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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
• Or Clll Mwl On 11le Peopia
Hotline 675-ASAP
. Bank Loan
.

.. . . !"
,_,..,.,,.....,*'
.tJIIIJII.-IIIIIj«fl.,lr_,..r.Jt,""-'
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rewA, .:1; a 1lcl
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,, otiv•llw_,.,.._._,..•.t#JI.II.
.....,.......

. _ ,. . Ill

..

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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

�'· Commentary

\
f

.

••

. Wednaaday, January 24, 1111

. PllgtA2

Weclnudlly, Janu.y 24, 18118 ·

OHIO WeClthcr
AccuW~ focecut

· The Daily Sentinel Head of Russian intelligence·. has KGB past:
on TeleVision and Radio, then u the ~ty editor , sive presenll from the KGB budget."
~
o( Pravda, a Communist mouthpiece.
As a prominent academic, Primakov became .
Several soun:ea say that it was durin1the Prav- fast friends with then-Soviet Pmident Mikhail'
da period that Primakov was recruited by the Gorbachcv, who dispatched him on sever&amp;C
KGB. But they disagJee aboUt whether be was a important missions. The most prominent was an ·
part-time contact, or a full-time career officer for unsuccessful attempt to persuade Iraqi despot .
the intelligence agency.
' Saddam Hussein to pull his troops out o( Kuwait•
Primakov told one confidant that he was never
When the Soviet Union disbanded ih 199,\~ '
on the staff of the KGB, and didn't have any mil- Gorbachev picked Prjmakov to hell!ililtilo:.:&gt;"l"i
itary rank. "They suggested they would give me Central Intelligence Service · w~ii''tlii! ''KGH was
one," he said, "but I refused." To another source splintered. The new agency .. and .Gomachev --.
he revealed he had worked for the KGB since lasted just two months before Yeltsin t&lt;l!'k power;;
1959 and. was known by the code name
Yeltsin re-formed the service into the SVR and•
'!Muim," the shon form of his middle name.
'ic.ept Primakov on as boss. One of the key reasons~
After his Pravda stint, Primakov entered acad- 'say insiden, is because Yeltsin didn't want t~
emia as the director of the Institute of Orienlal anger the old-line KOB bureaucrats, who made tl;
Studies and later became the head of the Institute clear that Primakov was one of theit own. lndeed,
of World Economy and International Relations. It · the SVR is linle changed from its days as the FtrSt'
was a job that required lots of travel, especially to Chief Directorate of the KGB.
,
the Middle East. which was his specialty. One · He has become even closer to Yeltsin since the·
source told us his first stop on each trip was a visit showdown last fall with Conservative parliamen"
with the local KGB contact.
·
tarians. Primakov's friends say he is a clever
"They would receive a cable in advance, and J!olitician, who is convincing in his loyalty. And:
were told they were responsible for his security in be's eager to keep the power that has been grow-·
these countries, and to ,keep him happy," the ing for him daily.
'
'·
source said. "When he was there, he always
· Jack Anderlon and MlchMI Blnnlln . . ~
asked the KGB personnel to buy him very ell,l)en- for Unllld Featuno SyndiC81W, Inc.

By,lecltAncw.on
8lld lllchllll Blllltlln

WASHINGTON - With good reuon, the
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
selection of vetcrin spy cbief Yevgeny Primakov
814-112-2158 • Fu: 992·2157
as.the new Russian. foreign minister has caused
.great concern at the State Department and in U.S.
intelligence cirdes.
Primakov is best known for trying to oust his
predecessor, Andrei Kozyrev, for the last five
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
years because he thought Kozyrev was too proWestern. American observen were nonetheless
ROBERT L WINGETT
surprised when he finally succeeded.
Publleher
"It came as something of a shock to us," one
veteran Russia analyst at the Central Intelligence
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
Agency told us. However, he added, " there were
General Manager
Controller
several CIA reports that predicted Primakov
would be the successor •• ·and expressing less
alarm than some of us feel."
Over the last few years, our associate Dale Van
Atta has spoken to more than a dozen Russian
sources •• including several former KGB officials
-, -- about Primakov' s chec.kered past. Not the least
L.--------------..;..------~--------------------....1 of his blemishes 'is having been an agent for the
old KGB. He's also proud of a close friendship
with Iraqi despot Saddam Hussein, and of being
the only former Gorbachev crony in the Yeltsin
government.
Nonetheless, Primakov
has carefully cultivated the
image of a reformer in Boris
Yeltsin's cabinet. As his lat• 8y WALTER R. MEARS
est promotion attesis, he's ·
AP Special Correspondent
, WASHINGTON - On the grandest of political stages, in a theater no been quite successful.
'To keep his job as head of
· pretender can match, the campaigning president of the United States stands
unrivaled for a night. It's opening night, in a way.
the new intelligence service,
But the drama, and even many of the issues of President Clinton's State the SVR, Primakov has
j$ Hoi'
of the Union message will be footnotes, if that, long before the finale next deliberately suppressed perac~K.
fall.
sonal information that might
In theory, that presidential address to Congress, the Cabinet, diplomats be seen ·as damaging. He
and the nation is an election-year keynote marking the real start of a quest doesn't lalk publicly about
for a second term. It is mandated by the Constitution, prefaced by pageantry, his KGB career, and has
the presidential pulpit on display.
publicly denied it in several
· But in practice, the political impact seldom has been lasting.
Russian press reports. Yet all
lbere are durable issues - norably, the confrontation over the role and the evidence we've found
priorities of govemmel)t that is behind the struggle between the White suggests the new Russian
House and the Republican Congress in their impasse over the budget and foreign minister has a lot to
.getting it balanced by 2002.
.
.
explain about his ties to the
· . Clinton 'Slhetorical aim is to move beyond that with brief mention, not to old, discredited Soviet
·tet into a green eye shade argument over the budget or tax reform, and then power structure.
~o deal with his themes for the term that would end at the tum of the centu·
Born in Kiev, Ukraine,
and reared in Tbilisi, Geor:? · The White House is calling it "The Age of Possibility," the son of slogan gia, Primakov graduated
:Giat recalls Ronald Reagan's "Morning in America" theme of American from the Moscow Institute
:(evival and values a dozen years ago.
of Orienlal Studies in 1953
; • Best to borrow what works. lbemes Clinton has tried in his previous and did post-graduate work
·~tate of the Union reports haven't succeeded- such as his brandished pen until 1958. He then became
'and threat to veto anything shon of universal health insurance coverage in a journalist. first as 'an editor
·1994, a hollow threat since no bill passed Congress.
for the Moscow Committee
: ; And that was when Democrats held the majority. With a Republican Con:iress, a litany of proposals ~or legislation in 1996 would be pointless, a yard·
stick for what the admimstration can't get done. Bestdes, m a budget
squeeze and with the president committed to a seven-year balancing act,
there's no money to be spent on new or expanded govemmel)t programs
By Joaeph Pet1dna
Republican presidential hopefuls Nix.on has made mistakes on his tax taxes with Social Security taxes,
anyhow.
But a limited Democratic agenda can be used to draw campaign lines on
I'm heginniog to have roy doubts • sounding off lik~IJ,)al~tE·day . Marx· return, and each ~- been mQuil'ed to most lower-inaome worke&amp;S en&lt;Wtpissues like Medicare, education aid, his venion of a crime bill, his terms for about the GOP. I thought it was the . ists.
pay the Internal Revenue Service paying more than 20 percent to
welfare reform to replace the GOP bill he vetoed, his 'version of a middle·· party of ideas; that the only reason it
1be GOP need not have endorsed back t,aJtes. ty~d fines. ,
•. .
Uncle Sam.
·class rax cut.
•
has failed to conven such Republi- Forbes' "pure" flat tax of 17 petcent
A flat-tax system would •.be so
Buchanan suggesis that the nat
It also is an occasion to advertise assets. Clinton's spokesman said he will can ideas as the balanced budget and on income (excluding capital gains). breathtakingly simple that even
tax
would be a sop to the rich if cap·
recount economic progress of his fiFSt three years; now or later he also will congressional term limits into public But they also shouldn't have under- those of us lacking accounting
ilal-gains
taxes are dropped. But 40
hav,e to confront -the econ()rnic anxietie~ of the middle class over stagnant policy is because of Democrat mined the very idea of a flat tax by degrees .could figure· it out. Yoli get
percent
of
annual capilal gains are
wage levels, layoffs and job security.
·
obstrUction from either the White savaging the Forbes plan the way rid of the present federal tax code,
realized
by
Americans with incomes
"When he describes the big challenges ... and says here's where we nel'(l House or Congress.
.
they did. Forbes simply was raising with its 4,000 pages and 5.6 million
to go as a country in the 21st Century ... he obviously is using one! of the pri·
Then I tuned in to the recent GOP pUblic consciousness about the need words. You replace it with a flat-tax of less than $50,000 (mainly when
they sell their homes). I'm sure they
mary features of the presidency, which is the bully pulpit, to try to rally a presidential debate in Iowa. For for a simpler, flatter tax code. His code of maybe 25 pages.
don't
consider themselves rich.
country," spokesman Mike McCurry said in a State of the Union preview. much of the 90-minute session, fellow-Republicans have all but shot
That's because under the flat tu,
"And that's certainly what a good candidate does in a campaign. That's what magazine publisher Steve Forbes that idea to hell.
you throw out the five different indiAlexander is the most off·lhC·
a president does as he seeks re-election."
was set upon by his fellow Republi·
Yet, surveys show that both indi- vidual income-tax rate&amp;c and eight wall when he claims that the flat bix
Does or tries.
cans for supporting a federal nat tax. vidual and corporate taxpayers want different corporate rates. You get rid would be disastrous for the countcy.
: George Bush did in 1992, but he oversold his State of the Union blueprint
Phil Gramm said Forbes' flat-tax a flat tax. Indeed, in a USA of all the tax deductions, credits, It hardly would be a disaster if
to the point that it became a liability. "Stay tuned," he \Old New Hampshire plan would be unfair to working Today/CNN/Gallup poll this week, exemptions and exclusions for indi· American taxpayen saved the s:io
voters· as he campaigned there prior to his address, trying to fend off the people. Pm Buchanan said · the 48 percent of respondents said viduals and businesses. You stop billion a year they now spend to
~hallenge of Pat Buchanan, the conservative commentator who is running
Forbes' plan sounded like it was they'd be better off under a nat tax, collecting Social Security raxes, have their tax returns prepared-for
··worked up by the boys at the yacht against only 35 percent who thought capital-gains taxes, fuel takes and them. It hardly would be disastrous .
:41ain this year.
• .
.
:. By the time Bush went before Congress, he d ratsed expecrauons he club." Lamar Alexander said enact- they'd he hurt.
'
excise taxes.
if the federal government cut its laX·clould not match, and he had no real answers to offer. Democrats taunted that ment of Forbes' nat tax "would be a
And in a Coopers &amp; Lybrand surYou settle on a single fiat rate collection costs from $75 billion a
:oe had no program to deal with the economy, and that became one of the disaster for America." And although vey of chief executive officers at the between 17 percent (which Forbes year to $25 billion a year.
·~urdens of his lo~ing campaign.
. . .
front.runner Bob Dole did not slam nation's fastest-growing companies, favors) and 20 percent. Every indi:. In his re-election year, Reagan was upbeat, optlmtstlc, and purposefully Forbes in Iowa, he has taken out TV 63 percent favored a flat tax on all vidual above the wverty line pays . The nat tax is an idea whose time
·ieneral in addressing the State of the Union. He also was far ahead and had ads that describe his plan as "risky." personal wages and benefits.
that rate on their gross income. has come. And any Republican pres'oo challenge in the party and no real threat in the fall.
Americans have become accusThe American public has not Every business pays that, rate on idential hopeful who hasn't tlie
vision to recognize this doesn-' t
'· • When Jimmy Carter bid unsuccessfully for a second term in 1980, his tomed, by how, to hearing class- · united around a particular flat-tax their profits.
deserve
to be the party's standant·~tale of the Union acknowledged that it was no easy time for Americans, not warfare rhetoric coming from liberal plan, whether Forbes' or anyone
It's hard to sec how
kind of
bearcr.
:i-ith 50 diplomats held hostage in Iran, inflation _and ~nergy ~oblems at Democrats, who think the federal . else's. But they know they hate the nat tax could he unfair to working·
Oome. Aod not with Sen. Edward Kennedy contesting his renommatlon.
tax code should be used to redistrib- present tax system. It is so complex class folks, as Gramm s,uggested.
Joseph Perklna Is • columniit
.• Clinton has been spared that. He is the first Democrat since Franklin Roo- ute wealth. But it's shocking to hear that every president since Richard After all, when you combin'e income for The San Diego Union·Trtb~.
ievelt to run without a serious challenge within the party.
: He has said bC is running, but his formal declaration of candidacy can and
till wail· ~cCurry ~aid _the preside_nt may hold off unti_l af!Cr the ~epu~li·
·~ans have waged therr pnmary election tight for the nommauon agamst him.
·
"I will deal with the congressional pensions," tapping retirement pay so that it could not exceed
, "The earli~st that we think that would happen would he about April By LARRY MARGASAK
Aasoclatecl
Preaa
Writer
tel11vision
cornmenta1or Pat Buchanan said Jan. a lawmaker's laSt year of ·salary. Rank-and-file
fool's Day, appropriately," McCurry said.
WASHINGTON· - Dozens of lawmakers arc 13, referring to $4 million lifetime pensions as "a •tawmaken currently earn $133,600 a year.
· . "An elitist approac.h is not defensible," Bryan
EDITOR'S NOTE- Welter A. Meers, vice president end columnhlt for quitting a Congress they see as less hospitable, looting of the American taxpayer."
Magazine publisher Steve Forbes said in a 30. said. "lbe overriding thing is to reform the sysThe Aaeocletecl Prell, hal reponed on Washington end nllllonel poll- but their misery will be tempered by the generous
pot of retirement money they'll take with them.
second television ad, "Million dollar pensions for tern in which a member of Congress and (colitics for more then 30 yeara.
With 34 House members ,(seven arc running Congress paid for by ltlXpayers? Steve Forbes · gressional) employees receive ·a higher pensi&lt;!D
for the Senate) and a record 13
says,
'No,' politicians than others in federal service. In my vic"!, thatfs
senators retiring so far, a small ' :
:
shouldn't receive taxpayer- ·unconscionable.''
group of lawmaken say they 'II
.
..
. .
funded pensions."
"I wasn't really expecting them to do it die
redouble efforts to curb future
The ad accused the ·first year," David Keating, executive vice presjcongressional pensions.
leading GOP contender, Sen- ·~ent of the National Taxpayen Union, said .of the
The National Taxpayers
ate Majority Leader Bob reform effort that began last J:lnuary. ".People still
Union, the conservative watch·
Dole, of voting to increase arc refining what the best proposal would 9e." ;
dog group that has pushed
congressional pensions:
'
Keating said that equalizing congressional an!!
hardest for congressional pen,
Dole voted in 1991 :' other federal pensions, as Bryim wishes to do, still
sion chanses, has been estimat·and 1989 to raise senatOill' .' would be "too generous" to lawmaken.
:
ing the pension of each lawpay, which also incr~ased " He endorsed a proposal that would abolish ~
maker who announces retire·
' their pensions. But he al&amp;Q,I' congressional pension plan, except for the taX·
ment.
voted for the GOP budget •• deferred savings component. 'J1Ie . legislation iS
The NTU calculated, for
· balancing bill last year,: sponsored by Reps. Mark Sanford, R-S.C., Way oil
instance, that Rep. G.V.
.
which included lqueae to Alllrd, R-Colo. and Sen. Bill Frist, R-1\:nn.
.
"'Sonny" Montgomery, D·
make future congre11iona1· · The best cliaiice for a House pension bill rests
Miss., would receive an initial annual benefit of pensions the same as those of other federal work- , : w1th a Republican task force helided by . ReP..
nearly $107,000. Sens, Mark Hatfield, R·Ore., ets.
.
,;. P~ H~jcstra, of Michigan. It will make ~omi- '
and Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., would begin with
The language, originally proposed by Sen&gt;; mendations on a host of reform issues, indudint
more ihan $96,000, the group estimated.
Richard H. Bryan, D-Nev., was not enlli:ted · clllllpaip finance changes, and' Hoekstra sa'j4 ,
Over a lifetime, using life insurance mortalitY because President Ointon, at odds with Repu~ eqU!i:i.lni all federal pensions would have ' ·
tables, the btJanization predicted ljlat Reps. Patri· cans over·the budaet; vetoed the lcJialation. ~ , :'lliah ppority."
;•
cia Schroeder, 0-Colo. and Robert Walker, R-Pa.,
Dole, referriilll to the bucleoc bill, told C~ · . But ~e said more ex~me ch4nges were:.
would receive more than $4 million in benefits.
Jan. 10, "If there's somethins wrong wilh our unlikely, contendinJ the luc~tive benefits to be'·
CO!JPsiC:mal pens.ion$_are. 10 controversial pension-system, we ought to correct it, and we did · collected by senior lawmakers were accumulatecf~
because leJisliton pvc 'tbemtelVes a retirement it ... And in f~t,l heljled PI it done.".
·' ' Prior to 1984- when the system was change!!. i'
system superior to tllat of federal worken. 1be
Dole said he was "Iakins ·a look" II ~i!ll
lfoeblra ,.tel that uqcler the current system• •
fedenl system, in tum. il more generous than the proposal ~~~n ~s year, while 1J,Yan tlddW ."~ IIIC~bers' pensions arc gOing to IJc: sia..:
many private ays~. IIIX:Oidln81o Labor Depart- that he IS -hins for anoeber ~to uMiid nificlnlbt different lhlll thole who~ pnor to .
meat fipm.
.
'
with his pension equality plan; .
- 1984." .
'
.
~
• The laue hellpl'llllf up in campaiJn,for the
Bryan said he'd like to res.tore the 011e provi- ·
EDITOR'S NOTE: &amp;Mry .-..-.~cow.:- eo.;•
Republican pmidentiill IIO!nination.
sion dropped from his bill in the bod.et language: .,_.for~ ,_oc~~-~
'' _ -~__:_-

..

~

:opening night on
·the grand political

M'f WiFe.

Flat tax proposal just makes pl,ain sense

this

Retirin_
g lawma·kers take big pensipns with them ·

T9day in history

.

;

~·-···-

----"

------ -

.~-

;, I
'

TM o.lly SanUnel• Page 3

ITolldo! 28" I

l!feigs County wiU be featured in
the March issue of the Ohio maga·zine, according to Marilyn Jacobs,
who was iu town Tuesday to lalk to
Ownber of Commerce members and
merchant associations about adver·tising and promotion.
She said that a color photo of the
.Bend area, including Pomeroy and
Middleport, will be on the cover of
the magazine and that a six to seven
page article will tell all about Meigs
County, its past, curreru development.
.and prospects for future growth.
Jacobs, an advertising account
executive, noted that the magllzine
has a paid subscription of 83,000, 75
percent of which is in Ohio. She

•

!Manlflekl!28" I• ·
I

. •!COiumbu1!3t· I

W.VA. .

'

.·

:Today's weather for1csst
.
Souu.e.t Olllo
.
IS to.20. West WiJid S t0 IS Rlph.
.
Today...Windy and turning colder.
Thursday...Panly sunny. Hip in
: : Lingerin1 light rain and drizzle the mid !30s.
. : changinJ to scattered nwries by
Extet ••• turecut
: · afternoon. Temperatures falling into
Friday...A chance of snow or
: : uwer 20s and lower 30s. West winds rain. Lows near 20. Highs 30 to 35.
: : 10 to 20 mph ...Gusts around 30 mph.
SIIIUrday...A chance of snow. Lows
: Chance of precipitation 60 percent. in ~ teens. Highs 2!5 to 30.
· . Tonisht...A chance of evenin1
Sunday...Partly cloudy. Lows 10 tO
·.. nurries ...lben partial clearing. Low 1~ . ~ighs 20 to.25.'

