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Page 16 • The Deily Sentinel

Thursday, January 25,1116

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'Spontaneous' shrines ·help communities face . grief \\'11:\ ri ,.S ' 1~ \\ '
,By TOM CURLEY
USA TODAY
• In Union, S.C., mourners left red·.dy bears and ClOSSC$ at the shin of
_Lake John D. Long, where S~~~a~~
Smith drowned her sons in 1994:
' In ()ldahoma City last year, a put..
lie shrine was born when so~
,hung an American nag on a liglll pole
~car the bombed federal building.
:Soon there was a makeshift shed
.filled with stuffed anjmals, ·wreaths,
candles and cards.
: In Oovenlalc, Calif., FBI agents
left poinsettias where the body of 12year-old Polly Klaas was found in
1993. Today, Oowen and personal
'offerings still are left at the sill.
. And in Arlington, Texas, last
week, mourners left small mementos
..'where the 'body of kidnap victim
Amber Hagerman was found Jan. 17,
four days after she disajJpclrid.
Nationwide, spontaneous shrines
have become an accepted expression
of public mourning, a sort of community sympathy card.
Experts say it's ~ol a new pbe- .

nomenoa, but one !hat's bappeniog
more and 1IIOIC in response to the
seemingly endless stream of teleVised
tragedy and senseless death.
"These are deaths for which the
traditional rituals and customs of
grieving don 'I seem to work," says
professor C. Allen Haney, who teaches the SOj:iology of death and dying
at the University of Houston. "The
public finds (these deaths) incomprehensible. We can't fit them into
any of our handy, explanatory models. We can't say, 'It's God's retribution' or 'Some chemical company
was just being greedy."'
Commonly, these shrines are Occt·
ing tributes; others have acquired a
more pennanenl status, remaining a
point of pilgrimage years later.
Lynn Mills, 43, lives about a mile
from where Klaas' body was found.
She helped search for Klaqs, and likes
to visit the site early in the morning
or at dusk. "It's peaceful," she says.
Mills says people travel thousands
of miles to sec the shrine, maintained

by residents of the IIMII, northem
California community.
''This is something that is fairly
universal worldwide," says professor
Ronald Banctt of Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.
"Almost immedi•tcly, people show
111spec1 for the !ICIIIIIlocation of the
loss of life as a way of honoring the
departed spirits."
Dcaley Plaza in Dallas. where
President John Kennedy was assassinared in 1963, sliD beckons the curious, some bearing tributes. The same
is true of Holocaust and battle sites
in Europe.
The Dakota, the New York apartment building where John Lennon
was shot in 1980, became an immediate shrine for fans of the worldfam!Ns musician. Lennon devotees·
regularly visit Central Park's Strawberry Fields, a 2 Ill-acR garden
memorial to the former Beatie.
But shrines to onijnary, everyday
victims of horrific crimes are springing up all over. And playing a major
role are the ~a. which can trans·

form i senseless death in one community into a nationally ~HI
morality play.
Plastic flowers and a rosary
marked a Dcttoil curbside shrine for :
Malice Oreen, 35, who died in police
custody in 1992. 'JWo officers were
convicted in his death, which sparknd
claims of police brutality against
blacks.
" We're seeing and we're able to
experience people's pain perhaps
more than we have been able to,"
Barrell says. "We're ... more
informed because of the immediate
transmi.ssion of images 'llcross the
planet."
At the ruins of a burned-out clothing store in Harlem, New Yorkers left
flowers, cards and candles in late
December. The store had been the site
of a racial dispute !hat turned bloody
when a gunman shot six people.
Whatever people leave behind, it
gives them "a chance to reach out
and say we are connccted," says
Michigan psychiatrist John Schnei·
der.

IN l l SI~It .\ rl ,
ri,LIICN 1 1 11il~·!·?
1995 MEROJRY
COUGAR XR-7

v..,

auto, AJC, AMIFII
tilt, cruiH, PS, PB,
PW, POL, Pwr wet '
Pwr. Moon

C811,

R* ·

5

15,949

ty after hla humoroua lllpad Vlt'llona of weekly IChoollunch menua - . broaclcast by l'lldlo
atatlona across the country. (AP Photo)

Lunch Menu Man hopes to enjoy
more than ·15 minutes of fame·
By PAUL NOWELL
Associated P111•1 Writer
. CONCORD, N.C. (AP) - The
· : voice could cut through sheet metal
: - high-pitched and twangy, a mad. cap mixture of a coon dog's howl and
: a 1V preacher's rantings.
· "TREA-SURE of the OCEAN ...
: that's
TUN-a
NOO-dle
· CASSEROLLLLE! ... or PIZZA!
: PIZZA! PIZZA I ... KER-nels of
:CORN .. . warm, spice!f CHER·
· RRRIES ... CRUN-chy VEG-gie
:BITES ... and a ROLLLLL!"
This is the menu for Monday, Jan.
• 8, 1996, for !he Charlotte,Mccklen•burg schools, courtesy of !he one and
:only Lunch Menu Man - David
: Price, a fonncr car Salesman who has
; parlayed a brief weekly phone mes• sage into a peculiar fame.
: The Lunch' Menu Man can be
: heard on radio stations across the
; country. He has appcarcd.o,n a nation· al 1V talk show and cut his first
: album. He's even done a couple of
: commercials.
It's bard to fathom all that has hap: pened to Price since September,
: when he left his job of 10 years sell: ing cars to take a job in the advertis• ing department at !he Concord Tri: bune.
• He had always wanted to be a
• co~ntry singer, Qlll did not view his
· n.ew position as a ticket to fame and
: fortune.

"I wanted," Price said, "to spend
more time with my girls" - wife
Cathie and daughters, Maria, 3, and
Kara, 2.
· One of Price's first duties at the
newspaper was to record the weekly
lunch menu for Cabarrus County
Schools for a call-in line.
"It was kind of dull doing the
same thing every time," Price, 33,
said in an intervie~. "I figured, 'No
one's listening anyway, so let's joke
around a litde.' "
He noticed !hat nearly every day's
menu seemed to end with fruit and a
roll. "By Thursday, I was doing it,
'FRUUUUIIT ... and a ROLllL!'"
Price said, his eyes twinkling.
When Cathie beard the tape, she
worried that he could be fired.
"I said, 'Nah, let's leave it.' "
Price said.
Soon, !he Tribune's switchboard
was swamped with calls for the
lunch menu line. There were 200
calls in September, 5,000 calls in
Oi:tober and 35,000 calls in Novem·
ber. As a point of reference, the llibune has a circulation of jusll3,200.
Then, several radio stations in and
around Charlotte heard about him,
and began to play Price's recitations
·or school lunch fare.
The Lunch Menu Man was ready
for the big time. He left his job and
went on to declaim !he lunch menu
for the state's largest school district

on The Charlotte Observer's information line.
"CIDCK-en LICK-in NUG-gets
... with KET-chup or SAUCE ... a
.. dinner ROLLLL ... mashed POTATOES ... broccoli-woccoli? Jell-0 and
· FRUUUUIIT."
The Lunch Menu· Man precedes
his bread-and-butler recitations with
exhortations against droppill'g out of
school, and offers to visit classrooms so be can spread !hat message.
"Call me if I can help," he
implores. "It doesn't last !hat long.
When I went to school, school was
cool!" .
.
Price had no idea how popular be
had become until a friend asked him
to take a walk through downtown
Concord.
"He brought me into aboutl5 different busi,nesscs in town," he said.
"He would say, 'Do you know who
this is? It's The Lunch Menu Man."
They all knew The Lunch Menu
Man; the legend had taken hold.
Since then, Price's been featured
on radio programs from Texas to
Rhode Island. He was featured on
CBS-1V's "Day and Date" talk
show.
The Charlotte paper doesn't pay
him for his work, so The Lunch
Menu Man is a scrabbling guy !he~
days. Price has cut commercials for
cars and cellular phones.

·- -----... . . . . . ~·S;ociety scrapbook--1,

WEIGHT CONTROL CLASS 1 exercise techniques and other phases
•
The Meigs County Health l&gt;cpaJt- i of weight conttol.
•:men! wil) begin .a series of six week
Oasscs are to be held in the con:classes for weight conttol on 'lUes· ference room of the Multi-purpose
-day, Feb. !\• at 6 p.m.
building,
Mulberry
Heights,
: The classes are free to Meigs: Pomeroy.
:eourity residents and will be of two
Residc:nll shollld 111gister.as soon
. ;hour duration. Classes will include as possible due to class size limita' -nutrition education, stress manage- tions. Those wishing to register may
:mont. weekly weigh-ins, relaxation· call the Meigs County Health Depart.· ~uea. recipca, diet recall~. : ·ment at 992-6626.

TRUSTEE ORGANIZATION
Delbert Smith was elected chairman of the Sutton Township Thistees
and Grover Salser, vice chainnan, at
the organizational meeting held at the
Syracuse Municipal Building. Kenny
Wiggins is the third member. RcguJar meetings were set for the first
Monday of e~~~;h month at 7:30p.m.
at the municipal building, Paul
Moore, clerk, announced.

1!Ae~ Cr0s~i~o~rse ·to ae·offered at.uRG ,
'"

;: ' n.-Uum'lityofRio~o;
:~CommunityCollegidlrouJhi
·, Zlbl' .Oftii:e Of ~t and Continuing;
; :Bd!rlfinD Will oft'cr a coune fof.
t ~ led Crou P'll'lt Aid and;

payment in DC~:CS..iy. DewUine is

Feb. s.
In the combined act of courses,
J!:VIicipants will fulfill the ~uirc­
11101111 ~both Slllidlrd Pint Aid and

, .CPR.
. . CJ'R certification cards. l'llticipanll
• : Tbo .,_ will &lt;be ~. F,b. . lllllll be~ 1eut 13 yeus of 1p or to
. ~ W l:aG a.Di:co $:30 ._m. eo.t, . bave c:ompler!'JCI the cvenlh llfllde,
Jl11!1~i113d~lflyollld · .The course invCJMi dllalonatnlioo

.••
....
••. '
·r' ·

· ~ ItO
~~-.... --~

.

-"1"

'

You'll be considered a married
etaxpayer for 1995. Your.
Imarital
&amp;taNs for
purposes is
tax

detennined as of the final day of
the tax year, mearting you'll need
to choosc.between filin&amp; a joint
return or filing scpariiiC returns.
It will be beSt to compute your
tax boll! ways for compari1011, and
then select the fiUn1 status that
~suits in the lower combined tu
HlbiUty. You and your spouse
sliould •h rovlow your Ponnl W. 4 filed with your employcn to
your tu wllhholdin&amp; to
reflo101 ,.,..,. new lliluallqn.

films Ud pnclic:e scui0111. Amaicm
Red Cross workbook is rcquind and .
c• be purchucd livm the inllllilctor
at a cOIC of$10.
Por more infonnltlon IIIli to
ister COIIIIICI the office of Adult and
\)OIIIInuiiiJ nducalion, p. p. Box F13,
University of Rio Grande, Rio,
Clnnde, Ohio'4S674 Ot-CIII614-24S-'

reg-

S3S3, extenaion 732S.
· ·~ ~--

Lowa in mid-30t tonight.
Rain. Saturday, Rain chang·
lng to anow. Hlgha In mid·
~-

...

e
Vol. 46, NO. 188
2 Sec:tlona, 12 ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 26, 1996

.By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Santlnel Newa Staff
The Eastern l.ocal School District
will gain a Meigs County Public
. Library branch if !he proposed ele: mentary sc~ool building project goes
forward thts spring.
. Meeting Thursday afternoon, the
: Library Board of Directors approved
llletter of intent to be sent to the Eastem Local Board of Education.
In !hat letter, the Library Board
~~s to establis~ and operate a pubhe hbrary branch m !he new building

1995 OLDS'

1994 BUICK

Y·8, auto, A/C,AM/FM
can, tlh, crul11, ~. PB,
PW, POL, Pwr .... t.
ONLY 10,000 MILES

V·8, auto, AJC, AMIFM
c.aa, tilt, crulae, PS, PB,
PW, PDL, Pwr 11at.
LOADED CAR

'13,8.9

516,949

CIERA

PARK AYE.

1993 LINCOLN

LASER .

3 DR Hatchback, 4 pyl, 5
AMIFM 'Caa•,
PS, PB.
ONLY 14,000 MILE-

•pet, A/C,

MARK VIII

V-8, auto, A/C, AMIFM
ca11, tlh, cru111, PS,
PW, PDL, Pwr 1111,
lellther.
CELL PHONE, LOADED

s

·1993 MERCURY
COUGAR XR·7

DR, V-6, auto; . A/C.
AM/FM Clll, tilt, crul11,
PS, PB, PW PDL ifRE

V-6, auto, . A/C, AMIFM
caaa, tiH, crul11, PS, PB,
PW, PDL, Pwr 1111.
MORE

510,849

$11,949

·LEBARON

Conwertlble, v-e, •• AJC,
AM/PM cua, tilt, cnlji., PS,
PB,PW.MORE
-.~.

Q

ycar'l

1167

!he current Eastern SchQOI Library
and librarian.
The Ieuer of intent said that if
established, it is to be "regulated by
joint agreement between the parties
so as not to unduly interfere with !he
rights of !he general public to use the
library nor to interfere with !he day
to day operation of !he school system
and the library.".
If the bond issue is approved by
voters in March, then $7.2 million in
assistance from the State Building
Assistance Fund will be released for
the $8.75 million project. ·
In other business, it was noted
plans are moving forWard for devel-

See photo on Page 7

1993 PONTrAC
GRAND PRIX

"Enrolllcl to PI'IICIIca Before
the lnlllmal Revenu1 SW1o1cl.•
CHANGE OF
MARITAL STATIJS
I got married in November.
• What will my filing status be
on my 1995 tax return? Willi be
considered married because I wu
married at the end of the year or
will I be considered single beausc
I was single for the majority of the

Plck4:

35 cenll
A O.nnett Co. Newapel*

Eastern Schools may receive library branch

You Don'r Hovt To Loolr For
To Spy rile Best Buys In
the Clossl(ieds. ·

b1 A. Kebllr, E.A.

' 168
Buckeye 5:
13-17-23-29-37

Pwr -t, GrHn.

Parent
teacher
conferences
scheduled

· LUNCH MENU MAN· David Prlcit, known 11
1htt Lunch Menu Mlln, center, clown• with atudanta at Greanway Park Elementary School In
Charlotte, N.C., Jan. 3. Price became a celabrl-

Pick 3:

Sports, Page 4

V-8, auto, AJC, AMJFM Call,
lilt, crul.., PS, PB, PW, PDL,

•

Parent-teacher conferences in the
Meigs Local School District will be
held next week.
'The schools and hours when con- '
fcrenccs will be held are as follows:
BradburY: Tuesday, 6 to .9 p.m.
and Thursday, S to 8 p.m.
Harrisonville: Monday, 6 to 9
p.m. and Thursday 5 to 8 p.m.'
Middleport: Tuesday, 6 to 9 p.m.
and Thursday, S to 8 p.m.
Pomeroy: Thcsday, 6 to 9 p.m. and
Wednesday, 5 to 8 p.m.
Rutland: Thesday, 6 to 9 p.m. and :
Thursday, 5 to 8 p.m.
·
Salem Center: Monday, 6 to 9 pm.
and Thursday, 5 to 9 p.m.
Salisbury: Thesday, 6 to 9 p.m. r
and Thursday, 5 to 8 p.m.
Meigs Junior High: Thcsday, S to ·
8 p.m. and Thursday, 6 to 9 p.m.
Meigs High School: Wednesday, ·
5 to 8 p.m. and Thursday 6 to 9 p.m.
Supt. William A. Buckley said that .
conferences arc being changed to two
~venings this year in order to give
more parents the opportunity to meet
with teachers to discuss their children's ·progress. He said that p&amp;rFnts
will receive a letter describing the
conference scheduling procedure
alon11 with infonnation on the con·
fe111nccs.
Parents are encouraged to take
advantage of this opportunity to communicate with their children's insu:uctors. Questions regarding the conferences are to be directed to the children's schools of attendance.

No. 5 Bearcats
sluggish In
Thursday win

1995 FORD
MUSTANGGT

516,949

Ohio Lottery

,.

.,I 249
,
1991 FORD

CROWN VIC LX

v...

4 DR,
IUio, Air cond,
AM/PM cau, Ill, crulae, PS,
PB, PW, POL, Pldded Top

'8,949

. 1992 CHEY.
LUMINA EURO

· 4 I)R, 11-8, auto, Air ·

AiiJFII cau, lilt, ci'!IIU,
PW, PDL, LOADED.

'

.

59,249

Over 40 Trucks &amp;

Vans In stock All
Slzes,.AII Option$
All Must Go
Call Us Todayll

to be consttucted on land adjacent to
!he high school building.
Whether that consttuction goes
forward will be determined when voters in !he district decide a 4.5-mill
hood issue on March 19.
The letter said !hat the library will
open a branch to be available to students of the Eastern School District,
as well as members of the general
public.
It was pointed out !hat it is the
intent of the library board to operate
!he library branch in cooperation with

opment of a library branch in Racine .
Plans call for the renovation of a
bam on the Tyree property into a
library building. Burgess &amp; Niple
Ltd., architects, will present final
plans for the renovation at a meeting
scheduled for next Thursday.
The house, on !he six acres purchased by the Library Board last year,
has been advertised for sale and several people have indicated interest in
moving it, according to Ruth Powers,
librarian.
Pat Holter, Library Board presi·
dent. appointed some staff members
to inventory things in the bam and
house prior to Thursday's meeting

Accident
highlights
'concerns
·o n safety

Clinton signature
may avert another
federal shutdown

By TOM HUNTER
semtnel Newa Staff
Any parent's worst nightmare
might best be described as the one
· experienced when a child is expected home from a school bus trip and
never arrives, because !he bus was
involved in an accident.
That nightmare became a reality
for parents of the·. Eastern High
Scllool girls basketbill te8n1Widnes-"'
day l!ight, whc;n many Qf them
learned !he bus t;arryillg Jheir children
was involved in a fatality-related
accident on U.S, 50 near Guysville as
they waited at the school for the bus to arrive.
C9ASH AFTERMATH - lnveatlgators from
lhla Eastern Local schoolbus, which was
the Ohio State HighWay Patrol apent aeve111l
Vonda George, 26, and Misty
Involved In Wedneldly nlght'e double fatality
hours Thul'llday Inspecting the wreckage of
Mash, 19, were killed instantly when
on U.S. 50 ••t of Guysville. (Sentinel photo)
!hcir·l986 Mercury struck the 24-i&gt;assengcr bus head-on around 10:15 related fatality in the area since are transported each year in this area
Buckley said Meigs Local's bus
p.m. Wednesday.
1990, when Eastern High School of the state.
fleet logs around 300,000 total miles
George's 4-year old son, Justin, graduate Mickey Randolph was
Meigs Local Schools Superinten- each year.
suffered serious facial, head and killed when his vehicle was suuck by dent Bill Buckley said !hat while !he
"In terms of the safety of the vehiinternal injuries and was still listed in a Warren Local school bus at !he inter- districts in the area take every possi- cle, schoolbuses are probably the
critical condition !his morning at section of state routes 7 and 248 at ble safety precaution, an unavoidable safest vehicles you could ride in," he
Children's Hospital, a hospital Chester.
situation such as the Eastern accident added. "I thmk our bus driver~ . as
spokeswoman said.
With this week's events, the issue . issues a call of re-awareness to well as all the drivers in this area. do
School officials, including Super- of bus safety has jumped 10 !he fore- schools everywhere.
a great job. There are going to be
intendent Ron Minard, ~d at the front for many school officials
"When something like this hap- accidents somewhere down the line.
scene shortly after the accident, and throughout the state.
pens, it really makes you think about For several reasons, the area districts
along with pa111nts and eyewitnesses
how
safe we are," he said. "Reflect- have luckily not had many serious
For school districts in southeast
commended the quick actions of Ohio, children safety on the roadways ing on this accident will certainly ones."
Eastern Local bus driver Bob White. has been very secure, with high safe· make our district analyze how we do
Southern Local Superintendent
which kept the accident from becom- ty marks posted by school districts things, and we'll look at beuer steps James Lawrence said that his 23
ing even more tragic.
who bl!ltle the odds, particularly we could take to prepare in the event years as a teacher and administrator
Tile accident was the first bus-car with the'·amount of mileage -students of an accident."
(Continued on Page 3)

Middleport man Jailed on probation violation
A 36-year-old Middleport man General . imd Super I 0 stores in
was sentenced to 18 months in prison . Pomeroy.
Thursday on charges of violating his
He Wll$ sentenced by Judge Fred
probation on previous charges.
W. Crow JII in the Meigs County
Mike Bums, formerly of Detroit, Coun of Common Pleas.
The probation violation was based
was on probation for two charges of
breaking and entering. according to on a conviction for assault in the
Assistant Meigs County Prosecutor Pomeroy · mayor's · court, Powell
explained.,,.
Scott Powell.
Bums a[,o faces a new charge of
Bums broke into the old Dollar

McGlone named new
commander at post
Lt. Wayne E. McGlone. fonnerly is a graduate of Dawson-Bryant High
assistant commander at the State School and later studied at the UnitHighway Patrol's Lancaster P951, ed Electronics Institute and the
has been appointed commander of !he Northwestern University Traffic
patrol's Gallia-Meigs Post.
Institute.
· McGlone, who was promoted this
McGlone and his wife, Sue, reside
week from the rank of sergeant by in Logan and are the parents of a son
Col. Warren H. Davies, the pattol and daughter.
commander, succeeds .Lt. Dan GibGibson, commissioned into the
Son at Gallipolis.
·
patrol in February 1977, served as a
Gibson, who assumed !he G-M trooper at Jac~ !111'1 West Jefferson
~ommander's position in January · befo~ transferring 'lo the patrol's gen1!194, has been promoted to sta(flieu- eral headquarters as a member of the
tenant and reassigned to Jackson,· executive protection section.
where he will be assistant commanHe transferred to Circleville in
der of a I0-county district.
1987 and was promoted to sergeant
McGlone, who rcceived'his patrol ill September 1988, where he was
commission in January '971, has again assigned to•!hc e!tl:cutive prosel"'ed mo111 than 20 years at Athens, tection section. He was assistant
where he was niUIIOd trooper of !he commander at Chillicothe before
year in 1972, j 981 , 1985 and 1987. coming to Gallipolis.
_ He was promoted to serJeant in
He was named trooper of the year
September 1991 and was reasslgnC!I -'Jackson in 1978 and 1979, and and
to Lancaster.
· • Circleville in 1987.
Originally from Ironton, McGii&gt;ne
Originally from Columbus, Gib-

. -.-..

when the final plans will be reviewed.
Executive staff members were
The bam has I, 700 square feet, also recognized. They are Ruth Powand additions are planned to bring it ers, director of !he main library; Kristi
to about 3,000 feet, according to Eblin. director of extension'services;
Doug Lillie, board member. The Olita Heighton, assistant director and
goal, he said, is to start consttuction head of technical service; Connie
in April or May.
Bailey, clerk-treasurer and technical . ,
Don Mullen was appointed for assistant, and Wendi Maxon, branch
another term on the board and was supervisor.
given the oath of office by Meigs
The board voted to join the Meigs
County Prosecutor John Lentes who . County Chamber of Commerce,
serves as legal counsel.
heard reports on book circulation, and
Lentes also installed the officers, agreed to install fax machines in
Holter, president; Patricia Mills, vice library branches.
president; Wanda Eblin, treasurer;
An executive session. was held io
· and Doug Little, di~tttor of building discuss job descriptions and the
programs. Mary Kay Yost, secretary. ~al,uy schedule at the conclusion of
was not present.
the meeting. ·

contributing io the delinquency of a
minor, according to Powell. He was
living with a 17-year-old girl, he
alleged.
Bums is being held in the Meigs
County Jail pending transfer to
pnson.
Also Thursday, Barry Duikeman,
21, Nelsonville. pleaded guilty to an
unrelated charge of corruption of a
minor, a felony of the third degree

punishable by a maximum prison
tenn of two years.
·
Duikeman had sex with a minor
female , according to Powell . The
alleged crime took place in !he Car·
pentcr area, he added.
Duike·man entered his plea before
Crow, who then ordered a pre-sen·
tence investigation. He is being held
in the Meigs County Jail in lieu of
bond.

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated P1111s Writer
WASHINGTON - With~ midnight deadline looming, the White House
said today President Clinton is willing to sign a bill approved by the Republican-led House that would keep !he government running through March 15.
The Senate today was taking up !he measure, which would extend federal spending authority another seven weeks while cutting back funds for
dozens of federal agencies.
·
Without the bill, thousands of federal civil servants face a third'partial government shutdown beginning Saturday. But !he White House said Clinton
would sign it before !he current temporary spending bill expires at midnight
tonight.
.
"We fully expect Congress io take care of that today," press secretary Mike ·
McCurry told reporters. Earlier, he said, " We're satiSfied that a lot of giveand-take has produced an agreement the president can live with."
However, Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle. D-S.D., said today
Democrats would offer two amendments to the temporary spending bill. One ·
would raise the nation's $4.9trillion debt limit by $185 billion. enough to
last unlll March 1997. The other would restore federal education spending
to last year's levels, up from the 75 perccntleYel in the bill.
Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer. who appeared with Daschle at a news conference, said without !he restoration Detroit schools would suffer a $16.1 mit-:
lion cut and could have to lay off 419teachers.
The House on Thursday passed the temporary spending measure, 371-42
marking the first fruit of the new mood of detente between Congress and th~
White House.
·
Having abandoned any hope of reaching a balanced budget agreeme~t
soon, Republicans and the administration have agreed to seek more modest
goals, seeking smaller spending and tax culs while keeping the government
open and raising the federal debt ceiling.
"This has been an incredibly tense negotiation," said Rep. Bob Livingston,
R-La., chainnan of the House Appropriations Committee. But "both sides ..
have come together and crafted a compromise that keeps the government open .
for the next 45 days."
Stung by puhlic criticism of the budget impasse that led to two shutdowns
keeping federal workers home for nearly a month, House Republicans agreed .
that another shutdown wasn't politically feasible.

