTbe closures will involve II Nilsson said.
ty residents.'
percentage points.
An estimaled 1,000 employees
Men favored legalizing riverboat states, not I 0 as f~r,~t announced by will lose their jobs in the cost-cutting
the I 5-state chain, spokesman Dave
The D,aily Sentinel gambling S4 percent to 39 percent. Nilsson said Monday. Nilsson, man- move, he said.
ager of planning and analysis, said a
'
(USPS Zl:J.liM)
store in Michigan already was in the
·Pubfiohcd CVCIY uftcnlootl, Monday lliroucli
process of closing so that state was
'Friday, l11 Coun S1., Pomeroy, Ohio. by lbe
Am Ele Powa' ........................42\ dropped from the original list.
. Olo10 Volley Pub~JIBng eon-,./Oonnctt Co.,
Veterans Memorial
Akzo .......................................53\
He said a list of SPecific store closl'atneloy, Ohio 4l769, Ph. m:2u6. Monday
admissions - Dottie
.Alllllrtd OH ...........................35\ ings would not be made immediatedillpoo.... poid .. Pomeroy, OhiO.
Sizemore,
Middleport.
ATI.T .............................,•. _.,83\ ly available, although a state-by-state
)toooloot . The Auocialed ~'lou, IIOIIho Ohio
S.k OM ...............•........~ .....36\
Monday discharges - Helen Kit..
breakdown was released Monday. ble, Pomeroy.
New- Asoocillion.
Bob Evana . ........................... 18~
States most-affected with the closures
Holzer Medical Center
~w.,_
··········30~
POSTMASTIII• Send addral - - ,.; I
CMmplon
lnd .......................
17:\
The Deily 8entmel, Ill Court St., -Pomeroy, '
Dlschai'Jes
J•n. 22- E. Juanita
QNo4jl69,
Shop.................;-2"'
Ross,
Barbara
Moore,
Helen Myers,
ng .............................M
SIJISCRIPTION IIATIS
Curtis
Cook,
Lowell
Crabtree,
Carrie
- llogul.......................11\ Alullvel'lllll')' meeting aet
IIJctrriorar-a=:•••ooooooooooooouo oono ooooooooo!l
Rife.
The lOth anniversuy of VFW
'0M - ...............................................11.00
G
.... TaR •••••.- ..............41:. Post 9053 will be observed at 6:30
OM ..............................................18.70
(Published with permission)
OM Y. ........................................ ,..,.. $111§.00
K.....rt .....................................1\ p.m. Thursday. The meeting is open
;
La. .1!rtd....................;........13\
· ~;
SINGL&amp;COPY PRICK
.
Umlted'lrtc:..... _ ..........-..•• ~...18" to all VFW members and the Auxiln.ily .............................:.................... 3l (Jeojj
Paapt11
21 iary.
Units of the Meias County EmerOhiO
.•
Velley
..........
........
H~
Solwtbooo noo dalrtoa 01 JIOII lho coni&lt;&gt;: "'Of
aency
Medical Service lolled four :
- I ld ~~~- ........ Dolly Senti...
0,. ValleY............ ~······..•·······U)a Melp OAPSE meeting
calls
for
assistance Monday, includ~
•-~·
lootjJ.'Qedlo
wiD be
,_
_ilo,or
_12_
I
.!.DD.kW&amp;II .···-········•••••••..••"••••.11
MeiJS Local School District
ing one transfer call. Units respond¥
• .•
.
~.
1............-.114~ OAPSE Locall7 will ~t Thursday, ing included:
No wol&gt;oclijllioa br lnOil pomliiiOd li ._..,
7 p.m. in. the Meigs Junior High
~· lite.....................- ......
. MIDDLEPORT
•.... -tenlotilll'llilaWe. '
School
cafeteria. Bad weather will
. ., a.nk ....~...........................~~\
4:16p.m.,
Page Street, Jerry Ward,
:
- MAU.IUIIIllltrnONII"
~.
catiOOI.
·
.
-l'lolloC.., '
.
Veterans
MeJIIOrial
Hospital;
w
. lrtd...................20~
~3 ....................:................................ m .W
9:21p.m.,
StorysRun
Road, Bud• -................................................sn.a
Cardell dab lllletbaJ
8lolk
NPLI'II
nllla
10".10
a.m.
5Z .............................l ................$195-'6
· The Riverview Ouden Club will dy Shaffer Jr., VMH.
auetoa
provldotl
b'
Atlvoot
o
POMEROY
j IS - .
-~"""'~
.................".........................$19.:15
meet Thursday, 7:30 p.m. It the
·. .....~ Clwe411Dn
5:06
p.m.,
Ann .Street, Shawn
.......
:JL
. ~~I'"'"'"''""""''""""'"'""""$$6...
borne of. Grace Wcb!lt. Propm will
. - ;..,...,............... ,. ........ ....,......SIOU1 ,.
"Anthony
Qwinn,
VMH.
be hints for attracting birds.
" ..

:Poll finds respondents
:split on riverboat .gaming

.Pamida stores to remain
open in Buckeye State

.ee

!;

Weather forecast:

Claude M. Rupe, 87, Kyger, died Monday, Jan. 22, 1996 in Holzer Med- ·
icat·Center.
Born Aug. 26, 1908 in Cheshire Township, Gatlia County, son of the late
David Perry and LauJ&amp; S. Lyle Rupe, he was a fanner, factory worker, town·
ship trustee and storekeeper, and belonged to the Siloam Lodge ·456 F &amp;AM,
Cbesbire.
Surviving are his wife, Lena Rupe of Kyger; a son, Perry Rupe of Lowell; and a daughter, Martha Adkins of Kyacr.
. He was also preceded in death by four sisiets and two brothers.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday in the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, with Pastor Robert E. Musser officiating. Burial will be in the Coy Hill
Cemetery, Danville. No calling hours will be observed.

,·,. County· court ca'ses ended

\

I

Mark A. Burton, 30, McCormick Road, Gallipolis, died Sunday, Jan. 21, ·
1996 in the Holzer Medical Center emergency room.
Born Sept. 7, 1965 in Rushville, Ind., son of Mark A. Sr. and Carolyn F.
Vanvolkenburgh Burton, he was an.operator at Pillsbury Foods, Wellston.
. Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, Sheila Shuster Burton
of Hartford, W.Va.; two dauJbters, Amber Janelle Burton and Kelsey Faye i1
Burton; a brother, Shawn E. Bunon of Gallipolis; his grandmother, Leona
Mac Burton of Greensburg, Ind.; and several aunts and uncles.
·
NEVILLE SWORN IN - Middleport Mayor Dewey Horton
Services will be H a.m. Thursday in the Cremeens Funefat Chapel, with
•-ra
In 8ppointad council member Rev. John Neville, right, •t
Chaplain Bob Hood of the Gallipolis Volunteer !'ire Department and tbc Rev.
Monday'a
reg111Jr llllllltlng of Middleport VIllage Council. Neville
John Hollis Burton officiating. Buril!l will be in ibe Ohio Valley Memory
will
811
the
unexpired term of Councilman Dr. Nick RoblnNII, who
Gardens. Friends may call at the chapel from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.
I'Migned In December 1995.

Stocks

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Chit=
=

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Announcements

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lane=· . . . . . . . . .

Robbl:.::=·············-··.17\

·=··············-;..,;.........

-·-·-

t

Hospital news

·

·Local News in Brief:
Natural causes found in death

.

The Meigs Counly coroner has ruled that a Romeroy woman died
of natural causes apparently unrelated to a one-car accident. over :the
wcekcn~ on State Route 7 near Cheshire, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State H1ghway Patrol reported.
The ruling was reported to the patrol by Dr. Douglas Hunter in the
death of Virginia I. Thomas, 67, 242 Condor St.
lnfonnation on the ruling ana the accident was not complete until
Monday.
·
Troopers said Thomas was northbound at 2:45p.m. Saturday when
.her car. w~nt off the left side of the road and struck a brick pad. The
car was slightly damaged.
Thomas was later pronounced dead at Veterans Memorial Hospitat.

FEMA to begin damage assessment

·
•
:
•
•
•
'
•

;

The Federal Emergency Management Agency will arrive in
Columbus this afternoon to assist local and state officials compiling ~·
and analyzmg damage from lhe Ohio River Flood of 19%.
State staff is working with local officials in Meigs, Columbiana, Jefferson, Belmont, Monroe and Washington counties. Federal teams will
be in the flood area this afternoon.
As the water continues to re&lt;:ede, these teams will compile damage
reports to dctenrune ehgtblhty for Small Business Administration assistance and other federal assistance which could be included in a federal disaster de&lt;:laration:
Initial damage repons indicale more than 2,000 homes and businesses were affected by the flooding; early estimates of cost exceed
$500,000 on uninsured damages, according the Ohio Emergency Management Agency.
·~ .
Preliminary eslimates of damage lo public structures and infrastructure total more iban $11 million and state officials expect both
these figures to mcrease as damage assessment teams gain access 10
inundated areas.
·

Mayor's court session postponed
Due to high water around the county Pomeroy Mayor's Court
scheduled for Monday night was postponed until Feb. 12.

HEAP funds to be distributed
Home Energy Assistance Program funds to eligible low-income
Ohioans are being distributed this week, according to an announcement
from !he gove~or's ?ffice. The program ~elps low income Ohioans pay
for Winter healing b11ls. The benefits are m the form of a credit on uti!- ·'
ity bills or a voucher that can be redeemed at the applicant's bulk fuel
provider.

Meigs on emergency list
(Continued from Page 11
it necessary, we can request assistance from the Ohio National Guard .
At this time, we could really use
some equipment and manpower from
the state agencies to help with the situation," Byer said.
The stale has not made any financial commiunents at this point concerning the flood relief effort. Only
a commitment of resources and manpower to the county has come from
state officials, according to Byer.
The main concern of coun1y officials is to get the businesses affected
by tbc flood up and running. Many of
the business affecled by flooding in
the downtown Pomeroy business district spent Monday cleaning their
stores and drying them out to restock
by Tuesday afternoon.
Damage estimates, light to many
of the businesses, will he covered by
insurance carriers in most cases.
Small business owners who can't
afford the cos1s of cleanup and damages could possibly get a helping
hand from the federal government, in
the fonn of low-inlt:rest emergency
loans.

'

"There is a chance thai assessme~t
teams could come from the Small
Business Administration 10 evaluate
damage to businesses," Dyer con;
finned.
.,
Stale Route 124 between Racine
and Syracuse was opened this morn:
ing, along with State Route 7 at Dark
Hollow and Addison. Main Street iq
Pomeroy was also clear of water this
morning.
According to Souls by, most of~
main roads in the county should be
open by this evening. Several se(;.ondary roads will still be coverejj.
with high water, due to levels that.
remain in small streams and backwaler from the Ohio River.
&lt;

VIe
llature
Drivers, Ho•e
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

Our stalistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer
and less cosdy losses than
(Continued from Page I)
other age groups. So it's only fair
force account resolution for the highto charge you .less for your
way department, aUowing them to do
Insurance. Insure your home and
general work in-bouse with out bidwith us and save even more
car
ding out the work.
The board also noted that people ' with our $1)8Cial mufti-policy
discounts.
are complaining about dogs running
loose in the county. Dogs are nol
allowed to run loose, il was stressed.
Commissioners· pai~ weekly bills
of $370.379.44 consisting of 311
entries and adjourned.
Present were Hoffman, Howard
and Commissioner Robert Harten·
bach. Clerk Gloria Kloes was unable
to attend due to hiah water.

Committee will

SPRING VAllEY CIIIEMA
446 4524

7

~ ·

'

Meigs EMS runs

·~
- ~
ER~
.

--

Ins111111lCe Services

· 214 EAST MAIN- - ~~
POMEROY
~1811

· Auto-(hl&gt;,..,., l~e
. l.Jfe Home car 8ulinetl

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........'

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The Daily Sen~~~

Sports

.

•• •
·,
• •

.·

BROWN SHOOTS • Marshall Unlvlll'alty sophomore John
Brown shoots over the outstretched arm or Tennee-&lt;:hat·
tanooga'el-c Scott •• Johnny Taylor lookl on. Brown ecorad
18 polnta •• kahall beat UTC 86-89 Mondey night In cam Hendei'son Center. (AP)

. '

·--

--

,Sooners b!K:k in the second tiaif.
"For a team like this, you have to
hope somebody steps up, " said
.Minor, who seemed to arow increu·
·ingly fl1lltnled as things started to go
bad in the first half.
"I tried to step up. I don't know
what it is. Maybe it's a concentration
thing. I did the best I could to spark
my team."
In the only other game involving
a ranked team Monday night, No. 8
Vllllinia Tech defeated SL Bonaventure 65-58.
Kansas used a 15-4 run late in the
fmt half to surge to a 39-28'lead. But
!he Jayhawks couldn't finish off
Oklahoma until the final moments of
the game. Minor finished by making
five of his last seven field-goal
attempts and seven of nine free
throws.
"Their (inside) guys are huge,"
Minor said. ''They are fundamentally sound. When !hey get the ball
inside, they are either going to score
or you are going to foul them. It raises your level of play sometimes."
Kansas' 6-foot-10 inside players,
Scot Pollard and RaefLaFrentz, com-

ibined for 27 poinll and 20 rebounds. for a dunk for a 68-S9lead with jllSt
Pollard had 15 points and nine
rebounds and LaPreiiiZ 12 point&amp; md
11 rebounds.
"I thouahl we did a good job in the
lint half of rebounding and controlling the tempo, nor j~ defensively,
but offensively as well," Polluduid.
"We played the way we wanted to."
1 · The Jayhawks kept throwing
defensive players at Minor, altemat·
ingJerod Haase, Paul Pi~ and even
.point guard Jacque Vaughn on him in
1 man~to-man defense.
"We just gave him different
looks," Vaughn said. "First it was
Jerod, then Paul, and even I was on
jhim for awhile.
, "I think the challenae is what I
!desire, and that brings out the bell in
!me."
Pollard fouled out of the game by
·fouling Minor with 3:59 ' Jet\, and
Minor made both free throws to pull
.the .Sooners to a 66-56 deficit.
A 3-pointer by l)Tone Foster with
about three minutes left made it 6659.
But Vaughn, who had II assists,
fled an alley-oop pass to LaFrentz

over two minutes lei\, and time beJ.¥t
to run out on the Sooners.
.
, Allen Field HOUle worked its
1mqic again for a KaJisu team ~~
\had won its first two league pmel lin
:theiOid.
.
"It's early, but we're happy to· \IC
in that position," Vaughn said. "To ·
get two road wins and then to protect
our turf is a good sip for us."
No. g VL Tech 65
.,
SL Bonaventure 58
In Olean, N.Y., Dimon Watlington
scored22pointsandAceCustis 13 'as
Vu-ginia Tech (12-1 , S-O Atlantic 10)
won its ninth straight game.
St. Bonaventure (S-10, 1-S) cut
Vu-ginia Tech's lead to ~3-58 with
11.9 seconds left on. the first of two
free throws by Shandue McNeill. J:lut
McNeill missed the second ftee
throw, Watlington grabbed it, was
.fouled and hit both foul shall to seal
the win. ·
The Bonnies, who have lost fo\11'
in a row and seven of their last eiJbt,
wens led by Jerome Spellman with 17
points.