~j Opposition

minimal
::to widening ·of US 50
State transportalion officials heard
.questions and concerns regarding the
proposed widening of US Route SO
from two-lane til four-lane on a 16·mile stretch from Athens to Coolville,
·at a public hearing Monday night in
Stewart.
.
The hearing, spunsored by the
Ohio Department of Transportation,
brought approximately 175 area citizens to Federal Hocking Hip School
to get answers to specific questions
on the $79 million project.
Opposition to the project appeared
to be minimal, with only one area res·
ident, Chad Keister of Glouster,
· expressing dismay that the State of
. .Ohio would build a.folD'· lane hish·

way adjacent tO the H~ki~g River,
thenby damagins the envaronment
and the county's tourism possibilities,
in Keister's opinion. lie questioned
whether or not passing lanes had been
considered an an option for improving US-SO.
An area woman asked w_hy it had
taken so many years to bring this pro·
ject to fruition, implying that she
would believe the road was really
going to be built when she was dri·
ving on it. However, she did not state
that abe was agaiiiSI building the road.
Bush pointed out that the section
between Athens and Coolville is the
final unconstructed four-lane section
of the -State Route 32 .

Eastern, Southern.c::tiuued

'

fi1Hn

.,..~

CLEANING'UP- One by-product of any flood Is tons of mud.
Workers and flrdghter. -re buay Tuesday using plows and
back hoM to remove mud from the Pomeroy perking lot. Here,
WCH bia Ullltfng the p_,oy Stnet Department hose oft the
~end ~the partdng lot Tuesday afternoon.

Leah Rae.Williams
Leah Rae Williams, 86, Harrisonville, died Thesday, Jan. 23, 1996,
at the home of her niece, Connie Chapman.
Born•JanA -9 ...-1910, in Meigs County, she was the \laughter of the late
Elmont and Lola Mae Graham Cain.
She and her husband owned and operated the Sohio Station in Harrisonville for over 2!5 years. A lifelong resident of Harrisonville, she was a
member of the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church, a 1928 graduate of Scipio High School and a member of the Scipio Senior Citi_zens.
She is survived by several nieces and nephews, great·meces and nephews
and great-great-nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband of 56 years, Dale Williams,
in· I985; an infant daughter, Ernestine Williams; a brother, Carlos Ca:n and
a sister, Anestine Carsey.
·
Services will be held Friday, I p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middle·
port with the Rev. Joe Sayre officiating. Burial. will follow in Wells Ceme·
tery.
.
Friends may call Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

rial Hospital ;
9:19 a.m. , Perry Run Road,
Rachel Knight, CCMH;
3:32p.m., state Route 338, James
E. Boggess, Jackson General Hospi·
tal.
REEDSVILLE
10:41 p.m., Mount Olive Road,
Annette Bartoe, VMH .
RUTLAND
II :05 a.m., North Second Street,
Tony Quillen, Holzer Medical Center;
9:34p.m., state Route 143, Leah
Williams, dead upon arrival.

. t oc k rep0 rt
1i0 day ,s 1IVes

Stocks

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Ole ....,_,__,.,_ ......,_ ... _................$2.110
0. Mollh ........,_.....,. .•. ~···········.. ·············$1.70
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~

Ve4lra111M-w
Tucsclay admissions - none.

TUesday discharges .- Dottie
Siamore, Middleport; Lewis Smith,
Portland; Carol McKenzie, Pomeroy.
0..~.........................,...32\
.
Haber Medkel Ceater
Roottw.ll ....." .......................~~
.
Dlaicblraw
Ju. 23- Mrs. Bran·
'Rallbl~..............-2
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r~
·. ~· ·~ ,don Flannery and ~g~. Richard
'iofford, Kayla Bush, Dona!d
llloneyallnO.
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Keville.
.
.
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llrtl.-Mr.
and
Mn.
James
W
Clan llid.-..:.
._._ ...- ••
Callihan,
Ewinaton; Mr. and ·
Mn.
Rod
CIOilCh,
son, Mi4c!Iepon;
,Stock·.NP.Isrta are lhe 1o:s_fi
Mr.
and
Mn.
Clyde
Sayre, 10il,
:;~=~dlllby .
'Racine.
. · (Pioh'LW wldl ~J

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................................................. $29.25
............................................ .-....136.111

Hospital news

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.s••• c . . . . INit detkiat 10 ..,. lhe ~...,
II The Dolly !!oodool
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board ~

Ward.
Anyone filing as an independent
has until March 18 at 4 p.m. to p"'·
sent a petition of candidacy to the
Board of Elections, Rita Smith, director, announced. 1be name of ind~- ;;
pendent ~andidates will be on the ballot in November.
Write-in candidates for the MarCh ·~
primary have until Jan. 29-at 4 p.ltl. _::
to file their declaration of intent with '
the board.

Darlene K. Graham, 76, of Racine died Wednesday,Jan. 24, 1996 at Holz·
er Medical Center, Gallipolis.
·
Born J:'lov. 18, 1919 in Antiquity, she was the daughter of the late Harry
C. and Mary Catherine Smith Stobart. She was a homemaker.
She is survived by two daughters: Lois Allen and Cricket (Bud) Rose,
both of Racine; two sons: Bob (Ruth) Graham of Pomeroy, and Dave (Janey)
Graham of Racine; .one brother, Harry (Mary) Stobart of Letart Falls; 10
grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Homer "Bob" Graham in 1984;
a daughter, Linda Graham Turley; four sisters: Hazel Cleland, Freda Bentz,
Eula Henry; and Louise Coe; four brotpen: Don Stobart, Ross Stobart, Ray
Stobart, and Jim Stobart; and a grandson, Brad Lee Allen.
Services will be held Friday, II a.m., at the Letart Falls Cemetery Chapel
with the Rev. James Satterfield will officiate. Burial will follow in Letart
Falls Cemetery.
·
Calling hours for family and friends will be Thursday, from 7 to 9 p.m.;
at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.

EMS logs 12 calls

.,c.m....--.

All of the petitions filed by candidates for county ·offices and central
committee were certified as valid by
. the Meigs County Board of Elections
Thesday.
Unintentionally omitted from an
earlier listing of those filing for the
Democratic Central Committee were
Barbara A. Hudson, Middleport
Fourth Ward; Maureen Hennessy;
Pomeroy First Ward; Rebecca
Triplett, Pomerey Second Ward, and
Catherine L. Welsh, Pomeroy Third

.

Darlene K. Grahani

price of a cup of coffee a day,"·- mo~th because of the bond issue,"
. Spencer added. "I'll suppon my said Eastern Local Schoo_ls Superintendent Ron Minard.
·child."
Eastern Local School District vot·
Tupayers can determine their
· en will decide on a 4.5-mill, 23-year properties' approximate market value
· bond issue that, if approved, will · by dividing their assessed value (listfinance construction of a new, dis- ed as "total value" on their tax bill) by
trict-wide, K-8 elementary school .35, said Auditor Nancy Campbell.
adjacent to Eastern High School and
For instance, a propeny with an
· major renovations to the existing assessed value of Sl9,2SO would
. high school building for housing of have an appraised market value of
. grade 9-12 students.
$55,000 ($19,250 divided by .35
If approved, the issue will raise equals SSS,OOO).
· $1,614,000 with the state kicking in
Meanwhile, levy advocates in both
$7,136,000, or 81 percent of the total districts stress their respective issues
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
$8,750,000 for the project.
can he used for the described con- gency Medical Services answered 12
Property taxes will go up $15.75 struction projects only. Money raised calls for assistance Thesday includfor each $10,000 in appraised market bY the levies cannot go toward teach· ing four transfer calls. Units respond·
value. 1be owner of a $40,000 home en' salaries, operating costs, or facil - ing included:
will pay an additional $63 a year, or ities such as stadiums or all-weather
MIDDLEPORT
32 cents a day. Ownenhip of a tracks.
2:24 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
$100,000 home will mean an addi·On their bond issue, the Southern Center, Grace Hawley, Veterans
tional $1S7:so a year, or 43 cents a Local Building Committee went so ·Memorial Hospital;
day.
'
far as to secure an opinion from
5:01 p.m., volunteer fire departIn the Eastern district, the state is Meigs County Prosecutin1 Attorney 'ment to Rutland Street, auto fire,
providing 80 percent of the funding. John R. Lentcs,. an -opinion that Willard Laudcrmilt owner.
Without state funds it would take applies equally to both bond issues;
RACINE
about 22 mills of local rax dollars lo
"Under the provisions of state
12:40 a.m., state Route 124, Larmake needed improvements -- mon· · law, and the manner in which the levy ry Holsinger, Camden-Clark Memoey the district could likely never · is.bcins,soupt, these funds can only
afford.
.
be used {or capital improVement pui- •
"In our district, the 4.5 mills is posesandcannot'beusedforanyoth- '
. a:oing to be a bargain for an $8.75 er purposes, inc~uding purch~ of
million building project. It looks as if equipment, salanes, or other ttems
COLLTMBUS (AP) - Indianathe average taxpayer in the district unrelated to capilal improvements."
Ohio
direct bog prices at selected
·will pay only S6 to $7 dollars more a
"You will see your tax dollars at
buying
points Wednesday by the
work," levy supporters i11 both disU.S.
Department
of Agriculture Mar·
tricts stated.
The D,aily Sentinel
ket News;
Barrows and gilts: SO cents to 1.00
IUSPS 113-Ht)
higher; demand moderate 'to good on
hbUthed evrry aftemoon, MoodoJ -th
moderate supply.
Prldoy, I II Cowl SC., " - · 01\io, by lho
Am
E1e
Powtr
.......................
41\
·U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 40.50-,
Oluo Vol ... ~ ~IGL .,eo,,
Allzo ......................................17\
l'oorom)o, Oh;o 45769, Ph. !192·2t56. s.c-1
a few 42.50; plants 42.00·
42.00,
AIMaM 011 •••••~.......................15
clou- )llid Ll'oorom)o, 01\io.
ATAT _...................................14\ 43.50, a few to 41 :75.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 36.50- . The A-;lied Preu. IIIII lho Ohio
Bri 0.. .....................~ ........11\
NewtptperAtiiCildoll.
40.50.
I
lob
....,
.............................
11~
. •.:
~..............................30\
Sows: steady to 50 cents higher.
POS'I'MA.S'I:IJI: siPd lddfal OiOiiOCiiOII &amp;o
et.ill~ IIIII.
~
Tho Dolly SUdllll, II t Coon 51., .........,,
U.S. 1·3, 300-500 .lbs. 26.000Wo(5769.
~ ltiJilp ""'""""""""' •
28.50; 500-650 lbs. 28.0Q-31.00, a

13 :16 -

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spoke of the I"CSP\)RSC of othi:r coin·
mlinities following similar proll\0tions in the magazine and said Meij!s
County could upect the same. She
mentioned specifically the revilalitation program underway in Pomeroy
and the effect it should have im
tourism here.
,
She was here specifically to dCs·
cuss an advertising commitment pf
about $3,000. Karin Johnson. to.tiri9111
director, said $600 can be ex(lect;d
from county funds, while t{le
Pomeroy Merchants Associatien
pledged purchase of a half page ad 6t
$1,350. Bob Gilmore will con~t
Middleport merchants about advey.
·
•
.!ising particination.
~

Petitions validated by

~IL IIUIICIIrrioNI

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Meigs County will .be
featured in -M arch issue• :
of Ohio magazine

'lllunilay, Jaa. 25

-:·r---------------------~----~~------------~~
'Esi:MIJsfltJ in.1948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

son,

·

few 32.00.
Boars: 24.00-26.00.
Estimated receipts : 42,000
Prices from The 'Producers
Livestock AssiK:Iadon:
Cattle : steady to 2.00 lower.
Slaughter steers; choice 60.0064.25; select 56.00-60.50. ·
Slaughter heifers: choice 58.0063.25; select 55.00-59.50.
Cows: 1.00 to 1.50 lower; all cows
45.00 and down.
Bulls: steady to 3.50 lower; all
bulls 48.00 and down.
Veal calves: 15.00 higher; choice
127.50 and down.
.
Sheep and lambs: 1.00 to 4.00
higher; choice wools 70.00-84.00;
feeder lambs 93.00 and down; aged
sheep 36.50 and down.

BRICK DEADLINE EXTENDED - The Melga County Cham~
of
commemDietlve brick sale hal bean extended until
Valentlnea Day, Feb. 14, eccordlng to county tourism director
Karin Jahn1011. The peraonallzed brlcka, corneratones, end logo
markere will adorn the floor of the riverfront amphitheater
In downtown Pomeroy. Roger JHele (right) of Don Tete Motors
was the first Meigs County buslne11 to purcheH • $250 logo
marker. J ..sMI received his numbered certHicata noting hla brick
purchase from Jim Birchfield, chember of commerce vice-pres1c1ent. Anyane who purcheltld a brick prior to Jen. 18 end reqUIIt·
eel a certificate cen pick It up anytlme after Monday during regular houra at the Chamber offlcea, located In the former GTE
building In P-oy.

Cot•••-

Flooding returns.r;~ntinued from page
The flooding follows an Ohio

River nood last weekend which covered low-lying roads along the river
and backwater areas. Some roads are
still covered with water and ice.
· Roads were alsa closed last Friday
due to nash nooding.

·
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·
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··

I

for the day. By late today, tempera·
tures in the teens were expected.
Snow also was in the forecast,
w_ith accumulations up to an inch

More than an inch of rain fell on
parts of southern Ohio Tuesday night
and early today, causing many already
full streams to overflow their banl&lt;;s.
Numerous roads were reported
under water early today in Adams,
Brown, Hocking, Pike, Ross and
Scioto counties. However, the sher·
iff's departments in those counties
said no major evacuations were
required. ·
1be flood waters were expected to
recede quickly after the rain tapered
off today.
Meanwhile, another blast of frigid
weather was headed this way and
forecasters said readings this morning
in the upper 30s would be the highs

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: SHEAR ILLUSIONS .. : _:·
•••••••••••••••••••••••••
: Session Includes:
•
Professional Makeover

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-caD-For AppoIntment, "l-2550

193 s. 2nd

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 24, 1998'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P • 4 ~The Dally Sentinel

~eigs gets 6~-45

..
.·

Win
over
I.
. . Trimbl·e

•"

~ DAVE' HARRIS I
S4ntlnel Correspondent
~ •Meigs

jumped out to 31-t7Jead

a~ ihe half and rolled to a 69-45 vice

ICC; over Trimble in boy's Tri-Valley
Ctmference basketball action tuesday night.
·:The Marauders' second slnlight
wiJ! moved their record up to 7-S
~overall and S-3 in the 1VC's Ohio
Division. Trimble drops to 3-10 al)d
o~ a 1-7 mark in the Hocking Divisi~.

-Meigs played the' game with out
thti services of starling guard Donald
Yait, who has been hampered by a
so(_t back. Yost should be ready to go
wben Meigs travels to Alexander on
FrKtay.
~oth teams traded buckets to
start the game. Travis Abbott gave
th~ Marauders the lead for good on
a tiaseline jumper to break a 6-6 tie
with 4:45 left in the period.
.Paul Pullins then . hit a three
pointer from the left wing at the 4:04
mo¥-k to increase the lead to 11-6.
C~s Cleland then increased the
Mtauder lead to 13-6 off a Brent
Hanson feed.
· ~rady . Trace then scored the
ga')les next four points to pull Trimble&gt;to within 13-10 at I :56 mark of
thelj,eriod. Baskets by Cleland and
PuOins increased the Meigs lead to
17~10 with I :071eft. Zach Miller hit
a backet with 50 seconds left to pull
Triinble to within 17-12 at the end of
the:period.
eigs scored the first six points
of e second period to increased the
lea to 23-12 with 6:02 'left in the
hal The Marauders increased the
lea~ to 31-17 at the half when
· Pullins hit another three pointer with
I :~ remaining in the half.
'[he two teams traded a bucket
eac~ in the first three and ahalf minutes, of the third period. Cleland
inc,Jeased the maroon and gold lead
to ~ when· he scored off a Jeremy
Pieke assist with 50 seconds left in

f
•

the period.
Trimble scored the games next
five points, but PuUins hit a layup
and was fouled connecting on the
foul shot with five seconds left to
give Meigs a 46-28lead heading into
the final eight minutes.
Meigs continued the onslaught in
the final period outscoring the Tomcats 23-17 to post the 69-45 victory.
The final score could have been a lot
worse, but Marauder head coach Jeff
Skinner began substituting freely in
the firSt period, and continued to do
so for the rest of the contest ·
Cleland and Pullins took game
high scoring honon; with 17 points
each. The two were joined in double
figures by Travis Abbott with 10.
Meigs hit 28 of SO from the floor
for 56%, including two of 10 from
three point range. Meigs went to the
line !4 times hilling nine of them for
64%.
Meigs pulled down 32 rebounds
led by Pullins with eight, Cleland
added six. Meigs had 18 assists led
by Cleland with three. Meigs turned
the ball over eight times and was
called for 17 fouls.
"It's always fun to win when
everyone gets a .lot of playing time,"
Skinner said. ''This was a strong
team defensive effort I hope we can
get a lot of fan support at Alexander,
it will be a big game."
Brady TraCe led Trimble with 13
points, Heath Armbruster added II.
Trimble hit 20 of 56 from the floor
including one of eight from three
point range for 37%: The Tomcats
were only able to hit on four of 14
from the line (29%.).
Trimble pulled d11wn 22 rebounds
with Trace grabbing nine and Arm·
bruster getting six. The Tomcats had
three assists, all by Joey Wright.
Trimble hllll 14 turnovers and 17
fouls.
Reserve nota: Meigs jumped
out to a 28-11 lead at the half and
coasted to a 60-32 victory in the

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• FIRES SHOT - The Meigs Marauders' JOih Witherell (left) flrea
EYES ON THE BALL - Meigs Mttrauders Can Clellnd (. . lift)
end Paul Pullin• (21) end Trimble's Brady Trace (20) Wlleh 'the bell . e shot ovw Tr!Jnble'l Brady TI'IICii during n.tday night's TVC game
end move In •• their teemmetn raiM their hendl to get po11111lon at llelga High School, where the Mllreuderl won 68-45. (~lnel ph&amp;
of It during TuetiCiay nlghfa game on the Marauders' home Court. to by Dave Harrla)
Meigs won 69-45 to stay In above-.500 country. (Sentinel photo by
Dave Harris)
·

Dugan i -0-0=2, Brad}~ Trace 5•0- . Pullins 4-2-3=17, Tim Lewis 0-03=13, Ooug Manis 1-0-1=3, Terry 2=2, Chris Lambert 1-0-3=5, Brent
Alfan 2-0-0::4, Joey Wright 3-0-0=6, Hanson 4-0-0=8, Aaron.- Hockman 1Mike Drake 1-0-0=2. Totals: 19-1· 0-0=2, Josh Witherell 3-0-0=6,
4=45
'
Travis Abbott 5-0-0= I 0..Totilb:
.
27·
MEIGS- Brad Whidatch 1-0- '2-9=69
0=2, Cass Cleland 8-0-1=17, Paul

in a Saturday make-up contest .

reserve game. The Marauders'
Daniel Hannan and Mick Barr led all
scorers with 12 points each, while
teammate Matt Williams added I 0.
Mike Drake led Trimble with six.
The future: Meigs will travel to
Alexander on Friday and host Miller

Oy•rtcrmY!a

.