Suspect in murder case
plans to waive extradition
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - A Hartford woman accused of murder in·
Mason County, under arrest in Uma County, Ariz .. plans to waive extradi- .
lion Monday, according to Deputy Curtis McConihay.
Risa Lynne Sayre Leonard, 32, was taken before a judge in Uma County Thursday on a fugitive warrant from Mason County. Leonard is wanted
in connection with the September murder of Jack Roush, 52, Hartford .
McConihay spoke with Uma County officials this morning. The officials
told him that Leonard plans 10 waive extradition when she appears before a
JUdge on Monday.
A search is still underway in Uma County for 'Timothy W. Gibbs, 36, Hartford , who is also wanted for Roush's murder. Leonard and Gibbs were both
indicted on murde( charges during the January session of Mason County grand
JUry.

Appellate ruling affects state DUI law
RAVENNA (AP) - A state
appeals court ruling could lead to !he
dismissal of hundreds of drunken-dri·
ving cases in a five-county region of
northeast Ohio.
The lith Ohio District Court of
Appeals in Warren on Tuesday ruled
!hat !he state's drunken-driving law
punishes defendants twice for the
same offense, in violation of constitutional protections against double
jeopardy.
Under !he slate's revised 1993
drunken-driving law, drivers who
fail blood-alcohol tests or refuse to
take the test must surrender their
licenses for at least 90 days. Last
year, more than 67.000 licenses were
suspended staiewide.
LL Wayne E. McGlone
AI issue is whether administratively suspending licenses through
son is a graduate of Westland High the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles is
School and holds a police science a criminal punishment or a civil
degree from Columbus Technical Jtmoval of privileges intended to
Insli!ute.
·
. keep intoxicated drivers off the
He and his wife, Stella, reside near strccts.
Appeals Judges Donald Ford,
Bidwell and are the parents of two
Judith Christley and Joseph M.OOOey
daughters.

--~------,.1---

.

·"'

said Tuesday that the primary effects Victor Vigluicci on Thesday ordered
of the law are deterrence and pun- all police departments in the county
ishment.
to slop seizing driver's licenses while
"If the suspensions were purely making arrests .
remedial and imposed solely to pro"We're seeing a number of filings .
tectthe public, the~ would be no rca- for motions to dismiss ," said Ashtabson to keep a defendant 's license ula Counl)i Prosecutor G~g Brown
once he was determined to be sober," on Thursday. "What we have done is ·
their ruling said. " There is, howev- to notify all . the law enforcement ·
er, no such provision."
· agenj:ies in Ashtabula County, tuid·.
The appeals court for the lith we liave advised them to apply the
Appellate District, which includes DUI laws as they were prior to when ·.
Lake, Gcauga, Ashtabula, Portage the administrative license suspension ·
and Thlmbull counties, has become provisions we111 in effect, or !he way "·
the second-in the Stale to reject !he it used to be done."
''
state's revised drunken-driving law.
Lake County Prosecutor Charles ·
The Youngstown-based 7th Ohio . Coulson said he had not had a chalice
District Court of Appeals is the oth- to review the ruling and wasn't sure
cr.
of its effect
The Ohio Supreme Court has set
uwe haven't had that big of a · ·
a hearing for Fetr. 7 on the state's rush," said Virginia Hanson, a clerk
drunken-driving t,w and conflicting at Chardon Municipal Court in Oeau- · ·
rulings at !he appeals court level.
ga County. "We expeclcd a biuer -"
Portage County municipal judges one. The attorneys aren't aware of it. · began dismissing drunk driving cas- but the word is getting out.''
es ~ncsday. Judge John Enlow
A message requesting COIIIIIICIIl
said about 300 pending case$ will be was left with Warren Law Directot _.
dismissed in the county. Prosecutor Greg Hicks.
·

�'

~comme11tar-y

PegeA2

••••

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"•

Friday, January 26, 1991
•'

OH IO Wcat11er
Saturday, -}1511. 27
AccuW~

service obstructing:ju$tice?
.
.
The Daily Sentinel ls'customs
¥diu- .
.
~

'Estillfisfrd in 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2158 • Fu: H2·2157

'.!lr
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publllher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

Genenll M-ger

- . . . --.. . . . .,...,.-.. ,.,. ---.1111-

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·enzzards and
bureaucrats
.

I

fly WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correapondent

WASHINGTON) - Some days, that ogre of a federal bureaucracy
Republicans are trying to tame doesn't look so bad, even to conservatives.
Not when their constituents are buried by a blizzard or swamped by flood•
ing. .
.. That's wben they join the line seeking help from Washington. It's hap,pening now.
.
,
.
· Ironically, the agency that l)andles disaster wd hac! been among those sbut
down in the budget siege President Clinton blames on the GOP and they say
was his fault.
• "Never, ever, shut the federal government down again," ClintOn challenged Con~ss in his State of the Union address, to ~!Docratic cheers and
stony Republican stares.
.
It reopened just in time for the Federal Emergency Management Agency
to start grappling with the disastrous blizzard that swept the East. The d.eal
that put lbe government back. in business runs out Friday, b~t both sides in
the budget impasse seem inchned to extend 11 and avmd a thi.rd. shutdown.
That ougllt to suit the Republican governors who have b1ds tn for state
disaster relief because of snow and flooding. Just Wednesday; three of them
'got approval for blizzard help. 1\velve states got federal disaster assist.ance
because of the storm.
·' With FEMA verification Of the need for help, it provides for reimbursement up to 75 percent of the cost of plowing and clearing snow from emerllency routes, one lane each way. When be ordered that aid on Jan. 12, Clioion said "we ll(ill provide federal disaster assistance in situations where
•response is beyond the capability of state and local gov~rnments."
.
. • Plowing snow isn't usually federal work, but Clmton s spokesman, M1ke
'McCurry, said, "We found because of the size of the blizzard of '96 that
there was a proper role for federal officials."
And if that sounded like big government at work, it didn't faze the GOP
'dfficials who sought and got assistance.
·
The rule was that cities and states could get help from Washington ifbliz:Zard snow removal exceeded their,average annual costs over the past three
jears. Rules lib that in other federal programs draw conservative com·
Rlaints of red ta[!e federaffoi'IJ(ulas, Not these.
,
· Then came the thaw and flooding in much of the same region. And anoth·
er round of disaster relief applications, approved so far for flood-hit areas of
Maryland, Pennsylvania and New York. ,Ohio: Virginia and New Jersey 'also
are seeklng disaster aid from Washington. F1ve of the SIX have economy- ·
minded Republican governors.
·
Most of this has been handled quietly and routinely, the way it usually
worlcs. It is what FEMA does. l1le federal government has spent nearly $SO
billion on aid to stricken areas over the past five years, after disasters lib
the earthquake and floods in California, Midwestern flooding, Florida hurricanes.
The number of presidential disaster declarations has been increasing; a
Senate study last year cited 53 in 1993 alone. At the time, Republicans complained of the impact on their efforts to cut federal spending toward a balanced budget. The House passed a resolution calling fpr change in disaster
relief policy, to stress prevention and p~mote p~vate insurance cpverag~.
Disaster relief is expensive, someumes forcmg emergency appropnations, as in the nearly $6.7 billion for victims of the 1994 California earthquake. Sut the budget side of the debate has .generat17 ~en low key; whe.n
there is controversy, it usually comes from d1saster v1c11ms and the1r pollll·
cal leaders, dissatisfied with the pace and size of the federal response.
That was the case when Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge protested on Sunday that Clinton hadn't acted adequately to approve flood disaster relief for
his state. l1le fcideral disaster declaration was broadened on Monday and the
White House said Ridge should have known better. Pennsylvania senators
!'ided with the governor, who still wants more counties covered.
.
: · Sen. Rick Santorum, a budget hawk who had voted in the House agamst
~ emergency appropriation for ~idwest flood relief, said Pennsylvania's
~as "a true emergency, a disaster that needs to be attended to, and the fed' eral government has a role to play."
'
:: McCurry said disaster relief is not an automatic entitleme~t, th~t the go~­
emmcnt has to assess damage and document need before ac~ng. We don "
just go and dump bales full of taxpayer's money on a state that has a d1sas• "he 'd
ter,
· Pennsylvaniats
·
· a swmg
· state, cruc1a
· I to Cl'mton m
. h'ts b'd'
:• Then sw
again,
1 .or
~Sc:cond tenn. And McCurry said the episode in Pennsylvania, as in other
shows the powerful role the federal government can play in helping
!(I meet the needs of the people.
'•

.wes;

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend ...

forecaat for

MICH.

.. . ..
••

W.VA.

Rain, snow to hit ~egion
just as weekend begins
By 1be AIIOCiatecl Prell
A wintery mix •f freezing rain,
sleet and snow could hit much of
Ohio by toni&amp;bt, fORUSiers said.
Snow accumulation of 1-3 incbes
are' pouible across northern Ohio
while the rest of the sfllte will receive
only a dusting, tbe National Weather
Servi~ said.
·
Then a cold front due to push
through Ohio ~arty Saturday could
produce more snow. The frontal sys-

Is the flat tax proposal .a rea·l possibility?
By William A.- Rulher
.
taxed at a lower rate to
Perhaps tloe best measure of how radically the 1994 elections have begifl with, hlS saving
already changed this country !II'C the things that are now up for serious dis- is less wben the rate is
cussion.
flattened.
Prior to November 1994 tbere had only been one balanced budget since
The truth,
of
1960 and the conventional wisdom was that another was out of the' question. course, is that big
Politicians might pretend to. want one, or even to deliver one, but in the long eatners take refuge in
run it would tum out to be just another chimera.
loopholes that sharply
Similarly, nobody believed that entitlements such as Medicare could be reduce their taxes ..
touched without instantly destroying the politician or party that touched loopholes that the nat
them. Tim Russert on "Meet the Press" made a career out of daring politi- tax supporters vow to
cians to propose doing so, and got very few takers,
close. Two of the
As for a flat income tax, the concept of "progressivity" (i.e., taxing the biggest
loopholes,.
rich disproportionately higher than anybody else) was seemingly enshrined however, are the curamong the nation's highest values.
rent deductions for home mortgage interest and charitable contributions ~­
What a difference a year has made! Not only have the Republicans put deductions dear to the hearts of. many millions of middle-class voters. Th4t
fonh a plan that would balance the budget with real numbers in seven years, is why some variants of the Qat tax would continue'these deductions. Tha~
but President Clinton has matched it (even if 90 percent of his spending however, requires an increase, in the flat tax rate, from the often-discussed ·
reductions would talce place in the last·two of the seven years, after the cud . 17. percent to something markedly higher, to produce the necessary revenue.
of his second term). What's more, both parties propose reductions in the rate
There are all sorts of other variants of the flat tax idea, but almost all of
of spending on Medicare, with the Democrats calling for reductions only them propose elimination of any tax on incomes below a certain level. In
slightly smaller than the Republicans,
Steve Forbes' version, a family of four ellriling up to $36,000 a year wouta
Most astonishing of all, proposals for a flat tax are being heard on all pay no tax at all. (The twp adults would have personal exemptions cJ1
sides, and clearly have widespread public suppon. If the Republicans win · $13,000 each, and there would be anotber $5,000 exemption for each child:)
both the presidency and the Congress this fall, it seems likely that some fonn
As London's Economist magazine notes, this would "focus efforts ta
of flat tax will become t1ie law of the land.
redistribute income precisely where they belong; oil the poor. A flat tax tlW
Superficially the political problem with a flat tax is that it would appear allowed an exemption for a big slice of wage income and levied a single ta3.
to benefit tbe rich more than the middle class. A person who earns a million rate on everything else would force all of society to pay for whatever le~
dollars this year will theoretically pay at least $400,000 of it to the IRS, of public charity it deems appropriate. Envy of tbe rich could no longer maswhile someone earning $100,000 will pay, not $40,000, but something ~uch querade as·love of the poor."
:
closeno $30,000. Under a flat tax, both would pay at the same rate: 17 (\CrWe are living in intellectually stimulating times.
'
cent, say, or $170,000 and $17,000 respectively. The ftrst individual would
Wllll8m A. Ru1lW Is a DlatlnguiiiMcl Fellow of the Claremont lnstf.
save $230,000, the second not $23,000 but only $13,000. Because be was tute tor the Study of Stllllsmll'lahlp 1nd PolltiCII Phllo1ophy,
·

..

Noah's ark tales are alive, and well

.

tern also will bring colder temperaand gustin1 w.inds will create
below-zero ·wind chills.
Lows tonight will be 25-3.5. ~ghs
on Saturday will be in the 20s.
The reconl·liiah temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
statiOn was 70dfkrees in 1950 while
the record low was 9 below zero in
1948. Sunset toni&amp;ht will be at .5:43
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:45
a.m.
tures

Jeffrey

'·

An 18-year-old Racine man was arrested recently on a charge of disposing of stolen property, stemming from the theft of a 10-speed bicycle froni ·the John Hunnell residence in Syracuse on Jan. 18, accord·
ing to Meigs County Sberiff James M. Soulsby.
Jeffrey R. Gilland was picked up by Racine police for the sheriffs
office on a warrant from the Meigs County Court.
He was charged with a felony because be has a prior juvenile offense,
Soulsby said. Under new laws, juvenile records can be used wben the
suspect is an aduiL

Area man held for domestic violence
A 4.5-year-old Lanssville man was' arrested Thursday· eve11ing by
MeigS County sheriff's deputies on a misdemeanor charge of domestic violence.
Glenn L, Muhorney Sr. of Hampton HAllow Road is accused of beat·
lns'liislive-in iirtfriend.June Arnold, about the neck and head, said
Sheriff JIIIIICS M. Saulsby. He was placed in .the Meigs County Jail
pending a hearing in county court this' morning.
Arnold was transported by the Rutl&amp;lld squad of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital for treat·
ment.
· ·
·

Accident causes minor injuries

·

A Zl·year-old Long Bottom woman ~as treated for minor injuries
following a one-vehicle accident on State Route 1 in Chester Township Wednesday afternoon.
··
Rachael D. Hawley was northbound when her 1994 Toyota truck
struck ice and snow, slid into an embankment and rolled several times,
according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.
Hawley was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital for treatment
by the Syracuse squad of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice. A passenger, Amanda Wells, 21, Chester, was not injured.
No citations were issued.
'

No injuries reported in accidents
No injuries were reported following two.accidents on Morning Star
Road near Racine Wednesday evening. .
In the first accident, Sandra Morris, Racine\.was eastbound in ber 1994
Pontiac and lost control in a sharp curve, striking a westbound 1993
Ford driven by Tamara Hill, Racine, according to a Meigs County sheriffs report. ·
·
· Heavy damage was reported to both vehicles.
The second accident was reported near Basban Road.
Jennifer Proffitt, Rainbow Ridge, was eastbound in her 1989 Ford
and got stuck in a ditch. A following car, driven by Ben Petrel, Racine,
went off the roadway to avoid Proffitt's car. No damage was reported
to Proffitt's car while Petrel's 1992 Mercury sustained light damage.

.
.
said. "We have nine buses that log

(Coadaued from,. 1)

in tbe district· have been extremely
lllldent transportation is
concerned.
.
"I can't remember any accident
tesulting in injuries to either side
while I've been with the district," be
~~&amp;fe ones, as

about 120,000 total miles a year. For
the time the buses are on tbe road and
the conditions which they travel in,
we're feel very fortunate that there
have been as few accidents as tbere
has been."
•

The D,aily Sentinel
(USPS21,_)

Stocks

PubUihed every aftemooft, 'Monday chrouRh
Friday. Ill Coun St.. Pol'l'lltftly, Ohio. by thr:
Ollio ¥Alley l'llblilllilll ~ny/GMnelt Co..

Am Ele P --.....................43~
Akzo .....................................,53\

""""""'· Ohio 4,7&lt;\9. Ph. 992-2 U6. Scoond

clad pclllli¥C paid Ill Pomeroy. Ohio.

'
.._..r: The ASJOCillled
Preu, afll:lthe Obio

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111e Doily Senlloel. Ill &lt;Aun St., Poml:n&gt;y,
.OIIIo 4"69.
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~Warner ..-................... ,30~
Ctwinplort llld....................... 11~

MeigS announcements
.

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•0111 lllfee. ala·• 12 _.... buia. Ctedk .,ill be

No tohcripdon by moil p;rminod In ..,..

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MAILSU.atiP'I'IONI
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Soup dinner planned
Members and friends of the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
will be treated to a special worship
Sunday, followed . by a "Soup-er
Bowl" dinner. Women of tbe church
will provide a variety of bomemade
soups and donations received will go
to mission projects of the church.
Pastor Bob Robinson and chairman
of missions, Bernice Carpenter, invite
the public to enjoy the worship and
fellowship.
Boil order CBIIceled
The Leading Creek Conservancy
District has canceled its boil advisory for customers west of the intersection of Titus Road and Carson
Road.
Gospelsln1 set
A Bend Area gospel sing will be
held Feb. 3 at 7 p.m. at the Hobson
Christian Fellowship, Church, State
Route 7 below Middleport. Singers

featured will be Genesis, The Chosen
Ones, Narrow Way. and Evelyn
Roush.

VFW dance ·announced
A round and square dance, along
with clogging, will be held Feb. 3
from 8 to II p.m. at the Thppers
Plains VFW building. Ou1 of the Blue
band will play and Jim Brown will be
the caller.
I
.

RACINE

10:49 a.m., Elm Street, Wilma
'McGraw, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND
Veterans Memorial
9:49p.m., Hampton Hollow Road,
Thursday admissimis - none.
June. Arnold , Veterans Memorial
Thursday discharges - Paul Hospital.
Reeves, Pomeroy.
Holzer Medical Center
COLONY THEATRE
Dlscha'l'l Jan.l5- Mrs. Lar- .
FRIDAY THRU THURS
ry Henry and daughter, Mrs. David
WALT DISNEY'S
Beaver and daughter, Mrs. Brent
TOY STORY
Myers and son, Butch Hall, Julia ButP0-13
ler.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
(Published with permission)

~

'

.........

ON I Hl llORICMOVII''
a. I(" IF!'&lt;
,,;,1,( .~

MIAT

Meigs EMS runs

Units of tbe Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded five
calls for assistance Thursday, including one transfer call. Units respond·
lng included:
MIDDLEPORT
1:14 p.m., Mill Street, Russell
Meadows, treated at the scene.
POMEROY
10: 17 a.m., Rose Hill, Sarah
Diehl, treated at the scene.

:;.

.... ' ., ' "''"
'111\r. IJ&gt;\W N

'

• &lt;U Otoii&lt;UCfl••o . . . .

R

INGELS CARPET
Invento Reduction Sale

Hospital news

-111ft~ b

ALL IN STOCK CARPEt AND VINYL ON
SALE. PLUS, lAKE AN ADDIIIOIIAL
10%' OFF SALE PRICE THIS WEEK ONLYII
(Picldlo!!i I Utbor Exclpdecl )

..:::::::

GOOD HO"EST PEOPLE

CMrnllrlg Stlop................... ..ltt.
~ .~ ......... - .........- •.21'1r

Goodyear TAR ....,, ...............4G~

Sayre

IkJ·

GMr.a ....~............................82%

Ofte Wcck .. ................. ............................... $2.00
Olio ........................... :....................$1.10
011e v.......................................... :·:"' SI04.00

SINGLE COPY PIICI

Alh..Jid 011 ............................ 31~
AT&amp;T .....................................84~
Bank OM ._.............................38
Bob Evant ............................. 11-.

H~

Today's livestock report

Federal Mogul ........................11~

swscaiP'I'ION IIATU
lyc-le&lt;or--

&lt;'

·.,

flacine man arrested on charge

. Bus accident

By George R. Plagenz

Robert E. Pierce

L·ocal News in Brief:

&lt;

'

Memorial services for Jack M. Onley Sr.,~ diN JID. 19, 1996 It hU
residence, will be beld Sunday 112 p.m. 11 the fllllily's residence, 130 Lui
We have a lot of helpful people
The se nder preferred obviously to rei St., Pomeroy.
·•
around Meigs County aild among remaid anonymous and the postthem is Sonny MCClure, who is a mark is blurred, so I'm not really sure
rilember of tbe state steering com· where the clippings came from .
mittee for the Soutbem Baptist Dis- However, tbe columns are by writers
aster Relief in Ohio, and volunteer with whom I'm unfamiliar - Thorn
Vonda A. George, 25, I S. Shannon St., Athens, died Wednesday, Jan. 24j
leader of the Southeastern Ohio rei ief Marshall, Jim Barlow and Leon Hale. 1996 as a result of an automO\lile accident.
:
Be assured that I'm reading them
team.
Born Aug. 8, 1970 in Point Pleasant, W.Va., dau~ter of Katherine Ali!
Due to the flood, Sonny and his well, hoping that a bii of their humor house ElliQtt of Ouy~ville, and the late Kenneth Lee Pauley, sbe worked ..
team were called out and left Thurs- will rub off. Some days, mine does Tab's Taxi Semce in Athens.
:
day for Wheeling, W.Va., where the wear thin .
Sbe is survived by two sons, '!Yson and Justin Qeorae, both of Rutimil;
group will be preparing and serving
two sisters, Valt rie Richmond and Kim);lerly Pauley, both of Rutland; OtW
By now you probably have brother, Ch.t Deskins of Athens; and her former husband, Teriy Geiqe ot
food provided by the American Red
Cross through contributions of busi- received your notice of taxes being Rutland.
:
nesses and indiv.idutlts.
due on your real estate. I thought. it
Also surviving are a paternal grandmother, Pauline Pauley of McArlhw':
Initially, Sonny and the team will was refreshing that the notice reads and a mluernal grandmother, Catherine Joachimi of Lake City, Fla.
•
be feeding 3,000 people. Some of the taxes don't have to be paid until
Sbe was preceded in death by a s~pfather, Donald Deskins.
•
these will not be those affected March 4. Nothing like a little time to
• Services will be I p.m. Saturday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville;
directly by the flood, but people who get the hard cash assembled is there? with burial following in White Oak Cemetery in Meigs County. Friends may;
went into the Wheeling area also to By the way, my tax bill was down 20 call Saturday at II a.m. until time of services at the funeral home.
•
assist flood victims. The local team . or 30 cents. Now that'll make it easwill be working in a tent set up out· ier!
side the Madison Elementary School
Twice this week I've·read articles
in Wheeling, where massive damages
about
the .over-supply of doctors in
were reported as a result of the recent
Robert Eugene Pierce, o,loveport, died Wednesday, Jan. 24, 1996 at bls
the
United
States. I have a little trouflood.
•
home.
:
Making the trip to the Wheeling ble digesting that since Meip CounHe was a supervisor at Columbia Gas of Ohio, a member of the Grove.
area to assist with the project were ty certainly could use some of that
port
Church of Christ in Christian Union, the Homestead Springs Golf CID!&gt;
Sonny, Kenneth Imboden, and Bob surplus. Yet I don't see any of them
and
Americ;an
Legion Post 308 of Bangs, TeJlas. He was a U.S. Army ve..
and Joyce Mills of the Hope Baptist rushing into Meigs County, despite
eran
of
the
Korean
Conflict.
Church in Middleport; Hank Hatten the fact th~ I'm•sure they could do
Surviving
are
his
wife of 44 years, Nina Pierce; a daughter and son·id.·
and Jack Simins of the Good News very well financially and ·this is a
law,
Teana
and
David
Gordon of Bremen; sons and daughters-in-law, Robert
Baptist Church in Gallipolis. Also on great place to live, especially in this
E.Jr.
and
Etiuna
Pierce
of Matthews, N.C., S. Crail! and.Gina Pierce of Pickthis team are W~t and Carol Mans· day and age with the cities being such
erington, and Jeffrey A. and Debbie Pierce of Hilliard; 10 grandchitdre!i; t\is
field of Shadyside,. and Charles and jungles. Maybe tomorrow?
mother, Nellie Pierce of Langsville; brothers, Carol .Pierce of Salem Cenie{,
Ruth Purpis of Cincinnati are helping
and
David Pierce of Mansfield; sisters, Dolores Johnson of Green Castle, ind
Don't look now, but we have Jan·
the Southeastern Ohio team.
Sandra
Newton of Waverly.
.
For several years now, Sonny and uary almost behind us. And that's
Friends
may
call
2-4
and
6-8
p.m.
today
at the Dwayne R. Spence' Functthe Southeastern Ohio team have good. All in all it's not been a good
al
Home
in
Canal
Winchester,
where
services
will be held Saturday at I0:30
gone out to several states as volun· month. Small wonder that everyone
a.m.,
with
the
Rev.
Bruce
Vial
offici11,ting.
Burial
with military rites will lie
teers assisting vi,ctims of disasters. knows about the January "blahs."
in
the
Forest
Lawn
Memorial
Gardens
.
Certainly would require a lot of time However, with February coming up
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations Can be made to Mount Carmel Hoswe're just that much cToser to spring
and energy - God bless 'em.
pice.
and there's always Valentine's Day,
I wanna thank the reader who sent Presidents' Day and it's leap year. Not
along the humorous ·newspaper real big bright spots but, perhaps,
columns - from Houston, Texas, I they'll belp get us out of the dol- .
drums. Of course, it'll also help if you
think.
Jeffrey Hugh Sayre, 27, Coolville, died Thursday, Jan. 25, 1996 at his re~
keep smiling.
idence.
'
,
Born Jan. 4, 1969 in Parkersburg, W.Va., !ion of Joseph Sayre and the late
Elizabeth Matlters Sayre, he was a manuf~~Pturing engineer with UDS Corp.
·and a 1987 graduate of Eastern High si!liSM: ' ' • .
.
COLUMBUS (AP) ~ Indiana- 29.SO; 500-650 lbs. 29.50-33.00.
He was an Ohio University enginCFring graduate, a member of Our Lady
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
Boars: 24.00-26.00.
of Loretto Catholic Church in Lona Bottom, and a member of the American
buying points Friday by the U.S.
Estimated receipts: 43,000
Society of Mechanical Engineering.
·
'
Department of Agriculture Market
For the week: barrows and gilts
He is survived by his father and stepmother, JOseph and Dixie Sayre 9f
News:
mostly 1.00 higber; sows finn to 1.00 Racine; a brother, Joseph Sayre Jr. of Tampa, Fla.;.piternal grandmother, Lau.
B~ws and gilts: firm to 50 cents higber.
ra Sayre of Glendenin W.Va.; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
'
higher; demand moderate to gopd on
Prices from The Prodaeers
He was preceded in death by his paternal grandfather, Jesse Sayre; 1l1l.d
a moderate supply.
1
Livestock Association:
maternal grandparents, Hugh and Beatrice Mathers.
' '
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 42.00·
Cattle: steady to 2.00 lower.
Mass of Christian Burial will be beld II a.m; MoJ¥1ay in ll)e Sacred Heart
43.50, a few 44.00; plants 43.50Slaughter steers: choice 58.00- Catholic Church, Pomeroy, with the Re:y. F~ Wl!lter lleinz officillinl.
45.00, a few 0:.3.25.
63.75; select 53.00-60.00.
Burial will follow in Our Lady of I:.oretto Catholic Cemejery in Long
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 38.00Slaughter heifers: choice 58.00- tom. Friends may call Sunday from 6-9 p.m. it ~ White Funeral }lome,
42.00.
65.00; select SI.00-58.00.
Coolville, where a vigil. service will be beld at 8:30 p.t'n.
.
Sows: 50 cents to 1.00 higher.
Cows: steady; all cows 39.00 and
U.S. 1-3, 3()()..500 lbs . 27.00- down.