-

·.. ·; .··
,, .
,.,.

I

' ~·· .

_.. -:. . Monday for SUnclly'e 30th annual SUpar Bowl conlelt. Above,
.. , Coach Bill Cowhlll', right and othtfl tt.ve the airport In Phoenix.

:.·.·Leaders remain the
,. ._.._·same in prep ratings
• By The Aasoc:lated Press
Findlay Liberty-Benton, Archbold.
""· ( Orrville and Zanesville continued as
the front-runners in the third weekly
Associated Press boys ltigh school
!" ;·.. basketball poll, released Monday.
:, -: • Liberty-Benton, last year's state_
:~:;_... champion; maintained ap 18-point
.. r-.. edge over Van Wert Lincolnview in
•c• •· the Division IV ranklngs, while Arch·•!• ' bold's lead in Division mover Ver. sailles grew from 43 to 63 points.
1•, •
In DivisiOII II, two more defend:.o .. · ing state champions continued their
, ., · battle for supremacy. Defending Divi·
sion Ill champ Orrville held a 63, ;:--- point bulge over last season's Divi:c:··sian II state champ, Cleveland Villa
-' · · ' Angela-St. Joseph.
··,. ·· Zanesville, the big-school winner
last spring, owned a 68.point upper
hand over Toledo St. Francis in Divi~. sion I iiJ balloting by a sljiJO media
• panel.
Zanesville received 32 tint-place
·' • · · votes. The next six teams in Division
:·.:· · 1- St. Francis, Cleveland Heights,
Galloway Westland, Cleveland
, ' " · Collinwood, East Liverpool and
~· ~

"· ;u.

.

Mll.WAUKEE (AP) - Marquette
teams of the past made a habit of high

national ranldngs. Cracking the top 2S
for the first time since 1993-94 is
something special for second-year
Goldep Eagles coach Mi)ce Deane.
"lthelptthe university, it has ramitications for recruiting - and it
means nothing if we .don't stay
there," Deane said Monday after
Marquette (12-3) gained the No. 24
spot in this week's college basketball
poll.
.
lllat's what an upset over then-No.
9 Memphis will do for a team, but
Deane said he wants his Golden
Eagles to forset all about Saturday's
S9-SS win and concentrate on tile Wk
· ahead.
"I know how good we are and
.how good we could become," he said.
"We have a very balanced team, and
the hardest thing for us is to get every·body working on all cylinders on the
same day. When that happens, we're
going to have an explosion."

Massachusetts, the only unbeaten
Division I team, remained No. I in
the poll, but the Minutemen's grip on
the top spot slipped a bit.
Last week, Massachusetts (16-0)
was picked first on all but two of the
ballou from a l)ationwide media panel. This week, ,with two more voters
participating, the Minutemen received
S7 of 66 first-place votes and I ,641
points, 52 more than Kentucky, which
was No. I on eight ballots.
The Wildes" (I 5-J), who didn't
·have a fmt-place vote last week,
. averaged 126 points in wins over
LSU and Texas Christian.
What makes tl\e change in fust·
place votes hard to understand is that
Massachusetts beat Rhode Island and
Duquesne without junior center Marcus Camby, who missed three games
since collapsing before a game on
Jan. 14. He is expected to return
tonight against Pittsburgh.
Besides Massachusetts and Kentucky. only No. 7 Villanova and No.

14 Penn State held their spots from
the previous poll after a week in
which I 3 ranked teams lost a total of
14 games. ·
Kansas and Connecticut, which
recei'ed the other first-place vote,
each moved up one spot to third and
fourth, while Cincinnati, which lost
its first game &lt;If the season on Sunday to . Alabama-Binningham,
dropped two spots to fifth.
Georgetown moved 1\P two spots
to sixth, followed by Villanova, Virginia Tech, Wake Forest and Utah.
In addition to Cincinnati, Wake
Forest, Villanova, Memphis and
North Carolina lost IJ!St week as Top
10 teams.
North Carolina dropped one spot
to lead the Second Ten, and was followed by Memphis, Arizona. Penn
State, UCLA. Michigan, Syracuse,
Clemson, Purdue and Boston Cotlege.
The last five ranked teams were
Auburn. Iowa, Texas Tech, Mar·

quette and California.
Syracuse (13-4), which dropped
from 12th to 17th, was the only
ranked team to lose two games last
week. The Orangemen dropped road
games to West Virginia and Connecticut.
California(I0-4), "lbich has lost to
only one unranked team this season,
joined Marquette as a newcomer to
the rankings, replacing Mississippi
State and Georgia.
The last Marquette team that made
the Top 2S stayed there for I0 weeks,
including the final six of the season,
and made the round of 16 in the
NCAA tournament.
Marquette joined Cincinnati and
.Memphis as ranked teams from firstyear Confe1ence USA.
"There's so much balance in Conference USA that I think the league
deserves to have four teams ranked,"
Deane said. ·"I hope the NCAA tournament selection committee looks
kindly on us at the end. "

Hawks rely on defense for eighth straight victory

.

/. Chicago White Sox acquire
;.;; Tartabull from Oakland A's

t

fi-?m

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Boykins, Sherry top MAC players

•••

Do you have an IRA1

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618 EAST MAIN ST., POMEROY

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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eonr.rence.
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Marquette moves to 24th in AP ratings;
undefeated.UMass remains No. 1 in poll

:. &gt;

••

I

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - Could j Steelen made the Super Bowl and I
Rod Woodson's amazing recovery i couldn't play," Woodson said. "The
and Charles Haley's' tou&amp;b luck be ' SuperBowl is whatlceptmegoihg. lf
omens for this Super Bowi?The Pitts- !they had put me on injured reserve,
·burgh Steelen wouldn 't mind. The there wouldn't have been a reason to ~M~:.;:;r
Dallas Cowboys say no thanks.
·work out sa hard."
&lt;ifj'i(i.tk !'
Just after the Steelers arrived in . Haley also has worked hard to get
Arizona for their fmt Super Bowl iback. He hoped to play in the consince 1980, coach Jill Cowher :ference title game, just as Woodson
announced that Wood n, the peren- had.
nial All-Pro cornerback sidelined
Dallas' main pass-rushing threat,
since the · season opener with torn Haley hasn't been in a game since
knee ligaments, would play Sunday. Dec. 3.
E.lier Monday, Haley was held
"He didn't feel well at breakfast,
out of practice with a 101-degree then felt worse this afternoon," coach
fever, another bad break for the star Barry Switzer said. "Doctors were
defensive end who underwent back · giving him 110111e intravenous fluids to
surgery seven weeks ago.
try to get him well from the viral
Considering the slide the AFC has infection.
been on in the big game, with llloss"If we got 20-2S plays out of
es in a row, the Steelers were ~If to a Haley in the game, and if he is well,
better start than their conference he miaht even be able to play more :
brethren usually manage.
than that We've got to find out in the
" Rod is going to play." Cowher physical practices whether he can ·
said. "How much he practices will be cope with the physical play and play
the detennining factor how much he the run."
plays."
Teammate Russell Maryland, who
"That's great," All-Pro center has had his own bouts with injury this
AIKMAN WARMS UP • Dallal quart8rback Troy Aikman looltl'll
Dermontti Dawson said. "Rod's real- season, said a return by Haley "would
up btfore 1 team practice In Tempe, Ariz., Monday. (AP
ty worked as hard as anyone I've ever be a nice little added boost."
seen for this chance. You know, with
"I think his pre$ence really helps
a Rod Woodson on the field, it has to us, just being around," the defensive doesn 't make it into the lineup. Haley last three years. Even with Woodson,
help."
tackle said. "I don't think he would had 10.5 sacks despite missing the .the soul of their team, on the field, the
Don't expect to see Woodson cov- . miss this game. Being his fifth Super final month.
Steelers can't match that - their last
ering Michael Irvin 1-on-1, or return- Bowl, trying to go for that other ring
"You're taking a lot away from a Super Bowl was in 1980.
ing many punts, however. His role that nobody has ... he's that type of team if it is without a Charles Haley,"
Then there is the 11-year slide for
figures to be limited after missing player who would try to come O'Donnell said.
.
the AFC , even if the Steelers didn_'t
four months with an injury that usu- through for us."
What the Cowboys definitely do lose any of those games.
ally sidelines players for a year.
Steelers quarterback Neil O'Don- have is an edge in experience and suc"That's just another stat," O'Don"lt would have crushed me if the nell certainly wouldn't mind if Haley cess, with two championships in the nell said.

Browps are required by !'!etr lease to
play at Ctevel~d Stad1um through
1998. The case m Cuy~oga County
Common Pleas &lt;;ourt w1U go forward
unless a resoluhon can be reached,
Nance.said. .
"My IIUII'ching orders are not, 'Cut
a deal under any circumstance,' " he
said. "Mymarchingordcrsaretosee
AlLANTA (AP) - The Atlanta coach Rudy Tomjanovich said after the Rockets into ties twice in the inspired effort by four fanner Milif some mutually satisfactory goal can
opening 90 seconds of the final peri· waukee players.
Hawks
can thank their defense for hi.s team lost its third in a row.
be attained in advance of the owners'
Atlanta's
eight-game
streak
is
sec· od with his long-range shots.
extending
their
winning
streak
to
meeting."
ond longest in.the NBA, behind only
Ehlo's 3-pointer with 9:13 left
Nance said he had heard of a pub- eight games.
11
-game
string.
.
gave
Atlanta an 81 -78 lead, one it
Chicago's
"The defense is out there working
lished report that the NFL would
'"The
pressure
all
the
time,
their
never
lost.
manage the Browns and keep them in · hard and everyone's getting reward- · quickness outside was evident," TomClyde
Drexler led the Rockel-§
Cleveland, putting An Modell's ed on the offensive end," fotWard janovich said. "They're very good at with 23 points and Hakeem Olajuwon
majority ownership in 11 trust until a · Grant Long said Monday night after
stripping the ball, but we helped added 20. Besides his 20 points, BlayModell-owned expansion team could the Hawks beat the two-time defend- them."
lock had a season-high I0 rebounds,
ing
champion
Houston
Rockets
IOSbegin play in Baltimore.
Ehlo
made
nine
of
13
shots,
nine assists and six steals.
"I don't attach any more credibil- 96.
By
including
four
3-pointets,
and
scored
"We didn't execute as we nor"If your defense is constant, it
ity or lack of credibility to it than any
18
in
a
stretch
of
just
over
six
minmalty
do,"
Drexler
said.
"Atlanta
was
Dave
other scenario I've heard," said gives you opportunities, because if utes when the Hawks turned a 65-62 aggressive on defense and hustled.
you
miss
a
shot
you
can
come
right
Nance.
·
Grate
"It's not going to happen," Mod- · back, be up on people, bother them deficit into an 87-78 lead with 8:20 That's how they win."
remaining. Ehlo capped the spurt with Heat 96, Spurs 89 .
of
ell spokesman David Hopcraft said and maybe make them turn the ball his
third 3-pointer in a three-minute
Alonzo Mournmg outplayed
over
or
take
a
quick
shot,"
Hawks
Monday.
Ruland
David Robinson down the stretch,
coach Lenny Wilkens said. "I liked stretch.
"I
got
rolling
pretty
well
and
got
and
Miami
scored
the
~~e's
finaiiO
our defense."
.
Fumlture
The Hawks forced Houston into off some shots that got a Jot of net," pomts to beat San Antomo.
committing a season-high 27 Ehlo said. "It was one of those lucky , Mourning scored ~5 points, and
There are bigger things in
turnovers, and capitalized offensive- nights when everything was going Ithe Heat held the Spurs w1thout a bas·
•'
.
life than money. Bills
in."
ket in the final seven mmutes. San
·~
.
ly.
"Ehlo was good," Tomjanovich iAntonio, which leads tbe Midwe.st
***
Steve Smith scored 26 points,
2~.
CHICAGO (Af) - The Chicago cage muscle.
A
word
to
the wise is
said.
''Srilith
was
good,
and
I
thought
:Division,
has
lost
three
of
Its
past
four
,
Craig
Ehlo
a
season-high
2S
and
General manager Ron Schueler
?;,'1 White Sox acquired outfielder Danresented.
our py Henry James was fanwtic. If :games, all on the road ..
-.;;l ny.Tartabull
the Oakland Ath· said the White Sox are counting on · Mookie Blaylock 20.
we don 't have him tonight, we don't
Robmson had 25 pomts, but only
In
the
only
other
NBA
games,
Tartabull
to
return
to
the
fonn
be
·. ·.: letJcs for ~o mmor leaguers Monday.
four in the second half, when he ~as
How come people who
. · ~ Chicago sent left-handed pitcher showed in I993, when he hit 31 home Miami defeated San Antonio 96-89 even have a game."
James,
who
signed
a
tO-day
conslowed
by
foul
trouble.
Sean_
Elhott
and
Vancouver
beat
Milwaukee
100snore always fall asleep
runs
for
the
Yankees.
The
right-hand~~~ Andrew Lorraine and outfielder
tract
with
the
Rockets
on
Saturday,
also
scored
2S
for
San
Antomo.
ed
hitter
has
a
career
batting
average
92.
first?
! ~- Charles Poe to Oakland.
" Atlanta's playing as good Ill! scored 16 points on 6-of-8 shooting, · Mi_ami's Rex Cha~man scored a
I•: •· "This trade will help both teams,'' of .275 and a career slugging per·
***
anybody
in
the
league,"
Rockets
including
four
3-pointers.
He
lifted
season-high
2S
for
M1am1.
centage
of
.498
in
12
seaso~s.
The
good
news
Is that the
Oakland general manager Sandy
"We have been looking for anoth·
Griazlles 100. Bucks 91
best things In life are free .
• ·, Alderson said. "Danny will have an
A victory at Milwaukee gave VanThe bad news is that the
'.} immediate impact fOr the White Sox er right-handed bat, and now we have
added
Tony
Phillips
and
Danny
couver
its first road v1ctory in 17
government is trying to find
· ' '· and we have obtained a pitcher who
. ' could help us ·this season as well. Tartabull to our outfield picture,"
a
way to tax them, too.
TOLEDO (AP) - Eastern Michi- points in a victory over Western ig~~~~ Edwards'
points led an
18
; ·Also, this will give us an opportuni· Schueler said.
gan's Earl Boykins and Amy Sherry Michigan.
The White Sox signed Phillips, of
Kent have been selected as the .,..;.---...;....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
ty to reShape our outfield. We ue very
Procrastination Is the art of
who played with the California
· pleased with this deal."
keeping up wilh yesterday.
. . Tartabull, 33, split last season Angels last season, to a reported $4 f~~e~o~~:n~:'kintheMid•Amer' ; between the New York Yankees and million free-agent contract Saturday.
Chicago had been shopping for
· •' Oakland, hining .236 with eight home
Boykins, a sophomore from
outfieldeB
after the off-season depar- Oeveland, hit 14-of-20shots from the
~· runs and 35 RBis in 83 games. He
.: .,, was acquired by the Ns in a July 28 tures oU.ance John~ ; who signed field including S-of-6 3-pointers and
• .; 'I trade that sent Ruben Sierra to New with the New York Mets, md 1im was 8-of-10 on free throws while
'·,: •• York. then spent most o f August on ·Raines, who went to the Yankees.
averaging 21 points 1 game last .
•: the disabled list with a pulled left
rib
week. In a 109· 102 victory over Ball '
.
'
State, he sent the game into overtime
with I 'drivinj basket with 1.2 seer
I
onds
left in regulation, then SCored
•
•
,•
.
. .
seven of Eastern's nine points in overYou can flvlt Hltlllllod.
:_ CEDARVILLE(AP)-Findlay's 3.5 steals in three v1ctones.
_ time.
: lenni McGraw llld Walsh's S1111111tha
Pack. a senior from Akron, scored
·
1 ·~ 11·wr.AEID••
1 ~~',Pack share the women's honors and i· 19 points and had 6.7 rebounds per
Sherry. a se~or from Corti~
- :•Malone'aJuoii'Carver was ~~elCCited game as Walsh won three games.
N.Y., had 29 po1n~ llld ~ved 1~tp
',,
OPEN MON.·FRI.
SAT. 9-5 192-6174
· ·as the lmle player of tile week in the I · Carver a senior from Shelby, had third place on Kentsall-ti!JIC econng

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

a,w..,.