Meigs................... t7-14-1 S-23=69
Trimble .................. I2·S-11-17=45
.. TRIMBLE - Zach Miller 1-00=2, Mike McClelland 1-0-0=2,
Heath Armbruster 4-1-0= II, Nathan

.t allies 71-69 comeback win over Vinton ·County

By :SCOTT WOLFE
Sel'ltlnel Correspondent
c:?oming from behind late in the
gan\e, the Eastern Eagles rallied to
defeat the host V-inton County
Vi~gs Tuesday night in boys var- .
sity basketball action in McAithur. '
Eastetn was led b)l senior Micah'
Otto's 24 points, while Eric Hill had
13, •Michael Barnett added 12 and '·'
Daniei Otto II.

VC was led by Ryan Caudill with allowed EHS to squander its lead. picking up eight of his overall It
18 points, John Murphy's 17 and VC scored on the next possession points in the final round. Eldest sibNathan Henderson's 12.
· before two turnovers and a foul at the ling Micah also rode a wave of
Eastern is now S-7 and 4-4 in the buzzer allowed Caudill to hit two momentum in the fourth quarter as
Tri-Valley Conference's Hocking free throws for the 37-34 taliy.
EHS came back to take the lead.
Eastern
was
flat
in
the
third
round
Barnett hita pair of crucial fouls
Division.
Vinton County raced to a 16-13 and as head coach Tony Deem said · going down the S!retcb, then Otto did
first period lead, then.Eastem rallied "We couldn'( find our man," drop- the same. With EHS;.Ieading 70-69
Barnett had a chanci. to preserve at
to claim a 37-34 'lead at tile half. ping a 21-14 tally (55-48).
Eastern trailed early much of the least a tie, but hit I of 2 and VC had
Eastern' had boosted its lead to 37-30 ·
at the 1:35 mark, but silly play fourth quarter, but made a strong a chance with ten seconds left. Miccome back at the finish. · Midway ah Otto came up with a key block
through the fourth quarter, VC was . and VC go the ball out with two sec·
effective with a diamond and one on onds left. Time ran out and EHS
Eric Hill. The ·Otto boys then rode claimed the 71-69 win.
into town. The younger of the OttoEastern hit 2-6 threes, 24-44 twos
Hill clan, nailed four straight shots,

Belpre gets 78-48
win over Southern
A 22-9 spread in the second peri·

od Opened up an insunnountable
Belpre lead and the Golden Eagles
roared to a 78-48 Tri-Valley Conference win over the Southern Tornadoes Tuesday night in Belpre.
Southern (4-8 overall &amp; 3-S in the
Hocking Di.vision) was led by Jesse
Mayltard's 16, while Kent Garrett
poured in 23 for the Golden ~glej~.
Belpre took a 13-6 lead in the
opening round, but picked up the
pace in the next canto, burying the
Tornadoes 35-IS at halftime.
After three rounds, Belpre led SS32, then rolled on to the 78-48 finale.
Southern hit 15-46 from the f~eld
and 3-17 on threes, while hit 9-17 at
the ·. iine. The Tornadoes had 39
rebounds (Harmon 10, Maynard 10);
ten steals (Harmon 3, Maynard 3);
18 turnovers and 14 fouls.
Belpre hit 19-41 twos, 7-12threes
and hit 9-14 at the line. Belpre had
35 rebounds (Colgrove 8); 16 steals
(Randolph 5); II turnovers and 16

By DAVE HARRIS
assists, Kristen Dassylva had three of .
Seritl!'lel Correspondent
the Marauders' seven steals. Meigs •
Nelsonville-York jumped outto a had 17 turnovers.
32-20 halftime lead and held off a :
Adams led Nelsonville with 14
Meigs comeback attempt to defeat' points. Nelsonville hit 18 of 42 for
. Meigs47-41 ingirls'lVCbasketball 44% and hit II of IS from the line
ac\iQ·~ · Monday evening at Nel·
for 73%. The Buckeyes pulled down
sonville.
26 rebounds, with Adams grabbing
Arliie Adam~ paced the Lady II.
Buckeyes' lead with 10 first period
Reserve nofel: Meigs won the
points. Mindy McCleJand-picked up reserve game 32·30. Tricia Davis~
the pace in the second period with Meigs with Ji t B~ky l&gt;8Jton, Jed
six 'P9ints.
. , .
Nelsonville with 11.
Meigs c.limi1Cd :back. into the OJw:W: lldlla
.gallle;in' the thi~ perilld outscoring Meip.:.................. v. l0-10-1"7-4=41
• · tJiC Buckeyes 17-llto ~ij to with 4j). •. Nelsonville-Yorlt....... t6-1~8-7=47
37aftc:rthreeperibils:Che.y1Jewe\l;
Melp- Rebekah SIRith 1-01ed M.figs i,n lhe"period, witb six 0=2, Cheryl Jewell 3-0-9=15, Kris·
poiDii. Carriua Ash adde4 four., , ten OU.ylva 2-0-l=S, Anne Brown
.,.alowscQri11Jfoui1hperiod,the 1-04=6, Ashley Roach 1-0-3=5,
.
hosts
Cluls&lt;;ored Meigs 7-4 ~post tlJe • c.rlsa·Ash J..()..:z..4, 'Il!ryn Doidge 2- ·
1
wili.
~ . • .. ' . ' 1
o!OI04.' 1bllill~ u..e-19oo41
.~
lf~llled the MaraudC!Js with Is'
N~·Yort - Sarah 081,
· poinlllncludinJ nine fQt nine liom 3-Q.Oa6, Moaica Joli!lson l-0-0=2,
• the Jille. Moigs, which liit 11 of 37 HCI!hcf Cia 340=6;Amie Adams
tloar
coot ~.-bit t9 ~14, &amp;lphlnie Slider t-O-

"'*"*
fer,
of. 23~ 1110 liM I« a•.lifei·

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,rraf•

tbniD Ul """' ,_T. ~--• ,_

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Sowers for VC.
Quarter 1111111
Eastern .................. l3-24-14-20=71
Vinton County...... l6-18"2l-14;69
EASTERN - Eric Dillard 0-0S/6=5, Josh Casto 3-0-0=6, Daniel
Otto 4-1-0=11, Eric Hill4-l-2/4;13,
Micah Otto 10-0-415=;24, Micabel
Barnett 3-0-6/11 = 12. Totilb: 24·217126=71.
VINTON COUNTY - John
Murphy 6-1-213=17, Todd Braden 40-0=8, Ryan Caudill 4-1-7110=18,
Nathan Henderson 6-0-0;: 12, Casey
Nice 2-0-112=5, Matt Bethel 2-1· ,
212=9. Totals: 24-3-12117=6!1

third season with Atlanta after play- team history. Chris Mills shot 1-for- was a factor, but he said Atlanta was
ing seven years in Cleveland, scored 12, Dan Majerle was 1-for·7 ai1d Ter-. tired too.
"We don't have any excuses, we
nine -of his II points in the fourth rell Brandon 7-for-23.
Brandon
said
he
·
knew
flltiaue
qUarter. Atlanta held the Cavaliers to
(See CAVS on Page 6)
13 points.in the final period.
"I got open a couple of limes and
VINYL OR ALUMINU
SUMP PUMPS
had some good looks ~t the ,basket in
the final quarter," Ehlo said. "This
GUnER .
winning streak has been amazing.
WHITE
We just find ways to win, but I think
or
we've been shooting very well, and
BROWN
ALUIII~UM "
that helps a lot."
GlitTER
aeveland led 61-59 entering the
fourth quarter, but missed 10 of its
next II shots and fell behind 70-63.
10FT SECTION
The Cavaliers made just 29 of 84
ALUIII~UM
shots in its first home game since
DOWNSPOUT
going
3-4 on the longest road trip in
r -____________________,. ,

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WHITE

JANUARY
BARGAIN Of-

as arthritis, bursitis, rheumatism,
.j ·nful 111111Cie ac:hea, joint achas,
! simple~kache,
· Although the mechani1111 at ldion .
'swdear,experimentaindicated~Jt

THERIIOPI.AiTIC
lueMERSIIL!
SUIIP PUMP

•&amp;•

'18"

ment ofdebilitatirw Conditions IIICh

).4, Syc!eny Broob l-0-0:4. ~

·.

and 17-26 at the line with 25
rebounds (Barnett 8). EHS had three
steals, 7 turnovers, 9 assists (Barnett
and Dillard three each); and 17
fouls.
VC hit 3-9 threes, 24-47 twos,
had 33 rebounds (Caudill I 0, Hen·
derson 7); six steals (Henderson 3)f
II turnovers, two assists and 25
fouls.
· Reserve nota: Eastern won the
reserveglllile41-38topushtheChris
Stout club to 7-S overall. Steve
Durst had 27 points·and Rickie Hoiton had 8 points and 7 assists.
Brandon Oernon bad II and Matt

Blc,ylock helps Hawks hand Cavs 84-72 loss

fouls.
Reserve notes: Belpre also won
the reserve game big 64-25 led by C.
G:LEVELAND (AP) - Atlanta
Craig's IS points. Billy Sheppard coach Lenny Wilkens said an over·
had nine for SHS.
whelming \letenninalion to win has
The future: Southern, which will led to the Hawks' nine-game winget Friday off, will host GallipOlis in ning·streak.
a triple-header, starting with the
"This team won't give ~p. they
freshmen at 5 p.m. Saturday.
want to win, they're hungry for winQuarter mYia
ning. That's been the key to the winSouthern .....................6-9-17-16=48 ning streak," he said after the
Belpre .................... t3-22-20-23=78 Hawks' 84-72 victory over the
SOUTHERN - Ryan Norris 0- Cleveland Cavaliers on tuesday
1-0=3, Jamie Evans 1-1-3/4=8, Jesse night.
Maynard 8-0/1=16, Spi)te Rizer 0-1Wilkens also credited Mookie
1/4=4, Jay McKelvey 3-0-0=6, John Blaylock for much of the team's sucHarmon 3-0-2/4;8, Jos)l Roush 0-0- cess. Blaylock led the Hawks with
212=2. Totals: 15-3-9/17=48.
23 points.
BELPRE - Josh Watson 3·
"Mookie Blaylock bas been play0=6, Kent Garrett S-4-012=23, Jere- ing tremendous. be's like our MVP,"
my Colgrove 3-2-010=12, Jim Ohl 0- Wilkens said. "He works hard on
112= (, Aaron Weaver 1-0-113=3, defense, on offense, he looks for
Zack Klei.n 2-3/3=7, Jim Simpson 6- people. He's just playing great, great
2/4;14, Mark Wilcoxen 1-3-1/2=6, · basketball."
Jim Randolph 0-3-0=6. Totals: 19·
A former Cleveland player helped
7-!1/14=78
beat the Cavaliers. Craig Ehlo, in his

Nelsonville· York girls post
4"(-41 victory over Meigs

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·-

~ Walsh

Wednesday, January 24',1996

Wednesday, January·24,1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

.

Humane society loosens t~e ·leash on dog. being punisheq

returns to 49ers as assistant head·coach·

. By DENNIS GEORGATOS

toa~tbcr the best football lelm pos·
~d W... wollld not be involved in
sible, and if that IIIQJIS coacb Wllsb penonnel decisions, which will
is put of this again, then lbal's what . remain with geoeniJ1181111« Dwiabt
we'n: aoina to do."
·
· Clllit and other front-office officii!J.
Walsb, 64, was given the tide · That's fine with Walsh.
adminislrllive assistant to the c011:b·
"Wlw this portrays is a staae of
ing itaff.. He will work cxclusiv'ely 1 · lifel'minrillbtnow,"WIIshsaid. "I
with the offense and provide adviqe -don't' have .111 aplllla and. I'm not
and counsel to offensive coordinator 1loolrin&amp; to stab.out any tcmtory and
Marc Trcstm.lll.
'I'm not Jootins to make key deciCiub president Cannen Policy sions. The rok as I unclenund it, the
·
role that I basicllly approved, was

since I've *n a CCillcb here;" Seifert
said. "Three years qo, I probably
coulc!n 'I havo done Ibis to be quite
honest with you .... Three yc.~ qo,
I wasn't maybe as secure in my own
lbilitia and maybe I'm a Utde more
arrogaut now. Aud if there are some
bruises with res.ms to egos, so
what?
"Because ultimately what wc'n:
trying to accomplish here is to put

Pamer in 1989, bad velOed a 1992
SANTA CLARA. (AP) - Bill . plan to hire Wlllsb as a consultant,
Wllsb, who led Sau Pnmcisco to . but said be was comfortable with the ·
three Super Bowl·tides in the 1980s . notion.now.
u bead coach, rejoined the te1111
Seifert, who has won two Super
Thesday as a coaching assistant in 1 Bqwls in tbe seven yean since suc: !)opes his e~tperience can restore the ceediDs Walsb. denied the addition
· 49ers' offensive mystique.
of Wllsb was "something forced
Coach George Seifert, who • -down George Seifert's throat"
worked as Walsh's defensive coor"In fact, it's probably one of the
. dinator before succeeding the Hill of_ more excitins, ~ times for me

nipt. I wenlto the owners' house to
uk why they were doing this and was
told they were punishing the dog for
digeing holes. 1bey intended to continue making his leash shorter, little
by little. I was disgusted and called
the humane society.
A few days after I reported Ibis
By ANN LANDERS
incident, I passed the dog again. This
time, his leash was much )onger, he
1 , ·~ Dear Ann Landers: On my way to
· school, I passed a dog unable to sit\ had a dog house, food and water. The
dow~ because his leash was attached
humane society had sent someone to
too tightly to a tree. I worried about monitor tbe dog's condition and
. this but figured tbe owner would real- infonned tbe owners of a gentler and
ize the situation was unpleasant and mon: effective way to train animals.
remedy iL
: What I thought would ~ a hopeless
The next day, tbe same dog was at situation was taken care of quickly
that same tree, forctd to stand at and easily. .
attenlion all day ana possibly all
TeiJ your readers that acts of cru-

Ann
Landers

··Cavs lose ••cc;o.....n....~_nuec~
........,.fro_m......~;;;li-i·; o; 4&gt;----------.. . . ------------------- :::isf:.,.be!tn:C~~~;
..

George, Canncn, Dwight, and, of
led the way with 16 rebounds.
. Antonio Lang scored seven points course, the coaches.
"It's sort of an emeritus position
duriq a 17-S run in the second quarter that gave Cleveland a 42-30 lead. with a little vitality and energy assoHe finished with a career-high nine ciatecl with it. I accept this role as an
assistant football coai:b primarily."
points.
Policy said the notion of bringing
The 72 points was tbe second.
Walsh
back was discussed ~~tten­
lowest scored this season by the Cavsively
last weekend ill meetings
aliers, who wiD tab to the road &amp;,ain
wjtb
team
owner Eddie DeBartolo,
today for a game in PbiladelphiL

just didn't shoot the ball well," Bran- at tbe start of tbe second hllf tum- of fourth-place Cleveland in tbe
don said. " I think we defended prel· ing up their defensive intensity. Our · Central Division. Steve Smith scored
ty well, but we just didn't get the ball mistakes came mentally mon: than 20 points for the Hawks.
Brandon and Danny Ferry Jed the
in the basket. We will bounce back .anything else tollighL We were a step
tomorrow, that is what the NBAis all slow on things, just not sharp.:•
Cavaliers with 17 points apiece.
But Fratello said be had to give . Cleveland stayed in the same .by
about."
· Cavaliers coach Mike Fratello Atlanta a lot of the credit.
controlling the rebounding. The Cavalso said fatigue played a part in tbe
"They made some things happen aliers held a 17-38 advantage on tbe
when they were down," be said.
boards, including a 21-3 margin in
outcome of the game.
"I thought Atlanta did a good job
Atlanta moved I 112 games ahead offensive rebounds. ~chacl Cage

I

BILL WALSH

Family
Medicine

/ulltabola 67. Alhllbttla f.decwood s~

,.

'

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AtlaMkDI•-

IJilll
" .750
Ed.
O.t..OO .................. ll:
JO 10

Gil

New Yori&lt; .............. 24
Wubinaton ............ l9
Miami ..... ............... 18
New lent:)' .......... .16
80SIOn .................... IS
Philadelphia ............. 7

5.5
10.5
11.5
13.5
14.5
22.

IS
20
21
23
l4
31

.615

.487

.462
.410
.385
.184

Cmtnl OlwWon
Cbh::aao ..................35 3 .921
tndiana·...................lS 14 .641
Atlanta ...................23 17 .575

CLEVI!LAND .......21
Detroit... ..... ............ l9
Cbarlone ........... ..... l&amp;
Milwaukc:e ............. I.S
Toronco .................. 12

18
18
20
23
28

f'

Buckeye Trail61. z.aesville Roaeo

..,

c..field 71.Howlond 69 (01')
Caato• Glo.o.Jc 56, lolutilloa Pmy'
49
canton S. 76, Uhrtchlville Claymont
71 .
c.- n...., 54. MorU- 52
ctucri• Polio 70, Soloo 63
Cia. Mdenoo M, New RicbmoDd 39
Cin. llo«l'lrt 62, CiD.•,...., 45
a.. Elder 89. Covioatoa Cadi. 86 (3

WESTERN CONFERENCE .
MldwtoiDivlolon

:ram

.ll: li bl. fill

SanAntonio ..........:26
HO\Itton ... ............. 21
Utah ...................... 25
Denver ................... 16
Dallas ... ,.... ........... ! !
Minneso~a .............. ll
VMcouver ...............9

·.·.

Paclnc Dlwllion
Seattle ............ ....... 27 II .711
Sacramento ............ 22 IS .595
LA. Lol= .......... 21 18 .538
Ponlond ................. 20 20 .SUO
Goldc!n Stare .......... l7 22 .436
Phocni• .................. IS ·22 .«&lt;S
· L.A. cu_. ......... tl 24 .!85

Tuesday's scores
Toronto 86, New Jency 79
Orlando lOS, PITiladoloiU 90
Atlanta 84, CLEVELAND 71
lndiDil&amp; 117, Plloenl• IOl ·..

Chicas(l99, New York. 79 ·
Utah 96. PortlaiWI72
•
Dallas Ill, s.......... 109

Tonlpt'splilel

·.~ ·

·

· :~.

L.A. LIITmll~toa.7:J0t.IIL

,,

Col

60

Vancouver ilt Tdfor!ID. 8:30p.m.
Oeuoil ar Dallu, 8:30p.m.
··
Denver at L.A. c;:~ppcn. IO:lOp.m.