Vonda A. George

.---------=--=-----=.:..--------------------""':-,.,..
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'TOJI.IL•••

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Jack M. Braley Sr.

by Bob Hoeflich ·

'

By .lllak
~
gave him unli!nited ICCels to cluslfied infOO!UI· juslic:e in connection with his brothers' cases.
end Mlot ullin •••In
· . lion. ctelrji became tbe lead qent in an investi·
The U.S. Attorney in Houston declined to
, WASHINGTON - U.S. ·' authorltiee think ption desiped 10 fiod. out if Brito was helpins prosecllte Brito in February 1992, but interference
they've . s'lruclt 1old .with their c..,rure of Juan hil two youaser brothers, Billy and Mario Brito, from Custollll may have played a ~le m IU~
Gan:ia-Abrego, the lint dru1 trafficker to mike who had been implicated in a 1987 cocaine· decision: While a former prosecutor mvolved 1n
the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List.
smuggling operation,
the decision says tpe indictment was " too vague"
These officials are hoping !Ut the kingpin who
Cleary gathered evidence indicatin1 that the to be proven, congressional investigators have
ran a $10 billion drug empire will help cnlck twoyoungerBritoshaddiscusseddrugprotection questioned why customs officials strongly urged
dozens of other criminal ~ in the Uni~ they received from a ~ther in the ~itary and Houston prosecutoa to decline the else. .
.
States, and belp show comphc1ty by some MeXI- influence they had w1th customs offic1als along
In September 1992. Barron charged Bnto wtth
can government officials.
the MeJlican border.
petjury'stemming from testimony be gave at the
But Abrego's revelations may also emburass
Cleary al~o learned that Billy and Mario often state drug trial of one of his brothers. In ~994. a
an American agency on the front-lines of the drug dined with Abrego, and belped develop his secu- special military panel weigbed in with a report
war: the U,S. Customs Service.
rity system.
concluding that Brito was "involved in drug
As we reported last March, the Customs SerThe two brothers were eventually indicted on smuggling activity" with his brothers.
vice has allegedly derailed both state and federal state drug charges. One brother was convicted ,.
But as Barron prepared to bring his perjury
efforts to prosecute a former U.S. official who has and fled to Mexico, the other fled before his state' • case to trial that year, Customs officials repeated·
been accused of having lillks to cocaine smug- trial began. In 1991, Billy and Mario were both ' ly blocl\ed requests for Cleary's assistance in the
glers working for Abrego.
named as co-defendants with Abreao in a federal case!. Finally, in August 1994, CustomS told
The official in question is former Col. Richard drus indictment.
·
!=leary be was .being fired.
.
Brito, who once beaded the National Guard's
But Cleary's efforts to wget Brito were met ' Brito's attorney, Charles · Cate, has said his
drus interdiction program in Texas. Brito had with hostility from Custollll offiQals. Sources say client was unfairly hounde4 by Barron and
been under indictment for perjury since 1992. But Cleary was constantly harassed, denied promo- ' Cleary. Cate slid Brito ....didn't know anything
the charge was recently dropped by a judge lions and detailed to other duties. Federal prose- about" his brothers' drug activities, and called the
because~ case had still not go~e to trial. The cutors in south Texas, however, buicalty corrob- military report "completely,erroneous."
local d1stnct attorney, Thck McLain, has appealed orated Cleary by writing two draft indictments
Jaek Anclerlon and· MlchMI Blntteln ane
the ruling.
charging Brito wjth perjury and obsu:uction of writ.,. tor United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
"Since Abrego may ~
1
talking now, I hope it will
clle. A''TIA.~
CAM6:110.1
provide fodder for my can"~;,~It I 11...:::1
\71"41 11\J'tl
non," McLain told us.
Last year, Mcl:.ain 's predeCessor - David Barron ..
told us his case against Brito
had been stymied by Customs officials. Barron
accused Customs of launching a smear campaign to dis·
credit and fire his chief wit·
ness, Customs agent Kevin
Cleary, in order to prevent
him from assisting in the
case.
•
According to Cleary's
attorney, Kent Schaeffer,
Customs officials are worried that they nught have
.,
gone too far to harass aeary
and to protect Brito from
prosecution.
Documents
we've obtained, along with
evidence gathered by a congressional subcommittee,
support Schaeffer's view,
The Customs probe of
Brito began in 1989, when·
he was running the ijational
Guard's drug interdiction
program in Texas, which

FJNBST .IQVIPJONT AVAD ABU
2 and 4 wheel Alignments (Computer)
•Brakes eShocks •Struts •Tires
e()ll Changes -Lube Jobs •Tune-ups
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~ ~ .l2oct;ns iNd.
808 W. Main St.,·Pomeroj, OH 456769
% mlie Down R.._fnim ~fldle
_ _ _ ..._.... Phone na uM

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175 N. 2nd ~ve.

'' . ' . -c:::

MlddllpCN1, OH
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~Sports

The Qaily Seni~~l

No. 5 Bearcats stu

,
BECKER WINS • G11111any'a Borla Becclke~r~:=~
,, umlflnal victory OVIr Aultrllla'a Mark W
: trallan ·open Tennla Toumamenta Thuraday. (AP)
.

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-~hang

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.CINCINNATI (AP) - Not even a
return tO winning could-shalteCincinnati's malaise.
The fifth.ranked Bearcats got past
their only loss of the season Thursday
night by staying with outmanned
. DePaul and finally pulling away for
a 71-61 victory.
Cincinnati (13-1, 4-1 Conference
USA) played a little betler than it did
last Sunday, when its unbeaten streak
ended with a 70.681oss at UAB. Darnell Burton matched his career high
with 24 points and Danny Fortson
scored 10 of his 17 in the final 7:25.
But overall, it wasn't much dif.
. ferent from Cincinnati's lackluster
perfonnances of the last three weeks.
"We've just got to get back to
Bearcat basketball," said Damon
Aint, who scored 18 points. "The
players have to take that upon them·
selves, IQ feel we're go'ing to come
out and dOminae a game."
DePaul (7-10, 0.6) came out and
dominated early, building a 13-3
lead. 1bc Blue Demons sagged inside
to stop Fortson, a power forward who
has averaged 29 points the last silt
games.
. '
That .part worked. Fortson had just
five points in the first half and was. n't a factor until the final seven min·
utes.
But the Blue Demons couldn't survive the tradeoff. Concentrating
inside so much left the perimeter wide
open, and Burton and Aint took
advantage. Burton was 7 of 14 from
behind the 3-point arc, and Aint hit
60
Cincinnati hit a seasonhigh 13 of 30 3-pointers, making up
for its lack of front-line production.
1bc Bearcats !tit just one 2-point shot
in the first half and eight in the game.
Coach Bob Huggins wasn't happy
about the unbalanced o"ense.
'"
"There are two ways to look at it,"
he said. "We shot as many 3's as anybody in the country last year, and we
lost (12) games. We shot as many 3's
as l!nybody in the country two years
ago, and we lost 10. We decided this
year 10 throw it 011 the blocks and let
those guys touch it a little, and we've
had success."
DePaul came in depleled by academic suspensions (Juan Oay and
Charles Gelatt) and injury (3·point
specialist Peter Patton has a sprained
ankle). The Blue Demons bad lost
their last six games in large measure
because of the lack of depth.

b!!~all,

ousts Agassi.
·. ~. n .A.ustra II. an 0 pen
·• MELBOURNE, Australia (AP)This time, Andre Agassi dug a hole
1110 deep to escape.
.' With the defending champion mixing too many misses with his impressive winners, Michac~ Chang scrambled into the Australran Open final
with ' a 6-1,' 6-4, 7-6 (7·1) victory
today. Chang still hasn't lost a set in
the tournament.
·
Chang, whose only Grand Slam
tiJie came in the 1989 French Open,
~ill meet Boris Becker on Sunday.
Becker, who has won five Granll
Slams but none since the Australian
ip 1991, beat Australian giant-killer
ry,tark Woodforde 6-4, 6-2, 6-0.
"I felt I was playing a flawless
match almost," Becker said.

Chang had 41 winners and 22
unforced errors..
Chang, who also had 13 aces, said
the wind didn't bother him.
In his earlier victories, Agassi
said, "I just felt like I could put
together the tennis to do it without
worrying about anything else. Today
I would have had to work harder than
I felt like I was able to do."
. Agassi's coach, Brad Gilben, said,
"1bc adrenalin pulled him through a
few matches, but today he hit the
wall. ... Chang only played average,
but then again Andre didn't make him
play very well."
In the second set, trailing 3-0,
Agassi looked like he was about to
tum thirigs around after the action

by reaching the semifinals. But in the.
five malthes it took to do that, he lost
Jijs first set four times, had to play
t~ree five-setters and was two sets
ltehind,before beating Jim Courier in
the _quaJ[erfinal~.
.
While Agassr)"as playmg 22 sets,
J1o. S seed Chang was losing only 37
~mes in 15 ~ets ; Easy opponents,
some crtucs sard.
· ; But Ch~ng 's .ability to run down
~ots . and get b~ck wmners was too
'l'uch for Agassr as ':"ell:
• Afler one Agassr wmner, a fan
ljll!fVeled: ."You hav.~ to hit a lot of
s~ots to wrn a pornt.
·
On one point in the third seC s first
jalrie, Chang saved two near wmner:s .
;Ind. then hrt a backhan!f past Agasst.
• ;,You' re a champion, Michael,''
iam~ a. shout from the crowd.
• Dunng a changeover soon after
~t: Chang rec~ived treatment for a
arned nb cartrlage.
" Maybe I just overstretched for
e shot," he said. "It was OK. It did·
rft hinder my play." .
Agassi said, "I felt rather flat. I
!!!tve played a lot of sets."
·i i'To play in the wind against a guy
IIJce MichaeJ, Who's .going to make
~move comer ,to corner, and being
at· the· same time, Ifelt like I had
t~ take early chanc,s and points, and
. I~ust didn't .quire have it today," he
ded.
; 1bc tesultoftbatrisky play was 34
mners .and 60 unforced errors.
... •

around Agassi for a while. He
watched them for a moment and
flicked a cricket away from the baseline with his racket.
Agassi then won six straight
points, breaking Chang with a spectacular drop shot and a forehand passing shot down the line and holding
serve at love. He broke again to make
it 3-3.
But Chang broke back immediately when Agassi hit a smash long
and then netted a backhand.
"I started getting my head abo!rt
me and feeling like maybe I can get
that step back and get on top of the
ball, but I lost my serve at 3-3 on the
favorable side and that kind of took
the wind out of my sails a little bit,"
Agassi said. ·
He held his next serve to make it
4-5, but had to save three set points
to do it.
Chang said he felt Agassi wasn't
playing his best.
Still, he said, "it's a great confi·
dence booster to me to have a win ·
because over the years Andre has
lieaten me most of the time. This is
the first time I' Ye ever beaten him in .
a major."
Agassi's record against Chang
now is 9-5.
On the No. I ranking, Agassi said ·
he wanted it only if he felt lilcc he was
playing his best lennis, but "in another sense it is a reflection of what you
have done for an entire year."

That they stayed so close for most
of the game - DePaul led 51 -50 with
nine minues left - pleased coach
Joey Meyer. In the end, the lack depth
took its toll again.
"I looked out there and saw Malik
Murray, who's 195 pounds with rocks
in his pockets, guarding FortSon,
who's 260 pounds, and I knew we
were in trouble," Meyer said:
Ccnler Biyant Bowden picked up
his fourth fool with 7:25 left and forwaid Brian Currie fouled out with
five minules left. Fortson started t&amp;king the ball towards the hoop aggressivelyandscorcdeightpointsinal66 run that put Cincinnati in control
66-57 with 3:19 left.
Huggins got tough with his players after the loss w UAB. Aint said
their inlensity was no better Thursday.
"I felt it was about the same (as in
the loss)," Aint said. "Practice was
real tough the other day, but that
shouldn't make a difference."
"We were just slow the whole
night:" Fortson said.
'
Huggins isn't surprised that his
team is struggling. He's puzzled
about why it's struggling now, in the .
middle of such a goo&lt;! start.
.
"Every year, teams go through
periOds when they're just kind of
blah," Huggins said. "Usually for us,
it comes a little later."
1bc players can't explain why ·
they're 1101 more enthusiastic.
"We're (nationally) ranked, so
we should be happy, going out .and
playing a little harder," Burton said.

::Aikman beware: Nasty
·boys are ~oming
Sunday
•

~:nar:~~~~;~~s:!fu;l:ro~o~
fun, we're going to be OK."
Arotiad Ohio

Elsewhere in Ohio college bas·
Iccthall Thursday night, a jump shot
by Lenny Brown with four seconds 10
· a uv-59
£n
go gave X avrer
victory over
La Salle.
The Explorers, who trailed 31 -26
at the half, led 59-56 with 1:07 left.
Brown made a baslcct with 54 secoftds to play, moving the Musketeers
(8· 7 overall, 4-1 Atlantic 10 Conference) within one point, then hit the
winning shot.
Brown finished with 18 .points.
Romaine Haywood had 17 for La
Salle.
In another game that went down w
the final basket, Ashland defeated
Northwood of Michigan 58-56 as the
Eagles' Chris Oates tipped in a
missed shot with one second left.

ish i·n win

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - Greg
Lloyd doesn't learn from experience.
Despie a $12,000 fmc for decking
Brett Favre, he's got no qualms about
coming after 1foy Aikman in Sun·
day's Super BoJOL
" We're not going to hold back,"
Lloyd said this week. " We are going
after the quarterback. If the ref
decides it was a late hit, let him deal
with it right then and there."
That's the philosophy of' Pitts·
burgh's Nasty Boys, Lloyd and Kevin
Orcene, the outside linebackers who
creale llt,yoc and let other guys clean
up. If the Slq:lers are to upset the Dal·
las Cowboys, it may he because they
produce an early turnover or two that
swings the momentum.
.To the outside world, Lloyd and .
Orcene are strange birds. To ~s­
ing quarterbacks, they're menacing
-they've combined for 39 1/2 sacks
the last two seasons, 24 of them in
1994 when · the defense was even
more aggressive than it is now.
1bc strangest bitd may be Greene,
a walking contradiction.
1bc son of an Army colonel, he
remains · a captain· in the Anny
reserve, even though he bas the most
unmilitary of appearances - his
blond locks fall past his shoulders.
Afler the Steelers were upset by
San Diego in last season's AFC
championship game, Greene was on
his hands and knees in the Pittsburgh
locker room, pounding his fists on the
floor and shouting obscenities at anyone who approached him.
On Tuesday, the Steelers' day off,
he flew io Las Vegas as part or a
wrestling,promotion, sitting in looka,like Hulk Hogan's comer. 1bc next
day, surrounded by reporters, he
declined to discuss it.

JULSON SHqOTS • Clnclnnatl'a Jaci!Jon Julaon (40) gou up
for a ahot IJIIIt DePaul'• "'aiiie Mu~y during ucond half Thura·
day night In Clnclnnetl. The No.5 l•rcata won, 71-411, (AP
Rob Winihger with 25 points was
the only player in double figures for
Ashland (9-9 overall, 4-6 Oreal Lakes
lnlercollegate Conference).
Butler broke a 30.30 halftime tie
with eight straight points and never
trailed in the second half of a 71-56
victory over Cleveland Stale.
Chris Miske] scored 13 of his 19
points in the second half for the Bulldogs.

Leonidas Skoutaris and Joe ·Rey
shared scoring honors for the Vikings
.(4-11, 3-4) with 13 points apiece. .
Findlay defealed Ohio Dominican
76-70, Malone got by Shawnee State
89-86 and Tiffin edged Mount Vernon
Nazarene 74-72 in Mid-Ohio Con·
ference games.
Central State beat Spalding 86-80
in non-conference play.

'

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t

nllt

----Sports briefs---Sella Shirts

Likes Boxillg
CHICAGO (AP) _Middle linePHILADELPHIA (AP) - Ricky
backer Joe Caia of the Chicago Bears Watters, the crack · Eagle running·
is 0~ of tli~ surest and toughest tack- back, also takes an interest in boxing.
lers on the team.
Watters is a close personal friend
of veteran heavyweight George Fore-·
Off the field, however, Cain is a man and, when he .can, tums up in
businessman. He owns a silk-screen Foreman's comer to lead the cheering.
business in Los Angeles. IHpccializes section for the bill beller. .
.
in designer T-shins and athletic wear.
Ricky says, "I try to carry the ball
for George in my own way."

Best Wishes To All Our
Meigs County
Wbtter Sports Programs

fine.

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dif.'ectli

Rely On Us FUr
Complete COverage OJ Your
Favorite Sport:a Tea
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Franli Conferellce championships. He
Hjlward · 11 ·Hall' of Fame (Q9tball. served ·as athletic directOr from 1969
cci!ICb whose job clescrijJQon in Clem- to 1971.
~· 5 med~ slnde was simP~&gt;' "Le11·.
He never planned to be a football
eJid,•diCd IOilaY of oong¢SI.Ive
heart coach; but during his e&amp;reef and into
fllilure. He wu 86. 1
'retirement, Howard was awarded
•
. ; Howard died. abOut 3 a.m. at his nearly every honor a coach could be
hiMnC, Clemson athletK: director BOb- given. In 1989, 'he was inducled into
bj ~hson laid. H,oward had ~n the .~oU~,e ~?"'bal~ Hall of Fame.
ill .in ~t ~ and .was ~ . , I think 11 1 ~ IDI,ghty ~~ honor, I
h~Zed three wee~ .,o ·.rl.et 'a . oqc of tbe ,~ I ever had. H~ard
f~tiq i(ICII. . · • , ,, '•· , . ' ·: ~ llllhll ti106. "h'l probablY the lilst
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Howllll mtinta,illed 111 ~ 'li . one 1'·11 ever ae&amp;, I've sot about every
Clemlon't: t\111!~ Qftic;e~ Iller retit'; ··t :honor, that J.'vc·~n eliaible ·~m: ..,....
inJ aa ~I)
'in• l9'fl, -~', IIIKI1 ~ .tbll I ~~~ not be eli&amp;lble
'1'...~. tt~a~llltaY It idle uah:emlY s · for. , . . ,
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IMJ,fO~tM nprl,but loll !he '

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Rams in 1985.

Still a raw talent, he played pri·
marily on special teams for three sea·
sons until becoming a starting linebacker in 1988. He quickly became
one of the NFL's best pass rushers,
getting 16 1/2 sacks that year.
. He's been in double figures every
year but two - this season, when he
had nine, and 1991. But he was con·
sidered a liability against the run by
the Rams and they didn't put up much
of a fight when he went to the Steelers as a free agent in 1993.
"They dido 't know how w use me,
from the owner to the front office on
down to the coaching staff," Greene
says. "This was the perfect system for

me.''

The perfect system was the one
used by Dom Capers, then the Steel·
ers' defensive coordinator. It's based
on blitzes from all directions Greene from the left side; Lloyd from
the right or the middle; Rod Woodson
from the comer; Carnell Lake from
strong .safety or off the comer.
It creates havoc with blocking
schemes and it puts the two nastiest
guys, Lloyd and Greene, in the mid·
die of it.
It also pu[ the nasty boys in the
middle of a controversy this week.
"I consider Oreg Lloyd a dirty
player when he uses his helmet to hit
someone,'' says Erik Williams, the
Cowboys' right tackle.
Williams isn't exactly innocent
either. In the ' NFC championship
game, he used a cut block on Green
Bay nose iackle John Jurkovic that
put Jurkovic out of the game. .
It was technically legal, butjt had
the Packers crying foul.
The Nasty Boys might have the
Cowboys doing the same on Sunday.

·

danl Thureday In Plttaburgh. The children In the
unit are Wearing black and gold "Terrible Towell" for blanketa, and "Go Steelpra" hlta donated by the hoapltal'a auxiliary volunt..,.. (AP)

STEELER MADNESS Eight-week old, four·
pound Eric Prokopochak, Butler, Pa., Ia held at
Weatem Pennaylvanla Hoapltal'a Neonatal
lntanalve Can! Unit by Dr. Wilma Karamchan-

Players union says NFL owners
must agree to more revenue sharing:

PHOENIX (AP) - Concerned
about numerous injuries sustained on
artificial turf, NFL players have
turned to the federal government for
help.
The NFL Players Association said
Thursday it is cooperating with the
Center for Disease Control in Atlanta
on a study of artificial turf and its
relationship to injuries.
Gene Upshaw, executive director
of the union , said he hoped the study
would be completed by 1996. But he
added that the study had not yet started because of federal government
"People want problems to OCCUf," shutdowns during the budget debate.
Smith said. "When you've been on
The Union released a study last
top so long, people don't want you
year showing that more than 90 per·
there anymore. So they are trying
hard to get at us, get us to tum our
backs against one another and·get us
at the internal side.
"They tried it with our owner, our
DALLAS (AP) - A few weeks
coach and now the players. You can ago, Jason Kidd was excited to learn
keep trying all the time, I won't let it that fans were likely to make him an
affect me in the way I play.
All-Star starter. He also felt guilty
''I'm ready to play aod I'm tired about it because he ·didn't think he
of talking about it."
deserved it.
The Stcelers weren't nearly as
So Kidd decided to do something
vocal or visible this week. In fact, so about it.
many of them were invisible
Wednesday, the ream was hit with the
record fine .
"It was a miscommunication,"
coach Bill Cowher said as he apolo- By Dave Harris
gized at Thursday's news conference.
ROCKSPRINGS-Wellston slipped
Linebacker Greg Lloyd was a past Meigs 41-37 in girls Tri-Valley
center of attention Tuesday at media Conference basketball action Thursday when he supported the notion that day evening at Larry R, Morrison
Dallas tackle Erik Williams is a dirty Gymnasium.
player. Lloyd was one of the absenThe Lady Rockets took a 15-14
tees Wednesday and showed up for lead after the first period as Andrea
the final moments of Thursday's get· Wyatt (six) and Mandy Leach (four)
together.
combined for 10 points in the period.
He, more than anyone, expressed Cheryl Jewell and Anne Brown paced
disdain for the image-making that the Marauders with six points.each.
occurs during Super Bowl week.
The Rockets outscored Meigs 12-11
"We're not looking for image," he in the second frame to take a 27 •25
said. "We just line .up and play."
at the half.
Pretty soon, they'llget to do just
It was a low scoring second half as
that. Apparently, they can't wait.
the Lady Rockets outscored Meigs
14-12 to post the four point win.
The win raises the Wellston record
to 6 and 9 overall and 4-7 in the Ohio
Division. Meigs drops to 3-10 overall
and 3-7 in the TVC.
shortly after the Steelers' nearly two·
Anne
Brown led the Marauders
hour workout began. Coach Bill
Cowher again deferred any decision with 12 points and 17 of the Maraud·
ers 31 rebounds. Jewell added eight.
on Woodson until game day.
"He feels confident aod is getting Meigs hit 13 of 50 from the floor for
more and 'more confident every day," 26%. The Marauders went to the line
Cowher said. "I'm pleased where 17 times hitting II for 65%. Meigs
had five assists led by Rebekah Smith
he's at.·~
and
Ashley Roach with .two each and
Safety Myron Bell, whose playing
time would Pfobably be cut if Wood· nine steals led by Smith with three.
son returns, said the fonner NFL Meigs tumed the ball over 12 times.
Wyatt led Wellston with 12, Nik·
defensive player of the year is getting
ki
Downey
and Dana Stevison with
considerable work in practice.
eight
each.
"I know why he wants to play ...
Meigs won the reserve game 35he's been in the league nine years 1111d
he's been a Pro Bowler six times, and 11 . Tricia Davis and Myca Haynes led
he wants a piece of the action," Bell Meigs with eight points, Tracey Cof· ·
said. "He's going to do everything he fey added seven and Danielle Grucser
added six.
can to get on the field."
Meigs will host Alexander in a
Still, Bell also seemed to question
make-up
game on Saturday at noon
if Woodson's return might disrupt the
and will travel to Wahama to play the
secondary's cohesion.
"It's too valuable (a game) to play Whire Falcons on Monday in the first
1 ever meeting between the two
games," he said.
schools.

cent of the players preferred grass
fields. The NFL, which is cooperat·
ing with the survey, has said it can 't
detennine if more injuries occur on
artificial surfaces because there have
been no conclusive studies.
"This is the first time we've been
able to get an agency like the CDC to
wo~k on this," Upshaw said. "If we
can get them all the data. we should
be able to get something definitive.
Meanwhile, the players union said
that disagreement among owners on
revenue sharing is holding up
approval of the three-year extension
of the labor agreement.
" If they don't approve it soon, it
will be very difficult to get approval

later," Upshaw said.
.
The extension was approved late
last year and approved by the players.
. But owners didn't approve it at
their meetings in Atlanta last week,
·largely because it mandates additional revenue sharing.
Upshaw said that includes parkinil
and concessions, which normally
have been kept by home teams. It alSI!
would include the kinds of deals Dallas owner Jerry Jones has made with
Nike and Pepsi-Cola, prompting the
league and Jones to sue each other.
The current agreement leaves
1999 as a year without a salary cap.