Mayor pare for the Feb. 12 trial of Cleve-

: .· resentatives will be reviewing all of
. ., ,,_ their options in negotiations with the
, , ;... NFL over the fate of the Oeveland
, , _. Browns, the city's chief counsel ·on
the issue said.
"Like any negotiation, we have a
.. , starting point," said frederick Nance.
' :- . From there, the city will see if a
~ 1· :. "mutually satisfactory" goal can he
· :_ . reached.
.
.·':,,
The announcement 1811 week lhat
the National Football League and
Cleveland will hold talks has ted to
speculation that the city would accept
•,
a team other than the Browns or a
"
binding resol\llion from the NFL to
'\ put a team here later. The NFL team
• '.; owners, who postponed a vote last
-~ :· • week on the Browns' proposed move
,':_ : . to Baltimqre, are expected to ta1ce lite
::· ~- vote Feb. 9. •
Nailce said discussions. with the
:'·: NFL will begin this week and meet·
· · ings will take place in New York,
: Cleveland "and elsewhere." ·
•
Nance said he is continuing to pre-

Rubin outlasts Vicario in
longest women's match
:: ever in Australian open

1

CLEVELAND (AP) -

·_;.·~ ,. Michael R. White and other city rep- - land's lawsuit, ~hich contends that

.

I·

Maumee - each climbed one spot as
last week's second-ranked team, Trot·
wood-Maclisoil, dropped six spots
after losing two of three games.
The top four were unchanged in
Division II, with Orrville and VA-SJ
trailed by Chardon and Bexley, with
Lima Bath sliding into the No.S position.
Versailles took over at No.2 in
Division Ill for Lisbon Anderson,
which had its fttst loss. North Lima
South'' Range and Bedford Chane!
each moved up a peg to third and
fourth, respectively, with Anderson
dropping to fifth.
The fust f6ur teams were also the
same in Division IV, with Liberty·
Benton and Lincolnview followed by
Springfield Catholic Central and
Southington Chalker.
M.Ung their first appearances in
the Top I0 thjs season 1!fere S!lfing·
field South ani~ Cincinnati Woodward
in Division I, Qttawa-Giandorf in
Division II, Seaman North Adams in
Division Ill and Middletown Fenwick
in Division IV

:· Ci~y and NFL prf!pare for
·.. neg'oti'ati'ons on,I"Browns

Walsh,. Niners
may reunite

1he Daly 51111111
Valezllle Hems
: . 111 Cou I'Stnet.
: : Pe•ny, OH

(AP)

••• ' I.J ,

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STEELERS ARRIVE· The Plttlburgh Stnlernrrtved In Arizona

. •.

Alexander girls top Eastern 73-61 '" TVC play~·

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MU uses.pre$S to
subdue UTC 86-69

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• • • 1 .,;

Dungy named new Tampa Bay coach

Pi ..
II ....
........
$6.00 to:

:

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He talked about how Gen~ral
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Tony a nucleus ready to take off. The build· ;defensively.
ing
blocks
are
there,
he
said,
all
the
Dungy
explained
his
hiring_
as
a
Mmager
Rich McKay caught him at
Dungy's long and frustrating journey
team
needs
is
consistency.
two week process and noted with the office in Piltsburgh and said:
from the NFL's youngest defensive
He became only the fourth black humor the intenest it generated.
"You're the guy that we want."
coordinator to a head coach ended
head coach in NFL hiSioly, behind Art
Monday.
"The people in Timpa made me Dungy 'said he didn't want to 11et:t6o
·
The long-time assistant, inter- Shell, Dennis Green and Ray Rhodes. feel so welcome. All the calls to a excited at first because a lot can ~
Dungy said his firs!: goal is to build number I thought was a private num- · pen before contracts are si~. · ·
. viewed but paued over by four oth"You will grow to like him ._.d
. er teams in the last 10 years, will get a sense of family and togetherness ber," he said. "While it was nervewith
everybody
striving
for
the
same
racking
it
made
me
feel
good
about
You
will certainty grow to respect
· a·shot at trying to tum the.Tampa Bay
end
a
winning
team,
The
the interest in football."
Nm," McKay said in introductory
Buccaneers into a winner.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) throws with 4:03 left.
The Bucs haven't made the playHe described himself as "f011unate remarks.
"I feel that they are very, very
Marshall coach Billy Donovan credTennessee-Chattanooga is 0-S this close,"the 40-year-old Dungy said at offs or finished above .SOO since lind blessed by God that he's gi~n ' Dungy, the Minnesota VIkingS:
ited his bench as the.key to an 86-69 season in games in which it trailed at a mid-afternoon news conference 1982. .
me this opportunity." He credited ensive coordinator since l9S2,
Southern Conference victory over halftime. Marshall swept a SCliSOn announcing his sis-year contract as
He described himself as a teacher · football figures in his backiround
to town Sunday for his first faceTennessee-Chattanooga.
series from the Mocs for the fmt time the sixth coach of the NFL club.
and said Bucs linebacker Hlnly Nick- who were mentors.
ace meeting with . Bucs o~r
The Thundering Herd (9-6, 2·2) since the 1989-90 season.
-.
The Bucs have young players and erson 'is a key to what he wants to do
calm Glazer.
•
used several combinations of players
Veney hit four of his five 3-point'
Monday.
ers and scored 16 and UTC's John
"The game was basically won by Oliver scored II of his 20 points in a
our bench," Donovan said "I thought first half that saw five lead changes
we wore them down a little bit. Some and two ties. Brannen scored all I3 of
Hecontinued,"WebeatAiexander round and after some coaxing from 9,andKimMayleseven. MaryBiiur
ALBANY · In a tight for the 'Iiiof their shots weren't going down in his points in the second half, while Valley Confmnce Hocking Division 25 poinll, the first game. We took it coach Wolfe played $0mewhat more- had 12 for AlelUIIlder and Kristy King
the second half.
John Brown added 16 for Marshall championship, host Alexander took to them and we played our game. aggressive in the final four minutes. 9.
"I thought our -pressure caused despite playing just 24 minutes.
Last night we let a freshman like con- The final stood 73-61, too little to late
Eastern goes to Nelsonville
.. them some problems. We wanted to
Pat Henderson scored II off the _the upper hand by defeating the East· trol of the game. Joni Orubb (fresh- for the Eagles.
·
Wednesday.
em Eagles 73-61 here Monday night.
' create a hectic environment," he bench for UTC.
man) is a player. Alexander deserves
Joni Grubb led all scorers -with 27
Score by qlllllten:
Eastern
drops
to
7-3
in
the
league,
' : said.
Brown took an elbow to the head
a
Jot
of
crediL
They
played
well.
I
points,
while
another
freshman
EasteJ;R
13 9 14 25~1
. Marshall's press made a differ- late in the first half and didn'·t come while Alexander moves to.7-3. Over- asked il! 01111 o( ow; early tinle outs Angela Jewell had 12, 1\iisty Markins
Ale.x~r_
18
16 19 20..:~~
.
ence; UTC coach Mack McCarthy back until the latter part of the second all. Eastern is 9-4.
"Who
wants
to·
guard
Joni
?"
and
eight
and
Andi
Rolston
7.
Box
score:
.•
Eastern Coacll Scott Wolfe said,
said.
half.
when
no
one
replied
for
about
20
sec·Eastern
had
42
rebounds
(Aeiker
EadHa
(61)
-~
"They did a good job of using it
"John Brown dominated ofTen- "Every game we've lost we've f~ onds, 1 knew we were in for a long .13, Brannon 16, Evans II); had six
Beth
bay
0.0-0,
Rebecca
Evl$
selectively. It was very effective," he sively," McCarthy said. "He even ways to·beai ourselves. In bo!h the one. Defensively, we had the aggres- 'steBis, 20 turnovers, 7 asSists, and 14 7-1-2/4&lt;=19; Nicole Nelson I~;
said. "Pressing boils down to if you. . blocked three shots and affected a lot Federal Hocking and Alexander sian of a small mouse. We played fouls. Eastern shot 2-4 three's, was Jessica Karr S-0-112=1 I; Patsy Aeikcan whip your guy, and they. whipped mote. They whipped us on every spot games, we came out very flat and man-to-man and only had two fouls 24-72 from the floor, and was a mea- er 3-0-113=7; Crystal Holsinger 2·
with absolutely no intensity and gradour guys. There were some things one through five.
"
going into the fourth quarter."
ger 7-20 at the lirie, including a 1-7 0=4, Tracy White 0-0-0, Martie
open that we didn't take advantage of
"John played 24 minutes. I hope ually got worse. We put ourselve:; in
Alexaller
tOok
an
early
18-13
lead
!effort
in the fourth quarter comeback. Holter 0-1-0=3; Michelle Caldwetr 0at all. We didn't play defense like we he doesn't play the whole game position to get the shots, but missed as Eastern shot S-19 from the field. j Alexander hit 5-8 three's, and 23- 0-212=2; Jessica Brannon 5-0-116=U,
can."
against us," McCarthy said, "They 23 lay-ups. If we make half of them Eastern hit a meager 4-14 in the sec- ~ ~8 two's, with a l0-16 night at the . Tblals Z4-l-7/20oo6l.
•
we win. Last night, we played very
Keith Veney scored 21 points and might beat us by 100."
ond quarter en route to a 34-22 half· ·,line. Alexander had 51 rebounds
Aleuacler(73)
..:
keyed a first-half run that helped the · Donovan said his team played the little defense, then played even less in time tally.
·
(Marltins
9,
Grubb
12,
Rolston
8),
II
Angela
Jewell
S-0-213=
12;
J&lt;!Jii
Herd take control. Veney hit two 3- three-time defending conference the second half. We couldn't shoot,
Eastern continued to be lack· steals, II turnovers, and 13 fouls.
Orubb4-S-4'6=27;Ariane Starling()..
pointers in the IS-S run that sparked champion a bit differently this time we didn't rebound, we didn't pass adaisical in the third round, dropping
Eastern
won
the
resrve
game
360-3/4&lt;=3;
Bobbijo Davis 7..().0::i4 ;
Marshall from a 28-27 deficit with than it did in beating the Mocs earli- well, we couldn't dribble, we didn't to a 53-36 tally. Eastern finally made 29 to _remain undef~ in the TVC. Andi Rolston 3-0- 112=7; Misty
6:06 left in the half to a 42-33 half- er this season. The fmt game didn 't shoot foul shots (7-for-20) and we some signs of aggression in the final Valene Karrhad 12,Juli Hayman had Markins 4-0=8, Jodi Wilson 1-0=2.
couldn't even foul wben we had to.
time lead.
count in the league standings.
'Ibtall 24-5-1005=73.
UTC (8-7, 2-2), which had a two"We felt we had to do something Other than that everything went fine."
'
game winqing streak snapped, had different," Donovan said. "We didn't
taken the lead on a pair of Isaac Con- press very much at Chattanooga."
ner free throws.
Marshall held UTC star John TayThe Moccasins got as close as 42- lor to just seven points on 1-of-7
37 on Willie Young layup with I7:4S shooting from the floor.
left in the game. Marshall then pulled
"Your best player has to play well
. . away again, with its biggest lead 80- in the big games and he didn't,"
• 59 after a pair of John Brannen free McCarthy said.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) -..,
Bill Walsh appears headed back to a
WRmA MISSAGI TO YOD SPICIAL V~NTINE
new position with the San Francisco
49ers.
Remember thal 'specillsomeooc thla
Without spelling out the reason,
Valendfte's Day with a meuage in
the team called a news conference for
today. Walsh was scheduled to attend
The DaiiJ Senllael
with club president Carmen Policy
•Sweetlleerll
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Rubin also came back from a 0-5. and coach George Seifert.
Team spokesman Dave Rahm said
.Chanda Rubin, a teen-ager already 0-40 third-set deficit against Jana
·M-ADWI
:; famous for winning marathon match· Novotna in the third round of last Monday night he could not confirm
oGnaclpen•tr . .
; es, outlastedArantxa Sanchez Vicario year's French Open.
reports that Walsh, who led the 49ers
•'D:adaen
•, 6-4, 2-6, 16-14 Monday in the longest
" I knew I could hang in there for to three Super Bowl tides in JOyears
;: wo~'smatcheverintheAustralian however long it takes, Rubin said. astheircoach,wouldrejointheteam
"She didn 1t give it to me and I was- in a yet-to-be-defined role. _.., the
Open.
•Fllelldl
:: .
R11bin, who advanced to a semifi- n't going to give it to her.
Walsh's addition won't ...ect
•. nal match with Monica Seles, Jet two
"It feels great to be in the semifi- position of Seifert, who guided San
:; match points slip away at4-S in the · nals of a Orand Slam. It's a first for Fraucisco to two Super Bowl triAnyone w~ would appreciate alhci'Jshlfulword from you1
:• final set and another two at 13-14- me. It's huge."
· umphs in the seven yean since sue•; one vn a controversial line call. The
She acknowledged, there also ceeding Walsh in 1989.
'' Amercian Jed()..~ lead at 14-15 and were many times she though~ she
San Francisco was denied a
AU Valeilline Hearts will be publlstiecUa the February 14th
:: won 0111ier sixth match point with a might Jose. After there was no call on chance to win a sisth championship
iuue at a c::os1 ()f Oily NMI
:: stretehed forehand m~~~-couit volley. a Sanchez Vicario volley that she when the Oteen Bay Pac~upend­
•:
The inatch l..ted so tong that a thought was out on her fourth match ed the 49ers 27-17 in a di\'lsional
MUST BB PRIPAIDI
;.. · qulll'ierfinal be~n tliCn's No. 2 point, at 13-14, 30-40, "I was think' playoff earlier this month.
:! Ai!idn!A&amp;aili and No. 8Jit!l Courier ing, God, I can't win this, it's going
Walsb. whose offensive system is
,~················~··········~
·.1
l ,.. . . . . .
.
.
i
:: didn't lllrtlinlil after 19:" p.m. It to go on all night."
still run by the 49en; operated quar,, wautopp~dfornlinaboutahalf-hour
Rubinquedtheruling,andmany terback campi and worked for the
1
IE I
-..
""•
:
~: J... withA,-iiC:rYin&amp;at4-,inthe in the audience of JS,OOO·booed it, NFL in an advisory role in the last
;: 'fim "'- lnd dien fiii.Oy postponed. but the line judge's view appatently year.
~; ·~I· Many IaiJ~ (~ outrage ·at _. was blocked by Rubin's feet.
· He spent tile previous three years
·! . !he deci,sibn to wStPOne· .
Rubin then missed the next two in a second tour as Stanford COIICh
·I
....
20
•
' I
I
.
:•·· -· The lhird .et between Rubin and' points, held service and finally broke before reiiplna in 1994.
I I•
·: Sancb1z ViCIIV took 2 ·hours, 22 min-' ' Sanchez VIcario after 13 strailht • · ; Wlllb quit u 49ers coadl follow:: iie.a Of the . 3:33 lllllteb, ~ch let ~ vice keepl by the two women.
:iq tile 1988 ICBIOII, wbich eaded
I
~ o;Oa-eta tolll'tl8ment -records fori·
Rubi.n; seeded · 13th, played. 10 with the team's third Super Bowl
I
I .
1
;· pmea (48) llld final-set PJ!II'&amp; (30). agresuve pme d!rousltout lllllll 'crown. He lllyed wltb the orpnizaI
1 .The previoua Aualrllian ·• Open No. 3 Sanchez ViCirio, her doubles ' tlon~flyum~before
leCorda were 4' for total jllrtaU. She had twice .as many win· leaVJDI 10 lib a job as 1D analyll for
I
•l ~and 24 . - ipuet, both set ~nen as Sanchez Vicario - 68 10 34• NBC;
·
·
.
4~769
• Ia 19Q liut in llpll'llle m•tchel
_- and twice • many unforced emn
He lpellt ~ ~ I I a broad- .
I
M•ltlhnfu...IJ,..t
:
1a llllllir_, 111111111 • W'tmbleciQD - 96to 48.
·
.~ before R1t111111Df to f~ • .
.. 1 . . . ;... bbia beat J'~Ria.HyTheintoMitya!JUiywashi&amp;hin JlUIIIIiupacb•nc:e. IOWork~tbthe •
1 1-ws 7-6, 6-7,· 17-IS in 3:45, the lint~ After she lost her~~ .149cn.• ~~t~Jl!! bkin&amp; !he a Wimbledon 1WIJICII's · !!12-1 in ... ftnue_t,_ ~"fnlfi:loJ" COI!'iPD&amp; 1iOI)ItS~m 1992. The ; ,
~ ·
fotbll ttllilalletll2:04and .- RICOiv•hWMDilllf.oullmmiq.die -~ ~ ~- hia_!lnt ~or . ;
•
o( ...... iauet.
-tia,ll', itttp dill Will '
..-c:-"i"'jotila lw .
·
Jnn