NCAA DiviSiou I
;, men's scores

~~~.l'!nCft

.

thl~=
. y63,SOUbWJl5

Oeoml 57.
St. lobo 52
Oecqetown 75, Felicity 61

Hofstra 83, Towwn Sr. 63
lona 67, Manhal:t.u 49
Loyola, Md. 64, St. Peter'• 63
Maine 79, Hwtford 66
Musachusetts 79, Pittsburf,h 71 (01)
· T.....le 68, la S~k 4l!
Vermont 92, New Hampshire 90
West Virginia 86, Rutsen 71

58

South
Arkansas 71, Alabama 6l
Davidson 90, Appalachiao St. 68
LSU 86. Nidlolli St. 69
Miami 72, Notre Dame 64

58

Southwest

Far West .

.,

Loyola M"'1"""'nl 76, Cal foly-SLO
64

Malven sa. Jewett-&amp;to S4
Mancbeatct 62, Tul1aw 50

Ohio men's
college scores

Morio11BipD76, UpperSattdtuky 61
MrinlAnlto&lt; Kl•a68. Avllliotl n
Muon 57. Hamlil&lt;&gt;o R&lt;* 47
Mayo.;llo 39, Pblio 31
MediDa Finl a.,.. 71. Mouilion Ov.

62

Mld-Oblo Coafenoc:e
Non-conlerenc:e play

C&lt;ilorvll~ 77. Micb.-Doarbont 67
Wollh Ill, Obio Volley 87
Wittt:nbers64, Defiance 49

(01')

Mlddletow• Madilon 61. National
TroiU7
MkMow47,A-38
Mlllfonl68, Wa...ty 63
MOpdorc 67, Coalwood 61
M'"'" V..- 62. Pnoklio 1111. 57

, Ohio women's
college scores
Capitoi68,Morielta37
lolut Clrroll6l.l!eidolbst..,
M001111 Ullioo77. Baldwt•Wiillco 72
Ottcd&gt;eia 76, Olllo Norf!*tt 62

Mld:otdo ca.,-

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Rayooldallura 52, Wllllioa Memortol

• Wjlo.IIIJO.Cio......,_B.I9
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M:

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Send questions to Ann Landers,
Craton Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Anaeles,
Calli. 90045
•
.

SAN FRANCISCO {AP)
Hours after her heart-lung transplant,
Sandra Jensen was already trying to
speak. That wasn't surprising to
those who kn0 w tbe 35-year-old
woman witli Down syndrome.
"Sandra is going to get up out of
that bed - and out of her mouth are
going to come the marching instruclions," said Dr. William Bronston, a
state rehabilitation administrator and
friend who helped lead the yearlong
fight for Thesday's operation.
Jensen is believed to be tbe first

mentally disabled person in tbe United States lo receive a '11ajor trans·
plant. She was recovering today in
the intensive care unit at tbe Stanford
University Medical Center and listed
in critical but stable condition.
The Sacramento woman had congenital heart problems and pulmonary hypertension that became
critical a year ago.
Initially, dociors at Stanford and
the University of California at San
Diego rejected her as a transplant
candidate. They didn't ihink she was
smart enough to handle follow -up
care and any complications that may

pay for a full-time caretaker to make
arise.
Dr. Bruce Reitz, who led the sure she takes her anti-rejection
transplani team, said he still thinks drugs, exercises and avoids strenuous
most Down syndrome patients could activities.
Medicare paid for the surgery
not understand the required care after
and hospitalizalion, state health offisurgery.
But he changed hi'~, mind ahout cial~ said, while Medicaid will pay
undtsclosed costs for drugs and postJcnsen after meeting her.
operative
care.
"We found she was functioning at
Jensen's mother. Kay DeMaio, of•
a very high level and could take care
of her treatment," said Reitz, who Elmira, Ore., said the struggle was to
perfonned ihe first successful heart· have her daughter treaied a5 an individual.
lung transplant in 1981.
Jensen, a high scho~l graduate
Stanford placed Jensen on its
who
has lived on her own for severtransplant recipient list after Califoral
years,
will spend lwo to three
nia's Medicaid program offered to
weeks in the hospital, DeMaio said.

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addreued ltlmpect
envelope to return
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.,'

Hllll'oolllllul!olo, 1:10 p.m.
PltUbuJP II Ollawa, 7:30p.m.

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Ill
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TlleldaJ 1li&lt;Orel

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133
141

lion to provide sleeping accodations for oul-of-town guests.
Should close friends or family members offer to invite guests to stay at
their homes, that would be nice, but
it is not your responsibility to arrange
housing for out-of-town weddi11g
guests.
. Relax and enjoy the occasion.
.Don't Jet concerns aboul"protocol"
spoil your special day. A good motto
to remember, dear: "Don't sweat the
small sluff."

I

133
135
168
124
159

Nowltlle)'l,LoaAqeleal
Aori4aS,WIIITI-4

N.Y.-II

~­
' WI-63,--411

J

57 163
51 145
44 164
44 . 119
:14 122

0

• .W.JdoaS2,--Twp.30

l'ol

a.a,o .............. 241S 9
T.-o .............. 22 17 7
WlnniP"1 ........... 20 22 4
St. Lt\olit ............ II 19 8
Dallas .......... ......l12110

PoelllcDI•Coloiado ............ lS 14 8 58
~- ... ......... 161111 43
Loa An..... .. ..... l6 21 II 43
Calpry ......... ..... 1622 9 41
Bdrnooton .......... l7 23 6 . 40
Alllhelm ............ l626 5 37
Sanlooe ............. J031 4 24

~ ...... ,Uit,.,~Qr.31
w. Oaoair~,., Milfanl40

.

ISS
144
159
145
138
180

Centnlonw-

\

rooms at our expense. Is she right
about this? We have attended several oul-of-town weddings over the
years, and we have always paid our
own hotel expenses.
I plali to insert in the invitations
three loll-free numbers of some nice
motels in our area so people can start
making their own arrangements.
Would this be tacky? Please give me
some guidance. I want to do everything right. •• Mother of the Groom
in Wisconsin
Dear Mother of tbe Groom: First,
live-in companions or fiances should
be invited to the rehearsal dinner. It
is nol necessary to invite tbe dates of
wedding party members.
Second, you are under no obliga-

.Boneless
Chicken

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Iaa
ll: L I flo. iif llA
Oemt ................ 3l 9 3 67 164 95

.

s. (a'll46. Nonrolt St. Ptall40

225
140
ISS
129
Ill
100

Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Spi•. Sba..... 61.1'-IIO
St. A•J•Ithll Add. 33, Andrew•
Sdtool:ll l
TeoYa Vol. 8 3 . - U-35
1lllbt o.-·56,.-&amp;, Ill. Maop

~ ...... 61.-~St l· '

' -=•-._.,
'M.AIIIil.......... · " •
'I:.=JO ,
I

17

...,.
.... _,.,..._QooitiiO
~a.·.-Co;67 .

Jl

' / bhlo
B.S.~·.....
~

.

.46

=:,
t:&gt;... tiO,~':rn

, •1,

•

Nonlotio 54. -

66 178 131
63 164 121
,ss 159 115
47 127 117
47 135 151
44 tl9 116
31 128 165

Nerd&amp;_. DI\'IINR
Pl....... ....... :.. 29 14 .l 61
M_. ............21 I~ 6 48
Boa1011................ 19 18 6 44
Dutrlio ...............ll 23 3 39
......................17 23 s 39
Ottawa ................. 8!S I 17

-

O,.DoorS6,Col h50
=~-~ 1" =~?t· 6l
116. U..TeoipltCitr.16

Mottitl V.... N - til, , . _
~14.
11 ,

56

w.... Cilantplon

ll: L I !II. iif llA

N.Y. Ranp .....2911 8
Florida ............... 29 12 s
PITilldelpbia ....... 24!110
WaahlnatoD.......21 I~ S
' T...,. Bay ........ 20 18 7
Now Ieney .:......20 11 4
N.Y. 11-.... 12 24 8

({111

-y6S.o.tloldllb. J6
llln-*FIIIII9. " - ~ 3t

F;ad)ay~.~llo67 • .

lia

Roa1•44, Maj&gt;lo H11. :16

Newtoo Pol .. 61,

A--

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Prel&gt;lo S!Mw- 58. Valley VIew 52

SS

.,

NHL staudiDgs

vm.,. 43

boume:M

::e!".r:.= :~~~~!,..41
• Ne-... -•64.Bidlolillood42

· Ohio Atbletl&lt; Coafereace

'

J

Molp 69, Trimble 45
...... Cadi. 70, Ma)'fleld 58
Miami..... 83, OUoniTalaw- 62
MJddletowD 71. Milford 58
Mldd......• l'onwick 61 . Pnoaidi• 59

'

Hoc key

F,....lll Rou 63, OY&lt;Io 53
o.hana 60, u~ Arlinslon S2
Hamilton Badin 47, Cia. Fin~~eytown
42
.
Hardin Northern 5S, Fremont St.
J-54
Healb 87. New Albony 42
Hudloo82,N'"""'24
Jdfenoo 69, Middlolowo Madi1011 4~
K.em Rooaeve-72. Altro• N. l~
IC.enerillf AI.. 53. Day. Ookwood 49
Lalo: Ritl8e S2.1!1,.U Flnt Baot. 19
~S7,W....mUes. .W
lninaiOII Sl, MariOD Hanliaa 41
Uckin1 HtL 43, Mii"'JP.M 41
. Looltlo!MIIo 67, SmitbVIIIo 43
MwfielciSt. ,_., 51,N«tbmoo !I
Mlrioo Plouant 81, Rld&amp;Ddole64
I.!orion RiW. Vol. 65)( Union 37
Medi .. Flnt ...... 61, Maoailoa Cbr.
51
Mlaml64. Gnl&gt;am 42
Milllli Vol. 46, Xa!Jalllr. 39
MOIIIOIVilloSI, New Loodoo43
Mouhl V--.37, FraDkin Hu. rT
Nadonollilil50. c.-.;11o, Ind. 37
Nowa-67,U..-Sl
Now KaDTovitlo 62. s,._.;tte 39
Nowadt 46, M..tleld Sr. 41
0roDae lllr. 46, M - a.. 211
o..,llJo 54, Triway ~7
PickeriDJIOD 69, Wortbinaton Kll·

a-..

Lamar 88. Ca\tet\11)' 70
Oral Roberti IM, John Brown S6
Tuu Tccl172. Southerp Meth. 60

OUR SPECIAL ·PAGE(S) .
"FOR PETS ONLY"
WILL BE PUBLISHED TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 1311 IN

Olloon ......... 12 ...... , _ ,
II·FI. Loramie 21. 12·11ertin Hiland 19.
13-Waynaville l 5.

43

Kiii&amp;I ·SS. Norwood 53
Kinlaad 7l,l'ymotuai Vol. SB
Lab Ridae 66, Blyria ~ Bapt. 54
........ ood 54, B. Clevtlattd Sbowl8
u-tor 51. Tri-Volley 38
.......7,lemoo--41
Uborty Ullion 65, A~
48
.
u .. 69, LhnaCtlb. 60
Uncoln Bap" 65, Uctinl Co. Chr. &lt;It»
Unle Miami 93, Goalln 43
Loaan Elm 71, Hundntton 64
Louiaville Aqui1111 79, Dover 48

Midwelt

9-0t-

Blida 54, F'llldlay 47
Fraottio Monroe 48, TwiD Valley S.

u.-

1111.

I·S. a..tesliTo SE(Il) 13-0 ... .. .. 203
:l-lacbODCaa(4)13-l .. .... ... 1~3
J.z-.;tlo R - (l) 1:1-2 . . . .158
4-ICalida 11-2 "" . " . " .. " .. " .110
5-0ttovillo 13-1 ...... .... ....... lOS
6-Soutbi- Cllalit&lt;'l-1 .. " .. " ..70
7-BaacomHooewell-Loollotll2-l ....65
8-Doovilloli·2 . " ". " . ... . .. " . .58
HIS. 9-2 ......... .....56
10-B.C...O. IJ.I .... . .. .. .... . ... 26

Browh 17
!loy. Canoll 56, Edawood 4l
Day. SlcbbiM 59, Milloa Union 49
O.lpllos left'"""" 65. Wayae T""" 62
(01')
Dillie 64, Tri

.. .... .. .90

:r..

Cuyahosa Val. Chr. 77, Halhaway

.Grand Vol. 71, Cardinal 68 (0'1')
G.....,. S2, Oakwood 42
110, FiWr Calli. 50
Hlckooy, PL 66, Brooldield 46
Hilloboro 68. Lovclattd 55
Jetrenon S7, COIIDelllt 31
John Glean 55, River View 47
Jobnltown Nollhridfe 14, Johmstown

PIT IALEN,.INES!

ncelvlnoliG&lt;
~·
· ..nllt
II OtiMn
(de), BELPRE
(!), Cin. W
JO.
ll·IWobridoe Plio! Volley . 14-Supr·
cieek ll&gt;taway 18. IS·Welli&gt;UIO It! 18
(tie), Loudol.;ne. UP\* Satteluay 13.
1.1-Coldwaa 12. ,,
. " ' ill.' ..

Col. Wai81,Coi.Soottll48
ColdwEr 76, St Marys 47
Columbia 65. Clarview 50
Copley 75, Toltmadae J6
Qayaloop FaDo 79, Ellol32
C.,YabOp Hts. 52, Rocky River 38

Keocott Ritl8e 58,
s2
Ke711011069, • .....,..61

Bradley 71, Evansville 60
Drake 87, S. JlliDOir67
lndilll18 99. Michiaan ll

s.~.ea.;.-.LaB ... u-1

Clo. VA-SI67,Cio.a...motK31
Col. a-bcrofiSI,O.I.-011040
Col. - - 7 0 , Col. MJftlio 15
Col. Cal101111iai39, 0.1. Eoot 36
Col. lade' uulc~MX~63, Col. Sri. . 35 .

Oir.6~

E••• .

6,Pemberviltel!lalwoodi3-i . .. ..•..63
7-Alaon StV•St.ldary 1-3 ..........110
(tie) N.UmaS. liMa&lt; (I) 10-60
9-Bahi....., Li~ Uni1111 1:1-2 ... ..49
10-SbaWoocl F•mew 12) 12-2 ...... 36

CU.. Wyoa~~&amp;43,0a. - 1 7

Grand River Acad. 75, Cro11road1

0

m

CU.. w...... Hils 53. aa. NCTIIII-

Gihtlour ........ 74. lll&lt;lct&gt;cndcllcc 60
Oleewood S9, Franklin Pulli&amp;'C! Omen

46

AM

1-Rocky River Loth. W. (3) 13-0 . : . . I 57
J-A-.Ciean:toek&lt;2&gt; B.o ... . .
4-llrooltvillo(l) 10-4 " . . . ....... --911

Col. Walaut Ridae 56, Marion·
Prant.lin 42

,._Ia

.

.

31

NEW ·ORLEANS SAINTS: An·
nounced the raiparion or Frank Wmen
and Steve Trim~ble . anistant defenain

PICftJRI YOUR PD

:rfill,
1-Healb(il) 14-0" . " . .. " ... .. . 195

Clo. Colliowood 65. Clo. Keuedy 62
Clo. Eut Tecll78, Cle. BMt 36
Cle. Qlco.;tle 43, Clo. Sooth 36
Clo. Hay 60, Cle. 35
Ot. Manball 96, Cle. Uaco1•· We11

Golloway Watlatll 69, Thomla Wor·

Boston Univ. 63, NMheulerD 59
Connecticut 116. Cent. Coonecbcllr St.

Findlay II, Utbaoa 69

49

Day. Cariiole 86. ..._s...._ 57
Dar. Owilliao 66. s. a.~ooro~~ Sll63

...._

Football

OOO.)'tw co-tract.

Dl.tslonW

Qa. Ur10Une 48, On. Pun:ell Milian

33

DeGnlfRi-711, lodiltt Lillo 47
O.lowlre7S. W..torvillo N. 70
E. CooiOD 59, 1\ilcorlwu Vol. 56
E. Knox 81, IAcu 59
!'.allan Brown 75, Lyocllbura.ctay SS
IWttlab 63, Ri. . . . 48
Foirleu 62.111diu Vol. 49

Houston a1 Wqhinsto:n. 7:30p.m.•

Elil

iloed!a&lt;&gt;ft77

_,_
-·

-

OIIHn ......... u ...... polIt .or-field McCiilio 26. 12 (tie), Avon
Lalo:,llover 25. 14-Copley IS.

- 6 2 . _... 13
c.tilla 45, Marion i.oc:ol32
Cllilicotile61.A-S7
' Citt. Haniaotl 59, Cln. O.~n SS
'·, Cltt. Merey67. c:o. 0111 tiiU. 54
Cia. Mt. Non Dame 63, a.. McNi·
cbol•49
Cin. Priaceroa 66, Hamiltoa 3 I
Cia. Aeadiaa1l,Ci•. Mt. lieallby48
Cit&gt;. St. Umla 58. aa. McAuley 56

Cooottoo Vol. 70.1lelloit&lt; Sl.lalto 47
Dubury Lltetlde 76, Tol. Olrittlaa

Thun!la:I''•.-

'

~82.Col .

'

!II.

.. .. 184
2.()lmltedPai .. (4)14-0 .... ...... 183
3-UmaBadt(3) 11-4 .. .. .... ..... 169
4-lleloit w.. iinDcll (I) 15-1 . ... . .127
5-Conlaod Labvlew 11·1 "" .. " ..95
6-CiD. St. Unula 11· 1 ........... .. 59
7-lle•ley 11-2 .. · ' · ""." " .. .. ..57
8-llellaino 10-1 .... .. .. .. .... ... .. Sl
(tle)Sinlliteni0-1 ..... , .. .. .... ... SS
10-Col.lleSalalol-1 . .. " " " "" .. 53

Question; I've had problems with pe'i~ent or less, .tbc skin can dry oui'
my fingernails becoming brittle and very quickly. This typically occurs in
breaking easily in the winter. I also our homes and work places as a result
have trouble with the skin on my fin· of making them comfortably wann
gertips becoming cracked and tender, when the outside 1emperatures are
but I'm not troubled with this in the low. Heating tbe air drops tbe relative
summer. I've noted that others seem humidity of tbe indoor air to low
to have the same difficulty, too. Are "desert dry" levels. This desert-like
these problems related, and what can environment pulls moisture from tbe
be done to help them?
skin making it brittle, dry and cracked
Answer: In my personal medical --just like your fingenips.
· library, my books on &lt;lennatoloey
Those who have a generous
, take up about a foot of shelf space. amount of sebum have more protec. Among those books, I have.tbree !bat lion from drying than do those with
deal just with nail probleiJIS. My a lesser amount. Therefore, young
poinl is that there are many, many individuals usually don't have as
problems that can affect the finger- much difficulty with dry, cracked
nails, toenails and skin, so it's hard to skin in the winter.
be sure of the cause of any individWhy is it, then, that exposure to
ual's complaint without a thorough water .. particularly hot soapy water
history and physical examination. ·, - can also lead to skin dryness?
Despite Ibis, I think I can hazard a · Obviously, while your hands are in
fairly accurate guess as to the likely water, tbe skin is moist. However,
source of the problems you describe. once you remove and dry them, you
You mentioned the problems wim · remove some of the protective coal·
your fingertips and nails as being Jim- ing of sebum and, hence, you have an
ited to tbe wintertime: lltat makes me actual net loss of moisture. Soap
believe the underlying cause is the . accelerates this drying process
same for both problems, and it prob- because it facilitates the removal of
ably is a consequence of your age and sebum .
tbe dry environment in which you
Fingernails arc mostly made of
live.
keratin, a protein substance ihat is
Age is a faci!M' because as we get sof~ned slightly by water and made
Older, the productio'b of sebum .. 'tbe mon: brittle in its ibsence. Hence;
nonnal skin oil .. decreases. Sebum your nails tend to break more often
plays a key role in helping the skin in tbe winter.
retain water, As tbe amount of sebum
Liberal and frequent use of hand
production decreases, external factors _ _lotions will certainly reduce lhe
such as wind and dry air can cause amount of trouble you uperience
excessive drying that, in tum. leads with dry skin and cracked nails in the
to cracked, tender fingertips. It is winter time. Use of "moisturizing"
unusual to see this type of skin prob- soaps will reduce the amount of drytern in those in their twenties or ing soap causes as will washing with
younger, while it is a common mal· tepid instead of hot water. And final.ady for those of us who are 40 or old- ly, adding extra moisture to the wann
er.
air inside the house by using . a
The two primary sources of skin humidifier or vaporizer should help
dryness are low humidity, or the "dry your hands stay "summertime soft."
air," which I alluded to earlier, and"FamUy Medicine" is a weekly
- somewhat paradoxically •• exces- column. To submit questions, write