Kidd ·proud to be an all-star ·performer.
" I figured, hey, if they think I'm
an All-Star, then I have to perform
like one," Kidd said.
Lately, he 's done just that He
posted three triple-doubles in six
games, allowing him to smile easily
Thursday upon teaming officially
that lie will be the starting point guard

Wel_lston girls. edge Meigs
WELLSTON 15 12 9 7-43
MEIGS
14 II 8 4-37
WELLSTON-Wyatt 5 -0-2~ 1.2,
Argrabright 2-0-0=4, Sickles 0.00=0, Downey 4-0-0=8, Steviso n 1· 1·
3=8, Swafford 1-0.0=2, Leach 3-()..
3=9, TOTALS 16-1-11=43
MEIGS-Rebekah Smith 1-0-0=2,
Chery Jewell 1-0-6=8, Kristen Dassylva 1-0-0=2, Anne Brown 5-()..
2=12, Ashley Roach 1-0· 1=3, Brandi Meadows 1-0· 1=3, Carrisa Ash 20.0=4, Taryn Doidge 1-0-0=2. Erin
Krawsczyn 0-0-1= I, 10TALS 13-011=37

on Feb. II in San Antonio.
K.idd received 1,049,946 votes226.120 more than Utah 's John
Stockton , a certain future Hall of
Farner.
·
The other Western Conference
starters will be Phoenix's Charles
Barkley and Seattle's Shawn Kemp a1
forward, Houston's Hakcem Olaju·
won at center and the Rockets' Clyde
Drexler at shooting guard.

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IRAIILY
SYHiil

Some Steelers question Woodson's return

•'·

·,.rank Howard, 86, Ha#l of
·~me,. grid coach, dies

'

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - Fun's over.
"I don't want to hear anything
Even Naw Newton says so. And if about that," Steelers center Derthe mirthful Dallas Cowboys guard is montti Dawson said. "I don't read the
ready for work •.well, who isn't?
papers or watch TV."
. "I don't care if our curfew is 10
So now everyone will g~t down to
p.m. or 9 p.m., we've had our fun, business heading toward Sunday 's big
we've shown olrr faces," Newwn said game.
Thursday, the final day the players
"I don't want to wake up on Sunmeet with the media. " It's time to day aird say, 'I need a few more hours
slow down."
sleep,' " Newton'said.
The week's oflbcat moments fea·
The players didn't exactly lose
tured:
interest, but they certainly made it
. -Dallas coach .Barry Switzer call- clear they can do without the persising the Super Bowl the Orange Bowl tent questions about everything from
and joking about his ex-wife sleeping sleeping habits to partying habits to
In his hotel room on a rollaway bed. dressing habits.
-A fleet of 12 limousines,
"Bored?" said Michael Irvin, still
ordered by Emmitt Smith and costing . \he JIIOSt entertaining of players, even
$1,000 a day per limo, meeting the in a· toned-down mode. "Bored of
~owboys in Tempe.
what? Playing at this time of year?
· -Cowboys owner Jerry Jones
"If I say I am bored, maybe God
grabbing the spotlight for himself by would show me next year or the 'year
$CUing up shop in news tonferences after that'or the year after that, 'Mike,
designed for players and coaches.
you were bored. so let me take it
: -Jimmy Johnson, who hasn't away. Let me let you sit home .,.,bile
coached in the NFL for two years, somebody else plays.' And I don 't
~olding a heavily atlended news ton· , want that.
ference and not bashing Jones - too
"I am not bored. I love what I am
inuch.
doing."
What the Cowboys don't appreci· ·
· -Steelers linebatker Kevin
Greene spending his day off in Las ate is how outsiders try .to disrupt
Vegas doing a promotion with them and foster ill feelings among
wrestling lookalike Hulk Hogan .
them. Sl!lith, the articulate, classy star
_:About two dozen Steelers fail· running back, wonders if people are
ing to show up at a mandatory news getting bored with Dallas" winning
conference, leading to a $25,000 ways.

1

•Meigs Marauders
•Eastern Eagles
•Southern Tornadoes

Some promotion.
But Lloyd'-iS far less outgoing except when it comes to quarterbacks.
He has led a min i-revolt among
defensive players around the league
for the system of fines imposed for
use of the helmet on the quarterback.
He was !tie first one fined - for a hit
on Favre in in exhibition game with
Green Bay of which Favre himself
said: "If one of my players did that,
I'd high:five him."
·
"I don't,know if I've been singled
out at all. but l do know definilllly
when I go i.nto the game, l am one of
the ones who are looked at," says
Lloyd, who has a black belt in karate.
"Every time you get close to the
quarterback, the ref comes up and
says, 'OK Lloyd, that was good,' or
'OK, Lloyd, that was cleise.' I don't
want to hear that."
Neither of the nasty boys came up
the easy way.
Llo):d;, who at 226 pounds is small
for a· linebacker, played at Fon Valley State, not exactly a must stop on
a pro soout's tour, and was a sixthround draft choice in 1987.Ayear lat·
er he was a starter, and by 1991 he
.was a l'ro Bowler and one of the
NFL's most aggressive linebackers.
Greene. who dropped from 255 to
245 pounds this year, played at
Aubu!IJ, but only as a walk-on. In
fac~ he· walked on as a punter and
ended 'up as a running back on the
scout team - essentially a tackling
dummy.
"That made up my mind for me,"
he says. "I decided I wanted to hit
people, not get hit."
He ended up at defensive end,
played for two yean and had II sacks
his senior year. That got him drafted
in the fifth round by the Los Angeles