:.woa•'•

Cowboy ace hasn't played since Dec. 3

3 Kansas edges Oklah.o ma 72-66

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - .
Ryan Minor's shooling slmnp put
Oklahoma in a hole that was too deep
· to overcome agaimt Kanus OIIQe he ·
found the rauge.
Minor fmiabed witb 22 poinll, 15
in a furiOUJ second half Monday
night, but No.3 Kansas (1 5-1 overall, 3-0 Big Eigbt) held on for a n 66 victory over lbe Sooners (10-7, 23).
"We did everything we could do
to stay in the game. We played hanl,"
said Minor, who is carrying the
, weight of the Sooners on his shoutders.
"They seemed to get all the
bounces. A couple of calls here, a
couple of bounces there, and we
might be in the game at the end."
Minor, who hu made just 30 percent of his field-goal attempts in Big
Bight games and 39 percent in all
games, was 3-for-17 on Sattuday
when the Sooners were defeated by
Kansas State in a rare loss )On !heir
home court.
He missed four of bis six attempts
in the fmi half against Kansas before
he almost singlehandcdly rallied the

::
.

~ TUHdly, January·23,1aN

·

Woodson in, Haley ailing for Super Bowl

... '-

~

The O.IIJ Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.....' • ..

. 41Qe

.No~
...

Tu11d1y, January 23, 1996

-

IL_.:..__:~~;;~;~~~;;;~-----J

.
points.lna
90-,82
victory
at Mount
in aplayer
win over-A'
year's
from
Elida. i. · 29
Vetnon
Nazarene
and
25 points
in a - Jill
MAC
of the 1'011.
yearLut
lidded
16 .
,'lvenaec} IS.? points, 4.3usists
9S.:S.0 tols to Walsh.
.•
'
,
~

,

.-:.....--

and

-

.

-~---·-,

11 mo-t . .

RUTLAND

�'