sive exposure to water through to John C. Wolf, D.O., Obio Unibalhing or swimming.
versity College of Osteopathic
When the relative humidity is 20 Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, \
Oblo 45701.•

NEW JERSEY NEI'S: Plaoed Khalid
Reeva, pard. on tbe injuml Ual. Aclivll·
cd Rh:t Milhorn, forward, from the in·
jurat lilt.
SACRAMENTO KINGS: Plaoed Byron Houston, fOIWard , on the injured liM.
Aclivlled Michel Smith, forward, from
tlte injured list

coatncta. IDVilld Pablo Mar·
d-lolielder,"' oorl•l tnialn~
MONTREAL SXPOS: Si&amp;Hd Mel
Roju. pitcher; Dd.ond Slovllll, outneld·
cr. IDd Ryaa McGuire. infielder. lo o.cIN' ..........
PHILioOELPHIA PHIU.IES: Sisnecl
MJclo)' Morudini, .....,. btueman. to a

DI.WOUD

-~ Gruvllle 39
lfa
....... 62. ihletoYo Val. J0

Col W....... 7l,Coi. Rady61
0.1. w... 86, Col. South 72

,Basketball

Notional _ _ ..._......

ODt-ye.'

..

:rl.Qorlleld Hu. Trolty (14) 10.2

Atroa Fiftllloae 39, Hudwo Western
Ra«vel7
Akron Hobu J8. Mauillon .SO·
Amaada·Cicarcrcct 89, Jonathan
Alclor 45
A.._ Ov. 38, Cutoo lleritqc Otr.
37
- 7 1 , Kenmono 39
Boy61, lucke,eS3
llellorOIOiioe 83. Gnoeoon 21
llelmll 5I. liurotl48

Franklia 80

(O'J')

11-Cio. Collinoodl1

nor-lcque coattucl.

to
T... l1tobe aod Clwla Boock.
pitdlera. .... Morty. Malloy, iafTOider, on

-

Ollltn-Uer_...,.....,

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

~:~t-Ridp 92, Col. ·i.f...&amp;..

Housron at NfW\Jency, 7:)9p.m.
~·
CLEVELANO at Pltiladelpllia. 7:30
p.m.
New Yortal Miami, 7JOp.m
WubingtOIIatOw•. 7~p. m.
Phoeni• at Minoesota. 8 p.m.
Vancoll~eT II Qlcqo, 8:30p.m.
Indiana at MilwiiUbe, 8:30p.m
Detroit at San Antollio, 8:30p.m.
Denver 11 ~tie, 10 p.m.
Utah at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

-'ATLANTA BRAVES: Asrecd

3-Coi.Broolrllawtt (l) 13-0 . .. . .. .. 168
... _ 1 3 - 0 """ "" " ." .148
5-Tn&gt;y I S-0 ..... .... ....... . , • .1111
6-MI......... t:l-4 .. : ....... .. ...114
7·Y.... -.hao 1:1-1 .... . ...... .81
. _ _ Roul:l-0 .. .... .. .. .... Sll
9-Rocl'yRivorlolqnificalll·1 . . . .. .54
lO-W. Otoater Lalca4a Il-l .... .. ....15

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

1emu wilb Greg Olwn, pitcher, on ami-

.--.

1·Picbriolatoa (1) 12·1 " " . " . " .172

YOII. a.t..U.73. Wanat a.. 63
Y011. Eoot 64, ~I 54
- Yoa. Liborty7l,lf•bblrd62
YOII. M - 110, w.... Hanli•&amp; 54
v.... ..,..·at. vhu.aw.e1 7t
Y011. Wllooo 67, Y011. UnohtTO 61
Zannvillo 70, Hi llonl 59

Cia. Modi« 54. Day. a..nt.ode-JuU·
-40
Cia. PriDCetDD 84, Cia. Col«aia ~
CiD. 5cvcD Hil~ 53, Cin. Country Day
45
Cin. Sunnit 57, Oa. Loc:k11Dd45
Cill. ~ 86, Amolla6l
aa. Turpin 49,'0111. ~47
Cir&lt;lovillo SB. Bloom-Canoll &lt;19
Clo. Coltiitwood "'· Clo. Kooaedy 71
Clo. Elot Tecll!l4, Clo. Eall72
Clo. Glenville 106, Clo. South 71
Cle. Lolhenut E. 58, Wilio-Hill46
Cle. t.bnhall 7:1, Cle. Uacoln-Weat
67
Oe. Mu Haya 46, Cle. Jane Adami
45
Cle. 63, Clo. Hay 56
Clcrmoat Noreheaaa.ern 47, Wealern
BrQWD45
·.Col BriiPS6.Col L &lt;1 L • 51
Col Eut 411. Col. Ccolatioiol 44
Coi.-74.-Hanlllla69
Col MiflliD 55, C o l . - - 51 '
Col. Norrblaad SS, Col. Llllden·

4.5
6.5
I
IO.S
11 .5
12.s

01\'llloa I

41

(0'1')

I r :.):

:r.
!II.
1-Beooaaocl (18) 11-0 ... . ..••.. .1U

Xcaia65,Bea"'"""'*50
You. Bo..rn.an 49, Atllliatowtt-FIIcb

Cia. t.diaa HIIIIOO. CU.. Cllriotlaa 79
Cia. LaSalle 81, KettcriDJ Alter 78

.S
I
10.5
13
1!5
17.S

place vota in i*

S'r. LOUIS CAROINALS: AgJeed to

MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Traded
Duane SintJetoa, outfielder, to tbe Delroil
n.,.. ror ilawJ s-. pitda.
SEAITLE MARINERS: Claimed
Ana SmaJ1./:' rdla, off waiwn from the
Florida M.t U Ud delipated bim fet

recor4 lhrouJb ·aame• of Jaa. 21 (first·

toaS-4

0'1')

12· .684

14 .659
13 .658
2l .410
2;'. .342
27 .289
30 .231

Wi- 66, · - Akkr

Ciaol

leflc AnoCielioa divialou, widl woa--lotl

Tri Cotmty N. 67. N'1:C
............. Cadt. 82.
61
'l'lr&lt;iubl*l ss. CbaRioo 48
u- l.oc:olli6. Cadi• 54
UnioMowa Lake 56, AUiuce 42
Univenily School 55, Gufield H11.
Trinity 52
UpP&lt;t Altifllloo 63, Glllaooal8 (0'1')
V1hcen1 Warren 62, Poiot Pleuanl,
W.VL48
w. O..Up 72. OroDae 64 (1 01')
W. Holmel 52, CosbocMD 51
W.-muviUe Htt. S4, Panna 32
W*'loo 52. Woodridao oW
Wayuo 78, Cia. Aikoa "76
Wayi!CIIield 93. Triad 42
Weinoa (W .Va.) Madonna 63,
Willn111eS4
Wellifllloo S~. Millon Cadt. 48
Well-61, Fodoral HociTi'IIIO
Weatem Ra«ve Acid. Sl, Allopeny
(Poj,) Academy 47
We.toll 54. Hamiitoa Twp. 37
Wlcldilfe 62. K...IOII 56
WindiTam 53. Ra..... Sou- 47
w-alf&lt;TIIOv.t04,c-bur&amp;71
w.......... Kilboolrao 70, PicbriDc·

ctllll49
811Cke,e Vol. 102. T"" ofUfe 72

10.5
13
14.!1
IS.5
17
20
24

.538
.514
.474
.39S
.300

Toronto ~l. Uabon Belva )4 ~

Allllll&gt;ola- 47, Mlllooo 46
Aorora 76, O.yllhap Hb. 51
Badpr 76, Bkioonfleld 47
llelloUe 79, Steoboavillo Cadi. 47
llelpt&lt; 78. s.o- 48
Beajamio Lop•u441 Mecbutie•bura
43
Berbhlre 74, LedtetMm 50
Bethol-T"' 110. Bliao:haoor 49
Bottiu49,FiirlawD33
BIOCb.;llo 66, aa.. 52
BrilloiiiO,-SS
llroobido 64, l.othono W. 59
llntlllwick 114, Clowrtca! 54

By MARTHA IRVINE
Associated Prell Writer

I

. ,·,

Basketball

you, Ann.
My husband and I are on a fixed
income. Andy has asked his sister and
brother and two of our sranddaughters to be in the wedding. We offered
to rent the tU~t for his brother and buy
tbe bridesmaids' dresses for our
daughter and sranddaughters. We
also agreed to provide champagne for
the wedding and pay for the rehearsal
dinner, which now includes 25 and is
IJ'OWing.
Now my question: Some people in
tbe wedding party are not married.
Should their da,tes be included in tbe
rehearsal dinner?
My second question: The bride's
mother says we are obligated 10 put
up all tbe out-of-towners in motel

elly to animals can be prevented with
ju-st an anonymous call to an animal
shelter or police station. It does wonders for these abused animals an\1
also for your conscience. --Sleeping
Better in Ohio ·
Dear Sleeping Better: Three
cheers and two hurrahs for tb~i
humane society in Ohio. I hope your
letter will encourage others to contact
tbc humane societies in their area
when their help is needed. It is obvious from your letter tbal tbe humane
society in your town does an excel·
,
lent iob.
Dear Ann Landers: Our son,
"Andy,'\ will be getting married
soon, and no one can give me any
·'straight answers. I ·am counting on

-g~-i~~-en~'f-o~-it~opa-th-icM-ed-icin-e..., .Woman with down syndrome gets heart-lung transplant

;Seifert and Clark.
. He said the discussions centered
on what · went wrong during the
49ers' SCISCIII.

Scoreboard

.

I

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.·
UPET'S NAME"

•

Owner's Name

r ~~'!Tr.!.!'!:'!!!l.!!!'..!!.~.:.'!:,

&gt;

14.25-15.25-0Z.

1 '
I.
I

IAddra

I

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plcturaa I
.J

'

,·

~

.. ______________ _
I Amount Encloead:
nUl each.

for, .

. ·

I·

·,

•'

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...,.,..

The Daily-,~ sentinel
11 0 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

I

The Ohio Casualty Group of Insurance Companies, on!; of lhe top 50
insurance groups in the United States, is working wilh us to offer
minivan drivers 15% ()ff their premium rate. Now, miniva~ drivers
like you can get top-notch insurance coverage at family car prices.

)

·''

~~

To find out more about this money-saving deal in minivan insurance,
just call us today! We think you'll find our offer very fitting!

Serving Melp County Since 1868

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
'MUSSER INSUUNCE
111 Second
St.
. llepmenll,.,

'

'•

P~meroy

c........

'•

912·3381

-

Ohio Caslllllty Group ·

•

'·

'

Buy One-Get one

EEl

that fits your minivan.

Your Independent Agents

Deadline Friday, February'.9th at 3 p.m.
· Mall or bi'lng the
ent,Y
fOrm:
-·
'
-

6.5-8-oz.

&gt;

1
VALENTINE PETS
IP-''' Name
I
1Owner's NlrM
I~

Kroger ·
Kroger . Cheese
curls
vegetables
SELECTED VARIETIES

.·
.·

Hurryl DNfllllle

I

(Items llbo'" • • • - only In stores Wftlt DeiVI'OSITV ~~

Lay's

~

Potato Chlps...................6-oz.

�Wednesday, January 24,

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

P~oy • Middleport, Oh!O

1996

.-• .
·.
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···,•.
··.

12 Pl. 12 OL CANS

STOREHQuRS

Fill

'•

~~o~~~~., tlnS••ar

IAM·IOPM

-.
.

POMERO~OH.
.'

-.

~

WE RESERVE TIE IIIIT TO UMIT GUAIITinES
PR.CIS IOOD Tl•u· SATURDAY, JANUARY 27; 1996

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

·.

Grandparents urged to take greater
.role in grandkids' schooling
: • .y DEB RIECHMANN
: Jaeoclated Pren Writer
: • . · ~ WASHINGTON (AP) - Every
• - Wednesday, 96-year-old Bert Wilbur
; srabs his brown cane aitd shuffles a
: l)hlf-mile to Morning CreeK Elemen: .• '¥Y School in San Diego to help chi!• ',. 'dren learn to read.
'
. f}e's there rain or shine, one of a
. gro'!"ing number of elderly citizens
' fhat school principals are recruiting to
, volunteer in American schools.
. • " Whail do is really very simple.
, I let them read, correct them when I
: . : lhink it's appropriate and help them
• • !!llmetimes with pronouncing words,"
: ~ s,id Wilbur, adding that one of his
: • ;etght grandchildren attends the

:~: :~hool.

:•. · ~ Wilbur gets a gold star from the
·: · ;N,ptional Association of Elementary
-:: :S~hool PJ;incipals, which has pro:·:'4aced a v1deo to tell the nation's 57
:: ::I!G.Ilion pandpare~ts how t~ey_ can
·: •:'clp theiC grandchildren spcceed in
:: :~~I. 'd
d
ped ft
:•:-! e ~·eo -was · eve~1 . a er
: : ~earch md1cated that~ nsmg num• : .~ of children, especially m. low:; :,t~!fome neighborhoods, . were bemg
-: • .qused pnmanly by the1r grandpar·
·-•lidts.
. • - The Ameri~an Associa~ion of
; keured Persons reports thatm 1993
, • there were 723,000 grandparent·

,.

'

J ,Jhe dean's list for the fall semester at
• Capital University.
· In order to be named·to the dean's
: . l"t, a student must have achieved a.
• · ""de point average of 3.4 or above.
:• Located in Columbus, Ohio, Cap: kal University prepares sll!dents fo1
: .lifelong learning in the global envi~
; ronment of the 21st century through
: live colleges: College of Arts and
; Sciences, School of Nursing, 'conlietvatory of Music, Law School, and
a ~raduate School of Administration.

•,

•

.

I

\

In addition, there are Adult Degree memhers _o f Royal Oalc will be
Program centers in Cleveland, Day- charged $21 per month. In addition 'to
ton and Columbus.
attending the program, for that fee
they and immediate family members
may also use certain facilities at their
convenience at Royal Oalc. ParticiARTHRITIS AQUATIC
pants who have bee~ coming to the
PROGRAM
The Arthritis Aquatic Program at class once a week on the Senior CitRoyal Oalc Resort in Poineroy will izen bus may 'continue to pay $5 per
'
.
begin a new session Feb. 2. The pro- month.
Sponsors of the program are the
gram is a series of gentle rec=tional exen:ises in the heated pool, Jo be Ohio University College of Osteoheld Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri- pathic Medicine and Royal Oak
days from 10 to II a.m.
.Resort. For more information call
Those participants who are not (614) 593-2518 weekdays.. '

•T1ae Commtmlty Caleadar Is district residents welcome tp attend.

free

POMEROY -- The Wildwood
Garden Club, I p.m Wednesday at the
home of Doris Grueser.

REEDSVILLE·· Riverview Garden Club meeting Thu..Sday, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Grace Weber.
Program will be hints for attracting
birds . .

tl·~~
~ are printed u
permits
be panmteecl to
a

THURSDAY
POMEROY -- The Meigs CounREEDSVILLE
••
Eastern
Local
ty
Library
Board will meet Thursday
CIUIIlot
1110
School District levy' committee 7 at I p.m. The Library will be closed
! W...lflc number ol day1.
~ ·:r.p.m. Thursday at Eastern High from 3 to 4:30 p.m. to discuss perSchool. Public invited. Child care to sonnel matters.
·
'•~DNESDAY
be
provided,
School
representatives
::; • . RUTLAND •• Leading Creek
TUPPERS PLAINS ·· The lOth
~d4riservancy District board meeting, will be on hand to answer questions.
anniversary of VFW l&gt;ost 9os3 will
;~~p.m Wednesday.
:!~ :·
.
. MIDDLEP01IT ·: Meigs0APSE be observed at 6:30 p.m. Thursday..
· .,: _. RACINE •• ~outhcm Local ..Locall7 meetinJ Thursday, 7 p.m. in The meeting is open to all VFW
· , liQilding Committee meeting 5:30· the Meigs Junior Hig~ School cafe· membe~ and the Auxiliary.
:p.m. in the high school cafeteria. All teria. Bad weather will ~eel.

14.75

nia mailing addresses established

..

99

s

·vaughan addresses
Meigs Rotarians

Marketing
sem1nar
planned

DRI
-, PA·PER
·. TOWELS

..'

.CHEF BOY RDEE
2 CHEESE PIZZAS

GROUND
.BEEF
.

:t;•

10LB..PKG.

',

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,.

INEZ. Ky. (AP) - ' M•

sboolll

ia bcicb lcp. He wu bolpitalilled in :
l8lilflctory
coaditi1111.
·
dog: 1101 ~of. Dol shooll man,
"lt'l not fuany tbal the JUY lOti
- now dw's a story. ·
•
It happenld during I btwliDI out-. pbol," llld · Mlltia County Sberiff
inJ wheli a lpllliel n-' R111l)' p.riel Y~. "But it's kind of fue. ,
stepped on the lriger·of a shotpD 11y how liD aut iihoL"

•

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Pr r:• fa rlt M

qll,.d

Alit

271 North 2nd Ava. ·
Middleport. OH. 45760
AKC Reg. Pupplas, Klltane, Blrde I lllore
Exparlanced G~ · Financing Aalllbla

/~

MIDDLEPORT.
U.P.C.
PRIVATE CARE.
H.OME

'L--

Skiing, Porche•,
Deck&amp;,
Home lmprovemeilte,

Remodeling, :
Add-On'a, Root111g
S.tl.tiiCtlon : ·
G~n!Hd :

Bill Doerfer :

(614) H2~44

B. Jol- Rupe/Owner

6&gt;

(614) 992-217f
(UmeStone- ,
LnwRatae) :

Water
lrnt•ent

~ .~ Et~ulp•ent
·

·

WICKS ·
HAULING

Diltributed by

Opening• for 2.
Chrlttlan
atmoaphere for
elderly care In a
non-•moklng home.

Tll·STATI WATII SYSTEMS, IIIC.

Limestone,,
Gravel, Sand,

The_ water treatmert company cordially inlliles you to
partK:Ipate In a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Ill,.,.. H..-11,...., Iron, PH.
Ptuee Cllll Roi.Sojlelllll2-4472 or 1 - . - 3313
·toMtu -lrMwoterena

614-992-3200

Top Soli, Fill Qlrt

614·992·3410

llerer le;
lonely Ag1l11

\lhe

Call

eotnet
Picture Frame, Mats

1·90N56·260o

&amp; Framing Accessories.

$2.99/mln. 18+ ;
Touch tone phone reqtRd.
Serve-U 61U45 84~4

405 North Second Ave., MiddlepOrt

IIIHiiH3082

...,.._

BALES OF
HAY fOR
SALE•

Llm11tone, Sand, Gravel, Coal a Water

WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

CALL
614·949·2512

992-3954 or 985-3418 . , .

to the Federal Depoali
lnaurance Corporation,
w.. hlngton, D.C., 20421,
·for Ita written oonaent to
aoqutra aoma uaeta and
-ume the llabllltlee to polY
depoalta of the Oalllpolle,
Pomeroy and Auiland
of Athena,
Sank Ohio.
One
Offlcea
Aihenl, NA,
H Ia con18mpla!H llla1 all of
the offlcea of lhe above
named lnotliutlon will
continue to be OjMtalwd -.
:~~nk~:;a, 0{r.!'c::::::.
Any peraon wlahlng to
commant
on
ihla
application may fll8 hlo or
her comment• In writing
with ihe Regional Director
of the Federal Depooli
lnaunnce Corporation eilla
Regional
Office,
500 3800,
W•t
Monroe St.,
Suite
Chlolgo,
IL
80861,
before
proceulng of the
application haa been

32124 Happy

Holt- Ad.
Mlddl8pot1, Ohio 45710
Danny • P'VIIY Brtcklft
614-742·2193

PL'h&amp;•n

11!1 31151~

coN~~~~~ ci.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

overhead &amp; :

.New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions· • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMA':TES
"'

underground : .
utilities &amp; lighting
Bucket, Digger ·
Truck Services
S.VIce Pole
$2
.50 per ft. -.

61 4-992• 7643

(No Sunday Calls)

...,.__
1-614-371-9101
1----....:~--......::.....-..:...--::..:::1 ';";;;;;;.~;;.:

J.D. Drl••••lng ( ompany

1

0 Bo 587
X

R 1 Oh 45771
IC ne,
•
Jamal E. Diddle
trac:khoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
.JICkhammer, Available 24 Hra.
We dig basements, put In septic
systsms, lay· lines, underground borea.

n

r. '

For Free eetlmate call

949-2512

·~=;::;;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;:~;:=====-== -~~~~~......lioo-~
NEFF RtrlllllMUNG
.....N-' • ,.,.,..,,.,..,for .- J&amp;L INSULAnftllt
SERVIa

'f'H'' Special Occaiaft1

•WaddlngaiRKepllona

-coupone

Houte ...,..,.,

llernodlltng

IE"'I'Jimenl Pic...-..)

. -Aounlonl

KltchtnA lleth

J::