Enough already, let's play ball

- ~~~~the~l~- - down
~ed~~~~~~~.~-------------------··-----~-----------------~~~~
on Center Court and flew

t

The Dally Sentinel• Pegl 5

'

1996

I

Pomeroy • Mldd~port. Ohio

. Frld,ey, January 28, 1981

.,

.,

.·''
'I

...

•I

l

: SCOTISDALE. Ariz. (AP) ~od Woodson's decision to play in
the Super Bowl after missing nearly
die entire season has left his PittsbUrgh Steelers teammates in a deli·
·
cate position.
· If they don't support him,.they will
·aj,pear to be turning their backs on his
courageous comeback. But if he
plays, the Steelers risk destabilizing
a secondary that has played marvelously at times without him.
: On Thursday, three of the Steelers'
fQur current starting defensive backs
expressed reservations about Wood· .
son's intention to play Sunday against
tlie Dallas Cowboys.
· "You have to be careful not to
niess up the chemistry we have back
tliere," safety Dllrren Perry said.
"We're just starting w gel. If you're
g9ing to throw Rod in when he has·
n:t been in there, you've got to be
careful how you use him."
, Woodson, who hasn't played in
nQariy· five months, probably would
be limited mostly to the Steelers' ~ix­
back dime defense. It was exactly that
alignment the Chargers' Tony Martin
beat for his game-winning touchdown
pljSS in last season's AFC champi·
o11ship game.
: nm McKyer's blown coverage on
that pass makes some Steelers play·
er:s nervous about Woodsy n's return,
if only because one such big play
could decide the Super Bowl.
. "We've · had good 'Chemistry all
ye..-. and I don't know.how the oth·

er guys are going to accept it," cornerback Willie Williams said.
Woodson, the Steelers' six-time
Pro Bowler, wants to become the first
NFL player to retum from a tom ante·
rior cruciate ligiiJ!Ient in the same season he was injured. 1bc injury usually requires 6-18 months of rehabili·
tation.
However, Woodson admittedly is
only about 85 percent healed. Even if
he plays only a few downs, he might
leave the Steelers' secondary exposc!d
to the Cowboys' proficient passing
combination of Troy Aikman to
Michael Irvin.
"He can't come back and play
us," Irvin said. "I want to see this. I
don't know what Woodson looks
like. I know what Woodson used to
look like. I know ho-.y great a comer
lie used to be. But I know what a knee
surgery takes out of you. It took me
a year and a half to come back. I can't
worry about Rod Woodson. 1bcy got
here without Woodson."
Woodson said he wouldn 't jeop- .
ardize his team · by playing if he
weren't ready. •
"I t..ant to play, and I would love .
to play," Woodson said. "It's a deli·
catc situation. As a player, I don't
want to disrupt our team, I don't want
to come back and move everybody
else out of~ way. 1bc last thing you
want to do is lell a JUY he can't dress
because df a guy who hasn't played
all year."
·••
·
Woodson practiced again Thurs·
day, removing a protective brace

---Sports ·b riefs---NEW YORK (AP) - 'lbe 111051 ations of the' name such as Mickey.
1bcre were 28 Michaels or variapopular name in the American Con·
tions
in die conference. The second
fcn:nce of lhe NFL in 199S wu
Mithael, which included IOliiC Ylri• n\OSt popular 11ame was James .

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Plge.&amp; • The Dally SenUnel

Friday, January 26, 1996

Friday, January 26, 1991

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

GRABS REBOUND • Jerry McCullough (5) haula down a

· rebound In front of Connecticut'• Ricky Moore, right and

. Ralhlmel JCH:~ea, during flrat half action In a .81$1 Eaat college
. · game In Plttaburgh Thuradly night The Bearcata won, 6N2 (AP)

S~nator~ are still

.WIn less In
By The Auoclated Press

It's a strange game.
Although Ottawa's losing streak
continues to grow, the Senators and
their fans are beginning to smile.
. They fell to Detroit4-2 Thursday,
. one nightaftertumblingto Pittsburgh.
The tosses now totalll in a row, two
since their new head coach, Jacques
Martin, came aboard, and four
· the.1r new $217 m1·11·10n
'straJ'ght m
1Jome.
. : Instead of feeling downbeat, the
~enators feel they have turn ed th e
·oorner.
•
· "
. , "It's not discouragmg, center
·~lexandre Daigle said of the Sena:tors' latest two defeats. "Those are
·two of the best teams in the league,
-&amp;nd if we play like that against less
.ented teams, we're g11ing to be
rewarded."
· : While Ottawa was tumbling to its
·l7th loss against eight wins and tie,
:the Red Wings were winning their
•Sixth straight, 22nd in 26 games and
·improving their season record to 349.-3. .
. The 16,882 fans packed into the
Qalladium loved every minute, even
th h
though their heroes were on e s ort
end
· of the score.
. "It's a first-class building with a
lot of atmosphere and it made a dif· r~rence in the hockey game," said
fletroit center Steve Yzerman, an
·
Glttawa native who had a goal and an
tissist.
: In other NHL games, it was Chicago 2, San Jose I; Montreal 6, Pionda 2; New Jersey 3, Washington I;
8oston 4, Tampa Bay 3; and Hartford
g, Los Angeles 2.
• Ottawa outshotthe Red Wings 3734, but was halted by the brilliant
gaaltending of Detroit's Chris
Osgood. He made point-blank stops
ojl Daigle, rookie Daniel Alfredsson
and veteran Steve Duchesne in the
fi'nal minutes of the scoreless ihird
period.
.
· "Chris Osgood came up b1g and
niade some key saves, so I don't think
we played as well as we can," Yzernian said.
: Goals by Daigl~ and Tom Chorske
811ve Ottawa a 2-1 lead early in the
sC&lt;:ond period before Detroit scored
tliree consecutive goals- inCluding
. a;pair in 80 seconds. Besides Yzerman, Paul Coffey, Tim Taylor and
Keith Primeau scored for the Red
Wings.
•
Blaekhawks :z, Sharks 1
: A goal by Chris Chelios during a
two-man advantage late in the second
Jl!iriod boosted host Chicago over San
Jose.
: Bernie Nicholls also scored for the
Slackhawks, while Jeff Hackett, the
Sharks' goalie in their expansion
1~1 -92 season. stopped 20 shots to
beat his former team.
: San Jose's losing streak reached
rour games despite goalie Chris Terwho made 18 saves, many of
diem sensational. Kevin Miller scored
,

new home

.

.

By The Auoclatecl Press
Virginia Tech and Marquette, lbe
two teams that played for last season's NIT championship, picked the
same time to have subpar games.
The eighth-ranked Hokies dropped
a 64-47 Atlantic 10 Conference game
~t George Washington and the 24thrankeil Golden Eagles lost 79-69 at
North Carolina-Charlotte in a Conference USA game Thursday night.
In other Top 2S games, No. 4 Con. necticut beat Pittsburgh 69-63, No. 5
Cincin~ti got past ~Paul71-61, No.
10 Utah defeated Texas-El Paso 6854, No. 13 Arizona edged Oregon
State 66-59 and No. 2S California
downed Washington State 87-79.
Varginia Tech (12-2, 5-l), ranked
all season long, struggled all night
with its shooting. The Hokies hii just
37 percent (18-for-49) from the field
and only 58 percent (11-for-19) from
the free-throw line.
George Washington (10-4, 4-1)
scored the final basket of the first half
to lead 29-25, then began the second
half with a 10-2 run, the lead reaching 39-27 on a 3-pointer by Kwame
Evans with 17:17to play. ·
The Hokies never came closer

than nine points after that, and fell Travis Knight had off nights, but
behind by as many as 16 in the final Rudy Johnson and Kirk King didn't
four minutes.
in the Huskies' Big East victory ·at
"I'm not taking anything away Pittsburgh.
from them, because they played well
Johnson scored 16 points, King
and they played hard, but I'm not so · had II rebounds and Connecticut tied
sure it was as much their defense as a school re&lt;:ord with its 17th consccit was our inability to run our utive win. The Huskies (18-1 , 8-0),
offense," Virginia Tech coach Bill who haven 't lost since Nov. 24
Poster said.
against Iowa, tied a school record set
Marquette (12-4, 3·2), which by the 1952-53 and 1953-54 teams.
broke into the Top 25 this week, had They .will try to break that mark Sunits own shooting problems against day against Virginia in Hartford,
UNC-Charlotte. The Golden Eagles Conn. ·
·
scored only 18 points in the first half
"The guy who ~illed us ...:.
and got no closer than eight i.n the absolutely, unequivocally killed ussecond half.
·was Rudy Johnson," Pitt coach Ralph
"Tbere is no excuse for shooting Willard said of the Connecticut senior
16 percent (in the first half)," Mar- who has 40 point~ in his last two
quettc coach Mike Deane said. "We games.
Garrick Thoma~ had 16 points for
didn't make anything. We did a
decent enough job defensively. We Pitt (8-7, 3-4), which lost its fourth
just didn't execute on offense."
straight.
DeMarco Johnson scored 22 No. 10 Utah 68, UTEPS4
point$' and Shanderic Downs 18 for
At El Paso, the Miners weren ' t
the 49ers (10-6, 4-1), who led by as able to win one fortheir hospitalized
many as 24 points and made 16 of coach.
their final 18 free throws.
Brandon Jessie scored 18 points
No. 4 Connectkut 69,
and Mark Wydalch had 17 to lead
Pitt 63
•
Utah ( 15-3, 7-1 Western Athletic
Ray Allen, Doron Sheffer and Conference) to its sixth straight win.

It was the first aame for U'I13P
since coach Don lfaskins .suffered ll
heart attac~ Satulday. The 35-year
coaching veteran is not expected
back on the sidelines this season.
No. 13 Arlzoaa 66,
Ore&amp;Oil State 59
At Corvallis, Ore., Ben Davis
scored 18 points and Joe McLean
added 16 as the Wildcats (14-3, 4-2
Pac-10)· held on for a surprisingly
tough victory over the outmanned
Beavers (3-12, t-5).
Arizona led by as many as 20
points early in the second half, but
Oregon State rallied to get within five
with 2:19 remaining. The game wasn't decided until Davis sank two free·
throws with 11.2 seconds to play.
No. 2~ California 87, Washington
State 79
·
At Pullman, Wash., freshman Shareef Abdur~ahim had 32 points and
18 rebounds and Tremaine Fowlkes
had 12 points in his season debut for
the Golden Bears (11-4, 6-1 Pac 10).
Mark Hendrickson, playing for the
first time since he fractured his left
hand Dec. 27 at San Jose State, led
Washington State (8-6, 1-S).with 27
points and 14 rebounds.

·Alex was very anxious to get into
a certain club at schooL Yesterday, he
was voted in and is so thrilled he
can't see straight. As part of the initiation, the boys gave Alex a video
camera and told· him he has to make
a video of his mother getting
undressed. The club members show
these "initiation" videos at parties
and charge to see them.
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: My sister,
When Lydia told me this, I was
"Lydia," age 38, divorced her hus- · too upset to respond. The fact that her
band almost immediately after their son would consider asking his mothson, "Alex," was born. Lydia has er to do such a thing shows how litbeen spoiling this boy rotten ever tle respect he has for her. What is
since. He is now 17 and attends a worse is that Lydia is actually 'conprep school in the East. A recent sidering it. I should tell you that she
development has me stunned.
is very proud of ~r youthful figure

Ann
Landers

rebounding and shooting slats all but
dwindled to nothing last year.
Now he is leading the nation in
field-goal percentage, hitting.92-of128 shots for 72 percent H1s 13.4
points a game are tops on the team.
Pastorino isn't necessarily athletic, but makes sure the right people get
the ball. Although he only averages
5.5 points a game, he sets up the
offense and directs traffic.
.
Perryman averages 13.3 points
and 9.3 rebounds a game while shooting 60 percent from the field. With
Pastorino doing most of the ball-handling, the Flyers have been able to
hide his deficiencies (36 turnovers, I5
assists).
Heading into Saturday's confer-

Reserve and Wittenberg at Wooster. Cedarville, Mount .Vernon Nazarene
Marietta is at Heidelberg, Oh10 at Findlay, Malone at Rio Grande and
Northern at Hiram, Otterbein at J~hn Tiffin at Oh1o Domm1c~n. .
Carroll, Baldwi_n-Wallace a.t.Caplta.l
Non-conference act1on . mcludes .
and Mount Un1on at Muskmgum m Bluffton at Defi1anc_e, Oberl
.
mat P·enn ·
w
1
Lak
the Ohio Conference. ·
State-Behren.d, Purd
1mmgton
_
at
Id
I.e
In the Mid-Ohio Conference, Erie and !nd1anaue- n 1anapo ts
Walsh is at Shawnee State, Urb.ana at a_t Central State.

PICTURE YOUR Pft

G TIE•••

Pn'

'•

ence game against rival Xavier, Purnell said that for the first time in a
long time it appears Dayton is headed up and not down. Adding to the
opti"!ism. is the_ signing of three !OP
recruits, mcludmg Zanesville Htgh
School star Edwin Young and 6-9 lf2
Mark Aschman of St. Marys Memorial.
'.' We have a lot of young guys who
·
are getting valuable experience, smce
we start two freshmen and a sophomore," he said. "The future looks
bright."
In other Ohio college games Sat· at Purd ue m
· Ihe
urday, Oh'10 state IS
Big Ten, Bowling Green is host to
Akron, Miami is at Ball State, Ohio

,.

'

at Central Michigan, Kent at Eastern
Michigan and Toledo at Western
Michigan in the Mid-American Conference, Cleveland State is host to .
Loyola in the Midwestern Collegiate I
and Youngstown State entertains Troy !

OUR SPECIAL PAGE($)

"J'OR PETS ONLY"

State in the Mid-Continent.
Ashland welcomes Grand Valley
State in the Great Lakes Intercollegiate. In the North Coast Conference,
Denison is at Earlham, Kenyon at
Allegheny, Ohio Wesleyan at Case

WILL BE PUBLISHED TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY .13'" IN
Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

'THE 'DAILY SENTINEL
Clippers, Pistons
ONLY
win on clutch shots

·.

$600 '

Hurryl Deadline

lriday, february 9tlt at 3 p.rn.

r---------------,

1

I

.
I ..
.:•t.
I ...

..

I._

my.

1

1

more

a:

VALENTINE PETS

'•

I

I
I
.J
,.

_______________ _
p.in.

:.uft...-.

....

' ~

-- :

::

'•
••

-1 ""·,.,.
,j

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.

~ firstti~

.

.

..

~.

The·Daily Sentinel

~l~trd:~~~ m_::,to"~a· ~onc!mJ'~ s~nday's ~~r

By DANIEL 0. HANEY
AP Science Writer
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - The
medical bills and lost earnings of
Americans who suffer strokes each
year total $41 billion, according to a
new analysis.
Strokes have long been recognized to be a major killer and crippler,
. but the new repon shows they have
a staggering economic cost as well.
· Each year, 500,000 Americans
· suffer strokes, and I SO,OOO die from
them. They are the third leading
cause of death after heart disease and
cancer.
Researchers from the. University
of Iowa attempted to add up ihe
· financial toll by looking at the lifetime cost of the strokes that occurred
· in 1990.
They calculated that the average
lifetime cost is $103,576. However,
· some kinds of strokes are much
more expensive than others.
By far the most costly is subarachnoid hemorrhage, which occurs
· when a blood vessel breaks on the
surface of the brain and bleeds into
the space between the brain and the
skull. The average cost: $228,030.
• Subarachnoid hemorrhages are
especil!llY upensive because victims
tend to berelatively young, so the
lifelong earnings they lose are high.

Meigs County Prosecutot John Lentea, right,
Installed a naw board member and officers of
thll Meigs County Library Board Thursday. They
were from the left, Don Mullan, reappointed for

another term aa a board member, Doug Little,
director of building programs, Wanda Eblin,
treasurer; Patricia Mills, vice president and Pat
Holter, president

----Society scrapbook-"- - - ROCK SPRINGS CHURCH
Plans for the South Central District Conference to be hosted by the
Middleport Child Conservation
League were made at a recent meeting"uf the ,Rock Springs United
Methodist Church.
The conference will be April 13.
Honorary members will be invited to
attend since it will mark the local

These account for about 7 percent of ·
all strokes.
Intracerebral hemonhages, which
happen when blood vessels break
inside the brain, cost $123,565.
DEDHAM. Ma". (AP) - A
Ischemic strokes resulting from
woman's
jailhouse kiss had more
· blocked blood vessels inside the
than passion - it also contained a
brain - by far the most common handcuff key that allowed her lover
cost $90,981 per victim.
to
escape.
The research, conducted by Dr.
Christopher Glover, 20, was
Thomas N. Taylor and others, was
recaptured
and indicted on charges of
presented Thursday night at a stroke
conference sponsored by the Ameri- escape, possession of a dangerous
can Heart Association.
The researchers calculated the
lifetime cost of the strokes occurring
in 1990 was $40.6 billion- $5.6 billion for subarachnoid hemorrhage. $6
billion for intracerebral hemorrhage
and $29 billion for ischemic strokes.
While the medical costs of caring
for stroke victims is high, the
researchers calculated that victim's
lost ellfl!ings are even higher, '!laking
up 58 percent of the total economic
cost.
"Improving survival can't substantially impact the cost. We have to
get people back to work after
strokes," s11id Dr. Patricia Davis, one
of the researchers.
The study found that while
Peter 4: 14 -- "If ye be reproached
improving stroke victims' survival for the name of Christ, happy are ye."
reduces the expense of lost earnings,
Notice, for the name ofJesus, not
it makes medical bills higher.
for ourselves, or anybody. In 1 Peter
Until now, sfrokes have been 4:12-19. he speaks on how a Christuntrcatable in the first hours. While ian is to be happy. In these da)'5 it
doctors could help prevent compli- seems that nobody is happy with their
cations and therapists could work on church, their pastor, the pastor's wife,
rehabilitation, there was nothing they or even the people of the church'
could do to stop strokes' destruction Why? I have been asked this question
of brain tissue.
many times over the years. I believe
However, experts reported last I have found the answer.
month that the clot-dissolving drug
First, we are not to thin~ it strange
TPA -tissue-plasminogen activator when a trial comes into our lives and
- could limit stroke damage if giv- ask, why is this happening to me? I
en within three hours of the onset of Peter 4: 12 Beloved, think it not
symptoms.
strange concerning the fiery trial
Dr. Steven R. Levine of Henry which is to try you, as though some
· Ford Hospital in Detroit estimated strange.thing happened unto you : It
this treatment could cut millions is to try you .
Second, we are to rejoice, that we
perhaps even $1 billion - off the
are
partakers of Christ's sufferings.
cost of strokes.
you really suffered like Christ?
Have
Among other findings of the Iowa
Can our suffering even compare to
research:
-Strokes are more expensive for the sufferings of Christ? !think not!
men than women if they occur before If you are going through a trial for the
age 65, since men's earnings are name of Chris~ it is not you who they
higher. However, after 65, women's are speaking evil pf, but of God.
As you r~ad i Peter 4:14, you will
strokes cost:more. ·
see,
Ye are to be happy suffering with
- Medical bills in the first two
Christ.
I Peter 4: 14. If y_e be
years after a strolce account for nearly half of victims' health care expens- reproached for the name of Christ,
happy are ye; for the spirit of glory
es.
and
of God resteth upon you: on their
-The lifetime nlirsing home bills
part
he is evil spoken of, but on your
of people who bad suokes in 1990
part
he is glorified . .
will total $3 billion, while other long'
Now
in I Peter 4: IS it says, But let
lenn care witrcost $6 billion.
n11ne of you suffer as a murderer, or

league's 50th year in the Ohio Child
Conservation League.
Kitty Darst presided at the meeting which opened with the pledge to
the flag and the mother's prayer. A
dessert pizza was served. Patty
Arnold was hostess. Nancy Morris
won the hostess prize, and Peggy
Harris, the traveling prize .
·February meeting will be hus-

band's night with a potluck dinner
being served. Denver Rice will entertain on his guitar.
EARNS DEGREE
Andrew Baer of Pomeroy earned a
Bachelor of Arts degree with a major
in criminal jcstice from Ohio
Dominican College in Columbus. He
is the son of Barbara Bailey and
Charles Baer and is a 1991 graduate
of Southern High SchooL

...

'

~

weapon and armed carjacking.
A grand jury on Wednesday
indicted tiis 19~ear-old girlfriend,
Shannon Rideout, on charges of aiding an escape.
Rideout wrapped the key in duct
tape to slip it through the metal detector at the county jail on Nov. 9. Once

never did hit me.
l:ee
We have had many eye-opening
Dear Milwaukee: Don't move
discussions since he gambled away back with AI. Tell him if he is seri'the rent and food money, and we have ous about cleaning up his act, he can
worked through alot of problems. AI prove it by going with you for joint
hasn 't had a drink for five weeks and counseling.
wants us to get another apartment
It sounds as if alcohol has a lotto
together. I'm afraid he will slip back do with Al 's problems. A competent
into his old bad habits and then MY counselor will probably send him to
behavior would be unacceptable. (! Alcoholics Anonymous. And also
have a short fuse.)
check into Gamblers Anonymous
Should I move back in with AI and (see your phone book). Good luck·to
give our relationship another chance, both of you. You're going to need it.
or should I just move on and look for
somebody else? I love this man, but
Sead questions to ADD Landen,
he really did disappoint me. I am ter- Crutors Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenribly confused and could use a fresh tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
opinion, Ann. -- Coogie in Milwau- .Calif. 90045

By TOM HUNTER
Looking back 38 years ago at this
week in 1958, an
open house gave parents and residents of
Eastern
Local
SchQol District their
first look at the new
modem half-a-million dollar consolidated high school
between Tuppers Plains and Chester.
The new school was part of an
$825,000 building program in the
district, which included the new
Riverview Grade School near
Reedsville . The state provided
$402.000, while district taxpayers
bond~d themselves for $425,000.
Classes opened in the 12-classroom
high school on Monday Jan. 27 to
232 students. 11le gymnasium and
industrial arts wing were completed
after the school openecl to students.
Thirty years ago this week. the
new Sunday Times-Sentinel, a
. merger of the former Gallia Times
and of the Saturday issue of The
Daily Sentinel was preparing for its
first publication date of Feb. 6,
1966. Newsstand price of the Sunday-Times Sentinel was set at a
dime per copy, and believed to be
the lowest priced Sunday newspaper
in Ohio, if not the United States, at
the time of its introduction.
In sports this week in 1966, 5-6
senior guard Buddy Moore nailed a
20-foot jumper with three seconds
left to giv.e Carl Wolfe's Middleport
Yellow Jackets a 68-66 home upset
of the number I team in the Associated Press Ohio Class A basketball,
Nelsonville. Gary Stobart paced
Middleport with 27 points, while
Moore adde~ 12.
The "Flood of 1996" river levels

I.

l.or~tl

inside, she hid the key in her mouth
and passed it to Glover when she
kissed him, said Assistant District
Attorney Heather Kelley.
A week later, he used the key to
unlock his shackles and escape from
a sheriff's van ca1rying him to court
to answer charges he stole a car.

were the worSt in Pomeroy since
February 28, 1979, when the Ohio
River crested at 51.5 feet. Friday's
scheduled crest of the Ohio River,
the second crest of the river at flood
levels in less than a week, brin~s'lo
mind one of the worst months for
flooding in Meigs County.
In March, I 963, business owners
in downtown Pomeroy moved from
their stores twice in two weeks due
to flooding that reached the fifty
foot leveL
Business owners in Pomeroy and
Racine returned to their stores
Thursday, March 7, 1963 to .find
windows broken and water recedi·ng
from their businesses after the river
crested at 51.6 feet at I a.m., March
6. Just as area residents had thought
the flooding was over, heavy rains
pounded the Bend area on March 18
to push river levels up nearly two
tenths of a foot each hour.
Employees at the Ohio Valley
Electric corporation's Kyger Creek
Plant cheated the '63 flood for the
second time in eight years, with the
operation of railroad .service to the
plant that transported 200 workers to
and from Kyger Creek on the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad.
The river crested at 49.6 feet on
March 21, leaving Pomeroy businesses with two foot less water than
the earlier March flood.
The significance of the month's
floods was noted in a story in the
March 21, 1963 edition of the Daily
Sentinel. "According to one veteran
businessman, it was the first time in
at least a quarter century that high
water had entered business houses
twice in two weeks. It, was exactly
two weeks to the hour from · when
several businesses began moving for
the recent flood."

Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
Sands' in the past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

color

,..,.,.,Times-Sentinel
I • .

WJUTE A MESSAGE TO YOuR SPECIAL VAL£NTINE
Remember that special someone this
Valentine's Day with a me$$8ge in
The Dally Sentinel
•Sweethearts
•Monas &amp; Dads
•Grandpllrents
•'Ie.chers
•BabySitten
•Friends

Are you happy?

. PER PICTURE
PRE·PAID""

AUstin leads Phoenix
open after two rounds

listens.
Dear Ann Landers: While I was
away on business, my fiance trashed
my finances and then lied to me about
where the money went He was supposed to pay my bills, but he didn 't
do it. I left him the cash, like a fool ,
and he spent it gambling.
When "AI" didn't pay the bills,
we were evicted from our aparrment.
I'm now living with relatives, and he
is with his father.
We have been kicked out of two
other apartments because of our loud
arguing. I would get so angry when
AI came home drunk that I'd scream
at him, and he'd scream back. Then,
the pots and pans would fly, but he

Girlfriend's kiss helped boyfriend escape

Houston finished with 20, including ;
eight in the fourth quarter.
Jason Kidd neaily had his fourth
triple-double in seven games as he
finished with II points, 12 assists and
eight rebounds.
1
"This was not one of my best ,
games at all," Kidd said. "The ba)l
just didn't go in for us."
Please enclose selfGeorge McCloud scored 23 to lead
Dallas. Jim Jackson added 18, rookaddressed st.. mped
ie Loren Meyer had a season-high 131
"PEl'S NAME"
envelope to return
and Popeye Jones had 12.
,
Owner's Name
Cllppen 94, Nuggets 93
·
your photo.
Barry's basket sent Denver to its :
sixth straight loss.
,
Pour seconds before Barry's dra·.
matic shot, LaPhonso Ellis hit a ISfooter to give the visiting Nuggets a
93-92 lead.
Loy Vaught scored 26 points and
had 13 rebounds for the Clippers, and 1
Terry Dehere had 18 points off the
~
~!~f!~i3.t~~h~i~.secondsremain- bench. Barry added eight points.
,.
:Pet's N a m • - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
' ''
- ·:
In other NBA games, it was Wash- t Antonio McDyess, a rook,ie who
;
went
to
the
Nuggets
in
a
deal
that
sent
ington 120, Houston 85; and yanOWner's Name
.
.·
.
.
couver I06, Toronto I0 I m overtime. Brian Willili!IIS, Rodney Rogers and
::
. After Houston's basket, Tony Barry to the Clippers, had 23 points
IAdcir..._
I '·
: SCO'M'SDALE, Ariz. (AP) who shot66 Thursday. .
·
Dumas' tong 3-pointattemptclanged and 13 rebounds in the Joss:
•
,~ bogeying two of the last 90
Stev~ Jones and Jusun Leonard off the rim at the buzzer, and Detroit Bullets 120, Rockets 85
:
4
hOie!i Woody Ausiin is confident he's were third at 13 , one stroke ahead of won for the third time in five games
Seven of Washington's nine avail- ' lc~
~ng
consistent.
Don Pooley and Scott Verplank.
and 12th time in 17 tries.
able players scored in double figures
,.•'
136
in
a
rout
of
Houston.
: ''I'm gettipg the blld tournaments
~arry Lane w~. alone at
• · The Mavericks lost for the second
Amount Enclosed:
for
pictures
'
9Jitofmysyttem,"heuidThutsday while Doug M~m. Bob Tway, time in· three games and opened a _
The Bullets were playing without
•
utNeach.
·
.
t
~
IIIOolina a 4-under-par 6? for a AndreMed~ ~aseed •11M•k.eS Shetan_!lys,taRyoced· five-game ho111estand by ending a injured starters Chris Webber and
. ,~.... halfW thr It the co
1..... an om c .. ~r
h
. .
__._
Mark Price. Brent Price scored 2S
' .
l ·~
ay . oug
.thi fi . shots 0 fthe lead at 137 two-game orne wmnmgsu ......
'
{•
•
~ Qpell. ".Being .in contetltion WI n. ve
·.
. •
The game was close all night. poiriis and Calben CheWy finished
D~adllne Friday, February 9th at 3
•
•'..
lot .bai belpcld. I'm tn11tin1
~~pl::ers~:~ud=~~e~ There were 19 ties atid neiiher team . With 20 poiniS for the Bullets, who
· Mall or bring the entry form:
4
~mote,~ Jut Yeat; I d,idn't cl adeptFon.Z.Y
t ;led to' led by more than three pointsover.the had lost five of six.
~ It wu olhqd on." ·
e . r r
•n
_... u
fiaal 5:48.
·
. Gheorghe Muresan bad 17 points :
'
; : Alliin, wbo entcnld 34. toilma- finish the RC9nd. rouod after_ 1 1 l/2- · Mills had a 5eason•high 24 pointS and 13 rebounds, while Tim Le11ler 1
•·''
M !Ill ~- monl thin Ill but hoThefrol~ ~:r.':;'.'y ear; to lead the Pistons, who played the had !6poinllan~JuwanH~.rd 14.1
~
Gllt«POAT!ure~-and
tin eli . . finilh
Jcf last 3:11 without Gnnt Hill. He , Hakeem OIBJuwon eclipsed the 1
10
A
21,000-marldnc.:eerpoiats,scoring
· 110 Cqun St.
fouledafteoutfor
ibis::,; 22 on 10-for-23 shootine. but the vis.
'
· · ,... : ~ uo .,. ·~, 1~11!!"' ·~ .-1Bowl iii ~....... -~.-:
SOli
r gelll!'g 13 potnll. e
••
iting !'tockets lost for tliC fourtli time '
Pomeroy, Ohio ~769
tt I - ••\~! tA*i.of £\MIIICICd3Z. .
•-~1 '~"'r'
.
rebounds and etght asSISts.
"
••: : .r.al
Jetpet' Paraevik,
•··
-'-'7 . _
Oti1 Thorpe bad ~0· points, and in fiveaames. _
:,_JII!I'I'I-1!~-------------11!!1~-· I •,.

ren.

and wears clothes that show it off.
In my opinion, Alex 's request is
totally inappropriate, and I am confused and troubled by my sister's
reaction. I don 't know what to say
without alienating her completely.
Any ideas? -- Stymied in New York
Dear New York: Has Lydia asked
your opinion? If you told her that
being taped in this manner would
cheapen her in the eyes of her son's
friends, would it make any difference? I have a feeling the answer to
both these questions is NO, but it's
worth a try.
On the outside chance that you can
get through to this vain woman, tell
her how you feel , and let's hope she

Lifetime ----Board installation-----. Bend Area Reflections
cost .of
.
strokes
each year
$41 billion

Dayton cage program 'ba~k on track'

By RUSTY MILLER
.
AP Sports WrHer
for the Sharks, who are 2-10-0 since
The record might not be dramati·
catty
better, but there is no question
Chnstmas.
6
Panth
2
that
things
are definitely looking up
.
Canadtens ,
ers
·
·
ht
f
th
at
the
University
o.f Dayton.
It was a prod ucuve mg or e
·
1
d
·
1
"The
kids
have
hung in there an.d
Montre a] pIayers mvp ve m as1
· k Roy trade , wh'ch
month 's patnc
1 sent are getting better. They've worked
the All-Star goaltender to .Colorado hard to prove they're a good team,"
for Martin Rucinsky, Andrei said second-year coach Oliver Pur. Joce1yn nell.
Kovalenko an d goaI1e
Thibault.
·
The Flyers are 9-7 on the yearRuc·nsky
scored
his
filfSt
career
hat
two
more wins than during last year's
1
trick, Kovalenko had two assists and 7-20 season. They are 1-4 in their first
Thibault improved h·is record to 8-4- year in the Atlantic 10 Conference,
· · · cana d.1ens snapped and that's already one more win ttu.n
I as the VISitmg
Florida •s six -game un_beaten streak. they picked up a year ago while going
Vi
D
h
add d
a1 0-12 in their last trip through the
mcent amp ousse
e a go
Great Midwest Conference.
and three assists to the Montreal
attack, while Pierre Thrgeon scored
What's more, even though the Plyhis 22nd goal and added two assists. ers are still barely keeping their
DevOs 31·Capltals 1
heads above water in winning percentage, they aren't losing by 20 and
Martin Brodeur continued his
domination of Washington, stopping 30 and sometime~ evqn 40 points as
they did under Purnell's predecessor,
19 shots and assisting on the game- Jim O'Brien.
winning goal as host New Jersey beat
Po.r what it's worth, Dayton
Washington.
remained competitive throughout the
Bobby Holik, Stephane Richer game at top-ranked Massachusetts
and Steve Thomas scored as the before losing by an inflated 78-58
Devils won their second straight fol- margin. The Flyers had two shots in
lowing the All-Star break and helped the last 12 s~conds 10 win at lOthBrodeur stretch his lifetime record to
ranked Virginia Tech but fell 63-62.
7-0-1 against the Capitals.
"We've been very competitive
Peter Bondra was the only Capi- with everybody we've played," Purtals player to beat Brodeur, who ·
nell said. "The kids have realized that
started his club record-tying 17th it doesn't matter who's on the schedstraight game.
Bruins 4, Lightning 3 ..
ule, we've got a chance of winning,"
Purnell said.
Sandy Moger's goal with I :36
The unlikely heroes so far have
remaining boosted Boston over visit- been 6-foot-10 senior Chris Daniels,
ing Tampa Bay, snapping the Light- 6-0 freshman point guard Josh Posning's two-game winning streak.
tori no and 6_7 sophomore power forThe Bruins took a 3-21ead at4:59
of the third period when Todd Elik ward Ryan Perryman.
Daniels is a late bloomer from
scored his IOOth career goaI on a
power play, but Roman Hamrlik Columbus who barely played as a
knotted the score again with his ninth freshman , blew out a knee before his
goaI of the season, aIso on a power next season and took a medical redplay.
shirt, averaged 6.4 points as a sophoWhalers 8, Kings 2
more and then watched as his scoring,
Brendan Shanahan scored the first
of his two goals in Hartford's fivegoal opening period , as the host
Whalers dominated slumping Los
Angeles.