~ • Middleport,

~~~ Couple ill:u.~tr~~~~
·~~

· ::

Am
landers
;:..:;::::::.
_.., 1 ·

By ANN LANDERS
.
• • Dear Ann I .ancien: I want to
: ' upreu my fe.lings about what
• '"Modesto, Calif." had to say regard-.
.; ina puaing the hat at weddings.
!
:
My husband and I were both I~
: · whon - married. Our puents • of modest means, and we had to pay
: for everything ourselves. We decid! • eel lbeR wu going to be no hat pass-•

about four houri, and it 11ke1 two
)'C!ln to pay for it -:SbUuJina But
Happy in Maine
Dear SbUagling: Many of those
brides whole weddings cost thousands of dollan would give a lot to
be as happy u you are. I've said it
before, and I'll say it again - the best
Chings in life lftll't things.
Dear Ann Landers: I have known
"Belinda" for several months, and
I'm in love with her. She says she
loves me, too, but we have constant
fights about her roommate, "Joe."
When I first met Belinda, she
explained that Joe was just.a family
friend and that there was nothing
sexual between them. I believed her

. iDJ. I IJICIII $2!5 on fabric, and my Iii1«Jlllcle my wectding gown. The veil
cost $9. A family friend made a fourtier wedding cake, which wu beautiful. We gave her $20 for the ingre.
clients. My mothec's bestfrieadmade
silk flowen for the altar, and they
loobd wondaful. My aiJtm, my
maid of honor and my mom prepared
the dinner the nijht before.
We will soon celebnre our lith
anniversary.Ourtwoyoupasonsare
a joy to us. We are very happy, even.
thouJh we still have to watch every
penny. I hope you will print my let..
ter, Ann. It might disc;ourage young
people from going into debt to put on
a show. The ''perfonnance"lasts for

CHARLES B. WOLFE
Navy Petty officer second clus
: Charles B. Wolfe recently received

JMuary 23, 1181

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

with Sea Control Squadron 24, Naval ·
Air Station,,Cecil Field, Fla.
:
Wolfe was_awarded the, medal for .
his outstanding performance as a
Medical Department represeptative.
Wolfe organized .and inS!fUCted 12
CPR classes resulting in a 99-percent
squadron qualification level. His
weekly evaluation and treatment of
more than 7S patients increased flight
crew availability and squadron per·
sonnet readiness.
Wolfe is a 1986 graduate of Southern High School, Racine.

·some of my friends think this iJ 11
·mig~~ty odd .-nngement.
1
Belinda and I have talked abouti
marriage and moving in togetbu, buti
she refuses· to ult Joe to leave. The ,
man sleepa 011 the floor in the livinai
room. He bas 1 aood job and
well afford 1 place of his own. He .
insists that he is happy the way thinp
areandwillnotlQOkforaplaceofhis
own unless Belinda ub him to.
Whenever 1 tell Belinda that Joe
should move out, she becomes very
upset and says 1 don't bUst~1 ~ confused about their rei•
tionship. I'm really in love with her,
Ann, but I'm conflicted. Please rush

couldj

; Bewildered in North Hills, Calif.

De• North Hilla: No couple
:•hould liM life toptber wid! a fllll.ily friend •leeping oli the livina
'room floor.
.
Tell Belinda that J~ must.go. If
she refuses to respect your wilbel11
this point in your relatiolllhip, 'you
are destined to have a very rocky

1 •

imsrriaae.

·

1 DelrAnni~:I.-inmyllle
l SO. and have a poor ~te. 'When
' I go to a restaunnt, I often prefer to
order from the child's menu because
the portions are the rlgtit·size for me.
Am I riJht to say it is diicrirnination
, when the waiter tells me the restau·

TODD A. McDADE

SHAWN E. TIPPIE

AMY D. iiiLL

Marine Pvt. Shawn E. Tippie
iecently completed the Marine Corps
Enlisted Warehouse Basic Course.
During the course with Supply
School Company, Marine Corps Service Support Schools, Marine Corps
Base, Camp Lejeune, N.C., Tippie
received a comprehensive theoretical
and practical background in the performance and administration of
duties as a warehouse clerk.
Tippie joined the Marine Corps in
May, 199S.

Amy D. Hill, daughter of Mrs.
Debra K. Haley, Middleport, has
enlisted in the Air Force's Delayed
Enlistment program.
Airman Hill, a 1996 graduate of
Meigs Hiah School, is scheduled for
enlistment in the Regular Air Force
in July 1996. Upon graduation from
_the Air Force's six-week basic training ~ourse near San Antonio, Texas,
Hill is scheduled to receive technical
training in the administrative career
field.

By JANE 1!. ALLEN
AP Science Writer
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (AP)
- It toolt only an hourlong plunge
through Jupiter's shroUded atmosphere for the Oalileo probe to cltal: lenge years of theories about the for. mation of the solar system's largest
planeL
Data from l~t month's firSt-ever
descent showed Jupiter is drier and
windier than expected, with Jess
lijhtning and an intense new radiation belt 31,000 miles above its
clouds.
It came u a surprise to a cadre of
planetary theorists that had expected
to see evidence of an abundance of
water in one of the planet's cloud layers. The findings may force them to
revise their theories.
Two decades ago, scientists
believed Jupiter was formed by the
condensation of dust and gas in the
cloudy area called the solar nebulajust the way a star is born.
But in the last few years, a newer
theory took hold. It said Jupiter
formed when ice and rock from

comets joined to create ll core that
drew in other material.
If Jupiter indeed began with that
icy core more than 4 billion years
ago, seientist&amp; expected the probe to
fall through water clouds. But no
.watery layer appears in the first-look
data.
The findings from the Galileo
probe's Dec. 7 parachute plunge
were releaaed Monday by scientists at
NASA's Ames Research Center . The
4-foot-wicle craft relay~ a 57·minute
weather report before it vaporized in
extreme heat and pressure.
The probe detected wind up to 330
mph - compared with an expected
1220 mph- and extremely intense
·turbulence, probably caused by heat

:, I believe it il wu II hi to inlitt that
1 order moR tJ. I
I re~Cnt
· p~yinl for food ~ wiU 19 in the
garbage. What do you say? - Upset
.in Ida Grove, Iowa ·
Dear ~ lay you sbould go to
restaurants that ~e halt ·portions
and offer senior cltizell dilcounts.
Check .-ouncl.
./ : Oem of. the Day: Ad\lice for
'women who long for a~~ ~t~s better to be alone than' tb wish ·~ were.
SUd
to Au L 0liilen,
Crt8lon S;raclbfe. 517'7'W· Cell·
1ury Blvd., Stdte 700,1M A•a Ia,
Calli. !lOIN!
' .
.

CID-

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' j

.,a2·2996

Dear "Renee Young"
· ,.
1
I'm a guy who knew you 6 years ago in
high sehool. I would like for you to call me. I
..: really need to tell you I'm sorry for
· . something I said to you back fhen,•oa!l me
~ any'month, be.tween lQIIJ through thli ,l.?tft of
· evecy month. My phone .ntlmber is ~~ul531 ~
· If you would rather write send your letter to
,•.. P.O. Box 86. 1t would mean alot to me..
··, ·
Your-Friend
Henry B11chanan

escaping from deep ipside tbll planeL
.
It found lightning occurs on
Jupiter only about one-tenth as often
as Earth. Scientists said that,was consistent with an absenee of water
clouds.
Scientists saw just !lDC of the tbree
npected cloud layers and said it
could be either ammonia, the expected composition of the outermost layer, or ammonium hydrosulfide,
.believed to constitute a second, deeper layer.
. Surprises in Jupiter's atmospheric composition also included signif.icantly Jo)w~ than expected levels of
:helium, neon and elements like carlbon, oxygen and sulfur.

CuotljNiilllt 11M • P!lcM

110 · Help Wanted

HELP II

YOU'll SAVE MONEY
IN THECLASSIFJEDS
AND THAT1 NO BULL!

(

We need a few
gQOd people to
assist persons with
MRIDD with daily
living !ikills in Meigs

•

J.'

: " I'

·""·

' '

'

-

will ~a.ve opportunity· .tb_ promote !J!etr own good
health -~le s!Jaring the gift of life by
donating blood when, the American
Red Cross visits the Mqigs SeniQr
Citizens Center, J.an: 31, I to 6. p.ril.
U1,1der the corporate swnsorship
· of 1ohl)i0n and Johnson, the Ameri~ can .Red ·cross will be distributing
~ free at-home advanced care choles' terol test kits d•ring the bloodmobile
~ visit. Emphasis will bO on helping to

711...

Aty~ restdents

I

!

'~-"'

loU\

increase public awareness of the
impo~ of ma!ntainin~ healthy
chole~rol levels.
The Red Cross and Johnson and
Johnsqn are optimistic that the program lllill encourage the public to
give l)~ood so that allequate blood
suppli~ c•n be rebuilt following lhe
usual helvia- holiday usage. The cholesterol kit, it was noted, is not a pan
of the blood donation process. The
jp&amp;s will be given to individuals 20 ..

ii

~

~

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;
~

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~
~

.
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.:.AP .announces advanced version of .News Camera 2000

rable to high-quality film images . frames before the imaps are saved to
. across the entire ISO range," said the drive (2.2S frames per second for
Marty Cammarata, sales director of a burst of 12 images). An advanced
AP Technology Marketing. "The Photoshop plug-in designed by AP
liew technology in the NC 2000e also lets photographers c1pture more
eliminates the news photographer's data for better quality photos. The
biggest fear with digital imaging plug-in allows users to work with 36shooting in low lijht. With the NC ltit data before saving it in slanllartl
2000c, what you shoot is what you 24-bit ROB mode.
.
set"
AP and Kodak each conaibute ·
Improved electronics in the NC pho.tographic, . technical and engi·
2000c provide significantly enhanced ' neering resoun:es to the project. AP
image quality and color fidelity at writes the ~ws application specifihigher ISOs. This new tedmology cations for the NC 2000 and NC
reduces digital noise and eliminates 2000e. Kodak designs and builds the
the grainy texture common in digital cameras.
images higher than 800 ISO.
·
AP is the exclusive, W!lddwide
The NC 2000c has increased · distributor of the NC 2QOO and NC
memory, 16MB, whU:h enlbles pho- .2000e. The U.S. list price flit' the NC
·
tographers to sboot liiOie consecutive 2000e is $1S,2SO.

FDA discounts risk of milk from horm·one-treated cows

-

Thle 11 .,.. i~·• rendition,
by N~ of the qe111eo probe . -11
Into Jupller'e ti)tckly clouded
Datil relumecl by the Gi,llleo
unexpected flndlnge about
almoaphel'e lhlt rney force aclilnllm •

PER PICTU..IE
PRE·PIID
Please enclo11 lllf· ,
addressed stamped
envelope to return

i. ·
Galilee's Jupiter data could rewrite
textbooks abo,wt sol·ar system
• •

I"" !!~'!1!-'.!'!..ru~!l

!!!'~!.~..:.'!:, :
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1
VALENTINE PETS
1I Pet'a NarM
I ·

I,

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1Owner's N•IM

I:
I

~~

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, f,

f.

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tor

p!alur.-

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_ _ _ _ lllllill _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
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Deadline Friday, February 8th at 3 p.rn. ; .Mall or bring tht .entry fOrm:
.,, .

The Daily Senti;nel
110 COUrt St.
POmeroy, Ohio . ,..

! '

•

By MICHAEL CAIBAGE .

Hurryl INIIIIne

.

~

"·PET'S tt\ME"
owner'• Name

your photo.

I Amount Er.clo11d:

•

·'

to rethink how thl planet w11 formed, NASA
aclentletlnld Monday. In •rly December, the
probe releaeed !IY the unmanned Gallleo •pacecl'lft plrachutecllnto Jupiter'Bitmoapherund
relayed 1 57-minute -ther report before It
melted and VIIPDrlzed. (AP Photo)

~

I

.

stan of the solar system.
FLORIDA TODAY
,
.Most Rs.ean:hers eKpected to find
Information beamed back from many similarities between Jupiter's
the ~leo p~ ~)t ~hutecl com~i!Rlh and that of the su.n: .
throu$l.i j\lpiter's l!,!lllosphere could , But the probe turned up surpnstng
reWrite basic ideas about how our discoverjcs, some of which conridict
solar system formed, NASA scien- those theories. The new information
lists .said Monday.
reveals a harsh, alien world even
During a news conference from more inhospitable than previously
N.,-\SA's Ames Research-Center in · thouaht.
Mountain View, Calif., project sciThe discoveries include:
enti~~ ~.Jented data collected dur- Beneath the outside layer of
ing the probe's descent in December. ammonia clouds, Jupiter's skies were
· Many of the findings are at odds much 9learer that previously thQught,
~ with lll:UpiM theoiies on the way the without the expected three-deck
: planets evolved.
structure. Water douds, preclij:ted Co
~
"You're not talking about totally be under IWo upper levels of ammo: tearing up our ideas abOut how the nia-based clouds, were not detected.
-.,. Severe wirKii"6iP-Jupiter were
' solar. ~y~~ ?s pot tolether, '' said
Pbrrence Johnson, Oali~'s project much stronger than antiCipated,
·tc~nlilt,.. ;\'lhl new tiWories wit( milclJing speeds of 330 mph. They
~a relationship to the old theories, remained, constant deep into the
~~they WY!\:1 ~ mctly ihe same.~·. llmo&amp;phtt!
·
~.. "Aitiecti .the theories we've ' . - · tev~s of helium on Jupiter
·~ ·living wid) *'i'kc!ing to hive to _ W!re Qilly'ibout.halfof those found
lie modified," qreed Tobias ,Owen, il lhe SIRI., Scientists had expected
~ ~ ~ll on tile ~ · dlilm ID be;~tear~y the same.
~:t; 'Of ,l~ '" ; •. ;1 •
•
.
- 'Ali UlleiiiC lldiation belt wu ·
• Scientillllong have theorized that . diiCOvered 3 f,ooo miles abOve
ler- sometimes consideied .a Jupiilll':s cloud;tops.
that never ipited ~ because of ·
-: J..l&amp;tuiDa on Jupiter, eKpected
tremetidouiJrlvity kept thesime to 11o '!M.e during the probe's
~ " 111inf~• piwe_!ll _~t ~ _ de--. Ytii'C!f!.l&gt;'~~-~nd!. ~

activity found on Earth. A radio on
the probe was able to detect massive
lightning strikes far off in the dis·
tance.
Ejectejl from the GaJ.ileo satellite
as it approached Jupiter last summer,
.the probe entered the Jovian atmos·
phere Dec. 7. 11 marked th~ fhst time
a man-made device ever has sampled
the atmosphere of one of our solar
~ystem 's giant gas planets.
The oven-sized probe transmitted
data for 58 minutes until 30Q.degree
Fahrenheit temperatures and an
atmospheric pressure 22 times that of
Earth's destroyed it
The Galileo mothership will continue to orbit around the planet for at
least two more years, surveying
Jupiter and several of its moons.
Rich Young, Galileo's project scientist, said the device 's brief plunge
through the Jovian atmosphere represents a breakthrough.
·

or

'

E
10

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"The things that we are now
learning about Jupiter will not poly
be applicable to understanding our
own sollll' system, but they will
almost certainly-be applicable to
understaniling these new solar sys- :
tcms that .we are only now beginning I
to discover," he said..

rwqulrwd.
Sarv-U 819-845 8t34
1/tl/ll

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Sieling, Porchae,
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Home Improvements,

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AKC Reg. Puppies, Kltlena, Blrdl a More
Experienced Groomers • Financing Available

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Aemod•llng,
Add..On'l, Roofing
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(614) 992-2979

(614) 992.f244

FREE
Plck.Up discarded
washerl; d~,hot

water tanka, atovas,
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Distributed by

Openings for 2.
Christian
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The water treatment company cordially Invite$ you to
participate In a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

Call 992-4025

analysis. WE WIU TEST THE FQUOWING:
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.................r

Jim PIII'O, Auditor of S FINANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIP
For FIICII Year Ending
December 31, 1995
Columbia Townahlp
County of lltlga
"Thle lean unaudited
Flftllnclat Report"
'SUIIIIIARY OF CASH
. BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
; GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
,
Revenue Rocelptl
IR-'pta
Tox.................... 431131L73
Llcaneoe, Permlta and
F- .......................... 550.00

ln-.p.,nmenlll

Muat be te yre.

Touch- P"- .

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$600

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factory Choke Only
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GUN CLUB

GUN SHOOTS
SUN. 1 PM

$2.99 per lllln.

(814) 1148-3013 Phone
(814) IMWO'II FAX .
814 514-20011 NIGHT

Opening Feb. ht

Public Notice

~

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HYDUUUC IEPAII
$32.00/HR.

"Suppi;M for aU your pet needa"

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UCINE

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BALES OF
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SALE.

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Allo a spec:lal ~n for Ia Memory Valentine Pets.

FREE ESTIMATES

ROUND

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OUR SPECIAL PIGE(S)
"J'OB PBTS ONI.Y"
WILL IE PUBLISHED TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 13~ Ill

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years or older as long liS supplies last.
To give blood individuals must be
at least 17 years of age, weigh at least
II 0 pounds and be in generally good ·
SMITH'S
health. Donors can contribute once
every 56 days.
.
CONSTRUCTION
The Red Cross reminds individu- Cullom lluldlng a R11nodollng
ills to take their donor can!s when
•NtwHom••
they report to give blood. The Tri·
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SUite Region serves donors, hospitals
•New Garages
and patients in parts of West Virginia.
•Rtmodellng ,
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Ohio, and Kentucky.
•Roofing
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FREE ESTIMATES

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UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
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Rem~ellng

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•New Homes
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MIDDLEPORT

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·;~ Blood

ROIEIT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

County. Various

.

PEt

PE'I'

(Splct.llzt In
DrlvtWiy Spreldlng)

i

:: SAN DIEGO (AP) - Siamese
: •twins l;lom to a Mexican couple ear; ~lier this mdnth share a liver but have·
·:individual hearts, say doctors who are
: 'weiahing the possibility of separating
·:the
•
11\.
: "There is a single liver," said Dr. ··
::Michael Segall ofihe newborn inten&gt; sive care unit at Children's Hospital '
::in San Diego. "Althoujh that does
add to the complexity, it's not an
: impossible obstacle."
.
: San Diego doctors donated thetr
· : services to perform tests Saturday on ·
· Sarah and Sarahi Morales, who were
: born connected at the chest and bel: ly.
· The twins are to undergo more
· testing this week, includina a cardiac
catheterization to find out if the girls
share any arteries.
Hospital spokesman Mark MorelSIAMESE TWINS· St.mne tWln1, Sartlh 1nd
: li said it would be several more days
will perform 1 cardt.c ~that Will
$11'1hl
Morllel, II'III'Hted by nUI'Iel Mondly
· before doctors determine whether
help ctec~ the fllllblllly or ..........,g 11e two
It Chlldr•11 Holplllll In Sen Dt.go. Th• ·glrle ·
glrle. (AP Photo) .
~ surgery would be feasible.
. "They look quite good. " Morel- ..... bom Jan. 12 In niUinl, Mexico. Doctor•
:li sai4 "'They have color in their face.
:They have ribbOns in their .~r. and ferrecl to San Diego after doctors at ·
Their parents, auto mechanic
Both said they were grateful to
·they're resting comfortably. He wd the facility where they were bOrn Miguel Angel Morales and Maria Children's Hospital for donating the
:Sarah is the stronger of the two.
were unable to find a hospital in Luisa Espinoza, have four other chil- services, which otherwise would
· · The babies were born .Jan. 12 in Tijuana that could accommodate ·dren, have a weekly income of less have cost hundreds of thousands of
:Tijuana, Mexico. They were trans- them.
than $50 and no insurance.
dollars.
•
I

: NEW YORJ.( (AP) -The Asso- paign," said Vin Alabiso, AP execu'ciated Press has introduce4 an ·live ·photo editor. "Its new features
:advanced version ofthe News Cam- offer our photographers one more
:era 2000, the first electtOniCJ:8111era tool to set members quality images
:designed specifically for photojour: fut."
.
'tlalists. It is clllled the News C~ · • . The NC 2000e IS the result of a
:2oooe.
·
collaboration between AP and Kodak.
• Enhanced features of the new which for four yean have been test~amera announced Monc:t.y let news ing and ':l'finin~ electronic cam~as
&lt;photoSfaPhers take more photos in fllf photojournalism. Both compantes
c.nts because of incleased memory have l"!'g histories of commitment to
;.na allow more flexibility in tow- advancing news pboto~y. and
'iJhtinl photography, This means "?~ ~ 1~111 m applic~ons of
JPbotographers will be able to take d1g1tal tmagmg tecbnol?Jies. The
~-quality images in tougher sit· NC 2000 wu announced 10 February
~ Diore quickly. .
1994.
r
"The·NC 2000e will play a major
. "We've ~y seen news~rs
in our coverage of two of the nugrate to diptal technology With the
bitae•t stories of 1996 - the NC 2000, With ~ new enhance·
PI~ and the prui~ntlal cam- menta, NC ,2000e Images are compa-

WICIS

~)

"111

:Doctors say
:siamese
.:twins share
[same
liver
•

1tlrt

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

.
theli, and I still belieVe be,, althoup 'your 1111wer to - llo!heaM tad ·rant will not .Jiow.me to do !hat?

Galileo finds lack of water, forclng
1reconsideration of theories

TODD A. Mc:OADE
his second Navy-Marine Corps
Air Force airman Todd A. · Achievement Medal while ~ing

PATRICK H. CAPEHART
Anny Spec. Patrick H. Capehan,
son of Buford L. and Alice M. Capehart, Coolville, has been decorated
with the Anny Achievement Medal.
Capehart, a light wheel vehicle
mechanic at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, was
awarded the medal for meritorious
service, acts of courase, or other outstandina accomplishments.
The soldier is a ·1982 llf&amp;duate of
• Federal Hocking Hiah School, Stew. art.

Tundly,

that the _pest things i~ lif~ . aren't things

--Military news-McDade, son of Wayne L. and Mar- ·
ilee McDa,de of Middleport, has ·
graduated from basic training at
Lacldand Air Force Bue, San Antonio, Texas. ·
During the six wee"' of training,
McDade studied the Air Force mission, organization, ud customs and
: received tipeciat training in human
' relations.

Ohio

.

·

Recelpta ............... 45351.13

l n -................. 1034.26
All Other Revenue............

Pl. IU 1171

108 Pomeroy

11/131111 tnO.

.

.

.New Homes ~ VInyl Siding New

Overhead&amp;
underground
utilities &amp; lighting
Bucket, Digger

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

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(No Sunday Calls)

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Public
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•
(
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Truck Servlc:et' Service Pole
$2.50'·p.r ft•

.. 1-6'14-371-9101

•

P.O. Box 587

Copllal Outtoy........821.15

~~~~~-~-~-~~-~~=~

A·CUTILm
CONSTRUCTION CO.