~~~~~~~~

owner John Phillips were hunting · 'In the nonoonfldenilal
~ of the appllollloll
tcipther Monday when the IS· ·tJte
Pholonrt•
of Information
wll be liiiiCie
IVIII*e •
month-old dol retrieved.a downed
bird. Pbillipl wu tryinJ to take the
IJinlaway wt. Rulty llejJped on the I!'" be obllllned " - tile
triuer of a 12-gauge shol&amp;tJn and it t!"G'-1 Oflloe. .
/.

land1aw Mill

108 Pomeroy

llemod1llng
R - Addltlona
Siding, Aool'd•, P.UO.
lit 11 ablo
=~::. ,!=~ tnt~:~~ .::cod
--'tor auch fila. " lliiiY
~-··....,.....
1112
4401
be lnapected In lhe · · For,IWIIIlat 1
C:O.pcutlon'e Regional
Oftloa d11rlng regular
..,.
bualn•••
houn.

.m:

,.,,.•,.

SAWMILL

Oxygen Acelylene CO.
Helium allllzn Medical Grade o.
P~ne Trlmlx unn

be completed no •rller
thin l'ebruMy 23, 1118. Tilt
period lliiiY be eattnJaJ br
the Aagt-• D t - for
good aeuu.
The
nonconftclentlll portion of
the application file 11

~1) 24. (2) 8,23

H&amp;H .· •

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

completed. ,_.lng will

~~=-::r!:=

...

Ill

Authorized
Distributor
Welding Suppllel•lndultrlal Gaan • Steel
Sllle A Fabricltlon • Repair Welding
AlumlnumiStalnlell
·
Machine Shop

~h~~~~n!~t=

•and blutDd 45-yea'-old Pllillip Smith ! '--~ - ~-ici .Sml~-~-doa - ~-~l!1.if,~- •
"'

Factory Choke Only

.

~-·
I. D
. CONSTRUC11011

ROUND

Dog shoots man.in hunting accident

90

-

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· Opening Feb. lst

A seminar for individuals iriterested in developing and marketing
SMITH'S
alternative income opportunities for
their farms, families or communities
CONSTRUCTION
will be held Saturday at the Wash- . : Custom Building' Aomodollng
ington County Career Center in Mari•NewHomea
etta.
•Addition•
The seminar will begin with reg•NtwGengea
·istration at 8 a.m. and conclude at
•Remodeling
4:30 p.m. The seminar will have a
•.Siding
•Roofing
special emphasis on marketing for
•Painting
income opportunities.
FREE ESTIMATES
The keynote address will be giv(814) tm-5535
en by William J. Taylor, Agricultur814 1112·2753
al Economist with the Cooperative
Services Division of the USDA Rural Development Administration, and
an Adjunct -Professor at the Ohio
State University. Taylor also operates
a small woodworking business from
his home. During his keynote
addras, he will be sharing his secrets
for "Ei~llence in Promotion."
Pmticipanta will spend the remainder of the day in workshops focusing
on marketing the products, skills and
services of rural small business ventures in Ohio al!d West Virginia.
Workshops will follow tracks on
alternative income opportunities,
small business management, crafts 110 Halp Wanted
and crafts marketing, and tourism.
Registration~ for the seminar are
HELPII
due on or before Feb. 17,tqBuckeye
Hills RC&amp;D, Route 2, Box I D,
We need a few
Marietta. Ohio 45750. More inforgood people to
mation about the seminar can be
assist persons with
obtained from Bob First, Buckeye
MRIDD with daily
Hills Rc&amp;D(614-373-7936), or John
Carr, Little Kanawha RC&amp;D (304·
living skills in Meigs
679-3639) or any of the following
County. Various
·seminar sponsors: the Marietta Colpositions available.
lege Small Business Development
Call ·
Center, and your local office of The
Ohio State University Extension or
1-800.531-2302
West Virginia University Extension
Service.
Public Notice
No1lce Ia hereby gtven
that The People• Benktnu

i

'•

U.H.,.,..,.n.

"Suppa• for all your~~...,.,., ..

12Ga~t•

e

Pomeroy Mayor-elect Frank of the river to the next.
Vaughan addressed the MiddleportIn 1997, Mayor Vaughan hopes to
Pomeroy Rotary Club on his first 22 raise the salaries of village employdays in office at its regular meeting, ees which he says are 1/3 less than
Monday evening 11 the Heath Unit- other village wockm across the stale.
ed Methodist Church in Middlepon. He alae stated that he feels the
The mayor spoke on several chat· biue-t challenge facins the 111111 is
lenges he has faced in biJ fU11 days "flndiqg a way to keep tbB young
in offiCe including concern over road . people in the c:ommunity."
couditions, a blizzard and flooding .
In response to quesliol)s, VauaJian
He said that in spite of die prob- ; stared thai the reason he decided to
terns, "the whole community has; run for mayor is because he has lived
been wonderful. • Vaughan ~ed ~~~ in the 111111 Ill of his life and was;
the state's declaring Meig~ County af asbd by sevenl clO.C wociatcs tQ
state of emergency·so thai the 1111111 seek the position. He noted his ser·•
will beelipbletorwceivesova•w•t• !vice 10 our country for two years in funds to repair snow and flOod dan!- ;war time anCl said that he wanted to SOutheastern Ohio as far as water
age, and went on to discuss hislmbi· . pve some time to his c:ommunity and quality and quantity.
ti0111 u mayor and what he illoOkr :try to mike thinp beaer for his chitThe meeting was turned baGk
ing forward to IICCOIIIplilhinl in the :dren and lfllldchildren.
over to president Lloyd Blackwood
next four yean.
.
Quellioal coiiCDI1lin1 the new ·and a discussion was held.conceming
Vauahan's fU11 goal il 10 have · Wiler lines were anawcred by John the purchase of bricks being sold by
Pomeroy streets paved within the Andenon, villqe admilliJintor, who the Olamber of Commerce for use in
nexi few months 8Jid develop a bet- , stared tblt the W8ler line project the downtown rlvitalization project.
ter WOIIdng relalionship with the peo- "sbould be don. in two weeks, WeiiJI.. . .Bob Beegle moved that die Rotary
ple of the business conmunity. In ihD er permiUiDJ." The new water lilieS ~ !Club purchase an 8" X 8" Comer·
spring, he lllid he would lite 10 beaio . wiD 111ow for llvwih in hwinea ~th . IICone Brick in support of the Chama beautification proje.ct on the riv~ ., almolt unil..Uted Wlllei' ClpiCJty. · Iber of Commerce sale.
.
bank by cuttiq the bank so thai The new well, located in Syncuse, is· :·· Women of the church served the
Pomeroy can be seen from one bend 1ept4kld to be one o1 the best ill dinner.

', .f

3 $1
$~1"

NPET

· ROU

I I

oz.

oz:

.\,.

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

32.5

..

DOG FOOD

JOAN OF ARC
KIDNEY -BEAN.S
15.5 oz.

Between the blizzard of "96 and intulude in wbic:h to Slrlisl*n up the
the first flood of '96--and please Jet attic.
there be no more--l developed a case
Dilriq the eiK:ounter I ran across
of writer's block.
a laqe cardboard box which investi·
•
I
Variety is the spice of life, "they" galion disclosed contained the many,
say and the weather has really pro- 111!iDY kind messaaes that you sent me
vided an unwekorne taste to every five years ago-at this time of the·
day living.
year--when I had more health prob1 couldn't' believe thai last Thurs· lems t1!at I cOiild count. I made a
day I, not heavily dressed; even major decision. It was time for them
•
turned on the car air conditioning on 10 go. However, not UJJtill reopened
a trip to Middleport in order to cool a¢ cad CIICh card and CIICh note
off. The next day, I was freezing-- · again. Now that took time. Howev-.
yep, even in the long johns.
er, I'm more impressed than I proba· ·
Floods
are
unfortunate
events
in
bly was the lint time around when J·
..., the lives of us along the river and I didn't
feel -all that great anyway.·
don't mean to talce them lightly. Oeez. With all ofthatCIICOUI'Igernent
Above all they are a terrific blow to I Couldn't do anything else but get
our economic climate. He"ven well. WhM bothers me now is the
.... knows the Main Street merchants in question: "Will you love me in 1996
Pomeroy having enough problems as yoo did iri 1991 ?" I stnly hope
making it--they certainly don't need .so. Trust me, rm deliahted to be
the expense of moving out of their amons you.
buildings, the lost business and the
You'll be pteued-~~~re you will··
;.: " _.of getting--back in when 'the to 'blOw that aftu the second io"
.,
water recedes.
around-with the cards and notes I did
However, I do feel that the televi- get il1e attic ltraightened up. It won't
sion station.s overplayed our flood of; be that way for long. You know the
'96-as I say, the first and hopefu)ly 1- attitude ~hen you encOUDter some. the last one of the year. Watching the: lhi!ls iround the~ that you don't
television I had difficulty in believ· know what to do with. · You just
ing I was experiencing the same flood throw it in the attic.
that the news commentaton were
Thday. the attic loots great By
talking about. Did they really feel it. next week? Well, that11 be another
was that bad or is toda)"s crop struck story. lriiO the baraain I did get up .
with sensationalism? A reality check enough courqe to trash some of the .
might have worked. If those "yopng "stuff' in the attic. You know how I
uns" thought this one was bad they feel about "stuff" and especially the
_ . should have been around in 1937. "100&lt;1 stuff'' so I didn't disPose of
Now, that was a flood.
what I consider "good stuff." No sir.
While I haven't been doing too Hung right onto it wiill the thought;
well in keeping in touch with you that it11 bring a good price when they '
through "Beat of the Bend," don't get hold the auction in the front yard one
me wrong. I haven't been just sitting day.
.
around watching television and
I hope your clearina away some
drinking mint juleps from tall glass- "stuff" but whalcver, do hang onto the
ei. No sir. Since I nonnally always "good stuff.• They11 probably do an
feel that January is a good time to '· auction for you too. Above all, .do
"clear out," ii seemed like a perfect keep smiling.

FRISKEES CAT
FOOD

15

.

'·

18oz.

WHITNEYS PINK
SALMON
4

oz.

•

·.

&gt;

li(IIICe

'

by Bob Hoeflich .

JIF PEANUT
aunER

ss•··

390Z.

Beat of the Bend ...

'' ·

.

'tlllit .,..,. rrL :
Touoll- pllonf
. . .INd.
.
Sirv-U 818.8411 8434

GUN CLUB
'"_,_,. GUN SHOOTS
SUN.1 PI
YOU'll SAVE MONEY

MCIFamlly

'

49

MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE

UO.OO/IL

CCII=-!-~,.

Gertn.lde Rizer

'•

5.5

WELIIII I FIIIICAnOI

MINI STORAGE

It THE CLASSIFIEDS
endlowd, · AND THAT1 NO BULL

·-·-

(

....~......:~~;.·.~.•·..·.·.~...~.......1~----

-----Community calendar--: ; IM(bllshed as a
servke to non·
:: ~t groups wlsblaa to a a - e
!~ i0ietin1 and special events. The
~: ~dar II not d1llgaed to promote
•. Ji,ae. or lund nlsen ol aay type.

TOMATO
JUIC'E

••'
•

BLUE BONNET

---.~-Society scrapbook--~--

.· ..· : •. DEAN'S LIST
.
j • . . Heidi Ferguson of Pomeroy made

STOKElY
460Z.

headed households with no parent wanted to pursue such efforts,
present. There were more than I mil- ~ording to the survey..
SUPERIOR-BONELESS TAVERN
lion children in these homes in 1993
Round Valley Primary Scl)ool in
- up 17 percent from 867,000 chit- Springerville, Ariz., has a weekly
dren in 1992, ••;d
· · ·
- Ren·ee "'--'··~~
"""" _.,.u, support group •aor peop1e nus1ng
acting director of the AARP's Grand· grandchildren. Barratl Middle School
parent Information Center.
in South Philadelphia is seeing many
More than 10,000 grandparent$ more custodial grandparents too.
have called the center in the 2 Jn.
' WillardModeiEiementarySchool
years it has been operating, she said. · in Norfolk, Va., has inviled grandAmong the reasons cited for raising parents to two "chew and chat" sesgrandchildren: Their own children are sions so far this school year. Princistrugghng w1th alcohol and drug pal Lillian ~rinldey uses the coffee
addiction, are. in. prison. or have and doughnut breaks to get grandne~~ected,the kids..
pare!lts insi~ the school, where they ·
They re back m the school sys- .can be recru1ted to tutor, read to chiltern, and goin~ to PTA meetings," dren,sharetheirlifeexperiences'and
Woodworth s&amp;Jd of the grandparents. spealc at assemblies.
The principals' association sur·
"We have . found it's a great
veyed 3,000 of 1ts 26,000 members resoun:e," Brilikley si!id. "It's a sort
about grandparents raising children. of hidden treasure that has always
Of the more than 450 who res~nd- been there."
ed, 83 percent noted an increase in
Ninety-eight percent of the prinlhe.~ustom.
.
cipals surveyed ~d grandparents'
F1ve years ago at my, l!'lhool, no suppon of education can have an
gr~dpare~ts were baby sitting or · impact on a grandchild's success in
ramng children," said Susan Van school.
Zant, principal of the Morning Creek
"Instead of asking, 'How was
school. "Now I have more than 20. school?"' the video suggests grand- And ! _know plenty of other principals parents ask their grandchildren to
\l(ho see this as a growing trend."
describe their school day, or ask them
While only one in five'P,rincipals about their favorite part.
who responded had set up 'outreach
Grandparents who live too far
programs for custodial grandparents, from the school are encouraged to
an additional 50 percent said they schedule visits around a school play
or concen

On Hla Birthday,
Jan. ~4th.
s.dly milled

-- .

-.
....

My,Huaband,

NORMAN
RIZER,

-.

grandfather, grabl hl1 cane and ~ufftM a halfmile to the tehool wh- he donltll hie time
helping 1tudente read. (AP Photo)

1·910-255·21"
•
&lt;•
bt.t402 ;

UCINE

CUBE 24 PIC ·12 OL CANS

. GETTING INVOLVED - Bert Wilbur, a volunteer at Morning Creek Elenwiilllly School In San
Diego, reada to atudlnta at the achool Thuraday, Jan. 4. Onca a - k Wilbur, a 96-year-old

CHEAPER RATES

985-4473

In Memory Of

•• Lowet.. ·

C•lllowlll

Rem~ellng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

CLASSIFJBDS

.,.,.... ly

&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

•Garages
•Complete

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PEA DAY.

ttl Ql12

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR

•New Homes

.,

291 SECOND ST.

J. E. OtOOLE, OWNER

101111 IISSELL
COISTtumo•

1

·Annlvwuitea
-Groupe

.,_
-···•

AAI-~114I;..I~
..
Ibllll~:;:;a
Allor 4 pin
..,..._WI J' .1
-·..
•
on

~.

D71RVAII PLACE .. ' ,. "
IIIIODLEPOIIT lllll-2772
Oflloe ltoln: Mon.-Ft). :
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m. :: !

VInyl A Alum. Siding,
VInyl Rlplli'CIIMnt,

Wlndowl, Blown d

lnlullllon, Stonn, ~~
Doore,
: •l
Wltula
we, 8eorm
Qen~gea.

..,.., • I IIJI

.•
;

�--~- -

omeroy •
leport, Ohio
The O.lly Sentinel • Page 11.:
~8d~n;l;l~d~ly~,~J;a~n~UI~~~2~(~,~~!9!96~::------------------------------!~~~===I:::::::::::::~~~~~::::::::::::::::~========~==t:
1;u.LEY OOP
--~~------· - -~
··

NEA

BRIDGJ:

Puzzle

Cr011word

...........

.:.

----------~~------------------------------~----~· .·

PHILLIP
ALDER
ANNOUNCE r.IEIJ1 S

005

·KIT 'N' CAIU.YLPAD 11J t.n, Wrf&amp;ht

11183 Devtonalroo.

Alt.

PersonalS

AI tWill- -111111111n

to-

Giveaway

2 llodraomo Well To

IIIII"-"1
na 1"'!Fair
!lr IIII.Cijei:IIO
!toe
- . g ld.

ll'l~Na~IU~rai~G~u~F~u~rna~c.~
· ~· v..~·~,~N=Ice=··
11..__,1G.

ol18811 wl1lch ..._" llagal

2 Bodroomo, 1 Balh, Gaa Hoot,

"'ny

1285/Mo. lncludao Water, Gar·
bage, No "-11. Depoall814·«1 ·

PI-""'·
imbtionoJClloct1minatlon

1'I' 1 old Auatralian Shephard. ·

sho~t hair, browrvwhite, goad W/

limitation"'--.
1'1111-•1'11111' ... not

2btdtoom, tolll itectric:, no pel~.

Board Of Commissioners Re·
serves The Right To Reject Any

Spring&amp;fl, long hair, good wlchi~
ren, to best home only. 304-675-

-'li'l~

-lion
Our- ...

--lllb'•l-le
~-

w111chllln

675-4064.

hereby .

inlolmad lhllll ~
MNrertiled In this nI 1Pee "'I
are aVIIable on an.equal

Beagle dog , male , 8mo1 old, ·
fr iendly, to best home only.

30•-

675-4650.

olflelaw.

_..lilY--

"What do you want us to do, Captain Ahab?
That Greenpeace ship Is loUowlng us againl"
. .
.

Cou ch w/ sofa·bed, needs work, ·
come pick up. 304·675-6582 after ·
4:30pm, leave message if
home.

EMPL 0Yf.1FNT
SERV ICES

Female English Sauer.
English Sette r puppy.

6588.

RI:Alf::STATI:

110
weekly. Auemble
pradu~ts. No selling. Paid direct.
Fully guaranteed. No experience
necessary. 7 da~s . •07·875-2022

..t0505H04.

310 Homes for Sale
3 llodraom, 1 Bath, Gal

..1Water,
11132.

Hll~

fll.

BulavHie Pika, 814-«8-

.ttbedroom home on 4acre lot,

Now ~

baautilul view, 1yr old, priced to
l Clah MaN r•dy D HI!. Rl~od Eatates. 304-675·

open. Needed are wndort of an- 3020.
tiques, quality ~;rafts, &amp; c:olle&lt;:ta·

oooo.