The Whalers' scoring flurry
chased Kings goal Byron Dafoe. and
Hanford built a seven-goal lead in
defeating the Kings for the first time By The Associated Press
since March II, 1992.
The Detroit Pistons are making a
Geoff Sanderson, Nelson Emer- living on clutch shots.
son, Jeff O'Neill and Brad McCrimOne night it was Terry Mill 's 3mon, with his first goal in 97 gmaes, pointer. The next it was Allan Housalso scored in the first period for the ton's layup.
Whalers.
After beating the San Antonio
Canucks 2. Avalanche 2
Spurs on Mills' shot with 2.6 seconds
Third-period goals by Roman remaining the previous night, the PisOksiuta and CliffRonning backed the tons did almost the same thing to the
goal tending of Corey Hirsch as visit" Dallas Mavericks on Thursday night.
ing Vancouver skated to a tie with
Houston took a pass from Joe
Colorado.
Dumars on an in bounds play to hit the
Hirsch had 45 saves, weathering a . winning shot with 1.9 seconds left.
22-shot barrage in the second period
"!think we're becoming the carduring which he allowed just one diac kids," Houston said.
goal.
Brent Barry's clutch shot for the
Clippers helped them break a four. Mike Keane and Alexei Gusarov game losing streak and defeat the
gave Colorado a 2-0 lead after two slumping Denver Nuggets. The rookperiods.
ie stumbled into ·the lane and
launched a looping 6-footet that

The Dally SenUnel • P•ge 7

How far .will mother go for son's initiation in elite club

Virginia Tech, Marquette
upset
victims·
~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

as a thief. or as an evildoer, or as a
busybody in other men's matter. )'ou
may say I am not a murderer, I am not
a thief and I am not an evildoer and
you may ·get away with saying that,
but if you are not happy with your
church, pastor, pastor's wife or with
the people of the church, you , my
friend, are a busybody in other men's
matters.
If you feel that the church is
against you, the pastor preaching
about you, you may be right.
Remember it is not the pastor who is
,trying to make you do righ~ it is God!
Look at I Peter4:17 through 19, For
the time is come that judgment must
begin at the house of God: and if it
first begin at us, what shall the end be
of them that obey not the gospel of
God? I Peter 4: 18 And if the righteousness scarcely be saved, where
shall the ungodly and the sinner
appear? I Peter 4:19 Wherefore let
them that suffer according to the will
of God commit the keeping of their
souls to him in well doing, as unto a
faithful Creator.
It is time for judgment in the
. house of God so that the gospel can
be preached and .souls can be won.
We need to stay together and be
found faithful.
I would like to end up with I Peter
4:16, If any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed but let
him glorify God on his behalf,

.

Anyone wlio would appreciate a ihoughlful word from you1

'

All Valentine Hearts will be published in the February 14th
issue at a cos! of only $6.00!
MUST BE PREPAID!

·.:··················~··········~
Prill ytur MSsngt
I
fnthtHtn

:
1
I

.......
with $6.00 to:

The Dally Sentinel
1
Valaltlle Hearts
: Ill Court Street.
: Pollltl'oy, OH 45769

:

J

I

Umlt
20
Wordal

.

Mat Be

Rial•• 81 , . !l

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

'•

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I

1

�••

.••....
! ...

ApostOI'C

......;"'~=~=-:.s~

•

Suadof School • II a.m.
Wllllhip . tlla.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdneldly Servicco • ? p.m.

•••

MHcU pwl Cll..... of Cllriol
5111 llld Main

••

31057 sur. Rau~e m, Llrlpvlle

Keae a...... "'Clu1at
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
.....,..Jellrey w.n...
Ill and 3rd Sundoy

........ JUdct a.ra ofCIIrlol
I'Uiar. Joclt Colepe
· Sunday School -9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdtlcoday Servicco. 6:30p.m.

..• .
.·

FreeWII ....... CloU'dt
Alit Strcct, Midclcpotl

~~••

..._, LeaHoyDIIJI
Sunday Service , 7:30 p.oa.
Suadoy School· 10 a.m.
Wedneaday Scrvice-7:30 p.m.

:!.•I

..••..
..·•
..•..••
.

.
.

R•llud l'lnt llttpllll Cll111'1:lo
Sundoy School· 9:30 1.m. ·
Wonhip • 10:45 o.m.
,_...., l'lnt Baptilt

Putor: Paul Sti111011
Eut Main St.
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m.
Flnl Soalloen •r.t~M
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Putor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicel· 7:00p.m.
Flnllllplllt Cllurdl
Putor: Mork Monow
'61h llld Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School • 9:15 o.m.
Worahip. 10:15'o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Servia:· _1:00 p.m.

.

.

Flnl Bapdll
Putor: Rev. uny Haley
Youth Putor: Aaron Youns
SUndoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Worsbip • 10:40 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicel · 7:00p.m.

....•
:·

s"""
RJuo ~t
Peotor: Bill Unle
, Sunday School· 10a.m.
we::;!%.y Servia:sI !a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wed
7:30p.m.

'•

••
•

·.

MLUaloaBaPdot
Putor : Joe N. Sayre

Sunday Sehool-9:45 o.m.
Evening· 6:30p.m.
We&lt;lneaday Servicel· 6:30p.m.

,••

r=
,•
••
••

-lelwDBapllll

Racine,OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Wonhip • 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study • 7:00 p.m. Wednesday
Old Btlllol Free WUI Baptist Clturcb
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School · 10 o.m.
, Evening· 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30
RUialde,"pllll Cllarcb
St. Rl. 143 juSI off Rl. 7
Putor: Rov. Jomes R. Acree, Sr.
Sundar School· 10 a.m.
Worshtp • lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services •7 p.m.

Vlclory Baptist lade........al
525 N. ~ St. Middleport
PUIOI: Jomes E. Keesee
Worship · I Oa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Fallh Jlapllll C1tarcb

Railroad St., Muon
School • 10 Lm .
Wonhop. 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

•

•

Sunda~

•

Fonst Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip. II a.m.
ML Moriltll Baptlsl

Fourth .t Main St., Middleport
Pallor: Rev. Gilbert Cnia, Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.
Aallq•lly Baptlsl

SUoday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:45 a.m.
Thunday SC.Vit:a ·7:30p.m. ·
Radud me wm a.p1111
Solem St.
Putor: Rev. Poul Toylor
SUndoy School- 10 a.m.
Evenina· 7p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Ca th o li c
' SMredReat1CIIHUcClo•r&lt;b

161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pallor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
Sot: Coo. 4:45·5:15p.m.; ~-- S:30 p.m.
SUn. Con. -8:45-9. U o.m.,
Sun. Mua. 9:30 o.m.
Dalley Mus· 8:30a.m. ·

'hppen 1'11111 Clo.,... ofCIIrlol
Pastor: Stanley Mindal
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wllllhip · 9&gt;45 a.m.
Wednaday - 7p.m .

a-.,
CJnordo otarw
Putor: Rick Snyder ,
Sundly School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

,.· ;,

f

~

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a.......otC1or111

· 212 W. Main St.
......,., Andrew Miles
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 o.m._,7 p.in. ·
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

. '

Sundoy sehool· 9:30a.m.
SUndoy wlll'lhip •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetina· 7 p.m.

Suadoy ocliool - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip. t0:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:30p.m.

Plllllr. Robert E. Robinson

Suadoy School · 9:15 o.m.
W&lt;lflhil' • 10:30 a.m.
Bible Stody Tuooday • 10 a.m.

HyooD Ra U..... Cloorcll
Peotor: Robert Monley
sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m:
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Putor: Keanctllllaker
Sunday Seltool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonltip ·10:45 o.m. (2nd ol4tll Sun)
, MoniaaSiu'
Putor: Koltnclh Baker
sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
W&lt;lflhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thonday Services· 7:30p.m.
Son.
· Putor: Kennetll Bllrer
Sunday Sehool . 9:30 o.m.
Worsbip • 10:4S a.m. (111 II. 3nl Sun)

Tbt Cnrcb of J CIIrlll ot La...,.._Day Sotltoll

St Rt 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
. Sunday School10:20-lt a.in.
Relief Soeiety/Priestbood 11 :05·12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 Lm.
Homemakina meetins, 1st Thurs. . 7 p.m.

Sunday School . 9:30 a,m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service ?:30 p.m.

ue.-,.k Gro\'e Clt. .lo

Luthe r an
St. Jolla Lalloena CINrcb

Pastor. Oene Zopp

Sunday school • 10::!11 a.m. ·
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

PineOrove
Putor: DaWn Spalding
· Worsbip. 9:00 a.rri ,

--.tie Chon:h of Cllrill
Pastor: Philip Sturm

Etu0Ldat1

Sunday Sehoul . 10:00 a.m.

Sundoy Seltt?ol: 9:30a.m.
Worahip Service: 10:jo a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
'

C hri s tian Un1o n

a.....

Harttord
ot CltrloO ..
Cllrlldu Ualotl

Hartford, W.Vo.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday Sehool . 11 a.m.
Worship. 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Services • 7:~ p.m.

Chur c h o f God
ML Morldt Cloucll of God

Racine

Putor: Rev. Jamea Sollcrfiel~
Sundly Sehool · 9:45 a.m .
livening • 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services· 7 p.m.
Rlll18.,. Qucll of God
Putor: Gregory L Sears
Sundoy School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m .• 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
SyrO&lt;aR Flnl Cltom:b of God
Apple'lnd Second SIS.
Pallor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday Schoolond Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
CltU'dt of God of Pnploeey
O.J. White Rd. olfSI. Rt. 1110
Pallor: PJ . Chajiman
Sunday School • tO a.m.
Wonllip • II o.m.
Wedneaday Servicco • 7 p.m.
CllatuCitucll oiGod
S. R. 248 li: Riebel Rood, Cheller
Pallor: Rev. William D. Hindi
Sundoy _School • 9:30a.m.
Worsbop • 6 P..m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Fomlly Trainina Hour
"

Co n g reg a t1 o nal
TrlaJtJ Claurdt
Second .t i.ynn. Pomeroy

Putor: Rev. Rollltd Wildman
S~ndoy schoolond wonhlp 10:25

Ep1sco p al

z..

3;' o....:•
326 E. aln .0:Pomeroy
Ret:tor: Rev, D. A. duPionlier
E

Holy Eucharill and

S~Sehool10:30a.m.

hour followlna

Peotor: Brion llarlcneu
Sunday School-10a.m.
W=·9a.m.
Wed
· y·7p.m.

Oar Sotvioolr Lulheru Clt•rda
Walnutllld Henry Sta., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lntrlm putors: George C. Weinck
Sunday Sehool • I 0:00a.m.
Wt5rsbip · II a,m.

......

Putor: Brian Harlmeu
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m.

· Sl. hal Lalltena Cllorcll
Comer Sycamore .t S«ond St., Pomeroy
Pulor: Down Spalding
Sundoy School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship • II a,m. •

CooMIIe l1111Ud Medlotlltl Pulall

Pallor: Helen Kline
CooMIIe Cllucll

Main .t Fifth St.
Suadoy School· 10 o.m.
Wonhif. 9 a.m.
Tuesday Servocei • 7 p.m.
llllllel Clo.....
TOWtllltip Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 Lm.
Wonhip • 10 o.m.
Wednesday Se!Yices • 10 a.m.
RocldJtaport Cltarda
GrandSI!eet
Sundoy School· tO a.m.
Wol1hip • II a.m.
Wednesday Services. 8 p.m.

United M e thodi s t
.Gn11u1 Utdted Meoloodlll
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m. (Ill&amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.
Mt. Olive Ualled Melllodlst-&lt;

Off 124 behind Wilkeovllle
Pulor: Rev. Ralph Spil'ef
Sunday Sehool . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services .. 7 p.m.

Melli Coopenotvel'lrtall
Norllleut Cl!llter

Torc11Clo111'1:lo

Co.Rd.63
·School • 9:30 a.m.

All'nd
Putor: Shlron Hausman

CUI\ooo Tabenutdo Cllordo
Clifton, W.VL
Sunday School • 10 e:m.
Wonhip . 7 p.m.
'lbunday Service • 7 p.m.

ne •~~enn· ro~~owo~~~p MlalllrY
New Ume Rd., Rutllft&amp;

-

Services: WednOsday, 7:3Q.p.m .
Sunday, 2:30p.m. '

~YIIIe Cao•'-ltJQ111'1:lo
I

-

~fea1t1l.~~ ·

St. RL 124, Racine
Paator: William Hobaek
Sundoy Sehool . 10 a.m.
Ev011ina . 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

H-ofl'rayer

· (ot Burtinaham churcb offRoule 33)
Peotor: Robert Vanco
Sunday wonhip • 10 a.m. ,
Wednesday service · 6:30 P·'l'·

Mld..eport Pea-l ·

Third Ave.
Paator: Rev. Clark Bs~er
Sunday School · 10 o.m.
Evenina • 6 p.m.
Weci...Oiay SU.ices- 7:00 p.m.

Mldtl~ CommualiJ Cllurck
57 Pearl St., Middleport

Pulor: Som Anderoon
Sonday School10 a.m.
Evenina • 7:30 p.ln.
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

Fall- TaiJetucle Cltarcb
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rlwson

Sunday Sehool · 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
·
Tbursday Service • 7 p.m.

Ro.n-vlllo l'nobJima• Cloorcll

t4-ll Brid~mon St., Syrocusc
Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Evenina • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m. ,,.
Rue! c.......ta1 CII.U
OffRt. 124
Putor: Edsel Hart
.~
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m. :
Worahlp. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

'

DJmlllt c....IIIIIIJ O•ril
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m:

M-CIIapciCitarda ,
Sunday school· 10 a.m.
WOI'Ihip . 11 o.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Faltlo

=
.

Mt. RotWOD UDIIId ..........
.. Cllrlll Cll•rdo

Texu Comm~a~lty olr 't R 82
Pallor: Robert Sanden ,
Sunday Sehool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip · 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m.
Wedneaday Services • 7:30p.m.

·~

Clt•l'U
Long
om
_;.
Sundoy -School· 9:30 o.m,

Worsbip. 10:4S o.m,, 7:30 p:m.
Wedneaday 7:30 p.m. ,,

Eclft Ualted ........_ • Cltatll

21/2 mileo nOrth of R-ille
on 51-1c Rou1c 12A
PUIOI: Rev. Robert Morldoy
Sundly School · 10 a.m.
Worahip • 7:30 p.m.
Wedneaday Services . 7:30p.m.

Mt. Ollft Commaally Clli.r&lt;b
Pallor: lAwrence Bush

SUndoy School . 9:30 i.m.
Wqnhip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m .
Wednedly Se"'ke • 7 P·i!'·

Cltesler
PaolO!: Shoton Housman
Worsbip • 9 a.m.
Sunday Sehool • 10 a.m.
Thunday Services·? p.m.
Middleport CIIU'dt oflloe Nuanttt

Putor: tl:':ondolpll
Worship · 9:30 a.m.
SUnday School- 10:30 a.'!'.

Peotor: GteaorY A. Cundiff
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedlletoday Services· ?p.m.

LoqBoltom
Putor: Rev. Cllarlea Muh'
Sunday Sehool • 9:30 a.m.
Worsbip ·10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

RoedPIIe Fellowalolp
Clo.U otlloe N . . - Paslor:JohnW.DoaaJu
Sundoy School· 9:30 o.m.

Wonhip • t0:4S a.m., ? p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p,m.

~

Putor: Rev. Cllarlca Mllh
Worsbip. 9:30 o.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m_.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

S r - CIIU'dt oflloe Nourwe
Peotor: Bill Stires
Sundoy School • 9:30a.m.
Worahip. 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicco. 7 p.m.

Ttoppora PloJu St. ....

Pastor: Sbaron Hausman
Sundoy School • 9 a.m.
Wonloip • 10 a.m.
Tu-y Servicco . 7:30p.m .

. Pa•nOJCIIU'dtof ... N - '
Pastor: R&amp;v. Thofnu M&lt;Ouna

Ca•tnl Clooler

,. .

.........,.(87-&gt;

PUIOI: Chorlea Neville

Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhlp. 10:30 o.m. Uid 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Scrvicea • 7 p.m.

Fd Goopalup-

&lt;.\\\. Slrl!f

f&amp;.,,

83 Mill Street

Middleport. Ohio 45780 .
($14) ~-6657 • (998-ooke)
CHURCH SUPPUES &amp; BIBLES

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
1104 W. Mt!in
992·2318 Pomeroy

Silver Ridge
Pallor: Robert Berber
Sunday School· 9 o.m.
Wonhlp • 10 o·!"·• ~ p.m.
Wednesday Scrv""' • 7 p.m.

Cutetoa ..... tlea&gt;ele.....ol Clivclo
Kinpbury Rood

Putor: Jeff Smitlt
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonlup Service tO:JO o.m,
. Wonhip Servi&lt;e-111 and 3.tfsunda1, 7 p.m.
No Wedneaday Evenma Servtce
·

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
'
.
'

POMEROY, OHIO· 112 SUit
IIIIJ.. QUICKEL
.

FURNITURE &amp; HAR~ARE
Homelllt Saws

.

\'

'

•

&gt;'

204 Cftindi!lll0:

Pofl1eroy; OH .
992~75

YGu 'U be floating on a
. cloud with the buys ·
. , you'U.find il&amp; the _
' _clpssffie_th"
(,

ElnNGFUNE~LHOME

established 1913
112·~21

108Mui~AY,t;'"'-- . ecimeroy·-1

,,

Memorial Hol~l t~" -

115 E. Memorial Pr:
-

.992•2104

Notice

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
912-8215

Total Stre•t ·cleanlni,
between 8 am-8 pm
s - tmtllclllemovt~l ........
.............................,500.00
Mon. thru Sat.
'J'OIII 8trHt Conllruotlon,
1_....._
Malntanance and · Repair '----..::=.:.:::::;,:::;.~
Fund .................... 11~,SOO.OO
82·1-8 state Highway
Public Notice
lmprovament Fund
Z40Suppl•--~~·-

Progr~m

a......... .. . . . . . ... . . . . .

......................... 87,100.10

t-

Pom~y,Ohlo

The family of
Danlal

for the kindness
·and support It

our loas. ·

212 Employee allllfltl..
.............................. 100.00
240 Sujlpllel/llllerlolll .....
........................ 40,Cioo.oo
2IOC:..,.I
......................... 112,000.00
lnAttdltor·F -.. 3,000.00
Total FIN/FIN 'huck Fund.
....................... 100.100.00
a.-A Utility Fund
240•"--""""'~-'-•....,...._.,.,_ _ .....

Outlly..............

Tot;i'i'iiiiiitfji~;jd::~:::

Vllllcla

240 Dlll*lt llllfund...........
......................... 23,000.00
Total Ullllllle Depollt Fund
~ ...... 2 \~C:L
ENTERPRISE
FUNDS
APPROPRIATIONS
...............
....................... 402,000.00
Section •· Thet thara ba
approprlatad from the
TRUST
. ANDAGENCY
FUNDS.
• POLICE DIIA8IUTY.AND
PE~ FUND P~RAM

1-IE~~:n;.vR~RIONS

a.11.z12 Employera'ShaN

••"'oo
..._ .... .-.................., - .
234 Audl!or F -..... 210.00
TOIIII PollOI Dlub~d
00
Plt'lllon Fund.........

PROGG"t:::ii~EI!AL

Endowment
Fund
Clmthlry., ......- ....38. 11U7
Other En. . . .nt Ftllld
Porpttual Cn ..... 7,221.12
Total for EnlloWIIIIIII Fund
AIIP/'0Prlllllon ....... 41,347.08
OIIAHD TOTAL TR UIT
AND AGENCY
P U ND S

~~110N.IIO,M7.08

Z40 ..........
APPROPRIAnor:n:a:fiii
10
TDi•r-..
c.. 11
Uaarioe ~ fllnd,1D,OOO.OO htraby alllhorlzed to di'IIW
S
d T t
warrant• on the Vlllllll
0
A district meelins to be held Saturday at the hall was , 11 ran . . 0 • 1 lpeo11 1 naaaurer for pejmanta
aniiOliiiCedwhenChestetCouncii323,DaashlmofAmer- A ntnJ.:..._~O: from any of 1111 foregoing
· met
ntly
¥PIOIH'Io a. -- ..... .__ lppropriiiiO!ll upon
tea.
rece
·
'
.
8eotiOn · ,._ 'u ..ra noaalvlng P!OPII' Oll'llfiHttt
Goldie Frederick, councilor, conducted the meeting •Pfctoprliited from tha •nd vouohara therefor,
which opened iq ,rjttelistic form. The ill.neas o~ sev~ =:.=,11111 DIUIT SERVICI! llllllfOVICI by the iloanl or
member$ im;ludiiiJ Jean Hall. Bob ~arden, Delons Wolfe, . QIIIIBIAL 08IIGA110N ofllclrl authorized bY low
llld V'qinia Lee, were {~'ported. Ell~ Hayes returned · ·
liOIID: FUIIID
to
1111 •1111, or 1111
..A...
'))
•AX?: 1=:;::~......
ordln-e or NIOiutlon of
..-1111 JI¢SS.
.
~-". __. _ _. ' i'la'P
'll:'""t
oouncll . to mekt the
· Officers were instilled, Re .. _.,,..nu were serv...., ..... ·
r
u ........ ~; provldad lh1lt
00 . · "" Wltnnallilllllla t1twn
doCir 'zes ~awarded to Mary Jo Baninler. Goldie '
Enn
CI 1 d Othe
ttendi
'
Tolllllllllllltlll'uncl-...or paid for .a alirlu or
..,,._."""...,..
l
ean
IS I
ng Wenl
··
1,271.10 _, _ _ e __.
__
__ Kai!Jeyn ' Baum. •'l'hllma White, Opal Eichinaer. Doris
TOT~ DDT ,
~ .......- 11-... 10 ,....

""-".!:!'- ··"

·------1.271.

aiUiD

·'

Totallanlllrvs.-Fund

and Family

110

Ho)!er, ~

Help Wai'lled

HELPII
We need a lew
ood
I
Q
peop e to
assist persons with

~d-,br-Vii~g•

'JIIIIO'"'

..k

Mldchport, Ohio 457eO

· Denny 6 Paggy Brlcltlel

614-742·2193
'

un-1-

CWH • Stael

Salel a Fabrication • Repair Welding

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

AlumlnumiStalnleiS

·.

Machine Shop

·~~~~-

·

Oxygen Acetylene CO.
Helium ellalzel Medical Gl'llde 0.
P~ll!l Trlmlx Ultrl Mix Mit Welden

... JAIIII

FU7'131111
8t. llllon, WV

1OS Pomeroy

ffl

•

s"lr'Mtfa

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~
.New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Garag.,. ... ~fpl~cement_,W,!.qdows.
Room Additions • ROofing
COMMERCIAL and R&amp;SibENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATI!:S

614-992·7643

County; VariOUS
positions available.

1-ti00-~;~·2302

James

appropriation•
for
contlnlltiiCI•• can only lla
expendad upon appeal of
-thlrda vote of Council
for Item• . of expen..
cone11tutlng 1 legal
obligation agalnat the
village, and for purpo•••
other t h i n - covertd by
othar
epaclfiC

-:=:• ~-:."" ~~

r. .o1u110n ....n ..k• •""'
parlod
Pllltcl January 3, tM
John Mu-r
PNIIdent of c-11
Attm: ·
Kathy HyMII,
Cllrlt of Council
CEIITIFICATE
Sactlott 1170 1, R.C. • "No
IPP"'ffrrlllort meuuN thall
become afftc:tlve unUI tile
county • ttdltor 11'"~111
- -... e

u

::~::'"fh:~~lty10j 1~

approttrlltion• rrom ••ah
fund, Ilk• togalhtr with all
other · outatandlng
epproprlotlono, do not
excaed euch official
t1tllntlt or -ndld olllclal
. . umot 1 • When the
appropriation doaa not
exceed auch · official

=~~u'::'.:''::.:~c!: ·
forthwith upon rtcalvlng
from tha epproprlatlng ·
authOrity 1 ctrtlfl.,. copy 01
th 1
up roprlatl on
miUUN '
....
The Stile of Ohio Mllge
County, 11.

ra.

systems, lay lines, Underground bores.
For Free estimate call949·2512

~====·=l,lj=MQ==N=:A=I=U=JLU'U===·==-=~

............ . . . . . ,
T

~

Wlagt 01

'!J::

,_,•'=

1-614-371-9101
U

••,., ••

lOIIefJ Agar•ll
·
Cill
1·90"-&amp;56•26H
v-v

llltlsltt30I•"i .
$2.99/mln.

Yauch

't::::::

-WICKS
HAU Ll NG

fGIIIII.. M

Limestone,

a

AKC Reg. Puppies, Kittens, Blrda More
Experienced Groomera • Flnanclnn Available
··•

(614) 99lHJZ44

B Jolene Rupe/Owner
•
·

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

141-2512

UCINE HYDUULIC IEPAII
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.
CHEAPER RATES

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR.
21543 BASHAN AD.

Racine, Ohio 41771
MN013 Pllont
1148-2011 FAX

SPIIIISOFT

NEff REMODEUNG
SERVIa
Houulltpalr t.
Aernotllllltll
Kltl:lttn l 111111
"··m·DdiUnlll
R;';Addiii4Me

llclltlg,lloollng, Plllol
Raaean•-1t ·· ·
lni-·EMPIMnll~

c.- Wlynl Nlft
aa t40S

-

• '

.

18+

....._
lllnl..,-..
raquilld.
Serve-tJ 61H45 8434
;======-=-~

271 North 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH. 45760

O..'s w.tar RtR I 1
New Hllven, wv

C:.

Bucket, Digger
Truck Services
Service Pole
· $2.50 per ft.

0· . F b 1
penmg e • st

County, and . In whole

;;;-y

• '" u~rgi'Ound
utllltlea &amp; lighting

"SuppUea for all your !H'I •-do"

Glen .... ..,.....

~~ =~~=·~

Racine, Oh.
Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck, ,
J kh
A II bl 2 H
ac ammer, va a e 4
We dig basements, put In septic

vlil::'ot"r.:!~~~nofuU::

the Law• of tha Slate of
Ohio to ba kept. da lttNby
ce..,.,. tlttt the !oNgoing
A~~-~. 1
Appropriation
Ordlnanca Ia llkln and
•
,_.. f
th orlglnel
~=-"rom"-·
file with
,g
thet
the
,
111 1
foregoing Ordlnanc1 hal •
liMn _,.,.. 11y "" with
....__.._......,...., 111111 ~.....
. ::.;;'i;~'; 1nc1 ;.'1;'i .
...__,
.OIIIIV • - - ·
· Wlti 111 my elgnllure, tllle
·lrddlyof...,urry,1-

E.

Overhead &amp;

_

J D D •••• (
• •
rl ng Olllpany
587
45771

P.O. Box
Public Notice

....

(No Sunday ,Calls)

A-( UTILITY
CONSTRUOION CO.

·

,,

Frlldeuc:ki M111:1a Kel~, E11zabelh Hayes,~
lll erdlftiiiOI. Provided .
lllli!e Coulilfr Olllti
For,._ •ll'hi o ~
011
1,.1uta N~e:e, Even:tt Grant llld f3thel Qq. ~ _ _ _ !ol~ewln~ -~.~-~~!TAL furtller __ th•~ ~~·-...:~) -_!Ia; 111:
_ _.. _ ---~-· "' ~.~'-,w;"""',.....o,..;~..,..
I

31114 Happy Hollow Rd.

Ill Distributor

MRIDD with daily
living skills in Meigs

.-:=:::i:.:":,!':"t::·- :::r:w:..':Lno.~.: •.

Orulaer._Bitl!s S~; Opll ~Ion. Chari~ Gnat, ~II')' •!'~---~

participate in a lree, no obligaUon, comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL ~T THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mlntr•l HardneH,Iron, PH.
Ple11e callllalnSoft M - 7 2 or 1-IC»«&lt;&lt;-33'13 ·
lo HI up your frH wat•r anelYSII.
t.....,.l

~';-~u~ ~'eo!; by•l':,~··,

U.W ENFQRCEMENT
TRU$1' FUND
OGIIAIII·SECURI1YOF
PERSONS AND PROPEtnY
81-F Law Enforcament
Fund
240'8upp!IM/IIlllerllll.....
........._ ...........-II,SOO.IO
, Total Lllw Enforoamant
,F::';:As;;i;iy'p:.;!.SOO.oo, .
240 SUppllttlllllttrl..a......
..................... - ... 1,000.00
, TOilllllllhty PuntU,OOO oo
MOTOR VI!HICLE UCIHSE
TAX FUND
PROGIIAII VI •
.
TRANSPORTATION

:r:=
G..h. ester 0 0f A. to
meetJ"ng
"
rlall......
h0 ld dI'strt'ct
·
.
_.
ii~iCi~" v0::f.
i

00

TRI•STATE WlTEI SYSTEMS, INC.
The water lreatmcnt company cordially invites you to

Mrs. Daniel Shane

••1 l.u.bullon...............
Et+G'ii;i;;;"·" 77•000 •00

.

........,.,,
'orta61e

Du1ribwed by

GodBieasYou

a.m-..

=. . ;. . . .

SAWMILL

.

.

E. Shane

thank everyone

H&amp;H

-~....,.."'

~v:..u~

would like IQ •

........................ aa,ooo.oo

240 supplltl/lllllrlala......
................ , ......... 2,000.00
TOIIIMIIIra .......... a,ooo.oo
Total
W•t•r
Fund
~ ..... 2!17,000.00
hnltary Stwor
Fund
240Silppllta.'llatiNIA......

·C ~-u't (~j n!~=~n~

Authorized
Welding SuppiiH • lndultrltil

PROJECT FUNDS
CONSTRUCTION FUND • .
JSSUI! HWATE!IUNE .
CONSTRUCTIONFUND
D11-A
W lllrllnl
..,._..,.,
270 Othlr U- 01 Fundi .. •
......................... 17,000.00 ·
To t • I
W lllrllne
Conltrucllon Fund ...............
......................... 17.000.00
ORAND TOTAL CAPITAL
PROJECTS
FUND 1
APPROPRIAnON

Rtvltallatlon Grant ............. ·
113,000.00
311,000.00
011101
.........113,000.00
OTHER SPECIAl;
J Other
Santlery
RI!VENUEFUNDS
S.W.Fund
F : r Flre/Pire Truck
~~:.~!~~ ~:

:;s:*

v..eran•

"Dignity and Seivice Always•:

PubHc

!,

TRACTOR SA! fS

CLASSIFIED ADS·
a supermarket '
for everything

~ ... 1123,300.00
hction 4, That there ba

reporting !he group has r«eived S2,3f5 to promote .t he
bOnd issue fonnewelcmentary school, im;luding a$1,000
dl!nation from ail anonymous supporter.
,
............. .....
.
"~• So far; .......,,...,. ..,..n spent on a promohonal vi.....,tape
with an· additional $,3 24 appropriated for three rounds of
pr'omo.insel'IS for The Dail•1 Sentinel and Ex-ssLine cus·
r·tamers in tlte district
.
..
Plans we~ made to R:cruit workers in each preci!lctto
drum up siqlport for ihc measuR:. A special meeting for
prospective· precint:t represenlati vcs will be held at a lat·
erdate.
.
The tern"""""'
committee is pursuing a 6.1-mill, 23·
.--·-,
year bond issue to bankroll the districl's $4,180,000 share
ofa $7,370,000project which im;ludcs a new, district-wide
elementary school llld renovation• to the existing high
school.
,
The next meeting will beheldWednesdliy, S p.m. in the
high school cafeleria. The group encourages all district residents 10 attend the meetings.

Soalk Reibel NewT-1

. . . - . ..

•Interior I Exterior
Pelntl"'
AI\() Concrete Work

furnaces, and many
metal materllla
Call 992-4025

o,W ~eot::= ~=:·~offt':':'

The Southern Local Building Committee met Wedncsday evening at the high school with Treasurer Kim Phillips

33045 Hilond Rood, Pooqeroy
Putor: Roy Hunter
SUnday Sdtool-10 a.m.
Evenina 7:30p.m.
Tuesday II. Thunday. 7:30p.m.

-

•Raofl"'

'weter tankl, IIOVM,

tiiiiM-.fiL

---------..1----...,..-----1 ,_. . ,. . . . . . . .
·sul'ldl'ng comml'tt"e
t;
gets anony.mOUS ' gt'ft
. 11oP-•s.rv~ce~
~~-~. ~~~~~r.:oioo

UDitetl Faltlo Clld''"
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Puo
Pallor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip -10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servia: . 7 p.m.

P•.J. PAULEY, AGENT

Pick-Up diiC8rded
Washel'8, dryel'8, hot

882-2996
eo..-........ ,....

........................ eo,ooo.oo
212 Employee Btntflll.,....
112 Employe•
11,100.00
............... _ ......37,000.10
TOIIII Copt Fill Gl'lfll .......
......................... 11,100.00
240 au~......
.........................40,GCIO.OO
IIII-A
D0 w n 10 w n
ToiiiSJNttContJructlonl llevHdullonProjectGrant
~ .. 1117,000.00 230Conlractui1Servlcle..
81-1-C Straet Cleaning,
......................... 21,000.00
SMw tmtllcl Almovll
240 luppllt...........,a.....
Z408uppllu/lltlltrllla-...
...... _,,.,.,_...... 10,000.00
............. ~.-........ 4,1100.00 Tote!
Downtown

·

~ .

•Room Additions
•NIW Gtra1111
•Electrical 6 Plumbing

~.~:.llllr::~ and 21:,~...::::~....... . _21~..~-~~::iOO:oo ~.~D..~~.~~ooO:OO

Un1 tc d Br e thr e n

·-

614-992-3200

FREE

MINI STORAGE

210 PeraonllletolcM
211 .........,.............
............- ......... 15,0011.10
212 Etltplayea letaenta..
..............- ....,... I,IIGO.OO
ZIO'I'flwl•• •---·100.10
Z4CJSuppiiU/IIItll'..
..............,.......... 111,1100.00
240-2 RolunciL..1,200.00
Tot•l
Mayor
and
Adtttlnlebiii.. Oiftoe...........

...........;\.•••• 4,100.00
,;A1+8 Ott Ullllty

Sevallo-DIIJ....._...
Mulbeny HIS. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Lawinalty
Sottuday Servicoo:
- t h School • 2 p.m.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

_

'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Z40 SuppiiM/IIIIIIttl.·---'---·--·-·-·2,100.00
Toll! Ptognom V
ltalc Utility S..VIcle........
•..,_,,.._,_........ 1,700.00
PROGIIAII w ·GENERAL
•
QOVIRNIIENT

:

Sev e nth -Day Advent 1s t

·aft..A.;WIY

230 Contr.clull
......................... 20,000:00
240 SUppliel/llaterlalla......
............,............ 40,000.00
TOIIII Ofllct ....... 1DO,OOO.od
E1-II-E Pumpl"'
240 Suppllel/lllllrlala ...... '
......................... 11,000.00
Tolll Pumping.... 11•000.oo
EI-5-J Dlalrlbullon

--·•

..

. Openings for 2.
Chrlatlan
stmoaphere tor
elderly c.re In a
non-amoklng home •

Willi.,.

Z40 Suppllta/lllllerlala......
appropriated from the
........................... 3,000.00
following
sPECIAL
Toll! Ra.:rut~on Program.
REVENUE· FUNDI. Strait
3,000 00
Conatructlon, 1181nltr'laltee, Tot;i'ii&gt;;ojj;:;;;;·jjj'. Ll~un
anc1 Repair Fund.
11mt Actlvllltt........3,ooo.oo ·
PROQIIAII Yl·
F&amp;DBIAL GRANT FUND
TRANSPORTATION
COPI FAST GRANT
B1+1s-t Cona!rUctlon 1111-A
IIIII R-.tructlon
210 Pe-nal S.rvlctl

A1 _...

..

MIDDLEPORT
U.P.C•
.PRIVATE CARE
HOME .

Cell 992-7747
Afltr4pm
During Wllkdtya
on

RECREA110N FUND
&amp;.I!IIURI TillE ACTIVITIES
1111-U
lleorutlon

Z40 SUppllallllllltt1alld...

·~ "

RHtonlble Prlcel

210 Plilonll Sll'vlcta
211 ~~~ ... ..:...
.. .-~......;...........:.75,000.00
212Empioyftltlltllta .. ·

Toiiist;;;t'~~~

Worahip • 9 a.m.
SUnday School • 9:45 a.m.
: ·~
·
.,.c '
Mlddlitpwl
Sundoy Sehool ; o.m.
Worahip • 10 Lm.

S;,rac--

'

l'l'eabJieriaa

'

' '614·949·25.12

•Family

Section 7. Thill litera bt
1pproprl1t1d from lht
followlf\g ENTERPRISE
F = *-Fund

ao.......-............

PISIOI: Rev. Kriaano Robinson
Sundoy School · 10 o.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

t-

- -11,100.00
-......
...........................
Total Stell Highway 1
lmprtl\'lment Fundi,IOO.OO
Totel Program VI.
Tlanapatlltlloot.•• 170,000.00
CEIIETI!RY FUND
PIIOGIIAII MPUIUC
HI!ALTH SERVICI!S
IJ3.2-A c,m111ery
210 ..._.... S.rvlcee
211 ....t...._........
- - - -........
..................................IOO.OO
212 Employee lllrllflll..
.............................. 100.00
Z40Supplilllllaterllll ...,.
........................ 21,300.00
TOIIII c-lltty... 27,000.00
Total Progflm II • Public

u-..... .........

Synct110 Flnt ~

CALL

I

............,_,_.,.....1,100.00

e::lllr

P en t ecosta l

Pastor: .Theron Durhaift ·
Sunday • 9:30 o.m. and 7 J&gt;-m·
' Wednesday • 7 p.lll: l

'

'

-Grpupa

985-4473

112 Emplovee letNIIta..
..............- -......... IOCLOO
TOIII Llglallllve 'lttvlllll
•........_ ....,,_,_.e.ooo.oo
A1·7·D Cllrlr/tlwAinr
210 Perwonltlletllla••
211 ~ ........
...............: ......... 17,000.00
212Emplayee....,..ll ..
,_...........,.........:2,100.00
Toll! Cllllrlll'aMiir........
_ ...................... 11,100.00
A1·7-Aiolleltar
230 c : - 1 StMol...
............... .:........... 1,000 00
Tollllollcltor...... e,OOO.OO
:..,...,. • ._~IIIIIIIIIY A1·7·0 8oardt tnd
._. hereby HI llklt lnd CommiiiiOM
lpllfOjlrllltd 11 tollowe,
:D4 CouniY Attdltor't and
vii:
.
n-t~rar'a ,__11,11Gooo
llctlon 2. Thill thiN lla TDtal
aoard
and
IPP':/AL•t•d from the c-tolailonl .......11,-oo·
0111
FUND
A1·7·X Othlr General
PIIOGIIAII I • IECURI1Y Gooii'M*II
OI'PIRSONS
AND
DOContraclull~·
· PIIOPERTY
Ptlu...-. ................ 1,IIGOOO
A1·1-A Pollet Law
Total Othar Genaral
Et"-""1
1,100.00
A1·7-A Other U1e1 of
210 , _ . . Slnlcll
• 211 ~........ Funcla
·• •..._..;,........ 1131,110000 ·271 Trlnltlrl-.121,000.00
· • 212 ,._......_ ....nllt..
.......• ......._
-....-••--··-·--121.000.00
-.,.r......
--·-··-·•.........10,000.00
Z40 luppllll/lllllf ..,_
leOIIoil 3. Thill there ba
__........._ ......31,000.00 1pproprl1ted from tha
TDtll
Pollct
Law QENEIIAL
FUND
for
~..... S224,000.00 ~ for put'JIOMa
A1·1.C Strttt IJghtlng
not ot11erw1t1 provk!td tor, .
Z40 Suppllee/lllllt...... to t.ht axpanded In
1
::::1::::•
....................- ..31,11011 00 11701.40, R.C., th1 eum of ·
PIIOGI!IAII Y..IIASIC
1123.300.00
. ~~.,'!:S
Grind Total GtntraiPuncl
approprlltllort tor Cumnt
Expen••• •nd other
lxplntllturel 01 the Ylllllge
Of ..,....,.,, 111t1 of Ohio.
during lltl llftal year
l1llllng Deaantblr31,11M.
Seotlon
1,
81 IT
IIUOI.YID by the CoUncil
of lila Vll~~ge of P - y .
State of Ohio, · thet, to
provide ~or thl currant
expan111 and oth1r
expendltur. . of 1111 111d
Wlllgl ol Pomeroy durlnt
.... tlacal v••r ending
31, 1. ., lilt

1/4 mile pelt Fort Meip on New Uma Rd.
Putot': William Von,Molcr
!Iunday·7:00 p.m1
W~sday· 7:00p.m;
Friday·7:00 p.m.

Wednesday·~p.m .

Plllllr. Rev. Morpret J. Rcibinson

An ORDINANCE lo lll8lle

q..r.oiJ-·Clorlh.
Apootulk Faltk

l'riclly • fellowalup oeryke 7 p.m.

210 ...._., ...-o~~caa
111 1111.......111·-·-·

O..D!NANcE

P111or: uwnnoto.Fonman
Sundoy School • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Pootor: ~ve Reed,

•

FREE ESTIMATES
~~~-~~!lVI