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC•

614-992·7643

Total
R. c •• pt.
Ov•I(Under) Dleb...............
............................(7630.301
Other Sourcee/Recelpta
Othtr Financing Sourcea
&lt;u-)........................300.00
Dlabureementa l Other

Middleport, Ohio 45780
O.nnr &amp; Peggy Brickle•

St. MillOn, WV

....... ,.................... 304tltl.62

:;::::;~~.:::::.~=~

32124 Hoppy Hollow Rd.

ru 11 11,1

614·742-2193

TOTAL RECEIPTS. ............

Ex...ndllure Dlabu,_,ta
Olllbu..-ta
General GavwnmenL.......

PorffiiJie
lanlf•aw IIIII

Oxygen Acetylene CO.
Helium all elztl Medicll Gl'ldl 0.
P~ Trlmlx Ultra Mix M~ Weldenl

Racine, Oh. 45771
Jamee E. Diddle
.

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
. Jackhammer, Available 24 Hra.
We dig baaementa, put l,n aeptlc
1 11
nd
nd bo res.
SystemS, ay nea, U ergrou
For Free eatlmate call 949-2512

Fund . Cuh .Batanoe,
·- _
u-.....................
(7330.301 '· ~~~~;;·~•;";IOII.;=~"':•;•;•:•~J=u•;a==:;-:;:~
Jenua,., 1, 1995...................

............................ 47721.50

Fund Caah Balance,
December 31, 1815.............

NEFF REMODELING
SER'VIn
91"110
Hau• Repelr &amp;

SUMMARY OF INDEBTED NESS TOTAL
· OUTSTANDING Jan. 1,
:1815 ..................... 25,000.00
i llmi!Eo .,............ 83-; OUTSTANDING Dec. 31 ,

llemaclellng
Kitchen a lleth
Remodtllng

(Engagement Plcturw)
ofleunlana
•Annlvwurlea .

IIIIIOMIIII
IMUNfl , Elcperlenud
Call WllyM 111ft

-.famly
Reuanablo PriCII

:11111 ...................... 18881.117
Dlpoaltory

a..-..........

.......~ ................... 41032.51
Total T,...""' Belt nee....
.. ......................:... 41032.51
Len Outallndlng CMab

RaomAddlllonl
Siding, llwlhii, P.UO.

lle2..a
.

For F-Eat!.._.
.....

'" ............................:. .1.31

TOTAL BALANCE ...............

;,;tiiy'ii;'~~.!:t ,. ~~~~~~~1

.to be _ _ . ondlrul to 11M
.Ibelt of my lmut1 dill"
.

I Qlorlo HuHon, t·11·M,
T-hlp Clerk At. 3, Box
82, Albany, Ohio 457t 0,
phono81WII G04
.
[t) 23 '1TC
.......,..__ __

537 BRYAN PLACe

-Coupa.'\1

............................ 40311.20

~~~~
· ~~~-.

J&amp;liNSUlATION

N••" a Piw1"""'p/te' /or
""'"
Specin/ OccDtlo!!P
•Widdlnga,ftiCIFtaona

Ofllce Haln: llon.-Fr!.

Ylnyt R ..._

• .,_..........__

·.
~n--.
li'IIUIIIIort, Storm

,.......,

Ca111112-7747

Doon, Storm

WI .- .....
'
nuuw,l i .-...,...

Alllr 4 pm '
Duilng Wlfl dap
1111 ~ Wlllllndl

..

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_

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:CHESTER STOUGE

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NlilrHM,i,'•

...

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..........
••• ••

Cllillt •••

OneUnMNow
AVIIIIilblt
'
101128 • - per mo.

---1

Akim.=:·

8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.

VInyl&amp;

..n...--.....-

.

•-2112

IIIODI..EPORT

•
•

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•

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&lt;
~~~T~ue~a~d:•;Y·:JI~n:u:•~~23::,1~8:96:_______________________~--------~P~~:m:~:~:y:•:M:I:dd~~:~:o~:;O:h:~::::~:=:=:==::=~::~~The~~~~-~-~~-~s~~~~~~~--:·:':••:':'~
NEA Cro11word Puzale
PHILLIP
ALDER

......

ACAOIS

••

1 Eyedrap
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40 - lin lin

I

Side

01-11•
N
•• 4
IIA JC Q 7 5

511HZ!-02l14 •

Furnished 2 Roome &amp; Bath,

•• 4

Dawnataira, UtiiHies Furnished ,
Clean, No Pttl, Ref.,ence, Depoll! Roquited, .........1,518.

113Mllllli.

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11 ()paola

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... 21==

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Elflclency All Utilkleo

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1088 1•110 3bedrooma, 2bllths,
all applilncel, C111nl lit, llundry
100111, new lXII fnlnl porch, IXC.
cone!. Muat Hit. Muat be moVId.
Price reduced to 113,10(). S0.-

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14 Boo 17 IIPJ II

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for s.ll

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ttiO Dodge Ram Van B-250.
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OW,., !jOUr wh lrte. IIOIMihlttg ,_to impnM
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4:30pm, leave meaoaao il

Now Bank Aopoa. Oliy 4 left Stll

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WHAR'S ,
JUGHAID'S 41A8V

21
4•

JEST

We.&amp; Nord!
Puo 111
Puo 3a
Puo Pala

Eat

Puo

Pua
Pua

Opening lead: • A

CAME BYAN'
·TOOK IT

SQUIRRIL??

,\LIVI 1JU( ..,

Robin Hood,
bridge player

BACK

HOM I
1084 Ford Explorer XLT. 34,000
With Exuaal

Vulnenble: Both
Deller: South

8oatll

If (j

1

•K ~

•

1884 Clleuy S.10 - · VI aulD,
ac, looka &amp; runa good. 13,500 .
--31152

·'

By Phillip Alder

,

David Bird baa written some of the
funniest brif18e storiee. Ilia lalellt boot
Ia "The Bridge Adventure• of Robin 1,1m-+--+__,r
Hood" &lt;GoUancz; $1e.oo p.p. trom Tile .:. ,n---lr-t. Bridge World, 38 West 84th Street,
·.' PEANUTS
. -.
New York, NYIOOU-7124). 1tiawritten b-+-+-t.
. about Robin Hood and his Men")' Men,
who lived in She11J00d Foreat outside ._...........,....._...__
~E't', MARCIE .. W~AT'S OUR
WE'RE SUPf'OSED 1D ~RIZE
Nottingham, En11land, robbing from
HOMEUIORK FOR TOMORROW 1 A PASSA6E OF SCRIPTVRL
the rich to gift to the poor.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Tbill book ill an entertaining read.
However, I bave two minor ~rva­
by Lula c.mpoa
Ctlllbrlly Qpher Cl= ..... CNIIIId frQm..
bJ,....... JI'IOP6I, .... nt ~
tiona for AmeriC81111. M01t of the aucEach
., h dfJt- ....O.Iur . . . . .. Toally's CU: E ...... B
tions follow the Nottlngbam Club IYBtem, This isn't lmown over here, but
'0 K
IWH
MUXV
u NTUFC
OX
VJC
Bird does explain everything. Alao, I
don't think the character~~ in Robin
DHX ,
IW H
JUYC
vw
CANCFV
u
Hood's band are u weii-lmowD on this
side of the Atlantic.
KCM
ETGOVCZO. ' TWZCVVU
1be deals wcy from intermediate to
llllvaDc:ed. I doubt many playen wvukl
IWHXP .
find the willning defenae In this deal.
One club wu artificial, lbowlng any
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I like lhe people, the talk, """" lhe dinnet'l. I love
everything about hockey except lhe games." - (Goallender) Glenn HaU.
hand with 11-21 high-card points. The
rest of the bids were natunl.
:L I&gt;ON'r wAtiT
Robin Hood, sitting West, led the
,.. JVST OfT
club ace. When the queen dropped
"'
Tt41S GOLI) ~- :L
from South, Hood wu about to lead a
PIIIUI
second club. But then he realized that
wANT
Vl!lV$
- - - - ..... n., ClAY I.
for the defense· to have any chance,
AS
.South would have to be void In bwts.
So, u II was vital to teep dedarer out
:L
· of the dummy, Hood switched to •
ttAVE!
.
flamboyant IIJIIIIIe ldag!
•
GRAAVY
"! ' ~ .
If South draws trumpe before playI•Z.)
1
Ing tbe diamond king, West ducks .
South actually pla7ed the diamond
king Immediately, ao Hood won with
J'IIE BORN LOSER
tbe ace and exited wilb bla second
~
US E S I
r ,.I LOIE A. c,OOC&gt;lRRilL.ER! ~..., ~'{ toJE. YOO I&lt;EN&gt;I~ lJI.E.
[ ~'r.l WD 1J.IE: ft.IC ~"!leE trump. Now South bad to lose four
tricks: three diamonds and one club.
u.si"~R.~
.
Til{!(,~ A~T... I
Tl\~00(.~~
-~

.

I

TO

.

&gt;·

... S&lt;all.fllA-4£t/is· .......
JIOIUII-----

.'
t 871 Chryaler CordQ¥ia, Alao
Motor
Whlie FII'Hrtllll Topper For
Lonabed S·IO Pick-Up:
t878 .Bua
l!lool&gt;a 8,
XRtOO Mcitorcyclo, Noeda
Ttraa, &amp; RolilgotaiDr,
On Motor, 114·311- 7705.
Gaa Furnoct. SIDYt, o..n &amp;'Fie3117-IOQ.
. trigora!Or, Muoh Morel Modo Tp
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Haul4 .... &amp; Billftln .Fleer.
1178
1-HMilQ

Motor-·

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eam.;.za.e
•

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Tt4f
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DIDNTYOUMIT