·

'""'" •••

Marked

8, PS, PB, 51 ,000

nlloquinod,814-311-1273.

Call 014·448·0251

1 'hlld. 1275/mo. lncludu traah
pi&lt;kup. $200 depoalt. New 1995
2bodroom, no 11011. 1 child, $3501
mo. $300 dapolit. 304-675-8277

speed, r uns good, · nice body,

•

Homo, ClOwn City Aroa, $275/Mo.
Depoai~ 614-258 8403.

992·21*.

•bedroom trailer In Ohio on At
143. Reference• &amp; depoait. 304-

882·290".

1D77 Fool F-250 35/M, Auto, PS,
PB, 10 Ft. Flatbed, Runs Good,
$1 ,000,814-245-0319.

Trailer For Rent On George1
CrOll&lt;. 814-448-1271.

1980 tn1erna1ional Dump Truck
With 9 F~ Snow Plow &amp; Siilt Box

Household

Goods

549

MISCellaneous

Hours. ca11 (909) 115-2300. Ext.
1351. (24 Houra).
.

LOST: male. tan cat, subdivision
across l ro/1:1 Beale Elementary,

Dec. 271h. Phone 304-67!Hl717.

Lost: Man's Black Billfold,
ant Pap e r~ . Unreplaceable i
lures, Please If Found: 614 -446-

$40,000 /YR. INCOME Potential.
Home Typists /PC Users. Toll

for Renl

Fr.ee (1) 800·898-9778 Ext T·
2814 Fa&lt; Ustings.

0218.
LOST: on Gill Ridge, 1· 18-96
even ing, black 3moa old, fuzzy Able
furred puppy, wearing red collar.

304·695-3213.

Avon

Representatives
needed. Earn money lor Christmas bllls at home/at work. 1·800-

992·6356 or 304·882-2645, Ind.
Rep.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vlclnlly

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

PEANUTS

1100 depoall, Bam 10 5pm 814·
992-78011.
5-10 Blazer, V6 auto,
runs good, $3,500.

"''OU SJ.IOOT, AND 1LL 60
UP FOR TI-lE RESOUND..

"

~AT WAS TI-lE REBOUND..

540 Mllceltaneoua ·
MerchandiSe

am""'"'.

Parr-Time $9 !Hr. Answer Teleph.ones, Flexible Hours /local
Area, No Experience Necessary

Call 1·809·474·6549 Ext. 681 int
kl 101.

the day before the ad is to run. Eem up 10 $1,000 Weekly I lUffing
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m. Friday. enveJopt11s at home. Start now. No
Monday edilion - 10:00 a.m. Sat- experience. Free suppli11, information. No obligation. Send sell
urday.
addreued stamped envelope to
Express Dept 38, 100 East
Whitesrone Blwd., Suite 148-345,

. ·'
Ford Aerostar 1 passenger
dean, 14,000 000, 814·9112· ·. ·

------------------1

I&gt;ON'T

WAiCH
~

..

711613.

s;eP

·~

..· '

II.

..

.,..

"

t-.LW#I'&lt;:&gt; M
lAlE \olallf!&gt;

FARr.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

style?

420fdtea-

staUon-

43 Sonny's ex
light

45 Grllfted, In
heraldry

I must admit that my knowledge of
the American Constitution is not what
it might be. How is youn? What is, for
example, the Eighth Amendment?
In today's deal, you are in four
spades. West leads the club ace and
irritatingly continues with the club
lUng. Over to you. (Leading the ace
from ace-king tw become remarlrably
popular in North America.&gt;
Note that four hearts can be defeat-

46 Side lnue
47 SingerAdams
48 Feel8 sorry
about
~ de France
51 Grad deg.

50

53 Female line

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campoa

.·

Eighth

Celebrity Cipher~ Ire crt~aled lrmn quo&amp;.lion&amp; by IM'IQIA ~. praet and prosent

Ed litttei"i-1 the~ stanclllor anortler. Toct.IYt cAll: X 1tQU1t1s f

0

v Fl

1

LRFI

LWFDW,
TKFZINZW

F

IFOEMWS

LRWO

LWH

XNK YI

LW

SWZWNDWI'

I V

LW

YNK

LFMIWK
YZVII.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II you want a place in the sun, you have to expect a
few bfisters."- lorena Young.
. ·

....

WOlD
'::~:.~· S@l\4\\1A-&amp;£~s·
IWitM loy CU.Y I. PCIIIoUI ""!":';;,_-_,_ _
R..rrange '"""" ol the
lou• oc:rambhod -d• r..
low to fo•m lou• -.Ia.

•

I~rll'll
ROCKED

I

I

EMSUO

lives.

~INI'.o,

Ql.l£f!
Help Wanted on· Dairy · Farm:
Mil~ing, Feeding, Bedding and
Equipment
operater. Andy

- ----:':"'---:----::-----·I Adam's Doi&lt;y. 814-3711-2744
90 Wanted to Buy
HOME

Auto Parts &amp;

Electric Wheelchair&amp; /Scooters,

Accessories

-./UIId, Scootor IWIIHicholr

Lilli, Stolrwo, Ettvatora. Lilt
Chairs, Bowm1n's Homee1re.

•

Antiques, collectables, tfstates, ·
TYPISTS
River ine An tiques, Russ ,Moore, PC Users Needed. $45,000 lnowll&amp;f, 614·992-2526.
come PotentiaL
Cal/1-800-513-4343
Clean late Model CSrs
Ext B- 101111.
Tru cks , 1987 Models Or Newer,
Home
Typists,
PC users needed.
SmHh Buick Pon ti.1c, 1900 .East$45,000 income potential. Call 1·
ern A¥entJe, Gallipolis.
IIOIM;13-4343 Ext B-9388.
J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying sal vage vehicles. SeHing p~rts. 304- law oHice seeks lull-time experienced secretary,, with
773-5033.
mar, typi ng , word pro.ce&amp;,sing
Top Prices Paid : Old U.S. Coins. skills. Send resume to Box
Silver, Gohj, Diamonds, All Old %Pt Pleaiant Register, 200
CollectiDies, Paperweights, Etc . S~ee~ Pt Pleasan~ WV 25550.
M.T.S. Co in Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Galllpolia 614-448-2842. Need 5 Ladies To sell AvOn, 614-

197a
675·7195.

814-4&lt;16-7213. ..

I'

BIG NATE

Budget Transmissions. Used IRebuilt, -.11 Types, Acceuib!e To ·
OVer 10,000 Transmission, New
Clutch Kits, NeW Pressure Plates,

Loot&lt;., NATE, "RRU'M
1'\ERI'v/ETHEI!.~

Starting 5·10's $S9.95, 614-379·
2935.

USE[) TO IT!

~!I REF~
TO &amp;E /1.

New gas tanks, one ton truck
wheels, raciarors. floor mats, etc.

D l R Auto. Ripley, WV. 304·312-

180 Wanted To Do

3933 or 1 -800-2TJ-9329.

.GET

~tlCTH

GRIIDE
LIIUGHING!.lOC 1&lt;.1

;.

PRINT NUMBfRED
'1:11 LEITERS
,
IILL
JW•HT,

Used furniture - antiques, one

NEEDED IMMEIDATELY

piece o.r comp lete estate&amp;, Osby
Martin, 6~ 4--992-7441 .

local Factory Outlet Has ·e Pr.Wi·
ous Positions Available.
• No Experience Necessary
• Incentive Programs
• Paid Vacations

LNely. 61 4-Jt!8-9303.

IT!

PUT
'El'\ UP 1•

Wanted To Buy: Uaad Mobile dly Only:
Home, 614-448.0175.
014--"1-1975

TRANSPORTATION

Georges Portable Sawmill , don't
haul your logs 10 th&amp; mill juat call

004-675-1957.

MATH TUTOR· will tuto• high
COnta&lt;t Join at814-llll2·1096.
ServiCe -50 -Ft Reach, Stump Removal,

Free

Estimates!

In ·

surance, 24 Hr. Emergency Serv·
ice -Catl And Savel No Tree TOo

Big Or Too Small I Bidwell, Ohio.
114-3118-11043, 814-307·7010.
r

Sun Valley Nursery School.
Childcare M-F 8am·5 :30pm Ages
2-K, Young School Age During

'

Summer. 3 Daya per Week Minimum 614-44&amp;-3!157.

_'In The (lasslfleds

Rooms tor rent • week or month.

2acrea, aurveyed, county road
aCCIII. 17h chest Unico frHZer.

Sta•ting II 1120/rtio. Gallla Hotel.
814-4&lt;16-9580.

Five acres,
aer•tor, near
Racine,S18,000 can finance with

hall down, 81-2025. .
Loll on Ml_, Dr. In Now Ha-

Clydo -Jr., 304-5~2338.

360

Real Estate
wanted

co. .,nlhetico, flnfah d~l, rvol

Wanted to buy· one 110ry 3 bed·
room home in u.ig1 Counl)' with
Mperata dining room and ample
yard space. Send •f81ponsts Cia

875-ell:l.

~OH457ei.

Conatruction work, all phases.

Addtiona, lidinll, plaatoring, IIU&lt;-

.J8B ~NOLOGY

Sleeping rooma with cooking.
Also trailer apace on river. All

Havo A largo Stltctlon 01
Modtl T.V.'s &amp; VCR'a For
Gauii'*HI
11H..1-01150

hook-upo. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5851, Muon 'I{V.
MFRCHANDI SE

von, 304-8112:290".
Scenic V1lley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2ac tots, public water,

Home
lmprovamei'l!s

2 Rivorvlaw Loll 200'X701' - bend Subloiolon N. Rt. 7, Watt•,
Eloctrk:ty, I Phone, t3Q,OOO. 304-5211-1753 AfiiK 51'M.
304-675-1918.

Prote11ional Tree Service, Complete Tree Care, Bucket Truck

You'D Find Cool

=-71~0--:-Au-d_oa_f~o-r-:-s.-..--la1 o

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

school &amp; college atudenta in basic math, aiQebra &amp; trigonometry,

·'

So•inls You'll

In the

IWEDNESDAY

SERV ICES

510

Household

Goods

C&amp;C General Home Maintenance - Painting , vinyl sidlng,
carpentry, doors, windows. bi!iths,

....' .

11183 Mt.rcodtl 240D, looka a
runa good, 4Cyl, 41pd, 12.500 or mobile home repair and more. For
- -304-675-1575.
free estimate call Chet, 614-992·
8313.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ romance
ABTRO·GRAPH'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

ropalra, lnatllllng windowa. 304· Dolly Stntinal. P.O. Box 72D·1g,

Will do hou11 keeping or t.kt

care of~ during t.o day, 110
por hour, call Pagg' 814·DU·

m rJTAL s

..__ _ _ _ _

583301114- • •.

f lrJMJCI/\l

210

Bullneu

OpportUnitY

111111 Oodgo 4
Spood, Air, 73,600 MIIH,
-~. 080, 114-258 8340.

ThunMily,Jan.25, 1998

.'

.. ,
..
'

..
.... .

In lha yMr ahead, you might develop
OUIIIde lnlltnlatllhlln you ,....
In lie paat. Thl8 wfl be a poellive experi·
ance Wft ~'f clllnlctlrom your more
mtlf8 fun,

a.lou8 C0t!Cifl1l.

AaUARtus(... »fW.ttiO...d

app!WCiale y:our fte .. Ill lodly, bul ~
might HY lhlngl. a 'blt too blunlly.
To avoid thla potential problem, think
blfoN you IIPIIlk· !&lt;.- wt.. to look IDr .

.L

l,

at..a;:;:~

you'll find it. The Aatro,
Gr11ph Matchmaker Instantly revaal,a LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Unless you're
which ligna are romantically patfect lor careluf today, you ·'!'lght overlOok some
you. Mall $2.r5 to Matchmaker, c/o thla lmpor1ant deta111 where your work is con·
naWijlaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill . cemed. Have a cO--WOtl&lt;er recheck your
Station, New Yort&lt;, NY 10158. .
ftnlahed product ·
PIICI!I CFtb. 20 lla01120) Avoid stingy VIROO (Aug. H-lept. 22) In buslne88
or pet1y ~ IOdlly. Tllalr bellav- 1111111er1 IOdlly. 1111811 points ellould not be
lor might offend you e .. n more than taken lor granted. They could later 1um
UIUIII and you IIIIIY act like them In spite out lo be thorns in your side. .
ol yGUIMII.
~LIIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Try lo praise
ARIES (March at-April 11) Weigh your family members today lnatead o1 berating
worda car.fully loday Myou get lntb a ella· them with criticism. Acidic comments·
cuaalon with a parson who has aome COUld provoke anger and argumenta.
Influence over your carHr. Your com- ICORPiO (Oct. a..__. 22) II someone
will be ~led ctftic:dy.
goea out of his .or her way lo help you
T~UfiUS CAprll 20-May 201 You will · today, make 1ure to acknowledge ·this
8I10J ~ wllh otherS In I frilndly, p8180R'S efforla. A sincere 11\ank·you wltl
open 111111111r todly, bUt RWill be betllr to be mo~e wetoome lhan caSh.
awld thctlltlnll ouitfkllmilll mettentwllh IAQITTARI\.11 CNov. 23•Dec. 211 A
utftmll8r people. , .
number of sm811, uM4ICHIIry eldrav&amp;·
aSI?I.(IIar ~....... 20) H could pt1M1 · tanee~ could IM,Id _up !0 8\ llhocltilg""""' IOdlly to -"' ,.,.._ from a pnon · IO!My. Try to be ~ o1 Mly penny
who ladtl..,et... ln
you lipen(t.
ha.orlllelly:ourflfand.Seellalll'l'l' .
CAl RICORNC0.C.ZNan.11)UtecauCANCER (June 21.July 22) Progrwa 1fon ...... ..,..t!lng -lanily "*ltberl
COUld be ittpeded IOdlly by on uaoclale 1odly t.ca..e_
you might lilY 101118thittg
who doeln1 fully Ui1cllfRnd .,our game . tllat aounda Tar anlagonftlfc lhen
plan. Milke an·IIIIDrtto- yDUf potjtlolt you io11tided. -

Olflaln---.

III II I

SCIIAM-lm ANSWERS

CIGssf(led SectiOn.

• $300 Pe• Week

Wan1ed To Buy: Little Tikes Toya, To Those Who Uuality. lnter614-245-5867.
wiews By Appointment Only. Call
:.....~:....;.:..;,..._________ Monday, Tuesday Or Wednea-

. , UNSCRAMBlE FORI
ANSWER
,

TH~T:S

446-3358.

Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos1With
Or Without Motors. Call larry

Eut
Pus
Pus

Whatever West does next, you can
unblock the heart ace, draw three
rounds of trumps ending _in the dummy and run the l;learta. If West doesn't
cub the dlalliond ace at trick three,
you will get home with an overtrick.
Get ulled to considering the altema·

YOO~l

773-5785 Or 304--773-5447.

2.
3&amp;

my.

I

RicK Pearson Auction Company,
lull tim e auctioneer, complete
auc uon
service .
licensed
fi66,0 hio &amp; West Virginia , 304·

NOIGI

Pus
Pus

Amendment is :
"Excessive bail shall not be required,
nor excessive fines impoRd, nor cruel
and unusual punishment innicted."
One of those words gives you a hint toward finding the best play in this deal.
You have copious tricks, but no eaay,way to cash them unless the spades
are 2·2. One plan is to ruff the second
club and play a diamond to your king.
Bu( if West wins with the ace and returns a trump, you will be in big trouble.
·
A much better plan is to run dummy's heart suit. But that can only be
, done safely if all the opponents'
trumps have been pulled. And as you
can see, the trumps are splitting 3-1,
not2· 2.
By now, you've probablY spotted the
. winning play. Don't ·ruff at trick two.
Instead, mate the "unusual" play of
diecarding a diamond from the dum-

Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

C-r Park,

Wea

a=.-.

25-

Pua Pua Pus
Opening lead: • A

The

Part dme Typiat 1- twenty houro

Ott Doodine for appllclliona, Fe-

20 Poorgr-*
21AnCiellt-'
22 Chlkl'l toy
23=:'

27 Openo role
28 Positive Voll
28 Actor a..tty
30 Pteuant
32 Moat
offenalvw
34 Brectstreet'a
paiiMr
38Actrau
Joanna40 Sing, Swlas

ed by a spade ruff.

bruary 1. An equal opportunity

AGENT: AVON SEU.S rTSELF
Need CASH Fo'r Winter Bills?
Earn $8 -$15/Hr. At Work -Home
1·800·742-4 738
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304-075-142D.

1

'

To $goo Weekly /Potential Proceaalng Mottgage Relunda, own
Hours, CaU (900) 715-2300, 'Ext.
782, (24 Houno).
per week, high school diploma,
c:omputo&lt; and filing aidlo rocr.inod,
experience preferred. Job de·
scription and application• avail·
able II Ohio Sllta Univerlity EX·
renaion, Meigs County, Box 32,
Mulberry Heightl (bailment ol
the county Infirmary), Pomeroy,

7Contelnlng
lint aoll
• -lily

ISI10 Conduct
12Freo-t
13u.tit
t7Joumeyatage

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No Experience Neceuaryl 1500

$35,000 iYR. INCOME Poten~et.'
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16
2•

By: Pbllllp Alder

ceaaing Mortgage Refund.a, OWn

note

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Fi&lt;m.814-38].(!612

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in Middleport, available December 1, all
utillliea paid, 8250 per month,

4PriWia
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6 GuiCIO'I high

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31 Pug, ....
37 l'rolnplild
31 AulllorLavln
40 Craving

Dealer: South
Saotllt

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2~

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Vulnerable: Both

440

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sewer, water and trash included,

allmitlatlon

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33 Optic

•10 7 4

· DOWN

dlt.cll••

tK 7 J 2

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noeda &lt;lutoh, asking $650, 814·

510

fllr-

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62

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s ...........