I'

I

(E'!IIIgtlllllll Plclur..)
oAIUIIlonl
•AnniV-"tl

Stop &amp; Compare

APPROPRIATION

Dirt • Sand

'

-Coupon•

•Garag•
•Complete
Remodeling

~~140

Ume~one • Gravel

II

i

'/'llr•·d " l'lwl•'ll'f•t•Mr /or
ynnr SP,rf'illl o~nuloR?
.Weddlngo/llacapttona

•NewHomea

~-~ Ufe CIIU'dt .
500 N. 2nd Avo., Middleport

SERVICE

I

;

Chester, Ohlp

CONSIRUCnON

.

DUMP mUCK

i

985-4422

1.1111 IISSiLL

PaSior: Dovid Doilclf' , • •
Sundly School 9:30 o.m.
,
Evenina · 7 p.m':-&lt;

Rev. Clyde Hendenon ·
SUnday oerviCo; 10:00 a.IIJ;f 7:30 p.m.
Youth FellowahipSundly', 7:00p.m.
Wednesday aerv..,, 7:30p.m.

'factory12h•••
.
Clloke Oily

...

Stlvanvllle Word otPalllo .

Sunday School • 9:30 LID·
Wonhip ·9:30a.m, 111d?.p.m.

StdeatCialer

c.u.et

~. ~

Looa Bottom . '

Peotor: Ron Fien:e
Suioday School· 9:15 o.m.
Wllllhip - 10:15 a.m.
s-mtle
Sunday~· 10 a.m.
W&lt;lflhip • 9 a.m.

Sundoy School • 9:30 o:m.
WOI'Ihip. t0:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

Ot her C hur c h es

c.l¥117 Jlllli a.Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
I'Uiar. Rev. BlackwoOd
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
WDIShip 10:30 a.at., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service-7:30p.m.

...... ,.. ~ Cloorcll

Jlallaacl .
SUnday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 Lrn. .
Tbunday Servlcol - 7 p.m.

.......Y

, .... , ......... Cnutle ... ~
Putor: Rev. Fnnklin Dickenl
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

. a.-. CllriiiiM r......:.tp CIIU'dt

, Pallor: l(eldt Rider
Sundoy School· 9:15 o.m.
W&lt;lflhi(&gt; • 10 o.m.
You.th Fcllowalnp, Sunday . _6 p.m.

' - : Kenneth Bllrer
s..tday Sdlool·10 a.m.
. W&lt;lflhip ' 9 a.m .
Wedneodly Servicco • 10 o.m.

Suaday School· 9:30 O:m.
Wonhip - 10:30o.m.. 7p.m.
_!ednesday Servlcee . 7 p.m.

Cllrlallu Nlowololp Caator
Solem St, Rutllltd
Putor: Robert E. M11110r
Sundoy Sdtooi · IO o.m. ·
Worahip· il:1S a.m., 7p.m.
Wednelday Servia:· 7 p.m.

'lklclt 5fl'ltiD

Rodud c.....llllilp C..,rda
Putor: Rev. Roy Mc:Corty
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Sundoy Everiina. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicco • ? p.m.

Sunday School • 10:30 a.m. •
Wonhip • 9:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servia: • 7:00p.m.

New...._ CIIU'dtofllteM•v-ne
Putot: Glendon Sln&gt;ud

·

TONIOHTCOME DANCE wmt
OJ BRADY HUFFMAN
.1 .00 cover
SATURDAY NIGHT
"THE CHAIN GANG"
Co&lt;rer

:

ROUND
BALES OF
HAY fOR
SALE.

TIUCIII&amp;

&amp;UN CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUI•.I PM

MIODLEPORJ', DiiO

Flllnlow Bille Cllwdt
Letart, W.Vo. RL 1 ·
Putor: Rankin Rqach

Worahip · 6:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Services·? p.m.

.....,

Pallor: Rev. John Neville

nw Clltlld! otlloe Naant~e

Pallor: John W. Doualu
Sunday School ·10:00 o.m.

l'etlriCIIapel
SUnday School· 9 a.m.
W&lt;lflhip • 10 a.m.

Putor: JaniCe Danner

........... CllriiiiM CUrcio

~lo•d

Putor: Deron Newmon
Sundly sdtool • 9 a.m.
Worahip . 10 o.m.

WetleyaniMbloR....._CII.U
75 Pearl St., Middlcpotl.

aM

R. L HOLLON

UCINE

I

Wlolto'o Cllopd w~
Coolville Road '
PIIIOC Rev. PhiUip R,idenour
Sunday Scltool • 9:30 Lilt·
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Suadoy Sdxiol,• 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp . 10:30 o.m. 6:30p.m.
Wedneodoy Services • 7 p.m.

...........

1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Monley
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship . t0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ' 7:30p.m.

Portlllld·Ric:ine Rd.

Dexter
Putor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening . 6:30p.m .
. Thundoy Service • 6:30p.m.

RallutiQ.... ~ llteN•
Peotor: Soml#el Bllye

Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

.......... ClludlefJ- Clorllt
of LaOter Dlly s.lltltl
'

Uberty Chrlltiaa Cllordl

...... (MidB pat)

'

'&gt;

Putot: Vmtapye Sullivon

La tt er -Da y Sa 1n ts

Hlclcory HUll Cllurdl of Cllrlol
Putor: Joseph B. Hoold,.
Sunday Sehoul • 9 a.m.
Worship· IO..m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

.

a-otSiolrHD_CII_
l.oodina Qtek Rd., RUIIIIICI
Putor: Rev. Dewey Kine

,

...

Putor: Deron Newmon
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
W&lt;lflhip • 9 a.m .
Thundoy Servlcoo • 6:30p.m.

Peotor: Pelcr Tnomblay
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 LID. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00p.m.

lndtord CIIU'dt ot Cllriol
Comer of Sl. Rl. t24 .tllndlury Rd. .
EvanaeJi.st: Keitll Cooper
Youth Minister: Micbael Tcqirden
, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Services • 7:00p.m.

Gr.ce

,_

LalftiCMifl'ntMeaodlot CIIU'dt

Rorllruld Clnlrdo ofCiu1at
Putor: Bugene E. Underwood
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Church o f Chr 1st

Pallor: Rev. Victor Rouoh
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • II o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Pille c;,. IMblo H..__CIIutd

ZJ.. CIIU&lt;lo ofCiu1at
'-roy, Hurisonville Rd. (Rtl43)
·
Peotor: Ropr Wlllon
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Servk:a • 7 p.m.

'

~:"R«;;::prl

.,...
Gtiofool.,._

Suadoy Sehool-11'30 ~IIi.
Wonhip- 7 p.m.

Wonbit&gt; • ULm., 6 p.m.
Wednoodly Set'VIcoo • 7p.m. '

Flohroo'da

Putot: Keitll Rader
Sundly~ ·IOo.m.
W&lt;lflloip • 11 a.m.

t

Bald Ktool&gt;, 011 Co. Rd. 31
Putot: ~- Ropr Wlllt'onl

SUnday_ ~ ·11'.30 a.m.

Sundly Sehool·\0 a.m . .
Wonhip -·9 a.m .

Suaday wonhip • 10:35 o.m• .t 7 p.m .
.Cllildn:n'l chun:h · 10:35 LID. Youtll6 p.m.
. Wednesday fl"'yer service • 7 p.m.

1'1

~CIItord-otllooN.­
Pallar: Rev. Hett.erl GB1c

P...=~t~odcr

' - : lev. Rick Maleyed
Sundoy aehool - 9:30a.m.

Putot: AlllaiUoll
Youdl Minlllor: BUI Fruieo
Suaday School· 9:30a.m.
Wllllhip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdneldly Servicco • 7 p.m.

::.

Sundly ~. 9:45 a.m.
Worahip • 11 a.m.
Wedlletoday Servicco • 7:30p.m.

Hol1ne ss
Dla9111Hs*es a.rcti

-

~ •.Frtdly!. .tanu.1y 21, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Gravel, Sand,

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

......,.,..

QU~fij,w....

I. D. (OIS1'RUOION
Sldl~~hea,
Home lmprovemente,
Remodeling,
Add.On'e,_Roofing

Sllfleflctlon ·
Guanmteed

Bill Doarter
(814) 982·2979

.

�:r,:Frlday, January 26, 1991

The Dally Sentinel • . , . 1t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BalDOI:

PHILLIP

ALDER

37~olgald

ACROSS

31Moreor 1 """• for corn 40 tpenlll1

pttlntar
41 s.ty-

.. Cable I Golf-

~:=
~=~
14 Anclent-wrlllng
15

Rom., 502

48 All the people
51 ActreH Clalra

18 "-1M

NO

.x Q J

01·--·

hnf,)

22 011'1
24 Frog'• coulin
21 AqUMic bini
rr 0rae1t leiW

9A J 7 I
eo a 4
•A Q 10

EAST

WEST
•2
., 2
tKJ1071

I

I

•o

II 5 2

11 Golden lherry
20 ~ world
21 lnaermadlltlt

•A108783
9K 5

t 5 3 I
.7 3
SOUTH

52

ca....

p--

53 Pate de - 111'81
54 Fall mo.

55 Olherwl•
511
57 By llfrlll

DOWN

30 In the
..,-lng

1 Hair .tyto
2 Splice
111011111
32 Came to ...... 3 01 a particular

man-of

MSII~

35-fty

7 po~IIJ

5Edgla

•pMklng

31 Pouchlllce pert

a Place In

4 Small groupa

le-t-'

s:::r='
.....

•• 5 4
9Q 10 9 I 4
tA Q

11

•K J 4

Vulnerable: Neither

Dealer: South

'·'BARNEY
.'
FO.undt dark brown pup~ on

North Fl~h ·Avonuo, Mlddlapor~
AGENT: AVoN :st;us ITSELF
looks likt Ger,.n Shepl"erd, 61.t' Notd CASH For Wlntol Blllo?
9112· 7354.
Elm • -$15 IHr. At Work -Homo
1·8011-742-4738
1'ound: Large llreed Doo Wtanno
A Greenloh Swoator, 614-387- AVON 1 All Areas 1 Shlrltl
7487.
Spooro, 304-675-1429.

THEY CAUGHT oNE OF TH'
VARMINTS CHI~TIN' ll

CARP GAME
.BROKE UP
. lAlLY II

n!EN A VOICE COMES TO ME OUT
OF THE DARK 1liAT SAVS,''SO'(. TIIERE'S
AN ORIGINAl. TJ.IOU6HT! '!

~ O,Pf~P Tt4f t'(t4Ef'S
.fUitP,ISE'~ BVT ~ Tt41NIC

% 601 Tttf

•' BUSBOY'S
llfVfN6i''
INSTtAP!

•

'

I
'

'

750
Kirby Sweeper Shampooer al·
IICI\monV Hand aulh vac. includld.
Coat $1500.00 HandIcap Et.c~ic Scooter $400.00 Ut·

seoo.oo

doRaiCII;814--1

l.lERCHANDI SE

Household

Goods

~~~;.~~~~
W
Reconditioned
gratora,
Raa~~;.'::i

French City Ma',llfl, 814 •118 .

2!Jedroom houao in Hart1ont. ~882·304.

7-

-'-~---------

l;;d;;;~h;;;;";~~;i;; J Countrj Furniture. 304-175-8!120.
3 bedroom house on

Height~, coll81.4-192-:111211.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVIr.ES
All rae! oatato advortfofr111n

1

S200. ·$500 Wkly. Assemble Pro·
dues. No wrv. Pllclll¥..:t. fl,j.

1; Guaranteed. No Exp. Ntctaailry.' 7 Dayo 407-875·2022

EJL01121!i«M"

,
·
$200· $500 · wtoklj. Auomble
p('oducta. No ". Ulng. Paid dtrec:t.
FUIIW' g~M.ran~. No experience
necesury. 7 'daya. 407·875-2022
OII0505H04:

I

Bolli:
White
Old,-anohouae
ll 26; Deak Qryer
ISO:
4 'Ynra
Futl 011 Stove Willi Blower t!IO:
WhitolNhirlpool DryOf 175, 614·
~AFTER&amp;P.M.

Refrigerarora, Stave&amp; , Washer•
And Dryera, All Reconditioned
And Gauranteodl $100 And Up,
~llleliwr. 614-88HI41.

£

this ne~'lpaper ls subfect to
the fldoral Fair Hollslng Act

Oapt. 131 , ·~.; ~3:4:;;,
Blvd., Sulta '
TX 781113.

lolatchlno White Ke!lrltc&gt;ro,Wtah·
"' &amp; Dryer, 8 Ytara 014. USO

- - . CUllOm BulllhtlfnO. Now
Open lor blot or hog. Cell lor
:::•·27M Bua. or 182·

·'

~tamped

Rt 2 N. 8milea, PI Pltaaen~ WV.
Tu..S.t H, Sun 1t-5.

Lumbar : Oak Poplar, Pint To
Pia.. Ordar Call Altar 8:00 304·
578·29811, Prlcaa: . 1~/Bd . Ft To
.i!Odd.FL

Wanted : Legal secretary, QOod
Communication skills, lfplng akin,
uae ol WOrd Perfect 8.0, Atforonc01 roqulrld. Send rosumo to Box
G-21, !I.Pt Pl....,. Regioter, 200
Main Street. PI Pleuant, WV

255&amp;0.

WII.DUFE!CONSERIIATION

JOBS

'

Now Hiring Game Wardena, St·
curltj Maintenance, Park Rano. era Etc. No Experience Ntcea~
aery; For Application And lnformotion. 1·407-750-3122 Eat.
OH112C ( 7 A.M . .SP.M.) 7 Deya.

Able A~on ReprtMntatives
Experience Nec:ea~arr,llsoo
nf8&lt;18C1. Earn money for C~rist'
sooo Weekly /Potent ai .Pro·
nib ·bib at h.-or -lc. 1·800· ceulng llortgage Rotunda, OWn
992·8358 or 304·882·2845, Ind. Houra, Cell (0001 715-2300, E01.
,RIIP- '
t35t.(2~Houro).
'

of 11168.which ,.kett •ileOII
to advortlae "any prwferanoe,
11rn11a11on or dtocotmlnellon
baSed on race, cotor, Atllglon,
sex farnllalotatus or nallonll
origin, or any Intention 10
meke any IUCI\IJI.,renct,
limitation or dlacr1mlnetl0n.•

This ntwlplpor will not
knowllngly accttpl
edYerttoernert1alor raalaatate
which Ia In violation of the low.
OUr raadera ora htraby
Informed that ctna111 101
advertised In thla naw1;..,..
""'available on an equal
oppo11unlly bula. .

Unfumllhed two badroom hauu,
nice and cllln, depilalt required,
no 1 . - -814-9112-30110.
Wetzgal Strut, PomltDy, WID,
$S5Molo. Dtpooit, 513-822-02114.

420 Mobile tkiriles

Sanaul AMIFM Stereo Receiver
W/4 Sj&gt;takora, JVC Ca 0aollo
Docie, 5ltarp CO player W/NmDII

conro1t1oo.oo 81......._1i1121&amp;

1985 Malley F.erguaon.Tractor,
Vory Good Condlaon, Runa Excollont, 814-71:!-2457.
For- so·oo Tractor t3,18S; IS
llaauy F,rouaon Dltlll Ra·
. ~-. 14,350; liN Ford Ra-ed
11,11115; 814-2118-(1522.

REAL ESTATE

310 ltomes tor S.lt
'

Noftll

EMt

19
49

.....
.....

39
.....

.....
.....

25...,._.,..
24aa.tlypoe

--' ·

21 Plauant time

z

~:;t-_
a:;.';{'"

Taking care of
you-know-who

21

By Phillip Alder

41 CMclt

31=-

33 llclllftnlr
31 A~•ndan
40 Prlcldy lhrub

,..._

In many top bridge pairs, one player lm--t---+-+--t~ more system-oriented than hll partner. He makes moat of the decialoJU. h-t--lr-.+-&lt;
However, discussion should oecur:
otherwise this comment by Anthony
Stqrr, a Britiah psychiatrist, will come
trile : '"Marriages not infrequently
break up beea111e the more compllttnt
,.mer eventually feel1 compelled to
reuHtt hia or her loat, sepanrte lden·
lily."
When defending, though, IOIIIellmea
It mu.t be a joint elrort and IOIIIetimea
a one-inan operation. In today'• deal,

~~~~ bas to make the crucial play.
Defending against four hearts, We.t
leads the spade two. How should you,
1itting Eut, plan the defenae?
Despite North's forcing ralae, South
bas no llaiD upiralions.
You can see three defensive triciB:
the spade ace, the heart king and a
spade rulf by West. However, where~
triet four? It will have to come from di·
amonda. So, perbaps you switclted to a
diamond at trick two. Yet there Is a
anag. With thia layout, South will fi.
n!llle his queen, West winning with
the Iring and retuming the suit Now
South should le.d the heart queen to
encourage a cover, but then put up
dummy's ace. Another trump lead results In an immediate claim. Why
would South jeopardize his contract

ao.ts &amp; Molora

'Z M F

.........

47 A lingle time
... Gracloii
·so Art!M'a tlag.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

OTTR

BTIVTPFC

AAPBTUFCFR.
AP

HTXLA

830
·.• Livestock
'

1:1,~~ ~s:r-~

ACCIIInfles

fMI llo\ILY
Plll&amp;ll

Clema-. Oft

51:Hetl-21122.

- - - - - - - . , aA'I' .. - - - - - - -

8 four
Roorrongo ie11era
ocrombled

of tho
below "' lomo four worda.
~.

HORAMI

ACE V 0

I 1· t I
r_R 0.I D .IL w..I_

Tilt
You.11 Ffnd In llrt
ClflssJ(Itd Secllon.

Sovt"fl

I FRIDAY

i'

2 Bedroom&amp;, 1 Bath, Gaa Hnt,
beQt,.No Poll, Depoal~ 814-441 ·

0000.

l' 1ANSPOHTMIOtJ
AutOIIor

Bile

·es 'Firebltd, 82,000 mlleo, 2.5·4
cyl:, now tiroa, battery and ••·

so~ertce.

ClC Gintrlt Homo Meln:
tononco- Pointing, vinyl tiding,
..,....~,. doora, ~1, bltho,
mtlio!'e hdmt rafliir ind mono. F"'
!rae eati,.tt «&lt;II Chit, 811·902·

broken romance? The
r--A-S_T_R_O
' -.-Q-R_A_P_H
_ _ Matchmaker can help you
•.
wha1 to do to make lhe
~------- Mail $2.75 to Malehmaker, clo
paper, P .O . Box 1758, Murray
StatiOn, New Vorfc, NV tOt 56.
. PISCES (Foab. »March 201 If you are
more tolerant of casual acquaintances
B~DEOSOL than of your family today, you may incile
hOetMI!y on 1he home front Try to be con·
alderatato everyotl4!.
- - - - - - - - ARIES (March 21'·Aprll 11) Negative
thoughts must not flavor your thinking
IOday. Sell-doubts could cause you to

hlu!!l. ~..... 814-742·2848.
8S2S
w'r - sc. two door, :s.a ---:-,~:-----'-­
lin, v.e, lflte moclef turbo, PS. Hong, llniah

pow• •••t• ·

""* ·

BERNICE

PB. AC, s opted,
Celllne• ..;,.,.,.,: ;floater rapelt
•'!" lock~. "Great Car,"
Cell Tom 304-e7!&gt;-4118. 20
~: 814-lll2·747aor 814-141- . ~-~-~.._~--:-_,._:_:~=

••soo

roari

t 813 MorcedN 2400, looko &amp;
l'i!rtl OOod, 4cyl, lapd, $2,500 Or

Aon'a TV Service,' -iiNZirv 1n
Zonllh allo HrYicine rooat other
branda. HOUIO cell, 1-100· 707·

-

·3fl4.875-t575.