· f/E:N..m£·

r

CR0 T H

SEflVICES

I I

~"~,

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A .favorite bumper sticker
of mine reads: •A Smile Is a
~~~e-~~a-t Sets Most Things

H A M T WR

Antiquea, collectables, ealatH,
Riverine Antlqueo, Ruaa Moore,

~--;.,..-,.--,,..-,.--,.-t

- · 114-1182-262111.

a

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1

Complate ' tiMt chuckle q-.1
by filling lt1 ""' -..g -c1a
L.....L....Ji.-..L.-L-.L.....t you do01lop lrorn ..., No. 3 below.

I

Clean Late Model Caro Or
Trucka, 1117 Modola Or Newer.
Smith Bulc:i&lt; Ponllal:. 1100 Eaat·

""lwlr1UI.

•

,..., ,

OVfJ

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X!; ••

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1

.'BIG ·NATE
OtVW, l:"LL
llE loll LLIM
CLARK\

Top Pri- Plld: Old U.S. COina.
Silver, Gold, Diamonda, All Old
Colloctlbloa, Paperweightl, Etc.
M. T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

~NI&gt;

WHAT"!&gt; LE'NI!&gt;"!o

"I'l-L
BE...

FIRST N"ME?

· SCIIAM liT$ AHSWal

UH ....

J

- . ~' 814-446-21142.

The Tmsure

Sovlnp You'N Find In lite
Closll(ltd Sectloll.

Uatcl tumhur•· antiquts, one

PI- or complata eatatu. Ooby
Mar*!. 81o4-11112-7441.

wanted To Bu~: Junk Auroo With
Or Wh~out Motora. Coli Larry

I TUESDAY

LIN!i'-811- \""'
Wanlld To Buy: Utile Tlkll TOWL

.....~7.

1 ~,,, 1 ,,, r.H t&lt; r
',. I! ViCI •;

ASTRO·ORAPB
' .

0

Board Of Col!lmlaaiontra
-Tho Rtght To Rojoct A~

Ni&lt;;l ,_,. In I!Kine, targa

lltlllfl·

And · -

· Ina will houn omalt bualneaa.

I El•ecl,ical,

BERNICE,
·BEDEOSOL

171111.

alao a onti car '•r•a•. fenced
~ard. oaklng 14 .000 514-D4D2104.
1 bedroam a~rtinent In Mk:kftl·
port. available Dacombor 1, all
utllltlea paid. t250 ~r month.
dlpooll.
&amp;pr:n 114182-7101.

••oo

eom .,

..•
•

-.a...-...,

puodictlons lor lhe year ahead by INIIIIng C:ome to you lor
today. Ailhough
$2 and SASE to Astro·Graph. c/o th.is you mighl be templed to telllhis person
ne...,aper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray: Hil what ha or she wants to hear, bending
~. New Yortc, NY 10158. Make sore the trulh woo'l be constructive.
to.yclur ZOIIac llgn.
VIRGO CAIIII· b-Sepl. 2211ndustrious11'11CD (HII. 10 March 10) A lll!UIIIion ness and determinalion. nol luck, will
IIIII til. gortlt '*""~lilllalely can be recti- enable you 1o accomplill1 your objeclives
fled N handled property. Yoo can prortt today. Slane! on your two, feet in8lead ol
lnlliltd o1 coming oUt on the lhort end.
depending on al'llbbit"a foot,
,.,.as.(lllltrCI 21-Aprll 11) Your judg- LIBRA (lapt. 23-0c1. 23) Today you
man1 rwgardlng lmportanl matters ll)lghl might have lo make a decision lhat wiU
be blUer than an aaaoclale's today. allact Olhars as wall as yoursaH. Do not
Lllten 1o his or her comments, but matce be impulsive. Malee sure Ia careiully anallle final decision you,eef.
lyZe 111e SiluatiOn .
.
· .TAURUI (April 20oMay 101 H you hope SCORPIO (Oct. 2._Nov. 22) You can
to ~ 111 old diiJI rwpold, you may l1ave ftnd compllleut i1lllpln today 1o finish a
to t1111e . . dll*lr llldo
to IJI¥8 him lask you are unable to do unaided. You
or her a . ~ •••••·
w11 be grallllul to l1ave lhil project out ol

-v
11
201
lt.,_ulve alridell!' your cholen liekl G:FPP'l..!J "":n ~':."':;
111111 be poa&amp;lllle In the year aheaci. 11ion or ''"""" with
you
wednMdlly, Jan. 24, t996

=ARIUS (NOv. ZHiec. 21) Even
m1g111 Ulc' yOu to talce on aome added though you'IIMt in a IOCilble, QI80tlllou8

=

•~ 'I1U'I_IIke Cllle::;.~OJatan- ~lea ~ocMy.

570

llllllcll

lnltnlilenta '

Render your -

- · mood today, you'll aloo appreciate·

flllndl or - •. wllln
your vlall.-blll not !jOUr purw.
·
...,.,..
·
C'IICIJI.,...11-.IU!y II) You wll 1101
A'Dt/ARIUI (.lin. 20.Falll. 11) II fOU ba overwhelmed by your competition
~ ,to ~f,C~!P81oday,.~.aboul wortc tocliW· ·EV81\ IIIOIIfiii.Othera ,may ND tor
- lllij·~- 11: lilt', II ,au~ oiMir, you'*' rialto 1111
end

t~ WOI'II,•doll.!._dlly~bBIIII 'tiiiOut ~no
. ; : : : •·~L"!!'JQiiilllto

-- - •

'

'

.CAI'RICOFUI (Dec. 22.,.,._ ttl Opefallng lndapeotdeollly-d Olhera could fiiO'!'I
,aflventagtoua tor you today. Plrtnet'l
· may be run to havo anound , but they

,._.,.... -.,..,_
U!O Cohllr 23-Aug. 22) A friend might mililtldlllnlc:tyou.

gill.
s.nd tor ,.....
Allro-GIItpl\ .
~-___....._.._ ~
. ---.---~---

• 0

0"01'..,.,

eJIChanglng -aMIIIe kllas wlfueriOue
lhlnkora.

.

-...~ '-

-

,,

'

--

--

-- -

-

~----

-

·

- - ·-

Influx - MOund - Floss - Almost - OLD FOOLS

One old timer to another: "HI'ellytloes aurprise me

how many young fools have lived to become OLD
FOOLS."

JANUARY23I

�.'
•

•

.

..

T!Miday, January 23, 19ie

Pomeroy • Mlddlepo,rt, Ohio

Meigs,
Eastern
squads
triumph

·;study launched ·On simple alternative to hysterectomies·
·-IICH..4J'
D COLEWoiW
' Anaclslll' Po
II

SAM fRANCISCO (AP) - A simple doctor's office puxedlll'e to stop
no 11i'lt _ _ _ . bJeedin&amp; could eliminate up to 20 percent ofbysterec; tomiel performed tid~ year in the Unikd Stiles, rescarc:bcn say.
•
; " We ibiat hylleleCIOmies ue pnuy serious," said Dr. Milton McColl of\
•GyMCIIe ill MAnlo Put. which developed the new uterine balloon thel'llp)'.
: "And we lhillk we should be able to tteat all these women with this less inva• ·ve melbod "
.
Uterine balloon thenpy uaea a C8lbetcr llld bllloon to beat the 'inside of .
·the .,.._ and dellroy its linin1 to atop excessive IIIDDI\nlll bleedins. the
:·of20pm:eat to 30 pereentofthe naaion's 600,ooo·bysterectomies IRDII- ·
:Illy.
• Doctors estimale that the new procedun: could eliminate as many as.
·120,000 hyaoerectomies each year.
..
: Teats on the procedun: involvins2SO women in 13 U.S. hospitals besan
;Monday. The results are to be submitted to the Food and' Drug Administra·

"!'

Ohio Lottery

tion withilll8 monthJ. The technique is already approved ill some Europelll IIICCOIIIplnied by the risk of complicldons. includiq infectionallld clanaap
countries. .
·
Ito the bladder and bowel.
As with hysterectomies llld any procedure in which the uterine lining is . The bllloon technique costs an amage of $7,000 to $10,000, or leu than
removed or des&amp;royed, uterine balloon therapy results in aterility.
:balf1he cost of a hysterectomy and the follow-up cue, said Dr. Roben LonThe other altcmalive to b)'llmCtOIIIy, called endometrial ablation, reqillres . don of Kai!CI' Permanente, the nation's largest health maintenance orpni;
, ~ specia1 scope inaerted into the ulenls. Operated throuah a TV monitor, it zatioo.
. ·
,
·
lmvolves electrical cauterization of the uterus.
·
The annual costs of hYsterectomies prompted by excessive menstnial
! • But few gynecologists have the expertise to perform endometrial abla· :bleeding are estimakd at $750 million io $1.8 billion, London said.
I~~· said Dr. David Grainger, director of the Center for Reproductive MedMore than 300 women in other coontries have already underJonc the bal·
!tctne at University of Kansas in Wichita, which will be conducting one of· ·loon procedure. with good resul15, Gninpr said.
·the U.S. trials.
·.
Test results so far show 25 percent to 30 percent of women stop menscruai
The balloon technique is far simpler.
·bleeding altogether, and SO pen:ent more have reduced flow, Grainger said;
"This levels the playing field technically," Grainger said. "It can be done
Dr. G. William Bates, a reprodltc.tive endocrinologist at Greenville, S.c.;
in the office, with local anesthetic,lllld takes 8 1/2 minutes." The patient can ·~ Hospital System, who ·sits on the health care commission of the American
leave the office .within an hour and l'e back to work the following day.
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, called the therapy promising.
Hysterectonues, by contrast, usually require genCI'IIl anesthesia. several
" I think it's a logical ~h to this problem and for a limited poup
days of hospitalization and four to sili weeks ' recuperation. They are also ·of women ... offers a gOQd a1ternative to h)'ste~,'' he said.

Pick 3:
310
Pick 4:
4907
Buckeye 5:

Sports, Page 4

4-5-9-27-33

•

Vol 4e, NO. 117 .

j It

wobbles; It wiggles; It jiggles;
:but where does it come from·?
By ROBIN ESTRIN
ing to "sneak into the plant" behind
.Asioclat.d Prus Wr118r
one of the many trucks that pass
WOBURN, Mus. (AP) - A few through the factory's gates.,
'years ago, a lobbyist offered to help
The reporter had heeded an 8-foot
stare Rep . .Carol Donovan visit the fence, signs reading "STOP" and
,big. four-smokeslaeked factory off " no llespUsing" and a security guard
Route 93, a - few miles nonh of who said to turil around.
BostQn.
Obviously, this factory, with its
Wben Donovan appeared as trim landscapina. American flag
scheduled, she was told she would blowing in the br'eeze and sp1lwling
·not be given a loUr. 'All she saw was bridk building, is not easily penetra·
ble.l
·
'the inside of a conference room.
" If there's nothing going on, why
Animal rendering is at the heart of
are they 10 protective and why are the Jell-0 manufacturing process.
'they kecpins everyone out. and why And for years now, some residents of
:are they so s\llpicious?' she asked. "It the stable, working- and middle·
makes me suspicious of what's going class communities near the plant
'o n."
·
have been complaining that Atlantic
What is going on is not nuclear Gelatin stinks up the neighborhoods.
. fission or top-secret weaponry.
I
Gelatin is made from the hide
• trimmings of cows and pigs, not from
What's going on is Jcll-0.
For the past 75 years, at the their horns, hooves or meat. .
Pint, the skins are washed and
Atlantic Gelatin plant in Woburn,
workers have been malting the stuff bathed in hot wlllel' to remove the col!hal wobbles, wiggles and jiggles, the lagen. Once extracted, the collagen is
Jtuff of America's Jell-0 molds and soaked, filtered and purified, con·
Jell-0 shots.
verting the collagen to gelatin, said
• Here, in a plant that often emits Kraft spokeswoman Cathy Pemu.
pdors they make Jell-0 . Just don't
The gelatin extract is then evapoask to see how.
rated and dried, and sent along with
• State Rep. Paul Casey, a Democ· flavored powders to Dover, Del., and
rat wl!O represents the neiJhborinJ San Leandro, Calif. for packaging.
Oils ihat are left in the hot water
towns of Winchester and Stoneham,
,..,as invited several years qo into a baths are sold for pharmaceutical and
conference room to speak with fac· industrial use. Any remaining solids
tory officials.
are removed and sold as compost.
. "It was like entering a concentra· As the hides are washed in large
7()..foot vats, bits of fat, hair and skin
tion catnp,'' said Casey.
. · Repeated requests for a plant tour come off into the water, said Mary
by The Associated Press were Persky, an environmental analyst
refused.
with the state Department of Envi·
"We generally don't give tours of ronmehtal Protection and one of the
the plant to anybody because what few outsiders
bas seen the inside
goes on in OIM' plants we consider of the plant.
"The water's dirty and smells like
proprietary,'' said Nancy Daigler,,
·• dead animals," she said.
spokqwoman for Kraft Foods.
· "We are a food company andl
The plant does not emit odors all
keeping things very sanitary are oil the time, she said, and wlien it does,
utmost importance to lis," she
I the smell is more likely to be of the
: Daigler later accused a repotter fruity variety.
who tried to visit the factory of try·
Sometimes, she said, especially

who

said."

AMY NORTHUP

Amy Northup, varsity cheerleader
at Southern High School, was selected as an All-American Cheerleader at
Kenyon College during chccrleading
camp.
As an All-American, she will
at!end the National Invitational to be
held in conjunction with the NFL
Pro-Bowl in Honolulu; Hawaii She
will leave for Honolulu Jan. 27 and
return Feb. S.
While there she will be taking
part in many of the NFL festivities
incloding performing at the national·
ly televised Pro-Bowl game.
. Among the places of interest she
will be visiting during her stay there

f!ne:

.'

·Eastern, Southern residents
weigh cost of new buildings ·

when the weather is warm, the water
in the vats goes septic, sending a rot·
p""'t poups nhln1 to .-nee
ting smell through the surrounding
meetlq IIDCl special eve~~ts. The
hills.
calladaril not deo!ped to pi'OIIIOfe
Just ask Carolyn 1borne, who
.. .es Or fund nllen of any type;
lives about a mile .from the factory,
.loems are prlated as .,ace~
downwind. Thome, 53, grew up on
IIDCl caaaot be auaranteed to nm a
Jell-0. She doesn't eat it anymore.
llpCdllc: number ol days.
For t~ last decade, Thome has
complained too often to count about
nJESDAY
the odors.
HARRISONVILLE
Har•
She objects to the sw~t smells,
, rison ville Senior Citizens Club, Tuesbut the stink of rendering is worse:
day, 10 to II :30 a.m. followed by
"It's like if you leave a piece of fat
dinner. Blood pressure clif!iC itiCludout in the sun too long."
ed.
Then there's a thitd smell - a
depdorant. "But it's as disgusting as
RACINE •• RACO meeting, 6:30
the fat smell," she said.·
·
Tuesday, Racine Star Mill Park:
After years of complaints, the
DEP issued a I
order of compli·
WEDNESDAY
ance that fon:ed Atlantic Gelatin to
RUTLAND •• Leading Creek
change some of its operating proccConservancy District board meeting,
5 p.m Wednesday.
dun:s.
· Kraft's spokeswoman, Pemu, said
RACINE · • Southern Local
the plant, which employs about 270
Building Comminee meeting 5:30
people, spent in the "multi mil·
· p.m. in the hiJh school cafeteria. AU
lions" to address the problems.
district residents wekome to attend.
"We're doing everything we can to
.·
make sure we're a good neighbor,''
POMEROY ·• The Wildwoocl
she said.
Ganlen'Club, I p.m Wednesday at the
Things improved for a while,
home of Doris Grueser. •
Thome said, but the smells returned, ·
"If you have a month•or so of
THURSDAY
odor-free air, you get that false sense
Eastern Local School District levy
of security. And then one night,
committee
7 p.m. Thursday at East·
you'll smell it and you'll say 'oh my
em High School. Public invited:
God it's back,"' she said.
Child care to be provided. School
Persky admitted that the odors still
representatiyes will be on hand to
are problematic. She agreed that
·
~
answer questions.
Atlantic Gelatin has worked batd to .
comply with regulations.
"Nothing is ever going to be per·
feet," she said.
And not everyone is disgruntled.
Don Sweeney, who has lived in
In an effort to provide our reader·
ship with current news, the GallipD:
Woburn for about half his 82 years,
lives just a short walk from the plant.
lis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sen:
He said he ~kes the fruity smells that
MYSTERY JELLO • StNm rl- from the Atlantic Gelltlrj 'plant tinel will not accept. weddings after
reach his home.
60 days from the date of the event.
In Woburn, Mess. Dac. 29, 1HS. Tbt familiar building, nlckMmacl
"I think it's like having a deodor·
All club meetings and other news
the "fol ball." Is con•..,_ to ba onit of tha .,.., more Mc:m
izer for the whole neighborhood," he
~cles
in the society section must be
and ncure JJiacM. Tlltl ncret Is the recipe lor the planfe prodsaid.
submitted within 30 days of occut;
uct, Jall-0. (AP Photo)
·
,,
;·
renee. All birthdays must be submit·
ted within 42 days of the occurrence.
,.. ......,..,. 111...
1111, ••" .
All material submitted for publi·
cation
is subject to editing.
·
2 2156

By JIM FREEMAN
end TOM HUNTER
Sentinel news staff
"Yes, this new building idea
is great, but what will it cost me?"
With both Eastern and Southern
local sehool districts placing bond
issues on the Man:h 19 primary ballot, "What will it cost?" is a common
question in parts of the county served
by those districts.
.
.

FLOOD'S HARvEST - Old tires, rubl:!lah, dtlftwood and tons
and toni of muck wera the and product of lha Ohio Rlvar flood
th8t atruck Malg• County over the ~d. Hare, a aign from
an unknown~ proclaiming "Kitchen••. 24 HRS... South"
adams the P
pmtdnglot along with topplad parking meter
polft and Olhar
ltua.
.
.

no, not again/
.
~Flooding- rrefurns~:te·ceunty~
Oh

. for ·tbird time within a week

·News policy

Stntl•l CJassiWs ,

"

"

'

·'

By staff, wire reports
For the third time in fess than a
week, flooding retllfl)ed to Meigs
County overniJht in the fonn of 1.5
inches of rain that fQn:ed already
swollen waterways over their banks.
· Volunteer firefighters evacuated
seven people from homes in Burlingham tll)d in the Laurel Cliff area near
Pomeroy, said Meigs County Emer·
gency Services Director Roben Byer.
Those evacuated went to stay with
friends or relatives, althouJh several
chun:hes in the•area offered temporary shelter, he added.
Among the roads and areas flood·
ed were: U.S. 33 at Burlingham; state
Route 124 at Minersville; County
Road 10 at Dexter; Laurel Cliff
Road; Naylor's Run near Laurel Cliff
Road; Children's Home Road near

.

ue the Arizona Memorial at Pearl
Harbor and the University of Hawaii.