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11 .....w
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20 Aclnee
58 .,_willow
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'7D Ford truck, F-10, 302, 3

41

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40 :

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ACROSS

Vagary ·Issue· Torr;h • Warmth· STRAIGHT

A favorite bumper sticker of mine reads: •A Smile Is a
Curve That Sets Most Thinas STRAIGHT! ·

JANUARY24I

�P11ge 12 • The O.lly Sentinel

Wednesday, January 24, 19116

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:An exhibit to die for at N·ew York murder museum
.By LARRY McSHANE

AMocl.ted Pren Wrtt.r

NEW YORK (AP) - This is one'
- killero f a m~,~Seum show.
'
· , There's the bright yellow crimel
scene tape, separating it from al
Jieighboring exhibit. There's the
barrel pointing the way to its
entrance. And there's the disclaimer:
Some of the contents of "In Cold
Blood: Five Murders that Shocked
New Yorlt" might malce ·the average
museum guest queasy. ·
"I love murder mysteries," said a
smiling Mary Beth Betts, curato~ _of

gun:

the new show at the New-York Historical Society. "And what's intrigu·
ing aboutlhese.is they offer a glimpse
·into a certain time in New York."
That certain time coven 1836
through 1964, and selects five of the
city's most infamous killings - a
tough task in a city where five murden a day was the Q:Cent average. In
chronological order, the chosen five:
- April I! 0, 1836. Tabloid heaven: Attractive prostitute Roswina
Townsend is hacked and set afm:,
allegedly by wealthy, promiscuous
young businessman Richard Robin-

son. Robinson, whole reputed mosive alongside White's bed. Thaw wu
was keeping the young hooker from acquittal by reason of insanity.
revealing their relationship to his
-July IS, 1912. Gambler Herfiancee, was acquittal after alrial that ·man Rosenthal was gunned dowll:
drew national illtention.
outside a Manhattan cafe, shortly•
- July 2S, 1906. A tawllry tale of after complaining .that' police were
sex, high society, insanitY and jeal- ignoring his bribes and closing his

ousy. ·Architect Stanford White was
killed atop one of his greatest creations, the old MadisQD Square Garden, by an old flame's huslia.~. Harry K. Thaw. Thaw's wife, showgirl
Evelyn Nesbit, stoked Thaw's rage
with a tale of boozy sex - and a
naked ride on a red velvet swing hung

Looking for
immortality? Ea~tman's
Detroit ·man
has right
the stuff
By JOHN LARABEE
The Detroit HeDETROIT - If, Norman Bates
'had the services of Bill Huffman,
maybe he wouldn't have gone psycho
keeping his mother's mummified
remains at the Bates Motel.
Huffman, a Colorado, taxidermist
who stuffed animals for 23 years in
the Detroit area, now wants to pmctice his cmft on humans.
In fact, Huffman said he may
undertake his first human "preservation" as soon as next week- if he
can get a cadaver from a medical
school.
"The technology is already here,"
said Huffman, who lived in the
Detroit area from 1955 to 1978.
"And it is legal in many states,
including Colorado. All the law here
requires, for instance, is that the body
be embalmed,by a licensed mortician.
After tha~ there's no mention of what
must happen to it."
Dr. David Johnson, acting chief
medical officer of the Michigan
Department of Health, warned there
1!fe hazards to what Huffman proposes. Some diseases survive death
and could be spread by improper handling.
"There is the possibility of the
ongoing presence of microorganisms," he said. "When the organs are
removed,· one would have to follow
the same precautions as a pathologist
would follow. There is a danger of
HIV, hepatitis B or tuberculosis~
Those organisms could survive the
death of the body for a period o

her three times. The slaying became
a symbol of urbili ·apathy and alien-: ·
ation.
The eJthibits include vintage .
newspaper clips, pboiOgraphs, boolcs :
·and drswings. The White eJthibit :
inch~ a red velvet swing.
"All o( these cases share parallels .
with contemporary eve~ - :
although 1 wouldn't want w, crw :
them myself," B~'¥1 said. , ,.
:
• Visitors catt11rW'tlltit own. The :
exhibit opens today and runs through :
April7.
'

Indemnity." Hard-boiled Queens
· house...fe Ruth Snyder and her lover
did in her husband to c;olleci $96,000
in insurance. The " Dumbbell " was
nota Jeference to the mUrder weapon:
It paid homage to the stupidity of the
li:iUeis. Both died in the electric

gambling operation. A corrupt police
captain, Charlea Becker, was convicted and executed in 191 S although a subsequent investigation
raised questions llbot!t his guilt
- March 20, 1927. "The Dumbbell Murder" was the inspiration for
James M. Cain's novel "Double

chair.

.

-March 13, 1964. The slaying of
Kitty Genovese outside her apartmcnt
was just another city homicide until it was discovered that doiens of
neighbon had ignored her screams
for help, allowing the killer to attack

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·

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel nawa atafl
Meigs County Emergency Services Director R(!ben Dyer met
Wednesday with state and fedeml
emergency management officials to
sllrVey flood ravaged areas of the
county.
Dyer said the group to\lfC(I the
flood area from Story's Run Road
below Middleport to Reedsville along
state routes 124 and 338. .
At one point, Marsha. Manson
from the Federal Emergency Managemen.t Association, got out of the
vehicle and waded through flood
water in the Dewitt's Run area to
make sure there was still a road there,
Byer said.
.
Touring the area were: Ken Larson, a FEMA representative specializing in Small Business Administration assistance; Arvin Schul!z.
FEMA, a mitigation specialist who
seeks ways to limit future flood damage; Carol Focke of tl)e Ohio Bmergency Management ~iation and
Karen Slone from U.S. Senator Mike
De Wine's office.
Following the tour, the group proceeded to Lawrence County to survey
damage there.
,
Byer said he was meeting this
morning with FEMAand OBMArepresentati ves Charle~ Reynolds and
John Spoff along with officials from
·the-county highway department, viilages and townships concerning damage to infrastructure.
This afternoon, he will meet with
Peter Fink from the Depanment of
Natural Resources; Dean Ogden of
FEMA and AI Sands of OBMA to
view certain lR8S of damage from the
flOoding which occurred this past
week to assist t!Jem in working with

MASON .

wv

.......
-·0

COLUMBUS (AP) -,-A sex edu,
eation teacher accused of being sexu8tly involved with at least five students Will receive a w.-supported disability pension,
.. .
· The pension of $38,760 a yw :s
·blsed on psychiatric problems, Herb
Dyer,.director of the pension system,
Slid tqday.
. .
. ..The pension was awarded Fnday
to' David A. Lawrence, 49, who
last February from suburban
Reynoldsburg High School, The
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer ~

.,.pea

toilay.
.
The State Boll'll of Bducalion said
~nee had··~ 10111111-

·,-

,

•

By TOM HUNTER
Sentlnal NeWI Staff
Two Athens women were killed
and a small child was seriously
injured late Wednesday night when
their 1986 Mereury sedan crashed
head-on into an &amp;.tern Local sc~l
bus on U.S. Route 50 east of
Guysville, officials from the Athens
post of the State Highway Patrol statestTh~y..JliQillilllo . . ;
The bus, carrying 24 team memben and staff of the Eastern Junior
Vanity and Vanity Girls Basketball
teams, was returning from a game at
Nelsonville-York. No one abOard the
bus was seriously injured, but all were
taken to area hospitals as a precautionary measure.
According to witnesses at the
scene, a car driven by 2S year-old
VondaA. George was traveling westbound on US 50 in a curve when she

attempted to overtalce a semi over the
yellow line at County Road 42, near
the fonner Spanish Maine truck stop.
She reportedly braked to try to avoid
the eastbound bus, but collided with
the Eastern Local bus head-on.
The impact shoved the car back
and into.{! guardrail where it came to
rest. The school bus slid off the left
side of the road into a guardraii..All
of the occupants on the bus were able
to escape through the emergency
exit The semi was not involved and
did not stop at the accident scene. The
bus driver, Robert White, 65, of
Coolville, had no chance to avoid the
car, patrol spokesman Lt. Michael
Hunter stated.
GC(){ge, fonnerly of Rutland, and
a passenger, 19-year old Misty Mash,
were pronounced dead at the scene.
George's 4 year-old son, Justin, was

the interagency hazard · tilitigat:on
team in the event a presidential declaration is received.
"This will also allow us to provide
information to officials regarding
steps that may be taken to reduce
damages in the future," he said.
"This is what llried to do in May
after the flash flood," Dyer added.
Commeiuing that things are·moving
faster this time .
Dyer said some roads still remain
closed and some slips are showing up
National Weather Service said.
on Union Avenue near Pomeroy and By '""' Aaoclated Pren
Hydrologists at the Ohio River
The rising Ohio River left hunon Roy Jones Road near Syracuse.
Forecasting
Center said, barring sig"Without Roy Jones Road, you've dreds of people homeless, closed
got 900 residents of the village of roads and schools and threw some nificant precipitation, the river should
Syracuse isolated during floods," he communities into a state of emer- recede to 56.7 feet by Friday and to
54.7 feet by Saturday. Midweek rains
said. The road is the sole route in and gency.
could
cause some additional flooding
In
Cincinnati,
the
river
exceeded
out of the village during times of high
later
this
weekend.
its 52-foot flood stage Monday and
water.
Fed
by
snowmelt and rainfall of up
COncerning the current status of crested at 57.3 feet early today. the
the river, Bye:' foresees no immediate
danger.
"We're watching tbe situation to
see what will happen," he said. "I
don't feel there will be any danger to
the city front but there could be some
more roads cut off"
A Hartford, W.Va., woman want- tody, the local sheriff's department
Dyer said 700 families are still ed in connection with a September faxed photos of Leonard and Timofeeling the flood's effects and don't mutder in Mason County is under thy W. Gibbs, 36, Hanford, who is
have a normal way in or out from arrest in Uma County, Ariz., accord· also wanted for the murder of Jack
their homes.
ing to Sberiff Ernie Watterson.
Roush, 52, Hartford, according to
· ''Our bfggest concern is for fire
Risa Lynne Sayre U&lt;lnard, 32, McConihay.
and emergency medical service pro- was detained Wednesday evening by
When the arresting officer saw the
pie getting where they need to go," he Uma County officials and will be pictures, he positively identified
commented.
arraigned this afternoon on a fugitive Leonard and Gibbs. Leonard's father
Byer commenjled residents and warrant, Mason County Deputy Cur- also called the Arizona authorities to ·
local officials .for their coopemtion tis McConihay said.
tell them about scars on his daughter's
during the recent emergencies which
At the time of the arraignment, forehead and face that helped in ideninvolved either snow or high wall:r. Leonard will .be given the option of tification . •
and in one instance, :ln overturned waiving_ or fighting CJttradition.
Gibbs had given the officers false
McConihay said if Leonard waives identification when stopped. Authorpropane tanker.
"Oiurehes offered their services extrsclition. officials will go to Ari- ities returned to the site where the
for shelters." he said. "It was almost zona to pick her •P· Should she fight transients were stopped and found
it, a governor's warrant will be identif:cation with Gibbs' social secuautomatic."
obtained.
rity number, but he was gone. A
gets disability
According to Watterson and sean:h continues for him, McConihay
·
McConihay, Uma County officials said. ·
stopped a group of si~ to eight tran·
U&lt;lnard and Gibbs were both
tic arid sexual relationships" with at sients and checked for identification. indicted during January tenn of grand
least five female students from 197S At tha~time, Leonard,gave hero~ jury for the murder of Roush. The last.
through 1991. He.lost his teaching and
but a wron!l soc:al lead local authorities had on the coucertification in October.
·
, · S:CC~ty,number. When her •~orma­ pie was in· November after their
The board said Lawrence also lion was .ru,n lllrough NC~C. 11 came vehicle was found in San Francisco,
smoked marijuana with students.
back a hit, Watterson said..
Cslif.
Dyer said medical reports on the
After Leonard was tabn mto cus-

r

,.

commended the quick actions of bus
driver Bob White, which helped the
passengers aboard the bus avoid a
tragedy. "He did an incredible job driving, in attempting to avoid the car. ·.
If it would not have been for Bob's
actions, we all probably would not be
here right now;: Eastern girls baskethall coach Scott Wolfe said shortly
after the accident.
·
The car had to he cut apan ll)' the
Coolville Fire Depsrtmenl, in order to
remove the victims. Other units
assisting at the scene were members
of the Coolville Police Depanment
and Athens County Sheriffs Officers.
The crash is still under investigation by troopers of the Athens post of
the State Highway Patrol. A crasl)
reconstructionist was called to tht;
scene, and the National Transponation Safety Board has also been notified, Lt. Hunter stated.

found crying in the back seat of the
wrecked car · by Cory Dunn, a
Rave'nswood, W.Va. truck driver who
had stopped to help at the scene.
Dunn broke out the back window
and climbed into the wreclcage to rescue the child, who was taken to
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens and Iater transferred by Life Flight to Children's Hospital, Columbus, The child
was listed in critical condition with
facial, head, and internal injuries this
moming at Children's Hospital, a hospital spokeswoman stated.
Parents following the bus and
several emergency squads with the
Southeast Ohio Medical Services
transported the bus passengers to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital
and St. Joseph Hospital in Parkers·
burg, W.Va. and O'Bleness Hospital
in Athens.
Several parents and eyewitnesses

Ohio River .crests af57.3 feet in Cincinnati

·Residents along waterfront neighborhoods evacuated; water may rise again

....

End neighborhood. "No one npect!
ed it :o be like this. It just shot up

to 1.5 inches, the Ohio River rolled
through waterfront neighborhoods on
Wednesday.
Hardest hit were Clermont County, Anderson Township and Cincinnati's east side.
"The water came 100 more feet up
(the road) sin~ last night," said
Steve Roat, 32, of Cincinnati's East

overnight."

·

Roat's house, about 50 feet front
the floodwaters, had I foot of water
in the basement Wednesday, but hli
planned to stay put. Many others were
on the rno've, thou~h .
:
(Continued on PaR• 3)

.
·Murder suspect held Racine mayor plans
by officials in Arizona bid for commission seat :

pensiOn despite SeX-related finding

u.. ..... .....

1

-

Outside of HB 264, the remainder
of the project can probably be done
for less than $100,000 using permanent improvement funds, he added.
A new, insulated roof will be
installed on Middleport Elementary
School,'paid for by HB 264. The new
roof will be sloped for improved
drainage. The ~xisting roof has tears
and is not insulated.
The board authorized Buckley and
Trtasurer Cindy Rhonemus to proceed with the projects. Architect Brian·Boyd of Lock One Inc. is working
for the district on the projects.

Ex-Reynoldsburg teacher

'!

BIG BEND

---------c;--

(

·I .............I -........ &lt;II lUI. 01111&lt; ..... _ _ .... . . -" ' -.. lliiiMIIt. LlmM .... !No.
1-porhoo hold. Vou poyll 'C b+e10J&lt;-dopall~ oncl-ptoo-fUI (II~ t
~
~
good""" ln ... us. Noi I - l y .........
'"'I
·

I

Meigs flood sites

•

Pepsi
Products

•

.

Alnerical
Silgles

e~tplained.

In addition, the board proposed hired lise K. Burris and Angela RigsFeb. 16.andApril8asmaketlpdays · by as substitute teachers for the
for inclement weather. The rest of the remainder of the school year and
days will be made up after Memori- approved hiring a .tutor for a health
a! Day.
·
handicapped student.
The district also hired Ed RamsAll schools in the district have
-f!!issed atle&amp;Steight days due to snow . .burg and Benny Wright on one-year
or high water with Salisbury and contracts for the maintenance depanPomeroy elementaries missing nine ment. Mary Boorum was hired as a
and 10 days. respectively.
socretary in the treasurer's office.
Following an executive session,
The board received a parent complaint concerning parking in front of the board agreed to attempt to recovPomeroy Elementary School. One er $20,000 in costs from an insurance
parent said the Pomeroy Police company. The district will be reproDepartment threatened to ticket her sented by the Meigs County Prosewhile she Was parked in front of the cutor's Office.
school for her children.
·
Present were Buckley, Rhonemus,
-Buckley said he would talk to board President Roger Abbott and
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan members Scott Walton, Larry Rupe
about the matter.
and Randy Humphreys.
In personnel matters, the board

Eastern Local bus with 24 passengers returning from a girls basketball game involved

1411Z.

12 oz.

handicapped accessible. Under provisions of the Americans with DisabilitiesAct,IOpercentoftheproject
must address ADA compliance.
Superintendent
Bill
Buckley

US 50 bus-car accident kills two Athens women

State, federal

Asst. 9 oz.

A Gennett Co. Now po.,...

Meigs Local School Board
outlines building renovations
Renovation worlt on two Meigs
Local schools may begin this summer
after the Meigs Local Board of Bducation gave the green light to the renovation projects.
The major of the two projects
involves upgrades to the old Central
Building in Mi41Jiepon. part of the
Meigs Junior High School complu.
Much of the work will involve
energy-saving improvements including new windows, paid for lhroush
House Bill 264, a conservation program where the cost of improvements
are recouped through energy savings.
A new heating system and lighting
will also be done through HB 264.
Fireeltits will be improved and the
bUilding will likely be made more

Ground Beef

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txJuldMWtiU;Cipi',....ly."
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35centa ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 25, 1996

By JIM FREEMAN .
Seminal nawa atafl

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He said the body would have to be ,
posed almost immediately by a local
·funeral director. "Embalming fluid
makes a body quite rigid," he said. 1
Huffman said his finn would cmte :
:the body and transport it to his la))o, ·
ratory in Colorado. It would be
'freeze,dried over the next six to I0
'months.
"We then would penonally rerum
·it to its owner," he said.
The cost? About SI0,000.
' · Huffman said he's been "thihking
.about" the problems involved in
;homan preservation for a number (I(
·yean.
.
: "A lot of P¢oPle will find the idea
' :clis~ing;" he.lldmittal.
: . Bi!l whell yqu think of it, it.is no
'lilore ! distasteful .. th4n having Old .
· ;Shep pre~rved'.ind dueled up on the ,
I

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Johnson said he didn't know if the
risk of disease from human bodies
was any greater than from animals.
Animals, he said, "are not my area of
expertise."
Huffman, who operates what he
says is the largest private museum of
animal remains in the country, said he
would preserve humans in the same
way he saves the bodies of iguanas,
various rodents, fox, raccoons, reptiles, birds, cats, dogs and the twoheaded piglet he worked on last
week.
'"First, the body would be
embalmed. Then we would freeze.
dry it. Properly cared for- by which
I mean you don'tleave it out in the
rain or allow the dog to chew on it,
it should last for years. I have birds
here that are 40 years old."
Freeze-drying removes the moisture from the body's cells so that it
does not take on 'the dried-out, mummified appearance common with
recently embalmed corpses.
Huffman said humans likely
would be presented lying down
because "we are used to seeing them
in caskets, or perhaps in some other
favorite pose, such .as sitting in a
rocking chair."
"I think the family that wanted to
preserve the body would wish it displayed in a manner suggesting most
closely their best memories of that

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case were privileged and could not be
divulged.
·
Lawrence applied for disability
pension in March and at first was
refused. He ~led the ruling, and
the State 'Ii:achers Retirement System
board reversed itself last week.
Reynoldsburg Superintendent
Richard Rou told the newspaper he
was. shocked by the decision.
.

.

Diseipllnary hearing will be r~pened
COLUMBUS (AP) -A discipli;
nary heiri~g agalns\ a lawyer will be
reopened fot teStimony from a bailiff
who claims the lawyer and a judge .
lied under oath about their relation,
ship.
LawyerChri¥«JpherT. Cicero and
Judge Deborah P. O'Neill of Franklin

County Common, Pleas C011rt said
they were not _int,imately involved at
the tiille O'Neill ~Jnted CICero~
defense attorney in 'a felony case 10
her court.
Bailiff Norma Mitchell said the
pair lied when they testified in September

Racine Mayor Jeffrey L. Thornton
has announced his intention to seek
the Democratic nomination to run for
the Jan. 5, 1997, seat on the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners currently occupied by Republican Robert
Hartenbach.
'
Since becoming disabled in an oil
field accident, he became involved in
.community work and elected office.
Starting out as a Racine councilman
and later becoming mayor of the viiIage.
Thornton, 35, cites his work in
assisting area farmers in receiving
disaster funds and seeking new markets in Canada. He has also helped
the village secure grants for impioving its water system which now has
an .w well, the first in 45 years.
M:ile mayor, the village received
a $480,000 housing grant and he
wrote a grant to restore the old
Chester Courthouse.
1
Thornton is also proUd of the
S,OOO feet of new sidewalk installed
in the village.
He was a coordinator for stale representatives Mary Able and Mark
Malone. He is a member of the
Meigs County Chamtier of Commeree and was on the board of directors for three years. He was awarded
the Good Citizens/lip Award from the
Ewings Chapter SAR fnr his ·community work.
Thornton's goals 1re to be full..time
commiSsioner and to unite the county by working with the township
trustees and villages. He also plans on

holding community meetings in 1he
villages and townships to get advice
from their residents.
He advocates a five -year and I O-·
year plan for the county and stressed
that county residents need to suPPOrt
the school systems and senior citi, ·
zens.

He is a member of the Racine First
Baptist Church and is the son of Florence Thornton of Letan Falls and
John Bernard Thorn19n of Seattle. He
is the nephew of Bob and Hazel Roy . ';,
of Racine and grandson of Addie·
Cummins and the late Floyd "Buster"
Cummins.

·

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