11015, wv 304-578-ZIIIi.

.

.t

end-····

:Aooflntl end tiUhlt• - • I l l
ri'llnor
......,
•. 35
.,~,. ~=lance,
B&amp;B
ROOf·
_IIIIi, 81

~.
_

"I think the wor1d is round,"
the philosophy major told the
class, "so we ·can~ see too far

develop from 110p No. 3 below.

Status • Apron • Nymph - Muslin - PUT UP
When we moved to the country an old farmer told my
husband' not to take a fence down until we find out why

1twasPUT UP

$285/Mo. lncludll Water, Gar-

710

I!
.

Hor10, S 112
et-7-

.tor Rent

r

1

1 1 1 1

SCRAM lETS ANSWIIIS

HO,_ .

I

........

49 lETTERS
PRINT NUMBERED
IN SQUARES

SEIWICES

lrl'lprov~·

-

S~\\.cillA- 4~~s·

..__.._....._ . _......-JL-...1 you

Sln11o Axlt Campei SIMP• Sf
Good Condition. nr~~a, 814'
379-28!8.
'

810

T X Z .'

1-[-,"~-.,Nrro...,.t_ETI_R-rl-lrG- i;,;~~ ;~~~h~~q:!:

Auto Pans&amp;

3 Year Old AOHA folaro · In·
~;tnll'll ~und Shown In 4-H 614·
448-l!MI3AIIar5P.M.

BTIVTPFC

FCLFPZ
LFKIEL .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I never saw a lavatory umll I was ten. I spentlhe first
1wen1y years of my life almost continually hungry."- Anfhony Quinn.

s.

NH418 Doluao Hayblno $4,000 .
114-3~2744.

PWTKWJ

" p

G E A

ZMF

. PWTKWJ

5
.

1893 201 Pro XL, 20' S1ru11l1
ban boat, 200 XPHP, 814·86T·
73:17 or 814-9411-21179, ·

43 WlcUclrieu
44 llrlght colora

by Lull Campos

I

for Slit

42111-llpol

CMOrily Ciphtf c7:c; .,.,, .,. r::tNIId hm quolllielnt b¥ lamous I*Jilt, pu1 and pr...m
Each If 1n the Cipher ~land~ lor ano!Mr. Todly"• due: H tqUalls F

for a p011ible overtrick?
You muat give West hill rulf lmmedi·

JD 2155 -2eoo Hra: JD 2355 • 1178 Ford F250 body j&gt;orta. ~•
2300 Hro: Caat 11114 o43 HP -1100 875-7116.
Hra; Caao IH 5130 With Cab, Air, Budget TronamJ•IIona, Ulld IR•
Haat ·1~ Hra. Ex; MF 231 ·224 built, All Typoa. Acconlblo To
Hra: MF 235 ·12110 Hra:JDW R OVor 10,000 Tranamlaaion, Nil'
- ; ""'"'"' ii04G ·A lolor; NH Clutch IOta, Prtaaurt Pillet.
487 Hayblno: NH 411 Hayblno; Starn~ 10's-$89.95, 814-371NH 411 Dlleblno: NH 251 Rallo; 2835 .' ~
·
JD 870 Rako; All Slzea H &amp; S
Manure .Spreaders • Payment New ou 11nka, one ton 1ru~
WtiYor Ulflll Jon 17; ·o~· fl· Whtall, ra&lt;iaiDra, lloor ..ll, tiC. •
nanclno On JD Round Baiera: o &amp; R Auto, Ript-r, wv 304-372Low 5.~ On JD Hay Equipment 31133or t-800-273-83211.
Caah Bonua: We Trade. Car·~~~~~~~~L'-~
niellelf'a.fltm &amp; Lawn 814-448· 790
Campers &amp; :;
2.,20r1rlfl0-!114-11n.
Motor~

an

1•·------,....

Wm

ately and hope the diamond trick
comes later. But u West will II)' to put
you in again for another ruff, you must
be careful to lead the IJp8de three, ,our
lowest card. asking for a club switch,
the retum that cannot blow a trick.
Thea the conlnlct diea.

I

-

23 PNac:ll

llolla

Opening lead: •

PAW·Il YORE

C..•-

17 llttm•
11 Dwwlad

'

IIIM1.

... ,

-

'llrthdlt'

-

'

S.twdav.: Jan. Z1 • 1996
iJitique beneflfl 'CQ~id OCli'M your way In
tne ye•r. allu!l 'through people who.

II

~==::::,:::a:.::

advantageous to manage your money 118
pt\Jdlntly u pottlille at thi8 lime. Before

i&lt;eei&gt;iili1

imum could
for everyone.
(JUly 23-Aug. 22111 will be wise to
gelling too closely involved a
friend's complications . He or she might
use yctl,r concern as an exCIJS8 to dump
the matter in your 1ap:
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Do not let
your ego run rafT1)11nl today. Avoid talcing
· full c'redit tor something you only played a
small part in btooging about.
LIBRA (Bapl. 23-0ct. 23) Rejection, or
per'ltaps even l)ard feefinga, might resun
today N you ael&lt; others to do things lhet
you can easily manage youi'MII .
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 22) Today,
move ceuliously 1n lituatiOI'll !hat ,.quire
an lnveetment on your part . Do not be
alntid to beCk - y ·trom a delll111et no

ionglr looks p!OI!Iialng.
. .
IIAGIITARIII (No¥. 2WIItC. 21) Conal!'

Witting a cfleCk; 811ft yOurself W!he Item is
your matjl .before making any major
... , ttiat
•
•
.
domelllc .decllloniiOCIIIY. Your judgn.,•
btfong to the aame clubs and social GEMINI (Miy 21-.1~ 20) In regard to
gloups tlllfyou do.1&gt;o not ,_itate to your career, dOn'l apcepl challenges · mlgllt not be ..-cl and you will need ...
fiCOIIIIa ,_job o11er.
'
IOd8y jUa1 to PfOYI a'point Nothing will Of hlr 1111Uf,
AQUARIUS (,.._ 110-M. 11) h Only be gained Wyou win. ind you could look CAJinJCONI (Die. IWIIL II)~.
you can find 1 good value lor your
ldy to initR!fe ~ 0 In.ICiilly bid " you loae.
•
to M1 the e~implt J!~Uraafl. De) ' CANCER(.._. 21-.lllly 22)11 a particu· money. I lowe..,, you mtgh1 . - eome
nqt eJqM1C1 qtNtia uphOld ~ lao . •r 1111br dlalutbl you. today, bring Mout bad cholcM IOday. Got.• eocontl opinion
. high_, for 'lfl\l. Trying to petdl up'a Into the open lnet~a'd- of aulleringln blllooe' you • deCIIIOn.

·be

to:

- t.
•

•

JANUARY 261

�.
:·.
.

~ :~~~1~2~·~n:ne~OI=I~Iy~~::nt:ln:e:I____________________________~P~o=m=•~~~y-·~M=Id=d~le~~~~O~h~lo~--------------~------F-r_I~~·-J-•_n~--~~H
__, _1~
~

.

~ 'Gulliver's

Along the River

Travels' explores the imagination

·wllen
tile
.
fiOOt.&amp; came:

•

: By MIKE HUGHES
; 0...--.a ,...._ Service

"Jonathan Swift was into excrement
in a big way."
• . You surely recall "Gulliver's
Now the hurdles have been
• Travels." the worl«!-famous fantasy· cleared.
: novel.
"Gulliver's Travels" (9-11 p.m.
&lt; In England, it was required read- Eastern Feb. 4-5 on ·NSC) has a
i111. After all, it makes fun of ... well, strong script and spectacular effects.
: Englishmen.
,
"The technology has moved so
: In Hunpry, Robert Halmi recalls, rapidly," says producer Duncan Ken: it was a scbool assignment. " Unfor- worthy. "If we'd made it a year ear·• tunately, I had to read it."
lier, there are certain (things) we
: And in the United States? Well, wouldn 't have been able to make use
·: Ted ·Danson remembers the pictures. of."
·. "It was probably some abridged
Even now, the film took $28 mil:- children's version," says Danson, lion.
:: who stars in an epic new version.
"I did 'Scarlett' for $40 million,"
•: "Visually, I just remember the Lll- Halmi says, " but that was eight
:: liputians, gathered around this giant hours. So in proportion, this is the
:· ·figure."
most expensive four hours of televi· That's mostly what we remember sian ever done."
:: about this book that Jonathan Swift
There's one thing more that Hal: · wrote in 1726.
mi forgot to mention: "Scarlett"
•· The images were grand. In one was pointless crud; this "Gulliver's
·: land, people were six inches tall; in Travels" ripples with wit, intelligence
:: another, they were 72 feet ta,lt:niere / and craftsmanship.
·
: was also a floating cloud, maglciir"
The idea staned when Kenworthy
: . palace and a noisy land of Yahoos.
was working with the late Jim HenThese are images that scream for son on the fanciful "Dark Crystal"
: a movie. Alongside it, however, were and "Storyt.eller.:·
: stiff words and an episodic plot.
Henson liked the idea of a "Gut"It was a travelogue," Danson liver" miniseries, so Kenworthy hired
: says of the book. "It had no timeline, Simon Moore ("Trafflk") to write it.
: no dramatic arc."
Moore carne up with a camplex
• . Mary Steenburgen - his wife weave:
• onscreen and off - agrees. "It's
Dr. Lemuel Gulliver is back from
: impossible to film the story the way his nine-year ordeal, babbling about
: it was written. It would have been giants and dwarves and talking hors: disjointed."
es. A villain (James Fox) wants him
•. Besides, Danson says, the book institutionalized; meanwhile, his
: detoured into some odd areas. plight keeps blending with his tales.

a

This is ·perplexing to the viewers,
panson says, unless they simply settie back and soak it in·. "Visually, it
is so exciting (that) you will be
hooked."
Without the beneflt of all that
visual firepower, Danson almost felt
overwhelmed by the script
" It was frightening," he says. "It
was terrifying; it was so big, and so
huge, and so complicatedly interwoven."
He had to simply take a chance,
plunging ahead for four months of
European shooting. "You really
couldn't prepare. You had 10 go there
to get over being overwhelmed."
There he was surrounded by etassic buildings, elaborate costumes, a
few American actors (led by Alfre
Woodard) and a lot of others.
There were Peter O'Toole, Omar
Sharif, Geraldine Chaplin, Kristin
Scott Thomas, Edward Woodward
and more. There were two Foxes
(James and Edward), Warwick Davis
(moviegoers' favorite Ewok) and the
90-year-old Sir John Gielgud.
And at the core was Danson. "It
terrified me, (but) I couldn't say no
to it."
· Danson's life had just returned to
normal, after his roller-coaster
romance with Whoopi Goldberg. He
met Steenburgen during the obscure
movie "Pontiac Moon"; now they
had marriage plans and a merged
family with four kids, ages II to 16.
They were overseas, trying to
plan a wedding long-distance. Cos-

s1

lns1de

'

tume designer Shirley Russell renowned for ller worlc with thenhusband Ken Russell - made Steenburgen's wedding dress.
For the first three weeks in Portugal, Danson did nothing but provide
the voice for the big and little people
to react to. That may have made it
easier to work with O'Toole.
"It would have been more intimidating until I realized that he would
only be six inches tall," Danson says.
"That kind of evened the odds."
Then those actors left and Danson
had to film his scenes, alone on a
pale-blue London stage. "It's a very
lonely affair," he says.
Other scenes brought him to a
magical time-shifting land and to an
oblique cloud, where academicians
are careful to never discuss anything
of consequence.
"I loved that pan," Steenburgen
says of the academic satire. Danson
- whose father, an archaeologist,
was a hands-on academic - agrees.
Wrapping it up was the land filled
with humanoid Yahoos and wise
horses.
That last pan was tough to do,
Danson says, especially when you
must look lovingly at a horse that
simply doesn't want to act "I think
my co-star actually bit me," he says.
Upon hearing -that, Steenburgen
replied: "That's not a fu-st for you,

.
........
Preview

A hlatory of the
region's high Wiler nwb

•,....,.. Gil,...

pageA2

A Gannett Co . Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • January 28, 1996

_GOP lawmakers return home
_with less than they had hoped for
WASHINGTON - Gallipolis-area
congn:ssional Republicans 'came home
this weekend after having seen their bUd. get hattie with President Ointon come 10
an apparent tniCCI, with results far short of
wbat they had wanted.
After being hammered in the polls for
more than a month, House Republicans
last week decided to postpone their goal
-~f a balanced budget and not shut down
the government another time.
· Instead, they decided to press for an
Jlgreement in the coming weeks with the
White House that would m8ke a "down
'payment" on deficit and tax reductions,
· rather than enacting a comprehensive

GULLIVER'S TRAVELS • Pictured· are MGulllwr'a Travels" ...,.
Emmy Award winner Tlld.O.naon In 1M title role lllld Academy A-rd
Mike Hughes writes about TV for winner Mery Steenburgiln 11 Gulliver's wife, Mery. The show will air
the Lansing (Mich.) State Journal and Sundtly and Mondtly Feb. 4 and 5 from 9 to 11 p.m.
Gannett News Service.

.

NO RAINCHECKS

Zesta

$159

lb. box

c

I

seven-year balanced budget plan. Many
significant budget-balancing issues
would likely be put off until after this
fall's elections.
Cincinnati-area members were some
of the most fervid members o( the Republican revolution.
Tristate and national political
observers are beginning to speculate
about the ultimate fallout of the budget
saga with voters.
Many have called the outcome of the
recent gridlock a clear-cut victory for the
president. The Washington Post editorialized that Clinton "routed" Republicans
by forcing them to sidetrack their plans.

Congressman Frank
between now and then,"'
Cremeans, R-Gallipolis,
Rep. Franlr
Alexander said.
said he is ol)e of the few CNIJJHIII, R·
AI Thchfarber, University
that is continuing to Ge/llpol/e, Hid
of Cincinnati political anahope that some kind of he le 011eoflhe
lyst, doubted Cincinnaticomprehensive bill can ,., lllllf le conarea members would suffer
be reached this year.
lfnulllfl to hiJIM
any significant damage.
He said he also doubt-· lhllt • ...,. lclnd
Their constituents probably
ed that Clinton was win- Df ~ IJefanl»d understand the president
ning the public relations bw,.t bHI c.n be -c/HHI had the constitutional
battle.
IItie yee~.
power to block much of
"If he is winning it,
v;hat they wanted to accomhe is not winning it here in my district," plish, he said ..
Cremeans said.
Instead, Tuchfarber said, the budget
"I think everybody who's been · standoff offers the promise of a new caminvolved has been tarnished a bit," said paign strategy:
Herbert Alexander, political scientist at
'"Well, we tried but the White House
the University of Southern California.
was able to stop our efforts and we need
But he added that's hard to know how another term and a new president, and we
it will play in November. "That's a long need a Republican in the White House to
wfy off and a lot of things can happen
Continued on page A2

In wake of harsh wlntet

COLUMBUS (AP) - A decision is expected early this week on the
state's reqlle# for federal .assistance in cleaning up the recent flooding in

Breasts

-..
~;!,!lllld:=._ern Oliio_
.,·~·~~~ Federal Emergency Manage-

c

lb.

Lettuce

Potato Chips
Reg. $1.49

size

(o(a Cola

Del Monte

·Products

Ketchup
c

12 pack ·12 oz.
cans

5 LB.

$

Head

$ 49-

Domino

Yellow

Sugar
$ 69

Onions

Limit 1 please

31b.bag

2

$1
Limit 2 please

Cris'o

Shortening
31b.

$ 99
1 please

Gallipolis man bound over to gr•nd )\.lry
on Involuntary manslaughter charge

Lunch Meat
12 oz.

BOlogna

89

4

Vienna Sau
5

oz.
.

.. r.

'

'·

MAIN STREET FLOODING -The Ohio River overflowed Into Marletta on Monday, flooding the main ltreet. Show II an aerial photo
looldng ell! down Stall Route 7through town.
percent evenly with the local government.
The state has received federal money through a FEMA-administered
disaster declaration four times since June 1989. The state received $7.5
million last August following a series of rainstorms. Voinovich declared
state disasters in 13 counties after the recent flooding, authorizing state
agencies to do whatever was necessary to assist local government5. They
include those counties requesting federal help plus Adams, Brown, Clermont, Gallia, Hamilton, Lawrence and Scioto counties.

'

Emergency HEAP provides assistance to households that have had the energy source disconnected,
faces the threat of disconnection or has less than 10
days' supply of bulk fuel..
The program allows a onet
time payment of up to $175
per heating season to retain
heating services.
Homeowners or renters
qualify if their income is at or below 150 percent of federal poverty gui~·
lip~s. Income eligibility can be for the past three to 12 months. Those not,
qualifying on the three-month level are asked to present their full 12-molllh ·
income to determine if eligibility can be met, Proffitt explained.
Regular HEAP offers heating assistance one per season to low-income
households trying to defray heating costs. Regular HEAP pays a portion of
eligible households' winter heating bills. The amount of assistance, Proffitt
said, is determined by total household income, the number of people in the :
household and the type of heating fuel used.
Income eligibility for both programs is the same, but Regular HEAP·
requires the previous 12 months' income.
1
·Applications for both programs can be made Monday through Thursday : •
from 9 a.m. until noon and 1-3 p.m. at the Gallia County CAA Outreach·
Office, 863 Porter Road, Porter, and the Meigs County Outreach Office, •
39350 Union Ave., Pomeroy. or at the central CAA office in Cheshire. No
applications are taken on Friday.
•
Regular HEAP funding is awarded by the Ohio Qepartment of Develop-.
ment, while Emergency HEAP money is channeled directly to CAA, Exec. utive Director Sidney Edwards said. Emergency HEAP is issued in the fDnll ·
of vouchers, he added.
1' •

.,

News capsules

Good Morning ..
r----------1..:

GAU.IPOLIS- A Oallipolis man was bound over to ll)e next session of
Gallipolis man claims $1 00,000 prize
Ohio Poll: Clinton
the Gallia County grand jury on a charge of involuntary manslllughter fol Oday's 'llitit • ~ utbwl
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. - Wednesday's near record
lowing a pn!liminary'hearing Friday in Gallipolis Municipal Court.
Increases
lead
. 15 Sections • 164 Paps
Powerball jackpot reminded J Gary Fenderbosch, 47, of
, , ·
. : &gt; .
: · ,
Judge William S. Medley ruled
over Sen. Dole
· ·
· · · ·
· ·
there was probable cause 10 submit
Gallipolis to check his tickets from past drawings and realthe case against Joseph M. Owen II,
CINCINNATI (AP) -A
ize he was holding a $100,000 winning ticket, purchased at
•
26, 3987 Jackson Pike, to the grand
survey of Ohio voten; asked
Go-Mart in Point Pleasant, from the November 25 drawing.
jury when it meets Feb. S.
Whom they would elect pres"Can you image carrying around $100,000 in your pockOwen, the sori of fonner Gallipoident showed President Clinet for two months ,and not knowing it," Fenderbosch asked
lis police chief Joe Owen, is charged
ton with ~ 1 percent support,
as he claimed his prize at West Virginia Lottery headquarcompared with 40 percent for
ters this week. "I don't even carry a wallet-- the ticket was
in conn~tion with the death of
Mark A. Bunon, 30, McCormick
Republican presidential canloose in my pocket-- and I still didn't notice."
Road, Gallipolis, following an incididate Bob Dole.Eight percent favored some
The top cash prize winner, who works for the Gallipolis
dent at the Old Brick Thvem, 234 Third Ave., Gallipolis, early on Jan. 21 .
other candidate and I percent were undecided, Development Center, said he and his wife, Sherrie, crossed
I
according to the Ohio Poll released Friday.
the state border to play Powerball at Go-Man because
Durilll the 30-minute hearins. Gallia County Prosecutins Attorney Brent
In an Ohio Poll in October, Clinton was backed Wednesday's jackpot was so high: Fenderbosch then
-,
A. Saunders presented one witness to support-the charge against Owen.
Column s
by 46 percent of the registered voters questioned, remembered the ticket and asked the clerlc to check it.
David Pattenon, assistant manaser of the Old Brick Tavern, said he was
]
to 42 percent for Dole. In June, the Kansas sena"He motioned for me to come into the store," Sherri~
workin&amp; around I a,m. when he observed Burton and another patron, Billy
t .,
' ~'.,
tor received 48 percent of the support, to 45 per- Fenderbosch said, "and I thought he needed more money f~
Armstrong, in a "heated arp,ment."
cent for Clinton.
his purchases or something. He met me at the door and
Patterson said he stepped through a crowd to separate Burton and Arm·
The University of Cincinnati's Institute for casually told me we had won $100,000. I was in disbelief!"
strons and ·:exchanged a few words" with Annstron&amp; when he said he saw
Policy Resealch conducted the latest survey Jan.
The Fenderbosches said they have not decided what to
Owed push Burton through the_tavern's unlocked back door that leads to the
11-24 through telephone interviews with 574 ran- do with their stroke of good fortune. "Wj: recently bought
patio.
·
_.
dornly chosen registered voters. The Cincinnati some land, so we may use it to build a house," Joseph Fend·
•
Examined by Owen's attorney, Wilham N. Eachus, Pattcnon said Owen
OllioYolloyl'lllllitMoaCo.
·&lt;.:
pushed Burl9n with open palms in what he described as "a perfect football . Enquirer, WLWT-TV and the university spon- erbosch said, "but it will probably so in our savings for
sored the poll.
now."
·I :
shimmy."
L
"I knQw I saw Joe Owen push him out the door," Patterson said.
PatterSon said he .went to Burton, whose head wu lyinJ on the patio's
concrei&amp; pad and feet were on the first step back to the door. Blood besan
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - GOP presidential front-runner Bob Dole hour after bour, minute ·after minute,". his campaign was preparing to : ~: ·
seepina from Bunon's nose, he added, "and I yelled for someone to call an
demanded Saturday that Steve Porbes release his tax returns and said he unleash a fresh ad assault of its own &amp;gaii1Jt Forbes. The spots are to beain '
ambulance.
was convinced· his wealthy rival s relentless negative advertising barrage early this week in Iowa and move beyoad critics ofFodlea' flit tax plan.
"I never saw where Joe went bel:aUIC I wu concentratina on Mark," he
. to bacU:was slatting
uu.,, . ·'
.
~
·
. " After $8 million aimed at Bob Dole we do!:MW maybe it is time -to
said. When Pa11ien0n and police officers looked for Owen about five minBut even as Dole criticized Forbes for attacldng him "day after day, respond," Dole said.
·
Continued on-jlaga A2

· Armour

c

or eating.'"

,.,

Armour Treet

•'

CHESHIRE - The ~h winter weather and devastating flooding have
caused problems throughout our region. For those experiencing heat-related
emergencies, applications are still being taken by Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency for two heating assistance programs.
The deadline' to apply for the Emergency Heating Energy Assistance f&gt;ro.
gram is March 15, HEAP
Coordinator Letha Proffitt
said.
"HEAP provides help for
our area's neediest residents,
who may be on a fixed
income or among the working poor," she explained.
"HEAP helps senior citizens ·
1¥14 fll!liliea with chil.drel"avoid the choice of ' heating

m~nt

Agency officials were in
Ohio on C
Friday to delelmine
the severity •.!!1 ,4~. -lite-.
number of people" displaced
and the threat to tl\e'health and
safety of Ohio cdllllilunities.
Rain and melting snow from
a .blizzard cauMd the Ohio
River to flood in niany areas
, along the eastern lllid southern
border of the state 'since mid·
January.
It
The Ohio Deplrtment of
Public Safety ha5 ·estimated
· property damage at' more than
$16 million and rising. The
flood waters damagCd more
than 2,000 building'S.
Gov. George 'Voinovich
asked President Clinton Thursday to approve federal help for
residents and businesses in
Belmont, Columbiana, Jeffcr.·· son, Meigs, Monroe and
Washington counties.
The federal disaster declaralion would allow the government to provide grants and
low-interest loans tO flood victims. Voinovich . slid other
--11111!!!!1"!1111!11--~1!'11~-.!!!!lll counties may be added to the
request. Ohio has received almost $37 million in federal money to help
with flood cleanup over the past seven years.
Once federal help is approved, the U.S. government pays 75 pe~cen1 of
the cost of supplemental disaster assistance, with the state and .
ernments picking up 25 percent of the cost. Ohio g~nerally

flood

Gallia, Meigs CAA accepting ;.
applications for heating aid , '

Ohio citizens waiting to see
If fed~rsl government will help

Fresh Chi,ken

Mr. Bee

c

Vol. 30, No. 51

House budget battle ends in truce

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

' . '~

me
.}

eitl]~r· "

Crackers

•

·tmes·

'96 Flood
reco-v ery:
2o/o
Milk
....

Detalll on -·

Cf

•

)

VALLEY BELL

HI: 301
Low:,.._

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$1
3

298 SECOND STREEl

Sen. Dole targets Forbes in New Hampshire, prepares new ad assault .;:.·; ·

POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE JANUARY 27,1986 ONLY

••

•

..

•

'

J

·~

,.

_,
.

I

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