The ~outhem High School junior,
dauJhter of John and Vicki Northup
of Racine, is president of her class
and active in many clubs. She is a
member of the Racine Pint Baptist
Church, and is the granddaughter of
Mrs. Rachel Bissell of Mason, W. Va.
and Mrs. Ruth Northup of Gallipolis
,Ferry, W.Va. and is the great-granddaughter Mrs. Ada Bissell of Long
Bottom.
.
1
Several local organizations and
businesses have assisted her in raising money to make the trip.

•

'

Feeling Sn9wed Under?
9.99%

.....
.. ~-------Society scrapbook· -----OUR LOAN SPECIAL CONTINUES

ri~
Me..... FDIC

• Muon 773-5514 ~New Hawn. 882-2135 • Polnt'Piannt 615-1121
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Hotline 675-ASAP
. Bank Loan
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- Pomeroy ; state Route 143 near
Pomeroy ; state Route. 124 at
Langsville; state Route 7 at Forest
Run; state Route 124 near Rutland;
Kingsbury Road; Happy Hollow
Road; Hysell Run Road; state Route
143 at Dead Man's Curve; Rocksprings Road; County Road 10 at
Jack's Road; Lee Road off state
Route 143; state Route 681 nearDarwin; Bradbury Road.
Aooding was also reported in
areas along Shade River in eastern
Meigs County.
The current round of flooding
resulted in the closing of Meigs
· Local School. Southern and Eastern
schools remained open. Red Cross
representatives are in the county to
offer assistance where needed.
Continued on page 3

Judith Williams eyes.GOP
seat on county commission

·&lt;

Lula Hampton, national securit)
American Legion national conven·
tion held in Minneapolis, Minn. in chairman, spoke on that program not·
ing that a country's natioruil security
1994.
One penained to the Legion's depends on the·strength of the values
stand aaainst puttina U. S. military of its citizens and can be achieved
forces under foreign conunand during only by concerned citizens working
peace keepint operations. Another together. The 1996 committee will
called for a strons .policy to be place emphasis on crime prevention,
adopted by the U.S. government to disaster preparedness, emergency
insure that every serviceman or planning, USO, savings bonds, and
woman captured by hostile forces POW/MIA awareness.
A prayer for peace and singing of
would know that everything be done
Ame.rica,
closed the meeting.
to iDiure ~ relief.

I

'

In the Southern Local School District, proponents are drumming up
support for .a 6.1-mill bond issue for
construction of a new, district-wide
K-8 elementary school which will be
located adjacent to the existing high
school.
In that district, property taxes will
go up $21.35 with each S 10,000 in
appraised property value. For
instance, a taxpayer with a $45,000

home will pay an additional $96.08 a
year. or 26 cents a day, while the own·
er ~fa $100,000 home will pay an
addmonal $213.50 a year m property taxes, or the equivalent of 58 cents
a day.
"That's less than the price of a can
of pop a day," said· Southern Local
Building Committee chainnan Dave
Spencer.
If approved by voters, the 6.1 mill,

. 23-year bond iss ue will raise
$4,180,000 which will be coupled
with $3, 190,800 in funds, or 40 percent, already commiued by the state.
The $7,370.800 raised will go
towards construction of Southern
Local Elementary School and for
additions to Southern Loc al Higl&gt;
School.
"I'm certainly lor cuttmg out the ·
Continued on page 3

President .Clinton's address draws ·GOP jeers

m

rt. ,..•• ••

35 cents
AGannett Co. N-paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 24, 1996

The Community Cllleadar 1i
publlsltecl as a free servke to~

Lewis ManleY. Auxiliary adopts resolutions
• Lewis Manley AuXiliary Unit263,
American Legion, met recently at
Dale's Restaurant. Gallipolis.
· · Ada.franklin was hostess for the
~qg conducted by Lorene Gog·
pns; Flolence Richards, serving as .
~Kietary in the absence of Dorothy
Caey, reporkd from the American
LeJiOI! Pirll!g Line. Mrs. Richards
..... that tbtl family support network
WiD .,sLve assistance to families of
~ sent to Bosnia. She mentioned
·.f.CiOlutiona adopted by the

2 Saollona, 12 P-e-

Community
calendar

Northup named All-American
Cheerleader at camp

Lows In teen a ton ight.
Flurrlaa. Thurs da y, partly
sunny. Highs In 30s.

Judith A. Williams of Syracuse is
seeking the Republican nomination
for the Jan. 4 tenn of Meigs County
Commissioner.
She is one of six Republican can·
didatcs seeking the nomination in the
Man:h 19 primary to run qainst the
Democrat nominee in the fall for the
seat now held by Janet L. Howard.
Democrat.
Williams has a bachelor's degree
in business management and has
worked in the insurance industry for
the past IS years, including the past
three years as co-owner of Williams
&amp; Associates Insurance in Pomeroy.
She is a member of the National
Life Underwriter's Association, Ohio
Life Underwriters Association in
Athens, I11dependent Agents Association, and bas attained Life Under·
writers Training Council Fellowship
designation. She was named to the
National Director of Who's Who in
Business and Professionals for 1995·

96.

She serves on the Chamber of.
Commerce Board of Directors and is
the tourism committee chainnan. She
has been a·rnember of the Xi G.amma
Epsilon for I0 years, Racine Ordcir of
Eastern Star member and officer,
serving on the Meigs County Extcn·
sion Advisory Committee for 1996,
gd W@S t!ae chainnan of the Stemwheel Festival pande 11nd queen
event&amp; for 1995, and is a charter
member and officer of the Big Bend
Youth Football J...eaaue.
She is mamed to. John T "Jack"
WilliiD\5 and the couple have·three
· clllldren, Jane Ami, who works . at

Ohio State, Tucker who attends the
University of Rio Grande, and Ryan
who goes to Marietta College.
Williams said that if she is elected commissioner, she will work to
"strengthen the effons of bringing
jobs/industry to Meigs County and to
compkte the connecting road to
Ravelllwood. "
"I would like to sec a partnership .
of education and business in the county through a high school chamber of
commerce working with the Meigs
County Chamber. We need to find
ways to retain our youth in Meigs
Couniy. With the effons of getting big
business interested in·our county. we
need to realize that even one job at a
time is important."

By DAVID ESPO
Democrats as she walked down the
Alsocltded Press Writer
center aisle to her seat, keeping her
WASHINGTON - Portending a back turned to Republicans, some of
campaign.season struggle for the whom have demanded her dismissal.
political center, Republicans are
-Clinton sparked a laugh from
scoffing at President Clintor.'s Rep. Newt Gingrich, his political
embrace of "an era of balanced bud· nemesis, when he handed the House
gets and smaller government" as speaker a copy of his speech text
empty rhetoric from a liberal politi· along with a handwritten note.
cian.
'
"Thank you and good night," it read
"President Clinton may well be - precisely the words Gingrich had
the rear guard of the welfare state," said in advance he wanted to hear.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole
Clinton's speech was salted with
said in a brottdcast rebuttal to Clin- conciliatory references to majority
ton's State of the Union address Republicans. and included a salute to
Tuesday night.
Dole's service in World Warn a halfDole, the front-runner for the GOP century qo.
nomination to ~pose Clinton next . But he challenged the GOPdirect;. fijl}~jnot~~
·. too cast sev~J~ I,W!&gt; pressing ..issues·. !'Never vetoes fMt year On · P legislation. eVer shut down the government
"He is the chief obstacle to a bal- again," he said in a reference to the
anced budget, and the balanced bud- two partial federal closun:s since
get amendment" to the Constitution, November. "And pass a straightforthe Kansas Republican said.
ward extension of the debt limit."
For his part, Clinton's speech to
Coached ih advance, Democrats
Congress sketched themes likely to cheered those words, while most
Republicans sat in silence.
carry him into the fall.
"The era of big government is
Dole didn 't address these issues.
over," the president said during an
Instead, he said Republicans
hour-long speech in which he sum- would challenge Clinton in this year
moned skeptical Republican law- to "walk the talk he talks so well ."
makers to work with him to nail down
Pat Buchanan, who 's also conan elusi've balanced-budget deal and tending for the GOP presidential
bipartisan welfare overhaul.
nomination. took a shot at Dole's
"But we cannot go back to the remarks.
time when our citizens were left to
"The president spoke with passion
fend for themselves," the president and eloquence tonight and be is try·
added in remarks before a packed ing to seize the Republicans' censerHouse chamber and a television audi- vative vision," Buchanan said from
ence counted in the millions.
the Iowa campaig~ trail. "I think our
Rhetoric aside. Clinton's speech party came off second besi tonight. "
provided moments of theater only
Other post-speech reaction fell
possible when the nation's political along predictably partisan lines.
elite gather:
" We heard a good speech
- Democrats cheered enthusiasti· tonight," said Rep. Jerry Solomon. Really when first lady Hillary Rodham N.Y. "We always do from this presiClinton was introduced in the House dent. He's the 'say anything, ·do
· ~hamber ; Republicans only grudg- nothing' president. ... President Clinmgly.
·
ton bas mastered, bener than anyone
, - Energy ·Secretary
Hazel [ know, the political art of talking
0 Leary · shook hands only with conservative and governing liberal."

President's State of the
Union address at a glance
By The Associated Press

·

President Clinton's list of seven challenges to the American people, issued in hi s State of the Union address. A few of the initiatives
are new but most repeat past Clinton policies.
FAMILIES: Fonnation of the National Campaign to Reduce TeenAge Pregnancy; continue push to restrict tobacco use among youths;
support a voluntary rating system in the television industry.
t:DUCATION: Award $1 ,000 scholarships to the top 5 percent of
high school graduates; dramatically expand the college work-study
program; tell parents to take more responsibility for their child's education; renew year-old proposal for college tuition tax credit.
ECONOMY: Pass a G.I. Bill for America's workers to offer on·
the-job or fonnal training; increase the minimum wage; protect health
ins'lrlnce coverage for workers with· pre•eKisting conditions who
charige jobs; crack down on health care fraud and abuse.
CRIME: Combat street gangs involved in drugs and violence with
a comprehensive anti -gang strategy; remove drug dealers and criminals from public housing with a "one strike and you're out" policy;
challenge states to ensure that convicts serve at least 85 percent of
their sentences by 2000; nominate Anny Gen. Barry R. McCaffrey
as the nation's new drug czar.
ENVIRONMENT: Cut red tape and regulations for businesses that
meet high environmental standards; asked Congress to abandon efforts
to cut environmental enforcement; speed the cleanup of abandoned
industrial sites.
FOREIGN POLICY: America should neither return to isolati onism nor attempt to become the world 's policeman but should play an
active part as "America the peacemaker." The START II treaty to cut
U.S. and Russian nuclear stockpiles by another 25 percent should be
promptly ratified; challenged the Geneva Conference on Disarmament
to complete work on a comprehensive test ban treaty; urged the Senate to ratify the treaty outlawing poison gas; repeated his call for Congress to pass legislation to deal with international and domestic tcrronsm.

GOVERNMENT : Called on Congress to send him the line-item
veto bill and to pass campaign fmance refonn legislati on that would
limit contributions by political action committees to $1 ,000 and require
broadcasters to offer di scounts on air time for candi dates who ab1de
by voluntary spending limits.
Democrats applauded Clinton's
remarks - not always the case for a
man elected in 1992 as a " new style
Democrat."
"It was solid. It took the high
ground," said Sen. Carol Moseley-

Braun. a liberal lawmaker from Illinois.
"I thought he was at his best. It
was a big, broad, inspiring speech,"
said Sen. Joseph Liebennan. DConn.

More than 100 people attend DEP hearing
to comment on proposed pulp mill air permit
By MINDY KEARNS,
OVP Ne- Staff
More than 200 comments have

tJ&lt;:e~ .received ~y the West Virgi?ia

Dtvtslon ofEnvu"Onmental Protectton
concerning the air pennit for the
Apple Grove. Pulp and Paper Com·
pany, accordmg to a DEP official,
many during an 8-hour taped comment session held Mondsy at Hannan
High School.
Jeanne Chandler of the DEP said
I II people signed in at the session,
with 59 letters being presented and 81
people making oral comments. She
added some people did both.
The air permit is the last penni!
needed by Parsons &amp; Whittemore.
parent company of Apple Grove Pulp
and Paper, before ·construction Cl!'
begin.
"The biggest influx catne between
12:30 and I p.m.," Chandler, one of
several DEP officials attending the
session, said. "There were 54 people
malting comments before we had a
chance to break, and after that there
was a constant flow." Others attend·
ing from the DEP included Brian
Farkas, public information officer,
and permit engineers' Renit
Chakrabarty and Beverly McKeone.
Chandler said she felt it was a
good opponunity for people to make

comments, even. though the DEP had including a labor group from Ken·
hccn criticized for the fonnat. Some tucky, along with Ceredo Kenova and
environmentalists said there was no St. Albans.
time when citizens came together to
"The key to the whole thing is we
hear other opinions during the eight· have regulations in West Virginia and
hour session. Some said the process laws. If a company goes by that then
was very "controlling" by the DEP. we expect they are going to be gramChandler said it gave the opponu- ed a pennit," Musgrave said.
nity for those to speak who would
Musgrave said the mill would
nonnally be intimidated by the large provide $200 million in salaries and
audience. She also said this session consumables, plus a spin off of three
followed an .earlier public meeting times that amount. 'That could he
when DEP officials explained the $600 million a year coming into the
penni! and its process and allowed county," Musgrave added. "1 think we
public comment from those attending. can have it all: good environment.
Chandler said there weren't many good safety and good jobs."
calls to the PEP office last night from
John Watterson, an Apple Grove
people who &lt;aid they could not attend resident, also attended the session, but
due to the high water in both Cabell to comment against the mill.
•and Mason counties. The DEP wili
Watterson said he is not against the
take such calls into consideration pulp mill, as such, but wants the !)est
when detennining if another public technology used in building the plant
comment session should be held pri- to make it dioxin free. He also resents
or to the comment deadline.
1 that the company will not commit to
· John Musgrave, director of the hiring union or even county employMason County Economic Develop- ces.
ment Authority, was one of those . "We do need jobs in Mason Coonmaking comment in support of the ty," Wanerson said. "We hive a lot of
mill.
good people wbo need jobs, but Par·
"I thought it went very well, we sons and Whittemore have not given
had a great contin sent down there," !IS any indication that they ue going
Musgrave said. He noted dtat many of"· to hire union wotbrs, or even local
those commcntiog. qainst the mill ·. people."
weRl from out of Mason County,

;.
"•.~------------------~----~-r------------------~--~--~

' .

,.

_,..

"They have the technology to
build the plant di oxin free. I don't feel
they care about the people in Mason
County," he added. "I think they want
to rape our forests and use our people. I'm very concerned."
·
Watterson said if the mill is built
he will be able to see the smokestacks
from hi s house. "It will fall right on .
me," he stated.
Waner.;on said he felt those attending the ·session were pretty evenly
matched for and against. "I saw more
people in Point Pi~ant pushing this
than anyone anywhere else," he said.
"A lot of businessmen. politicians and ·
people in the 50 · to 70 year age
group."
.
Point Pleasant resident Butch
Greenlee was another wlio spoke oui
during the session for the plant. H~
said .it's time to get Mason CountY.
movmg.
"We have a chance for Masori
County to get some pride back,~
Greenlee said. "I'm also thinkin11
about the children."
•
Written ·coirunent can stiil be made
on the air pennit by mailing it to the
attention of 0 . Dale F•ley, cbier'
Office of Air Qualj ty; I 5.58 Waabina'
ton St. East, Charleston, W.Va •
25311•2.599. The deadline is 4:3('"
Jl;m. on Feb. 6.
.
:
r

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